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1983-12-27 - Orange Coast Pilot
Dick Dale sex trial delayed Jurors in n10/est case get holidays off, won't return until Jan. 3 By JEFF ADLER Of tM O.ilt -It." Gu11.anst Dal·k Dale's felony child molestauon trial an Orange County Supenor Court. dragging on far beyond original tames esumates, will not conclude untu someume an January. both defense and prosecuting attorneys concede. The tnal. which began Nov 29, was recessed until Jan. 3 to allow jurors time off for the holidays. Dale, 46. faces 12 felony charges of child molestation and oral copulation stemming from his alleged sexual encounters with a 13-year-old girl in his Balboa Peninsula mansion during July and August 1981 The entertainer, whose real name is Richard Anthony Monsour, repeatedly has pleaded his innocence to the charges, contending he was set up by his former wife who wanta to d iscredit hlm. Dale 1s best known as one of the originators of 1960s-stylesurf music. His popular band, Dick Dale & The Del-Tones, virtually was a fixture in Southern California during the heyday of the surf music craze. The key witness to the prosecution's case is the 13-year-old girl, now 15, who testified early in the trial that she a nd Dale had engaged in oral sex on six separate occasions In the 17-room mansion during the summer of 198 l. tSee DICK DALE, Page AZ) THI DRANGI COAST Dick Dale COUNTY IDITIDN TUESDAY. DECEMBER 27. 1983 ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Wind, rain mar Coast holiday But things looking up: sunny, warHJer skies due By CHRISTINE DECKE R Gusty winds and pounding rams made the holiday weekend a little less than joyous around the Orange Coast. getting the blame for several accidents throughout the county and Southern California. Al about 6:30 a.m today. a bike rider and a Corvair collided on wet streets at the m tersecuon or Red Hill and &linger avenues in Tustin. The 36-year-old male cyclist was knocked off his bike and hit the car's windshield, according to Tustin police. He's 'in critical condition at Western Medical Hospital. Police were still investigating the accident and didn't release any other details. In Newport Beach several boats were jarred from thell' moonngs. An electric harbor cruiser was t.ossed loose and apparently drifted to Corona del Mar state beach. where it was found washed up this morning. Police do not know who owns the boat. Planes leaving John Wayne International Airport were experienc- ing some delays because of airports closed throughout the country due to severe winter weather. "Anybody going back East should call their airlines and check on departure times and keep abreast of the weather situation for wherever they're going. ln most cases we're not having that much trouble, but there are some delays," said Steve Karnes. tower supervisor. The good news is, Orange Countians can look forward to a warmer and sunny Wednesday. It's expected to drizzle on and off until tomorrow afternoon when the sun will. break through the clouds. Highs will be in the nuddle 60s with lows from 48 to 58 degrees. according to the National Weather Service forecast. The pattern of cloudy mornings with partial clearing in the afternoons will continue through Fnday. There may also be some sllght early morning fog. Oellf ..... .,..._ _, ............... The rajn came down hard at times and a little more than one mch of ram fell from Saturday through this morning, said .Emmett Franklin, rainfall expert for the county Environmental Management Agency. Shoppers fight the elements at Fashion Island on the day after Christmas. Travelers dodge rain and other passengers at John Wayne Airport as the holiday weekend wound up. Mudslides pose peril • 1n county By tbe Associated Press One torrential rainfall c.-ould trigger major mudslides in Orange County because the ground alre ady is soa k e d from above-average rainfall, two Southern California geologists are warning. If the slides start, they could cause more damage than the record destruction wrought by mudslides last season , said Los Angeles County senior geologist Art Keene. The ground has not completely dried Crom last winter's stonns, particularly with the 9.3 Inches of rainfall so far this season in Los Angeles and a similar amount in Orange County -more than double the seasonal average. The (See SLIDES, Page A%) Coast colleges to boost classload By PHIL SNEJDERMAN ot•O.-,,... ..... The Coast Community Colleges are adding more than 140 class aections to their spring schedules. as a result of the Board of Trustees' dedaion to rehire 55 teachers and administrators. The staff members h ad been laid off last spring because of a loss of state funds. But the makeup of the board changed last month when three candidates supported by district teachers were elected. The realigned board voted to make offers of reinstatement to all of the laid-off teachers and admin- istrators. The reinstatement.a will take place during the spring aemester. As of Friday, 26 people had Smoke detector saves condo Fire alarm awakens Mesans just as pine bough blaze explodes BJ LUlEN E. llLEIN flames with a garden hoee just u a "flaah over" °' ... .,..,........ oc::cu.n-ed. • A holiday tragedy was narrowly averted over A f1alh over, ln flrefighten' tentlS, oocun when the weekend when dry pine boughs were lg:nited by the material initially bwnlng heata up a room to the a .-nouldering fireplace ln a ea.ta Mesa condominium point where everything in the room explodes into in the 300 block of Campbell Lane. flame, Tully expl.a1ned. Don Tully, a Cotta Meta fire protect:Jon analyst. "It juat teta 10 hot ln there that everytht.na - aaid a smoke detector lnatalled in the condo aaved the chain, dnipes -explodes." he taid. "But they were lives of the two people aleeplJli lnatde. able to pt the flre out just ln ~· A couple of It was about 1:30 a.m. Saturday when 90l'ne pine minuta t.t.er and It would have been too bite." boughs acattered over the mantlepiece cau,ht fire Stephanie Bernardy, who owns the con- and then Ignited a pine wrMth over the fireplace, domlnfwn alonl with her huabencl. Tim, oonfl.rmed Tully uJd. that the lmOke detector had uved the llvee of the ''The wreath caUlht the wood pa.nellnc on the tenantl who Uve In the condo. wall and the smoke .et off the alarm," Tully Mid. "It waa lncredible. The anoke alarm woke them One of the aleeplna r-'dentl called the fine up and they•;;= light from the flames cominl ~partment and the other manaa-1 to put out the '(8" SMOKED ll, P111 Al) 4 4 A • responded, indkating they wish to return to their college positions. accordinl to William Waechter, th e district's director of per'IOrulel. Waechter said the laid off em- ployees have about one more week to respond. As a result of the reinstatement decision, Oranae Cout College will be adding about 100 cl.al9e9 to it.a spring IChedule. Many of thete will be COW"leS IOme atudenta were unable to take du.ring the fall term becaUR of the culbecka. Elaine Beno, a spokeswoman for the college, said Orance Coast · will offer 33 additional P9Y- chology c1aaft, 12 more muaic eta.., 10 more physk.al educa- tion ~ six more dvil tech- noloa cia-and four more the.ter aru dallee. Still other cl.Miii have been added In Mtronomy, bfoloo, health education, hl910ry, IOd- olOI)' and apeech. The cl.-. Wft'e added too Late for lncluaion In the •prtnc catalop. Aa a rault, Beno Mid, Orange C.O.t la pcint.lnc 200,000 (See MOllB CLASSES, P ... All • Irvine's main drag becomes Culvert Drive By ANDREA ADELSON Ol-Oelty'11ot1Ufl Motorists who drive north on Culver Drive, Irvine's busiest north-south connecting road be- tween the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways, will have to detour around a gaping hole in the street at least until Wednesday. The giant pothole, which dis- rupted holiday weekend traffic, is ~xpected to be paved by tonight,, water district officials said today. Rain and a holiday-caused shortage of paving materials de- layed road workers from patching the 150-foot stretch of Culver north of Deerfield Avenue, undermined Christmas night by a failed water main coupled with the genera.Uy soggy condition of the ground due to the long rainy spell, public works inspector Bob Storehheim said. Drivers returning to familiar routes this morning after the long weekend were diverted around Culver al Irvine Center Drive, Sgt. Gary Schull said. Extra congestion on the south- bound lanes due t.o slowmg on- lookers "is causing a problem," but no accidents were reported during the morning rush hour, he said. The intersection of Culver and Irvine Center Drive is the city's busiest, crossed by 72,000 cars per day, traffic engineer Bob Haines said. The road has never been closed before, he said. Traffic was light o n rain-slickened Culver about 11 p.m. Sunday when pent up water pressure pushed slabs of pave- ment atop each other. undermined by water spouting underground from a failed fitting on an Irvine Ranch Water District main, Storchheun said. tSee CULVER, Pa1e At) 0.-, .... ,......., llllMN !( ....... Irvine County Water District worker John Palmar r epairs six-inch line which burst Friday. Rem• ere Wnhlngton bound The Rama wlH epend New Y•r'a Day In Wuhlngton, D.C., after upeettlng the Dallaa Cowboya 2.-.111n the NFC wlld card ptayoff Monday.S.Sporta, PageC1. r ' 2 Orange Coast DAIL v PILOT /Tuesday. December 27, 1983 HB eyes takeover of beach R)' ROBERT BARKER Offlt·1als a1 e enumng {anal negotiations that mny lead to the takeover by the City of Hunt- ington Bt-al·h next spring of eight miles of beachl'S vis1tt.'d by 10 m1llton pt>opll• each yt•ar If the traru>aC't1on g<.1t's 1hrough, the cttv would have under 11s rontrol. bt.«Khes from the Santci Ana R1v1•r lo Warm•r AvC>nue. according to C11y Administrator Charles Thompson. Medics treat m a n a nd dog a j.CONTINUED STORIES MORE CLA SSE S ... From PageA1 copies of an ~ight-page sllpµle- ment lisung the additional classes The supplement will be mailt'd to college district rt>s1dents and inserted into t•atalogs d1stributc>d at spring regis tration Woman saved from flames in Wes tminst er By The Anuclated Pren At Coastline College, wh1ct orrers instruction at locatloru throughout the coUege distm·t about :iO more classes will Ix addt-<1 to the s pring schedule at't.'Ordmg w college spokesmar Jat·k Chappell Subject areas w1l mC'lut.le music, psychology anc history Golden West ColJege In Hunt- ington Beach will add 12 sectioru t.o its spring schedule, accord ing tc Don Randol, assistant to th« president for instructional oper· auons. "Thc·y (state parks and rt'<.' reat1on off1l·1ab) like uur proposals We're going to sit down and talk again at tht• first of the year If 11 all g0t•s Wl•ll. this l'Oulu be aet:omplished by April," Thompson said Thompson said th<• c11y 1s t•on- s1denng a long-term lt>ase He said he belte ves the t·1ty l'lluld offSl•t operation costs through con- l'ess1ons. parking fet.-s and othl•r "innovatlvl•" revC'nut• soun·cs No l'OSt figures are available A Co~ta :\lt• ... o firem a n e·omf ort a ~ha ke n Uulw rman fJi n-.cher as par ametlifs tre a t :H,•)'t·ar-ole l Tom rn) (;t'orge Ba r tels of Nt•\\ port Ut•ad1. who was critically in- j un·cl \lonclay t•\f>ning w he n his car ramrne·d i11 to a vt-hidt' drive n by Salva dor Frurll'u. Ua rtl'ls. tJri\1in~ a mini piekup o n lla rbor Boule vard, suU~red inte rnal inj uries a nd was toke n lo the Founta in Valley Co mm unity Hospital tra uma eenter for surge ry. T he 3-yeu r-old f f'male dog was taken lo Nt'wporl II arbor An ima l Hos pital whe rt' ullenda n ls d e lt.'rminNI she was uninjured . Tw0Callfom1a Highway Patrol oCficers have rescul>d a sleeping 70-year-old Westminster woman after spotting flames in her home from a nearby freeway, CttP officials say. CHP ofrtcer Leslie Hill broke a window in the residence of Mag line Curry. 70, and carried her to safety while officer Darrell Brooks used a fi re extinguisher to battle the flames, said CHP dis- patcher Marcella Ozenne Sub)l'<.·t art'as include music graphic arts and psychology Golden West w ill also open ad ditional i,pace m the cosmetolog) program and will reinstate tht work experienc.~ program, h which students can earn cred1 while working at a JOb in thei1 held of study. CULVER ... From Page A 1 SLIDES THREATEN COUNTY ... The ofhcers spotted the fire m the woman's home from the San Diego Freeway about 1 :30 a.m Monday. Oz.cnne said. Abuut 180,000 gallons leake< from the broken fittmg on tht six-inch main. which feeds re claimed water to landscape me dians. district spokeswoman Joye. Gwidt said The leak went un deta·ted for at least four houn until it bfogan to percolate 1r quantity on the street surface, sh4 -;cud Thompson said. city fon•c•s alreadlv are saddled with much of the poi1t-e. fire and paradmed1c serv1C'C• to the area "that's the front door lo our c1tv " The ci ty owns one mtlc of beat•h from Beach Boulevard to the p1t>r dnd 1t sits almos1 directly in the middle of Hunungton State Beal·h to the south and Bulsa Chica SI.alt• Beach to the north Consohdat1on would do away w1lh much of the emergency and maintenance ser- vice overlap, he said "I'm optimistic but there 1s a number of hurdles that need to be resolved But thlS 1s the first llmC' we've t'Ome this far," he said Assemblyman Nolan Fnz.rellc•. R-Huntington Beach. said tod;.iy he's been working with l'ity officials to bring about tht.' takeover From Page A 1 rainfall has exhausted the ground':; capacity to ~k up "nt-w" v. n1er, Kt't'ne said. "This week. one inc h in one day will do it." Kc-ent> prroicted Gc"'lllog1sts examined a Canoga Park rockshde Monday aftt'r a 12-fool boulder camt' t-rashmg duwn .1 l'Hnyun wall. smashing a mobtlt• home. an auto and a campt•r ng No inJurws Ol't:Urred K£'t"n'-' said the rot'kshde was caused by ground t'Ond1t1ons which h(• -.atd are worse now than 1n 1969, when a woman was killed in a mudslide that suffocated her inside h€.'r Malibu area home Cond1llons are also similar to those pnx:eedmg the disastrous Blu<>bird Canyon slide m Laguna Beat·h m I 9i8 l!CLA geology professor John BULLETIN BOARD Drunken driving topic of Golden Wes t program Linda Graham. president of lhl• Orange County chapter of Mothers Agamst Drunk Dnv1ng CMADD>. will be the featured s peaker at Golden West College Jan. 9 Graham will speak to members of a pohucal sc1enC'e class m Forum lI at 7 pm The public 1s invited and adm1ss1on is free Following the l('(.·ture. members of the California Highway Patrol will give a demonstration of vanous equipment used m sobn Ny tests Alzhe imer' Disease lec ture pla nned The biochemical basis of Alzheimer's Disease. a mental disorder that afflicts older people. will be d1scuss<'<.i Jan. 4 at a UC Irvine lecture by Dr Dennis J. Selkue, associate professor of neurnlogy at the Harvard Medic.al School The presentation. set for 7 p.m . 1s the fourth in an eight-part d1st1ngu1shed lecture senes sponsored by UC!'s Department of Psychiatry and the UCI Neuroscience Association The lecture 1s free and open to the public Information on this and upcoming programs may be obtained by calhng 856-424 1. Ecologist to ta lk on acid ra in a t UC I &ologist Gene E. Likens will deliver the 1984 Steinhaus Lecture on "Acid Ram: Causes. Consequences and Controversies" at 4 pm Jan 12 m the Ftne Arts Village Theater at UC Irvine. Adm1ss1on is free L Rosenfeld agreed with Keene's analysis, saying that "for the rain to trigger a big slide, it usually has t.o infiltrate the land for some time. The larger the landslide is. the longer it takes to occur. "We're really set u p this year. especially for big slides. because of the preceding two winters," Rose- nfeld said. Afte r more than two inches of ram fell during the Chnstmas weekend. heavy rainfall now wilJ smk directly into under ground waler tables, w hich in tum can dislodge cliffs and hillsides and any homes on them -the geologists said . Seen snow? For those Daily Pilot read- ers interested m d riving by and taking a peek at the colorfully decorated house pic:tured atop Page Al m Sunday's paper. it's located m Laguna Niguel at 2374 1 Dolphin Cove. Burks family wins FVyule decor contest Winners have been selected in the 1983 Christmas Decoratmg Contest sponsored b y the • Women's D1v1s1on of the Fountain Valley Chamber of Commert-e. Leading the outside residential catC>gory were the Burks family at 9179 McElwee Ri ver Circle, first place: the Finnell family, 16449 Shadbush St , second place and the Brashear family, 16439 S had- bush, third place. In the inside commercial cat- egory, F.quitable Savings and Loan, 9029 Garfield Ave .. placed first; Peret's, 17171 Brookh urst S t . serond. and Sandy Morton Jewelry, 10810 Warner Ave .. third Man found shot appare nt suicide Four types of slides are ~1ble, Keene said -debns flows. land- slides, rock falls and mud flows. Mud flows, he said, are. the most feared slides because they can occur on a "flash" basis • The woman. who w~ alone at the time, suffered shght smoke inhalation but was not hosp1tal- 1zed. "A mud flow 1s dtSt1ngu1shed from a slide because it flows like a stream," Keene said. "It can flow very rapidly and move down a complete slope within 10 or 15 minutes " The fire. which apparently started wh<•n a hanging light fell on a sleeping bag. destroyed an adJacent garage. t·ausmg abuut $4 7,000 damage to the garage and 1tst.'OntenlS, which mduded a 1980 Mert'E.'des automobile. 0Cfic1als said Watl•r orril'ials are speculat1n1 that selthng earth somehow dam aged th<: filling. as no faull wa dete<:tt>d in the pipe when it wa 1epa1rt'Cl Monday Gwidt roul< not estimate the t'OSt uf repa1rs SMOKE DETECTOR SAVES THE DAY ... From PageA1 out of the living room," Bernardy said. But she said she was d isturbed when the tenants told her the heat had blacke ned the Christmas tree a nd melted some tinsel and ornaments by the time the fi re trucks found the address. "They (the firefighters) had a hard time finding the street -(the tenants) had to go out there and show the trucks where to come in," she said "There is a rondo on each side of that and 1t could have set off the whole place," she said Smoke detectors w1JJ be mandatory in all Costa Mesa apartments, condominiums. hotels and motels next month, Tully said. Last July, the Cost.a Mesa Ctty Council passed an ordmance making smoke detector 1nstallat10n man- datory within six m onths. That grace period expires J an. 20. "This (ordinance) affects any place where people sleep," Tully said Ali non owner-occupied dwelling pla('eS must have the detectors installed by January and all ownC'r·0<.'t'up1ed res1dent'e'S, 1 e. smgl1 family homes, must have detectors installed when ever the homes are sold The ordinance does not specify which brand o detector s hould be installed. Tully said. just that 1 should be approved by thl• State Fire Marshall fo1 use All of the brands on the market m Califom11 must be approved by law. he said. The ordinance only states that the residence be "properly equipped" with smoke detectors. Tull~ said a one-story residence probably only needs on1 smoke detector. but a two-story residence shoulc hav<" two. Although ther€.' will be no 1nspect1ons to see 1f th• ordinance is being upheld. Tully said fir efighter who may come to a home on another call can check tA see 1f there is a smoke detector m place. The detectors are easy to install and may bl battery operatl'd or electric DICK DALE SEX TRIAL DELAYED ... From Page A 1 The girl, who was visiting her grandparents m frequently v1s1ted him as "happy-go-lut•ky girls whc Newport Beach at the lime. said Dale coaxed her into frolicked" around the the 1920s-era mansion ona the sex acts. but didn't force her. The girl's owned by Kang Camp Gillette. grandparents were Dale's across-the-street neigh-Other witnesses called by the defense have bors. testified that they were approached by Grimmett l< Anothe r important prosecution witness was help set up her former husband as a child molester. Dale's former theatncal agent who told jurors the One of the witnesses. whose testimony has no defendant had shown him pictures of the young girl yet been presented to jurors, testified during i m wruch her bikini bathing SUit top had been heanng on defense motions that G rimm ett told hm unfastened and her breasts exposed. "she had made him (Dale) and she was going to tea.a The lengthy defense presentation has centered him down ." The jury is expected to hear hi: on Dale's contention that the charges were trumped tesumony when the t rial resumes in January. up by his former wife. Jeannie Grimmett. as part of Judge James Turner struck a blow to Dale': an effort to discredit him. defense. however. when he ruled that testimOn) Dale and Grimmett separated shortly before the ron<.-em ing the 13--year-old's prior S(.>XUal experien<.'l sex acts allegedly we re committed and the two were was not relevan t to the case. engaged in a bitter divorce action settled only in the Out of the jury's hearing. Quigley presented s past several weeks. witness who testified that the girl's father hac Grimmett has been called to the witnes,, stand sexually abused his two daughters. several times, both by prosecu tor Kaz Makino and by The father. Long Beach resident Kent Smith defense attorney Michael Quigley. also was calJed to testify during the hearing on the Likens. considered an authority on ac:1d ram, is director of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies at the New York Botanical Garden. His research has focused on the ecology of lakes and northern forests. Acid rain. caused by the burning of fossi l fuels. 1s suspected of stunting plant growth and killing fish en high-acid content lakes. Dale alao has taken the stand in hil own defe me, motion. but invoked hi.s Fifth Amendment righ den ying th at he ever was sexually involved with the against self-incrimination when asked whether he g irl or her younger sister. He described the girb who had engaged in oral sex w ith his older da ughter. Huntington Beach police said a ..-"-----'---'----------------------------------- Pia tic su rger y seminar in Hunting to n A seminar on plastic and reconstructivC' surgery is schedu led Jan. 12 in Huntington Beach The seminar. which will be held from 7 to 9 pm at the Carmen Yuppa Conference Center. across the street from Pacifica Community Hospital at 18819 Delaware St .. 1s free. but reservations are required and may be made by calling 842-0611 The event is part of the hospital's focus on community health ou treach program man fo und shot to death inside a car parked in a n vacant field was an apparent suicide victim. A passing motorist noticed the car Saturday afternoon m a field near Newland Street and P acific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach. Police found a shooting vtctim inside the red Datsun station wagon, but detennined the head wound was self-inflicted. Police withheld the man's name today pending notification of his wife. We're Listening ••• What do you like a bout the Dally Pilot" What don't you like., Call the number at left and your message will be recorded. transcnbecl and delivered to the appropriate editor The same 24 hour a nswering 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 642•6086 calls. please · Tell us what·s on your mind ocO.:;' ... .. OuetentMd "°'°"°"Y f rWy H r0oJ 00 not ,, ... Y°"' P•l>e• by ~'JOO"' c;all~erom end r0•'1 copy w•ll II• --'° Salu<Oey and --., " you C10 l'Ot •K-yOo# c.cpp .,., I & Ill <.el -· 10 •111 -.,.0...CQO\'- be o.ii-'"' ..... ClrnllallM Tai If...._ =-C..wy ..... ~_.., -- ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L lchwarta Ht PuW. ChaJ DoweHbY "8ymond Mecleen EdltOf al\d AtalttanT Controller 10 the Put>lllhar • .....,.,,c .... ~ ....,.... MAINOPFICI "° W. tay St , Colla ,.._, CA Moll ~ llo• 16'0, C.1a ...... CA 82'H COpynght 1813 OrlflOe c-~ eon.,_, No na•• 1tor1tt. lll~•t•allont t dllorlal "'•ti•• O• --·· ... ,.._,,.., ..... oca.c.d....,. ..... ~°'~- ,, r~~"'~"'"'~' ; l(ewport Surf<®. Sport, <ifnc. • AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE OUR GIFT TO YOU ENDING SUN., JAN 8th 1011/0 -7011/0 OFF ' WETSUITS <Full su1t1> MEN'S CLOTHING f rH1tylt • O'ltlll -Oily s9915 lrM Sllil'ts !St"'91 & SeMa) 50~ Oft Aggroltte Rip Curt -01ty SJOgts lrtt_. him (Strffes) 30~ Oft ' JICltts & Sweaters -25~ Oft SURFBOARDS BOY'S CLOTHING Starting at 1200" lzod Shirts -50% Off Jackets -40% Off I WOMEN'S WEAR -. H•ppy Holld•Y• 25-50% Off and much more El ONNDAILY NO a.m. • f:iO p.rn. • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 27, 1983 ~S Sea lion WE ASKED:-----------t World War I vets gets new lease Have you bought, or are you planning to buy your own telephone due to the Increase In rental rates after Jan. 1? • not gone Just on life By ~~ A11oclatecl Pfffl An unconscious 60-pound sea lion pup found washed ashore with a bullet wound to the head in 1982 was not expected to live an hour, but now he's a 300-pounder who's back on his flippers and ticketed for a new home in England. Bill Ford, vice president of Friends of the Sea Lion, an Orange County volunteer or- ganization that cares for injured marine mammals, said Trooper was "totally comatose" when found one summer morning in 1982. "We never expected him to last another hour. But he continued to last another hour and another hour," said Foret Members of the organ ization h ung the name "Trooper" on the sea lion, figuring it was ap- propriate for the pup that wouldn't give up. Ford and volunteer Lisa Clancey kept a round-the-clock vigil over Trooper aft.er veterin- arians determined that the bullet had glanced off his skull. The animal didn't move for four days. Finally, after receiving in- travenous glucose, antibiotics and vitamins followed by fish puree pumped into his stomach, Troo~r began to twitch his whiskers and flippers. Now he's ready to face the world -alm05t. M05t of the 360 sea lions and harbor and elephant seals treated by the Friends last year were returned to the Pacific once they recovered, but Cunningham said it appears Trooper suffered brain damage from his wound. Leel•nd Gray b•rtender, student Newport Beach .. Yes. I'm going to buy a phone. It's more economical than renting one · · Off Winegardner edltorlal •Hlatant Co1taMe11 "I already bought one from the phone company. They said 1t was more economical to own after the first of the year ·· Juan Gutierrez busboy and OCC1tudent • ,, .. Yes. a phone 1s a necessity and 1t · s more practical to buy one '' Caryn McKltten stained glaat artist Fountain Valley "I knew the prices on me use of our phones were going up last year. so I've been buying new phones on sale since then. I just bought one for $9 -not from the phone company -and It works great." Godfather's FV safe was really safe Woold-be thieves hacked the 0Yts1de of a sale to pieces a1 Godlather"s Pizza In Fountain Valley. but lalled to gel Into the interior compartment. acc:ordlng to pollce. AbOYt $800 In d!l~a~e was reported. Burglars forced their way Into a residence In the 16000 block ol San Jacinto Street and stole $9,,,6 1n cash. Jewelry. audio visual eQu1pment and miscellaneous items. . . . Someone unlocked a sliding glass door In the 18000 block ol Santa Isadora Street and stole a men·s Seiko wristwatch valued at $320 Thieves toolt money and a tele- vision set af1er forcing their way Into the Westhaven Veterinary Hospllal. 1616 1 Brookhurst St. Someone entered a reaidence In the 11000 block ol Stonecfess Av· enue atter breaking a lock 10 the garage door and stole a television M l, microwave oven and crystal valued at $648. Car thieves stole stereo eQu1pment and cun from a car parked at Cinco de Mayo Avenlda whlle the owner wu attending services at a nearby cilurctl. H u n tington Beach A holiday weekend burglary was reported Monday at a home on the 17600 block of Jacquelyn Lane. A rear alldlng glass dOOf was pried open to ente<. The Ion. es11mated at S660, Included a televl1lon set and a ate<eo. A blue 1978 Schwinn Spitfire bicycle was stolen Monday from lhe porch of a home on the 6500 block ol Peggy Circle. The loss was estimated at $175 Someone oroke Into a blue 1981 Pontiac Gran Prn1 parked Monday on the 16800 block ol Roque Lane Ttle loss included a stereo worth S'OO A while Chevrolet pickup truck wa1 reported stolen Monday lrom the t•OO block of Lakeside Lane. l'he loss was estimated at $5.000. A resident ol the 8000 block of lndlanapolls Avenue told po1ic. Mon- day that his home was burglarlxed some time within the put three weeks Entry was made through a rear upstairs window The lo" In- cluded camera eQulpment worth $550 A turquoise 1966 Ford Mu1tang was burglarized Saturday white parked on the 9600 block of La Crest Circle. The vehicle had been lett unlocked. A stereo radio worth S 150 was stolen. Someone broke Into a home on the 19800 block of Gloucester Lane on Saturday. Entry wH apparently made through a front 1Hdlng window. The loss Included $300 cuh and a television set worth S 150. A 1979 Ford pickup truck wH reported burglarized Saturday on the 300 block of 16th Street. The Ion Included a stereo unit worth $500. I nine Three Irvine homes In the we11ern portion ol University Park -• the target ol weellend Jewelry thieves. Ponce had llttle Information this morning on lhe break-Ina, occurring between Saturday night and Monday noon, where mo<• than $24 ,000 In jewelry. cash and weapon• wu stolen from horrwt1 on Lago Norte and Montanu Norte. Jewelry wu discovered taken Monday from a fourth home on WlndJammer In Woodbrldoe. An early morning drinker llole a six-pack of beef before 9 a.m. Friday. left as a gif1 for garbage collector• on Cypress Tree Lane. Costa Mesa A Colla Mesa woman who took her Jewelry out ol a aarety depo111 box so she could wear It during the holldays, reported someone broke Into her residence on the 1100 block of Dana Drive and stole the Jewelry H weU u about $500 In cash. The total losa came to $15,000. A croott apparently removed the front door to Coat• Mesa Sewing Center and took a $250 MW!ng machine. Polic. reported the bual· neu' front door hu been broken for about a year. A cat burglar pried ~ a aecond floor window ol a residence on the 400 block of Bry90n Spring• and toott $1,830 In atefeo equipment from the locked house. Sunny and wariner weather ahead Coastal Extended Temperatures •La II O'I .... .. 14 at oe ,. iO "n t7 14 ti M 21 '° H OI "" 11 .Of ,. 10 II IO • • II OI ,. OI la OI .. 11 ti 14 tf I I ., " ,, . Tides TOOAY ~-4otp ... e.oM!oo# 1011)'1"' --&DA ,.....,.. ... ... --11 ... ... ...... .)4, ... ..._.._ tOIJP"' 18 12 18 11 32 20 18 13 " 25 1S 11 43 14 11 14 14 07 14 03 SS ~ -06 ·ll 16 OI 40 3A ot ·10 .. ot Cit "'t ,, 11 33 21 " 11 33 :11 l5 14 40 10 ,. 14 64 46 n tt 65 6' n ,. 5t 21 21 2S 51 .. IS ot 13 ot " 20 40 ,. ,. 19 t 4 II 11 °' 26 It ,. 11 4"t JI 6S 42 " " u IO .. 11 II 10 21 or ,. JI 11 °' 21 11 ,. ot 11 ,. n '' It 11 " " 14 ., )1 17 =:: 11 10 41 14 ti ~ IO OI It '°' 10 N 11 M ti II n a n ts 11 ,. P•ulPrlce •ludent Newport Beach "I think I will. It makes more sense'as far as money is concerned. l'dlikeonefor apartment use." Ruth Spero artist Newport BHCh "I just happened to buy a phone. It was a good deal. The phone company advised us a w~le ago 1t would be more economical to purchase a phone from them rather than renting it. but I found a cheaper one from another company.·· 'slowing down' By Use A11oclated Preu The bingo games and parading have stopped, their numbers have been decimated by the march of Father Time, and now the last days of two World War 1 veterans' groups are ticking away with the approach of 1984. The veterans' organizations an the Leisure World retirement communities at Seal Beach and L.ilguna Hills will cease to e xist at tRe stroke of midnight on Dec. 31 ''We're just slowing down," says the Rev. Whipple Bishop, 89 The retired Unity Church minis- ter is chaplain for Seal Beach group, officially known as the Veterans of World War I. Barracks 2860. The chapter was organized m 1962. the same year the 6,500-home walled retirement community opened, and had 51 2 members a t its peak m the 1970s. Now the membership r05ter 1s down to 160 names, but only half paid their $6 dues this year and only 12 to 15 attend the monthly meetings, said former post com- mander Safety First, 89. He estimated 360 members have died since '62. The chapter used to sponsor a November parade through Leisure World on what members still call Armistice Day, but in- firmities ended that. "Old age was beginning to creep upon us. We couldn't march," said Larry Westerman, 88, one of the few remaining active members. Bingo fund-raisers for patients at Veterans Administration H05- pit.al in Long Beach stopped four years ago because of declining attendance and competition from activities sponsored by more than 200 other organizations al Seal Beach Leisure World, Bishop said. Come 1984, the only reminders uf Barracks 2860's charity will come from its ladies' auxlhary, made up of veterans' wives. First said they'll L'Ontinue their volun- teer work at the veterans hospital. At Laguna Hills Leisure World, the World War I Barracks 1116 veterans' group has 225 official members. but commander Steve Lally, 89. says just 14 or 15 still attend monthly meetings. "We just can't get enough officer material (to run the or- ganization)," Lally said. "They're pretty old, and not active enough to participate." When some members com- plained about driving at night. meetings were shifted to aft.er· noons, "but the attendance isn't any better." Lally said. Over the years the chapter has installed flags a round the com- munity and raised money to distribute television sets at the veterans' hospital, but even the bingo games that paid for intemaJ activities stopped about six years ago. First said the problem m Laguna Hills is the same as at SeaJ Beach: "We're JUSt too damn old." Top bicyclis ts slate d to vie in T em ecula race Bicyclers will have a chance to ride with some of the greats during a 124-mile ride from Anaheim Hills to Temecula. OV Schools get state grant for computers The ride, which starts at 7:30 a.m . on Jan. 8. will feature ultra-marathon cyclists John Marino of Irvine. the father of the Race Across America along with Michael Shermer of Tustin, hold- er of the Miami-to-Maine record, and Lon Haldeman of Harvard. m.. last year's winner of the grue ling Race Across America. The Ocean View School District of Huntington Beach has been awarded a $50,000 grant from the st.ate Department of Education to pursue educational television and compute r programs f or low-achieving students. wiU help teachers develop a model learning laboratory for disadvan- taged and remedial-level stu- dents. Registration begins at 7 am at El Rancho Junior Hi~h. Sant.a Ana Canyon Road in Anaheim Hills. Riders will cycle through Corona to Lake Elsinore and on to Temecula where they will tum around. The funds must be used to support new developments in educational technology, such as computers, video and educational television. The project will be launched using the computer facilities at Crest View School. The program will be made available to teachers throughout the state through the project's videotapes and instruc- tional handbooks. "It's not very hilly and it's very scenk . Even the casual nder would enjoy 1t," said Ro bert Hustw1t, ride director. Experienced riders can finish the course in about eight hours. Others should finish m 10 or 11 hours, said Hustwit. The one-year Ocean View pro- ject was selected from among many school districts' proposals. It UC Irvine Professor Alfred Bork will acts as a computer consuJtant to the district. This wa1 the home of the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse for 19 ye an, but the 0.-, ..... ,.,....., _. ...... theate r group finally will relocate to Rea Community Center in March. Curtain to rise on new theater Mesa Playhouse bidding not-so-fond farewell to fairgrounds By UREN E. llEIN Of .. .,.., ........ The Army recreational center a t the Orange County Fairpounda wu suppoeed to be a temporary facility foe RrYicemen stationed ln the area during WorldWarll. More than 40 yean later, the "temporary" building atill houaes ita latest full-time occupant. the Costa Meta CMc Playhou.e -at leut until next apriJ11. 'nie CMo Playhoute, which bu been he9d· quartered at tbefaifa:ro\&ndaaince lt opened ln 1965, la ~eduled to open lta March.play at a new theater. tn Costa Meta'• Rea Community Center. i....t week the C..ta Me. City Council apptOWd the fundl needed to ~te an auditorium •t the Ree Center ., the new theater can make lta pennlnent borne there. Pd 'hmbeWni, raident dlrtlctor of the play- ~ a1nm tt opened, said the sroup hu bMn 1obbytnt fot a beaer' t.heeter for 1'\Nl'ly 10 yean. "It'•~ thmt we•ve been •ble to mmintaln a loyal tollowlne over the years wlth th.la (hlll:Ootc>-ftnd) location," Tambelllnl aid. The ac1na bul1dbw · ._ awn~ fallinl apart with iermh• ~ Dd dw pdic.lnc •M always a problem, lheWd. But lt W'M the ~ of the P8clfk Arnphfth8ter '"rtcht out our beck door" that made the altumtkln at the play~ ID rrom bed to 4 desperate. "There is no way you would be able to hear anything," over the din from concerts at the amphitheater, Tambellini said. This year, the theater was dark during the summer whlle the concerts were being held, ahe aaid. But next spring, when the amphitheater opens its expanded aeuon. the theater's play tchedule would con!Uct with concerti. The playh<>Ulecurrently is a division of the city's leisure eervices department, Tambellinl said, but within the next few years the 200 paid members of the group hope to establlah a non-profit. independent atatua for it. They currently put on five showa a year. plus a aptdal chOd.ren'• show. 1he said, and they ho~ to expand to llx ahowt next year in the new facility. The new theeter. refurbished at a cost of f\fffly 1140,000, will haw 90 -.eata, a box office and a lobby. The new ... Una in the theater wUl really make a dlfterence, 'hm6eWnt Mid. Tht bleechtf'..etyle .. ta currently being u8ed wtre atr.dy wom out when they wett donated to the tbNtet' by t.on. Beech Qty CoUece years ago. The comfortable .attnc. improved •t.ace .,. and ample partdnc at the new theeter wiU be a pllend, Tambelllnl said. "1'hil ls really wonderful." ahe added. "It's aometh1.nc we·ve bMn holdina our breath over for such • •one tJ.mt." t • "• .· ~~ -or~~1~•T•"='""""-r.1~11,....,,.e-:r~=--=,...,....,....----------.----..... ,,.....,....,..,..._ ............ ._.._. .... ._.,.. 44 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, December 27, 11183 U.S. freezing while balmy Europeans bask Paris, Vienna enjoy sunshine FRANKFURT. West Germany (AP) -F'rom the AJpme foothills to the Baluc and across the northern pl1uns. Europe basked in one of its warmest Christmas seasons on record. __/ While m05t Americans shivered through polar cold and snow during the holidays. Europeans ' enjoyed balmy temperatures in the 40s and 50s or even higher. Rain clouds covered much of the continent, and gusty winds provided a reminder of wlnier, but there were penods of sunny weather in wide areas. Paris luxuriated in sunny. 57-degree weather. Belgrade reported a near-.summer reading of 64. And wild roses budded in the Swabian alps of West Germany. The mercury hjt 62.6 Monday in the Rhine valley city of Freiburg in southwest Germany. Flowers bloomed in Muruch. The West German Weather Service said the 57 degrees recorded Christmas Day in Frankfurt was the highest for the date in 58 years -warmer than last Easter. Elsewhere in Europe. Vienna and Geneva reported 55 degrees, it was 50 in Warsaw and 45 in Copenhagen. Even Helsinkj on the Baille Sea had an unseasonably mild high of 25. Skiers compwned of poor snow conditions in many areas of the AJps as a thaw set in at altitudes below 6,000 feet. ,.,.,,.,....... Laura Watson, Elisa Maselli and Marlo Maselli enjoy icicles fresh from the tree in Lufkin, Texas. Nation's freeze takes 290 lives By Uae Anoclated Pren Freezing rain, snow or sleet blocked travel across much of the Deep South today, with cities such as Birmingham, Ala., virtually isolated, while the death toll from De<.-ember's record cold wave reached 290. Forecasters offered little comfort to a nation numb with cold, but citrus and vegetable growers in Florida hustling to harvest crops iced by a killer freeze were spared another rught of temperatures in the 20s. Interstate highways and other roads were iced over and impass.able this morning across parts of northern Texas, northern Louisiana, southern Ar- kansas, northern Mississippi and northern Alabama as the icy weather moved into Georgia and South Carolina. Many accidents were reported on the· slick highways. "Driving is about impossible on all roads, major and secondary," said Rusty Cummings. a highway patrol dispatcher m New Albany, Mtss. ''UnJess you have a four-wheel-drive vehicle, you probably won't make it." In Birlningham, where even walking was difficult, the entire interstate highway system and several other major arteries were closed or im- passable in all directions. In the hilly regions of central West Germany, resort owners complained about slow business on the borne by winds from Africa prompted comphunts of slopes. Only a few areas reported enough snow for circulatory problems from many elderly people, good ~ country skiing. But the West German according to hospitals in Bavaria. Automobile Club warned drivers ag~t venturing German police attributed several auto accidents into the higher regions of Switzerland. Italy and to rain-slick streets, includjng a head-on crash near France without chains in the trunk. Hannover on Christmas Day that killed one person ''In ge neral, travel across north Louisiana is impossible this momjng.'' the National Weather Service sajd. All roads in the area from Mnroe to Arcadia were closed. including Interstate 20 and U.S. 80. In Shreveport, La., the Jimmy Davis Brodge and the Shreveport-Barksdale Bridge were closed. Snow was scattered from Washington to the Great Lakes, with almost the only good news a tin y temperature rise that pushed some states above freezing for the first time in more than a week. The sudden arrival of subtropical afr masses and injured six. ~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~-. Sale: Pure, Precious, Cas hmere. .. Originally s10 0, Now 69.90. •One of the softest. most luxurious touches in the world .. • •On sale now. crew necks and V-necks, as well as many orher styles. •A special collection in pastels and basic colors >#. for S,M,L. •Sweater Collections. r~may ha~been \. mt~1aie P"ce reductions on somt' rtems "''°' to this "'le Not every style m every colat and size m t'Yt'fv store South (Od\I Plaza. JJJJ Bris tol Street Costa Mesa Sale· Evan Picone's Best .. 25% to 50% Off Original Prices. •On sale holiday skirts, jackets and pants in rich flannel Originally '68 to '160, now 50. 90 to 119.90. • And, • whole collection of Ev•n Picone classics is now on s.le ... F•ll •nd holid•r sponswe.r that Includes sldrts, jackets, 1Mnfs, SWHtersmd blouSfl ...• 11 ., tremendous savlltfJl • Ev.,, Picone Collections. r here m.i y ha VI! bttn mterm«Jiate prtee reductlOfls on somt' lfMll """' to t'"' s.ale NOf ~style m e~ color and ,,,,. '" l'W"'Y st.,,. South CoHr Pl•u lJJJ Bristol Stl't!f'f. CCHr• Me.I. t Pope talks with his assailant ROME (AP) -Pope John Paul U met Mehmet Ah Agca in hts prison ceU today and called the Turk who tried to km him a "brother who enjoys my complete trust," Vatican officials said. The Vatican o(ficials, who watched the meeting with several guards from outside the open cell door. said Agca knelt and kissed the pope's ring at the. end of the encounter. They were alone in the cell for 21 minutes, sitting side by side on chairs. The offtdals. who briefed reporters on the condition they not be identified. described the meeting at Rebibbia as being "almost like a confession." They did not elaborate. Agca is a M05lem. They said the two men spoke in hushed tones in Italian and could not be overheard. It was their first face-to-face meeting. The officials said the 63-year-old Roman Catholic pontiff appeared deep- ly moved and quoted him as saying "I t.aJked with a brother who enJOys my complete trust." The pontiff was asked by television reporters who were allowed near the cell what they talked about. "That is a secret that must remain between me and him (Agca)," the pontiff replied. Agca is a serving a life sentence for shooting the pope May 13, 1981. The meeting followed a visit by John Paul with other inmates at the prison. Aft.er arriving to applause from Italian government and prison oCCicials, the popj! went to the chapel, where 500 prisoners wearing civilian clothes were waiting. TOP OF THI lllWS NATION Hope, entertainers back from L e banon By Ille A11oclated Pren McGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE, N.J. - Comedian Bob Hope returned to the United St.ates today with a pressing question on hlS mind after his Christmas tour off the coast of Lebanon ror U.S. troops. "Who won the Dallas game? That's what I want to know," he said to no one in particular as he stepped from the Ajr Force C-141 at this base in central New Jersey. The 80-year-old com- edian's 31st trip to entertain U.S. troops abroad ended as it began one week earlier, with Hope attending a news c.'Onferenc.-e with his stars - actress Ann JiUian, Miss USA Julie Hayek, Cathy Lee Crosby of TV's ''That's Incredible," singer Vic Damone, actress Brooke Shields and comic George Kirby. Ca n cer girl hospitalized KNOXVILLE. Tenn. -Pamela Hanulton, the 13-year-old cancer patient undergoing court-ordered treatment despite objections from her parents on religious grounds, is back in the h05pital after a Christmas visit home. Miss Hamilton, who was released Fnday from East Tennessee Children's Hospital, returned Mon- day night to conclude her sixth series of chemotherapy. Miss Hamilton's fathe r is a minister of a religious sect that forbids medi- cation. She began receiving treatments in September under orders of a Campbell County Juvenile Court judge. She is suffering Crom a Ewing's sarcoma, a football-sized tumor in her left leg. 200 flee apartments NEW YORK -About 200 people were forced to flee in freezing weather today after a section of lawn over an underground garage collapsed, endangering their apartment building. Fire Department spokesman Robert Asch said the courtyard of the 250-urut apartment house in upper Manhattan caved into the garage at 11:21 p.m. Monday and "put the building m danger of collapsing." Police reported no injuries in the collapse, which was caused by water seeping under the six-story brick building. STATE Animal 'kidnap' costly LOS ANGELES -The Animal Liberation Fron~. an animal-rights group that claim re- sponsibility for thefts of dogs and rats from medical labs in two states, has cost hospitals more than $100,000 and delayed research by a year, researchers say. The ALF, a nationwide group dedicated to eliminating the use of animals for medical experiments and for furs. stole 12 dogs from Harbor -UCLA Medical Center in Torrance on Christmas Eve and placed them with adoptive homes outside the area. said ALF spokeswoman Holly Jenson. Quad g aining weight RIVERSIDE -Quadriplegic cerebral palsy victim Elizabeth Bouvia, bent on starvation, has gained weight under a hospital force-feeding program. a doctor says. And doctors reported Monday a larger, firmer tube was being used because of the patient's resistance to feeding, which a court ordered over her opposition. The tube, which runs through her nose Into her stomach, carries liquid protein. Lizard vs. builders RANCHO MIRAGE -The endangered fringe -toe lizard is threatening to give the boot to developers in Southern Califomja's Coachella VaJJey, but a compromise may make the area livable for both man and beast. ''The potential is there to shut down all development in the Coachella Valley," said Riverside County Super- visor. Patricia "Cork y" Larson, whose district includes the lizard's 95-square-mile habitat. That habitat includes property in the growing desert communities between Palm Springs and Indio, where millions of dolla.(s in construction have been proposed. WORLD UNESCO plea issued PARIS -France has asked the United States not to withdraw from the Paris-balled U.N. F.ducational. Scientific and Cultural Or- ganization, authorized French sources said Monday. The officials, who by French custom could not be identified but were speaking for the government, listed two reaaons for the request: France's support for UNESCO's work and the fear that a U.S . wit hdrawal could undermine the universality of international organit.ationa. London shoppers out LONOON -Shoppera crowded into Lon- don's West End today for post-Christ.mu sales as Scotland Yard warned the bargain-seekers to keep "their eyes and ears open" to the threat of more IRA bombs. Press Aalociation, the Brttlsh news agency, said the throng of shoppers u the stores re-opened waa down from prevtous years. But Davtd Elliott, director of the blg Oxford Street store Debenhama, aald. "The number of people INide our store la growing very atead:ily .'' Two cannons stolen PARIS -Two men wearina rnuka beart.na the llkenete ot ~h Pre.ldent Franco6I Mitterrand stole two cannons trom a fre&,ht depot at Roltly Airport, poll<l9 Mid toda1. Otflcert Mid the 30mm o.MOna, which w.... dtlUned for an unklentllied buyer ln Spain,--. a10len Dec. 22 a.teer the two men overpowend an alrport M!CW'ity l\*'d. The weepona wwe Cllfttained tn \WO Cl'lta wh[ch lneludecl nelthllr the weepcna' ~nor lh.t.r amlbunldllin. of f.kWs aid, I I 1 Men of the Year Time Magazint• named Prf'side nl Rt"agan a nd o viel leade r Yuri Andropo v lo sha re the 57th a nnua l Ma n of the \'ear cover. The two, while po litiC'a l o ppo ites, we re n a m e d a · ne wsmakers who domina ted.fo r be tter or wo rse, the events of the past year. Andropov a no-show but his speech heard MOSCOW (AP) -The Com- murust Party Central Cornrruttee ended its two-day meeting today, and ailing Soviet President Yuri V. Andropov apparently missed the closing session as he had the opener on Monday. Radio Moscow announced the end of the meeting in a 3 p.m. ( 4 a.m. PST) news broadcast. saying the policy-making body had adopted economic plans for 1984. It made no mention of Andropov attending the second meeting, but noted he had sent word Monday that "temporar y cau ses" prevented hts attendance at the openmg. H as speech was read to the session. hne that has been worked out. .The most important thing now is not to lose the tempo and the general posiuve intent to get things going." He criticized inefficiency in scientific and technology projects and delays in manufacturing con- struction projects. He also noted that "with a shortage of many products on sale. h igh-quality raw and primary materials are wasted on the manufacture of products which are unmarketable." On Monday, the Central Com- mittee made fo ur appointments to the ruhng Politburo that sug- gested Andropov and his sup- porters are enhancing their con- trol of the Kremlin Reagan taking Beirut blame WASHINGTON (AP)-Presi- dent Reagan today took rt'Spons1- bility for permitting 241 U.S. servicemen to become victims of the Oct. 23 truck-bombing of a Marine Corps headquarters build- ing in Beirut. At a meeting with reporters shortly before starting a vacation trip to California, Reagan said local military c.'Ommanders should not be punished for failing to provide sufficient security be- cause they did not fully under- stand the threat posed by ter- rorists. -"If there 1s to tx> blame, it should rest in this offke and with this president," ~eagan said. "I accept this responsibility." A report issued last week by the House Armed Services investiga- tions subcommittee blamed all levels of the chain of c:ommand for permitting the lax security. It particularly smgled out Col Timothy J. Geraghty, then com- mander of the Marine peace- keeping unit, for ··serious errors 10 judgment in failing to provide better protection for his troops " But, without naming anyone, Reagan said 1t was unfair lo punis h local C'Ommanders for not "fully comprehending" the threat posed by terrorists. Reagan said a report issued by a Pentagon-appointed commission noted that by tradition and train- ing. U.S. militar y forces have not been prepared to deal with attacks by terrorists, "and I heartily agree." But the president said this should not compel the United States to pull out of Lebanon. saying, "the problem of terrorism will not disappear if we run from it." Under questioning, Reagan also said he dtd not want the loved ones of the servicemen killed in the blast to think that the lives had been given in vain. He also said there were signs that the Marines "were laying the foundations for peace" in Leba- non and said the nation "'is on the verge of national reconciliation." Andropov, 69, has not been seen m public since Aug. 18. He is reported to suffer from kidney and heart ailments. Despite his absence from the plenum, however. Andropov's political standing a ppeared intact Beirut airport shelled The broadcast stressed that Andropov's report and plans drafted for the economy "focus more than before on production e fficiency, on spending more funds on social needs and on doing all that is necessary to keep the nation's defense potential at the proper level." In his speech. Andropov said the Soviet economy had made progress but still suffered signifi- cant shortcomings He rec- ommended tighter labor dis- cipline, better planning, mo re responsibillty to managers and quicke r introduction of technical innovation. Andropov has constantly promoted such reforms since since he took power in November 1982, after the death of his predecessor, Leonid I. Brezhnev. in the text, he hailed the effect of changes in- troduced since then . "People have begun working with greater desire. The rates of economic growth increased, and quality indicators have somewhat risen," Andropov said. "All this confirms the correctness of the Israeli., three gue rrillas die in shootout BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) - Artillery shells s lammed into Beirut airport near the U.S. Marine base today, panicking some travelers a nd sending the Marines diving into bunkers. No casualties were reported at the airport, but in the por t city of Sidon in southern Lebanon, an Israeli soldier and three guerrillas were killed in a shootout after an Israeli patrol came upon guerrillas who were laying explosives. The Marines at th e Beirut rurport went on their highest st.ate of alert because of the shelling. Maj. Dennis Brooks, a Marines' spokesman, said 1t sounded as if three shells h it near the runway south west of the terminal build- ing. "Incoming and outgoing pass- engers panicked. There was a stampede from the tarmac for cover and many just dove on the ground," said the airpon -based reporter for the state radio. Also today in Beirut, the st.ate radio reported a roadside bomb exploded in the downtown shop- ping district as an Italian vehicle approached. No casualties or dam- age was reported in the e xplosion. Experts estimated seven pounds of dynamite had blown up. There were reports, mean- w hile, that Lebanon's largest Christian m1litia force, controlled by the Phalange Par ty. was offering to abandon military ac- tion in hopes its Moslem rivals would do likewise. A communique issued by the Israeli military command in Tel Aviv reported the killings in Sidon, but did not say who the guerrillas. were affiliated with or if any escaped. The communique said one Is- raeli border policeman was wounded and taken to a hospital in Israel. The artillery she lling came shortly after police said the latest civil war cease-fire was holding in Beirut. The cease-fire ended three days of fighting that pitted Lebanese soldiers against funda- me n talist Shilte Moslem mili- tiamen who control the southern suburbs of the capital next to the Sabra and Chatilla refuRee camps. •*"'*'42 s; Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, December 27, 1983 No Payments. Ne_) Interes t f:r NO Finan ce Charges until January 198 5! Plus 15-50% Savings on Everything in All Three Store s! SAVE 2Cflv ON ALL CENTURY FURN ITURE 1111' \.... h1mit'1111 CL1ll1•111m1 ccm1l11111 ~ I remit tlt>sru11 1m.>11b from thc 11cnod of LJJIH) XV "·1111 s1wcnii1 Hlllcfrm t.tchnoloau th us ruo1•1drna 1un111ur1' Clf C\ClUISl lt' Pt'tlUIU Lfuul11t1 umt pcm1c,1111•11u· . f ht' t UM tul>tllt'I llf tltt'f'TU '(il1J) ,111d i·eiicrrs ttllllt'S 111 two s1:c<- ttnJ ll'tJlurl'~ l>fh iit'll qllm r111•rtt'd 1md rd1t'l tt1rm1~s t.llld u UllllSltr litlhl The (ollrditm "'t.lS des1yncd t'\dll::-1\'d y ft1r Century f-un111Ur1' flu Rt1ymo11d So lloltA o111' of thr rnt>~I rt;srJrdrd designers in thr business 11 111cll1des bedroom dot1ng room t.ltld ln•111c1 room r1ru·s ull now t.im1lt1f1lr. at Chandler s r un11turt' al 20', of/ 0 < 'F:'\Tl 'RY Sale Ends Saturday 2 pm.! PAV IN 1985 Choose now. enjoy now and pay in lanuary 19851 Or pay now and enjoy a lffii discount ror cash Choose from Chandler's 55 million inventory of famous name fine furn iture and enjoy double savings-great financing and sale prices SAVE 15-50% Everything In all three stores 1s marked down 15-5ffi>. but only until New Years Eve at 2.00 p.m You·11 find the largest selection of Drexel. Heritage. Henredon Century and Thomasville in califomla. along with a mag- nificent collection of designer accessories. gathered from around the world Enjoy the New Year even more with furnishings and accessories from Chandlers. FINE FURNITURE BEST SERVICE EVER Chandler's experienced sales consulta nts will show you what we mean by guaranteed quality and service See us today! BEST TERMS EVER Our extraordinary financing terms give you 12 months free of payments. interest and finance charges Offer is subject to approved credit and 2at down. Minimum of 5500 purchase required. This offer does not apply to pur- ch ases made prior to December 26th or after December 31st at 2 00 pm nor to interior design 1obs. In January of 85. 1f you choose. you II have an additional two years to pay the balance through Chandler s revolving charge Pl"OWcl m. INTERIOR DESIGN · Santa Alta Main at IOtlt Sbrtt 714/542-6737 Santa Alta Mal" at 17tlt Sl1rtt 714/541 -4391 Ulg1ma Hiiis Nida Pbiw. & SD Fwu. 714/951-7101 Storr Hours. Dall~ 9:30 am. to 5· 30 p.m .. M0ttda!1 10 am to 7 pm . a"d Su"dall 12 "oo" to 5 pm. Rm11116tt ~II P..J wfwl !IC* ff ~"f pr ctl ClialWllt1~ Pini.st "°" s,,,claf closl119 llMt-2 00 p'" °" Nrw ~;s Ew • I -'I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 27. 1983 0 MAllBDX A l esson in th is somewh ere To the Editor: l'risis relocatton planning (CRP) I didn't realt~ how dose we The Garamend1 amendment, in- were to the "doublespeak" of troduced by Senate Majority OrweU's 1984 until I heard Irvine Leader John Garamendi, permits l'Oundlman David Sills state that no funding for CRP and with good the Orange County Advisory reason However, Jhe Garamendl Board on Civil Defense was look-amendment expires in June of ing for a platform to propagandize 1984, in which case crisis reloca- their view at taxpayers expense. uon plaruting will be incorporated ln reality, this group which Sills into an integrated disaster man- unputes with an ulterior motive, agement plan. How come coun- has come into being because cilman Sills doesn't see anything citizens are concerned about how sneaky about the government those very tax dollars are being trying to make nuclear war less spent. Sure. the Advisory Board1,,....threatening by equating it to an . on Civil Defense questions theV earthquake? wisdom of the Federal Emergency Have our values bec.'Ome so Management Agency in matters perverted that we ridicule pertainfng to nuclear war. That is mothers concerned about the fu- why they seek an open forum ture of their children -especially where all aspects of the tsSM can 1f they dare to question authority? be discussed. Well, maybe it isn't too surprising What's wrong wath an informed considering that the President. c1ttzenry that can make intelligent who sets the moral tone for the Judgements regarding their very country. expressed the view that survival? How else is government the position taken by the Catholic and our elected officials to be held B1Shops against nuclear war accountable? would reduce us to a position of With respect to Carol military and -would you believe Hopwood's comments; Yes. the -moral infenonty? AdvtSOry Board knows that the PH1LL1P CUTLER county is making no effort to do Costa Mesa A change for th e b e t ter Over the past 30 years of living and working in and around the city of Newport Beach, I have had many contacts with city hall Most of my time has been with the building department. r cannot say 1t was all unpleasant. but it almost always ended Wlth some type of frustrauon for me. Usually I would be there to ask questions pertaining to some homeowner's need and would end up by being told that no one in that depart- ment would be responsible for any answer they might give. That is to say. no one would if 1 could get anyone to even t.ake time from their phone or coffee or conversa- uons about their outside life to serve me. About six weeks ago I was again forced to confront thlS same den of indifference. Armed With What [ hoped was sufficient material to constitute a proper interruption in their day, I took a deep breath and walked right in. I have never been more pleasantly s urprised (shocked). I had barely reached the counter when two people interrupted their phone conversa- uons and let me know that they would be right with me . Within 60 seconds (by the wall clock) some- one else from one of the offices trotted up to see what he could do for me. He was extremely pleasant and after finding out what my problem was, he in- formed me that the city engineer would be right out to help me. Here we go [ thought, wait an hour and then find out the engineer is out to lunch. Wrong again, he came out almost like a Jack in the Box. In 15 minutes I was standing outside with my problem solved and aboolutely no frustration. 1 hope whoever is responsible for this change in attitude gets a chance to see this in prmt. They. as well as the very busy clerks in the office force, are doing a wonderful job. FRANK BEALL Newport Beach Daily Pilot welc omes le tte r s from r eaders The Daily Pilot solicits your views cm any matters of interest to our communities. If you wish to contribute to these pages, please send your letter legibly written or typed. Shorter letters will be considered first. Address such correspondence to: LETl'ERS To Tbe EDITOR, Dally Pilot, Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA., tHH. Please include your name, address and telephone number. If you prefer, you may call in your letter to the We're Ll1telling special telephone number ... 64%-1081. Be sure to leave your name, address and telephone number so that we may verify your comments. L M. BDJd /Mixed image Police in West Berlin have been authorized to wear neck.laces outside their uniforms, if they so wish. Think of that! Did you see the sergeant with the rope of seashells? Believe he would've looked better in a pearl choker. A medical researcher in the Philippines contends the Kalachuchi plant cures herpes. but it's an undocumented claim. Can't count on it. Don't call yourself a skillful knitter, if you can't make 100 sut.ches a minute. Co11ege basketball leam.5 typ1- callywin about two-thirds of their home games. Q. Who was the fu-st American playwright to make a living at it? A Howard Bronson. You say you never heard of him? He turned out "Saratoga" in 1870, and earned enough to get by Truckers with Citizens Band radios were not the first to JOln forces to avoid speeding tickec.a. The U.S. AutalYl(}blle AasociaUon ORAHGE COAST l1ilyPilat organized in 1905 specifically to spot police traps and warn its members or same. Q . Which president was the tallest -George Washington. John Adams or Thomas Jef- ferson? A Jefferson at 6 'eel. 2 '12 inches. Washington wait.6 feet 2. The widespread Adams at 5 feet 6 was known to some then as "His Rotundity." Play the tape of a piano solo backwards and It sounds like an organ Farmers are motivated to donate whea~ to Washington State Unlvenlity. Such kindness in the amount of 150 bushela is rewarded wtth two 1eason lickec.a to the school's football games. The donated wheat then (a IOld to raiae money for athletic !ICholararups. And these, In tum. are expected to attrACt the caliber of athletes who'U give the wheat Canners some preuy good aames ' . . • . • • • ~ Industry set own safety rules WASHINGTON The chemical industry secretly drafted American foreign pohcy on safety requirements for chem1calssold in the Western world. This startling conspiracy 1s dis- closed m State Department and Environmental ?rotecuon Agen- cy documents, which were in- tended for ofhctal eyes only. But my asoociate Jock Hatfield has seen some of the suppressed evidence. The evidence has also been laid before the House sden<.-e and technology subcommittee whose chairman, Rep. James Scheuer, D-N Y . had planned to hold hearings last October. But he wasn't able lo corral crucial Stat.e Department and industry wit- nesses. They are understandably reluc- tant to answer the embarrassing questions they know Scheuer is waiung to ask. But he'll try again to hold hearings early next year. Insiders t.ell me, meanwhile, that the chemical industry is "scared to death" that the evidence will be made public. This ts exactly what I now intend to do. The suppressed memos reveal that the Chemical Manufacturers Association, an industry trade group, helped write U.S. policy for last year's talks with our Western industrial partners in the Orgartii.ation of Economic Cooper- auon and Development (OECD). European members of the G.~ J-IC-1-11-11-11-11--~- OF.CD had hoped to win U.S. approval lor strict tests of toxicity before a new chemical could be marketed in member countries. But U.S. insistence on looser safety requirements effectively scuttled the negotiations. The chemical industry objected to the Europeans' stricter safety tests, complaining that they would be too costly. The Reagan adminis- tration supported the chemical makers. A memo dated May 25, 1982 -six months before the OECD meeting in ParlS -makes clear that the U.S. pro-industry position was no fluke. The memo was written by Jack Blanchard of the State Depart- ment's Office of Environmental Affairs to Harry Marshall, the deputy ~isl.ant secretary for environmental affa.JI'S. It frankly acknowledges that the language of the U.S . proposal was prepared by the Chemical Manufacturers Assoctation and "met U.S indus- try conceM\S." The memo states that the indus- try-inspired position paper was forwarded through European channels for eventual presen- t.ation at the Paris conference. But Blanchard's memo was later pen- cil-edited to su~est that the chemical association's draft was official U.S. position amounted to actually the work of an EPA "wordsm1thing" and not dictation official. of foreign policy. · Scheuer views this revision as ''a transparent and flagrant at- lA:!mpt by the individuals in the administration to conceal the fact that the chenucal industry itself was drafting this country's inter- national chemical policy." Blanchard now says he was confused when he wrote the. memo and insists that the U.S position at the Pans confere nce did not originate with the chemical industry. But another memo, written to EPA's then international activities director, Richard Funkhouser, admits that the government's position was rewntten from the industry's "suggested language," while "tak- ing account of the above CMA suggesuons." Don King, director of the State Department's office of en- vironment.al affairs, has cor - roborated the two embarrassing memos. In fact, he said that the chemical industry not only drafted the policy proposals, but had veto power over the hnaJ text He said industry representatives reviewed the State Department's final draft at a luncheon meeting and later gave it their seal of approval. "but if they had said no, 1t would have been no" Footnote: A CMA spokesman said his group's contribution to the NO RED ALERT: The FBI has cleared the American peace move- ment of charges that 1t IS com- munist-dominated ln a recent update on the situation, the FBI confirmed its congressional testi- mony of a year ago. The update was sent to Sen. Jeremiah Denton, R-AJa. "The FBI has documented overt and covert Soviet active measures to influeoc-e the U.S. peace move- ment," the report st.ates. But. 1t adds, "there IS no eVJdence that the Soviets or the orgaruzattons they control have a dominant role in the U.S. peace movement" The re are some Sov· 1et-rontroUed groups. the FBI said, but they "consutute only a few of the literally hundreds of orgamzations that comprise the contemporary U.S. peace move- ment" The Kremlin realizes this, the update points out. "The Soviets recognize that their U.S.-based front groups have credibility problems and do not have the strength or support to l'Ontrol or dominate the movement," the report states. It's not for lack of trying. apparently. All the top brass of the U S. CommurtlSt Party are active- ly involved in the peace move, ment. the FBI warns. Credit man for Condor comeback By RUSSELL W. PETERSON Ata time when humanac- tivitiesare threatening life every- where, it's heartening to see Homo sapiens performing as stewards of Ufe, using science and technology (and commonsense) tosavea fellowcreaturefromextinctlon. 1983 was a banner year for the endangered Cali fornla condor thanks to the Condor Recovery Program. a cooperative feder- al/state/private e(fort that has surpassed its own highest hopes of just a year before. Annual surveys earned out by the recovery team have shown the remnant flock of California con- dors to be declining at an average rateof,two birds per year. The wild population cu rrently numbers about 20. AB every wildlife biologist knows, this is dangerously close to the genetic point of no return. But here's the good news. The recovery team has in just two years built a captive flock of n ine birds, up from the lone. longtime occupant of the Los Angeles Zoo. Topa Topa. Seven birds were added in 1983alone. When a species is as close to oblivion as this one. a jump of more than 30 pen..-ent in the world population ina single year isa cause for rejoicing! The dramatic increase in Cali- fornia condors is largely due to the bird's tendency-discovered only this past year-to produce a second and even a third egg to replace thoee removed by the recovery team. In 1983, four e~ were taken from condor nests. All were auccessfully incubated and hatched at the Avian Propagation Center of the San Diego Zoo. It now appears that the release of young condors to augment the wild population could start as eary as 1985, which is at least five years ahead of the original release schedule. And when captive breeding begins around 1990, the team may be releasing as many as 10 to 15 birds annually. Additional headway was made in 1983 because of radio-telemetry. Tiny solar-powered transmitters were attached to the wings of two wild condors whose travels were then monitored from the ground and lhe air. From this we learned more In one year about the condor's life-style and habitat require- ments thaJ) in many previous years of field study. The recovery team al.ao Ident- ified an 11 ,000-acreranch that serves as prime foraging habitat for the wild f1ock. The ranch, it Some fine points of thought THOUGHTS AT LARGE: Before we condemn someone as a "fanatic," we should ask ourselves if he is not the same man we would honor as a "martyr" If he gave up hia life for IOmething we just as strongly believe In. Most people who complain that there are "too many laws" don't really want fewer lawa -· they simply want different laW1, providing more liberty for them- .elves t.f'd mo~ l"fttricuonA against thoee who dl .. gree with them. Whenever I lff a product whoee package proclaims boldly: "New and Improved.'' t ~n '°wonder vagu~ly what wu wrong with the old product. ''Can you keep a eecnt?'' ia a quest on that Invariably tarmarka a penon who can't. • .... ~· ¥': .... ~ -IYllD--1-,-.. -.--'f, The moet at.urd mbnomer ln televllton ahowa ia "Real ~ple," which NHS ltl holta (and boltell) the most unreal people who can be lmagined. "Shrink" II a atupid alang word for a piydilalJ"itt; a bid one doetn't ahrlnk your h~lld. but ICA!p1 li; while a aood one 11.mply help1you,....,...the1tufUnp. The.-. could hardly be a man pro~~= to heed Uw wordl of Smith, the dia- d,,,w.hld Anm1c:IU\ ......... wbocanctud.d ,_...., lhll "No other rector In hlat«y, not "'*' reupon. bM pndimd IO fMnY wan • hll thl dalh ac .. daml ~IMed&dbJ *hemmed palriotlain." The wont tyranny is the tyr- anny of the majority. for the majority ts almost always wrong ln the ahort run, though right in the lon, nm -and the time required to chanae equ.11 the amount of freedom of 9preaaion granted to l\I minorities. c.on.etvattves &ive the lm- pi :mion of .being ofd \00 IOOI'\, juat .-radlcall slve the lmpremon of betna yoUJ\I too lq. (Someone like Qeorwe Will, for lN\anee, eeema to · have been born thin· upped and cona\Jpat.ed.) LcJcic by J..it hu newr dwaneld ~·· mind •bout a IUbjlct ol penona1 ~;It II a UMful tool or\Jy for metien wt do nal care much about. turned out, was about to be converted intoa housing develop- ment. Movingswiftly,con.serva· ti oms ts encouraged Congres.s to appropriate funds for acquisition of this critical tract. Despite the suddenly improved prospects for the California con- dor. and continued strong support lor the program for professional omi thologists. the recovery effort still has its critics. Some are philosophically opposed to cap- ture and captive breeding, and to radio-telemetry research. They call for a "hands off' approach to the condors, contending that habi- tat protection alone is sufficient to save the species. Some even suggest that the California con· • dor's time has come.and that we should let thiaancientcreature exit gracefully withoutsubjecting 1t to the indignities of handling, radio-tagging, and (for some) cap- tivity The other view, which the National Audubon Society shares. holds that it was man'adeatructive intervention over the put century that nearly exterminated the bird. It ls thereforeourobUgatlon to do all In our power thJ"OUlh poeitlve intervention to restore thia and other beleaguered •peclet while there tutlll time. Slmllareffortl on be halt of the pettgrtne f alicon, bald MQle and whoopln& craM have already ahown that It can be done. When the condor ~very pro-vam wu launched four yean ago, it wuclearlya lqahot-an all-out, lMl-dltch effort wlLh only an oucaldechanceof ~It now~ Uk.ty that the propwn will IUCXftd. It ttdoa, lhe 11'91l blrd wtLh I'-J.foot wi.ne1Pan wW continue IO .,.l"OY'el' tbi CalJ. f oml.I mountalJ-. a llviftl IYft'bol tNt mankind laOIJ)ebleOf cornct- (J'\l ICll'M Of tu eerUer~ ba\lnden.. ' 111CUBT111111 caum TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27. 1983 ANN LANDERS ENTERTAINMENT TELEVISION 8 2 83 84 U/' all 1Jw mi1'iu11d<•rstood peuple in this world, th~rf• ;~ 1w mw a~ 1111Jligned alt 1he "s1a11di11g" at the llf•1wty 'hop. wlio to the uutside world, is u 111011umr 11t l o .-tmily, allowing nothin~ lo stand in tlw M-HJ' of hN · .. ·eeld y UJJ1'0i111111e11t. ee U2. 0 I ~ D lfyoa'regoing oatforNew Year's There's still time to make reservations Staying in to ring in the new By BEVERLY BUSH SMITH D .... -C.,,_......I If you'd rather rang out the old whale staying m: Why not leave the cooking to someone else? Here are some elegant sources of take-home food. (broccoli sauteed in olive oil. with mushrooms. prC*'.iUtto, parmesan); linguine pescatore (with dam sauce and shrimp); veal marsala, shrimp diablo. breast of chicken Fassaro (bonel~ breast of chick.en with prosciutto and cheese, sauteed, an sauce of butter, marsala and mushrooms.) Phone 673-3750. That night of nights forlifting a cup with old acquaintances dra~s nigh. In fact, New Year's Eve is so nigh that there's just time to make your restaurant reservauo\15. Will you choose a multi course pre-fixe dmner or w1U you com- bine dining with dancing? Will you sup by the sea or sip your way through a "marathon'' of wine. music, and food from seven dec- ades? The choices are many. Here are a few you might con.sader. Maxwell's by the Sea, 317 Pacific Coast Highway, Hunt· ington Beach (536-2555). for ocean front dining, offers three seatings. Come at 5, 7 or 9 p.m. and order from a special holiday menu with dinners from $15 to $20. Dance to a live band in the main dining room. $10/person prepaid for reser- vations covers hats, noisemakers, champagne toast. Showley-Wrlghtson. 2:531 F.astbluff Dr., Newport Beach, that ''complete service gourmet boutique," prepares such holiday goodies as standing rib of beef, fresh roasted goose, boneless leg of lamb in the French manner, authentic plum pudding and their specialty, Panafortedi Siena, an ltahan fruitcake whose origins date to the tame of the Medici in Florence. Their special suggestion for the New Year: cassoulet, with pork ribs, confit of duck, country sausages and slab bacon accom panied by slow -coo k ed , stock-and-wine-rich white beans. Your advance order is recommended. Call S haron or Grant at 760-9701. Rothschild Cheese & Wine, 2407 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. In addH1on to the variety of pates and cheeses in the deli case. any menu item may be ordered to go. You may even bring in your own serving dish and have at filled with 'lU<'h ciPlicacies as rigatoni ron br()('('oli What's Cooking Expr~ Cwsine, 298 E. 17th St., C.OSta Mesa. Select from a lovely display of Italian foods, all made on the premises: lasagne. canneloni, manicotti, elegant pasta salads. (They make their own delectably Light. pasta.); chicken. meats and fish done on the rotisserie. You may also find fusilli .':fith duck sauce, chicken with orange sauce, qua1P, roast pork. And they can prepare "almost anything" for you on 24 hours notice PS Don't miss th1er own satiny gelato; you may never be sat1sf1ed with plain old American ice cream agam. Phone 645-5505. The Bouzy Rouge Cafe, 3110 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach (673-3440) becomes a "Wine and Time Machine," offering sips of famous wine vintages from the 1920s (1926 Haut Brion), '30s (1934 Clos de Lambrays). '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s and '80s. The New Year's dinner, prepared by chef Henri wiU feature seven courses to complement the wines, aad the Bouzy Rouge Cafe disc jockey will spin music from the decade of each wine. (Yes. there will be room for dancing.) A magician will tum water into wine and perform at tablesides. The tab: $150 plus tax and tip, includes a bottle of champagne for each couple -to clear the palate! The Newport Marriott Ballroom, Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach (640-4000. ext. 6104) begins its festivities with a filet mignon and lobster tail dinner. Continuous music features a Las Vegas show band and the Society fort.he Preservation of Big Bands. The price of $75/person, paid in advance, includes un- limited cocktails and wine from 8:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m .. plus cham- pagne at midnight. And if you'd prefer not to drive after all that, you may stay overrught in the hotel on 12131 for $100 If you'd like to make a weekend of it, the room rate for 12130 and 1/1/84 is $75. At The Westin South Coast Plaza (540-2500, ext. 477) you may usher in the year in either Alfredo's or The Orange Grove Cafe. Alfredo's entertainment will again feature singer Enzo Salvaggi. Doors open at 8 p.m. and the gourmet dinner will be served at 9 $75 per person includes midnight champagne service, party favors and souvenirs. The Orange Grove Cafe will present a country western theme with music by a western band that plays dance tunes as well. Hours are 8 p.m . to 1 a.m. $35 per person covers a mulU-<"Ourse dinner, mid· night champagne, party favors and souvenirs. Disco dance music will also sound forth in the Westin's Blue Unigae unity_ A rule of conversation At Huntington Beach Seaclilf Country Club last week. 300 women gathered who have acheived unity through a unique rule of conversation -never any talk of age. weight or church affiLiallon. The1rcominon bond is a love for the Christian way. and what better way for the Huntington Bel)ch Christian Women's Chlb to rejoice and be glad than gather for a holiday party full ,of sisterhood? Chairman Glnny Brelr has been Wlth the club since it began in Huntington Beach (Ir belongs r.o a national network) 10 years ago, and is presently enjoying her second consectuive year as head of the group. "We meet monthly at Seacliff and enjoy luncheon. a professional musical offering and an inspirational talk," she said. A club with an unusual framework -no dues or mem· bership -HB Christian Women encourages all visitors to bring new friends to each meeting. These ''first timers " are given corsages (pastel tissue fashioned inro roses) created by Margle Tayne, fondly known as the club's "flower lady." Monthly spon.110rs of the Giuy Brelr most new visitors are given complimentary lunches for two - donated by Seaclfff. With the theme, "All Dressed Up For Christmas," (each meeting has a differenr theme) the women enjoyed a holiday fashion show volunteered by Braada Galllfent who coordinated fashions from her boutique and did the commentary. Club models Carol MercbaDt, Lavomae Franz, FrankJe SmJda, Evelya Herrtag, Mary Swor and JoAD Smitlt sported faahioN appropriate to~ morning, afternoon and evening. MUlical accompanist was Ariane Ambrose who played on a magnillcent $17,000 organ loaned the club by SnoWI Piano and Organ of Santa Ana. In the audience (and also on the dub board) were Rolemary Bartoli. Marceline Slater, Ela.lite ~tell••· EUeo Browa, Jiilie Kauer, An.Dene Mobley, Delea lllce, Hele11 Laqlola, Jeu R1111ell, PlilylU1 Bnce, Bella My1llu1kl, Bemee AlJu, Betty Hancock, Laarte Dorman and Ge~a Poat. Luxury supper crulee A cocktail and 1Upper cruile llboard a luxury y.cht wu the treat Delma C«poration of Hunt.ln£1.on s..ch bad In 11are for corporate penonnel whm they· were Mked to pther at 1 destination in Long Beach one niaht lut week. The delignted groupcrulaed f>ort of Long Stach waters before traveling to Huntingion Harbour where they enjoyed the acclaimed crul9e of Uahta. • Gathered few the holiday pttina-away-frorn-lt·all ventu.tt were R*rt and Carol ZiMp'abe, Pee.er and LlMNy Stffablieck, T091 and NJkkl 0.Uot, Tlm and la"9n Butold, BW aod Olqer Stnnau, Dave Bnttlltt, Peny and 1Ua Bnvu, Recty and Hagle Mcltceu and ltn and CIMJ Remkla. PAP~RAZZI II edited by S tyle Edlf«' VIDA DEAN w11.h contrtbCJBom from Hunclnp>n 8McJr corrtspOndvtt ANN <XJN. WAY. • You may also order for take-out at the original What's Cooking, 2632 San Miguel Dr., Newport Beach (644-1820). Parrot lounge. A minimum $5 cover includes finger sandwiches and champagne at midnight. Antonello Ristorante, South Coast Village. Santa Ana (751 -7153) celebrates with an Italian feast. There will be two seaungs, with the first at 6 p.m. offenng the regular a la carte menu and pnces. The second seating at 8:45, features a five-rourse fixed menu at $65 per person. Dinner begins with appetizers of deep fried mozzarella cheese in carrozza and scampi in anise sauce. The entree will be vitello ala Necci (rack of veal with manicdole.) French Moet Chandon will be served at midnight and you may dance to an Italian band till 1:30 a.m. At The Ritz, 880 Newport Ce-nter Dr , Newport Beach (720-1800). you may choose be· tween a 6:30 and 9:30 seating. The menu will be the same -a choice of five enlrees, such as Christmas goose or rack of lamb: four apptizers and four desserts. Price for the first seating is $35 and for the second, $60. For your extra $25 you enjoy five strollinR violins, a jazz combo and dance floor and party favors. Registry Hotel, 1800 MacArthur, Irvine (752-8777) caps the hohday season with a six-cour se din ner i n its French-style restaurant, Le Chardonnay Offerings include quail eggs an a nest of spaghetti sauce. scampi in saffron sauce, supreme of duck with poached pears. At midnight, Perrior Jouet champagne will be served from Methusala bottles. Guests will be given exotic party favors and can dance to the music of Fred Carrol and his band. $65 includes tax and gratuity. In the Registry's Cafe Gazebo. $30 covers dinner (including ap- petizers, choice of four en trees and dessert). two cocktails and mid- night champagne toast. You may also move on to the Chardonnay lounge starting at 9 p.m. The Newporter resort hotel. 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach (644-1700) suggests two ways to toast the New Year -in La Palme or The Wine Cellar. Festivities begin at 6 p.m. in La Palme for a single-seating ~ ..... ...._., '--...,_ JoA n Smith and Mary Shanor modeled dresses. Mother-daughter act by Sue and Lisa Pohl. Joell Fitch, Kelly Carriere and Nancy Sherman. seven-course menu of California Cuisie. Entree selection includes grilled saddle of lamb with tangerine sauce or roast veal rib eye with truffle Madeira sauce. Classical guitarist Greg Coleman entertains and the $65 tab includes party favors and champagne. Int.he Newporter's Wine Cellar, the evening's eight-course feast opens with fresh truffle en croute. The entree. filet of veal creme d 'oignon,. will be followed by petite salad melangee, an assort· ment of French cheese. chestnut charlotte with rum sauce, petits fours secs. The price is $75. Dinner guests are invited to continue celebrating to live music in the Library Lounge or the Plau ballroom. Complimentary party favors and champagne toasts wall be offered at midnight. For those who prefer not to dine but wish to join the Newporter's festivities and dancing, there will be a $22 cover charge for the Plaza Ballroom and $10 for the Library Lounge. Women journalists See new op.portunities By JOAN BRUNSKILL NEW YORK -A new book offers encouraging words from a group of women journalists in the vanguard of change and sharply aware of its opportunities and challenges. "New Guardians of the Press," edited by Judith G . Clabes, is subtitled "Selected Profiles of America's Women Newspaper &ii tors." It consasts of 13 profiles, each written about herself by a woman editor -one of them Clabes. The women have one thing in common: great enthusiasm for their work. Otherwise. they represent the widest spectrum of situations, in the newspaper they work for, their education, experience and personal style. There's Jennifer J . Allen, editor of the 11 ,000-circulation Daily Sun, Corsicana, Texas: Clabes, editor of the 118,000-cirt'ulation Sunday Courier & Press, Evanavil.le, Ill., and Nancy Woodhull, a planning editor of USA Today with its circulation of more than a million. From their diversity the conclusion reached is that there is no one way to succeed; there are no rules, and increasingly no limits to what a woman journalist's aspirations may be. The use of the word "new" ln the title signifies more than anything change. above all change in the numbers of women editors getting to th e top in journalism today. Of course there have been women editors before, and aome of thoee who write here are by no means new to their positions. · The number of women editors is still small but it is growing. ''Female college students outnumber males," writes Clabes in her introduction. "Females outnumber males, period. Female journalism students outnumber males. It makes sense that practice will catch up with reality." All acknowledge that there is a long way to go and that a great deaJ of effort is still needed, until the time when no one will any longer find reason to put tqJether such a book as this. What does it take? "Hard work," says Linda Grist Cunningham bluntly. Cun- ningham, executive editor of the Trenton. N.J., Times, says she always wanted to be a teacher. She swl~hed. Now she's abo a mother -who U9ed to telephone her baby sitter 80 she could hear her baby cry and gurgle -and she deals in detail with the problems of combining family and career. "Failure has never been a word ln my vocabulary." writes Allen, a pumal1sm major whoee fonnaUve yean led to an early love affair with journalism. "There wu another child ln the family.'' says Judith W. Brown, looking beick. "It wu the newapaper and aomeUmes it got more attentJon than I did ." The newapaper is the New Britain, Conn., Herald, of which her grandfather wu one of the founders, and of which she ta now editor and publ.laher. Another editor for whom lt'a In the family la Barbara C. White, who ~ecibes henelf aa "one of 1 dlsappearlng breed -a member of a Mom •nd Pop team wMch runa •family-owned newspaper." Her paper ia the Meriden, Conn .• Record-Journal. Then there ii Ann Far-.bu, ed1tor of the Herald Banner, Gttenvllle, Teua. who writel that when lhe wu wu making c~r plans. belng a newspaper editor wu not an altemetlve she r:ons!df'red -"And no one w• more IW'priled than I wbm t became a reporter." Nancy Woodhull ..U. how abe bepn to breek the rules by not Cinllhinl coiJece and by taktna • job u proofreader on a local newspaperinl\Md. Sheatill bellevee thatent.hua!.umand tnt.ell~ OOW\t for mcn thin "°"•· Luck aan count. too, llCl.'Of'dinc to Beverly Keea, executive editor of the Orand Forks. N.O., Herald. But. "I have fllW"t'd out th.at tbe luck that lbt ,_ varloua jbbl over the yara wu invariably prompted by my own llC'tlona," ahe comment&. • i -...... --------------------------------------------.... --------.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Oeoember 27, 1983 r flMA IOMlfCI Holiday blues ••• Christmas prese~ts lack meaning AT WIT'S·END Her 'standing' valued highly Of all the nusunderstood people in this world, there is no one as maligned as the "standing" at the Beauty Shop. To the outside world, she ts a monument to vanity who allows nothing to stand in the way of her weekly appointment. Take the "12:15 Tues. Standmg" in Waro, Tex., whose daughter wrote recently about her "weird" mother. "My earliest recollection is of my mother going to her hairdresser," she wrote. "If Mother Nature laid a blizzard on us and we couldn't shovel the car out of the driveway, Mom loaded us onto a sled and away we went. "At other times when the car wouldn't start. we called a cab. In more recent times, I let her borrow my car. Forget the fact that it was raining. Forget that when the civil defense sirens went off because a tornado was sighted a few blocks away, she refused to move from under a dryer. "I went into labor, heaven help me. on Tuesday! DEAR ANN LANDERS: For a aeuon that l.S suppoeed to be jolly and evoke feelinp of good wUl, Christmas surely m.laaes the mark in our hou..e. lt would not be an exaggeration to aay Christmas is the mott exhauating, depressing time of the year. When I recall the gifta we gave, I become more depressed yet. But what does one give to a cousin whoee daughter has leukemia. a neighbor with a cerebral palsy aon or my own two nephews who have a reading disability? Ia there an appropriate gift for parents of a teen-ager with serious emotional problems, or who ls legally blind or hearing-impaired? What does one give a cousin who just gave birth to a Down's Syndrome child? Or our next-door neighbors, whose beautiful daughter will be in a wheelchair for the rest of her life? Or another neighbor with a dlabetic aon? If you have any suggestions that might educate me or cheer me up, I would be ever ao grateful. - FEELING LOW IN LONDON, ONT. Dear F.L.: Sorry you didn't wrlte ln November, I collld bave solved mlDy of yoar Clari1tma1 gift problems by recommendin1 tlaat yoa send aab1crlp- tlon1 to a maaad.ne called "Tbe E1ceptJoaal Parent." It la pabll1bed bl-montbly ud la tile finest publication of lt1 kllld. "The Exceptional Parent" baa a rticles by dl1tlaplllted Htltorttlu as well a1 ordinary, everyday parents wboae cblldrea are b.Ddlcapped (pby1lcaly or emotloaally) or laave ID lllae11 that cblD&et tbe llvea of everyone ln the family. It features apbeat, aapportlve artJcle1 by parents wbo are Uvtnc wltb problems tllat wm never 10 away. They would resent It If you called tbem "lterolc," bat tJaey seem ao to me. Anyone interested ln a aab1c rtr.tton 1bould write to Dr. S&a.Dley Klein, editor of 'Tile Excep- tloaal Parent," 105 Commonwealtla Ave •• Boston, Ma11. OUU. I cu't quote a rate 1lnce Cuadlan price• are·dUferent, 1Dd llldlvldaal1 alto pay a rate different from tlaat cbarced libraries ud orcuJza. tlon1. I cu tell you, bowever, lt la MUST reaclhag for all tho1e with a b1Ddlcapped chUd. It coald claange their Uve1. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: This may seem like a a.Illy complaint compared to moat 1ou receive, but l am diagualed and muat unload on aomeone before I explode. Within the put couple o! yean, supermarket checkert, elevator operators, wait.era, bWI driven, recepUonl.sta, meter-readers, parking lot attendanta -almost everyone who meets the public -have ta.ken to calling me Honey, Sweetie, Baby, Derlihg and Sugar. Yesterday, a garage mechanic called me Doll. I am a 51-year-old grandmother who considers such intimacy vulgar. What should I say to let these clods know I don't appreciate their familiarity? - L.A. HERALD-EXAMINER READER DE AR READE R: Yoa could say, "My ume 11 Mrs.----," wbich would create a sudden cltJU ud 1>9t ID end to 1ucb greetings. But, to be perfectly fraak, I am a lot older tlaan you ud I don't mind tlaem a t all. • • • Ann Landers' n ew booklet, ''Sex and the Teen-ager," explains every aspect of sexual behavior -where to draw the line, how to say no, the various met.hods of contraception, the dangers of VD, the symptoms and where to get help. For a copy, send $2 and a long, sell-addressed, stamped envelope (37 renrs postage) to Ann Landers.. P.O. &x 11995, Chica.go. Ill. 60611. Thank goodness, Mom's grandchild had the sense to wait until 2:15 to be born so Mom's hair would look great! I don't understand her." Of course you don't understand your "weird" mother, and you won't until one day when you have locked yourself into a bathroom and a pen and note come slowly under the door. The note reads, "URGENT! CAN I SPLIT A PEPSI? CIRCLE ONE: Fear of flying ••• Pilot, plane failure top concerns Yes. No. Not if you live to be a hundred. ANSWER FAST!" This is the day you will begin to consider where you can go that no one can follow. And once you have found this Shangri-la, you will never be the same person again. Beauty shops aren't sticky. The phone rings all the time but you don't have to answer it. The magazines are whole and don't have crayon marks across the pages. Everyone there has worse kids than you have and more problems than you do. You always feel thinner than when you came in. And se)(ier. And richer. And childless. You can sleep under the dryer with your mouth open and no one cares. You always have a feeling that God has just given you a second chance to be a legend in your own time. The other day Mother called and said, ·'Want.a go to the Beauty Shop with me? They've got two 11 o'clock appointments open." I checked my calendar. ''I have menopause penciled in for 11, but I th.ink I can trade with Marj. You're on." If you don't understand that, then you're hopeless. FOR MR. J .: The fear of flying -in varying degrees, most people will agree they suffer from it. Some only have a twinge of apprehension; others are too frightened to take a seat and listen to the doors lock prior to take-off. You are not alone. Why the anxiety? From what people tell me, l think the two foremost concerns of passengers are the possibility of plane failure and pilot failure. Other concerns are poor weather and poor airport facilities. Although I do only moderate amount of flying, my own passing concern is about the health of the pilot in the cockpit. When I look upon the face of the captain in charge, I unconsciously size him up, wondering about his heart and brain. How's his c1ruclation? How are his reflexes? (Bus drivers, too.) Mr. J .. I can understand your fear that the plane may not have been checked thoroughly to prevent breakdown of some engine or other part. But, as I say. I'm more concerned about the pilot's physical checkup. Yet, overall, I'm convinced that flying is the safest of all varieties of transportation. I've sat next to many an erratic driver of a car who gave me the heebie-jeebies more than sitting in a plane. Those who are concerned about the fitness of pilots will be heartened to learn that guidelines have been set up to aid physicians in ex.amining pilots. The examining doctor doesn't issue or deny a license. That's up to the FAA. Many American physicians are involved in aviation medicine. They examine airline pilots twice yearly and commercial pilots at least once a year. For example, in 1976, these physicians sent reports to the FAA on more than 450,000 medical examinations. • • • DE AR DR. STEINCROHN: I have been having pains in my chest. My doctor tells me they aren't convincingly diagnostic of angina pectoris. The "resting" ECG is nonnal. He advises me to have an exercise test to clinch the diagnosis. What do you think? Mr. P. DEAR MR. P.: I'm in favor. It's important you know whether or not you have coronary heart di.9ease. But, it's also important that the ex- ercise-testing be made in the presence of a cardiologist who will assess any changes in the ECG, and be able to evaluate any onset of chest pain. Instruments and medications should be at hand to deal with any sudden heart irregularity. If the diagnosis still remains in doubt, special X-rays of the coronary arteries will establish the diagnosis. • • • FOR MRS. W .: Have you tried an electric blanket with dual control? This might solve your sleeping problem in cold weather. Speaking of weather changes, at least three out of four married individuals have differences about what is the most comfortable house temperature. Often it is a cause of s~ in -----IRA----- Instant tax advantages plus Retirement security for Anyone who workS. RUFFELL'S U'HOLSTllY, INC • .................. 1922 HARBOi 8l VD COSTA MESA -.5~8. t l.56 The easiest way to cut your taxes for '83 and every year from now on. amount you save and earn with equal dollars in most any other type of investment. More money ... when you have more time to enjoy it. :\aturally. the long range purpose of an I~ is lo provide extra security and prosperity during your easy living years A Home Federal IRA ls for anyone and everyone who works . . . and you can start any time, by phone. No matter what you're doing, your hometown newspaper The Daily Pilat fi ts in. T YOUI HIAlTH DR PETER J. STEINCROHN a.nter-relationsh1ps. One keeps opening the window, the other keeps closing it One keeps raising the temperature controls in a room; theother"can'tstand ; the heat" and lowers it. I I believe each should respect the other's differences in body metabolism. You can't change 1 your personal metabolism, but you can change your I attitude as a couple. One simple way is to dress 1 warmer if you're cold, and tighter when you're hot. I • • • Dr. Steincrohn welcomes quesuons from read- ers. He c.a.nnot answer all individually but will include those of general inr.eresr in hlS column. Send your questions to him, in care of the Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box 1560, Casta Mesa. CA 92626. ' ' ' ' ' ' 13 WE~K CO•U.~S.E s 1 0 · OFF ICE CAPADES CHALET MESA VERDE 979-6351 • ;. :..~ .. : •• :.. . f .. :.c. :.. ••. ' Good for you! 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Free party favors In the lounQe. l Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 27, 1983 BS Today's IV • Honored for artistic achievement Frank Sinatra, Katherine Dunham and J a mes Stewart are among five people saluted ~or life time cont.ributions to the performing a rts o n HThe Kennedy Cente r Honors: A Cel- ebration of the P e rforming Arts" tonight at 9 on CBS, Cha nne l 2. doanna Cassidy not buffaloed by Bill By JERRY BUCK ,,,, ............ ,_ lb S.-. E.,...111 ... u& Hohl "Tl* llEIP" (R) 100 jl)O ~00 100 l ()j) 1100 " TO BC OR NOT TO BC" (PG) I B \ l 10 ~ CO t 00 10 /~ "TUllS fl EllJlWllJfT" (PG) 11 JO l OS HO 110.10~ "Ttf: MM IMl LOVED WOllO" (R) 110 110 6 10 ••• ,,,. "TWO Of A lllll" (PG) 11 IO HI u~ ,., a I\ 'It "lllC<IMJN VALOR" (R) l~J101CO IOll "ftJMS fl DUMIDT" (PG) t7lC l~ ~·~·~LO~~ "mm"(PG) sr! CW f hGAGI 10 I "' ' I • ~ ~'Xi "j "Tl* KEIP" (R) • ' 10 / II I C~ & ll 9 r¥' "GORttY rMll" (R) •Jiil tlO HG I JO llOS "l#tCOflllOI V Al OR" ( R) 1/.,. t e I 11 HI •• !. ·Jtf MAA IMl LOVED W<KN"' {a) , J\~ "' " 0 . * PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES * • "ll'COlllOI YAlCla" (R) l'IUS "Tll DlAD ZOfl("' (R) "CllllS Tiii:" ") l'IUS "QllCll & CHOllQ SlU Slllllll'' l•l Jlill1ti2. "llmlC 'All"CI) I'll!$ •ftST aOOD" (I) "OllSTllA (I) ""' "CltlCll 6 -...... ..,.... <•> "Rm" uamor CN> 1\14 "• anm -A DR.ml'' (I) ...... ACT"~) ""' "nlGITmlS" (N) A ""R"~-~~~~ .. -..-... -....-~JI'!'~ u............... --. NOWPIAYING iun.TOll IEAOI EowanlS Hllltonoton c.-.m. M4J8I , ____ ..__, OMMl Sudivm DIM In S3M'T10 WU1Wla Pdlt s 141-Wl'f JIJ °""In 891 Jll93 TICl<iif. "497W.1'9_ '•C••t C l~'••t C \...C.O-.C-.,.tirt ........ ,.Mll, t•UIGl9 fJtlt ... 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Y THE VIAR INAEVIEW -1:ao-.. MARV TYL.EA MOORE •a!NEWS -1:40- &MCClOUO -1;46-0MOYE * •t,; '"Mad Mu" 11991)1 Mel ~ ton, Jolnne Samuel. -2;il0.- 8NEWI ~~NEWS NIOHTWATCH *** "Simi Tlmt, Nut Yw' I 19 781 Alln Alda. Bien Blnlyn. -2:21- <CJ MOYIE **** "My Flit I.Mt(' (196ot) Am Hwnlon, Audrflf Hec>bum. ®MOYIE ••• ''TM Min From Snowy Flwr'' ( 1982) l<i1I Oouglll. Tom llurbon. -t:JO-•wow u "SIN Of Jmbll" (1954) ~ lllt• Goddlrd, George N.ldlr. !~ -2:40- ~ W(n.MTOI Plcrk ' Al\lllllm EOwllOI Or1tma Wt$1 Onvt In 879'!18~ • PAnil'.l'TU> IJ< 8913936 ~ , ......... _...... ... ,_ .. , .. ~,,, ... , . .,,....~ .. -~~ • NOW PLAYING t El YOllll MllSIOll VIEJO • WHTIMITlll fOwllOS SIOO!tb.K~ sat saeo EOwarda MIUIOll Vlflll UA MM! 1.1111 m.eno 893-0()46 ··u. r11111r1M-.•11,.. • rs1wn.n••••·" ~---.1 •·• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Oeceinber 27, 1983 642-5678 Put a few word$ to work /or you in lhe llilJ Plllt By HUGH A. MULLIGAN u.......,e.,..,. •• :t AOOARDTHEUSSGUAM (AP)- Bob Hope watched from the aignal deck as the helmeted Marines, waving M-16 rifles, charged off their helicop- ters tO catch the comedian's shipboard maunee Christmas show. "My God. another hostile audience." ad libbed Hope. 80. The Marines, living in bunkers and tents on the perimeter of Beirut airport, got up at 4 a.m. to fly out to the USS Guam. a Navy amphibious assault ship. · The Marines were U'\Structed not to bring weapons to the show. "Some guys didn't get the word," laid Capt. David Karcher of Miami. "and a lot of them don't like going any place around here without a weapon." The ship's company had a pleasant early morning wakeup call. After the traditJonal screech of the bo'sun's pipe whistle came the lilting soprano of Miss USA. Julie Hayek: "Reveille. reveille, rise and shine ... and have a nice day." Almost the entire audience was part of the force which invaded Grenada two months ago. Three of the Guam's helicopter pilots were killed in the initial assault on the Caribbean island. Before the 6th Fleet band 1truck up the overture for the flnt of alx Chrl.ltmu shows. the four women In the cut -Brooke Shields, an act.rea and model: Cathy Lee Crosby, a singer; Ann JUlian. a comedienne. and Mi.as U.S .A. had reached a pin-up crisls. All had run out of pictures to autograph for the eervicemen, and fi".'e more ships, including the battleship New Jeney and the aircraft carriers Independence and John F. Kennedy, were in the Mediterranean off Leba- non, waiting for the show to arrive. ''Even I'm running out of pictures," rejoiced Vic Damone, the veteran crooner. On the flight out of Los Angeles he worried out loud about the generation gap and whether any in the youthful audience had ever even heard of him. The Guam prides itself on being "a two-beer ship." It has been at sea for 66 days since it left its home port of Norfolk, Va .. and qualified for the authorized ration of two beers per person after 45 continuous days at sea. "It's torture. sheer torture, bringing aU these good-looking gals out here aft.er 66 days at sea." moaned Seaman Scott Gtesham of Chattanooga, Tenn. Hope wu pleued to find that .ome of \he akitaandgaphewiedln Vietnam nearly 20 yean aao •t.lll worked. Lines like "Thetie marine. are 10 tough they uae barbed wire for dental flOSI" .and "Now that there's a cease-fire I can take off my bullet-proof ·Jockey shorta" brought gales of laughter from leatherneck.a who weren't even born when he first used them at Danang during the Vietnam war. Comedian George Kirby wanned up the audience with a humorous run- down of his experiences as a combat engineer in World War II -what "Archie Bunker called ... the big one." Kirby quipped. He ended his routine with a hilarious imitation of small-arms and rocket fire. But for some, like Marine Cpl. Jeffrey Harrison, of Buffalo, N.Y .• Kirby's mimicking of the noise was harrowing. "You never forget that sound around here," Harrison said. "h 's an almost daily occurrence on the beach." Some members of t)le Hope troupe who visited the Guam's bridge after dark could see tracer rounds from sniper fire in the moon-drenched purple mountains streaming down on Beirut. Bob Hope in action Director Davidson catches his second wind By JACKIE HYMAN 4-t.IM,.._W_ LOS ANGELF.s (AP) -After taking a year off to think, Tony Award-winning director Gordon Davidson has returned to the center of a maelstrom. • He's directing a movie, producing three to four new full-length plays. planning a three-play repertory for the Olympic Arts Festival and overseeing a variety of other projects. including the development of television shows. Among them is one that will air on PBS in February. "For one year, I didn't carry phone messages in my pocket and I didn't read any scripts," sighed Davidson. long- time artistic director of the Mark Taper Forum. during a short break from his hecuc schedule "I was overdosing on scripts." Davidson, 50. directed at the Taper and on Broadway the award-winning plays. "Children of a Les.5er God" and "The Shadow Box," for ,which he won his Tony. He took a sabbatical during the 1982-83 season to think about what he wants to accomplish in the theater. then a brief break from the Taper this faU to direct "The Lady and the Oarinet" off-Broadway, which opened to mixed reviews. Gordon Davidson The Taper Itself lS something of a three-ring circus. Currently at the 742-seat main theater. part of the Los Angeles Music Cent.er, is the West Coast premiere of "Quilters," a play by Molly Newman about pioneer women in America. New Theater for Now festival in February and March. • In addition. a facility focusing year-round on new plays-TheTaper, Too -opened in October at the John Anson Ford Cultural Center in the Hollywood Hills with "Wires," a musical piece about tightrope walking. Taper Media Enterprises. a project Davidson set up to bring new ideas to television, recently scored with a highly praised half-hour syndicated program. "Tell Them I'm a Mermaid." featuring a group of handicapped women. An hour-long show about modem relationships, "Popular Neurotics," is 9Cheduled for PBS' American Play- house series In February. It stars Mimi Kennedy and Jeff Goldblum. And Davidson will soon direct the Paramount film. "Gentle Vengeance," an account of a man's first year in medical school by Michael Cristofer. who won the Pulitzer Prize for "The Shadow Box." lf it sounds like Davidson is already running in a marathon race, well. the Olympics are yet to come. Davidson and other Taper staff members are consultants to the Olym- pic Arts Committee, which plans an arts fest1v::1l .Tun(' 1-Aug. 12 to coincide with the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. Highlights will include the first United States visit by the Royal Opera of Convent Garden, an exhibition of 45 impressionist paintings from the Louvre. the American debut of Ger- many's Wuppertaler Tanz Theater and a three-play repertory at the Taper. "I'm trying to give an American look to this repertory season, because of the Olympics, because so many (foreign) companies are coming with Shakespeare and the classics." he said. One of the three plays may be Arthur Miller's "The American Clock." a kale1d06C0pe of. the De- pression era. he said. Unlike on Broadway, where producers must choose plays for their potential to become colossal hits, Taper plays are chosen for more subtle qualities. Davidson did a lot of thinking about the subject dw'ing his year off. "l recommitted myself to the idea that the theater is a place for language. for ideas and for theatncality," he said. "What you wiU never take away from the theater is the ability to do a certain type of magic nght in front of your eyes -the magic of t.rans- forma tion. of character, of illusion and of poetry.'' Davidson is in the process of selecting three or four new full-length plays to be rformed on the main stage in a 1--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_,__ Saroyan statue just a bust LAGUNA HILLS MALL-- CINEMAS 3 NEW DELUXE THEATRES -llOW Ofl•ll !- FRF.sNO (AP) -They planned to pf'clce a full-sized statue of the late author William Saroyan at Fresno Convention Cent.er. but it turned out to be just a bust. A fund drive was started last spring to raise $50.000 to place a bronze statue of Saroyan at the convention center's theater which was named post- humously after him. Saroyan adamantly refused any such honors when he was alive. Sculptor Varaz Samuehan. a fellow Armenian and friend of Saroyan's, made a giant clay model of the author of "The Human Comedy" and "The Time of Your Life," winner of the 1940 Pulitzer Prize for drama. But the fund drive lagged, raising only about half the amount needed for a full-figured Saroyan complete with a depiction of the bicycle he rode around Fresno. "I don't think it's grounds for astory. but some people that we counted on to be sympathetic to the idea didn't come through," said Bob Der Mugrdechian, chairman of the committee. "They just didn't think Saroyan was that great a guy." The bust was put up in November. and "there has been no adverse comment," Der Mugrdechian said. The committee will dedicate the bust at a champaign reception Jan. 8. )Jll:l<f.\"S CHR1sn1As C\R(>L 'l'Di ........... &1'011*1' . __ .... __ _ ~\"o& lOOO \ l\ttll ...... l ,.all \ht~\ ) •alt1 Ill ...... ' ,ull \ht •••. 2:00, 4:05. 1:10, 1:20 Sun. 4:05, 1·10. 1:20. 10-.21 Mon.·frl. 1:00. 'i111 51)0, 7:41, t:IS S.I. 1:00. J:U . 5:30, 7!"5 lun. 3:15, S·>D, 7"'5. 1:15 EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT TUES.-FAI. 8:15 SAT.-MON. 1:15, 4:45, 8:30 ~.~ .... fl lht -· 1 No matter wha t you're doing. your hometown newspaper T-.·ftl. e.tore 5 ...... .10 -a.t./S..n./Mon. 1tt Sfw>w SUO ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LA-A tall MAU C9mMAI n Di•go Fwy. And El TOl'o Road 768 11..11..11 ... , ... ,,,.., ..... ,. s.w. -. "*' -vu MAY OUR STARS LIGHT UP YOUR HOUDAYS ~ .. h ..... )'O'I hi good about Amerkan mcMe· melci•" NIWIWID~ .. SILD'OOD ls not to be ..... ~.....,- .... IMf!'_'.e-~ Ideal • ~,A~ -·--······ .. -·... ~ ... l,IAMQVl($4 990 4022 ro:rallU OWMOS fOWM Cr.HUR 7!>Hll4 CDWMDS Ct«MAS conn 979 41•1 lll'm ~ SAOO'.llACll ~l~ -toWAROS W0()()8Al>C( S51·°"S -MIC OAMCl IMll SYUIY Sl~ Ot UA CllY CIOA IUJ-TD UA WUT-sltl MAll .,. mAsled.'' (J$ MMiAZU/i "Sll.n'OOD' ls powerful." NW l'Ol.l' l'OST SILKWOOD -·-·:-:::.: 6 (BJ ... UA MIWllS 4 9904022 .,. .. COWMIOS 90. Ct>ASl P'l.Al A ~&2711 u-&~SQUAA( (21J) 691 0633 tOWAAOS VU) TWIN '30'990 -MIC OMHCl( IMl l 6)1 0340 UA~ '34)911 .. TU UA WlSTWfSlU 1VM -~JU ~ .. .. ~MOYIS 4 TllUI '"bc1l1nd" ,.., ..... lDWMOS tWta r. UASO ~f -t.-WOQOllll)CC --lDWNIDS M ~ MM l -MltOIMCllMU. =w: . UA•UWTUIWll 990 4021 ')l lSOI ~~,. m 06S~ 49SU20 The lally Nit fits In . . ' .. II . ; ~ \... . . .. ..... -... ~In)... _,_,._,.....~ 1----NOW PLAYING ---.i AIAMllM lrlOUMH'al 172-1446 COITA MUA (._.. CiMllll C-. 17M 141 llMH COITA MIU UA CiMllll 540-0514 (dMlft Wtodllfldtt 551·09!15 fOUITMI VALUY l.AIUIA HtlLI Fllllily lwiR llt~llt Hilb Mell ltS-1307 781..tell WHTIHITlll UA CitltlM "3<0648 ~n ••11 ' OUHI StMw11101 931.ano OU•ll VIiie ""' 831·00M ~ I 1. • I fiARt·n :l.D P>JJ'I lo.JA1'IOJ'~ ~l~"IOR:), fCft. etTAll"f~! ,v." A~ UALL'I' (X)Jf-~Htlo..!6 10 IMF'ttOVE "fl-41: ~tJ co~rT10tJ? by Gus Arriola Cl)f IT v lff/ POEf.' !'M ~e1e1~ GUIL. 1Lf5 5 ~/~~E.' by Jim Davis R(~IDINO IN A BROWN PAPER 8Au OIV(5 ONE AN ALL-NEW PER5PE.CTIVE ON ONE'S SELF ~~ 00 0 --- ···-· --4... THE Fr\'llL\' CIRCl'S "Santo Claus goofed. He brought Mox the helicopter I asked for." '9 \R'9.\Dl'"t: by Brad Anderson G\FT EXC~GE No ~E.~CJN~ "Forge1 the exhange, Mrs. Owens. Every Christmas he gets a ieweled collar. and he insist s on a refund." "Here's something for a splitting headache, but there's nothing ... " ~~ft€"gr =----'-j I ~.. -- 1 ~--.. I OONT LI KE TOi'MTO ~E.ANCHOVIE5 ~E£SE SAUSAGE OR MUSHROOMS ... WHAT ELSE DO YA • PUT ON 'EM ?" llolh v11ln1•r.il1l1 \.\'1 'I 11 .... 1, NOKTll +AK q~1 K q to I K 7 3 + K 54 w•:sT •:AST +J H +3 J 54:t2 A!lti 4 A J IO!ltl a2 +U11 7ti +A J "\Ol'Tll • 10!1 1176 Ii 7 Q ll • 10!1 32 Thi· huhltnl( \\ u t '\orth Ea .. l !,oulh ....... 2 3 ..... 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DR.-\BBLt; Oranqe Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, Oecembef 27. 1983 Ill GOif ii ON lllDGf BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAA SHARIF l'.1k1,1.111 .11111h11-1 1.11111tn :-.-. o oh'n "'··r1· .111111nx 1 h•· l,1\<11n•ol 1·1111lo·111lo·r, 1111 .1 "'11111111.ol 1 ... r1 h 111 I ho· r.·11·111 Wurltl 'lo.1111 ('h.1111p11111,h11" -..wo·oll'lt i.:.11110·11 .111 o'.1rl) .111 v.111t.1i:1· 111 llwir lhmt round 1•1u•11uu11·r ll11lh 'Wo•ol1•11,111tf l'.1k1,la11 (oo,11'h1·il hour 'fliHlo·, 1111 I ho· "'"'' h "11ut h r.1ril' 1 lw a111· 111111 'h""'" '' lr11111 1 hi' r11om wh••ro· l'.1k1,t.111 ,,it ~11rt h :-1111lh \!11rth' '"'" 1li.1111011il hul "',,, .trl 1111'1.tl .11111 ,1 ronx /':,1,1' 11\ 1•ro.,1ll "'·'' n.11 ur.11 .11111 "'h1·n 1h.1l r;1m1• round tor him \11rl h 1t1tuhl1·1t lur t.1ko·•oul '1rto·1• "out h ,..,ufol n11I .01 l lro·1·I~ 1111·r I hro 1 l11.oni11nok \11rt h 11111<hl h.110· two n l'olOt o•nt Ill JM" 1h·,111lo• h1' poo\\ o rlul 'Uflf1•1rl lor ht' p.1rl n1·r' ,1111 1•,111•r1.illy ,1111•1· h1, k111.: "' 111.1111111111, "',,, 111 1l1111lilf11I v.11111· Thi• :-w1•1h'h t-:.1,l 1l11ul1h•ol. .HI ,11· 111111 nut l.1k1·11 hy l'ak1~t.1n 111 I ho· 111 h1•r """"· fho· dl'!t•llM' \\,I, tl1'.t1tly. \\ ,.,, 11•01 h1' 't11J(lo·l11n 1t1.1 J1lllnol E;i-t won I h1• .ll'I' .11111 rl'l11rtwol l ho· I \\'II .1 o•lo.,1r ''"I pro·lt·ro·111·1• ''xn.il lur a l'luh r..i11r11 W1•,l rulf1•d ,mot olutilulll n·turr11•1t llw q111•1·n 111 11111". 1'01\ o•rt•1I h.1 t h1• k111x .111ol l.1knl II\ I ho· .II'•· 1-:,1,I 1·,m•lullv r,1,h1·il l hi' ,10·0· 111 h'""" .11111 J.11·k 111 o luh' ht'111r1· n·111rn1nx .1 low oli.1nwnd -~111 .1 n·o1111•,l lor .1 o·l11l1 ro·t urn \\ o''' "'·'' .1hlo• lo"'' rrull oh•..l.irn "'llh h1' )·" k 111 I rnmp' 'u"' .1 1 luh ro·111rn .1f111,.1·d E."1 111 ,1•11ri· h1, -1111:lo•111n 1r11111p 111 rul1 lllJ.: Down I llM11 t11 lh1•111 h1·r ro""" l'.1 k1~1.111 olt•l1 .. ol l'ol r1111r 'I'·""'' l1y 11111~ I hn•1• I rll'k' :-:w1·ol1·11 jt.1nw1t MOO 1111111h 111'1 , lor 1.1 lnl1·rn.1 111111.11 M.111•h l'11111t- tlubbn brld1r t lu~• throua hout lht fouatry UM' th4' lour·dral brldct foriHt. Uo thty knew 110mrthlai )'Oii don't ? f harlu Gorn'• .... our·Uul Hridgr" .rm lrarb you tbt •tratt1if• aad tactin of tlll• t .. t·pactd K · lion 1••r tlut pnvldu l~t curt for untadlq nibbtn. For a copy, ~ed ll.7S t.o "(;oru·•'our l>tal ... carr ef thiH Dtw•papt'r. f>,(), 8e1 2S9. Norwood. N.J. 07W . Makt rhtclu payablt to S tw•pap4'rbooti1. by Jet f MacNelly ll 11 •MJ..,,,.1.o•H lwll S1•<,.<tl< 'It ·~~~~~~~---' t 'OR BETTl::R OR t·oR •UK~t; "'fli1A11 ;JE 'RE. -:Py I f\.1 1 To oos-JFF, A~.· l 1?Z.,E wJr..'i .E.R C. JS F\ONE. It' _,. COME ON,t<.1000 LE.fS ~ Y .. Ry .,.J1fh /()..F.. ·10) 5 .Jf'SfA1RS ~: t•t'"'' "''"t:RHt;A, l.XXl'R£ ~tC,ITT 0 DEA~ ... rr ~ A Ml~iAl<E ! IHI~ I~ i H£ LASI t.;f.AR. 1 GRDER iHAI MANl) FRUliGAKE~ ! by Lynn Johnston MAMArl 1 WE. 'RE. Do1N STUFF -AN' MtCHAEL '4X)N\l..ERiE US RLONE: I by Tom Bat1uk tr'o Jthl THtrr -mcc; WE.RE !::IJ MUCH CHEAPER PJ..( -rnE 10N I by Ferd &TomJohnson °"~-·-s-~_o_c~"--~~~~~~~~~~ rr-_...~~~~~~~~b-'-~-"'"~--~ H~R~'s To HARRY 1f?UMAN , by Charles M. Schulz by Tom K Ryan wG'R~ GOING -ro VI DS:OIAP~ YOU R OPS:RA"flON 1"0 DAY', DOC, so w e CAN S HOW 11" "fO 'YOUNG M S:DtCA(... s-ru c::>e N "f'S .' · .n 1»Gt: P '•"•:• • YeAH, Wl·H~N YA s-ru DY AS HAR P A S 1"Hose K I D S DO, A L.11""'rL..e COMIC RS:L..l eF IS At-WA Y S Wf;:L..COMf: .' by Harold le Dou• • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 27, 1983 STOCKS Tuesday•• 11 a.m. (POT) PritH 'Mlf'\ ,.. •• \.I .. \ ,_.rt v l; nG\ iuv l ~ PE"o .. civw t hQ NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS OUOIAllON$ llo<:IUOE llVIOH OH TH( N[W YOR" Ml0Wl8l l•ACll IC l'llW 80SlOH O('IA()o l ANO CIHCl"'"'4fl 81()(;J( VICHAHQH AHO llEl'OlllED IY IHI NASO INlflNEl ,.,,., ...... •• t "0' c.•o~ t f"'Q ~··' ,.. ... \•I•\ Nf'f \.-.tr \ "ot P t f\0\ (IOV r "Q l.1 S f\ch C IQY. t ftiQ f.# f AO\ (IV\., I "" 1ii ~ I · . . . . -l~ ,11•' ~ il.J 1•1111 11111 Santa Fe-Southern Pacific rail merger allowed by ICC By llu: Aaaoclaleil Pre11 WASHINGTON -The merger of Sant.a P'e lnduatries Inc and Southern P8C'iflc Co. has been allowed to go through by the Int.erst.ate Commerce Commi&sion. The two holding companies own the Atchiaon, Topeka & Santa Fe and the Southern Pacific railroads, respectively, and ICC decision was a major step toward combining the rail lines themselve.. But the railroads will remain under separate management until another rec ruling, probably sometime next year. Automakers log b est performance DETROIT-U S . automakers say early December sales of new cars climbed 25.2 percent from a year earlieT for the best performance in five years. The companies said they aold 179,749 cars between Dec. 11 -20, compared with 143,530 in the year-ago period. Nuke plant scrapping endorsed INDIANAPOLIS -Indiana Gov. Robert D. Orr baa endorsed a task force's recommendation that the partly built Marble Hill nuclear power plant be scrapped. Orr also said he would ask for resumption of hearings on Public Service Co. of Indiana's request for a rate increase to pay for the project's investment t.o date. The company owns 83 percent of the project. Interest-rate jitte rs 'calmed' NEW YORK -Sluggish growth in the nation's money supply, a cooling off of the et'Onomy's brisk e xpansion and continued moderation an inflation have calmed interest rate jitters in financial markets, economists say. For the first three weeks of December, stock and bond markets were in a slump a.mad concern that the Federal Reserve would have t.o push interest rates higher ot risk a resurgem.'e of higher inflation. Analysts had expressed fears that rtsmg rates would shut down the economy's growth Fed government outspends income WASHINGTON -The federal government outspent its income by $21.6 biUJOn in November. keeping the deficit's growth slightly behind that of Last year's record shortfall, the Treasury Department reports. Federal spending totaled $67.8 billion in November and rec.-e1pt.s amounted to $46.2 billion, the Treasury Department reported. The Reagan adminis- tration's latest official predict.Jon, made an July, is for deficits to decline graduaUy from last year's record $195.4 billion. November's red ink raised the deficit so far for fi.scaJ 1984, which started in October. to $46.7 billion -a bat lower than the $50.3 billion an the same period last year . Dollar lowers; gold steadies LONOON -The dollar opened lower in quiet post-holiday trading today as interest rates fell on dollar-denominated investments. Gold pric.-es held steady in listless trading, with markets an Hong Kong, London and Zurich closed as part of the Chnstmas holiday weekend. Dealers attributed the dollar's decline tO a drop in interest rates and tbe hght trading.Eurodollar deposit rat.es -interest pald on dollars held in Europe -were slightly low~r 10 Frankfurt, West Germany. ·GOLD QUOTATIONS ..,Ille __ 8-1.0 WO<ld OOkl p<ICll• lodlV l~ 1n.uttet1 .,. CtoMd -oll0<noon ""'llG '37847,110 IO 93 ,, ... twt fl-lnQ 13111 "· 011 S 1 00 lwldl i.10111.e<noon bid '379 ~II oll IO u l380 2SAlllod °"~I""'-(onty oauy q1101t1 $3711~. ......... d Conly O•ll~ qUOC•I '3llO llO up •• 60 I~ lo"'bled lontv do~y ci11010) '3119 M . uoSI ~7 NY c-• 11o1a spa; mo<1in '" l380 30 ofl SI 70 WHAT NYSE DID HEWVOllK IAPl ~ 13 AO•onceo ~ Uncl'le-T otal •UUff Ntwnf9~> HtWIOWt fOdev IJS I ll •n 1'61 n II WHAT AMEX DID NEW YOllK !API DK ll METALS Toeley ,., 2'1 232 ,.s • • Prev do ,., '10 403 1017 .. ,, Prov det ,.. >01 ,.., •n ,. " NEW YORK (AP) SP<>I "°"'"''°"' ..,.,., "'"*!Oday C.,,.. • 8"'·70 C*lll e pDunO, U 8 aee11neoon1 ~ • 83.IO oenll -POUnd NY Com•• IOOI monlh GIOMCI Fri LAM • ?•-21 cen1a • pouna Z1M • •t cet11a • pouna. Oeff-.0 Tiii • 8.2048 M9lel1 W-compooito lb ....,._ • 81 Wiit o p()Und, N 'f ...... "" • 132().00·'3.40.00 -16 lb "•<II. .... Yori\ ........_ • 138600 d-11C tn«Oh""I hoy OUl\C9,NY SILVER • ..... .. M)6 HMdy I HOI"'°" tonly 4ali1 ClllOl•I ........ 111-ltOf-HYC-•epot -c:IO..clFrl STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JON£S AVERAGES NEW YOllK (AP) -FINI Oow·- ••e<o"' tot l"rldov, Doc 7J STOCKS JO Ind 10 Trn lSUll •SS1-ln<!u• T~an Ulll• 6Hlk ~"-Lft a.ea.. m1.u 11st u 124191 11.50.s1-l.1S SIS ts Sfl 27 "2,03 !17.26+ 0,1' 11' 11 13116 12',2' 1J0.6H 0..20 4'1 11 soo.96 '"'·" m ~ 0.11 1,t ll,100 1.'6UOO 2.m .200 ,,,, ... soo AM£RICAN LEADERS NEW YOltK (AP) -Sare., Frldev O<lc:t •lld ,,., ,,.._ of 11\t 10 "'°" K11Ye ~.~:: .~'~R::::zr 1"""· ,,_,. =~ 1m~ lS-~~ -:_!-~ OO<cMIGH 111,600 11 + '"' WeO<otEI' '6, 100 I''--i. Werd•Co t fJ.JOO 16lt +l TIE Comm t ..... 11 +I 11w11n1 A auoo 11 +n. l"OIO<NI 11,IOO l " + \'l Hou()ltTr 11,SOO t wonol •btl • .. ooo 34 + "" NEW YOllK (APt -The tollow .... Mt! "'°'"' lr.t Htw VOttl SIOCll EaCllMM >IOOt -Wot1' ... lt 1 ... 1 ..... -.. llw mo•I ond dOwn the ~I llllMll Oii -cent OI c:l'ler.e rt90rdleU of ¥Olume IOI' FrldtY No teCUfllr.. lrtdlno below l2 er• lnct-uooo Ntl eno _C*I, ... c,...,....,.. IN allltftllC• btlw-ti.. ..,.,,lout 00.lnt IN'!« tnd loaav'• ~m Dra. Neme l o.i Clle Pct I P$111d 4,31PI I + l UP 14.) 2 Ri.oet Ttall JO"' + JI'> UP lU J Pul>Svc lnd 121'1 t l'M UP IU • PSlllCI 4.14c>I I + ~ Uo JU S lll. Co pf() 16V. + 1-Uo U • Gen ltelrec t 'lll + 'Ill Up U 7 LamtnS.\n )1,.to + "" Up f.J I 1.ll Co OIP IS + II\ Uo I.I 9 AoacMCr. 11 ... + " UP 11 10 PairlckP ' J-. + '"' UP 7' 1 11 Putt!o Int t~ t I'> Uo U 12 M®M Hom4 4141 '" Vt> 4.S 1l Dual.I 1 lOolA 17YI I UP '-I 1' 01V1n Pwlt 11-. -+ 'Ill Vt> ~~ u lni ... .-.co u -+ '-Ue s,. It Copwld to\'> + I UP S. J 17 l rlHt ~Ital )1\'l -+ ll'I Up S.0 11 Lff•Pelrt UYI + 1-. UI J.0 1t 1-Uld DIV 10-. + I'> VII ._, 20 COtllu Pow U" t 'Ill UP 4,1 ti lll. Co 111,.to + l.<i UP -.1 12 P1111rvPr1" S'lll + '4 UP H I! ~='~ 00 i t ~':. ~ u UC*<O • + " Ult U 26 llllT~ T OIN + "' uo 4'S I o..::::=. , l1~141 ~"f Off P<I 1 $0UHIT e!A l l -l Off 1H ,r .... _"' t.l I·~. ~~~:= ~ SIM!t-11 t~ -\'> I """ , .. , '"' -" 'l !i~:-Ii = :: t I i:,.-:-~1,,.., "" -\ 11 I J;; "'"' '"" -.. ~ "=" J,ttw ttl'>-1 1 ~"'·~ )~1!;=:' 1 e= .. .-. -: i .. rv' ,,er= ~ sii i cag"' W = = I I I : I t -:::=~------- Dilly Pilat TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1983 CLASSIFIED C7 t Win or lose Thursday, Gerry Faust guarantees he'll be back in '84 to lead Irish. Page C2. Davi d Hill ( 8 I) cele brates, along with Reggie Doss and Charles DeJurne tt. Dallas Coach Tom Landry skippe d the fun. This time, Rams ride off into the sunset, 24-1 7 IRVING, Texas (AP) -The upstart Rams will continue their stunning season with a New Year's Day playoff game agamst the Washington Redskins w hile Tom Landry performs an autopsy on the Dallas Cowboys' sudden demise. ) The Rams won their first National Conference playoff game since 1979 Monday with a 24-17 victory over the Cowboys, who lost their last three games after a promising 12-2 beginning. The Rams will play defending Super Bowl champion Washington at 9:30 p.m .. PST. Sunday in an NFC divisional playoff game. The Rams. who were 2-7 last season under Ray Malavas1. made the playoffs with a 9-7 record under new Coach John Robinson. With a new oHense headed by rookie running back Enc Dickerson and a revived VulC'e Ferragamo P.m.) a.m.) NFL playoffs Mtndly'a N,C Wld Card kot'e Rama ~· Delea 17 Satvrdav'• c~. Samfflnala AFC -S..tle 81 Miami (Channel 4 at ,..30 a.m. NFC -Dett'ett at San Franctsce (CMnnal 2 at I Sund.1V'1 Coo .. •eoce SemlftMlt NFC -R1m1 at WaUl!n9twn (CNlnnal 2 at t-.30 AFC -Ptttaburtlfl at Raiden I I p.m.) al quarterback, the Rams dominated the Cow boys by both land and air in the w ild card playoff. Ferraga mo nfled three touchdown passes. Dickerson rushed for 99 yards. and the Ram defense forced three antercepuons and a fumbled punt. Not everyone's happy - Even Orange Tourney winners are disappointed By ROGER CARLSON Oi IM Delly l'llol ltoft First-round basketball favorites w on as ex- pected Monday an the opening salvo of the 16-team Orange Ho!Jday Classic at Chapman College -but there were some darts thrown nevertheless with two area winners a bit unhappy. not to mention Costa Mesa Coach Tim Parse!, who didn't even have a victory to soothe some sore spots as his team fell to 2-5 overall. Estancia H1gh's Larry Sunderman wasn 't too pleased w ith his team's play in a 64-47 victory over winless Villa Park. and Mater Dei Coach Gary McKnig ht wasn 't too thriUed with his opponent's tactics despite wmnmg by 45 points. Tonight Fountain Valley returns to cap off another four-game salvo in the first round against El Modena Here's how 1t went Monday. Estancia 64, Villa Park 47 In a contest m which the Eagles never trailed. or even tied since the operung tip, E!ltancia upped its record to 7-1. spearheaded by a second quarter in w hich they expanded a 14-12 lead to 29-14. fi nally Fresno State stuns Houston HONOLULU (AP) -CalJ it Upset City. Or the Land of Aloha, as an hello and, especially, goodbye. For Houston and Louisville, it was a blue Hawaiian holiday Monday night, with both teams getting beat m the Chaminade Classic, hosted by the team that just one year ago upset then-No. 1-ranked Virginia. The Fresno State BulJdogs stopped Houston's 7-foot center, Akeem OlaJUwon, and the nine-game winning streak of the No. 3-ranked Cougars came to a halt with a 68-61 defeat. Tournament schedule at~C.-... T .. y ( ,..,,. •MMll, l:lO-~ "" MlltM S:IO-Clle!Wf vt. ~ ·~-LalleweM n. 0... H .. Nt-•1--.. n. ....... v...., 1c--"::r:J..9:.. •• ., • Uft.-lt. ,. .. n. V1l9 hn ll:IS a.m.-Geelll Mlle w. ~ ... I~ IM'l\.-MNW· ........... n. Olaflrt.Onftet ..._ JMn.-Lall ..... .,... ........ ,,.. ....... ~ .... (Cllatii*'""* °""'"' ..... , ):31 IM'l\.-•dMda .,.. s.-a.re Sllt __ ,. ....... --°" "" llolft,-MllW·..,.. ....... ... ~"°"""'" 1:3111Jft,-LalreweM•Dtt ......,..,._ mMMl!le.,.V .._ settling for a 14-poml halftime bulge. Villa Park was guilty of 11 turnovers in the second penod as Estancia took command, but despite his team's low turnover rate ( 13) and reasonable shooting (28 of 59 for 47.5 percent) and 8 of 10 at the !Jne, Sunderman found little satisfaction in dealing Villa Park its fifth loss of the season . "We just looked slow and they started taking it to us, rather than us taking it to t hem," said Sunderman. "We're going to have to play better than that in this tournament. If we let Santa Clara get the ball to 33 (6-4 John Martinez) inside like we did tonight than we're asking for trouble . "And I'm still looking for a policeman in the middle to emerge." Jon J ohnston led all scorers with 20 points and junior Scott Clements added 13 counters for the Eagles, who are still without All-Sea View League guard Jim Curtis (ankle injury), a situation Sundennan terms as "day-to-day ." E!ltancia led by a 48-27 margin early in the fourth quarter before allowing Villa Park to chip away at th e lead and the only real satisttfaction S undennan could find was the second quarter spurt, Johnston's all-around game and some sharp play by junior guard Adam Lockwood. "Yes." acknowledged Sunderman about Lock- wood's play at both ends of the court, acoring eight (See ORANGE, P11e ctl Dickerson, who played in Texas Stadium for Southern Methodist, said , "I got sick of hearing about the Cowboys, Cowboys, Cowboys when I was in college. "Nobody t hinks they can lose. To beat 'em here means everything ... Robinson used a little ~chology on his team. "It made us mad that we were 10-point underdogs," Dickerson said. "Coach Robinson talked about that alone for 10 minutes Friday. He was really mad about it." Dickerson su!Cered a sprained arch in the game but is expected to be ready for the Redskins. Landry, whose team lost 31-10 to Washington and 42-17 to San Francisco before playing the Rams, said. ''The last three weeks we jUSt self-destructed. You just can't play that way .. He said the Cowboy collapse could be traced to the Washington rout. "It was just too big a game for us to Jose emotionally," Landry said. "We just didn't recover Crom that game." Landry sa\d he wasn't certain whether he will return next year. "l don't ever make a decision like that alter a game like this,'' Landry said. "It is a challenge to see if you can put this team back together. The last time it took me three years. I don't know if I have that much time or not." There were a record low 43,521 fans in Texas Stadium with 20,0 15 no-shows . Ferragamo threw touchdown passes of 18 yards to David Hill, 14 yards '° Preston Dennard.and 8 yards to Gt!orJ(e Farmer. Underdog Ra01s have last laugh IRVING. Texas (AP) -Nose tackle Greg Meisner summed up the Rams'·24-17 wild-card playoff victory over the Dallas Cowboys Monday with an underdog's last laugh. "We were insulted to learn that we were nine-point underdogs,'' Meisner said. "Our basic play was to line u p across from our man and have 11 fistfights and hope our guy won." The defense had three inter- ceptions against Dallas quar- terback Danny White and they sacked hlm four times in the Rams' first National Confere nce playoff victory since 1979. "We are a hungry football team, very hungry," said de- f ensive back Eric Harris. "We came out determined to win, and we wanted to stop what they do best, run. And we did a good job of it." Defensive end Jack Young- blood of the Rams said "We be- lieve in what we are doing. We have great leaders. There is nothing that is not pos&ble. "It feels great \o beat Dallas. You have to come through here (Texas Stadium) \o ge t to the Super Bowl, and it wouldn't be the same if you didn't." Youngblood said, "This is the type of game you enjoy playing in, the type that you know is going to be on a high level of competition. We played great team defenee." a.., __ ..,,.... ...... Dallas' Tony Dorsett rushed 17 times and gained only 59 yards. Tim Deutsch takes it to the bucket in Estancia '1 64-47 win over' Villa Park in Monday's action. Ram Coach John Robinaon said. (See RAMS, Pa1e CS) Earlier, Cham1nade made it two loaes in a row for Denny Crum's 14th-ranked Cardinals. The Silversworda outran LoulSVille 83-72. On Sunday, Houston beat Louisville. 76-73. Houston coach Guy Lewis had nothi ng but praise for Fresno State's tenacious defense, which held Olajuwon 8COreless in the first half and to 12 points in the game. Penn State seniors say Aloha on winning note "Tonight Fresno State was our worst enemy," Lewis said. "They forced us into a lot of our errors. They run thelr offense very patiently. They are well coached." Houston never led in the game. The Bulldogs stole the opening tap from Olajuwon and grabbed a 2-0 lead . Us.log a dt.ciplined, spread out offe09e, they slowly built the lead '° 16-11 midway through the first half a nd 28-18 at the lntermlsllon. "The key on offenae wu getting the early lead." Fresno State coach Boyd Grant Mid. "Alter that we were able to control the tempo by spreading thinp out a little bit." With Mk hael Young hlttJna from all over the floor, H'ouston managed to cJ09e the gap to 61 -~7 with !Stt FRESNO. P11e ct) HONOLULU (AP) -P enn State Coach Joe Paterno wanted to win the Aloha Bowl for his seniors. · But with one quarter to go in Monday's bowl matchup against Washington, Patemo'a Nlttany Lions looked liked they were going to end the 1eaaon the same way they started It -on a loaini note. The Niu.any Llona trailed 10-3 and had been able to muster only 143 yardl total offenae &gailllt a swarming Washington delenae. On the final play of the qua.Mer, however, the Lions came alive when Kenny Jack.:>n ran an end around 16 yards to the HutkJn' 33-yard line. From there, Penn 1tate kicked a field goal to make it 10·6. With three minutes left In the 1.ame, freshman f'\.lJUUna beck O.J . [)ozjer crashed over from two yards out, cappina another Penn State 9'Xltini drive, and the Nlttany Lions held on to win 13-10. "We worked harder for tht. bowl game than any other bowl game we played," Paterno said. "I really wanted the kid.a to win for the 1enion. "I was yellina and jumplng on t.he sidelines becaUte they've worked too hard to let It alip out of thelr hands." Paterno aaJd. "I was pleued for them .that they ended.u&:th a win." Wuhlngt.on h Don Jamee wun't pleued with hia tMm'a performance even t.houlh the Huskies held Penn State ln check for molt of the 9arne. ''We mil9ed more catche9 today than we milled all year," Jam. aaJd. "U your offen1e can't do anythina, you can't fel a drive 804nl. We C'OUldn't put totet.Mr a~ drlv•." Oolier a run over right i.ck.le capped a Penn State comeback which negated a 10·3 halftime lead Cor Wuhington. The ~ allowed Penn State to finish the season 8-4-1, after lo.tna lta first three games. Tralllng 10~. the Penn State offerae, which had been held in check for much of the game. got the ball on lta own 49-yard·llne with 6:54 remaJnll)I. Quaterbeck 0oua Strana led the Nlttany Ucu' ~ drtve, which took nine playee and ended In Dozier a run. The bla plays were Stran,a'a 19-yard pall to runn&na bide Jon WUUam. and a l'!-)'U'det ~ KMl\Bau,h. ' Alter Doz.ler'a touchdown, Nldc Gandtano kJcked the extra point to end the .cortnc. Penn ltate took • 3-0 a.ct CW\ ... firlt P' • I Met\ wt th Gandtano hit Uni a field eoel from 23 yards oul ... I ' -- - - - ----:---::::::::=:::------ ---------------- t.'2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 27. 1983 ·- Delly '9lol ,.,.. .. bf -d ll .... ler Estancia High's J on J o hnston ( 14 ) hustles for a loose ball and teamma te Todd Mooney (right) goes up for a bucket in the Eagles' victor y over Villa Park in Ora nge Holiday Classic Monday night. SPORTS BRIAK To no one's surprise, Sipe lea ves Cleveland for USFL's Ge n e rals from AP dis patches SOUTH HACKENSACK. N.J - Cleveland Browns quartPrback Brian Sipe has abandoned the National Football L<'ague after I 0yearsto1ump to the New Jersey Generals of the United StateS Football League. a Gl·nerals spokesman said Monday Sipe. 34. already has signed a contract with the Generals and was to be introduced today as their quarterback at a news c.'Onference at Giants Stadium. where New Jersey plays its home games, team spokesman Kevin MacConnell said. Terms of the contract were not dis- closed The news came as no surpnw to Sam Rutigliano. the Browns· head coach. "This 1sn·t something that came out SIPE of the blue," said Rutigliano. "If there's anybody who wasn't expecting this. they've been hibernating for the winter " Asked what S1pe's defection does to the Browns' quarter back situation. Rutigliano said. "We've got Paul McDonald. Rick Trocano and the 1984 draft" Q uo te of the day Universny of M1ch1gan basketball coach Bill Frieder on the NCAA 's decision to eliminate its controversial. final two-rninme Cree throw rule. "I thank it's stupid to eliminate 1l Six or eight great coaches speak out and they chani;te the rule" Tar Heels No. 1 NEW YORK (AP)-North Carolina's Tar Heels remain firmly planted atop The Associated Press college basketball poU , but footing isn'tso firm for the rest of the nation's top 20. By vmue of a 103-58 rout of Dartmouth in their onJy game last week. the 6-0 Tar Heels widened their margin over second-place Kentucky in the weekly voting Monday, amassing 985 points to 963 for the Wildcats. Last week. the Wildcats were only nine ints behind the Tar Heels in the votin WE FLY DAILY I' ln•ex•pen•alve• '(In tit apen' trv) no• nigh In price, reeaonable, clauill«I ...,.._. I!· '· 1: .... 10 BERMUDA DUNES CATALINA ISLAND and weekends to Mead City, ·Ariz. edvert•elno ~ Classified Advertising 6~2-5678 CAUFOHIA SEAIOAID AllU•ES 640-1246 -.2FLYCIA INVISTMINT SEMINARS toy 1 torrn« o.c>uty l .. Co11ee1or1 AESERVATIOHS NO'f REOUIREO Aussies ta ke Davis Cup lead MELBOURNE. Australia -Paul ~ McNamee and Mark F.clmondson gave Australia a 2-1 lead over Sweden today m the Davis Cup tenms final as they registered a 6-4, 6-4, 6-2 victory over Anders Jarryd and Hans Simonsson Australia now needs only lO win one of the two rt'verse singles Wednesday to win the Davis Cup for the first time since 1977. Australia 1s bidding to win the cup for the 25th lime. while Sweden has won it only once before -in 1975. F.clmondson and McNamee. the more e x- perienced combination, took only one hour. 43 mmutes to carve out thetr victory The Swedish pair came into the match with a 6-l record in Davis Cup competll1on but started nervously and never reall y got a grip cm the conteSt. McNamee and F.clmondson did not have their service broken throughout the mat.ch Owens h onor: Pho to finish ? NEW YORK -Americans Carl m LewlS, F.clwin Moses and Mary Decker head a field of five candidates still in the· running for the Jesse Owens International Amateur Athlete Award, to be presented J an. 18 in New York. The other candidates from an original list of 12 are Jarmila Kratochvilova of Czechoslovakia and Zhu J ianhua of China. The award is given to the athlete who best personifies excellence in athletic performance as well as cooperation and understanding among peoples of all nations. It is named after the Hall of Fame track and field star who won four gold medals in the 1936 Olynpic Games. Lewis won gold medals in the 100-meter dash, the long jump and the 400-meter relay in the inaugural World Track and Field Championships at Helsinki, Finland, in August. Moses. the 1976 Olympic champion and world record holder in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles. extended his winning streak to 87 races and won the World Championsh ips in 1983. Decker won the women's 1,-500-meter and 3,000-meter races in the World Championships. Ro binson' c r ysta l footba ll For a rookie coach in the National GJc •m Football League. John Robinson of the , Rams suffers from no short.age of ('Onfidence Last Thursday. during a meeting with reporters in the Rams Pa rk press room, he broke coaching tradition by predicting the Rams, seven-point und~rdogs. would beat the Dallas Cowboys. On a blackboard. he chalked out his pred1ct1on or Monday's National Football Conferem.-c wild-card game against the Cowboys "Now don't use this until game day." Robinson told the reporters. HIS guess: Rams 24, Cowboys 21 It was close The Rams upset the Cowboys 24-17. Steamers roll over Lazers ST LOUIS -Rickey DaVlS and m Redmond Lane each scored two goals to lead the Steamers to a 5-3 Major Indoor Soccer League tnumph over the Los Angeles Lazers Monday night in St. Louts. Attendance at the game was 12.328. The w in, which edged St. Louis's record to a game over the .500 mark at 7 -6, broke a lie for third place in the MISL's Western Div1s1on as Los Angeles. 5-6. slipped into fourth place. 6 0 ,923 welcome Oa k T ree ARCADIA -Fighting Fit used a ~ strong finish to win the $65,150 Palos Verdes Handicap by 4 Y2 lengths over Ex pressman Monday before a crowd of 60,923 at Santa Anita on opening day of the track's 91-day winter thoroughbred meeting Flghting Fit. ndden by Eddie Delahoussaye and carrying high weight of 122 pounds. covered six furlongs in 1:09 and paid $4.60, $2.60 and $2.10. The victory was worth $38,150 T elevisio n , ra d io TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: College Basketball -Pepperdme vs. Tulsa. 5:30 p.m . KFOX-FM (93 5) NBA - Denver at Lakers. 7:20 p.m .. KLAC (570). Soccer -Lazers at Wichita, 7:30 p.m. (delayed). KFOX-FM (93.5) ~aust's return promised H e says he'll b e back, e ven if Irish lose Thursday MEMPHJS, Tenn. (AP) - Gerry Faust "absolutely" will re- turn as football coach next season even if his team loses ThW"!lday night's Liberty Bowl to Boston College, Notre Dame Athletic Di- rector Gene Corrigan said Mon- day. Faust's future became a subject of speculation after Notre Dame lost its last three games to end the regular season with a 6-5 record. ln the fi rst three years of his five-year contract, his record is 17-15-1. But Faust and Corrigan dis- counted that speculation. "Things have been written by people who make some observa- tions on their own. They don't talk to the right people," Fauat . said at a news conference, adding that a victory over Boeton College is important because It will "get Gerl'y Faust the program started right for next year and end the program up right this year." l..a~r. Fautt said, "Why ahould I quit after l've buated my blCk for three )'ears? W~·~ ClOlll!. We're going to be a greet footbalJ team " . "Thia game hat abllolutely no bearing on It at all," Corrtcan •Id when uked lf Fauat would loee bla Job If No~ OatM k»t Thurs· day nl&ht. ''Ye.:h. oh yHh, •bllolu~ly," he replied when asked if Fauat would return. "We've had a aelf·dett.ruct attu- atlon the laat thret' glnM!t of the teMC>n," Corrigan uJd. "He hun't Md a lot of luck." Before IC. 23-22 rqular ..-on-endtna lo. to Alr Force. the .chool aald It would ac:cept a Ll~rty Bowl lnvhadon ewn If It IOlt that pme. When It did at, Notft Dame told bowl oWdala to find anoiher team. Only the intervention of Liber- ty Bowl executive director Bud Dudley, a past president of the Notre Dame Alumni Association, kept the school from pulling out of the game. Corrigan said. He said that a fter Notre Dame fell to 6-4 with a 34-30 loss at Penn State. "we told Gerry on the plane coming back Crom the game, 'no bowl.'" Then Dudley called and asked Not.re Dame to reconsider. Alter the loss to Air Force, "we told the bowl 'go find somebody better. We don't want to embar· rass you by coming,"' C¢rigan said. Notre Dame finally decided to accept the bid after further pleas from bowl officials. Not.re Dame has been reluctant to go to bowl games If It doesn't have an outstanding record. h rejected a Fiesa Bowl bid last .euon when it wu 6-4-1 and even got two invitations, both of which were tumf'd down, alter Its 5·6 record ln Fauat'a first 1euon, Corrigan aald. "l wouJdn't aay lt.11 a total de- parture from tradition," Corrigan aid. "ilwryttd:na dOM " Nottt Dame lt on an ecf hoc buis." Next 1eUOn. Conipn u.ld, Notre Dame wtll not ICICept a bowl lnvUation If It la &-5. .. I would ao co the bank on that ... he promlted. ORANGE ... From PageC1 points and constantly breaking up Villa Park's att.1tck with his defensive hands. "But!ll"ll play better," t'«mtmued Sunde nnan. Mater Del 78, Laguna Hiiia 33 Although his team's 10th victory in 11 starts was reahsticaJ ly pul away mid way through the first quarter with a 17-1 lead, McKnight was unhappy with Laguna Hills' tactics, which slowed the Monarchs' express somewhat, holding Mater Dei to ju.'lt four points over their average output. "It's tough to play against a team that isn't trying to win," said the se<.'Ond-year Mater Del coach . "They had the break and they were backing 1t out, even when they were down by 20 points." Asked if he fell the Hawks of Laguna Hills Coach John Moore slowed it somewhat in hopes of holding his Monarchs to less than 100 points, McKnight said, "yes. "But what are you teaching when you're down by 20 and not trymg to score? Laguna Hills is supposed to be one or the better teams in the South Coast League ... I expected more from that league. "We played nine players and I had a freshman (Chris Patton, who was scoreless) in there for two quarters and (sophomore) Jim Dwyer played quite a bit (he scored eight points)." The loss dropped Laguna Hills to 6-4 overall. Any hopes of an upset were quickly dashed by the Monarchs, who jumped to a 9-0 lead and maintained total control of the issue. rutting 50 percent of their 68 attempts from the field against the Hawks' zone and 10 of 13 from the line Laguna Hills rl'sponded against Mater Dei's man-to-man defenSC' with 30.6 perc.-ent shooting from the field ( 11 of 36) and JUSt 50 perc.-ent of their 22 free throws. Tom Lewis, Mater Det's 6-7 junior scoring phenom, was bottlc."'<I up (for him). scoring just 27 points, off his game-entering 33.8 average. He led the Monarchs with 7 rebounds. while senfor teammate Matt Beeuwsaert. the spectacular 6-6 11'1 guard , chipped in with 15 points and 7 assists. The 2,700 fans treated the game more as an exhibition than a contest, showing thelr approval for the occasional slam dunks and assorted tricks by the Monarchs and their d1sappo1ntment when sh·owtime didn't materialiw. Foothill 60, Costa Mesa 48 Foothill upped 1ts re<:ord to 5-2 and in the process was rewarded with a Wednesday date with Mater De1 after Jumping LO a 14-poant first quarter lead. seeing 1t me lt to 24-22 by halftime, then pulling away in the third quarter The Mus tangs of Costa Mesa narrowed 1t t.o 51-48 wnh 43 se<:onds left. but then F00Lh1ll responded with an inside shot from Pat Casey and seven good ones from the free throw line to put ll out of reach. "We• JUSt have a lack of experience present with our guards," sa1d Parsel. "We play a couple of good quarters, then a couple of bad ones We've got an inconsistency at guard. but we're young. We're µlaying two JUntors and a sophomore off the bench." Although no one scored in double figures for the Mustangs, their was a balance present with six players scoring between ti and 8 points. led by 6-3 Mark Cook (1:1 points) Raiders face big dilemma EL SEGUNDO (AP) -Every time Tom Flores. coach of the Los Angeles Raiders. considers the Pittsburgh Steelers offense. he sees a different look. The Steelers arrived in Southern California six days in advance of their National Football League playoff game against the Raiders. but they haven't decided on a starting quarterback and likely won't for a while. "We hear all kinds of things," said Flores Monday after greeting his team back from two days off. "We heard that Mark Malone was running with the first str ing. then w e heard that (Cliff) Stoudt was Still the No. I guy. "Then somebody said Terry Bradshaw was going to start throwing again." All of which leaves the Raiders' defensive coaches in somewhat of a dilemma. Which Pittsburgh quarterback to prepare for? Will it be Stoudt. who started 15 games but w.u also in charge of an offense that had its problenu while losing four of the final five games? Will it be Malone. the 6-4, 225-pounder who haE a s trong arm a nd adds a running dimension, but whc has little experience? Or w1ll 1t be Bradshaw. who has played less than • one half of football all season while rehabilitatin@ from an elbow injury? "Each one adds a different dimension," said Flores, "but whoever 1s in there. it won't change thE personality or their team ... The Haiders announced that tidket sales havt surpassed 53,000, but that 92.5 16 must be sold by 7: hours before kickoff for the game to be televise< locally. FRESNO ... From PageC1 2:35 left. But that was as close as the Cougars could get. Forward Ron Anderson. who finished with 25 points and was named the tournament's outstandifli player. connected on two l -and-1 foul situations in the last 36 seconds to sew up the wln. Bernard Thompson added 18 points for the Bulldogs, and senior guard Mitch Arnold had 12 points, includifli eight straight at one stretch midway through the sea>nd half. Center Scott Barnes, who spent much of the night fronting Olajuwon, finlshed with 10 point.a And seven rebound9. Young led all scorers with 26 points. Houston had to play the game without Benny N\ders, a standout on last year's team that went to the NCAA champloruihip game. Anders quit the team before Monday's game and returned to Houat.on. Basketball scores c .... u .n thw t1, ~eto9'1t 11 •vlNf't ,,, ktOll HIM 1t MIO· WH T 0.1ro11 41, TOiedo 4' Tou.MAMllMT 0..-..Cllwt "'""° Stele ... ~IOll •• (!lnll Clleml"'4t. H1w1n Q , lovtavllte 1t (llllrdl ... tdtMI TOUllMAIMMn 0-. ..... •Clulk ~ ... S.111• CWI ,., SI ~ •1 •11en<T1 ... , VIiie "'rt U .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. December 27, 1983 c:a A couple of days off revitalizes Dionne VANCOUVER. BC (AP) The Christmas pause m the N ational H ock ey League sche<lule enabled M arcel Dio nne to tak e a rouple of days o ff. bl.it the Vam'Ouvt'r Car'lucks wish h e was s u ll on a h oliday and had a guilty ro!llK'lence becauae l hadn't been on the tee fo r lhree daya ·• But the layoff d idn't dull Dio nne's IC'Orlng u\ltinct.s. His goals w e re carbon copies -a q uic k s h o t f rom t h e slot area after thtt p uck was dug out o f the com e r. tied 4 .4 whe n J Ltn Fox w~ given n u nsportsmanlike con d u c t minor and a m i1COnduc t for protestmg a trippin~ penalty ag ainst teammate Dean Kennedy Both clubs wert< llfcl~ until 0 1onni•, on u flret -period power play. and John Pau l K e lly g ave the K mgs a 2-0 lead mldway through the secon d period Dionne. t h e pudgy center on the K ings' "Triple Crown Lane," alo ng w ith Dave Taylor and Charlie S ammer, scored three goals -includ in g the w inner in overtime -to give Los Angeles a 5-4 v icto ry in a see-:ww bat tle . "No t bad for a 32-year -o ld," Dio nne said a fte r h e e nded the game follo wing exactly one minute o f o v e rtime . "I've scored a lot o f goals against V ancouver over the years (he has 24 ln hts last 41 games a g ainst the Canuclca), but n ot the way I did tonigh t with three similar goals," said Dionne w h o ran his season total to 18 as h e found It easy to s n eak unc h ecked in fron t o f t h e n e t . W h ile the Canu ck.s failed to 9COre they were stung whe n Bernie N ic'h olls t ied the same with less than ftve mrnutes remain- ing while rookJe Cam Neely was sltu ng out a retaliato r y ro ug hmg rrunor. "Their power play look ed d a n ger ous all nigh t and th ey g ot two goals." said V a n couver coach Roger Nielson a fter t h e Kings w o n their fourth road gam e in five s tarts. "Ours didn't look da n ger ous a n d w e d idn't ge t any a n d that was the dif- fe r e nce.'' D&rcy Rota star ted th e Canuc.k t'Ome- bock b y lipping in h is 24th goal o f the campaign. Dave Williams 9<.'0red o n a simila r play f rom a t:entring pass as he sh o ve lled the pUt·k unde r Los Angeles goalie M ik e Bla k e a nd N eel y <.'Ombaned w ith Rick Lanz o n a s lic k passing play. Dionne even ed the<.'Ount but Bla k e w as the victim of a M oe Lemay flip s h o t tha t bounced bet w een h is le gs . Nic h o lls g a ve the Kings ne w life o n the pow e r p la y w h e n h e pounced on the rebound from M ike M cEwen's point b last. "But I've just had two or three days o ff. On Saturday J w e n t into the mountains and re laxed a b it. J Ce lt a b it tired today The k ey to the game w as tw o power-play g oals by the Kings in' seve n <.·hances, while the Canu c ks squande red six powe r plays .That incl uded a two-man a d v antag e for two minutes w ith the score The w in w as the-third 1n four meetings this season for the Kings over V ancou ver FDR THE RECORD Prep basketball log NFL116aV ... ~ ·"'C WILD CARD SlllWdeV'• Sun SH iii• 31. Ottwer 1 NFC WILD CARD ~y'&S<- Ramt 2• Oellu 17 COHFERENCIE SIMIFINAU S.Nrdlv, De<. )1 and SIHtdn, J•n. I AFC S.allle el Ml1m1 (Channel 4 et 9 30 a m. S.turoavl PlllsDurgn at Rald9n 11 Pm Sunoav I NFC Oelrolt at S.n Francllto \Cha11M1 2 at I P.m. S.turoay I Ram• at Wasn11K1ton (Channel 1 el 9 )0 am Sunoavl CONfEltENCIE CHAMl'IONSHIM Sllftdlly, Jen. I, 1..- SUl'Ell BOWL XVIII J-n. 1"4 At Tampa Slaolum, Tamoe F'ta (C"'8n net 2 at I.JO om Ram~ 14, Cowt>on 17 S<.,t DV OUar'9n Rems 1 O 7 1~1• OallH 0 1 l 1-17 Finl Qua,.,., LA -O Hiii 11 oeu lrom Ferregamo (Lensl0<d kk~ I Drive IS varcn, 1 olevs Kev DleYI Okker.on 20 run on llt·an0· 10 to Oal 31, Olct,t<..on lS run on ht·ano·S 10 Oat 11 l.3S LOI AnGelH 7. Oallu 0. S.Cend Owe,,... Oal -T HIH 14 oess lrom Wnlle IS.Olien klc1tl. Ori•• 70 varos. 4 01evs Kev Olan T Hiii 11 oass from Wnlle on 2no·and· 10 to LA 44, T Hiii 23 oeu from White on 2no·eno·2 10 LA 1• 1• '3 Los Al!Qel.s 7. Oellet 7 T!WO Ou_,. Oal -Fe; Sel>llen • 1. Orlvt : ).) varoi, t o1av1. l<ev Olav• Fellow& 3J l11ckott re1urn to Oal '4. Sorl1K11 12 ou1 trom Wiiiie on hl·an0· 10 lo LA 47 3·S9 Dallas 10, Los A~s7 LA -Oennaro 16 oeu from Ferregamo ILan•foro klckl Drive 16 vards, I Olav Key !Mv· WllClle< recoverv on O•I 16 of muffed ount Dv Allen 111 Lo• "'nQele\ 14. Danas 10 ,.,.... 0u•r1w LA -Farmer t oess lrom Ferraoemo \Lan•forO kid! I Drive SS u •OI. 10 '"-vt Kev !Mvl D<ktr.on 1' run on lto·and·2 to Oal 1S, 0.nnaro 10 oau trom Wlllte on lrd·ancl·I 10 Cal .3 .,D6 LOI A~ 21. Oallas 10 LA -FG Lan1t0<d 10 Ot1•e • Dlavs, o yards Kev Ol•Y Irvin 9• 1nterceo11on ret.,.rn to Oal ) of Wnll• oen IO JoMM>tt s S1 LOI A-* 2•. Dallas 10 Cal -Cosble 2 Pass lrom While \S.Ollen klO.I Drive SI vards, 1• Plavt Kev Plan PH rM>n lO oan from Wlllle on •tn·al\Cl· 17 to LA ?t. Whtie reco•erv of own tumble on 41h·and· I 10< l·vard g81n 10 LA 11, CM~ n oan from While on lro·eno· 10 10 LA S 1) S7 LOI ... _.., 2•. Oallu l7 A-tl,S21 TEAM JTATISTICS Flr11 oown1 Ru1ntt·vero1 Pan ing varo' Relurn v1ro1 Pen., $eCkl BY Punt' Fumble1·10" Pene111e.· 1aro1 Time ot Poueu ion LA Dal lO 2' 30·94 20-63 -.. )()0 121 14 16·11·0 3'·S3·3 3·30 2· .. 6·37 S-31 0·0 2·1 H I 6·40 ?I.JS JI 1S INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHIN~o• AIKl••u. Olck ... M>tt 23·99, R9delen 3-S. Ferraoamo •·(·10) Oallu , Dorsett 17·S9, Sorlngs 2·•, 0 White 1·0 P ... SSING-LPI Angete1 Ft<ragamo IS·lC>-0-161, Olckt<M>ft l·Hl·I Oallu 0 Whllt 32·S3·l·l)() RECEllllN~ot ... ~. Fel"fTlt< S-•7. o ...... ro •-u. Enaro 1-n Barti..-1-20. 0. HI•,_"· DkUnon 1· 11 Celle• T Hll 9· llS, Co•Di. S-'2, Pearton 1·4'. Sorlt>ilt 6·31. N..-wne 2·7S. IOMIO'I 3·20. 0orMll 4·1?, OuPr .. 1·9 MISSED FIELD GOAL~one Odeh COLLICOE BOWL.S Llbe<IV Bowl -Boston COlltot 2 l O•H Noire Dame PH <PI 8owl -Florida S•ale l over N<><-lh Ct •Ollna Get0< 8owl -F1or1ce l o•t< lo•• B1.-ine1 Bowl -OlclaP!oma Ste •t 1 over Bevkl< Flella Bowl -Ollk> Stele 7''1 ov., Pill1Dufgh Cotton Bowl -TeaH l'IJ o•., t;eo<gla Rot.f Bowl -Ollnol1 4 over UCLA $U11ar 8owl -Aul>Vfn 4 01er Mkr.lgan O<anoe Bowl -N•brHll• 11 o•er Miami, Flt ~rem Hernll's •-"""' .._ S-1 ~ SOVTHllRN CALll'OllNIA MOUNTAIN HIGH -17 lo 14 ln<I! IMIM FOUf' Chairs -llllKI MtOW VAU.•Y -It to ·u Inc.I> l>eM TIY .. llfla -allng GOLDMtNll -,, lo 7•·•nch IMIM F- Cflaln -•lino WIUIA·N•V ... DA RANCH AIMii MOUNT AIM -JO-llKn DeM In full -••loll MAMMOl'H MOUNTAIN -1'·1ncl! IMIM One "°"°°'9, 14 Chairs lllr.e wr1ac:t1 IOWI -•llnO DOOO• •tOGI -4, 10 ~·ffic:h NM In ""'-•lion N(f, RlaA -60 lo 107·1nch l>aM Eltnl C'Nln -•llno KIUCWOOO -'6·1M.ll IMI.. In IVl -.11on SlaUA tkt •ANCH -NO r-1 HIAVINLY VALLIT -.. •o 17·1ncll IMIM Ont Ir am, 1S <Niln, four •llt'l.c"e - fOWI -ellng TAMOI SKI llOWL -41 IO fO·IMll IMIM. Two Cllelrs OO«allllO NOltTMSTA• -l6 10 tt·4"cro l)e" In tu• -••Ion Sl(I MC&.*• -JO 10 41•1nct! IMIM S!K IHh -.11111. SCM.IAW VALLI Y -It 10 IOI 11'1(11 bete. Nine !Int -•line MT. ltOl8 --IO .. -Inell IMIM 111 fUW _ .. Ion. IL.IOI MOUWTAIN -44 .. U17·1fteft ..... Ont CfleW -•11119 oo.tla Sill •A..CM -l»•lndl MM In NI OMf t llofl A~ M9ADOW1 -41 lo ''°"Inell IMIM. ...._,11th -•llN .U.M IOW\. -tn 10 lf'1·lt>ctl MM "'" dlllln -••lftt l(MtlAL -1111 IO IU ·lf1C11 .... '°"" Cl\elrt -"'"' L•s Alalf 1tn MONDAY'S Rfi!SUL TS 141sl ot 60·'""' -..--w ~I FIRST RACE . .00 yarCI• N1ughlv Mu lt (H1rtl 9 00 4 00 3 .0 A1ure Ace 1Trea1ure) ).olO 2 60 Weeks Wages (Cruger) 3.tO Allo raced Ea1v Nlgnl, DH ert Hiiman, Lion In Winter. Mvrls Pot ol Gold. Hai No She, DUPes Cult Ooll. Time 20.as U EXACTA 18·6) oald '23 60 Sl:COHD RACE. 170 vards Sovanna One Time IT•tr) • 00 l 60 l 20 Swl's Bani.er (Hermo<1) 13 .0 720 Rtntt llamblllKI Red lo.lombt ) 10 20 AIW raced· Ir Ith Snake SOffd Chari. Trlt>le SorinQs, I Think I Can, C0<.ontrv !Ullltf T;me •7 •S THIRD RACE. tOO vards Rool Juanllo (Fklue<oa) I 1 20 7 10 • 20 C"'8rger Judv \Mvtesl IS IO 4 20 tm1111 ol Umll• (TreHurel 2 40 "'''° raced Quest tor fain*. Wired 10 Win Attlei Image. R.t>1 Ouka, Alerl Jonnnv F uNums Ret>el c;1r1 Time 2063 n EXACT A 12·9) Palo 11sa ()() FOUtlTH llACL .00 vard~ Lulll PJchlrllO (Peufinel "'1 00 H O • 00 ~rv Me Ernie tGa rc .. 1 I IO 1 IO Htr Turn (TrtuUfe) llO AIM) rac90 SwH I Pollcv. MlkH Fancv Ml1 MOon>hine, Jonnie Lime Foot, Camino OltllfO, Peart CH l'I, Miu Mont ¥ Mt M Tlmr 'l0.91 U UlACTA (9·1) 01ld '19060 l"lf"TI4 RACE . .00 varO• unolo 8ov (Ward) t 00 ~ 20 3 00 Big League Dancer IC••OOH , 3 tO ) 40 ~kv Boo<>e (Broolu) 9 00 AISo reciro· Ra11<oad Welcn, Ptlll c;a1eeu, Oot> La Fame. Ot1noou1a1K1 Oon. Telco Tom. Billy Sheerl. Etwrnel Clle<ok" Time 10 7S. n EXACl'A ,, •• , oelo U I IO SIXTH •ACE . .00 varo1 Big Btlll <Mvles) 6 tO 3 60 2 60 White Falcon (Harl I 3 IO 2 60 Scali Soah (Creager) 2 60 Al'° rac.o Mr Duet O•oo•ll. A lure Lomlll. Liiiie Hubie . l(allt nu H-. She>•· on Time 20 SS SEVENTH AACE. tOO ve•d• Buenlu lma (Caroo11J I 00 • 60 ) IO Roct,et l>v W0<CI (Frevl ,. 40 6 IO Hlllarv OllJe Bar (Clerrtse) • olO AllO raced Sunnv and Miid, Pav on Qemend, Truekte A~, CMr11/1 R.t> Pav lhe Bwa Time 20 46 n EXACT A (9· SI oeld 1109 '° EIGHTH RACE. 170 verd1 MeCt>o Mllo tTrtasure l 11 00 SIO 300 lltite• Action (LtCkeVI • 20 H O Cllle1'1 (;reatH I (Harl) S.20 Aho raced C"'8rlOll H Bug, Phantom Rouge, Mlonlglll Po4kv. Cnarge Coll. LH P· llKI Le4t Time; 4119 U EXACTA (4·1) oekl U.20 '1 ~K SIX 16·9·9-t -7-9) paid 112,n1 .0 wll11 one wlnnlnQ tlckal (1la nc>oe11 12 Pick SI• coro1otallon oald '191.20 .. un 246 winning tlckel\ (five llO<Msl HINT" RACE. .00 vards 8old Hand (Pauline) I IO UO 3 00 Hec1or Joe Jr (Willlamsl 7.00 U O Hoteooll tHart) 3.IO Also raced One wav Rider, Slllln on tne CH n, H.s E1 Lovin, TruellOOd, Go SlrlOt Go, Ralw • Hustter. Clnovs Chamolon Time 20.~ U EXACTA IS·4) o•id 16110 Allenoance 6,ll03 OellTrM (11 s-A""9 I MOMDAY'S RESULTS (hi .................. ""'"""") l"•ST •ACll. 6 turlono• Prouo Ouk• ID19c1Jtol 12.40 s.eo ._40 Olstl1K1 LO'l'tr (Ha.......,) 1 20 C.40 Nut 88fld (Slt>llel 6.60 AIM> read AlrrOll1K1, Too Pote, Prince Roo LH ,,...,,..., Dancer, Cnrl•'' Laa Time· MO 2/S SJ COflO RACE. One rnlle Brummer IE tlraclal t 00 • 20 360 Plr•I• (LIOl\aml 4 IO 4 00 Mhler Crttt (SlDlllet S .o AllO reced. RHI Good Man, G•I• Clrele. Ft mllv Fox. 'Scuse Plea"' Tirne l:J7 3/S n DAIL y OOOBLE (7-2) oelCI 15" 20 TH .. O RACll.. 6 turlonvs. ~·• La<lv IPlncavl S20 l.40 1IO Nol AM FOOlllll (Vaierl1utltl • 20 3.00 c11a11 ... 1v 1ces1anec1a> • 20 AIW raced· Cioltta. L.tndlt . Pullin Slrlnt•, ~lal O<onen, Helleb Gal, M4tlM· cure Kit. COVNr'• Oe41gllt Time: 1'11 'OUlllTH RACE. 6 lur1on1n Bll911 (Plerctl 11.00 Carrin o (Plncav> t .40 4,70 4 40 uo 3.60 Cl'lerllt E•dullve Arh 10.lehOYuavel AltO reciro: Known tor Sivie. Andrew1. EndurlnQ Time· I 11 21S. l"ln H •Aca. •''°' lurionvs. One Never Note (lllnlll 10 40 GrH I EH lern (Lipham) F111 Ptueoe (0...llouuen> AltO raced· Morrv'\ Ch•mo. Cr.vita Slrftl, BIG Aoaln Tlmt I: IS 4/S U llXACTA lt·SI pafcl tfO SO SIXTH RACll. 6 lurlOIKI• H O 300 4 20 JOO 290 Mo11v11v. Gr Ml °"' (Vlflrl) 1 20 ) '° , eo Nice ...., Ho<mal IOll'lvs) JM ·uo B~ne Tvralll IOrlet•l l.20 Al>O rec.,;! Blll~ln. Promot<><-y. Galtteo, Mornlflg Th\lflclff Time 111 1/i MIVINTH RACE, I lt l6 rnllH Swlvtl (Ollv.,tsl 11 40 t 00 4.90 K-Ofl Tallllno <Plncavl • M ).40 COPY Mtt ltr IBIKI<) S to Also ,_ Armin, F'"' Jotv. Mael( MMno. ltmMI. Jolly JOSI!, Tallll:a Takll • Time 'l".A4. U I XACTA (t ·t ) otld ""SO 1....-nl •ACJ. 6 1Vttone1. 'ltflllnt I'll <Dlllvl) t 60 1.0 ,, 10 EHr'"'1*" <~er) UO HO ~ Oreetner l'°lnaovl t.40 Also t.ced: ,_lrldl M<Flll, 8era L.an Tin-. 1:09. U llXAC'TA <S·)I Mid t1UO. 11 l'tCJt SIX ( J-S-t · H · SI otld 1151,7'1.20 wlll'I one ""'""'"' llellt! <.Sx l'lona). 9' Pkl< Sb COMOlellOll Nici tl.•~IO •Ill! 107 wllltllnt lkllet• 1n1rt PIOf-1 HO MO uo ~'° f .0 J.• UI SEA VIE W LEA~UE laVINE IS.JI COM 16·21 47 Marina ., C•PO VelteY 63 LB JOrdan 42 S4 Mavnooa 64 6~ 6' Bohe Grano. S3 49 SO Ot nt Hiii\ •S lS Mlu lon Vlelo 63 Tu•lln l3 64 6rM·Ollnot 64 11 Sl VIiia Park 41 )7 S.vanna " S1 Wesltrn •• S7 lrvlllt 47 47 CM Ciel Mar S7 l6 wooe1or loot 49 el La Qulnla J-Etlancla J6-11 Unl•tu l1v Jt-lrvtne 37 6' Mlulon VlelO IO 44 077-<•nvon lournev J 11-<o••• Mete J 1)-al ~Odtel>leh Jlt-.1 El Toro J20-NewPOrl Harbor J2S-tt E11ancl• J21-Un1vertl1v JJO-el lrvlnt F •-• Co\ le Me14 F)-S.OdlelMICk F.-E1 T0<0 F 10-at Nol Harbor COSTA MES;. 11·Sl S4 San CiefNfllt 68 S? Comolon 71 43 Canyon .. S6 S.nle Ant SI 41 Artetlt .. SO Laguna Hiiis 5a 41 Foothill 60 02t-Ort~ Tournev J-et Toro J6-al Irvine Jt-el Unlvenllv Jll-tl CdM Jl)-Newoorl Harbor Jlt-Eslancla J20-at !M!OdltDeCk J2S-ar El TO<O J21-lrvlne JJO-Unlver•llv F' 1-COfona °'' Mer F'J-al Not Hert>or F._,, E'i.ncla F 11>-Saooteoan Ill T°"O U·41 67 Min ion Vlt lo S4 47 Lagune Beech 77 '6 Lii Wil•on S7 '3 LO• Alt mlto\ 69 47 Corona 4' 4 t SaOdltOICk S2 67 Lagune Hitt\ Sl J...-a1 Costa Mell J6-al ~ddlellacl< Jt-E"encla Jll-1 Nol. Harbor J l>-11 Unl•ersilv J lt-<orone def M4tlr J10-al Irvine J2~o•la Mala J27-!M!OdlelMlck JJO-al Esranc•• F1-Newoor1 HarDOf F J-UnlYtrtllv Ft-.1 COM F 11>-lr'l'IM ESTANCIA 17·11 IJ LOI Amloos 60 as Legu11a BtKh sa at $en Ciemenle 60 11 Powa y ., 67 Vi•tt 61 64 Gten HOO\ler 67 S9 San Olevullo S 1 64 VIiie Park 47 D21--0r•noa 10<.or~ J6-tl CoM J~ol HarDOf Jf-el El TOfo J 11-•• SaooleOtcll J 1)-lrvlne Jlt-.t Co,1a Mesa J20-Unlvertllv J2~or. oat Mar J'7-1 NPI HarbOr JlO-EI Toro F 1-Saodltback Fl-al lr•IM Ft-<OSI• Mesa F 1~1 University J4-el SaodltOact. J6-<o"t Mtta J._.,t CdM Jll-Unlvtt1ltv J 13-ei E stencla Jlt-al Nol Hart>or J20-EI Toro J23-$eOClteDect. J27-al Coile ~"' JJ<>-Cor oel Mar F 1-1 Unlvtrtllv FJ-Etlancla F.-Nor Harbor FIO-al Et Toro N .. T. HARM>lt l4•J) S7 Warren 61 62 W"lern 43 •• LO\ Amigo, •S43 O<anoa G"'1 47 11 Mar 'II"• olO S1 Fallb<OOI< S6 0 Poway 47 071-<ar\on Cotv tour J...-Unlversllv 16-at E s•ancre Jt-~OdteOICk J11-Et Toro JIJ-at Cos•• Mn• Jl.-,lrYIM J10-ar CdM J2S-•• Vnlver1lr. J27-Esttncle J30-at S.00-k Fl-•• El Toro Fl-<011a Mesa F.-•I Irvine F lo-<or del Mer SADDLIEBACIC U · 11 SS SA Valley S3 67 HB Rewrvt1 C7 46 Sanle Ana ll 46 Magnolia .a 64 Trov •S S2 Et Toro Cl .a Garden Grove 60 D27-Sanflqp 10\lrlll"r J-•••lne Jt-€1 Toro J9-el Nol Htrbor J11-E\lencla Jl3-<0< ~I M•r J 11--al Unlvtrlllv J20-<otlt MHa J2S-.t Irvine J27-r El Toro J»-Newoort Harbor Fl-ti E11ancla F)-el COM Ft-univerlltv F 1~11 Colla Maw UNIVERstTY (1°4) ~ Sutlnv Hills 41 ~ C1nv0tt 39 •S Brea·Ollnda •1 29 Gardtft Gro.t 27 " WOOClbridoe •9 St Canvon 61 027-Canvon rournev J.,.._al NOi. Harbor J6-<or def Mar J.-Costa Mesa J 11-• Ir vine Jl>-EI Toro Jlt--SaddlelMICk J?0-11 E1lancla J2S-Newoorr Hart>or J77-I COM JJC>-<al Cos•• Mala F1-lrvlt141 Fl-91 El Toro Ft-11 $edClleC>ack F 10-,Estancla -(_ > . NBA Wl:Sl'l•N CONP:ll• .. tca ... dlk OM.-w L .. ct. Ga Porlland l.AUrt Goldtlfl S1t1e 21 ' 700 -.. ' 667 11'1 u I• 461 1 ~· S..lllt 13 " .... 1V> 12 1S .444 1'1'> S.n Diego 9 20 110 11'1> Mlr#.,IOMtlell uren 11 10 643 Delles IS 12 S56 ,.,., 4 6'h 1 kansa1 Cl111 U 1l .500 0...vtr 17 17 .•14 Hou•lon 11 11 393 $an Anlonlo 11 lt 367 • l:ASTl•N CON'l•CNCll P1!111oetol'll1 Bot Ion Nt w Vorll Watl'lllK!lon New Jer....- A lltlltk DMlleft 20 s ,., 1 11 11 13 14 13 1S ' MllweuN" ""'"" O.troll Clltc:ego Cleveland lndla111 C-tl OIYIWn 16 11 14 14 11 I• 10 ,, • 71 • 20 Met*Y'• ker't Pllotnla 140, Ctn.., lil (01) T ......... 10.- Dtn•er •I LMren Mllweur. .. 11 Ind~ ,... J.,. .. " 11 w11111no1on Potllt nd I I 0.lfoll Dalla• t i Attanta eo,10fl at Sin An!Ofllo Ntw YOfl< al Cfl~ Pftl\a(MtOfllt el Ktnta1 Cltv Safi OMoo t i HOUtlon Uleh el OolOtn Sltlt COt.L•GI! Aft Tep 10 I N Ca<OllM (JSI 2 Kenfudl v ( IS> ) HoutlOfl • o.l'•ul S.0-oelown 6/Nrvlend 1 UCl.A I ll JoM'l t .Loul"-51. 10.WelttF.,etl llOWtlt 1',IOllOllC._. 1>.N.Carollnl II. 14.l OUlt ..... 1~ 1 .. Ttut·e l ...... 17~11. , .. ~ If Or9tOl\ St, ....... ·-6-0 7-0 10•1 l •O .. , .. , .. , 7·0 .. , 6-0 H 7·1 •-2 .. , t-0 H ..2 M .. , .. , too 759 607 .. 1 ... Stl .soo .. , •17 216 .231 . ..., • llh 2'1'> 3 41h ' ,,,, ~ ,..,. tlS 1 fQ , .., , ... 761 s "' . w ' SM 12 ., 11 "' 17 ,.,, 14 -' ~ 12 De 10 "' 20 "' It HO 16 , .. 1 '" 15 lllO HIOH SCHOOL .......... v..~o ~ ...... o.wc, lnL.U ftMC -litoClll I;), JK Ollt S. KIM l.1. °'""" 41 AY9tl t, ~ 0, ~d o. w .. 1e 1t. , ...... » ,,.,. a. H TAJCJA -JtlWlllOll JO, 1'"'111 I , ~ •. c~ u, Grlflll'n a. Leck· ....... Otut90I •• 8ur'cNrtlt t, ·~ 0, ht'low t, M\llb 0. TOI•· 19 t>lt .. SUNSET LEAGUE EDlSON 11·21 •2 La HaDra 21 )) !Catelle (otl lS 91 ()omlnQU.I JV S6 .. Cvoreu 46 S5 F OOlhlll SO 43 OomlnQU.I 60 64 La Quinla .. 76 CaPO Vattev SS 62 LO\ AllOI a() 027-<erton C••v •our J...-11 LB Wit.on J6-al M4tlrina J 11-H•n Beacn J 1)-Founttln va11ev Jl.-al Wttlmtn\ler J10--0cun Vlt w J2S-Ma•lna J27-al Hon Bucn FI-al F'ln V•ll•Y Fl--WHlmlMter F't-•I OcH n View FTN. VALLEY (4·SI SI Ser ••It l>l 6' Esoe<1n11 •I 13 Hin BHCh 61 S9 Oen View toll SI .0 Bo\Co Teel> la •1 S• Bernaro S2 .. LA Banning 49 S3 OeM4tlllla 70 SO SI Jonns SS 027-<)range tour,..... J.,_L• Quinta J6-Ht11 Buch Jll-a• Weslmlnt•er JIJ-a l Edison J l.-ef Oco n Vttw J2G--al Marina J2S-.t H•n Beecn J17-W.srmtntltr Fl-ECllson F>--<>cu n View F'._Marona HTN BEACH IJ.11 66 Caoo Valle• 69 S3 Marina SO •9 SI 11n111on. S1 62 La Quint• S2 61 Founlaln vattev 13 6J Servile ti S4 SI Ant11onv 71 S 1 Radforo l Hew I S6 SS lolanl S6 •1 Lii Ran<llO SO J>-MO <Cnaomenl Jl-1tf Mlnlltan J6-at Fin Valle• J11-t E<1i1on Jl)-a• Ocu n lll•w J 1t-M4tlrlna J70-Wtllmln\lfr J2S-Fovnialn llalltv J27-Ed11on Fl-Ocean Vltw F>--•• Menna Ft-al Weslmln\ltr MARINA 11·1) 4l Cor d•I Mer •1 SO Hin 8HCll S3 ~ Lal.twooel 44 S3 Sunnv Hin, AO .. Sanle YIMI s. SS S.nla Baroara S 1 l6 Oana Hlll1 1011 J7 41 CaPO V•lltov 6S D27--0relKlt •0<.orMv JJ-M1u •on v •elO J6-Eo11on J 11--0cun llltw J ll-•• We11mln11er Jlt-a• Hon Baach J70-F'oonlaln Vt lltv J2S-.I Ed11on J'7-a1 Ocean llltw F 1-w.s1mlns1er F~unllnglon Beach Fl-al Fin Vttlev OCEAN VIEW (7·ll 66 Min ion VleiO S2 t7 LOYOia 62 6S S.r••lt •9 SI Fin Vall .. (OI) S'I S6 LB Poly 67 S4 F OOll'lllH Bat. I 60 66 Canvon ISi 41 7 I Se n Luis Obh~ fl WHllake 71 13 LaU wOOCI 61 J)-RldonOO J'-1 Inglewood J6-al wn1mln1ter Jll-ao Marina Jl~tn Beac11 J 1.-.Founlaln Vallev J10-el Edison J2S-We11m1n11tr J27-Marlna FI-at Hin 8••cn Fl-al Fon v elley Ft-Edison WUTMINSTER 1).7) 60 Oena Hiiis 12 60 La Mott Oa t3 &a Pacific• '1 S4 &on·•• 61 '° Se«•lt s 1 ,. M4tlV1a•• n 9S &.II· Jelferton 60 S4 LB Wit.on 61 •9 Cerrito• 79 46 El Dorado 62 071-Sanllae>o '°"'' J4-Sanrlaoo J6-0<un Vifw J 11-Founlatn llallev Jl)-Marlna J1t-Edl1on J20-t l Hin BH CI> J2S-at Ocon View F' I-at Marina F'l-ai Edlton F.-a1 Htn Beec1> ~by OUanan VIiie Par~ 12 t 1 10--41 E1la11ela U 10 10 ~ Tolat loull Ville Park 9, E••encle 13 hcnnlul Hulick IE,1anc11> Matw D.i 71. L.lllUM H•s ll IOn,_ HtllOav Clan '<) LAOVNA HILLS -Cart ... 14 GerclAt 2, 1..lllln t , S..lllno S. Plemel O. RllKlltr 2, Ht Mlclav O. Ot •l1 0. Brown 0 Conrtdl 1 Tolalt 11 11·1'2 13 MATE• Dll -Bat\.tw1atrl IS Lewi> 21, Jaek.on 12, MllCntff t. Fletdtr 1 Owver t . llellv 2. Mo••s • Worthe O. (;orman O Pellon o To1a11 34 10· 13 7' ~"" °"'""" Laoun• HIMI s 13 II -)J Maler 0.1 21 10 " ,._.,. Toltl louts Laguna Hllll 14, M4tllff o.t 17 Tecnn1ea1 Jackson IMOI ~ ..... '°• c .... Me-la ... (OrM9f H ... v OaWcl COSTA MESA -llvten 6, Kimme 7. Judd 6, Greene 7, Cool< t T~ 2, M4tlrtln J, "-ll<llOwskl 6, Paulln 3 Tolalt 17 1•·21 .. FOOTHILL -AlVartoo 4. Ct MY 14. Gore 16. Lelro IS. Pfr'kln• t, Lftl•r 0 Total• 10 10·?1 60 k -b'I Ou•n.n CO\lt Mtu 1 IS 10 ,......,.. Fooll'llil 21 3 17 19-tO Tolt t 1ou11· Cos•• ~H 10, Foolnlll 19 Sadlhbeck 64, G1rd9n Grw. 60 I"""'.. T..,"""*'9 I OA.OllN GltOVI -CulDOfd 14, Deni• It, o vuira •. Ikerd o. W.sfereuro IS. Movln 4. KtJ.er 2. Rock O Tot el• 26 t ·,. '° SAOOLl aACK -Walkins 4, B Wallon I), M, W•llOll 21, Lulen 14. OM I '· Jone• 0 Total\ 2S ,..10 64 k_..,0-,., Gtrderl Grove 20 I) 13 1......0 $eddlt0Kk IS 17 IS 17-.. To1e1 foub. Geroen Grove 16, Sad<IW· OICll 14 Devta cu. ..... 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SOUTH COAST LEAGUE CA"<> II ALLEY II· I I O?t--Otarogf IOurne• 69 Htn 8each 66 J.,_Laguna 8eacn 6S Cor Oet Mar ,, J6-al Min ion Vl•IO 68 ROllllKI HIN1 .0 J9-S.n Clemtnlt 1' B"*"• Park SI Jll-11 CaPO Valle• 66 Le Sarna l>.t J 1)-et Dana Hiii' 71 HH WlllOn •• 11.-wooe11>rldge 6S Orange 63 J2S-•t Laguna Baacn 67 Marina •1 J27-Mln lon VleiO SS Eo"~ 76 J30-el S.n Clemente 027-PunallOu tour F l-Cao111r1no VatMlv J•-•• Oana Hill\ Fl-Oana Hit" JO-al WOOODridge F•-·· Wooelb<loge J,_Mlss1on V•tlo Jll-Laguna Hlllt MISSN VIEJO 0·0 J 18-Lagu"" Beacl> S2 Oc.H n View 66 J20-al $en Clernenle Sf El Toro 67 J2S-Oana Hiiis lJ C0< oel Mar H J17-Wooclbrlooe 67 Sonoo Ana 63 Jlo--al Minion lllelo 44 Canvon '° FI-al Laguna Hill• 41 Wooclt>rld11e 46 Ft-al Laguna BHCll 80 l•vlne M F l~San Cltmente 026-Brea tournev J>-a• Marina DANA HILLS 15·3) J6-Laguna Hill• n Westmlnlltr 60 J,..._.I Caoo Valttv 47 Orange 6 t J 11-11 uguna Boen 60 S.vanna S8 J t)-Wooclt>rldge 4S lrvlne SO J 18-at San Ctementf S6 SI JO\tOh 59 J2~0ana Hllli SS Sania Marla S3 J27-al La11Una Hiii• 37 Marina lotl l6 J:lO-<aPO vanev 51 Lo' Amloos •S Fl-Laguna B .. cn 011t--Or•nge tourney Fl-at Wooelllrldet J..-<ao111rano llantv F.-San Cletnenlt J6-t• Laguna Hint F 1~11 o ana Hllli J,_al WOOCll>f~ J II-Sen Cteme111e J 1)-Laeunt Hllll J70-at Mlu lon v1eo0 J2S-al C•PO Valley J77-L•CIU"' Beach Jl0-WOOC111r100I FI-al san Clemen•• F')-al Laguna H1t11 F 11>-Mlu lon lllelo LACO. aEACH IS-21 13 SGJlee>o 61 sa Eslencla t s S6 Wtrrtn 6S n El Toro 47 S7 F oolhlM SS 68 Sen Ctem 12011 67 7S Wllllney 61 0,._.I Rt'l'll IHa,.) D:ic>-.1 Cu tle (Haw) J>-M.gnoll• Jl-1tl Lag1141a Hiii• J.-oena Hlll1 J 11-Mlu lOI\ lllelo J l>-San Cternenle J lt-.1 Ctoo vane. J20-et wooe1or1oge J2s-Laguna Hiii\ J27-t Oen• Hiiis F ,_, M1111on llieo0 F>--.1 San Cl<!menle Ft-<aol•treno Valtev F l~WOOCIDf'IOQt L ... CO. HILLS O ·O Sl El Dorado ~ " Peclflc,a 54 •1 WObrtOQt (OI) JO 46 Sa•anna l>.t " Tu111n SI U Lo• ,.,...go, ~7 sa Co\IA Meu SO '3 $unnv Holl\ SO S7 El Toro ~7 ll Meler Oel 18 ANGELUS MATllR Dill 110-tl 103 Esoertnrt 46 '1 Oomlnoue• JV J l 18 Katell• S2 6' St &ernero 45 ts No••• Dame 31 13 Benning ILA I SI .. SI Bernero 47 SS Cr•nsna w S1 ~ a t St Jot1n·s 60 SI OeMatha 64 71 L1gun1 Hllh )) SAN CLEM 15·3) 61 WHtern 57 6S Warren 62 60 Et1t ncla t9 68 C0>ta Mua S4 SS EI Mooene S2 61 L•g Bell (1011 6a 61 Le Hat>r a S9 12 Lt Amlg, Uot I 7) 026-<hlno 1ournn J.,_Wooelt>rlooe Jt-at Laguna H1111 Jll-el Dena Hill• J ,,_.., Laguna Btecn Jlt-Mlnlon VleoO JlO-Ceoo Valtev J2S-et WOOODrldge Jlo--Laguna HlllS F 1-0ane Hlll1 Fl-Laguna Beach Fl-el Min ion Vle10 FIQ-e! Cooo Valle• WOODBIUCM;E 16-1) S9 Fullerton 34 SI Garden Grove .,. 39 Lag Hlllt (Ot) 41 S8 Arle>la t4 49 Universllv " S6 Min ion lllalO '8 l7 Cor del Mer 36 021-Bru lournev Jl-1tl S.n Clemente J6-Caol1tr ano v elle• J9-0ane Hlh J 13-at M1n l0n V1tt0 J It-• Lavuna Hill' J20-L•guna Beach J2S-Stn Ctemenle J21-al Caoo Vallav J:»-e• Oal\8 Hiii• F3-M1u 1on Vlelo Ft-Laguna Holl\ F l~Leciuna Beach LEAGUE O?t-<>ranvf 10<.orne., JJ-tion Beech ICnaPt J7-Serra ICnaoJ Jll-et B1•noo Amat Jll-Srvlle <Cvoren l J lt--St Paul l(heOI J20-et Pius X J11-• Serro JJl-Amao tCn11>m1nl F>-5rvlte ILBAren•I F8-Plu' X lhOmt ) F 10-al SI Paul NHL CAIW'aELL CONFIR&NCE Sm¥1M OMl!eft w L T "" COi" GA Edmonlon 76 7 • S6 no ... Vancouver 1S II 3 ).) IS3 ISJ Ca!Qarv 13 16 6 32 130 ISi WIMlot9 1) .. • 30 ISi 175 IC.._ 17 ,, 6 30 IS.l 17' Nerrls OWlslefl MillllttOla 17 .. • JI ISS IS1 Clllctoo 1S 10 l ).) 117 160 Toronlo .. •• s ll U7 166 SI LOUii 13 19 • lO 140 156 Ot 1rol1 11 20 26 12S 1S4 WALES CONFE•ENCE .. atrldl °""'*' NYl\let ,. 10 2 so 170 123 PMt <lelO"I• 20 10 6 4' 161 124 NV RanQer1 19 13 • ., .. , .. o WtsPlllKllon 17 It 2 36 .,. ll S Pllllburgl'I 9 23 s 13 119 162 New Je<',.'I' 7 26 , 16 9t 162 Miami OM...., 80llOll 2J 10 , .. IS9 104 8utt11o 20 1% 4 " Ill 121 QueOec 19 14 l 41 16S 132 Mofllrffl 17 17 2 36 llJ 131 Heriford 13 II J 19 in 131 MelldaV'S se-K.._ s. Vt ncouver • <oil Boiton 2, BuffelO 1 MonlrH I 1. Hertford 1 F"llltbu<Ofl 7, NY Ranters • F'l!llaoetP!lla S, WH l!klofon • T Of'~lo 6. O.lroll 1 Clllcaoo ), SI. Lou•~ I Wlnnl"9 S, Ml,,,,..ota I EdMOnlon 6, Caltert 3 T ........ t~ Hll'll(l(d et ~ a uflelO a l MontrMI $1 Louil •I ~w Jentv Marcel Dio nne Tourneys attract JC fives .. 'Tis the week for h o liday baske tball tournam e n ts, and two of the thr~ a rea communi t y col- lt'ge teams arc takmg things liter- ally. O r an ge Coast College he ads for San Diego to compete in the 17th ann ual San D ieg o M esa Christmas Invitat ion a l, while Golden W est L'> in P a lm Desert for the College of th e Desert Tour- namen t Saddleback , m eanwhile, will stay close to hom e to compete in the seventh annual Santa Ana H oliday Tournamen t In San D iego, Coach T andy G11l1s' P irates meet G rossmont tn t heir opener W edn esday night a t 8 A v1t•tory w o uld send OCC u p against either lmpenal Valley o r M esa. Arizona a t the same time o n T h ursday nigh t OCC ca rries a 6-5 rec."Ord into its gam e The Pirates h ave1''t played sin ce Thursday w h e n t h ey w h ipped Citrus, 82-53 in their best s h o wing o f the young season Saddleback , 3-7 , will try to s n a p a three-g a m e losing streak whe n the G auc h os fa<..-e LA V al- ley w nig h t (8) an the h rst ro u nd of the S anta Ana tourney. A vic- tory w ould sen d the G auch os m to the c h ampion s hip semifina ls agamst th e winne r of the Full- erton-San t.a M o n ica CC game on Thursday nig ht at 6 Golden W est, 1-6. had an a f ter - noon contest today in the Desert Tourney, but should Coach J im Greenfield's Rus t ler s d e f eat Sout h M oun tain Anz.ona. they would see e it h er College o f the Desen or Glen dale W edn esda y n ight at 6:30 an t h e champ ionsh ip semis A first-round loss for any of the threoc teams would rele g ate the m to the loser 's brack et whe re a consolation c h ampio nship is the lon e goal. H ere's a look a t this week's first-r o und tournamen t pairings: SAN DIEGO MESA TOURNAMENT w-1dtv'1 f tnt-Rtulld Gem.. 2 o m -Bt~tr\lleld VI Scollsdele. Arl1 • om -lmoerlal Valley vs ~a. Ariz 6 o m -Rio Honoo vs San 01990 MeH a om -Gronrnon1 •S Ort no• Coe•• SANTA ANA TOURNAMENT T-..il'• flrst·R~ COa,,,.1 6 om -Sanla Monla CC "' Fun.r1on t om -LA Veltev •1 SaOdlti>a<lo. W9dr>tldtv'S Flnl-Rtulld Gamn 6 pm -LA Pierce v1 Olrle. Ulah I o m -Hancoc~ vs S.n1a Ana RAMS. e • From PageC1 "W e can't call t h is o ur b iggest win Let's w ait until t h e season is over . W e may have som e thing left in u s ." G u ard Dennis H a rrah said. "I'm read y to party. W e cel- e bra ted C hristmas h e re. "N o w w e can go cele brate N e w Y ear's in W ashington." D a llas Coach T o m Landry said. "W e d rop ped a lo t o f passes today but ultim a tely the quarterbac k (Whit.e) h as to s h are the responsi- bility . W e j ust w e r e n 't a solid team " H e said h e d idn't plan w h o le - sale c h a nges n e x t year. "I t hink w e have a nucl.eu.s o( a good t e am," Landry said. "Every position s h o uld be competitive, and tha t's w hat we will look at." A n emo tio nal Wlute made a brief appearance In the Cowboys' intervie w room before he left. "l tak e the blame as much as anybody else," White said before tears began to w e ll in his eyea. ''W e ll guys, I'v e g ot to go." Saddleback five tops Garden Grove M ark Walton 8COl'Cld 27 po~ta M o n day night to lead SaddleWck Hig h t o a 64-60 victory over Gu- den G~vo tn the flrst round ot the Santiago H igh Buke t ball •Toumam~nt. W alton , a 6-7 junior center . h elped tho &.drunner1 pk:k up their ahn.h wtn apinlt orw ~At OU. eeuon. Kii brother:. Bryant, juat a mphomore, chl}>ped tn l3, w hlJe St.eve Lajln ldded 14 for Sllddle- b.ck. I (\j Orange Coast DAtLY PILOT /Tuesday, December 27. 1983 He just wanted to see the game But b ecause the referees didn't show up, h e offered his services CHAMP AlG N. ll1 (AP) -CharlJe Due arrived at the arena as a spectator and wound up as a referee in one o f the blggest '-'Ollege basketball games of the season. "ln relJ'OSpect, we got out alive. So it t.'Ou1d.n'l have gone too badly," laughed Due, w ho took his first crack at basketball officiating when No. 2 Kentu cky squeaked past No. 20 lllinois Saturday before a nationa l television audience. Both teams went into the game unbeaten . He wore a pair of old blue jeans and a striped shirt a few sizes too small, but he made \lp for the makeshift uniform with a lot of confidence "I've been around sports all my life," said Due, 54, who was an assistant basketball coach for 18 years a nd has been Champaign Central H igh 's baseball roach for 26 seasons. "So it wasn't like I w as a stranger to that enVU"Onment . the noisy crowds or the roaches screaming, or anything like that." What do we do now? Because of record cold paraJyting the Midwest, the three referees Crom the Big 10 Conference couldn't reach Auembly Hall in Champaign by the scheduled starting time. Some 7,600 fans did. After the game was de layed 15 minutes and the situation hadn't improved, of- ficials from both schools agreed to uae three men from the crowd. T he first was Due, a season ucket-holder and veteran high school football official who knows Illinois Coach Lou Henson. They scrounged up a shirt "four sizes too small. The other two, both with extensive experience calling basketball games at the prep level. were Bill Miue, principal o( nearby Monticello High, and Bob Hiltin- bran. an Illinois faculty member who teaches agronomy. "I knew both fellows and they were just great." satd Due. "That helped a lot. And the kids were Just super . I've always found the easiest gamea to refertt were the ones played between the best teams. "I guess the kids undentood the situation so they didn 't do any rantmif and raving," he added. "J oe HaU (Kentucky'• coach) got on me once or twice. but that'1 part of every game. "And after you've officiated as long as I have, that stuff rolls off your back like water ofC a duck.'' tn fact, both coaches went t.o great lengths a fter the game -d ecided 56-54 on a last-second jumper by K entucky freshman James Blackmon -to prallie the quality of the calls. "Under the circumstances," said Hall, "they did a super job." "You can go back and look at the films to see that," ooncurred Henson . Altogether, the trio whistled a below-average 25 fouls -12 against the visiting Wildcats. Fiesta BolVl: Buckeyes, Pitt to score a lot? SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.. (AP) -F.arle Brut.-e of Ohio State and Pittsburgh's Foge Fazio, the rival coaches in the Fiesta Bowl, say it will take more than 12 points to w in. "We've got to crack their defense and score more than the 12 points they've been giving up. It will take more lhan 12 points to beat Pitt.'' Bruce said Monday upon his team's arrival in Phoenix for one of the five bowl games being played on J an. 2: Bruce got no argument from Fazio. who brought his Panthers here Dec. 20 and has put an seven workouts already at Phoerux J\lnior College. "Their offense scares you," Fazio said o f the 14th-ranked Buckeyes. 9-3. "I don't think 12 pomts wall be enough to win. What's the least they scored? Thirteen against Illinois? And they had some crucial people who were not in there. "They're the best team we've faced all year. no doubt about it, whe n they're health y." All of the Ohio State players, except linebacker Curt Curtis, had been cleared for U>day's first wo rkout at Scottsdale Community College. Bruce did not seem alarmed that Pittsburgh. 8-2-1 and No. 15 nationally, had such a head start in working out in the warmer weather here . The Buckeyes have practiced outside only three times since the regular season and left zero w eather in Columbus. Da ll a Cowboys Coach Tom Landry and quar- terback Dann y \'l'hite ta lk over th~ situation during Monday,s 24-17 loss to the R am . "We hope to catch up as quickly as possible," he saJd "Most of con tact work isoutof the way. We hope we've maintained a degree of execution and tlmmg. Most certainly we should be fresh ." The squads from the sch ools 180 miles apart mingled for the first time Monday rughtat a steak fry Rogers has tough act to foil ow UCLA free safety was Rose Bowl's co-player of game last season LOS ANGELES (AP) -UCLA free safety Don Rogers has a tough act to follow -his own performance in the l 983 Rose Bowl. "Going out and getting another victory is the most important thing to me." said Rogers, who was named co-player of the last Rose Bowl game along w ith quar- terback Tom Ramsey of the Bruins. "[ think I'll play a significant role just by doing what I do best. That's playing tough football." Rogers, a 6-11-1, 208-pound seruor. earned nauonaJ recognition on Jan. l. 1983, as he helped the Bruins whip Michigan 2,-14. He led this year's Brums wtth 137 tackles and seven Interceptions. UCLA earned its second straight P a· cific-10 Con ference championship and the Rose Bowl berth by winning six of Its last seven games after an 0-3-1 start. The Bruins, who we re 6-1-1 against league op ponents, will face fourth-ranked Illinois, 10-1. in the Rose Bowl game on Jan. 2. Rogers was a key to UCLA's success this year. as evid enced by his second-team All-American status. He srud he never gave up hope even after the Bruins' dismaJ beginning. "To be honest about it, I wasn't discouraged (by UCLA's slow start).'' he said. "At umes we played very well. [ knew that after having that tough Another Butku~ helps Illini return to Pasadena PASADENA (AP) -One of the greatest players in the history of Illinois football was Dick Butkus, who helped the Illini win the 1964 Rose Bowl game. Now. after a long d ry spell. another Butkus has helped the Illini return to Pasadena for what midwestemera hope will result in another victory. "I'm really glad he wu a part of it and I'm glad I'm a part of it.'' said defensive tackle Mark· Butkus, whoee Uncle Dick went on to a brilliant National Football League career as a linebacker with the C)\icago Bears. '.1 "He was my idol." Mark, a four-year starter for the Dllni, has that Butkus look. but at 6-foot-4 and 260 pounds, he's much bigger than his uncle, who w as a junior on the Illinois U!am of 1964. Butkus was 1n on 59 tackles this season in helping the fourth -ranked llllni to a 10-1 record and the date opposite UCLA in the R06e Bowl next Monday. He had five quarterback sacks and six tackles for losses. The younger Butkus said hia uncle's exceptional career at lllinol..I had nothing to do with his decision to go there. "I just felt that lllinois wu the place for me," said Mark. "There was a whole new coaching staff there. I juat fe lt It wu right. They really hadn't had a good team~ 1964. "For some reuon. going to the Role Bowl was always in the back o f my mind. t juat thought it wu roing to happen .. , t hadn't even heard of Coach (Mike) White before he came to llllnois." schedule that something was going to go right. We started playing four good quarters every game and things turned around." Early in the season. the Bruins l06t to top-ranked Nebraska, seventh-ranked Georgia and ninth-ranked Brigham Young, and tied Arizona State. "We had some inexperienced guys who had to step into some big shoes," said Rogers. "It was a matter of getting experience and a matter or getting healthy. We had some injuries early in the year and that didn't help. "The tough schedule really brought a lot out of our younger players They gained more and more confidence as the year went along. I think the younger individuals will respond (in the Rose Bowl).'' Rogers believes he has Improved during his career at UCLA. but a1ao thinks he was a solid player even before he was discovered in the Rose Bowl last January. "I thought.. I had an All-American season last year (as a junlor)," said Rogers, a three-year starter at UCLA. "The Rose Bowl put me in the limelight; It was the biggest thing ever for me athletically. "I'm not going to compare last year and thl..I year. Last year I was Injury-free; this year I dealt with injuries but I was a whole lot smarter." Rogers could become the aecond straight UCLA free safety to be drafted in the first round by the National Football League. The last previous Bruin at that position. Kenny F.aaley, has had three aucceaful yean with the Seattle Sea- hawks. How much better can the hard-hJu.ing Ropnget? "I'll aee.'' be said. "I have no idea. I'll keep w orking to find out. J worked hard to get where I am today and I'm going to keep on working." "He'll be out for the game. He gives me a little advice, some little pointen," aaid the younger Butkus. Dempsey new Memphis St. coach "Having the name has ita poeJUves and negallvee. It does give me an extra incenUve." " Mack aaid that hia f1ther, Don, Ii.al been ~ bla help, too. "He'• been • real lnaplrat.lon," aid Matte. "He played ln hl1h IChool, th.It w.t ft. From w~ ~told~. 1w W81 IUp y bettft than my ~. He WM 6-7, 270. an offtnltw lineman. "He blame. It on my ma. I.hat'• what be lays all the time,.. llddld Che youn,er Butkw with a amtle, ref.rrtnc to the fst &Nl hJI I.at.her didn't play c:ol.kce tootbalJ. "She 11ys. 'R Jht!" MEMPHIS. Tenn . (AP) -M~mphia State'• new head football coach aaya hie eoaJ I.a to lead the Tigers to • nadon&I championship. "l"m a very poeitlve pel"'IOn:• Rey ~mpRy Mid Monday aa he took OYer Ow football prosram he lnhmta from the late ReJt Dock~ry. '11 came to win. I expect t.o win." Dems-l came to Memphll State &om Soulhe"n llllnoia University where hi.a Saluldl won the 1983 DlvtaSon l-AA champlomhjp. Ke aid he and his Soulhfm DllncMa pltyen Ill the divillon c,lonahlp u their goal for 1983 at th md of the 1982 aeuon . "My next goal ii l'm golng to do It In (Dfvilicm) 1-A.'' the47-year-old Dempwy MIAS. Dtm~y •tep. Into 1 rebulldlna Job bltUn Dockery. who wu killed with three o er men two weeb -.> when their plane crashed near La~. Tenn. Dockery ...... had jult Led the ,.... lO their ftrlt wtnnil'\I ~ -8-4-1 -llnce 197'7. The on.-t!me Uniwnlty of Ttft. nemee1tar Nd t.n at t.he n,.r hebn for thJW ~ ..... , .. Al'Wll..,i.oto Two for Akeem II ous t on ~s Akee m Olaj u won towe rs ovt~r Fresno tate's Scott Barnf's during Monday's c ham- pionship ~ame of the <.:hamina<le <.:las. ic. Fre no upset Houston. 68-61. MiaHJi star inipressed ... but not worried CORAL GABLES. Fla. <AP) Tony Fitzpatrick promises to be at "150 percent" normal strength by the time fifth-ranked Miami Imes up against No. l Nebraska Jan. 2 in the Orange Bowl. The H urricanes' middle guard may need to be that strong -Nebraska's offense is one of the most productive in college football history And Fitzpatrick, at 6-0, 243 pounds, lS 6 inches shorte r and 17 pounds lighter than Mark Tranowicz, the Nebraska center he'll face. "This o ffensive hne isn't your ordinary college offensive hne. They say (Nebraska's) second team should be their first team and their Cirst team should be m the National Football League.'' F1tzpatr1ck said. He may be impressed. but he's not worned -at least not publicly . Even though he's sllU healing from surger y to repair a bicep tom m the Oct. 29 West Virginia game. Fiupatnck figures he and hlS teammates with coUege football's No 3 defense can use their quick. swanning style to stop one of the best offenses of all time. "Yeah. they're big. They're strong.'' F1upatr1ck said. "And they have a lot hanging out over their belts. That'll slow them down." Nil.JC NOTICE NOTICI CW TRUITal'I IAU Tl N0.410 VM _ .......... ~•DllD Of ntueT, .._,Oct. '1, "1t, -.... ,.., lMI••'*' .. " ..... ,_ "~·"...., ........... ..... ..... H,..,Medefle .......... el Ille nehire of Ille """4lnt .,..in.1 ""· "" efMMIW _._. • ~WART TITLE OF CALI• FOANIA. a Ca11tomta c;orpotatlon, 1Sub1lltutecl lrullM). u duly .,.. point.cl Trullee unclef the lol!OwlnO dallCflbecl dead ol lfull WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO 'THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH Of u Ml '°'th In S~llon 2924h ol th4 Clvll COO.. all right, tltle and lnt•MI OOtl· veyed to and now held by II under aald DM<I ot Trull In the Pfoper'ly hereinafter dncrlbecl TRUSTOA· RUBY E BONHAM, dbt A BONHAM & CO BENEFICIARY DORIS GESSIN, I m1rrled woman 11 het tole & MPar- ata Pfoe>ert~ Recorded Oecemt>e< 20. 1978 N ln1tr No 33478 In~ 12978 peo- 750 ol OHlclaJ Rec;ord1 In the ofllee of the R11eotdet Orange C<>vnty, Mid deed or truat O..C:tlbft lhe lotlowlng property • Lot 1 • ot Bloc;lc 53, Arcn Beeeh Hlllghta, •• pet map recorO.O In 8oOll 7, Pag41s 9 and 10 of Mla-c;etlanaou1 Maps. 1n the onic. ot tne Counay Aec;otder of Hid County MAY ALSO BE KNOWN AS VA· CANT LANO "(II a elrMt acldrMa 0< common dfflgnatlon It lhown above. no war· ranty II given 10 111 oomplet-Of couectnat•I" The Vend<>< uno., talO 0..0 of T ru11. by rauon of a breac;h or <I.-fault tn the obllg111on1 NCUr.0 tharaby, n9'etol0<e uacuted and dellve<ed to the undersigned I writ-ten Oec:lareuon of Default end 0.. mand tor Sale, and written notlee of breach ano ot etecllon 10 cauM the unders19ned to Mii talO Pf094lt1Y 10 Hllsly said obllgauons. ano the<• alter tMI un09'slgned c.auM Mid no-tice ol breach and of etecllon to be Recorded Augull 30, 1983, as 1natr No 83-373190 of aeld Olflctal ~ cords Said $Ille will be made. but wlthoul covenant or warranty expresa or Im-plied regerdltlQ lllle, polMUlon, Of encumbranoes. lo pay tMI remaining pr1nc1pal sum ot the note(•) MCUr.0 by said 0..0 ol Trull, with lnternt as In Mid note provldeo, aovancet," any unde< lhe term1 of Hid Deed of Trust 19" Charges and .-pen-ol tne T ru11M and ol 1ne tr11111 Cfall.O by talo 0..0 ot T rus1 SelO 1819 wlH be held on TUMOey. J11nuary 3. 198• at 10 00 A M at lhe Chapman Avenv4 entrance 10 the C1v1C Cente< Bu1kllt1Q, 300 Ea11 Chapman Avenue Orange. CA Tl'te tolll amount ot the unpaid balance ot tne oOltgauon MCUr.0 by te•d properly 10 be IOIO, together w11n 1nte<est. tete cn111ges, and etll· meted co1t1 expentes. and ad-venoes, as to tMI dlte hereof II S27 SO• 13 Dale Oeoembe< 6. 1983 STEWART TITLE OF CALIFORNIA as said T ruttee, By STEWART TITLE OF CALI· FORl'llA 900 Nor1h Broadway Santa Ana CA 92701 1]1')558·111• By JAMIE L WEIKS. ASST FORE· CLOSURE OFFICER FOR STEWART TITLE Of CALIFORNIA Publ11hed Orange Cout Oa1ty PllOI Dec 13. 20 27 1983 P\&.IC NOTICE FICT1TIOU9 eu...-H NAM« IT A TEfllENT T'1e tollOWlng pert0ns are dOlng business at LIPSTICK 1686 Tu111n Ava Costa M&N, CA 92627 HOlty Ann Wooletl 2009 AlllO, Costa Mesa CA 92627 Petrle4a L SunpSOf'I. 2009 AlllO, Cos" Mes.. CA 112627 Thll butlneu IS condUC1ecl l>y a general pertne<ahlp HOiiy A WOOttt<S Th11 1111emen1 wu hied With Ille County Cler~ of Orange Counry on Oec 5 1983 f'ZJ11llO Published Orange Cout Dally Pilot Oec 13 20 n 1983, Jen 3, 1911• 6•39-83 He likes to point to the fact that Notre Dame, Purdue and West Virgirua all had offensive lineme n ___ P_OO_l_IC_NO...;.....Tl_CE __ _ who were bagger \han the Hurricanes' defensive FICTITIOUI .u .. NEll f NAME 9TATEMINT ront. The tonowlng persona ere dOltlQ Miami -and Fitz.pa trick -manhandled all bus111n1 .. three GENERAL HOME SERVICES, 31706 Co911 Hwy . Sv1ta 302. S "All the guys I've gone against this year are 6-4. L•gun•. CA 92677 6-5 They haven'tdoneanything against me.'' he said. Robeft Gary Turner, 33815 El en. T canto Dana Pont, CA 92629 "I've played against lots of large linemen. here Leurenca F Wossell. 3•222 isn't a single lineman who's beaten me one on one this Sepul••d• Apt B. Cap1streno N boas · f " Beach CA 92624 year. anyway. o t. JUSt act. rr111 business 11 conducte<1 by 1 DllTH NOTICES oeneret par1ne<Slllp Robeft G Turner Tn11 11a1ement wu llled wllh tne County Cle<k of Orange County on Nov 29. 1983 HYMAN Monuary. Laguna beach EMMA E HYMAN passed with Pastor Tom Jorde. of- away December 24 , 1983 at hctallng Interment will be F'U1MI Publlthed Or•tlQ• Coast Dally P1IOI 0ec 6 13 20 27, 1983 6367-83 her ~1defl('t' m Laguna at Pacltic View Memorial ---------- Beach She 1 survived by Park, Newport Beach. Mrs Ml.IC NOTICE her daughter L1lhan M Hyman will he tn state FICTITIOUI .u...-11 Moore of Stock ton and her Wednesday . December NAME ITATE•NT llOn Roben E Armstrong of 28,1983 from NOON until 9 The tot10W111Q pertons ere doing u , Lo . PM M Co k M buslnets as· nawa11, a Stsler u1se . c rm1c ortuary, WALOONCOMPANY.2230renge Martin of Laguna Beach Laguna Beach. Directors, St Newpor1 Beech, CA 92683 and two nieces Pat Martin 494-9415 Donald Hugh frladmen, 223 Col- d J · .,_l o_ · ton St Newport BHCh, CA 112603 an ona uo: gnney .;><:!Vices Jenet Marueen frtedmen. 223 will be held Thursday. De~ SHAURETTiE Collon St , Newport Beech. CA cember 29.1983 at 11 AM in MAGGIE ANN SHAURET-112603 lhe chapel at Mc Connick TE. born CXtober 3 1,1976, Wallet HollefenPrlor.2230ranoe r::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;m;;m;;'°-, passed a way December SI · Newporl Bell<lh, CA. 926&3 CtlolM Mergaret Prior, 223 Or· H.-.aOR LAWN-MT. OUVW MOttuwy • C.metety Crem1tory 1825 018* AV9. Coe•• Meea 540.5554 NRaMOTHPI llLL IROAOWAY MO«TU.-.Y 110~ay CoetaMaa ~2-9150 aAl TZ NRQUtON IMITH & TUTHIU WllTCll" CHANl 4~7 E. t 7th SI Cotta M•1 &•8·931 1 ~ MICOMKtl llOtltTV~Y 1111 LllllM Canyoft I'd. LllUN leedl. Ce. tHI 1 ...... ,. c 25, 1983. She is survived by enge St . Newpor1 Beach. CA 112663 her father Michael N. Wallet H Prtor Shaurette mother Jolie B. This etatem.pt ., .. "*' with the Shaurelt~. and brother County Cieri! ~enge Counly on J Sh JI f Dec:. 12, 1983. eremy aurette. a o n:lllM Irvine· maternal grand-Pubtlahed Oranoe Coall Dally peren~ Jack and Carol PllOt 09C ?O. 27. ill83. Jan. 3. 10. Nelson of Mmneeota; pl· 11144 6568-13 temal grandparents John r----------- and Verna Shaurette of Pl8.JC NOTIC( F&-ondJdo and great grand-ITATIMbfT Of' mother Mae Moeeby of MANDCU-NT Of' UN cw Temple City. Maggie will lie 1'1CTmOUI ., ..... MAMm ln 11.ate Wf'dnetday. I>K-em-Thi follOwWIQ ~ ~ ati.n- be "" 1""3 t 11 AM dOl*l the uM ol lhe fletltloue lllel-r ~. "° rom -H•IM' ORANGE t:OUfilTY until t PM with graveside AC10 WASH co . 211 1ttt1 Street. ael'\lkee at 2 PM at f.I Toro Hunt1ng1on BMctl. CA 9"49 Cemetery. Mc Cormk k Owner Kenneth &erry. 211 1ttn Mortuary, t.aguna Hilla, DI· =· Huntington leech. CA l"K10rl, 768-0933 Tht F~tltlOue 8ut1neM Name ,... l'l8l.IC NOTICE lo above waa flied In Orentt 1Y on Oct. 12. 1M1 lhll bu ...... WM oondUCted by• Mdull. l(~l'lhrry Tl'lla •tit-I WM fllecl With lhll ounty CIWll Of Ofente Counay on ()¥.ti. 1~. 111tno'1m7t P\.IOlllMd Or1nge CoMI Delly I 0.C. I, 13, IO, 17. 1"3. eMM3 &>\8.IC l'IOTICC NOTICE OF TRUtTtl'I IALI ' TI N0 .412 You ere 1,, def1111t 11nde• a Ofl!D 04' T1'UIT. dated O.C:. tO, 1tn, 11n· I•• 70t.t l11te lllllon lo protect 10111 ,,,.,..,., , II 11'11~ be llO&d It I pt.tbllo ..-, " you nMCI en • apNl\ellon ol Ille n1l11re ol lh• p<~Mdlllt =• rou. rC)lj thot.lkl ciontecl • Orange Coast DA ILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 27, 1983 ('I MtlC NOTIC£ P\8.IC NOTICE PUBllC NOTICE P't&.IC NOflCC NlllC NOTICE Ml IC NOTICC NlllC NOTIC( NOTICI! °' TlllUITH'I SAi.I YOU AN '"Ol:'AIA.T UNOlfl A t:NSB K·OUlll NOTICE Of'' OEATll OF NOTICE OF DEATH Of' CNH IC-O.l'14 YOU AM'" Dl'AUlT UNOlfl A L=~~~ri:=.. ~=-DJ:!..':~~~~~~ ~nJ:. NOTlt'E OF OEATll Of' JAMES SUN DERLAND ETHEL J . VALECllE . AKA =~=i ~~~~::.:=~~~:: ~~ T.t . No. H-14111 TO HIOTICT VCKM Hl()tllflTV. IT CLELLA M. COLTON AND ANO Of' PETITION TO AO· J, VALF.Cll~. AKA ETHE L 100 c~ Clfle., Dt. w .. 1 TO HIOTICT YCKM "'°"""· n UNITCODIH MAYlllOLDATA~IC IALI. OF P t:TITION TO AUMIN· MIN ISTER ESTA1'F. NO. J. Ml'CONNELL ANO Of' Plaln~:'~E~~A~~Am~' =A~~:_~gA,,T,t.~:~ ~tl11.1ly app:.~:0v:~u~~°"un<111,111.,~Fy~H:'1:A~~::"c,":'"1::: I S TF.R f:STATE NO. A·l!0844 P ETITION ~0 AOMINIS· O.lendanr OICK J ANUUI. BILL OF THI NUUH o' THI 1011ow1ng oete111*1 dMd or 11u11 ,.flOCllDINO AOAINIT YOU, YOU A·l:? 1079 Tu all tw111'I, lM•rlt'rtl'iJlll'•· TF.R £$TATE NO A liG948 JOHNSON, OIVERSIFIED BUSI· HIOCllDIMO AOAINIT YOY, YOU Wll l SEU AT PUBLIC AUCTION SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYlfl T11 all h1•11 s. lx•m•fll rttrll'!I, n 1•cl11<1r~ .ind l'UOllntwnt To llll twlf8. lJl•nl•lll"IUrll'lo NESS ACTIVITIES INC' A Callf0tn11 IHOULD COH'TAC1'. LA.n'l"-TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR NOTICa 04' TflUITll'I IAU ·J f JAM ES , I , ,, , , Corpo111lon. HUNT ER HORN RE· NOTICI Of' T"UITH'I IALI CASl1 AN0 10R THE CASHIERS OR 'f.I ..... ,..,... l"H•drtur' .ind. l'~lnlHlj!l'OI I.• I I l 11 I i.. (I l rt l llur' Utlu U Hltln l(Nlo SOURCES INC A Cl lllOfnl• COf· NO. 101471 CERT lflED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN NOTICE 16 HEREBY GIVEN 1N11 l n-cl1111r, • 11 l LELLI\ M SUN DF:HLl\N U J lld JX'I 1100 11 t 11·d 1 lu" o r F.T 11 EL J po1at1on HARVEY LEVIT l rNTER· On J enu81y 9 1983 11 10 00 A.M , S TEWA,Rl TlflE OJ CALI CIVIL CODf SECTION /9241l tP•Y Oil WednetOly J1nu1ry II, 1984 •I C'Ol.'T'ON .11111 pt•l'liOr\S wlu.J \\ h u nrny h·· 111h 1•1 WIW v A I. 1-:c 11 t~ A K A J NATIONAL OEMOLOOICAL SO· .. Tl•• ••• , entreno• lobOy on $111 FORNIA • C.llotorn•a c0tpo<etion M able Al 11\1 111ne ot ure on 11w1u1 10 00 • m or ••'<I day 1n Ille room lllJY IJt• otlw t WIM' llllrn"'ll'C int.-ro ... 11-cl 111 tlw will ,m(llur VA LECl t~;. A K A ETH E L J ClfTY A C1llforn11 CO<Po<•llon 1nd CS~~p,Anoyt 1:_.ha1C1:eooal !~1111 N~~h ~ duly appoonraa Trl•llM undtet Ille money or tile Unot"° S•11IH l Ill •19h1 "' UtO• for C<>f\ClucOng T1utt .. • h II I 1 1 M ~ '')N N L'l L .• DOES I through 10 tnclUllV11 -.. w -~ ~ "'' ,.._, loUowong llescr11>1<1 OHO of lrusr 1111~ and interest con•ereo 10 and s.ies ••11tll1n 111<1 olllcH of REAL ES· "' I •· WI .me 111 t':Slal4' •'lo ·' 1' l"' c. • • .tnu p.·rMoru Cat• No 39.~o Slree1 1n In• Cny 01 S111ta Ana, Will SEll AT PUBLIC AUCTION now llelO by 11 unuer ~10 DMd ol TATE SECURITIES SERVICE, 1\ 1>e·t1111111 h..i~ l)t'\'I\ h lt'C A pl'h llon hil.'C lx.·~m lrh'l.1 who m.1v lu u lhl·f Wl"t tUllllMOtill County ot Or11ir; Si.It Of Call- TO THE HIGHEST BIODER FOR TruSI on""' Pl()l)<lll'ly h•retn1n11< 01· locahtO •I 2020 North 8roaow1y. "' P 11tr It IJ l.'out'I T hou m 1r hv C:1·ralct 11..Crwr m th~· S u · lnh'r(•,11~1 Ill tlw w ill undlo l NOTIC() Y.u he" ............. 'coOrNnV·E·Y·NCCA.E LCOF .'?PR. NN~ A. a Ac .. E1: CASH 0r u Ht ronll •n Secuon scrot>Old Su••• 2011. on 1ne c 11y or Senl• A.na. h S ,. f () n:·nor l'11u n ul Orongl· Coun· 1 , TM c:-' _, dNlde aeelnet JW " ...... 2924h Oltlle CIVIi COCI• all oglll mle TAUS TOR RICHA~D p HEifllZ County of Orange. 1111• Of Call-l t• uix·rmr ... uur t n r.ingt ,... • t'b\J \ without ·-Mint Mill'd "'"'"' rorn1a COll)Otltlon .. duly IP· 1nd tnlerHI conveyeo to ano now BENEFICIAR~ SANT A FE l'ED· IOfnia, WE.STERN SIERRA FINANCE t'ounly l'l'qU('l!llOJ( that Pa ly r·toqUl'!itinl( lhul Gt•ra ld A Jll'lllmn h u,; bl'«.'n fllt'd JO'I ~ wlttlln '° daJL ~ po1n1eo Trull .. under tllat cenlln '14Md by '1 unde• Hid OeeO 01 saod ERAl SAVINGS AND t OAN AS· CORPORATION, 1 Celllornle COt· I• ll'W l'Lllll.•l T h o u111 bt-ap tlt'fm•r !Jl· UJ>f)llmlt'd u pt-r-by FIHST INTERSTATE IN lnlottNtlon below. Deed ot T1u11 ••ecutl<I by SHARON Deed of T1us1 on1'1e P•OIJ!tfty herein· SOCIATION poreoon, u duly appointed Trutl" porllll'tf a~ pt'l1illllul rt•prt'St!n sonal n ·pn'!k•nt.uuvt• to ud· BANK. A CALIF CORP If yovwlth to Nell Ill• advice or 111 LARKNE0STWENEGA0.RaWnu1Nn.m 1enrrledunmw81omr~ 11111 desc11b•O RECOAOEO July 13 1919es1nstr unde1 and pu11u1n1 10 tne ~of , I fJAM"'c. rouME' L Y KNOWN ., eftorney in Ihle miller you 111ouid _, TRUST OR W KIM WILSON " Pojo 1e5•0 1n Boo~ 13227 page :J20 sale conlerred In lhet cenaln Deed lallVl' lo ddn11n111tc·r the t.'SUltt mtnti;\t r l W l'lillllt• u "-'> "' ,{ Ac:. do IO promptly so that your wr111en man H hualora, recorded on June """ied man JJ MOSER amarroee ofOll1c1a1A;;corlls1n tlleot11ce oltt1e orTrus11xecu1ed by CAL·CO MAN· •lf CLELLA M COLTOl'I S UNDERLANO (ur1dt•r the U NITED C ALIF' BANK rr resc>Ol\N, 11 any, ('11•1' be liled on 111 198t.111nwument No 234tllln man Recorder or Orenge Counry AGEMENT 1NCORPORA fED. •Call-I umh•r th• lru.le•pt•ndl'nl Ad-lntll'f.".'nd1·n l At:1m ln11<1ro11vn ti" Supt·• 1or t\•url u l Ora nl(t 11me Book 14102 Pege 1!12 ot Otficl.i E BENEFICIARY DAVID W WARO· $81(1 Off<! Of l•Ull ClttlCfll><!S m•rornoaco•l)Ofallon.re<:orelld July 1, m1n 1 tr · ll n ( '"'·w1 ~ ""'' .. r Uol<lll"l> /\l'l) T hl• ""-lll1un Cou n t y ll'"Ut•Sllng thll' AVllOIV1ledll111ido eleml11dade Record1 of 011nge County,St•l•OI LL M D a P11>l11Ss1ona1 Corpor tollt,.••ng 1980 on Book 13652 of o mc111 Re· :. " 11 11 .,..... ~.. , • ~ • . , -. '' El 1r1buma, lade dec:ldlr ~•re Uct C1lllorn1a under Ille po-of Hie ation lot " ot T 1 ae1 Pojo 10018 on tne cords '01 ,.10 Counry at pege S29 Thl · J.ll'll \11111 I!> ~·I rt>r ht'IH llltC 1:-Sl'l for h1•arm~ m O..•pl Nu. I-I R S 1 I N T E R S T A T E eln ~ .. • -4'!.le Uct. ,.. ther111n con1a1ne<1 will Mil 11 pybllc Rec0td~ Jl l1Ull) 14 1983 115 Coty t>I Cotta Mesa County ot Or· Aecoroe• s 1n11rumen1 No 685. by in O..•pt No 3 al 700 <:1v1c :1 al 700 C.:rVll' C.:t·ntn Dr , BANK. f\ L'A LIF COHP lur ~ ...,lro de JO dlee. ~ 14 auction lo tne n19nea1 l>lddet tor '';:,~. ~ ,!: ~~~!5~1°,r,!>~~~.~:, ange S1a1e o1 Ca 111ornra as P'S• map •nson 011 b•Metl of d1faull 1n P•Y· Ct·nlc•r Dr Wl'SI, SanUI Ana. Wt~t SunlJ Ana. CA ~'l7UI mt.•r Iv k uow n J !> United uhf ln'°'"'8Clon qua..... cull or cnecll u dHCtlt>ed bllOw. c rec•Oded 111 Boo~ 425 Pages 4 10 7 -nent ot per1ormllnCie of tile obh· • 1 ..., 0.. IJt 'lM I llllJ II JU B. k 1 d " JCHI wleh to -" the M Ylce ot payat>lci a1 tn. llnwt ol Mle In lawtul Otenge County U•d Otl80 °1 1rus1 1nc1us•~tt or moKellanaous maps. on 1a1oons secured 111ereoy 1nc1Uo1ng LA ~~71111111 Jdnuury 11. 1...0' 1Jn "''m •r · al rn 11' 11ppomu· WI Jl'•r "' eltOfMJ 111 tMt fftattet, rC)lj money or Ille United Stll" o4 Clesc111>es ine •onowong property mt! olltce ol me Coun1y Recorder of nat breach 0< delaull. Notice or ,1t \I ;w A M A M ••OnJI rq .>fl':>l'llUIUVt• Ul Jtl 9hcMlld do eo pt_,.u, eo tl)et ~· America wlll>Out w1,,1n1y ••Pt- The land relerrld 10 hereon as Solu· sa•d County .. nicn was rec0tded March 30 19112 IF YOU OBJECT lo tht< IF' YUU O BJECT lO thl' m rn1!llt•f th t• l·~Wtl' uf ETHt:L written rffPCNI"· " enr. llWIJ be o• omphed aa ro !Ille uM. pocaeeelon lled in Ille Staie or Caillornoa Coun· YOU ARE IN DEf AUL T UNDER A os Aecoroer s lnstrumen1 No "I J Oii , ' I th . I ·tlll"O Y''" "r<in\tn " ul tht• '"'Trtwn. yuu J VA LEC H 1.-: A KA J Ille<! on time. o1nr1eenre~u1mnbo1w1nche~daJID~1gn11'· u111re_~ 1Y of Oranoe end is Clescrobeo 85 OHO 01' TRUST DATED June 20. 12-109966 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC "' "~ 11 1 JI v ' v w " " r • ~ . II U.led ... a IOlk!ltat el--• .. , _ .. IOllo~ The Nortn 44 SO loet Of Lor 1979 UNlfSS YOU TAKE ACTION ~UCTION TO THE HIGHEST BID· ~huuld t•1th1•r u ppt••H J t th" s huuld l'llht•r appl'<tr al lht' VALECHE. AKA ETHEL J lo de""' .ootedo en "'a .. 161110, T•ustee in ano to the following de- 12 ot Phelps SubOivosoon ol a Pilrl OI TO PROTECT '\'OUR PROPERTY tT JER FOR CASl1 lewlul money of tile hl'.ll"IOj5 ,md :.tall' you ob)'.'C.' hl·anng Jnd l>UIU' yvu Ob)'.'\'• Mt.CONNELL (undl•r the• In debelt. hec.rio lnmedlet-... scrlt>ed propeny sltueled In Int 1"' dencor tract,'" ihe Coty 01 Sa11te MAY SE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE Jnoted S1a1es. or a caan1er'a cl'llek uo n,, 111 fill· w ritie'n olb""·· uon,, or rill• wnuen ob.)f't·· Ut''"'mh-nl Ad mrn1strat1011 o f de HI• m-a, 111 r....-.t• afopr~RaJCdELco1u "'1nanudnds1~11d11.:,.101wl1~1:h Ana. County or Orange S1a1e 01 ll'YOU NEED ANEXPLAp.jATIONOI' lrawnonaS111eor na11onalban11.• r-~. . h I , bt•f Es.-_· . A ' •rt . H c:rlla, 11 1\er algt.11\a, puedol-" " •""' v California. as shown on 11 map t'1ere· THE NATURE OF THE PROCEED· ;tale 0, loderal CHt<lll union, 0, 1 llo ni:. w r th lhl• l'OUrl bdofl lrun~ WI\ l 1l l'llUrl Oft' l.alt'S l t I )• pe11t11in 1.s reglelrede a'""''°' mtereAI on and 10 Lor 1 ol Tract No or recorded'" BOOk 3 Page 28 and"' ING AGAINST vou YOU SHOULO Haro or llKle111 N Y'lng1 and loan tlw h1·11nn~ Your appear t ht• ht•arrng Your .ippea r-sc·t f11t h1'<1flrl),l Ill Dt•pl No ;1 t·TO THI OE'IHOANT; A cMI 11088 111 tne City or Coat• M .... Book 5 Page 35 01 Miscellaneous CONTACT A LAWYER issoc1auon oom1e11e<1 In 11111 11111, •• m ... m.1\ bl• 1n pc•r<;im or b) anl~' rnay l>l• 111 pt•rs.m o r by JI 700 C1v1t' C1•111t-r Dr • West. complelnt hu bMfl ....., ~the ~~;Y,:'....~,~~P•;ecS~a~!c, ~~ ~ Maps in '"' oitoce ot Ille Counl) 1093 SH Blurt Drove Costa Mesa ill payable a1 Ille lil'TWI ol &ale. au vour till~rrwv vuu1 a llornt·y San w A n u C.:A Y4!7111 o n pelftlltf "alnet JCHI. "JOI.I• to •16" P"":: 19 and 20 of Ml•~ Recorele< OI Sll•d Coun1y Calofotnoa oght ""'and onllfHI held by 11. u • . . . L' YOU UL' c uEDI . ~ ltll• ... 141ff. , .... Mt.tel, ~ --~a -b cepl tnerel•om lhar portion de· 111 11 slrtHtt aOd•ess or common rruslee 1n 11111 rear prQPer1r tiniete 11' YUU AKE A (.RED! Ir Anc. A n · Janud ry -1. l!llH J I Y 30 A M wltllln 30 d•YI11terlllh11lllmmons11 cella'*>Us Maps. 1n 1ne ottlOI o4 tlle scrll>ed 89 follows Begonnong 81 me oes-gnaroon 01 P•<>Ptl•ly os shown n saod Coun1y and S1111. ti.sctlt>Cld TOH or ,, ,onlln~t· t l'rt'd1l01 TO R ur J l"UrHln8t.'nl crt'd11u r IF YOU OB.HA.I lo thE served on you. 11111 wllh thlt court a County Rocoroer or 111d '4>Unly N1~~a~e'esr111v,c1yora~ongo11:e81~..i;~~e~~) aoove no warranty is given as 10 its u follows 11r thi· d~"''-'ll:.t5 < must mi; uf lhl· tJ""~·a:.t'tf, you m ust rill· Kra n u ng uf lht· pt•u uun, you ..nuen l"90f\N 10 tile ~omplalnt EACepung the refrom unit• 1 ·-""' -·~ completeness 0t c0f1ec1ness1 Tne lOI 39 Block E Tlact 1219 ••· • 1 h h Id h h Unless you do, your cietauu wiH oe tnrougll 6 111 snown upon the Con-ilne of seod Loi 12 1 dlstanc;e of 19 03 ~ellciery unotlf u id Deeo 01 :orded on Book 38 Pages 26 and 27 vour d .. 1m \\ e e l'\IUr\ or your l ;um W ll t e l'C)urt or shu u l'll t•r 11pphlr a t l It enle!ed on eppllcelion ot 11141 pllln· domonoum Plan rec;0tded on Book leel to 8 line parallel wotll anc distant T1us1 Dy reason or a Dre8Cn °' Oe· JI Mosceoaneous Maps records or prt-:.c:nt 1l to 1h1 µt•n,n n<il rt•p· µn~·n1 II l•J l ht• µt•rsvna l rt•p-h l•Jrlnli( JOU :.Wll' you oh~<C.'· tiff. and this court motY enter a 1udge-13855 Peoe 928 OffiClll Record• of southwesterly 4000 1181 measurec laull in tne obtooatoons secured said coun1y n-,,.•nW\i\l' JPIJIHnl!'Ci bv t ht rt'!.<'1tWl1vt• .1ppm n ll'd by tht' lion,, or f1k w ritte·n objet'-ment agaJnat you for the reltel ct.-H id County II rlgM angles lrom 1"9 south tnereD~ neretolore IAKuted and lntt •l•IHll adoress or olnlf com· '\IUrt w11h1n l11ur mv. nlh• t'tlUr t w 11hrn four mnnths turns with t h 1· l11Url lx•forP mended In the comc>lllnt, whlcll lhePACRonCdEomL 2,nu1unm11P31•'!,"',,'!:',~u1pono In _,terly lfne of Ille Soullletn Paciioc dehvereo 10 1ne undersigned a w11t· .,,on des1gnauon 011ne reel p•091f!Y l •• could reau11 tn g11n1snment of .. ~· -""' Rlllro1d Company\ rigrn 01 wa~ ren oec1aril10n of Delaull ano De-~e1einaoo.-e deSGrot>ed 11 pu1por1ed Crom 1h1 J.itt· nf fu-st r~uam.'E fr11m 1 h1• datt• 11r hrs\ tS!>U&m'l' lhl' h1·:.inn~ Your ·•PfX'ar· ,.;ages, 1a1&1no of money °' property Parcel I abOve lOO 00 1181 woo e t hence mand for Sa111. and w111ten no1oee ot 10 t>e 1421 Kings Road Newport of lt•lll'r•.i.1~ pr11v1tk d in~· 111 ll'llt·r~ a!> pruv1dt'<.I 111 S«·-.inu• m:.iy he• m Pl'r~n ur hy 01 other relief roquetled 1n Ille oom· Tna rotal amount of lhe unpaid soutllelSlerly along saoel parallet lln2e breac'1 and or election 10 cause me Beacn CA lioon 700 ul llu Prubatr Cod• 11011 700 o f lhr· ProbalC' Code vnur ... w .rrky plaint D1ogr1nec.t~e811 wb1a1!.8"rece•~!~181tfbMly1191hW11me90tlt..,.: TOlhe t1as1eriyllneol$ald lOll unc1ers1gned 1o set1sa1d prope11y 10 Tt1eunde1s1gneOherebydiSCllllmS (. Th f .. !Clf ' Th t r . fL"YllU A"""'A C R"DI Daltld l'eb l.!983 " .. ~· ... thence nonherly along Sllld eesterl) sausfy saod ob11g1111ons. ano Ille•&-all hablllty 101 any 1ncorr11C1ness in o (Jlilt1rn1:1 e llmt• or 0 J 1 o rni.i l' imr or r nr, r. ·LEE A. BRANCH. Clerk coS1s.expenMS1nd1dvance1atft>I llne 37 12 leer lo said Po•nt of be-al1er the unoers!Qne<I caused sa•d sa oo s rreet addren or 01"9• com· l1hng d1111n'> w ill 01)1 1•xptr{' filmg d uul\s w rll not c•Kp1re TOJl. ur J l'ttnlrngt·nl l'red1l0r By HERMA E BOSTICK. Deputy tome ol the 1nt11al publieltion of thl• ginning nouce or breach anel ol e1t1e11on to mon oesognatoon prior to lour months frum \he prrur to fuur m o nths rrcim lhl' of thl· tlt'\.'t.'3M'<I, \11Ju mu:.t file Cetherin. I'. GardMr Nouce are S96 965 23 BusMhaySal&a t>eSknow~ IS C2~62 Nortll be recOrdtlC Seo1emt>er 13 1983 as SaoO sale wotl Ile made wotnoul Jut . of lilt' ht•.irinu ntJlll'-d dntt• o1f th~· hl'<lflng noU<.1..J vou r d a1m w 1lh th t• C'VYl'I o r l~men I. Kep&en orCCuer~1n1~ dC~ll Csepsnay .. a?~ Ct·hlcilo ,._! ""' '"18 ... ne Instr No 113-402029 or 0 11oe1a1 Re· warran1y e~press orimplleo regard· t "' · Allorne,1 et Lew .. ....... ...,.. .... .. .. "(II a ttreel adorn s or commor co•ds 1n tile 0H1ce ol tne Recorder ot mg 1o11e poas.ssoon °' encum· ,ol)uV•• iJbtl\t• pn~·nt 11 lu lht· pt·Nm.tl rt·p· 12'0 WMt e.c:ond lllMI T1us1ee or bidder ere ac;c;ept•ble to delJonatoon •551\own at>ove no war· O•angP County D•ances to sahsty tile ptoncrpal bll· YOU M AY E XAMI NE \he YOU M AY EXAMlNE thl· n·st·ntauve• Jp~11nh"1 llv thl' Loe Anaetee. CA. 90029 fru11ee proviold proper ldenllfl- ranty 15 given 10 ns completeness 01 Sa10 sale w•ll bit mede bul wotnoul aoce of me Note or 0111er obllg11t1on r Ill· kt pt h\ lho• tourl If vuu ril1· kl·pl b \' 1h 1· l'QUrl Ir you t11url within r11ur months (213) t20-1os. ca~oronmos •,vna1 1 0 1•,bmleatoon w•oc• '"' COffeClneu1 ICO•enanr or warrenly eapress or 1m· secureo by said Deeo or Trusr "'"' • • -· h • Published Orange CoH I Deity PolOI ' .. .. The Vendor under sa•d Deed 01 phe<J •egllfd•ng uue POSMSS>Ol'I. 01 interest and ot"8• sums 11 provl<led ,1n• 1111 .. 1 .. ,l\'(I Ill 1hc· l'l>t.all'. ,oft 1nll'n-i.1t" in l t• t.'Sl3ll'. from lhl• dJlr· of f1ri.1 1ssua nlt' Dec 13 20 27 1983 Jan 3 19114 Trustee deems relllble b\11 tor Trust. by reason °1 8 brellGI\ or d&-lencumo•an(es 10 pay the rema.nong t1>ere1n. plus advances. If any. under }nu Ol..i' '4'1 Vt' upon th r ex· you m.iy ~·r v1• u pon lhl· t·X· 11f ll·tkro. J!> pruv1<1c'<l in S..'<. 6483·83 wt11cll Truaree ma~es no ·~· leult in lhe 0 1bliga1oons secuieo principal sum ol rile note(SI sec..red tile terms thereof and 1nt1<Ht on l'C.'utor ui J tlrniru:.lraLUr or l'tUtur 1rr Jdmtn1:.1rator l)r tutn 700 uf lht• P rul>all• Cudl· tahon or warranty tile 111111 ad· thereby llere10 ore eaecu1eo enc b d dee<! of T 11 Ill 19 est " d d pl s reea • h h . T PUBLIC NOTICE dresS(esl or otner common delig· dell eo 1 tne d e<J ,. ~ 58' •u · wo •n ' sue 1 ••nces an u u1>on 1h1· .111urnc·v for th l' t.'X-u p.in I t· ollvml'Y lor t t• t'X· or (dlrrurr11J. ht• tum· ror nal•on ol the abo~ d-'rl.._. "'"""" ver o un lfSIQn a wro a5 1n sa•O note p1ov1ded. edvances.11 charges end e•pe nses ot tile · d · d •v ~ """,.. ¥,.. ten Decl11a11on ol Default and De any undlf the terms or Miid Deed of Trustee and ol lh• 1ru111 createo by l'\"Ul•>r lfl J J1ll1111s1rator. Jnd l'\.'Uh>r or a nunislrator an (1hng l lu1m~ will not t'><ptr<• NOTICE Of Tl'UITl!f'S I ALE any Ii 2000 Mayer Place. •A3, mend tor Sale, and wrlllen nouce 01 trus1 fflM, cnarges, and eapenses ot said Deed or Trust The 10111 amount file• w ith the• m u rl with pmof ftl1· w ith lhl· t'Our I with proof µno r w fv ur m o nths from thl' Loen No. f A.,.POTHER Costa Mesa CA 92827 bredecn anddol etec1iiondto cause th1E tile Trustee ind ot tne trusts createo of saod obligalion, including reason· of :...•rvit~'. u wnllAm request of Sl'rVll't•. a wrnw n rt'qUt'Sl da(t• o f lhl• hl'ar111g no \l('ed T,I , No. 0.-000 Sa•d property os t>e<ng M>ld fOf 11141 un ersigne 10 set "'' property c by saod Deed of Trust ably eslimeted 1-. charges an<!••· • , . . , , d , . , . I • UNIT COOi o purpo11e or paying the obtlgatlon• aallsly sa•d Oblogallons. and tnere Saoo ~le will be llelcl. on Widnes-penses of Ille Trullee Bl TM time ol :sl4'llng th.ii you d t-srre SJ)l;.'\:lal sl<llrnl!: lhul you lSlrt s pe<:ra Jb<Jvo: Fll'IT AMEfllCAN TITLE secured by said Deed OI T1u11 lnclud- alter the undersigned causeo saJc day J11nu1ry 18 1984" at 2 oo p rn 1n1ua1 publleallon of this Nottce. is nolll't.' of thl• filing o f a n m -n11t1l't' or thl• '11 rng of an in-YOU MAY EXAMJNE the IHIURANCf COWANY Ing•~ and HPttnaes or 1ne Truet .. :'~!c°c:.:~aC: a~~' 0: ,ere;=~~n !~ al 1ne Cnapmen l'wenue entrenoe to $387.816 40 vt•ntury Jnd J p prUISt'ITlt:'nl of Vl.'n lurv J.nd c1ppra1semcnt o r frh· kl•pl by tht• l"IJUrl Ir you as duly appointed Truslee undet Ille and or Sate ug 1'1e C1v1c Center Bulldong 300 East Dated Oecemt>ctr 15, 1983 , , , , f h , • ~'"ll' ·~~"" C>r or lht nP\I I ~t•·...o IO lh l ~tale lollowtng de-rilled deed of trull Oiied Decemt>er I 1983 Instr No 93.349106 ot saod Ottic1a Chapman A•e Ot11r1ge CA WESTERN SIERRA l'INAN CE l'Sl<Jll al>S( LS (Ir 0 l e Jl'•U· l ...... ....,.,. "" • .-• Jrl rn ~·rm ~.,, • ~" • WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION CALIFORNIA RECONVEY ANCE Records Al Ille hm• ol '"' •n•h•I pubh· CORPORATION lions or 3l~i,un~ mentioned uuns or <ll'\.'OUnl. .. ffi('OliOn<'<l you ma y !14.'f"'l' u p.in lhl• (>)(-TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER l'OR COMPANY Satd aaJe "'11 Del maoe but wnooui cal•on 01 lhos notice 1ne 101a1 A Ca111orn11 CorPo<ation 1n Re-in s..,·11o n 1200 and 1200 5 ol m &'t'llOn 1'100 Jnd 1~00 5 of l'\.'Ulur or admm1s1ra1or. o r CASH ANO/OR lt1E CASHIERS OR as said Trustee ::OO;:;'"' 01 dw'"f;:l eapress 0~r amoont of ine unp11d betence ot tf\e centers111p th<' C.iliforrllu Pmbaw Cudt-1h1• Ca hfom1a Probate Code u pun t he a t tornl'y for the ex-CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIEO IN By Suzann..,• K8:!yHIOen =~u~~.~~l~pay~S:ain· ~::::;o;:~;~u~r ~~ !.~:11:': u ~;u~~ERTA BAKER. ~vw LE AT RICE L V N NE BAIRO & BAIRO l'\.0Ul11r or a dministrator. a nd ;~~\~~~E 1~!';T~?'!.~:2,~"1c:.;~; ~:~u~:bon~v.:,ue 1 Ing pronctpaJ sum or 111e no1ecs1 M-costs e•oenses and aO•ances ,, B~ REAL ESTATE SECURITIES LA TTS Attorneys for Petitioner I 11<' with lht' m urt w ith p roof money 01 the Untied Statesl arr right. NOftll11doa CA 913211 cure<! Dy said Deed 01 Trust, wott $87 192 94 SERVICE Z60 South Los Robles Av' 4%70 Lon g Beach Boulevard of ~·rv1c,·. a writte n rt-quest 1111e and 1n18fest conYeyed 10 and 12131 701·2 0358 C 0 1 P ....... inte<ei t as rn saod no1e provoded Tne 101ar 1ndeo1edness t>eong an e Calotornoe c0<por1toon. its Aoent S i ., 1 • · Long Beach, CA. 90807 l>kl\IO" th.it yuu desire sno~1al now hetd by II undlf H id Deed or DecPubll$1led13 20 '2'7nge1983°all 11 'f ""' advances '1 any und., Ille lerm~ 01 eshmate on which the opening b•d 1s 1Seal) DJ Morger, us President u le " ' "' ,.... T 11 the pe<1 llefel 11 d sakl Deed or Trust •-charges computed mey t>e obteoneo by cell· 2020 North Broadwey, Sune 206, Pasadena, CA. 91101 Publlsh t.'<I Oran~W C-0a.'ll nulll'\' of lhl' filing o r an tn· ~~1W. pro Y na er e-' · 61S4-83 end ••penses ol the Trusree anel 01 1n9 (7141937·0966or12131627-4865 Santa Ana, Ca 92706 Publ1"'ht.J U r:ingt' Coast Daily P1lol 0.-c· 20, 2 1, 27, vt•nwry dnd appra 1st•mcn1 of TAUS TOR o CLARKE l'AIR· ------------ tile tr uals created by saod Dffd ol theday t>ef0tetMsale Telephone (7 1419~-61110 Ouil\' P rlol I.A'\. 20, 2 1, 27, rnffa t'l>talt' asst'ts or u f t h e nPll· BROTHER Trust . Oared Decemt>er 19 1983 Pubhslled Orange Coast Dally , • t• 3 r-BENEl'ICIARY 230 17111 STAEH Seid sai. wfll be held on Tuesday MAR VISTA p,101 Dec 20 27 19113, Jen 3, 1984 l!n!.I 655.,·8 lions o r at'\.'OUnts m e ntro nt><l K~ J1r>uary IO t984 al IO 00 A"' at as ,.,d Truslee. 6565-113 ti5<i0·8~ In Sc.,•u un 1200 and 1200 5 o f LT~ECORDED June 3 1981 as Instr OftANGf COUNTY ''lit Cti~man Avenue entrance to By TD SERVICE COMPANY egenr °''°'IC ..nTICE P\8.IC NOTICE thl· C ahrurnra P robatt· Cudl' No 6576 1n BOOll 14085 page 1453 1Uf'£R!Oft COVftT lhe'Ctvlc CA!ntllf Bulldlng 300 East By Sandoe Arment• Assostanr Sec· 1111m•1c NOTICE rljgt. nu K d •· K d ot OlllcltLI Records on tne oH~ol lhe 100 CIYlc Centef Df. W"t Cl'lapman Avenue Orange CA •etary rljgt. NOTICE OF DEATH OF enne y .. enne )' c The totel amount or tne unpaid ,One Coty Bl•O Wesl Orenge. CA FICTITIOUI 9UINNEll FICTITIOUI IUllNIH M O R G AN A. BISS EV ANO I 541 Wllsblrt Blvd., S te. 307 R~':;,":.!:, 0;,~~1 =~Ibis 11141 Plain~~aB~~t."N~JAPOR-bet•nce of lhe obi.gallon secured Dy '92668 NA• STAnMENT NAMI ITATHll.NT O F PETITION TO AOMIN· Los Angeles. CA. 90017 lollOWlng prop6fly ATION Mid P•Oi>er!'f 10 1><1 sold rogemer • 714t 83S 8288 Tile lollowong person 11 dOrOI Tiii! tollo<Mng PlflOt\ 01 Cl0t"11 I S TE R EST ATE N 0 Pubhsh l'<.I Orange• Coast Loi 99 ol Tract 4224 1111\0Wn on Delenoent ROBERT McCLANE willl •n*<est late cnai ges eno esh · I Publtsne<I Orange Coast Dlllly business u t>u:~~~SsOCIATES 38 Coventry A l?I005 · Dailv P ilul l.k<C 20 :l l 27 a map recorded In Book 157, Peges and DOES 1lllrougll36 lnclutlw meted costs eapenses ano ad · Prlol Dec 21 1983 Jen 3 10 196' COAST Al ADVERTISING. J 14' -r uu·i· ' ' 1 to 14 lnclustve ol m190ellaneous Case No 4 11898 vancH as ro '"' oate 11"'801 ''I 6618-83 COiiege A"" Cost• Mesa CA NllWPO'I Beech CA 92660 Tu dll hl''"'· bl•nd1t·uir1t'S. "0 ' maps records ot Orange County IUllllMOMI S 17 691 00 92626 OOnlld H R1tl. 3ll Coventry New ti5:11 -ll;j Calllomoa NOTICE! YCHI lln• bMn .-ct. • por1 Beacn. CA 92680 ne•d1t•>r~ a nd t·unl1ngt•nt 0•1• December IS 1983 PUBLIC NOTICE Fl()(IOC)e Scnumm 314!1 C01ieg1 Tllo9 bu•lness ii conducted by ·~ lrl'<llLUr'li ur MO RGAN A Excepting lllerelrom all Oii Oii The C041r1 mer deetde ..... ,.., STEWART TITLE OF CALIFORNIA Ave Costa Mesa CA 92626 ondlvoelull llj!lllS, minerals, mineral HQ.his, wlt~t ,our be111g "-d ....... as u ld Trustee, NOTICE Of SALE Thia t>uliness Is conducled by •er Donald Reis BISSEY and pc·rSt.mS who Ml.IC NOTICE narural g1111 r1g'1ts, , end olller rou rHpond wltflln JO c1er1. ftMd By· STEWA RT fiTLE OF CALI· UNDER DECl'Ef OF 1no ... 1dual This llalemeni wll llled wllh 1114 m<i y bl• otht•rw1sc rntc resled hydrocarbons by whalaoeve1 name the lnftHmetlon below. FORNIA FOl'ECLOl~E l'lo•ence S Schumm C 1 Cle " 01 0,111,.. County or In \ht• will andti•r t.'Slal<' NOTICE OF known lllal may bit within or under 11 you W1Sh to Hek tne advice of an 900 NO<th Broad 1 Tn11 statement wu liled wllll 1111 oun Y r ..-TJIUITll'I IALE tile percel or lend he<111nebove de-attorney 1n !Illa metier. you etloul<I Santa Ana, CA 9~1~1 s6~i~Yb~ Mt'NT~~AN~~ AS· County Cie<k of Orange Counry or Nov 28 1983 FZ:U:tll A pell lio n has ht~·r1 rrll'<I No. a..17'U4 sc"t>eO rogether wllll Ille perpe1ua1 do so promptly so That your written 1714) 553.11 14 • c ' •inti vs Dec 12 1983 PubhtMC Or•IVMI Coell n.l.h by Dons W oodhouse m the YOU Al'E IN D41!fAUL T UNOEI' A 11gllls ol drlll•ng. monong, e•ploring ,05ponse 11 eny may be filed on By J1m1t1 L Wetlls RHOMARK INC etal Delenoanr Fz:m21 P1101 Dec e 13 20~21 19113 __ , Supt.·riur Court o f Orangt' DEED °' TftUIT OAnD .Kine 22. and operating therefor end storing on ume AUi Foreclosure Officer No 40·14-ll2 Publosned Orange Coast Dell\ 6358.a,: 0t 1'1L UMLall YOU TAKI ACTION and remo•lng lhe Unwt lrom N fd AVllOIUSled ne Sidodemendlde Published Orenge Coasr Da•ly PolQt 1 the unde<S!Qnecl Brad Giles P1101 Dec 20 U 19113 Jen 3 10 County r(>(jUl'Slmg that ins TO ""OTICT YOU..""°"""· rT land°' any other land 1nciodlng Ille El t"t>ume, lede decldlf Cllftllr• Ud.. Dec 20 27 19113 Jen 3 199.-Sheroll COione• Counly 01 Orange 1984 WoodhoUS<' be appointed as MAY af SOU> AT A l"UelJC IALE. r19n1 to wt11pstock Of d11ecttona11y etn ·~ 1 -.,_UCL,.. 65~-83 StatP ot Cal1lor111a do heraDy cert•l'f 6566-8; Mt.IC NOTICE rv•rsonal rtoprest·n1a11v e to IF YOU .. ED AN EX"L.ANATION droll and mine lrom rands othef tnan eponde dlfttro de JO dlee. Lee le lna1 by ••flue ol Decree of l'ore-r-( OF THE NA TURI OF THE 1nose nere1n1bove Oeterll>ed. Oii or lnformec:lon qua llfue ciosurP and Sele on ine SuperiOI MLIC NOTICE flCTITIOUI Ml ... 11 ad mrnrsh'r lhl' l'Slale 0 PftOCHDINO AOA .. IT YOU, YOU gas wells. tunnels and 1naffs Into, "'°"' wtlfl to ...er the....._ of Court olthe CountyotOrange Stele NA.Me ITAn•NT M O R G AN A BISSEY aHOUl.D CONTACT A LAWYI". tnrougn or ecron the subsurtace ot en ettorner In tt11e _...,, ,_ 01 Car11o•n1a entered on Novemoer F~!~ou1:.~~TIS The 1a11ow1ng person• 111 dotni cunder tht• lndt.'pt'ndr nt Ad· On F11dey J1t1u1ry 13. 1984, at tne land nerelnabove described end ehollld do eo prOfftfl'lr eo thee,_ FICmlOUI •UllNt'.IS 2 1983 and recorded Novemt>er 2 " .. _,. .. , ,._.." buSlnetl u f Est.al A ·\) I l 00 A M . RE ALTY IN· 10 t>oltom such wlllPllOCked 01 written reeponee If enp map M NAME I TAnMIEHT 1983 '" tne at>ove entitled action. Tiie lollowrng persons are dotno BOATMAN . MARTENS II, 31S1 mmislratlun ° ('S t . CORPORA TED u duly appointed dorect1ona11y drilled wells. tunneta nted on tlfne. ' ' TM fotlowong PlflOflS are d0tng wnerein Pi'IRKVIEW MAIN TEN· busoness as Alrwey Avenue. Suite 0 -1. Coeu Tht• pt.•lltton is tel for hearing Trustee unde• and purau1n1 to Deed and shells unde• and t>enatn or 11 U.led ._ ... leltat el_.... 1>u11neu u ANCE ASSOCIATION a Cetllorn•a l1UNTINGTON BEACH AUTO Mesa CA 921126 In 0..'pt Nu 3 at 700 C1Vll of Trust rec<>tded June 22. 1916. u beyond the exlerior llmilt thereol, lo de IHI abogedO en .... -IO, Pi'IRKSIDE ASSOCIATES, LTD Non· Profit Corpora1oon Ille at>ove CARE CENTER IOT2 SE Btl1tol. Richard. C Boatman, 3151 Aorwe~ Cl•nlt'r Or . WC'!it, Sant.a Ana. 1n'1r No 30•27 booll 117112. pege And 10 redrlll, retunnel, equip, meln· debelle hllcwlo mm.._._.._ t072 SE BroStol Suite 102 Santa named plaon11r1t11 Obtained a rudg· Suite 102 Santa Ana, CA 92707 Avenue Suite 0-1 Cosra Mese. CA. CA 9.,701 J " 198, I t79 ol Offlclll Reoord1, executed rain repair deepen and operate any de "'' m-1, Ml ~·· Ana CA 92707 ment and decree ol lorecloture and Parkside Associates lid a Call· 92626 " on dnuary ,, " by MARVIN LLOYD SMITH, an un· such wells' or mines wllhout. now· H clile, 11 1111 ... -. puede - Ray p Olm!IC/\elO, 1012 s E sale agalnSI RHOMARK INC delen· lornoa limited par1nerslllp, 1072 SE Enc w Marten• 610 Newport a t 9 30 A.M m1111ed man u tru1tor111. In Ille Of· ever Ille rlglll 10 drill. mine atore, regletrede 1 tlen!po. Brlerol Su111 102 S anta An1. CA danr1s1 for the sum or One ll>Ousen<I BrtstOI. Suite l02 Sanla Ana, CA. Center Drive, Suite 1455, Newpon l F YOU OBJECT to the ta of the County Recorde< ot Or· eaplC>fe and ooer11e 1nrougn Ille aur· 1·TO THE Ol'INOANTr A dwll 92707 eoglll hundred 1Wl<l1Y·lour & 501100 92707 Beech, CA 92&e0 • nl n f th l.lll o u enga Counry State of CehlOfnle, tece °' Ille upoer 500 1 .. t 01 1ne eomplelnl "" Men Ned ~ ._ Tll1t ou11nff& 11 conducred by a Dollart lawful money ot Tile United R L Call 3802 Seuupe Drt•e, Tllit bu•1nt1N 11 con<luc11<1 by • gra 1 g 0 e pe on. Y Will SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION subsurta<;e ol 1"9 tend herelnet>ove pelnl"' "el"'' JOI.I· H ,_~to Hmlled partnership Slates ano Dy vtflue ol a wrll of Huntington Beec:n. CA 92649 generll pertnershlp sh o uld c•1thtor appear a l the TO HIGHEST BIDDER l'OR CASH deterlt>ed. u rltMfVICI in Deed re-~ thl• leweutt, ,.... _._ Ray P Ormsclleld enl0<c;emenr on said ectoon •ssued on Tnis t>usmeas 11 conducted by 1 Rlchatd C 8oe1mall hl•armg and !>tale you o b,rc· (peyet>M II lll'TWI of Nit 111 lewful cord.O Decemt>ctr, 13, 1974 In Book wttMn JO deys etter thl1 aucnmona ta Tl\11 11a1emen1 was hied woth lne November 28 1983 1 am com-gene,.~P•011ne<snip Thi• 1ta1emen1 wu toled won Ille uum. or file written n b}l'C· money of the Unneo S111 .. 1 II 11304. Pege 492. Off11:111 Records served on you, Ille wttll 11111 coun 1 County Cle<k 01 ()ra"91 County on manded to seH Ill fhe propeny on ll'lll Ray lmscheod County Cl«k ol Orenge County 011 h h bef SOUTH l'RONT ENTRANCE TO TH E YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A wrlllen rnPonM 10 11'11 compielnl Dec 12 1983 County ol Orange S1a1a ol Call· Wiiham E Gerw1n Nov 211, 19113 lions Wit I l' ('()Uri ON/ 0 RA.NG E C 0 UN TY 0 l D DEED OF TRUST DATED AprH 17 Unless you do. your cW!eult will be f0<noa descrot>Cld as IOllOWS '11s AttOfney·ln·flCl nt1113 till' hf'artng Your a ppear-COURTHOUSE 211 W Sanle Ane t981 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION enlered on eppUcatoon ol the plain· F232&31 Lot 27 ol Traci 9393 as Plf map Tnos 1111emen1 wll filed with IN QAflWtN a WAONll' a nt't' may bl-m person or by Boulevard, Clty of Santi Ana, Stele TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. IT UH and this court may enter 1 ~ OAflWIN 6 WAGNER reco<Oed 111 Boo._ 399 Peges 1110 IS County Clerk ot Orenoe County or luMe 410, 18401 Von Kll'tnen An. l , Of Cehlomte 111 rlgnl tllle end MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE ,,,e,,1 'Qllinst you IO< Ille rellef 0.. ....... 410 of M11Gella'*>Ut Maps, rec-OrdS OI Dec 12 1983 lrvlM CA. m111 your a t o rnt y lntatwt conveyed to end now held IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF mandtld In Ille c;omplelnl which 1'401 Von Kermen Awenu. saod Orange County. C111torn1a Real f"UliUl {714) ias-111t IF' YOU ARE A C REDI· by 11 under said Deed of Trual In lhe THE NATURE OF THE PROCEED· could result In garnlanmenl of lrftne, CA .. t7715 prooe•ty IS mo•e commonly known QA"WIM & WAONI:" Publlttled Orange CoHI Deily TOR o r II t'OnltngPnt t'l"f'Cl1to1 properly altuated In U ld County Ind ING AGAINST YOU. YOU StiOULO wages taking of money or p~oper1y 11i~b:6;.~Morarige Coasr Oaoly u 2 croveblosaom Irvine Call·'!'.!!.' 4V10 K • Piiot Dea 6, 13 20, 27, 11183 ol tht• d('\."\!QS('(j you mus t filf Stlle detcrlt>ed u CONTACT A LAWYER Ot o1"9r relief requested In lhe com· tornoa 1-1 on lfmen .. .,-636!>·113 . · PARCEL 1 An undM<lld II 106th 1210 P011111, Newport Beech, C• ptaJnl Pilot Dec 20 27 19113 Jan 3 10 Togetlle• with an and smgular lllejlnrlne, CA. t2715 your cl:um with the court or lntlfnl In 111<1 to Lot 110 Trect112• 1, .. 111 a tlreet addreu or common Dattd Sept IS, 19113 1911• 1enemen11. t>eredltamenlt ano ap.. (7141 MS-11'5 pr<'lWnt 11 to th <' personal rep-In 1he City of Co111 M .. a. County of designation of property Is 1nown LEE A BRANCH, creni 6569-BJ purtenancea 1neraun10 belong•nq or Publtlhed Orenge Cout Oall) Mt.IC NOTICE rt'!lt!nlallve appointt'd by the 0.9')99. St1t• of C1111orn11. aa per et>ove. no warranty 11 given H to 111 By M JORDAN, 0epu1y on anywise appertaonong Piiot Dec 20. 27 t983. J11r1 3. 10 i h f h map recorded 1n 9ooll 3• t pegea 21 completeneu or correclllffll ·· The JeMpll p ow.., -------------P•OPlf"tY ro Ile sotd 'Vblttet io the 198• flCTTTIOUI .UltNlll t~iurt w t m our mont s end 22 of m11tellaneou1 mai>• In ine t>enetlCtary under .. 1c1 Deed ol cooer.., ·c......_ • Howatcl MLIC NOTICE 119111 of •edemp11on· 729 020 6571·8~ NAllll ITATIWNT from tht• dale of first 1ssuan<'t' office ol tl'll County Recorder or said Truit by reason 01 1 b<Neh or~ 117'12 I. 1nt1 It. ------------729 030 72!1 tl l CCP The IOllOwlng pe<ton IS dOing of ll•llcrs as p rovided m $e(•. Counly lault In Ille obllglllonl 1«.ured Twtlt! CA. t1t10 FICT~I •UlfNEll Prospechve bld<ltl<S ShoulO relce< Ml.IC NOTICE bu~~ :-;:TERNATIONALS 12323 \Ion 700 nf lht• Probatt' Code EXCEPT THEREFROM Unit• I lllereDy ,,....,ofore ••eculed lnO (714) m ·M74 NAME ITATEMENT lo Secuons 70 t 510 10 701 680 c p . tnrough toe u ll>own upon tile Con-delivered 10 '"' undtl<llgned • Wiii· Pvl>lllhed Oranoe Coat• Deily Piiot The 1011ow1ng pertons are d0tng tncluti.,. '°' proviaoons goveming FICTITIOUI IUSINEIS Harl>Of Blvd • Suite 25 Gllclen n f ~llrornia The llmf' for ldomrnlum PTen reoe<ded in l>OOll 1en Decl1retlon of O.l1ult •n<I 0.-Dec 6 13 20 27 1983 butiness a.s 11\e tlfms cond11ions end effects of NAllllE ITAttMeNT Grove. CA 92640 fihng datms wHI nut expire 11152. page 690. Olflcill Aec:ord1. mend'°' Sell, eno written noliOI of · · ' 6313-83 B E R ASSOC IA TES 3737 Biren Ille sa~ an<! Ille llet>tllly 01 deteultlng The 1o11ow1ng person• a11 dotng A Greo~ C~•~fn·d!4~~::9dena prior w ruur months f mm \he u amended by in lnatn.ment r• breecn end of etectlon to ctuM tile 1------------- Streel Fourth Floor, Newport bldPdU!lfB,LIC NOTICE IS GIVEN T• I business as 1h1; bulln!~ 1~'conelucted by en dall' of lhC' h N1r,ng no hC'ed corded in l>OOll 11283 page 119 of un<1er11olllld lo "" Hid PIO!>lf1Y lo P\8.IC NOTICE Beech CA 92660 .. a COVINA COMMERCE CENTER, Olllc:l•I RecOfdt ••OsTy 1al0 obllQlllonl, end 111ere-1------------- R1ymono W and Dorotny Roglfs. on Wed'.'"<'ay. January 18· 1984· 81 1012 s E Br1tlOI. Suite 102. Santa lndlv•Ouel ahuv1• PARCEL 2 Unit Ill 11 llhown upon 1"-er lhe uncMl'llgned caueed Hid FICTITIOUI IU ... M 3eo N Seldwon A.-e Arcadia C.A 10 00 o clock. A. M oT 11111 day al An• CA. 92707 Gregory Clayton YOU MAY EXAMINE lht'ltM Condominium Plan referred 10 In notiee of o~ end of election to NA• ITATl•NT 910011 Main Lobby Cour1houae. 700 CMc R~ p Olmtcheld, 107' SE. Tllll atlllfMlll ""11 Iii.ct with the flit• kc-1 b th<• l'OUrl If nu Parcel 1 1t>ove Ile record.a Sec>temt>er 2. 1983 as The following PlflOll• ere doing Stephen and Wendy w Bowie. !Center Drive W"1 Clly ol San11 Ana Brost~ Suite 102 Sanll An111, CA. County Ci.tk 01 Orenge County on , P, y _ _, h y , The 11r .. t lddr"a and otlllr lnttr No 83-38°t349 ol Otflclal Re-bu11nea111· 3e15 C11am111n Corone del Mer I will Mii the et>ove dl9Crll>ed P•DP· 92707 Nov 211· 19113 art tnlt n -sku tn 1 <' t:'5latt. ommon dellgn111on, II any, ot Ille cords lntheofficeoftlle~derol S UNNY MEAD CO MMERCE CA 9262S "'ly. Und« Mid wrll and decree. 01 Call Prof)Ctr1111. a C1111orn1a gen 'IJ1211 you may 5t'rYt' upon the e x· HI propany ci.tcrlt>ed •bove It Orange County: CENTER, 1072 SE B1lt10I. 8'111• Aogei w Eppenon. 40461 Celie :O much thellyeol :i ":,~be~~ e111 p111ner1111p, Jell San Miguel, .Pi:~~~ 1~,~~7 ~~ Delly w ulOt 11r admln lltrator. or l)tjtl>Of"led to bl 627 Oenubl w-v. SlidHlewlll belT\ade, bulwlthOUt 102. Santi Ana. CA. 82707 FIOete Temecula CA 92390 'Y to Ulla 1 •-vv"*'1 wl I Sune 120 ~ Beecll, CA · ' ' 83~7 83 U'"'" lhl' a\lumeu (Or the e>C · Colle M .... CA 92828 CO-'Ml orwerrenly,expfl90f lrn Ray P Olmschel<I, 1012 8 .E Th11 ousonns os condutled t>y a nt•"1• end C0911. to Ille highes 92660 • ,... " The unc:llllllOM<I TrullM cir .. pli9d, f'IOl'dlng tllle po11111lon, or Brl1tol Suite 102 Sante Alla, CA oene<•' pertne<lh•P it>l<ld«. '°' cath In lawful money of 04_, Properties • Cllllomla gen l'('ulOr nr a dm1ms tral0r. and ~aim• any llet>lllty IDf any lneotrec1· enc:umbf~. 10 Ply Ille ~inlng g2707 Stec>hen Bowie ~lie Unlt9d Siii.. ere! panne<alllp 19762 MacAt1hur PUBl.IC NOTICE f1)(' With lhC' m urt w ith proof nftlOI Ille •trwt lddr-enci.c pmclpll 9Um or the note(•) ..Wiid Andr-J Kelenz. 1072 a E Thoa 1111emen1 wes hied with Ille ~ated .. Santi Ane CA Decemt>ctr Blvd Suite 120. 1rvrne. CA g211s of servit'" a wrltll'n N-quest eommon dellgn•tlon, 11 l f'rf. by Mid dMd of Tru1t, with Int"'""' 8rlttOI. S..11• 102 Santi AM, CA County Cieri! 01 Orang9 County on I"" IH3 Andrew J Kelen1 1012 S E 'ICTrTlOUI IU ... 11 h d ,,_,.. I lllrWI .. in Mid nolt provl<led, llCIVanoee. If 92707 Dec 12. 1g93 Hlaley, Neulend PardH & &111ol Suite 102, sMta Ane. CA ........ ITATl•NT !ilul_mg t at you esire lr-·3 SalO 111ew1n 0. mllOI. OUT without anr. Vn6e< the term• of Mid OMCI 01 PhllNP V Otten. 101112 MacArthur ~ Colletta 92707 Tile totrowlng penon 11 dOlng nott~"<' of I he riling o f an m • eo"91\ant °' werrenty. •t1P"-or Im-11'\191, IMI. ctiergee. and open-01 8ou111Yard. Sutt• t20. rrv1ne, CA p blo"'8CI Or n Coa 1 oe11y 24031 El T0to ~· Sune 250 Thia OUllMN te ~led by· • t>u•l-1" ve n1u ry and appraUtelTl("nt of pMed, regatorng title, pa11111lon, or !tit TN91• llld of 11'11 trueta cHated 92715 Pllo~Oec 20 2! ?:ea Ja~ 3 10 LegBn~o·G':!111T~·sCA8._2~53c genwllpanMrlhlp. PRESTIGE AUTO RENTAi. <'!'I.all' ll.'\5ets o r of t he peu -encumbfancet,IOC)l)llherll'\'Mllnlna byMido.e<IOI Ttvtl Thll bull,_.ll COf'ldl.ICltdbJ'• ' . • ,,... .. .. • ·-· • oroner Ray p Otmacheld /LEASING, 2~00 w Coatt Hwy., PfinelP•I sum of N notl(I) ...,,.a Slid .... wl" bl lllld on; T\/99d1y. gen«tl penneolllp 1064 County 01 Otenge. CA Thia tletll!Wlt ., .. 1111<1 wllh the NCIWPO<t 8eectl, CA. 92ee3 lio ns or 8«'0Unts m('ntioned by 1elo Deed ot Truet. wl1h lnt.,...t January 17. 19114. at 2't)0 p.m. 1t 1be Rey P. Olmtcheld 6572"83 By K Br~. k~t O I plot County Clerlt ot Orange County on Kurt Vinnie 8elnt John, 120 NICI U1 $c't.'lron 1200 and 1200.~ of thereon ae PtOVIOed In MIO llCMC•l. ~en Aven..-enlr1nce lo Ille Thie 1111-t wu nlecl with the ------------i~~7 1~ Jac:i~'~. ,::. 1 Dec 12. 19113 PllMll ~8:J • 103. ~t 8Mch. CA th~A· (L'&LIAlfNorn819 WProEbalSSt.e 6c~~· :;'':!,If on~;,~..:~ ~l:.. ~:~:cf" Elf1 ~~n~.C~\ or OrenQI County on PUBllC NOTICE 11$63·'3 QAJWNI a WAo.Jl Thia bullnna 11 conducted by an """" and •JIP«'-of the trwtee 8"d of At ltle time of Ille lnlllal publl• P'111117 ------------1..._•,. 1t1dlv10u11 SOCIATES the tf'\l'llt1 CtMled by Ntd o.d °' C9fl0n Of thll notice, lhe 1ot1t GARWIN a WAONmA ITATl•NT °'~WAL "8.IC fl>llC( 1M01 Yet1 "-Aw Kur1 S11n1 .io11n Attonu•y fo r Petllloaer Trvtt. IOt tnetft'Ot.ltltr 1 u1 ~ -amount of tfll llftOtld belll!CIOl the 1411M41t. ,...., lfOft K.,._ A-. ""* ,.MT .. ,_..., tmM, CA. n111 Thi• 1111-t .... 111ee1wtth11111 nu AllHlfl' A•taff 11metac110 be H1.uan OIMIQetlon -.o by, .... at>ove o. 1r<11ne, CA. lf111 ONllATlltO ~ JllCTIT10U9 M1991111 Pvbl•"'90 Orlt!OI eo..1 Oelly Coun1y c1er11 of Orenoe County OC' 8 C Hit? Tll1 benllflcllty under Mid OMCI acrtied ct-i of INll a.no •lt!Mled (714) ... ,,. ,ICTmOUI ...,.,.. .. NAMI ..... tTATllmWT Pltol Dec 20. 2 7. IOSJ, Jen 3. 10, Nov 211, 1913 Lona .tatla, A. OllrllltheretOf~~end--00«1. .. ~ llld .Ovancat •• Pvbllthed Oranoe COUii OIMJ 1TI1et~per.onruwtthdr.., the 1o11ow1ng ~ _ ~ tH • • "111111 Publu•hro Orimge u)Ut ~ 10 ,,.,. t.tndetllOt*t ·~ 11 .... •n20. Pno10ec e. 13. 20. 21. tta. •a r': pertner rom tile Plfl· bu8ll-... 11570-83 Pul>llllMd 0r...._c01111 Oeil't Dally Pilot De<-20 21 27 0ec1eret1on of o.taun enO ~ TM tolll lndebt.O-b9ln\1 en 1*-13 ~ p °'*•1rno uncle< t;,.~ CITY OF-INDUSTRY AUTO CARI Piiot Dec II, 13, 20, ~1913. 1 llK3 • • • '°' s .... end I written Nola of 0.. eetllftlle on wtllcf1 ..... opening°'° ll ~~E~D=SfMENTS. CENTER. 1072 • ~ lriel04. &1114 rtll.IC fl)TlC( '361·13 6~~8 83 feuh tftd gleCllOll IOs.11 Thet.tnder• comc>uted mer be obi.in.cl by cell ---... ---IC-..,,.-,ll>r----'°"'ONA lll lll Nortn ~ Tuatln 102 Sente Ma. CA. t2101 --'I __ 11 • tlgneo ~ MIO Notice of Dilftl.111 mg (4161 946· ... 11 Ille d'Y &.fore ic-. nu ~ •11 R p OtrnlclMld 1072 a.£ "'_..,...,.. -f'tll.IC NOTICE endElecOontoWtoblreciordedln .......... -----------A-'UI. su111 e Sent• Ane. CA 8fl•~~ Suite un s.nia Ane C. MMI ITATIMIJfT PUBlJC NOTIC( the COUfl'Y .._. ,,,. ,.., "'°""" 11 Olteel. o.c.m1* 20, 1113 ncnnoua .,...11 92701 ' ' Tile IOllOWtng l*t0!1• Ire OOinl PJCTmOUI IUIMH toe.led Fll'ST AMERICAN TITLE IN· IUMI llA,.....,, TM llctllloul bu1ln•11 neme 92707 •At butlneM ... • ... ""~ f!Crmout .,_.. Dated' o-n• t 1M) SUfllANCE COMPANY The fOllowlng pel'IOn II .... 9'111.,,.,, for Ille l*'fMrllllp ..... Arthur M. Anoeuon. 1'°"' 'LAOSHIP CONVAlE8CEN1' Tile I 11 d MAMI ITA~ AEAL TY rNCOAPOAATtD 11 Mid TN1t• OUtilleel ee; fllecl on July I, 1982 In Ille County of ~~1• Orl'lll. City of lndutlry, CA CENTER,~ Rd .. ~1 butinell ~ Plf1IOl1 Dint The IOllOwlnQ l*90fta •r• doing .. .., Tt\191.. • .. T 0 HAVICE COMPANY.~ s & 8 EHQINEIAINO WOM&, Ot~:!~A::,~:.2:.11W1P11t-Tlllt ooein.t it COl\ductlld by' I ~,.::;,e Cel MIOICel Ser •1, T:.:a~~Nc:.~=--~a:r bu=~Pf. 1I002 Sltypetll Cir•~~ =~ KMI. AM11t~I ~~1~~· ...... 0at0tn ~ flOn Wlthdrtwtno Arlhut J FrtnCO ~·P~ ""· 1061 IEaet Qodefl A"9 , Mii-CletenOe W. Ould!GI.' 11171 Tuwtln, Cle, IMN. CA 11714 32H W llath SI 1llO N CA 8IYd , Walnut c:-.r.., Glenn AWi &..,_, UH Aoeo1e Signed Ar1ht.ll J l'rWICO Thie ftlllfl'*ll wll Ned "'"" the •IUllM, Wll »20f Cotlt Mlle CA t2t27 JINI OillMfrtou H34 H W•t LOI A~ CA t0020 CA 94$~717 AV9., GwdM ~.CA t*I Lloyd R Ht11dy CO\iftty ~ Of ()fenge Coun1Y on Thia bu"'-le ~eel by' • ThM bullfi.. te conouct.O by. 111 MICAr1hur 111\rO . '9nte An&. CA (2IJI31().31701•1 StO 4 tJ.t44·to t& Thie but1ntM la condUIMlt et,: 111 £0-110 r 0""9 2 813 OQrPOrlltlon lndMdl.lel 82704 PublllfMIO 0r-.. eo..t Olly ~ ~ 0r-. eoe.t Delly lnclMOl.lel ~ • WAONIJI NoY I. I mtm Alen l Haneon. l•tc VP cw ... w Oudcl ,,.,. OelNttlOv o.e_ u. 20, u 1M3 Not 0.. '1 IN), Jiii\ s. 10 ..... Olllrwl A et.nr • ..... 411 OAltW9t a WA-Jll Thie •laltrNnl ., .. llltd wftl"l I.... Tl"lle 11aternem •II llllcl with lhe Thie Metemenl -llllO llftl"I the M1743 M11.-, Tl"lle et~I ... tied wM1 ttit = \':_ ~ ·-l4lf9I •Mo ..-, lf9'1 1(-Aft. County ~of Or-.. County on Couftty CWll of Or"enge County on County a.ttl of °""Cl' ~ Ol'I COuttty Qn al Oranoe Oow4y en '11•1••• ...-..c ... c 11 Nov u .' na1• Nov a .1* ,. ... Nov a .1.a ,.... Jack A erson I 1·1111 P1·11-i, Hov tt. IM3 P\lblilfled °'rl: ~ ~ (1~"'or 0-c Olly ~ °''"" eo.. Delw "'*"'*' °'""' ~ -,...... 0..,.. ~ Olly "''*"* °'"-"' Colll~ ~::.. O.C. lO. 27• ta. Jen I , t ' Plot Otc. •· 11, ::'11. ttA. f'llot 0... I , ti, tQ. tf, '"'alM:I Piiiot 0.0. t , 11. IO.•F. tlll. ""°' 0.0..t. II. IO, l1, tea..,. reveals in f he ~, ~. , ""°'Ceo.' t1, IO; I?, '9 653M3 '3Q·'3 -.a -.a POOLIC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTICE i -----«!• Or ·-• • • • • ange Coast DAIL y PILOT /T uesday Dece , mber 27' 1983 .. ~,..,__ . t0~6• do • Places to 10 ... • • er a\t ·~ r~· ~ I /; \ -! . I ,.,/'' ... ~' ... >~·) . ~· \. .. \,;; ~ ' ;'./\ '·. ~ {.. ~ ·- ( . . -~,, ~· . J' ·" .. '-~-· ~· . ........., ·. ~ . . . . .. ;. }' -· : ' -------~----~-~~~~-~~~~--------_... __________________ __ Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, December 27. 1983 (;7 .Uwertiaia1 lilts Accoulia1 Cabinet Miking Claimney Sweel ardeaia iiiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil CPA r11gh Quahlv oncomi> •New cabinets cab1ne1 ---m'!O~E!!'IN'!'!'N'!'!'Y~ ... --( T T ''"an Ups• ree rimming t repwr fl~ or burld ANY P•rri•i 1toli•1 -ra•r-.th-1n_g ... tn-1e-1-10-r""0e-a-1g-n· 1 HANGING/STRIPPING orange coast rool1ng toge ... H ... •.-•-.•i_a.1 ______ rc_o_•i_•.1.., _____ _ 2tt llf El. 141-1121 ST ARV ING COLLEGE $2.17 per day ro1, wor~ ,ti rt",•~ ••tlf'S ld~•r•y ti.tr~ ~ rornu~,, CHIMNEY SWEEP Y,11<J Mt11nl •lhiulong THING Al!ai.onablt Jullll B1 uwn ti.l 1 h~83 ~uunlPt loµ!> b42 OllH I S40 ti UP 1 867 4876 MIK[•650·32b3 raies Dave 960_2165 Furnaces . Poot Healers STUDENTS MOVING co uc T 12<1-436 Insured VISA-MC Scott 673-1512 /license 1118 1217 Thats ALL you pay tor 1 hnl!s 30 <Jays u11ne A1ph1lt ..;.C_a_.rp._e_a..,tr_.f_____ Con tr actors D11vew.i, Parku1g LOIS E~pert Carpen1ry Setvrce General C om mil• c1al1 Aes1den11at L.111usc..1pt-Ma111te11ance OuJl!ly :Service reas he llon<lP<I :rn yrs 1n area AMERll.AN HANDYMAN Ca1p G1as!> Pi11111 etc In!> Bondeo 847 2367 • HANGING/REMOVAL. ..;,T""r&.1 ... i • .. 1._s ... e ... r_• ... ic.;.e __ _ t 1 • yrs a•Pe11ence Typ1ng/Wo1d Processing Ho111e Cleaainp 64 1.5421 R081N1S CLEANtNG WATCH US.GROW• DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY At-part$ St-.ilt:Odllng Rep<1u Rt'tnOtl Aod1l1ons S6S Aspnalt 63 1 4199 L•c Ouor> dl ;,48 4980 Ren•odtlttRPpaors comm MIKE 851 1800 All business !>Cl\OOI & per. , I 1 sonal pro1ec1s 851 104 t SfAVICE 8 1horoughty Paiatiat 1.lean navse 540·08571.;.;;.;.;.;,,;.o.,_r.-____ _ Ro ,..,,11 I •l d oon<Jt>C1 All Types Rt>p.111 Resurl 1n~1.1i1,1t11>11 SP"C•dh!>t "'' r UI .. ,, 5'J2 4 142 M t wu .. 1wy Lan<lscape 64~·5124 _H_a_1a_li .. nol!l1""'!'!....,...,..---I B11t1sn Housecleaning Ser Fiil PlllTlll DUMP JOBS & YICe Quality & depen Oy R1cha10 Sinor Lie •rr ..... * REllOYAL * Widow Cluaia1 WHITE WIZARD ..,.,,II ~Cl.ti 1Sll RAY Ml>. Nt>V> \ U .rd (,,1r1Jel CH LC mn1 At•S•l.l Rt!JS Hr '•l•ICll 1)1(1 Vinyl fl.He~ F "'" est1mJte> L.,.r I""' Wuod .'.'> SleJm Electrical &ardui111 W1111td fl ECTAICtAN Proced Mow111q Ed9l ng twice a 119111 h~ .i~11mat .. on me• $20 S25 645·5737 SMALL MOVING JOBS O.ible work 650-0 t89 280644 14 yos or happ) MIKE 646 1391 local customers . HOUSE APARTMENT Thank you. 963-411<1 Call us rirst' 760-0328 WINDOW WASHING Parcel Sllit 1a Wr1r The only magic 1s 645 4269 01 64S 0032 Cle<111 84' ~913 HAUL MOVE-REMOVE Cledn1ng or Renovahng p 0 BOXES 0UALl1 y 63 1 2026 81by1i1tiap AEMODELINu All phases BABYSlrflNG MY HOME: Al!><.> tu~tom CJb•nt'IS ltl ru1111ture To ash Trees Free esttmale 650·4468 QUALITY PAINTERS 463 S415 NORM PROMPT NEAT PAO· Housecleaning Vacant FESSIONALS 636-71 49 ldl<jt' or '>ll•dll 101>~ l1<. t ANOSCAPE ~AINT l'Hi62 t 673 035q ( i. •111 •JIJS Heiis rales 2600 E Coast Hwy Stale Law plus tne IRVINE MIRROR ano the HUNTING TON BEACHCOMBER every Wednesday at N1 V•clort..i Costa Mesa v•s "' ;:~eJ_ Lie bon!le<l Nignis & p T 64~ 8482 '"s l1 -68·J564 any11me flfl. I fl!CIAN 20 yo 5 e• p KEN 892 5830 TOP QUALITY WORK AT \$LOW RA TES SS Hau1tng Co1 student l•S Apts Exp d rehable true.lo. Reas Bc.h voe Own trans 650 3263 tcor Dahha) 760 1822 12 YRS EXP r m small. Plaater/le1_1ir State law requues tnat all con11ac1ors who pe1torm work over S200 1nctudong ldbo• anel matef!a1s mus1 bfl 11cen<;f'd Un1tcenseel c.on11ac.1ors should so slate on lhert adver1ts1ng Co1H1at1ors and con· sumers contact Mary Gron<11e a1 558 4086 with any qu1>sllons Conlrac· to • 'i S1a1P license Boaro 28 (.1v1c Cen1er Pl1ua Room 690 Santa Ana CA 92701 no e•ll a cnarge• CALL TODAY" S1111ng & hie nsc1ean1ng 3 Cement Concrete AfA<\ RAlfS 646 7602 T,..,. 111n & ttlmO•al Qf:'ll RESID COMM l IND '" 111 •I'~ 'JC,4 7017 CclM Tna n k yo1. 759· 1936 Cort M . My proces are small• PLASfERhTCHING OVIDI 650·64 77 Ron --=-.. Ae""'c...-.. ""o""v-1N"'"G-=-·t Restuccos 1n11tia1 30 yrs Jays pe1 wk 8-5pm For Concrete U torm I pour .?O I" Do lily own work VAqo MAIN C.l !'AN ·UP LIGHT HAULING It dSI\ lurn1ture elC MA11 645 5089 "" Neat PAUL 545-2977 ISi FOR SHIRi 1n1er~1ew call 650-8019 or cnmplPlt: 101>s No 1011 l t1 ..'7t!O~ I Al 646 8126 I rN l 11m iS Ht1uhn9 Ou•Cklcarelul Low rates F'IGUEIREDO PAINTING lie T 138046 552·0410 Frie proofing shtngles. 25 Plaalliag You1 Daily P1to1 Service Direclor v Represen1at1ve 8 LL • loo SmJll 964-0366 ooueep1n~ Cardeaing l. lt.'O 84 7 245 7 yrs axper. inllexl. spec -2-.. -.. -E•l•.-1-.. -1-1-1-2-.. on natural wood finishes. ,. "' ,. • 111 oonded & insured, tree Faucets• Waler Healers PROF BKl'.P compu1er Ceramic Tile TREES Handyman PAUL S HAULING •A-1 MOYIH* manual Moderate leei. FLOORS•PA T10S 12 stake v.11111 & 8 pickup 646-0 7<l:? anytime Bes! quality 25 yr e•p ltC 1 116 428 730-1353 142-4321 .... 301 F1ee counsel 642-7047 SHOWERS•COUNTERS 1'1PPl'll'•emov.-<J Cleillt· •**HOME REPAIR est Lie C-33 No 290804 638·69' 1 D1a1ns clear from $5125 Repair faucets d1sp e1c Anytime M&M 642·9033 ---------1The rastest dr&w on the SELL Idle Items with 1 West a Detty Piiot Dally Piiot Classilled Ad CtassJfled Ad 642-5678. FrPe est Rea~ S'i!.l-81'50 Have something you .. ant to sett? Classified ads do It weU 642-5678 ulJ ""w l..iwM 7~1 3476 EIC't Plumb-Carpenlry Rt<muo.-1 Ke1111 646 ·~ ·:i Find what you wan! In Delly Piiot Ctasslfieds. Shop ctasslfled-our store never closes 642-5678 Want Ade Cell &42-5678 Sell Idle Items &.42-5678 Alt sorts ot people use Move a mountain or l•--------ctass1heo ads to sell all mercnandlse with class•· sorts or things 642-5878 tied 6•2·5678 _1t_a1_n_f_er_Sa..._l_1 __ 1 Baa••• ltr Silt .•-.•• .. •-.n-..-l•-.r ... Sa..-1,_t __ ::•;.;.••::;;•;.;;ts.;..;;;f•;.;.r..;S_a1_. __ 1.,l-.•-.•• ... t-.• .... l•.-r-S ... •-.l•--.. __ 1 Bta1t1 ltr Salt 1 ..... Uafua11~N ..,Ct...,• ... er...,a-.1 ___ .;.100~21 -.-.-t-..ra,_1 ...... ...._ __ 100-21 Gtaaral 1002 Ctata •n1 l 024 lle.,.rt leac~ 10'9 -.-,.,.--rt-le_ac_la--106-9 1 Foant1ia • LIH ISLE Traditional 3 Br, 3'h Ba Bayfront, pier & float for 65' boat. Priced to 1ell $1,250.000. IRYIH TERUCE Panoram1l· bay & oc.-ean view from ~ Br, ~ Ba patio, pool homl' Prune location $775.()()() YllTI HL UM llYFIHT Fabuloua bay & mountain view. 1 Bdrm. 1 Ba. condo co-op. Lowest priced at $295,000. "-UYSllE PLACE UYFROIT Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 br, 2 ba up: 2 br. 2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces. Reduced-$1 .500,000 PElllSIU llOIE OCUIFIOIT Ocean & jetty vtews. Marine room, 4 bdrm, 3 bath. 3700 sq ft -I t ar parklnr.! $1.:.!85,000 F&lllUIS WICll lllLL TOP New 4 br. H 'i ba, cwtom French Normandy F..na~ 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Nc.w $995.000 COlllDI CAYS IAYFllllT Coronado Island cu.st. bayfront lot 85' boat deck. Plans avatl Now $370,000 w/trade llllWIW NOME Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake Vlew 3500 liq fL $440.000. Will trade for a local property. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ).11 Fl"V''d' Dr,,. °" B bl'> 6161 COLDWC!U. BAN~eRO LllO ISLE 112,000 The charm & elegance ot grac1oos Lido isle 1ty1ng is incorporated on 1h1s love- ly 5 BR family home E.t· ~ACRE IACI HY Lo1S ol po1en1tal nere' Horses? Units? Nursery? Al1erna11ve zoning ror A-t possible Owner may carry Isl T D 1 759-1501 cettent street to Slreet to-'--- catton adtacent to slrada & close to bay & oeaches 144-IOIO 2 IHI SAYS SELL TIUS ,HPlllTI Newport Beach Blults Fantasllc location on Bluffs Largest greenbelt overlooking rettec11on pool Bank will ltnance at terrific terms Great po1en11a1 Subm•I all ol· lers Asking $199 000 Call Sally Shipley or Joyce Debolt Ge: 759-9100 ----- Have you reed tod1y'a Ct1111fled Ade? ti not. y0u're mlMlng Ille belt beroelnt In townt 5 BEDROOMS Sllt,tOO Mesa Verdes least ex· pensive• Newly painted and newly carpeted nuge S Bedrooms J batns Large hv1ng room coun- Hy kllchen over 1001\ s 1am11y area and rear yard The best buy m Mesa Verde Call no w 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS OOHll.IEmYIEW 200 81k 40' tol 3Br • den 3ba yard comp! returb S4A9 900 2 t 7 Jurn1ne Open Sa11Sun 1 S Ownrtagt 673-5551 ·::~:::-.· S©~~~-/J, t~s· .... .,., -----,.,.., ~. C\Af • '<)Ut.Jlf •:=,·=~b~ :..,o;, :- .. tO ........ •0w ......... :1. ti"1Yl/1il AMWAC I 1-.....-1 ...... , .--, .---,-I ~~E_s_R_s_c~I--:_: I' I' I' I . : ...,_ .. ,r.,. .. --. BUii"'" tor , ... t • ~ _,, --------. 811\1-bllloro ~-- SH CI NG I i--.lr--TI ..... , "T'I =-. .....I -..-1 -1 o --... .... ... ·-· ...._ .... _ __.._...._ ........... --'·--' .. ,. :;.,z1,,; :. -;: , ;:!' F• Ad Action Cal a Daly Plot AD·VIS(lt 642-5671 I' r I' I' I' I' I' r I I I I I I I I I I For Ad Actk>n Cal a Olly Piot AD·V1S<I 642-5671 ILUFFS -IEJITIFIL IOW $310,000 Valley 2234 S 111,000 S REWARDS J Br ?', ba 2 story condc ocu• VIEW This home IS the best bu) n e d, Ta I be r I & HOIOSCOPE I 1t1n1 balcony 01 tl11s oes1 Nwpt Ben" Larges! " Br Brooknur sl T •buron , ... r eCJ ) (ldom 2 , bath model v.1th ocean view D USTSIH 1 IDHCOTil&E BY SIDNEY OMARA T 01ally decorator coordi- nated w1tn absolute per· lect•on Linda model with OE:am ce11tngs custom lutcnen w1all gourmet leature & surroun<le<l by GJrugt' .\Alley Accei.s $11,500 Pool Spa tennis Pric""" snwr patio dbl gar 1.,,.,,.,. Home 1n walking "v e1~ a d K d 0 Over $70 000 below mar ~ g r oor opnr 1 s 01~1ance to beach' ver Pt'IS OK S850 . SGOC 1 100 ~q 11 Poo1 spa & ket At only S359 000 11 dep Ag t no iee Wednesday, December %8 Roy McCardlt, Rltr. 541-1121 tennis• 759· t501 iecenuy sol<l lhe smallest 863-0755 ARIES (March 2 1-April 19): You gain informatio n through model with NO view lor lusn plantings 2 tldrms -, mcludes master Sulle SALE BY OWMER w pvt encl patio & large A 1 2 1 4 B spa You must see to ap-~<;um" " 5 ory ' wtpool Nr Fairv1i>w 6 prec1ale 1ne warmtn & Sake• $ lJ5 000 mok1- cnarm Call 27 t t Vista 1 ~'ib 0625 11 12 ~==;; =====:; Umbrosa 673-6900 ° r I 11eton - \\ 'I I 1(1 l(t "I IEW'°llT TERRACE 1''1'11 .., Inc SPYSiUSS IUUTY flt>rft>CI tor t11sl lime buyer RE AL E '>TA 1 E 6e..iut 5 bdrm home 111. ;> story conoo recent!) l73-e900 Spyglass S5JO 000 Can ,,.1,u1>1shed 3 Bdrms 2 , ---------1 mo•<> 111 w m1nm1um dn na1hs commun11y pool pymt Will carry note S 129 500 lavor..itJI~. way lmmed LIDO llHL TY COAST HWY. escrow 8.14 '' 5 7 Deni SI' 113-noo COllOMA DEL MAR Hunt. Beacla 1040 ------- H1q11 ••S•b•ltly corner IO· Mot1va1ecJ seller J Od 2 ---------catinn Xlnt s1qn1nq plus Ila l1p1c New Ille pa1n1 ~" SlrPel parking :>500 ~ Ori1Pf'" A sking SQ •1 ST 6'i oer loot S 1 1 q Q S 0 P P ('I I 530 '> 1S9 S2H,OOO OCEJIFHIT li)\~eoch l ~ Real Estate COROH DEL MAR Allrac11ve lwo story twc bedroom norne on well landscaped R-2 lot PLUS neal one bedroom ren1a1 un11 Conveniently toca1ed soutn ot High wav E •cetlenl t1nancmg S219 900 131-1300 h11ulu MESA VERDE POOL HOME! Irvine LIKE NEW 1044 Cu~I '" bu111 nomf' 111 Nor tnwo<JU'> l t't11l1t on side coiner 1oc;a11011 Bac .. i. 10 par~ Assoc1a tton r.001 and 1enn1s 4 8d1m~ 2 ba too many e•113~ 10 hSI A muSI s~ betore tlec101ng on any 1n1ng eise $299 ooo Cd ~~isor 1 ~r~ ·Realty 786-11 12 I ~ ~JJJL::· 3880 Michelson D11ve l1v1ne MOllTMWOOD PARI PASH 4 Bd1m 2' 1 Ba 2 5tory wnh ..itc wet bar and Al 111e P•f'r a rare 3BA 2b< Rt-n<le1vous con domon1um on the site o lh• latJIE'd oallroom Or 1n1• no.irowallo. steps 1c '"'' '>ilnd w11n panoramic oct'an ••ew Easy beact w,11~ 10 lhe Dory lleel P;iv111n n ano fe11y e.m.1oa al " s be.51 IU-1211 CHOICE IUFFS COHO J Br conrto take advan· 1aqe ol lh•S super buy Will consider tease op· 11on Close to schools ~hup 1..11ng 8 park $149 900 An11a Scnandel 644-6200 ~Macnab ·Irv me tamotv room lerge LEISE/OPTIOI redwood petoo Only I year old s 196 500 with 2-stry 4Br 3ba ram rm s t53 ooo 1n assumable nome gate guarded Beauttlulty decorated 4 i.nancing 832 .2 137 comm Tennis pool Bdrm nome 1cx;ateo on 8 0 1acuw $349 500 v.15'A Qv•el cul·de sac De· wner pt1ncipais only dn or S t800tmo (6 10 12 11gn1ru1 k11cnen has oeen Minion Viejo 1067 mos 1se opt t remodeled & 1he solar • ROll!EllS •raLTI nealed 1>001 offers en1oy· Lake view E•e<: Home. 5 • "iut ment & fun tor 111e en111e Br · Den 3 'r Ba 115-2311 1am11y Sometnong special $215 000 752-2197 675-331 1 Ev/Wknds at $169 000 646 7171 MESA YElllE W1oe shady stteets anc e•pans1~e lawns •s what quality hv•ng •S all about Tn1s nome has 11 all and more 3 B<lrm 2 Ba w1tt1 large 1ooms lh1r k ne10> carpeting and R v s1orage P11cP<l to se11 now Don 1 miss 11 Only $146900 7!11·3191 C:.SELECT ..... PROPERTIES NEWPORT HACH HUGE LOT (90 ~ 178) With good older 3 Bdrm 2 bath nome $215 000 and owner wtll ca11y RtJ lcCartllt, Rltr. &41·1121 TRIPLEX Cl•$441,000 YOUR AD IN THIS SECTION IS REACHING 108,777 HOUSEHOLDS 261,064 READERS S360 00011 Th•s aoso1u1e Baat. Inell 22•0 unorthodox sources. Focus on money o f others, investment ba1ga1n ptu!. a go1geous 3 bel 2 b 1 1 11. possibilities disclosed by one with "legal leanings " Dig deep, home certainly won not a rp c new 1 e · f ·al la · k 1....-h h f I tasl To see call Pallick paint and drapes reiectsuper 1c1 exp nauons,as to~s ownw ere manc1a Tenore 760-8702 Agl S8001mo tsetopt1on statements are concerned. Mollile Ho•H l 100 213 530·5159 TAURUS (April 20-M ay 20). Go slow. fimsh what you start, HOMES FOR RE.NT be sur e of special rights and perrn1ss1ons. Focus on public 12 " 40 I BA good lo· cation Costa Mesa $ 13.500 548-5688 LJHUMILLS A Beaullful 1972 Royal Cna1e1 Home. large hv· 1ng-d1ning & kitchen area larn rm w/wet bar. mas 1er bath wl watll on closet & garden tub Elaborate llress1ng area w/doubte sink Yoµng edit wel· corne Agt 140-5131 Huntington Beach ;i & 4 r elations )0. int efforts and ~<>ible declSion affecting marital Bd1ms $800 $900 • . Y"""". Fenced yards & garages status. Look beyon d the immediate, reach for wider audience. K•ds & pets welcome r ealize th at you have something of value to offer 863·0755 Agenl no tee GEMINI (May 2 I -June 20): New approach gets )Ob done - lniat 2244 you 'll attrac t allies and employment picture will be bright.er Be 110 3 Bdrms $900-St400 direct , display courage of conv ictions and be willing to get to llt'.f'4 I h eart o f matters. M ember o f opposite sex explains f eelings and 1s oisor extrem el y frank. It I CANCER (June 21-July 22): Good lunar aspect coincides eo y 1 with intuition, emotional responses. speculative venture and 7 86-l l ?2 I intensified r elationship. Hunch proves correct. you are on right path. Individual who taught you in past ts again available, and you need but ask to receive aid. laco•t P)tp 1350 l LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Diversify, r ealize that some rouunes -----------3880MocneisonDrove have become outmoded. Check details. be aware of small pnnt 11 HITS Irvine Prime Npt Bch rental . SO and learn more about property values. Restrn:t1ons are property tocaled near LllHI Htlh 22 temporary and actually grant you opportunity for second Oover/Westchtf behind HOME FOR RENT I · d wes1c;1111 snopp1nQ Laguna Ht1113 Bdtm 2 ~ emouona wm · . c.en1er $ t 600 ooo S825 Fenetd y1rd & 011-VIRGO (A ug. 23-Sept. 22): Check d 1rect1ons. review Terms a•a•t Courtesy 10 age l<lds & pets _,_ instructions prior to departing upon )Ourney Telephone caJJ aids Bkrs Call ow ne• come 863·0755 Agent, m clarifyt'ng matters enable r elattve to know of your plans 645·6646 no tee • Miuita Viej• 2267 --·,·u·11•1·Ts--·1 HoMes rM RE'Nt Mission V1e10 3 & • Bedrm Super e1ghlplex, eacn with $825-$900 Garages end 3 Bdrm 2'' ba double tenced yards 1(1ds & pets garage Copulld be con· O I( Ag 1 No I e e dos Ov.ner will hnance al 863·0755 i;;_» ,•1, Super invest· ment. asking $725 000 lfewrrt ltacli 2269 CALL Bill COTE 2 br 2 ba duple• W/0 ll0-1100 trptc nuge pa110 Steps to bch 5406 Neptune $900 964'·• 163 (? 131379-5015 -COTE rt~ REALTY •NPT HGTS 2 BA I BA Rustre fncd yd, lreM trptc Move now 5850 Mr Motter 5•7·020• F.-1 zo-3·• B1 2'-r t>a 2 blocks to '"" tieacn cto~ 10 pool & Last chance to buy g1eat 1enn1s 962·6683 1nvestmen1 property at Newpon Shores tne Fun Zone. 207 Palm St Balboa Reduced 3Br 2' • Ba condo pool, pnce -S350K 673-2943 835 Amigos =9. $895 673-3930 213.5<1 1·•~60 What seemed lost is due to be recovered. Scorpio nauve plays paramount role. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Study Virgo message Focus on payments. colJections. discoveries which enable you to recoup recent loss. Get view s on paper. realize that gain is indicated through w ritten w ord. Cycle moves up, you'll be at right place at crucial m om ent. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-N ov. 21): M oon in your sign emphasizes fresh starts, independence, su ccess by pioneering a project. Judgmen t, timing. intuition are on target. M oney comes from unusual source and you'll receive gift representing "tok en of affection." SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Discretion is net't'S.Sary - clandestine meeting 1s on agenda and you 'll gain valuable information as r esult. Define terms. get nd of superfluous material, get machine in working o rder. Pisces, Virgo natives play o utstanding roles. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Wish comes true, financial picture is stron ger, relationship in tensifies and scenario is transformed from bleak to bright. Focus on successful business enterprise, career m ove, commendation from superiors Another IEW,ORT ILYI llAHH RIME Capricorn figures prominently. Great Costa Mesa IC> cation Traffic counl 75 000 cars pr day Zoned C·2 Lot size ts8SC sq It Exlsllng bu1ld•n' IOOO sq It Askin, $269 000 and nas a h1gt assumable 1oan 631-7370 Tlt\OIT 10" \l. ~L\U' 4 Bdrm e1111e home tor AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): P romotion due -response mer model fabulous ff . h . . ocean city & hgnt v._ fromrecente orts&Sent us1ast1c,attractsattenllonofthosewho Comm POOi spa & ten-canadvanceyourcareer. You'llbedealing w ithpersonswhocan nos S3500tmo Agt open many doors and are likely to d o so. Aries native plays key 644-0927 role Haven reniais avail Pel! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): N ew plans unravel in OK From $800-$7500 -h 'bl · 0 li f · · Call 760-8702. aot connection wit poss& e )Oumey. pen n es o communicatio n. LHHl lPTlll s~udy v arious O_P~O~ and pounce on OJ:>~rtun~ty to publish 2 sirv •BA 3b1 ramity rm views. Stress onginality, courage of convTct1ons. independence. home Gate' guarded willingness to let go of "security b lank et." community Tennis pool tBCUUI $3~9.500 w/5'~ .A U f dn or $1800/mo (8 10 12 tall Val. !prtantl, Vaf. nl!l .. tall, 8 • mos tsetopt l C11t1 Mtll 1724 C.111 Mna 2724 Ct1ta Mtaa 2124 "-HIEH llUL n Moaatai•1 uwltrt lll·U 11 I Br 1 ea patio. $395/mo "LIKE BRAND NEW" le1trt l4SO 675-331 I Evs/Wknds inclds utlls Agent Sparkling 1 Bdrm from Palm Springs custom dtc 6•5-3683 $445, 2 Bdrm from $555. hm. pert tor enter1atnlng lease wtoptoon to buy 2 • t BR, good cpts & drps, Uuts pd, p00I, garage. no Desperete-must sell den 2'\ Be 1s111me ever stove. no trig Ulll turn pets St59.500tobo By Owner ava1t1bte Beeu11tut Lndrytaclt.nopets S•25. 301 ~YOCldO, 642·9850 VIEW OF OCEAN 2 Br 2'' Be Twnhs. micro, trash comp rrptc. sky tights S795 642-7803 WESTSIDE 619.346_9425 condo in Belcourt Hiit Westside 646-4382 24 t W Wttson 63 t-0960 C • I • 2222 .IAOMS HAL n 2 BR 1 ''tbl air cond sgl Lrg 2 Br 1 81, upper. deck. a 14r• bl trOH t ar 111-1110 ger p1t10 · 272 Ceb~tllo 1 encl ger, off Newpott 'lew 3 Br "~ ·9. patio European v1tla wtf11>uiov1 $575 Agl 5411·85'7 Bt & MeH Dr AYell J1n 0/W btt-1ns. kids OK. no ocean v1-3 Bd. den LIDO ISLAND 4 brl 3bl "' --7 1550/mo 548-11138 pets, 1mmeo occup1ncy. get s 1600 Agt 640-4868 beech. avail Jen S 1800 2 Br 1 '" 81 studio patio $650/mo 880 Center St 107 V11 Koron 673·5368 gerege no pets S575/mo lrg 2 B1. I b• W/tlde Ow, For 1pp1 645-6646 CutaMffl 2U4 lrg•Br 3 b• oen fncdyd 548-4291or645-9857 tndry rm Av1tt 111/84 1615 Cute C1pe COd 26r EtBtutt ., .. S1l50tmo. S3So. ltg uwer 1 Br -,B •• s525imo 6"5-682~ IHt.~acla 2741 2ba, new cptsldtp• wd lei IHI & S500 MC dep no pell, QUlet, lndry tacit, LlllRY .... 2 el 1 81. new dips/crpts llrs fn«I yd, uNd brlek 538-7996 edulls preferred 3 TO Wiik to So Cat Plau N Ptls Kida OK garage gdnr 22 T8·tll Avocedo 631-2177 Frptc:, tr wtndowt, •lo, In· $ 00/mo 733 Utica Ptacenua 645-2568 AtutMatl r......... .. ..,.. 2 ...,. -..,.__ llC'Urtty 2 er 2 Be 960-61172 -.. ..,.,,,, uvtm llOUM near '""',.. • 3 unots on me beach side of the h19hway Walk to bei>Ch and 1happ1ng Two units wtth 2 81 2 Ba One un•I w1tn 3 81 3 88 Fite· pieces rn all units CaM Mary Den11s lor more de· !alls 644-7020 Utllt HAL HT.All WestJlde SEE THIS ONE' Ctrtll •ti Mar 21U 20111 end WlllM:e Refa tncldt bOutlfut p1YI Bll ul 2Br 181 twnhse, C 0 M PA A E * 2 81 1 Ba enctad gar. w/O C 11 f \ !i1o req 548-3829 ClbnM. 1enn11 crie, pool• trplC. patio. vaulted ceit-room crpts dr1pe• P•tlC ory. am• · um • u.,, · --__ & much more UOO 1ng. bllln1. enct ger, •tn1 no P4'ts $550/mo, MC pool Empt fem, CLEAN/5 yrs Old 3 8drm 531-7478 erea nr Hunt Hrbor Cortaa •tl Mar 1022 o .. •u Hl 11&9' WU 2 Two C>drm unite duple• tn Corona <101 M&r dptk '' del1n1toty the be•I boy 1n CdM Unll• In good cond & owner 11 very anxious 10 9&11 1269.500 llHEH REJL n 111.2111 875·3311 EllfffWknde OUR CLASSIFIED RATES 5•8.5442 770_5629 non1ml!r, no pet1 Utll 2b1 $695 O/W Gar. NEWPORT apTs. $626, 846-0736 1nc1 ~11 S335/mo. 111. Pa110 H95 Agt 5'6-5605 "" · D u D p I t 22.a 1111 lee 640-411911 2 Br S370tmo 1 utlll In-\IH 3 BR 2·~ BA ""' a .. y 108,777 25C 111 t 1 " . E11111ci. 1 Br amell but lent onty No w11erbed1. new trplC WO hkuP pan• Plot Circulation 3 N Br. 1 P bl condo. Pt CMtl ••11 2'14 coty wltll tots of natural no peta 2450 Newpor1 try bttne encl gtr lg patlO per thouund 1guet oot, 1enn111 tn~ UKO Db mob" hOme. no wood 1395 861-9523 PALM MESA APTS 11c SCl75 545-3604 Santa Ana 63 w/d. lrig 1775 492-67oc Piii Mllur• ldult• F11t-1ld• townhouH. 2 1 Br $.460/mo. Office hrt 49,000 ( FtHtala Quiet teQura bd, I bl, patio, oerprt, 9·.4 168T Mesa Or Santi Recfster Circulation per 111ousand V 11 2224 1991 Newport 646·8373 seoo 931.1900 An• H • 1 0 n, • Ne t I 2 lnrrtlffcai d&I E aide 2 8r. OIW. 011. nu 714/5411-9'00 ~ 52,000 soe 3 Br. 2 bl Coodo Cover-eel Im p;a QUl9I prC1 cpl. Plinl llC No ~· Sent• An• Hgt• I Br 1600 Ensifn Clrculabon Pt' lhousand enctolld P•tlo & oareoe P•i>ttv on bey, btoci.1 10 l475tmo, 111 a , .. ,. • 2 Br 2 aa H OO No pell $62&/mo 963-NO& bel1, ti« gar, Y"IY 1525 MC & clelnlng.:. S41-Z405 &4& .. 855 SEAWllD ¥1LUIE The 80 000 49C 673.e33&·••2·MM ..... tn ,..... ...... Ct1ta .... 1124 Pemysner Clrc~t11lon per thousand Fer~~ Ad A,a.rta .. 11, Val T ~i.: ~:~r· ll:C.1 !',. wr~\~:J:: C.M. IHT llT Cell • C Hi•.::. --Aot 73 1-&e'9rs.2.131a • bltne. trpia ano No Two hOv,_. tOf tne PflCI of Rat., BaMd On 3 Linea -1 Tlmet ~Not trtal 111U ••u peu it 5 T Paolftc one Fan11111c ••ff Jutt ... ___. On=::.. Al).'MOA titUdiO, Gi;. ;;& In m ........ !AUi 631-I 107, UMM5 S 188 000 f. rtAI ,, .. , .._, 142•1• neer belcf\ Aftll now l 'I • ...aD ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Bltr 9<18 o_7_09 ___ _JL:===--Ctrcute--t-lon-==ln=Ptlot==M=====~.l-:::::::::::::::::::= .._u_2_&'_"'° __ 14_4·t 5H 01 Tt f Adi .,....11 Ctmlfted Adi Ml·•• t11r 1 & 2 Bdrm k.lxul) 1pt1 In 14 pl1n1 I 8df]ll from $&75, 2 Bdr(TI from 1875 TownnouM trom 1735 I pools, ltnl\lt, w11..-1111s, pondt o .. fOf ~tno. ' heellng f!lld ''om S.n 0..00 fl!:fW) drtve No<tll on IMd\ 10 Mcf~ Ind .... Of1 Mcfeocttn lo SIAWINO >JILlAOE f1 '4~- t 8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, December 27. 1983 TODAY 'S CROSSWORD PUULE At HOSS 1 Dispute "l,r,1t lo.lt'~ 10 f •101::. 14 Monstrous 1 'i rit'lmsm.111 ll> f-dll SOUlld 17 Mai..e free 19 Urluercoolo.t:>d :.>O Olt>O e g '} 1 Conspicuous 23 (,lrdCI ~6 M etdl • ; Citrus pl.int 10 1r1 one p1ect:> 14 UnprOl1uchvt' .1:, Tnreddbart' J 7 Pr Ot'11b1t1on1st 38 Sht.'t'IJ 39 Reiecteo 41 de 1e1e 421ke 43 Crete.:1n l..llHJ 44 w ood 15 Toddy S words 4i Nev.sman 'iO And so on dObr !>1 Cask part 'i2 Pale shades 2 3 4 14 17 20 34 38 42 45 60 64 67 56 Grumble 60 Death notice 6 1 [' ,µ1.1111er o4 Upe111ng bf> INJl/e b6 nesounded b 7 Pe1111ont1r 68 Shovel 69 Greek u11deryround DOWN 1 bl11p p1011ou11s 2 l11terrogdte 3 Alga extract 4 At'tuvt'nated 'l lns~ct & Short drini.. 7 Staie abbr 8 Ja1 dtr11eres 9 Kind ol tatc 10 Sttorl race 11 Wings '~ Frayed 11 Bari acuda 18 Conveyance 22 Wrinkled 24 Suture 25 Panics 27 Suety 5 6 7 15 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 28 Moslem order 29 ACIOIS 31 Confess 32 Hoisl 33 US President 36 Map 01ow-up 39 H11 hard 40 Rings 44 Make ready 46 Camne 48 Proba11on 8 9 49 Prepos1t1on 52 Bos1on - 53 Fattier Arab 54 Parent 55 M isdeed 57 Print style abbr 58 Ntnllt prel 59 W ork units 62 O~<tahoma city 63 Sinful 11 12 13 66 69 At1rta1at1, Uaf. At1rtaeat1, Uaf. Aertaeala, Oal. 2900 ltlt Wai! .. 1100 !tit Wut .. Slot ltlt Waal.. SlOI lelt Wul .. 7014 ------------------SEA & SUN LODGE S 100 wk up Color TV 3026 W Cotti ~twy, Npt Accou11u1nt. 1u11 ch111gt1 MODELS . TOP PAY exp •11(1 d Colleg~ Chr1st11111 fhomnGall111y de9ro11 P•t1le1 able C11ll 6'>0 2317 Linda 4!11 4858 01111.t-11018111111 Vlll~O leatall t• Sia.re ---------dull••-rktPllOnill type 2901 •AJ .. AOOIHT !>O wvm phono!I Nwpl "[-,9--b-e•_u_1_h .. om--.-.-X""L·l 1 HlOITIVI Be11ch ot11<;0 675ti1 tO amen111e1, Fern pref !he Orange CoHt 011ly OFFICE MHAliER $350 • 12 utll 548-2497 Poot has 11n uceuent op. 101 ~mall busy olfile PH Mlf New condo/3BR or PO•luruty lor '1 Cllreer ikllllJ f1Qnl olhc11 ulJ•h Npt bear.II S300 mo • ot1erllt1c1 MRjor Accov•ll 1t111> '"'" 11111.11111r11nc.e ttnt.l ulll Av<J1I now 675 6959 EAetUtlve with ii proven hit' llkk !l i.11owlu11oe rtt 11 ,Jrl; I PC Old Gre.it QUll•'ll 'I vr'>COllege IJrt>I M1F shr apt on COM Resp 1JOle1111HI guaranteed Gc>u<l iou relerenct•s d & c~an $325/rno • II~ drew ll!jdtnll com MU~I S6 $9/hr b.ised u111 G1111e 67S-3890 m1u1or. Desue tomove on t">llt1rience 7 14 857 S523 dys onto rnunagement a plus bl~ ')0\l<J. Ask tor Johri Send resume to Middle age buS1n1tss la<l> p o Box t560 w1rl sh1 her 2 Br apt, pool c051.., Mesa 92626 1ac w1sarnti CM $225 S51-S05 t' ilfl 2 30PM ·E·O·E------- N11wpor1 Crest pvt bd 1 oa poo11spa11nns tndry nr och $375 Call Ans Ac 752 S42 4300 24 hrs Resp te. beaut COM 3 Br rum Twnhme nr ocear w same & c.h1ld $395 • Ulll S75 S04 I Resp rmmte, beachlront lot1a9e wlvu Lagun? Bch $375/mo ~97·6839 Rmmtemse Soller 2 bd < oa condo in Unove1s1t) Park E'c.ept1onat OPPI\ lor 119ht person Non smk1 Ove1 25 Rel~ Req S2751mo ut1ls Ask t or George 78S a 116 WE LOOK fOR YOU Housl!1Roomma1es un11m11ed 832-4134 Office Reat1h 2914 tS 17 WeS1cl1l l N B 278 1365 SQ It Su1tablt lor me<l1ca1 01 dental Agent 541-503;. Bayl10111 Oll1t6b pallos parking 1an11011a1 S73-1003 lur lal~u Pier HVEHTISI•& HHCY rs looking lor an aggres1ve young 1nd1v1dua1 10 star I as a 1w11or acct e•ec w oppo11unrty w ad vsncu Appro• 30 hrs a wee~ 10 ~1.ir1 Must bt' college rauca1ed 1n the lleld 01 JllVer1ts1ng mar- keting 01 sates Exper 1s helpful but not nee Musi have own trans Pro111 Slla•lng ma1or medical s.;l.iry lQmm car at 1owanc.t1 App11ca11ons ne1119 lilkeri S4 t 4973 A,,rentict OrcH Ttchlician P1t1rne Etec & mecn at:>1l1 ty BO• :.>6 tJ N B 92S63 Audio Pror1uct1on Assis t.inl Will 11 ,1111 E• pf'r.ence w1c.asse11es d plu'> $4 hr .titer month Ir.JI F 1111 hm;> Appl) BOOKS ON TAPE 729 Fer.id c:. M Ask IOI 8111 548 5S2S IAIYSITTERS HEDED Adulls/lemp days eves wr>ds Ayenc')I. CharlOI· 1e s Sollers S45·37 4S Oldu SpJytttillt Factory ·~ IO<'k•110 1111 pan 11me sec. re1,1ry11iookkeepe1 tHS I? " Mnn 111111 rri S7'> llh'•~ Part· Tl1111 Ptrlll EVEMIMGS WEEIHDS New1.1ot1 Oea1.11 Ma1kel111g '" m 11.i~ ~eve111I opt111111g~ 101 , e~po11!.11lle .ind 111 (1u1o111ov~ p;;opll! A !JOOO \olJeJklltQ vO•l l' a MUSl 1 A 4rei1I w(ly IO rrl(.ltlaSt- ¥0Ur IJ11<.lQt>I t.lOlldl:. W~ pl), 101 vou1 training for 1r\tt••v·~~ ''"µ1 Cdll M1 St1.>emo'1 54!'> <o77S PMOTOSR&PHEllS IOI IJIOl1t & f'•DOSure Ch11,riun Thomas Gallery 6!>0 2317 PROGUMlllEll! ANALYST St tie wide Alf invest nu•uts. t~n st-rvtc.es tum Oller 1119 <..llallen91ng pos 111un lur nr1qhl t1101v1d11a 111 wrn., and tJes1Qn 101 T 1 o<io .11•0 or c PlJP t I J4 Musi t1.1ve ? v•'> e•ue1 wtLOBOL f" c elh!111 c,1reer oppor I uni iv C..a11 55J oq40 HUS OARHR M111or ru1tl!l(IAI co Hekl l0<.11lly u~t..tbltshtiU irtdl .. 11111111 1.011eg11 b11ck. ornunt.1 s>• et St1ltn11d lfoor o.1nd vnhm1Led trl <..un111 t .. 111ng w1tr1 op j)OlhHtt1y ro build tlqUllY T h1bault ll Co 7!>4 7017 SALES Carter o.,ertu1lt1 I 11.. K11110t1rty Coroon Aquncy netto~ 1.1111 I 111n11 <.111t.1 full 11mtt s.i111~ lltilp You will bti selling mem tlt«r .. ll1Ci. IOt cl rtatto11w1dt1 Havel co1po1a1ton 10 91111 ~rul n11.,chan1s com pr1111t•s grouvs a11u or •1d1111.it10ttl> No u~per 1w1 wtt will trn111 Free I• .1v1•I uvu1lablt· Xlr11 '"'"J" .11111 t>e11ehts pack 1111· Purl lime 1fi<..Om1> lrnm ST~ to S2001wOOkJy "''''il91' full lime S400 ,,.,, ,.~" iUUl fUOlf' Jver tQt: ~en 111fo;1111111on ur .11Jp01n1rrn«'ll C.dll Mr B I r10111·•~ bo>lween 2 S µm M1111 r11 / 14 2G I tS39 Outside 7 14 1100 t'l1-111n llMIERL Y SORDOM ASSOCIATES SALES DISPLAY &DVERTISIMG fhe Orange Counly Oa1ty P1ltJI 11;is an e~cellent Oil rior lur 1111y be911111111g n11(1 J 111uary lor c.ar!Mlr 1 ••111..,11 t11spray a<Jve<11s 10 """'!. reps w111 a 111uvt>11 l•ack record (.,11•,lt <Jar rtony uott>rtlt(ll fl11.Jrurtlet>l1 Ordw JQi1111~1 , • rnm1-.~1on Desore 10 1110vl" 11110 "'"11ager•wn1 .1 plu~ S1•110 rt:!sur>1e 10 r 0 Box 15SO <.osta IAesa 92626 EOE l'C CIOAN •IOOIJ $tl000 PART TIME Ver~ t'tOUr• 2 t3 Jl2 1491 Iv Include unrly A M wwkt111<l' Must hav• Cl• Maria• Epi r . 7011 POOdllhltt vt1h1Clt1 (llmDll Aolklr lurilriwf hOOd 1411 truck var• ~11111on rurl '.12)() t.l!I It 10 SO II .YdQOfll 10 a"'\1•.1 new" hou11 S tbbJ now ~ell rm J•uf.)t!r dt1Jlt11 1n lrvtnl' $7 l"i h1t1 tt1111d1h1y (5:i' 011011 Mu,1 l)t-dt!IJQll "' o .. y11 fi40 2'l 11 ljVtlS 9145 HJ79 MB 300 SD Turbo Dteset. Ivory w/U11mboo int •1111 concl S 10 !>()() 660· 1484 d11ve 646 8158 8Y9!; 1984 SO I uroo s:1r. ooo S11ver1e1ue Hcu1dy for Chr1~tn10~ !>'i 1 960S dublc.> C:c1ntac1 Gr11g !l~I 188:> lfyd11 Monday lhru f11d.iy 8016 ri7 ?!>OSf 4-d• $nrf, ltllr. 11H1w11t.ir1 9 30 a11u 10 JO Molor Blkt1 ., m only 642 432 1 -----------I AMt~M cass 4·~P blk, • MUST SELL 1111 orig ~cry good cond Vt:!~IJll P200E lo m1. $4'100/0bo 613-1622 Do~a 551 0 AK Engh~h S1ttter pups S tOO ? males 7 70 9800 ••ves & wkrtO& AKC Lab P1.1pp111~ y11llow Rt•Jlly for Ch"''"'") 'Si'?') S4:> 069'• M"~~Y OoQs• $IO .my i.wi C.roon11rty '>tllC>tJI 1eact1t11 121y1i.11•11) 'i46 ;>648 POODLES ARE P(Ol'l [ fttJ up•luy•M1111dhu ... ~46-:.>848 AM ~M cass lMCk111st & 82 3000 Turbo OSL tuyg r11ck S750tobo l'.l 000 m1 ltke new 86' 0<144 P Fu111et1f $25 900 N11wpo11 Sch Motorcyclea/ 720 1705 Scooters 8018 83 380 SEL Blk Beauty Yamaha '80 GHIO clean. ,,, nu Inc PhQnlt Sell 101 lik•• 11,..,. $/'lO 963 .,498 loss '£4200 613 302') Auto Service&/ P1r11 9015 4 011 Ao1td hr£·~ C.u<.U tur J1hOt J•/t• 7u JC 14 \1·.01111 '8114747 A'>k .illoul thtt money we Cd11 save you mru our PurChJse & lease plans JIM SLEMHS IMPORTS 1)01 Oua11 S11~1 NEWPORT BEACH 833-1300 Antiqau 601 0 Aut os W1nted Oe!>lo. s11~, Batl $75 OAK Hou~1tH $t.OO HIGHEST CASH IMMfO B•wlll (; 9 M11rc11011s. 79 Ori·~'"' $2~0 Ote:.ser lur YU"' v .. tto1;le. dumesllc; $28 000 Or 52000 and $ l'J(J N1ytot:.1a11d \ 100 Cll loreoy" '>~ 1 IJ:l!i\S I O•pyrnt~ OI $700/mo 645 "597 WE BUY (') 1·5211 7'.l I 350 I Appliucu 6011 CLEAN CARS MC 9149 1 7 cu It Sears ret11q,.r AMD TRUCWS 63 MG Midget All orig Jlor 'SSO 962 S280 " " Blk wired lea1her S 1700 r111~I lret' Reing !.150 67 I 51i8tr Cun deliver Kt>nmo1e wshr t dryr eAlt c.u11ll $100 t!u S44 !i488 furniture 6025 St'c ">Ola Tahrt1an wh1ll:' J m "'"'" CO'il.., S 1600 t~~ 1nq $I tOO ObO 71Jf) 0 I IJ evl:'~ & wk111l<. <;ntu <..011111' v r fl'llc.t1 (.1.111111.,ry l'Ji.1110 rww · II 1·1uuSt> lull ol lur n Muv 111g 644-!>J 19 J ewelry 6214 CON HELL CHEVROLET I ~ llarhor llh d l '<IC'\T\ \1 ~.~ \ 541>-1200 WE IUY 11!',Ef> t,ARS 11 T AtJCt<S ( OME IN OR (,All r OR FREE &r"l&IS&l < 1111n11•1 Dt>l 111ri CHEVROLET 1821 1 BEACH BLVU HUN rlNG TON BEACH 14l-&Oll;541-333 1 WE PAY TOI' DOLLAR Help F111.:rnc.e S7S· 1277 Porsclae 9157 '68 Porsche Coupe 5 spd or•g and -<Int SS500 One owne1 S75 1277 Rolls Roy ce 9161 t'-41)' ....... "'• A # /J." 4,! 1 •,.fl -•; ..,,.. • tv> .• " ........... OPEN ~UNO•n 11 • 550 s11 Clean w1cp1 pv• IUl'll/FULL CHAR5E ba S4001mo S42-4623 lor a local CPA lirm 1n ---------r .. 1mc Show P1111: gill ---------•I 5l"tmStress e•perienced 1.t:r 'rl11,all V.111 (;lf>ef & FOR USED CARS AUMl&&MOM POITl&CISUa&RU Toyot1 9169 78 Corolla 1Corp Transl) I ownr riu 111es S2400 000 640 4''l69 Pvt otllct! now a .. a11 10< ac-• Ir vine All pl'lases ol counlant at S425trno bllkp 9 •eQutred "Com rnct la~ hbrary ledeial & puter eAper helplul Call stale 10,015 copier re· Bell, Rayl & Co 752·5S 11 cept1on rm telephonE answe11ng parking Costa Mesa 64S·4428 1450 '>Q II view suite Fou• 11g p11~ate olllces w11h lrg sec1eta11a1 area k1t c ne11 and prtvalt lobby S19n space avail ao1e on Westc1111 Reoecoration anowance 15 pos111ons great salary E>.cel oppo11un11y A ad •ar1cemen1 Im med opening~ Employmen1 Service Cnt• l 14 220-1520 CUSSIFIH OUTSIDE SALES r11e Oran9e Coast Dail) Pilot ha' an e.cellen1 op po1tun11y IOI a Class1l1ed Outside Sates person with a proven tract re cor <J G1ea1 ear rung poten11a1 guaranteed draw ag11m1 comm1ss1on Send 1e~ume to P 0 Bo• 1560 Cosrn Mesa Ca 92S26 EOE PROMOTION C.111 /Oil "'""" 1 hrs ni9h1ly, At··~ou Well groornPt.l <.l!'p••nut1bl .. ancJ <,t>ll mor•vdlt'<.l, Drivciu fr11oy ""or~1119 w11t1 ~ ,os? 11vou1.an answer YES Phone S46· 702 1 Z 30-Spm Mon th1u Fri RECEPTIOMIST r10111 oll1ce person w1nea1 appearance lor 1e1e phone & CRT o•<ler erttrv WnOlt>~ole lumber ro r •P llelplul t:>ul nor 11eceS!>.t•y Call Qeneral mgr lor llPOI WEBER PL rwooo co , J 1·4000 RECEPTIDMIST w.in1e<.l to wur~ w1lh la1ge ArP<'I JewelH.,. \/Voll '>ell ma11ne manulatturer lull 1:nllrt: $4000 cr.id1t 101 '"""' 'l48·J464 Greq S2 '.>OO ,,, µor11onl> 101 5.,,,ttary lo• taw 01t1ce nr; lt'Qoll PXJ,ler net. f •II / 5 ' d I 5 C I) U 11 I 714/597·223J •k•ll~ wo•d u•oc e~t.1111 Miscellaneou s 6218 lt~·c:.lf .... &hh; non ·Smkr '•<•r• avaol 1mmeu Cdbbage Parch doll $17'3 •,,.,,<.l rr·~ume only to •>tw 786·942~ ')1 ''" Boudreau i:. vO•" (;t.11!.trna!> SP<'<•<111 Scr1 ... 1n ·r ·~·1r;2 Mar A11t1ur c..x 100 mut11 {.ros:. (•II f\1.tJ u•lt' J;.>C, lrYlll"I C..Vl•<.l Brvlli.e w yellow "' 1 i· m,,qs New tire~ Pnds j 111c 1 S9S SuCJ<'r ot11ce ;>480 Hart1ri1 Blvd COSTA MfSA 549·4300 549-1451 WE WAllT YOUR CLUM USED CARI See Ronald Once 79 c .. 11co 'i-sp air AM/FM O••g owner 48K rn1 $4 700 8:J3 3S3S Vol lcswagu 9173 1970 VW SQuareback 4 speed run~ good looks gooo ~,BOO 080 645 317t SECRETARY /GEM OFF •lt.·~k 1t•1t Mn<l retvr,.. Typing Acc;uracy 1mpor1 ~18~ Coun11y t.1111 tt:>I 50 ,mt F T no $1H 644 l')Q'! • '>0 w'C.IH> ~uhd wood * 74 VW BUG• Looks greal and runs great rebtl eng $1650 l~t!~~llim!ll 57 Rag I 01 SIOClt 1600 ~1ngle pOr t Blaupunttl VOO gage~ new 1ad1als gooo paint no rust $1400 O.in 546 '.1147 SPCIPl<.1ry I .. ,, olle1 <;u1lbO.H<l mu\I St>t• $!10 78S·S967' 4 Whe~I Dri v es 9030 l'10IPS~1ona1 olloGto ma11 79 Chevy Btazt1• 4 • 4 1\lt>• must lla•e ver) EMS Mactu11e erec muscle Juro "'" cono p10 pis ql'>OO lypong s~ills ~omf <.lunulJIC>• ltk .. N.iuttlus SSSOO &'>0 4;.>4;.> 0, 1>nn~ '"f'O•nq and com $ t 75 E.ec <lt>:.ks c,,2 7'>!1·8323 -P"'"' skills nec.t•ssdry S 15011S S 1 t2 78S 1464 '•111 t1nw Se1111 resumt UMllf ROGERS TIX A ntiques, 6 t Bug rPSIO•ed S t995 obo S51 1S71 "' N;1111:y 1767 Orangt' Classics 904 5 l11e lymq & cle11ca1 Boul Aw 8 lOl CM qJb'7 I" 10"" 1oge $35 ea cir I'"!"~'"!!"''""!'"~-.-----~ s:1 Ha1.i •Pbll t1ng trans t1on1 end l:IV 'S 1000 MUSI '>fll 642 757') Hun t. Buch 2740 Newport Bu cb 2769 Newport Bucb 2769 Coamercial COCITlll SERVERS OPEIU115 SOH .. c" JJPI nelplul Call 11o1c.J•• n.11der ., 855 630 I 57 I Bord 16K 0119 needs S7'.l nn dSk lor Chit SECRETARY " -r (l c "II a II •• ,j IP t l!llly 1JJ1n1 .0111 llltt'rlO• 67 Bug All 0119 Re<l " r , r r ll a r 9 a I " s I 1 <, 0 0 $I • 50 Ot:>O c.Jn l1na11ce Wdlk to t:>eac.h 1 Br ~•ovf' I 2 oor-uppe• w pch ba1 Rut1h 2911 ... 1r qe w <l n• uc. qa· DOVER WESTCLIFF vu stove h19 S42-1 40C 15so Newporl Blvd CM cld van~ i,Pt "''l""" 2 Br 1 Ba nu CPI urapes SSSO avt1ol t-84 400 SQ 11 SJ 7Si mo s.i~c 11'\(. 53;, ~r, 1 • fll' I~ POO c.arport nc CHEERS RESTAURANT En1e11a1nmen1 and dant ong Wt: need cocl1ta1t '>e•11ers we 1ra1n Stu dents OK Fun p/I Beact• II WJrnt'r Call t>el noon 752 S95S 847·996S pm i ,,., ,, $6 ~5 1 ·oo Bea Agent 5<1 1-503< WOODLHEAns JI IL•OU'> 1 S [\r l1r IT S'L''> ~d•e~ S ·.trram., pnro1 S SPo 1..i•gt' rl>t • • J b45 6646 Spacrou~ ~ingle. one 57S 11 re.ii w PCH N B SI 13 per It .iva1I 1' 15 Ll>vt'I, 7 Br 2 Ba ? gar ,t><.1! I hi• hCh II( r,,.,, s ;c.o f'.St'l· 170S ev! c§. two bedroom apts Mar , n,, Bu s p , e I ' f 0 fl\ M P A I f ' ~ 11t'1 (.'lrJll'd tJ .. ;;ur1lulh I 1"d~c 1(1en '"rt11 it) ~,~1e~ e;,J,,, 1ri ~..-1~ lb f~··' PHI H ... T AP&ln•ms h gona Bncb 2148 1N NEWPORT BEACH ti, Ldquna 1 8• l';.nq._.., 1 & 2 Bdrm Apar1 S 1~.-.J mo l ,f se .A11tl1 ,"l",l'f·t" ~ rowntlouse• "'"'"'" 4<>-~c"JI\, ... e· •1 m S660 1 A~k "IOOul Newport Buch 2769 1 B<l1rn 1 bartt Avd•laolt ,,, "" Sb50 mo 1" HI~ I S"J 335' 1 D!lrrn SSOO me• J.,ls PO "I• '•OP•CS 24c1 f 11)11 'i1 N ... p1 Hots 6:s.r, 109 •.,, ... ~rte11 dPIS """'mplett ;.1t•1 lV 1ir1i>11s 6 u1ens1ls m 11 11e ,,.,.,e,1 tor shor1 '"'m " tonger No leaS< '"Cl cJ On Jambo•Pe Ro ir S,11 JoaQu•n Hills Rd 644-1900 I PPl'•n •l•a trq 2Br Sl'ldec~ Arross h0m Lido M.i,.na """" cruts urvs a. paint I B• ~Ba lipl np"'I) dee 1r1y l~e VSO S'>:>·OB53 1• ·11ed $895 1 998 58S~I ,. Br c.ondo Npl Tr•H Svaroous ;ipt 1 m1 l101r 11 o t.111 ... " s;oo ,,..0 r ... ;icri t'1•oe1c, <l•apes 1•1i 1279 &4<' :>1S7 FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED All UTILITIE S PAID. HEALTH CLUBS. TENNIS SWIMMING plu~ much more' Sorry. no pets Model~ open daily 9 lo 6 Oakwood Garlkn Apartments Newport Budl So. 1700 16th Street (al Dover) 64 2-5'13 _H_el..,r _W_i_n t_ea _ __,;.S_l 0..-01 B•lt Wutt4 Slot N~port Bu d! No. Daily ~~11 t11E ...... Deliver Daily Pilot by auto m Laguna Beach area (2 hours per day). Weekdays P.M . - weekends A M. Earn about $400 per mo. Call Mr. Barrow 642-4321. EOE MANAGEMENT TRAINEES .\ U-TOTE-1 MARKETS , l IOWlllllC ·,1 ·1 880 l"'1ne Avenue {at 16th) 645-1104 :i ~~!fllll!!!~~ :j Versailles condo spac10u! · 2 b<l 2 ba w 1frplc 111ew '5850 S69-95 12 Su Clemute 2776 Z Br t Ba nr bus & beach poof & laundry lac S4751mo 498·Si.'77 L' Br close 10 oeach S475 ?23 La Paloma Call lo• ilPPI S37 79 18 Rooas 290G S4;.> 1400 Rt!nl or lf'35t' newly re modeled home w1tl' storage & large hmcec 101 commercial zoning ac11 to Newpor1 Blvd S42 1334 Shops olf1<..es s1oragF S50 SQ 11 or less reas Costa Mesa C 2 548-72 49 Store 20A60 hi v1sb 2J3C Newpo•t Blvd Costa Mesa S75 7788 hulastri1l leat1h 29 20 2 660 SQ fl 3975 Birch NB S 1330 M 1A zoning Agent 541·5032 Costa Mesa 3000 s 1. 47c pr s I 1005 Brtoso Or 644-72S9 Aanoaaceaeata 3002 t.ounr!'r Pl'r5 EAP d prer Apply "' Pe•~ 7-3 Pay re.,., Ct1>J11ers 30S Old Npt Blv<.l Npt Bc.h DIUVER I COURIER uo IO S8 50 hr No e<pe1 •IP(. Somf' veti•cles p1ov•ded Emp1oymen1 Se1111c" Cen1er l 14/ 220-1520. Not oiti <>mployml agency E•ecu11vl' Seete1ary Ollie" ol Ille Pres1den1 fon.inc1111 service:; l1rm needs 100 knotcn exec sec y lor very busy c11at1enq1nCl pos111on Sl•ong e1P 1n tyi:,1109 /shorthand sl\•lls a musl Non smkrs pis Call 553 0940 SPIRITUAL READINGS F•lWIME PAY AO vice on all mlltters Love l'HT •TIME WORK mamage & business Oppor1unrt1es available Also counseling 1815 wtlh the Los Angele< So El Camino Real San Times C11lula11on Oe Clem Lied 492-7296 pa11mt>n1 1n Our Loll rt Fo•ad 3004 door 10 11oor newspape1 • sales program Guaran IPeo nou1 ly wage p1u~ FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 142-5171 Found Ak11a 01 Keeshound Female C M 548· 1775 comm1ss1on Hours 9AM 2PM or 4PM 9PM Tra1n1n9 •S provided Potential to earn S300 ptus per week for an 1n- l i> r v 1 r w Cati (714 957 23S1 E•I 1204 Gene1a1 oll1ce P1T Ltle Bkll g ond 1yp1ng Atrpo1t Area Real Estate de· vetoprnent manaqemenl co 7S'1·7SO 1 ~ For poenion. In m91l- agemen1 level. M ust Bal Penn 3 Br condo s1 .. ps to beach 9ar S200 mo S75-7266 FOUND M med sz dog Good 1yp1st Mature tor general olftte work in Npl Bch Small office Well es1abhshed Please send •esume to P 0 1991 Newport Beach CA t •·,have convenienc e ___-..._ /store M gmt . U · r -1 ,,..-_. perlence. Salary com--j 1 ~rate w11h experience. .) / 1 Up to $7/hr. For Interview, 1 l apply et U-TOTE-M Mancet on ~ , PCH & VlejO In Ulguna 9eect'I ? ---( ;:_ at 1390 North PCH be1WMn c:-11-12 noon Of 6-7 PM on r. ThurSday. FOi iOi£ tlfO CAU.: (714} 494.9233 tr 537-4141 EOE Newspaper Furnished Room near So CoM\1 Plaza FernalE preter $2~0 55S 1737 N•r.e turn 1119 TV utll ovl Pntr re'p person ..,~ 111 Nr ()l'n 53S·8518 SUUlll MtTEL Wkty rentals now ava11 11S S01w~ & up Color IV Pl'lone, on roorn 227• Newport Blvd CM S46 744!> KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! AGES 11-14 EARN lP TO $75.00 PERaBEIK We now hl •t IS Olltlll111$ !Of you..,. e., btavtu lo 1«111t rtacten f0t The Or "'t• Co~ Oa~y Prlol Our Cr1W$ stJrt 11 J 30 pm Ml woo unld 8 30 pm 'llftldays On SalurdJ~. "' !IOI' • lt11 more hov" YOll "'" urn manr ltfl>' , and pr1iti 1f011C with w~ J'OV' own l!IOllff , 111e,, 11 no ctr4rfCflflC or c•tion "'~ tt JOI! art 111ttrnlfd pleaw c.t Mr lM1 MU ca (714) 548-7058 12 s COllllr Molletl School HB 9S4.J?13 Los1 Cnoc lab Mare. 9 92S63 vis M c Arthur /San Joachin ert'a REWARD Hos1es! lor real estate de 644 s4o8 11Ptoprnen1 1n Sen Juan Capistrano New ttcen!ee lest Pdal St11l l1dt1t wicase (moonligl'ltersl HWAH IH-3041 01 1Pltrt'll R E he reQ Sa1111y 213.507.5091 or 71 4 493 4093 l 1Quo1 Cieri. n19hts meld wknds Musi have cash reg1'>le1 expe11ence Apply 1888 Placentia Lost Slale of Cal ollic1a1 Mature, Reaponalble. bro,.rcase Vic Harbor Bl cle•n tndlvldual reaulted & 405 Fwy Reward Call tor the total care for a col eves 9fS·967-7084 Hml-ambul•tory elelerty REW ARO S 100 For the re-woman In the Npt Bch turn ol G1b5on Explorer erea lncllvlelual shall Guitar Serral 8165-2013 have I vallCI current Call- T ilk en 12 16 631·2064 lomla 0rlV8fa llc*1se with a cie•n clrlving record. Mull be Ible to cook, clean, do mtrktllng. banking Must be Clepen- Clable and h•ve com· m•nCI of tl\e Engllah langu•o• Live on preml••• nece11•ry Room ind boud prOY1ded Dy empl<>Y9f ln- Cllvldual mull po'"" the pet~. pen:'C!Dtlon anCI com1>9 .. lon that 11 M04tl11ry tor the cone· tant care of an ~ly In· dlvldutl Som. nuralng ••S*'~ pr.-red but not required A9P11CMt1 rl90f1 In P«90fl to the nMr .. t Or*'09 County EM~t~t 01pe111T1en1 r-o•rcllno lob order number 2148 tH/3'4.377 .0 t4 ACI paid by employer. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Heaven • Macaw Cress El'lsign INCREASES Ad 1cen 1n ii rural news- paper Bunnies lor sale, St ~o each Buy now 1>eto1e supply IN· CREASES 1 ........ . Oz~IHilin fOll LOCAFL TRAUGHT AIR· CRAn DEALER Mellt 'lhllr el\oleler for •• • ~nllOf'I S30 000 sharet • 011 Of pert ,,_uat w1n1 to &el now 7111117 1·'000 ltlt ... ,... 5100 HouMClt1,,.r1, eaper1d. hill Of P•rt ltme t,.r,toor· 1111ton nee '40 0~$1 EDICAL front omce. PTT nH• Hoag Hospttal 648·777t R f IT . t P11hhc Ri>tat•QI'\ Oepl J K1"0 """ r,uti,1111 10 fi4'' ;-17'1 l'rlfl !i7S l;>'r •c•• ... ''" '·"' PJCPd agenr ¥ I.. ! 100 bi1 8 I I I Ausv .r<l aqencv 1n lrv1r1t' 0,,.. ,..~ t', per eucrqet•l nr•ed~ ilf.Curale def't>I• ..... ~on"' 11n1 l~J>oflQ f)r ",, <1 "ollt' ''"' 1 s 100 Aatoa, l•rrte4 11 '1'" '1 n" · «;"' O;. P 1 'J•lf"' '''' nd >• 111~ Wort.I °>1"'"' 'S"O 4C!fl ?''i? Af,.t 1<J to N.irtc • Prr.c 1 ,.1, ,,,,, -'7'1 7000 •·vt-s '""~"<.l' •Alli Romeo 91 OS Rt!"""'"''' SECRETATRY MJ411 is1nnd '>ell or lraU•' 176 Alla Spider Red 1"'(J~t11111• •IVtlllilbl!J AplJI) G111n (.,,,,, M•JmlJN~'11p 'dj 000 n11 S.?'lOO ' ,, I• t' s o i1 I Mo111111· IJPl!>On neeo .. ct lw P1 est''" le.. $3">00 ~Pll '>48 1•,31 1'1()111$(,.HllD~ <..HEfSF 11 hllPClliral, o;r;(" 'SlC,Oor ~S44 0700 ANO WINE l 407 F Gs• "11 I.I A riot C".lll '4 r I.;> 1 Austin 9109 llwy (..C>rtJr i ill•I Milr I <;e1v1c1• ,1,1t11>n .111e110P•ll New Ori ~z miltltlbo's f);> P.. H <;prite 1C:.01p ? .. 1.111 ~alt>\ 1•11 "" 1 11' t•ml' < n•·vrni ~"1~r1111s11~1 "'~':~1,1.'1 f:oi '" sr ~ 1 .. 00 640 ;>S69 F •Clu«;1vi> l ~01e$ Bout•QUI''' St •1 •OOO r aorYiew C.M '\t•ll '5275 rnrrrv SSO 5 1 t;fi n1o1•1 ·nq ... r asho('ll l!>lrtt•d START A llEW CHEER BMW 911 2 •eauuo>c; f'•oer.enceu ':':t~ ri<1b111 SSO ne111q ---------~ p10IE>sc;1011a1 rP.ta11 sale'> NOW! : 1 ~ l "·"""' C ouc.h Co11 ... en1ent1y Localed Pf'O()le Cdll terr Appl !t1t p,.,,,,.,..,a,.., 1~ aCC!'IJI S:>~o fi-o; 4'iS8 A Comper111velv P11c.ed ;i 1'.I 274 c,o 1a I ,.,, ,, "''l·tt•l111c; 1,., ,, 1tJ11 Musical Inst. 6224 &' &,11,,~ I l•nH H• .u1;.tr "<1 c.nn-suli 1--------...... -~-1.,, •I (OU 1:''110V work.II'.) '} Accor01dnS 120 Bas!' * * * WANTED: PROS ,, •1 lh" ~·ubloc or> p .. 1 on S'<~ 7~"' 5c,q5 sq;.> S925 5;i1es-Serv1ce l ~11~1nq fDYCARVER I~ 11S I~ 7'tt l ·I~\ I\\ u11 n11 th,, phon" come Office Fornitare / .... a At•tJh •n p• .. r~on • 1 1,0 P , entod AvP Ep1pmea1 6226 * l o:.la t.Ae'..1 IJ"111 1ne end 01 the Y!'ilr & TRAINEES * * TOP SSS or11v you '·'" gel l(lw;>r • ~. :,; .. ~~ '::· .. ,._, r ,.1n;tlt«'> P•el Mo<Jels Ii th.in ever p11CP~ on USt'd (%WI .. 12n 18s6 1984 t.1< 101v con<1111onf'd ~ r.lll•R Why nol a1al lor dOllMs on l<EROll plaon PllPI'' too ""-""-YIL our CdM otf•ce we oller ---------11•rs Gel Xe•O• re<fvr1to11 • H1qhes1 commissions A copiers lrom S2095 & • Eatens1ve P•O<luct lines For Ad ction dee;• top r:on1ers lrom Sa1es-Se1v1ce·Leas1ng 81& MONEY SHORT HOURS 70 Bug 01110 arn11m cass snoo nnc q57 S257 71 VW Bu~ Recently R1:t11t E11\l1"t' $t'i00 54S S443 78 R<1hb1I 1 v wnr nu lorPs S2'180 i86 7698 ~· MIU MclEHl'S SOUTH COUNTY YOLKSWACH ''WE Will IOT IEHDEHOlt" Volume Sales, Service And Leasing 18711 Beac11 Blvd Hunllllgton Beach (l 14 ) 842-2000 • Pho10 copy supplies SS9S All m<1cti111es corne • Sam lo 12 noon CaU a v.1rn ltm1IP<.l 10 d;iy war • Tra•nt>e~ stall SS hour • 111ty & art' ehg1t11e lor LARGEST INVENTORY • 79 3201 4 '>Pd AIC Mi sc • 9177 lo rthlrllS I •o rt-Da:•y Pilot '"'0 ' ~erv•l" Olans «;O " rtl lusl' F1u more 1111t1 serve, w l ,otH tiat t o t 111 8'.l!'l·22S9 collect urn u, to $1000/w•. AD-VISOR 11 yon are a sell slarler Ii nu119rv tor money call 642-5678 Mr Thoma• Sam lpm al 673-0118 r>1111o>v Bowes ma1l1nq ""l 1 n111t> Posh seal~ x 1e 111rr• .1ndress l 1ke ni>w s~ ·5 s5s-o3s7 Pi 1noa/Org1n1 6228 Kimball up11gh1 Pli'lnn Good con11 Very Quaint S tOOO obo 644 5480 f,7" JOSS 1994XEOt • 70 3201 4 sp11 S R t0Y1YPZI • 1r~ J201 4 c;pd StR t.ltl'iYPYt * i9 3201 auto S R 1468292! • 80 3201 'i i>l'll A C l'ifiSlOLI • 80 3()01 !'> Sllll S pk 9 1SC-OZPL1 * B 1 3201 S WO S R ( tCUT8411 • 81 5281 5 spd SIR Come on 3 see Newport Beach s h11es1 se1ec11on ol prev10<1sly owned Po•sches AUdts and vo11tswagens -.: .. 455 E Coasl Hwy Newport Beach S73-0900 Aat11, Dea111ic Yamana Piano Pro-Up111e flbOny •IOI $ 1950 H 548 S784 w 261 2223 (785 lb5t • '82 5281' 19SS6531 • 83 3201 Auto roaaed 1,.c .. 1_d..,il.,.l1_c ____ 9_3_09_ '7S Seville showroom A LINE WANT ADS IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIES Sell your Items for $50 or less In our famous DIMES·A·LINES pub· fished each Saturday In the Dally Piiot. DIMES-A-LINE •d• must be p,._pald IO m•ll or bring them Into ttt. Dally Piiot office. S. sur• to lnclud• your ptton. numbM or ad- drna In your •d. have • prlctl on MCh lt«n & no abtmtvt•tlons. Sorry. no oommerclaJ ad., tJ•f'efl'I ..,_, Prodc.K¥, plMttt or .,,,,,,.,, are MX»ptablff. DEADLINE: I p.m. TIMI,.., Coete ..... Oflloe 5 SPl1 SIA cono SS500 673-1913 T V R d. I IFZP1!7S) L I 101 3~0 )fereo 6232 • a:i ' 1 duto E!>late Sale Eldo1ado ----__, ...... -'"°' ( IFMY9251 1q port color TV goorl • 83 3201 5 spd SIR SiR p11ced "ghl S•SOO Good lOlld 545·•009 COi' l S 100 645 144S f tFRH275) ;1 .JBL Spt..rs Moran11 1ec uu 11 lum II.II San~UI 1n ll'•4r.1te(1 ~Y~ skprs lnpe 1.ft•rk I ec s a 11mp, II.II n tltl & wood & glt1sS dOO• tall C.-111 all 5 73 I 1055 BEAUTIFUL 25 RCA <..0101 Iv 2 y• wrnly S t·IA r •l't' d"' Opi>n <;un TV,lflhnS6~S t766 • 83 3201 5 spd. SIR 10023571 • 84 3181 5 spo 10 rn1 (:la11x?94) 835-3171 LARGE SELECTION OF NEW & USED BMW SI LOii& 1£ACM IMW VOLUME SALES ~ERVICE 4 LEASING l lfl 44 IV 1>ro1eCIPd lly II 1670 N Cherry Ave I I :en1tll Gott.I Slilr l ONG BEACH !-1'•0 nbo 642 7'>79 • \NO Cherry e111t -40SI Nl'w Quasar VCR S350 <l 14) IH-5ll0 run1 642-1 !07 Trade-ins Welcome Now open Sun 1 t-4 T V RENTALS $20 per rno 111 cofOI TVs esso11~ Re .. a 9125 ~lytf'S S•O 3 t95 81 Accord LX. •ut Slvr ca1 stereo. tape, velour Ptwtr ltata 701 2 int 35K ml $6299 * H n SCARAI 863-0609 e;i 100 hra hyd hoist, laan 11n~1ou~. 2 bl ownr $55K 1-.....,,~!"!"!!!!!! 960 9003 or 960·<1373 L 1111'1 1 .. ~na1 .. e 8 &y nnot L1v1nq in Newoo<t l1111t nbO.lrCI 32't· 19S? Chrt• C111ll w1s11p n.er Ru.,._n f I •~ $7500 64s-.&838 ltata, Sall 7014 SI S•noe< yawl nu di.tel S50001obo 962 62110 Cu,lom 411 It C & C llll> d'I SOUTH COUNTY lllZU 11wtW1U•T 11 ... .... llOlumt ... " $tilMQ9 AnCILUllng 11l 118"el\ lllvd Hun1111ton e..ch (l H) 142·2000 THE LAR&EST SELECTIOll or tale model. low mileage C11d1llACS 1n Southern C:11111or n1n1 See us today' MAIERS CADILLAC 7600 Hnrbor Blvd COSlA MESA ~4u · 1860 Claevtolet 9313 1957 Chev Bel Atre, Red w/wht hO•dlOP Re-bit 350 eng Turbo 400 tr11ns Hurs l 3 spd $6500 7 t•-77 7-3928 79 El Camino Cooqv1s1a tape docl... elec wndws good cond $3500 675-3059 all SPM SEE US FIRST! We have a good Hlectlon ol NEW 4 used Chev- rote111 See ul tO<Jay1 COMM Ell CHEVROUT • •.II 1 • I !" 1 \ \~ I ~4b I 200 •11••2 tUI 177 cou9et. \Oeaea. to m1. xlnt Con<I $3500(0bo 631·'1~ Aft $PM 1e .tlPhY' 37K ml. v-e. new btakos, atnt cond '3200 140 1484 'ou can't m•• 11 '10 ch. big l llM neict .,..., Don't let 'ffN' tlellell go to waat•bUV • 11m1 ecs. l.otl Of tpOft9 ,.,. reed CIMtlled 142·1171. !._.~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~ u1hng tf<>Op 1n mint co .. o ngOf'd tor 1oce1 or IOflO Otttance cr11111, Comoie1e e4et.tronic1 Hit inventory 1on11 mofe A"Ol¥\HatH 8 wllut1urlOl.lt new Int. 2 heads & ahower P1t1t1eat Mlltng ytcflt In Npt tltt &2111.000. 1-.ma •vtll US-231 t c1Y1 11S·33 t t -a 11rt..ndt Oct11llid ~~-9'0p~·-- Dick Dale sex trial delayed Juror in n1ole t case get holidays off, won't re turn until Jan. 3 By JEFF ADLER Of tlW O•ll'f -ltitfl Gu1ldnst D1t·k Dalt>':-felony child molestation tnal in Orange County Superior Court. draggmg on far beyond original limes t.'St1mates, w1U not conclude until somet1mt• in January. both defense and prosecuting attorn('ys t'Onet.'de. The trial , which began Nov 29. was rt.-cessed until Jan. 3 tO allow JUrOrs lime Orf for the holidays. Dale. 46. faces 12 felony charges of 1:hild molestation and oral copulauon stemming from his alleged sexual enc:ountt.11-s wuh a 13-year-old girl in his Balboa PC'nipsula mansion during Ju~ and August 1981. The enteruuner. whose real name is Richard Anthony Monsour, repeatedly has pleaded his innocence to the charges, contending he wasaet up by his former wife who wants to discredit him. Dale ts best known as one of the originators of l 960s-style surf music. His popular 0and, Dick Dale & The Del-Tones, virtually was a fixture in Southern California during the heyday of the surf music craze. The key witness to the prosecution's case is the 13-year-old girl, now 15, who testified early in the trial that she and Dale had engaged in oral sex on six separate occasions in the 17-room mansion during the summer of 1981 . (See DICK DALE, Page AZl THI ORANGE COAST Dick Dale COAST IDITION TUESDAY. DECEMBER 27 . 1983 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS ' Wind, rain mar Coast holiday But things looking up: sunny, war111er skies due By CHRISTINE DECKER Gusty winds and pounding rams made the hollday weekend a little less than joyous around the Orange Coast, getting the blame for several accidents throughout the county and Southern California. At about 6:30 a.m today, a bike rider and a Corvair collided on wet streets at the mtersecuon of Red Hall and Edinger avenues an Tustin. The 36-year-old male cychst was knocked off his bike and hit the l'ar's windshield. according to Tustin police. He's in critical condition at Western Medical Hospital Police were still 1nvesugaung the accident and didn't release any other details. In Newport Beach several boats were jarred from their moormgs. An electric harbor cruiser was tossed loose and apparently drifted to Corona de) Mar state beach, where it was found washed up this morning. Police do not know who owns the boat. Planes leaving John Wayne lntemational ~rport were experienc- ing some delays because of airports closed throughout the country due to severe winter weather. "Anybody going back East should call their airlines and check on departure times and keep abreast of the weather situation for wherevt'r they're going. ln most cases we're not having that much trouble, but there are some delays," said Steve Karnes. tower supervisor. The good news is. Orange Countians can look forward to a warmer and sunny Wednesday. It's expected to drizzle on and off until tomorrow afternoon when the sun will break through the clouds. Highs will be in the middle 60s with lows from 48 to 58 degrees. according to the National Weather Service forecast. The pattern or cloudy mornings with partial clearing m the afternoons w1U continue through Friday. There may also be some slight early morrung fog OelJ ............. ...,,.._,. ._ The ram came down hard at umes and a little more than one inch of rain fell from Saturday through this morning, said Emmett Franklin, rainfa11 exj1ert for the county Envtronmenta1 Management Agency. Shoppers fight the e lements at Fashion Island on the day after Christmas. Travelers dodge rain and other passengers at J o hn Wayne Airport as the holiday weekend winds up and family reunions conclude. Mudslides pose peril • in county By tbe Associated Pren One torrential rainfall could trigger major mudslides in Orange County because the ground already is soake d from above-average rainfall, two Southern California geologists are warning. If the slides start, they could cause more damage than the record destruction wrought by mudslides last season. said Los Angeles County senior geologist Art Keene. The ground has not completely dried from last winter's stonns. particularly with the 9.3 inches of rainfall so far this season in Los Angeles and a similar amount in Orange County -more than double the seasonal average. The (See SLIDES, Page AZl Coast colleges to boost classload By PHrL SNEIDERMAN Ol"'90.ty ..... llMI teachers and administrators. The realigned board voted to make offers of reinstatem~nt to all of the laid-·off teachers and admin- istrators. The reinstatements will take place during the spring temester. The Coast Community Colleges are adding more than 140 class sections to their spring schedules, as a result of the Board of Trustees' decision to rehire 55 The staff members had been laid off last spring because of a loss of state funds. But the makeup of the board changed last month when three cand.ldates supported by district teachers were elected. As of Friday, 26 people had Smoke detector saves condo Fire alarm awakens Mesans just as pine bough blaze explodes By KAREN E. &.LEIN Of ... o.lr ......... A holiday tragedy was narrowly averted over the weekend when dry pine boughs were Ignited by a smouldering fireplace in a Costa Mesa condominium in the 300 block of Campbell Lane. Don Tully. a Costa Mesa fire protection analyst, uid a smoke detec1or lnstalled ln the condo saved the lives of the two people sleeping lnaide. It was about 1 :30 a .m. Saturday when IOrne pine bought acattered over the mantlepiece caught fire and then ignited a pine wreath over the fireplace, Tully said. ''The wreath c.au&}lt the wood paneling on the wall and the smoke .et off the alarm," Tully said. One of the aleeping 19identa called the fire department and the other managed to put out the l flames with a garden hoee ju.at aa a "flash over'' occurred. A flash over, ln firefighters' tenns, occun when the material initially burning heata up a room 1o the point where everythlna in the room explodes into flame, Tully explained. "It just get.a IQ hot ln there that everythlna - chairs, drapee -explodea," he u.ld. "But they were able to tel the fire out jutt in time. A couple of minutes later and lt would have been too late." Stephan.le Bernardy, who owna the con- dominium along with her huab&nd, Tim, con.finned that the llllOke detector Md uved the lives of the tenanta who lJve ln the condo. "It wu lncredlble. The smoke alann woke them up and they aaw yellow light Crom the flamee coming I~ SMO~E DETECTOR, Pa1e Al) • responded, indicatJng they wish to return to their college positJona, according to William Waechter, the district's director of per90nnel. Waechter said the laid off em- ployees have about one more week to respond. As a result of the reinstatement decision, Orange Coast College will be add.Ing about 100 cl~ to its spring schedule. Many of thee will be COW'ICS aome atudenta were W\able to take du.ring the fall term because of the cutbaclu. Elaine Beno, a apokeswoman for the college, said Orange Coast will offer 33 additional pey- chology da&lletl, 12 more music claaes, 10 more physical educa- tion claaees, alx more dvil tech- nology clU9et · and four more theater art.a claalet. SUll other clules have been added ln astronomy, biology, health educatJon, hiatory, IOCi- ology and apeech. The clules Wen! added too late for lnclUllion in the •prina cawop. ~ a rw.llt, Beno aaid, Oranae eo.t 1a prtntlJ\I 200.000 (See MOllE a...AMU. Pap At) I'! • '----------------------~-------- Irvine's main drag becomes Culvert Drive By ANDREA ADE~ON Of IM Oolty l'llol Ii.fl • Motorists who drive north on Culver Drive, Irvine's busiest north-south connecting road be- tween the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways, will have to detour around a gaping hole in the street at least until Wednesday. The giant pothole, which dis- rupted holiday weekend traffic, is expected to be paved by tonight, water district officials said today. Rain and a holiday-caused shortage of paving materials de- layed road workers from patching· the 150-foot stretch of Culver north of Deerfield Avenue. undermined Christmas night by a failed water main coupled with the generally soggy condition of the ground due to the long ramy spell, public works inspector Bob Storchheim said. Drivers returning to familiar routes this morning after the long weekend were diverted around Culver at Irvine Center Drive, Sgt Gary Schull said. Extra congestion on the south- bound Lanes due to slowing on- lookers "1scausing a problem." but no acciden ts were reported during the morning rush hour. he said. The intersection of Culver and Irvine Center Drive is the city's busiest. crossed by 72,000 cars per day, traCfic engineer Bob Haines said. The road has never been closed before, he said. Traffic w as light o n rain-slickened Culver about 11 p.m. S unday when pent up water pressure pushed slabs of pave- ment atop each other, undermined by water spouting underground from a failed fitting on an Irvine Ranch Wate r D1str1ct main, Storchheim said. I~~ CULVER, Page AZl OelJ "91,.,....., ~ ........ Irvine County Water District worker John Palmar repairs six-inch line which burst Sunday. Rama are Waahlngton bound The Rama wlll apend New Year' a Day In Waahlngton, O.C., after upeettlng the Dalla• Cowboya 24-17 In the NFC wlld card pl9Yotf Monday. S.Sporta, PageC1. ' j I 1'2 * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 27. 1983 HB eyes takeover of beach By ROBERT BARKER or ,,,. Defir "'°' Stell Offtl'lab :irt• t>nll'ring final negouauons that may lead to the t.1keovl'r by the City of Hunt- 111gton &>at·h next spring of eight miles of bcal'ht>S v1s1wd by 10 mllhon pt•oplt' (•nrh year lf tlw trans.it·t1on got.•s through. thl' l'ILV would havl' under 11s l'Ulltrol bc;wht'S from th<• Santa Ana R1vt•1 tu Wanwr Avenue, al't:ortlmg tu City Administrator Charles Thom pson Medics treat man and dog I CONTINUED STORIES MORE CLASSES ... From PageA1 ropu.~s of an eight-page supple - ment listing the additional clas.st-s The supplement will ~ mailed t(I college district rt!Sldents c.nc.J inserted into catalogs distributl'd at spring reg1s trat1on. Woman saved from flames in Westminster By Tbe Auocialed Pren Al l'11J~tlt111• Collegl•, which off1•1 '4 111strul·t111n at locat1oru thruu~hout \lw <.'Ollcge dit;tnct. about 30 mon.· c.·lasses w 1U ht: add<•d tu th1· spring .schedule ttl'l"tJHi ing tu l'ollege spokesman J;..wk ('happC'll. Subj<.~·t areas will indude mui:.1t" p~yc:hology and history Goldi:n Wt•St Collt•ge in Hunt· lllgt.un Bead1 will add 12 sectioru to its spring S('hedulc, uccording u Don H.mdul, assist.ant to the prt•s1dl·nl fw 11~trul"ttonal oper· at1on-; · .,. "Tht•y (statt• parks and rl'\'· rcat1un o!f1l·1als) like our propoS<tls Wt" re go1n~ to sit down and talk again at tht• first of the yt>ar lf It all gO<'S wdl, this rould be accomplished by April." Thompson said Thompson said the city 1s t'On- s1d£-ring a long-term lt'aS<' He said he believes the city l'Ould oH~t operation rosts through l'On- cessions. pcirking fees and other "innovative" revenue sour<.'<.'s No cost figures arc avallablt• A Costa Mt'sa fire m a n comforts a shake n Dulwrman pinseher us paramedics treat :\6-) ear-olJ Tomm)' Georgt' llarte h, of Newport B eech, who was critically in- jured :\londay evening whe n hi:, <.'a r rummt>d into a ,.-hidt' drivt•n b y 'u lvador Franco. Barte ls.' drivin,; a m ini pickup on II a rbor Bo ulevard, ~urr t'red internal injuries a nd wae takt'n to the Fourltuin Valll'y Lommunity H os pita l trauma cente r for s urgery. The 3-year-old f emale dug was takt'n to Newport H arbor Animal H ospita l ' whert' attendant!> dt>termined • s he was uninjured. Tw0Cahforn1a Highway Patrol offwers have rescut'd a sleeping 70-year-old Westminster wom;m after spotting flames in her homt> from a nearby freeway, CHP officials say. CHP officer Leslie Hill brokc a window in the residen<.-e of Magline Curry, 70, and carried her to safety while officer Darrl'll Brooks used a fire extinguisher w battle the flames, said CHP dis- patcher Marcella Ozenne. Sub.)(•t:l art•as 1nc.:lude music graph•~· arts and psychology GolcJf!n Wt·st will also open ad· d1uonal c;µac(• 1n thl' t'OSmetolog) program and will reinstate thE work cxpencn<.'C program, ir wh1L·h stutlentc; can earn credi whale working at a JOb m thei1 f1elJ of <;tudy CULVER ... From PageA1 SLIDES THREATEN COUNTY ... The officers spotted the fire m the woman's home from the San Diego Freeway about 1:30 a .m Monday. Ozenne said. Abo ut 180,000 galluns leakec from thl' broken f1tt1ng on th( s1x-11wh main, which feeds re· da1nwd wat(•r to landscape me· d1ans. J1s tr1ct spokeswoman JoyCE Gw1dt said Thl• leak went un· deU.'<'l4"d for at t<.-ast four hour. until H lx--gan to percolate ir quantity on tht-s treet surface, shE said Thompson said <.·tty fur<.'\:'s alread1y are saddled with much of the police . fire and parad med1c service to the area "that's the front door to our c1tv" The Cl ty owns one mlle of beach from Beach Boulevard to the pier and it sits almost directly m the middle of Huntington Staie Beach to the south and Bolsa Chica State Beach to the north Consohdallon would do awav wnh mu<.'h of the emergent'y and maintenance ser- vice overlap. he said ··rm opt1m1st1l· but there 1s a number of hurdles that need to be resolved But this is the first time we've come this far." he said Assemblyman Nolan Fnuclle. R-Huntington Beach. said tcxJay he's be-en working with city officials to bring about the takeover From PageA1 rainfall has exhausted the ground's capacity to soak up "new" water. Keene said "This week. one inch m one day will do 1t," Keene predicted Geologists exarmned a Canoga Park rockshde Monday after a 12-foot boulder came crashing down a t'anyon wall. smashing a mobile home. an auto and a camper rig. No injuries occurred Keene said the rocksbde was l'aused by ground <.'Ond1t1ons which he said are worse now than in 1969, when a woman was killed in a mudslide that suffocated her ins ide her Malibu area home. Conditions are also similar to those preceedmg the disastrous Bluebird Cartyon shde in Laguna Beach in 1978 UCLA geology professor John BULLETIN BOARD Drunken driving topic of Golden West program Linda Graham. president of the Orange County t'hapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD). will be the featured speaker at Go1den West College Jan 9 Graham will speak to members of a political scienl'f' class in Forum U at 7 pm The public 1s invited and admission 1s free Following the le<-ture. members of the California Highway Patrol will give a demonstration of vanous equipment used 1n sobriety tests Alzheimer' Disease lecture planned The b1ochem1cal basis of AJzhe1mer's Disease. a mental dtsordl!r that afflicts older people. will be discussed J an. 4 at a UC Irvine lecture by Dr Dennis J. Selkoe. associate professor of neurology at the Harvard Medical School. The presentation . set for 7 p.m., is the fourth in an eight-part d1stmgu1shed lecture senes sponsored by UCI's Department of Psychiatry and the UCI Neuroscience Association. The lecture 1s Cree and open to the public. Lnfonnauon on this and upcoming programs may be obtained by calling 856-4241 Ecologi t to talk on acid rain at UC I Ecologist Gene E Likens will deliver the 1984 Steinhaus Letture on "A(•1d Rtim. Causes. Consequences and Controversies'' at -t pm Jan 12 in the Fine Arts Village Theater at UC Lrvme. Adm1ss1on 1s free L. Rosenfeld agreed with Keene's analysis, saying that "for the rain to trigger a big slide, 1t usually has to infiltrate the land for some time. The larger the landslide is, the longer it takes to occur "We're really set up this year. especially for big slides. because of the preceding two winters," Rose- nfeld said. After more than two inches of ram fell during the Christmas weekend. heavy rainfall now will Seen snow? For those Daily Pilot read- ers intf!rested in driving by and taking a peek at the rolorfully decorated house pictured atop Page Al in Sunday's paper. it's located in Laguna Niguel at 23741 Dolphin Cove Man may have let train hit him deliberately A 27-year-old drifter, kiUed by a tram Monday as he walked down the tracks in San Juan Capistrano with his dog and a Bible m une hand. may have deliberately waited for the tram t-0 hit him. authorities said. Keith Allen Rinas, who had hvt.>d m San Juan Capistrano, Mission Viejo and other com- munities. was struck and killed at 9: 15 pm. by an Amtrak train near the junction of Junipero Serra Road and Camino Capistrano. Police said Rinas made no move to evade the approaching train that also crushed and killed his dog Rinas was pronounced dead at the scene "There's no ruling at this point but we're investigating it as a possible suicide," commented Or- ange County Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart tcxJay Man found shot apparent suicide sink directly into underground water tables. which m turn can dislcxJge cliffs and hillsides -and any homes on them -the The woman, w ho was alone at the time, suffered slight smoke inhalation but was not hosp1 tal- 1zed. geol<?gists said. Keene said the threat of big slides is "l""Ommon knowledge" among county officials Little can be done m advance to prepare. however. because no one can predict exactly where or when they will occur ' The fire, which apparently started when a hangmg light fell on a sleeping bag, destroyed an adj3Cent garage, causing aUuut $47 .000 damage to the garage and 1tsc.'Ontents. which included a 1980 MerCedcs automobile. ofh('1als said Wfltt-r off1t'1als are speculauni th<tt M"tthng <.•arth somehow dam aged th1· fining. as no fault wa: dett"t'tt-0 m thE' pipe when"1t wa: repairl-0 Monday Gw1dt coulc not C'Sllmatc· the <.'OSt of repairs. SMOKE DETECTOR SAVES THE DAY ... From PageA1 out of the living room," Bernardy said. But she said she was disturbed when the tenants told her the heat had blackened the Christmas tree and melted some tinsel and ornaments by the time the fire trucks found t he address. "They (the firefighters) had e hard time finding the street -(the tenants) had to go out there and show the trucks where to come in," she said. "There is a condo on each side of that and it could have set off the whole place," she said Smoke detectors will be mandatory m all Costa Mesa apartments. condominiums. hotels and motels next month, Tully said. Last July. the Costa Mesa Caty Council passed an ordinance making smoke detector installation man- datory within six months That grace pericxJ expires Jan.20 "This (ordinan<.-e) affects any place where people sleep," Tully said All non owner-occupied dwelling pla<.'eS must have the detl't'tors installed by January and all owner-o<.'<:upwd rt.'S1den<.'l'S, 1.e smgl1 family homes, must h<.1ve dt•te<·tors installed when ever the homes are sold The ordinan<.'C' docs not specify which brand o: detector should be inst.ailed. Tully said. just that 1 should be approved by the Stat<' Fire Marshall fo1 use. AU of the brands on the market in Califomt< must be approved by law. he said. The ordman<."e only stal<.'s th<.1t the residence be "'properly equipped" wtth smoke detectors. Tull) said a one-story rcs1dt-nct' probably only needs om smoke dete<:tor. but a two-story residence shoulc have two. Although tht-re will bt! no 1nspect1ons to see 1f th1 ordinance is being upheld. Tully said firefighter. who may come to a home on another call can check I.A see 1f there is a smokt.> detl'<'lnr in place The detectors are Nt.<>y to ihstall and may be battery operated or l'let"tric DICK DALE SEX TRIAL DELAYED ... From PageA1 The girl. who was vtsitmg her grandparents m frequently VlS1ted him as "happy-go-lucky girls whc Newport Beach at the time. said Dale coaxed her into frolicked" around the the 1920s-era mansion ona the sex acts. but didn't force her. The girl's owned by King Camp Gillette. grandparents were Dale's across-the-street neigh-Other witnesses called by the defense havt bors. testified that they were approal·hcd by Grimmett l{ Another important prosecution witness was help set up her forme r husband as a child molester. Dale's former theatrical agent who told jurors the One of the witnesses. whose testimony has no· defendant had shown him pictures of the young girl yet been presented to jurors, testified during < in which her bikini bathing suit top had been hearing on defense motions that Grimmett told hirr unfastened and her breasts ex~. "she had made him (Dale) and she was gmng to teai The lengthy defense presentation has centered him down." The jury is expected to hear hi: on Dale's contention that the charges were trumped testimony w hen the trial resumes in January. up by his former wife. Jeannie Grimmett, as part of Judge James Turner struck a blow to Dale'! an effort to d1scred1t him. defense. however. when he ruled that testimon) Dale and Grimmett separated shortly before the concerning the 13-year-old's prior sexual experiena sex acts allegedly were committed and the two were was not relevant to the l·ase. engaged in a bitter divorce action settled only in the Out of the Jury's hearing. Quigley presented < past several weeks. witness who test1f1<.'d that the girl's father hac Grimmett has been called to the witness stand sexually abused his two daughters several times. both by prosecutor Kaz Makino and by The father, Long Beach resident K ent Smith defense attorney Michael Quigley. also was called to testify during the hearing on lhl Likens. considered an authonty on acid ram, IS director of the Institute of &'OSystem Studies at the New York Botanical Garden. His research has focused on the ecology of lakes and northern forests Acid ram. caused by the burning of fossil fuels, is suspected of stunting plant growth and killing fish in high-acid content lakes. DaJe also has taken lhe stand in his own defense. motion . but invoked his Fifth Amendme nt righ' denying that he ever was sexually involved with the against self-incrimination when asked whether ht girl or her younger sister. He described the girls who had ~ngaged in oral sex with his older daughter. Huntington Beach police said a ,------------------------------------------ Plastic surgery seminar in Huntington A seminar on plastic and reconstructive surgery is scheduled Jan. 12 in Huntington Beach. The seminar, which will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Carmen Yuppa Conference Center. across the street from Pacifica Community Hospital at 18819 Delaware St., IS free. but reservations are required and may be made by calling 842-06 l l The event 1s part of the hospital's focus on community health outreach program. man found shot to death inside a car parked in an vacant field was an apparent suidde victim. A passing motorist noticed the car Saturday a fternoon in a field near Newland Street and Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach . Police found a shooting victim inside the red Datsun station wagon , but determined lhe head wound was self-inflicted. Police withheld the man's name today pending notification of h is wife. We1re Listening ••• What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like., Call the number at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. 642·6086 The same 24-hour answerin& service may be used lo record let- ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation <'alls. pleiHe Tell us wha t ·s on your mind. ~ .. 0MrMtMd _.., ,_y " 'fOloi "° 1101 ,, ... Y°"' o•o., or 6 ao p '" C911119for• 1 11 ,., 1 lld JOlll COClr wllf De --eel llfutdAJ •lld tund1y " ,.., oo not -rOUt OC9J lrJ' ' • "' ca• o.4ort tO •"' -1'W «IP!' _,. Doi----°",. .... Tl 'lf'lllW • ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L aoftwllrtl • Publllher ChayDow8111w Editor end AMt..tt to the Publllhef ~·.c~ ....... Clr1Ub•n ~• -Ct 1Wc•ulsa ..... ~ Al ..... ,.-. ....... 411 llAlllOPPIC• ~ W... ley II • Coll!• W.., CA Mel tOOt-llo• 1MO, Coale ........ CA 9HH ~lOf!I tlU Oteno-c-t ~ c:o.i-y. )lo 11ew1 110110 , 11111t H1t1011e. eclllorl11 "'•"•' o• -0-.llNi••~· """",,,.., ... NP<odlloecl """"°"'..-cw ~ ol oopyfltN - r~~~~-.1.Wlflfl~.fll.wl· I !(ewport Surf® Sport, qnc. • 1 AFTER CHRISTMAS ·SALE I OUR iFOo/.; -7 0 o/~G OFAFth WETSUITS (Fun Sutt•> MEN'S CLOTHING Fr111ty11 • O'ltlll -Oily s99ts llM SMrts (Stn,.a a Wftl 50.,_ Off Aarolite Rip C1rt -Oily S10915 1rtt11111 "'11 (Strt,es) 30~ Off Jldtts & S1t1ttr1 -25~ Off SURFBOARDS BOY'S CLOTHING St•rtlng •I '200'0 lzod Shirt• -50% Off Jacket• -40o/e Off WOMEN'S WEAR H~ppy Holld•y• 2 -50% Off v •nd much mJJ"* ONNDAILY e:. ....... ,. .. p.m, .1 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, December 27, 1983 * J\3 Sea lion WE ASKED:---------. World War I vets gets new- lease Have you bought, or are you planning to buy your own telephone due to the Increase lr1 rental rates after Jan. 1? not gone just on life ' By &be Auoclaled Preu An unconscious 60-pound sea lion pup found washed ashore with a bullet wound to the head in 1982 was not expected to Live an hour, but now he's a 300-pounder who's back on his Clippers and ticketed for a new home in England. Bill -i'ord. vice president of Friends of the Sea Lion, an Orange County volunteer or- ganization that cares for injured marine mammals. said Trooper was "tot.ally comatose" when found one summer morning in 1982. "We never expected him to last another hour. But he conunued to last another hour and another hour," said Ford. Members of the organization hung the name "Trooper" on the sea lion, figunng it was ap- propriate for the pup that wouldn't give up. Ford and volunteer Lisa Clancey kept a round-the-dock vigil over Trooper after veterin- arians determined that the bullet had glanced oH his skull. The animal didn't move for four days. Finally, after receiving in- travenous glucose, antibiotics and vitamins followed by fish puree pumped into his stomach, Trooper began to tw1tch hlS whiskers and flippers. Now he's ready to face the world -almost. ( Most of the 360 sea hons and harbor and elephant seals treated by the Friends last year were returned to the Pac1f1c once they recovered, but Cunningham said it appears Trooper suffered brain damage from his wound. Leeland Grey bartender, student Newport Beach ) "Yes. I'm going to buy a phone 11 · s more economical than renting one.·· .. ~., Dee Winegardner edltorlel eaalstent CosteMeae "I already bought one from the phone company. They said 1t was more economical to own after the first of the year ·· ~ -• Juen Gutierrez busboy end OCCstudent ,, · ·v es. a phone 1s a necessity and 1rs more practtcal to buy one · Caryn McKltten steined gleaa artist Fountain Velley "I knew the prices on the use of our phones were going up last year. so I've been buying new phones on sale since then. I iust bought one tor $9 -not from the phone company -and it works great." Mesa jewel thief get($15,000 haul A Costa Mesa woman who look her Jewelry out of a safety deposlt boic so she could wear ii dunng the holidays. reported som410ne broke into her residence on the 1100 bloell of Dena Drive and stOle the jewelry as well as about $500 In cash The total loss came to S 15.000 A crooll apparently removed the front door to Costa Mesa Sewing Center and took a $250 sewing machine Pol1ee reported the busi- ness' front door has been brol<en for about a year Two businesses on the 3100 block of Pullman Avenue reported an Intruder broke Into their ottlces by hurling a rock through a window and laking vtdeo record8fS and electric typewriters The total loss was put at $1 .900 A cat burglar pried open a second floor window or a residence on the 400 block of Bryson Springs and took S 1.630 in stereo equipment lrom lhe locked house Huntington Beach A holiday weel<end t>Yrglary was reported Monday at a h<>me on the 17600 block of Jacquelyn Lane A rear sliding glass door was pried open to entlf. The lou. estimated at S660. Included a tetev1S1on set and a stereo A blue 1978 S<:hWlnn Spitfire bicycle wat stolen Monday from the porch of a home on the 6500 block of Peggy Clrcle The loss was estimated at S 175 A 1979 Ford pickup truck was reporled burglarized Saturday on the 300 blocl< of 16th Streel. The loss 1n<:luded a stereo unit worth $500 Someone oroke into a blue 1961 Pontiac Gran Pmt parked Monday on ll'le 16800 bloek oJ Roque LAne. The loss included a stereo worth $400 A white Chevrolet pickup lruck was c,11ported stolen Monday from the 1400 blOCk of Lakeside Lane. The loss was estimated at $5.000 A resident of the 8000 block or Indianapolis Avenue told police Mon- day that his home was burglarized some time within the paat three weeks. Entry was made through a rear upstairs window. The IOU In- cluded camera equipment worth $550. Fountain Valley Would-be thieves hacked the outSlde of a sale to pieces at Godfather's Pizza In Fountain Valley, but lalled ro get into the Interior compartment. according to police. About $800 In d~~a~e wa.a reported Burglars forced their way Into 1 residence fn the 16000 block of San Jac1n10 Street and stole $9.446 In cash, iewelry. audio visual equipment and miscellaneous Items. ... Someone unlocked a Sliding glau door tn the 18000 block of Santa Isadora Street and stole a men's Seiko wristwatch valued at $320 Thieves took money and a tele- vision set after forcing their way Into the Westhaven Veterinary Hospital, 16161 Brookhurst St. Irvine Three lrvlne homes In the weetern portion of University Park we<e the target of weekend Jewelry thieves. PoJl<;e had Httr. Information this morning on the breek-lns, occurring between Seturday n~ht and Monday noon. where more than $24.000 In jewelry, cash and weapons was stolen from nomes on Lago Norte and Montanu Norte. Jewelry was dlscove<ed teken Monday from a fourth home on Windjammer In Woodbridge An early morning drinker stole a sjx-pack of beer before 9 a.m. Friday, left as a gift for garbage collectors on Cypres.s Tree Lene. Laguna Beach Burglara made ott with lfnene and towels valued at S 1. 100 from the Surf and Send Hotel In Laguna Beach, police aald. Guests at a loud party In the 1100 block of Cataline Street were a~ed to break It up efter neighbors com- plained ol the 2~3~ a~m. revelry. A !lower stand In the Boat Cenyon Center suffered damage at the hand of vandals. polfC:-~~· Three people wefe awehended et Nyes Piece and South Cout H~hway by police alte< wltneSMS aald the trlO toned objects 11 their cara. Pollce said the three were relel.Md afttlf a ICOldlng. Sunny and warmer weather ahead Coastal Clnconnatt ti '2 ~ 16 11 Coll.mlllo.S C 32 20 eo...m-ti 13 LO-CilOU09 lon!Qlll 11\0 W-ey Dell-Fl Wa<lh ~ 2S momtnQ ~ _,.,.,end 1 MUii Oevton IS II _...., w~"Y •"-Lowo l>efl-A3 11 lonlQM 48 lo $1 HIQN W~ey M 10 0. MolMI 17 14 n • °"''°'~ 11 01 From Potnl Conoeplton 10 h-ic.tl Duluth 14 03 lotder 11\0 CM 80 ,,_ OWi -El PMO 65 50 .. , .. ,-*lywln<lt 101020~ftOl•wllh flit-• .oe -13 2 lo +-'---ll\fOUOll l°"'Of" htgo 18 OI lllCI w~ Wale<iy -2 10 4 f1eOltloll 40 :M 1M1 C--10w -O...i ,.,.. OI ·10 llW°"llfl w-.,-pwllel clMtlng Hatttotd 19 06 dwr1n9 IN'"•'-11\0 -W.0 "°"'9 -OI · 1 I 0...-~ltomP°'"1~ ._ 81 71 UOn lo .... ca.-..-·_,,._ -33 2t ......,. 10 IO 20 ktlOll with A IO 6-100! "-opoll 18 11 09lftblMd -llWougll w--., ~-....... 33 31 ~----..,lft_,iei -~ 3S 24 CllMtlno .. I..... ,,.,,_ 40 10 ~(;tty ,. ,. la Yeo-5-4 IS ~ lllodo. 11 11 Extended LLOI Anoe-6S 5' _.... 22 ,. Lu-st 21 ~ ,. 2$ MtetN S7 40 ......._.. IS Cit ....,.,..,,,.,. 13 oe -.... 23 20 ..... ~ 40 JS -Vert. II IS T emperatures ::::",_. ~~ .;: OltW!omo c..., 26 It .. i.. ~ 18 16 13 O> OtlMClo 44 31 4$ :at , ... lc>t.... t6 62 6t 17 11 10 ,, 01 :M ,, 21 OI 27 ,. II OI ., 31 ,, 18 II 11 42 JI )4 JI JI IT Aaln mm Snow £m Shower1 llll FlurrlH l!:!J .. to ~ ~ ... :M II U 10 OI II .ot 10 OJ " ,. 12 .. "" H II •• It ~ 14~ __ .. _,_,_··~~~~~~"~'2 ............................................ ... " oe : ~ Tides " .. 2t tt ,, 10 11 07 " 11 12 .07 21 10 21 10 1' :at II OI II OI JJ OI ,. ,, ,, 14 '11 " 41 ,. II Of H 10 --~-411'"" -.. INa M W~--..... 111 . ., .... .._ .. ,....,. ltf11111 -II 1>11"' w-..,-.i,..,...11 10IP"' lllf 1111111 'slowing down' Paul Price •tudent Newport Beech "I think I will. It makes more sense as tar as money 1s concerned I'd hke one tor apartment use." Ruth Spero artist Newport Beech "I just happened to buy a phone. It was a good deal. The phone company advised us a while ago 1t would be more economical to purchase a phone from them rather than renting it. but I found a cheaper one from another company.'' By tbe Auocla&ed Pres11 The bingo games and parading have stopped, their numbers have been decimated by the march of Father Time, and now the last days of two World War I veterans' groups are ticking away with the approach of 1984. The veterans' organizations in the Leisure World retirement communities at Seal Beach and Laguna Hills will cease to exist al the stroke of midnight on Dec 31 "We're just slowing down," says the Rev. Whipple B1Shop, 89 The retired Unity Church minis- ter is chaplain for Seal Beach group, officiall~ known as the VeteransoC World War I, Barracks 2860. The chapter was organized m 1962, the same year the 6,500-home walled retirement community opened, and had 512 members at its peak m the 1970s. Now the membership roster 1s down to 160 names, but only half paid their $6 dues this year and only 12 to 15 attend the monthly meetings, said former post com- mander Safety First, 89. He estimated 360 members have died since '62. The chapter used to sponsor a November parade through Leisure World on what members still call Armistice Day. but m- hrrmties ended that. "Old age was beginning to creep up on us. We couldn't march," said Larry Westerman, 88, one of thl' few remaining active members. Bingo fund-raisers for patients at Veterans Administration Hos- pital in Long Beach stopped four years ago because of declining attendance and competition from activities sponsored by more than OV Schools get state grant for computers The Ocean View School District of Huntington Be~h has been awarded a $50.000 grant from the state Department of Education to pursue educational televlSion and compute r programs for low -achieving_studen ts. The funds must be used •to support new developments m educational technology. such as computers, video and educational television. The one-year Ocean View pro- ject was selected from among many achoo! districts' proposals. It will help teachers develop a model learning laboratory for disadvan- taged and remedial-level stu- dents. The project will be Launched using the computer facilities at Crest View School. The program will be made available to teachers throughout the state through the project's videotapes and instruc- tional handbooks. UC Irvine Professor Alfred Bork wiU acts as a computer consultant to fhe district. 200 other organizations at Seal Beach Leisure World. Bishop said. Come 1984, the only reminders of Barracks 2860's charity will come from its ladies' auxiliary, made up of veterans' wives. First said they'll C.'Ontmue their volun- teer work at the veterans hosp1taJ. At Laguna Hills Leisure World. the World War I Barracks 1116 veterans' group has 225 official members, but commander Steve Lally. 89. says just 14 or 15 still attend monthly meetings "We JUSt can't get enough officer material l to run the or- gamiat1on)," Lally said. "They're pretty old, and not active enough to participate" When soml' members com- pla1m.>d about driving at night, me<.-tmgs were shifted to after- noons, "but the attendanc.oe isn't any better," Lally said. Over the years the chapter has installed flags around the com- munity and raised money to distribut~ teh:v1s1on sets at the veterans' hospital. but even the bingo games that paid for internal activillt.'S stopped about six years ago First said the problem in Laguna Hills 1s the same as at Seal Beach: "We'n• JUSt lOO damn old." Top bicyclists slate d to vie in Temecula race Bicyclers will have a chance to rtd{• With some of the greats during a 124-mtle ride from Anaheim Hills to Temecula The ride, which starts at 7:30 a.m~ on Jan 8. will feature ultra-marathon l'yclists John Marmo of Irvine, the Cather of the Race Across America along with Michael Shermer of Tustm, hold- er of the Miami-to-Maine record, and Lon Haldeman of Harvard. lll., last year's winner of the grueling Race Across America Registration begins at 7 a.m at El Rancho Jumor H1~h. Santa Ana Canyon Road in Anaheim Hills. Riders will cycle through Corona to Lake Elsinore and on to Temecula where they will turn around. .. It's not very hilly and 11's very scenil' Even the casual rider would enpy 1t." said Robert Hustw1t, ride director Experienced riders can finish the course in about eight hours. Others should finish m 10 or l I hours, said Hustwit. l_, o.., l'llot ........ ..., ·-· 11....- This was the home of the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse for 19 years, but the theater group finally will relocate to Rea Community Center in March. Curtain to rise on new theater Mesa Playhouse l>idding not-so-fond farewell to fairgrounds By KAREN E. llLEIN desperate. otlM.,._,....... "There is no way you would be able to hear The Army recreational center at the Orange anything," over the din from concerts at the County Fairgrounds waa auppoeed to be a temporary amphitheater, Tambellinl said . facility for tervioemen stationed in the area during This year. the theater was dark during the World War II. swnmer while the concerts w ere being held, she said. More than 40 years later, the "temporary" But next spring, when the amphitheater opens its building still hOU8eS It.I lat.est full-time ocrupMt. the expanded aea.on, the theater's play 9Chedule would Costa Mesa Ovic Playhouae -at least until next conflict with concerti. spring. The playhou.e currently is a division of the city's The Civic Playhou.e, which haa been head-leiaure 1ervlcea department, Tambelllni said, but qu.arteredatthefalrgroundutnceltopenedin 1965,is within the next few yean the 200 paid members of 1ehedUled to open it.I March play et a new theater. in the group hope to e1tabll.ah a non-profit. independent Co.ta Mesa'• Ree c.ommunity Center. status for It. LutweektheC.oetaMesaCJtyCouncilapproved They currently put on fiveshows a year, plWI • the fu.nda needed to renoyate an auditorium et the special chlldttn'• show. she said, and they hope to Rea Center so the new theater can make tu elCpmd to she lhowt ~xt year In the .new taclUty. permanent home there. The new theater, refurbllhcd at a coet of nearly Patt TambeWni, resident director of the play-$140,000. wUl NW 90 .eai., a box office and a lobby. houM llnce lt opened, Nid the group hu been The new ... Una in the theater will really make a lobbyb'C for a betwr thftltt for nearly 10 yNrS.. dilf~. Tam6elllni aaJd. "lt11amutnc t.Nt we've been able to rnaini.Jn a The blucher-ttyle llNtll t'Utrently btl"8 used loyal followtnc over the yean with \hil were already worn ou\ when they ~ donated io (hatd·to-llnd) kx:ation." Tamb@Wni aaicl The .,tna the theater by Lona Beach 0\1 CoUtte )'Mn AIO· bulldina •• cramped, fa1Jinl •pan wtth ""1n!t.e The comfort.able INtinc. lmprowd •tale area lnf-..iam and the puk1na wu always a problem. and. ample pe.rillna et the new theet.er will be a ebe laid. pllend, Tambell.tnl aald. But t\ Wiii the ope1\1ng of the Padfic '4Thll \I ree.lly wonderful," ahe edded. "It'• AmphithNt.er "riaht out our bllck door' that m.ede aometh.lni we've been holdina OUl' btteth ovtr for the altuetion •) the play'houte to from bid to,. auch a long ~:· .. I " .. NB Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, ~cember 27, 1983 STOCKS TUESDAY'S Cl.OSI NC PRICES "'''"" ""·· \fll"'' N,.f i.• t ,.," '•~•\<f" c ~ p ( hd'\ \ hiV' ( "0 NY E COMPO ITE TRAN ACTION QUOIAllON'l tNCIV(){ lAA0£8 ON Tiff NI W \011" MIO'i\11&1 PAClfl(;. PIJW. 90610" Of IA01J ANO C1NC1NNAll 8rOC11 EACll"'NOCS .tiND REPORIEO l\'r rnc N.ti80 INllT!Nf' '\.Al .. \ ""-'"' \•If\ N•t \.elr' Nel ,.1....... ,.. .. , 'tlltlfl'\. Ntl PI f'\Ch (.hJ'"" l f\Q P f ncr.. ( luw t "O "'l h~ l'O\fl' (hQ ., f ru" c 1u.... c r\.Q "° t "d t •1 1 I Pltj ,, • Dow Jones Final Up 13.21 Clo1lng 1,2$3.7 BUSJllSS BRIEf S · Santa F e-Southern Pac ific rail m e rger a llowe d b y ICC By tbe A11oclated PreH WASHINGTON -The merger of Sant.a Fe industries lnc a nd Southern Pacific Co. has been allowed to go through by the lnterst.ate Commerce Commission. The two holding comparues own the Atchison, Topeka & Sant.a Fe and the Southern Pacific railroads, respectively, and ICC decision was a major step toward combining the rail Imes themselves. But the railroads wiU remain under separate management until another ICC ruling, probably some time next year ,, A uto niak er log best p erforman ce DETROIT U.S . a utomakers say early December sales or new cars climbed 25.2 percent from a year earlier for the best perfonnance in five years. The compames said they sold 179.749 cars between Dec 11 -20, compared wllh 143,530 m the year -ago period N uke plan I scra pping endorsed INDIANAPOLIS Indiana Gov Robert D. Orr has endorsed a t.ask force's r~mrnendation that the partly built Marble Hill nuclear power plant be scrapped. Orr also said he would ask for resumption of hearings on Public Service Co. of lnd1ana's request for a rate increase to pay for the project's investment to date The l'Ompany owns 83 percent or the proje<'t. lnter est-r ale jillers 'calmed ' NEW YORK Sluggish growth in the nation's money supply, a cooling off of the economy's brisk expansion and c'Ontinued moderation in tnflauon have calmed mt.erest rate Jitters in financial markets, economists say For the first three weeks of December. stock and bond markets were 10 a slump amid concern that the Ft.-deral Rest'rve would have to push Interest rates higher or risk a resurgen<.-e of higher tnflauon. Analysts had expressed rears that rising rates would shut down the e<:onomy's growth Fed g o vern1ne nt outspends iI1 com e WASHINGTON -The federal governmen t outspent its income by $2 1 6 billion in )i)>vember. keeping the deficit's growth slightly behind thaCOf last year's record shortfall. the Treasury Department reports. · GOLD QUOTATIONS •ttt..A __ ,.,_ S.O.Ct.a worto Qold p<IC4lt •Odey ~ m•rketa •r• ciOMO ,. .. ,, alte•nCIO'l lixino $378 •1 uP 50 83 ,renlllurt fl•ll>Q $37§ 99. Oii l I 00 z ... 1c~ ,.,. Alttl .. oon D•O t.319 S9 oft SQ 15 '380 25 u •.o ......,., a 14.-m.., 1nnty d11ly qun1t 1 t.371 15 on t2 15 f.....,..d 1on1y lll••y auotet '3tl0 eo up ,, 50 1............. t10<,.;el9d !only G•ll• Qu(llel '39911• up SI 51 NY Com .. ')OIO S()OI """''" ,,, Sleo 30 olf ,, 10 WHAT NYSE DID NEW VORK l"'PI Ot< 77 Adv1nc.1<J Ot<hnt<J Uncna1>9tG Total IUU•\ Ntw fltQP\\ Ntw tow\ l udo• '" &JI 411 20)1 lJ SS WHAT AMEX DID NEW YOlll< f~PI etc H 4'.dvt n(e-Q OK'1"f'O UncNnveo fOlel1UlAt H••n1Qh• N•w•OW\ METALS T~v ,., Jh , .. . " I I& Prt.., d .. 136 810 171 1961 11 II Pr•v Otv ,., 711 1)1 1'S 9 6 NEW vOAtl l"'PI ~Pol nonl''"°"' ""''Ai PliQI> lodoy C-8f'-· 70 CMlt A l)Ovn<I U S d•tl111uon1 !; ..... • 63 80 ~41110 e>et P<)Und NY C.,.,..• tC>OI rnontn C'09ecl F r1 l.-24 27 '*'". l)Ound ZIM 49 ""'111 a poono aei.-.a Tin 6 20t8 "'*'•'• w .... e0<npoe1te lb A.._......,. • 81 Oll\11 a pound N Y ~ t.3:10 00.'340 oo -18 lb nu, -v ... , ""'"-»85 00 G-11C """Cl1"'11 troy ....,_NY SILVER q!~ S8 805 1-ftntly 6 tlafmen 101\1~ oa11y IW-SI 772 P<t• troy nuno. NV COma• lllXll m<>nt~clOMOFrl • STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT SYMBOLS -.. -. I " + .. -·• .;1 ... _,, t"' -t '• + .. -'l + • + •• DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW VORK IAPI -Final Oo• J~ ••tregu to1 fut1on Oet H STOCKS JO'"" lHI ll 17'11117'910 176J 17 • 13 71 SN 00 591 49 Sl4 OI Sii 41-+ I 71 IJO U 13113 130 IS 1lt tt .. I J.t 491 7S S03 U '960 SOI o.t-+ •OO 6 U6,IOO I J70 IOO 7 119.600 tO "6.SOO AMERICAN l£ADERS NEW YORK IAPI -S.1t1 4 Om D<ICI eno ntl cnonvt ol Inf 10 mo•t active Amef'te.l n Stoc' E.._ch•~ '' \ut• •r•Oino n etiOn•lt v e t mor• '"•" •1 Wt 1>11LeD8 OomtPl•I Vero.eflm' Te11ohr•" l~1'a•Al((p t<t~Pherm' llE Comm 1 Ho110l1Tr ~t)rtlnl wt Be<oen8run' UP 77),500 101.000 161,tOO l~,700 l~.JOO ••.ooo tS,fOO 11.400 19.000 76,100 WNS lS • lS·16 II ... 4 ... 6 • 11 • " . ... , .... 7• ... ; I • -. -' • • -.,. -" NEW YORK fAPl -Tt>t IOl'Owlll9 k>f ,...,,,., ,,.. New Vorl< SICK~ E •Clle.-.V. 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