HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-12-29 - Orange Coast PilotTHI ORANGE COAST
THURSDAY. DECEMBER 2!1. 1983
O.itJ ""'4 plloo4o b1 l9e ,,,,..
coum EDITION
ORANGt COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
$150,000 trawler
stolen, smashed
A 41-foot trawler stolen from
Huntington Harbour was found
'today bobbing in the water off a
harbor entrance jetty where at
apparentJy had been smashed into
the rocks.
The Vikmgsholm. a $150.000
fishing vessel, is the third boat
that has been stolen and aban-
doned along the Orange Coast in
the past week. Authorities do not
believe the thefts are connected.
The expensive trawler, owned
by Palm Springs resident Glenn
Heggst.ad, was stolen from a slip iri
Peter's Landing sometime late
Wednesday, police said.
A Surfside resident spotted the
partially submerged vessel this
morning off the east jetty to
Anaheim Bay-the entry point to
Huntington Harbour.
The boat was . not insured,
according to the Orange County
Sheriff's Harbor Patrol.
and whe ther they sank it de-
liberately.
A 35-foot Owens sailboat was
stolen last weekend from a New-
port Harbor dock, stnpped of all
its belongs and marine hardware
and then beached at Pelican Point
an Crystal Cove State Beach
sometime early Christmas Day.
Harbor patrolmen said it ap-
pears the thieves tried to scuttle
the boat at sea and, failing that,
deliberately ran it aground where
it sat for 24 hours before being
reported.
Monday, a small electric boat
was stolen off its mooring in
Newport Harbor and run aground
on Corona del Mar State Beach.
The boat was split in half but an
expensive stereo unit and other
valuables aboard the craft weren't
touched. authorities said.
Wehther for weekend
should howl 'eID over
By the Associated Pren
High cloudiness hovering over Southern California will be
banished for the New Year's w ee kend , and
eat-your-heart-out-East-Coast sunshine is promised for the televised
Rose Bowl parade and game Monday.
The National Weather Service said the high wall be m the 70s on
Sunday, New Year's Day, and that temperatures Monday wall be just as
Salvage crew recovers sunke n stolen
fishing boat of~ East Jetty of
Anaheim Bay after $150,000 vessel
smashed into rocks.
A private salvage crew hired by
the boat's owner was trying to
hoist the vessel today for inspec-
tion to determine if the thieves
removed anything fr~m the craft
a~-omlnodating. .
lt will be cloudy Friday along the coast with highs ranging from 66
to 73. Low temperatures will range from the 40s to the low-50s.
Mesa murder
victim's auto
found torched
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Ol IM Delly ..... ''""'
Co.ta Mesa police w1).l attempt
to obtain a search warrant today
allowing them to inspect the
interior of a car they say belonged
to the man bludgeoned to death m
a Costa Mesa motel room Tuesday
morning.
Police mvesugators recovered
the car, a green 1976 Ford Sedan,
in Compton on Wednesday. Sgt
Bill Bechtel srud.
Autopsy resu Its obtained
Wednesday identified the murder
victim as Steven Garich, 67, who
had registered at the California 6
Motel, 1441 Gisler Ave. He check -
ed in a couple of days before he
was killed and had paid his tab
through the week, Bechtel said
Garich's body was found in h1s
bed an Room 113 by a maid about
10 a.m. Tuesday. A spokesman for
the Orange County Coroner's
Office said Garich bl~ to death in
the room after. he suffered blunt
force trauma to his head.
The Ford LTD Garich had been
dnvmg was traced to Compton,
where an attempt had been made
to torch tt, Bechtel said.
"They apparently tried to set a
hre inside, but due to a lack of
oxygen it just smoldered." he said.
"It got very hot and melted the
1ns1de of the vehicle but didn't
burn it "
Although police believe Garich
had been driving the Ford LTD.
the vehicle was not 'registered in
has name. Bechtel said police have
been unable to contact the car's
owner.
Invesugators hope to uncover
dues in the car that will lead them
to a suspect in the killing. Bechtel
said there are no suspects yet and
he declined to disclose details of
the ongoing investigation, except
to say investigators are tracking
down severaJ possible motives for
thecnme
He refused comment when
asked if a slashed window screen
on Ganch's room provided a point
of entry for the murderer.
Garich, who was retired and
getting a pension from Chrysler
Corp., had no permanent address
and had been living in various
motels in Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach for some time.
Bechtel said Garich had stayed
previously at the California 6
Motel, where a single room costs
$22 a night.
After some difficulty, police
were able to locate a relative of
Gar1ch's, a sister who Bechtel said
Jives in Costa Mesa.
Garich's body remained at the
coroner's office this morning
awaiting funeral arrangements to
be made by the Camily, a spokes-
man said.
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Logjam in Newport
. •
· urf ers scurry for the best position
in this hot taken from the Newport
pier looking west toward the groins.
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One would gue a lot of these guys
got either s urfboards or new
wetsuits from anta this Christmas.
Donations made their holiday
Albert Sitton Home kids enjoy trips, toys, tree, tons of snow
By CHRISTINE DECKER
Of IN Delly "6ol llofl
It was a Christmas the 100 children at the Albert
Sitton Home may never forget.
The shelter is home to abused, abandoned and
n eglected children supported by county funds. This
Christmas, donations from the community made the
shelter a little more like home.
There were parties. The children traveled to
Knott's Berry Fann. South Coast Repertory's "A
Christmas Carol" and the Newport Be9ch Harbor
Parade of Lights. Sant.a Claus, Disney characters and
Gumdrop the Clown all visited.
Toys and cash flowed into the home like never
before, said William Steiner. director.
One of the most fun events was the arrival of 16
tons of snow provided by Lifesaver Charities from
Buena Park a few days be(ore Chrlatmas. The
children played all day in il and by evening had built
a 23-foot tall snowman.
"It was re4Jly w~ul for them. Mo&1 of them
(See SITl'ON, Pace Al)
Wat ch out for those
clowns from Caltech
PASADENA (AP) -Re-
member the Roee Bowl game ln
1961 when embarrassed Univer-
llity of Washington football fans
held up cards during the halftime
ahow that spelled out
C-A-L.-T-E-C-H for 30 million
televiaion viewera?
Well, the local police remember.
And 10 do four graduates of the
California Institute of Tech-
nology. renowned for producing
brilHant !lcientista and IOrrie of the
ITlOlt creative pranks ln coUege
history
The four alumni have edited a
aoon-to-be-published book,
"Legends of fa!tech," recalling
'
the card prank and explaining the
romplex machinations behind it,
as well as other famous high jlnka
perpetrated by Caltech students.
The local police, meanwhile, are
keeping eyes and ears open for
mbchlef at the New Year's Day
Roee Bowl perade and football
game matching UCLA and the
University of llllnois.
Students at Caltech have the
Image of devotJon to laboratories,
complex equations and dellcate
experiments that make lell8e
mainly to other ldentiflcally In-
clined foUu.
But in the put they have
!See CALTECH, r•I• At)
Offshore
oil lease
cutback
cheered
From staff aod wire report•
Interior Secretary William P.
Clark's df!Claion to end the Reagan
adminis trati on's
near-moratorium on land acquisi-
tions for national parks and post-
pone two offshore oil lease sales
was welcome news on the Orange
Coast today.
"If he's putting the lease sale
off, that's te~fic," I think it's a
step in the right direction," said
Laguna Beach city councilwoman
Sally Bellerue.
Clark, named Oct. 13 to succeed
controversial James G . Watt, also
will be making other major policy
and personnel changes at the
department, the New York Times
reported.
Clark said he is asking for $150
million in fiscal year 1985 to
purchase wetlands and new land
for wildlife refuges and existing
parks, and that his request had
been approved by both the presi-
dent and the Office of Manage-
ment and Budget, the newspaper
said.
"I hope to still some troubled
waters," he was quoted as saying.
The increase represents a shift
awa y from Watt 's
near-moratorium on parkland ad-
ditions, which angered conaerva-
tionist groups.
Clark said he also is postponing
oil lease sales off southern Cali-
fornia and on Georges Bank off
New England for both en-
vironmental and Defense Depart-
ment concerns. He said the De-
fense Department was concerned
that some of the areas were in
military training or transit areas.
Watt's tight-fisted land
purchase program, one of his first
Initiatives when he became in-
terior secretary in 1981, was baaed
on his belief that federal money
should be devoted to maintaining
and restoring existing parks
rather than buying new ones.
"We do not need more acres to
(See OIL LEASE, P&Je AZ)
A2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday,~~ 29, 1983
Irvine man given
• term in gem scam
By ANDREA ADE~N
Of .... °""' ...........
Future property buyers will
pay higher prices because of an
aUeged mternat1ona1 gem and real
estate scam t hat may total $1.5
billion. a police detective said
today.
An Irvine man re(.-e1ved a
five-year suspended sentence
after pleading guilty this week t.o
fraud charges, the first arrest and
plea stemming from the complex
case which began to unfold last
March, Anaheim police detective
W.W. Lane srud.
Duane Allen Lamm. 39, was
sentenced to serve up t.o nine
months in county Jail Lane said
the jail tenn was put off until
December 1984 until detectives
can pin down the exact losses from
his part in the alleged inter-
national scam.
Lamm ts accused of fraudulent-
ly obtaining at least $1 .5 million in
loans, JUSt a small portion of the
$1.5 billion authorities believe IS
involved.
A second Irvine man, Kenneth
J . Harden, 24, faces a Jan. 18
preliminary hearing on grand
theft charges in West County
Municipal Court in Westminster.
Junior guards
switch beaches
with Aussies
"You and 1 are going to pay
more for property" as a result of
the uwestigation, Lane believes.
"There are more foreclosures on
loans because of people who have
found they are able to manipulate
the system."
Lane said eight banks, which he
refused to name, are linked t.o the
Irvine case alone. Authorities
wouldn't say how many might be
involved worldwide.
He said lenders who made loans
against property allegedly bought
with overvalued gemstones were
unknowing victims.
"The banks had no way t.o
protect themselves" and learn the
reported income of those seeking
loans because of privacy laws,
Lane said. • The detective said the case
against the two Irvine men ar -
rested in November is an offshoot
of a wider international gem scam
based in Orange and Los Angeles
counties.
"God only knows" how many
vi,ctirns fell for the scheme, Lane
said.
But they have may have been
bilked of $1.5 billion over a
three-year period in a scheme that
involved the .exchange of cheap
gems for real estat.t" and personal
property such as boats, airplanes
and cars.
Gem transactions have been
traced t.o l3 states besides Cali-
fornia as well as Canada, Britain, 0..,. Pllol """40 by LM l"•r-
CLOWNS ...
From PageA1
sw1t.<.•hed lht! grttn and red lenses
on city stophght.s, fired straw-
ber ry Jello from a h istoric cannon
and rigged up a long-range
launcher t.o lob oranges at
Pasadena C1ly College.
One caper that infuriated many
and earned thl• pranksters numer-
ous prizes was tht> McDonald's
affair.
ln March I !J75, lhe fast-food
chain spon sored a $50,000
sweepstakes that offered a year's
free groceries and a Datsun sports
car as the top prizes. Three
students took literally the cont.est
rules in fine print that said "enter
as often as you wish."
Helped by a Caltech computer,
the three printed more than l
milhon entries and deposited them
at 98 McDonald's restaurants
around Southern California.
The Caltech group won about
20 of the pnzes, including a
Datsun station wagon, $3.000 in
cash and about $1,500 wonh of
McDonald's gift certificates. The
car w as later donated to charity.
"The students acted in complete
contradiction to the American
standa rds of fair play and sports-
manship," McDonald's said. but
the prank was declared legal.
As for this year's Rose Bowl
activities. police say au is quiet so
Car.
"We haven't caught an ybody
this year. but in years past, we've
found balloons implanted under
the surfa<.-e of the field, on the
s1dehne, that were triggered to go
off during the game by remote
switch," Lt Richard Emerson said
Wednesday
Fifteen Huntington Beach Jun: Hong Kong and C.OSta Rica. in-
ior Lifeguard captains are spend-vestigat.ors said.
Is it left over right? SITTON ...
ing the holidays m New Zealand Gi?mst.ones. including garnets,
and Australia as part of an rubies and emeralds. were valued
exchange agreement with the two at highly inflated sums but were
nations. actually acquarium gravel, the
It took three Edison Co. crews to
r eplace one power pole with a new
one a t 2 lst Street and West Balboa
Boulevard in Newport r ecently.
Getting all tho e wires crossed
correctly -took some doing.
From Page A 1
had never seen snow before,"
said Steiner.
To everyone's delight, a 12-foot
tall Christmas tree was donated by
Gen. and Mrs. William L yon of
Newport Beach. The Newport
Harbor Art Museum delivered the
tree completely decorated.
The youths, ranging in age from detective said.
16 t.o 18 years, are participating in
lifeguard competiuon during their Some details of the on-going
visit that began Dec. 17 and ends investigation were discl06ed in
Jan. 5. May t.o avert $88 million worth of
OIL LEASE CUTBACK CHEERED ...
They are the top members of transactions in escrow on land
the Huntington Beach Junior allegedly bought with flawed
Lifeguard organi:z.ation that has gems, Lane said.
about 700 members who must pass. rigid tests in swimming. running "IC we didn't announce it. they
and ocean rescues. would be hurting now," he said .
BULLETIN BOARD
Women voters to study
referendum process
The League of Women Voters of the Orange Co<tst will meet to
study the initiative-referendum process at several locations on the
coast next month.
Meetings are scheduled for Jan. 10 at 9:30 a.m. at Glendale
Savings. Laguna Hills: Jan. 11at9:30 a.m. at 711 Lido Park Drive,
Newport Beach and 7:30 p.m . at 25017 Woolwich, Laguna Hills, and
Jan. 12 at 9:15 a.m. at 1960 Catalina. Laguna Beach.
Meetings are open to the public and further information may
be obtained by calling Vivian Abrams at 770-7326.
Bird watchers plan Huntington trip
The Sea and Sage Audubon Society will host a field trip to look
for unusual birds turned up dunng the Christmas count Jan. 7 at 8
am
The tnp will begin at the Slater Avenue parking lot at
Huntington Beach Central Park. between Gothard and Golden
West Streets. Further mfonnation may be obtained by calling the
society at 974-8250.
Breast cancer lecture set at YWCA
Dr. James Padova. a clinical professor of medicine at UC Irvine,
will present "An Oncologist's Approach to Breast Cancer
Treatment" Jan. 12 at 7:30 p.m. at the YWCA, 1411 N. Broadway,
~ta~. (
The lecture is sponsored by the YWCA Encore Progmm of
monthJy speakers forums for women. Additional information is
available at 542-5525.
Newport seminar to study emotions
The Center for Cognitive Therapy will hold a free public
seminar Jan. 13 in Newport Beach entitled "Self-help Techniques
for Managing Problem F.inotions."
Psychologists Christine Padesky and Michael D. Masters will
conduct the lecture from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at 1101 Dove St., Suite 228,
Newport Beach. Further infonnation is available at 646-3390.
From PageA1
neglect," Watt said in one 1982
spee<:h. "We do need t.o allocate
more of our funds to properly
caring for the parks we have."
Although not a complete mora-
torium -Watt did ask for money
for emergency acquisitions and t.o
satisfy court judgments from lef-
tover land condemnation cases -
hi.a cutbacks were enormous.
The land purchase program
carries a permanent spending
ceiling of $900 million a year, and
Congress ordinarily appropriated
$300 million to $500 million a year
before Watt took office. For two
years during the Carter adminis-
tration. the appropriation ex-
ceeded $700 million.
Court workers
want back pay
for 'King Day'
The recently approved Martin
Luther King Jr. Day already has
touched off a dispute in Orange
County where Municipal Court
workers are suing county govern-
ment to recover wages they claim
they should be paid for the Jan. 16
hohday.
Municipal Court personnel who
take the day off should not be
docked for wages even though
county government has not yet
declared Martin Luther King Day
a government holiday, Superior
Court Judge Philip Schwab has
ruled in response t.o the em-
ployees' suit.
The problem arose because
court personnel while state em-,
ployees, are paid by the county.
County officials said they are
refusing to pay for the extra
holiday because it was not in-
cluded in recent salary nego-
tiations conducted by the munici-
pal court employees' bargaining
unit and county labor negotiators.
The judge directed county of-
ficials t.o pay the court employees
or argue the merits of their ca9e
during a Jan. 12 hearing.
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ORANGE COo\ST
D1llyPllat
ttLlelt•all• Publltier
='.!=t to the PublWw
"'1J iillOMI ..... I lft
ContrCllt
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But Watt's annu:ll budget for
the program was about $50
million. Congress raised Watt's
request each year, usually t.o $150
million t.o $200 million, but still
complained that too little land was
being bought.
Other criucs charged that Watt
was simply making the program
more expensive in the long run,
since the price of land generally
rises each year the government
hesitates in buying.
Earlier, conservation lobby1Sts
had said they hoped for a small but
significant increase in land
purchases for national parks next
year follow ing a policy review by
Clark.
They said changes might be a
simple recognition by Reagan
adminiltration officiala that Con-
gress will force the money on
them.
On Christmas Day. the children,
who range from 18 months t.o 17
years old, awoke early to find they
each had been given seven gifts.
The gifts, most given anonymous-
ly, had been carefully selected for
C'ach child by the staff.
"It was frantic. They were
absolutely deHght.ed. You have to
remember a Jot of theee kids never
had anything for Christmas," said
Steiner.
MURDERS LINKED? ...
Church services and a lra-
d1t1onal turkey dinner followed
the opening of presents.
Among the gifts were electronic
toys. 75 Cabbage Patch dolls,
donated by Target st.ores. 75
watches valued at $3.500 donated
by ALLTIME Inc., stuffed
animals, new clothes and makeup.
The home, located in Orange. also
received $20,000 from individuals
and businesses in the area.
FromPageA1
tight lid on the invest1gauon.
said they have not found a
clear motive or a specific
murder weapon used to strike
the victim in the head and face.
Earlier. a Bakersfield oil rig
worker was bludgeoned t.o
death in his Laguna Beach
motel room. Police said Ronald
J. Murphy was struck with the
porcelain top t.o a toilet tank
which was found shattered in
the ransacked room.
Police feel robbery may
have been the motive in the
Dec 11 killing because several
hundred dollars the victim was
believed t.o have been carrying
was missing.
A man with reddish brown
hair, an unkept beard and
stained teeth had been seen
with Murphy hours before the
killing and is being IOUght.
On Dec. 14, construction
worker Ronald Dean Gaakey
was found dead. face-down in
a hallway of his security-tight
Newport Shores home. Police
said the 35-year-old man was
clubbed t.o death the night
before with an unknown ob-
ject.
Mesa duo
appointed
to board
Two direct.ors have
been appointed to
four-year tenns on the
C.OSta Mesa Sanitary Dis-
trict Board.
Robert Hanaon and
Steven Randall. un-
challenged in the No-
vember election, were
appointed by the county
Board of Supervilon,
accofding t.o Costa Mesa
City Engineer Bruce
Mattern.
Newport detectives have
not determmed a motive and
despite a neighborhood search
that spanned two days. have
not located a murder weapon.
Nothing else was disturbed in
the elegant, two-story house,
police said.
Because Gaskey appeared to
have taken painstaking
measures to secure his house
and rig an alarm system, police
are of the opinion that the
victim and killer knew one
another.
On Dec. 19, a 26-year-old
Gi?orgia native was discovered
bludgeoned to death in his
Buena Park condominium
Robert Orville Carver's hands
had been tied with electrical
wire and his head battered
with an unknown blunt object.
police reported.
While Buena Park detec-
tives said they have no clue t.o
the identity of the killer, they
are working on the belief that
robbery was a motivation be-
cause a small safe Carver
owned was discovered open
and empty.
"It was the largest amount of
cash ever received during the
Christmas season. We really ap-
preciate everything everyone has
done to help us. It helps me t.o
know I'm not alone in the re-
sponsibility for these children."
said Steiner.
The money will be placed in a
trust fund and spent on the
children for such things as birth-
day presents, special shoes, glasses
or camp -items not provided in
the county budget.
Although it was a wondrous
Christmas at the Albert Sitt.on
Home, Steiner said the best gift he
could think of t.o give each child
would be a "nice, stable home."
Less than one-third of the
children were visit.ed by their
parents.
Steiner said the home was
planning a sped~ party for New
Year's Eve.
But it won't be anything like
Christmas. They're still unwind-
ing from that."
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7:00 Dinner only '16.95 Prix Fi11
Featuring:
Roast Prime Rib of Beef,
Poached King Salmon. Beurre Blanc
Crisp Long la)and Duck, Montmorency
Roast Loin of Lamb, Jardlnalre
Broiled Rock Lobster Tall. Beurr• Nol•tt•
Hanson , recen\ly
elected .ecretary, hu
aerved.atnce 1979 on the
board that overwea the
admlnlatratlon and finandnc of the district,
whlc:h operatet and
malnt.alna ..wtta and
w1ter·dl1posal oper-
adorw in the d&y.
Tiii M1l1 Evllt
10:30 Dinner
Plue: lech lntrM lnoludM •.•
Hora d'ouevr-. v1rlet
Freeh Spinach S•l•d w/hot bacon dreulng
Frnh Seaaonal Vegetablee
Stttec11on of Homemade o....rt
·Smlth, • commodiU.
broker foe the Flrlt Na-
t.lonal Mone1al')' Oroup
In IMne, Uves tn Cmla
Mtaa and took ~oeth ot
ofta on DK. 1,
Dancing
Champagne
5¥rtt tup«b dlrWll. PLUS .,,,,..,.,,,,,,.,.,
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Sunder New YNr'• Der
8pect8cul•r New YNra
9runch Buttel .
Orange Ooast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 29, 1983 a
Trauma p~ogram slashes county traf fie deaths
'
Uy the Associated Press
Orangl' County's nauonally
known trauma can • program has
cut th<' numb<•r of prc.>vc•nt.able
ll •lfril· Ul'aths m half, S<1ys a study
d1n.'<:tcd by the man 'who di-
vdoped th; program
"Tht•n• has l:>N.>n .1 s1gmfl<:ant
dt.'('rl>asc m mor tality rates be-
caus.:• of the program and that has
never bet'n stattstu:ally dc mon-
stratl-rl before anywhl•re t>lse m
thl' l'OUntry," Dr Rit'hard CalC'S
said. r(•(erring to the five-year
study
Th<' study, sponsored by tht> UC
Irvin<' Medical Center in Orange.
tht• Oregon Health &wn('('S Uni
versity and the U S Department
of Health, F.ducauon and Welfa re.
is scht-duled for pubhl'allon next
month in The Annals of Emerg-
t•m:v Mt'<.ill'me.
"This survey shows that the
Orangt• County trauma care pro-
gram 1s not only work mg well, but
much better than anvone ever
t'Xpt.'<'tt.>d," said Cales.' a former
t•onsuluint to Orang{' County's
Emergency ML'<itca l St.•rv1t't'S De-
partm('nt
In tht• program dt•wlopt-d by
Cales. w ho now heads tht> Depart -
me nt of Emergcm<:y Mt.-d1cine at
Portla nd's Adventist Medical
Ct•ntl.'r. paramedic crews trans-
port traumauc al'<.'tdent v1cums
wllhm 15 minutl:'S to one of four
trauma care centers m the
78-4-square-mile area.
Spt·c1ally trained medical
specialists are available to treat
the v1t·tims 1mmed1ately.
The Ora nge County program .
begun in J une 1980. 1s a model for
Grove gay bars win
round in city battle
By The Associated Press
Allorneys for several bars in
Garden Grove say they have won
the first round m a battle to kill a
city ordinance they say dis-
criminates against bars that cater
to homosexuals.
S uperior Cour t J udge Jud ith
Ryan. after l'lolding hearings on a
lawsuit hied by the bar owners m
Se pte mber. issued a preliminary
inJUnct1on last w eek that prevents
city officials from enforcing the
ordina nce until the case comes to
trial
Gene Dorney. attorney for the
Orange County Business and Pro-
fessional Coalition of about 15 bar
and nightclub owner... said Tues-
day the ordinance was a "dis-
guised attempt to get nd of the gay
bars in Garden Grove "
However, Deputy City At-
torney WiUiam McNames said the
law "has nothing to do with sexual
prdt-rences."
The<:1 ty. he said, ha!>l'Onllnumg
problems with mmors w ho receive
alcohol tn bars w ith "night-
club-type of e ntertainment "
"It's a rather bitter d tsappoml-
ment to have this categorized ... as
an anti-homosexual ordinance."
he said "It's nothing of the
sor t. It 1s sex-neutral "
Thl· L"Oahllon mcludt'S at least
two gay bars. Dok West and
Rumour Hazz1t. as wl'll as the
Rendt'zvous. which dot's not cate r
spec1f1cally to gay patrons.
Other t•oah uon members have
not been pubhdy 1dent1fted. The
ordinance. passed by the City
Council m June. requirt-d bars
that provide entertainme>nt to set
up separate areas for minors The
requirement kept mm ors from
using a bar's dance floor 1( liquor
was being served near by
similar trauma care networks
around the nation. including one
just started in Los Ange les Coun-
ty.
So Car, the Orange County
program has served more than
3,000 patien ts and the program
"has greatly exceeded what we
thought 1t wouJd be doing," Cales
said.
"We have demonstrated that
the victim's best t•han~e for
Pothole
plugged
on Culver
Motorists who earlier ran into
dead-end streets trying to detour
around Culver Drive, the most
heavily used street in Irvine,
didn't have to consult maps to get
home Wednesday.
The northbound lanes were
reopened about noon Wednesday
by Irvine Ranch Water District
paving crews. Workers finished
u p the $10.000 re pair job ""on the
150-foot stretch of Culver. under-
mined by a leaking water main
Christmas night, according to
supervisor Carl BaUard.
A swift-moving rainstorm dis-
sipated by Tuesday afternoon and
the d ry weather aided road crews,
w ho put down another five-inch
layer of pavement on two lanes of
Culver
The street had crumbled from
wate r we lling up beneath the
street. A broken fitting in a
si x-mch main proved to be the
culprit, but 180.000 gallons of
water spouted underground
before the leak was detected.
water officials said.
Lt. Gene Norden said Culver
has been re latively free of acci-
dents during the three-da y
closure. despite slowing by on-
lookers.
Cigarette buyers get the last laugh
Two men who apparently lost
money in a cigarette machine 1n
Wlnchells Donuts. 6791 Warner
Ave., Huntington Beach, picked up
the vending machine, earned n
outside and tossed 11 into a trash bin
Pohce said the machine was broken
but 11 wasn t clear whether any money
or cigarette packs were removed
from it
Burglars broke into an unlocl\ed
garage on lhe8400 block of ivy Street
and took $400 worth of frozen meat
and more than $1.500 worth of other
possessions 1nclud1ng a bicycle and
drapes
An absent-minded customer who
purchased $351 worth of 1ewlery at
Thee Jewelers 10128 Adams Ave
walked oll with his purchase but
forgot to leave a checl\ he d written
out with the clerk The customer
tracked down several hours later
said t he S35 1 check was shll 1n his
checkbook.
Irvine
A 72-year-old Irvine woman was
arrested for susp1c1on ol drunken
driving Wednesday night pulled over
at Barratca Road and Harvard Av-
enue. May Pearl Johnson was taken
home by a pol1c~ ~t11;er
Someone attempted to force their
way Into a University High School
building overnight by prying the
doorknob of a room 1n the 300
building No ent.ry .w~s made
Howard Gillespie. 31. was arrested
on a felony warrant obtained by
Laguna Beach police in Irvine
Wednesday att~m.~n
At least $1 ,350 was taken from a
home 1n the 4000 block of Williwaw
Drive Thieves apparently made entry
through an unlocked window The
break-on occurred Monday
Fountain \'alley
About $225 in cash packed 1n a
briefccfse was snatched from an
unlocked car parked on the 16300
block of Filbert Street
A man in his 20s was arrested on
susp1<:1on ot drunken dr1v1ng alter
several residents complained the
driver was racing up and down
various street at a high rate of speed
while yellfng at area residents
~t-wport Beach
A Newport Beach woman reported
the theft of 1ewelry valued at $550
from her home in the 200 block of
David Street Wednesday
A Newport Beach man reported
the theft of a revolver valued al $ tOO
and a ring valued al S 100 from his
home in the 1400 block of Seashore
Wednesday The suspects gained
entry alter kicking in the front door 10
the home
A Newport Beach man reported
lhe theft o f a camera valued at $450
from his home in the 3400 block of
West Ocean Front. .
A Santa Ana woman reported lout
tires on her U171 VW were atuhe(l Wednesday when the car was parked
1n an alley near the 2100 block of
Ceder Street
Laguna Beach
A gold wedding band valued ~at
$1,000 was stolen from a house In the
700 block of Balboa Avenue. accord·
mg to Laguna B~a.ch.pollce
An attempted break-in at a resi-
dence In the 700 block ol Gavlota
Drive was reported to police No
items were missing
Co la Mesa
The adm1nistrat1ve oll1ces at Costa
Mesa's Whittier Elementary School,
1800 Whittler Ave , were broken Into
and ransacked, an officer on patrol
discovered Wednesday about t0:45
a m The windows of the prlnc1pal's
office were apparently smashed to
gain entf)V Loss has not been
es 11ma4ed""
An unlocked rear storage shed
provided thieves access to several
vehicle batteries located at a Shell
station. 1201 W. Baker St. Loss was
placed at $840.
A couple hosting a party Wednes-
day got the bad news as they were
cteanlng up -someone had stolen
their $355 camera during the course
of the evening.
Fair weather, cloudy skies due
Coastal
F••• 11><00011 Frldr, out con-•bOI
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survival occuni with treatment In
the l't'g1onal trauma syste m ," the
report !!aid.
The report compared the medi-
cal e xperiences of 58 patien'ts who
died before the program began
with those of 60 victims who died
after the program began. 1 t found
that 34 deaths before the program
started could have been prevented
by emergency medical care .
the program began and the report
srud most of those fatalities oc-
curred in hospitals o utaide the
trauma care network.
six trauma care c•enters, but ad-
m inistrators at St. J ude Hospital
in Fullerton and Anahtiim Mem-
orial Hospital withdre-. .. 1rom the
program , d tmg high oix:raung
costs
The study also found that
automobile fatalities in Orange
County have decreased more than
10 other Southern California com-
munities that lacked trauma care
programs, including Los Angeles
and San Diego counties.
The rt-maming trauma car e
t'enterl> are at UCI Medical Centt>r,
Western Mt-d1cal Center m Sant.a
Ana, Fount.am Valley Commuruty
Hospital and Mission V1eJ0 Com-
munity Hospital The number dropped to 15 after Until recently . the county had
Duck d ilemn1a:
Feed o r fl y?
Oavt> John~on of
'\l' e~t minster a nJ
Kathy Ellis of Hunt-
ington Beach ach ieve
peaceful co-t•x i ~t ence
with a flock in the
pond at (~arr Pa rk in
Huntington Beach .
But whe n long lt-g!t
a n J little boy a p-
.p roach. ft-ed in~ i!'ln't
a s importa nt a~
1urvival. and lht•
d U<·k~ ta ke eva h cut·-
tion a n y way they can.
Pedes t r i~n s pus h e d petition
They'll roll o ut the side walk for folks on 2 Hunting to!' street
By ROBERT BARKER
Of Iha Delly ~ It.it
They can't roll up the sidewalks at 9 p.m. along
Florida and Main streets in Huntington Beach -in
some places they don't even have a sidewalk.
And that's a sore point for resident Marjorie
Niland
She says she's been getting a runaround from
the city for two years.in her campaign to take care of
what she calls a safety hazard for a large number of
the city's senior citizens.
About 200 e lderly people live in the Wycliffe
Towers apartments on Florida S treet, and a large
number of them walk down that street to cross Main
Street to shop and bank and do other business in the
Five Points shopping center.
The problem is there's no sidewalk for about 50
yards along a vacant lot. And the elderly residents.
some frail and others in wheelchairs. have to go out In
the street rather than slog their way through mud
and dirt.
"Thl.S has been a dangerous situation," Niland
said Tuesday. It seems they (city officials) wou ld do
something about it. It wouldn't be that big an
expense. They just don't seem to care."
Niland. who said she first became farrnhar with
the problem while teaching a Coastline Com munity
College painting class a t Wycliffe Towers. circulated
a petition among residents and presented 1t to the City
Council.
The petition apparently did the trick.
City officials now report -though Niland said
they still haven't bothered to tell her -they will
contact the vacant lot's developer. the Main-Florida
Professional company. The\r say they'll give the
company an opportunity to put m a permanent
sidewalk.
If not, the city w1U pu t in a tempora ry asphalt
sidewalk.
Niland said city employees had frustrated her
because none allegedly wanted to accept responsi-
bilit .
THE POSH
TUXEDO
Classic styling at its fin est.
Appropriate anytime of
the year, yet perfect for
all of the occasions that
make our holiday season
so special.
'
.44 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 29. 1983
Beach Boy dead at 39
Dennis Wilson dro wns while clowning on boat
MARINA DEL REY (AP) Beach
Boys drummer Dennis Wilson, whose
Cahforma rock 'n' roU bramch1ld took
Amenca on a 20-year mUSJcal .. Surfin'
Safari, .. appeared to be clowning when
he dove oH a boat and drowned, a
friend swd.
WilsQ!', 39, an avid surfer who gave
the band its name, did not oome up after
diving in 12 feet of water at a yacht sltp
Wednesday. said boat owner BiU Oster,
the friend Wilson was visiting.
"I saw some bubbles oome up," said
Oster, who was on the boat with two
other friends. "He popped up and
waved his hand. I saw his body shp
down. I thought he was clowning. I
knew he had to come up for some air."
Wilson's body was recovered by the
'1
. . I
• Touch controls
ONLY -
Harbor Patrol 50 minutes after he
disappeared. An autopsy was sched-
uled for today. sa1d Bill Gold. spokes~
man for the Los Angeles County
coroner's office
Described as the group's loner,
Wilson recorded a solo album. col-
laborated on a song with one-time
friend Charles Manson, stopped sing-
ing with the group for a time in 1981
and missed a recent concert in Los
Angeles.
Born Dec. 4, 1944. in Hawthorne,
Wilson grew up in Sou them California.
While still a teen-ager, he and his
brothers Brian and Carl, cousin Mike
Love and Al Jardine began playing at
high-school dances as Kenny and the
Cadets, then as Carl and the Passioris.
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Leak sparks
• evacuation
near Solvang
SOLVANG -Up to 46,000 reside nts of six
communities were asked to leave their homes after a
toxic gas byproduct leaked into their gas lines, but
most refused, officials said today.
The evacuation was called after hydrogen
sulfide, which is an irritant at low c:oncentrations and
toxic at high levels, was accidentally dumped into a
natural gas pipeline serving the Santa Barbara area
during testing of a new gas-treatment plant
Wednesday. ·
No injuries were reported, but to "err on the side
of safety" about 43,000 people living in Solvang,
Lompoc, Buellton, Santa Ynez, Los Oltvos were
urged to evacuate, Southern California Gas Co.
spokeswoman Ina Rosenberg said today. About 3,000
more living in Vandenberg Village near Vandenberg
Air Force Base were ordered to leave. officials said.
Although it was unclear exactly how many
people had left the ruraJ area about 125 miles
northwest of Los Angeles, it was apparent that ·•not a
heck of a lot" of residents were seeking shelter.
Sheriff's Deputy Mike Kemp SaJd this morning.
"Most people just don't want to leave their
homes," he said. Sheriff's s pokesman Don Hartnett
esllmated that 95 percent would not evacuate.
Another storHJ
hits northwest
By the Assodated Press
The mercury took another dive to record subzero
lows across the Rocloes and deep into Texas today
while violent thunderstorms hurled tornadoes and
ba.sebaU -size hail at several Dixie communaties.
Stm another storm pushed into the Pacific
Northwest with freezing rain that coated highways
with black ice in wes~m Oregon. forcing the closure
of highways as cars arid trucks sk1dded out of control
in cities including Portland and Salem
Since Dec. 17. when an arctic oold wave blasted
Northern states, the weather has been blamed for
more than 400 deaths nationwide
Florida citrus growers meanwhile issued a
pre limmary estimate saying 25 percent of the $1
billion orange crop had been lost as a result of a record
freeze earlier in the week.
Tem~ratures broke records this morning from
the mountains of Colorado, where the mercury
dropped as low as 30 degrees below zero, to the citrus
groves of southern Texas. with parts of the Lone Star
state enduring the coldest December morning on
r«<>rd.
In Fort Worth. Texas, where the temperature
had been below freezing for 11 consecutive days, city
employees began delivermg bottled water to shut-ms
because of a water shortage. There have been more
than 800 breaks m water mams since the freeze
began.
Among the more than a doz.en c1lles reporting
record temperatures for the date were Denver, where
it was 13 below zero. and Amarillo, Texas. where it
was 5 below. It was 30 below at Belgrade. Mont., and
27 below at Butte, Mont.
Actor Delllarest
services Friday
PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Friday graveside
services are scheduled for actor William Demarest,
the soft-hearted grouch in more than 90 films and
Unde Charley in TV's "My Three Soris." Demarest
died Tuesday at age 91.
Film director Frank Capra. who worked with
Demarest on several films mcluding "Mr. Smith Goes
to Washington," called his friend "one of the finest
comedians this country ever saw."
''He had made people laugh more than anyone
else because he was at it for so long," Capra said
Wednesday. "He acted sour. but he wasn't, of
course."
TOP OF THI NIWI
NATION
Eco-indicator shows
'miniscule' .4% drop
By the Auoclated Pren
WASHINGTON -The government's main
economic forecasting ~auge fell 0.4 percent last
month in its first slide since August 1982, the
government said today. The small decline in the
forward-looking Index of Leading Economic
Indicators broke a string of 14 ronsecuuve
monthly advances, the Commerc:e Department
said. Though a drop m the number 1s taken as a
sign of some weakening m the economy,
Commerce econom1st Ago Ambre said the
one-month decline is not unusual or cause for
worry. "As you get into the rc.'COvcry you see
some blips, you should expect to see some slow mg
down," he said.
Sex change pilot rehired
CHICAGO Dismissing Eastern Airlines'
arguments as a "sham," a federal judge ordered
that a pilot who was discharged after a sex
change operation 1s protected by the 1964 Civil
Rights Act and must be rehired with back pay
The a1rlme's lawyers had ('Ontended that_safety
would beoomprom1sed 1£ Karen F'. Ulane, who as
Kenneth Ulane flew 25 combat m1ss1ons m
Vietnam. were allowed back m the <."O<:kp1t.
Panda has bamboo aplenty
HOUSTON Frost killed the entire crop of
bamboo that the Houston Zoo uses to ft.'t'd its
panda. But thanks to the hearts and gardens of
dozeris of people, Ym now has enough fresh
green stalks to endure the latest cold snap But
nud-day Wednesday, one day a fter officials
issued an appeal for a new food supply for the
female lesser panda, more than enough had bet>n
donatro to fill Yin's needs, said Parks and
Recreation Department spokesman J0<• l loward.
Pair win dog bait suit
HOUSTON Two ex-c.-onv1cts who say
they were bitten repeatedly when forc.-ed to
"jump out of trees and fight nine to 12 dogs"
during training for prison guard anamals have
won a $14,000 settlement. their lawyer says The
settlement came m a suit accusing the Texas
Department of Corrections of c1v1l nghts v1ol-
atioris, but agency spokesmen denied anyone was
used as bait and said t he training is not dangerous
to inmates.
STATE
Bouvia death off er told
RIVERSIDE -A <.'erebral palsy victim w ho
wants to starve to death under a hospital's care
has lost another legaJ battle as an appeals court
refuaed to bar the hospital from dfachargfng her.
Wheelchair-bound qucidtf pleg1c Elizabeth
Bouvia. who also s uffers frorTi,arthritis, remained
in Riverside General Hospital today. Meantime,
a Los Angeles woman offered to take m Ms
Bouvia and let her starve to death under her care.
as long as the Los Angeles County district
attorney will agree not to prosecute
More animals liberated
LOS ANGELES -Twelve medical re-
search dogs stolen from Harbor-UCLA Medical
Center by Animal Liberation Front zealots have
been spinted out of state to throw law
enforc.-ement off the scent. an ALF spokeswoman
says. Meanwhile. another group said it was
liberating stray cats and dogs from a suburban El
Monte kennel and planned to hide the anamals in
the foothills.
Rape-murder trial ordere d
TORRANCE -David Miller, son of
President Reagan's personal attorney, v1as found
mentally competent to stand trial for the
rape-murder of his mother and pleaded innocent.
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Top officials
meet to hasten
Mideast peace
JERUSALEM (AP) -Tht.A fu-sl senior Egyptian
offll·1al to v1s1t Israel in more than a year met with
Pnme Minister Y1tzhak Shamir lOday in what he said
was an effort to ''speed up the peace proress" in the
Middlc h:ast .
El-Shat'f1 Abdel-Hamid. an assistant secretary
of stall' for foreign affairs, said a fter an hour-long
meeting with S hamir that they discussed topics of
"mutual interest. and certainly the dialogue between
Israel and Egypt will contmue an order to achieve our
mutual goals "
In Lebanon, police said one person died an a rash
of bombings overnight m Beir ut's Moslem sector, and
the state radio said U.S . ,ets from the carrier USS
lndependt>nce staged reconnaissance runs lOday over
the capital and the hills above the U.S. Marine base.
The radio said the planes drew no ground fire.
Polict' said six bombs devastated five stores and a
beauty sho p an west Beirul w1thm a 70-minute span
just after the mghl curfe w went into effect
Wednesday
One man. a Lebanese. died of asphyx1alion in a
fire touched off by lhe first explosion. which wrecked
a popular supermarket off Beirut:.& mam commercial
thoroughfare Three other c1v1lians hvmg in apart-
mentsover thesupermarketsuffered burns and were
hospitalized. according to police.
No group claimed responsibility for the attacks
and 1l was not immediately known if the bom bings
were hnked to polilical disputes or to local protection
rackets.
In Sidon and other towns in soulhern Lebanon.
Moslems staged a protest strike today against the
arresl of a mosque preacher. Sheik Moharram
el-Ari ft . on Tuesday. the state radio said
Israeh security men blmdfolded and handcuffed
the sheik m publlc before drivtng him to a detention
fac1.hty, the radio said.
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'THE DM"nER' b · ...
•
E BLESSED
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OUR LADY'I HILPIU P.o. aox 247a
LA HAM.A, CA. ~ 1
ln•ex•pen•alve*
•(tn lk •pen' llv) not h'gh In pnce;
reuonable: cla11lfled adV9ttlling
all .. _, ClaHffled Advertltlng r•1 6'2-se1e ·
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 29, 1983 ~a
Newlywe ds
Prim·t.•e" Cu rolinf' of
l\1onac•o, 26. toduy
married wt-althy Ita lian
businessmun 'te fano
Casiraghi, 23, ut the
roya l palace in Monte
Carlo . He r fa the r ,
brother und 1o1ister a t-
tended the ceremony in
a mirrored r eceptio n
hall adornt-d with u
portrait of her late
mo the r , Pri n cee ·
Grace.
TOP OF THE NIWI
WORLD
Andropov to appear
in public 'ver y soon'
By tbe An oclated Preu
Five days spent in sub-zero cold
MOSCOW -The Soviet Parliament today
ended Its two-day winter session without
P resident Yuri V. Andropov, but a Communist
Party adviser predicted the ailing leader will
appear in pub lit· "very soon." A message from
Andropov. in which he wished the Supreme
Soviet's 1,500 members "congratulations and
good health ," was read at the close of lOday's
45-minute joint session. Before adjourning, the
Supreme Soviet lOday approved a foreign policy
resolution that endorsed statements issued Sept.
28 and Nov. 24 m Andropov's name. The first
condemned U.S . foreign policy and the second
explained why the Soviet Union walked out of
the Geneva talks on limiting nuclear arms in
Europe.
Two A rab s to hang S urvi vor's father stayed hope( ul but was 'getting d esperate' TEL AVIV, Israel -Two lsraeli Arabs have
been sentenced to death by a secret mill tary court
for the murder of an lsraeli soldier m 1980,
according to newspaper and radio reports today.
The executions, if carried out, would be the first
in 1.sraeJ since Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann
was hanged in 1962.
ALBUQ UERQUE. N.M. (AP) -For almost a
week after his son's plane went down m rugged
snow-covered mountains, Gus Mink said he never
lost hope, believmg "if he survived the crash, he
would survive the a ftermath."
He learned Wednesday his son and grandson
were rescued after being spotted from a search
helicopte r near the plane's w reckage, where they had
huddled against northern New Mexico's sub-zero
cold. subsisting on melted snow and a single can of
rations.
Tony Mmk. 36, and his son. Brian. 14. were
recovering m Presbyterian Hospital in AJbul4uerque
"I hadn't given up hope. but I was getting
desperate," said the elder Mink, of Preston. Idaho. on
Wednesday. "It's pretty unusual to survive five
days."
Tony Mink's wife, Charlene , 35, d ied Friday
night shortly a fter the crash, said Ray Piper, search
and rescue coordinator for the state police. The men
survived by wearing snowmobile suits and staying
inside the snow-covered plane.
Mink said h is son and grandson were recovering
"remarka bly well."
"They are in a certain amount of s hock, although
not any trauma," he said. "They are alert, talking and
glad to be alive." The youth had a fractured shoulder
and Tony Mink had chest and head injuries, but both
were listed m fair cond ition.
T heir Beechcrafl Bonanza was found about 3 1h
miles north of Canjtlon Mountain near Tierra
Amarilla.
R eporter 's a b eauty
PARIS -A 19-year-old reporter who
entered a local beauly contest to write a story for
her newspaper has been crowned Miss France.
Martine Robine, who writes about spor ts and
general subjects for a weekly paper m Nor-
mandy, won the 1984 Miss France title Wednes-
day night, her 19th birthday.
I found out why "01' Reliable"
just may lie the best
telephone deal in tovvn.
1-aoo-59s-at11
Th i a 24·hour, toU-free nu mber pedally staffed to answer any
questions you have about your telephones or teie~ service.
C 1983. AT&T ln/onnabon Systems
' •
•·'Andy, do this. Andy, do that.' I'm hearing a lot of
talk about telephones these days. And getting a lot of
advice about what to do. So be fore I got completely
confused, I talked to the people who know telephones.
T he people who invented the te lephone-AT&T."
The phone In your home comes with
options no one c•n match.
"Tums out, the telephone I've got in my
home comes with some mighty attractive options.
Not the least of which is to keep it right here
whe re it is. I can continue to lease my phone
from AT&T, or I can buy it. ·
"You can get all the information I got by
calling AT&T's special 800 phone number:
1-800-555-8111 ."
Keeping your AT&T phone means
keeping AT&T service.
-' \ ··When I think of all the things I've got
'\\ in my home. that AT & T tele phone just
.,\\ might be the ite m that 's given the most
~\' . service with the least trouble fo r the
• ·, \\ \\ longest time. But if I ever have a
·, ~\ \ problem AT&T stands be hind its
~ _ \\ equipment now and for a long, long
f time to come.
"Sure you hear a lot about
telephones these days . But for me ,
the AT & T phone in my home is
the best deal going."
~
ATa.T
•
•
• Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT !Thursday. December 29, 1983
r
D
A local Biblical scholar
disputes story on Chris t
To the F.ditor:
Your AP artu.:le entitled
"Christ's Death Pinpointed" begs
dar1f1cation.
The Gospel of Luke. ws1tten in
the year 82 AD in Ach1a states, "At
that time the Emperor Augustus
sent out an order for all citizens of
the Empire to register themselves
for the census When thts hrst
census took place, Quirm1us was
governor of Syna" (Luke, 2 1-2)
Matthew and Luke assign
Jesus' birth to "the days when
Herod was Kmg or Judea," (Matt
2:2. Luke 1:5) which would have
to be before He rod's death in 4 BC.
But Quinnius reigned as legate of
Syria between 6 and 12 AD
Josephus makes note of a census
by him in Judea, but ascribes it to
AD 6-7 (Josephus-Wars 2:8).
Fortunately the early Chrtstian
scholar Tertullian comes to the
rescue. He records a census in
Judea by Satuminus, Governor of
Syria 8-7 BC. (TertulJian, Adv
Marcionem IV 19). If this is the
census Luke had in mind. then
Jesus had to be born in either 7 or
SBC.
Here are the facts. In the month
of March. 8 BC. (the month Joseph
and Mary were married) Caesar
Augustus decreed that all inhabi-
tants of the Roman Empire should
be numbered. that a census should
be made which could be used for
effecting better taxation.
Throughout all the Roman Em-
pire lhts t.-ensus was regtStered in
the year 8 BC. except in Palestine,
where Herod reigned. Here 1t was
taken a year later, in 7 BC. as a
l'Oncess1on to Herod and the J ews
he ruled, for they were greatly
prejudjced against any attempt to
number the people.
The actual birthdate of Jesus is
a bit harder to pinpoint, but since
one scientist in the article ts an
astrophys1c1st, he 1s probably
aware of the extraordinary con-
junction of the planets Jupiter and
Saturn m the const.elJauon of
Pisces on May 29. 7 BC Similar
conjunction occurred on Sept. 29
and Dec 5 of lhe same year. This
phenomenon accounts for the
so-called bnght ''star of BethJe-
hem."
Many re)jgious scholars beUeve
Jesus was bom in the SUJTU'Tler
months. which accounted for
heavy travel and an overcrowded
mn. more likely in the month of
August
We do know. however, that in
354 AD some Western churches,
mcluding those of Rome cel-
ebrated J esus' birth on December
MAllBDX
25, which was erroneously calcu-
lated as the winter solstice, the
shortest day of the yf!ar
Since Mithraism was the largest
religious cult of the ume, Ot.'l-
ebrating as 1t did the "natahs
invicti solis''. or birthday or the
unconquered sun, the apostle Paul
and other early Christian leaders
were able to win over the better
half of its adherents LO Chns-
t1aruty by estabhshmg Jesus'
birthday celebration on the same
day.
The F.astem Churches re-
mained loyal to Jan 6 and charged
their West.em brethern with sun
worship and idolatry.
Establishing Jesus' death is a bit
easier than his birth, but not by
much.
Luke states that "Jesus was
baptized in the 15th year of the
rule of Emperor Tiberius: Pontius
Pilate was Governor of Judea"
(Luke 3:1). This would appear to
be AD 29, since Augustus died tn
AD H : however, it should be
recalled that Tiberius was
co-emperor with Augustus for
two and one-hall years before the
death of Augustus, having coins
struck in his honor in October, AD
11. The 15th year of hls actuaJ rule
was the year AD 26, that of Jesus'
bapusm. Thts was the same year
that Pontius Pilate began his rule
as Governor of Judea. Jesus was
then almost 31 'h years old at the
tsme of his baptism in
mid-January. AD 26
Jesus left John the Baptts t near
Pela in February, AD 26, never to
see him again in the flesh. Later in
June of that year, Jesus picked the
first six apostles: Andrew. Peter.
James. John, Philip a nd
Nathaniel. They m tum picked
the second six: Matthew, Thomas.
James and Judas Alpheaus
(twLOS). Judas Iscariot and ~1mon
Zeolotes. They ministered three
and one half years until April AD
30. The Last Supper was held in
an upper chamber in the home of
John Mark's parents, Elijah and
Mary Mark.
Jesus was crucified on Apnl 7,
AD 30. Just before 3 o'clock
Friday afternoon. he cried out
with a loud voice, "It lS finished!
Father, into your hands I com-
mend my spint." His mortal life
ended a few months short of 36
years.
WALTER ZlGLAR
Corona del Mar
In d e f en se of Mr. M eese
To the Editor:
Mr. Wright's editorial cartoon
on the editorial page of Monday,
Dec. 19, leaves a lot to be desired.
Hopefully that does not reflect
your editorial position on the Pilot
( trUSt that the Pilot doesn't mean
to put words in the mouth of
F.dwin Meese as Mr. Wright did
JIM deBOOM
Newport Beach
l. M. BDJd !Newl ywed gift
Did you ever read Gustave
Flaubert's "Madame Bovary"?
Our Love and War man notes the
government of France has seen fit
to give this great novel to all
newlyweds there. Not sure a book
about adultery is appropnate for
the occasion. Bul il's the thought
that rounts, anyway.
Young lady. 1f you irtsist on a
gentleman fnend who's at least 6
feet tall, you'll have to eliminate
82 percent of the candidates.
That car most stolen of late is
the two-door Ford Mustang. Sec-
ond is the Chevrolet Monte Carlo.
The Buick Regal winds up third.
Fourth is the Chevy Camara.
Oldsmobile Cutlass comes m fifth.
And the thieves put the Pontiac
Grand Pnx sixth.
Q. What does 1t cost to get a
lawyer to execute an uncontested
divorce?
A. About $150 an hour ii typical
now. Less than It would COil to
execute the lawyer, at any rate
ln Washington, D.C., only 8
percent of the public defender's
felony c.ases ever go to trial. Plea
bargaining disposes of moet. Mia-
ll'ial rulings take care of t he rest.
Q. What was Albert Einstein
doing for e living at the time he
revolutionized phystca with hill
OAAHOE COAST
three h1Storic papers m 1905?
A. Clerking in a Swis.1 patent
office. Took him another five
years to get an underpaid
professorship at the University of
Zurich. But he never did sweat the
money matters much.
More flower seeds come from
Lompoc than from anyplace else
in the world.
Oriental men of old wore san-
dals they could kick off easily. so
could practice foot-fighting
without deadly damage. But
norther I y pioneer men on this side
of the Pacific wore laced boots,
mostly, so dared not practice such
combat for fear ot inClictmg
serious harm. That's said to be
why the feet are such si,gnificant
weapons in the Far Eut. but not to
in the Western world.
Claim ia only about 150 com-
puter pf'OIJ'a.mmers deligned aU
the \rideo pmes on the matket,
and most of thne 150 have~
multl-mllllonaires therefor.
There are dog tninera In Oreat
Britain who make 10mething of a
Uving just teaching pups how to
find lOt'lt golf balla.
Did you make 779 phone calls wt year? That'• uld to be
a~rage.
H.L .... •lftl • ~
~...:..-:.----·----· 0.--· 4 1 ............ C'Allll-. CA .....
UnyD ...... ........ .... .
WASHINGTON -Co~ is
in the midst of its favorite holiday
task: stuffing the turkey with
extravagant, unnecessary con-
struction pro,ects that will C05t the
taxpayers billions
My associates Corky Johnson
and Donald Goldberg have com-
piled a list or the more outrageous
suspects in th.is annua1 raid on the
Treasury. They're enough to give
any taxpayer a pre-New Year's
headache:
-The Narrows Unit. a dam and
irrigation project on the South
Platte River. IS my nominee for
the boondoggle of the year. At a
cost of just under $400 million, it is
supposed to supply water to a few
farmers Ln northeastern Colorado.
Critics both in and out of govern-
ment say the Narrows is bad news
economically and environmental-
ly.
The lntenor Department's Bu-
reau of Reclamation claims the
pro,ect's cost-benefit ratio beats
the break-even mark. But the
Office of Management and
Budget disagrees. Some critics say
the Narrows would return le-M
than 50 cents in benefits for every
dollar 1t costs
Environmenta.hst.s predict that
construction will be a disaster for
several rare species of birds that
use the area's wetlands on their
migratory lights each year. "It is
our biological op1ruon that the
Narrows Unit is likely to jeop-
a.rdu.e the continued existence of
the whooping crane," a Fish and
Wildlife Service memo warns.
The whooping crane IS already an
endangered species.
In addjtion, the Environmental
Protecuon Agency has warned
that waste runoff caused by the
Narrows project will cause serious
water problems. EPA sources say
the Reclamation Bureau refuses to
cooperate in any attempt to solve
this problem.
Finally, engineers found flaws
in the original design that will cost
a bundle to correct. Congressional
inve-3tigators are checking the
blueprint& to make sure the dam
will be safe if it's built.
-Another Reclamation Bu-
reau boondoggle has drawn fire
from the EPA. The Arumas-La
Plata imgation project is intended
to provide water to farmers in
Colorado and New Mexico. at a
<Xl8t of about $550 million. But~
EPA points out that one-fourth of
the Cannland IS out of production
under the government's PIK
subsidy program. Th~ plan also
OLD SANTA.
MELLI YOU'RE
fR1lZ ~l»lE !
calls for pumping trngation water
from a site near uranium wast.es.
-Rep. Gene Snyder, R-Ky .. a
veteran member of the Publit.•
Works Comrruttee. is trying des-
perately to snare a $200 million
dam for his constituents. Ken-
tucky doesn't want the Falmouth
Darn, south of Cincinnati, and
refuses to pay its share of the cost
So Snyder is trying to have the
federal government pay it all
The dam is justified as a
flood-<X>ntrol measure, but critics
say a floodwall would do a better
job at one-tenth the price. Army
engineers' figures show the
Falmouth Dam would destroy up
to 9,000 acres of prime farmland ,
part of a state park and two
wildlife refuges, and would dis-
place as many as 500 families.
-Reps. Tom Bevill, D-Ala ..
and Jamie Whjtt.en, D-Miss ..
powerhouses on the Appropria-
tions Committee, tacked $9.4
million for the Appalachian Re-
gional Commission'• highway
program onto the supplemental
funding bill. The money will be
spent on roads in -where else? -
Alabama and Mississippi.
Cttlzens' Watcb: Thousands of
Americans have joined my
Citizens' Watch to help spot
incidents that should be reported.
Here's a dispatch from one of
them, James Franklin of Los
Angeles:
"My work lakes me into some of
the smpovertshed areas of Los
Angeles, where I see the poor as
they reaJJy are Sad to say. Ed
Meese was absolutely nght when
he saJd a lot of people go to soup
k1tchens 'because the food is free'
and 'that's easier than paying for
It •
"The media seems to have lhe
romanuc· idea (you included) that
all the poor are noble but neglect-
ed victims of society Some of
them are, but some of them are
not.
"I can tell you from years of
observatum that the lower class is
populated with people of all kmds.
Some are long-suffering souls
who deserve a bt'tter break. Some
have psychological problems: they
are the chroruc rrusfit.s you find on
the streets. But some are simply
unwilling to improve themselves,
unwilling to work for a living.
''They go around with their
handa out, becauae lt'a easier than
paying their own way. Yes, I have
seen people line up for a free meal
because it beats paying for 1t. The
same people have tu.med down
offers to go to work or to learn
skills.
"But in the spirit of the
Chnstmas season. I suU think we
should give to the poor and allow
them the benefit of the doubt.'"
Gracious dining ala Rooney
This is the best time of year in
our refrigerator. Between the
leftovers from Christmas dinner
and the leftovers from dinner
Christmas Eve. it's full of cold
ham, turkey, creamed onions,
mashed potatoes and stuffing.
For all the advice we're always
getting on how to prepare various
dishes for these holidays, no one
ever gives us any recipes for
making leftover meals. I mean,
how to prepare a leftover meal in
the first place.
Many of us probably agree that
most of the Christmas dinner is
better eaten as leftovers during
the week between Christmas and
New Year's than it was when we
had it on Christmas Day. Why
can't I make turkey stuJCing that
tastes as good the first day aa 1t
does several days later?
I even like cold turkey better
than hot turkey. The whole idea
of getting the turkey out of the
refrigerator and cutting yourself a
couple of pieces is much more
appealing than having it served to
you on a plate along with every-
thing else. A cold turkey sandwich
and a Coke or a cold beer in the
living room ln front of a good
football game is the best turkey
gets.
We always have mashed pop-
tat.oes for Christmas dinner. I love
to make a hamburger-like patty
, .....
-.N-DY-RD-ON_IY_ ........ ~
out of leftover mashed potatoes
and fry it in butt.er until it's brown
on both sides. To tell you the truth,
(can't think of a single item on our
Christmas menu that isn't better
two days later.
h's probably a good thing that
we don't know too much about the
chemistry of leftovers. I suppoee if
some of them were put under a
mic:ro9COpe, ltcould be determined
that the enhanced taste of some
An abuse of public funds
By R~p. Robert Badlaam
Tax funds are riot taken frOm
your pocket to be Uled for lobby-
ing or political purpoees, yet the
Legal Services C.Orporatlon haa
been engagina in all manner of
illegal actlvitls for yean and
CcniJ't!SI, it t1eema, ia poWttlelB to
put a stop to th8e practice.
In 1plt.e of Jaws expremly atat-
1.ng that public funda may not be
uted to lobby government at any
level. or be Uled for c1MI llCt1on
eulw or Other devic8 to~ or
affect IOdal wUqt. the Ltpi
Services c.orporatlOn h.u beoeon
aettinaaway wtth th.la for 10 )'Ml'I
and It appean that It wtU 80 on th.ia
way until the corporation la
abolllhed or sut>.titut.ed with an
organhation that reaponda to the
law.
I h.ave no objecUon to the I'll ti.mate funding of a Jepl body
for the exPJ'ell pufllC* ol provid· •nc eervklel for the poor. But
when that body UMI lhoM funda
to chan&1nl the llOClaJ S\Ncture of
the Unf\tef Sta• without belp-lna the poor, ~ l part campe.ny.
Th.11ctMdt1 wen uncovered
ln ~t hHrtnp by the Labor
and Human Reeou.rc.w Commit..
\ee:
• L8C neoun;iee were uad to
tdvocata • pub)k polky of fiah~
-
lng threatened budget cut..1 in the
Legal ServiC'.8 Corporation and
other federal 90Cial benefit and
entitlement prosrams.
• The LSC created an outside
lobbying group to coordinate
survival of the program through a
national lelter-wriU1ng campaign
and development of a IJ'Ull'OOtl
network.
• LSC publlcationa included
advocacy of cMl dllobec:tlenoe,
lntimidaUon and mucJaaktna .. a
means to embuTMI opponentl of
community acdon IJ"OUP'·
• Dummy corporatlonl were
formed and f~ to avoid
adheriJllto~ proh.lbi-
tiOlll &galmt lobbying.
• California Legal ~
programs 1pent an eetimat.ed
'100,000 in taxpayer money to
lobby .,a1n1t Howard J~
Propoe{Uon 9.
The. efforu ao tar beyond
lllmple PfOlrUD .tvoc.ry by
qendel of the aowrnment or budaet requeeta which come ln
hiab and we allited few Nduction.
Whn'I fundlna for LeoJ 8ervklll
Corporation came to L6e ~
th1I year. ~ dahtenlne
Nl1l"lctbw on ..-of L9C f\.anda
WU t.ncluded In \he b01. which
~.18andw•Qnedby ~P'l-'rt.nt Reepn on Nov. 28.
appropriating $275 million for the
corporation:
Here are the restrictions:
• Clus action suits are restricted
to instances where a ttempts to
re90lve disputes without ligitation
have failed.
• Lobbying cannot be part of a
coordinated effort and all ap-
propriate avenues of judicial and
.mn1niltrative relief muat be ex-
hausted prior to lobbying.
Frankly, l believe that to have
to ao to IUCh 1engtha to require the
bureeucncy and advocacy groupa
to obey &be laww of lhe land ls
ridiculous and it teems to me th•t
the ~ Servicea C.OrporaUon It
., fatally flawed thallt ought to~
eboU.hed outriaht.
Lep1 Servicee lawyera have
been lnvolved In llleaal lobbying
ai.nc_oe incept.ion of the pf'Olt'ami no
matt.er what the Intent of Con·
are-, the LSC people have la·
nored lancu-ge in the law and it
Ra111 that no amount of n w
restrictions pl.aced on the LSC will
~ ~ todo ls.cr9p the
who&e procnm and come up with
MJmethina DllW \hat. will. Indeed. ~.::.~~nee ry
JJedh#n ,..,,. ..,,,. rite 40ch
~ llfllrift.
leftovers had to do w1lh bacteria.
Some kinds of bact.ena improve
the taste of food. Cheese is the best
example.
We always assume that any-
thing "fresh" is better, but that
isn't aJways true. Everything we
eat or drink has an age at which
it's best consumed. The age varies.
Vegetables should be eat.en as
soon after they're picked as poss-
ible. I always remember m y
mother saying that the rule in her
house, when she was young, was
that the corn wasn't picked until
her mother had the water boiling.
At this time of year. most parts
of the country don't get many
fresh vegetables. What we get
usually comes from Florida or
California. I suppose broccoli,
lettuce. cauliflower, string beans
and celery are at least a week old
by the time they reach our stores.
Even then, though, they're far
better than they are canned or
frozen.
Beer has always puzz.led me. l'm
not much of a beer drinker but
they say beer's best just aft.er it's
made. You'd think beer should
age awhile. Why do they age wine
and not beer?
No one would argu~lhe ~
of fresh eggs. Diners traditionally
have the best ICl'arnbled egga and
lt"I bl'cauae they aell ao many thalt
they always have them fresh We
often keep eggs for weeks in our
refrigerator.
Rice Is m y favorite leftover dish
any t.lme of year. We eat a lot of
rice. I oft.en warm leftover rloe in a
frying pan with butter and throw
in almo.t anything l cnn find.
The one thing we have for
ChrlatmU dJnnu that doesn't age
very well la peppermint candy Ice
cream. We mak,e It ounelvee. U
you make homemade lc:e cream,
lt'a belt to prepare It and then let It
mellow ln the acre~~ for
•few hours tn the freet.er tectlon
of the refrl~rator. If th6't'1 any
left after dinner, we It.ore ft In the
freti.er, but homemade Ice cream
tan't • aood the next day. For-
tuNtely, lhtte tan't UNally much
~
ln anothel' weelt ~'ll have to
atart c:ook1na .,.in, but mean-
while. we're 1Ml'\I ~
r
IN THE SERVICE
Three local Army enhstt.'d men Spec. <b
Ronald N. Thibault and Michael J . Whittler and PFC
Joseph C. Ca1tlllo participated in rt'<.-ent operations in
Grenada with the 82nd Airborne D1v1sion Thibault is
the son of Joseph N Thibault of Huntington Beach;
Whlltll'r 1s the son of Edward and Dianl' Wh1tt1er of
Corona del Mar. and Castillo 1.s the son of Mr and
Mrs Cipriano Castillo of Hunungton Bc.>ach
Airman lst Class Robert S. Thomas, son of David
and Mary Thomas of Mission Vi e.JO. and Airman
Kimberly S. Baumer, daughtl'r of Dt•n1s Baumer of
Costa Mesa, have graduated from thP Air Fon-e
adminis trative specialist cou~ at Kl'<.•sler Air Force
Base. Mass.
lst Lt Kirk 8. Knipp, son of Donald A Knapp of
Costa Mt'Sa and Ann M. Allen of Ne wport Beach , has
been dcrorated with the Army Achievement Medal
at Fort Raley. Kan. Knipp 1s an exl'(·uuve officer with
the lst Battalion, 63rd Armor and a IY81 graduate of
the U S. Military Academy in West Point
Airman Sharon E. Grasmebr, daughtt·r of James
and Doris Grasmehr of Costa Mesa, has arrived for
duty at Bitburg Air Base. West Germany. She is a
financial services specialist with the Joth Tactical
Fighter Wing a nd a 1983 graduate of Cost.a Mesa
High School.
Pvt. Jaime Raygoza, brother of Raul Raygoz.a of
Huntington Beach. has c:ompleted basic.· tra trung at
Fort McClellan. Ala
Justine K. Tanabe, son of Kook1ch1 and Amta
Tanabe of Huntington Beach, has received a
three-year Air Force ROTC scholarship Tanabe 1s a
student at UC Davis and is attending ROTC al Cal
State Sacramento.
Spe<.·. 4 William D. Pfeifer , son of W1l11am and
Carol Pfeifer of Huntington Beach, has arrived for
duty at Fort Campbell. K y . following duty m
Gelnhausen, West Germany. He is a' 1979 graduate of
Edison High School in Huntington Beat·h
Pvt Cynthia A. Miller, daughter of Sam and
Wanda MI1ler of Huntington Beach, has t'Ompleted a
supply course at the U.S. Army Training Center, Fort
Jackson. S.C
.x_"1:1ia~~ ,.Jill.~ ~RAVEL
~ AGENTS CLASS
Begins January 23
Mo1n1ng and E119n.ng Sessoons
Monday througll l'hur$day
Every'lhrng you neeo-•nclod•no compute< 1ra•n•ng ano
olacemenl ass•slance-to oecome a proress·ona1 travel
agen1
800 W l<ATELLA •ACROSS FROM OISNEYLANO
CALL 17141 "9-8900
REDUCE TODAY'S moo COST OP DYING
CREMATION -BUKIAL AT SEA
Today the 1verace funeral costs $2, 500.00.
The Neptune Society offers simple and dlCJllfted
crematloft wtth burial at su, mountains or desert.
Sodll Sec:urtty and Veterans Death Benefits will
cover most of our complete tervlce cotts. We are the
larcest cremation society In the n1tlon with 19 fully
licen.ed offlcet to serve you.
Our tervk:e Is available to 111 If you need lmmedllte
Mrvkle, or wtsh membershlp.fnformatlon, ple1se all
orwrlteto:
646-7 431 124 HOURSI
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Miiie n&~IOOCTY
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Olp C.-. .,._,CA ~7 u...,,.. °""°'9 MATIOMWIM CDI ..
. ,.
4
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday. December 29, 1983 .\ 7
Capo City Hall
a cat house?
By the Auoclated Preu
I ln San Juan Capistrano. a town best known for
l s~~~~~·~~~-eyed cat l8 king or al least tht:
~ Bier. a black-and-white tom found behind City
Uwtt.,f11t11
Poll shows eyes of Lisa Hartman, Michael
Jackson, President Reagan, Alan Thicke
and Barbara Walters have it.
all in a Dumpster, moved in three years ago and has
l'e been named San Juan Capistrano's official
asc.'Ot and mouse catc:h~r.
"He does think City Hall is a cal house," quipped
Councilman Phil Schwartze. "He probably saves the
taxpayers thousands of dollars by mousing the place
But we do try to keep him away from the swallows."
The 12-pound cat IS the first ltvmg soul to enter
the building in the morrung and the Last to leave at
night. Sam Kirkland of the Pubhc Works Depart-
ment keeps B1ff's bowl full of dry food and stops by
on long weekends to check up on the feckless feline.
Biff has the run of City Hall, and he's bff.n
known to disrupt City Council meetings by leaping
onto the council table. Winking, blinking given nod
City workers feed Biff a steady supply of lunch
and alluring." Of Barbara Walters, she said, "Before and dinner leftovers Kentucky Fried Chicken is
she says a word, it's easy to tell she's thoughtful, his favorttt! treat -and chip in for other expenses
intelligent, sensitive and wise. But her eyes say she When B1ff gots1ck from a squirrel bite, a " Baff Health
has been hurt, too, and that's part of her unique . Fund" was set up to pay the vet's bills
LOS ANGELFS (AP) -What do President
Reagan. singer Michael Jackson and talk show host
Alan Ttucke have in common? All three are among
the top vole-getters in the Hollywood Makeup Art.tsts
annual poll of celebrities with the "Most Expressive
Eyes."
-Others in the top five are teleVlSlon newswoman
Barbara Walters and ac~ Lisa Hartman, Danielle
Walker. president of the international organization,
said Wednesday.
"This is the first year we have included men on
our list," said Walker. "But those 'big blues' of Alan
Thicke's on television every night, our president's
sincerity and the mystery behind Michael Jack.son's
dark glasses accounted for more men than women."
Walker srud the group of makeup artists
identifies the public figures whose eyes convery
something special.
She said Lisa Hartman's eyes "are both sensitive
expressiveness." ,--,.----========;...._-==~---
Headlights to mark
drunk driving fatals
Drivers across the country will be asked to turn
on their headllghts Jan. 10 in memory of the
thousands killed this year by drunken drivers and as
a New Year resolution not to dr ink and drive.
Endorsed by the Presidential Comm1ss1on on
Drunk Driving, Resolution Day will also feature the
made-for-TV movie ''License To Kill," the story of a
high school student ktlled by a drunken driver.
LAG LJ NA BEACH
SCHOOL OF ART
Winter Quarter
Jan. 9 -Mar. 17. 1984
< ttrt1ftC..dte OrO<Jrdm m J-•ne Alf·,
O dy ona t: vernn9 Cid\\~"'
J Q•f"qn SIUOC!nl~ d(f "Pl~
Wr11it • PtMwM tor lltocliure
(714) 497-3309
2222 L....-C.nyon Rd.
.............. c.llorlW .. ,
,_...,a., lie......,.. Aeeoc:N9on
of kNa11 of M llnCI o.ig,, (NA&ADI
Warning The Surge on General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Health
SOFT PACK 100s FILTER. MENIHOL 2 mg. "1ar". 0.2 mg. nico11ne
av. per cigarette. FTC Report MAR '83.
NOW IH[ lOWESl Of All BRANDS
Smg Smg 5mg 6mg
2mg
We've got your number.
l
j
l
• .,.. lllit I ........
.\8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 29. 1983
AD STARTS THURS.
AD GOOD TBRU JAN. 4
CLOSED New Yur's; O,ea 9-6111., Ju. Za•
Hey, mom, t1b as •0•1 to l1ti1a1l LUIMr
to see SHORTY I CHEAP CBICIEI at tla111
stores oa S1tu•11, Dece•Mr lht
LA MIRADA 9:30 to 12
DIAMOND BAI 2 to 4:30
HARDWA
ALLTRADE ROLLAWAY
TOOL CABINET WITH
THREE DRAWER CREST 2688
KR TOOLS
UTILITY KNIFE 99c •UK-7
7 PC. NUTDRNER SET 99c tCCND -7
HACK SAW l"•l·HSF
2 29
•7020
NO RAlN
C.HECKS
L\MITE.b
G>t,JANTITI ES
J 4 PC. TUNE -UP KIT
TORQUE WRENCH 2 •• 'f'Wf1J'I. A FURNITURE AND WALLPAPER YARD
ALL STEEL 599
FOLDING CHAIR
BI-GLASS SIMULATED LEADED
GLASS ENTRY DOORS 7788 LAU AN
Moch.a brown eNUneled finhh, with front and~ 1-9 brace. You
prob.hly Nn'\ember th.-from hi9h ech.ool -mbu-. ( Oh, you u.-d
--------------toditch?) OAK 97••
JOHNSON PET 599 ~ ALLTIADE 599 DOR GARD · ~f STEP-MATE
Solid state alarm mount. on Pet-Dor. I Folcla up for storage and holcla
uses 9 volt battery (not included). up to 280 U.., which mean.a rnoet of ua can u..M it.
_g RLM WRITE VllYL
~ COATED PLAIT STAIDS
rJ . 649
EA.
Get an upright, circular or three ahelf
stand to show off your green thumb.
OCELLO
RLM VINYL
COATED WIRE 499
TROLLEY CART
STIOIC IOY 500'l OIT TRASB IAGS -,o~
BIUI DELUD 1 ft97
DUWD SYSTEM V~. BIG-0-PACK 49c
SPONGES EA. Tough pla.stic drawer with all .teel alid•,
fit. in or under cabinet..
Nice 80lid core doon, 1 ~ "z36"z6'8". (I told my doctor that
e .... ry bone in my body hurt. He Mid I should be glad I'm not a
herring.)
50%~~ £RECTO-PAT
BAIDWAU DICK KIT
ELECTRICAL
EVEREADY
C 01 D 11119c
BATTEIJESll EA
PHONES
w.AIY on PllCI DJCTIOIIC PBOIE 4••
HONEYWELL SET· IACI
THERMOSTATS
HEATING ONLY
HEATING/COOLING
49~
Sr.!1A
AQUASTIEAM
WASBEIJ.ESS FAUCETS
SllGLE BAIDLE
llTCBEI 01 SllGLE 14" BAIDLE LAVATOIY
WITH POP. UP tm1
YOUR CHOICE oa tG>l
DAftlOl/POITLAID 12" ILACI I WHITE
TELmllOI 4•• ()ulcll start pictun tube and 100% eolid state cha..ia. U Santa
c:Ucln't come through, you'r. atill in luck.
WIPER BLADE 2 GAL. AT SALE PRICE . 7 .78
OR PAIR 01 unLLS ~~=-INREBATE -a.oo GARDEN
ArrER REBATE FOR 2 GAL. 1.78 DOUGLAS HOSE REELS IAIE22" SPlllG IACI 2 7'88227
------------. OR 2.89 GAL. 13••
WINIDAY/ 699 t------7---7 ................. c---. == 1a·•·l87 JOll'SFDTRIDIPllD
NIGHT MlbOI CAITIOL 30 WT. 23a1·113
PAKOF 9 1 17 ~· or~~·'
8" or 10" model. Ju.t flip it. to cut th. •OTOI OIL ,__ FROJn' LOAD CART IU
1
·• .... __. f.UU.. ti.at .... ~ ,..,.
glare from the h .. dliqhu of thoee tall v.a 0.... Inn\ !)wwww•-,.,_ • Fnait ,.,_ . 99c _,.,_ . ..,.... gaton. JI" IAJllOO 01£ Z-To:\g~: JACI =r• 1° -1 3! ~~~J-899
aow 11111 99 c·
.. UIAl'I I. 4 4 ratlLllDI 1~ LB. Tiii.a --Go.& .... ,_ the ·='917· Pick Hou.plent Foocl. ~xn ao.t., Deep Wiii 11 QI. •A-1118 ~ • a-..1 Pw,irrn
'·' . ·--
r --------------------·---·------
llllJPllll
THURSDAY, DFCEMBER ~9. 1983
ANN LANDERS 82
Ill CUii 1111 THI caum TELEVISION 83
t·t1 rly 2 0 11a111t>s ure cranuned iruo 1-Jds for
tht> n1ovit• "Chris tin1-," and son1e filtn
i11tl11s1ry cxe('uli v~s say the cascade of credits
i.i; us out of <·ontrol as tl1 e movie'·" murderous
PJ.r111outl1 edan. St>t• 83.
0
a
COMICS 84
'Keep drinking -you'll never get a
hangover
-Pay Kelly, director of American
Bartender School'
The hangover
There is still no cure
By SUSAN MONAHAN
Dallr Piiot c ..... ._-n1
It's the morning after and many people who last ntght thought
that a bacc·ha na han revel once a yt•a r eouldn't hurt are rapidly
changing their minds.
While some may be stmdy enduring a throbbing headache and a
churning stomach, others are e ither employing a hangover remt'<iy or
desperately searching for one
"Every few years you will hear of somethmg that will relieve
hangovers (But) 1f there was a cure for hangovers. people would
know about 1t and use 1t," said Dr Richard Lang, assist.ant medical
director of CareUmt Hosp1t.aJ , Tustin
This may be true, but there 1s no short.age of pet theories on the
c ure and prevention o{ hangovers.
"Ket>p drinking -you'll never get a hangover." said P at Kelly.
director of the American Bartenders School. Santa Ana.
He admitted, however. that he once tried a hair-of-the-dog re<:1pe
-Malort {a Polish liqueur) chased with a warm glass of btt-r wllh
disasterous results.
Kelly hasn't tried them all. but m hts business. he hears about
most of them "A lot of hard drinking businessmen carry a bri<'fcase
filled with B-12 and an oxygen tank," he said
Those who would find this too cumbersome might want to try
AJka Seltzer dissolved mice-cold 7Up "A lot of people swear by 11," he
said.
Kelly said drinkers should try mixing th<'ir ltquor with watt>r or
plain soda rather than a sugary beverage. Not only does this da-rease
the Li kit hood of a hangover. he said, ll also inhibits the speed at which
the alcohol ts absorbed.
Patty Champy and Don Osborne. bartenders at Lakewood
Country Club. Lakewood, laughed when asked what would c·ure a
hangover Nothing. they said. Then they described thetr own
antidotes
"I get fresh air lots of oxygen m the lungs." said Champy
"Three aspirin and a glass of milk before I go to bt-d," said
Osborne.
Both advised against consuming more alcohol "That JUSl prolongs
1t," said Osborne
Hesa1d that a m1xtUre of orang<' JU1ce. a raw egg and tabascosauce
IS an old and popular remedy Perhaps the very thought of drinking
such a concoction 1s enough to distract someone from the misery of the
hangover?
"If 1t works at all. it's probably tx'C'ause the tabasco has alcohol m
1t," said Osborne "You could drink a bottle of LtSterine and get the
same effect."
He said that some people hyperventilate into a brown paper bag.
apparently believing that the carbon dlox1de produced w1U ease the
pain. "Of course. that's just the opposite of what Patty suggested," he
said. "We ll . whatever works for vou ''
Not all of 'he remedies are this unpleasant. S wallowing honey or
haVlng a morning after breakfast o{ menudo (tnpe) are treatments
PAPARAZZI
Hosts Nita and John
asnd Steve Loe hr.
that may appeal to the less masoch1St1c hangover v1ctm\S
While some of these folk remedies may be based on wishful
thinking. others sec:•m to be at least partially grounded m fact.
Dr. William L Thomas. a phys1c1an at CareUmt. says that if
vitamin B-12 helps. the value 1s probably psychological. He added.
however. that a good B l'Omplex. and espedally B-1. may shorten the
duration of a hangovt'r
Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw, authors of "Life Extension"
write that the cysteine tan amino acid) ma raw egg and the vitamin C
m orange JUI C't' ma y lessen hangover symptoms
There haVl' also been studies which indicate that English evening
primrose 011, a nutritional supplement. may help to ward off a
hangover.
The tht'Ury is that the gamma-lmohmc acid (GLA) which 1s m
primrose 011 <:an rl'plat.-e the GLA m the body which 1s depleted by
alcohol. GLA. e1n ('SS('nt1al fatty acid. IS needed to produce a substance
known as prostaglandm EL. which 1s required to keep the body
ht>ahhv. A~'<.:ording to S(>rne scientists. 1£ the 011. which is available m
capsules. 1s taken aft<'r drinking and before bed, a hangover can be
avoided.
"It works. but you've got to take a lot of it and it's expensive," said
Peggy Payne, a nutriuomst at Fern's Nutr1t1on Center, Buena Park.
She added that almost any oil. taken before and after drinlung.
can help prevent dlS(:omfort the next day.
Payne also recommended doses of magnesium, potassium and a B
complex to restore the nutrients robbed by the akohol.
"I usually tell people not to overdo it, but 1f you're going to drink,
at least you t:an protect yourself," she said "Eating something helps
block the f'ffec·ts of akohol. It's like time-releasing the alcohol."
Another holiday party
Fur coats-are favorite attire Marilyn Nielsen with Warren and Joann Fix.
Others on the guest list we re Tony
and Ken Oliphant, the David Tappan•,
Tom and Tommie Wilek and William
Lee, museum director.
• r
Metalsmith
A trip through history
By CHRIS DAHL
A1MClelM Pfff• Writ ..
WILTON, Conn. -Kenne th Lynch was hammering m his shop
one late afternoon some 50 years ago when a large man wearing a tan
gabardine suit stepped from a s hiny black, chauffeured car
The stranger asked the master metalsmith to fashion him a new
SUit
"He asked ho w much 1t would cost to build a suit of armor in thf'
s tyle of William the Conqueror," the robust Irishman recalls
The men agreed on a prke of $1 5,000 and Lynch fill~ the I Ith
century-style suit to the caUer's specifications.
Three months passed and the man returned to Lynch's shop in
LOng Island City, N.Y .. to pick up his armor. A week later, he was back
again to lodge a eomplaint. It seems his armor was chafing.
Lynch says he was astounded that the man had been wearing the
armor Why would he torture hunself, he asked.
"The man looked around and said, 'Well. you nught as well know.
You see. I am Wilham the Conqueror ,'" Lynch recalled. suppressing a
chuckle
ln his 77 years. Lynch's work has taken tum on many trips back
thro ugh history, from his madcap meeting with the delusive Engll11h
monarch to some more recent repair work on artifacts that shaped the
building of the United States.
He was commissioned on short notice to make 8,000 park benches
for the 1939-40 New York World's Fair in Flushing. His biggest
a rmory job was in 1937 when he made several score of chain mail,
breast plates, swords, helmets a nd shields for Cedl B. de Mille's ep1<.·
movie, ''The Crusaders."
Lynch has become a master storyteller, too.
Now, he says age has hm1ted hJS activity. In addiuon, he's been
having trouble breathing because he fell off his mount and broke a few
ribs while riding recently.
"The horse just bolted,'' he explains, embarrassed that a former
cavalryman could have such an accident.
So, Lynch no longer climbs the tall ladders and pounds away at
red-hot metal in th e shop as he once did.
"At my age I'm the problem -solver," he says, pomtmgout proudly
that "there's little we haven't been able to solve over the years "
Whe n the weathervane fell from the Old North Church in Boston.
Lynch was brought in to replace it. When the Statue of Liberty was
becoming worn in the 1920s. ll was Lynch who gave Miss Liberty a
facebft -hanging from a scaffold 300 feet in the air.
Currently. Lynch has been devoting his ume to a $1 0,000
weathervane that will top a building in Atlanta. He's being consulted
on the restructuring of the Statue of Liberty that began recently and
the rest.oration of Ellis Island.
"If you can draw it, we can make it," he says, redting his
word-of-mouth advertising slogan. However. Lynch 1s concerned that
his craft is dying.
"We're the last firm in the world that can do all of this," he says,
mournful about the lack of competition. "It's an old art "
• Lynch evolved with his craft. His father was the master
blacksmith at Yale University when Lynch was born in New Haven.
HIS family moved to Wilton m 1908 and Lynch says that since then. the
firm has grown through "adding and adding and adding."
Lynch says he soon realized that the demand for ho~hoemg
would diminish. so he moved into other areas of metalsm1thmg -
foundry work as well as re pousse, the craft of forming objects in rt-he{
by beating on metal from underneath.
Advertising pays
Her answer was 'yes'
PITTSFIELD, Mass. (AP)
pays. Ask Brian Anderson
Adverusmg
Anderson, a 25-year-old Pittsfield native now
living in Houston, knew his girlfriend, Noreen
McGuigan, 23, also of Houston, would be visiting
her parents in Pittsfield over the Christmas
holidays. so he bought space on a billboard on
Rout.e 20 leading into the city to ask "Dear Nor.
Will you marry me?"
At first she didn't even notice the placard.
decorated with pictures of cats climbing a
Christmas wreath and wearing stocking caps,
Anderson said.
He said he had to drive right up to the
billboard and pull off the road before she got the
message. .
"l was trying to get over the shock of seeing
the sign and Brian said 'Well, you didn't answer
yet,'" McGuigan said. •
The answer was "Yes.' and the couple say
they will be married next summer
Metallic creations
STRATFORD, Wash. (AP) -Ray Strouf, a
54-year-old wheat and alfalfa farmer, has found
some new uses for those odds and ends of
machinery you see lying around farms.
He estimates he's created up to 40 metallic
creations. He says the "monster" is his master-
piece. It's 19 feet long. 7 feet tall. with body made
from a hot water tank, legs and neck of irrigation
pipe, a chunk of cable for a tail and a head made
from two oil pans.
"I had it in my mind what it should look like,"
he said. "I saw pictures in magazines and in
cartoona.''
Next to the "monster" on Strouf's front lawn
ia an "alligator.'' Its body is a hot water tank
covered with "scales" from 210 sickle sections.
Strouf says he's been working with his
welder's torch since 1967, when he began
combining olp metal objecta on his 350-acre farm
about 15 miles northeast of Ephrata.
Besides the pleasure it gives him, his hobby Is
al.BO cheap. "It's all junk," he said .
r
I
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8 2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 29, 1983
EIMA BOMBECI Letter of rebuttal: Writer backs counseling advice
'I AT WIT'S END
Civilization
runs on gadgets
My husband .md I haw alw::iys loved antiques.
Wt• will buy anything that is 10 years older than we
art'
Actually, (1ur rornance blossomed at an antique
show when wt• lookro at ont' another over a little
wood£'n box with a cutting blade and uttered those
thrl"t.' little words. "What 1s it?"
Tl'(.•hnology bt.>mg what 1t 1s, I t'Ouldn't help but
spt'('ulatt.' about the antique-lovers of the future. I can
JUst St.'(.' a couple poking through an armory full of
memorabilia m 2040
· "What 1s 1t?" asks lngr1d, p1ckm~ up two pieces
of plastic ronne<:ted by a string. •
"(l's a t'Ordless phone," says Max.
"What did they use it for?"
"The way I understand it, you t'Ould talk on this
whil<' you cut your grass, washed your car , played
tC'nnis or work('Ci in your garage."
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your C.'Olumn stinks.
Every time you run Into a problem you can't handle
you say, "Get t'OunseUng." Any dummy can say "get
rounsehng1' instead of coming up with a solution.
Why don't you hang it up, old girl? You're
getllng too old Cor the job. -HIP IN G RAND
FORKS
DEAR GRAND: So long, pal, but before you 101
please read one more: • • • DEAR ANN: Herc's a follow-up to a letter l
wrote two years ago. I signed myself "Crushed and
Confused."
My husband was determined to have an affair
and wanted my approval. l saw myself as a helpless
victim with five children and no employment skills. I
wrote for advice. You said, "Get counseling." I
ignored your suggestion until l made a suicide
attempt. That frightened me and 1 decided to take
your advice.
After a year wtth a competent counselor I feel
good about myself for the first time in my life. I am
able to ~ which problems belong to whom. I no
longer assume that every failure is mine.
We still aren't divorced, but I am no longer
terrified. I have set limits for my husband. If he goes
beyond them I am prepared to end this marriage. It
will not be easy, but I am strong enough to·handle it.
QANN WIDllS
Bless you for telling me to get rounseling, Ann. It
headed me in the direction I needed to go. Without
you l wouldn't have done it. -OMAHA
DEAR 0.: Thanks for le tting me know. P .S. J
applaud your courage. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: As a first-year law
student (Michigan) I feel I must respond t.o the issue
raised by "Proud of Minnesota" in regard to the
moral and legal responsibility involved m giving aid
to a person m distress.
According to law. once a party voluntarily begms
to render aid he must proceed with reasonable care
and may not abandon the person unttl he or she is
assured there IS no further danger. Th is 1mposesqu1te
a burden on the kind-hearted soul.
Today's courts have made it quite hazardous for
those who are in a position to lend assistance. Far too
many times the rescuer is hit with a lawsuit filed by
the person he or she tried t.o help
Perhaps ''ProUd" should check to see if
Minnesota has adopted a law giving lmmunlty to
re1S<:uers, aadoea Vermont. Vermont wisely did this to
encourage by11tanders to render aid free from the
threat of lawl\lits. Until similar lawa are puaed in
every state I, too, might -THINK TWICE
DEAR TWICE: Your facts are correct H stated.
Thanks for dolng yoar homework. You will be a
mighty floe lawyer one day. And wlleo that day
comes, I hope you wlll give some time to Legal AJd,
an extremely worthwhile agency that bandies le1al
matters for lndlvlduals who cannot afford an
attorney.
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: No problem, just a little
advice l hope you will pass on. Please tell parents to
treat their children the same way they wish their
parents had treated them when they were growing
up. -FLORIDIAN
DEAR FLOR: Excellent advice. Thanks for
sitting lD my chair today.
• • • Is alcoholism r uining your life? Know the danger
signals and what to do. Read the book let, "Alcoholism
-Hope and Help," by Ann Landers. Enclose50cents
with your request and a long , stamped,
self-addr essed envelope to Ann Landers, P 0 . &x
11995, Chicago, l/1. 60611.
"Why would you want to do that?" asks Ingrid.
"To keep up." says Max "Look at this. Do you
know what it 1s?" r ngnd picks up a bracelet w1 th a small opening in
1t ··1 haven't the foggiest," she says
Deep depression ••• Condition often misdiagnosed
"It's a small TV set." DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: My Cather's health
··t thought they were bigger " has failed during the past six months. He is now 79,
"No. this was for when you were dnvmg to work but until recently, looked no more than 60. Not only
or taking a bath or sitting at a ballgame and wanted to does he look old, but he feels old. He has lost interest
see another game that was bemg played somewhere in all of us He used to dote on his grandchildren, but
else." now pays them little interest or attention. He has
··Why would they want to do that?" asks Ingrid. little appetite and has lost weight. He sleeps poorly.
"To keep up," says Max He just sits and sits.
lngnd and Max browse through portable Sometimes he reads, but mostly he does nothing.
computers that you propped up m front of you as you Our doctor thinks he has been having some damage m
traveled on an airplane or relaxed at the beach. They his brain. He calls 1 t Alzheuner's disease. There's little
t.>xarrunc the cordles.s toothbrushes and little ashtrays or nothing to do for it. he says. The doctor has had my
that made smoke disappear. dad m the hospital for over a week lately to study his
Finally, Max becomes intrigued with a pair of oond1uon.Hecanfindnothingelsewrong physically.
headphones that make him look hke a man from I think he has overlooked something important.
outer Spa('(> All this deterioration seemed to start within a week or "HC'y," says Ingrid, "those are listed here m the two after my mother died. He went into a deep
l'atalogue Listen to this: 'A radio built into depression andhasn 'tbeenabletocomeoutofit.Isn't
headphones and worn by children m the '80s day and it possible that loss of his wife (my mother) has
night."' b ted f h. bl ? Ar · th "I der h , .. sa Max oontrt u to most p t IS pro em. en t ere won w ). vs ed" . h . h h 1 ? M M Ingnd shrugs. "To keep up? It's puzzling, .. some m icmes t at nug t e p. rs. .
though, if they had all this stuff, how come the entire DEAR MRS. M.: Depression IS a oommon
c'IV1lizat1on died out?" problem in elderly widowers or widows. Thts should
Max takes off the headphones "The way my be taken mto account before designallng the problem
parents explained 1t to me. their battenes went dead as Alzheimer's disease. Many cases are misdiagnosed.
and they couldn't function anymore ." Yes. there are medications that often help bring
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patients out of a depression. Ask your Cather's doctor
about them.
Elderly pauents who have psychological prob-
lems might be better off seeking treatmen t in a
mental health center than in a hospital. According to
Dr. Barbara Solomon, social work professor. elderly
patients of ten diagnosed as having physical ailments
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chewing gum whenever I took a plane tnp -which
• • • FOR MR. J .. Experiments on animals suggest
there may be some cardiovascular problems after
vasectomy However, there's no evidence now
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&x 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626.
was often . r used to suffer awful pain in my ears when r;:=========:::;;======:;::=~ the plane came down for a landing. l know it's an
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Orange Coast DAILY Pt LO f /Thursday, December 29, 1983 83
TONIGHT'S TV
U~o
Billboard ad for "Christine" movie crammed with nearly
20 different names, reflecting growing credit problem.
Credits out of control
on movie advertising?
HOLL YWOC'f) (AP) -Nearly 20
names are cran1med into ads for lhe
movie "Chrisune," and some film
in d ustry executives say the cascade of
credits is as out of control as the movie's
murderous Plymouth sedan.
The "Christine" ad's prolific prin t
includes th ree mentions each for
qire<-tor John Carpenter and producer
Richard Kobntz; two credits for Step-
hen King. who wrote the book about
the car with lethal urges: and the
names of the associate producer, two
executive producers, one co-producer
and the director of photography.
For all those mov1emakers, credits
represent recognition thetr colleagues
can't nuss as well as fatter future
contracts. But ego ts what prompts
many to fight for their credit hne
"I know my mother will be thrilled
when m y name appears as producer of
'Ele<-tric Guitar,' " Arnold Stiefel says
of his upcoming concert film "Sance
this business 1s populated by over-
achievers who had less than wonderful
childhoods, it's mt-e to get a paid-ad
credit to make up for that ternble year
in the fifth grade."
The studios. which negotiated many
of t he credits into contracts as a form of
non -monetary com pensation, are now
complaininfjt about swelling advertlS-
ing bills, the biggest factor in a recent
push by some t>xec·ut1ves to restrict th~
fine print.
"In most places in the United States,
these names mean li ttle or nothing t.o
the pubhl'," says Paramount Pictures
Chairman Barry Diller "T hey don't
sell any tickets. It's getung a little
silly."
Diller and othe r members of the
Joint Creauve Rights Committee of the
studios and Directors Guild of America
concede the s tudios are partly at fault.
But that d1dn 't stop a group of studio
executives from placing a rl'(:e nt
trade-journal ad urging a reductton in
"the cascade of credits" -a call likely
to generate hot debate at next year's
negotiations with wnters' and direc-
tors' unions.
"This 1s like Detroit, where ma nage-
ment didn't do its JOb and now 1s
screaming." says Naomi Guraan, ex-
e<-uuve director of the Writers Guild of
Amenca. West. "They give away these
credits in negotiations with lawyers
and agenLc; and packagers, and now
they're complaining about 1t."
Diller says his <.'omm1ttee isn't trying
to withhold deservf'd ho nors, "but
w hat is the sense of running a group of
names to which audiences have no
point of reference? The purpose of ads
is to sell the movie. not the egos "
••' .'\"41 I '1 .. I ', •, , •
' c •• ' ( t lit 1 ' .. '\ """"-~~~lid ... ...._T_., C--OO•+ttt\ ... RD
LU XURY THEA TRES
1s1 2 Matt nee Showings 0 nly $2. 75 Unless Noted
113t•U•X•Xutl6l6s~ 2sss 1~~.)
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~~ISlAHO
H 'A "Some Kind Of Heto" (1912)
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"Hltcl ~. Hatcl SOec>" ( 19781 l.111-
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-12:40-
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• • \+ ''The Kid From Lllft Field"
( 19791 Gaty Coltmen, Ed McMlllOn
(CJMOYIE
• \+ "The Sea IMdline" 119781
AgostinaW
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11.fflJNE TO A OYltO WOAlD
HOTTMa<S
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U 14 "Olfly Htndl" 1197S) Roel
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-1:30-0 MMf TYLER MOORE m at HEWS
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IM Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 29, 1983
f~UUHt
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1"1ME
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Gor MY SACK. Gor MY
£YEHOL£5, WHAT M ORE
COULD A CAT Nf.E C??
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THE
•. ..\'Ill\
CIRCl S
by 8 11 Keane
"look! My sled puts borders on my footprints!"
ll \ H ll \ D l K t: oy Brad Anoerson
;·l;ii jr
~ ... ( ~ •• c
"At least Marmaduke likes the lte
I gave you."
I J
'40tJ ~l'f
IJf::EO tJO ~IFOQMS,
>JO TooL~, ~o
mA1k.!1tJ6f
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--------------· ·--·.. . . . .. -. --. ----. --------------------------71-
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
-'
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BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARlfi
It 1' 1mp1"s1hli· lo
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In lh1• r1H1rn wht•r1• N1•w
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cl1Jm11n1h duuhl1•1l Thi• t I S
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won th'•· kinl(, lin1·'"'c! lh1·
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Slult·.~ h1·ld th•• North South
r:1rtk W1•"t'ic d11uhl1· of (our
dtt1m11n11' w111o p.1swd uu l.
and 1l loolu•d a' ti th1• 1•on
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and lrn•tl lo draw trump~ w,.,t l(rJh~·d th1· ar1•, lt·d J
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1h1• "'llinl( trirk
South ov..rlookt•c! ;1 rhanr1•
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Artt·r winnilll( 1h1• l'lul"o 1·on
u nuul111n, tt rt"l~ noth1111( to
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h1·.1 ~h 11 ~:J'l produn·' a
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h1•:1rl Now 1l1•1'1art•r ran ml
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lion• hy :cl11 ffinic hill loi1inl(
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.11·1·~ 11( c•lt1h11 .incl tl1:1mond•
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How do you t boott till'
~II OptDilJ kad~ ('llarln
Gore-a t..1 the-H1wer. •·or 1
copy of ~wiDDla1 Optnl•1
Lead•." 1ud '1 .MS to
"GorH·Ll'ad1," nrt of thi1
DfWlpoptr, l'.0. 801 2S9,
Norwood, N.J. 07648. Mab
chtth poyablt to Nl'••
paptrboolle.
by Jeff MacNelly
--~=::::=::1.a1:1111
T~MAGONW
ANNOUNaD T'.4~T 1\.El('Li..
Al.I.OW ~E ~55 'R>GO
ON ~'( RITU~E IW~SIC~
DH \881.•:
W~T 00 iOV
~T TO 00 wME.N
~OU 6ROW IJP,
PA1RIC I( 7
··oR Bt:TTt:R OR ··oa "UHSt:
BES! WISHE.$ FOR R
HAPPY HOltDAY F~
-JOrlN? WHO RRE.
5fRN,G~CHEN .BPR6
AND \<ENNY '?
•·t '" \ \U,K•:RH•: \'
MMM 1 I HIS A L L<X.K~ ~
GCX:>D I !WI ~F~I D {'{'(..( DIET
I~ IN REAl iROL..BlE 1
MAi8€. iou SHOOl.0
fOU.OliJ IN '{~ fA1HE.R'~
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by Kevin F aoan
I IJMAT fi)~~ If 1 010
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by Lynn Johnston
HANG-ot{fo 11 -
IHEY C.OL>LD SE.
RaJ11iv'E.~
by Ferd & Tom Johnson DH. SllO('k ...--.-----------ll•H•' ll l 1.1.1 "-by George Lemont
ASTRO·NAUGHT
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l9 IF YOV DON'T HAVE A
LOVE LETTER IN
T~ERE FOR ME TODAY
l'M 601N6 TO KICK YOU
INTO TME NEXT COlJNTV !~
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by Charles M Schul z
TMAT'S TME ONLY KIND
OF LAN6UA6E A
MAILBOX UNDERSTANDS !
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by Tom K Rya n
i ·v e Go-r A
R1c:>c:>i...t:: FOR YA .1
FOUR DOC'T'"ORS
M ee-r FOR L..UNCH
1'"0 DISCUSS A
t:>IFFICui...-r CAse ...
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CARDIOL..OGIS 1'". A
GYNeCOt...OGISf',
AN IN1'"ESRNIS1'" AND
A SURGeON ! WHI CH ONG PAie:::> IHe e>ll. .. L..;'
AW.CM~ F~N10t ..
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CONCLU?ION~ t
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by Harold Le Doux
1
Cost overruns and high inte rest rates
on nuclear power plant construction
projects have sent electricity rates
soaring across th e country.
Electric rates get nuked
Cost o¥erruns, interest rates on power plants mean money woes
NEW YORK (AP) -Electric rates are gomg up
across the country in giant leaps to pay for
billion-dollar nuclear plants that are years late and
way over budget.
Many utilities are being forced to make no-win
decisions -cancel the costly plants without
generating one watt of electricity or continue paying
the exorbitant cost of construction and interest.
At the two-unit Marble Hill plant in Indiana, for
example. the choice is to abandon with $2.5 billion
spent, or invest at least $5 billion more with no
assurance the reactors will ever operate. And the
company wants its customers to pay more tlan 50
percent more for electricity over the next six years.
With projects up to 12 years behind schedule and
more than 1,000 percent over budget, some utilities
may face bankruptcy no matter what they do.
"Nuclear economics is not for the fainthearted.
The annual C06t overruns alone equal the govern-
ment budgets of many nations," according to a study
released two weeks ago by Worldwatch Institute, an
independent research organization that analyzes
global problems and is ti.n.anced in pan by United
Nations organizations.
Massive construction C06t overruns have
prompted deep concern on Wall Street, where utility
stock prices are plummeting amJ the ratings for
utility bonds have been lowered to speculative
grades, raising the cost of borrowing even more.
Some utilities, including Public Service Com-
pany of New Hampshire, are paying dividends with
borrowed money.
"ln the current climate -political, social and
financial -you cannot rule out the poaibillty of
bankruptcy." said Bill Perrin, a managing director for
the invE!$tl'nen t firm First Boston Corp.
investors are still reeling from last July's $2..25
billion bond default by the Washington Public Power
Supply System, a consortium of 88 utilities that at one
point planned five reactors. The only completed unit
just got a low-power operating license. Two others
were canceled, and it's doubtful the remaining two-
more than half completed -will ever operate
General Public Utilities, the pa.rent owner of the
Three Mile lsland plants in Pennsylvania, hasn't paid
a dividend since November 1979, six months after the
nation's worst comme.roal nuclear accident occurred
there.
Bond ratings have been lowered to speculative
grades for a doum utilities in 10 states: Kansas.
Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
New York. Connecticut, Massachusetts and New
Hampshire.
Other utilities involved in nuclear plant con-
struction are at the brink of aimlla.r financial ills, with
bonds rated at the lowest investment grade.
The common stock of lOutilitiesbuilding nuclear
plants hit new lows for the year last Thursday, the
day after a governor's cornmiaion in Indiana
recommended abandonment of Marble Hill.
Such stock m.acket problems further increase
cost overruns as utilities are forced to pay higher
interest rates to stimulate purchase of their bonds.
"Nuclear power plants completed in the United
States in the next few years will generally cost five to
10 times as much as originally projected -overruns
of more than $2 billion each," World watch said." And
some projects make that figure look like a bargain."
Long Island's Shoreham plant, for example, was
supposed to cost $261 million but will C06t about $4
billion.
Ohio's Zimmer plant was proposed at $240
million and will cost in excess of $3 billion.
The cost of delay can be as high as $1.5 million
per day, mostly for interest payments.
"Spending on nuclear construction in 1983 is
more than one fourth the annual investment in new
plant and equipment of the U.S. manufacturing
sector and over three times that of lhe automobile
industry," said the 81-page Worldwatch report.
ln most cases, utility off.lctals say they'll seek to
have consumers pay the construction bills if nucle.ar
projects are abandoned.
"ll the state refuses to let us get thoee costs back
in a reasonable way, investors will aaswne that
putting their money into any Indiana utility ls risky
business. No one is well served by such a policy,"
warned Hugh A. Barker, chairman of Public Service
of Indiana, which is building the Marble Hill plant.a.
/ Indiana Gov. Robert D. Orr's task force
recommended that the utility's shareholders "abaorb
the substantial portion" of all Marble Hill costa and
that consideration be given to other financial
remedles, including possible elimination of dividends,
before any rate hikes are granted.
But Barker said such conditions would require
the utility to ''risk serioualy impairing our levels of
service to customers and our ability to raise capital."
How to get the best car loan
By SYLVIA PORTER
The 1984 new car models are rolling off the
asaembly lines at a steadily increas-
ing pace. New car sales are reaching
for the 7.5 million-plus annual level.
Detroit generally appears in a
healthy state -and therefore, new
car loans are on the way up, too.
With the minimum price for
new tull-size cars moving toward
the $10,000 mark, it could hardly be
olherwiae. How many of you could
afford to buy without financing?
The answer lies in one statistic: Up to 77 percent of
new car buyers finance their deala.
And lheconflnnatlon lies in other statistics: Auto
loans ¥CJC>unt for a hefty 38.7 percent of consumer
credit, a total of $143,621 out of $371,561 in October.
Longer ownership means trade-in value has declined
in recent yean, which adda (indirectly) to lhe cost of
your new car.
The deal you make on a loan easily may make the
difference between buying a new car or a used car -
or even postponing the whole arrangement. Beware
bein8 lured into accept.Jni the tentlS a smooth car
aaJetman offen. No mantt how allurin& the deal
llOWlda, you often c.an do better on your own.
Your 80W'al9 of JOAN oever a wt~ nuige -
ban.b, oonswner fl.nanoe companies, auto corporate
finance companies, aavt.np and loan ..adationa,
credit unlona.
While different lenden charge according to the
rata prevailing in the regjon, aa a rule, credit unions
oUer the rno.t attractive rata. If you belong to a
credit union, start ahopplna ~t there.
Few lenders offer adjuaiable nateB on conaumer
lnst.all.ment Joana IUCh ~car loans, IO when you shop,
you'll almost eurely be look1na for• fixed-rate loan.
The car i;nanu.fectw'e'a' corporate finance com-
pel\i• -IUCh • General Motors Acctptance Corp.
-can match er more m..n match 1Dme of the rai.ea
other commerda1 lenden offer. The •veraae chaJ'te
on new car loan1 by COi porate finance eomparu. wu
13.~ percll'l\t In October. reponi the Federal Relerve
Board. com~ wt th an •veraae ln&erwt. chare by
oommerdal benlai of 13.46 ln Novembe'r. lnterett
races have~ In• aenenJJ~ ded.ln1nc. althouah
spotty' trend.
Savtnp and &oeM make car loam but chi. &ou.
repre1ent only about 3 peoramt of total S&L -tt
and not all ..adaUona make thml
With the strengthening of the new car sales
market, moreover, IOllle of last year's creative
financin8 arran~ementa have just faded away. (Good
riddance. comment I.)
The standard te.rm for a car loan -no matter
what lender you chooee -runs three or four years.
The average term aelected by bu yen, according to the
Fed, is now 46.2 months. On down payment.a, the
average falla in the 20 percent to 25 percent range.
Obviously, you can aave a significant amount by
ma.king the largest down payment and chooeing the
shortest repayment term you can afford.
Citibank in New York, for instance, has been
charging its customers 14.5 percent for new car loans.
On an average loan of $8,000, the monthly caste of
financing a car for one year will be $720.18. A
two-year loan carries monthly payment.I of $386; a
three-year loan ooste $275.37 a month; four years.
$220.62 per month; and a five-year loan, $188.23.
But with lntere.t considered, lhe long-term
loans are the most coetly, despite the low monthly
paymente. Tile five-year loan coete $11,293.80. The
one-year loan winda up at $8,642.16.
Check it all out! What are the prepayment terms
of each lender? Will you gel a full -or nearly full -
refund of finance charget1 lf you pay back more
quJckly? How I.a lntereltcomputed? You'll be be9\off
if it's computed eccordJ.n8 to a limple decl.lnl.ng
balance. What about penalties for late payment?
Don't be overwhelmed by the 1984 modela. Thia I.a
big-time cuh!
Construction managem e nt
classes sche duled at UCI
The winter 9emlon of clAl8et (or the Light
C.onatnJct.lon and Development Management Pro-
gram begins Jan. 3 at UC lrvtne. The extenaion
program II offered ln cooper•Uon w1lh the Home
BuUden Council, the educational arm of the Building
Industry A.modaUon of Southern c.allfoml•.
The required Introductory cl.a.-for the Provain.
lntroducUon io the U,ht ConttNCUon P~
which coNil1a of only foul' meet1na. ii beln& offered
Jan. 3 prior to the commencement of the other clu 1 ea
In .ddltlon to the lntroductory eta., the procram
will offer Ji\andamentall of Mark~ f« the Uaht
Conatruc\lon lnduatry and Cue Study ln L!lht
Conaln.ICUon.
For more lnfonnauon on th procram, caO the
UC lrvinit Exlt"nSlon offl~. 833-5528.
··-· .. . .. . . . ------------~----------------...
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 29, 1983
DllMlil CDUITY 80111111
.
Pauline J. Kinsley appointed
VP of Liberty National Bank
Pauline J. ltln1ley of A.rulheim has ~n
appointed administrative vice president of Liberty
National Bank, Huntington Beach. The an·
nouncement was made by Pblllp S. l nglee,
president and chief executive officer. She has been
with the bank slnce 1981. • • • Newport Beach resident Sandee Hennetsey
has been promoted to marketifl8 director at Laara
Merlo & AHociates Inc. of Laguna Hills, She
formerly was an independent financial consultant
specializing in cost control, planning and efficiency
systems for a variety of businesses throughout
Orange County. • • • Barbara Roppolo of Laguna Beach has joined
Tbe lrvlne Co. as director of management for the
Fubioa bland regional shopping center in
Newport Beach, it was announced by Sam L. Van
La.odhigham, vice president of the company's
commercial dlVlSion. Roppolo has been general
manager of the center since 1979, but had been
employed by the Taabmu Co., which managed
Fashion Island for The Irvine Co • • • Mon Chatuu Rettauraat in El Toro has
recently been honored as an awrd member of the
World Famous Re1tauraat1 International. Mon
Chateau. owned and operated by J ean and Erna
Vubecke of Mission Viejo, is Saddleback Valley's
first and only restaurant offering gourmet Belgian
and French culsine. • • • E1tey-Hoover of Newport Beach has been
appointed the advertising and public relations
firm for Spring Creek Homes in Oceanside,
according to Gordon Youde, president of The
Ma rketing Tum, the m.acketing arm for the
developer, Bilcou i Enterpriles. The agency is
creating advert.laing and collateral matertala for
the 185 single family home development located in
the San Luis Rey Valley. ••• Ron McElroy of Corona del Mar has been
named to the sales staff of the Charles Dua Co.'1
Orange County office, announced Job.D Arlotll,
sales manager at the real estate firm. • • • Robert L. Bobbi has been appointed to the
newly created position of aenJor vice president of
finance and administration at Irvine-based VU
Corp. Hobbs held the same poeltion at SbUey Inc.
since 1981. VLJ Is a pharmaceutical firm which
markets the vaginal contraceptive sponge • • • Donna Salyard1 has been promoted to vice
president ad.ministration for The Mortgage Groap,
lac .. a Newport Beach-based mortgage banking
firm, according to James L. Palda J r., president of
the company. In his new position, Salyards will
oversee all operations and coordinate the pro-
cessing and closing of loans with builders and
lenders. Prior to joining The Mortgage Group,
Salyards served with Cadillac FaJrvtew Home1
West of Newport Beach as a sales administrator.
MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS
OVER THE COUNTER
llA• ITOCll UlnlGI W9Al9DO .. I
HEW YO"I( (AP) -,,,. fOltowlno "" &l!Ow& Ille Ov., · ,,,. • Covnt1<
&IOCll& end werranll !Ital It••• fOM UP the motl elld dOW~ fi,. motf MMC! Ot1 -cent ol cltenff tor W9d
No &Kurlll•• lredlno IMllOw 12 or 1000 .,,.,.. .,. fr>cluoed
d::•..:.d :..:~·ir,,. Cit;~:.,, ·~·io.:::
Did P<kt end t~1 letf !Md OfiCe.
Neme L.e&f C"9 Pel, 1 L\rMd WI 1 + 'Ill Uo 3J,J
' ForWI '"" + '"' Uo 21.t l OeHI• 7'" + 'It UP 10.0
; ~~~r~' 1~~ t , .. ~= :a
' ivir .... , ,,, + '" UP •to 1 l&Omda fl + 1 UP l 1 t LleSCI 1 l'!t + I'" UP 119
t Stille I'• + II.<. UP 119 110 ICom SI' + \o UP 111 1 I 161/lt + 11~ UP ISi
It Arll!•114 2 + '" UP 14) ll 0.ttcp II'~ + 1'"' UP It.I 14 llf1dlr I', + >6 UP IU U W...,I to + t\'I UP IU It Coc>'fltl >1 + J\o UO 11,J
11 l"tlrl wl J'" + '·' UP II I It CmPu11t "" + >6 UO IG.1
H ~Atn 1'-+ llO U• 10.1 gs••• S14 + '" U• Its l let lo 1 '"" + I'll U• lo I n >eil!ie< '"' + •.-u. '°·I n Shlt!:"9• 1 I)• 16 + '• UP t
l'll!lllcr ' 1'1'1 + I'" Ua :· l l(W 6 + 1"' U• I H S\lrltll'd ooJw.n + h Ue t.I H..,... La" Cl'll Itel
l e:,01 .... -" '~ ' ' II\~ -' I l "'' l -1'1 4 HVcirOPI 4"' -\o t.) $ l(on .>•~ -,... 1u
' WflllPI U 11 ~· 16 t.t ~;: 1~ § ~ "•
,1.rG"' ~ = ~ =:~. =I~
~r -... I ~ ·m=·~ , "" ,.. .. ~' "" "" ..
I
. I
-------·--· ---·-·---------------·--~-....... _...,..._._ ----'
B• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 29. 1983
STOCKS NY E COMPOSITE TRANSACTION
Due to late tranamlHlon today's llatlng will not appear In the Dally Pilot.
'J~lf'\ Nrl
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..
1011111 BRllfl
Pennzoil's objective cloudy
in bidding for Getty shares
By Cbt A11oclattd Prth
NEW YORK -J. Hugh LJl.'dlke. the chainnan or
Pennwil Co .. Mid Wednetld.ny h!s c.-ompany's $1.6 billion offer
for 20 percent of Getty Oil Co. is no\ designed to tngger a
bidding war. AnaJysts 81lld they were unsure o( Peruu.o1l's
long-term objective in seeking to buy up to 16 million of
Getty's 79. l million shares outstanding for $100 apiece
New-construction pac ts rise
NEW YORK -The value of contracts for new
construction in November rose 4 percent from October, and
contracts for the first 11 months of the year were higher than
in any previous full year, a.ccordjng to a business in!onnation
service The F.W Dodge Division of McCraw-H1U lnlor-
mation Systems Co. said Wednesday the 4 percent gain
brought its Dodge lndex of construction contracting to 145,
compared with 139 m October and 143 in September.
Toyota assembly line may open
FREMONT-Toyota Motor Corp., which last week won
tentative approval for a joint automaking venture with
General Motors Corp .• C'Ould open a second assembly line here
under an agreement between the two companies. Such a move
would strengthen lhe Japanese automaker's foothold in the
American market, but a Toybta spokesman said Wednesday
that a second assembly line is possible but not planned.
Shareholders to acquire TWA
NEW YORK Trans World Airlines has been set free of
the far flung conglomerate that owns it Shareholders of
Trans World Corp. voled 18.6 million to about 510,000 on
Wednesday to "spin off" the 54-year-old airline by, in eHect,
giving it away t.o TWC shareholders. TWC owns 81 perrent o(
TWA'sstock; under tennsof the agreement, as of Feb.1.1984.
each TWC shareholder will also get a proportionate share of
stock in the airline. which will become a separate and
independent C'ompany
Bell A 1la1Jtic mus t release pac t
WASHINGTON -One of Ma BeU's children was
spanked by a federal judge Wed.nesd.asy for trying to leave
home with too much o( the family assets. Bell Atlanuc Corp ..
one of the S£-Ven Bell telephone operating companies that will
cut the apron strmgs on Sunday. must tum over to parent
American Telephone & Telegraph Co. a contract tD sell the
federal government the c1vtlian telephones 1t now rents in
mostol Bell Allanllc"sarea, said US Distncl Judge Harold H
Greene.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
., tM AMOC'-4H ~·
S....:1e<I wQ<ld 0040 pt!CM IOO•V
L-mominv 11•11'9 $319 00 up$ I 00
L-all.,"°°" Ii•~ $381 40. up JA •O ,,_ afl.,noon loalng '378 82 up Ml&~
,, ... ~ ha"'Q SJ77 99 oll I 149
Z..ndl lete • ., .. noon boO '-182 ~~ up 5.4 2~
Slel OOUllllCI ~ & """-!only Golly QVOltl '361 •O
""" •0 ll ..... d ICW'r d .. 'r Q..Ot•I SJl2 llO up
JA •O ~d WlloUl.0 IO<llr °""' Clll01eJ µQI 94 U1> S• 62 NY e-a go1a opo1 monlh w.o '371 50, on suo
WHAT NYSE DID
Due to late transmission
today's ... llstlng wlll not
appear In the Dally Pilot.
WHAT AMEX DID
r.ew YOAK 1API 0.. 11
AO••n<..O Oec:llned
Unche"9<00 fot•I tn v•t
Ntw "ion' New towt
METALS
Tooav 111
374 140 l:U
9 '•
Prt• d•• 141 l1' 7H "' I 16
NEW YOfH( (API SPol n011l .. ,QYt ""''al
O<IC .. lodey
C:-67'o 10 Ce<\lt e l>ovnO US -'"'"'""'' c._... 63 S5 ..... °"' _,-d NT COtM• 1C>01 month c-Wed
L-1•· 21 eonta • pcuno Z>foc • 49 ,.,., •• -,,..._eO
Tift -6 2370 M•t.it w"' compo1u10 lb ,.._ ... _ ·11 ceftlo •-"41, M_Y
Mwtwy • Sl20 00 !340 00 ~ 1G IO tta ..
-York
~-· $36~ 00 OO>mMll(; """Lnonl hoy ~N V
SILVER
911-SI 930 Handy & Ht• 11\<ln IOfW\I dally ouo111 ..,..._st 632J>«lroyounc.e NY Come•""°' "'°"In clo9'id woo
STOCKS IN· THE SPOTLIGHT
NEW YOAK -S.tn Wec!M\Oov r><lc• 1110 n•• cnt ntt or •n • IS mo•I e<:tlVt N•w v .... ~ Stock E•ch•n!le
h•ut1 H edlno n etlone lfv e f
mo<a 11\en t 1 .,..., l &T wl
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AllRk:lllid IBM Su,,.r011
P\IOSlfC Incl U)Sto.i
AMI Inc• Ol•mSllm Arlrl'ub )vc
SYMBOLS
4,lt',700 ,'fir~ \ 4'l .SOO I Ut ,700 '"·"°° ~:uoo 141,'JOO
1 ... 100 704.100 6'1.100 .... 100
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DOW JllNES AVERAGES
NEW VORK -Final Dow JOM\ e•t< agu for WtOnt\On Dec 1l
SlOCl<S
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20 Trn
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6§ 5•• l"'dUt
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SOI 41 ~ U •ti l6 501 IO+ 0 It
T'•" Utll\ •SS••
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AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW f()ltl( 1 &Pl -Saitt W.Ontt4Jev Orie• •no ,..., Cn."OI of IN ,0
mot.I active Ameftcan $tot\.. E&-<Mnoc it ·
\Utl 1 tr •d •nv n1t1ona1tv •'
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UP
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111,400 91 UICI
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1 Jtmtt••• • I MauevF t ICN Phorm
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14 Rol>f"nH IS Ta•Com8n
le TrlaPac 17 v18t ldwUIO
II Wtan Uni! It Suav.Shoo
70 Mallet WI 71 11><0 Coro
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------------------------
Daily Pilat
THURSDAY. DECEMBER 29, 1983
CLASSIFIED C6
Steve Brazas Brett Kacura J eff Brown Ste ve Mikulich
Costa Mesa gains fit1al ,
Edi ~'"'" OV in semi
of girl basketball
1ournan1en1 • See C3.
\
Lancf' eal
Golf pro
Demaret,
73,dead
HOUSTON (AP) Jimmy De·
mdrel, lhl· thrt>t•-L1nw Master:.
d1dmp1on whu mtruducc-d tht•
tour to flC:.1shy playing apparel,
died Wl'Cint:sday of an <tppan·nt
heart attal·k wh1lt' working al his
Housto,golf courS<·
He was 7:1
Demaret, who had lx'<'n <>Uffl·r
mg from hc·art ailmc•nts rccenlly,
was stricken at the Champions·
Golf Club. wh1C'h he owned with
veteran player Jack Burke Jr .
said club spokc•sman Laura
Guillot.
Brazas, Kacura, 3 others earn All-CIF
"Wc'rl' C:.111 in sh1x·k." ~1d P<tl
Morgan. C:l dt·vl'lop<"r at the
l'OUr'Sl'.
"J :.IC'k gws bac:k 60 yL•ars with
Jimmy I don't think hC''s said
anythang yet c·xct•pl that he'll
miss a fnend, an a"50Ciaw, a
brother It's hkt• losing your
brother or falher." Morgan said
By ROGER CA RLSOI':
01 lhe Oally Pilol Sl•ll
Five area prep too1ball stars led by
first learn cho1<.'l'S Sll'Vl' Brazas and Brett
l(acura of Newport Harbor have been
distinguished with All-CIF D1v1s1on lll
honors bv the· First lnterstale Bank
Athletic Foundation selt'<'l1on board
Brown and Irvine hnl•backt·r L.!nt'<' Neal
Brazas and Kac.·ura were both St'l'ond
team choices as juniors and were· tlw
unanimous pieks for back and lmc•nwn ol
the year m their league
M1kuh .. :h. the Estancia High wade
rt.'<.·e1ver, -.yasn't overlooked despite• his
team's 3-6-1 record and absence from the
CIF playoffs
touchdown or less S<'ven limes.
Also al lim·backer is lrvim"s Neal. a 6-1,
190-pound senior whose sohd defensive
play led to a playoff berth with four
straight victoriC's 1n league play l:x•fore
falling to La Habra in the first round.
20-18
Ji'uneral ar rangements wen·
pending although Morgan said
the servl('CS would b<> private and
restricted to family members. The 6-3. 211 -pound Brazas rush<'<.! tor
1.538 yards on 227 earn~. m add1uon to
his other endeavors. suc.·h as Ii n~·eptmn!>
for 236 yards. a 40-plus average on punL'
and a reputation for his solid hncbac:kmg
The· 170-pound senior e<1ugh t 44 passes
fur 841 vards and 7 touchdowns, wtth an
;1verage-gam of 19. l yards per rt'{'t'pllon Deman•t won 31 tournaments
on the Professional Golfers As-
soc1at1on Tour and was the first tu
wm the Masters three times. don
nang the green J3Cket at August.a.
Ga , in 1940, 1947 and 1950 But
he was never able I.I) captur{'
thr('(.' other pn-st1g1nu!. lltles -
the US Op<m. PGA or Bnush
Open.
Brazas and Kacura. tht' Sailors'
one-two punch at tailback-lmebackcr and·
two-wav lineman whtt·h dominated the
Sea Vie:...· League. an.• first team picks by
acclamat10n -no vote was taken
Kacura. another nugget m the Sailor
at tack which led to an 8-3-I record and the
Sea View League champ10nsh1p. was a
candidate for either side of the lmC' and
could have been named to the offense.• a:.
well as defense
Brown. who was the No l fore.'<' m
Corona df'l Mar's 8-3 season, was also a
lwo-wav standout at linebacker and
fullback. Offensively he rushed for 1.038
yards on 193 carries -better than 5 yard~
a crack. mdudmg 11 touchdowns
Playt•r of tht• year 1s Rubidoux tailback
Ryan Knight, a 6-2. 204-pound senior who
1s being heavily recruited by USC.
1<mght led his team to the Sunbelt
U.•ague championship and mlo the F..ast-
c·rn Conference semifinals.
Also earning honors on the second team
were Estancia High r<'C'e1ver Steve
Mikulich, Corona del Mar linebacker Jeff
He was picked at linebacker. where hC'
hl•lpffi lead Corona del Mar's defense. an
area which hm1ted the oppos1llon Lo a
He rollro up 2,620 yards on 337 l'arnes
and srorro 31 touchdowns For the SE.'ason
jSee ALL-CIF, Page C2>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Two for Beasley
Former Cosla Mesa High and OCC
star Chri" Bea8ley for Ari-
zona tate during u 52-50 win
over Penn St. Wednesday nig ht.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--
Edison on a roll in Nevada
Chargers in Carson City finals; Artists, Sailors, Vaqs win
Edison High captured its fifth straight basket-
ball victory and advanced to the c hampionship game
of the Carson City Classic Wednesday night,
dispatching Bellanmne Prep of San Jose in the
semifinals
Meanwhile, Laguna Beach opened its two-game
stint in Hawaii by downing Roosevelt; Newport
Harbor will play (or the consolation ulle at Carson
City: Woodbridge was belted from the championship
quarterfinals b~ Sonora in the Brea-Olinda Tour-
nament, Irvine goes for the consolation title and
University was ehminat.ed at Canyon: Saddleback
High advanced to the tournament finals and
Westminster wa.'I ousted at Santiago by Garden
Grove.
••
Here's what happened:
Edison 49, Bellarmlne Prep 4S
The Chargers (9-2) raced to an 11 -0 advantage.
only to be caught al 19 in the second qwirte r before
settling down to post the win.
The Chargers will meet Reed High of Nevada
(1 0·0), whic h stopped hMt Carson City in the
nightcap. 59-54
Brad Hachten's three-~nt play capped the
11-point run at the start of the game, but Bcllannine
acored 14 straight points late In the finst period and
early in the second to overcome a 19-5 deficit.
The game waa cloec the rest of the wAy w ith
Edlaon taking a 25-22 leDd at halftime and nu.nrins a
four to five-point edge moet of the remainder of the
contett. _
HEK'h!A•n INf lhP Chlll'R<'f'1' wit.h 18 points, while
'
'PREPS
Tim Wertner had five steals and five assists along
with his 12 points and John Thomas pulled down
seven rebounds in a solid effort.
Laguna Beach 6S, Roosevelt Sl
The hot-shooting Artists (6-2) were paced by
Nick Tepper, who had 17 points and the outside
sharp-shooting of Tom Arndt ( 10 points) and
sophomore Billy Elfsten (8), who loosened the
Roolevelt r.one with their baseline accuracy.
Scott Fortune was hampered by four fouls much
of the contest. but reserve Paul Watford did a good
job In his place. dishing ofl'four assists In L~e fourth
quarter.
Laguna, whi<:h meets Castle High of Hawaii
Friday nJght, hit 32 of 60 from the field.
Newport Harbor 67, Douglaa C3
The Sailors easily advanced to t.oday'a conflQla·
tlon fliWs at Carson City against Reno High by
routing their Nevada foe.
The victory for Newport (5-4) wils sealed In the
early going when the Sailors raced to a 21-8 lead af~r
one quarter. Coach J erry De8uak 11ubstltut.td freely
and often right from the b«>sf nntng
Rob Ma..e, a 6-3 forward, helped Newport to it.a
quick start by notchlnjl 10 of hl.." team-hlRh 19 poCnt.a
(Sff PREP, P1ge CO
Eagles roll into semis
* * * • •
Barons forced to rally
Estancia
wins by 19,
.faces MD
By ROGER CARLSON
Of IN O.ity ""4 llall
The stage has been set for
David (Est.an<'1a) and Goliath
(Mater Dei) m the champ1onsh1p
semifinals of the Orange Holiday
Classic at Chapman College fol-
lowing Wednesday's 69-50 v1c-
tory for the Eagles of Estancia
over San ta Clara.
It's at 6 at Chapman College
and Eagles Coach Larry
Sunderman says h is team's hopes
lie with similar tactics with kept
Foothill withm range of the 11 -1
Monarchs through the first half
before wilung and eventually los-
ing by 30.
"Mater Dei 1s without a doubt
the most talented high school
basketball team I've ever seen."
says Sunderman, who watcked
fiis own club roll to its eighth
victory in nine starts with a sec-
ond-half burst
"l was really happy with our
second -half defense," said
Sunderman, "but we're stilJ a
little soft 1ns1de."
Scott Clements led Estancia
with 21 points and Steve Funn
added 18 to pace the Eagles, who
clicked on 26 of 52 attempts from
the field for 50 percent accuracy,
and turned Santa Clara's hopes
inside out by forcing 29 turn-
overs.
Guards Adam Lockwood and
Jon Johnston added 11 and 10
counters to complete the picture
as the Eagles took command in
the third quarter, with the in-
side-outside combination taking
the Eagles from a 32-31 deficit to
a 43-34 lead with 3:55 still left in
the quarter.
After that it was JUSt a matter
of how far the margin would
become.
Scott Clements
Knights can't
slow down
Mater Dei
Foothill High's Knights turned
m a sterling first-half effort
Wednesday night, perhaps a
preview of things to come for
those with ideas of upsetting
Mater Dei High's high-flying
Monarchs.
The Knights had the crowd of
2.200 at Chapman College in an
uproar through two quarters,
trailing by just 7 at halftime. But
in the end, despite a flawless
game plan and brilliant first-half
execution, Foothill fell to the 11-1
Monarchs by 30 points as Mater
Dei rolled to an 82-52 basketball
victory in the Orange Holiday
Classic.
The conquest sends Mater Dei
into tonight's semifinals (6
o'clock) against another foe
(F.stancia) expected to try similar
tactics to deal with the Monarchs.
A half-court delay. going to the
(Stt MD, Pait C3l
FV draws
Panthers
tonight
Fountain Valley Hagh's Barons
rolled mlo tonight's cham
p1onship semifinals al the Orange•
Holaday basketball tournament at
Chapman College against the Or-
ange Panthers (8 o'clock) follow-
ing Wedn<.>sday's 74-6 1 conquest
of Dana Hills (5-4)
It was, however. anything but
routine for the 6-5 Barons, who
were exlc•nded to the hilt by a
smaller, but scrappier Dana Hills
quintet.
Dana Hills took a 40-35 lead
with 3:29 le ft m lhe third quarter
with Fountain Valley stars Brent
Martin (6-7) and Rolf Jacobs (6-7)
on the bench with four fouls
apiece, and the Dolphins were
still up by a 43-42 cou nt entering
the four th quarter
But the two front-hners re-
turned to restore orde r as Foun-
tain Valley Coach Dave Brown
switched his offensive scheme,
stacking his two stars differently,
and the two responded with 19 of
the Barons' 32 fourth-quarter
points.
"We only seem to play when we
reaJly have to." said Brown. "I
can't explain it."
Orange presents the last hurdle
to the championship game Friday
night and Brown says the Pan-
thers' press and intensity follow-
ing a 50-47 decision over Servit.e
are the Barons' major concerns.
Fountain Valley hit just 16 of
45 through three quarters (35.6
percent) against Dana Hills' r.one
before nailing 12 of 17 in the final
period.
Martin finished with 21 points.
Jacobs had 14 and guard Mike
Newton sparkled with 9 points
and several assists. including one
behind-the-back dart to Martin,
which accounted for a 14-5 lead.
Underdog label irks Robinson.
From AP d1lpa1clae1
Rams' Coach John Robiruion aaya he's "in1tated"
that hls team ia a 10-point underdog in Sunday's
playoff game agalnat the Redakina in Washington.
Asked if he would hold a formal prediction
seMion sometime before the Ranu meet. Washington.
the coach grinned and replied: ''I can't organize my
clairvoyance; It just comes to me ... anyway, maybe 1
should quit while I'm 1-0." "l detest the underdog role," he aald Wednesday.
"l dc~t the kind of bullt-ln excu.e that goes along
with that, like aaytnc, 'Oh. well, they'~ better than
we are physic.ally.' I aay 1e\'a go play the fame and
find out.
''I think we can make It Into an even football
game."
Th Rams were u.nderdop last Monday 11aJn.at
Dallas. but they whipped theCowboyt.24·17, U\lhelr
National Football Conference playoff o~ner. Pr'lor to
the /;a~ Roblnton predl~ the final lt'Of't Rams
24, 21.
He lavished superletlvet1 on Waahll'\lton Coach
Joe Glbbl!I, quarterback Joe Thclsmann and the
Red.slc.ina as a whole. But Roblruon alto pralaed his
own club.
''This hM bea>me really, rNlly a good team," he
aald. "They play hard and they hav fun.''
Much was written about the Cowboys' "chok·
Ing" last Mond•Y· but Roblnaon 11ld, "O.llu was
beaten by a tum that played really good football. It'•
easy to say Dal.lat f~ll apart. but that's not what
happened."
I·
, I
...
% Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. December 29. 1983
SPORTS BRIAK
Illinois football
playe r find winning
is all in the mind
PASJ\PENA llhnms footbaU m pl.1yt'~ huv1• great 1maginat1ons. 4.,
l·nrdully 1.Jtowlopt~J IJy sports psyl·hol-
ug1sl Oun Smith ll> hl'lp them win
Surnl' of Smith's star pupils believe this
1·x1t•nSl\'t• n1•w tra1111ng will pay ofC Jan. 2 when
tht•v rnl"l•t UCLA in the Rose Bowl
Snuth tt•arht.•" e1thlC'tt>S to imagine themselves
111 a gamt• s1tua\1on rd axt'd, self-confident and
pt•r form1ng Wt•ll
Ofu·11. reul '\Utt-t•!>S follows imagined sut~-ess,
s.a1d Smn h •'\
"I dos<• my t•yt.•::. ,uid imagine myself runnmg
my routes. ca tching paSS4.'S and runrung with the
ball." said wide rere1vl'r M1tl'h Brookins." At first
It was hard. but thl'n 1t got t>as1er It gave me the
t'Onfiucm·<• I nt't'ded lo play rect>1ver "
Smith begins by having players relax
complNt?ly
Shop Target Automotive Centers for
everyday low prices on auto seNices.
• Complete brake service
• Wheel alignment. front end repair
• Monroe shocks. McPherson struts
• Muttlers and exhaust service
• Air cond1honing service • Wheel balancing
• Batteries and electrical service
All wori( performed by Qualified installers
and mechanics
Target's guarantee: We want you to be
satisfied. H you are not satisfied with
something you bought at Target. please
return it We will fix it. exchange it. n.ake an
adjustment or willingly retum your money.
We want you to be satisfied.
Q uo t f' of th d ay
Del Crandall, ~au..-Matint·r nia.n:igt-r,
r<.'fcrnng to the C'lub'a newly-at'qUJred
second baseman: "The only thing standing
bctwE>en Jack Percome and ran outstanding
muJOr league t·areer 1s performam.-e."
Isla nder. nil' Kings in O T
INGLEWOOD Defenseman ~
Stefan Persson S(.'llrl'<J on a 25-foot shot ,
with JUSl six seconds left in overtime lO
hft the New York Lc;landers lO a 6-5
victory over the Los Angel~ Kings in a National
Hockey League game Wc.'Clnesday.
Tht' goal, assisted by John Tonelli, offset a
furious third-penod comeback by the Kings in
which they outs<:ored the !slanders, 3-l , after
trailing, 4-2, after two periods.
Thi.' Kings had drawn even at 5-5 on goals by
Marcel Dionne and Terry Ruskowski JUSt 54
seconds apart in the third period
The lsland<'rs Jumped ahead 2-0 as cent.er
Bryan Trotucr collc•l'll"'<i his 25th and 26th goals of
the year
Nt!w York winger Greg Gilbert got hlS first of
two goals to put tht.• !:,landers ahead 3-0 at 3:09 of
the se<:ond penod during an Islanders power play.
The Islanders. who improved their record to
25-10-2 and lead the Patr1ck D1v1s1on, regained a
two-goal lead with JUSl 44 seconds left m the
second period as Mike Bossy scored his 28th goal oC
the year on a 30-foot slap shot.
.. _...,... ....... --
'im 'fate d ·ide d in De troit
DETHOIT U .~ l>ustractC:iurt 1n al
Dt•tro1t 111 a m•utral field, and nelUwr c. t
the Houston Gamblers nor the Detroit
Lio~ will have an edge when a judge
dcterminC!S where Billy Sims wall play football
next season, attorn~ys say
Judge Robert E DeMasc10 l'onsohdated all
further legal action in Sims' <.'On tract dispute with
the two teams an federal court 'rue!lday, saying he
would decide on Jan. 25 where Sims plays in 1984.
The ruling came afl.er DeMasc10 re(used to
dismiss a suit by the Lions of he National Football
League seeking to void Sims' contract with the
United States Football League's Gamblers.
He also denied the running back's request to
lift a Texas court's temporary restraining order
barring Detroit from interfering with Sims
t'Ontractual relations with the Gamblers.
Cincinna ti hires Wych e
CINCINNATl Sam Wyche, [I]
lndi~na University's football coach and 4• •
;i former Cincinnati Benials quar-
terback, was hired Wednesday as the
new head t'Oal'h of the Bengals of the National
Football League.
Wyche. 38, will replace Forrest Gregg. who
Saturday was hired to be head coach of the Green
Bay Packers
Paul Brown, Bengals vice president and
general manager, announced Wyche's hiring
Wednesday but declined to disclose terms of the
contract.
Cougar s m ay lo e three
HOUSTON -Two Unlve1"¥lty of m
HoualOn basketball players already
have quit the third-ranked team and a
third has threatened to quit over a ltlck
of playing time as Coach Guy Lewis continued lO
face an early 11eason crisis Wednesday.
Benny Anders, a top rnservt' the past two
sea.sons, and junior college transfer BraxlOn Clark
quit the 10-2 team and returnt'd w Houston
Monday, about one hour prior to the Cougars'
68-61 loos to Fresno State m the fmals of the
Chammade Classw In Hawaii.
Mille r ta k es o n e-sho t lead
PEBBLE BEACH -Johnny Mill-!I
eor had five bi rdies and an eagle on the
back nine at the Carmel Valley l'Ourse
and finished with a 7 -under-par 64 for
the first-round lead Wedne&iay in the Spalding
lnvitational golf tournament.
T e levision, ra dio
TV: College Football Liberty Bowl. Boston
College vs. Notre Dame m Memphis. 5:30 p m ,
Channel 11
RADIO: College Football -Libert y Bowl.
BoslOn College vs. Notre Dame, 5:30 p.m ..
KFOX-FM (93.5), Collegt.< Basketball -UC lrvine
vs. Weber State in Utah Classic. 5 p.m .. KWVE
( 108-FM): USC VS Iowa m Hobday Classic at use.
8 p.m .. KNX (1070). Soccer -Kansas Caty at
Lazers, 7:30 p.m .. KFOX-FM (93.5).
Target open Saturday.
NP.w Year's Eve until 4 pm
Ocean View suffers
first loss in tourney
Ocean View High's bid t.o win its
second straight soccer tournament was
denied 1n the semifinal round Wednes-
day. as Capastrano Valley edged the
Seahawks. 1-0 at the Huntmgton
Beach Tournament
Capo Valley will meet Esperanza at 7
tonight for the championship
Meanwhile. Ocean View (l l-1-1),
which advanced to the semafmals
earlier in the day by virtue of penalty
k1ck.s against Serv1te, takes on La
Quinta for third plat.-e at 5
SOCCER mt
and Oc.-can View never t'Ould get the
equalizer
"We would have hkt'd to stayed
undefeated, but that's pretty hard to do
in soccer," Kollar added "W e dom1·
nated the Serv1 t.e game. but JUSt
couldn't sc.'Ore "
ln the other sem1hnaJ game,
E.5peranza edged La Quint.a. l-0. to
earn Its shot at the ta tie
The Target pledge:
expert car care
In other action, Huntington Beach
advanced mto the ninth-place c.'Ontest
al l against Mater Dei; Marina will play
for the consolation •·D" tille against
Tustin, also at 1, and Fountam Valley
was ousted by Hawthorne in the
t'Onsolation semifinals.
Ocean View's offense was silent all
day. as the Seahawks a nd Servite
played lO a S<.'Oreless tie, but Cx:ean
View advanced on penalty kicks.
Host HununglOn Beach also needed
a shoolOul to beat Cypress. but a goal by
Garrett Hosh1J0, with a throw-m assist
from Enc Lawton, gave the Oilers a 1-0
dectsion over M1ss1on VieJO in the
second game
Tom Wright played weU in goal for
Huntington (6-4-1) and Dean Tomasick
had a good defensive outing.
The Oilers' .opponent. Mater Dei.
was vil'torious over Bell Gardens on
penalty kicks after a scoreless tie in
regulatton. The Monarchs won in the
same fashion earlier aga1 nst San ta Ana. at everyday low prices.
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• Resurface front rotors
• Inspect master cylindef
• Bleed and refill t>rake system
• Repack bearings
• Replace grease seals
Non-repairable hydraulics extra
For most U S and Import cars
, • .... : .. r" . . .
Auto Senie• c.n..,1 ~
Mo<!ctay ll"'OUQh ''Idl y 7·>0 '"'10 I Piii,
Seturd•J I >O"" to I pm,
Sund1y tO "" 'o ~ Pfl'I '°' 1ppoln..,...,I. c:•ll IMN •uto S.mc. Ctflt• 11vmben @TARGET
lotA1'9e le1
C-ce, '76 28!12 '°""' o.. 919 4 1e1
Alflel!IW•. ~re 11 Xl C...,.e..91S100Q
OfttMiO Jl>I 191i
No11MdV-. J•I> !>c>ei ,.~ 8 )4.) ..
)
"We had our opportunities to score in
each game," said Ocean View Coach
·Paul Kollar. "But we couldn't convert.
Give them (Capistrano Valley) credit
They were a scrappy t.eam.
Ocean View d id have its chances. the
best one was m the first half when a
Seahawk shot hit the post. But Capo
converted 25 minutes inlO the game
Fount.am Valley beat Cerritos. 4-3. in
its opener, but fell to Hawthorne. 3-l.
UCI
begins
tourney
SALT LAKE CITY -
Weber State will provide
the first-round opposi-
uon tonight (5:05 PST)
when UC lrvme opens
play in the 16th annual
Utah Classic al the
Special Events Center
here
The game IS slated to
be broadcast live on radio
s tation KWVE-FM
( 108 8)
The Anteaters H -3)
ha v e had an
up-and-down season
thus far. and are hoping
to be on a 'high' for the
two-day event which
also features Utah and
Texas (who clash m the
S('('()nd game tonight).
The winners and !~rs
are paired on Friday.
UCl 1s sparked by Bob
T hornlOn, who leads the
Anteaters In scoring
( 15.7 average) and re-
bounding (8.4), while
Ben McDonald (15.6)
and Tod Murphy (14 .7)
also average in twin fig-
ures in the scoring de-
partment. The other
starters figure lO' be
guards George Turner
and Raymond Lankford. ----
COCA~NE
ANONYMOUS
• J • '
WE FLY DAILY
to
IEllUDA DUIES
CATAUIA ISLAID
and weekends to
lkhad City, Artz.
CIUFOlllASUIOlll
AllUIH ......
.. IR.YCIA.
Manna. meanwhile, stayed alive lO
play today by shutting out Bishop
Montgomery. 2-0
ALL-CIF ...
From Page C1
he scored 200 points He set a single game CIF record
of 501 yards in Rub1doux's vtclOry over Corona
First Team Offense
Pos. Player. school
WR-Steve Ybarra, Rosemead
WR-Ton Brown, Duarte
WR-Danny Ruizc. &ldwin Park
OL-Dan Erickson, Bell Gardens
OL-John Smith, Rubidoux
CL-Craig Lashley. La Habra
CL-David Wmt.ers, Valencia
B -Ryan Knight, Rubidoux
8 -Steve Brar.as, Npl. Harbor
B -Steve S igloch. Riv Poly
B -Mark Krajnik. Rosemead
B -Darrell Harris, Garey
B -Michael Johnson. Bald. Pk.
K -Steve Adams. Claremont
First Team Defense
Ht.
5-10
6-0
5-10
6-3
6-4
6-3
6-7
6-2
6·3
5-11
6-1
6-0
6-2
6-2
DL-Brett Kacura, Npt. Harbor 6-1
DL-M. Whiteside, Ganesha 6-3
DL-Pat Ricciardi, La Serna 6-3
DL-G.Sinnott, La Mirada 6-1
DL-Tom Caines. Damien 6-3
LB-Sean McCoy. Ganesha 6-2
LB-Jeff Adcock, Riv. Poly 6-1
LB-Tom Stockard. La Quinta 6-0
LB-Rusty Schaffer, Ramona 6-1
LB-Charles Lewis, Rubidoux 6-2
DB-Chris Dalke. Ramona 5-10
DB-Bo Mullins, La Mirada 5-9
DB-Darryl Henley, Damien 5-10
DB-Mark Green, Riv. Poly 6-l
DB-Gil J imenez, Rosemead 6-1
P -Craig Oden, Brea-Olinda 5-11
Second Team Offense
WR-Vic Jarels, Apple Valley 6-3
WR-Steve Mikullcb, Estancia S· 1 l
WR-Bob Holler. Norwalk 5-9
OL-Pt!rry Harpold. Diamond &r 6-3
OL-Jim Malhhews, Corona 6-5
OL-Jeff Tull. Cajon 6-3
CL-James West, Sunny Hills 6-3
CL-Robert Sims. Los Amigos 6-4
B -Len Barton. Bell Gardens 5-10
B -Pat Pallares, Valencia 5-9
B -Mike Moore. Cajon ~-8
B -Da.rroll Love, Ganeeha 5-11
B -Rob Lough, North (Riv.) 5-9
B -Mario Puentes. Bdl Gardens 5-5
K -Tim Byrnes, Sunny Hills 5-11
Second Tu m Defen1e
DL-Rlek Jones, Palm Springs 5·9
DL-Don Wolfe, lndlo 6-3
Dl.r-Michael Cooka. Oanehaa !\-10
DL-Marvtn MatlOx, Garey 6·5
DL-Kurt Brown, Glendora 5-10
LB-Jeff Brown, CdM t ·l
LB-Darryl Fields, C.jon 5-1 l
LB-Charlee Davia, Garey ~-10
LB-Luce Neal, lrvlae •·1
LB-Nol Cook. Clanimont 8-0
1..B-Steve Aylor. El Toro 6·0
LB-Eric K.ruqer, Diamond Bar e.o
DB-~ Rko. San\a Fe 6~0
DB-K. L.lUmtrand. Arlinp»'l ~-11
OB-Dlt10 Cral11 Ramona 6-1
DB-Andy Gowell. Victor Valley 6·2
DB-Parry Kidney, Don Lu,o 6-1
Wt. Cl.
145 Sr.
160 Sr.
165 Sr
235 Sr .
210 Jr.
237 Sr.
265 Sr .
204 Sr
%1 1 Sr .
190 Jr
170 Jr.
185 S r
170 Jr
180 S r
?12 Sr.
245 Sr.
240 Sr.
212 Sr.
212 Sr
210 Sr.
195 Sr.
210 Sr.
200 Sr
218 Sr.
165 Sr.
175 Sr.
165 Sr.
180 Jr.
180 Sr.
175 Sr
195 Sr.
170 Sr.
155 Sr.
220 Sr.
240 Sr
240 Sr.
235 Sr.
245 Sr.
165 Sr.
175 So.
170 Sr.
180 Jr.
160 Sr.
140 Jr.
180 Jr.
190 Jr.
200 Jr.
195 Jr.
195 Sr.
210 Sr
!15 Sr.
l~ St.
1~ Sr.
ltt Sr.
200 Sr.
175 Sr.
lGO Jr.
180 Sr.
l8S &.
170 & .
l&S Sr.
105 Sl'.
' ..
f DR THE RIC ORD
NFL lllavoff scMd\lle
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
Salurdo't Ga~
AFC-SHllle <II M1arnl (Chann•I 4 a1
9·30 am I
NFC-Oe1ro11 el San Francisco ICnanne1
1 al 1)
Sundav'• Ga,,...s
NFC-Rams al Washington (Channel 2
at 9·30 a.m I
AFC-P llis1>urvn al Raider• !Channel 4
at I pm )
CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIPS
Sundav, Jan. a. ltM
SUPER BOWL XVIII
Jan. n. 1914
Al Tampa Stadium Tampa Fta (Chan-
nel 2 al 1·30 om
Bowl lhwup
IA• limes PST)
TONIGHT'S GAME
LlbfftV Bowl
(II Mampfliil
Bolton Collt>oe (9·?> vs Notre Oame
(6•5) (Channel 11 al 5.30 om I
FRIDAY'S GAMES PHcll Bowl
(al A!l.llln.)
l'jortn Carolina !8-Jl vs Florida SI 16 5)
ICMnnet 2 •I noonl
Galo<' Bowl
<a1 Jach onvllM)
Iowa (9-2) vs Florida 18·1 I) (Cnonnel /
al 6 om I
SATURDAY, DEC. JI
&1UWo<wW1 Bowt
(al Houl!Oft )
Bavtor P·l ·I) vs Oklanoma SI 17·•!
!Channel 11 al Sam )
MONDAY, JAN. 1
Cot!lHI Bow!
(al Dain)
Georgoa (9· I· 11 vs Tuas ( 11 ·01 (Cnan·
nel 2 al 10 30 am )
Fiesta Bow!
(at Tempe)
Ohio 51 (9-3! v• P•llsourgn U·7 I)
1Cnannel • a1 10 30 a m I
Aow Bowl
(al Pawd9na)
llllnO•S 110 I) vs UCL.le (6•i II 1Cnannt l
i•t2om J
Orange Bowt (al Miami)
Nebruka 112·0) VS. Miami (Fla I (10 I)
1ChaMtl ~al Som I
S119ar Bow!
(al New Of1<tan>)
Aul>urn ( 10-11 vs Mten1van 19·21 !(nan·
net 7 al Som )
8oW1 rHuln
SATURDAY. DEC. 10
lllcMtMndeou B•WI
(at 511,..,.._i, LA.)
Air Force: 9. M1s,\1nu>o• l
SATURDAY, DEC. 11
C.llfomla BoWI
(al FrHM)
Nortllern lilll'ots 30, Cal Stale Fullerton
23
Florida Cllrut Bowt
(al Or1ando)
Tenneu ff 30 Marvland ?)
THURSDAY', DEC. n
Hll tf Fa,,... Bawt (al Blrmln9f\am, Ala.>
Wes! vuo1n1a 20, K&nlUCO.• 16
FRIDAY. DEC. 2l
H•ldav Bow!
(al San D+.vol
BYU 21 Mln ourl 11
SATURDAY, DEC 14
Sun BoWI
tat El Puol
AMioama 2&. SMU 7
MONDAY, DEC. 1'
AMIN Bowt
(at Henellllul
PtM S•a•t 13. Wasntno10" 10
Se>akllne lnvlfartonal
!al P~ Bffchl
Joflnn'I Mlltc-r
Mike BraMan
Georoe Arcll«r
Bob EallwOOd
Oon Bltt
BoObv Clam11e11
Boo Glider
JOlln Mahaffev Bao BOkll
MflleGove
Steve C•Ulkln•
Crelo Stad~r
AIChal\d~r
Lon Hinkle
Ron Hovi
Mlkt Nlcott1tt
Erle Bettf"
Rick R hoed•
Ptler Oo"ert1u1•
Aoberl Badll• Jr
AodCurl
Larry Mlt"
Laird Smell
Siii condltleM
lS·?'>-64
Jt·~S
3S·J2-67 JA·ll-67
JA·).t-68
JS-ll-U
3S·~9 JS-~9
3•·3~9
3S·l_.9
32·31-69
lA·lT-69
JA·lT-69
3S·J.t-69
)A·Js-69
Js-3.-.t
37-J?-.9
35-3~70 34-~70
3'·36-70
JA-36-70
34-Jt-70
34·36-70
SOUTifllltN C:AUflO.NIA ~NTAIN HIGH -Nor-ton •now
CMolh. Tllrff d\alr~ -•rlno.
$NOW SUMMIT -• ro IMnch bHe
Flvt c11al" In -••loft
MallllA·NllVAOA llANOI
GOTTAGll ""'INGJ -U ·lllCll IMHI
OM <'lelr -alllle
000011 lllOOIE -)A·I~ 0.JI In lull
-•llon.
MT, ltllaA -60 IO 126•11\Ch Date. Se¥tfl
""' -am10. IOlllKWOOO -.. lo IU •lnell 0.JI In
1vn oc.ellon
Sl81taA SICI llANCH -'1·111Gn -In
11111 -•llon.
HllAVllNL Y VAL.LIY '-60 to 17·lndl
llate Ol'fe If.I'll, It Cflelf\ a nd llWM '4}rleQ
IOwt Ill OHr alloft.
TAHOI SKI eCIWL -7• 10 90-~h
base. In IUll -••Ion "°"THSTA• -)t lo .._,,llC'h bete. In
f\111 OHi' ellon
MO INCUNI -)4·111Ch -In Ml
-anon
Los Alamitos
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS (O rd Of 60·nlotlt oua~t ,,_11n9)
FIRST RACE. lSO varos Karats CM> (F1oueroal 10100 MUO 14 60
Awesome Aoollo <Treuurfl 960 990
Jaconoerta < C reaoer I 4 00
Atso raced Samurai Warroor, Lil Soonlr
Rvon, Lucks Sw1noer Norlve Cee. L••'
Sinn. BOODY Oarrin Moon Messenger
r im ... 1129
U EXACTA 19· II oa10 11,&3960
SECOND A.ACE. JSO varos. CamDtO Ot' Oro tMl!Chell) 1110 I 00 4 60
Hav And Oats tcr.,aoer l 4 00 ),40
Callpn 1Paullnt) 1 40
Also raced Tai~ lo Po1>1>a . Wavlo"
Awav TIP Your Hal. Too Aarr. Trvtv
Parr. Yallllysu. tm Com1no Up
Time II )I
THIRD RACE. 400 vards
Sues Fella (Mvle•I 1QJ 60 32 60 11 00 Elect Ion Eve 1 Laco.e vl 2 I 40 1 40
Three Rams !Pauline> S 40
Also rocea Tullt>dO Lover Arc En Ciel,
Flal Out Pat Jonny San Run Main Mama
Vauller Surelvs 6esv Jel
Time 21 IS
U EXACT .A ll ·9l oa•d 1971 20
FOURTH RACE. 400 vard•
PeDPas Vatenl1no <Crdll 4.60 180 1.110
Jewel Twitte r tClerlue> 280 2.60
Blac~ SeraQl'I (Ault) 6.00
Also raced Joe Rich, Tnunder ThtOhs.
Jannv Jtl, Socoal Meetlno. A1>1>le l/allev
Power Red Ho• Coov. Eelov Tnree
Time 21 00
ll EXACT A (&·91 oeoO I l1 70
FIFTH RACE. 3SO voras.
Soul Ol .A Ctiam1> <Ward) tS.80 11 40 9 '°
F'ace Oate (Brooks/ 1060 5 '°
Smoo.1n Sun•el ITreesuret 3 00
A110 rectd Snawnee Sul! Laser Charoe.
Ael> A Jet. E asv Juan. Oul>t!s Sister
Maggie Molton Mr Cam"t Bu•
Time 1798
'2 EXACT A (10·11 1>01a I 126 00
SIXTH RACE. 970 varos Tne Fe\11va1 (tier!) 980 6 ?0 coo
JOHOO I Bavlev l I 00 i 10
Tl\t C.rev Shaaow tl~utt I 6.80
AllO raced NO•>V Reo, Miu Huard
Coun•v Scramllno Joe Trloot Bonus
Time 47 51
SEVENTH RACE. 400 yarcls
Snorrlv Alter Five ICror> 7 60 3 80 1.00
W•ld Oesn (Ward) 3 00 1.60
Pro"' Pion (Cardoza) J 20
AllO raced Trutv Snea, Hemoen• Jewel,
Miu Fhcko Te. F0<1unes Fa-.or Sanoer
Clncn, High Vooue, Mot,,., Suoreme
T•me· 20 30 n EXACT A (10·91 1>ald '16 20
ll PICK Sl.X (9·4·8· 10·2· 10) Palo
'5,19J 60 Nllh lour winning t1ckr1S tflve
l!OrU\) Carrvover POOi µQ,681 23
EIGHTH AACE. '00 varO• Pasamonle\ Bunnv 1 A<letr I 9 60 • 60 l 00
Rich Lau tPaullnet ) 40 1.60
I/ anov' Pol•cv <Brook u 7 00
Al.o raced Rock., le Elaine, Shawnee
1-100 Hem11ens Jet, Cercna Dancer Never
Snort
Tome 1012 n EXACTA U·8) Paid U0.80
NINTH RACE-lSO varos
Carreroo <Cemooe111 1 oo 4 20 2 80
Bla\ter Lil Red IWllhams) 1180 8.60
C.ot•ka C Rocket (Bard) 3 20
Alio raceO Hesa Coov Two. Carmellno,
Be<dv Wm Mondav fop Me Not, Samit>
JuO. GOii& Go Bov
Time 19 oe
U EXACT A 110·91 oatO '107 00
Allttndance b, 19&
S.nta Anltl
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
( lnd of '1. dll y "-'"'"'"".0 tnffllne) FIRST RACE. 6 fur1ono>
Perfect Cover !Gallllanol 66 80 1710 9 '°
SocralH (BM!clt) 3 60 J 40
Boston Magic (Hawtevl 4 40
Also raced Sa m crow. Avandaro, Vlklno
Room. ROYel St Gt0rot. IR Power, Bold
n' Beller, PoslllOn's Bt>I Knowledoal>le
Luck, Austlnes C w
Time t ti l i S
SECOND RACE. 6 funongs
Prim Oust !Guerra ) S 60 J co 2 IO
Nan·• Turn 10 Star IHewleyl 3 IO ),70
Premier Lau !Sll>1flel 1 60
AllO raced. A Positive Mavl>t. Miu Mesh, Final Assaull, Sunland Succen
Detra Jewel, Pa talel, Saratooa Rolle
Time t 11 . n D.AILY OOUILE 19·7) paid IJISOO.
THlltD RACE. o,,. mile
OarleOO !Sil>llle ) HO J:10 220
Runaway Groom (Fell) S 40 7.80
Mullerono <S,_mo~erl 7.20
Al'o raced Rt0al Falcon. J acque's Tio.
Mananllal
Time: 1.l6
U EXACTA !A·J) 1>alO \10900
FOVllTH RACE. 6'1 furlOng\
Siar Ma ttf'lal ( Sno.tmaker) 1 40 J 00 7 CO
Heza Oevld (Toro) 7.IO 7.70
Tom Tom ~ullan !Pearo1el 7 80
Alto raced· F ive Pennlts, Aelnv L-nd,
No Funds, Shannon's Toy, One More Hll
Time: 1 II 3/ S
Flf<TH RACE. ""' m~ts on furl.
I'll Sft You ILIP!lam) 16 20 9.IO 6.60
AcoulsiHon (SIDlllt) 16 00 17.40
TOI> of the Barrel IHawlevl 13.&0
"''o racld. Boll De Grace. Mr Aeaclor. Quantum LH P, Mou·Ftf'nl-Tvchl, Trlekv ·
Wiilie, Peler Jones, Ooul>lt Sier
Time Hf llS.
U EX.ACTA fl·SI e>ald "'37.00.
SIXTH llACll. 6 turlono•.
Miu Ll9'1tntn (Hew~vl 110 0 7S.20 1 . ..0
t l.l>vt You Bel>v (Olhw ) l.60 3.:10
!l's • Romo (Ft fl) S.00
AIM> rac9d . .Allu1lon, Bid Footl,h, \/lien.
lncut>vl. Secrtlt41, ln,lructor. Haslv Pro
Tlmt· 111 4/S
i lVllNTH lt.ACll. 6 luriono'
h U CIOud ISl'IMmalltf) :n.IO U O 5.110
Hal10Vtflen ($11>111tl UO 5.20
Fl Devi• (t.IPllaM) 4.00
AIM> ra.Ged: Hl-lllCO, Many Oleelto,
""" E•CHllY•, Handtomt Pec:kaee, No
Hvtt. ""\II to Power, Mlfa LOMa Don Tl,,... MO 415
s.S IXACTA !S·'l 1>ald S26S '°·
llGHTH llACI. 1 lurlOllO•.
l oo L• ho (Haw!nl UO S.60 S.20
D•nteO.r (Cllff••l 7 60 .. oo
l/ ... boftcl G.i (PedrOH ) U O
Al.o rec«I. •011119«1 Miu. .Awllwar-d
Aoe. 1ton 1 Oerbv't Love, Nal1Kal Suml'llll.
l'M ltHllT ~In. Trut w1nc1v·• Bal>v
Time: 1~4 2/i
t2 l"fCtl SIX t4•3·•·J+fl Mid s U,0.UO wlttl elol>I WIMfno lkllelt (llff
llOl'lft) Carrvovet' l>OOI' s112,"9~
NINTH llACL I 1116 M4~
Klulno Gin fOll¥arHI l>.110 UO UO
Fon fov (o.tMdlllol 0 0 >.OO
Melmelton l~Oll) JIO
.Ai.I> r~ L.otd'• t..e"lf, JOen'• YO•. Otwt Dew, FMll'ltf LA"• l>oMIMlll LA.a,
Doon'• Doll. rim.. U4 .,,
U IXACTA <H J 1>t11d lff ~ .Al~tMll ,....,
--~~------------------------------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 29, 1983 C3
Ediso n, O cean V iew, Mesa a d van ce
Ed oon and Ocean V 1ew ad ·
vanced to the semifinals of the
Edison-Marina Tournament,
while Costa Mesa will vie for the
championship of the Mustangs'
own tour ney aftt!r pooling girls
basketball victories Wednesday.
Meanwhile, Ma rina w as
tumbled by Srea~Ollnda and
Fountain Valley fell to Foothill m
championship quar terfinal play
at Marina, while m consolation
action, Huntington Beach stayed
alive with an easy win over Dana
Hills.
NBA
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Pacific DlvllMn w L Pct. GB
uken 19 9 b19 " Poruand 21 10 617
PhOenl~ u 16 447 6
Golden Stale 11 19 434 7
See Ille " lb .429 1
San 01'90 10 71 323 11•,
MidWHI DM'1ttt
Utah 20 10 667
OaUu 16 IJ SS1 )\.,
Ke1uu cuv 13 " 481 S''~ Denver t7 19 400 • Hout Ion 11 ta 379 .. ' Son Anlonlo II ?0 3SS 911
EASTEAH CONFERENCE
Atlantl< Dlvlslen
P11llaOl!IOn1a 21 s '°' Bo"on 23 7 167
New Yor' 17 13 S61 6 w .. htnoton u " soo 9
New Jtrsev 13 17 4)) 10
Central Dlvhlon
Mllwav,ee 11 12 S86 Allanla IS " Sl7
Oe1to11 IS 14 S17
ct'llU OO 11 14 «O • Cleveland a n 176 9
Indiana 1 20 2S9 9
W-tdav's Scor•• Mllwauke" 89, Ne.,. J"""" 95 Oetr?ll 111 New York toe
Oallas 109, San Oltvo 9'2
PllOenl.< 121. Golden Slate !OS
Utall 113. Seallle lOS
T ....... t't Ga,,...,
Allanta at Cteveland
Bosion •• Houston
Kansa• Cilv at Sa11 Antonio
Porllend at CrHcogo
Phll1dc-lohio er Denver
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Ora"" Gout 6', Groumont S4
!Grnwn«ll T9'1mem4iftll
GROSSMONT -JoMson 6. Overlund
11. Troven 12, Wllllems l , NetlOn 2, Renver c, Brown 2, Sebastien 2. GorCIOn 12 Totals
21 11-~ S4 ORAHGE COAST -Morgon 11 Berry
'· Slel)llens 9 C.uen 13, Shalluck II, Svman1ll.I c. Goudge 9, Farmer 2 Total' Z1
22·19 66 HaHllme· Orar19e Coa>I. 79-2S
Tola! loult Grou monl 2b, Oranoe Cout
17
Golden West 103, Glendale 76
(C ..... oe DtMt1 Toumement)
GLENDALE !Arta.I -Burn• S. MaSOll 12. Henrv 10. Rowtev 17, Troutr 20.
Bradberry 12 Tolal• J4 12·17 76
GOLDEN WEST -Hatev 12. O'Conner
3, Slber lS. Murrav 11. Judoe 14, Love 12. Dameron 19, Whllellelr S. Bruce 11, Rivera
7. Tolalt 39 2S·3S 103
Halftime: GOiden West, 44-J2
Tol•l IOUll C.lendalt 24, GOiden Wt SI 16
HIGH SCHOOL
Fountain Velev 74, Dena H•s 61
(OH,,.. Hellday 0.ulcl
DANA HILLS -Se>etman 4. McSWffrleY
17, Mathlw 12. Jeffers I . Cmetak O.
Campbell 16, Moomaw •. Anlenunuccl 0
Tolals 11 19-24 61.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -Marlin 71.
Jacobs IA, Tlnr1ev 4, Newton 9. Brown a,
Zeno 3 Han'°" 2. Power 7, Molnernead 6.
TolelS 29 16-30 74.
SC.... bV 0Uar19n
Oana lillts l1 19 13 11-111
Founleln Valley IS 16 II l7-74
To111 loutt. 01na Hiiis 26. Founleln
Vallt v 20. Fouled out· Moomaw (OH),
J1co0s (F'V)
MaM Del 12, Foothll S2
<Or-Helldav Clank)
FOOTHILL -Gore I, .AlverodO 6,
Perkin• 4. CHev 10. Laird 16. Ou1rlsac a.
LHler O. P arlier o. Aelllv O. Tole!•· 21 10-13
57
MATER DEi -Beeuwsu rr IS, Lewl1
)4, Jack1on S, Flttoer 11. Mllchell a. Owver 6. Pellon 0, Molls 2, Wor llle 0, Kally 0,
Gorman 0 Tolels. 32 11·72 17
kw• bv ouarttn
Foolhlll 13 1 S 10 1..-57
Maler Otl lS 20 JI 16-t7
Total loul• Foothlll 17, Maltr Ot l 14.
F'oul~ ou1· Cash <Fl
E1t1ncla 69, S.nta O.ra SO
(OrMet Hlllclav Clank)
SANTA CLAllA -Cvllanovlcn 11.
Torre1 9. Marllnei 6, Aamlr&r 13, Antclllfe
1, Bee• 0, Gullerrtr 0, Seluar 7,
B1umo1r1r1er 7. Tolets; 12 6·9 SO. •
ESTANCIA -JOMSIOn to. Locllwood
11. Furln 18, Clemenls 21, Graham 3,
Ot utsch 0, Bucherdl 0, Hullck 0, Hastings 0,
Moor1ey 6, Bartow 0. Tolal•. 26 17-7• 69
Sc.,.. by OUamn
San1e Clare 15 IS 17 t-SO
E stancia 11 13 16 21-69
Tola! loulS. Senre Clara 19, Esta ncia II.
Foul9d out Cvlla novlch tSC>.
M.,1M 61, Cha ... y 29
(Ora,,.. Hellda• Clank)
CHAl'l'EY -Modera •• Scht n11ra I.
S1><1rllno 6. Dona ldson 6, Thomes 6, Buck 2
To1e1s. tl 3·7 29
M.AlllN.A -Aoten1welg 18, Ellmom a,
Draheim t, Btlonoer 11. Wl>ffltr 7, Smllh
'· Grader 2. Churchvlt~ 2 Tolals· 25 ll-IS
61 k-bV 0U."'9n
Cllafltv 10 1 2 1~29 M3rlna 13 12 17 1~1
Tolel louts: Chalfev 17, Merine 11.
Laeune H•1 61, C411tl Mell 47
(Or•-Htlldev 0.ttlc)
LAGUNA HILU -Llllln 11, C:artlf 17,
Stlllno 10, Plemel s, Brown •. Devit 7,
Rlnoltr 11. Conradi 1. To1a11· 13 1•·24 62.
COSTA MESA -COOk A, Judd 4, l(lmrnt 9, Rvsan 4, Gr-•. Pttlchowskl
7, Marlin 4, Ton 12, Dullv O. McFadden 4. Tol1l1 19 9-11 47
k-lrV 0Uaf'1itr1 L•11un• Hltl1 9 IS 15 ))-;12
Colle Mase 4 13 14 1,._.7
Tolal loult. Laguna Hlllt 12. Co111 Meta
17 Fouled OUI: Kimme (CM )
EclMn 49, .... rmlnt ~ 45
IC.,_ ClrY T___.)
IDISON -Hach.... 11, Tr.om.a s.
John.on t, Wer•ntr 12, Wl!H l , Sl11Cl1lr 2.
To1alt: 17 IS-25 49.
lllLL.AllMINll ,._,, -Srnlth 2. P:lot'ft '· Br11mffell •, N\kt'lttlnl I, Ft,,..-1v l. Hltlleio n. Jontt 2. TOllli 12 ,,_,. •s
k -111¥ OMr9lln
Edlaon IS 10 9 15-49
etlttn'Rlne Pr"' e 1' e I~
Total fouh : Edl'On 2', Bell1rm h,. Prt9
73. FOUied out: Wlltt (El New"" Hertler 67, Oeutlet 41
(CMNll Ct1Y T___,.)
DOUGLAS NIV. -Cracll 2. Ooroon
12, lolMr 1{. ~llalll •. LAGrande 7, ~onlt ), H•rnlllOn • To••••: 14 1.,.2' u
N8WPOllT HMIMNI -Bu1iwn.11 1 t.
McOevren 2. Sor-I, FrtMI' I, Mate
It, HOiden 6. lM •• 9"ctt 4, J l tnft ), F~ J To1a11· 1• lt•1i '7. tl-.11¥....,....
Doutli' I t I). 1 >--0
NeWPOfl Ha rbor ti 10 1) ~,
To111 lou1t · Oouolel It, Ntw~ Hafl>or '1 Poutoeo our OOf OO<I <0)
..... ~U,~M
IC--f--lt)
IOU• .. AllOI -IOIWWI H1 V-..00
2, 0re¥ft 11,. e.c.k t, Hlottn t. Aw.N 4.
Tolelt: ti 21-ll Q ,
UMVUllTY -e....,.,, •. •v1111 •· ~lllft'ler• 1. S!otrofl 111.. ""1'IDl4I 10, v.n1111 •·
VtnUIW\ 4 TOl•I•· U tc•)I t0.
WOMEN
Here's how 1t happcint•d:
Edison 52, Mater Del 39
F.dilion (I 0-3) meet8 Foothill at
6 tonight in the sem lB following
its s urprlsingly easy decision over
10·4 Mater De i.
Leading by just three entering
the fourth 4uarter, the Chargers
began lengthening it out in the
fourth and breezed home.
SCH'• bv OUartan
BOiia Grande 12 16 11 2~ Unlvarslly II 2 I 1 21-60
Totel toull. BolH Grande 21, Unlvtrsllv
25. Fouled out "'"old (Ul. Ftemarll (U)
Irvine M, ESCJef'•nH .,
!Canvtft T9'1memtntl
IRVINE -Ounrap 20. Caldwell 11, Neal 1, ~llOdH 4, Tamure 2, P.,ltrun I, Bltlmen
14, Partdel 10, Flick 0. Torall. 27 10-11 6-4. ESPERANZA -Ktomen S. Anlhonv 17,
Sl'lffh 12. Gelctiell o. WIDO s. Rou 2, Bau
1, Lox 4, Oraoonell 7. Wiiiie 0, Y'orotr 0
l Olllt U 19·2& 49
SCO!'t by Oul,.,.._l
Irvine 19 11 13 lb-64
Elotronla 12 9 IS 1)-49
Total louts Irvine 11. E111eranra 12
Technical E•1>eranu eoacll
lAeuna BHCtl 6Sr RooMvett s I
LAGUNA IEACH -Teo1>er 17, Jordan
6, Naeu 4, Blanron I, McGralll 2, Fortune a. Welford O, Ellslen a, PernlO 0, Arn<ll 10
Total> l7 l·I &S.
AOOSEVELT -Ga1><1e12, V•mauch1 c,
McCabe 9, Kile 13, Hatnlao. •. Lar.en 10,
Makomanl 6, Nuoent 3 Torals 23 S·15 SI
Seer• bv Oua,.,...s
Laguna Beacl'I 23 16 12 t<r-6S
Aoosevell 20 6 11 •-s1
Total lou" Laoun• BHcn 14, Roose11tll
12
GarcMfl Grove S4, WHTmlnsfff S1
ISaMlllM T9'1memenf)
GARDEN GAOi/iE -C.ull>Orl> 4, Oents
11. Ovill lra tO, Morin 7. We11ergoord 9,
Clanin •. Cro"t 2. Kaser 4. Roell 4 Totals ,, l2·2t S4.
WESTMINSTER -Eo•hn IS, Oowno
10. A~lla 2. Oavls 8. McMiiian I. Burkman
9 Totals 18 16·38 S2
SC-l>V 0u•r1en
G.sratn Grove 9 20 14 I l-S4
'<Ves•mll\ster 13 12 11 9-S2
Total loult Garden Crovt 26, West
m lnSltr 27 Fouled out Ea.11n IWI, Akll•
(W). MCMiiia n !WI Ov .. ma (GG). Clonln
IGGI TecMlcats Garde" Grove 1>encn.
OvO.•lra (C.G)
S.ddlback 6S, El Dor1d0 37
tSantleM Teume,,_i)
SADDLEBACI( -Jorl*s 0 Kiel S,
Prt1•d0 2, Wttillns b, LOvtlau 0, B Wauon
15. M Watton 21. Luten 8. Oeel I. To1111 19
27·38 65.
EL DORADO -Hakeman 16, Sammon
2, Preilon 7. Scnwerll ?. Rava 7. 011on 2.
Benlt I TOl•ll 12 13·23 37
Scet• llV Oua.....,.s
Saddtel><lck 14 16 IS 2~S
El OoradO II 6 9 11-37
Total 1ou1s $addtet>ack 18, El OoredO 2S.
Foul"d oul· Deal tSI Ramos (EO)
Sonorl U, WoodbrldOe 37
!Br• Teumement)
WOODllll1DGE -Forlnotr ~, Padoell
4, Townsend 4, Bala• 1'. Murl>flv O. Bor\uk
10. ToblaSOll O
SONORA -Quinlan 10, Nal>t'< I,
'Vo•hlda t, HOOi< 10, CorDa tlll 2, Cebrun 7
E SamuellOn ?4. M Samue1Son l . l(ramar
9, Summer• 2. Wtillt 2
Scet9 llV ~nen
WOOdbrklOt 4 1 10 1.-37
Sonora 19 11 le ?1-.6
Fouted out· Batdl tWJ
HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN
EdlMn n. Maw Ott Jt
(Manna. Eclsen Toumementl
M.ATl!ll DEi -Ac'11tno 2. Gatne; 19
Wood 6. El~rman 2. Ale" 10 Total• II 3·4
39
EDISON -Claro. 7. Gendron 10, Parenr S. Htnr1essev 4, Meinhard! 2S. WllM>n 1
Totals 23 6-16 S2
Scel"t ltY Ouartw1
Ma1tr Dtl 6 6 16 11-39
Edlton 9 12 10 21-51
Total louts Mater Del 20, Eal1on 10
O<Nn View 62, Burrewtl• 41
(EdlMn·MarlM T-.....-1 OCEAN VIEW -Cnase 27, Cnom•CI 9
Oourv 6. Slrntk 4, Vlach<>~ lC. German 7. Giii 0. Hounsall 0, AodrloutJ 0, Slr•loht 0
TaklCIO O Totals. 22 18·2S 62
BUAAOOGHS -Kettler 20. t<.ln~tnnon
11. Elder 2. Sca n•an 2. Garcle c, Vealch 2.
Hier O. McCauonen O. Hauser 0, Hu land o.
Haves 0, t<.lno o, Pautwn O Total> IS 11· 17
41 sc-bv 0Uar1en
Ocean View 11 17 16 11--.7
Burrougnt 13 10 12 o-41
Total fOUll ()(een I/it"' 1', BurroughS
16
fl' oott1• SI, F 9'Hrta In 'V alev 46
IEdlsen·Martne Teumamentl
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -Puchalski 16.
CIOwer 12, Hender son 10, Buren 2 COOi< 6
Toret• 19 8· 16 44.
FOOTHILL -Strong 6. Gtddv 1. Je
0 1ur 21, JI O.ur 16, Mc Fen on 4
FlelKhao.tr 3 Total> 21 9· 13 SI
S<-b'I Ouar1WI
Founlaln Vattev 2 20 11 1)-.16
Foolhlli 11 11 1• lrSI
Tola! loul>· Fountain Vallev 12. Foothill 17 Fouled our Strong !Fo ). TecMocal
Puctielskl (FV)
Hunttnet9n Bead! SO, Dana Hlh 21
EdlMn·MAl'IM T9'1'1\a1Nnt) DANA HILLS -Brighi 0, Fortttr 17.
Hlr1es 2, Quinn 1, McCrH S, !>c;hroeder 2
To1a11, 10 &·16 21.
HUNTINGTON IEACH -Becur 12,
CordOve a, H041dey •. Tiius S. Vallt1 I.
Hertmon 4, Lund c, Murrey S Totals 21 2·6 so.
Sc.trt IW 0Uar19n
Oene Hfll• 9 • 4 11-21
Hunllrigton Beech 13 14 9 I~
Total fouls; Dan• HIH• 10, Hun1lno1on
Beech 18.
lrN-Ollndl u . Marlnt 42
1Ed1Mn·Ma""8 T~I
lll•EA·OLINDA -Staoter II, ThomH
IA, Chlolll U, Kteotr lS. GlboMv &,
S<hevu ler 2. Eoen " Tc>l•t•. 31 9· lf '3.
MAIUlllA -Celkll1• ??. Sabatino J,
Bellamv I. CerOOnl 0, Klrk111> 3, Rk:llter 2,
Ferouton 2. Calderone 2. Tolal•: 1& 6-11 42.
Seer• bv Oullt1WI
Brea ·Otlnda II 71 It 1~
Marll'l1 4 10 1S l,_..2
Tolal IOU!•. Brea·Otlnda 12, Mlflnt IS.
CMtl Mell 6', Wts'9m 52
tC .. tllMeuT--1 WISTlllN -WIHlarm 17. 8t1n1 U,
$ta1lak I, Oonntllv •. Parenlffu l . Lowlrna ), Morelet 5. Total•· ?I 10-16 S?
COSTA MaSA-C1>wtev 1, Garcia S,
HarecMI •. Lua II, NMI 20, Reul 2,
khunlaller 24. To1111: 25 19·2' 69.
~ lrV °"'""" w"tt<n 1 u It t>-S1
Colla MH t IS 2' I• 1.,_.t
Tolll IOull: WHlern 23. Cott• Meta 11.
Fouled oul: Gere•• (CM>. Oon,,.nv CW),
,.,,...,1te11 (WI
l1lancla 4tr s.••.-i1dl 12
((Mtl Meta T---'l
•nAMCIA -l rutM 10, •lllOOM I•,
HalhCOCk 14, P.vllll \01 NatbV 1. Tolall. 20
,. " 4t. SAOOLllA(K -Tt<r aclO S, Mocl\l1ulll
1. Hanton>. Htt ltY to, C:.rrllle 2. Totals.: t .... ,, ,_. " °"""" Eatancl• t 16 I 1......,
.. ffltOe(k • ' s ,_,,
TOlll l'oull: Ellencle 11, ~ 13
G1v u:hen Meinhurdt onc.:e again
hit 20 in both SC.'Ormg an d re-
boundmg (25 points and 20 re-
bounds) and al.so hcid six steals.
Kor i Gendron did <i good job
running the offense, dishing off
six ass1slS, as did sophomore
M1t'helle Hennessey, while Sheri
Clark (nine rebounds) and Kristi
Wi lson ( 10) w~re fort'es on thl'
boards.
Ocean View 62, Burroughs 41
Karen Chase controlled the in-
side, scoring 10 ol her· game·h1gh
27 points in the second quarter. to
NHL
CAMPBELL CONFEAE~E
Sm¥1ha Dl\ll1lan w L TPI>
Edmonton 27 1 ' sa
Vancouver lS 19 ) )J
Coloar; 13 II 6 32
Wlnnloeo I) 19 I )0 I(""" 12 19 6 )0
Norrh DIVltltn
Mlnnn o•a 18 " ' 40
Cl>IC1go IS 70 3 33
Toronto 1' 17 s ll
St Louil I• 19 • 32
Oetroll " 20 • 21
WALES CO~EAENCE
Palflck M slon
NV l$1andfr\ ?S 10 7 S?
Pnlladolohla 20 10 6 c6
NY Ranoe11 20 13 • ..
Wotn1no1on 17 19 1 )b
Pi1t11>uron 9 2) s 23
New Jt rHv 7 11 2 16
Adam\ O!Yllloft
Boston 24 10 ? so
Butlalo 71 17 ' ..
Que OK 20 " l 4J
Montreot 17 18 1 36
Harilora 13 19 l 29
Wedntsdllv's kerts
NY lslande• s 6, 1(1n9t S I ot)
Delroll J Wa1n1ngtori 7 (Oii
Mlnneso1a a. Toronto 6
NY Range,. 7 ChlcaQo •
Boslon S, Calgary 3
Edmori1on 4. l/aricouver 2
TOll!tflt's GaMll
Qul!bee at Bulla10
Oetro11 a l New Jer.ev
T oron10 a1 St Louis
tuanden 6, Klnvs s
kwe l>V PtrlO<h
GF
224
ISS
133
ISi
ISi
163
131
ISJ
ICS
128
176
161
ISJ
130
119
101
16• "s 172
137
12)
GA
IS1
157
IS6
175
180
ISi
147
174
160 1!>6
l?I 124
t'4
137
167
167
107
132
13S
138
10
Ntw Yon 2 l t 1-•
Lo• AnMlet 0 7 J 0-S
Flt'1t Period
t New 'York. Trorrler 1S 1Po1vln) 1.38
<sh). 1 New York, Trottier 26 (Gllberl,
S.vl c S2 Penarlles~orlno, NY, l'?A, B
Suiter, N'V, 11 01
SecMCI Ptf'led 3. New Yor~. Gilbert 8 (Bouv. Trolller)
3 09 (l>OI, 4 Los Anoeles, 0 Smilh 6
t r<t nrledvl S •2, S Lo> AntM~•. r<eMv S <Cnr1Slo'1, 0 Smllhl 17.30. 6. New Yorll.,
Bou v 2t tPeruon. Tro111er) 19·16 Penal·
llH -Hordy, LA, 2·J6. 0 Surrer,'N'V, S·42,
Cnrl11011. LA. 12 00
Third PH'led
1 Los A1111e1ts. Slmml!r 13 (McEw&n,
Olonnel ns loo); 8 New Yoro.. Gllberl 9
(Bou vl •.30. 9 Los AntMl•l Ofonnt t9
<Enoblom) 6,2S. 10 Los A<1oe1H,
Auskowl kl 1 (Jarvi•, Hakansson) 7·19
Penelll!!•-Olrieen NV l·S4, Potvin, NY, 9 1)
Overtime
11 New York, Peruon 7 (Tonelli) 4 54
Snoll on ooal-Ne w York 11 •8·10·)-31
Lot .Anoeles U·l -1 1·•-37
Goallet-Hrudev NY Lesl<owslli, LA
A-t6,00S
eovs • socctf'
(H""""91tft &aeCh Touma.,,_
CMmoleMlllO Ouar1'tf'ilnals
Ocean View 0, !>ervllt O {Ocean View
edvanct• on oenallv kick\)
Caolstreno Valtev I, Canvori 0
L• Quinta ), Wtstml•nltr 3 ( L• Qu(nta
advance> on oenauv ~lck•>
E>l>4!<enu 0, VIiia Park O IEsoerenta
edvenct'\ on oenellv klcll.s)
CllamoleMlllP SemHlnalt
Caolstr1no l/allev 1, Ocean Vt"w 0
Esoerant• 1, La Quinta O
Flflh Place Sem111M1t
Servltt I, Canvon 0
Ville Per k 2, We\lmfn\ler O
Ninth P\eca OUtrtwflnlb
Mattr Otl O. Sanla Ane 0 (Mattr Otl
ed•ance• on 1><1nellv lllckl ) Bell Gordens 2, SaddleDack 0
Hunllno•on Beech o, Cyoreu o tHun1
1no1on Beocri •d~•ncts on ~allv Klck•I
Mtn loft Vltlo 2. Kennedv 0
Nlntll Place Semiflnalt
MAiter 0.1 0, Ball Garden! 0 (Maler Oel
advances on e>eriallv kk kt )
Hunllnilton Beien 1, Min ion Vlek> O c-""' oua,,.._,
Haw1nor,,. 4, T u\lln I
F'oun111n Vel~v •. CtrrllOI 3
Bevertv Hill• 7, Bishop Mon!gomarv I
Pelo> Verdfl 4, Merlna 0
C_...tlell Samlllnell
'11w11'1Qrne J, Founteln Ve11ev 1
PalOs Vtrdes ,, Beverly HlllS 1 c-----"D" Samlftnalt Tu111n 1, Ctrrllos o
Marina 2. BlshOo Montoomlf'V O
T toCla V'• SdlecMI
r o,.,, -Hunllnoron Beech vs. Mattr
0 •1 !nlnttil, Marlria "' Tu11rn (conlOle flon '0")
3 om -Servile vs VOi• Park (111111),
H1w1110rr1e vs P alos l/eroa. (conlOlallonl
S o.rn -Ocean View v1 La Qulnla tlhlrdl
1 om -Ceolstreno Vel~y n
E1otranie <c11amolonltilo).
WMMt.dlY't trMMcfteM
l.AHaALL . ~~
NEW 'VO•r< VANl(EES>-Narneel Gtr1e
Mlcfletl third 11111 coec.h, ltov Whll• flrll
baM coach. Jell TorllOrg encl $emmv Ellll
11 ptlclllno coec:M• encl Lou Plnlt11•,
outfi.t<ltr. •• balllno coach. ~ ......
YOMIUltl GIANT$-Sloned Warren
Cr-rile, outtlttclt<, 10 a lhf'M•Vffr con-
If .C:I
lead the Seahawk.8 (10·2) into
tonight's 8 o'clock ~mlfmalB
against powerful Brea-Olinda
Burroughis (of Ridgecrest). the
defending champion ot the
.Edison-Marina tourney, was
never in the game af ter halftime
when Cx.-ean View lOOk a 11-point
advantage. Trina Vlachos and
Michelle Chomici had eight re·
bounds apiece and Dana Douty
netted a pair of key baskets in the
second half to pace Ocean View
Costa Mesa 69, Western 52
The Mustangs (3·4) will meet
Mark Keppel Friday at 7:30 for
the title after dominating West-
ern.
Costa Mesa outrebounded the
visitors, 44-29, led by Lisa
S<.·humaker and Shelly Neal with
13 apiece. ,
Nance Lux enJOyed her first
double -figure scoring pe r -
form ance wit h 11 points.
Schumaker, with 24, and Neal,
with 20, led the Mustangs in scor-
ing.
Another key for Mesa was that
it had only 11 turnovers. 21 less
than ilS previous ou ting.
Foothill 51, Fountain Valley 46
The sister duo of J ennifer and
Jill Osur two-timed the Barons,
combining for 37 of Foothill's 51
points, including 11 of the first 13
when the Knigh ts built a 13-2
lead.
Fountain Valley rallied to trail,
48-46, m the final seconds, but
Foothill converted a free throw
and field goal with five Se<..'Onds
remaining to clinch the victory .
Brea-Olinda 83, Marina 4%
The Vikings (8-5) proved no
match for the Wildcats in .the
quarterfinals, as Brea topped the
tournament scoring record by one
point.
The old record was held by
Ocean View , which scored 82
points against Dana Hills last
year.
Judy Calkins (22 points) and
Heather Kirk.up (11 rebounds)
we re two bright spots for Marina
Huntington 50, Dana Hills 28
Wendy Becker sc.'Ored 12 points
to lead the Oilers to their easy
victory over Dana Hills in the
consolation quarte rfinals a t
Marina.
The Oilers led, 27-13, at half-
time and never looked bal'k.
Estancia 49, Saddleback Z2
Four players scored in double
figures for the F.agles. who will
meet Garden Grove Friday at 3
for the consolation title at Costa
Mesa.
Karen Rindone and Amy Hat-
hcock notched 14 points apiece,
w hile Connie BrazelJ and Teri
Pavlik accounted for 10 each.
M D. e.
From Page C1
bucket when pressed, and de-
fensive fronting of Mater De.i sen-
sation Tom Lewis. along with a
four-com er stall with any kind o (
lead at all was Plan A for Foothill.
And, it was working. The only
problem for Foothill was that it
didn't work long enough.
Mater Dei upped its lead to
37-28 on a pair of Lewis free
throws, Foothill blew a lay-up,
then Mike Fielder connected
from medium range and Lewis
got loose on the baseline and
suddenly it was 41-28 and Plan A
was out.
Plan B (playing Mater Dei's
game) found the winners outscor-
ing Foothill, 25-10 before the
fourth quarter began. as the game
became just one more rout within
a two-year span under Coach
Gary McKnight that has seen the
Monarchs compile a 40-4 record.
"We tried tc maintain the
tempo," said Foothill Coach Jim
Reames. "But once they got intc
their power game it was over."
McKnight voicerl concern about
hi.s team's "flat" play on Monday
against Laguna Hills and through
the first half Wednesday. "We'vE
played a lot of people and are
getting a little com placent," said
McKnight. "But that's going to
step.
"I anticipate Estancia doing the
same things. but they're hurting
without (Jim) Curtis (Estancia's
all-league guard who is out with
an ankle injury) .
Lewis finished with 34 point$.
hilting 13 of 16 from the field and
8 of 9 at the line. • Marina 11 , Cbaffty %9
The Vikings (2-8) stayed alive
ln the oonsolation bracket behind
Ron Roeeruweig's 18 points. .
"Roeenzwetg did a good job on
the boards, too," said Marina
Coach Steve Popovich, who M?nt
hls team aga1Nt Lakewood today
in the conaolation Mm.is.
Mart.N held a 25-17 halftime
bulge. then went on a 17-2 ipurt
in the third quar~ to put it
away.
Lagana Hlll1 It, Co1&a Mesa 47
Mesa (2-6) dropped out of the
tournament u the Hawa cook
C'OJJ"lm&nd in the third quarttt
with a 25-14 bl.ll'lt. wlt.h four
players flniahina ln dou~ fle-w.. led by Robert~ (17.).
Meea'a only player ln .cortna in
double (jl'l'ft WU 6-7 l\l*l'd Lt~ Ton (11 point.I).
r ----. .
('.a Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Thursday, December 29. 1983
Bruins cruise past BYU
UNL V, Georgetown ready for confrontation
Frum Ai' dh1pa1cbell
COLLEGES LOS ANGELES -Center Stuart Gray scored
19 points and Kenny Fields and Gary Maloncon
added 17 ap1e<:e to lead the 7th-ranked UCLA Brums
to a 82-73 v1ct0ry ovt>r Brigham Young Wednesday
night.
UCLA. which improved its record to 7-l. led
15-13 with 12:43 left in the first half be(ore running
off a 10-0 spurt in the nex.t 1:59 to take a 25-13
advantage.
The Rebels raced out to a 13-4 lead ln the first
Cive minutes and were never seriously threatened.
Cao.'hings 9COred 13 of his points in the first half.
UNLV led J8-28 at halftime and increased the
margin to as many as 19 pomt.8 in the second half.
The BruU'\S ran off a 12-2 spree to take a 44 -23
lead with two minutes to go in the half.
However, the Cougars outscored UCLA 9-1 to
close to within 45-32 at hallti.me
The Cougars, now 5-4, continued to rally,
outscoring the Bruins 21· I 1 to start the second halt as
center Brett Applegate, whosrored 13 of his 16 pointS
in the second half. led the rally.
Georgeaowo 82, Marshall 71 -Forward David
Wingate scored a game-high 23 points and Patrick
Ewing'6dded 17 points and 10 rebounds to lead the
No. 5-ranked Georgetown Hoyas to the victory over
Marshall in the first-round of the Las Vegas Holiday
Classic.
The rally brought BYU to within 56-5:i with
nine minuU!S to play.
Wingate, a 6-5 sophomore, was 6-of-9 from the
floor and 1 l -of-1 l Crom the free-throw line as the
Hoyas raised their season record to 9-L
However, Melancon's two free throws put
UCLA ahead 58-53. and the Cougars could get no
closer.
ln other college action:
Ewing, ~ddled with four personal fouls for most
of the secnd half. led a late Georgetown rally in
which the Hoyas outs<.'Ored the Thundering Herd.
18-7. m the finaJ nine minutes.
UNLV 69, Clemson SS -Center Ed Catchings
scored 17 points to lead the unbeaten Rebels over
previously unbeaten Clemson in the Holiday Classic
in Las Vegas.
Kentucky 86, Purdue 67 -Melvin Turpin scored
22 pomts and Kenny Walker added 18 -14 in the
first half -as No. 2 Kentucky smothered No. 18
Purdue in Louisville
Ora.nge Coast, G WC
• easy tourney w1nners
Orange Coast and Golden West
colleges were resounding winners 1n
basketball tournaments Wednesday, as
the Pirates claimed a first-round vic-
tory over host Grossmont. and Golden
West stayed alive in the College of the
Desert tourney m Palm Desert.
ln the hnaJ three minutes. OCC
worked its control game to perfection,
and converted all 12 free-throw at-
tempts to thwart any Grossmont
comeback. Jeff Stephens and John
Berry each hit four free throws down
the stretch for the Sues. who have shot
80 perc.-ent from the foul line this Here's how it happened:
season.
Orange Coast 66, Grossmont S4
Golden West 103. Glendale (Ariz.) 70 The Pirates (7-5) rolled lO their
fourth straight victory and wi1J meet
Imperial Valley ( 11-1) in a rematch
tonight at 8.
The Rustlers enjoyed their top
scoring output of the season in moving
into the consolation finals against
Riverstde today. In the first meeting between the two
teams. Imperial Valley beat OCC.
68-66. on a last-second shot in the Miles
Eaton Tournament.
Seven players reached double fig-
ures in the onslaught, which improved
Golden West's overall mark to 2-7
OCC start.eel quickly, taking a 26-15
advantage 14 YS minutes into the game.
but the Griffins rallied to lead. 42-38.
With 10:25 to play
Golden West led by just six in the
final two minutes of the first half, but
scored eight quick points before inter-
mission to assume a 46-32 advantage.
"We also had three guys m double
figures on the boards," said Golden
West Coach Jim Greenfield.
The Pirates caught Grossmont at 48,
then took the lead on a Mark Goudge
rebound with 4: 12 remammg.
White:
'Staying
cool' key
PASADENA <AP)
lllmo1s Coach Mike
White says staying cool
when thing~ go wrong
could be the key to
winning the Rc&e Bowl
on Monday.
UCLA Coach Terry
Donahue thinks his team
will have to run against
Illinois' tough defense if
the Bruins are going to
have a good chance
Both c:oaches h~ldl'<i
questions Wednesday
during a news con-
ference m the stately
Wrigley mansion. now
headquarters for the
Tournament of Roses.
"There wiU be emo-
tions. mistakes. human
errors." said White,
whose team won its first
Big Ten championship in
20 years. "The team that
keeps its poise when
some adversity h1ts 1s the
team that will come out
on top."
Donahue s aid
fourth-ranked lllmois
has the best defense his
Bruins have faced.
McHone fire d;
GM will coach
SAN ANTONIO (AP)
-Less than halfway
through his first head
roaching job in the Na-
tional Basketball As-
soc 1 at ion , Mo rris
McHone was f ired
Wednesday by the San
Antonio Spurs and re-
placed for the remainder
of the season by General
Manager Bob Ba.i1s.
PREP BASKETBALL
From PageC1
in the first quarter. It equaled a personal season high
for Mase
Dave Felde had all rune of his points m the final
period. while Todd Bushman added 11 points overall
Ten of the 11 players Newport suited up scored
in the lopsided affair.
Irvine 64, Esperanza 49
The Vaqueros (6-4) placed four players m double
f 1gures in the romp and earned a shot at Bolsa Grande
m the consolation finals today at 3.
lt will be a rematch of a Sonora Tournament
game which lrvme won easily.
Greg Dun.lap tied his personal high in points
with 20 and also pulled down 10 rebounds to lead
Irvine in that department.
Jeff Biel man ( 14 points). Ken Caldwell ( 11) and
Glenn Paredes ( 10) also scored in double figures
Irvine led the whole way and owned leads as big
as 18 points in the second half.
Bolsa Grande 63, University 60
Foul trouble plagued the Trojans (2-6). who
were eliminated from the tournament
Nonn Stolzoff. University's top point-getter
with 27, was wh1Stled for four fouls in the first
quarter which hampered his playing time.
Jason Gentile. Carl Flemark and Brad Arnold
also suffered from foul trouble and Arnold and
Flemark eventuallv fouled out.
University did own a seven-point advantage in
the third quarter. but Bolsa caught and passed the
Tro,ans in the !inal six minutes of the game.
NextactJon for University will be the start of Sea
View League play against Newport Harbor.
Sonora 66, Woodbridge 37
Woodbridge dropped into the fifth place
semifinals against Troy today after losing its second
In nine starts as Sonora jumped to a 9-0 lead and was
never threatened.
Sonora. using a front line that went 6-7. 6-6. 6-6.
effectively cut off 6-10 Marc.'O Baldi. limiting the
Warriors' standout to 14 points.
Saddleback 65, El Dorado 37
The Roadrunners ran their record to 7-1 behind
the 9COring of 6-7 Mark Walton (21) and 6-4 Bryan
Walton (15) and will meet Santiago in the finals
tonight at 8.
Coach Pat Quinn says he hopes to display 6·9
junior transfE!r Chance Peterson tonight. Peterson
has yet to play because of an ankle injury. ·
Garden Grove s•. Westminster 52
Bem1e Denis scored with 20seconds left to break
a tie and lift the Argonauts to victory over the Lions
(3-8)
The game was close all the way.asJef( Eastin ( 15
points) and Tom Downs (10) paced Westminster.
Wills:
All • IS
not right
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Maury Wills is in
trouble, those who know
him say
The same Maury Wills
who rose to stardom as~
26-year-old rookie in
1959 and remained in the
national limelight for
more than two decades.
Apparently all has not
been right for him for
some ume.
·The former base steal-
ing champion and star
shortstop who later man-
aged briefly in the ma-
JC>rs was arrested this
week for investigation of
grand theft auto. He was
stopped while driving a
stolen car. and police said
they found what ap-
peared to be cocaine in
the vehicle
Don Newcombe, coor-
dinator of the Dodgers'
drug and alcohol coun-
seling efforts, said he
had tried to help Wills
fight a cocaine abuse
problem earlier this
year.
"[ t.ook him down to
the CareUnit in May or
June. and he was ad-
mitted," said Newcombe,
a former Dodger star
pitcher who had a drink-
ing problem himself dur-
ing his playing career.
"Two weeks later he
walked out of the place,
on his own. before being
released.
"I asked him why he
left and he said he didn't
think he had a problem.
He didn't think there
was a need for him to be
there."
"He's had problems
for some time now, .. said
Buzzie Bavasi, who as
the Los Angeles Dodgers
general manager signed
Wills to his fi rst contract.
"He's had too much time
on his hands; that was
part of the problem ."
Wills. now 51, had a
brilJiant career with the
Dodgers as one of the
most exciting players in
the 1960s.
He later worked as a
commentator for NBC on
the "Major League
Game of the Week" for
severaJ years before
managing the Seattle
Mariners for 82 games
during the 1980 and 198 l
seasons.
Wills was called up
from the minor leagues
as a tot.al unknown dur-
ing the 1959 season and
W88 a major (actor aa the
Dodgers won the pen·
nant and World Series.
He later was a key
(Set WILLS, Pase Ci)
Irish have point to HJake in Liberty
MEMPH1S, Tenn. (AP) -
Notre Dame quarterback Blair
Keil says he and his t.eammates
hope to make a major pomt to-
night when the Fig.hllng Irish
tangle with 13th-ranked Balton
College m the 25th annWll Libet·
ty Bowl
Th~ Irish. who dropped their
11.st three games of thP regular
11euol'I, balked at accepting a bid
to tonijht's conu.t at Liberty
Bowl Stadium against th~ 9-2
£aales, and are out to quiet critkt
who have S3ld Notre O.mt
should have stayed home with Ila
e~~
''l don't want to ~ rude. but
0• TJ' tenl66t
C6an11tl!I 11 at 6:a•
we're the ones playlns in the
game !IO I don't care wfult other
people think. We're here and
we're going to put on the pads
Thuniday night and hopefully
show people 'hat wedeterVe to be
in thls game," Keil aid Wedrul'S·
day.
"We've pul our loaeet behind
us," added N otre Dame'•
All·Amer'lca running barck Allen
Pink.Nt. who has n.ashed for 1,394
yards and ~ 16 toUCh.doWN.
"W~ an focustn1 on ju:a\ one
game. This ts a chance.for us to
redeem ourselves."
While Fighting lrish players
a.re putting plenty of emphasis on
what a victory could mean to the
long-term future of the Not~
Dame f ootbell propam. Boston
CoUege C08Qh Jack Bicknell'1
EagJ~ have more immediate
ffoala ln mind.
With vk:torlCll over auch powen
u Alabama. Penn S~~ and
Clt-mtOn Nlted away, the Jla&lee
have the opport.u.nlty to not only
move Into the Top 10 but can
~. the f1m Boeion College
tetm to enjoy a 10-victory lea9Dn
In 43 )'Hl'll
.. i .... • .... •
MUC NOTICE Nil.IC M>TIC£ Ml.IC NOTICt P\8.IC NOTIC£
PICTITIOUI IW'*'ll PICTITIOUI IUl•H PICTITtOUI •U ... 11 PICTrTIOUI IW ... H NA.Ml ITAfl.Ml.NT NAn ITATIMIHf ttAMI ITAT .. •NT ~ ITAnMalfT Tr .. fOllOWlng l*.001 are dOlng Tile fOllOWlng l*llOO la doing The IOllowlng IHlflOlll .,., dOlr>g The lollowlng petlOll It dOlng
but111eM H . bu11,,... ••· bvlh'41H ... bv1ln.t1tt 11
PAClflC RESEARCH AS-(A)IAVINEOOORCOMPANV,(B) JANELONOONPAINTINOS,4800 Foor PURSUITS. 110
SOCIA TES, 2816 E Cout Hwy . IRVINE OAR.AGE DOOR COMPANY. Par~ Newpotl 1110 1, Newpott Sttw1mw00d. Irvine, CA. 112714
COfOl\I del Mar. Cl' 1128211 IC) IRVINE GARAGE DOOR REPAIR Beac;h, CA. 112llOO Bruce A ROH. t 10 SltHmwood,
Melvin A l10ftt, l!S 1111 Jll()klOn, COMPANY, (OJ IRVINE DOOR COM· Jat11 London, 4800 Park N-p0'1 IMne, CA 112714
W .. lmlnefe<. CA.112883 PANY-WE ARE 110NE. IE) NEW· 1 101. Newpott e.ach, CA 1128&<> Thia bvllneu 11 conducted by 111
Thi• bullnen •• eonovct.ci by· • PORT BEACH DOOR COMPANY. (F) Jane London lndlvldu•I.
Hmlled p1nnetthlp NEWPORT BEACH GARAGE OOOR Thi• 11atemenl WU Iii.cl wllh f!\41 Bruce A Rott
Melvin A. H0t1I COMPANY, (GI NEWPORT BEACH County Cletk of Orange County on This atetemenl wn lileO ""Jin the
Thlt tlllement WH llled with 11\41 OAAAGE DOOR REPAIR COM· Nov 28, 1983. County Cletk ol Or111g41 County on
COYnly Clerk ol Or1nge Count)' Otl PANY. (HJ SUPER SAVERS, (I) ANN FU1IOO D.c 7, 1983
Nov. 17 1983 REIOLE DESIONS. (J) REIGLE DE· Pubhthed Or1r'91! Coaat Dally n:l&1'7
fU04M SIGNS, (Kl REGAL DESIGNS, Ill Pilot Dec 8, 15. 22. 29. 1983 Publllhed Orenge Co11t ' l'.7ally PubllaheCI Orange Cout Delly I R v IN E D 0 0 R c 0 Mp .... N v 8392-83 Piiot Dec; 16, 22. 29. 1983. Jan. 5.
PMot De<: 15, 22. 29. 1983, Jan !S, SUBSIDIARY OF AIR INOUSTRIES, 1984 ,
1984 (Ml COUPON CARROUSEL. 33 Re· .,..,,IC NOTICE 6470·83 8506-83 eodo, Irvine. CA. 927 t• I"~
PUBLIC NOTICE Oovglat Warren Reigle, 33 Re-FtCTITIOUI aUllNIEll i.odo, Irvine, CA. 92714 Thia 1>valnet11S conducted by an NAME ITil''rlM&NT flCTfTIOUl IWllMEI & PtlJLIC NOTICE
lnlllvlduel The lotlowlng pen1on1 1re doing NAME ITATIMINT
FICTITIOUS aUllNEIS Oovglaa Weuen Relgle 1>1111nu1 at The lollOwtng pereona are dolng
NAME ITATlllftNT Thia 1t1t11menl waa filed with the AIRPORT TRAVEL, 38<lll Campui bu1lness u ·
The IOllowlng pettlOO II doing County Cie<k of Otenge Counay on Drive. Newpott Beech, CA 92680 THE FREE SPIRIT COMPANY. bu~~·;c~~F ARCO. 490 E 17th Dec 7 1983 Coutel Se<ra tnc, '188 Serra, Cor-18683 Maplewood Circle Hunt· • FW1'2 Ofla 1191 Mar. CA. 92626 ington Beac;ll, CA 92a.6 '
Street. Cotta MNI. CA 112827 Publlthed O•ange Co••t Dally Thia D\lalneu 11 conducted by 1 H•"'h Dovglaa Hocket1 l8893 CharlH S. Gel(;nwtnd, 950 N ' ~ co potatl<1h -• ' Kings Road, WMI HOiiy.wood, CA ~~~~Doc 15 22. 29, t981, Ja11 5, :.C1cnll4M D Miiler, Pretlden1 ~~•:wi:d92~~cle. Huntington
90069 6'1J3·83 This alalemenl was filed with the Thia' bualneu 11 conducted by· 8 This bullneN It rondvc1ed py: an 1------------County Clerk or Oflnge County on limited p1rlllerlhlp,
1ndlvldua1. ouollC C No 8 1983 C11ari.1 S Getenwlnd n1V HOTI E v • · H Douglu Hockett
T I II I h F22tl31 Thia statement wu filed w•lh Ille
his ate ement wea led w I the FICTITIOUS 8UllNEIS PUbllshed Orange Cout Dally Counly Clerk ot Orange County on
County Cl11<1\ ol Orenge Counly on NAME lfATIMENT P001 Dec 8; 15. 22 29 198~•oo-83 Dec l3. l98~.
Dec 7, 1983 F2.121 1 The following penons 1111 dOlng .,.. F2m6I 1 business as. ------------1 Publlllhed Orange Coa11 Dally Published Orange Coeat Dally INVESTOR SHELTERS LTD 111 P\IJLIC NOTICE Pilot Dec 15, 22, :<>9, 1983, J111 5,
Poot Dec l5. 22. 29. 1983 Jan. 6, 3471 VII lJdo, Suite 204, Newpori 1984
t984 Beac;h, CA. 92663
8458-83 Sewmlll 1nvestmon11. Inc . 3471 "~m~o~:A~=• 6505-83
-----------Ivie l•do. Suite 204. Newpon 8el(;h, The following 1*60'1 11 doing Nil.IC NOTICE P\IJLIC NOTICE CA. 92663 Duslneaa as. _____ ......;........;.. ___ _
-----'--'--'-----lu19 Celderon, All Cities Invest· LINDEN COMPUTER. 2000 W FICTITIOUS IWSINEll
FICmlOUI aUllNESI menls, 950 Wesl 17th Street. Suite Palmyra . .o35. Orange. CA 92668 fCAME STATIMENT
NAME ITATOll NT ~.Santa Ana. CA. 92706 Lota M Abrams. 2000 w Palmyra. The IOllowlng persons are dOlng
Tne following person is doong This business Is conducted by r/ •35, Orange, CA 92668 t>uslness BS:
1>uslness as· lmlted partnership Tills business ia conducted by an STANFORD CONSUL TING. 3 Cor·
M.B. LABS. 8248 Atlanta, Sulle C. Richard A Newell, Secretary lndlvldual porate Pllll, Suite 101 Newpor1
Hunllnglon Beacn. CA 92648 This statement was 11111<1 with lhe LOI• M Abrams Beech, CA 92660
Norma E. Merrill, 8248 All1n1a, County Clerk ol Orange Coun1y on This llatement was flled with lhe Peter G Stanford. 8306 Wilslllre
Sulla C Hunting Ion Beach, CA Oec 7. t983 Counly Clerk ol Orange County on Blvd •406, BeVtlfty Hiiis. CA 90211 92646 "2221• 0ec !. 1983 Paler G. Stanlor<I
Thi• business is c;ondvcted by an Publl81>ed Orangjj Coasl Dally F'23182t This s1a1emenl was llled wllh the
lndlllldual Piiot Dec 15. 22. 29, 1983, Jan. 5, Publlsned Orange Coast Delly County Cieri< 01 Orange Coumy on
NOfma E Merrill 1984 Piiot Dec 8 15, 22 29. 1983. Oec 7, t983
Thoe statement wa.s llled with the 6469·83 6393-83 FU212t
County Cler~ o! Orange County oo Publlshe<I Orange Coast Delly
0ec 1 , t983 PUBLIC NOTICE PtlJllC NOTICE P11ot 0ec 15. 22. 29. 1983. Jan 5,
F2:S2116 1984 6'163·83 Publl"1ed Oranoe Coast Dally IOUTM DISTRteT FICTmous llUllNE88
PllOI Dec 15. 22. 29. 1983. Jan. 5. MUNICIPAL COURT NAME STAHMENT ountlC NOTICE 1984 OF otlANOI! COUNTY fne lollowlng person Is dOlng 1 ___ ....;r..=~;..;;;.;..;;....;.;~.;.;.;;'----
6471·83 >0143 Crown VeMey Peril••1 1>uslneas as
PtlJl. IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI aUllNEll
NAMfSTAUMENT
The lollowlng person• are doing
business u
HOLIDAY VALLEY. 253 Magnotta,
Costa Mesa. CA 92627
Edward N Tabb, 62 Beacon Bay,
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Jlfry L Cole. 263 Magnolia. Costa
Mesa, CA 928:<>7
Thr5 business 19 i;onducted by a
gene< al pal1nershop
Edward N Tabb
Tt111 statement was filed With the
County Clerl< of Orange COi.iniy on
Dec 7. 1983
FZ32111
Publlstled Orange Coasl Delly
Pllol Dec 15, 22 29, 1983. Jan 5,
198~
Laguna Nl(fvel, Ca. mTT FOOT fRAFFIC UNLIMITED, 1555
Plalnlltl WILLIAM E BAKER Mesa Verde Drive C·46 Costa
NOTICE OF
TRUSTEE'S SALE
10-1051-4Mll Oetendenl KATHLEEN A Mesa. CA 92626 KELLER and DOES I lhrough IV, In-Arthur M Jordan. 1565 Mesa YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
cluslve Verde Drive C-46, Costa Mesa. CA DEED OF TRUST DATED AUGUST
Cue No 25883 92826 28, 1981 UNLESS YOU TAKE AC·
SUMMON& T1l1s business os conducled by an TION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP-
NOTICEJ You have been aued. tndlvldual ERTY IT MAV BE SOLD AT A PUB-
Tlle covr1 may decide 119 .. nel you Arthur M Jordan UC SALE IF YOU NEED AN EllPLA·
wlthowl your being l!Mfd vnleN This sta1emen1 was flied wllh the NAT ION OF THE NATURE OF THE
yCM.t rHPOft(I wntlln 30 ct.ye. Relld County Clerk of Ora.nge County on PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU. YOU
the lnfOfmatlon be!Ow. Oec 7. 1983 SHOULD CONT ACT A LAWVER
II you w11h 10 seell the advice 01 an F23211' On tne 27th day ot January 1984
lllOfney 1n this matter. you should Published Orange Coast Dally al 9 00 am at the 8th Slreel en·
do so promptly so that your written Pilot Oec 15, 22. 29 1983 Jan 5, !ranee 01 Ille new Count y re11ponse. 11 &ny may be filed on 1984 Courthouse, located at 700 C1v1c 11me. 6461·83 Center Drive West. formerly known
AVl801Usled ha !lido demandade as 700 We&I 81h Streel, solueted on
El trlbuma. lede decldlr conlfl Ud. POOLIC NOTICE lhe City of Sama Ana. County 01
tin •lldlencla a m.noe que Ud. ,... Orange, Staie of Calllo1noa CON·
aponde dentfo die )0 dllie. L .. la FICTITIOUI 8U81NE8S TINENTAL AUXILIARY COMPANY
tnfOfmaelon que Mgue. NAME 8TATEMENT e California Corporation. as Trustee
H yCM.1 wl•ll lo..-the lldvtce of The lollowlng person Is doing under Oeed of lrust dated August
an allomey In tllla mallet, yCMi business as 28. 1981 eaecuted Oy Geo1ge 6'166-83 allould do 80 ptGMplly 80 tlle1 your T 0 M CA M P 0 S & A S -Koschel and Luzstella l<oscllel who
-----------written reeponM, tt eny, mer be SOCIA TES/TC.A , 17779-F Mein are mamed to each other and •&-
PUBLIC NOTICE ftled on time. SI , Irvine. CA 92714 coroed on September t!>. 1981 as ___ .....;..;....;;....;._....;;.........;..;..___ llUeteddeMaaoflcltateleon.... Thomas Robe'1 Campos, 1615 lnslrument Number 17870 on Bool\
FICmlOUI aU81H£18 lo de"" 8bo9edo en ffl• NYnto, Ruth Lene, Newport Beach. CA 14219 Page 1283 Ott1c1e1 Recora•,
NAME ITAH•NT deOefte "-lo lnmedlattmenle, 92660 County ot Orange. Cehlornoa goven
The tOllowlng persona ate dolng de ff ta m-•· 111 reepwet• This buslneu 19 conducted by an 10 111Cure en indebtedness In lav0t ot
bustnest as eeerila, et lier e1t11na, puec1e -Individual Bank of America Nal1one1 Trust al\d
WILKIN SON ENTERPRISES. ,..ietred• i llempo. Thomes A C8mpos Savings Assoc1a11on a na11onal
20401 Beyview A.,.. San1• Anl, CA 1·TO THE DEFENDANT: A ctvM This statement was filed woth tile bank111g assocoatoon, by reason 01 92707 c°"'fl4alnl hM been ftled by IM County Clerk of Orange County on lhe breach ol the obhgatoons SllC·
Marshall p W1lk1nson. Ill. 20401 pelnttff ~nit you.Hy~ wleh to Dec 7. 1983 cured tnereby no11ce ol whK;h was
Bayview Ave . Santa Ana, CA. 92707 defend thla lawavlt, you muat, '232111 recorded on June 2 1982 as lnslfu·
Christine B Wllklnton, 20401 within >O days aft• tills !14.!mmons ts PubllSfled Orange Coast Dolly ment Number 82· 18~ 13 ol Olf1c1al
Bayview Ave . Santa Ana, CA 92707 IH!fVe<I on you, Ille with thla coon 1 Pllol Dec 16, 22 29, 1983, Jan. 5, Records o! Hid Orange County. and
Thia bull-Is conoucted by-1 written responM 10 the complalnt 1984 more than three month• have
gene<al pa11nera111p unleSa you do, your oeleull wlll be 6474-83 elasped since ,uch rei;0tC1at1on w111
Christine B Will\lnson entered on appllcallon ol lht! plain-.,.mllC NOTICE sell at pubhC auc11on to lhe higlleSI Thot s11temenl wu filed w1lh the ttN,andlhlSCOU•tmay enterajudge-ruu b•dder for cash 01 a Cashier'
County Clerk ot Orenge County on ment against you for the relief de· NOTICE TO Check drawn on a stale or national
Dec 7 1983 mended on the complaint which Dank, a s1a1e or federal crlldll union
F2321a could tesull In garnishment of CONTRACTORt CALLING ore state or federal savings and loan
Published Orange Coast Dally wages taking ol money or propeny FOR 9!08 (COM~R USO(l&llon dom1c11ed 1n thos state
Piiot Dec 15. 22. :?9. 1983. Jan 5, 0< olhe< rellef requested In the com-SYSTIM) tpayoble at time ol ~ate 1n lawtul l984 plllllll NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN th81 money of the United States Of ~72-83 Dateo Aug 23 11182 the Board ol Education ot Ille Hunt-America) wolhout covenant or war-
-----------RAYMONo a COURTNEY 1ngton Beach City Elementary ranty express or 1mp11e<1. as 10 111111
PUBLIC NOTICE WM.8AKER a ASIOCIATEI LAW· School District ot Orange CO<lnty, possession or encumbranc;es. ttie
-----------YERI ' Cal1lorn1a, wlll receive sealed bids up ontaresl convtryed 10 and now held
FtcmlOUI aUl*€IS 1123 H lttoedwey lo. but no laler than January 9, 198'1 by the sa•d Trus1ee unoer saoo Deed
NAME STATDllENT lent• Ane, CA. 927111 al 2 00 p.m In the bu1ln11sa o!lloe 01 ol Tru11, 1n and to the totlow1ng d&-
The lollOWlng person 11 dotng (7'8) tn-1'e1 · lhe Huntington Beac;h City Elemen· scribed properly sllua1e<1 on the
bullnesa as JAMES B HARRIS Clefk tary School District. 20461 Craimer County ol Orange State ol Cah·
HOLIDAY BOAT CONCESSIONS By Colleen Galavlz Deputy Lane. Huntington Beac;h, Calllomta. lornla
Sllp " 1 BalbO& Pavilion. Balb01. CA0 Published Orange Coast Dolly Pilot 92648, at which lime said bids will be See Exhlbll "A" attached hereto 9266I loec lS. 22 29. 1983. Jan 5, 1984 publlc;ally opened end read aloud and made 11 part hereol Loi 186 of
WllllamJohnEdfllh•u-Jr 1749 8504·83 lor Traci 7100, on lhe Clly o! Irvine.
Skylark Ln Newpon &ech. CA I 17 MICRO·COMPUTER SVS-County ol Orange. Slale ol Cah·
92MO ' Nil C NOTICE 1'EMS (EDUCATION) lornla, as shown on a map recorded
Thia bualness 11 c;onOvcled by i n I (69 color monitors, 48 mono-on Book 324, Pages U -48. 1nclu11ve
Individual SUPE,.IOR COURT OF chrome monitors.) ol Miscellaneous Maps, 1n me ol11ce
Wiiiiam John Ede4hau-;Jr CALIFOflNIA COUNTY 45 disk drives) of the County Recorde• ol saod
Ttile slattomitnl waa tiled wHh lhe OF ORANOf All bids shall be made on • bid County.
County Clerk ol Orange County on 1n the Maller of the Esiate of iorm tvrniShe<I by the Huntington E•oepllng therefrom all oil, o<I Dec 7 1983 MARTHA T MALIK Deceased Beech City Elementary School Dis-rights. mineral, mineral r1gh1s natu·
F2»1J2 c-No A,,.... lrle1,endshallbelneecordancewllh rel gas rigllts. and other
Publilhed Orange Coul Dally NOTICE OF INTENTION TO SELL lhe s~lcatlons on Ille, which may hydrocar1>ons by whatsoeve1 name
Piiot 0eG 15. 22. 29. 11183. Jan S. REAL PROPERTY AT PRIVATE be Obla ned trom the office of the known lhel may ~ within 01 under 1984 SALE Anlstant Supertntendenl ot Butt· the parcel ot land hereonabove de-
64a.-83 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lh1t neu Servkles of Hid Dlllrl<lt scribed togelher wlll\ Iha perpelual
-----------sub1ect to conflrmatoon by th~ Each bidder mull tubmlt a bid right ol drilling, mining. exploring
Nil.IC NOTIC£ abov..,nl1lled Superior Coun on deposit. In the form ot • certified O< and ope•allng therefor and s1orlng in
------------J 6 198• 1 9 00 oeshler • i.~. or a btd bond equ•I and removing Iha same lrom sa10
FlCTITIOUS IW ... 11 1~~~'Jar Within th: ome 1111;,.:CI ~; to ten peroen1 I 10"/tl ol the 1mounl lend or any 01"81 land. mcluding the
NAME ITATIMEMT I aw the u n def s' g n e d a' ot the bid, and made payable to the right to whlpstock or dlrectlonelly
The lotloWlng per.an 11 dolng Co·E~ecut0ts ol the Will ot Manha Hunllngton Beach City School Dis-drlll end mine from lands o1her lhan
butlneu ,.. T Malik dec;ease<I will Mil at prl· trlel lhOM heretnabove dllscrtt>ed. oil or
NUTREX, 452t Cempu1 Of • 138, t ..; to th h,~ I b dde on th No bidder may withdraw h11/her gu well•. tunnels and Shells into. Irvine, CA 927 l5 va 11"" e ' 1 r e bid for a pe<lod of 1lx1y (601 days through or across the wbsvrtaoe of te<ms and con lllons hereinafter '"" lhe set date tor lhe nnanlnn of th 1 d ... _ -' bO .. __ , .. ..,. d M • r k F Ander a on. H ~ menlloned all right !Ille and In tares I -.. v .. ••• e •n • ..,r.,.na ve .,..,..,r uvu, an
C1mpw00d RI . Prescott. AZ 86301 of Mar1ha T Malik. deceaMd. at IM bl~~e Board 01 Educ•llon re&«VH ~~r~~~~;:Y ·~~~edWh:.;,~oc~~,,;;
This buslneu 11 conducted by an tome of het' Cleath and all right titi.. the rlghl 10 reject any and all bids and shafts under and b8neatl\ 0 lndMduel and all interest that the estale has a11d 10 we1ve any lnfo1m11l1ty Of Ir· ... _ d th I I II I th 1 Merk Anderson •quored In addlllon 10 thal of dece-.,.,yon e e• er or mo s ereo
This s111emanl wn flied wtlh the !dent 11 lhe lime o ther deal!\ on lhrll regularity In any bid. and to redrrll, retu11ne1. equip. maJn·
county Clerk of Orenge County on real property loo•ted '" Orange Hunllng1on Beach Clly taln, repair. dffpen and operate any
Dec. 7. 1983. County Cahlomla described as 101• Elementery School Dl11rlct such wells or mine& without, how· '221'20 lows · Ore~e Counlt, CA. ever. lhe right to drill, mine, SIO<il
Publltlhed Ora.nge Coaal OaJly Lot 73 ol Tr Ile I 2137 per Map re-Gery urgner d D. a.plore and operate lhrough lhe tu•·
1P1101 Dec 15, 22, 29, 1983, Jan 6, ~rded on Book 75 peon 6-11. In· Atalalanl Secretary lace to the upper 500 feet or tile l984 · Butlneu Services subeurtece of the land het'eln1bove
6465 • ., ~lu91ve. 01 ~l,F•llaneous Maps, 01· Published Orange Coast D•lly Pllo1 desGrll>ed as reserved in 1"9 deed ....., ~ ollne Orenge County Rec;order Dec 22 29 1983 · c A Slid property 11 c;ommonly known • · lrom the lrvtne ompany, Wetl r-~-iiiilil------r.;;;;:-jlU_. 9091 San Jose circle. Buena 8587-83 Virginia Corporetlon, recorded r ~ Pa II Cahf()(nla August 7 1975 In book 11~77. PIQB
"
a•aAa , .. -...-• .--;,,;. tale 11 sub~I 10 current Nil.IC NOTJC[ U ot Ot11c1el Records _._.. ............... ' .,....... I The address or olher common Monuery • c.m.t..-y ••II, covenanll, cond lions. re· NOT.Cf IHVITINO 810S Id slgnatlon 11 •ny of the 1111 prop-~atory lllrletloni , ratervatlOn•. rlgh..-; r1ghla Notice it hereby given that the ~y desert~ above ls purported to
6 O lol w1y. and eatern411\IS of record. Board of T rusleet of the Coaa1 Com· be 3782 Fe<n St reel Irvine C• Ul2 · Iller Ave.. liany encumbranoet of record to be munlly College ot1111c1 ot Orenge 192714 tho undM11Qrnl<i Tn111ee dis· C::::s~ lul~~led 00~101 the ix:rc~:;' ,P'1~;1 County. Calltornle. will receive aul-lclalms any ll1blflly for any 1ncor•ecl-
..._ • Of 0 811 are T' 1 1 Of ~ ed bide up to but no lllet' thin 11 neu ol the address or olhet oom-r.: 098r!Y MCI mvtl be n Wf 't:'° an 1 11.m . Tuesday, J1nu1ry 17, 198~ at mon designation. II any shown h~• .,.,11 be roeetved et the o ice o the Purcl\aelng O.panmenl of 11ld I
aAL n llRQl .. ON
IMITH a TVTHfU.
WllTCLI" CHANL 421 E. 17th St
Coata Mesa
&a~9371
tTuOhey & Pra1M, A Prolu•lnel Lew cotlege dtelrlel localed II 1370 n,11 "'' al0<8Hld property hll no ~orporallon, a11orney1 for the Adema Avenue, Co•ta Mesa, Call· atreet lddress Of othet common ,..,19,o·u~IO<'ts · at 1200CN<><1 th M1 •In, lornla at whtch time 111d bids wfll be k14t11gnallon dl!'9CllOtll 1110 how to ult• _.., anta Ane 11 torn •. Of publlely opened and reed 10,. I · b
lrney be tiled Wllh the clef~ or t!\41 PURCHASE OF PRINTINO :c:i~ 1,':: ~op:~.t~r:ry~n~
Svoetlot Court ()( dellverod 10 PAPl!R: ORANGE COAST COL· lllfllld °""of Trua1 ••• WhOM feQVMI
TUC>hey 8 PreaM, A Professional I.EGE hh• ule 1110 be coneluclld, pvreu111t
Law COfporlllon. personalty " eny All blO. are to t>t I" eccord1nce Ito 1 wrlltan r.quest submitted ~lme •fl• publtoellon of thti notl<:e wllh lh• Bid Documeol• wnlcl\ are lwftl\ln ten Cl•Y• from th• 11ra1 publGI; let1!_~t0t1 Makino lhe ~~.;. .. _ now In Ille and m1y be 1ec:ured In the ltlon ot thlt Notice. to auoh
• ,.. PfOl>ltlY will t>t ...,... on t.,. off~ ol 1111 OfrtotOf of Purch11lng Benetkllary al 11\e lollc>wlnO 1ddreae· ~ollowlng lerma.: All c:aah. Ian pet-of Hld COlleQe dltlrl(;t BANI( OF AM!AICA l'IATIONAL
ic.tlt I t0%) Of the amount bid to IC· Eacl) blddet' mull aubmll with hie TAUST AND SAVINGS ASSOCIA·
QC>m4)tf'ly the olf•t by Cet'lllled bld • cMhi.t'• Check, certified TION LOAN ADJUSTMENT DE·
ict*k. 1111 bellnel 10 be ptld all cl\eclll, or bldCS..'t band Mad• P•Y· p ART MEN T • 4311 F O A E •
klonllrmatlon of .... by the Supe<lot able lo the «dw of the Coul Com-CLOSURE SECTION 46 SOUTH ~oul"I. r. .... ''"'''· C>Plf•llng Ind mvnlty College Dlatrlct 8oer0 of HUDSON AV&NUE ' PASAD!NA
m111111111nce up11n1... •nd Tru11 ... 1n"' amount not te11 lh1n CALIFOANIA 91101 ' •
premium• on •nturance ~ttble five P«Cl8111 (5"> of I~ tvM bid ae • The 10111 emovnt of Iha unotld
to the purch1aer lllall be Pf'Ofllld" guarani• tNlt 1111 blddet' wlll et'ltlt balance of the nollfl) MOVred by of thl date ot conllfmallon of '*· fnto 1~ ~ Contract 11 11\e Mid Dffd 0, Ttvat wltl\ Int-I
bamlnallon of 1111., rec«dlng ol .. me It 1w...O.O 10 him. In the event thereon u provtdld in Mid notl(tl ~noe. ''~.!! ~:-::~ ~ of lalture 10 ent• Into Mii conlftet, advanoea 11 any, under 1111 1~ oi I rano. ...,...., the Pf0089d• of Iha cneck wlll be Mid OMd of Trust lneludlng i-, •~.;::.,..01 lfler purol\aaer or lorlelttO. Of In 1111 cue of 1bod.11\e ohargH end eap•n•" of the Pllf._ ldef-'-lld eetr'\rM 1119 fuH tum th«90! wlll be tort.tied lo Truat• .. of the dlt• or the tnlial
,.. llf ....,. ' aMtt tolll!Oe ottttict pvbllca1kiii ol the Rota ot Sale l• f'lollt lo rejec1 811~ end i;:'_...... bide Pf'l<>f.... No blddtr may wlthdr•w 1111 bid U2.2t7 00 O•tld' o.c.mw 22
10 l!'llfY ol 111 0tdet con "'"'"' IOf 1 r-IOd fof tony-five (~I d•va 1913
Dat.O: OeGemtMlt u. ,.., •"• the d•t• ... '°' the Q9efllnQ NIIMI, &trMI Addrwa and , .... CINDY OW!HS 11\eftlOf, pllOne Nvmotr of Tru1111 or plll'llOll
BlANAAO JULIUS MALIK Thi "°''" OI True!-·--oondUC11nQ Nie"' c .......... ..,. Oo--1.•eculon of 1ne bta11 ti. prlv941Q11 of rej9Ct1ng 1ny 1nd .. , .;... ~
of Mllf'ltla l Mllllk. Oeoee11Cl. bid•°' to waive eny ltf90\llattl ... Of 4S SIMll ~llOll Awnu.
A Pl~~~= lnfomlllllleeln any bid Of In 1"9 bid• PNldeM, Cllffonlletft01
8y MICHA(L F MCCOY cllnO NO~N I WAT.SON ~ = C..
AllC1'"9yll f0f Coollc9cuton &ecre1ery, d of TN•.... 11135~' f'liblltfled Ot~ Cout OlflY Piiot '1:1b19Md Ottn0t oeet DllNV Pilot Pll1>4tll'ltd ~ oo.1 ~ "'"._ __ -______ c...,~ o.o.mti.r" '°· Jlf'lijaty $~~ o.c.m1>1r "· '"'· ..11nverv~ o..mw 29, 1813. 1~
I I
....,... ... -~·-------~·-------
College.,
prep
cage
C011e911
WUT
Luu1ivllfe tf He-A au f'o\. 11 I I w we,n1noton .O \•Ct•1t,~rHt'I
ll ~1
ROCKIU
Mon••~• ~· IJ ~£ M •U l.l<ir 'la EASl
6<>•1un u )8 E: C.a•ull"• 41 Connoi.ll<u• h Co1utHD•• l>O
Ho111t4 l>O L1loo11e s..
MIDWEST
lno1ona St l>O ~1 l Ow•\ '8
11.entuci.11 S&. PuttJu• 61 Mlnne>ola bO Df'lroll !>'>
TOURHAMEHTS
FINI R.Und
Cenne<11Cul M1111111 Ci.n1c Arllon& St SJ, l)•nn SI )0
t onnecllcul IS (ulumO•e oO Canon Slll .. , C&.ulc
Geo•o10 Tp;.n 66 Neoru•• •9
Alebema II M,thl11<1n SI •9
F .AirlMild H oO<M v Oiu >I<
4mer>eon ln1trlloh0'1al IS N<V> Hemo1hlte 17
S.crto Heetl 'tO Queen• I I
F11r W••I Cleu1c
Ort11Qr1 12 Cor 11e1t SO
Goniaga 73 ROMrt Mor••\ ~I
FIMI Bani! O.u1c
Ttrno•e 71 Anucie ll•ono oo
Prov1oente ... Penn •7 RO<M11W Clinic l'(Otlntultrn SS p,.,,._10" J•
St Bonaventure 97 Amtr•co~ 17
Suter Bowl
1<.011••• ol 1 ulane H sw LOU111•n• 7• l'IOr•Oa oS
Utica C*99 lllWIT'• Clan1c
Geon1e Muo" 63 R·oer ol Wagner 6} UllC• 63
Al C~ Toumev 01o.1enoma 117 luo Son An
IOll•O 72 Ar~ ·Llllle lloc• 71 O••~nom•
C11v n
COWbO\i ShOOICK.11
LO VOid Mory t'l"(IUf"lf /~
Wll ·GtHn 80 1?
Wvom1ng bS N <\ruune ~~
LAI VeeH HlltltllV Cleuic
UNLV 69, Clem,on SS
Geor11e1own 51 Marihall 71
Wolf Pick c11u1c
Ne•aoe·Reno II UC Dow•\ o• U San 01e110 18, Flot1oa A&M )7
Reltmow
Ala 811mononam 57 Pac '" •I SMU 71, Duke 16
Flnal1
Gllor llCWI C141ulC
wa~e F oru1 S7 Jac,.onv1 e >• """I Auourn 9S V1llenov& ll lln"o
Gel«Mft Tr141~ c .. ul<
Poll\OUtQn S'I lllinool SI !>4 r.r,1
B•vlOr S9 Ououe1ne •9 j 1n.ro
MUl lc Clf'f lnvrla"-1
Vanoer01ll SI S FIOroOa U I n 11 Te••• 4&.M u •·• Fo'<t •1 lflll•dl
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITI0\11 I UllNEH
HAM[ n ATttffNT
I ht' IQllO,.lll\j Pt!I SUl\'i •• • au.no
t>U1•ness .u
IHf OOlOEN GAAOEN GUEST
HOMr .)016 ll••d111g w.~ C0t11
Ml''kl l:A n626
011rlolll' M P•o .. 1 ... 30 lb H1U0111g
Wa~ Cu•ht M40!1.• (,A 926;>6
(.111111"" M ""D•l1n JO 16
11,ud1ng W•y C.,.)>t• M11"• L.A
JiUi'tl
Tm• OU\11111n ·~ LUfldYt.l<t<I lly •
J•HU)trtl UArtnttr)n1D f11u••""' M Pat1<1lan
I r"5 \ldll!fnt!f\I Wd0 hl('IJ Wtlf'I Inf!
l,;oul11Y ' '"' • 111 ll11111\j11 <.:ounly II" Dl•1. I 198J
F23f~ µ11D115n1i.J 01,1n.;i11 Coas1 Oa11y
1>1101 ~ o 1s n iri 1983
6396 63
Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Thursday, December 29, 1983 C5
PUBLIC HOTICC Nit.IC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Pla.IC NOTICE Ml.IC HOllCC PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI INYITINO INOI 'ICTITt®I •u~•H NOTICE OF DEATH OF MOTICI °' CITY°' lllVM c,.......
NUl1Cl41 ,, 1\9<.0) u•v.., lh•I t~ NAMI ITATl•NT ('L Rf· ('Ollt"N ANU O• TltUITfl'• a.All CM.lfOMIA NOTIC• ~ TIIUITll'I H U
Bo•td ol TruetMI oll ... CoH I Com I t\e following peoon '' d()lng A • ' , I 0-10lt .olllll HOTICI INYITINO elOI T.I . No. U-llOI
"'un11y Colleoe 0t11r1e1 ol Of·llllQ4! bu1lnea• H • PETITION TO AOMINIS. YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A "IOllCE IS HEAEBY OIVEN 1he1 HOTtCI
Counly CeltlOt1t1a wit!,_..,...... GI. M MACMl"IE SHOP IS&:ll T E R ES T AT E N 0 , DUO OF TRUST OATEO AUGUST ••led bid• wUI b41 received Dy IN YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNOf.R A
ed btdl Ull 10 WI no lat .. lllan 11 Compul•• L" Hunllng100 eet4h. A· 121 1119 ,8. IH' UNLESS YOU TAKE AC-Cny Cltork of IM Clly of Irvine c., •. DEED OF TRUST DATED $41ptem·
em T""°IY Jenu•ry 11 116• 11 CA 11~6•9 llON TO PROTECT YOUR PROP l0<n1t IQ< lutnl•hlrlQ eM 1)11n1 i.tbot ~ I~ 1982 UNL.ESS YOU TAKE
111o1 Purcn11111ng De91t1m.n1 ol l&ld GonG If Kull, 18351 Sant• Anlle To IJll hl'lri., lwnrfu·i, rll'll, ERTY IT MAY BE SOlO AT A PUB tervteet matettelt loOll 0equ1p· ACllON TO PROT"".:T YOUR
COll411)e Oillrlc:I IOC•led •I 1370 ln Hun11ng1on 8Mch CA 92549 l.'r,·lllltJP1 Mid ('(mllnj{C'nt llC SALE IF YOU NEED AN EXPLA menl '4.lppllet l11111por1111on. ulll· PROPERTY, IT MAY SE SOLO AT A
A1J41m1 Avenut Co•ta MM& C•~· Met11U1 0 l<ull 16351 S1nte Allll• l.'rl-Ullor. 11j C'LAHE COllEN NATION OF TtiE NATURE OF THE 111e1 ono all OlllO( 11omt and tec11111ee PUBLIC SALE 11' YOU NEED AN
lot1llll 111 wnic1111n1e Htd bide w111 be I II Hunllnglon Seacll, CA 112S.9 und J••rc<lfi> who ntJV Ix PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU vOU heuu111y lh~elo. •• provide<! In EXPl.ANATION Of THE NATURE
publtely OPttnttd a111l read lor T1111 bl.lllneu IS conOucllO oy '" SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER lhe CO<llfetl ducurnenla IQ< RE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINSl
PURt..HASE Or PRl"lll"IG 1ndMOuel 111h..rw1"'4• mlNl'!>li'\l 1n lht On1ne '7mo11yolJanv11ry, 198• PAIRS ANO CORROSION CON· YOU YOU SHOULD CONTACT A
PAPER ORANQf COAST COl· Manna 0 Kull wall .111dt11r ''"llllf' II 1100 II'" ., "'' 81h S11eo1 on fROL HERl1 AGE PARI( AQUATICS LAWYER
lfGf T1111 slalemenl wH Iii.a wllll me A j.M!llll(IO h<ti; IJi't'll flllod 111111ce QI Ille new County COMPLEX 1oge1her w1111 •I> On Jonu•ry 13, 198•. •I 1115
All DldS ""' IO !)If Ill 41CC0f0111"41 C0tml) Cletk OI Otangt Coun1y On • Cuu•lhOUH IOCilleO .. 700 CMC punen•nGet thereto 1n tl•ICI •c· • m EQUITY HOLDING CORPOR· wllh lntr IJ•d Documents whiCll ore OiK I. 1983 by N.mmr Kuml· in !Ill' Su Cen1e1 Drive W&SI rorm11r1y i.nown co1d1111u w11n 111e wec111c ... 1nn1 un ATION 111 ou1y •pP<><nle<l T1ut1ee
"o"' "' 111e anu mar be s&eu1eo 1n me m 1as p .. nor Court of Omnj(c· ('11un 11 700 Wea1 8111 S1r11111 ~•tu•ltld 1n me a1 m11 olllC<! ot Ill• Oiroctor ol •tK.O•ded Sep111mber 22. 1982 "
111111." ol 1ne On11Clur ol Pu1chA111ng PuDhshl!O Oronge Coas1 Oally 1 v fl'tjUt•i.ting 1 hut Nuomt me City ol Sanlo Ane, Cou111y 01 Put.Ille w orkt lt11l No 8:?·333238 01 OltlCltll R•
ot n1d college dlSlttel Pllol Dec 8. t5. 22 29. 1983 It . l.x.-)l ··' . . OraOQe, Stete ot Callto'"la CON· DATf OF OPENINO BID& 8101 corda In lhe oHlce ol lhe County
(acn b•Ode• '1'USI IUbmll wlln his 6399-83 Utnl UJ.lj)IJll lv as J't'I TINENT AL AUXILIARY COMPANY Wiii btJ 1ece1vtt0 •• 1118 OlflUI OI 1116 Recoroer ol OranQe C0<in1v. Sl•I• ol
ll•d 11 tdsn1er's ch.icli,, cerHlllld scma l rt'JH'l'Sl'lllllllv1· to url a C•Jllornla Co1po1a11on. 11• Tru11ee C11y Cieri.. 01 lhe Clly 01 11v1ne Cl\llfornl& Ea11<:u1eo Dy Rk:lo. O. Pol·
-------------checl. or blCldllt' bond m•oe Plly· P~UC NOTICE m1n1sll•r lht· 1·:.tlllt• 11t under 0fltl(J of lru'I datec Augu11 1oca1eo al 17200 Jamboree Road, le• a 1111g1e mM WILL SELL Af PUBLIC NOTICE able ro Ille 010111 0111111 Coeal Com CLARE COii EN (Unui•r lht 28 1981 •~ecutl!<I by George 1rvir1e.C11111orr11a. 92713 un111 2 00 PUBLIC AUCllON TO HIGHEST
-------------mu"1ty Coll~t1 Otslrtcl Soard ol FICT1T10UI I UllNE&a J J J A·' Koscho! and luzslllla l<Otchel. who pm ThursOay January 1:l 1984 al BIDDER FOR CASH OR CASHIER'S
OFFICE OF THE l1us1ees in nn amounl nol leu than NAME ITATEMENT 111 l'Jlt'lll l'lll umm11ara11on ate mertled 10 ench Olher and re· which lime and piece Did• wtll b41 CHECK (payebHI 11 lime ot s&HI In
SHERIFF'·COllONER, l1ve1.hllC:ttn11~•,•tOl lheiumbldu1 Tne lollowinu person Is oom U( F.st.;lll'li A l't) Thl' J)l•llllul1 cotded on Sep1embtlt IS 1981 u publicly open&<l ano read 1lovo. l1wlul1noneyoll11eU1lfllOSlel .. )81
COUNTY OF ORANGE guaranlee in111 11•4! bl<l011r wlll enle< ouslneu aa g 1s wt fur ~ ... tinng 1n Ot•pl Nu ln$1rume"I Numt>er 17870. 1n Book Bids shall be su1>m11tad 1" sealed lhe lront 11nlr11r1<..e lo lhe 01<1 Oranoe
NOTICE OF 8 ALE 1"10 lhe JJ•oposl!O Conlt!M:I II Ille B & w APPLIANCE CO 7366 'l al 700 l'ivit· l' •nlt•r Dr 1•219 P8gti 1283 O!l1c1ai Record•. envolopes m111ked on 1he ou11lde, County Courlhouse loc•tll<I on
UNDER DECREE OF samt'.' 15 aw111dt!(l lo him 111 ltw! evtnl Slllttt Ave Hunlln Ion Beach CA ' . •. . 1 , • ' County ol Ortnge Ca1110'"1a, gMm "REPAIRS ANO CORROSION CON· Sama Ane Blvd belween Sycemore FORECLOSUAE 011a1lute 10 ellle• into sucn conlraCI, 1126~8 g Wt·sl, ~.1nllJ An.1 (A ~:.!701 10 MCure en 1ngeb1edneu 1n lavor ol TROL, HERITAGE PARK AOUA llCS SI & 8roaoway Senll Ane. Call·
CUl VEROAlf COMMUNITY AS· 1ne proci;;i11s 01 me check wtll be eo'"4lld Valenllnt1 Oaullliet Jr 11n J,.tn HI, l\IK-1 Jl 9 :JU A M Bank 01 Am.,nce Nallonal Trusl and COMPLE)( , CI P 580-70 lorn1a all r1ghr, l•lle. and lnlerHI con·
!>OCIA I ION elC P1o11n1111 •5 lorle•led Of In llltt Ca5tl ol a DOd lhe 16•00 Ml Ar er Bl Fou"1a1n V•ll•y' Ir YOU OBJ El.'T lu tht• Savings Assoc1a11on a n1111onal M.aNOATORY PREBIO CON· veyed 10 and "ow held by II undet
CHAAL F!> E VANC.f e1a1 0..len· lull sum l"e<901 w•ll oe l0tle11eo lo CA 92728 ' ' f I ba"kl"g assoc1a11on by reason ol FERENCE AND SITE YlllT A said Deed ol Trull 1n 11\41 prQPtfl\I
,t,.111 No l'I '>1> 27 5111d colft!fle d1s111c1 Th1t Oulll"eas •• conoucieo by an g1 Jnllnlo( u l 11' pt•lillun you lhe breecti 01 1he obllgauona sec· Ptebld conleteoce and si1e v1111 wlll 111ua1e0 111 u 10 Coun1y ano S1•1e
1 1ne Hndt1rs1gr11'<! Bred Gales No b111oe' may w11hdr11w Ills 01d inOlvidu•I ::.lwuld ••1lh1._,. .1pp..•jf .il tlao cuted 11\ereoy no1ice of which wn be helO 111 8 30 pm on Ja"u1ry 5 091Ct1b4;<J es
'ih""" c..,ronf.!' C0<in11 ol Orang.; lo• a pe1100 101 lorly·hve 145) dey1 eerntto v Gaulh•e• Jr hl·;11 ing Jntl :.Wlt• yuu UU)l't" recoroeo on June 2 19112 15 lnSlru· 198• al 111e He111agt' Park Aqu11ic1 PARCEL 1 lol A 01 the A 0
514111! OI c .. 11101n1o1 00 lll!illby ll!tllly alle• lhe dale sel lot !he QCtlnlnlJ ThtS llalemenl was llled Wllh tne llUI~ or I ill• WrlllC'n ob""' me<1I Number 82· 186613 ol Olllctal Comple>. A IJ8"etal OISCrlPllOI\ ol Hams Subd1v151on In Ille CllY OI 111a1 b1 w 1ue of Decree 01 Fote tnereol Couni cieri.. 01 Ora 0 Couni on r" Record• ol said Orange Coumy and 111e wori. to be IJ<lrformeo end 111a COfla M•n Coumy ol 0r9110l! ,10$u1P .rnd 5ale in lhe Supe110• Tne Board ol T1us1ee~ reserves Dec ,Y 191lJ no Y IH>n" with 1h1· tourl bdor<' more 1hon 1hree mon1ns have a11erna1111e sctle<iultt9 ot work w111 t>e S1e1e ol C•lllorn1a ••pt< mep , ..
, Court 01111e Coun1y 01 Orange S1a1e lhe pt1vetage 01 rtiiecllr>g any ano ell F~l'40 th\• hl•JTlll~ Y o ur utJj.11.'Jr· e11toe0 11rice such 1ocoroa11on. will uu111neo All con1tec1or11"tend1"0 10 coroed 1n OOOk 8 P81141 611 or "'4••·
01 C..:1lilo'"1.i eriaere<I o" June 29 bids or 10 waive any 1tt11gulet111es or Puollsneo Orange CoHI Diiiy JlWt• lll.J\I bt• in pt•rwn or by sell II publte auc11on 10 lhl! htght1s• submit b•Os 1hall ellend 1he preo1d cet1a11eou1 Maps In 11\41 OlllCI ot lhl!
1983 ''"o •e<oroeo June 29 1983 in 1ntorma1<1111s 1" •"I' b•d or tn lhe Did· p,101 Dec 8 15 22 29 1983 · , O•dder lor cull or 11 Caslllet s conle<""ce Al the d1sc1e11on or 1118 Coun1v RocorGef or NJO Orenge 1ne aDove enlllle<l ac11on w11er11m ll•flll 6394 a3 yuui .illornt Y Cneck dr•wn on a S1a1e or "e11ona1 CJIY failure 10 a11end may reaull 1n Coumy EAC'f)llng lhii<ehom Ille
CULVEROAlE COMMUNITY AS· NORMANE WATSON • If' YOU AHE A Cl<EDI· oank as1a1eo1l&0t!ralcted1run1on d1squalll1ca11on N0t111-sier1y 5151ee1 alto eaoepl-
SOCIA TION a Calllorn1a No" P;ohl Secrelary Boero ol TruSlees TOR ur d l,lrlllngt•nt i ·rt-dilur 0t a Sia le or fedet81 savings ano loan LOC ATION OF THE WORK Thi tr>g lhetelrom lhe N0t1l•eet1erly 95
Corpera11on 1n11 aoov11 name<i plain Puo11sned 0111"ge Coasl 011ly Pt101 DH'.l IC NOTICE 1 th d , 'CJ ,1 f 1 usoc••t•or• dom•clled 1" 111•5 Slate' work 10 be pet"lormed twtteundet " feel 1o111s1 01>1a1neo a 1uogmenr and Oecemne1 29 1983 January 5 1984 ~uol u l' l'l'f<l!>t •you mus 1 l' (payable 11 11me ol sale 1" law1ul localed '" 111e Cny ot Irvine, C0<inly PARCEL 2 Tna1 por11on 01 lhe
dec•N or torectosure anti sale 6640-63 your l'la11n with lht• lUUrt 11r money 01 111e Un11eo s 1a1e1> ol ol Orenge al Ht1t11age Aquauc Com· NollhHllefty 20 1ee1 ol San1a Ana
agamSI CHARI ES E VANCE and '~l~o~: ~::~• prt'M'nt 11 LIJ th•• J'l•rstmal n•p· Amerle•I wllhO<il covenanl or wa,. plex. •602 Walnul Avenue Ave"ue lying Oe1w een Ille
MIRIAM J VANCE ae1enoan1cs1 lor PUBLIC NOTICE T 1 A ,... I l'~,4_.111:.illvt• .ip•vunlt-d by tht· ranly. e•P•ess or implied es 10 title. DEBCAIPTtON OF WORK Slruc· Sou1hees1et1y p101onga11on 01 lhe 1ne sum ol E1g111 nundrtKl seven1y & he allowing persons 8'9 o..,.ng ,... peaseulon or IJflcumbrancos Ille 1ura1 repairs, nand1c11pped no<11, Not1ne111e1ty and Iha Soulh-le<ly
20 100 Dollars lawtul money or Ille business as t•uurl within four month!. 1n1e1et1 coMeyeo 10 ano now neld pa1n11ng end 1n1erne1 c1111001c 11nos ol thll per11on or Loi A ol the
Un•led Sta1es and ov virlue ol 11 w111 STATEMENT OF TgCH~ICAL CONSTRUCTION from th1• d,11(' 11( f1r..t 1~u:int•<-Dy ma said Trus1ee under said Deed pro1ec11on system A 0 Hems Sub01v1s1on described'"
al !'nlo•teml!nl •11 so1d action IS$Ue0 4'8ANOONMENT OF UH OF ~R DU J; 2ij5 9~~~r Drive, u l h•lll'P• JS pruvadr<l lfl &'t.·· ol Trust 1n and 10 lhe 1011ow1ng de· Schedule A Schedule A requires P&•cel I above, aDandoned Dy order
on November S 1983 I am C()m· FICTITIOUS IUSINEll NAME ewperl acll, A ?()() ( I p ba ('ud SCrtbcld proporty slluale<I I" Iha the work 10 be perto<med on all OI the Board Of SupetvtSO<a of Or· mandeti fO ~ell all Inti property'" lhe The 1011ow1ng persona have aba"· Wiiiiam E Chichester 2•75 Arbor lum. 0 l ll' ro ' k e County ol Otange. S1a1e ol Call· three pools s1mul1aneouS1y and a"ge Cou"IY by proc;eedlngs re-
Counly or Orange S1a1e 01 Cah· Cloned lne use of lhe F1c1111ous Bull· Drive. Newpotl Beech. CA 9'663 o ( Ct1llfurn1a 'rhl• llOH' for tornla compleled by June 15. 1984 cordeo 1n book tO paoe 2115 ot
101,.,10 1h1'Ct1bed as lollows . ness Name UNIVERSAL SYSlEMS. Poul PeSlel 4:l:l S Snietos Drive, fihn~ l'i<llrnl> will nol l'Xpiri• See E•h•D•I A a11eche<I he•elo Schedule a Scll60ule B requ11es M111u1es ol Board ot Supe1v11<><t of
tol 26 01 Tra'1 No 6786 as re-80 IS Pri11G1lla Anone1m, CA 9:1606 Anaheim, CA 92804 f h r h , a11Cl made a pan htireol Loi 186 ot the work 10 be Pilflormed on 1t111 Orerige Coun1y
co1oeo 1n Book 285, Pages 3 10 5 owner Kerl H Jungclaus :16152 Tnis Du11nass is conducled Dy a pnur lu our m on l s rom t l Traci 7100. 1" Ille C11y ot Irvine 33.5 mater and 25-yatd pools and Tne '""' address of the reel
inclusive ol M1sc;e11aneuus Maps •n Estala Mission Viejo CA 92691 general per1nership. dnte uf th\· hl'ar1ng 11<Jlltio-d Counly ol Orange S1a1e ol Call-compleleo Dy June 15 1984 The properly described aoove ts
lhe Oll1ce ot lhe O•af'lge Counly Re-The Fic1111ous Busl"ess Name re· Willlam E Chicnes1er al>ClVl' lorn1a as shown on a map recorded con11ac1or must ae1noblllte and purpor111<J 10 De 1515 Sanll Ana
.. oraer Ca1110'"1a lerred lo above was llled in Oran911 ,. This slalemenl wu llleo wllh Ille YOU MA y EXAMINE ttH' 1n BOOI< 324, P11ges 4._48, 1ncluS1ve clean up Dy lhlS dllle Tllo co"1rac'lo1 Avenue, Coale Mesa, CA 92627
Re111 oropeny is more com'"only Counly on No11emt>et 24 1983 vOu"IY Cler~ ol Oranue Cou"1Y on ( 1 k 1 I If ol M1scelle"eous Maps 1n the olllce can 1nen remoolllze on Sep1 t 1984 The undersig11eo d111da1ms any
knuwn as 3862 Mam111on Street. This Du9iness was conducted Oya Nov )9 1983 1 " l'J.ll lV t W tourt yuu ol 11\e Coun1y necor<le• 01 said and perform the worlo. on lhe ll•blllly 101 any 1ncorreclr>eSs ot the
Irvine Ca111orn1a tnd1V10ual F231* .1rl' inkn'Sllod In lhl' \~latt• C0<inly SO·me1er pool above s1tee1 edoress and olher
logellle< •tt•h all end w1gula1 me Karl H Ju"gciau! PuDhsll&O Orange Coast Dally vuu mav Sl'rvc-upon lh<.' c•x E~cepllng lherelrom all oll 011 MOBILIZATION The Comracl commo" des1gnallon II any shown
h!f'lemenl\ nereo11amr.n1s and ap I n1~ statemen1 was hleo w1lh lhe Pilol Dec 8 IS, 22 29 l983 1 . 3 ~'l'Ulur ;,r admimsrr1.1tor vr righls m1nt1t11I mlnetal rights. n11u-ooes no11nclude a '8parate pay 111m nerttt"
pur1enance5 lnere\m~o belon<;1•ng Ot Counly Cte<k ol Orange Counly on 63 ' 8 h r r a I gas righlS a "Cl 0 I her lor moD1llza11on Full compenaauon Said sale Wiii be made bul WllhOul
"'anvw•oe ilPPt'rta1r11ng Dec 1 •983 upon l t• <lllt1rnt•y ur lht• ex nydrocaroons Dy wllalsoever name ror any necessary mo1>1hullon re-covenen1 or w111an1y UP<ess or Im·
P1opet1> 10 oe sold suo1ecr 10 me Me t10 r 176631 l'l'Ulur or .1.dm1ni!>lralor, and known lhal may b8 w11n1n or unoer quireo shell be cons•de•lld as 1n. pllec rtg1rd1ng 1111e POuesalOO or
nor11 o• 1eoemp11on 729 020 Puo1isnea Ora11ge Coas1 Delly PUBLIC NOTICE ft le wllh the' l'OUrt wllh proof 1he parcel ol lano lleremaoove de-eluded 1" 1he pflces pelO tor the ••rt· encumbrances to pay Ille retn9IO•ng
729 0.10 72!> 1A1 CCP P1101 Oec 15 22 29 1983 Jan 5 f scr•bl!O 1oge1her w11h lhe perpetual ous con11ac1 11ems ol worlo. 1nvotved pr1rn:1pal sum 01 lhe noll!(s) tecureO
Prosp;ic11•e O•dde•s sn0<i10 rater l984 FICTlllOUI aua1NEas u SC'rvll"i'. a wrnwn rt~Ut'Sl t1gh1 ol 0111hng m1n1ng exp1<>r1ng and no ado11iona1 compensalion wlll by H id Deed ol Trull wllh 1n1.,ee1
10 Sec11ons 10 1 S 10 10 ;o1 680 CCP &4 75-83 NAME ITAnMEHT Slat mg that you dC'S1re spt't'lal ano OPil••ltng the•elor ano slortng 1n be alloweo lherelor COMPLETION llll!fe<>n as prov10&0 tn seio noll(I)
l•rotluS1ve 101 pro.is1ons go•ern1ng The rohowtng person 15 ooong nuwfi· of thl' f1hng uf an m •nd removing lhl! Slime lrom said OF WORK All work is 10 be com · advances 11 any unoe< Ille ll!f"ml ol
Sun ll•WI lhe 1e1ms cond1lio"s ano ellecis 01 business u \'t·ntorv and jpprillS4.'ffit•nl uf l1nd 01 any Olhflt lano 1nclud•"9 me pleled w11n1n lhe lotlowinu tc.nedule sa•d 0eeo 01 Trusl '-· Cl1'1gM
Toai E Paio ~1 Ar ior• 19 01 lhf' \<Jle ~"0 the 11a1>11i1y 01 oelau111ng PUBLIC NOTICE ADVANCE SAFETY SUPPL y 11gh1 10 wt11ps1och or 01rec11ona11y Schedule A t SO · me 1 et and upenses ol 111e lru11ee 8/IO ol 1"}~an TKI' ~9 M· "·~•n ;e D10ders 7282 Mutdy Cttcle Hun11ng1on l~Wll' asM•t.!> ur uf lht• pt•ll· drill ena mine from ianos Olllet lllan 33 5-melet ano 2>ya10 POOi•) 85 Ille ltuSIS cru1ed Dy *'Id Deed ol
lfntto PUBLIC "IOl tCE tS HEREBY I FICTITIOUS IUllNEl a Beacn CA 92&47 lion.' o r an,iunlS m .. nuont'd those here1nabolle deS(;f•bed 0tl or c<ms«u11ve working days !tom lhe lrus1
IGIVEN T11a1 on f"tooar Januarv 13 NAME STATEMENT Rooe<I Lee Goooe 1021 Moon· 1n 5t'l'IH>n 1200 ,ind li!OU !i uf gas wells 1u""els and s111hs 1n10 dale spec1hed 1n 111e No11Ct1 10 lhe 10111 amounl ot lhe u"pllfd
C:ommunltv c~ 1984 a1 10 30 o c•oc• AM ot rnat Tne IOllOwing persons "' do•no 'lghl circle Hu"1tno1on Beacll CA th C· 1 f a J-' b;it , Cod , lhrougn or acrou 11\t! suDsunace Of Proceed Con1rac1or mull be lully t>olance of tt>e oDllgallon MCOU•ed by TOURHAMEHTS Jay a1 M<11n Looor C,ourmouse 700 ousmess as 112647 l a 1 urni ru. t l the 1ano 11e<e1naoove oesc11bed, and demoblllL&O by Ju"8 15. 198• re· 111e properly 10 oe SCIO and reason·
Grlllll\em IC1v1t Cenre< Dtove West Clly of DOLPHIN DIVERSIONS 84S No Tn1s ous1ness,. conoucl80 Dy an DA VIO M. LONG to OOllom such wfllPSIOCked or gardless ol lhe dale specified 1n lhl! etlltl esllmeted coSls expenMS '11<1
(Flrit Rounctl ~anld Ana • w•ll '811 me aDOve de Kallllt"'" OranQe CA 92667 1no1v1t1ual STEPONOVICK & LONG d1rec11onally drilled well•. 1unnels Noliee 10 onsecullve work1nn days advances 111 Ille l•me of 11\e tnlllal Oran11e Con t 66 Groumon• S.. Jonr Gould Oe Felice 8•5 No .. .., S<oltioei. IArtr 1 11 &d•tr\••tio lsc"bttd prope11, unde• said """' 1 Robe•! Lee OOOO'L! 121! N orth Broadwa) uht •no sn111s under and benealft or from lhl! dale spec1lled 1n lhe No1ice publlca110" ol rne No11ce ot sale Is and deer~ or so muc" 1hereo1 u Kalhltien Orange CA 92667 Tllis S1a1emen1 wot llleO wllll lhe ' oeyono 1ne e11er1or 11m11S lhereol lo Proceed Conlraclo• musl be lully 579.384 83 7' lm~rial Vallev 66 ~\a Ar,1 , may be "ecessarr 10 satisfy sa1a Douoias Gilmore WebDet. 499 SI 1Cou"1y Clerlo. ol Orange Counly on 2.04 •nd to red11fl relunnel. equip, main-demoblllred Dy June 15, 1984 re· Tne oenehc1ary unoer SllO Oeeo
6S 1uoc;im;,n1 w•llt .nle•es•~ ano cos1s Andrews ~o NewPOn B<tat:h CA Oec 1 1983 Santa Ana, CA. 92701 ta1n rep111 Oeepen 91\d ope111e any gardless ot Ille dale spectlled 1n Iha ot Trus1 here10101e executed and d .. ~o Me•a 110 R•O HOnoo ea l'o the n1gnes1 Ol<lde• 101 cas" 1n 92663 F~1'37 Publ lShl'd Orangt> Coast wen wells or mines wllhoul how· Nollce 10 Proceed livered 10 the undersigned • wrl11en c.*" oi Deitr1 lsw!ul money 1.>I 1'1e Unneo States This Ousine9s is conducted Dy •" Pubhslled Otange coas1 Daily D 1 p 1 n.... 28 29 19,,-3 ever lhe ttgn1 10 dt1ll, mine. store. Schedule 8 (50-mele< pool) 60 Oeclarallon ol Oelaull ano Oemeno
(COl'IMQl1C1n SemlliNl1I 1oa1i!O Bl San1.i Ana Ce111orn1a Oe· v11111oo•PO•aleo auoc1a11on 01hor p1101 De< 8 15 2' 29 1983 31 Y 1 ot •A'-• • 0 • e~plore e"d operate tllrough 1hesur-consecutive working days trom Sep· lor Sale. and• wrlllen NOllCe ol Oe-
Go1o•n Wt•I 103 G1Moo .. 16 cemoer 1 1983 tnan a 1>ar1na1 s"1p 6397 63 J ii n 4. 19114 race to the upper 500 leel or 1h°' 1embe1 1984 me date on which 1ne 1au1t and Elt1et1ori 10 Sell The under
Ch1mcil9nlhlo S4tmlf1N h ~e1oso11 Lee & van Gemert Douglas G VlleDoer ti6:l l-113 subsurtece or 111e lend lle<el"8bo~ Contrecl(H may 1e-moD1llze signed cauHd se10 Noltee ot Oelaull
T 111 71. Cerr.10, 17 11) 17 Westcllll OrM! Su•le 204 John de Felice described as reserved 1n lhl! deed AWARD OF CONTRACT The and Elec1100 10 Sell 10berec0ta.d1n
Hltltl schOOI Newp1.>1t Beacn CA 9?660 lnis s1a1eme"1 was flied •llh 1"41 P\lll.IC NOTICE !'\a.IC NOTICE from lhe Irvine Company, A West Owner reserves the righl, alter open· lhe counly w11er111he real property is
TOURNAMENTS BRAD GA TES Sna11N°Cornt1et Gouflly Cler lo. ol Orange Coumr on Vtrgl"ll Co1po1a11on. recorded Ing tlldS 10 rejeel any 01 •ll bids 10 IOC81ed EQUITY HOLDING COR·
On'* Htlldav ClH'I< Coun1y ol O• ange CA Nov 29 l983 NOTICE OF IMl'tlOVEMENT AuguSl 7 1975 1" DOOi< 11477 page waive any tnformallly '" a Dtd lo PORATION u lruslee IChl~sNc> Outrterlin.all) By ti B•own Sergean1 F2l1Jt7 AEIOLUTION OF INTENTION 14 ol Ollte111t Rec0td1 make awards '" 1t1e mleresl ol lhe BY CALWIOE TRUST DEED SER.
Ellanc•a 69, Sanla Care SO PuDhSlleO o;,Mqe C.oas1 Dally Ptlol Publi&hed Orange Coe.st Diiiy SECTION 1 NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN lhet lhe CITY COUNCIL ol ine The address or other common Owner ano 10 re1oc1 all oltier bld5 VICES INC AS AGENT
Malt< De• 11 Fool~lll S7 Dec 15 n 29 1983 ,r•IOI Ot'c 8 IS 22 :l9 1983 CITY OF' COST A MESA. CALIFORNIA, adoPled 111 Resolullon o11n1en11on detigna11on 11 l"Y· ol lhe real prop-PROPOSAL OUARANTEE ANO 18327 Sher men Wey
O<an11e SO Ser•llt •I 6~2-83 I 6370·63 0,. lht' t91h oay ol Oecembe< f983 decler1ng 115 1"1en11on 1o order lhe My oescr1De0 •Dove •S purpor1eo 10 IOHOS Eecn blO shall De OCCom· Rasllda. CA 91335
Fou•\laln veuev 7• Dane ... u, 01 con11ruc11on ol cer11fn 1mprovemen1s 1n a epec1al easenmllf'lt d•st11c1 be 3782 Fefn S11ee1 lrvme Ca panled Dy a C~lllilld Ot cashoer s (213) 708·8813 S1t~':'u~~ r~~~" I .,...,, IC NOTICE .,._IC NOTICE ~nown and designa1ec H 92714 Ille un<le•SJQneO Trustee dis-Check or by a corporala swely bond By VICKY JENKINS TRUSTEE LIQun• Hiii\ 67 Coi•• Mna AT rUIM. rUU\. AllE&IMEHT OISTl'ICT N0.12·2 cl•1m1 •ny llablloly for O"Y lnCO<rect-oo lhe lorm lurn•shed by the Owner SALE OFFICER
M•rona 61 c"attPv ~ (IOU™ COAIT METftO CENT£") neu of lhe add•ess or olher com-85 guaranlff lhal the OldOer wtll 11 PubhShl!O Or1nge Coesl Da•ty L•~f'wooo 10 E MOOt>~• s1 RESOLUTION N O. 13·127 111e<e1"allerreterred 10 Hlhe Assessment 01s11ic1 l end on 111e 191h day mon oesig"a11on 11 any shOwn 1\41re an award •S mode 10 him •n &e· P1101 Ot'c I~ 22 29 1983
s."t .. M A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUN CIL OF THI; CITY OF ol Oecemoer 1983 a Rl!()Orl conSlsllOQ or plans ana SPOC•l1C1t1ons an I" cordance Wiii\ 111e 1erms ol his D•d. ~3
1Chlmc>len1'1lo ~'l NEWPORT BEACH EXPRESSING ITS INTENTION Tb ENTER es1tma1e 01 lhe cosls. ano a d•agram or rne proposed eueumen11 II lhe •f0tesa10 l>'Oj)(!<l\I has no promplly secure Worker• Com·
s.001.,oac• &5 E Doraoo ll INTO AN Oil OPERA TING AGREEMENT AHO INVITING BIOa l~lhe< wlln •n asMSsmem roll wes tlleo and on lhe 191n oey or lltllfll aodreu 0t olhef common 1>41"SlllOO 1nsur11nce and liablllly In· -------------
Sanhe;io ~~ Ma;ico"• ~ ~t>et 1983 a Resolulton was edopleO '~""no. COtl!llOl!flflll 1n0 dnogne1ion dirllCll()tls H 10 llOw lo surance e1ecu1e a conttecl in lhe PUBLIC NOTICE C~llon \emff\N!i 1 THEREON approving sa•O RePOtl 1e1a11ng to said works ot 1mprov-1 acqu111 IDClle wen p<ooe<ty may be Ob· requ11eo lorm and furnish sallslac --------~----
G1<oen G<o•e ~ .. ,.,.,, .. ft\•t• 'l WHEREAS !he City ol Newport Beach is presently engaged in 110,, anel awur1enances as P<OPOsed lor 1ne Assessmenl o.s1r1ct anolor 111neo from 111e Beneflc1ary under 1ory l>Onc:I• tor 11\41 1111htul per SUPEAtOA COURT M
Ke11n..sv "4 B~na Par~ &J producing 011 lrom a lteld localed benealtl tidelands. and penteulars relerence ,5 maoe 10 aaJO previously 1aop1ec Rn<>1u1ton 01 Ml•d OeeO ol T1us1 el ...nose reque91 lormarn:e ol the con1rect •nd tor Ille CALIFOftNIA COUNTY
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Bru ·Ollnd• 75, Pac•••c• 61 Olemono B•• IS M•\l•On v'oe10 II Sonora 61 Wooobridge )9
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Ntwoorr Harber 61 Dt><Na\ •l
Reno S6 Sl>4lr• 1 Nt• S• I{•,_. Klan" (Chempi<lfllhlp ~1\1
ltalelll S4 1..8 W1l\O<l 41
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WH'-'" 64 Gi.tnn SS ,_
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Caoo Vellev 82 Rad•oro '7
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Leoune 8te<l1 •S 11.X.\e•t 1
(Hewf il) ~I
Women
HIGH SCHOOL
T Mlmllmtnft
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Foo1n111 SI Founla•" V•llev 46
EOl\on S? Maltr Ot• 39
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Bree·Ol•nd• 8J ~•tna 42
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Loera 76 Wt\lm1n1ftr 30
Huntl"glOn 8tec11 !iO DMa Hllf\
Geita Mttu
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Merk l<eo~I 60 No Torra"<t S9
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E•lencl• 19, S.oaleOatk rl
Gar<lltl G•o•e 37. Tu'"" 31
WILLS ...
FromPageC4
member o( two more Los
Angeles World Series
winners.
In 1962, he st.olc a
then-mapr league re·
t'Ord 104 bases Tht'
swit.ch -hJ\.ter had a life·
ume batung average of
.28 1 and stole 51$6 bases
during hLS big-league ca·
reer
Wills, dnving a 1981
Audi, was stopped early
Tuesday on a ~ An·
geles area freew ay
Capt. John Sparken·
bach, romm&nder or the
Lot Angeles PoUC'C' .()('._
partment's Southeast
dJvtaion. said Of!l("('rs
Dan Cardn~ hd Susan
Smith bealmt' suaplciou..
wht-n they noticed that a
window on the vt>hlcle'1
right side had oo·n
broken
I WHEREAS lhe G11y Council anCI the T ech111caJ Oii Advisory 1"1en11on 1ne sale 1s 10 oeconoucteo. purtuanl 11>aymen1 of claims of melett•lrnen OF OftAN02
Committee tl OACt t>elteve ll'lal 11 1s 1n the t>esl interests ol the DEICAIPTION OF ASSESSMENT lo • wttllen re<iuest suDmllll!O. and 1aoorers lhereunOe< Said check In 111e M•ller 01 lhe Estll• ol
City ol Newp ort Beach lo retain a quahhed 011 held operator 10 DllTAICT w11h1n 1en d•~ ''°"'Iha 1trs1 pub•c•· or blOOer's bono shall be an amount MARTHA T MALIK, Oeoeueo
C I IECTION 2. TM said tonsltu<;llon ol 11111 work alld 1mprovemen1t 11on ol 1n11 Nollce 10 1uch ol nol le'9 lhan ten I 101 percenl of CaM No. A 11'"' maintain and operale the 16 lly-owned 01 wells and related oil 1ogetne< wllll apputlenancet as aloresaio 8,9 ol moie t11en local 0, Benet1elery e1 lhe following address Ille amount 01 lhe Did Tne F111rhlul NOTICE OF INTENTION TO SELL
tiroduc11on and s1ora9e lac1h1tes in the west Newport area. and oroinery publte 1>enefil. and me expe""' o• •t>e work end •mprovementt BANK 01' AMERICA NATIONAL Pet-tormance Bond sna11 be "°I leas REAL PROPERTY AT PRIVATE
WHEREAS llhgation with respect lo the City-owned wells and 8,9 chargeable UPOfl •district. whten said Assessment OtllrlCI 11 n81et>y TRUST ANO SAVINGS ASSOCIA· than one nundreo ( 1001 percen1 ot SAlE
produc11on 1ac1ht1es has oeen resolved and no longer cons1ttu1es dec;larlld 1o be the dlllrtel benefited and 1o be auetMCI 10 pay 1ne calls TION LOAN ADJUSTMENT OE· 1ne 10111 am0<in1 ot 1ne bid price NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhat,
an 1mpect1me"1 10 111e approval ot an agreement with an 011 lleld and e•penses 1hereot, tncludl"g 1"c10en1a1 e.penses a"d cos Ii and w111ch PART MEN T .. 4 3 :l 1 F 0 RE· amed In lhe con1raC1 Tne laoor ano $ubiec1 10 conf1tmallon by tne
operalO< and ,1 descrlD&O as loltows CLOSURE SECTION 4S SOUTH Ma1er1a1s Bond shall be "°I less lh•n above·e"1111e0 Superior' Cour1. on
WHEREAS the C•ty has petitioned the Stale Lands Com· AH that cer1a1n 1err1fory 1ncludl!O within the ex1er10< b0<indary 11"81 HUDSON AVENUE PAS1'0ENA, one llundred (1001 percenl ot the J11nuarv 6. 198•. 111 9 00 11 m or
mission tor ap~roval 01 this resolution, and ellhlblls attached shown on Ille p1a1 e11hlb1llng the properly at1ec1ed or oenefllec bv or 10 oe CALIFORNIA 91101 101a1 amount ol lhe 01d prloe 1n 111e lhereefler w11111n lhe 11me •llowed by a.ssesseo1opay111ecos11ande•pensesol sat0wori.end1mp1ovements lhe 101el amoun1 ol11\e unpe10 con1rec1 l•w lhe u"derslgned as lhere10. and the S1a1e Lands Commission has approved same: wn•ch 11110 plal ,1 lllled and •denulleo as balance 01 ine no1ecs1 secured by PftE'llAILINO Rr\TEI OF WAO!S Co·E~eculotS 01 1he Will 01 Manha
and "l'tlOPOIEO BOUNOARIEI OF sa10 OeeO 01 Tru11 wtlh 1n1eres1 In aecordanoe with the prov111ons ol T Malik. deceaseo. wllf sell al pri·
WHEREAS lhe pro111s1ons of Section 7058 et seq ol the Public A&SEISMENT DIST"ICT NO. 92.2 lheteo", u provided'" said no1e(1). section 1773 ot 1he C•lllo'"la l•l>O• v•te sale 10 lhe hlghftl bldd« on Ille
Resources Code requ11e 1he City ol Newport Beach to etipress. (SOUTH COAST METlllO CENTER)" aovanoes 11 any unde< 1he 1erms 01 Code lhe general avalN"g ••lea ol 1erms rinrl cono111on1 henllneht1t
by reso1u11on lls 1ntentron lo enter into an operating agreement. ano wn1ch said Map was lleretolore approved. on Ille. n"d open 10 u1d OeeO 01 Trutl including lees. per dlum weges performed llH !>-. men1toneo, all r1~hl, lllle and lnl8'tlS1
requires that the resolution contain certain inrormallon, and '"'pectton For all par11cu1ar1 as 10 the bo•mdarles or 111e Aases1rnen1 ch•rge1 end e~pe"sH or th• obtained lrom Iha Director ol lhe 01 M11r1ha T Ma 1k. dtoeue<I. II the
requires I hat lhe Ctl" follow certain procedures prior 10 e.11ecul· 01st11cl. reference" llereby made 10 said Map on Ille w11h Ille '''"sc11p1 ol Tru1IM . es ot lhe oare 01 the lnllaJ Oepar1men1 ol l"OuSlrl•I Rel111ont, 11 time 01 her dealh and all rlghl tllte,
1 lhese procee<11nos pubtic.1100 01 11wt Nollce ol Sale Is copy ot wn1c1119 on hie 1n Iha olllce of and all ln1er1111 111111 lhe Hlele hu
mg such an agreement and BONDS $62.267 oo 0111eo Oecembe< 22. lhe City Cli!•k 01 lhe c11y 01 1rvtne &qulrec 1" eod111on 10 tll•f or o-.
WHERES this resoluhOfl lully complies w ith the provisions ol SECTION a. Serial bOnds shall be laaueO '" accordence wun Otvll.lon 1983 and w111 be made evallable to •nY denl a11ne11rne 01 n1t dealll. In the
llhe Pubhc Resources Code referenced above and expresses the 10 ol lhe S11ee1s a"d Highweys CO<le ol the S1a1e or C1111or"1a t lmptov•· Name S1tee1 Address lfld Tele-1n1eres1ed perly upon raque11 The real properly loeall!O In Ofenge
1nten11on ol the City nol only 10 enter into an oil operating mllf'll Bona Ac1 ol 1915") lo represen1 all unpa10 1uessmen11and1ne ''" PhOne NumDe< ot TrullM Or person con1rac10r and 1ny 1111D-con1r11c:1or County Cehlo'"I• desctibed at lot·
agreement but to stnctly follow the Stale statutes with regard to '"S1allmen1 ot Slld bonds sh&JI mature a maiomum ot not 10 e-ceed conouc11no .. ,. 11 Contlnenlel Aus· unoet him Shall pay no11esa than lhl! lows
lhe execution and performance ol such agreement fOURTEEN ( 1•1 YEARS lrom 111e 2nd day ol July next 1ucceedlng 1en ( 101 "lety Compeny apecllled p1eva111n11 rall!I ol wage9 Loi 73 01 Tract 2137 per M•P re-
NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED b" lhe City Council 01 mon1111 lrom lhelr d•le Seid bonds snail bee< 1"1e1es1 ,, e ra11 not 10 '5 Soulh HudlOl'I A"""'8 10 ell worlo.men emplayed In lhe ex corded 1n Book 75, Peel" 6-11. In·
1 e•cffd 1hl! cuttenl legal mea1mum rale ol 12•;. per annum Pas.Oen• Ct11l0tn1e 9110 I eculion cluSlve ot Ml9Celleneou1 Mep1, ol-
lhe Cily ot Newport Beach that A period of 1n1r1y 1301 oays wtll be ellowed atter Ille c;ont1rme11on ol ine By J0911 C Casa LABOft REGULATION& The con-lice 01 lhe Orange C°""'Y Recotcte<
1 The City Council or the City ol Newport Beach hereby assessment 10 pay asse"rmmts in cash or 10 make pey~n• agamll 11,a Ex Ottocio Agent tractor 1hllll comply w11h all 1he re· S•tO p<operty Is commonly ltnown
expres56s lls 1n1en11on 10 enter into an agreement to operate the uaeasmentt Th• belance or auessments will lhen t>ecome payaDle 1n (:l 13)578-60 tO quiremen11 ot Secllo" 1777 5 as 80ll 1 Si n Joae Circle. Buena
s1.1een t 161 011 wells and related oll production and Slot age •""ual in•1•llmen1t ano se11a1 bonds wlll be •»Ued b .. 11no 1nle<t11I •• 8 Puohthl!O Oranoe Coast Dally P1101 1oge11>er w11h 1111 olhet •PPIOC:able re Park C1Hforn1a
1ac1hlles owne<I by lne City ol Newport Beach and localed In the rele 10 oe dele•mlned on lhe sale ttiereol. PfOvtded. however 111111he te1e Oecemt>et 29 1983 J•" 5. 12. qu1remenl9 ol U\l! Cehlorn•• l •l>Ot The sele II suD)eCI 10 cuttenl
area commonly "nown as West Newport," northerly o l Pacific 1hall no1 exceed lhe mu1mum rate as set fortll herel"above 198•6639·63 Code tues coven1n11. c<>Ntltlona. r•
Coast H1ghwav and westerlv ot 52nd Street ii extended and more MMUNICll'Al l.,...O'llEMENT ACT ORAWINOS ANO IPECIF'I· 11r1c11ons llSetV•llon1, rtght1, rlgllll
1 1 OF 1e13" Dim• C NOTICE CATIONS: A lull se1 of drawing• and ol way, end easements of record,
fully descnOO<l in Exhibit ·A' lo the request lor proposal which is SECTION 4, hcepl es hl!rttt" oth-lse PfOllldl!O tor Ille ttsuance 01 r~I ll>OCtf1Ca11ona11 ev811able lor inlll>4K· any encumbrancet ol reoord 10 be
attached lo this resolutton, bonds. allot said lml>fOllemenll shell oe made •"d ordered purauafll 10 FICTITIOUI BUltNESI uon wilhouf ch11ge •I the olflc• of satisfied out 011,,. purehH• Pt1Ce
2 The term ot lhe ag1eement wltl be 111110 years The lhl! provlilons ol 111e "Munlclpal 1mprovemen1 Act 01 1913 . being NAMI ITAnME.NT 1mi 011ec1or ol Put>llC Wo1k1 ol 1t>e Bid• or oHe<• are 1nv11eo for this
agreement will convey no nghls to the operator other than Dtv1aton 12 ol 1111 S1ree11 l!l0 Hl=:r Code 01 1,,. Stal• 01 C•lllor"t• The followir>g peraon is d<><ng C11y 01 Irvine prope<ly ana musi be In writing •nO
compensation lor work performed Other terms and conditions COIT OF OYEM INTI 1>usinest .. Complele Mis ol seld dr•wlnga. will be reoalved al lhe office ot
ol lhe operating agreemen(wlll be as set forth In the req uest lor SECTION s. THE TOTAL ESTIMATED COSl OF THE IMPROVE-LIZETTE 3412 Via Opono • 1 speclfleatlons and bl<! documelnl luoll•Y & PtHN. A Prolellln•I Lew
I hi h ... & .... t h I I' E hlblt "B" MENTS IS AS FOLLOWS New""-I B•~ll CA 112663 may be purellased from lhe De9en· corpo11t1011. a11omey1 for th• proposa w c •S auac .. ...., o I is reso u ,on, ae x E11lm111ed Cosl or Construcllon $6,757.080 00 e 'IT~rlleld '11umbe•lo Edgar menl of Public W0tl\•. Clly or 11111ne. Co-Ekecu1or1, •• 1200 North Mein.
1oge1her with such add1t1ona1 terms and condlllons 85 may be Eallm•ll!O lnctdentel Expenses ,2, 137 157.00 858~ l arthOm Or Huntl"glo~ 1noo Jemboree Roed. Irvine. C•ll-Sull• 800, San1111 A"'· C•lllornle. or
deemed necessary or appropria1e by the City Council to tully Eillmatlld Total CoSI S6 6114 237 oo Buen CA 926-46 lornla, 927 13 A non·retund1bl• IM may be llled wllh the Cler-01 lhe
pro tect the 1nterests 01 the City ol Newport Beach. the Stale ol E111ma1eo con1tlbutlon s 1.110.628 oo Thl•' buttneu 11 conducieo DY an ol $2~ 00 will be oharg8d tor MChM t Supertor C0<irl or dtllYered to
Calllornla and ltle State Lands Commission Be11"oe 10 A11eseme"t $7.783,809 oo lndllo'ldual ot documenll. Drawing•. apecill· Tuohey & Prasse, A Prolesalonel
3 The operating agreement shall &peclty; PUellC HEMING H E B t1"11t1fd ca11on1 and bid dooumont1 wtll b• l aw C0tpor•110". peraonelly 11 .,,Y
A The monthly service tee to be paid 10 the operator lor SECTION •. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT MONDAY, THE 8TH T1111'••~1ernen1 wH 11180 wtlll the m•lled, upon rllCelpl of request• no llme '"" publlcatlon of lhll nolkle
the duties required 10 be perlormed pursuant to the agreemenl; DAY OF FEBRUARY. 1118•. AT THE HOUR OF 6 30 O'CLOCK P M OF Counly Ctetll 01 Or•ng• Coun1v on leter Iha" 10 caieodar d•Y• prior 10 •nd before m•klng lhe ule SAID DAY. IN THE COUNCIL CHAMBERS. CITY HALL. IS TME TIME ANO Ole I 11183 the dll111 lor opening bldl, tor '" TM propeny wlll be told on Iha
a"d PLACE FIXED TO CONSIDER ANO FINALL y DETERMINE WHETHER . n:J1UI addlllon&J Cllllge ol S!i 00 loUowlng term• Alt cHl'I. ,.,, pet•
B The compensation. expressed on the bHll Of an TME PUBLIC INTEREST ANO CONVENIENCE REQUIRE THE IMPROVE· PublltheO o .. nge Coast 011ty HCURITY "°" CO....ITION cent I 10%) ol the •mount bid to llC·
nourly rate. for extra engineering work required 10 the operator MENTS. ANO TO CONSIDER ANO DETERMINE WHETHER THE OWN· Pll I o.c 8 15 22 211 1983 Of' '#OfltC The COOlleGI ocumtnll omp•ny lhe otter by cet1111ed
by City, and ERS OF A MAJORITY OF THE AREA OF THE PROPERTY IN THE 0 . . . 63911-83 ca" lor mOnlhly P•oO•MI p•ymenll check, lhe belance fO be £eid on c The compensation expressed on the b8811 of en PROPOSED ASSESSMENT DISTRICT HAVE PROTESTED AGAINST b•Md upon ,,,. ongll\Mf'I "Um••• ~_"ljrm•llon or HHI by the upetk>r ~ I f 1 d · I d Ill k t.,. I SAID IMPROVEMENTS, OR ANY PORTION THEREOF, ANO TO CON--C NOT CE ol lhe l)efe.lllege ol work com· ... ourl TmxH. 11n11, 099'1111\Q Ind .. our y rate. or ell ra a m1n1s1ral ve an 0 ce wor requea ""'0 SIDER ANO FINALLY ACT ON THE ENGINEER'S "'REPORT", ANO TO Pta.I I pleled Tne Clly will telraln 10% of m •ln1en 1nc• U Pl l\IH, •"d operator by the City h 1 11 11 pt• mt 1 eGCf9l•blt 4 The award of lhe operating agreement will be m1d1 lo HEAR All PROTESTS RELATING TO SAID PAOPOSEO PROCEEOtNGS, ,ICT1l10UI .,..... NC orog•eu peymen c..CU• y • ums 00 "IV''"°' OR TME GRADES AT WHICH THE WORK SMALL BE DONE. OR THE ~ ITATl .. NT lor ~•M blddet. IM tty wlll IOlhepuroh•Nt allellbeptor•ledU 1he lowesl responsible bidder. as determined by the City Counell EXTENT Of THE ASSESSM ENT DISTRICT. OR AS TO MAPS ANO pey lhe emounl IO retelned upon or the d•le ol c;onllnnallon of ....
o1 the City o l Newport Beach, on ,,... basil ol bids !or the IMS DESCRIPTIONS, OR THE ESTIMATE OF THE COST ANO EXPENSES ~ollowlnlJ l*'80ll Is OOlng cornpllenoe wtlll lhe teqW-11 of E•amlnetlon ol !Ille, rlCOl'Olng of
and servlCes described In Section 3 of l hll resotullon Bid• are to THEREOF, OR l HE PROPOSEO OtAORAM OR ASSESSMENT, ANO ANY bu .. N 11 Govetnment Code S.Ctlon 14802 convey1noe. Ir•"•* ...... '"'' 8lt'f
be submitted on the proposal form which la attached to thl• ANO All PERSONS INTERESTED MAY FILE A WRITTEN PROTEST AT 0 ~~ l~B~~l ll~~~s'° s. 0 and lhe l>fOYlatons of Ille contrllci lllle lnMlf•llOI pOlic:y then be ti Ille
resolution as Exhibit "C" Prnonartlve bidder• may obtain one OR BEFORE THE TIME SET FOR HEARING REFERRED to MEnEtN xp ·...,bell Ou 110 0 I d dOCv<'l*\11 petfelnlng to "SubtlllV· expenH of th•r puroh•Mf or ~..,.,...... M'°'" "" Ntr, ,.. or • t!Otl ol Secutru.... purch•-a
copy ol the proposed lorm and other retevent document1, at no HCTION 1, A 'Report", contltttng 01 detralltd l)lttr1a ac>ec:l1lcallonl. ""';':~ ~~ .. ~~ conoucled 111 ,,.0..-CT AOM!NtlT9'ATtC* AM rne vna.teioneo rMetWI Ille
(;OSI. et 1he o tttce 01 ttte Utlltties Department. iM9 W. teth S tr .. t, mepi •tKI o..cr1ptiona, tallm•te of coat ell(!••'*''"· tnd dleO•em 91\d lndlllldu'; or Quee11on1 re1111ve 10 1h11 proiec1 11g111 10 .-.JtC1 ::J:nd .-bid• ptlOt
Newpor1 Beech. CA 92663 The Ulllltl .. Dlrect0< I• authorlHd to ...... "*''·hat been Pt9C>aled. prellm•n""Y N>Proved. llnd flied Wllh the p.,,, Hetbttl Out11• pilof 10 oe>enlnO bid• ahrall ehell be 10 1ntry ot"' oonllnnlno ....
1ranam11 bid doeuments 10 persons known to be quallfled oll fi.ld 1ren1er1p1 ot 111eee p•OOMdlno• "°' lurtllef pert1Cul11n ref91ence 11 Olla 11 .. _, .. ~with tht directed 1~USS£1.I. TH11;1.e. "'(). Dllred Deoetnbef 27, 1983
opora1or1 Tne operating agreemen1 wot be ewarded during the h«eby m•de to aald "Repon" et preiltn1n•Uy 81»f0Yed. • .. well ea 11\t County Cieri! o1 0:909' County on JECT MANCA~~t 2~1 9~f;· BERNARD ~:78Js0::~:
1egularly scf)eduled meeting of the City Council to be held on prlllloully mentioned "'-<>lvtlon ol tn1en110t1 H 11 1963 lrvl"•· • or n ' •
January 23. 1984 The City Clefk Is hereby directed 10 publlan ,..OCl lOtNOl INOUIMll Oii ' 1'2J011t 11•1M0-30t0 Co-E.xecutora ot lhe &l•t•
'hi I II I In "IC I t ·-I .._.. f llCTION .. For "' lntorm111on ret•llng 10 11\eM prooeadlnQ•, llWI ......... .._.. n... ,.~, nal"-8y Older of Ille City Counell Of ,,,. ol M•rthe T Mlllttl, o.o.u.cs. treso u on, n e o ta n8W1P4per, • .... 11 one.ea__.., Of he•rlng praoadure, llnd en~ Md all ma. nttt "aet fOtth end coni.lneo I" P11ot~~-: ,~~-....... 1........ .,..~, Clty of Irvine. 0•19 D.oemt>er 21, TUOHEY' PRASSE, fovr IU°'etsive Weel\S, prior 10 the date and time fixed 1()( the Cl a_,,, Ion C I Cllf .,_ v. "'· u . n . '""'· 11183 A Pr~ I.aw Corporetlon
award ol Ille operating aoreemenl, an d the publication Of 11111 ~'°" oqumen;:.~. • Ot etl llC•I•. '11'"110n 18 ec1e<I to Ille ffi!.P CITY OF tRVINE 8y-MICHAl!L F. MCCOY
retolullon shall constitute nollce to all pro1pec11111 bldd•,... Bldt e~ MAn ERN · Pta.IC !«>TIC( N•tlCy C L.c.y At1orneya f0t C:O..EJt.eculon
mull be fUbmllte<l to the CltyClerl('s Offlee no leter then Jan. 11 CITY OF COSTA MESA Olly Olet1! PuOll~ Or•• co.at 0-"Y Pio!
at 10 00 A M and wlll De opened by the City Cletk I t .. 1d time, 77 FAIR OR!Vli P'tcTmOUI .,..... Pubtllhed Of'lnge Coall Dally Pllo1 0.0.ml>ef 20. 30. Jtnl*y e. 1~
plaoe. and date All blda wm be examlntld by City Slaff which, Po. BOX 1200 MAW ITA,.....,. ~Der 23. 211. 1913 eeoo-&3 ..,643 t h n COST A MESA, CA. 928'6 The lollowlng perton It dotnu .na 1 thereafter. submit the bid e elong wit ata recommen-TEL.EPHONe. 17 141 7~_5343 t>u"'-' ••
dallon to the City Council 1n public Mtalon. The City Councll anall OltoW'hON cw ~YIMIJfT PAOHrnlA pq()HRTY ._.Ai...
tnen O.Clde 10 •l)l•r Into an agrMfNrtlt with OM o f the blddert Of llCTION '· fhe work• ot lmprovemen1 ,,.. dMCl(lbecl .. 1o11owe. TENAHCE, 87'2 Helyerd. ~ r•~ 111 bide II nn •gr9tlfTlent la entered Into. II ehell promptly 1111 con1tructlon of oatlaln publlo tmptOytl'l*'ltt. tnclt.tdiflO .. ,.., IMclh, CA n~
b4J retorded 1mproYIM*l't11. IMlucllno ortestno, pevtno. bM81 evtlll and oull•rt, MICheel .IOMf)fl l.lt'l'lbeellt. 812
ADOPTED lhlt t21h day ot o.c..mw, 1983 eia...11111 •nd atre.t llgllta, un<f•qrovnd ulllll .... unltllfY -., Hllfrwd. ~ e..ctl. CA. t2"3
EVELYN ~ HAAl drelnlQI and '9CfM1lonal lectMllft, logether with ~enoet 111\Cf nit. bu~ It ~ted by'"
A TTEST
!WANDA E ANDERSEN ICny Ct4H'k
•ppur1at111n1 wOrt to~ Ind l>tlWflt PfOS>lfl• wu111n tM bOundar• of lnCIMdlill
MayOf ASStSSMENT OISlAICT NO. 82·2 fSOUTH COAST Mtl"° CENT!llll .._.Lein'*"
OA Tl:D Oeoemt>er It tH3 Tlltia •la.-t -Ned with tl'>t
[1"811 11> Pf11Mey Oounty QW11 Of OtllftO' County on cm CLI At( Dec f. 1M3
NEW BUSINESSMEN
Contact the DAILY PILOT for
I n t o r m a ti o n r e g a r d I n· g t h e
county requirement• tor using •
Flctltloua Bu1lne11 Name.
Publlthed Orang• Coast Dally Piiot Dec: i a, 1983, Jan
1984
CttY °' COITA Ml.SA ,__
&TATIOfCALIP'OflHIA ~ Orenoe eo.t o.iry 642-4321 EXT. 332 ~89-83 P11blithed 0t•"041 Coe11 Delly PllOI Dec '4 tt. IH 3 M10~ Ptlot Dec t , 11. 22. It, IN3.._., '----------------------
4, 11, 18,
l. t
' I
C8 Oran e Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 29, 1983
~Kiu. \~Telephone •rvire: &.!-~ IOOI
e.1t.o. ""''',-..w. 1001 M 0 nd a y-F rnJa v l'>oputnt>u a..-~, I 0 I A / ~ ... ~M., :~! 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
~-r.!"'n1 :~ Business Counter:
P'bwua1n v.u., I~ f~ 'd
tt .... u.,...... -.11 11HO Monday-n av
H""'· HOTt>wt 1042 ~Bc ... 11 :~: 8:00 A.M.-5:30 P .~t.
t::=~~~. :~~ DEADLl~ES :
~~~ :~ Pl"BUCATION Dt:AOIJ'a : N•wpon -II 100~
San o.m.ni. Wt M(lnda\ s.n Juan ea.,..u""" 1071 Sat.
\1011.
11 .:w a 111
I .W p.111 s.n ... ,.,.. 10110 T ut'sda'
s..l ~h 1084 t'f' .I J sw1n u.,uno 1086 " eunes a\ ~r:,· -::: Thur-.d.:t\
1-:rn I'·"" ·l ::w 11 111.
I .W p.m.
·uu1 I' 111.
.~ Oil p.111
::.u::_ :~ Frid a'
~.. ::~ Satunl.n ="-~1 :~ Sunda'. C-ltt)_ Lo\a 172!
Cbmml Propn11 12~
Condomtniu.mt 121~
0..pln<OI Unn• 130\
H""-IO bo Mu-I J2..
..... 'OO'W ~) IJ~
CA :\CELL ATIO ~ &
CORRECTIO'\S:
l:!..""1:"~":"'1 :~ Cancellation~ and r0rrert101b ma'
Mob&k Honw Pulu 1•2)
...... n ... n o..n 14)C be made 011 ~arne deaJltnf'S a~ Ora~ Co 1)()0 ~:~~,:•Y :~!?.abo ve. PleasP as k for a cancellation
~~ :~ number whf'n ran~lling vour ad.
1'-Shar1lll! t ll80
ll=:r :~ERRORS :
RENTALS --Check you r ad daily and report
~=~,,... ~ errors immediatel y. The DAILY
H"if:;".,!:"~ °' i:ioo PILOT assumes liabilitv for the fir~t Condo 1'urn 2400
c-io unr ~!~ incorrect ir.sertion cnl v. Townnou... lllm .,.~
T-Unf :!)" ~==~ ~ CLASS IF IED 642-5678
Apwvnmla ~ 2600 ,,_ .. Uni 1700
~"""' or Uni = ...... fer Salt I a ... " ... Salt
Room a. Boord 2902 I 1002 ~~'"'.:!:::." : _ .. __ ._,_a1 _____ 1._oo .... z Ceaera
Sumrntt &on..a 2908 v ... .-&ont.ot. 2901
•f!n<lalo "'Slw? 2908 LIN ISLE •Renlalo Wan1«1 2909 ~for Rent ?811 Ofhw R.mo.ola ze14 Traditional 3 Br, 3 \I\ Ba. Bayfront, pier & ~~,:..i. ::: float for 65' boat. Priced to aeU $1,250,000.
1nc1 .... 1 !Wnt.ola 2'1120 ser.,.. Zlln Mtr Renw. M)
AflOKEMDfTS
~ ........ ~
t-• a. rounc1 3004 POfWM\Olo 3012 ~I~ JO••
lllVllE TEllUCE
Panorarn1t bav & ocean view from -I Br. -I &
paU•>. pool home Pnme locauon $775.000
Yll TI IEL UM UfflllT
Sthoolo. lnetruru0o1 3016
Tra.,.I 3011 Fabulous bay & mountain view 1 Bdrm, 1 Ba.
condo co-op. Lowest priced at $295,000. ..._
BUSKSS &
FINANCIAL a.--1 .. s.i. ·a.--~-lluoi..-Wan....i
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UYSllE PUCE UJFllOIT
Speciacular bayfront dplx. 2 br. 2 ba up: 2 br.
2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces. Reduced-$1.500,000.
PEl llSIU llOME DCWFllllT
Oc-ean & jetty vtews. Manne room. 4 bdrm, 3
bath. :noo SQ ft -I tar parking S 1.285,000
FlllllWllS UICI lllLL TIP
New 4 br, 4 'Ii ·Ila, custom French Normandy
F&tat.e 1.2 prime acre hilltop. Now $995,000
CllllUH CAYS UYFllllT
Coronado Island cust bayfront lot 85' boat
deck. Plans avai.J. Now S370.000 w/trade
llllllWllUI H ME
Near new -1 bdrm, 4 balh. lake view. 3500 llCI
ft, $440,000. Will trade for a local property.
8010
8011
8014
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I BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
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BANl(eR"O
IPEI 1-1
OPEi SlTIRllY
larHr Yltw •••es SUl,000
You say you want your own private
pool plus a play-yard for your chil-
dren -we have just that in this
pricf'd-to-sell 4 BR Palermo plan -
perfect fanuly home in a perfect
location!!
144-1010
For Ad Action
Cal a
AD-VISOR
642-5678
.. Daly Plot
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tnmendou•
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but I al••t • uar thr
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ILIFFS • IUmFIL
IOW 1310,000 1350 2234 Totally decorator coordl·
nated with absolute per-
h1cllon Linda model with
beam oe•llngs. custom
k•tCllen w/aH gourmet
11 HITI
, ..... ~,.tillf-Wlprtme Npt Bch rental r. 2'1r ba. ;> story condo
near Talbert &
Brookhursl .. Tiburon ..
Dshwr. patto. dbl gar,
alee gar door opnr Kids.
pets OK $850 • $600
dep. Agt. no lee.
863-0755
feature & surrounded by ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
lush planllngs 2 bdrms -includes maa1er suHe """"'-.._.._._ ___ ..
w/pv1 encl pallo & large
spa You must see to ap-
preciate lhe warmtll &
charm Call 2711 Vista
Umbrosa &73-6900
MAHOll YllW lllH
3 Bdrm. 2 Ba Newpon
Beach home wnh large
pool In pnva1e rear yard
Quiet street loca11on near
schools and shopping
Good assumable loan ·--------and priced to sell
S249 995 including land
Call TOddy Smith
GE 759-9100 ---------..
~ IHAYElll
HLFCOlllSE
rg 2.s1y axecullve home
w /spectacular view of
gollcourse 4 Bdrm. 3 Ba
and tamlly room. Asking
$329,000. 631-7370
TIUDI T 10~ \l.
RL\l.TY
rriH 1044
IORTllWOOI CHH
Lowest pr ic e In
Streamwood 2 Bdrm. 1•1.
t>ath upper end unit
ACANT Neat pool/spa
Low down Owner wlll
tl'lrry 2nd A sking
$88 900
W)'iaC Dorn
€.fi ~~iso r 1
~·Realty ~ 786-1172 1 ' 1vJ!itL:fi/
3880 Michelson Drive
Irvine llWNllT WUll
Unbetlevabla pr~ tor de-l•--------tached 3 Bdrm home in
lhe city ol Newpori
Beacll Bog yard and RV
ac:cess add 10 the value
Proced well below other
Newport propettles Full
price only $169.950
751 -3 191
HllTIIWHI
PAHPASH
property located near
DoverlWeslcllll behmd
Wes 1c111 1 shopping
center S 1 600,000
Terms avall Courtesy to
Bkrs C all ow ner
645-6646
I Ull lTS
-
I COTE rt~
; REALTY
Spilt level 3 Bdrm 2 ba
pool hme lrple dbl gar
kids & pets welcome
5700 s 539-6190 ee.1 tee
Hut. leacla 2240
3 bd. 2 ba. frplc. new Ille.
paint and drapes.
$800/mo lset optlon
213·530-5159
HOMES FOR RENT
Huntington Beach 3 & 4
Bdrms $800 -$900
Fenced yards & garages
Kids & pets welcome
863-0755 Agent, no lee
THEE +NOHE HOO
Large Coun1ry Kitchen, Fii ZOIE Bre8Mlas1 bat c:ustom
Last chance to buy grea1 decor, t>lock to ocean
1rivestment propeny al Very EZ terms 537·5027
1he Fun Zone. 207 Palm S50 Security lee
SI. Balboa Reduced Unique hSe rental S425
prlc:e -S350K 673-29<13 w/appls & more kid/pets
673-3930 539-6190 Best Ally lee
lbaataiDr Dfltrt Walk to sand 3 Br 2 be
ltstrt 1450 wl ftr & gar $6:>5 11&1 deal 539-6190 Best Ally lee Palm Springs custom dee.
hm. pert tor entertaining lrYiH 2244
Oespera1e-must sell 110 3 Bdrms S900-S 1400 S 159,500/obo By Owner ~
619-3<16-9425 al.1.1.U Jl~rt luck 2169 'filsor 1
$20/mo. Modern 2 ealty
Story Back Bay. 4 bdrm. I
3 oa 3300 sq It. 3 car gar. 786_117 2 pool, 1ocuu 1, • • acre lot
Po"lble unfurnished or
of)tton 6<12· 1366
llAHOR lllHE 3880 Michelson Drove
Irvine
ustom 3.4 Br split lev hm
3 t>a atrium pool' 1ac lrplc
2 gar S850 Hurry•
539-6190 Best Ally lee
LUSl/IPTIOI
2 airy 4BR 3ba. tamlly rm
home Gata guarded
communl1y. Tennis, pool.
1acuu1. $3•9.500 w1s•1,
dn er $1800/mo (6 to 12
mos lsetop1)
llOIHS llUL TY
lll-2111
675-3311 Evs/Wknds
Saa CltaHtt 2276
CHTOI 2 '1Y. 3 bdrm, 2 be. 2 car
att gar S750 558-0059
Weatal11ttr 2291
Older house 4 rent $360
bltlns storage nr beach
539·6190 Bes1 Ally tee
AertaHtl Faraiak ..
Costa Mtaa 2&24
CASA DE ORO
ALL UTILS PAID
Compare Delore you rant
Custom design lea1ures,
pool. bbQ. cov'rd garage.
surrounded with plush
landscaping No pets
1 Bdrm Furn $580
2 Bdrm Furn $675
365 W Wiison 642-197 t
Hut. ltacla 2640
YOUR OWN
COUNTRY
ESTATE
Beautilul & park flke
wllll terraced pool * Prtva1e Patios
*Covered Patios
*Spacious Apt s
•Dining Area
• Walk-ln-close1s
•Heme-like kllchens
1 block lo Huntington &
Frwys
UTILITIES FREE
Senta Ana Hgta I Br $500
2 Br 2 Ba $800 No pete
545-4855
Small I Br, relng. t1ove,
pvl yd 1 pereon, no pets
$375/mo. 642--0481
SPAOlllS
$700/mo. 3 Br, 2 ba
twnllee. encl git, LIA.
pauo
783 w 19111
TSL Mgm1 642-1603
LUX.CONDO $600 1 Br Studio. lrplc,
wtd. walk 10 SC Plaza
875-4063
PllHLIFF YllW
Lrg 1 Br w/lofl, ancl g8I.
1ac. ulll rm pYI deck.
bllns, trplc $750 No
pets 2151 Pac ific
631·6107, 855-0685
THE GABLES 2Br l 'llBa
w/gat $585 crpta drapea
bluns lncd patio wa1er pd
2439 .. D"Orange
636-4120 call 1-5PM
..eSliB.AU
Beaullfully landscaped
garden ap1s Pool & spa
Pa11ostdecks No pe1s
Bach ~50
1 Bdrm $525
131 E 18th 646-6816
161 E 18th 642-0856
WHTUlE YILUIE 1 & 2 Br pool spa. garage
avail lndry rm. no pals,
CBI port
Bach. t & 2 Br $385-$565
TSL Mgmt 645-8122 or
642-t603
WESTSIDE
3 llllr• a,t
New 3 Br 1•; Sa pauo,
DI W bll-tnS. kids OK no
pets. 1mmed occupancy.
$650/mo 880 Cen1er 51
For app\ 645-6646
1 Bdrm Furn $585 WOOIUll YILUCE
2 Bdrm From 5695 I & 2 Br apts avail pool
LA QUINT A HERMOSA spa lfr pa11ol bal No
west of Beach 3 blks pets 1 & ;>Br $505-$610
south ol Edinger TSL Mgml 754·008 t or
141-5441 642-1603
tlewrrt ltacla 2669 Hut. l eacla 2740
~!"""!'-~-9'!"-,-...~~ 2 Br. 1•, ba 1mmac rplc: 1 Br bach pad quiet. Prvl lovely patio gar porch
prprty on Day. blocks 10 o ll mas Br S550
t>c:h. elec gar. yrly S525 960-352 t 673-6336-642-9666
Apartaenta, Ont.
lalka
Peainnl1 2707
2 bd apt wtgar $7501mo
113'> 29th St Upslatrs
2 Br. I Ba. new drps/crpts
No pe1s Kids 0)(
S500t mo 733 Utica
960-6972
Br condo nu cpl pa1n1 &
drapes. pool $550 Ava11
now 786·8861
Nu Carpel 213-433-0S02 Beaut 2Br 1 Ba lwnhse.
C-d I M 2722 lrplc. pa110 vauhed cell-OlODI t ar 111g. bllins. encl gar xlnt
2 Br 2 Ba. den. lrplc.. 2 cer area nr Hunt Hrbor
gar s1eps to beach $625 846-0736
C:SELECT
-r' PROPERTIES
4 Bdrm. 2•11 Ba, 2 story
with al e. wel bar and
lamtly room, la rge
redwood patio Only 1
year old S 198 500 wl1h
$ 153 000 1n assumable
l1nanc1ng 832·2137 Owne<. prinopals only
Beaulllul 4 Bdr es111e
home Beaut lfully
turntshed & decorated
Former model Comm
pool spa & tennis
S3500 /mo Ag1
6<1<1--0927 UIDLOlllS Avall now S 1100/mo Beau1 3 Br 3 t>a lrplC
tle•sta l1hlrilslltlll 1 provide qualified people 851"8767 vaulted ce111ngs, tencd PRICE Citatral 2202 to rent your properly. Costa Mtll 2724 yd. encl gar blllns, w/d
TRW report ' appllcalton ·1~B!"'r"""!"'1 '!!B~•-. ~,§r"!2~0"!W~al~la-ce-. ~kuu,,Pt WHaalrkbloouber acSh76NOr NEWPORT IElCH REDUCED IUCIFllOIT COllO form • professionally ,_ 5420 drafted lease lorm ofter-retrige, quiet. c ... an 846-0736 HUGE LOT (90 x 178) with on 1•15 fantastic Plan 43 tn Desperate seller, 2 Br. un-Sierra Mgml 6<1 1-1324 good otder 3 Bdrm 2 bath cu"i·~dale 3 Bdrm. 2 bl ObS1ructable oceanvlew ing Y04J ma,umum protec-Beau1 ;> Br. 1 '; t>a. lrple,
52 5 000 d ·~· AS$uma 1oan wi th llon Call Pe1e Johnson 1 Br 1 Ba patio $395/mo vaulled ceohng rencd yd.
home 1 an Extensive upgrades 122.000 or less Locate<l 631·1266 1nclds ut 1ls Agen t encl gar blllns Walk 10 owner wlll carry Covered patio nlee yard '" Carlsbad By The Sea 645-3683 beac:h Nr Hunt Harbour Rtr McC1rllll1, IUtr. E•cellent location near s "' 900 B w11 1.,.., 111 born 2 bd. 2 be, very n1c:e. qulel, S650 846-0736 141-1121 park and pool '148•500 619-438·0268 downstairs apt Patios, ~ Galuy Really encl gar Aon 548-0477 SElWlllD
YILUliE TEllNIS,-POOL
SAUlll-ElSTSIDE
a I so r 1 Ctrtaa ••• Mar 2222 Xlnl 4 br. 2 ba home, $800 2 BR hba. air cond cnl 1 br lake condo wllolt. -.. ealfy Lrg 3 br 2·~ ba. 2 frplcs. $525 No pets Tom Ho gar. paho 272 CabrlllO New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury
beams & p1110. xlnt cond 768·2999 eves 581 ·3 !65 $575 Ag1 5<19·85<17 epts 1n 14 plans 1 Bdrm
This condo n611teled In a 7 B 6 I Avail 11 17 No pets l<lds 2 Br w/garage. upstairs, tr om $575 2 Bdrm lrom
hne Costa Mesa Comple11 -1172 OK s 115-0 • $1000 tee L I 'll 2250 no pets. rels req'd. s415 $675 Townhouse trom is a real sleeper. 4 Bdrm. 640-<1360. (213)470-6595 11181 l 1 Avail 117 352 Victoria $735 • pools. Jennls
2' •bath highly upgraded --~-HOME FOR RENT 645_8161 watertalis. ponds Gas for
with mirrored living rm, C11ta Ntll 2224 Laguna Hills 3 Bdrm 2 Ba coolllng & heating paid
dining 1m & master SOiie 3880 Mk:helson Oftve * * * S825 Fenced yard & gar-•Sm 2 Br 1 Ba nr SC From San Diego Frwy
Compte1ely remodeled lrvlne E&•L c1•11y age Kids & pe1S wel-Plaza s A pool spa ins drive North on Beach 10
k1lchen Don 1 miss at •11 " come 863-0755 Agent. $525 No pels 752-5822 McFadden and wes1 on
S 129 9001 6<16•7171 M' . v· . 1~1 1768 Curry no fee McFadden IO SEAWIND · 111108 lt}I -Coste Mesa S375tmo I Br, 1 ba small v I L L A G E
Lake viaw Enc Aome. 3 You era the winner or tow flliuioa Viejo 2ID co11age. oft road quiet 1714)893•5198 THE REAL
ESTAT&:RS
wan11FHIT,
Br 1 Dan. 3 .,., Ba. lree tickets ($20 00) value HOMES Fl5A RENT 2072 Newport Blvd. _
$215.000 752·2197 to the Mission Viejo 3 & 4 Bedrm, TSL Mgmt 642-1603 Walk 10 beach 1 Br s1ove.
S"llTI YacaTIOI -refrlge. wl d hk-up, gas tw rt lflcla I Ml • • l82S-$900 Garages and $500 2 bdrm hOYse near lncld yard. pel reqlred &at llY IHW tenced yards Kids & pets 20th and Wellac:e Refs s4 75/mo 536-4637 S2S,OOO An1hefmCooven1ion O K Agt N o fee req 548-3829 HYOIUI per year Income irom CeoterJ1n7·15 863-0755 Ss85/mo 2 er;-11.., ba WOotUIEAm Excepuonal buy for the in-these 1rue pnde ol own· r 1el p asas call S I 1 & 2 B I om h h 1w 0 c: m a • tl•.,...rt ltacla 2269 Twnhse, Ellide Enc:I gar. ,pac 04.IS r r vestor w 0 88 8 ays ersh1p units New root. 6 •2·4321 , ext 252 1-·-.:.!:-.... --"!"'"'"""!''!'!'l'I~ pa11ol yd.2346SantaAna $525 Lakes & streams. wanted lo be on the bullt-lns. lrplc Better * * * 2 br, 2 be duple11. W/D, TSL Mgmt e•2· 1603 pool & spa, large rec water Pier and dock for 2 1ak1 a look! 759-ISO 1 I le • ti St s to I bolls-SO ti and 35 tt 4 .. -------. 3 Br, lrg lenc: yrd. giir. cpl, rp • .. uge Pl 0 ep -r 0 0 m · n 8 w Y 'e • "'" bch 5406 Neptune $900 CLEANl 5 yra old 3 Bdrm decorated. beautllully
Bdrm plus 4' •Ba c:ustom ,,,__ drapes. grnhse. quiet 982-4163. (213)379·5015 2ba $695 DIW Gar 11ndscapad security ~~·~1ti~~~ h~:1 be~: U SO/mo 650-5719 •NPT HOTS ;> BR, 1 BA Pillo $695 Agl 546-5605 gates Sorry no pets
$<125,000 assumable et ai• .. Wlllllilliiili .. 4 bd. 2 be. Lrg tncd ~d Nr Rustle. fncd yd trees. Eaatalde t Br small but <16-6591
12 5% Land may be schools & ahop·g mmed lrplc Move now S8SO cory with lots ol natural La •alita~ 27U
purchased tor $398,000 Occ s975 645-0029 Mr Miiier, 547-0204 wood. $395. 651-9523
at 10% no down. Asking i:::::::::::::::. $615 Cute C1pe Cod 2br, 3.4 Br, 2'"' 1>8. 2 block• 10 Eastslda cute bachelor, $~5o~!g,u~ ~; Is~ Av~1i
$625,000 Atk lor Bettina 2ba, n4IW cptsldrps wd beach. close to pool & vaull9<1 ceilings, patio, lmmed 497 ·5382 eves
Laughlin 6.C4-7020 1211,000 nrs. lncd yd, used brk:k, tennis 982-6683 $4SOlmo Joyoe Weitze.
Lt•IO RUL ESTATE ICUIFIHT garage, gdnr 2218-A Newporl Sh°'es Aemex 631 -1266 TUDIO Small. but great
1022 At Iha pier, a rare 3BR 2ba Placen11a 645-2566 -location. 1 blk 10 Main
Cortal ••I Mar Aendervous con-Charml"" Ill Eaatllde I 3 bd.~ Npt Heights, E soda 2 Br, DI W. g11r. nu Beech or Downtown All
1 .. ., 2 c:.r Gar. lrg encl yard cpl, palnl etc No pets utlls pd $300. 494-6087 Lift t• llE dominlum on the •lie o Bdrm bungalow $300'1 5775 640_7382 s475/mo. tst & last, 1 __
.... •rlT OI E the labled bellroom. On 539-{i 190 Best Ally lee sec & cleanlng. 548-2405 Jltwptrt ltacla 2769 • " 11\e boardwalk , 1tep1 to ---------3Br 2'"' Ba condo, pool, --Select the 3 br front houae the sand wtth panoramic: C 0 M P LET ELY RE -835 Amigos •9. $895. E/slde, nr n-2 Br. 1'-' be. 1 bd. $500: 2 bd. 2 ba.
or the 2 Br rear Ellhef ooean VieW Easy batch DECORATED 1 Br hse 213•541-4460 2 slory Twnhae Gar, $600: No Pe19 545-4855
one wOVld t>e a greet went to the Dory ttee1. wlgar & lge yd Charm-palio $575 650--0500
owner• unit YOY can get Pavlll on and ferry Ing, -10 apprect111 •Br 2Ba Newp°'t lllanCI.
top rent for thls__mill Balbol 91 It's best 1700 1<12·1971 2 car gar 25 dock. yrly t•STHTtlt
1 Bdrm. I bath Avlll1ble
now $650tmo, yearly.
673-3355 located CdM duplfj and' i ••7211 CREAM of -the_C_r_op-1-0-11-nt 4022 Ch1nnel $1395 1 Br 1 Ba al' bit-Ins. lndry en~y 11111 13 t 5,000. _. I.I, Realh Ill· 1142 rm, c:er port. nr beach & 1 bdrm. S500/mo. ullls pd Co Y W.rd 844_6200 4 rm. 2 be 111ecullve .,,, .. 14251 home. upgraded lnllde s .. ops. · mo. The Tropics. 242 1 E 16th
'!/!:Macnab -Irv me /..Jn NIC1£l
111\lll y &
llSSU[lllT£5
HYFllllT
end 04J1 880 Petlo. Gar-AT TllE WOii 735 W 18th St SI. Nwpt Hgt1. 645-5109
diner and Ullls PAID 3 Br 2 Be. frpl, gar. yrly TSL .... 142· 11 I 1 -Br ant wt1to~. fr"' on
1575 s I f S9501mo, contac1 VIII• ..... •• ... ' ecor ty " Rentals 676-4912 -. PMLSllE UT Pen1nsu11. S430tmo. Cell
537·5027 1 Br, lrg rma. crptlldrpe, 675-06~ P_M __
Oelu11e SomlfHI Twnh11. till IHll r1r111•. No peta. $385. 2 bdr-upPlf. w. pch, bay
HUI t .lmY VIEW 1 IUOH UY
200 Bill. 40' lot. 3Br ~ den, By owner. tattim.on.tecl
3b1. yerd. compt rttturb. 3 br 3 N def\ 1 2 t>t 2
$449.900 2 11 JHrn1~. t>a ·es>t 1c.,, be c:on-
Open S1t1Sun 1-5 ~9<1) Xlnt lln. 111111.
Balle<, nr S..r. 2 m11te< 2 Br S850tmo '42·6743 Agt 73l·e&2gf642·7312 vu, atove, trig 642-1400 ~= 2~!!;,~h~,~~: Hive 23 rental• IYlll Pete .. LIKE BRAND ,..EW" $850. IVlll 1·84
oar. pool, apa. $950 111 OK. From 1600-$2500. SparlcHng 1 Bdrm ltotn $795/mo 3 Bf,.,,2-b-,-. ""2_c:ar_
7 1 4 -9 7 3 . 1 2 7 1 or Call 760-8702, egt $445, 2 Bdrm from $555 encl gar. w/d N!up. upper
71<1-955-2199 U1111 pd, pool, lllflQe, no unit 8loclls to beech
Ownrtaot 873--555 l Low low down. 1945,000. E tide 11tr11e 2 Br 1 Be,
Ctata HI 1 4 540-4242t87~tee9 good IOC , yard. d«:. No
WIE ---pelt. 1826 751-3898 4 Br, 2 b1 w/attaeh gar on /wr1rww
LIAM wloptlon to buy 2+
den, 2·~ Ba. 111 lime ..,.,
avallable Bt1ut11u1
COf'dO In Belcourt Hiii.
pets 09 Walnut
301 Avoc:edo, &42-9850 SL Mgmt
241 W Wiiton 831--0980 &42 1&03
&O 11 120 c:orn.r lot 11 911 2·elry 4Br 3b1. fem rm. LIWll WT•
K u T J C 11 l Vlc:torla tor a low ptlcl o1 home. g1te guardad Sh•P 2 bd, 1 N "°"" In
Ii I' I I I H 3.500 C111 &4&-831& comm -rannla, pool, QtMI tocatlon al 2&1 _ _ _ _ . 5 ----llMlual 1341.500 wl5~ Fio-St 1 c:« ger.
....__ M»
""-* t$.JO ,.. -, .1&1111 •UL n
lll.fllO
l.rg 3 Br 2 Ba upper.
encllld garage. M"' del
Mar .,.. 1585/mo No
pell 75 t -9905 IV rM0
r&Ra NEWPHl
&P&RTMfm
• ' ....... . :I SALE IY IWIEll dn or S 1800tmo . (I to 12 ~/mo Avtlll t•7·&4 LIOO ISLAND 4 bfl3be rw LllllY tmn Slng!M t a 2 8dnn Apif1· ,._ .... "~E_w __ Y_o__., '1 Auume 111 2 •tOfY 4 Br mot IM oPt I Wayne~ ti beech, •veil Jan 111800. Wlltt to so. Cat Pl&UI mentt & TownhouM • I' I I I' wtpool. Nr F•lrvlew & IMlll IULn MiU"Veroa 4 Br. 2 ba, r1m 107 Via l<oron. 1 -6368 FrJ)lc. It wtl'lde>Wt, 11c. In-lrom '"° (AMI •bOut · · · -I 6 kker I 13',000 f'IWI• 111-tJ 11 '"' (Pen lum'I> S 1200. u dlCOf ll Br n.1 wtgar homu9Curlty. 2. Br. ll Ba !Vmlthecl •Pt• comptete El DO y f ofr. 558.ot25 Ill 12 675-33tt£v/Wllndt &40-t&071¥91&Wllndl MOO't PW1 blitt pd II lncldt beautllul prvt wttl'ITV.llMntl"""*tl, r--r-"T"~-r-f: w,,. • _ ,_ ~ .. noon Modem 2 Ir •bOde a.oi 531~8 '!? lllt Alty ,.. c;lbtlll. tenni. crtt. f::o' =~ '; = : = ..__.l.__.l__._l'-'-1-'' ...... ...., "I-·,.._. IHIUU IUm ·~u. .... llM w/llC)C)ll ~ k.ld/pel 01( .... .. ' ~l.ICtl "'0'•· req'd) On JlmborM Ad. ,.....~~...,._-..;•;;..., _ _,,. •-i-"--7 Bffut. 5 bdrm•11omt lft lJMlaLI S31~1IO Beet Alty... 48' 2k 2t00tq. ft lltu-&:ll 7471 118en~ln Hllll Rd.
" 1 Rl G Y I Ssryo!Me SMe,000. Cen 117,. .__.,,. .. V"'· w Rare "°'* ..,.,.. yard atecl 0111 tluge IOtln Pf ... Newer 2 bd -;;p.tlo end 144· 1111 I I 1• I I 0 ~':; :·..:~~:.'.:. --·· move 1n w/mlnlmum Cln c -""': ..,. .., &ld b-•t 11Q10v1 .,.. OerdlMI' a 0¥11111· No b4t11. 1525.
--· · -· ---. ,, .. -,.. '-: pym' Wiii c1rry note ~~ 20·~~2 '°'· :~ ~ 3, ~ .:~ ~ool wvlc• l11CIUC1ecl. 145.5571 Penln •'ra lro aer, •
... , .. , ""'4IOID llTll~\ ... I' r l' I' I' r I flll«abll ••Y lmmeO. lttf-""' :e/dlnlng/111::; C-tl a!M Ito....... 1 7 0 0 I m 0 A II t . ALM SA APTa. new Ct01t /Clrpe I '*"'· '"st >91,1•,1 . _ _ _ _ _ • 8 ..crow 834· 1157 OenlM ., .. Ught lntenot ._. -131·7370 1 8'. MIOIYnO ~ "'* Yl'ty 1lil. 1190 Ml~ I • .. sc .... 1 '""' 10 I J jr .. A I I I I 8uyen ind .....,, meet buy In orang•· Co. A Ylffldal= clellyptlc: ~ 3 Ir ai.. a. oondo. t-4 1H 1 .._Dr &an11 ~ tlPt. 1 1111 ffOiTi II , ..... u ---:.! -. -. ~ dty In ClaNlllecl 127.500 YOYnQ edutl• YllY p 0-a Cfll'PO't pOOl l -A n • H • I II n ' • beectl, w111t1. dr..,.._ ••Ln11Mew1llD111•1ll11a.I &e2..&t71 WlllGom..AQU~·.m7 f..'2~71°••u l f l ed h75 &40o-737t 11•1546-MeO &ca-2iJn
-_,_~~~~~~~--'~~~~~~-~·~
IUCHAIOS( =:=... llOIO
tOll ,._ IOll ............. ::: c.-• .... ...-· ~ IOll ,.,_ .. y .. tllU ~--toU 1100 i.....-o... Gii ~ HU =:=... n11
Hit :::....-=--. aa .,,.
Ollia> .w. ..... ..!:~o:... Int ... ~ ... ..
J
I
a
Ajvertiaia1 11111
$2.17 per day
rhat·s ALL you pay tor
3 lines. 30 days
111 the
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
plus the IRVINE MIRROR
and the HUNTINGTON
BEACHCOMBER every
Wednesday at
no extra char get CALL TODAYll
HI FOii IAllH
Your Dally Pilot
Service Directory
Representative
142·'321 Hf, 308
Orange Coast DAILY PILOi/Thursday, December 29, 1983 C"J
Acc1Hli a1 IMkk11~•J CHtracter1 Qu .. aiai Haalia1 HHH Cltaaiai P1iatla1 Paptr lta .. al '$'~~~:
CPA high quauty Income PROF el&Pd computed Gtatral -----t k t t •-...,...~·-..,.---la .a I W t .a HAUL MOVE REMOVE 8rltlah 11ouMCteanlnn Sflf· Fiii PAlmll * REMOVAL * Ty ~ · ord ProceUlng aJC wor a reas ra es manual Moderate tees. Remodel/Hepalrs comml F•ll II II •• · · • C All •·ua n~a. ·~hoot & per·
John 81own 631 ·6-483 Free counsel. 6-42· 7047 and m id Lied bOl'lded Mowing, Edgl ng. Twice a Fur~•t;4 TS.,,~RT~eea ~l~:le ~~~~It~~-() ~:rn· b~8:~~e;~ Y~~ng;-h~~Y all u1 llrall 78().0328 90~81 P~;jec~. 851•1041 A1~faafi Ca ... iatt ee1Lia1 ms Fo1-est, 552-9 t-42 . mo S20·S25. 6•5-5737 • t N I I P -111o..1 ' W • .. • El 1 SS LOW RATES SS-LT HAULING . MOVING-HOUSE-APARTMENT ~~.~~ayt:',';:3-4114 lrct • r • .., Typlng7Wrltlng Servlees
Dr veway ·Parking Lots •New cabinets, cabinet · telrica Tree trim & removal gen Chrlatmu and Appltance Cleaning or Renovating. P 0 '!!oxes 8u1lnesa. Academic and
Repairs · Sealcoatlng taClng. bars & tor mica ELECTAICIA N. Priced clean-upa. 554•701 7 d&llverlea Jon 6-45-8 192 Frei! estimate 650·4468 12 YRS EXP· I'm •mall, 2600 E. Coaat Hwy Personal 78{}-1968
S&S Asphall 83 t-'1199 Lie countertops. 642-0881 right. tree estimate on -My prlcea are amalll (cor Dahlia) 760 1822 w· I YARD MAIN CLEAN UP Hauling Col student. trg Housecleaning . Vacant 650-a 7 --• aaitw 11aia1
All Types Repair. Resurt. Carpeatry - - - -large or smell )obs, Lie Tree Trim & Haulln~ lrUCk Reas. Sch \/IC, CdM Apts E11p'd, reliable '-Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
4iii7
iiiiiiiRiiOiiNiiiiiiiiiiiiii Platltr~··~h WHITE wiilR'O
Seal coat !SLURRY MIX) E -C -39662 t. 673-0359 c Leo 847 2•57 Thank you 759· 1936 Cort Own trans 650-3263 1• Comm , Reaid .. Reas xpert arpeotry Service ---- ---· .. FIGUEIREDO PAINTING PLAS ER AlCHING WINDOW WASHING
Repair Remod •dd'ti a ELECTRICIAN: 20 yrs exp. --------L-IGH-T H•ULING f11 • -Rest I I 30 "The onl magic 1 Rattls Free esUma1es Doors.;tc, .,,548•-4o9n8~0 TOP QUALITY WORK AT ffa .. yaaa Trash, fur n"lture. etc . tYlDl Fire proofing sh1nglet, 25 uccoe. nt ext yr1 Y. a 645--4269 or 645-0032 REAS RATES 646-7602 •**HOME REPAIR MATT 6-45-50811 = lbc MOVING = yrs exper, Int/ext. spec. eJCp Neat. Paul 5•5·2977 OUALITY . 63 1·2026 la~~aittilt REMODELING Alt phasea RESID/COMM'L/IND Etec-Plumb-Carpentry Quick/careful. Low rates. In natural wood finlanes, Neil Patches-& le.xturea State Law • Also custom cabinets 18 Remodel Keith 6<46--4672 PAUL;S HAULING Lie T 138046 552-0410 bonded & lnaured, tree Quality work at low rates 1.8 .. 1-1-1---1--1-h--11 BAB SITTING· MY HOME yrs In area Lie, bonded, 20 yrs Do my own work n· stitke wtlllt & 8' pickup est. lie C-33 No. 290804 Int/ext Free est 645-8258 a e aw requ res at •
Nr Victoria, Costa Mesa lns'd 968·3564anyClme Lie 27804 1 AL6-46-8126 I REPAIR, FIX OR BUILD 646·0792anytlme *A·1MOYlll* 638-6911 --· contractora who pertorm
Nights & PIT 642·8-482 C--C --Carieaiat ANYTHING. Reas rates Best quallty. 25yr exp I•--------Plaa~ia1 work over $200 Including·
NE w v EAR s Ev E taeat eacrett _ Dava 960·2165 Heatiai uc T • 116,428 730-1353 PlifriDI-----241., El• HI-ll2I :~rc!':i~at~~~~e~.':!
BABYSITTING loving Concrete· U form. I pour Clean ups•Tree l rlmmmg AMERICAN HANDYMAN 2.t II El• I.ti 1121 STARVING COLLEGE - -Faucets• Water Heaters contractors should ao
care in a clean, sate or complete jobs No job Yard Malnt •Hauling Carp, Glass, Paint, etc. Furn:ces•Poot~eaters STUDENTS MOVING CO Farthl~lnterlor Oealgn state In their advertising.
home 548-0184 too~~~ 964-0366 MIKE 650-3263 Ins .. Bonded 847 -2367 H Cl . Lie T 124-436. Insured. V~S~~~~ g~~~7f f1~5~2 ~;~~~~ ,~::~tZ~:J:s!~~~~. Contractors and con·
Sitting & lite hacleanlng. 3 Clai•Dt! Swee' Hnliai .... . ...... w·Tc64H1U-8S42G7ROW' •H·NGING/RE'·o·v·L· Anyilme M&M 642-9033 Gsurmonedrlse, atc5o5n8t~~o'86~-~trhy
days per wk 8-5pm For M 6ft.myl--Commerclal/Reslden11al DU-"PJOBS~ & ROBIN'S CLEANING " ' " ... " ,. .. .., interJle 811 650 9019 Landscape Maintenance .., SERVICE 11 • yrs experience lMlia1 -any questions Contrac-w c • CHIMNEY SWEEP Quality Service. reas .. lic. SMALL MOVING JOBS a thoroughly P1iati11 MIKE 851-1800 tor's State License
Thet a;,.;. d7aw In the ~UP 1·867·4876 bonded, 20 yrs In area MIKE6-46-139t clean house. 540-0857 ·auALITY PAINTERS All sonaOr-i)eopte use Board. 28 Civic Center
West. .. a Dally Piiot <:>hop class11ied-our store Mc Weeney Lanr;lscape Have aomethlng to sell? Find wha1 you want In PROMPT, NEAT PRO· claaaUled ads 10 sell all Plaza. Room 690. Santa
Ctaaltlecl Ad. 6-42-5678. never closes 642-5678 645-5124___ Clll.Nllled ade do It well. D.lllty Piiot Ctualtleda. FESSIONALS. 636-7149 _•_ort_s_o.!..!,!'lnga. 642.5678.r-_ _.. __ _,;.....;;,-.~1-A_n_a_. c_A_9_2_70_1 ___ _
IHtali to LHl l foa.. 3004 Btlt Waalt4 5100 ltlt Wu... SlM
Sllare 2901 Found 12118: F Maltese. AN OHIO OIL CO. offers Hostess tor real estate de·
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE I __ _...._ ___ .;;.;;.;.;; v1c. Adams & Huntington high Income, plus cash velopment in San Juan
Resp, tldy person to shr St, H.B 960-5668 bonuses. Regardless ot Capistrano. New licensee
lge condo nr SC Plaza, no experience, write M.D or retired. R E lie req. • HOROSCOPE
ACROSS
1 Collide
6 Asunder
11 Sign of
a hit
14 Lissome
15 Rela11ve
16 Wool weight
17 Kind of mint
19 Upon pre!
20 Low water
21 Performs
22 Stimulates
24 Listen
26 The elite
27 Governor
30 NY island
32 Leftward
33 Frighten
34 Fasten
37 Merge
38 Mold
39 Merry king
40 Child pref
41 Puddles
42 Crowded
43 Decelerated
45 Vibrated
46 Flower pans
48 Strip
49 Eat away
56
60
63
50 Fest111al
52 USSR nver
56 Tro11ed
57 Trite
60 Resident
sufl
6 t Look tor
62 Gains
63 Tne Sp
64 Leans toward
65 Forest units
DOWN
1 Coterie
2 V111ac1ty
3 Unsorled
flour
4 Lamb tender
5 Pronoun
6 Small cul
7 Pub serving
8 Camera par I
9 Frost
10 wood eater
11 Adlai and
Robert L
12 Lariat s
13 Poet
18 Javelin
23 Pronoun
25 Opposite
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
l IA I C ' F A C E S 111.:i A L E A L IG A ~ N 10 0 E A L 0 I""
M IO IO IN l 10 W E IR L I C E
s rr R A I T rs • 'R 'TA L T 0 IS
L E IE P • E IC A -
T A T ll E R •R A S H N E s s
U R 1 IAI E R I ~I E T A P E
T I E • R IQ V rs .:. I C
T .._ R IS I • "4 [£ T E • t1 E NT
I NSE C R E T •C R u ro ES
-v E E •IS T O iO L -
M O NE i ~!o.· RVM8' £0 A "' E R 0 I S A P P 0 I N T
SERE E OUCE I UNTO
T R IO 0 R 0 8 E 0 1:> E E P
pref
26 Passage
27 Storm
28 Weapon
29 Nuggets
30 Burn
3 t Bugle call
33 Bootee
35 Otherwise
36 Tobacco
38 Swine
39 Porous
42 Rightful
44 You1h
45 Panegyric
46 Hazard
47 Muse
48 Conspires
50 FBI ot11cer
51 M ongst
53 Unusual
54 Skin trouble
55 Fewer
smkg, drugs or pets. Found: 12/24, yng gray Read. American Lubll· Salary 213.507 -5091 or
$275/mo 5-45-2575 Kitten wired collar nr cants Co .. Bo• 426. Day· 714-493-4093 Lions Park 6-42· 1376 ton, Ohio 45•01 Resp .. tidy person to shr .. 1
lge condo nr SC Plaza Found 2 Hub caps at Assemblers. Apply 7 am ole
No smkg, drugs or pets. Irvine/Highland N 8 only. MacGregor Yachts. TllE IALIOA UY Clll
S275/mo 545-2575 640-5l l-4 Lv Message 1631 Placentia. c M FRONT DESK CLERK Friday. December 30
BY SIDNEY OMARA
Ammtes, n/smkg, to shr • Assemblers. e1tperleoced Hotel Guest R-.lstratlon ARIES (March 21-April 19): Y ou gain greater perspective
br, 2'"' ba lwnhse, Back or tr I C " -• f d ' · · Ba" S225/mo. 645-7272 FOUND ADS a nees an ma.,e Full Time lncludlng week--sense o 1rect1on ts r estored, you 'll kno w where you're going , $7-$11 per hr starting ends CRT EJCperlence d h b . ul . oal S d Share-4 Br pool hse, pay. FIT & PIT positions preferred Typmg 40 an ow too tam umateg . tress in ependence,creativity.
Costa Mesa $300 + ullls. ARE fREE avallable Call 543-2808 wpm & Good basic Math ability to perceive p icture in its entirety. Leo plays key role.
850-9311 _ Nat~~c HG. Skills Graveyard shltt TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You are able to combine
Shr 2 br. 14th St. Bal. Pen
$335 ulll pd. 675-2688 or Ans Ad 824, 6'12-4300.
Call: Ba1>ys1tter needed, my Please can tor appoint· various fact.ors, to synthesize and f inally lO com e up w ith
home. New-born Mature ment. Mon-Fri, 9·5· complete and accurate stor y Y ou learn truth about financial
reUred woman prel Own Hl-500, Ext 521 142-Hll Trans 650-8077 status of one who w ould represent you. Stress self-reliance.
S~~u3S:~u~I g~v ~~~ c. ~'I 1---------lllYSlmlt H c?~ :~: ees:~ a Ea:~ da e realize that som e individuals d o ex peel som e thing for nothing.
u11ts 631-0503.645·3•66 Found black-&°Whlte ca•. Pt1t1me. mature loving 645·6305 GEMINI (M ay 21-June 20): Go slow, lie low, l eave detatls
VVE LOOK FOF.t YOUI v 1 c Bu shar d & person needed tor 17 mo Insurance Agent needs for a nother day. F or now, emph.asii.e public relations, r eview
House/Roommates 8 rook h u r $ t . H 8 old CdM area 760-10 11 Manager who 15 pro-various fact.ors which include legal rights and permissions.
Unlimited 832-4134 968-6732 Babysltler wanted 5 yr old tessional Must have Long-distance call a1ds in clarif ying plan r elating to communica-
1 I W _.. 29_ Found. F gry come-uke girl My home 2'Ji sales. typing. phone tion, travel and education.
tall I aatn v;r dog Beach/Adams. H.8 hrs/day. Tues-Fri skills Growth Potential Prot Female seeks home 960-4808 645·9258 after 5·30. Salary Negotiable CANCER (June 21-July 22): Concentrate on basic issu es,
to share or small rental Found-GOiden Retriever, SS F 673-1943 jobs that need attention , d ependents and pets. You'll make
Costa Mesa/Huntington apx 8 mos old Country CU I IH uul SECllET•llY contac~ with unusual, creative people who are willing to Bch Nonsmilr. neat. OITSllE eurs •• • Club Or. CM 6• t-5054 ..., Small N-port Beach clvll cooperate in prom o ting special cause Scorpio, Leo, Aquarius respon ·-have elderly. Tile Orange Coast Dally lltlgatlon otllce. w ord . l k l quiet dog Shirley Found Grey & Wht Male Piiot has an excellent op-processing experience natives Pay ey roes.
642· 1207 Cat w/llea collar F v por1unlty tor a Class1lled required Salary nego· LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be ready for change, travel, variety.
Glllftl fer 964"3224 Outside Sates person 11able. 955-0560 speculative venture and exciting meeting with special member
2912 FOUND M med. sz dog, with a proven tract re· f
1
_.!!"R_e_n_t______ 1216. collar. Mollett cord Great earning Liquor Clerk , nights lnctd o opposite sex. Be analyt ical. discern m otives, be willing to take
Eastslde. Costa Mesa. School HB 964.32 13 potentlal. guaranteed wknds. Must have caJlh "intuitive leap." Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons figure
10 ( 20 $65/mo 957 2528 _ _ draw aga1n1 commission register experience prominently. · · · Found Siberian -Husky. Send resume to P.O. Box Appty 1888 Placentia
Offict IHtlb 2914 male vie: Bristol & Santa 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca. Live-In Housekeeper and VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on restorntlon of spe<:iaJ
161 westclltr. N Ana Ave. 5-40-4234 92626 EOE ca!8 lor elderly couple. material,includingphotographsandfurniture.Emphasisalsoon
278-1365 sq 11 Sultat>le Found Sml apricot M OICITlll SEllYHS Call atter 7 pm 64-4-8421 safety, security, home, property values and long-range plans.
tor medical or den1aJ dog. mixed Poodle? C M Basi d t . d " un t k l d 'II be f ' 41 Skunk
58 Be 1n hOCk
59 Cosset Agent 541-5032 546-8362 IPHIH SOii.. MAllFICTllUll c omes le a JUS en ta es pace an you n e rt as a ,.....-,.--.--~1 --CHEERS RESTAURANT Sharp tndlvlduals needed result.
11 12 13 250 sq ft suite, $200/mo Found: Wht puppy, 3.4 Entertainment and danc-tor wood cutting, metal LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Relative aids m perfecting
n9 W 19th St. aolte D. mo, Victoria/Union C M 1ng. We need cocktail casting. blade sharp· tech · h I d · d ' d base f · -1..,6,-+--+--~I CM Tom 851-8928 548·8320 servers we train. Stu• enlng Retiree ok Call ruques. e ps etenmne 1reet1on an o operations
dents OK. Full. pit Beach Gary 631-03 t2 Focus on clarity, humor , versatility. ability to transform losmg
~5~:~~.' 8~~'.::i,8 ~n Mature. Reapont1b••. proposition into productive activity. Pisces figures pronunent1y BaY1root Ottloes, patios. Lost black female pup. -1.,,9-+-.....,-~, parlllng. Janitorial. spayed, N-Port Beech
------11miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim Lost Black/Grey/Wht col· Compank>n3id8. mature 1 1 e F e c a I 1 • woman to care tor elderly
673-1003 area 675-1398 clean 1ndlvldual 1equ1red SCORPIO (Oct. 23-N ov. 21): Personal magnetism soars.
tor the total care tor a members of opposite sex are drawn to you and many confide
semi-ambulatory elderly their most intimate feelings. Emphasis also on payments. woman In the Npt Bch COAST HWY.
CtllOU IEL IUR High vlslblllty corner lo-
cation Xlnt signing plus
off-street parl\lng 2500
sq tt S 1 65 per toot
3 harbor realty logo
6
ltarlal~taPltr
550 slf Clean wlcpt, pvt
be $-400/mo. 6-42-4623
1450sq.tt vlewsulle
Four lrg private olllces
Ith lrg 98Cretarlal area.
kitchen and private
lobby Sign space avail-
able on WestcllH
Redecoration allowance
fornlal lndlanapolls H B lady. live In 786-6130'
960-7931 aves Counter ptifs-E.xp'd pref
Lost black neut M cat,
yellow eyM, Haveo Pl &
lrJlne Blvd 548-t293
Los1: Choe Lab, M°iiie.' 9
yrs. M cAnhur/San
Joachin area REWARD.
644-6408
Lost gray tabt>y cal (Stuar1), male Wht collar,
t>lue tags Dec 24. RE·
WARD. Promontory Pt
area. 673-5806
Apply In per., . 7 ·3. Pay·
less Cleaners, 306 Old
Npl Blvd, Npl Bch
COllllEll
Orange Coast Savings haa
Immediate full time open-
ing Good driving record
Company car furnished
Call Linda Dacus
75-4-1870t
1700 Adams. C M
EOE
Lost lady's gold watch Delivery person PIT. MuSI
12125 at 7-11 Store on be 18· good dllvlng re-
Baker. CM. 545-5062 cord 751·47o5
6-40-4-487 Demonstrators
FUii JOI
area 1nd1V1dual shall collections, ability to locate needed material. Can(>er, Capricorn
have a valid current Call-persons figure prominently.
lornlaOnversli<leosewlth SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).· Y ou strike chord of a clean driving record Must 1>e able to cook, universal appeal. Utilii.e broad brush strok es -r efuse to be
clean. do marketing, limi~ by. petty ind iv. iduals who l ack crea~ive juice, imagination.
~=~~nga~us~a°:e d:: Cycle IS h1gh -you U attract wider audfonce and could r eceive
mand ot 1he Engllsn public recognition for efforts.
language Live on CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19 ): Look behind scenes,
~r::~sesanndecebs~!r/d ac:quiesce to request for "secret meeting." H igh light individu-
provldedbyemptoyer In· ality, originaJity. willingness to let go o f past and to pioneer a
dlVldual must possess project. What appeared t.o be a loss was actually a m ere delay -
the patience, perception you'll re<.'Oup. recuperate and eventually emerg"' vict.or1·ous. and compassion that Is "' necessary for the cons. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): M oon position highlights
tant care ot an elderly In· wish fulfillment, money from surprise source, added popularity
~v~~~~:~~er~:·~~~ and career advancement. Intuitive intellect works overtime -
not required Appllcants you'll know what to do and you 'll know where to be at crucial Reward: Aust. Shep M.
blk/wht, small, CM/NB. Are . you adventurous, report In PflfSOn 10 the moment.
~=,~~n4g91~~n\~v~:8° ~~e~;m~~f'~~ .. ~~~ PlSCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Be pre pared for adjusunents,
Co has openings tor 1 Department regarding changes where business, career activities are concerned. Open
~~!. ~~~ragv~rc.:i~or~~ ~~~81~~~;~ ... ;~t0b1~r Undes of commb.unl'tjcatio~. realize th~t public re1.la t.ionsdis important
OutcallONLY835-9199 Las Vega, Hawaii and 11 Adpaldbyemployer an Y?Ur a 11 y to put acrcxss persona1ty a n produ ct is
73-5302 6-44· 725-4
enoHll 01
SC ORTS / MODELS
145-1101 NEW YEAR'S EVE Western states with our essential. ANrt8 UaJ •-·-a-Couptes Swing Party supervised marketing Medical Aulstant tor tall, . l!!Ull! ..... u.1. WldeWortd 821-6117 team demonstrating .a Physician In Npt Sch 1------I I w .. SI
lewptrt leac• 2769 Saa Cleae1te 2908 1:----..,.....,.----revolutionary new prod· MedlcaloHtcee~perlence ltlt Waa... Slit t I ut It . el WutN Siii
REOEnllllST -1-.;;.;;--.;.... __ ...;;;.;~ B 1 W tt4 5100 uct. Must l>8 ambitious. reci. Good pay and ben·
A.cross trom Lido Marine 2 Br 1 Ba nr bus & beach, lean. r99p, quiet fflfnllle 2911 t p H well groomed and bright eflls For lnlormatton PHTHIUfllHS PROIOTIOll
3 Br 2 Ba trpl newly dee~ pool & laundry lac. to shr 2 Br. 2 ba apt. Pool, ~'P'!!~-'!'!'!""'ll!'!P."!"~..P * * * All training expenses 675-9102, 6-8 p.m for profit & exposure. Can you ..
orated sa95 ·1.998•5868 $475/mo 498·6277 )ac, tennis S325/mo Incl Ill. I . MCIRIH paid Transport all on MEDICALtront office, P/l Christian Thomas Gallery Spare 3 hrs nightly?
Big Canyon, 2 Br 2 Ba, IMal 2900 ~!"s, Nlleedk Bdrm Alurn,., 2103Yacl\t0aphne turn, return guaranteed near Hoag Hospital 850-2317 Areyou . ... us e cats. va N~port Beach High earnings Start 548 7777 Well g ..,.
II I ,.. 11184 0 786 5t8 u " • PIH••••Ell/ de,,..,.rdooabm1e""'' sp 1 ev .... neutral tones, Bal. Penn .. 3 er condo. 1 ana · I You are the winner of four lmmed. For apt. call June -,.v ..
for Siii Wear Manuia
luring Co Handll
phones, Ille ottloe wr
some computor enll
Salary based on e
pe rlence. Mon-Fi
8-4:30 2-41-8105 ~;,fciu~:e' v v~ew,d ~eca:e 'sk~~m~o 6~:.~~h66. gar. Female· beaut SC Plaza ho ps/ offices/st or age free tlclleta ($20.00) value Pridgen, 1 l--4 pm only ltlELS •TIP PAY AIALYST and sell motivated?
S 1 1 5 0 I m o A t . Condo, 2 Br, 2 l>a, xtru . 650 sq t1 or less, reas to the 646-3337 Chrlstl•n Thomas Gallefy Slate wide R/E Invest· Do you
720.0904 g Furnished Room near so 111 $295 662·7593eves ostaMesa C-2 5-48-7249 SPOllTSYACATIOI DOCKMASTER Ex· 650-23l 7 ments. lln. Mfvlcel llrm, Entoyworklngwlthklde? er
Coast Pla211, Female F/M . k 21 35 t h2 tore 20x60' hi vlsb 2330 All RY lltW perlenoed In boat hand· MIYD ltUYH ofl8'1ng cllallenglng poa· II you can an•-YES All sorts ot people ~-
CONDOS FOR LEASE prefer $250 556 1737 n-sm 1 • 0 5 1 Newport Blvd. Costa ling & maintenance. Reta • · ltlon tor !>right lndMdual Phone6-46-702 1 classllled ads 10 sell f k· Furn & Unfurn 5525_51500 _ · · • br. 2 ba apt Poot. 1ac. 6 Anahelm Convention 'd .. 1 Must hard WOl'ker, clean to write and d-"'n tor 2·30 6pm Mon 'h F 1 1 f h 6 5 Agent 631_..
960
Graduate studenl UCI tennis etc. $3-40 • utll. Mesa 75•7788 CenterJan7-t5 req ... ppy In person cut, polite Call SlARV· T l-9 90 end.....,DEC ' • ·• ru r . _so_r •_0_1_1n_g_s _42_·_6_ d
needs rm w/Amerlcan C M 5-46-3240 Iv msg ---To claim passes. call w/resume 675•7100 ING ACTORS MOVING. PDP 11134 M h
NYH/WHTCLIFf t am11y . irv 1ne FRmmtewante<1·3 Br 3 Ja•11tria1 6•2-4321. ut. 252. Drivers -Cro$s country 650-1366 yrs~•per ~1co~o~":x~ ·aa·11y p·11a1 ...................... ~t
213-21-4-3393 Ba condo. nr ~I\. H'.8 ltatab 2920 *** Calllo rnla license. NURSES REGISTRY cellenl career oppor1unl· .ue 2 Br. 1 Ba. nu cpl/drapes.
bit-Ins, pool, carport. no
pets. S675. 1616 Bed·
M/F, Newport Crest. pool. $240 • util. $100 dep. 2,m ..,, ft, 1975 Bir~", liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii M1611CG3t Pregor v,accht Corp, now hiring mature nurses ty Call 553..()9410 . PART TIIE \d
lord. 6-45-66-46
tennis. )ac Nr beach. Avail Jan 1 8-40-3366 """ ..., .., "'' 11.ltll AOctllT laoent a, .M. for home care. Only those · •
L d S375 •tt 6 NB. S1330. M1A zoning. llllYEI who are wllll"" 10 work Utt'e Miii Muffet eat on 1 · : n r'J . '" • F to shr w/M&F wen-Agent 5•1·5032 EIEOmYE "• T fl t I ' Deli Dail Lovely 2 e 2 B 2 650 5-458 1 h weeltenda need apply. u • • 1 ong came • ·ver · y Pilot by auto ;... · e r a. gar. • localed Nwpt condo, Colla M•H 3000 s.I. 47t The Orange Coul Dally wt van or amall truck tor Ca 11 7 7 0 . 6 3 4 4 . 0 r ec>I~ and rMd In the u • • =YS7~. g~. ~6'6 e: Room In 4 br, 3 t>a home, S310/mo • utll 675-9643 pr s.f. 1005 Brloao Dr. Piiot hae an excellent op-Ioctl detlverle1. 661-0506. 23622 Rock· 0111'1 Pilot Claeellled Laguna Beach area (2 hours : \
i
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil deluxeareaolTustln.klt. Lool\Tng forneat'lproltype 644-7269 portunlly for a career AOSOetlverles261·8018 fleld. Ste 201. El Toro ~.tonr·~~~ ... ~.!~'tt· per day). Weekdays P .M. -
prlv S2001mo. 731·0361 10 Shr 3 Br Twnhme In oriented Major Account WI flTllA lllEY 6-4 7 Camino de Loa ""' .,,... • .., ......,,..,,
e•a1 •• •m ~rvlne $320/mo • 'It U111a. AuMmt••••ll 3 2 E:xecullve with • proven Guys, gale, h<>memPenil Mares, Ste 113 San fOt St.95. You ~h .... weekends A M Earn about ~1 l Call Patty 552-6431 eves FREE-ALL AGEBI' tr11ck record. Great SELL 1• KODAK FtL•• Clement• your tuffet and tot1 of *400 Call. • M Spacl04ls slnqle, one
& two bedroom apts.
FURNISHED or
UNFURNISHED.
ALL UTILITIES
PAID. HEALTH
CLUBS. TENNIS.
SWIMMING, plus
mtKh more! Sorry,
no pe~. Model$
open d1ily 9 to 6
Oakwood
Garcln ASN'11Nnts
HtwpCMt ladl So.
1700 J6ttl Sl'Yttl
(at Oowr)
64l·Sll3
N.-,ort l~ildl Ho.
880 ltvlnt Awtnllt (.al 16th)
645"-UCM
Wkly rentelanowavall. potential, gu1ranteed • "" . other thlng1 through 'f per mo. f . Barrow
11s,50/w11.&upC01$>r Lrg. beaut. home, ALL TV COMMERCIAL SEM· draw aoilnlt com-coupone.Churchlleneflt. Nuratno Dilly Pilot Claeelll•d 642 ,.32l EOE '
TV. Phones In room. 2274 arn~ntttee. Fem. pref. INAR SEE SUNDAY AD mlMlon. O.lre tomove 2-40.0-427 1011 UllS Me. Cell $42-5'71 '. _, •
Newport Blvd. CM. 1350 .. 12 utll. 548·2497 213--465·4149 1 Into management a ptua. ,,...Fem_a_le_m_odel_1_w_a_n_ted-. Cert or e·x.peir•d. Daya. · • · · · · · '· · • • • · '· • · • • .. • • • • • • • • • • · · · · · · •• ·•
54e..7u 5 J Lrg rm In huge 2 stry hat. SCRAM LETS Send ret1ume to No e11perlence necen· P.M., Convalele*'lt Ho•-
s"'" & SUN LODGE F •A Id d h b ,A • P 0 . Box 1660 91y. An.a 21-35. To poee "'tat. Npt Beh. 1tlot b9n-""' rp ..... w · s wr, e"". Coate M-·. 92•2• ...-"' S 100 wll up. Color TV Must see $395 850-6314 IUSW£RS EOE v... v v lor portralta. $20 pr hr. eflta. &42-.804-4
3028 w Coaat Hwy, Npt M/F New condo/38A on N1 I•--------,,,8_7_5-0_8_2_3 __ ~---1 Office aul1tent, varied
Vacatiea Npt beach. S300 mo + Junket . woven Genetll office, PIT. Lit• duti.t, reoeptlonl1t, type
•-t 1 2907 utll Avail oow 875-89511 Yodel -Grimly AlmlTillll lllllJ Bkll'g and typing. Airport 50 wpm, ~. Nwpt -a I I ON tile MENU 1• IOOklng for an 9g0reelve, Area. Real &lete ~ 8Mch offlQe 875-8110
Lrg mountain cabin, 3 Br. MIF: quall't 2 l>r. 1 ba, Wife at dinner table: youno lndlvlduaf fo lltart velOpment, menagernent
2 bl. 2 frplc;'a. nr Snow Olde CdM. trptcs, gar. "LOOk at It tllla wly II I •• a junfC)( e.cx:t ••ec co. t52-7501 lf'10l llUYllT
Valley Weekly or wtcnct.. S3llO Incl. ullla. e.40.5999 don't heve a couPon for w/opportunlly to ad· GOOd 1yp111• Mature fOf Full Time Htoh School
'75/nlght. Sleep a 8. Mlddt. age t>ualMM lady II. It len't ON 11le ~ENU." vanoe. Approx 30 "" • general office work In Npt Gred with QOOd drMng
&42-ll049 win tnr her 2 Br 81)1.=, SPIRITUAL REAOINOS week to start. Muat be Boti. Small otttc.. Well ~~F=,':t ~ .-.-.-,-.-1,-tt----15~; :_!~me 2~30M.PM225· AdlllOt In 111 mattlfll, Love, f:l~ :;,t~ed In. m~":. ntablllhed. P ..... Mnd Bein, w11111m P:roet & Atr
I L-.._ " ......,.,1, •fl · marrleg• a bualneu. reeume to P O. t9t1, IOCI.,... 1'601 Quall St _,. •.ve M pref, to tl'lf 3 l>f. 2'h t>a Alao counMUng. 1815 ketlng Of ...... •Pl" 11 Newport 8eagl\, CA Npl Bet\, *** apt, Balboa tltend. 1200 So. El Camino AMI, San :!tut d:! "::.· ~=: 92ee3 .,... IMtm ~ ut11t. 873-782& aft. s ci.m. 1.1c•ct. 492-7298 iltletlng, m.iot medic*, .,.._TWI P:: :;::.·~ .:!;i
1~32 W OeMn Front Pentnou11, nr belch. pvt Liit I ..... 1614 Nlaty ,. comm, car II-Int plant !Mlntenenoe. .,.., 142·1870 ~ 8"oll ent & 1>1111. crpto. ll'llOf~. •* * lowtnce. Appfloat1on1 e.i>. PNf• Ger ,.q. CMeet ,..-.-.. y::".8:~:'.~f V: H.B. ~5. S38-0'TO. llnf WllT IMilng tlken: 141-4173 'iiJOibi&ibef'9fliiiiiitaii.ii~iiiii5440iii ...,.,_
to tile Prof c:pe .... ..,.... 10 1207 St1rt>oerd 11 .,1f•1gtt1••11111••1
INITS YAUTilll "'"' ltUlde hOfM. yrty. Coront del Mar Fs Ad Actian .. n .W I 1117 Imo ea. e&0-40lr · You .,.. the wtnMf of four
Anaflelm Conwntl~ ftM tlclletl 1'20.00) velul
0entet.fan7·15 IOIM
T'o ctalm pu1tt. cell '°' Ol•llltled Ad Ullll 1AIATlll
llA2·'*U1. UI. 252 ~~ .. .,_
Classy Auto
Advertised
....
Nftspapet
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
(714) 148-7058
••• ~"'°' ~c~ ----Ao.~ CenMtJan7-t9
Wn'ltlfff 2 bf, 1~ bl Art vou "jlllt IOOklng"7 MJ-6171 To olalm peuea, cell
In the ..., .... Cal a
Daly Plot AD-VID
642-5&71 towntiouN. No pell. We 11111 brOwHr1 In 04~·02 t. t•t. 212.
$700/mo. 548·7&33 Clueltied ll-42·6478 *'**
l
('I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday. December 29, 1983
ltlt Waalt4 SIOO ltlJ Waatt4 SttG Hel1 Wule4 5100 ,ff=--,.-"-."-.'---.p.;.;• flll1ct lla H 14 a IH W 1-..1 9020 A la -.a ---,.. a H n• H " lltl, ,.,,_ AllM, 1•1!11 .. Roataurant ult Ml quarter OtM -• -
Po11t1ons available Applw St'iipping/Rectlvlng o.ics1no. POA a.fdl"O· CabblOO Patch dOll, $t76 Yamana P•9110-Pro-Uptlll. Cu1t01THl8 ttC 4 c tu~ dtl WI •• , ~ ,· I 9169
1 n p e r s o n' SALES l:;ApOf·d OI lratneea can xlnt trall $450 H obo 766-0425 ebony >.Int, $11150 H ••tllng •IOOP 1n mint USEDCARS& TRUCKS ,,.•_.Y_•.•~------
ROTHSCHILOS CHEESE DISPLAY IDVHTlllH mak~$8 $t2/hr Full and l·MT-9525 546 6764 W 2111-2223 M.. I al COM!. IN OR CALL FOA '76 CeHc• 15-ap, air.
0 PfT po11110nt e1v11.ll Cell FIREWOOD $1 20 • COid c.,...,, rlQQed °' IOc °' s i..-"'~ •·-L·-·• •Mt .. •• 1g 4"K ANO WINE 2407 E Cs1 l ho '8"911 C:.O\.lnry Dally 543•0100 tor appl Na· •OlO mixed white they 1 .. ,· Vaman• Plano ProUe>ille long dt11anc. c1u111ng FllE""""1. • _..v_. .... ng " ....... or63own1t1. 0
Hwy. Corona dal Mu Pilot has an exc~IM!nl 09 llonal C HG ~~~~~~·~~ 6'2-3657 Ebony :aln1 I 1950 H ~Plate electrOt•!Ca & Cotmlet-0.Ullo UllEIT ml. $.4700 3-3636
Resta-uranl I O• hH11•t y t>eg1nn1ng ogany 0111t 546-11784 w 211t 2223 1111 Inventory 1 1on1 -maa.... llYEITORY Ytlbwaiea 9173 m10-J11nue11y tor caraet s1111ng&1ttehicie.n1ng 3 Bed tt50. Walnut Kero•one he1tor. more AccomodatH 8 "" •..s• _ Geo Hllp·PIT SOll•e •" 01111n1e<1 dt'C)lay adver11... d11y~ ~· wk 8·5pm fOf A1mo11e. 2 door $.400 Kero-Sun radiant 10 TY1 l .. i t , wlluxurloua n-Int. 2 l82 II BEACH BLVD •·79 3201, 4 •Ad. AIC 1670 VW Squaraback :;
perlence with ltelt•n rng sales reps wtth • 111tt1rview call 650·8019 662-0699 atter 4 pm S 100 673·8 t 1 t lltrtt 6232 litads & anower Prettlelt HUNTINGTON BEACH 1994XE0) 1peea, rune gOOd. IOO!ll ~'~an~~~~:~; ind proven track record RESTAURANT A I' IOU MUSl SELL 3•118• rug, 2 ]BL Spkra, Uoranlzree, ulllng yeehl In Npl Har, 141.tOllJ 14t-JU1 •·79 3201. 4 ap<I. SIR ~ood S 160010 BO
Restaurant
UIECHl
lmmedl81e opening tor e>o.
pa11eoceo One cook m SC
Plaza. Bacio. Bay Rowing
& Running Clut> Call
641·0 118 (ask fo1 Clark I
RESTAURANT
1 he BEACH HOUSE IS &1;
cept1ng appllc111ons for
the lollow1rtg postt1ons
Day food serve1s. day
cocktail servers day bus
boy
2
Apply In persl)n 1>1wn
9AM ·12 n oon or
7PM·9PM
NO Phone calls Plt!8se
619 Sleepy Hollow Ln Lao Bch
Retail Sales
Eac1us1ve ladies Bout1qut>
opening tn Fashion island
requires expertenced
professional retail sates
people Can tor Appl
213·274-5018
Seles
* * * WANTED: PROS
I TRAINEES
* * * Bl& MONEY
SHORT HOURS
Why not dial tor dollars In
our CdM ofhce We oller
• Highest commissions
• E.<tenslve producl nnas
• Photo copy supplies • Sam to 12 noon
• Trainees star1 $6/hour
•• rehlras I at rt·
stnt, w/,ol11tl1I to
t1r1 u, I• 11000/wk.
II you are a se11.s1ane1 &
hungry tor money. call
Mr Thomas Sam· lpm at
673-0118
~~~~ll~~,~~d~o~~~:~8~i Hemtngways hvem By c!!n::·~:: rafrjg. wfit. 1200. genutne emer1ldS dual turn lbl. San1ul In· U~92g~· d ':'~;5 ;;~1~ WE PAY TIP llLW ~~t~~t, 4 spd SIR
45
•
3112
•••
comnussion Desire to The Sea 11ow htrtng all 170 Ron S 6119•1999 S20 eachl 640-61188 torgrated •Y'. akprs, tape • & k J ' · Fii ISEI OARS (385YPV)
move tnto management a cook oos11tons SauJe. New 40 gal water -hearer deck. rec's & Imp. turn 81191 w n a ai a11 .,. •• 111 • ·79 320r. ttuto. SI A IWH WELll
plus Send resume to t>ro1ler oyster b11 E•P Froat free Relrlg S 150 S95 4o gal electr water tt>I & wood & glau door Be N l "'""" -(4682921 665 Park po Bo• 1560, only Calllorapptw1tt1 673-5886Candellver neaterS90 432•1449 cab Callall5731·3055 II a al. N•TIAO/SllAll *'80 3201. 5 spd, A/C Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa 92626 Carl 497·6568 I IUY APPLIAIOEI L 44 .. -T-V 1 Stnict 7020 2480 Harbor Slvd. (585Z0l) You are the winner 01 lour New On ., matt/bolls rg pro ected by a EOE TEXAS OIL CO''PANY -13" z Ith G Id S COSTA MESA ··eo 3201. 5 $pd,"S" pk" lreetlckets($2000)value '"" Les 957·8133 springs & trame In pkg. en ° tar w needs mature person 101 Warr incl Retail s800 $750/ot>o. 642-7579 YAOllT SlllVEYS 541-000141-1411 (560ZPl) lo the
Seamstress. expenenceo. short trips surrounding Speedqueen ou dryer 1 52 5 FOR All PURPOSES *'81 3201. S spd, SIA SPORTS VAOITIOI w.mted tu work with large Orange County CMtllCI $150 5 settings. 11lnt ael 7 hurry 650·5156 New Ou11ar VCR, 1350 Recognlllld t>y WE WAllT YOIR ( 1CUT643) AND RY SllOW
n1srlne manul8Clurer lull customers We trntn cond 493·562 t Regular membership firm 642" 1107 Major Banke & Ina. Co's CLUI ISEI Clll * '81 5281• 5 spd. SIR. Anaheim Convenllon
ume !148 3464 Greg Write N T Dickerson wasnttr/dryar. Seers t>est John Wayne Tennis Club T V RENTALS $20l>er mo. CAPT LARSON see Ronald Dace (78516!"1) Centei Jan 7.15 Pres . Southwestern Pet $800 675-2968 19" color TVs. assorted NEWPORT *'62 528E. Auto, loaded To claim p•eses. c~ll SECRETARY hvy dty, used only 2 mos. (96~"" .. 3) " " " •Oteum Bo• 789. Ft s WESTERN RELICS styles 540-3195 (714"'54-9809 "'"' 642 4321 ext 252 M1n1mumw11ge Houis!.1·5 Worth tx 76101 almond Washer 395, '" *'83 3201 5 apes. SIR • .
Bent1111s c M 63 t·7271 dryer S275 •32·1706 FOR SALE 1t111, Geam l -7011 (1FZP975> **~
Secre1ilry Femaie!~~~l~odels& Fret lo Yoa 6022 ~:~~h~!~'::in:.8~rysa:a~:~ Klepper Aerlus II loldlng Slira 'Dock1 7m *'63 320i auto. SI A •'74 VW BlJG•
ro asstona o tc.i man· Esco11s (2131 666· 198<1 Cabbane Patch pups. ser no MX 1493. faaued • * '83 320 5 d SIR s 1650 536 ... o P I 1 II Kay8k Beautllul Shipe ll .. e·aboard sllp available ,,~~~~lllJll ( 1FMY925J Looks & rune greet rebll
8g., must ha e e • t •• 1 A ood $4 75 873·9023 eves January 1 40' • •5· Call 1 sp ' eno ' ·~ 1 ~-v v ry ••••••••iii w/adopt pape•s Fo~ o ...... ex can rmy. g .. (1FRH275J . 11000 1yp1n11 skills. some l'iound cross 545-9958 cond S295 Ptwtr loats 7012 642·4644 4 ftHI Drittl .,.83 3201 5 spd SIR 63 BaJa, rabll eng . trans, bookeep1ng and com· PART· TIME Vaned hours or 839-6 l56 W1ncheate• 1894 saddle N 1.L 1016 10023571 · lront end t2V. S 1000
pute1 skills necessary to mciude early A M rong carbine. 30130. miss-18' l'(MAN SIDE STEER olor latl CJ5 JEEP. blacic. tan Int: * .64 3181 5 spd, 10 ml MUST SELL 642-7579
Full time Send resume weekends Musi have de· To lovtng nm. beaut rt!d tng rear sighl Only $225 CLASSIC Atomic 4 cyl ·A 1 Honda Passport xlnt brand new 109. brakes. 121.,.29"1 65 Bug -veru rellable
10 Na11cy 1767 Orange ~11da1>le 11ehrcle ($111all Hound. loves kids. other Winchester l892 saddle eog. xlnt cond. $8500 running cond S600 shocks, etc $3800/obo IJa.J ll l uanspor1at1on' Nu ttres Ave ~B I02 CM 92627 lruck van sta11on dogs.bogyaros548·9584 rtngcaiblneraremodel. 540-4242 675-8669 54824541v Fred640·5732 u wagonl to assist news ----' • msg 208 W Isl. Santa Ana S975 536·3~ 10 -For oil are 6025 side mounted sllng V 9040 SECRETARY paper dealer rn lrvrne swivels. relurned from * 31 n SCUU M I I / 181 Closed Sunday
Public Relnttons Dept 8 area Must oe aepen· , ,., FIRllTIRE Belgian Congo $365 '82 100 hrs. hyd hoist. • orcye .. -76 Chevy Window Van, LARGE SELECTION OF
1as1 paced .igency re-dable Contact Greg Sh 50 1 old 1 bl an111ous, 2 bl ownr S55K Scttteu 1011 custom camping conv NEW & USED BMW'S' Hyde Mon"ay tnru Frtdl" Les 957 ·8133 arps ga re 1a e 960 900 qu11es e•pe1 ene1get1c u , cart>lne. inspectorsmllk· • 3 or 960-4373 '83 Kaw 3whir s 1900 obo Clean. runs well $3000
pe1son wl aln1 typing •Or· t>etween 9 30 and 10 30 Sola Country French ings. model 1859 $395 645-40761(213)426·11484 673--0287
genrrnuona1 skills Word 1•e•m•o•n•ly•6•42···4•32•'•• Cranberry. b11nd new + Ed Atchardson 111 *31 n SCAIAI --Proc ne1ptu1 979-7000 i• • & house lull ol turn Mov-675_8711 days only ·at. 100 hrs. hyd hoist. Traileu, A.oti••Hr
Secretary RtX:ept1onis1 ror
publtc wate1 agency
IOCilled 111 Dano Pt EA·
cell typing & clertcal
s~111s req d Knowledge ol
etect1on1c lypewrrter &
small p o procedures
ne1p1u1 Sml olltce S1art -
rng SJllllY S t;?051mo
EOF a96 1786
5105 1ng 644-5319 an111ous. 2 bt ownr S55K TraYfl I024 Clanin 9045
Joba Waated 6169 Ma11'cal la11. 6224 960-9003 o1 960-4373 Mawre e•ec sec• e•per'd Newrrl lt1d1 '70·20' Tr11llbl12er, sips 4. ·57 T·Blrd 761< orig. needs ' OVI GS E UFF 2 Accordlans 126 ease 32' JEFFRIES EXPRESS sell cont. 40 gal water only parnt and lnteroo1 all phases Oii procedure M N ALE /Bl 595 7sw $595 892_11925 Cruiser pert for fishing. tank 12000 e42.o !36 Ba, g a 1 n $ 1 1 , 5 O O desires PIT 101> 979·9621 Reing S50, exec desk · · _ scuba or live abo11d, xln1 645·2179
couch. oak din tbl, dish· 011· F • / d $6500 497 3511 A I S i / Rel111ed p1aC1•ca1 nurse, tts. d1st1ller. bike rack. trlr ace lrDlhtrt con • • o trY eea A I H
lo ve in local ref's a child seat. x cniry sills/ Esuiraeol 6226 Least e11panslve Bay Front Parh 9015 altl, arrt
631-6590 e•I l 02 t>oots, toys trike, clothes Until the end of the ye81 Living In Newport · Live 4.Qlf Road tires Good Aadi 9107
J obs Winted/ Thurs/Frt/Sat 1982 Vtsta only you can get lower aboard 3211· 1952 Chris condlllon size 70 X 14 110 CREDIT CHEC"
0 Caudal 720·9077 tnan ever prices on used Crall wl sllp. near Rut>en S150 obo 786-4747 n . "
Sec1111a1). sharp sell Domestic 51 7 tactory condttlonad E Lee $7500. 645·6666 '83 Audi 5000S Equity
s1an er en1hus1as11c. ac Hl"'DY lilRL Jewelr~ 6214 XEROX platn paper cop-'•--------True spoke wire whls for and assume Call for Into
curate tvp1s1 60 · wpm " Game how Prtzo, glf11 '" Mercedes Benz. HI of 5. 650-8501 or 839-1065 will help wldom wk tn •ers Get XeroK •eduction W&•TEI S 1100 or offer 760·6263 ~ __ exit phone skills a plus e~th tor rent 760.MASA cert1l1cate van Cleet & copiers from $2095, & 911
exper'd CM 545-4517 A1pel Jewelers Wiii sell desk top copiers from IHT SLIP A•loa W11tttl 9020 BMW
$ , /W d P Dogs 5510 entire $4000 credit tor $695 All machines coma 40 classic yachl will share HIGHEST CASH IMMEO 79 201, lberlan Red. xlnt t C Y or rocusor S2 500 or portions tor with l1m1t""' 30 day war· use possible Partner cond $9000/obo 1 d t R 1 AKC l at> Puppies yellow · ""' tor your vehicle. domestic · mme •He opemng ea 2 5 "'• d 1 s c o u n t 1an1y & a1e ellgrble for Call Boll 714-650-6626 645 6305 Iv msg estate syndocatoon t11m
1
Ready 101 Cnrostmas 7141597.:n 33 Xerox service plans so ( e v e s 8 I t 6 I 01 lore1gn 551·8285 ·
needs the roght person 10 5225 642-0695 act lasti For moie •nlo, 714-760-l6l2 (days) Conventenlly Located
ru11 Investor Relations Messy Dogs• StO any size Must sell ladies• I'• ct call 835•2269 collect !•--------WE BUY &CompetlttvelyPrlced
LOiii IUCll llW
VOLUME SALES
SERVICE & LEASING
3670 N Cherry Ave
LONG BEACH
(No Cnerry exll-<105)
0 14) 131-5110
1'rade-1ns Welcome
Now open Sun 1 f ·4
MO CREDIT CHECK
'60 BMW Equity and HS·
sume Call tor lnlo1
650-8501 or 639-1065
Dataao 9117
'77 28oz. sn/rl. copper. gd
cond $4250 559· 1253
·77 280Z, xlnl cond $4500
ObO 1213)426·6484 bef 5
MO CREDIT CHECK
66 VW Bug Everything
new rncludlng tires EX·
CEPT needs n-engine
$1 100 obo 548· 1065
67 Bug All ortg Red
S 1750 ot>o Ca11 finance
part 6 7 5· 1277
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Good t>ody. needs eng
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I
THI DRANGI COAST
THURSDAY. DECEMBER 29. 1983
Stolen
trawler
smashed
on rocks
A 41 -foot traw ler stolen from
Huntington Harbour was found
today bobbing in the wate r off a
harbor entrance jetty where it
apparently had been smashed into
the rocks.
The Vikingsholm. a $1 50,000
fishing vessel, is the third boat
that has been stolen and aban-
doned along the Orange Coast in
the~t week. Authorities do not
believe the thefts are connected.
ClllT IDRllN
OR ANG E COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
DellJ ...... pholo bf t... ,.,,,.
LB cheering
delay on oil
lease sales
From staff ud wire reporla
Interior Secretary William P.
Clark's decision to end the Re.agan
administration 's
near-moratorium on land acquisi-
tions for national parks and post-
pone two offshore oil leaae sales
was welcome news on the Orange
Coast today.
dent and the Office of Manage-
ment and Budget, the newspaper
said.
"I hope to stlU some troubled
waters," he was quoted as saying.
The increase represents a shift
away fr o m Watt 's
near-moratorium on parkland ad-
ditions, which angered conserva-
tionist groups.
The e xpensive tre1wler, owned
by Palm Springs resident Glenn
Heggstad, was stolen from a slip in
Peter's Landing sometime late
Wednesday. police said.
Salvage crew recovers sunken stolen
fishing boat off East J etty of
Anaheim Bay after S 150,000 vessel
smashed into rocks.
"If he's putting the lease sale
off, that's terrific. I think it's a step
in the right direction," said
Laguna Beach city councilwoman
Sally Bellerue.
Clark, named Oct. 13 to succeed
controversial James G. Watt, also
will be making other major policy
and personnel changes at the
department, the New York Times
re ported.
Clark said he also is postponing
oil lease sales off southern Cali-
fornia and on Georges Bank off
New England for both en-
vironmental and Defense Depart-
ment concerns. fie said the De-
fense Department was concerned
that some of the areas were in
military training or transit areas. A Surfside resident spotted the
partially submerged vessel this
morning off t.he east jetty to
Anaheim Bay-the entry point to
Huntington Harbour.
The boat was not insured.
according to the Orange County
Sheriff's Harbor Patrol.
A private salvage crew hared by
the boat's owner was trying to
hoist the vessel today for inspec-
tion to determine if the thieves
removed anything from the craft
and whether they sank it de-
hberately.
A 35-foot Owens sailboat was
stolen last weekend from a New-
port Harbor dock. stripped of all
Mesa murder
victim's auto
found torched
By KAREN E. KLEIN
OlllMO.-, ...........
Costa Mesa police waU attempt
to obtain a search warrant today
allowing them to inspect the
interior of a car they say belonged
to the man bludgeoned to death m
a C.OSta Mesa motel room Tuesday
morning.
Police investigators recovered
the car, a green 1976 Ford Sedan.
in Compton on Wednesday. Sgt.
Bill Bechtel said.
Autops y r esults obtained
Wednesday identified the murder
victim as Steven Garich, 67, who
had registered at the California 6
Motel, 1441 Gisler Ave. He check-
ed in a couple of days before he
was killed and had paid his tab
through the week, Bechtel said.
Garich's body was found in his
bed in Room 113 by a maid about
10 a.m. Tuesday. A spokesman for
the Orange County Coroner's
Office said G anch bled to death in
lhe room after he suffered blunt
force trauma to n is head.
The Ford LTD Garich haq been
drivm g was traced to Compton,
where an attempt had been made
to torch it . Bechtel said .
"They apparently tried to set a
fi re in.s.ade. but due to a lack of
oxygen it just smoldered," he said.
"It got very hot and melted the
inside of the vehicle but didn't
burn it."
Although police believe Garich
had been driving the Ford LTD,
the vehicle was not registered in
his name. Bechtel said police have
been unable to contact the car's
owner.
Investigators ho pe to uncover
clues in the car that wiJl Jead them
to a suspect in the killing. Bechtel
said there are no suspects yet and
he declined to disclose de tails of
the ongoing investigation, except
to say investigators are tracking
down seve ral possible motives for
the crime.
He refused comme nt when ·
asked if a slashed window screen
on Garich's room provided a point
of entry for the murderer.
Garich. who was retired and
getting a pension from Chrysler
Corp., had no permanent address
and had been living in various
motels in Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach for some time.
Bechtel said Garich had stayed
previously &~ the GaUfomia 6
Motel, where a single room costs
$22 a night.
After some difficulty, police
were able to locate a relative of
Garich 's, a sister who Bechtel said
lives in Costa Mesa.
Garich's body remained at the
coroner's office this morning
awaiting funeral arrangements to
be made by the family, a spokes-
man aaid.
reported. its belongs and marine hardware
a nd then beached at Pelican Point
in Crystal Cove State Beach
someume early Christmas Day.
Harbor patrolmen said it ap-
pears the thieves tried to scuttle
the boal at sea and, failing that.
dehberately ran it aground wheri!
at sat for 24 hours before being
Monday, a small electric boat
was stolen off its mooring in
Newport Harbor and run aground
on Corona del Mar State Beach.
The boat was split in half but an
expensive stereo urut and other
valuables aboard the craft w eren't
touched, authoriues said.
Clark said he is asking for $150
million in fiscal year 1985 to
purchase wetlands and new land
for wildlife refuges and existing
parks, and that his request had
been approved by both the presi-
Logjam in Newport
urf ers curry for the best position
in this shot taken from the Newport
pier looking west toward the jetties.
One would guess a lot of these guys
get e ither surfboards or new
wet uits from Santa this Christmas.
Donations made their holiday
Albert Sitton Home kids enjoy trips, toys, tree, tons of snow
By CHRISTINE DECKER
Of Ille Dellr "91 ltaft
It was a Christmas the 100 children at the Albert
Sitton Home may never forget.
The shelter is home to abused, abandoned and
neglected children supported by county funds. Thi.I
Christmas, donations from the community made the
shelter a .little more like home.
There were parties. The children traveled to
Knott'• Berry Fann, South Coast Repertory'• "A
Chriatrnas Carol" and the Newport Beach Harbor
Parade of Lights. Santa Claus, Disney characters and
G umdrop the Clown all visited.
Toys and cash flowed into the home like never
before, Yid Wllllam Steiner, director.
One of the most fun events was the arrival of 16
tons of snow provided by Lifeeaver Charities from
Buena Park a few day. before Chriltmaa. The
children played all day in it and by evening had built
a 23-foot tall snowman.
"It was really wonderful for them. Most of them
(See Sl1TON, Pace AZ)
Watch out for those
clowns from Caltech
PASADENA (AP) -Re-
member the Role Bowl game ln
1961 when embarraslled Univer-
sity of Washington foot.ball fana
held up cards during the halftime
show that spelled out
CA-L-T-E-CH tor 30 million
televiaion viewers?
Well, the local police remember:'
And ao do four graduatea of the
California Institute of Tech-
nology, renowned for producing
brilliant aclent.bta and '°""' of the
most creative pranks in oollege
hillory.
The four alumni have edlted a
1oon·to-be-publi1hed book,
"Legends of Caltech." recalling
t ••
the card prank and explaining the
com~x machinations behind it, .. wen .. other famous h.lgh jink.a
petJ*r•t.ed by a.Jtech atudenta. Thi Joca1 police, meanwhlle, are keepan, eyes and ean open for rm.chief at the New Y eat's Day
Rem Bowl parade and football
game m11tchlna UCLA and the
University of Illinois.
Studenta at Caltech have 'the
lmap of devotion to laboratories,
comj>lex equalions and delicate ,
experhnmta that make wrwe
malnl)' to other lclenU1'cally ln·
cllned f ollca.
But ln the ,..i they have
(8"CALTECH,PactA1)
i
Watt's tight-fiste d land
purchase program, one of his first
initiatives when he became in-
terior secretary an 198 1. was based
on his belief that federal money
should be devoted to maintaining
and restoring existing parks
rather than buying new ones.
"We do not need more acres to
neglect." Watt said in one 1982
speech. "We do need to allocate
more of our funds to properly
caring for the parks we have."
Although not a complete mora-
torium -Watt did ask for money
for emergency acquisitions and to
satisfy court judgments Crom lef-
tover land condemnation cases _..
his cutbacks were enormous.
The land purchase program
carries a permanent spending
ceiling of $900 million a year, and
Congress ordinarily appropriated
$300 million to $500 million a·year
before Watt took office. For two
years during the Carter adminis-
tration, the appropriation ex-
ceeded $700 million.
But Watt's annual budget for
the program was about $50
million. Congress raised Watt's
request each year, usually to $150
million to $200 million, but still
complained that too little land was
being bought.
Other critics charged that Watt
was simply making the program
more expensive in the long run.
since the price of land generally
rises each year the government
hesitates in buying.
Earlier, conservation lobbyists
had said they hoped for a small but
significant increase in land
purchases for national parks next
year following a policy review by
Clark.
They said changes might be a
simple recognition by Reagan
administration officials that Con-
(See OIL LEASE, Page AZ)
'Rose Bowl
weather' due
for weekend
By tM A11ocla&ff Press
High cloudines hovering over
Southern California will be ban-'
ished for the New Year's week-
end. and
eat-your-heart-out-East-Coast
sunshine is promiaed for the
televilled Ro9e Bowl parade and
game Monday.
The National Weather Service
said the high will be ln the 70s on
Sunday, New Year's Day, and
that temperatures Monday will be
just as accommodating.
It will be cloudy fhday along
the coast with highs ranging from
66 to 73. Low temperatures will
range from the 40s to ~e low 50s.
~--.,.. . . ..... ' -. __ .,.;;:-----------
r
Al * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, December 29, 1983
Irvine man given
• term ln gem scam
8y ANDREA ADELSON
Of -o.ar l'tlol 11en
Future pro~rty buyers will
pay higher prlt-es because of an
alleged international gem and real
estate scam that may total $1.5
biU1on. a police detective said
today.
An lrvinC' man received a
five-year suspended sente nce
after pleading guilty lhlB week to
fraud charges, the first arrest and
plea stemming from the complex
case which began to unfold last
March. Anaheim police detective
W.W. Lane said.
Duane Allen Lamm. 39, was
sentenced to serve up to rune
months in county Jail Lane said
the J3Ll term was put off until
December 1984 unul detectives
can pin down the exact losses from
hlS part m the alleged inter-
national scam.
Lamm is accused-of fraudulent-
ly obtaining at least $1 5 millidh in
loans, just a small portion of the
Suspect held
in Dana Point
wife stabbing
A Palo Alto man remained in
jail today on suspiciqn of stabbing
his wife at least 10 times during a
dispute Wednesday m their
rented room in Dana Point, ac-
cording to the Orange County
Sheriff's Department
Janet K.lsz. 23. was reported in
good condition today at Mission
Community Hospital where she
w as rushed after the attack at
25248 Staysrul Drwe. according to
authorities.
George Jacob Kisz. 41 . was
arrested at the scene for mvestiga-
. uon of attempted murder. Officers
said Kisz injured himself during I
the attack when his hand alleged-
ly slipped off the knife handle and
onto the blade.
K.isz was treated at San
;Clemente General Hospital for his
wound before being taken to
Orange County Jail where he is
being held on $250,000 bail.
$1.5 billion authorities bebeve ill
Involved.
A serond lrvine ~. Kenneth
J. Harden, 24, faces a Jan. 18
preliminary hearing on grand
theft charges in West County
Municipal Court in Westminster.
"You and 1 are going to pay
more for property" as a result of
the investigation, Lane believes.
"There are more foreclosures on
loans because of people who have
found they are able to manipulate
the system."
Lane said eight banks, which he
refused"'to name, are linked to 'the
Irvine case alone. Authorities
wouldn't say how many might be
mvolved worldwide.
He said lenders who made loans
against property allegedly bought
with overvalued gemstones were
unknowing victims.
"The banks had no way to
protect themselves" and learn the
reported income of th06e seeking
loans because of privacy laws,
Lane said.
The detective said the case
against the two Irvine men ar-
rested in November is an offshoot
of a wider international gem scam
based in Orange and Los Angeles
counties.
"God only knows" how many
victims fell for the scheme. Lane
said.
But they have may have been
b1l~ of $1.5 billion over a
three-year period in a scheme that
involved the exchange of cheap
gems for real estate and personal
property such as boats. airplanes
and cars.
Gem transactions have been
traced to 13 states besides Cali-
fornia as well as Canada, Britain,
Hong Kong and Costa Rica, in-
vestigators said.
Gemstones, including garnets,
rubies and emeralds, were valued
at highly inflated sums but were
actually acquarium gravel, the
detective said.
Some details of the on-going
investigation were disclosed in
May to avert $88 million worth of
transactions in escrow on land
allegedly bought with flawed
gems, Lane said.
BULLETIN BOARD
,,
Is it left over right?
II took three Edison Co. crews to replace one power
pole with a new one at 2 lst Street and We l Balboa
Boulevard in ewport recently. Getting all those
wire cro sed -correctly -took some doing.
OIL LEASE CUfBACK ...
From PageA1
gress will force the money on
them whether they ask for it or
not.
Ron Tipton, a parks speclalist
for the Wilderness Society, had
said a possible shift "may be more
a recognillon of political prag-
matism."
Said Tipton. "They're going to
get the money; they might as well
ask for it."
been a target of conservationists'
wrath.
Money for Land purchases
would come from a land and water
conservation fund which is fed by
offshore oil leasing royalties.
The money would not be used to
add new parks. but to "round out"
existing parks with acquisition of
privately owned land inside park
boundaries. and to acquire new
wildlife refuges and wetlands, the
Times said.
Four teens nabbed
after CM burglary
Three juveniles and anaduJt led
Calta Mesa police on a high-speed
pursuit early this morning after
they allegedly burglarii.ed the K
and B Sportswear Shop, at 2300
Harbor Blvd., just a week aft.er a
similar break-in oocurred there.
About 2 a.m. today a burglary
alarm was set off at the store aft.er
the four allegedly smashed a
window and made off with 298
pairs of pants, valued at $5,960,
according to Calta Mesa police
Sgt. Bill Bechtel.
Several police units pursued the
suspects' car to 19th Street and
Newport Boulevard, Bechtel said,
where the suspects stopped and
fled on foot.
AJJ four were chased down and
arrested by officers, he said. The
merchandise was recovered.
The three juveniles. whose
nAmf>CI were not released, were to
be transpol"U!d to Orange County
Juvenile Hall today on suspicion
of burglary., Becht.el said.
The adult, identified as Ale.Jan-
dro Villa, 18, of Santa Ana, was
booked into the Costa Mesa Police
Department Jail on suspicion of
burglary.
Bechtel said Villa is the brother
or a juvenile who was arrested
about 2:30 a.m. on Dec. 22 in
connection with a similar clothing
burglary at the same store.
ln that burglary, the suspects'
car hit a police vehicle head-on
and one suspect, the driver, es-
caped from police by climbing
over a waU .
The other suspect, a juvenile,
was arrested on suspicion of
burglary and transported to juv-
erule hall in that incident. No one
was injured.
CLOWNS FROM CAL TECH ...
FromPageA1
switched the green and red lenses
on city stoplights, fired straw-
berry Jello from a historic cannon
and rigged up a long-range
launcher to lob oranges at
Pasadena City College.
One caper that infuriated many
and earned tbe pranksters numer-
ous prizes was the McDonald's
affair.
In March 1975, the fast-food
chain sponsored a $50,000
sweepstakes that offered a year's
free groceries and a Datsun sports
car as the top priz.es. Three
students took literally the contest
rules in fine print that said "enter
as oft.en as you wish."
Helped by a Caltech computer.
the three printed more than 1
million entries and deposited them
at 98 McDonald's restaurants
around Southern California.
The Caltech group won about
20 of the prizes, including a
Datsun station wagon, $3,000 m
cash and about $1,500 worth of
McDonald's gift certificates. The
car was lat.er donated to charity.
"The students acted in complete
t'Ontradiction to the American
standards of fair play and sports-
manship," McDonald's said, but
the prank was declared legal.
As for this year's Rose Bowl
activities, police say all is quiet so
far.
"We haven't caught anybody
this year. but in years past, we've
found balloons implanted un~er
the surface of the field, on the
sideline, that were triggered to go
off during the game by remote
switch," Lt. Rit-hard Emerson said
Wednesday.
The book's introduction de-
clares that Caltech pranks "never
injure persons or damage property
(permanently)."
The proceeds from the book,
which will cost $9. will go to the
Caltech Alumni Association.
SITTON ...
FromPageA1
had never seen snow before,"
said Steiner
To everyone's delight, a 12-foot
tall Christmas tree was donated by
Gen. and Mrs. William Lyon of
Newport Beach. The Newport
Harbor Art Museum delivered the
tree completely decorated. '
On Christmas Day, the children,
who range from 18 months to 17
years old, awoke early to find they
each had been given seven gifts.
The gifts, most given anonymous-
ly, had been carefully selected for
each child by the staff.
"It was frantic. They we{'!
absolutely delighted. You have to
remember a lot of these kids never
had anything for Christmas," said
Steiner.
W oinen voters to study
referenduin process
The Times also said Clark was
plannin8 an accelerated review of
proposed Western water projects,
such as dams and other projects
for the Colorado River basin, and
the replacement of William Cold-
iron as the department's solicitor
general Coldiron, like Watt, has
MURDERS LINKED? ...
Church serv1ces and a tra-
ditional turkey dinner followed
the opening of presents.
Among the gifts were electronic
toys, 75 Cabbage Patch dolls,
donated by Target stores, 75
watches valued at $3,500 donated
by ALLTIME Inc., stuffed
animals, new clothes and makeup.
The home, located i.n Orange, also •
received $20,000 from individuals
and businesses in the area.
The League of Women Voters of the Orange Coast will meet to
study the m1t1at1ve-referendum process at several locations on the
coast next month
Meeungs are scheduled for Jan. 10 at 9:30 a.m. at Glendale
Savings, Laguna Hills; Jan 11at9:30 a.m. at 711 Ljdo Park Drive,
Newport Beach and 7:30 p.m. at 25017 Woolwich, Laguna Hills, and
Jan. 12 at 9: 15 a.m. at 1960 Catalina, Laguna Beach.
Meetings are open to the public and further infonnation may
be obtained by c•alling Vivian Abrams at 770-7326.
Bird watchers plan Huntington trip
The Sea and Sage Audubon Society wiU host a field trip to look
for unusual birds turned up during the Christmas count Jan. 7 at 8
a.m.
The trip will begm at the Slater Avenue parking lot al
Huntington Be.ach Central Park, between Gothard and Golden ·
West Streets. Further infonnation may be obtained by calling the
society at 974 -8250
Brea t cancer lecture set at YWCA
Dr James Padova, a cllnical professor of medicine at UC Irvine,
will present "An Oncologist's Approach to Breast Cancer
Treatment" Jan. 12 at 7.30 p.m . at the YWC~ 1411 N. Broadway,
Santa Ana.
The lecture is sponsored by the YWCA Encore Program of
monthly speakers forums for women. Additional information is
available at 542-5525.
Newport seminar to study emotions
The Center for Cognitive Therapy will hold a free public
seminar Jan. 13 in Newport Beach entitled "Self-help Techniques
for Managing Problem Emotions."
Psychologists Christine Padesky and Michael D. Masten will
conduct the lecture from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at 1101 Dove St .. Suite 228,
Newport Beach. Further infonnatlon is available at 646-3390.
Court workers
seek payment
for 'King Day'
The recently approved Martin
Luther King Jr. Day already bas
touched off a dispute in Orange
County where Municipal Court
workers are suing county govern-
ment to recover wages they claim
they should be paid for the Jan. 16
holiday.
Municipal Court personnel who
take the day off should not be
docked for wages even though
county government has not yet
declared Martin Luther King Day
a government holiday, Superior
Court Judge Philip Schwab ~
ruled in response to the em-
ployees' suit.
The problem arose because
court personnel while state em-
ployees, are paid by the county.
County officials said they are
refusing to pay for the extra
holiday because it was not in-
cluded in recent salary nego-
tiations conducted by the munici-
pal court employees' bargaining
unit and county labor negotiators.
The judge directed county of-
fictals to pay the court employees
or argue lhe merits of .their case
during a Jan. 12 hearing.
We're
Listening •••
What do you like about the Daily Pilot! What don't you Uie.,
Call the number at left and your m•age will be recorded,
traNcrlbed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 2A·hour antwerina service may be UNd to reeord let·
ten to Ow editor on HY t.ople. Mailbox cont.rtbutora m-' llM!lude
their name and telephone number fw vtriOcat.ion. No drNlaOoo
642•6086 calla, pleaae. ·
Tell m what '1 on your mind.
.. 5.11
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ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H.Ladlw ....
~-
='.!= to the~
,=~
From PageA1
tight lld on the investigation,
said they have not found a
clear motive or a specific
murder weapon used to strike
the victim in the head and face.
Earlier, a Bakersfield oil rig
worker was bludgeoned to
death in his Laguna Beach
motel room. Police said Ronald
J. Murphy was struck with the
porcelain top to a toilet tank
which was found shattered in
the ransacked room.
Police feel robbery may
have been the motive in the
Dec. 11 killing because several
hundred dollars the victim was
believed to have been carrying
was miaaing.
A man with reddish brown
hair, an unkept beard and
stained teeth had been seen
with Murphy hours before the
killing and is being aought.
On Dec. 14, construction
worker Ronald Dean Glllkey
was found dead. face-down in
a hallway of his security-ttght
Newport Shores home. Police
said the 35-year-old man was
clubbed to death the night
before with an unknown ob-
ject.
Mesa duo
appointed
to board
Two d1rectorl have
been appointed \o
four-year terms on the
Costa Mesa SanJtary Dis-
trict Board.
Robert Hamon and
Steven Randall, un-
challenced in the No-
~ber election, were
appointed by lhe county
Board of Supervtlon, accordiJ\I to Coat.a Meu
City J:naineer Bruce
Mattern.
Hanson. recenlly
elected leeret.ar)', hM
eerved anoe 1979 on ..
be.rd thet ovec•• U..
administration a"d finandnl o( the diltrict,
whkh operates and
malntainl ....... and
wat.er-d11pou.J opu·
aUona ln the dty.
Smilh, a coaimodta.
btoUr-for, U. .,,_ Na-
tional MONwY ~
tn lrYtm. Uwia "' c.a.ca 11-ans '°'* hlloedaot
otnai an Die. 1~
Newport detectives have
not determined a motive and
despite a neighborhood search
that spanned two days, have
not located a murder weapon.
Nothing else was disturbed in
the elegant two-story house,
police said.
Because Gaskey appeared to
have taken painstaking
measures to secure his house
and rig an alarm system, police
are of the opinion that the
victim and killer knew one
another.
On Dec. 19, a 26-year-old
Georgia native was discovered
bludgeoned to death in his
Buena Park condominium.
Robert Orville Carver's hands
had been tied with electrical
wire and his head battered
with an unknown blunt object.
police reported.
While Buena Park detec-
tives said they have no clue to
the identity of the ldller, they
are working on the belief that
robbery was a motivation be-
cause a small safe Carver
owned was discovered open
and empty.
"It was the largest amount of
cash ever received during the
Christmas season. We really ap-
preciate everything everyone has
done to 'help us. It helps me to
know I'm not alone in the re-
sponsibility for these children,"
said Steiner.
The money will be placed in a
trust fund and spent on the
children for such things as birth-
day presents, special shoes, glasses
or camp -items not provided in
the county budget.
Although it was a wond."OUS
Christmas at the Albert Sitton
Home, Steiner said the best gift he
could think of to give each child
would be a "nice, stable home."
Lesa than one-third of the
children were visited by their
parents.
Steiner said the home was
planning a special party for New
Year's Eve.
But it won't be anything like
Christmas. They're still unwind·
Ing from that."
~·/\ I • ;.C..i • •cf e~· '4l_;~ .. ~ (~ .... _. ... e~,. e . ":: .. ~:q a..UO ~......-.:il z -~~°tP ·~ .. : li~~f~
7:00 Dinner only '16.95 Prix File
F .. turlng:
Roast Prime Alb of Beef,
Poached King Salmon, Beurre Blanc
Crtap Long 1•nd Duck, Montmorency
Rout Loin of Lamb, Jardlnalre
Broiled Rock lobtter Tall. Beurre Nollette
Plue: lach lntrw lnotudM .••
Hora d'ou.vNB, WltW
Frelh Splnact\ Sa&ld w/hot baoe>fi dr'eMlng
F'reeh s.non11 Vegetab ...
SellctSon of Hom«nade o.a.t
SUnclaf New YNr'I Def
1~18rNeWYNra
llrUliOll llUtfet
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 29. 1983 * 41
Trauma program slashes county traffic deaths
..
. . .
. . { • .
• • :
!
By the Auoclated Press
Orange County's nationally
known trauma care program has
cut th<' number of preventable
traff"· deaths m half, says a study
d1ret·ted by the man who de-
velope<l t ht' program.
.. Thl'rt• has been a significant
decreast.• in mortality ralt's be-
l'8USt' of thl' program and that has
never lx't>n statistically demon-
strated before anywhere else m
t he t'Ountrv," Dr." Richard Cales
said, rderring to the five-year
study
Th<' study. sponsored by the UC
Irvine M('<i1cal Center in Orange.
the Oregon Health Sciences Uru-
versitv and the U.S. Department
of Health, Education and Welfare.
is 5''heduled fur publication nC'Xt
month in The Annals of EmC'r~-
ont•y Medicine.
"This survey shows that the
Orangl' County trauma t·ure pro-
gram 1s not only working well. but
much better than anyone ever
t>Xpt'l·ted," said Cales. a former
rnnsultant to Orange County's
Emergency Medical Serv1C"t'S De-
partment
ln tht.• program developed by
Cales, who now heads the Depart-
ment of Enlergeney Medicine at
Portland's Adventist Med1caJ
C<!nter, paramedic t·rews trans-
!XJrt traumatic acddent victims
w1thm 15 minutes to one of four
trauma earc centers m the
78-l -square-mite area.
Specially trained medical
spec-1ahsts are available to treat
the v1ct1ms immediately
The Orange County program,
begw1 in June 1980, 1s a model for
Grove gay bars win
round in city battle
By Tbe Associated Press
Attorneys for several bars 1n
Garden Grove say they have won
the first round ma battle to kill a
ci ty ordinance they say d1s-
eriminates against bars that cater
to homosexuals.
Superior Court Judge J udith
Ryan. after holding hearings on a
lawsuit filed by the bar owners in
September. issued a preliminary
injunction last week that prevents
city officials from e nforcing the
ordmance until the case comes to
tnal
Gene Dornev, auornev for the
Orange County Business.and Pro-
fessional Coalition of about 15 bar
and night.club owners. said Tues-
day the ordinance was a "dis-
guised attempt to get rid of the gay
bars in Garden Grove."
However. Deputy City At-
torney William Mc-Names said the
law "has nothing todow1thsexual
preferences."
Thcc1ty, he said. hascont1numg
problems with minors who rec.-eive
akohol m bars with "mght-
dub-type of entertainment."
"It's a rather bitter disappomt-
ment to have this categorized ... as
a n anti-homosexual ordinance,"
he said "It's nothing of the
sort.. It is sex-neutral"
The coalition includes at least
two gay bars, Dok West and
Rumour Hazzit, as well as the
Rendezvous, which does not cater
s pec1f1cally to gay patrons
Other c"Oahtion members have
not been publicly identified. The
ordina nce. pas.5ed by the City
Council in June. required bars
that provide entertamment lo set
up separate areas for mmors The
requirement kept mmors from
using a bar's dance floor 1f liquor
was bemg served nearby
simHar trauma care networks
around the na tion, including one
just started in Los Angeles Coun-
ty.
So far, the Orange County
program has ~rved more than
3.000 patients and the program
"has greatly exceeded what we
thought 1t would be.• doing ," Cales
said.
"W~ have demonstrated that
the VlCllm's bt•st cnance for
Pothole
plugged
on Culver
Motorists who earlier ran mto
dead-end streets trymg to detour
around Culver Drive, the most
heavily used street in Irvine,
didn't have to <.'Onsult maps to get
home Wednesday.
The northbound lanes were
reopened about noon Wednesday
by Irvine Ranch Water District
paving crews. Workers fmished
up the $1 0.000 repair job on the
150-foot stretch of Culver, under-
mined by a leaking water main
Christmas night, according to
supervisor Carl Ballard.
A swift-moving rainstorm dis-
sipated by Tuesday afternoon and
the dry weatper aided road crews,
who put down another f1ve-mch
layer of pavement on two lanes of
Culver.
The street had crumbled from
water welling up beneath the
street. A broken fitting in a
six-inch mam proved to be the
culprit, but 180,000 gallons of
water spouted unde rground
before the leak was detected,
water officials said.
Lt. Gene Norden said Culver
has been relatively free of acci-
dents during the three-day
closure. despite slowing by on-
lookers.
Vandals ransack Mesa school off ices
The adm1nistra11ve offices at Cos1a
Mesa s Whollier Elementary School
1800 Wh11tter Ave were broken 1n10
and ransacked. an officer on patrol
discovered Wednesday about 10 45
a m The windows of lhe pnnc1pal s
office were apparently smashed 10
gain entry Loss has not been
estimaled
Three washing machines in the
laundry room of an apartment cdm-
plex on the 2100 block of Thurtn
Streel were broken 1n10 somellme
Wednesday morning. a 1enan1 IOld
police The coon slots of the machines
were appareolly pned open and $85
worth or quarters was laken
An unlocked rear storage shed
provided thieves access to several
vehicle batteries located at a Shell
statton, 1201 w Baker St Loss was
placed at $840.
A couple hosting a party Wednes·
day got the bad news as they were
cleaning up -someone had stolen
their $355 camera dunng the course
of lhe evening
Ne wporl Beach
A Newport Beach woman reported
the thett of 1ewetry valued at SSSO
from her home 1n lhe 200 block of
David Street Wednesday
A Newport Beech man reported
the theft ol a camera valued at $450
from his home in the 3400 block ot
West Ocean Front
A Santa Ana woman reported tour
tires on her 1971 VW were slashed
Wednesday when the car was parked
on an alley near the 2100 block of
Ceder Streel
A Newport Beach man reported
the thell of a revolver valued at S tOO
and a ring valued al S 100 from his
home 1n lhe 1400 block of Seashore
Wednesday The suspects gained
entry atter kicking on the front door 10
the home
Laguna Beach
A gold wedding band valued at
S 1.000 was slolen from a house tn the
700 block of Balboa Avenue accord·
ong to Laguna ~a;h.pohce
An allempted break-in al a resi-
dence 1n the 700 block of Gav1ota
Drive was reported 10 police No
11ems were missing
Irvine
A 72-year-old Irvine woman was
arresled tor susp1c1on of drunken
driving Wednesday night, pulled over
at Barranca Road and Harvard Av-
enue May Pearl Johnson was taken
home by a pohc~ ~tt1;er
Someone attempted lo torce their
way Into a Un1verSlly High School
building overnight by prying lhe
doorknob of a room in the 300
bu1ld1ng No en1.ry _w~s made
Howard Gtllespoe. 3 t. was arrested
on a felony warrant obtained by
Laguna Beach police In Irvine
Wednesday att~rn_o~n
At least $1.350 was laken from a
home 1n lhe 4000 block ot Wllllwaw
Drive. Thieves apparently made entry
' l(!rough an unlocked window
Fountain Valley
About $225 in cash packed in a
briefcase was snatched from an
unlocked car parked on fhe 16300
block of Filbert Slreel
A man in his 20s was arrested on
suspicion of drunken driving atter
several residents complained the
driver was racing up and down
various street at a high rate ol speed
whole yelling at area residents
Huntington Beach
Two men who apparently lost
money in a cigarette machine In
Wonchells' Donuts. 679 t Warner
Ave . Huntington Beach, picked up
the vending machine, carried It
outside and teased It Into a tralh bin.
Pollce said lhe machine was broken
bul It wesn't clear whether any money
or clgaretle packs were removed
from II
Burglers broke Into an unlocked
garage on the 8400 block of Ivy Slreet
and took $400 worth of frozen meal
and more than S 1.500 worth of olher
possessions Including a bicycle and
drapes
An absent-minded customer who
purchased $351 worth of lewlery at
Thee Jewelers, 10128 Adams Ave ..
walked off with his purch&MI but
forgot to leave a check he'd written
out wllh the clerk. The customer.
tracked down several hours later,
said the $351 check was slllf In his
checkbook.
Fair weather, cloudy skies due
Coastal
f olf 1'1<0UQh Friday but coM1<1etoble
hlQh Qoud.._t FrtOoy HIQll Friday 6610
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CIOudo Frldey
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lllf RIPllT
"
.~ • If
I
survival occurs with treatment In
the regional trauma system," lhe
report said.
The report compared the medi-
cal exptrient-es of 58 patients who
died before the program began
with those of 60 v1ctuns who died
after the program began. It found
that 34 deaths before the program
started could have been prevented
by emergency medicaJ care.
the program began and the report
said most of those fatalities oc-
curred in hospitals outaide the
trauma care network.
11ix trauma care centeNI, but ad-
ministrators at St. Jude Hospital
in Fullerton and Anaheim Mem-
orial Hospital withdre·.., trom the
program, citing high operating
costs.
The study also found that
automobile fatalities in Orange
County have decreased more than
10 other Southern California com-
munities that lacked trauma care
programs. including Los Angeles
and San Diego counties.
The remainmg trauma care
<.-enters are at UCI Medical Center,
Western Medical Center in Santa
Ana. Fountain Valley Community
Hospital and Mission Viejo Com-
munity Hospital. Thein umber dropped to 15 after Until recently, the county had
Duck dilemma :
Feed or fly?
Dave Johnson of
Westminst t-r and
Kathy Elli of Hunt-
ing ton Beach achieve
peaceful co-existence
with a flock in the
pond at Carr Park in
Huntington Beach .
But when long legs
a nd little boy ap-
proach . feeding i n't
1 as im po rtanl a~
survival, and the
ducks take evasive ac-
tion any way they can.
Pedestrians pushed petition
They '11 roll out the sidewalk for folks on 2 Hunting ton streets
By ROBERT BARKER
Of Ille Ody "'°' II ell
They can't roll up the sidewalks at 9 p.m. along
Florida and Mam streets in Huntington Beach -in
some places they do n't even have a sidewalk.
And that's a sore point for resident Marjorie
Niland.
She says she's been getting a runaround from
the city for two years in her campaign to take care of
what she calls a safety hazard for a large number of
the city's senior citizens.
About 200 elderly people live in the Wycliffe
Towers apartments on Florida Street, and a large
number of th em walk down that street to cross Main
Street to shop and bank and do othe r business in the
Five Points shopping center.
The problem is there's no sidewalk for about 50
yards along a vacant lot. And the elderly residents.
some frail and others in wheelchairs, have to go out in
lhe street rather than slog their way through mud
and dirt.
....
"Thls has been a dangerous situation," Niland
said Tuesday. It seems they (city officials) would do
something about it. It wouldn't be that big an
expense. They just don't seem to care."
Niland. who said she first became familiar with
the problem while teaching a Coastline Community
College painting class at Wycliffe Towers, circulated
a petition among residents and presented it to the City
Council. .
The petition apparently did the trick.
City orftc1als now report -though Niland said
they still haven't bothered to tell her -they will
cont.act the vacant lot's developer, the Main-F1orida
Professional company. They say they'll give the
company an opportun ity to put in a pennanent
sidewalk.
If not, the city will put in a temporary asphalt
sidewalk.
Niland said city employees had frustrated her
because none allegedly wanted to accept responsi-
bilit .
THE POSH
TUXEDO
Classic styling at its finest .
Appropriate anytime of
the year, yet perfect for
all of the occasions that
make our holiday season
so special.
-
---.... -. ...........,... .. ..,_,...,,.-_ ---
•
111c•1111111 ·caum
lllJPlllt
THURSDAY. DECEMBER 29, 1983 *
ANN LANDERS
TELEVISION
COMICS
82
83
84
Nearl y 20 nn111t•s are crtunrned into ad f or
tht' 111o vie "Christine,'' and sonw filrn
i11<lu try c•xec·uti ve · ·ay the ca cude of credits
is as out o f control a the n1o vie 's murderou ·
Ply1noulh sedan. See 83.
D
0
~
'Keep drinking -you 'II never get a
hangover.'
-Pat Kelly, director of American
Bartender School
The hangover
There is still no cure
By SUSAN MONAHAN
DMIJ Pllol COl're~nl
It's the morning after and many pt.>ople who laM night thought
that a bacchanalian revel once a year <:ouldn't hurt are rapidly
changing their minds.
While some may be sto1dy enduring a throbbing headaC'he and a
churning stomach. others are either employing a hangover remedy or
desperately searching for one
"Every few years you will hear of something that will relieve
hangovers .. (But) 1( there was a cure for hangovers, people would
know about 1t and use 1t," said Dr. Richard Lang, assistant medical
director of Care Unit Hospital. Tustin.
This may be true, but there 1s no shortage of pet theorit'S on the
cure and prevention of hangovers.
"Keep drinking -you'll never get a hangover," said Pat Kelly,
director of the American Bartenders School, Santa Ana.
He adnutted. however, that he once tried a hair-of-the-dog recipe
-Malort (a Polish hqu~ur) chased with a wann glass of beer -with
ctisasterous results '
Kelly hasn't tried them all, but m his business, he hears about
most of them. "A lot of hard drinkmg businessmen carry a briefcase
filled with B-12 and an oxygen tank," he said
Those who would find this LOO cumbersome might want to try
Alka Seltzer dissolved in ice-cold 7Up. "A lot of people swear by 1t," he
said.
Kelly said drinkers should try mixing their Liquor with water or
plain soda rather than a sugary beverage Not onJy does this decrease
the lik.Hhood of a hangover. he said, 1t also inh1b1ts the speed at which
the aJcohol 1s absorbed.
Patty Champy and Don Osborne. bartenders at Lakewood
Country Club, Lakewood, laughed when asked what would cure a
hangover Nothing. they said. Then they described their own
antidotes
"I get fresh air lots of oxygen m the lungs." said Champy.
''Three aspmn and a glass of milk before I go to bed." s.iud
Osborne.
Both advLSed against consuming more alcohol "That Just prolongs
It," said Osborne.
He said that a mixture of orange juice. a raw egg and t.abas<.'Osauce
lS an old and popular remedy. Perhaps the very thought of dnnkmg
such a concoction 1s enough to distract someone from the misery of the
hangover?
"If 1t works at all. n 's probably because the tabasc'O has alrohol in
1t," said Osborne. "You could drmk a bottle or Listerine and get the
same effect."
He said that some people hyperventilate into a brown paper bag.
apparently believing that the carbon d1ox1de produced will ease the
pain. "Of course. that's Just the opposite of what Patty suggested," he
said. "Well, whatever works for you."
Not aU of the remedies are this unpleasant. Swallowing honey or
having a morning after breakfast of menudo (tripe) are treatments
-PAPARAZZI I
that may appeal to the less masochistic hangover victims.
While some of these folk remedies may be based on wishful
thinking, others seem to bf> at least partially grounded in fact
Dr William L. Thomas, a physician at CareUn.it, says that 1f
vitamin B-12 helps, the value is probably psychological He added,
however. that a good B complex, and especially B-1, may shorten the
duration of a hangover
Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw, authors of "Life Extension"
write that the cysteine (an amino acid) in a raw egg and the vitamin C
m orange juice may lessen hangover symptoms
There have also been studies which indicate that English evening
pmnrose oil. a nutritional supplement. may help to ward off a
hangover.
The theory 1s tha t the gamma-linolin.ic acid (GLA) which IS m
primrose 011 can replace the GLA in the body which is depleted by
alrohol. GLA. an essential fatty acid. 1s needed to produce a substance
known as prostaglandm EL, which IS required to keep the body
healthy.
According to some scientists, if the 011, which is available in
capsules, is taken aft.er drinking and before bed. a hangover can be
avoided.
"It works, but you've got to take a lot of it and it's expensive," said
Peggy Payne, a nutritionist at Fern's Nutrition Cent.er, Buena Park.
She added that almost any oil , taken before and after drinking,
can help prevent d1SC0mfort the next day.
Payne also recommended doses of magnesium. potassium and a B
complex to restore the nutrients robbed by the alcohol.
"I usually tell people not to overdo it, but if you're going to drink,
at least you can protect yourself," she said. "Eating something helps
block the eHects of alcohol. It's like time-releasing the alcohol."
Hosts Nita and John Connelly, right, with Mary Anne
and Steve Loehr.
·--
Another holiday party
Fur coats are favorite attire
•
Others on the guest list were Tony
and Ke n Oliphant, the David Tappan1,
Tom and Tommie Wilek and Wiiiiam
Lee. museum director.
Marilyn Nielsen wi th Warre n and J oann Fix.
" • •
Metalsmith
A trip through history
By CHRIS DAHL
iloeocleled ,,... ••-
WILTON, Conn Kenneth Lynch was hammermg in his shop
one late afternoon some 50 years ago when a large man wearing a tan
gabardine suit stepped from a shiny black, chauffeured car.
The stranger asked the master metalsmith to fashion him a new
suit.
"He asked how mu('h 1t would cost tO build a suit of annor in the
style of William the Conqueror," the robust lrishman recalls.
The men agreed on a price of $15,000 and Lynch fitted the I Ith
century-style suit to the caller's specifications.
Three months passed and the man returned to L ynch's shop m
Long Island City, N. Y .. to pick up his annor. A week Later, he was back
again to lodge a complaint. It seems his annor was chafing.
Lynch says he was astounded that the man had been wearing the
armor. WhJ would he torture himself, he asked.
''The man looked around and said, 'Well, you might as weU know.
You see, I am William the Conqueror."' Lynch recalled, suppressing a
chuckle.
ln his 77 years, Lynch's work has taken him on many trips~
through history, from h1S madcap meeting with the delusive English
monarch to some more ra-ent repair work on artifacts that shaped the
building of the United States.
He was corrumss1oned on short notice to make 8.000 park benches
for the 1939-40 New York World's Fair in Flushmg. His biggest
armory job was in 1937 when he made several score of chain mail.
breast plates, swords, helmets and shields for Cecil B. de Mille's epic
movie, "The Crusaders."
Lynch has become a master storyteller, LOO.
Now, he says age has lim1t.ed his activity. ln addition. he's been
having trouble breath mg because he fell of! his mount and broke a few
ribs while riding recently.
"The horse just bolted," he explains, embarrassed that a Conner
cavalryman could have such an accident.
So. Lynch no longer climbs the tall ladders and pounds away at
red-hot metal in the shop as he once did.
"At my age I'm the problem-solver," he says, pointing out proudly
that "there's little we haven't been able to solve over the years."
When the weathervane feU from the Old North Church in Boston,
Lynch was brought m to replace 1t. When the Statue of Liberty was
becoming worn Ln the 1920s, 11 was Lynch who gave Miss Liberty a
facelift -hanging from a scaffold 300 feet in the air.
Currently, Lynch has been devoting his time to a $10,000
weathervane that will top a building in Atlanta. He's bemg consulted
on the restructunng of the Statue of Liberty that began ra-entJy and
the restoration of Ellis Island.
"If you can draw it, we can make it," he says, reciting his
word-of-mouth advertising slogan. However. Lynch is concerned that
his craft is dying.
"We're the last finn in the world that can do all of this." he says,
mournful about the lack of competition . "It's an old art "
Lynch evolved with his craft. His father was the master
blacksmith at Yale University when Lynch was born in New Haven.
His family moved lo Wjlton in 1908and Lynch says thatsmce then, the
f1nn has grown through "adding and adding and adding."
Lynch says he soon realized that the demand for horseshoeing
would diminish, so he moved mto other areas of metalsmithing -
foundry work as well as repou~. the craft of fomung ob.)CCts in relief
by beating on metal from underneath.
Advertising pays
Her answer was 1 yes'
PITTSFIELD, Mass (AP) -Advertising
pays. Ask Brian Anderson.
Anderson, a 25-year-old Pittsfield native now
livmg in Houston, knew h1S girlfriend, Noreen
McGuigan, 23, also of Houston, would be visiting
her parents in Pittsfield over the Christmas
holidays. so he bought space on a billboard on
Route 20 leading into the city lo ask "Dear Nor,
Will you marry me?"
At first she didn't even notice the placard,
decorated with pictures of cats cli mbing a
Christmas wreath and wearing stocking caps.
Anderson said.
He said he had to drive right up to the
billboard and pull off the road before she got the
message.
"I was trying to get over the shock of seemg
the sign and Brian said 'Well, you didn't answer
yet,"' McGuigan said.
The answer was "Yes,' and the couple say
they will be married next summer.
Metallic creations
STRATFORD, Wash. (AP) -Ray Strouf, a
$4-year-old. wheat and alfalfa farmer. h as found
90me new uses for those odds and ends of
machinery you see lying around farms.
He estimates he's created up to 40 metallic
creations. He says the "monster" is his master-
piece. It's 19 feet long, 7 feet tall. wi th 9Qdy made
from a hot water tank, legs and neck orirrigation
pipe, a chunk of cable for a tail and a head made
from two oil pans.
"I had It In my mind what it should look Uke,"
he said . ''I saw pictures in magazines and in
cartoons."
Nf.xt to the "monster" on Strouf's front lawn
la an 'allllator." Ita body is a hot water tank
cowred with "9Cales" from 210 sickle IM!Ctiona.
St.rout says he's been working with hls
welder's torch since 1967, w}\en he began
combining old metal objecta on hil 350-acre farm
about 15 miles northeast of Ephrata.
Besidea the pleuure It gives hlm, his hobby is
al90 t'heap. "It's all junk," he said .
,..
Be NB Orang8 Coasl DAILY PILOT/Thursday, December 29, 1983
STOCKS
\A.,., N.i• U lt!'\ N•t
.... • hO-. \ tli)V '-"°O p t "0' j low ~ no
,.
NY SE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION S
QIJ0141 IONS INC~UOE IAAOU ON THC N(W ~OAK. MIDWmt P&C"IC. PIW. 9QSTQN, Of'lllOll 4NO CINCINNATI llOCt\ UCNANOEI AMO
RtPQRTfiD ev rH£ NASO 1"81il~El
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1,,,_+ '• ~ ;:I .. " ,., .... "' ... ~·· ........ .__ ..
Dow Jones Final
Down 3.05
Cloalng 1.290.11
Balllll IRllfl
Pennzoil's objective cloudy
in bidding for Ge tty shares
By tbe Anoclartd Prus
NEW YORK -J. Hugh Liedtke. the chairman of
Pennwil Co .. said Wednesday tus <..'Ompany's $1.6 bllllon offer
tor 20 percent of Getty OiJ Co. is not designed to trigger 8
bidding war. Analysts said they were unsure or Pennzoil's
long-terrn objecuve in seeking to buy up to 16 million of
Getty's 79. l million shares outstanding for $100 apiece -New-construction pacts rise
NEW YORK The value of contracts for new
construction in November roee 4 percent from October, and
contracts for the first 11 months of the year were hig her than
in any previous full year. according to a business infonnation
service. The F.W Dodge Division of Mc:Graw-Hlll ln!or-
mation Systems Co. said Wednesday the 4 percent gain
brought its Dodge lndex oC const.ructfon contractmg to 145,
compared with 139 in October and 143 in September.
Toy ota assembly line m ay op en
FREMONT-Toyota Motor Corp., which last week won
tentative approval for a joint automaking venture with
General Motors Corp., could open a second as8embly line here
under an agreemen t between the two companies. Such a move
would strengthen the Japanese automaker's foothold in the
American market. but a Toyota spokesman 83.ld Wednesday
that a S€COnd assembly line is possible but not planned
Mor e steel plant closings due
PITTSBURG H
welcomed U.S S teel
capacity by 16 pen-enl.
The investment commuruty has
Corp.'s decision to cut product.loo
AnaJysts said more plant closings are likely as the
company attempts to compete in a global market. "Further
consolidations are forthcoming in the industry as a whole. and
m U.S. Steel," Joe Wyman, an analyst with
Shearson-Amencan Express m New York, said Wednesday
COLO OUO.TATIONS
., 1119 AHocle1ed ,...,
SelecieO worlO gold p<lce• lod•y ~morning ll~lng S379 00 up SI 00 l-•llemoon fi•lng S387 •O VI) S• 40
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SI 50
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YORK IAPI Otc 2'I
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Un<nenoeo Tota11uue1
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WHAT AMEX DID
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SILVER
.,.,,.. • SD 930 Handy & 111rman (ooly dolly
QUOl•I ..__'8 '32Pe< irovovn~.NYCom•• 9001
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STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
NEW YOlllC (API -Sele\, 4 Pm Df'1Ct
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SYMBOLS
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NEW YORK !API -F1ntl Do"' lOM\ evtre11«\ tor Tl>unoev, Dec 1' STOCKS 0-H .... l•..0...C ... JO lnCI
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AMERICAN LEADERS
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