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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-01-05 - Orange Coast PilotN·e resideilts .open fire on a rporl pact Unlimited flights rile homeowners By JERRY lllRSCH Of .. o._ ......... Newport Beach residents a.re not pleased with a propoeed agreement limiting expansion at John Wayne Airport and they made thelr views loudly known at a town hall meeting Wedneld.ay night. About 200 people crowded the City Hall council chamber and ita lobby and all but two of the more than 30 speakers repre.enting an array of homeown~r astoclations said the agreement would need druuc changes before they oould suppor1 it. Any agreement would have io be approved by the City Council and the county Board of Supervisors, which operatel the airport. Tom Edwards, speaking for the Airport Working Group, a coalldon of homeowner'• aaociation said to represent more than 9,000 Newport families, chided city negotiators for not coming up with the type of agreement they were asked to develop. "We were promlled the city would negotiate an agreement t~t wduld limit the n\,Ullber of flights to 55. This agreement does not do that. In fact lt allowt for willmited fliJhta,'' Edwards laid. Barbara Llchman, theorganii.ation'a director, cited four more objed.lons: •The aereement does not eddre91 the need to find a location for an alternative commercial county airport. •It does not limit the~ of a propoeed new airport terminal ln relation to the number of commercial fllghta at the airport. •The agreeement would make the city financially liable for noise damage auita against the airport -a liability, Lichman said, Newport should not ahoulder. •Finally, LJchman doubted the agreement ta enforceable and could survive a court challenge by an airline wanting access to the airport, unleta work-0n a new airport was under way. Newport Beach resident Torn Williams said the agreement focuses on noise which is a much less imponant probtem than safety. , ·. "Noile is only iO percent of the problem. The (See AIRPORT PACT, Pase .U> THI DRANGI COAST Emotional audience blaStsPlan By IEllllY BllUCll1 °' ... °"" ....... , . Few subjecta ,ef Newpon Bdch residents more upeet than John Wayne AJrport. And t.empen were hat Wednetday nJgh\ when more than 200 aJ)ll'Y • Newport rem.dent ~ Into City Hall to criticlJ'ie a propoled dty/county ~t limlting ex}JllNloo of the airport. The reslderita stood in ·the .. the lobby and wherevtt they could fit appla~ foes of the ~t and hi-1nS as dty (See EMOTIO • Pap Al) cnum 1111101 I HU fh [JA Y JANUAR Y ', l 'l ll-l OHANC F <:OU N TY C At trOH N IA L'> C EN T ~ Teen 'loner' held in wODlari' s slaying By STEVE MARBLE aad ~EN KLEIN °' Ute DellJ .......... An 18-year-old Huntington Be@ch youth arrested in connec- tion with the murder of a U.S. Postal carrier was described by neighbors' today as a "strange boy" who kept to himself, dressed in shabby clothes and fought loudly with his mother. "He seemed like a complete loner," said Alice Nickerson, 58, describing Gabriel Deluca, her next-door neighbor on Jon Day Drive in Huntington Beach. '1He was smiling when the officers led him away," noted Nickerson. "I don't think his parents were even home at the tilne." An Orange Coast College stu- dent, Deluca was kicked out of F.ciison High School in 1982. F.dison principal Jack Kennedy said Deluca had an attendance problem during his sophomore year and that when. he grades began lo slide, he was directed toa continuation school. But neighbors said Deluca moved to Argentina instead and returned about a year later and enrolled at the community college in Cost.a Mesa. shrubbery led investigators to the · Deluca residence late Wednesday. Haxton, a Garden Grov~ resi- dent and mother of two, was apparently stabbed to death in broad daylight sometime early Tuesday afternoon while she was delivering mail. Her body was discovered sev- eral _hours later slumped in the back seat of a light green postal car found in the parking lot of a Costa Mesa church -less than a mile from the Meredith Garde.ns com- munity. The bloodhounds, brought in by postal lnvestigaton, Wett first given the suspect'• scent to track from the church parking lot. . . Deluca w• arrested Wednes- day evening on suspicion of murdering Ida Jean Haxton, 30, after a pack of bloodhounds led officers toward the youth's family 'home in posh Meredith Gardens. Cost.a Mesa Police Sgt. Bill Bechtel said bloodhounds, blood- stains and a piece of unusual "We believed the suspect lived in the area where (Haxton) de- (Sff SLAYING, Page Al> o.11JNeC1'11iie"'-..... Olf icer Mike Oark Yiews home of suspect in death of Ida Haxton, inset. · • .Body of 1HB teen · found I ByROBERTBARKER OflMD.., ..... 1\aft Orange County coroner's depu· ties were perf onning an autopsy today to determine the cause of death of a 19-year-old Huntington Beach woman found deadin her car in an alley behind homes in the 5~ block of Edinger Avenue. Detectives said the body of Antaya Yvette Howard, a 1982 ·graduate of Marina High $chool,· was found Wednesday wrapped in a blanket in the back of her yellow Datsun by a Huntington Beach parking control officer. The car had been cited for a parking violation on Tuesday by the attendant who apparently failed to see the body at that time, police said. There were no signs of assault or robbery. Capt. Mike Burken- field said, nor were there initial indications as to cause of death. The body, which reportedly was in the car about a week, was badly decompoeed. Burkenfield said police are treating the lnci- dent as a suspicious death and see ~ apparent connection with Tuesday's murder of a Hunt- (Sff BODY, Page Al) o.llr Nit ...... lllr LM .. .,... Bob Schnurstein points to slug pene tra ting the hood of his new Dodge Rampager. Reveler's shot hits FV truck Robert Schnurstein has a new hood ornament for his 1983 Dodge Rampager -it and the new year apparently arrived simultaneously. The ornament? It's a steel-jack- eted slug from a .30-caliber gun that a New Year's eve reveler fired into the heavens. Schnurstein, a production man- ager for a Cost.a Mesa manufacturer off umiture and acces90ries for vans, said the . slug which penetrated a~ut half-way through the medal hood "could easily have killed someone." He fortunately was safe inside his Fountain Valley home at the time of the incident. "Whoever does this kind of thing is either dcunk or dumb," Schnurs- tein said. "What goes up has to come down." Fountain Valley Police Lt. Dave Brokaw said Schnurstein's car was not the only target of misdirected oolebrations. One vacant home was struck and 10 shooting incidents were reported, Brokaw said, adding "It's just stu- pidity; this is the first year that these kind of shooting incidenta have happened." Kiss that warm weather 'bye. Summer temperatures replaced b y cllill, maybe even sh owers By CHRISTINE DECKER Oran9e County, to have dlrty air,'' Zumaya aaid. OI ... o.-, ...... ..., · "There'• no telllng where the dirty air came from but Say goodbye to lhe sununer-Uke weather blown 1 wouldn't be surprised lf it came from San Diego." tn from the desert this week. .. Smog levels ln the air have not been ~ By Friday, all~ of the warm. dry gusts will with air quality considered good. he said. The smos. be aone, acrordlna to Air Quality •pecialist,.Annando compoe.ed of ni~ dioxide and comes mainly from Z automobile engine exhaust. umaya. The winds Will be replac:ed by cooler This morning, the haze appeared to be liftlng as tempetatutts and perhaps a ~ light showers, said C..talina Island, 2(mila 8CfOM the eea froQl Newport • Stan Muaty. National Weather Service 1peicialilt. Beach, could tle cl arly teen- N the wtncb weaken, the lay r of IDlOUY hue, There were a few light showers toda.y which has added a brilliant h!d tinge to sunsets lately• Temperatures are expected to stay in the upper 11 expected to blow'away from or-.ng County. 70. today and drop to the 408 or low-~ tonight. ·~ Santa Ana wind.I did not bring tn the Friday, typlcal winter weather wW return with pollution but they do dlSrupt the natural wtnd wnperatures tn lh uppe,r 60t in the da)' and 40. ~t · pat rn1 of an area. They'll cause a dirty~ir tJ ni&ht with coutal f<>s i'nOmlno and eveninp. Th11 have clean alr and a cl an-.air am, like t0uthem tttnd II forecast ~h thew kei\d . --. , .. Irvine pools to he fixed for Olympics By ANDREA ADELSON Ofltleo.lfr ......... Leaks in two defective swun- ming pools at the Heritage Park Aquatics Complex in Irvine will be plugged in time for the Sum- mer Olympic pentathlon event, a city official said Wednesday. Irvine won a $457,000 settle- ment for damages against the pool builders, designers and arehi tect in an agreement reached last week, a month before the city's $1 million lawsuit was set to go to trial. Even though the city won't receive the money until March. Irvine intends to award a con- struction bid this month, Assistant City Manager Paul Brady said. "The settlement is a fair and reasonable one," he said. Brady said a corroded under- ground piping system beneath the aluminum shells of the two pools will be abandoned. It will be replaced with a water circulatlon system beneath the pool decking. He said repairs can be com- pleted by July 28. m time for the pentathlon event, expected to be attended by 5,000 people. Repairs will equal nearly one third the cost of the $1.6 million three-pool complex. built ln 1976 and considered one of the finest in PCAA -eon begin• The UC Irvine men'• bask9lball teem opens PCM play tonight •net NeW Mexico State at Crawford HaJI. Page C 1. ·~ the nation. But the pools are a continuing financial ~ to the city and was the source of an earlier lawsuit. The city settled part of a 1977 suit against San Gabriel contrac- tor Ruane Corp. when the 50- meter pool came up one inch short and unfit for competition. Met.al brackets were mstalled to stretch the pool's shell. Ruane is also named in the recent suit, although the primary defendants are builder Pacifica Engineers and designer K:am- meyer and Partners. The complex's 33-meter diving tank and 25-yard recreational pool were closed m October of 1982 when perplexed·city officials dis- covered why the water level kept dropping. Unprotected aluminum pipes corroded by electrolysis were leaking 30.000 gallons a day. Despite corrosion that has kept the two pools closed foe more than a year. the 50-meter pool has remained leak f1"ee and home to the Novaquatics swim team. The 200-member private swim club pledged $23,000 this fall to pay half the costs of maintaming the pool to keep it open year round. The Olympic-sized pool was closed for a short time last Febru- (Sff POOLS. Pace Al) ' I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, January 5, 1984 Dale claini labeled 'cloud Of sinoke' I CONll!JUID STORIES ~ Pro ecutor ay guitaristhasn'tprovenhewas' etup'byhisex-wifeinmole 0 tca e EMOTIONSRUNSTRONG ... By JEFF ADLER Ot .... Oell7 'llot ..... Guitarist Dick Dale's chnm that the child molestation charses he fa were trumped up by h11 ex- wi!~ tS nothing more than "a big cloud of smoke," Prok-cu tor K.azuharu Makino told an Orange County Supertor Court jury Wednesday. In his closing argument, the deputy dlStrict attorney con- tended the defense has been unable to prove that Dale's former wife, Jeannie Gmnrnett. con- cocted the story or paid off the- f ather of the 13-year-old girl with whom Dale is accused of having oral sex. "The defense, 1'" ~ume. is that the former Mrs. Dale is the sinister .engineer who made false charges agatnst the defendant. But 1t is something that doesn't hold up in the evidence," Makino said. "The defense evidence never connected it up; how it, In any way, fntered into t.heee chars . " Instead, the pl'OIC!cutor urged JW'Or'S to cmWder th tesu.mony of the 13-ye&N>ld girl, now 15, who was the pl"OlleCUt.ion'a star witness. The girl emotionally deacrlbed for jurors on the opening day of the trial how Dale had coaxed her into engaging in oral sex with him on six occasions. "If anything is important m this case, it is her testimony. She b the one these things happened to,'' Makino said. Dale, 41), is charged with 12 counts ol c.-h1ld molestation and oral copulation stemming from six alleged sexual encounters with the girl during July and AugU5t 1981. The incidents are suppoeed to have occurred in Dale's 17-room Balboa Peninsula mansion, across the street from her grandparents' house where she was staying. The p~utor asked the jury to discount Dale's own testimony Dick Dale in the case, calling him a "smooth" talker who did not tell the truth. "He's got a story to tell and he'ao going to tell it," Makino said ... He wan ts you to believe. this is all part of a conspiracy. He wants you to believe this is all part of a giant consplracy. That ahe (Jeannie Gnmmett) Is handing over the evidence. But he can give you a false swry without batting an eye" • When the trial resumes today in Judge James Turner's Santa Ana courtroom, defense attorney Michael Quigley· is scheduled to present his closing argument to the jury. Then the panel will retire and begin deliberations. Dale, whose real name is Rich- ard Anthony Monsour, rose to fame during the 1960s as one of the originators of the surf music sound. His band, Dick Dale & The Del-Tones was a popular attrac- tion in Southern California during the 60s era. The guitarist, who has been ~ttempting to stage a comeback in the past few years, also operated two nightclubs prior to his bitter divorce from Grirrunett, his wife of 15 years. Valley trustees weigh school revamp By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of lhe D•lll Pllol ll•ff Armed with the results of a parent survey, Fountain Valley School Dtstrict trustees will decide An honest reply's not his type ThlS thief rates an "A" in typing but an "F" in ethics. tonight whether to reorg~ the kindergarten-through-eighth- grade fonnat of Fulton and Cour- reges schools. The trustees meet at 7 p.m. in the district headquarters. 1721 O' Oak St., Fountam Valley. Under review is a long-range plan, adopted in 1982, that calls for changing Fulton into a mjddle school (grades six through eight) and limiting Courreges t.o kindergarten through fifth grade.~ elective subjects such as wood shop and home economics. Parents who oppose middle schools include those who wish their children to attend a K -8 school closer to home and those who are concerned about social problems evolving at a site where a )arge number of older students are grouped. The district used written and telephone surveys to test the interest in a new middle school among the parents whose children might attend Fulton. Superintendent Fisher said he used the results to estimate that about 400 students would attend Fulton Middle School next fall, providing four to five teachers per grade level. Fisher said the trustees will have to consider that upper-grade e nrollment in the district is ex- pected to decline by 44 percent during the next five years. He said some K-8 schools will have especially small upper-grade classes and thus little teacher flexibility for specialized instruc- tion. But board president Woest said the survey is only one factor the trustees will consider. • From PageA1 officials tried to defend the proposal. Speaker fte r speak r went to the podium during the four-hour meeting and nearly every message was the same -you have be- trayed us. we don't like this agreement. A trembling George Oschner shocked the gathering by dwnp- ing a half-dozen iron jet engine pieces on the floor -parts he collected from his yard last Sept. 27. when a Republic Airlines jet ran into engine trouble and sprayed the parts on Dover Shores setting about 20 small fires. BODY ... FromPageA1 ington Beach postal worker whose body also was found in a car. Friends say the victim, who lived with her mother, Maxine, had planned to attend the stew- ardess school at Orange Coast College next September. At Marina High school, she was a top-flight player for two years on the girls' varsity basketball and volleyball teams. "She was a very nice, smiling girl," said Lupe Loya, a guidance technician at Huntington Beach High School, wh&e daughter Valerie was a teammate. "We were shocked when we heard the news last night. She was pretty and attractive and one of the better players on the team." Her volleyball coach, Dennis Creighton, said the girl, lmown to her friends as Yvette, was a good athlete who was helpful and fun to be around. "Who are you worklng for? Who are you rep~ntlng? Who are the oonautuent,, acUvely up- portin& the a~ment?" Oachntt shouted at the city of fJd.ala. "Do my friends and neighbo~ have to die before we stand up and toke a positton on aa!ety?" a furious Oschn~r shouted, turning toward the applallding audience Walton Mansfield verbally at- tacked Newport Beach Mayor Evelyn Hart as if he were a district attom y cross-examining a crimf. nal. "Is 1t true you were sent to negotiate a limit of 55 flights,?" he barked. ''Yes," answered the soft- spoken mayor. ''ls it true you were sent to negotiate an alwmate airpon site?" "Yes," Hart said, UU... tim@ addmg she would answer Mans- fie ld's questions only when he had completed has alloted three- minute period to speak. "You were sent with two charges from the City Council and you failed on both. Why don't you step aside and let someone else with more strength take a shot at the county?'' a stem-voiced Mans- field asked. "It is one of the most frustrating things you can encounter is some~ thing that you can do nothing about that goes out of control," a subdued Hart replied. "The document is anything but a perfect document," she added. Hart noted the agreement would limit flights to 55 a day for 10 years. Sometime during Newport Harbor High School's two- week winter · break, a thief crawled through the window of room 155 and stole a $700 e lectric typewriter -but not before taking the time to type a note. School board President Jim Woest said trustees must decide whether to follow the existing plan and create Fulton Middle School or to leave the schools with their present grades structures. District Superintendent Wil- liam Fisher said today he will recommend the new middle school be established because "I think there will be sufficient enrollment to justify a third middle school." SLAYING SUSPECT CAPTURED ... "There is alternative site language in the document, how- ever, it is evident the language is not strong enough to satiaf y the people in this room." The teacher who discovered the theft Tuesday found the following message: "To whom 1t may concern. Thank you for leavmg the windows open so I could obtain 'this wonderful typewriter Next time don't leave your windows open stupid. stupid, stupid. Sincerely, The Jackal" Newport Beach poUce have encouraged the school to un- prove its security. District officials say the two middle schools opened during the past two years, Talbert and Masuda, have been su~ful. They each have waiting lists of 20 to 35 potential enrollees. Middle school advocates say grouping older students together permits a greater number of upper-level teachers to be based at eacb school. With more teachers, a middle school can offer more specialized instruction in math, science. foreign languages and BULLETIN BOARD , Kids coIDpete Sunday in El Toro hoop shoot Competition for the 12th annual Elks Hoop Shoot, the national fre<> throw basketball shooting contest for youngsters ages 8 to 13. will be held Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. in the El T oro High School gym Each contestant will have 25 shots at the basket The boy and girl m l'ac:h age group with the highest scores advance through four twrs of competition to qualify for the nattonal finals m lnd1anapobs April 22-24 Local and district winners will compete against other contC>stants in the state event at Mile Square Recreation Center m Fountdin Valley Jan 15 Exchange students to speak Friday Thn•t> foreign exchange studen ts from the Corona del Mar c:hapH·r of the Amencan Field Service will speak at Fnday's m<'t'tmg of the Friends of Oasis. Frances Jones from Wellington, New Zealand. Mana de los Rios from Madnd. Spam. and Gonzalo Vasquez from Santiago. Ch1k. will discuss life m their countries at the 11 a.m Be$51on top-smoking c linic planned at Hoag The American Cancer Society will conduct a stop-smoking dm1c at Hoag Memonal Hospital m Newport Beach beginning Monday and running through Jan. 23. Classes will be held Monday and Thursday evenings from 7 to Y p.m Reg1strat1on 1s $10 and reservations may be made by calling 752-8600 FromPageA1 live~ mail,'' Bechtel said. "Then we fel~that if there was a single suspec he would have had to leave t scene on foot because he left the car." The dogs led officers on the trail to the general area of Meredith Gardens, he said, but were unable to point them to a specific block. A broken piece of a shrub that grew only at the Deluca home was what first linked the residence with the murder. lt matched a broken piece of vegetation found with Haxton's body. Bechtel said. When officers looked closer at DeJuca's home they discovered what looked like fresh bloodstains in the dnveway. The suspect was taken to the Costa Mesa Police Station for questioning and then arrested. Postal investigators, who had offered a $10,000 reward for information that would led them to Haxton's killer, called the slaying "brutal." Haxton, they said, is the first letter carrier in Southern Cali- fornia murde red in five years. She had been a postal employee for three years. working out of a Huntington Beach substation on Atlanta Avenue near Magnolia Street. "She was effervesc.·ent. That's how 1 would describe her," re- called one female letter carrier at the Huntmgton substation who asked not to be identified. "It (the murder) is more than a shock," she added. "Everyone is stunned. lt doesn't make sense." Postal investigator Mel Moore said Haxton had delivered mail to homes on fewe r than three blocks before apparently being killed. The undehvered mail as well as the woman's purse was found in the green mail car . PolJce said it appears none of the items was disturbed Residents on Jon Day Drive said Deluca and his family had lived in the neighborhood about four years and m that time, the short curly-haired 18-year-old had de· veloped a reputation as a drug user. Police supported the asser- tions. "He ~ot into the PCP crowd," We're Listening ••• What do you hke about lhe Daily Pilot' Whal don't you like" Call the number at left and your message will be recorded, transcribed and deltvered to the appropnate editor 642·6086 D~~ le Oueren•Md ~1 ''iOar II f°" 00 ~' 1\1¥• your P•IM• l>y t.lOo on a.I oet0te 1 pm end yo11• c;ooy w111 D• ~'° lllurd•r '"d 811nd•; II YN dO 1101 IKfl•• y0\11 eopy ciy r • m e111 ci.tore 10 • '" eno 'f04lt CC9Y _. tl!t~td The same 24 hour answenng service may be used lo record let· ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must i:'lclude their name and telephone number for verification No circulation t'alls. please , Tell us what's on your mJ' d ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat \ H. L. khw•rt1 111 Publllhef Chazy Dow81tbJ (dltOf Ind Alsll1ant to the Publisher • ..,....,.c.... ~oouefllln • Ma!90W DftlrteA.,.... ~ .. .MtseM4 ., Cll '1"1 .~ n.-.. ......... ,~ ,.. ................ . llAIN on:a ~--yCt .e..ia ....... c. Miii ..,.... loi tMO Coeilt ..._. CA 92$28 ~ 1113 Ol9"DI c-~ ~ No .,,_ ttor•H . llh1t1r11ton1. tdltorl11 rn•ll•r 01 ~IWtll'lmaytiertPO!klld..,....,...... ~ OI ~ °""* voe. n . Ho. s containing a story of Deluca's arrest w~ on the front lawn. POOLS ... FromPageA1 said Nickerson. "He overdosed one time and the police came out. The next day he asked if it had caused a scene, like he was looking for attention." Deluca lived with his parents and a young brother in the neatly groomed two-story house. accord- ing to neighbors. Huntington Beach police sealed off the house late Wednesday and remained on guard today. "He didn't really seem to e~er do that much. He was just around," said Nickerson. "I think he had a parrot. He was just strange." A woman who lives across the street described Deluca as "just an 18-year-old who was having trouble growing a beard." ary for precautionary repaid~ Devices to neutralize electrical : charges that cause corrosion were'. installed. According to Br.ady, similar. devices should have been installed i around the others as well. { Christmas lights were stiU strung along Ute front of the house and a child's bicycle was in the driveway. A morning newspaper "The wt:iole thing is very spooky," added a.Nother neighbor. "This is such a nice quiet neigh- borhood. That's what makes this so pathetic." In 1980, before the pools began. to leak, Irvine hosted the U.S.: National Long Course Cham- pionship, the alternative to the U .S.-boycotted Moscow Olympics AIRPORT PACT DRAWS FIRE ... From Page A 1 real problem is the potential danger the people who live in this conununity are subjected to every day of their lives." Williams said to strong applause from the crowd. But noise is the only basis by which the county could limit flights at the airport according to federal aviation law, responded Robert Burnham, Newport Beach's city attorney. "The consensus of the attorneys is that the binding agreement cannot addresssafety,'' Burnham said. Although the residents may not like it, Newport Beach has its back against the wall. according to Pierce O'Donnell, a special counsel hired by the city to fight airport expansion. "The county will one day provide an adequate environmental impact report and and that is the only thing standing in the county's way of expansion," O'Donnell said. The supervisors were set to expand the airport two years ago, but their plans were frozen when an Superior Court judge ruled the airport's environmental impact report was inadequate and expansion could not proceed until it was revised. The county is set to complete a new report in June. Buzz Turner, a member of the city's advisory aviation committee, said he planned to take people's comments and craft a new agreement. "It is important to keep in mind that we are only half of the equation," Turner said noting that the county has control of the airport. "Being a realist I know that these risks will never be solved but could be minimized," said Al Graham, an aviation committee member who spoke in favor of reaching an agreement. The aviation committee suggested five changes in the agreement. •An alternate airport site should be selected in three years with to start within 10 years. •The city would not be obligated f.o support a new airport master plan unitl a new site was selected. •The new John Wayne Airport tenninal would be limited to 100,000 square feet. •The city would not be financially liable for the cost of a noise damage suit against the airport. 3The city's liabilty to repay any federal grants to the airport would be limited to $25,000 a year. Cruise into Spring with Ralph Lauren. Linens, Cottons and Silks. 119 f a1tiion l1l•nd ~twporl e,ach (714} 759· 1622 • .~ ... • • Or nge Coast DAILY PILOT /Thut'lday. Januaty 6, 1984 U Fr"oggy Water.in Newport i-esBrVoiP hard to swallow From 1a.ff and wlrf r~port1 B1ologust.t at tht! MetropolJtan Water Oistnct know nearly ev~rylhtng about the Afri~n clawed frog. Everything, that I , except for how to get rid of t t. . They can readily tell you lhi.lsabout the amphibian. -It was imported tothuu.'Owitry m the 1940s t.o be used for pregnancy tests and medical research, then made its way to pet stores and eventually into lakes and reservoirs. -It's ugly. with glistening, mucous-slick skin. -It secretes a poisonous toxin through its skin when at is grabbed or bittenpy an animal. -It eats voraciously, preying on young native fish. And it willdevourita youngwhc n it runs out of other food. A pokes woman Cor the Mt'U Consollda~ J Water D1Jtr1ct whlch receives water from the reservo1r sa1d tfaonly an a very raremstanct'that anythmg getathrough that screcm But that rare instance <n'W'red in January 1981 , when a rip an the&ereen allowed the frogs to wend their way into the water supply. Frog bones were found in ctty water pipes in Costa Mesa after that lncldent. "We really don't even know how many there are," says Michael McGuire, a water engineer for the M WD, which brings water from the Colorado River and sells it to local water {'Ompanies. "Our 'wild guess' estimate is that there are 50,000 of them, but for all we know we could find a million." McGuire sald. -It multiplies rapidly. But the water agency still isn'tsure at can dislodge the frogs from their adopted home in the district's San Joaqum Reservoir near Newport Beach. \~-The MWD has been ftghung a losing w ar with Me amph1b1anssmce they weredLSCOvered in the reservoir six years ago. About all the agency has succeeded m doing 1s keeping the frogs from spreading toother water systemi by erecting.a giant screen over water o utlets. How to e radicate the frogs 1s a major question now for the agency, which two months ago began drainmg the 3.000-acre-foot reservoir for cleaning and repair. As the water level drops, the frogs will ~k elsewhere for homes unless they are destroyed. "We don't even know if draining the reservoll' win ~rmanently get rid of them," Mt'Guiresays. "They might come back u"lce we fill the reservoir back up, and then we'llhave to start the cycle allover agam." Gaido seeks third Irvine term Councilwoman calls for $25,000 limit on campaign spending By ANDREA ADELSON Of TIM Delly l'tlot llefl Two-term Irvine Coun- cilwoman Mary Ann Gaido said she intends to seek re-election while advocating managed hous- ing growth, opposition to two proposed freeways, and the event- ual closure of the Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro. While declanng her candidacy Tuesday. Gaido called for can- didates to agree to a $26,000 spending limit. Gaido, 41. is the first to declare her candidacy in the June 5 race for three council seats, although official nomination papers cannot be drawn until Feb. 13, according to the city clerk's office. Incumbents Bill Vardoulis and David Sills. contacted following Gaido's annowicement, said they ooth would oppose campaign spending limits. Vardoulis, who said he will not seek a third term, called a spend - ing ceiling "campaign rhetoric" that would have little affect. He pointed out that a candidate's campaign war chest can be stuffed by political organizations that are unregulated Sills said he has postponed a decision on whether to run until Feb. 1. While conceding past council races have escalated in cost, Sills said Gaido's proposal undercuts the standard spending yardstick of $1 per vote. ''That has a tendency to help incumbems," he-added. Two years ago Irvine voters approved limiting individual donations to $250. a cap that rises along with the Consumer Price Index. The new law didn't stop the June 1982 election from becoming the most expensive in the city's hJStory. The winners, Larry Agran and Barbara Weiner, each spent about $30,000. Gaido spent $12,000 on her 1980 race and this time intends to hire a professional fund-raiser. She 1s on the staff of the county's Human Relations Com- mission. She was first elected to the council in 1976 after serving one year on the city's Planning Commission and a stint on the Tranportatton Commtsston. Afri<·an clawed frog making . ewport water drinkffi jqmpy. The Al n can clawed frog has no natural predators, and no effective methods of control have been found. b1olog1stssay clogged with froQS. But the district thJn.kJ w trouble lS wor'th it. "Frog parts, found in a glass of drinldng water, would do little for the image of the water industry," the agency's water quality manager, F.llgene BoWtt'I, wrote in a internal memorandum. The screens are constantJ y being cleaned by· MWD workers because they· frequently become Mary Ann Gaido The candidate said an expected~ spurt in new home growth should also correspond with a city-wide greenbelt plan, instead of piecemeal open space plrum.ing. Dimwits divided Densa dummies' derivation dim From staff and wlre report• True to their dimwit image, Densa members can't figure out who really started their club. Four men in different cities all claim to have founded Densa. which parodies Mensa, the high-IQ club whoee members rank in the upper 2 percent of the population in intelligence tests. Densa. represents the underachieving side of the population. Members rank in the lower 98 percent in intelligence tests. "Their existence is sort of to poke fun at us and tha~a fine,". said Andrea Schrote, secretary of Orange County Mensa. Mensa members recently poked fun back when a book about .Densa with its membership quiz in it was pal9ed around at a Mensa meeting. Schrote said the questions were purpoeely stupid and very humorous. She said the book is available in local bookstores. The battle lines for Densa club founder began when a man from Hoboken threatened a lawsuit against Jack Canaan of San Diego over.rights to the club's name. Canaan, however, said he continues to sell his memberships to potential Densa members in -5arrBiego for--$30 f~. •10 f-Or lUe. - Meanwhile, J .D. Stewart of Rochester, who_proudly carries the title CDP (Certified Dull Penon), accusecf' Steve Price of Houston's Densa of trying to gain "exclusive rights" to the name. "We better find out who the real Densa is," Stewart wrote Price. / Irvine driver picked ·wrong 'chicken' opponent The Rochester and Houston Densas each claim to have several hundred dues:-paying pinheads. Canaan said he is trying to establish a sperm baii..k to ensure Densa members can survive a nuclear attack. or at least a windy day. An Irvine man was arrested for suspicion of assault on a police officer and mlsdemeanor drunken driving In Irvine early today after. allegedly "playtng chicken" with a patrol eergean1 on Jeffrey Road. After Sgt. Scott Cade's patrol car was forced off the road, a short chase at speeds above 90 mph ensued. Ronald F. Wood, 22. eventually pulled over on Brandywine, north of Jeffrey. The pursuit was sparked when Cade flashed his high beam~ at the other car The cars did not make contact. . . . A burglar stole $400 worth of jewelry from a condo on Meadowsweet Way sometime Wednesday. gaining entry through an unlocked alldln~ g!a~s door. Jewelry valued at $670 .disap- peared from an apartment on Cascade sometime Wednesday. A thief forced entry through a slldlng glass window. Huntington Beach The burglary of an apartment on the 21600 block of Brookhurst Street was reported Wednesday morning. Inside. a $400 waterbed was punc- tured. The toss included $1.000 In camera equipment and $1 .000 In Jewelry. . . . A resident of the 17100 block of Pinehurst Lane reported the theft , Wednesday of a blue Schwinn bicycle worth $200. The t;lll<e had been parked outside the rhrlftlmart, 5858 Warner Ave .• and was gone when the resident left the store. . . . A red 1967 Volkswagen "Bug" was burglarized Wednesday on the 19700 block of Waterbury Lane A coat hanger was used to break into the car. The loss ln9luded speakers worth $100. · A man was arrested Wednesday evening on $YSplcl0111 of shoplift Ing at the Target store, 9882 Adams Ave Recovered were cassette tapes valued at $32 A 26-inch boys Land Cruiser bicycle was stolen Wednesday morn· Ing from In front of a home on the 600 block of 16th Street. The loss was estimated at S 140. A maroon 1980 Honda Civic was stolen early Wednesday from the 300 block of 13th Street. The lass was estimated at $2,500. The slde-&torage compartment on a tan and brown 1983 Pace Arrow motorhome parked In the RV lot at the city beacti was burglarized Miscellaneous proper1y worth $450 was stolen. Fountain Valley Someone used a water nozzle to breli)I< a sliding window to gain enlrilnce to a residence tn the 11000 block of Orchid Avenue and steal $6, 165 in iewelry, camera equipment, a letevlslon set ?n~ ~lothlng. Burglars ransacked upstairs bedrooms In the 9000 block of Dandelion Circle and stole jewelry, a radio. pillows and an adding machine valued at $382. Thieves stole jewelry and a watch from a residence In the 18000 block of Santa Veronica Circle A 21-year-old Westminster laborer sullered cuts and bruises on the forehead when an erstwhile drinking companion jerked him from his car and began hitting him ~or no ap- parent reason after warning. ''I'm going to klct< your ··-." Laguna Beach An irate Laguna Beach husband called police to report a neighbor was on an adjacent roof, peering at his wife with a pair of binoculars. Police arrived and urged the man to put the binoculars away. Household 11e'm; v~lued at $10,000 were stolen from a residence In the 300 block of Pinecrest In Laguna Beach, polloe reported. . . . . A purse containing $150 in cash and valuables was stolen from a car parked at Crystal Cove and North Coast Highway .••• Stereo equipment valued at $300 was taken from a residence in the 500 block of Seavlew. Costa Mesa A tire shed behind a Union 76 gas station al 3067 Bristol St. was br~en Into Tuesday night and approximate- ly S 1,500 worth of tires we<e taken. A padll)Ck on the shed. which con· talmid 30 car and truck tires, was cut. police determined. . . . A resident of the Sea Lark Motel, 227• Newport Blvd., was arrested on suspicion of burglary Wednesday after another resident reported his room had been ransacked and $803 C~ntinued fair along the Coa~t Coastal F.., llllOU9fl Fndey HigN 61 lo 71 I.-... to SA 11ic>n9 Ille coeel and 311 to <It lot Ille lnlenCI vell9ya a-w. weten ''°"' Potnt Concep llon 10 s.n ci.tn.nl• ltlend 10 the Me1tlc:M Bordet ,,_,1y light vari.t>te wtnc1a llllOU9'1 Friday ••ce91 toUlll_.t to -I to 15 II.not• Frldey •11•noon Md -*'ii W•l.,ly t well I 10 3 feel FW< e1toept -1"911 ~ OYt< eoutllem ...... 0-out., waten ITom POHll Conc4ICI 11on to San ci.m.nt• ltltnd Md cM eo ,,,...., nonll 10 "°''-wind• 5 to 15 knot• tlvOU9fl Frldll'f wltll combined -4to eteet Extended F al! Wllll nlQll CIOllCIUll i!MI HIOf1t 95 lo 75 LOWt ,2 10 55 Temperatures HI la ~ 3:r 11 23 &9 u 2t 01 54 33 51 43 31 31 .,. .. 0 " ., 4 1 .. u .... 31 33 31 ~ a1 13 .. 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Sell lell• ..,, Antonio Sal\ OllOO • StatlOnlry .. se o •• 71 • , 41 10 31 40 34 49 42 37 u u 27 61 se 51 3' 50 :M •• 21 SURf REPORT m cash ano-otothlng had been stolen A witness told polloe she saw Patrick Dane Kiibane. 28, carrying a bundle of clothes out of the victim's room. Kilbane la belpg.~d .on S 10.000 ball. A $300 chain aaw wu reported stolen Wednesday from an un· secured garage on the 2000 block of Java Road Newport Beach A Newport Beach woman reported the windshield of her t978 Buick Le Sabre smashed and $438 In damage to the auto, which was parked In the parking structure at 4200 Park New- port. A woman working In an office at 1401 Avocado reported her wallet containing $170 was stolen from her purse while she was at work Wednes- day afternoon. A Newport Beach student reported the theft of $529 In camera equip· ment from his unlocked auto parked In the 3400 block of Quiet Cove .._> • • • A Newport Beach woman reported theft of jewelry valued al $2.505 from her home In the 1900 block of Santiago Drive A Newport Beach woman reported the theft of two bicycles valued at $300 from her unlocked garage In the 1100 block of West Oceanfront Tuesday. A Newport Beach man reported •the theft of his bicycle valued at S 100 from the rear of his open garage In the 3500 block of Seashore Wednesday But of the status of the bank, he said: "Nothing in the fridge." The debate has prompted a suggestion that the clubs settle the squabble by awarding the Dena rigbta to the chapter tcOriilg lowest on a Densa quiz drawn up by Price. Sample question: "Define the universe. Give two examples." Orange County Mensa membership chainnan Sara Cullison said all four men may be .correct in claiming to have founded Densa. "Maybe they all spontaneously did the same thing at the same time. History proves this can happen. Many of our great inventions were being discovered by different individuals working in different places at the same time," she said brightly about. the dimwit controversy. County's water· pla~ entering third phase Orange County supervisors will continue long-term planning ef- forts aimed at ensuring county residents will enjoy a stable water supply in the future. The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously directed county Environmental Manage· ment Age ncy officials to begin work on a third phase of the county's wate r plan. The study will focus on the possibility of increasing the coun- ty's long-term water supply. It will also assess state and regional © (~ONCORU ~1ARINER SG water agency policies in an at- tempt to determine future water pricing policies and what impact they will have on Orange County. Also, the study will ~ how new technologies will affect the water supply and will ~ttempt to develop a strategy aimed at secur- ing a steady, stable supply of water for both the public and f oc private industry. EMA officials said the study should be complete sometime this summer. The Sporstwatch of the '80s. For him or her. Sllm. rugged, wa tar-resistant. In black chromlnum stainless steel and 14 karat gold . Electronic quartz movement. Hand-crafted In Switzerland. • RAFF JeWilIY (J FASHION IStANO-NEWPORT BEACH ------- ' • ' \ ··--~-------~.-------:---~~----------------------------.................................................. ________ ._. ' .. Hawkins f anlily suffers more gang violence TOP OF THI NIWI ..,. Police u p eel arson in late t revenge a l tack a fter corpse fo und torch e d in Watt n1ortuary 0 ~ GARDENA (AP)-Al"90n 1 swp«ted in• Nt.>w Wednetday Jamet Hawk.bu Sr., 72, who hu a homl' and Year's fitt th.at d troyc.-d a mortuary ~rvi~ hrm 'f'he f mily received numc.oroua telephonf' thrtoob groecry store ut lmpt'rial Boull'vard and S later oWned by a famJly besicg{'<i by " sln."Ct San& teeking Lut year that they WC!re going w be "burned out," aaad Street, which borders Willowbrook and Wa tta, hal ~venge for a member's death, au1horilies say Eugene HawkJ.nl. "We were aU looking (orwacd.to a bet-n •hot ut and had hla ho~ and bustnt"ll battered Hawkins Mortuary Services bumf'd early New Y~. and hert" lhla happens ... l rnlly thousht by fire bombs and shotgun blast.a and cv n rammed Sunday, and damae w estim.ted at $200,000. wd this WQS go1na to be a beGutlluJ y ar" by automobllee during a lcmathy pnlod o! violence Eu,ene Hawk.tna. part ownt•r and the son of the The Hawklnl<."I had dilltlbu~ l,UO hams and again.at the family embattled Jame1 Howk.ms Sr .. a Watts grocer who turkeys to poor families in tht! area al Chrlatrnas tame:, Fourteen alleged i&ng mc:'m~ra have been h.aa dared to do battle with young hoodlum.q from o a longstanding family lracliUon. "and t~ought we jailed and are awaiting trial on a variety of chorg~ in nearby ho<wng project. WC're well on our way to making friends, he sold co~necuon with th<> lncfd nta ~ "When we heard about the h re, we Just.couldn't help assuming that it was gang-related," said another 10n1 James Hawklna Jr . w ho allegedly shot a young gang member to death last year dunng an attempted ~bery ---He was not charged in the case. which apparently has triggered a series of revenge attack.ii on the family and theu-property, investigators say. ln the mortuary bu1ld1ng Sunday were 30 bodws, but unly two that were not m rdriger .. tc.'<i lockers burned. f1ref1ghters said "They pulled two bodies out of the mortuary refngerator onto the Ooor." said Hawkl.J\S Jr He said the intruders apparently poured a flammable substan<.'eover the bodies and ht a fire that spread through the facility. w hich lS jointly owned by Hawk.ms famil y mt:mbers and The Nepttme Soc·at>ty "We suspect arson. but the mv~t1gat.wn 1s not finished," Gardena pol1c't' Lt Ph1hp Shepherd said Marshals foil jetliner arson try, · nab woman in burning lavatory LOS ANGELES (AP) Federal sky marshals have arrested a 3 1-year-old Las Vegas woman who allegedly tned to set her clothmg af in~ and "scorched'' the lavatory of a n a irborne jetliner w ith 148 peoplt:> aboard, authorities say ' The Bcx>mg 727 was on 1ts landmg approach 35 miles east of Los Angeles lnte m au onaJ Airport from Dallas when the fi re broke out late Wednesday afternoon, FBI spokesman John Hoos said The blaze was quickly cxlmgUJshed Audrey Jean Taylor, 31. of La.<1 Vegas. Nev . was booked for investigation of destroying an aircraft. Hoos said The federal marshals wen• already aboard Delta Flight 331 and made the arrest while the plane was sllll in the air, Hoos said. "Durm.g theoourse of tht• flight Taylor set fire w a lavatory on the aircraft which was extinguished by the crew." Hoos said. "Two US marshals aboard the flight assast<.'<J the crew and µlaced Taylor m their custody " Team up with Target and Procter & Gamble to support the Special Olympics Item Zes1 soap Dat"I 5'/P r.ldl . Bounty• 2 papf'f tow•· Charmin • 2 ootti !t•"u" '1 ~ltl' ~ Cres1 6 4 0 1 tl'lt)tt p;1'\lll Wondr1 10 t')l ltJt~ ~ Mr.c ... n ;/8 OI hotllfl Dawn n 01 del'!Wblw Q Wl•-1 Scope ') 4 01 mc...Jtn>Nil~lt By now you've received your Procter & Gamble coupons in the mail. For each coupon you redeem at Target, good on many popular everyday essentials, 10C will be donated to the Special Olympics. And to sweeten the incentive, we've also sale priced these products. That means you save the face value of the coupon on top of the low Target sale price. Just look at the savings below: Target Your Item T1rget PrC&Gambte sale price final cost sale price pon value 2 ,, .82 .20 Ill 2 2 k>r .62 Prell shampoo 1.89 .40 f'tl 1.49 .. 11, Ol l•IJll•r1 1t ea I JI Ohl 1•r•t•.1ll 1.40 ... .15 ,,, 2 2 for 1.25 Bounce 1.7·9 .20 Pd 1.59 40 (.()t.1111 1.78 f(,, .20 IJ(I 2 2 tof 1.58 Head 'n 2 Int 3 .98 .40 011 2 2 for 3.58 Shoulders 1 '> c>J "lfi.tmr10<> .94 .25 f'd .69 Pert 2 '"' 3 .98 .40 ()I' 2 2 for 3.58 1 ~ Ol iVWT'tDOf 1.39 .25 .. " 1.14 Sectwt 2 '"' 4 .16 .50 (lf1 2 2 for 3.66 2 oz tolld 1.59 .15 ,. .. 1.44 ant~ P«8Pt' ant Boldnt 3 .29 .50 Pa 2.79 8• oz llunClty 1.69 .25 P1' 1.44 oetergent p-=-· 7 .09 .50 "" 6.59 lot • 1.79 .20 ,.., 1.59 • Bounty. llm•I t 'l roh ~ Gll!lomf'f Ch8nnln. I.mt! l'l 4 l'.IA"., 5 P'!• 1..u\lr "''"' P~. hmlf 4 bQxPs per r U'lllOfT\t" Al111r<tl't()(l P'M:M QOOd lttrovgh Seturday J:tlluwy 7 t 0¢ Ck>f'IAll()flt good on coopont redMmtd IO<IOy 'lllrouotl Saturoay J1t11J«y 21 l tmt1 Oriti coupon~ bl!Wld per CIJtlClfT* n .. ~IA! 0tyl'Tl{)I( s 11 e non ,,,011t national 00t1\ p10Qram rtl'!()C8tf'ld to h~Q mllloon!I ol IN'(llHly ~d IOults lllfld cn.k1rM IHd a~ mQff) lu#ifhnO •tt No~cvtl • t , I -~-' --#-J: NATION Attack warning dre w little panic or notice By tbe A11oclatd P~H HARRIS.BURC, Pa. JUit one oounty responded with sirens and alerted polk<' when an ~mt•rgency uttack warning was ttunaml~ accid~ntally , but at least 12 otheni called in and were told the message was a l')'liJlt.ake, o spokesman said. Lehigh County apparently wu the only one to trigger itl blartng sirens and noufy police, fire and ambulance companies, saJd Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agtmcy spokesman John Comey The attack wamins was sent by mistake as t.echnicians for American Telephone & Telegraph were work.mg on the new romput.er syswm u.'ied by the emergency agency Scouts b a ule gr anny HARTFORD. Conn -The Boy &'Outs ol America !l4ys It w ill fight an order requinng it to offer a sc·outmastt'r·., post lo a 65-year-old grandmoth(•r, whoa hcarmgofftcer<.'alled "weU quallf 1ed" due to her past as a ''de facto S<.'Outmastcr "Catherine Pollard. of Milford. the motht'r of two Eagle '&-outs, has served periud1cally as an adult volunteer since 1953. She complainl'<i to the state Commission on Hum.an Rights and Opporluruties an 1976 after regional and national Boy Seoul officials rejected her apphcat1on for a scoutmaster pos1t1on STATE Assa sin con victe d LOS ANGELES A 20-year-old man of Armenian d(.'$(.'c•nt fat'~ a possible death sen tence after being conv1<.'ted of first degree murder In the 1982 ambush slaymg of a Turkish diplomat. Hample "Harry" Sassouman was convicted Wednesday by a Supenor Court jury which also found that he had killed Turkish Consul General Kemal Ankan. 54. ~ause of the diplomat's nationality S hullle shullerbugg ed BERKELEY A photography miss1on aboard last month's spa<•c shuttle failed because the mm was fogged, and future flights might be adjllsted to prevent the problem, say astronomen at NASA and the University of Califorrua here. "Almost every frame was JUSt blac·k'' in two rolls of film from a ~lesc'Op1c camera that was lo have caught the ftrst glimp!K"S of distant stars and nebulae.said C. Stuart Bowyer of Berkeley, who direct<-d the experiment with Frenc•h scientists ~ Lo;,e kin gel $.525,000 LOS ANGELES -Five years after police sh ot a knife-brandishing woman to death, the City Council has approved a $525,000 settlement oflawsu1ts by the thrft• doughters and mother of , Euha Love. The approval was unanimous WednC'Sday. five days bc•fon· thl' $5 million wrongful-death lC1wio.u1ts wert:> sche<luled to go to tnaJ Lov<·. 39. was shot eight tames Jan 3. 1979, a fter shl· had thrN1t<'rn-<J a gas C'ompany ('mployet' who wantt'li to 'hut u ff ht•r mt>t<'r for nonpayment. (,~a/tech bla I hurts 2 PASADENA A chemical reaction 111 a largf' flask set off an explosion that shook a chemistry building at the Callfom1a lnst1tut.e of Technology and critic·ally mJured a 23-year-olct student, authorities said today. Flying glass from the beaker severed th<' <:arotid artery of Ramsey Bittar, who had Ix-en mixing a solution o f chem1t'als and water. said police Lt. Don Burwell A fellow student s uffert'<J lesser injuries an the WednC'Sday c•venmg blast Law panel kill · bills S ACRAMENTO A committee hrut killed bills to raise penalttc-s for driving with 0 20 perc-ent blood alcohol and to allow hfe-w1thout- parolf' s~n lC·nc:e-; for some •16-year -old murden•rs. Also dc•foatcd Wedn<'Sday by the libt>ral ASS('mbly Criminal Law and Public Safety Cummitl<'c• was a Democrat's bill to l<·galJu• the sale of drug paraphernalia to adults. WORLD S h e ld in kidnappings . HOME Pol1C'l' have arrC'llted and charged (1v<' mc·n. 1ndudmg four Sardm1an shephe rds . with thl· kidnap of a Jt'WPlry company he1ra" and a tN•n -ag<• son whose.• ear wa.q c:ut off to terrify relatives mlo paying a ranROm The five mf'n nrr,-skd Wt.-dnesdny wer~ accUAed In the Nov 19 ab<l uct1on of Anno Bulgari Calissoni, 56, of the Bulgara jewelry family, and 16-yt>ar-old ~n G11>1 g10, who Wl're n •l('ast"d Christmas Eve af tl•r tht• ransom demtlnd wus met Hubby ·msck s two car ZURICH . Swluc•rlonct S tc.'Can0Co."irngh1, scrond husband of PnnC'e58 Caroline o~ Monaco. ~maqhed h111 w hldl' Into the con1 of two photogropht•rg bt.'t.'aw· • he WOJ lrritawd by th~ joumalu1ts. the nt•wspapt-r Bliek q 1d tod y BUck said thnt whrn Caslraghl saw the photoaraphert wniting (or the newlywed (.'OUplc In front ot a porting f(ood11 1tor~ Wt'dnt'!lday a t the reeort of U.•lPnna, he C'llmbt.-d Into his Range Rovl'r and "r('('klt ly smuhed th r nd~rs" of thP two can Cardinal, ojciech m e i WARS AW 1 PQland -C1i1rdin"I Jo r Glemp and Pn:-m1 r WoJd ich J oruzclakJ me\ today In th~ir flntt f,.Ct' to -( cccnrounwr 11nce Pope John Pou) ti'• pltgrimog to Pbland In Jun Th Pollah nt•w1 1 ·ncy PAP I ued u on ·lln r~purt yang lhl• mt't un.c l an a& n n (6 a m T) but g v no otht r dew1l Th• Commun! t Party chje?f and th~ titm'a Roman Cnhollt primate met 1t 1 gov mn nt v1ll1 In Notolln, outald Warsaw, 1d ur who puk on< ndltton th y not be 1d ·nulled \ . . ... . ... • Oran~ Coa1t DAILY PILOT 1Thwid1y, JanulfY 5, 11M Al -· Troops shoot TuniS rioters Crowd tries to tort!h tore alter government boo ts food pricet TUNIS, Turuaia (AP) -Anny troop1 and po opened f1re on ~"'in TunlJ today u a crowd lried to•• fire to one of tN dty'1 latgnt storm. At least three people were wounded. It w the flnt repon of m.jor vtolence in Tunllia ma 1\LClday. Rlouna eru~ ln the 10Ut.hem par\ of th• north African COWlU'y Dec. 29 after the government announced it wu doubllng the prt~ of bread and Increasing tho eo11 of other buic 1taple1. The violence •pread to Tun1a Monday. Unofficial reporta put the death toll from the violence at about 25. The eovernment con- firmed four deathl. Soldl~ra "took up postt!onl on the roofa of buUdlnp n tM old dty add In neijh~ •~ta Anny h Ucoptera later arrlvtd with more troops and mach -gun v hld• cOok up poatiorw .m the area. Shop pen c"-d thetr rnegJ lhuuen. although aome let ln pl'Ople frjati~ned ~ the a hooting. ~ Preaident Habib Bourgulba declared a sta• Of emersency and a dusk·to-dawri curfew 'l\aaday, mil after army troopt moved fn to ~ up poUct. calm wu nwtored ln moet areea. Wedlwday night, the aovemment l8ld w1dowa. orphana, m.in!d people and lnvalidl -Uae moit affected by the price hiket-would receJve iN:r 11Hd welfare beneflta. The amount of the lnc:nMe WM not announced. Habib Achour, aecret.ary-genttal of the Genenl Unlon of Tunisian Workttl, t.M 'only JepJ labor organiiallon ln Tunhda, uJd a aenerat itrike ... poalble if the aovemment..dJd notgrani .. ""fldent" com~tJona for the 11~ percent ri8e ln the price ot bread and for price hikes affectl.na other stap&ee. Hero's we lcome for POW Neighbor& of Navy Lt. Robert 0. Goodman Jr. put out welcoming banners in front of his home in Virginia Beach, Va. Goodman, re- leased fro m Syrian captivity T ues- day, is expected to return today. The 1hootin1 erupted today ak>unc:t thr Maguln General, local«! at the entrance to the old dty of Tunia, a labyrinth of narrow street.a and ital.la that starts at the end of the capital's main street, Av- enue Habib Bourauiba. The securil y forces Wied automatic weapons, tear gu grenadet and pistols to drive the crowd away from the it.ore. Within minutes, the city center was practically de.erted. "It ta not excluded that the worken will dedde on a general 1trlke," Achou.r aa1cl tn mi tnt.ervtew •1th French radio. "The union u an orga.nhation did not participate ln thete rlota. To the contrary, h held beck ita troops waiting for a denouement between the government and the union." No. 2 at Defense quits SEC charges Thayer, 8 more in insider trading WASHINGTON (AP) -A year after he took the job, Paul Thayer hes resigned aa the deputy 1eeretary of defense becauae of a Securities and Exchange CommiSSJon complamt that he waa mvolved in ms1der stock trading before he came to the Pentagon. In New York today, the SEC filed suit in U.S . Dtstr1ct Court charging Thayer and eight others with insider stock trading. The civil swt charged that Thayer Improperly disclosed information about proposed acquisitions by LTV Corp., Allied Corp. and Anheuser- Busch Companies lnc. Thayer sat on the boards of all three companies before joining the Pentagon. The suit seeks a court order requiring the defendants to give up profits gained through Insider trading. The defendanta received mo~ than $1.9 million in profit In the scheme, th~ suit said. On Wednesday, Thayer. who called the allegations against him "entirely without merit," resigned in a letter to President Reagan. He said his resig- nation will take effect Jan. 12, exactl~ one year after he left the presidency of LTV, a major defense contractor, to become the No 2 official at the Pentagon. The SEX:'s investigation had focused on allegations that Thay!r, in his role as a member of the board of LTV and two other companies, gave private infor- mation about potential mergers or acquisitions to associates, penrutt~ng them to buy or sell stocka and thus make money as prices rose or fell after the information was pubUcly an- nounced. The practice is banned by fed<>ral sec\U"illes laws. In recent years, the SF.C has made illegal insider trading a high priority. · No replacement was immediately announced for the 64 -year-old Thayer. who informed Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger late Wednesday morning about his decision. In recent years, the deputy secretary oi.defense has traditionally come from the business world. But Thayer may be replaced by someone already at the Pentagon because top business dfflcia1s might be reluctant to take the job with only a year left in Reagan's term, acrording to Pentagon sources who declined to be named. Among the current Pentagon of- ficials said to be under consideratton are William Howard Taft IV, seneral counsel ot the Defense Department: John Marsh Jr., secretary of the Army; Verne Orr, secretary ol the A.Jr Force, and Lawrence Korb. asslBtant sec- retary for manpower and reserve affairs. Israel and Syria endorse ·peace plan for Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon "' (AP) Lebanese officials reported today that Syria and Israel have endorsed a proposal to separate Lebanon'• cavil war combatants but they said U.S. Marines should stay an Beirut even 1{ the security plan takes effect. If the plan is implemented, President Amin Gemayel will ask the nallons in the multinational force -the United States. France, Italy and Britain -to keep troops in Lebanon in support of the effort to stabilize Lebanon's cease- Clre and extend government control, . the officials !18id. Neither the Syrian nor Isrheli gov- ttmments had Immediate comment on the report they had approved the plan. In southern Lebanon. Israeh occupa- tion forces were attacked three times today. a day after Israel staged its largest air bombardml.>nt since it in- vaded Lebanon ln June 1982 Military sources in Tel Aviv said a grenade was hurled at an Israeli convoy, flattening a tJre on one truck but causing no mjunes Earlier, re- porters in Sidon said two Israeh soldiers were believe<J slightly hurt in the attack. The Tel.Aviv military command said a Lebanese man was injured when a mine exploded as an Israeli patrol walked by. And Israeli soldiers safely detonated a grenade that was thrown at them, the military sources said. Shiite Moslems had vowed retalia- tion not only agalI\.St Israel but against the United States in response for Wednesday's Israeli attack, aimed al pro-Iranian guerrilla bases in central Lebanon's Syrian-controlled Bekaa valley. The state radio said more than 100 were killed and 400 inJured In the raid, including many dvilians. Searchers hunted today for more victims in the rubble, and residents throughout the area staged a general strike to protest the attac:k. ''I swear by God that we shall pay back the biU plus mt.erest to Israel and to the American enemies of God who support Israel," said Sheik Mohammed Mehdi Shamseddln, the acting presi- dent of the Higher Shute Religious C-Ouncil. ADDITIONAL REDUCTIONS IN OUR SEMl·ANNUAL lij OOJJ51 QUALICf"'"-8HOll aTO"U SHOE SALE! ORIG. 12.99 TO 15.99 ORIG. 16.99 TO 20.99 7.98 10.98 ORIO. 21 .99 I 22.99 ORIG. 24.99 TO 28.99 12.98 14.98 ORIG. 27.99 6 MORE 16.98 . • Sel ct c1oar•nce groups. reQular stock• Brok n ," s b1~ c:ho1c& ' Exciting Handbag Bergalnal [Pocket $1 extra W1th 1ny two ule 1hoe1 and/or bags] lnterm~11t t•diKllOnt ,,,.,. b n ,,,..,, M11t•rCard • VI .. SOUTH COASJ Pt.AlA .Anoh•1m Ptoao • lueno '°'" Cent., Huntlnoton Center • The City lhoppino Centr• l -J : . . -' No commercial sales Shop T8f991 Automotlwt Centln tot everydly low p1ca on auto MMce. • Comptete brake serv1ee • Wheel altgnment. front end repair • Monroe shocks. McPherson struts • Mufflers and exhaust &efVICe • A~ cond1tt0ning serv1ee • Wheel balancing • Battenes and electr1eal serv1ee All wO<k performed by qualified anstalters andmec~ICS Target'• guarMtile: We want you to be Ntisfied. " you .,. not utlifted wllh IOfMthlng you bou9ht at Tqet. p-.. return tL We wMI ftx It. exchange It. mlM an adjustment Of Wiiiingiy rwtum W'O"' money. We want you to be N~ The Target . pledge: expert car care at . everyday ·low pric~s. Rugged MOhawk steel belted radials at everyday low Target prices. 34.99 ~~80A1J Mohawk Avanti radial whitewalls have two steel belts for protection polyester cord ply construction rugged tread design for excellent trachon Everyd•y Metric Low Price Size E•ch Pl 55 80R1 J 34.99 P165 80A13 39.99 P185 80A1 J 44.99 P185 7!>R14 47.99 P195 7!>Al4 49.99 PlO'> 70R14 52.99 P?Cl"> 7':iR1 4 52.99 P205 7':iRl':i 54.99 P? 15 7~R15 58.99 P22"i 75Rl5 58.99 P235 7':iR.J, '> 59.99 P155 80R13 and P16~ SURI 3 have 1 POlyP<;ler coro ply P205 70R 14 has d11!Pri•nt !lfllad OCS1~n No Ir ¥1~ rn nPf'CIPd Whef1 you buy tire~ at T.1rq1•1 PvPn at our low prices you 1,1et th(•<tP Sl'rv1e...-~ ,., no f'><lra c.harye • MotJnl1nq • Rotation Pv£>ry '> 000 rn1lf'., • P1mt.l11rP 1PPJ11 lor ,,., l11nq ,1-. yr1u •1wn lhf' f110••, Heavy-duty battery at everyday low price Polyester blackwalls at everyday low prices. 22.99 Each 600·12 Mohawk Meteor blackw1ll1 have rugged POiyester con strucbon tor strength and smooth nd1ng. tread design tor exce~nt traction A real tire value at these low pnces '"' Thia 011t E\lefyde, -.nc: Low 'ric• SIJ• llH bch A1'f8 l,l P185 80A1J 2J ff 8 0 lJ P175 80R13 ti.ff 078 14 P18!1 7')Rl4 lttt E78 14 Pl~!> 75Rl4 S2.H Front disc and rear drum brake overhaul. 99.99 Eve"fdaylowp,.ce Target will • install new front disc shoe pads • 1nstan new linings on rear wheels • install front grease seals • rebuild front calipers • resurface front rotors • repack front wheel bearinqs • resurtoce rear brake drums • rebuild rear wheel cyhnders • replace rear brake springs • lubricate shoe contact dnd self ad1usters • inspect master cyhnder • bleed and relill system • inspect and ;id1ust park1nq brake • roud test For most u s ( cUS p1( kup~ ;lnd van .... Non repatrdble hyrlrr1ul11.., ""tr,1 Durable steel muffler .. .installed 24 99 Evf'ryd3y low Radiator flush and flll at everyday ~ price. 9.99 T drget will 49.99 With trade·1n Target T80 battery is heavy duty tor long hf e under hard use conditions In sizes for most US and import cars. pickups and vans No charge for 1nstalta1ton F78 lA P205 7~1• 13.H 078 14 P216 76RI• 35.tt • pnce installed Maremont double wrapped 1tMI muffler grves dependAble wear and Quiet ~rf ormance • Drain radiator and engine block 078 15 P215 75R15 H .tt Complete auto electrical MMcel avalll.,., at ~dly low pricft. H78 15 P725 75A15 31.t• L.78 1& Pn~ 15R15 40.tt lfftt ll U t tllff. dlft~ ,...., de9ttn. 800 12 800 1? H .tt ~o 1& ~eo 1s 2111 &00 '~ 800 15 21.tt In &tZ~$ tor marly U S oncJ 1m~rt ca~ pickups nnd wmc., Pll)es haR'gers and clr'\m~c; extra 1f nePded • Flush entire cooltng system (Super Flu h extra cost) • lnc;tall new ant1ffePZf' (Ant1trPNe extra cost) t • Prt-~sure test system for leaks ~tr_,. 1t1 nNdtld A 8 *'° 0 Wet have !l t1b tr MO • T ightPn ho~ clamps If n oCSOd Add1ttonal parts extrn 11 needed For most U S and imoort cats Auto~ Ce1tten 9fM'I Monctey ltltOUOfl , tldly ' SO "" to I Pt11 .le111rctey I )0 "" .. t pm, · lvndly 10 em 10 I pm For •~eM*ltl CIH IMM Allto s.mc. Cent• numbW• (!)TARGET Sano.., ..... ~' 1 !\•!! Chwle YltU., DIL111o.t11 Lo1Ange .. 1 ComlMrc• 12616!\7 lollttl 011• R lll 4 1'1;i Altlem~• !'118 n lU Co.In•. 9 !'I i'O<IV Onterlo, \Ill 1111~ Horttlrldfl. 149 'I I ,. o4fft1. ~ 1 l04 1 Menl\et19ft ... ctl, :)•fl 61> 1 .,., 11 Totranee, J71 OJll lont l•cf'I. Al#'ll Ave !l()lrtn OI 0.. All'IO -..o 42& lz:JO Lono a..cti .e ..,. .. 811ta ''"" 1WJ111t1 ,,,,,,.~~,,~.y ~~· fl34 I ""'.,aid il~lUJ& l ont ••ch. Soulh St belW C n • Av•~ ~Olvd '"~!ti """''"•-a.di, 6• ot\8 Anef*m, 7 7 • ~1~1 011den o,..., OrOOlltlur• W~1 '"' Avfl jU\l l"lltltl ol Giiden °'Ove ,., ""IV fl "' "1 flO JUll Of I !\ 4 ]~ Q.erdtifl 0f'Olf9, H•hor D •d Id Ctwt• Vl«a N • c A .. 1!11.)fl •2~817:, • Oanenl, J8) II''~ ll C...,_ !> 4:Z6" n..,M,..... ~n.111r.1 • o~· 11 HIQ~ Ave II 11) 1 14"11ftl,. "::'• 2 7' 111 :l lanletMtdltt0,0.~ -flt.Md IUI AttNlllf .. 224 D1 J 1 1 11 ,., r fin;] 111r. Uft,....l • , -. . ". t DAILY PllOTIThureday, January 6, 1~ Sterility case brings award 87 tM A11otl1ttd Prt11 An arbatr"tJon panel h awarded $350,000 tCJ n Orange County woman l~ft stenh: by comphcalloru from the Caesanan birth of a child who dwd !.IOOn afterward The award, announced Tuetiday m Santa Ana. also gives $50,000 to Debra Lada 's husband. Andrew. attorneys said. The couple, w~ nt-wbom daughter died the day she Was born July 4, Hna. flled a malpractl('e claim against Dr Laverne Eng. the obstetrK·1an· gynecolog15t who cared for Mrs Lada during her pregnancy, two other phys!Ctans, and St. Joseph Hospital m Orange, which later was dropped from the case The physicians contend they did nothing wrong, and one has asked an Orange County Superior Court judge to reduce the award Like many patients, when Mr.,. Lada wa:. admmed to St Joseph·, she signed a pledge not to sue l1l case of nu.lpraclll't' but to submit her claim to the American Arb1trat1on A.ssoc1auon . . UW~to _ Marine hero r8Jects medal Chri tian ter1n ·nation's highe t award 'a form of idolatry' BRAWLEY (AP) • A born-i.goln Christian w r hero who lo~ll an cyt.-to V1~tnam t.'Ombat hu reje(·tt-.0 hlJ Congn.'SSional Me<Wl of Honor u a "form of idolatry because It ~ a false god on It." For yeun, John Mc-Ginty Ul, one of 259 llvtng rrelpi~nta of the mt"dol, wore hlli citation proudly and spoke on lecture tours about the jungle battle an U~66 which C.'OSt him hfs le!ft eye as he fought oCf a troop of North Vaetnamt.w soldiers almost singlehandedly. The Marine even appeared on "The Ed Sullivan Show" before the TV show t?nded in 197 l. But now, sayini he is placing th<' Ten Commandments over the Manne Hymn, thl! 43- year-old veteran says he rejects what he did in Vietnarn. The medal awarded March 12, 1968, by President Lyndon B. Johnson has been donated to a coUector, he satd. "What he did JUSl lSn't done," said retired Army Col. CharlPS W. Davis of SanFrancis<x>, who earned the Medal of Honor in World War 11 "But we reahi.e the medal an itself doesn't make a man into something he's not " Mount.ams bombing range are a fltlln" r«!mlnder of hli pa.st McGmty. u bt"ard Kl man with a sardonic wlt, r<>M: to captain dun~il 20 years' Rrvtre. "If the Marine taught me anythlna, Jt w&U how to follow o ens, and now that I'm a Chrisunn l follow Cod'• orders-the Ten Com- m ndments,'' McCanty said. "Them~ is a form of Idolatry because it has a false god on it." The medal, lhe nation'• ·highest military honor, bean th4! llkent of the mythicaJ Roman goddelS Minerva. "l don't want to detract Crom anybody else's deeds, but I couJd never stand before God ,as a Christian with that thini around my throat," he said. McGlnty 1tiU accepts a $200 monthly stipend tor having won a Medal of Honor. The collt.-ctor who received the medal has pliK.-ed it on display m a San Diego m1litary collectibles shop, he said. McGinty said he became convinced that tus Medal of Honor was blasphemous about the same lime he had reducovered God The a r b1lrat1on panel, c.omposed of a doctor. ~wyer and buMnt'SSman, n·ached a unanimous decision ~· t:i <tftt•r thret• days of hearings. The award must bt.· c.'t'rt1f1~ by a Surx·nor Court Judge E,-\1arint· John :\'JcGinty ha givf>n Today. McGinty lives qu1ety near m the.• lmpt.·nal Valley near Brawley, on <1.foased 10 acn.· ram·h wtth his wife of 21 years, Elaine, and their lwu sons Mt.Cmly 1nslSts he is not a rel1g10us zealot. a 1 £'('1US(' or "one of those crazed veterans you read dbuut who has loose screws" Ht· -said he rebelled from the church's tc.·achmgs early, and was ··vehemently antJ-God" wh~n he t•nllsted m the Mannes. a"a~ hi., (~ongrf" ~ional \1c·dal of I lcmor dm• lo rt~ligiou ~ b~lie(~. Nt•arby, explosions on the Navy's Ch0<.·olate A hearing•~ S<·t Jan 25 on tht• doctors' challenge AdverttSed prtees good through Saturday. January 7 No commerctal sales Save on the whole roly-poly gang from Care-a-Lot ... books, games, records and more. 3.95 Each reg 4 95 Care Sears books, 6 heat !·warming tales from Parker Brothers. for kids ages 4 to 8 Deltghtful stones that will teach your child valuable lessons 1n shanny their f eellngs Book Dept ._. 1984 will be big year for Orwell's '1984' By CYNTH IA GREEN Thirty-six years after penning "1984 ," George OrweU ts agam a best seller Bookstores across the nation are rt•portmg thal tbe arrival or the ominous year has brought a huge demand for the darkly prophetic novel. Four of five stores surveyed in DaUas said they wen.· sold out of the book, which details a fu- ture society in wh1c:h citizens' tn· dtvidual freedoms afl' suoordtnated l'Ompletely lo the st.a~. . :' ''Sales are right up there with the la test romance novel," said Peggy Ogden, a salesclerk al B. Dalton in L1v- 1 n g s ton , NJ . "Every lime we get at in. it sells out" "All the high George Orwell S<.·hools have assigned 1t as required n.•admg. eveQ. more than the average number. and o'lfier folks are reading 1t as well.'' said a spokeswoman for Century Book Stores in Dallas, which had no mor~ copies of the book on hand ln Chicago. Barbara's Bookstore is running a special Orwell promotion, S<t1d Laune Haight. Any customer who buys $l!J 84 or more in merchandise rl'(."C•tvcs a frC'e paperback copy of "1984." "The amount that we're selling is phenomenal." she added. The shop has recently spe<:tal-ordere9 three hard- back t•opies, a request "almost unheard of," she said. At the B Dalton branch in New York City's Greenwich Vntage, operations store manager Valerie Lenu said sales had begun to pick upm September.and peaked in December with many people purchasing copies as Chnstmas gifts ln Anchorage, Alaska, B Dalton reported selling its last copy of "1984" on the last day of 1983. Waldenbooks sold out last week, and the Book Cache sold out even earlier. "We're completely sold out of every edition, including the Monarch (study guide) notes -even the anniversary edition," said Irene Dutcher, a sales· woman at Tower Books in Seattle. "We had' to send to the East Coast for another shipment. Hopefully it will be here in another week." Tim Jones, a clerk at Walden's in Oklahoma City. sajd he believes sales have been spurred by the recent publication of a special commemorative editJon with an introduction by Walter Cronkite. Most of the buyers "are people who have read it before," he said. Other works by OrweU ~ the pseudonym used by British author F.ric Arthur Blair, who died in 1950 -are also moving briskly, said Bob Rakozzi of the Book Stop. a used-book store in Albuquerque, N.M. "We have none of his stuff," he said. "We usua11y have more copies of 'Animal Farm"' -Orwell's fable of how soc:1allsm c an turn into totahtariamsm -"than anything else The week before the end of the year, we sold them all." But while the buyers are eager, 1t appears not all are well acquainted ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! withtheh~toryofthebookthatro~ed But while the ~~ of 1984 has boosted the popularity of his novel, Orwell probably would have found it ironic that readers put such emphasis on the date. He derived the title of the tvel, written in 1948, by transposing e last two digits of that year. - . 79 Each reg 9~ Care Beers co6oring boo6cs, creative outlets for your child s e.)Ctra energy Choose from an assortment featunn4 the funny httle fellas .~~ ·~ -·--··---···- 4.49 Reg 4 99 Cara S.ra Play-Doh Mt from Kenner tnelldes 3 molds plasbC vehic.le ptaymat rofhng pm Rnd 3 cans of Play.Ooh Ages 3 to 7 years ' .. . 1.~~ Each. reg 2 99 Care Bears acrylic paint-by-number kits include everything a child needs to paint Care Beens boxed puzzles. assorted scenes from the land o f Care-a-Lot .. 4.99 Reg 5 99 Care Burt On the Path to eat.e·Lot board game from Parker Brorhers The objective 1s to find your way home Fe< 2 to 4 players. age& 4 to 8 . - 2.99 Each. reg 3 99 Care Bears card games from Parker Brothers offer excellent ways to teach your ch~d color. to count or to spell 1-4 players. ages 4·8 2.99 Each set Care BMnl catMtte and book Mt. ktds can read nght aJong Assorted C.. a..ra l"9COfd Md book Mt. save through Saturday S... 1.99 Record Dept I ,, ---- the slogan "Big Brother is watching" One customer asked a clerk at a B Dalton store in W~t Hartford, Conn., last week 1f the book was out yet m paperback, said senior sales clerk Audrey Davenport "She said. 'Yes. 1t has bt.oen for 35 vears," Davenport said The story wasn't intended as a predict1on of what the world would be hke an 1984, but rather as a warning against the dangers of totalitarianlsm such as had occurred. in Germany during World War II and in the Soviet Union under the rule of Josef Stalin Dan White's release • shrouded 1n secrecy SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -While the gay community orgamzed rallies to protest Dan White's release, priaon officials fearing for the convicted killer's saCety remained tight-lipped about the details or his parole "White indicated he has..aome con- cern for safety and doesn•t want to confront reporters," Department of Corrections spokesman Phil Cuthne Sci.id on Wednesday. "We're not taking any chances." White, scheduled for parole on Friday, was convicted of voluntary manslaughter m the Nov. 27, 1978 slayings of San Francia.'O Mayor George Moscone a.nd Harvey Milk, the city's first openly gay supervilOr. A group called the CommltlH to Protest the lnjustice has been f onned to st.age a demonstration Friday night on Castro Street ln the city's predominantly gay district. Donald Montwlll, one of the organizer1, said h~ bchcvcs the prot.es\ will bt" peaceful. "I don't~ a remote poaJbJJity or violence," he said. "There ll concern in the gay community that we not ~ulat.e the violence of llOl'llOOne llk.e Dan White.'' Montwlll said the evening demon· atration. plua a noon rally at Union SquaNt and a l5·mmute work 1toppa e al l p.m. on Friday. will Mrv u reminden of how the crimlnal Jutllre tyltt'm failed ln the Moecone-Malk killings Althouah Wh1«' h five years of his seven-year, eighl- month sentence at Soledad, Guthrie •id the law allows the state to releaae him from any state prison, county jail, prison camp or halfway houae in California -more than 150 different locations. He would not say whether White already had been moved. "Don't even bother showing up, because even If he is still at SoJedad, you wouldn't get a glimpee of him when he left," Guthrie said. ''Anyone there won't see him. We won't tell you where he is, either." ln a Dec. 20 letter published Wednes- day in the San Franciaoo ChronJcle, • White, 37, wrote to a clOle friend, "An attempt haa been made to find out where I am being paroled, but pa.role officials realize precautions must be tAken In my cue. "The plan I've agreed to is one that will mlnlmlie any unnauaa.ry huales Crom the media or anyone e!Ae. I'm confldcnt It will enable me to do my one~year parole without any prob- 1cmt." Guthrie saJd th d partment would contlrm the release, might eventually 1ay where he wu ~lcued from and wW lndJca\e in a general way where he ls, for example. whether he ii In Southern Califomla or th central valfoy. ''We want to be su~ that White, hi1 famJJy aiid tM prilOn ttaff ue in no clan& r during th~ release," Soledad 1pokftwoman Ruth Youn ruJd. Save money and shoppingJ~~lthe Diiiy pg J, • • -. . .,. -. -· ' • • Out of mouths of babes NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AP)-The babble of bab ea, oft.m dlsml.ed m re noise·makina, can provid clu to pcmible heartng or learning dlt0rd rs, 1 pn>f eaor 11y1. oddt"d that once pannu •no dOCto Vanct rb1lt U v raty an T , t.M· dbcov r tht-problem, they can 1~ak. louder iate ol Florida, the Uruv nity of ColoradO or have children fit~ for a hearin'aid eo and w Uruv rsity of Iowa. .. th t they do not mill out on further Lewi.I alto bifia.n a Lhfee·yew Pf9.Ject in~action. laat fall, funded by 1 $400.000 pant from the The ablence of babbt -or a lack of raemblace of the bebble lo th parents' native 1angu se-by children Youn& 3 months can Indicate hearlna d billU or physical handlcape in the mouth and throaL, aaJd Michael Lewia, prof r of pediatrlca at the Rut.gen ¥edlcal School of the Unlvenity. of Medicine and Denllltry of l.Awis ii putting t.o1ether a program tO U S. OeparU'Del\t of EducatJon, to study make parenta and doct.on more aware of the chJldrcn between the aJet of 2 and ' who developmftltal probJ ms that can plague have n dow to learn ,t)ow lo Lallc. H4t ~ children between the ages of 3 months and 3 chJldttn ln about 60 families will be 1tudied. ! yearw. h will focus on doctors' acrff'nlna ''Weeeetoomanychlldttnat2(yearaqf procedures rather than the children them· age) who 1hould have been eeen a !)'eat .elves, Lewi& aald. earlier," Lewtl lald of the project focuai~ • • The project, which began lut fall and ontheyQIJJliersroupofcbildren. '':J'hela~r Best feet forward Jenniler Pedersen, 8 , o( Costa Mesa kicks otr th with gu to on the playground at Costa Mesa Park. I New Year BIRTHS HOAG •MOfttAL HOWITAL girt Dec.mber 11 Mr and Mra. John Bowman, MR 11nd Mrs. o..ld eom.tt. -Munttngfon 8Mctl, girt-- Corona def Mar, boy Mr. •n<I Mra. John Colombero. Dec.mW 14 Balboa lllancl, boy Mr and Mre Merrlll FOitz. Laguna Mr. and Mr1. Wiiiiam Kadi, Laouna Nlguel, boy Beach, boy Mr and Mr1 John Rhlnntnlth, Mr and Mrs. Seth R~tord, Irvine, Newpart Beac:h, boy boy Mr. and Mre John Mtcluao, o..mw r7 Huntington BMch. boy Mr. and Mre. Donald McCarter, Mr. and Mrs Keith Dougtaa, Cotta Cotta M ... , boy M .... girt o.e.mw II Mr. and Mre Char'" Garnet. Mr. and Mra. Steven Luplnac:cl, Colla M..., girl lrvlna, boy . o.c.ntb9r1' Mr. anq M rf. Ttlomu Mr and Mra. Jol9ptt-Qulnn, WMt· &hloellm111, IMM, boy • mlnlter, boy 'tr and Mra. Hetbert Cuetta, Mr and Mre Richard Kettley, utmlnlter, t!OY Santa Ana HelQhtl. gift r and Mrs. Howard Pepper, Mr. and Mr1 (dw11d Wiid. lrvtne, LaQun• Niguel, boy girl Mr and Mrs. Avram Nlnyo, Irvine, Mr and Mre Normtin Otu. Santa girl Ana Height•. boy Mr and Mre Richard Spicer, o.c.tnbef 11 Wutmln1tet, boy Mr and Mre Tom O.Young Jr . Cotta Mesa, girl Mr and Mr1 Jeffrey StOM, Laguna Buch, girl Mr and Mre Maurice uvol!e. Irvine, boy Mr. and Mr1 Robert McKnight, Cotta Mesa, girt 0.C.W.bef 17 Mr and Mrl MlctlMI Boughey, Huntington Beach. gin Mr and Mre. John Mar.halt, Balboa. twin boy• Mr and Mre Gary Hobeon, Hunt- ington Beech, girt Dec.mt-11 Mr and Mrl Lloyd Sllllerman, Newport Beach, girl Mr. and Mra. l.ablb Aryan, Foun. taln Valley, boy Mr and Mr1. LM Heinl, Irvine, girl Decemw11 Mr. and Mre Dean Howard. Balboa, girl Mr. and Mre Wiiiiam Wateon, Newport BMch, girl ' Mr and Mra O.vld Alltetna. lrvlna, girl Decembef20 Mr and Mrs Clark MacHamef. Cotta M .... gtn Mr Incl Mrl Michael 81adclhlra. South Laguna. girl Mr and Mre Petet Gatu, Cotta Mesa.gin Mr and Mr• John Ca.tiglln, lrvln•. gtrl Mr. and Mrl Leoni Belt. Coeta M .... glrt Mr and Mre Frank Spening, Irvine, girt Mr and Mre Brian Smltl'I, Coeta M ... ,glrl Mr and Mre. J~mea Round1, Fountain Valley, boy Decembef21 Mr and Mr1 Jaetl Pattereon. lrvlnt . girt Mr tnd Mr1 Earle Craig, Newport Beach.boy Mr. and Mr1. Alan Taylof, Cotta Mna,glrl Mr. and Mre. Charlel Orr, Cotta Mna,boy Decembef22 Mr and Mre. MlchHI Oldm1f\, Huntington Beach, girt Mr and Mre Thomu King, Irvine. boy Mr and Mr1. S•'"'* Davia, Foun- tain Valley, boy Mr and Mre Jamu Beu, Hunt- ington Bach. girl Decemb9r21 Mr. and Mrl Jamet Mattln, Hunt- ington Beach. girt Mr and Mr1 Howard WhltMldt, Irvine, boy Mr and Mr1. Ronald lnltoml, WMtmlnltet, glrl • December 24 Mr and Mr1. Robert Trlnen, New· port Beach. girt Mr. and Mre John Glbbl 111. Cotta M .... boy Mr. and Mre. Paul 8tu0Ylky, Irvine, girl December21 Mr. and Mre Oavtd Ball, Hunt- ington Beach. girt Mr. tnd Mr1. Robett Herbold, Huntington Beach, girl D.c.mbef21 Mr and Mre Aobel"t Horlbt, lrvlna. IT. JOllPH HOI PfTAL No¥9mbet12 Mr and Mre Chrll Catdlnal, Cotti M .... boy 09cembetr7 Mr and Mre. Chrlt Opp, Cotta Mesa. glr1 FOUNTAIN YAU.IY COMllUMTY HOIPfTAL 09cembetl Mr and Mre. MlchMI O'Mllley, Huntington Beach, gin December 12 Mr and Mrs. Jimmy .Harrleon, Wutm1n1ter. gin Mr. tnd Mre. Mlctlael Ramey. Piuntlngton lkach, girt Mr.and Mrs. Aly Alvu, Fountain Valley, boy Deoembet13 Mr and Mr1. Brian Middough, Cotta MeM, boy Mr IOd Mre. Michael Curtla. Huntington Beach, girl Mr. Ind Mre. JOhn Marvoe, Hunt- ington BMch, gin Mr and Mr1 Daniel John•. Hunt- ington Beach, boy Dec.mber14 Mr. and Mre Tlmolhy Tooi.co. Huntington Beaeti, girt Decembet11 Mr. Incl Mrs. o.o<ge Fotecn. WMtmln1ttt, girt December,. Mr. and Mre. Jamee Mylkl1, Wut· mlnlter. boy Ml. and Mra Sam Phan. Coeta ....... gtn Mr. and Mr1. Chrlllophtr McCullough, Huntington Beach. girt o.e.tnbef 17 Mr and Mre Hao Nguyen, WMt· minster. boy D.cembef11 Mr tnd Mr1 Mlchael Marriott, Huntington Be9Gh. gin Mr and Mrl. Jacob Newell. Wfft· mtn1ttr, girt D.cemb«20 • Mr. and Mra. J1me1 Schmleg, Wutmlneter, gin Deoetnbef 21 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Glannellt, Huntington Beach, boy o.e.tnbef22 Mr and Mra. Rafael SMN. Foun- tain Valley, boy o.e.mbef 21 Mr and Mra. Francleco Mandou, Huntington BMch. boy Mr and Mra. Joeeph Caligiuri, Huntington Beech, boy Mr. and Mrs. Thomu Morgan, WMtmlnlter, boy Mr and Mre. Steve niff. Hunt· lngton Beach, boy Decembef24 Mr. and Mre. Todd Hawtlln1, Costa Meea,gtr1 Mr and Mre. John Quinn. Hunt· lngton BMctl. glr1 Decelftbef 21 Mr. and Mra. Larry Johneon, Fountain Valley, girt Mr. and Mr1. Car1 Duran, Wut· mln1ter, boy Decembef21 Mr. and Mr1. Nikola Jareb, Foun- laln Valley, girt Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gordon, Huntington BMctl, boy Mr and Mrs Patrlctl A .... Ntw· port lJeadl, °"' Mr, and Mre Larry Forbel, Wfft· mlnlter. gin Mr and Mra. Charlea RtmHy, Huntington BMch, girl Mr. and Mre Owry Moort, Wt1t· mln1ter. boy o.o.mwrr Mr. and Mr1. Gary O.Altttr, Foun· taln Valley, boy Mr. and Mr1. MlchMI RogalMll. Huntington Beech, boy DecHtwa Mr. and Mrs. Stevtn Acileteon, Fountain Valley, boy Mr. and Mre Ch1flM D1vi1, Hunt- ington 8elctt, girt Mr and Mre. Frank Del Alo, WMlmlnater, glr1 Mr and Mrs Marti VendetbUt, Cotta M ... , girt Decembet II Mr and Mre Richard Glab. Hunt- ington Beach, glrl Mr and Mre Rlchll'd Travla, WMtmtnlter, boy Mr. and Mrs Kuang Taal. lrvlna, ~~ and Mre Oougla1 Barrttt, HunllngtQn Beach, boy Mr. and Mre. Derek Andefaon, Huntington Beach, girt o.c.ma-ao Mr and Mre. Scott Schotler, W11tmln1ter, girt DecembefM Mr. and Mre. Cunl1 Baker, Hunt- ington S.ach, girl I OUTH COAIT Ml!OICAL CbffRR o.o.ntbefl Mr. and Mra. Pater Janet, Laguna Niguel, girt Dec:embef I Mr. and Mre Gary Whltfleld, Laguna BMch, girt Decembef 10 Mr and Mrl. David SIMI, Laguna Niguel. girt Decetwbef 11 Mr and Mra. Robt<t Wllklneon, Laguna Beach. gin Decembef 12 Mr and Mre John Wlttrbury, Laguna Beach, boy Decemb« 11 Mr and Mr1 Edward Quinn. Laguna N~Mr 11 Mr. and Mre Timothy Hullbut, t..gunaN~lr1 bet21 Mr-.nct Mr1. Ralph Roberti, Lagvn1 Beach. gin Mr. and Mre John Kutcntra. Laguna BMch, girl Decembef 22 Mr end Mre Thom•• Taylor. Lagun1 Niguel, boy IT. JOllPH HOIPfTAL Decembef 11 Mr. and Mr1. Stewart Biddle, Wfflmlnltet, boy WIEITlftN MIDICAL CENnR Deoambef7 Mr. Ind Mre. Mlchael Wllaon. Fountain V1lley, girl Deoambefl Mr. and Mre. True Hoa Le. Hunt- ington Beach, twin glrl1 Decembef 10 Mr Ind Mrl Donald erc>o11en1, Cotta Mela, glr1 Decembef 12 Mr and Mre Paul Rlctlard. LaQuna Niguel, glr1 DecemMt' 11 M. and Mr1 Lane. Morton. Costa Mela, gift Deoamb9r1t Mr and Mre Michael Powell, trvtna, bOV Mr. and Mre. Stephan Cech, 1rv1ne, boy Deoamb9r11 Mr. and Mre. Sttvt Panry, Cotti M .... gln IANCL .. llNTI OIHIRAl. HOIPITAL Daoemb« 21 Mr. and Mre. Timothy Hyde, Laguna Beach. gin IVY'S LEAGUE WINTER SALE ALL WINTER ITEMS 30 -50o/o Off New Jersey. · Left uncorrected, 1uch problems can make iL difflcult Jor the ch.Ud to learn, he said in a telephone irttervi~ Tueaday. He will lut for four yeJrs, la being funded with we do it, the more difficult It li. • a $6001000 grant from the Robert Wood ''The quality and amount of babbJ.iNi Johneon Foundation. Similar funding has that a child does ts a very lmportantb *n provided for related raearch at Indication of communJcation deVelopment$: As a day surgery patient at a Kumana hospital, you would probably only see a few of these people, but isn't it comforting to know they're all there ... just In case! No one would ever thmk of having major surgery an·ywnere but in a hospital. However , even comparatively mmor elective surgery -the li:md where no overnight care 1s needed -can result in complications requiring the extensive backup of technology and trained personnel found only m today's modern fully eqwpped and staffed hospitals. We think you 'll agree with us that surgery belongs 1n the hospital. That's why your Humana hospitals in Orange County have reduced their outpatient surgery prices by as much as 50%. If you 're considering having your operation at one of those tree·standing surgery or emergency medical centers. we want to remove cost as a factor in your deci~ion . Now. be honest. wouldn 't you feel better having your operation in the safety of a modern hospital . a Humana hospital? -Humana DAY SURGERY ~Hospital Huntington Beech 17772 Beacn BlvO Hun11ng100 Beach CA 9264 7 (714184<'1473 ,..~ Hoepital .-4unwna ....... Wrtet ~ WINbv•.-, 3033 We\1 Or dnge A'e Anaheim CA 9?804 1714) 8?7 3000 200 HOSD•lal C11c e 'Neslm1nster CA 97683 17141 893 4!>4 1 DAY SURGERY RATE SCHEDULE CHECK AND COMPARE OUR RATES/ YIM£ IMlllUTUI 0 ·~ U11 111 30 Up 10 •S • Up lo 60 Up 10 1~ Up IO 90 Up IO 10~ °"" ·~ LOCAL AllUTHESIA ' 2!>0 • ' 32~ ' 400 ' 500 s 6!>0 ' 17~ SI 000 $1 '75 ITEMS INCLUDED IN IAU CHAllGE ~ ,a \'Of'•""O Room Ar Anestr.ttoc Aqen•\ A "vSO•li P1t4•'Tl.t<.e111•,J ~ • • ' ... -.oou• l J11'1)me"1 Medut Supp•~ R«it•e'I Room '-I ""'S<n(j C••t ITEMS NOT INCLUDED Ill IASE CHAllGt A.10 1100<11 0.<19riost1C Proceou•es x R.lys Aoo !•on.ii Lal>Or'1o•y P•oceoure I • i, Putmofl.lry '> •een.ngs etc PilnolOQy Cllcl•!je PllyK"" P•o•ession.11 i en "·u1;1n1\ •nl•Aocu••• enses P•oslti~ic Oev..:es ere ''~e 11ome Mea•CihOr .. 'f h ( ~ ~·· 1 ;_,, .. fl'1 IQ ''"' ,,Q "N°~· ,,-...,. ,.,. ii. > .. ..,.(. ,.1 rwl1f''' ... ,. r----------DAY SUllG(llY llESl'ONSE COUl'ON----------" : -Humana DAY SURGERY DA : I I Fo 4 ••et b•Opltu•e Ot1 Ille tlu"""" Oar S..'9t'Y p·091~ 4no 'w I 0"''""1" •ele" n oieue comoiti~ '"t tol'O* r9 1no rn.i 10 "•"'4"' Day Su'Qt'Y P 0 Bo• 1110 liunhng1Q<'I e.ac:~ CA 9Zt.4 i , .. ,,,. ---------------- Aooren --------------- C,1. --------Sld'e __ l D ---- I~ I I Pleue ~no me • I et H1;m.tn• Oa~ Su'9tfl D<Ot/tu•e f ' 1 ..,°" o "' 1 pnys<<.111 •ele"il P'e•~ 1t1.e • H""''"" ,,..~po11 1 ·eo•t""1'1«t uM !'It n tO<'lf•oence 1 -----------------------------------~-) ln•ex•pen•1lve• '(In lk spen' slv) not higl'I In price. r eason able. c1ass1tled ... ....,. advertising -1 .._. Classlfled Advertising 642-567A A Robnscns Sae SAVE 25°/o YOUR PRECIOUS JEWELS RESO WHILE YOU WA'ICH ---·---- Reg $100·$2.200 Sale S75·S1,850 Just bring us your precious rewelry and let us transform out·of·date or worn settings into dazzling new rings pendants. earrings and more Simply come 1n and let our experts reset size lm1sh and ultrasonically clean your ·new treasure right on the spot (we·11 include a compltmentary 1ar of rewelry cleaner too) )bu can also save. 25°10 on a selection of loose diamonds for augmentation In NEWPORT Friday January 6 11 a m ·8 pm Al Robinsons Fine Jewelry 100 where service is our style Starts Satqrday, Jan 7, 1984 c 10 a .m. to 6 p.m. IVY'S LEAGUE FASHION ISLAND 640-5721 Mon., Tues., Wed .• Sat. 10·6 Thurs., Fri. 10-9 Sun. 12-6 I i i " ,, ' .. •' \ • ' . I l l I I l I \ Otano-Coat DAlCY PltOT!Thurtd1y, :January 5, 19H ,. 'I Gruesonie glut of mail boggles 1nan 's mind It was ~ slow week in a moderate size real estate office. Slower than µsual, except {or the mail. Make that the incoming mail. It comes in relentlessly, day after day, week after week, at a mind boggling, finger numbing pace. Junk mail, direct mail, oomputeriz.ed mail or drop shipment mail; you name it -I get it! We all do. Some of it is self inflicted, like my well-intended move to join the Sierra Club. I was hoping my $25 membership fee would save ha.If a redwood somewhere in a northern California forest. Right? Wrong! The result has been a year-long shower of slick mailings that must have consumed at least a grove of the towering giants: catalogues, newsletters, bulletil\8, fund appeals and political e xhortations that never seem to end. My $25 didn't even cover the postage bill. I could spend all day, everyday, answering mail that I wish I could turn off. It's incessant! Book of the Month Club, credit card offerings, opening announcements. Town Hall meetings and summaries of meetings, magazine subscriptions, entry fonns, The Pennysaver and consumer surveys that make you feel like a socialist the minute you think wastebasket. They all bring just a spark of interest and that's enough to interrupt your "plan your work, work your plan"day. Then there's the junk mail that makes you wonder, who the heck is sending it and why: The Western Medical Centers' newsletter; a 50-page four-color catalogue of warehouse equipment; a newspaper written in sign language: a packet of tax forms from a New York printer; a high quality, 43-page electronics catalogue that cost $5 to print (and 5 seconds to pitch); two identicaJ mailers from Smart and Final and a copy of the magazine "Plain Truth" showing a nuclear missile i1asting off with the caption, "Where In The World Are We Heading?" Much of the unwanted stuff is beautiful! AT&T Cohunurucations sent out a gorgeous, four-.color piece in a cellophane envelope that explained in great detail the cost of communicating with Chiclayo, Peru and 449 other cities from Nambia to Czechoslovakia. Trouble is it takes three hours to figure it out and I make, at most, two over-seas calls a year. To top it off, I got a matched pair of these costly mailers. Both are destined for the dumpster. Compared to this, the U.S . Post Office is a model of efficiency. Some of this inefficiency is based locally. A colleague in Laguna sent three letters announcing a house for sale in South Laguna and a land offering in Dana Point. I stopped opeajng half way through the second of three identical envelopes. A stock broker in Newport Center, whom I've never met. sent a copy of current municipal bond offerings that made sanskrit appear legible; Dunn and Bradstreet in Los Angeles sent two envelopes that I couldn't muster the emotional energy to open and a Chevrolet dealer in Costa Mesa sent a beautiful brochure connecting their cars to the Olympics. I couldn't muster time to read the three pages of copy and still have time to earn a living. Gotta pitch it! Sorr.y. it's sad, and I wash I could turn off the mail machine. But how? Besides, I have to keep on producing because I can tell by their envelopes that KCET. The Salvation Army, The American Cancer Society and The Red Cross all wantdonatfons; Dean Witter wants to sell gold bullion ; a leasing company wants me to save taxes and Western Union claims they can save money on long distance phone calls. Maybe they can, but I'm scared to death to reply to their direct mail offers. My fear is getting on yet another mailing list. This would be a hot one; made up of people who respond to direct mail advertising. Gad. thpt's just what I d on't need! -JIM WOOD Corona del Mar l. M. BDJd /Sm ash statisti c Motor<.:ycle experts know the fi rst year 1s the most dangerous. You think you've learned how to handle the thing, but you haven't learned enough, evidently Sev- enty percent of all cycle accidents involve drivers with less than a year's experience Tennis great Ivan Lend! from time• to time has offered a fake credit card that states the bearer to be a "Guaranteed Czech ." T ht· only live• ll~UP without a bl{J(id supply m the human body 1s the mrnc•a of thf' eyf' It gets its oxygc•n d1rr'<:tl y from the atr Th£> US Army won't enlist women ov<'r ti f<-t·t tall, please note• Q If th1· harnadt" 1s hermaphrnd1t1c-. meaning both male and female. can 1t mate· with 1tsc•lf? believe what.ever: It's reported that a housewife in Rome, Ga .. charged and received $10 each to babysit a variation of Cabbage Patch dolls for doting owners who didn't want to leave their wards unattended during everungs out. and at one time.she averaged $100 a week Electnc toys should be bough~ only for children over age 8. This, from the Consumer Product Safe- ty Comm1sswn Am too latP in mentioning at? Sorry Statisticians have thlS to say about black males between ages 24 and 34: The leadmg cause of death among same 1s the handgun. How does an "electrical male chastity belt" work? Shrug. Any- how, a fellow named Michael McCormick patented such a de- vice in 1896. A No By the time it's old ln 1974, Dr. Alice Chase died of enough for that, it's glued fast to'-What physicianl diagnoeed as whatever Can't move malnutrition. Dr. Chue was the author of "Nutrition for Health." Prame dogs kiss Q. Says here thP ancient Romans ate the dormouae as a delicacy What's a dormouse? · A. A sort of small squirrel common to Europe At an altJlude of 12,800 feet an Colorado's Rocky Mount.aw Na- lJOnal Park 18 a solar-powered toil<'l Don't miss it JI you and [ believe th111, wt-'11 OR.ANOE COAST Daily Pilat --L. -- Consider 'the eapecially good-logkin1 woman. When anot~r woman 1ee1 her, that other woman analyi.ee what it is about her that maka her pretty. When a man 1ea her. he doesn't 10 analyze, but jult notJcn. Thia a.1ao hold.I ln th~ cue of an unattractive wo~. Female oblerven lm· mediately figure out what'• wrong with her. But ma.le ob- ~rvt:u, Jon't k.nvw, Jon'L wond~r, and don't au-e. So con~dt our Lovtt and War man Urry 0. lpHrw ........ t•• Pentagon uses old tactic well WASHINGTON -In their insatiable hunger for fancy hard- ware and ever bigger budgets. the Pentagon's people are not above juggling the 'facts and figures when they testify behind dosed doors on Capitol Hill. A favorite tactic 1s to give key members of Congress secret, selec- µve intelligenc-e on new Soviet weapons, intended to scare the lawmakers tnto signtng a blank check for matching U.S. weapons. The weapons "gaps" thus re- vealed can only be bridged by the expenditure of billiOl'lS of dollars. It's an axiom of this techruque that Congress should rarely be told anything that makes the Soviets seem less than 10 feet tali. Reversing the words of an old song. the Pe ntagon fund-seekers ac:centuate the negative and eliminate the positive. My associates Dale Van Atta and Donald Goldberg have un- covered a classic example of this misleading Pentagon practice. in- volvmg the Russians' new Alfa class attack submarine. From secret documents and intelligence sources. 1t appears that the Alfa is a most formidable sub. But without actually lying -simply by not telling the whole truth - the admirals have greatly inflated the Alfa's actual danger. ·Q ·; :.-.c-. -•• -.1.-•• -.-~ For example: -The Alfa IS the fastest submarine ever made, with a maximum speed of 42 knots on the surface and 45 knots underwater. It can outrun not only the fastest U.S. subs, but the Navy's surface ships as well. The Pentagon doom merchants cite an ultra-secret intelligence report that tells how an Alfa sub showed off once doing figure-eights behjnd a Navy battle group. But what the Pentagon experts conveniently play down is the fact that. while our fastest subs a.re as quiet as sharks, the Soviet Alfa is one of the noisiest vessels ever to c,hurn through the ocean. It's the underwater equivalent of a hot rod without a muffler. In fact, the Alfa can be detected acousttcally more thaA 1.000 miles away. which means it could hardly sneak up on an enemy target Furthermore. at anything over 20 knots. the Alfa's own engine noise would drown out the target's noise. Submerged subs are blind: a submerged Alfa is also deaf at high speed. And though it could outrun U.S. attack vessels, it couldn't escape the Navy's anti- submarine planes and helicopters. -The Alfa can dive down to 3,200 feet, compared to the U .$. Los Angeles-class subs' maximum depth of less than 2,000 feet. But the reason for running deep is to avoid detection, and here again the Alfa's hot-rod noise betrays it. In addition, the Alfa can't go as far or stay out of port as long as-tJ.S. subs can. -The Alfa's lighter, stronger titanium-alloy hull is what enables it to go fast.er and dive deeper. The Soviets were first to develop the technology of welding titanium hulls -reportedly at the cost of several workers' lives. Besides being lighter and stronger than steel. titanium is also non- magnetic, which means the Alfa is virtually invisible to magnetic detection devices. But it can still be easily picked up by acoustical detectors. -Though select congressmen are told in ominous. whispered detail of the Alfa's su~. they are not told that the sub was a colossal flop when the first one was launched in 1969. After sea trials in 1971, the first Alfa was scrapped. It wasn't until 1978 that the suppa;ed super-sub achieved operational capability. And tech- nical difficulties stm plague the Alfa. Footnote: Significantly, for aU their purported alarm over the Alfa submarine, the admirals have never suggested that the United Stat.es build one like it. CONFLICT OF THE WEEK: Former Presideni,Nixon's son-in- law, F.dward Cox, left hi.a job as general counsel to the U.S . Syn- thetic Fuels Corp. last J uly to join the law firm of Reid and Priest in New York. One of his new employer's clients is Middle South Utilities, which has applied to the Synfuels Corp. for a subsidy on a co-genetation facility that will wie natural gas derived from coal. And guess who one of the attorneys is working on Middle South's application to Synfuels? Right: former Synfuels general counsel Cox. He should have a certain expertise on the legal niceties of a Synfuels application. Is this a conflict of interest? You or I might think so. Federal regulations forbid a fonner gov- ernment employee to represent a client on matters with which he was directly involved while work· mg for Uncle Sam. Absent mindedness as an art form All four kids came home for the Christmas holidays and after they'd departed all we had left to remember them by was one hat. a pair of running shoes, two sweaters. a nightgown, a raincoat, three socks and a blue jacket. The only mystery is the blue jacket We've called all of them except Brian ano none of them claims the JaCket. It wouldn't fit Brian. The feeling is that 1t belongs to one of their friends who came over to t)le house to visit while they were home. Leaving things behind when they're home for a few days 1s a trad1t1on with the kids m our family Brian often bnngs a bag of laundry to do and once he even left that an the dryer Forgetting things 1s something the children come by naturally I've taught them everything they know about 1t. I've left things all over the world: --Once I left a camera on the top of Barry Goldwater's car when we were filming a show with him near the Grand Canyon. --Several years ago I turned in a rental car at the airport in Frank- furt. Germany. and left mv suit- I~'' -ll-DY-ID-Dl-IY_ ......... ~ case in the trunk. I was half way to New York before I remembered it. The Thursday before Chnstma& I stopped at the infor- mation booth in Grand Central terminal to pick up a timetable. I put down a shopping bag 1 was carrying while I looked at the train schedule. After seeing what train I could catch, I rushed oU, leaving the shopping bag with $200 worth of Christmas presents an 1t m the middle of one of the busiest places on earth. [ got to the tr4m. took off my coat and sat down to read the paper before I remembered it. I rushed back and the bag was stHl sitting where I'd left it, having been pa8St:'d by S<'veral thousand people in the meantime. --The following day I stopped at a good ~lectrical supply store to buy two dozen extra Christmas tree replacement light bulbs. Aft.er I'd bought and paid for the bulbs. I saw some batteries I needed. I told the clerk I wanted those, too. He put them in a bag and rang them up. I paid for them and walked off, leaving the bulbs I'd come to get in the first place on the count.er. When I take a shower in a hotel room in the morning, I of ten hang my pajamas on the back of the bathroom door. I get out of the shower. dry off and open the.door. The pajamas are then hidden from my view and I often pack without them. I suppose I've lost half a dozen pairs of pajamas that way. I get very attached to pajamas, too. Some of the ones I lost were real favorites but they'd seen so much servic-e and were so well worn that I was too embarrassed to write the hotel and ask that they send them tome. If I hadn't been leaving things behind since I was about nine, I'd think I was losing my mind wlth age. There's never been a tin:ie in my life when I wasn't forgetting tl1ings. During my early days ln the Army at F()rt Bragg, we used to have to f aU out In the company street for a roll call at 6 a.m. We were auppoled to be properly dressed and carrying our rifles. On three mornings over a period of two weeks, I lined up on time but on each occasion I forgot my rifle. "How do you like that,'' Sergeant Fischuk said to the assembled company, pointing me out as a horrible example of what an education can do to a man, "Rooney's got a college education and he don't even -remember to bring his rifle." One of the most distressing things I do regularly is forget where I've parked my car. ln November I drove my car mto the city one morning, parked it and went to work. At 5:25 p.m. I left the office, hW"'ried..to the railroad station for a train I often ride and took (t home. I never remembered I'd driven In until I got to my destination and realized [ didn't have a car parked there to drive home in. .. Last night I made some not.ea I was going to use when I wrote thil column but I forget· what was on them and unfortunately, when I came to work this morning, I'd !eh the notes on my dresser. Good reasons for U.S. in Lebanon R~p. ROBERT BADHAM There is an understandable frustration among Americans con- cerning thl? pretence o( Un{tf:d St.ates Marlnn in Lebanon. pat- lirularly since the tragic bombtn8 of th Manne barracks and later by tlrtlUery and amall anm attack. on MarlM poetions. Why, Am ricans sk , are we w1lhn1 to take IOSI of lift> in n ar~a knowl') for centuries for , .. violence. ~rrorlsm and relJgi°"" wan" The sukH are largtr than ~banon, ~lrul or th~ airport in th.at Nty w~ are in th ~gion mainly to help 1tablllzc the situ· atton until tht' young Lebanew , -~---- 1ovemment can bring thang1 und~r control, expand ha a'nny and build a 501id nation. Futhennore, there is the matter of maintaining 1 prue~ to aJd Israel. the moderate Arab atates and the larger picture, prottx:t the greot oil upp tdor dlstributlon to the free world. At thls mom nt In hostory, Syria, a cUent of the Sovaet Union, has undertaken th role ot apcnler, pref rrln8 that the United Stat.cl and th l'C.!et of th multJ-naUonal force I V< Lebanon. Th reucm 11 simple: Syna want.I to be abl to de~nnlrw t.M polttJcal orienwUon of that coun- try nchh to..-hav full rontrol ovt1r the ~on . Thia would not be in the best ln~rest of Lebanon, Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabla and, not least of all, the Unltf:d Stetee. M. I stated, the Mtlrlnot were eent to ~benon to h lp create a climate an which the Lebane.e government could g t on lta feet, built up by ha army, tteadlly widen i\I ar~a of control and flnaUy auert lLI full eoverelgnty with ~ d panure of foreaan annin. Now thlt our Marines ~ allowed to retpond U"Mlidlately to threa\I to their 1ea1rhy and th~ New Jttaey, at lait, an fire at th i.rrorU\I. the Syriane and th Sov tUruoncan thatwcmcan bul.lneu. Puhape we might C?Ven find ~ Americans agreetna that we nted to modemlie our d f enM forces, with auch airttaft the F/A-18 -now Uylna ln the Orang County aides around El Toro -which are carbJ, of avoldtng Syrian SAM , while operatfr\I from aircraft c4tl"n1>n1 oflsho~. A. for the Id that Amcricant should "cut and run'' in the face of rmrilu au.ecka, that ll just what thoee who th.row bomb., h throuah 1a&ca on auid® mi ona and e a e in other auch t.KU want. I &dh•m ~preRni. the 40rh Con(lrUill.IOIW Dla&ricr. . ' l I I -PRICES COOD THRU TUESDAY JANUARY 10, 1984 ' • Large 36" fully-lined firebox Increases radiant heat output. • Bullt-ln grate designed for efficient wood consumption. f BF-36. ,. ll ... 11: 1'260 E ~'¥ 1215144S 6955 ~ 6SS llOrtb 11115 17 Ill '2C 16" -.all: 109SS E Ftrtstoot 121JI 8619991 GAllll CMI; 12662~111.i 750-~1 t• IUC1t: 2511 E SOutn St 12151 .,. 7S61 IAITA -U09 lnStOI St 171CI t7H111 llftlSM: 10551lUQnotll 17UI 687 20S~ CMlllA: um s w.sttm 12rn sn 2ass STEEL STORACE SHeD CLEARANCE SALE'! 7'XS' FAIRMONT STORAGE SHED REC.119.99-SAVE 60.11 NOW ONLY s59aa 10'x6' FAIRMONT, REG. 149.99 ............. SAVE 75.11 ............. '74.88 10'x9' FAIRMONT, REG. 169.99 ............. SAVE 85.11. ............ '84.88 10'X6' PRtNCETON, REG. 179.99 ............ SAVE 90.11 ............ '89.18 10'x9' PRINCETON, REG. 199.99 ........... SAVE 100.11.. ......... '99.88 10'x9' CORONADO, REG. 249.99 ........... SAVE 125.11 ......... ~t24.88 10'X4' EXTENSION, REG. 99.99 ............. SAVf 50.11 ............. '49.88 SAi NMO: 21M9 s Wtmm 12HI ~7 1122 11M1: 1SSU <llMf Of 111•1 SSH768 l•LA• llkLS: 219'0 YICtorf 12151 J41-88SO •1n1Ctllf IUCI: 7800 Edln9tf 171'1 847 6066 SAi .......... ™Of~ 5hOWt 111•1 819 9661 CICMllGl: 977S IMftf Id 11u 19800212 llTAM: 2J1• 5 Mountain 17UI 9U 5144 STORE HOURS: MON. THRU FRI. 8·9 /SAT. 8· 7 I SUN. 9·6 I .J -' DUP INTERIOR & EXTERIOR PAINT ·0 , CLEARANCE R·19 ROLLED INSULATION s,,88 • 6 "115·. C8.96 SQ. Ft roll • tuts hNtlng ana cooiino costs • Qualtfles fOr stm and federal tax creotts 1.19&·x23.. _ •ta.88 HOME CENTER I '· .. Alt Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, January~. 1984 Grief deepest for unh.appily wed survivors • BOSTON (AP) -Of all llfe'a tragedies, the death of a spouse is perhape the most harrowing. A ~r study of how people deal with this pain reachet a aurprislng conclualon: Thoae with· unhappy marriage. grieve far longer ·tor their lost mates than do the survivors of loving partnenships. Anguish is also more likely to linger for years if a apouae dies unexpectedly or if the mate left behind had been intensely dependent upon the deceased. • . . ... AD STARTS THURS. AD GOOD THRU JAN. 11 -u The findings are part of the final report of the Harvard Bereavement Study. This summary, writ- ten by Ors. Robert S. Weiss of Harvard Medical School and the University of ~husetta and Colin Murray Parkes of London Hospital Medical College, was recently published as a book called "~very from Bereavement." • The study was based on interviews with 68 widows CUld widowers, all under age 4 5. It is changing many ideas about how people pull their shattered lives together again. "The first thing that surprised us 1s how long it takes to recover from loss," Weiss ~d. "When we started. everybody thought that crises were dealt with in six weeks or so. We discovered that in fact you never get over it fully But the time required to re- establish a way of life that has some integrity takeiJ about a year. and there is still a lot of distress at that point. "The second surprise was the ubiquity of grief. T he death of a spouse almost uniformly gives rise to intense grief, irrespective of the quality of the marriage.'' The depth of desprur after a bad marriage was another paradox. People seemed to get helplessly stuck in grief when death ended a relationship that was marred by bickering and turmoil. When the spouse was alive. they argued over money, the in-laws, disciplining children, alcoholism and other antagonisms. Yet many survivors still yearned for their dead mat.es during follow-up interviews two to four years after their passing. The researchers are not sure why this happens, but they have theories. For one thing, there is plenty of opportunity for regret and self-reproach. "As Jong as the marriage con tinues, there is hope that things might get better, but once a person is dead, it is too late to say, 'I'm sorry,"' they wrote. "The survivor mourns not only for the marriage that was, bJlt also !or the marriage that could have been and was not." IN THE SERVICE Four local airmen have completed basic training at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas. They are Brandon J. Sbeet1:-s0n of Hubert Sheets of San Juan Capistrano and Sabina Sheets of Capistrano Beach; Mark S. Colbert, son of J udith M. Colbert of San Clemente; Hoyt 1en R. Hagens, son of Gary and Nancy Hagens ol Huntington Beach, and Troy L. Bartlett, son of Alfred Bartlett of San Clemente. Completing their basic training at Fort Dix. N.J ., were PFC Geoffrey G. Herb, son of Gene G . Herb Laguna Niguel ~nd Marjorie J . Smith-Meyer of Newport Beach. and Pvt. Bob Be nnett, son of Harold and Christy Carlin of Costa Mesa. Herb is a 1983 graduate of Orange Coast College and Bennett graduated from Estancia High School in Costa Mesa in 1983. Michael 8 . Kinna ma n, son of Jcx:ly Van Sandt of Costa Mesa. has been promoted to captain in the Air Force. Kinnaman is a co-pilot with the 70th Air Refueling Squadron at Grissom Air Force Base, Ind. Airman David W. Palmblade, aon of William and Eleanor .Palmblade of Costa Mesa, and Airman Lance E. Smith, whose wife lS the former Rona Gonzaga of Huntingt.On Beach, have graduated from the Air Force air passenger specialist course at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas. Palmblade is a 1983 graduate of Costa Mesa High School. Senior Airman Lucy A. Bucklin, daughter of Fillmore Mois10 of Fountain VaUey. has graduated from the Air Force weather specialist course at Chanute Air Force Base. 111. She will serve at March Air Force Base, Calif., with the 7th Weather Squadron. Marine Corps PFC Thomas E . Cbevallier. son of F.dward and Dora Chevalller of Fountain VaUey, has graduated from the Air Force law enforcement specialist cou~ at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas He UI a 1982 graduate of Los Anugos High School in Fountain Valll•y. Gra~ tile little oan ••• coae to tlaese 1tore1 to see SBORn A CBUP CBICID oa Salar•ay, Jaa. 7t•. CWOI 9:30 to 12 TOllAICE Z lo 4:30 CLEAR RED OAK 4 FT. 6 FT. 8 FT. 2x2 4.97 7.47 9.97 2x4 9.47 14.27 18.97 2xs 14.47 21.47 28.77 Some of our n ice r con.truction atuff for your patio ad d-orus. (I wu just getting uM<i to writing 1983 on everything, n ow I've gotta get into t he '84 habit.) ,., to;;"~ HEMCO SECURITY ~ . PRODUCTS . INDOOR OR OUTDOOR •DFC-7B LIGHT CONTROLS YOUR CHOICE 4 97 tLL120R EA. OLCS T urns 'em on at d u•k. off at d a wn. (I di.covered la.t weekend that the only t hing worse t han staying home on New Year'• i.8 goin g out.) DUAL FLOODLIGHT 1397 CONTROL •DFC -7B Weatherproof con t rol haa photoel~ric eye to t urn lights on at du.k, off at d a wn. 300 wa tt capacity, 180° ra.diua poaitioning. Bu lb• e:irtra. CRAIN LINK FENCING FABRIC 48" 60" 72" 48• 63• 73• LIN. FT. LIN. FT. LIN. FT. CALIFORJllA OAI HOTWOOD 2 f 9 .7S CU. FT. BUNDLE Fi.re it up in that new BF36 fireplace or take it alon9 on your camping trip. ( If you 90 camping thi.8 ttm• of year, you'll need a bunch. Brrrr. ) MASKING TAPE 3A" 39• ROLL l" .. ... ..._ROLL 1 Y2" 77• ROLL 2" 1•7 ROLL You pt .urty yard. of thia ,,.,...ui. stuff on~ roll. You'll e.. me at National buyinq a cartload. ( But I'll Urt you taJa.e cuta in line et th.e ~'" ) SANBORN MAGNA FORCE I BP TWIN CRINDEI All COMPRESSOR 22988 Porta.bl. compremor h.. 14 oal tank. deli._. 8.3 8CFM at 40 PSI. The Dtal-0 -Matlc i.ta you dial in Uw riQht amount of ah for the job. I ~,I • , )•\~"/.I \,L~I<. ·~ ( I '•) l' ·~~~~··'~~· I " 'fo.' •• . f:.·-~ "lr!- /' '1.1 ~· ·;,·,~··•a ""\ <..:....' , ... 4" CONTAINER CYCLAMEN Ha rdy bloomers that do well in the qround or in pota out of d irect aunllght. ( Yeah, I looked them up. ) ALLTl.ADE STEP-MATE 644 SHORTY CLUB LOO x L Army Sgt. E ric W. Foltz, son of John E. Foltz of Fullerton and Karen G Denis of El Toro, participated in operations in Grenada. foltz is'an infantryman with the lst Battalion, 75th Infantry Ranger unit at Hunte~ Army Airfield, Ga. The b.st choice for a long -We ffllc:e. uni... you A t ough Utt!. guy who can hold up to 250 can afford brick. Think of th• money you'll .. -pounda and h. folded flat for etorage. Ronald E. Turner, son of Robert and Ruth by not havin9 to bail Fido out of th• pound. ( Neith•r of which I can do.) Turner of San Cle mente, h8' been speciaUy t--------------------1------.;_...;;.~.;..;;;~-----...J identified for early promotion to senior airman m the ?0 AUOW 4 PC. Air Force. Turner 1s a medical administration ' ' HEAVY DUTY apeclaliatat England Air Force Base, La., with the Air < \, Fon:e Hospital. ~ ~' ·~ \\\ STAPLE GQI llT Second Lt. Denis S. James, son of retired Marine ~ 13 33 Corps Col Gerald D. and Julia K. James of San Juan Capistrano. has grduated from Air Force pilot ITSO-K training and has received sUver wings at Reese AJ.r Force Base, Texas. He will &erve at Blytheville AJ.r Force Ba8e, Ark.. with thf> 97th AJr Reserve Squadron. Army Pvt. Robert S. Thomas, son of Jack and Shewrrie Thoma.' of El Toro, has c:ompleted basic training at Fort Jackson. S.C. He is a 1982 graduate of La Quinta High School in Wefttminster. Two errore •PP98red In our box •nd liner .... advwtleemani. that ren on J•nu•rv 1 The H 'le io e&•/e Kit c::om .. wit h th.e T-90 .t.aplar, whine attachment. 1CrMn /pl097beck attachment and .tapl., all you n..t ''" uphoi.t.17 worll 01' ~no tllA OI' wh.aw..r. EVEIEADJ EIDGIZEI 4 PAI 197 CORD PAK OF 4 BATI'ERIES They eay that th.,. lut u lon41 u any on' the market. What clo you uy? ( LOuder, I can't hear you over thia tJ~writer. ) GDll 1/i BP ICllWDllVI IAllll DOOi oraawm FREE llTU TUllllTTll IOWLllnm&TIOl 12•f.7 orouaum _.. ~&IOS-eoo .. vine• pertain• to our d'9conttnued MIJcau dfnnerw•re MU onty, no1 our en- tire coUectfon of Mlk• .. dfnneni¥•re . Alao, the 51•/e .. vine-on our i.pc, place Mttlng1 of Franclacan Reflection• din· nerware it llmhed to blue, peach, .. nd, lad• and Ulac color• only. We regret any Th.&. ,_. 4-1'1 ~ "'* ...n i.tw. 8.ay t.ha OOl\...s.nt C:.·IOO ft91,t rww uw1JOU'll9.t an ..u. •iflli"ANll\1"-m ~ In convenience thft may. c•u.ae you. THE BROADWAY . -\ SHORTY CLUB uu l( u ONat atuff, this WD. It .to1>9 11queak.e, helJ>8 pNMnt ru.t, and liberat. sticky mechanical part.. ouao SUPER-CLUE SUP-1 3GRAMS Doe.n't take much of thb stuff to gin a stron9, clN.r bo.J\d to moat surfaces. It'• potent, llO Ned thoee directions on the label. BAJ.Al· ~-.l!J> FRONT-END COVERS . ·-SALE PllCE 2 9 9J LESS MFG. l,WJ. ·II IDATE YOUI IET COIT AFTEI IDATE -3" 2697 The deal i.8 on our nine in· .tock numben onl . Check out the Rebate. ·~ · CHIEFTAIN LOUVERED !&. HIGH INTEISln ltit'.'1dj! nil LIGHT SETS ~ 9•• SHORTY CLUB LOST LBSY Get th ... popular li9ht ..t. ln amber or clear, •40010/ 11 -2W8. Your choice 19 clear, uni.a your choice 19 amber. la that clear? · STARLITE ~.~ SUPERGARD CAR ~:/ COVERS SMALL MEDIUM LARGE 2997 3497 39~7 EXTRA LARGE 4997 Green car protectors with eluticiud bottom for a good fit. ~ ' QUAIEI 20/50 WT.· MOTOR OIL 84:r. W•'ll let you follu buy up to 12 quarta at thl.9 gl'Mt j)rlce. ( What. 18 th.'9 another oil 1hon.a~. Shorty? ) I • Dilly Pilat _· THURSDAY JANUARY 5, 1984 .. ANN LANDERS TELEVISION COMICS 82 83 84 •B/ue TJ1u11der, 1 tarting tomorrow night on BC, i triclly srade-haul tuff. It und like "The tetun. ••·''BC' 'ucee ful udv~nlure erit-~ and ii uitn!t 10 be1 but In/I flat. ·e,i 83. THI COAST AID THI COUNTY The school bas has changed U~S. education More.school vehicles on road than other buses By LINDA ST. THOMAS '"'"l\eofl'-" ........... Ice During its 75 years on the road, the school bus has grown up, changmg from black to double-deep orange to bnght yellow. from a wood-and-metal truck with hard rubber tires and even harder seaL"i to a sleek, 66-passenger a1r-cond1uoned vehicle In sts early days, lt wasn't even a bus, but a motor-powered wagon. and before that, a 12-Coot, horse-drawn wooden "kid's hack" with roll-up canvas stdt'S The school bus, m tum. has bt>c-n changing American education everssnce 1869. when wagons first tranaported duklren from home to school an Qumcy, Mass. There are more school buses than any other kmd of bus on the road. The 432,813 school buses registered an "1981 were 80 percent of the total number of buses (543,894) in the nation, according to Federal 'Highway Admmstrallon statistics. ln the 1980-81 school year, 56 per cent of the 38 m1Jhon American public-school children took buses, up from 46 perc.-ent a decade before Although enrollment an public schools a nd the number of schools are dwindling:· the percentage of children riding buses 1s incre8J!lmg. Among lh'-" reasons are neighborhood school closings, caused by dedinmg enrollments and the accompanymg consolidation o( chlldren to more distant schools, busing to achieve racial equality in schools, and busing to transport children across highways and congested suburban and urban streets. The S authson1an's 1939 vehicle 1s s1gmf1cant. Roger White of the museums's Division of T ransportation says, because 1t is typical of the early all-steel buses with shatterproof glass first introduced m the 1930s. The 36-passenger bus, painted "Omaha" orange (the modern equivalent of the older double-deep) and now restored t.o running condit1on, has its origmal Dodge ch~1s and body built by Carpenter Body Works, Inc., of Mitchell, Ind. For nine years, st was owned by Russell Bishop, a farmer who contracted with the Washington County, lnc., school distract t.o transport children to and from the Martinsburg grade school. In ,the La tc 1940s, it was sold to a local graocer. Lester Jones, who used it for 14 years as a peddler's wagon, serving houses for 50 miles around Jones converted hts bus into a rolling grocery store by removing the seats and adding shelves. Many a (armer-driver of that period would simply replace the body of a bus with a wooden platform when the school year ended to haul hay and other materials all summer In September, 1t would, like Cinderella's pumpkin, become a coach once again J ones became sll in · 1962 and the bus, s till loaded with groceries, was rel<>gated to his backyatd There 1t sat until 1980, when Carpenter Body rl'-purchased the bus and began ot restore 1t before donatmg 1t to the Smithsonian The y<>ar- long restoration dl•pendC'd on the memories of th<> employees who built the original because company records of the 1930s had been destroyed in a fire Bob Callahan with Terry Hant>s. O•llY Pllo1 Photo• by ••rr1 stobtn PAPARAZZI ·" The stttl bus, which revolut1on'zed public school,transport, came about because sch~l boards and parents began demanding safer vehicles than the wood and Later, wood-and-metal bus that was easily smashed or caught fire in co1Jis10ns. The manufacturers' response was an all-steel vehicle with sturdier body, emergency doors, and later, hydraulic brakes, spring cushion seats and larger windows for better visibility. "Of course, school buses.' made of whatever matenals, had already made their mark on the American educational system," the Smithsonian's White says, beginning with the Cu-'st day children left their farmhouses and, rather than walking toa one-room school, boarded hor&•-drawn wagons that took them to a large school with better fac1ht1es Logically enough, school transportation or- ginatcd in Midwestern an~ New England stales where road-building materials such as gravel wc•rc plentiful, and consequently, primary and second- Colette Jacob and Ted Hales. . Fabulous R•rty reputation People d esert country living for it Barbara Aune of N<'wport Beach h4S the reputation of giving fabulous New Year's Eve parttef she's be(>n giving them every year (or 15 W1lrox, m black-tie ate/re, stopped l)y long t•nough to get their black-eyed pt.•ss before moving on to the Rllz Brothers dinner at Th~ Ritz.) "l olway1 tell rny guests t.o bring ftlong friends, stop for a while or !lwy Cot the evening. N lghbQn1 (mcludlng Jim 11nd F'ronJcJe Sheppard) wander over.'' Barbara said Allo aoon-to-br _______ ..... ary road systems able to accommodate Large vehicles were developed. The first motorized , school "truck",a Model-Twooden truck with rows · of benches inside, was built about 1909. Like earlier sc.'hool wagons, the factory-rnade buses had rear doors which the driver opened with a pull cord. Most carried 24 to 30 students, about twice as many as the wagons. Paved road and motonzed school buses inevitably led to the construction of many consolidated elementary and high schools By the early 1920s, school districts had their own bus systems, and farm famHies were proud to send their children to schools wslh more teachers and better equipment Al the same lime. White points out, "~hool buses were break mg up the senSt' of community in rural America by taking children away from the small , neighborhood schools." However, the idea of transporting t hsldren from their neighborhood schools became a volatile They on.• so popular that Bill and Marpret Harper det1C?rtcd rountry llvln& in Templeton and rame back alter a four year abseh '· Margaret caUed tht! h08tes» and aasd we re lonesom end want to come w your party They hOU!6C gu tt.'<i (or thf' weekend. nelghbon Gl~nda Coker and Btu Van Zupthcn attended Barbara (MucN•b- lrvinc) just sold the.J11 the nearby home, wh~"' they will be manil'd in Aprll Barbara Aune, a ll y lark, Margaret Harp r and Ell~n Wilcox. Th party oent ittnrtC'd Rrnvlng ot 7 fol' th run l'V~ning Pilar Wayne c~·ctiring , sequinned hnt) and Toa.I Armlitud (plumed with trich ft'ath· l'I) 1wept an tor a whtlt u did otht'rt (lndudf ng Tom ind Emma J•n~ RJJ y) on the cvt" party dreuit (Bob and Gmny Rob1rnr ond Bob and Ell If ·. I Barbara'• daughter, Terry Hanes, wns th re with Bob Callahan along wlth Polly Jobnaton, Mary and Cbuck Hirsch. 8111 and 8.tty Clark who rrlvcd walh Nan Chapman end Pat W•taon, ally Clark (Barbara's fOd· ,! __ _ rlett Wltmtr, Oon Luclll~ Kuehn ummHall und daughrt•r) with Bob Hopkln1, Carl (lnd Pac Nel11er And Mike and uaan Md'adden. .., kip and Joan Ke) er ddl-d n ••touc.•h of cln'"" -th<"y ,uT1ved <'· rly 0th n W<>re Pat Cox (havmg n n1<'t' nnd V" rkl-<l lht·1r S1lv<'r Cloud Rolls an Ion rh r w11h M•,..arrC) ffelen Cof· the drivc>"'ny (rhr. .1utom<>b1lP. for. fey, ColJettt Jscotn, , t · m v'1)71.>elol1Jlt>d ttl J1164•ph C.."Utu-n ) issue with the mtroduction of bUIJ.ni t.O ac:h.il"ve achool lntergrallon. For years, in eome eras bule9 had been Uled exclusively to tranaport white students to wnite IChoola. 1n tome eouthem IChooJ diltricta, bUlel occa•ionally were Wied t.o ~· petuate segregation by ttansP<>rtint black lt.U· denta as far as M> miles IO \hat they 004.lld att.end all-black school.I. In 1970. ln Charlotte, N~C., and Richmond, Va .. after 16 yean of slow dnegreption followine the U.S. Supreme Court's Brown VI Topeka~ of F.ducation (separate ii not equal) dedJjon, court.- ordered buaing began. Violence, eometime9 directed at the bus paengers and t.M vehiclei themselves, broke out in Boston, ln Pont.lac, Mich., and in other cities around the country. The demonatration1 are u much a pa.rt ol American history as the bwies themetelves, ahd 10 Wh1 te set out to coUect a ''memento'' from that turbulent era. He called three companies ln Boat.on with contracts for achool bul 1ervice in the 70. and found one ficm, Auto Bua, Inc .• that still had IOlne broken windows from the company's 1974 fleet of 56 General Mot.on buses. The rear window on one- bus, damaged ln south Boston by white students protesting the enrollment of blacks at their high school, I.a now part of the Museum of American Hustory collections. In the years since the busing controversy peaked, the demand for buses has i.ncrealed about 19 per cent and the buses themselves have changed dramatically. Federal safety at.and.ardt that went into effect in 1977 required new ~ to meet stricter standards in eight areas: emergency exits, interior protections, floor systems, aeating, crash worthiness, vehicle operating systems, windows and £ uehy1tems. The greatest change, aaya pupil transpor- tation specialist David H. Soule at the National Highway Traf fie Safety Administration, involves the seats. "They are moi:e heavily padded and taller than public bus .eats." Soule says. "and their frames are energy-abeorbing to·they will bend but not collapse on impact." Ridjng to school is safer in these new, bules, Soules adds, but there's still work to be done· t.o make st safer in the '80a. "I'd like t.o 1ee a nationwide 1ehool bus stop law and inore student- rider and driver-training programs." he says. Yet riding~ 1ehool bus ii a lot safer than other kinds of road travel. The fatality rate for achool buses in 1981, for example, was .4 deaths per 100 million miles, compared with 27 .1 for motorcycles, 2.4 for passenger cars and .9 for other buses. There are aome who would say that a school bus is only as good as its driver. Driver error, in fact, has been cited by many states as the major cause of school-bus accident.a, accounting ln recent years for 79 per cent of school busaccidenta in Iowa to ~ per cent ln New Mexico to 55 per cent in Maryland. Extracurricular activity buses often driven by substitute drivers unfanuliar with vehicle, routes and regulations, tend to be mvolved in a disproportionate number t>f the accidents resulting in deaths, thestaUstlcssay. Standards for hmng and training drivers still vary from one state to a nother, but the drsver select.Jon process has come a long way smce the 1950s, when untramed farmers and high school students supplemented their mcorne by dnvmg school buses part stme. Are you YAP? Maybe you're a Yuppie NEW YORK CAP)-You've Just come off the squash court<>. and you've come home to your loft for a quick pasta-and-endive salad before you're off to a Woody Allen retrospectJve. You're a YAP, says C .E Cnmmms an "YAP The Offietal Young Asplnng Prof~1onal's Fast-Track Handbook.·· You're a Yuppie a Young Urban Pro- fes.s1onal -say Manssa Psesman and Marilee Hartley in "The Yuppie Handbook." Both handbooks .. published within 90 days of ont> another. spoof the affluent baby-boomers, their penchant for what they believe to be the fmcr things and their mama for self-improvement and t'Xl'r<:iS(.• Cnmmms' book, pubh~hed m October. came f1r-.t. but Long Shadow Books demed that "The Yuppie Handbook" as a knockoff of the Cnmmins book ~ .. A YAP, says Cnmmsns, uses words like mtl'rfal-e and prioritize and network. He (or she) <.'Olll"(·ts kitchen appliances, but never has Lhe tune to rook, and is much mto beepers Crimmins actually passes along the phone numbers and addresses of gourmet take-out stores and the like, P1esman and Hartley merely offer gu1dl'lanes to the Yuppily inclined "The ncJmt• of the game is THE BEST - bu yang at. owning 1t, usmg st, ea\lng at. watching it. weanng it, growing it, cooking 1t, d.nvtng tl, doing w hatever with 1t," say Piesman and Ms Hartley. Yuppies, say the authors. never will eat or drink anything instant, ~ad a tabloid newspaper. wear any synthet1<.· fabnC' or attend a museum ttxh1b1t unless advant-e tickets are requ1rPd Celebrates li vin g free BOSTON A man who fastened humelf to 57 hehum-f1llt'd baJloons and soared onf> mile mto the l>ky at dawn on N~w Year's Day says ht-\OOk th(• unusual Otght to relebrate hlB grautude for living ma fr~ world. . Kevin Walsh. a 24-year old licensed para- chute nggt•r, said he went aloft at Minuteman Atrf1eld m Stow, M to call attenuon to the posstJve aspeC'ls of livms an 1984 -year d("S(·nbed sn fo~bodlng terms 1n Gcor Orwe-lJ'1 ncwf'I by tht' "Wmt' name "lt w a sta~ment nbe>ut Orw •lJ'a book, M)'lng that lift' IS not ~ dtsma1 as~ sa.1d and we ho~ things don't t that way," Walsh said T\Jftday. "I JUSt wan~ to do meth.lna posiuve tn my hft.tsmf'," h.-. Id "I've btoen planning this for thn ·and a half y an.." . Walsh 1d he' and ruM f~nds 1tayf'd up all nasht New Vt• r's Ev , attachlna nlntt Oen of ftw to. vt•n hehuin f iltt'd wat r balloont t.o the croft lhnt would carry him k~ nt. • _J ~-~-~·-·-----~--~~~--------------..... ,.._ ____ ..... ________ ........................... .. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, January S, 1984 . . . Car crash study ••• Reckless driv ers should read results JOUI HIAITH DEAR ANN LANDERS. l'm 1 hJgh .:hool meruor who very concerned about the way ktds my ~ drive. Some of theise crazy driveos ana my pals nd I wwry about them. The foUowmg story was part of our reading assigtunent in a cnnunal just.Jee class Please pnnt it, Ann It could save aome lives -NEWSDA Y READER lN LONG ISLAND HEAVEN CAN WAIT It takes seven-tenths of a-aecond to kill a person Jt 's that time again ... don 't mi.Ifs it !~~~~ es e -$. Q w 0 ::> Q w a: "' CJ m WOMEN'S ~ FINE QUALITY SHOES A SANDALS ~ SHARPLY REDUCED Not all sizes in every style Howard f 01 • David b ias • A111tfi • Erica VALUES FROM 9200 to 12000 NOW 5695 TO 6995 SELECTED PATTERNS Just a few pair but each a great value! 3495 OR. PETER J STEINCROHN WIOf IS Al 7/10 of a :ond the enlln.-body ol O\e car i. twu.ted grotnquely out of hape. ln one f1~ agonizing convulaion, the front teat rams forward. - pmnin.g the driver against the •teering lhaf t. Blood spurta from hta mouth Shock t\as frozen his h art Fo ll o w d irectio n s on prescripi t ions lll an automobile crash Studies at Yale and Corn U universities proVlded a dramatic split-second chron- ology of what happens when a car rams into a tree ut 55 m.p.h. At l/ 10 of a S<.'<.'Ond, front bumper and grillwork collapse. At 2110 of a second the hood crumbles, ni;es, smashes into the wmdsh1eld and grillwork dtSJnte- grates. At 3/10 of a serond the dnver is sprung upright from his seat, his broken kpees pressed against the dashboard, the steering wheel bends under his grip. At 4/10 of a second the front of his car is destroyed and ..dead still, but the rear end is stJU plunging forward at 55 m.p.h. The half-tbn motor crunches into the tree. At 5/ lOof a second the driver's fear-frozen hands bend the steering column into an ·almost vertical position and he is impaled on the steering wheel shaft. Jagged steel punctures his lungs and arteries. At 6/lO of a second the impact nps the shoes off his feet. The chassa bends in the middle an d the driver's head is slammed into the windshield. The car's rear begins its downward fall as it.a spinrung wheels c.·hum mt.o the ground He i.·now d~ d. Gnaly to contemplate, and all 10 unnecesaary. Tht' dafference belwt"("n Cleath and arriv1ns ot your dt.'lltination aalely it limply a matter of thinking about the conaequences. Rttkleanee1 I.I foolish Drive carefully and live. DEAR LONG ISLAND TEEN-AGER: Thank you tor tbo1e ft1ure1 and facts. Teen-agers aren't tbe only reckle11 ones on the road. I urge everyone who 11t1 In the driver'• aeat to Imagine tbat be or 1be 11 tbe person described In today's column. Another 1tatl1tJc: Fifty percent of all fatal accident a are alcohol or dru1 related. A few beers, two cocktall1 or a couple of Jolnt1 may be enough to pat you In the dan1ea: ione. Ir you want to live, drive only wbeo you are completely aober, observe the speed Umlta and a ll oiher rules of the road. • • • CONFIDENTIAL to How 111 the World Did He Do It? (Weston, Mall.)< You aay be 11 not very bright ud totally unmotivated'? It may be that be made bis modey the old·faabloned way -:... be loberlted h. • • • Discover how to be date bait without faJling hook, liqeand smker. Ann Landers' booklet, "Dating Do's ana Don'ts," w11J help you be more poised and sure of yo~~lf on dates. Send 50 cents along wich a long, stamped. self-addressed envelope with your request to Ann Landers. P 0 . &x 1 I 995 Chicago, I/I 60611 . Her weather indicators 'reliable' For months now, weather forecasters have been saying this' is going t.o be a record-breaking winter for snow . 5,149 inches of it, t.o be exact. On what do they base "these predict10ns? Caterpillars. They have thin brown bands across their middles and are moving fast. Squirrels. They're laying in an extra supply of acorns. Onions. They have thick skins and anyone knows thick -skinned flMA IOMlfCI AT W IT'S END omons can mean only one thing. Snow. early as September t.o avoid any traffic patterns I could have told you long before this that the around doors leading to the outside. Even owners winter was going t.o be a bruiser. Only my premises who stand with the door wide open in the winter and are more scientific who beg, plead and grovel are faced with dogs with Car batteries with a warranty that has run out. better sense than they have. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN; I had a bad 110re throat. My doctor put me on antlbiouas. He wanted me t.o take them for 10 days But my throat felt better within two days llO I qult About a week later I felt worse I went t.o my doctor who said J had developed a severe inf ecuon. ''This time," he said, "Please l<l"E'P on with the medicine until 1 ask you to st.op taking it." He told me that if I had kept on with the medicine in the fi.nll place, it's unlikely I would have had the second lnfection. Is suddenly quittlng as dangerous as all that? Mrs. P . DEAR MRS. P .: There are two extremes. Some patients aruaous t.o get well. will empty the bottle withJn days -instead of patiently .taking the medicine by the teaspoonful. Othen, like yourself. prematurely cut o ff the medication -and suffer for It. Antibiotics need t.o be taken with care. They should be finished as directed by the 'doctor to prevent recurrence of infection. Also carefully follow the directions on when to take them . Some ant1b1o tics ~hould be taken at least one hour before meals or two hours afterward. Otherwise the stomach juices lessen their effects. Many follow the directions about aspirin. Swallowed after eating. there's less likelihood aspirin will irritate the stomach wall. But aspirin can be stopped pre maturely, too. I've known many arthritic patients who worsened after suddenly discontinued aspirin after tpey had taken it for years. Lately, many have been warned about the sudden discontinuance of sleeping pills and sedatives. Sudden cessation has produced convultions and other serious oomplications. When using necessary medi- cation. consider it a friend. Don't be impulsive. Don't break up a happy relationship without having good reason. Take your medicine "as directed." • • • DEAR DR. STElNCR OHN: While a patient in VALUES FROM 5700 to 6800 NOW Nothing heralds the arrival of a fierce winter like a People can control their thennal destiny, if they temperamental battery. The colder it ge ts, the more want t.o. Mild winters can be calculated and planned independent it becomes. On a blustery morning when like everything else. You want sunshine in January, TO you are running late, it will groan and sputter and February and March? Buy a new pa1r of skis. Get a then go dead . It is only a matter of time before it will pair of new boots for each one of the kids. Get your the hospital. I did not wait until the nurse returned. Instead of trying to swal'low a capsule with water, I tried t.o swallow it dry. It stuck in my throat and I aJmost choked. Didn't you have a column a few months ago on how t.o swallow capsules? Mrs. H. DEAR MRS. H.: I did mention that some who have difficulty in swallowing should not swallow while in semi-sitting position in bed. Ideally, according t.o a Britlsh Medical Report. the patient should stand or at least sit bolt upnght and take sufficient fluid. Never try to swallow a capsule dry. 41 95 demand an audience before it performs ... Uke a man furnace cleaned. Stockpile food and supplies. Have from AAA three or four tir?)es a ~k. rock salt in a hand.y container outside your front door .__A_l_S_O_S_E_L_E_C_T_C_A_S_U"'---A=L-S--1 Shortage of firewood. Coun ron record-breakmg And then sit back and watch the sun shme. snows when you see a few branches of twigs at the I read somewh ere where the coldest 995 4195 supermarket being sold for $20 a bundle. temperature ever registered on the planet earth was 2 to Snow shovel. You know you're in for at least 130 at a Soviet Union Antarctic.: station at Vostok. The mches of snow when you discover your wife has temperature was 128 degrees below zero on July 21 of loaned your snow shovel t.o the Binghams who took 1t last year w ith them when they moved to Florida last April. They probably asked for 1t Some husband . Values from 4800 to 7000 • • • FOR MRS. N.: r ve been reading a report tha\ 99 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH Dogs' kidneys. There is a strong correlation probably said. "Look. Anna, I know 200 people are a between snowy winters a nd dogs' resistance to go out lot to invite for a party, but we'll cook out and keep of doors t.o relieve themselves. Some do s start as the mess outside!" says early Babylonians and Egyptians believed that toothaches w ere signs of divine displeasure. And th.at the Chinese considered a toothache the result of over indulgence in sex. Whatever the cause, tooth decay is one of the oldest ailmen ts in man's history. 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LESSONS • Enhance your child's pois• and posture A planned progran of teasona with the internauonall famous Ice Capades· easy tearr ing method g111es you or you chOd wholesome. healthy exe1 c1se 1n comlor1able. 1uperv1se• 1urrqundings New Skaters Welcome REGISTER NOW r,----------------~ • • • $5.000FF • • • 1 le:• l lultl•1 Le .. o.. t I for •1l•••H I • • I P'"'"" oupo" Im dlw 1111n1 I I A 1 t , ,. .. I II •1 I ~----------·····-~ ln••••P911•1tve • ·on Ill eoen· IN) not high In price, ree1on11>11, '1ettltit0 ..., __. ed~r1111ng ,.... Ctaultl1~ Adv•rtlalng 1142-58711 . ~ \ Pianist Borge turns 75 COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) Dantsh-bom p1an1J1t Vic tor Borge, who got hUJ start on the Bing Crosby Radio Show 40 years ago, celebrated his 75th birthday by conducting a gula concert h ere and said he feels "not a day over 74 " In Danl!lh shghlly rusted by 43 years In America, Borge quipped and fumbled through a sentimental two hours Tuesday night conduct- ing the 50-piece Royal Opera Orchestra in the City Hall of Copenhagen the city where he was born Boerge Rosenbaun in 1909 to Frederikke and Bernhard Rose- nbaum. "My father was a vi- olinist m this orch~tra for 35 years. When he got home my mother didn't re<.'Ogniz.e him,'' he ex- plained to an audience containing fa mily, friends, officials and diplomats. H ismotherwasa pian- ist. ln more senous mo- ments, Borge led the orchestra through the great composers and a medley of Danish folk melodies, ending in a shower of tmy flags of national red a nd white as I •, Victor Borge fireworks flarf'd from the wings Though he dcl1ghu. audienct-s with hi!> 1m provisat1onal wit. Borgt· considers himself a mu- sician first and a humor 1st SC<.'ond, but nol <• comedian HL· explaml·d in an interv1ew Tut>S<fay. "To musicians I am an absolute mus1l'ian. To people who want to laugh, I'm a humorist A comedian 1s more or less a person who takes ad- vantage of props, like a clown. You can learn comedy but there is no method by which you become a humorist -ft•s there already. like 'the .-1.Quch' with a piano You cannot learn the touch " Part of the Borg<' touch is reading an au- dience, also across na- tional borders. Tonight's TV -8:00-D ~Hill STREET BLUES fJOUNEWS uomm NEWS 8 CHIPS D QJ) 20 / 20 tlEJGHT IS ENOUGH Cl) MOVIE • THREE'S COMPANY • • 1~ "Gang War" ( 19581 Charles ., HAWAII FIVE-4 Btooson. Kent TaylOr ~I LEHRER ~ ::;&~~ NFl al> UNOERST ANDINO HUMAN I OJ MOVIE BEHAVIOR * * • "Richarcr PryOt Live On The · Cl) C8S NEWS Sunset Stnp' I 19821 Richard Pryor l1Jl ABC NEWS Q 0 MOVIE 3 N8C NEWS * • ' Puule 11979} James Fran- 8) C0UEGE BASKETBALL etscus Wendy Hugl\eS <0.> MOVIE ~ 10-.30-"Btllnwava" (1983) Keir Oun... Q) INDEPEHOEHT NETWORK Suzanne LOYt NEWS -t:30-m MAK ~ews m ALICE ( BaAAAE Gi) HlMAHJTES THROUGH THE -11:00- ARTS fJ 0 D (};@I~ NEWS Cl) NEwS 8 COUEGE BASKETBALL 0 BARNEY MtU.£R 0 AOWAH & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN QIWHmOFFORTUNE '8M•A•S•H 0 MOVIE • Q) TOP -40 VIDEOS * * t "The Sect et Of NIMH' ( 19821 fli) JACKIE GLEASON Animated Voices of Elizabeth Hart· m NIGHT GALLERY man, Dom Deluise 1 HJ MOVIE -7:00-**'la "Endangered Species · ( 19821 I) C8S NEWS Rob«! Urleh. Jobeth Williams D N8C NEWS I SJ MOVIE g HAPPY DAYS AGAIN tt 'Ir 'Love Child" (19821 Amy • G ABC NEWS Q Mad19an. Peau Bridges G ~ASYISLAHD CZJMOVIE (!) ""'"~ "Coup De Torchon" (No Date) at FAME -11:30- Q) JOKER'S WILD I) ()) TRAPPER JOHN. M,0. 6J BUSIHESS REPOAT 0 ~ TONIGHT • Gi) MOTOAWEEI( D [QJ A8C NEWS NIGHTUNE CJ) P.M. MAGAZINE 0 IN SEARCH Of ... 9 ENTERTAINMENT TOHIGHT '8 THICKE Of THE NIGHT 18 LOVE COHNECTIOH 41) STREETS Of SAN FRANCISCO CS) FAERIE TALE THEATRE fLH AMILY PORTRAIT 4" 730 m 700ClU8 ~ fJ 2 OH THE T~-C) MOVIE I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday. January 6, 198• 'Blue Thunder' com ic book-level TV Hy TOM JORY ••-t.ltd ,, .... , .... Hraiddo(.'k, tn whit h ht• promisn -ut k•ust lWlC\• an 1 tw prt>nllf'r~ t plaodt" -to o~y th~ rul "unl w don't 'f• eyt• to l'Yl' on &am thing " Or word.J to that Nl':W YOHK P V.C , ltw burn, uwu\ todPStruy ,.m .... ·t Chum•y, .mt1 the vu llm-to·bt• .L"k!l 1111 bos.8, C.1pt Yuu'w supposed tu find Clinton WonderJove 81 ~uld;1(.'k , for pt•11n1 •ll>rl lo i·ha'>t· the• 1m.1t.l<lt•ru.-d. {l).uui c~rvey), wht1 works the comput.E>r on Blu n1rb011w d1 UK :.muJUth·r 1r1 t11s ln<'rt·d1blc Armor t '<J Thundt•r, t£n ::IJlluatng and endearing eccentrk. He's Ht•hl·optt•r hrt'IOmt' "Look. Mr M~w11ck," Braddock say}!, "you're tn th<· opt.·nrng 1ruitallmc>nt, "Sc~-ond Thunder~" nf'VN ~u1ng to gt-t my pt:nn1~1on to go out and play PVC: (Richard Lync·h), once a police tnforrnant, Ls St U<'Orge and the Dragon That's fourth-grade willing to k1U as many cops as nece&sary to get back at 1rn·111.<.1l1ty .• md I'm not 1itomg to IN 1t happen" Chonf'y Why he's ungry at the copter pilot is never Bn.1dduc-k ha1> tht• guy peggl'd, and the show, n•11lly r lt:ar "Slue> Thuudl·r." 1;turting Friday night on ABC, 18 Though J' V C ultunately shoots down a couplt that w.1y, 1..uo strwtly grat.le-school stuff uf µol1ce helwoptf'rs, Braddock for some equally JOllf iltlng the kind of v rbaJ ~xch na d ly curnmun '° "Blu Thunder.ti "Hci!'t aomg to make• fool of you." 0 No, he•1 not," say• Bl'addock. Ch.mt•y. in th nd .,. w~U. you can th rat. Br-.ddock, whc>'1 got '° be a Ill~ 1wi.s~ htmltlf, dc>t1"n't m unhappy with th outcome. Th~ru'• no ll-aon, no mt e here, unJ h't llle •impl • nundt.id notJon th.at v101enceo must be met whh V10)<'nc,,., that no amount of thought or ttason can roun~r n threat to ICX'll.'ty. And that's 1. ther disturbing SCAAM<t • YENTI.. ' .,, , ..... . ..r ............................. . It ... ound'i hkP "The· A Tt'am," NOC's succ~ful 11~·un• reason doesn't want Chaney to light back. <•dv1•11tu1 t.• st·rn-:., aud rt aims to lw, Lut falls flat "Tht.• I lt.>'ll go af~r the airborne madman, he ~ys. from the LUXURY THEATRES A Tl'am" i.il least has thl stylt-to be able t.o laugh at ground S2. ...... Ar .... IMPACf ,~.,~ .... N"W it'K•lf. "it's an t:x~rcise 10 futility Cap'n," Chaney says, ht 2 Matintt Show1np Only 75 Unlta Not- ln " Blut· Thu11dl•r," tht· d1alogut· 1s c:um1t-hook .. -S .ST1l l•fei11I*6l..t.M ~SJ(~~ ) S thf• slot yl11w rt'V( ngt• anu retra ullon, t e a<. lion ~ --·-·--···-_ ,J b h ~ * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES *D-.. , 1u 14. 9 u _..._ -t v10lc·nt l!J :U'.+i•H!•l4 ]11;,)~ J... FOR FUOI EXCITEmEOTI V1S1tOur... J.-ln ltu· '>(1t.·ning sc.·c·rn·. bdo11• thl' crc'<.11u., a polin· * Bargain Matinees! ••••:rmn • • ~. * K H c:huµpcr I:> shut from ttu.• Jlr by lhl· rnJl~vulent p v c ti40MOAY TINw IATUAOAY fACUlTYot (ANOlfWOQO Al tt.•r <1 b1 ll'i <:urnmt:I u.il break, the instrument of All rtrferm•Mn hfwf'S Ol rM "SCMflct" <•> rt•t.1' 1t11>n i<.o mtrodu<.·t'<.I ''llc·n· she tomes. the most lh s,. E...-111.th & Hehl "';:tci:. ~ .iwt· ... 011 •• lwlwopt.t·r ever built' Blue Thundt.•r" l(1 .. f.M.:::t·1.•~·l6 J ,,z• ... itM"l '1 100 01 W1tl1111 r11011H nt.s. dn old school bu!>. d lint> of Junk ~ _ _ ) f k l. I J • h ~--I ... I .. ,._ Of .................. (PS) ntrs and '4'V4 r;il .J •• uUI l rngs avt· ~n ( L'Slroyt"'U LA ll!!l!ADA AT l!QSlC8A!IS ......... ..___,., d ( 1. 11Q J!l', ~"an IH~ 1l1•rt11111str.1t1cm, only ford t'hPl·rmg crow o u1g "TWO Of A Kif()" (PG) <;}il)h a11cJ Ur(I~'; h<.tlS I I 11• , 1 ~ 1 l Who m'<·d:-. th1s'1 "YEJIHl" (P'G) •.ricw tllf.AGlWNl Ill ' I~ I !)(I 10111 J<.1m(•s far<•nuno plays Frank Chanc-y. and S~tndy Ml·PNik 1s Rraddcx:k tn the adventun• S(.>rlt...., ba.-.c•d on the· motmn picture.• of thl.' same naml'. Former proft•<;s1onal footballer<\ D1l·k Butkus and Bubba Smith take• thc•cr Lite beer act (you know, the two tux-dad brutc•s who hoix· the ballet 1s m English tomorrow night) to "Blue Thunder." and that's a happy turn of Pvent.<:., thougn one certain to wc•ar thin before long How many timc-s l'an you watch -will you wat<:h ·L yman "Bubh;1" KelS(!y complain about R1ch;ffd "Ski" Butkowsk1's d1spus1t1on? "You got a mean streak a rnth..' wide," Bubba tC'lls his <:11mcCightcr~<.'Ompamon "Look.'' says ~kt, "that's <1 l><id rap laid on me m fc.xJtball I'm the mt't'St guy you'd want t-0 mN .. t " That routine is playt-'d, m var1at10n ~.'Vt.•ral time·:. tn the course of the hour-long sho\o\ C:hanl'v's shtick 1s a running fUl•d with OMOVIE • * • •vll And Hyde TOljether Again f 19821 Mar~ Blankf1etd. Bess Armstrong -12:00- 0GOHGSHOW 1. fJ INDEPENDENT NETWORK MEWS -12:30- Uc~ LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN U 'l.A. TOOAY OMOVIE t * •, Along Came A Sprder_(l970) Suzanne Pleshelte. Ed Netson rf) ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN Q) lOVE, AMERICAN STYLE ffO) EHTERT AJNMENT TONIGHT -12:-40-tJ 16 1 MOVIE • • Topper I 1979) Kate Jac~son. Jack Warden ~MOVIE t * • The lh111y-N1ne Steps t 11178) Robert Powell. David Warner S MOVIE * * Porky s ( 198 t) Dan Monahan, Mm Herner -1:00- 0 GREAT REC~O ALBUM COLLECTION O MOVIE t • • 'FranctS OI As"91 { 19611 Bradford Dillman. Oolofes Hart (l-1 MOVIE * * * H~hng ( 1975J L~ Remtck. Monte Markham iJ..~ ~dw.arch I Wrou,.,TAIN ¥Al.UY J • " TO BC O« NOl TO 8(" (PG) I \~, fl ' • 1. "TERMS Of° ENQWllJO" (,G) 17!0 l~.H0870 10~ "Ill MlN ifHO tovco WOMEN" (RJ JO II j lit: KEEP" (RJ " "YENTL" (PG) "'I U •MA."' • 1•• . . . "UNCOMMON VALOR " (R) I& "HI KEEP" (R) ' • I!~ H U 64~ I fJIJ 11 ~ "UftC~ VAl.O«" (R) 1')0 ·~·-~· •• "Ill MAN WK> LOYCD WOMllf ' (R) ·~ * PACIF IC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES * All OPEN 6 00 Start 6 45 -~ttl!Wl31 :lo) * fwy91otUMONSl * "It( MAN WHO LOV[D W()M(N" (R) "'~ 'HASK>~CC" (R) "CHRIS llll <RJ • Ill KCCP <RJ "lt:VUI SAY lt:VU AGAIH' (PG) t lWllGHI ZOff. Ill MOVI' (PC) CllllS lift (R) DC CAB (R) ""' v & SA.JNOAV f•o_,. 1•M ~ '°'' tftfO t11& 6.)t •1~t -·•Sll>O(H WACl" R} '"' "SHMK't'S MACltftl" (R) . 'UNCOftM>ff VAl<JA" (Rl l'llf.I Tll DUD ZOff.. (R) _ M :1i• ,~:~JJ \.w 0~1-...,y(np.,,,°"°~f,,-,_,, "Ill MAN MiO LOV£D WMN" <RI .,~ "D£Al Of T~ C£HTIJIY" (PC) Ci:: A4/t0<int>mos ESPANOC. *) =~· .,: . 12,45 > 10 S:>O •·ooe. 10:15 BARBRA A lllm Wllll nalOI( STREISAND 11.so z .01 YENTL 4:40 7 120 m 10100 At J ·ZO 7dl Tiie KH1> CR) 1 lO 1 .21 (!j lo t :20 12:00 2:JO 5:00 7 40 10:00 ~~ Al 1100 '7hr 9J{a11 )/fHr m VJ. S l :OO S:OO r ft!pffl''WllOI 7:00t:OO /I.'. /YPc· . • BJ 1 :20 J :lO 5:40 7:10 10100 i3irat1j•216J<l 255J /""~) .. ~~.~.~i ~.~~ .. 11 trj d'U· I f.1¥~1§ 6 t6J9 8770/~) SUP£1CIHI·" Sot.>l'IO Ol1e<I To'°"' Cat l odt00f •WIQkltWry~ ~ Bl Al PACINO EM,~,!:r A~~ ~!!~~E Jv{)f /,( lo Alt lht IUtlU Mon& (R.) ...... "'•¥1.'t ~01.0I I I ... '. . '":Jc.I""" !If llDC1 \1161 "' .. * SO. COAST PLAZA • I ' St&tllQ •• ~ .. ~ '" .. C()tlll ~--· II • .......... , • 11'0 (1 A aR> •PC ""'' l•• #111 I'!; . ~ ll(llolll- • Of(1) jtp(Mll • GORKY PARK • • SANTA ANA • -.,., .. ... t.! ...... ~0 'tU BllSlOl ·~. ... "'""" ~ 7444 BRISIOl • .. , .,.., ~07U4 flt ~ll7 • , I C1t11S Ill i•t ,. * El TORO * SADOI £BACK DC UI •I I ... b ' CMIS llf 111 m ~HO • I SADOl£BAC~ u. ~· ... ·~ ... ' IJIHY\ '"I I . ·-• .. ~II ~AAO SADOLCBACli ~ lO'llD -cJlll~ 111 q -· . ,, •·. flf .ii' ,, 'Al ~sac SADOICBACM ~ ... • . Ill() Of I lllCI 1,.;1 . .. • ~II ~HO SAD0l£8AC, 1 •• D Qt FAMIL y FEUD * • · 81ht1$ I 1977) Path d Ar ban· f ?l?u m ,. 1 9 LA VERNE l SHIRLEY & ville, Mona Kiri en sen ,, .:!!_ ~ f L fl : _ COMPANY 0 MOVIE W!'AllC• 11.1 OI "'"' ......... MM. l(RMS Of £HO£ARM£HI <PGJ AN OHIClR ANO A GCNIUMAN SOOO(N IWACI (R) SHARllY S MAC!tf«" !Ill .,.., .. C.."J-fl!.~Ot I•• It•• -...,,ll ~GllNZA'' r:;. .... , 'I SAOOll BAC" fl EYE OH LA. • t "'Society AnaJrs I 19811 Harry 11 •• ~~I ~m G>@) PEOPLE'S COURT Reams. VlWonica Hart =~~~~~:::'.::::::~§~~§:::~~~:§:~====== &;) Wll.Dl.ff SAFARI BAL A PCROl>A" --- Ci) ntE UF'E l ADVENTURES OF NICHOt..AS NICKl£8Y ()) TIC TAC DOUGH (HJ HBO COMING ATTRACTIONS lOl INSIDE OH (ZJMOVIE • •'h "White Dog" (1982) Kristy McNlchol, Paul Winfield -8:00- fJ ((J MAGNUM. P.I. Q ~GIMME A BREAK U MOVIE • • * 1~ "e.d Day Al Black Roell' ( 1955) Spencer Tracy, Rob«! Ryan D ®) AllTOMAN Q 101 COLLEGE BASKETBALL (!)SOAP CD ENTERT AINMEHT TOHIGHT 8)MOVIE • • t "79 Perk AYlllUe" (l'art 2X 11177) Lesley Ann Warren. Polly =~ Uf'E & ADV'EHTUAES Of NICffOCM NICl<l£8Y 8) Ota< VAH DYKE ftJMOVIE t t * "L11'1 Spend Thi NiQhl Togelhlr ' ( 1982) Oocumtntwy fhe =r-• • "Partner•" ( 11182) Ryan O'Neil, John Hur1 (6) STRAWBERRY ICE 0 MOVIE f :t<-! \ .·~ MAY OUR STARS LIGHT UP YOUR DAYS ,/JOHN IRAVOlfA OtlVIA NCW lo'N JOHN 'Sll.K\\00)) I~ JW'Mrful \/ ~ 111/tA 111\1 \II K\\ OOD " 11<11 to ht· 1111"t·d . I\ 11 I• I/Ill ~11K\\001> 1s 'o dam ~ood 1 (he.tr nom11u111111' fort'\ ('I"\ hod\ 1 1,Uf#J "U.41\/\ 111/~lf I "Sma1hlngty Funny. ltOoks and .. ncrof't arc terrific." ............. , ,......,.. "119 &aughll Tak« the kids!" # ~,.., I Arw • * COSTA r.t:SA • . ' ft Ill Tl I • \rllflCI 111 I !ti •• 10 II Ol llOI TO II PC c~rw • •• DC UI I I .,.,.. "'I .,. •wmr • *LAGUNA HILLS • LAG HILLS MALL DMI '1C)IT c,.;1 0 ••• \el ""'. .., ,, 161 6611 I • 'Utt'" llUU I'll .. LAG HILLS MALL q, •• , \ • f '•·.,,. Iii 6611 I ' LAG HILLS MAU 114 tl\Cl01 ' I•• 11101 ! \( ;::J-:\ • t~ • 11>16'11 • * LAGUNA BEACH • SOUIH COASI ~ lUIH I OA~l ft .... .. ,_,., . * FOUNTAIM VAUEY • H N vat t IY ·-· , .... ~ ll'I I~ rlN VAt l£l .. _ .... ..... ~ mi~ !'o rw'!) UJllOI .... , • ·~ ... ' .. 'I"'"" " " • WESTMINSTER • CIHtMA Wf SI ** "A Little S.1" (1981) Tlm / ~•lhe3on. EdWard. H«rmann ' -8:30- ~111\~()()I) \\111 h<· a formufahll' ltlll 1t·11th-r 111 tht' \l.tdt•f11\ \\.\;.ml' raq· \Ii /A' 111111 '• l/l/tl\11 II m _..,, .. .. ···~ . ...... . · IB FAMILY TIES COUEOE BA8KETBALl I P.M. MAGAZIHE DO(VAHDYKE -t.00-• INON&SIMON D CHaRS l l~FIOTA • lfME)QC() "~ t * * "Wahington Alftlr" (Ho O.tt) Tom 9'11eti, lllrry Ul¥trl. ~ 1914' ( 18821 Perry King, Timothy Vt11 Patltn -e:ao-=r=.l U t "Thi ltcono Tllnt AtN\d" l:'l OIClblt ~ Atwtt Onf, )MICIQINCI -~-• (J) l<HOll tNQNQ \ I MIU UA Mo111e414 COSTAMHA I , ..... I' t ( I."' I I .... ,. Edward• Town C•11tM1 IL TORO EOward1 S"ddl•llltc• IAVINR to nJ• WOOClhrle!SOf' ORAN Of AM( 0 rt!1Qe Mell UA CHy CenlcH • SVUFY Sl•diom 0 I PG 6 If 0340 8311 3911 6 \Q.,,_flj) WHTMINITIR ~ UA Wettrn1n1te1 .... ,, 893·0s.i6 ~----... I SI I ~I~\ \r( )( )I> f \ .. ~!~., R BAU JA Mov•t!!I 4 COSTA MU A ''' 11 IV Ec!w11<1 SQ C,011st Plaz.i LA HAIAA , o -to:>. All.ill. ~a11t1rn gqu:i•n MJtllON VlfJO 17 11~~ 1 Qh..')J ( dw 11 ll'l \l"f'IO I w• OR ANOE u• ru r l ""t"' AM~ 01 ange M<ttl WCI TMIHllflll UA VY •rtn11111•• Twin • 1110 &9WO ' .. :.\~11 637-0:t~O ' 14 "\\lU . I t Clrt'MA M SI CIHrMa W{Sl .. PG 8A!A UA MO¥•f! 4 !190 •on COITA M IA [dwlrdt HtrbOt T"""' &31 l~I ,. UA $00111 Cont ~•O OS9• l"VINI f CIWllldt W oodl>r1<1Qfl .,51·06~5 MllllON VJIJO Edw11rd11 M V••1n M 1tll •95 8220 O"ANOl UA U1ty Cf'nt•r 6)11 3911 AMC Or1n1• Mall 637 03110 W ITMIN Tl" l)A WHlm•n•lt>t Twin a~J.1.10S ... ) .. Bl OI ng COi.i I DAILY P.'llOT/Thur~tlay, .hmuury 5, 1984l f. \Hl'lt.l .D OKAY. WHO L005£NEQ THE TOP ON MY SALTSHAKER ?/ lt \ H lt \ D l k J: T HE •. \'911.'\' ('IRl'l S by 8 11 Kea ne · A couple of girls want a word with you. I thtnk they've discovered your fickleness ... 'tlOO' l1 l 1.1.1 'S P,ACKA<1E DEA L ... PJ: \ 'l I'~ I "~ .\ ... '"'L' :'RL)~;::: ~ '\ ( ~1.\ "\\,\ \ i.:1,.ir\ -Ht L~\ .\._ t ~"'Tl .... CLUB I WERE 'ME-c C, - HE~E -J,\\l'Rii:\.1.1. Nl6~T i. c.oui r~v1 Cl)T Ht 1-: 600() WI r~ /\ SHN..l' a>. \I !:'\A( to-! t'iOl 1}.4A1 WCULrYl/l reL>J t?OINC, ~E:m1JJv, CJ(jH1 ~· Hlf, (,J:OH(iJ . . .( by (>u<, Ar r 1ola '()LI 1..1\lt 11 (lJ I.A 111. ..... Wl...,1-:: "#..'/ IJOW !:>I \t 11 t 11"' AIJl l lL))\J ' • by V•rq ' Parten 1 V1 P 1 "By golly, It IS lemon ice!" Hank Ketcham r -.. - L • "DAD SAID THE SNOW 15 KNEE DfEP BUT I fHINK IT'S DEEPER fHAN THAT " -. by Cnar es M Schu1 L I OC'-' T Si.;;;>;'J:;.E "' .. J ~ C..\'<E TC. BE 01. i\ GUEST SPEAt--ER byTomK Ryan - 111 .1h # . ·~' NOll'l'll • K J 111 !1 tl 1 r, I\ t\ :i • i\ ,. !I \H'.'I •:t\\d + i\ l + I l\Klffit:t IU Vu1d qJ IO!IH7 1i~ + 10 H t i! + JI\ :1 '°'°' 111 + ,. H 7 ft ~I :I H i! +Kit ., h• liul1l1n1• ...... 1 'evlh ""'"' ,IJ,,h 3 ....... ... , .. .I' I ........ ... ,~ Ubl" ...... , , .... , I + ....... ''•" 11 ..... I lp1·111111: I• .1d t\wi: ••I \111•1111• I h• lrittdt I 'I u 1• 1 • ~110•· GOIEN ON BllDGE • BY CHARLE S H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF ,,.,, 111 '1i.:11.rl11u:. 11111· ol 1 lw lllt"I flHplll.lt I' 11'\l I"' 'If.: 11.il, I h1· pl.1 ~ 111 .1 111..:h 1·,ml 111 ,1 "Ill 111•1111! 1•' ,1 l.u•k 111 Ill I 1·rt·,I. wh1l1 .1 low 1·,ircl "1•11 rnur.1~111.: '1111' I lll'11f\ 1, I h.11 VHll f',11111111 ,iJ 14 .t.\' .tllm ti 11 hti:h 1·,1ril 111 lh•· '"'' \1111 14.1111 l1•d ur 1·11111111111'11. hut \1111 1.111 11,11,1tlv ....... p.111• 11 Ill ,1 ..... ,1 Ill ... 1111 h \l•ll h.111· 1111111 It 11'•1 lltt141•11 r I h1' .1i.:n ·1·1111·1ll ., 11111 111·1 t'"·'"" .111 11111111 \t•tl hli·"lllV. ,,, I h1' h.111tl lr11111 lh1 II 11111:.11 I Ill 11.110 I'll ""1111l1•r :n lh1• l!l>d L11111p1·,t11 I h.11111t111n,h1p i.:r.1ph11 ilh tf1•m•1n't r 111·' I h1· .1111·111111 '"""II I• lflllll 1111' ftHllll "h1•n • I .r 1 .11 llnl 1111 lwl•l 1 h1• '"' 1 Ii ..... 111 h I .If"" ....... 111' ch·• l'iull lu 111,fl I h• tl11,1l1l1 I' "I" II '" 'I"' -111111 ''"'' I I I h,11 1111 111111 r,11 I "ill Ill.Ii.I 111111·" 1·: .... 1 h·.111, .1 h1 .. irl i\.:.1111,1 l1111r 'l'·"fl•, w,.,, 11·11 1111' k.111.: 111 111'.11 h. 'l'h1· II 1111.:.m.111' w1•r1· "'"'.: 11111 1.1,11111111•11 '•.:11.11111~: 1111'1 h111k "t "h1·n 1·:.1,1 11l,1yl'il 1 lw h·n. W 1''' 1·11111 in111·1I w11 h ;ll't' 111 111'.trl' arul .111111 lll'r for Kt'I lo 1'1111 I•:,,,, .:av1• h1' p.1rl111•1 .1 111.1111111111 r11H .11111 W1·'1 ,1111 h.111 I 11 ,1•1111· I h1• .11'1' 111 11 lllllf" l11r 1111" 11 I" 11 I 11 I ht• Ill h1•r rlHllll t h1• ll1111.:.1ri.111' .11,11 r1·.11·h1-cl lt111r ,p,ulo•,, .11111 lll'rt', l1H1, I h1· up1·11111i.: li•,111 ".1 .. I h•• klll): ul h1 .1r" 11111 1 h·· llr111 ... h E.1,1 \\ 1 'I p.111 "ho "1·n· 11,111.: n '• r'•' "ll:t1.1I" "''Ill •'" n "ht II I ,,, htll11" 1•11 " I h I h1· 11·11 11111 1l1·1·l.1n·r 1.11,,., .1rcl1 •1I "II h I 111 J.11 I. '11" \\ t 'I , ,.,,.i 111 .. I'·• r1111 r '"' 111 x .! 111 h1 .111 ... 111 "h11 ht''" I ht• It'll H , , .f1,1·111tr.u.:uu• •'ttrtt l..1,f "1111111 It.I\ 1• 111.1I1·11 I ht I'' 11 to 1·111·1111r.1i.:1· \ lll•r '""II' I h1t11.:h1. \\ nl 11!·1·1111•11 I h.11 ht' p.ttl 111 r pr11li.1 hl,1 h1·l1I I 1411 'f1•11l1•,, 1 l1r1·1• l11'.1r1'·1'1.:ht 111.1111111111, .11111 .1 111111 111 1•l11h, =-'•• ,11 l rll'I. 1"11 Ill' ,111111·1111• .1 111" 1•l11h I l1·1·l.1r'n "1111 .11111 li·d .1 I r11111 p .• 111tl 11·11 I rt1 k,, ,,11l1•d h111111• • Huf' >ow bc•t'n rwnn•na 1n tu do11blt' lro11bl4'? l. .. t ( 'harlt'i< ttorc•n h .. lp you find your wu throu1th th .. m11t' ~r um nu:~ (or .,.-nalhr .. 1mf fortakt'nl. f.:Of' 1 ~PY of hi .. nm RU:~ boolilt'l. Hnd S l.IC5 to -tiorn Uoubl .. 111." rarr of lhi .. nrw11pa.,.-r. 41.0 Ho• i!!>~. 'orwood. ,,J. 07tHIC Malit' rht•rki. paubl .. tu '"'hpap«rboolitt ~'r Jeff Ma cNe llv ~ l(OJ IN ~ VEAA l'tl. WOQlCJ~C"l i'ME. MtDD\.t. ~ ON A. ~ORT 5T~'f' .. ~E'°™\NG? ~""\or-". f ~ DH \HHI.•: WENO'( rL£EiwOOO I~ ~£.Rf. iO j ~E.E 'iOO 1. ~ J'OR BJ:TT•:R OR ··oft"() Rs•: • ~- JI Ufi t . P \HKt:H { ( \ I. by Kevin Fagan '(f..'> M~. p~51oe.~n °"· ~1, IJE.NO~ ~ <,05~;f~~ ~"°NE.'!> 6£EN ~1NcitN& Off 'f~~K 1• 11 S r\1..WA"i!> A fi...EN>lJ~ fo ~E~~. r~M '(Ou, ~\R ~ ViMl. lo i'~f­c.~1E.f I ~A 1-l~I . ~~\ _,___-~ SORRY, 'J,'M ONt..-Y A t...eG MAN.' - @@ by Lynn Johnston r ·~ by Tom Bat1uk /.1JHE~E (,() r-0'.)r WOOr'IE.S LIVE l!.. by GeorgP. Lemont f/ON ',.-,.-et...t... M6 IH6 AGf;; OF SPE::CIAL.IZ.Al lON ... HASN"I GoNe 100 FAR .' J 1·· '· ("-.. 'I I ,, J f(/(x.·, . ~ . -' by Wtl~y , ' I• ., ~>Y Harold Le 0Qu1 1111-1111•111rI 1, , - I II~ ' .-ollll ,-~ II ~ 1 HI 1"1 • 11 u•, I', ' ~- ~I I Are ~ we re&lly. helping compulsive gamblers? By SYl VIA PORTER Compulaive gttmbllng threatAms the emotlonal and Clna.nci l well-being of an Increasing number of Americans. An ~tlma~ 12 million suffer the disorder. of gambling addiction, and the ripple effects wash over every- one in their wake By the time compulsive gam- blers seek help, they've passed the point of despair, are deeply in debt and may possibly have re&e>rted to criminal activity and associations. ' Family Lives and careers are in tatters. Many tum to fraud, embeulement, tax evasion; debts force them into the clutches of loensharkl; aome wo~ become prostitutes to pay off gambling debts. As many as 20 percent are estima~ as attempting suicide. One expert on gambling observes that all compulsive gamblers steal in one: way or another from their f amities. We fail to do much to treat compulsive gamblers. Most of the various gambling industries don't acknowledge either the problem or a responsibility to do something about it. Unlike the alcoholic beverage industry, few gambling concerns place any public service ads warning of the dangers of addiction or sponsor research into the addiction and its treatment. And compulsive gambling is an addiction. In its "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Ill," in 1980, the American Psychiatric Association included pathological gambling for the first time. The description starts by noting that the individual is ''chronically and progressively unable to resist impulses to gamble." Considering the hundreds o{ millions of dollars that flood into state treasuries from gambling revenues, it's shocking that so very little goes to research and treatment of gambling's casualties. In New Jersey, which must rank as the nation's gambling capital with casinos, horse racing and a state lottery, only $200,000 has been appropriated to help treat compulsive gamblers. Yet gambling New motel in Costa Mesa A 5 i-room Travel Lodge motel is under construction on Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa. The motel, owned b y Mike Lin of Hacie nda He ig hts, is expected to be complete d in late April or early May. Newport Beach architect Jack W. Hester revenues amount to 7 peroont of the state budget. Casinos pay 8 percent of their groa revenues to the state; from May 1978, when casino gambling began, through October 1983, this amounted to $436.4 million. In October 1983 alone, casinos paid in $12.6 million on revenues of $159.1 milllon. In Connecticut, the gambling industry pays up to $300,000 annually to help· fund treatment and research; some of the money comes from a tax on each lottery and betting machine. Maryland appropriates $100,000 from general revenues for treatment, and New York spends $200,000 of state funds to operate treatment centers in Staten Island and Rochester. Back in New Jersey, the state wlll spend $200,000 next year, and the state lottery will give $75,000 to Rutgers Medical School for a study on compulsive gambling. While these are all important efforts, the sums are scattely impressive. New Jersey State Assemblyman Chuck Hard- wick has introduced a bill in the state legislature that would tax each betting machine $25 a year for funds to go for treatment and research. "We can't depend on the industry to put up any money," Hardwick says. "It's up to the legislature to do it." Nevertheless. the legislature doesn't want to. The bill is stalled in committee. So most compulsive gamblers must tum to other sources for help. The key program is Gamblers AnonymoUS', which was started on Friday, Sept. 13, 1957. There are now chapters in 40 states and Puerto Rico. At last count, about 10,000 men and women belonged to G .A. de ig ned the motel in the Mediter- ranean style be ing emphasized in the city's nearby re development area. General contractor for the project is K. W. Hosfie l Construction of New- port Beach . Here's some help in deciding if now is the time to buy a house . NEW YORK (AP) -The same old question, the very same dilemma that harassed them last year, faces many thousands of families agail'Ythis year: To buy or not to buy a house. For those caught up in the battle a few hints might help: -There is probably no ideal time to buy. If interest rates are down a bit you'll probably find prices up a bit. And if prices are down, the probable cause is that higher interest rates have cut into sales. -Most housing industry forecasts seem to call for ~lightly lower interest rates early this year, tending higher by autumn. Prices, which have remamed fairly stable for three years, also are expected to rise. In the first three years of the 1980s the median price of a single-family resale home rose about 12 percent. This year, says Jack Carlson, executive vice president of the National Association of Realtors, prices of resale homes are likely to Mse 6.2 percent above 1983's median price of about $70,400. -Lenders are pushing adjustable rate mort- gages for all they're worth. which is debatable. Adjustables are offered now at about 11 .5 percent to 12 percent, compared with 13 percent to 13.5 percent for fixed-rate mortgages. Which should you seek? In some instances you'll have no choice but to take an adjustable. But when you have a choice, you should keep in mind the great fear of the various housing groups -that a continuation of budget deficits ls almost certain to force interest rates higher within a year or so. Consider this: The National Association of Home Builders estimates that every 1 pert'ent increase In Interest rates eliminates 2 milUon Americans as potential buyers. If you already own. therefore, It could cause probl ms. To continue renting might buy time but probably not much more. Builders' costs are the asaoclated land. To buy a small r hou -the M('(han n w home last year was about 1,500 aquare feet -might stall mean owning a hou.e larger than those buJlt 20 years ago, when famJliet wett larg r -Several other CX9l-CUtlln& opJ,ions exbt. If you supply the lot. the lound.atlon. th plumbing connecliona and th land.leaping, you may be able to h.eve 1 l,200-equare-foot factory-built hom~ delivered and conne!Ct.td for Uttle $30,000. U you are willing to buy a hOU8e before completion you aln UY many thousands of dollars. lh amount uved be ins ~pc-nd nt on th@ amount of work lefl tO berompt ted by you. U you are wutlng to t.ackle the entire bulldln& job ye>Ul'lelf -and mo pcopl have been doing tt achy ar -you can cut your coeu tO a fraction ~ Owner Bwld r C:Cntcr In &rkel y, CA11f. ~Umal you can aft 20 J)(!l"l"cftt to as mu h as 60 ~rccnt, continuing to rise, and so must rents. Moreover, limi~ partnerships have bid up prices of existing apartments. To justify purchase prices. new owners must increase their rent rolls. -To buy a smaller home is not necessarily to buy an inferior home. Builders have taken a tip from carmakers: They are shrinking siz.e but raising quality and efficiency, thus keeping both initial price and operating costs low. A task force assembled by the U.S. League of Savings Institutions, whose members are active home lenders, found that prices rise about $5,000 for every 100 square feet of space added to a home and depending upon how much work you do with your own hands. Most people who take this route become their own general contractors, with the various work stages subcontrac~ to the proper trades and crafts Less common is the practice of doing all labor yourself, including seeding the lawn. Reagan appointee to address accountants Harvey A. Goldstein will be guest speaker at a meetipg Wednesday of the Orange County Chapter of the National Association of Accountants. The event begins at 6:30 p.m. at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. Goldstein is the managing partner of the accounting finn of Singer, Lewak, Greenbaum and Goldstein. He has been appointed by President fteaaan to serve on the National Productivity Advisory Committee. The topic of his local addttss will be "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Tax Collector." To make reservations or obtain more infor. matJon. call Ted Windham, 863-1901. Saveriano oii high tech board • Jerry W. Saveriano, of Saveriano & Aaaoctalel of Huntingt.fn Beach. has been appointed to a 10- penon ldvtllbry committee repraenting major W t Coast high ...nnotogy firms. Th commit~. will plan a ROBC1I'S· WF.ST Conference tn Anaheim n xt Nov m~r, a«ordlng to of ficiall with Robotics IntcmaUonaJ of the Sode\y of Manufacturlng Enginet"n. Robotics International II aid tO be the world's larg robot.let t.eehn1cal lad ty with more than 10,000 membeft and ~ chap rs. including l.~ manbera ln tht' We.1. The ty publl&h Roboli Today r?Ulgannr and 1poruor1 about ~ con!~ woruhops. minan and shon roUJ"'ICS nnwlly. -' I .. Orang William Reimer to manage . California Federal office /.. WUllam Reimer has been named managtrr of --- California ederaJ Savtn11 ud Lou Atsocla- tlon'• Soutb Cout Plar.t office. Reimer joined California Fedttal ln 1975 and later eNVed u assistant manager 1n Anah~un and ma™'&er of th association's Orange and San Clf!menle branch ~ • • • • . James E . Collla 1, president of Colllnt F aller Corp. of Irvine, has been inlt.alled u presid nt of the Society of lndustrtaJ Realtors, Southern California chapter, during the group'• annual meeting last month. Collins Fuller is an industrial • and commercial r~al estate finn with offices lo ,., .. ,. COU.IHI KAAUS Irvine and Riverside. Herbert handled the le-ase negot1ationa foe Canon. • • • All four brokers are UIOdated with the Newport William H. Kraus has been selected as the Beach office of Crubb & Ellil. new executive director o{ the Apartment A11ocla-• • • tlon of Oran1e County, announced Robert~. Dlai, Merit Property Man.a1emut, i.e. of MiaWon president oC the 3,000-member organization which Vie)> has been selected tO direct the homeownert' provides educational and advisory services to asaodation at EPAC Development'• Le Pare rental property owners Kraus, a Norwalk condominium and ftownhome community in El resident, was the c~ty administrator of thatctty for Toro, according to EPAC President Rick 1 O years. Doremas. • • • Canon U.S.A., Inc., the camera and copier manufacturer, has leased 47,580 square feet of office space on Main Street in Irvine from Pacmc Mutual Life Ins urance Co., according to Ronald P . Tom1lc, senior vice president and district man- ager, Grubb . & Ellis Commercial Brokerage Group. Canon's lease <.'Overs a 10-year period with the total transaction amounting to $2.8 million. Pacific Mutual was represen~ by Scott Bumbam and Bob McDonald. Brad Schroth and Greg • • • Pa«y Martin bas joined Bristol-Newport, Inc. as senior loan underwriter. She wu previoU9- ly with Newport-Balboa Savlq1 ~d Loaa. Bristol-Newport isa iru.tdeed broke~ge baled ln Newport Beach. • • • Wendy Collen has joined the creative de~ ment of Cocbrue Chase, Uvblg1toll It Co .. lac. as a copywriter. Cochrane Chase is an advertislng. marketing and public relations agency bued in Irvine. \ MUTUAL FUND LllTlllGI HEW Y<>ltK (API Candi\ U5 U7 Sl'clt't 10 13 NL Inv llldk ) I_.. NL MIJlual ol OrTlelle HYMu 1).Q U.11 Dl'""'9r -Tiie follOwlno QUO· OMO l.23 f ft SIO<l! 141' H~ Inv 9ot UO 1U9 ArlW!r US NL OOtloll ls.23 lUl m i ra11011•, su~.O bY lIDllC 'g·fi 1 · 't• Fre f.10 9. lnm~Gfr:tr. Grwll! l~ !ft ~y 14.11 lUS ti 2 . the Nation• Asa«I· Monti\. I . 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I lft Cllar09/ Calvin iut G~MA I 4S at ~Sii 1l ,l~ ~'/ FO 1\¥. ~ ~Iv ~ St~ot Foi ' 'f-Prtvlou\ Ol.(l A Gt 1 HI tcm 1 t3 117~ 1.JU;j,y 1 ~~ I B"' 14 IS Jt a~& I 4S NL ouo'9 ' lt9Cle\'Tlot-8~-ifS .. IHX ltieo \o n NL tl'll 1nv't 13 14 ~ ~tGvt 10' NL HIYIO ,g 1 1! H ~ Oo 76 S6 NI ci..r11e mav •ootv OVER THE COUNTER MAID ITOCll UlllllGI ... .. """ 13 I J I 9 16 17 tO 16 16'. ' ' . 16. 1~ 17 • 11'- ll't )I , 1'-2 , 11 • 17"' 107 107 , I• IA ' ,, ') ,, 7 '4 , ... 10. 10, n ) ,, IS 1 IS-. .... '° 40'~ AO'• 14 ,, .. ti°' It ,, tl ,,._ 13"' 11 11-. 0 ''1 ..... I~ 11 )•.I. JS. . - •IAlmDO ... NEW VO-I( AP! -'Tne lol'Ow•no ~·· "'° ... ' !tie °".. ,.,. ,_. .... •lOCll\ and warrt l'I" ff\91 llaYt -U• llw mo\t and oown the mo\I M..O <>" oarc"'' ol '"'-tot' w.o No Hturltln tred•nv 1>tlow U ~ 1000 '"*'" are •ncluqeG Ntt an0 oe<cent-Cf\8"9tt art "'t d;ll..-..-ct Ot!WM<I •he ore•'°"' <.to\>flt ooo e<1ce llolld •ocla•' 1.,r Dfd DOCt Nem11 1 Form wtlS 2 ~auoero ) "°'""' .... 4 JH\04a S Ntn .. oP 6 lltlS ""' 1 hncor I tntretS• 'HI~ 10 CmotA11t 11 AoMS• 1' >iPSC I) 111,111 lAS ltol>V~ Lt..idte 16 TllYnO ... 11 FMt •' 11 Nl\o\S "" " ()al\fV 20 TIO'l'l V" 71 CCOlt n OuatLtt l.1 Mclt\ffl "" t A ~rln 15 Slt!l""C~ u .. s l H I 1'11> 1 ... ' l 10 • 11 .... , ... 2 1\oo 1)·16 7 , ... ., ChQ Pct t UP 1' 4 t I'• Ue ltt t 1 Ua ~1 + ... Uo 1•l + 1 • UP ,. 2 + 1 Uo 711 +l •Ul'214 + i., Uo IU :~, 1: ~= :t! • < " Ue 16 1 t I lie 1• 1 t .._ YO 1• 7 + t'-UD I~ 1 .l •+l •Uo1'l S ~ + \o UP ISi 1 S 16 +-5 It VD IU 1 • • 1 U• '' 4 I .' + l • Uo IS J ~-+ I Uo \U 11"' + l 1 Ut 14 t I + I Ue 141 ' i ~ ~ ::l . 1 • • u. 14 l DOW•\ i...;1. _c"? ( o.tfll('iu l -t D" lU >•·n -11 >1 Oft 11• s -i.Qellt )~ -I Ott I . I;= ;g;:bl ln=I-=~ c '! . = 1,: g: :1 I -.. Oft . ~=~81l ':" = , , Off , t ,r: = ,: E 11 ,~ : 1:! E ~~ l1'~tt :,.,~ ~ 'I ,. • Oii J' ' .. Of! ,1 ' ~ I ~l -~-"'"• --. -. . .. . ..--.. .......,,,..... Thunclay'1 11 •. m. (PDT) Prka Wt..-\ "• • I ( l>d• ( 10_. !\Cl j ...... , ,_..,, I• I l!•h ( IOV ( l>Q I \ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS t OVOTAtl(,HJ 1HC1.UOC'1'11AOU OH'" H w '°""' IMCWl'UT, l'ACt,IC l'IW llOlfOH oct.-0cr AHO Q H()HNAfl STOCK (JC(;~ AAD ~f[D IY fHt H.UO IHSTIHIT \•I•\ 1 ... 1 I• ( "4\ (loW' ("41 'Witt\ H•I !Mil•• ..,., Pl...,. (10~ ("9 P (! l!d\ (IO" (llQ •111111 BRllfl . Getty Oil, Pennzoil deal valued at $5.28 billion LOS ANGF.LFS ln u <.lt•al valutd at $~.28 billwn, Getty Oil Co haa agreed to be m •rgt'<i into a l'Ompany to be formed by Penni.oil Co ll.nd Gordon P . Gcny Under tcrrru of the deal, the 48 miluon Getty 1harcs not a~ady controlled by Pennzoil or Gordon Getty would be purchaAed !or $110 aplece, or $5.28 blUion. Roben Hfll'pt>r, a Pennio1l 11poketman In New York, 18id Wednemdoy the crord calll'd for Pennzoil to buy :t4 million of the publicly hPld C-.etty aharf"t for approximately S2 6 bUllon in ca.ah Gordon Getty would buy the rt>mninang 24 m1lllon for approxlmawly $2 6 b1lhon GAF Corp. to clo e three plants NEW YORK GAFCorp , who&eboardo(dif'(l(:tol"flwld owstt'd wt month m a sharehold~r r£>volt , said 1t plann~ to cla&e three roofing matenal~ plants, eliminating 82~ pbs. Sam~el J . Heyman. who led the dlss1dent shareholder fight and was elected GAF t ha1n'nan an December, said Wednesday the closings would allow the building mat.eris~ diV18ion to po8t "significant earnings" in 1984 after thrE'f> straight unprof1t.able y£>ara. Bank to uid Korean steel firm WASHINGTON -The Export-Import Bank board said Wednesday It would guarantee loans to help a Korean st.eel company buy Amencan.made equipment for a new steel mill. The Commerce Depanment last month asked the bank to turn down the financing request. saying short-term job galn would be outweighed by harm to the US st.eel mdustry from new foreign compet1uon T he Export-lmport Ban~ lends money to foreign companies to encourage them to buy Amencan prodUC'l'I lompuler firm lo e ttle suit NEW YORK -Apple Computer Inc. and Franklin Computer Corp satd they agreed to settle a 20-month court battle over whether certain of Apple's compu ter soft ware was protected by copyrigh t laws. The companies said Wednesday the· settlement calls for Franklin to pay $2.5 million to Apple and for Franklin not to infringe on Apple's copynght in the (uturl' .Fledgling airline to c ul fares NEW YORK Fledgling Northeastern lnt.emational Airways Inc is plann ing to cut air fares between the Northeast and Florida next month. Northeast.em said it would offer an unrestricted one-way off-peak fare of $75 and a peak fare of $89, beginning Feb. 9, to Fon Lauderdale. West Palm Beach and Orlando. The major alrlmes currently are charging $99 Cor one-way fares with restnct10M, but that was schc·duled to r~se back to $119 on Feb. 9 Dollar hold ·; gold prices up LONDON The U.S. dollar e xtended its record- breakmg rally m early European trading today, 1ett1ng new ~aks against the French fran<: and Spanish peseta while holding at its all-time high against the Italian curren<·y. The U.S. curren('y slipped. however. from 1l8 10-year high agaiMt the West German mark. and against the Swiss franc a nd- Out<:h gulldt·r Gold pm'f>S edgt>d higher GOLD QUOTATIONS IJ lllo MeocMled "'"' 'S<o!Klltd WOfld QOld II'><" lr'4l•r LOftdoft "'°'""19 '""'9'116 '>O up $7 'lO L.ondofl all .. f>OC>o lt01f>Q Sl7~ 7~ U4' SI)~ ,..,,. ell,..,,_ ''•l<IO '370 30 up SO 711 ,,.,,..,., ... '""'G '311 XI off 10 ~· lunch 1a1~ •ll•noon bid UH 60 "" 1 1 10 076 IOu•...i HMlfr ........ !WI ''""Y Ot•ly quul•I 07!> 2~ UP SI 2~ l~rd for>ly ll••lr Qlll')le1 S"ll" 85 up t1 2! l~d ''"'"-•lll<l IC>oly O••IY q\lnl•I Slll4 0 v1> SI )I NY c-· o••!l 'l>'>l IT\(ltllt WHJ I) 7 7 )0 (>ti \I 90 WHAT NYSE DID NE</tl YOll,. 1,o\Pt Jen f AO••llC.0 Ot •iln.cl U'l<fl•noto 111••· " ... ' Ne'# P'•\il''' t4•WkJW\ IUO•• 1719 01 ,., 10)1 d 11 WHAT AMEX DID AdYA"(•O o .. ,,,,,.,, Urict·e,,v•CI f()f4 \\ .... , """"' t~1i11' \ N11-1t ll'Jw\ METALS Tn<.J•'f 41>~ 111 ,,, ••• " I p,,.., ,, .. en 131 >61 101S )6 ,, Pt•" llh ue 160 'I?<; ·~/ ,. ) ~ NEW YORK j,o\PI !>11<>1 """'.,""'' "'*IAI Pl" .. IOOay c~ 89~ 1i '•"" • pc,uno u 'l t1"'''"•1ton• C...., fl4 1~ C..,_la P4lf P"!Jnd N1 (,<>Me• •4><11 mortlll t!OaoO Wed LNd 10 ,. <Miit a l>Clu<oO ZN •9 GM>lt.1 pouno ~ ... eo Tift I 11)5 Moltl• W• rnm~ce ID A ...... ln.-11 centt • OQVr>Ct M y ...,c..,, un oo S 1'0 oo i-n ,., n ..... _,,"' .. l'let"'-"186 00 0(1(1'••11• ,,-,91c 1oan1 1r0y Wl'te, H Y SILVER .,.. $t ~, Hllf>OV & Har....,, tnt>ly 0 .. ly quot el lll¥of U ~2011411 l•Oy OU<>ce NY C-1 9'l01 """'111 <IQNd Wed STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT SYMBOLS DOW JONES AVCRAGES "4£"' ~l)ln 1,o\P1 f1na1 l>uw Jll,,., ••f'f•"' fo..-wees J•t 4 STOCKS )0 '""' 17\1261711l611 .. U ., .. 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Year-in and year-out, they're the most deceiving team ln the Sea View League on paper-you JUSt can't document quick hand.a and man-to-man defe111e. Bill Kendall, a 6-0 senior guard for Corona del Mar Hlgh'1 Sea KJnsa. proved that Wednetday night u he came off the bench to ipark hla teammates to a ~7-49 Sea View League basketball vic- tory over vi.siting F.atanda before 1.200.~ Coach Jack Ernon's Sea Kinga took the lead at 24-22 on a pair of free throws by Kendall with 2:32 left In the 1eCOnd period and they were not to yield the advantage from that point. "He really settled us down," said Errion. "And defensively he shut down (Jon) Johnston." Johnston, F..tancia's All-Sea View League guard who entered with an 18.4 1eorlng average, ap- peared to be on his way to another big night, hitting four buckets in the first quarter in keeping the Eagles on top at the outset. But he could ne-t just one more basket in the last three quarters, flpiahing with 14 points. Corona, meanwhile, answered with 14 points each from Ray Zahradnik and Blair Pettis, along with a game-high 18 from Scott Green. "We m1aeed lay-upi and tree throws." said &ta.nda Coach Larry Sunderman, who uw h.11 team fall to 9-3 overall wtth the opening 1oa In league play."They outplayed us. Offensively, de- fen.tively and with free throwa, they flat beat ua." Corona had a big edge from the field. hitting 20 of 36 for ~5.6 percent, while Eatanda, normally a good shooting team, made just 16 of 39 (41 percent) againat Cor- ona's man-to-man prelBW'e. Corona had a 26-24 lead late in the second quarter and expanded it to 28-Z4 on a pair of free throws by Zahradnik alter a colliaion under the Corona basket, then Eatancla guard Jlm Curtia wu called for traveling just prior to going in for an apparent lay-up with four aeoonds left. F..tanda waa not to cut the margin to less than three polnta (32-29 early iz:a the third quarter, then to 44-41 late in the third period). With a seven-point lead enter- ing the final period the Sea Kings were able to "milk it out," u Sunderman figured before the game, and F..tancia did little to draw it out, opting to aend Corona to the line just three times ln the 1.aat five minutes. Veteran Lyle Alzaao of Raiders i warning to CdM's Scott Green (23) and Bill Kendall (22) try to disrupt rhythm of Estancia 's Scott Clemenu. Thornton available for tonight7s PCAA ope~er New Mexico State makes con{ erence debut against UC Irvine ByCURTSEEDEN Of tM .,.., Nee ..... reason Mulllgan is glad Thornton will be in the lineup. Thornton ls ready, is his guard.a and their production. "My mother told me this job wouldn't be a cakewalk," bemoaned UC Irvine basketball coach Bill Mulligan Wedne9day afternoon. Mulligan, on the eve of hia Anteaters' PCAA opener with' New Mexico State (7:30 tonight at Crawford Hall), wu anxiously awaiting word on hia 6-10 aeruor center Bob Thornton, who was having his aore foot examined at the h08pital. The Aggies, making their PCAA debut after finishing third last aeaaon In the Mi.aaourl Valley Conference, boa.at a front line which includes 6-8 center Andre Patteraon, and 6-7 forwards · Lindsay McElmell and Orlando Fedres. "When our iU8J'ds play well. we win. I think three of our wins (the Ant.eat.era are 4-5) have oome against the three best teams - we've played," Mulligan said. "It'• the coach's job to get the guards to play well and Still, the real key to New Mexico State ii eenior guard Steve Cotter, who is averaging 18.9 points and five rebound.a per game. I haven't been able to do that." So, to defeat the 3-5 Aggies. Mulligan wtll be expecting better thino from junior guards Derrick Johnson and Jerome Lee. A1J of early Wednesday, Thornton was questionable, but late 1n the day It was learned that he will be available against New Mexico State. "That guard (Cotter) is probably the second best guard in the conference. (Cal State Fullerton's Leon) Wood being first," Mulligan said. "But the concern isn't with their team, it's with ours.'' Johnson ls averaging 7 .2 pointa per game, while Lee ls at 6.3. Ben McDonaJd lead.a UCI. averaging 17 pointa and five rebounds per game. The Anteaters wiU. host LoNl Beach State on Saturday night at 7:30 before beginning their three-game road trip. The Anteaters' opposition tonight, meanwhile, is healthy and big -another Mulligan's No. 1 concern, now that Warriors win; Artists fall in OT If the first night is any lndica- tJOn, the South Coast League basketball race is going to be a ifieramble all the way, as two fiames went overtime and another 'wasn't decided until the fourth quarter. The most dramatic opener was "at San Clemente where Wood- }>ridge and the hott Tritol'l9 'worked four overtimes before the Warriors could emerge on top. Here'• how It went: Woodbrtd1e 50, San Clemen~ 48 Marco Baldi, the Warriors' 6-9 center, ended the marathon with 10 seconds left in the fourth over- time with the game-winning basket. The game turned into a duel between Baldi and hi.a 6-9 counterpart with the Trltona - Dean Garrell. Baldi had 24 points, Garrett 20. After Woodbridge uaumed an early ~lght-polnt advantage, San Clemente overtook the Warriors to go up by one at halftime. The game 1tayt'd cla.e the re.t of the way. Laa. Hlllt 5 '1, Las. Beacb H Playina without atarttns center C.Oby No and B!Uy Ell•len and with two othen wcak~ncd by the nu, the Anlsta dropped th tr r on &he Hawka' floor. . Scott Fonune had lG polnta and Nick Tepper 18 for tho Anllta. Capo Valley H, Dana Hiii• H Th 1 tlnal mar,tn may have n 12 point.I, but" the hoet Dotphlh.11 put up a touth fl1ht for th qua~n. tralllna by Ju.at nng the f lnal elaht Three-team race in Sunset Barons given slight nod over Ocean View, Edison By ROGER CARLSON °' ... o.llr Nee ..... They're odds-on favorites to qualify for the ClF 4-A basketball playoffs as the Sunset League's three entries -but when it comes to establishing a clear- cut favorite for the championship, it's razor-doee. F.diton, Ocean View and Fountain Valley, ranked No. 2,-3 and 4 in Orange County, are rated even cloeer than that ln terms of league competition, to the polnt that the odd.a between the three are virtually even. F.di.aon, with a new coaching system and 6-6 Rodney Johrl80n leading the way. hu racked up a floay 11-2 record. including a resounding 76-65 victory over Ca platrano Valley. that 1ehool's only 1088 of the season. Fountaln Valley, although just 8-6 in the won- loa column, haa played in extremely tough circles, with Arizona-bound Rolf Jacobs the central figure, along with just maybe the best guard In the league (Mike Newton). Ocean View has rolled to a 8-4 record -the Seahawka' only l<met1 coming to Long Beach Poly and Foothill (Bakersfield) ln the Tournament of Champions and to Fountain Valley in overtime and at Inglewood by three points. Steve Moeer (6-6) is the Hawka' No. 1 player, but the Seahawka have shown a great deal of depth. Each of the contenden are bruaing inside. tough on the boards and play sound defense. ,.. for a darkhone -at this polnt there isn't one. Huntington Beach and Marina have fallen on hard times and Westminster'• anticipated rile to the top hasn't been evident. despite the praence of 6-6 Jeff F.utln. Friday'• flrat salvo flnda EdllOn at Marina: Ocean View at Westmlnat.er: and Huntington Beach at Fountain Valley:"_,, Vanguards spurt to 82-6·9 victory Four players reached double fJgura for Sou them California C.OUeg Wednnday nighL, aa th Vanguardl r~ to a bll early lead and defeated Letoumeau of Texas, 82-eg, In non-aJnference basketball action at sec Andre Smith led the balanced attack wlth 19 poin\a, whJI Dave Coral poured ln l~. Sherwin Durham 14, and'N~ And non 11. ~ hotta built. a 20-J 2 advantage in the openlna . •taa , and built It to 18 by lntennlaion. " The doeeat IAtoumeau could come In the d hall w 1 J polnta. Th Van rds (9·3) hoat Ocdd ntal Saturday at 7:30. ' • I SUNSET HANDICAP m I Here's how the Daily Pilot sees the race for the title: 1. FountalD Valley (8-1). The Barons of Coach Dave Brown appear to have every facet of their game under control with a big front line -Jacobi at 6-7, junior Brent Martin at 6-7 and Mike Tinney (6-4), able ball-handling (Newton). good outaide shooting (Newton, Tom Power and Drew Brown), 1<>Jld def enae and a real ace-in-the-hole, 6-2 Scott Motherhead, who has 1hown an all-around game. Odds: 3-1. i. Ocean View (1-4). The Seahawlu may~ the deepest In talent, and with the emergence of tran.tfen Ricky ButlN (6-5 freshman) and Rlck WU.On (6-5 senior), along with the 10lid pretence of O.ve Straight (6-4 junior) and Dave Dretnlck (6-3 nJor), there appean to be no holes ln C:O.Ch Jlm Harrla' outfit. Moeer lJ averaging 19.0 polnta a game. Odds. 7·2. 3. Edl1oa ( 11-t). Only th 1982 jugemaut has gotten off to a better It.art for th Char&en (they went 16-1 bef~ flnt.hlng 24-3) and Jon Borcht'rt has been uaina a Un up which lnclud Johrwon (13.8 pJ>i), 8-2 Ken Wlliel (9. 7), 6-2 Tim W ~ (7 .8) and 8·5 Brad Hach~n(l2.3) for th moat part. F.dllon ta on a eeven-game wlnnlns atnalL Odds; 4-1. 4. Wes&mlD1ter CS·I). Dick Kau got 1 law 1tart wMn he took over for the Lion.a and to thla point antldpetJona hav n't ~ velo~ Lnto a wlnnlna r«'Ord Still, F..ulln combinc.-9 with 8-~~ Rtck DeLavalJed and 8· 1 auard Tom Downs, to giV lM Uona the potential to apoll eomeonc·1 drive to the championship pth, how r .'hun't IW'feced and foul trouble t'Ould prov fatal. Odd.I 26· l. ( UN ET, Pa l I 0.., .............. Bill Mulligan leads UC Irvine into tonight's PCAA opener with New Mexico State. Sea View squeakers: Sailors, Saddleback, El Toro eke out wins Sea View League basketball warfare got off to its predlcted start Wednesday night with New- port Harbor. Saddlebock and El Toro eking out vlctorlet by the narrowe9t of margins -Newport lhrbor and El Toro wmning by a bucket and Saddleback forced into overume before edging Irvine by one point. Here's A&w-it went: Newport Harbor 41, Uni 44 Harbor's Rob M~ and Un1ver- 1lty'1 Nonn Stolz.off each col · lected 21 point.I for hlgh-polnl honon, and 1t came down to the fin.al 11 1eronds with the Sailors up. 46-43 The Saaloni sent Stolzotf to the llnc.-. Ht' mode th first but de- liberately mlSKtd thf' 11eCOnd, and aft.er the Sallon f Hed at th Une wtth lour 9"COnCll t ft. a p.r- auon half court a.hot m1IRed by the Trojans "It thi ls going to ~ what at'• pn to be bb in this I agu 1t'1 IO&na to be un~U vable." Wlid Newport Coech J rry OeBusk. "W• Wf'rt" very lucky to wln I'm happy with th~ win, but the-re were llOl1M" m11tllpk we'll corrttt "Univ nlty a lot of th1 to disrupt J>l"Opl h w a tt I che. match at th~ t'nd " El Toro H , C'Olta MHa H WU down by II whh . .. . .. 1.20 left and pulled to wtthm two points, then got off a shot w•th eight !E'C'Onds left. but 1t didn't fall. Jeff Arnold. El Toro's 6-10 Purdue-bound All~CTF star. play- ed hut hrst game ainct" the non- league opener m December when he hurt his knee, and ICOred 12 points Mesa had led. 33-28. before Arnold led a charge. capped by a three-point play to tJe It at 33 David Greene, who acored 14 for Mesa, hat 4 of 8 from the field and all 6 free throw1 Mau Judd (6) and Mark Cook (~) were Mna'1 lead1ng rebound rs. Saddleback 5', lrvhae 5J Th Roadrunncn upped th ir ov ralt record to 9..1 6·6 junior Mark Walton ICOrM all five of Saddleback's ov rt1m4! pointe wlth th"-"" at th lint> land 1 ft kl goal "We tntd U> giv It aw ," a.aid Sadclli!back Coach P•t Quinn "We milled fl~ f throws ln overume. tndudina three one-- and-on ln the lut ~2 " Mark'11e>phomore brother. 8-4 Bryant, 1c!d all n wl\h 11 potnll (and 14 rebounds), and Sti Lu chapped n w~th I l for th wti\ntta ltvt '• 11a>nng w It'd by Ore Dunlap (18). Kt.on Oildwtiil 0 ) and IAift 1 10). ---------_,__. ___ --... .. Ca Orange Co I DAILY PILOT/Thuraday. Janu ry 5, 1984t Edison, Barons win; Seahawks, Oilers, Lions lose Two of thrtt Sun.set Lcagut• {avonie. tunt.-d up wtth winmng w-.ys Wt.'Clncsday m lheu· {U\oJ non- leagul' c:onlA."Sb. but a thud, Ocean View, found the road at Inglewood rockv, as did Huntington BeaCh U\d Weslmln.'lter m th~ir games wath Milllkan and Sanuu.go Ht·rt•'s how It Wl'nt Wednesday. Edison 48, LB Wilson 47 The Chargers escaped an ambush by the Brums. "5 Brad Hat·hten connected on two free throws walh SPORTS BRIAK Death of Sitzberger, gold medal winner, under Investigation From AP diJ.patcbH Ill CORONADO -Kenneth S1tzberger. winner of an Olympic gold medal for spnngboard dtvmg m 1964, died Monday an a hospital emergency room and hls death is bemg investigated as suspicious. according to C.oronado Police Sitzber~er, 38, was brought by ambulance to C.oronado Hosp1taJ at 11 a.m and was pronounced SITZ8EAGEA homicide · dead at 11:30 a.m .. acl'Ordmg to a pohce report Coronado Pohce in- vesugauons commander Bob Hutton said the autopsy report that was received Tuesday "says the death was not of natural causes It was the result of traumauc tnJury. particularly to the head. At this point we are looking at it as Cl suspicious death, not as a Hutton said police responded to Sttzberger's home to help with an ambulance call about an apparent heart attack Jeanne Sitzberger told the off1et>rs she had checked her husband at 9·30 that morning and he was sleeping At 10 45. she said she checked him again and ht> appt:-an.'<i t.o have stopped breathing. so she c:dlled an ambulance Hutton said that S1ti:berger had complained of headaches. and that is why hts wife said she didn't want to dlSturb his sleep. Hutton said police are now trying to check on what may have happened to S1tzberger before the day of his death 'That"s wba.1 we're trying to put together, those facts as to what occurred to cause those kmds C)f inJUn£•s."' Hutt.on said. Quote of the day Bob Betz. Longmont (Colo ) high school basketbdll coach. following a los.c; ·'That was_, s.ome of the worst fun I ever had." 'V'" PREPROU DUP m SJX M!COnd~ left to hit EdtSOn from a 47-46 d f1C1t . F.c:h~ w nl to a man-to-man defo~ m the fourth quarter to agniw lhe rally af~r Wilson had h •Id the upper hand through m<lil of the game Ttm Wenner's lay-up pulled EdtSOn to wnhm 47 -46 to set the staRe for thl' Chargers' •wnth str.ught victory King , Canuck kate to tie INGLEWOOD Marcel Dionne's ~ secQnd goal of the grune and 24th of the ' season, at 17;22 of the second penod, lifted the Los Angeles Kmgs to a 3-3 lle with the Vancouver Canucks in National Hockey League play Wednesday night. Aft.er a score!~ third pt>r1od . neither club was able to manage so much as a shot on goal m the overtime penod. The tie enabled Vancouver to leave Los Angeles with three out of a possible four points m two games in as many rughts against thl' Kings al the Forum The Canucks now have a 16-20-5 record. good for sa'<>nd plact' m the Smythe D1vas1on The Kings are 13-21-7 and tied with Winnipeg for fourth place •Jl the d1v151on Los Angeles took a 2-0 lead m the fu-st period on goals by Anders Hakansson, hts seventh. and Dionne Vancouver earn<.-back with three straight goals m the second period. as Neal Belland scored a power play goal at 10:25. Andy Schltebener tallied on a 30-foot slapshot at 12:45. then Mo Lemay got the fmaJ Canuck goal al 16:56 of the stanza Dionne ued at up JUSt 26 seconds later. Floyd., Stadler eliminated TUCSON -Ray Floyd and Craig Stadler, two of the eight players who received byes into second-round play. were among the upset victims Wednes- day in the Match Play Championship n Floyd, a two-time PGA champion and former Masters title-holder, was el.immat.ed, 2 and 1. by :l5-year-old tour sophomore Dan Forsman and Stadler. a former Masters champion. lost to J C Snead on the 19th hole In the seniors' bracket of the two-pronged tournament that opens the PGA Tour schedule, five-time British Open champion Peter Thomson of Australia htt only five greens m regulation but scrambled to a 2 and 1 dec1s1on over MHJer Barber Bellinger ha PBA lead Jeff Bellinger of C.olumb1a. S .C.. G rolled games of 277 and 266 en route to 1 the second-round lead Wednesday night in the Pro Bowlers Association's $140.000 Rola1ds Open m Anaheim Bellinger. one of four non-winners m the top ftve after a-dozen games, total~ 2,748 and led Alan Granat of Palisade. Colo .. by 43 pins. Greg Baderdeen, Ontano, was m third plac<' wtth 2.697. whtle first-round leader John Forst, La Grange. Ill . fell to fourth at 2.689 The tournament winner will collect $25,000 Edu.on. nov. 11 2, was led ltl rt!boundiJ\a by Rodney Johnson (9) and John Thomas (7) nd aaasta by Wf'rtnt'r (5) and Ken Ammann (4) Foootalo Vall~)' SI, La Quinta 41 Brent. Martin and Scott Motherhe d were the duer antapists gauut La Qulnta as the Barons upped their overall record to 8-6 by handling the Aztecs m almost methodical fashion, budding a 50-36 lead before settlmg for the Hnal margin "We've had a ~al compcutive schedule.'' says Magic returns to lift Lakers RICHFIELD. Ohio -Earvm "Magic" Johnson. playing tus fU"'St game an more than a month, scored 11 of his 23 points in the fourth quart.er as m the Los Angeles Lakers snapped a two-game losing streak Wednesday rught wath a 106-99 National Basketball AssocLation victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers. "Johnson. sidelined since Dec. 2. was not expected to play because of a dislocated right index finger But he came off the bench to score .10 first-half points before really heating up in the fmal penod Cleveland. w hich lost for the runth llme in 10 games, never seriously threatened in the second half. The Cavahers pulled JOHNSON within 89-80 with eight minutes remammg. then the Lakers got baskets from James Worthy, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Johnson and Michael Cooper to move ahead 97-80. ultimately taking a 106-88 lead on Worthy's three- point play with 2: 15 to go. Cleveland scored the final 11 points to make the final sc.-ore appear much closer than the game had been Personable Lady triumphs ARCADIA -Personable Lady, ~ ndden by Eddie Delahoussaye, slipped past Sales Bulletin m the final stndes to capture Wednesday's La Centinela Stakes for 3-year-old fillies at Santa Anita. Within close striking range of the lead all the way. Personable Lady rallied on the outside commg out of the fmal tum and was three- quarters of a length ahead at the wire. The winning time for the six-furlong race was 1 10 All eight fillies carried 118 pounds. Personable Lady, wagering favorite of the crowd of 24.261, paid $4.60. $3 and $2.60. Television., radio TELEVISION 6 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL -Pan American vs. New Mexico, Channel 56; 8 p.m . - Long Beach State at Nevada-Las Vegas, Channel 9. 11 pm -"Arrroila State at UCLA. Channel 5 (delayed). RADW 7:30 p.m. -COLLEGE BASKETBALL - New Mexico State at UC Irvine, KWVE ( 1190); 8 pm Arizona St.ate at UCLA. K.MPC (710). Arizona at USC. KNX (1070>. . Fount.am Valley Cooch Dave Brown "We tt!U hav a ways to go, but hopefully w 'U aiet • c.'OUp)c und rour bell against Huntin,ton &w:h and Marina &o It.art league." Martin kod tht.• &roN with 18 pojnt.$. wh.lle Moth~rhead chipped ln 14. Fountain Valley host. Huntington Beach Frtday rught m its league opener . lngltwood 71 Ocean Vltw 88 Rick Moser'!rored 22 polnts tot Ocean View, but the Sentinels responded wath 69 ~l"Ct'nt ahoot.ing from the field, led by Pat RQy's 16 polnta . The Seahawk.s, who are Sf'ldom outrebounded, lost in that area, 2~-20. Dave Dresmck and .Davt! Str~fght added 12 and 11 points Cor the Seahawk.s. who are at West.minster Fnd&y Millikan 57, Huntington Beach 54 The Oilers had a 46-45 lead in the fourth quarter, but the loss of Danny Thompson to foulstook1tat.o!l m • the late going as the Rams pulled out the decision, dropping the Huntington Beach to 3-9. J ohn Hanavan and Joel Miller scored 12 and 10 points for the 01lers Santiago 82, We11tmln11ter 68 Rick DeLavallade equaled a season high 19 points and Jeff Eastin added 18 counters, but it wasn't enough to offset a Sanuago flurry, which drops the Lions to 3-8 overall. DeLavallade was also the team's leading rebounder with seven and Tom Downs had six assists for Westminster SUNSET RACE • • • FromPageC1 5. Huntington Beach (3-9). The defen~ing champions show httle resemblance to 1983 when t.he Oilers went 20-6 overall, due largely to the loss of 6-7 All-CIF star Jamel Garner. who transferred to Alabama. The Oilers have very little height to combat anyone in this league, and the hoped for perimeter power hasn't made significant headway for Coach Roy Miller. Odds: 60-1. 6. Marina (2-10). The V1kmgs are feeling the affects of a three-year span in which the lower level • teams have been very limj ted in success. Ron Rosenzweig and Bill Belanger are returning starters for Coach Steve Popovich, but' so far, there hasn't been a lot of help forthcoming from the newcomers. Marina has enjoyed 17 straight years without a losing season Odds: 65-1. College, prep basketball scores C01"9 WEST SoC111 Col ~ 81, Le•ournuu 69 CanKn 6e Cnrl11 COi~ 63 Cal P0111·Pomon1 12. Mount Marty. S.O 73 0.,,.,,., ti, Bernet, Ken 66 f>omo,,. Pir1er 79 COfnell, Iowa n Redlancl' II San 01eQO 73 Senta Ciara n. 1011no 61 EAST Boston Coll 81. P11110urgh 11 C1nl\•u1 92. Cornell 67 N llllnol' 74, (Ml Mkfl~an 67, OT Net>raU\a S6, COIOrado SI ~ Ot110 U 6S. Kent St SS Tole«> 9'. 8owllne Green .. Valperall.C> S2, Clev~end SI 49 W Michigan U , 8all St IO SOUTHEAST Ar1<11n1u S7. 8avl0r SO Oklal"IOIN "'· McNeese SI ,, T UH Al.M S2 lt1ce 47 Tun TKl"I 79, Texas Cl"lrllllan 60 Hkltl K:hool SH View LN9Ue 'Husker pair in top three of USFL draft Drexel 61 Lefevene SI Fa1rl1tld 9• N11111ra 90 Fordham 6S. Hof11ra S'I Geor~lown 81 Con,.Klo<vt 69 S1en1 99 Oomonrcen 4S Temole 99. S• Jouon ' 83 Towwn SI 65, Rider 60 Ulica 68 verrnon1 60 Yalt 87 Ho4v Cron 75 Corona dt'I Mlir 57. E'tenc:oa 49 E• Toro 31, Coue Mew 36 Saddle~<" ~-Irvine S3 Newe>orl Harb<>< 46, Univtf\lly u Souffl COHI LN9" Caoiwano Valley 66, Dana Hiii• S4 )lif<e Rozier NEW YQRK (AP) -Mike Rozier and lrving Fryar. who led Nebraska's C.om- -huskers to an undefeated regular-season. were two of the top three picks in the United States Football League draft Wednesday Running back Rozier, the Heisman Trophy winner, was selected No. 1 by the Pittsburgh Maulers and Fryar. a wide receiver. was chosen No. 3 by the Chicago Blitz The> Oklahoma Outlaws. one of six £'Xpansion teams for the USFL's February- Jun(' S<.'C.'Ond season. had the No. 2 pick and took defensive c•nd Ron Faurot of Arkan- sas. The drafted collegians weren't rushing m waves, pens in hand. tos1gn with the USFL. although the league did put a fow under contract quickly. including Tulane defensive e nd Chnt Wenzel (by New Orleans) and M1ess1ss1pp1 State wide receiver Danny Knight (by New Jersey). But for most of the bigger names, like Rozier. it figured to be a waiting game. The USFL. whach signed a few prospective National Football League stars after last year's inaugural draft, then made a few successful raids on NFL rosters. was getting a big draft jump on the older league as 1t had a year ago. But the NFL. which chose to stick w1lh a May 1 draft date (midway in the USFL season). was counting on th1s year's crop of collegians to wait until then before they sign with any team. thereby depnving the USFL of their services for one year at least -as many did last year. A typical c6mment came from Buford Jordan, the running back from McNeese State drafted in the first round by the Breakers, who moved to New Orleans thts season after playing their first year m Boston. "I'm nol going to play one league against the other," J ordan saad "I'll just wait until I talk to the Breakers to make up my mmd ·· " 61 SOUTH CiemlO<' 91. SI Franc•' NY 63 Ovkt 99 Lovota, Md 68 Ftorlde S6, Mlnluil>PI SI SS Georpe Muon 77. NC·Cl"lerloltt Georo•a Teen 71 Aooal•cl'll•n SI Marvi.nd S9 N Caro 1ne SI SS Moreneed s1 68. Tennf'\'" SI. 67 Murrev St 83. New Orlt'en' 6'1 NC ·Wllm1ng1on 61, Wiiiiam &. Marv SS Norfolk Sr n MQ<'gen SI 6 l Stetson 6'1. Armv SI Tenn Cnanenoooa SS VMI 31 Vanderblll 76, M1u 1u 1ool SS Virolnle 74, Vlfgln10 Teel'> ~ wai..t' Fort\t .,, Rlcl'>mond S7 MIDWEST Ke n\11' St ~ TuH S4 La Sa!M 6e. Noire De~ 66 Memol"l1' St IS. Conc1nnati 62 M1am1 Of>10 SO. E Micl'>lgan '8 Mlct1111a n St 73, Iowa 72 ._.l\rnuri H Wli ·GrHn Bav S'I LeQvna Hilh S7. LeQ\Jl\I Beech S6 WoocJbridOe SO, S.n Clenlentt .. (4 or) c.mwv Ueeue Cenvon 60, VIHe Per1c Sl S.nll Ana 69. Et Modena " loll Footl'lill SO, Tvtlln lt Orange S6, S.nte Ana Vallt'v S3 E,,,..,.. Laeeue LO$ Alamllo\ 75, Cvi>rtH 71 El OoradO n, Loera 49 Pacifica Sl, Et-•~• 37 Ketelll 61 Kennedv 48 Neft·IM9Ye lnglewOO<I 71, Oc:een View " S.nlleQO 82, WHlmln1ler .. Fovnt11n Valley 64, La Qvlnll S4 Miiiiken S7. HuntlrtQIOfl 8eecn S4 Edison 48. Long e.ecn WllM>n 47 Magnolla 60. Renelle> Atamll01 SI Valenc:la n. FVller'ton 60 Ge roen Grove 70, Western SS 8ree 67, Trov 29 Savanna 67. Artesia S6 LO\ Aml90, S7, Anal"lelm ;o 0aif/ Served 3:00 p.rn. to 10:00 p.m. Sunday 12 Noon to 10:00 p.m. ''AT'' CENTER BEST HEALTH CLUB IN ORANGE COUNTY The "AT" Center, IAlter note freolmenl Center), locol,.d 1n Su10nne \ Heolth S1vd10 J023 PCH 1n Corono del Mor olf..,, s the fines! oll oround program o f e.erc1se. d iet stre\\ redvct1on & tro1n 1ng for the competitive athlete thot 1\ ovoiloble today \OY\ Center Dueclor Colleen W1elengo o program we know o per son P'""Y well We know how mony color1e\ o per\on need\ to conwme & how mony they nl'ed to burn, so we con de\•gn o progrom bo\ed on rho! person\ meloblo1c needs & 1he11 needs only Alzado warns Seattle Veteran Raider irked by Seahawks' comments . DINNER SPECIALS SATURDAY Fil et Mignon* SUNDAY Jeriyaki Brochettes* ) 4.45 3.95 2.55 •Sefved ~ homemade soup ex crisp satad, potato (baked potato served 4 p.m to 9 p m ) ex ru ~f. and cfinner rat When you 1oin o Heolth 5po vch O\ the o nes tho! ore populor todoy and leh foce it we ve oll 101ned one ot \Ome lime or another. yov re thonre\ o l succeeding with your heollh ond ltrnen gools are vf'ry \lim The lock of Jler\Onol 0!1f'nt1on poorly troined \toll & limited foc1l1 he' uwolly cause mo\I people lo ot1end lor o month moybe rwo then drop by the way· \Ide n .. , I\ !he reason heolth spa\ hove bet>n around \0 lono Everyone poy\ the lorgf" 11111101 poyrn.-nt bvl only o very \moll percentage ever U\!I' the loc1l1ty for ony lenqth ol 11me lktl at the AT" Center " drfftrflflt In the AT Centec. w!I' wor~ only on on 1nd111.duol bait' People thot <ome 10 •h• center or~ ttsted for (2) doy' ti.fort ever begrnnif\Q o pro 4''°"' of Otl'f lund Thtf woy we con b. 1ure t110<tly whot th•y wont to accompl"h & what w• ntPd to do to o< complf"1 ti And t>ow do wt-oc <Ompl.\h tht\e gool'' We uw: o com 1not1on of th1ngt 1oy1 Centct 011ector Wtf'I~. - fo11 of oil, M to oll !he lfll l\g ,... do poor to stortu'Q Thot \ why we re \O svc CC'S\lul with weight lo\\ pro· grams their metoboh\m "1ust \lower thon overage & wt use e .. erc1se & colorres mon1pu· lotion to \peed 1t bock vp to a 101 bvrn1ng' \loge Righi now onyont on the program con eitpecl 10 lose obovl l % bodyfo1 per week wh1d• t\ the f'qv111ofent to obout 4 pound\ every \even days We ore offenng on entire 6 month Chorlf"r program for S I 50 00 10 the 1st 200 people omv1ng 01 the Center Th1\ SI 50 00 " total cost & will cover all testing before, dvnng & ofter the ,,. months as well o s personal super v1\1on dvrin9 lhf' tnt1rf' l•ngth of the program Wt> ti b• u\•nQ the reluln of thf~ 111\I 200 people-IO H lobh\h our cred1b1l1li~\ •11 ()f ~ ongt1 County \O you con bt1 I. W,. It Q01n9 10 do OUr ob,olvte but to geot big rc1 \Ulh fo, ev•ry chon•1 mtm· 'bf'• .~ "We're wry rewltl onen ltd," \IOll"l d1rttt01 Wti.n;o, "tho!\ why wt r11olly Ort the b1,1 Heohh Ctvb rn 0 C · To btcom• o Chor ter hptr1mtnto1 member, pltost coll 67S 89~~ Ext. no Th1l program ., olto cr-o•lobl to fomtf ' w1~11\g to port1cipai. en ~ t°""1ly oct1 .. 1ty 671-8955 •••• 220 ' T" ClllTIR -----___ ....__.......__._ MANHATTAN BEACH (AP) - Veteran defensive end Lyle Alz.ado of the Los Angeles Raiders admitted Wednesday he's irritated about some c-omments he says have been made by two Seattle players. And he issued a warning to the Sea hawks "A cou!Jle of their guys have been running their mouths a great deal." r:.1id Alzado. "They were saymg they've handled us before, they can handle us again. "They said it team-wise. I take it per.;onally. We'll see what happens." Al.zado identified the Seahawk.s as wade receiver Paul J ohns and off ens1ve guard Edwm Bailey The warning by Alzado came when he was asked about the Raiders as they prepared for Sunday's American Foot- SALES SERVICE BIKES ball C.onference championship game against the Seahawk.s at the Los . Angeles C.oliseum. ' "We're good. real good, maybe better than good." he said. "We're playing our best ball of the season right now." - They weren't when they lost to the• Seahawk.s. an AFC West rival1 38-36, at• Seattle on Oct. 16 and 34-21 at ~ Angeles two weeks later. "We didn't think Seattle could beat us twice," said Alzado. 0 Now, it's the second season. It's different. They beat us tWlce in the first season." What do the Raiders have to do to win' "We have to stop them from spread- ing our defense and letting (Curt) Warne-' run inside us," said Ab.ado. "I didn't lnow where they were running the ball (in the second game)." ~ Eagles win • SKATES SKATEBOARDS .1n soccer The Estancia High boys' soccer team re- rovered from a Corona • del Mar goal in the opentna two mlnut.cs to post o 2-1 victory over th ~a Kings in th Sea ' Vit>w Le gu opener for • both sqw.ds, i NEW LOCATION NOW OPEN! Specializin9 In: SR MOTORBECANE GT PROCRAFT & The ALL NEW SUPER CYCLE RtJ>.\lr• Done While You Wail OPEN1DAYS Mua Verde Ce13t•r 305 P&lm 270l fi•rbor Blvd. &lbol. CA Coit• Me • CA 92.626 ~2661 (714)7Sl..a82 (714)67~1352 Al r recto OonM.-1 tied 1 th game m thC last five i m.anu of lhe fa~t hall and Curtis Watton kiored th eamf'-wann r with l~ minu t.o go In th cont l ,--------------------------------------------------------------------~----------....:.~_:Or~ang9:;::~C0at:·::::~O=A:IL~Y~~~L~OT~/Ttiutaday,JanuSy5,19M. ca fDR THI RICORD Na A W•STllUt COH,.•INC.1 ,.KMle Dwllleft Lalrtn w L I'd. GI '° 11 .... 5 Portlelld 22 IJ ·'" Goldtn Stete " " .m s .... Pnoenh1 15 It .455 ' S..llle I• 11 .452 • San Dle9o 12 21 ~ ' Uteh Mldw .. , OMlltfl fl l2 ~ Oattea ,, I• SQ 2 .... Otnv., ,. " '2• 1 Kans.a Cltv 13 " .41' 1 S.n A,,lonto 13 20 m • Hou1ton 12 11 ~ ' IAJT•RN CON,IRINCI 8ost0tl Alleflftc DM*'t ,, • 7'S PfllledelpNa n • 733 2 New Ycrl .. •• S6.1 1 Wellll119ton 16 IS S1' l 't» New Jersey IS " ·~ 10¥» Centrel OMJ.left Mllwaul<M " ,, ... 3 Dtttoll 17 IS Sll 2""' Ati.nte 1' ,, 415 4 Clllcaoo ll " ... s lndlene ' 21 300 ,..., Cleveland ' 24 27) 11 w.-...Y'1Scw.i L.Uen 106, Cleveland " ~Ion I IJ, WHlllneton ICM llldlena 102, Cnlcaoo 19 Dttrolt 171, Pnoenlx 11• New Jeriev '1, Atlante II Denu IOS, S..ttlt 102 lJteh 116, Houlton 111 Sen DI~ 122, Keniea City 111 TNllY't Game PlllledM>hl• et MllweukH. (n) L.alcen 106, cav11ten " LOS ANGIL15 -Wiike. II, Worthy 10, Abdul·Jet>O.r 12. COOi* 11. McGH "· JOhnton 23, Nater I, Scott 0, Kupel\il 2, Gen ett •· Totala· •S-90 15·20 106. CLIVILAHD -Sllttton 2•. Tt1om,,.on 13, COC>k •• 899a.y •• FrM 12, Graf'IOI( 2, HlnSOtl 2, Hubt>erd 1•, Po4utttt 4, Hu1lon 6. Gerrla 6. Totela: 43·'9 12· 11 99. Sc-bY Quarten '-" .,... 1S ,, " 21-106 OeY9and "' 2S 21 ti-" Thl'•·POlnt ooel.-C~. TllomPton. Fouled OUl-nont Rt00unda-Lo1 AAoeln a IN•I., 10), Clev.itnd 41 (Shelton 10) A.ulata-Loa Anoelei 26 (Johnton 10), Clev ... nd l3 <holey 111 Total IOUls-Los •~ 2S, Clevelend 2t Tecnnl· Ctl-Wllkta A-t,027 COLLEGE sec n. u.ou,.....u" LITO\MNIAU -Smith 11, Flttcner I, Holllftt 12. Z,elller 4, R..,nold, 19, o.Gfoot •. Weller 4. Totel1: 31 7·14 '9. SOCAL COLLIOI -Smith 19, Durnam 14, Hlr1t t. Coral IS, Anderton 11, Cono<lon 2, Renshew 4, Tibbs 2, Werd 6. Totels. 37 1·13 H. Ha"tlme: SOCel, •7·31. Tolel fouls. Letovrneeu 20, SoC•I COl!ffe I•. Fouled oul~ HoMJna (Ll. HIGH SCHOOL Cer11n1 dll Mir 57, Estancia 49 (Sell View L.._,.l ESTANCIA -Jonnaton 14, Curtis •• LockwOO<J I. Cle1Mnt1 10, Grenem 7, Furln 2, Moorwtv 0, Burcherdt 0, Deutsch o. Totels: 1' 11·V 49. CO.ONA OIL MAR -Zanrednlk 14, Prvor 2, Pettis 14, Harfie4d 2. GrMn 11, KendeK 7, Olooocl 0 To lets 20 11·25 57. Sar-. bV Quattan E1tancle IS 9 11 t-49 Corone def Mar 14 14 20 9-S7 TOie! fouh Estancl• 20, Corone del Mar 11; Fouled oul Loc:k'WOOd (El. Pettis (CdM) ,.._"'1 H11Wr 46, Un1wn1tY 44 (SM View L.aatiue l UNIVl•SITY -Everett 10. Ftem.rk I, Stottoff 21. Arnold 4, Rvan o, Genlfle 0, Vtt*altah I. Tolals 16 12·13 u . NIW.-0.T HARllOll -Bushmen •. McGavran S, Frea.r 3, Mase 21, Hoioen •. a..ch 3, Jemes 6, Sorensen o Totals. IS 16·23 46. Scere by Qu•"9n Unh•.,sltv 11 I 12 1)---<M NtwPOrl Herbor 10 18 6 12-46 Total foula · University 19, NtwPOrl Herbor It, Foult<I out: Venkatesn (UI, Sorensen INHI II Toro 31, Cothl MIMI 3' (Sell View LM9UI) IL TOttO -Summtra 2, Shocktll I, Marklno I, Stone 3, Brunell• 4, Chilton 6, McLeln 2, Arnold 12. Totels: 14 10·21 31 COSTA MISA -Judd 6, Kimme 6, COOll 2, GrMne 14, Ryun •. Ton 2, Pellcnowakl 2, Peulln 0, McFackllft 0, Nouvtn 0. Tot els· ll 10· 16 36. Sc«I by Qu•l1tn El Toro I 12 6 12-31 Cosla MtM I 6 IS 7-3' Tolat loull El Toro 17, Coat• ~ 21 Foulacl out· Kimme (CMl S.dcleblck 54, lrvtne Sl (Sell I/ft L9"Ull IRVINI -OunlaP II, Caldwtll 13, Ba.Iman '· RllOdts 4, NHI 10, Palerton 2. Totala 20 13· 11 Sl SADDLllACk -Jone. 2, Wetklnt 2, B. Walton It, M. Welton IS. Lulen 11, Peterton 3. 0..1 2. To11l1: 21 12·23 ~ Sc«'I bV ,..,.... lrvlne • 16 13 14 ._SJ S.ddi.t>eck 10 12 I. 13 S-Sol Total foul•· Irvine 19, Seddlebectt 12. Fouled out NHI (II. CaPo Valley U , Dene H•s S4 (Seutfl CMst LMW.) CAl'ISTRANO VALLIY -B. Call 2, N. Cell I, Trevino 11, Otte 2•. Aouller 19, Lukes 2. Tolel1: 25 16·26 66 DANA HILU Cemol>lll 16, McSwMfteY 11, Jtffers '· Metnltu S, Moomew 3, Soelmen 6 Totals. 19 11·72 ~ ktre bV Queritn C•Platrano Valltv 12 " 11 2s-66 Dena Hiiis II 19 10 loi-S4 Totel foul• CePO Vellt11 11, Dane Hiits 20. Fouled out· Jtffer• (OH) w.....w.. St. .... a.n..w 41 ,...,.c..st~) WOODUIOOI -lrttlneer I, Mi.lf .... v •• •onlJk '· 141'ntll •• leldi 24 T•IM tl 4·7 50 SAN C&.aMmNTI -~rev I, Garr•ll 20, Cltzadlo 12, Vlllen\Wle I, Wade 0 Tolats. Zl 2·1 41 lca'ebV ........ Woaowtcloe 14 7 l6 5 J 2 2 ~ kn Clemente 6 16 14 • 2 2 2 o-41 Totel foult: WOOdCrklot ll, Sall Cllmtnlt '· L.atuM H•s 57, L.atune ... dl U (~ C:..tt LM9M) LA~NA ••ACM -Fortul't It, li.n· tOtt I, Jordan t, TICll*' 16, McGre111 o. Arndl 2, Wettord 0. Totllt· 24 1-10 5'. LAGUNA Ht~U -Lltfln 14. Ctrltr 20, s.lllno 10, P1trM1 t, ltl,,_ • T•tats: 25 7·10 $7, \ SC...IW,.... L•eune 8Mdl 12 IS 14 " ~ Laouna Hiiis 14 ts 11 12 s--57 Total fouls. Latwnt ltecfl 101 Laount Hiiia 11 MllMtan 57, H""tti.,._ ... dl S4 (Ntfl • .....,.) "UNTINOTON llACH -krv f, Tl'IOmc>lon 7, 8cMtl1 2, Mllltf 10, Henaven 12, Snow 6, Cusadl I . ~.,, 0. Totatt: 2• 6· IS Sot. MILUkAN -Pr!u 4, Garmanv .. Scruoos 13, o.tos 't, l.OCllr 7, Roen. 14. Metvln 4. To1111: 21 IS-2( 57. "--bV Ouef1ln Hunllnoton ~ 11 ' t 22-s. MIHlken 10 13 " lt-S1 Totel foul1 Hunflnolon BMc:h n, Miii· ken 12. Fouled out. ThOrnOIOll (HI ). Edlten 4t, LI W1Mn 47 ,..., ...... ) IDISON -Hecnten I, Jonnson 10, Wertner 14, Wile\ 4, AmmelV! 10, Thevtf' 2. Totals: 20 1·12 4 . LONG llACH WILSON -ltactor 10, Griffin 22, Goldsmlln 7, Jonti t. Total•: 21 S· 12 47. Sc.,.. by Quef1WI Edlton I 10 14 16-41 Lono B .. cn Wiiton 14 10 1' 7-47 Totel fouls: Edlton ta, Lono BNCll Wiison 9. ... Wood 71, OcMn View '8 (Neft • .....,.) OCIAN VIEW -Drnnlck 12, MoMr 22. straloM 11, Penilca 4, Wiison 6, Buller t , Perco 4.. Totals: 2t 12·1' 61. INGLIWOOO -Roy 16, JOMton I, Hevnn 4. Gerrett 12, Wetrt¥ 2, Smith 2. Brownlne 4, Thomes 7, Foster 16. Tolals: JI 9·15 71. kertbV~ Ocun View 14 20 10 2..-.. l119lew00d 12 23 11 19-71 To,.t loul1: Oceen View IS, tnei.wood 16. Foultd out: Panile.a (OV) Sanftl99 n. w .. tmlMtw " (Nefl ...... ) SANTIAGO -Davis 13. Slon19ar "· Tamelaaor 13, Hffl 13, Bullll I I, Mal'HCO 2, currv· 7. Hines 2. Tran 2. Totela: 35 12·20 12. WESTMINSTER -Eastin 1', Downt 10, O.Levalladt 19, Devis 4, McMllltn 2, Burkmen 4, Hammond t , Watenal>t 2. Totals: 2t 12·21 61. Seere bY Quaf1iln S.ntleoo n 16 24 20-t2 Westminster f7 12 · 17 ~ Total foult: S.nlfeoo 21, W .. lmlnaler 1'. Fouled out: Hemmoncl <WI. Tacnnlcet: HHI IS) F.untalft Vllev .. , La QuJnta S4 (Ntn·IM9utl ' LA QUINTA -Van Pallen 12, Moses 22, Det>t>s 6, Wiiton 9, Cnurcn 2, Z11941t11 J TOI els: 25 4·1 54. l"OUNTAIN VALLIY -N-ton I, Mothlrlleed 14, Merlin 11, Tinney 4, Jec:obt I, HanlOft 2, f"l)wer •. Brown 2, Zeno 4. Totata: 21 t-13 i.4. Sc«e bY Quaf1iln Le Qulnlt 12 12 11 1~ Fountain Vellev 16 16 I• I...._... Total foul1: Le Quinta 12, Fountain Vellev II. F~lacl out: Dtbbs (LQ). Pro bowllnt 1'8A TOUR (ef 8!'\lftlWIClr W•--WC, AnMelm) s.ceM-lteund ~ . 1. Jeff Btlllnoar, Columble, s.c .. 2,7., 2. Allitl Grenet, PaJIMdt, COio., 2,70t 3. Greo Bad.,dMn, Onlerlo, 2,'97 4. JOl!n Forst, Le Granot, tit., 2,6" S. Bob Hendlev, Pomoano Btech, Fla., 2,617 6. Dennis JaC<IUff, Htoi.nd. N.J .. 2,67' 7. Brad Bohllll'il, TllornlOtl, Colo., 2,M9 I. Merli Baker, Gerden Grove, 2,6U 9. Wayne Webb, Ce.rmtl, Ind., 2,651 10. Bin Streut>, Lltlcom, ~ .• 2,65' 11. Tom Beker, BuftalO, N.Y , 2"54 12. Huon Miiier, Ev.,eff, Walh., 2,..7 13. Jim Poulot. Dllv Cltv. 2,'42 14. Pell Wet>er, Jecktonvlllt, Fie., 2,63S IS Ari TrUk, Frtano, 2,62' 16. Mike Durt>ln, Cllaerln Falb, Ohio, 2,61' 17. RendV Stoughton, lndlantoolls, Incl, 2,612 1'. JOhn Genl. Plllst>urvh, Pa .• 2.5" 19. BIAV Young, Jr., TutM, Okl9.1 2,595 20. (Tia) Merk Fanv, Chlce90, tnd Brl.tn Vou, Taa>rna, Welh., 2.519 n. SI.VI Cooll, RONVNlt, 2,511 23. Gii Sliker. Wa.ntneton, N.J .. 2,5'7 24. Jay Stout, Levlttown, Pa .. 2,JeO OMP IM ftlNne A•T'5 LANDfNG (.......,, IMdll -6 enolln. 20 bass, s IMIPlhMd, 20 saroo, 3 madlertl, 3 rodt 11111. • DAVIY'S LOa<•ll <""'1ien lted\) -2t •ll'illerS. 202 roell Cod, IS t>onlfo, I COW cod,2Sm~ Lft A&llfttllM WIDNHOAY'1 ••suu1 c.._ .. ...._.__. .. ,......, ,-.sr ••ca. n• .,., • L.elnaler .. (.._rl) Ut 2M UO l'oGcV MHI• (Adlllrl UO 2.IO Sniff N SMoke (Garde) UO ""° rac.M. lll'IMd Tht 'lffll, On EHY ltr ... , 0.¥ Of Plulldw, C11 ca Pan, sw....,, 1 18'11 llorltv, ltalnbow RIVtr T~ 11.lO. U •XACTA <•·•> NICI SlJ 20. llQOND RA.Cl. 400 Varda. HVOOYt l..ave llr~I) 1.M> 420 ).20 t<aweeh W• Co.tome>ll •.20 uo On • ..,.. Too (MMI) 3.00 A.Ito rac.d: Good Tnlef Scotti, c~rno OIW!t Mitt Money MeM, Sw... ifl'Ollcv, Miu ou.r Oefletll, c.111a1n l lrcn. Yclv lue i.t\yr. Time: 20.70 ,,..D ltACI. 400 verdl t<lnum CC.rdou) 2UO °'"'Y <>cc.tlon (Lackey) R.r.r To Maller <F ulltrl uo 3.IO uo 240 500 S.uv Sek•, Allo rK*I FNckt Roct.ttra, Wr~, Wllldl •u1tr, Htevent Nal\nllt t Time )Q.34, '2 IXACTA (7•6) Ptld 135.00 'OUltTH •ACL 400 yardt. Lavlalllne (Piikenton) lUO 12 00 14 20 Tlnvs Oev Moon (Ward) IUO 12.10 Sbl• ..... y (lfl'auline) 7 20 Atw rac:M; Summtr Winett, Rtbellt Brlllt, Pr-..CS Toest, EHY Acclenl, Clndlo. Time. 2029. 12 IXACTA "·l l Pl4d S1'UO. """ ltACI. 400 vardl. Ille Of DrMms CFrvdavl 47.00 15.IO UO Lt Moon ChlO. (Mllehtlt) 6.20 4.00 OH·Cneam ~ (Cerdou) l.00 DH·Jeladolt (Hal'I) 4.00 Dl+--OttclMet for tnlrd. AllO rectd: Black Denim, Omnll Jet, SwMler Tnen Jem, Ila E••Y Ba.bV. 1(1111•111· to. Time: 20.23. 12 IXACTA (4·2) Ptld '191.00. SIXTH •Ac•. 400 vard•. RI.,_ Wlletl (Adelr) 3.20 2.tO UO PtrMc:tlne11ervw1v (Mltcllell) 4.00 3.00 Easv C.pr~ IH•rtl uo Also recld: Jutta Llllle SOne, Tlmt- lottrMk, Joyful LUCY, TOOiels Calhler, Exclteblt Laclv, Crvsta~nos Jef. Time: 20.30. SIVINTH llAC•. 170 vardt. 0-Llttle Bear (Clo ) 14.00 S.40 4.00 Luvdedt (Harl) 3.00 2.IO Holata Affair IFrvdllvl UO Alto reced· Nesnvlllt l'ffwa, Vain Shane, Mr Stacy Bob, Fleml1111 Cel, Cherge CH I. Tim.: 4U4. S2 IXACTA < .. Sl 11tld '34..20. $2 ~ SOt ( .. 7+4+6> Ptld '21.312..IO wlln one w!Mlno fldlat lfl~ llonel). Carrvov.-llOOI: 1-44•.SI. llOHTH RAC•. 350 vards. Rich Leu (Peutlne) 14..40 4AO UO Time To Shu (Laclt•vl 3.00 2.40 Lotical Luv (Hert) U0 Atw recld: Bottoms U11 Jt l, o..t A0tln, Easy Liu Jlf. Miu Hot Current, Miu 0.. SNuv, Min The! nlOCIKk, .Stffm On ev. Time: 17.75. U IXACTA (6·1) 11tlel '3UO. NINTH RACI. 350 vards. American Poflcv (Cror) 37.10 IUO 6.20 Truc:kle Roon IC.rdOtal 4.20 4.to OOOllftllurY Rebel (Hart) S.00 Also rac:.d: Sadie TN Led\', Snuttle. Merv Mt Kristine, Princess Cnl1 Buo Buo Alive, Whet A Rtflectlon, Jefaona R9'>11ca. Time: 11,06. '2 IXACT A C 1-31 Ptld 199.20. Alltndenc.: S,S13. SMtl Anltll WIDHHOAY'S ••suLn (ti\ .................. ,,,......) 'lllST RACI. 6Y, furlonot. SIMI (V11ef11ueta) 7.00 UO 4.00 Potltlon'1 Bftt (Hewlev) lUO 11.00 Elated (LIPhem) 4.AO AIM> reced: 8olcl n' ti.lier, N.ver LOOll Back. D•clctv Loneleln. Fiery Return, Plaza Native, Trust Ille Men, Cos.mt!, S..u Twister, Jlf Menevver. Tlnw: 1:11 3/S. dCONO ltACI!. 6'h l\Klol\o1. Pronlo Miu (ft9dro~) · SAO 3.20 UO Sall' 1 Prlnc:eu < Oelahouuave 1 4.00 l.00 ~_, S6am BebY (Lltltlaml UO Alto rec.d: Lone °" Clau, AkMM, Briar LadV, Garo.a, Wlnwelk.-, SWMI lrllh Laule. Time: I: 19 21 S. 12 DAILY DOUILI (7~9) oeld SIUO. TM•D •ACI. 6 furloncn. Felr Mtllsse IDtnsvl UO 4.00 3.20 COPVrlOhl Girt CSho9mek.,I S.00 3.60 Buncll a Bunll (Fuentes) 4.M> Also react: Thenlls Judlll. Witch C•Mt, Judy Mutlerd, Pvramld Hletl. Invader'• Dream. Time: 1:11 4/S. ~TH •ACI. 1 II 16 mills. Conclarot (Valen1uela) 1.60 3.20 2.20 Nortllrtllford Drive (McCerr0ttl 2ACI 2.10 Due IA Due IMc:Gurnl 2.M> Alto raced: Joflnotable, NotMe Air. Time: I :U l/S. t.S IXACTA C!H) peld '43.50. """ •ACI. I~ milts on turf. Hien Haven (Slbllltl uo l .AO 3.00 Kev lo ttlt Minstrel (DIMvl 11.AO 7.20 Ceferene (Ll9ftam) 1 . .0 Alto recect. Predous Plrele, Tvnourle. Trust us, Le Mimosa. Time: l:AI 4/S. t.S l)CACTA (S-4) 11tld '136.00 IUtTH llACI. 1 l/16 mllft. Refund Offer CMcCerron) s.JO 2.60 2.60 DH·•un Ille GalHY (Shmllr) 2.60 l.00 DH·End\lflno (CestaAlde) 3.00 UO OH-DtaoMel for second. Alto reced· Command Pos•. Brandy's FIMt.,, Biiiy HOO<, Jet Poflcv, Aloma's Danctr. Time: 1:47. SIV•HTH llACI. 6 lurlonln. CllarnPffnl Bid (VlnJJl 1UO UO 4 . .0 Fest P••seee (McCer'ronl 3.M> 3.00 Aff of e Sudden (Hawtev) '-20 AIM! raced: Mr. Collator, Morrv's Chemp, Full Choke, Star Gallenl. Time; 1:09 4/S. '5 •XACTA (6·3) e>ald S12S.OO. llOHTH ••c•. 6 turlonO•. Penoneble Ledy (Dlhtv) 4.60 3.00 UO S.les Bullelln (Mc:Cerron) 3.10 3.00 o-·a Ledy (Hewllvl 3.00 Also raced. Nol All FOollsn, Tamurt, Gatllc's Fevor, Turn Soutn, Not Even • Card. Time: 1:10. U l'tCk SIX IS-S-S·M·71 Paid Sl,o.1.00 wltn 30 wlnnlno tickets (alx hOtMS). '2 Pio. Six consolatlon Ptld '13UO with 657 win· nloo llckt11 (fl'll hOrws) First yachting of year scheduled -Bill Ficker series highlights 1ate of weekend boating activity By ALMON LOCK.ABEY o.., ..... ~ ...... The first major yachting activity of the new year will be in Long Beach this weekend where two regattas are scheduled. Long Beach Yacht Club will be host to the Bill Ficker match racing series starting Friday and USFL's Outlaws name coach TULSA (AP) -Woody Wldenhofer, defensive coordtnator of the Pittaburgh St.eel- en, Wed.ne9d..y wu named head coech of the new Oklahoma Outlaws of the United States Football League. Wld nhof er, 40, had been on the It.Aft of the National Football League club Ii.nee 1973. The Outlawa bt!came the 1ut of them new USFL tearm to name a head coech. Outlawt Pretident Blll Tatham Jr. Aid that lix montha of ta1U with Wuhlnpm &dlkina' quar- te.rbecka:.ch Jerry Rhome had fallen thrc>uah. Wldenhofer arrlwd ln Tulsa Monday to meet with Tatham, butOutlawaoffk:ialldld not reveal who they were negoUaUna with until Wed:nMday. BOATING continuing th.rough Sunday to detennine the final entry ln the Conare-ional Cup match racing series in March. The regatta was originally known as the Pacific Coast Match Racing ChampJonahip but was changed to comply wtth the deed of a new trophy by Bill Ficker of Newport Beach. The first colleatat.e ~competition of the new year wW take t:;, Saturday and Sunday at Alamltoa Bay, Lona Beach, where Long Beach State will be boat to the ff.anaovtt Bowl Regatta. Ei.ghteen 1ehools are entered, includi.na ax out· of-state colleges. Teams from out of ttate lnclude Lhe U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.; Tufts. Brown, MtarnJ of Ohio, Texas and Wuhlngt.on. On the local yachting front, Balboa Yacht Club wtl1 retUme ita Sunkilt Serlee wtth small boats racing Inside the bay on Saturday and keel boa ta tadnc ovtt lnlide~tald@ COW"le9 on Sunday. It will be the third ln the •riel which conclud th ftnt weaend ln February. The ~pl.Itta.Do Bay Yacht Oub will host the fiilt yachtinl competition of 1984 at Dana Point Sunday with lta annual Ne"' Year~a Rtgaua for Performant"e Handicai> BKlna Fltet (PHRF) yacht&. ... • HHL CAWllLL COM, ... JK. lmvtM~ w L Edmon Ion T "" Of' OA 30 7 4 .. 147 1'5 Vancou~ " 20 s l7 161 m Cetotrv 14 II 7 '5 1•7 ... Wlnnlpeo 14 20 5 ,, '" lfO '°"" tJ 21 7 ,, 176 1'5 .....,..~ MIMMol• " .. 4 41 "° 112 St Louis 17 " • • lat 164 Toronfo 15 20 s )S 1'3 If) Clllceoa " 22 ) lS 144 .,. 'e>etrall IS 20 4 )4 "' 161 WALll GON,.•INC• l'•trklt ~ NY lllalldtfa 26 12 2 ~ 1• 13' NYRenotta 2:3 IJ s SI '" I~ lfl'll~•cMIPfllt 21 " 6 • 111 lU Welhlnoton " 19 3 39 llS 141 Plttaburoh t 2S s 2l 124 171 N-WMY 7 30 2 I' IOI llO • .,.,. OMINill 8oaton 2S It 3 S.J 173 "' Buffalo 23 I) 4 50 1'4 144 Que«ltC 21 " 3 •S •• m MontrH I " " 2 JI 14' ltt Hartford 13 21 ' ,, 129 161 W.._.Y'•k- l(Jllel 3, Vancouver 3 8uffel0 f, Wlnn~ 4 NY Rangers 4, New WMV 3 (01 ) Clllcaoo s. Tor0ttto 1 Edmonton 12, Mlnnetole I T .... t 0.mM ~-et Botton, <nl NY tsi.ndtrl el Hartford, (n) Dtlroll at Monl,...I, (n) Wlnnlpeo at PllllacMIPl'lla, (n) St. Loula et Wastilneton, (n) Mlnnetol• et C.lllerv, (n) K"'91 J, GaftUdra J Sctite..., ,..,... Vanceuver • a • e-a LR.,.._. 2 I • •-a • f'nt ...,... I. LOI An9tlft, Hekenston 7, 7: 1'; 2. Los Anoetes, Dionne 23 (Simmer, Al\Olrson), 11:11. Peneltl.-And«SOn, LA, 1:31; NII, Van, 4"2t, Dttormt. Van, 12:03; H•rdV, LA. 12m; Svml, Van, 16:35. Smvl. VIII, lt:44. sec.. ...... 3. Vencouver. Belland S (Gradln), 10:2S (1111); 4. Vanc:ouv.,, Sehl~ 2 (Smyl), 12:AS; 5. Vencouver, L.emav 2 (Mollnl. 16:5'; '· Los Anetitl, Dionne 24 ISlmmtrl, 17:12. '"-1"91-Hake~Hon, LA, 10:20, SnNMa, Van, ll31, Tevtot, LA, 13:21; McCerthy, Van, ll'ialor, 14:11; Mac:Ltflan, LA, melor, ~4:11. '"*-I...,.. None. P9nalllft-McEwen, LA, 1:2S, llote, Van, 2:01; 5'1ndllrom, Van, 2:16, Te\llor, LA, melor, 9:20, Mc:Carlt!v, Van, melor, t:20. OVwtlmt None. PIMllltl-Nont. sno1s on ooat-Vencouver 11· IS·S-C>--31 Los A""* 14· ll· 11 ·C>--ll. Goatles-Vencouvtr, Brodeur. Los An· Qtill, Blake. A-1,9'1. -.Vs' wccar HIGH SCHOOl. IPMda 2, C... ... Nw I E atencte ICOl'lnO: Curtis Walton I, Wiifredo Gomet I. Corone def MM ICCWlno; Not I Y•llat>lt. . WCT ~ CN,...,.lhlPI (It l.Mdtft) "'"' lleufld Peter Ftemlne·Frlti Buthnlno <U.S.) dlf. Hans Slmonu on·Andera Jarrvd (Sweden), 6·4, 6·2, 6·3; SnerwOO<J Stewert IU.S.J· Merk Edmondton (Auslrall•l dlf. COiin Dowdeawttl·John Feever (8rJteln), 6·1, 7·6, 6·3. NFLIUVeft~ CON,.RllNCI CH~SHM"S s.-v NFC-Sen Francisco at Wesnlneton (Cnenntl 2 et 10 e.m.l Al"C-S..llle el lla6dln (I P.m ) Wf'llt IOWL xv1n JM tt. 1"4 Al Tamoe Stadium, Tempe, Fi. (Chin· net 2 at l;JO Pm.I USflL .... ,. IXl'ltlH SILICTIONS TM lerrllorl.tl Miectlona t>y Int LOI Anoeltl ExPI'"' at tne United Statea Footba" LMOUI drall. Tony Br-er, dt>, Soutntrn Celttornle. Jiff l rown, ID, Southern C.IHornle. Kelln BrowMr, II>, Southern Celltornle. F rid Cornwell, It, Soulllern Cellfornle. Todd Diiion, Qt>, Long e.ach Stele. MlChMI H•rPlf', rt>, Soulllarn Ct flfornla. David Howerd, lb, Lono Beecn Stalt. Llontl Menuel, wr, Pacific. LH Miiier. dD, Cat St•l•·Fulltrton. Lenny Montoomerv. rb, Lono Beech Slate. MelCOlm Moort, wr, Soutntrn C•lllornfa. John Puier. c. Lono BffCll Sl•I•. Ken Rl.HlllOtn . OI, S®tnern Celltornla. Rich S.nchez. rt>, Cal·Lutlleran. Tony Slaton. c, Soultltrn Cellfornla. Cerv Smlln, 01, Peclflc. Todd Siiencer, rb, SOultlern Ctlltornl.t Cl'lucll Welker. II, C•l· Luttltren. t<lrt>v warren, rt>, Pacific Tom Wiikes, di, Cal·Lutheran l(tfttl ir:~...,. dlf. Deft la•, 2 i.- $arnrriv lted\eb dlf. l!d Flori, 2 and I D•YI Stoc:klon Otf Wlllv Armstrono, 3 •nd t. Alldv IW!I dtlf. MIM Gove, 2 uo '0.A Welbrlllt •. '"'-a.ca. 1 Ull, 22nd "°"· Tom Pl.lftw Mf. OonM H~. I \19, 19111 hole. T .C. Chen def SCott Slmc>IOft, I and 2 Venct HeeflW def. Bob !utwood, 2 U11 Rlcllard 1~ o.f. att1 Kratz.rt, 3 ef\d 2. Curtis Strante dlf. De1111v l!dwardt, 1 Ull. Garv Hellblte o.t. ,.. • ., oa.i~. 2 and I. I. Alllfl Miier dlf. RONI' Meltt>le, I up. (,_.., TIW) Peter TllOMlon dlf. Miiier aani.r, 2 and 0-Littler def. Howle Johnt0n, Send L Gav Brewer dtf, "oberto deVlcenro, 3 •nd 2. Don January dlf, Jim ,..,. ... , and 2. Orvl .. M1>oaY dtf. Rod FunMth, 4 tlld l. Cne"" Sifford def. I ll JoMllC)ll, l uca.. l lMy C&IOe' cl«. Doug S.nden, 1 uo. Dan ~ .. def . .Wry left., I VP, 21M "°"· • • ~ Sill~ SOUTHUN CAUflOtlMA MOUNTAllll "'9M -24 IO 30 lnctl-baM. T-c:flalt'I oo.allno. SHOW SUMMIT -12 to 14--lndl bne. Five llfta OMre!N. GOU>MIMI -24~lndl beM. TWo dlalrt In OMrallon. MlaA·NIVADA •ANGI JUN9 MDUNTA* -S4-mct! bue. Thr• c:llaln -·ttne. MAMMOTH MOUNTAIN -lot-lnc:tl NM. T-90ftd0!M, 21 Cllalrt Ol*'atlno. DOOGI •IOGI -30 to C2·1nch C-.. 1'1v• Che1rs ocitr•tlne. MT. llllA -M to 120-lnch best. Six chelrt ooeretll!e. dKWOOO -I to 12..fool beM. In full .. Obertllon. Sll9Ut.A SKI llAMCH -Slx·foot t>esa. Nine llfb ..-.tine. HIAVl~Y YAU.SY -S lo~ baM. 14 cNlr1 ooerattoo. TAHOtl SK.I IOWL -20 to ,._lncll bate. In ful OMrallon. _,.TMITAa -l to Moot De.le. Hine '"" OMratlne. Ski _._... -11 lo •lndt beM. Six Ntts °"'8111\a. SQUAW VAU..Y -I to lo-foot beM. Cat* car, 90ndOla and IS Chain oeerallne. MT. Rosa -• to t-foot baM. In full -·non. SUOI MDUMTA*-S to 1°"1oot beM. In ful OMretlon. DC>eeMlll SKI llAMCH -1 lo 12-fool ....... Tllr• ~ OMnllne. Allllel MmADOWS -M to 153--lnctt bast. 11 llft1 -•fine. SUGAJI IOWl. -II to 17·1ool OllM. In Ml ooerallon. I09llAL -10 to 17-1001 base. FIYlt c:Nlrs -•lino.. WednesClllY's tranaadl9m aAU8ALL AmtrkM L.eeew MINNE SOT A TWINS-SIGMd T.om Gotnmann, c:aldl«. and •Hloned lltm to Vlselle of tl'lt Class A Callfomle Ste le LHOut. l"OOTaALL ........ , ..... L-.ue GREEN BAY PA~kER$-N. ~ Rlltv deltMl~fleld ST. L~ C~ INA Jim Hantfan,/hiad eoech, lWO·YMr con· tract ••~Ion. ..,.,..,. s--. ....... Lawt NEW JERSEY GENERAL$-$1oned Dennv t<nloht, wkte rtcelv..-. to • multi· vMr contract. NEW ORLEANS IREAKERS-Sloned Cllnt Wenut, deflnllvt and OKLAHOMA OUTLAWS-Nem•d WOOdV Wldtnhofer llHd coadl. NOCklY HARTFORD WHALElts-<e lled U11 Den Bourt>onnal1, left wine, and Rtld e.ri.v, dlftnseman, from 81noNimton o4 tfle Amtrlcan Hodlty LMOut. NHL-Sus~ Jeck O'CeHallMI, «»· lensemen for the Cnlcaoo Bledl Hawks, for 110111, oemes. COLLSGI! ARIZONA STATE-Named W.W. "ClllP" Wisdom tlneb9citer coac:n COLORAOO-Annou~ lhe t Lisa VenGoor. canter tor Ille woman's t>Hkfl· ball IMm, wlU tie rtdslllrt.cl tor the rest of this s.Mton. INOIANA-Namad 8111 MetlorY Med IOOlbaM OMldl. SAN DIEGO STATE-Na"°*' Merv Allee HIU e!hletlc dlnctor. TEXAS CHRISTIAN-Announc:.d rnl9· nation of Fred Warren, llHd oolf ~ Riggins • prom1s~~ big effoi-t 1 WASHING'OON (AP)--Wilati- ~ Redaldns' runnJna :beck John RfaJ.n.t aid W~y that he and the detendlna Super Bowl champjoni were just wann-lna up ln their pwadt of a MCCnd •tralaht National FootbAJl lAque uile. A. lmpremive M the Redlkina wett in cruahln& the Ram., 61·7, last Sunday' RJgglnl said he and ~ tum would be even man ready f OI' Sunday'• National Football Conference Cham- pionship game against-the San Franciloo 49en. ''The ante goes up on Sunday." Riggin.a said at a prem conference. ''We will be even more ready io • play on Sunday. Thu is a cham- pionship." Riggins, who tet an NFL res· ular-aeaaon record with 24 touch- downs ln 1983, acored three times and gained 119 yarda on 25 came. against the Rama. "It wouldn't surpriae me if l carried the bell 37 times Sunday," said Rlggina. "We are a good team. a v~ good team that can, if it plays ita game, beat any team in America," Riggins said. r'The 49en are • good team, too, but it wW prof> ably be written u one of the great upaeta if we loee." Pa~-1·0 begins • 1n earnest this evening From AP clilpa&dlft Pacific-10 Conference basket- ball goe. into full swing tonight niaht with defmcting champim UCLA bouting a No. 6 national ranking and Stanford trying to extend ita beat start in 35 years. Conference play, which began with California losing to Walh- ington. 67-50, on Monday, takes off with eight teams involved tonight. The echedule finds Arizona State at UCLA; Arizona visiting USC; Oregon State visiting Stan- ford; and C&lifomia welcoming Oregon. Washington hosta Wash- ington S~te Friday. Led by forward Kenny Fields' average of 14.5 points a game, UCLA brings a 7-1 record into ita conference opener against visiting Arizona State. The Bruins' only loss was to New Mexico and they beat No. 19 Memphis State by 14 points in the preseaaon. Ariz.ona State is 5-5 after ge t- ting off to a 3-0 start. The Sun Devils are led by guard Chris Beasley, a product of Orange Coast C(>llege, who is averaging 17 .3 points a game. Th~jans take the court with team that has only one or forward Wayne , from Ocean View High, has averaged 14.5 points a game during USC's S-8 preeeason. Ex-Brave Niekro still uncommitted ATLANTA (AP) -The agent for former Atlanta Braves pitcher Phil Niekro said Wednesday the veteran knuckleballer has not d~ cided what club he v.rill play for, despite a report that he will sign with the New York Yankees this week. It had been reported that Niekro, a free agent right-hander who received his unconditional release from the Braves at his request following the 1983 ~season, would sign with the Yankees within 48 hours. -----------. FND YOUR NAME WIN 4 nac:ns WORTH $20 Hundreds of sports & vacation displays, RV's, campers, trailers and accessories Daly sta1e shows Winners In T~ay'1-Cla11ified1I IT'S EASYt Find your name and addresa tn today'• claaaJtled MCtlon, then can e..2-4321 Ext. 252 to c111m your tlcketa. Wlnnera uch ....... day, eo check the claalfled1 In tM ... "!"!""J ,._ •• 'J ' • ,- -..., ,_ , t I I • Cl) I Cit ... l It) ~ Cl :;, c • ., ~ 'O f :;, t t-0 ..J ~ ~ < 0 -• • 0 0 e Cll -c • ... 0 • ~ ~ . - 4 ~ J J ~ WE DELIVER 2.48:READERS . PER CO~AND MORE • r ,,... Are suburban newspapers really read as well as city doilies? Well according to the Simmons Ntarket Research Bureau's recent study of USSPl's suburban markets, they are. In fact, Simmons reports that our 43 market audience of 32. 2 million, and 13 million suburban households, deliver better than 2.48 readers per copy. That's a higher rate of readership than almost every other city daily we compete with. . Simmons also reports that more than 66°/o of our audience read their suburban paper the first day, and over 94°/o read it within two days. And , that 34°/o read their suburban paper on two or more different days each week . As for quality of readership, Simmons reports that more than 59°/o of our audience believe their suburban paper is better than their city daily in reporting community news and events. What these findings prove is that USSPI delivers heavy readership of your soles message by an enormous suburba~ audience, at home, when they're ready and able to buy. Simmons says it. Simmons proves it. We are the suburbs. U.S. Suburban Press, Inc . We are the Suburbs. NEW Y()Q( (1111687 8~1SCHICAC.o 131 ;'1 371 0:'75 ~HAU~8URG (31 :?1 se; 3:>o: '"'<; A"l(.EtES :.'13) J8v 88J0 Dfll!\)11 (3131 64 7 767i DALLAS ;'14)139 OJOJ ATLA"-lA J O.II ~')~OJ" Sl lOL. 5 131418 .. :' 05 :' P()Q1LAN()5f.A1 llf :','o S:'J i!JI PH '"~'p"''" ,:'1!!1 5.a:: 023:' SA"i HlA"K. :ice 1.1151931 4 :.'5:' ..... / • ,, .. '-=- ., - \ ., .... ~ ..... ' ,... ' t ' - • ~ ., I ' Jod i Mille r, picture d 1n Tampa in June, died New UW!t9'M1e Year 's Day after long battle with bone cancer. Or~ Coa t DAILY PILOT /Thursday, Janu.-y 5, 193• C.I rt&IC NOJIC'E MUC llUICC ncmtOUt auu.u ,termow ..,..... '1Cfmous .,..... Tmoue .,..... l'ICTI'TIOUI MAim • .,. '!'Um ..... ITATI .,, ..... STATDmJfl ...... ITATl*Off ... su'r::r .. '"-1 '*""' .,. dodlt Tr• illO '*'°"' •• OO!tlO Tr,. 'OllowmO ,...._ .,. nw ~ "' 11 ,,.. tOfloW!no • .. • ~ ~ bUliMM ........ WILklHlON EHTEAP~ISES, T"AOfTIONAl HC>til S ALTY JC MIRACLE Pf'OOUc:TIONS '00T ,U,.IUtTI t fO T._ 1M.f UlMP4'NY l~A\19 811t1t1A,.. CA AND 0£\' LOJ1M HT. 2tl6 EAlt ?21't 21'1511 ... C-U. IA-. Ca. et•tmwOOd nwt CA t2f14 1"'3 Yepl.-4'0Cf aide ' ~O:,INlll ,, w "*'" 111 '°'° 1 ~! Hwy Cotona del MM C.. f2t27 f &r1a A ,_... 1 JO •r•11WON, ~ e1Ncft CA '26tl • 1y .. iewA._ .s .. 11AM CA t2707 r-etl Da .. 1d 8" ... , 11 la" 111:" Cot~ t. :::1~ 11 "'T':.~!.COfld\lcMdlW.,. .. ;;r.;..:-•~c:l~H nt !,_. Ctw..iine u W IMOfl ~401 tlUI ~ CUf f,_ bVteneM 11 tonOucted lly _, C ,._, ·r-Av• ,~,. Aftl CA t27p7 t7MO lr>dfvlduel .... ,. "°'9 --::: ~ ~ h • blltll'leet It COllduc:Md bt e lllil ~it tonc:ll.lc1tl0 b) en Jonn f ~ . .If Tll!t ··~ ... fllld !MDI ltle flmfMd ~ IC otttNlfV"P ~ Tl"9 1t11emen1 •• ''*' '"'91 <:ovnt c.t. ol Or r-.-.. Chtl.ttine I W••-l\'9'•t 01•10 lkl* Count Cleta 0( Or Count 0.C ?. I .,. ~ .. ~on H ~ HoC*ttl Th•• llllemertl w• Med with Ille ft119 111ttment .,, .. ni.d ¥11th tM ()et t~ ttt.i ~ '1 ' fU ,_., ~ ~ ~ ...,ec:::: U. oun¥, Clettl of OrlnQI Coonty on County ci.,11 Of Orange Countf on p.,~"I °'.,.. C... ~ Dee f), tM3 ~ 'f on • 1013 '2221a OtlQembef 7. 1H3 PubllsMd Of_,. Coatt ~ Dee 15, 22, 2t. ftlJ J111. f , ,_ Publlll14IO Ou1nge COHI 0 11 Publ~ Oranet cou?*20: P.io. J.,, 5 12• ti ff, t"4 lH+ ... ttl4 Pv_,. Ot.,_ C... Oaly llOt D.c ,, 22. H 1083. Jim l Pilot J1t1 5 t2 19 11 1N4 ... 10,a '9lol OK ,, 22. B •te3, Hit. ... 984 138·14 ,.... ~ ,._ ______ ~_12_.13_1 rtalC wona rtate mm • Pl&.IC NOTICE rtaJC NOTICE 'tCTmoue ..,..." ,tennow .,..... fWUC ll>TICI '1CTITIOUl IUllNIH '1CTnlOUl llUIMH f ~~ e TATu.NT NAiil ITA,__ ~--M NAMa ITAnM€MT NAM91TAT'la.NT ~;-;"lllG l*tonl.,.. doing The ICJl!owln9 pet~ w• ~ MAmaTA,_., lne lolfowing P«M>nl ate OOll'Q The loltowlng petlOl'I ate OOtng OOL.D COA8T IHOUITA14L bullneee.. TIW f~ l*ton 11 ~ au INltl'lnl.. SUPPLY 410'~ E Oceanfront 8T~FO"DCOHSULTIH0,3Cor· ~-• INV[STO~ SHELTERS LTD • t, PM ttffL. 11231 Cretel'LJdl• Cl. 8elboe, c. 't2M1 . 'poral• ,,. ... ~· tot, Hewpof1 "UTAQ. ·H21 Clr\"IPl.fl °' n,., 71 v11 LICIO Svtre 204 ~ ,ount nVall4ty.Ca 027ot ScottClft~ '10.,_.! ()c;Mn. e..ctl,CA t1tlC) lr~.CA t17t5 CA 02603 HINlll M Mlleni, 11231 Cr•I« lfonl &llboe Ca elMl Pel« 0 Sllllford. t:J0t W...,.,e Mer'll ' A"fer1011. H,U, Sawmt11 lnvettmentt Inc 3.471 L •Ct • Fount1111 Vlllty, Ca 92708 Thia~.,.~ by 911 lt¥cl •.oe . .._ly HJllil CA to2t t Wl'lpM>Od fllt • ,relCOU AZ M3Qt ,. LIOO Sutt• ~4. ~, 8..ch Man~'·" MHhllOUfl 1123 t itldiYidual Pt!., Q Btlllford TM~ It COl'IOUet«I by 8'I A 921163 Ct11 .. L.lll• Ct . ,ounlaln v1u.y Cl Scou Tiecl09 Tlli9 ··*'*'' .... flied llMJI the LUtl CtlO.ron AM Clllft '"YMI· HPOI l!W 1t .. emen1 wM tiled With the County C.. Of Ot~ ~on T 11, 950 w .. 1 17th Street lwte TNI butllleM-. eonouct.o by 1 County Ctwk of Orange County .on Dec 1, t~ 11ie •tirtemenl-.. flied~ aw S1n11 AN CA 927Ge lifn<ted IMlflntrlhii> ~I* 1• 1983 f nzu. CWtl of~ .... ~y °" Ttlll buMlesl 11 ~UCllO by 1 HASSAN M MILANI rnrr. Pvblilfwcl Ottinge CoM1 Delly • 1tl3 omtled pennetlhlp Th11 Jlltamenl Wit llleO *''" 11141 Pu~ Orenge Cou1 Deily Piiot Dec t! 22. ft, 1tl3 Jw't, I, "' '21ttil Aich1td A New.II Secretary 8:"1~Y1 cim of Orange Coun!y on PllOt Jen $ 12 19 29 1914 lte4 ' · ~~! ~~ 1~ Jiln"f"'/. fhlt 1111emen1 w.1 fiteo Mth the • t tH 14 Ma-13 1 ...... ~ ' • • • ounty Cletk of Or1nge County on 'DMl9 .. _IC ..,, .._ 7 tH3 Pubhlhed Oreno-Co tt Ody l'ta.IC NQTtc( ,.-. ra1TICE ...as.-a ,m,• PtlOt Jan &. 12 19 28 tNJ Pul>Jtttl.O Or~ CoHI 01? 12 I 84 'ICTITIOU9 .,._.. f tCTJTlOU9 ...... I I "-1"' "" "'"" -----------NAME ITATI.-..-,.... l'TAttMINT 1~a4 uw.; " u ....... Jen · PlllllC NOTICl The lollOWlng ~~~ dOlng Tiie 1~ peraon II dOing "!CmtOUl.,_U bullneM 11 bUtineM.. ..._ 8TATIIMRWT NOTICE INYl'TINO !MDI WHEEL. LANO 2701 Httticw etvd HOL.IOAY 80AT CONCEISIONS, TN folloWwtg l*IOflt •• ~ Ml.IC NOTICE Notice 11 htfet>y oiven 1n.1 tn. Cotta MeM Ci '92829 · Sltp " t 8alt>oa Pa\ltloon, lelOOI CA ~ .. I"--------· -----4BolrdofTruat .. oftheCoeltCOO\· H41fli.rl o Stone 3023 Country 921161 WEITEAN OUTDOOA TAX· 0 mllf!lty ColleQa OlatrlCt of OrlflOI Club Or Costa Metri. 92828 Wlllllm JOM EdeltllYMt, Jr. 1749 IOEAMY, 3174 Pufl~ Str .. t, Suite ALFRED ROSELLlNl & IU Coonly. Callfornll, wlll receive..... Oonaki L SIOM, 2221 Heather, 811tlefk l.n .• ~ leKtl, CA 1 tt. ec.t• Meea, Ce. t282t nJ.. ed bid• up to but no later ttlll'I ', Newport Bach C1 92MO 92&80 41bet\ Hill. 2•1162 lAtO Clfc:M. OF PETITION TO ADMlN • m . Tueedey, Jenuwy 17. 1084 11 Thi• INllnfl~ 11 conducted by• 1 Thie buelneN II~'*' by· 1111 MIM!on Vltjo. C&. t2tl1 18 TE R EST AT .,. N 0 lhe Pllfchallng Oepw11M11t of Mid ,__11 partnflf-.... lndMOY... WIWl'9" a... ttA.27 St~llr ' c.. corieg. dtllrlCt louted II 1370 ..-HO Stone -..... Wiiiiam JoM Ed.lhlWI«. JI Ad . c.trrllOll. ea 90701 • 6469-83 A 1!1%13 Adam• Aftnue. Cotta MeM Catt-This ltltem.ni -flied with the Thlt lllt*'*'f w11 flied with the Thie but1n91a II condlJc1ed by' • To all heirs, i)('nef1C1ar1es, tornla 11whlctl 11me 111<1 bkl• wlN be eoonry Clerk of Orange Col.my on Countv Olwtc Of Orenge County on oet*1lf S*"t••llliP creditors and conungen pot>hcty ~and reao tor Dec 9 tpel Dec f , 1883 W•nwi ._...,. l'dl r Alf ed R PURCHASE OF PRINTING nn. n.utn Thie et•lement ...... '"'"the er t.ors 0 r ~llmt PAPER ORANGE COAST COL· Published Ofange Gout 09lty Pvbbhed Ofenge CoMt Deir County C'-1J of °'~ Cewlty on And pert!Of'\8 who may LEOE PllOI Jen 5, n. tt. 28. '"' Pilot Dec IS, 2'2. 29. 1N3 J1t1. IS. Dec 14. ttt3 otherwtl(> mlttn-sted in th All bid• are 10 t>e in ecc0td1nce 124-&4 tH• Pmnl Jodi was 'ready to die' Can cer victim r ej ecte d mac hines, h ospita ls wall and/or Clltal~ wnh lh• Bid Docunient1 wt11c:h are 8464-13 ~ Otenge Coeat D .. y now 1n ltle and may be MCUrld 1n the l'\8.IC NOltC£ P!6ol J8fl 5. 12. ti. 2&, t"4 TAMPA, t1a (AP) -A 22-year-old cancer-stricken amputee, ta.ken ln by a nuss1on aft.er she fled friends in California who wanted to put her in a nursing home to we, will be buried in blue jeans just as she wLShed, a mission spokesman said. The Palm Street Mission took in Jodi Miner eight months ago and cared for her unL1l she died quietly in her sleep New Y ear '1 Day . "Sht> was ready for death. She looked forward to it. She Yf...U tired of being in pein for-80 long: She didn't want to be hooked u p to machines or live in a hospital or nursing home," J e ff Land of the mi.J;.,ion said Wednesday. "Sh e was alone with a friend when it happened. She only spent the last six days in a hospilal," Land said. H e r body, once a size 7. had wasted to a ~re 38 pounds Crom the bone cancer that had dauned both her leg:l. "ln a way I look at dying as a re lie f," s he said six months ago. "I know I can't handle much more . h hurts 10 much. Not just physically. You get to feeling out of place Y ou hate to ask people to help you" Jodt mudto• her own funeral plans, JOtling down 1nstruct1ons in a spiral notebook She wanted to be buried in blue y•ans. "Sht• will ~." Land said. A polict.•man h ad found Jodi m April s itting m un old brown wheelchair in a fast food rc-stauranl near Tampa's downtown bus terminal. She said she was h eaded for Miami to escape friends in California who felt s h e sh ould spend h C'r final months in a A pt'tlllOll has been riled olhc• ol the Dife<:·IOf' of PUfthUlng rtllJC ll)TIC( 132 ..... nursing home . by Dave G Roselltnr a of·~ colleQa dlllrlCt IOU'TM OISPK:'T "The only reason I <:ame here was Remy R Ruiielhm m the Su· EICh btO<* mutl su1>m11 with hl9 W •AL C°""1 ORlW COUNTY Piil.iC ll)TJC( because nobody wouJd thank I'd come penor Court or Orange Coun -~ or~:~. ::\n.C:'~~ .:: ~~O.::: • ., :=:.: ~ a.or....., 1tlWM here," Jodi •~ud at the ume "They ty requt'Sung that Davl' G 11:>1e 10 tM or<* 01 tn. eo.11 Com-&....-.. ...-, mn c.ntrll Of" ... C...., ......., tMmea to CMOrroat knowhowlha•'"thPheat My 11 ·..1 Roselhn1 and Remy R munlty COltege Otatnet Bo1ro ot Pllfflhtf WILLIAME BAl<EA DWrtllt 0#8UUt11tAMWD .... . so-ca l."U Soselh.nj be appointed as ..... r~ Trull ... In"'~ not .... than D•l•nd1nt l<ATHLEEH A 100 c .. c..... °""--, .... 1111 .. .., U.C.C.) friends-just expected me to go mto a ..-tiw '*'*" {S~) of the IUf'I\ blCI .. I KELLER ano DOES I ltlf°""' IV. In-..... AM. C••• .. .,,., THIS EXCAOW IS SUBJECT TO nursing home or a h ospital and die. I eonal represent.auve '° ad-gu.,1rtt• tri.t IN bidder wlll 1t1t ... eiu.ive . Pl9in11tf IUPEAK>A PAVING co .. THE CAUFOAMA Cot.4MEACIAL minister the estate of Alfred Into the ptOl)OMd Con1rec1 If tn. c ... No 25843 INC CODE SECTIOH ttot • d on'twanttobecoopeduptna h osj11tal. Rolelllru (under the Inde Mtneltawardedtohlm.lnthe...-.nt 8UlllllQfjt D•'•"d•nt CEOAAVIEW Noltc:.i.~totttidltortOI You go nu ta In them . d l Ad -, of f111u<110 ent., Into llUctl conrrec:t NOTtOll YM twit ....., ..._ PROPERTIES and DOE.a 1 tflfowgfl tn. llllrhin trllnl1er0t(s) ttl•t a pen en " mm1strauon o 11141 proeeecsa of ,,.,. Cheek will ~ TM _. 1a.1 cfiMlde ...-.. ,.. so. lnduef¥e bUlk tr.,,.._ 111 lil>OU:t to be m~ on "And I've seen nursing horn~ 1-Atau-s Act). The peutaon 11 1orte111<1, or In tl'll e1M of• bf>d the wtttlovt ,_ .,_. ...,.,_ ..._ C... No. 1"300 • pereonat prOf)tfty nereinafUw • That's n ot what I want .. " !M!t for hearing In Dept No 3 lull sum ''*'°' wtH be lorleited to '" r"POftd _..... •.,.. ._ au•otet ecrlbed p r Off' G Rod 700 c· . Ce n.. w . Hid college d41lrk:I the lnforlNtlon ....... NOTICll v.. ..... ...... ....... The ,,..,_ and butlMll .-cs-. o ice teer eorge nquez 3,t ivic ntcr ...,, ·• est. No bidder m1y w11h0r•w hi• bl~ 11 YoU wlln to ..-Uie ed'llce of 1111 The ..wt....,,_...,, ........ ,.. or ..... Of the ltrttnded lfiritfer0t1 said, "When she said she needed a place Santa Ana, CA 92701 on Jan. for 1 period tor 1or1y-flv• (451 d•YI anorney In rhlt ,,,.,,.,, you lhould •""-' ,_ ....,. ....,_ ..._ are: OOH c JONES. ti 10 ~. to-stay I said rd help But when r· 2~. 1984,ttt 9:3{) am. ,,,.,th• dill• .. , for IM O~I~ OOIO promptlytO 11'1at~ ~~ .............. ~..,.. FGuntelrHI~~.~ ' , · lF YOU 08.JE<.."T t.o th . lh41reof retpoose, If 1ny, may be llled on .... .,.__, -· A JONES.~ NIM• al>oYe started call mg places. they were either . . . ~ TM eoard or Trut•-,...,vet um. "YoU wWI 10 ... the ad~., The ,,.,.,,.. and bu9inee9 addf- full or didn't want to fool with an granting or the pellt1on, you th• pr1ve1age or reieeuno any •no alt Avtl01U1t.o huielo demlndeCle attorney In ti* INtMr. Y°" lflOulcl of .,. tnl9rlded 1rentl'9f• are. should either appear al the bid• or 10 wuv. any 1rregu1arm .. or El trlbum1. lede decWlr C*ltt'• Ud. do 10 ptomC)tly 10 that Y04lt ~ l(EJ'TH L. RENEAU. 2115 Hllft)c)f, amputee. I finally called the Palm hearing and st.tte you objec-lnformlli!IMln1nybloor1ntr,.bld-•audfende•IMMe::Ud.,... reeponee, If eny, mey be fled on eo.11 ....._c. Tl'leptOJ*'typeni- Street Missio n a nd the woman there lions or file wrau.en objec· 01no .,...._ dentfo de• U. le 1'";V190tu9tecHwilldocMmlindede nent '*eto • deletlbed 1r1 ~" said 'Com e o n ."' tions wuh the court before Secr•t~R=deofv;~:.~~ ~,':.~ 4:' .:--.._._..et El trrbuml, ... -........,. Ud. :..~t~• =- That woman was mission d1rf'Ctor the heanng. Y1>ur appear-Publllhed Orenge Coett oe11y PllOt ... ....,NJ "' tNe IMtW, ,.. "".wdea ICta •,...... ... Ud.,.. lkltlnell. Goodwlll. Fuitur•. [Quip · M . h u Kr be b Oeaemw 29. 1M3, Januaty 5 1984 ..._..do eo .,,_,.,, eo ..._.,.. ...--..... • • ..._ Lee .. ment a eown.nt nor to Con19e1e, IC e e og. anc.e may m person or Y • ee°40-83 writteft r....-. II ..-,, fNf IN 11•mrD'1ll.,....... • THE FLOWER Pl.ACE 9M ,. "Everyon e h ere 1s gmng to mtss her your attorney ...., on ttMe. • ,_ """• _.. .. ....,. • located 11 t110 Edinger Fount•lfl because we cared for her on such a IF YOU ARE A CREDI-~NOTICE .,UetectdeMeeolcfWel--.. .,_ .n.-r "' tMe ....,, ,_ v""""' ca 021oe TOR or a contlngl•Jll creditor Je de WI ..,....• .... .....,..,._..._ .. ,. • ._.., • ._.,.. That the ..... ..,, ~tbeel ,,.,.._ personal basis that s he became family f th d ased h1 flCTITIOUI .,...11 ~ '**'° IM'Aadt ... w .. , .,.._ "'''•·I..,,..,• ••.,•ie>t>eeomummatm,wt>ject We loved her" Ms. Krog said 0 e «-e 'you must e NAM9 ITAT'llllNT • ••• IMMle. .. ,........ llMM-.. 10 the above Pf°"'s.om '' 9550 Dr Robe p •--k your c laim with the l'OUrt or 1,,. IOl+Ow.ng peraons .,.. 0oing MCttta. • ~11..., ,_.. .,u...t..._......., .. .._. w.,.. Ave . Sult• 213. "°"""'*"' . · . rt OUK:. w1~h. who donated present al to the persona.I rep-tM111nes• a. r..,.., .... • . .. • • ........ "' ':! ......., v~. c. 92708 on c.t,att• Jattuary his services lO Jodi, aa1d that when he resentallve appointed by the o R MARINE. 23881 C0te1 Bly. l -TO THI DI NDANTi A cfttl ~ .... ....,_ '""" ••• ... 20 1M4· {. t h he .. death' d . . Leguna Niguel Ca 92877 C*tlplelm ......... " .. -....... -"'' II Thoe Etcrow II sut>jae1 to c.. U'S saw e r s was on s oor . . urt wt than four months Donald w Hiem Rel • 23aa 1 ,........ ....._. ,... • ,_ wtaet ......_ et ~ ,_.. -tomie Un<torm COftW'WrCI• cooe I didn't think s he'd la t long.. from the date of r1 rsl l!IS~ Cor1l Bly ~N Nlg:'ca 92877 defeftd ..... latnult, '" l'Mlllt, ,....,.... • . SecltOn 8108 She had OS'°'"'enlc san:onw J for of letters aa provrdl>d m Sec· Th11bUS1M1111 conducted t>y 111· wttNn '°days after lhts 1Ummon1 1-TO THI DI Alff: A cMI Tnere 1tia11 be no c:la•m1 ac:up1.a -~e 700 h p ,...,_.1 lrid•v•dual 1en1ed on y<>u. file wnh this COUf1 • ~ "-IMaft ,.... br the inro nerow alt• JllOOafy 18 t9&4 mother died of cancer wht>n sh<· wa'> a lion or t e rol>aw '-AJUC' OonalO w fl4t•rM•• """""" '"900" 10 lhe eomp1.in1. pelntlft ...in1t JOU. If r• wt&et to So far u •known to NICI intended toddler Cancer 0 ( the pam:reas dasmc'<.i <>( taJirorn1a The llml' for Th11 11a1emen1 wH Ille<! With the Unles1 '/OU do. your 0.feull win deflftd 11.-lewMlt, , .. ~ TranaferM UICI lnleoded Trenlfer0t h ( h. bo f S filing da1ms will nut exparl• county Cieri! ol ore"ge Counly on ente<ed on appl1c:1hon of the pi.In-wltMft IO days •fl., thla aummont •• uMd 1o11ow1ng 9<1d•llon,1 bu-er at er a ut 1ve y<>t.1rs a8o • he pn r ll four month ( th Dec. 9 1084 1111 ind this eourt m1y '°'" • iuooe-Ml'YtlO on you, hie wllh 1hil court • names en0 addree-w11h1n the said she Wal an o n)y Child <inu W<JSU 't () fJ h S rom l' F:z:inn menl ega1~st you IOf lhe relief 0.. .wltlen reJC)OOM IO IM complalnt lhrM yeatl IUI past Oatflld J1111unry . . . • . att-~> l l' hl'aring noticed Publlthed Orange Coasi Dally mended In ,,,. comptllnt, wtllCh Unlell you do, yovr deflUll wltf be 3 198' sure 1f sh e had any living rc•lat1ves, ahovf'. Piiot Jan 5 12 19 28 t984 could resu11 In g1mllhm•"' o .,,,.,Id on app11e111on of tn. p1a1n. Publlinld °''""e coasr oa11y although there may havt' lx•••n an unde YOU MA y EXAMINE the 127-84 ' ""llO"· taklno or money 0t propwt ""·•rid tl'Mi covrt mayent41f •IUOQe· Pilot Jin s. t984 115 a~ h Oh. or other relief requetted In 11'11 com menl agllnll you for Ille rellel a. some were in 10. fllC' kept by the l'OUrt tr you plaint mended 1n ,,,. comptllnt, wtlleh ----------- No one here knew tu.·r fru.'rlds in 11re interested in the el'Jlate, fltllllC NOTICE Oiied" A~ 23, 1982 couio. rHt.tll •n 01rnl1hment of "8..tC NOTICE California. Ms. Krog sa1tl sht.• thought you may serve upon the e x-NOTICI OHM18Tll lAU ~~= .. -~~I.LAW :.Tt'~'::?r:.=::.:,~1. NOTICETO CMDITOM they may have bc>of.n an tht.• San <'C.utorhor adrJ?lnhftratohr, or Yeti .,."'!.'.:!'~• Deed of Yl11'1 "'""' <.:._ ~~~:r~rc., Francisco area upon l e attorney or l e ex-Tru11 deted New 111 1112. un-tm N . .,~., Oiied Feb 3, tM2 Noc.e.111 hereby given to ereollor• · toe.·utor or ndministrator, and .... ,~ tatie eel~ to j,rocect ,_ ,_.. .. AN, CA. t270I R08EAT 8 l<UHEL. Cleft of 111e within MmeO trlllSl•l>'l•I . f I h h h ( .....aA h ...... ..1~ ..... _ (714) f71-ttl1 By-Allee Vlldez. Oec>uty N _, Crowd on busy city street watches as woman slain I e Wll t e court Wll proo pr..,........,, l'MJ --• pu ...... JAMES B HARRIS Clerk PubltlheO Ofanoe Coett O.ity PUot I I • Dull! t•an..-f'f II about to be of M'rv1<.-e a wntlen r"""uest ..... If rou need an H planetton of B c 1•~ G 1 n-..t Janu•"' 5 12. 10. 29 1984 made on l*'IOOll P'°'*1Y ti.efn-. -.., IM l\llUre of tM prK Mdll\t V o ._., 11 •111z ......,. Y - ' ' alter 6"c'ibecl "IUltmg that you desire SJJl'<'lal egetnat reti '°" i hould cOfl•ect 1 Pubtlshecl Or1nge Coalt Diiiy Pllo 122..,... The nwnM ano bu~ ll()- nol1CC' of the filmg of an m · i.w~•· ' Dec 15. 22 29 1983, Jan 5, 1~84 4r.,... of 111e 1ntended tten'lt~or-1 wntory and appraisemenl of STEWAAT TITLE OF CALI· 850 • "8.JC NOTICE are Jay Seott E•Mmen 1n11 ...,Ulle as9l'ls or C the ,,_t . FORNIA • Cal1fornl1 eoriior1:ion H McOermotl SUtte K. tr"'"-c.. t 0 ..-1 duly appointed TruttM ut'lfW lhe P\lll.JC M>TICE K .. 111 9271' tums or acl'Ounts mentioned 1o11owtng O..Crlbe<I dO.O of hull ~COURT The 1oeaoon m C1M0tn•• of the 1n Section 1200 and 1200 5 of WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION IUPE:AK>f' COUftT Of' THI aTATI Of' e'"91 ••eeut"'9 offoc:• O< Pflnetpel NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (AP) - About 20 people looked on as a deaf woman was fatally stabbed on a busy <.1ty s treet, but "nobody moved to help" her, says a truck driver who passed by and tned to break up the attack. "I just (.'Ouldn't understand why pe<>ple were just standing around and looking," James Grc-cnc said Wednes- day, a day a fter Virginia Price, 41, died with what policP said were about 20 stab wound A t-011structlon worker, James L. For~. :i9, was arrested Wednesday and charged with murder. He was being held without bond In the Newport Ne ws city jall, police said. Gr,>ene jd he was pa88ing through the area o f urban renewal projec~ and middle-class n eighborhoods, at about 3 pm wh<'n h<' spotted the s truggle from a dlst.ent.-c. Medi-Cal to pay $27 4, 000 for transplant cost FRESNO (AP) Mt'dl-Col will pay •274,000 t"ward the medical bill of 1- yHr-old Koren Cr01hmd of Frl'tmo who hod o 1UttMt<1(ul liver transplant oporatlon lJllt July. &caUI{' ot unttrtalnty how much Mfdl Cal would pay. Frt.>tno r dcnta rontrlbutP<I $91,422 for h r medlcal xpt>~ Thot fund wlll pay the ~maJnan $29,000 1tlU owoo for th o~ratlon t Univ l'llty of MlnMIOta Medlen) C nter, I vlng more Ola $60,000 for future medical bllll. The ch ld'1 mQ\h c. .Raee Crotland, tnformtd by tale oWctalt WM lay how much woulJ be rov •red by Medl·Cal. The operation wu ~rfonm.'<I afll!r Gov. Geora · Oeukm J1411 pled&N &h•t th pro1ram wuuld cvv r P41rl uf th blU ewn thOUfCh JI r tran plani.. w ~ con- td !CJ exp~mmcntol ln th paat and • th\U nut 1e lmburtr.d hy MedJ·C&I . "I~ looked like they were wr~tlmg," said Greene, a veteran of the Army Special Fo~ "It looked hke he was hitting he r with h is fist.II, hut then I saw the knife . That's when J parked my truck." Greene, who Is Crom nearby Hampton. said he graboc'C! an ax handle from the truck, ran to tht: pair and pounded the a ttacker ~uarely in the back near the neck "He JUSt stood straight up hke a grizzly bear. I thought f'd killt.'<.I him the way I hit him. but It didn't seem to faze ham o ne bit," said Grt>ene. Then, he said, thP attacker r e. hro into his coat pocket "I tried my best but I thought h(' w going for a gun so I j~t bo<:kl'CJ oH of hun. I don't mlnd helping pc.>ople, but I don't want to get !llhot tn tht> prOCM."," Greene saJd. The attacker bucked oU and two or three other men chn.'Wd him, but h <> got away. Greene aa1d Ano thc.•r iruin <: lied police. "Nobody movt>d to help the woman," ht> nddl"d. Polke 8'Ud ltwy hav" mtc.•rviewt.-<l about 10 wltm.• !l('S but hav<-bffn unable to idenllf y the o thcl'I, sevf'rol o f whom wcr C'hlldrt'n. "I didn't sleep wt'll l.ll!llt night," iwid Thomn.."'1 Parker. th m n who 1um moncd pot~ "( thouf(hl, maybe. I t'Ould hav don• more than J did •• "It happen1 !rcqu ntly that prople 1t4rld aroWld. w tch r rlmt! and don't ntA:?rv n , " aid Sgt. Jamet1 Lt'C.lford, a police 1pokesm n &-v raJ peychologist.s utt~mpwd tu explaJn the phE'nomenon of tMcrowd'1 vlty, wh ch Or Bruce ltolbf!r tald ll l1 known mon 1rot 1ologllt.s "Bystander ln rv nllon Prob km." ~ wltn 1truf(Hlt• with th rn· eelVt!I for havln turned thc•Lr btK.·k1, ld Dr. William R . llhough the r tJoM can "r11nar. tr m 'v deLl<'hm nt -for~ uJn It th • next momln -ltt ltrtdlng l'V<' n dll teful that thP f>C' n r pl" It." the Cahfomaa Probate Code TO THE HfGHEST BIOOER FOR Of' LOI ANGELil CAU'OCllMA, COUNTT OF tMlt.tnen ottic. of the intended CASH Of .. Ml l0tth In Section 11' Nofttl Hll ltteet LOI ANOllll . CIN'TilAl. Ota. transferor II ume Behrens, Recht, Finley & 2924" o11tieC1v11 Code. Ill rlgl'lt. 1111e Loe A,.._, ca. t00t2 TNCT Al other tMllmeSI names and ad- Hanley • 1110 lnt41f•t c:on~eyld 10 "'° now Pi••'""' BAENOA L BAUCE Pta1n11n BRENDA L. BAUCE dreMn uMd by the Intended traos-11 S Civic Center Or. West lleldbyttunoeraaldo..dotTrua11n Dtfend1n1 JIM L CURRtE,SYN O.tendantJIML CUAAtE.•t• fworwtthln three Yftn 1u1 ynrs S It • 10 • ,,,. property,..., ... ,,., deec:flbld DICATE A' I, INC . I California Cor Ctosa-Cornp4.llnent FULLEATOH .. , put IO fer ., known to the U e " TRUSTOA GILBERT HERAERA, por111on. CHARLES ARTHU MORTOAOE and ESCAOW COM-llltenOeO 1r1n1le•M er• MAIN Santa Ana, Ca. JR ano DARLA SUE NUNN HER· FOWLER. JUDY v FOWLER. ROB PANY • Caltlomll COfpotltlon STAEET LUNCH ' COMPANY, S47-H08 REAA. husband arid wife 11 tOlnl EAT J THOMAS. SUNWEST BANK. Crot .. Oefendanta JIM L CVA· 18218 McOermoll, Su•le K. lrYlne, Pubhahed Orange Coa.1t '9';,·;~~FICIAAY RAYMOND M ~Rf~~°:A~~~&r::"e~~~L· ~~~~1!YNg:;::~.~:n'. ·~A1A~S caT~~~llendtMl•lntteed'1rha Dwly Ptlot Jan 4. 5. 11, 19tl4 BULlO ANO ANGELA BULLO. hul· COMPANY. I Cllllorm• C0tpor ARTHUR FOWLER JUDY v . of the lfltenoed .,.,,,,.,M(•) .,. 103-84 band 1nd wlt1 H jOinl lenlntl 111on, DOES 1 rnrough 50. l~dlve, FOWLER, ROBERT J THOMAS, PETER GROHMANN, 1r,73 Bluebird ~Ofded Novemt>-. 24, 1982 u end ALL PEASONS UNKNOWN, BRENDA L BRUCE , SAMUEL <Anyon Drive, Laou111 Beech. CA Instr No 82·413991 ol Olllclal Re· CL AIMING ANY LEO AL OR GRAHAM JR DOES 40 through 70. 92651 01111 11,lal cords In Iha oftk:.I ol lhe Recorder ol EOUITA8LE RIGHT, TITLE ES· lnc1u11ve fhll ,,,_property P4'f'lll'M'nl hereto Orange County, 1110 Oeed of tru1t TATE, LIEN OR INTEREST IN TH Case No C410S80 11 delerlbed In ~el as Ah of tl'lft •----------• dMCr lt>e1 lhe lollowlng properly PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE IUMMONI ON C"Oll-COM· 11oc;fl.1n-tr1<1e l1Vn1ture fl•lur .. HASTINGS llARVJ.o:Y E HASTINGS runnl•ral arrangt-mcnt.a by Pt<•rte Brolh<'rs &>II Broad· "·JY Mortuary. 642 9150 LOT 75 OF TRACT NO 5132 AS COMPLAINT ADVERSE TO PLAIN ftt.AINT ~ulpment goodwlH end trede "'"'"' PEA MAP RECOm>EO IN BOOK TIFF'S TITLE OR ANY CLOU NOTICll You ""• bRft wed. of I c.rle.n r .. t-.ir1nt Ind IS loealNS 1112 PAGES 14 lo 40 INCLU'jl\IE OF UPON PLAINTIFF"S TITLE THERE· The~ IMJ dKlde .... t ,_.. 11 3001 Redt>tll AV« ButtdmQ 1 MISCELLANEOUS MAPS IN THE TO wlttlout row .....,. Nard ..... Suite 108. Coate Mf>M CA OFFICE OF lHE COUNTY RE· c-Mo. C411910 JCMI ,..,...... ~ IO _,.. 9'eed The ~,.,_. name utfld by !he COAOER OF SAID ORANGE COUN IUMMONI the ~ INkw. Mkl l•-l«or(ll 11 111d loultt0n IS TY NOTICll YCMI "-" .,..., IUed. II yOu with 10 ..... ltl• ldvtce of an REDHILL LUNCH ' COMPANY MAY BE ALSO KNOWN AS 3882 The co'"',,,., dee ... ......,, lllc>mey In lhtt m111., yOu ~ Tl'll .. .a DUI",,.,..., ... ti kltenO~ F1n11terre, Huntington Qeeeh Ca wlttlovt JOtH betflt 1tMnf un do IO promptly IO lhll YoUt Wl'i119'1 lo be con~1ed I t1141 otfoce of °" 928'9 '(If 1 1trMt 1dOrfta Of com-rou r....-nd WIU*I II> deft. reeponee ff eny mtty be 1141d on BURAOW ESCROW COMPANY. mon deatgfllllOn 11 lhown ll><MI no the Information betow. llrM 1'57 E LlncOln OflttV" CA 12&G5 r H~ LAWN-MT. OLM Morluary • Cemetery Cremetory 1825 Olslef A.v•. Co•t• M98a 6'0·5554 "'Rel MOTKEfll llLLMOADWAY MORTUAflY 110 Broadway Cotta Mesa 8'42·9150 IAL t% IEROl flON I MITH & TUTHILL WllTCLJFF CHAJllL 427 E 17th St Cotti Mt11 e•e.9311 MoCOAMtCIC M°"TUA1'Y 1 TH \.egune Cenyon Act l.90UM Betch, Ca t2U t .......... ,. warranty 11given10111 comptelenea 11 you wtlh to Nell the Id~ of A'AtOIUeted n. ..ao demanOade on Of 1tter Januwy tA 1084 or c:or-reetnetll et10tney 1n 1n.1 mall.,, you lhovlO El tnbuma lede d&cWtr COftln Ud.. The bulll tran .. 1~ '' aibjo'lct 10 TM Vendof under NOd Dead of oo 90 promotty IO lhll 'fOUl Mill IM Mllll,,.._ 1 ......_ .-Ud.,... C1hforn1e Un1lorm CommerCl•t Trutt by ruton of• breech or d• r~M 11 eriy mav be flleO _,..........,.•JO ..._ Lae &e Code S«11c>n 11oe llull In tM ot>lic:.tlOnl MCVted tlrM ~ .. a6fw. Thin-#\Cl IO<lft'S' at the~· •htf•by heretOfOf• eucuted end AVtlOlUtted 111 ..oo1'4tfnanoade " ,_ wWi .. ..-the ..,._ « '°" ""'h whOrft elllmt ~Y bit fll«t • dtltlvered to !he undel .. g11ed. wnt· El lrllMr\a, ... decWlt '**' Ud ... ....,.., "' ........... '°" ttUHHU\"I ~s ... ,,11.)W CQM,.ANT. ten 0.Cllflllon o1 Defautt end 0... 1tr1 ~ 1 ...,._. .. Ud. ,._ ........ 4M M _,......, .. ll'let ,_., 1857 E llnc:OI"· Of1~ CA t2U$ mend lor Sale. Ind "1'111en notice of deMJ• de•..._ u. ..m.n "''",.., w ....,, "'V 9" Ind !he last day tor ft11no c:IM'l'lt by breach and Of ttee!lon to c~ the In~._.....,.. tltM ... -.. eny cre01tor ~ bfl J""*"t 11. underelgned 10 Mii Mid OfOC*IY 10 If ,_ wl&fl ..... the acMce of .. UMM ._..-Cit• .. .,....._ 191• wtlteh •• lhfo tMI--. d 1 1111tty Hid Obllgattont. encl titer• .,, etfOl"MJ tn tNe ma!Mf, '°" lo 4M WI ....... -.... ..-... b41tore lhe CC>f'~mm•tlun dll• .,,. IM undettigned ceuMCI Mid "**'. IO,,,..,..., .. tflllt ,_ ~ ......... .. ........ _., lc>edfltlO above notie. OI bftKh Md Of eteetlon to wrttt.11 ,.........., w ....,, ...., be de .... ...-.. .. ,..,...,. o.1ecs Oeetomber 27 tffl bit ~a.a Sept 29, t883 H '"•tr "'" en ttme. eecttta, ti r=W. ,_. w Pet• Oronm.M No 13-4291&1 of ulO on1c:111 Ae-.,U.ttd._.Mtkltt., .. ~ ,.....,._, 1111ancseo Trans.I ~"I c0t01 jo de lift ....... a11 .... ~ l ·TO THI DIOANT: A ctYI P"'bltlhed Ora~ Cottt 0 \ty J.'!IOt Said Ille w1ll bt mlda, bvt WlthOUI ...,._ ~ lftmedlellfMlft ... =· fll l'lel ...... llM " the J8n t\ t984 covenant or w11ranry, •KP' ... or Im-de "'' .......,, w ,..,_.,. ..-... '"' Jf '" -"" .. • ~~8 plied, regarding lllle. Po....aion. or """' al =dftll. ~ -... ..-dlle -~. ,.. l'IWt. ~br•~.10 pay the r~ ,....,,.. a wttMn •oay1 •ft*' thtt eummone-. prlnclpel IYf'I\ Of the note(I) MCUrtd l ·TO THI De INDA.NT: A cl'ftl Mtwd on you, Ille wttfl tttta ~°"rl I by Nici Oted ol Truet. •Uh 1n1 ..... 1 .......-1 "-1Neft Med tw tfle written raepon" 10 lhe comoe.int In l9id not• P<OYlded ed>lln<lft, If ............... ,... " ,..., ..... .. Ul\leM )'Oii 00 J. )'O"' def Miii "' be tny, under the 1enn1 of ••1d o-d of ~ iNa ......... ,_ _., enlered on ~hon of Ula ~ Truat, "'"· c:h.,gee •n<I ••'""'*'9 Of •HNft. days •ft• lflle ~ 18 tiff Ind IN COIKI,,,.., ent•. ~· lht TM1• ltld"' IN fl'Ultt OHleo -~ on ~. ' .. ,,, ""' coun I "*'' fOlil\SI you fOf IM ,...., ~· by Mid 0..0 Of Tr"9t wrJllttl r~ to the c:omol•lf'lt ~ 111 lhe ~I. wncll 8alO .... _..be Mid on fhurlclay. Vt-. 1°" ff ~ defl\lll w111 be '°"14 reewll in t*n~t Of Jll'KJrt 21. 1M4 at 10 00 A M at enrer.o on ~tlOft °' '"' Cllain· •aoee lllliftG Of ~ or IWOl*t'f 111e ~ Atenut ent,ence to ""·and'" eoun mey enter 1 ~ Of other reNf reQ\Mted In the COi"'· the CMc Center lulldlftO. 300 lalt !Mal 1ga1Nt Y011 10t IN r..., de· ~ Cf\IPl\'IAn A*"lt Orenve CA The ~ In N ~t. wNCt, The leg9I o.oription of lfle rMi total atnounl of the ~ Mlenee c°"ld reeun 1n t n•llWMnt "' propeny 11 .. ,....,. The w arty of I"-01)llOlllOll ~ed by Miid ~. 11lllng Of m«'fi&7 or P'°"'1Y 40 ,_.ti# the f *'r IO Mt OI Lot Pfopetly 10 be told, tOQttller trilfl Of OllW rfl('ief feqlMled in tl'le CC1m-'14 TrK' 4449 .. per M• ~ in..,_t late~ end e lmA!.0 plalnl 11'1 8oOl 41 ~ 44 of Mape In fN COltl • .,.,,..., Wld ldv9neee, • 0.led July 2' lh7 ilf I Co\,nly Atc:OfOer Of lOI to the •• , hereof. II S2S2.t30 32 JOHN J COhCOAAH ~ County (more OOl'IW'ftOllly Dai. o.c.mw n . 1m <AMlty ~ 11~ • 112 Catt t '" ,,... loe IT£WA"'T tlTLI OF CALIFC>1'N1A 8y O hntigu t)' ~ Califometl h Mid lrvttw t . ........._ 0.ttd lec>t I IN:t It l...,t l1 oft fofnit • ._. .. .._.. OuU9edl C-* JOHN J OOACO"'AN CllfR tOO Ncw1fl "*-'Y . tt9 ...... v.....e ... ., CA--~ A IUAO • '-'1'Y ant a AN C• t270 t LM t.~ C. _, ..... T • ..._, BJ.J,,_ L W . I ~Of ... C..t Net ....,,, -., C4 •ti lf•••-• .. r•• ., .. , ... ,, l714)5M·t 1 '4 (11~,...._ t MtW""*-...,_, 1.-1t1 A..i 'Ot«toM• omtet DK~ a, 11U, -, I, P\Ob"-'*' °' C 0_ ty Hoe • C Pvb med Of ~ 00..t Olt!y P1101 ,... J1t1 t 1) tt ' 4 .... :"-___ ....... _...., __ ,,~ I t;J, 11 ·1tf4 lllO... 118-14 ' ..-..-q ••• ' • '1CTmOUI ...... 'M)nne>U• ...... MAm ITA~ =ITA~MT • TN ~ .,.,.... lie doing Tn. ~ .. petton le Ooll1Q TM per""' It doing ~-~... bUelMllM. PACl,IC RHIA"CH Al• (A)IAVIN DOORCOMPAHV.(I) TOM CAMPO& & Al · &OCIATU, 21111 I.. Ool9t ~. IRVI OAMGIOOO..~AHY, SOOIAThffC.A 1Trn-f' Ma.In CoroM Cjtf M.,, CA t2m (Cl IAVIN OAMO! OOOA MPAIA It.. IMne, CA. 1171• M«w1 A H«tt"_l51t1 Jectceon, COMPANY,IO>llMN!OOOACOM TllomM ~ Cempoe, 1811 WMtmlntl#. CA wW PAHV WI AAt! •ONI. (£) NIW· Ault! Lane. Hftpof1 8ucll. CA Thoe ~ .. oonducted by a PO.tT HACH DOOR COMP~ t2te0 ltmit.d .,.,,~ NEWPORT etACH QAAAGE Tl\le l:NelnMa i. conducted by' II\ Melvin A Hota1 COMPANY. (0) N WPOAT HACH lndlvlduel noe 1te1wnent w• filed wttll IM GARAGE DOOR AIPAIA COM· Tllom&I" ci.n~ CO!.H'ty Clerk °' OfMge Cow\ty on PANV, (H) SUPEA 8AVfAS, (I) ANN Thie ttetem.nt ... hied wttn tl'MI NOY 17 1N3 MIOL! OlSIONS. (JbREOLI Dt!· ty ci.ni Of OrtonQe Coullty on fluom SIONS. (K) A!OAL ESIONS. (Ll Dec: 7, tN3 Publtlhed Of~ Coett o.ity IRVINI DOOR COMPANY '1»111 F'tlot Dec 1&, U , ff, 1"3, J9tl IS, SU8SIOIARY OF AIA INOIJSTAIH, Pubtlthed Oftnoe eo.-1 Delly 19.. (Ml COUPON CARAOUS£l 33 ,.._ Piiot Dec: 16. 22. 21, 1913, Jan 5. esoe-13 codo, lnllne, CA 82114 1984 Oougtu WarrWt Aeiote. ~ ,.._ cooo, frvlne, CA 92714 ..__ _________ _ Pt&.IC MOT1CE Tlllt l>utlnea II concSucled by· ..-i rtll.IC NOTIC£ rtermoue IU ... H lndNldu•I -----------NU. ITAftMIMT Dougla Weuet1 Aelole 'ICTmOUl IU ... H The lollowtnQ P9f'90N .,. doing ThlS llelemenl wu llled with IM ..... ITAftmNT ~ .•• ,,... aa Count)' Cleftc of OtfllOe County on The following ~ It Ooing ..._. Dec:. 7, 1983 llMM u · WHEEL LANO. 305 Palm. Balboa, flmlta WESTCLIFP AACO 490 E 11th Ca 92MI . • Herbert o Stone 3023 Country P11blltMd Orange Cout Dally tr..,, Cotti M ... , CA 92627 Club ()(1~ Cosl1 M ... Ce 11262e P110I Dec: 15. 22. 29, 1913. ,,_,,. 6, Chit... $ Geechwlnd 950 N Oon•IO i. Slone, 2221 HMlt.. 1984 Kl • ~. w .. 1 HOftywood, CA Newport e..cti Ce 92M() 8473-e3 9 Th•• bull~ 11 conduoted by 1 Tn11 bullnett 11 conduct.a by: an generel percnerltllp llllDtfC W\TIC[ Individual H O StOM l"WN. nv Chet ... S Geecl'lwind Thil aletement w .. tl141d wtlll ll'MI '1CTITIOUa ""....... Thll 11119n*'ll WU 1"9<1 with II~ C0<inty Cler1C ol Drano-County on NAMI ITAtt•MT ;:"¥~of Ofenge Coonty on Oocemt>er II, 1983 The 1o11ow1no !*'•on 11 dorng ' ,m111 ft2:l2305 t>ullneu •• Publlllhed Of~ Cout o.lly Pubhshed Orenge Cout 0.lly FOOT TRAFFIC UNLIMITED 1555 PllOt Dec: 16 22 29 1983 Jen 5 PtlOI Jen 5 12 19 28 1983 ~ Verde Ori.,. C-46, Co111 tte• . • l25·84 M .... CA 92626 8486·83 Al1hur M. Jorden, 1555 M ... ___ Mt __ IC_NO_Tl_CE ___ ~;~~:Drive C-46, Coet1 M .... CA. , __ ..._P\ISl __ IC_NO_T_ICE ___ _ FICTITIOUI IUltNHI NA.ME ITAftMINT The 10ll01111lng pettons ••• dOlng busmen 11 (At BEST REAL TV, (8) BEST (C) BEST RENTALS 10 135 WHt· minster Ave Garden Grove. Ce 92643 Bell We1tern lncorporeted, 13602 Hope SI Garden Grove, Ce 92643 ThlS business 11 conducted by • Tn11 t>uaineu It conouc:ted by 1n FICTITIOUl INIMH NAMI ITAftlftNT 1nd1v1dull Arthur M Jorden Thia 1111emen1 wit filed with Ille Tne lollowtng pert0n II doing n~y f.':t of Of•noe Counry on bu~':~a:s. 82•8 Atlente, Sult• c. fm11t Huntington Beach. CA 92646 Publtlllled Orange CoaaJ Deity Norm• E Meroll. 8248 Atlante, 1~~~ Dec 15. 22. 29, 1983, Jen 5. ~g,:8 C, Huntington Beech. CA. 6487-83 Thia bullneu is conduct.a by an lnd1vlduel Belt WMtern Inc; Notm• E. Merrtll Geollrey D Wlntert Thia 1111emen1 wH Ille<! with the corporet1on Pretldenl Pl&IC NOTICE Coun1y Clerk ol Orenge County on 11._.. 1------------10ec; 7, 1983 This stetement wH ..... with the NOTICI Of l"mMS C0<in1y Clerk ol Orenge County on TRU8Tll'I IA&.a Publlal'Mld Ore.nge Coui Dell)' Oec:embilf 7 1983 1"2'2155 10-10f1-GIOI Piiot Dee 15, 22. ff, 1963, Jen 5. YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A 1984 Publlthed Orenge Cou1 OeltY DEED Of' TRUST DATED AUGUST 6471-83 Pilot Jin ~ 12, Ill 28, 1984 28, 1981 UNLESS YOU TAKE AC- _,_37_·_8"--------TION TO PROTECT YOUR PROP· ---81-.,-,,C-NO-T-ICE ___ _ 11o1t011C """TICE ERTY IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUB-,.~ ___ r_~_._nu __ . ---UC SALE IFYOUNEEOANEXPLA· ---------- NATION OF THE NATURE OF THE f'ICTITIOUI IUSINlll l"ICTITIOUI IUllNEH NAM~ ITATE•NT The lollowlng persons .,, dOlng buSlnesl •• BEST BUSINESS SYSTEMS, :.>0242 MorrlStown Circle, Hunt· rnglon Beacn. 1 92646 Gary Pill. 700 w L• Veta, Or· enge Ce 92668 Th11 bullnest ts conducted by en lndl\llduel. Gary Pell This ttt1ernen1 wu llled with tM Counly Clerk ol Orange County on December 9 198'4 l"m354 Pubt11ned Orenge Cout Dally Pilot Jan 5. 12. 19. 26 1984 l2~·8• P\8.IC NOTICE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU NAME ITATEMl!NT HOULD CONTACT A LAWYER Tiie lollowlng peraons ere dOlnq t>uelneu u On Ille 27th d1y ol Jenuary, 1964, HOLIDAY VALLEY. 2!>3 MegnOll•. et 9.00 • m., at Ille 8th Str .. 1 en· Co111 Men. CA 92827 trance ol the new County Edward N Tebb, 62 Beecon Bay, Coul1houM, loc1t.O et 700 Civic N-por1 Beach. CA. 92660 C.Ote' Drive w .. 1, forrne<ly known Jwry L Cole, 253 Megnolll. Colle as 700 W•t 8th Str .. t, lltutted In M .... CA. 92627 lhl City Of Sant• An•. Coonty Of Thia Ouall'IM8 II ®"dueled by • Orange, Stete of Celllomle, CON· generel p1rtnerthlp TINENTAL AUXILIARY COMPANY, Edwerd N Ttbb a c.Jlforni• C°'porlllon. es Trutt11119 Thia aterement wH Hied wilh the undef Deed of Trull dated Augu1t County Clerk or Or•noe County on 28 1981 .. ecuted by George o.c: 7, 1983 Koscnel end Luzat .. I• Koec:hel. who 'm111 ere merrled lo eecn other end re-Pubh•hed Orenge Co111 Delly ded on September .lS.JU_1 t ~ 16, 22, 29. ~.Jen 6, Instrument Number 17870. In 8oo6t 1984 14219 Pege 1283, Official Reeord1, 6466-83 nty ol Orange. Cet1forni1, given 1------------ to sewre an lndet>tedneu In l1vor ol D11D1 C """TICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF Bank or Amerlcl Netlonll Trust and---'"-~-·-""----­SHEILA K. CARLSON AND •vlnga Asaoclellon. • netlonet ITAftMENT CW WITHDRAWAL. banklnq HIOClltlon. by r .. aon of RtOM P.AlrrNER .... OF PETITION TO ADMlN· he brMCh 01 the ob11g111on1 MC· Of'!RATINQ ~" ISTER EST ATE NO. A ured tnereby notice 01 wttlch wu ,.ICTITIOUa IUtt•H N.Am 121259 recorded on June 2, 1982 a1 lnltru· The lollowlng petton nu wlllldrewn T II h be f. ment Numb4tr 82· 186613 ol Official • genert l pertl* trom tM ........ o a etrs. ne 1~1anes, Record• ol .. 1d Or•nQ9 County, and anlp operating undef tlle..-~- l'red1tors and contingent more then thrH montn1 heve thloua butlneu neme 01 ARIES creditors of Sheila K Carlson •5'>8d tlnce such record•tlon, wm OMPANV 5202 Ooeanu1 Avenue · 14141 et public: auction to the hlghnt • c " · and persons who may be bidder lor easn or ... Cuhlef'a Huntington Beac:tl, •llf. 9284 .. olherwl$e interest.eel tn the ~ drewn on • 1111e or neuonel The llctltlou1 bu1lne11 neme • tatement tor Ille partneAhlp WU will and/or estate . beM. • ttete or tedefel et.Oii union led on M•)' 12 1983 ln tl'MI County h .___ f led ore state or le<Serel H\llngS end IOen O F E' 0 F2 ...... A peuuon as .,.,.,-n 1 assocletlon domieu.o In thl• ll•le". 1 renge IL N 1"""" by Lawren<.'e L. Dow Jr , m {Pay•ble 81 time of Hie In lewful Full Neme and Addreu of the Per· . 0r' Wltlldrewlng Power-Sonic Cor· l he Su penor Court of ange money of rne United Stein ol etlon. p 0 Box 5242 13 106 County requesting that Law· AmerlCI) without covenent or war· Spring S1 . Redwood City, Cll1f L Do J be renty express or Implied. u to tltte, 4063 rence w , r.. ap-posse11lon or encumbrances. tne Signed Guy c Clum Pre• pointed as personal represen-lnterea1 conveyed to end now held Publlahed Orenoe Cout Deily ta live lo adm1tuster the estate by the llld TrullM unde< llid Deed Pilot Jen 5 12 19 26 t9a.. 123·8-4 of Shella K. Carlson (under :,;~t ~~:;:11~0 ';u~~:w'~ ~; · · · the Independent Adm1ms· County ol Orange, Stele ol c111. flt&.IC NOTICE trat1on of F.states A ct) The forn11 petlllon IS set for hearmg m See Exhibit "A · 11tecneo llereto ~~=;~ Dept No. 3 at 700 C1v1c and mede • part hereof Lot tee ol Of OAANOE Center Dr West Santa Ana Trect 7100· 10 the City of lrvtne. In the Meller ol the Eatate of CA 92701 ~n Jan' 25, 1984 at ~~:.:~n~~·as~:r:or~:; MARTHA T. MALIK, OeoeaMCI. 9:30 a m In Book 324, Pegea 44-48, lnclut/Ve NOTICE co"r1~E~T~6~0 SELL IF YOU OBJECT to the or Mlseetleneout Mapa, In tne office REAL PROPERTY AT PRIVATE granting of the n<>lll1on you 0' the Coonty Recorder 01 n ld SALE r-' County should either appear at the NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that, d b . Exoep11no theferrom all 011, on eubjeel to conllrmetlon by the heanng an state you o Jee· rignta, mlneret. ml~•l right•. netu· ebove-entltled Superior C0<irt, on lions or frle wntten ob,ec· rel gu ngnu. end othe r Jenuery 8, 198'4, et 9.00 • m or t1ons with the court before hydrocerbon1 by wnatsoever neme lheretlter within the time lllowed by the heanng Your appear-known that mey be w11111n or under lew. the underfione<I u Co-Ex· · the parcel ol land nerelnabove de· ecutora ol tile Wiii of M111ne T .. ance may be in person or by scribed 1ogelher with the perpe1ua1 Mallk, deceued, will Mll et privet• vour attorney oght ol drilling. mining. exploring ute to the hlgnett t>ldW on tl'MI · lf YOU ARE A CREDI-end <>09rt11ng therefor end 11orlng In term1 and condition• ner•n•lter red end removing 1ne ume from .. Id mentioned. all rtoht. title end lntereat roR or a ronungent c llor lend or eny 01ner 1anc1, mctudtng the ol Mar1h• T Mefill. deoeaMCI, •t tile of the dec·eased, you must file right 10 whlpltock or directlonelly time ol her deeth end all r'9nt tltle, your claim with the court or drill end mine tram lends other then and 1H Interest thll the .. tete nu !>resent it to the personal rep· thoM heremebova delcribed, oil or aqulr.O In IOdltlon to tlllt of ci.ce- H wells tunnel• end lhatl1 Into. dent et the time ol Iler deltll. In the resentot1ve appoint.eel by the 1nrough or ecroea 1ne aublurfece of , .. , prOJ*'ty tocet9d In Ofenge l'OUrt within four months the lend herelnebove described, end C0<inty. Calllornl• deterlbed •• fol· from the date o f fu'St 1ssiance to bouom such wnlPttoetled or lowt ded . c-__ lrac;1lon1lly drilled well•. tunnel• Lot 73 ot T rect 213 7 per Map re· of letters as provi In~·· no lh•lll under end beneath or eoro.o In Book 75. peges 6·11, In· uon 700 of the Probat.e Code beyond 1ne exterior llmlts tiler.of, c1u11.,., ot Mlacellaneoua Meps, of· of Cahfom1a The lime for nd lo redrllt, retunnel, equip. meln· flee ol the Orange County Recol'der. filing claims will not expire tam repair. deepen i nd operlle eny Seid property 11 commonly known ch ,,...,, or mlnM wrthoul now-u 8091 Sen Jote Circle &ler\1 pnor lo four months from the ver 1ne righl to drlll mine 11ore Park Ctlrlornie dal<• u f the heanng noticed xplore end operele through the tur· The Mile II 11.lbtecl to current abov(' ace lo the upper 500 IHI of the 1ue1 covenenta. condlt1on1, , •• You M~EXA MlNE th bturlece ol the lend heretnebove s1rtcllon1. reserv1t1<>na. rlghll, right• e escrtbed, u reM<Ved tn the deed ol wey. end eeaemen1s of record. file kept b e court. If you rorn 1ne Irvine Com~y. A w .. t anv encumbrances of record 10 be arc interested in the est.ate, 1rg1nl• Corporetton. recorded set11lied out of the pureha .. price You may serve upon the ex-ugu11 7 1975 tn book 11477. pege Bids or offer• are Invited lor this 14 01 Offlelel Records property end mutt be In writing end ('(·utor or admm1strator, or wlll be received 11 the office ol upon thc attorney for the ex· The •ddrnt or other common Tuohey & PrHM. A Pro1 .. a1n11 Llw d d n1t10n. 11 any ot lhe reel PfC>P· corporitton ettorneyt lor the Co-1-<:utor or a mm1strator. an y <MKrlbed etxwe 11 purl)()(ted to Executors. 91 1200 North Mein, Suite file with the court with proof be 3782 Fem StrMt, lrvlne. Ce eoo. Sent• Ana. Cellfornla, or miy of servtt-e. a written request 2~ 14· the undett~ned Tru11" di•-be fl141d with the c:lefk olthe Superior qtafmg that you desire special leimi any llebluty or any Incorrect· Court or delivered to Tuotley & nnt ot the .,OOr ... or otl\ef com· PrtSM. A Prole"'°'1•1 Lew Corpor nollet· of the fl.hng of an m· mon o~netton If eny thown nere-lllOn, peraonetty 81 any time •'1• ventor y and appra1sement o f n publlc:atlon ol tllla not~ 1nd before t-state asaets or o f the pell· 11 tl'MI 11or..,ld propert)' hH no ma111ng lhe .. 1. twns or accounts mentioned 11r .. t eddreu or other common The pr~ty wtn be llOld on ""- C'-.. IZOO d l200 .. f deslgn•llOn, direction• u 10 now 10 following t9fm1 All cean. tWt per· in ~ u on an "' o IOeet• IUOh l)foperty m1y be ob-cent 110%1 o1111e amount bid to IC· the Cahfonua Pro1'ak' C-Ode tamed from tne Benelielery uno.r eompen)' the otter by eertlfieel Walter R. Baranaer M id Deed 01Trv11,11 who .. requee1 cneek. the b•••nce to be p11d on 695 Town Center Dr Salte the 111• It lo be conducted. purtuent conllrm11lon of 111e by the Superior " 10 • written requ .. t 1ubml1ted, Cou11 Tuu. rWtta, °'*"lnO end 30 I tn1n ten d•Y' from 1n. 1~11 publet mernt•n•nce .. penHI. eno Costa Mesa. Ca. tUH 11on ol 1n11 Notice. to auch p<emlumt on •naurenoe ecc.p111>M f S 7 ·2898 =~1e1~7 •~t~:ri~~~A't.~:t ~ r.: ~~::er e::r'm~tf:n°'!r::. Published Or~nge Coast RUST ANO SAVINGS AS80CIA-E11tmlnet1on of title. r9COl'dlng of OA1ly Pilot Jan 5. 6, 12, 1984 ION. LOAN ADJUSTMENT IX· convey~.''""'• 1u-. that Mt 113-84 A RT MEN T • 432 '. FOR[. lltte lnl\.lflnce POiiey llhlll be at ,,,. LOSURE SECTION, 45 SOUTH u~nH of tn•r purchHer or UDSON AV!NUE. PA8AOINA, purchlMll LIFORNIA 9 1 101 Tile underllgned r...,..... IM "O"' to rejeCt eny and ell bide PflOr ITAn.NT CW Tile total .,-novnt Of tM unP*d 10 entry of en Ofder confirming .... Al.A~ CW UM CW belanoe of in. not••l MCut9d by o.r.t.ct Oec:tmt>er 27. 1tt3 RCTITtOUI IU8'Hllll NAMI MIO Deed Of Trust ... ., Inter• ;-CINOV OWENS The IOltowlng petton• have 1ben· thereon .. prOVlded In M id nott(I), ' BERNARD JULIVS MALIK dOMd tM UM o4 tile FICUllout lutl· advanc• II •nt under tile term• OI Co-£HC\.lt0fl Of llW Eatet• ,_,Herne UNIVERSAL SYSTCMS. uld 0.0 OI Trul1 tncludlng ..... ol M1ttl\a T Mtllk Oel::uml. 90 1 s PtltclCll, Ant!NMm CA t210t charge• •nd e11~nM1 of tna TUOH!Y 6 PMSSE. owner Kif'! H .Jungeleut. 26 t62 TNltM, .. Of .,,. d•t• Of JM intlll A Protntional Ulw C«pcw1Uon F.Kala Mlulon Vle10. CA.112'01 pvbl~llon Of the ~t~ °'Sele II ly MICHAEL F MCCOY Tile FlcilflOu• Butlneu Ne!M r• M2.2e7 00 0.led' Oeoember 22, Attorneys for Co·E.11.a\ltOft letred 10 lbOYe WN ltled In Orange 1983 • Publrthed OfanQe Cout o...., Pilot Cout'ity Ol'I No\'9mber 24 1083 Nll'M Street Addr ... end T .... Oec.mtlflf 29. 30. Jl/nUary 5J_I~ Thit ~ 111>ea c.onduc:ted by • ptlont Nvm-.r Of TNJI .. 01 P«ton 004'·'3 1nc1Mduat con<1uct1nq Nie•• ComtfteftlM Au•· t;:=.:=========-. t<att H Jungcleu• ....,, c......., tn••••pen•alve • Tl'lll tt1tatnent wu med lWllll rn. 45 Soult\ Hudaon A~ •(In i.t 1C>9n• tlV\ not Noh CoYnty ci.r" Of~ County on P~ cailtornia "101 1n prtt e t ea1on1bl• Dec: 7. 1N3 By Joatl C C... Ille no F t1M31 b OtflC:kl Ao«lt ciMf'llttO ........ PIJDUNd Of~ C!oat Oelf/ f2t3)671-f010 actwrli.i"G -1 ~ l'tlot o.c 1s n . tt. ita. Jan l'vt>lllhed OJ111ge eotet~l'floe Claumed Ad¥ertl1lng '"°' o.c.mw 2t. tttl. J911 t2, M2-6e1ft ... 7$-•3 ' .. '3u.-__ __. _____ __ MOC *>TIC£ - ·llllJPllllt 11¥111 TllUOI POJ.oramk' bay & ~an view from 4 Br, 4 Ba pauo. pool honw. Prime location $775,000 YllTI llL Liil lllFlllT Jl'abulowl bey & mountain vlitw. 1 Bdrm. 1 Ba. eondo co-op. Lowest priced et $295,000 . , llYllll PUOl llfflllT Spectacular bayfront dpbc. 2 br. 2 ba up; 2 br, 2 ba dn 2 boat apl!C& keduced-$1,500,000. PllllllU H•l IOUIFIHT Ocean & jetty views. Ma.riM room. 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 3700 sq. fl. 4 car parkml{. $1 ,285,000. DllNIM UYl llYFIOIT Coronado bland ~t. t>.ytront lot. s~· boet deck. Plana avail. Now $370,000 w/trade. llllWIWl•E Near new 4 bdrm, 4 bath, lake view. 3SOO aq. ft. $440,000. WW trade for a local property. Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR j l I fl" '( ... d. D I ' " • ~ J ~ t> J '> ti I b I llPLO ••HLIUI Jutt a few block• trom the Exclualve, proaperou1 b••cll. Three bdrm nelgnbornood wnere owner'• unit wttn private .. ch home ren.ct1 pride patio. nrepteoe & be1m of owneranlp. Very large celllngt plu1 deluxe 2 • Bdrm, 2'1t bath home. bdrm rental unit. Newly Featurea, Huge mat., remodeled Large H~ 1Ulte, formtl dining. MP· 1Umabte la.n S395.000. •rat• family room with wetbar & llreplace t 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATE RS "LUIEOmll" ------$5.000 option money. 2 master IUltn. Exoeli.nt for Co-O'wn«lhlp Over loot<lng 1 bealutlful l•k•. Pool, spa, tennis courta. Low down 5-46-23 3. THE REAL ESTATERS OAlllllHIEI llll,llO G0<geou1 view! Ocean. C1t11lna & city night lights, easy walk to 3 pri- vate bealCMll 4 BRs, large prlv1te courtyerd with pool -Remodeled kitchen • Security •V-- tem Owne< wlll fln1nce 144-IOIO Dciebout Bay&Beach Reci Estate 11U1. l'fl'An UCAUNCI l/#C6 ,_ OHT&IEU Attract>ve wood and stue· co trlpleic Conveniently toeated with gotf courM to the rear. Two bedroom•. one 1nd one- nalf b1tn1, fireplace. Two bedroom•. one bath One bedroom, one bath. An- nual Income. $17, 165 .... $189,500 111-1100 l•EULIUY IEMmlll Seller "Y9 aelll Pr••- $850 per month rent Spanish tlle entry to v1ulted celllng llv1ng room Sunny country kitchen. 2 king 1lze bedroom• + den. Call for ahowlng. Price S 119,000. -Cati now 646-23 ta. - THE REAL ESTATE RS •IUllLll&I Charming 3 Bdrm 2 B1 1 snort walk from city ten- nis i nd huge perk New paint, near new roof, very. t1rge detached bonus room and RV storage all add up to fine llvlng It a very low prlct of only S 128.900 751-3191 C:SElECT .... PROPERTIES •IUYEllE llLFOHllE lrg 2-aty execvllv• home w/1pect1cu1ar view of golfcourse. 4 Bdrm, 3 B1 a.nd f1mlly room Asking $329,000. 631-7370 TRADI T 10\;\L RfJ\l.TY IEWLlmH IUYllW Guard gated community 3 Bdrm on one ol the larg· est lot•. End of cul·de- sac. Off street parking Community pool, sp1, and tennis. Goed velue 11 S3•8 .500 Marilyn Twltehell. GE 759.9100 llQlout 4 Br 2'n B• nome --------- wTtn pool and tp1. Prl· TEllll POil v1te be1cn and tennie f courts Now $575,000. Sllll·USTllDE Alk fbr David Hlracllle< Thia eondo net1ei.d In 1 64•-7020 line Cotti M..a Complex Lllll IUL EIT&n la a re11 11eeper. •Bdrm, 2'h bath, highly upgraded IUllOllTll OHIUlllE Low maintenance eKterlor only 1tep1 to bayfront. Exceptlon1I qu1ll1y & 1paclous daign With a dram1tlc fl1lr You'd b9 proud to own thl1 2-ttory • bdrm home with large with mirrored llvlng rm, dining rm & ma1ter tulle Completely remodeled kllchen Don't mlaa 1t $129,9001 ~6-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS living, dining & f1ml1y C.rtaa ••I •ar l 022 rooma Specltl delllllng 1--------~--.... .-tnr ougnout w11uded HUI I .IETTT YllW gl1P. brHe, oak & lu11ur· 200 Blk. 40' lot, 3Br + den, lout b1th1. S525.000 3ba. yerd, compl refurb Call &31·1•00 S••t .900 217 J1emtne WATI HI HO'llT Open Sal/Sun 1·5 HOMt., a-. Ownr/agl 873-5551 REALESTATE tlfl HI 1024 111"1400 •Br. 2 ba wlauadi gar on I•--------60 x 120 cor,,., lot at O 11 h•t • Woncs.rful WOttd of Shopping, right et your flnoert"'9 ewryday1 Victoria for a low price of $03,500 C111 ~6-6386 Dally ff11ot c1a1111t•d IP& MB If inn Ade. To plec. your ed. ut •Bdm 2'11 Ba. A /C. eel &42..M71 9nd 191 I CIHllfled Ad-Vttor ......, 2 lrptca, 2·tty, near S C •-.. Ptua Tenn• 5-48..()903 you. ... ----- '::~=' CO<C~~~-J1~0ts· ::: -----Ml-'"' QA9 .. ------. ~-:..:::"':..:. ~ ........ i...---· 1C ltAl£C I I I' I I I' 1 1--.-0_0.--v ,...A_ltrr-41 1 , . I I I I' . I CNIXO I -:~ ' I' I I I . _ my=..-:~~:; -------IOll Myt90ir-. ..., .. ,... .. I SHECIT l lMJllNI --'· I' I I I I' •~:-.:hoot••·-::: --~ ............................. -......... -,..;:. --,:-J .,.._ .. ·-' . ,• 1IOIM911TTAll E'llde .Ai 1 cones. 187 ,500 •EUYllM • bedroom qualtty home RV ICC.U $139,800 .. , ........ "' 141-1121 EllUUTllll Ill O&IYll 642-5678 Avall Jan 20th. quality 2 Bre famlly tP<>t S500 Call 539-6190 BEST f .. 3880 MIChelJOO Or1~ Irvine Turtle Rocle Dlxe 2 bd condO tltJihly UPCI''*' Vu, pool, tennle. S950 915-0810 Prime loc1tlon over· ...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim tooklng falJllYays, lake HITIWHI 01111 and nit• 11ta ·5 Br. • f1re- Low• at pr 1 c • In plecn, library, blHlard 3880 Mlcnelaon Oflve lrvtne Cll1rmlng E.alde remodel 3 Bdr 2 Ba, formal dining, prefer ye1r't lea••· S850 /mo. Marllyn Coomb1,631-126e Streamwood 2 Bdrm, 1V• rm, l1mlly rm Attention b1tll upper end unll lo every detail In tnl1 cu1- VACANT Near pool/tpl. tom Vetentlne bullt home. Low Clown Owner wtn $2.650.000. Tom Alllnaon carry 2nd A1kl ng ~4·6200 Big Ca~yon executive home, • Bdr, w11pa $88.900 WylaC Dorn ~~or l ·Realty l 786-1172 1 3880 MlchellOfl Orlve lrvlne * ~ • I ~ 00 • ~ Q.) ~ • >< a_) • ~ • I f ~ Macnab-Irvine COMPLETELY RE · $3000 /mo Agl OECORA TEO 2 Br hte 780·8102 w/gar & lge yd. Charm-Chln1_C_o-ve_ooe_en_v_lew-.-3 Ing, ... lo apprec:lite. B<lr wl 1pa & elevator S700 ~2-1971 Steps to beach Oelux 2 Br, 2'11 ba Condo. $2000/mo. Ortve by 2716 L1:&•f /lmll frplc. ate, dbl attach ger Shell, CdM 1nd call agt ~ w/opnra Greet toe 7ec>-8702 2-atry •Br 3ba f1m rm _S_900 __ imo __ ~_3_·2_2_8_9__ Cute 5-m-1-11-1-bd-. -1-bltl.,-,./be-.,..h home, gate guerded comm Tennie, pool, Eae1tlde 2 Br. 2 bl, trplc, 2 w /ger Sunny & Bright Jecuu l $3'49.500 w /S'f. car gar, gdnr. No pate. $550 780·19e2 dn or $1800/mo .. (8 to 12 Avell Ji~~J:21~ t MC. Ullll 11111 mos lae opt.) Beautlful • Bdr estate IHHI HAL n E11taide large 1 Br $660 home wltll OCNn and clly 111-2111 U1il1 pd, enclad geraga, light view. Comm. pool, 675-3311 Ev/Wknds g1rdener. 645-8-453 apa, tennla leSN term :"jjjiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii E/elde: 3 br, fl'g fenced yd nagotlable. S3500tmo • wlfrult ''"'· encl. gar. C11l 1gt 780-8333 UllllLI IPH Flll&T 11·2 111 YIA .llO&I Hiit~ u111wn lll-1100 grnhM , deck. Pd water & --Wl--1-1-lmH---- gardener. Smell pet or chlld OK. M95/mo Jan 2 1try •BR 3ba, family rm 15 Send personal Info to home G11e guard•d Ad •963. Delly Piiot. Box community Tennis, pool, 1560. c M 92628 jaC\IZZI $3•9.500 w/5•f. LIWEIWTllH dn 0< S1goo/mo (IS to 12 mo1 lte/opt) , _________ Sharp 2 bd, 1 ba hOUM In lllllllULn 111-2111 VERSAILLES CONDO Priced for quick sale· $78,000. Ferguson & Hahn R.E. 6-42-1183 iimtiloat1 l l 1876 Skyline like new. 12 X 55' 1 bdrm S21-.ooo. by owner. Senior Park 2060 Newport Blvd, CM. 114·787-7778 2 Br. 2 ba NB. 2 to cnooM from at S•0.000. Call Rene. Century 21 Gold Ster Rttr 8'46-7434 UllUllLLI 1972 8eautlful VIII• West Home 201160' corner tot Highly upgr.cjed 2Br 2ba, large livlng/dlnlng/kltch •ree light lnt.,IO< Beel buy In orenge Co $27,500 Young adult• Welcome Agt 540·5937 SkyttM, 12'i55'. 1 Br. exit co'ld. adult (over 55) peril 'CIOM to bet\' Costa Meta s 19,950 1-885-8522 ,, ......... ........ ,, great location It 258 Flowe< St 1 car gar, $650/mo. Avall 1·7-!4. 875-3311 Evt/Wknds. Wayne 84&-8816 LNM wtopllon to buy. 2+ ------.,,....,...--~-=-=-den. 2'~ Ba, 11t time ever LUXURY TOWNHOUSE a\lllleble. BHutlful on qule1 Cul d9 Sac clOM condo In Belcourt tilll 10 Fairview Ind Newport -eouteverd. a bedroom•. "&vwU IUL n 2'A b1th1. double garage: 111-1110 Kitchen Include& atove & micro wave, dlahwather. traeh compactor. Pool 1n<1 Jacuu l. lmm.cullte Lido 11te-Renl·leu&-Buy Be1u1 trge 4 bdrm home 675·9103 Owner Flex. condition 111rougnou1 Ott Cout Hwy nu p1lnt S 1100 per month d .. lgner decor ger1ge 050-0238 1pot'"9 2 Br nat '800'1 M"8 Verde 4 Br, 2 ba, lam 539-6190 BEST, .. rm. (Part turn?) $1200. PENINSULA: 3 br, 2 be, 1 540· 7507 eves & wknd1 hOUM lt'bm ocean, encl. g1r S 1350 F«gutOn 6 Hann R.E. 642-1183 Prof. Int. detlgner Uv1ng on Lido late MMI 2 or 3 Br teate on lido 'Cini refs 875-3273, 875·2681 WANTED: Har~. Spyglau. etc. for family w/refa for rent, ..... or ;";";";';'1;':'iiilaiiiiilftiiiiiiiiiil Al~lt Cartnt;11 Cntr11ttn C.tr4t1l11 Radr•n Rtut Cl1aala1 Palatla1 $217 bt\ewey ·Parking Lott me:;pentry Lrvb Gn1111 1-c·o·m·m·.,,-c1 .. 11-1Ae_a1_d4t_n_t1_11· AMERICAN HANDVMAH B1mlh HOUMC:!Mntng~r-1•·o·u•A•L•lTY--P·A-IN•T•E•Fl•S-' per day S&~aJrt • 8••~oaono Aep1lr·Remod·Addlt1on1 Rm;i/Aepalrs cornml L1ndte1pe Malntttnanc. Carpentry W1ndow1. vtc• Ou1111y 6 dec>en· PROMPT. NeAT PR().. A.lphelt 83t ... t99 Lie Ooor ... te S.8-4930 111d r"ld Uc'd, bOnci.d, Ouallt11 Serv\Qt, r.,1, 11c Paint, etc "47·2387 dlble work 850--0189 '!S.SIONALS That't ALL you p1y for All T --- - -' 3 Unet. 30 day• YS>ef ~r. Returf. REMODELING· All l)hNn Ina For HI, 552·9142 bOndod 20 Y'' In .,.. Ouallly WOik , honHi HouMCleanlng Vacant 12 YRS _lX_P_l_m_'"'_'"· In the ~coat ISLURAY MIX) AllO custom c•blnett 11 PA1'10 WORK·Cuttom CS. Mcweeney Landae•pe quotn 11•1 '"' Apt1 Eap d relltble My price1 at• am UI . ltati law DllLY Rat .. rn . F Auld . ...... )'fl In., .. Lie. bonded, tlgn all laze• Very ,... 645•5124 Merk Row1n 631-4877 Own trant 8$0·3263 850-4'77 AON AMt\IOCOI. Jntl,e.xt. 30 Y'9 s LI I =z .. a:s .. I\ •• r.. at1rn11e1 lnt'd 9e8-35&4 anytime onabl• Ret'1 provided 716 GR'•SS CUTTER ...... Ntitt PllUI $4S.2971 .... flW '~ ··-~5-42U or &45 0032 R41patr·Aem0del·Ro0flng Lie 1 lnaor9d 903 0022 ·~ " BaaliDJ L~al S.nkt1 Cuatom MOUN Ptl(lt ng _,,.. . contr~ ~ ~ PILOT la~lttia~ -0oor ... w1nC1ow .. Ca1>1net1 bUbP JBB!I DRUNK bRIVIAd I dtt;; .. •1 r9d~ win!! .. '~~~, ·~I Petet.a & .!!,xtUJ".. wonc ovet 1200 lndudlna r P·--• P •-F 35 11 t i ·1 Light Hauling SM .. LI. MOVING J09S L.,.._, S1rv1c.t Re.. ,.,.. .. t ..... ve _,,,_.,.... wvallty •O<tt It ...,.., ratee la.bot*'° ll\lttnaM' ~ tJA ITTIN MY iloME .,..,. 1t ... 1-encea. ff r Ciu Cleanup• " .... int/•"' F-__. ....... ,.... ..._ ...._..... • ._..__ SERVICE n J .......... 13 MIKE 6•&-139 t LOUii Horowttt t!S.1392 I ~ ,~ . ..... ·--· --,_ ............... --Nr Vietofla. Cotta M... Y" •xp .,ry ~ EtfcffticlXA Priced Aeasonabl• aa tr conttactel'9 ~ .o Nightt & PI T &42·M82 Repair/Small Job9· tenoea, right, lrM Nllmat• on Free Eatlmatu HAUL MOVE-REMOVE fllniaL Lie 42592 ""-17 fJ 9 ~ate In 11*r tld~ DIRECTORY w, Ill BABYSIT IOvlng care lhelr11nve•s'tpev8'•tl7tlon31.'e31L1ow t1rge or arnall lob• I.IC (714) 970·1792 Fum11ure, trash, Tr•• • f.1C MOVING • lnt/e.oct 20 Y'9 e•p Ant H lw af Ml-1121 Contr1ctort and Oort-n my h'6'm., d•i• or evu. 396821 · 873-0359 863·54 t6 NORM Ou1ckYc1retul Low r•t" rat•• Aft •pm or wt<nd1, Faucete\'waier H..,.,, •ume<a, contacl Mwy plua tl'le IRVINE MIRROR 5•8 0 c I -.--c l 1 Tl380•· "'"'2 "4 10 842-0442 Norm, Sr. Gt'ond .. at NI .4()M Wll fl and the HUNTINGTON " • 1 4 urt t Ct I LL BEAT ANY PAI El Hauling Col 1tudent, lrg c " "",> -v Oi'alna C:....-from 11$ eny quettlOna Conttao- BEACHCOMBER every l:-11-.-ty-_,lt.,.__m-'ct fntteliatiOn SpeciaJf9t Quality Electrical Work VAAD MAIN CLEAN-UP truck Rea1 Bch v1c, CdM •A· 1 •l vt•I• PllnUng by We) 1a Leffiir ~alrfWt, dllC), ece. to1'1 Btlte LlcenH W9d~ay at -;:;~~==,..,...,,,:-=.,---New & uNCI earJ)tt Of AK LANDAN 834-8633 TrM Trim & Hauling Thank you 759-,938 Cort S.1t quahty 25 yr ·~ 10 yrt of qu111fy & Clllftl-Anytime M&M &42~3 lotrd, 28 CMo ~ no extra cl\lfgel BODY BEAUTIFUL r•111tch old, + vlnyl, RE.SIO/COMM'LllNO C Leo 847 ·2457 LIGHT HAULING I.Jc. T • 118.•28 730-1353 m1111t11p 111 Harbor aru. ._.i PIG&. Aoom llO, a..ta CALL TODA YU Are you lnter .. t9d In E*· oeremlc, wood & tlaam 20 yrt Do my own work ~ Trash. turniwre • .ic (IXOYE) 751-8103 -Ana. CA 92701. &II NIUllU !'°",~-M~eStlmulatton clean 847-7813 Lie 278041 AL 8-48-8128 ,_H_•.,.•""!• .. r'l"•,.• .. •.,.,.,.... ... !"91_ MATT 845-5089 s:J'~~i~GM~~~~~Gcfo QUALITY PAtNT1NG. FAIR ~°'*IOICOMI Your Dally Piiot n ,,. pr,,.acy of your C--·-; * *Rmle REPXIA PRICES Fr" "' Cati ,,..,.. l <°1rf _,&:7• Service Directory ~~mt r mine? 850-5 t08.••••t Coacrtt• G1r•eala1 Elec·Plumb-Carpen1ry PAUL'S HAULING Lie T 1~:·,~~:2~ntured John anYtlme, 631-2050 ~ 83 RepreMnt1t1vt ter pm call 9'2·8269 Dflvew1y1, p11Jos. p1th1. -E Remooel Keith &46-4872 12 •t•k• wlllll & 8' pickup --142·4121 tit. JOI IOtUH la etc No IOb too small TIE I 646-07~ anytime WATCH US GROWi Pa,.dq fnlal a.me. •JI ! 984-0366 °' 5~6-0553 Toppect/ram<noed cie.n. ONE CALL DOES IT Al.L1 B tl ---Paiatlat F'a:thrnGintenor tsMt;n tYPl;;Mord ts1oc;;;ing Fer A~ Action · Cal a --------• PROF BK°RP~· compute</ CLll• C up, new 11wn1 751·3476 We 1111 11· break 11 buy '' -•-•-•.•--------........... _.._______ HANGING/STRIPPING AH buslneu, echoOI & per. manual Moder11e 1... • Ill ---or haul 11 548-5009 24 hr fl f 141-1121 FllE PAlmll VISA-MC Scott 87l· 15 t.2 sonat P<oteet• 851· 1<M 1 Acctaatlat FrM counMI. 842-7047 Loving childcare, 1dn1 r•fa. cie:~r~~=1~~~:r1T;:;::~ing Handyman of CdM Mr Furnace•• Pool He111er1 by Rlch11d Sinor Uc CPA: hlOh qu8llty Income C Li M·'-i , my Santa Ana Hgll home MIKE 650.::263 F1x-1t Odd Jobs. Painting 280644 14 yre of happy Ellpert Walleovertngln. Typing/Writing Servtc:.a Daly Plot 11111 work at rees. r1te1 I• att -•I nr Airport 75 t-3198 - - -& Wallpaper ~0-8259 Htllt CltHi~ local cusiomers B --Thank you 675·0383 John rown 1531-8483 •New cabinets. cabl~t Loving chlldcere My lar411l11 Waltt4 1 REPAIR FIX OR BUILD Aoe!N's faNiNG st1lla1ton R1u Contult· 81.ttlneta, Academic ano AD ~nD 1n1 AUiQnmt S81-8590 Pert0n11 780-1888 •fNUft feeing, batl & t0<m1Ca home Want full time chit-Mowt"" Edglng Twice • ANYTHING Reas rates SERVICE h hi CMllaifled Adi &42-5878 countenop1 M 2.0&81 Oren 1 yr up Ph 850· 7169 mo 's'20-s2s &45-5737 Dave 960·2165 clean houte a 1 <>;~~08~7 Shop claullled-our atore never cloMs &42-5678 "WE GALS SHOULD SELL Idle 1tem1 with a 642-5671 HANG TOGETHER" Delly Piiot c....lfled Ad. 839..0730 anyt1m1 &42-5118 I~~~~~~~~ • AJU!antt, Oaf. Aertaatl, Val. Aprt•ntl, UaJ. ltatab to Lt1t Ir.... 3004 lelt Wu... SHI ltlt ..... 119 Cuta Mt11 2724 L111aa ltack 2741 Saa Clo•11te 2771 _l_b_r_• __ _...21...,0l_l;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-1#11,,.. mTM.lllllTllT HOIOSCOPE 2 Br f 91 nr bus 1 beech. Rmmte to thr 2 br. 1 ba FUllT Hlllllllla A team ol'1lmld oemAlf of· llWIREEIAPTS~ No Laguna. t Br . pool & laundry tic apt on Bllboa Pen. Oya fOUNDADS ~l0<newL.\.baNd blnCoat1Meulootc- BY SIDNEY OMARA Baehel0<1, t Br S Lotta S450/mo, 1 yr lae Avail $475/mo. 498·6277 6«--0990. evs 673-8890 ln\ematlonal .irtlM . ReQ. Ing for an enthullattJo & $395-$565 6-45·44 t t 1mmed 497-5382 eves Rooms'" deluice home, NE ARE.FR££ age 20 or over; 2 yra col-Mff.motlvat9d ADA wtt.tl NEWLY DECORATED La ... Ii ... 2752 Soatk L•J•H 2711 Coste Mesa Kit, lndry, :.o; ~'. h~.~~?O'.· ~ ~r,-:; :!w.!:~ ~2· r::o ••. 2 Br w/gar, crpls, water I I 1 ed ~ Iott w/spectecular hse & pool prlv Pref CaH: welQh .. -· Friday J anuary 6 paid 838-4120 1-5PM Sweeping ocean vlewa 2 coast view Prlv Yrd Wik prof MIF n/amkr S75 :,~,:~~Ja-~ Dental Ate't, FIT, front & ARIES (M h 21 A .119) Wh had 1567"A"Orange $525 bd, 1 ba. wlk/beh, $900 to Bch S625t mo wk 548--0514 ah 4pm IU4111 teMewl hekt at L"""' beckofficeel{S> .. f\DA.X· _ arc . • pri : al evaded your grasp ----uttll & gar Incl 494·3044 499·5042 -·-Belch Executive Air T9'-_ ray lie. Sa.lary OC*\. Ben· wtll bno;. become. avadable. Means major goal is. now within 2 8~L~~E ~~Et~~:sT~tyle lt~rl ltack fijj looal 2900 Rtatalt Waatt4 2989 mlnat. 3805 E. Spring St, ::~· ::;:.or~2'!:::; reac · OCUS on i~portant contacts throu_gh soeta1 activities, aptt, crpt1 drapu 1 b<Fssoo; 2 bd. 2 ba. 1 Br In 3 Br 2 Ba hse, spe. Aetp. clean. galnfufly Found Bike. Newport Sund1y Jan 8, 9AM to 873.3403 evet/Wknda • powe,rs of persuasion and career or business advancement. dshw1hr updated kltch. •$600. No Pets. 545-4855 Nwprt Hghts. 5 325 empl. F w/cat needs lrg Beach Call btwn 6-7PM 4·45 PM only Bring ,.. ' Gemini, Sagittarius natives play key roles. From S605. 548-7367 1 Bdrm. 1 bath Avaiiibie 642•6096 alt &PM studio or 1 br In CdM or 673-7283 ~t photo & reaume DENTAL ASST TAURUS (A ril 20 Ma · ~ \: No Laguna Nr bus. Rent ASSE B 0 ERS Pert time. Outgoing, · P · • Y 20): You now are on more solid O• TH WATEll now 1650/mo. yearly E side c M furn bdrm w/ to S.50 xtra aec dee:>. ror Found Blktwl'lt kitten, M LY W RK friendly ent""91etttc pet· ground -standing in community will be elevated. Display 2 Br 2 81 ~Ill level. pool, ~73-3355 pttv be S27S mo ~ $25 cat OK. By Jan 15. Heidi male 1n lronl ot Blu. Lite UMmbly wMk from ton wanted for high leadership qualities. Doors previously closed will now swmg' s5p5a6·'92gooareoe wtopener 1bdrm,$500/mo.uttilpd clean charge 650·4303 557-4630/eva760-9789 Lagoon , Leg Bch. your hotM. Excell. In.-quality PfOPl9 ortenled Th T I 2•21 E 16 h - ---•99-3612 wcomeives eoptcP's'~!!<,m~ pract~lnCdM.Hra\~6. wideopen.You'llhaveopportunitytorevise,reviewandcottect e ropct," I Furn pvt Rm & Ba, Wanted·gueetcottagefor F d Ch d ..,., h c· -· ,._,~ Tuet&'TJ\ura,9-12,Wed pasterrors.Keepeyeon Scorpio! PALMMESAAPTS St,NwptHgts 646-1801 ! 9 2 5 o_o 9 1 6 m37o Yng Male prof Fem Reh oun ow og, ,_,, a111y all Magg ie , Fri. CIJI Chrl• 11 1 Br. $460/mo Of11ce hrs 2 Br lba, frplc, lower dplx. .. Wknd/eves 542-2310 gold, vie Harb0< & Htmll· 312-868-.8888 Alto open GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Spotlight on commurucatlon, 9-4. 1561 Mesa Or Santa t row ffom ocean Vrly MIF, Newpe>rl Crest. pool. WANTED H111bor View, ton 12/31 548-9164 aft 6 evenlnga . e.u-1001 travel, education, ability to promote special cause. Get ideas on A n 1 H • 1 O h 1 s Refs req $650/mo tennis lac Nr beach Spyglass, etc fa< family Found fluffy blklbeige cat. AlllSTUT M Dental H)9en61t. ~ paper, protect formats, coypright pertinent rn.{terial. 7W 5•6-9860 ___ 6t9/568-4306eves Lndry 1375 Att 6. wtreta tor rent lease or approx 1 yr vie 19th & FllllllYIOI ~h8 :':;• 2~d~. Long-distance call aids in clarifying objectives. Another Gemini Redec. 2 br. t be apt. * 2 BR, 1 BLOCK FROM 650-5458 option ~SAP 759-0540 Pomona. ~2-5037_dyl __ At*ltt..-.t Tl F'60d Servic.. e73-~ ~:-nJ. 1 • f . · t} s590tmo No pets Refs BE AC H S 5 5 0 I M 0 Npt, w1lk to beh. pool, ten" • Found· lrg red F dog Red 3 .v. h /d A.--b igures~ommen y. Avail.now.49•-7008 HOWARD963-t970 · nls. S250 incl utlls Offlctltatall Z9l4 ding .. CA '82 tagi, ~ Hu~t~onay&;;'h'c~DOCKMASTEA Ex · C CER (June 2l ~July 22): Strive to restore family SantaAnaHgts 1Br$500 5500--8 Bd 548·4260or993-4888 1517 Wutclltf. N.B 12131,lnHB.988-S5S8 SchOOIOlstrlct.15.08/hr. ~~~ harmony. Basic domestic adjustment is part of scenario. Money ls 2 Br 2 Ba S800 No pets Versa~c~~~o. ~I s265 278-1365 aq h Suitable Found-M. KJtten, 1/1, Apply 20451 Cralm« req'd Appty kt· pereon involved, budgetcould becen teroflivelydiscussion. Digdeep for 545·•855 Spa, sec ~6-2947 R:::'a';: pV1 e,,~~1~1=~~':, tor medical or dental Newport, wht & gry. Lane. H.B. 96.._HH. w1r.9um.. 87~7100 information, reject superficial explanations. Taurus, Libra Sharp Mesa Verde 2Br s7951mo 3 8,, 2 ba, 2 car Laguna 494.4459 Agent 5•1·5032 673-6320 aft 5 ~~'.'~~or apptylng. DRIVERS ClASS .._. .... 11 persons fiaure prQminently 2Ba s595tmo 546-5882· encl gar w/d l'lkup upper Room w/kllchen prlv 250 sq ti sulte~S200/mo. Lott black neut. M cat, 17/hr &~. t::Mp. not nee. o-. aft 6 978-3848 Pam B ' ' 779 W t9 h St I D Attend1n1 Live-In C M """' LEO (JuJy 23-Aug. 22): Someone may attempt to take credit _ __ unit. locks to beech adults only 962-5760 Nr t • su te • yellow eyes, Haven Pl. & · · · Some lclea pr<Mded. / for your work, efforts. Mruntain low profile, but protect ideas S IPAC311BIS 2 ~it ~~·;:,~t 642-1603 bus & shop CM Tom 851-8928 Irvin• Blvd 548-t293 =~~~~ :x ~ The E(~J~• d f to -hing f thing F l al 700/mo r, ba SEAWI IOTtL Lott Elks l.od"• Ring Boero + amt HI•"' ,,.~....-an re use give up somet or no · OCUS on eg twnhse. encl gar. LIA. Across from Lido M11Ma (Chrl1tmas Dayi on Pa· Prefer Fem MS-2357' Not an 9"11)1 agency papers, special documents, unique research material. Pillces patio 3Br2Ba.lrpt,newtydec~ ~~~~~·~:C:~r s~Sa~~~~~!~iy cltlcCoastHwy.btwRtv· •--------- plays important role. 763 W. 19th orated $895 1·998-5868 TV Phones m room 2274 across from Newport City erSld• Oi'lve/Grant SI. Alli nu 111¥111 E.&11 DTll _, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You'll have more responsibility, TSL Mgmt 642-1603 CONDOS FOR LEASE-Newport Blvd CM Hall. 268 sq h to 1000 sq REWARD Cell after 6 Handle fight N!Pllh. New· Guys, gala, homemekersl LUX CONDO F & u t $525 St500 846 7445 It, only 86¢/eq ft pm, ~6-0613 port Tire Center. 3000 SEl:.L IC l<OOAK FILM therewill ~addedpres,,ure,but you'llgainallles.Meansdespite S600 1 8 s 1 urn nurn • -Lost·-·'l .. 'kdog.--EaatCoutHwy.CdM. coupona.ChU<enbe1'41ft h . th h ill i h -d "d . r tudlO, rplC, Agent 631·4960 S"" .. • S-U-N LODGE ••11 w1a LIH ....... .,. .,_,._ • 2•"· A"27 roug terratn ere are persons w o w P tc m an aJ m tennis, gym. w/d, walk to ---""'0 •• ... heartbroken, an1 to ~ttertMothera .._P. ~ achieving goals. Favorable outcome to legal dispute is indicated. SC Plaza 875-4063 HYll/WISTOllFF 30~~~ w~0u:,t ~owyl~ ~~t 0tt1n!QeLI001Pece8u1*'LDth1NbGay view ~oke, v1c Edlng4r & .,. my home 2 c:hUctr9n ESCROW SEGIOfflCEFIS Cance .; f ' mine tl 2 Br. t Be, nu cpl/drapes. Goldenwest 897-8481 7-3PM HB 8-46-5655 Temp assign. eq>er only r na ... ve igures pm n y. PIHILIFF VIEW bit-Int, pool, carporl. no Westchll, NB. siOo mcl Crpts. drapes, UIHS & LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 22): You strike chord of universal Lrg 1 Br wlloh. encl gar. pets S675 t6t6 Bed· util Vng woman. non· ma1nt incl 95¢/SQ fl Please. my chilcfren---.re CASHIER Gen. off Will ESOllWIYDLUI appeal. People are "on your side." Utilize various means of Jee. ulll rm. pvt deck. ford 645-6646 smkr 648-5559 LllO REALTY hysterical. Lost Fem train Outgoing per· 714-494·233_2 __ . . . l ding h ed' M be f . blln1. frplc S750 No ll• 7•00 brindle Aklt1. 6 yrs, re-son1l1ty, fun 1ob . Female model• wlllted communtcation ,mcu t e m 1a. em ro oppositesexlB pets. 2 151 Pacific Eestblull. 1 bd, pool Working Fe 25-40 non-,.. • wardlorreturn 241·9055 ~0-95510<631--0262 No experlenee necee..- drawn to you and makes no skret of it. Aries and another Libra 631-6107 855..0665 Pleasant area S600l mo smkr pool tennis. 1ac --------• Reward Aust Sh..,, M CASHIERS ary Age 21 .35 To PoM __ · 644-4767 NB $300 650 1706 eves v .. figure prominently. THE GABLES 2er 1'"1Ba -Baylront Ott1ees patios blk/wht small CM/NB 15 po1111ons avail Xlnt fOf Pof1r1111 S20 P< hr SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Special sale proves of benefit-w/gar $585 crpts drapes Lovely 2 Br 2 Ba 2 gar Vacation parlung. 1an1tor1111 673-5302 644-7254 starting salary Hiring 675--0823 you make headway along new paths, gain greater independence bltlns lncd pa!IO wtler Pd yearly. '" blk bch. no Renlah 2907 673· t003 immed No exp nee Free 1anc;ar111t fOf past• 2439"0"0range pets. S725 650-1706 evs COM office space -(bBSe·p =-""'er_1,_o_•_•_ll __ .-_3_0_1"!"92 The Employment Center up & lay-out Newl>Qrt as resuJt. Avoid heavy lifting, keep resolutions concerning diet, 636-4 l20 call l ·5PM Newly remodeled 2 Br 2 Lge Big Beach cabin Pool -(71 4)220· 1520 Beach printing sales of- tr·u· d al h alth ' ~ A . t' I B table. color TV, 2 lrplc, ment) Access to private •Handsome wht male Not an Empl Agency r1c·e hat tm111 office nu 1 on an gener e . LA-"V, quanus na 1ves p ay Upstatt1 2 8, 2 Be. gar· a, lrptc. garage. no pets. sleeps 1417141545•6916 patio 48 1 sq fl at 83c. seeks. attract. generous paramount roles. age. nr Hoao. s550/mo $875/mo. Incl ut1I Avail south or Hwy whl female 557-8543 Clff, hlistaat speoe ava1l1ble & 20 hrt SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Follow through on first 675-8411 & ~5-6822 now 759•9194 Ooeen Front Rentais 1 & 2 Rogers Realty675-2311 CIRCUS Of Min 5 yrs exper contlnen· over work fOf' tree-lance impressions. Ideas click, innovative procedures succeed. Be alert, ---Nft ;;·~~~":';,to;, 1,88J!: ~i~r;s 01;0~0~~~,~~o~ P°71me locauon. 350 sq tt ~~rd~~!'~., anghl~:;; =~~~ ~=~g~u:if aware and display sense of humor. Relative makes unusual me&liB.1111 close to pool & tennis. $600 114·498·7873 ~~~I 642"4644· Mon-Fri, MASSAGE culelne helptul. bcetlenl r1:vac~~~~8~~5or request -deserves serious consideration. Cancer, Aquarius Beautifully landscaped ~:~\J~7 ~a~~MS1100 Rea tab to 7 t9 N~utt:~TocfN BLVD ~~~a~1 C~u~~i~tu~~ natives figure prominently. garden apts Pool & spa. __ _ _ Ilaire 2901 Laguna Niguel 831_1t82 Fill lWEPAY CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You'll be dealing with Pat1os/deck1 No pets Nr Hoag · lmmac upper 2 Balboa Pemn Polnl 110-1112 0< 496-5767 PAIT·TIIE Wiii Specl'al docum0 nts, maps. sets of instruc·ta'ons. Focus also on Bllch S450 Br 2 ba, quiet tennants Beaut 2 story. 4 Br to shr l IAY A Will -Opportun•tl•• 1vall1bl• ... 1 Bdrm S525 $560 675-9005 or ATIAACTIVE Child MonltOf' • Hou ... With the Los Angeles payments, collections, ability to locate needed material. You'U t3t E 18th 646·6816 642-1276 ;,~!~~~:::· ~~~ 1~~1 &full stn lct 1114& MASSEUSSES keeper Live-in 3 chil· Times Clrcvta11on De· make contact with unorthodox individual who challenaes, 161 E. 18th. 642-0856 Ocean frnt, t bd. Wood/ from sand Non-sml<r No TO SERVE YOU dren Send Retume to partment In our door-to-- ul d ds If ~ S 00 673 8766 1450 SQ It view suite OPEN 24 HRS # 6 Yorkshire Newpe>rt door newspaper aaJea stirn ates an encourages you towar greater se -express10n. WESTLlH YILUIE Glass Apt lde111/ sngle pets 4 I mo • I Beacl'I. 92660 program GuarentHd AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lunar cycle high -what 1 & 2 Br pool, spa, garage pers Non-smkr Ut11s pd. or 673-68t6 Four lrg l)rtvate ofllCeS ESCORTS/MODELS C-NA's & NA-;;-Appl!-hourly wage plus c.om· Originally appeared as setback is due to boomerang in your fgvor. a11all lndry rm. no pet1. lse $700 650·3823 aft 5 Female non-smkr shr 3br with lrg secretarial area, Outcalt ONL v 835·9199 mtmon Houri 9AM • Port 2ba CM $215 Judy kitchen and private cations beln~ acoee>t9d 2PM, or 4PM • 9PM You'U be where the action is -you'll make correct judgment eC::.h. 1 & 2 Br 5385.5565 966•53 11 or 548•1954 lobby Sign space avail· prvt duty o County. T 1 1 1 P Id d h able on Westcllff 40 4 cnvls/ger1atrlc ex · re n ng • rov • and timing will be oh target. Scorpio, Leo and anot er Aquarian TSL Mgmt M5·8122 or Female 10 share 2 Br 2 Ba Redecoration allowance l11i1t11 On. 1 perlence a must For Potential to tatn S300 figure in scenario. 842•1603 Promontory Pt Apt appt call 661-7401 Mon plus per w..-FOf' an In· PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Focus on institutions, special WOllWIYILUIE INNEW ORTB"" .. CH $425/mo 673-8601 14 .. ·8101 SALHPIRSll thru Sat 9AM-t PM tervlew . Call <7 141 ""' u Almand's Nursing 957-2361, Ext 1204 groups, organizations and possible visit to hospital. Popularity 1 & 2 Br. apt1 evall. Po<>I. Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-Fem rmmte needed 10 shr l1tit11I C.s•tffo Ct. --- increases, individual confined will provide information necess· spa, l/r, petlo/bal. No ments & Townhou1es With M & F 3 Br dplx on --------· Looking fOf 11llr1C11w, well cocnan. SOYlll pets 1 & 2 Br $505-$610 lrom $660 (ASk about Penn $310/mo Must be groomed. 1ggreutve e-lllt ••-ary to achieve current goal. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons TSL Mgmt 754-0081 or furnished apts complete neat. clean. non-smkr Ct ••ercial person 10 1111 Oi11r1ct n ..... •• figure prominently. 642· t603 with TV, linens & utensils. 675·9643 Rentah 2911 Manager position 1n local CHEERS RESTAURANT may be rente<l for short area Entert111nment and dine· Atar .. tatl fualtla .. Atutantl, UaJ. Aprtatah, UaJ. +Sm 2 Br t Ba nr SC lerm or longer No lease Fe rmmte wanted 10 shr 3 •CdM dlx suites AC ampl Rapid advancement ing We need cocktail --Plaza SA pool spa $525 req d) On Jamboree Rd Br Condo. 19th & Or prllng from S325 2855 Excellent income servers We train Stu- C.1t1 .... 2'24 Ctrtal ••• Jb1 2722 COit• .... 2724 No pell 752-5822 Ill San Joaquin Hills Ad anqe HB s25oimo Call E Coast Hwy 675-6900 For conhdentl81 lnleMew dents OK Full, pit Beach 144 1•00 Stevf' all "4PM 536-4444 call Mr Olsen 645•9 t04 & Warner Cell bet noon 2 bd 1pt. wtgar $800/mo. Eastttde cute bachelor, z • MOVE IN TODAY 752-6955 847-9966 pm Furnllhod Bechelor $375 503'/t Polntettla, up· v11ull9d celllnga patio Diii Poiat 726 M'f n/smkr 10 shr beaut IALIOl llUll Utll paid, walk major stairs. 213-691-2318 S•l5/mo JCYyCe W•ltze' 1550. bin 2 Brm. view. Penln xlra lrg 2Br. tndeck. turn condo Laguna Hiiis HEAVV TRAFFIC' u -Cook Dinner HouH ahopptng, 'It blk buaea, --83 t268 • • new crpts/drps & paint $300 •i, uttls 859-1287 ntrtflftl, Broller and Seafood olf 1tree1 parking 2Br2 Ba.den,trplc.2car Remu '· neerDenaYCachlHa~~r Ytlylse,S750 552-0853 • Sl400tmo 650-5667 T.D.'1 4021 Dana Point Area S.6·5282 garages av1U. gar, tlept to beech. E.1lde lrg bechelor, quiet, A·25091 La resta v wnr LAGUNA BE~CH MI F Prime retail loc vie ot ----.... ~ ....... --499-2416 ---2~1.A Avall. nO'tlf $ t tOO/mo $395/mo Incl utll & 494-6848 Specious apt I m1 lrom beaut home w/tncred Harbor & NewPQ<l Blvd I.I Uffill Baat. ltack V'IV 85t-8787 p1t10 No pelt. 759-9194 Baat. ltack 2740 ~;~~35~arpets drapes ocean vu S600 ~2-7745 s125o mo 548·3401 l•rtsac• Ot. let. YOUR Owll Nloe 2 bd, 2 b1 duplex l•n•-Ill t .8, 1 Ba .•.• ,,..r clean, Lrg rm 1n huge 2 stry hse S 1 . Spec;taltztng 1n 111 & 2nd A II No I No pet• -· ....... ¥ Steps to beach 2 Br, lrpl Frplc. wl d. dshwr. bale 6h50oP:!0f,'o'rClftes$s'.'rteo:~•oe TO'sS1nce 1949 c1ans PEllOIS COUllTRY va w · 1 Br I Ba. 111 blt·ln1, lndry walk to beach, S425tmo nu. klt, $725/mo v,1.. Must ~. ee $395 650·63 t 4 "" .,... Robt Settler NHICM $7SO/mo • cleanlngand rm,c11r pe>rt,nrbeach& CallAndyg~-8870 213-727-7805 ', ~ CostaMeseC·:? 548-7249 Talented 1ril1an1 & S ii den Call RE Broke' Bd Realtor• needlewor"ers n--d-" ecur Y ,.. ahopa $425tmo Male PIT 1l9rent shr 3 Br ~2 2 7 54s..oe " .,.... .., ESTATE 759-0351, 8·5, Mo-Fri. 735 W 18th St WESTCLIFF 2 br. ,,.., ba 2 ba Twnl'l'se WI O. pool l••••trial 1 1 It tmmedl11ely 'M1k• Beautlful & park like Ct1ilim 7 4 TSL limt 142-1IOJ Townhouse No pets gd lam area Pref Female l eatah . 2929 Btlr Waat.. 5100 ~:-lo ~~:'Oc:'~.,:' • IEIEIAL IFFICI Energetic peraon 10 do Xerbic copying, fifing, typing & general seNice9 Company .... 111 Jra1n New· port Ph1rm1ceut1cal1 897 W tGth St N B &42·7511 ••t 230 H11rdresaer Experlenoed only Stach area 873-7219 na&.TIOLll Morning Shift 1vallable 6-2pm Nwpt Bctl Sptg HM. 752-0565 (RICtt) Helper aHllt handl· capped person io getJnto c•r 11 am end get OU1 of Cir, 4 pm ·~­ Eastsld4t CM &4$,-2357 with terraced pool S7001mo 548 7533 kid OK S330 .• , uul 2 660 sq ft 3975 Birch •t••Hlll 642-2668 •Private Patio• 1 8{·1 1 B•., 1~2t wa;;c~· -•PMLll• APT Yrly ocean front 1mall Lve ml{I 964 5303 NB $1330 MIA zoning with 4 yra e': 0, egr or Oh lllTIOlltal •Cover9d P1tl01 re r ge. qu e · c an 32 I Br lrg rms crpl1tdrp1 bachelor apt, So400 Agl Malure wrk'g Fe to shr 2 Agent 54 1 5032 oquivtlant lmmed oPen· OE LIVE RV Great PIT Job Int p!ln1 m11n1enance •S~lout Apl1 S~a Mgmt 841" t 4 range No Pell. S3&5. ' • SetuttlY Gatts 645-3683 bel, :? ba apt wl tame M/F dellvetlng bask.ti E~ Pfef car req. Great •Dining Area tBR $.475, w/gtrden view. Ag! 731-88291642-7312 • P(IOi I Aec Room 642 4952 arter 9 om Coste Mesa 3ooo sf, •7c Ing Apply In person Park lunches 9-2 tr1napor-Job & t>enet1t1 5'0--$440 W lk I •-~ t d ,_,. • 11 2 BR Patio Apt• pr s I 1005 B11oso Or Newport Apts Corner talion needed 497•3729 * 1 • n-c..,...ts new carpe ·new re,._, L-.,.,.. 2-... 2 Ba pool, lndry 6•4 1~9 S Joaq 1n 11 Jam .... •v u-r.1 Otn l'nc!1~p no Newporl Beech Condo On • -c.. 1n u • ...... __. / *Hom.Ille• kitchens new paint, bullt·ln ove<1/ tac. all ullll paid. From • ' ' ' Spac1ou~ ~tnqlt one B h th g meie bOree NB Delivery peraon PIT Must .. _... t block to Huntington & r1nge. refrig, wUhroom. 5489/mo 54&-0336 • D1111washer1 I 880' ay s r wi yovn I New Coste M1u lndustr111 be t8 good drMng nt· RELIEF For ~ l.cfy frwyt otf 11reet parking . .,., blk __ • J~ 10 8tKh I SllOPt & two btdroom apts $325 644 1607 Perk M· 1 zoning un1t1 CO<d 75 1•4705 Frt pm to Sun pm 8*1ary UTILITIES FREE bu ... 6•6-5282 gar avall Ltrge 2 Br. on Eaat1kte, Npl Bch E Bluff prol/F shr from 2400 to 5200 sq ft. IWOtl AOllllT Valk:I dr""" lie ~ 2 B D plell a yrs old patio, Ill ulll• paid Only w(.s1me, furn 3br 1',ba t5"to ofc C1111 P1ul Ryan, mCl11YI .1um1T P/T Eng Reta req 5'1-01~ 1 Bdrm Fum$585 ~ lu f~d yard n0 S850 No pet• 700·8882 condo. non tmkr $300 646·5051 wkdV-The O<ange Co.tat Delly Drive own car N>Ply 11 HouHkteper, E tide 2 8drtn From $&95 ~ti 5fo'..e13e ' "LIKE BR_A_N_D-NEW" mo ' ,~111 • d .. O 7$9 1QllO S1t r•1 ....... Pilot hH an IK<*lenl op. 2474't Newport Blvd CM Costa Mau ., •• 'LA e UINTA HERMOSA ,.... .... Beaut 3 Br 3 ba, frl)IC , or 66.-!>600 toct 409 ••ltA pe>rtun•ty tor " c·-"---• .. et-.,, ... •""5 - -Sf:rkllng t ...,rm from 1..,. I d ' --.,...,...,,.., -• -~ w .. t or BNc:h, 3 blttt 2 Br T ...... nhouM, ........J, •5 2 Bdrm from ... 55 vau t..., c:eihngl, ef!C ... ..,., uto •IOf.,.,. *""~ .,.. """" .. ..., Penth<>uM. n1 beech, pvt c.... -.. -_....... ooented MatOf Acc0unt Fii Jll touttl of Edi,.,._. 1p1. •ttached gtrage. Utlll:..,.. ,....... ".,.,.,. no yd, oncl g11, blllnt, w/d tor 4 can n1 P19eefllt• 6 • ...,_. -.,.,.,,. .--..-111 be8ctl N •nt & bath crptg micro, Executive with • prov.n 14'1·1441 trptc 1'.+ 81• quilt pelt • · ' hkup. W k to 11•0' FURNISH£0 Of He S32!> 536-0794 !7th C M 60 2300 treci.. record Grtlt L let k I 5!$0/mo 93t·•994 301Avocado.842-08&0 Hunt ~:t8~3e v UNFURNISHED, --------Aaataact•Hll 3002 po1•ntl11, guerenteeo •1••\ 1 '375/mo 1 St, 1 b• amall 24 t W Wiiton ~1 0980 aeaut2 Bt 1-,...,-ba.-tn>IC ALL UTILITIES P101e111<>n11 lllMle Metia FREE-ALL AGESI ~~::On 'Y:.i,~l 1~ * TEIBOUNDOFSi:: cottage.on road quiet Lrg28t18e;upper.~k, veult9d~llng,tened yd: Pl10.H£ALTH home to U\111or1m111 TV COMMERCIAL SEM· intomen~t1P4ul I Bt, frpte, gar No c:.t: y 2072 N..-pc>rl Blvd , encl gar. ott ..... port encl oar bftlna Walk to CLUBS T[NNIS. renlll, Cost• Mesa Hunt INAR see SUNDAY AO Send r.sume lo week ot monttl.. • 184 TSL Mgmt &42· 1803 81 & ,.. ... Of Avail Jen beleh Hr Hunt Hatt>our SwtMMING plu\ IKh .,.. NOl'l·lmlt.r. 213·465 4401 p 0 eo. t580 AJUlllnb, V • $565/mo 2 Br. t'" be 7 SS50/mo _!_4'·1838 S650 148-0738 much mort1 ~orry, n .. 1 , pootiblt Have Cost• MeN 9~878 ----Twnh ... !/atde. Encl iar. Lrg 3 Br 2 Bl upper, -------no pe~ Modtl\ f'ld•rly qulel d~ SCRAM-LETS EOE ~oc.e0Vf9w rt patio/yd Ui48Sant• na encitd gtr•· M ... det IEU. w••E '1111 optn dally 9 to 6. SM1ey 8•2· 207 ANSWE.RS IMnQ rm & office. S700. TSL Mgmt 842°1603 M1t 1rea 1585/mo No "" 4H-~.evee499-2517c1.EAN,&1,.. otdT'iidrm e>e'• 1s1-990&tvm119 1w:.;.,,"~=~·c.,~"& Oakwood 2bl $695 D/W Gar LUXURY CONDO walk to d ... .__ pool Glfdttt Aurtnwnts • "'...,.5 SC Plat F """"' ""-l rtpet, .,_.,.,y, ...- ... latall fllf _P_1Uo $695 A~t &4__... French ~~·~a~. garage $4951mo No 2 6d ept w/011. i1&81mo Eattllde 2 8' 1 h ~I~ home MCUrlty. 1 br I bt pe~~2~,2=a,.. St. .,, .... 29th St. Upattlr• Ole ..... o .... r~•,.J11 • Incl. WuNt & dry9f, ~vt , _______ _ Nu Cwpe4 213~~502 Eldtll 9'T• c:Jub wltMnl crta. PoOI• -EASTSIDE jac, 1t11n1, beaUt ~ QUIET 1 BDRM AP N•llU M'f COZ'Y 1 &OflM $345/mo 'lubhowe & mucf\ mc>fe NEAR B ACH '300/MO Vftt.,.,., toe. 1br, utll ~. ~· 145. &e25 Ind. moet ut St 536-7310 ssoo. no s>oet• t1fJ· t3S8 AJ nt O.yt 131-4405. t It 214 1$44 MvMW Or. .... 731·1528 lfHI I C J _ For rent °' ..._ W HLL Idle ll•m• with a Thalia 3 rma S.520 Ind Delly Plot 01U11-.d ~ utlllo.,otMt AM-41~ \ ' H'1Wpot1 Bt.W. So. t 700 1611'1 ~tttfl (•I 0ovft) 6•2-S'U Newport Bt~ No. 880 l~tnt Avtnut (It 16th) 6.,,_tlCM Pott enttbath. '" wam«/ ao10onwa1, H e 1911 t Oltne Ln $260 530-0704 Retp rmmt• ''" 2bf 2b1 N 8 SU!i mo • Pf'IOf'Wlt 6 •lee ~0·7004 Ton• AHlllSTUTm &UllT&IT ning r on .,, ""-'o valf•rta ~ 11 O'*""O tf'lojr COf~•'• off!C* tn Newpon Bach CA and II looltlng '°' just th rlgl\I lndrviOu lo ~ all 1dm1"1alr1ll•• 111111 Welcome · ptlone vOtC» ra • mutt Ind trono 9duc:at!Ort9' k Ott l'lectll "'' Jim Nu1hy 2 IJ/313--I 7 Are you 1dventurou1 need money.end tov.to ,,.~? A Cahtom1e Mtg Co h11. open!nQ1 fOf tO glll Ind Our-. 18 and OVef to trlNel C-'lfOf'NI. l.ft veoa Hawaii and 1 t W l91n Ill with OUf ~upervltld merketlng IHm cttmonttratlng a rev~uonary new prod- uc1 Mutt be lt'l\b!UOWI, W9ll QU>Ofned and tmght All 1111ntng ••~" .. ' p11d Tr1n1port1tlon !urn, rttum OU•M1eed High Hrnlngs Start rmmecs Fo1 1l, c.all June Pridgen. I 1_. pm on!y ..... '337 IHUUIPll LIYe 1n or out Mon-Ff1 Flt.xlblt hourt Mu1t IJ)tU Engtitl'I H..-. own car 1.aguM Np er-. R•f•renc• • t19uir~ t3t·28~ 0< M1·S15e HOUSE~E£PE.RS,47)0tlt FI P/T. WOrll ..mer.. yoll 1 ...... tar a p"°°9 a ""*· 75().3154 . .. . ln11U1anot Agent Nedi M#\ag4W wtto la pro- f onal Muat Ila"• aattt, typing. phoM *Ills GrOW'\h ~Ii.I S1tary NegoUabl• 17)-tMJ N 11 I11109 ----~----------------~-----------...---..... -----------................... .,.. ... .... ( Coaat DAILY PILGI/Thuraday. January 5, 1984 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ltlt Wu... II• •tr W9W II• JtM aatt4 SlOS •lactll11M11 Ht Aat11 WntN tt20 '81!!, ..,...,.. .... :;:;;:;;:iiiii;;;;.~;:;;;:;;;;.:= ~lltled pracucaJ nurtt, 1161*1 Ctoc.odti. hencsbag, WI w•--....... Ina IHI Vtlbw tl U SALES I COlllERCllL ~ REIL ESTATE llv• In, local ref'• seoo obo Mf...4711 _, ,... ..... "' -1 ... ....,, t 1-OWi ... •1.•t , ..,...., . I '7 0000 ""• I °'"'' _ • .,.,.,.., •• ..,~ . -78 4.,._.., wnt wfDlu nt, tuptt aherp c., Senior citizen i.cty , .. Md~-=~~:':· lelAoMIOOlcl ?eK ml, 111n• ~01'd, S3f001080 811-3011 ..l .,. tOO IS40·"13 -_.:.,_ POlltton .. com~•· 846-0723 '"&PM • ·1• vw Conwert Wht/Whl nlon/1tcrata1y PIH" - Pllone 87&·•430 On'*'· air frame on plat": '11 110 ILG ~~P790~11t ~!!" mllet ACROSS e2 8 ktrt unit PfH!VIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED ,._ Waatt4/ form S 180/obo Nu 5183, _.,..,., .. _ S300 813. 1093 dys Mag.a. Bm/Pal lthr. Only ---!;g;~1111 17M orig mt blr .. In· Aattl, ~ I Old hOfN ~St - 9 Leg room 14 tilgh rating 15 Further 1e Soften 17 Freedoms 19 M ooch abbr ~ Kind or '*'r &5 Oeser~ 67 8Htlng 70 Ptace del1y 71 Ghas11y Established firm la relocating to O.C. Airport area & expanding Its staff Open- ings for experienced agents or trainees with sates background. Send resumes to P 0 . Sox 518 South Laguna, CA 92677 h•ntlc 9107 IUIYlllL Ill help w/dom wk In t•ch fOf rant 780·MASA SSIO Video mad\ atMI 5 tor elude chrome whla 1.,.. 11500 or 1350 u . AblOlutely IMrnec oond &JIC ~ 876-2172 or 4ff.3U3 Trac I Must 111 to eppreo. (8tf li,;72p.;;38•y;....,1n!""l!)(!!'1n~l.,cond~~itP.:IOn~ v1a1a xxx-R :sow AC1oc '11 FdAB PickUP ;~~~f~~ IMPORTS. me s10t5 obo 8-42-1s11 convtrter S 120 can l300/0bo 6'&-e3a DIAL 21317 t4'~ERCEOl8 la-lck 1307 JOhn '' 832·2080 '87 ~o. gOOd WOfk wanted 8*trtc train & IC· truck S800 obo 1142·U.1 ·112 3000 TUReo OSL *'U 8u1Cik Reatl auume C -13,000 mt, ltke new pymnll ot $210 11 No 20 Poetry muso 21 MOithJr• 72 Within· pref. 73 Theater area 7 4 Time periods 75 Rum ind•r IEDIPTHIT/ IWITOlllUI lffUTll Store11ty, CdM, llexlble hre. ex<»ll ..iary + ben ehta tor 1 one pereon ot- ltce E•P w1phon11. typing & Um114"t IGCt'g Dys & 91111 840-94$ I tuy Dog t i S 10 any.1lze (Grooming achool) IHCher 2 f yrt exp s.48 2848 cnt Full ttealt Pftf •II ·ee Ford truck w/ctmS* $25,900 t1 B 720 1705 CIWn pimnl OAC .. C•ll 111 8 PM 8-40-•a2e en.u. run• v.,y~ 3 ...... ' 001 bo na~7 3 -,,2 Tl WAIOI Chuclc 7t• -"~ A.gt Wettern Saddlt, 111n1 14 O .,...... eond , "400. Oftllel Cam htl•ut --Only 15M ml Full feet '7tl 4 OR SKYLAAK P/8, 23 Remarks Pt"'n DMk S350 bNu1f.. ' .-pl Sn RI all"""" BMI AM/FM, A/C, Xlnl eond • 24 Footed DOWN lul.~ond 7So·e&3e ca.11111 IMS ;'.int'd veti f;;-wty & 1 owner S2.00 OBO 27 L<>oe unit 1 Became lor Npt 8ch firm Supetlor 1klll1 In clerlcal dutlM. In· cludlng typing, C\lllomer eont11et, and appear1noe • mutt f!xi>e<i.nce In Pulte 8otrd/eon1otH SG 1 ptut Good t>eneht1 For appt, 7 14~45'-4800 '!1 T·BfRD Yery clttn iclnt fin, evall Call qu~ _ Ms-4023 Mlle. WHIM 1220 new 1.uto trana, pwr lor da1allt (Set 1234) Call '81 Regel Lid, load4"t, WANTED 08Eb Blfiv brka. "'"· rldlator, xhtt HOUS! OF IMPORTS. Inc lharp, lull pw<, •Alf COnd 2$ Orama aahen apeeches 31 Light eater 3S Rooter 2 French r1ver 3 Deranged 4 Money slang 5 Apropos uoanuY Hotel NIM office ~utrt &owpm typing on 91ee· tronlc memory typt· writer, Ability lo work In· del)tndtntly and to co- oper1te as membef of 3· J*IOf'I tNm 4711-2055 C RIB Rtuontbly aywtm, tJ>rlnga. tie cot· OIAL2t31714MEACEOES 17500 8&1·1227 or l)rlCtd 1142 1039 onlal Whitt a 1 e.000 'II 210 SEC 559-5031 • • 957-8177 64&-&591 ~ot Biie/Biie, only 7800 ml All C .. UJU lo1 37 At no time 39 Goll shot 6 -Baba 28 Support a-0 Medf!O mist., 51 Ionization ntlque oak dreuert. tide boartt9, benQI. btrt>ef ch11r. braH CUh 19019· tere. and ol01h1ng r.ck1 IOf .. ,. Store cto1tng 263-0 Avon St. NewPort Beach (nr poet ottlcel 846-3545 or 1148-4025 llla1ic&l la1t. 1214 btea, l•,.rtt4 11c1 eqpt, 1ne1udea ;1u @ido auurM pymntt a pc drum Mt, z;;C\ cym-lft tl lZ chrome Whit Vth In of $393 98 No dwn b1T1. new harchtlatt, with ; 'Bl BMW 3 fil euurM gr Mt cond. S•v• over pymnt OAC Call Cnudc 40 Slogla lime 42 Roman date 44 Dirty air 7 .Applied 8 Mislays 9 Pouch 32 Trff growth dose unit 53 Piiiager 55 Cabin Reception~ R8et &tmte lnve11menJ Co . pro· te111onal attitude & •P· pearanoe nMdect. tight typing 549·2988 11cana111 caMt S700 8-45-129& pymnt• of 1276 70 No "9WI Mu•• be teen to ap-079-3563 Agt Ofllct fuaitart/ dwn pymnt OAC Call. ~~~r~~I~~~.~ ':; '75ELOOCAVALIER.orto· 45 Concerrung 47 Reducing 10 Wall coats 11 Actor hmn 33 Revelry cry 34 Mii untt 51 PoUshts 58 Rye disease 59 St Lo pals 60 Fnsky .; A E SALES Earn !9 90~ Leada 1upplleo ~•lty Network 957 -8787 M1jor Stock Brokerage firm has Immediate 099"· 1ng lor MCretary. E•· ~rtenca prel Accurate typing a mu11 Hrt 8-4 30 Salary com· menturett with tX· Ital •Ht 1226 Chuck 979.3553 Agt. Ot231 Cit! lnal. moonrool, 12176, Firepro! frte-tllndlng '715 BMW 3 OSI, M600 HOUSE OF IMPORTS, Inc Newporter II, 842-07115 d•et 49 Gamble 50 Angrier 52 Delight 54 Single Robert - 12 Shrewd 13 Looks over t8 French sculplor 22 United 25 Arcadia 26 UK Shtre 35 Suds 36 A11an money 38 Allude 4 t Permanent 43 Wizard 61 Ne19hbor- hood 63 Nil REITA~~' Counter /ctea mull be r•· llable Apply t the Irvine r.lub Houte H850 Sky· park Blvd Irvine Call Cindy 7 • 10am, 857 -0499 or 2pm.5pm 250-1553 per1ence Cell Met en. liiA.._.., ... Pl"!'--'!l'""P 847-2423 comb1n111on sale, 24x ~~;~ ~r =: ti DIAL 21317 '"MERCEDES -'ll El MUii 21x23 deep new COn<l A• about the money W9 MBZ trad•ln Wht/Burg S2751obo 846-0792 '78 5301, Arllc Blue w/lan can aave you thru our Only 36M orlO mt Full Pl•1801 Or UI Elec Sn rl & window• purehaM & ,, ... plant. fact eqpt A beaut Xlnl cond S9000 Jll IUllll m1lnt'd veh Only $8995 Kn1be mplco rend 850·0253 l•PllTS Call Quickly' (3-r 993•) 56 Contntlon 590n -46 Number 66 Pipe l1tttng 68 Fllpper Player. mint cono S9000 ,79 320; lbefl•n Rtd, xlnt Ctll Juhe 759.9335 1301 Ovall StrNt HOUSE OF t••PORTS Inc I HY APPLWICH cond . UOOO/obo Nl!WPOATBEACM "" • Secretary 1 with 48 Sou1hern city 69 German river Prolestlonal office man· ager, mull have very gOOd typing tkllla, tome bookffplng and com· puter 91<1111 ~ts•ry Fut~ time Send rnume to Nancy 17117 Orange Ave, •B102, CM 92621 " 957·8133 l,.rtilt GIH1 1230 1145-8305 Iv mao lll-flOO DIAL 21:\/714 MERCEDES enmore WHh•r. xlnl complete Scuba Gear, ~ ~·•n Phone Sate Subacrlptlon1 'ID 11 llRDI 10 11 12 13 2 3 Restaurant Gen Help-P-'T Some ex· ---..-..... -..--t--1 perience with ltallan eond. S85 1145-25&1 Incl 2 Aegul1tor1, •,Wet ~ 1'11.1' Ouellll.ct Ltadt Ctll MBZ trac»-ln. Brn/T1n enmore wlhr & dryr, .. 11 Sutt $400 5411-3073 S1JM.8e<vlce·L...ino Frank &31·8100 lthr On!r, 3eM ml One of 14 Coolctng Spaghetti and P1u1 Call &31 ·3433 cond. S 100 11 544·64118. lt1t1~ Gtatral -70 l1 UllEIT Cac:tlnac 1 finer ~'"" AYTAG weaher and gal 121 Avon. 3 yra old. xlnt llVEITIRY TOP SSS PAID ~,o~rc::itced oMll 20 Retell Sale• * llUIALHOP* Part & Full time Ex~r In retail women a cioth1ng req Train ln bridal C M 859·5559 548-1821 SECRETARY/ RECEPTIONIST General ottic. work Mon· Fri, PI T Atk MIU Foettr dryer. Ilk• new. 1150 ea cond wlllrbda,O/Bbrkl .... 79 320I, • epd. AIC IERForCEPamlE~SrltdEIZ HOUSE OF IMPORTS.Inc Aelrlg, Sl50 957-0498 cover. oera $575 lor (994XEO) OIAL2131714MEACEDES OLDER O·E REFRIO Quick Hie• 875·9389 *'79 3201. 4 spd. SIA ToP Meretdel Prk:M PaJd 82 Sev\lle, mint cond, new 24 751 ·5053 Work•. S50 875-4568 Power ... ,, --.-7012 (09lYPZ> CallPtter/lar 11r .. 118,950. Catt w o •frig, 17'. FIF, $175 Apt f4' RunabOut. 2Shp John· ~~:z~~~1• 6 apd, A/C DIAL213/714MEACl:DES Raymond, lnterttl( Ser· S1le1 clerk, Colla Me .. Secretary. therp aall starter, enthu•lutlc, ac· curate lyplat 60+ wpm, exit phone tkllla e plua. eitper d CM 545-'4517 relrlg. $95 1550·7'452 eon. wltrlr, xtru $1600 *'81 3201, 5 IC)d, SIR HOUSE OF IMPORTS, Inc v1Cet(213)377-0971 obo 840-0625 bet noon 11cuTll43l •G-1141 -TIE UllEIT Stat1oner1 270 E 17th St C M Full llme Apply tn person 10-12. M·Sat etr1Q.ra1or S50. -W/D, S 125 ea, DIW S 100; EleC Range, S 150 648-58411 Eric ~2-8353 afl 4 * '82 528E. Au10. loaded ·76 MG MtOOET 12080 SElEOTIOI 18 Outtleld bay boat, all (986&!>3) ""46 an15 ~-...-...... --t--'1 Sales 11011na11Y REFRIGERATOR REPAIR Local home eallmate S2.7 Larry'• Relrlg 1150·7'452 new Ss.400 646·9626 *'83 320!. 5 lpd, SIA " -vu (1FZP975) or late model, low mtleage ·79 MGB. 21K +ml, $5300 Cadillac• In Southern ... ,, .. , Fa1lalt1 ""' ---+-+----t CreatTve European htgn 22'63 CENTURY CLASSIC *'83 3201. eulo. SIR Lapatralee very nl<:e V ( 1 FMY925) berth convert top, can· *'83 3201, 5 tpd. SIR vu cover, VHF, Grey (002357) obo 862-7473 Callfotnl•I Sea u1 tod•YI Porsc~• 1157 UIERI fashion t1d1u · ahop te9ks expe<tencecl aalft P'f.c>n-Fine locetloo. e11· cellent pay Call Anita al Sml conatr co. Typing, gen'I office booUeplng axper nee -m1ture Sal com w/Hper 673-1830 16 ev It Hotpo1n 1 Rel/Freezer Like new, SECY /llfOEmllllT s200 obo 6•6· 10•2 Merine 215 Sacrifice *'83 3201, 1ulo, $4500 673·3951 (llw\t 189) ;173 612. xlnt con.d.. ODILUO SIR rcpt1. nu p1lnt, S•950 2600 Harbor Blvd 65 70 ~44·2652 W.H DllPUY AIYHTlllH Advertising agency need a w h 1 We 11 1 n g ho u 1 e aec'y/raceptlonttt with over/under washer 4 good org1n1ut1onet dryer S200 95~·2588 skllls 0 C airport a1ea Typing 60wpm, handle Frff ti Yea IO}Z busy phonea accuralely 6 mo.Did Ft tab. Blk. No I • 118t'letY Of dUllel Paper1 GOOd Home Lori Knowledge or computer 964· 1285 or 895-9182 lndintry 1nd memory 26 1980 Century tow *'8~ctl, auto. lo ml houri many extr11 (1grm010) $1 1 ooo ltrm 848-4242 * '84 3181, 6 tpd, lo ml eve or 213·587·2t91 12anx294) days IH·I 111 208 W. tat.Santa AM ·n wencrett gd cones. 1011 Ck>Md Sunctey equip S 12 900 642-4875 LA-AGE SELECTION OF Calll 28' FIG. F/9 , sgl gts NEW & USED BMW'SI 675-4719, 731·4844 COSTA.MESA 68-Targ•. reblt tno & 640-1880 Irena recent paint s1500 11411-111110 Cf'me~t 1313 '70 91 lS lmmac cond •11a c vy camaro .. Naw engine_ Divorce -.ume-p1ttul11 of t1~ forces 11.le S8500 OBO No dwn pymnt OAC Wtll lrtcle 491·14115 Chuck 979.3553 Agt ~•911 Coupe. 5 apd, m9t ·79 Cnevette 4 Or hatch, 73 The Orange County Dally P11or rraa al'I e•celTMI oP· porturnity beginning mid· J11nu1ry tor cereer Orlen· ted display adve<t111ng sales rept with a provtl'I track record Great earn 1ng Polenttll. guaranteed draw against com · maa11on Oe•tre 10 move cnto management a plus Send resume to typawttlefl helpful CoHlelShephetd. 1 yr old Salary eommen1urate lemete Very friendly. with experience Contact ltkea children 536-9886 S i c 116 81< 71•·760-8677/847-604~ bronze/tan Int Very ellck, 52M . clean Liii IUOI llW ctean S9950 851-2259 s2225tobo 0y 895·3877. VOLUME SALES or 640-0847 ev 759·8191 ' IJARTNEA WANTED Chris 957-0171 Lab )( mix pupplet 5 wle• _e_e1..,, _w_._.,_t4.._ __ s_1oo...,,1 B•lt .~ .. Serv1c. Statlor\ Attendant Old Alter 8 pm 850·9 t44 40 Vlktng SF. twin dll loaded lmmac $40,000, 'l share. terms Con•tder SERVICE & LEASING ·77 Targa Xin1 cond '79 Et C.mlno cOnqul.. 31170 N Cherry Avt S13 750 714·497-5737 ""'•""td .. _..... 5100 Belt Wute4 SlOO Expd Apply Shell St•· Hon. 171h & lrvlne, NB LONG BEACH tedor ..... u • tape ........ (No Cherry ••11·4051 • '78-911SC, cashmj;"' beige .-C. wnctws, good cond LHAL ~ECRETARY MODELS-We Need you ( OLDWHL BANKER All types ovM 18 ex PROIOTIOI P 0 BOK 1560. 11,,LIOLfll Steck rtt• oeltrtl Faraitart IOZS NB shp rent exch1nge jih· tea1fi., couch. green, ' 541 ·0455 <lH) IH·lllO coupe. lull equip, terv r• $3500 875-3059 alt Spm frada-tn1 Welcome ~~d JJ~·500 494•9572 '12 GORYfTTI -HESIDENTIAL REAL ES I r.it1,,0nced or not No leti Can you I ATE SE RVIGES 1\ seill< Ph 8~ 7 64 11 Spare 3 hrs nightly? Costa Meaa, 92626 EOE 2 year eotteg.i requires peraon captble of some lllllng, typing 50 wpm. & lblllly IO work Wllh Ilg· ur" Cell Miu Abboll, 546-0933 for appl $250 Teak Icing or aoi headbrd, S50 1115-4568 lt1t1, Sail 7014 811 Blue Denim aota. 11lnl Col 28. •71 118 . CUilom Int Now open Sun t t-4 • • MBZ tr~ln. Only OM ml o..... 9117 la~ar. . llil SllV Btu./Blue lthr Thi• 1nQ ~81 .ocret111e::o with Now h1nng Rental & Sales Are "fOY lll•t'lit1 or f'•P"""ntfl tc I PeCJple Balbo11 111an<1 Well groomed wCi•~ on ouc corpmate ol Ri,ally r,73 8700 dependable IAUI EJ1:c1t1ng c areer OP· por1un111es In odvert1111ng cond $200 955-3385 $12,500 494·2000 Early Amer bed & dreeaer. Mui.at al . -70 t I •18J Oataun 300zx ... '76 a )(' a Wagon GrHI ~..'· c:.~-:~~~=~· (~ •ume pymnll of $287.89. Skier• c11r, ~OOd eond.. 0934) CaN flt" •ocal•<:I 1n Irvine 11,,d \elf mo11va1eo'> r;u,,11l1Pd <1r;pl1can1~ muc;t OFFICE DELIVERY Do you P05SOH good com !Full Tcme High School EnJOY working wtlh k1d1? No e.1tper1ence necets 1try • Several pos111on1 ,Jvaolable · $35.000 • 1n comf' Call Mr While 771 405'l EOE MIF S 150 Tr11d Queen sole/ steeper I 150 845·3425 rel rite boll tra1 a. 3000 & 5000 lb cap S400 & $500 499-2484 No dwn pymnl OAC Cell s2ooo 642• 961 evea HOUSE OF IMPORTS, Inc Chuck 979.3553 Agl '82 4 X 4 GL Wgn. pwr p~. DIAL 2131714 MERCEDES rn11111c::a1101 '"''" •1~ •no (,rad "'"h good drtYtng ti you can answer YES 7(J wr:;m d1<.t.1phone e1 rK.o•d Apply 1n per'°n Phone 846· 7021 IWJTCHIUI OPEHTlllS Elec bed wl mtsseger dbl 18 mo old) Coll $1 tOO, tell $500 432·8377 * 8" Sen Ira u lume 10 mt S7200 760•8211 '82 Z28, 21K ml, luily pymntt of $120 37 No Ttf.tll tltl equipped, pert cond, r•f'l•Pnf P dnd ~11owlP.<lgf; 10 Mr Fuentes at Rot>Eltl ? 30-6pm Mon thru Fro ,,, lh•· CPl w')rd prCJ· ~.n WllhAm F'1os1 & A•· l•--------Full & part/time positions Wiii train right person• Call for appl &42-30 t3 I IUY FIRllTIRE 11w , Docb 7022 35 SLIP for PoWer bolt $300 mo •21 B11tboa Covet N B 673· 1464 dwn pymnt OAC Call •· i Toyoll 4xo4 p 0 Xa-111.800/obo 11411-7820 Chuck 979-3553 Agt ---rr~-;vir ,,.,,,,,.,lit' helpful !>OC•alu 140 t Ova11 St (..01 HH .t BANKER Nr;I B(h o•o_,,,,,.., ,..,,,.11 .. n1 c.orr * PAllTER , •"'; t .. r ~'''~ C.••1 P•Jr f •P tor ap1 ma11 '"nantf' .. ,,..,,,.1 at 7 I 4 d,t,{) (J 7 80 fmmrcl op11rm1g Apply 1n "'' 0111 •nr,.rvif'w r; .. r,ein Pdrk N1>wpor1 f q•J.tl Otipty Enoployer Apt'! Corner c.I Sa,, Joa I "~"'" (,Ito•.. noghl!\ meld auin at Jamboree NB "'knd'\ M•J'' hlllvfl cast'lPart 11m1< Irmo drivf'r also '"<1''1"' "'Ptrtenc.e answer pr1onftl eves J>r1ply 1'~118. Plat,.r1t1a Pacilic View Memorial Pk IAHCU IJ'>lo. tor Lynro ~4 2700 '.>rn1111 r"Slllvranl S4, ~'>u: ,MLHOTOlllT "' 111sr 1 '"" ;1.,8!j p 1r i, '30am-8 30am tlltf,,997 7&8/l ~ti f.,pm Mr,n f11 0CCAI wknnd• MHHU I min 1 yr e•Pt'tl 963 0626 NMolt•rl lrJo Ull!lf •tt• (.lf!dlTI PICTURE FRAlllC ••011• \<KIO"'' 1'• '"''' wr oil!• all! •howroom lrri.ur int" I\ 1'('""~··s ilO , ... "~ a lull um" recep c,o r.r., "'~ ""'~''", r·r.I 1,,,,.,., Dvl•I!, l o mclude ~'1""',. rJi, ' ''' 1"' ·11lt 'J' •.howroc.ll', 11111e~ At wetl '""!J11 nt ••flJt•r 11~111 fOll ,1., otll l_,p,.cls ol picture ht.Jn 1r N • ,,,.,, m dtl 96L G C..tl Bc.O ) rJtt:ll.t~hoOn'ld fr Jtnrng u 1 'n ICI' C.reitn tJIJI' Hu11I PICTURE fHlll8 "'Q"'" Ctr 8111 I 1" 1 lnr H.ar<:I worl< but 1011 of var •til••rv"•w .. r•P' "''Y ~le1cble hour'! 1n llAllUFACTURI"' r hut.no 5alu•dllyt and ''"'', No e1per nl'IC wtll •r ''' Starr $41tu 11 So (.•, nl V1llag11 \t•opptng • •·nt••r C.111 L arry I' I f 106 P T POSlllOn for exp r•a!!oll'·UP a lay out pe< ~on 1n bu\y Newport Beach µr1nt1ng sates or l1c,1• i<nowledge ol illcnlor proce,, 11 must Poly basel'1 on e•P Pit c.onlacl Becky or Usy1 646 3908 8 30 !> SALES CREAT JOI IRUT PAY CALL ED TODAY 2131372-0545 Soleapeople 10 make appls lor well known photographer You mu11 be bright energetic, well groomed. poised and personable You must apeak well like children and enioy meeting the Les 9!>7·8t33 Telephone sale& K1ng·u a11 water bed *ALL LUil SIPPLIH w/m1rror headboard 1 We're getting bigger & wk o!J:I: S250 645-1295 better. telling ART (Diii· MARBLE TOP TABLE P1eauo-Mlro) 10 people S 150 645-1572 whO make direct Inquiries .. OVING hi 1 10 ua .... everyt no goes Sect couch, 1275 New 110,000·1100,0001 dble bed set, S85 Ouffn Easy II you can aellll Cell ael $95 FruitwOOd din Larry. 645-8733 lable. S 175 Handcarveel Boll slJp wanted for 37 sailboat Temp or per manent Despera1e1 522-0280 213-691-5255 79 200SX 5-spd. AM/FM stereo 111n1 eond $3000 540..5790 82 ZX Turbo Red, Im- maculate cond loaded S 16, 175 or 1 10 leeM II Dock lor rent nr Udo tale. S397 /mo 788·5135 power boal1 up 10 30 fl Fi 9l"3 S 1751mo 558·()g33 It " "'7"'6"'llfl'l"j1"'!'1"'x"'16 ... bP'r'l"k .. B"'1u·1""' ~xl~nt Ltve·abo8fd 111p ev~llable cond lo mlle• $2600 Joy January 1 40 • 45 Call 650.11529 ev• 648-7141 ~2·4644 .:_ Purchasing agent for of rice furniture Ex - pprcenceo 10 do purchu- mg follow-up and coor dmare d&llverie\ and p1c1< ups Must t>e able 10 ""'ork well with setesmen, l11c1ory personnel, truck drovers and cuttomers Sf'nd re'avme 10 Ad pubhc PIT or FI T Poten· --------• tsel earnings up to S tOOO B1nk1ng Meit bar S 150 & din chrs S40 ea Wr iron boo\\· caaea. $75 ea 957 -04915 Slips ava1table 25', 27. ban tlf7 35 Call 642·4644, Mon Fri, 9-5 1061 011ly Pt lot. P 0 Br17 1560 Costa Mesa CA 92626 pr wlo. Excell oppt'y for prof sa111people, houae- wtves. young adults For 1nterv1ew ~II Mr Law· rcnce al 650-0724 IAUSPHSll real 191818 lltltlll Ots•ttlc Ct. lllTUT llCOME Looking tor 111racuve, wall Bu1y beach olllee neeelt groomed aggre111ve lltented aoent in rental peraon 10 1111 D111r1ct dept to 1>9gln today Manager posllton 1n IOC&I Cllll P9m· ·• orea BURR WHITE REALTOR . IMC. 67S.46l0 Rapid lldvancemenl EMc.ellent income For conlident1111 1nteN1ew c1111 M1 OhMn 1145·9104 TELLE II On size hlde·•·bed 1200 644·4 17 4 c1ll lor apt Wt have an lmmect111e - opening tor an lndivldutl Rattan Vanity Deak brand wtlh 111 month• teller ex-new $225 548-6013 p e11ence or recent Single white canopy bed c11hle11ng background with matching night Must type 25·30 wpm & stand and mirrored have gOOd figure •P· dreuer S 150/0BO lltude 957·8165 lnteretled perllel, pleaae lllttor liktt IOU Motobec1nt I Vupa Cleo, $350/et Good cond 644-0375 Mttorcyclt1/ 1111 ltlllU'I ScMttn IOll SOUTH 168fa AusRv 1'sec 5 mo old, very good cond cou1n BPPIY 1n person Les A111l11 Ft~tral S1tl111 l11k $ t550 OBO 557·36011 or Ct1t1 M111 1124 541-43&0 d•vw lllZU Huge Estate Verd sale Fri 80KX125 bought n.,,., '82. UWf WILL 111 e 7 ,8th Second Ch1nee gOOd cond Ideal tor be-If llllHlll Anl!Ques 1724 Tus11n glnner $400 1145-0490 Volu-Salft, "'~"--320 I N-port Blvd .... . ..,....,..,. Newport Beach. CA MOVING GARAGE SALE ~80 Yamaha 850 Spec:lal And Ltatlng Decorators Furn Seel Mtnl s 1200 673-8779 18711 Beach Blvd •,t rp rr c)1J•0,10I) riM>•<lf'fl I • w11t>d cull1r•Q "'"'' ~ r 11 .. t111Q nl.Jd" '>haq, tArnny RPt·r~~ r1~ ('JI' ( "" I f, I I 0'11 I rA•,tt11 "' A~,•1'1kr•t "• r,...,. ,. '"', ,, n, <1 ·''' '\' n ... ,, t .... fJ ''""" t ' "t ,~, . ...,, ,, , ' fi•·' t t. f '4: Seamstress experienced. 675·4500 aola S 175, Iv seat S60. Huntington Be.ch P1 .. ,,1 Hi:>u.Y· Pliml 11er •fOEPTIO•llT wanted 10 work with large dbl rctnr $55 6 dwr IV'1 1022 (l 14) 142-2000 ,.,,. nc1" "'" tblfl m&ml n maron" manulocturer lull EQu&I Opply Employer drsr lmtrr $60 Hand Sth llllhetl. 193 Alpha dOid Mt1<Jir,.tl "''"' 'J"'' '} •·1 co~1 1 ,,, tn1 ; r.ttt '1U htt •• ~4 8 ..... ' '.A•Jlh•I P11r I t•rr" t ' J IH he r,.111 ... ,, ;.i1 lfJ w~C1y!I '•, Ml')(1f Ls ,, •.•. ,,,,,, l ')I l1r1~rr, t ,.,,,,,,, r1r,w \ • 4!! (,444 llOIEU • TOP PU (,1111 ,111m Tl'lr,mftfl f;;<1llnr / (i'.0 l )17 1 r•d• y01Jr Old llull tor new gooel iea with 11 ,,, ,. Illar 1 r •i-rnq Own A growing to•mtttic wr 11mP 548 1464 Gr&Q carved Me~ chrs $40 40 X 8 wlPopout In lvg lll1i•1 flf 1 '' "' r, 1 2?11 I <J"rt •uppty comp&ny TOP SS$ barlstls $95, 2 occ chr1 "Mii, 11 conac1ent1ou1 $oAmslren lor men 1 & 145 2329 Littleton Cr rm In park, PlllO, I 7 4 U a z d 1 A)(' 2 Print Sito' hnH PIT morning reCtP· I wnmen • alterallons In FemeteaPrCJI Modela& 957 O 96 C M carport. lurnlahtd $1200/0BO GOOd cond r, t~•al"P'"" FIT 1ton1st Should have e• <Jress thop F I T Eacort11(213)866-198'4 • 4 osta •se (TC811141 128 ,000 850·3104tvot 11 ·1r11 •,1 t nqun1 Rt:t tt•ll typing cterteal ind I 63 1 8290 TIP PAY La1a11 l11cla 1141 714 95' 3 too .,,.,bal •kill• FOf mC>fe R c Pertona ro locate pinb1ll & dli%AGE SALE A· sole. Trailers, llltrCfftl ltaa ti 4S '"''"AIMER/. "''o & an interview eppt S£;C,RE TA y onstruG· video g11mea TOP PAY •m•ll rettlg Queen bed, ,,.,.. aou 1976 MB 300 SD. TurbO AHUST c.all 714·261-2 l l I I ~~1~w~;:;:~~· 1~1~~~1. Call Nick 894 7563 swivel rattan eh11lr mite ""' Dietel, Ivory w/B1mboo '''''" ""''cJ"' rvr. inv•at 1Ht•<.ep11on11t S11/S11n rc'.lll Strong on collec American Amusement S111/Sun 1?87 Cltli Dr '16 25' fdeal, nice tlta."' Int. •Int cond $19,500 ""'"1 ''" ""'"'<."' l1tm c.nty Peo hc Vttw 11on& ol eccounta rt lle•ve your number) NewPoft Bch. lwn bedt, 860-1484 d1yi, 6'4&-81~ r1rft 1 "Q <.h11llM91n9 I>'>' Memorial Perl< Ask 101 <."•veble apply l653 J•elry •214 rr bath, micro. xlnl cond . eves 1111•11 •or tmQht rndMdulll l>nt 64•·2700 l!'.upf'rtor C M 6•2·7222 PART TIME Varttd houri 1BaumeM ercler Summit ::1~[ t m Eve a ·e1 MERCEDES 230S ir" ~;·:to 11n~ ,,"~•1g; ~~ I $tM;re1ary to lncluoe early A M 1' 141< quert1 water rea11 • 4 dr, S99!1/obo 540·8244 i>nP 11134 M'''' havo ;i HCllUTIOI LUHR EIECITIY .. S•o1n••y wMkandt Mual have de· tent watch attll tn boll, BUY F" .TORY DIRECT • S -- h T t lh 1: 1: "" pendabte vtniete camall ,,.ver worn 12900 l ightweight llberglau 72 250 td•n. •Int cond . ,, ••P"r wtr,()li<Jl f• Work1n~w1t Mnt or • Top con11U~ proo~t• truck "'n, 1t11ton 15411-2215 Scamp f3' & 16· 1r1Y11 OYto. air, amlfm ease, lo r •·ll""' c. ,.,., 1.;ppor1unr C•ty o Irvin• Altetnoo11 compeny ,.._,lull ume trallflta and new 19• Sth m1tea S59001ee-1755 ty C1111 '>5:! 0940 .:and Eveninga Apply by nxocuttve ...c:rtttry to wagon1 to •111111 newt-Mtl'IS 7 dtamonct cluster J 8 nu 11 r y 1 3 C A I I work with Hin menaoer l)lper dtttltf In Irvine ring. 3 cit Appralltd In wheel CaH now, toll lrM. '73 280 4 Of, Alf, PB/PS, ~l•HlflfKI ad 642·5&78 Cluatli.cl Ade 660 3814 •rt• Mull be cs~n-79 01 $8000, NII for 1·800·34&-49152 for lrM runt good M45010bo "'2·6878 1n ono ,_,son l.agun1 b .. d S"'VEI 8"'"' 387'1 7"'"' ~ ,.. dabl• Con11ct reg S4rkN\ obo MIS-0792 roc .. ure an ~ dy .,., ev ~··11191 l fllim•------------.. liillillli _________ Nlgvel Office ueeoent "JVV ·t 1ye>1ng •nd 1n11y11c11 ::!f!!°"od~ t=~~ ';~d~ Mac~iH tzll AatM W11t 9020 73 280 4-dr. 9U1o, llJll P'#f, Newspaper KIDS-EA~N GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! I AGES 11-14 EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WEEK Wt no" Nwt I~ OPl!"'llJI lor '°'"' u1111 ._,,,.,, to ~111' ,.~,for Ill# Or"'lt Cot\I Olay Piiot Ouo rrt., sl.trl •I J JO p m arid ' ufllol 110 pm '1tfkday1 On S.lurdtp, •• wur• • It • tn0rf' lloun You "111 rarn many frtl" •lid 11111~, •Iona "'"' •4rM•a ~riu1 own mOMJ tllfff r\ llO dfti-l'rl~ 01 c•tJon ~lltolttd H \' II ift ll!lllfnftd P'ft!f C Ml f 111 (714) 548-7058 .. ~b~~~y J:~p:~~r.·~~lv: I m only "42-4321 I" floc~EU TABLE AldAesf cX§H' iflbtb M~/o~I 5.!o.s~ ~e" 0 • SAW GOOD CONO for your 1191'11cie. domel1tc 11iary ind ~neltt• PKk S8S/obo 6'4e.0792 or tOfelgn ss 1..e2u 74 280, &7900 Lo ml. mint •Nge lor kr1oh81 cba"?ld~• Woltrtta/Wanar Min 3 yr WE llf oond '498 t&01 on am r u m I " eaper Apply In ptreon, Bff0·18nd blut macillfM, aume to ~ 142 Murrt t 30·4 30 pm JOl.L Y MIO & arc welder. ~com· GLUI A••1 'll 2.0 I LIM. L90u11t Nt0U111 CA ROGE.R 400 So COHI prneo<I lalha f2x38 Vtlft 02677 Hwy, Laguna Beach 13x"<l, 15a40, 3 vertleal All TIHll wented vng Pereon PIT mllla. 2 t1or11ontat m1111. Live-In from 4PM·8AM Jt~I Wntt• SIOS or•nllt fl•tt. aurl•e• dally 875 4275 l"""·tarm hOUN 11111"" grindef tutrt1 latti.t, _, . ., .. ., band 1tw, bench milt, • •,...fll/W•nw1 oo1111on w1nted by rotarty tibia, oi..ttat I "''" "''~ m11urt wom•n Local ..., 8r .. lcl11l/111neh, tx Rel a Call Ant Ad • 294, ~ tMd for mill, Ortll l)ltr~ff'IC4 with ~tall• 8•2·4300. 24 hr• Ot .... CUl•otf Hw. b4tll Wtd ·Sun Apply a.n under ~· 1 S408 Orown a 31108 Co11t Find whit 6011 went In llbctllUH•I 1211 Hwy, So Laguna o.ity Ptlot twmect1 2 S:auuful 11h wettr I •1 ,., t aquarium• &Ogal.OOQll, al Y I a · · · · • · 'omptatt UOO both. •• 845-8003 11temoon1 ; PART TIME Deliver Dally PaJot by nuto in Laguna .Beach area (2 houn per day). Weekdaya P.M. · w ~ ridl A.M. F,am about ~00 per mo. Call Mr. Barrow ' 642-4321 EX>E . . . . . . . . . .... . .. . .. . . . ...... • . COHMEll CHEVAOLH x.,.. If .. r 1. 1 • I r-I \ \1 t 1)46-I 200 WlllY USED CA.RS I TAU<lt<8 COM! IN 0,. CAl.L ,OA Fiil &PPUIUI. C0rl1'.., •09\.1110 ......._n IU118EACHIL.VD HUNTINGTON BEACH 141·1111f ..... 1111 WIPIY"'Ml'M , ....... 1&.11111111 N1T1111••• t•IC> M•'* 8'vd COSTA MESA 141~ .. M 141-1411 • r 11ume pymnt1 ot S 181 411 '13 Z21 CAIERI No dwn pymnt OAC Call Chuck 979.3553 A.gt *'84 Toyota Celllea ,.. .. sume pymnll of S 178 36 No dwn pymnt OAC Cell Chuck 979.3553 Agt •'M Toyoll PU A.11ume pymnts ol 1127 72 No dwn pymnt OAC Cell Chuck 979.3553 Agt 82 CAESStDA all options white. low mites, Ilka n- $10. 750 846-5047 Volbw11ta-1173 1678 EUrope1n VW Com· merlcet Camper Ven New PrQPane and Gaa 924 engine Mutt '"· Asking S7000 Cell Frank 497-6927 eves 380-0330 day• '57 R1g1op, no rual Blaupunkt. new rldl1l1, stock 1600 $1200/0BO 548-314 7 (fj) MtlElolHU .. SOUTH COUITY YOlllWAIEI "WIWILLllT 1111111111.1" Volume Sllff, Service And Leuing t8711 Beach Btvo Huntlni_tOn Beach (114) 142-2000 '153 Ba11 rtt>lt eno. ""''· front end, 12v. S1 Obo Muet 1111 15'42·7579 'Hiii Powdtf' blue, auto, tlr, radlalt, run• gr .. t UUtflOIJ 11421. 759.Qe51 Abeolulety •• newt Only 14M ml Bllt./Bllc, T·top, alloy•. apec: rear deck & much more C1ll now le>< grut buy (Ser 7890) Call H'OUSE OF IMPORTS, Inc DIAL 2131714 MERCEDES ~Corvette, eompleUy loaded Take over leaM paymerit o~c 11253751 Agl Call Ch1tlle 478-1877 IEE II FllllT1 we have a good Ml.ctl0r1 of NEW & used Ctl9v· r06tt1I S.. ul todl yl '70 Doctge Ndan. It.IC. 142 .500 ml , $750 1142-4148 74 CHEVY VAN. VII, hall ton. •Int conct . &2800 631·2782 '76 Doctge Colt, 4 sp(i, vlnyl top, run• well saoo 1145.4997 75 DODGE DART. Sl1nl IS eng. 2 dr twdtop, xlnt COf'ld t1500 1531-2782 '78 Ch1llenger. am/Im CIU, good eond, axll OU mlleaQe, Stpd 010 Blut- bo<)t(, 13•60. NC $2200 Obo 1140· 7827 Fer• t3lt •'84 F'ord Tempo HIY'M pymnt• Of S 111 4e No dwn pymnt OAC. Can Chuck 979.3553 Agt '85 Muttlllg Coupe, tulO trlnt &2100 1142· 12:M '71 LTO weoon. $600 e42·•14a ' ' NB residents open =ti.re on airport ·pact UnlinJited flights rile honieowners By JERRY HIRSCH Of ... .,.., ........ Newport Beach resid ntl are not pleued with a propoeed ~ment llmtlin&'expanl!on at John Wayno Airport and they made their viewa loudly known at a town hall meetins WednetdaJ ni&ht ... fact it allowa for unlimited fllahts," Edwardlaa.ld. Barbera Lk:hman, thoorpni1.1Uon'1ditedor, ottd four more objectlor)a: How the airports 1tack up DellJ Yeertr .... ., Mrport ....... p1111n .. n ....... Burbank S3 2.8 mllllon 88,000 IQ. ft. EHJotional audience blasts plan About 200 people crowded the City Hall ~'OUncil chamber and lta lobby and all but two of the more iban 30 speaken repl'e9enting an array of homeowner UIOCiatlons aatd the agreement would need drasti~chan&es before they could 1upp()r1 it. •The agrffmt!nt doe.1 not addl"t"ll the need to flnd a location for an alternative commercial county a1rport. • h doet not limit the alze of a propoM!d oew airport. tennl~ ln relation to the number of commeTCial flJghtl at the airport. San otego 81 Saera"*1to 43 6.2 mHllon 547,000 IQ. ft. 2.3 mutton 118,000 IQ. ft . By JERRY BIBICB Orange County • o. .. ..., ........ •Th.e agreeement would make the city financially liable for noiM damage suits apinst the airport -a llabUlty, L.lchman aald., Newport . should not ahouldel'. Current 41 3.5 mtlllon 27 .ooo IQ. ft. Few subJecla get . Newpm:t Bnch raldenta more upMt than John Wayne Ali'port. And tempera were bot wean.say ni1ht when more than 200 anpy Newport reddent jammed Into City Hall to critJd~ a propieilif!d city/county aireement llmitinc expansion of the airport. Any agreement would have to be ap~ed by the City Council and the county rd of Supervi.ors, which operatet the airport. Old Muter Plan 55 e.2 mlltlon 240,000 IQ. ft. New Master Plan 73 10.2 mJlllon 320,000 IQ. ft. Tom Edwards, speaking for the Airport Workina Group, a coalition of hs1meowner'a aaoclaUon said to reprnent more than 9,000 Newport families, chided city negotiators for not coming up with the type of agreement they were asked to develop. "We were promiled the city would negotiate an 11reement that would limit the number or flights to 55. Thls agreement does not do that. ln •Finally, Lichman doubted the agreement ls enforceable and could survive a court challenge by an airline wanting 8CCe9I to the airport, unleu work on a new airport wu under way. Newport Beach realdent Tom Williama said the agreement f ocuaet1 on noi1e -which ls a much less ~portant problem than aafety. "Nolle ii only 10 percent of the problem. The (Sff AJRP9RT PACT. Pase A!) Note: Development of the old mater ptan wu frozen by Orange County Superior Co4Jrt wtMle the Board of Sul)ervtlort prepar• a MW environmental Impact report. Current com- merclat atr trafflc at the atrport wu llrntted to 41 deity dep.9r'tur• by the court at that time. The MW mu1et plan. which may aHow for an even larger aJrport, le under development and lhould bt completed In June. tew-. CltJ ef .... pert~ ikwMnk'Glendllr 'c t lit...,..,..__..., The residents ttood in the alal8. the lobby and whereVer tlley could fit applauding foe9 of the agtteme!)t and hilsinl .. dty . (sff EMOTIONS~ Pase At) THI DRllllil CDlll CDllT IDITlll I • ' f • . THURSDAY JANUARY '> 1':18·1 ORANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Teen 'loner' held. . . . _in woillan's slaying By STEVE MARBLE ud IUREN KLEIN Ofhl)ellyNMI ... -An ~ld .'._Huntington Beach youth arrested in connec- tion with the murder of a U .S. Poetal carrier was deecrlbed by neighbors today as a "strange -boy" who kept to himself, dressed in shabby clothes and fought loudly with his mother. "He• seemed like a complete loner ," said Alice Nickerson, 58, deterlbing Gabriel Deluca, her neXt-doot nelghoor on J on Day Drive in Huntington Beach. "He was smiling when the officers led him away," noted Nickerson. "I don't think his parent& were even home-at the time." An Orange Coast College stu- dent, Deluca wu kicked out of Edison High School in 1982. Edison principal Jack Kennedy said Deluca had an attendance problem during hls sophomore year and that when he grades began to slide, he wu directed to a "°ntinuation achool. But neighbors said DelUc:a moved to Argentina instead and returned about a year later and enrolled at the community college In Costa Mesa. shrubbery led" inveatigators to the Deluca residence late Wednesday. Haxton, a Garden G1'9Ve resi- dent and mother of _two, was_ apparently stabbed to death in broad daylight eometime early Tuelday afternoon while ahe was delivering mail. Her body was discovered sev- eral hours' later slumped in the back 1eatof a light green poetalcar found ln the parking lot of a Costa Mesa church -lea than a mile from the Meredith Gardena com- munity. The bloodhounds. brought in by postal lnvestigaton, were first given the auapect'• ecent to track from the church parking lot. • Deluca was arrested Wednes- day evening on suspicion of. murdering Ida Jean Haxton, 30, after a pack of bloodhounds led officen toward the youth's family home in posh Meredith Gardens. Costa Mesa Pollce Sgt. BUJ Bechtel said bloodhounds, blood- stains and a piece or unusual ..We believed the suspect lived in the area where (Haxton) de- (See SLAYING, P•se A%) o., .......... .,~P9tM Olf icer Mike Clark views home of suspect in death of Ida Haxton, inset. Body of HB teen found More Cleme.nte homes perlled If rains come Airspur's return seen hyJ-'n. 15 By ROBERT BARKER Of tM .,.., l'tlol 1'81f Orange County coroner's depu- ties were performing an autopsy today to determine the cause' of death of a 19-year-old Huntington Beach woman found dead ln her car ln an alley behind homes in the 5500 block of Edinger Avenue. Det.ectivea said the body of Antaya Yvette Howard, a 1982 graduate of Marina High School, was found Wednesday wrapped in a blanket ln the back 'of her yellow Datsun by a Huntington Beach parking control officer. The car had been cited for a parking violation on Tuetday by the attendant who apparently failed to aee the body at that time, police said. There were no signs of assault or robbery, Capt. Mike Burken - field said, nor were there Initial indications aa to cauae of death. The body. which reportedly was In the car about a week, wu badly decompoeed. Burkenfleld , Aid police are treating the Inci- dent u a suaplcioua death and eee no apparent connection with Tuetday's murder of a Hunt- (8ee BODY, Pase AZ> o.lr .... _.....,~ ...... Bob Strong check• slippage next to his property in San Clemente. By L.P. BENET OftMDellr ......... Seven more homes may be lost in Verde Canyon if heavy rains hit, engineen toid the San Clemente City Council Wednesday night. 'Itle 1even 'homes, near three others already loet in a land.slide, have been evacuated. "The big worry now is what will happen when the rains come," explained Mayor Scott Diehl. "The rains could undermine the land if enough water draio.s underneath cracks and crevices In the slide area." City Man.ager George Caravalho said today no additional slippage occurred since Wednesday. Meanwhile, city officials asked one resident who loat h.ls home to remove his personal belongings from the rubble. City crews also are installing a water pipe on Via Avilato to replace a ruptured pipe, damaged in Friday's landslide that sent three expensive homes tumbling down the slope. A representative from Leighton and As- sociates said the altuation "could possibly grow w~." but the eng?"leering firm still needed to gather additional information at the site. Diehl said. The landslide moved 1.3 million cubic feet of dirt, covering an area of 700 f eetf rom the top of the slope to the bottom and 500 feet across the face of the canyon. Engineers, however, have not determined the cauae of the landslide, Diehl said. Residents in the area say a water main break Friday may have undermined the earth and caused the landshde, but city officials claim the shifting earth may have broken the water line. Kiss that warm weather 'bye Summer temperatures replaced by ch ill, maybe even showers By CHRISTINE DECl.ER Orange County, to have dirty air," Zumaya uld. °' .. o., • '""' .. "There'• no telllng where tMdirty air came from but S.y soodbye to the 1ummer-Uke weather blown I wouldn't be turprlled If it came from San Dleao." in from the detert thls Wffk. Smog lev la tn the alr have not been dal\ael'OUI · By Friday, all traces of th warm, dry guata will with air quality conaidettd aocxt. he &aid. The emoa. be gone, according to Air Quality apedallat Armando compoeed of nitrogen dloxlde and comes mainly from automobile engine exhauat. . Zumaya • '--llftlou• By KAREN E. &LEIN °' .. Delly .... _.,., Airspur commuter helicopters will be back ln the air by Jan. 15 if flight tests this week on the company's Westland 30 aircralt continue to go well, company officials said. • "lf we can validate (modi- fications made by the helicopter's British manufacturers), and we can see there's no vibrations and the ship perfonns properly, I'll release them to the other pilots to get them Wied to flying them again," said Ainpur President John Gallagher. And if all continues to go well, Airspur's freight loads will be earned by Westland 30s by the end of the week, he said. "We're looking at Jan. 15 for taking It back to full passenger load." he added. The Westland 30s have been grounded since one crashed In November, injuring six people and prompung the Federal Aviation Administration to issue a ground- ing order pending the outcome of an lnvestlgation. Laat week the grounding order was lifted on the condition that certain modifications in the chop- pers be made. FAA. engineers said Tuesday PCAA -eon begin• The UC Irvine men'a basketball team opens PCM play tonight against New Mexico State at Crawford Hall. Page C 1. The "wlndl wlll be repi.c:ed by cooler . Thla momlnJ, the hau appHttd to lK:' ...... u temperatW't!I and perhapa a f~ ltaht h~ n, uld C.tallna bland, 26 mllPS 8Cl"09 the IN from Newport Stan Maley, National Weether Service 1 lalilt. Belch, could be clearly n . 75 ~1'9 of achool buMt Aa the wl.nda w ken, the lay r of wnoay haze, There w re a few lJaht ahow n today. whi~h haaadded a brllllant red t1n totw\leta lately, T.emperaturea are expected to stay in the up~r ll_tx ted to blow away from Oran County. 70. today and drop to the 40. or low-$08 toni&ht. "Th Santa Ana wlndl did not bring ln the Friday. ty))b.I Winter w a\Mr wlll ~tum wtth ~UutJon but th y do .diarupt th nauual wind · temperatunie ln thi upper 60i thi diy and 40i at t nu of an area Th y'll cauac a..dlrty9alr atta to nijht with c:outal foe momlnli and nlnp. Thia Cvo clean al.r and a clcan·•lr area. like .OUthem trend ii {Of'«9t throulb ~ w.ek.end. • .. I • • I ,.. __ ,_ During lta 75 yea,. on the road, the ichool bu• hu gre>WI" up, changing rrom a hard eeated clunker to a lleek. 68apauenger r- condltloned vehlde. PageB1. . that Westland, the Briuah firm that manufactures Ainpur's heli- copters, has corrected mechanical defects that caused the Nov. 7 accident. "They have dealt with the problems we've identified," said FAA In vestigator Samuel Brodie. " ... They've taken steps to strengthen the aircraft. As far u we're concerned. Airapur can resume its flights at any time." Gallagher said that after the acc1dent the manufacturing agen- cies and Alrspur off.aaal.s went through "a meticulous. painstak- ing examination" that pinpointed the aircraft's tail rotor control u the cauae of the crash. "Our engineers detennined they had to stiffen up the tail rotor 1ervo mounting platform,'' Gal- lagher sa1d. "We red~ that platfonn and the pitch control lever -making for new. tightel', closer engineering tolerances." All the parts an the gear box have been replaced. he said, and the taaJ rotor pitch control lever was redesigned to include a built.- an alarm sy tem "The maintainence engineers can morutor the structural integri- ty of the craft," Gallagher said (Sff COPTERS, Pa1e All • I * Orange Coa t DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, January 5, 1984 Dale cl ai m label e d 'cl oU d o f smoke' lco11~111u1D s10R11s J Prosecutor says guitarist hasn't proven he was 'set up' by hisex-wifein molest case EMOTIONS RUN STRONG ... By JEFF ADLER 01 "'-0.11, ...... ltalt Gujt.anst Dtck Dall•'s claim thot the child molest.allon charg<.'t he faces were trumped up by hlS ex- wHt> •~ nothing more than "a big cloud ol !il"nt1kc." Prosecutor Kaiuharu Makino told an Orange County Susx-dor Court Jury Wednesday. . In his closing argument, the deputy distnct attom~y con - tended the defense has been unable to prove that Dale's former wife, Jeannie Grinunett, con- cocted the story or paid off the Cather of the 13-year-old girl with whom Da le is accused of having oral sex. ''The defense. I assume, is that the {ormer Mrs. Dale is the sinister engineer who made false ch arges against the defendant But it is something that doesn 't hold up in the evidE!nce," Makmo said. "The <!Pfense evidence never connected Dick Dale it up; how it, in an y way, e ntered i.n to these charges." Instead, the prosecutor urged jurors to consider the testimony of the 13-year-old girl, now 15, who was the prosecution's star witness. The gtrl emotionally deecrlbed for jurors on the opening day of the trial how Dale had coaxed her into en.gaging in oral sex wlth hun on lix occasions. ••If anything ls lmportant in this cue, it is her tesumony. She is the one these thi~gs happened to," Makino said. Dale, 46, is charged with 12 counts of child molestation and oral copulation st.emrn.ln.g from six alleged sexual en.counters with the girl during July and August 1981. :the incidents are suppoeed to hav~ in Dale'a 17 -room Balboa Peninsula mansion, across the street from her grandparents' house where she was staying. The prosecutor uked the jury to discount Dale's own testimony in the case, calling hlm a "smooth•· talker who did not tell the truth. "He's got a story to tell and he's going to tell it," Makino said. "He wants you to believe this is all part of a conspiracy. He wan ta you to Why go for 2 , when I will do? Laguna trustees consider single pool pro p osal at high school 8 ) L.P. BENET or tt.. Delly Piiot Steff Once upon a time, a group called the Aquatics Task Force in An honest ~. reply's not his type This thief rates an "A .. in typing but an ''F" in ethics. Laguna Beach had a dream of building two swmuning pools. Indeed, they spent months drawing up a proposal justifying the need, saying one pool would be necessary for the rugh'iehool swim and water polo teams, while another smaller, heated facility would accommodate youngsters and senior citizens. congested area. The pool is expected to cost $800,000. The city has agreed to chip in $375,000 over three years. The current pool, next to the high schooJ, has been plagued for years wifh an assortment of maintenance problems. If the school board approves the facility, officials from the district and city will meet to settle operation procedures. Construction is expected to begin in the fall of 1986. believe thta is all part of a ga.ant conspiracy. That she (Jeannie Grimmett) ls handing over the evidence. But he can give you a false story without bat tin& an eye." When the trial resumes today in Judse James Turner's Santa An.a courtroom, de fe nse attorney Michael Quigle y is scheduled to present his closing argument to the jury, Then the panel will retire and begin deliberation.<J. COPTER S ... From PageA1 ''The inside of the lever is filled with air, so they can continuouSly monitor the pressure of the air. U the re was a crack. the air would go out." All of Airspur's problems may not be solved, however. A North Costa Mesa citizens' group has vowed to continue to fight to get Airspw-'s San Diego Freeway route changed because otnoise and safety problems. Ken Hall, an aide to Supervisor Tom Riley, said he believes a new route may be in th~ works. ''We've had a couple of months to think about trus now and I've talked with Airspur," he said. "I don't want to say that anything's been changed, but we're going to try to determine where and if there's still a noise problem and I think we're going to try something new .. " The shuttle helicopter service has been besieged with problems since Sept. 15, wnen it began running 15 round-trip flights a day between John Wayne, Burbank and Fullerton airports and Los Angeles International Airport. From Page Ai officials U1ed to def end the propoeal. Speaker aft.er speaker went w the podium during the four-hour meeting and nearly every message wns the aame -you have be- trayed us, we don't like this agreement. A trembling George Oschner shocked the gathering by dump- ing a half-dozen lron jet engine pieces on the floor -parts he collected from h~ yard last Sept. 27, when a Republic Airlines jet ran into engine trouble and sprayed the parts on Dover Shores setting about 20 small fires. "Who are you working for? Who are you representing? Who are the constituents activ~ly sup- BODY ... From Page A 1 ington Beach post.al worker whose body also was found in a car. Friends say the victim, who lived with her mother, Maxine. had planned to attend the stew- ardess school at Orange Coast College next Sept.ember. At Marina High school, she was a top-lllght player for two ·years on the girls' varsity basketball and volleyball teams. "She was a very nice, smiling girl," said Lupe Loya, a guidance technician at Huntington Beach High School. whose daughter Valerie was a teammate. "We were shocked when we heard the news last night. She was pretty and attractive and one of the better players on the team.'' Her volleyball coach, Denrus Creighton, said the girl, known to her friends as Yvette, was a/ood athlete who was helpful an fun to be around. porting the agreement?" Oschner shouted at the city offlcitLls. "Do my friends and neighbors h.ave to die before we stand up and take a position on safety?" a furious Oschner shouted, turning toward the applauding audJence. Wilton Mansfield verbally at- tacked Newport Beach Mayor Eve lyn Hart as if he were a district attorney cross.examining a crimJ· nal. "Is it true you were sent to negotiate a limit of 55 flights,?" he barked. "Yes," answered the soft. spoken mayor. ''Is it true you were sent to negotiate an alternate airport site?" .,Yes," Hart said, this time adding she would answer Mans- field's questions only when he had completed his alloted three-- minute period to speak. "You wer e sent with two charges from the City Council and you failed on both. Why don't you step aside and let someone else with more strength take a shot at the county?" a stem-voiced Mans· field asked. "It is one of the most frustrating things you can encounter is some- thing that you can do nothing about that goes out of control," a subdued Hart replied. Erma Batham, an airport .foe from Santa Ana Heights who attends nearly every meeting where the airport is discussed, brought laughs from the audience when she complained about night flights. Speaking with a heavy ·Euro- pean accent, Batham referred to busin~ jets that violate the airport's curfew as "suckers." "Private jets are hard to catch. Sometime during Newport Harbor High School's two- week winter break , a thief crawled through the window of room 155 and· stole.. a $700 e lectric typewriter -but not before taking the time to type a note. And while skeptics like city officials, privately scoffed at the idea, the task force and school board members believed they oould build two pools for about $1 million. The skeptics, it turns out, were right. After months of debating the number of pools to build and various construction sit.es, school board officials will consider a proposal at 7:30 tonight in district offices, 550 Blumont St., for 'Cl single pool that was drawn up five years ago as part of the district's master plan. SLAYING SUSPECT CAPTURED ... Sometimes they take off at 104 or 105 decibels at 2 a.m. or 4 a.m. and you just can't catch those buggers, we've tried," Batham said. The teacher who discovered the theft Tuesday found thf' following message: ''To whom 1t may concern. Tha nk you for leaving the windows open so I could obtain this wonderful typewr iter. Next time don't leave your windows open stupid, stupid, stupid. S incerely. The Jackal" Newport Beach police have encouraged the school to im- prove its security The pool facility is expected to be located next to the high school's baseball field In recent mQnths. district of- ficials had studied the idea of building two pools in the high school parking lot on Park Av- enue, but city and district officials said parking changes would com- plicate traffic flow m an already BULLETIN BOARD Kids compete Sunday in El Toro hoop shQot Compt.•t1tton for the 12th annual Elks Hoop S hoot , the national trP<.· throw basketball shooting contest for youngsters ages 8 to 13. will be hdd Sunday from 2 to 5 pm in the El Toro Htgh School gym. &c:h ('ont<:st<:tnt will hC:1ve 25 sl\ots at the basket The boy and girl in each etg(• group with the highest scores advance through four tiers of compet1t1on to qualtfy for the· national finals m Indianapblis April 22-24 . Lon il a nd district winners will compete agamst other -Nn~estan ts 1n the statc• <'VPnt at Mile Square Recreati on Cent.er m F,'buntain V<ill<'y Jan I !1 Exchange students to speak Friday From Page A1 livered mail," Bechtel said. ''Then we felt that if there was a single suspect, he would have had to leave the scene on foot because he left the car." The dogs led officers on the trail to the general area of Meredith Garde11$, he said, but we.re unable to point them to a specific.block. A broken piece of a shrub that grew only at the Deluca home was what first linked the residence with the murder. It matched a broken piece of vegetation found with Haxton's body, Bechtel said. When officers looked closer at Deluca's home they discovered what looked like fresh bloodstains m the drive way. The suspect was taken to the Costa Mesa Police Station for questioning and then a rrested. Postal investigators. who had offered a $10,000 reward for information that would led them to Haxton's killer, called the slaying "brutal." Haxton, they said, is the first letter carrier in Southern Cali- fornia murdered in five years. She had been a postal employee for three years, working out of a Huntington Beach substation on Atlanta Avenue near Magnolia Street. "She was effervescen t. Tha t's how I would describe her," re- called one female letter carrier at the Huntington substation who .asked not to be identified. ''It (the murder) is more than a shock ,'' she added. ''Everyone is stunned. It doesn't make sense." Postal investigator Mel Moore said Haxton had delivered mail to homes on few er than three bl ocks said Nickerson. "He overdosed one time and the police came out. The next day he asked if it had caused a scene, like he was looking for attention." contammg a story of Deluca's arrest was on the front lawn. Pair uninjured in Laguna blaz~ Deluca lived with his parents and a young brother in the neatly groomed two-story ho"'5E!. accord- ing to neighbors. Huntington Beach police sealed off the house late Wednesday and remained on "He dldn't really seem to ever do that much. He was just around," said Nickerson. "I think he had a parrot. He was just strange.'' A fire early this morning in a. Laguna Beach apartment com-: plex caused $15,000 in damage.: fire officials reported. Flames started at 1:45 a.m . in apartment No. 3 at 170 McKnight Drive when an electric blanket cord short-circuited on part of a ' box spring mattress, officials said., A woman who lives across the street described Deluca as "just an 18-year-old who was having trouble growing a beard." guard;f;· cru· lights were still strung ong the front of the house and a ruJd's bicycle was in the driveway . A morning newspaper ''The whole thing is very spooky," added another neighbor. "This is such a ruce quiet neigh- borhood. That's what makes this so pathetic." Two residents escaped without injury. Three engine units re- sponded and put out the fire in five minutes. AIRPORT PACT DRAWS FIRE ... From Page A 1 real problem 1s the potential danger the people who live in this commuruty are subjected to every day of their lives." Williams said to strong applause from the crowd. But noise is the only basis by which the county could limit flights at the airport according to federal aviation law, responded Robert Burnham, Ne wport Beach's city attorney. "The consensus of the attorneys is that the binding agreement cannot addresssafety," Burnham said. Although the residents may not like it, Newport Beach has its back against the wall. act:ording to Pierce O'Dc;mnell, a special counsel hi red by the city to fight airport expansion. "The county will one day provide an adequate environmental impact report and and that is the only thing standing in the county's way of expansion," O'Donnell said. The supervisors were set to expand the airport two years ago. but their plans were frozen when an Superior Court judge ruled the airport's environmental impact report was in.adequate and expansion could not proceed until it was revised. The county is set to complete a new report in June. Buzz Turner, a member of the city's advisory aviation committee, said he planned to take people's comments and craft a new agreement. "It is import.ant to keeP' in mind that we are only half of the equation," Turner said noting that the county has control of the airport. "Being a realist I know that these risks will never be solved but could be minimized." said Al Graham, an ·aviation committee member who spoke in favor of reaching an agreement. The aviation committee suggested five changes in the agreement. •An alternate airport site should be selected in three years with to start within 10 years. •The city would not be obligated to support a new airport master plan unitl a new site was selected. •The new John Wayne Airport terminal would be limited to 100,000 square feet. •The city would not be financially liable for the cost of a noise damage suit against the airport. •The city's liabilty to repay any federal grants to the airport would be limited to $25,000 a year. Thn--e foreign Pxchang<· students from the Corona del Mar 'hapter uf JJ,.lt• American F'1eld Serv1cf' will speak at Friday's me<'ling of t ~· Frt£>nds of Oasis. before a pparently being killed. r~====================~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~ The undelivered mail as we ll as F'rann·s Jones from Wellington. New Zealand. Ma ria de los H1os from Madrid. S µain. and Gonzalo Vasquez from Santiago, Ch1h:. will discuss !J fo in their countries at the 11 a.m. session. . top-smoking c linic planned a t Hoag T hi· AmN1rnn Cancer Society will cond uct a stop-smoking clinic ut Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach beginning Monday and running through Jan. 23. Classes will be held Monday and Thur~ay evenings from 7 to 9 pm R<•g1stration is $1 0 and reservat10ns may bf.. made by calling 752-HfiOO the woman's purse was found in the green ma il car Police said it appears none of the items was disturbed . Residents on Jon Day Drive said Deluca and his family had lived in the neighborhood about four years and in that time, the short curly-haired 18-year -old had de- veloped a reputation as a drug user. Poli<-"e supported the asser- tions "He got mto the PCP crowd," We're Listening ••• What do you hke about the Daily Pilot ? Whal don·t you likr' Call the number at left and your message wUl be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. 642·6086 Delly Piiot o.ltwety i. Quarente.d ..,Ot!O•r r "o•r " v.,,, <k> "01 Ill •• yOlll Pt t.>•• Dy 5 10 p ,,, ,.~ l)lt!O>t 1 p ,,, e110 rou• GOPr '""' t1• ~.a la!u•l.l~r a1111 !JullO•~ 11 yOll 60 1141 t•C•·•t ..OU• ' ~ by , • "' Cllll 0.1"'11 "' • "' 8"° '°" ~ ... W~IO CltculeUon T-hoftee T he same 24 hpur answenng service may be used lo record let lers l•> the editor on any lopt(' Mailboit contributors mutt include tht>ir name and telephone number for \•enrication No circulation <'alls , pleasc · T ell ui> what '!> on your mir d ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Chair DowaHbr Editor and AMlstant to the Pubtllher • '· ear.a. tlGfl ....... MAtN Ol'Plea »0 W• llty ti COiie ..... ~4 M•• aodt• oo. •MO. c:.o.ia ..._ C4 we~ ~' 1113 On1ng1 CGlll ~ ~ Ho newt 1101fH , lllu•lrtllOflt, e41to1l11 l'IAllll or llMrt-'*"",...,. ,.,., lit~""""°'* 9"Clll '*"*'°"ti ~~ VOL. n, NO. 5 .\ ·-· Cru ise into Spring with 'Ralph Lauren . Linens, Cottons and Silks . 119 f11hlon h l1nd r~ port Buch (714} 759~\622 4728 dmir~h ~ Way ~farina del R~> (213) 823 -i955 I .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, January 5, ~984 * I Froggy water in NewPiirt reservoir hard to swallow ,. From 1taff and wtre reporlt Blologisl'>at the Mt>Lropolltan Wuwr Ou;tnct know nt.>arly evnythlng abountu.• Af ncan clawed frog. Everything, thlll 1s, except for how to get rid of It. They can readily tell you this about the amphibian: -It was imported to this country in the 1940s to be used for pregnancy tests and medical research, then made its way to pet st.ores and eventually into lakes arid reservoirs. -It's ugly, with glistening. mu1.:ous-sllck skm. -It secretes a poisonous t.oxm through its skin when 1t is grabbed or bitten by an animal. -It eats voraciously, preying on young native fish. And it will devour iO> young when it runsoutof other food. -It multiplies rapidly. But the water agency still isn't sure it can dislodge the frogs from their adopted home in the dlstrict'sSan Joaqum Reservoir near Newport &>ach. Tl)e MWD has.been flghtanga losing war with the amphibians since they were discovered in tht' reservoir six years ago. About all the agency has succeeded in doing is keeping the frogs from spreading to other water systems by erecting a giant acreen over water outlets A spokeswoman for the Mt.~ Consohdutt.td Watl'r Otliltkt which rPC<.'lvcs wuwr lrom thl! rt'SCrvo1r mud it's only in a very rare lNtanc~ that anything gelJ$ through that S<;rocn But thut rare: mstanc.:e occurred in January 1981, wht.•na rip m tht!scrE>en allowed lhe frogs wwend their way into tht> watersupply. Frog bones were found in dty water pipes in Costa Mesa after that incident. "We rcall y don· t even know how many there are," says Michael McGuire, a water engineer for the MWD. which brings water from the Colorado River .ind sells it to local water companies. ''Our 'wild guess' estimate is that there are 50,000 of them, but for all we know we could find a n11lhon," McGuire said. How to eradicate the frogs is a major question now for the agency, which two months ago began draining the 3.000-acre-Coot reservoir for cleaning and repair. As the water level drops, the Crogs will look elsewhere for homei> unless they are destroyed. "We don't even know if drainihg the reservoir will perm.mently get rid of them," McGuire says. "They might come back once we fill the reservoir back UJ.>. and then we'll trave to start the cycle all over again" Gaido seeks third Irvine term .Councilwoman calls for $25,000 limit on campaign spending 8' ANDREA ADELSON tlh 0..., Pilot Slaff Two-term Irvine Coun- cilwoman Mary Ann Galdo said she intends to seek re-election while advocating managed hous- ing growth, opposition to two proposed freeways, and the event- ual closure of the Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro. While declaring her candidacy Tuesday, Gaido called for can- didates to agree to a $25.000 spending limit. Gaido, 41 , is the first to declare her candidacy in the June 5 race for three council seats, although official nomination papers cannot be drawn until Feb. 13, ae<:ording t.o the city clerk's office. Incumben~ Bill Vardoulis and . David Sills. contacted following Two years ago Irvine voters Ga1do's announcement, said they approved limiting individual both would oppose campaign donations to $250, a cap that rises spending limits. along with the Consµmer Price Vardoulis, who said he will not Index. The new law didn't stop seek a third term, called a spend-the June 1982 election from ing ceiling ''campaign rhetoric" • becoming the most expensive. in that would have little affect. He the city's history. The winners, pointed out that a candidate's Larry Agran and Barbara Weiner. campaign war chest can be stuffed each spent about $30,000. by political organizations that are unregulated Sills said he has postponed a decision on whether to run until Feb. 1. While conceding past council races have escalated in cost, Sills said Gaido's proposal undercuts the standard spending yardstick of $1 per vote. "That has a tendency to help incumbents," he added. Gaido spent $12,000 on her 1980 race and this time intends to hire a professional fund-raiser. She is on the staff of the county's Human Relations Com- mission. She was first elected to the council in 1976 after serving one year on the city's Planning Commi~ion a nd a stint on the Tranportation Commission. African cla~ed frog making Newport water drinkers jumpy. The African clawed frog has no naturaJ predators, and no effective methods of control have been found. biologists say. clogged with frofls. But thedistrict thinks the trouble lSWOrthlt. "Frog parts, follnd in a glass of drinking water, would-do little for the imageof the water industry," the agency's water quaU ty manager, Eugene Bowen. wrote in a internal memorandum. The screens are constantly being cleaned by MWD workers because they frequently become Mary Ann Gaido The candidate said an expected spurt in new home growth should also correspond with a city-wide ....greenbelt plan. instead of piecemeal open space planning. Dimwi.ts divided Densa dummies' derivation dim From 1t,.ff aod wire reports True to their dimwit image, Densa members can't figure out who really started their club. Four men in different cities all claim to have founded Densa, which parodies Mensa, the high-IQ club whose members rank in the upper 2 percent of the population in intelligence tests. Densa, represents the underachieving side of the population'. Members rank in the lower 98 percent in intelligence tests. '·Their existence is sort of to poke fun at us and that's fine," said Andrea Schrote, secretary of Orange County Mensa. Mensa members recently poked fun back when a book about Ocnsa with its membership quiz in i~ was passed around ata Mensa meeting. - Schrote said the questions were purposely stupid and very humorous. She c;aid the book is available in local bookstores. . 'Qle baule lines for Denaa club founder beg.an when a man from Hoboker threatened a lawsuit against Jack Canaan of San Diego over rights to the club's name. Canaan, however, said he continues to sell his memberships to potential Densa members in San Diego for $30 for one year, $10 for life. Meanwhile, J.D. Stewart of Rochester, who proudly carries the title CDP (Certified Dull Person), accused Steve Price of Houston's Densa of trying w gain "exclusive rights'' to the name. ''We better find out who the real Densa is," Stewart wrote Price. 'Bird watcher' discouraged in Lagun~a Beach The Rochester and Houston Densas each claim to have several hundred dues~paying pinheads. · Canaan said he is trying to establish a sperm bank to ensure.., Densa members can survive a nuclear attack. or at least a windy day. An Irate Laguna Beach husband called police t.o report a neighbor was on .an adjacent roof, peering at his wife with a pair of binoculars. Police arrived and urged the man to put the binoculars away. . . . Household Items valued at S 1 O ,000 were stolen from a residence In the 300 block of Pinecrest in Laguna Beach. police reported A purse containing $150 in cash and valuables was stolen from a car parked at Crystal Cove and North Coast Highway.. • • Stereo equipment valued at $300 was taken from a residence fn the 500 block of Seavlew. Newport Beach A Newport Beach woman reported the windshield of her 1978 Buick Le Sabre smashed and $438 in damage to the auto. which was parked In the parking structure at 4200 Park New- port. . . - A woman working in an office at 1401 Avocado reported her wallet containing $170 was stolen from her purse while she was at work Wednes- day afternoon. . . . A Newport Beach student reported the theft of $529 In camera equip- ment from his unlocked auto parked In the 3400 block of Quiet Cove. A Newport B~a~h ~omen rep8rted theft of jewelry valued at $2,505 from her home in the 1900 block ot Santiago Drive.. • • A Newport Beach woman reported the theft of two bicycles valued at $300 trom her unlocked garage in the 1100 block of West Oceanfront Tuesday. A Newport Beach man reported the theft of his bicycle valued at S 100 from the rear of his open garage In the 3500 block of Seashore Wednesday. Costa Mesa A tire shed behind a Union 76 gas station at 3067 Bnstol St. was broken fnto Tuesday night and approximate- ly$ t .500 worth of tires were taken A padlock on the shed. which con- tained 30 car and truck tires. was cut. police determined. A resident of the Sea Lark Motel, 2274 Newport Blvd .. was arrested on suspicion of burglary Wednesday alter another resident reported his room had been ransacked and $803 In cash and clothing had been stolen. A witness told police she saw.Patrick Dane Kiibane. 28. carrying a bundle of clothes out of the victim's room. Kiibane Is belng.h~ld.on S 10,000 ball. A $300 chain saw was reported stolen Wednesday from an un- secured garage on the 2000 block of Java Road. Irvine An Irvine man was arrested lior suspicion of assault on a police otlicer and misdemeanor drunken driving in Irvine early today atter allegedly .. playing chicken .. with a patrol sergea.nt on Jeffrey Road. After Sgt. Scott Cade's patrol car was forced oft the road. a short chase at speeds above 90 mph ensued Ronald F1 Wood, 22, eventually pulled over on Brandywine, north of Jeffrey. The pursuit was sparked when Cade flashed his high beams at the other car. The cars did not make contact A burglar stole $400 worth of 1ewelry lrom a condo on Meadowsweet Way sometime Wednesday, gaining entry through an ,unlocked slidln~ g!a~ door. Jewelry valued at $670 disap- peared from an apartment on Cascade sometime Wednesday. A thief forced entry through a sliding glass window. Huntington Beach The burglary of an apartment on the 21600 block of Brookhurst Street was reported Wednesday morning. Inside. a $400 waterbed was punc- tured. The loss Included $1.000 In camera equipment and $1.000 In 1ewelry. A resident of the 17 100 block of Pinehurst Lane reported the theft Wednesday of a blue Schwinn bicycle worth $200. The bike had been parked outside the Thrittlmart, 5858 Warner Ave., and was gone when the resident left the store. . . . A red 1967 Volkswagen "Bug" was burglarized Wednesday on the 19700 block of Waterbury Lane. A coat hanqer was used to break Into the car. The lose Included speakers worth S 100. ' A man was arrested Wednesday evening on suspicion ol shoplifting at the Target store. 9882 Adams Ave. .;ontinued fair al~ng the Coast Coastal F1lf 1"1"0VQI\ Frldey Hifht 68 10 78 Lows 46 to $<! ••ono the COHI Ind 38 lo 48 tc>< the •Mand ••fi.yt 0\/9< Inn« w111n lrom Point Concap llOfl 10 81111 c11m ... 11 fal1nd to tl11 MUIGen 8o<ll9', mot~ liljhl v1r11~ wind• lhrough Friday exe419l IO\llfiwett 10 -t e to 15 knols Frldey 1ttwnoon end ~ w"'"'>' aw_.I 1 to 3 t111t ,all IKOlj)I IOml hlfl1 ciOUOt O\llr IOUtlll<n wat9ft Ov9' outlfwa19ft tr om Po1111 C~p- 11on to Sin Cllmlntl ltland and out 60 MIMI•. nof111 10 nonh-t wlnllt 5 to t S knolt lh<OVQh f rlday with combined -41ol1Mt Extended TOOAY 606pl'll ti Mlpm '"'°·" 4091 m tO Item a 2011111 37 3' 51 29 41 28 39 23 32 10 00 39 6, 20 32 21 ~I 24 58 51 40 J2 52 38 81 70 70 ~, 39 23 61 31 82 33• 42 38 41 29 66 43 61 39 79 ~, ., 3~ 6'4 J 1 51 JI 73 so 40 25 ,. 23 SI 3t 62 •7 39 38 u 31 « 33 57 )3 )9 J3 $:) 37 eo 50 l8 ,0 78 •H .a 37 O& )9 ·, StatlofWy •• 6e 4& 84 71 81 49 10 38 40 34 49 0 ~7 32 « n •• &I &• ,. 60 so 411 ,. SURf RIPDRT ICll u It 1 2 1 3 , 2 l 2 1~ Recovered were cassette tapes valued !l $32. • • • A 26-inch boys Land Cruiser bicycle was stolen Wednesday morn- ing from In front of a home on the 600 block of 16th Street. The loss was estimated at $140. . . . A maroon 1980 Honda C1v1c was stolen early Wednesday from the 300 block of 13th Street The loss was estimated at $2.500. The side storage compartment on a tan and brown 1983 Pace Arrow motorhome parked In the RV lot at the city beach was burglarized Miscellaneous property worth $450 was stolen, Fountain Valley Someone used a water noule to break a sliding window to gain entrance to a residence In the 11000 block of Orchid Avenue and steal $6, 165 In jewelry, camera equipment, a television set ?n~ c:iothing. Burglars ransacked upstairs bedrooms In the 9000 block ol Dandelion Circle and stole jewelry. a radio. plllows and an adding machine valued at $382. Thieves stole jewelry and a watch from a residence in the 18000 block of Santa Veronica Circle A 21-year-old Westmt~ter laborer suffered cuts and bru'ses on the • forehead when an erstwhile drinking companion 1erked him from his car and began hitting him for no ap- parent reason after warning. "I'm going to kick your ---' But of the status of the bank, he said: "Nothing in the tndge." The debate has prompted a suggestion that the clubs settle the squabble by awarding the Densa rights to the chapter scoring lowest on a Densa quiz drawn up by Price. Sample question: "Def me the universe. Give two examples." Orange County Mensa membership chairman Sara Cullison said all four men may be correct in claiming to have founded Densa. ''Maybe they all spontaneously did the same thing at the same time. History proves this can happen. Many of our great inventions were being discovered by different individuals working in different places at the same time," _she said bnghtly about the dimwit controversy. County's water plan entering third phase Orange County supervisors will continue long-term planning ef- forts aimed at ensuring county residents will enjoy a stable water supply in the-future. The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday unanimously directed county Environment.al Manage- ment Agency officials to begin work on a third phase of the county's water plan. · The study will focus on the possibility of increasing the coun- ty's long-term water supply. It will also assess state and regional © (~ONCORU MARINER SG water agency policies in an at- tempt to determine future water pricing policies and what impact they will have on Orange County. Also, the study will ass;es., how new technologies will affect the water supply and will attempt co develop a strategy aimed at secur- ing a steady, stable supply of water for both the public and for private industry. EMA off1c1als said the study should be complete sometime this summer. The Sporstwatch of the '80s. For him or her. Slim . rugged, water-re$istant . In black chrominum stainless steel and 14 karat gold. Electronic quartz movement. Hand-crafted in Switzerland. . \ RAFF Jew'€Jt-r fASt-110 l\IA, 0-P.WPOJfJ 9 .. ACH • /' ,. Hawkins family suffers more gang·violence TOP OF TH. llEWI Police uspe(·t urso1J i11 la te t reven ge atlack a fter corp 'es f o un<I tor ch ed in Wa tt mortuary GAl\DENA (AP) Arson u :!S~pt'<:Lt.'<1111 a New Vear's fire that dl.'Stroyt.od ct mortuary service hnn owned by a f amlly besieged by a 'itreet aana seekina revenge for a member's death, authontits say. Hawklru; Mortuary Servu.'~ burned t.'..t.rly Sunday, and damage was ('Sllrnott.'<i.at $200.000, said Eugent> Hawkins, part owner and the son of tht> emba tlll'<i James Hawkins Sr , a Watts grocer who has dared to do battle w1lh young hoodlums from a nearby housmg prOJt"l'l. "When we heard about tht hre, w e JUSl couldn't help assuming that at was gang related," said another son, James Hawkins Jr , who all<'gl'dly :.hot a young gang member LO death la\l year during an attempted robbery · He was not l'harged in the case, which apparently has tnggt-red a sent>S of revenge attack:. on the famtly and thetr property, anvt$tJgators say In thl· mortuary bu1ldmg Sunday were JO bodies. but only two thCtt were not an refngeratt•d lockers burn{'(), firefighters said. "The) pulled two boches out of the mortuary refrigerator onto the floor," said Hawkins Jr He said lhe intruders apparen tly poUrt"<l a flammable substance over t he bodies and lit a fire that spread through the facility. which 11>jointlyownro by Hawkins family members .rnd The Neptune S0t'll'l} "We suspect arson, but tht· mvest1gat1on 1s not finished," Gardena police Lt Philip Sh(•pherd said Wednnday. The Canuly rt."t'e1ved numt·toua 1.elcphone lhreatA la.It year that they were gomg to ht! "burnt.>d out," s.i1d E\.ig •n Hawkins. "W w re all lookmg forward to a New Year, and hert' du.a happens ... l really thoug}\t thiJ was gc»ng to be a 00.autlful year" The Hawk.tnJeS had dunrlbuted 1.lM hams and turkeys to poor famtltE'$ in th<.• urea at Christ.mas limf', a longstandmg famJly trad1llon, ''and thought W{' were well on our way to making Cn.-nds. '' he scud Ja.mt.'8 Ha wkins Sr , 72, who hM a homt" and gruc.-ery stort> at lmJ)f"nal Boulevard and Slater SlrHt, which border.. W&llowbrook and W ua, ha,, bt.>en shot at and had his house and busUleSS b'm~red by fi~ bombs and shotgun blasts and even nunmed by ilUtomob1lt.'ll during a lengthy 1>4mod of violence against tht.> family. Fourteen alleged gang members have been jailed and are awaiting tr1al on a variety o! charg~ in connection with the Incidents Marshals foil jetliner arson try, nab woman in burning lavatory LOS ANGELES (Al') l''edcral sky marshals huvt.• arrested a 31 -yt>ar-old Las Vegas woman who allt•gedly tned to set her clothing afire and "S(·urcht"d" the Lavatory of an airborne ,etlmer with 14El people aboard, authoriues say Thl· Boeing 727 was on its landing approach 35 m1lf•<; east of Los Angeles Int.emataonal Airport from Dallas when the fire broke out late Wednesday a flt-moon. FBI spoke:;man J ohn Hoos said Thl' blaze was qu1ckly extinguished. Audrey Jean Taylor , 31. of Las Vegas. Nev , was . booked for investigation of del4troyu1~ an &tn'taft, Hoos said . The federal marshals were already aboard Delta Flight 331 and made the arrest while the plane was ~till in the afr. Hoos said "Dunng thecoun.eof the fltght Taylor set fire LO a lavatory on the aircraft which was extinguished by the crew." HOO!> said. "Two U S. marshals aboard the Cl1ght ass1st<"d the n<·w and placed Taylor in t heir ('UStody." Team up with Target and Procter &.Gamble to support the Special Olympics Item Zest soap oath ..,,, P har Bounty• 2 p.!Ot'I IQWPI'> Charmin• 2 h-.th l•<:.su+> 4 iw • Crest 6 4 V I I lf)!l ·t .. 1· h • Wondra 10 01 i()fo()fl Mr .. Clean ? 8 ,.,, l'lottl1• D•wn l2 0 1 118/'lw~'.htrtQ ff11110 ~ '} 4 Cl7 "TIOU1t'IWast1 By now you've rec eived your Procter & Gamble coupons in the mail. For each coupon you redeem at Target, good on many popular everyday essentials, 10C will be donated to ·the Special Olympics. And to sweeten the incentive, we've also sale priced these products. That means you save the face value of the coupon on top of the low Target sale price. Just look at the savings below: Item Target Proctor & Gamble Your sale price coupon value flnal~t Your final cost Prell shampoo 1 .89 .40 PA 1.49 ... 11 "' 11ra• 11'1 0r PA .20 )0 2 2 '°' .62 2 ''" .8 2 . , I Jfl\ ••f1t'.1tl Bounce 1.79 .20 n,1 I 1.59 4 O r 011"' .15 >I 2 2 b 1.25 1.40 I,, Head 'n 2 , 3 .98 .40 01 2 2 b 3.58 Shoulders .20 .n 2 2 '°' 1.58 1.78 I'' I .ii t I" r y i•~r~ 2 ,,,, 3.98 .40 <>" 2 2 '°' 3.58 2 tor 4.16 .50 on 2 2 lot 3.66 l ·Ul SO~d .25 Pd .69 .29. ,.~ 1.14 .94 1.39 ent1 PE'fSPtrMI Bold fU 3.29 .50 ea 2.79 A 4 Ol lclundr'f .15 f'<I 1.44 1.59 c1nlf1f09"I P•:· 7.09 .50 6.59 fUf I l\ ;t .2 5 .. ;i 1.44 1.69 1.79 .20 M 1.59 o louqty, ll!Tltt I) rl)I~ Of')f r:11 .. fQITIM CN11mln, llm1t 12 4 pr1C:1t' Df'f (,111tle>m•" Pemper1. ltf'ntl 4 t>o w 11 s Oil' r II' 1nmm Ae1vrrt1~ OttC"f!\ ()()()(1 lhfO\IQh Saturday J1VlU¥y l IO~ oonatioM gooO on coopOOt redeefnf>d tndlly tttrouol\ Sa.tUtc'llY J8J'luat) 2 1 Lim.I OM COtJPOf' Pf" brand Pf'f customer The ~i; Olympica '"ii noo profit 11n11()1'\j11 'IOOrt• program~ 10 ~ino f'l'\M1nn" QI ITl('fitnly ~ udults 8"(I Chllrhn ft(j 11 l\llpplC!I "10ft lulf•.ng fe No commflfc191 & ' • I -------.._ --'--- ; • NATION Attack warning drew little panic or notice By tbf' Auoclatt!d Pren HARRISBURG, Pa. -Just one county responded w 1th tdrcns and alerted polit'e when an emergency att~u:k warning was transmJtted accidentally, but at least 12 others called in and were told the message was a mlStake, a spok~ sa1d Lehigh County apparently was the o.nly one to trigger its blanng sirens and noufy polkc, !ire a nd ambulanoecomparues, said Pennsylvarua Emergency Management Agency spokesman J ohn Corney. The attack .warning was sent by mJBtake as techrucWJll for American Telephone & Telegraph were working on the new computer system used by the emergency agency Scouts baule g ranny HARTFORD. Conn --The Boy 5<.'0ut.b of America says at will f 1ght an order requmng ll lO offer a s.c.:outmaster'~ post to a 65-year-old grandmothf'r. who a hearing of fleer called "w<>ll- qualified" due to her past as a "de facto S('OUtmaslt'r ." Catherine Pollard. of Milford, the mother of tw9 Eagle &:outs, has served periodically as an adult volunteer since 1953. She complained to the state Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities in 1976 after regional and national Boy Scout officials rejeeted her · application for a scout.master position. STATE Assassin convicted LOS ANGELES -A 20-year-old tn of Armenian desce nt faces a possible death se tence after being convicted of first-degree mur er in the 1982 ambus h slaying of a Turkish dip omat. Hampig "Harry" Sassounian was convicted Wednesday by a Superior Court jury wh1ch also found that he had killed Turkish Consul General Kemal Arikan, 54, because of the diplomat's nationality Shu.Ille shutterbugged BERKELEY A photography mission aboard last month's space shuttle failed because the film was fogged. and future mghta might be adjusted to prevent the problem, say astronomers at NASA and the University of California here. "Almost every frame was JUSl black" in two rolls of ftlm from a telescopic camera that was to have caught the first glimpses of distant stars and nebulae. said C Stuart Bowyer of Berkeley, who directed the t=>xpcriment with French scientists. Love kin get $525,000 LOS ANGELES Five years alter police shot a krnfe-brand1sh1ng woman to death, the Caty Council has approved a S525,000 settlement of lawsu1L<> by the three daugh ten; and mother of Euha Love The approval was unanimous Wednesday, five days before the $5 m1lllon wrongful-death lawsuits were scheduled to go to trial. Love, :3!:1, WdS shot eight times Jan. 3, 1979, aftt·r she had thr<:C.tcn<:d a gas compan y employee who w~ntt'd to ~hut off her mPter for nonpayment laltech bla t hurls 2 PASADENA A chemicaJ reaction m a large flask set off an explosion that shook a chemistry building at the CalHomia Institute of Technology and cnticaUy mjured a 23-year-old student, authorities said today. Flying glass from the beaker severed the carotid artery of Ramsey Bittar, who had be<'n mixing a solution of chemkals and water. said polJce Lt. Don Burwell. A fellow studt•nt suffered lesser injuries in the Wednesday evening blast. Law p an e l kills bills SACRAMENTO L A committee has killed bills to raise pt-nalt1cs for driving with 0.20 percent blocxi alcohol and LO allow life-without- parole sentences for some 16-year-old murdL'rers Also dl'fcated Wednesday by the liberal Assemblv Criminal Law and Pubhc Safoty Comm1tlt'<· was a Demcx·rat's bill to legalize the sale of drug parapnemalia to adul~. WORLD 5 held in kidnappings HOM E Poht·f? have arrested and charged fivC' men. andud1ng four Sardinian shepherds. with thl' kidnap of a jewelry company heiress and a ~n-age son whose ear was cut off to temfy relati ves into paying a ransom. The fi ve men arrested Wednesday were accused In the Nov 19 abducl.lon of Anna Bulgari CaUssonJ, 56, of the Bulgar1 ,){'Welry family, a nd 16·year-old son Giorgio, who were released Christmas Eve aftE'r the ran~om rlemand was met llubby mack two car ZUHICH. Switu-rland Stef anoCaslraght. serond husband of Prtn('t.'8.'I Caroline of MonAM:O, smasht-d his vehicle m to the cars of two photographer.; beC'nUJI<' he ~-irritated by the journalists, the n<'wspapcr B k$ald today. Blick said that when Cas1ragh1 saw e photogrophen waiting for the newlywed couple in front of a porting gooda store Wednt."ld ay at th resort of Celenna, he climbed mto hia Rang<' Rov<'r and "rl'Ckl ly smashed th f nd rs" of th<' two cars Cardinal, Wojciech meet WARSAW. Poland Cdrdin.nl JoU!f Cl mp and P~ler WOJ.;i ·h Joru1.clskl met today tn lhf'1r f Inst r ·to f • encounter ainre PoJW John P1ulll'1 pHgrunng •toPolAnd in Jun The Pollth news a ency PAP ucd • one· Une report say1n th m ting g n l noon (6 a.m, EST) but aav no other d t.a1 la Th£> C-ommunl~t P rty ch1e( and the nauon's Roman C.Othohc pr1ma~ rm•t 11 a govemm nt viii In Netolln, outald<' War1aw, • Id ~ who 1pokl' on condJUon they not be tdt ntHwd. - ,· ' I NB Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, January 5, 198• STOCKS NYSE COMPOS ITE TRANSA TIO S TllURSDA 'V' • .. • • \ • I I _______ .. Up 13.19 CI09lng 1.212.M •1111•B1 . Getty Oil, Pennzoil deal valued at $5.28 billion LOS ANGELES -In & deD.1 valued at ~.28 billion. Getty Oil C.o. has agreed to be merpd Into a oompany to be formed by P~m.ou C.o. and Gordon P. Getty. Under cemw ol. the deal, lhe 48mUlion Gettyaharanotalreadycontrolled by Pennz.oU or Oordon Getty would be pwchued fot tllO · ap1~. or $5.28 billion. Roben Harper, a Penn.ioll 1~ tn New York, said Wedne.day the accord called foe PenNoll to buy 24 million of the publicly held Oetty lbar8 COr approximat.Ply $2.6 billion in cash. Gordon GMty would buy the remaining 24 mil boo for approximately $2.e billion. GAF Corp. to close three plants NEW YORK-GAF Corp., whoR board of directorl wu ousted la.st month in a ahareholder revolt. II.id lt planned to close three roo!lllg materials planta, ~llminating 8M Jobe. Samu.el J. Heyman, who led the dlaident shareholder flaht and was elected GAF chairman in December, Aid Wecme.day the closmgs would allow the building materials divilion to po&t ''significant eamlngs" in 1984 after three S\r'aiaht unprofitable years. Bank to aid Korean steel firm WASHINGTON -The Export-Import Bank board a1d Wednesday it would guarantee loans to help a Korean l1eel company buy American-made equipment for a new steel mill. The Commerce Department last month aal{i!d the bank to tum down the financing request, saying short-term jOb pin would be outweighed by harm to the U.S. steel industry from new foreign competition. The Export· Import Bank lends moMY to foreign companies to encourage them to buy American products. Computer firms to settle s uit NEW YORK -Apple Computer Inc. and Franklin Computer Corp. said they agreed &o settle a 20-month court battle over whether certain of Apple's computer IOftware wu protected by copyright laws. The companies said Wed:naday the settlement calls for Franklin to pay $2.5 mi1&n to Apple and for Franklin not to infringe on Apple's copyright in the future. COLO QUOTATIONS .,_.__. ..... ,.,_ s.e.cied world gold Pftc99 100.-, l.Ol)dort motn1ng llJlinQ $371 !IO up 12 !IO LOIMtofl artetnoon llllng 1375 25 up I t :rs P.-te 1ltetnoon 11.ino S376 38. up SO 79 ,,..,.,..,. li•lng 137120 off so 54 ZIJftcfl ••tt .ntrn00n 1101375euup11 10. 137110..-.0 ~ • ...,_ l°"'Y d.-Y .,oMt '375 2S up ,, 2~ IEfteell\Md IOftly dally quotlt '37S 66 up 1125 ~d l1bntat9d (OntV 0111y quoll l l3~4 43 up SI 31 NY c-· QOl<l SpOI month W9() 13 77 30 oft $1110 WHAT NYSE DID NEW YORK IAPI Jan S Advencecl Oecllnecl Unc;hano.<J Tolel1HUH "'-'"""' fll-IOWI Toa•v 1341 347 336 *' 1n • WHAT AMEX DID NEW Y~I( !AP) Jen s Adveric.~ Oe<l•necl u "'"•ll(led ToleJl\1~ N-MIQf>I NtW IOWI METALS Todav l90 113 Ito Ml 77 7 Pr11v dAV 177' '70 ,.. 21137 63 11 Prev o .. ... 1n 17S •1• 14 ) NEW VORK f"'PI Spol l'Onlerrouo metal pr~tooev C...,w 1111"• 12 centt • POUnd u S dHl•n•ttO'>t c...,_ ~ 1!> c.n11 POI pound NY c;omu spot month clOIHld Wed l~ 26 211 .,..,, ... pound line 49 '"'". oouno defiverlO Tin ·II 233~ Metal• W-compoaole lb """""""" • 11 <:.,,ta t POUnCI N '\' MlfCIHJ 1.32100·$:MO 00 Ill' 71 lb"- '°'IW YOO l'tetlftvm \ 1811 00 OomMllC me<chanl lro., wnc• N y SILVER ,,..,.. sa • 1~ ><•NJ) " 11 .. m,.,. •on<y o•~v Q'101@1 py .. \II \10~ lll)vOU•!(e NYl.°""'• llOCll "'°""' C1<>MC1 WM SYMBOLS II ..... ,...~ io-II Ne. ,_"' """' ""-01,,.. ...... l'OllO •••• "' -!Mdt ... _,., OtlW-o-o on,.,.'"'_....., °' -...._ CleC*•I-1oec .. °' t •I• .. ~ °' 08""""'91• l\OI ~llCI eJ 119 ...... -lifd"' , ... ~ !Oo! ....... •·A "l't Ot t•I<• °"ArnM •tie pllA MOO °""'°""'° ' l Cl\lldla!lflO ~ DK*9<J 01 pe.cl "'i'WIC~ 11-i.. ea oo ,..., tit .. 11..Ck ~ OI .... up I""'° -..... ~Of'>lll91l ~or l'IOltl-lek.,, 11 111" dMowllo ,_."'II • n.<-ie.eo °' jletd 1,.. ,.... ec·~-·--. Wl!tl "".,..."' I DOW JONES AVlRAGES UP NEW V()RI( (AP) -TN followlnt lltl IN>•t !fie New YOik Stock E•~ ''OCll' and werr1n11 '""' ,,.,,.. -uo '"' ,,_1 encl Oowl\ lhe .._1 lleUCI on Dlttlftl o! d\e,_ r-OleU OI voium. •or Thuf~• No \1Curl11et rr8Cl111t 11e1ow R v• ~­ uded Nat •M Wte/>lril che,_. ere fhe Olfle<IHKe OllWMfl ,,,. ll"eVio\I' doll"' or tee •nd lodaV'S 7 0 m ll"iG'e NllTl'I I 1.-'IV•llnO 7 Mallet WI J AdvfllC.r11 4 A••HPrd S l.fflY•I tll1' •Am Motoo 1 lrl(O t AllMn Inc t C.en ""'" 10 Eow•ro1 ' I I ConwOOCI ' 17 UM•IOfll I) JewtlCOr " (Cl'NMell ' u \c.ot U'd " T1oewll• 11 "'mSI. Fl• ' 18 Oonl.ul J•n 19 HullonEF 1 10 JI•"'•' 21 Qwc,Rt1• ,... n l•""•~s.,, 2) l HUN'HO" " ''~'lw., \ H PoooP•oo 76 TW(OHI wl UI"\ '-•'' C"9 4 • + ... J" + • 13.+1, 10~ + 19 ~ + ) • ,._ + "" 10"9 + I s-. + ,, , .. + ... 1~ + ,~ , ... , . •• + , 1'-~ ... 1µ. + 1 12 .. + I 7S + I'~ IS• + I o 17 I t I • J7 • + '"' ,, .. . '"' II • I • J... • • "'• .. ,, )4i., • , .. 72 I I I 1''• .. .,. Pel U11 Ht Ult 14. Uo 17 I Uo 11 1 Uo IU Up IOS UD 104 UP 10) UD 10.3 UP tt UP t 4 U• I t Uo II uo es UD 1.4 Uo I I Uo 1 0 Uo 71 I.lo 1 t Uo 7. Uo 1 S Uo I 4 Uo 14 Uo 14 uo 7l Uo I) DOWN\ LHI C"9 fl'cl IS"t -3"' Olt t• I 1t·-1•0tl 70 10 '" °" •• ta. -.... Ott • 3 , ... -• °" ., ···-""Olt ,, ,.~ -"" Ott '' 11.-•• 011 40 ,, .. _ '• 0 11 )t t•-, '()II l t , ..... -"" Olt , • U1-I 011 )t tOi. -'-OH U 71 -... OH H 7 • ()fl )4 ,,_ • ()11 )1 l\, -• Oil , l •-•Ol1lt 41 1 -I• ()If 7t 4lt -•OH U ' , -• Oii 7 1 ,,._ • ()ti 11 13'--.. Off 11 ··-'°" 11 ·---• Of! 11 ••-• n ..... -• U.:....O Ot -., I"~ •l mont ... plllOI •Ioctl~ ' ...., ., ....... .. 111«.otlO , , monitt'ia - malM (t.,. ••tw Oii t• O>V~I"'' 01 ••°"'"°"or o.ie •ft ~ OI t• <Of'" y(t ~ :\ _ ... !IA tS...Wll\11 OCl~-0 ~-·.c.i<• .. ~-­... w ,tf'I: •• ,t~tt-•• _.,,,"°"' watta1'1t •Old I• IMtr>tMoon r r •••-o rr.e 11110t °' • """' .. • ~ di .,.. .................... to<y~""'·' ... "'(V'lh ... ,.,.. .... 11¥.0 -.. ""°' .. r ... . L ' Are we really helping ~ompulsive gamblers? By SYLVIA PORTER Compulsive gamblmg threatens the emotional Md £1nanc1a1 well-bemg of an mcreas1ng num~r of Amencans. An estim3ted 12 mlllton sutf~r the disorder of gambling add1ctton, and the ripple effects wash over every- one in their wake. By the ume compuls1ve gam- blers seek help, they've passed the point of despair, are deeply m debt !Jnd may possibly have resorted to criminal activity and associations. Family lives and careers are in tatters. Many turn to fraud, embeu.lement, tax evas1on; debts force them in to the clutches of loan sharks; some women become prostitutes to pay off gambling debts. As many as 20 pereent are estimated as attempting su1c1de One expert on gambling observes that au compulsive gamblers steal in one way or 4lnother from their families. We Cail to do much to treat compulsive gamblers. Most of the various gambling industnes don't al· knowledge ct ther the problem or a responsib1hty to do something about it Unlike the alcoholic beverage industry, few gambling concerns place any public service ads warning of the dangers of addiction or sponsor research into the addiction and its treatment And compulsive gambling is an addiction. In its "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Ill," in 1980, the American Psychiatric Associati on included pathological gambling for the fu'St time. The description starts by noting that the ind1v1dual 1s "chronically and progressively unable to resist impulses to gamble." u Considering the hundreds of m111ions of dollars that flood into state treasuries from gambling revenues, tt's shocking that so very little goes to research and treatment of gambling's casualties. In New Jersey. which must rank as the nation's gambling capital with casinos. horse racing and a state lottery. only $200,000 has been appropriated to help treat compulsive gamblers. Yet gambling New motel in Costa Mesa A 5 i -room Travt•I Lodge motel is under conslruction on Newport Boulevard in Costa Me a. The motel ~ owned b y Mike Lin of Hacienda Ht-ighb~ i~ t'x pected to be completed in lah• .\. pril or early May. Newport Beach ar<·hite<-t Jack ~·. He ter revenues amount to 7 percent of the state budget Casmos pay 8 percent of thetr gross revenues to the state; from May 1978, when casino gambling began. through October 1983, this amounted to $436.4 million. In October 1983 alone, casinos paid in $12.6 million on revenues of $159.l million. In Connecticut, the gambling industry pays up LO $300,000 annua)Jy to help fund treatment and research. some of the money cpmes from a tax on each lottery and betting machine. Maryland appropriates $100,000 from general revenues for treatment, and New York spends $200.000 of state funds to operate treatment centers in Staten Island and Rochester. Back m New Jersey. the state w1U spend $200.000 next year, and the state lottery will give $75,000 to Rutgers Medical School for a study on compulsive gambling. While these are all important efforts, the sums are scarcely impressive. New Jersey State Assemblyman Chuck Hard- wick has introduced a bill in the state legislature that would tax eaeh betting machine $25 a year for funds to go for treatment and research. "We can't depend on the industry to put up any money," Hardwick says. "It's up to the legislature to do it." Nevertheless, the legislature doesn't want to. The bill is stalled in committee. So .most compulsive gamblers must turn to other sources for help. The key program is Gamblers Anonymous, which was started on Friday, Sept. 13, 1957. There are now chapters in 40 states and Puerto Rico. At last count, about 10,000 men and women belonged to G.A. designed the mote l in the Mediter- ranean tyle be ing emphasized in the cit y' nearby redevelopme nt area. General contractor for the project i K . W. Hosfiel Con tru<'lion of Nt•w- port Beach . Here's some help in deciding if now is _the time to b~y a· house NEW YORK (AP) -The same old question. the very same dilemma that harassed them last year, faces many thousands of families again this year: To buy or not to buy a house: For those caught up m the battle a few hmts might help. -There 1s probably no ideal time to buy If mt.erest rates are down a bit you'll probably fmd prices up a bit And 1f prices are down. the probable cause 1s that higher interest rates have cut into sales. -Most housing mdustry fore<"asts seem to call for slightly lower interest rates early this year. tending higher by autumn Prices. which have rematm.'d fa1rlv stable for thrL•t.' years. also are expected to rise In the first three vears of th<> 1980s the mechan price of a s1n.gle -fam1iy resale home rose about 12 percent This year, says Jal·k Carlson. executive vice president of the National Asso<:iat1on of Realtors. prices of resale homes are likely t.o rise 6.2 percent above l983's mt>d1an price of about $70.400 -Lenders are pushing adjustable rate mort· gages for all they're worth. which is debatable Adjustables are ofrered now at about 11 5 percent to 12 percent, compared with 13 perl·ent to 13 5 percent for fixed -rate mortgages. Which should you seek? In some instances you'll have no ch01ce but to take an adJUStable. But whE>n you have a choice. you should keep In mind the great fear o( the various housing groups -that a rontinuat1on of budget def1c1ts 1s almost certain to force mtcrt•st r<itC's higher within a year or so Consider this. The National Assocuijion of Home Builders estimates that every 1 percent increase in interest rates eliminates 2 m1ll1on Americans w; potential buyers [( you already own, therefore. it l'OUIO r:-ius<> prohlt'ms To cont1mw rL•ntmg might buy time but probably not much more Builders· costs ar(' the assot·1ated land To buy a smaller house the median new horn<' last yea~ was about 1,500 square (N?t -might still mean owning a house larger th{ln those built 20 years cigo. when families were larg •r -Sevt'ral other rost-cuttmg options exist. If you supply the lot. the foundation, the plum bang mnn<.'f uon.s end the land~apmg, you may be able tO h:lVf> B 1,200 squart' foot foctory built home de It verod u nd connected r or A.'I I 1 ttle as ~30,000. If you &N' willing to buy a house before romplet10n you can 4laVC many thousands of dollars. the amount vro ~mg dependent on the amount of work 1cf t to be completed by you It you II't' willlng to tockle the entJrt' bwldJng )>b yourself -nd more JX"Opll' have been domg 1t each year -you can t.-ut your ts to a fraction. Th Qv.ner Bulld..-r Cent.er rn &•rkelt'y, CaUf. estlmAt~ you can 58Vt.• 20 pr•n-cnl to murh AS 60 pen:· •nt. continuing to rise, and so must rents. Moreover, limited partnerships have bid up prices of existing apartments. To Justify purchase prices, new owners must increase their rent rolls. -To buy a smaller home is not necessarily to buy an inferior home. Builders have taken a tip from carmakers: They are shrinking size but raising quality and efficiency. thus keeping both mil.laJ price and operating costs low. A task forl-e assembled by the U.S. League of Savings Institutions, whose members are active home lenders, found that prices rise about $5,000 for every 100 square feet of space added to a home and depending upon how much work you do with your own hands Most people who take this route become their own genPral contractors, wnh the various work stages subcontracted W the proper trades and crafts. Less common is the practice of doing all labor .yourself. indudi~ing the lawn. Reagan appointee to address accountants Harvey A Goldstein will be guest speaker at a meeting Wednesday of the Orange County Chapter of the National Association of Accountants. The event begins at 6:30 pm at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim. Goldswin is the managing partner of the accountmg firm of -Singer, Lewak, Greenbaum and Goldstein He has been appointed by President Reagan lo serve on the National Productivity AdVJsory Committee. The t.op1c ol his local address will be "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the 1\x Collector." To make reservatio"' or obtain more infor- mation, call Ted Windham, 863-1901. averiano on high tech board Jerry W S&v riano. of Savenano & Asaoaates of Huntington Beach. h.as been ppointed to a 10- person advtsory committee rep~ntm.g major West Coast high ttthnology firms The committee will plan a ROBOTS -WEST C.Onlcrt'ncc ln Anaheim next November, according to officials with Robotics International of th~ Sodety of M anu!actwi.ng Engineers RobotJc:s Intema.tional 11 sald to be the world's larg t robotJ~ society With more than 10,i<>OO membr.n and 50 chapters, including l,500 members in th West The 10C1ety publish(!'! Robotic:s Today ll\ll{laPn ' nnd 1poraors about 35 ronfottn«'S.. work&hope, •ma nan and short rourses an nu lly. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, January 5, 198~ 05 ORAllGI COUNTY IUllNllS William Reimer to manage California Federal office William Reimer has been named manager of California Federal Savings and Loan Assocla· &loo's South Coast Plaza office. Reimer joined California Federal In 197~ and later served as assistant manager in Anaheim and managt!r of the association's Orangt! and San Clemente branches. • • • James E. Collins, president of Collloa Fuller • Corp. of Irvine, has been mstalled a president of the Society of laduscrlal Realton, Southern California chapter, during the group's annual meeting last month. Collins Fuller is an mdustriaJ and commercial real estate firm with offices in IrvinP and Rivers1de. REIMER COLLINS KRAUS • • • Wiiliam H. Kraus has been selected as the Herbert handled the lease negotiations for Canon All four brokers are cwociated with the Newport Beach office of Grubb & Ellis. • • • •new executive drrector of the Apartment Associa· lion of Orange County, announced Robert A. Diaz, president of the 3,000-member organization which provides educational and advi.Sory services to rental property owners. Kraus. a Norwalk resident. was the city administrator of that city for 10 years. Merit Property Maaagemenr, Inc. of Mission Viejo has been selected to direct the homeowners' association at EPAC Development's Le Pare condominium and townhome community in El Toro, according to EPAC President Rick Doremus. • • • • • • Canon U.S.A., Inc., the camera and copier manufacturer, has leased 47.580 square feet of office space ort Main Street in Irvine from Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co., according to Ronald P . Tomsic, senior Vice president and district man- ager. Grubb & Ellis Commercial Brokerage Group. Canon's lease covers a 10-year period with the total transaction amounting to $2.8 million. Pacific Mutual was represented by Scott Burnham and Bob McDonald. Brad Schroth and Greg Patty Mar.tin has joined Bristol-Newport, Inc. as senior loan underwriter. She was previous- ly with Newport-Balboa Savings and Loan. Bristol-Newport is a trust deed brokerage based in Newport Beach., • • • Wendy Coben has joined the creative depart· ment oC Cochrane Chase, Livingston & Co., Inc. as a copywriter. Cochrane Chase is an advertising, markeung and public relations agency based in Irvine. MUTUAL FUND LISTINGS NEW *ORI( tAP) Candn I IS 9 67 Sr>or1 10 13 NL lnw lndk I '4 NL Mutual Of Omalla; HY Mu 13.63 14 77 O!lco•er -Tiit folio wino ouo-Dl•ld 3 73 3 SJ Stock 14 79 NL Inv Bo1 11 40 17 2' A!Mr 9 7S NL Option \S.2l 16 33 ':1 ~L :~0~.;,~~~r1t',~T-~':ii11 11Ht i'l~ M ~:, t!~ :fl •nr~oasd G~o:r1· ..,. G'"''" H9 l:i' i':~v, '~13 is4~ !:~{ l1,-t? 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L USAA 1 Group3., ~t m1tk 14 '7 16 omPOSllt Grour: ~ NI.. ~n B 7 N!:bllr"' m Munlc 1143 L Grw n 14 .. ntro I S.13 17 Bond une•e t Ynt. NL tn 1?.42 1 nrgy 7. NL s1P1ut 1nves1· inc0 1 6' xch <16 SI NL Fund une•e I nclTJC 14 NL umm 2U3 26 uard JI. NL C1Pll 13 '61 14 SS fOlt l6 7i NL Fd Am ISOI lUO Tu i••ll lndust 446 NL Tecll j21Lllll Ubly ue NL Grwtll 15.l4 j6:M T:~I~ 11J ~ NNLL Grow ?967 NI.. oncord 4 ~ NL lncom 907 NI.. TQI RI 31 I 4 ~nhl 6.~I NL lnco U t 030 ~S n Hart>r 'f ~ l'J. onslel G I NL WrldT I 6' t 12 U$ Gvt I Pann 104 Nt SPecl i3 ts NI.. un1f.-.. 11M IO.~ NL ~¥2 8 l J. ~~n J ~t ~~fP If !Z If~ ~Bl~ 'i" ~I.. =:l ru: 21f. ~L om St 14 ~t ~~~ 't'1i ~t HI Yid I I ont Mui 7 NL Fsl ln•HIW~ ICisl<lf'e ,,,,.~ NY M4'fl 1.07 N See Fund' ..., umn Pace ~ 1 21 Irv Cap JJnavall Grwtn 10.7' I 1' us 84' Nt N.cllol9 1~ Nt .;t tl NL ~~1 l ~? ~LL Provoo 7 6 "'"''°" FUftd• tncQm 6 4S ff u' IC 1 r NL Nf"~ N '"'°"' ~ NL - American Fund' In.QI f '4 I 09 N1IRe1 6 ~ 1 l "' SI r 20. NI.. N I 11 • NL MMB 66 NL ,. "' .. Ven.Ir l 1 16 4 Cmrce t 41 1g 7' lnll:>ec IS 06 16 u' 1(2 r 1. NL N 111 r I · N Inn Fd NL. Un~tc.cic-F""f"o •1 11 ff A Bet 1099 1201 PilOI IJ 14 14J6 90·10 llff "ll Cus Slr 9u NL NoveFe1 17.04 ~t.. s.cw11v Funch. ~b"l11 Sff J A Mull u S It f1 Dean Winer Te/ E• 6 f lf" r 1 ~L Nu•ffn ?·~ · 1.. 'ono 7 J·iJ HI Inc J • g AmcP .,l 'tl Sunl)lf us• lS9S Oc>ln • s cu, S.tr 7 t'jL NY Vanl 7.ft • '3 ACllO<I 'I Con Inc 1!~ 14 J ~~n?n.. I~ h ls tt' Br.~, ' If H Jfl ~,.~~a 1~2 , 1 / 1~~ ,.:!~ r 1\# i. ol ' ~1' t In~ t· 10·39 ~~';" 1; 6 1:~ .~-:~ l 41 lt ::!,Y~~I 11 33 s ~orr::· I lJ N," ~~' I ij ~t Ir~,,. d14 s.~· F 7 • t.4S lllwCCol . 09 s ICA 1 l6 11• NtlRlC 791 1 Frid Gttl 2• t;s t..evro-1ill NL olnc ·a lfi JE,~"' "'1J;. NL ~t~ 1li11ti4f NwEco TexEk 9 *6 I 7 FounderJ Gr!>IJP leJtinoton GrP I 1 S~s n.J6 llll 1J 13 IS 11 WrldW 10 )2 NL Grwtll , SS NL CP I.Cl• 12 .0 1J" l 'o klm6n Grouo Va119~ s s 6 ,., Ptrs 1 .l , 20 ...... ,. Group, •ncom 1• ,. NL IOIO!d • oc N1.. HI Vld "i ~~ ~•PFd u °' u °' u'ruto ~·IC", tt NL TaxE 9• t92 ~at lSU t~ MIJfal 1011 NL NMA 774 NL ~n 1• mSttt lUJ lS•S B 12 NL Wsll Mt 10 1 I l 16 w 19 71 7 SOK! 11 40 NI.. row JO ff NL n . omun 1.1nay•'I rowlll 9 NL A GtllFd 917 9 ~ ICll 7 19 ' Foursq uneva11 "" 9 NL tr!lel 1J.2S rowtll 7 66 26 1 IS N A Htf'llO 3 f NL A • Fre i 76 Franltltn Gr~~ Llne111r 117 NL x Fr• 9_7t I lnco 11 71 l 6J Va1~"'i.1ne FH L ~r~:· In l8«'11 ~t J!r2fP 'io'y· IS l 9~!c ~14 lltt L~i,; S.vir&i Nt J,1~ 14~} l ; *~:~ GrClfjj 1009 ,~ ll ~t !~~" • 0 SNI~ rrt:.~ ,, ~~ Gr':t 1l· I L:u1Aooett N ~e~ ~ lt'3 li"ff R= s lt·17 1P' lncO"},_ .J-NL A Nlinc 19 71~ GDlv 23 Nt NY 'f'u 9t 6 A~llld ts1 1075 PnW'1c1 1099 NL arw111 u?f 1J'~ k:i" sTt1 1621 ~C ~~~~" 1f•'i, 'N1.. : fl U ~ ~t 81'J;on H1 t ff 8~ g~ 1~ ~ !Hi ~~ ~-· ;·;: ~t ~~· 13lN 11~ v~•eE P'~T ~~,,~-,,1~ s Nt.. ~:e.u~urGrf NL ~oa'o., i'l '41 = in 1Ui ~.~Prt'UN~.ftl NL ~~r Fun.n WI ll~ Fnd B 9 f2 10 ~ ABnd I~ ~1 NL ~~I t U t~ Llj!ller•n Bro ~· Ser!es It~ 12 ll xFd f 107 17 ~~ .: r. .~ .-~~~~ l~ J .ri:. 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NL MF IJ P~ Fund V',PI I I ~SPrt ~ ~L m ·~d 11,, ~t ~~ ... :~ 1• ~1 1, ~~Ind ~t ~.t , .. 1 ,= J:H ,:.u ~a rti~ '1.'iJ 1oNJ,. Hrv~ 1 Nt Bo"on Co HIYk! 'n S rdPkA l\> •7 71 21 SKI 191 . II Inc fLJt 17jl ~ In li57 7 fl IG8~ a l ~AP ~CM NL tnceo, I il tl ~ Ham HOA s ao 6 l4 Mathen 24 1• NI.. Ill Inc \2.71 IU7 i!'lnlnc 4... NI.. SllrlTr L Inc li NL lnY~'' . I Hen Giii 14 ft NL lrrfl! Lvncll· e!ftn Inv ll 'l NL ftl"'« In ll.53 19 SI Ind Tr 1'. 4 l eruct d vs Sol ~4 6 Hor Ma!I 1• ~l qu Bo Pde• Fund,. lven 6 MuLo 9 NL 8osl FF'':, l s u""o1 ~-~ I 4 . ~::..:n~· I~ ~t =~~ 1• 4 * ~~ p~~" 1t~ ~t ]:,., 8ri' s~u~p 8 ff ~~~ lg~ ~t 8 11r?S NL Et>erS11dl 'i Hllon Grovg H111nc .J • Grwtll m ti~ r09n 9. I l MuShl 'f 1 NL i.~1,rier II ff NLL ~:~, 11. 11 ~ :int r 19 tf 9N9) ~T~ l 11 ,~~ I : Mt ~j1F~~ i.' IU~ ~t ~=:i~~ I M,, 00 ou Iv N ~urvtv 14 Ui mro r I' l 1 NI.. LIM•t 6 . nil 14. NL ~ StrMI In•· Wndl' I t 01cn 2 NL EnoUtll 20 NI.. wlll r 3 40 NL MunHI 01 . N Era 11. NL Exch t2.91 NL Vtnl11r ll I 12 Cltlverl Group ivr11r11 r •1 ft NL Niii 9 » 13 23 Munlin 6'7 ~ u N H.9f'f1 If 00 NL Grwth r 53.27 NI.. WaffSI G I SI 9 EoullY 1120 NL. vrorTll ~ NL NY Mun 9 I 031.Fd jS.M l 1 T• Frt .45 NI.. ln•ll r 1G.Ot 70 4' Wein Eo 19.sJ L lnco 14 71 NL rm BG NI.. Oollnc 10 NI.. 11.fx I H Pro Stf'vlctJ. Sttadman F11lf W'lgrd I\ SI 12 6' Socltl un .. all Fe<!er•l.ci uno' IRI Slc1< IS 7 t•.. iTdl 9 66 I MedT 12 n t'jL. Am Ind l.S NL Wooo Strut"'n TaFLld Am L.dr 137 1116 ISi Grouo Val une•aU Fund l NI: Anoe 9 NI: deVt11 ~ 2' NL TxFLQ l~il ~t ~:~~Ir l}:? ~I: = ~ UJ M dA'tft' ~~ ~s Pr~'llC°11a1 8~-6~ fJ::, r ~I.. c,.':s ;.,~~f-d Ca1 .. n BuliJu GNMA 10'5 ~ Trll Sh I 11 ls MS8 Fd 2l oultv U a 1SH St n Ro. Fels· ,_ PrtvloU, dwl AogGI I j 1 •9 HI lcm 11 '3 \2 ' lndu"ry . NI.. Mui ~ f4 1 vlSc 9. , 9 e . .S NI.. OUOI~ r Rt(lemo11on 8ullck I 9 30 lnco 10 71 L Int Inv SI 13 14 tJ MdlGvt 10 03 NL HIYk! 10 1 10 ao ()p 7,.5' Nl cllerge may aPOIY OVER THE COUNTER llAU STOCK USTINGS •SAlmDOWllS NEW YORI( IAPl ConPao SI ''> S7 l(amen l 23 7J • Pt>S•NC ""' 17 Toyote NASDAQ ouolellon' C.S-do\ ' 11'~ 7\:i.o IC.tllySv .. , .. Pur18tn 14'h 7SI'> TW,IEx snowlno 111or1ei1 Old\ Coc.e~1 ' ll~ 311" Kimbel ' 21 ' • 27 Qv•krC 27' • 2''• TrlcoPd and 10wei1 olfe" bv CrosTr 71 '"' 2e~) Klnolnl l'• 4 Reoen , ''• '~ market maker' es of 4 CullFo ' 1"1<1 2 KloolG 451'> '51• Revmnd 3''11 401i., Tv1on s o.m Prictl do not Ol1Ds s ISi\ IS'' ICn•1>eV 2•''l 2S Rff•H 1\1/., 11 US Enr 1•, I •·16 37 40 16 16''< 4 •• ,. NEW YORK lAP) -Tne IOllowtng i..1 lllOw( Ille Ove< ll'lt • Count~' ''ockl and warrant• tl\el llan oone UP tl'lt "'°'' and down ll'lt mo'' ba~ M e>erUtlt Of cllallll• lor w~ ~~~e~•! ~:;:::,~ 8!e;'t>'A 11~: ~P! ~~~: , ,;!: ,:" RoadS ~:~ tt;i,, us Sur luion for Wed. OelCenT 13"1<1 l•'I.. Lenee 76~ 77' • =~v 31!• 32 • US Trell , .... "" 11'. 11" No 1ecurlllft tr.cllno below n or 1000 ~rtJ tre Inc~ StKll IMd Alli Oewey 11"1 11 t..a ndRes •· I .... s AEL Ind )0 )I 'J DlaCrv' SS SSh • I J . l' s -e11 er 4... UVeB' ' AFAProl •2 U OocuOf IJ'' 13\41 Lane<: ' St ~ft ~d r.~ r.~ UnvEn II ~N•I •nd ,,...centege cPla~J are tl't dltfe<enc• C>el•Hn Illa c>re.ious cio,.no bid orlc.e end 1oe1 .. ·, 1a,1 t>od 0<lce AVMCp 7" 7•, OolrGn ' I• I•'• LleCnm 11 16 l"\ SIP•ut st ,·59~ U0Pt11P Acadln ' 14 " ··~ OovtDll I ... ,.. • Lfln'tl JS • )S:W. Sc I H 11' ,..,., AcuRo U •\ 2~ OrletCn ll Jlle UnBrd , 71'• 71''> s.~:le , 1' VHIR ACICll,nW 13 'l 1• DunkD ' 22"° n" Looetrn e 1'1'> s.n ~:, ~ ~~ VetNll AdvRou '" 6i-Durlron IJ?\ 14'' MCI l ISlli IS"' sv:r : 1~'-U'-V•nOu' AllBlll ' 14lo. \SI• EalVn ' 20"• 21 MGF OU 11·37 " Svmsl , lJ~'> 17''4 Vakro AllC(llnc SI 5' Econl..b 76" 76~ MadiGE 10"1 20'1.. SllMtd l 3J'l'J XI'• Al'Nlrx II '-I EIPes 13h 141,, ~l>tlP! ,Yt 2"' Sii mul 4Jl\ .,, .. Vl<1raS Amcut '3 4l'"' EIOarBe \2'4 IJ MalRI 1"-I~ Sll~nx s 16'.t, 14'h VldeoCp AFurn IQ'> IOt• Ei.Nucl 91 • 9'h vlMrlon IS-16 I SCelW!r 16 1'-WernEI AGrel ' 2•1• U EIModl 11\41 121, Mault..P tt 4) "I'• -AtnGP ' 63'• '4 EngCon• Jll~ Jll ... MavPI 111> .... SwEIS• 3•1 ... 3•j,, WsflE ANlln' 77 1 n 11o Enr~I Ma'{nOI 6' 6'°' So•ra n ... ' WOMP AQuur 1"' '" I IS· 16 7 \.\6 McCrm ~ )O"'° SSll~", 3l\li ,,,,.. dM1c 7•1~ 2~ WHold ARHM II .,, 15·16 EnRs• l 'I> ~ McF•r1 11lt 1~ ldRH , ~I' )'2 Anadllt 11 \ 11'111 Entwtsll 11 '> It M<Quav lJl6 14 Sl•ntWne lS...; 17 ' W~ Alll>SA 1S1· IS ECllOll Jl• 1 I MlduW ,,,., 1''4 SlrawCI '7 .. Wtllre AngAGd FrmG 4l •l ' • MOtdCH 1311> 1).,, 5 WI•_,. IOS ) 10611) Fldtcor J9 ,, .... MldlltH I I ,. I utMlrv ... .... • -v A~ 77~ 1t Ft811Sy S2'"1 S2~ MldlBI>. 4114 •l~ S~rEI 10>.4! 11 WOlvAlu ...Apj(jM1 it"• itVt FtErni>S 371'> JllVt MINlpr 2''1> 21'4 STvlMlttEt C •! 4~ Wo!MI Ardtn(;p .... ,,_, FIW11Fll'I 6.\t '~' MluVIG l 4 21'" T O .,.. 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