Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-02-21 - Orange Coast Pilot( l Win $~00 ·In the Piiot's Socia I Securl'l . Sweepstakes -P•geC2 Coast Some Huntington Beach youngsters are getting the Olympic gold, too./ A3 Seems like just about everybody got out to cel- ebrate the presidents' birthdays./ A2. Callfomla A 14-year-old Mexican boy wrongfully deported to Baja from Santa Ana, has returned home./ AS The Supreme Court Is reviewing California's liability suits over LA de- segregation ./CS Nation Mondale made im- pressive showing in Iowa caucus as Gary Hart took a surprising second./ A4. World The first Marines have packed up and moved offshore In Lebanon./ A4 Iran says It's ready to deliver final blow to Iraq In that 31h year war .I A4 Mind a: Body Demonstrators on video tapes from Dimensions in Fitness of Newport Beach may be in the same shape you are./81. Wiii real experiences of llvlng with teen-agers rival Stephen King's plots?/82 Sports UC Irvine, behind Ben McDonald, romped to an easy 97-66 basketball win overXXPaclflc Mon- day night ./C1 Round two of the CIF basketball playoffs Is set tonlght./C1 The Midwinter yacht races wind up./C4 Entertainment "Bye Bye Birdie" at Saddleback College is an entertaining revival of a nostalgic musical./83 Bualneu Sylvia Porter reminds readers not to for get to clalm all their sales tax deduttlons on their In- come tax form./85 Newport Beach-based National Education Corp. gets a new director ./85 INDEX Bridge \ Bullttln Board 8u14nest Calffornl• News Clalllfled Com lea Crouword Death Notlcn Help YourMlf Horoacope In the Service Ann Lander• Mind and Body Mutual Fund• N1ttonal Newt Opinion Potlce Log PubllC Notices 8por1• Stoctc M1rket1 T~ Theettrt WMther WortdNeM 8-4 A3 85·6 A4 CM ca cs 82 C7 ' AS 82 81-2 BS A4 A8 A3 CM c1-• 88 83 83 A2 A-4 l:llll lllTlll OHAN (,l LOUN fY CAL IFOHNIA /<.Cl NT'; . JBilbrea~ attempt foile~ Ro bery suspects held tn HB attack- By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. ...., ......... Two robbery suspects in custody at the Huntington Beach City Jail attacked aguard Monday night in an unsuccessful attempt to break out of Racing death casein court HB teens asking charges be dropped Attorneys representing two Hunt- ington Beach teen-agers charged with murder in the traffic death of a Fountain Valley woman have asked that the murder charges be dropped. The lawyers representing Randy Craft and Jeff Thomas, both 17-year-old seniors at Huntington Beach High School, claim the charges • leveled against the pair ar:e too severe. The teens were arrested on suspi- . cion of murder last year after their cars -one after the other -collided with a vehicle being driven by a Fountain Valley mother. Gloria Chang, 48, died shortly after the violent, high-speed accident. ac- cord ing to authorities. Craft and Thomas were arrested on second degree murder charges be- cause they allegedly were racing each other along Adams A venue at the time of the accident. Police said tbc y()ung motorists were drivinJ about 90 mph at the time of the acctdent. James Egar, who is representing Craft, said the facts in the case do nor support the murder charge. He asked the charge .be reduced to vehicular manslau~ter. • A hcanng on the request has been set for March 23. · • A motorist has never been con- victed in Orange County on sec-· ond-<iegree murder charges. Tougher driving law passed in 1981 cleared the way for murder charges VLICorp. lawsuit defended By ANDREA ADELSON Of .... ...., ......... A Newport Beach attorney believes a state Supreme Court ruling will greatly aid consumers suing manufac- turers over product injuries because it alJows changes in product warnings tp be used as evidence. Attorney John Van Dyke said the Jan. 9 "decision is very much a plus for consumers" and could affect the outcome oflitigation involving Pr<» tor and Gamble's Rely tampon and dru& maker A.H. Robins· Dalcon shield as well as his own suit aiainst the Irvine-based VU Corp. ··1 consider a wami!l& a con- fession.~· he wa. - Van Dyke represents a 28'-year-old Santa Ana woman suin'4 VLI, makers of the Today contraceptive sponac for SS million. Bruce Vorhaucr. chairman of ~ponac maker VLI Corp.1 said Mon· day he was unfamiliar with the hiah coun's ruling and refused to speculate on how it may affect the suit. However, Santa Monica attorney Roben Dickson. who lw defended the drua maker 10 six sui ts over allqcd infection stemmin& from the intrauterine device, disputes Van Dyke's interpretation Dick\on said the ruhna docs noth1n1 to broaden what may ad· mittcd as evidence in product hab- 1lil1, cases. • lt would be nice to have a clear (Pl_.. TAllPOJlf /Al) I jaH. police said today. Huntington Beach police Set. Den· nis Manin said the escape '1)' OC· curred at t'5.os p.m. u Detention Officer John Moore, 56, was prepar- ing to lock the two robbery 1u1pects in separate cells for the ni&ht. The suspects, b.oth unemployed transi· ents. were identified as Michael Leroy Keogh, 42, and Daniel Wygnanski, 23. Manin said the two men attacked Moore, who was unarmed, knocking him to the around and kicking him repeatedly in the face and ribs. Keogh then jerked Moore•s keys from his belt and ran into a corridor. Martin said. But Moore's calls for help had been overheard on the jail's open intercom system, and-other detention officers arrived at the scene to mist the fallen guard. The two suspects resi'1ed but were subdued by the auards,. Martin said. Keoah and Wypafteti were then transferred to Oranae County Jail, which has a more elaborate security system, Martin said Keo&h was in custody on suspicion of steailng a pune from a 72-year-old woman at a local supermarket. ac- Copters backup· aS flak down Airspur commuter alters flig!)t path BJ KAllEN &. &LEIN Of .............. Ai.rl)lur Helicopters Inc. is flyias high and the company's bel.icopten are flying higher. Noise and nuisance cornsll by the helicopien in =have peatly decrcated in month since the commuser slaunle service returned to tht air. Tbe copters were grounded folloWi .. a November crash in Lona Bach bat are flying once apin, now at biabcr altitudes and along allemi ftiPt paths. Sarroanded by attornq and family mem- ben. Jeff Tbomu waUa oatatde court. ........................ "- Randy Craft (rt,lht) leaYes JaYealle Coart accompanied by lat.a attorney, Jam• 1t1ar. Buoyed by the resumption of service, AirspuT officials say they have begun the process of obcaioina approval to expand KTVice and nm • (Pleue ... COPTSU/d) • High tech 'snot Greek to researche~s By ANDREA ADELSON OfltleDellf ......... Twenty-first century technotOgy is helping save a bit ofancient history. A UC lrvinevoupdevoted to preserving the Greek classics, with grant help from the Nattonal Endowment for the Humanities, is working on an exhaustive compilation of 60 million Greek words and phrases for use by scholars. But the advent of the computer is making possible Thesaurus Li nguae Graecae-litcrally a treasury of the Greek lanJuage. The treasury is being compiled from surviving Greek literature, nearly 9.000separateworks,andisexpected to be compiled in a computer bank by DeadHB man's kin told to pay By STEVE MARBLE Of ... DellJ .......... The parents of a Huntington Beach man who was killed two years ago by a motorist who ran a red light, claim they are beinJ asked to help pay the State of Cahfornia for their son's death. Doug Eli, a cable company em· ployee, was killed Jan. 13, 1982 when a woman reponedly ran a red light and broadsided the company van in whicti he was ridin._ The woman also was killed in the mashap. Eli's mother and father, who live in a suburb of Cbicaao, said they now are being asked to come up with $50,000 to complete a complicated worker's compensation case. Pit atop In Newport June I 9S5; project dinictor ThoodoreBnmneuaUl today. The project began a decade ago to provide scholars with the most accura&£ and corqplete means of studying the phiJosopby and history of ancient Greek culture. It was sparked by a SI million gift from an anonymous dooorwbo isa Greek scholar. About 60 million words will be stored on project computer tapeS when completed, representing the words of3,000alJthors from the time of Homer in 800 B.C. through 600 A.O., said Brunner, a UCI classics professor. Source material has varied from single words found on pottery m.n:ts io the writings of Greek mathematicians and physicians. • {PleueeeeOUBKSTUDY/ A2) "The ridiculous bottom line of this," said Perry Eli, the father, "is that, albeit indu-ectly, we are being asked to pay for our son's misfonuoe of being killed in California. "And that's morally wron~ .. he added. (Pleue Me DBATB/A2) A San Dle&o-boand hellco£t.: wu forced to make an emeraency Ian la the -.nd at Newport Beach near Prolpect Street after dneloplnC eq.lne problema. Police ..td pilot Brian Aclama made a ..re~ oa tbe empty atretch of MDd aad llftecl li9cll on after a mechallic ... •••oaed to correct the problem. · Super BO not a super p!ane for 'Quiet jet' plagued by engtne troubles, design questions It was supposed to be a cure -a new, quieter airplane that would appease fractious airpon com· munities while at the same time rcduclna fuel and maintenaoce costs for the airlines. But for 01tnat County. tbc McDonnell Doual&s DC·9 Super 80 ha$ only meant trouble. The most recent in a scricsofincidenuoccurred Friday when an American Airlines DC-9-80 had one of hs two cnainn fail after takina off from JOhn Wayne Airp0n. The jetliner landed safely in Lona Beach but not before tc:attcrina en.aine pans on Tusttn. John 8. Oalipault, president of the Aviation Safety Institute.an indepen- dent industry watchdol. isn't sur· I prised. He says the McDonnell Douglas plane had problems even before it was certified by the Federal Aviation Administration. "We were seeing cracks in the fuselage about two or three inches an front of the dorsal fin," said Gal- ipault, who monitors FAA files and pubUshn an newsletter detailing rccuJTCnt problems. :The airlines have re~rted fiJtina about 50 of thost cracks to the FAA. he said. Accordina to DouaJas spokc5man 0.ve Eastman. airplanes are always developing cracks. Nearly all arc not critical in nature and arc rapidly rcpt ired. "We $1W those cracks and we looked at the problem. It was about two years 110 and 'NC dtticlcd to ch•naethcattachanglcs. That was 1t," Ea unan said. Another problem showed up dur- ing slow-peed landings 1fthc plane'' I -JERRY H11SCH Focus ON THE NEws loaded wath an an center ot arav1ty - that means plane's center of gravity is toward the rear of the plane, Oal- ipault said. Ourin• one such land.int at the cert1ftcauon staac of the plane's dcsip, the tall ripped off the Plane. be said. The plane also has problems af it gOt"s into a stall when loaded with an aft center of arav1ty, he said. In that instance the aircraf\ becomes un- stabl and wobbles. I ··And u know what their fix is? Don't y the plane slow and don't have an af\ center of aravity," -o.ttpaolna~t. - Ooullas' Eastman, however, is strident that both instances showed up only dunfll ccniftcat1on proceed. inp "when you try to tee how far )'OU can ao. You want to test lbc limit1 of th&olanc " "When ~ra1 Motors crubel 1 newcartosee.-hereitbudi doesn't mean there is a desi&n flaw in the car ... Eastman id. "lf there was a desi&n ~m ~ ould not tell the plan and the f would not have cenified iL Tbat is common ~ntc ... Eastman uid. But the jetliner hU becil ccntrr • t11t for thlft ~ John Wayne Airpon 1ncidrnts tn Oat PlJ1 five month I First there WU the llti'Mabtic Mr· liflCl m1 p u .=: '21 wlla a (Pl••• ... ~I R/M) I A2 * * Orange COMe DAIL v P•LOT/T~ey. Februll)' 211 198~ Bcd.1 Schwab, pr61dent or the C:ihfom1a -'\sS()(.·1at1on of Realtors. w1U addre ' rt'lll est:ltt board mcm· bers Wednesday at the A1rponer Inn an Irvine Schwab. a La Mt'sa Rt'allor. secs an ovrrall improvement an the t'COnomy and tht' real eMate m1ukct throu&hout 1984 which ~he said wall hktly trigcr a 13 ~rcent ancr~asc 1n home tc$8les. fhe Huntu\gton Bcuch/Founu1in Valley Board of Realtors 1!1 actana as the ho t board for the ~onal mcetana which has been 11T1n1ed by the boards of Realtors in lrvme, Newport Harbor/Costa Mesa: Saddlebadc Valley, La&una ano South Orange County. Schwab is the first woman elected p~ident is the association's 80.year history. Wednesday's proaram wiJI get under way at I 0:30 a.m. an the Skyliner Ballroom 11 the Afrponcr Inn, 18700 MacAnhur Blvd., Irvine. ~~5i~Pd~M~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ COPTERS FL YING HIGHER ••. From Al helicopter shuttk hct"'een John Wayne and Ontano lntemattonal airports Tim Gallagher. A1rspur president. said the company has invested a good deal of money into the preparation of an environmental impact repon that examines the po!>s1b1hty of the John Wayne-Ontano 'lhuttle hnk. The EIR. prepared b} a Newpon Beach firm . predicts A1rspur would run 16 flights a day between Orange County and Ontario. carryin~ 326 passengers a da). Gallagher !.aid the plan is designed to help ease the crush of air passengers at John .w~yne and increase usage of Ontano s lac1ht1cs. The El R and a proposal for the service must be approved by the Los Angeles Depanment of A1rpons. GaUagher said he expects the On- tano-Joh n Wayne !>erv1ce to begin sometime later this year Gallagher also said re\ 1s1ons in A1rspur's take-olT and landing pat· terns and altitude restnct1ons out of John Wayne. along with a "grass.-roots" program to educate residents, have reduced noise com· plaints drastically. In fact , the North Costa Mesa citizens' group fighting the copters has all but declared victory an lhe past few weeks -the choppers are not gone. but they're Oymg higher and avo1d1ng residential areas. home. owners say. While having the helicor.tcrs flying over her home is not idea , the noise and nuisance is bearable now, said Cindy Davis, president of CRASH (Citizens' Revolt Against the Shuttle Helicopter). .. People are getting noise, but it's only a couple of times a day and it's negligible compared to what it was," Davis said. "I cannot complain about A1rspur anymore." CRASH was formed by Davis and a group of Costa Mesa residents last fall to force A1rspur to make revisions 1n ns flight patterns and decrease noise levels. "I've had ne&)igible complaints (from other residents),'' Davis said. "(The helicopters) arc better. They're not waking me up anymore, they're not hampering my sleep. We can live With this." "Our fisht really worked," Davis said, citint w1dcspread media interest in the group and the cooperation of county airport expens. "lt was really good lo see people act so involved in something.' Gallagher said the helicopter pilots arc Oyin& at altitudes between 3.500 and 4,000 feet and are varying their routes at the discretion of tower controllers at John Wayne ratherthan sticking to the San Diego Freeway route. But Galla~er said the contact he and other A1rspur officials made in the community was the most valu- able action taken. "Getting out there in the community was a big plus for us." he said. TAMPON LAWSUIT DEFENDED ••. From Al definition of the law, but in dk~t. 1t leaves the law the way 1t 1s." he said. Before the ruling. that upheld the claim of an mJurcd R1vers1de iron- worker. Yan Dyke said "the la"' said you couldn't sa~ the product was fixed. becau)t.' 11's an admission of fault.'' Hut a change 10 warning labeling placed on a product after an ind1v1d · ual 1s inJured can now be admitted as evidence. Van Dyke ..aid. Dickson d1!Mlgrced He said the high court's ruhng allows product warning!> to be used as evidence only 1f the maker had knowledge of a defect before the injury occurred. Dickson pointed out that products are changed based on new infor- mation. "The key is knowledge at the time of the accident," he said. Van Dyke's client, Marlys Stapelbrock. is one of four women the Food and Drug Administration said has recovered from toxic shock GREEK STUDY ... From Al ·· fhere are thousand~and thousands of people whose work 1s1ust a few scattered remains." explained senior programmer William Johnson. one of 14 labonngover the Greek texts and tapes at UCL "Their works are equally important" to the pro1ect. As an example. Johnson pointed to Galin, a Greek medical wnterhc dl'scnbcd a~ boring. Nevenhelen, some ofGahn's passages provide valuable information on ancient science. cultural habits and word usage, he said. "It's interesting to ~e what the) thought would cure X or Y disease." he said. Te"<t'> 1nclud1nga few unpublished manuo;cnpts by obscure authors and JOO-ycar-old cd111om most I) from tJ(Ts own research library. are approved by an advisory rnmm1ttec of th e A.mencan Ph1lolog1cal Association. "We'vegone as far a!I hand-carrymga te>.t from Prague, Czechoslovakia," Brunner said. Tht• material 1s handmarked to ensure that the essential information 1s put 1n10 the computer. he said. The data is entered by highl y accurate typists from the Philippines employed by Redondo Beach-based Computer 1 nput Corp., workin~ in Manila. Johnson s.a1d "They do an extremely competent Job," he said. Scholar!> ma' purchao;e them for S20 per million bytes and use a computer to call up words. phrases or entire texts 1n a vanety of cross-reference.d forms, and rece1.,.c 1nformatton on their meani.ngs. historical contexts and literary use'> The cost of Homer's I had and Odyssey 1s S30. Johnson said. .\bout one third of the known Greek works have yet to be entered on computer tapes. he said Earlier attempts 10 create such a thesaurus have failed due to the volume of material 10 be organized. An attempt by 19th Century scholars tocomp1k a Lall n thesaurus failed miserably. ending with thousands of slips of paper stored \omc"' hen.· in CJermany. Johnson said. But the adH·nt of the computer makes the feat of compiling the rnmpcnJ1um possible. he said. Hrunncrs.a1d a recently received S398.000grantand $600.000 an prm 1\1onal matching funds from the Nauonal Endowment will finish olTthe tas~ \'-'har remains arc the wntanpofsome early Chnstaan Church fathers. 1nclud1ng )uch theolog1ansasOngcn and long·wmded St. John Chrysostom. and philosopher St. Gregory of Nyssa. Brunner said about 300 h1stonans, philosophers and religious scholars ha' e al read' u\ed what's been completed so far. .. Thn •, c been able to develop new findings that they wouldn't have c11'>tuvncd "'11hout 1t." he said f hc rm1cct has attracted grantsofncarl) $4.8 million to date syndrome who were also users of the Today sponge. After reports of the some- times.fatal disease in Today users surfaced in December, the FDA ordered VU to place labeling more prominently on the outside of the packages, alerting consumers to toxic shock symptoms. Federal health re- searchers have said that no link has been found between Today sponges and toxic shock. VU Chairman Vorhaucr said the four cases of toxic shock confirmed by the FDA could be nothing more than "random cases" and have nothing to do with the product. The company says 1t has seen medical records in only one case. and disputes findan~ in that report. Van Dyke said the high court's ruling makes Stapelbroek's suit easier to press. The suit cla ims VU had not done enough testing when 1t put the sponie on the market and that warnings on the Today pamphlet do not adequately warn women about health nsks. Vorhauer refused to discuss the pending lawsuit. "This is one where we're saying nothing," he said. Since receiving FDA approval last April and entering the market in June. Vorhauer said 8 million sponges have been distributed and he estimated that 400,000 women use the devices. ATTACK ... From Al the day, teanng up straps ol blanket apparently to be used to tac someone up. The stnps were not used. how- ever. he said. Martin said their plan probably could not have succeeded because the detention officer's keys would not have opened all of the doors needed to escape, including one electronic door that is observed by a camera and controlled from a remote location. Detention Officer Moore was treated at a local hospital and then was sent home to recover. He is expected to return to duty later this week, Martin said. PROBLEMS PLAGUE 'QUIET JET' ••. From Al Ph tx.•n1'\·hound IX-9-80 lost power on take on. ~nd1ng engine fan blades ra1n1ngon l'H:" port Beach and setting about 20 small rnol and grass tires. On Jan 22 a r ront1er A.1rhnes [X -9-XO had landi ng gear and engine trouble \horth after Lake off from John Wayne .\1rport The pilot was ahle to lower tht.· landing gear LOrrect- lv and make an l.'rnl·rgc ncy landing And la\t rnda\ II was Amencan A1rlint'!>0 turn \ Poenix·bound f)( -9-80 had onr ot II\ !WO CO@.IOC0'i fiul \horth after takrofl. thl'i ti me ra101ng hoi eoginc pJrt\ on Tustin On almo!ll an) otht•r Jay 11 would ha vc been Newpon Hr at h again hut <1trong Santa Ana wind., forced the a1rpon officials to 1urn the takeoff and approo<.'h p:tttt'rn\ around Luckil y for the pM\Cngers and tho~ people on tht-ground. the a1rptane csn nyonJU\t onec-ng1ne No one was injured 1 nan) of the ml\htips "I know lh1s as a coan 1dcnce bc)'ond your undcr-;tand1n1 and mine. But 11 ha\ heen an c'tremcly reliable en inc for the airplane. It hu more than a m1lhon hours of fly1n1 tame " Eastman ~1d "h could be mtrcly chan(e that thou-1nndcnt\ ha vt' <>t:<'ul'ftd 1n the same place." Gahpault arttd "It is ettta1nly po ~•bk that the CnJlnC JUSt ingested a bird," The ena.ine used on the DC ·9-80 1s a Prau & Whatne~ Jl -80 100 \Cnes model. The on<' on the Republic 1ctJ1ncr " currently undcrgoana tests by 'he N1t1onal TraMportataon Safe- ty Board and the m:inufactun:r to sc~ what "-Cnt wrona. McDonnrll Onughl' iuwa111n1 thc ' result~ of those tests before 1t com- ments on the eng.me problems. East- man said. But the Frontier problem was entirely different and pointed out a ma1or flaw in the airplane. according to Gahpault. The Frontier problem was caused by a shield on the inside of the landing gear wheel well shutting off a fuel valve to theengjne as the landingacar were retracted. "What that means 1s that when you retract the landing gear you can shut offlbe engine. That says that it is bad design,'' Galipault said. The shield was meant to protect the fuel system from damage ifa tire blew out when the landing gear were retracted. Douglas and the FAA ha ve told airlines to simply remove the shield because 1t 1s not really needed. "It was not a design flaw. What 1t amounted to was that It worl<ed perfectly well The problem was getting 1t replaced correctly during maintenance." Eastman said. "It was put an to take care of a problem that never happened in 25 million hours fo Oight time." he added. Incidents of turbine fan blades brcakina arc not uncommon in the plane's predecessor. the DC-9-31. s.aid Galipult. That model plane uses an earfier version of the Pratt & Whitney JT·SD enaine in service on the Super 80 Inspectors found an Eastern Air· lines lX>9-3 l missing turbine fan blades atler one of the plane's enainc cxpenenced compresM>r problems on Jan. 13 near Richmond, Virgina, accord1n1 to Gahpuh. Ju t twoda)"s later, anothtr Eastern A1rhnCJ CX:".9·31 lost ran blades foJlowina an engine problem in the Atlanta a.rea. Oahpault has not made a ma.ior study on the Pratt ct WbJ\ney enainc and would not say there ~as any trend an the ine-tdtntt ••we have never researched tl.. The~ are 1 million quntions onl could 1 k and wt just don•t ha\'c the time or monty to do everythina.," he yjcl ' ... Raill may spatter coas~line Coa•tal Temperatures 44 211 Aocflmoncl ~ 47 S11.-s2 37 SI "91•fM'IC>e 112 ,. S.111 1.. ..... 43 20 Sen ""10NO 411 31 SM Diego 40 27 Sen Franc:l9CO II 63 SI SI• M•le 74 44 SMllll $() 31 ~ " •a $loux ,. ... 41 30 Spo11- $0 30 Syt!IC<IM $0 u TOC*I• ~ 3• fUC*)n 63 31 lu!M 112 32 WMhlnglon 53 40 WICl>lla S1atawy•• to 31 50 33 1t 64 32 ot 50 )3 13 .. eo .. 30 22 $.I •2 47 ,. 38 17 41 N 43 21 •2 24 $8 40 51 2t 51 33 52 23 ..Le 44 ao 41 H <It II 12 07 64 » 641 31 &5 35 ., 36 66 33 51 31 64 31 41 30 M 21 IO 31 53 •• TOOAY Seoond nigh 12 .3 7 p m '-'cl tow 11:24 p.m noNiaoAY 3.•-1 1 ' SURF REPORT -=--=----=-----== -----===--_-_ - Flrtl lltgh 1 :05 a m. 60 l'lrfl tow 8:08 a.m 0.8 LOCATIOH 9-nd NQh 2·0t p.m 8econcJ IOw 7·09 p.m. 3. I Muntlngton ~ u Ai.... .i.tty, N9wporl Sun eeta todty el 5:42 pm .. ''- Wedneedey at 8.30 LM end Nit~ atl .43p.m. Moon r1-today ti 1 U2 pm .. ...._ 11 .. 42 t m. Wedneaclay 40!11 SI , Newpoft 22nd 81 • tw#porl Belboe W.c1Q41 LaQun• 8Mctl 8W1 C6emen1• Wat., Temp 56-eO •121 1·3 1·2 . 1.2 1·2 1·2 1·2 1 CotilOfTION 1illtil(>Od poor poor POOf poor poor·lalf poor S...U c11rec11on _, 01' Sol makes appearance as OC enjoys 'birthdays'- By CHRISTINE DECKER Of!MDllllJl'W•t.fl Convertible tops were down. Surf- boards, their skcgs facing the sun, were strapped on the top of small cars. Bicycles and barefooted people ready for some fun in the sun jammed most roads leading to the beach Monday. The ocean glistened in the warm 75 degree sun. A few ~oplc braved the 59 degree water. Sailboats languished offshore. More than I 00,000 people ob- served Presidents' Day by sunning, running, playing and dancing on area beaches. lifeguards report. "l kind of feel lake a lobster. I've been out here since 11 :30 this mom· ing. I went in the water. It was cold but at felt really good." said Stacy Berger, a student at Palm Springs High who was visiting Newpon Beach for the long weekend. Her skin was a bright pink. In between the goosebumps. Up the beach a little, about two blocks from Newport pier, a chubby, dark-skinned teen-ager danced with a slender friend the serpentine gym- nastic moves of break dancers. Music from a large portable radio blared the !trains of"Cali fornia Knows How To Party." A crowd of about 25 people gathered to watch. "I love to watch this dancing. 1 came out to enjoy the scenery. It's definitely one of the best days of the ye.ar," said Dave Williams, a sales representative from Huntington Beach, as he watched the dancers. Beach traffic clogged Pacific Coast Highway and parking spaces were at a minimum. At Corona del Mar. many beach-goers stayed almost until the sun went down. "It was as crowded as a summer weekday. The roads were packed but there was still plenty of room on the beach.'' said Lt. Ron Johnson. New- port Beach manne safety. There were plenty of cases of sunburn, a few sprained ankles. cuts. minor surfing injuries. lost children, but no major rescues. "The water was still a little too cold for most people to swim out too far or for 100 long, so we have few rescues in the sprang." said Johnson. With air temperature!I expected an the 70's for the weekend. the crowds are ex pected to return to surf. sun and sand oflocal beaches. Cuban held in $1 Dlillion Santa Ana cocaine raid By the Auoclated Preu A 56-ycar-old Cuban 1s 101a1I after being arrested in a raid that netted two and a half kilograms of cocai ne worth SI million. Los Angeles sheriffs deputies said. Juan V. Fonseca was booked anto the Orange County Jail Sunday for irwesuption of pos~sing eoc.aine for sale after a raid using search warrants. !.aid Deputy Bob Stone- man . Bail was !>Cl at S 15.000. Stoneman said the cocaine seizure at a Santa Ana home ended st.•veral weekc; of rnvcst1gation. DEATH COMPENSATION FLAP ... From Al The 21 -year-old. who had moved to Cahfom1a with three Illinois fnends. was working for Video Con· cepts of Westminster at the time of the accident. State law mandates th-t depen- dents of all workers in Cahfomia killed on the JOb wall receive com· pensation ranging from $50,000 to S75.000. But the law also states that worker's compensation benefits will only be paid to dependents and not other family members. "He was single and had no depen- dents. so there was no money that was coming to us." explained the father. "And that was fine. We understood that. No problem " But 1t was a problem for the Chicago-area fam1l.Y that soon found out that an California the state getS the worker's compensation benefits if there are no dependents. Accordin&Jy, Traveler's Insurance Co., which handles worker's com· pensation for the Westmnster video firm. paid $50,000 to the state. Seeking their own form of com· pcnsat1on, Eh's parents filed a claim with •State Farm Insurance Co .. the Just Call 642-6.086 firm that covered the dnver who had run the red light and reponedl) caused the accident. "We got a check for $50,000 which was all the money that insurance policy allowed for" explained the father, who said the money was needed to pay various bills associated with their son's death. If Eli 's parents thought that was the end to things, they were sadly mis- taken. Traveler's Insurance, apparently seeking to recover its own loses, filed a claim against the estate of the driver that ki lled Eli . In seeking the claim, they asked for the $50,000 that had gone to Eli's parents. "They want the money," said the father, who has so far refused to tum it over to the insurance firm. "It is the principal that offends me," said Perry Eh. "It is a heart· breaking tragedy to lose your first-born child in the prime of hi life. "But it is even more dev1statina to have the government claim to be 1 beneficiary and, through its laws, cause additional cner." Eli said he traveled to Sacramento last month to ta1k with state officials and legislators lrom Orange { uunt) tO get some answers. "The question I have 1s who has the ~reater nght to that money., The insurance companX or a young man's surviving family. Arc insurance nghts really greater than family nghts'' "We're being told that we don't desen-e anything and I don't agree." Assemblyman Dennis Brown. a Republican from Lon$ Beach whose d1stnct jncludes portions of Hunt- •n$ton Beach. has promised the llhno1s father that he will explore state law on the matter. "Perso nally I agree with ham. It doesn't sound fair," said a spokeswoman for the assemblyman. "It's a tra~ic s1tua11on but it may well be that this is Just the way the law is.'' Eh said 1fthat's the case. he believes the law should be changed. But Williams George. a consultant to the state Assembly Finance and Insurance Committee. doubts the. Legislature will change the law. "This 1s the way the insurance business works. and the industry has convinced the Legislature that it should be allowed to minimi1c its los!le-S when po sable." he explained. Wbal do you Uke about tbt Dilly Pllot? What don't yo u like? Call &be 121mber at left and your message will be rtcordtd, tran1cnbed and deUvered 10 the 1pproprl1te editor. Tbe same U-laour an1werln1 ser vice m•y be used to record letter• to &.be editor on any topic. Contnbutot1 to our Lf tttrs colomo must Include tbeir ume aad ttltplaoae number for veriflcalloo. No rlrculallon can,, please. Tell •• ... , •• OD ynr mind. ORANGE COAST Diiiy Pilat H. L kttw8ftl DI Pubfilnef ,, .... o., •"4 fWn4!•, If '°" no1 •ec.,.t v~ Q)l">'i 11. ' •"' , .. or ~. 10 • "' ""' vt•I' ' .. ...... c ............. Y-• .. •N•• ,__ ChelJ Dowelbw EdltOf Ind A 1it1an'f I 0 Int Publtttwf "oeemary Churchman Cof'ltr =r~ .... \ .............. ' F o ru1D o n arthritis s cheduled tonight "Someth1n1 CAN be Done About Arthntisn is the topic of two fttt public be.al th forums that will be off~ m Huntinaton Beach anU Fountain Valley. The pf'Ol'lmt, · •pomored by Humana Hospital Westminster, will be conducted by Or. Oharoon Panahj, a rhtumatolotist, and Dr. Roberl Hammatt, an orthopedJc surgcon. One forum will be presented from 7:30 to 9 p.m. tonipt at the Huntinaton Beach Central Library (the Talben Room) 7111 Talbert Ave. Another forum will be offered from 7:30to 9 p.m. March 8 at the Foun&ain Valley Branch Llbrary, I 7S6S Los Alamos St. £116a.n• Rotarian• out for blood The RoJ,ary Oub of Laauna Beach and the Hotel Laauna are asking for donors to paniciapte in a Red Crou blood bank WednC$day from 9:4S a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Hotel Laauna, 42S South Coast Highway, l..a&una Beach. The donation will help the community meet a uraent need to maintain the blood bank at an level sufficient to meet any emergency. The hotel will supply aJI donors with a Bloody Mary and a buffet luncheon free after the contribution. Reservations arc available by contacting John Boyd at 497-1738. 1Vomea'• 9embJar .et bJ lrvbJe "New Bqjnninp for Women," a two-part pt!>IJ'lm for women who arc decidin& what to do with their future, will begin Wednesday at Northwood Community Pvk in Irvine. The class is to help women to evaluate their own life situations. Instructor Marti Malterrc, a Coast Collesc teacher, holds a master's degree in educational psy- chology. The fee is S20 per person class, which begjns at 7:30 p.m. Those interested in enrolling may caJI 660-3814. Trauma lecture et at college Shirley Gower, executive director of the Orange County Trauma Society, will speak Wednesday at the enterprise hour sponsored by Chapman Enterprise lnstilllte. The public forum begins at noon on the Chapman College campus in Oran$e. Gower will present the enterpnsing characteristics of a non-profit organization. as well as a discussion of the trauma society's programs. For more information. call 997-670S. Pre-.clJool program bJ Irvine .. PrcparinJ Your Child for School Success," a three-part scnes designed for parents of pre-school learners. will be offered on three consecutive Wednesday nights beginning this week at the Dttrfield Community Park in Irvine. Kay L. McGee. an educational psychologist, will help participants to recognize their child's special talents during the seminar:.i which begins at 7:30 p.m. The cost is :,30 per person or $SO per COUP.le. Registration is under way and will continue until a 30-person hmit is met. Those interested should call 660-3814 during business hours. Preu women to hear •peak.en Investigative reporter Bruce Henderson and Ellen Henderson, president and director of a stock photo agency, will be guest speakers at Thursday's meeting of the California Press Women. Orange County District. The meeting will be held at Pronto's Restaurant in South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa. A social hour at 6 p.m. will precede dinner at 7 and the program at 8. - ------- HB y ouths vie i n 'brain 0 l y m !Jics ' ' Sa~vo, YUl'Ollavia, iln'ttheonly plact to tage W"tnterOlympic Oa . They had some in HutUiat'OG Beach, toO. I nstc.ad of the 1Jtifoa ~n ~ llopet and 1katm1 around ice rinks. the contest tes~ such slulls as phonics. Jpdli na and vocabu· lary as well asothcrcatqOricl. The &tars of the Uiow were pupils in Lynne Jenkins· ftntanwkclauat Hunt- 1 ngton Christian School. They aot to st.and on v 1ctory platforms to receive their medals. Roben Heckman was the top medal collectorwilth fouraoldt, thrtt bronzes and one silver. Darrick RasmUJKn, 6, allO dtd J)Rtty well, too. Hecapturedatold;uUvcrand two bronze medals. Like all compecito" D•llY Piiot 1taff photoe by L•• Payne Prhacls-J Gary Reboln COD- lfttalatee whme,a (from left) Becky Boulton. Robert Heelr•aa and Tre•or Webttter. Tests sought on 'glass' in tuna By ~ Alsoclated Preti A Fullerton woman who claims she pulled sJass-like crystals out of a mouthful of canned salmon said she refused to tum over the salmon to its canner because she wants it tested independently. Georgene Vombaur. 48, said she received a call from a manager at Bumble Bee Seafoods' San Diego plant Monday morning. the day after she found small, hard bits in one of four cans of salmon she bought at the Price Club discount store an Cerritos. "He (the Bumble Bee official) said it was little crystals that form when they cook the fish," Vombaur said. On Monday, the telephone at Bumble Bee Seafoods offices in San Diego and San Francisco rang un· answered. Vombaur said her 2S-year-old son cut himself and bled when he crushed one of the bits between has fingers. S~e added that she had diarrhea all na~t. 'They look like little glass straws," she said. · Monday afternoon. she said, a young woman who identified herself as the daughter of Bumble Bee's local distributor came to the Vombaur home and offered to pay her for the four cans she bought. But Vombaur said she refused because "they'll just say l 1maganed things.~• "What I would rcaUy like to do is have it tested inde~ndenlly," she said. adding she might call Orange County health officials today for advice on where to have the salmon tested. The cans. marked with serial number0939SR2~3. werepac~at Bumble Bee Seafoods in San Die.so. Meanwhile. a Price Oub official who refused to gl ve bis name said that while the store considers the incident "unconfirmed," the rema1n1ng Bumble Bee salmon cans had been pulled from the store's shelves. Cla roomevmt1aJ501ncludcd viMlal dt.SCnmination, s>uWct. lantmee. IOCial studies, penman&tup, Jar)&Ulle. addition and alphabet ex.ems.es Jenkins said she ao1theidsfrom1 teachers' map.tine and It~ wdl. "UsuaUythechildrtntet...aedlislimeof the year, but they~ C!XCited and realty motivated(bythcOlynapicltlacme.)Aftd we had a hard la me set tint them down from the victory stand. O"cc tbey-t t~. they didn't wan1 to,etdownforthtnutl(OUP to have their p.aures taken.,. The Bill Cagney story-and other tidbits~; Or, how J immy's brother got Ronald Reagan to team with Bob Finch Unless there 1s an objection from the back bench. I'd like to shine that light on one of the most modest men I know. I mentioned him last week.. That 1s Bill Cagney. v15Jon and billboards. Finch was a most remarkable youna man. He lived up to ihe billina that Pat and Bob Hitt had pven me. ------By WALTER BURROUGHS Bill is the younger brother of the great mou on picture actor. Jimmy Cagney. I first heard about the Cagney famity from a couple who operated the Seattle Repertory Playhouse. WALT£1 Bu11ouc1s As the campaisn pR>IR9ICd I was encouraged. Even so, when the date for election got closer I had miscivings about our stra\Cgf. l got hold of Bill Cagney. At the time when J (mmy Caaney was rising fast to stardom 8111 became a producer. l knew that he was acquainted with Ronald Reagan. so I asked flim to help .. After I have uS('(i a wo rd for a long time. Tuesday, February 21 • I :30 p.m., Oru1e Co•nty Ptunta1 Comml11loo, Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • S:30 p.m., Newport Bucta Library Board, Newport Center Branch Library, 856 San Clemente Drive. • 6 p.m .. Lapaa Buell City Con ell, Council Chambers. SOS Forest Ave. • 6:30 p.m ., Costa Mesa City Conell Meeting, City Hall Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive. I have a habit of "looking it up" in a dictionary. This week I decided to look up "Searchlight" to make sure it means what I thought it meant years ago when we staned this column. So I turned to the Reader's Digest Encyclopedic Dictionary. You'd be amazed how often people use a word thinking it means something com· pletely different from what it docs. For example, the Los Angeles Times recently published a "lettC'r to the Editor" from the Pilot's former editorial page editor. Al Bates. The letter pointed out the difference in meaning between "convince" and "per- The husband was a reall} fi ne small-theater actor. The wife was as talented a director of plays as I have known. At the time I was editing a small weekl y "high-brow .. magazine and also producing the rotogra vure section for the Seattle Times. I had helped them raise money for a theater m the University district. It was converted from a n empty garage. When they heard I was moving to California they told me the story of the Cagneys. It seems that these two people had been instructing in acting at a settlement houac in New York C1ty. Among their students were James and Bill Cagney. 1950 I think) be was "looking after" ha s family. Apparently he had a sharp business head and managed his brothers' and sister's business affairs. O ne day I got a phone call from Patna a Hitt. She wanted to talk to me about a young man whom she felt would be a fine lieutenant to Ronald Reagan as governor. This was Bob Finch. I said, "Bill, I feel pr,tty good about tht' election. It will mean a gJUt deal to newspapers to win without a billboard or TV backing, but I can't be so selfish as to put the entire campa1gn on newspapers alone Do you think you could talk to Mr. Reagan! • 7:30 p.m .. Hutlngton Beacb City Council Meetlag . City Council Chambers, 2000 Main St. • 8 p.m., Foaa&aln VaJJey City Coancll, City Council Chambers, I 0200 Slater Ave. suade." Wednesday, February 22 • 9:30 a.m., Oruge Couty Board of Sapervl1or1, Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. • I 0 a.m., Costa Mesa Traffic Comml11loe, City Hall. First Floor Conference Room. 77 Fair Drive. • 1:30 p.m., Oru1e Couty PlualD1 Commt11lon. Al is a gentleman so he didn't disclose the source of hi s annoyance with the meaning of the two adjectives. But I suspect it was I. I distinctly remember his objecting to a statement by me many years ago. I had said ··1 am persuaded," when I should have said, "I'm convinced." Jimmy was the elder of two brothers. The younger one. trul y just a child at the time, was Bill. It was o ne of those situations where the li ttle brother is filled with hero worship for his elder siblings -not o nly Jimmy but some other brothers and sisters. But there was a void. Bill knew that he had a mind for business. so he took o ver the welfare of the famil}. He didn't want to be an actor. Seems that Ronald Reagan's "kHchen cabinet," which supplied most of the mone) for Reagan's election campaign. did not want to include Bob Finch 10 a JOmt campaign for governor and heutenant governor. Finch had some small money 10 h1scampa1gn. but nothingcomparC'd to that of Reagan. I suggested that such money as he had be used for newspaper advertising. At the same time l persuaded him to call on newspaper editors all over the state in the hope that they would support him edhon- all > They did. He had a wonderful personality. Probably still has. I haven't seen him lately Bill paused for awhile and I could sec that brilliant mind of his chuc:n1ng. After about four minutes he S81d, "No, f can't taJ.k to Ronald Reagan I denied him a part on~ and I think he still resents it But Jimmy and he are su II good friends. f'll talk to Jimmy." It never occurred to me that a simple asking could be so effective Within a very few days new billboards went up with portra1tsofF1nch and Reagan as candidate for governor and lieutenant governor. Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center P1aza, Santa Ana. • 7 p.m .. Lapa& Buell .Plauta1 Com mt11IOD, Council Chambers. SOS Forest Ave. • 7 p.m.. Lagu.aa Beacll Parkins, Trame and Clrcalatton Comml~. City Hall Conference Room, SOS Fo rest Ave. • 7:30 p.m., Foutain Valley Plauln1 Comml11loo, City Council C hambers, I 0200 Slater Ave. Anyway, I looked up Searchlight. Among the many meanings for "search" 1s one definition which caused us to name this column in the fi rst place: "A critical examination or scrutiny." It also gjves a defin11ion for searchlight: "An apparatus that may be thrown 10 various directions for search or signaling." When I decided to move to the Orange Coast area and ran across Bill. I recalled what I had learned about him in Seattle and we became friends. Even at this time (circa I was encouraged because I thought It would be a great demonstration of the 1mpon ance of newspapers versus tele- So 1f some of }Ou are wonderins about my reference to 8111 Cagney in last week's column. this is \omc of the bacqround. An y quesuons'l I lo.no~ there will be some So ao ahead and tire I'm an expenenccd target. Walrcr 8.u.rrough~ ''the Pilot's founding publisher , PoucE Loe • Cyclist hit by car in Mesa; police seek three youths A 27-)'t.ar-old Newpon Beach man was hit and knocked off his bicycle in Cost.a Mesa Monday by a white station waaon driven by three tccn-a~cd }'Ouths, police said. Daniel Freiberger told Costa Mesa police officers he was riding his bike eastbound on Victoria Street near Puente A venue about 5 p.m. when the CO.talleu Thfft antique rifles with unknown value were rcponcd stolen Monday from a rt idence on the l 00 block of Flower Street. Polict said there was no evidence of forced entry to the home. The victim told them a fonner tenant has a ma ter key. • • • A SI 199 video camc111 was re- ported ~tolen from1 the Video Con- cepts store m the South Coast Plaza Mall Monday. The came,. was appettntly taken from a tripoct'in the ''°"' dulina a slow busme!\ day. ••• A retJdcnt of the 400 block of East 16th Smet discovered her valuable jewrlry mwf na Mond.ay She told poUce the last time he saw the jewtlry was in late Dcttmbtt. lo waa estimated at Sl,OSO for her W'eddlna nna. aold chain and ~iamondi. ' , station waaon pulled up next lo him and the youths inside began shouting insults at him. As the car went by, he said, one of the teens sprayed a hquid at him from a spray bottle. The car then came back around the block and edacd diagonally into the curb, cutting Freiberger off and Handncton Beach Usin& a shovel to smish I side wmdow. someone buraJaritcd a home earl)'. Monday on the 4000 block of Montcao Drive. The loss included JCWClry wonh $9,000. ••• A re ident o f the 7000 block of Maddox Drive reported Monday t~t someone stole the front pi.II from his 1979 Ford Courier. The lo s was Mtamated at $187. • • • Four ba kcts oflaundry and a radio were stolen 1n the buf'llary of a locked white 1982 SubaN, parked Monday in a call)Ort on the 9700 block of Continental Drive. Ent.ry waJ aaincd by rcmovm& lhc back window. The I was estimated at SS2S. • • • A resident o f the I 5800 block of Belfast Lane told polite Mond1y that ~mconc sfolc ht black and whttc I knocking ham from his bike. He was not seriously injured. The car was last seen turning northbound onto Ha.rbOr Boulevard. Freiberger described the youths an the car as two males and a female. between 16 and 19 ycan o ld. Freiberacr told police he believe thecuwasdclibcratelydrivcn at hun. 1971 Porschc~h1ch had been parked in the strcet.1he lo wasntimaled at $8.000. • • • Entcrina throuah an open bedroom ' window, someone buraJariied a home on the 16100 block of F1nt1 1a Lane, a re ident rcponC'd Monday The lo included S\lrfina equipment wonh $300 and a S 180 radio. • • • A retident of the 6900 block of Auburn Drive reponcd Monday that someone stole 1 26-otncb Huffy airls b1C)'Cle from a •de yard. The l •'I tSt1m1ted at S 11 50. • • • Someone tole a blue-sray 197S Chevrolet Luv p ckup that v.'BS parked on tht 19700 block of 9cach Boulevard The los was t1matcd at Sl.000. • • • A pharmacist at the • drua sto~. 19640 Beach Bhd . to\li pohct Monday that a man had used a fof\td I pre~n ptaon to obtained Valium. The customer. described as a Caucasian in his 40s. gave a false name and address. • • • Someone broke into the tool boxes mounted on the rear of a 1982 Toyota pickup parked on the 9000 block of Ellsworth Drhe. The loss included tools worth $950 ••• .\ weekend burglary occurred at a home on the 17500 block of Delon& Circle. Entry was made through a locked garage door. The loss included s:?.300 worth of toob and a $200 ant1Que d resser. Irvi ne A young skateboarder, injured an a • traffic colhs1on. was m stable con- d1t1on this morning 10 the intenStve l'arc unit of a Sant.a Ana hosp111I. Pohc-t u 1d 1oday they arc still 10vest1gat1ng the mishap that lef\ Anthon) J. Compofel1cc. 7. with scriou! 1nJ unc~ follow1n1 a traffic rolhs1on undav 1n Irvine ••• 1lverwarc. cash. kuchen ap- pliance' and a stett<> of undetermined value \,\;Cl't" taken in a brtlk·1n on 8owd1t<"h discovered Monday nl&ht. 8urglal") ran~ckt'<l the houSf al\er mak1n1 entf} through an unlocked • 1dc praae door . . ' tuden1' returning to Unavcnuy If 1a,h th1~ momina saw the rcm11n of an oran~ sport car 1n the parluna lot. 1lS w1ndows <1ma-.hcd and its 1de hattcrcd. accordtn to a pa tb . Polu:c n:ce1 v~ wold of the anCtdent fo nda). hut had nt' funh r infor· m1t1on 1h1~ mom1n • •• • . • The owner of a dark 1983 Toyota Celica discovered Monday morning two milk cartons propping up the car and $700 worth o f radial tires and brushed nms m1ss1ni. The theft on Bearpaw occurred o vernight Sunday. • • • The owners of eight cars left in tht' private parking lot of Kmdercare. 3661 Michelson, over the three-day holiday discovered their vehicles missina Monday. The pre-school operaton had the cars towed away about 6:30 a.m . Polioe said visitors to the Parle West aparunent complex at Culver and Walnut make un- authorized use or the lot. Lapn&Beach Jewelry valued at S9.6SO was rcpOrtcd mi in& from a home in the 200 block of Cliff Drive. • • • A total ofS28,000 an SI 00 bills was stolen at about 8 a.m . unday from a business in the 1100 block of South Coast Hiahway. • • • Eqwpmcnt valued at $700 was taken from a prqc in the 200 block of Cyprtss Street. • • •• A 11rl's Schwinn C'ontmental bicycle valued at $200 wa tolen from a houtc 1n the 1900 block of Lquna C'ayon Roed. • • • Miscellaneous items Wlth a total value o f $200 ~ taken from a hou$C 1n the I 000 block of Nona Drive Newport Beach A Huntin on 8c:ac.b man reponcid the thcf\ of 1s wallet and SSO cash ftom a bu · rie tn the 2 bl ot , East Coast Highway Mo nday. • • • A Newpon Ekadi man reported the theft of an unloclcd bicycle valued at S50 from h1<1garage 10 the 2400 block ofC'lifT Dn"c Monday. ••• R & B t ommcrcc Plaza reported the theft of S 1,499 tn tools and equipment from its marntcnance bu1 ld1ng 1n lhl' 41 00 block of 81rch Strttt Monda' -... Newpon Op1ometnc V1\1on at 177 R1vers1dc Onvc. reported the theft of a pair of -;unaJas.se valued at $95 Monda\ • • •• Newpon Bcacb Golf Course rc- pon ed the theft of two car battencs valued at $80 caC'h and a batter) charger valued at S 150 Monday • • • A Hununaton Beach man reported lhc Lbeft of$300 in nn1 equipment from has car parked at 400 Pro P«t Monda) Fountain ·vaney I I 'I've got women to meet and beers to drink· The bdicop1en came in from ib1pa offlhore 11 7 a.m .. and die movcmenl of the combat force beck to the warshtps of 1be 6th fleet ataned about an hour l11er, Brooks said. BEIRUT Lebanon (AP)-The U.S. Marine combat force began pullrna up stakes 11 its Beirut a.1rpon base today and mov1n1 to Navy ships off the Lebanese coast. Seventeen monthli after diaaina 1n with French. He said lt would take 1 week or two to move out the approium11ely 1,300 Mannes at 1he airpon base. He said 1t w11 his undmtandina that no Mannes would remain there. thou&h some would stay ashore to auard U.S. Embassy offices alon1 the seafront in downtown Beirut. Italian and 8rm~h troops, the Mannes bepn flyina uut by helicopter and \811tn1 out b) land1n1 craft from the Green Beach area where they first set up a landina dock. The chiefapokesman for the Manne base here, Army Col. £d McDonald, said the official orders for the move wert received today, but they desi&nated last Sunday u the bqinnina of the operation. "Today the support people have gone, and we're working on the combat gear." Marine spokesman MaJ. Dennis Brooks told reporters. "Today 1s the first day of the relocauon of the actual 22nd MAU personnel." Brooks said, however, that none of the men from the three combat units at the airport had been moved out before todaf s order. Brooks was refemng to the 22 nd Manne Amph1b1 ous Umt -the combat force holding fronthne pos1uons around the airport ba~. surrounded now by leftist militias claimina victory over the collapsing Lebanese army. For days now. 1he Mannes have been shipping out equipment and troops that ~r\-ed as support for the fighting men Brook~ said the support troops were "99 percent gone .. Asked 1f this meant the evacuation of the Marines had begun, Brooks replied. "Please use the word 'relocatina. · We are not evacuatina." President Reapn announced Feb. 7 that he had ordered a plan drawn up for movement of the Marines from the airport to th1ps offshore. There has been confusion since then about when the move would take place and whether any Marines would remain ashore. "We still have a few cats and dogs left and now we're getting to the combat force." he ~1d Asked about the mood of the men. Brooks said morale was good but there was some frustration over CD CD m CD CD CD lD J J Orange County's Easy Listening Radio Station is Giving Away Trips for 2 to Puerto Vallarta , Hawaii and More Listen For Detalls KDCM 1aa.1 sT::ea Plan your banki~ needs in short anlK m CD m (I) CD rn ID TI-IE HUNfINGTON SAVINGS CD MONEY MENU LJc;e nur mont>y mt'nu to plan a well -balanced financial diet. It 's as easy as you -know-what. No Strings Checking. No minimum balance and no service charge make this the account to '>ttHt with. Earn 5 1 4 % interest compounded dail y on every dollar -even it there's only a dollar in your account. Super NOW Checking. Unlim1tec.J check. writing with high money market interest. $2.500 minimum balance. Passbook Savings. Open a pci.,.,bnuk savings account with as little as $1 and start ecirn1ng 5 1/z % interest. Huntington Investment Fund. Ea rn high m1iney market interest (slightly higher than Super NOW rate). Make a" m.my withdrawals as you like. $2,500 minimum balance. Term Accounts. E:arn Jut'> nf mh·n· .. t when you commit your money to termc., rang1n~ from .i ft•w wtTk.., t11 '>C'veral years. Our most popular term account 1., the Cert it 1c1tt' ot Deposit. or CD. Call us for the latest rates. Retirement Accounts. It., newr too .. oon tu open a retirement account and incl ude 11 in your savings pl.rn Krogh plans are designed for self-employed people. An Individual Retirement Account. or IRA. can be opened by anyone come see us. And while we're till ing you in on the money-m.iking details. you can Coffee 'n Conversation. fill up a cup wi th freshl y brewed coffee. It's always on us All account'> art' in~ured up to $100.000 by tht> FSLIC Now you know why your neighbor banks at [IJ ~ ' I whether the Mannes had accomplished their mission, Satd Lance Cpl. Samuel Lee, 20, of Miami, Fla., stand1naoutsidc his bunker at Echo Company: "I'm ready to 10. I've &<>t women to meet and beers to dnnk." When asked about the Marines' mis ion, he said: "We were Just trylna to restore the peace. It doesn't look like 1t happened. It's a shame the U.S. bas been here more than 1 year, and they ttill can't act thrir act t<>sether." The Marines came to Beirut in Auaust 1982 to help supervise the evacu•tlon of Palestine Liberation Or- aanization ,uerrillas. The job done, they ten. but were ordered back in September after the massacre of civilians in the PaJestinian refUaee camps of Sabra and Chatilla. The Marines· slay was marred by the Oct. 23 true., bomblnaat theairpon which kiUed 241 U.S. servicemen. In all. 26S U.S. 1ervicemen have been killed since the Marines arrived in 1912. The I 00 British troops of the multinational forte departed recently and Italian troops finished their pullout Monday. Soon, only the French continaent will remain. Pre.ld entiat hopeful Walter Mondale .it•e. 'thwnbtt a p ' at Sprlnlfield, 0 1. rally . Mondale gets most marbles Caucus hints Glenn ----had the wrong stu_f_f ____ _ DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)-Waller F. Mondale says his "perhaps spectacular" victory in Iowa will help convmce Democrats that he 1s the man 10 defeat Ronald Reagan . but his opponents for the nomination say they wilt be ready for him next week in New Hampshire. Sen. John Glen n, whose claim to be Mondale's prime challenger sank under the weiaht of a fifth-place finish , said. "We took a hckma tonight but we arc on to New Hampshire ... I hope we do much better than we did in Iowa. Obviously, we won't do much worse." Mondale scheduled a quick trip to the Granite State today Others were already al work there, preparing for the first-in-thc-nauon primary Feb. 28. After the d1mcns1 ons of his Iowa c.aucus victory became clear Monday night. former vice president Mondale told reporters: "I think I'm going to be nommee and I think this wm here in Iowa strengthens me considerably. Tonight is the beginning of the end of the Reagan administration. Let the word go out from Iowa to the nation -to all Americans who want a safer world, I am on your side." Mondale nearly shut out his opponents in the fight for national convention delegates. He took nearl y half the raw vote at the 2.495 precinct meetings and led for 48 of 50 nominating deleptes. Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado, whose second-place finish gives him a claim to be MondaJe's top challenger, won two delegates. "It will be a big boost. It will add additional energy 10 our effort here." Hart told supporters in Manchester, N.H. "Hopefully. 1t does tum this into a Hart-Mondale race ... It sets up a contest between the {>arty's future and its past" George McGovern , starting late and spending little here, finished a surpns1ng third and called it a ''minor miracle." "A great many Iowa voters ... voted their convictions and voled their conscience," said the party's 1972 standard bearer. With the New Hampshire primary only eight days away, Mondale said the Iowa results stand as a "recommendation to the rest of the nation" to support him. The rest of the field -Glenn. Sens. Alan Cranston of California and Eme'>t F. Hollings of South Carolina. the Rev. Jesse Jackson and former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew -were shut out. Jackson and Hollings made virtually no effort in the state. IRAN READY FOR BIG PUSH By t~e Associated PreH Iran says its forces have repulsed an Iraqi counter- offensive and are massinf alona the battlefront, p~rcd to "deliver the final blow' in the 31/l-year~ld war. Iraq, meanwhile, accused Iran ofshellina a town and damaaina a school there. Its self-imposed one-week moratorium on shellina residential areas in Iran ends today. Jn Washinaton, White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes refused to co mment on a ~pon that a U.S. naval task force had been moved to the Oulf of Oman to protect the Strait of HormU7 -vital to world oil shipments -from a threatened blockade b}' lran. "W..e don't discuss fleet movements/' Speakes sajd. addina the United States w11 .. absolutely .. committed 10 keepin• the strait open. Asked if the United Statet would take m11it1ry action If neceuary, he said, 0 1t includtt doina what's n~. We haven't been specific." The British Broadcutina Cori>. reported Monday ni&ht that Royal Navy warships are practicin& armed eacor1 du\ies for aupenankm in the Penian Gulf in cue Iran clota the strait. Iran's official Islamic Republic News Aeency uid Iran.an forces m>Ulsed an In.qi counteroft'eolive Monday betMCn the border cities of DebJoran and Mehra.n, on the central teCtor of the bluJtfront. Iraqi report.I made no reference to such an offensive. IRNA. monitored in Cyprus. 11id Iranian Revol- utionary Guards werr ma11ina alona lhe fronL Tehran radio quoted President Ali K.hlmenei u uyia, lll:nitn forca wen awai11na 1n ordtt to attack. .. Witb diVlne succor, with the help of lbe fotea deployed oo the betdefronl today, .and in view of the dctcrm1nati0ft and moti\'H of the people and bnve combetanll of lalam -who are awaitint one sipal 10 deliver the final blow on the agrtMive cntmy-we shall Oni h thejob.soon." Khamencl w11quottd auayina. I -- \ Customs, DEA feud , d~aws towar d c lose By &kA110Claltd Prest . WASHINGTON -The Reapn adm1mstrat1;on 11 tryina to end disputes over its war on drup by •aree•n• to Conaress' desire for a Cabinet-level 4rua cur and allowtna Customs a1ent1 to pursue 1nvestiaations based on their dn.ia seizures. The two decisions are desianed to resolve a JO.year-old feud between the Customs Service and Drua Enforcement Administration and a tussJe with Conaress. The Customs-DEA feud has helped aenerate reiular complaints from Conaren that the administration~• multimillion-dollar war on druas lacks proper coord1- nation. and needs a Cabinet-level superviser. Customs aaents have Iona complained that DEA and other federal aaencics fail to pursue all the leads ~erived from Customs drug seizures at harbors, airports and in offshore waters. Climber •tlll mlulng TALKEETNA. Alaska -After a daylona air and around search turned up only the snowshoes of a lo~-overdue Japanese adventurer. o~nly concerned offic1aJs have sent out 1wo mountaineers \o sc.our Mount McKinley for him. Naomi Uemura. a national hero in his homeland who th11 month became the first man to climb North Amenca 's tallest peak alone in winter, was last seen by plane Thursday signalina from the shelter of an ic.ccave that he was OK. On Monday. the first day of clear weather since last week, three planes and a helicopter searched for Uemura without success from the 20,320.foot peak down to the 7,200-fooi levct. $16 million awar d OK'd CHICAGO-Hundreds of current or forme~ wet.fare worken who said they were shunted to low-pay1nf JObs because they arc black will share more than S 15 million .to be paid by Illinois and Cook County. The ractal discrimination award. announced Monday, caps an I I-yea r tepl battle wajcd by Local 2009 ~fthe American Federation of State, County and. Municipal Employ~. The union alleged in a 197 3 lawsu1t l~at many.black pubt.1c aid workers were placed 1n low-~ymg positions but d_1d the same work as whites in higher-paying jobs. while earniogS I S0to$300a month less. At least I ,OOOpeople- 95 percent of them women -will s~ar~ th~ m~ncy in what 1s believed to be the largest racial d1scnm1nataon award of its kind 1n the nation. Bridge collapse hurts 3 YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio -A bndgc carrying traffic over a city park collaJ>S:Cd Monday. scn~mg a trac- tor-trailer and a car hurtling about 90 feet into a small ravine and inJuring their three occupa~ts. The Oak Street Bridge, whi ch carried traffic across Lincoln Park on ~he city's east side, collapsed about 2: 15 P·f!l·· Patr<?lman ~1ck Marciano said. Mahoning County Engineer Michael F1tas said preliminary palice reports indicated the truck's weiJht e:itceeded the 80.ycar-old bridge's posted 1Q..1on limit. Avalanche rider unhurt PROVO Utah -A woman caught up in a small avalanche Monday while she was cougar hunting in Provo Canyon was swept 600 yards but survived without apparent serious injury, authorities said. . CALIFORNIA Whalett ln San Dimas? SAN DIMAS -Paleontologists have unearthed the skull of a whale behcved to have swum through ocean waters covering the valley 10 to 12 milhon years -.o. The discovery of the 211>-foot yellowish skull may provide the first soltd evidence of whales during that period, said Lawrence Barnes. a curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History. Condor egg 'kidnapped' SAN DIEGO (AP)-The second California condor egg of 1984 was removed from a nest Mondar and taken to the San Diego Zoo where. if it 1s fertile, it will be hatched and the bird raised in captivity. The egg was laid Wednesday. but members of the Condor Recovery Team were unable to get al 1t until Mondar because strong wind prevented a helicopter from landing near the nest in Ventura County, said zoo spokesman Jeff Jouett. The first egg of the 1984 hatching season was taken to the zoo a week earlier. Always on Sunday LOS ANGELES - A small bank hopes its sevcn-<tay-a-week human teller service will lure customers away from l.arger ins1jtut1ons that have cut hours and encouraaed use of automated cash dispensers. "We're looking to fill some of the void they have left behind," says James McMahon, president of Western United Nation.al Bank in lbe Westwood area. ··we stiJI think there's money to be made with the average customer out there." Another bank, Gibraltar Savings and Loan, also offers Sunday service in shopping malls, and Sears Savings Bank plans to increase the number of seven-day-a-week branches in California Sears stores from the current 24 to 42 by the end of the year. Naked man shot to death NORWALK - A nude man who allegedly tried to break into two homes was shot 10 death Monday by officers in a nearby back yard after allegedly threatenina one of them with a sharp-P-Oinred piece of lumber. The man. who carried no 1dent1fication, was shot twice in the head and twice in the chest durina the bizarre Monday afternoon incident. He died about 9 p.m. Monday followina suraerY at Lona Beach Memorial Hospital. Soviet Nobel wlaaer dead MOSCOW -Mikhail A. ----......... Sholokhov, the author of "Quiet flows The Don" and the only officially sanctioned Soviet writer to win the Nobel Prize for literature, has died, it was announced today. He was 78. Radio MoSQOw's Ena- llsh-lanauase service was fint to announce the death. uyina "the areat Soviet writer, winner of the Lenin and Nobel prizes. Mikhail Sholokhov, hu died." Soviet sources said he died Monday niaht SBOLOUOV at Rostov-on·Don, the t0utbcrn city where he lived most of his life. Sholokhov won the coveted Nobel Prize ln 196~, 30 years after he published rua first and best known nove , translated into It lust 73 lanauaatt. Asked bla reaction on reoceivina the prize. Sholokhov repliedJ .. , smiled, si&hcd quietly -and tho~ah• it was too late. Veauael• amlMwdor •hot OEOROETOWN, Guyana -A bu,..W wounded Venezuelan Amballldor Saddio Garvainnt and hia wife in a shootout at thetr residence earty today, polioe uid. A medkaJ poktlman at tht St. J0teph•1 Mercy Hospital uid the 1mbetaldor was in ttable condition and bis wife w11 auffmna from abodt ft-om a aruina wound. A potu 1pokaman uld the wound• Mre receiwd in .. ,n Uchan91 or IUD fire With I bUraJai'' It the amb&IMdot'I msdcnct In the fashionable ~I Air pnnp area or Oeoraetown. Poht"C said they hid tent snvau111on wilh tracker dop to thf re tdtnce. Deported boy finall)'i foMnd. ·1 wentthrough a lot of ----cold and hungry times ... ' SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 14-ycar-old Mu1can boy who was reunited with his older brother five days after he was mistakenly deported to TiJuana says he tried to explain to U.S. immigration officials that he was a legal resident of the United States, but "they wouldn't listen." Mario Moreno Lopez, the object of an intense search s1ncc hewasdroppedofTin Tijuana wilh a busloadofother Mexican nationals last Wednesday niaJlt. was found in San Dieao Monday. A reunion with his father, who has spent the past four days in the Mexican border city of l.S million people looking for his son. was delayed after Mexican and San Diego police were unable to track hi m down Monday night to tell him his sdn was safe. Mario had a visa which allowed him to hve in the United StateS legally, but he did not have the document with him when he was rounded up along with 33 other suspected illegal aliens on a Santa Ana street comer, the youth said at a news conference Monday night at the downtown San Diego police station. Speaking through a police interpreter, Mario said he had twice attempted to cross the border on Thursday. but was turned back both times when he was cauJllt by U.S. Border Patrol agents. When he tried to explain he was a legal re51dent, he said the agents "wouldn't hear it." . On Friday, he said, he and a fnend sneaked back into U.S. territory by walking through a canyon near the international border crossinJ at San Ysidro and began looking for work in the San Diego area. "I didn't know they were searching for me. I knew they (his family) were womed about me and they would Air Force officer becomes colonel Ralpla G. Toarlno, of Westminster, whose wife is the former Sherry l . Tisdail of Newport Beach, has been promoted to the rank of colonel i!l ~h~ Air Force. Toumi~ 1s assigned to Air Force Space D1vmon, Los Anie~e~ Air Force Station, in El Segundo as director of the div1s1on's Upper Stages System Program. Auman Paula J. Cole, daughter of Pauline King of Fountain Valley. has been assigned to Lowry Air Force Base. Colo .. after completing basic training at Lackland Ait Force Base, Texas. She is a 1982 graduate of Los Amigos High School an Fountain Valley. Arm y Pvt. Pete J. Wltltaker, son of Charles and Patnc1a Whitaker of Huntington Beach. has completed basic training at Fort Jacksgn, S.C. Pvt. Paul J. Hardy, son of Manlyn A. Hardy of Huntington Beach. has completed the Arm y prognnmer and analyst course at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind. Hardy 1s scheduled to serve at Redstone Arsenal, Ala. Airman Lee L. Rivard, son of Lee and Sally Rivard of Huntington Beach, has been decorated With the Air Force Achievement Medal at Sembach Air Base. W~t Ger- many. Rivard, a I 9~2 gradua~e of Ma.ri~a Hi.a!' School in Huntington Beach, is a secunty specialist wt th the 60 I st Security Police Squadron. PFC Herb W. Edet1ber1er, son of Herbert and Ins Edetsbcrger of Laguna Niguel. has completed basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C. He 1s a 1980 graduate of Dana Hills High School in Dana Point. Airman James L. Sbee&z, son of Leonard and JoAnn Sheetz of San Clemente. has been ass~gnod to Shep~ard Air Force Base, Texas. after completing basic traming. Sheetz will receive specialized instruction in the medical services field. Airman Darren Dotter, whose fe 1s the former Ramona Hinz of Fountain Valley, s completed basic trainingat Lackland Air Force Base, exas. He w111 remain at Lackland for specialized instru ion in the education and training field . --. . . . . Marlo Lopes, 14, aneaked acroee border after wroni11 deported from Santa Ana. come looking for me if something happened," said Mario, whose father, Juan Moreno Garcia, a Santa Ana plumber, was stm Jearchina for him. When the father hadn't been heard from by midni&}lt, San Oiqo police released Mario to his 19-year-old brother, Oscar. The brothers were driven back home by a Santa Ana police Hispanic affairs officer, Jose Vargas. Varps said that the father usually chedced in with police every momina. and Tijuana officials were alerted to tell him his son had been found . "I went throuaJl a lot of cold and hungry times," said Mario. He was found at 5:30 p.m. Monday, when an Alhambra couple. Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf Zamora, saw him wandering near the San Diego Harbor and offered him some food. Because of news accounts, they realized who he was. and caUed police. Bradley backer Mafia victim? LOS ANGELES (AP) - A Miami &rand jury hat indicted reputed Mafia fiaure Charles Delmonico OD charaes of extoruna $20,000 from one of Mayor Tom Bradley•s bignt financial boosters. a newspaper repon.ed Tuesday. Delmonico, S6, of Miami, was cbar&ed in a ICICJ'et indictment returned in Dade County of exiorti!>;I the money from Loe Angeles busineuman Robert Mu:hael Terry. The indictment alleges that Delmonico forced Terry to pay $20,000 for worthless stock in HoloaraJ>hic Development Corp. of America, which once bad offices on Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Hills. Delmonico is also charged with conspirin.a to kidnap Victor Dante, one-time operator of the Hollywood Palladium, the Los Angeles Times said. In addition, Delmonico is indktcd on characs t.bat he forced the r,oung son of a wealthy Aorida family to steal a valuable s1Jver serving set from his mother to pay otr a loan shark debt. Shortly before the indictment was rcleated Delmonico was set free from Jatl after servin& sevml weeks for contempt because he disobeyed ajudae's orders to answer questions about his dealing with Terry in the alleged plot to abduct Dante, the paper said. Investigators said promoters of the Holoaraphic stock persuaded investors that the company ~ produc1ng a device that made three-dimensional laser photographs. It was, in fact, only a shell corporation without the ability to manufacture the devices, sajd the Times. quoting unidentified authorities. Fast-food stab victims better BURBANK (AP) -Two fast-food workers stabbed durinaa robbery remained hospitalized Monday but were "vastly improved," a hospital spokesman said. Police said Karen Faqetter and Mateo Miranda were stabbed in the back despite the fact they followed the robber's orden. They had been listed in lerious condition at St. Joseph's HospnaJ following the weekend holdup. But Ms. Fauctter, 26, was m &ood condition Monday night and Miranda, 22. was in fair condidon, said nursina supervisor Ron Havens, ad<lins, .. They are both VUlJy improved." Police Set. Chris Thomas said Monday ni&ht that no • one bad been arrested in the robbery, whidi occurred l about 3:30 a.m. Saturday at a Jack-in-d1e-Box restaurant. t 0 1 M:) R J ReynolCle Tcltle«o CO • Taste that delivers ~~~~~~-1-~~~~~~~~--1 pack ·-----------·-----· I ,..T ttft•Y•NT A CAftl,1.... .l•" c~ "l• o I THI ORIGINAL A•"<OP I Low Cost · , .. ~(I I DOG and CAT I I V•ccln•tlon Clln'lc 11 I Rabies 1395 I Ol1temper S4 76 I I Par'lo S5 00 I I Cat "3·1n-1" S6 60 I Dog "6·1n· t" S7 50 ' I (OHLP + PARVOI I I .... ..,.. ao• e ••t1J9'.I ••0t '•b'e• 'mot. I I 009 ''hi" rKorftfftend9d ev•ry ' I I yeer• •ti ot "•' varc•"•hon1 >;ear to, I V•ter+nar1an 1M1va Of...,,., 0001 ® ... I on llASHES call"' eoxrs I I COSTA I HA: Friday. February 24 I . I Hours: 2:30 pm to 4:30 pm Mesa Verde I I Center pmlng lot 2701 Harbor Blvd. and Adami I I llMl: Saturday, February 25 I Hours: 11:00 am to 1:00 pm Home & Garden Center parking lot Culver Dtlve and Irvine Center I ... PUTUR• CLUHO IMPO. l811J 709-1H• • .. HOW TO .FLYAKl'IE 1 2 Never use wire or any metallic ,material. "3 Don't fly your ~kite in the rain . l ( .J r I ~ 6 Always fly your kite far from power lines! Don't try to retrieve kite caught in power line ! I , Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health - " .. Perhaps the cablevJsJon Industry within our community should be more competlUve. • • Jack Anderson erred, McDonnell Douglas says To the Editor: Columnist Jack Anderson made an unjustifi ed attack on the Navy's F / A-18 strike fighter in an error-filled column published on Friday, Feb. 17. The following are McDonnell Douglas' responses to three of its many inacc uracies: I . Anderson is wrong when he says that Navy Secretary Lehman has repeatedly recommended "mercy kiUing" for the F/ A-18. The fact is that Secretary Lehman has repeatedly praised the F/A-18. most recently in congressional testimony on Feb. 7 when he cited the FI A-I 8 for "excel- lent perfonnance." 2. Anderson is wrong about the F/ A-I 8's mai ntenance record. Of- ficial Navy records show that other operational Navy ai rcraft in the Hornet's class require 65 percent to 110 percent more maintenance than does the F / A-18. Secretary Lehman has said in his recent congressional testimony that Hornets are "breaking all records for reliability and main- tainability." cWTCnt price t.a of about $30 million per plane. The unit flyaway cost of the F/A-18 is actually about S21 million in the fiscal 1984 budget. It is less expensive than any other car- rier-based tactical aircraft now being procured by the Navy. McDonnell Douglas Corporation, manufacturer of t6e F/A-18, takes sharp issue with these charges. In defense of the FI A-18, it cites the , following testimony by Navy Sec- retary Lehman · before the Senate Anned Services Committee on Feb. 7: "This unique dual mission-capable aircraft (F/A-18) adds a new dimension of flexibility to Navy and Marine Corps aviation. Not destgned to have the ranges of medium attack aircraft, it nevertheless bas excellent performance in the anack mission. Moreover, fleet experience indicates that it is now the most capable air-to-air maneuvering aircraft in the world. It is currently breaking all records for reliability and main- tainability ... " ,. ,.. 3. Anderson 1s wrong about the f / A-18 being the "most expensive tactical aircraft ever made" with a G.J. MEYER Corporate Vice President External Relations McDonnell Douglas Reds ahead in germ warfare Cable TV rated D-plorable To the Editor: The services afforded the citizens of our community by the local cablevision companies is deplorable. It is difficult to appreciate that ··customer service is Group W's number one priority"! I'm sure if the facts were known regarding Dick Watennan's statement that Group W received complaints from only about 5 percent of its customers, the 5 percent figure would more accurately reflect 50 percent or more. Ha ving called Group W several times over a two-week period to obtain servic.e, I finally asked the representative who answered the phone if l could have the name and phone number of the president of Group W. l was informed that the local manager was on vacation and no one else could give me that infor- mation. I fi9JlllY called the New York information operator, at my expense, and not only obtained the phone number and name of the president, but having talked to the presidenfs office. received local service the following day. Let me suggest that Mr. Waterman re-evaluate his service and public relations policies -or, perhaps the cablevision industry within our com- munity should be more competitive. J. WARREN JOHNSON Corona del Mar NB council flexing muscles To the Editor: It's not surprising that Dennis Holland is getting the local support that you are seemg. Apparentl} the fact that he worked for years on a pro1ect that could benefit the city does not cut any ice with the council. They are using laws to shoot him down but the fact that the will of the people is otherwise doesn't make any difference either. This is probably a ca5e of where people get a chance to show authority, they do 11. Why not give the guy a location to get fitted out on and give him the time to do it. Whatever these civil servants are guarding is the public's anyway and not theirs. If he gets chased out of Newport by the uncaring council. they will de- serve all that will come their way as the result of their actions. FRANK FARGO Newport Beach WASHINGTON -The National Security Council has delivered a report to President Reagan warning of a frightening new development in biological warfare. The secret alert is based on CIA assessments that the Soviets have developed gene-splicing techniques as ominous as the atom-splitting discoveries that led to the nuclear bomb. The startling evidence is contained in CIA reports, classified "Secret," which declare flatly that the Russians could u~ their new biotechnology to incapacitate or destroy entire popu- lations in a future conflict. In stark language, the documents warn that the United States is dangerously far behind in developing bio-tech weapons. One CIA report esti mates that the Soviets will be able to deploy these horror weapons in th ree to fi ve years. Other scientists contend that b10-tech warfare is more than a decade away. Of cqurse, the production of hann- ful biological agents for use against people. animals or crops is strictly prohibited under the 1972 Biological Weapons Conven tion, which the Soviets signed. But this has not deterred the Soviets from rushing ahead with bio-tech research. De- clares a secret CIA report: "The evidence points strongly to illegal production or storage of biological agents and weapons." The technical name for this re- search is .. recombinant DNA tech- nology." It is also refel'T'cd to as JACK AIDERSOI ~ :·gene-sP.hcing," .. genetic engioeer- mg," "biotechnology" and "synthetic biology." It bas to do with DNA; or deoxyribonucleic acid, which is the basic genetic ingredient. The Soviets have developed a process for removing segments of DNA from the cell of one species and attaching them to that of another, thereby creating a new o~sm. The military appltcation is awesome. CIA sources told my as- sociate Dale Van Atta that the Soviets will be able to reproduce mysterious human sub\tances and produce super-viruses more deadly than any known to man today. For ex.ample, the Soviets could reproduce such.Jluman substances as growth hormones, which have never been duplicated. One U.S. expert estimates the Russians may be able to reproduce brain chemicals, which send command signals to various parts of the body. The fear is that the Soviets will be able to produce them in quantity and load them into spray weapons. This bio-gas would dis- orient and destroy the human brain. Even more disturt>ing, the Soviets could use biotechnology to combine the most infectious, most virulent and most indestructible charac- teristics of disease-<:ausing organisms to form super-viruses. If it seems bard to believe that the Soviets would experiment with such civilization-destroying technology, consider this grim excerpt from a secret CIA report: "Since World War U, sporadic reports and alleptions have been received concernm~ Soviet involve- ment in offensive b1ologicaJ weapons development Sources of the aJlega- tions have ranged from low-level defectors to high-level Soviet academicians. High-level political and military leaders have also alluded to possession of biological weapons." The document describes other developments, which have been "closely observ~by the intelligence community." For example, the Russians have "acquired significant technology and equipment, built laree-sca.le biological fermentation facilities and made progress in other areas considered useful should Mos- cow decide to pursue production of biological weapons." At Sverdlovsk. the Soviets operate a biological warfare institute where an accident, involving a lethal strain of anthrax , reported!)'. caused hundreds of deaths in Apnl 1979. The ClA co ncluded in 1980 that the anthrax was being produced for biological weapons. Jack /lnderson is a syndicated columilisr. SOMETHING (LACKING) FOR EVERYONE Walter Mondale CLINTON. Iowa-Walter F. Mon- dale strides across this state Uke the Jolly Green Giant. He dominates the polls. needs two planes for his news media contingent and makes appear- ances that are better advanced than Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's at the Normandy beaches. Rooms for him materialize at unplanned stops, couches are moved in, and reporters are told, before they get off the bus for the night, what motel rooms have been assigned-and what the break- fast special will be in the morning. And yet...and yet there is some- thing missing. Call it enthusiasm, call it.emotion, call it anything you like. The Mondale campaign walks, talks and acts like that of the dominant front-runner. It just docs not feel like one. Instead of excitement, there is a sense of duty or obligation about this campaign. The operative word is "restore"-a word Mondale frequent- ly uses. lf•"Clectcd, he will .. restore .. government programs eliminated or cut by President Reagan, especially those that help the aaed and the ~r. He will "restore" the tradittonal dialogue with the Soviet Union that has resulted in every recent .President but Reagan reaching some sort of arms aarecment. He will .. restore" a sense of fairness and onoe again oblipte the government to do the right1 as well as the economical, thing. lt 1s all aood stuff and, if you are poor, a&i'!J or out of work. wonderful to hear. But it makes Mondale the candidate of tbe recent past, specifi- RICHARD COHEN cally of the Carter adminstration, a kind of monarch in exile, ·waiting for the restoration. And it pits him, should he win the Democratic nomination, against Re- agan, the candidate of the nostalgic past, a man who cites his all-but-imaginary hometown of Dixon, Ill.. as a model for America-a movie-set town of virtue and neigh- borliness whose reality most Ameri- cans fled. This is what Reagan did, choosing Pacific Palisades and Rodeo Drive over Dixon and Main Street. No matter. In a contest, the nostalgic past, which is anything you want it to be, beats the recent past, which is worse in memory than in reality. This must have occurred to Mon- dale and his staff. So maybe this is just bis strategy for the primaries, an attempt to unify the Democratic Party around the ideals of the recent past before he leads it on to something new and bold. The trouble is that boldness is not a Mondale attribute. On Vietnam, for instance, Mon- dale was late in opposing the war. He now says that's the chief regret of his public career. But he was also among the last of the Democratic candidates to call for a Marine withdrawal from Beirut, something he says he docs not regret. When it came to the Marines, M~ndale says, _there were so many things to consider. Because of bis experience, his knowledge, he secs many trees-maybe more than the other Democratic candidates. What he sometimes can not sec is the forest. So the Iowa campaign is one of trees. For organized labor, Mondale offers loyalty and nary a hint of disagreement. For the teachers, he has an education program. For the elderly, he vows that Social Security and Medicare shall remain inviolate. And for the fanners, he promises that once again the world will be their market. Only once, when Mondale told how the women's movement had enabled his wife, Joan. to "grow and blossom," did he seem to speak from the gut-and that, for many who heard him, is where the remark was re- ceived. Other than that, though, the Mon- dale campaign isa trough from which a voter can feed. There is something here for. everybody-something good, something necessary. But there is something missjng, too, and you can see it in the faces of the eeople who come to sec Mondale. They walk away like shoppers in a supermarket. They have bought the essential. For the vision, they will have to go somewhere else. Richard Cohen is a syndiCAtcd columnist. Unlucky surfer's accident gave drink its name Questjon arises as to the origin of Califom1asurfer named Harvey tosta that mixed dnnk known as the tournament. so proceeded strai&ht- Harvey Wallbanger. In the 1960s. a away to Pancho's Bar in Manhattan ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H.L. Schwertz Ill Pullltt- Chaay Dow•••br lOllOt anct .-..,,,..,, Ill~~~ Lerry O. lpur• Ma~"9 EOtlOt Beach to con.sole himseJf uncunnina-ly with several scrvinp or a conooc- t1on that caused him upon exit to crash into a wall. Or so socs the iale. How many times can a woman ellpttt to fa1 I 1n love? The statisticians arc pinnin& Clciwn the •Yef'llCS Prett)' well these days. The~ say '4.8 tima •s now t;r-pical of the Amcncan femaJe. You call yourtdf culturcd? Neither do f Just found out the Barbtt of Seville was a woman. J Q. Quick. what did frontiersman Wild Sill Hickok, sinter Al Jolson and comedian Buster Keaton have in common? A. They died playina cards. Q. ls tua"'°f-waran Olympic Games event? A. Not anymOR. W11 once. But it aot tossed out aJol\I with polo and CfOqllCt. Q. Why is a i mall piano called a ~· spanct "'? A. ~uac the fiM or ame was I I I J I built b~ a I Sth century Venetian named Giovanni Spinetti. . Our Love and War man has a volumino-.s file labeled "Differcnus between Maile and F~ale." One of lhe it.ems tbtrein notes it was Oretet, not Han.el, who pushed the witch into the o~n. I( you~ to be shy.you may have anhcrited the lfllt. Or to rtpOrt rtttarehers now Gena pus on timidity. they say. LM. BOYd ;s a ayndicartd rotumnis~ J . WAR.REM JOJUfSON Corona clel Mar PAT BucllAIAll Gay rights·: Hot issue of the '80s Clashes brewing over laws that co~ify 'respect' WASHING TON -Should homosexuals be admitted to VMI, and the Citadel? To West Point and Annapolis? Should the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps henceforth be pro hi bi ted by federal law from sever- ing from ~ctive duty lesbians and gays? Should avowed homosexuals have a federally guaranteed right to work in day care centers, to teach in public schools? Should landlords who refuse to rent to gay couples, and employers who refuse to hire homosexuats, be subject to federal prosecution? The Democratic Party's answer to all these questions is yes. lfJohn Glenn, almost alone among the Democratic candidates, dissents, Walter Mondale, the probable nomi- nee, docs not. "Gay rifhts is no longer a debatable issue withm the Demo- cratic Party," says Ann Lewis of the Democratic National Committee. Maybe not, Ann. But it is going to be for the 1980s the same social dynamite busing was for the early 1970s; and it could do for Walter Mondale what busing did for George McGovern. What leads to this observation is an event trus week in a bedroom suburb ofWashington, D.C. Whenever a list of the most affluent counties in the United States is drawn up, invariably, Mon~omeryCounty, Md. is nearthe top. Rich, highly educated, socially progressive, Mont- gomery County customarily votes Democratic. When it goes R~ publican, it produces your basic garden variety liberal like Mac Mathias. I ts public schools are among the highest rated in the nation: it boasts as many country clubs as any county in America. Well, the other day, the Montgom- ery County Council passed, with little advance notice, a ~y rights ordi· nance -making it 11lcgal for landlords and employers to refuse to rent to, or hire, homosexuals. From ~ction at the local radio stations, a firestorm is building which, ifthe county ex- ecutive signs the bill, is likely to lead to a referendum on the bill-and its probable repeal -in one of the more liberal counties in the United States. Does this suggest Montgomery County. Md. has become, suddenly, a hotbed ofbigotry1 Of course not. What it demon- strates is that the worst enemy homosexuals have in American so- ciety is the arrogance, effrontery and stupidity of the national gay rights movement. Quite simply, in ths D.C. com- munity, there1snowidespreaddis- criminatioo against homosexuals. While blacks here were still relegated to aspiring. at best; to being instruc- tors at Fiske University, homosex- uals were at the pinnacle of their professions-education, govern- ment, politics, diplomacy, law, jo urnalism, the arts. The per capita income ofhomosexuals in this metro- politan area is among the highest. If there has been any systemallc harass- mentor widespread injustice visited oflate upon homosexuals in Mont- gomery County, it would have been blanketed by the Washington press. What this gay riJhts bill amounts to. then. is not a request for.tolerance, but a demand upon Montaomery Countythat the ideoloaical p05ition of the National Gay RiabtsAlliance - that homosexuals livi04 toae\bcrare the morJl ~utl of mamed couples - be codified en county Jaw. And any employer or landlord who dares to treat homosexuals otherwise iu bigot, to be punished and fined. for years, homosexuals who con- gregated together demanded that they cease beina the victimsofJ)Olice harassment, that they be protected from thugish anault. The larser community, lona.,o. conceded the point.Lcf\atooe,boW6ver, the homosexualure still un~ - bcc::ause their little communiuesare denied the rec<>ll\ition and public •rd routinely accorded blacks. H1Jpanics, etc. But ~nit Ion and respect fo~ th~ir"li,festyle" is not ~methina-in this sociall¥ conservau ve, and still larJtlyChnstian, country-any law is so•na to be able toaive. By demand· •n& it. out-of.thc-cl0te1 hom0texuaJ1 are picki~a fiaht with American society which they arc ~in& to loac. In the process, they may just take down the tubes with them the Democratic Party and their new· found friend and champion, Walter F.Mondalt. Patrick Buclwian ;$ • •yndicalid columnm. 'I I • ----~---- Exercise given new dimension Newport company finds peers for video aerobics By JAMIE SEELEY A newly formed Newport Beach company, Dimensions in Fitness, is promoting both health and sleek body lines in an innovative and thoroughly researched exercise regime featuring a video exercise library. These tapes, however, stretch far beyond most exercise videos. "Our tapes have all been medically endorsed," said Sharon Wood, presi- dent of the company. "Every exercise was researched and thoroughly thought out." The video tapes were reviewed by Konstantin Pavlou, Sc.D. of Nutri- t1onal Management Inc. m Boston, Mass. and a team of six physioloajsts and physical therapists. All are specialists in obesity. "There is nothing like this on the market .and we're excited to have something that aJlows people to work out properly," Wood said. "We arc trying to really promote a sound, wholesome program." f or instance, these exercise tapes arc more tapered to the averaae person. "You don't see just a bunch of beJlutiful people standing around," said Wood. "We cast every part for the individual who is exerc1s1n .. " There arc 15 characters ranJPna in age from 25 to 75 in the aerobic taP._C. "A middle-aged man, a housewtfe, a boxer, a female and a male dancer and a nerd who resembles the man at the beach who always gets sand kicked in his face arc some of the characters exercising in the tape," INFECTION UP . It'• bed enough to have to be ln a holpfttil. but to get __, llcker while ttw• ll an aH-too-frequ.nt fate..,... <Mys. Chande9 of acquiring .an JnfecUon In the holpttal .. now a perc1nt to a '* c.nt. The conventional explMatlon It that holplt•. by ~ antlblotlOI With abandon, breed the fttt..t ~· But In HIMa •In hMlth, MonbWl'e Dr. Cert W. Nohr ~.­ ft stiff talc• two to tango: a.cterta can•t get WKy fat wtth a body that Q8n ~d ttMff llgalnat mvU<>n. Trouble ii, Nohr ftndl, hoepitelzed patients who have und«VOM .. gery CM't defend t~ welt; they .... not ~able. HllatudlMlhowtheydon't fMkeact.quete lrrtlbodlel 11'1 *POnM to Mcterta. ' And that =a better way to ttoht PQ9t-op Infection tt;en wfth :': that hardier bugs ... We're getting ctoee to u. llinft In 4'Cttwn111 or antibiotics," Nohr eays. "W• need to do more to ltlmullt• (a peraon'a) own deNnlel agamst b9ctef1a.'' Sister Cities 1 group guests at luncheon Dignitaries from Anjo tour Huntington Beach By ANN CONWAY Deir "" C:. I $ •1 Rt In keeping with their sister-city arrangement with Anjo, Japan, Huntington Beach SisterCityCommittee Wood said. "You faJI in love with them all. "We spent three days auditionina 125 people to fill I 5 paru with professional actors and actresses which is another unique feature of these tapes." There arc 70 exercises on the 56-minutc aerobic tape includina warm-ups, fast stretches and a full 12 minutes of aerobics incorporated with cali sthenics, isometric arm ex- ercises and floor exercises. The obesity tape, another selection in the company's library, is also receiving a lot of attention according to Wood. "Exercises for the obese have to be medically sound and each exercise has to be throughly rescan:bed which ours are," she said. Wood, who created the exercises later researched by Pavlou. formerly taught aerobic classes at Promontory Point in Newpon Beach. When she told some of her students she was being relocated, they asked her if would put her program on tape. "When we went to have the class taped, the video company suggested that we market il That was 10 months ago and that's how it all began," she said. Wood, a charter member of the lnternatjonal Dance Exercise As- sociation, has also created exercise programs for employees of Health Care Management, a company that owns and operates hospitals through- out the state. . The exercise videos will be avail- able in both Beta and VHS at an estimated cost of$60 per tape. Tapes on obesity and aerobics will be premiered at 12:30 p.m. Friday at the Irvine Marriott. Dimensions in Fitness is producing three other tapes: one for executive stress, another for geriatrics and a beginner session. members (beaded by Larry Kram) and city and state Deir,...,...... 11r u. ...,._ dignitaries hosted Assemblyman Masayuki Sugiura and Jeri Chenelle and Patricia Dapku admire his political entourage at a recent luncheon at the · key to the city given to Japane.e Tialton. Huntington Beach lnn. The outstanding success of the Sister City Committee that fosters cultural exchanges with private funding prompted Sugiura to visit with city and state officials to su~est a sister city-type of alliance between the stateofCahfornia and Sugiura's prefecture-Aichi county in Anjo. After the business proposal was presented in City Council chambers (accompanied by dozens of ttome-baked chocolate chip and oatmeal cookies and t!a) the group of more than l 00 boarded buses to \Our the waterways of Huntington Harbour, the oil fields, the Bolsa Chica bird sanctuary, the central library and the city's industrial park and civic center. Ourina the luncheon, Ke .. o Olaea, the sister-city interpreter, narrated an East-meets-West fashion show. Japancse..influenced gowns and local. beachwear were modeled by oommittee members. At the conclusion of the luncheon, Huntington Beach Mayor Jack KeUy presented theJapanesc vi$itors with vials of sand from city beaches, proclaimin~ .. the same waten wash our sands and those of Japan,' sipifying the friendship which exists between the two 90unuics. Shella Plotkin, left, •oee o•er p~ notee H . • • ~ . . withPaalette II. C~ene abowcciordlDator, . The untmgton Beach H1stoncal Society bestowed before d.laplay of -m ·WMt fuldona. 1ucovetcd "Order of the Newland Rose" on Betty I.euedy, chainnan of the trustees for the Newland House (the city's tum-of-the-century pride and joy) and A.lualMlrla Bat, dedicated society member, at a Sunday tea. Lblda Bren, past president of the society, and Fru81U.Ui presented the pink rose-embellished l)laques durina the 11th annual tea In the community room at Prosressive Savlnas and Loan. Bqinnina in April, the society will have its own community room when "the barn" (an all-purpose buildfoa built by the city on the Newland property) wtll o9(n for public use. ••• Show biz troupers rchearsina tirelessly for•• A Hot Tame in the Old Town Toniaht.•• this year's Huntin1ton Harbour Yacht Club variety show, have been gener- ously nourished by cast membcnMenb andhrye s ..... EneraY·ladcn hot fudp sundaes and taco salads have become "the break everyone hunaen for0 on rchearal niabts for the toe-tappins, finacr·snappmg cast which includcsJeaaJt Bar11ett, W Barea,JM.I MJIJer, Old and Lola Beat•. Manlaand&Hrt Bela.er, Frin and P11llM Bickel, Fruk and v1r1tala 811ttl1a, Ku and Mary l•ICM, Sally FtaCoe (co-producer with Oeerlla !Wlla), Leounl and DorotQ' Lady. ClDdy Hanf ... Dort .. J llalpla•. Joyce Sakgen and Joe and OlqerWnt,, Showumc is8:30p.m. preceded bycocktallsat 7m thcclubhouseat3821 Warner. Huntinaton Buch, on Feb. 25-26, 29 and Marth 2-3 Forttckcts.catl Dr. Bob Uellerat846-1378, , Energy theozy revised Muscle bulger gets attention LOS ANGELES (AP)-Tbe 111De chemical that makes mu.._, butae could help thOle with llidlleJ. liver and other diaeues. ~ say. The chemical iso 't sieriodl. but creatine, a natural 1ubs&a9Ce produced by the liver and kidneys. It is released in muscle tissue d..._ muscle contraction -such u d .... exercise. A new theory announced 1u& week by two Univenity of Southern ()di.. fomia researchers linb crcatine Wtdl the way cells set tneflY. Until now, scientists believed crcatinc played only a minor role ill eDCfJY aeacration in mutele ~ said Dr. Samuel Denman, cbaimMD of USC's department of pbanna. cology, who devcJ~ the theory. But bis research indic:a&es crcatine -combinina with . pbospboru to form creatine phosphate -i1 die main eneray-transfer compound ju cells. Beuman said the crcatine ~ pbate acts as a kind of shuttle bet1WleD muscle fiben and structura inside cells that produce energy. When a muscle contracts. creatine phosphate is consumed by me cdl. · The creatine that is left reacts wdb enzymes that are bound \0 the enerJY·producina structures, te11iJia them to make more en~. The repetition of these intenctioal keeps the cells .. fired up," the ~ ician said. Sharon Wood la prealdent of Dtmenelona in Fttneae wblch prodacee medically endoned tapea on obeelty conection and aeroblca that 8tretch beyond moet Tldeo aercl.Me. But when the shuttle erocesa d&- teriora&es because of diseue, t.be system pows sJ~sb. Studies by Olris Carpenter, a p-aduate student. use the theory \0 explain why muscles J.!O"' larFr' with ellercite, Bellman said. PRIMER ON FATS .. When the shuttle is wortina property, aercise stimulates C9el'I)' ~uoa.. .. BetuMn said. "£ncrlJ IS needed for protein synthesis. SO, when you aeneratc a lot of energy, Y.OU make a lot of protein, which builds muscle." Ever wonder what saturated fats are saturated with? Which fQOds have the most cholesterol? Herc's a guide: Cholesterol belongs to the stcrol group of fats, a different class from the saturated and unsaturated fats. It's valuable in mwng ceU membranes, sex hormones, vitamin D and the bile salts used in digestion. On the down side it clogs coronary aneries. Chqtesterol-rich foods include dairy products, ca yolks and organ meats. such as liver. kidneys, brains and sweetbreads. Bessman said the theory is provid- ing insiabts into muscular dystrophy and other diseases. .. The theory doesn't give us cures, but it tells us what inves ... tive directions to take," Bessman said. The other fats we're conccrned with fall into two major classes: the"ba.d" saturated fats and the "good" unsaturated fats. Both lcinds off at insulate and cushion the body and provide energy reserves. In general, saturated fats arc solid fats from animal products: butter, lard, the marbling in a steak. Unsaturated fats are mainly liquid vegetable oils, such as safflower, sunflower. corn and soy. Dr. Nachman Brautbar, a USC kidney specialist. said the theory disputes the idea that kidney diseue sufferers become weak simply be- cause they don't eat wcU. Both fats arc chains of carbon atoms strung with hydrogen atoms. The term saturated means the carbon chain carries all the hydrogen it can handle; polyunsaturated means there's room for at least four more hydrogens. Margarine is made by bubbling hydrogen through unsaturated vegetable oil to saturate and solidify it; the harder the margannc (stick vs. soft), the more saturated 1t is. Bessman said the real problem appears to be the failure of the mutele cells to pick up creatine from the bloodstream. Brautbar said limited research in Eu.rope indicates that a metabolite of Vitamin D may help correct me problem. And now one more hurdle. Cholestcrol 1s transported through the body by two major groups of proteins. The •·bad" low-density lipoprotcins (LDLs) bear a heavy burden of cholesterol. some of it destined for coronary anenes. LDLs arc believed to be major factors in heart disease. He said the muscle weakness seen in alcoholics also appears crcatine-rclatcd. Most scientists consider high-density lipoprotcins (HDLs) the "good" cholesterol carriers. They carry the fat from the cells and tissues to the liver which gets rid of it. Some evidence suggests HDLs are linked to a lowered heart-attack risk. "Tbe answer to improving muscle function is not diet.·· said Bcssman. who is also a professor of nutrition. "That kind of thinking is nonseote. Full-time mother's job description disappears Use your free time wisely, project self into future There is no one in our soc1ery who works harder than the full-time mother of two pre-school children -other than the mother of three pre-schoolers. Mot hers are on call 24 hours a day just like firemen. Firemen. however. get extended periods of time off to recoup. l.1111 - hn- Just as apple pie has become suspect, full-time mother- hood long thou&ht of as a key fo undation of Amcncan Society is now being challenged as a hcaJth y acuv1ty for •••••••ilill••• adult women. The JOb descnpt1on of the full-time mother of young children plac~ her ma limited environment. The federal Oepanment of Labor's Dictionary of Occupatiooal Titles ranks her status as the lowest amona 22.000occupebons. I don't k.now which comes first. but the end result a.s th11 a mother who~ ~mary JOb is 1n her homc•oftco develops a low 1elf •mace and may have trouble establishing new aoaJs. The problem 1s that even 1n these so-called ''ti~raltd umes" where the dcfin1uon of mothethood has prnumably chanted. the nttd ror mothcnna ttm11ns ~ same. Mothers tend to become too bu y to think abc:>ul thcmselvc To tc<:OID•tc personal adult need within the framework of motherhood IS, at best, d1ffiC\llt. We•vc been trained by our own mothcrsa.nd their Mstm tobchcvctbat children hould oome first and that person~ nttd can and hould wait. But in p1tc of the fact that I am an advocate of equal P3) for equal workJ equal opponun1ty 1n education and business and of aboulder-to-sbouldcr marriaees. I do llOI believe in martyrdom. Women who pow hair oo tbc:ir chest do not teem very attractive to me. Remember that, at its best. motherhood is a job which self-destnJru. How well we've done under most circum- stances is jlJdsed by bow independently our children can function after 18 or 20 years of parcntina. lfwe've done a good job, many of us who havefhad our children in our early 20s can expect to be vinually unemployed in our late 30s or early 40s. Predictable as this may seem, too many youna ~ hesitate to plan ahead; they put off thinking about their own future to another day. and blame their procrastination on current parcntaJ respons1bihtics. They att ma~ a mistake. Those pnvtlqed women who have the ability aad have chosen to raise their own children on a full·time blat alw ha'1e an obliptron ta themactves. The joy ol anucipeuon of a Iona life carriC$ with it the rcsponsi"bilit) for a sound life plan. If you area full-urne molbcrofa ~ ortchool aaech\Jd. • tay involved m some interntina penonaJ Kt.ivtty. • ttcnd to personal aroomins. . • K«p work skills alJve by rcadina ~ journals or through appropnatc voluntttr WOT\. •Tune 1n lO f\atu~ opponunity. wa\Cb bo o\hcr pcop~ use crative enc11Y or earn a hv1ns. . •Read the ~per includiQI the cLusifted tcCllOla. •Take a class. • • 1...eam a new sktll. • lnsisi oo and ~Y di.1crctiOMr) ume. •Allow yoW'ICtr to fa.nt.asizt to project \iftluwo1r1il the futurt. •Tran late tbcte fan into workable pb. Dr. IJl&ii is 1 psycholofj1t and ~c:ou11 lf1 • Coron• dcl Mar. Address an. quesdom co U.. ,Plt,D, c/o Dally Pilot. P.O.~ 1$60. COiii Maa ·~f!lt -€allers angry, but not at the dispatchers Diabetes knows no age limitation Qucshons about diabetes arc nnswcrc .. '<i b\ M Anhur Charles M.D .. Ph.D. associate profcuor. Oei)anmcnts of Mediane and Physiology. UC lrvme College of Medicine. DEAR ANN LANDERS· You have helped a lot of pcopkthro~h the years. Now~ 111 you help us'? We are the folks who handle the phones for the auto clubs. A11 lAIDEIS The langua$e we ha' e to listen to 1s unbelievable. Everybody who calls is mad -a~ 1fi1\ourfoult. I a~k you. Ann, are we to blame if people do dumb thinJS. such as neglecri~thcirautosso the' breakdov.n runnangoutofgasorlock.ingtbekeys inside? \\ l. an: ha pp' to send somrone to rescue them and we tt:ll them !>o in a pll'a~nt. reassunng wa) So why are the callers so abus1' e'' \\ h~ do the) )ell at us? It seems no one e' era!I~) pol1td) 1lv.c will send the truck. They all scream and u!>e profane language Pica~ pnnt th1)complamt. l have never seen a leucr on this problem in all the )ears I ha' e been reading your column -A DISP.\ TCHER IN UPSTATE. N. Y. DEAR DISPATCHER: Tlao1e callers wlao ue aba1Jve Q. Several •f my relaUv~ laave dlabetes. Wbat are my ~ of 1esttq t•e dl1tase? W'at are ~e ,iraratn1 dpt? A. Diabetes is genetically based. Therefore. 1f the d!sease runs in your family, your chances of gelling diabetes arc greater than for individuals without n family hi~tOI)' of the disorder. Wamina signs include increased ~nna~on, heavy thirst and appetite, and susccptibilhy to lnfectton. lfthe symptoms are atlo~ to persist, coma and death can result. Diabetes can appear at any age, and even strike people with <10 clear family history of the problem. It's therefore best .to have a. dia.betes c~eclc as pan of a rqular yearly medical eum1nat1on. This 1s true for ch ildren as well as adults. Q. Bow seriou It diabetes? Wllat caases ll? II dlere a eve? A. Diabetes 1s an extremely senous illness. with 10 to 1.S m1lhon victjms in the Unlled States. It ts the third leading cause of discase--relatcd deaths in the nation, behind only cancer and hean disease. It is also the leac:ta.n& cause of bhndncss, kidney failure and amputation of the lowcrhmbs. Not • however. lbat dia~tic coma is quite preven- table and now occurs rarely. There are two major forms of the disease. Type I. which affiicts I 0 to I .S percent of all sufferers, occurs when the pancreas fails to produce sufficient amounts of the hormone insulin. Type II. which aocounts for about 8.S to 90 per cent of all c.ascs. occurs when the insulin that is produced does not get into the blood stream and/or fails to function r.roperly. I nsu in 1s the m"or hormone responsible for helping the body store fuel in tbe form of fat, protein and carborhydrate. When not enough hormone is produced .. or when that which is produced docs nQ\ work as intended. .. broken-down products of these foodstuffs begin to build up m the body. Afl~r reaching high levels, they arc flushed out I'>) the kidneys. Testing the unne for high levels of sugar is a simpk way to determine iflhis diabetes related flushing process is taking pla~. Well recognized chronic complications of dlabetes - which beg.in to occur af\erfive to I 0 years with the disorder -include problems wtth the cy~. ktdneys and nervei lo fact. the d1 ase can afl'e<t v1nually C'very oraan in the body. A~ yet, there 1s no cure for d1a~tes. Mtny patients can be treated with dietary chanacs or oral mcdiCAt1ons. Since the 1920s, doctors have ~led the very hiah blood supr problems by havma victims injcd themselves d1uly with insulin. Insulin injection helps control sucb symptoms as increased urination. thirs1. af)petitc and infection SUSG'ep- t1b11ity, but does not prevent the chronic complications from developing into serious tllncs) 15 to 2-0 years down the road. The reason msulin treatment has ~n fCRCrally unsuce sful is becauMe the body's insulin requirements change constantly. Recently. ~·vc developed the technology for patients to monitor their blood glucose levels at home and inject themselves two or three times a day with insuJin amounts more 1n line with what their bodies actually require. Although the long-tenn affects of such procedures have yet to be full} documented, studies with pregnant diabetic patients 1nd1ca1e the new methods can reduce infant deaths to levels observed in non-diabetic mothers. language aren't mad at you. Tbey are mad a t U.em1elves. You are the first person lbey talk to after U.e car breaks down or they discover lbey've done someUalq stupid. This makes you tbe haodlest target for all that stored-up rage. Remember the old French proverb, "To undentand all is to forgive all." Novel plot based on life with teeD.-agers DEAR ANN LANDERS: Mv husbandand I are professwnals "'ho cam a decent living. He doesn't drink, !>mokl', gamble or chase women. He 1s helpful at home and goes to church regular!) We have all the trappings of suclC\S. Fncnds !>a) I am lucky to have such a fine husband. bur he 1s dm mg me crazy. The man 1s a spendthnft who insists on handling our linannal affairs. A.t th1s moment he has brought us to the bnn~ ofbankruptc) He "'as always a spendaholic, but the death of a dear fnt:nd last )ear has exacerbated the ~1tuat1on He nov. must ha' e C' Cl) thing IMMEDl- .\ TEL Y We ha' e had so man) fights about his ridiculous purchasc<o that 10 ma1nta1n a semblance of peace in our home mo ne' i-; rarel) discussed. Th1sdoes not help matters at ali. because now I have no idea what new bills "'111 show up at the beginning of the month. He sees nothing wrong with hts behavior and refuses to accept counseling. I have promised our teen-age children that l Y.on't do an) thing rash until they have completed college But m) resentment is growing by leaps and bounds and each da) I feel more like a trapped animaJ. As television -------------viewers, there arc few things anymore that make our blood run cold and cause the hairs on our arms to frost over. The following story will do it. A houscw1 f e and E111 Bo11Ec1 mother from Maryland walked into her home with her two young dauihters and within seconds the door she entered closed again. She thoudl it was the wmd. As she viewed a large sharp knife on the table she thought she must have left it out and chalked 1t up to forgetfulness. As she walked down the hall, she grew angry because obviously her son had thrown a large candle and put a hole in the wall. ··Here dog. come on girl," she caJlcd. No dog appeared. (She was later found cowering behind the toilet bowl.) Then she noticed her jewelry box was missing. Finally. 1t hit her. They had been robbed. Now, here comes the bad pan. "I got over the burglar and the police seeing our unmade beds.'' she wrote. "I lived with them checking for fingerpnnts on slightly dusty furniture. Even the hole an the wall was easily repaired. But the thing I Will never get over 1s the time 11 took me to convince the officers that the children's rooms were not ransacked. They kept telling me that the 111)urance company would come in and put the rooms bad. 111 order. It was tempting. but I just couldn't lie. They always looked like that!" What woman readtng this account has not had nightmares about dying and having the neighbors come in and sec her corroded oven and dust balls so big they look hke they've been fed? I've known women who have put off their hysterectomies until their wax build·up was under control. It reminds me of a story told to me by a Norwegian captain of a cruise ship on which I was traveling.. He sajd he came from a small seapon an Norway that was a haven for a fleet of warships dunng World War II. It was an abso)ute mess. A real eyesore. Somehow. there was never time to restore order to it. One night they decoded a message from the enemy giving orders to bomb it. The reply from the reconnaissance plane was ... h's already been h11!" f have plans for one of 1he scanest novels ever 10 hit the literal) world. It's the story of a woman with three recn-agers who is trying to sell her house. The night after the pany for 300 half <Tazed football fans. the rcaftor calls to bring by the only re.al prospect m the country wbocan get a loan. Will she get the toilet paper off the shrubbery in time? Will she get the tire marks off the entryway wallpaper'> Will she rescue the dog from the TV antenna~ Eat your hean out. Stephen l{jng! How can I protect myself from the inevitable? Is there a ""ayout ofth1s mess? Thanks for being there to unload on -even 1f you have no sotut1on. -PANICKED IN NYC DEAR NYC: Your husband ls a compablve hayer. This is an illness in the same league wttb alcolaollsm. NEWPROCEDURECAPSTOOTHPROBLEM See an attorney about protecting yoarseU legally from bis lrraUonalbebavlor. A11011kyoarbankerabo11ta Can the si mple patching co m fort known as only way to save the tooth But New York City den- flnanclalcounselortowllom YOUcugoforadvtce. Yod of a deeply drilled tooth, root-canal work? Dentists once the pulp was even tist Gary Soldati says that needtolulowhowcoprotectyourlacomeudyoara11et1 called pulp capping. avoid have been debating the partiallyexposedwasaroot one simple additive, the ifyoulotendto contlnuetollvewltbtbJsman. thedifficult and costJydis-quesuon for close to SO canal. Total exposure antibioticclindamycin.as· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ year~ usually meant the root's sures 90 pe~nt succe~ Depending on which death. with capping. The idea DON'T MISS OUR WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY FEBRUARY 2!111 DRASTIC REDUCTIONS SUPER BARGAINS -LADIES I MENS SPORTSWEAR -LINGERIE -DRESSES -ROBES BLOUSES -SKIRTS -PANTS -JACKETS and MORE [!ac11 OF BLOUSES "=" l400o 11w 14• I ! CLOIE·OUT PLAY lllOEI 11"1 CREDIT CARDS Visa · MasterCard -American Express C arte Blanche -Diners Whl'' .. HarClf.11 Metts N"fl·•"I Blvd 548·1212 Now At Our New dub lrn North ~llywood Slnce 1949 DEPARTMENT STORE HOURS 9:30·6:00 Closed Sund~ys 1816 NEWPORT Bl VO . COST A MESA dentist you ask. pulp cap-Then. in lhe 1930s. den· hasn't caught on widel}. ping is either rarely effcc-tists started capping ex· Those who try 1L says u vt in saving a deeply posed pulp with a Soldati. swear by 11. but decayed tooth or so effcc-"chemical cautcry" paste many dentists don't even uve that 1t may make a root called calcium hydroxide. know about it. canal unnecessary. Who's The hope was that 1t would Some endodonttsts, who nght? · kill bacteria and stimulate specialize in root-canal The question arises when growth of a protective den· work. are largely skeptical a tooth is so far gone that tin covcnng. On top of the of pulp capping. But Dr. dentists have to drill down paste they deposited a tern· Harold Stanley. chairman to the last layer of dentin porary filling. and waited. of the oral medtcinedcpan· cells covering the tooth·s The approach has worked. ment at the University ol root. or pulp, to excavate but how often and when is Florida. points to his own the decay. Time was. the still debated. study as proof that pulp ~,~!!~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~!!'~ c.apping will work -provided the dentist picks a tooth with enough vitality (' •1 l 1~ Featured left in iL ' J Guest Sceaker You may be a candidate / (I ~)t<1 (_pp l'~ DR. GER~ G. (JEIRY) JAMPOLSKY ~C:vepu~~y c~pit~~~f J: D 'Iii .. C.. " p ..a. gressivc symptoms: Guest Speakers: r. I a• 11trry 11.tr -A tooth is sensitive to Rew. Pew Bassett hot or cold. February 25, 1984 10 A .M.-6 P.M. when~~~ ~~'aat~~i{'w~~~ Reg istrat ion 9:00 AM spoon. Community Church by the Bay -You get a spon- 148 E. 22nd St. Coat• Meu, CA. 92627 LIMITED SEATING Donation $50.00 smgle. $90.00 couple "Qckets ' (tax-deductible) Info cal (714) 645·7650 (213) 837·63&5 I taneous toothache. -Biting produces a RUFFELL' U'HOLSTllY, INC. ............ -4 .... 1922 HARBOR Bl VO COSTA MESA -.S•8 1156 W e 've started from the ground up. And now our new North Hollywood Club is really toking shape Come see it all for yourself. Over 40,000 square feet of magnificent health club. including the latest. high· efficiency exercise equipment. Plus a sky platform exercise center and jogging track. The aquatics features on Olympic-style pool. hot hydro-massage whirlpool. and Scandinavian cold dip pool. Also on advanced training center plus computerized Ufe- cycles: racquetball courts. sauna and steam rooms. With the best aerobic and anaerobic recreoflon and relaxation Get your pre-opening Charter Memberships today. Stop by now for o preview showing of the new Holiday Spa Health Club In North Hollywood And toke a good look ot the shope of the new standard of excellence '11fi Holiday Spa Health Club for Men and Women NORTH HOLLYWOOD 13069 Victory Boulevard. 818·506-4208 (7 blocks west of Hollywood Frwy In the Victory Plaza ot Ethel) I I I I centraltzed pain. Act. Any delay is a lurch toward a root canal dig. Terror &oea trana- aUantic When syph1hs was the ma.ior venereal disease to fear, national anxieties tended to name 11 for the enemy. The French called 1t the English Disease. while their n vals the Eng- lish insisted tt was the French Disease. It ravaged both countnes from 1600 101900. These days. with sexual- ly transmitted diseases on the rampage again and t:conom1c and political concerns bem$ what they are. Europe 1s branding them unwelcome Ameri- can imports. But the most contagious element ap- pears to be hystena. Last summer. Libera· tion, the powerful French daily. charged that a maJOr French drug firm. the In· stitut Pasteur Production (IPP). had used blood plasma from ga) Amencan donors m manufacturing hepat1t1s-B vaccine. Fol· lowing the front-page ban- ner .. IPP Producuon: Ill· ness of the Gay Cancer." the paper declared. "Scien- tists believe AIDS ts trans- mitted by blood trans~ fusions." Belgium de· manded that I PP sell Belgians vaccines made only from Belgian plasma. "The v1ct1ms of AIDS arc exclusively men, young and gay." conttnucd Liberation. Yet the facts are different m Europe. Of a total of 40 known AIDS victim" in Belgium. 16 642·5678 involve women. of 12 people known to have died of AIDS there. 11 were heterosexual Africans. Kaposi's sarcoma, a cancer that is a frequent feature of the AIDS syndrome, has long been known to occur naturally in some parts of Afnca. How the Belgian AIDS cases developed remains a mystery. but that's no com- fon to the French. Their Quot1dien de Paris recently reminded them that France·s 70 known AIDS cases make it "the Eur~ pean capital" of the dis- ease. Letter to the editor "I tried your 'Self·Help Kit for Smokers.' almost made it. but backslid. Help." -Charles Hodge, Princeton. N.J. Editor's note: C all Smokenders. 8()()...828-4357; classes in all c ities; full course S295-$450. Or: Amencan Lung Associa- tion; six sessions in four weeks cost $35 to S40; call )'Our local office. American Cancer So- ciety; call your local office to find out abQut their ..Fresh Start" programs: free or token charge. Seventh Day Adventist teams, through local churches: free or $25. And check your local Yellow Pages under "Smokers' Information .. for hypnotherapists and other centers in your area. American Health Maga- tine Put o few words io work /OT you in the 8'11.Pilll ' Deaclly •traale INTERMIS SI ON -----... Nostalgic 'Birdie' at Sadd.lebac When "Bye Bye Birdie" first tut the Broadway s,tage in the "cry early S1xuts, 1t was oncoflhcmost topical mu iCJtlsor •be market -inspired by the m:ent drafiing of one Elv11 Presley into the Atmed Force$, an cnnt that created shoclc waves throu&hout America's teen-aic popula<=e". Now Wlth both Elvt and the draft no lonscr Wlth us. "Birdie". is sometbina of a museum piece, a collector's item revived infrequently as a nostalgic . tribute to an earHcr, more innocent era. It's still entenainina. to be sure, but its fascination (Hkt the recent anniversary of the Beatles' invasion) is more of a trivial nature. At Saddleback Colle~. where local au- diences arc enjoyina the first local revival of "Birdie" m two dee.des. a cast of students mostly unborn when the show played Broad· way puts on an eneraetic production under the direction ofBrian DonO&hue. It's hardly their fault that the vehicle itsel f is runoinJ with the fuel gauge touchinaempty after a scintillating first act. Toi TITUS boss/boyfnend somewhat heavy oo I.ht 111- decisive nerd aspect of the character, 1mpress-i~a in his "Put on A Happy Face0 number. As his overpossess1ve mother, Deborah Pearl speaks softly and carries a bi& schuck iJJ~ of the theater's most stereotyped parts. f.O Do .. Terry Newman and Lauttoee aa... Jhate the baton for &be ttudmt Ofdanul. wtiilt W1Jlyttun&oon.'1frljntlnary~ ~ ~e their pul'pOef ~Y• Don't look'foir the Utk 10ft1 in .. .,. aye 81tdk" -lMl WU~ _/Of &be ,..,Ylt venion. One more week.end rmWDI, ~ day tbl"OUJ,b Siturday at I p.m. aNt ..,._at 3 p.m. on the maia ~ of the Saddld!ilQ campus in Mia ion V~Jo. Call U l-46'6 for tjcket information BACK.STAGE-Soon Willianu1on, I local ctor lHt seen 11 Sty Mutcnoa in Hunt· ington Beach's "Ouyt and Qolll." has tt- olaced Fred Lehne for I.ht doli1t1 , •l'Cf • formances of .. M 1 A,ODtar' with .Martin Milner at the Orud 'Dinner Thea~ 1n Anaheim ... lhc show runs niab tJy cxupt Mondays th rou&)l March 4 ... Clift De Yoani (left) and Harry Hamlin battle oyer a knife In a 80ene from the three-part mlnl- lleliea ••11aater of the Game.•• conclucttnc tDnlCht at 8 on CBS, Cbannel 2. While enthusiasm often outweighs ex- penisc in the Saddleback show, the presence of Deena Driskill in the leading role of the music hustler's secretary raises the talent level considerably', Driskill turns in a dynamic rendition -even though her musical numbers arc blocked as concert solos rather than characterizations -and her "Spanish Rose" closer is bot stuff indeed. Kathenne Jensen is sweet and charming as the teen-aged girl chosen to be k.istcd by the dcpaning rock star. while Steven Clifton plays the egocentric entenaincr quite well -cursed as he is by fauity amplification on both of bis numbers. Donald Fonnaneck fwncs convinc- ingly as the father whose household is overturned by the showbiz contingent.. ably supported by Suzy Bailey and Matthew Bick as his wife and young son. Other perf ormcrs making their prescnoc felt arc Troy Maddox as the jeaJou1 teen suitor, Adriane Callas as a sexpot eecret.ary and Michael McAlexander as an overbearing bartender. CALI.BOYD -Auditions for Saddtebed CoU~s producbon of'"Tbe 8aUad oflhos.d Cafe' wilJ be held ne-.t 1\lesday and Wcdnn- day from 7 to 10 p.m. in tbe main theater on • the Mission Viejo.camJ)Ul •.. mtn and women . of all ages arc beina souabt for the dnma. which opens April 6 ... Final tryouts for the musical "Damn Yankees," a joint production of the Laauna Moulton Playhouse and Golden West Col- Jeae. will be held March 4at S p.m. in tbeGWC theater ... all roles except youna Joe Haidy 1tt open: .. lhe show wdl play at both theaters, open mg at the collcae May I 0 and the -t.'00- 1 •• NEM CMP8 EJGKT 18 EHOUOH Ttf&'S COWANY HAWAIAYE-0 '-=/LEHRER I AMSICANOOVEAHMENT CllHEWS N/CNEWS Q 8 teCNEW8 • OD< VAH DYKE (C)MOYIE ** ''This Time F0<evtr" (1980), et.Wt Plmpate. Vincent Van Patten. ®MOYIE *** "Thfesho4cf' (1981) Donald Suttlnnd, Jeff Goldblum. (.l)MOVIE * * * "The YMI Of LIWlg Otn-gerously" I 1983) Mel Gibson, Slgour neyWeaYf/f. -1:30-eAUCE I = OF CUlTUAE @ TAXI QI WHEE. OF FORTUNE 9THATOR. -7:00- 9CISNEWS DHICNEWS e ~DAYS AGAIN 8A8CNEW8Q I =AS'( l8lAHO e THREE'S COMPANY e JOKER'S WILD • IU8INES8 REPORT GHOYA Cl) P.M. MAGAZJNE 0 ENTERTAIMNT TOMGHT QI LOVE COHNECTION 9MOYIE * * * "The Big C.t" (1M8) Preston FOii•. Lon Mc:Celkstw (%)MOVIE * * t "The Man Wltll Two Brains" ( 1983) Steve Martin, Kathleen Turner. -7:30- • 2 ON THE TOWN D QI FAMl.YFBJD 9MOYE * * *'h "That's Enter1a1nmenl" (1974) Fred Astaire, Bing CrOSby 8 EYE ON LA. • WKAP IN CICNHATI e 0 PEOPl.E'S COURT • WILD, WILD WORlD OF ~ Cl) TIC TAC OOOOH CD> NIA IA8KETIAll -l:00- 1 Cl) MAsTEA OF ntE GAME QITHEA·TEAM 9 FOUl-uPS, BLEEPS & IWNDEM D POLICE WOMAN (!)SOAP e ENTen'AMIENT TOMGHT •MOYE •••~''The Groundstar Conspw• <:y" (1972) George Peppetd, Mtehall Slrrazln. eHOYA • AMENCAH Pl.AY..ausE (t>MOVIE •• "AdvtnlUfes Of The Wlldwneu F.mty'' (1975) Robert Logan. Susan Oamante Shew. 00 ON LOCATION (J)GAU..AOHEA: TOTAUY NEW -l:30- • 9 RIPLEY'S~ rT OR NOl (!) LOVE fJOA T • P.M. MAGAZINE (%)MOYIE *** * "OU Boot" (1981) Juergen Proc:hnow, Arthur Gruenemeyer -t:00- 8 QI NP'TlDE • 0 THREE'S COMPANY DNEWS •.-VGAIFFIH I MEICAH PLAYHOUSE =TOSHAAE ®MOVIE • * "Strokw Ace" (1983) Bur1 Rey- nolds. LOnt Andefson. (.l)MOVIE • • t "The Man With Two Brllns" (1H3) Steve Martin, KathlHn Turner -HO- • 0 OH. MADEl..INE Cl) MOYIE t * t "The Lost Man" (1969) Sidney Poitier, Joanna Shimkus. ID MAKINO THE MOST OF THE MICA() G HORSE RACING -10:00- D a REMHJTON STE£lf 9'8eNEWS g 9 HART TO HART G LOUORANT • NEVER.1UAN BACK: ntE LIFE OF FANNIE LOU HAMER IDNATUAE eBOlDOHES (C) Ll<El Y STORIES CISTl llU 546-2711 111111 634-3911 lOWAROS SOOTH COAST PlAZA UA CITY CENTER lACIU 1EAC1 m · 1711 OUICl 631 0340 EDWARDS SOUTH COAST ptJJA AMC ORANGE MALL •stmsnl • EOWAROS CIHCMA WCST 891 m~ NOMINATED FOR 8 ACADEMY AWARDS ... _._._._._._. __ ,H,,,.~ BEST PICTURE 'l'BB BICB ''I' ···~""··u .... l .. '"a .. ' ............................ ~70W•·=•S ~ .. f" .. 41••t\1lt1f.l[lll.ff ... T IUCI 613 S3SO tulCl 634 ml £0WAAOS lllO SYUrY ClllOOM£ tlMl(6349J61 •s~~sm PAVI~ OIWtGC Oii iN UA WEST-STER fn * UHM MU • CDWAROS/SAH80llN LAGIN HILLS MALL 168 6611 -SSI06S~ lDWAllOS~ u -(213) 691 0633 •rASta~ ~--mmt lOWMDS SOUTtt COAST LAG• -63425S3 SYUfl CllOOlllC IOl•ra 191 9l5 cowMOS CllJM wm IUT•ID 191 3693 PACI~ HIWAY 39 !.» W (O)MOVIE Bruce Bierman plays Driskill's Patti Hubler, late of Sebastian's West, choreographs the show, excellina on the large-scale number "I've Got a Lot of L1ving *** "Arst Blood" (1982) Sytvestw -----------------------------------------------------StllllOne, Richard Crenna playhouse May 24 ... -10'.30- • NlE.PEHOEHT NETWORK HEWS (.I) IEST OF BIZARRE Q -11:00- 8DUCl>0 Q!NEWS 8TAXI D AOWAH& MARTIN'S LAOOH-IN 8)M•A•S•H e TOP 40 VIDEOS I JACK.IE GLEASON WHATS MY UHE (C)MOVIE * * "Ice Castles" ( 1979) Lynn-Holly Johnson, Robby Benson STAHDINO ROOM OHL Y ( 8UP£RST AAS OF COMEDY SALUTE ntE IMPROV (l)MOVIE t * * "The Return Of The Secaocus Seven" (1980) Mark Arnott. G0<doo Clapp -11:30- • Cl) MAGNUM, P.I. D Q!TONIOHT 8 lWIUOKT ZONE 8 0 ABC NEWS NIGHTUHE Cl IN SEARCH OF ... W THICKE OF ntE NtOHT ti> STieTS OF SAN FMNCISCO e LATEHIGHT AMERICA m100 cLUe -12.'ClO- • ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS 8 EYE ON HOLLYWOOD GMOVE ** * "Gelling Strlighl" ( 19701 Elflolt Gould. Candice Bergen. (!) IHOEP£HDEHT NETWORK NEWS ltl MOVIE t *'' "Divorce H11" (1972) RIChafd Burton. Ellllbelh T aylof ®MOVIE * * * "Star Trek U· The Wrath Of Khan" (1982) W11t1am Sha1ner, Rlcar· do Montalban I (Q)MOVIE **'·~ "The Ruhng Class" (1971) Pet• O'Toole. Catotyn Seymour MOVIE * * • · f'lastlclance (1983) Jenrnler Beals, Mdlael Noun -12'.30- D Qt LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN 8 GREAT RECORD ALBUM COLLECT10H 8LA. TODAY Mfcbael Caine Rockers plan USO venture ' LOS ANGELES (AP) - A group of veteran rock 'n' rollers is getting ready to prove that the USO isn tall Bob Hope and pretty girls. Dubbing themselves tbe First Airborne Rock & Roll Division, 11 members of Kansas, Cheap Trick. Pablo Cruise. the Doobie Brothers and Le Roux. will be making a three-week USO . tour starting in mid-March -the first such venture by a group of major rock performers. While rock ban~s usually spend much of their time on the road, the musicians say their journey to the Philippines, South Korea. Okinawa and the Indian Ocean will be made under relative "hardship" con- d itions -no first-dass hotels, limos or customized buses with fancy hi-fi and video uj ment. NOW PLAYING PU fl TOllO Mltll18'eJ Plua £°"'1ros 5'GOlto10 ~~ Sil !>880 COUA •ESA HUllTlllGTOll WCH fdwa!ds Harl>o< 1 w·n £0 .. 110~ HuNonoton 631 3501 C1Mm1 a.a 0388 *COSTA MESA IAV1Nl EOw¥dS I own Cen111 (OwarOs WoodbndQt ISi 41a. CH1em1 !151 065~ -·~1CCW"11t•o-, .. ,"'6,t.Gl .. •t lllllOI VIUO fdWMdl Miulon Ylt!O ,.,. 495 8220 •OllAllGE CllltdOmt 634 2S53 wu ...... an11 ECIWallb Ctotma Wesl 891 3935 .... _ .. °"" OMME Paollc s Orange 0rM 111634 QI WUTWSlt.11 P11Cfic'll41Wly39 OrlYt In 891·3e83 ·""•::sF..NTU> '"'ID'-- W atch For Advance T ickets On Major F ilms LUXURY THEATRE S * ARCADE of GAMES •. .', .: " ~IPO] U :I O l :OO 1:10 7:20 1 :30 ... 'I' fi UFI' m 1 '•i?1t t:, \1::"'1! :;- YENTL ID Siio._,. at U 100 t 1lO 1 100 7:IO • 10:ts 1100 S110 1:20 7130 t 140 Drlw••lru Ooen 1130 Wffflt ftft / t 14a Wff•u1 .. llU ChHlllrt1 llldfrl2 frttlllessJletM 'Rita' raising Caine's stock British actor keeping busy, earns his third Oscar nomination who takes his daughter on a Brazilian vacatJon and is seduced by the teen-age dau&htcr of his bc1t friend. The seducer, played by lovely Michelle Johnson, appcan semi-nude in scenes with Caine . "I told my wife to stav close to me at all times ... By BOB THOMAS Between his emergence as a star in "Alfie" in 1966. •mct•tM"'-•...., and bis recognition for "Educating Rita." much has BEVERLY HILLS-Michael Caine was amusingly happened to the Londoner wbo was born Maurice philosophical about winning a Golden Globe Award for Mick.Jewhite 49 years ago. his role of the boozjng, bitter professor in .. Educating He has earned millions. He'1 made some dreadful Rita." mm·s, such as .. X,Y and Zee." "Beyond the Poseidon The outspoken Englishman said the last time he had Adventure" and "The Hand." And he's bad some aood won an award was for .. most promisine newcomer. ones: "The Man Who Would Be Kina,"•"Califomia Suite., "I was be~inning to feel I'd let the people who gave it and "Deathtrap.'' He also married, fathered a dauahtcr to me down,' srud Caine. a direct, uncomplicated man and moved to the United States. who is able to adapt himself to any role without the He came here, he srud, ·•because I wanted to become a introspection of method-style actors. name in American films; because I considered the EnaJisb Chosen by the Hollywood Foreign Press last month, Wt system unjust; because I believe it's healthy to shake up Caine srud in a recent interview: "h's true •. I've won one's life now and then." nothing -except a couple of Academy (Award)....,_...__ _____________ .,.,..... ______ _ nominations ('Alfie' and 'Sleuth'). Those are the only thinp that have happened to me in between." (He later received his third Oscar nomination for "Rita.") But before he became a "promising newcomer.'' his career had the usual pitfalls. He was once broke and out of work. and auditioned for the pan of Bill Sikes in the musical, "Oli ver." He didn't get 1t. .for Caine, who still bares traces of his cockney past, it was a big disappointment. "If I couldn't get a role as a tough cockney. what could.I get?" · . "Oliver" ran for seven years. "Late in the run, I drove past the theater in my Rolls-Royce, and I thought to myself, 'I could still be there. playin& Bill Sikes," he said. Now Caine ischumingout movies as fast as would-be actors get turned down at auditions. , • Next comes "Blame It on Rio." which 20th Century-Fox released this month. He plays a businessman [ a:i.. * PACl~IC WALK-IN THEATRES * ~ !frB(?,goin Matinees! f rJ~A{;~•hi•f 4 l''i"ili'.J ~ MONOAY Tll1w SATURDAY fACUlfY01CANOl.EWQOO All PtrlormlfKft ...... s·oo l'M (Ex S,ec. £11.,...... .. u 1 Hoisl IP.!Rmf72:.*J LA M!!!AQA Al ftQSlCRANS "Y'Dfll" (PC) IUI. J 00 UO I~. 10 ta "llf'AITlfll.l Y Y<US" ('6) 12.-40, l 40. 4 40. '40, • 40. 10 3S "TOMS Of EJl)(MfiE(l" (PG) 17'~. J 10. S4S. 11S II 00 '90ADllAY DAlllY ROS£" (PC) I 00. J 00, UO. 1 00 t 00. II 00 ''M.All IT «*al>'' (I) 12 30. 2 30, 4 lO. I 30 I 40 IOSO "FOOTLOOSE" (PG) 12 JO 3 00, 530 HI 10 21 "·roonoosr (PC) II OOl l'I SltlllO 11 )0, JOO. 530. 100. 10.IO "lUMS c. OIOllfll.lfT'' (PG) 11 lO J OS HS 11S 1055 "Y£NTl" (PG) 1100 140 SI~ 100 10 40 "HCkltSS" (I) l OS. 1-00. It~ "D.C. CAB" (I) 100.~55.~ "SCARFACE" (It) 1130. 34S.100. IO.IS "Ttf: Dltma" (PG) 1245 ) IS. s•s I IS Ut4S "lllOADWAY ~ IOSl" <PS) 12~ 750 US., ... IJS 1030 * PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES * "WSllU" (I) rlllS .. TWUHT Z.C.·M llM:" Pll L "Tll liA lU C. till" "° Olll • • •• ··rma,. ~ <"> 1'1.11$ "1um5 PUCO" (l) 2. '1MUSCl.Dlf' (I) lllH ta~iiii;P.iiiiijiiiiiiiip;ii~' 3. "fllDAl ..... (I) 11 AOll11T.D I. "STM IO" (I) z..,.. ,. (t) 1 "Tll UllU Qtt' (I) IQ!Er') "9.Jll. It '* ., .. (I) "us "TIO C. A lift' (PG) "Mill" (I) " "SCMUCl" (l) "fOGnOOSl" (N) I\ "'ITAYIS MM'' (PC) ....... LOllS .WU S ·c:uaas (K) ...... n.r, 100 ,. J~l 4114 llDfl '""'' 110 H O TOWN CENT[• Ol.O.O lll:OI u • .. ..... 'WMTlflU' \Olm" If') " ""'• 'JO a JO 10 IS m •1l4 SOUIH C?ASI 10-sum:.11 -wsmr (l) .. n.n,30 IJO tOlO SOUTH COASl wooo1 AtllH """' ·--u Ollll'l llOSl" <"1 '-•~ ~6 2711 Mo<>l""'''l0,0'; SOUTH COAST UCMD't AMI>,._ ..... aST .C~ S11111' ~ ....... CJ) !146 1111 .. n.s I IS t-• Ill,.... (f'Cl 100 '.~ El TORO SAOOllBAO< IOll .. l(CI , ... , ~ 'USllfll' Ill f' ••• -~U~l~ !>I I mo SAOOlCBACI! ·~"(I) '(1 1., •• ... n.,. .IOIS I l•11 h .... wacT"lll ~· ~--0 ... n.rtllS SAOOlCBACK MIO!Ar.I.. CA.1.H& '' ... ~ .... n•.,.•> I• 1trt tf --~ !>el~ 6ZI Ill IUI SAOOl£8ACK l lU«Jl'l llm f' ••• ,.. ~11111e Y:;.: ...... m ~110 71S. t• SAOOlCBACK roortoar "' \ 1 •• ,. .... ,... t ' ••• 600 100 It• m '>aao SAOOl.CBACK ~··--' .. llfllfWlllH YOlllS' .Cl • LAGl*A BEACH IQI Sill((). "\.mntl' Ill ...... "1MATIS 1111" M l , , , ... 61S 10 JO 11.,., 1 eo '11 ............ Ill l---------a!.•----~-----110-SOUHt COAST 1~ SlltlCJ. "'' ..,, "'lASlllD Ill .... -.. .... Ilion UI I 00 II 00 M lNIUll ••• Cla.l VI JO T'"" s ~ N11MD FOUNTAIN V~llfl HN VAllEl .... ._,,, ... ...... 13' 1'.>00 ... "'°"II) t l\ nN VAllU imo llC)()ll( 'W Al'llf1lU \'Ila" (PS) """ ,. UCI WESTMINSTER u '"• •• , IUUC11lS$~ Simi' CM'MA Wl$l ..,...."' .. llWIU• •oo IRVI,_ fmt •IHCll \llllllUl"41) .. 11-61S 11!. ltl\ . . IOll Sii UC\ 'UllllDl"41l ....... , •• u o •·111 .... (itt\at'lt:l .D nos IS YOOP. CONSCIENCE &PEAKIN(t. "0N'T VOU CW\£ PuC!>M OPIE OFF TMf TABLE ! TMAi WOULD &E INHUMANE ANO C.P.Of.L THE f'..\MILl' CIRCt8 "The record player hos the hiccups and keeps soyin' the some thing over and over . 11 ,..\11'9..\DLkE by Brad Anderson .,______ ''lf!IC'l'~•'v~ •"!Jo f'' ,._ ~~,,_) "He doesn't hke ·mush!' .. say. 'please!'" PE..\,l"TS NO, MA0AM l DON'T TJ.ltNK W~AT ~E SAID IN T~E FIRST rnAPTE~ WAS GERMANE t I • ,.,. 0#4 0 a e 0 -· A 0 4 ••• ' • c 4 l!4; 4 a • $ I I I 0 a 0 4 I I I $1 onnooso by Jim Davis BRIOC! Hoth vulnerable. South deals. NORTH • J IOS .c;, Q lotU 0 987! •A WEST EAST •7 •QU <::I J U 4 <:?KU <>K H 0 3 •CU 1087 • K 96H2 SOUTH •A K 90Z <::I A O AQJ l06 •s The bidding: SOYdi Welt North Eaet 2 • Pue 3 • P ... 4 O Pau 5 • Pua 5 iv p.., 6 • PaH 6 t Pu t Pa11 Pa11 Opening lead: Queen of •. Even seemln1ly simple hand• u1uaUy offer eeveral line. ol play. For rumple. there are lhrtt poulble w1y1 to au.adt lh is hand. Whal an they, which would you choose and why'/ Arter South's demand openinr bid -ju1lilled because ol his great playing strength -North .et the suit immediately. A c"e bidding sequenct propelled Norlh·S1>uth to slam ln quick lime. West's opening lead was most damaging -al removed the only side entry to the table. Declarers first thought was to play to drop the queen of trumps; holding JfM 0AY1'~ SHOE BIG GEORGE ~-~ ~ "M1clnto1h. Herry, Boo·BOO, get up ind give tht nice min your 111t1:• DE,,IS THE 'IE,:\CE Hank'Ketchum Qi / ~ 0 ·~· -I H··· . ''WHY OOH'T YOO A~IT IT. GEQ:l8E ... 0ENNl5 MS SOME ZIP INTO YOUR LIFE.'' ------------~'T"i1"7"1!-r--.-~ DR..\BBLE ~ow oo ~oo L.1 Kt M'i NW !JWEAff.R, P~IRICK1 rr ·~ SREAi~1ti.KIN'7, 01\0~ > J FOii BETTER 011 t'Oll •ORNE I &.lRE WISH SPR1NG- VJOULD COME Y~H. t'M1iReD OF COLD FV'-J' SNOW J t l ! l by Ferd & Tom Johnson DR. SMOCK ,.....,~------- FENTON by Ch arles M Schul z by Tom K Ryan I :t 1"0L...C' 'f!.M A SURGICA L,.. 6t..Ove W ASN'1"' e>u1 l,,"f° -ro HOL..P IHA"f" M UC H H01"" A IR/ hi -2 3 3 5 0 ; a nint' cards In 1 suit. Lhal is •ll«htly bftlt'r than a 52 Pf'' tent 1hol. Jr that dottn't work , declaN"r can etlll hopti lo drop a aln~lt&on king or diamond•, lo lncrHllt> has ehantes alightly. The second cbanct I• to use the entry lo dummy to takt an immediate' diamond finesse . Wh1ll' tht' lint t ran ~ repealed. at really net'cb 1 2 t diamond break as well, for If the diamonds are :J I. one o( the defenders will bt- able to get a ruff in the 1uit. All things <'On1idered. this is a much inferior line to the one abovt' Tht> last poss1b1lity 1s to take the trump finf'Sllf' at trick two. If th1tt surreeds, dl'cl&rer I• home rega,t~len or wha\ happen• in 'fie dla mond tuit. Bul even if the lrump Onttlt fails. South hu not yet loll hi• contract. Hr has a 1eco11d strfng lo hi~ bo)¥. l.>telarer now has anothtr t'nlry lo Ult board in thr re malnin1 trump honor. He win.s IGJ rtturn, cuhet a high lrump 111d crone• to dummy with 1 trump. Now hr run1 the nine or diamonds South will still land his slam if t:asl has the king of diamonds and the suit breaks no worse. than 3 I. Tht com banation of two fioe11eT'is a bt>tter than 75 perrt>nt chan«>. and 1s by far the best lint'. REAU.'i 1 by Kevin F aoan IT MAKE.'5 '400 LOOK LIKE A ~01 AIR BALLOON 1. by Lynn Johnston -IF TRIS IS 1RE ~RTE.ST MONTH OF THE. Y€P.R-HOW COME IT F\.WA'YS &EEMS I UKE THE LONGE3T by Tom Bat1uk WHAi 00 ()()(.) CAU. A FEJ'ML.E BAX)K 501...DIER. ~ ~y Wiley ,........,.------.. ONL'I UNilL. I ':JA\./£ 111£ HUMAN RAU ANO ~IN TH~ NcefL ~t: PRlZE ... I I . ' COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE TRANIACTIONI, ... CR£DIT LINE ~ - Seal, Berkus earn promotions at Coldwell Banker Real Estate Don't forget to deduct taxes on big purchases Ne•l Seal, an active professional in real estate since I 9S8, has t?een pror:noted to senior vice president in charge of markeung services of Coldwell Buker Real E1tate So'!tben CallfonLla by noma1 GrUflD, president. A resident of Granada Hills, Seal will relocate to south Oranae County to be near Coldwell Banker's new corJ)Orate hcadquaners. Seal has been with the finn since 1959. In another personnel move, Wuda Berb1 has been promoted t~ vice president of marketing services. Until her pror:n<?uon, she was manager of the REO department. Berk~s JOtn.ed Coldwell Banker in 1982 with IO years of expenence in real estate. • • • Nucy Elliott has been promoted to junior advertis- ing account executive at B.J . Stewart Advertltlaa ud P•bllc Relatlon1, lac., of Newpart Beach, it was announced by ADdrew Skiver, agency senior vioe president. Elliott started with the agency in March 1983 as advertising account coordinator. Before that, she worked at Hibbert Adveni11D1 in Costa Mesa as an account assistant to the president. • • • Sparklett1 DrlnklD& Water Corp.'1 new distribu- t1on/warcbouse center in the lrvtae IDduatrlal Complex at the intersection of the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways is oow in full operation. The facility was designed to serve customers from Newport Beach to San Clemente. SparkJetts formerly served all of Orange County out of its Sant.a Ana bottling plant and dislnbution faciltty. • • • This month marks the 10th anniversary of Oruae Coa1t: Tile Maia11De of Oru1e Couty. Pre-sold business is in excess ofS7SO 000. Other hard assets total more than SI million. These figures mean large issues ahead, such as the 250-page March edi tion. • • • Benard E . Harkin has been promoted to sales manager for the Huntington Beach district of the Pradeatial IDnruce Co., according to Doulcl II'. Roblnaoa, manager. Harkin beon his career witb the company in Yuma. Ariz., in 198l as an agent. • • • R~~ard F. Timmln1 has llecn named marketina manaaer for custom and semicustom circuits for the electronics marketing group of Irvine-based Wyle Labora· tor1e1. The announcement was made by Oarlet M. Clo•P. aroup president. who said Timmins will report to James C. Bolton, group director of marketing. Timmins comes to Wyle from Mattel EleetroD.Jcs, where he was director ofintemational software development. Timmins MUTUAL FUNDS NEWT SEAL WANDA BERK VS NANCY EWO'M' will lead the Wyle entry into the custom and semicustom circuits market. • • • Herb Eapelud bas been named vice prcsi- ·dent/operations of Costa Mesa-based 1181 Dala Corp., it was announced by WWJam J. Bowen, MSJ chairman of the board He replacca M•rray Robluoa, who left the company. Espeland joins MSl from CftlVY Data Sl1tem1, a Xerox company. Espeland will have responsi- bility for all manufacturing operations, Bowers said. MSJ manufactures portable data collection systems. • • • Stratepe Software Sy1tem1, lac.1 has announced the appointments ofSteplla A. Kolm to Vlce president of sales and Roaald E. Kelly to vice president of software acquisitions and development, according to Joa RJclt- a ...... , president. Before joining Strategic, Kohn was Nonh American ISO sales manager for Otbonae Com- ,.ser Corp. Kelly was most recently a consultant, assisting in the d~ign and development of a wide variety of business, educational and recreational software products at companies such as Software, AcdVlll•. and Suware Developmeat Corp. • • • HuntingtOn Beach resident Jaclr F. Wood Jr. was named general sales manager for Kwikset Dlvla1oa, Emlaan Hardware GrHp. Most recently Wood has served as Kwikset's central regional sales manager. • • • Newport Beach resident Re&U Jobi received her qualification as a certified graphologist from the IDter- utJoaal Grapllo&opat Society in Chicago. A graphologist is trained to identify personality traits in people from samples oflheir handwriting. EDITOR ·s NOTE: This is tht eW.rh article ia a 12-part ~ries in which Sylvia Porter d~scnbes ways taxpayers can save on th~" 1983 and 1984 income taxes. few of you keep records of your actual sales-tax payments. But the Internal Revenue Service instruction booklet accompanying your return forms contains "Optional State Sales Tax Tables .. for the states (including D.C.) that bave state and/or local sales taxes. These tables arc a "blank check" sales-tax deduction for those of you who have no sales-tax records or don't want to dig for them. You may claim a sales-tax deduc- tion based on your income and family size regardless of your actual sales-tax payments. If you don't make maxi- mum use of these tables. you arc needlessly overpaying your taxes. Other ttps to help you get your maximum sales-tax deduction: • Don't overlook the small foot- notes at the bottom of the tables. You may JCt a bi8$er sales-tax deduction than is shown in the table itself. Small footnote 9 after New York, for instance, explains a New York City resident can add 107 percent to the amount shown in the table for New York residents. Thus, if the table shows allowable sales taxes ofS302, a New York City resident can add $323 (I 07 percent of $302) for a t0tal of $625. • The "income•' on which the sales tax may be claimed is not only the adjusted gross income shown on line 33 of your Form 1040. The income also includes non-taxable income: Social Security, veterans' and rail- road retirement benefits; workers compensation; untaxed portion of long-term capital gains or unemploy- ment compensation; All-Savets interest exclusion; dividends ex- clusion; disability income exclusion; deduction for a married couple when both work; public assistance pay- ments. The IRS also has infonnally in- dicated it includes as well such items as gifts, prizes, awards, non-taxable insurance proceeds. The IRS doesn't mention it. but this would seem to include tax-exempt interest, too. The salcs·lJlx table 1s not SYLVIA Po1n1 EXP ER T ADVICE all-inclus1ve. You can add to the sales-tax table the amount of sales tax you paid on purchase of: • A car, motorcycle, motor home or truck. • A boat, plane, home (mobile or prefabricated), or materials to build a new home if the tax rate was the same as the general sales tax and your sales r~ipt shows how much tax was im&>OSed on you an~·d by you. 'thus, say ou bou ta new or used car in 1983 for $9. and paid a sales tax of $720. Say. too, your sales-tax table shows you can claim $390 for sales taxes. You can add your $720 car sales tax to the $390 sales tax table amount and deduct sales taxes of $1 ,110. I guarantee you'll save money with the above tips! Now, too, don't overlook the fact that you are entitled to an investment credit for '83 if you areanemployecorself-emp1oyed and bought a car, computer. typewriter, etc., for use at work. You can claim a direct credit apJnst your 1983taxof6 percent of the cost of a car, which has an IRS depreciation life of three years, or 10 percent if the item was equ1~ent such as a computer, which the considers to have a five-year de~rcc lion life. Thus, if you bought a new car for bu,1iness in 1983 for $9,000, you can claim a $540 direct ~uction of your '83 tax (6 percent ofS9,000). lf it was a $2,500 computcr, (ou can claim $2SO (10 percent o $2,SOO). You show these credits on line 43 of Form I 040 and attach Form 3468. It seems too good to be true but the investment credit is allowed no matter when you bought the item in 1983 as long as you put it in SCTVice in '83. When deciding whether to use the flat mileage deduction of 20.S cents per mile for the lint I S,000 miles ud 11 cents a mile therc:after for busiacll travel in the car you bouahl m 198). note that if you deduct actual ex- penses you alto are allowed a 1913 depreciation deduction equal to a flat 2.S pcrocnt of the cost of yoor car leM balfthe iovntmenl cn:dit. When you add depreciation and other deduc- tible e~pemes of uhnl the car (Ju, repein), you well may 6nd this toW ii more tba.n you can claim under the 20.S cent-I I cent miae. formula; Oaim your actual expenses. For your '83 business putehales of computers, typewriten, other equip. ment with an IRS five-year lift, you can claim depreci.alioo in .'83 of ts percent of t.bt cost less hllf Ole investment cn::dit -rqarcUeu o( when you bouabt the propeny in 'U. Or, as an alternative, you can write off up to SS,000 of l.our purcbate price iD '83. (You don t Ft the invcstmcDI credit on the SS,000 writien of[) Al these spcciaJ writo-oft"s arc increuod for 1914 and la let yean (ckprcaation particularly). Nest: lav•cm.Q, la&erell. UP s ~~n D ow ~s NEW YORK (AP) -The foltowlne t~ shows the Over·lhe·C~nttr stoclls and w.,.,.anf1 that have OOM UJ the most end doW!'I the most baMd on oefC9flt of en.nee tor Frldav. No s.eurllles tradlno below S2 or 1000 shares we lnducMd. Net and s>ercentaet c:hanoes •rt the djfferenc• be1ween the PftVk>us closfn9 b d e»rl<» and todav·~ last bid 1>r1Ce. ~ 3 ·t f t . Newport firm gets new director From the Bual.Dess Wire National Education Corp. has an- nounced that Frederic V. Malek, executive vice president of Marriott Corp. and chief executive offtcer of Mamott Hotels. has been elected to the company's board of directors. Malek served as deputy director of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget from 1973 to 1974 and. pnor to that. served as special assistant to the president of the United States. Malek had previously served as a member of the president's Domestic Council. the president's Commission on White House Fellows and the president's Commission on Person- nel Interchange. He currently serves on the board of directors of several Lehman Bros. Mutual Funds as well as three NYSE listed companies: Automatic Oat.a Processjng. Inc.. Mark Controls Corp. and Sargent-Welch Scientific Co. H. David Bnghl, president and chief executive officer of NatfonaJ Education, said MaJek's election ex· pands the board to nine mem bcn and brings to the board a strong outside director whose business and gov- ernmental leadershjp is highly rc-- gardcd. "Ma1c1c·s strengths as a manqicr and strategic planner will be of &reat benefit to National Education as we enter our company•s most rapid period of internal expansion." Bright said. -1141:11111w.t1~Pl:I-------------- " 20' • Ooc:uOI 10 10''• OolrGn ' •lit "' ~· 13"' 13'-Dti.ICll 11· 16 13·16 Dut*O S-Sl't Ourlron S7'" S7~ E t lVn s 6 6'i't EconLD 3'~ •"• E IPH 11 1211• Ek!erh SJ .S6 Ei.Nud s~ si. e1Moc11 U« IS'• Eno<:onv 10"' IOl't En<""-! ""' 16~ Enlhv 1'1 • 1111o Entw~n JI lJ EqlOll ~ ~"• FrmG 1"'-I''-Fldlcor I•"' 14loo FtallSv 27''> 2''" FtErnpS 1•1'> 2S1<11 FIWnFln 2S lS14 Flldul 1 l:it '" FleNJ:I IS''t lS'Ao Flur~ i-16 1' F0te&IO Q 64 FrankCtl 1$ IS\>\ F'9tlkfl 20'1't 211't FrwSG 501,, Sl Fremnt 17~ lt't'l F ... HI 10 101# H1mlP1 11"> 11~ HerpGo l~ 16 HerifN I ll 3S\'f H«118 1 1'1 • 1,_. H.nrdF 131io ,.,..... Hoo., ... ,,.,, 20'1't ~l1lh n-. 731t'l IMS Int 12\.':I 11"41 ISC 12'1't 13 lnfrelnd 114 .,_ Intel l 11~ 131,. lntrcEnr 3S'l't 3~ lntoon 1 l'l't I 1 H 6 lntm!Gs • •'Al ln8W'1l 16~ 17~ lweSoUI ,.,.. 1~ JemsDv ~ 41 Jerico ' 3''ftl 3'''-vum-. S2'• S2'h Joslvn 33 33"-K•~I of 6'-7 K•tv.,. 22:14 731/o 1(-n I lt'h 3' K .. 'fSv \l'-t•'AI l(ll\'IMI I t•1AI 1•1't Klnolnl 1~ 17 l(loo!G ll'At llloo 1(-V 3' 3'V. Kr110t 12'4 1"' Kulell• I JO"" JOl't Lenee -• • - -• -• • • -• • -Gre~ Americ~n Investor Series-Bonus oupon --------------I I I I I I I I I I I EARN BONUS INTEREST ON A 1-YEAR ACCOUNT Open a Great American Investor Account today and receive from S25 to SJOOO!• lock-in high interest for as little as 1 year or as long as 10 years at Great American Federal and rec~ve a big interest bonus. The amount of your bonu i guaranteed, depending on how much you deposit-from $5,CXX> to $100,<XX>-and the term you choo Th n the Choi e i yours to take your bonu interest home with you the very day you open your account, or earn even more interest by allowing it to compound for the entire tenn. This offer is limited, so invest now. w~~tever your t;>alance, whatev~r the de ired term, it's ea y to compute the amount of bonus intere t you'll receive by rounding the princip~I balance to th neare t hundred dollar . 111""'91 todiy. 1NJ CJlw 1J Amitfd and rNY be wit.,.IWl\ .ti MY timt. ~American 'l~~ ~4'1 S.Vmp..... I/.... OMtion 11 t Yflu"' ~"'~ Ot~ oom,; I ~ Sh&~ l~ttd t\S Uw k"" I Earn up to 3% in Bonus Interest! ~us INTtU'ST flAMPUS Of IONUS 11\fTU15l ltmt~IN'Y tw WirtldrMn •I An\ IJml!': W withdr,...11 ai pn!"dpllpnor • m.llllnr, \0.111 """" If\ \\lt>'IM?li.11 lf'lt,...... ' ~tu~ 111 ~ JlftW - - - - - - - - --- - - - -• TeM out .net reLlin for mere e.•••• -I I 1 I I I I I I ~-------..._.--......... ~--·-~----~-~~~~~~~--~----~~--""'!""""------._.. ...... .._~ ............ !l!!l!l!!!ll[ll!llllllJ!lllll .................................................................. .. . . ~ 1' ~.. "' ·-., '... .. 1, -'• .. I i.-t ''I On the , • °"'· ............... 0-. NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Ow l'I 1MK Ud 0. -"' loot l? ,,._ .. ~i tt TUESDAY'S CLOSING PRICES Dow JoNE S AvERAGES WHAT NYSE Orn NEW YORK tAPI Ft1> 21 Tod'm..,.· ~dvtnc•d ecllntd nch4nged olal IOUU 1:!' ~whlgl'IS N•w low' NYSE LEADERS NEW YORK (API -S.IH , Tue~•v price and net chaf'ljlt of tht 15 mo11 1c11v• New York Stock Exchange Issues. tred ng na1lon1~1I al more lh~ $1. 1 " 1,_ Amer T T n , ,7 ,.., -,. Baicter rev$ ~. JJ,I ~t11e -13.4 FordMOI $ t ~~· Sl'I• -IV, ~::,~~~~ s: '7~ = ~ ~uJfCorp H7,• 52~ -1~ xxon ·'°° 37~ + ~ h~osPet 2 !:~!N 1~ 4 ~ = ¥: IP.Mx Ulll m·soo ''• + '"' CO Id ~ -'I• eat ~ood :m 4"• -l'lt en Molon , 7~ -1 AM R Corp 3, ·~ + Ve NatSeml s O. 2~ -~ UPs ANO DowNs NEW YORK (APl -The foltowlno list 1how s the New York Stock Exchange stock' and warrant• that have gone uo the most and down the mo•t baMd on percent of cn.ni>e regardlen of volume for Tuesd•Y· No securltln trading below n are Incl· ·vded. Net and percentage challQe5 are !he difference between the prevlou• clo• ng orfce and todav's t~m. orlce. i Mal~rn:r La~stl... ChP,., ute1·9.5 RolmCorp l.t. l Uo 1·• EAL wlO ~ 11• UP ~ 4 Unllrode s } 111 Pio Up I: S Roc>erCP s 11111 Up . t Plr$Ol'IS s 11> 111• UP . EaJlnAlrL 7/e ~ Uo .I Nat ~Q!T\IS •~ 'I• UP .1 Me"otflh n ~~ I. Up ·2 l~ ~~~~~, 1~~ ~~ 8~ :·, l~ ~~~,, 2~!:e 1i~ ~ 8~ !'.t l~ ~t .. a Ind 1•34 ~ Uo .;i ' ·~n.:csm ~ 1~ ~P H 1, ~:~.cf adl pf I ~ 8g ··~ ~ K:u~~ Co &! ,,... · ug ~:., MesaRovt 1 UP l Sc<>elnd s ''• 111 UP PacSClen 4 ' > Uo · 2• Salan1 Cp 101'> ~ Uo .7 2S Evans Pd 7'1• I/• Uo .6 DOWNS Name L •f ' Chg i Bk Am SPCI pf ~ -2~ Katy Ind 2 7"9 -271t NtMlneSv -1 4 EmerRad s 1~ -11 S GenHC9 Inc S7'1 -~ 6 gulerTrav s 18 -I'" 7 entrnOata 12 -I/• 8 ITorlto (I 10 -9 Hesston co 16 -~ lo Firestone 17~ -'h i Com1Me11 , Im -1~ LetiVallnd 11e -1 • NBI Inc 2 1 • -''"' U Purolalor 36112 -~7," lS Sanders s 3634 -l.4 16 BollBernk s 17111 -'I• 17 NatSeml s l~~ -,,... 18 ~nger Co 2 2 -1~ 19 oleco 1 ''l -1"' 20 lecl Assoc ~1,. -~ 21 Inland Sii 2 -1~ 12 ~tuschLb s 2 ~ .. -ll'I 3 ex Coro 71ta -11, • onderoJa 19', -1''• 25 Tonka Cor o 251/• -~ WHAT AMEX DID NEW YORK (AP) Feb. 21 T4~ Advanced ffi Declined Unchanged T 01a11,sues J New highs New iows AMEX LEADERS Pct. f 14.1 12.1 1S:a u !j 71 7. ~. 6. 6.~ 6. I ti Prev "'ffi • 21 NEW VOAI( (AP> -Sales. Tue~•Y price and nef cilaoge of the 10 most act ve American Stock EJtch•~ lu ues. trad ng Nllon·a· 110 at more thtan ~l. 2~ + •;. ~~'&'~v ~· Y: ~ + ~ Wangl t bB n· 2 ~ -3"" 8rownFor B l , l 28~ -'I• PetroLew 1 • j NII Patent 9,. ¥:. =2,,_ CyprusCo s· I 7:. '" Verbltllm i • ·• -1 • tnstrSv•t 4 ,7 1,'I -1·• Hel1l'r 45... l 3"" + ~ •mM•l!lif jipn NEW YORK (AP) -Most •Cllvt ovtr· -t~~~~nter ~~~ "~~~edA,\UN£~ ~ftG' l:nm·:~~ ~!''• u~ + 'h coni ' , ls~ ll -2'."• xlfa : 2tl\ 1 ... _ ~ Arn p , • f ~v. '.-'J -~arllt l •. l:tlt 11• -oort a 412, "• -1v. andn • 314, 1 in + !Al Goto QuorE s ME T~L) Quons =--------=--=---- That's an apt description of both business and business people along the Orang Coast. Toke p track of where companies are goipg and which people are.helping them get there.just wat h 'Credit Line• -v ryday in th Business section of your. new Dlilf Pillt . Clowning around Dodier pitcher Fernando Valensuela break.a up teammate Bob Welch u Valensuela doee an lmltadon of Welch durtnc aprlng tnalntna at Vero Beach, Fla. Monday. MeDoD.ald close to record UC Irvine star needs 51 points tobreakMagee'sa 1-timerecord STOCKTON -Ben McDonald is apparently savina his best for the last A four-rear starter for UC Irvine's basketbal team, the 6-9 fonner Lon& Beach Poly High star, scored 27 points Monday night as UCI blitzed Pacific, 97-66, here, in Pacific Coast Athletic Association play. It was not only McDonald's best scoring performaftce of the season. but it also put him within SO of Kevin Magee's all-time soorins record. McDonald has scored 1,425 points in three-plus seasons and needs just SI more to pass his former teammate. "That was the old Ben McDonald playina tonight.'' said UCJ Coach 8111 Mullipn. McDonald's performance helped UCI to its 11 th PCAA victory in IS games. a record for the Irvine school. The Anteaters ha ve j ust three con- ference ~cs remainina ... all at home. UCI hosts UC Santa Barbara Thursday. then takes off a week before meetina Nevada las Vegas March I and Cal State Fullerton March 3. Then it's tournament time. McDonald got plenty of help with sophomore Tod Murphy hitting 24 points, including 19 m the opening half when Irvine raced to a 46-30 lead Over-the-hill gang? Noway Lawn bowling club seeking members -in their 20s, 30s . ByCURTSEEDEN Of .. O.., ......... Just the other day, the Los Angeles Dodgers gave veteran Dusty Baker his walkina papers via waivcn be- cause he didn't fit into the club's plans. Yep, Baker was over the hill at 34. If he can't find a job but wants to rcmwn active, he miaht like to aivc the Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Oub a jingle. A 92-year-old member passed away recently -and he wa.s playing right up until a week before he died. And that doesn't mean you have to be in your golden years to hit the bowling greens for up to three matches and six houn a day. The fact is, the Newport Harbor Lawn Bowl- ing Club wants younger players, prefcrrably in their 20s and 30s. "It seems like this sport is looked upon as a retired person's sport, but on the other hand, lawn bowling attracts yo unger people in England, Canada and Australia," says Bob Hicks of the Newport Club. Hicks and other members of the club arc quick to point out that the club welcomes anyone of any age to compete. "h's a excellent sport for older people;~ says Ted Hallahan, another member. Hallahan's 67, but his two partners, Al Morrison and Bob Koltun. arc 86 and 75, respectively. "We've got players out here with pacemakers." at the intcnnission. Georac Turner scored 19 and Ronnie Grandison had 10 in a reserve role Pacific, now ~2A overall and ()..l 4 in Lhe PCM. save UCI a battle early on. but the Anteaters took c~ mtdway throuab the opcnana half and ran away anc1 bid. At one point. Pacific held a 23-19 lcad before Irvine aot untracked. ·•rm proud of th~ way our kjds came in here and played a team that had no wins in the conference. Sometirncs a team can have a letdown. but we played well toniaht." said Mullipn. "I feel sorry for Tom O'Neill (Pacificcoach). He'saaoodcoachand he's my best friend in the conference. I hope he can tum it around here." The 97 points was a record for A.G. Spanos c.tftaa. The old mark of 93 was set last 1e1son by UC lrvi~. UCI 1sdosan1in on 20w1ns. which undoubtedly would put it in n«llent position for sett1n~ aa NCAA or. Nataonal Invitation Tourument bid. Anythina Im than I 8 would probably end the Anteaters' tealOn. But the way McOo.nald is playin .. any thins is Hktly. Pacific. which was led by sophomore Andy Franklin's 21 points and 11 rebounds. opened an early I 8-14 lead and was ahead 23-19 with 9:2~ left in the first half. Irvine then went on a 27·7 tear and led 46-30 at halftime. The pme was never close in the second half. Bob Thornton led Irvine in re- boundma with 13. ·uc1 tumbles in ninth, 4-3 The Univcnity of Santa Clara rallied for two runs in the top of the ninth inning to band UC Irvine a 4-3 setback in collegiate baseball play Monday at UCI. Eagles, Seahawks host playoff foes The youngest player on the New- port Harbor club is 66. About 60 to 70 of the 160 club members play six or seven times a week. They don't bowl on Thursdays, but that's only because the greens have to be watered some time. Neither Hallahah nor Hick.s are claiming there's a lawn bowling boom going on in this world. but they do point out the sport has started to attract members of the young gener- ation. The loss was the Anteaters~ 7th in 11 games. UCJ pitcher Ed Deese was rolling along with a five-hitter, until Santa G ara erupted in the ninth innfag on a single by Kevin Dunton, Mike Doulcr's triple and a wild pitch. The wild pitch was served up by relief er Bo Kent The Anteaters jumped to a 2-0 lead with single tallies in the first and second frames. In the fint. a double by Paul Hammond and Bob Perry's single staked UCI to a 1-0 lead. A double by Don Davis and Mike Sugar's two-out single made it 2-0 in the second. Dunton doubled in a run for Santa Gara to cut it to 2-1 in the fourth, but UCI quickly got it back in the home balfwhen Mike Shjclds sin&lcd. stoic second and later scored on a fielder's choice. Santa Clara cut it to 3-2 in the sixth on a single by Dunton and Doulcr's double. uerrero ichest odger VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP)-Third seman Pedro Guerrero has signed c richest contract in Dodger history, s Angeles Vice President Al Cam- nis announced Monday. Guerrero. who was scheduled for a Jary arbitration hearing Monday orning, signed a five-year contract ortly before the hearing was sched· led to bcain in Los Angeles. In the rbitration case, he was seeking $1 .2 illion for a one-year contract and c Dodaers' offer was $900,000. No financial tcnns of the Iona-term nltl.ct were announced, althouih it as believed he was askina $8 miOion r·fivc years and the Dodgers were Offerin1 around $7 million. The pact obvtousty calls for mol'C han SI million per year, since that is hat Los Angeles pitcher Fernando alenzuela was awarded last year in \,he richest arbitratio" settlement ever an baseball. "Pedro has proven he is one of the ouna superstars of our aame," ampanis aaid. ''He has the potential o become a triple crown winner and VP and I'm sure he'll own several ~r offensive marks before he retires." Oucrrcro, 27, 1witched from the outfield to third ~ in 1983. He ponded with 32 home runs, 103 runs bltt.ed in. and a .298 battina vcrqe. He became the fil'lt Dodacr In history to hit JO homers and cc.al 20 bea tn 1982. and he duplicated tht feat in l983with hls 32 homers and 23 tokn -_.J CIF round two set for tonight in basketball By ROGER CARLSON OftM.,.., ......... Round Two of what everyone hopes will be a five-game set in the CIF basketball playoffs gets under way tonight (7:30) with Estancia High's Eagles and the Ocean View Seahawks having home games. Here's a capsule look at each of four games involving area teams, in ad- dition to four others of area interest: Pomona v1. E1taacla The Pomona Red Devils duel Sea View League champion Estancia at Edison High and bnng a 13·9 record with them, in addition to a front line that measures 6-8. 6-7. 6-6. Larry Sunderman's Eagles respond with a 23-3 record, the best in the school's history, led by the Sea View League's ce>-most val uable players. Jon Johnston and Jim Curtis. The winner advances to the quar- terfinals of the CIF 3-A playoffs. lf Estancia wins, the Eagles will be on the road Friday against the winner of the Orange-Downey game. Bosco Teel• v1. Oceaa Vlew Wayne Engelstad, a 6-71h All-CIF star as a junior. leadl> the way for the 19-7 Tech men from Rosemead. Engelstad is committed to UC Irvine for his college career. Ocean View, No. 3 in the Sunset League, counters with 6-6 Steve Moser, 6-5 freshman Ricky Butler. 6-S sophomore Tony Panzica and 6-S Rick Wilson to try to surround Enalcstad. fhe winner will face the Mater Dei-Palos Verdes victor. Mater Del v1. Palos Verdes The Monarchs of Mater Dei, top-ranked and top-ICCded with a 25-1 record and a second straight unbeaten Ansclus Leafue season. invade Rollin.a Hills High. a familiar CIF playoff site for home pmes for Palos Verdes. Palos Verdes got past Ventura in overtime in the first round and is 14-9 overall as the Bay League's No. 2 representative. Fountain Valley v1. Verbam Del The Barons of Fountain Valley, 18-7 and Sunset League champions, go against a 21-5 Vcrbum Dei un it which enjoys the unique privilege of playing on its own home court (Compton College), the only team in the 4-A granted such an advantage by the CIF office. Verbum Dei's game revolves around 6-7 Torin Wimams and 6-9 Shawn Brooks, while Fountain Val- ley's front line includes 6-7 Rolf Jacobs and 6-7 Brent Martin. The winner advances to the 4-A quarterfinals Friday against the win- ner of the Santa Moruca-Thousand Oaks game. And it's all right with both of them if Pepsi replaces Geritol as the No. I refreshment on the bowling grecens. "We've advertised in many of the homeowner newsletters and the city has posted invitations (to join) at some of the tennis clubs." explains Hicks. The club provides the bowls (the balls that arc rolled) and the instruc- tion is free. too. "We hosted a tournament last October and many of the members of the New Zealand club were young," says Hicks. The champions from Canada are in their 20s." And should someone be interested in trying the sport, he or she can phone Hicks at 644-4138. a.., .... .....-., ....... u,e. Ralph Reed of the Newport Barbor Lawn BowllDC Club ahOW8 hla form u Connie Ropton awalta her tarn. Garner to return to Huntington? If he does, Oilers will be contender in Sunset League Timechanacs thinas-and Roy Miller is hoping that will be the case at Huntington Beach High next basket· ball season. .. The CIF basketball playoffsare underwaywilhacoupleofnotable schools missing their customary berths-such as Pasadena and Victor Valley (Ollie Butler). There's also two others-Huntin.ftOn Beach and Marina, two schools nch in basketball tradition. Miller's Oilers went 5-18 for the season, in contrast lO a year 110 when HuntinJton Beach swept to the Sunset League championship and into the CIF 4-A quarterfinals apinst Verbum De~ finishinawith a 20-6 ~rd with o-7 so~homore sensation Jamel Gamer pavina the way. But the Oilers' absence from play- off contention took no longer than the time it took Gamerto pack his bags when he transferred to Alabama. Gamer. however, says those bags will be packed again and headed back to Huntington Beach shortly. "Ycp. l'mcomingback." says Gamer via telephone from h 1s Tuskegee residence. "I'll be back around the middle of summer after the Garfinkle five-star invitational camp." While the Oilers finished in a tic for last with a 2-8 record in league, Gamer is still busy. His Tuskcace BabyT1gerscntered the state 3-A playoffs Wlth a 20..2 record as the No. I seed. Included in that mark 1sa S8-48 v1ctoryovcrthestate's No. I rated 4-A team. Central Hiah of Phenix City. Gamer. who averaged l S.3 poinua game in the Sunset League on the way to ea ming firstteam honors, avcrqcd a team-leading 19.1 for the Baby Tiacrsas a shooting forward. a spot he RocER C11LSOI admits he enjoys more than the post position, where he was so effective for Oilers. He has also collected I I rebounds a pmc. second in his league. Gamer is surrounded by a 2.0.pound, 6-4 center and a 6-4 forward who "jumps out of the gym.·· aocordina to Gamer. .. Jfhecomcs back." says Miller. "I'll beasmart coach qam and a contender for league honors. l f not ... wc'llbestruahna." M iJlcr was the Su nsct League· s Coach of the Year. as was Marina's Steve Popovich for a couple of seasons running. before the roof caved in on Manna. too. Without a run at the league cham- p1onsh1p Miller went to the future. to the chagnn of some senior parents. and Miller admits. "I'm not the post popular 'uy on cam pus anymore. "But." he adds. ·-rm not going to let th1seataway at me like it has done to others." All parties continue to deny such a s1tuat1on. but rumors persist that Gamer will return. but to greener pastures-such as Mater Dc1 or Lona Beach Poly. • . ·,: H U Ocean Vie~ High's Dave Dresn1clc has been a h1ahly visible force in the Seahawks' basketball succns. with a 9.8 sconnaaverage entcnna t~ playoff'-includinaan 8.4avtragc 1~ , Sunset Lcaauc pla}', but the 6-3 tanc:r got lost in the shuffle of a rcocnt Da1l1 Pilot stat1st1cal list. Another misplaced athkte IS Steve (PleueMeCAllL80N/C4) Finishing gruefling race was reward ·enoug By HAL BOCK SARAJEVO, Yuao lavia (AP) - His face was bcci.rcd and little crystals of ice were fonnina on his eyebrows and lashes. Lyle Nelson had Just completed the gruellina 20·k1tometer Olymp1C' biathlon race. 12 miles or so of cross country sklina a«om .. n1cd by per- iodic taraet hootins. He would not win this event, because Amcncans do not win Olym- pic biathlons qa1nst East Europeans who devott full time to the pon. But he had finished and that wa reward cnouaJ\. "Amcncan arc too medal con· sciou ;· Nelson said. "Ju t lin11hina I ' I in the top half Of I field hke this is an accomplishment." So 26th place among61 biathletcs was Just fine with him and he'll hope for better at Calpry in 1988. The country is juitiflably proud today of the men and women who took medals home from these Balk.an Olympics. But the ones who dad not should not be foraonen. Ccru1nly any Amencan who watched Bill Johnson come bunhna down the idc of a mountain to capture the men's downhill and Pb1I and tcvc Mahre, run 1·2 in the slalom. had to feel a touch of pndc. But walchina how oach Lou Va1ro and the U.S hockey team handled their m1sfonuncs provided a different kind of sat1sfact1on. Chasina the a}\ost of I 980's aold medal team. Vairo's team came up shon. Their coach did not. "I don•t think wt have toapoloaitc for our team's performance." Vairo said. "We operated with d1anity and couraar under tttmtndous prcnu~. We came 1n as a team and we stuck totether as a team Nobody took a vacation and turned at 1ntoa iaht 1n1 tnp. There were arc.at cx~­ tion Obv1ousJy. we're dt ppoantcd That's pons. Tbat•s tift ... Ptul Vcn:hota, captain of the Ammcan team. was a member of the 1980 aold medal squad. He ha I nddcn the hockey roller coaster from top to bottom and he has no rqrcts. "l wouldn't have missed this txpcncncc for anything in tbc wortd," he said "It has been wonderful." He wasn't talk1na onl)' about 1980 and the ,old. When \hey ra1$Cd tlNO U. fl a Dcbb•C Ann trona and Chnstin COOp(t' stood on the awards platform followina the women' aiant sJ lorn, n wa touah not to fttl touched. if not for them 1Mn for World Cup cham- p1on Tamara McK.inn >'·_.ho miucd tbc btonzc by than a half JttOnd. Four day lattr, McKinney had the best 1nttnncdiate time m the slalom before miuinaa pte andJ\Ul hkt \hat her Olympi wttt o"er. he came an as mcrica' top woman k~ and went home w1thout a medal. But h~ Va1ro and his hockc)' players.. sht- handled tht ad'-ersity h\c a cNm· pion. ··Pan of the Olymp1 1<ka '' compctina. .. she said. ··tt·, 1 dclu 1 n to iay 1 Id 1 all that mattcn.. 1 d n't ~t that rm bapp I amc:· When ou lute tht medal win-- n thin about them. too. The ly\e Nelson who came and comptted; whO tt.l>!C'l.tn\C'd the Uai\ed 5.ale* Tbq dKt it wu.b lf'K'C-Jhey C1id '' With l}~. .. Orange Cont DAIL.., PILOT/Tuesday. February 21. 198<4 The 0 GIVEN AWAY WEEKLY GRAND PRIZE EACH FRIDAY OF 5100 • NO LIMIT TO THE NUMBER OF TIMES YOU CAN ENTER! • NO LIMIT TO THE NUMBER OF TIMES YOU CAN WIN! • ENTER NEW CONTEST EVERY MONDAY 4 ~ nUWIRGS uc1wit1 Each Drawing will be for •.• ~:tf.:~1~~1 ............... s 100 1st Prize.!~.~!J......... S 5 0 Znd Prize.!~~l........ $ J 5 3rd PrizeJ~!J......... $ J 0 HERE'S HOW . • • (I ) Eo1er your Social Security number, name, addr•H a.od phone no on the coupon below (or reuonable fac.jmile). Enter ea many lime• ae you w1ah, but only on• entry form per envelope, pleaM Each entry form muat be aJl or191oal Each member of your family with a Social Security card may •nter by uainq a Mparat• envelope (2) Mail you.r entry to Ora.D9e Coaat Daily Pilot, Social Secunty SwMpttakea, 330 W eat Bay St., Co.ta Meta, CA 92626 (3 A w10nio9 number wall be publi1h•d each Monday, Wedoeaday and fnday tn lhe Daily Pilot. An. additional number will be pubhahed each Friday for $100 WMk· ly Graod Pnw 4 lf one of the w10Din9 numbeu La identical with your Social Sec:unty number, you muat cla.im yow _priM money by bnn9in9 your Social s.ctuity card to the Duly Pilot office You will th•o be declared the wiuer ud linmed.Utely receive your prU. in caah. lJ you win a rpa.Dd priM of $100., a check in that amoUDI will be mt.iled to you after you have pr• .. nted your Social Security cud al th• Daily Pilot for veriJication. (S) To claim a priM, your Social Security cud muat be preMnled at the Daily Pilot no later than 5:00 P.M . .,two bualne .. daya after the number waa publi1hed. Any priM not claimed by th• deac:l.Uu will be forfeited. (6) It ia not nec. .. ary to pu.rchue th• Daily Pilot. You may in1pect the winninq number• in th• lobby of th• Ora.o9e Cout Daily Pilot (7) Emplo.,.., or repreeentatiYM, or circulatou ud di1>- trlbutou of the Daily Pilot or member• of their famru.t are not eUqible (8) Th• Daily Pilot will be eol• judqe in int•rpretinQ th ... rulM Oect.1on of the judqet it final 4 WAYS TO CHECK FOR WINNING NUMBERS • SUBSCRIBE TO CONVENIENT DAILY PILOT DELIVERY. • CHECK DAILY PILOT NEWSSTAND EDmON ON MON., WED., FRI. • SEE RULE NO. 6 ABOVE. FILL OUT COUPON BELOW (Or Reuon able Faoa~mile) AND MAIL TODAYI (Only One Per Envelope, Pleaae ) M y Social Security Number u ------------------------------ NAME ------------------------------------------------------ ADD RESS ________________________ --===------------------------ CITY ST ATE ---------------------------------------------- ZIP _________________ ~--~-PHO NE ~---------------- 0 P l .... start con•enient home dellnry of the Daily P ilot. ! tJSFL desperate, needs another Herschel Walker WASHINGTON -With two of its [il chaner members on the fl nanciat ropes and • II • several other clubs facing lagiaa ticket sales. the United States Football League moves into ats second season in desperate need of another Herschel Walker. "Ticket sales are off in a number of cities with the bi8$est problem areas in San Antonio, Washington and Chicago," according to Dom Camera, the USFL's Director of Marketing, using figures thtouah Friday, Feb. 17. The much ballyhooed signing of Walker last year at the time an All-American at the University of Georgia and the Heisman Trophy winner, spurTCd 11cket sales and gave instant legitimacy to the new leaaue. "Herschel was a shot in the arm for the whole league last year," Camera noted. "Unfonunately there as no Walker this time." According to figures compiled by the league, half the 12 clubs that fielded teams last year have sold fewer season tickets this year. In addition, three of the six new entrants in the league are experiencing lagging ticket sales. San Antonio. one of the new expansion franchises has been hun by a squabble, recently resolved with city officials over the availability of a stadium. ' . "T he .ownership decided early not to sell any tickets unul they were sure they had the stadium "said Camera. adding that "as a result the team has sold only , 5.000 season tickets." Doing the best are the Arizona Wranglers, formerly the Chicago Blitz, whose ticket sales are up 39 percent and the USFL champion Michigan Panthers, who arc up 292 percent. USFL begins drug program NEW YORK -The United States m Football League has joined with the FBI • II • and the Drug Enforcement Agency in a program to alert its players against illegal wa$ering, sports bribery and illicit narcotics trans- acuons. Commissioner Chet Simmons announced Monday. · ··we hope to avoid problems of this nature," said Simmons, "but you only have to read the newspapers to realize that the potential exists. We're pleased to be a pan of this pro$ram since we believe that awareness leads to prevcnuon, which is always the best cure." The rrogram, first introduced to tbe National Basketbal Association in 1982, also has been im· plemented by the National Football League, the National Hockey League and major league baseball. Mahre gets first look at baby SCOTTSDALE. Ariz. -Olympic Ei gold medal winner Phil Mahre is expected to 'ct a first look at his newborn son tonight. Mother and baby were reponcd "doing very well" at Scottsdale Memonal Hospital Monday. Holly Mahre gave birth to a healthy boy Sunday at about the same time her husband, Ph al, 26. was winning a ~old medal in the slalom for the United States an Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. Mrs. Mahre's mother, Ardith Kaiser of Scottsdale. said her daughter. 22. ga ve birth about one week early to Alexander Ryan Mahre. who weighed 8 pounds, 13 ounces. Her mother said Holly finally got through to Sarajevo by telephone and was able to speak with her husband. He is expected in Scottsdale Tuesday evening. Baker becomes free agent SCOTTSDALE. Ariz. -Dusty Baker, Ill claimed on waivers by the San Francisco Giants on Thursday, notified tbe team through his agent Monday that he would not report to San Francisco. thereby becoming a free agent. Baker. 34, was one of the Los Angeles Dodgers' leading hitters over his eight seasons with the club, but the veteran outfielder was released last week with two years remaining on his Los Angeles contract at an estimated $700,000 per season. If Baker had joined the Giants, the only team to claim him. the Giants would have assumed the contract. Baker had fi ve days to decide whether to join that team or entertain bids from other major league baseball clubs. The outfielder had a no-trade clause in his contract and recently rejected a proposed trade that would have sent him to the American LcaJue's OakJand A's. The A's wanted him pnmarily as a designated hitter. and Baker said the role did not appeal to him. Andenon PCAA '• top player Fmno State rorward Ron Anderson, m who played a key role in lhe Bulldoas' upset of fif\h>-ranktd Nevada-Las Vt&AS. was named the Pacific Coast Athltlic AS$0C'ia· tion's basketball player of the wetk Monday. Anderson, a 6-7, 215-pound senior from Chicaao, pumped in 27 points and had $ix rebounds, two auists. two steals and a blocked shot in Fresno State's 68-43 win over UNLV Sunday. The de!caut Fresno was only the Rebels' second loss of the season. Anderson, who eamed the PCAA honor for lhe Keond time this season, also had 12 points and five rebounds in the Bulldogs' 6S-S6 victory over UC Irvine Thursday. • Pac-10 honors Jones, Sitton Stanford University auard Keith m Jones and Oregon State University for· ward Charlie Sitton were named Pacific· IO Conferenc.e basketball players of the week • Monday. Sitton, a 6-8 senior 'from McMinnville, Ore., scored S4 points and grabbed nine rebounds, had five assists and three blocked shots to lead the Beaven in victories over Anzona, Washington and Washinaton State. Against Arizona. Sitton had 23 points, three rebounds. two blocked shots and one asSJsl Jones, a 6-1 senior from Phoenix, scored 43 points and added four rebounds, three assists and five steals as the Cardinal extended its Pac-10 win streak to seven with victories over USC and UCLA. Against UCLA. Jones had 23 points, three steals, two assists and one rebound. Bird NBA player of week NEW YORK -Boston forward m Larry Bird, who led the Celtics to three straight road victories. bas been named the National Basketball Association's Player of the Weck. Bird averaged 26. 7 points, l 3.3 rebounds and J 3.0 assists as the Celtics defeated Golden State, Seattle and Portland. Against the Warriors, he had 16 points.. nine rebounds and 17 assists. the second-highest assist total ever by an NBA forward. Against the "SuperSonics, be collected 30 points. 13 rebounds and 13 assists, and against the Trail Blazers, Bird had 34 points, nine rebounds and nine assists. Boldlrev honored by NHL MONTREAL -Veteran left winger Iii Ivan Boldirev of the Detroit Red WinJS , scored four goals and added six assists an three games to cam player of the week honors, the National Hockey League announced Monday. Boldirev edged goaltender Pat Riggin of the Washington Capitals for the award. Riggi n posted a 3-1·0 won-lost-tied mark in four road contests. including a 4-0 shutout against the Minnesota North Stars on Feb. 13. Also receiving consideration for the award were center John Chabot of the Montreal Canadiens, goaltender Bob Froese of the Philadelphia Flyers and defense man Recd Larson of Detroit. NHL suspends Paterson DETROIT -The National Hockey ri1 League on Monday suspended Detroit Red , Wings left wing Joe Paterson for two games after his fourth game misconduct penalty . this season, a Red Wings spokesman said. Paterson also was fined S l 00 and the team S l ,000. Paterson was slapped witb a game misconduct after a fight Sunday in the Red Wings' 6-2 victory over the Maple Leafs. He served a five-minute penalty Sunday for fighting with Toronto's Dave HutchinlOn, who also received a five-minute penalty and a game misconduct. Under NHL rules, a player receives a one-game suspension after his third pme misconduct, with the penalty increased by one pme for each subsequent misconduct. Sir Pele races to victory ARCADIA -Sir Pele, ridden by ~ Rafael Meza, moved in front early in the homestretch and went on to record a I 1h·length victory over Luc.ence in Mon- day's$ l 8S.62S San Luis Obispo Handicap on the turf at Santa Anita. Meza kept Sir Pele, a S-ycar-old son of former Kentucky Derby winner Bold Forbes, within closing striking distance of the lead as Lucence set the pace from the begjnning of the 1 1/~mile race. Meza then took bis mount outside in the final tum and Sir Pele edged ahead ofLucence, then widened the lead comina down the homestretch. Carrying 118 pounds, Sir Pelc was timed in 2:27 2-5. Reynolds rallies UTEP Keith Lee's tip-i n a t buzzer gives Memphis St. 69-67 w in EL PASO. Texas (AP)-Afterscoring only one point in the fi rst half, senior Fred Reynolds poured in 16 ia the second half to pace ninth-ranked Texas-El Paso to a 62-S5 Western Athletic Conference victory over Colorado State Monday night. Reynolds. a 6·6 forward, scored 12 points durina seven minutes of the second half when he was lhe only M1ner to score. But UTEP outscored the Rams 3S-3 l in the final 20 minutes af\er leadina 27-24 at halftime. shot when Lee stripped the ball from forward Ken Suttles. Turner then took a pass from Lee a~ attempted the jumper but missed, giving Lee the chance to tap in the winning basket. Memphis State improved its record to 20-4 and 10-t m the Metro Conference. Southern Mississippi, now 11·13 and 2-9 in lhe conferenc.e, also had lhe chance to win the aame in rcaulation when forward James Williams went to the foul line for a I -and· I with 11 scconds left but missed and lhe Tiaers got the ~bound. But Lee miss,ed a I 0-footer at the buzzer aod the game went into overtime. The Eaales led throu&hout much of the ft.rst half, building as much as a 35·28 lead with S:09 left. The Miners, currently the No. I team an the WAC. improved their record to 23-2 overall, 11-2 in tJ\e ---------.----------- conference. CSU feJI to 12-12 and 6-6. B k tb 11 CSU, which handed the ~iners their first l~ss of~he as e a scores season 1n January at Fon Colhn.!z Colo., was led tn tconna c ..... by Rich Strona. who put an 14. 1 odd Benn backed Strona WHT • ~ : •:.'~~~.::... " with 12 pomts. uc ntne 97, Pedflc " lot) Reynolds was aided by Luster Goodwtn with 13 s °'"'°" u. Pectt1c, Ore.. » Navv "· e. CarodNI 1' points. NW .... ~ 13, E °'"°" 14 NE 1.ou1.i.na '°· SE 1.oulmna ~ ll0atl81 Navv "· I!. Cll'Ollna M C'SU which shot 46 percent from the floor, was ....., Me•a "'· Air '°'c.e • s Ftotlde •· ,... ·•tr~ piqued by foul trouble. As a result, the Minm IClOred 24 g;."':"'rr!!~ t~·~~.!i'. Ttdl 74 i~~.1:=':: · points from lhe free-throw lane. tot> Tfl -Crw.11.nooM "· O.vlchOn ti h fiThe Ra'!'00didnd•t mhake 1t 1to thhe chf'tylhstripe ·~ ~!~ c~t1cut :,~ovtoenc• 59 ~~:0i1~ _;.u~ IS 12 ot t e ant pen , an s ot on y t rec 1rtt row tn \I& GW .. ~ n. Howard ~ w v1r~ "· vlrflnte r.m " second half. MMIAllM 41, IAl•Y•ll• d MIOWllT Mtmpllt1 &ate It, So. Ml1tlttl11PI 11 HA 11'1ESBURG. Mi s. -M'empb.i1 State forward Ktath Ltt tipped in a miJ.Sed 20-foot jumper by par_d Andre Turner al the buTW' 10 ajvc 12th-ranked Mem{>bis late a Metro Conference basketbAU victory in ovttume o ... tt Soutl'ltm Mi sis is.iof Monday nl&ht The t:a&lc "'ere hofdin the baU, playina for lhc lut 1 St tonevtnturt 7), IOtlOn U. 60 Cle'INnd SI. a>., Wh.·Gr"" .. '°'"" .. . Alebeml u, MlufulPOI 6S .... !. lllnolt M{IM·~·llldlanffOM ~M St U, ! Tennn.e .,. " 1¥Antvlllt •I, 0.ll'Olt If Ctnt F\orktl ,,, "Olllnt ,, l.OYOI&. tit 7S, SI. l..oul• .. FWlde 7t, <Morel• " Orel ttooer" JOS. 1111w 100 FIOflde 51. 57 Tliltnl Sl XH!ef, ONo ... Olll9homa o.r.1a r;cJ. 10, Md.•'-""'.,, " "*" " lOu'TN#UT UY ts, Mlulutlltll ii, 70 T•••• • P• ... ,. c.lor.00 ll SS ,, "aA WISTSJlN CO..flHINCI ~~ W L l4 " l2 ,, ?t 24 24 )0 24 31 17 37 MMhfftt OMtlell GI ,~ ' II I I'll " u1111 n 22 ,m OtJIH 2t 26 .$27 San Mtonlo n >1 .446 K111N11 Cllv 2l 30 .434 ,...., • IV. e>.nv., 27 3J AGO 10\li 11 Houiton 21 » Mt IASTlaN CO..fll•INCI 90SIOfl Phlled9tc>nl1 N-York N-Jerstv WaaNnoton -~ Otvbleft 42 12 ,.. " J3 20 26 2t 2S 2t ~-DMIMfl Mllweullff l2 23 O.trolt 30 22 Allenlt 2' 27 Chlceeo 21 30 Cltvtlend 20 32 lndlene 16 31 MelldtV'• ~ No Demfl Kn.ckJltd T'"6tflt'a O.m-. S.tllle ., l.alltrs PllllaeltlPl'tle t i New Jeoev Pwlland ti New Y~ Cleveland •I Allanlt Ptioenl11 t i San Antonio O.lrolt ti t<en .. s Cltv Ute h 11 Chlce11<> Mllwtukff •• HOUllOll Denver 11 Golden Stete w.-...'1'1Gtmea Ltllen ti SHllle Portland 11 W11lllno1on New York et Detroit Chteeoo 11 tndl•n• Houston et Dtll•a Sen Antonio II Denver 8011on 11 S.n Dleoo COLLEGE ne 642 m 473 .463 ,.,., l\li ""' 17 UC Irvine 97' Pacific " (f"CAA) UC MllVINE -Thornton I . MeDonelO 27, Murpny 2•, LM 4, Turner 11, 8ffns 2, Carmon 0, Grendbon 10, Cl1cclo 4 Total\ 31·15 21·36 97. ltACl"C -Rltt>tl 2. Franklln 21, Counts I. PIPPle 4, Leldenhelm« 2, ThOmla S, Andrttt1 6, TevlOI' 2. Fll>len 10. Cret>lr• 4, Pro.chi< 2, Du\111 O Tol•I• 27·70 lt·lt '6. Hellllmt-UCI, 0-30 Fouled out-Grandison, Counts Rt00Und1-UCI SI (Thornton 13l, UOP 41 IFranklln 11) Anlsts-UCI 22 (McOonato 6). UOP lS (Pfl>l>la 4) Totet touls-UCI 22, UOP 27. UC Irvine ( lS·I ) 91 U of IOthO 7l 11 Pt«>0erdlne 83 79 San Dleoo Sr 76 u u. of COiorado ts 71 UK 66 n u ol San Oleoo IS 91 u. of Monl•n• 13 65 Wll>er SI. 13 IO u11n u I 10 New Me11lco Stele 71 12 Lano &tech Stele 67 .. Ntved• LH Veoat 13 71 u11n Stele 11 n San Jose Slelt 12 63 Fruno Sti tt S7 93 Unlversllv ol Peclllc 72 11 Ct l Slett Fulltr1on IO 1a UC S.nta &erbara 67 100 Lono &each State 14 n New Mtxlco State 102 64 San Jote Stele S3 69 Utan SI•'• 67 S6 Fresno Stare 65 '7 Ptclflc " Ftt>. 13 -UC Sanle Berbare' (hOmt). Maren 1 -Nenoa Lea V11a1• thorne) Mardi 3 -Cet Stell Fullerton (hOme) Merdl 1·10 -PCAA Tournament •I Forum In tnolewood. . -°'"°'" PCAA oeme A" "°"" oame1 Plav9d et Cr•wford HeU AN ;ames 1lart et 7.30 PCAA C~• Ntv•d• LH Veoea UC trvlne Ute n Sllte Fraano Stett New Ma11lco Stet• Cel Stitt Fullerton San Jose St1te Lono BttCh Stele UC Santi 8arbara Pacific W L •• 1 11 • 10 s 9 s 1 1 1 1 6 9 s 9 3 " 0 ,. MeftdaV'• k-uc lrvlne 97, P1clflc " TlwndeV'a Gemes 0-.. WL n 2 IS 9 16 • II 7 11 12 16 9 10 I• S IS • 1S 2 24 UC Santi &erblra et UC lrvlnt Cel Stele Fullerton 11 Ntv•d• Las Vt011 Unlvtoltv of Pacific at Lono Beacn Ste le Fr11no Stele t i Nlw Mexico Stele San Jote St•te II Uteh Stele S.tllrdav'• Gamet UC Santi Barbare et Ntveoa LH Vt011 Uten Sttlt ., Frittno Sl•I• ~v'• Game P1clflc 11 New Mexico Stat• MendtV'• Game Lono 8ellCtl Stitt ti Cet Stele Fullerton I North Cprotlne 16 ll 2. Georoet6wr1 (1) 3. Houston 4. l(entuc:llv s. O.Peul 6. llllnols 7. Nt'lldl Lil Vt011 I. Okl•homa 9. Texes·EI PHO 10. Tulsa 11. Ark1nse1 12 MemPfll• SI 13. Purdue 14. Duke lS. Wakt Forittl 16. Svrecuse 17 Ttme>lt II. Weahlnoton 19. Auburn 70. Oregon SI 23-1 23·2 23·3 20-3 19·2 20·3 23·'2 22·3 22·2 22·2 21·• 19·4 ll·S 1H ll·S 17-S 20-2 ll·S 16·• ll·S SoCal C ..... ( 19·71 1239 1 1169 2 1097 4 "' 6 171 3 U1 1 841 5 111 9 m 10 6S2 12 600 u SS9 a ... 11 312 " 269 13 233 16 211 20 209 15 155 1SI 100 Cel Slelt LA 13 101 Le Verne 7t SI SI. Merv'• IO tS 8etllanv 61 106 UC S.nlt Cru1 S6 93 Cteremont 6' 61 Pomona·Pllrer S6 61 Loyole·Mervmount 70 'l Pte"lc Chrlstlerl (fOfft lt) 0 n ltldlands " 94 Mlttourl 9a1>ll•t IS 12 LalOUl"ntau·TtllH ff n C)ccldenlel 10 76 w111mon1• 121 '2 Cel l111ll1t IO ff UC S.n DllOO ff 100 Cel Lutheren ~ 7S Point Lome 71 •S AlUM PK"k: 61 '° 9lola 71 93 Notre Deme (Ce11t.l " " Cel l111tl•t 75 107 West CoH I Chrlslltn " n FrHnO Peclflc 67 n uc San Oleoo 74 11 Point I.om• 71 FtO. 21 -AluM PIClflc' """ 2• -11 LA teonn· ''° 2S -Alumnl • -Oenollt NAIA Dlttrlct II conltnnel oeme o\M oarnet start •I 7;JO Pm HIGH SCHOOL 80YS C8' 4·A fllleYtfh <HCO..D •OUND, TC>NtOtfT, tlJI) Ml* Oii (U·ll "' it.iot Verdet (U·t) al Aollkle HI a 1oteO Tedi (19-7) n. Oc9M YllW (1,·11 et FOUl!leln Vallt'I ~ (12·l) ti ~n 01·7) $1. hNlotf (21-S) 11 $1, ~ toaco 120-•) kllll Monie• 125-ll et 1000 Oeka (20•5) ,_.,.. VllWt ( 11•1) VL \/«bum [)ej llMl ot Comoton Colllw lttcl!Mch 12t-ll ot Crftlll llf-SI ~ (11-6) 11 I.I ,_.,.,. llHl Ct, 2·A ... .,..._ tu•• I dt ( 19•1) YI. Nort1I alvtnlOt US-1) If ltamollO G---(2J·3l et H~ Hllotlta Wlllon OMO> H4W1 c tf·•I vs M•'* ¥19 < 19·6) II II T.ro I LM Anv.o. (12·111 ¥1 m T ... CtJ.91 11 ~Vltlo " MOrtllO ve1tt m-21 ., Dernltn o• ., L.I Quinta (l)·lOl va (Ne Y..., l!M• el Dena Hlk Oowftty UO·Sl ... °''"" (lt·•• II Clllcwnan c-.,. PomoN 113-t) va IUMcae ID•Jl II Edlaotl bl CU' 2·A •v9ffl SOnort (2 .. 2) va S.vaMa 111-71 11 Ket ... AllttloH Vtllev 117·7) et CIOttllo ONl Northvi.w 114· 11) et S.nte Cert (l,.Jl Pelo Verde (21-)J II S.UOUI ( 17•9) Cl""'M• (,_12) et Sen lernardlno (21-Sl lurrouollt (IUdoecrittt) (15·7) et Montd4tlr ( 1'·•> NordllOff ( \1•6) vt. La H11>ra t 12· 101 at SOnor• Workm.n 121·3) et 8tll 01rdefl1 t 11·•1 ' CIF l·A •veffl laMlnD <21-l) at 81ue11 ( 14· 7l Le Salle (17•7) 11 Oflltflo Chrlatle n 02·1) Mlrlltlte ( 17•1) et LA leotlat ( 19·•> St, Joaeoh tS.nle Merit ) (11·2) el 61 PHO de ltoela (20-3) Chllmlnl6e (21•4) II HewthOrne 112·9> Wtlllller CMatltn (20-)l II Atmore ( lS·I ) ltlm of '"' World {19-S) II LA Lut11tt1n llf-2) Aoulnta 121·•> er 8aldwln Perk (20-ll cur srnal Sdtoth •veffl Cn.ctwlck (17·•> et C•l>l•lreno \letltv CIVlitlAn ( 11-6) Cll Prep al OrMIGlt Lutheran (ll·f) TtmPle Chrl•tlen ( 12·3) I I Pe~l\a Potv (11•4) Moleve 02·7) et H-lll CJV'lallan (2Ml Rio Hondo Prep (lf-4) at Woodcrell Chrl•llen (12·1) Sef'reno (20-3) et Feith 8aotlll (17·6) TemPieton 117·2) e t Cete (11·3) 0.kwOOd at Crouroe"s ( 1•·1) HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS cu• 4-A •voffl (s.c.I PW!ld. w.-...v. 7:>0 IU'\.) l uena m-01 11 Mlltll' a.. m-s> ) Culver City (20-3) et North Torrence 172--2) C:om111on (2'2·4) al LvnwOOd 122·4) Pomona ( 17·Sl el P'tumeln V"1111V Mornlno•lde (23·3> et L.tkewood < 11·71 Sent• 8art>ere t lt-4) at UPiand (2S· ll Gahr (20-5) 11 L& Poly ( 11· 7) Muir (14-0) et Westlake t 17·6) CCF J·A •voffs ,.,..,., Star (20-0 at S.n Get>rltl (21·4) Loere (22·4) •I Mission \llelo !21·61 Loulaville (20·7) et San Lula Oblsoo 120-3) Fontana (23·2> et l ualln 117·91 E~enu (17·6) et Painw.11 (21·2) Coalt Mete (19•4) el Schurr 122·2) W1 a tdllt 121·21 et Altmanv 117·71 Walnut 11S·•> el FoothlM (24· 1) CIF 2·A lllaVeffs Norco (16-9) 11 8 ree·Ollnoa (26·1) Artesle <21-4) et &ol'8 Grande 0 6-61 Ca lon 124·2) el Mont~ tll-21 Centrel (13-6) el KIPPll (21-3) Indio (23·2) et San Bernardino <16·9> Ganeahe (20-4) ., L• H•br• (23·2) Ttml>le Cltv (21·4) at Palm Sc>rllnoa m·Sl Soutll Hnta (20·4 et LI Oulnle 123·2) CIF l·A •vofh St. Josee>tts (21·1) 11 Aooure t16·S) Ro .. rv 121·5) at Onterlo Chrlstl•n (10-11) Blsnoe> (20-1) et Reoln11 Clell (21·'1) Hawth«ne 119-3> 111 Blsllcw Dleoo ( 11·3) MenhaU (12·S) at Pareclelt (17·3) San Dimas (24· 1) et Vattev Chrlallen (17·7) Conntllv 118·4) et Norrt Dame Acaoemv Senre Clara 111-Sl er Le Reina t 11·1) CIF Sn\al Sdtod1 MarlcOC>a < lt·O) at Ynntve Pltorlm ( 17-2) 11 Trona (7· \0) 29 P11ms ( 13-t) et Rio Honoo Pree> (14·1) Fllntrkloe Sacred Heart ( 11 ·2) 11 Snerman lndltn (16·1) Crour~ (14•7) e t Waatrldoe (1'·1) Bffumont (14·8) al Molavt (16·3) ~ Clln1"8n I lt·S) et 8oron (I HI Rtmona Conv.nt (11·2l 11 VltwPOlnt llS·S) COMMUNITY COLLEGE OCC (13· ll) GtNlen Wnt (S· 17) 68 MlreCoite 73 6S Snow 71 13 SD Mes. 7S 61 Cenvona 69 104 E111 LA 79 n l(lngs River 61 61 Imp, \ltJley 70 S9 Glenclelt 11 62 Ml. SAC 61 61 Pe..otne 78 71 NtPt S4 67 St<1UOIH 90 72 St nte Ro.. 82 S3 San Jost 64 6S PelOmer 49 6S S. Mounltln 79 74 Eeat LA 6S 103 Glendale. Al 76 12 Citrus SJ 76 Riverside 86 66 Groumont S4 64 Oranoe Coest 78 IS lmP. Valley 79 7S Santa Ane 73 6S SD Mel8 6e 10 Fullerton 87 71 Golden West 64 SJ Cv11reu S6 S3 F ulltrton SI 61 Ml. SAC 79 31 Cvt>ress 52 S7 Com11lon 61 S9 Ml. SAC SI 63 C1rrllo1 72 39 Compton S6 59 OCC 9A 6' Ce<rllos 73 n Santi Ana 16 19 Sant• Alla .a 74Fullerton 97 94 Golden Wittl St n CVPl'tU 91 60 Fullerton 71 SI Ml. SAC SS .. CYPrlttS ... Ftt-er Compton S3 Mt. SAC tot) S4 F2s-<lll'rlloa 61 Com11ton 49 F22-et Cerritos F2S-.t Santa AM Saddleback < 14· 12) 16 Sente Ant IO 69 Grotimont 60 SI Ml. SAC 49 n tm11. V•llev 97 93 Fullerton 10I 61 Southwestern SI S3 Mt. SAC SS 61 MlreCost1 S9 69 Ml. San Jee. 17 41 Sen Dleoo SO '2 Santi Monk:1 12 71 SD Meta 65 31 Slit. 8ar1>1re 36 6S P1tomar •I 61 Lone 8eedl 67 61 Groumont SS 66 Vtnture 67 73 Imp V11ley 72 13 Oe5erl 16 61 Southwtsle<n SI 53 LA Vattev 71 70 MlreCoste lot) 52 Santi Monica so 63 '1 LA Pierce 71 60 Sen Oleoo SI 12 PalOmer S7 F2'2-al SD Ml .. ~OMMUNITY COLLEOE WOMEN Oranee Coaat st, Orosamont 32 OttANGE COAST -Anderton 1, KruPk• 6, Rivera 14, Gln1bur11 10, Howltnd 2, Mendoia 12. Burris 14. Totati: 21 3·7 S9 OROSSMONT -Thom11 9, F ltll 2, 8rown 2, Wtal 2, Mclevle I, Gllmort 2. Cronin 1, M.afl 6. To1111: 12 1·15 32. Ht lfllme: Orenoe Cotti, 2t·15. Total fouta: Orenoe Cotti 22, Gron mont 16, Fouled out: a rown (Gl. &•PAIS~ Daie ~ Tlme sun. Fii> 26 -Denver 1 om SUn. Mir.• -Blrmlnohlm 1 11.m Sun. ,.,..r 11 -11 Oollltf'td I.JO Pm. Set. Mer. 11 -el Sen Antonio Noon Sun. Mer. 2S -Jedtaonvllle I 11.m Sun. At>r. 1 -New .>eraev 1 o m Mon. APr. 9 -et e>.nv« 6 II m Sat. Arw. 14 -Memphlt s 11.m. Fri. APr. 20 -11 Chlcloo ' 11.m. Mon. AP<. 30 -at Houaton 6 11.m Sat. Mlv s -Plll•IXireh S o.m Sun. Mtv IJ -11 Phlledelt>nle 11:30 a.m $1.1n. ,.,..., 20 -Mlchl9an 1 11.m. Sal. ,.,..., ,. -ArltOM s II m Sun. June 3 -et We'111noton 11:>0 1.m SUll June 10 -et Ot-.tehOme 11.30 a.m. Fri, JllM IS -~lend 7 o "' Set. June t3 -11 Arizona l 11.m Timtl ore loQI end .-.;bite! 10 Chenot dllt to natloM1 TV covertot ~ j I t I ,, . c .I Orange Coal OAll.Y PILOT/Tueed~. FebNlll) 21, 1114 Prep basketball log H• VftW LIAGUI CO.OMA OIL MAa •vtttC (15 ... 1·6) 110• lS, I• ltl '1 MeflM Q S. Meenot1a M 47 C.N Vtlltv '5 " llot'-Orol\Ot SJ 6) L9 Jordell " so 0.1\t Hlh d H Mlulon \li.19 D 6' ~ff·Ollnda 64 ~ Tutllll 11 S2 \/Ille ltork •I n S.Vonne » 52 w'""" .,. S1 trvlne 41 41 Cor de! M#tr 51 l6 WooObrlo.t 37 '4 Minion \llelO IO ., u Quinto " " Lot Arnloo• 7' S7 Eatenc:t. 4' 64 E1111ren11 4f 3' Unlvenllv ... 10 9ot11 Grende S7 42 lrvlM '11 S3 Sddbdt loll 54 45 Co.le ~ 3' " Costa ,,.,... to 51 ~ 31 37 Cor. ci.i Mar 42 41 Et Toro 43 .., Unlver.llv 41 u Npl. HO/Dor S2 SS Eatenclt " 3' lhtll'lda $6 45 Npl. HartlOf' .. .. Univ•'"" 47 S3 El Toro " 47 lrvlM 47 SO SaddleMck 72 '2 CO.II """° .. 6' Cotlll Met411 61 U ~ 92 t2 Cor. dtl Mar 4f S3 Et Toro SO 42 Unlveraltv " S6 Herbor (OI) S4 .0 Ealenclo 61 COSTA Mis.& <2·•· 0-14) S.. San Clemente S2 Comoron 43 Cenvon S6 San•• Ant •1 Arl~la so LIOUnt """ .. Foothlll 47 L1ouna HIHI 36 Et Toro 60 trvlne 40 University 3' Cor de! M.ar 54 N111. Haroor S3 Estencle SI Saddltblck 44 El Toro 61 lrvlne 61 Unlveraltv 46 Cor. de! M.ar SS NPI. Harl:IOr SI E1t1nclll 57 Stddlet>acil EL TottO (lM,M) S3 Npf H¥bOr 6' n El Toro If 61 NEWitC>ltT HARMMI 71 (14. 10, •• , ) 46 S7 WerrWt • 1 Sl 62 Witttern '3 ... 46 Los Amleos 4S SI 43 Orenge Gi.n 47 60 n Mar v1''' 40 •2 57 FetlWook 56 38 4S PowlY 47 6' 52 Rffd(Ntv) SI 16 67 Dou9Ja•(Nevl 43 45 SI Reno 43 59 46 Unlver•llv " 10 Sl E1tanc1-6e 74 46 Seddllbllc:k tot) Sl 11 SI El Toro 3' 69 54 Co1ta ~ 44 10 .., trvlne 45 62 52 Cor. IMI Mer 45 Sf Unlverlffv 54 ri 49 E111ncle 63 70 61 SeddJeback 10 37 El T6"o 69 56 Coate MKa S5 66 trvlne S3 S4 COM tot) 56 61 Mlulon Vlelo 54 47 Lloun• 9••ch n SADOLEIACIC 46 Lit Wllaon S7 (lt·S, I0·4) 43 LOI Atemltoa 69 S5 SA VtU.V SJ 47 Corona 44 67 H9 Rutrvti 47 41 Saddlebacll 52 46 Senti AllO 31 61 L.aouna Hllh S7 .. Mtonoll• ... 31 Costa Mell 36 66 Trov 45 SS Sddbk (2 ol) SI 52 Et Toro 41 63 Estancia 74 64 Garden Grove 60 36 NPI. Harbor Sl 6S El Ooredo 37 10 Unlvenltv 57 14 S.ntlaoo S9 43 Cor Ott Mer 41 S4 lrvlne (ol) 53 11 lrvlne 53 SI El Toro (2 or) SS 71 Coate Meu u Sl Newoort (or) 46 St Saddltbldl SS 46 E •lanc:Ja 41 63 E•t1ncl1 69 31 Cor. del Mer Sl 69 NPI Harbor J7 52 University 37 63 Unlveraltv S 1 14 Coile Mesa 51 SO Cor. de! Mer S3 n lrvlne so 19 Irvine 72 S5 El Toro S9 CIP' 54 Domlnouei F21-Loa Amlooa ISTANCIA ( :tl·l, 11· ll 13 Loi Amloo• IS LADUM 9Hdl 19 S.n Clemente 7t Powev 67 Viste 64 Glen Hoover S9 S.n Dleoullo 64 Vine Perk 69 Sant• Clare 51 Mellll' Del II Orenoe 49 Cor. Cltl Mer 61 Npt. Htrt>or 14 Et Toro 41 Saddllbldl 69 lrvtne IO Coate Mel8 61 Unlvtnllv S6 Cor. del Mer 63 NPI Herbor 69 Et Toro 71 Seddlel>Kk 61 lrvlne 11 Coste Melt 64 Unlvenllv c" 88 Dane Hiiia F21-Pomont S.. 80 NPI. Harbor 61 • 66 Estancia 71 52 Cor. del Mar 4S 61 University SO 70 Costa Mesa S7 ,,, S3 Ptlm Sol'lnoi s 1 60 F21-et North, Riv. SI 60 69 " 67 Sl 40 47 40 50 45 ll 29 .. 33 S7 St Sl 41 63 60 .. 44 55 .. S3 16 47 41 39 57 49 37 63 47 66 S4 60 47 St 70 •5 " 51 S3 so 4S UNIVE•SITY (7·15, S·f) Sunnv Hiiis 41 C1nvon 39 Bree-otlnda 42 Gtrden Grove '17 w~ ., C.nvon 61 Cvt>reu u 8olsa Grtnde 63 NP!. HerbOr 46 Cor. del Mar 36 Cotte Me.. <IO Irvine 41 Et Toro 10 SeddleC>ac• 52 E•tenda 61 Npt, Htrbor St Cor. de! Mar u Coatt Meu 61 lrvlnt '2 El Toro 63 Saddlebedl 6 I Estencle 64 santa Anlh MONDAY'S llESULTS (45"' ef '1·dlY ~ nwetlnt) l'ltltST aAC&. 6"'2 turlonos. Famltv FOii (Pinc.av) 6.40 '-20 3.40 Wicked Hiiier (Gtlllleno) 1.20 S.IO Sonic SPlld (Cnl•MO•l S.40 AIM> reced: GOiden Clrdt, Rotf\erWOOd, earrer Gold, ·scuae Plies.a, Junote H11•. Rusi\ to Powlll'. Time 1·17 4/S. SECOND RACE. OM mllt Fr tve'a W lill (C ta l e nadel Sl.20 lUO I 1.40 Whet1mom IPlerct l UO UO Lei of Stera IOllvarts) 13.00 Atso rtce0: Le Garufi. Hiott St>ruct. Qlueen Nenol'(n, TOP Acilltver, Ledy Llenoe. tndlan Fablft, Determined Lenle Time: 1:31 3/S. S2 DAILY DOUILI t•·7l paid S226.00. THIRD RACI. 6 furlOnoa. Doon'• Doll (Gerclt ) 14.40 uo 3.10 Wiid and SwMI (Steiner) 7.60 3.40 Al>OVt the Pints (Ftll) 2.60 AIM> reced: Perkv'i Cholce, Staker'• Girt, BIOndt 8omt>shell. Our Flr51 Btusn Time 1:11 3/S. P'OUtlTH RACI. l 1116 mlln Gi tt D1nctr (Dtlehouuevel Prince True (McCerron) Heav1ntv Pteln (Pinc.vi •.40 2.60 2 20 3.40 2 40 uo Swlvtl, Atso rtce0: 9olcl elelltf uo, Greet Deal, Anotemen. Time· t-43 2/S. '5 IXACTA <•·Sl oeld 133.00. ""™ aAc•. 6 turtono" Sir Stout (OllvOIH) 20.40 7.00 • 00 Chrlt'S Ltd (McC•rron) 3 . .0 3 20 Exctualvt Senion IRitlllle) 7 20 AllO rKIO' lndln Ster, Monllevr E11clle· rnent, Kllatldon, New~ Fla.n. Gr«IOOll. Emmet Ke y, Et Jebel. Time 1-0. 2/S. '5 laec111 ~-7> 1>11ld 113'.SO SIXTH aACI. 7 furlon9t. Allualon (Shoemlker) lUO S 20 3 .0 Zvlhum tMcCtrron> UO 3 00 Drt1m Ffflhtf IDelahOUIMyt) UO AIM> recld: Fffl(I Ctlerm, Min· \trtlorlnc.n , Oll•ton, L• Firm, Nonhlrn Numa a. Time: 1:'14. SIVIHTH ltAC•. 1 1/16 ml""- Anenlf'el !Toro) lUO lAO uo $flint l'Olr (Mc:C•rronl t AO UO Wiid Aoaln ($!~tit) 2.IO Alao recld: Tender Sover•lt n PUll.tnel, Molllble ll'M$1, $11verl0t Time. 1-41 211 u ludl (3· ll Mid us.so. NINTH aAC 1 1116 m Mullcal Scof'e (Mc.CllfTOlll •OO UO >AO Ott\ ACCllll CVOilf\T\llllO) 140 4..20 IW I! •cetV.. ISl!oetNktr J S 40 Alto roeoit ~ In The II\•, lo 0... ltldl Wlltoll. IN#trv Olodtr\, ~ Time 1;42 t lS. JS IACtt (9-4) Hid in.SO. AtltMOllCO .... 1, I SUNSET LEAGUE IOISON (lt-$, Ml 42 Le Hel>r e 21 33 KlllNA (OI ) 35 91 Domlnoue1 J\I S6 41 Cypreu .. SS Footlllll SO 43 Domlnouei 60 64 Lii Quln11 .. 76 C•PO Vellev 55 62 Los Allot 40 65 Reno SO •9 81llermlne 45 54 RM<I <Nev.> 47 41 LB Wiiton 47 53 Marine (2 o~) 46 St Hin. 8Hch S3 u Founleln Vtllev 54 u Weatmlnater '3 S4 Oc"n View 43 st Merln• 31 S3 Hin. &etch 37 '1 Fount1ln Vattev 52 S3 Weatmlnster 3'2 56 Ocean View 46 CIP' S6 Mutlken 65 ,OUNTAIN YALLtEY 111·7, t·ll Sl Servlte 63 64 E•Ptran11 41 73 Hin 9aedl '' S9 Ocll. V1ew (OI) S 1 40 9oJCO Tedi 31 47 SI. hfnerd S2 41 LA 9annlno 4t 53 DeMatlla 10 SO St. JoMt SS IO El Modena 41 74 Dine HlllJ 61 11 Or•noe .o 43 Meter Del S6 64 Le °"'"'' 54 I I Hin, 8elCl'I ... IS Witttmlnater l3 54 Edison U 59 Oeet n View SI S4 Merine 47 90 Hin. 8e1ch 67 SI Wtslmlntttr it S2 Edlaon 47 SS Oce1n vi.w 64 61 Merine S6 Ctll' SS S4trvlle :M F21-e t Vert>um Del HUNTINGTON ICH (5°17, ,.., 66 CIPO Vtl1ev 69 S3 M.arlnt SO 49 St AnlhOnY S2 62 Lt Qulnll 52 61 Founttln Vattev 73 63 Strvlle 17 54 SI Anthony 71 51 Radford (H1w.) S6 SS IOllnl (Haw> 56 61 L \I Rencho SO 49 Meter Del 64 S4 MINlken 57 .., Founteln \1111tv 11 53 Edlaon S9 S4 Ocean View 72 S2 Marine S3 13 Westmlnller 46 61 Founteln \leli.v 90 37 Edison S3 SS Octtn View 69 U Merine SI &e WH•mlnater S2 MAalNA (4·11. 2·1) 42 Cor del Mer 41 SO Htn hech 53 J9 LaktWOOd 44 53 54inn¥ HINJ 60 46 Sente Yne~ S4 SS Sant• a.~,. SI l6 Dene Hiib (or) 37 41 CIPO Vetlev 6S 32 Servi!• 64 6 I Cllattev 2' 40 t.ek-OOCI 49 31 Mlulon \llelo SS 46 Edlaon (2 ot) 53 52 OcHn View n 33 Wttlmlnster 37 53 H tn. 8aech S2 47 Fount1ln V1ll4tv S4 38 Edlaon 52 31 Oceen View 51 4S Weifinlnst1r SI SI Hin. Seecl\ U S6 Founteln V111ty 61 OCIAN VIEW (1,·7, 7-J) " Mlulon \lleio 52 11 LoYOla 62 •S Servlla •t SI Fin \11...., (ot) S9 56 LI Potv 67 S4 Foothill 18ak) 60 U Canvon (S) 41 71 S.nLuls Ol:>laoo 4' t l Westlake 71 13 Lek-OOd 62 63 ReclOnCIO 44 61 lnoltwOOd 71 SS Witttmlnitar 43 n Merine s2 n Hin. &tech S4 Sl F04Jnla ln Vettev S9 43 Edison S4 46 Wtslmlnster 42 Sl Marine 31 69 Hin. aeacn SS 65 Founteln Vellev SS S6 Edison 6e Qfl S3 Simi Valley SI F'll-Botco Tech WHTMINSTEa <S· 16, 2·1) 60 D•na Hiits n 60 La Mlreoa 63 M Ptclflc:e 1>7 54 8onlla 61 40 Servltt 51 71 Mevttir 72 9S a.ti· Jefferson 60 54 L8 Wiison 62 69 Cerrilot 7'9 4' Et Dorldo '2 S2 Garden Grovt S4 61 Santllloo 12 43 Out n View SS l3 Founllln Velley IS S7 Mlflna 33 43 Edison 44 46 Htn. Btech 13 •2 Oceen View 46 39 Fin. Vallev SI SI Merine 45 32 EdlM>n 53 S2 Hin BHcn .. LOI Alllmltos MONDAY'S RISULTS (ll'lnt ef 4'·nllflt l\al'MU INMln) FIRST RACtE. 1 rnlle Aunt Gtinv <Hvman) 3 90 3.40 :s.oo Jenne'• Joy (CrOOllen) S.20 3.60 Meone Rost ISMrrenl UO Also recld: Andy's Svlvlt , Slavonic Duclltn, Cimarron Beltt, Touch• Mlr~lt, Golden Atlelr Time 2:0S 2/S. n Encta (6·5) 1111<1 $3070 SECOND RACE. 1 milt OUttllOhl snvater (Longo) 4.IO 3.20 2.tO LUCkv Cnl (Barker) 4.40 3.IO Gl;ls Deslon (Ratchford) 7.20 AIM> rtctd: Laltcl•. Honey Meke MONN. S.llV'I 9ubble, Deds Du 8ete, Frostv Flu , Iron Set Time 1'01 1/S n EHc111 (8·1) oeld S21.IO THIRD ltACE. 1 mitt Crul•ino N. < 91ker l S.IO 3.00 2 60 Lord Al~ (Lteke'I) '2 IO 2.60 Rider ITrtml>l•vl 2.80 Al•o rectd· Jutes aov. In Honor Of. Karevar N, Teeome N Tommv Biker, Ktll'llUCk Idell. Time . 1 :S9 4/ S. U EHcte (9·1) paid SIS60 FOURTH RACE. l mitt Ftasri Storm (Pierce) S 90 3 60 2 40 lttudt (Flsco> 3 70 1.60 Red Poplar (O'Oonot!Oe) a 40 Atso rectd· Ticket Room. F1t>l1n. Air Pocktl, Shannu Ster, Wtlrua, Twice Rt· ltcled Tlma 2'03 11 S Flll'TH RACE. I milt Burntra &vrd (Vllndnohm) UO 4.00 J.60 D1wn1 DtliOlll (Retdlfofd) ,1 20 UO Monken1 Elle (Pierce> 11.00 Also recld. 919 Soflle, Judv Novt, Geme Enslon Acedlmv Award, Smootn Ginger Time 2-00 3/S. n lllam (2·4) 1111d s 1'3.20. SIXTH aACI. 1 mile Cockvs Ontv 9ov (S.th) 7 20 4 .0 J.40 MOOOv Slut N (Kueblilr) l.IO S 40 Juatmet (Aut>ln) :UO Alto racld Crul ... wev, Flt Af'td AOldV, Atron ClllP, Mell 9um«tro, YenllM Hell Time ,-00 1/S. u Enm (7·4) ptJ4 MUO SEVENTH •ACI. 1 mllt Handove< IPteno) 6 IO 4.IO ) IO Wllt>l'O (Lonool 1.00 4.IO Autllc Soott (Hvmerfl s.60 AIM> recld: Sludltloh Toooef, ~..,.,. Alto. NlmDlt Yank" N, Marell loy, Sc.otttwl Loch. TtrPOl"t Donnv. Time: l:Y l/S ., •nm IS-4) H id IU.00. llGHTH aAc&. 1 mfle Howov $t1r ILoneol 1uo 10..00 S.00 Prtrllmaur IMCC•tv> f ,.O UO Full Poektl llt lllfl U O AIM> rtcld Horlron Ster, WNtt Vfiyft, Lto11 v .. r I Monttrev ltodl .. ~ -..Cl\ Time 2'01 11 lladl U·•l Mid 061 41 "*™ uc•. 1 l'lllt "91tv IL~tV) I• SM UO Cl\MfiUI MOoM (Oetomlrl l4' MO C K HOMV IA..oln) Ut Atio r.eM Nobtl ...,_,,, ,.,..,... ,.,_.teer DMr Sir T ret Oil It,..,,..,,,_ T""8 HO 2 / S " ••edit <2 1) ~ M.$ 70. n..n. ltACI. I l'Nte J.,,... Or1t11n IAndet'IOlll )t0 UO UO Hlnov o\OOt (TOOO) 17.20 UO "'" Merine (Kcietllt) )W AltO rK9d H\nlllne Oele. lt ..... nd IN!. knOe -.... OttM it.-e T~ HI 111 '1 I•~ I 1•11 NICI tlUO Atten.tt"'• ' n5 , OMA NLU (11-ll. 6.-6) 72 Wes"'*"I« 40 '1 0r.,,.. " 60 S.vWV\O SI 45 trvlne 50 56 SI. Joteofl If SS Sante Marie S3 l7 Marine (OI) 16 SI Lot Amlool 4S 75 L.tkewood '2 61 Founteln Vellev 74 61 Senti!• 6S S4 CHO Valllv " 73 Leoune 8eec:h Sf 60 Wdbcloe (3 of) S4 72 San Cilmente S6 S7 U9UN HIMt 51 64 Ml»Jotl Vlalo 70 '7 Caoo ... ...., 61 70 LaeutM laedl 55 S3 w~ 3' SJ '-" Cllmlftl• 62 11 L.eoune Hllli 70 32 Million Vltlo 31 WOODMIOGE CIP' S3 E atanclt • (ll•ll, •·•> S9 Fvlwton :M S 1 Gal'dell Grove 44 '9 Lee. Hilb (oil 41 UGUNA IEACH SI Antila 44 Ot•ll, 4-1) ., Uftlver.itv J3 73 S.ntlHO 6 I S6 Mlsalofl \lleio • J7 Cor dtl ,,,.,. 3' SI Eat.encle I~ S6 W1trlft '5 4l HH WDaon 40 n Et Taro a 37 5onor• " S1 F oolflll SS S7 Trov 4S 61 Sen Clem t2otl '1 .. Mmlon V1elo so SO Sn Clm (4 ot) .. 41 C.00 Vellrf 61 S4 On His 13 ot) 60 37 Minion Vlelo '2 SI l.aOune H•s SS 53 ~ 9aedl so 47 San CleMlnte 42 7S Whltnev 61 65 Rsv" (Hew) 51 S7 Cutle IHew) '2 67 Meonotla 73 S6 Lao. HlftJ (ol) SJ S9 Dene Hllli 73 62 Mission Vlelo 63 73 San Clemente SI 47 CaPO \lellev '7 57 CePO Vattev 69 36 Dent Hllll 53 SO WOOCll>rldoe 53 49 Mission Vlelo n 45 Leouna Hlh 52 61 Laguna e..cll " 66 L89Ulll Hllli Sf 6S Dana Hiiis 70 S6 Minion Vleio 66 IS Sen Clemente 9S ANGELUS LEAGUE MATaa D•t 71 CaPO V1llev 70 69 Woodbrldoe 61 LAGUNA HILU (12-1:1. l·f) SI Et Dorldo 9' Ptclfla 41 Wdl>rldoe (ol) 46 Sevanne 7'9 Tustin 66 Lot Amloo5 SI Cotte Mna 43 Sunny Hllli S7 El Toro 33 Meter Del 62 Cotta Mna 70 St. Peul (ol) 64 Lek-ooci 57 Leo. acn 1011 41 Mlulon Vleio JS San Clemente 46 C•PO Ve..., SI Dant Hiii SS Woodl>r'ldoe S9 Leouna 8each 52 Minion Vleio 41 San Clemente SI CaPO \/alley 70 Oen• Hlns S2 WOOdbrldoe t2S·1, 10-0l 103 Eilllfll\JI 46 92 Domlnouu J\I >I • ICelw 52 SO 69 SI. 9emerd 45 5' IS Noire Deme 3t 39 13 hnnlno (LAI SI 64 .. St. lemard C S 1 S5 Crlftlllaw 52 41 Sf SI. JOM'a 50 so s I DeMatl\1 " SO 7t Leouna Hiiis l3 67 12 Foottlll S2 71 12 Eatende SI 47 S6 FOU11taln \/elev 0 64 .. Hin.~ ft S6 100 Strre SI S6 • l llMP Amal 5' SI 10 Setvlte .. 3' 16 SI Ptul 3' 61 •1 Plua x " 57 f1 5-rrt '5 SI 91 91.oop Amat J7 '6 71 Servile 47 S7 9' Plus X U S7 • St Pt ul 33 62 CIP' 11 4S LB Wllaon JS 45 F21-el P110s Vlll'Otl NHL CAMl"aELL CONl'EAENCI SmYh OMslell W L T ltb GI' GA x·Edmonton •2 14 s If 339 252 C11toarv 2S 22 12 62 230 240 Wlnnlpeg 21 V 10 S2 2S1 271 Vencouvlll' 23 33 6 52 239 2SS KiMll tt 30 12 so 24' 2n Nen\s OMMerl MlnnftOfe 30 26 S 65 267 2 .. Chktoo 23 32 1 53 211 236 SI Louis 23 32 6 S2 2 ,, 245 0.1rolt 22 32 1 s 1 227 2S6 Toronto 21 34 6 41 nt 2'S WALES COH,laENCE ~•trldt DMalall x·NY 1altt 37 22 2 1' 264 215 11-Weshlnoron 35 22 • 74 13S 113 11-NY Rengers 33 70 I 14 243 nt ll·PllRtdelPhla 32 11 9 73 25' 211 Plllsburoh 13 42 5 31 118 271 Ntw Jersev 13 43 S 31 175 ?SI Adllmi DIYlslOll Buffeto 3t 16 6 14 2SO 199 Botton 36 20 4 16 162 201 Quebec 32 n 6 10 27' 210 MonlrHI 18 18 S 61 233 2'2• Hertford 20 32 8 .. no 249 •·Clinched otevott btf'ln Mol\deV't k- Ktnes 3. Minnesott 2 Tenlltlt's Gem-. BuffelO ti Plllledel11tu1 MontrNI at Ouet>tc Eomonton .. St Lo.ill Toronto at Catoerv 9o\ton 11 \11ncouver WHllHdty's Gamet 9otlon el K"- Wlnnliieo 11 Ntw Jerstv Edmonton 11 Pt11.ouron Minnesott et O..rotl W1t111no1on 11 Chlc:aoo Kln9S ), NWWI Start 2 kertllY~ LOi Anotlts 2 0 1-3 MIMHOll 0 2 ~2 ''"t~ 1. Loa Anoeltl, Tavior 12 1sm11n, Slm· mtr), 9:21 2 LOI Anotlff. MllCLellan 22 INlctloll•. Wali.l, 10'1• p.,..111ts-Plttt, Min, ~· Ttvtor LA, 12 2l, MecL.-n. LA, , ~ s.cend ~ l Mlnneiote, As111on, 7 (Plett, Levlel 1'19 4 Mlnnewta, 9tll0Wl 3S (lroten, LlndOrtnl. Ht (lh) Penellle1-ttoti.rt1, Min, 4 3'. Andenon. I.A. Malor·mlllOI' 1•·'3; AClon. Min, 16 43 Tllll'lt ~ -S. LOS Anee!ft TtYIOr 1) ($mllfl, EnolllOml 14 11 Penatttea-Mont Shot• on Goat--Lot Aneetes 15-9·1-Jl Ml~tl 11-lt..,_ll Go.lltl-4..0I A'*'91 larOll MIMI· sota. 9aeUOft A-11.7" ! .............. Oii •A NA,_... ,,.,._ ,... fta .... I .a) ~ ..... v-. .... , ...... c.... '°""' lttWIClt " """" LYllWOlld et..,,,... ~ ... ., ............ _ ...... ., w..11 cue-cttv • o-o Dom'"9WI .. ~ ..... ~ar 0.~atltt41NH• --Dll .. Hewt9lorM 1111....,_ 11 N...-et v .. Part! c..,...,.. .. s.n~ T'*-"I <Ml• ., ...... hnNI• UDleflO ,,, ,Oft ..... ~ AtCedle ., Hee** ~ w.... ai.;.. Amel •I 0... .... CW i·A ~YOf'PI '""' ,..., ,.... .. , .._, ~., ... ~ SI Fr"OnClt ot LomNC At111W1-I .. ~ldolr w~.,~ El a'lndlo al Mhalotl V• Monti A"""* Of LA ~ c ........ ....,... AttoYO GfMlde .. HMf Ollfto •• &...,ONe SI Wrtl lo.co ot ~ LaMwoocl el GWln ~lellello el 0... H .. ~ Ot c.. .......... , "~ flolY Mn GalWW at G-ne Le MlfMll OI C.W-1111 L9 WllMll •t toteo T ICll CH' t.A f"LAYOfll'S (l'tne ,...... Prtdrl, 2 ~) Sen hmer41no et L.I Quinta Sonora ot cor-• ..._.. ol lntltWOO(I t<....i .. '°""' ., ..... Lii C."9dl at ,._.. Vf/Mlrf Rubld04Jll •• Cer!Wej .,,,,..., ~ 9uene Peril et lt'•-otlnol St. ~nerd et MoNovta 8rewtev et T~ t' Gerden Grow et Hervercl \letencle et ~ lndlo el Palm $Pr1nft Aneheim •• Ce.Ion Rendlo Atamltos at Et Monie LtMox et 91Uloo Mollttomerv QI" 1 ·A ltUl YOJIP'S (Ant,...... "'*•· J ...... , Lii s.tlt llvt ChedWICk at o.11.WOOd C.llO VelltY Owlstlln el Vllffe Olril- tlen 9uddft' •' O.Plll"\ Aooura .t Atesc9dWo Pwldef• •' Rlntrldoe Preo W«>O ., 8annlnO Whittler Cflrlstlen b'lt LA 9ae>f1'1 11vt St. V1nt9111'a 11 Moorollr1' \/ ...... Chrllllln el 8rentwood LA Lutheran et AQU!nu EtalnoA et Oranoe Lulhe!'tn Chamlnadt et Wlndwerd Mesrobian 11 Santa Yne:z S.nte Peule l7'lt Gifts MCctr CtF 4·A ~ YOl'P:S (f<ln1 ,...... TiwrMllv, ) ~• Laount Hiiia at Torr..- Mlratell• et Et Toro Mlulon Vlelo et UOllnd Aot111111 Hiiis or Mini Cost• •I ..._ ........... ~orAno~el 91ah0cl Montoomerv UNftrlltV el South T orrena Me.-at 0wia Hiiia C:-• ,,,,., 11 o.remon1 CW J.A "-AYOf<'I t'1rlt ,..... ~v. l ......., Ket ... et Arcedie Welnut et St. Bonewnturt Rovet ., La Canade Sonore et Hart or Genena TusllnllE~ LelltwOOO et RIO Mesa T tm11t1 Cltv et c.rn.rllo ~v Hiib et Le Qulnll El Modenl ti LB W1bofl Chlmlnecle et 0. PW'k SOn Menno ., Simi \/ ...... MOlkatl el VIiie Per11 Canvon t i CalltMlsas Monldlllr ., ROM.rv Vllllftda at Padflca MlftcaY'I tranMdf9m llASEIALL ....... L.oellllll HOUSTON ASTROS-Slened Enot Cabell, lhtrd baaemen, ro • two-veer contrect. PHILADELPHIA PHILUES-~One.I Olerlea HudtOll, T onv G"81fl, Jev T1«itlS eno Don Cerman, plld'lers, .Juan Semutl, second besemen; end S..V• Jt111. utllltv lnflelder ,OOTaAU u...is ..... ,.....~ ARIZONA ~ANGLERS-Slenld LUM S.ncnet, ~ Deek, IO I ltW'W-Y..,. contrect. Traded 1wo Mure dref1 c:holcM to tht PtilleOoWlll Sttn tor Mer'k eutlen, ~ve tec:kle. Cut Den UOvd, llneOadltr; Dennis I~. Robert Oiiton and Donnie Johnson, c:ornerbech, Alfondla Hiii, wide reeelvlll'; ThtOOOra Sunon, runnlno bltck; K1vln Sefb91, klc:tler, end Monlf'end'(. Tev· tor, deflnslve !Kiiie Placed Cert Allen, corneroeck; Robert 8ama, offensive lineman; Nici! Evre. ottemlvt tldlle; Mllrll Sttven•on, offen•lvt outrd; Tim Wr'9htmen. ttont Ind. end .lntnonv EdMt. runnlno bad!., on lnlured reserve. CHICAGO &LITZ-Cul O.vld h tr, kicker, Derrvt Clarll, lullt>Kk; Mike Solvev. Mfely, Eddie Rev Wt tller. COl"l\tf't>edt, Mlkt Weston, c.nter, end LArrv Wtll,., defenalve IKklt DENVER GOLO-Cul Mlkt Hlrl\, 1'9t'lt tnd. end Oen Nledemofer, llnelledlel' Pieced ROC>trl .JohnM>n, l'\lnnlnt blc:k, on lnlUt'ld ,_.,,. HOUSTON GAMllLERs-<ut JllMI D1vl1 1nd Jerrv Gordon. wro. ~. Cetvln Frence, runnlne Mell; J\111,., Fltleoe. note ouerd, Ken Hanle'I, ounter, Derril J1rtaon, -rtertlec:k; Stew JectOI\, c.nter,,.,,.,.., Kr-.U, ~; end Rev ROOlnaon. defefl~ encl. JACKSONVILLE 9ULl..S-* .... Md lo Dennis and Sr..,,. HtrMI'. llltlf "*: Ir*' Fr9"CO. klc:tltf, ~ Mltctlel. lllhtv; Jay Ptnftlton, c.nler WlltlYr Ptlllli.•, llnebedllll' Joe ltotliMOft, ~ """"'"· Jom Slllll!nllll. rvMlne '**.i. ... Ted V'-1 ~ tftd. P"8CiM T_.,..., Porter, Otfenal"• ooek, on ll\lurlM ,....,..,. Pieced ludl h4UO, ~ CNf1lt OMll, ~ve b10.. Warrwn Onot • .,_ i..,11 ... linemen, Mon/In ov.tt • .....,ve enci, Jof\n McLAM. n~. Md s...n Platt, runn~ ~.on ftlo ••....,,_.,... Kst NEW JERSEY GENEltAU-~r.-. Si.vt Ooolllllt, Mn-.cklll', IO !tit N9w Or1Mni .,... • .,, -• 1"5 drift llldl. NEW Ottl.EANS 81tEAKEA$-<ut Ired JoMson, COftter; ltwfe IPtr•. 9Uet'd; Vince Menallt, ountw. Frtnll. ltoMrts. ~l11te AMl'/IOll, 0.vtorcl Peul. ..,_.,, •nd Mike ~o. dtfitntlve tnd. ~ J9ff Q\.llnfl, ~ Aftttlony s..-. """" nine ~ Cllr" tomllt. lleflt end; M11rWi arown. wide ,..,...,; ltn .... ~ ~vt Rnemet\; .JoM ......... aftO....,. Doollltll ~~ Jeff ,,,_... tM OJn4 Wll\Jtl . .....,.,. ""9men, IM Gerr'fft CriAM Otf9MI"' beet-., Oii lflt dll ....,,_ .. ltl roater ()IC L.AWOMA DUT\.AW$--<:Ut Sern AdatM. ~V't tuttO. ltlctl ..... OUlllW, Mike C.t911111ne, -'* ,.....,.,; ltkt. ""**. ~ ltll Ol"eMo&. i..lcMt, Anch Hlim, lect.Je; lttll •-..i ... LOMlt ll....... ~ T,.... -~ • ......,.,. .,., to lf'9 ...,,.. J8 A St~ tor• Mura dnft ~ llltTTSIUltOH MAIJUlt~ Amos LIJwrtnet, NMlftt -.ct.. ... lcl9ft turrl\ .......,.... ~ --.... ,_..,. at Cut De~ ,,...., ~. OW'r'dl~~ .... .... ... Oety '"'"''· ~ o. .......... . .-re I 7«. Tim Alile. ......,, W9t 1.-, _... ,...,.,.,; ...i M OW'lltlllilfle. ca•·, WAIHlleOTON l'ae>«~ .,,.. """' .,.. ~ """'· ...... . Melt; """' ,..... ~ ~ -J.,,. ~. ~ .. NICW!rt tnt -W111J111.. .. t C)._, ... •-. ... • ... Gt-.. ,..,., k ., • , , \ J Orang. Coat DAILY PILOT!Tueeday, February 21. 1~ Signs for $7 million "' .......... Pedro Guerrero (left) recelvea a •hake from Dodger prealdent hand- Peter O'Malley after •lCninC a five-year con- tract, reportedly worth $7 milllon. Sheehan has the hot hand '83 player of year is early favorite ---in Mesa tourney The LPG'\ has staged three tour- naments in 1984 and has a two-week hiatus before the Unidcn LPGA lnv1ta11onal at Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa March 1-4 ... but only the eolfing faithful can answer this question: Who are the three wmners of the tournaments held in Flonda this )ear? One of the winners should be eas> for you LPGA buffs. Patty Sheehan. Player of the Year 1n 1983 and Rookie of the Year 1n 1982, 1s again off and running after wmmng the Elizabeth Arden Classic in Miami. Svlv1a Bertolaccmi was the winner ol the Mazda Classic of Deer Creek m Deerfield, Fla. and Alice Miller the victor in the Sarasota Classic. Sheehan 1s the leading mone> winner after the three events with S39.:!59 and could more than double her mcomc with a victOI) at Mesa Verde nc>.t week where the first pnze I\ "Orth $40,000. The LPGA has established a trend 1n the past year of having a large number of winners. In 1983. there were 21 different players in the ~ 1 n ner'c; circle, the most ever for one season smcc the LPGA was started. 5heehan. who lives in Los Gatos 1n Ocean View seeded No. 2 in soccer Ocean View High's Sea.hawks have be.en seeded No. 2 in thcCIF 4-A boys soccer playoffs, which begin Thurs- da)' The Seahawks arc scheduled to cntenam Bishop Amat of the Angelus League in the first round. Also in action Thursday will be Huntington Beach at Canyon, ~ater De1 at Hawthorne and Westminster (1f 1t gel!> b} its wild card game at El Modena today) at Alta Loma. In the 2-A playofTs. which begin Fnda-, Estancia 1s at Inglewood, Irvine at Salcsian and University hosts Valencia. each scheduled for 3 pm In girls soccer acuon. Edison is the only area team to have a home game m Thursday's opening round action. The Chargers, Sunset champions, take on the winner of the Rollin& H1lls-M1ra Costa game. whic h wu played today. CARLSON ... From Cl Northern Cahfom1a. will be one to watch and could Join JoAnne Gamer. NanC) Lopez and Pat Bradley in the winner's circle at Mesa Verde 1n this year's Uniden lnv1tattonal. Since joming the tour in 1980. Sheehan has captured nine tour- nament titles including the one this ¥ear. She has a career earn mg total ~f S6 I 2.588 and will be stnving to win S I million in-the shortest time of any LPGA tour player Lopez ac- complished the feat 1n five plus years. While she 1s awa) from home a great deal. she has time to back some very worthwhile ventures 1n the San Jose area. She 1s a backer of Tigh Sheehan. a house for young girls ( 13-18) where a home-type environ- ment and education arc provided. She was also a member of Founder's I 00, the group which sponsored the San Jose Classic. Sheehan is 27 years old. was the Nevada and California state amateur champion as well as the AIA W nat1onal title winner before turning pro. With her fast start this season. she will definitely be one to watch in the Umden LPGA lnv11auonal at Mesa Verde CC Benolaccim has been on the tour for nine years and has four v1ctones to her credit. The Arienuna na11ve had won $370.868 pnor to this season with•her last victory coming in 1979 when she pocketed $76.244, her best year. She shares the record for lo~ HOWARD HAllDY CoLF nine-hole score on tour with three other players at 29 which she set in 1979 at the Orange Blossom Classic. She has won the Argent1n1an .\mateur ( 1972) and Colombian Amateur ( 1974) pnor to tummg pro m 1975. Miller 1s frnm Marysville and played on the 1975 AJA W national collegiate championship Arizona State golf team. Her best year was 1983 when she won the West Virginia Classic. her first tour victory. had 14 top-10 finishes and won $157.321 in pnze money. Her pre' 1ous high mark was $46. 779 1n I 981 when her best finish was third place. With her victory in the last tour- nament 1n Florida, she has estab- lished herself a~ a player to watch at Costa Mesa and has proved that she did not have a fluke year in 1983. Repons from the LPGA office in Texas indicate she can be tough when the wind blows as ll has done at Mesa Verde in the past. U.S. Olympians no match for LA Kings turn back North Stars, 3-2 as Taylor stars BLOOMINGTON. Minn. (AP) - Just 24 hours after they re turned to Minnesota from the Olympics in Sarajevo. Yugoslavia. Scott Bjugstad and David H. Jensen were 1n uniform for the Minnesota North ~tars of the National Hockey League -and feeling the difference. "I got caught with my head down and I kinda got my bell rung. .. said Bjugstad. who was decked 1n the first period by Mark Hardy of the Los Angeles Kings. Bjugstad also suffered a cut hp in the collision, but was able to continue playing as the injury nddlcd North Stars were edg«I out by the Kings. 3-2. Jensen also had his problems. "M y first shift tonight I felt like I was skating 10 quicksand," he said. "But I started feeli ng better and the coach started me in the second pcnod and.I gam«I a lot of confidence from that." Both fonner University of Minne- sota players said they would quickly adjust to the more phy111cal NHL games played on nnks smaller than the nnk at SaraJe' o. 'Tm glad I got hit tonight," BJugstad said "l learned a little something from 11. to teach me to keep my head up in this league. I wasn·t surpnscd at the speed of the ~me. JUSt the ph}s1cal clement." Jensen. a o-1 . 190-pound de- fenseman from suburban Rob- binsdale. Minn . agreed. "They hit a lot more in the NHL and the rink '>Ile makes a difference because there arc more opportunities to hit." he said For both Olympians. it was the first game of an eight-game amateur tryout. Lou Nanne. Minnesota gen- eral manager. said the club had agreed to terms with BJugstad for next year and will be meeting with Jensen's agent in the next couple days. Mahoney benched center Dennis Maruk in the second period of the game and explained later. "Some 11mes you JUSt have to change thmgs to get a reaction. It worked pretty well dunng the second pcnod." Both Minnesota goals came in the c;econd pcnod. The K10~· Dave Taylor opened the Los Angeles sconng at 9:21 of the fint penod when he knocked in a rebound past goalie Don Beaupre. -... MidwinteJ!s oi; Mid summers? By ALMON LOCK.ABEY Onhson at the helm of Roller oaster wb ch corrcctcd out .._,,........, "*' as the Class B winner. For SS years they have been calling 1t the "Mid-Winner of C'la C and the Don Lee Tropy was winters'._ Richard Compton. anui Barbara Ya ht aub. saihna But the 1984 edition of the famed Southern C'ahfom1a Geronimo. YachungAssociation cla 1c miaht well have: been dubbed Tinder Boll. ti.kippered by Bob Burkhardt, Dana Point the 'midsummers" ar. balmy weather. smooth seas and fair Yacht Club, wa' the winner of Class D and 1he Mu Miller d I'. f Trophy. wtn s were a ieaturc 0 the thrtt--Oay event. Jack Woodhull at the flelm of the Cal-40 Perstpbone , Los ,\f\&elcs Yacht Club wound up the M1dwm1en was the.wmner of the LA YC trophy for the class. Monday as host to four classes of lntcmauonal Offshore Summaf1 of re uhs: Rule ratinas and the Cal...40's sailing as a one dcsi&n eta s. IOR-A (8) -1. Bnsa. Memc/Choatc. LA YC; 2. ' The 6-meten., also scheduled on the LA YC roster, failed to · Amante, Mel Richley. Lido lsJc YC. show. IOR-8 (7) -I. Roller Coaster, Sheldon Oolison, ' When the fanfare a t LA YC was over Monday 01~ Lons Bc»ch YC': 2. Heat Wave. Dick Penninaton, LBYC. four of the oldest and most coveted perpetual trophies in . lOR-C' (I 2)-I . Geronimo. Richard Compton, Santa Southern California yachting had new owners • 8ar~ra YC; 2. Medmne Man ~b Lane, LBYC: 3. ·• lnsat1ablc. Thoma~ Armstrong. California YC, 4. Free WinnerofIOR-Aand the Ben R. Mc~er Perpetual was Enlef'l>riSC. Dick Ettinger. Newport Hatbor YC. , the Choate-48 8nsa. co-skippered by Dack Meine of the IOR-0 ( 12) -I. Tinder Box, Bob Burkhardt. Dana host club and Dennis Choate. Long Beach Yacht O ub. Point YC'; 2. Audacious. Mike Kennedy, LA YC-3. Second in the class was another Cboate-48, Amante. Apogee, Malt and Marty Vogel. LBYC; 4. Mamie, R.rt skippered by Mel R1chlcy. Lido Isle Yacht Club. which was Koll, UCl ailing Assn. damaged in a starting line collision in Snday's race. CAL-40 (5) -I. Persephone. Jack Woodhull. The Christian Bros. Trophy was won by Sheldon Cahfomia YC; 2. Radiant, Bevco/ Fitzpatrick. LA YC. Midwinters race results MktWlnten r.sutts KING HAJtaotl YACHT CLUa S3 Meh, 6 dllHft PHRF·A 171 -l w1n11,, Len sn.0.1. eve. 1. Maenum, Mike Kolkll, eve PHRF·B (I) -I Ghent Wlno1, Lvle MC:C11e<1. Pacltk Mlrlner1 ve, 2. Co11ont•l1, Pele 8ectolol, PMYe . 3 Sun Oance. 8fll Web,ltr, KHYC. PHRF·C 114) - 1. P•rtv Girl, Torn Laweck, CYC; 2. Slrokes, Oofl Tallman, KHYC, 3. Slroent, Marlin Greenfield, WYC; ·4. SYOlf" Plumb, Brad Godfrev. KHVC MOORE·24 (7) -1. BllMtr, Peu4 $hero, e cvc. 2. Sell SNker, Peter Slewafl, KHYC. CAPR1·2S (71 -I Oflllnallon Unknown, Ty Hol<en1on, Westward Crul1lno Club, 2 Motor Cltv SNkeoown. U•do Koller, KHYC PHRF·O (10) -1 Hoo Sco1c11, Warren Fo•. WYC, 2. Traveie<, OovolH Kle4M>n, KHYC. 3 Slll>OI'. Larrv Scerborouon, Redondo Beacn vc DANA POINT YACHT CLUB SI belh, S CIH\ft PHRF·A 1111 -1 Cellfornla Gold, Fred O'Connor, Dana Wnr vc •. 2 Mlacnlef, Nll•onl RllldOrl. BCYC; 3. MICklnac II, Wn Tllomown, OPYC, PHRF·8 (10) -I Valkerle, Garv Bake<, OWYC; 2. Celi PalamH, Ce rl LHI, Vov-1 YC, 3 Chrl• Liz II, Ron Cll1ve1, South Shor• YC PHRF·C (13)-I Tres G0tdo, PrlcelPurceN. BYC. 2. On The WI Y, Al Nehon, OPYC; 3 Gold Ru1h, Don 8ec:ker, Ceoo BYC,' Holo Klkl, Rick Raff, Caoo BVC. CATALINA·27 (9) -1 01'1 8rHk, 8ob Geln, Caoo BYC, 2 Antkloellon, Bob Mclntvre. C.oo BYC, 3 SVn~ine, Ron Maleno\llv, OPVC MORC !I S> l Cowboy , HarkevlGlbbS/COler, CBYC, 2 Comout•lon. Reton Rodllelm, BCVC. 3 PsvcllOQlnlrlc. Boo and Harrv Pelllic>n, NHVC, c Hffbef Cr"D4tr, SlrallontG.aroe. KHVC CALIFORNIA VACHT CLUB 11 belh, 1 Cleues Senta Cru1·27 (111 -I. C>vna Flow, Mark Dini, Senla Cruz YC, 2 Sallihlker. Bob BoYn. Pineeoe>le Isle VC (Hawaii), 3 Varlerv SN>w, Roblfl Scllu'IW, SCYC MERIT·2S (91 -I Oullaw Kevin Hall. Venlure VC, 2 Moonbeam, Enc and Kurr Wei.ckl, KHYC. 3 Hlalul, Bll'iOl\/Adams, CYC STAR 1231 -I Mlrk Revnolch , San 0 1990 YC, 2 Orl'ColtlNlcllolas, SOYC; 3 Argyle C1mooe11. NHVC. ' Sieve Rownblfg, RedondO Beacn YC, S. Rldlerd Heckel, SI Frencl• vc. EXPRESS·27 (6) -1. P9911U\, Jollanrte and Chrl1 LM, CVC; 1 E•Of"tUlon. Mint and Tom Btenton, eve HOBIE·l3 1111 -1. A~ellca, Oen P1ul1on. SBYRC, 2. lie bltw11n Ful, Werren Miiier, eve. eno Chlroe<. cn1111o1m Wiiii•. Oc:Hn•ldl vc. OLSON·lO (13) -I Llmlner Flow, Charle• O'Leary, WYC, 2 LIQuld G•lt. Howerd Chesley, SBYRC. 3 Wiid Hare, Sien end Cerol RoblnlOft, SBVRC, • C11cn 22, Jonn end LHlle Clerk WYC CAPRl·lO Ill - 1 Slav Tuned Tonv Morrelli, Ariecaoe VC, ? Live Wire, Duke Jone1, WYC. 3 C°"'lr, KH Kattner SoYtn CoHI Corinthian YC MISSION BAY YACHT CLUB 100 bMti, 9 CIH .. S LASER A (26) -I Mike Sanlovlcn, ABVC, 2. Oouo K .. 11<. Sent• Clare Recino Aun., 3 Bruce GrHllem. SCRA, 4 Jim Kirk, Betmonl q Snore Sallln11 Aun.; s. Cnerlle Bucklnolllm. NHYC LIGHTNING (9) -I Kirk Jonnson, MBVC. 2 Al Polndlaler, MBYC, 3 Mike Brewer, M8YC. THISTLE (10) -I O•n K .. rman, Frnno VC, 2. Bruce Gone. MBYC, 3 Ron Smiln, Peto Alto YC VICTORY (I) -I Tom Leonerd, Frnno ve 2 Jerne1 Re<:lll, MBVC, 3 Tom A~'iOI\ FrntlO YC SAILBOARD (I) -I Sieve F•nn, SCRA. 2 Jeff Jonet, Belmont Snore Saltlnv Ann. 3 Weller COOll . MSA HEAVYWEIGHT SAILBOARD Cl) -I Rend! Benion, SOYC, 2 G•r t Hullrer, BSSA, J Alen Herzuc. SCRA SAILBOARD B (le) -SColl Cartwn, BSSA, 2 Kenclall KarnH, MBYC, Pet Peueli. MBYC, ' Susan Krebs, MBVC Gearv·ll (11) -I Buel Busc:n. MBYC. 2 Au•lln Peepln, CBYC; 3 Jerrv Jonn1on, Pomone Velie¥ S.lllno Ann WYLIE WABBIT (6) -1 Aeron S1urn SBYRC. 2 l(lm OIMnt>erv. RICl'lmonel VC UTILE SH!f>S ,LllT '3 IM9h., 6 CIH- PHRF·A (17) -1. Hot Fl11h, Oen Clloo. ABYC, 1 Advance. 8oO Ki.dine •• save, t ROCkll, MA!rk Blelweln, Oe4 Rev YC, 4. Mlvlc Touc.11, Wevrte Colohln, S8YC; S Helaire, Scotl Atwood, ABYC PHRF·8 (91 -1. Vroom. Mir-Iv GrMn, UF; 1 Ruriewev II, Jolln WllC>ll, VYC, 3. Wow, Ted Zellmer, SI BYC. PHRF·C 1171 -1. Ace of Cuo,, Bruce GOllson, ABYC; 2 SOUlt""n Comfort, Tom Newlon Jr •• A8VC, 3. FHI Comc>env. Jim Durden, CYC, 4. Wlld C.I, Lani Sound, C8 YC; 5. Mlawns. eero/Wetldns, LBYC. PHRF·D 1101 -1. Proro. Ed Feo, c a ve. 2 Cllloookff, Don Anlet. SI BYC, 3 Znl. Sltve Cole, LSF PHRF NON SPINNAKER (3) -I The Getew•v. Mark T-l'iOI\, LSF ERICSON 3S·2 (7) -I. Nugle Too, Karen I nd Jim Nuoetll, BYC, 2. Andoml, Don Z.lnn, C8YC; 3 lndlan Summer, Jerry FIOCK, LSF DEL REY YACHT CLUa 19 belh, 2 dHMt SldMV Sabol Jr. (16) -I JOlln Sturman, CYC; 2. Merk G0tdon, ORYC, 3 Mlrk Bern1rd, eve Sldnev Sabol Sr (3) 1 Sid 811~. WVC. SAN FERNANDO VA~LllY YACHT CLUa 10 l!Mtl, 2 dlues Oev Selle< (S) - 1 Rover Muronv. SFVYC; 2 RalOI\ Mlddlelon. SFVYC. SMALL BOAT ARBITRARY (S) -1 Culo, Sturm/Ad .. r, CYC. ANACA .. A YACHT CLU9 l1 llMh, 4 dHMt PHRF ·A (6) -1. Kie. OwlOl'll Rowe. Ven YC, 2 One Trlek Ponv, Alden Glkkman, Van YC PHRF·B (91 -I Fel T~sdlv. Dave IC.1111, Ana YC, 2 Mareuldef, Va n Coll, Ana YC; J. Tonka, Herrv Hibbs, Ana YC. PHRF·C (9) -I War Pelnt, Larry Thomp· son. Ana YC. 2 Saleclous, Biii cov-y, Ana YC, 3 Noble Eme>eror, Commet"IFord/H*, Vff1 YC PHRF·O (10) -1 Ovnemll•, Andy Guhl, Ana VC, 2 Mlcanoov, Paul Frefta•, Al\I YC; 3. Cllutlnco, Oeve PertrtdOI, Al\I YC USFL teams trim rosters Second season to begin this weekend for 18 clubs By Tbe AHociated Preas ''Famous" Amos Lawrence was placed on IOJured reserve and dozens of lesser-known players were tnmmed from the rosters of United States Football League teams Monday. The Pittsburgh Maulers put Lawrence and guard Scou Bums on inj ured reserve for at least four weeks with knee 1nJunes to get down to 53 players. The 18 USFL teams are permitted 40 players on the active list for each game. The 12 established clubs are allowed a I 0-man developmental squad and the six e~pansion teams arc permitted 13 developmental players when the season opens this weekend. The Maulers. one of six new USFL teams m the league's second season. also released eight pla}'ers. including Dave Jacobs. who was expected to be their regular placek1cker. and strong safety Demck Goddard. who had been competing for a staningjob. Goddard's release means Dan .. Peep" Short. a former University of Pittsburgh safety who was cut 10 days ago and then re-signed, will be the starting strong safety. "Shon just played a much better game than Goddard ... Coach Joe Pendry said following the Maulers' 13-10 exh1b1t1on triumph over the Jacksonville Bulls on Saturday ... Shon really came on last week." The announced lineup for Sunday's opener at Oklahoma mcludcs Mike Rozier, Nebraska's He1sman Trophy winner. at tailback. and two former Dallas FV's Jacobs tops coaches All-Sunset Rolf Jaco~ F-ountam Valley H1gh's three-year starter and headed for the Univers1 t)' of Anzona for his collegiate career. has been chosen as the Sunset League's Most Valuable Player 10 sclecttons by the league's coaches. Jacobs averaged 12. 3 points a game in leadtng the Barons to the league championship and was a force on the boards. Coach of the year 15 Dave Brown of Fountain Valley. FIRST TEAM Player, School Rolf Jacobs. Fountain Valley Mike Newton. Fou-nta1n Valley Steve Moser. Ocean View Brent Martin. Fountain Valley Brad Hachten. Edison Tim Wcrtner. Edison SECOND TEAM Rodney Johnson. Edison Jeff Eastin. Westminster Ken Wiles, Edison Dave Straight. Ocean View 8111 Belanger. Manna Ht. Yr. 6-7 Sr. 6-0 Sr. 6-6 r. 6-7 Jr 6-5 Sr. 6-2 Sr. 6-6 Sr 6-6 Sr. 6-2 Sr. 6-4 Jr 6-1 Sr. Avg. 12.3 9.5 14.8 13.4 10.0 9.7 10.8 12.4 10.3 11.2 12.8 Cowboys. quarterback G lenn Carano and linebacker Bruce Huther. The Oklahoma Outlaws. another Ocdgling franchise, reduced their roster by cutttng eight players. includjng punter Rick Engles. who spent parts of three seasons in the Nauonal Football League, and trading defensive end Joe Gary to Binnmgham for a future draft choice. The release of Engles left the team without a first-string punter heading into Sunday's season opener. The New Orleans Breakers disclosed that tight end Dan Ross. who balked at JOining the Breakers when they moved from Boston to New Orleans, will rejoin them. Ross. who played five years with the NFL's Cincinnati Bengals. originally signed with the Breakers when they were based in Boston last season.He joine~ the team for one day earlier this month and then was traded to tbe Chicago Blitz.But Randy Vataha. the Breakers· president, said the trade wouldn't stand up because of complications in Ross' contract. The Breakers cut six players Monday and will have to drop one more when Ross reports. The Oakland Invaders waiv«I eight players, includ- ing veteran NFI..ers quarterback Mike Livingston and safety Benny Barnes. and traded offensive tack.Jc Kurt Jonker to the Memphis Showboa\s for an undisclosed draft choice. Barons' Puchalski Sunset League MVP Fountain Valley High's Therese Puchalski. who !>Cored at a 23.0 clip. has been named the Sunset League's Most Valuable Player in girls basketball after balloting by the league's coaches. Puchalski is joined on the first unit by teammate Kerri Clower. Fountain Valley also landed second team choices Jackie Cook and Cheryl Henderson. Between the four they averaged 40 points per game for the league champions. Also gaining first team honors were Ocean View's Karen Chase and Michelle Chom1cz. Marina's Judy Calkins. Huntington Beach's Eve Titus and Edison's Gretchen Meinhardt. Finl team Player, acbool Therese Puchalski. Fountain Valley Gretchen Meinhardt, Edison Kcni Clower. Fountain Valley Eve Titus.. Hunt1n$lOn Beach Judy Calkins, Manna Karen Chase. Ocean View M 1chclle Ch om icz. Occa n V 1ew Sttond Team Ma~ Beth Thobc, Edt!IOn Jackie Cook. Fountain Valley Cheryl Henderson. Fountain Valley Jill Bellamy. Marina Trina Vlachos. Ocean View Yr. A"t Sr. 23. Sr. 20.0 So. 10.0 Sr. 17.8 Sr. 19.0 Sr. 12.0 Jr. 12.0 Sr. 1).4 So. 10.0 Sr. 7.0 Sr. 13.S So. 12.S Johni.on ofEstanc1a High. The Eagles' shortstop got caught up 1n a confusion ofnames in a recent baseball outlook.Jon Johnston, the huketball star. is an infield-outfield candidate, but it's Steve Johnson who anchors thingsauhoT1 tr "Cl -<r E~EWHERE ... Huntington Beach has replaced Mlb D' AJetsaJMlro W1 th Art Parker as the 0 1lcn' volleyball coach . Mater Dea basketball coach Gary Mcl.DJ&19t ,.ys his Monarchs will return to the sa~ tournaments next season -the Vatenda. Orange and Toumamcntof Champions, the litter not nccessanly Cribbs court battle over, nowit'suptothejudge at Cal Poly Pomona . McKntaht also say bis club may be play1na somcpmcsat Anaheim Convention Center •.. FountaJn VaJJcyba ket- ball appcanaobconsohd fool.in The Barons weft CJ.. I on all four kvt/,S -the vanity.Junior vaf"lity, sophomore and freshman. Three captured outri.aht lequccham - pion.shipsand the Junior vanuy sham:l thetitJe #itb Ocean V.cw. -' BUFFALO. N.Y (AP) -It's all over now except for the dec1s1on. and that will come later from Judge John T. Elfvin o f U.S. District Court. Lawyers for the Buffalo Bills and the 81rminaham Stathon' football teams summ1riz.cd their case Mon· day 1n the court battle over which team has the naht to the scrv1c~s of fleet-foot«! runn1n1 back Joe Cnbb Elfvin ~vc no 1ndieatton of ho .. '°°n he will make h1 rultni. ( nbb 1s scheduled to play for 81rmm&ham unday -.nco the Stallions open the 1984 United Sutcs Football Lague KtiOn aaa1nst the New Jersey Oen· cn1J1 < nbb~. who starred as a runner for the 8111~ m the National Football wauc from I 980 thro u&h last ~son . had demanded in I ~82 that the B1llli rencgotuitc his contract. No avcement W3$ reached. Crib!» then i.1gned with B1munaJ'tam of the new lJSFL but played in Buffalo an 1983, wh 1ch wa the founh and final year of h1' ongmal contract with the Bills. The key 1nue in the eoun dispute 11 a "naht of fi!'lt rcfusal" clause 1n ( nbbs' contracl with Buff'aJo. The Bills cl im the clause meant they had the riaht to try ao m11ch c:ont"'c' offers m&tk to ribM by 111y • other profeu1onal football team. But lawyers for C'nbbs and the talltons say the clause applied only to offers made by other NFL team~. Ralph Halpern, rcprncnuni the Bills, told the court Monday that there was nothing in the wordma of the riaht of first rcfual clause th.at hm1tcd 1l to NFL team,, He said t t appl tcd to alt professional football teams and ... 11 profc tonal leams certainly includes the Birm· 1naham Stallions or the U A.. or Canadian team,." Halpern also attaeked the midi· bility or Dr. Jmy Araovu.z,. who represented C nbbs m conlract talk with the Bills and who later btt1me one of the owners of &he Hou ton team in the USFL Ara.ovu:z.. accordina to Halpern. schemed lO SCI a franchise 1n the USFL and lo act the new leaaue some fint-rank pla)ers. such a \nbbs. Referrina to A1"19v1u's testimony, Halpern id. ':'Jf truth wett to become ~r10n1fied and walk up to Mr. AIJC>viu. l'm not sutt he would rt'cO&nJlC him:· Cribbs' la~cr. ViC1or Fu.zaJc •. id the' · uc wasn 1 Al'JOv1u's credibility but rathtt whether the naht or lint I h .. lu!Mll d;ausc in Cnbbs contract evtt really look effect. Fuuk said thcway thccon&ract was worded 1he right offint rcf\a I clause in the Bills contract was supcrse4ed by a similar clause in the collective beraaininf aareement between the NFL and its playen &ssodation. And 1hal first ttfusal clau1e an the lcquc-wide q.rc.c;meni. f\ll.ak id, applied only to off en from o ther NFL team -not teams 1n other lc.a,ua. The clause in the Billa contl'IC f"uuk argued, W&SJ\'t c\len clear. ThcJudac rcm1rttd ... , think th.ttt i' no question that any la~r could have drafted dearer laP&'4aae." M•n'a bat caddy. It'• really a dOf'• ll!e, u Saperdog, caddytna for b1a muter H. R. -Job.uon ln Monroe, N.C., ehoW8. Wond.eT bow be bold8 the nae on the freeU? Polltics makes strange humor for magazine Satirist of both parties won't run out of material W ASHJNGTON (AP) -He thinks American politics may be so outrageous in its oat~ral form that there's no place for a magazine devoted to political satire, but Gary Wasserman has gone ahead anyhow and printed l 00,000 copies of the first issue of"Molc." The cover promises : .. Satire-Gossip-Scandal-Smut.·· For anyone ready to be outraged further it also carries detailed fictional accounts of the Kennedy family. To a critic who suggested that some of the material 1s ~tele.ss, Wasserman replied in a radio interview: "Don't put it in your mouth. then." Wasserman, who used to teach political science in Amencan universities, is no respecter of pohtical parties. Asked if he thought he might ever run out of material he replied: ' "Never. We could just pnnt the text of President Reagan's State of the U nion message." The magazine tells a tall story about half a dozen balloons painted to look like Rcapn in order to throw potential as- sassins off the trail. It concludes: "But the plan worked so well. according 10 administration insiders, that even the White House was having trouble telling the real thing from the rubber decoys. So every night, until the crisis passed, aides would let air out of all the presidents, and whichever one didn't deflate was Reagan.·· Another paragraph gets in a dig at both Rcapn and Democratic presidential can- didate John Glenn,· recently portrayed in the film "The Right Stuff. .. "Voters presented with the Real Hero 1'n the primanes may fmd they preferthe Reel Hero in the cinema:· the magazine says. The Supreme Court isn't spared. either. A pretended diary ofoneJusuce says some of them arc sometimes in a hurry to go home. It continues: "Then the rest of the court just goes along wuh what YOL\ say. Last year on the night of th.e Academy Awards, we decided nine cases in under seven• minutes. Nobody wanted to miss the opening nu~r." Tbe magazine'sed1torial page CJJ'ries the headline: "A Declaration of Principles." The rest of the page is blank except for Wasserman's signature and one sentence: .. (This space available for advertising.)" On a later page a small box says: "Mole wilJ shine the beacon of satire on politics--as.usual, without fear or favor. And we will continue to do this until we make eno\,\gh money to stop." The issue carries no paid advertising. though Wasserman said in a telephone interview that he hopes to J,et some. An advertisement for the senous political weekly. ''The New Republic." appears on an exchange basis. he said. There arc also six pages of satire on "The New Republic." under the title 'The New Repulsive.·· Wasserman said he had noticed that other countries have popular and influen- tial organs of political satire -he mentioned ''le Canard Enchaine" 1n France and "Private Eye" in Britain. He suggested that one reason there is none in ~he U nited ~tates is that mapzine publish- ing here 1s "segmented' rather than devoted·tO broad subjects. Wasserman, 39. was an assistant professor of politics at the Ci ty University of New York and Columbia University and a fellow at the lnstitutcoflntemational Studies at UC Bcrteley. He was formerly on the staff of Rep. David R. Obey, 0-Wis., and worked under the Carter administration in the U .S. Agency for International Development (AID), evaluating aid projects. The back cover mocks the federal bureaucracy as "Club Fed -the antidote for amb1tton," in something hkc the style of advertisements for the vacation spots known as the Club Med. The ~ 8Mdl Unified School Dlatttet loard of~ .. COfl- .. • reaolutlon tor tM pwpoae of leal6rlQ lhl Alllo 8c:hOOI tHe to a publlc I09ftCY within eo ... "' tt. mMtlnO of FtOtuary 23. 11M at seo llufnont. Laguna a.di, CA. at 7:30 P.M. tt no pubic~ --1n1.-. Alllo School ... then be off•ed for ..... to int....-ci prt-v1te antn1ee Publlsl\ed Orange COMt Dely Piiot Feb. 21, 1984 &40-M NOT1CltWIM.9 TO HICIHlaT llDDU Notice la hereby gtyan that ~ .... be received for .... to tM ~ blddert•I of varloue _..... and equipment axoaea to the need• of the HunUngton 8ead1 Union High School Dlltrlct. .., .. PICllUOUI ... ... nem--...... -MAm aTAW ...._.._-PICnnout• II 111 !'41 p I 16 The f°"°""'O ~ .,. OOill -STAmrrr tMm n•• ll uur-.. " • • • ~... ~~~.,.**'I ... ~ ...... ...,_. ti_... PICfflll....- HIUNA lfMST ~. ,....,_..,. --..: n..---,..---.._. 1111 eunw.....a c.vt. ~ '"""'"' L AleoctAl'n. ln>. ~OB.MML.NOC..._ .._.;;;;-.,_Aas .... 9Mdl.CA.t2MO ==-c::;.,.,._102. MOO._.C....~.,_ .. -1--A.•• I UHCW. ~~.;:'~~ o!:, ~~.~ ':= ~C:-:r'~ ... *"-ii1a ::9Jf:-'.....,...,A......_ e!c,..ciA~211~. l.IQUM c.u:.:o.,. ~&aY ·~~a°'"· eorw .. .,.,, .,=:-,.· 1-:C:=-b:= lllla--·-----• · .... _, nm~••• cw--_..,..,, · --'-"==-.,.,...,.,.._"' NICOlu. DrM. Me 1 • ........ lnclMllll ... ..,.. -_," -~....-0 ~..,. hadl. C.. HllO-AMI U.. ....... tm .. •a•1 "'""' ..._.. Tiiie ..._., .. 8dl Pctwrl ,.,,_,C..W_.119 Clll *' nm.......,.,. ... ..., wtttl IN llmlt9d bUlll!iaaa II~ w.. TNI ...... ac -... .. ... ... • ,. COunty a.tc of Ortr101 COllnty °" ~. "°J ~ ~ <;: ol 0rMeit ~on TM A •1 • 'e = .._,..~ Jell 1t, 19M a...,.,,,,., ' ..... ·---.. ~ ; ,...,. ft.t.. &<I---,..,. ... --.. .. ~.,, .• , · .. ~ 0,.,.. CoMt ~ ..... ---·-............. Publlltlad OrlrlOI e... °"" --------. 0 , ., •• Plot, •. 14, 21. 21. MatCb .. 1.... ~~.~of°""" CCMltY °" Hot Jen 11. ,., 1,-: \4, 21, ,... .,_.., ......... • to5-M HARWOOD&~ 111 ..... ,..,H.lldllllW• • ----------A~•'--Pml.ICllJTD .,.. ...... _ ....... I uo ........ c.. Or. CCMlllW .a.ti flf er.,. c... .. . -·,... . ..__ ..---. !.*.J: fK;m80UI • 113M ... Mo '11' m'A ' ,__.,....., _., PiiiMi ..... 9fArJ rT ~ ar.,... C... =· 1 Pu~ OrMOI CoOM1 o_, ~ie .,._..,.. dolf'8 Plot,.._ 21, »....,_,,ts. : Piiot Feb 7, 14, 21. 21, 1N4 0AA0t. f(C.flH, 3420 8 . ....._ ....... ' •n-M Coale ...... c.. neat --------· -1 bMer'fl ,,.., ~actunno • ·-.,. --.......... Cellf. CIOf'P 560 .. .. • -----~....,.;;.;..;"";.;..;.;';.;.;;..o-.;..._.--i:O ._ 1'70, IA~ Ce. I ::: PICTrnOW9UI!.,.. n:~ll~by.a The .:..n:..:.: ..... ST•m-" oorporlffon • butlneM -• ~~~--dOlnO f.MNfn;dlo .~ JUDY HANiON AND Aa:• C ~AANGET 81 00Utm' WUTEAH ~~~-=.,~~!t:'*..C•1"­~U~A wJ.• OrMt. eo.ca ~can °'<>range County on Judith .--. 101 ..,._ ,._ p.,,,... p~-1020 J-..y24,1114 ,,,.,~ ..... CA.- -·-· ,_ Thll...._ .. condudtdW.•' ~j~ St.. Ana. CA. Publllhad OflrlOI Coaat Del>' lnclMdl.lll. Debbie Mc&Mn 11:S11 !'lot F41b. 7, 14, 21, 28, ,... Jucllltt HaMoft .,,.,..., Huntlngt~ leadl CA. ~ lNI .... ,,.,. .......... 92&44 • ' ~ CWlc ol Orwlee ~..,, • Tlll1 ~ II conductad by: a Ft0 1 • 1M4 I> getierll~ ,_. Peme4a Pea~ Glmc* ncnnoue ....... ~ er.. c.. Dllt Thie ltlltmanl WM Neel wttt1 ..... 8TA,_-, Piiot Ftib, 21, 29, liaft:ll, ts._., County C6aftt °' OrW'09 ~ ~~ ~ ... dOlnO *644~ Bid fonn IMt with apeclflcattona PtBJC fl)TIC( and lndtceUnO ax.ct toc.tlon of ___ ...-;..;;;;;...;;.~~.;;...-~ ttem. may be obtained from IN Ola- tnc:t Purct\Ulng 0.-11•ienl. 10251 Yorktown Avenue. Huntington Baacl\, CA 92648. Atty Item may be lnepected al tl\a IPta wMre It Is located durinQ ...,.., IChoot tlout9 pnor 10 Matcfi 7, 1914 bide lhall be dMl1y ll*tled "Ob-'*'• EqtApment-81d 1649, ad-dra11ed to Allyn ~. Rowley, Purcllalng Manager, Huntington Baacl\ Union High 8cl'IOOI Dlatr1ct, .10251 Yonuown A~ .. Hun1ingt°" Baacl\, CA t2&46, and reoeMd al or before 2.00 p.m .. Wednaadey, March 7, 1984. at wt*" time and plac. bid• Wiii be pubfk.ly °"'* Ind read In Bldg. c. Room 381 All UpanMI of C8l'taga and ,.. movll .,. lhe ~ °' the euccaaaf\ll blddart•). .... tax .. be lddsd to .. quotatlona unMal vllld retell ..... tax penntt IMMer le IUbmltted wtttl blcf tonn. Payment In lull lhllll be IMde .itt11n MYel\ d&ya of the llWWdlng of -..... and IN matarlal ltltil be ,.. moved from Dlattlct property at the time of lull peymant. The Boatd raaarwe the right to ,.. Jact any and Ill bld1 or to walYe any lnfonnallty or INagulwlty In tM bid- ding. All matenala we aotd In an .... ... .,.. Is" condition. The Dl9tl1a nwk• no guarant•. wrttlen Of' m. plied, M 10 the condition of any hem. ttem• may be wtthdrewn trom Ille ti r9qUlfad pnor to bid accep- tance. Da1ad: ~ 20, 11MM Puf~anagar Publlltled Ofano-eo.1 D9My PMot Feb. 21, 26. 19'4 1040-84 Jll1CTITIOUI ....... NAmeTAT'lmWT The followlng panonl .,. doing bu9inealM: CENTAUR PROPERTY MAN· AGEMENT, 2et2 Club Meal Pt .. Coel• Maaa. Ca. 12827 Lonnie L. Laa, 2892 Club Mela Pt., Colt• ....... Ca. 92127 Tl\11 bullnaaa II conducted by-an lndMdual. LONNIE L. LEE Tiiis lta!""*'I WU fllad wt1h the Counly Ca.tt of Orange County on F.t>. 7. 1984 ~ PublllMd Orenge Coalt Delly PllOI Feb. 14, 21. 21. Mwctl 6, 1984 928-14 "8.tc fl)TIC( F1Cm10U9 llUIMN NAamaTAft•NT The tollowlng penona era doing ~-HARRINGTON'S, MO Gtannayre, Laguna Beacti. Ca. 92e51 John Oannlt Harr1ng1on. 1104 Bala. Laguna 8Mcfl. Ca. 92851 't"'9 ~II conducted by· an lndMdual. Jonn Dannis Harrlnglon Thll llltarnenl WU ftled with the County C6aftt of Orenga County on Jan. 11, 1984 f2*2I Publllhed Of_,. Coa1t Dally Piiot Feb. 7, 14, 21. 28. 1984 783-84 J111 18, 1984 MAGICAL FORREST, 17421 Aka " Vleta Clrda. Hunangton 8-:tl, C.. "8lJC llJl1CE 92147 fll~·Moft Miiiar. 11421 Aka umn•~m==• VIit.a Clrelil. Huntington e.em, c.. The ~ ""'°" 11 clolnl" ---------~ 12147 ~-___ ..-...--...;.;.;..;.;.;.-..._~ ~11 eonduct«I by' an CA'8 GALOM. a112 w. ~ ~ A ..... AVlrlUa, IMla AM. CA. 92704 Thll ~ ._ ftlad w1tt1 IN ~ '· tCOftllClnY, I....,., ~ County 0.. of OfMOI County on OtM, Cofone dtl Met. CA. tm1 · Jan. 13, 1114 ~ laconducMd w. an. FZlflN ~F~ • 19391 Tobago Ln, Huntlnot Publllhad Orange Coaat Deley ,.,. '*i"'*" _fled Ml\ ... Beacti, ea. 92846 Plot FtO. 1. "· 21, 28. 1114 County an o1 °""91 County Llndaay R. 81talh .. I, 19381 7M-64 FtO 11 1114 on: To::ge Ln .. Huntington Besdl, · ' ,_,.,. 92Klm Laror Lott 2196 "8.IC tl)TIC( ~ er.. C.... a.Ir • Oflve, Cost• Maaa . .'ea. lllCTlnOUe .,..... P1'0t Ftib. 21. 21. ~ •• JS. 1WC This bullneal II conduC*I tly'd MAim STA~ ~ genarll pertnertlhlp. The toeo.tno ,,.,...,,.. .,. doing • LINSAVSATATHIEL bullnealaa: PlllJC MJTIC( '• Tiiis 1t1temen1 -filed with t V & M JEWEJ.EAS, 11t22 ----~;;.;;...;.;;:;;.;.;.;;;;;... __ County C6aftt of Orange County 8'~ St .. Fountain V'*'t, Ca. f11Cnnou9 • I S • Jan_ 31, itM 92708 lllAlm aTA CT n ,..,.. V,,_ Kowor11 Ouzounlan, 1115 TM klioWlr'O S--... cll*t Publi.Md Orange eo.t Delly Sl&WllyAY'a,lonQ~.Ca.90815 ~-Piiot Feb 14, 21. 21. Mll'ctll, 11M TtMebullnWiconduetad by:.., ACADEMIC SEIMCEI. 4111 W • 929-M lndMdull. lit Su.M, Santa Ana, C.. tan4 Vahe Ouz.ounian Cf'_., ~ Faulens, 4:11 W. l't8.JC tl)nl'C' TIW ~ WM ftlad w1tt1 tM 11t S.,.... Santa AM, C&. ll270J ___ ..;.;;..;;;..;...;.;,;;~1.;.;,;;;-. ___ County ea.tt of Orange County on lNI _..,_ • concll *Cl by: an ACTTT'IOUS.,._M Jan. 30, 1114 ~ ..... aT ,_..,. P1171M .,...._. o..i Feult,_ T I A Publllhed Of Coa1t Dal) Thia .....,_,. -Mad-"" .. bull~!:'ng ~ .,. dolnQ Piiot Feb. 21, 28~ •• 13, 1114 ~°=°'Or-. COi.inly Oft ST AMPIHO SCIENTIFICS. t7 1047_.,. · • 1 ,_.. Skypaltc Circle, &lite I(, IMM, PutlllNd Or~ C011M ~ 92714 _,. Richard T. Hanley. , 22212 Pl Piiot Ftib. 21. 2&. •I , 13, 1tM lino, Ml9alon Viejo, C1. 92714 1061 ..... Thia bullneaa II conducted by: f1C11T10U9 ....... Individual. The followtrig ,,.,._ ... d<*'Q __ ....;...;.;;.;;.;;...;.;,;;-.;;;;... __ MAim ITAT'lmWT RICHARDT HANLEY ~ • NOTICa tW TRU8TU'9 aALE The lollowlng penone era doing Tilll etatament WM ftlad wlttl THE CHNST A.NE COM ft ANY, Loarl .... *111'/lUCHUI bullnMI N: County C6aftt of Orange County on 1401 00.... Street. ~ aoo. ..... The tolowtnO ,,.,..,. ... dOlnO T.a ..... y.-. P.0 .E. T.S .. 7492 Edinger A'¥911Ue, FebrUlty 7, 1984 pott ~.Ca. t2teO ~ea: 110111 ............. ...,,..,. ... , Hunllnglon 8Mcfl, Ce. 92647 ~ The Chnttana Compeny, Inc .. • LE~'....,,.'8 ,,,..., a -..r•.:• + ....-...... r--Ray Publlahed Ofenga Cout Deity Callf COtl' 1401 Oo¥9~ .... ...,_.,,.,,.,, ._ ~ 14 c~=;.,. tomia -=~iir;=12•s<;:; Piiot Feb. 1•. 21. 2a, Marct1e,1114 300,·.....p(,,t 8-dl. c.. t2ieo ~1 Worthy °'" Ml6o ~eppolntad Trwt• under IN Court. a Toro. Callfomla 92830 928-64 Thll ~ II oonduaad by: • ~ Rojaa, 1111 WOf1hy ' dalcflbed dead of trwt Ttlll bull.-Is conclucted by. • __________ ,corpofatk>n. Dr ...... C&. 12166 WILLS LAT PUBLIC AUCTION eoff>O'ltlon. PlBJC tl)TICE ~~G.~~.~--~~~la~tly.an TO THE HIGHEST 84DOER FOR Ray.Jeln Bull Flyers. Inc. .,....... ~.,,._, ---7 .._._ CASH (payable 1t the time of .... In Jeannie Grimmett, Pra1. FtCTTT'IOUS ....... Thia ~ WM tied -"" lM Lso Aot-lewfut moMY of the Un11ad Stat•) Thia ata'*'*11 WU ftled wtth IN ...... STATDmlff County C6aftt of Dr_,. County on Thll llt.lllafMnt .. tied wltf\ IN Ill right, title Ind Inter•~ County Ctar1c of Orenoa County on The lollowlng persona.,. doing Jf!l'lllMY 24. 1114 County ain °'er._. County on to Ind now held by It under said Jan. 13. 1984 t>uslneu u : flm1• JM. 31, 199' Dead of TNlt In the property her• ~ A CHOICE FOR LIFE 32261 Publllhed Orange COM! Dely ,_., lnaft« delcrlbed: HICKEY. NEULANO, Camino Caplelrano, Suite o.1oe. Piiot Feb. 21, 28, MllCh 6, 13, 1984 Pubtlehed Ofano-COMt Deley TRUSTOR: BARRY G. STOUTE PA.ROES 6 COLLETTA San Juan C~lrlllO. CA. 92675 l04e-&4 Piiot ~. 21. 21. Mwen e. 13, 1M4 BENEFICIARY: MIDWEST PA-24031 EJ Toro Rd, Sult• 250 Mona D 8ettano. 3308e Ac:apul-1Q66..e4 CIAC Lagun1 Hiiia, Clllf 92853 co Drive. Dana Point CA. 92e29 PtllJC tl)l1C[ ANANCIAL. INC .. an 1ow1 Cofpor-Publlahecl Orenga Coe.It Dally Barbare L. Klein. 27611 8ufn.. atlon Pllol Feb. 7. 14, 21 , 28, 1984 merfl1ld L1n1. San Juen ~A=-PtllJC llJT1C( RECORDED Match 16, 1981 u 765-84 Caplllrano. CA. 92675 . The folowlnO are ACTmOUa • II ... Instr. No. 21089 In Bootl 13983 Thl•_,bualneu 111 conducted by.• bullnaaa a1: pel'90fla ...,._ STATW : 932 of Omei.I Records In the Pta.JC NOTICE ~b::~'.'7.::,P' DIVERSIFIED MANUFACTURING The tollowlng s-'ION ara doing of the Recorder of Orange Mon• D Belzano SERVICES. 1870 Santa Ana A\09. ~ U: ec::styd..d of trust ~baa the ACTITIOUe IUaMal Tiiis 11aiaman1 wu tllad wttll the Suite E. Cotta Meu. Ca.12827 ' THOMAS AND ASSOCIATES Supreme Court to review LA desegregation tonowtng proP«ty: NAMI ITATE:mNT County Clerk of Orange County on ~Bernard Gallo, 17392 Sen-FlNE OOlLECTABLE.8, 1131 E. PARCEL 1: Lot 53 of Tract 8790, Tiie following peraone are doing Jan 18 1984 dalwood, lrvlne, Ca. 92715 WM_.. Aw .. Santa Ana. C&. 12705 RAHM .. lhoWll on • m-s> record«! In bullneu u : ' • nmee Thll bualneu II conOucled by. .,, Mldlaal E. Thomet, m St Ci.Ir. 4" 9oot13&4,Pllgel30 ltwOUQtl 33 In-PACIFIC WOODS LTD , 1539 Publlltled Orange Coat Dally lndMdual. CoMa Meu. Ca. 92928 RA L pH LA w R )!; N c E clulNe of MllClllanaOu9 M~ .. ,. Monrovta. Sult• 19. Newpof1 Beach Piiot Feb 14. 21. 21. March 6. 1984 R.,.rl Gallo lNI tlUllneal .. condud9d by'"' RAHM was a long time resi-c:«dl of Orenga County, Callfomla Ca. 92663 ' 471-34 Thia atatemenl waa fllecl wttll IN lndMclUel. DEATH NOTICES Justices seek opinion --~-~----~ on suits against state W ASHfNGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today asked the Reagan administration for its views on whether Califo rnia state officials should be shielded from being ~ued in federal court by blacks seeking to end segregation m the Los AnJeles school system. The justices asked Justice Department lawyers to comment on an an appeal by state officials who said they arc constitutionally immune from such a suit. The high coun is not expected to act on the appeal until it hears from the Justice Department. The 9th U .S. C1rcu1t Court of Appeals ruled last Sept. I that any constitutional bar to a suit against the state was wiped out by a 1974 federal law, the Equal Opportunites Education Act. It prohibits states from fostering racial discrimination in local schools. The appeals court ordered a federal judge to decide whether the California Departm£nt of Education and Superintendent of Public Instruction "sho uld share with the local authorities the duty of takin& affirmative steps to remedy contiil\Jing unlawful sqreption" in Los Anielcs. The Natjonal Association for the Advancement o f Colo~ People sued both st.ate and local officials to eliminate unlawful segregation in the city. In September f98l. state Jud&e Robert Lopei resolved a $Cplrtte suit by opprovini a plan to desegregate the Lo An&ele 5Chools. The plan provides only for voluntary integration, chiefly a maanet school system and voluntary busing of only black, Hispanic and Asian students: not white studentt. At the time of Lopez' rulin$. the chy school system was 27 percent white. That f'lure has since dropped to 20 percent. The voluntary plan was adopted after California voters rejected forced busina i_n a referendum. Some S7,000 of the 530.000. tuden ·n the Los An&eles public schools were involved 1n ltte short-lived fo!Ud busina plan. Under the voluntary pr011tm now in eff«t, about '40.000 studenlS arc bUKd. In lhccascactcd on today. the NAACP issttk1nast.1tc financial aid to help eliminate qrept1on. The NAACP contends that the state officials $hOuld be held accountable for JCl(eption in Los Angeles b«ausc of past actions by the state. ~ The NM P char&ed the s11tc ptrpctuatcd ~ p~on 1n scuina school 6oundlries and atttndancc ion~ t1lnDJ •nd promotina faculay. dtmprd1111 federal laws and rqulation scckina federal funda for ~ted schools. f.ailina lO ursc adopteon of 11t.1te law to dismAntle 1 dUAJ school system an Lot Anadcs and proposina b\l.dl(U Wt lacked funda lO eliminate ltlJ":PtlOn. • The NAACPalJOnamed thc~\lcmorofC'allfonna as a defendant 1n m suit. But 1he 9d\ C'irtu1t coun di missed u lar&elY ymbolic &he suit as it pertained tO him. Edmund O. Brown Jr. wuaovemorand Wilwn Riles the su~ntcndent of public instl"U(Uon at the umc the uil Ms ~led. Brown has intt bten ucettdcd by GcOfF Oeultm(JIAD. ' I d PARCEL 2 .. ~ _ .... _.___ Newport H11bof Bullderl. Inc .. I County Cler1I °' Orange County on Mkhlsl E. Thomel ent of Newport Beach. He : ,,..,,.,.......,.......,. ..... Callfomta corp., 1539 Monrovti. ----------J111. 13, 1984 TIMI el8'al"IMlnt waa flied wtltl IN was the beloved son of manti lor lngr ... and agrwa av. Sulti 19. Newport Beacll. ca. 92663 P\RIC NOTIC£ FDl1'll County Cleftt °' Orange County on babel Rahm of San Di_.. f"'...,.. acrNoOll87~11 A and 8 of Mid Orenge Cout ~I. Inc .. I Publllhed Orenga COMI Deity Jan 31, 1114 ___ ; ,_, . ... ... let for1ll In the Clllfomla corp .. 3-435 VII Lido. FtCTinOU• ....... Piiot Fib 7, 14, 21, 28. 1984 P'll79 uncle of Carole Sihilling of mut• Oedarallon recorded on Oc-Newpot1 Beadl, Ce. 926&2 NAMI ITATW 767-34 . PublllNd Orange Coeat ~ 85 to 118 ............ ..___.d "-•-'""' .,....._ ....... """'",.., v, --R ... pereon .. ~"' -----------.. ..., ... ..,. • ............ e. 13. 11M Newport Beach, <:athy De lober 211. 1970 In Book~ pagaa -..... ... _.___II~ ................... • The ,,,..,_..,. ... .......... ... .... .,....... 21 "8 .. ....... Petro and Julie Dray. both County, cA'.";d ~ ~';;,t;, llmlted partnership. bualnell U : 1056-M f G Ba W' nsin Newport Harbor Bullderl, Inc. AOUA·PRO POOL SERVICE, PlllJC N0T1C( o reen y taCO , eupp~ll end modification• J.L. Petenci. Pr•. 8412 Norfolk Or . Huntlnglon __ flC.....;..TinOU~;;.;..;..l~.,...~;;;..... .. --I •-IC MnTlC( David Dray of Fort Lewis, ''*youeonA. RE IN DEFAULT UNDER A TI\19 ltllemet'lt WU llled with ,...... BelCh CA 92648 ___ ..;. ... ~~;.;.;....;."";;;;..;.;.;;::. __ _ W hin d De '· Coun ,,. Joh,; Rot1. F-•~ f2 ~...... NAMI aTATDmWT .. gt.on an nn .. OE.ED OF TRUST DATED March 9, ty C1ertl of Ofenga County on ..... --·· -._,,,_ The f--.. --""'-ACl l1IOUI ...... Ora f G Ba w· Jan 13, 1984 ..,. . Huntington Beach, CA. 92tMI .... ~""Ill ----· -"' ... ..-. .,. .. ,. " y 0 reen y. l.ICOn-1981. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION Tlll1bu9inM1lecondUCled by. Ill --~.. -.. -.. sin; grand uncle of Kint.en TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT Publiltlecl Orange Cou~ indlvldull. HILLS WELDING. 131 PIUllrino, The f~ per'IOnl ... doing Sthllling of Newport Beach MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE. Pllol Feb. 7. 14, 21, 28, 1984 Jolln Rosa FMMY Coata Meaa. ca. 92e21 bullnaal u : ..... OF THE NATURE OF THE 789-84 County Clerlc ol Oranoa County on Mela. Ca. 92128 T•rece. Cofone det Mat, Calif and Joe~ De Petro of IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION Thi• 11t1tllmenl WM lllad with lhe Gane Hiii, 2SM 0!'"'09, Coate JPR ASSOCIATES. 1839 Sabrina Green 'y. Wisconsin; PROCEEDIHO AGAINST YOU, YOU J HS 1984 Thil ~II conduc1ed by. an 9262S . nephew of Vi Kitzinger of SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. P\llJC NOTICE Ill . F2mn lndllldUll. Jemae F SlemW. eon .. On:Nd. San Olean and Lillian De c!.591~~Wlndwood Lane. El Toro. Publlal'led Orenga Coat Delly Gane H• Cofone del Mat, Calf 92825 e-" ,....., FlCTITIOUa IU ... al Piiot Feb 14 21. 21. March 6 1984 Thia alatemel't wa tiled with ttw Joaapfl Stemler, 1839 SMltlna Young of Travis City, Mich -"(If• 1treat addreae or common ,.,._ ITATDllWT · · · 4e5-84 County Clertt of Ofenga County on Terrace. Corona cMI Mar, Csillf ipn. Services Thunday. dellgnltlon of propeny II ~ The folloWlng l*90fl 11 doing Jin 12. 1984 92125 February 23 1984 at 4 PM at ~.nowarrantyleghlen •tolta l>Yalneu u ----------1 mTCI P1u1 P Stemle r. 411 5 ' eotn91etanaa Of e«ree1neu)." The M & Y ELECTRONIC ASSEM8L y P\8JC NOT1C£ Publllhed Orange eo.1 Dely Dora-ter Corona del Mat, Celt Pierce Brothers Bell Broad-beneflc:lllY under Mid Dead of t 165& RoNmary Ave .. Fountain ---------,.;._--1 Piiot Feb 7, 14, 21. 28. 1934 t212S way Chapel, Reverend Trust. by r.uon of• btMcll or de-v1ney, CA. 92701 FtCTinOUa eu ... n 764-&4 Robeli J Stemler. 1139 s.brtna Charles D. Clark of Fl.rat fault In tile obllgatlona aecured M1rtc Chen, 11858 RolemlfY NAmlTAftmNT Tarrac:.,COfon1delMw.c...12&2s Un.ited Methodist Chwclt thereby, llaretofor• axacutecl and Ave .. Foun111n Vaf*ey. CA. 92701 The following e>er90nl are doing "8.IC NOTICE Thia bulinela le conductlCf by. 1 • dallWtad 10 the undarllgned 1 writ-Thia bullnaaa le conduc1ed by: an bullMM u . getieral ~ offici.atil'\i. Pierce Brothen ten Dedarallon of 0.-ault and 0.-lndMdual NEWPORT MOORING SERVICE. aTA~ tW Jamel F StamW Bell Broadway Mortuary, mend for Sale, and written notice of Martt Chen 1200 Sllallmak• Aoed. ~ A8ANDOIRWNT tW U. tW Th1111atement w flacl ...._ u. Dlrecton 642-9150 breach and of elee:tton to Ct1UM the This 111tement wee ftlad wttll the Beacfl. CA 92te3 ACl'mOU9 .,... .. MAMI County Clertt of Oranoa County on • underllgned to ... Mid property to County Cler1t of Ofenga County on W11ll1m Lea Harrla. 21331 Antigua The lollowtng parlOnl lla"9 &ban-Jin 31, 1984 Nlllfy Mid obllgaltona. and tiler• Jiii. 18. 1984 LIM, Hunllnglon 8Mcfl. CA. 92641 doned the UM Of the Actltloua &.*-. ,.,.. aflef the unde11lg11ed cauaad Mid n.:zn Donald R. Big.Ilea, .-.1 Count,., nw NllM' AT YOUR SERVICE. Publllheel Or9nCM COllllt ~ "°'lea of breacl\ and of elee:tlon to Publllhad Orange Cout Deify HHI Roed. Anaheim H-. CA. t2I07 1047 Praalcffo ~ Coate Maaa. Piiot Feb 21, 21. t.fard\ 6. ti_ 1M4 HAUOll LAWM·MT. OUVI Mor1uetY • c.tneterv Crem•tOf'Y 1625 Glaler Ave. be recorded Oc:10bar 12, 1983 .. Piiot Feb 14, 21, 21, Mlt'Ctt I , 1984 Willlam L• Harrll CA. t2l29 1063-M in.tr No 83-450199 of Offlclal ~ 417-84_ Tiiie 1ta1ement WM tied wtttl IN °""* AnM I ~. 8599 , cordl In 11\a oMca of the Aecot"der ----------County C1ertl of Orange County on Boa~ Clrde. Founlaln V.a.t. CA. ---.. ---11'-------of Or_,. COunty; Jan 18, 1984 12108 ~ ~·~ Said tale wtll be !Mde, b\lt g' nmn owner .,..,.._, M Han. 1047 ACTmOUe Cos11Meaa 5'0·55!>' NRCI POTHIR8 llLL P OADWAV MORTUARY · 110 BroMfw•Y Costa Mesa e..2·9150 IAL Tl llRGPON I MITH a TUTHILL WllTCLlfF CHA,EL 427,E 171h St Cot•• Mesa 6-4&·9371 McC09'MICK MOllfUUY t?IS UQuf'l.t Cl"YOft Ad ~ hacfl. Ce 921!, ... ,~15 c wlltloUt COY9Mnl 0t W#fanty, ell· ·_c;; Publllhed Oranoa COMt Oilily Pr9llcfto DrM Colt1 ...... CA 9lJll ... pr ... or lrnpllad, reo.-dlnt tn1a Piio1 Feb "· 21 . 21. March a. 11M 12ae · · · MAm ST'm 11 poew8'on. or MCUmb<enc:.. to ~ .-.1.... The Act1t1oue ...,_ NwN r• ;:::.. ~ ,_... .. ~ pay IN remaining prtndpel wm °' ! 5 twrec! to aboll9 wae flied In Orange RS ENT£APAllES '°'' ,._ lhe note<•) MOUfad by Mid deed of ...., It) P\ll.IC tl)llC( County on Oacalnber 23. 1913 Aw , INIM. c. 121 ;4 ---: TN9t, with Int•• M In Mid note < 1 FlCTmOUe Thtl~w-~edbyl Scotl OardMir LolwMn. t40lf :.o::~tfof~;::: 'i <'I ...-aTA~M Oat.::~~ CNQal!A.,._ntfte.~92714 cmargaa, Ind ..,,.,._ of the • ~ -~ The IOlloWlnQ pertone .,. doW'V nm ~ WM Ned wtth IN RoMand ~ LolWMn. llOO TNSI .. and of-... -~.-...... "' DC_ ] Duainell • County.......___ ~ n... ,.__ Autf\ ~ ~ Beed\, Ce Niki Dead ofT;;;~_.. ... .....,.,., W "' 207 BROADWAY I, 4400 Jan. 1a,;"' ..,..,. ~·tv on 02llO Saldlllewlllbetleldon:Waclnaa-.,,. MICArtlllH' Blwd , Sult• 330 ........ ftlanol'H:M74 Thllbullnealla~~ ll day ,. ............. 2t 1Mhl 2:00 pm .! i U port Baec:tl. Ca. t2MO Publlltlad Orange eo..• """"' genairal S-tt••· at Iha~ AY9nUaentranOat0 I n:!;'"':!O:'~~ c · PllOt,. 14, 21. 21. Mardi i. 1964 ='~--tied .. tM IN CMc C.,,t• ~ 300 ~ • SUlll )3o, ~ ea.di. C..: ~ County a.ti ol 0.,... ~on ~ A¥a .. ~-CA. "'" 9"".,. ...... '"t .......... Notlca: Al thl time of ..._ bldt • ,....., _ .. • ' ·--be _....., "' ~"' .....0101 ...._ Q)' I Pu ~ l'ranc:. Klllulny, 19312 "8JC ll)llC( ,__ ,,_., ,....,. "' .,._, • .., ... C (,.) Fl~. Hunltngton .,_.,Ce. t2948 ftubllNcl er._ c.... 0..-~ ~ ~"':f_c:Mc*..! epeot.. ·-Robert Ind Carollne •--PllOt FtO 21, 11, Mardi 6. is_ ttl4 ,_ .....,.. ....,.,.. --.Ion ua'h. ,., o.'°'" I 4723 Mlt1y Cour1, L.a ....;:::"&: M~IP T " Ol1 U9I tW ~ At tM time Of the lnfttal publ-W t240 1 ..Cnnoul 1&111 ... ..,._ cst1on °' tt111 not:1ca, u. tota1 -._c E The to1ow1no rwr... lbsn-amount Of the l.ll\Plkt t>Mnoa ol the .. ~--r~~f~ donacl!M11111W'..:',:........ .-.c llJncl =::,ion MClUt«S by the abo"9 ct. • .C H«Den atwt Dnlleiltl Pr9tt ,,._ Mama. TIO£ AND nMD PUa. ..Cm"I ooatl. .. ~n:sand.::::-: ~ Trval 4400 MecAttflur ltwd ~ USHINO COMPHAY. U0 ._,.um~A~Jll1•1n• • 1 • niM~ M '.c _ 330 ·NtillpOrt 9wf\ c.. 'IHIO ..,, CTl\a cotony Sui•• 10s). The To cMliiw•ia the ooer*'cJ bid. "' -(ft 0 kl 20ll. ~ ..,_ ,:e. uig;:. 8-:ft, Ce. t2tSt ~ ~ _... .. .,.,. JOU mer cell (ltt ) N~ -W 0 .6 Ca 9l0t7 H. BllMp, 2St ~br St.. CH.-ISTIAN ~!OEM TIOM Da*1J.,..y30,1M4 • C .~ .;,d~~~uc~~22~Dr,COMltANY tN lhe MAYS o! IUl'll..INGTOH RNANCIAL at"' -! Otl Mer c.. t2GI ""' . .....,._ UQune IMOtl. Ca. tM'S t Ct4NIT. 11m ...... ~ VICU, INC.. _c .. ~ Tiiie ~ta~ fM J111cttt1ou9 .,.._Manie,. Hum~ liaadl. Clilllomlla ..... a CelfiOmla ~•ltolt U5 llfnnad pennartNp by: I ,.,,.. IO aDo¥9 ... fl9d M e>r.,.. ~fl~ t•m ~ ~ ~ .,_.., 1 m M• rMVDTMlNT. • ~ eowncy °" ~ 11. tau ~ ~ c•a •• ~ \()fl~~~T.;.::! c::'K ~I gia;w91.,_,. ~ ~-==oondMCtli&I bye lndl'>~-=--11~ "ran ,..~ a-.-~ '* Dalltd H. IMhop -_....., Diii "° ........... a.. TNI llatelNM WM lleo """ the Tiiie lllteman1 -fled _. .._ ldwd "-~ a.oo ,.... ~ · Count, a.n of 0r-,._on County an °' ar.,.. °"""" °" TM " 11 "41'1' w ... .-.._ 11t)61i~l2~ F'tib •• 1N4 -...... --"# JanuarylO ..... ~c:: .. Orw"111~- Putlllthad Ont101 C.. o.ty ~.S .!; Ft31103 Fta Mo '214 HM • ..... ,.0,7.14,2',IM4 ~ U .. ~.~.::-.. =~,,~:~·=~,~er-= '°'~ . '°"..... . . . • .,-14 .. -" t ~TmOU9..,_ .. NAmlTATW....-T ni. fOllowttlg ~ .. doing bull~ .. DAFFODILS ANO DANDELIONS, 315 Avwnld.• CerrltOI. Newport 8Mch, CA 928e0 Ala MerchM. 315 A~ C.· rt1oe. ~ a..ch Ca 97eeo Thl1 bull'*I 11 conducied by an lndlvld1.lal Alice MwGhlUI Th11 1t1lement WU ltled with IM County Ci.rk of Or•noe County °" Jiil 18. 19 ... nJG71 Publllhed oranr eo..1 Delly PHot Feb 1•. 21, 2 , March 8, 198'* •113-8• Ml.IC NOTICE '1Cnn<X.ll ., ....... NAMI ITATDllMT The followt11ij ~· are doing l>UllMN U PRODUCTION HEA D RE· BUILDERS SUPPLY, 179•5 Sky· park Circle. Sult• K, Irvine. C.. 9271• Richard T Hanley, 22282 Platlno. Miiiion VleJo, Ca 02891, Thia bullneN la conducted by an lndtvl<lual RICHARDT HANLEY Thia 1111-11 wu flied with the County Clerll of 011n99 County on Feb 7 1~ ,.,.,.. Pubffthed 01ange Cout Deity Pilot Jan 1'* 21 28 M11Cfl 8, 198'* 927-8'* Mt.IC NOTICE FICnn<X.11 9UltHlll NAMllTATU •NT The followtng l*IOtll are doing buaineaa u . MECHANICAL DESIGN CON· SULT ANTS, 1001 W 17th St , Suitt M, Coit• Meea, CA 92827 Francie Alohard Lyndhurtt. 2885 M!{N411 une, Cotti M.... CA 92628 Ian Jemet Feu". 2• 12 Hoity Lant, Newport Beech. CA 92883 Otvld A Bruna, 19221 Oe11war1 •28. Huntl11ijton Be.ch, CA 92848 Thie butlne.a 11 conducted by. an untncorpotatld UM>Clatlon othel then 1 plf1nerlhlp I J Fett• Thia ... ,_.., WU tiled wltll the County Cllf'k of Oranoe County on Jan 18, 198'* FDl1• Publllt* Of•nge Com Dally PllOI Fib t4 21. 28 Mereh 8, 198'* 903--M Ml.IC NOTICE YOUAM .. Dl.FAUlT UNOP A DI.ED Of TRUIT DATWD M9J 1t. 1•, UHl.HI YOU TAKI ACTioN TO "'°TWCT YOUR "'°"""· IT MAY • aoLD AT A "'9UC I A&..a. • YOU MH O AN I XflU· NAno-Of THI NAT\Mf Of THI PROCHDINQ AQAINIT YOU, YOU IHOUU> CONTACT A LAW· YIR. NOTICI Of TRUITll'I IALE T.I . No.107'4 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on February 28. 198'4, It 10.00 o'clock AM of M id day, OUl91~ the Main 1ntr1nce to the County Cour1houN located 11 700 W•t Civic Centtt Drive In the City of Santa Ana. County of Or~. State of Callfornl1 DEL MAR MANAGE- MENT CORP u duly eppolnted Tru1t" uncs.t Ind purMiant to the power of Ille conferred In that cer- tain Deed of Tru111xecuted by Ken~ Bunauw1 end Noriko bunuawa, hu1band and wtfe recorded Juty 2, t8110. In the offlel of the County Aecotcs.t of MIO County u ~ coroer a lnatru!Mflt No 3337 by reuon of 1 brMCh or default 1n paYfT*ll or perlorm~ of the obit· gatlOOI MCUted lhefl by Including that brMCh or default. Notice of which wu <9COfded Octol>« 28. 1983. u Aec:o<d«'a lnatrumenl No 83--477825. WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BID- DER FOR CASH. lawful money of lhe United Stat•. or 1 c:uhltr'a check drawn on 1 11at1 or netlonll bank,• 11111 or ll<Mwal Cl'edll union, or • 11111 or feder11 N vtng1 and 101n 1110Clatlon domk:lled In thla 1tete, 111 p1y1ble 11 the time of 1111. ell right, title end lnter .. t held by It, u 1'ru1t11, In that real propeny &llulled In M id County end State, OHCl ll>ed II follOWll Th1t portion of Lot 21 of Fairview Fermi. In the City of C0tl1 M .... u 1nown on 1 mep fti.reof recorded In Bool< 8 PIQI 71, Mlaceflaneou1 Mapa, record• of 11Jd Ora~ County deecrlbed u 1041owt: Beginning II a point In the oenter 11ne or Hamilton Street. dll1ant thereon •Je feet WNt-'Y from the interMCtlon of t"9 <*lier Hnea of H1mllton Str"t and AnaNlm Av- tnue. u Mid 11r11t1.,. lhOW'I on • map of Mid Felrview FerrM, running tnenee Southelty Pll'ali.I with Mid c.nter une of Anaheim A~. 248 40 fMt th~ W•1-'Y pe.r .. Itel with llld c.nter Kne Of Hamilton Street 52 fMI I~ Northefty pareli.I wtth Mid centet nne ot Anaheim Avenue 2•8 40 r..t to t"9 c.nter llne of Hamllton 8tr .... th41nc:e Eaaterty llong Mid Center llne of Hamtlton Str..i. &2 re.t to the point of beginning The 1treet addr ... or otn.r com- mon cMelgn1tton of the ,.., prop- erty h1r11n1bov1 dMcrlt>M 11 i;>urPorted to bl 599 H.milton 8tr"1, Coeta Meu CA TM und4wllgned hereby dt.- atlllm1 111 llablNty for aoy Incorrect• MM In Mid atrwt llddr111 or other •common cs-tgn•tlon. Said H11 wtll bl medl without wwrMrty. llUlf"' or lml)ll«I, r• gMdlng tltle, ~on. or encum• bteno.. to aa119fy the ~ be!-"'°' of the Note or other obllgatlon MClll'ld by aalO 0..0 of T Nit, wtth lnMrN1 end other IUf'nl .. P<CMcMd \Nt9k\, '*'9 ldVMOll, "Illy. under tM tenna tr.eat Ind lnt«llt on "'°" ~-IOel. end pg , .... cMIO-and ••P9ft... or thl Truetee end Of IN trwtl cir .. tld tly Mid Deed Of T""' The total amoun1 Of MkS otlllgltlon. lnc:ludlng ~ eetltMted,..., CIMr89I ertO ...,.,_of tN TM!te9. 11t lN ;m. al Wu.I pubbilon of ,,. Ho- del, ...... 141 •t o.t.s ~ 30. ttM Ofl MAA MANAG!MtNT COA,., • T"'9tee, Ir (llAll OOH IOYNTOH, MM· : I. ,OUl1,, ltiwt ~ 20, ..,... Ana. Ce t270' 7 tc)IA7 ... to0 ._,~ OrltlOt eo.t OllM1 Piiot 1lb 7. "'· ~t. f .... I03-IA CPP......, NOTICI OP T'Ml8Tlrl tALI T .I. No. to-otn ,.,,, ,,. NOTtCa YOU ARE IN OUAUl T UNDER A DEED OF TRUST, DATl!I> Mey 2t. t983 UNl..ESS YOU TAKE ACTIOH TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SAU. IF YOU NEED AH EX Pl.ANA TIOH OF THE NATURE OF THE PROCEEDING AGAl~TYOU. YOU SHOULD COHTA~ LAWYER On MwClll 8. 198'* II 10-00 A.M , CALWIOE TRUST OEEO SEA· VICES. INC • .. duly liPPCllflted Trvt111 wnd9r Ind pura1ant to Deed of Truet recoroec:t ~ 7. 1883, u INI. no 113-238'*15, of Of· llclal Aecoreb In the offlcl of the County Rlcot!Mf of Orange. State of Calttomla executed by Thom• A. \1111 W11gon1t and Cito! C Ven WllQOf*. hutband and wife WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH OR CASHIER'S CHECK (payable 11 time ol NII In l.twfvl money of the United StllN) In the lobby of the front ol Suite 107 11 2130 E. Fourth St • S111t1 Ana, Calllornta Ill rlgtlt, tltle. and lnter-1 con~ to Ind now held by It under lald DMd of T ru1t In tha property lltuated In uld County and St9te delc:fll>ld u · The Southwee1erty 80 feet of the Northfflterly 180 fMt of th• Southe.uterty 205 feet of Lot 288 of Newport Helghll, In the County of Orange. Stall of California, u per map recorded In 8ool( • P• 83 of Mlaolllaneou• Mapa. In the office of 4M County Aec:o<der Exoec>t the Northeuterty 85 IHt The etreet lddr... of the real property dH crlbed above 11 pu1ported to bl 2189 Tuetln Av· enue, Col11 ..,._, CA 92827 Thi undlrllgned dltc:lllm1 any Oablllty tor any Incorrect,,.. of the aoove llrllt lddr ... Said Ille wlR bl maoe. but Without coven.nt or wwranty, P · pr... Of lmplieO, flglfdlng title ~. or encumbrancea. to pay the remaining prlndp9' eum of the notl(a) MCUrtd by M id DMd of Trust. wtth lnter911 thereon, u provided In said notl(1), ldvanoae, II any, under the term1 of Mid DMd of fruit, feea, charg11 and u - pen111 ol the Tru•t" and of the tru111 created by Mid DMd of Trull The total amount of the unp1ld balance of the obllgetlon MCured by the property to bl told and reaaon1bltt eatlmated coete. 1x- pen111 end ed11ancea 11 the time of the Initial publk:atlon of the Notice 01 Sall la $78,0 t5.55. The benlflclary under Mid Deed ol Trull heretofore executed and de4tveredto the undersigned 1 writ· ten Oeclaratlon of default and 0.- mllnd for Sall. and • wrltt.n Notice ol Default and ElectJon to Sell Thi underalgned cauMd uld Notice ol Oelautt and Ei.ctlon to Sell to bl rec:orded In the county white the reaJ pr099ftY II located 0111. February 2, t984 CALWIOE TRUST DEED SER- VICES, INC , AS TRUSTEE 18327 St1etm1n Way AIHCll, CA 91335 (8 18) 708-8813 By VICK'\' JENKINS, TRUSTEE SALE OFFICER Publlahld Or1nge Cout Dally Piiot Feb 14, 21. 28. 198'* 834-84 Ml.IC NOTIC£ I T ATI Of CAUPORNIA THI RHOURCll AOINCY Dl,~NT Of' 'ARKI AND RfCMAno- CAYSTAL cove STATE PARK, BOLSA CHICA STATE BEACH. POINT MuGU STATE PARK LEO CARRILLO STATE BEACH, GAVIOTA STATE PARK, AND EL CAPITAN STATE BEACH LIFEGUARD TOWERS NOTICI TO COHTRACTC>ftl Sealed bldt will bl recelVld II the office of the Oepanrnent ot Parke and Recr11tlon Conetructtlfl leo- t1oft, 2422 Arden Way. Suite A-1. Seoramento. Callf0<nl• 95425. or P 0 Box 255628. S1etamento. CA 95885-5528 (NOTE Expr111 mall mul1 bl malled to 1treet addr-), up to 2 00 PM. TUllday, Mareh 13, 198'*, 11 whlCh time and plac» they will bl publtely opened and rMd for performing the wort! u follOwl: Furnlltl Ill llbof, m1ter\alt, toola Ind equipment Ind lncidentala, Ind to perlorm 114 work MOllNfY to conatruct Ind d4111ver 1 tot.i of t 7 lifeguard tower• at CRYSTAL cove STATE PARK, BOLSA CHICA ST A TE BEACH, POINT MUGU STATE PARK, LEO CARRILLO STATE BEACH, GAVIOTA STATE PARK. AND EL CAPITAN STATE BEACH. Oranoe. Vlfltura. LOI An- galel. end Santa Barbara Countlll. C1llfornl1. In aoc0<denc. with the plan• and apecllk:allon• therefor• and auctt addend• thereto u may bl l11ued pnor to the bid cpenlng date Proepec11111 bidder• may eum- lne and obtain bid lorma. lt)eClft· cat1on1. Ind plane by calllng at or malling 1 requ9t to the office of the D19Wtment of Parka Ind Aec:- r .. tlon, Con1tructlon Section. No bid Wiil bi cone6der9d un1M1 It 11 midi on • 11andard bid form furnllhld by the [)ecHlrtmen1 of Plfkl and Aec:f .. tlon, and II made 1n accord1nce wtth the "lnattuc· tlOna to 81d01r1" Bide mut t bl eubmltt.O for IN lfltWI WOf1I dNCrlbld '*°*"· 0.-Ylatlonl from epecttleatlonl wtll not bl conlidlrld and wlll bl .,.. fOt rljeetlon of bide The OlpetVMnt Of Perk• Ind Recteetlon rllltWI ui. rlOttt to wa!W any lrflQUlarlty In I bid or to ~ eny or ill Dick. The IUCCll9fuf btddef Wiii bl ,._ quired to ••acute • oontrecturlll agreement In IN lotm of • .. ,..,_ dard Aoreement -Form 2" wtllOh lhall bl binding vPOI' the ..... °' C11"orn1a ontv UPofl llPPfOVal 1:1y tM State. In 90COf'Olnoe wt1h the pr~ Of Section t770, 1719 and 1711.1 Of tN LaOf Code. ui. ~t .... ll90lf1alnld tMt the general prevallna flta afWllOM in tftl ooun- ty In wNcil the WOf'k re to be dOne bl .. l9t9d tly Ole ~mant Of ln- dualrlal ~. A copy Of thll :C.~ on fllll at tN CoNttucuon Pl••a.,. bl 0tant9d '° btd-der prQPetty eppt~ .. ·•1tna1 .,..,_. .. In aoc«danot ~lee>-"°" ''"· .. Mq • TltJe 2. OelbM MINnlecr.ttw Code ApploatlOna for ~enc:ie ,,.,_bl IUbmltted to the Imel ..... Otftcie. ,.23 . '"'"•tr• / teor.,,,..,,o. c.MorNa tMt4, not,_. tNft ft¥9 (5) ~ dlt deyt In ldY9"0e of b6d CI09nlno dell It bidder wnca "SIMI! .,._ naee ' Pf.,..._ on trlle pr0j9Cl. bidder mua1 -on STD e t 1 form (lmd "*"-Pr•enoa end Certtflca11on ~) end 9Ubmff wt111bld OIPAATMEHT M PAAl<I ANO RfCRIATIOH Wm. I ltlMr, Olfec:IOf Pub!Wted °'~ CoMt Dally PllOt ~ 21.H, tlfC 10CX).14 ITAW rrcw t .. l.DIR PCWU.CW Nmnoul • II •IC llMm TtlelolowWll,....,._alllft. __,,,_ ... .,,,_"JLl•tta ..... 1---- neu Ha"'e: IVl"O"llN OO·O'l"ATIYI LTD.. 11011 ltatlllmoor Lafte, H\mllt19ton teed\, CA. t2t"f 642-5678 tlflfwtl Merteen l)t.MI, 153 72 Att- demen &.n • Huntlngion 8-cf\, CA. HMt r.i;;;;;~;J~~::::~~~;;~~~~~~iiiiiiiiii~~~::~~~::----1:~~-=---=--:-~:--"i::------:-:-:--~a;-<lW"" Ch•IM "-WMftDUl'n. ..... ... •·t-I IM2 .Wbor Point C:Wdt. Hunt· l•~---...---"'11!~----......... Ille .. ...._ ...... 1;._ •·•-i lnQton laedl. CA. tH4t .... al 1111 · T HE DAILY PILOT .,.... lalt -.-... ..,. The Flclttloue ~...,,.,.. ltwal 1111 .... ...,.,, .... ~ 1111 =1y'°onU::C:v~~0rqe .,,, .. !,~J!.noi CLASSIF IED OFFICE HOU~ MUl•UY Ptalat.it tfjlllf M1IUlll 11,,!.':~,_:.conductecsb)'• on1ylnctudet1h9aBctrm Telephone Service· "*IDlltm l ayfroni&ndOfar Luxurlou• condo on CM rlN f'I. W..tlbum 2 la f\om9 but MO PoOI. • • Elceltlng OONt'1 Ylft horn., 2 8a, ~ tllQ, emle water, auper VIW. teCUf· Thll 1111.,.,_,t ... filed wtth the r9Ct .. Uon tldllttte Ind Monday. F rad a y Muet M eold now. l>rioed vlew1 1p1ricllng cond. lty door man. reduoed County Clafk of Or11ng1 County on comptete e.xterlof and B OO eccotdfngly, 3 8dtm + FurnteMd 1575,000. Call 1100,000 to 1550,000. Jen 10. t914 garden mllntenenoe ano : A.M.-5:30 P.M. convtrtlbf• dtn. Im· 213/947·6'4' evH, May • t r ede. Owner tii.no,,168175 •tofelfevwynervou• B . C meculate condition. Clll 213/1146·2S'7 daye. t7f·1'3f&85t.a3tM Pvbltlhld <>range co.tt Deity ....., 1a1.a1e1 usmess ounter: = Dabolt or 1e11y ~•"'"by IP91. · ••?Wiii .. Pttot J.,, 31• Fib 7· "'· n:... t=,SElECT Monda y-Friday &; ... LI Li Ifft °"=:-:1bolt •• F1Mr Mt.IC ll>TICE f'ICTITIOUI IUIMH NAm lTATIMINT Thi fOllOWtnO ~ II doing l>ualnlll •• THE KEMPLER INSTITUTE, 805 l.ak~ Ln , Colla MIN. CA. 92921 Watter Kemplef, 805 LMI~ Ln .• eoa" Meaa. CA m2e Tl'llt bualneM II oonduetld by an lndMdual Wiiiet Kempler Thia 1tat_,t wu tllld wtth tl'll County Ci,rk 01 Orange County on Jan ti, 108'4 '2ltl7t Publltnld Qfange Cout Delly Piiot Feb I•. 21, 28. Ml/Ch t . 188-4 48'*-84 Pta.IC ll>TICE 'ICTm OUI .U ... 11 NAMI ITATWMINT The lotlowl11ij l*IOnl are doing bueJneu u . IRVINE JEWELRY, 58111 Sierra Bravo. lrvtnt. CA 92715 lrvlne EnterprlMl, Inc • 68111 Sier· re Bravo. trlllne. CA. 92715 Tht1 bullnett It conducted by. 1 corpot all on 0..ma Kllhlt. Sec:retary Thi• llatement WU flied With the County Cllf'k of Ofange County on Jan t8. 1984 ~ Publllhld Orange Cout o.l1y Pilot Feb 14, 21, 28. M11eh 8. 198'* 902-M Ml.IC NOTICE FICTtTtoUI 9U .... H NAMI ITATIMINT The following pereon II doing bu1ln111u ANANC'I' PRODUCTIONS. 543 Aldllndl Ave , NewpOft Beech. CA 979&2 Gregory Arthur Newton, 543 Aldlandl Ave • NewpOft Beech, CA 929&2 Thi• bullneee 11 condUc:tld by 111 lndMdual Gregory A Newton Thia 1111_,t WU flted with the County Clerk of Orange County on Jan ti, t9M ,at21'1 Publllhed Or~ Coalt Diiiy Piiot Feb 1'4, 21 . 28, March 8, 198'* '489-8'4 Ml.IC *>TICE OflANGI COUNTY IUN9'tOR COURT 700 CMc c.rttlt Dt. W11t hnt. Ana, CA. '2701 Plalntlff Loretta J. Guco. Crota-Plalntlff Security National Bank Defendant Security N•t1on1I Bank. Marvin Blanke, Wefl9 F11go Bank. Jeck Thornton, Cllttornl• Korean Bank, Vince 8111. Kenneth Mont·Hemphtll and OoN 1·25, In• d\Jtlve Cron 01l1nd1nt1: Kenneth MonMiemphltl and Georgeanna Hemphlll, and OoN 21-ISO, In· c:tualve CU1No3582 M IUWDMI NOTtcll Y• Ml.._ wed. Thi OMlrt !MY ............ ,.., 1'ttMuC ,., ....... .... ,..,~_... .... "9ed .. ~-..... II y0u will\ to ..-tllt ~ of Ill lt10fM)' In 11111 INl11f, )'OU lhould do IO promptly IO thlt )'O'lf wr1111n reepon11, If any, may bl filed on time. A vteOtUttld hi lido ctemen- dedt El trtt>uma: lede....,.,.. .... Ud...., '" ......... -.. Ud. ,.., .... .,,,.,. .. .... u.1a11 ........... Fl .. ...... ",.., ..................... . ... ....., ........... ,.. .......... ,. .. .,., ...... ,..., ........ 111,1...._ W _,, fMY M .............. .. u.w. ................ .......................... ••• ~ai.etl• "••arl• , .. . .. ~ ................ .. r .. , ............. .., ...... ~ ';',.ri==,~·- -PPAOPERTIES 8:00 A.M.-5 :00 P.M. iii• J:.'~S:~ DEADLI NE c.nlll"!c,•• AllJtw klt<Mn, 2 bf. 2 be + xtr• .. .... COLDWC?U BAN~eRLl ,,..... ,. tr yon octtlt roome.1325,000. -sas "' om tnluhtirlNnQ 3 Br 2 Mra. Long M0-1180 PUBLICATION DEADLINE .... ILIO" Blho!M. !xtralolotwttn ' ' ft&f'• room '°' expantloft. NJ,. BAYFRONT: SptCt.ICUtet Monda\ Sat . 11 :30 a.rn . Lovely trl-leYll home wftn ceea to ptlv•t• betd\. corner .... 11i.w. dodc, ..c. T . .J • ~t •tac> up llvtng room. fOf· Gr .. 1 potantlal.135000d000 $1,350;000. 876-2330 UeMJa\ • on. 4:30 p.m. mal dlnl"" Hi-country 1~• 1·-... "--------Tue~. kltchanCM,~r.m11y ~~200.... -lllUIY•-IY .... Utmlt W,-dnesdav 4:30 p.rn room tlld PoOf, " giant 11% fixed rett. 30 Y'• PH.._ T~ursda\ \\'ed 4:30 p.in. bedroom•. 3 bathe. NMr h4onaco w1111 best oc , BR. 3,.L ~t ...... ,.._..._ fnda" Thur". ·' ''() 2 golf oour ... and pelt(, ~. ,.. Rue Vlllara. ,. .,. •• -""' / " ": ·' f' .111. Prte.d et onfy 1228,000. 09er'I wtcnde. &CO-1638 room, dining room, PoOI Saturciav L"r1 ., I)() C a ll l o r inowlng & IP•· loc.ated on~ _ r ,,: p.m. 6"&-2313 --..,..,,.-----'..........,........., 11,...,. cul-de-uc In f•:!:j ::>undav F n . 3:00 p n1 ti tu In trtple A Orange Co. k>- oriented :"t"t>orh . C HOO ft a II cation. "O" 'Vaeancy. i~~g "f:d1,,:' .d!: ANCEL LATION & 2 be ti~. w/jlCUZZJ. Juat =2•. No brotc.,. llrMble 30 yr. IOen Wllll • CORR ECTIO~S red uoad • 10. 000. iiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii flud lnteru t rate. • : FllllLll•IS·IH 1139.900. Call 966'1te7 lllUIYMlll'flm Fatx.ii'Mt;:" Cancellations and c.:>rrec tions may oa11y Hot Litt or ~120 SM.IOI Lowest s>tlced OOlf COUrM be made 0 d di ' propertlft. All Orano-Small, 1mai<-d0wn. Xlnt cu•tom In Canyon. <t ~~~~~~~~I n same ea m es as co.datau1t1&pubUoaue· loctlon, end unit acrou Bedroom• "bath• prl-above. Please ask for a cancellation tl()f1 tru•• .. ·• Nlet-139 rrom lrge greenbelt .,... 11•t• pooi' and 19e. u1-mo. 998-e381 CloM to truportatlon & tlmtt• In privacy. number when ca ncelling your ad . lllllYI PllOEI 1t109pi . c1111se-11S01. 11.19&,ooo ERRO .n.w II.Im 111-1• Near new 5 St. 5 be con-RS: tempory on 45 toot 101. Ch k d d . s1.•15.ooo. ec your a a1ly and report Ull&llLIYUll errors immediately. The DAILY ~~ :So!tO:t.~ CO: ~ILOT assumes liabilit y for the fir~t •Ider tr•d• down for mcc~ rect ir.sertion cnl y ue a bl • prope rly. ' 11•395•000· CLASSIFIED 642-56 78 Lawso YOUR AD IN THIS SECTION IS REACHING 108,777 HOUSEHOLDS 261,064 READERS COMPARE * OUR CLASSIFIED RA TES Daly 108,777 25¢ Plot C1rcul1bon Santa Ana Re&lster Newport Ensil" 49,000 Circulation , 52,000 Clrcul1llon per thOuund 63c pe1 thousand soc Pl' thousand The 80,ooo 49c Pemysaver C11cwhon Pl' thousand Rates Baaed On 3 Linet -7 Tlmet THE REAL ESTATE RS MPLD·041 Aera 5 Br 3 Be front own- '" unit on xtra wide parcel with epacloua 2 Br rMr unit. 1 blk from C<IM main bMch. Ownet mlnt NII lmmed. & wlll con- lld.,. any off•. 1111111ULn 111-2111 lll-1111 l•n/W ... Fora.llWA4 ACTION C.tlJ A DA&Y ""°' AD-YllOI MJ·M71 -COTE ~t~ REALTY =:.= :::' ·-= ~ ": .................. ,., ...... r------+------..J ...... deyt .,.., ,,. MNnOftl ,. _______________ _ II wwct on you, .. wtltl ttft oourt t w'1t1an reaponae lo tht OOfnC)lailnt UftlNe >'°" dO, '(04/f default ..... .,,terecf on ~tlotl Of ttie p1e1n> 11rr. and thlt court "">' enc. • judOllMnt 1911MI you fOt tN l'ellf demanded In tM ~. wtlldl c.QU!d t-'t In ~· Of wege1, taalna Of money "' ~ Ot otn.r ,....,, requeet9d In IN oom- p«alnt Dttld OeQ 1e.1M1 LH A BRANCH, C... ly. l<Mhteen A Keyt, Deputy PutWlthld OtMft Coaet Delly Piiot Jiil it.,. 7, "'· 21, 1914 7ft.IA 642-5678 l'ut a few rl'nrch '" work /nr qou m tlw Daily Pilat OrangeCoa1 DAILY PILOTIT~. februety21, l llM C'7 plue the IAVIHE MIRROR and the HUH'TlHOTON BEACHCOMBER~ Wedfteeday et no utr• Chwget CALL TODAVll 111••1.111 Vour Ody Piiot 8etVlct Dlrec1ory A41pfeeantettw M2...tll1nt.• ----------· ...... Vafval.W .,.,.... .. fuabW Aprt!eta, Val. Apr!llnt1, Val. Offln latab ltH Leet I ,.... HM •I Wu... 9111 SYDNEY 0MARR lntu Ut4 ...... ..... ... c..ta ..... HM ..... ...... nM 1"CdM dbteutt... AJ; = LOST OR FOUND A Pm AocounU1nt. AMI e.eaM 1 to l ddrma. nrm .. 1« ... rcMi. RecNcoteted lrg 1 ' 2 •. 1 L&oom:&EXN VIEW. ~~~Meoo ,<;:::t:• AISt L.=:E =~~~vl~~I rro $750-11300 D/W, Wlhr, dfyr, lrg ~ 2 BL ,;arcHln apt, pool w8lk to bMCtt. tllt5/mo. handtt • van.ty of ~ .mu w /ocn vu tf600 . S445/1535710W18ttl8t 499--50t2 790 1 1q ft up1telr•ui.t;8tnlWHrTEdoO,lg eountlng~.Com- also.,-i '~ 8pacl0Ua 2 8f 1 Ba, nu..... -=.ft:~ =~·~under ~beeedGLeccount• It:. -I STUOfO: pvt em. pool. cipt9, paint, ;ere;.. patlO, l?Urm room '" rn 11)\t, C.M. btdcl 1275 mo. . • cut\ planning. A/P 80 Y Mature, prof. ~ E.1lde, raf1. SHO. Meaa. Call after e PM (800) 53M>n5 L0et doO. brwn/blk Shattle A.. P091t!Ond requtral 1*9Qn.N/emkr.*'25mo 075-1841 ~t2 ~·· Fe. HB/FV . accoutlng ~rM or WedDelclay, February u 786-1172 !"" June~M-o4~ THE SEVILLE 2 8' w/ger Hunt Bw:tl l\Orn9. Pvt ~ '!:lJ:.•·::,~ 7201. 213-590-Mt7 = Ptwe Wld ARIES (March 2 1-April 19): Financial decision. at fint delayed, •a"'1 .... • ~t orpta, dips, bit.Int. tncd beth all houM prlv RecHI & en.tol neer oc ~l'DIUL£TS Mclactllan ttwe1tment wiO be made with aid of family member. You are on tariel. your OCAJ#MON+: §~ yd ~/~lo, weter pd. FrptC, d/w, w/d. '360: Alf'pott. 1000 st up. R & H ~ Co. 1400 Dove ''· ..._. judgment is correct. but o ne who would be a partner does not have bf . Ho pett. M1 mo 2819 C"Santa AN Ave. 981-8783 IY mag. tnveetmenu 751-seet lut'WfRS Port a-ct\, t2teO necessary resources. Know it and act accordingly. Stick to familiar 3880 Mlc:Mlaon Drtw to'l!'f1. (213)795-3018 z · Call 1-6138-4120 Prof M /F, non--atralght IEWf•T Ill• M"1 grouTndA.URUS (A ·1 20-M 20) E h . . . . lrvtn. •··-11,VaL \~~ :1~!1~ wanted to ,..,.t oceen ·-........ ~;~ .. MlllSSI pn ay : mp as1s o n mvest1gat100, J.M.PatareWood8kte48f ...--• · • --· view room In pvt hme In ........... _, • .., ...... , llillllft mtcllcctual curiosity, added popularity and answers to legal queries. 3 ea. highly upgreded, w. · 648-~518 Lao Bch. Kit PttY. pvt ~~o:"9~~ quldter The 0ninge Co.It Deity YaJuable contact is made at social affair -you'll improve public ~~;.1':0 eond. •1200. ~. nn lut ..... , Hit bath. ~~ + utll .. ~o.tbox 315~ P=.'?!'~COU::.i: PllothManaxcetlantop- relations, panncrship proposal should not be taken too seriously. 36' 14>.S:: no peta, 1780 5-4e.2287 • &tab. tNO ha\19 a r.ftrem.m p1en " portuntty fOf • cereer GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Stick t? basic issu.es -ignore those Latua IAcla 1141 S~ to bW:h: 28' 1:': mo. 1eeo1 ReQlna Cr. Room~°' ~le per-,_,Eater. O.lloe>er end you come to WOt1C ,,.;., =~ M: .~ who want Y<?U to act prematu.rely. Time IS on your side, you can afford rn 3806 eq ff. t:m. S17a~a.:1oar· w • M0-7863 Of f.40.eee3 ~~5o ~ br!;· ,::: Broker looking for 3 you'll age• lot qutcqr," tr•ck record QrHI to play wa1Ung gam~. Attent1~n al~ C'Cnters on depc:ndcnts, pets and rm. Horth End of gated Li ii:: "U~ 18801 RagJna belch: H.B. te0-2183 peopta r..i-... reMtiad PtlWlla iill potanttal, guarant~ employment. Scorpio, Aquanus nauves figure prominently. community. a.et view In C.... ... ,... •• IUWlll to •hara complately d rew agafnat com· CANCER (June: 21-July 22): You receive added "su stenance .. in town. 111?5. •M-9813 CZ21(2L:YmW003 YIWll SEA & SUN LODGE lumWled offtoel In Cot-CllCll If mlMIOn. Oealr• to move formofro mance.affection,love.Yougaingreaterfreedom,you'llhave Hot1h u.guna. 2BR 2ba.. ca11tnge,frptc,M1tr9Ufte, & 2 Bd 1u 30i~1:~~l;'pt ~t~t"!._oo.nf rm llSSllE ~~ .. ~t ••ptua I fi If · Ch · · lari flreplace epa Fully tum pvt petlo + yrd & lrg Nft 1 rm xury · "-1• ·-· .,_.,,.,._,, ""'"' • • ...,.., reaume o ~cw out ets or se -exp.ress1on. ans~a . 1s . present, popu ty I HSOO/mo AOt 973-6595 eundedt Pet• OK Avtlf. apt• In 14 plane. 1 Bdrm y ilft 7.20.1133 P. o. Box 1HO increases and you could win a contest. Gemini, Virgo persons play key · Im med: s 1ooot mo: from s575. 2 Bdrm from 11 ... a -•· 4AAll "----'-' 719NO. HAABOABLVD. eo.ta ~ 92t2.0 roles. .... ... lllla HSI 1eo.eooe. Hoity N70. TownhouM trom ten ..,., ~ FULLERTON EOE LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Review costs connected with recent move, 4ioME FOR RENT 1735 ... poola, tennte, Gg mounGilri hOm:. ! a; 2 \Int.ala 2111 11M11t !•------- domestic adjustment. Older individual is willina to lend benefit of LaguneHllle2Bdrm.taoo. C!!taJle !!14 !'!1.!'1-:-· ~a.~ ~·/ "ttr-io..T 10. t88l0Am.F.V. ll&Yl&Wlll tlllSS1mW experience. Focus on property values. basic security, Iona-range Fenced y.,da & gtragee. ~ APt. ltove, r · ;::: Nonh'Tn -5 nltt 12'0 ICI ft. ATTRACTIVE A/P 6 AIR upr. Some investments. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio persons play siJ1Uficant roles. Kid• & pet• wetcoma. raftlOt. No pet•. *'20· eZki to McFadden end latala ti Agent ,5-41-6032 MA88EUS8E.S typing, comP'lt• det• VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): lnslructio ns, directions are subject to Aoant. no fee. M3-07H 541377 W• on McFadden 10 · 11aan net ..,.., an. J~E~~Ju~ emry • C)M. N-tt'flOk~ chanic. Elementofdeceptioncouldbeprcsent. Knowit,protectselfin ....... liptl ml. 1::. t:'°· quiet. Yi'': ... Suwtnd VIiiage, COM XP1ioihfnr m eoo tq "·ground floor, =·o!fryplyAv:; s2:i~. emouonal clinches. Define terms, check meuqe'-make inquirea WI: XU new-p;t'Rr, a;n, 9325 ~Jva 91• (714)193-5111 Non-amkr, ma6e. 20-30 newly ramodtl•d · ftnfUJ Alla (off FelrAilwl concerning relative in transit. Pisces plays key role. 2ba, wet bar, frptc, 2 car, ' see Air Apt• 2 BR 1 bath yra. S320/mo. 875-7927 Mc:Naeh RMtty 942-'1334 lenleet 3114 -------- UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): What had evaded you will now become 2 1>11tlot. 495-0283 aft. 15 1 Br 1.':.1390/mo. Allf• apt. No pet• kldt OK. Avalt Mateh 1 c M 3 Br Small EJalde C.M. comm'll sh:n;t C: g._. ap: &Pn. llOUT&IY available . Responsibility combines w ith profit -you'll offer better lwprt IMf~ Bit r:\ ·~·· 352 Vic· $500/mo. 538-8420 TwnhM, ~1ii.9. Nr ratall/otflce. S250/mo. Open 7 daye. VISA a MC, ~tlonwld• •tudlo h•• service and earn more m oney. Debt is repaid, prom~tion is due and this im8'/mo. Modern 2 'Ba. 1 1 v~ l~rt 1Mc• ftli occ. S230. 241-18&3 128Cebrlllo8t.&41-e&« '320 eempue Df, #190. :''t!:!~ ~- could be your power-play day. TaJcc ad~antage o~ n! . Story Beck Bay, 4Bd 3 \or';&~~o~ ::·. no UNbtoRbs. j n;;a 38 Coron• del Mar: Pro--ldutrlal ~~ ~~~. Acroaa hrly ... comm Inter· SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2 I): You II be at nght place at crucial be. 3300 1/f, 3 car gw. doge tsOOt mo Ava ll rentall a WEEK to meet t..ion-6 only to anr lge lntalt 2121 v191mg Mon & ;ueufter moment. Timing, judgment arc: on target -take initlattve, finish pool, Jee .. '/•ec lot. Po,. 3/1. 931-6812 · my ctlent'• "41ed•. Call beautiful home. S425. 300 ft mca lulatntt 12 631-3339 assignment, look ~yond the i~mediatc, realize that Y<?Ur potential can tum °'opt. 942~ 13ee 28R 1 beth, 1 Cfllld OK. HELEN 964-525' ~:o?~415 8 :11_;~50 b • · \r r:, =~l~tmo'. .. lalt 401 l Artllnterlof dealgn, ttex be tremendous. Anes, Leo. Libra nauves figure promin~ntly. * * WANTED: Harbor 2563-B Elden. 1525 1 Br wtlori. lrplc, gar, ext 123 ' e1ys 1,11 Whittler St CM. OV'I ekiARETTE 0t Vtoeo hra, wth train. Eye 10< SAG ITT ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): Li~t is shed on area previously View Home. A«lt or..... 831·3e71 ' danwr. 1 bloclc to bMCh. . 540-1352,..,.M&-OA 1 DISTRIBUTOASHIPS COIOf nae. &48-4825 shrouded in m ystery. susp icion. TaJcc initiative in gaining access to option. !54Meot 21r bdrme t•n be. ow 2 S750/mo. IM>-3787 Female+ anr 2bf C.~~ :~· 2000 & 2900 eq ft Cuti BualneH.... W• ASSISTANT BROILERS pnvileged information. Stress creativity, independence. willingness to 3 Br. 2 be Condo, frpk:. ~gar. wiOf**. 4 Y,1 2BR 1~BA •19'>9 to btedl. ~~~:fart epm' S0.501q ft. · pr.=, ~ic!;, 0 · Appty In person onty 2·5 get to heart of matters. Member of opposite sex makes "confession." new = nr :::.:' ~ Old, very deen. Avail. 2 patio' a,~ MOO mo. Br . Agent 5-41-5032 ewnlng ' & • ·BON~~ Ancient Matww. 2907 W CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Focus on friends, hopes, desires, Hoeg /mo 5 Mar. 1. 1725. 94M233 :_r11;tJe ... to~ ::!1 Fc:;d~= ~ ~ 2288 1q ft warenou.t atetl to_... you 1n •· Coast Hwy. NB __ ability to fulfill aspirations. You'll be o n more solid emotional, BLUFFS 3 bf, 21A be, epllt ·-ar . . S275 mo C M 'ee2-n47' ahop/1lor9 apace, ap-Ung up VOUR OWN AUOtONIOEO Recording financial ground. You could receive reward o r be recipient of special i.vet on greenbelt. Freah-l 'n be w Side Brend 2BR 2BA Mobile H~ In · · · prox w. of larger C.M PART OR FULL TIME Co """' tape dupll-- award Cancer and a nother Capricorn figure pro minently 1y painted, ctean. •1350 'c:rpi1 drpa & Cann4i1 VIiiage. near Fem. to lhat• 2 bdrm l300 w.,ahouM. 30t per eq ft. BUSINESS. c:1tor Will Tr a In AQUARJlJS (Jan. 20-fcb. 18): Pop~larity incr~ases, results in offer mo,~· 720-0279 ~~~~ •. Encl Patio, c:t1ild'n water 50 mo. 875-5097 ~' 2~~ ~Of. utH peld. (800) 53Un5 IN~~!!=~:;..ooo _54_5-6_90_5 ____ _ to travel or take charge of special social or chanty event. You'll be Condo. 2Br 2ba. frptc:, OK. No Pate. '875/mo Avail. lmmad. 2BR 1850-3000 1/f bldg. 10.000 1/f 1-800-241.22ee AWNING CONSTRUC- 1. d 'II be f · .. i. d ' pool. S850/mo. Avell 94~ S1000. 3BR St75-$2000. M/F lttr 5bf Hunt. HerbOUf tot Cfleln lfnk bit! top TtON & 1n1tat11t1on comp.1mentc .on ap~rance. you co~e aware O we~.,,t, 1et, lmmad. Call 842-2111 Ferguton Hehn 942-1 183 pool home w/dlv. owner. L.e.. Of trade' M2""4e10 I 19..,ilfi~ tilt ~ con11ruct10n expr nutnt1on. One in authonty makes promise. intends to keep 1t. dya or 549-3080 ev/wka MOO. Dix mob11t l\Orn9, no $650. (213)612-1988..,. · •• helpful 645-22« PISCES (Fc:b. 99-March 20): Open lines o f communication -P•t•. Mature adult•. umllT 5000 eq rt. Include otrlCe * ' * ----· . . 'II d 'f · F LIDO ISLE: 3 Bdrm1, 2 Quiet. MCUre. lbr lb af I d M/F to anr 2 bf apt, lndry new 17th & Plecentle Benklng someone 1s t rying to help you, wt .. o so 1 you are receptive. ocus on beth•. s1300tmo yny. 1191 Newport. ~73 •talre, aer~ ~: 11= tac. Near occ & AJrport. 121001mo. 94e-1194 · 10 ways to inak• money • IECEPTilllST tra~el, c:du?ttton, awarenc.ss of spintual va.lues. h may be necessary to 673-7713 •ft 9 Pondaro .. Mobll• El· s 100 clunlng d•P. 1250 + utll 942-4301 aw CM ox 3000 " tnctda t>enant1. c.11 "3--6570. Immediate opening 10, revise, review and to rebuild on a m ore suitable structure. LIDO ISLE 3 br. 2 be, cHln. tat•: Oht moblMI home. Sindy 644-<>128 Pennlneul• Atternetlve: 20 500~Motdlx lndatrt prtt. lllTAllllT/PAml.Y 1rtendty. well-groom•d ln9" Vaf•ral••.. ••'" Vafaralt•.. ln9" Vafuafda.. No pate. Rafi req. Avail. Adult• only, no ,.ta, N..,. ocean, 2 er. 1 Ba. to 25 year-old roommet• t1450/mo. 844-7269 lrvtne.,....,5300eqft peraon In hMdQuerttrt -M.,. 1. S1900. Long term Quiet, aecura. 1191 New· refrlQe crple er\Ot gar to lhare 4 bf home new S110,000 Cutlto SBA Ln offloe ol buay aavlnga & lnnal 2H2 C.1t1 .... 2z·· Cetta .... Wt tenant dalred. 973--2•72 Port. 946-8373. $400. 1725. No peti. 87~· occ. Pool, laundry. In-·-~ nu Chruehtll Prop 5'0-4o470 loan Good telephoM & ----------________ .... ,_, ...... _______ ---------crtdlblynlceroomma1•ftr ft .... typing Skllll required. 2 Bdrma, carpet. drapea, Nlot 2 8', 1 be w/gar, w/d l.m llU Um.J $450 Lge qui.I upper 2Br, Npt Hgta, 2 Br, 1 ba.. frpk:, Rent $225/utlll. Cali ~,,:::~Me-. IOll. ltm.. Cal Betty. 754· 1801 4 Br ocntmt. rum, Sl50twntr 2 Br w/frpl, 1 blk to bch .,.00/yrly 2 Br + den. 1 blk to bch StOO/yrly ..... , ...... , ....... MCllllUALTY ,... ....... " JH/llM171 g er age. s 5s1o1 mo, hkup nr Vlct<>M & C.. Lovely 2 bf home w/dOCk. 1 be, adtt• pref. No pet•. gar. elc. Ideal for retired Scott et 2'1·1517 or IOc eq n.' Agt 87s-e700 Abtent .. owner/meneger OOSl 5-4M1tl nyon. S5t5/mo. Agt 1yr lNM:S2800/mo. 31 1W.Wllaon.e31-2177· couple. S500/mo, yrty. 957..o528. mu1t H ll 1pecl1lty 1700Adams Cott•M_. 8 /d hk 197·9309 or 831-3117 9mo IMM: S2500/mo. *'75, 2 Bdrm, 1 bath. 548-5308 or 731-3772 Pen. Pt. bat bct\/bey, fem Llit..,....tt Mil woman• apparel anop In EOE 2 2~a~J~!:.;.~ Ave. ~o W/alde, engl fem dettched St~anle Bemer~ Hear 20th & Wallace. pref. n/emk. 3-1 mow In Entertain your eweett:Wi prime CdM loc:atton. e - pate. S515. 545-7983 hme. 3Br 1bl, engl car Agt 6 3-7300t945•70 REF'• req. 5'W329 l300+utll 973-8013 Metil thla W.-by... IMUI IUl TY A::fY 2 rare poeltt0na. 2 Br. 2 Ba. apllt 19Vtl gar. New orptl & pelnt. PENTHOUSE on weter •2 Br 1 8a dpllc S525. Sep Prof/M want• to lhr e UUIHIT. Ill 11'62111 chenteie no1 nec:MUty P l.tAa "··-A\lal43/4.11t,1Ut +aec. S2000mo.2br.2be.frpl . er\Otgar.Nopet1.2261A --.. tlful .... ~In H.B., -............... 11•••111m1-.-.. 1 Must be experienced condo. 91\lr ..._ ..,.,..,., S700/mo. 7•2.2••1 2000 IQ ft 974-21~ p ·~ .. "'~"'~ ....., ,..,.,.. """ r•• '" ... f """" di-.. -·~ tlo " .... · ~ .... ..---SI""'~ 1 & 2 Bdrm .a...-. CdM, xlnt ref'•· 41+8732 .. , ._ ...... It "-"""~ .... Ut •3Eslhetician r~-· .,,w-,..., pa ' POOL DOVER SHORES ....... .._, "'',... ....,.,...., ... -Swtmmlng pool chemical •Mamamst waher/d1'Y9',refrtge,dbl SINGLES DELI GHT ll .. lllrl/IWt menta & TownhOUMI F/non-amkrlMttl_,,.\O ~~.?",._'!ln._Et~ MMcM buain.ta Hpt Rtc:herd Ouei'ette Salon, garage, el.ct garage <MgantlC 2 rm pteuura S 3~.;ooM. :.~l~1 ALL UTILI PAID Only trom see<>. (Aak at>out ettr 2bf 1be fum. C.M. ~t...._.; .-:r.733·~ .·:-8 Bch/Cotta M... arN 200 Newport Center Or door Of**. No pet• palace cMfs kHch break· 1 I o S3ff. No pet• 7eo-&ee2 twulmthlltttdT\l. ll~!·aoomP'etut .... ·•11.• ~Mull be reap .. neat & •• ...,.,. .... ~ " No exp. nae Win tr11n tff'wport e.tich plNM. 1850 + seo<> tt.c>. faet bar auP« pluah 8ml 1 Br dplx, 2 bike from ,,_,. _,., *"45+ tit 1-11...-SPIRITUAL Ar•oio..A• •••K run t 'd Wiii Agent. no, ... 883-"076& decor natural roek frplo Eutlllde 2 Br. 1 Ba. may be rented for lhor1 -u · .v-• ~ ~ ..,., am req · -. .----•-·ala •••7 b-patio ao6ar' heated beaeh.cute&qulttw/pvt HIUt/.-A 2•11 e Eld 846-2557/H 1524-MIO/W Advfcetnallmatter1.Lova. net ~K+. Call coltect aum ........ .,..r.,. ...... ....,._. ......... ~·I • 1 WBMtlldeh ettarp 2 B~ pOOI & IPA all1• .,.. P!l'°1~2 117•80r .. 1!.~lmo. -f;N "831.';755 · en · ~~'!1dr6~: .. ie:: Rmte: fem. 25-30 Yf9. merrltge & bualneH. Mon-Fri e.SPM. All< for R«11 or top ~ Faahlon p~ r ·dfr ~ I . OUM, oar.,...1, t5QO'e pM S50 MCMlty 'Tvv-.,. • ....,...,.. It Sen J~quln Kltta Rd. $250/mo. Avail 311, NB A.Ito COYneellng. 1815 Tim 408-867-0111 !eland WM. ~1 ..... drapee, fncd patio. w/d ,.. 537-5027 La Jaaa Cl= ml Eu111de 2 Br, 1 ba. gar. • ...... ,... .,.... Polly '7~9570 Of so. El camtno AMI. Seti .... , I __ , ..... 11, lrg mutef bdrm rm. No pet•. 1655/mo. + _ fr p I c, b • 1 m ca 11 ..-ft e 557 2428 Clem. UC'd. 492·72" . r. . --~ cHln, fem rm. 3 eecurtty dtp. Mul1 have DUI •tlat UK rant to own 3& 28a S&15-M25, + 11t. lut & • • • T . 1 4021 GEL COAT FIBERGLASS f\'plo'I , ... to bay, nr good C(9dlt. 541-5-4~~ Of 3 IN/2 IX 1760 dbl gar prvt ..,. 1725 MC 1225. 2 penona, no ... Cleant• n71 Rm t• wanted: m•I• •• r.mEI REPAIR MA .... Npt 8ch btecf\, alltm, Ho pate. 770-5e29. V!AV ATTAAcllVE 53M1to BEST Alty fee pate. 850-1791 3 Bdrm 2 S::: \ biOC1it to non-tmtcr to flN neow So. • .. ~ICed '7&..2837 Vrty IN. 500 I< St. ly •w · On -• 1 __ .. Coat Condo. 1215/mo ..,.._, •-1H 8ookk Stcr.s t Appt. 11900/mo. 3Br2Ba,frpt,MeaaVerde 493-0487 laata Au .... Frpl pool prvi petlo beech. ..te .,...,7:, 'Alutll Me-11toatttpm f S *:ia!Tilni: -· • MPtf, ary 0< 848-2575 HOO/mo. Ownr/egt OCEAN VIEW: 2 bf, 2 be 8 co pt;;; r optton dlflweftr x~ia 2 8r on 181'5/mo. ee1..e1 2 . Olll> AD Spec lrigln 111& 2nd ~= ~·':·rur:o '39·3152 Of 720-0740 conclO MC tit POOi t°' bu · m xlr:SS7I + Eatelde '810 557·2'41 ---Amt a wanted. Pvt TD'1Slnoe 1949 .,..,... Cenu .. I .. , UU l er. 3 ba, 1990/mo. tit & tennis: 11ac:i. l:2-t172 ' t!. ~9-e~ BEST lt!J!rt ltac~ 1711 room/bath. turnlahed. ID[ fREE ~~~:::• 9d ~~ ~ ... ~W:,": t:'~ \IM tS: con<iO upetalft. I Ste tt.c> IM opt -UH/mo. Utll pd ML 942-2171 54-5-0611 Hol~. 2424 Newporl ma par mo. th8 wur-~ •. ~an 873-1711 V\ew, 1 Br upper tondO. INl ..... Ul4 melltiBAY 7~ •" 6Pfn Cal·. BNO. Cott• MeM. CA lty. 71'/H3· t 191 , POOi, tPa. Wiik to beech Spcl<IOUHfnglt. Ont It Wu ... ttiO 92827 ~r & pc H St50/mo. lncida garden«. & llMbor 1575 523-3008 aummera oomln grab yrty TIW•l•I & two btdroom apU u•-1111 .... ,..,...........,,_.....,,...,...,_,......,...__._.__ -----·-·-· --1 MeeaVerde2100eqft.3 VIEW COND0'8 2aR 2 Br walk to und-1111 ~ •LM• * BOOKKEEPERS RES· 3bf, 2bl. frpl, bH-lnl, din lk 2 BL Ho pet•. Aefa W/D amtnlt,.• from appla aunny decor S575 O.... fer ltlf Companion/Aid• tor • TAURANT ~. ftex· T.'L .. 7717251 "'°or 7. ~:~..!;15. req. Agent HM221. se15: Agt 496-HIO +em fee 53M1to BEST Frptc, veuttedoattlng, Widow Xlnt QC>90f1unlty 11* WI" tr9ln Appty tn ~ ..... ...... 1....---.--r--....... ~ T ;r.: rm do®le pool & tor matur• womt11 Wflo le pe11on only Ancient ii50 I Ir 09flge. ~ •IHI ..... ~lllH lut .... , 1141 a11.. Mn 2 lkS~~ ,'!:; IOoklng tor • permanent M•rtner aouih Of HW)', n~1m• ~d::~cr:::. Fiat ..... d& kld pet '*fii: f~ 2 :~ eee w. 18th. 145-2719 llv9 In lltuatlon In Hew~ _______ l _E_l _PI ___ _ 70tAvooedo,e13'-Y t 7 504etStor•&Markatl '400'.• & fnod 2 If' r UM1'<1adTfee L.atge111r.pool,lndrYf9C. =-~ ~·~-r; Retail eiore r..o. pwt 41r2.,._~ol,tenn6a. 14t-'HO $50Ch &39-t1t0 BES ell wtne paid. If.om TURNISHEO or hobblel Muet own car. time of'ftce help Bll~ Qdnt, 2 • owntagt aeeut 3bf 2'Mla twnt\M s bf, 214 be twnhm, ~. W•talutlr 1111 *'2t!mo. 6tt-033t UNrURNISHEO no emottert<Mntt fW'• exper neceewy, ..,_ l2000tmo &t..a0oe Hew ·PIMt. etpt, amm.c: di* ga.r, Hr Nech.,,..,, 6i&f tiOUM 1 & i506 Laroe 2 Ir. a a., gerege, UT TIC.S. req engllati tPMktno. ftexlbt9 Call VllOini. or Lit 3 Ir 2 II 2..iy on Lrg bdnna. Pool, JIC, ten-couple. 1750.14().()713 baillc decor ~ta w/w UPP* no pelt. How Ap~LIO. H£1ltLJH 7141855--110•. t -5 or Biii tor Inte rview ~. 400~ Heliotrope nit. 11100/yr .... Eut· 3 ... 3 .. 2= .. _ btook 13M190 HIT fllty... .velf. *12s1mo. IS1 .. 165 " I\ 131-7867 -ndtl.... 94a.1oe1 "'" ... "'7"'"" -,_, CLUBS T[NNIS ...,..-,----IOO. l7S·et~ tide. _. .,_ to OOMI\ ~~1 ~::1:0 ......... P!!!l!W H4IW9t 1 6 2 Br wl ;art0e. SWIMMING plu't ter needed. •tll '* &eo >e1r• trg Condo 2 lk. =efrAitv ,_ I t llMla --iiti From '4&0. Ho peta. mud't mort' Sorry 1111111111 ~tlgloua rwtad ••or.. 'iti1&miiPi.iiii&iiii1ti!i-e;;aoP-111~iiiiiw:;~•1 Oen 2 le. :gr.. pool, u • • 94&.ssn. no pth Modtl~ Eatebllahtd petrol.um cell to' lntervl•• •~: near Ham4fion l NSO/mo. t7 13 l!lltt beehttOr P•d nr lllw NEWIA 29r w/gerage.. No oe>t• d~ly 9 to 6 general con1ractor ,,... no.ow Ir~. trplo, dtlfl.. Aet ~ Hr kid pet = c':'~:o wave & Yl.U• ~ta. HOO/mo c an ::,::::~ °':; UtU. M M\I" .. _. °" • =-;·=-= = .. ::,:.::.::.r decor f'25 =es Hew , & I ldrm lwMy 1)1-11&3 Oakwood ~ aocoun1 ..Pbi.. Tuffet. •IOl\f came. .... 11a . BUT... .. In "plW. 1 ldnft ~ 1 9'. lrl)te. =· ~. Ap&rt.Hts Lott· dttmond a ... ..--=~ ~~ :.7:t '~ .. u:: i iiim:====iii,Juet td 2 ~am HOMU ,OA AENT trom $175. 2 9drm f\'om 0-· Ho pet&. w Bey _.....,_. omc. dUtlel. No ~Ing aection abOl.it M hm enot Ill''*" C* 3 ldrm 2 le llOO-tl&O .. 10. Townhouaa ffom '516. tfiO..tHt N"'°" lt.0 So.. IOc.atan .._,..,... lectlel' ~ ,.._,,, In offlot Oood tllllary I fwt ' Tuffet eno '*""' 't ••••n =.em~~=" ,enced yard. • saar..: ~~.:. ~ t~ Cadllleoe torn 1700 16th Strttt ceptlofll••· lelephot1•. 17 "' t>wflte. Celt Mr. Hiiier for 19.ts You c. ... ~'**-Often ""*' IOdt I pee. .-om.. w ' _...... ~ tht 'act {at Oovtr) ":~~· =-:2'a Loet dOG "'*' .. bll, 7141730-1213 te>AM.12 your tull•t enct 0•• °' '* rt9ult-o-tttne M A VI • IHwt. AQent no,_IU-1500 pekf, ''°"' 8en '*Vo Aol 'amonu.~ 2 11\ 1 '"· ~d vtcHell& Mon-W.,,_ot~,..: othe r uunoe UHouet. ,ltot CIH•lfled Adi ' ~.eotntrlOt. • • l'rwy drtv. Nor11'1 Oft Whtl .• C'mflld AIJ 64 ·5'13 TOM LM 142· I03 Magnole. "'· 142-6131 IUrlW to .u. Allon Inc. Dally PllO\ CIHe tli4 "*" the Or ... c.... .. " 2ba. ffp6c SMO/mo v**" 39' Ta$ • IMctl to Mdlidden llnd Call Nowt 141-MTt ... _ ..... __ ...... _ 1617 W11•• °'· H.a. .-T ,.;,..; ,__ .. _. MA 11601 ._......_ -.... .... Me Cell M2 71 ...,.., "4.oeN · ' 28at7I0.11rt4e0Clloae W• on Mc#edd9n to '*"'°"llK-..nu. ttlOaqft .\,IV """'._..... ,...., ,. ..... --• ,... M2..al71 to tchOOI~ lctd• Oil suwlnd Vllfag•. tCla•elfleCI AO• .,. lh• 80 lrwtf Alltnut Agent . 641-5032 • albm ~ M. Tuetin, Ce tatlO y., .,,., .......... ·-=~~~==~!!!1a Br~= fNlt "2-4471 ..... u f1H--51" :,._;c!o~d~!~ tat16lt\) • Mdbt--.ACamot :::.:.'=:-'OOI bey -;:::.·~·~·"'-::'~ •·~ILL. ldl ,.. t ... ..76/mo Pate. Haw aomethlnQ to NII? Went Ad tMtp? bett• Wfti to Miii more 645·U04 Pf1tnt-ll'om UOO ta!I Ftnd wl\at 1o.1 went II\ ll'ao4 wam Adel eel -. ~,.:.a=,.:; M. a...c. Prop 719-3111 Ctwmed Id• ao It.... 142·M71 peop6lt '-COIM ...,, 116-elOO Want w Catt 94~·&e7a Ollif't Ptlot Clwt'!Ma I '42·M11 -. ' , J I C8 Otange.cout DAILY PtLOTITuMday, Febru.,y 21. 1884 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZI E ACAOSS 1 Mineral· sutt 5 LllSMt - 10 )Yetght unit 14 Afriean port 15 Anc141nt 52 Listen 58 Scale 60 Reno• ,.REVtOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 18 City of ltatta 17 Bon amt 19 0.Ctate 20 Guarantee 21 Menders 23 Rubs 26 Drowse 27 Make a new home 30 Visitors 34 Evils 35Up - - Cornered 37 Sheep 38 Pool stick 39 Bounders 41 Creek 42 Netherlands town 43 Revoke arch 44 -·SUit 45 Bank (on) 47 Cales 50 Pro - 5 t Springe 2 3 17 20 38 42 45 60 61 Ice cream type S. W11er1au Scot 85 Append 66 Willa 87 Leisure 68 Grooves 69 Different DOWN 1 Opera boic 2 Press 3 N Mexico resort 4 Holds out 5 Woodland 6 -Baba 7 Fish 8 Rip 9 lmpe11I 10R10 - 11 Gad 12 0 1 the USA 13 Impairs 18 Coll soc 22 L1ber11nes 24 Dish 5 6 15 25 Lounges 27 Sieved 28 Dodge 29 Rest 31 lmaret 32 Thread 33 Ottomans 36 Staff anew 39 Hindu noble 40 Scraps 44 Propos1t1on 46 Refrigerant 7· 8 9 _1_.1_,_w_._••_t4 __ s_10G,_ 1 1111 WHte4 VOLT Tt::-AAV KAVCES ~4S...741 3848 Campus Drive Across from O.C. Airport Newport Beach CILlll •llLT&IT Become a profession al consultant & enjoy tab- ulous Income. 848-{)995 COOi Pr•school Mornings. Santa Ana 556-2000 Coordinator fOf Youth Ac- quatlc office. office skills & boat knowledge nee able to WOik w/youth toupa Some wknds a Base 642-5031 Cosmetollglst wanted. pref cllentele. fOf beach shop 675-a.o6 11111111/W UST fOf • local medical lab. Anernoona Must have car. 8-42-6393 HllUTill FLAlll PIT FIT Flelr, fOf decOl'at- Ing essential. Wiii train. Call Julle 846-3212 FIOIAL Sil.II · needs llc'd esthetlclan for laclals, waxing, etc. Pvt room. ASAP 675-7740 FILE CLElll 48 Claws 49 Epochal 52 Sallow 53 Melody 54 Asian coins 55 Treat 57 Type race· abbr 58 Badgers 59 Handle Fr 62 Smee 63 Kitty 10 , 1 12 13 HLI IELP WAITll Full/time days. See Duane at 495 e t 7th St . c M lunsllll Progressive arch/const co . needs ""'9(81 com- paily Pilai • • ••• •• ··1 i PART TIME ! petent draftsmen for In- hOUM rea.lcomm. pro- )«11. Send resume Incl aatary req to Chris R. Stephens Inc 18226 W. Mc Ourmott suite o .. lrvlne CA. 92714 HYOLOIEll Part/time counter het Laguna Beach. 494-84 m1mu111n Guya. gala. homemakenl SELL 1c KODAK FILM coupons Chureh benefit 240--0427 Newspaper • • • • : Deliver Daily Pilot by auto : : (approx. 3 hours per day). : • Weekdays afternoon, w eek-• : ends eatly morning. F.arn ap-: : proximately $400 per mo . Ask : • for Bruce Emsley. • • • : CIRCULATION DEPT. : • 642-4321 F.OE • '-······················· KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! (714) 548-7058 PIT front office heipl =~~~I office. Mt.2A71 ---W.tlhEASEJ h'•• IME.ZI Claliltfted Adi 142·6'71 .• IMPORT A.NT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIEI Seti yoc1r It~ for $50 or ,_. In CNr fltmOCJ,I OIMES..A-LINES puO- HM«I Heh Saturday In ,,,. Oally Pflot. OIM ES-A-LINE ad1 mu.I b41 ~d «J mMI Or bring tfNtm Into thfl OaJly Piiot omo.. a. wre to lnchi<M your phoM numw or MJ- tk-. In your MJ, hav. • prk» on MCI) Item & no •bblwvlatlom.. Sorry, ltO oomm.rclM MJt, ~ ..,.., ~ ,,,.,,,. or anltrM .,.. eooepf•b#e. DEADLINE: I p.m. TM...,., c .......... Oflloe • ) I · . .......... SOITH cou1n YILllWllll 11ftl.llT ......... " Votume S-.. 8ervtc. 1a1~e='L. NABERS CADILLAC LARGEST SELECTION or late model. low mlleege CldlllKa In Southern C.ilfofnlal See us lodayt 1•0-1110 2eoo Hwt>or Bfvd. COSTA MESA ~let t3i3 1MIUlllll Jaguar red, btadt Vin)'! top..1. 350 cu In. Mu1t Seill 1;;.i1 Larry no.nee CONNELL CHEVAOUT •, ~ I 1 , I• t , .. ! ' ·.·' ~4b-I 20(1 f 1111 111111 TUESDAY FEBRUARY 21 1984 Yes, Susan, t here Is a free lunch Susan Myers Is out to tunch this week ... and we'r• picking up tl)e bill. ·The Huntington Beech resident 11 the latest winner In our "Take a Piiot to Lunch" contest. You could be lunching for free next week. Just f111 In the contest entry form on Page A2. Coaat Some Huntington Beach youngsters are getting the Olympic gold, too./ A3 Seems like just about everybody got out to cel- ebrate the presidents' birthdays./ A2. California A 14-year-old Mexican boy wrongfully deported to Baja from Santa Ana, has returned home./ A5 The Supreme Court Is reviewing California's llablllty suits over LA de- segregation.JCS Nation Mondale made Im- pressive showing In Iowa caucus as Gary Hart took a surprising second./ A4. ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. World The first Marines have packed up and moved offshore In Lebanon./ A4 Iran says It's ready to deliver final blow to Iraq In that 3111 year war .I A4 Mlnd&Body Demonstrators on video tapes from Dimensions in Fitness of Newport Beach may be In the same shape you are./81. Will real experiences of llvlng with teen-agers rival Stephen King's plots?/82 Sports UC Irvine, behind Ben McDonald, romped to an easy 97-66 basketball win overXXPaclflc Mon- day night./C1 Round two of the CIF basketball playoffs Is set tonlght./C1 The Midwinter yacht races wind up./C4 Entertainme n t "Bye Bye Birdie" at Saddleback College Is an entertaining revival of a nostalgic muslcal./83 Bualneu Sylvia Porter reminds readers not to forget to claim all their sales tax deductions on their in- come tax form./85 Newport Beach-based National Education Corp. gets a new director ./BS INDEX Bridge 84 Bulletin Board A3 Business 85-6 California News A4 Clanffled C&-8 Comic• 84 Cro11word ca Death Notloes C5 Hetp YourHlf B2 Hor01COP9 C7 In 1he Sef'vle9 A6 Ann Land•rt 82 Mind end.Body 81-2 Mutual Funds , 85 NatlonalNewa A4 Opinion A8 Police Log A3 Publk: Notices C5--8 Sport a C1-4 Stock Market• ee Tee.vtafon 83 Theaters 83 WMther A2 World News A4 . , ; l e ~ a1rassa11 . . e ID Racing death · casein court HB teens asking charges be dropped Attorneys representing two Hunt- ington Beach teen-agers charged wilh murder in the traffic death of a Fountain Valley woman have asked that the murder charges be dropped. The lawyers representing Randy Craft and Jeff Thomas, both 17-year-old seniors at Huntington Beach High School, claim the charges leveled against the pair arc too severe. The teens were arrested on suspi- cion of murder last year after their cars -one after the other-collided with a vehicle being driven by a Fountain Valley JTIOthcr. Gloria Chang, 48, died shonly after the violent, high-speed accident. ac- cording to authorities. Craft and Thomas were arrested on second degree murder charges be- cause they allegedly were racing each other along Adams A venue at the time of the accident. Police said the young motorists were drivinJ about 90 mph at the time of the accident. James Egar, who is representing Craft. said the facts in the case do not suppon the murder charge. He asked the charge be reduced to vehicular manslaughter. A hearing on the request has been set for March 23. A motorist has never been con- victed in Orange County on sec- ond-degree murder charges. Tougherdrivinglawpasscdin 1981 cleared the way for murder charges . Carol Barnett Actress' lawsuit upheld WASHINGTON (AP) -The Su- preme Coun refused today to free the National Enquirer from paying Carol Burnett $200.000 for suggesting in a 1976 gossi~ column that she was tipsy at a fashionable Washington res- taurant. The justices, citing a lack of jurisdiction, refused to hear argu- ments that, among other errors, California courts wrongly denied the weekly tabloid state libel law protec- tions after findina it is not a ''news- paper." ' Burnett sued the tabloid over a March 2, 1976 gossip column item said she had a loud •rsument with Henry Kissinger and Jialed after spilling wine on another restaurant patron. Before the popular entena1ncr sued. she ha<tdemandcd a retraction. The Nat\onaJ Enquirer published one i~o ip column. stauna: "We understand thCjtcventsdid not occur and we are sorry for any embam ment our report may have C*uscd Miss Burnett." When Burnett sued scckina S 10 million, lhe Enquirer's lawyers sousht to invoke a California law that 1im1ts libel awards to compensatory damaa~s -out.of·p<>e:ket lo - when a demanded correction 1 published. • rea \ Robbery suspects subdued. sent to coun ty lockup By PHIL SNElDEl\MAN othD.-, ........ Two robbery suspects in custody at the Huntington Beach City Jail attacked a guard Monday ni&ht in an unsuccessful attempt to break out of jail, police said today. Huntington Beach police Set Den- nis Martin said the escape try oc- curred at lO:OS p.m. as Detention Officer John Moore. 56, was prepar- ing to lock the two robbery suspccu in separate cells for the ni&)tt. The suspects, both unemployed transi- ents. were identified as Michael Leroy Keogh, 42. and Daniel Wypanski, 23. Manin said the two men attacked Moore, who was unaTD'led, knock.ins him to the ground and kicking bim repeatedly in the face and ribs. Keosb then jerked Moore's keys from bis belt and ran into a corridor. Manin said. But Moore's ~Is for help had been overheard on the jail's open intercom system, and other detention officers arrived at the scene to assist the fallen auard. The two suspects resisted but.Jrere subdued by the guards. Martin said. Surrounded by attorney tod family mem- ben. Jeff Thomas walta oatalde court. 0.-, .......... ~~UllM Randy Craft (riaJlt) leaTe. JaTenlle Court accompanied by lUS attorney. Jame. E&ar. Keogh and Wygnanski were then transferred to Orange County Jail. which bas a more elaborate security system, Martin said. Keogh was in custody on suspicion fPleue eee A TT ACI./ A2) High tech 'snot Greek ta researchers By ANDREA ADEUON °' ...... ,... • ..,, Twenty-first century technology is helpingsave a bit of ancient history. A UC Irvinceroupdevoted to preserving the Greek classics, with grant help from the National Endowment for the Humanities, is working on an exhaustive compilation of 60 million Qrcck words and phrases for use by scholars. .. But the advent of the computer is making possible Thesaurus Linguae Graecac-literally a treasury of the Greek lanJuage. The treasury is being compiled from surviving Greek literature, nearly 9,000separatc works, and is expected to be compiled in a computer bank by DeadHB man's kin tqldtopay By STEVE MARBLE otllleO.-, ........ The parents of a Huntington Beach man who was killed two years ago by a motorist who ran a red light. claim they arc beinJ. asked to help pay the State of California for their son's death. Doug Eli, a cable company em- ployee, was killed Jan. 13, 1982 when a woman reportedly ran a red light and broadsided the company van in which he was ridin"'The woman also was killed in the mishap. Eli's mother and father, who live in a suburb of Chicago, said they now are being asked to come up with $50.000 to complete a complicated worker's compensation case. Pit atop in Newport June 1985, project director Theodore Brunner said today. The project began a decade ago to provide scholars with the most accurate and complete means of studying the philosophy and history of ancient Greek culture. It was sparked byaS I million gift from an anonymous donor who isa Greek scholar. About 60 million words will be stored on prOJCCt computer tapes when completed, representing the words of3,000authors from the time of Homer in 800 B.C. through 600 A.D .. said Brunner. a UCI classics professor. Source material has varied from single words found on pottery shards to thewritingsofGreek mathematicians and physicians. (PleueeeeGRBEK STUDY I A2) "The ridiculous bottom line of this." said Perry Eli. the father. "is that, albeit indirectly, we are being asked to pay for our son's misfortune of being kilred in California. .. And that's morally wrong," he added. (Pleue eee DEA TB/ A.2) A San Dt.ea~boand helicopter wu forced to make an emeraency landJ.n& ln the aand at Newport Beach near Proepect Street after deYelopln& eactne problems. Police aald pilot Brian Adams made a Afe landln& on the empty atretch of sand and lifted back off after a mechanic wa• aummoned to correct the problem. Super 80 not a super plane for JW A lt was supposed to be a cure -a new. quieter airplane that would appease fractious airport com- munities while at tbc same time reducing fuel aod maintenance co ts for the aulincs. But for Oranae County. the McDonnell Doualas OC-9 Super 80 hu only meant trouble. The most recent in a series ofinc1dents occurred Friday when an American Airhn -9-80 had one of its two enaine fail af\er takma off from John Wayne Airport. The jetliner landed sa~ly in Lo"' Beach but not before scattering en&inc pan on Tustin. John B. Oalipauh. president of the Aviation fety 1nstitutc, an indepen- dent industry t•tchd<>a. i n't sur- prised. He says the McDonnell Douglas plane bad problems even before it was certified by the Federal Aviation Administration. "We were seeing cracks 1n thr fuselage about two or three inches in front of the dorsal fin," said GaJ- 1pault, who monitors FAA files and publi hes an new letter dctailin& rt'\.urrcnt problems. The airlines have repon~ fixma about 50 or those cracks to the FAA, he said. Accordin to Douala spokesman Dave Eastman, a111>lanC$ arc always dcvclop1na crack . Nearly all are not cnt1cal 1n nature -od are rapidly re pat red .. We w ttio crack and we looked at the problem. It was about two years aao and w~ dcc1d~ to chanac ttic 1ttach anale . That wa 1t, .. Eastman said. Another problem ho~ up dur· "'' low· pttd land af tht plane is I Focus ON THE NEws load~ with an an center ot ,,.av1ty- that means plane' ccnterofvavu) 1s toward the rear or the plane. G al- 1pault said. O\Jrin• one ~uch landina at the ccn1fkat1on s of the plane·~ de 1gn, the tail ripped ofTtht" ptane. ht said. The plane al has problem 1f It soc 10to a stall when loadro with an al'\ center of gravity, be td In that 10 tanet the aimaf\ t un- stable and wobbl . "And you know what their fix ts? 0on·t fly ~he plane-stow and ®n't have an af\ center of lrl"'ity ... Gahpault says. Oouitas· Eastman. ho~-cver. 1s stndcnt that both instances howcd up only dunng ccn1ficauon procced- 1nas .. when ou try to stt how far )OU can go You want to test the hmtt.s of the plane .. "When G~~I Motors crashes a n(Wcarto scewhcrc it buckles doesn't mean there 1sadcsign flawtn the car:· Ea tmao said. "If there wa a design p~cm we would not SC'll lhe plan and the FM would not havr certified iL That it common sen ;·Ea man id. But the ~ rhncr ha been CC1\tel' , fir thru major J n Wayne trpon 10(1dt1' an \he pui fi¥c mont~. • F1"t thttt the R~blic ir· hn m1 hap tut .~:27 --a lf'l...... I . I J ' 1-----------~~--'---~=--------___,..;---.__ _______________________ ...:._~------------"-~~~----------~~'~..;..-.::...~...J ' I A2 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuaday, February 21. 1984 01' Sol makes appearance asOCenjoys 'birthdays' By CHRISTINE DECKER Otllleo.Jr ...... t ... Convtrt1ble tops were down. Surf- boards, their ~t"8S facinJ the sun. \\-CfC' trapped on the top ot small cars. 8.tt·ydc and bartfoot1.'<1 people ready for some fun in the sun jammed most roads leadina to ahe ~ach Monday. J ht' ocean gfo1e11cd 1n the warm 75 degree sun. A few ~oplt braved the ~~degree water ~:ulboats lan1uished o thhorc More than I ()(l,IXXl people ob- 'c1 vcd Pre 1dents' Da) b) 'iunning. r uno1ng. pla) 1ng and dancing on area l~aches. lifeguards rcpon .. , kutd or feel like a lobster. r .. e tx·cn oul hrr<' sinn: 11 30 this morn- ing lwcntinthe "~11cr lt"ascol<lbut 1t kit reall} good." ..aid Stacy Bergt-r a \tudcnt at Palm ~pnnis Hi&h who was v1s1ting Newpon Beach fOr the long weekend. Her skin was a bnaht pink. In· between the aoosebumps. Up the beach a little. about two blocks from Newport pier, a chubby, dark-skinned te-cn-ager dam."Cd with a slender friend the scrptntine gym- nastic moves of break dancers. Music from a large portable radio blared the stroms of"Cahfomia Know~ How To Pany." A crowd of about 25 people gathered to watch. "I love to watch this dancing. I came out to enJO)' the scenery. It's definitely one or the best days of the year." said Dave Williams. a sales representative from Huntington Beach. as he watched the dancers. Beach traffic clogged Pacific Coast Highway and park an a spaces we~ at a minimum. At Corona del Mar. many bc&ch-aoers stayed almost until the sun went down. "It was as crowded as a summer wttkday. The roads were packed but there was till plenty of room on the beach;' s~ud Lt. Ron Johnson, New. port Beach marine safety. •The~ wen: plenty of cases of sunburn, a few sprained ankles cuts minor su~ng injuries. lost children: but no ma,,or rescues. "The water was still a little too cold for most people to swim out too far or for too long. so we have few ltSC:ucs an the sprin$." said Johnson . Wath air temperatures expected 1n the 70's for the weekend, the crowds are expected to return to surf. sun and sand of local beaches. D EATH COMPENSATION FLAP ... F rom Al The 21 -year-old, who had moved 10 California wi th three Ill inois friends. was working for Video Con- cepts or Westminster at the time of the accident. <itate law mandate') that depen- dents of all workers an California killed o n the JOb will receive com - pensatio n ranging frocn S50.000 to ~75 000 But the lnw also ~tatec; that worker's r11 mpcnc;at1on benefits will onl) be paul lo dependents and not other fa m1h members ··He was single and had no depen- lknts. so there was no mone} that was c1m11ng to us," i:xplained the father. " \nd that was fine We understood that No problem " But 1t was a problem for the ( h1cago-arca family that soon found nut that 10 California the state gets the v.l>rkcr'c; compeno;a11on benefits if thne arc no dependents. \tTordingly, Tra,ekr'<; Insurance C ·o which handlec; worker's com- p-.·11\.1t1on for tht• Westmnster video fi1111. paid $50.<XJO to the state. t•ek1ng thc11 own form of com- prni.at1on. Eli'<. parent<. filed a claim \.\1th tate Farm Insurance Co .. the fir m that co·H·red the driver who had run the red light and reportedly caused the accident. "We got a check for $50,000 which was all the money that insurance policy allowed for" explained the father, who said the money was needed to pay various bills associated with their son's death. If Eli's parents thought that was the end to things, they were sadly mis- taken. Traveler's Insurance. apparently seeking to recover its own loses, filed a claim against the estate of the dnver that killed Eli. In seeking the claim. they asked for the $50,000 that had gone to Eli's parents. '"They want the money;· said the father, who has so far refused to tum it over to the insurance firm. "'Jt is the principal that offends me," said Perry Ela . "It 1s a heart- breaking tragedy to lose your first-born child in the pnme of his life. "But it 1s even more devastating to have the government claim to be a beneficiary and. through its laws. cause additional gnef." Eh said he traveled to Sacramento last month to talk wath state officials GREEK STUDY ... From Al .. There are thou-.ands and thousanps of people whose work 1s1ust a few ,l·attered rematns." C'(pla1ned senior programmer W11l1am Johnson. one of 14 l.1honngmerthd1rce k tc,tsand tapes at UCI. "Theirworksareequally 1ni ponan1" to the project. \<;an exampk.Johnson pointed to Galin, a Greek medical writer he <ll 't n ht'd as boring Nevertheless, some or Gali n's passages provide valuable 111tormat1 o n on anc1t•n1 sc1t·nce. cultural habits and word usage, he said. ·· 1t'<,11l1Crl'\trng 10 \CC what the)' thought would cure X or Y d1sea~c." he ,,ml r n t\. 1m lud1nga le"' unpublished manu<;t:npt!> by obscure authors and 1Ull-) ear-oltl ed111on s mn,tl) from UCTs own rl'scarch library. are approved by .111 ad \1~or) rnmm1t1ec of the American Philological Asc;oc1ation. .. Wt··\ t• go nl' ... ., tar as hand-carrying a text from Prague. Czechoslovakia." Br unner ..aid r he material 1c; hand marked to ensure that the essential in t11rmat10n t'> put 1 ntC> the l'Omputer. he said. The data,.., entered b\ highly accurate typists from the Ph1hpp1ne<; l lllplo~ed b} Kl.·don<l o Beach·bascd Computer Input Corp .. work in~ in l\1Jn1la . John'ion <;aid "The> do an extremely competent Job." he said. \<. holar<, ma} purchase thi:m for $20 per million bytes and use a computer tu tall up" urds. phrascc; orcnttrc texts in a variety ofcross-refercnced form!i , and rt-cen c 1ntormatton on their meanings. historical contexts and hterar, u ... c ... rhe cost oft lo mcr's Iliad and OdySSC) 1s S30. Johnson said. \boutonc third ot the t..no wn Greek works ha' e \'Ct to be entered on \t1mputcrtapes.he<,a1d · I .irlicr attempt<. lo create such a thesaurus ha\e failed due to the \Olume 11l 111~1tcnal to he o rgan11cd. An attempt b> 19th ( entul) scholars tocomp1k a I 11 in thc,aurus failed m1scrabl>. ending w1th thousands of shps of paper stored \l•rlll''-' hl·rc 1n (ii:rman). Johnson ~1d. Hui 1he ad"ent of the com put~ mak.es the teat ofcompiling the t111111x·nd1um pos..,1ble. hesa1d. B1 unncr <,aid a recently rece1"ed $398,000grant and $600,0001n pr rn 1'111nal rnatr hing funds from the National Endowment will finish ofTthe 1.1 .. i.. What remains arc the writing!> of some early Chnst1an Church fathers. , ,,, l111h ng 'uch theolog1anc; a'\ On gen and long-winded St. John Chrysostom. ::11d phtfoc;npht·r'it (irl'goryofNv~,a. Hrunncr <,a1d about 300 h1'>tonans. philosophers and religious scholar<. Ii." 1' • .treat.I) uo;ed what\ been completed ~o far f he\ 0\l' ix·l'n ahk H>OC"l'lop new findings that the) wouldn't ha"e d• ,, P\ t'rl'd w1thoul 11 "he <.ard T ht• pro wet ha'> attracted grants uf nearl~ $4.8m1llion to date and legislators from O range County to get some answers. "The question I have is who has the ~reater right to that money? The insurance com pan~ or a young man's surviving family. Are insurance rights -f'Cally greater than family nghts? "We're being told that we don't deserve anything and I don't agree." Assemblyman Dennis Brown, a Republican from Lons Beach whose distnct includes pon1ons of H unt- an,ton Beach, has promised the Illinois father that he will explore state law on the matter. ''Personally I agree with him. It doesn't sound fair," said a spokeswoman for the assemblyman. "It's a traJic situation but it may well be that this is j ust the way the law is." Eli said if that's the case. he believes the law should be changed. But William s George, a consultant to the state Assembly Finance and Insurance Com m ittee. doubts the Legislature will change the law. "'This is the way the insurance business works. and the industry has convinced the Legislature that it should be allowed to minimize its losses when possible.," he explained. ATTACK •.. From Al or stealing a purse from a 72-year-old woman at a local supermarket, ac- cord 1 ng to Manin. He said Wagnans~1 was m custody in suspi- cion or robbing local greeting card stores Manin said the two men will now fa ce the add1t1onal charges of assault- ing a detention officer and attempting to ec;cape from 1ail. He \aid officer~ believe the two men had plotted the jailbreak dunng the day. tcanng up strips of blanket apparently to be used 10 tie someone up. The strips were not used. how- ever. he said. Martin said their plan probably could not have succeeded because the detention officer's keys would not have opened all or the doors needed to escape mcluding ont" electronic door that 1s observed by a camera and controlled from a remote loca11on Detention Officer Moore was treated at a local hospital and the n was sent home 10 recover. He 1s expected to return to dut} later this week, Martan said. Win $100 In the Piiot'• Socia I Security Sweep1tak .. -Page et PROBLEMS PLAGUE 'QUIET JET' ... F rom Al Phocn1'·bound IX -9-80 lost po'A-er on take o fT. \ending engme fan blades r;11n1ng on Newport Beach and setting ahout 20 \mall roof and &rass fires. < >n Jan 22 a frontier Airlines I>< ·4-80 had landing gear and engme trouble shortly alter take off from John Wa}'nc i\1rport The pilot was .1hlc to lower thc landing gear correct- !\ aml makt> an cmergenc) landing. And last f-nday. 11 was American \11linc'>' turn. •\ Pot'n1'·bound I>< 'I-RO hnd one ot m two cngjne'i. 1.111 '>hortly after takeoff. this lime 1.ll ning hot engme parts on Tustin. \ On almo11 nn) other du~ 11 would hJ vt· Ileen N<:"'pon Buch ag.1in but •trong Santa <\na wind~ forced the ,111 pon offic1alc, to I urn the taktoff Jnd appro:-ich patterm around I m kif> for the.-PJ'>senacrs and 1ho'\C' people on tht-around. the a1rpl:ine can fh on JU~t one engine. No unt w:t-.inJurcd 1n any of the m1~hap<, "I know th1'i 1~ 1 co1nc1dencc btvond your understanding and mine. But 11 has been an c,;trcmch rrliahlc ena.inc for the a1rplJne It has mo~ than a million hou~ of Oyma 11me:· f,a tman \31d. ··ft rnuJd be mcrcl) chance th:11 tho~ 1nc1dents h•~c oc:currctl 1n the \l.lme pl cc." Gahpault a.arced "It 1\ ccruunty poi 1ble that the cnaine Jll5t ingc tcd 1 bird." rhe en nc used un the OC-9~80" a Prau h11ne)' J;f ·80 200 series model Th<' one on lhe Republic JC.-thncr •~ currcntl)' undctao•~ lHlS b> the NatinnaJ I ranap0n111on · fe- ty Board and che manufl<'lurtr co •hac v.cnl w n1 ~tcDJnn<' Ooual•~ t• 1wa11ing the result) of thOSt' tests before 1t com- ment~ on the e ngine problems. East- man said But the Fronuer problem was ent1rel} different and pointed out a maJOr Oaw m the airplane. according to Ciahpault. The Frontier problem was caused by a shield on the 1ns1de or the landing gear wheel well shuttmg off a fuel valve to the cngme as the landing gear were retracted. • "What that means 1s that whc:n you retract the landing gear you can ~hut J off the engine That says that it is bad design." Gahpault said. The '>h1eld was meant to protect the foel S}Stem from damage ifa tire blew out when the landing gear were re tracted. Douglas and the FAA have told a1rhnes to simply remove the ~h1cld because 11 1s not really needed. "It WU not a design naw. What it amounted to was that it worked pcrfrctly well. The problem was getting 11 replaced correctly during maintenance." Eastman said. "It was put 1n to take care of a problem that never happened in 2S m1ll1on hour1 fo Oiaht time," he added lnl·1dcnts of turbint fan blades breaking arc not uncommon in tbc plane's predecessor. the DC-9-31 , \aid Galipult. That model plane uses an earlier version of the Ptau & Whitney J1 -80 enJinc in $Crv1oc on the uper 80 ln~~·tors found an Eastern Atr- lin~ lX'-9·3 I m1 s1na turbine fan blade" after one o f the planc·s engine eitptr1t"nced compttSSOt problems on Jan 1 l near Rtchmond. V1r1ma. a<'cord1na to Gahpuh Jui.t twoda)s later. another Eastern ~1rlinM OC-9·3 I lost fan blades follow1na an tniinc problem in t~ Atlanta area. Ciahpault ha not made a mlJOT tudy on the Pntt & Whitney engine and would not saychcre wa any trend 1n the 1nc1dcnta. .. We have never researched it. There arc a malhon qu t.1001 one could ask and we JU.St do n·l have the ume or money te do cvCT)'tb.ina. .. M \aid. ' J • . . Rain may spatter coastline Coaatal Temperatures ..'--... JO TOOAY 44 " Nclwnon<I $4 47 Sll-S2 S7 St ,....,Twnpe 62 3e 8.n LM!e 4) 20 5"" At1tonlo 411 31 San'*OO 40 22 S.n Fr~ Ill 113 SI 911 M-74 44 ...,. .. ~ ~ =~ 41 30 SPOk-so 30 s~­so 44 Topelle 63 34 T~ 113 3 I ,.,... 62 32 Wllllllf'>91on 53 40 Wlcllll1 IO 31 50 33 71 .. 32 06 50 aJ 73 u eo .. 30 22 1M 42 47 II 31 17 41 ,. 43 2t 42 24 $1 40 51 29 68 33 52 23 47 25 41 ,. '-'cl lllgh 12:37 p m 9-ld IOw 1:2• pm u -1 , SURF REPORT WHMllOAY 12 07 54 ~ se 31 55 311 48 85 55 S3 $1 3' 54 31 41 ao 3t 21 50 3' 63 41 l'lr91"'9fl 1.051.m. FlrM IOw e·oa a.m '-'4 lllOI> 2:09 p m. 8-ld IOw 1 OI p m. Ila 1·3 1·2 1-2 1·2 1-2 1·2 !Alt-good poor poor poor poor Sun NII today 11 5.42 pm .. rl-w.on.cs.y 11 a·30 1.m Md Miii -ci.in et 1:43 p.m poot•IW Moon,._ today el I 1:22 pm . •1 111 9:42 Lm. Wedtleed8)t , s-" Clhct!Otr. ..::" Huntington council gear& for takeover of state beach Cost savings viewed if city controls eight-mile se ment By ROBERT BARKER °'Ille Dellr .......... Huntington Beach City Council members will be asked tonight to OK negotiations that could lead to the city's takeover of eight m iles of state beaches as early as May I. The agreement for operational control of the beach would be for no less than 25 years and no longer than 50 years. In the first year of the agreement. the city 1s projected to receive $2.59 million in income through parking and camping fees and concessions but expenses fre projected at about $2.64 million. a deficit of about $45.000. responsibility for the protection of Huntington State Beach and Bolsa Chica Beach -also claim mainten- ance costs can be kept down by cutting duplication of services. And for the first time. the city isn't asking for state subsidies to help finance operations alth~the state has agreed to pay off current Cbnstruc- tion costs. City offtc1als say they can operate the beaches without adding adm101s- trative personnel although the state 1s insisting the city take on 24 public safety and mamtenance workers. The meeting is scheduled to start at 7:30 p.m. at City Council Chambers, 2000 Main St .. following a 6 p.m . study session and a 7: 15 p.m. b1rtb- day celebration in honor of the city's 75th birthday. Orange County Super- visor Harriett Wieder, a former Huntington Beach mayor and city council member, is scheduled to deliv"°· remarks and former council members and mayors are invited to attend. Council members also will be asked to approve a design for construction or a controversial meet10g room and restaurant at the end of the city pier. Cuban held in $1 01illlan Santa Ana cocaine raid However. at the end or a five-year I penod in 1989. the city 1s expected to By the Associated Press make a profit or about S 139.000. investigation of possessang cocame for -;ale after a raid using search warrants, said Deputy Bob ·Stone- man. Costs are projected at S 14.5 million A 56-year-old Cuban 1s in Jail arter for the period and income of almost being arrested in a raid that netted S 14. 7 million is seen. two and a half kilograms of cocaine Ba il was set at $15,000. City officials, who have long main-worth SI million. Los Angeles tamed that crime can be cut by city sheriffs deputies said. Stoneman said the cocaine seizure at a Santa Ana home ended several weeks of investigation. patrols the Orange County Juan V. Fonseca was booked into Sheriffs Depanment currently has the Orange County Jail Sunday for 'Just a few sprinkles' predicted tonight While most or the nation 1s digging out from a week- end snowstorm, Orange County residents should feel lucky with only -a chance of showers on the way for late this afternoon or this evening. "There isn't going to be much accumulation. just a few sprinkles." Pat Rowe. Nauonal Weather S4:rv1ce specialist, said this morn- ing. It will be cloudy and chillier today than 11's been with the mercury reaching only to the upper 60s. Lows tonight will be in the 40s. G usty westerly winds will pick up to about 15 miles by Wednesday. which 1s supposed to mostly sunny and a little warmer. Rowe said. The extended fo~st calls for sunny skies Thurs- day through Saturday with temperatures in the 70s. Take A Pilot to lunch and win a lunch on us The Daily Pilot will buy lunch for you and a friend up to $20 To win. you 1ust have to fill out this coupon and ma1l 1t 1n to Pilot Lunch. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. California 92626 A winner wrll be drawn weekly from entries received the previous week. Pictures of winners will appear 1n the Pilot Winners may choose to have lunch at any of our part1c1pat1ng restaurants. which include The G, 111aer Zub1es. Hogue·s. Spires A complete ltst of parl1c1p at1ng restaurants 1c; available to winners f '' ;,,ac, ·''•• l 1 ,P t t 1(J lt/t1i "1ft1otl t'••'1n11f1tl't1Vfl ,..1t l (ILl•• ti LU'C:'d!.~ ,.,.t.., . .,,_,,,., (n,1 ' '~•t't'\11 p ,..,.2 •I•'( 11,' I I )U)i..,#,,,. •h1, 11,..~• \..(~1 4Me~t I I I I Name PtwnP I I I I Addre5!:. I I Where you bought I I your tunchllme Pilot _ -----I ________________________________ , Just Call 642-6086 Wbat do you llkt about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number 11 left and your me1111e will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to &be approprtate editor. '' Tile um~ U -boor aa1wtrlnJurvtce may be used to record lt&ters to tlte editor on any topic. Cootrlbutors to oar Letters column must Include tbelr • 111me and telepbone ftlmber for verification. No clrculatlon calls, plt11e. • Tell us what'• on yo ur mind. D~::· •• Guarenleecl ~oG.11 f r •>OI f H I'°" )J ~co "••t '°"' H~ Of ~1r1,, ... , .. ~,,.,., 1 ~4 ,o~· <4)11• ••" b1 ~"° '•luHlef e"41 IW~f II '°" .;jo ~· •K•· .. t<N' '°"' "" ' • ... U<I °'' • 10 • ... -,._ c""' .,. 1111-M ... Clrc ...... , ... ,.... ... =r ~ .... ~ ..... -- ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L khwarta Ill Pubitlh9t "°""'.,, Churchman Col'ltrolllt Clfcul1tten7W~ Cl111lfled ..,.,....,4 7WllG..,.. ........ ,.rtrt.. ... ~ MAIN CW"CI ))0 ,,.ft, ,., ~I CO\I• ... _ CA ..... ,,.;_ II• t MQ C:0.11 M.-. CA ltM C ,,..,,. l Ot•"Qt! C:0..1 ~ ~ NO Ill •\ ,,..... 11111\l•••·on• •••IOOl l .... 1101 •• -... ~ ............. ,i..1cir~ ........ ,,..""'"'"' ~ cr.o,•'{fll - • ... .. .. HIGH 71 LOW55 TUl:. ~DAY . H :BRUARY 2 1. 1984 O HAN(,f < OU N TY (A l l f (J HNIA 1 ~ (ftd') Win $100 In the Piiot'• Socia I Security Sweepstake• -PageC2 HB jailbi--eaR try; thwarted Coast Some Huntington Beach youngsters are getting the Olympic gold, too./ A3 Seems llke Just about everybody got out to cel- ebrate the presidents' birthdays./ A2. California A 14-year-old Mexican boy wrongfully deported to Baja from Santa Ana, has returned home./ A5 The Supreme Court Is reviewing California's liablllty suits over LA de- segregatlon./C5 Nation Mondale made Im- pressive showing In Iowa • caucus as Gary Hart t ook a surprising second./ A4. World The first Marines have packed up and moved offshore In Lebanon./ A4 Iran says t~eady to deliverflnalblow1o Iraq ln that31hyear war ./A4 Mlnd&:Body Demonstrators on video tapes from Dimensions In Fitness of Newport Beach may be In the same shape you are./81. Wiii real experiences of living with teen-agers rlval Stephen King's plots?/82 Sports UC Irvine, behind Ben McDonald, romped to an easy97-66 basketball win overXXPaclflc Mon- day nlght./C1 Round two of the CIF basket ball playoffs Is set tonlght./C1 The Midwinter yacht races wind up./C4 Entertainment "Bye Bye Birdie" at Saddleback College Is an entertaining revival of a nostalgic muslcal./83 Buaineu Sylvia Porter reminds readers not to forget to claim all their sales tax deductions on their In- come tax form./85 Newport Beach-based National Education Corp. gets a new d irector ./85 INDEX Bridge 84' Bulletln Board A3 Butlneu es..e California tiewl A4 ClaNlf\ed C&-8 Comlca 84' Croaword Ca Death Notlcet CS Help Yourttlf 82 Horoecope C7 In the Serva AS AM l.and«I 82 Mind and Body B 1-2 Mutull Funds 85 National News A4 Opinion AS Pola Log A3 Public Notic91 C5·8 8port1 C1-4 8 toek Market• ee TM¥tl60n B3 ThMlera B3 WMther A2 WCM'id Nfti A4 .. Robbery suspects held in attack By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ofdle.,..,,... ..... Two robbery suspects in custody at the Huntington Beach City Jail attacked a guard Monday night 1n an unsuccessful attempt to break out of Racing death casein court HB teen s asking cha rges be dropped Anomeys representing two Hunt· ington Beach teen-agers charged with murder in the traffic death of a Fountain Valley woman have asked that the murder charges be dropped. The lawyers representing Randy Craft and Jeff Thomits. both 17-year-old seniors at Huntington Beach High School, claim the charges leveled against the pair are too severe. The teens were arrested on suspi- cion of murder last year after their cars -one after the other -co llided with a vehicle being dnven by a Fountain Valley mother. Gloria Chang, 48, died shonly after the violent. high -speed accident. ac- cording to authorities. Craft and Thomas were arrested on second degree murder charges be- cause they allegedly were racing each other along Adams Avenue at the time of the accident. Police said the young motorists were drivinJ about 90 mph at the time of the accident. · James Egar, who is representing Craft slli'd the facts in the case do not suppon the murder charge. He asked the charge be reduced to vehicular manslaughter. A hearing on the request has been set for March 23. A motorist has never been con- victed in Orange County on sec- ond-degree murder charges. Tougherdrivinglawpasscd in 19RI cleared the way for murder charaes Irvine firm'• •ponae VLICorp. lawsuit defended By ANDREA ADELSON OfdleDlllf .......... A Newpon Beach attorney believes a state Supreme Coun ruling will greatly aid consumers suing manufac- turers over product injuries because 1t allows changes in product warnings to be used as evidence. Attorney John Van Dyke said the Jan. 9 "decision is very much a plus for consumers" and could affect the outcome of litigation involvina Proc- tor and G4mble's Rely tampon and drua maker A.H. Robins' Dalcon shield-tt-wcll as his own suit against the Irvine-based VU Corp. "I consider a warnina a con· fession," he said. Van Dyke represents a 28-year-old Santa An.a woman sum4 VU. makers of the Today contraceptive pongc for SS million. Bruce Vorhaucr. chairman of sPQn&e maker VLI Corp • said Mon· day he was unfamiliar with the hrah court'$ ruhna and rcfu$Cd to peculate on how at ma) affect the utt. Howe ver. Santa Monaca attomc)' Roben Dickson. who ha defended the drua maker an six u1t\ over allqcd if'lfcct1ons st.emm1na from tht intrauterine device. dispute V n DY.kc's interpretation. 01cbon said the ruhna doc nothin.1 to broaden what ma y ad· mined as cvidenc-c m product hab- 1htr, c.asc •It would bt nict to ha\C a clror (P TAMPON/A~) Jail. poifce said today. Huntinaton Beach police S&t. Den- nis Manin said the escape try oc- curred at IO:OS p.m. as Detention Officer John Moore, S6, wu preper- ina.io lock the two robbery suspects in separate cells for the night. The suspects, both unemployed transi- ents. were identified as Michael Leroy Keogh, 42. and Daniel Wypanski, 23. Manin said the two men attaeked Moore, who was unarmed, knockm& him to the arou.nd and kickins him repeatedly in tbe face and ribs. KeQlh then jetUd Moore's keys from his belt and ran into a comdor. Manin gjd, But Moore's calls for help had been overheard on the jail's open intercom syarem, and othCl detention officers amved 11 tbe scene to assist the faUen auard. The two suspecu resisted but were subdued by the au1rds. Martin said. Keolh and Wyananski were then transferred to Oranae County Jail, which has a more elaborate teeurity system. Mart.in said. Ke<>sh was in custody on suspicion of stealing a purse from a 72-ycar-old woman at a local suptrmarket. a<:· cording to Manin. He uict W~lki WU in CUltody in suapi- cjon of robbina loCal aree!ina Cud •tores. Manin said the two men will now face me additional cbarp 0( ....,.,_ i na a detention officer and attempt.in& to eape from _jail. He said officers' believe the two men had plotted the jailbreak dwi"I (Pleue ... ATT It£'&/ A2) HBset . to take beach control Savings seen tf city runs 8-mile segment B7 &0BERTBA••A Of ............. Huntinston Bach City Coacil members will be asked toni&bt to OK neaotiations that could lead to the city's takeover of ciaht miles of 11.lte beaches as early as Qay l. Surroanded by attorney and family mewn- ben, Jeff Tbomu walta oatalde coart. Dlllf .................... ~ Randy Craft (riibt) lea•ee Ja•entle Coa.rt accompanied by"hla attorney, Jamee Epr. The agreement for operationaJ control of the beach would be for no less than 2S years and no lonaer than SO years. In the first year of t.be apumcnt, the city is projected to receive S2.S9 million in income through perking and campina fees and concessions but expenses arc projected at about $2.64 million, a deficit of about $45,000. However, at the end of a five-year (Pleue ... DACB/A2) High tecb. ·s·not Greek to researchers By ANDREA ADELSON Of .... 0.-,,... .... Twenty-first century technology is helping save a birof ancient history. A UC lrvinevouf devoted toprcscrvmg theGreckclassics, with grant help from the Nat1ona Endowment for the Humanities, is working on an exhaustive compilation of 60 million Greek words and ph rases for use by scholars. But the advent of the computer is making possible Thesaurus Linguae Graecae-literally a treasury of the Greek lanJuagc. The treasury is being compiled from surv1vi9.g Greek literature, neatly 9.000 separate works, and is expected to be compiled in a computer bank by DeadHB man's kin told to pay By STEVE MARBLE OfltleDlilf ..... 141119 The parents of a Huntington Beach man who was killed two y~rs ago by a motorist who ran a red hght, claim they are bein~ asked to hefp pay the State of California for their son's death. Doug Eli, a cable company em- ployee, was killed Jan. 13, 1982 when a woman reportedly ran a red light and broadsided the company van in which he was ridin~ The woman also was killed in the mishap. Eli's mother and father, who live in a suburb of Chicago, said they now are being asked to come up with SS0.000 to complete a complicated worker's compensation case. Pit •top In Newport June I 98S. project director Theodore Brunner said today. The project began a decade ago to provide scholars with the most accurate and complete means of studying the philosophy and bistoryofancienl Greek culture. II was sparked by a SI million gift from an anonymousdonorwhoisa Greek scholar. About 60 million words will be stored on project computer tapes when completed. representing the wordsof3,000 authors from the time of Homer in 800 B.C. through 600 A. 0 .. said Brunner, a UCI classics profcssor. Source material has varied from single words found on pottery shards to 1he writings of Greek mathematicians and physicia ns. (Pleue.eeGH&KSTVDY / A.2) "The ridiculous bonom line of this.. .. said Perry Eli. the father, "as that. albeit indirectly, we are being asked to pay for our son's misfortune of being killed in c.,lifomia. "And that's morally wrona." he added. (Pleue eee D&ATB/A2) A San Dleco-boand helicopter wu forced to make an emeriency land.I.DC In the And at Newport Beaela near Proepect Street after de•eloptni eqtne problema. Police Nld pilot Brian Adama made a eafe laJldln& OJl the empty stretch of And and U.fted back off after a mecb.anic wu eammoaed to correct the problem. I Super 80 not a super plane for JW A It was SUJ>posed to be a cure -a new. quieter airplane that would appease fractious a1rpon com- munities while at the same time reduci~ fuel and mamtenance costs for the airlines. But for Oranae County, the McDonnell Douslas OC-9 Super 80 ha only meant trouble. The most rtttnt 1n a scriesofincidenuoccurrcd Fnday when an American A1rhnes OC-9-80 had one of its two cnajnes fi1l 1f\crtakin1offfrom John Wayne Aimort. The JCthncr landed safely in Lona Beach but not before scatterina rnaine pens on Tu tin. John 8. Oalipault, president of the Aviation Safety lnstttutc. an 1ndcpcn- dcnt indu try tchdot. isn't sur· oriscd. .He says the McDonnell boustas plane had problems even before it was cenified by the federal Aviation Administration. "We were sec1na cracks in the fusclaie about two or th1tt inches in front Qf the donal fin." said Gal- 1pault. who monitors fAA fikl and publishes an ~wsletter deta1Lana rec.urrent problems. The 11rhncs have reported fi•i"I about SO of tho cracks to the FAA, he said. Accordi"I to Douatas 'J)Okesman Da"e Ea tman, airplanes arc always dcvelop1n1 cracks . Nearly all are not cntacal in nature and a_re rapidly repairtd. "We saw tho cracks and we looked at the problem. It wa about two )'can aao and we decided to chan theattach anaJct. That wa at," Eastman said. Another probl<"m howed 'IP dur· ma low-peed land 1f tht plane i JERRY H11sc11 Focu s ON THE News loadfd With ID ltl ~ntttOt iRVlt)' - that mean ptane'sccnterof .,av1~ 1 toward the ttar of the plane. G; I· ipault id. Ounni one u h land1n1 at the ctnif.cauon of the plane' dciign, the t1il nppcd off the.plane. he said The plane •' ha problem sf 1t soc into a stall wh n loaded with an at\ ~nter of vav1ty. h Yid. ln that \n1ot1occ \be a1rcraf\ become un· st1 I<" and w bbk' -. .. And you know what their fU 1s!. Don't fly the plane slow and don't havt an aft ocnter of arav1ty," Gahpault says. Douala ' Eastman. howcvCT, is stndcnt that both in tan~ sbo~ up only dunna c:cn1fication ~- 1np "when you try to tee how far )OU can 10. You want to t the hmus of tht plane." "When ~RCTal Moton cruhes a new car to sec wbcrc I\ buckl d n 't mean thctt a a dcsllJl Oaw an the car," Eastman td, "If there was a clcs1an problem ~ wouk1 not II tbc plan and the FAA would not bavt cenifted h. That t common sense." Ea: tm.an said. But the jc'lliner has bcc'n cen 1qt for thrtt major J n Wa)'nc A1rpon incident in the iau• fiv ' month Fint thctt •• the R.epublK Air- h ne mat.hap \&st Sc?.;}l._"1m a (._.. ... Pa~/AS) AS * er.,. Cout DAILY PllDTfTUellday, Fob<uary 21. t9a.< In --; f t.-s 'Gimme shelter' The chances ofbc1n1 cauthl in 1hc rain while waitin& for the bus in Fountain Valley may be reduced soon . The Fount1in Valley Ci1y Council loni.J,ht will ronsidcnna expandin1 the local bus shelter prov.am from I 0 units 10 30. The council mee1s at 8 p.m. in Fountain Valley City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. On 1 trial basis. the council has &llowed IOsheilers to be placed in the dty durin& the past year. Tht lighted shcllen arc CQu1ppcd with bencbes and panels 1h11t can be uJCd lbr advertising or community service announcements. Int l'tport to the council, Plannin& and Buildina Director Clinton Sherrod said the city has m;eived no wrincn complaint,about the shcllers.· He said the proposal calls for two companies, lntcr.Cuy Shclu~rs Co. and Transit Shchen of California, to each construct and maintain IS State's Realtor chief to give Irvine address Bttki SchwHb, president of the California Association of Realtors. will address real cs1a1e board mem- ben Wednesday at the Airponer Inn • inJrvinc. Schwab. a La Mesa Realtor, sees an overall improvement in the economy and the real csui1c market throughout 1984 which she said \\'ill likely trigger a 13 percent increase in home resales. The Huntington Be-ach/Founta1n Valley Board of Realtors is acting as the host board for the regional mecung which has b«n arranged by the boards of Reahors 1n frv1ne. Newpor1 Harbo r/Cos1a Mesa, Saddlcback Valley, Laguna and South Orange County. Schwab is the first woman elec1rd p~esident is the assoc1at1on's 80-year history. Wednesday's program will get under way at 10:30 a.m. 1n the Skyliner Ballroom a1 the Airponer Inn, 18700 MacAnhur Blvd., Irvine. sMhen in the city. Fountain Valley also hu about 1 SO advenilin& bus benches in the city, throuab an aareemcn1 with the Bench Ad Co. Rcprcs.cntatives of Bench Ad hav~ asked city officials to allow the benches to remain on the same comers whert shelters are built. The city Planning Commission, however, has r«ommended the~ benches be removed from locations where the ahelters art constructed. Beclll Schwab --liilll1iililRlr---------------- TAMPON LAWSUIT DEFENDED •.. From Al definition of the law, but in enett, it leaves the law the way it is." he said. Before 1hc ruling, that upheld 1hc claim of an injured Riverside iron- workrr. Van Dyke said '°the law said you couldn't say the product was fixed, because it's an admission of fault." But a change in warning labeling placed on a product after an individ- ual is injured can now be adminrd as cvidencr. Van Dykr said. Dickson disagreed. He said the high cour1's ruling allows product warnings to be USC'd as rvidence only 1fthc makerhad kno""·lcdge ofa drfel·t before thr inJUty occurred. Dickson pointed out that products are changed based on nrw 1nfor- mat1on. "'The key is knowledge at the time of1he accident." he said. Van Dykr"s cli ent, Marl y ~ S1apelbroek, 1s one of four women the Food and Drug Administration said has recovered from toxic shock syndrome who were also users of thr Today sponge. After reports o f the somr- times-fatal disease in Today users surf.aced in December. the FDA ordered VLI 10 place labeling more prominen1!y on the outside of the packages, alcrling consumers to toxic shock symptoms. Federal health re- searchers have said that no link has been found between Today sponges and toxic shock. VLI Chairman Vorhaucr said the four cases of toxic shock confirmed by the FDA could be no1h1ng morr than "random cases·· and have nothing to do wnh the product. The company says it has seen medical records in onl y one case. and disputes findings in that reporl. Van Dyke said the high coun's rultng makes Stapelbroek"s suit easier GREEK STUDY ... From Al ''There are lhousand sand thousandsol people whose work ISJUSt a few scattered remains," explained senior programmer William Johnson. one of 14 laboring over the Greek 1ex1sand 1apes al UCI. .. Tbeirworksarccquall y imponant .. 10 the project. As an examplc.-.Johnson pointed to Galin, a Greek medical writer ht , (·scnbed as boring. Nevenheless, some of Gali n's passages prov1dl· valuable fo rmation on ancient sc ience. cultural habits and word usage, he said. "lt'\,ijlterest1ng 10 sec what they thought would cure X or Y disease." hl· ..aid. Tex.ts, 1nclud1nga few unpublished n1anuscripts by obscurr authors and 300-}car-old cd1t1ons mos1l y from uc·r s own rc.-search library, are appro' cd b~ p.n advisoryeommittecof1h e .-\mcncan Ph1lolog1cal Assoriation. "We ·vc gone as far as hand-carry1ng a lex\ fron1 Prague. Czechoslovakia ... Brunner said. The mat('nal LS handmarked to ensure that tht'cssen11al 1nformat1on is put into the computer, he sa1d . The data is entered by highly accurate typists from the Ph1bpp1ne~ employed by Redondo Beach-based C'om'puter Input Corp .. work1n$c 1n Manila, Johnson said ... They do an extremelycompctenlJOb. ··he sa1d . Scholars may purchase them forS20 per million bytes and use a computer 1ocall up words. phrases or entire texts in a variety of cross-referenced forms. and rccei vc in format ion on their meanings, historical contexts and Ji terar) uses. The cost ofHomer"s lhad and Odyssey isS30. Johnson said. Aboul one third of the known Grerk works have yet 10 be cn1ered on co1nputer tapes. he said. Earl1erat1en1p!s to create such a thesaurus have failed due to the volume of material to be o rga nized. An a11emp1 by 19th Century scholars to compile a Latin thesaurus failed miserably. ending with thousands of slips of paper stored somewhere 1n Germany, Johnson said. But theadventof1hccompu1cr makes the feat of compiling the corflpendium possible. he said. - Brunner said a recently received $398,000 grant and S600.000 1n pro\ 1s1onat matching funds from lhe National Endowment will fini sh o ff th e tnsk What ren1a1nsare 1he wrilinl!sof some early Chnst1an Church father5.. including such 1hcologiansasOr1gcn and lo ng-winded St. John Chrysoston1, and philosopher St. GregoryofN)ssa. Brunner said about 300h1storians, philosophers and rcl1g1oussrholars ha vl' alrl.'ad} used what's been completed so far. ''The} 've been able lo develop new findings that they wouldn·t have di~overed '-"'llhout it."' he said. The pro1ect has attracted grants of nrarly S4.8 m1lhon 1oda1e. to press. The suit claims VLI had not done enough testing when it put the spon'e on the market and that warnings on the Today pamphlet do not adequately warn women about health risks. Vorhauer refused 10 discuss 1he pending lawsuit. "This is onr where we're saying nothing," he said. Since receiving FDA approva1 last April and entering the market in June. Vorhauer said. 8 million sponges have bern di§tributed and he estimated that 400,000 women use the devices. BEACH ... From Al period in 1989, the city is expected to make a profit of abou1 S 139.000. Costs are projected at S 14.5 million for the period and income of almost S 14. 7 million is seen. City officials, who have long main- tained 1hat crime can be cut by cit y patrols -the Orange County Sherill's Depanmrnl currently has responsibility for the pro1ection of Huntington State Beach and Bolsa Chica Beach -also claim mainten- ance costs can be kept down by cutting duplication of services. And for the first lime. !he ci ty isn't ask1ng for state subsidies 10 help finance operations although 1he state has agreed 10 payoff currrnt construc- tion costs. ("11y officials say they can operate the beaches without adding admin1s- trat1\·e personnel although the stale is 1ns1st1ng 1he c11y take on 24 pubhc safely and maintenance workers. The meeting is scheduled to star1 at 7:30 p.m. at Ci ty Council Chambers, 1000 Main St., following a 6 p.m. st udy session and a 7: 15 p.m. binh- day celebration in honor of the city's 15th binhday. ATTACK .•. From Al 1he day, tearing up strips of blanket apparentl) to be used to tie someone up. l "hc strips were not used. how- ever. he said. Manin said their plan probably could not ha ve succerded because the detention oOiccr"s keys would nol have opened all of the doors needed to escape. incl uding one electroriic door that is observed by a camera and con1rolled from a remote localion. Detention Officer Moore was treated at a local hospital and then was ~nt home 10 recover. He is ekpcctcd to return to duty later this week. Manin said. PROBLEMS PLAGUE 'QUIET JET' ... From Al Phoenix-bound OC-9-80 lost powrr on take off. send1ngeng1nc fan blades ra1ningon Newporl Beach and setting about 20 small roof and grass fires. On Jan. 22. a Frontier Airl ines OC-9-80 had landing gear and englnC' trouble shortly afler take off from John Wayne A1rpor1. The pilot was able to lower thr landing gear correct- ly and make an rmcrgency landing. And las\ Friday. 11 was American Airlines' turn. A Pocn1x-bound OC-9-80 had one of 115 two engine's fail shonly at1er tak,o lf. this time raining hot cngin~ pans on Tu5tin. On alnlOSt any 0 1hcr day 11 would have bctn Nrwport Beach again bu! s1rong Santa Ana winds forced the iurpon opicials 10 turn the takeoff and :tpproach patt('ms around. Lui:kily for thr passengers and those peoplr on the around. the: a1rptanccan ny on Just o ne eflg1ne. No one was in1urcd 1n any of the mishaps. "I know this 1s a coincidence beyond your unders1and1ng and mine. But 1t has b«n an extremely reliable cnajnt for the airplane 11 has more 1han a million hoors of Oying time:· Eastman said. "It could be mcrrly chance: that thost 1nc1dents have ~umd 1n the same place," Galipau/1 ag.rted ... II is «rtainly pass1ble 1ha1 the engine JUSI ingested a bird:· The engine used o n the DC·9·80 is 1 Pratt&. Whilnc)' JT·80 200 series model. The one on the Republic jetliner · currcn1ly underao1na 1ests by 1he National Transpona1ion Safe- 1)' Bolrd and tM manuf11cturtr 10 K'C """-' went WrDfll. . , \ McDonn r>ougl1s l•awa11ina1he ' 7 73 resuhs of those 1es1s before 1t con1- ments on the rngint' problems, Eas1- man said. But the Frontier problen1 .,.,,as r nt1rely difreren1 and poin1ed out a major naw in the airplane. according to Galipault. Thr Frontier problem was caused by a shield on 1he 1nsidr of the landing gear wheel well shutting off a fuel valve to thr engine as the landing gear wcrr retracted. '"What that means as that when )OU retract the landing gear you can ~hut DC-9 Super 80 -1act-sheet- r11e, McOannilll Doutl• DC-9 SUpet '° -... -ol • ,,... __..iOfJ of JN dfligi11ld to UM lilaefualancl ___ than ~~;;r. Id, rtarMty , • ..,... • w eolcl to 9uA111fir ln leptei111bW of 19'0. •The .......... -lor about *22.5-. •The MO •It 147.1 ... 1ono. 21.7 ... hlgll ancl Ille.~ o1107A-. •tt OM hald .,_Sflil 137 and 112 111r11 ""' o.,..-. on _ _....,_, •ft Ille • -.-ol 588 -... -. •TM Mo.Ill ,_ • ~ ·-"'-......... •h .. b•lllli•\"--· ' ofT1h ccng1n c. That says that it is bad design," Galipauh said. The.shield was meant to protect the fuel system from damage ifa tire blew out when the landing gear wert retracted. Douglas and the FAA have told airlines to simply remove the shield because it 1s not really needed. "II was no1 a design naw. What it amounted to was that it worked perfcr1ly well. The problem was gcuing 11 replaced correctly durina ma1ntcnanct.", .. Eastman said. "It wa!I put in to take care of a problem that never happened in .25 null1on ho1,1rs fo nigh! time," he added. Incidents of turbine fan blades breaking arc 001 u~mmon in -lhf. plane's prrdecrssor, 1he DC-lf..31 , S.'Hd C.ialLpult. That model plane usc5 an carh('r vcn.1on of the Pn.tt & Whitney JT-80 engine in service on the Super 80 Inspectors found an Eastern Air· hncs DC'·9-31 missing turbine fan blades afier one of the plane·s cn,inc ex penenccd comprtssor problems on Jan. 13 near Richmon4. Virgina, according 10 Galipult. Just 1wo days later, another Eastern Airlines OC-9·31 1011 fan ~lades following 11n enajne problem 1h the All.ant.a area. Galipaull ha5 no1 made a major !ll udy on the Pratt & Whitney en11nc and would not say there wll.sany lrtnd in the incidents. '"We have never researched iL There are a million questions one could ask and \\'C ju1t don'I have the 11me or J"oney 10 do cveeythina."' ht ,.;d. I I rs z 7 s • Rain may spatter ~oastline Coastal .. .. " .. " .. " .. .. .. .. " " .. •• .. .. " " " " " .. .. " .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. " .. " ... . ., .. .. .. " .. .. .. ,. .. .. .. " .. _, " " .. " ........ .. .. " Nlow0t ...... " " St.loW .. " " " ... ,,,. .. " St,,._.r~ " .. " .. -.. .. ... .... " " .. " "'°"" Pl•tl• " .. "'..,,._ .. " .. " OlolahOINI Cl1y .. " ... _ " .. " ,. "'""'' " .. IM'•-..CO " .. " " ....... .. .. S1 8 .. MMll .. .. " " Pell!! St#""'Ot " .. ..... .. .. " 30 .... _ .. " r.:;1;; " .. " " ..,.,. .. .. .. " .. " Plti.Ngt> " ,. -~ " .. .. " Poru-.u. " ,. ,._ .. .. .. .. PvrU•nd,O!•. " .. '-· .. .. " " .......... " ,. ,_ .. " " " , ... " .. " " .. " Temperature• .... .. " " .. 41 11 Tide• :::::r,,,, ...... " WMhlnglOtl " W-• .. .. TOOA'f 9-ld. 12•37 p "'· ,. __ SURF REPORT 12 07 5-!d low 1•24 p"' " ftDMIOA'f llMI• llMHc Cll'f " " .. " '1rttlll0fl 106•.m '·' ·-· .. " ., 3~ AtSI llM I GI 1 "'· 0 I LOCATION ""' ,., """'" Salt•MO<• S-00 Ngrl 2 Ofl p "' 3 I Hunlltlgtor. 8-" 1.1 1\1-Jelty, __ , llOlr-QOOd .. " " .. " " .. " ~low 70flp.m ... ,., ,.. ,., ,., -..... .. -~ ....... ..... .... ~ ·--" .. " " " .. "°'" !h . Nlowport 22nos1 .~ 8"11bOeWldgl u,... ..... Sal'la..-1• W1t• TlmJI: M-t0 ' ---· poo<-!lllr -s--.-· 01' Sol makes appearance asOCenjoys 'birthdays' By CHRISTINE DECKER OI II• 0...,. P11D1 St.tr Convenible lops were down. Surf- boards, their skcgs facing the sun, were strapped on 1he top of small cars. Bicycles and barefooted people rtady for some fun in the sun jammed mos1 roads leading to the beach Monday. The ocean glistrned in the wann 75 degree sun. A few ~ople braved the 59 degrer water. Sailboats \anguished offshore. More than 100,000 peoplr ob- served Presidents' Day by sunning. running. playing and dancing o n arra beaches. lifeguards repOn. .. , kind of feel like a lobster. r ve been out here si nce 11 :30 this morn- ing. I went in the water. It was cold but 11 relt really good." said S1acy Berger, a s1udent at Palm Springs High who was visiting Newpon Beach for the long wrrkrnd. Hrr skin was a bnght pink. In between the goosebumps. Up the beach a tiule. about 1wo blocks from Newpon pier. a chubby, dark-skinned teen-ager danced with a slender friend the serpenunc gym- nas11c moves of break dancers. Music from a large ponablr radio blared 1he strains of"California Knows How To Pany ... A crowd of about 25 people ga1hered 10 watch. "I love to watch this dancing. I ca mr out to enjoy the scenery. It's definitely one of the best days of the year," said Dave Williams, a sales representati\'C from Huntington Beach, as he watched the dancers. Beach traffic clogged Pacific Coast H~g~way and parking spaces were at a nun1mum. At Corona del Mar. many beach-goers stayed almost until the sun went down. '"It was as crowded as a summer weekday. The roads were packed but there was still plenty of room on the beach," said Lt. Ron Johoson. New- pon Beach marine safety. There \\'err plenty of cases of sunburn, a frw sprained ankles, cuts, minor surfing injuries. Jost children, but no major rescues. "The water was still a little too cold for most people 10 swim out too far or for too long. so we have few rescues in the spring.'' uid Johnson. . W1th air trmperatures expected 1n the 1o·s for the wcckrnd, the crowds arc expected to return to surf. sun and· sand of local beaches. Cuban held in $1 million Santa Ana cocaine raid By the Associated Prets A 56-ycar-old Cuban 1!> 1nJa1! after being arrested 111 a raid that neltt:d l'-"O and a half kilograms of cocaine wonh SI million. Los Angele~ sheriff's deputirs said . Juan V Fonseca was booked into the Orange County Jail Sunday for investigation of possessing cocaine for sale aftrr a raid using search warrants. said Deputy Bob Stone- man. Bail wa s set at $15.000. Stoneman said the cocaine scizurt at a Santa Ana home ended sevrra\ weeks of investigation. DEATH COMPENSATION FLAP ... From Al The 21 ·year-old. who had moved to California with three Illinois friends, was working ror Video Con· cepts of Westminster at thr time of the accident. State law mandates 1hat depen- dents of all workers 1n California killed on the job will receive com- pensation ranging fro m SS0.000 10 S75.000. But the law also states thal worker's compensation benefits will only be paid to dependents and not other family members. "He was si ngle and had no depen· dents. so there was no money thal was coming to us." explained the father. "And that was fine. We understood that No proBlem." 1 But i1 was a problem for the Chicago-area family that soon found out that in California the state gets thr worker's compensation benrfits if thcrt arc no dependents. Accordingly, Traveler's Insurance· Co .. which handles worker's com- pensation for the Westmnster video firm. paid $50.000 to the nate. Seeking their own form of com- pensation. Eli 's parents filed a claim wT1h State Farm Insurance Co .. the Just Call 642-6086 ..... ..,., •• ' .. n.o, ~ """ <Xl ""' ..... '°"' tl•ii.• o, ~10. ~ ... l!#'Dr•'""' ·~·1 "'"' 1nt1 w •I I)• --~ firm tha1 covered the drivtr who had run the red ligh1 and reponedly caused the acc ident. "We got a check ror $50,000 which was all the money that insurance policy allowed for" explained · 1he father. who said the money was needed to pay various bills associated with thrir son's death. lfEli·s paren1s thought that was the end to things. 1hey were sadly n1is- taken. Trave1cr"s Insurance. apparently seeking to recover it~ own loses. filed a claim aga1ns1 the estate of the driver that killed Eh. Jn seeking 1he claim. they asked for the SS0,000 that had gone to Eli's parents. "They want the money ... said the father, who has so far refused to tum it over to the insurance firm. "It is the principal 1hat offends me," said Perry Eh ... It is a hean- breaking tragedy 10 lose your first-born child in the primcofhis life. "'But it is even more devastating 10 have the government claim to be a beneficiary and, through it~ laws. cause additional grier.·· Eli uid he 1raveled to Sacramento last month to talk with state officials and legislators from Orange County to get some answers. '"The question I have is who has the P"eater right to that money? T~e insurance companX or a young man s survivi ng family . Arc insurance rights really greater than family rights? "We're being told that we don't deserve anything and I don't agrte." Assemblyman Dennis Brown, a Republican fro m Lon$ Beach whose dis1nc1 includes pon1ons of Hunt· 1n$tOn Beach. has promised the ll'1n o1s falher that he will explore slate law o n the matter. "Personally I agree with him. It doesn't sound fair.'' said a spokeswoman for the assemblyman. .. It 's a trasic situation but it may well be that this is just the way the law is. .. Eli said ifthat's the case, he believes the law should be changed. But Williams George, a consultant to the state Assembly Finance and Insurance Commi1tee, doubts the Legislature will change the law. .. This is the way the insuranet: business works, and the industry has convinced the Legislature that h should be allowed 10 minimize ils losses when possible."' tle explained. Wb11t do you like about the Dally Pilol? What don 't you like? Call tbe' number at left and your me1sa1te will bt-recorded, transcribed and delivered to the tpproprlate editor. Thee same !4·hour aa1werln& service may be us~d to record leltfr! tQJ.lle tdltor on·nytoplc. COntrlbUlorflo our Ct1ters column mu11 include tbeir name and telepboae number for verification. No clrcula1h1n eal11, pltate. Tell u1 what'" on your mind. OAAfrofGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L. lchwortz Ill "'""""' C~1141M2"""811 c· 11lflMI ... .......,.1141141.an Atl°"*~Men ........ 1 MAJH OflflCE JJO WM! fle1 lit eo.11 ~,. c a t,1 .. •::W-8<:i.o I~ Cooli. '-CA ~ S•'"'"'°' •"0 &~no•• ti '°" .,., 1\1). ••t•• ... f')u• ~D<>'•"' ~~· ltl •"' -TOllC:ur>T - ~-~ "'"-, . ..,"°"" Ch•IJ DowollbJ Ea+fOt and AM11lan! 10 I,,. Pubhtwt' Ro1emery Churchmen Cont10lltt -() ... c.u.., ' --.._. __ ' .,.....,_ ,_ c .... ·---cai.i. .......... -· /Wlo"Wlf I I -