Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-01-27 - Orange Coast Pilot·--. THI ORANGE COAST :caum 1111111 . ' . -INSIDE- uperior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein ib a person who enjoys a little reading -sornf' as little as two int'hes sq uare. Page 81 . Money expert Sylvia Porter discusses the pros and cons of refinancing now that interest rates havt> dropped. Sound reading in the Financt" section, Page B:J. T he stunned world of t'ollege football pays tribute to Paul "O..ar" Bryant, who dit-d Wednesday of a ht•art attack. Pa~e CI . A look inside lht> noisy, cluttered, chaotic world inhabite d by Daniel TraYanti and pab on TV's 0 Hill Street Blue1." Pa~e C7. INDEX ' .. At Your Service A8 Erma Bambeck B2 Busl.nMa 83-6 Bulletin Board A4 Cavalcade B2 a..tfted Dl,03-6 Cro.word C6 Editorial A6 F.rltertainment C5 Hotoecope B2 Ann Landen 82 Moviem C5 Mutual Funds 84 Nadclnal NeWI A3 Public NoUoes 86.D2-3 =Marketa Cl-4 B:s T9leYWorl C7 Theat.wa 0 W•ther A2 • I• W«ld News Al • • •. \ . . ~·" ~~. ORANGCCOUNTY . C ALHOBNIA · .. ; •' Scuttling Coastline not the answer? By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of tM DellJ l>llot eta" Diam.111tling Coa:.thm• CoU~ would not product.• tht• sal{njfkant firumdal w11uJrall ant1l·1puk'<i by somtc" h. ... u.:htc"rs, l.t rt•purt by COl18t Comm u 111 ty C1J I il'i(t' Dai. trac t ddman1:.trator.. a.~rt The rt'port u. m rL'SJ.>Ol\!ie to d proposaJ made two Wl't:ks ago by the local l·hapu.·r of the American Federauon of Tl'ach<'rs (AFT) Tht-ll'i!l'hl'rs' group r l'cffS the dastn<:t, wh1d1 includes Orange Coast, Golden Wl'l>t ant.I Cua.slime colleges. soo n will send layoff not aces to dS Old n v a:. 200 full-llmt• 111Structors · Tht> te<1chl'rs su1uwstt·d that Seal Beach pier, right, heavily damaged by ~oday's s torm. Vincent Artman, below, behind sand bags that failed to keep water from home in Newport. do.mg Coutbne and d11trlbut111g 11.a d8SIK'S to Orange Coast and Goldt'n W est would save $4 million -and thua prt!aerve t.eachmg job.. Coastline, whll·h haa no formal eampus, serves 21,000 full -ume .md part-time studenlB. "It would be 1mposs1ble to achwvt• a net C06l iiavinga of $4 million with tht' elimination of Coastline Community College," declares the district re port, which was presented to tht' board of trustees Wednesday night. The report was prepared by district Chancellor Norman Watson, the presidents of the three colleges. and oth er administrators I ' . l I • t ! t I '"Altho ugh the real!ona CoHthne was established still exiat and atlll have lmJX>rwnce, consid e red strictly from an L'(.'Onomk stBndpoint. the fa<:t.11 do no t support the cost savings alleged to result from integrating Coastline int.o Orange Coast and Golden West," the report suys. Co11stlant' receavtc"s funding fron1 the state based on the number of full -lime equivalent students enrolled (Severa l part -lime students may be ' combinl'd to equal a full-tamtc" enrollet.· ) T h e Coast distract t:annot afford to lose this mt·ome. the report i.ays. Even 1f Coastline daaaeti were moved to lhe Golden W ea l and O r ange Coa1t campWlell, there would be a 1088 ot student.a who would not wi8h to attend these l<><:alion1, thtc" report 111Btes. With no formal campus, Coastline offers classes at more than 100 rented or Cree sites within the 105-square-mlle Coast district. The district report claims the convenience o( these Coastline locations is a major factor in maintaining the e nrollme nt Abo, the report says the Orange Coast and Golden West campuses could nol handle the Coastline -:+ cl.aaees If the current 11t.ea were d~. In addition, lh8..4i&i.nat NpQ:! contenda th.al Coaatline la tailored to a diffe~nt student population with different goela from aran.e Coast and Golden West. Coastline serv e1 a large numbe r o f part-time employed 11tudent1, average age 38. Phill.i.a Basile, pre.id" :at of the local teacher's union, cha rged -that district adminiatraton have misunderstood the thrust of the teachers' Coastline proposal. She aa1d the teachers do not want to see the college's cw.es and educational programs ended. (See COASTLINE, Pa1e AC) 'First' storm slams coastline o.lr .... ~"' \.-. ...,_ A little water doesn't stop Holla Hines and her golden retriever Charlie from romping outdoors at the corner of 36th Street and the appropriately named Lake Street in Newport Beach . Huntington new t rial in By STEVE TRIPOLI o<"IM 0.-, Net 8Wf A Huntington Beach man convict e d o f raping his 1t.epdaught.er haa been granted a new trial. but a deputy district attorney aa.td today he la not •w-e proeecuton want to flO through wt.th it. ~ C.OUOty Superior Court J~ &ben Green£:Wd the trla-i Chit week or James Jl.olllno. who earlier Jo.t two llmlW legal ba ttlet in ht1her oourta. Green. who pre1lded at Rollln111• orllinal trial ln 1981 aad ~ hlrn '° lix yean tn et•_. •prlaon , aatd Monday'• ~ WU hued on hi9 belief thet Rollinp WU not lldequately dliw{e111ded In hi.a flrat lrial . • m a n given sex case Rolllngl had been convicted of 16 counta of sexual milconduct, includlnc forcible rape, lnvolvtna hil 1tepdaughter when she waa 1:) ye91'9 okl or younger. He haa been free on bail 1lnce ht1 conviction while appeala were heard. Ironically, the aam~ lawyer who orlatnally prosecuted Rol.1!J'\ll 1Ueee19fully IOl.Wht the rww trial motion. Paul Meyer, a former proeecutor now In private practioe, repretenia Rollinp ln the cue. Green aald in a letter to lewyera that Theo Lacy. Rollinp' attonwy ln the ttrst trial, had failed to produce "lnformatlon that could have b ee n cru 1.lal to the ~Uon of the vicdm ... By the Dally Pilot Staff The first in a predicted series of s torms moved through the Orange Coa.st today. dumping more than one inch of rain, causing flooding and extensive damage to beachfront structures and evacuation of some residents of Sunset Beach and SeaJ Beach. The storm, described by a weather forecaster as the "tale of the wha le" that hit Northe rn California, was resporu>ible for cutting the wooden pier m Seal Beac h in half Storm-spawned surf, authorities said, removed about a five to 10-foot stretch of the l ,815·foot long pier built in 1935. The Orange County Fire Department sent three strike teams to S unset Beac h -Seal Beach areas to evacuate residents from homes flooded with rain runoff and ocean water sent across the beach by waves of up to eight feet in height. Seal Beach Police Chief Stac:ey Picascia said residents in Surfside Colony and in secuons of the "old town" in Seal Beach were evacuated from their rtooded homes, beginning about 7:30 a.m. He said betw~n 100 and 150 homes were evacuated. Evacuees w ere t a k e n to the Ma rine Community Cent.er. Other residents were evacuated from homes near SeaJ Way and Seal Wall<. Picasc1a said there has been one incident of attempted looting, b ut t he suspect escaped H e promiM'd around-the-clock police patrols Pacific Coast Highway w- closed between Seal B each Boulevard a nd Golde n West Street in Huntington Beach and between Beach Boulevard and Brook.hurst Street in Huntingion Be ac h. Authorities said the stretches of highway were made impassab l e by th e s urf thundering over lhe beach soulh of the highway. Forecaster Pat Ro we of the National Weather Service's Loe Angeles off ice said the storm - the first of three expected over the next four days -brought I 75 inches of rain to the Los Angeles Civic Cent.er. in H untin gton Beac h , however. onJy 1.03 inches of rain fell , according l o longtime weather watcher J . S herman Denny Ramfall since July l has been 7 06 inches in Huntington Beach Forec·aster Rowe said there's a 50 pereent chance of showers along the coast t o n i ght, in creasing to 60 percent by F'nday night Storm No 2 in the 5eries. Rowe said, "is going to be a real zinger." She predicted clearing late Saturday and S unday, but said another st.onn is due by Monday. The storms are re lated to a massive weather system in the Gulf of Alaska. Rowe said. Effects or the first storm were most v1s1bl e to moto rists attempting to get lo work in umely fashion this morning. Along Dyer Road, near the lrvine·Santa Ana border, one (See STORM, Page At ) A irport passen ger s up, but flights show drop By STEVE TRIPOLI / or111eo.-,,......,, ~ County'• J ohn Wayne Airport handled about l:W,000 more pueeneen in 1982 than the prevloua year, but total aircraft arrivala and departuree dropped, flcuree ahow. Airport offtdala attributed the drop in i.lrcraft operationt mostly to the state of the economy, and to a leeeer dell'" to li.naertu after effect• of the 1911 elr traffic oontrollen' strike. The flaww showed 2,&30,870 ~ ulina the airport IMt year, an lncrM9e of llx pen-ent over the 2,379, 792 who arrived 0t deoart.ed ln 1981. beapl te the tncreaaed paH•naer load, Juat 40,933 takeoff• and landin11 were recorded in l5Nl2, a 5.7 percent drop from the 469,133 of the previous year. The u.e of larser aircraft by the mapr oornmerda1 carrien who ae~ the eirpcrt explain• the tncrea1e in pa11engera coupled with the decreue ln !llahta. oftidall 8Aid. Ouiatine Eclwarda. an airport nolae control apeclallat whoee department compiled and released the ftguret, .Wd the drop ln operations came a1mmt entirely from smell, prtvately owned aircraft. Reatrlctlon1 on the uae of ln1trument nytn1 tn •inall . plan•, mandeted by the 1981 controUen' nrlb. were the ...,.. of a 1lump In 1enera1 (amall t.innft) •viation that Ml"°' y..c (8" AIRPOAT. P.,. Al) --~ ... ________ _ ' ---·---------·----------~ _...,. __ _ Orang• CoHt DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, January 27, itl3 The conteatant• were moving ol aa 1nall'1 pace, but no one teemed tu mind. Emmy Lou Bradt adorned her garden mollu1k with a llulfy feathe r before turning the creature, dubbed Purple Flath, loose In HThe Great Snail Race," spontored by the Cooperative Outdoor Program at UC Irvine. As the snails raced over re lier maps or various California regions, their o wners tracke d their progress b y pe n. Winners were d e te rmined b y the distance co~·ered o n the map, a nd prizes included a gift certificate from a backpac king store and a Rackage or r reeze-dded stra wberries. New Irv ine Co. chief Illending By JODI CADENHEAD friend and mentor Peter Kremer or .. DallJ ,... •ta« resigned. With his courtship of the "We want to re-establish the public stil in full bloom, Irvine quality of our communication ," Compa n y President Thomas Nielsen said. That was as close as Niel.sen apparently is trying to do ror th e image -tarn ished development firm what Princess Di has done for Great Britain. COMMERCIAL CENTE R DUE IN IR VINE -83 Namely to mend fences, give Nielsen came to saying the re was speeches and sh ow the world anything amiss about his that being head of the largest company's relations w ith the landholding company in Orange public. County doesn't mean you're He prefer red instead to say unapproachable. that hlS "emphasis lS different" Meeung with reporters at an from that of his predecessor. info rmal press conC erence Nielsen announced that plans Wednesday m the (irm's posh will be g in this year o n the sevenlh floor offices in Newport commercial phase of University Beach. Nielsen made it clear he Town Center on 300 acres across wanted to "work together" to f r o m U C I r v i n e T h e improve r ela tions with the dt>velopment includes a hotel, community. theater. farmer's ranch market and restaurant. The 51-year-old. s.ilver-haired Some of the company's other executive took over the reins of plans outlined by Nielsen for this -Construction of 300 apartment units; 585 are currently under construction in Irvine. -Construction of h ighway interc h anges fer the planned 1984 opening of Irvine Center, which will include a major shopping mall, offices and three hotels. Nielsen said there will be a "major emphasis" placed on building affordable housing. bul added there were no new plans under constderauon. The city has been encouraging the Irvine Company to build affordable housing units on a 35 -acr e p iece o f land near Eastbluff But nearby residents have complained and housing groups have asserted that the condominiums in the $80,000 to '$120,000 price range are too expensive. Referring to t he headline· making Newport Beach leasehold power Jan. 1. after his longume year include: ~\' ~~:~....,: .. ~·~..;.· "'°'-:-.:-~,;;~;;:~::~::0::::-,:.-::_i_F_?_d_a-y.-J-~-no-u-ary-2-~-.-,-~-8-?J_)_)_?-.,-•• -~-fi--Snow--[m-:·-.. -,I Cotutnl Variable cloud iness w1ln 1hower1. oc;caalonally nealf)I at llmet, tonight and Friday Rein lnereulng In lntenelty 1a1e Friday Sout'-1 wtnd1 15 to 20 mph, ahlltlng to aoutheast and lncrMling tate Fnc:say OvernlQllt IOwl 50 to 55 Highs Frldey S8 to 82 Chance or rain 50 percent tonlght. lncteulnQ to 60 percent late Friday Ef1awher e , f rom Poi n t Conception to tne Mexican bofder and out 60 mllee South to eout'-1 wlnda t5 to 30 lenota with focal guau to 35 knota. dacrea 11ng slowl y tonight Combl!Md MN t6 to 22 feel Ove< outer weter• wtth -10 to t5 .... ~ Inner walen Local aorf 10 r each 20 feat on soma weat-feclng beaches today Wlnda ~ly IOUth-1 10 to 20 llnota on Friday with comt:Mned HU tO to t8 IHI over outer walert and 4 to 8 1981 (7ol9l Inner water• Rein to lncreaae late Frldey u. • su11111iary A brvtel r .inatOl'm ewept O'Ver the Pacific c:oeet lodey. Clltrylno high wtnda and gueta up lo 96 mph that ceueed acallared floo dfn=nd mudafldea and forced of -hlghweya In Nort'-'1 omle., The etonn. lhe lateat In a aerlee 11181 ~ SuMey, -u;p«:t9d to crOM the Roclllee today to r each •eatern Wyoming and Mont-. The fllellonel WMlher ~ #81~ peopl9 WhO lf"9d M 8t ere.It• and rtvera In Hort"-tn c.itfomil INt they mtght haw to "llt1 qulctlty to -yourMll and ttlOe8 whO ~ on l°"· You mey Olo#f heW --· • In the Mldweet. PAC*-' tnoW Wedn ead ay m ade driving ha 11rdou1. The ano• ••• ap r ea .in~aatward lrom nortflern 10 -'•n P91w.-lla and Yen. with 11......... acMeor1ea poated lot Nor1tl Cerollne. Ugllt - -~ today ,,,,_IN io.er ~ and ...,,. tfl9 m6d-A ooaac Teniperatvraa around the rwtJofl et ""4n19ht PST r~ "°"' 22 degr-batow -0 In ...,..., Mllw'I .• '° .. degf.-In ~W....Ae. ' ano hllleide rMldent• -• wwneo oi mud•lldet and rocUlldea. "We're expectlnQ btMl<er1 of u' to t5 IHt. Hpectally on wH< f8Clfl9 ~. with lwella oi 8 IC 10 IM t,' Ne1tonal Weather Servla Intern Scott MentJet Mid today lie U ld up tO 2 lnc:hea Of rein wovld fall by tonight on cou lel p la1n1 up 10 3 fnchea In the roothUta and up to 4 lnC'-In inc mountain• The rain wll dact- F•lday, but another atorm ta moving tn Friday even ing ,' "'4ent1er H id lieavy ahow wa1 torecut a~ 6.500 feel In the mountains In tne lahloneble Loe Angeiee County coaatal community ol Mellbu . the reatdenta of • beac:hlronl home _.. evecueted )ult before their hOUM atart9d to break up due 10 lhl1 morning'• nigh 11oe1 and eurf, aafo Lo• Angelea County lira c.pt. Jamea Mabery "They euepected II might fall into the watet • .a they got out," Mabery eakl. adding that reaHSenta o l neighboring homa1 •••• advlMd 10 IMY9 T e u•p e ralure s Albany Alooque<qut! Amerttto AaNrvltla Atlanta A tlantle City Auttln Ball~ 9111ifl08 81rmtngnam 81af1\81CI< 8olM Botton 9'ownavllle Sulfelo NATIOll Butting ton Caaper Chet1wlon. SC Charleeton, WV Chartolte, NC Chey9nne Chicago Clnolnnall Clelleland Columbia, 8C Columbu• ~Ft Worth Dayton HI Lo 32 15 -49 25 3o4 20 -47 32 52 40 40 27 55 32 4 1 29 38 27 51 41 t2 5 53 48 40 25 75 43 23 15 29 3 43 3& 5e ~ 40 27 51 3-4 40 27 24 13 32 31 28 111 5e 36 33 27 .. 33 31 24 Fronts Cot11...,.. Den-o.a MolMI Oe1rolt Duluth Et Puo Fargo Aeottan Great Flllte HartlO<d lielen• Honolulu Houlton lndtanapoll1 Jlld<aon. MS Jacitaonvllle Kanaae City Laa veou Llttle Roel< Loulsllille Lul>bOCll · Mempl\11 Miami MllwaukM Mpla-St Paul Nuh\'llle New on.an. New Yortc NorlOlk North Platte ~City Orlando Philadelphia Ph090f• Pltt llbuf gh Portland.Me Portland. Or. Prcwld9nce :=fc11y Reno Richmond 46 27 t9 0 28 21 1 -~II 58 29 1 ...:J SS 23 .. 41 34 2t -47 35 711 82 53 40 33 29 57 44 81 36 30 17 56 -43 -42 3-4 36 33 3-4 tO 45 3-4 72 811 20 7 7 .7 -42 35 lie 51 36 31 « 3& 28 24 43 23 18 4 ee at 40 31 118 50 32 111 3e 18 55 .. 3e 2t 50 33 2t 23 : r, fli~t. Dliiiilllliia..1~ ___ 1,_1_1,_111_ ' ... Salt Lale• .. 39 San Antonio eo 32 Seattle 65 ~ ~-:1:. 6" 43 8 .... St. LOui8 32 24 St. ~Tampa • 51 8t Ste Marie 18 5 Spoil-44 .. s~ 2t 14 Topeka 3t • Tucaon 71 49 TulN 43 28 Wuntnoton « 33 Wlchlla 33 11 CAlWOflHIA Ballersllald 73 55 81y1he 70 47 Eur ell a 60 45 Fr~ 56 52 Lancaater 5e -48 Lot A~ 118 58 Momerey 81 .. NeedlM 86 .. Oalttend 82 53 Puo~ 59 53 Red 8luf1 M 63 Red'#OOd <:tty 83 62 Seer-to 82 51 Sallnaa 82 53 San OlaOO 87 81 8an Frandaco 83 &1 Senta Bart>ata &3 &4 s.n1a Mana 83 55 Slocllton 85 61 .... ow 59 41 Ilg 8aat 64 30 8lahop 64 i4 c.t.allna 84 .. t.ono laadl .. .. MoMMa 72 .. Mt.Wtleon 51 ., ~Beadl • 51 Ontatto .. 47 Nm ..,,.,. 71 .. p ........ 11 47 t: knarcllno ee 46 • Qabnal 10 47 Tides fences dispute, the new president said the class action lawsuit tiled by disgru n tled r es idential leaseholders may ultimately have to be litigated in court. Last month an Orange County Superior Court judge ordered lrvine Company representatives and those named in the lawsuit to attempt to solve their dispute before the March hearing. And , in re feren ce to the financially tro ubled Lio n Country Safari. Nielsen said hi.a hrm is "reassessing the su'ccess of the ~nterpriae with a history of some problems." -----Cllll 1 111 , N e ptune severs Harbor Lawn ties The founder of the Neptune Societv aaid todav hSa OOlnDU\V haa ceu e d bual neaa wlth Harbor Lawn Mortuary and Memorial Park in Coeta M ... followtnl aoc:uMtiona Lhat bodiM lent there tor cremation were m utilated and d iapoaed of In p-oup fuhlon. The NeP.tune Society It one of Calltomla. larielt direct burta:l -and cremation tlel'Vicel. C harles Dennin1. c hie f executive officer and founder of Neptune, said a letter wu sent Wedneeday to Ne ptune chapten tellln1 t hem to d i1contlnue buaineta with Harbor Lawn until the alleptiona are cleared up. John DUlan Fla nasan, 66, owner o f Harbor Lawn, haa refused to comment on th e matter. On Monday a clu1 action lawsuit wu filed on behalf of th.e famil y o f R o b e r t H e nr y MAhnnPv. Allf'ging that Harbor -. - Lawn ,....warty broke ptr nlr r f to clJenta "by t.reait.na ~ rn a 1 cavalier JTMU\Mr and cnnnatina · 1everal bodies topttwr. ' Dennin1 aa'd ln • pho n e : lnt~rview io<by from h ll San ! Lull Oblapo home ~t he w u · "appalled by the 1CCUMtlona, tf • the are true.•• if e aald h e allo aaked all • Neptune of ttc. to check to aee 11 • other crernatoriwna they contract wlth are cremat.l.na bOdJe9 Ln a . group fuhion. > Named •defendant ln the auit are nan.,an, hSa wife, Honorlne.; the Ne ptune Sodety and another : mortuary owned by Flanagan i and WUJ Edward OUJl'reme. 35, who formerly ran the cremation · chamben ln Costa Me-. Al tho u1h lecialat io n . prohibitinC multiple cremations : waa introduced thla week. there : ls no atate '1a w forbidding th e ! prac t ice . H o w e v e r , It ill · considered an unethical practice. BoIDme r Canyon approve d for cookof f Some of the apideat creationa thla aide of Yorba Linda will be featured i n Bommer Canyon April 16 for the 1983 annual Irvine Chill Cookoff. Tuesday the C ity Council approved the rustic aite for the event, w hich prom18el plenty of tasty ooncoctiona ln competition for the coveted tint--place kettle trophy. 1'hb year. 5,000 people will be admitted to the canyon ate, 2,000 more than the 1982 event. But only 1,000 can will be allowed at Bommer Canyon. Other can will be parked at UC Irvine and s hut tle bua aerv lce will be provided. Due to oonc:ema about people having too much to drink before hitting the road, beer tapa will be cloeed at 4 p.m. There al.o will be more food bootha than 1ut yeer. Still, M ayor Larry Agran vote d again st the B o mme r Canyon location becau.e of a potenti al pro ble m fro m conawnption of too much of the suda. In addition to the 4 p.m. beer salea restriction, no one will be pennitted to bring cans or bottles into the cookoff. Police Chief Leo Peart aaid no arreata were made laat year, t.00\.Wl IOl'De ti P9Y cookoff-goen Cathy Rigb y w ere w arned not to drive. He said officers w ill be on the lookout for thole who appear too drunk to drive. The cookoff iJI not being billed a.s a family event a.s It w as last year and entertainment will be more cloaely ecreened thia year. accor ding to a C ha mbe r of Conunerce official. The chamber is in charge of the event. In other business, the council deferred action on the proposed Cathy R igby Regional Sports Center becau.e a repreeentative from the gymnastics and fitness complex did not attend Tuesday's meeting. NATION GOP officials like Bush • • .. if Reagan bows out By Tbe A11oclated Preu WASHINGTON -Vice PresJdent Cleof'lie Buah flntahed far ahead of hui potential rivals when Republican Party ottldah were asked who w ould be their choice \0 lead the party In 1984 If PresJdent Reagan decided not to aeek a aecond term. A few cited the economy and Reagan's a_1e as factort that rould prompt him to decide against running. Rffaan wtll be 71 on Feb. 6 Jobless man flayed for honesty . COLUMBUS, O hio -An unemployed mechanic who found $6.800 on a street, then turned It over to police, say. he Isn't sure if his honesty paid ore. Charles Cossin said the money's owner has never even thanked him, Jet alone provide a reward, and frie nds scoff a t him for not keeping the cul\ himaelf. Reagan, Mubarak discuss Israel WASHINGTON -President Reagan will assure F.gyptian President Hosni Mubarak today that the United States la doing all it can -short of cutting ofC aid -to press Israel to withdraw its troops from Lebanon, U.S. officials say. Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Tt'lurld~, Januaty 27, 1983 ..\8 Flags at half-staff I or Bryant TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -Flags at 0the state Capitol an Montgomery flew at half-staff today to mark the death of Paul W1 U1am "Bear" Bryant, 69, on Wednesday, who during a 38-year career became the winningest coach in college football history. Volunteer worker Bill Baskin leeda a number of young &ea lions. It's a real zoo ·at Marine Center Nurse shortage appears over WASHING TON -The nation's much-publicii.ed shortage of nurses appears to be over, but inner -city and rural areas remain underserved and nurses need inducements to work there, a National Academy of Sciences re port said today. O~Neill raps Reagan policies WASHINGTON -H ouse S peaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. said today President Reagan has driven the country into a depression and Congress must repair the damage by creating a jobs bill and slashing at the huge increases in defense spending. STATE Marine gets maximum sentence SAN otroo -Marine Sgt. ~rge Alex Biddy -an unlicensed driver who never took a leiSOn in handling a car - was sentenced to five years and eight m onths in prison Wednesday for crashing into a Japanese tour group and killing four women last July. CBS must relinquish materials S AN FRANCISCO -The California Supre me Court has ruled that CBS must turn over all outtakes and unpublished material from a 1979 "60 Minutes" segment to a physician suing lhe television network for slander. By STEVE MITCHELL Of'IM D111J Piiot aeen Laguna Be a c h 's Marine Mammal Center is filled to tha gllla with sick sea lions and elephant aeala. And Bill Ford, admlniatrator o! the Friends of the Sea Lion organization, aaid the volunteer group ia rapidly running out of funds to feed the aili.na creatures. "We got hit all of a sudden with a whole rash of sick baby sea Ilona," Ford said. Marine center volunteers are currently caring for 1:1 sea lions and fi ve elephant seals. moet of which suffer acute parasitic infestation of the lungs. N o rmally, the flippered population of the center la four. "Wh en they 1uffer a respiratoQ' problem, they can't hold their breath long enough to find food," Ford said. As a result, they become weak, often contract pneumonia and hypoglycemia, and beac h themselves. That's where the Friends of the Sea Lions come in . The beached mammala are taken to the center out on Laguna Canyon Road where they are given a mixture of fish , glucose, antibiotic• and vitamin.a, all combined in a blender and fed to the an1mala through a tube. Medication used to rid the a n I ma ls o f l u n g w.o rm is powerful, Ford said, and the sea creatures must be strong enough to withstand the effect.a. But fish purchased by the Friends does not come cheap. At 45 centa a pound, the bill quic kly mounts when one considers the center dispenses more than lM pounds per day. And that does not take into consideration the cost for medica tions, and medical equipment. "Five and 10-dollar donations have kept us going this far," Ford said, but the sudden influx of new patients has drained the kitty. Tho se interested I n contributing to the non-pr-0fit o rganizatio n should send donations to the Friend.a of the Sea Lion, 20612 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, CA. 926:> 1. Two seals and only one fish present a problem. The other, apparently, is the referee. $57 million claim rejected SAN DIEGO -A $57 mtllion damage claim filed by Anaheim-based Tehnk Inc. has been rejected 9Y county supervLSOrs . Telmk hied the claim because 1t objected to the cancellation of a $25 million contract with the county for a new microwave telecommunications system. The County--------------- Drug abuse home for Costa Mesa OK'd Storm slows aircraft carrier SAN DIEGO -Severe weather off the Pacilic ooast has slowed the progress or the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Ha-,vk, which le ft Bremerton, Wash. Monday for its homeport of San Diego. By JEFF ADLER 0tu..,..,.,......,. Over the objection• of area businessmen, Orange County -.upervtsorB have agreed to rent a Costa Mesa builcfing to house county-run mental health and drug abuae programs. The 11 ,8 39-sq ua re-foot building is considered spacious enough to accommodate county Health Care Agency programs for the South County that have outgrown their present Newport Beach location. Moving to the new building, at 3115 Redhlll Ave., will be o ut-patie nt m ental health pro grams, continuing care services for p eople w i th em o tional problems, criaia intervention services, drug abuae programs, psychological services for children apd out-patient programs for alcoholics. The building is considered Ideal for county purpo9e5 becauae it is a large, sing)e-l10ry bulldlna with 66 parklng spacea ana pre-partitioned of&e apeice. The county will rent the buildlna for ur to five years at a monthly rent o $18,482 plus utilities, according to George Cormack, aalatant director of the county General Services Agency. The sh1p was scheduled to arnve in San Diego Friday following a year-long, $169.5 million overhaul at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, but the heavy weather has pushed back the expected arrival time to 4 p.m. Saturday. AIRPORT TRAFFIC INCREASES ... Commenting on the building's suitability, Supervitor Thomu Riley said, "It waa almost designed for the purpotlH we want to put it to." Riley'• COMtal district includes C:O.ta Me.a. Cutter's crew "in no da_~ger' SAN FRANCISCO -The 53 crewmen aboard the Coast Guard ship Planetree that was damaged in rough seas have patched their leaky ship and are no~ ln danger, aooordlng to officials who say assistance is on tile way. WORLD Arms talks to continue Tuesday GEN EV A. Switzerland -U.S. and Soviet negotia~ conducted three hours of talb today on reducing medium-~ nuclear missiles in Europe, followtna efforts by both aides to win European support for their pollUona. The two aides are 9Cheduled to meet again Tuesday. Poland's Walesa back on payroll GDANSK, Poland -The Lenin Shipyard has put Lech Walesa back on the payroll. but still won't let him start work until he produces documents showing he was not employeq elsewhere and has h is business affairs with the banned Solidarity union in order, a spokesman for the labor leader safd, Oil minister predicts price cut ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates -The government says it is raising oil production by 45 percent to match increased competition from other OPEC members following the cartel's failure to agree on production quotas. From Page A1 ended. F.dwards said. The restrictions, which are gradually easing ,as control towers nationwide complete their recovery from the strike, have affected general .aviation to a polnt where it La "only beginning to come back to nonnal in the lut llx to eight months," ahe said. But an even h igher factor •lowing seneral aviation has been the economy, F.dwarda said. She said the rla1ng coeta of fuel, part• and maintenance are combining to keep more pilota out of. the air. The •trike had less of an itnpa.ct on passenger figures, accord1na· to airport Manager Murry Cable, because John Wayne was not severely affected by Jt and major commercial can1en continued to .ervice the county during the walkout. Both Cable and F.dwarda said they 9ee DO particular trend.a in the increased pa.Menger figures, however. Edwards aald they indicate a "possible" recovery of air traffic. Other figures released in the year -end report s h ow an 8.3 percent increase in air cargo tonn.aae handled at the airport. with 2.601 tons handled in 1982 We1re Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? 642·6086 ~ ......... ....,.,.,..,..,, • )00.I 00 ~~~-~:' ••cl rout copy .ur b• ..... ., h flltdey -lunday II you do !'IOI ·~ 'ff14I' ~: Z:':o;. CCIPI''*= tie....., Call the number at left and your m rr r will be ~rded, tranacribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answertn1 serv1te may be used to record let· tera lO the edJtor on any topic. Mailbox contributors muat Include their name and telephone number tor ver1ncatlon. No circulation calla, please. Tell us what's on your mind. -ORMQE CCMIT llilyl'llllt ; ....... ..tMmt1•1 Comolet VOL 71, NO. 'D compared to 2,385 in 1981. A.ho, more than 37,000 more cars parked at the airport in 1982 oompattd to the previoua year. The figures show 464,221 autoe parked at John Wayne in 1982, an 8 percent. in.crease over the 427,208 parked there in 1981. Military and air taxi uee of the airport ah.owed notable increaaes. "It fita our needs rat and it .. within the ~pulauon area we are serving,' Riley said. The Storekeepe_r Final Sale Starts Friday 10:00 A.M. and Concludes Saturday 6:00 P.M. ALL SALE MERCHANDISE WILL BE 500/o To 800/o OFF Quality Sale Merchandise From Our Regular Stock of Men, Women and Boys All Sales Will B~ Final • Pkase Be Sure of~ ,-----------·-------·-,---- Or•nee Oout DAILY 'ILOT/Thurldey, J1nU1fY 21 , 11M Storm slams Coast; more due Friday From Page A1 motorcyolllt drove hit JMChine onto the lidewalk to avold the llx lnchel of wit.er ltandtna ln the street. Traffic heacllnl aou\hbound on New port Bo ulevard n e ar Fairview Road In Cotta Meaa WM rtduettd to one lane aa 1turm runott owrnowtid the curbe. ln La1una Bu.ch , 1lx t<> •laht-foot 1torm-1pawned aurf, combined with a 6 .G-foot momina hljh Ude, rl~ aero. portions of the M•ln h P.ark Seven killed by storms By ne A1aocla&ed Preti A brulsln1 Pacific storm alammed Inland today after deetroyina leUide bulldinp with bam-llzed wava, forcina dozena of coutal reaidentl to evacuate, darkenln.1 100,000 C. allfornla homes and cloalnl highways. The strin1 of coutal 1torms which began Sunday la already blamed foc .even deaths. In unusually force ful laJ11Uaie, the Weather Service warned people who lived near oreek1 and rivers In Northern California that they might have to "act quickly to aave youraelf and thoee who depend on ~ou. You may only have aeconda.' The storm whipped down the Padfic Cout and was expected to qoea the Rockles today, reaching W'eatern Wyoming and Montana. In the Midwest, meanwhile, heavy s n ow made driving haaardous and two t raffic fatalities were re~orted in Mlllouri. Near Redding, a mudallde Wednesday ahoved two pickups, a bulldozer and a bua carrying Shasta County pri9onen down a ~ ravine and into a creek, · a county employee, public wor s crewman Da vi d W•tennan. COASTLINE. From Page A1 At leut 100,000 homee, moet in the San~~ po wer , said Dennf1 Pooler, spokesman for Pacific Gu & Electric Co. Pacific IJ'elephone rePorted 3,000 phone drcui .. out. 'l'ldes roee to a record 9.93 feet at the Rio Vilta Briclae on the Sacramento River, said 1tate flood emergency coordinator Bill Helms. DoWJlpoura cau.ed lhe Ruaaian and Navarro rivers to apill their banks, forcing closure of two highways. Thirty-foot waves rocked Humbo ldt Bay near San Franciaco. Five flahermeri rowed an emergency skiff to shore after their 58-foot wooden boat sank near Alcatraz laland, the Cout Guard said. In Point Arena, a coastal town 150 miles to the north, winda and rain destroyed a pier support.Ing a cafe and a fiah packin& company. In Carpinteria, 12 miles east of Santa Barbara. 4 feet of aand wu washed from at leut one beech, leaving only rocks. Resldenta boarded up windows on beach homes and sandbaged. againlt predicted 15-foot waves that were expected to ride in today on a 7-foot tide. • • She -said most of the cost savings could come from eliminating Coastline's exp e nsive administrative structure and transfering its retponsibilities to officials at Golden West and Orange Coast. Regarding the convenience factor, Basile noted that several of Coastline's learning centers (rented. elementary schools) are already located "within a .s10ne'a ~w" of Orange Coast and Golden West. ''The idea of creating Coastline (without a fonnal campus) was to accommodate a period of growth," said Basile, who teaches at Orange Coast. "Now, it's ti.me to contract." Head-on smashup kills Huntington pair Two men were killed and two others critically injured Wedneeday night in a head-on collision along Pacific Coast H ighway in Huntington Beach. Police said the accident was not weather-related. Huntington Beach police officer Jim Austin laid Khoder El-Moheb, 22, of Westminster, was driving a 1979 Pontiac Firebird on the highway just west of Golden West Street when the vehicle jumped the center divider and struck a Plymouth Reliant driven by Allen Kusek, 38. of Sandy, Utah. Mustafa Bahr, 23, of Huntington Beach. a passenger in the Firebird, and Henry Harold, 62, a Texas businessman who was riding in the Reliant, were both pronounced dead at the acene, Austin said. The two driven were taken to Fountain Valley Community Hospital with chest and abdominal injuries, a hospital spokesman said. Kusek was lilted in critical condition today, while El-Moheb wM llated as lerloua. Police said El-Moheb has been arrested on suspicion of manalaughter and felon y drunk driving. DLAIKJMJ5 • _.,,..., Jewels by Joseph purchaM• diamoods, oematonet, gold and 1itver from private lndrviduals and eat1te1. Careful exam1natioo and evaluatt<>n by our e1tper11 High· est prieet pekl. Daily 10·9. Sat 10·6. Sun 12 ·4.45. Pnone today AaK tor Beuy Grae. or Eric Zala~u1. C.... de Bien,,.nidoe Youth Shelter a.11 All•••' Allli9a1 $11011 Los Alamitos High School Cerritos Ave. at Los Alamitos-Blvd. UTDNI Ju. lt, IM Child c~ pnm<Md mut Ju. H, lt-S AdmlHloo $2.50 boardwalk, tloodl~ lho bol\Om 1tnry o( tht cl~y llfe1~ tower. "lt'a .. rMI horror •how,'' la.Id Mark K101 t e rm1n, 1 city ur~acuatd. Tho buemonl tilled with ei&)lt f.et of watar, Klolterman II.Id, The turf allO poured onto Pacific Cout Jfl1hway near Br~way In the downtown uea. Lasuna Can yo n Road , accordln1 to the California Hl1hway . Patro l, WH cloHd between El Toro ROlld and tM San, Dle10 Freeway. The hl1hway remained open between El Toro and the downtown area. the patrol aald. Portion• of the Balboa Peninsula In New~rt.' Beach were flooded when high tide hlt a t 7:26 a.m. No homea were rel>Ol'ted damaged, however. Wade Beyefer, city General Services Department director, said heavy flooding ~ at 32nd Street near Finley Avenue. A section of a bloc)< way near the Newport Pier wahed away, 'he noted. · The Orange County Harbor Patrol said several boatl were pulled from their moorinp, but were reecued without incident. Jim K e nned y. an area manager for Southern California Edison Company, said two storm-related power outages occun't!d. -At 5:45 a.m., 2,065c ustomeni In Costa Mesa were left without power after tree branches hit a transmission line. The area was bounded by Mesa Drive, WQaon Street, Fairview Road and Irvine Avenue. Power was restored by a ll cu s tome r s by 7 :09 a .m ., Kennedy Mid. Jn a •parate lawldent, I\ 1116 a.m. 2,480 cuaiomert w•re 1811 without power afler 9qWpp~H failure ln an ~ vauJ\. The IJ'N WU bouncJed by Ped& Co11t C' hway, Bol11 Chica Road, 8 n,dale Street and Seal Beach ulevard. Poww t.o all bu\ 100 people WM IWtored by If :a» a.m., Kennedy aakl. Retiden.. llvinl Ilona 8-cb -BouJevard between lndJAnapolla and Atlanta avenue• in • Hun\ln&&on Beach were evacuated thl.a momln1 when 1torm dralna overflowed and flooded their home1, a city spokemnan laid. The cilaplaced retidentl were lod1ed at the Senior Chizena C.enter at 17th Street and Oranae Avenue. Hunt.lnlton BNch offidall allo anoouncea that flood-tru.wnec1 resident. can obtaiD free , sand bag1 by callin1 the city porporallon yard at 848-0600. ·chief··name·d at hospital Surgeon Richard Caatanon hat been elected chief of staff •t Huntington lntercommunlty Hoapital In Hunu.n,ton-8each. Castanon specializes in ear, note and throat disorders, and head and neck Injury. Other medical 1taff offlcen ·elected at the h011pital include Dr. W. Raymond Menzies, vice chief of st•ff; and Dr. Richard Stafford, secretary-treasurer. course Blueprint I, a coune In atthJtectural, 1tnletUral, plwnblinl. rnechM6eal and eledrlcal drawtna, will be offered by COMtJlne Colle1e from 6:30 to 9:80 p.m. Wednadaya, beatnnin. nu\ Wedneaday, at the Roblnwood Learnln1 C.nter~ 6171 McFIMiden Ave., Hunttnaton Bmch. The tuiUon-free c.oune will famlliarile ltUdenta with materiala, 1ymbola and construction proce11 ol a wood f...,... 1tructure. lnch,aded will be the civil fnllneerinc proce11 for prepari"I a homesite. · Kept.ration ii by mall. Additional reptntlon, lf = remains, will be held durinl the flnt two weeka of . ReaiatraUon infonnation can be obtained by ca1linl the colJete, 963-0824. • Costa Mesa's Natural Hlltory Foundation of Oranae Cowlty will hoat ill annual ~tlna at 6:30 p.m. Tue.day at die University Club at UC Irvine.• Reservations for the $6.50 dinner must be made by Friday. A slide presentation will be ahown and Cal State LoniE Beach Instructor and archaeololl.at. Dr. Jue Rolealbl will dl8cuu Indian artifacts. For retervallona call 545-8967. • RobHt E . Haana has been appc>inted director of adrilinistratlve tervlces for Fountain V•Uey Community Hospital. . . Hanna previoU1ly was asalltant adminl.atrator lit La Habra Community Hospital, a post he held for 11 ~· He will be responsible for 10 hotpltal department. including medical records. laboratory, radJololy, cardiololY and the pharmacy. . ·- Here comes A fresh new taste_ex~rience that Ol.itShines mehthol. · I • r • It not ~ tastes fresher wflile you smoke. It~ leawS you with a Eteai, fresh taste. 7 mg. "111", 0.5 mg 111co11111 av. Pt' C19arma by FTC method. County hiking ' ' I animal fees Oranae County will put tho bltti on pet ownel"I ne>tt July when Ucenle feee ao up, but the lncreue ahooldn't be enouah t.o ca~ t.oo ruany howls of out.rap, county offldala ooUeve. The Board of Supervlaol"I approved a jump lft animal Ucenalng fee9 Tueeday t.o teroVtt a greater share of the county'11 overall •ntmal control coeta. Bealnnlng In July, the reaular fee for a 12-month animal lloenae will go from $10 t.o $16 whUe the fee for spayed or neutered animall will go from $5 to $6. Senior c!thena will be charged $7.50 for the 12-month tags while lhoae owning spayed or neutered animals will pay a $3 fee. Similar Increases also are elated for six-month lln.imal tap beginnina in July. Tbe increase, affecta pe t owners in ~rporated areas of the county and Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach, which contract for tl\e county service. Fees for spayed or ne utered animals are deliberately set lower as an incentive to owners to help h old down the county's animal population, county officials said. Besides the increase in licensing charges, fees for dead animal pickups by county animal control officers as well as licensing fees for pet shops, stables and kennels, pet grooming parlors and animal exhibitors also wUl be l.ncreased. The county will charge $25 for the pickup of a dead animal, a $10 increase. The price of a pet shop license will go up from $60 to $70 while a ~ming parlor license will jump from $30 to ,40. r Anima l owners in Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach, Irvine and Newport Beach will not be affected by the increases because these cities operate their own licensing programs. If all the benefits of an Individual Retirement Account have suddenly become very im- portant to you, but you thought you couldn't afford them, think again. Bank of America offers an IRA PLUS account that lets you · earn high rat~ with a deposit as low as $50, to which you can make additional deposits. So even with all the other expenses you have to worry about, you can still enjoy the ben efits of IRA PLUS. BANff Of AMERICA"S What's more, IRA PLUS gives you a variety of plans to choose from. You can choose an investment which locks-in a fixed rate, or you can ch00$C a vari~ble rate invest- ment for more flexibility. With IRA PLUS, you pick the plan that best suits your individual needs. 1HE SAFETY YOU WANT Of course while earning high rates with.IRA PLUS, you are also getting all the resources of .P.111/fACll Uongressmen zap Washington ByfteAIMota ... PNlt Fr.h.rnen membln of ~ have poked fun at Wuhlnaton'a power ellte1 dellvertn1 ·~ on.-Unen about th• peop .. they'll be worldr\I wtth few the next few y-.n. Sen. P ... W ...... R-caJ.lf., .. "'< lauaha at the Wuhlnaton Pr.. Club'• Miu• Wtctn.day ,µ,,ht io the Nth c.orc-when he Mid Interior Seeretary Jam" Waft ii rnaklnc a me>vM cau.d "Raldera of the Lut Park." And Rep. Alu Whet. D-Mo., lament.-d the aeniortty 1y.tem, aaytnc ... You even have to'° to the bathroom here aooOrdiq t.o aeniority.'' The dinner, fOCUled arOund the theme that Poll ti~• 11 ~lrron and blue 1moke." waa attended brWatt, Secretary of State GHr1e Slaalt1, HouH MaJorlty Leader Jim Wrt1ru, D-Texu Houae Kw• Committee Chainna.n CIHde Pep,.r, o..J'la., and newly delicnated Secretary of Health and Human Servlcea Marpret Beckler. 8'1>· Coule Mack W, R-Fla., vowed, "I would never trade on b111ball" • he pounded a catcher• mitt, then removed hill tuxedo to rev..i a major leque bueba1l uniform underneath. River cleanup targeted NEW YORK -Abbie Boffmu, the foimer Ylpple radlcal turned ecolo&tat, and folk amaer Pete See1er are teamlng. up tO help clean up New York 1tate'a rlvera. They will work with the New Yock Public Interest Research Group to 1tage a benefit "River Rat Ball" on Jan. 31 at Studio M . "When you talk about water," Hoffman told a newa conference Tueeday in New York Qty, "you are talk.in& about llfe itaelf. So this ii a dance of life!" The $20-a-ticket benefit will brtna t.opther aa aponaors Seeger'a Hudson River Clearwater organization and Hoffman's Save the River "I like the high rates plus the $50 minimum.11 . California's leading bank. Bank of America's $120 billion in assets provides you with just the margin of safety you need for a long-term investment sucb as this. A WELCOME TAX SHELTER When you invest in IRA PLUS, you are also investing in a healthy tax shelter. You and your spouse can set aside up to $400) ($2CXX) per working indi- vidual) each year. The money you invest is deductible from the gr~ income on your federal income tax return and the interest earned is tax deferred as well. You'll find both features to be valu· able benefits at tax time. .. • ~ orsantutlon from the ThoUaand hJand area ln the St. Lawrence River, H ottman aald n celebrltlH~ lncludinc former New York Jeta qu.an.rbeck .JM Namatli, and hllh wire walker Plalllppe PeUt, are expect4'd t.o be unona 1,600 In attendance. Pulitzer kids affected NEW YORK -Rouue P'lllller, recently divorced from new1paper heir Peter Pallt1er after a aenuUonal trial ln Florida, aay1 the outcome of the caae hu put her children lnto "a ie.rrible taillpln." "My children would be worth anr aufferinl I've acne t.hrouah,' Mn. PWlt2.er uld Wedne1day at a newa conference wlth her lawyer, "palimony" expert Marvla Mltclaelaoa. Palltier A Florida Judae awarded cuatody of her aona, twin ~-year-ofd boy1, to Pulitzer after a trial packed with allegations of drug uae. occult practices and kinky aex. Brzezinski draws crowds NEW YORK -Fonner national aec:urity advlaer Zblpiew Bneda1kJ la drawing aellout crowd.a on the lecture circuit -at C'Olumbla Univenlty. The Carter administration official la attracting ao many studenta to his counie that the meetina place had to be changed to a larger room in the Scnool of International Affairs. A clau of 100 ts comidered large at the university, but 400 turned out Monday to hear Brzeztnski lecture in hla COW'le, United Stat.ea National Security Policies for the 1980.. NO FEES At many institutions, you'll pay a fee for setting up an IRA. But at.Bank oiAm~rica,, no matter which IRA PLUS account you chodse, you won't pay a penny in set-up or maintenance fees. On top of this, you can count on all the expertise that Cali- fornia's leading bank can offer.. So if you want an IRA that's more than just another IRA, stop into your nearest Bank of America branch soon. Look into IRA PLUS -California's leading IRA from California's leading bank. ls the the limit. You prot>.bly think there isn't any- thing you can do about soaring health care costs. But there is. Now you can join the FHP health plan where you work. With most FHP plans, your regular monthly premiums take care of almost everything from a routine checkup to major sur9ery. There are no big deduct· Ible, no sty,.f,i9h extra expenses to pey out of your own pocket. A recent surwy conducted by the U.S. Oepartmentgf HHlth and Human. Senricft reports tfaat plans llke FHP ~ ,. s.aved from 1°'6 to .0,. HCh xur on• ferfllty'l-hulth cara costs when comS*tl( to cionventtonel heatth Insur.nee plans. So .. ebout joining F.HP wMre ~u~~ MMt to brfna)'OUr health cart costs INiClt' down to Nrit\. ..... rt---------- Charter change .needed Newport Beach Ctty Council will vote next month on whether to form a ci ty charter review committee to examine election changes. We'd like to cast our vote now in favor of such a corrunittee. When the city recently moved its voting date fro,m spring to ' November to coincide with general elections, a few details slipped through the c rac ks. So this November, when the'balloting was over, council found one o( the incumbents had been voted out of office. But the n e w election regulations said nothing about seating new council members. So William Agee waited two months lo take his seat while Pau) Hummel, the defeatkd incumbent, remained in office. inteteat ln tackl 8 l11ue1 ot lmpe>rt with a lame Cluck eouJld\. 'n\ll lut el~ dW not tee 1 chanee in the bulc ~t of vift' of the majorl ty on council. However, had the voters turned all the incumbent. out of offlce, l~ would theoretically have been possible for a lame dud& council to enact legislation that waa anathema to the voten. We don't think that i8 in the best interest of elther the voters or the council. Slqce the lack of a date for aeatin& legial.ators wu an ov6rslght jp t)\e orlgl_'1•1 ordinance, w.e urge the councll to correct it ~ 800n as posalble. Council rightly postponed the election of a new mayor until after the new council had been seated. The result was two months of ~led time, since there was little We a.l.9o urae prompt review by t.he council. Since any chantea _ in the city charter require a · citywide vote, we would like to see the city discuss and recommend new measures now, not later, in the midst of a hotly contended council race. Clltl lea-----------, Letters to the editor City has rights too .. Costa M esa's Atlantis Massage Parlor is hard to miss. The building along Harbor Boulevard is an eye-catcher. So are the advertisements that show scantily clad women in alluring poses. Atlantis operators claim their business is ma ssage . not prostitution. However, five Atlantis employees have been arrested· recently by police on suspicion of prostitution-related offe'n.ses. City Council members took note of that fact recently in denying a conditional use permit sought by the Los Angeles College of Massage and Physical Therapy, the owner of Atlantis. The permit was requested in the wake of a cour.t.dedaion telling them to either obtain city approval for the operation or shut it down. That decision was appealed by Atlantis' attorneys. Their objective, of course, will be to keep the matter tied up in court as long as pc:xc;&bJe -and, at the same time , keep the establishment open. We think the city has a legitimate right to regulate the business. But until the issue is decided, the city probably has little choice other than to closely monitor the activities at Atlantis and ensure that illegal activities are not occurring. lr1in1-------------- Car radios targeted Despite the arrests of two groups of juveniles believed responsible for some of the string of automobile radio thefts that - have plagued Irvine in recent weeks, the losses continue, with nine more thefts reported in a recent two-day period. Since mid-November, when the car break-ins began to increase, there have been more thah 120 vehicular burglaries in the city. That's about three times the normal rate, according to police. Almost all the thefts involve Blaupunkt or Concord stereo receivers worth $150 to $500, removed from such European cars as Volkswagens, Audis, Porsches and BMWs. These units, police say , are in high demand and apparently can be disposed of easily. More than 80 Blaupunkt radios were taken in December alone. Methods of entry have varied from breaking windows to forcing locks with a special tool. While the arrests already made may stem the outbreak, r esidents or visitors to the community are warned to take the preca ution of parking in well-lighted areas if a locked garage is not available, and marking equipment with an electronic pen that can be borrowed from the folice department to faci itate identification if it is found. Police note that aeveral of the vehicles involved in the tbefta were equipped with burglar alarms which tbe owners apparently neglected to activate before leaving the car: Such alarms, they 1ay, can deter would-be thieves a·nd should always be set if the vehicle is parked. Apparently Irvine, with a young, rather affluent population likely to favor hlgb quality car radios, has been the princlRld target lately, but the advice mould be noted by residenu of othel'.- areas who own similarly equipped vehicles. .. · lllli11t111111:•---------- 'Watch' pays dividends Statistically speaking, Huntington Beach became a little safer in 1982, with the overall crime rate down 6.6 percent, although property losses from robbe r y, burglary and theft amounted to $8 . l million, about the same as 1981. There we re eight murder cases in the city in 1982, compared with only four the previous year, but police were able to report that arrests were made in all but one of the eight cases. (down 34.6 percent), drunken driving incidents (down 14 percent) and burglary report.a. (down 16.2 pen.'el'lt). On the minua aide. ~ were · increases in robbery incidents, thefts of m()re than $5d and crirhes against children, including child abuse and abandonment. PoUee also investigated 62 suicides, down from 75 the previous year. Police credit the city's strong Neighborhood Watch program for part of the notable decline in burglaries, but, despite this program and stepped up enforcement, burglary remained the city's number one crime problem, wlth 2,737 break-ins • Health care for 'working poor' To the F.clitor: The counties are now struggling with the problem of providing medical services to the indigent and to the "working poor" population with even fewer dollars than the former MIA Medi-Cal p~sram provided. The "work.Ing poor" group consists of many people who are more or less eelf-suffident but cannot afford either extensive mec:UcaJ. experwes or the hl&h cost of indtvlltual health insurance. Neither are t)ley covered under employer paid group medical insurance for a number of reuona (part-time or intermittent employment, part-time student, earning commiaaion instead of salary, etc.) MAILBOX to provide a more adequate level of care to the tl'Uly indigent NINA NFSTOR Carpetbagger To the Editor: Your political cartoon on the editorial page, ThUl'llday, Jan. 13, truly hit home for many Orange Coast resident.I with whom I have d.iacualled the issue of our newly 1•appolnted" state senator. As your cartoon illustrated, Mr. Speraw was dropped on the doorstep of Mr. and Mrs. Oranc,~oaat, complete with hil ~. reminds me of the way Mr. F.dUion Miller wu forced upon us by Sacramento without a legal vote by the Orange C-ounty resident.I involved -his SINCE THIS group is under 65 and reeoundlng defeat at the next election over 21 and, in general, at relatively ahou1d have· told the Sacramento power lower riak to develop serious medical people not to foroe their cronies upon us. problems, one wonders if tome insurance Obviously we Will probably have to get carriers might not be interested In rid of th1a carpetbagger in the same way. moving into thla heretofore untapped A larger iaaue here is whether a JDMk.et to develop a catastrophic policy penon who la not a legal resident of• to cover ~people. I am certain th.at, .. ,district can self-appoint himself to not only would many of theee people be repreeent ill citizens. who also must pay willing t.o purchue a low cost plan but for this "service" (which here appears to alto the families of many of them would be a thinly disguised two-year campaign probably be wi.1Ung to foot the blll in financed by the taxpayers). order to be relieved of the worry about JACK B. HOCHADEL ''what if." Marketing, therefore, would have t(r-be dlrected toward parent.I as well as toward young adult.I. Not only would the.e adult.I and their families be protected in the event of a serious lllne11 or accident but also inlurance companies would create a new market and taxpayers would be relieved of an ~ burden. The oountiea could then W1e their health care dollan Fit punishment To the F.dttor: I read In the Pilot that convicted freeway killer William Bonin is being held in the Orange County Jail while awaiUn.g trial for the four freeway killlnp that oc:cu.rred locally. Seema that he hu asked for hu trial date to be llll•laa--~-----------~-----­ . City-school pool p,.lan Laguna's Aquatics Task Force, set up to explore the possibility of a new commu~t)' pool on U. Laguna Beach High School camp~ has come up with a promising proposal for joint city-school operation of the project. The task force envisions a tw~pool complex to be located on the present high ICbool baseball fields, which wouJd be relocated at El Morro Elementary School. The acbool ·district could obtain its share of the funding - eetimated at $7~1000 to $1 million -from pending sale of an 11-acre parcel of property owned by the district. The city's haJf could come from in-lieu funds collected from developen for new parks, along with pri.rate donations, contributions from service clubs and health aervioe groups. Maintenance of the pool , complex could be financed from fees charged to participants in swim programs. In addition to serving the school district's physical education programs, the complex could be used for Red Crom IWim classes, progr~ for senior citizens and the handicapped, water polo and recreational swimming. U financing can be ~ged construction on the project could begin next year. This ls a logical way for the city and school district to join forees to provide a facility that could benefit the entire community without the enormous coet of acquiring new land. flllllll------------------- .Fire lesson unlearned One ye•r ago, no one In Anaheim Could have envisioned what WM • occur -that more than 50 ap•rtment bulldina• The overall crime rate is based on the number of so-Ollled "index crimes" committed per 100,000 population. Huntington Beach's 1982 population was 172,813. The crime r~port ahowed decreuu in reports of forcible rape (down 47 percent), arson incidents (down 42.5 percent), narootJc and drug violations (down ~ percent), fatal traffic accidents ~g durtng t year. 4 ' The w.Qr(i to cl tben•, ... Woald be l9duced to rubble arid more than f ,200 left homelf!l9 by • momint~ ~veral arawnenta. They said the city hi1torically had encouraged UM of shake rooft, that it would be unfair to exilti.nC homeownen whOM homee have 1hake1. that the baatl tnvolwd ooWd be hard to julUfy and that Fountain Valley, unlllte Anaheim, hat few overheed power linel from wblich fU. could ort-1nate. obviously, ts 'to st~y alert and · participate in Neighborhood Watch by keeping an eye on their neighbon' homes while makina their own homee more leCW'e. In the wake of the c:liauter, • T'-P.tw., ,...... ...... AM.t lleaittwe fdlor ............. ...... ,...Ullor ==- fire otfidall were quick to pomt out that it w• the combination of wood •h•ke roofa and hot., dry Santa Ana wlndl that pennltted the fire to move IO quiddy. Why the Fountain Valley City Ooundl would ignore thl1 • information la perplexJna. The council hu tul'JMd down a bid from tbe ctt1 flN chief for • Umlted bin oa ~. Under the ,...,.... ··~ not u...S with ,. ........... •terlal could no& be lllliaDW'WbM hciilill ... bullt!IJ ........ Coufidl memben 8dvalK'M lnltead, ihe council decided that homeownera ahould be reqwttd to r-..d about lhake roof hazard• when they decide to re-roof. In takl"£c'h•t action, the COUDdl «O* ii that huarda do exlat. Rather than ldenUf y th• problem, we thlnk the council ihot&ld haw taun diNet lietlon Md lmpc.ed a ban an UDU.t.ed 1hak• rooh u IO man1 olb¥ c-cww:n• ..... haW ~ it ' moved up because he doesn't like it in our jail . He aaya "The only thing to do here in Orange County for the next 4tl days j would be to elther eat, sleep, read or s-ice. and that's lt." Poor-guy. My.. heart just overflows with sympathy for him. Alter all. all he did was torture and murder some people. I DO FEEL, however , that the officials at the jail are making one major mistake. They have refused h[m televaion. I feel that in view of the crimes that he haa committed that's the wrong thing to do. They should MAKE him watch televtaion, 24 hours a day, for the next 40 days. with a trlple ration of commercials. That'd 9e'J'Ve him right. • -But, becau.e we are compassionate, and torture was outlawed many years ago, they probably won't do that. I then recommend th.at they do the next best thing. Put him to sleep, just as they would any other mad dog. WILLIAM D. HARVEY, Ph.D. Clogged courts To the F.ditorr Your artlcle on Proposition 8, the IO-Called "victim's bill of rights," was bul continued trumpeting by a legal profession determined to prove the pre-election forecasts that it would not work. The courts are clogged for other reaaons, to wit: 1. Poor ad.mlnist.rative procedures. 2. A procesa that poses as deliberative but is really elephantine. 3. Dockets smothered with frivolous and baaelea cla.Um. 4. Endle. delays due to tardiness of either the judge or one of the lawyers.· 5. An almost endless labyrinth of appeAls proce.ea. ·lL Endleas bickering over teclmicali ties. 7. A rising aea of new laws and regulations promulgated daily by leclalative bodies and bureaucracies . each presenting new opportunities for litigation. r suaesi the legal profeesion work on clearing up the above mess. That would be making molehills out of mountains. J. W. REID Housing needs To the Editor: Within the next two months, the Orange County Board of Superviaors will be deci~hether to phue out the affonlable requlrement of th• county hot•tdng e ement from the preeent 25 percent to zero percent in 1989. Thia phase-out should not be undertaken. The need fOC' lower lncorne affordable houmingla even greater now than in 1979 when the program waa fint instituted. Moreover, Orange County la projected to arow, which will mean more jobs in all income brackets. Bu\ without a mandatory affontable ~ prosram. there will not be a correeponding powth In the number of 1ower lncome housing unit.I. What does all of th.la mean? .. It mMN that there wm hot be an adequate number of affordable boualna unlta located near Orange County jobs .. Conaequqently, thl• wlll mean more people commuting greater distances, with the resultant inc:realM ln traffic ~and air polluUon. We can onlr hOpe that OW' county officials wU understand that the provialon for .Uardable boullna la 'an e11entlal ln1recllent to tntefll1ent PlanninC· RANDA BISHLA WI .. ... ,. ,. I• .. d 1. ' [ ~ . .. ' '"' ., ~· •. , Insured MoneYMarket Savings . Pays Higher Rates Than the Money Funds At 1st Nationwide Savings, we give you more of what you want ... high interesl* on every dollar month-in and month-:out. And your account is fully insured for absolute safety. You can move up to high money market interest at any 1st Nationwide Savings office for as little as $2 ,500 initial deposit. Fully Insured to s100,ooo. Unlike tha'l.minsured money funds, every dollar· ir;!!!!l!I!!!!!!!!!~---• in your Insured Money Market Account is fully f'g ... , ..... 1C insured to $100,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, an agency of the US J Government for absolute safety. ,......,...'-.__c.. --------------- ............. llOQDOO Total Liquidity You can make deposits and with- drawals without penalty any time you visit one of our offices. You can also write up to three checks and make three automatic transfers per month . Plus a Free VISA Card (iii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiii) Why should you pay a bank for a Visa Credit I J ''~M'm'"'' Card when 1st Nationwide Savings will give you one free? That's Right. When you open an Insured Money Market Account we'll 'tOOO 1 " iaq give you a Visa Card with no annual fee~ Does your bank or money fund make the same offer? Income Tax Preparation at Special Discounts Every year, qualified customers have enjoyed substantial discounts on income ~r~.,, tax preparation. This year, you can, too! It's easy to qualify: discounts as high •=7!'.-__,~ as 60% are based on your savings account balance with 1st Nationwide Savings. Call today to get all the facts and schedule your private Jppointment. •If ycur belance ~below '2.!500. you~ S.M" lnterwt comoounded dllly •"VIN SIJbfec1 IO credit IPPl'OYlll 1ST NATIONWIDE SAVINGS A Federe4 Sevingl llnd Leen~ ...... °"' •1 ... I I I I I - I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I . I I I -I I I . I I I I. ••• I I •• I I I I I Or"'91 COMt DAJLY PILO!IThur~y. ~ 27,, 1N3 At ~~ .. Jnterest • ..Absolute Insured s etv. Unlike the Sweep Accounts, every dollar in your Insured Market Ra7ichecking Account earns high money market rates* and is fully insured to $100,000 by FiSLIC. So why settte for an ok:t fashioned no interest or low interest bailk checking aocount. ' . . Free Checks PlusNo Monthly Service Charge. You can open your Insured Market Rate Checking Account for as little as $2,500. And when you do, we'll give· you your first 200 personaliz~ checks free .. Anct·, as long as you , . . I maintain a minimum balanoe of $500 in your acoount. there is no monthly M service fee. Pl.usAFreeVISACard Why .should you pay a bank for a Visa Credit Card when 1st Nationwide Savings will give you one free? Thats right. When you open an Insured Market Rate Check- ing A1ccount we'll give you a Visa Card with no annual fee!'* Does your bank or money fund make the same offer? Oftr 140 08ices Coast to Coast As one of the nations largest savings and loans, 1st Nationwide ~~lVings was th«:t first to have offlcea ooast to.coast. So no matter where you travel in California, Florida or New 'rork, you'll find us close by to meet your flnancilal needs. . lnformaUon Center, O.pt. 8G4, Pueblo, Colo. 81008. • RUF.FELL1 S · UPMOLSTHY ••ct 1111 _. .... 1921 tMPC)I IUD • . COSTA ~IA-14a.ll~ ...... ~ ......... uct LIQlm WAUPAPER &.apiji Dellps ~----•l'Olet. GrMt~lmOMy nwker -.....,., mot.,1, ~tltc.IOIKProftt . ......... 12 ..... greeter potentlel. All ......... ~­•to.aoo. Cell Mt. ~et: 966-1609 Register now for a free drawing to be held February 25 .. ssooo Gift Certificate a»SINa.AL EYEWEAR Fashion, Service and Craftsmanship, when you put appearance above other considerations. WHIN ELIPHANTI , FIGHT, ITI THI GRAii THAT IUF,IAI. FAICAN PROVERB Aviation. ground I classes offered ~ ,.. ... ~~ ,... ~~ 12•• ININIEI, THIE LIFE NOT TO IT .WILL CATCH :ntE LIGHT. ANON ...... 1 F40-CW coot cent lamps. reg. 1.99 I! --" speech by Winston Churchill is one of the rarest bOoks in the collection ' " little hooks~ • •"' 'fhey're big hobby for Judge Goldstein 1: STEVE TRIPOLI -..0.-, .......... Fint let's dispenee with any puns that may ~to mind about light reading or short stories. ~ Leonard Goldstein's books are both light and a)Jort, but only in the physical .ense. And the fact tijat he can fit 20 years of book collecting into a ~um-size drawer doesn't make his hobby any l4!ifl serious. ~ Goldstein, a Newport Beach resident known t6 many as an Orange County Superior Court JUdie, collects mirtiature books. To many people ~t may conjure up images of a thumb-size comic bOok in a Cracker Jack box, but Goldstein's miniatures are as different from those as a Qut.enberg Bible is from this week's TV Guide. !· There's World War I-era copy of the Koran, a1Ul containing the tiny ring with which Muslim ~diers attached it to a chain around their neck.a. \ll(ith ita leather cover that includes a strap and is ~t-Of ~1 old family Bibles. All at an ~a half higb by an inch wtde. Or the UM5 volume containini Franklin Rooeevelt'a inaugural address of that year, only miniature ever honored by American hers on their annual list of the 50 mostly artfully crafted books publlabed. , Othe:n tnclude ~ from tbte·wrltinp of Abraham Lincoln; "Slleiley," an A.C. Swinburne · firat published in miniature; an examination historic American flags and ''Thomaa Jefferaon Science and Freedom.'' There are more than in all. ~ Though not a widely known hobby, collec:ting ~ture books is more than just the paalon of ope Orange County judge. In a speech on the bject last week before the Orange County Book ety .(of which he is co-president), Goldstein ol miniature book collections he has 8eel'l rWnberini 5,00Q. volumes. "' And Goldstein's involvement in the hobby ~1beyond collecting -he already baa ~bed one miniature book and plans to wblish l He said he received his i.mpiration for bliahing from the late Achille St. Onge, a 9al88C:huaetts paper factory worker who la rhaps the greatest modem ~ture book blisher. . . St. Onge, who died in 1978, published 46 ture volumes over a 43-year period. So great waa St. Onge'• dedJcation to publlahing only the finest quality mlnlatures, acoordina to Goldstein, that he destroyed all but a handfw of copiee of his fourth book becau.e he waa not pleaeed with them. St. Onge did not realir.e at the time that his action would make that volume, a "°PY of Thomas Jefferaon's inaugural add.rt!98 that originally sold for $3 or $4 the mo8t expensive and sought-after modem miniature. Goldstein said he knows of none of the approximately 30 IW'Viving copies that are for sale, but he said the as~ price foe one would be about $1,200. Goldstein WU determined' to pay tribute to St. Onge, who was his friend for nearly 20 years, with his first publlahing effort. The book, which came out in 1980, ls a reprint of a 1974 New Yorker magazine tribute to the late Duke El.lington. Entitled ''Duke E1Ungton Remembered.'' Goldstein considers it bJa proudest pc II Millon. He said It WU a fittina tribule to St Onge beanlle both E1l1ngton and St. Onae were men of hWnble ~ whoee excellent artistry ple11ed pre.tderi~ popes and OOiMIOft people. ' Goldst.ein la very picky about the qualJUea that make• aood mfnfaun, qualities he •YI St. Onge ~·~that man1 oiher' publlltwn an!J infrequen mMch. Critiquln& his own , Goldstein points to boob with rounded hllcka, even pages. quality and paper, neatly hand-.wn btndinp and "ar1lully done" leather coven as the better examples. tven when much quality la achieved It is only the end of a publishing proce11 that normally takes one to two years, Goldstein la.id. Would-be publllhen m'-Wt tint 9eC\U'e rights to print the material, since most of It is not original. The book must then be designed peper ancl cover material choeen and a hard-to-fu;d bookbinder engaged. It all costs money, aDd the cost ls reflected in the price of the book. Tbouah St. Onge'• early ed.idons aold for ju8J a-ff!W OOUan in-the--1~ and 40s, Goldstein a.id a quality miniature now 008tl a minimwn of $15 and can run ''into the hundreds." Goldstein's Ellln,U>n book, which ii still for sale, .ells (Of' $25. Profit la not a consideration, the judae said, as most efforts yield profits of a few GettlnlJ a count of opponent•' handa helps finesse. See Goren, B2. Judge Leonard Goldstein shows off part of his collection of 11\iniature boob hundred dollan at best despite the effort. Miniature books are by no means a 20th · century phenomenon. Goldstein said such books existed prior to the 15th century invention of movable type. In their earliest daya, when any book was a ppa1c1•1e!9•1ii'on largely limited to =ty or the clergy, the small size of books was ~pa dictated by the cost of materials, their portability and their often peraonal use. Many early mlniattll'9-wen ~ in nat:w'e, GoJdatein said. and they were booka that by and large were for the "wealthy, mobile and literate'' minority. In th~ five centuries since "every subject lmqinable," Including pomosraphy, has been toucned in miniature vol~ he tald. Though there ls IOl1le ~ment, the purest miniature book purists claim that a true miniature ls never more than 2 ~ inches tall. Goldstein said he is content to call books up to three inches tall miniatures also. Books that can be read without magnification are Goldstein's prefettne:e. He said the smallest type liz.e that be read without tnaiJUfication ia four-point type, which is l~ than half the me of the ll>-point type you're reading now. Goldstein said that "90mething ~bly attractl\le"' draws people to miniature boob, but it's .ometh1nfc be can't explain. He theorized tMt the attnction -and the larger phenomenon of aitnction to all th1np mlniature -ls a throwback to the feelings of aecurity most people remember when they were small themselves. I . . .. r: . : . 81 Orange Ooe1t DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, January a?, 1113 rnillWffi~rnmrn~ ,-~~ GOllN ON lllDGf BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF North-South vulnerable. South deal1. NO&TH •Ak8 t:::i A87 0 AQt •KtU WEfT • EAST •QJ'151 •• , ~u ~1ouo 0 .110984 0 u ., •Q1t2 SOUTH •IOU <:> "QJ 0 1'7t • AJ105 The biddln1: S.•tll We9' N~ Eut 1 • P ... 1 0 PaM I NT P ... INT P ... P ... P ... Opening lead: Jack or o. ' When you have a two way finease to take, It helps H you can get a count of the op ponenta' hands. But you must do Jll you can to asaure that the count is as complete as po11lblt. The auction waa a matter of almple •rltbmetlc. After South bad ahown a balanced hand vf 18-16 poln\1 with hl1 one no trump rebid, North added In his 20 polnta, came up with enough (or 1lam and wuted no time In blddlna It. Becaute of the unfortunate duplication In hearts. there are only ten fast trick•. The only place for declarer to develop two more trlcka 11 In the club suit, and to do that declarei: will haveto find th~ queen of clubs. Ir declarer wins the dia· mond and cashes out all his winners, he will learn that West started with five diamonds and tW1> heart.a and that Eut began with Clve hearts an~ two diamonds. However, he will have no way of knowing the distrlbu· tion or the black suits. la the club finesse. therefore, a pure guess? Not to an ex ert declarer. He will correct the count at CNlffl ll trlok two b7 duckln1a1padel Now when he caehea hl1 wln· nan, he wUl .Alto cUMovar that Ea1t 1tarud with two 1pad11, which placH 'f e•t with fivt 1padt1. That mean• that twelve ot Weal'• card• are accounted tor, to he mu1t hold exactly one club. Now the play In the clut> 1ult 11 an open book. Otclarer ca1he1 tbe kins of club• and take• cart to JeUlton the jack ot clUb• under It. Whtn the queen doe• not drop. declarer run1 the nine of cluba, and he can 1tay In dum· my to repe11t the flneuel HavtJffitte• ........... te dHble trHble't Let Cwlea Q.,.. lat1p J•• a.. 7ovwa7danwpt11t .... of DOtJBLES for ,.MIUH ud &r &ak .. -.t. Fer a copy tf laJe DOUBLES booklet, Mod tl.85 to "Gorta·Dt.a.le1, .. care of W1 ••••paper, P.O. Boa 251, Norwood, N.J. 076". Make elaeekt payable to New1paperli0okt. -- By PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna.Beach , Allll l.AllDEIS DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was interested in the letter from the woman who signed heraelf, ''Married to a Nut in Cleveland." He bought porn magazines and aent away for rubber underwear. You said this was no reason to divorce an otherwise stable and responsible man -that he had a rubber (etish and she should consider herself lucky he didn't pester her to join him. Your answer didn't go far enough. That wife needs to get a three-way conversation going. A therapist or counaelor should talk to them both and explain that it is not such a terrible thing. The wife oug~t to become enlightened and accept this benign oddity. I am a rubber fetishist, married 35 years. My fetish has come up only twice during our marriage and both times it created a crisis. We would have been much better off had we discussed it openly many years ago. I didn't ask for this fetish. I've had it since I was four years old, when I became enamored of my mother's rubber apron. fdost people who have fetishes think they are freaks or a little crazy. A frank diacussion with an understanding wife would enhance the marriage, not threaten it. -SANE IN VIRGINIA DEAR VA.: I appreciate yoar fraatne11, ud 10 will otlaen. Tba.a.ks for 1Jaarlu1 your feeling.a. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You've printed several letters from the wife to The Other Woman. Now, will you please reverse the procedure? DEAR WIFE: So you have found receipts for gifts your husband has bought me? A bottle of perfume. A negligee. A silk scarf. Big deal. You have his name. You bore his children. You live in his home and share his bed almost every night. He takes you to lovely parties and on exciting trips. You will live out your years together and have the dignity of being his widow. I Will have a pain in my heart. Forever. Who has the better deal? -A FOOL IN LOVE DEAR FOOL IN LOVE: Your message Is a powerful one. So wise up, already. • DEAR ANN LANDERS: The letter from the mother in California who was upset beCause her 15-year-old daughter lnsisted on baking henel.f in the sun hit me betw~ the eyes. It tounded li~ an echo of my own mother's vok:e. ,,.,..---------- - When I waa 15, I wouldn't list.en to anybody. I. too, was a sun worshipper -never bothered with creams or lotions. Today I am not quite 30 and my neck Jooka like chicken skin. My face has deep creases and lines. Soon I will resemble a prune. I've triid all the hJgh-priced creams, moisturtz.era and lotions, but nothing helps. You don't have to atay out of the sun altogether -bvt remember, a healthy glow la a lot prettier than a deep tan. U you aren't worried about skin cancer, think about what you will look like in about 15 yean. -WISH I HAD LISTENED DEAR WISH: I'm ~d I dJd. Now.,-ii so destnacdve to a womaa 1 1kla H Old Sol. He 11 merclla1 aad 1111releatJD1. Aad ace Jae does Ma damage, tJaen ii ao way to udo It. Is alcoholism ruining your life? Know the danger signals and whac to do. Read 1he bookkt, "ll.lcohollsm -Hope and Help," by Ann Landers. Enclose 50 ~nts with your requet1t and a long, stamped, llelf~ envelope to Ann Landen. P.O . .8oK JIM, auc.,o. ru. 60611. rrw.ar. _J~ .. DID (March 21-April 18): V1W1'1 rnake1 comebtck; 1tatua quo ii 1ha.ken, chaftPI occur, outJ.ta an found tor cr.dv. ~"· TAUllUI (Aprtl 20-May 20): Refuae to be cajoled lnio pntmature mov. -dettne tennl, .. placm, people In realildc ~t. GEMINI (Ma1 21.June 20): What IHnMd nebuloue te now loomJna lar1e, la Hal, IOlld, taftllble. You 19' what~ wmt, but not In muuwr orlatnaUy ptann.ct. CANC&A (June 21.July H)=-You'll haw more rnoMy, a ~ buytns public, additional oudell tor Dl'Oduct en~. liBO (July 2~·Au1 . 22): Hl1hll1ht ~lf lldence, ~ty ... ltartl and .,. .... • ~. FOCua U.O on romance, senluallty. VIRGO (Aq. 23-S.pt. 22): You'll have lnllde track on tpecla1 project. Don'' become involved In pkture and ~tendal. LIBM (5ept. 23..()ct. 22): PoPUlarity lncreuea. 110Cia1 lldlvlty acceleratee, you'll" receive unuaual lnvltatlon to 1oclal event. • lllAA IOMIKI AT W IT'S END ICORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): 8pot1Jabt on ~, ~acand.lna 1n cammunlty, atilltty to adhere to ... 140 =8 (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Emphalia on comn&Ncatkln. travel. pu.b1f.ah1ns and pdndplel of tncernaUonal law. ; CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): t'Udllil beoo111ee available -hlahlllht productlvlty, home improvement and r'emember gift for apeelal annivenary. 4QUARH11 (Jan. 30-J'eb. 18): Malmaln low profile. Someone w.ntl ~ for nothbtc -you could be prime tarpt. a.eek Jep1 IDll*IWl'I. Pl8CE8 (J'eb. 18·Matth 20): SUck to pr.iCUca1 matten -bepl ~ pl'Oll'Un. Get rid of auperfluoua material. "On whether the NaUonal GeopaphJc la a new one or one thil I've Nld." "Don't nitmdr ... "Or what't"on the wall." "I get 4 polnta," I 11n1pped. "Now, what'• the item of clothlna that you bought for younelf .redef\tly? 1 aid it WM a shirt in 1972." "It w• a beh 1n une." Don't ask me why, but I cannot resist taking a ~"I ahould have remembered. You buy a belt marrtaae quiz. every blcent.ennlal." It'• atupld when you think about lt. What am I "There'• no need to be testy." going to do if I flunk lt? Drop out and 10 into real ood , estate? Change my major? Hire a tutor? Face it, I'm "Why don't )'OU WU\t me to get a g 9COl'e. too old to learn from my mlatakes and too tired to Wha~'WhJ:Ua::~T~~ 0f;~ me check some of my shop. He • · '"'--if kn ho And what-hannA lf.l a t terrlf' ~ Will-.--...8!!!\\'~n. re 1 'One. '-"-Y~_ow_w;..._;..._,1~ r_na .,. a-IC ·1 ,-::; narry on z.elfli'> a yes ' we live out the rest of our, lives bored out o our "What fa that? Some kind of a trick question to skulls flniahing one another 1 1entences? find out my age? Of course I don't know who Harry I muat tell you It was with 80me apprehension Von Zell fa" that I checked our answers on a quiz we both took · last week . ...---. "You remembered my deceased mother's "At"ieaat I know your mother's phone phone number and not Harry Von Zell?" number," I aaid. "That'• 4 points for me." "rm not into aports. You know that." "How could you know my mother's phone "Okay, how about t.hii one: 'Does your wife number when she's been gone eight years?" said my think Carol Burnett la funny?' I said yes. 'nlat'a 4 husband. . points for me." "It's her old one. I ai.o said that in a dentist's "Wrong. I don't think ahe'a funny. I think she's hu.t ........... 11." office, you'd rather read National Geographic than ,D~-stare at the wall." "I don't know you at all," he shouted. "It all depe.nda," he said. "And I don't know you," I shouted back. 'l()n what?" We'll give it another 10 years. POTENCY IS AN NPORTANT QUALITY ~: R. Ph. No medicine can be rolly effective ln c:urt.ng an iU.-. If It haa, by the time It reect-~ home, lost 1111 potency. JU.t • cenam foodll can deteriorate If not kept properly, 90 can medicioee. Some druga mull be refrigerated to retain tMir powen -such u ll'llUlln, oer1&ln eye dtOp and many type• of vitamin•. With othet" medklnm OJIOIUR to li1ht 11 the culprit and apedaJ contalnen m1.11t be UleCf IO keep u.tit OUL Every manufacturer of dru11 IUppllH UI with detailed INtl'UCtionl on how best IO prnerve the potency of their prodUCU.. and we carefully follow their direcUonL NOGUERON The Fortune . . . Truly a fashionable dress pump black patent with white calf crim, Navy calf with Bone calf ·crim also all bone calf. ·: J YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you neflt I delivery We will deliver promptly without extra charge. A greet many peoole rely on us for their health nttds. We welcome requests for dollvery Rrvlce • and charge accoun1a. ~ ----~Lili~ SHOES --- #~ FASHION ISLAND ... NEWPORT BEACH ... n9·9551 . . .4~ ~;ifft•r1~. cJr1l1r n 1f( ·<) _ A • '' ,,._.,. JRA-.,r .-.1S[ Educators who "care" for OiikJren · Hom~ · Pets · Ekkrl/ S . f _9nvif af ion _A pecia O~' The oorothY Jo Students 'J U '' To our uJJ for /irerarure • licem«l. bonded, insured SERVING ALL OF ORANGE COUNTY (714)' 752-6~28 ''SUPER SPECIAL'' .. 10o/c OFF ALL ASSIGNMENTS FOR SUPER BOWL SUNDAY ~~~to ~:ku~ . Lorraine Sutherland o/~,a;~ B a,,/ !(£[:; Ro,...tr ~ 714-760-0131 SIZES B thru 18 ~ To All ~y PaFs:om The Babr Bda T~ Come To S dao -Are Invite Dance tu . e Classes. ... Adult ExerctS Of MY A Celebration d Anniversary 3 3 r del Mar iocation The Corona At And h'g Dance h Year Teac in 50t At Studio h Jo Dance .~ The vorot Y 1 Hwy .. CdJn · 25 IS Eas6~J~l420 1983. 1 :00-3:00 P·~nJ day Jart . 29. fnuous Entert !! sa1ur 'rs ond Cont Refres h men Thank You , suPeo'' """ fi_ I peopl1 for 10" 1 Harbor atfO tO all you wo1~~: beauti}wl NewpO' frfendihip 1" 33 years. · c> . for tht past 2)o;ot'9, ,. JW•ll'°" By JODI CADENHEAD ot"hDllfrNe41 .... retail sho111 and • famwr1' r-.nch market. "Town Cc!n~r hal alway1 bffn Orange Cqut DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, Jenu91Y 27, 1113 th• °"' few y an, Mid lirowtr. ·Mortgage refinance .. lrvin community load ra hav ,..IM.!i.d •nlhualutkally to newa \hat construction of th lona.-awaited comn"Mtrclal 11etlon ot Univ rtlty Town Center will bfaln thla fall. nvftloned u an ll'ft that would Unk the unlveraJty and th lar1er Irvine comrnunJty," .. 1d lrvlno Mayor Larry Asran ''l think that the orla£na1 plan IJ about to Th• 250·room hotel will .,. operated by Granada Royale Hometels, baaed In Newport Beach. Tho reat.aurant will be lf'ued by Twohey'• and Unl\Ald Artlata will operate the five -screen theater . ,. . Irvin• Co. Pr11ident Tom Nltl .. n announced Wl'dneaday that coNtruction will begin thlJ year on the OO·ac:re, open-mall comrnerdaJ ~nter to be located on Campua Drive acroea frQm UC Irvine. be realized, however late." . An operator hu not be chOMn for the farmers' market or the retail shops coverina 16,000 ~.can mean savings .. Irvine Co. 1pokeeman Martin Brower aaid conatructlon h11 already begun on the realdentlal aecUon of Town Center, covering 240 a~res. The commercial hub will be located In the Ct>nter of the development, 1urrourided by two winga of homes and apartment.I. square feet . I I By SYLVIA PORTER Record numbers of n ew homeownen are now applyJ.na to refinance their mortgage loana - •umed only montha ago when Interest rates were at almost unbelievable peaka. With the sharp plunge In lntereat ratea since, a new . mortgage on a home can translate Into 'savings of thousands of dollars over a m o rtgage lifetime . Should you j.o i n t h e developing rush? What Porter are' the pi tfalla to know and avoid? There'• no dlsputins the trend. Thtt Federal Hol!•illg. ·Administration estimates that between 30 percent and 40 percent of new applications recen ti y have been from homeowner.s who want to refinance. Since September, the ·FHA has been receiving record numbers of applications. Say you bought your home with an FHA mortgage when rates peaked at 17 ~ percent in September 1981. New FHA mortgages are at 12 percent. That means nuge amounts of doll.an over 30 years. M onthly payments on a $100,000 conventional mortgage at 18 percent over 30 years total cloeie to $1,508. The same loan, at 16 percent, costs almost $1,345. Refinanced today at 12~ percent monthly payments would plummet to about $1,087. Getting a new mortgage to replace your high-interest one won't be cost-free, nor will it be easy. But you can do it, if you decide the hassles are worth It. It's difficult to generalize across a collection of state laws · and institutional policies, cautioru .$.JamK W . Christian, ..c1l.4ef ~. economist for the U.S. League. of ~; Savings Institutions, but the ~ following guidelines apply. ~ Go in person to the institution ~ that holds your mortgage and ~ investigate all costs. Are there :.· prepayment penalties and, if ao, S: what are they and how much ..;; will they add? Some state laws ~ prohibit prepayment penalties; ~ others ban them after the ~ mortgage is a specified number of ~ years old: still others have < different rules. ~ Prepayment pena!ties can total ~ slanlficant sums. A 2 ~rcent prepayment charaeii to a $100,000 mortaage taket $2,000 out of your bank account immediately. Calculate the coata of refinancing at the aame institution. Usually, you can get a better refinancing deal with the current lender. But shop around: "I've been lookina forward to thla alnce the unlveral\y was opened.'' said UCI obancellor Daniel Aldrich. "In terma of recreation our student.a have had to go to Newport Beach and Santa Ana. At long la.st there will be a Town Center." The first phase of conatruction on 16.0 acres calla for a 10-atory hotel. a multi-acreer\ movie theater , a family-style restaurant, 1,,000 square feet of The open-landscaped mall will be connected to the university by a foot bridge. Coruitruct.lon will be completed on the first projecta within six month.a and the initial phase should be done in two years. The remaining 34 ac,.es of commercial development will be completed In various phases over Plana for the development of Town Center have been dl1eussed since 1960 when the lrvlne Co. donated 1,000 acres for the constructi on of the unJvenity. But the commercial center was delayed while the giant development firm turned it• attention toward building hornet' In Irvine and Newport Beach. S.G.P.A. Architects, baaed in San Diego is designing the pro j e.c t, des c r I bed as a sophisticated urban setting with stucco, wood and glau. Tom Nielsen Will there be a second credit check on you, as well as another title aearch? If you haw an FHA mortgage. for instance, that's less than a year old and ia for new construction, the FHA won't reQ!ilire a new apprai.sal. -Ask with ut.rncst care what closing fees and other charges to anticipate. In general, closing costs are lower the second ~e around. The institution knows your payment record -and the prt>cess should be quicker and -.--.·RAlll CDlllTY 1us11111.-~------------. Fluor to work on Great Plains project leu costly to you. -~ -Once you've collected all your figures, visit one or two other institutions where, of course, you will be a new applicant . Compare the commitments of each institution and closing fees on a new mortgage. Compare all costs with your current payments. What does the new mortgage look like now? -Amortize whatever prepayment penalties and closing costs come to (plus all other fees) over a period of time. A key factor: How long do you plan to stay in your home? U you expect to live there another 10 years or more, the expenses will be worth it for many of you. But if your plans involve selling and movtng 'OD within a few years, these new costs may not offset the reduction in monthly payments. Another point: The longer you plan to stay in your home, the smaller the reduction in your mortgage rate you need ..i.e-consider in refinancing. < A Fluor Corp. of Irvine subsidiary will perform technical support service• on the Great Plains Gulflcatlon project, the first commercial-scale coal-to·gaa plant In the United States. The contract was awarded to the Advanced Technology Division of Fluo~ Engineers, Inc. by the U.S . Department of Energy's Chicago Operations office. Great Plain.a Gasification Aaaodates, a consortium of energy companies, Is building the plant in Mercer County, N.D. Fluor will provide financial auditing services to determine econom ic effects on the project during the course of construction. F1uor will alao 8llilt the Department of Energy in monitoring the overall progrea of the facility. 'The cost of the project la estimated at over $2 billion. Value of the contract to Fluor was not dlacloeed. Fluor Corp. serves the energy and natural resource industries. - • On Saturday from 8:30 a.tn. to 2 p.m. at the Anaheim Marriott Hotel, the firm of Coil, Ba11hack and Slater will ~ sponlOrfne the "Shaping the New Year" Conference. Thii all--day conference la planned to aaaiat women tackle those famous ''new year" reeolutiona and will focus on the areas of (:afeer and profe.ional development, wardrobe development and the total image. Keeplns with the theme, An.a CoU, co-author of "The Little Red Boo," Jane Ballback and Jan Slater will conduct workahope that will help participants "shape" their professional development by analynng skilla and career potential and by developing a professional network for themselves. . • • • J oining the partners of CB&S wfll be Betty Nethery, president of Uniquely You, a firm of color and fashion COJUulting, and Dr. Bobbe Sommer, a leader and •Peaker in the field of weight contr ol, whose workshops will ~eature . ..., 28,000 new GTE uaen professional image through fashion and wardrobe planning and health care. For further information, call CB&S at (714) 658-233. Cochrane Chase, Livingston & Co. of Irvine haa restructured its buainesa-to-buaineea group as a result ol major account acquisitions in the medical aclence and high-tech fields and created a separate Med Bio Science Group. "Med Bio Science ia a highly ~•Uud field and we wan' · to gjve it a clear identity within u a ligJl to clients and potential clients of our commitment to the med bio ldence market," says CCL prelident Lyu Llvta&a&oll. "We are abo irestructuring our Bualneaa-to-Bualneaa Group to include computer /high-tech/Industrial accounts, and plan to aggressively pursue new busi.ne9 in that sector." Mercury Savings, -Orange County baaed federal atock savings and loan aaociation haa announced that ita unaudited, after-tax, adjusted eamingJS for the fourth quarter of 1982 were ,2,146,000 or 52¢ per share, aa compared with a loss of $2,528,000 for the fourth quart.er of 1981. Leonard Shane, chaianan and chief executive officer of Mercury. pointed out that the resum_ption of profitability followed a aeries of loss quarters, and attri)>uted the turnaround to reduced l.ilterest rates, increased lending volume, higher loan sales activity and increased volume and accelerating activity in all portions of the Associatlon'a operations. Dennla M. BlackbllJ"D ofNewport Beach haa joined Karl Video Corp. of Newport Beach as chief operating officer. In hi.a new post, Blackburn will direct overall operationa for KVC. an independent producer and distributor of home video J>l'OiJ'Ulll. Blackbum moves to KVC following 10 years at KOCM-TV radio in Fashion bland, Newport Beaeh; the l.ut four as vice president and general manager. Finally, what about truces? The tax credit you get on mortgage· payments may outweigh any savings in monthly payments on a new mortgage, suggeJits Karin Hill, staff vice president at the California Savings and Loan League. How big should be the percentage drop in interest rat.ea before you refinance? Some experts say two to three points, others suggest four. All conclude, though, in toda)''s climate, refinancing your mortgage can make real sense. Figure it out for yourself. A lllrge in business activity In the fourth quarter of, 1982 proved a boon to General Telephone Co. of California, which aerves Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach. The company added 28,000 new phone lines during the ·year. bringing the total number of customer lines"io 2.5 million. BENSON &HEDGES CONTINUES ••• FEATURING THE FINEST IN UPHOLSTERED LINES Stanton Cooper • WoOdm•rk • Vangu•rd •Drexel tferlgge • , M•rge Caraon •nd more • all on sale lncludlng special ordera • 15 o/o to 25 o/o Off Only 6 mg yet rich enc:>lJ&h to be called deluxe. Regular and Menthol. Large aetectlon on dlaplay. Ready for Immediate delivery Open a box tod~ ' ) I I • Warning, The Surgeon General Hes Determined Thi! Ci~tte Smoking ls Olngerous to Your H111th. .... ~~ WE'RE CHANGING OUR NAME! From now on. wt"'ll tx· kno\\11 :.i. .. Fir~t Amt"l"i<:an Bank & Tru~t Co .. N.A. -FirM Amt:rkan Bank for ~hort Durin~ tht: nt"XI ~i xty lo nint.:t~ liar ... rou'll Ix-sedng our nt"\\' loJ.:o rt·pl:an: tht· familiar "LNB." We're tht: samt· hank. with tht· ~amt" <:ommitmt"m 11> pt.·r~onal M:nict: \\'t "\'l' alway~ hall -all \\'t."rt: t·h~m~in~ i.' tht' name. Whr the: change? &-<:au~ in 198.~ W\'.' ho(X.' to ix-gin cxpandin~ our ~rvkc area and First Amc:rkan Rank & Tru~t Co .. :"\ A i~ lht: namt: wt:\·t: <.:ho!'l('n t<>-JU'O" "ith. ==-::::111<1 fl~ AN1t:l;:::RK.:::::~=~ &ANK(:iTRUST .e , First American Bank & Trust Co., N.A. 310 Broadway. LAguna lka~:h. <.A 9265 I (714) 497-M 11 Ml:mht:r F. I) l.C. Soya and glrla Join the 760 DAILY PILOT carriers who earn great money and go on great trips to Oianeytand, Knotts Berry Farm, Magic Mountafn and Sea World. If dettverlng papera Isn't your bag you can ltlll Join the DAILY PILOT team and go on all the trips, earn cash and prizes by working Just a few daya a week for a couple boura each day aollcltlng new eubecnptlons with a DAILY PILOT dlltrlct manager. Our managers are forming Cf9W9 now. Put aome fun and profit Into your ltfe, call Circulation at 642-4321 and tell them you want to Join the DAIL y PLOT team. Dally PHal. Classified advertising Is your • best choice for help in selling the items you no longer n eed. It's Quick and inexpensive. .. 0 I lbday. all 'airfares are the same. One airline announcea a low fare, and the rest saamble to match it. . · Western beli~ves it's time ~ stop the fare wars and start taking care of the people who keep us in buainess, you. That means ft're going to auaran· tee no one beats our fares "'tervice in the West. WESTERN SERVES 111~'.WBST BETTER THAN ANY OTHER AIRJ..INE. Every day, Western afvn yqu more fti1ht1 to • ~ cities in the ~t than any0ne. Not just to the 'D: ~ ff~ -~ • m fJ :1 NASDAQ SUMMARY i m. =YI N&W VOttt< tAl"l -.... , Kllw -· s· I tllit<e...-r 1'9cu .._._. ..,. NASO. t "-v ....... ew,....a..1 S-'6 MCI 1.,... tSIMI ~ •141 -1'i I I u -~·· --.... , ... ~ 5 •·· .• Ml't ,_, +I II _,. -• , 111't N +"I ,...,.., ' lllWo -1411 ~ ~--• ·~ ·~-~ -;'1: uj . I E~ · :r,.m .-m •'"' '~ .t(; -.-ti ·~ + 141 . l !!.'!! =~· .. :~ .... ~... ·t1" I m Ff;;; E"~. . ................. .. fm ~ ................. .. .... .................... . ,.................... .. f1jj,"'7,,,. = ...................... t M ;~ !M 11 T .... I..... ... .... .. ........... SUI,,_ tS ~ ~ C>9L:l"A .. .. - WESTERN'S WW FARE GU\RA.NTEE. big cities like Los A•la and SeattJe/'Ja.:oma, but to the small cities like Cupe!; Wyomina, and Butte, Ptjontana. Wherever ~.um flies in the continental US., includina Aluka, there will never be a lowtr fare than oun. Guaranteed. If you find lnOthtt major airline's fare ii ~ llrin, it to U1 aqd we'll meet (If beat i~ (\tl'll ltlf you &bi •me fare with the ume qualificationa. u '&Ofts as our supply of low fare seall lasta.) •Bufd 0n com,etldw li:hedulea rill oUI« ... 81t11nft, • &iftned bf dw CA 8. Every mominr. we have more fint flilhta out to more cities in the ~. And when tbe \\feet wants to IO Eut, we can tale yoll to New ~ .OlicaF, or Wahm.tonf BaJtimore. At ~em Airlina, we know u well u '°'1 that all low farea are created equal todt)t We~ out to prowe thM all airliw aren't Eapecially when your name la V*Mel n. . J • l ,. : . ( ' • ;- Economy better · despite steel loss? . .By TM .U1ela ... Pna Althouch &.thl•h•m Steel Corp. J)Oli.d the lar191t quarterly io. ewr reported by a U.S. ~ and oU cotnpWet lbow.t dwtndllna Pt'Oflta bec9&.m of the aJobal o'1 tlut. adm1nlltraUOn oltJdala IUD believe the economy II~ up. Treaeury Secretary Donald T . R•1•n eald Wectn.day 1.Mt the nation hal •'turned the comer" to ~i.i announced WedneedMy It loll fl.15 bllllon In th• fourth quarter of 1912. That surp ••d the pnvtoUI QUanerly km of $1.01 b'1lion POiled by lncemadonal HarvelciT Co. in It. o.mJ 1882 lourth quarter. Bethlehem, the nadcn'1 flCIOnd • ..,.._ mel producer, Jon fl.'7 b'1JJon foe all of 1982. The A.mtrk:an 1ron and Steel IrwtStui. Mid lteel productiQI\. hit a lie-year low ln 1982 whUe lmporg took a record hlch market thate. The trade 8"0UP .ad producdon lalt year totaled 72.9 m1Won net tom of raw eteel, compared with 12().8 m1llJon tom in 1981 and' 66.6 m1llion tom in 1046, the prev1oul low. }obleBB clai~ dip WASHINGTON (AP) -F.int-Ume clahna for unemployment benefitl by jobJem Americanl totaled 491,000 fu the week endJna Jan. 15, the lowest f:Wnc level lince September 19«°1, the Labor Depvtment Mid today. The new applJcaUanl for benefi1S wider state-nan' unemployment oompenaatlon prosrame were 71,000 below the level ol the pnvloua week. according to the eeMOnally ad.Jutted filurel. It was the lowest filing level llnce f 7~.ooo placed fint-ttme cla1ma for benefiu ln the week endinl Sept. 19, 1981. The relatively low tiling Jevel teeme to indicate that layor& by Amet1can ~ have hit a peek. and that while ..ne 12 million people are listed as unemployed, fewer people are joinina the joble9s rolla. Just over half of the .ome-12 million unemployed Americana are qualified to recei~e unemployment benefits. Stations penalized LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ten stations accu.ed of aeJJ.in8 regular P*>llne at premium prices have been a•e•ed $32,000 ln dvtl penalUe.e and fl0,000 in legal fees in a consumer protection eult. Deputy DJatrici ~ Richard P . Kalu.tian and Audrey B. C.OWN Julius Nuch 81Mi the 10 stations of eelling regular guoline as pttmfum and of aelling cheaper branCla of guoline as Tex.co or other name brands. Photo lirm ousted LOS ANGELES (AP) -One Hour Photo Inc., which claimed to have pioneered the quick film ~lopinc ~with ltm Fromex One Hour Photo Sysiema. haa been ordered lnto liquJdaUon proceedinp by a bankruptcy iada. ' • · However, '6e 'Company •Y• operations will continue at Fromex franchbetl located mainly in Southern California. ........ Dec ..... ~11' WHAT AMEi DI> DOW JONES AVERAGES w.·v~J..,.....~ ...... --.. .._a.. 09 ..... "!!;_'t.,WUI "'7.JI 1€~ T"' *if ltl M-1.a ! f.: •n.61 fUAI ti 1 .~ ~ ..... !' ..................... 1. ,,.. ...................... a.• ~ ...................... , .. ... ....................... n.en. AMEllCAN LEADERS ,. ' • I 1 • • l 1 NJi!W YOHK lAP) Bu1lne11 leader.' rl'actlon \o Pruldtnt Reaaan'• latt'al 1•c:onomlc propout. wu mixed, with 10M apolaudina h1a l)C'OflOIM.lll u "wl.e" and ''lnnovatlw" but otht'rt tlndlna few e,hanaee lhat would hlPp c-ul the feder11l defldt and 1park rerovt>ry ttchnoloaical advanc1a. 1-'ew r;~,_,,of &h• National A11oclaUon of M oClo•li•~· prt1ldtnl of ''' Manut.cturen, who NJd the tDMCh llf'Cttot'Uc tnduetriee ~Uan. MJd 1howed "• comprehen1lve and Reeaan'a Plldet JnMl'UI "w.'U be mGl'9 lnnovltJw Mt of ~ to NltOre ~rH1ivtly allowed to pureue economic 1rowlh, Improve our ~ t.radt " comptUUver.-Mid pro¥idt Jobe.'' ikt Mcl(""ivitt, director of the U-.8 . Chamber of Commtrct Waahl"-1on ottlc:. of th• NatJonal Chairman Robert 'nKJmpmon Mid \he FedtradOn of Independent Buei"'9, a propoeed •oendina tree11 "on much of One of \he propoall ln Roqan'1 State of the Unlon 1peech, a 1tandby e>tcile tax on oil, drew a predktably crlUcal responao from the oU lndu.stry which callt.'d the plan "un1ound policy" that. could raise oonaumer fuel prices. amall-bulbMll tNdt poup, •id he the federal buq9l " • 1118\lfkaftt •"P WU entow"apd by the ........ t'teeU toward Ndudnc the defldt.tt tor aovernm.nt lncttna tht way to Jack Cerllon.~chJef economJat at the recovery. "Oovernmtnt baa 1ot to NaUonal ~Uon of Reeltora. aa.ld brine tnteawt rat.ea down red~ he Rta1an'• propoaal "tor a ttdtral apendlna," be 11ld. "Ht (Reaaan) 1pendtn1 frtlle Umhtn1 total But a trade group repre1entln1 technolo~y companies cheered t.he president a promise to aup rt U.S. pve U1 new hope!' •Ptncllna powth to no more thin the Rea1an alao found 1upport fi:om powth of tnfiadon la wile." Bu& he Alexander B. Trowbrtdp, ~nt it.> aaid that "'not ~ aavt.,.. are Mt.IC NOTIC£ CltP MIA YOU AM .. DIPAULT UllDIR A tec>TICa Ot' TitUIT9H' IAL.a DUD OP ~ DATID llAY .. On Febfuaty 10, 19M et 11:00 -. U9ILUt YOU TAICI AC"TIOM • In. FIRST AMERICAN TITLI! TO ...OTIICT You.t PllOl•n , l ~SURAN CE COMPANY , • rT MAY II ICK.D AT A ~ Cellfomle eotpor•tlon, M Truttee, I AL I . I' Y 0 U MI ID AM « &-Trvtt" « lvb6111uted U"-ANATIOM OP TM1 MA,__ Tl\lll", ol th•I cett•ln OMd ol Ot' TMI NOCllDMG AQAMT Tru11 uecul•d by RICHARD Y~r' IHOUl.D COWYACT A LOHR, • 111erol1cf m•n. •nd LA record•d Augu1t 5, 11181 11 MOTICI OP,.....,... IM..I lnetrument No. 4553, In Book T ... Nil..,_ 141H, P•Q• 1439, ol Olllclel NOTICe IS HIM.IV ONIH.. tnet Re cord • o~ Oreno• Oounty1 on WMI I fll'J ~ t, 1'tS. • Celllornle, end purMi•nl to lh•I 9:00 o·~ e.m. of Mid dew, In the oertaln Notloe of o.lmutt thereunoer room H t H ide for conducting recorded October 8, 1982 u Tru.1ee'1 a.a..""'*' IN oMoee of lnetrument No 82-3!l3999. In REAL ESTATE SECURITIES 01t101e1 Alcorcfs of Mid County. w11 SERVICE, loceted et 2020 NOfth under end pur~enl to Hid Deed of llfoedw9y, MM 20t, In IN Qty ol Trvet Mil •t public •uc11on f« uen. Sent• Ane, County ol Orenoe. Stele lewM money ollhe United Stal• of of Cellforn I•. BENE,ICIAL Amwlee. • euhlef't cMc11 pey•ble MANAOliMENT COAPOMTION ~ lo Mid TF\ltl• dr•wn on e •Ille Of AMl!ltiCA, a ~OCWpoi8llOlt, neclon•I bank, • ••••• or federal .. duly appointed Truet .. under ~ union, or • 1t•te or lederel llnd put.uent to !he ~ ol .... HYlng• •nd lo•n u•oclellon 9()nltffed In thet ceneln Deed of domlclled In this 1111e, •• the m.in Trull executed by_ LAW"E~~~ 1ntrence to Flr•I Am•rlc•n Tiiie ALVAREZ end MAOOIE ALVAR""° 1'*"11~ ~pany loc•ted al 114 Hua'*1d end Wife. ~ June EHi Fiith St,...I, In lhe city of 89111• 2, 1980, In Book 13822 of OfllClel Ana, Celllornla, •II th•I right, 1111• Aecordl Of Mid ~ty. et P9GI llnd tn111 .. 1 conveyed 10 and now 1782. "'9cot<ler'• lnttn.tlMnt No. held by " undet tald Deed of TN91 344, by rH1on of • breech or In 1111 property 1t1ua t•d In H id· d«autl In peymenl Of perfOrmanoe County and St•le dMCrlbed ... of the obllgetlOne -.9d ~. PARCEL 1: Unit I .. lhown and tncludlng (h•t breach Of defmutt, d • 11 n • d o n t 11 • 1 c • r 1 • 1 n Notice of which WH record•d condominium pl•n recorded September 21, 1812, • Aeconlet'• February ~8. 1970 In Booll f30SG, ln•trumtf'lt No. 12-N2751, Will Pao• 1254 of Ottlcl•I Record• of SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE Orange County Cattlornle. HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, SALE PRtCIS 0000 THRU TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1181 ~In ...... ~ tobrtnl ~ defJdt and; ... ~r.u.it, to lOwer lnWrwt rac.." Ro1er B. Smith, chairman of General Motor• Corp., 1atd, "Wt .,.... that a~ b&.,...u.n effort ii NQWNd to Nduot the txVllOl'dinary bud1et deflclu that have bttn pn>~. CIMrly the tint priority rnu1t bt to re1aln eontrol of the ·~ lllde o£\he ~uation.'' J\eePI\'• J)l"08l'aml have no efftot on Wall-Street, aa.ld Alan C. Poole, a ltock snaai18' IU'a1-iat at the Jnftltmen& firm Laidlaw; Adame • Pa h . In N.w Yark. •-zv.n tf·all la-~ w... put throuah by c.e-L ?'t'll lt1ll MV9 ~ 1ir.- ............................... ................................ def~ WfiW tWI' hid/' ~ .... ~ In Wa1hln1ton, Mule J . ~-'ltecfy, executtv• vrce pre .. dent of tb• Mort1a1• Banun A.teoc&adon of Arrmlca, aid the ..-a-nt uoarrectJy ldentttt.d lnYlltor and .... t.en about future Inflation, but I don't think anY\hlna he la Dl'ODOlina wW alll)' th-OM fHn .. -re~arcfl tht ~deficit reducUGM.' alter Wrilton, dWnun of Ntw York·bued QdiDarp., a i..cun. t.nk holdine COlnJ'M)', MJd Retpn'• call kw I federal ~ fnmit WM ••a ....iat.mimt ol.-an old princtple," and that the ..... he adcli.-d W9N not .. bli a chanp • what I'd been led to bi!llfW.'' KRAFT UNFACED 6'" x 15" •· f. ,., •• ,.., ... ln•ulittlon PARCEL 2. An undlvld•d 50 lewful money of the UNt.d StaMI. petOM'll Int••• In and to Lot 1 of or • GUN«'• died! drewn on •' Tr.ct No. 10419. 11 1hown on • stet• or netlonel benlc, • ae.te Of mep recotded In Book 448. Pmgee ~ c:redl1 un6on, or• Male or 22 and 23 ot Ml9Clllaneoua M~. teoef .. ~end loen .i.oa.tlon record• o l Orange County, domldledlrlthl991ate,elpeyablellt Celllornl•. together with •II the time ol Nie, el rtgtlt, title end 1mptovemen1., thereon, excepting lnt...i held by II. M TN91-. Ill U-efrom condom!Num Unlit 1 end th•t rMl property lltu•te In Mid 2 locmted thereon County and St•te. deacrfb9d u 52"11'1" ...................... . H"1n" ................. •ts.ee eut llHUn!I .i cooing ams 11¥ "*" lnSulaUDn. "" N!llWf Ult lt·Walue Ult ~ Ult ~ lllJIRr. PA"CEL 3 ~ An exclual v• followa: ~t appurtenant 10 MCI\ unl1 Loi 99 Of TrlllCt 1713 •per "NIP for the uH •nd occup•ncy of -ded In Booll 51 P-e-11-17 of tho" portions ol 1h• rHtrlcted m..,.. • recofOed In U. oMcie of common ., .. dulgn•ted In th• th• County Recorder ol H id dKl•r•tlont ol r••lrlcllon• •nd County shown on the condominium plan for The etreet •ddreu or other Md'I unit. common cte11tn•llon of the reel The •Ir HI •d d reH or o I h u property herelnebow deecrlbed 11 common dHlgn•tlon of aeld purported 10 be: 830 Pine ~. property It purpor1ed to be. 254 E. Coe1a M-. Callfomla. 15111 St., No A. Coll• M-. CA The underalgned h•reby Said Nie wtll be med• without dl1c lelm• •II ll•blllly for any coven•nl or wur•nly, expreu or lnco<rec1,_ In Mid tlrMI edd,_ lmptled, 11 10 title. po ...... on or or other oommon deaiQl•liol1.-- encumbr9"CM to Nlllly the unpaid Said Mle wlll be made wllhOul balance due on the note or not• wur•nty, •xpreu or lmplled. aecured by Mid Deed ol Tru1I. to r•gmrdlng !Ille , poHeulon, or ·wit: 12,478.26, plus the lollowtog •ncumbra ncH. to Hll•fY th• utlm•ted co111, axpenHt and prlnclp•I bal•nce of 1he Note or md•anc.t 11 the lime of the lnltlal other obl!Qatlon NWred by Mid publlcellon of 1hl1 Notice ol Sele: OMd of "'fru11, with lntwMt and S7118.00. othef 1um1 •• provtct.d thefeln; NOT~ TO-~N"flTY o~ plua edvanc.e. " eny, under 1M YOU AM IN D£FAUl..T UNOlfl A t•mt lhefeol ahd ..__. on alCfl OHO Of' TMIST, DATU> AUGUST ldYlheee, and llW feee, c:Nrgee a. 11n. UN\.111 YO" TAKI and ............ TNMMMd~ ACTION TO P"OTICT YOU" ... "'*-0-....S by Mid Deed "" PflONJn'Y, l'T MAY U IC>l.D AT A Tru11. The to1el ernovnt of U ld fllU9lJC IALI. ~ YOU ••o AN obllg1tlon, lncludlnt r .. sonably UftlANATION Of' THa NAT\Me H tlm•ted fell, OhergH end Of' THe NOCHDINO AOAJNIT ~of the Trwtee, et the lime YCMI, YOU IHOUU> CONTACT A of lntlel lnltlel pvblbtlon ol "'" 'LAWTD. Nodoa. • M0.970.43. Oelad: Jenuwy 12, tees oei.d: JenuetY 17, 1913. FIRST AMERICAN TITLE 8EH9lCIAl MOT. CO~. INSURANCE CO . a ~ AMEAICA. M Truetee caat. Corp. REAL ESTATE SECURITIES JellfVINI L Lawrie SERVICE, a Cell. Corl>. Auttiorind Otflcet 119 ~ 114 E. FlfVI SI 0..1. , Pr-. santa Ai-. CA 92701 ~ N. oectwey, #208 {741) ~211 Santa Ai-. CA ~708 Publlatled Orang• CoHI Dally (71-4) ts3-A10 Piiot, Jan. 20. 27, Feb. 3, 19113. Publltlted Or~ Cout Dally ---~-~ Piiot. Jen. 20. 27. . 3. ·~ -Nil.IC NOTJC( PB.IC flJ11CE STAlWNT Of' UANDOHllOfT ---:==~=-=~:=.:-=---1 Of' UH Ot' fltC llTIOU9 ..,._ .. "1C'T1T10UI 8UIM .. MA• MAm 8TAT'lmWT HUNTl .. OTON HARBOUR The lollowlng penona -doing CLEANEM, 16431 Pacific Cout ~ -HIQhwey, 8unM1 a..ctl, Callfornle MASTER MASONRY, 27H1 90l42 P 11eo Berr•nce, S•n Jua n TM-fl~llloua bualneu n&me Oepilttano, Calif«nil 9'81.5--=c....-.;t-----referred to •bove wH flled In Keith JHon Ellloll, 27991 County on Febr'*)' 13, 1981. Peaeo 8arrenc•. S•n Ju•n SANO N SEA PROPERTIES. Caplttreno, Cellfomle 02875 INC . 1&431 Pmciflc eo..t Highway, Robert E. LH , 2521 Nor111 SU099t Beactl. Celttornt. I0742 OrMd Awnue. No. F, Sanw AN. ~ bum!-WU conducted by a Clllltonlla 92705 corpot&tlon. Thole ~ • conducted by • Dor_, L Ademt O--• pertnenhlp. Tlll9 8t11-' WU flled "'th the Keith "-Ellott County Cler1I Of Orenge County on Thia atatemen1 -flled wttti the ~emt>et 18, 1982 County Clerk of Orenge County on F15U74 Januety 3, 1983. Publl•h•d Or•no• Co ut Oelly NmO • Wll60HT Pllo1, Jmn 20. 27 F'eb 3. 10, 1083 Attonwra .. ~ 51~ ._._ ........... ----------800~ Nil.IC NOTICE Lo..-._..,~._, -----------1 ,.... ACnTIOUI 8U...... Pvbll9tted Ofaf191 Colet Dally ..... ITA~NT Piiot. Jen e. 13, 20. 27. 1983 Th• loftowlng person 11 ootng 142-83 bvalnesa M OPTO ASSOCIATES. 3101 8 P\BJC NQTJC( 9'111ol, S.,,t• Ana. Callfoml• 92704 ----------1 Fred J B•ldH ll, 3101 S It .. 8rlmtol, Santa Ana. C•llfoml• 92704 FtCTmOUI .,_ .. Thia bu•I-,, oonouct.CS by WI NA• ITA~ ~. The followlnO ~ ere doing Fred J 8.idMll butlMll u : tflhl 1tll1emenl WH llled wttn the N A T I 0 N A l J 0 J 0 8 A COOllty Clltll ol Ormnge County on RESEARCH PARTNERS. 4000 J-.iery 4, 1983 M•cArthur Blvd., Suite 8 20, F21D1411 Newport BMch, CA t2t80. Publlahed Or•nge Cout D•lly 8EAN, MOOS & GUYETTE. An Plll:lt Jal\. 8, 13, 20. 21. 1983 lnVMtment Oroup, 4000 MecAr1hufl 133-83 etvd .. Sutt• e20. Newpoft 8Meh, ----------CA tHeO. l'\a.IC NOTtCE INVEST~~NC .. 10 Momtno FICTTTIOUI _,....11 OIOrY OrM, • CA 92'116. . ..._ 8TATD9HT Tttlt buelneee II ~ by• TM lollowlng l*9one .,. doing llml1ed pen~ lnC. ~ .. , ~~.,, .. SEVEN Si:AS SERVICES INC Thil 11•temenl -fled Wftll d'-RIOCX.E YAQ!T 8ROl<EA8, I ,,...__., ,.. Or ,_ _ _...on c.ttfotnla corporation. 700 Lido County ..,_,. "' el'OI -"7 Parll Dfflle, Berlh 40 , Newport J_.,y 3• 1~· ,__ 8eec:t\. Cellfomla 92M3 Publl1"9d Ortnge Cout 0 = ~~ PMol. Jen, •• 13. 20. 27. 1~ .... n. ...._,.wee Ned with.,.._ ----------i County Clerk of Or11ng1 County on ~2 1, 11182. ,...,. '~llMd Orenge Cout Dally ........ Mio .. 13, 20, 27, 1913 140..Q GALVANIZED 4 " x 10· •ox Gutter _.,_.,.i10 IU•IL fKN-4 ••••••• MINERAL F~CED FIBERGLASS 11011 110o,ln11 •to•!' ~ yow roof against wtncl, rain or bl5tff1n9 sun. OI005f tan. White or t>rown. DELUXE SCREW DRIVE Gar .. •Door. o,,. .... -····· Automatk ngllt Clftal. ~etf rMl'5L PuSh 0nct tc ooen, tw1tt to cl05f. f~. R.UORESCENT 48'' SllOll 1.lglle lllStant start. l.llfttWll!lflt. Ofiy 2~ es. 100~ SOiid soti. f 8020. TUll!S not lndUOed. •••• RED CONCRETE •rick• .:.. • ·t~r-=r-:::::-::::-=====::::::::;J For JI atOWld home or I I patto U5f. VERSATILE DURABLE 4 'X B' SIB'' ,.,.relcl• Board •5•J1 GAL VANIZEO STEEL •ural Mailbox llDOtcl desltn IOots gooO ... adcls strength. • ••• Alumltun, lllaCl. wNtt • or 1rWn tvlDn. IC-1. ASSORTED .,,,,.,, •. ,,,. M*O ECONOMICAL AU PURPOSE "' ••' 112'' •llee~rock ·•·JI -- CONSTRUCTION OUAUTY 9216" LONG II'' xii'' -~·-99 ! USYTOREAD ,.•••rloclc ••''rallll •••• ~ In 1&tlls Wltfl SCUii NRln9S""' 16 lnehes. fl'\12. J'rom AP dlapa~ "°' 14A hero who alwaya/teemed lar•r than life" . . . "Biller than the 1une ti.elf" ... ''A man'• man" ... "A monumental fisure ln lntercolle1iate athletx." ... "'The beat that'• ever been" ... "The muter ooech!" The .t.ributet poured in Wectne.day, elCh eeemlnaly more &1owina than the 1-t one, aa the ttunnecl world of coUeae football tried to find the ~ worda to pay_ tribute to Paul "Beer" Bryant. who dled of a mMllve heart attack at the ... of 89, the~ coech in bl8tory. But in the final analylU. Bryant WU almply a football ooech. And one after another, h1a adulators kept cominl bKk. to the aame phraae -"the g.reateat football oo.c:h of all time." "When you uw football you thou&ht of Coach Bryant.'' Mid John Cooper, athletic director and heed ooech at the Uni~nity of Tulsa. . Almost 60 of "Bear'• Boya" -hia former players and Ullatanta -bealme bead coachea ln the college and pro ranka. 'n.e latest WU Bruce Ariana. who coached the runninc backs last aeuon and la the new held coach at Temple University. , "I have a hollow, hollow feel:'na rleht now knowinc Coach la not there," Arlana Mid. "I WU looking forward to aotnc batk and vlaiting him and be bad made plana to come to our pme with Penn State next year. He said be wanted to pt around to .ee u many of h1a former playen and co.ches u he could." Colle,. football wouldn't have been quite the aame without the Bear prowling the aldellnel next fall. Now, he won't even be in the atanda. ''It wu going to be difficult not IJeei.ne him on the sidelines, but hia death la going to leave a void in IO many placea," .. 1d Clemaon Coach Danoy Ford, a pla~and coach under Bryant at Ala . "He la iOlna to be mlwd by 10 many people beciu.e be helped 10 many. 'lbat WU his main goal in life, to help people. And he reached ao many of them. He taught all h ia players .arnethina about life. ::&::&! ENT!ATAINMENT COMICS TELEVISION § ¥44 S~Jlon pull Sea View upset over E11ancia. C2. , a football coa saw him two weeka ago at the AFCA oonwn~on in Loe Anaelee. "He looked u good and aa u.eful as ever," McClendon aaid. "I 1Ull d on't want to believe it." Yale Coach Carmen Cozz.a al.lo saw Bryant in Loe AnaeJ-. "He joked with ua that he wu going to go fiahlng," Cozu recalled. "My God, he A:Ouldn't even enjoy-ir. ,._ One of the lut people to vildt with Bryant was Ray Perkina, h.la IUCICt90!' u Alabama's head coach. ·"We talked about why he went to the hoapltal. Then we talked about recruiting and me leaving on a trip. In fact, I had to nm out of the hospital to •tch a plane. "The last thing I remember, he wu going to call a Youn& man that we're recruiting for one of o.ur coachee laat night (Tue.day) and be didn't 1et to make that Q)l .He.wanted-me to tell ~ coach that he WU aorry he didn't pt to make that call.'' Paul "Bear" Bryant accepts an award in 1980, ihouta inatructiom to a player and above, watches from the sidelines during hii final game as a coach. Indestructible. He wu a monumental fiRUre ln intercollegiate athletlca. a man wno aet standarda not euily attainable by men. He wu a giant. and we will mill him.'' President Reaaan, who telephoned Bryant'• widow Wedne9day evening to exprea his condolences, Mid Bryant ''made legend9 out of ordinary people .. He was a hard, but loved~ ~r. him "a totally honest, totally dedicated penon. He always gave you a totally honest answer, and there'• not a lot of people who can give you that these days." t4ffe WM a winner," aaid former Ohio State COllCh WC>04y Hayes, whoee tam Wal whipped 35-6 by Alabama in the 1978 Sugar Bowl 0 He wa1 honorable, and he won with-good, cleen ballclube. ''-_! "He related football to life, and iYerybody Who WU-under his teechinp bad to come out a better penon. And ~hen you think about the thouaanda of ~yen who wore hia colon, It'• easy to determine that thia world la a little bit better beca-.e of Co.ch BryanL'' Charlie : Charlie McClendon. executiw director 9f the American Football Coachea ~tion and former coach at LSU~ ~ho played under Bryant at Kentucky, A.:• I s a w h i m t h i s .m orn i n I (Wedne-day)," Perkins laid. "He nwde the statement to me that be WU feelina real ~· He looked pxi. He was littina UJ) QI) his bedalde having break.faat. Penn State'• Joe Paterno, whoee 1982 national championa lost only to Bryant and Alabaml, aid: "The death of Paul Bryant l1 a tremendo~a ahock and d ifflc4lt to believe. He almoat appeared to be Patriotrcto the core, cfevotedto hla players and lnaplred by a winning aplrit · that would not quit, Bear Bryant gave his country the glft of a life unsurpueed. In making the lmpo9lble eeem easy, he lived what we all atrive to be." Pat Dye, head coach at Auburn University, Ala~'• bitter lntrMtate rival, a~nt nine years u an umstant · under Bryant. "He waa like all ~t people who have come throu1h American hinlry, ~ ])ye aald. ."nlouch he mQ be ..-. bia t-c:Nna wm • forewl' in the 1twa of u.-he..,. ........ " There'S really no • comparison Super Bowl quarterbacks ride separate paths to showdown By JORN SEV ANO o< ... 0.-, .... lt.ff . senior at Byrd High in Louisiana, directed his team to an unspedacular 4-6 mark. Sunday's titanic on a high school field in ~be~. . In urn, u a 21'aduatlng .UOI' out of the University of N'Otre Dame, Joe Theismann was drafted in the fourth round by the Miami Dolphins. A contractual differenL'e, however, with Dolphin President Joe Robbie prompted 'l'heisrnann to flee to the Canadian Football League. Finally, ln 19'7s.-Theismann, under 1irst-year head coach Jack Pardee, became Washingto n 's p ermanent ata rting quartf?rback. Woodley, meanwhile, only a 10phomore, was riding the bench aa a backup at LSU. If you're lookjng for compar isons between Sunda,y'a two Super Bowl XVII ata.rtlna quarterbacka -don't bot.her. They are as <lifferent as night and day, their only similarity being they both like to ecramble. Woodley, in only his third 9e880n with Miami, will be the yOUQgeSt quarterbeck (at age 24) ever to start a Super Bowl game. He is the first to admit, too, that he's just now starling to feel' confident as a signal-caller, and that he still has a long way to go. T h at same year -1971 -David Woodley was quarterbacking his eighth grade team. Three years later, in 1974, Theismann, having fulfilled his Canadian commitment, found himself the property of the Washington Redskins, who had acquired his righta that aeuon from the Dolphins. Theismann is bold, brash, outgoing, outspoken, controveraial at times and loves "I'm maybe two or three years away from being the quarterback I want to be," said Woodley gently, as he was surrounded by the usual cin:us of media Wedneeday. "It'• really difficult to be specific about something like thaL ''There's a confidence thing (to achieve), but it's a1ao mental. It's one thing to be good (See SUPER, Pase C4) people. • , ·oavid Woodley That same year -1974 -Woodley, a Woodley ls shy, unaaswni.ng, aoft-apoken. ahuns publicity and would just aa IOOn play '.UCI press :the answ-er? By JORN Sg\' ANO I ... 0.-, ......... -uc Irvine baeketball coach• Blll .Mulligan, In an attbmpt to &et total .concentration from 1'is players, atarted ;full-rourt pressing ~is .opponent two :Camel ago. ' · The result has been two victories. So, when the Anteeten entertain San Joae State tonight (7:30, l{WVE 108-FM). the Spartans can almost bet 'there will be a player in an Anteater .. uniform following th~ from one end of the court to another. "The pre11 h._1 treen highl y 1ucce11ful," admit• Mull11an. :•we 0 lt.uted It mainly to Pt our IUYI P~ . hard rl&bt from the ~. "We haven't r:eall)t <tiarupted people :by It, nor have we atolm the 'ball that ,.much. But we haven't been hurt by It. either, and with It we eet people to play our iernpo." The Anleaten (2-3 in the PCAA 10·6 overall) have already played the Spu1aN (3-2 in conference, 9-7 overall) UU. eeuon, toRnc "To week.a aeo by a 81-78 fnU'lln. ' \ • In that pme tumdVen were eo.tly to ua. • • "Wet..toplayhard-.tnd&turn_. :over i4 tlme1 ff we're dbJn1 to •t &.Mm," ukt Mulllpn. ., The Anwaten abo flaure to . ---""°"' ped«mance lroin Ben McDonald, who hM ICUIWCl 71 ldlitl lri '.bit 111t thr•• , ...... taeliall111 • :e.reer-hJ1h St aplmt Fretno Sta ~ (whkb tJCl won, 76-74). . f Rustlers acting like contender Golden West outlasts arch-rival Orange Coast, 69-68 BY CURT SBEDEN or .. .,_ .... ...., The flrat r o und of South Coast Conference buketball la over, and Golden Weat Colle1e la not ln last place aa predicted. In fact, the Ruaitlen aren't even clole to the cellar. Nope, the Ruatlen are juat one pme out of fint place today, but they had :IJ~t by a long-time rival Wedne9day And, I\ always aeemt like rlvalrlett and 0119-point ~go band In hand. ln Wtklneeday night'• cue, It WU a ~ -.ea victory over holt Oranae Cout. and the Rwtlen, whom-* it look nay• tew nJahta before acaJnat the No. 1 team in the tt.W. had their handa full with the hoWhooun, Ptratet. "U uneone h8d told me three monttw aao that we'd be &-2 In l,eecue now, I would have Mlced for a ralae then," admitted RUltW c.o.dl Jim Grwnfield. /la the ICON Indicate. du. WM nol an eMy Ruldlr vtctary. Oaldlirl Weet hid a 2·0 Seid at the outett and dkln't haw the upper hand 11P1n until Sherwin DurhMn'1 fret throw Wtth 12:18 Nmllnlna in the ... ~the Ru.den a 47-48 .d"vantap. 1•n11 ~an-·1 J.J ldn• Mil llWD • ....... ~MINnit ...... mndtM 8'D men• to IM&ntaln tUt Mid tat IDGl&oldM~ 8u& In the 4'ftd. lt W• I ..-.ol 116il fNe tbiVwl fram Qclldlft W*1/tl~ Ailldall ·ltfttl tlMlilllft~whh•W'mJ f I wli and.,...., f•linl wttb the .. ol ~NUDd plaJ. - ''This WM one we ...Uy needed," uid a downcut OCC eo.ch Tandy Glllia ... They (the Ruatlen) just ahot real well down the atretch. We're just not doing the thinp we need to pt a win." The Duca tried, thouah. They ahot 61 percent from the flooc for the pme. They allO outreboWMied the RUftlera 30·24. The Pirates~ rnanaeed to cut down on the If someone bad toid me three months •60 tlaat we'd be 5-2 i• leasue now, l would have ailed /or a raiH tlten. -I .......... . number of turnoven, lOlllne the ball 14 tima (u oom...-s to 22 ln tMlr lut outing -aainlt s.nca Ana). .. It doesn't do any ao.d to win the .cati8Ucal pme lf we don't Win the pme," Oillla noted. Revis' two free thtowl with 18 ~ rernalnlna &• re the Ru1Uer1 a 81-88 advan.._., aild Oolden W• ~ to Ill dw tiall bids at• a n' lhot. Th• Buati.n• John Kmkh, the llo. l ..., 1n tbe ~torouled an lht ~ wl1h five dl~Wft and oDUld lilw ...., .-Jlcl the with • tree dirow. L But Kftlllc:h imltld llw frant end if a ant-pl ..... iii~ tb9 Pllw .... the tllilll ID lAlllld llNlit .... lllwt .... al. \M buaer from U , .. , for die final ftllll'lln. # a r OCC's Garinn Morton and Bnd ~ managed to hold Kttsich to )mt Dine pointa (he'a avemglng 18.3), but IUal'd She!'wln Durham picked up the s1aCk by 9COrinl a career-high 25. Re.erve Ed Dorham ICOC'ed 10 of his career-high 14 pointa in the eecond half to fuel the Rustler comeback. Bruce led the OCC scoring with 18 potnte, Gueea acored 14 of hia 17 polntaover the final 20 minutes, and Deron White added 12 to go along with 12 ... ta. .. We juat tried to atop Bruce," aald Greenfield afterward. "Obvloualy, W@ didn't do a very aood job of It. They're a pxi ~am. What can I uy? There'• just '° much parity in thia leque." On Kreaich 'a low ·~':a' output, Gl"ft!'llfleld noted: "John tome Ml)' ahota. l'm aure he wu a little tiaht (Knlllch played at OCC two years ato>· Alto, he hid a pxi 6-8 playe11 (Gue.a) pard1nc him ton.llht." With the victory, the Ruatlera find thenwelvea tied wlth Santa Ana I« llCOnd place In the South CoHt Confereace ~ Both teama tnU c.na. ""*" reboundecl from Saturday nl& .. t'• _.... , ... t at GoWm w., witla .. 11-tO """" 0\'9r l'uUlrtan . OCC hu n~ Iott th,.. 1tra11h\ In ..-..-.1iwnmon........,llihe ' ....._. 1our-...-.... ..,...k •a a ' a....-... "l •••'• oompl•ln abOu\ tbl;f" , ~ ........ ~, ......... . ... -. I i 1 . ,OCC's Clay Tucker · • chooses. Richmond Oran1_e Coa1t Collea• O quart.erbldt Clay Tucker, who moved 1 into~ place on the all-time OOC pMli.na lilt, Ml received a fWl athletic • -lc:hol.antUP to continue h1a colleae toot~ career at the Unlvel"lity of Rkh.mond ln Vlrlln1a. Tucker, eon of Orange Cout Coach Dick ~er. wu hampered moat of the 1982 IMlllOI'\ after breekinl hJa .ruc.ie a few weeu before play Legan. He 1Ull manqed to pua for 1,025 yards to bring hla two-year total to 2,575 (226 of 488). '!be ooly damper on his stay at Qranae c.o.t WM the teem'• record -S-7 in '81 and 2-8 In '82. Richmond, lncidenWly, finllhed the 1982 eeuon with an 0-10 reoord. "I'm just glad he'a aolng 1UCKa to get the chance to play Dlvlalon I football," admitted Dick tucker.. "U he's happy, I1m happy." · Tucker left for the Vircia campua on Monday and baa already enro for the spring tem19tel' there. He will ai.o take part in spring football drtlla 1n April. · · • ~ "I'm very excited with the prospect of P.laytna at Richmond," the younger Tucker said. 'Th e -school has outstanding football and academic programs." - A B-plua student during his two yean at OCX:::, Tucker said academ.ica played a key role in hia dedaion to attend Richmond. Quote of the day Al Blue~. a former NBA player and now ..utant coach of the Phoenix Swia, in decl.arlng that he would appeal a $2,000 fine'for throwing a clipboard at an official: ''Remember, if everything el8e fails, I am a Jllf!Ulber of the players' amodation." . Toronto rallies to tie Oilers Mlro1lav Frycer 9COred two of Toronto's three third-period goals as the Maple Leafs rallied for a 6-6 tie with the Edmonton Oilers in National 'Iii Hockey League action Wednesday night. Edmonton's WayDe Gretaky had a pair of first-period goal.a to ralae his league--leading total to 44 . . . Elaewhere, Gary La.pill acored one goal and asaisted on two others while Darcy Rota picked up his 22nd goal to lead Vancouver to a 5-1 triumph over Chicago . . . Craig Ramsey's short-handed goal four minutes into the game was followed by five straight Buffalo tallies as tlae Sabres crushed Montreal 7 -3 ,.. . . o-ts Mank and Beltby Carpellter scorecf 21 ll!ICOllda apart to trigger a five-pl first period that carried Washington to a 6.2 decision over Pittsburgh, extending the Penguins' winless streak to 10 Rames . . . The ~ announced they Md recalled pile Gary LulMkl from their New Haven farm club. Laskoski started the season with the Kings but had a 4:20 goals against average and a 9-9-3 record. # Jabbar luela Laker 001Miaaek &ant• ..... "'...., ..... ti pQ&n ... lnrludtnl~llx tn tt. IMl four ininu .... to~brifta lha Loe A~IM L•k•ra from a»etil .. _d 'o dee•• MUwauU., 116·113, Wednlldly ftlaht tn the Na&lonal Buketball Alioda&&on. _Trte wken trailed ll 1·104 with 4111 remalnln• before runnllw ., 11 1UU,hl polnta to WLt a ll&-11 l I.cl Wftla one mb'lu .. to Play . . . J:llewhete In the NBA, G•• WU11am1 and Jaell llllma HCh ICOred 26 po&nta .. S..&tl.e tolled pllt Diti'Olt. 118· 108 . . . OUlrcl Mar' Am•lrr• poured la a ••m•·hf1h U polntt and &Tabbed l l rebou.nda to J*'9 IWi. ., a l 2&-1115 t.rtwnph C...~~a~ Doint. andl>aft ConlH added 21 to pace Ctllca10 to • 114-118 declliOI\ over Cleveland • . . Mo•n Mal••• notched 3' po&nta and grabbed 11 reboundl. but It took el1nt clutch fioal-perlod polnta by substitute ~ aJal ~ to ~ a 113-102 Pntladelphia victory over Phoenix . . . Ke\'18 Me&ale taWed 21 polnta and l9Wll Boston teemma ... ..., hit double ftluna ln the Cehica' 125-99 romp over Wuh~. The Celt.ica opened the falM with 14 I t polnta and remained in~ the re9t of way. Indiana outla111 NOrthweslern Ted ltUclllel, held acorele. for m the ftrat nine mlnutea, acored 29 polnta Wednesday night to lead second-ranked Indiana to a 78-7S victory over ho9t Northwestern in a Bil Ten collep buke&ball pme. Tra.lllng mofi of the flrat half, the Hoo.ten went ahe.d to stay eerly in the eecond half OI) a three-pointer by Kitchel and basket by Jim Tlllomaa . . . Itel~ IAe acored 28 polpta and fifth-ranked Memphil State took advantage of foul problema by two top Iona players and held off the ecrappy Gaels, 94-88 . . . Ralpla 8amptoD acored 16 potnta. grabbed 16 rebounds and blocked four ahota u No. 6 Virginia pulled away from stubborn George Washington in the final 1twen minu*" for ~ 59-44 victory . . . Houston'• Alleem Oa.J••• ·netted 20 polnta to lead the ninth-ranked Cougars to a runaway 76-40 victory C1Ve't Rice in the Southwest C.cJftference / .• Mo. 12-ranked Arkansas Wied clutch free throw ahooUna from Darrell Walker in the aecond half 10 bokl of1 a valiant Texaa Tech rally and beat the Red Raiders, 62-~ . . . Patrick Ewtq acored 22 points, grabbed 11 rebounds antJ bfocked four shots as 15th-ranked Georgetown bw'ied vtsifinB Big East rival Seton Hall, 71-48 ... Louisville froze the ball for more than aeven mlnu8 late in the game as the eighth-ranked Cardinals held off Rutgen, M-49. Knox quickly decides on Seattle Clll•ck Ka,x, who resigned aa • head coach of the Buffalo Billa only the day before, became head coach of the Seattle Sea.hawks Wednesday and . immediately said the Seahawks ••wm be competitive." Knox aaid, "We expect to run this football program around. We didn't come this far not to tum it around." . . . Dwayae M•rplty ~a $3.3 million contract with the Oakland As. Murphy, who hit 27 homers and drove in 94 runs last seuon, sianed a four-year pact with Oakland, and the club has the option for two eddilional yean. Television, radio TV: No eventt acheduled. llADIO: Hockey -New York I11andera al .Ki.np, 7:20 p.m., KPRZ (1150). Buketball - San Joee State at UC Irvine, 7:30 p.m., KWVE (108 FM). Balboa YC ends Sunkist Series this weekend &!boa Yacht Club winds up ita popular Sunkiat Series this weekend with races Saturday on inllde the bay couraes for small boat• and on ocean courses Sunday tor keel boats. r 'the aeries is a warm·\JP Cor the Southern California yachting Allociatton Midwinter Regatta which gets Wlder way Feb. 19. Voyagers Yacht Club will be host to Luders-16 sailors Saturday in the annual J ack Starkey Memorial Regatta. Dana Point Yacht 'Club will also aim its Midwinter Tune-up Saturday toward the Midwinters for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts. PHkF yachts will also have their day at Huntington Harbour Yacht Club in the Winter Wring Out Regatta Saturday. In other areas of the Southern California YachW:ig Association: ........ .., King Harbor Y8Cflt CM> -Wimer Aeg9tta l ... c:taa.) ~~ Redondo BHcll Yec:ht Club -Winter A9oatta lei deeeee) Sat1Kdey. 8outll Coee1 COtlnthlen Y8Cht Club -L• 8eon'a .., ... d k ... boeta) Sa~. South Bay Yacht Aaclng Clul> -Cllampegne Serlee , .. (k• boel9) ~. -..o,... Cofonada Yacht ~I> -Woodwottll Serlee (lnVttatloMI hancfap) 8eturdey. OOMtwlde Yacttt Club -8llannon Settee (PHAF) Sunday. MIHIOn Bay Yacht Club -One-Day Aaoa'ta. SUnday. ................. Anacapa Yacht Clul> -Whal•'• Tell AeaMta lPWAF) 8etUfday, Sunday. • ...... Yadlt CM> -Winter WisnM41 ~Sunday. Super Bowl matchups ····~ , ..... George Ster1te. 34. ~5. 2t!O, COlumble - Pl•y•d 1>uket1>all In collega wltll Jim ~and Haynrd Dotaon on• team tllet -No. 4 In the country. W• a tlaht end on the footl>ell tHm. Waived l>y ts.nu end llgr.cS with Redeklne In 1972. In time to pley fOf Waetqton'a llrll &ii* Bo'#l t.-n. Joe Jecoby, 23. 8·7, 295, Loulavllle - 1 came to ·s111na with no great college ,...,...0 .. end. In leet. coect. ltloulflt he ,,.. • ~ lnerMn end elmoet raleaeecl Nm wMrl tll9y found out he WMll'"' Ona o4 111pat pleyer9 In NFL Ctlert« meini. of .... a.nl Fr.d "-1. 27, W , 216, TexM Southern -Found e llofne wllh W-'*'Oton aft« prevloua NFL llkipa et MIMtl end CHalgo. Cen OleY l>Of11 taoeite spot• a• we11 u ov•rd. A1.0 pllyed tlgtlt end In college end caugM 91ght ~ °""'"'· 23, w . 273, PlftlllUr9ll -W•• a two-yH r atarter .i center for ~ Pm ...,,,. lhlll went 22-2. Or8fted • • oenter 1>u1 ~ mo¥ed Nm to WI .-n! teat~ Md he a~ In.,,.,.• ....... 000 In -Hoge. c:.... Jeff Boetlc:. 24, t-2, 252, Ctemaon - Cel*"I fOf punt9 end ... 009 .... -~ =:. Undr8illlld. ......... free .......pHe '" '"°· ,_...... In ...... -.. he llgned ........... * _,. ~ !tie al8l1 of ttla ..-on 8lld won ....... --==-, ..... Jon GlelW. 2'. M , 290. MlcHgan -He and Eric Laakao are Miami'• aecond lcngeat -runnlng teckl• tendem (27 ~ a.ta) --Doua en-Md Norm Ev.ne (43 dW"'O 1 .... 71). Ho. 1 *"' c:11o1oe In t91t. St.Ille lll04 put ~ M hlgf'I edlool "'"'°' '" Otllo. \;t1c l.Mbo, 29, 6-4, 291, Tulene -~ .,_. In ~ NMory wtlOM llrlt pro 9tm1 -In.~ gell'8 1971. ~NF\. plqar o4 Anniall daec:9nt. Hae l>eetlllot'• ..,.. In geology. • • ......... " JOHNSON & SON' presents ... Super lowl Pick . That old feeling's bac DeBusk, Sailon stun Estancia, 64-62 By ROOER CAALION Of ............. '"'9re'1 • certain fee1inc w)\en you've .....Uy done 1omethin1 well -call it an adrenalin · overflow, ~ ptmplee or t>one.~nc -you know lt"WtilD It'• there. And for N1wp0rt H.rbor H~blllletball oaMll Jerrj DIBulk. that ctrta.ln ,_ hed 111'9'ty well eecaped him few a lorta time ~ not on U and 19 polnt., and l'olk added US polnta, but If ' turnlna point ln a two-polnt 1am• could be p(npolnc.d, lt w• the play of Sheward, a 6.S Mnlor, who lint 90( the bell for the SaJlon In a ~ pmition ana followed It up with a 2~-foot 8ll'9t & a crud.al bucket. W~t f~ Tua'-'• M.ea upaet .. View viietary owr *""-a .. ,.1Mdtoy-. .. •11 remem thll f•Una." .. rd • 'JUbilant It WM tied at 69 and \he ..... of l'Manda had the bell under the Sallon' bucket, but Sheward tapped the bill away to get hf1 teammatea pc•••lon. . Sheward found ae.,.r open and rifled hll S- to the UnJvendty of Oklahoma-bound Seaaer, who turned It into a three-point play and a 62"·&9 lead DIBulk. "That ~ a "'8 .dltt.-.noe -a nAl dt.ft.ence.'' he oandnued, alludlna to hll teein'• trhnph. which ~ hll crew one pme off the PllC9 of third plMlf'J:l Toro with ........ record and in &ht hunt f« a CD' 9-A o&ayoft berth. '1 know thll ii a dkhe, but we've had ._. aclvenlty,,. added O.Buak, who aaw h11 team 1yatematkally decimated by: (1) Byron Ball'• aummer tranlfer to Oceen View, (2) Brian J'olk'1 knee 8Uf8HY, (S) Sean Sheward'a cuttina acddent to hla hand, (4) Andy Allilon'• ankle injury and (5) the lom of Brad Harker (ankle). There wu no adversity Wedneeday ntaht, however, u the Sallon kept their home record perfect at 4--0 wtth an opening ti~to-flnal buDer ;·t;:' 8.aaer and Jbn Wolfe led the wtnnen wt&h CdM, El TorQ kickers triu~ph Corona del Mar and El Toro poated narrow vtctoriea Wednetday in Sea View Leque men'• llOCICer play. The See K1no broke a 8COreleal tie with about 10 minutes tow ~1y to earn a 1-0 victory ov« llatancia, while Toro held off.a RJl'l'9 by Co.ta Mesa to record a -1 triumph. Vlnoe McGlnnla notched the Sea Klnp' aoa1 with an --~ Danny PfJaum. CdM pl.le Jeff Jacobi ... ted with 89Yell •we. 'Th. Se. K1np improved their Sea View mark 10 5--0-2 and overall record to 11-1-2. O:lnJna del Mar 11 ranked fifth in the latest CU' 2-A pall. After a 8COl'ele. flnt half, El Toro talfied twice early in the aecond half, aa Dan Avtlla and Rick Wyzykowaki netted goala. The Mu.tanaa answered with about 10 minutes remaining u Toto Pltoyo acored to narrow the margin to 2-1, but that wu as c1oee aa Mesa would ~t. . with &8 MCOndl left. • 'n'9 Eaal• Ft cloee with a pair of fJ"ee throwll from Doug Plnckney with 49 eecondtl left. got r:•-•on apln with 39 seconds ft but kicked It away with 18 aeconda left, then Folk iced it with a pair of free throws with 10 teoOnda remaln1na to gtve the winners a 64-61 lead. i'Atancia '• Jut 1up came with one aecond left u Pinckney hit a free throw, then intentionally mi..ect, caromlng the ball to Gary Jaeger, but Jaepr'16·-foot puah 1hot hit iron and bounced aw1y. .Ml"°""' Al80 sparkling for the winners was~ Chuck Mc.<lavran. who scored six polnta and played well at both ends of the court. "McGavran showed a toi of poiae and it could be Seaaer'• beat game," added DeBuak. '"nUa just might give us a little above in the right direction." Wolfe had 11 rebounds and Seager blOcbd four lhoq, Fatancia Coach Larry Sundennan, meanwhile, wu d~ted with hla team's interior defeMe, which ed the Ballon too much liberty. · Al h r.tanda outrebounded the Sailors, 36-34, and enjoyed a 20-9 advantage in tumoven, the wlnnerl oompemated by hitting l~ of ~ ~ tbe field (53.3 percent) as oppoeed to Estancia'• 21 of 53 (39.6 percent). "We didn't screen out and we didn't play .. interior defenae,'' aaid Sunde~. "We talked about \tolle, more ao than Seager during practice. We had to atop thoee two in that order: But, we didn't execute. "This is not to take anything away from Newport, but we're not executing what we're inatructed to do ••• Pinckney and Gavin Warlaumont 1COred 17 apiece for Estancia, which falls two games off. C.orona del Mar'a league-leading pace. UC /RV/NE ~·-San JoH Sl•I• -· ,. . I.$ TONIGHT STARTING AT 7:30 PM with "THE BILL MULLIGAN SHOW" 9rougM to rou br Anhw' luech, To,ota. 7UP/Ub, U.S. AJr Fcwce, Jim Cldl Ford , All fNOl.EMECHT COMPANY l'#IOOUCTION 4th ANNUAL Race 1 RUN FOR HOAG 5 AND 10 KILOMETER RACES JANUARY 29, 1983, IRVINE STARTING TIMES: 5K 9:00 AM 10K 9:10 AM •NTllY P••S PRE·REGISTRATION wllh T..... !:00 PRE·AEG•TAfmON no lhlrl .00 DAY OF MCI I 8dd 1.00 Al.,.,, ..... ~. "NO~· MOllTMTION Parttclpete tn wty r •ll•retlOn ... yow run net" 1 number wUI be malled tq you • btlb9 tM ""'· DIVISIONS ANDAWAllDS Trophl" wtl'I be pr•Mnted Immediately foftowtng tabulation of results. DMllons and award• below apply to each eYent. DM8'0N A 8 c D E F 0 H I J K L ~ .. 0 p Q " 8 T ... AGE 14 & Under 15-18 19--24 25-29 30-34 35-39 4()-4.4 4M9 50.59 eo+ 2001a. LADISI 14 & Under 16-11 1 ... 24 26-21 30-34 3649 40-4t' • ... eo+ 6 WOMEN TEAMS 1-3 AWARDS 1-3 1t-5 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 1-8 .1-6 1-5 1·3 1-3 1-3 1-4 1·5 1-5 1-5 1-5 1-5 1·2 1 .. f'ilipek, Vikes make Barons ,. feel ill, 58-45· By ED ZINTEL ............. .,..., .... Marina High basketball coach Steve Popovich didn't want anyone to know, eepedally Fountain Valley Coach-Dave .&0-wn.~ut-hla-atar Mnior guard, Scott Fllipek wun't feell.na IO hot. At least that's what Popovich thought. ''Don 't let Brown know, but Scott hasn't practice d all week; he's got a 100-deiree ~mperature," Popovich said as he watched Filipek warm up prior to Wednesday night's Sunset 1 League game at Fountain Valley. Well, aa things turned out. either Popovich was trying for some good copy, or, and more likely, FQ.ipek is a superb basketball player -sick or heJ!thy. FILIPEK SCORED 28 points, including 12-of-12 from the free throw line, to lead Marina to a stunning 58-45 u~t win over Fountain Valley .. The loss was the fir&t in league play for the Barons. ~ow 4-1, while Marina rema1ris very much in the picture with a 3-2 reco~. Fountain Valley's loss sets up a showdown for first place with H~tington Beach, also 4-1, Friday night at Huntington Beach. "You have to hand it to Marina," said Brown after he watched his Barons, ranked No. 2 In Orange County going into Wednesday night's game, drop to 13-7 on the year. "They outplayed and 1 outhustlE!d us. We were susceptible to aornething ' like thi&, but Marina played tremendously 1onight." Said Popovich:-"We-eaught. Founta.in-Y-alle-y at a good t.;me. We eliminated the breakdowns that we~ve been having. Now we're right back in it (the league race)." . Marina raced to an 18-4 first quarter lead, scoring 12 straight points during one stretch. Filipek had 10 of those poihts but it was the Vikings' ptessing zone defense, combined with Fountain Valley's poor shooting which had the crowd in • al)ock. The Barons made just 2-of-19 from the floor bi·the first' quarter. FOUNTAIN VALLEY didn't shoot much better in the second quarter (5-of-15) but Marina also CQ.9led off (4-of-12), as the Barons pulled closer at tile. half, 31-21. Slowly, Fountain Valley pecked away. Led by j\.¥\ior center Rolf Jacobs, who. had 11 in the second q\larter, 8 in the third and 20 for the game, Fountain Valley got within striking distance, 41 -35 after three quarters. ( However, that would be as close as the Barons wi>uld get as turnovers (Fountain Valley h.ad 20 in Uie game) killed any momentum the Barons could g•t going. " ; While Fountain Valley was unable to eetectively rontrol Filipek, Marina was able to put ttie clamp on the Barons' front-line leader, forward -Rbb Whitehair, who 19COred just two-points in the g4me. ; WITH JACOBS, Whitehair and Brent Martin, Uie Barons average 6-6 on the Cront line, while the VJkings, with forwards Ron Roeensweig and Eric P•dilla and center Chris Neumann, average 6-3. : Marina was in fa'tt oUttebow\ded in the game, 36-27; however the key was that Neuinaiiil and his back-up, Dale Ekstrom did not foul out after having picked up their third and fourth fouls respectively in the first half. · ·Seahawks escape; Oilers top Lions Edison High's upset-minded Chargers took Ocean View into double overtime Wednesday night in Sunset League basketball action. but Ocean View p~lle<i it out, while Huntington Beach put vyestminster's visiting Lions away. Here's how it went: Ocean View 78, Edison 77 With the score tied at 77 in the second overtime and time running out, Steve Moser drove the ball f.9wru:d the basket, and was fouled in the act of shooting. And with only one second showing on the clock, Moser sank his second attempt from the line to give Ocean View the final shot victory. Ediaon narrowly missed as the ball caromed off the backboard. , Jeff Washington scored a career-tugh 33 points for Edison, while Brad Hachten added 16. Moser finished with 11 and Byron Ball led the way with 27 points for the winners. Ocean View's Mike Judge had 11 of his 18 points in the final stanza. Hantlngton Beach 5!, WestmimteT 41 Leading by two at the half, the Oilers pressed Westminster and forced the Lions to tum the ball aver. Billy Thompson paced the Oiler attack with 17 points and 4 ·assists, while Jamel Gamer had 16 points and 16 rebounds. Mike Mills added 11 ~bounds. I Y~u can Charge DAILY PILOT Classlfled Ack 642·5678 ·cnt1 . Wflql~ Othlng and COCktoll1 Cl"" WHALE WATCtMG lllft:tEON · While watchln9 the whatee pau ~n front of yc;Urli5Te,"enjo~ 11-eA W - maybe a half pound hamburger treat - posslbty a 9Calone undWlch. '" D•IJ from 11:JO AM to 4 N ltntn .... .-;,,, 81t SLt.tPY ta.LOW Ull.; &.MUM IUCH I ID STUTI TIUBSDIY 10 DULEB SILES Bring the kids to see SHORTY W CHEAP CBICIQ In our •tore• thla Saturday, January 29th. . Qt: ·Diamond Bar 9 lo 11 Riv1nid1 11 :45 lo 2 Orange Cout OAllY Plt.oTITIMlt'41)', January 27, 1983 Palm Springs 3:30 lo 5:30 7~ ASSORTED A SILi HOUSEPLAllTS- MARVILLE FOIL-flCED llSOLATIOI 3 19 4" #0150 3Yz" FUL-TBIK R-11 15" I 70.5 Lii. n . (88 SQ. n.> 7~ " ROLL 4 99 I" #0151 r , 749 #0152 AIR 1 tog1 et~r now, ln thh• key o1f R: "Th•hlg~~r the 23" X 70.5 LOI. n . 2 1 77 va ue, tu.• greater t e ln•u atlng power. Louder, lcan'thearyou. (135 SQ. n .) ROLL UPBIGllT Oil I'' I 2~~192 ..... #0193 Low maintenance atuff. juat du at them off eYery once in a while. Look pNtty cloH to the r.a1 thing, too. Sina Nf•r to baaket. Limited qucmtlttea. FOREMDn WARDROBE CLOSET WITll - SLIDllli DOORS 67" #3822 Good old Wcnerly Walnut flnlah. easy aHembly. (Gotta get one for my wife, her walk· in I• too amall. Should buy her a d.rt ... thna.) 22 ·~GS.HD4E IOOO aata per mlllute, which ID plClln Engllab 1DeC1Da It•, .. beffl abarpenecl ..... bladea maD llllDC9meat of PDllOllC ILllLlll BITTERIES ' ~ AA OR AAA 69• TWIN . PACK • C OR 0 TWIN PACK 99• 9 VOLT SINGLE PACK ....,..w.-...,..i11m.o1a.t111e .... ...................... , ............. ....,. ,..., .. ,.,...... ..... &Yz'' SUPER-THIK R-19 liLIDDEI COLOR llTUBILS ,.,., GAL. lcztin flnlah interior wall paint carrle ; ablglparwammty. andyouccm't argu (not with me) about the price. Limited uu... -- llELL FIRE • ICE llW/ 41 WT. ILL IEI .. llOTOR OD. ••• QT. ltcmd9 .apto a wlM teaperatu.re range. Come OD ta ad llMltcll _. otl our dJaplcry. (Ho. DOt boa the boltoml l.ookcNtl) CLISE-OUT! IUIE SEif. COfEll 3•7 ··r IJLll FUJI ~ EA. hdpt hdtrlea for• door I01ld ot I clOOf epllt •k. Cbooeeblu.. black or belci-. Umlted ..... U... • "I" W•'"fOlthemforrom 999 llmldard .......... tnck. b;a ... ot BA. ..... u.a.... ....."-M. too. TUITLE WU MllUH .~ Wll i•oz. 3aa ·n.nmu DOOR STOP •• EA. lraH fln.lah. (My friend fJom Ea.at a.many turned down a 12 hows a day. I daJ9 a WMk Job. He aatd, "Who wcmta part·U.... work?") BIREROOT ROSES #2 127 EA. - #I~ 1 s7 EA. Got a bunch of them to chooH from. a ccm 't wall for Spring gardening. Sunahine, Oowera, the t .. 1 of compoat betw"n the IOM.) Limited Qucmtltlea. IEW! IRICO STEREO CISSETTE IDIPTEB FORl-TBICT TAPE 1597 PLI YEBS #ICA-7 Here'• a new(and cheaper) wcrytoget the ~ CIC ccu..tte ration with your old a.track. Eae, to lutal1. ~IEW! ~ liEllE TUC DBm ~~~U$£ IOIB . OPEIEBI ~ .. I 09:'! • . ~· I .9., (lffOWJf) . #08-810 (;it Oran .... ,.. ...,._IOAY'S IW8ULTI ~ .. ~., =.:. ...... --.> 009 WM! CMeul 31 10 10.00 S 40 PUMc Tr9dltloft (l'trlcay) 4.00 3 IO Slllru TUdor (Ollv.,.I s 20 Alllo r...S ~ 10 Oo, c...1-8ictler, llold "'*· 8-ee "'*' Jiik ... IW1• Oold. "'"°"" nm.. l 13 laCOND UCL 1 1111 rnllM ........ Crowd (Ill ..... ) 12.00 • 40 3 40 Ww A'-d (l'lncllyl a.40 2.IO Tulle'• DwM ll.~ S..O Aleo recect: ClncMNle ShM, &ullttn 1'1111. . w~ 8el, PMn~. 9Muty llooml. DMr Frenchy. Time~ 1:50 315. • DALY oouaa (9-l) pelO U7& ao n11m uca. 1 11 11 ,,,,.... "'°"*'1 ol loY9 (l'lnclly) 5.40 3.IO $.40 Sir Hlftt (Upl\MI) 30.AO U.to .aec.lllOf (Romero) UO Aleo rw:ied: JM\ Jim, Mel!M1-Nifty eld. Wlloetellleylll•ll•ll.. Compeny FrMdorn, MellOn 11.-t, Wine Hlc:ll, Nevenepple, 0... ol IM &et. nm. l 5 l 415 '°""'" uca. • ~ AllOWe TN pi,_ (~) 14.40 t .40 5 io.~eno) UO 4.IO ~( ....... ) ... Aleo reoed. Gummoco, Shirley'• Ellgle, AgiOMt, Ole Mum, fnt l .P .. My Donna B .. 8•1~~:? PW'T14 uca. • 1UrtonQ$. Gt~'a Pookey (Sl>miir)l.llO 3.40 3.00 L.lldy at1111yn 1v--...1 4.00 3.00 DelftlnO Dey (Hewley) 4.00 Aleo rec.cl: Mita Gfflary, El Yu Lulu, Medem &penoour, Comfort laA Time: 1'12 3/5. • DACTA (2-3) peld $12.!50 ICXTH !UC._ One mh. 0....00 (H.,,_) 11.llO 5 00 6 00 Grend a.lcony (Plncey) 4.00 3 IO "'• • ~l~l 3.80 Aleo rw:ied: CannllUn, Sunny Soulll, ~ Gene. CMtgeur. loe FlOw Time: 1:31 2/5 MVl:NTH llACL 8 furlong•. Hecipy Bride (McCMron) 4.•0 2 80 2 40 T-• Mt.a 10t1ver•l 2.ao 2 eo Magole't lnleni (Slt>lle) 3.80 Aleo ,..,: In.ti O'Bnen. Peppy'a L.udly Gin, 8-'lel O'Wonder, allmOnde. Ell Tu. T1ln9t 1: l l • UACTA (Ml peld S35 SO a l'te« ea p .2.:s-2•51 peld m .eee oo wttll two winning tic*• (llll iww-i 12 Pioli S I• contole tlon paid $2&4.00 wllh 133 winning Uckelt (IM iww-) llGHTl4 iuca. &'A 1ur1onga. CNnooll P-(Plncey) 3.40 2.IO 2.40 Flgl!tlng Flt(~) 6.40 3.00 Pollm Npeclor (Toto) 2.IO Alto raced: Shaneklte, Belfort, The CeptM't, W•I on 8'oed. time: 1.1& 4/5, • UACTA (11-ll peld $o41.00. ~ !UCL I If ti m11ea. nw .. liltC~l e.20 5 40 3 40 Pteneta (H.,_) 10.IO I 00 CeletlOn08 (Mera) 13.20 Aleo reced: PMof' PlraW, o."9 Ridge, ~ Ember, 8kNlng Snow. Aa.counlk. ""'• l.ed. ,..,,,... "°°'" Time: 1:47 • UACTA Cl-2) peld 124a 50. A~21,IOO NHL c....-u..~ ~~Q, ~ .... ~on 21 14 10 211 208 lie ~--e~ 20 24 7 20t 2111 47 20 24 5 1111 201 46 v-17 23 10 Ill 196 44 IC .... ,. 25 7 ...... ~ 172 213 JI Ctllcago 30 13 1 213 173 17 ~· 21 14 10 207 Ill eo St. lOUla 15 27 II 180 202 311 o.trOH 12 2e 12 156 207 341 Tor0n1o 11 29 10 in 212 32 WAUE•C~ ...... ~ PNledlllphla 32 13 I 212 145 70 ""~ 25 17 I 1t2 145 51 w~ 23 II 11 UM 1n 57 "".....,. 22 21 I 111 171 50 Pltt9burG't 12 30 1 152 as. 31 .... ,,.,.., lO 30 ll 131 208 31 .... ~ ao.tor'I 32 10 7 302 129 71 MomfMI 2e 14 II m 1n &l BuflelO 24 11 11 190 151 57 Quebec 23 20 I 20ll 202 52 Herdord 12 32 5 1511 2311 29 ....... ~---Bufllllo 7, Mon1tMI W-*'llton I, PlttMlurr 2 v_._-s. OllCeOO T Ol'Gfl\O I , EdrftontOn I ~ca..-..... Yortl at Olea Que4)ec M Hwttord Mont ..... Ill Nllw Yortl ~ MWpeg et Ptllled9!pt• It. i..o..-et ...,.,_.,. Torol!IO .. c.ig.y MU ...,....COW IOI ...... °'" ....... "*-9 u • ·.• l'OttlMlcl " , 1 tal • P11oen1x n 1• aoo • S..lllt ti 11 .NI I Clolden It... ti H .41t 11 Ian 0.00 1J H .171 ti°" ....... .,........ a.,, Antonto at 1t ,ooo l<.lntM City n 11 l4J a'A Dellfll 20 n · 41' • .,. Oenwr 21 .. "'" • Ullll't 1• 11 .400 • Hou91on 1 N . 1tt It"' u......cowaMMCa A ..... oe....... flNeOelpNa S6 I loelon 3t 10 .... ,,.,.., 27 11 WMNngton ll 24 IWYor1l II 2t CeMr1ll OMeleft .. 1 TU 4 &21 '"' 429 ,, sa1 ao ........ 30 15 ... 7 Atlenla 21 21 .500 1'A DIUolt 2t H .IOO 7i. CtlleeOO 15 ff .M 14 Indiana 13 ·21 .31'1 16 ~ 7 35 ,117 2t'A ·~ .. ---Ullen 1111, MtlMiuk .. 113 ao.lon 121, Wllfllneton II :;::::-:..'~1~02 a-tie 111. O.Crolt 109 0....12.5,K.-~ Sen Alllont!~ ...... at Wt11Nn910ll ~ Stai. el Houaton UIAlft Ill Pot1leM Allan .. al Siii! 0.00 ..... 111, lluc:k• 11' • MILWAU•al -M. Johnaon 3!1 C."°""'9' 0, C-10, ford O. Mone"" 10, Uat« 7, Bridgeman 11, Pr~ t, l.enler 4. Crlu 20, Moel!Mkl 2, llM• I. TO(K 411-M 15-11 113. LOS ~· -Aembla I. Wiik• ff. .-.~ 2.11 • .ion-. E. t , Nixon 11, ~ 11, Worthy 2, McAdoo tt Tot• ...... , li-31 115. ._.,0--. ............ 20 3-4 31 21-113 Loe AngelM 30 30 31 24-115 ~· goela -NoN. Fouled --Hone Rebound• -MllwaukM 42 (M Jolwl90fl 10), Loe ~ 4S IL ~ 121 ,..... .. -....._. .. 3-4 (Ctlee 1). loa Anoe1M 35 l E Joflneon 20~ T ot81 lollll -Mtlweuk .. 27, Loe Moeiee 22 T~ -C-. Loe AAo91ee, lleQ81 ~ A -17,506. COMMUNrTY COLL.SU Goldel\ ...... 0r-.. C...t .. ~ WWST -DYtMm 25, Siiier 2, Jemu 3, Ravi• 5, l<tHICh •. MylH •• OorNm 14, Mettlno O. POkldaxt• 2. Tota 21 t).21 ea. CMAMOa COUT -l<rCIMlekl1 0. 8ruce 1t, ~ 11. WMe 12. Motton 7, Ryen 4, ~ 2.. ..... 4, SNllluc:k 4 fOIM. 2t 14-21 ... HtlltllM: Onnge c-. ~ T«*I '°'*< Ooi09I\ Ww1 II, e>r.,. Coee1 20. fOUltO -Morton (OrMga Coe!M). ••ddlebecll .... 911om., 41 PALOllAll -Wllklnao11 10. Ueki I , ..,_. 1, Ood«I I . Gan1eon 5. Woode 4, K1ama11 4, 'i1t1oua 2. Houtton. GullM 2 Tota 20 a.14 48 I ADOC •ACK MllCltlal 16. Ground 10, Hendereon 10, OIMer t , Jotw*ltl II, W•d 8, "'--1. Mort_, e. Adema 4. Welk• 4, 8Mct1er 3. Rentrop 2. Tot ... : 38 13·27 &II Hellllnle.Seddleback,4~1& T ot81 1ou1e: Pllomat 21, Saddlebedl l & T~ louli -on (PalOnWI ScMI"' C:O.I C~ Col--~ W L W L c.mtae I I 21 3 Oo6del'I ... 9 2 13 10 Senta Anll 5 2 13 10 M\. SM .,,_ 4 3 13 8 F\lller1on 3 4 ll • ~ a 4 12 10 0ranoe eo..i 2 s 1 11 Compton O 7 5 111 Wedi nd.,.e ._.. Gokl9rl w .. 1 eo. 0ninoa CoM! ee ~ 54, Ccmpton 43 c.Tlloe 9'. FIAlet1on 70 Mt. San AntonlO IO, San .. Ana 611 .... 1 ,.. 0-(1::aD) Futerlon mt Orange 0- Sallta Alla et Golderl w ... eypr-111 c.mtoe Ml San An10nlo al ~ Pectfk: C:O.t Conference ·Ce --°"'911 W L W L 5 2. • • 5 2 16 • s 2 I& 6 5 2 14 • .. 3 10 11 3 4 15 II l I I 14 0 l • 14 'WMIFld.,. • .__ 8addlabac:k Iii, Plllomar 4t Sen Diego M.a 80, MHCoeUI 74 1mC*1a1 Vllley 81, ~ ll San Ol9eo 107, SoW!wlWn ... .. ~--=-=~·~···ca.... (1:11) hd,..,.. et OfoellMtl( ...0.. • .,..,,.. v.., St11 0111go ..... al San Diego Soutl-'9"1 at P"!.O"* HIGH SCttOOL Newoort Hllfttor ... &a.net. 12 llTJMCIA -JObneton 4. Curlle 11, Plndlney 17, Wllt1a#n0nt 17, Jeeo« 13. Ml*lla 0, A. ll!dnwood O. Tot.1119 24 14-1e 12. ...... -~ ... '" ... MAMC>R -Foll 111. Mc:O_.,, I , ~d O..; Wolfe 1t. S-0-23, M-0, --0. Totlillt: 24111-2114 ._...,o-.. &tlllda 11 24. 13 14-12 ~ Htrl>OI 20 14 17 13~ T otll toul9: &lMcia 15, Hilwpor1 Harbot 17. foulllcl ~ 9Mg« (Newporl Hatt>or). CdM a. Ue1N111tr 11 • ~ -~ 4, E¥W.n 10. Ill--.. c... l, Blake'· Oen• o ........ 0. Toe.Mc 13 M 31. CORONA Dal....,_ -~II, Wolft I. Ve11ce 7, VanSteenhuYM 17, Heu 4. MoKlllCMrl O. TOU9t It 7·t0 43. .... .,o..tllf9 \w-911y 4 • 12 1-31 Corona de!,..., 12 10 1 1a-'3 T ota1 loul9: Unfwwel'Y 1a. Corona cltl Mar 7. FIMed out: StollOff (Unlwnllty). lntM 11, c .......... ..,__...,..., t , NM1 11, V.-y 10, c.iwr .. -.ian .. c...... 2. ~ t. 8rOIOWldi 1 I T ota1a: 2$ I Mt 11. COIT1' IHIA-Cook •• 8tht , .. , Pelmblade 7, ~I. Koe 4, Tlrlg 2, l(lrnnle 3, Frei I, Ped! 2. Total9 It 1-ll ... .... "'a-we ........ 20 ,. l:I 12-tt Coeta..... .11 • 10 12-4t Tolml ,._ !nine 13, C.. M9ea 13. II Tero a. 81 it•1hlltl A IADOUeAal -0.,.. I , ..._ 2. Keio 21 W.nunt 2, ~d a, Wlllon It, t..IJM I, Mc:Allltttw 10, Caoe 13, K ... 0 Totlll: 11 .. If t2.. IL. TOllO -Haml'llal 16, Arnold H , ..,....,,_ •• TllOmM 1• • ...,~ 4, Oeltlft !. ~ •. &Aery 2, Hatti 4, ...,_, o. 'otllll .. 20-2' ea: .... .,o-t.. 1•111•'** 11 12 11 20-a 8 T-2t It It 22-fl T• ~ ..... ~I c• ..... El Toro l&. c.. v .... n. ••••rw.. a CW YM.Ld-Allder90fl 2, ........ t , I t.11t. ........ o.c-11,,..., '· N C:.-1, Ollll t, Ale 2, ~ 2 TOI* 11 ....,,., WOHi YI H '-orilltlf II, 9orU 0, .................... ~ .... 21.~1. ~LT...-:tt tH7N ...... -..... c.ov.., ta n tt 11-11 wu•• 7 u t1 22-T• ..._ C.,O V""" 21, W~ 11: 'outed out. •· Call (C._. VlllerJ, ~(W••·~ '::.--.:.::!':l 'J:l:r ~ ...... !<..-. • .,..... ,. Misc. o--1 W L 14 3 14 6 ' . 10 9 e 10 1 10 • 10 2 14 UPER BOWL QUARTERBAC • • • rom Page C1 conailtenlly. Bu' then week af~r w"k you fAI» new ~ and new deftnMe and that.'• hard to arup. Somethinc Uke \hat iu.. ttnw." Woodley hu 1pent molt of hMI three HllOi\I alternaUn• hi• pM!Uon with Bob Ort ... (who retired ln 1980) and Doc'l 8\IOCk. It wem't until l'«'9ntly, the lu' five 1ame1 to be euct. that.. Woodley hM ....Uy taken CQlltrol. "I think that hurt my devtiopment. yeah," Mid Woodley of playtna mu.ical chall'lt. "l wu never able to ao throuj'h thlna• that a quarter*k pla~ full time .,.. thl"oUa}). -11rm pla:tlnl a lot belter now than I wu beoluae I1m able to ao after thJnp. I can be more aur-tve now. I can take more chancel without ~!a~·~· lf 1 make a ml1take I'm 1otn1 to be Woodl y completed 98 of J 79 pa11e11 (55 percent) tor 1,080 yorda and five touchdowns during the ttSUlar meason of te82. In the playoffs. the 6-2, 204-pounder haa converted 32 of 62 aerials tor 528 yard.a and four TOs (He's al.lo thrown four lnt.ercepUona). "We're making a lot mo things happen on offense," aaid Woodley of hit recent surge. "We're throwing m ore whereat before we were one-dlmensJonal, t~ing maybe 10 or 15 tunes a game . "A lot of times early in the year we'd throw only when we had to and it's tough to make a living throwing agalnat nickel and dlme defenses au Ule time." WOODLEY REFUSES to make excuses for his erratfc play. He knows he's going through a learning process and mistakes come with the territory. "I don't try to defend myself," he said. "As long as we win games, that's the most important t.h.l.ng, If we were playing well and losln8, I don't think I'd be happy. "The blfiest knock teems to be my etatiatk:s and I'm not going to have tbe statistics of some other quanerbacka becaU9e I don't throw 40 Umea a game. The biggest st.at, to me, is the won-lou column. If we were into statistics, we'd be at home right now reading our statistics telling people how good we are." Statistically, TheWl"Oann finished with a No. 3 ranking among NFL 9uart.erbada ln 1982, trailing Cincinnati's Ken Andenon and San Diego's Dan Fouts, respectively. During the regular campaign, the nine-year CdM pads Sea vet("ran coml>Mted lCH ot 2'3 J>U18 for 2.033 yudl and 13 TO.. ln the pJ.ayof ft, hit numbera rad: ,,. of 76 for 612 yarda and ahc TOI (three lnU"l'l"eptiona). 11t•M JUST GOING to hav~ \0 do the thlno I've done 'h• latter pert of th.II yeer to kfiep t.M 6-lJ ln our handl," >eplalned The'8mann of hlt phJlolophy going Jnto Sunday's confrontation with the Dolpnlna. "I'm going to try not pul any more pnmu.re on m~lf than there already la aotnl to bt. I've alway• felt 'hat preaeure la eomethina that'11elf-lm~.1 know you'r• not 1oin1 to l>eUeve thll, &ut l'm . treatlna Sunday u II lt were juat another pme. I really am . . • althou&h h juat happens to be the hlggeet and moei Important game of my Ute," he added with a •mile, . Thel8mann eald he came within a signature of being a Dolphin In 1971. The money wu riaht, It was th• t.crm.lnology la term& of bonuses th.al llC8l'ed Theismann Into golns north of lhe U.S. border. "l'VE NEVER BEEN a per.>n to look back. I've always been the kind that has made decla1ona and lived by them," Theiamann offered. "Still, when Mlami was winning thoee Super Bowla in the .~arly 70'a, I wondered a little. "I mean I won a Grey Cup ChamEnahlp in .Canada (with Toronto). But thal was for the championship of Canada.' The Super WI la the' champlonsh!p of the whole wqrld." Theismann also talked about hls early day1 with the Redskins under George Allen, when his mouth djd more harm than his talent did good. "Moet of my early situation with \he Redak1na was my own fault," Theismann admitted. ''When I came ln I told ev~rybody I wanted the a1aJ't.ing job. That didn't go over big with the incumbents. l put my foot ln my mouUl so many times I felt like a leather salesman . "I've learned since that if you juat take a minute before you say something you can learn a • lot." • And what has Thei.amann discovered using· thatphiloeophy? ; "That every day la a learning experience for a ' quarterback -as la every game. Once you think you know everything you should probably get out," : he said. "I've also learned thai Joe Thelamann iaz! nothing without 48 other guys and a coach ing:- staff." :: View cushion Vaqueros, El Toro romp to impressive victories Corona del Mar has taken a commanding two-game lead atop the Sea View League standings following a methodical basketball victory over University . Meanwhile, Irvine held off Costa Mesa and El Toro'• offense was in high-gear in a romp over Saddleback. Here's what happened: Corona del Mar 43, Ulliver1ity 31 Dave Vansteenhuyse pumped in 12 of his g_iune-high 17 points in the first hall as the Sea Kings uaed a stingy defense and strengthened their iriP on the league leed, CdM took a 22· lS advan~e al intennlllion. but the visiting Trojans did manage to pare the deflcit &o five-points ent.eril\8 .&.he final stanza. But Tom Vance bad live poinca in the fOW1h quarter and University couJd get no closer than five the rest of the way. , Karl Wolff and VanSteenhuyae shared rebounding honors with ~ght apiece, as the Sea Kings pretty much had their own way on the boards. Mike Hess and VanSteenhuyme contributed five assists apiece as CdM improved ica overall mark to 14-3 after winning its eighth straight league contesL Univenity, which dropped to 3-~ in league (7-10 overall). w.as paced by Graham Everett wJth. 10 polnCll and Norm Stolzoff and Erik Blake with eight apiece. lrvlae 11. Co1ta Mesa Cl 'nle Vaqueros took control of the game in the eecond quart.er, building a 12--point advantage while holding the host Mustangs to just six points during the stanza. Doug Brwovich wae a force IMide for Irvine. aooring a ...an-high 18 points while grabbing an armful of rebounds. Berna.rd Uuery scored 10 for Irvine while helping Brozovich'a inside _game with his out.side shooting. Basketball scores J Ted Stitt notched 14 pointa for Coach Tin)-: Parsel'a Mustangs, whose record fell to 2-6 in .. ' league play. . "Irvine got the ball inside and we couldn't stop-: them," said Panel, "and they claied off the insid&· against us." .•: Irvine , which evened its mark at 4-4, was:! without the services of 5-6 guard Bobby Rhod~: who was scoring at a 10.2 point-per-game clip : entering the game. ·: El Toro tz, Sa'4lle'-cl IZ 1, The Chargers recorded their highest ICOri.nf.". total of the~ in keeping a grip on third plaot in the Sea View and handlng-ihe Roedrun.nera their! eighth straiehl aetback. • Leading by 14 at halftime, El Toro took any Saddleback hopes away by tallying the first six points of the second half to go up by 20. Jeff Arnold had 26 J!Olnta to &elld the ~· Capo sprints past Warriors Capistrano Valley started q~J: and rolled past Woodbridge, while l..aRuna · and Dana Hllla poaated victories in South Coaet League. basketball action Wed:nt9day night. Here'• how it went: Caplstruo Valley '71. WooArW1e 53 The Cougars dominated the first quart.er by outacoring Woodbridge 18-7 and never looked back. Turnovers proved cmtly for the Warrion, who could never get a oonaistenl offensive at1ack going. David WiJJe had 27 pointa f<>r the Warriors, now 3-5 in league, while Mark Foringer d.iahed off 11 assists. For the Cougars, Don Sedgwick was 12-for-16 from the field and had 28 points. Dan Mulder pulled down eight rebounds, while Burt Call tallied 11 assista for Capo Valley, now 8-0 in league . LaJ11DA Hills H, Mtmoa Viejo 45 Laguna Hills and Mission Viejo played on even terms for the first three quart.era of the game, but nine Diablo tu.movers in the final quarter helped the Hawks record the victory. Todd Williams Nd 15 pointa for Laguna Hills, while Robert Carter added 13. Rick Crawford had 18 for the Diablos and alto handed off \hree am.ts. Jim Evans pulled down aix rebou.ndl. Mt.ion Viejo built a five point lead in the third quarter, but turnovers hampel'ed the Diab.lot . Dau HWt '11, Lapa Beacla U Handicapped by injury and illneaa, the Arti81S ·proved no match for the Dolphinl. Scott Forttnle, onit of Laauna'• most productive players, WM akkliMd with 8 l1nm fracture, and Coby Nae11 and ally Edwards, despite playtna, were wMkened wt\h the flu. Naem did hlt a ~ of bask.etl 1n the 9eCOlld quarter when Lacuna surged to within 12, but Dana Hilla .Wed inatten 1n the third quarter by e>C1endina the advan\lp to 1e. Sen.tor Sttte fthorer-tomed tn •wuorr-htgh 28 polntl for the Dolphlrw. And ln the Acldemy Leque: Newport Clriltlu JI, C.,. Valley Q.rlatlu 4t Th• Conquerors outscored Capo Valley ·Chrtadan 18-10 In the third q_uar18' k> brwk the pine open. Scott KJJ.s-lrick Mel 23 polnta and Ovta Howard added 13 . Orange CoMt OAIL.Y PIL.OT/Thurlday, January 27, 1183 I 'The Frieze of Life' kicks off Munch exhibit A mual c theater pre1entatlon, "Th e Frteae of Life," wtll officially kickoff an exhibit o f Edvard Munch'• paintingl at the Newport Harbor Art Museum. 80& San Clemente Drtve, Newport BNch. 'nckeca at •G pneral admllalon, $4 for mUleWT\ memben, UC lrvtne faculty, 1taff and aenlor dth.en.1 and •s atudenta, are ovaUabl at the mWICum from 11 a.m . to 3 p .m . through Saturday. Th• p I• o • I a • 18-voloe choru1 and mumc dtpe.rtmtnt ••UC combination of mu1lo 1 18 . pl t c e oh 1 m be r San'-Bl.rbara. and theeier. The mulic, orct.tra wtU perform. Munch, an expre1· poetry and vl1u1l1 -Sololltl wtO be J,.lu 1tonl1 th once de 1 - many o I the Steidbam, aopon.no, Carl crlbed It work II latter tlld• of Munch'• Zytow1kJ, tenor, and palnttna1 "from ~he palntlnaa-ar• u1ed '° Jamee KAtNMy, bu1tonit1 modem Of of lt\e aoul." capture the emoUon of lw:h II a t.NCher ln the Hl1 Jma1e1 of birth, dHtre end detth are aymbollc of hu••n emotion. The e xhibit, which museum officials are callin& one of the most alplflcant to be huni. opena Feb. 12. the artht '1 work1, ---------- "The Fl'ie&.o1ltit~" J11 scheduled at 8 p .m . Saturday al ihe musuem, The prosram ta a chamber opera composed by Edward ..Applebaum. a pa>fnaor of music at UC Santa Barbara. aocordlng to Applebaum. The compo11r attended a recent alldt preview of the opera presented to the preae a °"d..N eJN p a.i:.L.tleKlL officials. Three aolola ta, a ABC passes CBS in ratings LOS ANGELF.s (AP) -A8C tied CBS with four shows ln the Top 10 to win the television ratings last week, only the second victory this season for ABC, although CBS' "60 Minutes" was again the No. 1 show. ABC earned a 17 .9 in the ratings for the weekend ending J an. 23. The networks say thla me&N that in an average prime-time minute 17 .9 percent of the homes with television were tuned to ABC. CBS was second with l'7.4 and NBC was third with 16.4. LUXURY THEATRES Earlier this season ABC won the ratings for the week ended Nov. 28, 1982, finishing one-tenth of a ratlnp point ahead ol CBS. The ratings were delayed Tuetday by a computer failure at the A.C. Nielsen Co. and late in the day only ABC had the rattnp. The U.t here ill from ABC. Spokesmen for NBC and CBS said they did not have the ratings. The current ratinp period ia the first in weeks in which poet-eeuon ' football games did not play a role. 1st MNltltMt.Atwil11W.YS'Z.llU.110tWwiwlllllt4 s llite144•Xu1161~ 25s1/~-;:, J s -* fOtt FUOI EXCITEmEOTI V111tOvr... * ORANGE COAST COLLEGE .. '• ARCADE of GAMES• ~:: •• ~.': CALENDAR OF EVENTS GANDHI 70 MM i500liil8 Jan.28 RaTURN TO THa UA -------lftll tf•OO 4 100 1100 Rcoft. SH h 1t S1tow Only /~o ,. .... , sa~1r1~.v .. •t1i·,y a Marine Serles -Lyn & Larry Pardey Feb.4/5 FACULTY DANCE CONCERT . Curtain 8:30 P M. Feb.18 Wl!SWl:DaS Armchair Adventures Feb. 19 JAN KNOWLTON Feb. 28 WINDSONG Ctass1cal Jazz Quartet Mar. 2·13 Ml:RRY WIVl:S OF WINDSOR Five Penny Opera & Drama Lab PADDY WllST Mar. 5 lrtsh and American Folk Music ,,. Good Loaldn' (R) Mar. 17 Mar. 18 EUROPl:'S MINl·COUNTRlllS Armchair Adventure Series AVAZ DANCll CO. . International Folk Dance "Na AIW .. INn "°" C"> 8 P .M . -ROBERT MOORE THEATRE * Driv .. ins Qpen 1:46 Weelcnltltlt1/1:30 Weelc9ndl * CaiiMrta Ulcltr12 Frtt UlltH Meted TICKETS /Visa-MC -556-5527 ICE SUTill LESSllll Cla•••• Open -Reaglater Now Beginners of all ages welcome whether you have skated before or not, one of these classes Is for you. r·•;:oo~;;-;.: : .......... . MESA VERDE CENTER Harbor & Adams Costa Mesa : ........ .., : ' ....... n : : ~ Coupoft tor • . .,........ . • e.mir.. 2-17-83 • .... ~ .......... .. 979-8880 VISA or Masterbard Ac:oepted PUBLIC SKATING EVERYDAY, ONLV A BUS RIDE AWAVI r I Coming Wednesday, February 9, 1983 COUPLES Who are the romantics along the ·orange Coast? How are Changing trends and lifestyle• alterlng the way they look at IOYe~ marriage and famlly? Thne are but a few examples of the engaging question• answered In February's Current megazlne. rrent Current will be packed with articles on 1uch tlmety toptc1 Al two·paycheck 111 .. tyi., ~ contract• and the probfem• an - pteuur• facing elderly couplel. Plue, IP901•1 f .. t"r• Ilk• a Vafent1ne11 Day gtft gutde and puH-out brtd91 MOtk>n. A <JEH1l.Vll&AN" 111 ..,...,.. ..... ,,... ...... "Kiii ME GOODBYE" tN1 ......... ... ... .. ,,.., .. ,.. .... . Applebaum uld he l'OmpoMd "The Fri.-e of LU•" becauao ot the emotJonal Impact found ln Munch'• ~t1"1'- •M» 0TREAIUR~ OF THE FOUR CROWNS" IHI ......... =-· U TIM&._11 11-. 1'111. ... * •ARQAIN MATIN•aa * Montier Utrv leturdey All PerfOflMftCff before 5:00 PM (llrilft .__.. ............ -.......,., "lillT FRIENDI .. ------ "THE VERDICT" 1111 ........ '--- 0 THE TOY .. _ ----- LAKEWOOD CENTER WAllC IN "TOOTlll" .. 1 ----- ..,... YllllDICT" .. ------ LAl<EWOOO CENH11 SOUTH wa•• '" "41 HRl."1111 ------ UGANDffl" -IN DOUtY ITW.MO --- focvll'f 01 Colldtewoocs 211/531·9UO .. ~. THmNGUaL"-_,... ___ ._ "IOPHll'I CHOICE" .. . ----..... GOODeYI" ------ MTJMe WALKIR" ------- 818•.,.•DRIVl·IN IAIKMIN$2 MRY WEDNESDAY I THURSDAY Cllldren Under 12 Always FIEE ,. ,.... jllll-.-.. .... ue, ..... ...,t:~•• 1•P0111TUI llOTICll CllllDIWI ...af:R 12 fill(! -.. -........................ -...... .... ~-·*.11,.CM!llllel .... ....... "'•*CM _ _...,......, ..... ............. , ..... ~--··-- ;., .. ~ ' ·.~ ANAHEIM [>lllVf IN "ntm TOY" -. -~-AU(lr-~"-~ '• .. " ... BUlNA ;. ARIC. : .. ·" " ~---·­HM070 l ,. •• LINCOl N 0 11 1v1 11<j ......... " .. -"tlHAMY'8 MAC ..... • _ .. _ -------- OwA NGl ... • '" Th compoeer 11ld ht became lntere1ted In \he arUat'• work afte1 walkJ.na lnto the MUJ"Ch Mu ae um In 0110. Norway ln lint. "The palntln~• arabbed me , • Applebcawn uld. Munch'• bfft known work la ''The Scretam'' painted In 1893-94 Thero will be ~3 pa.lntlnp ln the mu.eum exhibit whic h runa through March 27. l 'I Orange Coaat DAILV PllOT/Thurlday, January 27. 1983 THE t '"MILt' CIRCtM "Barfy's cold and wants us to come in." by Virgil Partch (VIP) "S omc people sure are touchy." by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum "I'd be willing to pay you not to bring him In here again." ~ -2-" t ' Jl.m.E P .\RKER 52 Japanese l)fem~r 56 Cusht0n ev TMf WAV, WHAT MAPP£Nf" TO~ LAST ON£? WEDNESDAY'S PUZZLE SOl.VEO 42 Bird UMoulh Pref 45Combo4 ..ea. ..... 47 VIOlln Uer 48 loc:k TtM•LE•EED8 ~s "lJ.ilSl! ..oo~ ~MPJ!J(e" ~~~!!OF f'CMP Wlf:l.VIN6' AMJRI! ~ ij{)W COMe?! SCAIHLE 6GIU8&1..E SC~l&el.E • by Tom K. Ryan ! a'-'~ HA, HA--IT'S l=UNNY THE WAV THEY TRY TO HIDE THEIR FACES FROM EVERYONE by Jeff MacNelly GORDO by Gus Amola f'l'NK l' •INKEaBEAN lOOIC oor eaowl! I I I ~ DRABBLE by Tom Bat1uk ~(£OR(£! HE~ Hl5 HEARi !ET Ct-J BEING AN AVALANCHE •1 t'U. 6E.1 'f~T 6UU.'f JAM\E, wl\.~ IE. ~R'i 'fo ~M~&I& &Rot~~R COM\~I MA,HA~ . ,.,, '-~ I• by Lynn Johnston =~Yoo1Wo !Hf\NO I fftJNT?f .... --- .. . I i . ~ . ' The sounils of 'Hill Stree echo real world " By FRED ROTHENBERG UT ...... Wrtw NEW YORK Mc»t televta on proaranll tak Authentic noise enrich p,opular cop show dMd. li Juat .... there ... Somt vitwen, ueed to ex~riendnc ttlovWon with one '1e and one ear, may hav• trouble paytnc 1uch clc. attention to 11HIU Street." "We like ao cna .. a leN9 of dblcomfort.'' MJd Hoblit. "You can't cmually wMCh ua." th~ E.F. Hutton apprOGCh to th nolaca or real Ufo. Everything mti1 to stop dead, aa the wate111 part tor the principal char11t•U!r11. The acenes may ,..be u( wemlng 1treet1, prt.ona or ban", but every locaUon sound.a like the plainl of Kanaas. f "TV tends to be homogtin lz:ed," 11ald Greg Hoblit, a produc.'('r·dlrector on NBC'& cop opera, "Hill Street Blues," an unconventional show In many ways and, particularly, In Ill aense of sound. "Most TV and bad mov1e1 show and tell," Hoblit said. "They show a picture and explain it." "Hill Street" tak<.'S a different road, one that offers potholes, honklng horns and a broken trafCic light or two. You might say It echoes the cluttered, compU~ated real world outside the TV studio. The e ffect ls greater tension. energy and viewer mvolvement. "We like to pepper the aenaes with a lot of inputs and images," said Hoblit. "We'll have I If I K~I>:\ 'i EVENIHQ ll.-00 ••• NEWS CHARLIE'S AHOEl.8 Julie ~ an unwllling ICClOlllplloe In • plot to kll ~eHcutni.. a POHT 18 ENOUGH The gltls nnd romance dur· l"IJ Ille winter break. • THREE"S COMPANY Furiey 10MS his job and mo\1111 In with Ille lh'8• IOml . • HAWAII~ \ .. .. cllppf'd , lncomplc-tt' dlaloauo and a lot of lnCormatJon thaat doeMn't get apelllld out." Thlt bu1y b\Uln 11 mo.t obvlout In roll call, th ltet'ne that OP<'nt ov~ry epllod . A day tn th Ure or the Hill Street Precinct atarta with Sat. Phil You could call it· Dungeon Din. Phonesjansle, chairs scrape and cops moa1.1, cackle and shriek. F.sterhaua (Michael Conrad) d1apenalna 81Slg.nment1 and Aristotle am.id blood-shot eyea and black coffee. You could ca.11 ll Dungeon Din. Phones jancle, chairs scr•~ and COJll moan, cackle and lhrtek. Th~re1s shop talk1 sex talk and small .. talk. Some you Nobody ~ A.J. "'*' • lie ,,..., lie Wlt1-d • ITIYfder ~ on Y8G8tl0n et • nonhern Cellfotnle reeort. 8 8 CIMMI A MIN< .... Ind th• gli1e cempelgn to oet the Chief to ~ the *"-009 he fired for ~no In • glfile maoa- zine. (Pert 2) • NYCHeC OOMllUllON Meglc:len <OtlMy .. ~ condUaU •n lnwltlgatlOn of J-Mydridl, wtio unth r-tly WM rtlfwred to .. t"8 WOt1c:1°1 IMdll!g P9)'dllcl. ...,, •led by Jedi Palanoe. • 9 TOO Cl.OIE FOR COMFORT Henly and Muriel go bed( to Ille t9SOe and the beginning of thak llfe ~-· • M•A•&•H Hawllert end 19.J. dedde to do '°"*""''11 •bout • hellcopter plloa wtlo - NtlYll lo gather t>atU. fllild brle+bt•c to NI• -~ • MY8TEAYI '"S«gNnt Cribb: Mad Matter'• Holkll)I'' Tiie -· OMfll le celled In When the dilmembered ,..,,.. of • One Cf1"P rlYOl'ller ~ trom hand to hand. 1eeY111Q • bb>dy ttll °' mll)'lllnl and murder. • OVEAEASY au.t: Jan Clayton. (R) Q • P98 LATENIOHT Host: 09nnls Wl"toley. &i C88NEW8 l ==Q Ted Danson stars in NBC1s ''Cheers,." which can be seen locally at 9:30 tonight 09 KNBC ( 4). / ~ .. dleco~ on @r1gflton leec:f\.1:J • MAITENll62 THEATRE "Winston Chufdlill: The Wllderr-. Y8Wlll'" Ha-mg loet e fortune In IN Wll Street cruh, Cllurchlll ftndt hlmeelf pltch9d Into• conlllct wfthtne '-dws of hit own per1y. (Per1 2) Q G BOlDONES :rHE PRICE IS RIGHT MOVIE **. "Jufle"' (1956) Oort. Dey, Louis Jourdan A woman i....... her MCond '-bend wtlln she dlloo'll· .,. n. k"*I her nrst 11us- bend In order to ,,,.,.,.., her. CB) THE 9KI CATS courttoom etlllt BJll Roblte; a villt lo Moble Fldellty Scund Labe; • IOolc el LOI Angelll01 prepera- ilonl fOt .,.. 1te4 Olym- plca. 1 (8FMM4.Y~ LAVSWE & IHR.EY &COtlPAHY Thi• docl.lmen • .,.,. CllP- IUl'98 vllllilhing .,_.. - Including A1letk: !lone. Souell AmeriC8n -..... and Siberian tiger cube - defend~. tllem1elvH FE8AUARY PAEV1EW 8:30 AUCE OICl<CAVETT CIHBNEWS • 9 BAAHEY Mlll.Efl Diltrlch It booked for Illa pW't W • demonltretlon and • pro-nuke aclenlllt ""-"" llllow pmon.. .,. by lp!Mtllng them with "atomic wet«.·· (Part 2) I :o oF PEOPt.E * * '-' ''The Cat And Thi Cen1ry'" (1878) Honor 8leclcman. Mlc:hlel Callen Hein l>•ttle for a fortune 11 the IPOOllY •tale of a decemed mllllonalre. "PO' C%) AWAl'08 TIME WITH CHARLES CHAMPUN 7:00 I C88 NEWS N8CNEW8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Rlcllie ~ ll'Mdom ol the pr-•bove frlendlhlp wtllti he ptlr'9 to eapoea FonDe'I beef llwt pflotMe In • If ont P11Q1 story. I :c,,.,.NEWSQ Billy trtee to ,_ .i..- c e: Danny·• hooller ~him ol jelllouey. i :.a COMPANY The roommet• IC)lnd • ....,end et Cindy'• aunt'• tann. I JOK&r8 WILD • II 18INIEB8 ~ (I) PM. MAGAZINE A pro file of Nedi• Comenecr 1 gymnHtlc c:oecll. Mio ~ed to the U.S. In 1981: I KllWglt doctor" wtlo helps .. cl- .... llnd .,.. wey °"' Of debt. . a Dfron,,.,...,..,. TONIQHT A loc* II pro •ttlllllle 0..J ~. Mertln Otaen, Lyrvi.Holly Johnlon end Fred~. wt1o .. ~ i acting c:.-a. LOOKAUV'E OMHQE OOUNTY 1 TOOAY CB) MN<INO LOW 9ETTlft S.• lhereplete. """* .,...,.... lnleMIM and ~ riNiiJiii .... prMlftted lo comp8fe .,.."°"' 'Ind ........ ebout """*' llllueltt)'. 7:80. I OH THE TOWN Feetw.cl: "" WOttl °' e KHXT lCBSI • KHBC IHIC) e KTL.A (Ind.I .KAllC (ABC) e KFM8 CCBS) e KHJ·TV (ln1U e KQT IAllC) e KTTV (Ind.) 'e KCOP·TV (I,,_.> e K.<:&T <PHI eKOCI IP8S> The glrtt l.ce -toogtl ~ u cont•tent1 on a TV thaw. • IEYEOHLA. FMturec:t: • PfofWe of Pn11 • Donahue: • POlllble cure IOf lrlllritll P86n: -luxu- ry c:ara; • r9')0rt on the "-ol t-.ge~ II MADAME'S PLACE The networtl preeldent lnlllll tllat Mldame hire • ---· • WKAPIN~TI Herb lntieipelM e ewtng.. Ing bechefor IHI •It• i1•tlng from hlll wit.. TIC T/IC DOUGH MACM:ll.1 l.EHREA REPORT • • HITCHHl<ER'8 GUIDE TO THE GALAXY ~Ind Ford find thlm- MtYM In • r•t-ant., ~ al the end of Ille unl'tlrll. (J) UE OET£CTOR (!) YOU ASKED FOR rT Flltured: "Ruseian Clrcue School For Klde" encl "Dolphin• Tllel Herd Alh." • MOYIE • • • "'l.Jndmt The Aid Aoo.'. ( 1937) Rl:)'mond MMMy, Conr9d Veldt. Swordlmen \>•Ille the loroee of Ille wlly Cardinal Rk:tllllu "'*' ,,. pel'· -=u1el "" ~ In LcUI XJll'1 F,.,.._ CB) NllOE THE NF\. Hoet1 Lin Oewaon and Nlcil Buonlc:onll ,...,.._ lligtlllgl\11 °' the ~ ..... HFl Qlll'* and .,,.... key ~ Ind ~ (D} NHl HOCKEY New Yortt ~et Loe 00~ Get "' INpe. tooa good, end .... ..,. .. !Ne ~"'-,,,..,.,. 1:00·~· MAGNUM,P.I. Meonum trill to recowr • ~ 111Hect "°"" frOffl I~ llmu- ralw.Ttof. ea,A.Me A 1111ntllly flendlc8CIPed elllO" ,... lor Jule. end the lludenla ~ • ~ dnl ~""°'°of~ • OeYld "-don. • °'9COYIR:,,. WOf¥.D °' IQ!HCa Pltlr Grewe ~ • wtde ,.,. °' ---Md -~(oP[ce. - • Q'I THE GMATAT wm llCAH HIRO "91pll'• ,,.. 81\lcMftl'• ,..., ~ ..... to tredl «IMtint ......... (NI KOOC flM I Ori-TV t •TV M90 a::> (C)Mml•) Cl) CWOtl>NY.,N.Y. • cwr-. II> (IS..,.I 1~(9tl9wttme) . ,.,_...,.,. • tC.l,.._He1_11) JlrJogl IJle CIA end 1111 l<OB down on lht echool. GMOVE * *'-' 00UMC" (1988) ~ ltd Btldford. ,,_ Otf)'. A wee unMrlf1)' medlc:el center le p1t11f*1 with dllly ""-lndudlng maipl'lll> Ucellllll. (!} 90N> a.rt -·· ... Mery 8bolA 1111 '*-: Mery rMlziel .,_ 1NY be oenylng M lllnbeby. ...... MAGAZJNE A profile of Nedi• Comanecl't g)'mnattlc coedl, wtlO delec:ted to Ille U.S. In 1981: a "budget doctor" wtlO helps hit dl- ents find their wey OU1 ot det>t. . • MOVIE •• * "7t Perk A--" (Plr1 3) ( 1977) l.-it¥ Ann Wwren, Polly Bergen. A tltffl·wlM young glrl unjuetty 111'11 to refOfm edlool. jolrie Ill uncle! wodd ~ ot proetltutlOn uc>on hlrr--. •• 8NfAK PAEVIEW9 Neel Gabler end Jeffrey Lyona r1Y1ew '"Gandhi"" encl '"Fninoae •• (C)MOVE ... ~. Cnlzy'' ( 19801 Ann-M8rgtel, Bn1C1 Dern. A T .... deYeloper"1 •'CCllllllul job end -.,.1- lul .... rNnlOI 10 dffle '*" Into • ~ c:wWI. "R" Cl)MOYE * • "The OfNI Trlln Rob- bery'' (1171) Sean Con- nery. Oonlld Sut'*11nd. Two ...,.,, lum-of-tlle- OlnlUry con .uete ·~ 10 pull ell the -··~ ~r~ot• !Ocilld .. ,. lboard 8 IUI· ITIOYlng locomotlw. "PO' eMOYE • • • ''Thi &aye In Com- peny C" (1171) AndJww St-. St.n Shew. A group o4 young Amertcan toldllrt manegee lo OWt· come Ille lertore of the Vletnlm Wer In U'lit own, rMOYmClflbeal ,,__. 'R' ...... "'Diner" (1"2) St8" ~. Mldley Rourlle. A ~ diner le the ll8flOOut tar ....... °' young ,_, -dUrtnu Ille time wllell IN 111'9- ... of adlAthoOd .,. lllrMlenlng 10 ~ .. them. 'R' UO Cl) CHAN.rt AHGELI A ..... ideOIN ~ llllfM> t• lor Jll II lralled ~ ~=n,.. •M..w '"Thi 8uc:ll ltope In ...... "R61r~efd100li the ~ WOtld "' lntlmllloMI .... .._ irl S.OPIUIO, ...... Nlw Yen end zurtc:tt. =meOMNM ........ : °' .... County ... ,... far...__.. V1o .,....,.., coee • c.. ..,.,. CMlft: IN CowNf ~lrl0fllfl08eou... ty; """*"'°" .._. .• OWf'I OOol.-.... ®~ ••i.t ........... tt•o Jene '°'*' l<tte Kite-....... ,,, __ __ _ ........ .. ........ °' .. ... ..................... ..... ........ ~.._~"' e ....,OUI .-.., """ "'• '"""°" ~--.... w ......... All unmarried )'OUll9 dNg eddict expects • bll by end .,.,.,. the ~· lor h411P, 1':*>88Q&AI 8em uwows an • uthor'1 per1y tor 11111 roomnwt9, • Red Soll eatehw wtio ~ out of 1M "98Y°" eioeM In hit MW W lobiot-n rrTAKUlWO A dlltr-..gftt !*lent holds Sem. Molly, Merna und • ~ """"' c. rolne Phlllp9 hoeCaot In • , ~ tel room. (J) MOVE ••• ••'fhe s.. Chi .... (18$5) Jahn W~. L.-. Turner. 8Med on me nowl by Altdr.,, 0... A Iler· man ceptaln comm en· ci.ra • lfllp of fugltl we during Wond Ww H. • M0A•1•H The~ a.... must IOm8how cope with • c:.111- cel ehor1age of bb>d d ur· Ing a grueling 18-ht:IW C!>":-'«W\. **IA "LOYI FOf Rent" (1178) u.. Ellbach~. Annette O'Toole. Two tmell-town glrll who mow to tMie adv9ntage of the gtamorow ... of the t Ilg city find themeatwa loroecl by ~ Into ti.cor ... ,~a <t'~~ Mede dlec:OYWe that hit MW IM!ly "wt not t11 r..O-, lor '*"• end Gety lo .. • 1111 long betll • =~ ILUO An lll'9IY pollce lleutenen I ~ F1dlo '° 111'4 the man wtio ...,... end stabbed ,. RugMar. end Renko le demoted to wrtl • I .. .... I pertd1ig ltdl .... (Pert t ) IO/IO THEFMl•OUI ~""°" OMMHD'f TO MUTI "Ofmencty And ~ Jtnaon'' Eugene °'mendY oonoucte the ~ On::hmtre In • pertormr enoe of Slbllue'e a-. to In D MlnOf lor Vlaln end Plano i.etUttng t~­ otd ~ ~ Janeoft. ;MVemm '"hftMnt Cltt»O: .. .., .......... Holldaf' The -· geant .. Cllled In ...... ... ~ed ...... of1 ~ .. dllcowNd on • ltlGIMon leed\. C -ent1· .. 11111AA A )'OUlll ,, ...... ._ .. , *'*9()ey ~ ot doll'll .......... .... MIM020 ,...,. ...... Md nowww........, ... -. (I) HOUYWOOO Hol)Mled ,.... -Hart1lt .,_ ...... repot1t Oft tit P90tl'8 end I """" ......... ....,.. newelnW.PJa• aM11Md ............... ~ . -~ ........... a.. latt" f1Mt)~ c.r~ dine. ,.._,-...., A .... .............. ...... Ofl • ...-w mm,..,... In•~ ...,.,..-......... .... -,.. . """......, ot._11a•~'"' (J)llOWll. . .. ~ ·-n.e~= \ plck up: llOMI you don't. .&t maet ot It ii actually• pho_ny, off~r• IOUnd, the ranc.ln81 and ravtnp of Oft The Wall, an lmprovtutJonal comedy 1roup. "We juat put them In a room with a mJcrophone and let them cnet.e vac.." MJd Hoblit. Watch cl<Wly torUpt. The only diltinct word.I come from th,. ,..culart, th.. R•nkoe, Hilla and <!'.offeya. The rtlt II tM 1ounchrack from Off The Wall'• areai.t hlta. 11 ''There'• allO an economic factor,'' HobUt Mid. Whenever an extra 'l"'>Uihl an audible word, he ce .... beln1 an extra, and we have to pay htm more.•• From the equad room IO the hallway, you're llkely to hear another "Hlll Street" trademark: continued, or overlapped dialogue. "I Jove to at.art a conversation off.8Cfeen, when you hear Batee (Betty Thomu) and C.Offey (F.d Marinaro), but you can't aee them rlaht away beau.lie they're behind a poet," ea1d Hoblit. "A few worda aweep you into the acene. A standing et.art la IUBE TOPPERS KNBC (4) 8:00 -"Fame." A mentally handicapped singer falls for Julie, and the students find a ~e pin-up photo of teacher David Reardon. KCET (28) 8:30 -"Enterprise." "The Buck Stops in Brazil,''. with host Eric Seva.reld, looks at the high-stakes world of international banking in Sao Paulo, Brasilia, New York and Zurich. KNXT (2) 10:00 -"Knots Landing." Mack diacoven that his new family may not be ready for him, and Gary 1oees his long battle against alcoholism. Some IOUnda enhance emolJGnal 1Jnp.c1. Jn an •.uode Wt 1.ar, Dt*tive J.D. La.Rue (Kiel Mardn) w11 lhot at, from dolt ranp. The llqUltnCe wu lhown tn •low motion, wi&,h the sun blut echalna aft.er the ICl'Mrl w.nt blade. LaRUe -and hla frtp-..d expnmion -both IW'Vtved. well pMt the cornmetdal break. A Wffkly 1er1a' tl1ht 1eheduU111 requirn completlna p»t·producdon work, lncluc:tt.na mUlk, diaJotue c{u~ and 80Und ef(ecu, 1n one day, u compared IO monU11 for a theatrical film. "We know we can do th1a better," Hoblit laid. "Sometlmea we'll do 11<>me fancy footwork tn pp1t-production IO heighten a acene, like putUna ln the 10u.nda of a throbbing heUcopter, even that you can't eee it. • · "But IOl'ne thlnga can't be fixed. If a acme ln the 1quad room tau. fiaJ, we'll wonder l! we could fiy a helicopter ln to save lt." IUn of IN PMt end "'88telN~of lcideY• llumor. I: 10 Cl) MOYll * * "Secret Fem91Y'' (Mo Date)~• Mlonall, lAn- do lkauoo. A man's ~--~toact out 1111 ~ pereonel fan. t ...... 'R' 1:111 HIO MAGAZINE t:a0 eaNEM l'M MAKING LOW IET1'IR .. a.. lher..... rnan-ln- t~ Int ....... and entartalnlng enlmetlon .,. preMft-.d to~· quMtlone and .,_. ~luMrlen~. --1:..un- • \t •tftll Olllnl Clew'' f1167) JfM Morrow, Mara Cordey. Jet fllhtlrt .. called In to deatroy • menwnottl, dMdl)' bird ttwt .... "***'a the ~ tlon. l:11 CB) 1N1101 THE NFl. Holla Len Oeweoft end Nldl BuonlconU rftttlw hlghllghtt of 1111 ~ ..... , NFL~ and ln1 ... key pllywa and COICtlel.. 1:111 CC> llCME *. "'"---" ( 1878) •111 Murray, Howerd ....._..n. Notlllnt 11 MCred In tNI llltlrlcel!odl et Hollywood mcMMnak· ~ end Olflf'I fllml. 'R' uo• MOVIE ···~ ""-Ion"" (1954) Comtil Wide, Y--DI c.to. A INll ....... M1P from an ~ lher hie IMd II liken ~ from '*" Ind hit Clml)' le ITIUf. dered. ~=20 ** "Didi Hunt"' (1N1) CNil1ee ·~ Lee Mir· W\. In ~ 1'30t, • Moun- tie Ind • fnlndlr oMllnll .. ... Old bettte -cMl---~on ... C....wld111-.'R' (%)MOVIE ···~~, .. (1911) Gibe ' A.la Kemie. Ttlt11 unflkely hlroel ... out to b9t118 IN ,..._.end~ of city hell. 'PO' 1:40 Cl) 9lllT Of llZAMI John ey,,. "'°"' )'OU "*"' etranoer tfWI trvth. llroer "*' .... end ~ then anvtNng you•w --· ..00 Cl) TOP O' THE MONMG .MOVIE * *.... '"Thi Ufll Of ~ an" (1979) Orehlm ~ man, John a.-. In the fll'8I Olntury. • bungler " fllMly Pfodl6mld • ,,_..... "' end b«lolnm "",_.., of • greet NllOkM ,_ """'..,..,.. ~ 'R' •:10 Cl) TULIA COUNTAY MU9IC FQTIVAL Roy Ctn, Jlln Stanord, .... r-.. The <>ek .... 8oye. George ~ Don w..m.. end Joe Sun .. IMtured In .... evening of foot41omplng mullc. ~'ll®llCME * * "Slt)'wwd" (tMO) .. Ill DHll, Howerd 111111 , ... A young .,.,__ pteglc. blfl •Idle! "' "" locel elrport'• -~. IMrneto~e<*I. --1~ • IMNllr'ILI 4:141<1:1~ ..... "A Piece Of The Adon" ('977).,.,., ~ -.-~.TWolllllll* oroob _...,.,. to mMter 1111 er1 of .,... rtp.oft ....... being ~rneled Into '**llnG ......,., communl-ty ~ 'PQ' uo•••.,. .. ..,,.,_.. ( 1N 1) Jelle 'ondil. Kt1e Kttltofftnon, A *- ll'IOWI ..., lllflO tool! - the cNltlNNHp °' hlr late "'**'d'a ocwporMIM and I lllQ'I po•• ed flMn. clel ••pert lteaoMe lnYOlwd In • dilMlrOMe diet with A.rib lnvlMon. 'R' t:oo(H)••\t ··~eT,. 11et1" ( 1t77) Atcllerd """'· Cetlllltne ..... 8mld on the ltOfY by Jonettlen 8wtft. An fnglllh Pll)'•lolen ltecptnH 1'1111 OOllld on en llMlld t 11.tnedGM pop. di I I ~ i.y tiJ!y peoplie. 'G' 7• Cl) ••• ''The a-. Wetl" (1t54) Edwwd 0 . RoelMon, Jotwl F~tll. The ..-Weier of • ~ ._ ............ ~ tlgelld t.y Ille lhow't r•••dlel. 7:11 C%) ***IA ''Lee Blcllee" (1"8) Jean..louie Ttlntlg- nen1, ~ S.-d. Arleti.~~-­ up I ~ Pwtel8n elc»- well er1leC. .... 7:IO (Q) * * * "Cuttll'1 WI'(" (1te1) Jotln ~d. Jeff Btidgll. A melmed VIII· 11111'1'1 ..,.. and Ille beet frllnd. • eodel dropout, • foc:ue thelt -glee on 8CJfW'9 e murder CMe. "R' Cl) •• ~ ""Second tiend HHr11" ( 1980) Roblt1 Bielt•. Batwe H81'rle.. A T-C:.-wlltl lt1«tdant well• up one morning to find tllet he le merrtad to • nlglltoMt Wlltr-with Uvll lllcla. 'PO' t:OO CC) *. * "'The Grell Clrueo'' (1HO) Matto Lin- za. AM~· EMco CIN- eo ,._ ftorn otMlcuttt)' .. • cafe entertel-to blcOIM • leed llf)Of " ..... Metropolltwl Opera. 0 * * '"The °'9ll Tr.In Aobblry"" ( 187t) ._ eonn..y, DonlAd auther· i.nd. TWo IKPl'1 tum-of. the-century con ertl911 etteonpt to ~ ell the . -·•tV!'I ~rob­ bery °' • lclc*ld .... 8boll'd • fllt-m«Mng looc>-motlw. •pa• a:ao ® * * ... "'The Man Who Sew Tomorrow'" (1981) OoC!Mnent.y. Harrllld ~ Onon w ..... Footage of _...he~ Ind dnimetac ~ °' 1111 ... ~ Ihle lo«* • .. ltll 17ttMlentury Ff-" ' phyeiclllll, Mtro6oglr ' and cnyatlc. MldMlll de ~ Demi,~ -~ d81NA.'PO" t:OO. ** ... "FtWltier oar• (1945) YYOnne DI Cello. Rod C-on. A ,.._.y lemlle lllMlon-lt...,., .... • lheky mabtmonlll llnot w11t1 • notonoue outtew . CZ> ..... "Nun:do"' (1871) David Proval, JemH Andronlcl. A young men trtee to M1P hit ,._o.o ~other -ve "°"' "" -~ WOftd """° thl ~ °' delly .... 'A' ' ....., ca> ..... "Hlghtllewb" (1811) S~ S'8111one. Biiiy Die Wllletfta. A towgfl , New VOite City oop bm Ille -" CIUI out far 111111 .._, Cll'8 of thl worid'• moll dengerou1 telfor11t1 em-In Mi city. 'A' 10:00 CC) ...... ··~End" ( 1837) S)'Me Sldn9y, Joel ~Y~lnen EMt RMr etum 1W'1t to °""-"*" erMron-INlll. CB) •• "'COnYO)'" (1171) 1<111 Krltlolfereon. Ml MICOt-. Tludc .. and °°"' ~ 10 MWtl -anotller In • ~ tumble -on ,......_ 'PO' """••'• ...,, ...... .,.~. (I) • *. ··ec.n. Of The 0ttme•• ( 1950) V1n JoM. IOll, Ololte ~. A poloe lllut9llnl .... the lllUrder -°' • ....,. ~·f'llfl· MO• .. .._.°'The Draoon" (1H1) 8Nlle "YM· Alotl- 8"1 Tr.._ wtllfl e jMe dregon le l'ltl#ned to I _.. ..... Oll~le ..... ••<%>•• ..... ~ .. I 1111) ,,_. FOflda. KJ1e ic.1llolfa w . A former ..... ....,tOlll- ---""-....,. ••• af ,_ ...... ,......,.. ..... , .,.. • 111111 po • .. llMft. clel ••P•tt -hOMI lmdwW Ill • .....,.,. ....... ,,.,..~ 'tr ... * "8ptrtt OI n. Wind" 1 lt791 CH9f Owl Oeorp, UM Ptdl-A )'O&ll't boy °"91 OOIW 11111 ~ 10 "-"" tlle W0tlcl Cll•Mplon Dot ...... 'PG' 10:IO{%) ••• "'*°'91Y' (1 .. )--d Pr)IOr. 0.. Wiit{. M tt• <C) • • '"O. or,_,.. . (1t?t) 0oo.i;, •••• *" Ollie ..,'" ~ ... ...... .... ,..., .... ..... 'N. by ArmatnM'8 a ...... • • ~ . -or..,. Oout DAILY llULOT/Thurtday, Jlnul_(Y 11, 11U .. • ·, . ' ' . . . ,, ,. ••••• ~ •• i:,, ........... ~·-..... ~ ...... ... "I Firmed-Up Without s,renuous f=xercise~1 .. '~The· Staff at Ne.wport Bio .. - Eitness ·are reall~ great .· .. · T-he resu Its are fantastic . . ~ -, and best yet, instantaneous!" .. LE!SLIE WOLFE . "After losin_g 110 pounds I realized a serious need to"begin an exercise progrann that would tighten and tone my muscles. When I discovered~~~ORJ--SlO:F!TI\IESS~----~~-~~'----Y~~ it was a dream come true! After only.12 visits I lost 21 inches. The indivfdualized treatments are .great and the staff are truly caring people". "I recommend NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS to all my friends." ·- : ~ "Due to my hectic schedule I don't get enough time to properly e~ercise. I find NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS relaxing and get immediate results. I lost a inches in only four . . • . treatments with no dietinQ. Fantastic!" --;\4(-- ----------------~--~--------------------------------~~---------------------------------------------------­: --------------------------------------------------------~---------------------------------------------------- . J . . . "Following arthioscopic surgery to my left knee jn June of this year, I was unable to run or bend without severe pain. I tried three types of physical therapy ._,,ith little success and literally couldn't play tennis without hobbling around." "After only six sessions with John Bens.on .aLNEWP_DBT BIO-EJTNESS, I can not only bend my left knee and run without pain, I am on· the court and playing tennis again. I can't believe it, but I am a believer now." -~~ HUGH STEWA'RT NATIONALLY RANKED TENNIS PRO . ··---------------------------------------------------------.----------------------------------------------------: --------------------------------------------------------~--------------------------------------------------­. . .. . . : . . • "After my 6th treatment I lost 15112 inches overall!" NINA TOWNSEND NEWPORT BIO-FITNESS · CJlN WOR~ FOR YOU, TOO! .._ - -_.. -.. --- and toxins which cause the familiar s.oreness following vigorous exercise. Bio-tor'e is per- fect for persons seeking an alternative to the monotony and regiment of tradition al figure salons. EuropeM Mini-Face Lift The same basic Bio-tone treatment can be administered to the finer muscles of the face . ~gain, tiny electrical Impulses tighten and ·firm up face muscles. And this can tie admin- istered along with our other ~io-tcme treat- ments. , . . ORANG• COUNTY'S ltl08T EJCCW81V. • COMPU.,.. PA881V• £X•RCl8E C•NTER I CLASSIFIED· INDEX To l'llct YN Ad, Cll 642 -5678 Annou""""'"'" .._, • r-na -Is ~~ S.-hoola a. l.nom•"""' T,..vt'I --.-BUSINESS & FINANCIAL Jlw;-'"' &» .,,.__ Opp.n.w- OUol ... WMIH •Jftwittnw'ftl Opponwwttft Jnw-atmrnl Wan\l'l(i ·-y IO 1..-. •Money WenWd -._.TD t EWLOYIDT IVlpWonWd .,.,._ Wan....t :IOOl :I004 :ion 3014 :Miit 3Clll lll'O ~·~ Thutlday, January 27, 1N3 ' • Rod Carew Colleges plan info Car w hosts MS fete ·:ml! ~ 1¥,1 I UIU O• ~ ~ .... It• Clla' ~·~".¥ m• eei ....._le .... A I 0 T .. =.......... ILHANT LOOM, 10 1t1•1t.:?J tf OOY 'I Y , rf UM, ...... ~~ N•WNtt hMf\, WHA""· I' ~"'• e 0..._1"41 AT~ l ~ • c...,... .,,.,,.. ..... ._ OA.. E'•lloll ~"" "'=.t.:~• Ml • Y AelOOt~' we. OllllflAM 1 'OMM ,, ~--111111 • ltll. IO l•l)H •,,....._..Et.Ti UTUM ftl9 ~I. • ~==j =~~u.._.:: ALV~/Ju"°*': .llM## .. m.a .. =· ~ .._, POf1~ t1 ~ !f!!'*J: !'!&ii!!.", ~MOULD ---::wr W06AT19 1' ....._ "'"ONDINT OIOA" H, TNt ~It w•~ ~ 1111 hMI\, 0.W.ty r....-. Itel• of -;o;;;.r :,~ UU l~';,';.oo'to':\.-. eo-ty Of 8UllNO• M.VAllU ' ......... Celifofnte HIM I ~ tfeNIW le T.a. ·-OfMf9, II .. of C....,M, fO CAii -0 .. MtY GA.II-~-liw f'. W ellOvl to M ..... to~ Ol1 HOnC1 II ~ ~ ... ,__ -I~ INI ~ ..,,_ of Rod Carew of 'h MOTICll v.................. --,,. ............ tllld ...... HlWltO"T· INO:h• C~I== Ofl ........ ~ •• ~ 0... .. '°''"" .. -.... In ,,_,, 1. ·~..a TM MWt _,...._ ..... JM 1NOW O COWllY °""'et 0r"'tl ~on OOt,.,.._"-~_':'~ .. MO O'docll ..-. ..... ,_.-' lfl Ille._. CIYt --~of \.AUforNa An1"1o11 hOlt\eO .,...... ,.. ....... '-" ....... TO OICA" H ALY ~II, flN ..... • ~J 1a..-w tl'9 tOM l9t Mlcll t0t OOI du.-.e Or.._,.._ of Oelllmel, ...... hl1 third MS ~lebrity ,.,........,.._..._, YoUAN · TOAHllM' ,_, wfloti 91111111 ... -•roH I• 11 ,,....... • ....., ....... ..._ot 011No11•111Ut14. tlet, e11• h h J IM._. I ....., IN THll ~OU.OWi TO !tut.Ha._. Oren .. 0...1 Daltr Mlllerl frtl. -of lnMe. OllMly .-uL HT ATI llOO"ITIH ,...,... No..-M, 1'11111._ Lune eon odnor n,s ";;:~: ........ ~ °' GIVI ANY LIGAL ~WHY '91ot,JM.11, ...... tO, "· 11N ofOt.,.... '*'°'~ HPIVtOI, locl•ted •I IOtO ........ •N•• •11lhled .... !"4 .... " out1tandln1 1tu en ta n an tllOf,..Y Ill '"'' "''"•'· YO\I '"' "ILllP IOUOHT IH THI , The~ ..... , .. ='='*' It lroedw•~ ...... Ill .. Olly°' NOflTH ll"" ,AM~ tht" Multiple Schtro1l• thOllld dOIO ~ eo lNll~ ATTAOHIO A~TION ... ..--:!!'..,rfNdllll ......... :_,-$ SalltaAna.CclwntydOrllWI, ..... AllOOIATION, , ... oUO R d h l wf'lll.,. tel90!\ .. II en~ Ml)' ... IHOVl.0~11 .._ ..,,_ -~--..... -... Of Cellrornll, ••NtJtCI~ ........................ ... H at on r ocont y at -.... .... 11~. ~ • · 1 ... • of t1111t .....,,.. ...,. M.t.HAOIMINT ,.,___ .. ,ION dear• of IOfoolOlllf• -Met .... h V I \ T tl ,_ "'' .. _ Detei 1t, ,., llMI ;-MttftOIYt-1 Lii~ 1t111l11e .. lrllOWn U ..,.,._,,,,.... I Hll J Hl .. "IT \ e e v u r e Av 11 0 I u. t •• ". • • • • e.m. In Del*"'*''.. lllAMI tTAW "W .• WMAI¥'' .,cl ....., AMINCA, • ~ oorpor..ion. •0•11111 D N • .. • Re1t11urant In ·El Toro. 1111111e114IM•· II "''*"" ,_.. AddrH• of oouttt '" OMo Tfle ,...._.,.. lNtMfl It dOllll "n1 w. NewfOtt 11¥11 .. aty of .. duly 1H01n1ec1 Tr~ .. ""°" deferldenl(al. tor die.,.... of one accor..1.1n1 to Suzanne .....,_ ~ .... "'·• .,,.,~ CenwOr1v11...--.AM.CllllwM ---· NewPort ~ •. oouneyof°""ll oon_.~r ... 1n ~~O:C,~ .. ~00 ,,:;.,~~..! 'I" ..--........ -.. IT ti ,UPITHI" ONMIMD "'91 P9'0 MAMAol 01.UI Utl *•of~ ' ,.., wv ,.,., _,_. "' _,... .. __ , T e lfe1an , Executive ...... "-............ " .. ~~~h '~~~~Ori Herwtoir "•oo. He.port "'' 1111111 lt•lltflt •Ill II• Tr1111 llCIOut•CI by JAMii J, u1111ec1 ....... en4 ~.,..Of. O fficer of the Oranae ...._ ---with lt!lt .,._, _,.,. -~ ...-... ......._ oon~ on°' .,.., flt tfth IU"l<I, • Mtrrled me11 •• Ill• wrll ot entar°'"""t In Mid ..ion , • ~I U•••CI ClllH 1olloltu •I ecoer-DeciierellOll. ~;;'A:" iO:it"eo1u1, Htl dey of,~. 1N)" 10:to e.M. HPar•ll PfOP•rtw. (IOOrd•d ..,., on~ 1J, , .... I Ill' County MS Society. COnHIO di un •bop•do •n .. ,. Oat~ .~.J!:.l..• Pot• Herwloll ....... Hewoor1 •• WllTl"H MUTUAi. llOfllOW .J#Wl't 23, 1M1. In look 1H24 of ~ to ..... tfll pr~ e e u II I 0 , d I b I t I ha o Ir IO _... K:.:0--leedl, ~ MM0 OOR,, Attn:~ '4Wef;~, 0MoW" "-OOl'dt of NICI County, M Ill tlll C-ty Of 0t1"81, IUM of Joini ng Corew was lnmldl11arnen11, d• ••t• mlMf•, Judge ... t11e TNt~lt~~"' .._ ~" 14'111. YOIM peoo ••o. flll90tdlt'• 1111tr\lfMfll Calltomle.~•..._., Connie Needham of the *'~·•Meritt, 11 heY ..-. ' ....,_, c-t """1Nll •1 .. ~. to1. TUettn. OA HtlO. NO, "211. by .-.on of• bt..:11 or OOlllrt. lilwM l'llOMr of IM UNlld pue<t• "' 119111r1C11 • llempo. JOHN T. Cl'tADWIU. A · ietwt A. lonlteollle TNt t11e IMt MW tor..,. dellN tn def*'"~ or l*folmenot "'1et, Ind by ..,._ of • _,. Of form er te levision 11h ow • 1. 9"Wtr om-. •402 Tfllt .... .,.,. ... tllld "'"" die •ht MOtow ,.,.,,eel to 11ete1n 11 of tfll teollr9d ttlereby, •lfOlw.c lfl .-, ...-. ....-"Eight is Enough" and ~ Hiiie, C4 t0211 COlllltY ~of°""",.__... on ~ 1•. ,..,, lncludlllO 1111 t>teacfl °' defaul11 on oeoe111ber ti, 1111, 1 •"' th• mascot of the M S TO TH£ DEfENDANT• A olvll (I,,) 1664111 Jtnuery tt tMS ~·... lo t1r H I.• llnown 10 tfl• Hotln ot whlcfl w11 reoordeo oonw..IOld to_. .. N °'°'*1Y " compl1ln t hH bffn llltd by tM ~714) 4117•164& • ' ,,_.... Trt11tllf .... ell butlneal 11M1M Oc:tow. 20, 1tU1 .. ~0er·1 1n t11e CGwnty of Orange, ..,.. °' Readathon, th e Mystery p111nt1n ~· you "'IOU wltfl to 'ublleflld OrenQ• Coeet Dall~ ,ullUllled Orenae Co.el Deify end 1ddtHHt u10CI lly 111• 1n1tNtM111 Ho. l<1·MHll2, WILL ~ dleoiltllel • ~ Sl h d J k 0 d9fenelthfela-ll,JOllmutl,WllNn .-..Ot. Jen. 21. , ... '· '°· 17, 1M3 Not,,.,. IO 11.,.... t 10 11N TtllfllfetOtt '°' ""~ ..... ~ HLlATPUIUCAUCTIONTOTHf Lot .. TrlCIC ............. In e u t • an a c -• H d1y1 •lier 11111 eu mmo111 I• ~ . • . • ~ -'"' I AMt. HIQHHT llDDIA fOA CAIH, looll 2t0, Pao• 4 ••. Offlolal S ·on Th e · Clo wn fr om ~on you. Ille w41h lhll ~ • -Detect: JenMtY 11 .• •MS. leWlul moneiy of thl United ltat-. Record• ot orano• County, ses J H o llywood Mag le in Wfttlen r91POftM lo tlle compltlf\I P\a.IC MOTICl PWl.IC M)TIC( NOACH!J( Oft NEWPORT, INC Of • Glltilef'• Gt** drawn on. CelllorNL R f '"'-ta M The top 11 UnleM )'OU oo '°· YGUI' Olfauk wll a c.t. 00f1>. .... °' MtloMI benll, • SIMI cw Property 11 more oommonly epreaentatives rom ·~ esa. ti. lfltetad on 1pp11c1tk>fl ot thO 'M:TITIOUa WM PICTlftOUe •H•H Merti ~. Pr11. llldlrll crec111 unkln, cw • 1tata °' "-..: 4fO VIM.a l'lolN. Newport ei ght Southern childre n a tte nded the p111n11",1nc111111oounrneyemer1 NAmlTA~ ..,...ITAW Tr.,,.,_. fildlrll..W.lndloen-lllMlon Bwlfl,C4illtornlL CaU fornia co lief es and l u n c: h e 0 n , plus two ~t IQ6lnlt )'OU lot lhl rllllf The lollowlnt Pl'IOI" .,. CI06ilO Tfla tottowtne l*IOfl 11 dot no 'ulllltfltcl Or1ng1 Cout Dally domlolecl ltlfl ...... 11 ,peyllbll at Togeltw ~ .. and .,..., h demlllded "1 1hl GOf'llC)lelnt, wtllC:tl ~et! ~ • f'ttol, Jen, 27. tMS , the ttme of ..... 11 rigtM, lltle Ind .,_ ~ .........,,.. and universities wll be o n participants w o were could r11u11 In oarnl1hm1nt ol FILM an OISIOH SYITIMI. 0~ tu.A' & AalOCIATH. 1$-13 lnMteet lllkt by "· • TniM ... In llPCIUl1eNnOll thereunlO ~ the ~e Coast CoUege sel ected by random '""91· 1ea1no of l'llOfll'f or property 302 ca1a11na Dr!w, Newport ....,.. 2911 ""'* .. ltreet. ~· Mlle. _ tNI orootrtv lltuate 111 Mid COUnty °' 1n ~ ~ dr l•u• or other ren11 requuted In the Cellforrlle 12983 ~ t2t2t ..-JC ..,,_ Ind eit.ia, lieectlbed • tollowa: PUILIC NOTICE 11 -Hl"EIY campus eb. 9 t.O answer aw .. oe. ex>mPlalnt. JOMph A. MHgen, 121 •111 0 ,901 c . Mtr1iyema. 2111 MOTICll TO OWrnllll PAACEL 1: The! portion of L04 1 Olll!N Ttlll on F,_, ~ 26. questions a b out their Nlnt"ty-six Urau ¥e DATED: Octoti.r 10. 1eeo 81~. NW'POf1 9Mclll, Cllltotnte AndrOI ltrHt. Co1t• MHa, •NM.,.. 11,_ of.Traot No. 1110 111 the cu~ of t"3, 91 10:00 o'dodl.&M. °'"* . tit U JOfln J. Corcoran, 12...... Cllltomla t2tat (I.._ ----""'.C.) Newport IMdl C<ully of Ot.,._ dey •1 Main Lobby, ~. ms u ons. C o u n t y s c h o o s County C4ertt Mitt! H. Allrwnt, IOI Oatallna Tflll bueltllll It oondlloted ~.,, Nolle• 11•;;_-; 1";n to tfle ltall of Calllornla, u .,.r map 700 CNlo Center OtM w.. Qty of A table will be set up ~· . ted . th 1982 Sy; v. L Smith, Drive. Newport Beecll. o.tlfOfnla lndNld!I*. or""Uort Of ICOtT" HOLFORD, ,,...,.., In booll 420 Peoat at Incl lent• Ana. I wlll ... , .... affVI in fro nt of the OCC S C1Rpaeadat1nh one h eld Deouty t2"3 ~C.Mwuyw Tr:;;...,« -...llOmeeddfWll 40 of Mi.o.tlaneou1 MIP• In Vie dtecttbed~.Ulldlr.-.-" RONN, WACHftl.L & -...RT Thie bu"-It COflducted by 1 Thll llltemlf'll -!lad w1U1 1M 4N ~ etey of co.ta ..... OlllOe of Ule County Aecofder of Ind dNtll, or '° mudl "*'°' .. Ca1 feterThia from 10 :8.m . to f r om 0 c l ob er t o A "o"MllMI c .. ,.."°'' OIM'11 ~~Mltttoen County C6atll of Oranoe County°" &:.~ 01 ora11g1 , 11e1• ot :g ~~:!.=-',.: mey tit MONWY lo •llfY Mid p .m . e event 18 open ~Students.read _, c....., 'ertr ._t, TNI atalMnlnl W.. tlecl*'Cfl h Deollrlbel' 30• 1HS. • .,... • ~.,.,..., 11 i9o0tdtd rn book 1297• PIOI 1131 ~~ '=8. ~~ to OCC students, local more than 19,000 books MIO c IOOl1 county ci.ni o1 0ranoe Coun'Y on 0 c ~ e11ou1 to ti. mad• 10 KlLLMA" Oftldal Alc«dl. tewf\11 monev of"" United aa... high school students, and and collected $43,000 by ~= ::Z: A J111Uary 24• '1183· ,_m ~.11J::.':,, F~~r.10~~;. 1113 :'.::.:U,'~N•J.= PARCEL 2: An undMdecl 1114th o.1ecs 11 Santa ""9. CalffMnia, m e m b e r s o f t h e reading for the need of Att-r t.r: Publl1hed Or1n11• CoHt D11i.. eo7.a t1an1no u prelident. Tren1,.,... ln!MllC In and to 1holl portlOnl of Jenuery 1t, 1913. • · fWnltff: C-lftllfllty ._. · . 3 '' wfioet-~ lddf-. It 19300 Lott I througll 7 lnciullw and lot A BRAD GATES, commuruty. oth ers. Publlahed Or1n11• Co11t Dally Piiot, Jin. 27. Feb. • to, 11• '"' ..a.IC MOTICl Ill• Jorlll Rold, Ofly of aen11 Ana, 01 Tract No. 11110 In the Cl1y pl Shariff.con.. Representa tives will Piiot, Jan. 21, Feb. 3, 10. 11 •• ~.. =~ ,.""--:=:• =:.,r._ ol orange. Stat• ot Newport lwfl County of Otanoe. County ot OrlflOI, CA be o n h and to provid e The MS R ead a thon is -r-rtaJC M)TIC( -8t1t• of CatllMnl!i, u PM map ay: K. &own, I t · t ' Ulm ITA The property to lie tr~ 11 f900rdld In boo11 4211 ,,.._ 3t lllld S.gaerrt accurate up-to-date a vo un ary m cen lve PUlllJC M)TIC( ,iciiTIOU1.,_N. Tfll tot1oW1ftt PlflOfl 1a dof119 delcr1111dlngerwat•A118'0Clllll 40 o1 M110etteneou1 Mape In the u__..MmllU information concerning r e a d i n g P r o g r a m NM9 ITATUmWT ~ • trede, 1111t11r-. equ1pm1n1 Ind good Office of the Courlty Aeootder of tr1t1 ...,,... ....., Currl·culum, transfer, d esigned at grades K-8 to PICTITIOUe .,...11 The tollowlng l*'IOlll -c101nQ HAWAIIAN "A IN 10 W w111 01 that Rental and a.111 Mid County"-' Incl defined .. ,..., c•••-MAm ITA,......., llull,_. u: l\'9Tl!MI, 170-A !Mt 1nft....., 11u11n111 llnown u "OCEAN ComlTiOf\ At. on • ~ ,.._.. MllfM9 financial aids. hous ing , motivate children to Th• followtno pereon le doing Ma p COAPO"ATION, a 0-. ....._CA. 111'21 '"ONT WHEEL WORKS" and PW!~ In book 12174 pege Pullllelled Ora119e Coalt Dally a n d a d m i s 8 j 0 n s . want to read . T h e buel,_ aa: 1 C1Hto1n11 corporation, 1eta 1 JoM ~ M21 liMllort 1oce1eo et 1011 Main St .. City of 1131 Ofldll Alc«de. Plot. Jan. 21. Feb. 1. 10. 1te2 l . d . AMER I c AN au 8 t NE a N .... u Line, Huntington a..ot;, Drtvil, ~ leedl. CA. ttMt ~ County of Otenge. at.e. of Tfla IHMt addtlll or Olh•r 4f&.e3 Brochures and nyers will program a so ai s In EQUIPMENT LEASING (AHL), Cellfornll t2t4t .,.. WllnW .. OOI ..... by 1111 Cllllomla. common cfeelgn1tlon of tti. fM I ---~ be available. edu cating the public 2t72 DuPont Drive, 1222. INIM, Maro• P11k1ll (Dlv111on of IMMCl'llf Tfl• llulli tten1fer w111 be Pfoperly flerWlabove deac:r1bld It rtaJC M>TICE C 0 l l e g es a n d about multiple sclerosis, CA. t27t5 M•glc LlghUno). 11f31 N1111u JoM K9INllllnl ~ °" 0t aftlt the 1MI put1)0l'1ed 10 lie: 7tle Tuelln AV'I.. ----------- h l and Virgil Miiion f'tllmell, 1147 ...... HuntlnQton 9Mctl. Cllltomle Tiill I' I 2 I 11111111 -fled """ fie dey of '~· 1N3 .. 10:00 &J'll, NewpOtt lead!. CA. MOTICe ~ .. universities that will be e ps to encourage Memory Lane , Santa Ana. CA. 92e<tll County ci.rtt of Or...,. County on et WEITEAN MUTUAL E8Cl'OW Th• underalgn1d harelly TlleCountySanltetlonOlllettctlof ren..-nted include U .C . de v e Io p a sense of 927ot PhlUp CavM. 11131 N9IMU o-Mier IO, 1ta. CQNt. attn: Matty!\ w..._.._,, dl1clalm1 all liability tor any Or1ng• County, CillfornJi , wlll ...-~ l tary · · th TNI ~II conduGted by en Lana, Hunttncrton lwtl, Cllfomla ...... -... ....._.II t4081 I . Yotba lnoouecti-ln Mid..,_ addr.-_.._ _..., bldl undl T·--'-. lrvine. Whittie~ College. vo un sefVlce m e lndMdual. 1116'• fi\lbltlfled e>rante eoaet o.1y at. . ._ 101, Tutlln, CA t2tl0. °' C>CMr -dellgnatlon. ,;;~ 8 1983 et 11:ooA"'u Cal State Long Beach, c hildre n who join. and Vk1lfl Fre.nen Thll OUllMll II condueted by • PloC Jell. ••• ao. %7, Fe. a. .... ThM the .... dete '°' ~ dalnll In • 8alcl .... wlll .,. 11\Me without Bldtu~ .. · bl received It ihe C al State Fullerton. provid es funds f o r Tllll ltai-tt -1llld wltfl Ula OIMfll par1ntrlfllp. * ... tM aec;row reterred to h«eln 11 warranty, Hpru1 or Implied, Olltl'lc:U' AdrnlnletrelM oMoel by . COunty Clerk of Orenoe County,,.,,. Marge ...... '*'*Y 14, t"3. . reo•rdlno title, po11e11lo11, Of the •• and tlm9 ~ ... Ch apman College, U .C. patie nt services in 11, 1913. Th111tatement-tllldwtltlthl P\llle..,TU lo lar ••I• known to th• enc11mbrancH, to 11t111y the'°""· •t whlctl ti-t~ti. Riverside, Southe rn Orange County and for W County Cieri! of Otanoe County on NCllnoue.,.... Transfer-. 111 buel,,_ namea prindpal t>elanoe ot the Note°' pu~ opened and• it research Pu1>ll1hed Or1no1 COH t Dally JlllUll)' 25. 1"8. · MAm ITATnmWT and addr11111 uHd llY tlle otfler oblloatlon MCured by Mid lhl offloe of the Olltr101•, 1oe44 C aliforn ia Coll,ge of _____ · -------1 Piiot, Jan. t3, 20, 27, Fell. a. tN3 f'-.a1 Tb f "........... ·-d-' TfWll'9ror '°'Ille PM'""" ytilr'I Deed Of f"ru1t, wl11! .,,,_, and ""Ill• &u1nua "'ountaln ValJ1w Optometry, and Western 111.U Pu1>1l1hld Or1nge Cout Deity ~o ....... pwaon .. ...,ng .. ,,,.SAME. other 14.tmt u provided thOfeln: c....or;-. tottti,;lollGiwlnlr. ,. State U · rsit -1. La NIUC NOTIC[ _________ ......,_ PilOt. Jlf'I. 27. Feb. 3, 10, 17, 1'83 NE w P 0 RT .LA 0 u NA Oteed: Jelluety 11, 1"3. s>ki• advanc:.e, ".any. uncs.r the ruve Y>UJ. w . -----------1 P18.lC M)TIC( 505-83 PROPERTIES. 425 30th Str .. t, t<l!UMA" EHTVIPAISES. INC. term• lh•t•Of ind lnleruf on F or inform a\ i On , '~~:A~=· Hewpot1 8Mdl CA 112913 •Cell!. Corp. corp. 1uch advance•. and p1u1 fM1, phone 556-5855. Thi lollowtng peraona .,. dOlng flCTI'TlOUI ....... P\lllC ..,TIC( AUS8ELL°C OA"NEA 310 ~alloy. Prea. ch11911 and HP•nHI of th• ..... ITATlmMT H•wthOflle Aoact' I --·n• ee.c:h TIWIM Ind of the ttull9 c:neted by .. _IC Mftftl'&'. l>UslMlt u : Th• toltowlng perlOM .,. doing l'ICTlftOUe --CA t2t61 • ......... • Publlahed Or1no• Co11t Dally Hid DHd of Tru1t. Th• 10111 ~ "'"~ ANNIE o .. 813 w. Bilbo• Blvd . ~II: NAm ITA,_,,, Thll t>uiir-.. OOlldueled by an Piiot, Jan. 27, 19113 •1" ... amount of Mid Obllgatlon, lneludlng '1CnrtOUI IU ... N NAm ITAftmlfT Thi 1011owtno Pll'90ftl •• doing bu"'-11: TOURNEY SPORT U.S.A .. 321 Anidi, Newport Beecfl, c~ e21e' Alctlatd W~ Mlllat Ill, 32 t Anidi. Newpor1 lleedl, CA 92te1 EllUbeth H. Sporiagle, 3062 YellowWtone. Co1te ...... CA 12827 Thie ~ .. conducted by • gener1ll partnerlhlp. • Alc:hard w . ...., Ill Thie lletement .... tlld with .... County CWll of Orange County on NewJ>Of'i 81actl. C.Hlornl• 112681 DESIGNERS TRUNK. 423 3111 Th• followlnt perton •• doing lndhlldull. " ....... ~ lltllMted ..... dlatQll Rnond1 J CHper, 816 W. Str .. I. NewPOrt 9Hch, Calllotnl1 bullnlel aa: ~ C. Qarner Incl~ of Ille Tt\lll .. , 11 the Ocunlronl, 8111>0•. Calllo1nl1 92ee3 COASTLINE MINl·EXPAES8. Thll ttatement -filed wl1h the PdlJC NOTIC( time of lnltlal publication ot thlt 9266t NII• Tlllyer. 108 VII LOtGI, HO Cagney Lii .. #301. Newport ... ~ ............... of Or ,,_...... Nollcl. .. '28012.211 Andr11 J . Ooldl>arg .. 2890 Newport BMctl. Caltlomll t2M3 Belidl, CA. t2883 ~ .. , ,_,. lflOI _.,, on P1Cnnoul M.1-N Oeled •-:~ 26' 19113 C1tt10<nl• St,.11. Sin Fr1nctaco. Dorothy Gllck. 211 Poppy, Gr1gory Jofln Rollln1, 210 JlllUllY 2&, 1te3. NAm ITA,....,,. : __ , • · Callfomle 94to7 "'-on• del Mat. Callfomla 12126 C1on1y L•n•. #3011, Newport ,_ The~~ .. ~ BENEFICIAL MANAGEMENT Th .. DU-·~ II --.... ~..,. .... 1 """ ,....... ,. • .,._ Pu,itltM<t Orwige Co11t Dell)' .__._ , COAP. .,,__ ""'''"''""" v, Thia~ II ~Id by a -y;;;~oonductld ~ltl PllOC, Jan. 27, FeD. 3, 10. ,7, 1113 -CASWILL GENNETTE Of AMERICA. a o.i.w.r1 a-et =:!c--een-ll ~ lndMck* ~ LOCK I! C LA0A I<· WAAF EL corpOtattoneS;aAT~ s Thia 1111em1n1 -lllecl wtth the Thll ll•t-t -llld wttl'I 1111 ~ "°"" Ro1>1rw rtaJC llOTIC( PAATNIAIHIP, 8375 lndu1trlal By. REAL TE IE Coutlty Clenl ol Orange County on County Clertc ot Or1n91 County on Thie ICltlfMrlt -llled wttfl the ~ Hun!tAQton Beed!, Cllltornle :!:f• • Clllbflle corp .. o-tiber 7, t983. J~ 12 ttea County Qer1l of Orltlillll County on lllCTTnOUI lllllWll 81MT D.J. ~ ,.,._, no.a ' · ""* J.n. 26, 1M3. um ITA~ Jamu C. C11w111, 10873 20io N. I:'~ 1209 Pu1>ll1hld Or1ng1 Cout DaJiy Put>Hihed Otel'IQI cou 1 Dllly ,_ The f0410wtno perton le doing Ct mlno Porvenlr, PalOI Verdel. Sanll Alie. CA ~toe PilOt. JW'I 6. 13. 20. 27. 1983 Ptlol. JW1 20. 27, Feb I , 10. 1N3 PullllelH<I Orenge Cout DeltY ~ • ~.:0::.4 Oet1nette. 28294 (71•) 953-4410 ,_,.., •----------'3_7_43_ 37143 Pllo4. Jen. 27, 0.0. 3, to. 17, 1tl:J DEEP OCEAN LOBSTE" Oelup Circle, Laoune Hiiie , Publllfled Ora11ge Co11t Delly C D II 100-13 TANk8, IMO Beker St.,• 116, Coela Cllltomla .,......,.,. -... JML..27. f1111L.3. fO. 1"3 Publl1bed Ot1n,,.. oa1t • Y M-'-1 ...,.., •""""'"" eas-........,. ,.. .......,._ p O Boll t,00 .,....,. r.-- Jan. 11, 19113 Piiot. .Mn. t3, 20. 21~ Fee. 3, 1183 : ~~tt;, .... o~t; Pl-NII.IC llJT1C( "8JC llOTICE · c;;; ..... CA."'2t2e ' Jame 1 D. Lo c It e , I ea 1 532~ 17&-a lot CIUl!llecl Ad• ACrmou• ..._.. Pueal Henry •urlll Ill. MO E1ctp1d1. Huntlnglon 8Hcfl.1-----------.. &--IT .. -ACTlncJUe 1111•11 Biker St .. #1111. CGeta ~CA. Clllfomla t2M9 "8JC fl)TIC( -.. ,_, MAim aTATWlmWT 92e2e Jofwl 8. Clatti Ill, 24012 Plovtr1----------- The followlno perlOlll -~ The followtno pereon 11 dOlng Tllll .,...._II oonduc1ed by en Lene, Leguna Nlguel. CelltMnla _ _..!'~ __ ~ • bu*-et! lnCIMdUll. t2fT1 --· _. ,... MOTIC9 IMVITWCI lm>t JACK-DANIEL COMPANY. MANAOEME,.T ANO ftwalH,..,.. w. Donald Wartal, 21372 ITAftWCA&•)NUPOll ..,rTUllMO.ITI 311e5·D Sear StrMI. 8i nta Ana. BUSINESS IEftVICES. 2172 Tlllll ltat-1 .... llled With the l1oollt1ur11. Hunt111oton Buch. TMI ~ -~ NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEH that 11111 llUO:ll .. Celllornle ll1704 Dupont Drive. Suite , 7, lrvln1, County C6atll of Orange County on Callfomla tH4t C... ..... A 11' 19' llalld ptopollM .. lie t9C9lvwd ~ SEJAN WRIG HT . of Costa Mesa. Oen1e1 A. Reny, aee&-0 e-Clll1ornta 12715 DIC. 2t, tta. Tflll bue1t1111 tt oonduc:ted by a eecrTU W IM.9 cw Thi etty of Colla Mela. to Wll: The MlLDRED I . SEJ~ Ca .. noted astrologer and ~nr~~=o'= Aol>er1 a. &wain, 2100 ~ ,_ gerwll ~· • MAL....,.UCIYAT Qty Counc:ll. P.O. eox 1200, Coeta resident of Irvine, Ca. r loVl.llg peniOn, passed away StrMt Senti Ml~ 92704 Del Amo. Torrance. Calllotfl a .,!!'b~.~"T. ~~f,~ =y Thlt .=,~·~with tlle E.atat':"'o~~C~l ITIN E = ~l~::''!t ~~~i:i· ... ~: 11.way Oil January 2S, 1983. In the early morning hours nn' tJulll*9 ... oonduc11d by an tollO, r--. ....._ ... ~.-... Born Marc h 5 , 1918 i n on Wednesday, January 19, lndMdual. Thll~lt~edbyan 52<M3 ~~.C,:.ol .,._"""....,_ .. ,on ~ia~ GIV~ Vial =~4o,l:'bt!:: Dayton. ~ntucky. Survived 1983 at the age of 40. She o.n111 A. Alny lndMduelRob.n e. swein W llJ11C( ,_m the undlnllgned _.Ill•~ ~ hit blcf •to the Ofly Cieri!'• by her t)uaband John W was born on October 11 1942 Thll 11llllMl'lt waa fllld with the Thll et•t-t WM lllld wlUI the PubllltM<t Oranr. Cout Dall)' ..,. to the,..,.._ end be9t blddtit. Office by the proper 1nnouncld Sejan, aons Larry Walker of In Louisville, Kentucky: Sh e =~ ~':':"'t:,~anoe County on County Cllftt of Otanoe COunty on l'IC.::.'°::.~ Piiot, Jen. 27, feel. • 10. '1~ :'.:C:: .::.:;r~Ofon ": :d' ,.:r ..=, ~ t~m~ Dover, Massachusetts and will be missed by her {nends "'1911 JlnlAary 25• 1183· ,-. Tha lolloWtfl(I pereon 11 d04"0 aft• '•llruary te, 1eu ot t :OO IOOfl ther•lter 11 prac11ca1>19, on Jack Se~ of Loa Angeles. and loved ones. S e rvices Publlahld 011~ Co111 Dilly Pullll•hed Orange coa1t Delly l>ullnMI aa: W ..,TIC( A.M .. et th• office of Charlll Fet>Naty 14, 1113, In tne Counctt ea .. motller Iona Christy of were h eld o n Sunday, Pllol,Jen.20,27. .3.103~~ Ptlot,J1n.27.Flb.S, 10.17.1"3 COMPUTl"lllD OFf'ICI PICnnDUeBJH•• :::.11~ w .. ..!~t-.. ~ Chemller, City Hell, 71 FM OrM. M erced, Ca., a 1111\er Mae January 3, 1983 a nd her 41743 llAVICU. 12082 ~. a.,.. .. a-ITA-:c.::o.:~·=:..._ v:: Co11a ~111, Calllornla, tor th• Ca 20,..,.AM.CAt2"°" -•-• ---VI turnl1l)lng ot LABOR ANO Guy of Otlhey'• Va11ey, .. ashes were scattered at sea PtaJC ..,TICE Steven Antflony ltecoraro. TM folkMlr'9.,..,.,. .. doing et._""-of dldi EQUIPMENT TO DEMOLISH , brothers J_.awaon Ctifisty of off Newport Beach. Gifts in "8JC M)TIC( 120ll £dlnoer. lei-20, lent• ~Ill: Ind 11 ;1gM. W. Md....., tMt REMOVE ANO DISPOSE OF Catbey'l Valley, c... ar)d Lee her name may be donated to ITATllmllT cw UA1&1rmurwr Ana. CA ea'ft)4 MODULAR IOFTWA"I Hid .......... "qttlrecl by VARIOUS STRUCTURES WITHIN ""'""..., _, "----nto. Ca., u ct cc M s u pp 0 r l Mu.. cw NCrmoue ~~.,&~ Thia~ II oonclUG1'ICt by.,, AMOCIATEI. 209 tlUI Street, GPl'lllOll oflMr, or 04MI ... otNr TWE CITY OF COSTA MESA ....... _., w ~ • ..,.., II.Ill ... __. .._ .. ,_, lndMdll.llt. Hunangton9witl.CA.'2t41 ~«llt.......,eo"91•.-, Additio n•••••• o l tfl• and 2 grand1on1. Funeral Foundation , Asthm a Tfl1 tollow1119 Jar1011 hu The totlowtng per.one -dolno -.-i A.,,__ Moduter Con141lllllf, tno., • ~ • .,_lint of..._ lrt ~tlonl bl ot>llined ll services will be h eld on Research Fund, Med/Surg. abendooed the UM the Flctltloul ~w':oAT PUILl&HINQ Tlllt •l'Fnent -fled....,. tl'9 CeltforM 00<pora11on, tot ltth end., 11 ... oatlln,.. propeny the Olllol of ~ Aoent, Friday, January 28: 198~ at #1, Irvine, Ca. 92717. · ~f'~. 20 Vlltl Dlf 8ol, OIVISIOH, a Callfomll oori>Ol•llon. ~ Olatl °' OrDl8I County on llreet, Hunl11191011 ... ci-, CA ......... Ill the ~Otenoe. 77 Fair Drive. Co1ta Mau. 2:00PM at Pacific View ALLEN s . Lagur\a. CA t2t'11 4001 w111111y Place, No. 101, Jen.~ "" ,_ ~ ....,....11 COftdUet8dby 1 :S°' Clllfomta. MCI .. ~..:':-~ ":':. ~~ Mortuary Chapel with Rev. ZITA BURKE ALLEN, The f'lct1tlou1 8u11n111 Name Newport 9eactl. Callfomle t2teO 'u~ ~ eo..1 OOl!Y ompo;1111C111. n. ... • I ~ ..... of .. wlttlln Mid time llnllt, In 1 IMlild Bruce A Kurrle off1c13tmg. resident of Newport Beach. 11larr1d to 1bova w11 llltd In H l.C. Corporation, 4001 "1IOt. .Mn. 1t, 20, 2?, ,.. a, t91!. .._..., ~ Illa. ..,. ••• 1' aw ._. of Lot JOf lfW'llope, Identified on the CIUbllde lnt.erment at Paci tic View Ca. Passed away on January Oranoe County on Nov. 2t· 1"° Wll1arly '"'-· No. 1°'• NNport ~'-. KM"-'-.......,.. ""'°'' ..-_.,..,,, .. per , ... P Wiit\ tf11 Sid Item HUmb1f and.,_ Memor ial Park, N ewport 26, 1983. S he is survived by ...... ~. a.~-~·~:..2!"""' ~·=::-.. ~by 1 .. _,,,. Mft'l'lltll>r Tiill ' ' ••it..-lllf wlll .. teCOrOed '" lioOk 4 P ... 11 of OC**'O date. .-...., ---"" '"' • _.......,,._. ..--""'-CounlY a.ti of~~ on Mlaoellen.ou• Me,e reoMd• of f.adl bid ltlll IPd)' ~ and Beach, Ca. In lieu of flowers her husband Robert, sons Thie bu"'--oondllc11d by ~ ...... -.... L K.-Jell. 3 , 1113. _••Id coulltr; IXOEPTINO tV1ry Item 11 Ht rotttl In the memorial contributions may Peter of Midway Caty. Ca.. an lrdvtdull. H 1 C. CorpOttllon llOncl cw Alft.ICATIOM ,.._ THEREFAOM ._...,. ••'31100 1p101Hcallon1. Any a nd all be mad~ to the Spastic Robert of Irvine. Ca. and Thll It-== ~h thl =:r=.,t FOii CHAW• ~~.~"T. ~~~ = ~ ~~ ~...__.!: H cepllona 10 the epeclfleetlon1 Children's Foundation, 1307 Pal rick. of lrv ine. Ca • Coun1y Cler\ of er.no-County on Thll 11et«n1nt waa tllld w1t11 t11e OW..,llHr CW A&.COMOUC 50t4 __, --_,, ----·-'-' lie dlat1y lt8llcl In 1111 llld, West 105th St .. Loe An~eles, daughlers Mary Allen o{ Jan. 11. 1~ County a.ti of Orange County on ~ UCllM A.'· 1~12 .. 1. Ind t4lllMe 10 Mt 10t1" l('l'i '*"'"' 5 1183 ,..... ~ 0# IN.a. CMf\ Ill ........... ~ttone ltiell bl gtoundl Ca. 90047. Pacific iew lrvlne, Qa., Judith Allen of Publl•llld Orange Coett Dall}< Oec:ember 1 '1 · To Wflom"MtiYConolm: "8..IC M>11C( money of the United a1et11 ot tor~of thlJl'd, Mortuary direc1orl. Cardiff, Ca. and Margaret '7:stan· 13· 20· 27• feel. 3• Publllhed Orange Coa:-::: KAREL Ind ITANA IMZIK,.. f!IC""°"' WM ..,_,,..,Oft ooiAmellon °' .... ,Of Eaot1 llld tt\111 Mt '°'111 Ille Ml WRIGHT ' Comito of Solana Beach, C.. 1 Pl'-' J 1 13 20 27 1"""" :== 10 1,.. Depert111ent ot •.a-ITA-pelt_. MCI....._.....,_,~ ntmH end realdencH of •II .., "'" an · • · · ....,. ...,., Contfol kw "•1" -·-· ftlMI Ol flOllll .....i tJr _,._. .,.,_ llld pertlll lnt-..ed In K AT .n. Y H 0 UST 0 N Recitation of the Rosary will "8.IC M>TICE 141-13 OH SAU IHRTW1NE(PU8. !AT. ~ .... ~ penoN -dolnO ot w.. died on U1e 11f01*1y 10 tbe propoHI. 11 the llld la lly a -;:======;::=='1be held 00 Thur s day. '1CTITIOU• ....... ~ ... llOcllflOllo .,_..... ocaAN fAONT WHEEL tolel. Tel\ ....... ol tM emouilt of oorporlllon, etet• Ule nemtl of IN January 27. 1983 at 7:00PM ..... 8TATD9WT "8JC llJ11C( a..llCI, ltOllflttlln v...,. CA WORKS oe.....,..,... a.tloe. .. '° 1111 .... .,. lllcl. °"'°"" ""° cen lion an ·--II at the Smith & Tu thill Thi 1o11ow1f10 perlOl'll are dolnt t27CML ' ' ' · All bid• Ot o"•• mutt b• In on behalf o1 lhe corporetton and 'ACNllC YtlW .,...,., ..... , .... Cemlnery Mortuary Chapel-Cremetory 3500 Pac1hc V1f!IW Or1ve IMWPOr1 Beach 6'M·2700 Mse~ MOITUAlllS Leouna Beach •SM-9'15 L~H1ha 7e&-Ol33 SM Juan C.p11tr1no cgs.,715 Cha M 11M1e '1CTIT10Ull IUlllWM ,ubt!JMd Oranee Cout Dally C~ Ntl1 I I --Md ... tit,..,.. IC the W11etMr more 1han cne oftloer nut WMeCCllfff h wt ortutaryl · bu FLAM9::AOOM mo McJnrcMa. NAm ITATW Piiaf, Jin. n . tea ... ..-~~~:~P""~~·i.: ., ... ....,.. oflleil.t Of' lift w1tt1 E" 111e bid 11 by• S*tMf'INP or ass o 1 e Resurrec on Cotll ..._, cem~nlt 12127 The tollowlng penoN .. dolnt 111-N j;;. "°9d • ~ ~ the'-*''*''°'._.· ot mey tie • ventin. ll ... the,.,_ end will be h eld on Friday, Robert A. Rowe, tJU2 ~-= 11707 ' ftlM wfttl tM...,. Of tM lffve of Ill~ Per1111'1 January 23, 1933 at 9:30AM Fllrmofll. Tueun, Cellfornle t2880 SEA OHOIT, 207 Pal111, W llJTa Thia~•~ by a ....... c..t .. .,.,...,. "* tN lndlQlntventur.,., lftfllllldderlu etSt.JohnVianner..;CathoUc M11Jorl• L, Ro-•. 131112 Belll04l,CAt2tl1 1 _ '!-,. tlon 1r1tpAlnMa.1oflttle,_...lnd IOllfW~Ol'llllC>or.,.._~ Chu-h. 314 Mar ... Ave .. Fwmont. TUllln. Clllfornla ·~ Mtfldl N•OfllbHd•ll, .... ~arm• 7 KEi.L.MA" l!NTlAPRllES. ............. .... ..... Nt~bullnllllll'lder•lloWout ·~ .. Thi• buallllll "conduetecl ~ lflltlnQIOfl ,.., T-103, Newport -INC. "" .... ......,,~--'*"'• tfll bid ttlell tie In"",..., BalboalJlland.Ca.lnterment HulbenclanCIW'lf9. leecfl,CAtaea Tlle......,..,.,Mftltdolftt • e~oarponitton IWI''°,.....,.°' .. ...._ name of thl blelder wllfl a services at Good Shepherd Robert A. Aowt Donna N90i-11tuc1et1, 11H ~:'it y H A" "1 1 • JIN\ J. llltlllof, OMilCI! ......,, 1t, 1MI. dall1nat1on followlnf ltlowlnp Cemetery Hunt! ngto n Thll 1latelnlnt -Ned wlll\"" ~llQIGn...!!•.a. T·,H. Newport "HOINll"IN• cAM•ULTANT. ,......,.. ll "· .. I ...... "DIA (lfll ttc11tlo11 n•m•)' ; Ca 'Se I d CQullly C6atll of OrlflOll Coumy Oft _,,CA-"' v-Tllil lll'J,.lt -.._. ""'.. ....,. prowtdecl, fl-ver. no ttotlltoua &acbz. • rv c:es un t"r Jftiery t7 11113. Tllll llullll9I 11 ~ ~ • ~.o. ~1~ .. 0.... Or~ eounty Clatl of oiw,.a ceuMy °" ..._DU It -ttlell lie~ unlw.,.,.. II• the c:urectlo n ot BeJts · w eer-•l*"•INp. c.._a.r._, .-,.yn, ,-. ......, • .._ CU'l'DtlliUllhlkM .. ._Orange Bergeron2 Smlth & Tuthtn Publlefltcl Or•noo Co.at Delly ........... M ....... ~°""'-'°'" ,_. ettWllllll IL a...... Co11111r "•OOtder. '"OH••' Westctlff Chapel Mortu11ry PilOI. Jan 20, 21. l'"tb. a. to. 1a A Thia tliltCI••• ~ _, .-.. ~=-=••,,....a.. en 'ulllteflell 0rllfl90 Coeal C>elw ..... AM. a.... oorporwllolie. lnclUde .. ,.... OI of Costa Mflllll. 64S..i371. _ -.u ~ Qlrtl of Onnot Oounly on II•••• Not. Jan. 11, M .1 . 10, 17-= ~ -~ c.-~ ::,~: ~. T,...,,... ABAIRE >en. 11. 1MS -~ Q. Ha'1e .,_, --- D A V I D R 0 N A L 0 .... .,. Mft-.. __ -... I -... ---. ,_-·.If, , I. ,_ TN ~ COunoll Of tfll ~ Of .. -""',_ .J}!bf}.!_"Od ~ c.... =-~ &:. ':f"::.. o.;;, '; .. MUC 1D1111 •~ c-. ..... ,...... 111e """ to ABAlRE, age 39, passed f!IC1mOUl .,_M ......., .-i. 1a. 20, • M . I.,._ .-, o. -"°"'8iw• 11 •11 ' '9JC mft11 '1:..,'"'.:,!y "#t 1911 away on January 23, 1983 T ~ aTA,.._,.11 d....... 1 ..._ .. ~..-naw =• == "'°""*' Or--... co.1 ~ ( l h 1111 H .,. ,.,..,,..,119 peraon "'"• '"•MllMcl ~ =.-! -11 ........, --·--_.,,... _.,. a i.r a enguy neu1 e IJulll"9I Ml -. Wt. ne ---,.,.... -• tfa Nol, .Mn 17. 1MS 9n'Ved Sn the U.S. Navy. He AMI RICAN INOUITPllAL ,..., .-. .. .. • ,., a\E~ IUllml .,.. ,..... .. ....... ., .. la survived by htt paren&a MANAGDtfNT f-.OINHM. n47 .em......_. -·- Archie and H e nrielU MernotV"--a.nt•Ma.~ ..... ~ o.lfenlla O .. UllCHtL.1.'8 WINI ' ~ - ADilre altier Jeanne Lcwil moe , 1 m ..,. ' ~~·· "141 0r .. ~J.:1=: &Ll!JLWi of Co~ta Meu. Ce., end ..:ru!~'=..e:'~ ~~....,. .. .._ -._K.......,..•11c.1e •n ,Lep9~ ---~l brother 0.vld lot.ire, Jr. of t2708 .... • 0 c • Av A ••• I "I I ,,. ,, .. ·~ ...... .. ==-a.tr .... Cl$ -. D 0~11... •• ...... • Tiie -::-"" --..... Ric hmond, '"'ftrslnla. ~11~tild.,,11t ADYCNTUM, •n a.,,....._,~-~~rm ,_....._,. .... t ftr1111 :": 1111.:: M-tal .. rvl<n will be --°"':.":""":":":'=, ... ~ .. -----._ -·--hakt on ~daly, January ~· Tltll lte1111Mn1 ... ,.... .. "' H .. ,::t:o. ;., 6: •• ·....-.. CA. Ill .Al ,. Ria..... '* ........ .-.11. -• GA 1983at1.-.uPM at the Smith ~ Cflflt., OtlnOI Coun1y on Celltomll'e.tt _.... M911:i_.:. .,__ ti ~ • "''*"ft arTuthUI Wftt.el&lt Qlape& • ....,, 3.._ 1~ "°•' K. = ''':t:"' ... 111.~ ...,.,. ......., -. li:'iS;]'"°' f:lllr In u.u of now ... lhct family ,lltlhfleci °'._ OONt ~.=,:: 1'!1.1'91 a~• ~~II• a , nr Pun ,.. ~ -.."=: ;e ~ donedonl .,. mad9 ""°" J111 •• 13, • "· .1.. ....... ...... .-.:: ,.... ..... ., .. ., Tiii n-to use. D•plrUnHt Of ,,.... '":Ill;;..,.,... ~ .. -... . . , ~n•lomy beurch c/o ""'...., ............ ,.. .. ,, __ ,_. Doctot-KAillyl &.rvke und8' ~ Clatl .. ~ OltllllW. ~ ... ..,....~ the dlret11on of Balta M...,....,..._. -...,1.-. ,_ Ja · ,....'.'._~~f!!!f a.r,.ro"48mlth & TulhlU ' ~= "''"''*' Or-.. o...e .,.., W-.cJm Chepel Mor•UUJ e.IMCI °"" ....... .-. 1. tt;,., "· -.... ot ea.ta M .. 646·H71. .. .. __. ,\ .. ... .. .... ' 16761 Viewpoint Lane Off •Holl etvd bet. w-' .... (tl.ftl .... Oft Teny) - --.,, ~ f• .. .. .... ;' r I ~ 1r 1 iJ Wt II'' .. •• ·1 ,. ..... , .... _.( IN NIWPOf'T ISAOH l lntlH 1 & I •drm ~-&T~ -· FtOl'll MIO On.-...•MM ... =.;-Ad· " Sl.14 per day Th•t'• ALL you ~ '°'. 30 d•y eO \ In the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY ...... onv.waya. Parking Loi ~el,.., SMlcoetlng. S&S Asphlt 631-4199Llc Sell Idle llen'\9 &42-5878 DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS Seti your no-tonger needed Items fOf cash. If It doesn't eell, we'll run It anothw 3 daya FREE. One Item per ad, mut t be prk:ed. Sorry, no real •tate or commercial eds. Call today for full detaJls. ( .............. 11111'1 ......... 11.00) INES Ctldlllacs to Go-Cert• Wtlatevw the Fed Roll • .,,, off the !Nlltt.C WIUI a QIMlfted NJ Call Nowt &42·5171 OLLA RS 3 . 3DAYS Ct;ASSIFIEDS642•5678 8 0 (Add 15.00) - ,.. t l • A Top Dolar Pid For YfNI Cart JI ...... Lii••--= -Hartlor . COIC8 ...... 540-M30 ... 1111 w.·,. #1 In .... w... fOf New a WHd ""P ...... ,,... .......... -l"l'toe & I .,utton, • 11,000,000 im.ttory. ~.~l " . . 11.1 ... 1 • '• '72 ~ Luv "'"*' """' .... ,_ *--•1190 141-7~ '71 "*"°'*o CIT, lf!WMO, oon6. ~ llOK ml. Plultl cueeom 1n1. MOOO/obo • ... CIYt 1151"°"". ,. "" 'Tt--lurf•r van wltll auto. tttna .. P#f, ... "'oond .. oarpet,. pentlng. ooudl, "' back• a ,,..,., ~~IM711 ~ .... Pord 20e0Heroot~. "'2.0010 11 .S~LMllflQ '[()(CARVER R.1.l.S R.Xt ·BMW Fiat !lH '75 Fiii Spider, JCTRA Cleart, new top, bfUM, clutch, llre1, blllery, ETC. ~. tM-e.406 1116~1100 Loeded -OOftd. 18.toO. Ct13>MM5M '11 - mt laUI It~.... 1111 ....... '14 HO Md•n. ••4*1. AM/,M CHHll•, n•w -- 0 on d . I 1I·0 1 4 2 . lop, good condltton. OptlOnl ~ w 00!\d, '"' Mii 'M IUO. Xlnl '48-1114 IS700/obo. H1-44H l AM/l'M •• .," ••P9· OOfld. l 24IO obO. "bit '74: 450 IE1, ~·· befOte 10 p.m. (1!Pl1aG). Mt. .. NW. 11CMOH 'll NT snlll new tit.., tuf'lroo • low .._, 1111 •• 12111 '7 t l11p•r lfffle , r11n1 'll mil. ~ Fully equipped, lo ml, IMle rnNMQe, mini , 114, SRI • f t .. II ,_, orig. owner. MOO(). 600. l40-A24, 1111 Op•I Manta. fl•W p f N • ,.. •n1. "" VI, **· .,.,..., ... .. 511.943~ Ur•. MM• eno woric, ~1~ neec1111• ,. on11149 .ir cond.J.. tilt, cr1.11 ... • --------1M.ch1nlo'• epeol•I, 10 8$00. 948-0elt -· · ,......... -~4t1 lleolt w/\;.8, & epeci.1 ~:.-,".:~' ".~,: ~" I H U tlU I Mil 2200, Whit• w/blk OI ....._..,1 .._., (2n8LT). -. .,-4-B_M_w-20_0_2_. -.-m-11_m_1 HIU ._.., ~. ::'d·~~:~~;: r ... M 1117 'U 1~1=·~~ cond. ~-~ cuad. •Ir, dexcp•Ptllopn1•1 We can Mlpl a.fOf!_l?' S2«>0. 831-eeto )(212 ~TER u 2.3111 zoeo Hertlor ~M. goo con " Y buy. check our un.,..._ , K.l.J •.o•-10 211 '4500. 648·8~5 •vet & able Hlecllon, aavtnga 73 ~ 480SE. '*• PN-/&•• 'lZ ..... lllTU 1 Ytht llfl _...., wknd1. tnd MNlce tod•yt new. 110.000. Owner ........ Oood cond. St-.o. New UIH mW• ·CMlllM Ult •• IYU•nw 831-7777 13831 HwtlOt ....... _., -·-_ 'II 2002 .. , 1 WANTED Glrdan GrO¥e -111-111 Ullll'f Good condlllon. Exlru w.n • --450SEL. P.P. Wiit Pll ..... ltr'f-le11l11 OVER8EA8 Dl!LIVERY ......... S2tOOOBO 675--690e 2860 HarbofBMS. ouh for '78 SE 114-111-JIU RegTop~Aooftor EXPERTS _..., ... Datlla 9117 COSTA MESA ~18.000 me•.I of '71 Micro-Bui. >Ctnl oond. 140-1140 114,000 mu.) Mutt .,_ '711 Turbo Cetrer1..1. 8 + 9" Clll 551-9100. ml 780-8702. 888. 912E eng. •15,600. 1973 VW Selllng Whole or '82 F'fllude, 5 yr wenenty, ....._........ 11,.7 PP. 983-71163 In pena.' 1ran1I., 1tr. Bl1up1.1nkt IUu...... "' ·ao CABRIOLET 53e-0973 redlo~ oond. Mue1 Tiit DrM l Prtce Uke rww MU81 ... I NII. . 645-0'50. -.. 11Usl S10,to0/ob0 14&-4$49 ·~~n~~~nl1~~0~· :~~~ •ada 1141 TurJ: ltlrlon '70 9118, inln~ OOffd.L ,.. ''*/obo.131-7917 U•t~~P.t'!P.'l''l"P.""11 TCorbo ~~ • ., emoked In. 11,000 '711 Rabbit need• work. UI' • • o r1 9 m t. I 11 , 0 0 0 . MUii .... Stl50 . ... 41188 850-4142 rn CO', TA Mf 'A l' .l J Mi! llh ',HI Yl:..'l ., -•' ' '' ........... •«•••••11tf Fora.Med Ad ACl10N Cal A DAILY PILOT AD-YllOI ...... .,. ' ( J~H·'lll HI• ihJ I ' ', .,> I 'IJl 1 MATCH THE· NUMIERS OH THE' • MAP WITH THE NUMIEIS IN THE BOXES 0 ATLAS CHI YSLH .PL YMOUTH • "I NIWPOIT DATSUN . IOI LONGPll PONTIAC • 75 % ton, tumb« raclc, lool bole, UC. tank, DOoci cond. 12300. 831-4!56 ea ~ Conlllrtll*, orta OWfW. S3000 Obo. l42-I001 llft 3 pm .. .. " •.•· . !,.. .... ,. ' ' : 1..1.. • , ' • • ' • n 1 C(J', T ~ '.1' ',h. t~ J ~IT'.>lJfW,HI • • • :. '• •• t ' • COSTlr'MISA DATSUN 2929 Harbor Blvd . Cosla Mesa Tet 546-1934 3 bloekl soUll'r or San Diego Freeway off Harbof Blvd. Complete body shop Sales Service. Paris. Service Dept. open Monday thru Friday 7 30 A.M lo 5·30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to 5 P.M on Salurday. 888 Dove Slreet, Newport Beach. Tel 833-1300. At Ille triangle of Jambor ... MMlArth\tr & Brtltol behind Vlctorla Station Sai.t. Service, Lening & Parta. We mike great deatst 13&00 BMCh Blvd .. W•tmlnater. Tel. n2-ees1. Orange County's otd•t and l•rgeet Pontiac de&lerlhlp. SahN, S9rVlce, P1rt1. 2845 Harbor B~a MeN. Tel. 540-S.10. Serving Orenge County for 16 year1. 1 Mlle So. 40!5. BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 752-0900. Call u1, we're the specialists for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot. Saab & Maser all THIODORl IOllNS FOID Modern sates. ser11lce. part•. body, paint & tire depta. Compell11ve rates on lease & dally rentall. 204'0 Harbof Blvd . Costa Meu. 6A 1-0010 or 540-8211. JOHNSON & SON LINCOLN MllCUIY 2628 HlrbOt Blvd . Coela Mesa. Tet. 540-5630. 57 YHrl Of lrlendly family service -Orang• Count~"• otde11 L.lncoln-Merwry dealeflhlp DAVID J . PHILLIPS I UICk .PONTIAC•MAZDA Siles • Servtc:e • LAallf'lg 24888 Allcla Parkway 137-2400 NIWPOIT IMPOITS 3100 w. Co111 Highway. Newpon B••ch. Tel. 4542-04051540· 1764. fhe FerrMI, Jaouar, A•ton·Marlln heldquMte<• tn Oranoe Coun1y . • NAlllS CADILLAC 2600 Herbor Blvd .. Coeta M .... Tel. 540-9100. Orange County's Latgeat Cadlltac dealer. Salee. SefYtoe., Le&atng. • IADDLllACK IMW/IUIAIU 28402 Mwguertte Pkwy., AY«Y Ptlwy. ealt We ofter whet no bank or IMM com!*ly can: 1. Expertly auitted, most modem NMc:e & pert• dept.; 2. One of the SOU1htand'a moat e Kpefi.nced .. ,.. & leulng 1t1f1: 3. Ellmlnatton of Ille mlddtem1ri by teaing dMtef direct. 831-2040 Miiiion VlejO 495-4949 • CHICK IVllSON POll CHl-AUDf-VW 415 E. Cout Hwy .. Newport Belch. 673-0900. The only dealef~ In oranoe County wtth thee< ""'" or••• m111 .. under orw rooff ALAN MAGNON PONTIAC..I UIAIU 2480 Hatbof Blvd .. Cotta M .... Tel. 549-4300. s-.. s.vic.. LNllng. "Mr. Ooodwrenon." Cl.All A OM091UI 165 Hewton Wey, coeta Meea. T•. 131-1393 ~ . "JAGUAAI OVA SPECIALTY" >CK 120'al140'e/1IO'llXJ'a/~T~ a .. -BeMce -,...'°'"ion. °" "**"' .. ~ 11th & 11th In Co... ..... ' .. ~·--~,.·,,..----- DICK MILLll FIAT/LANCIA "Probably tn. towe.t l)ric9d Flat• In Southern Callfornla" (located 1 mile north of Sou1h Cout Ptau near Main St. and w,,,_. Ave. In Santi An1) 120 W. Wlmflf, S1nt1 An1 557·2132 • -SANTA ANA DATSUN 2001 E. 11th StrMt, S1n1a Ana. Tel. 551·1111. Your Orlglnel Oedtceled De~ Duler. • • IUNln POID, INC. (Home of Wlltle the Whale). 5-440 Gerden Grove Blvd .. w .. 1mlo1t8f'. Tit 136-<4010. • .. 1111111111 .CDUl ,1:1111 EIRlll " .. THURSDAY. JANUARY 71 l'IA l l1l1f\N 1,f' 1111rJ', fli 11111 1 rJ1r. /', (.f NI ', .....-INSIDE,-- Superior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein -i• a penon who enjoy• a little reading -some a1 little a1 two inches square. Page l:il .. Money expert Sylvia Porter di.lcUMes the pros and cons of refinancing now that interest rates have dropped. 'Sound reading in the Finance aection, Page 83. The stunned world of college football pay1 tribute to Paul "Bear" Bryant, who died Wednesday of a heart attack. P~e Cl. · A-iook iniide--.b~ noi1y, cluttered, chaotic worlcl inhabited by Daniel Travanti and pal1 on TV'1 "Hill Street Bluea. n P-.e C7. --,lllDEI---- ·: :: At.Your Service Dma Bombec:k ~-·Seal Beach pier, riaht, hea\'ily dam•aed by today's storm. Vincent Artman, below, behind sand bags that failed to keep water froin hoine .. ·1--~~~~~~~---~~.:..-...;._-.:..--.....0.~~--~~~--~~~ in Newport. . Seal Beach Pier splits Pacific Coast Highway in .Huntington Beach near Golden West Street lies under ·more than two feet of sand after today's storm. City street maintenance worker Jaime Barker surveys . the scene. .Neptune cuts business with Mesa 01ortuary 'The founder of the Neptune Society sa1d today his company baa ceased buaineu with Harbor Lawn Mortl&ary and Memorial Park in Coeta Mea following accuaaUona that bodiea . sent there for cremation were mutilated and diaposed of ln group f.alh1on. TM Neetune Soclety la one ot Califomia!s--&aFge.t direct-burial and cremation eervlces. Charles Denning, c hief executive officer and founder of Neptune, Mid a letter waa eent Wed.needay to Neptune chapten telling them to discontinue bWllne9 with Harbor Lawn unUl the allegationa are cleared up. John Dlllan Flanagan, 66, owner of Harbor Lawn, has refused to comment on the matter. On Monday a cla11 action laW11Uit wu filed on behalf of the family of Robert Henry Mahoney, alleging that Harbor Lawn tel'J}arly broke promlaee cllana by tn!!llting bodiee in cavalier manner and cremating eeveral bodies tosether. Dennllll aald in a phone lntervlew today from hi• San Lula Obispo home that he WU "appelled by the accuaationa. if they are true." - Bv FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of"' ... Dtllly .......... / More than 500 west Orange County homes were damaged, 'the venerable Seal Beach Pier cut in half and Pacific Coast Highway from Huntington Beach to Seal Beach closed as a result of the powerful rainstorm that struck the Orange Coast early today. By midday, hundreds of west county residents in the communities of Seal Beach, Surfside and Sunset. Beach had been relocated to evacuation centers -their homes inundated with .veral feet of ocean water andund. It wu the eombination of the ra1n, storm-spawned surf and high tides that led to today's devastatiqn along the ooest. And the future was anything but bright for the disaster victims. The National Weather Service said another storm -one predicted to be more violent - will hit the coast Friday evening. A third storm could reach the battered beachfront areas by Monday, NWS forecaster Pat Rowe said. Aocor,ding to figures compiled by the Orange County Fire Department. 516 homes in Seal Beach, Surfside and Sunset Beach were damaged. In Seal Beach, there was major damage to homes between the city pier and Seal B each Boulevard and moderate damage to homes on Electric and Landing Avenue, a police officer said. · The city ple~1 built in 193!>, lost a 100-foot 9eCUOn on the inland side of the lifeguard tower to the pounding surf. According to county fire officials, 650 people living on Seal W ay alone had been evacuated to a center established at the Marina Community Center at First Street and Marina Drive in Seal Beach. Others driven from their homes by the sand-laden surf were housed at McGaugh School at 1698 Bolsa Ave. Power in the storm-damaged areas was turned off and work crews were summoned to 888ist in sandbagging efforts. Pacific -Coast Highway was cloaed between Golden Wetit Street and Seal Beach Boulevard and ... Beach Boulevard and. Brookhurst Street. Alao a portion between Golden Weat and Warner Ml wMhed away and 18 cloeed for repalra, ~ted to take a week. One police officer at Golden West cloeure said up. t.o two feet of sand covered the highway; the major artery llnk.lng the ooastal cities. Elsewhere along the coast there were r epo rt s of overflowing flood control <;b.annels, st.onn-damaged boats and pounding surf. In H~ntington Beach, fears that a flOod control channel along Beach Boulevard would overflow forced the temporary evacuation of residents alol'l8 Beach between Indianapolis and Atlanta avenues. Huntington Beach officials announced that sand bags could be obtained free by calling the city corporation yard at 848-0600. (See COAST, Page A3) Airport passengers up, but flights show drop By STEVE TRIPOU departed in 1981. Of" ... ..,,......,. :bes pl te the increased Orange County's John Wayne passenger load, just 443,933 Airport handled about 150,000 takeoffs and landing• were more pallell&el'S in 1982 than the recorded in 1982, a 6.7 percent previous year, but total aircraft drop from the 469,133 of the arrivala and departures dropped, preVloua year. The UM of W&er figures show. aircraft by the major commerdal Airport officials attributed the carriers who eervfue ~ airport drop in aircraft operations mostly exp 1 a ins the inc re a ae l n t.o the nate of the economy, and passengers coupled with the to tletMr. ~ to linae~ decreue in ~ offld•l• Mid~ after .effects of the f9iflair Chr'8t1ne Edwards, an airport traffic controllers' .irtke. noise control apeciallat whoee The figurel ahowed 2,SS0,870 department compiled and ~ Ullnl the airport 1ut released the flaureti, aatd the year, an lncreMe of llx ~t drop in operatlona came almolt over the 2,379,792 who arrt~ AIRPORT, Pap A!) .Scuttling Coastline not the . . ? answer ... By PHIL SNEIDERMAN clmina Coutllne and dlatrlbuttng Of" ... ....,........ .. ita c1.-. to 0ranp c.oa.t ana Uilmantllng 0-tline College Golden West would aave t4 would not product the sialnifbnt rnllllon -and thut p ..... rve ftnanda1 windf.all antidited by tellChlna Jobs. tome u.chen. a report ec.t ::-c.o.tline, which hM no formal Community Colle1e iatrlct campua. eervet 21,000 fub-tllne admanlllratan ...,.. and .,.n-dme IWdenta. 'Die ~ la Ila 19pc11m '° • '•It would be lmpoulble to anQ .... two w.-..., by achleYe • net cmt .mn,. ot '4 tM .,... °'Che AIMlbn million with the •liminiiUon of hcllnlUon of Twhen (AJT). COlltl1ne Community ~ TIM teaeben' poup fean the declaNI the dilUict NPOl'1. w cllilUtet. wbkh lncludel ~ w• ,........_. to IM board of Colll, Ook*I W•wl 0-..HN V.... Wed"9dlit ..._..t. The ooDepe, IOOft will •nd layoff ~ WM ............ ~ dlmlrict notleea to u many aa 108 aw.llat Rc.iNm Wataan. the full-dim inlV'uc1orl. .. ........ of the .... cmlltl'I! The teachen aug .. ted that and othw ..tmlniatntGn. "Althouah the reaaon• Coutline wu eatabltahed atlll exi8t. and atill haw importance, conaldered atrictly from an eeooornlc standpoint, the facta do not 1upport the cott 1avlR1• ~ '° ret\llt from lntecralinl C0111tUne an'° 0ranp eo.t ana Golden w-." the report •YI· Coastline recelvn fundln1 from the atate baaed on the number ol full1time eq_utvaleftt aJUdent• enrolled. (Several part-time 1tudent1 may be combined to equal • tuU-tlme enrollee.) The CoHt dl1trlct cannot afford '° IGie dlll tncomil, the report MJ9 .. Sven IJ CoMtllne clalaes were moved to Uie Golden Weat and Oran1e Coaat cantfJU!llS, there would be a 1- of atudenta who would not wllh to attend theae location•, the report stat.el. With ho formal campua, CoMtllne offen dllllea at men than 100 rented or free litet within the lo&-.quare-mlle CoMt dlstrict. The dltlrlct report clalma the convenJeaee of U... c-t.une locattona la a major fa'Ctor ln • malntalnln1 the enrollment. Allo, the report..,. ... ~ c-t and OOldtri Well Clain ... could not handle ... Col9dlne Volunteer worker Bill Baskin fe~ds a· number of young aea lion•, . . It's a real zoo at· M&rine Center By STEVE MITCBELL °' .. ~ .......... Laguna Beach 'a Marine Mammal Center ia filled to the gllla with aick sea lion• and elephant eeala. And Bill Ford, administrator of the Friends of the Sea Lion orpnlz.ation, iaid the volunteer group la rapidly runnina out of funda to feed the ailing creatures. "We got hit all of a sudden with a whole rash of a1ck baby eea lions," Ford said. Marine center volunteers are currently caring for 15 sea lions and five elephant aeala, most of which suffer acute parasitic lnfe.t:tation of the lungs. Normally. the flippered po~tion of the center is four. 'When th ey suffer a respiratory problem, they can't hold their breath long enough to find food," Foni said. ~ a re9Ult, they become weak, often contract pneumonia and ~YPO(lyc emia , and beach thernae1ves. That'• where. the Frienda of the Sea Lions come in. The beached mamma1a are taken to the center out on LaiWla Canyon Road where they are given a mixture of flah, gluco1e, antibiotic• and vltamlna, all combined in a blender and fed to the an1mala through a tube. Medication used to rid the anlmala of lung worm ia powerful, Foni aaid, and the .ea creatures mutt be strong enough to withstand the effects. But fish purchased by the Friends does not come cheap. "l''1ve and 10-dollar donations have kept us going this far," Ford said, but the sudden influx of new patients has drained the kitty. Th ose i n te r ested ln contributing to the non-profit organiza t ion should 'Send donations to the Friends of the Sea Lion, 20612 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, CA 92651. Two seals and only one fish present a problem. The other is the referee. Pay cuts averted· at South Coast Medical Center Employees at South Coast Medical Cente r have won a sleprieve from anticipated pay outa because the state has delayed action on contracts with hospitals for MediCal patients. facility on Coast Highway in South Laguna. Mc.Quade aaid the state is, for the first time, negotiating with hospitals on a low-bidder basis for MediCal patients. portion of those cut.a would be in the form of salary reductions. "But the state has delayed a decision on contracting for MediCal mental health patienta," he aaid, adding no pay cuta are anticipated Ior at least aix months. A second reaaon for the The numbe r of patlenta suddenly lncreaaed in late December to 127 and remains cloee to budget projectiorw._ t!>e administrator said. He aaid cut.a in Medicare and MediCal coverage. tied to a poor economy might be to blame for the censua decline lut month. Drug abuse ·center approvea-or ; awJUP·ADLKll -~A#f1CY. I &"' ........... iiiii~-ecmm.n~ °"the ~··f Over the obJectJont of area • 1ultabtllty Su~rva.or Thomae . buaineaemen, Oran1• County Rlley .. id, ' lt wu almoat : au~ have ...ect to renti1 dftlSned for the ~rpoMt we 1 CO.ta M ... buUcJina to hou.M want to put tt '°·" a ClOUtal 1 county·run menw 6-alth and dlltric:t lncluct. Coeta . I ctn.w abuae pr'OIJ'UIW. The aupelWor ·~ that t The l 1,839 ·1quare·foot while many communldm would t bulldlftl It eonttdeNd 1pedoua oppoee havtnc a meni.t health enouah io ~ .. county and drug abuae center llwated inf Health Care ~ency p&'OIJ'aml their .,., he felt this buUdlnaf foe tM Bouch COunty thaf have waa approptlata becauae it la, outcrown thMr pn9m1 N~ JocM.ed aloe'C a main bua route; ltc Beach location. la adequate ln alze, and lt la M~ io the new buildJ.J1C, at removed from other nearby I 31 U Redhill Ave., will be bulldinp. out-patient mental health "It fita our needl sreat and It' pro1rama, contlnuln1 care within the .~p_uladon area well aervlcu for people with are aervtnc. RUey Mid. emotional problem•, crt1i1 He added that he bellevea' intervention llel'Vkm, dnac a"'-e many of tbe feara exprffaed pc"08l'UIW. · .-)'CholoClcal ....W. du r Ing Wed neada y' • boa rd for -children and out· patient meettna wUl dJaappear once the prosrarm foe ak:ohoUcs. prqvama settle in. The building la conaldered But several area bua:l.nemnen Ideal for county pursx-becau. ar~ued that tne location ia i It ia a large, ~ bWJdin.11 inappropriate for auch uses. They J with ee parklng apacea ana said _they ~ bu11dinp in the ' pre-partitioned offJce tpeee. 'l11oe area being uaed for any but, county will rent the buildlnc for commercial purpmes • ur to five years at a monthly nmt The Health Care ~ will' o $18,482 plut uUllU., aocordlna move into the building within a , to George Cormack, Ullatant mohth of the comp1etion of t dlrector of the county General altef8t1ona• Cormack aaid. ' AIRPORT TRAFFIC. . . t From Page A1 entirel~ from amall, privately owned aln:raft. Reatrlctlon1 on the uae of in1trument flylna In •mall planet, mandated by the 1981 oontrollen' strike, were the at.art of a alump In general (amall alrcraft) aviation that ha not vet ended, Edwarda Mid. The reatrlctlons, which are gradually eaalng aa control towen nationwide complete their recovery from the at:rike, have affected general aviation to a point where it la "only beciNUnc to come beck io normal in the 1Mt sill Jo efaht months," the Mid. But an even hlgber factor alowln1 general aviation bu been the economy, Edwards laid. She said the rlalng CO.U of fuel. part• and maintenance are comblnlnc to keep more pllota out of the alr. · The atrlke had leaa of an impact on pauenger flfUre1, according to airport Manager Murry Cable, &ecauae John Wayne wu not seventy affected by 1t and· major ?ommercial carrien continued to 8el'Vice the county dwina cbe walkout. Both Cable and Edwards said they ..e no pe.rticular trelldl in the 1ncreued pueenger figures, however. Edward• aald they indicate a "pomlble" recovery of air traffic. Other figures releeled in the year·end report ahow an 8.3, percent lncrea1e in air cargo: tonnaae handled at the a1rport, with 2,601 tons handled in 1982- compared to 2,385 in 1981. . · Al8o, more than 37 ,000 more can perked at the airport in 1982 compared to the pttVioua year.• The figures show 464,221 autos' parked at John Wayne in i982, an 8 percent increue over the. 427,208 parked there in 1981. Military and air taxi w.e of the airport showed notable increaae&. ai.o. There were 16,429 air taxi operations recorded in 1982, a' l~.2 percent increase over the 13,926 recorded the previous year, and 1 ,820 military: operations ia.t_year, a 28 percent increue aver the 1,311 recorded: in 1981. ~ Paul McQuade, administrator of the South Laguna hospital, said an across-the-board salary cut was averte d due to an increase in patients and a six-month MediCal d elay He said six percent of South Coast MediCal Center's patients are mental health •patients supported by MediCal. postponement of pay cuta -but -------------------------------------- to a lesser degree -McQuade saJd, la an. increue.in patienta at · ~ mental health patients. The news came as a relief to the 600 full and part-time employees of the non-p rofit Were the hospital to fall to aecure a..contract with the state, McQuade said, "we we~ to have to trim expenses." The administrator told hoepital e mployees last month that a Rain to the 268-bed facilJty. He said the patient "census" one day in October waa aa low aa 85, and continued t o slump halfway into December. • remain ctnth•. wu to C0'1tlnue Frid•) evening with more '*"· hlafl ~ eoo tremencloue -1. Motorlet• end hlllllde reeldentl -. WW1*! Of muelllldel end rocQlldee. Friday, January 28, 19~ ~Coastal Verl•ble cloud lneu with lflowwa. oceu1ona11y hNvy et ?::· ton6ght and Fl1de)'. Rein wlrll! In ln*'9ity lete Fride)'. 8outhweet wind• 16 to 20 ,,,.,n, •hlfllng to IOUlh•••t Ind lnC1•ll11g lete Fncs.y. <>-night kiwi 50 to 55. Hlgfle Fncs.y 51· to 82. cnenoe of rein 60 peroent lonlalht. lncr ..... ig to 80 pwcent ... ~ride)'. Eleewhere , from Point Conception to th• Mexlcen border end out 80 "*-8ou1tl to IOUttlw9ll wtnde t5 to 30 11not1 with tocel gu1t1 to 35 llno11. decree1lng •lowly tonight. Combined -18 to 22 Met -OUler ..... with -10 to t5 .... ~ Inner wew1. locel an to reech 20 feet on 1ome "••t-l eclng beechu todey. Midi moeel)' eouth-' 10 to 20 ~ on Ffid9y wtth combln.cl .... 10 to '8 IMt over outer ~ end 4 to 8 Met ov. Inner ••tere. A•ln to tncreue let• Mdey. U.S. summary .. We're eapec:tJng bfellk.-9 of ~ to 15 ffft, eepectelly on weet '~ ~ wltfl ..... of e to 10 ..... HatloNI w.ttier s.rvto. Intern Soott Mena. Mid todey. He Mid up to 2 lnc:fl9 of r111n would fell by tonlahl on _... pleln1, up to 3 fnchel In the loofhlll end up to 4 ~ In IN moum.lne. The ,., ..... ~ Friday, "but 1nother llC>fm 11 moving In Frld1y evening." Mentier lllld. HM vy 9'low ... IOf9Celt llbO¥e 8.600 .... In .. rnoun18lne. In the fllhloMl>le Loe Angelee County coHt•I co"'munlty ol M .lllt>u . the '••ldentl ol • o.dlfloot home-. 9W9CU1t1d Jullt "'°'9 their ~ ICer1'ld to brMll up Clue to thll ITIOfnlng'1 high tldH 1nd 1url, Hid lo1 ::::::. County "'• Cept. ,,.,,_ "The)' IU~ed II m'9ht fell Into the -•. eo they got out," Mebery Mid, eddlrlo tllllll reeldenle of neighboring 1iome1 were edlllMd 10 leeve. Fronts :COl<I ~ 48 27 11 0 21 21 1 -18 51 2t 1 -3 55 23 48 41 3-4 21 47 36 1t 12 113 40 S3 " 57 .... 91 aa 30 17 .. 43 4a 14 .. 13 a4 10 41 34 72 • 20 7 7 -7 42 35 .. 51 31 31 44 38 "~ 43 23 ,. 4 .. 3t 40 31 • IO 32 1t H 1t IS 48 H 2t IO :sa 21 23 IO M .. 31 lllf llPl-1 I . Tides • 48 3t eo 32 66 ... 54 43 8 -4 32 24 • 51 18 5 ...... 2t 14 ,31 4 71 41 43 21 .... a3 S3 11 73 55 70 47 eo 46 M 62 11848 .. &I 81 ... 15 ... 82 N 61 13 M as 13 52 82 51 82 N 87 81 13 51 u ... 13 ee • 11 6t 4\ M 30 M 24 ...... ..... 71 ... 61 41 15 " .. 47 71 ... & :I 7'0 47 NATION GOP official& like Bush • • • if Reagan bows out By ne A11oclate:d Pre11 · • W ASHINOTON -Vice Pretlident Oeorae Buah f1nlahed . . far ahead of ht• potential rtvala when Republican Party ottsa.11 .. were uked who would be t.helr choice to lead the party ln 198' 1 if Pretident Reaaan decided not to eeek a tee:0nd tenn. A few cited the economy and lteqan'a age u facton that could prompt him to decide aaainat running. Rea,pn will be 71 ·: on Feb. 6. 5 killed in B-52 bomber fire ~· •· GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) -·Fl.re broke out today ln a 8-02 bomber parked ln a maintenance hangar at Grand Forkl Air Force Bue, killing five people, officlala aald. Seven people were injured ln the f>laze, according to the baae lnfonnadon office. · · Reagan, Mubarak discuss Israel WASHINGTON -President Reagan will assure F.gyptian President Hosni Mubarak today that the United States is doing all it can -short of cutting off aid -to press Israel to withdraw its troops from Lebanon, U.S. officials say. Flags at half.staff for Bryant TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -Flags at the state Capitol In Montgomery flew at half-staff today to mark the death of Paul William "Bear" Bryant, 69, on Wednesday, who during a ' 38-year career became the winningest coach in college football history. Nurse shortage a_pp~ars over WASHINGTON -The nation's much-publicized {lhortage of nurses appears to be over, but inner-city and rural areas remain underserved' and nurses need induoements to work there, a National Academy of Sciences report said today. O'Neill raps Reagan policies WASHINGTON -House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill Jr. said today President Reagan has driven the country into a depression and Congress must repair the damage by creating a jobs bill and slashing at the huge increases in defense spending. STATE Marine gets maximum sentence SAN DIEGO -Marine Sgt. George Alex Biddy -an unlicensed driver who never took a lesson in handling a car - was sentenced to five years and eight months in p~_i_~on Wednesday for crashing into a Japanese tour group ~d killing four women last July. CBS must relinquish materials SAN FRANCISCO -The California Supreme Court has ruled that CBS must turn over al\ outtakes and unpublished material from a 1979 "60 Minutes" segment to a physician suing the television network for slander. , $57 million claim rejected .. --• 4 '* .. SAN DIEGO -A $57 million damage claim filed by ' Anaheim-based Telink Inc. has been rejected by county supervisors. I• Telink filed the claim because it objected to the cancellation of a $25 million contract with the county for a new microwave telecommunications .system. . Storm slows aircraft carrier SkN DIEGO -Severe weather off the Pacific coast has slowed the progress of the aircraft carrier USS Kitty Hawk, which left Bremerton, Wash. Monday for its homeport of San Diego. -The ship was scheduled to arrive in San Diego Friday, following a year-long, $169.5 million overhaul at ·the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, but the heavy weather has pushed back the expected arrival time to 4 p.m. Saturday. Cutter's crew "in no danger' SAN FRANCISCO -The 53 crewmen aboard the Coast Guard ship Planetree that was damaged bl rough ~ have pa~ed their leaky ship and are no longer in danger, according to officials who say assistance is qp tbeway: WORLD Arms talks to continue Tuesday GENEVA. Switzerland -U.S. and Soviet n'gotiaton conducted three hours Of talk& today on reducing medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe, following' 9ftal1a by both sides to win European sup~ tor their p09ltiona. '!be two sides are scheduled to meet ag&In. TUe&aay: • Poland's Walesa back on payroll GDANSK, Poland -The Lenin Shipyard has put Lech Waie114 back on the payroll, but still won't let him start work until he produces documenta showing he was not emplo~ elsewhere and has his bu·siness affairs with the banned Solidarity union in order, a spokesman for the labor leader said. Oil minister predicts price cut • ABU DHABI United Arab Emirates -The government says it ia nilsing oii production by 45 percent to match lncreued compet.ition from other OPEC members following-~ failure to a.gree on production quotas. Ormnge Oout DAILY PILOTIThurtdmy, Janu..y 27, 1Na Rolla Hinee and her dog Charlie romp la water near 36th Street and appropriately named Lake Street in Newport Beach. ' . ~ (' . eoast-battered-by 'first' storm From Page A 1 · In Westminster, a portion of pedestrians and emergency the roof of a carpei-dying firm vehicles. Some flooding in the collapsed. under the weight of Balboa Peninsula was reported. raliifall. The incident occurred in No homes were damaged. th~ 7400 block of Hazard 1 Avenue, Westmi~r police said. In Laguna Beach, the super 1 surf flooded the basement of the In Newport Beach, Orange city lifeguard tower at Main County Sheriff's Department Beach Park. One wave spilled Hat1bbr Patrol boats were kept over the pjlrk boardwalk busy resecuring vessels loosened flooding Pacific Coast Highway ~ their docks by tidal action. near Broadway in the downtown Tpere were reports of some area. damage to piers near Little "It's a real horror show," said Balboa Island. The Balboa Island lifeguard Mark Klosterman of Ferry continued to operate the water that filled the th.rough the morning, carrying lifeguard facility's basement. Effects of the storm unleashed by a weather system in the Gulf of Alaska were .most visible to motorists attempting to get to work today in a timely fashion. Busy intersections throughout the county were flooded as storm drains simply were not able to handle the vigorous downpour. Along Dyer Road, near the Irvine-Santa Ana border, one motorcyclist drove his machine onto the sidewalk to avoid the six inches of water standing over the roadway. The normal three limes of traffic at the intersection of Storm blamed • ID 4 deaths SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Another potent storm slowly spun today toward Northern California, punished since last w~k by mighty winds and tides, torrential rain and deadly mudslides. By late Wednesday, the deaths of at least four men had been blamed on the fury of the first three slow-moving, subtropical stonns. The National Weather Service said the fourth rou11d of high wi~;ds and heavy rain would strike Friday. And it said two more stonns,. would likely follovt. in Northern California, where many communities bad received far more than their normal share of rainfall to date in the six-month-old rain year. have to "act quickly to save yourself and those who depend on you. You may only have aeconds." A mudslide s hoved two pickups, a bulldozer _and a bus_ carrying Shasta County prisoners down a 60-yard ravine and into a creek, said Capt. Mike Hopper of the state Department of Forestry. David Waterman of Redding, a crewman from the county Departmept of Public Works, was killed and the crew's supervisor , Gordon Clough, was se.riously injured, Hopper said. The prisoners were trying to clear a flooded road choked with mud. . B ill Whitmore, 24, of W a sh i n g to n s ta t e , d i ed. Wednesday in a head-on collision in Redding after splastaing rainwater blinded his view. · Five fishermen from Washington state rowed a skiff three miles through huge waves on stormy San Francisco Bay after an 80 mph gust knocked over their 58-foot wooden boat near Alcatraz Island. The Coast Guard reported the men came ashore at Sausalito. _ . Mud roared-ffiiough a hoU&e in Aptos, south of S'anta Cruz, without injuring anyone, said a sheriff's dfspat.Cher. Forecaaten warned as rhuch as 10 more inches of rain might fall in the Santa Cruz Mountains by late today. l More than 100,000 Pacific Gas & Electric Co. customers lost power, said Dennis Pooler, utility spokesman. Moat of the outages were in the San Franci8co Say area. About 3 ,000 Pacific ~lephone Co. customers lost service. Mud also crashed through a bedroom wall.of a $300,000'.home in Novato, 20 miles north of San Francisco, scaring but not injuring a sleeping famil~ southbo\jlld Newport Boulevard ' at Fairview Road in C.O.ta Mesa . was reduced to one as atorm · runoff' ~ed over the curb. The · ornia Highway Patrol ' reported no major incidents. It • said Laguna Canyon Road WM. - closed between the San Diet0 i Freeway and El Toro Road. Jim Kennedy, area manager " for Southern California Ediaon 1 Co., said two storm-related • power ·outages occurred. ( At 5:45 a.m., 2,065 customen in ' Costa Mesa were left without power after tree branches hit a' transmission line. The area w•. bounded by Mesa Drive, Wu.en Street, Fairview Road and Irvine Avenue. Power was· restored to · all customer-s by 7:09 a.m., : Kennedy said. In a separate incident at 5.:35 a.m . 2,490 customers were left without power after an equipment failure in •n 1 underground utility vault in Huntington Beach. The area ~ bounded. by Pacific Coaat Highway, Bolsa Chica Road, . Springdiiale Street and Seal Beach Boulevard, Kennedy said..1 Power to all but 100 people•• restored by 6:33 a.m. Veteran Huntinfton. Beach weather watcher . Shermaia Denny said the atorm brcJucht : 1.03 inches of rain to Hundnlton :. Beach -considerably le. ihm the 1.75 inches that fell at the 1 · Los Angeles Civic Center, I ' In Costa Me88, one flllideat of the Westbay Apartmenta aid ~ there was an extra amount of if water on the ground. Sprinldln: '1 at the complex came oa automatically at 9 p.m. · Wedneeday night and remained , on through the mornlna, ahe ., said, I The stonns sucking warm air and moisture from the subtropics, moved northeastwaNftoward the Sierra Nevada, where the snow level was fairly high -the 7 ,000-foot level Wednesday night. Winds as fierce as 90 mph blew acrpsa the mountaintope, the NWS said .. r=~~~~~~~~~=·~~~ At least ~40 people in the San Frandaco &y region fied to Red Cross evacuation centers. Fifty-five of those were ln Marin County, aiCtOSa the Golden Gate from San Frandsco, where high bay tidel threatened·homes. But the region escaped th e devastaUon of last January's ·~ whm 32 i>e<>.RJe~ _ ln Northern California. ~wa sandbagged the fraJdle levees ot the S'acramento-San Joaquin lUver Delta, and the rich f~n~ 11u.-vived an all-time biah tide Wednesday altemoon. Dut the dan~er loomed as long .. the ground stayed eoak.ed. "All colunty sheriffs and offices of emergency personnel report ' numerollr' creeks and drainag_e areas are at bankfull and or have overflowed," the NWS said. In unusually forceful _langi~e_the-,Weather Serviee-warn~ people who live near creeks and riven that they ml&ht .. The Storekee~r Final Sale Starts Friday 10:00 A.M and Concludes Saturday 6:00 P.M. ,· ALL SALE MERCHANDISE E BE 500fo-To -800Jo;OFE_,__,..._.. ~~; ________ ___;~~~;;...;;.------~-------------~----:...--------~--, • .l i.' Ul-I--What do y0u like about tlle Dally PllOt? What don't you like? • ..,. "1!fl Call the number at left and your llWI• wlll be recorded, l • . trarwcribed and delivered to~ appropriate editor. · L•s•en·'ng The same u.hour an•werin1 Hf'Vlff may~ uec1toncord1et. i I~ •1 ,.1 • • ~ ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox eoalributors must lncl..CS. j, :,:.; •Aa••Aa• ~~~::. ';S!::.~nd telephon-number ror veri!lcatlon. No circulaUol'I u-9' UUUU Tell us what's on your mind. Quality Sale Merchandise From Our Regular Stock of Men, Women and Boys l I t .. I I. I Orang• Ooaat DAILY Plt,.OTIThuraday, Janu New trial granted By STEVE TRIPOLI 0.-lhe DllllJ Plot ...,. A Huntington Beach man convicted for raping his stepdaughter has been granted a new trial, but a deputy district attorney aaid today he UI not sure prosecutors want to go through with it. Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Green granted the trial this week for James Rollings. who earlier had lost two similar legal battles in higher courts. Green, who presided at Rollings' original trial in 1981 and sentenced him to aix years in state prison, said Monday's decision was based on his belief that Rollings was not adequately defended in his first trial. Rolll.np had been convicted of 16 counts of sexual misconduct, Including forcible rape, involving his stepdaughter when she was 15 years old or younger. He has been free on bail since his conviction while appeals were heard. Green said in a letter to lawyers that Theo Lacy, Rollings' attorney ln the first trial. had failed to produce "infonnation that could have been crucial to the cross-examination of the victim." That Information apparently was contained in the diary kept by Rollings' daughter. COASTLINE. • • From Page A1 She -said most of the cost savings could come from e limina t ing Coa s tline's expensive administrative structure and trans fering its responsibilities to officials at Golden West and Orange Coast. Regarding the convenience factor, Basile noted that several of Coastline's learning centers (rented elementary schools) are already located "within a stone's throw" of Orange Coast and Golden West. ''The idea of creating Coastline (without a formal campus) was to accommodate a period of growth," said Basile, who teaches at Orange Coast. "Now, it's time to contract." Jewel• b'f JQMPtl purchases diamonds. gemstones, gold and 1111ter from private rndlvlduals and estates. Carelul examination and evatuahon by our eJ1pert1 Hogh· n t pneea perd Darty 10 ·9, Sat 10·6 Sun 12·4.45 Phone today Ask ror Betty G~ or Enc Zalalkus. JrwrLs by JOSl:PH loul'I Coell COIU ..... • MOoeoM Cua de Bienvenidoe Youth Sh.lter 21111 Aa11a•l A11liqae Sbow Los Alamitos High School Cerritos Ave. at Los Alamitos Blvd. l&TVIDAI Ju. It, .... Child °'1'e pr09fdecl 11JID&T Ju. 31, 1 .. s Adm1ee1cm $2.!IO The coateetaall w .. mo•Ans'at a ••U'1 pace~ but no one lffmed to mind. Emmy Lou Bradt adorned her 1arden mollu1k with a nuHy feather before tUl'Dln1 lhe creature, dubbed Purple Flath, looee in "The Great Snail Race," spon10red by the Cooperative Outdoor Program at UC Irvine. As the 1naile raced over relief mape of varioua California region1,. their ownen traclted their progreu by pen~ Winnen were determined by the distance covered on the map, and prizes included a gift certificate from a backpacking atore and a package or r reeze-dried strawberries. DllllJ,... ....... w o.y ~ ~~-....-,llW'811 Bias housing cha~ge against NB dropped BY JODI CADENHEAD or ... ..., ....... Federal houlinl offidala have a.MCI a report cleari.na Newport Beech of ICC\.lladonl oy a lepl aid "°"c;: d.t.c:rlmlnatory hoUllnl . The .S . Department of ffowlin8 and Urban Development iuued the 10-paae report thl• • week ln retponae to 1CCU1adona by the FaLr HOUllnJi Council of Oranp County apinat the dty. The report found no evidence that the dty ia in yjolation of the 1968 Fair Hous1ng"'Act. "We found the city to be in compllance with the fair houlina law1," said Fred Stllllona, a spokesman for HUD. "There are no lrre1ularltle1 on the city'• block srant proaram and they can continu e to spend the $496,000 that hu already been approved." Newport Beach has received approval from HUD for $4.96,000 to LehablH~aTe it• low and moderate Income bomee. But the Fair Housing Council claimed that without federal intervention the money would be used to make already expensive houa1nC moi:e COlltly. Eugene Scorio, Falr Houalng execuUve director, said he wu not aurprlaed by the report's flndin11 and noted that hi• agency la conaidertng pouible federal court action. "Obvloualy there'• been a great deal of back room maneuvering," said Scorio. "It doesn't surprise us. We don't Here comes expect eny .~ trom HUD. We ex'*'41d HUD to act in its uaaal fearW. ltyle." Crate Bluell, Newport S..C:h dty planner, takl he Md not yet eeen a copy of the re~ but wu pleued with HUD'1 ftndlnp. "I'm happy to hear that the city of Newp.ort Beach hat received thl1 notlUcatlon of non-violation from HUD. Thia w the position the~'/. hu taken all alona.'' Bluell . , The report comH at a time when Newport Beach faces a major lawsuit Wed ln 1980 by a number of le1al aid 1roup1, charaina that the dty'• land ~ prac&ei effectively e:xclude low and moderate lncome rwidenta and minorities from llvinC ln the dty." Chief named at hospital Surgeon Richard Caatenon bu been elected chittt of staff at Hun tlngton In tercommunl ty HOlpital ln Huntington Beach. Castanon 1pecializea in ear, noae and throat cjl.aorden, and head and neck Injury. Other medical ataff officen elected at the hoapital include Dr. W. Raymond Menzies, vice chief o f ataff; and Dr. Richard .J Stafford, aecretary-t.reuurer. A fresh new taste experience that outshines menthol. J 1 mg. ~,.r. O,& mg. nec:oth "'·per c191rm1 by FTC mtthod. It not only tastes fresher while you smoke. · It even 1eaves you with a dean, fresh taste. . .. UP25.88 Econo01y better despite steel loss? . Br ne Alsoleai.d Preti Ahhou1b Bethlehem Steel Corp. po11i.d the 1ara'elt quarterly loll ever 5=y a U.S. bUllnw ancJ oil compenlel ahowed d lta bec:a..-of the aJoba1 oil ,iut. administration IUll beUew the ecmorny la ~ Up. Trea1ury Secretary Donald T. Be1an 1ald Wednaday that the nation hM "turned the corner" to ecoe~~--1 announced wecm-sa.y It bl tl.15 bWJon In the fourth quarter of 191'1. Tbat IUrplPHd the previous quarterly km ot tl.01 WIJkm P09ted by Inwmatiooal Harve11ter Co. in lta a..i 1112 fourth quarter. Bethlehem, the na'tk!n'• eecond-W.- 11.eel J>ri>dUC!H', lmt tl.47 billion fQI' all of 1982. The American Iron and Steel InsUtute Mid _... production hit a 88-yMr low in 1982 while impol"ta took • record hJch market lhare. The trade poup laid production 1Mt year totaled 72.9 mi.Won net t.cJQI of raw lteel. compued with 120.8 million t.cJnl in 1981 and 66.6 m1llkln tom in 1946, the pnvioul low. Jobless claims dip WASHINGTON (AP) -First-tlme claJ.Jm for unemployment benefita by joble. Americana totaled 491,000 in the week endina Jan. 15, the lowest fil1nl level since September 19fl, the Labor nep.rtmmt wd today. _ · The new appUcationa for benefits under et.ate-run unemployment compenutioo Jll'Olf8ID9 were 71,000 below the level of the previoua week. acaJCdinc to the eeuonally lldjusted f:iCu.res. lt W9I the lowest fWna level lince 472,000 placed tint-time clatn:w for betwfita in the week end.iQ8 Sept. 19, 1981. The relatively low WJng level eeerm tq indkate that layoffs by American busln u have hlt a peek. and that while 101ne 12 mil1im people are u.ted • unemployed, fewer people are jotning the jobie. rolla. J'ust over half of tlie eome·12 million unemployed Americana are qualified to receive unemployment benefit.I. AMERICAN LEADERS METALS .... vo.c (Al")· ....... J -· ,.. --:-c.: ... ---...... 1 ........ ,.1===1'·--. I .,fl: Tll CMwll n ii! ~·= 0..-."""1 11 -+So v...... 11 • ': +t ~ : ... : ... ,,