HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-12-22 - Orange Coast PilotIUlll Cllll .Jiil llllllft llllY l'IPll
. M u N LJl\ '! l 11. I Miii H .'. •n1, I l I l AN ( ~ f (. ()I IN I ' I I\ I 11 ( , , , ~~I i .' •, c F N l s
$24 billion ·demanded of U.S.
:\irpor&s hit
Fog lo cl.ear,
forecast says
LOS ANG EL~S (A r ) Fog
that clouded the fhght µtans of
thousands or huliday travelers
Sunday and this morning was
expected to l~ssen tonight and
give way to low clouds. the Na-
tional Weather Service said.
··Tonight some deepening of
the coastal marine layer should
result in improve me nt in that we
will have more low cloudiness
instead of the low dense fog,"
s aid a statement released by the
service .
The extremely thick fog.
which closed Los Angeles In-
ternational Airport for several
hours Sunday night. continued to
block incomin g fli g hts even
after sunrise today. ·
Man seized
on Valley
asault rap
A 21 -year-old man was arrest-
ed and charged with assault
wilh a deadly weapon on a
police officer Sunday afternoon
arter three carloads of male
Latins reportedly tried to force
the vehicle of an off-duty Foun-
tain Vallev Police officer to a
s top. ··
The suspect. Mark Anlhony
Rodrigue-z.. or Chino. was arrest-
ed by Officer'Steven J . Corwin,
29, at the intersection of Euclid
Street and Edinger Avenue at3:30
p.m .. policesaid.
The suspect and another man
reportedly jumped from a car
and threatened Corwin with
empty beer bottles when the of-
ficer stopped his vehicle al a red
traffic signal.
Police s aid Corwin threw
Rodriguez to the ground and
pulled a pistol on the other man.
The other suspect ran to one of
t he three cars and all the
vehicles. containing at least
eight men, dro\'e away. police
said.
Police said the suspects ap-
parently did not know Corwin
was an off-duty police officer
CSee ASSAULT. Page AZ>
Numerous planes were forced
to land as far as San Francisco
and Phoenix.
Authorities in Los Angeles
said flights were taking off by
s unrise but were still unable to
land. At Ontario International
Airport, officials said 31 planes
diverted there because of the fog
at LAX were awaiting on the
ground at 7 a.m. and that as
many as 50 un s cheduled
airplanes had been sitting on the
ground at one time durmR the
night.
Ontario itse lf was clear of fog
this morning.
The fog settled in at dus k Sun-
day, closing the airport for
about six hours. It created havoc
for both the travelers a nd lhose
awaiting them, many of whom
waited at the airport for hours
grumbling about t he confusion
to harried airline employees.
··People are getting a little
irate at this whole mess," griped
one woman, who asked not to be
named. while waiting for an
American Airlines flight from
Chicago. •
Four s maller South ern
California airports also were
socked in by fog and forced to
shut down their runways
Intermittent heavy fog sus-
pended operations here for a few
minutes at various times this
morning, but most flights were
allowed to land and depart
albeit late.
"There were quite a lot of de -
1 ays, some up to three hours,"
an American s pokes man said,
adding that about six American
flights into Los Angeles and San
Diego had to be diver ted.
While some flights were can-
celed until today. others were
diverted to Ontario, Palmdale ,
San Francisco or Las Vegas .
Aerom exico had one flight
from La Paz, Mexico, land at
Ontario. About 115 passengers
were bused from Los Angeles to
Ontario to make a departing
fli ght for Guadalajara and Mex·
1co City, s aid Aeromexico
representative Frank Camino
Delay time was four to five
hours. he said.
The American flight from
Chicago. scheduled to land here
at 5 p.m., was diverted to Palm
<See FOG, Page A2>
Dan and the aan
Daniel Roberts, 3, Laguna Hills, makes friends with
"Star Man," a toy robot. Both were on outings recently at
Laguna Beach's Main Beach Park.
·--------' 1
t
Go Ka111S
That ·s not a crying towel Rams cheerleader Tina Easte'r ·
ling is wavin..g. The Costa Mesa resident, a former Orange
Coast College cheerleader. was cheering the Rams lo vie·
wry over Atlanta Sun<ldy fo1 slory of the gam~. s~~
Page BL
Huntington suing
state for funds
By ROBERT BARKE R
Of Ille Dally Pli.tStaff
Huntington Beach will file a
lawsuit to recover nearly $600,000
that has been withheld by the
state of California in the past two
months, a city official said.
State Controller Ken Cory held
ba~k $296 ,000 in money
earmarked for the city in No-
vember and another $273,000
earlier this month.
The action comes as a result of a
dispute between state and city of-
ficials on the amount of state
bailout money Huntington Reach
received after the passage of
Proposition 13 in June of 1978.
Assistant City Attorney
William Amsbary claims that the
stale is acting "precipitously and
improperly."
I le also accuses Cocy c»;>l-ain
politics in order to attract publici-
ty ''to his rather obscure state of-
fi ce."
·'It is our contention that the
state waited too long to take the
Suspect held
in slaying
A Culver City r;; an was ~rrested
by Buena Park police Sunday on
s uspicion of murder in connection
with the shooting death of his un-
cle earlier in the day.
A police spokesm an said Larry
A. Harderson, 42, was taken into
custody after officer s found
Oliver T. Convoy, 56, dead of a
gunshot wound to the head in his
apartment.
The spokesman said H arderson
was in the apartm ent when of-
ficers arrived. No motive is
known for the shooting.
Mao al\ftcks grow
NG !AP) -China's Com·
munist Party Issued its strongest
attack to date o n t he late
Chairman Mao Tse-tung today,
saying he personally launched
a nd led the 1966-76 Cultural
' Revolution that set back
econ omic development and
caused the deaths of hundreds of ·
people.
action even if it is right. and we
don •t think it is," Amsbary said.
Amsbary said the city will go to
court alter thefirstofthe year .
Cory contends the city received
$706,000 lo which it was not en-
titled in 1978.
Representatives in his office
said the city had S2 million in
the general fund on June 30.
1978, when the cor rect amount
should have been $4 .8 m illion.
State officials said the money
that was set aside for accrued
vacations, sick leave and unap-
propriated reserves in a separate
account should have been tallied
. in t he city's total reserve.
There also has been a mixup on
when the city took the action.
The city c laims it acted prior to
the Proposition 13 deadline but
has been unable to confirm when
it took tb.e...aclionl.hrough.minules
a nd tape recordings of council
meetings.
The money that is being
withheld is derived through re-
newals of motor vehicle registra-
tion fees. It had been earmarked
for maintenance and .r.epair or cl.-
--Y'f"-Oilds. 1
Quads born
in Stanford
STANFORD <A P ) -
Healthy quadruplet sisters
have been born to a San
Jose woman who reported-
1 y had taken f ertility
drugs, according to Stan-
ford Medical Center and
the woman's mother.
The infants "are a ll
quite fine, but the parents
are still in a state of
shock ," h ospita l
spokesman Julian
diCiurcio said following
the Sunday births.
-The infants remained in
e heepltal'e intens
care u n it while the
mother, Christin e Hess,,
was resting comfortably,
a ccording to Mrs. Hegg '
mother , Barbara
McGowan. The c hildren
are the Cint ror Chrtatlne
and Jerry Hesa of San
J ose.
Hostages
to .face
trial?
By The Associated Press
The speaker of the Iranian
Parliament today renewed Iran's
threat to put the 52 American
hostages on trial 1( the United
States does not accept the $24·
billion demand for their release
The Parliament leader.
Hashemi Rafsanjani. declared
that Iran will not ·'back down
from our demands "
The threat of hostage tnals
came a day after L'S offi cials ef·
fecli\'ely rejected the latest lr11
n1an terms for ending the confron·
talion thatthet.:.S government
deposit some $24 bilhon in ca~h
and gold in the Algerian central
bank as a guarantee that Iran's
financial demands on the Cnit<.'CI
States be met
The British newspaper Dall)
Telegraph reported. meanwhile.
that Algeria will mediate new
"detailed negotiations" between
Iran and the United States in Lon·
don this week But a State Depart
mentspokesmans aid. "We 're not
aware of any meeting in which th<.·
United States is participating in
London this week ·'
"I doubt it very much, .. another
high-level U.S official s aid of the
report.
The Daily Telegraph gave no
source for the brief stor}
Rafsanjani was asked at a
Tehran news conference about
ttie likelihood of hostage tnall> 1f
the u nited States fl'Jecte<I Iran s
demands.
He replied "I have not yet seen
the offi cial C S reaction But 1f
the L' S. is not read.n o give us our
rightsourlastactwillbeatrial ..
· · We guess the American!-
have wanted to make an excuse of
the hostages for military in-
tervention and conspirac1e~ WC'
ha "e no intention of backing <!own
fromourdemands."
Rafsanjani also said he does not
expect the issue to be returned to
the Parliament. or Majlis. which
set the four basic conditions for
the hostages' release seven weeks
ago.
"Because it has already given
its instructions if the U.S. does not
accept. The Majlis has said they
!the hostages> should be tried.··
The I r a nians accuse th£>
hostages of having been spies
The speakers ·s comments
echoed those Sunday of Iranian
Executive Affairs Minister
Behzad Nabavi, who is in charge
of the negotiations with the United
Stat~s. Nabavi s aid C S rejection
of all the demands would prob
ably lead to a decision to refer
the matter to the Is lamic courts
On Sunday, Secretary of State
Edmund S. Muskie called the de·
mands "1mreasonable.::...and-sa.id
the hostages would not be home
by Christmas. ·
A top Iranian official said Iran
could hold the 52 captives "for 10
more years." They spent their
415th day in captivity today.
Muskie said it would be djfficult ""M-··a:greeor.··t~rm s for the
hostages' release before Jan. 20.
when P resident-e lect Reagan
takes office.
Asked abo'ut Iran's demands.
Reagan told reporters he was
''not going to comment o n that un-
til it's .my turn. Then I 'II com-
ment."
An official English-language
text of the Iranian demands re·
leased in Tehran on Sunday says
Iran wants $9 billion to cover Ira·
nian assets frozen in U.S. banks
<See HOSTAGES, Page A2>
Father of four .
killed by bandit
OAK.LANO <AP> -The father
of four children was shot to death
by a liquor store bandit who Oed
with $30 according to police.
Store d e ·
• 1 day at Providence
Hospital. He left a wife and four
children, ranging in age from 3 to
9. Witnesses said the bandit en-
tered Bill's Liquors in north
Oakland and leapt o'ver the
counter. Alkins said. "What is
this? .. and arabbed the robber by
a shoulder before the bandit fired
two shots. said Margare t Boyette.
co-ownttollheatore.
APW• ........ •
RANSOM OR TRIAL
Iran's Behzad Nabavl
Murder try
suspect kills
self with gun
INA, Ill t;\P1 Police say a
prosperous insurance agent who
was wanted on a tharge of trying
to murder one of his cli ent s drove
head-on into a Greyhound bus and
lhen shot himself between the
e~·es
·A uthorit1es ha \'t' ruled that the
Friday night death of Harold
W1-.newsk1 . 55. of Centralia was a
s ui cide
Just ssx hours hours earlier. a
warrant had been issued for_
W1 s newsk1 ·::.arrest, eh ari~ing him
w 1th the att e mpted murder
Thur-.c1a\ of an eldcrlv wom<in
who had been one of his ins urance
clients for vcars
A bout ·9 30 µ m Frida y .
W 1sne~sk1 s c ar c rossed the
ren1 er ll n1· of lllino1s Ji and
headed straight for a Greyhound
bus. dn\'er Mitchell McDowell,
25. of Jackson. Miss., told Jef·
fl'r'\On County s heri ff"s offi cers.
Mc Dowell ::.aid he swerved and
C'l1ppec1 the car Wisnews ki 's car
then skidded 1,900 feet and came
1 n a halt Wi snews ki gl)t out to in·
s pcet lhe damage. accident re-
ports s a1ci
i\. bus p a sse nger told
authorities she saw th.c driver of
the t•ar walk around the car twice
and then take out what appeared
to be a gun When ambulance at-
tendants arrived a few minutes
late . the\' found Wis ne wski dead
with a -22-cahber pistol beside
him
A sheri ff 's d eputy said
W1snewsk1 oo Thursday allegedl)
went to the home of Irma Lee on
lllinotS 127 . about 15 miles from
his l rvin~ton office. southeast of
Centrdlia
Mr5 =>"-rnor.r~a-r.re~p~o~r~te~r;:-;'ith~ru;;---.
she wasn·t afraid of Wis newski
becaus e he ha d handled her in·
c;urancc 15 years.
!See SlllCIDE, Page A2>
Coas1
\\'eat h e r
Extensive areas of
dense fog late afternoon
through mid-mornin g
hours from Santa Monica
Bay · so uthw ard
Otherwise fair with some
high cloudiness Tuesday.
Highs at beaches Tuesday
65 to 68 with inland area.
highs ?s to 80. Lows
tonight 46 to S3.
INSIDE TeDAl'
Think amall, 1ay many
alock mvestment clubs. Bur
their protita can be btg. See
Pag~B4
1 .....
Tall sttJry APWl,....lo
A Parisian tries lo t'ram a tall Christmas tree he just
bought through thC' sliding roof of his mini Fiat. After an
hour-long struggle, it finally became a Fiat accompli.
'Stolen' airplanes
custody hassle • Ill
RONKONKOM.I\, N.Y <AP)
/\ Boeing 127 jl•t was the center of
u 1·ustcxl.v dis pute today after its
owner new 11 across the 'niled
Statt•s amad reports that al was
I akcn withou1 authorization after
a hill of repair work Wl'nl unpaid.
/\ Fed e ral Aviation Ad
m1 n1 slrati1m s1>okesm;in said the
plane took off from Burbank
\1rport on Saturda) The FAA
f 'r•me Page A I
SUICIDE ...
llut. shl' ::,a id her lawvcr ha<l re
t'l'rtlh told ht•r not to tolk to Wisn~wsk1 /\ few wt·e k!-> ago, she
1 ned to l·a~h in onC' of her llfe-
1n::,u ranl't' polic1C's a nd was told by
the eumpany that at had hecn
c·asht·d 10 lhrct' yt'ars ago She
had turnt•d lhl• mutter nver to he r
l;iwyer
·11 arolrl had hCC'n t·oming lo m y
house for \'Car!>, and I wasn 't
ufra1rl I datin't get suspi cwus un-
til ti was toolutt.',"she said.
·'I was s itting on the couch. and
he walked over and asked me 1f
m y dog would bite. l said no And
he grabbed a pillow and put 1tover
my face I fought like a tiger
. finally I passed out.··
A 11 hour I all!r. Mrs. Lee re-
~ ained consc·1ousness and calh.>d a
ll 'IJ.:hbor.
s aid 1t apparently had been un·
deq~oing a refurbis hing and its
o wn er look off with it without pay-
rng the bi ll.
It landed al MacArthur Airport
on Long Island about 5 p.m . Sun-
d ay. the FAA said. and Suffolk
County police today we re waiting
for someone to arrive who could
open the locked craft
AcMrding to Sgt. Frank Miller
of the Burbank police, the plane
was flown out of the California
airport about 8:30 JJ.m Saturday.
but was not reported missing until
J ·JOp m .Sunday.
The plane's listed owner is
Constance Le asing Ltd. of the
Ba hamas. and it was being re-
furbis hed by Tiger Air Ser vices
Inc
Tbr ee persons, the number
necessary to fly it. we re aboard·
whe n it took off. Miller said .
The µlane stop.ped for several
hours for fuel at the Dallas-F't.
Worth airport. Miller said.
The Boeing 727 is a medium·
r a n ge c arrier that a ccom -
modates between 145 and 190
passen gers on comme rcial
·flights .
Jobe Wl)'fte Airport la a SG1
million 1old mine annually for
the Oran1e County economy, ac-
cordinl to a survey prepared by
a pro-expansion airport 1roup.
The survey. conducted by the
Community Airport Council in
conjunc tion with the Air
Tra n ~port Association of
America, is being sent to all
public office holders who will
consider the proposed master
plan for the airport's future de-
velopment.
The plan. which calls for re-
ductions in jet noise and im-
provements to permit a double
in passenger trafric, was en·
dorsed Thursday by the airport
Land Use Council.
The plan wi_ll be considered by
the county A1rMrt Commission
Jan. 13. Later hearings will be
he ld by the county Planning
Commission and the board of
s upervisors. )
_J\ccording lo the s urvey( the
"induced economic impact "
from visitors using the airport is
more than Sl97 million annually
That figure is based on vis-
itors entermg the county via the
airport spending $131.5 million ..
For each doll ar spent, one or
more additional dollars is added
to the economy, according to the
survey.
In addition to vis itor s pending,
ooeration of the airport. where
1,449 people are employed. con-
tributes $93.7 million to the coun-
ty ·s economy, according to the
council's s urvey. The employee
payroll alone totals S25.4 million
annually.
The Community Airport Coun-
cil is made up of repr esentatives
of majo r county e mployers, in-
tluding Fluor Corp. and Smith
International. and the aviation
industry
According to the council, the
survey is among 34 ·nationwide
in which the Air Transport As-
sociation has participated.
Thieves get
costly tablet
PA PHOS . Cyprus I AP)
Thieves have stolen a priceless
2,000-year-old mos aic tablet de-
pic ting Leda and the Swan from
the museum al the Temple of
Aphrodite. the goddess of love.
police revealed today
A police s tatement said the
thieves struck over the weekend.
breaking the lock on the door of
the museum. near this Cypriot
city. and carting off the heavy
mosaic. m easuring mDre than
three feet square and set on a
conc rete slab.
"This 1s a very heavy
blow .... It is a terrible loss for
our cultural heritage," said Dr.
Vassos Karageorgis. director of
Cyprus antiquities. "ll is im-
possible to put a value on this
mos aic, it is a unique piece." he
added.
She was reported in good condi-
1 ion by a spokesman at St. Mary's
H os pital 1n Centralia The
spokes man s aid authorities noted
that th e woman 's h e art
pacemaker may have s aved her
life because 11 kept beating after
she passed 9ut.
OKW.AW.A
I
---A sheriff's deputy said an ll-
ltno1s state trooper who was a
friend of W1snewski 's apparently
ca lled him anrl urged him lo sur-
render.
Vic-ilin 1den)_i(ied
. ·-IWO JIM.A
-. . .
• .
GU.AM•
CANYONCOUNTRY (AP) A
nude body found off Soledad Can-
yon Road on the northwestern
edge of the San Gabriel Moun-
tains has been identified as a Van
Nuys woman reported m issing 10
days earlier. The victim was iden-
tified Sunday as 40-year-old
Eileen Levick by a television
viewer who saw a composite pia-
ture of her broadcast during a
news pro~ram .
Pope's itinerary
iiiylflat
Thomas P. Haley PuOllthl!r .
a.:..:~-1-~d~lt~or-""'"-'-"'-~
Thomas A. Murphlne
M•MtlllO Editor
Ch~rles H. Loos
AUIUMI M<t"f91"9 Editor
Copyrl9111 "t0 0,.~9• Cool
P11llll,llln9 Com11eny Ho ntw'
tlMIH. lllllt1re4klll .. "''"'"4 INllMr Of •d•trll_I, llereln mey bt
repro duced ..,(111ov1 'Pt<le l
..,minion o1 "'"'""' _,
Pope John Paul II has announced plans for an 11-day Far
East trip, starting Feb. 16, to the Philippines, Guam and
Japan. where he will visit the sites of history's only
atomic bombings -Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It will be
the pope's ninth trip abroad.
TELEPHONE
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State testing
alcohol cars
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The
atate h11 received three
lh1ny; illl"hl y modified new
Pinlol, the first ol what even-
tually will be a 77-car test ol
whether alcohol can be the
cheap and available fuel ol the
future.
"Alcohol in the future may be·
a more economical and a«ure
fuel' to run these cara on,"
Enern Commiulon Chairman
Ruuell Schwekkart Hld.
. . . .
Harbinger of wi11fer
A lone ice boater m aneuvers his craft as he
sails past the Coast Guard icebreaker
Alexander Henry in Thunder Bay, Ontario.
S unday was officiall y the first day of
winter, but there's no ne~ to temind r esi-
dents of Thunder Bay where sub-zero tem-
peratures have been common for weeks.
I',.._ Pap Al
FOG ...
Springs. Jls passengers were
bused into Los Ange les a l wo·
hour trip arrivi ng today at 3
a.m .
Many of the diverted flights
wailed al their unschedule d
stops to see if the fog would lift,
but when the wail became too
long, busing was used.
"It !the fo~> has already af-
fected almost a third of our
operations in Los Angeles," said
Allen Wayne of United Airlines.
He s aid two dozen fli ghts were
c ancelle d Sunday ev ening
Normally, he said, United has
about 00 inbound fli ghts daily
from Los Angeles Intern ational
Airport.
"I can't tell you how many
passengers are involved but it is
a s ubstantial amount," Wayne
said.
Wayne added United diverted
one fli ght to Palmdale, anothe r
to Las Vegas and seven to On
lario
The FAA Flight Service Sta-
t ion he re said J o hn Wayn e
Airport in Orange County also
was closed Sunday nig ht. along
w at h Santa Mo n ica and
Ha wthorne airports because of
heavy fog there.
Blasts roek
Penn Station
NEW YORK IAP) A Puerto
Ri c an terroris t g r oup has
c laimed responsibility for two
pipe bomb explosions 1n Penn-
sy Iv ani a Station that drove
travelers into a freezing night
a nd suspended train ser vice for
two hours. There were no in-
j uries.
An anon y mous tel e phone
caller told a ne ws agency the
Puerto Rican Armed Resistance
was behind the two Sunday night
blas t s . The ex pl os ions. 10
minutes apart, tore up an unoc-
c upied locker room near the sta-
tion's main-level waiting area.
About 1.000 holiday travelers
wer e evacuated from the sta·
lion. which li es below street
level in an ar ea running from
31st to 33rd streets and from
Seventh lo Eighth avenues. No
injuries were rePorted.
'Cops care'
school poster
winners told
"Costa Mesa Cops Care ."
So do second graders who
participated in a mural contest to
depict that the me.
Th e class in Room 10 of
Paulanno School earned first
prize offered by the Costa Mesa
Police Association to the bes t of 14
entries.
Under supervision of teacher
Nancy Little, the class created a
colorful poster us ing marking
,Pens and crayons to win a party
and tour of Sabala sso's Pizza in
Santa Ana.
Second prize went to Lillian
Glasgow·s seC"ond g raders in
Room 5 at Sonora School. Each
pupil will rece ive a pass for free
ice skating and skate r ental at l<'e
CapadesChalet in Cost a Mesa .
Third place went to Wilson
School teacher Sandv Rund,·"!-.
kids 1n Room 19 Each won a ii}
1ng saucer disc. donated by Chi ·
qu1ta Urands. and a $15 game·
pun·hase cert1f1cale from Tovs
International in Costa Mesa -
Costa Mes a Chamher of Com
m e rce members judged the com·
petition and wume rs were an-
nounced by police association
vice president Paul Cappuccilli
The entries are dis played at
Fidelity _Federal Sanngs and
Loan. 1855 HarbOr Rlvd . Costa
Mesa
The µohce association, formed
in 1969, lists 130 city officers a nd
e1vilian employees as members
and lists one of its civic goals as
the encouragement of leade rship
in youth
Fra. P,..-A J
ASSAULT ...
and were ··just looking for trou-ble."
The incident began as the of·
ficer was driving to work and
the s uspects' vehicles pulled on
both sides of his car and a third
vehicle swerved in front of the
offi cer 's car trying to force him
lo a s top.
The vehicle chase continued
d own Euc lid from 5th Street
several miles before the a rrest
w as made.
FroaePageAI
HOSTAGES
a fter the hostages were seized on
Nov. 4, 1979. Jt asked $10 billion to
cover the wealth of thefate shah of
Iran and the return of more"than
11 2 million ounces of Iranian gold
deposited in the U.S. Federal
Reserve Bank and worth almost
$1 millionatcurrent rates.
In addition. the statement said ·
Iran wants $4 billion in cash "or
a n y other v alid g uarantee
acceptable lo the Algerian cen-
tral bank, as a guarantee for the
hona fide discharge of the U.S.
go vernment's obligations." It
did not define the obli gations.
Infant dies
in tent cold
NA PLES. Italy <AP 1 A two-
month old girl died of pne umonia
ove rnight in a tent city s heltering
victims of last month's devastat-
ing earthquake in southern Italy.
and health authorities warned to-
day that hundreds of other people
m ay die be<.' a use of the freezing
t•old.
For the fifth consecutive day,
1cy·rain and ~usting wind pelted
the area east of Napl es hit by the
Nov. 23 quake that left 3,000
dead and more than 300,000 home-
less.
Thousands o( people still re-
main 1n unheated tent cities.
man y without proper sanitary or
kitchen fac1lit1es
Steam seen
at volcano
VANCOL:VE R. Was h. IAPJ
Mount St Helens has sent up a
steam plume as instruments re-
corded earth tremors beneath
the volcano and the U.S. Forest
Ser vice red zone r e mained
<:losed by inclement weather.
The r e d zon e i s c losed
whenever clouds obscure the '·
peak from direct observation o
from the ground s
Observers in a forest service 1·
plane reported a steam plume
rose to 20.000 feel Sunday. "We n
did see an event about 2:09 . . . .d
one of those seismic bursts that uf
we see sometimes associated 1d
with steam bursts," s aid Steve h
Bryant a t the University of ;s
Was hington geophysics center.
Gatt:ier«i Sleeve for-Maximum Warmlt\
----------------~ -----------
Christmas and "Pacific Trail" at the Garage
A Polyester ftlled jacket. full zip ro the
tur11e neck. completely washable. featuring two
zip pockets
B Fealher soft POiyester filled ,acket!Vest.
lull ZIP to turtle neck and completely washable
AL'S GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
111 C alifor11ia? Al'Wlr..-o
That ·~ nght t >nl) tht· ~11ow lhl'Sl' <'hddrl'n
<Jrto romping 011 clul11 L fu ll from t he skies.
wh1 c·h would tw an l"H'l'Pt1onal cvl'nl at Sea
World in San Diego, where kids are play-
ing. The white stuff, at Sea World's Alpine
\'illage, is m an-made.
Mondale raps · Soviets
C oncerned 'b e havior' unde rmining p e ace
w l\SlllNGTON IA p I Vice
President Wullcr F. Mo11dale is
leaving office concerned that re-
ce nt Sovi et behavior ha s
"dangerously undermined" US.
opportunities lo follow a course
essential for global surv1 val.
"l'm very worried about U.S
Soviet relations," the vice pres1
dent said .
In a wide-ranging interview
with a dozen reporters. Mondiile
ex pressed his concerns about
Hostages
>
'light-up'
pushed
MILWAUKEE IAP1 Radio
stations nationwide. spurred on
by a Milwaukl·<· ~talion, are urg 1
ing Ame ri can.'> lo burn ltght~ for
417 SC'tond!> on Christmas Eve
-a second for ca('h day the 52
American~ v.111 have ht:en held
hosta~(' in Iran h) that date.
J P aul Huddles ton, news
cl1rector 11f Mtlwaukl'c.!. WACS.
said the station plans to ware
President Cartl'r asking him to
Joi n the ··1.ight I'µ America "
z igil b~ lighting the national
Christma!. tree al 7 pm PST
Christmas fo~vl' fo r 6 minutes, 57
seconds
'artcr annoum·ed c<1rli er the
trel' would remain unlit for the
second year as a svm bol of rnn·
cern for the Am.eric::rns held
hostage in lnm since m ilitants
stormed lhe U.S. F.mbassy in
Tehran on Nov. 4, 1979
The stat ion launched the cam
paig n a month ago , ur ~ing
Ame ricans, at the same hour, to
stand outsidt" for 4 I 7 seconds
Christmas Eve with a ltt r an<lle.
fl ashlight or porch light
The s t ation has s ince been
contacted by stations in New
York . Tex a s, Florida a nd
Oregon that heard about the
vigil through the National Radio
Advertising Board and broad-
castinginrtrtt~
Advertisements boos ting the
vigil are available through the
ad vertis ing board, wees of-
ficials s aid. c arrying suc h
messages as "We're going to
light up because we're fed up."
Nnc p ..... -..1
Electrical contractor Robert
Briggs has been elected pre-
"sident of the board of direc-
tors of the H arbor Area
Boys Club. He succeeds Dan
Rogers.
the nation's internationa~ Tela-
tions. particularly with the Sov-
i c t Union ; h is un ce rta in
personal plans ; his views of the
errors a nd su ccesses of the
Carter administrat ion, and his
recomme ndations for reviving
the Democratic Pa rty .
.. It just baffles me why the
Soviets these past few years
beh aved as they have." he said,
citing Moscow's arms buildup
and the military intervention in
Afghanistan. and asking. "Why
do t hey have to sprinkle their in-
fluence around Ethiopia?"
.. When we·re playing these
games of chess with the lives of
others. that . . . embitters the
Ame rican µoliri cal dialogue." he
5a1d "Thal threatens all of us
because you can't control arma-
ments when this is going on ...
or . our ge n e ralton ·s ··
praontu.•s. he said .. "none should
be higher than trying to limit the
chance that the damn bomb will
~o off That's ever ything. And
Y<'I. you can't . deny that the
last couple of years , particularly
wit h Afghanistan, our chances of
rl oing those things essential for
o;urvival have been dangerous ly
undermined.·'
As s un l ighl s tream ed in
through the dining-room win-
rlows of the vice president's Vic·
torian residence at the north end
of Embassy Row , Mondale.
dresse11 cas ually i n a knit
s weater J<Jcket and a pullover
sport shut, toucht•d on a variety
1)f to pics 11(• said
The Carter adm1n1stration
• .., lo blame fo r presenting too
many new programs at once.
failing to concentrate on a few
key issues at a lime, and may
have ineffectively "explained to
the American people the nature
of the difficulties" the nation
faced.
"The publi c·education role of
the president is a crucial ele-
ment, and l'm just not satisfied
we made that case s ufficiently, ..
he said.
The president needs greater
authority rather than less, as
has been the trend sin c e
Congress began r e-asserting
itself after the Wa tergate scan-
dal He cited as an example the
president's need to move quickly
in the area of Joreign aid and
s aid "the president is tied down
1 by Congress I in ways that cost
this nation tremendously."
The incoming Republican
administration. whi ch is said to
b e considerin g declaring an
"economic emergency" in its
early days. should take care not
to face the nation's economic
problems "in a frenzied" way.
If the Republicans try to
abandon "50 years of bipartisan,
shared programs" that have
been the basis of the nation's
domestic policy since the New
Deal. "we're going to have a
very severe debate and we'll
find the American people" won't
s upport such a s hift.
Mondale, who will be 53 Jan.
5, refused to be s pecifi c about
his plans immediately upon
leaving office on Jan. 20 or about
whether he will seek the 1984
Democ ratic pre s idential
nomination.
Independents si;
Libertarians no
SAN FRANCISCO t AP >
Peol)le who seek elective offi ce
by us ing state e lection pro-
cedures designed for indepen·
dents mus t be identified as "in-
de endcnt" on ballots and not by
po ilica p arty, e s a e
Su1>reme Court has ruled.
The unanimous decision by
.Justice Wiley Manuel upheld the
cons titutionality of a state Elec-
tion Code provisio n requiring
th.at pcr~_ons . qu§!lifyiog .for_ t).le
ballot by -the 1ndei>endent
oorrrlnation s procedure be
designated as inde pendents.
Th~ ruling overturns an
Orange County Superior Court
decision that ordered Secretary
of State Ma rch Fong Eu and
voter registrars of Orange and
San Diego Counties to certify
David Be r gland and Jim
Gallagher with the political par-
ty designation "Libertarian'' on
the Nov. 7, 1978 ballot.
Mrs. Eu refused to certify
the m until ordered to do so by
the trial court Sept. 6. 1978, but
then appealed lo get the con-
stitutional issue resolved .
Bergland was a Liberta rian
candidate for the District 36th
state Senate seat and Gallager a
· Libertarian candida te lor state
Assemblyman in the 73rd A;· sem bly District.
The party did not qualify
· appear on the 1978 ballot, but the
the independent process and de·
m a nded l...ibertarian party
designation on the ballot.
The law provides that if a can-
didate qualifies· ror the ballot by
"vlrtue o f a n lndependent
nomination, the word 'ir1de~n·.
dent' shall be printed instead' of
the name of a political party"
beside his name.
The Libertarian party argued
tbat denying its candidates the
right to be Identified by party
denied them equal protection
and due process under the state
constitution.
Since the Libertar ian party
'"QmJttrled rortl!rl980 gen~
election by raising its statewide
vote r registration to the re-
quired I percent figure, its cao-
d id a tcs no lon ger face the
problem .
The Supreme Court rejected
ai-gument.S tfiaf~e <leni"il ol t~
r·ight to be listed as Libt!rtarians
illegally impaired a fundamen-
tal right to associate for political
activity and to vote.
"We conclude that the inden-
tification provision imposes an
ins u bstantial burden on the
rights lo associate and vote and
that the statute serves a com-
pelling state interest to prot ect
the integrity and stability of the
electoral process in California,"
the court declared,
It pointed out the code section
denies access to the ballot to no
one, it merely provides for a
ballot designation, party affilia-
tion and thus informs voters of
the manner in which a candidate
got on· the ballot.
'Pot' arrest
ODS
MOSS LANDING <AP>
Authorttie11 who spotted a 46-foot
sailboat crossing Monterey Bay
with no lithta early F r iday
boarded the ah1(> and diJcovered
two tona fA marijuana, worth u.p
·to $5 million, 1ccordln1 to the
federal Drut Enforcement Ad·
ministration.
QNL Y PILOT A.1
Tidelftilifs. suit. neon
•
Tnut fwid action may hit OC
By JOHN NEEDHAM
OI -Oeltr ~llet staff The attorney for the Orange
County Board of Supervisors
says it is a "virtual certainty"
the county will be raken to court
over its spending of Dana Point
Tideland Trust funds for pro-
jects outside the harbor.
Earlier this week the state
Lands Commission authorized
the state attorney general to file
a suit against the county if its
position on the matter didn 'l
change.
County Counsel Adrian
Kuyper said the county's posi-
tion is that money from the trust
can be used outside Dana Point
Harbor as long as it is used for
recreational purposes.
The Dana Point Tideland
Trust received revenues from
fees and rents in the harbor. The
money is used to pay operational
expenses and provides aid to
coastal .cities for lifeguard de-
partments. The money is also
used to maintain the Sheriff's
Department Harbor Patrol.
Because there is a surplus in
t he fund that is expected to con-.
l inue until at least 1990. the
boa rd or s upervisors has ap-
propriated some of the money to
cover operating d e fi c its at
Newport Harbor and Sunset
Aquatic Park and for park pro·
jects.
"We are saying that we are
legally able to keep the money
we earn." Kuyper s aid ... As long
as these funds are s pent on
recreation the county can be re-
imbursed with tidelands re-
venues."
But t he state Lands Com -
mission maintains Or ange Coun·
ty is n 't e l ig ibl e fo r any
reimbursement b eca u se 1t
haan 't indicated what the funds
will be spent on.
"Under the t.ruat laws, before
the county can be reimbursed, it
must make known its intentions
before it starts spending the
money," said James Trout, as -
sistant executive officer of the
commission.
However , Trout dis puted
Ku yper's claim that the attorney
general was already drafting a
complaint against the county
·which would be served within
•the next two weeks.
"We are still talking with the
county and are certainly in no
rush to go to court.·· Trout said.
"We are by no means anxious to
take this to court and incur that
expense anymore than the county
is." ·'Right now this is a disagree-
ment among reasonable men."
Trout said. "But if there is no
softening of the county's position
we will Jet lhe court decide what
the correct legal interpretation
is .··
Tidelands T.rus t Funds are
used lo pay the maintenance
costs for public areas in the
harbor such as restrooms and
picnic facilities. The money 1s
also used to pay for dredgipg
and repairs lo docks.
Adminis trative services for
leases and boat slip rentals are
paid for from this fund as well
a s the sala ries o f Sher iff 's
Department Har bor patrol of-
ficers.
Officials of the Orange County
En vi-ronmental Manage ment
Agency have projected t hat
s tarting in 1981 -82 Newport
Harbo r will operate with a
S57 .000 defi cit, whi ch will in·
crease to $97,000 by 1988·89
Dana Point Harbor is expect
ed to have a $1,382,900 surplus
in 1980·81 , wath t hat fitu.re
'declining to $.565,000 and lhen lD-
creasing to $1 .149,000 by 1988-•.
If the county has its way, the
surplus revenues rrom Dana
Point Harbor would be used to
keep Newport Harbor opel'ating
in the black. Some runds would
go to Sunset Aquatic Park ln
Sunset Beach, which is expected
to operate on a break-even baals
through 1999.
Antenna
linllts
studied
By DON CHAPM AN
Ol 1._ 0•11' Ptlol Sl•ll
Laguna Beach offi cials are
s tudying the city 's antenna
height regulations. wi th an eye
toward pc.eserving views in the
hills ide community
But the recommendation they
give to council members next
month may be a simple "stand
pal. ..
T ht• anll'nn<i hc1i.:kJt revi~w
tome~ after Cit\ Counci l mem-
bers rcje('ted a proposal to set a
36-foot maximum height limit
on the devices.
C1t_v Manager Ken Frank said
Friday that retainin g flexibility
1n the regul<~t1on of lhe radio.
lelcvii.1on. and broadcast anten-
nas has definite advantages.
Lethal street drug
worrying officials
.. ff you require a lov. aerial.
then the owne r has to have a
bigger trans mitter with greater
power :.ind morl' crO!:l!)bars," be
said "Thal cuts into the view'."
ThC'rt' currently is neither a
minimum nor a -m aximum
height for antennas 1n the cily
Hel>1<leots a re s 1 mply r~
quired to obtain a eonditional
use pl'rmil hcfor(' installing
hroadt ast ant cnnas
H O\H:\ er. !:>Orne ham radio
o p e r u l<1 rs t•nn lend the l'i l \'
should pro\ ult· m1n1mum heig~it
(?UarantePs
LOS ANGELES IAP> A
new. highly potent street drug
known as China white has been
blamed for several recent over-
do se dea ths in Oran ge .
Rive rside, Monter ey a nd San
Diego counties and in Phoenix.
the federaJ Drug Enforcement
Administration said.
The drug, which is circulating
throughout the Western United
States. is estimated to be 80
times stronger than morphine.
the active ingredient in heroin, a
DEA officiaJ said.
James M. Burke. deputy re-
gional DEA director. s aid the
emergence of the drug "is caus-
ing us considera ble concern"
because of the strong possibility
that users will regard it as a
substance equal in potency to
heroin.
A synthetic white powder or
"synthetic heroin," China white
is sold for roughly the same
price as heroin and is reportedly
powerful enough to cause almost
instantaneous respiratory ar-
rest, said George R. Halpin. acL-
ing regional DEA director in Loi;
Angeles.
Altho ugh China white is
believed to have been on the ii·
legal market since last June. the
DEA 's t estin g labora tory 10
Was hington was only recently
able to uncover its ch emical
identity.
Halpin described the drug as
the methylanalog <a compound
with only a slight structural dif·
ference ) of fentanyl, ri genenc
drug i.irescribed as a s trong
pain·killer
Fentan.rl 1s classified as a con
trolled drug under the federal
Controlled Substances Act
The drug is ··apparently being
C'lan dest1nely manufacl urec1 .
possibly in Southern California ...
Halpin said . adding that DE:\
agents are paying parlkularl~
close attention to the San Diego
are<1 in their searr h for an ii·
legal laboratory
Both Chtna white and heroin
are usuaJly "cut .. so that the
buyer purchases a mixture that
1 s as weak as I p<'rcent· c1 rui:? and
99 percent lactose.
Users app are nt!~ turn the
powder into a liquid solut ion and
inJN't it. the DEA said
T h l' y s ay t h ;.s l t h l' Fi r s l
,\m l•n<lmt.•nt "1 Uar.rnt<.·es th<'
rt g h t l o <·" m m u n 1 c a t e a n d
thl'rd11rt.· t h e rt )!ht to a
minimum antt·n rw height
l ourt ta~t'l-ha' c n(1t been
<'lear l'Ut on th at matter. Frank
said
He :-.ud nffw1ab arc ~ludyrn~
11. hl'thcr an 1nd1udual rev1C\\
pruCcl>~ for ::iotl'nna pcrm1t ;o,
could be prat·l1e:.ill_\ and le1ra11~
a pplied
· Wt' r l' :i I o;'' I 1J" k 1 n g n t
whethl•r \.\\.' cun coml' up v. ith a
maximum ta·1ghl that v.ould be
hascc1 on th:.it cond1t1onal UM·
l)t•rm1t ·
A recomme ndation on the
ma1lt.•r 1s tn bt• submitted lo the
Cn~ C'oundl 111 .January
Biggest quake due --.in P e ru
I.OS ANGELES IAP > The
biggest earthquake of the cen-
tury is being predicted for Peru
ne xt August and the forecasl
will be the first ever brought
before a year-old federal panel
formed to judge the validity or
s uch predictions.
Several top s cientists are
s k eptical o f t he prediction.
which was made by Brian Brady
of the U.S. Bureau or Mines and
William Spenl'e of the I.: S
Geological Sun•e_\ T he two
(;o lden . Colo , res earchcrs
stress the prediction as not en-
dorsed by their agencies
.. A prediction so specifi c in
terms or d ate and place and
magnitude so far in ad\'anee of
the event is surprising .... said
Rarr~· Ralei~h. chief or earth-
quake prediction at the USGS
r enter 1n ~enlo Park
-thl~~~ -..
~in ite own pa:kat
which b:zcomz..s e
coJ1\llZ.rn<Znt carrymg
p:iuch your cho102 Of
fN:Z. cdors, rod, na:vy,
tan, )"2-1 low and ka.1 ty ...
a rrost practtc.al ~1ft.
@)~o@@)~-
... AlSf\ion Island• N~port Beacl\·714/644·5070
1001 Matwood Blud.;~srwood VillQge•213/479-7727
! 1
8 ~1 Dww• ......
Ju*•·
·· Coa~fing
On lositig a f w heads
l , !, it, A Lt <'OUNTING . Pr.:hnun~u·y rtisullS are now
ti\ rrnm ltu.· t 'ntk c.l ~lllllt1i. ( 't1n SUl\ Durt:llU Oil how many
hudll"' 01 •Ull(I' C-uunl) holtJ:s htitl! I/I lht! Wtantn& d&,Yli of
19tl0 01f1n11l1> 1.1JI mull th" giuru. Nobody, but nobody,
v.w nb lu lh l'~I> l ht• lo:.ei-IJ ~ 11 l:!I thut the new headcount ~howi. Orange County's vo~ul1&l11•n 111 1 lHV ,i!lb4 liuub, whtch 1~ ol course aJre1tdy
uulddll'll tn h41b1t-~rnd move ~from Cucamon&•
1'h"1 "'1c.le lht toti.I rt:1>r~enu. a 3S percen\ gaun when
"'"'I'd' ...U t11 the I 421.233 who resided m lhtse parts 10
'" •• ~ 11~v 111 llf70 Wt: are <'!early nudging up against the 2
111 ll hun ll\cU k
t llt. llt-.1\lK'C)\JNT IS important lo our local city and
u •unt \ ~m t.<tu01t:nl:. because of certain tax cash flow that
"" .. 110\·dtrtl J ccord lng to the number of citizenry therein
r t'~tthng ~ ~ d result ot lhe new census, even some of the win·
nt>rs ~creamed foul.
Off1t•1al head counters, for example, reported that
ll,lf'wport Beach grew from 49,$82 in t970TO-s8,3S2 today, an
111 c rea:.e of 32 percent Pretty healthy grow\h. But
ewP'>rt officials felt cheated. They may demand a re·
l'ount. claiming the me tropohs by the-bay actually grew
more
Laguna Beach was like w1se. The federal number gave
our coastal Art Colony 17,800 people now, compared to
14,550 LO years ago, for a growth mark of 24 percent.
LAGUNA OFFICIALS FAINTED. They think their
population is more like 35,000. Where in the world, you
<:uesl' which door leads to the bootlegged lnnng unit"
wonder. could the other 17 ,200 have been when the head-
hunters came around?
Look. they couldn't have all been surfing at the time.
Some unofficial comment has suggested the missing
persons were hiding out in a large number of Laguna's
boollei,:ged housing units.
If vou believe that. then the numbe rs would indicate
half o(Laguna is livi ng like part or an underground move-
m ent
Art Colony city brass . however, insist they can tell
they have more than just 17,800 live·1ns by calc;ulating the
!.CWage now They didn't explain precisely how they do
t hat Thank goodness. Even the thought of it is disgusting.
Rl1T NEVER MIND the city census winners who
tho ug ht they should have bee n even larger winners. Whal
about thl' l<1sers those among us who actually lost
population over the past 10 years. We do have a couple in
our region, for example
BUENA PARK: The population here actually s agged 1
percent , lo 62.930. But the number of dwelling units in-
creased Well. maybe Buena Park people are just spread-
ing out with fewer pe r building and I percent of them got
lost.
LOS ALAMITOS: Here, the population drift-off was
even more marked : down 17 percent to 9,439. The head
count was 11,346 back in 1970. Where did everybody go?
Maybe they just got tired of waiting for a parking
place at the racetrack and moved elsewhere.
OR MAYBE the 1,907 who are missing just decided to
d rjft downcoast to Laguna and rent a bootleg, so they
could live anonymously.
NATION I WEATHER
Aptle•r••ee• 81•1 lie •fft!I"••• ~
Bumps Blong road of transition
WAS.UNGTON <AP> -The most comfortint thin1 that can be
said about Ronald Reagan's seven weeks as president-elect is that
the tranalUon ls an inherently awkward period that shouldn't be
taken as estabUshing a patlem (Or the presidency that follows.
Bul Jimmy Carter must be getting some satisfaction these
days watching Reagan, who promised to bring business-like effi-
ciency to government, trying lo settle on 20 or so people to fill the
top jobs in his administration.
And then there are those campaign promises. Reagan spent a
lot of time last fall lambasting Carter for his failure lo keep his
promises from the 1976 campaign.
Now, the president-elect, who tried to calm uneas1ness amon~
women and blacks by assuring them they would be pleased with
his record of appointing them to positions in his administration, is
having trouble finding anyone other than white males for his
Cabinet
REAGAN ALSO MADE
a special appeal during the
campaign lo un~on members,
assuring a uto worker s in Michigan that he had dropped his opposi-
tion to federal financial assistance to Chrysler Corp. While
philosophically oppose~ to bailo~ts, said Reagan, Chrysler was an
example of a corporation suffenng because of federal actions and
ought to be he lped by the government.
But Reagan's c hoice for Treas ury Secretary. Donald T
Regan, the Wall Street financier , doesn't seem to share his future
boss ' political judgment.
··1n a free enterprise system, there have got to be.casualties ,"
Regan told reporters last week.
Drop seen
in world's
·ll.8e of oil
NEW YORK !AP) -The cost
of oil will increase by 50 percent
over the next 20 years, not
counting innation. but demand
is likely to drop and petroleum
s hould comprise a sma ller part
of the world's energy supply, ac-
cording to an Exxon Corp.
s tudy.
The forecasts in Exxon's an·
nual publication, "World Energy
Outlook." included for the first
time lhe outlook for the com-
munist world.
EXXON SAID that oil's share
of the total world energy supply
will drop to 31 percent by 2000,
compared with 47 percent last
year. Coal likely will supply 28
percent of world ene rgy needs in
2000 -up· fro m 26 percent this
year -and nuclear power's
s ha re should grow from 2 per-
cent to 10 percent.
Blasi debris
He s.Ud that he believes the economy could withs tand collapse
or the automobile firm and added that "everybody can't be a win·
ner."
. Chcysler executives a re hoping to persuade the federal govern·
ment to give the corporation additional loan guarantees rather
than write it off as another of lite 's economic losers.
Edwin Meese Ill, Reagan's transition chief, was non-committal
on how the new administration might feel about a request for help
from Chrysler.
"AT Tms POINT, we have not taken any policy position,"
Meese told reporters.
Meese's comme nt came at a news conference at which he also
was pressed on what role the president-elect was taking in shaping
his administration.
It said something about Reagan's operating style that his chief
aide should be trying to convince people that the future president
really is in charge
"What he is doing is reall y running things," s aid Meese. "He's
making decisions . he's reading me moranda.··
APPARENTLY, W/\SJONGTON is going lo have to get ac·
custumed lo a president who prefers getting involved in matters at
the poi nt of final dec1s1on
Until then, Hcugan leave:. 1t to aides Lo battle over the best ~•>ur:se to pursue and the rl:sult often is the impression that the
boss 1soblt vious to the issues being resolved by his aides.
The best le~son th<.il might be learned from the trans1t1on is.
don't JUmp to con <:IU)iltlO!.
Synthetic fuels from coal and
other substances will supply 4
percent of energy needs by 2000.
up from a tiny portion now, it
said1
~-A jagged steel-and-concrete crater 1s all plo~1 on killed one Air Forc;e crewman a nd
in,1urcc1 21 oth(·rs . It's firc;t time site has
ht•(' fl opL·n for 1n:--JJ€'l'l wn since
ExxoR said that, after adjust·
ing for inflation. the price of
Middle East crude oil is expect
ed to rise about 50 per cent by t he
end of the century.
COMPANY OFFICIALS would
not say how high they be lieve oil
prices will go or what inflation
rate they expect lo pre vail in the
next two decades.
Saudi Arabia raised the price
of a 42-gallon barrel of oil from
$30 to $32 last week. a 140 per-
cent increase from the J anuary
1979 level of Sl3.34 and 2,270 per-
cent up fro m the Sl.35 price in
1970.
Exxon said that "until the ear-
ly 1970s, world 0 11 demand grew
rapidly and at a rate substan-
tially greater than that for total
ene rgy demand. Bul since 1973,
yearly growth aver aged about 2
percent.
"Over the next 20 years, oil
de mand is expected to increase
less than 1 percent pe r year,
well below the rate for other
forms of energy." Exxon said.
that re mains of Titan II mis sile silo at
Damascus. Ark .. where Septe mber ex
-
GIFT-GIVING SPECIAL
The ''Blazer''
By Our Very Own ,
Fulton Park .l
I ;.
Reg. 95.00
HOW 7-~.·0
Winter officially here
Go ahead-try
on this blazer,
sit, bend, walk
& stretch, feels
good doesn't
Mercury plumtn,efs .to 21 'below in New York
..
C'fNmalW .........
Oe<lte 109 14tf• "'*,,_n tnrouvn m id -morning hour) Tue\d•Y
olhU•lte llllr •llh high <louofnus
Cout•I tow ... hlQ!l 10 lnl.,.d 10 ...
"·high 10 W•ttf" '°
EIH•llere, 110111 warl•blt winds
lllrou911 tonl9ht ,.1111 u ceptlon ol
west to M>Ulh~t s IO 11 knots ne•r
,..,. co.ul t11b •ller.-n. Smooth sea
wllll •tStffly \Miil Of f to 7 '"'·
11.S. Sau •111
Sc•lter.cl snow fell •crou th•
northern Aoc~y Mou11t•ln• to the
C,t••t LMle•. wmlle clear •~les •no
blterty coldl-•lur~cowreonew
~=~•nd M _,,.,fir" day of winter ar-,
Sllowef\ •t'CI Wlftlls ousting to 45
mllu !"r nour t onllnutrd In Ille Pacific Northwest, wnllr lrHtln9
rain fell In per1• ol .,....tern l'Aonl•M and nortllem Uffll,
Wl11ter offl<l•llY •rrlYed at •· H e rn. PST SunOoty, in Norllll>r-. Ill .• a suburb of
Chlu90, POii<• reported llrlCllng the
...,,... .... wy ..........
-----l-11tMo..,,;;:.tJdorrt""f1'1d•d.,Wf tf you 00 NSI hl\1#
f'O<lt Cl-1>v ~JO o"' call b<llo.o I 0"' •f\d \IOU4 COO¥ '41nlt ~ CMt"ivf''*S
Salwt(llV AM ~tM ty ff W'Q.u ~ "C)I
•.-C:•twl! 'rQllf CJ10'Y D, Q A m c..;t
MfOftJ I t "m .tM f">t1• t:"'1f' tlr'tH Of
... tVtU~
_.;:;,.. __ .__
..
body of • men wllO died flit •-n •fter w..-rino _.,, 1..-i a per1y.
Ht WM ... ll'llrd ClllC .... erff YI<•
tlm of Ille feur-dey.olcl cold -p. fl'rft1lne _ __, -clter .._ .. ,
covtr.cl ttle Gulf Coetl II•••·
Sno. .. , lorecett for tile -r
Grut l•kta •nd northern Pf•ln•
states. w'lfll f,...rlno rein poull»M for
--~ -SUlttf'td rein .,._,s elld .-
""" IH were t•Pttttd over Ille
Pecfllc ~t -.,.. cel'llr•t Rock In
Temperetll'H er-.! Ille Mll4111
et "''~ PST r<lftttd I~ 65 In
fort ~WllHOMe .... K•v WMI Ill
l"lorlde to 11 lie--• Ill M.t.-M, f'l.Y T~1.21•.-..
AINll'f Al~ Arnerflle
AncllOr•
NI LAI~' " ., .. 2' ,. 21 ., _,,
""'"" .... " ti "" ..... " • AtlMtcOy • ,.
.. .. 1-. .. • 91rmlneM\ .. " •1emercll ilO 17 ..... 47 • llottoft 2S ,,
••-ntvlle '7 Q
eutf•le ,., IT
Cllerlltll 5C ,. JI CllM1M11WV 1' • Chey.,._. st • Cllfu9e II u
CIR<lfWleft 22 u
Clevel•nd 10 • Coh•mllln " 13
O•l·FI Wlh JS 33 O.nv1r se JS
OHMol,.1 28 11 Detroit n 10
Duluth 10 10 14
F•lr1Nlllls ·2' .31
H•rtlord ,. 0
HeleM ., 26 .02
Honolulu u 1S .u HOUllCHI 4J .,
fndft911ll1 2' tJ Je<hnvlle SJ • K•ns City 26 n
LasV-.n .. Llttle Roell l7 20
LowA,.lft 11 s. L1111fsvllle 29 11 ._...""'' 11 2S
Miami ,, .,
Mllweullee ,, " -..a.Sl,P 20 11 01
Nelllvllle » " ..... o.._ .. » I New't'Cltt( 21 " S..,Jle-.'IWN ·
TOOAV ... SKllN 111111 !0:45p.m. u ... 5eceft41-•1:11 ··'"· ·t.S TUUOAY
l'fnt "'"' t:~e.m. ••• """" ... t~p:t'I\. l.1
S.C9flllllltill lt:Jh.m. •.t
SUft .... •:• "·'"" rlMs , ...... , 6:Me.m.
MMft "-61• p.m., NH T__.., 1:Jlt•.m.
............ ,, .. -..... ........... ,, .......
I 2 U
I I It
t ' U 1 a n
I t IW I t 1W I 2 IW
I I JW
·IF-That's
oecause this-
klopman
fabric has
extra two-way
S-T-A·E-T-C-H
for a per-
fect &
comfortable
fit. In
100%
woven Dacron.
Camel or
navy.
Reg ...... 46-52
Long , .... 46-52
X long .... 42-48
Portly .... 44-52
~~-
, ..
1 ' . \ \ i"
~ '.
Loe ,.,.._ $rO & Scl<lno .....,., H01 Ill •11" -cOl9<9 1n an •t-• . . .,,_MAleUS SrlttOISI -ICM 1rwTr_11 ......... ,.
~PAM 2t7lt V..-.n St .:1 .. 1 lhe t i. from May Co flMftl .,,....,,..u,a ... 00..1 ~....me
fCIMAllCI ~ 11fttllotM ll'tcl. JPl•t ..
--..Lt 211 N Oi.noete A .... Ne~l IO AOC>lntOn't ltf .....
9M OlelO 3210 AOMCrenl (7U) tt>tl7i
wtt~ll $26 w.11mtnt l., Melt ne\t to ... , .... rtt
C.-tot "11t fllrd St ACIOH I~ II I~ SMft ... 1111
'VUOTOH Hll1>0f a ()r9"0ttl\Ofll9 t1M1tt ~ IJ\.AZA ..... , '°on ""-.,..,, "'"'.,.
lllVPllOI 365e A1 .. rtlde Piao tl14'M •
llOUMi: ...,, llltu ,.,I, 1.-t, e19"1 ~A. IN, let. IN ...... ti-I
..
STATE s OAIL 'I PILOT A5
. \. Santa Barbara f rip ----
. . ~.
La Mesa
Balloon waft.~ holiday
gilt to T xas couple
seeking
91 folks
LA M ESA <AP>
This city, shocked by
preliminary figures of
the 1980 census, stands
to lose at least $500,000
annually in f e deral
funds unless it turns up
91 more people.
~A TA U A KHAHI\
I p I ('unt>ljlly O\lt'I a
to) balloon boum·ln& 10
a nn•l ht'ld h.._, rt! ullt.'d
1n All un t>.ICpl'<'lt'd
('h rl.ilffilt!) g1h fo1 u
middle aa~ Tt'o• c·ou
pl~ who hav1• 1wv(1r bt•cn
ou\ tlf Ow i.t ""' 1&n 1&11
t'Xpf'nh• 1.>1.od v1i.1t lo
('ahforn1a
The dlll\ uf tt'I
l'hank11>g1vlnt: it ~""' ..
f\Mrb'1ra 'hoiJtitng 1111All
l.1t t 'u1nbrt' l'hn.1.t
lltunt'ht"\l 7 ,000 r~<l uud
wh1tt' helium lJcs r t )
bJlloon:. tu herald the
Jlrt\<tl of ~antd l'lau:.
l'ht'\ filled the 'k1e:.
O\'l'r '>Wlld Barbar1t and
lheo dis appeared on a
"arm we:.t "ind
Two da~:. lale1, l.~00
milt's aw11\ near
C11 t oil 11st.•
lbl\kln, rcx . Jlnl and
Almll1• Br111dt'n wtre
dt't'r hUlllln& ~hen they
uollt·ed a brtaiht red ob
Jert bhth.ily dancrnw
alOOI£ \h_. '1tfOUl\d a hClld O(
lhtll'h
· "l'ht•y wen• about
rt'1H1 to shoot it.·· ~aid La
Cumb rt> l>l>Okt·~woman
Dan a !-'ox , "but 1lec1de<l
t1t11tkt• o <'IVL't'• look ·
lT W S i\ •'l'LI.\' tn
flatt:d IJaJloon With the
follow1111l me!>sa~e print
cd al·r~!> tl "Season!>
lireet111~:. from La Cum
bre Plu.ta I.a Cumbre
HoatJ 110d State Slrcet,
Santa Hurbara
The Hradc11 's weren't
exacll) -.ure where San·
ta Barbara wa:. but took
a t·hance on California
State energy
plan urged
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Califorma should in-
c rease efforts to becom e
less dependent on oil by
c o n centratin g o n a
"comprehens ive s tate
policy for transportation
e n e rgy efficiency," a
d r aft En e r gy Com -
mi ss ion report said
Thursday .
The re port. written by
Commissione rs James
Wa lke r and S uzanne
Reed, is a draft ve rsion
of the 1981 Bi e on i al
Report. The full five.
membe r commission
will d eci d e Dec JI
whether to adopt it.
T he report notes that
whil e Ca l i fornia 's
e n e r gy d e m a nd i s
s tablizing, it still relies
on oil for 60 percent or
its ene rgy. "Energy.
inefficien t ind us tri al
processes. oil-fired elec-
tric generation a nd a
~as·guzzling transporta-
tion syste m are all rem·
nants of an era of cheap,
domestic oil supplies."
the report said ''Their
continued use t!> part of
a g rowing overall o b,
solen ce in America 's
economic base."
The ref)Ort said con-
ser vation has decreased
the de mand fo r natural
gas. which is likely to
remain constant the rest
of the century, and for
electricity, which is ex-
pected to grow l.4 per-
cent a year for the next
20 years .
The state can lake ad-
vantage of that respite
in dem and and "try to
reach an acceptable
level of otl use," the re·
port s aid
T he re port recom -
m ends that the governor
and the Legislature :
Support develop·'
ment of synthetic fue ls,
p artic ularly b i om ass
and un convention al
fossil fuels s uch as oil
s hale and diatomate.
Establis h a n in-
formation system to as·
sess l ong -ter m
trans portation ene rgy.
use trends
Fund a bal ance
e n ergy .e ffi c i e n t
trans portation system
that doesn't use oil.
Improve the efficien-
cy of the state motor
fleet and road system ,
in c I ud i n g im proved
veh icle maintenan ce
and traffic sign al im·
provements.
Increase support for
rail, ride·s haring anti
bicycle programs.
-Promote switching
motor pools to alcohol
fuels
Reduce travel by
enco u ra~ing use o f
tele phones to conduct
state business.
Pass a law requir-
ing homeowners to in-
s t a 11 con se r va ti o n
m easures s uc'h a s in -
s ulation before selling
the house.
The report also rec·
ommended that the
electric utilities and reg-
u I a tory agencies t r y
for a SO percent r educ·
lion from 1979 levels in
oil and gas use in power
plants by 1992.
. FOR THE MM
WHO a. lHE DlmREMCE
.. __ .. . .. in 14K aold
A. Bracelet. S750. 8. Mustache comb.
S1SS. C. Knife, S29S. 0 . Adjustable
collar stays, S190. E. Tiger eye
cuff links, $580.
BonkAmnicard • Visa • Ma.1tn Cha~e •
CHARLES H. BARR
w.tkllft Pllll• !Ml,.,... ......
• Jl!U J.ll'!'N .;.:_
'-nd wrot~ the c ity 's
Cham~r of Commerce
to inquire about their
find. Sllld Ms. Fox. They
had heard of the town
from recent press re·
vorts about President·
e te<'t Reagan's hilltop
ranch, whic h is nearby.
Faee of frighi
·we lhought it might
be interesting to know
how long it took the
balloon to reach Texas
from the date it was re-
1 e ased,'' wrote Mrs .
Braden , a 51 -year·old
hos pital nurse. "Thank
you ror any information
you might be able to
send us "
A 14-year-old girl seems t~rror stricken
during instruction on use of a semi ·
automatic rifle during Jewish Defense
League practice near Los Angeles. Mem·
hers are encouraged to prepare for what
J DL leaders see as a clash with "enemies
of the Jewish people."
T he tentative tally
puts La Mesa 's popula ·
lion at 49,009. To quality
for e ntitl ement city
status, which La Mesa
has enjoyed with popula-
tion of 53,000 approved
by the state in 1977, it
n eeds a m inimum of
50,000.
An entitlement city
can apply d irectly lo the LA CUMBRE officials were so excited a bout •~...,..-----~-~~~--~~-~~----~~-~~--~-~-----~~_...::___~
the whole thing that they
called the couple back
1 n s l~ad . a nd with a
C hristmas gi ft th ey
won't soon rorgct a
rree \'acation in sunny
PSA to probe air cra~h
U .S. govern m e n t for
gra n ts s uch as com-
munity development
block funds, but cities of
fewer than 50,000 must
·apply t hrough ·th e
county
Santa Barbara
M:. !-'ox said the 57.
year ·old truck driver
and his wife will spend
about four days in Santa
H a r b a r a b e"l w e e n
C hris t m a s and Ne w
Years. In addition to the
proverbial key to the
city. the Brad ens who
have four children a nd
live in Midkiff, Tex.,
population 500 -will stay
at one of the city's finest
hotels, see all the tourist
attraction5, dine al the
best restaurants and of
C'ourse s hop for lots of
free gifts at La Cum b re
Plaza.
SAN f'RAN CJSCO
<AP> A s elf·described
crusader for air safet y,
citing reports of party·
ing the night before a jet
collided with a s mall
plane over San Diego,
wants another i n ·
vestigation of a crash
that killed 142 people.
A lawsuit fil ed by
Rodney Stic h ·in U.S.
Dis trict Court seeks a
new investigation by the
N ationaJ Tra nsportation
Safe t y 'Board of t he
Pacific So uthw est
Airlines crash in Sep-
tember 1978.
A woman who got off
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ORANCH COUNTY'S
ANEST SELECTION
.
\.•
in Lo!. Angeles be/ore
the plane crashed s aid
s he heard flight atten.
dants talking a bout a
party the night before
the flight, according to
Stich. a former federal
airline saf ety in ~
vestigator
The safety board re-
f used a petition from
Stich in November to re·
open the investi gation,
.saymg the charges had
been "thoroughly in -
veslll'(ated" and "no sub·
stantial evidence" had
been found to s upport
them
The board invesliga-
lion found the crash r e-
sulte<l from failure of
the PSA night c re w to
maintain "visual separa·
lion clearance" between
a irc raft, according to
Bill Buckhorn, a board
spo k es m a n in
Was hington D.C.
The jet and a Cessna
airc raft collided in the
accident.
P SA publt c relations
Bill Hastings said the re
is no evidence to s upport
Stich's view. He said the
reported party ap
p arenll}' took place
"som e other l.tme "
Stich said he 1s not al-
Vivi tar
1_, -']
-· '
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COl'CTl .. UOUS
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Pre•l4h1 • ...W. ,........ ........................ .,. .............
#914 #924
s 7" -~..4"
leging t he part>' con·
tributed to the .cras h ,
but he said the board
has the resf)Onsib11ity to
i n ve s tigate th f!
passenger's report.
La Mesa. a San Diego
:.ubur b , rel·e 1ved
$543,000 1n block grants
this year ;ind put the
money into park and
s treet improvements,
housing rehatHlitation
and a commu9ity center ---t. ... r ~---...,TH,,,.,.--£----fund
~:~G '°'•' Wetet "••tl~q ' l I ,, ,, ...
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COIU llO(U641-1289 •u. .. ._ ....
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Or4nGft Coai.t Daily P1lul ~.. a~.. .-a11..e _____ .. ____ ~--··Decel••,.,.,••2'2•. •111•m>••••iillll••••B•a•rba•r•a•K•r•ei•b•ic•h•'•E•d•1t•o•rl•a•1 P•~-•E•d•l•to•'•-
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l In ttw IUI l>uh•11l d llltf'UbblUll" or al'll Ille.Ii al Orung\!
t u unl ,, "" Johll W J\ m• Alf1X>r't thl' c~·nh•r or attention
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1ht· LUblt.•-.t u 1rvorth tu ttw l'ount1;-in total takeoffs und l.111thn~ .. ,1otl lhUl ll lb lhl' bub u( Ollt: Of tht! largest <.'On ·
l'l'nl 1 l.lll41JI~ ul ~I I\ .1h• µlane lfl'll\ 11) tHI) wher e in the
\H ''' \\'lull' 11 1\·t-. .ir t' t~•k10~ off t.'&.1d1 d,t), an ave rag'-' or
,90 11._:hl .1111·1..-lt ~u1tl bu~111c~h Jl'l.., or commuter craft
ll't.I \t' lh1• 1 llll\\ .J\ •'•" h lilt)
\nd t lh•\ 1 t• 11ol •. tll -,mall plt>tt:,urt.· l'r~ift Not by a
11111 1.! ,11111 I ht· 111mmt.·n•1al at·tl\ 1t) Slll'l'Ound in ~ busin'<.'Sb
I light-. 111.11 1\ 111 I h1•1ll Jl'l:-. I'> i.I llll:-lllt.•:,:, all in llSt>lf
.11111 n1,u1\ 11f ttH· t•11111111 ..tl1011:-. l~•th around thL• :..t1J'por1 .ind
,/<it tlh 1 1i1l.md 'l'l' .John Wli\ m · .... ;111 11npor1;v1l µarl 111'
'th1 '11\lltt \ -. l'l'UllUl11~
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'uuut\ Ptlut:. ,\-,::,11«1.it1on .., .. , th•: L11rport 's mas tl'I' µl an
:-. l"nin~ tht· ~ruui1tl\\11rk fo11.-.cp.ll't•.i.1ng lht•m out ot' tht•
11 pt•l't opt· I <1t1011
l'ht.·) -.t rl·~:, th.it pnvatt.· µtlot:-han• long bel'n the
hrPJd u11<1 hlllll·r ut tlw t·ounl.\ u1rport anti that more tha11
~ttl hght Clll'C-1 art an• bas t.'Cl at tht.• a1rpol't.
II !-1nwn.i ... t111g I ll nut1.· that :-.l'\'t•ral of tht.1 group'-.
l·11mpl.1111t:-. l·t·hn l'Ont·ern:-. t.•xµrt'b:-.t'cl h~ n·s1denb and
polilll'lam. 111 '.'<l'''IJort Hl'i.l<'h. \\ho oftl·n an· \lt'\\t.•d
'llTIJ1l~ :..tl> ;..111t1 av1<.1t1on cr~·bah1t.·s
Tht.· pilot:. point out that tht• mastl'r pbn':-. t~tl l f(lr .1 Ill''' ll'rmtn<tl i.ippear~ to be "an unspokt.•n µIan· fur t.•:-.
pa11dmg datl~ Jt'l departure:, •
Off1ti<ils 111 Nt.·wport make tht• samt.• pomt. arguing
I hat 1<1r gt.·1· faC'ilitit•s t.'vcntually will usher 111 rlH>rt' :..ind
111 ort· .wt takeoffs And jlilots sa~ lhl•y'll bt.• t ht' 111ws a s kt><I
to makl' room for thl· .it.•b
T hl· plig ht o f· the pri\'att· a\'tators is \'t'r~ tC'al With
San Juan Capis trano Airport plowerl un<1t·r :md llunt
1ngton lkat'h ·s Mead owlark Airport on t hl' wa~· out. t lw
futurl' for general aviation on 1he Orangt· l'ou:,t look:-.
d im
l'nfortum1ll'I~'. lht>r t.• a p pear s to be little good Ill'\\:, to
offer privall' pilot ~ Rut s upporters of the airport master
p la n should he put on alert that their oppont.•nts an• start
rn~ to hne up in l'\'N ·incre<ising numbl'rs .
'Gift' for housing
Thert.··s no doubt tumbersomc govt>rnment red tape.•
1s rcspon~ible for <it least part of t he increased cost of
hous ing
By the t ime a developer works through the 1ed1ous
steps of zon in g c ha nges. tract maps. environmental 1m·
pi.let studies a n d· permits of a ll kinds. the inte rest h e's
p<iid out on his la nd climbs into m a ny thousands of
dollars a nd. of tourse. those dollars arc rccoverecl
from buy(·rs when the final product 1s sold.
So wht•n the Boa rd of Supe n ·isors las t week approved
a plan to ~lrl'amlin e d evelopme nt processing. it's s mall
won(ll•r one dt•\'(.'lopc r ca1Jec1 the mo\'C~ "a giant
t'hns1 m<1s g ift tu housing ...
It's t·~timated the improved procedurt> could cul µrot'
t•:-is tng timl' from 30 to SO percent. Whethe r this really
will savl' ·•thousands of dollars per house .. as WC.IS ~ug
~{·stt'CI remains to be seen . But it cert <iinly must result in
:-.omt• saving.
Tht• m·w system will involve C:1 m erger of :-ome plan
n1n g op~·rations, concurre nt process in ~ 11 f tertain
p1·1·mits . relocat 1on nf offices to provide a "'nnl··s top ..
s (•r vict· to re dute the present turnm·er a nd poss ible hiri11µ
of additional planners to coordinate and monitor tht.• pro
!-t l':.lm.
Hcduttinn of ~ovc rn ment red tape 111 any al'\:a ts
<1lw~1ys wt•ltomt.• But the m onitonng ~hou ld make ~Url'
the s pt.•ed up does not become a sleamrnllt.•r ll'aclsng to
ca rt.·h~ss. inadequatc l.v t'ontrolled d<'n·lc1pml·nt
Tricks of the season
Thjs is the time of year when m C:1n y people hit the
strct.·ts to solicit c h arit a ble contributions
Not a ll of these solicitor~ are what they appear lo be
T<:tkc the case of the Kris hna San las in l rvinc l r vine
polite cited a nd re leased t wo men in Santa Claus outfits
who were soli citing mo ney for an unna m ed charity It
turned out that the two men were llare Krishna followers
from La~un a Beach. Neither had u '·a lid business permit
to solic it contributions in lrdne
T hey told police that people a r c m o re like ly to con
tribute lo a man dressed a s Santa Claus than to a m an
dressed a s a m e mber of the Hare Krishna eel
The moral of this story is a s imple one : Know who
you are contributing to. It is best to see the valid busin ess
permit of pco le solicitiruLJ;har.iiable.con u:ibutwn.----•
----rne same ste p should be taken with people asking for
money in the home in the name of well·known chant1e~
Unscrupulous so li citors m ay mis represent themselves as
belonging to one or these organizations .
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those ol th~ Daily Pilot Ot~er-views expres~~ on this· page -are ,1fio5' of their authors and
-artists. Reader comment is invited Address The Dally Pilot, PO
Box 1560. Costa Mesa:CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boyd/Model body .
By L.M. BOYD
Young lady. o n a full.
length snapshot of yourself.
draw a vertical line from the
top of your head to the tips of
your toes and then a horizon-
t>
Dear
Gloorny
Gus
-I jue~sjl's true.. that the ..,_ ___ , sins or the fathers (and
•
mothers> shall be visit·
ed upon their sons <and
daughters>. I voted for
Reagan for governor
when he first r an .
J .C.V.
~·.~:l ::-,:::~:.-~·. ':!i _ .... , .. , ....... v ...... ...
=-~~tz:..r...r' ..... ..
ta l line right under your chin.
The lower body-length line
should be six and a half
limes as long as the upper
head-length line. Those are
the natural proportions. This
usually doesn't work when
you test it on artis t s'
sketches of women modeling
clothes. The body length in
those are most ofte n exag-
gerated.
When Victor Hugo wanted to
-know how the sales or his
book "Les Miserables" were
-doing, he wrote his publisher
t.be-aimple query~ 'l!! '' The-
publlsher wrote back : "! "
Q. Old burlesque po!'ters in
the back of our theater show
most all the girls to be
quite plump. Was that the
fad?
A. Evidently. Most ads for
burlesque girls In those days
staled that. no one under lSO
pounds need apply.
Jaek Ander8on
SALT promotion misled public
WA S lll NG TON New
evidence has com\• to liathl sug
1«.•sting thut Jimmy Curl ·r 1mcJ
Defense Secretary llurold Urown
dcliberat.ely misled the Amencan
public on the SALT II agreement
The SALT II agreement. now
dfectivt-IY dead, was on the
verge ur ex
tioction even
bt!forc thc
pres ident ial
t'ampuign re
a lly g11t start
I' d B u t
Cartt.•r. trying
l 0 d C p I I' t
Ho nu Id
lleagan as a
warmonger.
kc•pt bnng1ng up SALT II a~ if it
were the last . bc•st, hope of avoid·
Ing a nuclear holocaust Brown
s upported the president with rt'·
assuring st at c m cnts on the
treaty 'st'ffccti veness.
At the saimt.• time. however.
the defem;c secretary wrote a
"to1>-1wc ret, sensitive" me mo lo
Carte r that tells an entirely d1f·
krent story. My associate Dale
Van Atta has seen a copy of
Oro wn·s mem o randum. which
s hows Carte r 's campaign
rhcto r1r on disarmament was
JJUre hogwash The president
was told that SALT II. much less
lhc fast-dwindling prospect or
SI\ LT Ill. would no way lead to
a rcduct1Qn in the nuclear
arsenals or the t wo superpowers
Tilt: POINT to rem em ber 1s
that Gartc•r was touting SALT II
as a way or reducing nuclear
weapons llrown's top -secret
• memorandum µointcd out that
neither SALT II nor the hoped
for SALT 111 agreement would
actually reduce e ither natson's
nut·lear stockpile
"Reductions are important as
sy m bots of progress toward
·n·al ' d1sarmam<.'nt," Brown told ·
S:x>n the invasjon
will begin , my friend5 ...
M we rnust keep ~ move~nt aliV'e .
Bob Gre~ne
the president. "but they have
serious drawbacks as a · means
or accomplishing s trategic and
SALT objectives. and a r e
the refore inadequate as the
primary objective of SALT 111."
Thus . even while Carter was
promotin~ SALT II as a dis·
armament hope for mankind,
his chief militar y ~dviser was
warning that it might restrict
the number of missile launchers,
but not of missiles that could be
launched
Th e be s t Cart c•r cou ld
reasonably hope for. by Brown·s
estimate, was to put the brakes
on. u U S.-Sov1ct nuclear arms
race Yet the president was in·
s1st1ng that SA LT 11 would lead to
a reduction 1n both n at ions'
11 uclear stock pi lcs
A SERIOlJS deficiency in the
SA LT 11 agreements whether 11
or 111 is tha t they control only
the number of missile· launchers
and \lie will have to~ ~nd ... ana try to
ho1'i out as ~as ~can .
eac h nation possesses. These are
the missile s ilos. submarine tubes
a nd bombers that can send
nuc lear devices hurtling toward
targets in the United Slates and
the Soviet Union. But there has
been no coverage of the number or
missiles that can be stockpiled to
feed the launche rs .
By speeding up their reloading
capability. the Russians can er-
fecli vely double their nuclear
missile capacity. "Measures de-
signed to control the number or
missi l es (n ot just their
launchers) arc needed to
limit reload cap a biltt1cs , ·
Brown's m emo warned
Gelling down to cases, the de
rense chief warned that even 1r
the Soviet Union agreed to limit
its launchers to say. 1,000, the
lack uf restraint on the actual
missiles would still allow them
to have as many 11 .000 nucle ar
warheads ready to go roughly
twice the number they have at .
th•~ point
And that·s JUSI SALT II As
Brown's memo noted. even lhc
proposed SALT Ill agreement ..
.. would not r<.'quin• limit~ un
Hi-J C'kfirc. s~ ;w I nuclear mb
sill's 1 or olhl·r T '.'I F ITheall·r
Nuclear 1"<1n·~·s Wcaµon!-. l ·•
IN lllS nwmo Rrnwn virtual
ly abandoned any chance that
SJ\ LT agn•e.ments would give
· S misstll' forC'cS <t chance to
surv l\'C' a Soviet sne ak attack
· It I!. very unltkl·I ~. · he wrote.
··that SA LT 111 tonstraints l'l>Uld
hl· nc•got1<1tl·d which would
rcstort.· it · S 1 IC HM silo s ur
\1valJ1l1I\' 1n the p11st 1985
period · '
Bro wn als11 r<nsed hlht'r
dou ht:-. a hout Si\ I .T 11 none ur
..., htl'h \\er1• r<11:-t·<1 h~ C;.irter 1n
l'lthcr hls fight for rat1f1 cat1on or
St\ l.T II or h1 -. rt.'° el1•t•t1<1n ctJm
pa1gn Whtie ( 'artl'r .... ~:-s inging
the pratSL':-. uf SALT 11 . uncl hold
ing lllll promt:o.t.' of ('Vt.'0 grc•Mer
things lo 1·otnc fron ~J\l.T 111.
thl· 1ll'fl'n:-t• st·crL·tary w:.i~ adns
IOJ! h1 rn that 11e1Lher <.11,!rt.•(•tnt'nt
\\ uul<1 acT11mpl1:-h 1 hP r edut•t111n
1n 11ul"ll·.ir tl·.rrrn th1· prt'~•rlL•nt
"a' p1·11m1-.1ng
How can killing animals be called sport?
It wa!-. a bu:,y morning on t he
radio talk show The topic of dis
cus!-.1on was the murder of J ohn
Lennon. und most or the callers
wanted tn express their opinion on
gun control '.\1any \\Cn' for it
"Of course ... one voirc said .
"w e 're only talking about
h andguns here No one 1s sugi:tesl·
ing that rin es he taken away from
hunter~ and sports men."
or courst•
Every time the subject of gun
ICtws c·omcs up. people a rc quick
to l'XCIUd(• the
"sport~men '"
from any
possible sanc-
tions I luntcrs
a rcn 't tn thl'
he takes a life. Often he regrets it
later.
A huntl'r. on the other hand.
plans mon~hs in advan<'t' lie
reads up on his s uhject lie pre·
pa res his weapon He JO ins
friends . And then. sanctioned by
the law and by public opinion. he
goes out to kill an animal he has
never seen before . and who has •
done him no harm .
Why'.' lie likes to kill, that's
why. lie enjoys the sight of seeing
an a nimal bleed to death. He is
turned on by the extinguishing of
a no ther life. If that sounds
perverted. you unders tand me
precisely We a re ta lking about
pervf'rt.s here
~ a m e MA VBE IT'S because I can 't
talcgory a s conceive of having fun by killing
street killers. something that I h<1ve such con·
tht• theo r y tempt for lhl'se peopl e But the
~ues : hunters day is long gone when hunters tru·
are solid, de ty hunte d for food an in
cent, respectable Americans. finitcstimally small portion of
Well. maybe I'm a minority of hunters a re out there because
one. but I've never agreed Hun· they need to be s ustained
ters. it seems lo me, are sick -the m selves. Most hunters a re
s ick 1n a different way than street ther e beeause something inside
killers arc sit'k. but sick just the them mCtkes them fet'l good to
same. ~....-.,.,\,rx-i...,,>Nfn.:i~~tJ;;~--att'h a livi~thingdw---1\ person who murders ano er human being is us ually doing it T h ey call t h emse l ves
while filled wilhsomcsorl of emo· .. s portsme n." What a joke
tional passion. T en minutes Unlike other sports. hunting takes
before he pulled the trigger. he little agility, no physical condi· mi~hl not have done it, a nd IO tioning, no s peed. Any slob with a
minutes later he mieht not do it. gut full of booze can go into the
For an in.o;tanl, though; he rsfilied woods .and ... if his weaopon is
w1th the awful kilfin~ instinct. and ~ powerful enough, if his telescopic
Moral boycott of TV
Having read the current issue
of Time magazine, I was none
too surprised to bump into my
old friend Norm (Bubl Bricker.
a troop leader of the Moral Ma·
jorily, in the Eternal Light
Health Food Emporium &
Tofuteria
Bub wa s s tar in g tn a
som ewhat dazed fashion at a
or any1!~e who sponsors sexy TV
s hows.
"Yes," I said. "I saw in Time
that you 're boycottin~ Gene~al
Foods for refusing to withdraw its
a dvertis ing from 'Dallas.·
·Charlie's Angels· a nd 'Three's
Company'."
"I s ure do miss J ell-0." he
said wistfully. "Not to mention
Post Toasties. Sanka. Kool-Aid,
S wans Down Chocolate Cake
Mix and my nice hot cup of
Post um at bedtime.·· He squared
tra y o r
s pr o ut e d
mung beans.
"Do you mow
· ·em or plan( -·em:· ne
quired of no
o n e . i n
particular.
oulde~ ~~--~...,m"'a'-:k ... e sacrifices lo strengthen the
nation's moral fiber. Am'erica
first, Jell·Osecond ! ..
··1 assume
you ' re one or
the h a lf
mlllion decent Christians who
are taking part In the 'Clean Up
TV Campaign'?" I asked him.
"That ·s right." he said.
"We're not buying the products
WHEN I SAID I admired his
patriotism, he sighed. "It hasn't
been easy ... he saici. "Orieinal·
ly. 'Soap' and 'Saturday Nltbt
Live· were the only other shows
on our hit list. So we had to give
up Oristan. that great Chef Boy-
ar-de& spaghetti, and Anacin.
!>lght is strong enough .. 1.rncb a
good chance of making a kill
In a wav the hunter' art.' mut·h
more p<ith~t1c th.JO I ho'<' wl111 arm
themsel\'e.S to thl· ll't'th 1n thl·
na m e of ""self defcnst· · The lilt
ter ar e acting out of gl·nu1m· k ar.
1t miJ.?ht not be Wl!>t' lo kl'cp loaded
J?uns around the house but at
least the p..·oplc "ho .1rt.• <10tnl? 1t
han• no rt•ul dt.•s1rc to o;{'(· anyum·
else die Tht•y just ha n· he tome :-o
frightened by th(• time!> I hat thl'~
have succumbt•d to th1• µcrce1\"cd
ne<'d for protect ion
llU!\'TF.RS, TllOU;tf, untik(•
the nervous homeo\\ ncr who
keeps a pistol in the dniwerorthc
night table. do not ta lk of foar
They are the aggressor:, :'\oone is
out to get them. ancl they know 11
They wake upon a weekend morn
ing. ha\'e a hearty breakfast. s::iy
goodbye to the wife and t•hildren.
and go out rn the hopes of st•1.•1ng
somethlng die.
T hey polish their weapons and
select their bullets with care and
talk about wh1cb rifies have the
most killing power Their fetish
be co lilfS tiluaLlLis-t.w i.sted-tn-th
textbook meaning of the term.
and only bet'ausetheir pursuit has
become so all-American do they
escape the scrutiny of their
neighbors . The thinki ng has
always been that since there arc
so many ~f them .. what they .dg
must beatl'righl .
I alwayi; find it interesting to
"'-'l' tho'l' p1tturt·~ huntl'r" like lo
!11:-.pla.\ p1C'tun·., of th<'mSl'ht·s
..1J nd1n g prnudl) nl"<l to ..,,,me
forc·:-.1 animal the) hH\"t' JUSI
ktll t•d Thl' hunter:. an• inv:mabl.'
~m1ltng I hkt.• lo l1)(1k 1n the11·cyt•s
\\'hat I 'l'l' an • mt•n ~o in:-c·eun• of
thl•lr cmn \lo Orth and ab1ht1es in
the• n•a l world :-;o <lnuhtful of
1 ht·11 1·upac•l.' to t urnp<'tl' ''1th
111 lwr mL•n 111 An1L'ri C'an ~ocu·t~
I hat tht.'\ mu:-1 t:ikl· pridt• 1n till'
f:.itl 1h~1t. ai<kd b.' the most
SU\ .1J?l' f1rt.•p<i\\cr lht•y C'an h11\",
1 he' can c·au:oil' somr thing let rgt• to
di t>. Tht' smile:-on their faces
:-.l't'm fragile :ind weak and 'ia<t.
thL' rlearl a111mals ht'.''td<' thc•m t•x -
hll.nt muc h more dignity ancl
st ren!!\h.
SO I~ T iit: aftt>rm::ith or the
L<'nnun rnurdt·r. lhL· national dc-
l><tll' 1::. ::.tartan~ :.inc" on the
mt•r1 t ~ of g un cnnlrol for
J\ml'rtl'an <.'tlizcn~ Probably
nothinJ.? will come of it: after
t'\'er\' assassination we have ex
pt•rienced. there has been much
talk . bul as Lime l'(oes by the gun
lobby always prevails .
~ 1s ime. ffloug . when you
hear pt.'Ople automatically ex·
dude the hunters from their a rgu
me nts. pause a mo.m ent lo think
A famous public 'figure is t'Ut
down bv a suddt.•nly famous as·
-;:i ssin only once in a ~real whi..le .
:rt1e hunleh. though -th~
" portsmen .. -are out -there
e\'cry day. wanderin~ the land.
can lead to starvation
Whal a head at'he ! When we
added 'The Dating Game' and
'The Ne wl y w ed G ame .· It
seems hke every time we turn
on TV. there goes another dozen
things to eat "
"Like what?'' I asked
"Well, take the other night ...
he said. 'Tm sitting the re
watching an old movie featuring
a 'topless Ta rzan. a half-naked
J a ne he's s hacked up with. their
illegitimate kid. Boy. and a.
totally n aked c h amt>ant~e .
-Whe n the comnrercla eomeson.
I c lose my eyes and ask the Mis·
sus to tell me who the sponsor ls.
'Mom's Crunchy t\pplc Pie
Mix.· she says."
Quotes
"When the pres~ is (ree and
every man able to read, a ll is
sate."
Thomas Jtff~non
Ruh shook his head s adly
"lmagint'.', Mom's Apple Pie'"
he said "Seem s li ke there's
no thsng decent left fit for u
m or al American lo eat "
WHEN I SAID I assumed
that ·s whv he 'd stupped shop
ping at Safeway, he ~o~d~.
"Safeway is a den of 1nsqwt y
with sin and temptation on every
shelf." he said. p1cksng up a
ginseng root. "What's this s up·
sgd to c»ror .vou""
When l told him. he qwckly
put it down and picked UP an
egg. which. on being advised it
was fertile. he quickly put dbwn.
too "What 3m I going to do""
ht> s aid pralnt ively. "l 'vt
alrody lost 20 pounds."
"Well." I s uggested . "you
could always just bo)•cott TV ...
"I'll starve to death first !" be
cried. And. after looldn& ovfr
m y te\e,•lsion lo&. t fear he may.
' ..
".
"Car keys!"
BISHOP WINNER
ATHENS . Grt tH't
l API The ::.ecrctar)
general of the South
Afri c an Coun(·tl o f
C hu r c h e . Bt i.h op
Desmond Tutu. and a
conservation group have
won prizes awarded by
the Al exander S
Onassis Public Benefit
Foundation.
The f ou ndati o n .
established in memory
of the son of shipping
magnate Ari s totle
Onassis, awarded the
$100,000 Athinai pi:fte for
1980 to Bishop Tutu for
what it called his ·con·
tribution to the
worldwide s truggle
Jga1n::.t racial d1 s -
crimrnat1on
The $100.000. Olympia
Prize went to the In-
ternational Union !or
Conservation of Nature
and Natural Resources
for what the foundation
call ed its contribution lo
conservation of the en-
vironment worldwide.
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICI INVITING a10S
llECllPT 0" "110~AL5: Sulltd :;~:~:~ ~:..~;·~-:~~ 1~"r,,;1~
lie• of IN City Cl•rk. loultd •t II
Jambo•ff R.,.d, lrvlne, C•lllornl•
•11u, unlll 1 00 p.m .. on J•nwry 13,
'"'· for tno con>truction ol concrete
curbing fmow slrtP>I The •II• of IN
work I• loc•lltd •I Herlt•Qe P•r
lY•I• Awnue -W•lnul A.,.n uel
PU. FAMILY
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HOMl
•nd T urlle Aoc k Cominunlly P•r
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Westminster
693-3525
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Chapel
3500 Pac1f1c View Dnve
Newp0rt Beach
644-2700
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UJQuna Beach
494-941 5
LaQuna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776
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Mortuary • Cemete~
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
rtHCl llOTHllS
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MOITUAlY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
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WISTCLIFF CHAPEL 427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
rtllCI llOTHllS
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Hun11nQ1on Beach
536-6539
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will b• m•ll•d for •n •ddlllonat
cha roe of U.00.
rltOl'OSAL GUAaANTEE: E•th
P•OPOHI .... II be .ccompanl~ by •
cortlfled or c•>l\ier's cl\eck of old
bond In lht •mount of 10 percsnt of
tne total Dld Pf'ice pay•ble to the City
of Irvine H • -•nlM 11\el Ille bid·
""'· ii l\IS P•oPOWI is •<<~ltd, will promp\1y e•e<.t.rte tht c.ontr.c.t, secure
paymenl of WOrk..-'> Compenwtlon
tnsuranct". and furni'h • s.atlsfactor~
Fa ithful Performance Bond In tl'le
•mount of 100 perconl or lllr IOl•I bid
price ano • ~ -Mat.,.lah Bond In tM -of 100 percent of the lal•lbldllfiu·
WAGE ltATES: As required by Sec·
loon 1713 of IN C.lllorni1 ubor Code,
,,. Owner,.., determ1nrd ll'le venu11
pnv•lllr19 , .. es of ·-• in the loc•ll-1 y In wlllcll Ille work Is to be
Pl!riormed CbpiH ot Wtd ·-r•le Otltrm•~llons •re molnt•i,.d II 11\e
offi<•• of the Owner and or• •"•ll•Dle
uPOn ••Que>t Tl•• Contra<lor sl\all
1PG\I • copy ol ,.Id docum•nl at ea<ll
Jot> slle The Cotllr..:lor and 1ny wb-
lcontr.ctor undt• lllm >ll•ll ~Y not le\S
1tn•n tho ~llled pre,,alllnv , .... ol
wages lo 111 '#Orkmen HnPIOyNI In tl'le
rxecution Of the contr«t.
"llOJECT AOMINISTllATION: All
!Question• relaHve to lllls project prtor
lo the _,Ing QI bids Sll•il be dlrecle<I lo Consirucllon Proje<I Supu•isor. Cl·
;r~8~:'.:··.1c~~·;s,:·~:;:~:,;:1
Tile Owner reser""' Ille rlQllt to reJe<I
l
any or all old>, to wal~ anv 1nlorm•ll·
ly in a bid. and to m•-• award• In the
lnlorU I ol tne OwMr
D•to· December II, 1980
CITY OF IRVINE I 8v Iona I.. Oglesby
Oel>Ulv Cily Clert<
Publt\hed Oren<Jt CoHt Oa1ly Pllo~.
Dec 71. 2'1. 1"90 Jan s. 1'191
""11·tll
_ Mondlly, December 22, 1980 s ~VALOT A1 . I
Deatlu
Elaewhsre
NIW YORK (AP> -
Playwript Marc c..-.
ly. 90, w6o won a Pulltaer
Prlae fot hi• drama "The
Green Puturee" in 1930,
died Swulay.
PlllUC NOTICS
1'"8~'9NU. AfllllVIUCAYCT•
NOTICI llNl•llYOIVIN 1Mte11
TllHMY, ... .., .. J11111ery '"'· .. 1t1••M.•1 Or..._. ~' INrlff·CM-r,
H•Mt ........ ~. ttt1 .. .,. ...
0r1,,., ~· c•-....,.. .. ".,..,... 1e11ee.• .... , ..
...,..,~ .. c..MtyefOr ..
•111 ... l M..-ik wctltll to .. ~t ..... , .., C-" In lewful ,.,..., .. tlle
Unlt•St•-.llW'91-1"9 ... _.:
IUILC>ell: U'*--•• CM ln
Cr11IMr HUl..LNUMIEA·~,.V
11 l!GISTllATION NUM8E II · CF .....0
AV NASHVILLE, Tenn. Av•llMll•tor1,.,..11on1:00.lM.d•t• ....... (AP) -Jack S&app, 68, a HADGATES,
former Grand Ole Opry , ~!;~;Q<tef\1 mana1er wh,o went on to P11e.11111ee1 0r.,. eo.11 oa11v Piiot. build Tree lntemalional, 0ec u. 1• so1•-eo
the world's lar1est coun·
try music publishing PVllUC NOTICE
eom pany: died Saturday. Mor1ca Of' MOfl.•Hl'OM1t•1L1n
CARMICHAEL (AP>
Former A s ·
sembl yman Clayton
Dllla, 72. a legislator for
24 years and brother or a
current state senator.
Ralph Dills, d~ Mon·
day.
Notk• I• ,.,.e.y given 111•1 lhe "'" o.r,..,... wlll not bl ,.._tlble tor
4"1Y clellh w 11.e.lllllH contrected llY
NIY--· 1'-my .. 11, on 0t atlef 11111 d•I•
Oatad thl• ttlll <My <If Oecemc.r.
'"° 8-E.Wllll..-ns
S. St. George,
WtWTll,. .. r. CA '*3
Puollst.d Orenot <-•I Dally Piiot,
De< 11. :n.•. "90 SIOO
* -------HOUT
II s1.an GREAT 17DINNER n .
O Good for tnree pieces of Juicy golClen br(Jwn Kentucky
C F11e0 Chicken. phJs s1n91e sefvings ol cole slaw, (3 mashe<l potatoes ano gravy anCI a roll l1m11 two orter!> z per coupon per cus1om1Jr Custome1 po1ys all appllca·
I ble sales 1ax
040 OlltH e•P11es January 4, 1981
I
-------AIOUT
S6.49ofl:ld z
0 Good for twelve pieces ot 1u1cy, g0tden brown Kentucky ti
Frieo Cn1cken, with six rolla. plua your cnolce ot either a :::>
large cole slaw or a large maehed potatoes, 1nCI a small 0
gravy L1m11 two otters per coupon per c:ustomtr. U
Customer pays all apphcabla sales tax
Oller eap11es I January 4 1981
P11ces may vary at oar I 11c1pa1tng toca11ons
GooCI only m Southern
I Ca1ttorn1a where you
see the Seasoneo
Gree1tngs w1nClow
...... b.an;. ___ ~
one day only!
our entire stock
of 14K gold
For one day
we've added
$250,000 w.orth of
14k gold to our
regular stock.
chains .. .
charms .. .
charm holders ...
bracelets ...
pierced earrings ...
pendants ... . nngs ...
c;!.11 1_ 4k gql_dJ_
Same with
semi-precious
stones.
r"
T~ea., Dec. 23: Huntington Beach. 9811 Adams Ave. at.Brookhurst St.
Tues. only
December 23
Huntington
Beach store
9:30 to 9:30
I.
I
OHL Y l T APll'&G OA YS lUT
llfOll CHRISTMA S
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ARNl
DELIVER THE Daily Pilat
BOYS.AND GIRLS 10 OR OLDER
C~LL 642-4321 --APPL Y TODAY
l111d111~ ''"'iii~ 111 h·· 11111 tli.111 Ill p.1n•nt d id :!I•
11•11111•11 1j.!11 '.\I'll•~ ll;q1r1-.1 I'!•'' rt'(11tll'I
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HH hld wm
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1!1•t h lc•ht•m. I ht· re .,.,. 1u lrl lw 1111 <'I'll\\ 1b t lw r<· a l
C'hr1slmus Hut Ht• wa .... and 1h:il fart t!I th<' m:i~net
llll till' 1ron S)llrllf'd I rfl\\CI-. l hal t•nt<;h th1• O ll•:lk
111 LIP lt.irnll'I 11! 15.000 1w11pli ann11<1ll.1
Harva r d f ee ls pi11cl1
CJ\~t B RllHa: ~l a::. ... 1 1\£'1 ll:1rvarrl
l 'n1 \·t•r-.1tv say., 1L<; C'nd<•Wrnl'rll rn<'orn" ts nol ktep
mg up with exp<•nses 1•vr>11 lh111tfc!h tht' en<lowmenl
11H'rC':twd by Sl76 7 milli11n la.,t fisca l ycur lo SI 5
htlhon
Harvard. Amcn ra's nl'llf''-1 !>\'hU<ll. "aid Ill a
fm m1c1a l report for thl' fbral )car cnrlmg Junt' 30
that endowment 1nr 11mc grt•w hy r, 9 P<'rCC'nt et yl'ar
dunng lh!.! 1970!> But. the rrport ~aid. cx1><'11scs 1n
creased 7 fi perct•nt. ·
NO FRILLS TEETH WANING
Charlt.s 1-\.~"Pr :X.~d.t.rs
~ of 7\rriLl" lo.-
i{ickor~ m.rm5
\Jt.J::a.'~
\lt1kf' y11ur rJmst111as shnppmy a rewarding
1·.rpeneru:e Shop at Hf'Sft•fiO' l .. ~1.J
crnwenumtly located at the comer of Irvine
Ave & 17th St . Newport Heach
Cabinet Mounted with
Buih·ln Vent and Cooktop Light
REPLACES YOUR RANGE EXHAUST HOOD
... and Saves Valuable Counter Space
• Cook by T1mo or by Temperature
w11'1 M1r10 Th1lt'nome1er Tempf'ra
ture con1rol • 16" Extr11·W1d11 011ef\
Ca1111y • Easy to lnnall, loolcs hke a
built m • Replaces 30". 36" .rnd 42."
hoods • Charcoal l1l1er ava1h1ble for
1nst&llation no1 vented to ouu1de
• Tums your range in10 a Microw11Ye
.Cooking Centetl
-. . . . . ' ....
NATION
BUSINESS:
The toy industry is no
child's plaything •r
DEC. 22, 1980
but a multimillion-dollar
business . . BS STOCKS BS
COMICS 86
.
Rams have DloDientnDl going t~ Dallas
Corral turns from goat to hero with game'!'winning field goal
I
By JOHN 8£\' .\NO Ot •o.l•r ~._...
So 1t wa a mean1ne1ess aame, huh" Well,
don't ti")' to tell that to the Rams, or the Atlanta
f'a lcona. or the fT eni1ed crowd of 62,496 al
An aheim Stadium, who watched both N •·c powers
&o at one uothe r Sunda) as 1f the Civil War wa~
ridina on the outcome
The injury toll and fi nal score. 20-17 Rams. in
overtime. are more supportive evidence to the con-
test 's ferociousness.
Little did anyone figure both sides would dis-
pla y s uch intens ity Sure, ther e was some
s1gn1ficance at the beginning as both sides were
grappUng for n ome field advantages. But that
vanished at halftime in Dallas where the Cowboys
were leading Philadelph ia, 21 ·0.
With the Eagles reeling, the Falcons were ful-
ly a ware they had earned the rigtlt to hold all their
playoff games in the state of Geor gia. And with the
Cowboys rebounding, the Rams were also cog-
nizant they'd be spending next Sunday in Texas.
So why then were these two teams so unrelent-
less toward one another the final 37 minutes of
play" The answer is simple: pride and honor.
Both siCles felt they had something to prove not
only to each other but to themselves.
.. It's games like this where you have to reach
down _ and grab for wh atever you have !~.ft,·; e~-
Sceelen ,,...,, I• IP•fl ol Clla~9f.r•
{See 1tory. page 83)
pla ined place-kicker Frank Corral. ,whose 23-y ard
field goal with 8: 00 remaining in overtime pro-
vided the final m argin 9( victory. "This is wnere
guts and char acter come in and each individual
has his own pride... '
Never was that statement more evident t han in
Corral himself. who was having a miserable kick-
ing day Wllil he booted the game winner
Corral, who was thrust into the role or pun-
ter/field goal kicker at t he end or training camp:·
has had. by his own adm ission. trouble this season
adj usting to his double duties. It's been like one
roller <'ouster ride after another for the UCLA
graduate, with Sunday's performance ser ving as a
perfect example
ragamo (20 of 34 passes for 213 yards and one TD>.
Psychologically, too, the game was important
as the Rams kept their edge going into Sunday's
showdown with Dallas, a nd also regained some of
their respect and dignity from the Falcons .
Corral had missed three of four field goal at-
tempts prior to hts final kick. And. he also suffered
the embarrassment of a 13·yard punt early in over -
time which gave the Falcons good field pos ition at
the Ra m 37.
.. This kicker went through more highs and
lows than anybody out on that field today," said
Cor ral with a.smile ... T he important thing is that
we won and l'verybody is happy ...
"It's survi val. It's territorial instinct," ex·
plained Fred Dryer of the war waged on the field.
"We figure we're here. so we might as well go out
and play. ll 's funny how good football teams, when
they have to play well, will go out and play well."
The Hams had a number of reasons to be
JUbilanl-
By playing well . the Rams also had to suffer a
fe w more casualties. Jn all. 11 players reported to
team physican Dr. Robert Kerlan b_y ga me .. s end,
with the most critical being Mike-Fanning'!t back-
sprain, Willie Miller's flu, Lydell Mitchell"s con·
cussionand Billy Waddy's hip pointer. thc defense. whi ch has sparkled since the
New Engla nd game six weeks ago, held the
Falcons to 349 total yards, 110 during the fi nal 21h
quarters. The unit also frshioned a goaltine stand
late in the fourth quarter1
As a matter of fact. Fanning and Miller
were so bad Kerlan s hipped them to Centinela
Hospital in Inglewood for further examination.
the offense, which has been flowing or late,
gol another lop perfor mance from rookie J ewerl
Thomas C 19 car ries. 144 yards and one TD) and
a nother J!OO<I one from sore-ribbed Vi nce Fer-
.. A loss right now-would have been a real dis -
adv a ntaJ{e to us psychologically, .. s aid safety J eff
De l a ney in exp I a inin g t he team 's a ll-out
<See RAMS. Page 82)
O.lly l'li.t l'IWt•• by l'llirl<l 0'0-11
Not for Atlanta
Meaningl~ss
Sµnday fun?
8v JIM CARNETT
• 01 t ... 0•1ly P1iol St•ll
ll was a game t h at h ad
absolutely no impact on the out-
<'Ome of the ;-.;at1onal Football
Conference·s West ern D1v1s1on
r<.1C'e
It was a game that had no af·
fl'tt on the N F L ·s playoff
sc.:heme.
Win or lose. it was a game
that reall y didn"t have much
significance at all.
But. try telling that to th1
62,000-plus who witnessed thc.:
dass1c overtime struggle a 1
f\nah eim Stadiu m Sunday
bet ween t he Rams a nd the N f'C
Western Divis i on ch ampion
Atlanta Falcons. '
ANO. TRY convincmg the 4:-
µl::i yers who slowly stripped ofl
thf'1 r foot ball gear in the quiet
Atlanta dressing room following
the batlle that, for all mtent and
purposes, it was just a meaning·
less bit of Sunday afternoon fun
.. We hate to lose one like
this,·· Atlanta coach Leeman
Bennett said. "When you fight
your g uts out like we did. and let
1t ~et away, it's tough
Sunday's scores
Rams 20, A tlant a 17
(QT )
Washington 31 . St. Louis
Dallas 35, Philadelphia
27
Cle11elan<l 27 , Cincinnati
24
Detroi t 24, Green Bay 3
Houston 20, M innesota
16 New England 38, New
Orlea ns 27
Oakland 33 NY Giants
17
Kan s a s Ci ty 38 .
Baltim ore.28
Buffalo 18, San F r an-
cisco 13
Denver 25, Seallle 17
Tonight's game
Pittsburgh at Dallas
(channel 7 at 61
• NFL roundup, page BJ
• N FL summaries. page 8 4
.. But, I was ple::ised with the
overall performance It was an
extremely physiC'al game. and
both teams battled down to the
wi re.
THE RAMS' JACK YOUNGBLOOD HITS ATLANTA QUARTERBACK STEVE BARTKOWSKI, CAUSING A FUMBLE.
··You s aw two very good foot·
hall teams out there today that
battled hard I'm disappointed
witt) the fact that they were able
to d rive 99 yards on our defense
for one of their touchdowns. and
I was disappointed b} the fact
that we had the ball deep 1n
Ra m territory in overtime and
were unable to score
Though t~e Falcons we re dis-
appointed. they agreed that the
defeat will not have a negative
imp act on t heir performance in
t he upcomi n~ pla~ offs. After
taking next weeke nd off. they'll
host a playoff opponent in two
weeks.
Gutsy experiment
lnfootball's case,
By WILL GRIMSLEY
Al' '-lal c .. ,..__. ..
Now we know. Mr. Big Eye,
ol' cyclops of the electronic age,
is not quite as captivating a
creature when he's los t his
ton1ue. Come on back, Howard.
All ls foreiven.
The novel and gutsy experi·
ment with announcerless foot.
ball by NBC's Don Ohlmeyer
was a noble gesture. But, in the
case ~ football, it just won't
play. '
The network whiz knew this
when it first became the germ of
an idea. With him, though, it was:
half revofution, hall crusJde.
If it produces even a small
curtailment of the endless drivel
that accompanie s m ode rn
s portscasting, i t will have
served its purpose.
THE IDEA COULD work ef.
rectivdy in tennis -and
, perhaps even be a TV boon to a
sport dulled by idle colloquy.
Certainly, It could work in box-
101 and, to a leaser de1ree, in
1olf, which nee& a TV aUmulua. ____ uUn leam..lporta -football,
..---9cwiWfta:I , ts111t1tts1U lftd ,ce
hockey, played with lar1e nwn-
ben ~ competiton, movinc COD·
stantly in and out of ,the same
and performin1 sopblsllcated
maneuven that often require
proreutonal defbiillon -the
21·lnch screen ls hardly ade·
quate.
The Bl1 l!ye can follow mm to
the moon and even record warts
on the face of planets millions of
m i l es a w ay . Ye t i t c an 't
simultaneously follow the move·
ments of 22 men scattered over
a 100-yard gridiron . It doesn't
have periphe,r:al vision . It can't
get all the action in. · '
In Sat-urday's ga me in Miami
between the Dolphins and the
COMMENTARY
N e w Yo'rk Jets, Ohlmeyer
sought to discover if he could
give TV's millions of viewers all
the drama and fanfare enjoyed
by a fan seated on the 50-yard
line while saving him the con-,
stant rat-tat-tat on the eardrums.
He couldn't.
AS GOLDEN as is silence, the
armchair quarterback can catch
only snatches of the action. The
electric e xciteme nt can 't be
generated over the airwaves.
There still is a certain thrill in
hearing a human volce -an
anonymous voice, if you wish -
yellin1 over the microphone~
"HQ interapted the pan. He's
at the e 30 ... the"2>-
toucbdown ! "
Professional sports is show
buslJMll. It ls wed to television,
its conduit to the maues, its
bankroll, ita yellow brtckl'Olld to Os.
Unfortunately, in many c--.
TV hu worn out its welcome by
tryln~ to thrust )ts own
(8ee GVT8Y, Pase Bl) " ..,
PRESTON DENNARD DOES A DANCE A"ER CATCHING A TOUCHDOWN ltASS.
"TIDS LOSS won't be a factor
in the playoffs... Bennett saic!
.. We 're a 12-4 team and we're
the di vision champs . We'll be
ready to play.··
F a lcons quar terbac k Steve
Ba rtkowski said the loss. which
s n a pped a nine.ga me Atlanta
winning streak. will not affect
his club's momentum.
"We've got a good thing go-. · . -we-we"'1T"1._,,.....,..---1
ba rrassed today. a nd we still
reel good about ourselves.
·'W h at 1s m o m e n t u m .
anyway? One good TD r un can
get momentum started all over
again. I don't think this loss will
play any part in the rest _of our
seasen... •
Though disappointed . Atlan-
ta ·s players fe)t that mo'e im-
portant things lie ahead.
"IT'S TOUGH lo lose this
one. but a brand new season lies
ahead." s a id wide r eceiver
Alfred J ackson. ··w e·re looking
forward lo a week off, then i\"s
on to the playoffs . All our playoff
games will be in Atlanta. and
that 's going to be a boost for
us... f
Though the Falcons admitted
(See ATLANTA, Page BZ)
MAL.4Y A.'!I CElS
·THREE-YE4R PACT
The Rams announced SW'lday
they have signed Coach Ray
.Malavasi to new thr
eontr .
we re released.
Malavasi replaced the fired
George Allen after two pre ,
s eason losses in 1978 -j us t after
Chuck ~ left lhe Ram head
coachina job to 10 to Buffalo ..
Malavat, an usistant to ~
Knox and Allen. bu directed th~
Rams into the NFL playoffs
each d his three years as ~td
• DM.YN.OT1 ....... Ct :*8:at9
Sports break
A 1111• ,..,..._ .. _.. ...... •
Former CdM &tar Saltz
captures two tenni1 crown&
t'n•m .\P .aap•&~t.ea
fUHSE ldMho ~et'onJ 1'~eJ Danny Salli of at
\ Cl .A def.,it~ lop '"t'dt-d Mike L>~Palmer of 'ren
nC"&al"'t' 6 4, fl 3 .Sunday to win the U • Anuateur ln
ri~l1 ~•naile-s tt>nn1• \"h11mp1oru1h1p 1at thtt Boise
S--. 1 m iand karqutot ('lub
ln the wum~n · !t10tclea. champ1oo:stur.i "atnt' Sunday. No
l 11e-ed Landa ~IKCI or Suuthern c .. 1 WllS upset by teammate
Ktll llC"OI >. lhe No 2 '!t:cd, 4 6, 6 l , 6 2
I 11 th~ double!. play. No 2-seeded team
tru111 I '('LA, Jim Agate and Salli, scored
&n uvset over the top ranked team or
ft1eh1ird lialhe11 and Make White of Pep-
perdme, 6 4. 2 6. 6 2
Saltz 1i. a ~raduate of Corona del Mar
H1 "h S<.·hool and 1s now the No l player on
tht' Brum varsity tennii. team.
In high school, he led the Sea Kings to
the Cl F championship with outstanding
doubles vlay He was the partner of Craig
Thom_as w 191& when Lhe duo won the
doubles title and in 1979 was with Greg
ULU Wastl er to again capture the crown
In high school tennis. a player can only play i~ singles or
doubles ('Ompetition Al UCLA he was a double winner, cap·
turing the doubles crown with partner Agate.
-----q ... 1e ol tlte -.----......
"This was the best game I've ever had in college,
high school whatever." Kansas City quarterback BUI
Kenney a rormer standout at San Clemente High and
Saddleback College, who threw three scoring passes
and connected on 11 of 28 aerials for 316 yards in
the Cruers· 38·28 win over Baltimore.
................... Plaoftal.r ., ..... ,,,
Len ••Trwk" RoblnlOD ignited a Phoenix surge m
early in the third quarter Sunday night and lht; S~s
held on for a 111· 100 National Basketball As.soc1at1on
victory over Portland. The loss snapped a nme·game
winning streak for the Trail Blazers . . . Elsewhere in the
NBA, Freemaa WllUams' 28 points paced San Diego to its fifth
s traight win. a 117·97 triumph over Oi!troit. Rookie Midtael
Brooks added 25 points for the Clippers as reserves saw a lot of
action in the one-sided contest ... Milwaukee's Sldaey Mon·
crlef scored 14 of his 24 points in the first quarter and the Bucks
went on to post a 123·91 win over Houston. Jualor Brtdieman
added 22 points for the Bucks ,
illrhard goal glN"• ftlp ~~,,.._.
A power-play goal by Juques Rlchud with ~
1 :48 left in the game boosted Quebec lo a 6·5 Na· '
tional Hockey League victory over Hartford Sun·
day night ... Rookie Winger Gilles Hamel scored
on his own rebound with less than five minutes to play to give
Buffalo a 3·3 tie with Vancouver in a tight-checking game
, .. Mike Bossy scored three goals in a game for the 14th
time in his career and added an assist as the New York lslan.
ders blanked Chic•ago, 9·0. The defending Stanley Cup cham.
pions won their 19th game in their last 24 and mov~ into first
place by one point . Jean Pronovost scored a pair of goals
as Was hington powered its way to a 6·0 win over
Philadelphia, marking the first time the Capitals have ever
beaten the Flyers .
Broole., 11a,...,.. ronll111W 11rt1otlalf•11•
Herb Brooks, who coached the U .S hockey team Ill
to the 19800lympic gold medal, said Sunday negotia·
lions are still continuing with the New York Rangers
over an offer to coach the NHL team. He denied a ·
published report that he is set to leave his post with the
Switzerland's Davos team before the end of the year. however
... The chilly concrete surrounding Allanta·Fulton County
Stadium was home for the weekend to some of the most fervent
Falcon fans who were wailing to buy playoff tickets this
morning. By nightfall Sunday, about 200 people were huddled
around portable TV sets watching the game with the Rams in
Anaheim ... Right.handed reliever Stu B•basea has signed
a new two-year contract with Montreal . . . The 16,941
stalwart rans who braved temperatures in the mid·20s and
bone-chilling winds to watch Kansas City beat Baltimore.
comprised the smallest NFL crowd in six yean.
Tean,lalo"9 R•dlo
Followlng are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings
are: / 1 1 1 excellent; 1 1 1 worth watching; 1 1 fair ; ' forget
it. e & p.m., Ch•nnel 7 ./ ./ ./ ./
NFL FOOTBALL: Pittsburgh at San Diego. Announcers: Frank Gi fford, Howard Cosell and Don
Meredith.
I
The Chargers will be out to clinch the final American Foot·
ball Conference playoff berth with a victory over the Steelers. A victory for the Chargers would automatically mean a berth in
the playoffs. If San Diego loses, New England would move into
the AFC playoffs, The defending Super Bowl cl'lampion Steelers
are out of the picture this year. San Diego will depend on the
-$11'.0Ag •r::m--oJ-quarteFback-Oen Fouts-to te<rcrt"1rn'n0Vi ory tonight.
~ 9 p.m., Chennel 9 t/ ./ ./
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Oklatloma City at Nevada (Las
Vegas).
Announcers: Chick Hearn and Ra!ph ~ead9ut. ,. .. :.. . .
After losfng to Long Bea~h State In the ffnals of the Times basketball classic Saturday night, Coach Jerry Tarkanla'l,.'S Runnin' Rebels will be out to avenoe that defeat in tonighrs televised outing. "We're not playing herd right now," Tarkanian
complained after his team 's 10•·77 loss. "We don't play with any Intensity."
RADIO
Football -Pittsburgh at San Diego, 6 p.m., KNX < 1070); KSDO (1130).
Basketball -U. of Mlssourl·Kansas City at UC Irvine, 7:30
p.m., KWVE (108 FM).
c LEGE ETllLL
1on11n11
UIMISITV
Of C&IF.
llUlaE us. llalUlll5flY Of
SllPllllOKO
7:20M
5poMored by : Republic lneurance Broke,.,
--1lenn~ AMtMnnta Md McPeek Chrya._ Plymouth
4
I
I
SPORTS BREAK I FOOTBALL ~'BASKETBALL , ..........
ATLANTA. • •
lt1•r had no dlltlculty ••1ettin1. up· ffW lh• Rams Sunday. lhe
mo•l excited player on the field
waa probably former Eaat LA
Collt•e and USC star Lynn Cain.
C.:aln , a second.year h•lfb•ck.
and Atlanta's second·le•dln1
rusher this seuon with 915
yards to his credit, ran for 81
yards on 19 carrlet and cauaht
two puaes for fl yards.
·'I was pretty excited," Cain
saui , flashing a smUe. "I missed
last year 's game in the Coliseum
with u kneee mJury, and was re·
ally disappointed. I had lots of
family and friends here loday,
and 1 wanted to do my best."
And Cain is happy with the
way things went In his first full
st:ason as a pro
"I TIUNK I gained confidence
with each game. I had surgery
last year following . my injury.
and had some doubts coming in·
to this season. I had lost some
muscle·tone. and I wasn't sure
about m y c utting ability.
Everything worked out well for
me though "
Al East LA, Cain was a JC All·
American.
Dallf ............. 'Y .... rlc-O'.,_H
"I was also strictly 11 runner"
he laughed. "Al USC 1 learned
how to block for Charlie White.
As a pro, I think I'm a good run·
ner and blocker." RAMS TIGHT END TERRY NELSON GETS SOME AID AFTER SUFFERING A KNEE INJURY.
-Cain had a chance to score the
winning touchdown against the
Rams when he was given the
ball on a third-and-goal situation
at the Rams ' one with less than
four minutes to play in regula·
lion time. He was stacked up by
Jim Youngblood, however.
,.,.... Pap 8 I
RAMS ••. Jabbar's inilestone:
·'I really wanted ·to score, but
Youngblood hit me ha rd,·: he
said. "I knew it would be a
tough, physical game, and it
was. We were ready to plJly, but
so were the Rams .·.:.
performance. "Wouldn't you
rather be l l·5than 10·6?
"Even 1f at ·s a meaningless
game, I hate lo lose," added
Delaney with 10 stitches above
his right eye and an ice pack on
his left ankle.
25,()(X) career points
DEFENSIVE END Jeff Mer.
row. who sacked Vince Fer-
ragamo in overtime and caused
the Rams' QB to reflect for a
couple or minutes while resting
in a prone position on the
Anaheim Stadium turf, said the
Rams left some bruises .
,,,.. ....... ,
GUTSY ...
personalities -Howard Cosell
being the prime example -over
the game itself.
THE BRITISH greatly outdo
us in the quality of their T11
sports product, particularly in
prize fighting, tennis and golf,
the three main sports we share.
The camera's eye and the
microphone's ear can catch all
the action of a fight or a tennis
match, staged as head-to-head
combat in a confined area.
British commentators are sub-
ordinated and you hardly know
they are around.
There is high drama at
Wimbledon when a TV viewer
can see every shot, hear the
thud of ball against racket and
listen as the umpire -not the
"This was a good win for us."
said Coach Ray Malavas1. who
celebrated the signing of a new
three.year contract by snapping
Atlanta's nin e.game wanning
streak. "We can use the momen·
tum going into the playoffs.
"It shows you what kind of
players we have on this team.
We had peopfe hurt, but our guys
played their hearts out. They
pla yed like champions and
that's what I think we are."
Battered and bruised. the de·
fending NFC champions now
embark on the start of a new
season, one in which it will take
three games to reach Super
Bowl XV and four to win il all.
First, however, there's the re·
match with the Cowboys. And
they will be looking to redeem
some of the pride lost from last
Monday, Just like the Rams re·
gained some lost dignity of nine
weeks ago.
''There's a lot of pride in trus
room and in this team," said Jim
Youngblood as he glanced at his
teammates in the lockerroom.
··All I know is if I had to go into an
alley to fight I'd want this team
with me."
Civil War or alley fight. the
Rams begin their fight lo the top•
Sunday.
announcer -intones : "Advan· Players, ~ches tage, Mr. Borg." Announcers in·
troduce only with an occasional· at bowl llUICheon comment on style or trends.
ALSO, BRITISH golf and fight
announcers refuse to try to hype
an event that may be slackening
in interest. ln the United States,
a broadcaster will s ay ,
"Nicklaus is on the green -80
feet away -putting for a
birdie." He might as well say,
when a guy tees up on a par·3
hole, "He's s hooting for a hole·
in-one."
Players and coaches from lhe
Universities of Washington and
Michigan will head the list of
guests at the Slst Annual Rose
Bowl Kickoff Luncheon. Dec. 31
at the Pasadena Center.
Famed actor Lome Greene,
plus the sports broadcast team
of Dick Enberg and Merlin Olsen
and the Rose Queen and her court,
willjointheteam.
INGLEWOOD I AP 1
Kareem Abdul.Jabbar was in·
itially unaware of the
significance as his soft jumper
dropped into the basket, but a
roar from the crowd remmded
him of the National Basketball
Association milestone he'd just
reached.
The 10-foot jumper with 6· 16
played jn the final quarter Sun-
day gave the Los Angel es Laker
center 25.000 career points, put·
ting him into an elite club or fi ve
bas ketball superstars who have
re ached the plateau.
· · 1 wasn't thinking about the
record. it snuck up on me ." said
Abdul-Jabbar, who scored 42
points in the Lakers ' 135-122 vie·
tory over the Detroit Pistons.
··But 1 knew it when everyone
s tarted yelling.
"Still. the most important
thing was that we won My Jump
shot was falling, and when that
happens, it 's difficult to play de·
fense on me."
The 7·2 AbduJ.Jabbar. an NBA
record six·time MVP. built his
point total lo 25,004 with the 42
points. Playing in his 12th year
in the NBA, he topped the scor·
ing plateau in his 889th game.
He Joined Wilt Chamberlain,
Oscar Robertson, John Havlicek
and Jerry West in the exclusive
25,000-point circle.
'· 1 can hardly count that
high." said Laker Coach Paul
Westhead, "It's a singular
achievement or a lifetime to
score 25,000 points in the best
basketball league in the world.
"This season. Kareem was a
little suggish at the start, but he
got it into gear and now he's
ready to go."
The Lakers put the Pistons
away early in the third period,
taking an 85·71 advantage
midway through the quarter.
They had trailed 37·32 al the end
of the first quarter. but led 69·59
at halftime.
Geor ge Gervin scored 20 Subdued British announcers
merely say on a long putt: "He
has two putts for a four." That is
more realistic.
Yet there is no denying that NFL standings
AMEmCANCONFERENCE
East
W L T Pd. PF PA
television is a powerful medium, NATIONAL CONFERENCE making addicts of us all, and its EHt
offenses are. far outweighed by W L T Pct PF PA
points to pace the Spurs Jim
Silas had 19, and reserve' Dave
• eorzane had 18.
J amaal Wilkes added 22 points
for the Lakers. Butch Carter had
16 and Norm Nixon 13.
Kareem played a super garqe
from the opening lip," said an
impressed Corzine. "He was in·
tense all the way.··
·' l think Kareem's play is
som etimes taken for granted,"
said another admirer. Gervin.
"Anytime he scores 40 points or
more, you know you're in for a
long night "
UCI faces
Kangaroos
Coa ch Bill M ull1 gan ·s UC
Irvine basketball team attempts
to rebound from l wo tough road
defeats last weekend when it
hosts University of Missouri·
Kansas City tonight t7:30) at
Crawford Hall
The Fighting Kangaroos enter
the game with a weak 2·6 rec-
o rd . but at 's n ot really the
Kangaroos that have Multigan in
a quandary latelv
Instead. it 's his team ·s de·
fens e . which s urrendered 93
points to the Universit y of San
Francisco Friday and 109 to
Miami cOhio1 Saturday in losing
causes.
Mulhgan hopes to come up
with a solution tonight which
will stop opponents from scoring
at a 94.7 clip. Two prior experi·
ments with a pressure·man
and 2·3 zone have railed.
The Anteaters. 3-4. will enter
the game with a 99.l scoring
mark led by 6·8 center Kevin
Magee. who is shooting 64 7 per·
cent from the field en route to a
nalion·leading 31.4 scoring
average
the pleasure 1t affords. _ nhH 12 4_0 .?50 384 222 Th1rprov~l'ttcuhll'Jy ~,...... a:-"'·Buffalo t ~
case Sunday, when seven teams Y·Dallas 12 4 O .750 454 311
were still battling for a shot at Washn.gtn 6 10 0 .375 261 293
the Super Bowl. The nation had St.Lo1;11s 5 11 O .313 299 350
lo be entranced as the Big Eye NY G1"1ts 4 12 O .250 249 425
New Eng. 10 6 0 .625 441 325
Miami 8 8 O .500 266 305
Ball. 7 9 0 .437 355 387
NY Jets 4 12 o .250 302 395
moved from The Meadowlands Central
lo New Orleans lo San Fran x·Minn.. 9 7 o .,562 317 308
' · Detroit. .g i 0 .562 334 Z72 ~o. l.D H~t-on and e1'ewhere Cbka"o . 7 9 0 .437 304 2164 where playoff hopes soared and · e died. · Tampa Bays 10 1 .343 Zll 341
x-Cleve.
• y·Houston
LPittsb"h
:Clnc'iM.
Centnl
11 5 0 .688 357 310
ll . 5-0 .688 ~ 25-1
9 6 0 .600 355 287
6 10' 0 .375 24-4 312-
WHt One of those dying hopes Green Bay 5 IO 1 .343 231 371
belonged to the Pittsburgh West
Steelers, aging heroes and great x-Atlanta 12 4 0 .750 405 Z72
.688 424 289
.375 320 415
.063 291 487
y-Oakland 11 5 O .688 364 306
San Diego 10 5 O .667 392 310
Denver 8 8 O .500 310 323
K.C. 8 8 o .sbo 319 336
· Th r th th y·Rams 11 5 O champions. e act at ey San Fran. 6 10 O would not be around to defend their title, that tMs Ume there New Orlns 1 15 O Seattle 4 12 O .250 291 408
X -Clinched division title would be no postseason playoff
for them, could be enjoyed or
lamented with or without sound
effects.
Y -Clinched playoff berth
s-.,·110 ... ••"'t 70. Al*"• 11 IOTI
WHlll""°" JI, St. Lout' 1
Cleftl9ftll 11, clnc1,,,..1114
Oelroll 14. 0..... a., l
Hou\'°" 10. Ml'-\!Mt I• Hew E .... Mld a, Hew OrlHn• 11
Oe•lend D, Hew Var• GtenU 17
l(enw\ Clly • ... Ill.,_. 21
llvffelo ti, SMI l'ren<IKO IJ
Oen Yer 2.5, Soteltte I 1
Oellu JS, ""'l .. lflfli• 21
T•tlfll'tO-e
Pllltburgll •• Sen Ol•to ""'""'. I ., • o'cloc-.
·----------· --------·-
FOOTBALL Mondey. O.C.m~r 22, 1HO DAILY PILOT ~. ---,
Chargers niust ~efeat Steelers :
If San Diego loses, New Engl.and gets playoff spot
AM:Mll MANNINO .MVIM>WN
'Manning says
he may retire
St-;\\ Oki.lo:.\!\" l' 1 t least tbree New
Ur le an~ ~a ant ~ 'l'li:-ran~ 1 nclud1n~ s tur
qu.irtcrb<Ack n :h1'° ~1011'1w1'g !>av ther'll give
·"raous th<>ughl w 1 et artn.I(, now that their most
frust rating sea.i.011 I!> O\ er
Manning :uud l.i ~l week that he owes at to his
f.imtl> and harn~clr to consider has future an or
out of the Nat umal to'ootball League
Veteran <;t rong s-afet>' Ray Brown, w tro
represented Atlanta in the Pro Bowl before he was
traded to the Saints three seasons ago, said he
definitely will not be bal·k in New Orleans next
)ear
'I really don 't kno w,•· he !>aid after the Saints
los t lo New England Sunday, selling a dis mal NPI.
record of 15 losses in a season
"l 'm seriously thanking of retiring I won't be
back with the Saints next year I'm 100 percent
s ure of that
.. I lov~ New Orle ans I've had three g ood
years here, but l won 'l be baC'k "
Defensive ta<'kle Derland Moore. an eight-year
NFL veteran, said he 's goin~ to Mi ssouri. where
he said he'll take about a month to sit and think
about the fua 11rf'
.. I'm gomg to heal and think ," he said
··1 m ay buy a farm up there and chop cotton
and grow tomatoes ...
He s aid his decision will be determined at
least in part by the Saints ' decis ion on a new
coach.
Four weeks. ago. with the Saints mired at 0-12.
Dick Nolan was fired as head coach. His old friend
and assistant Dick Stanfel was promoted from of-
fensive line coach to fill the job.
This Weeks Stlecial
1976 CADILLAC SEVILLE
Leather covered seating area. dual comfort pwr
seats & AM FM stereo w 11 track tapt' player
<647PKP1 S6995
By TM ~HOda&ed Pl'ffl
'l'he Pmsbur·ah Steelers are out of
\he playolfs, their dream for, an un·
precederlte<I thirct consecutive Super
Rowl lillt.• at 1rn end. But the Steelers
will huvt a say in dt:ciding which
ttao1, ~un Diego or New England,
eomplctes the National Football
League's 10-team playoff field.
Uuffalo und Cleveland won division
tltll's and Houston and Oakland as·
sur<:d themselves of postseason
b\'l'lhs by wanning their games S un-
d a ) Tho!>c d ecisions wiped out
P1tt~huq;h 's playoff chances
Uut the San Diego Chargers must
beat the Steelers tonight to make the
playoffs, and they know that won't be
easy
"TIUS IS OUK Super Bowl. .. said
Hank Hauer. San Diego's specia l
teams star "Their pride 1s hurt.
They want to s how the country they
are the champions they are Anybody
who thmks they won't be motivated
is trazy ··
Steelt;rs wade receiver Lynn Swann
agreed,"'Re cnh'<' is always a great
motivator," he noted
If the Cht1rgcrs w111. they will be
the /\meril•an C:onfcrcnl't"S West
1>1 \'1sion t1lhsts llut 1f they lose, the
/\Fl' West t1lk· ~ues to Oakland. a
33-17 winne r over the New York
(;1ants Sunday, and the New England
Patriots would go into the APC wild-
<·ard gaml' with I louston
New En~land stayed alive by beat
an g the New Orleans Saints 38-27. but
railed to 11\'Crlake Huffalo for lhe
AFC East title because the Bills de
feated the San Franc·1sco 'l!k!rs 18· 13
The AFC Central C'hampionsh111 went
to Cleveland. whic h edged C1nc1nnat1
27 24. while the llouston Oilers won a
wild·carJ b erth by trimming the
Minnesota Vikings 20-16
THE ONLY OTHER d1 v1s1on that
had not bcl•n d ecided the Na·
t1onal Confcrc nt'e ·s E ast. and the
Philadelphia E<.tgles won that e ven
though they lost tu lht> Dallas
Fiesta Bowl:
· 1def ensive
ga01e hinted
SCOTTSD/\LF., Ariz tAP1 Ohio
Stale football Coac h fo~ar l c Orucc
hanted Sunday that the Fiest<1 Bowl
game with Penn State on Frida) ma;.
be .a de fcnsi \'('!>I ruggle
t.;pon his t eam's arrival at a
Scottsdale motel. Rru('C s aid during a
news confere n ce S unday nig h t ,
{"Normally, when two good teams get
ogether. it enc1s up a s a defensive
game.
E arlier 1n the da \'. Pe nn State
Coach ,lot.• Patt·rno ~~1d he expected
his 10th-ranked N1ttany Lions would
have to score ··:-.c1mc poanb " to ht>at
Cowboys, 35 '1:1. The clubs finished in
a tie with 12·4 records , but
Philadelphia earned its first division
title in 20 years on the ba~is of net
points in division gam es.
However, Oallas't,lriumph did give
• the Cowboys the home field advan·
tage in next Sunday's NFC wild-card
gam e against the Rams.
In other NFL games, the Kansas
City Chiefs outscored the Baltimore
NFL ROUNDUP
Colts. 38-28, the Detroit Lions beat
the Green Bay Packers. 24·3. the
Washington Redskins defeated the
SL Louis Cardinals. 31-7 and the
Denver Broncos topped the Seattle
Seahawks. 25-17
Bills 18. 49ers 13
BuffaJo won the AFC East for the
first -hme since 1966 as Nick Mike·
Mayer 's third-quarter field goal from
25°ydrds out snapped a 13-13 tic. The
Rills added a s afety whe n 49ers
punter J im Miller was tackled in the
t>nd zone following a bad s nap from
c·e nler.
San FranciSl'O drove deep into Hur
falo tcrntory midway through the
final period bdore Earl Cooper
fumbled and Mario. Clark recovered
at the Rills" five· yard hne.
Patriots 38, Saints 27
The Patriots fell behind 13·3 bu\
rallied behind M<tlt Ca vanaugh, who
threw thret.• touchdown passes. Ne w
England's vil·tory kept its playoff
hopes cili'e and killed those of the
Steelers ·and ironically. 1t was
e ngineered by a forme r nivers1ty of
Pittsburgh quarterback
.. I don't feel bad, but it 1s h ard to
believe, .. Ca\'<.tnau g h s aid of the
St C'elers being out of the playoffs
"They've het.>n 1n there for a long
time "
. Bro\\-ns 27. Bengals 24
Brian Sipe fired three touchdown
passes ior Cleveland. but 1t was a
::?2·yard field goal hy Don Cockroft
with 1:25 to play "that provided the
margin of victory and put the Browns
into the playoffs for Lht> first time in
eight years
Sipe completed 211 of 44 passes for
:l08 yards to raise his season total lo
4,132 yards and join J oe Namath and
Dan Fouts as the only NFL passers
lo reach the 4.000.yard plateau.
··That ·s a record that they hang on
a quarterback. but the whole team
has to take credit for 1t. ··said Sipe "I
thank I gel loo much credit for what
~oes on around here We. have some
very s hrewd rec·ea vcrs ..
Oilers 20, Vikings 16
Earl Campbell gained 203 yards on
29 carr ies to wan his third eon·
seculive NPL rushing title with 1,934
yards for the Oilers, who have m ade
the playoffs all three years Campbell
has been with them.
Campbell. who set an NFL record
.liiiiiiiii••••••lll!l••••••••llllll~~ l he No 11 Buckeyes . ..,. Brun· :-.:.1id the Buckeyes. f1rs1 New hockey uniforms
for Wint~r Hawks LEASING!
1981 M~~~S
HERE!
MANY MODELS ON DISPLAY
FOR IMMEDIATE LEASE DELIVERY.
WE LEASE ALL MAKE
CARS AND TRUCKS.
"WE'VE GOT WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR."
THEODORE ROBINS
...,___.~_..EASING C
209 6 Harbor II.
Costa M~1a
642-00 I 0
__ __, 540-8211
VISIT OUR
'-'HOLIDAY STOCKED" GOLF SHOP!
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Equipment 20%" Off
Big 10 ccmfercnn· team to appear in
th(• Tempe. Ariz . bowl, are in thcv
bes t phys11·al shape 11f the season.
Ohio State nrnt.d1ed Penn State "s 9-2
record anti tied Purdue fo1· second
place in the Big 10. bC'hind M1c h1~an .
However. Bruce d oes have another
proble m llis rcj!u\ar middle guard.
senior ~hirk Sullivan. has left the
team for what Ohio State offil'ials
termed ··personal and <.1c a<lem1c re -
asons."
R r u l" e 1 s <' x µ e r 1 m e n t 1 n g w 1 t h
:-.c,•e ral playo.r:-. .11 muldl<' guard lie
1s C\'en thinking about m oving reg-
ular line backer Keith Fcq~uson into
Sulltvan·s spot
Nick Miller anrl Regg1l' E:C'hols.
who also have pla) cd at m1d<lle
g uard t his SC'ason . arC' <;tart ing
possibilities
PORTLAND C/\P) The Portland
Winte r Hawks have begun wearing•a
new kind of uniform that the Western
Hoc key League team's general
manager says may be adopted by
other teams, including those in the
National Hockey League.
The Winter Hawks, who first com·
peted in the uniforms t"riday night,
are said to be the firs t team to have
worn the uniforms in a league game
"We'r e guinea pigs, I suppose, but
I think this wlff be the wave of the
future," said <Jenera! Manager Brian
Shaw ''We've done other things m
our leagµe in the pas t that were s ue·
cessful. and a year or two later the
NHL adopted them .'·
Tracy s earriings:
$642,000 in 1980
TUCSON cm ~ -Higb".Scbool. senior Tracy
Austin pushed her 1980 earnings to $642,~ Sunday
nig ht, dominatang Peanut ( Mareen} l..o~ae of San
Francisco 6·2, 6·0, for the Colgate Tennis Tourna·
ment title.
Both played from o ff the baseline. but No. I
seeded Austin was the mor e consistent, repeatedly
hitting the corners, hilting deeper , and moving
the unseeded Louie from side to side.
Louie placed only 51 percent-of her first serves
while Austin placed 65 per cent Louie took home'
$7 000 for second place . her biggest tournament -
• Leslie Allen o f New York teamed with
Barbara Potter of Woodbury, Conn .. to defeat
Mary Lou Piatek of Munster : lnd., and Wendy
White of Atlanta, 7-6. 6·0 , an doubles.
In a one-set playoff for third place in singles,
Potter defeated Sandy Collins of Odessa, Texas,
6-3.
The tournament was. the 21st of the year for
Austin, of Rolling Hills, and the title was her 11th.
• Give a Set of Golf LeuOll~ • tlOOd...:.w;.:•.._ .... , for tMt IOlfW friend to arr-tfii-new year.
COSTA MESA COUNTRY
CLUB
-A "9LIC 'ACIUTY -
110t ... co.... Dr., c.... ....
714-540-7500
-
'o¥ilh his fourth 200-yard game ol the
s eason , sco r ed the winning
touchdown on a three-yard run with
l : 58 left.
Raiders 33, Giants 17
The Uaiders assured themselves of
a playoff s pot by beating the Giants
as Jim Plunkett, their resurrected
passer, threw touchdown passes of 31
yards to Cliff Rranch and 37 yards to
Ray mond Chester.
"I don't think anyone would have
given us any odds that we'd be in this
pos ition al the end of the year." said
R a 1 d e r s C.: o a c h T o m fl'I o r e s
.. Everyone was saying we'd be lucky
to win four gumes, to finish · out of
last pluce."
The abalit)' of Plunkett to s tep in
f o r in j ured quarterback Dan
Pastonn1 was one of the keys lo
Oakland's season.
··Right from the beginning of the
season. Jim w11s on ttae sideline,
ready to come in.·· s aid Flores. "He
l·ame· in and pulled it all together
When you have your bat ks to the wall.
there are two ways you can deal with it.
You can ·run away or you can climb
overlhcwall ··
Cowboys :.15. Eagles 27
Danny White thre w four touchdown
p;1sses tying Roger Staubach "s
c lub record of 28 for a s eason and
rnn for a fifth score as Dallas built a
;$5. JO lead That put the Cowboys 25
points 1n front . jus t the number they
nl'Cdt.>d to heat Philartelphia in order
to gain thC' A fo'C..Ea:ot utle
But the Eaglei. rallied for 17 points
an the fmal !.('\"CO minute~ not
cnou~h to wtn tht• game, but more
t tlan cnOU J!h to win the division
crown
"We lost the battle but we won the
y, ar·. ·· s a1ll Eag le!> Coa ch Dic k
Verme1l. who drnnk champagne in
the locker room from a glass that
read." Philadelphia Eagles. NFC fo:as1
Champions 1980 ··
The Cowboys pulled out all the stops
in trying to win big, but once they got
the lead they needed, .they couldn't
hold it.
"We had to -go out and try to blow
them out, so we were playing like
caged animals," s aid White. "We
had them we jus t couldn't hang on-
to it." •
Ha rold C armic hae l , who had
caught at least one pass in 127 con-,
secutive· ~ames, had his record
s treak snapped . He was knocked
dizzy in the first half, before he made ,
a reception, and failed to return to
action. But following the gam e he
s aid. "We won the championship,
aod that takes a lot of sting out of the
r e.cord coming to an end ··
Chiefs 38, Colts 28
Second-year quarterback Bill Ken-
ney, making his third straight start
after not playi ng a down for his first
29 prg games. lhrew Lhree touchdown
passes to lead the Chiefs over the
Colts .
The game dre w a crowd of only
16.94 1, the s mallest home attendance
in the 28-year hi s tory of the
R a ltimore franc.'hi se, and the
s m<Jllest N FL crowd 1n s ix years.
Lions 24, Packers 3
Ue tro1t. 2 14 l<.1s t season. beat
Green Ba} to finish this year at 9·7.
<ls first w1nnin~ reC'ord since 1972.
(;ary Danielson completetl 17 or 2£
pa~S t'!> for 219 yards. and one
tout·hdown for Detroit
Redskins 31, Cardinals 7
.J o e Th e i s m a n n f i r e d t h r e e
touchdown passes. I woof them to Art
'.\t onk . as the Reds kins beat the
('a rd anal!.
Broncos 25, Seahawks 17
~f :lll Robtn!>On, <.t surprise starter,
pas!-.ed for one tou<"hdown and ran for
another for Dem er Fred Steinfort
a nded fo ur field coals. including one
from 55} ~rel!. an< a nother from 53.
On An~· full f acilil~· Membership
• Hi l 'harnpwn..,111 1> H.1t·qut•llJ.ill <"1111rt:-
• '.'\ \l"T ll.l ~ l-:\11 11'\I E '\T
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ONLY 3 DA VS LEFT
Expores 1} .n 80
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For the record In Cleveland
Jt.'s freezing
but.fans there
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'th 1rtlUt\ t..h ~I
t1•·11 J'ub1own \ 1 vn 16'1t ti. t1td,.(11
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S• , IUQ4•\ 'f Uf' •• .., ~'°"' lorn U4trn~ra ...
A ,1 HH
tndlvtdi.Wi L•~r\
•-tll..,HINC. Ot:f'\11tt•r l 'tll~ t 110 Pr~·\IM
10 Jv \• .1111, lu<Jir:tl 10 U Mc(utcn .. on $ J1
i•A\StN(, O.•nYflr • PQ01nwn q )) O 99
• hoHlfU.,, 1 JC h )oedt\lt> Zorn 1l ll l 121
A '" n 4,. ~ \J lir r •• o O 7 0 0
Ut \ flVtNG Of'nvt>r UOC"urcf'I: 11&
'IV Jl'4H1 : 71 YAHi... l~trQrnf \ 10 Saw'fe>r
1\ lflfl.it 4 )\ Mr(_ullurn J Jf
BiJls 18, 49ers 13
\<.Ott by Ov.l,.,'tr\.
Uytl 11o & I \ 0 18
1'4 I •i•"' ... I b 0 , 0 1)
Out fhllh,. fo P·"' ''""' FrrQu\on ~•<II.
11 I• d
... 4 11111( .. I .. HI() l>1t Ii\ fdd~()I
Huf litow,, .& '"'' cM19',. Mi.yt'r 11.•C• •
'.! H1,U\'\OO 7 U•'' !roll'\ M unhHI'' '""t!l'''"'NJ"''' ... 1 11f ~ (, M1i-.1 M 11-y4•r )'t
1~1•' .,,h 1, M1•l1t<tt..>...-rn10 1n • nd /'HM'
... " l/r.
~n•l1utu.a\ Lt6'dtt\
I< ..-HINu li~~ls4'1n fribb lto Ht tJB
UP>wn q 11 l 11""~ .t to Sdn f ,.1n1t ,,,,
t •m111, I\ 90 E 111utt t? d
Pl\ • )11,r. l\ufrnln FPrQu\on 11 10 O •o'
'" ' r ,,, .. '-H• Munt,••'-' 1\ Jb O lo.a
1. I , ~I I/IN(., huf!.cJIO Uut~t'' ) )a
\it Hl\ffit t ~11 l.•tt>b' 1 \lif \.nt\ ft H\1.,1~0
t t• ft "'t~ (. OfJQt""• I) 78 (tiu-. .t )I C.OIOrnCM"
• 'l
NBA NE-STERN CONl'EAENCE
M 1d-.e\I O'iYl\lan
"' 1. Pel Ge
"' 1 /\1ol•l<l't11 2A IJ t.A~
~ ... t'l\I \ "' IS 71 .41> •• ,
,,,,, lu11 I• 10 -411 I' /
lt.tn 1A 71 .coo Q
f 1H1v 1or ll '17 JJJ II
h.111 h • 31 "' ,~i,
p~ lh( DIVf\hWI
11•11"''" • '' 3 118 l •k•" ,. 11 1>48 •
I,,.. H11 '' \11111• II 11 ~ 10
• .,.,,1111 1/ I/ soo 10
'•"" rl11·')t II 10 tS'i 1 ~11
t·m lt,twl 16 70 44C 11 FASTER!< CO!<FERENCE
All .. nlic Dlvl''°"'
t •ul.tflt•lpP\Ht J? 4 RIJ9
Ht1• hm 7~ 8 IS8 1 f
lit•N </l')t'I> 1) ll ~}b tf
N,t\Oif\Qll\t"l U 10 -411 II
Nt w ''''" 'f t? 1l l•l tel f Crntr.it 01v111on
M ;hvttukl•• lb 11 10) ln<l1AM 10 II Sit S
"'""''" n 10 o~ 10 ( "'"''l" I\ 10 '?II 10 ( ,,..,,.1m11t 17 1S 174 h fl<IMI 10 7\ 184 U
.Sunct.1y 'Scorf'\
l ,Upn '1 ·~" /HlfurttO 117
M ........ k~· t)J ... ,IU\fQn 91
t·h0t nt• I I I Pt..tlldl\O 1()1)
•n t 1•""'1"' t t t C'Nlro'l (if
Tortt9ht ' Gt1m•
& •••,., •t P,nrti.111n
r • "\I',.,., u ,tt,,
N,, n11•'Jtu•' t1 /1tl•tnt1•
" .in It'\ t •\v ,,, l lfl<v••11•'Hl
N .. w H, V>y ti Jfw.J1.tn'1
IJ,1th t1I UAH4\
N..,/ilil Y~• 1tf CfUt '4(,10
f~ft \Mlf* •ti HOu,IOf~
(..1r-ho1t 1t Pnrw>".;.;.''---
Lakers 135, Spurs 122 SAP< ANTONIO " Joh"'°" I) DIDera
u1r) 1 1 f, Jonn"J" 't Vttr vm 10 S•1d\ 1'1,
fHt .,,.,,.~ to Grltft" s. Moor I' ' cor ,.,..,,. 18,
Wt11 y ·r lot11I\ SC 111h 117
LO~ •NGEL.ES C "o°'" '• Wilk•• n, 1uv1111 J,•bf>.1r t? (,v11>1 1~. r•.n •o"' 13, Coooe1
n H t WW'!t b , IOf<hm \1, \_11nO'tbetQf'[ S.
•'4 ttdV . 'tnllmid 1 Toldl' 'l7 lt JI IH
,-~Ort by QtMl'ltf\ :,_ ~~/\ II nlM>o ll 11 ?6 JI 171
I "' /In~,•~ J) JI ll JJ ll~
t r,ut11d nut P Johwwn 'r Ut'1f •out\
urn Anton11J ')'ti IO\ Anqttllt\> 1fl Te<n"1u11
C, 1r1nn\.on
II 11,J.ll
COLLEGE
HOW TOP lO FARl'O
H .. r, \ huw ttw Top t wenty te•m\ tn The
A\,OCtaled Ptf"'\ <Oll~Oe btl\,etb•lf pofl
fJ.,f"O IP\1\ wPt"lrl 1 o-P""' 1101 """1 N ,.,. .. St • .,,.., t><oal Loyola 111 II 61 t><oal Nor111wulern,
67 ~· , l(~ntuc~t' 1•01 l>UI Ala An<hot-q1 ~.'"MIA! .. tltrmtnQl!ltm,61 SJ
l UCL.A 16-01 be.I Ttmp1e, 13 ~
• OtttjOI\ Sl•I• I H>I l)e,i Alhl•fH In At
lion. 66 S.S
S v1r111nia r~dld nol Pl•y
b Nolr• °""" to·•I dtdnol pl••
1 Ohio Sl.ie U-31 lo\I to So</lh Alabilm.t, 1• &I, l<KI 10 Ariton.I Sta If, II SI
8 North~'°""" <1·11 bu! lndllna, .S·St ~ M••Y'""" (f>.11 bHI No•lh c .. rollN SI . e' H. or
10 tsu '"" bHI Ntw Or•un,, .,....., l>foel tulft...,,IW>-71 " lnd1Ma IS-ll IOSI to North CArollM,
&S ~ " W"k" For~I 18-01 beel S•nlt C1•11. 1$ bl, be.I /\lal>llma, ,._66.
13 Tuas At"" 11.0) beal Jame• MadlM>n,
~I •I: 1>4'•1VlrQl"la TKh, U ·S7.
I~ Arlrona Slal• 16-41 l>eAI 01110 Siii•.
/I SI
1.$-MWI'-µ.o) 9e•t Wettern Mlth1Q40n, tO'I ,.,
h Iowa '"" but Iowa St., U·St.
11, 11111'1>1' IS.11 l<KI 10 8rltl\eM VOUf\9,
flO.IS,b<>ellonA,1~.
IL Bril#IM'n VovllQ• <.-11 bHf Ml(hl .... St . IMO, be.i lllinol•, eo 75; lotl to Ttf\· llfSMt,et•S. •• ArllMI .. , l~l) ti.el C-enlertuy, 71.,.;
11 ... 1 I!. l<HlluOy, IOo/ ..
to Louilvlll~ (I OI lo" to Vl•ll. 1e it.
cotee9e SCOfH SATUltOAY'H...AT• KO•U Hvrnboldl St.•. S Or~ 10
114-e1, fot<t-• SI. II Wetnet P•lll< h , "-• Plln• ti vc ,_ Dle9o ..._ u ...... , n
tu.OAY'tko•u Pr lnOIClf\ IS, C619Allt 0
l .. tt .. Clarl ii. ¥o'll41<11 Te<ll" V\IV ... O<t••'"
THIS wtEKIS SCHEDULE
College lunl(llll Ml\\0•1tl Kan••• Clly al UC 1,.lllt I )II NOtll\t•n 4<1tON el U Of Safi
Ot000 ~l•rlfOCd ti Portl.,,d V , 8olM St •I (•I P9ly ISL OI Sttlll• Ptclll< at C•hlo1nle Oruol 11 USIV Du<1w>ne 11
)•f• JO•• SI vc D•VI\ •I F•H'IO SI ~llt•dln,, •• 1111no1~ SI Paclll< I ulhtron •I Ort;on
l "t\dly C.•t Slolt II. A I 11 Lo•ota. NOl!hotn Ar>tOl'WI •• VC Sanl1 B•r ... ra . ''"l•nfry •I U ol SAn 01990, Oruel al use..
Fr IUov (el S11lt l'ullt11on •\ Ort9<>'1 In
F•• WOI (IO\t( VC S&nlo Bar ... re n
C,t•mbllf'Q in COPIJIPt St•I• Cle\\lt New
MIAICO •\ NWY•c.\lt t l Vt S•tuHl.tY UCLA ti O.Ptul, Loyote ••
H~IN·ll in R••nt>Ow (le\\l( U t•h St •• llVU SMt Otl!QO SI •I lOnQ 8H<h SI Pd\lllC 11 Po•llttnCI U V o4 S•11 OltQO •I S1•nlord Sundov UC llt•Ot\ldt If S.n JOH SI
Junior coll•9•
r U•\OIY o"'"llP c ..... •I Cllru•. I lO S•lurd•v O•Ml9" Cool •' Goloon WHI
• JO
High achool I U~\d4' M<llOI 0.t •I Do\ PutbiO\, I r-, •04'¥ ..-tun11n9ton ee•cf'I •• 8rt•
toutnttm•nt, O.na Hiii\ .,., Nortn lon•M<
9) OI N°"h IOn•n<e IOu•n•mtt1I, Or.,.Qt fourn•~"-1 u=ciunt•,n Vatt•v "'\ ~let
O~t l Nt•PO<I H.,t>or .. El ""oclfM,
8 JO M dt1no Y\ lO•t•, S 101 Co)t• Mt}f "\
Str•ilt 6 JO E•l•n<I• V\ S..nl~ Cler• 11 101 ... , .. ,O•y EOl\Oll ., So Fran(" r ........
mtn1 O<itan V•fW al Vitia Per" fourrw
m .. nt Hunt1nqto11 B~•<h •W tlr'l'''"'Tourrw
ment 01-tnd Hllh •t NotfPI Jorr•ni• Tourntt
mt<11 Fo-.int•in V•lfPY M4tter ~ •. Newpc>n
M4tb0t Mct1rna. Costa Mt1\•1 E;t•ncl• al
Or41nQe rourrMlmttnt
N•wSouth W•I•• Tournam•nl C•IS .... y,A1t11r"•ll•I Sl ... lftFIMI F"I' 8...,.,1n9<111 8f4•n Tut hr" •·l ,61.,
I 6 <B-•"11 '"'"' \l/,lOO, Tue~• ••n• \8 ISO I Ooull4t1F1MI
Pt1ul M<N4fnf't Pt,f'r McN•ma'll df'f
V1t•\Geruttt111~ 811•nGo1tfri~d t. 1.o 4
Grand Prix Tournam•nt
<••Sot~ .......... ,
s1,.. .. ,,.,,..1
P~r H,.rtQV•~• ~t Vad1m Bor'""°v• • J & 'J
I \
TucsonOp•n Sl,..IHSomlllfl•h
f r1tcy Au\t1n def B•tbara Pollet 6 l 4-6,
6 1 Pe.t1ul L0<1te drl SdndV Co•1on,, t •. o-•.
Sl"fl•\ l'iNI
1 rrt< 't' Au\lln cHt Peanul Louie. 6 1. o-O
I A101 •n w1~UfU100), l ou1ew1n.'1 ,0001 ThlrdPl•ct U~rbat,\ Po11trd~t Sdl\dY Collln\, &.J Do..blHFlnal
Lf'\h~ Allt'" Pottt t d~f Mary Lou P1ate~ W•MyWl\lle I 0,6-0
U.S. Amateur Indoor C•l IOIM, ld•l>OJ M<Pn'1St"9lot FiMI Ddnny S.tlt IUCLAI O~I M1~e OtPalmt'r
t 1 •nnt•'ol•l 6 •.• J Women"Sl"flet l'lnal K•lly Ht'nrv rVSCI ~I Lin<l•Setgel <USC I
••• l • l
-·· OOllMH 1'1,..1 Jim Aq~te S•llt IUSCI dtf R1<hard
v~lllfn Ml-t W1>1lt (PtPl>•,.dl~l.6I,1·•,l·1
BROOK PARK, Ohio (AP) The triumphant
Cleveland Browns were greeted by thousands of'
cheering, banner and sign-toting fans when they
returned home via their chartered airplane Sun-
day night.
ln what has become an accepted p l ay on
words in Ohio's largest city, lhe fans chanted
"Siperbowl ! " "Siperbowl ! " as they braved sub'.
freezing temperatures at a r eception area adjacent
to Cleveland Hopkins fnternati()flal Airport.
The Browns captured the National Football
League's American Conference Central Division
championship Sunday with a 27-24 victory over the
Bengals in Cincinnati.
Their chartered flight Crom Cincinnati landed
at the airport and taxied l o a former tank plant.
just ou'5ide city limits, where the reception was
held.
The teams' officials had announced the plant
as the formal greeting point to avoid a crush inside
the lobby. The players exiled the plane and walked
onto a platform where each one was introduced to
cheering rans.
Most were smoking victor y cigars.
Browns coach Sam Rutigliano was greeted oy
Cleveland mayor George V. Voinovich and the
mayor's three children .
"This is the best thing that's happened to the
city since I 've been mayor, nex\ to getting out of de-
fault. But may be this is more important,"
Voinovich said.
The players walked across a platform anti
waved al the C'h eeri ng crowd b ehi n d a
chainlinJ< fence. Quarterback Brian Sipe tried to
talk to the crowd through a megaphone, but the
noise virtually drowned out his words.
Brook Park Police Chief Thomas A. Dease
estimated 15,000 to 18,000 people were on hand for
the victory rally .
Starr's status
will he reviewed
MILWAUKEE IAP1 Bart Starr, with a
31-57 -2 record in six se<isons as head coach and
generaJ m anager of the Green Bay Packers. !>atd
Sunday he expects to rem am on the JOb m 1981
"I'm not concerned. I 'm going to work as 1f I
have 10 years remaining," said .Starr~ who .has .. ane.
-·yeaT remaining On his contract
Starr made the remark 1n Pontiac. M ach ,
where the Packer s finished their National Football
League season with their fourth successive defeat,
24-3, to the Detroit L ions. The Packers' record for
the season was 5-10-1. compared with 5·11 last
year.
The Packers ' exe<.'utive <.'omm1ttee is not
scheduJed to meet unttl Jan. 8. although there
were reports that Starr's fate probably would be
determined before th aL
"Al no time during 1979 did we approach the
productivity we had this y ear," said Starr, whose
team averaged 390 yards per game for eight weeks
until the four-game losing streak
Had we been able l o maintain the semblance
of a heal thy team. we <.'Ould have worked our wa~
out of several of those losses we suffered late m
the year ,·· he said "We had the opportunity to
completely turn things around if all our defensi\'e
people would have been healthy "
..
S1101cl'ffllws i111oge
Vi ewfinder le n H•:-, ';hapcd like giant
snowflake arc theckcd by a tc<.:hl')ician at
Eastman Kodak Co in Hochest er . N Y . The
apparatu~ as ont' of m u n~· .Part~ of a camera
c <irC'full~ m~p1·C'l<:<I b''fori• being fully as-
st•mbh:d
s ·tocks clubs
turn prof its
8~ JOHN TNNI FF'
&P 8~\1f'ltt\ '""••'\\
'\EW YOHK ln\Cstment r luhs sometimes
outdo nu:m:iclve:i lo ~eoe.r.al. lhe> e.x.pe.cl their
s'iu(:i(5' to gain JO() pern nl an five years. but now
1hey ha\C• one with a f1ve·ycar gain of al least 1233
per r ent
The stork. ~oog, In<:. a manufacturer of
numeri<"alh at'tl\'ated mach1nt' lO<ils and elec
trohydr auli·r \'alvcs. sold at a lo"' of SJ.875 cents in
J 975 and at a l11gh of mf)n· than S25 recently
~oog "'as '-' mnng lhl' \2 mo~t popular stocks of
the 3.000 ml'mbcr club~ of the :"llat1onal t\ssoc1al1on
of Investment Cluli~ v. h<>Sc.' phll1J~11phy 1s to buy
for the long pull. r1..•IO\t•.,t1ng dl\ulends along the
way
~ t.:~HERS llA \ £ HAO their share of losses.
and man~ rlub!> haH· invested themselves out of
bustne!>S O\ er the~ car~. but the~
ma1nta1n that by combining the
amateur ab1ht1es of perhaps 13
peopl£>thc~ can prosper
Jn add1t1on . they ha' e
bener1tted from suggest ions in
d uded 1n the association'!> mon·
Los Alamllos thlv magazine "Better Invest ·
svNoAv's RESULTS mg · · Eleven of the 12 most wide· 1u1hdayo1~ ...... , ....... , .. -.. -1,..1 p • Iv held stocks. wha•h showed a Fir\I rite(' Ffy Lt";) /lff0W •Crea~,, t ~00 3110 HO H~llO Du,ly IDelomb<ll e el'Son naillS rombtned 5-year gain Of 318 per
10 10. 11 10 M8•o 01 Sl>i<• rHaro •so u.. O C'enl. Wt're sub1ecl !> of fe>al urt• MIA l) It P&ld \118 bO
second r<>t• M•h cu1• S1>u• ID••ombd) !'itories in the publiC'al1on CUNNIFF
Y?O •80. )..0 KIUl\•O\ Doll IMyl"''· 16 "° matc.h 11uce berth Uost widely held wai; Kaneb Services. which \ 80, D•• Rro91\1 Cht<ll <Wardo, 3 10 m
1 Mrd '"" Mv Pop, Reb 1c•er·•~1. produced a 390 percent gain for those who bought
ij bO • 10, J olO Nil Pie••• 1cru9er 1 "80, 975 J f •7 75 E th h h d q •O tc.•o•v v.11 .. I Adair •. b 10 u .. ac1a at its 1 ow o "' , vPn ose w o pure ase ·~ 11 o~•dt1'6 '° Bill Peterson of California Yacht Club will at the 1975 high of $12 :.175 c<•ntc, .;how<'rl a 207 per
r:nu''" rett' Pt-t>t't Ooo Pol,l'Y t th A . l . f S t M . B f' '''"""1 ,8 10. 6 00 Joo. Skoa1 Man represen e ssoc1a ion o an a on1ca ay cent pro 11. 'OOmon11u•rt • •O, 1 bO ltk• lo Go Yacht Clubs in Long Beach Yacht Club's second
r••a11..,1• Ho annual Pacific Coast Match racing champ1onsh1p AT THE T IME calculat1ons were made, In·
• ~·11; ~"~rv ':~,'~0~~~.~1:<~·~~:: :· Jan. 24·25. ternational Business M ach1nes, second·m ost wide-
roo lnlenloOft\ t(Mdoldl 800 l1 uam Peterson defeated a field of four '" the ly held stock. showed a 78 percent gain for those •\~,·,~~·~~ 70 P~·~•ua10• 1Trmurr1 ASM BYC sailoff Saturday and Sunday in a senes who bought at the 1975 low of $39.375 Thal percen-
1010 • .oo. J.to. Bornca•h tHar1 1 110 1 10 of matches that were sailed tn li~ht air and tage. however. 1s based on a S70. price for 1980 r,o\t' Jim~, 1v•t~n1ue••> 'oo l · h f h d S h · r II b I h t ~v~ntn rote" 1n11,, o.1,9n1 ""'do'•' through ho es an t e og The mate es were saile hares ave smce a en e OIA t a pnce
"•o ,. 1>0 1 oo Ai ... ,, Acceoi•b•• 1A1 in Ericson-235 sloops. After Moog were Occidental Petroleum. wtlh a
h\oni. noo. 510 J"'10'"' Ro•r <B••dl Peterson clinched the series in a com e· maximum gain of 177 percent. IL' International 110 \1 O Ml41 l t 101 paid \l'IO 00
t7P•c>S1-<HH111o••oll61001012• from -behind finish Sunday in a fog so dense that 159. Mobtl 367. American Family 221. Van Dorn
w•nnm11 1•<V1• 11""' "°"'0 u Pi<k S•• the Del Rev Yacht Club race committee had d1f-255 . Ti0 er International 217. RPM 00<>. Southern ton,o••••on P.t•O 111 •O lo 1 1'1 w 1nn1n9 ... ,.,
1ir-•h ethr.., ...,,.,..,, '~·• .. .,.no w•n ficulty identifying the winner. Co 32 and Dow 24
"'"ll '" .. "0"'" ""'~' The final match was between Peterson and Since clubs often accumulate shares an small E•Qhlll r•<• 01911•1 <Ward! q 00, S 00
, 10 Mo••" K•nd• M•n rM•I<"'"' b .oo Bruce Golison of CYC. The race started when the amounts. the maximum gains did not apply an
, ,o, J•1 '>PY rC••-·1· 1 ao fog lifted briefly, and al the weather mark Golison manv instances. But the percentage incr eases do N1nlh race C•"•• Can fC1er1, .. 1 SJ 80, •
70 •o. • '°· nshfr·, F•vo"'' <C•Hv••l. was leading by 20 seconds, increasing the lead to ,give an indication of the buying skills of the clubs.
• eo, J ..o. NoCh"nllf'"'I A1• 1W••dl. 71 '° n 1 :28 at the leeward mark. ------------~._....._. ____ mber& aiS-O tend &-buy the-...,...,...,-----t m~~~11n,~:"'11 'i;3.:,;:;,~'°~,c:-om=-= .. c=--ooi1.-;1:::-;,,~.,;;; .. ~,.-.--t---rncnesnm:y-wan ancJlow visibility Peterson stocks for their private portfolios "'°· 10 80, uo. e.n1e MOUntln 1ward>. overcam e the deficit and crossed the finish line 29
, •o. s 10, KM>o1 Rocv• <Pllken1on1, a ..o n seconds ahead of Golison. CLUBS USUALLY A RE made up of amateurs f A41Clft I/&) patCI \131 I()
""•n"""<" •.n• The LBYC Pacific Coast Match Racing Cham-who get to~ether at each other 's homes.
Misc.
WHk•nd lran••ctlon• aAH8ALL. Am.rl<M \A .... BAL. TIMORE ORIOi.ES Announcl>d
111•1 Rich D•.,.r. Hcond bH•m•n, h•d
tt1reed 10 fetms on• u.,...,..., COf\lf•< I N41lleNIU.,_ MONTREAL. EJCPOS Signed Stan B•M\•n. pile Mr, lo • t-·year conlr«t aAS1t•T9ALL. N•U-1 ....... 11 A-~I .. ,. OE TAOIT PISTONS PleUd'Jolln l.OllQ, gu•rd, Oii lhe lnlured 1111. Signed Norrnef\ 81.c-. QU¥d. IO.'°"''' <onlr«I. ,OOTaALL ... .._.,_llL.• ... LOS ANGEL.ES RAMS Sl\ned R•V M•l••HI, he ... Coe<h, to • tllrff yeer con·
lr•<I HOCK•Y N ... ltMIH9CMYl. ..... oveeec NOROIOU£S -Rec:•lled T•"V Jol>ttson, dli...Mmef\, from HertMy of the Amtrlc•n HO<-•V Lt•oue. Assigned Rlch•rd L.tdue, ctnltr, to Roe"°'''' of Ille Am1rlu11 Hoc-•y Luow. WINNIPEG JETS Ntlntd Mlhe Sff\1111
AHOC I••• cotcn. COLL•O• ARKANSAS Ntmtd Don LJndHy di.· tensl•t ~,11n1lot. l<EN't,STATE '4tmtd Eel Chit-......
loolb•ll «>«h, WI L.LIAM I. MARY Nlmtd W. Jtt!TIH Cootltt1d •thltllc dl-IM. eflt<fl"" lhlt 1orlno.
NHL ........ Sc_
Wtlll.,.._,t, ""l ... ltlfllet
O\ltbt< •• i:lertterll) NV l•lendltrt•,Ollc ... O av"•'° I, venc-r J ,.......,,._
C•lo-ry 411 NY It.,._"
pionship was started last year as a regatta to sometimes for no more than an hour or so. to
sel ect the final Pacific Coast entry in the lnterna-analyze stocks and decide which to buy. In many
lion al Congressional Cup match racing competi-clubs the monthly 1nvest~n\ comes to .l\O mo.r~
~-tion in March, :rbls· year's Congressional,Cuv is: than SID a person. althbugh wealthy clubs;m..ay in·
··scheduled ·ror M arch 9·1S off the Long Beach volve thousands.
breakwater featuring 10 of the top matrh racing The clubs believe In buying regularly. in good
crews in the world. markets and poor. convinced that if a choic~ has
been properly analyzed it will have the capacity to
Basketball signups set
Registration for the City of Newport Beach
r ecreation basketball leagues for boys and gir ls is
underway.
Leagues will be djvided into third and fourth.
fifth and sixth. and seventh and eighth gr ades. All
games will be played on Saturdays with each team
practicing twice a week, at'ter school.
Fees for those who will be r egistering in the
program for the first time wiU be SIS. Those who
already have a jersey will pay S8.
Registration is being held at the Newport
Beach City Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd. Office hours
are Monday-Friday, 8-5 p.m.
For more information. call 640-2271.
survive downturns. and prosper in upturns.
They are. for example. not enticed into chang-
ing their portfolios to lake advantage or today's ex·
tremely high inter est rates. Instead, they leave
their money on the long-term expectations of the
company.
"THERE ARE TIMES when results don't look
good. but clubs now have a 30-year ,r ecord and that
period of time is a pretty good test of their pr\n-
ciples." said an executive of the Royal Oak. Midi
association.
In spite of the positive results the association's
philospophy seems to produce. clubs do fall by the
wayside during poor markets. Many clubs dis-
band. and membership today is much lower than it
was a decade ago.
Schicora heads boat show AT&T .BATF.S
_Bill Sdlicora, vet.el'aA..SOU""lhliM DOit=aeiJer-, --
COLLECTORS
CORNEA
Aare ColM 6 8'~
GOLD J-.,tYIR
Prlcff tor 1 :i.1.._, haa been named chairman of the Southernl DELA YEO
California Marine AssoclaUon'a Z5lb annual boat
show Feb. 20 to March 1 at the Los Angeles Con-
vention Center.
Sctucora la a prominent retallln1 figure in lhe
Southland and baa been ad!ve In SCMA functions
for the put several yean.
The SCMA boat show, marldn1 Ila silver an·
niversary,. huJrown to a SS0,000.aq\lare foot ea-
hibllion. secon lar1eat all·marlne show in lbe
. U.S.
WASHINGTON (AP)
-The Federal Com-
mun ications Com -
m ission' has agreed to
delay lhe effective date
for major price re·
vision.' to the Wide Area
Telecomm unicatlons
Ser.vice. or WATS .
__....... •• e efJtn
caeMC--.• ._Cl tlt.lt
~~'= === 100 COfll(lolt\ N1L• "'9. '° "'"°' p,. • ,,., .• "'Sll"9r..... .,.....,. I~ ........... .,,,......_ ... Cea•-.-.
(114) -HID • louttl eo... ...... vi-.. ................
J~-..... c.. ......
.
. _' ~\\\\\tilllltll~,;,l\\\llW111''''''''\lllll\lll////lt.\\\lt'ltltlll.s; ~ -~cl
~ I
,
0 0 0 0 0
Bu6inC£G trdVel taking yolA
away from y(Jur prone?
Use Answer Ad service when placing your ad . . .
a Doily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad . . .
we toke your messages 24 hours a day . . . you coll
in at your convenience during office hour.s and get · · ..,,..._.--ttt1:;-1~ses -te-yeur-ed . . . hts~sPJ!erv+vicPPet-f-4is~o~nwly---~-=...--~
s7 .50 per Week. For more information and to
plaee · your od -·coil · 642 .:43~ t --.:.~-~ ·· ,. · ·
642-5678
'
-..o .......
Dogged tty tragedies, ·
tough girl hangs on
F. l.K'l'ON, Ky \AP l Sheena
Kl'e4J wH badly U\Jllred when a car
nrn tll'r off the road. E1tiht monlhl
lat\)1. 11he was· 1mp•l~d on a plan.k
that dei.troyud 1t lw11i1 . And after her
b•b)' thcd or pn"umonia, she felt
"deatroyt.'<l that God h1td tried
t1VOr)1 WU) ht! ~ould to aet me."
Rut <t\ \8 she's a s urvivor. Her
fr h!mb l'Ull her the "toughest 1lrl In
Loaian l"uuuty " And s he s ays,
• .,.... Whttn uu fmd some.body who tak~
· o , 1 e t p r t·., 1til'11 t l'lHti of you t&nd loves you, you hold
l.,t!ontd t U1 t·thrlt'\ 1111 " hu:. bt•eu u w Cl rul"d Th!it ~onwlxx.ly tb her 18·year-old
tht-Ortfot uf Orto~r hu1tband. Clark
R \ olutwn fu r ht!> 'I Nt't: THt:t' n1a rr1ed m August
~r e at ~~n ll'~!> l o 11179, the u~eds have had "an awful
l ht> l'o mmuna:.t Purt~ lut of baJ luck "
.and 0 0 \ 1et ..,t <t l l' 'I've e\en thought that maybe God
'l'h\· d\\ard \\,i-. prt> was trymg to tell us that me and
·entctl la :tt ''l't'k a Clark aren't right for each other," ti a } b l" t 0 r e s he said .. But when you've been through as much together as we
Br t' Z h n f:' \' " 7 4 l h have, you've got to figure you ought
btrthday to st ay together."
------The Ree-dS. wtio wanled a family
Protest s
gain cats
• reprieve
VENTU RA \AP) To
the traditional sounds of
Ventura beaches the
rumble of waves . the
cries of seagulls and the
screams of tourists step-
ping on half-buried soft
drink cans L have been
added the meows of rov-
in g kitties and the
squawk of outraged cat
lovers.
At issue is a plan put
forth by offi cia ls lo trap
the homeless fe lines.
who a re estimated to
number between 40 and
150, because of concerns
about disease. odor, bit.
ten and scra t c h e d
• children and the welfare
of the cats themselves.
T HE PLAN has drawn
protests from several
dozen cat lovers. who
say most of the anima ls
would not be adopted
an d wou ld f i nd
tl\cmselvcs faci ng a
death sentence at the
animal shelter.
and "enough money to make ends
meet." last year hired on lo strip
tobacco for area farmers.
In December, they were walking
home after work when a friend drove
toward them , intending to make
the m dive orr the road. Reed made it.·
His pregnant wife didn 'l.
HE R LEFT LEG was shattered,
he r hip was broken. three vertebrae
in her spine were damaged and she
had a deep gash in her fore head.
Doctors feared she might never walk
again and worried that her unborn
child might be seriously hurt.
She was hospitalized 21'l months
and decided "to ta:ke the chance"
and carry her baby to term. The
child. Cla rk Vinson Reed II but
· nicknamed C.J .. was born in April
with a cyst on the brain, a "lazy eye"
and a droopy eyelid.
"He wu juat a UtUe bitty thins, a
wonderful baby. so sweet, and pretty.
too," Mn. Reed said. "We kept on
wan tin1 lo believe nothing was
wrong with him."
WHEN THE BABY was 4 months
o ld , t h e Ree ds went over to
Clarksville , Tenn .. to celebrate their
first .wedding anniversary with a
pizza, a rew games of Space Invaders
and a.few be~rs ..
• O n the way home, t he'ir car
careened into a concrete culvert,
nipped twice and plowed through a
plank fence. Reed was thrown clear
and escaped with only bruises.
But a l-by-6-inch plank plunged
Uke a spear through Mrs. Reed, shat·
tering her ribcage and destroying a
tung. ,
A doctdr called to the scene faint·
ed. a nd as Mrs. Reed lay conscious,
rescue workers used a chain saw to
remove the plank.
'<ii BESIDE SEVERE chest injuries.
her right arm and leg were badly cut
and her lowe r lip was severed. She
needed more than 700 stikhes and
spent three weeks in a hospital in·
tens ive care unit.
Then last month, after their lives
had r eturne d to normal, Reed
awakened one morni~g to silence, not
the baby's usual crying.
"I heard Clark shout, 'Oh, my God,
please no!' and I asked what was the
matter," Mrs. Reed said, "and he
just said, 'He's dead, baby.' "
The infa nt died of "walking
pneumonia," according to the cor-
oner.
"AND NOW THE RE'S an empti-
ness," Mrs. Reed said. "We don't
have all the money in the world, but
we gave him 'all the love anybody
could.
fo r B e s t Quality a nd
Selection of Handmade rug s
from Ch ina. Persia. India &
Romania at reasonable
prices.
"Why not m ake the m
a tourist attra ction'>"
s1,1ggested one woman H_,,-. '"""Sat. IW ·
5-ylJ ..
2421 E. CoHt Hwy. (714) 17).222•
· CcHona del Mar
/\s a res ult or lh l'
fe line fracas. the Ven
tura City Couth:il has or
dercd a study of tht•
situation, to Ile. comJJICt
t!d hy Jan 5.
OFf'lt 'IALS SA V the
problem arose because
unwanted cats arc often
d u m ped at the beach
a nd a re fed by sym
path etic individua ls
H o w e vt'r , the ca t s
!\Omclimcs peris h un
~leasantly, often after
tbt'y climb under hoods
of cars parked nearby to
snu,gle near the warm
en gm es.
PUBLIC NOTICE
H·1JUI
SUPEIUOR COURT 01' CALll'ORHIA
COUNTY 01' OllAHOE
HO. A·tt'1•l
NOTICE 01' SALE 01'
REAL P ltOPEltTY AT
PlllVATE SALE
ESTA'l'E OF H C GOOINEl . .oka
t<ERMENEGtLOO c;. GODINEZ, ah
HERMAN C GODINEZ, ~·••eel
Notice I\ he<ebv Qi•en 11\61 on o•
•fter Dtc•m~r 19, 1•eo, "" un• dHslont<I, LVOIA REINA. '" •d
m1n1\I'"'°' ol tr. ••l•I• ol IM •bow
l'amed Cle<edtnl. wlll wll al prlvale
W.I• 10 ,,,. hiQllP\\ blddef\. wblMI lo
"'1>11tmalion by ti,. '"bo¥e•enllt1...t
Superior COurt, all ,,,., r IQll\. 11\le, In·
1tre\I and ••l•t• of IM de<e<lent al Ille ---··~ ... ~-•11-tM rlll"lt;"ll lie and lnlernt Ill• .state ""'· DY operation of law or otherwl'\e, ac
qul•ed olht• 11\aO\ or In &dd411on lo 111.\I
ol Ille de<edent at tho llrne ot "'' deitlh. In -to that certain real proper ty looted In the County ot Ontt1gtt,
51•1• ot Celltornla, deurlbed •U
IOllOW\;
lmp•ovecl r .. I property lot.tied .,
Jf?q "•'~''" 0.-.• f uttertOl'I. CA tt6U,
cit\< rllled ." ' LAI 2' ol Tr•<I Ho~ oe, •s --on a map r~Of'decl In 8ooll 1•. Pave •
ot Mh<ellaMOus Map\, Records of Oranv-Coul)ly, Calltornla
Subject 10, Cw~t IHH. co~ nants, conditions. re.trltllon\. re·
Mr•allons, "°"''• rlQllh of way. u se· -nts of re<ord
Blctt or olfe~ art lnvlteo tor tile l>t<>
perty and ""''' be In wrl\1119 and may tit deliw ACI to IN ldmlnlstrato• or 10
IM ottle ol lier attorney, USI State St .•
C••l•l>4td, CA •1008. or may be 11100 In
Ille ollke ol Ille <lf<k ol tlW Superior Court at any time alter the first
put>llull"" ot ll•h nollce and blitore maklnv ol lhe wie
Terms llllCI ,_llons of sale are Ca U. In 1.-NI ,_,.v of ll'e United
Sltlln ol A"-lca w 1Nrt <•sh and
IN•I creoit, "" terms ol cr..ilt 10 be , accept•lll• lo 1111 -nlstr•rl• and
IN abo,.....,.ltltd Col.rt; 10% 01 \lie
amount bid to ac~ny tlw offer
and Ille l>M-• lo lie .,.Id uPOn con· llrmatlon of lalt by 1"41 Superior
Court. Ta .. 1, ""''· operauno •net
malntan1nee -· -pr..,,111nu on lnllHanc• •«•Plabl• to tlle purclla-Nit lie IWOfMed ., ol ~
daltl of toriflr,,...lon ol w it, The t•· ..-nlnallon of IH .. , recordlno of con· wyance .W any tltlt IMurMICe POiio
sll•ll b• at Ill• ••Pense of 1111
purer.aw "'-dleM•'·
TM "'°""" "'rein docrlbtd Is C9m'11.011t..ofw•t11l.U.JUO V~i. . '""'J1Mi: Glu TM urdtrlltNd .......... , llw rltM
•• re i-c• .,,., ... •11 lllR. I DATED; 0K...-r It, t•
L VOIA t1•tMA "*"'"''"-"' .. EtUl•efllle I ... ,,. .,..... 0.C"9ftt
ALI a MIOll• a.. IAltKO ........... ~CA-
'"; CJMl M 19 ........ , ........ ., ..... ~llllM Or .... CMll Delly Pli.t, OK. U. It, n, ,.. ,.....
-&
•-t>
Whirlpool
W!tirlpool microwave oven
NA TUllS MIAL SIMSOtl"'
RMPllATUll PIOll AND
Y HIAIU PO.a COtlTlOl
Now. your cooking can be
easier . faster . more economical and much more
enjoyable. t~-s to Whirlpool
advances -.n space-age
technology!
•
'\
NOW .MLY
·-·---· •• -J ..
.. , --. . . . . .......
. •
.The Red Plate
$2200
A tradi'1on amonc the early A'merican f am utes
waa that when 101DeODe delerved special
praise or attention they, were served dinner
on the Red Plate. Today tb1s custom
returns ... the perfect way to acknowledge
a friend's special triumphs ... celebrate a
birthday ... praise a job well done ...
reward a go~chieved ... or simply say
~·vou are Special Today." Start a tradition.
Some more reasons: B.D. HOWES and· SON
An old friend visits, good report
card, Mother's Day, Homecom·
Ing. Won the game, New bab.y ,
Graduation, E ngagement .
Father 's Day, Anniversaries.
~
LAST
MINUTE
FINE JEWELERS FOR FOUR GENERATIONS
NEWPORT BEACH
341 2 Vtd lido I 675-2711
10\ "'-I.Ill' P•\•!Jl"'I ''"-'" H .. ICH .. 11<\
P>\I'' '11'111 ... 1,\ "'-lf<V.,(1\(1) ltA\.\J\11
HURRY! SHOPPING TIME
IS RUNNING OUT!
SPECIALS!
AM/FM Clock Radio with
Extra-Large LED Di~play
Chronomatlc • ·213 by Realistic ·
Save
I.
. Make sure all Don t F~rget the those toys and
Battenes for radios are
Christmas' ready for act1on1
LCD Display
c::l Calculator.
0 _Q EC-202
by Rad io Shack
9!~,,.
21°/o
37 88
Reg.
47.95
Wake to buzzer or radio•· Extra·
large LED clock display can be
read from anywhere 1n the
room. Clock features snooze
control and sleep.switch. time
set controls. Radio has 3 'h ..
speaker and earphone 1ack.
.f65·602
Great stocking stutter! Has one-
touch percent. memory key.
riiii
-VISA _J
Pocket Phone Directory
By Radio Shack
595
Just press battery in place for
instant indication of voltage
level Tests 9V and 1.5V "O".
"C" and "AA" cells. #22·100
Battery not
"'eluded
. Battery-Powered
2:station Intercom
By Arc her·
14 9~ .....
Ideal for campers and motor·
homes. Remote can signal
Master when system is "off ".
66' cable included. #43-221
CHARGE IT rMOS TS TOR£ SJ
LCD Quartz Sport Watch
By Micronta •
s-~u11d 8 siren. 7\M ra~
simple computer crrcuits'
and more. 164-page man-
ual #28-248
CAM/FM Stereo Phono/
assett~ Sy-ste _
larinette,.-91 by Realistic m Save 17995 s40
Reg.219.95
Records stereo from
3-speed changer or ~ad10. Headphone /~ck. Matching 1 S3/• u
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Selected. Electronic Toys!
Hand-Held Electronic
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electronic toys. Hurry in for best
selection! f.ll 14~29~ice!
0 o 6 Four quarters of action...,...or·--11----.._.
••• one or two. Run. pass or
• kick-you call the plays. c;;:> LEO "players" and score/ •==-... status display. Action • ·-sound. 1so-21so121s1
e.tewiet ••tr•
Check Your Phone Book for thelalllen.ellStoreor Dealer Nearest You
PRICES MAY VARY AT INOIVIOUAL STORES ~ DIVISION OF TANOV CORPORATION
. ··-. -.. ----. . .. ---........ ----....... __ ,
'
-.
ONL V PILOT Sf.
Praetieal burial. . ..
·Putting her in her place
81 llAlrftN 11.0ANS
DltAlt SUPSllMAUCT SUOPP&a -I
doCl •t know wMtber Ulla la U. klM ol a.tter
you prin& ln )'OW' coh&IDA. but I wouW like'°
.end • •PK••• thw yo~ to ~ 1.,-maitet
for Mlplq to mail• Ulla put YMI' a tood OM ror me
Ila W .. •day Mw•pa.,.,-ada ate ler·
rmc Aod wben I 1•t lo ta. llon, lb•
<'lrt'Warl bawe tva moni ~ ill lJMm_
la fact. -a ol UM ~ kaow tail• a
patrol Kiuon wiU. lbem tot.be •tore
I ALSO "PPaKC'IATS tbe coupon·
ncbanp bu11 Md the rehmd form bulletin
board
And when I 1et to the cbeck'°"t count.er,
lbe club are aJwaya pleuaot. They uk for
my ~ and are very catt1ful in riqina
up and bauin& my {>~cbues.
Sboppin& at th&& store ls a areal and
rrtendb experience. l invite you lo come
sbopp&n& with me and see for yourself.
Kathleen B-from MUwaukee
Dt:Aa llATHLEt.:N -" --·t ••Uer U.a& Y• .U.'t laclllde &lie aame of you
a&ett, became you let&er a. a ._..., U.aak
yo. ,.... all of .. '° &Ml ..... ..., &ry
ea•eclally ~ard &e be c•••ldera&e ••d
tlao•Pdal lo Uaelr c:u&omen.
O• belllaU of allloppen everywlllere, I
............. ht ................ . ••'7 tnr, _.-...., ... ,...
O&AR SUP&RllARK&T SHOPPER -
All tM lllU'°"U. a& tbe &-man Bible
Chtareb want to tbuk you for wrlU.., about
our ref\mdlq procram. Aa a reault, we bave
received ... and aacu ol mail from all
parU ol Urie country_
Unfortunately, the volume ot mail baa
made it laapaulble for u.a to respond to every.
one. So, pleue tell t.bem bow very mucb we
apprceclate their interest and 1upport.
And 'ft want to wish them a vuy Merry
Chrislmu and a Happy New Year.
-Betty Bourquein, Swunan Bible Church
DEA& BKTl'Y -~ &wo reeeta& eel· ••u c.eeenial nfa4lla1 for you c:lllarclll
created a le& of la&.erest a. Mlq ref_. for
, ... cames.
I W8llld appa'eela&e llleartac fn• naden
wllao att ~ wttlll otlller lnMllNI tlllat an
ula1 ref' a di &o raJae mwy for wortlllwlalle
projeda. Pleue M9d yotlr letten &o me la
care of &Ma •wapaper.
REFUND OF THE DAY
Write to the following address to receive
the form required by this $1-50 refund oJfer
from Close· Up, Signal and DX : Smile -Refund
Offer, P.O. Box NB·892, El Paso, Texas
79977. This oiler expires March 31, 1981.
-------------------------------------,
CL.l~'N' "LI IH~UllOS
kllly Autll or lkll9rtlneers, For U, -ltw lorm plu' 11 .. ll"OOfs. For SJ. wncl Ille lorm pl.n ,. .. n
prMh. Tiie ..,_ IW a-. Auth Is Ille 111 .. "thicker <llewler" c:on.r lrom h t••· ouftCe be9; Ille prOOf
for luttertlneers Is Ille red "tlllcller <Nn<IW .... co•·
M< lro<n Ille l"-.e be;. E•Plres Aprll >O, 1 .. 1.
DEAR ANN LAND.BS: My
buaband waa open·moulbed,
1lack·Jawed and almOll ttanMCI
1ray overnlabt when I told blm I
wanted to bin a wood craftsman
to dealp a beautiful cbeat to use
in tbe family room and put some
cuahiona on it so people can ail
there -then when I die, I want
it to be my cotli.o. Betides belnc
able lo store blankets in lhia
chest, I wiU know and become
accu.stomed to my final restinc
place.
I am a practical pe.rson. My
husband thinks I am crazy. I
also told him 1 want a private
funeral, the most inexpensive
one available, only wild nowers,
and that be should not have me
embalmed. I hate funerals and
do not want my friends and
family looking at me in that
shape.
Do you think I am kooky? If I
put this in my will, who should I
give it to? If you print my letter,
I ask that I remain anonymous.
I'm in enough trouble with my
family over this. The neighbors
don't have to know. -NEED
YO U R SUPPORT I N
OKLAHOMA
DEAR OKLAHOMA: If &bla la
what you wan&, I 1ee no reaaoa
why you sboaJdn't have It.
Pu&Un1 tbe ln1trucUoas In
your will lllaure1 notJalai. You
may be buried before &be will II
read. Your bes& bet la &o dllcaaa
&be sltuatloa wUb one ·or your
children, your cler1yman and
your pbyalclan. Among &be three
Ann
Landers
of &Mm, aomeoee llilould eee to
It U.a& yoe1r .tallies are canted ..,.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: ln
the laat two years I have known
personally one footbalJ player
who died of bead injuries,
another is paralyzed. Both hap·
pened in schools 25 miles from
here.
I wish you could print this let·
ter at the beginning of the foot-
balJ season, but I realize it's too
late for that. Just print it
whenever ,you can. I believe the
officials can make a big dif-
ference in preY,enting injuries
and deaths if they will do the job
they are supposed to do.
I go to a lot or football games.
At these games films are taken.
At our school interested people
are allowed to watch these films
a few days after the game. They
can slow the film down or stop
it.
You wouldn't believe how bad
some of the officials are. When
you watch the films and see of·
ficials looking at one penalty
after another and not c~lling
them. it's disgusting.
Two weelu a10 a player fac•
1masked 11 times that we could
see ln the mms. He was called
lfor it only once. He started in the
'line-up of the next 1ame but wu
•taken out with injuries on a· second play. Why? Because
team knew he was a di '
player, and since the olfic~
wouldn't stop him, they did_
Not calling minor penalties~
bad enou1h, but not calliq,
penalties that could cause
serious injury is a crime.
The very next time one of you
officials gets on a field, ask
yourself: ll one of these players
is seriously injured or killed,
would there be enough evidence
on lilm ln the last two years to
prosecute you for bein1
criminally neglige nt? -A
CONCERNEDSPECTATOR 1 DE"R SPEC: People of&ea
ask me If I make up letters. the
·an1wer II NO. l know U I wait loag
eaougb, l'U 1et &be letter &bat of·
lers a-dliaatt&ocbamplon. cause and say wbat I want &o.
I bne been waiting for VOVR
letter for a very long time.
Tbanlu ror writing It.
How to -and how much? Find
o'Ul with Arm Landtts' new ~t.
.. How, What, and When to Tell Your
Child About &x. '· For your COf'll
lend 50 Centi along with 0 long,
1tam~. 1elf-addreued envelope to
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 119~5.
Chicago, JUinoi.! 60611.
0.lfy ~Oita ............ Diet~ Clip Giii thl• Ill• -k-II wllll •lmller <-coupon• -• ref\lnd _,, "'~ •-... <-1. ..... ....,..... Siert COll«lin9 IM ~
prooh of pure,... wllll• 1-lne tor Ille ._1rec1 r•
""'4 lortM el Ille ._,merket, In --s -~d,.., --tredl"fl wltll frl-. Offen me• nol • ev•ll-In •II .,.es of Ille c-ry Al·
-10 _,lo re<elw HCll ref.....,.
CELESTE Plue Aef....O. Aecel.,. e refund of •1,
i1.1s or u.rs For••· Mftd tlle ,_Ired refund IWm pl~ Unlwrvl "-1 ~ lrom •ny 1-C.leste
PIUH For i1.1s. lend Ille form plus -UPQ
For U .IS, -tlle lorm plus lour UPC:S. E•plre' -rclll1 1"1.
~~~~~~~~~~~~ CHIFFOH Tell .. te Ofter. Aecelwe Ille "'Tell .. te Perty c-llook." s...11 Ille ,_1,94 refund IWm Pllll tlle -a "~ ._,.,. to toot Molller ,._..., ...
~ ,rr.r.-pec•u•9n of Solt c""'°"· E.,.,
MIRACLE lrend -r .. rlne Offef. Aenlw •
IMK ..... of Miracle MereerlN. Send Ille ,_1rec1 r•
'""" lorm p1111 u..1 .. ne1 P...-.CI Code f,_, •ny """ pack-..• of Miracle -r;erlne. Alto ll'ldlcele store n.,,... Expi'9S -., >1, 1'tl.
...... SMcti ~. C.-, C~lle>I
CURTISS Esc.i.i1,. Aef-Ofter. Aecelw ....
fUftcl ol i1. '2 or SJ. For••. wncl Ille required r..-
lorm plu' tllr• prook of purcNte lrom Fun Sir•
M ANb M'J, Tiie Cotorlul Beklne 1nerec11 ... 1 Receive• i 1 ref\.lnd. Send Ille r-lred refund IWm.
-net-we!Gllll s .. 1e ...... 1 ''°"' 10-nce or 1er911r M encl M'• pleln or _, cll«ofete <-es plu'
letlel• from WIY i-of tlle lollowine 11•1"11 pro-ducts: ,,_...,f"fl, flour, su;er, <•ke ml•. tw-n
~r. Expl,...Mer<ll31, 1 .. I. MAS G4tASS. Aecel .. e bok Of Mr,. Grus Soup
Send llle required refund torm plus two bo• IOCK wilh wt.lie prk e clrcles lrom eny Mr\ Gru s 11o .. d touP
mlH,. £xp1,... -rch lt. 1'11.
Charity c.elebrates
United Way Campaign Chairman Carl
Karcher announced projected pledges totaling
more than $10.3 million Tuesday night at a vie·
tory dinner for United Way of Orange County
North/South.
-------------------------------------·'
Former astronaut Wally Schirra gave the
keynote address in the Grand Ballroom of the
Disneyland Hotel, where more than 800 sup·
porters of the organization gathered for the holi·
day celebration.
Econo01y casserole with tuna
United Way helps support 84 local agencies
providing human care services.
Applications needed
With holiday bills and
inflated food prices, it's
difficult to find ways to
economize. Preparing a
strata ia one easy way,
though, to help ease the
strain on the family's
food budget.
Created during the
1930s when money was
also tight, stratas
were the bAndlworll or
creative coots who bad
t9 stretch their money
as far as It would RO.
TUNA STllATA
'fl cup c hopped
14K Charms~ SH_.
Hand Embroidered
Hankie• D.11 & U
green pepper
~ ~ chopped
onion
1 tablespoon butter
6 slices day.old
bread
1 can (6~ ounces)
tuna, drained and naked
6 eggs, slightly
beaten
1 can (1~ ounces)
condensed cream of
mushroom soup, un·
diluted
~cup milk
l/, teaspoon dill
weed
Photos With
Real SANTA
~ teaspoon_pepper
Parsley sprigs, op·
lion al
In small omelet pan or
skillet over medium
beat, cook green pepper
and onion in butter until
tender not brown, about
3 minutes.
Meanwhile cut bread
into ~-inch c ubes.
Sprinkle half or lbe
cubes into greased 8xh·
2·incb (or 2-quart rec·
tangular) baking dish.
Sprinkle tuna and green
pepper mixture over
cubes. Top with remain·
ing cubes.
Blend together eggs,
soup, milk and season·
ings. Pour egg mixture
over bread·luna mix·
lure. Cover. Refrigerate
several houn or over·
night. Bake in preheated
350 degree F. oven until
golden brown, about SO
minutes. Garnish with
parsley , if desired.
Makes 4 servinas.
Borosf!ope ·
Soroplimist International of the Newport
Harbor Area is accepting nominations for the
Soroplimist Youth Citizenship Award program.
A spokesman said high school seniors are
judged on their contributions to the concept of
patriotism and contributions to home, com·
munity, national and international affairs.
For information. call 557.0244 or 957·3033.
Eggs aid in ecorwmy
The joy or giving is often followed by the
agony or paying. To help out your budget this
holiday season, look to eggs ror economical,
easy and elegant main dishes like quiches,
omelets, soutnes and casseroles.
*** If the cost of holiday entertaininl bas caused
you to reconsider a special t•tberinl, 10 ahead
and put it on the calendar. But make it• bnmc:b
instead of a dinner, and let economical egg dish-
es be the menu stars. A quiche or two, omelets
to order, or a spectacul.,-souffle can create
TUESDAY, DEC. Z3 more conversation ·tban standatd party fare,
By SYDNEY OMAR& and save you money at the same time.
ARIES <Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Creativity, * * *
travel, change, special communications and Quiche for the holidays! It's almost the
alfairs of heart dominate excitmg scenario. You easiest entree around, and you can put nearly
complete project and gain plaudits of peers. anything in the simple·to·fi.x custard base.
TAU8US (Apr. 20·May 20): Review facts, Consider broccoli, mushrooms and cheddar
figures connected with property and long.range cheese. Or Swiss cheese and spinach.
investment.a. Leo individual aids in gaining * * * pertinenttnrormation. On a cold winter night when your family
GElllNI <May 21·June 20): You may be needs something hearty, fast and inexpensive
studying a map, plan or specific course of ac· for supper, scramble some eggs. Toss in some
lion_ Cancer, Leo, Aquarius persons figure pro· leftover vegetables or meat as you scramble_
Bring the 11111e ones minently. . Or, top the eggs with piua or tomato sauce.
to Huntington Centers CANCE& (June 21.July 22): Draw line at Add some hash browns and a green or fruit
Santa Fantasy Land for spending spree. Check for genuine bargain, salad and supper's on.
memories they'll never don't jump at first 'otter and take long.range * • *
forget including the view where investments are concerned. Eggnog for the holidays is as easy as 1-2·3.
Mitchell Manonelles, LEO (Jul.y 23-Au ... 22): What seemed an ob· First, beat 6 eggs with a quart or milk, v. cup HaJr Ornaments from ~J Santa's Express model a Letlaae s~ c.rv ratlroed and 8 visit wtth atacle will boomerang in your favor. Strive for sugar and a dub of salt. Second, fokl in 1 cu or
everything clutc:tl the real Santa with the initiative, new starts and ater · ~ndeu.nci.;iei:.-_ __.,w .... h .. i~p.Jlin3-cream,-w-btpped;-amrt e spoon •Ja. ~-__ real beard-And 1nstitnt-~~ _ vanilla and chill. Third, pour into punchbowl
G1o:;;.$1 _._., Santa photos only s2 591 VJaGO (Aug. 2l·Sept. 22): Be ready for along with o/4 to 1 cup of rum, brandy, whiskey
change, a variety of sensations, travel op· or fruit juice.
Jellvbean ladcetl $7
Handmade ceramic pendtnle, oo two
alike HI
f'fllr combs Inlaid
wtftl atJalOne & tur-quoise M-SI •
Gotd expanlion betta H
Three cinch ··bett.in-
H>ox" SI
Brocade Jewelry
carryall U I
~elakl n wallets &
handbag• 514 .. -
New aelecuon ot
etertlng altver rings, charma. e1rrlnga-ao me Inlaid with
abalone & mother-of-
peart tr-S4
Gift e«tifiallee
Cell 142-1111. ht a tewworda
to work tor u.
\
-...
Ollchn's
Puppet Show
lfa the ...:>n to INke
kkh twppv .. Huntington
Center wtth Santa. model trains, C*Qtlng and em.r-
llln'"9nt. See the Mitchell
Marionett99. 4 ettOWI deilY · thru Dec. .~32
portunity and treater ability to communicate * • *
views. . Deviled e11s are a quick, easy, nutritious and
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphasis on re. economical snack for holiday partying. Vary
decoratiq, revisina lifestyle, comina to terms flavors b}' addina a leJ!POOO .or two of 70U1'
wltlupecW..reguest fl'O"m family member. -favorite cir)' satad d.reuinl mia to the e11 :rolk _, ..8COaftO '(.<kt, 23-Nov. 21): Define terms, .._ mixture.
see places and people as they actually exlsl. --------------------
Avoid self-4eception. Streamline techniques, get
rid of 1uperfluoua material.
SAGl1TA&IUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Long.
ran1e objedivea come into sharp, clear focus.
Cancer, Capricorn natives play ir:nportant roles.
CAPUCOaN (Dec-22·Jan. 19) -Finilb
rather than lnitiate project. Dig beneath surface
Indications. A void co-silJling for otben in connec·
lion witbloanaorpurchaae1.
AQVAaJUS (Jan. 20·Feb_ 18): Protttt basic
intereata by gettin1 a1reementa, promiles in
wrltl.nt. Check legal n1bta, permissions.
P18CE8 <Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Intuit.Ive in·
tellect provea a reliable ,Wde. Empbull on
bulc services, special employment op·
portunitJes and a "new line" of product.a.
A UMITBD NUMBER OF A'ITRACTIV&:
: au-mtmas· fMol Song Sheets
ARE NOW . AVAILABLE TO
O.arcbes ' Organiations Nla~IA.M.te~P.M.
Harbor Lawn
~
d. c\ . . .. nol only nlg tgowna, but ...... l .. e n WESTCUFft PLAZA . f Qfl S Newpott .. ach _
sptr1~we1otr 141-4121
•
-u
YI Price With Thlt Ad
Aspen Ski Wear
Bagatelle Blazers
Junior House Classics
P.S_
..
remember us
for Christmas
Gift
certificates.
too!
THI llCOftD GltlftCI
... Noflfl ..., ..... ~ leodl. (?W) ~
2m ... Oceall "°"'· ........ lilactl. (N) ·~
..... o ., .. ,. • NATION
Shoplifting soars during ChrUtmaB season
local police. Jordan Mania •.
...... abed 4,000 lbopliftel'I a NEWTON. llila n CAl'i
INne ahop~n who t' hollda)
.,. U•ll are btHM than l~lr
1Mad1eu ~N lryln1 to mlllkfl '°"'
U.. dint>rt'ne bv 11tulln-
.... lr)lh\a '" W) • worth ol'
•'''' •Ith Ml•.•• Hid t~w•n. H • dm1 that • ~o h• t r...U ul
n•ry eo&lM\An••r tk•Uer ft* \o
\"lnr·er ...,Uftlt\f "'-••H
'fh• nah\M'•\ "'" 1t\op,UUn1 1rou\1 h.atf"I In Uat\t•. tald
that n tt•t't •Ion•. 111•1\t'f!ll 1"4!pm1
J•<'k f'owf'r , eot•url\)' r hl41f
for Jordan Mar h 11ort•11 , Hhl
Mc>pllftana 1 30 l>Nct-nl h11h"'
U. O'<i f'mbt'r •nd ll ''t•mti.11
l"•n thf re t or lhf' )~•r ~• l'* \~ ''-' hlllh"' d'-le lu
Thf' ton u1 th•· H lll'1 10 th'•
re t of lh<' l'um11rv fh.-•Uonal
roe lltu.lf\ lo l'tN ••Ill Shoplift 11111
aa) • mon.• Hum '4!> i,!4'1 ''""' 11f
huJ>llftlt~
l'owt'rt , • "'" • hi• HN&ril.)' fo1 , • ., ~ hkh h ... •1111 " "•mall
141'111 \" 1•a11 l'•h•h 111\h• Of\l'
hophft1ng orru1 11 Jur111.: lh1•
Chrlatmu shllpp111ic "t•u111111
l"\ll~irlt hi "' · '1'hc-ooh 1\\'l t>• 1 f'nl 111 111 pn111
l'\'111.,, htt•ll~'
Wit 1et ttw lwU!i\'1111\ "' 111 hu l'm1H'l'11o, "h•' llJ•'' hl11 I'll Ill t as a
BOSS BARES 'BOOSTER BOX'
Jec:fl Power•, aecurtty chief
A~Wl .....
VW to challenge
EPA recall order
WASHINGTON CAPJ For only the second
time. a recall orde r issued by the Environmental
Protect~on Agency will be challenged by an
automobile m anufacture r .
Volkswagen of America said it planned to
challenge an order requiring the company to recall
140,000 1977 models because of an alleged failure to
meet auto emission standards .
The only other challenge came in 1977 when
Chrysler contested an order involving 208.000..lW.~.
m odel cars. After a four-year legal battle, the U.S.
Supreme Court recently upheld the EPA order .
Ancient art found
LONDON IAP1 Three archaeologists claim
they have disrnvered the fi rst Stone Age cave art
found in Britain
Thomas Rodgers, a Canadian who directs the
Stone Age Studies Research Association, and
1Britons Rodney Russell and Andrew Pinder wrote
_in the Illustrated London News that they found a
drawing or a bison with two heads and another of a
deer-like animal with reindeer ·type horns in the
entrance of a cave 21 2 miles north of Monmouth. in
the Wye River valley on the EngUsh side of the
border with Wales.
The scientists dated the drawings about 13,000
B.C. and said they were in a poor state of pre-
servation. but were clearly exposed in infra.red
photographs.
Last
Minute
-Chris mas
Ideas~.
On th~ brink of Christmas Day ... have
you forgotten anyone? How about that
reliable postman. the news boy,
the cleaning woman, the gardener?
Or how about that loyal secretary that's
t seen you through so many crises this year?
It needn't be expensive ... Howes bas
many items priced from SS up to $10,000
and when it comes in a Howes box,
it says a little more .. .it says you care!
Check out our silver department ...
it's a last minute saver!
P.S. Don't forget your mother·in·law!
..
NEWPORT BEACH
3412 Vii Lido• 67S-27l 1
LOS "NGCLU/PASAO(N,./SANl A UH,.llA
ULM Sl'llNG11"~lUlU
'
depert..at 1tON detective lD
1• after belftl laid off aa an
•1laeer. lnall\I that 1bopliften be booked, arralped ud tried
ln eowt. P\Wlhment may be a
1u1pended Hntenee and pay-m t n t of l'ourt co1t1. Some
ntw1paper1 now publlah the
names ol t.holt convicted.
··Our b&Ht1t problems are
from women in the 18-25 a1e
brecket." Powen says. "But•
men are 1tart1n1 to catch up. r
"You can count on the newest
clothes beln1 taken first; thenl
the smaller stuff like jewelry or
(•osmetks. New dresses are the
bta ltftl WI year."
Powen uy1 muy aboptiften
are well·to-do.
"They bave more than eDOUlh
money in tbelr ,pocket.I to pay.
They Jmt don't think they'll 1et
cauaht," be aaya. "Maybe they
think the price ii too blah . . .
"People wbo think 1bopllftin1
ls done by kida from low·lncome
areas are wron1. Some of the
profe11ional1 are houaewivea.
They 1et the kid.a off to school
and then they go out on their job,
with a 1hoppin1 list."
Using store detectives who are
sworn in as unarmed special
l-·
}
.. .
\.
l~ I . '· ., ,.
year.
"You ftnd that California, Tex· aa, New York have tbe same
problema." be aaya. "We atay in
touch. We're all worldna In
abo~ the aame Qy.''
Retailen like Jordan Manb
rely on a phalanx of spin -the
number ii secret -who watch
cuttomen through two-way mlr·
ron, and on noorwalken look· inc "just like Joe Customer"
with shopping bags.
"We want to get all the
employees involved, learning
bow to wait on cuatomen, bow
to aelmowledce them and pre·
vent them from aneakiDI
around," Powen 1ay1. "Alter.
all, we're concerned with lou
preveatieo, not .cop1 and rob-
bers."
IT • • ? . ax on pa•ntinp·
GREENVILLE, S.C. CAP> -
County olftctala are conalderina
levylnt property taxes a1ainlt a
$5 million collection of Andrew
Wyeth paintin11 on loan to the
Greenville County Art Museum .
Five Christmas Eve
Candlelight.Services in
the Crystal Cathedral
5:00pm 6:30pm 8:00pm
9:30pm lt:OOpm
Capture the anticipation, wonder and joy of Christmas at
America's largest and most beautiful Christmas Eve Candle-
light Services this year for the first time in the Crystal Cathedral.
Wednesday evening Dr. Robert Schuller will deliver his special
Christmas message, "L_ight a Thousand Candles" at all
five services.
-Chapman and Lewis Street near the junction of the Santa
Ana, Garden Grove and Orange Freeways.
D lpecl ..
T91nl••d
candlelight Service
from the Crystal cathedral
Wednesday at 11 :30pm
KHJ Channel 9
-·-I -,_
DEC. 22, 1980
JALAPENO JELLY,_
BLUEBERRY RING
C3
C2
•
Winter Wmiderland Cake
.leaves chocolate lovers
drooling for more ... C4
[
ONOON An lo:nt1Lt11h hUUbt'Wile
asb httr huabaod for f W 1n th~ currl'nl
IHUf' ol , .. Wl('h m•w»• ""
British f o~d pri.ces no joke
'Why'> hr asks ''i\tt: you being
thr.-ai..1\W by hhu•kmo.11''" .
'No she reph•111 "Today I have lo start
t.l'u11lp1n~ for Christmas dlnnt>r ··
Wtull· tin.-mbtt<Utf\t' 111-.y be humorou11 , the
11r1~ r !\ .irt' not lh»t mu(•h of » Jok\t Hut British
bu c-ri. haH 111tlJu t~ to the-tt steep rate ol mOa
lion and evt-n >1111le us thev i.hop 1tmong the
llHOOjl> of tounsts at llurods
0 11e of lhl' "XOrld'~ premiere !itores. llarrods
doe:.n't have departments , ll has floors or
h.ilh of English china. men'i. Knd women's
f•ah10~. home furnis hings a nd sporting goods
\ tour or lht-rood hall is a . mw.t " for any vis
t\Or
'
ou t."t1te1 a vuiual Farmcr'i. Markel for
eptt·urt-i. wher~ the s1~hls und smells are
s~J 1s f y Ulg e veolf you. are only browsing.
Lox ti. banked around a founluan decorated
'ti. llh cooked lobste rs and birds Of paradise to
carry out the µ1nk1sh orange motif
fo~reshJy plut·ked pheasants are str ung up
alternately with reathered carcasses beside the
lis t of today's fowl and game offe rings -
always an unbelievable variety as are the fresh
fruits and vegetables. a lthough most are import·
ed at this time of year.
In the candy aisle -where whipped cream·
filled confections must be served within hours of
purch~se chocolates are fi lled by hand 'in
hourly displays that delight the children.
But back to those prices.
Londoners are paying "a pound per pound"
this Christm as for turkey. The pound sterling is
currently worth $2.40 in U.S. dollars.
(Orange Coast supermarkets are advertis·
mg turkey for 69 to '75 cents per pound.) For those
who can afford ham at $2.80 a pound, the tradi·
tional, ceramic serving stand costs $24 for proper
presentation on the holiday table.
In the "frosted food " section. frozen rice
and vegetable medley or mixed vegetables,
e ach in 8-ounce packages, cost 41 and 37 pence.
or 92 cents and 85 cents .
Prices for Betty Crocker supermoist cake and
a 10-ounce can of orange juice are 94 and '75
pence. or $2.10 andSl.80.
1f or those inclined to nibble when sur·
rounded by s ucti abundance, a medium
pizza costs $3.80 and the local favorite,
steak and kidney pie is SS for a pastry
that serves two.
A newspaper's consumer poll this past week
found that lfarrods Christmas pudding was the
\J ll ~ .\J
taster's No. 1 choice which was reassuring to
those or us who had paid $'7.50 for 2.4-pounds of
the plum or fig concoctions containing vine
fruits, cherries. walnuts, cider, rum a11d sherry.
F laming Brandv not included.
Treat Sanl,a to raisin cookies
Who's the busiest person on Christmas
Eve? Why. Santa, of course! Rushing from
house to house. chimney to chimney filling
stockings and leaving presents.
What keeps him going throughout the night?
Why it's those plates full of cookies and the
glasses of milk that await him al each house:
Lucky for Santa if the children of the house
leave him cookres filled with moist, chewy
raisins. Santa will love them and Mrs. Santa
will approve, loo. because raisins contribute
iron . as w ell as potassium. phosphorus.
calcium. magnesium and certain 8 vitamins.
Raisins are low in sodium. There's virtually
nofat in raisins and of course. being a fruit,
raisins have no cholesterol.
Since Santa will be leaving gifts for the lit·
tie ones, encourage the children to make the
cookies for Santa themselves, as their own
special thoughtfulness.
-~ ...... ·
.... __ ,,___ __ .
SANTA 'S H ELPfo~RS' RAISIN COOKIES
1 cup butter or margarine. softened
1 cup s ugar
1 cup molasses
2eggs
434 cups flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
2 teaspoons cin namon
2 teaspoons ground ginger
A nd many of us brought hom e this
English holiday t reat as a souvenir.
Meanwhile, some English passengers
and crew members hinted that they
would be takin~ back American turkeys.
I teaspoon ground cloves
1'2 teaspoon salt :v. cup milk
112 cups raisins
lcing < receipe follows)
In m ixing bowl cream butter and sugar
Beat in molasses and eggs. Sift together n our.
baking powder. s pices and salt : add to creamed
mixture alternately with milk. Stir in rais ins.
Encourage the
children to make
cookies for Santa.
That's how they can economically continue
the yule traditions which Punt'h magazine al·
tributes to Prmce Albert who decorated trees.
started caroling and ordered up the first ran·
tastic Christmas dinners
Neither he nor we would settle for spaghell i
Drop large. round spoonfuls of dough 2 to 3 in ·
ches apart on greased baking sheets . Bake in
350-degree ove n 15 to 18 minutes. until just spr-
ingy to the touch Remove from pans to cooling
racks. Brush with Icing while warm Makes 21.,
to 3 dozen
Icing:
Sift 2 cups powdered s ugar, combme with 3
tablespoons milk anci I teaspoon vanilla.mix lQ
blend smooth
" '
I
....
I
Jalapeno pepper jelly
makes unU1Ual holiday gift.
It's Too Late for
phone orders so
.. come on in!
'FOOD
• Baked 30 houral • Honey 'n aplce Glaza
•Spiral allced for euy aervlng
• Whole or half hama
• Nationwide ahlpplng ••rvlce
• Full service O.llcateaaen e • Old World Chffae Shop
PLINTYOFHAMS ·~"dwlohHtogo
lllADILY AYA!Ual P'"Jia...,
~700 I. COAST HWY., C--. ........ P'HOMI 67J·MO.
14'01 lAYMOMD WAY• ll TOIO ID .. ll TOIO, rtfOMI IJ7.Jlll
~~~-..... Also A·natieTm, branOi;Rancho·Mrraoi,-[a Rit>ra, ~n-Dlego,
[
lt06f llACH IUD ... &AINU. HUNTIM6TOH MACH. f'HOHI 14Ml71
Westlake Village, North Hollywood, Woodland ~llls'...Santa Monica, Pa~dena
Some like
it hotter
Want a frl'sh Hie a tor
so m et hing you c•an
make for Chris tm iu
gifts th.i s yt>ar?
Here·s a delightfully
different reclpe idea that
may become a new holi·
day tradition from ")'our
kitchen. l
Homemade jalapeno
pepper jelly is an ap·
petizer jelly with a zes ty
flavor designed to wake
up even the most jaded
of taste buds.
It's served atop cream
cheese spread on wheat
biscuits, toasted bread
squares, or any variety
of crackers.
Almost as good as its
taste is the fact that it is
s o quick and easy to
ma k e in yo ur
microwave oven -only
17 minutes to make four
8-ounce jars.
The sparkling, light
green jelly, put up in
c lear jelly jars a nd
topped with a bright red
bow looks so festive it
doesn't even need to be
wrapped
JALAPENO PEPPER
JELLV
4 cups sugar
34 c u p s w h i t c
vinegar
3 large green pep
pers. pureed to make I 11'J
\."UPS
:! t o :1 frt.>:1 h or
,·unned Julupt'•W p<'I'
pt•rs , puret'<I
4 llnshcs hot :;llU<'t.'
J O\U\{'t'S l)f \ij.tht ~{'
Im 6 dn1ps ..:rt•t•n food 1· coloring
In blender . puree
green peppers Strain liq ,
tsid reserving I VJ cups
of pureed green pepper ..
Puree seeded J alapeno
pe ppers. using 2 or 3
teaspoons depending on
how hot jelly is desired.
Mix s uga r , vinegar.
g r een pepper and
Jalapeno pepper. Cover
with waxed paper and
microwave at HIGH for
10 to 12 minutes or until
mixture comes to a roll-
ing boil. s tirring twice.
Remove waxed paper .
reduce power setting to
ME DIUM HIGH a nd
boil vi gorous ly for 3
minutes. Add pectin;
bring to a rolHng boil at
HlGH for 1 t.o 2 minutes.
R e du ce p o w e r lo
MEDIUM HIGH a nd
boil 2 minutes. Add food
coloring, skim and pour
into four 8-ounce jelly
jars : seal. Ir clear jelly
is desired. strain before
pouring into jelly jars.
Cool at roo m t ern ·
pe rature a nd th e n
refrigerate I ~
Easy holiday treats ~ i
: · m-pir1a ~ Make-ahead Chocolate
'rinkle Cups are easy
on tht> hostess at holiday
time.
Whisk 10 servings out
of the freezer. ready to
garnish and serve. To
prepare, partially melt 6
squares semi-s weet
chocolate and 2 tables·
poons butte r o r
margarine in a
""Ucepan over low heat.
·move from heat
s tir rapidly until en·
tirely melted. Place 10
a luminum foil baking
cups in muffin pans. Us·
ing a teaspoon. spread
chocolate mixture over
ins ide of the cups, cover-
ing entire surface with a
thin layer. Chill until
firm Fill cups with ice
cream : st.ore in freezer.
Garnish with grated
chocolate or chocolate
curls. n aked coconut or
cherries. if desired.
. ~
;p ,..... 4 I C · ~
f ---~ ;-~ t.~ ~~~~:~~~1fi!fJw~,,i
I.I'!"()> HOU\t Htn Fresh Turkeys oo 10"'\ c;,..,,A 81.i<lt Shouiot> Fresh Pork Roast aos1CJ1 e.in
Ml.,,.,.~t Butter Basted Turkey ~()I '°"'s lb S k A R Bot>tltn ,.,..,, Coooto S 198 mo - -oma Ham w~" ..,OtG 10
rro1!!1 (il•ll!' A
Hfns o• loms Foster Farms Turkeyseu1t<1 <;..t0r • 10 Hormel Cure 81 Hams a-1es1 ., s2 99
hOltf\
H SI. Crnlf' Cul 8onr In $269 am ices , """'John •o JoOyRog" 10.o.r $179 Fresh Oysters wu1 .. n J1t
Saf Pwny Fresh ()unlit~· Prml1u·t>!
49, . IOt•ll'OloGll Crisp Celery '""'' 1rrsn '"""' Fruit Baskets C•" i;.,.,Q
Fresh Lemons t.inov ,,,..°' 2,0I 35' Ruby Red Grapefruit .
Red Radishes 2 49( G•utAdd•lioo
101 Red Grapes 10 1"' ft\11111;'#\
8$11 s999
25'
'b 59c'
Q~c;:x;)QQOPctJC COOcc:x:x:x:>OO
( I.. \t. BUYU )
INFORMS in the Daily Pilat
Snfeu·ny Good Buy.11!
1-S Marshmallow Cre~e ~·•ft 1
; 59'
1-8· Kraft Cream Cheese "'"" ~: 79'
'.1-8· Scotch Buy Yams 30<:! 59'
1-8 Orange Juice ~~~ '~ 69'
1-8· Libby's Pumplc.in ~! 59'
1--$ Stuffing Mix w~~"' 1~:' 89'
~ I roa n• Pus Bel-air Corn .--.. ~ vq1~n ggc
Lucerne Egg Nog
~ p c . p"'"''''°' ...-. otato hips ,,..,p,.
%-<8· Butter Top Bread w~~~ s
8'(11 79' P>Q 2•-o1 f7 9c l e>al
%-£· Mar-Kes Burritos 5 ~~ s1oo
~ p .. 1c3~46' ~ et mtlk £•-•1'0 r ·
%-7 Orange Juice Sc::~~"
.......... _.
&IFT eE~TIFleM'ES , ... _,...._ ........ .
s. ..... ~ , ............... . ., ..... ,, ... ,..,,.... ........ ...
~-._... ............. Alt .. ., _, .. _.._,.,.,,......,
Fresh Yams us No ' .. .., 35' 6-lnch Pothos Plants 6 ~ s499 Flex Sham'poo '"'"' AMon l5-0l 98' S.tt
., ... .,,,.,.~,
9lf\tftlS AMIT SMIWAT
ClnmfWUTa.
We've Given.LOW PRICES a New Name •• ~
-·---
y-~ ALL STIBS (~.J ...., ...... ao• tmsTIUS IAY ."'"
o.__, U"Y IOUIAYS"~ ,.. m• • ., ..... ,
............ _....,....... . ....... c.........,.~ .... . ........ .., ......... w.-....... ....., .. Le,_ ..... ,..
.,.. ............ Me • L .. itc...-9tr-f/IW..,.,.,....
---
FOOD DAILY PILOT
~
Reli8hing holidt..y gt/ts
l'hl ) ar. mak your
holtdl)' lift 11vm& extra
per~nal b) rreatlna ex
ctltn& r\'ll h~ thia\ l'lll>
lurt th ~ p~~ .. o r~ ur
a11t>n1&1 f1t·1h rru1t' .. ml
\ f'61\'lttblt"'i
llomr \ prt••wnb fl 0111
uur k1\«:h<>n .trt! llnl(llll'.
f' onurnH·al. und 'lho v.
th1o11 vou rt•ully 1•ar"
Wtutl i. 1nort· ll "vftl•I\
t·~ \ h• tun1 on(· l(tft rnto
t v. o h \ II U t I I 11 IC
hutnl:'ll\llllt• 11•la"'h 111111 ull
uttruc-ta vt• v.1111 turuh•
dl'ror ltv•• 1.i1 111 11lh1•1
ft',\ I\ t' ~Ill.,, l Jlll\h 'I •
M (1 .. 1 rr, ... h tom111111·11h
• I I I .. t' •• l> I II I t. t•
It' fr I ~t·r et I Of f111 11 l u IS
v. , ..... i... gl\llOg lhl• I\.•\ llJ
11·11(.. IOdn Ol'l' .. '10 11 '
t,v :.t>r ' t• them d l> tll'
.'t\ • ht f u I nw ct I ct t com
IJ.illl 1111:'0~ 01 to lt'lllJ
. .rn l'Al'1\lng fhur to holi
dli} buffrt tabll-'>
.\ 11d .... , t•n v. hen the rl'I
1~h h..c. bccornl· 1111tv .1
dl'IH·10u:. rnt•rnory. lht'
cunla1nt'r n m .. ull be 1:0
joyed-
For tht' friend who aµ
pn·ciak~ gourmet food:-...
Fre:.h Apple Chutney ,.,
a welcome surprbl'.
C hutneys are s picy
co ndim e nts whi c h
originated 1n India
Long ago thev wer e
made with mctngoes, but
now featun· a variety or
µ1quunt fruit and
vegetable tombimAtions
Thi s del cc t a bl «
vers ion or apples, whitt•
grapes, red µe ppers and
seasonings, is wonderful
served wi th roast pork
or poultry entrees
often l() prevent aUck·
tn& Sooon lntu du ired ~ontalnera C hutnt1y
rni.y t. ~fn1erated for
at le1&al G \o tl W4.'~h
0 1\, pou1 bo1 1lntt hot
chutney into ~tcrl h~cd
j Mr•. h •IA \ HlK ~. Inch
. h_,ad s p lll'l' Lu~I iand
i.lvrt• Mukt·• 5 \o 6 hitlf
~llfltlf
i11("<'1UNI 1o:u s1t
6 ('UV:, tll tlll} !>hC~O
I Ui'C'hll\J
2 CUV:i th1f\l) :.h~·ed
u111011 12 li.rgc )
2 \ ~ taLlt>!>pOOl\S i.alt
2v. cup• cider
vineaar
2c\IJ)lauiar
\ cup chopped areen
pepper
I tablespoon ground
nutmeg
3 t11blespoona com·
starrh
I table s poon
turmeric
2 teaspoons dry
m us tard
l ~ teaspoons celery
seed
l,'l teaspoon hot pep-
per s auce
In large bowl combine
zucchini, onioa and salt ;
mix well. Allow to stand a hours or overnitht.
Drain; rinse well with
cold water. In lar1e Itel·
tie or saucepan combine
remaining in1redienls;
add zucchini and onions;
mix well. Bring lo a
boil; simmer 7 minutes.
Spoon into desired con-
la i ners. May be kept
rerrigerated ror 6 to 8
weeks. Or, pack boiling
hot into sterilized jars,
leaving 'Al-inch head
s pace. Adjust caps.
Makes 7 hair.pints.
FRlllOO
ROii
PARADE
TICKRI
No,..,.,~-••t:t¥· .. J
J ... •·~ ... '°"'' ... _,.
"' l • .,. \
..... ...-...... Q .. , .. ,
t It, .. "" "'" f ,
• ''" I t"••' , .. ""' u . .,.d,. • ..... , .r-J
''0*\ ••'.)\k.i ft o•'f II I f't' l•O•• 'J
""'""flt\ N tl
11 -0~110 "o ... l•t ~
King Rouse Avg Wt 6 to 7 lb
CAPONS
U.S.D.A. Choice &eel Chuck Cvr
7·BONE ROAST
El Rancho Fre1h With Rib Cage & V.ble11
TURKEY BREAST
El Rancho Fruh
TURKEY HINDQUARTER
f~1h Grode 'A' Pol & Son
ROASTING CHICKEN
~
tl• • • >. -. .
'
• S11e8to 13 lb, 1.59 l8 1.49 LARGE GEESE l&
1.49 Bor M Hickory Creek Whole or Holl
LB BONELESS HAM l8 2.79
l8 2.09 El Rancho Waler Added 2.59 CENTER HAM SLICES 18
l8 .69 l"lo r,.,el Cvre 81 Whole or Holt 3.29 BONELESS HAM l8
l8 .89 Armovr 1 Veribe.• Wllole o• Shonlt l"lotf 1.29 FRESH PORK LEG l8
Jars of
homemade
relish are
attractive
gift.
According to the nil
ed Fresh Fruit and
Vegetable Association.
t art . <'n s p cooking ap·
pies. such as the Golde n
D elicious or R o m e
Be auty varieties, a r c
tb e best ones to use in
making chutney.
SMOKED TURKEY luMio KING CRAB LEGS Alo1ko La.3. 99 CHUCK ROAST
8\AOE CUI 8H~
Give a jar of wcchini
relish to anyonl' who
likes hearty food s. and
include a tag suggesting
that its zesty flavor will
pe rk up h amhurgers,
m eatloaves, and simplt>
roasts.
The vivid ~reen color
makes it espec1::illy at
tractive and inst ant
ly recogni zable as hav
ing a fine "h<>m cm adc"
quality
fo' R F. S II A P P L fo:
CHUTNEY
4 cups cored , pared
apples
2 c u1>s s e<'d less
l:(l'UPl'S
'~c up (•h opped
onion Cl med1um i
12 cup th<>pped red
pepper
I c Io v l' g a r I 1 c .
chor1ped
2 c ups dark hrown
suga r
2 cups c ider vinegar
1 tabl es p oo n
mus tard S<"l'd
I tablespoon ground
ginger
I teaspoon gro und
allspice
I teaspoon salt
1 , teasl'O<>n hot pep
per sauce
In l arge kettlt' o r
sa ucepol, combine all
ingredients Bring to a
boil; reduce heat. sim
me r about 1 hour until
mixture thi ckens Stir
Cookies
Having a cookie Jar
filled during holidays is
essential to good plan·
El ~oncho
Hen LB.1.89
FOLGER·'S
COFFEE
llS CAN 2 49 All GRINDS •
--~~~~·mg-.. ~~~---
C ho co I ale -Coron u l
Bars. for example. arc a
moist , chewy bar cooki<'
that 's appealing, to serve
with h o t o r co ld
beverages when friends
stop: by. • ·
Combine in a bowl 2'4'0-~
c ups coconut. 2!1 cup
swettened condensed
milk a nd 2 s qua res.
semi·s weet chocolate.
melted. Add 1 t~aspoon
vanilla and mix well.
Spread in a wcll·greased
9x5-inch pan.
Bake at 350 degrees
for 25 to JO minutes, or
unti I lightly bro wned.
Cool. Cut into bars. This
recipe makes 18 cookies.
A fltctltlolfl Bu•lnen
~··-"''~ 11-ll--:----t-""'wt~lll Ill• County Clerll la
velld IOt ti,,. yeer1 •ft•r wlllcll llme co11Unulnt
bullnelMI lftUIC reflle.
PulMlcetlon I• MC•H•ry
only II tll•r • ••• cllan .... CMI IM L ... I
Department •t the
DAILY PILOT f or
lnforr111 tlon e nd
IMC .. uryr.t-.
642-'321
hl.W
,
.-1 . . . ... , ......
''"h 8 01
IAITIH OYITIRI ....... Jo,
Frtt"' 8 01 Jor 2. I 9 WllTl•N OYITDl ....... JAR 1.49
Cooked
COCKTAIL SHRIMP ... Le.
Fro r Oefro11ed Norrhern Center (111 3 29 5. 99 HAUB UT SHAil ............. ts. •
WHOLE or JILLIEO SAUCE 16-0Z.
OCEAN SPRAY 3 7c CRANBERRY p~~:E
lowro SctildO.,. Ant Ftowott ..4 79 01
POTATO CHIPS, 1 •• ~Po• .89 PRINCEllA YAMS .69
6 0 1 So" fe,'\Ol\do E· lo•o .69 78 01 N. Iott e .49 PITTED RIPE OLIVES CANADA ORY MIXES
s tb 1111 '••Polt .88 4 \\t ~of. Yatttl•I\ .85 PILLSBURY FLOUR NABISCO SNACK CRACKERS
1' 01 8e~1 l •O"'d 2.19 1$ • 7) I• ~•" '"O"I' Ow'!' .95 MIXED NUTS REYNOLDS ALUMINUM FOIL
?001 '"S"'"P (6\v,..\. Stoc:t d CrvV.-ed .57 1~<0"'"'' 10. 0·0,...0NI i~IM'' O .99 SPRlNGFIE LD PINEAPPLE DINNER PLATES
rnu:.~~M ......... :.~~~~;~· ..... 1.89
~&wPETITE PEAS .79 ~RO;Ss;:~~ROLLS 1.19
0 0 1 Sp,.111~l1tld 1 _,~ 0 Inc~ P11 R111
WHIPPED TOPPING .53 DEEP DISH PIE SHELLS • 79
10 or B"d")f' w,1~ C Nu• Sovc.~ 8 3 J8 Ot j(l~l'l\IOIH 1.75 BROCCOLI • APPLE PIE
RED
.YAMS
RED RADISHES
GREEN ONIONS U.S.NO I
-.29L~ ISBC~.
9 f()()t:S fJf' Ttf£' fJ~t:l'fr 8 0' ~ ..... ~. '"' '
0
"'
0
" 59 4. 4 IN OVI ,.(IH .. OOVCI ot•I BAMBOO SHOO TS'--_._ -----9=--4::-::9::--J 01 8otttf!' M1tw~on .Sv 89 • AGI .................... 79 RICE VINEG AR •
BATIERMIX 99 I o' M1yo\o ~tt•+•~r 011ed I 49
• MUSHROOMS •
5 ISo• Pl9 89 11>01 Pl.g 5.1 MOCHI .............. • ASAHI AJI 2.29 I ) l1!e• &oo&e
OZEKI SAKE .
PAPAYAS TRoPICAL FIU&T •••••• --.·~···········-········ ...a:A9C
USDA
CHOICE LB.95~
HUGHES
SOUR CREAM
PINT
CA~TON 79c
~···················· I CODE DURACELL I ~················ .. 1 c~~e DUBUQUE 5-LB. I
; ~?' BA nERY I '·,~... CANNED HAM I I w ,o. ·~" •ot.11)0" o"-d \) "'•l"l·m~ 9 puoc•o~ "'"'d "9 ol<oholo< bt••• 5 0 c I I oqt> loboc<o o•d dout p•od.I<" OFF I ,,~., O"t' bo"•'r JM'' COVPO,. o"'d -
on• ,_..., ,.., rv<'-•• Volod A•Y 8ll I I o.. n ••·· o.. n 11110 ••G.
I
w •• ,,,, 10•00" o•d u ~.-~-~ O• ,...,.. s1 OFF I
-.. f't(lwicl "'9 o'«o1'ol c bf:oroqf'• •ol"Ofco o"'d I
~ do 't P*Odw •\ l """• 0"~ If'-°"'' ~ C\
•
.... O"'d Ol'llf couoo~ O• hnfrO..,.., I
vo...i Dot n <I>•. 0.. H '"'
••••••• MUQllS MAllR COWOI ••••••• ••••••IMUQllSMAllPt •· OI•••••••
li>·l'rool Kentudly Stroi9h1 1.W~ HARPIR498
BOURBON ..... ~~
, ..... ._y . 99 --···········--····· 6
7»Ml. liq-'°"'oof
IOUT .... 499 COMFORT....... -
8·or C11p :Avo<odo Otp1 .65c I
PIN 6 QUILL 49c
PARTYD•I ..
•·or Rond•le ""'· Flovon llAIWAL Al•H ......................... > ••
7-or. A.it. Flovon .......
Glqtl •ALU._ .......... 2.09
l .6-01. liltfOrtlcih ......... y • ..... aou.s_ ............... as
12 .... Chvb I .. llAllOllAL
KG•I• IALA• ....... 2.•S
. ;;• ..
·.
•'
• ....a.a .... , .. FOOD
Christmas chocol&te cake
'ay r borolate •nd
•YH hth\ up, mouth•
b"lln t o water and
ou've l rou8flt lh~ •t
lentlon o f t'Yt!fYOIH"
wil b 111 arahot
To th.I .ind, we off er •
dtllC'IOW dlO<'Ol•ttl U IU.!
t h at w lll h av• th••
r hocolat.-lovt'.-. at your
&able drouhnai
Althouab th1 t'd1 blt<
tnbutt to wlntN lookf
t•o mpllrlllt'd W1ntt>r
Wo nderlt1rHI 'a kl' '"
1n1plt to prt'1.1ut' unll
'tart l. o ut 'A tilt u
rh~olalt' rllkt> mu
Amilrt•ltu a1 1vt' 1t , s• 1 r It ~ n d w h 1 I' IH ' LI
l'r l"am µro\&d\.':. thl·
nu"' > mantJ~
The t r t!t'" i.lft'
r-~h tv nl'd r rom
H 'Ull!lt ... t:d l'h lH'Ol•ll'
111or cl:..
1'ht' result 1:. a rather
~tr1k 1n~ and •ltogethcr
ddeetabk de~:.rrt thut
l'elebratt:.'I lhl' i.t.•llMIO
By ddrn1twn. w111tl·r
1:. lht' season ~twcl'll
.!Ulumn .i nd :.p1111~.
U S 0 ll 11)' U l' l' l' m b l' I ,
J nuary aml fo\•bru111 \
1 n l h l' n <• 1 t h t' r n
ht: rn 1splwn· IJow1•v11r.
we llon 't th111k u11yo11l'
~di rault you 1f you
SC'rvc this yummy rakt•
} l'ar 'rowid.
WINTER
WONDERLAND CAKE
1 package chocolate
cake mix
~3 cup amaretto
2 cups heavy cream
2 tablespoons con·
fectioners' sugar
Quick
bread
Fruited quick tireads
h a v e long bee n a
favorite at the holiday
season. Easy to make.
they are both delicious
and attractive.
Here 's a recipe that
adds the seasonal red
color of cranberries and
the fresh taste or orange
peel to oatmeal cookie
mix
Wrapped in plaslit•
wrap , loppe d with a
bow, it's a great girt
idea. Or serve s lices
s pread with whipped
c ream cheese as a nice
addition to any party ta
ble
CRANBERRY·
ORA.NGE BREAD
12 package (35 5.
1,unc:c s1ze J oatmeal
cookie mjx
3 eggs
I cup cranbtrnc·s.
chopped
I tablespoon grated
orange peel
Move oven rack lo
lowest position Heat
oven to 375 d egrees.
(.; rease and nour bottom
o nl y of l oa f pan .
R 112 x 4 ''l x 2 1h inc h es
Knead fl avor pac ket
a bout 10 seconds Mix
all ingredients in large
bowl witil moist. Spread
evenly in pan. Bake un-
til wooden pick inserted
en center of loaf comes
out c lean, 60 to 65
min u te s . Cool 10
minutes; remove from
pan. Cool completely.
Se rve with whipped
cream cheese if des ired.
Give candy
There's 30metJting so
gratifying when you
-mak~;-wrap and"-tlle a
gift from your kitchen.
Have a few empty tins
on hand so that you can
use them as gill con-
tainers for Coconut-Rum
naus. an easy no-cook
confection. Combine 4
e ups vaiiiU.a wa fe r
c rumbs , J'h cups
coconut and 1 cup finely
chopped nuts in a bowl.
Stir in one 14-ounce can
sweetened condensed
milk and 1/4 cup rum (or
use 14 cup water and 1
teaspoon rum extract).
Mix weU. Chill 4 hours
or overnight. Drop from
tablespoon into bowl of
confectioners sugar to
coal.
Cover a nd stor e in
refrigerator. Roll again
in s ugar just before
serving. Makes 6 dozen.
.. For belt navor, store at
hours.
'•Ceterlng •Me91a· • .. .,aad •Dell
.. Prvduce . ..., .......... -A.----
e.e.g~
•mwt~·
1444 'c..e ..., .. , c--.. ..... \.., .. ,,. ......... 1'
v. cup amaret\O
1 I ounee pack•I•
1tt1 ml1we1t real
r hocolale mort.ia
Puur take mla into
lar"'" bowl Subelltut• ~
cup 1maniuo '°" \.\ cup of the Uqwd ral&ed tor In
c•k• mi• dlrtcllona.
Add liquid tu eah ml•
with eu• u dl,..cted on ~ru·k 11e Prepare and
ba1Lt1 In two 8.d•Z inch
wr~a•ed r ak• p1n1 .
fullowlf\# r.>•Ck11u dl,..t
11v111 ~)I In P•M 10
Ill lllUl\.'ii ttt10lUV., (f'\IOI
1111 n11 c•ool t·om1llt'h~I)'
DD wtN 1'8CU. a.._ otf
\Opa ll w•ary.
In ~ dMp bowl,
bHt c,..UD ud CODfec·
tlooera! 1u1ar until
almOlt etllf; ldd '4 cup
amaretto and continue
beatlnc until aun.
Place one cake layer
on aervlnc plate Spread
wll h about l c up o f
tream Top with llet'ond
layt1r t'roat top and
ald111 with remainin g
r r\'1 1H1I ('hill aevenl
hour11
Melt c h oco late
111or C'l11 ovcir hot water
-~l 1mooda. Spned ln a '4·1ac:b u.&ck lQer OD
foll ud daW tmtll ftrm eDOUlla to cut. Wltb cllf.
f trtal abed cookie cut· ten, cut CM& tJeet from
chocolate. U y0u doa 't
ba ve tree.abaped cookie
cutttn, a pattern may
be cut out ol cardboard
and 'traced on the
chocolate with a sharp
knife. Chill lf'ffl until
complet ely harde ned.
Just before aervin1.
place trees on top of
cake or alon1 UH: sides.
Make• one ll-inch cake.
......... ...,._,., .......... ~ ........... °" ~lle:t leiM
SHANK PORTION 98 OF HAM •
t& \t t t t II\ 1 .,,, •• ,1
•• • 1 '""
WHOLE 138 HAM
SHANK HALF
OF HAM
uone 111 11111v 1 11n~•·u
138
. Ill
BONELESS 179
WHOLE HAM
, utlv (OOkeO Wdl{'J AOOPO l O
~ 7 l 0\ IH,11\1{'\ LO I 9RI
-~
CURE "81 " 329
HAM canned & Packaged Delicatessen Items
HOI "•e• ll011rlE'\\ t 1111y COOkeO HJll l ll
11 Ill ('111.1'.I Pr H,1111 10 3 491
CENTER CUT
HAM SLICES 269
flnne 111 Fu11v cookeo lO
GRADE A
HEN TURKEYS .69
1.111<,'Kter r<1rm\ 1 I 14 lD Fro1en LO
BUTTER BASTED 7 9
TURKEYS •
.AltltOU• (,QIOPtl ~l.tl 10 12 lO
,, IOe A H('ll OJ IC Ill I ll)len •0
BUTIERBALL TURKEYS
'fXJ .. { I OM r,PAO( A /0 J\ 1 fl I 00/J N ... 79
LADY LEE TURKEYS
h A ti :.,PAO( ... p.QP f ti
II ... l~/f~
BONELESS TURKEYS
:t'iW)\jO (;()111("' \fA'I'
hlllftU HA',lfO ">0/ft.
GRADE A DUCKS
r•V)N ~'·tOt, ,.,,,,.~
STUFFED TURKEYS
.•. 79
'" 1.69
.a.98
•"¥-"~a.1, i.1•t11t A" n 1h, ·~If~ l8 .89
IR 1.98 ST ANDING RIB ROAST 'AP'"' '"'tHt .... -..1•1 nni
RUMP ROAST
A()NBl\\\JfiftUN f u• Jll')Nfl'f n ~ff f 1>01H40
RIB EYE FILET
110-.f.i. 11111 1•.(ot"f!IC11
T ·BONE STEAK
U~~tit 0lU11 tD~
lff 1.98
... 3.29
in 2.68
~E.~TERN OYSTERS •ooi ,.-1.49
~~~:.~,.!~~N SAlJSAG~01 ••G .49
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
80Nf U \\ lt()Hflt n llff I tf')IN
1t11tr w.~u1 •Ciftl
GROUND BEEF
OOf\ N()1 t){(f(O .Ml'• •Al l tft .. (; 0-"'00ll
LEAN GROUND BEEF
f)Qf\~fl fl(f01) ,.,
CROSS RIB ROAST
&°""'\~ -f~.0 Olli l ttuL•
,n2.69
1ft 1.39
lff 1.78
ln 2.08
7·BONE CHUCK ROAST 1 7n •-ll-Oe ---i.o • ~
LADY LEE SLICED BACON 1 38
1 lH PlC. •
canned & Packaged
r LINDSAY OLIVES b PlflfO W OIUM 601 (Ai,, 75
•• -t WATER CHESTNUTS 51 0 5001A I 01 CAA ,
r HAWAIIAN PUNCH 1 93 b COOttllll•Al( 1101 811 ,
I' INSTANT POTATOES 89 b .... l\llUl'V "IJIOG,tv J•O 16 01 AO•,
r PANCAKE MIX 79 0 l AOY lCf H GU• AO 11 01 AOx ,
I' DOLE PINEAPPLE 71 0 IU UP PACI I VA01(11(1 IO 01 CAA,
r MAYONNAISE 1 Q9 0 WflG"l WAICHU\ II OZ IU ,
r ONION SOUP MIX 65 b t•l()frtf Jl•01 Pl(l#.
r NESTLE'S SOUP MIX 57 b llO\IAIOf • YMl(ll(\ l I 01 l'l(C ,
r CORN BREAD MIX 49
O CllllCH llOl llOI •
b WALNUT BROWNIE MIX 1 59 lfm CllOCKH IO' • 01 IO• ,
A~~IPS •001 MC;.49
r WISHBONE DRESSING 1 15 0 rtAUM 1MAO • '4 01 ITl ,
b~~· 169. .--o. IO OZ l lL , f._ l'n( .. fMM f ftt<I,.. W!Mnt.ll.t<tlOtJ
--lUll-(°"""" ..........
f'LADY LEE
OYAMS
fl STUFFING
b ~J~merrv Hero or
saqe & 0111011
.59
11 Ct Plcg
.59
19 oz Can
.69
fl CHUNKY 55 0 ~J~~p FRUIT • 16 oz c.1n
r BLACKEYE PEAS 0 UC)O~A!lf '
r CRANBERRY SAUCE
0 OClA"f \PG'At' 45 •rUifOoPW~t 11o OI t•~.
L ;.~ .. ~~Y~1.~.ED NUTS 1 99
W Pt:ANUf~ 0 01 (AN •
r CHOCOLATE CHIPS 1 59 6 lAO• tf-l Putl t1 01 SAC. •
r CRANBERRY COCKTAIL 1 39 0 OCU·N \Pt'At 41JCll 8fl •
r WHEAT CHEX CEREAL 1 29 0 9A\\l()N 1101 90, •
r SUNSHINE CRACKERS 89 /) tt1 H() W"l.Af W-HI'\ 00> CHE fl II 16 01 BO<•
r WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE 91 6 Ft(N(M ~ 10 OZ Ill •
Hou sehold & Pet
b ~~~~INUM FOIL 100\• -o.i 2. 99
r ZffNAPl<INS 39
/;, A\0,0.llOPAP{• !>OC• .. G •
! YARDLEY SOAP
llOVIO .. Al<O lAV(N()ID 1 89 OOICCXo.tluHU •HOI 8•1 •
Delicatessen Items
P SUMMER SAUsAGE 1-89-b UlOVlU !001 PttG ,
r SMOKIE KING SAUSAGE 1 89 b 5C1t-•\ 901 .. G •
I. ~~~~~~~~~s .• a, .. " 3 .19
A ITALIAN SALAMI 2 19 -.UCOllOIO~<CIO 90/ ••C. •
l'SALAMICHUBS 2 29 b Hltef'W .. AIOIAlCO~<U 1101 .. C. •
I' SHARP CHEDDAR 1 99
b u<ICCltlAlllUUIU 101 PtCC. ,
ALL STORES WILL CLOSE
CHRISTMAS EVE AT 6:00 P.M.
AND REMAIN CLOSED
CHRISTMAS DAY
.. ........
f'LADY LEE
o~J!i~.~ .39
eoz (tnr
psw1ss 99 0 s~~~e~~tura1 S1tceo • 6 01 Pkq
r POTATO SALA D 0 ttN'
r XLNT SALADS t_. t t lAflh l P•PtA f
f VA.Dlfllf\
! CREAM CHEESE
ltiiO•Hr
139
9 0 1 Plcg
~001 (f~D 1.09
'"'"' 1.09
. ''"' .69
""h' 1.29
: •. , 1.59
r CHEESE SPREAD
0 itAU.-AUNA l!lUfJ 3 49 (Dr)(• C,HA~P !/f I (POI• •
r CHEESE BALL 2 39 6 o.uw•u~• 11\UI w '-Uf\ 1)01 Ptt •
Dairy & Frozen
!:SOUR
CREAM l aov 1ee Reat
~WHIP
TOPPING
lJOV Lee
!:ICE
CREAM 1aov Lee Soo;ir~
.89
16 Oz Cln
.69 ,, oz Pl<Q
148
c:.,11 (In
r DOW. NYFLAKE WAFFLES 5c: b.-euH~lf' .,,07 Par.. • J
r PARKAY MARGARINE 79
6 \0fl U l)/C''l4•
r PUMPKIN PIE 6 11111~\tlltf .... 10 ••Ol "'•· 1.99
lOOI 84~· 79
rNIBLETS CORN 6w 1ui11ouuu 100/f>t.f. .75
rPtE SHELLS A Mt\ Slli'lh• \ ti()/ "t~ .89
r ORANGE JUICE 0 l•ll\WHICONCl"lf~ll
LADY LEE ECG NOC 1 5 5
t-"'01 "'-•
111 W lA 'AUllA AftllUI 111 IO. STA" CIOU.9ea MUL9M9
r TEN HIGH BOURBON
( .....
r PASSPORT SCOTCH ,. '
r JIM BEAM
I' '"'' •,
'hL'
. 9.39
11 .99
10.99
; EARLY TIMES
.., ,. .... ~ ... r-O<'ll'." ... 10.79
r SEAGRAM S V 0 (.. ......... "" .......... , .. 14 99 '••APWJ()f I"• H' •
•CUTT If SARK 15 99 ~ •.tt'rf ~ .... 1uxr • '" • •
Chocolate cake
has added
flavor of
amaretto in
the batter.
I_ LA~DER S SCOTCH .
! BEEFEATER GIN
11 .99
16.79
9.39
7.79
10.69
I •
I. GtlBE" S GIN
,i VAMCHATi>.A VODKA
[ f & J BRAN DY
[ ANCIENT AGE ... 10.79
:' SEAGRAM S 7 CROWN
"' '"'•I 11 .29
[GO.RDONSGIN ..... 9.69
Kev Buy savings on Health & Beauty Aids.
0 -TIP SWABS .. •; 1.29
3.99
L COLGATE TOOTHPASTE 1.37
[AL0KA SELT7ER •· 1.47
b ~l_A~ AN!.', P~~S.~1-~ANT •. '.. 1.39 • !, ONE A DAY VIT AMINS
! MENNEN PROTEIN 29
...... ·""" y " •••
'"IQ Jt "'
b HOLD COUGH DROPS
A u, l
3.47
1.39
.99
[OIL OF OLAY ... 3.49
Produce
DELICIOUS
APPLES .29
wasntngton Extra Fancv Rea or co10 LD
FUERTE .29 . AVOCADOS
ltlrQe Eacn .
D'ANJOU 39 PEARS • ·
U ~ __ NO 1 l.trlle. _ l t>
BELL 59 PEPPERS •
LatQl' Crl\P & Cruncnv LD
tfALIAN 49 SOU ASH •
h Cl'ill'nt OuJltlV lO
°'1' llttf, ~1\lf'ttl'llit' ~11 \I ~.1Mi1"'14'1'\ ,,,_.,, L't1• t-'\
ti' b• f'UH flff trilt~UY ""'~'°""'' Uutt ltv-.. \uf'O.t\i C'\r('~,., Jiff\ tM('I
I NIGHT OF OlA \
.i FA (llR':.E_::>H.AMPOO
... ·>
! FLINTSTO"lt S
~ GILLU H FOAM'1 . . .......
! BABY W.ASH CLOTHS
! SALINE SOLUTION -' .
j SKIN CONDITIONf;R
"""" ~. ..
! GERITOL TABLE-TS
3.49
.99
2.49
1.37
1.87
1.89
1.09
5.99
! ~OMM.A~D ~AIR SPRAY. 1.97
~ FIN.AL NET HAIR SPRAY
• 't ,,._, •I 1. ••• ,... 1 37
• .. : .. \' I •, t : , •
l Ir (,r/(111 (j1(t f'?r1•·L <f1:
Our nr •(1 ~, J1f· I'' 11.( r• lrC ••llPO (..,
f (' ;t rtt ,t, ti .. \<it f ttPV' 111 •(,lSQ"
,mot'~.,,,~ 1rn,... mw ~"" crtef~n
trc:r't' ut Of l' t ll .H .1 Ur f f
;-i1, ·~"·!!1 ~ " ... uUL.J.e.-tniln.iqt•, , 1er.11•"
KEY BUYS MEAN
EXTRA SAVINGS
"'V I'''° Jtf i{t:-J'''i L''1((0 I t/vt f "' lP
l••r1t I VI t y0.t'I 1 111? IF..jf t t t"' 11f
f t tt •',,I 11t ft '''P t tr • U••
n'Ot •01'~11 Hll+W,lllC 1 ~ '-'' f lll( fl)l•l""r\ ..
•••f1(0.~~ ~ •u tt •rn'o ,, rnn•--i' •t
1'Cv J.u, l.h_.,,._.,."' .... " w~• tnn tt"lrrr
up ,,. 1 11n' t r11\ 1rH1•
[flJ;vJ
~
DEVELOPED ANO PRINTED
1 HXPOSURE 20 EXPOSURE
2.89 4.09 .. . .. ~
• • • ... ...... "I ' , -.~
.. ~ ... ) · ..
DAllDlll QIM)W uers I UC\.IO 411111'-
COtTAMlllA
t1• IWlellll 9CMA'IAM ~'°" .......... MlllUI
l!Utl.,.....TOM IUCM ueutlA MLL.I tttn CIMOt ..... At LA 'Al
~~•wt.ia "...,...
_TI ... '1'0-llllCM ... , Ul,.Uft& .,,._
tulllll
IUNlll-AWllUI 1 .... ._.. .. .., tTllaT
«MIA .... .... a.~ ...... ITOllll ONN
IW\.Y t 4.M.
..... ,... ... ... ,......,. ... .. .,....,....."'"""'
. . .. . .. . . . ...... . .
Wll'ltlt•lll Tlll 1MP1 .. I Do.\U 1111f0 -
1 t ........... -~ ~~.-....----._.__ ... __ .. ___ . __ _
j
Mondey, December 22. 1980 DAILY PIU)T (S
Cakes with prunes
Prunes ua. w,•11 11'1
Olb ttr (lrif'(j frui~ f1\411kt•
uull nt in1redaent~ for
batine& a.nd me.I plain
r11n1 fo1 tbc holiday\
Well knnwn fo r thc 11
quatlt sound nu\rl\1011
a nd i'nl•rio conlt•11t
p1 une aJ" a.tu •·•c ll••Ht
<'ho1ce for ttui. ''"' 1 ' halL~ tcooda
. Pin Prum• l'io1IH· 11t
dt•l I(' IOU •11111 \It' r.., Ill lit•
u11 a Ch1"tn11.1"' ln·ul 1141\tl
1..• n bl· ervo..'<1 11i. 11 \'akc
11r t>.ir <U•k lt> i,:u·l·ll~ut
0 \\II ..nd 1£•.\IUfl' lJUI)
II h l1&h 1111 l h r h•l 11f
(J\01 lit"'> \f\1•1 t11ak 111~
'H'f\ I .,-. tll 111 \l>iJl»'\J .,-. Ill\
h.irJ 'JUl't' UI l'tlOI lh t'
l .. ~,. ""' thv11 t rubt d)
1k ... 11 ,·J t t11~t l·d the
1 Jk1• h1d d ' ~1·11 fur
't' \ t" I ••I 11 u ~ ' ~ p 1 t· )'
f•r une l Jkt> 111c1k l'.., c111
~'ll'lll:nt <ll''>~l'rt 101
1 ll m JhU\\ "'h1:n 'l' I'\ l'd
\\1th h1>l 'I* 1..<il l 1cl1•r 111
Ill ul11•d WllW
S PIC\' PKl'"\ E
CA K E
I': C'Ups Slfil•d fluu1
2 tl'd !>i,lll llll'
pum pkm !Jlt' s ptCl'
I lt·:.i:.µoon bt1 k 1ng
'>lllfa
1:: tup murgann\• or
UUltCf', !>OftCOl•d
I cup sugar
2 cg~s
I c u p p r u n t• ~
(' 0 0 k (' d , 1J I l l l' c.J d fl d
chopped
1:: eup buttermilk
I t' u p l' h o p p l' d
waJliut)
sJft togethl'f flour,
pumpkin pie s pice and
ba k ing s o d a Cr e am
margarine and s ugar
un til light and fl uffy .
Beat in eggs. one a l a
tim e . Stir m prunes Add
dr y ingredi e nt s
al ternately with hut
te rmilk : mix we ll. St ir
1n n u t s . S p read i n
Fudge mix
Pe rsona l expressions
of "Seasons Gr eetings"
often come in the form
o f fest ive can d ies .
cookies or othe r gifts of
h o li day gooc..lic s
Ho m e m ade fu d ge is
always popula r . Now
with the availa bility or a
convenient mix, it is
easi er t h an ever to
m ake perfect fudge a t
ho me.
~~udge mix can also be
u sed to m a ke t hree-
1 ayer Fud ge Mi nt
Brownies. a recipe that
will delight any fudge -
f an c 1e r or brownie -
lovcr A rich, nut filled
brownie is the bottom
laye r . A coo l, green
m111t rilling is topped by
a layer of creamy fudge .
rudge Mint Bro wnies
a nd creamy chocolate
fud ge are both ideal ad·
dilions to a ny holiday
gift list.
FUDGE MI NT
BROWNIES
l c up all-pu rpose
fl our
1 2 tcasJ>OQn baking
powder
:i,,• cup margarine o r
butter . softened
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
flavoring
1 packu ge c 14
ounces> fudge mix
12 <'UP chopped
walnuts
3 tabl espoo n s
margarine or butter
4 teasJ>OQns milk
'I'~ teaspoon pep per·
minl extracl
3 drops g reen food
art•Ht•d l3xi Inch pan
Bi.Im at :~ U"il«'ell f' . to to ~ mlnult'S Servt
wur1a "1th httrd '<iUt('
oi frO!!il 0.11 d •I n·c.I wtwn
1·1>01 12 acrvrnltCi;
1'Kt;Mtlll•:
l"IUI •:Pit:
I It lt\l'h I ro.n·11 W t'
11u 11•lJ ~ll!\l I ) !>h t'll 01 8
~m·h :.l1tnth1ul unbakl·d
I'"""> ,ht'll ~o 111tll•d '" unc ...
~ hOl•ll~O
• 1 t'UI> 111o11 .:ur111t: or
h ut I t'I ~lft'°lll'd
11 1· UIJ )Ul(tl I
) l',l(~b bl·.1ll'll
'' lt!HpoOn vanlll•
cxtroct
1 • cup port
1~ c u p coarsel y
<'hop&)ed pecanis
l'repure pastry llh('ll ,
i.\'t n!\lk Chop pr uneli.
<.'1 l·1rn1 m uo u1nne and
~u~ar until llKhl and
flurt)· Add t~gs. van ilht
unJ port, mix well F'oli:J
m <'h t>pped µrunt!:. Pour
i n to p ast ry s h e l l
Svnukk nuts over fill
111~ Bake at 350 d egrees
~· , 40 lo 45 minutes
t'oo l S1:r v e wi th
\\h 1p~ed <'ream. 1( de
... 1n·c..I I pie 18 servings>
•
B! ... 39 REGU LAR OR UNBLEACHED ~
BOLD MEDAL 8 3 FLOUR LI~ ...
RED
GRAPES
~ Mcln'tosh Apples
m t~;;erines
Gtft k1, 10 ''"' H! Seagram's 7 -Crown 1:.,,0
Gitt ...... ,, ... B! Chivas Regal Scotch ~~0
.U liilt k1,~1f1Httr
~Seagram's V .0.
'""' Vu• IO ''"' ~ Jim Beam Whisky
ffi V ;;inoff Vodka
ISO
.. 1
I II
II•
I II
'"
•.. 35
•. 49
499
1291
999
658
o.Mlt. """'· l eH 0. ~f. UM ffi Taylor Cellars Wine :.,s 279
.. , ......... ffi Best Foods
... .,.1111o m Bisquick m 7:t;; 0Mt , .. , o.,.,.,
~ .... \•tt1 ~ Nestle Morsels
ffi K;;i; 'o·i·~ner •u ( .... IHI I 1•eHIM4 0. (er-•ff4 'l+ Dressing
)l •• ,., ) 4 9
112
.,., 199 .. ,
'·ti 28 ·-· .
'~:· . 79
~
205 SHORTElllB
CRISCO ... ,.
CAI
~ (;~~b~~;;:; S;uce
!ff 6~-;;;,"'9;;~; .. ·"· ... ~··
Ntlkru t ~Yams
ff+ l;\~;h~;~<Ch~ese
m c~·;i w·hip
~Imperial Margarine
, .. .44
S&ci1 42 "" .
".. 49 .... .
••. 219 I\
" ... 59 .... .
iYF::;.§:~!J WOMEN'S
DESIGNER JEANS
fOP OUALITY1
NO SECONDS
OR IRREGULARS' WHILE SUPPLY
LASTS•
El.
5 POCKEl W£SHRN STYU MOST STOMS CHlllE OIEll ••o.oo
colori-n ---
t 'h cups s ifted con-
fectioners' sugar
2 t a bl es p oon s
margarine or butter
2 tablespoons wate r
St ir together flo ur and
b a k'in~ p o wde r . S,~t
·aside. -
In large mixing bowl,
bea t tb e ~ c up
m a rgarine, eggs, vanilla
and 11h c ups or the fudge
mix until smooth and
c re amy. Stir in flour
mixture, mix ing we ll.
Stir in nuts. Spread in
greased 9x9x.2-inch bak-
ing pan.
Bake in oven at 350
d e grees F about 40
minutes or until tests
done. Cool slightly.
I n s m all saucepan,
m elt the 3 tablesJ'.)OQns
margarine . Add milk,
p e ppe rmi n t e xtrac t ,
food coloring a nd s ugar,
s tirring until s m ooth.
R e m o v e f r o m h e at.
Spr ead o v e r wa r m
brownies . Ch i ll until
flrm.
Me lt the 2 tables poon_s
ma r garine i n s m a ll
saucepan over low heat.
Rem ove from heat. Stir
In water and remaining
fud ae mix. Place over
l ow h eat. C o o k 4
minutes, stirrin1 con-
stantly. Quickly apre.d
on chilled fUltn1. Let
stand unW fudte ii firm.
Yield: 35 squaret.
.... I .t '" ' ' ~
u nmtlfi•11 ,.o ,.,. ,.,,.,"'"lt , .. 1111 Utllt.ue.~l lllO ... ,
,.ICES IFHCTIVI THIU
WIO .• OIC. 24, 1 .. 0.
Prunes add
nutrition to
holiday
baking.
..
Ill& CRIB
LEOS
... 119" ffi Pork loin Roast 149 ,.
ff! ;;;k·ct;:.;~···· .. 149
ffi s;~;;:r.t·~~-s ... .. 14 9
k of C:i..d I 111• A•t il+ Whole Shoulder Clod 208
" m 9;·;;;d' i~;k~;~ ... """ ... 89
H.+ ~~k~d· H·; m '" 298 •••
WMM0t~'•rt14"'
!l!Fresh leg 0 Pork 149
I\
m G",~:~;r 9·;;1
-~GIVE I TIMEX WITCH---..
~,10 8/o OFF
·m .. '•• "'a •1• ' I WI I 'Al Wt
II ••
.. :· : • . . . . . . . .
I • I .
..
ONLY ~ILOT ...... 0.: I ·-22. 1• Television TONIGHTS LATEST LISTINGS
uo , .....
~W()fiWil
.. lfelnH ~ • ~IQ
111preo •H•PIMIO won
··~-111\C! .. 111 C)(\. ~Jt rTUlllOfl 10 •Niii Ill\
l)tl ,.,. .. llf.0 'f>lll * 000
ti•ullla ol u llde vol 0010
1N1 IQrNe c~1
• 01 .Wl P:OOU•All.
PH••tlvloto !I•"""• •• .._,, ~Cl\•tQ<tt ~
I T TACOOUOH
w ·11•1 •M
~I-....... "' ~·~
m•'10nl\1 oH~ ""'~ 10
ti•~• • •w Vlll one ~vuu1teo
., .... 11 .. ,.....,
• f H{ IKNHY 111l L
IMOW
• ELECTRIC COMPAN'r
flll)
• AH ElllA~HAH
CHAii~
C£1.EMATION
Proc•h •O"• l•••l•ng .
•11191r1g .. no dan<;ing l)'Pt·
Gi i 01 the Elilaoetrum pert
Cid r11on1io111 "'• tea111re hol·
tOly
· C8SNEWS
8.30 G BULLSEYE
tD WELCOME BACK,
KOTTER
When Ba11>.;11no oec1des
10 run IOf lludlllll body
p<es1deot. n1s <:ampa1gn
18Chniques <:raa111 mora
problems tnan anyone bar·
gained 101
• GOOOTIME.8
fnetma catches he< cousin
nlpO<ng al the lamlly kquo<
suPply
II OICKC~VETT
Guest Haroll:I MKmlllan
tplfl 1 OI 2)
6!i) STUOIO SEE
Stunt Kid Hollywood
stunt kid Reid RonClefl per·
lorms a world record·
breaking 1ump off a high·
rise (R)
M•A.•s•H
When Henry Blake 1s
11an11erred 10 Tokyo.
Hawkeye launches a wild
campaign 10 get n1m 1>ac1t.
7:00 IJ CBS NEWS D N8CNEWS
Edward Asner as .. Lou Grant" in·
vestigates a long.unsolved murder from
Hollywood's golden days in the repeat of
an Emmy-winllfng episode tonight at 10
on CRS. Channel 2.
U HAPPY DAYS A.GAIN
Rlcll•e poses as the owner
ol a cna1n ol nardwlltl
~ SIOles 1n Otde< to meet the
Wisconsin Cola poster g111 G J()l(ER'S WILD
• M•A•S•H
Ha•keye undergoes a
drasuc change #hen he
t>ecomes temporary <:om
maoder ol lhe 4077m
• BARETTA
fD OVER EASY
Lifelong M arriage
Guests· Linus arid Ava
Pauling, Or Paul Kingsley,
Clara·and TC>~ Brown,
6!i) MACNEIL I LEHRER'
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
7:30. 2 ON THE :rowN 0
A youngster w'Tth
rourelle s syndrome.
which was once contused
wlln demon1<: possession,
Sieve covers Ille Se1ual
Allerna111res Lltes1yle Con·
venllOll a day 1n lhe 1110 ol
a phot09raphe•
D FIGHT BACK wnH
OA\110 HOROWITZ
l op1cs Bolo Ill commorc1a1
cnallenge. tree vacation
oilers. diet pills I weigh!
loss gadgelS; micro I m1n1·
m1<:ro <:asseues U SHANANA
Guest· Dusty Spronglleld G FACE THE MUSIC
• ALL IN THE FAMILY
Ar<;hte 1ns1s1s that a new
'1ome •• no1 his -· be found
lor llllle Stephanie C>ut
klnd·hearted Edith has
otner ideas fll MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
6!i) MOREOFTHE
l11nlly lrom ll'lelf ~
dayt In KAllMI to tlleif
11rkl11 In w .iou1 Grow le
pr....,lllO In tn1t r.irot-
peollve IHIUrlng ct•MIG
~ d111ng t>aak to ,,,.
..,.._. blglnnlng (R)
• MOW! * * e • "GOlng My W1y"
I tU41 Blog Croaby. Berry
FIUgl rlld A prlHt
111S1gnecl 10 • downlrod-
derl p1tlsl\ •ork1 a mlrlCle
wllh the perlett '"" the
people
G THE ULTIMATE
WEAPOH
Jim M<:Krtll llOSll 8 dOC:U·
ITWKllaty on bringing B11>1eS
10 Chr1s11an1 belund Ille
Iron Ct.11a1n
• P.M . MAGAZINE
A behrnd-lhe-1<;1nes )ook
a1 tl\e Sears ma1l0oroer
<:a1alog, woolly worms that
prldlcl lhe weather. sing·
1ng Christmas messages,
Chel Tell on oarvlng
knives. Or WaS<:o na.s 11
quiz on lleartng
• SOUOOOU>
Host Dionne Watwl<:k
S) 28 TONIGHT
8:30 IJ Cl) LADIES' MAN
Alan is besle<;ied by angry
readers and co.workers
alter he wrnes an article on
marriage ano rntideltly tD SEVENTEEN GOING
ON NOWHERE
Tl11s si:>e<:•al oxplores 111e
reta11onsh1p ol a father and
son who have lost tou<:h
and the drastte measures
the 1a1ner talo.es 10 get
lll•ough 10 h1S son
fli) ORE.AT
PERFORMANCES
She Loves Me·· Robin
, Elhs and Gemma Craven
s1a1 1n lhlS SIOly OI a cou
pie who "meet" lhrougl1 a
lonely 11earts cotumn onty
10 dlS(;OVUr thiJI 'they
olready lo.new each Olher
!R)
8:4S D l!]) TO BE
ANNOUNCED
g:oo fJ CI) M•A•S•H
The doctors are pressed
1n10 service as temporary
saloon 1.eepers when a
orawl puts Rosie in the
hOSp11al (R)
It A Pfinc. dilgUIMd II I
•IC>Ofler ,,_.. • M11tlng
lntlruc:tor Ind ll'ley 1111 In
lo.,. aJ QOH COAYELL
t:IO • Cl) HOUSE CALL.I
One ot Cheli.y'a llVO<t\I
plllenl• tum• oul to be 1
c;on woman 111amp11ng to
1x1on money from him Ind
lhe hoapi\11. (R)
0 MOYIE * *~ "8ronk" (lll7S) Jldc
Palancl , David Blrnay A
IUtl)lndld Oellcil.,. jnlll·
train 1 n1rco1k;1 •lnQ
rnponslbte tor 1 fellow
olflc•r's <Jealll
10i00 8 Cl) LOU ORA.HT
Lou pull Ille Trib Slllt on
the trail ot a long-unsolved
murd.er involving names
lrorn Hollywood's golden
years (R) ..
8 HEWS 8 MOVIE * * *'I\ "Camelot'' (Part
1) ( 1967) R1cnard Hams-,
Vanessa Redgrave King
Arthur ballles Sir Lencelot '°' the love ot Oueen
Guinevere c;a.,s1ng the
decay·of the m1g1<:11 land
01 c ame101 . •
., INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
t0:30 G). NEWS 9 TMEREHEARSAL
Award·w1nn1ng ct>oreogra·
pher Giordano weaves a
SIOty into rehe1J1sal While
taking his class through
lheir oaces Oancers
include Juhe Walder and
Jeffrey M11dens1e1n
«i) MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
· Testamen1 Ot Voulh
Vera 1s plunged 1nlo 111e
hell or a 11on1 1tne hospual
and assrgned 10 nurse
wounded Germans (Part
4)
1 t:OO fJ D (I) (!§) NEWS 0 HOLLYWOOO
SOU ARES 0 NEWL YWEO GAME
G) THE 000 COUPLE
FeliM trios 10 palch lhongs
up wl\en a pro hoc~ey
player hits Oscar ano
winds up cnalleng1ng the
athlete 10 a bo•tng match
CD ONE STEP BEYOND
JOHN DARLING
TUBE TOPPERS
ABC D 6:00 -Monday Night Foot·
ball. In the final game of the regular
season, the defending Super Bowl cham·
pion Pittsburgh Steelers battle the San
Diego Chargers .
NBC D 8 : 00 -Little House on the
Prairie. A three.hour special episode re-
capping segments from the early years
of the series with Michael Landon,
Karen Grassle and company.
KTLA 0 8:00 -"Going My Way."
Bing Crosby and Barry Fitzgerald both
·won Oscars for their performance in this
.award-winning movie from 1944.
e CLAES
OlDENBORG'S CRUSOE
UMBRELLA
A profile ot Claes Olden·
burg, one ol Ille few mod·
em sculptors who has
beer1 su<:cesslul In creating
large outdoor scu1p1ure. is
presented
11:30 IJ Cl) QUINCY, M.E.
A hall-i!aten apple 1s Oum·
<:y s only clue IO· !tie
wl\ereabou1s ot a k•d·
napped leen·ager 0 THEBEST OF
CARSON
Gues1s PhylhS Newman
Joo Garagiola. Dan Hag.
gor1y. Earl "Fetha· Hines.
Marya Josie fR)
8 PRISONER: CELL
BLOCKH
Violence erupts when Bea
leams tnal the new amval,
Sharon, 1s 1n prison '°'
drug otlenses D NEWS Q GUNSMOKE
A neng1ng-m1nde<1 iury s•I$
111 1udgemen1 01 l11eh. a
s1ern silent mounra1n man
accuse<! ot th1ee wanton
Slay1ngs tD HOGAN'S HEROES
Col Klink Ines 10 learn
Hogan s secre111
CD MOVIE
To Be Annouric;ed
8) ~ CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS ~ ABCNEWS
11;50 @) IRONSIDE
A colleg11 profebsor
betonies a marlceo man
a11er one ot his s1uden1s
takes her hie
-Ml>NIGHT-
12:00 U TWILIGHT ZONE
Jana ret>els from tlle
mon1>1onous Ille she ano
her par en ts are 1tv1ng U ABCNEWS
• YOU BET YOUR LIFE
Buday 11ac1o.en meets .1
yoyo champion a Water
melon Ouoon and a man
who plays 1ne pen<:•I
12:20 U MOVIE * * wee~end 0 1 Te1tor
I 19701 Robert Conrad Lee
Ma10ts A. pau ot ~ 1<1
nappers search lor J
r9pll\Cemem When ltieor
111c11m 1s acc1den1a11y k1tl"IJ
12·30 0 TOMORROW
Guest c.a11oonis1 Gdl!dn
Wilson
D ISPV
Relutn 1 o Glory
G THEFBI
"Ropa OI Gold"
• YOU 8tT YOUft Llf'E
BudOy HIMlklll maets I
lldy aneke tr&l"tf. Mr,
Nudl I U.S.A Ind a ,
lemlle •~·l<>Gltay
• INDEPENDENT
Nf:TWOftK NEWS
12:40 8 Cl) THE NEW
AV£NOERS
Sited, Pur(lay and GllYlbit
<:onlront an enemy egent
whO Is <lOO feet 1 .. 1 (R)
12;50 (II AOAM· 12
"Tr111ln1ng Wheelt"
1:00e MOVIE
To Be Announcied
1:308 NEWS G THE LONE RANGER
"A Brol\en Match'
1:501 NEWS
2:00 NEWS 2:201 NEWS
2:25 MOVIE
• ·~ Man On The Oul·
st<Se 'I t975) Lornti Greene,
James Olsen A poltce
captain comes out 01
re111emen1 lo !rack down a
gang 01 mobsters respon.
s1ble tor executtng his son
and abducttng h•S grand·
son I 2:30G) NEWS
I -
Ttw!rday••
Dnfll i111e 1tlo1•ie•
-AFTERNOON-
12·00 G). * * * The ThrAe
w orlds Of Gulh11er ( 1960}
Ker win Mo111ews. Jo Mor·
row A man 15 washed
,1shore on an 1stand 01 1tny
Pf'Ople
3:00 IW * • > Lost Homo11"
1Par1 2) ( 1973J Potor Ftn~h
Liv Ullmann A k1<1nappe<l
d•plom111 discovers Shan-
9r1 La d place 01 e1erna1
pca<:e
3'30 0 • *'' ·s e11e11 Alont!
( 1975) Dewey Mafltn Aldo
Ray A 1'1 yeor old C>oy
1cao\ his s" younger s1bl-
1n9s on a pe111ous cross-
countr y 11ek during the
1800s
by Armstrong & Batluk
Chaaa~I Ll•ting•
8 KNXT !CBS) Los Angeles
GREAT AMERICAN
GOSPEL SOUND
Tennessee Em1e Ford and
Oelll.1 Reese IOatTt up for a
ce1eorn1ton of trad1hona1
and gospel music trom
Nash~1lle's Grand Ole
Opry. teatunng perlor·
mances by An<lrae
Crouch, Grandpa Jones
Ramona and the Happy
Goodman Family
IJ THAT'S INCREDIBLE
Featured a skier who rat ·
os on grass and rocks. a
sculp101 who worl<s C>y a
volcano, a horse lhat
d11ves a ca1. a birth control
1>ra
WELL I Klos ... SANTA
CLAUS 15 ON H<5 WAY ...
0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
g ICTLA find J Los Angeles D KABC· TV !ABC) Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB tCBS) San Diego
G KHJ-TV (Ind I Los Ange1es
Q1) KCST (ABC) San Diego
• KTIV (Ind J Los Angeles e KCOP·TV(lnd) Los Angeles 9 KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles 6!i> KOCE·TV (PBSI Huntington Beach
()) P.M. MAGAZINE
11:00 IJ (() FLO
An 1c11 siorm maroo11s Flo
Earl and Les in Earl s drat.
1y old C>arn 0 THE LITTLE HOUSE
YEARS
The s1ory of lhe Ingalls
G COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
Rebel Roundup Tourna·
ment
G) MERV GRIFFIN
Guests Bundy Hackel!.
11a1e11e Horper, Doan
Conn. Carol Botwin CD DANCE FEVER
«i) MOVIE * • •) Thin l(;e (1937)
Sonja HPnte I yrone Pow-
~ 'Sat11rday Night' dead but unburied
,I a ,,,,....
i:e ·'
..----I
tiroofce'~ • Mppfts ,.,. w1.-""°'o
~ctress Brooke Shields shows off two mup-
il!pets s he qeated her self after taping a guest
Ql;ilppearance on the Muppet Show in London. ~'They're pigs, sort of 1" she expla ins.
11----H.-.ous ton oi!dered
J o air 'Princess'
~· HOUSTON <AP> -The controversial movie
e_ath-of .a Princess''-must be .broadcast by a
ouston public teleYisiOJLitalion within ~ d;ws. a
der al judge has ruled~ -
U.S. District Judge Gabrielle McDonald said
Issuing a perm anent injunction that censol"Ship
f the rilm "raises specters or totalitariaism that
ust now be ended."
• KUHT, operated by the University or Houston,
a ncelled the airing or the movie last May.
Despite strong protests from the Saudi govern-
. ent. the movie was seen in most or the United
tales, but not in Houston.
Dr. Patrick J. Nicholson, former vice presi·
ent of the university, s aid when he took the show
ff the schedule : ·'Our long friends hip wilh the
audl government and U.S. national interests all
int to a need to avoid exacerbating the situa·
Ion."
GE&TllUDE 'ARNSTONE, a former Houston
hool J>oant trust~ .. filed swt acainat the-Station
tfte show wu cance . ....
Ma. McDonald issued Ttuarsday'1 permanent
·unction tn splt.e of rulings by the Slh U.S. Circuit ourt ol Appeals in New Orleans and by \J.S.
upreme Court Justice Lewi1 Powell rejectin1 a
mporary injunction she iaaued lul May t , three
ay1 before the movie was lo bave been broadcast.
Gre1 Wilson, an assistant in the Tuaa at-
omey 1eneral'a office, said an apPtal would be
ed.
By PETl-:R J . BOYER
LOS ANGELES CA P'J The new
"Saturd<1y Night Live" has been pro-
nounced dead on arrival by viewers
and critics, but N BC insists 1t st ill
feels a faint pulse. The network will
not pull the plug on the show until at
least next spring.
N RC programming chief Brandon
Tartikoff s ays the s ho w will be grant·
ed its full 20·week run, despite a
steep ratings decline, critics' an·
tipathy, reported backstage chaos
and rumors that "SNL" will be orr
the air by mid·J anuary.
"WE'RE ENTERING into a
norma l pe riod of reparation, ..
Tartikoff said' "and the s how's find-
ing itself " The s how lost itself when
creator-producer Lorne Michaels left
after last season, along with the stars
and writers.
NBC gave the franchise to Jean
Doumanian, whose ex{>erience on
the old "SNL," some say, was book·
ing m usic acts and arranging accom·
modation for guests.
Ms . Doumanian got a n entirely
new crew cast. writers, the lot -
who proved lo be not ready for any
time, prime or otherwise. Their nro·
duct was cr ude, occasionally of·
fensive. as was its predecessor ; but
il wasn 't funny often enough to war-
rant indulgence.
Stories of backs tage bickering
began to ernerJ{e. Write rs were fired.
The audience dwindled After three
programs. "SNL " had slipped four
whole point:-from its ratings stand-
'"~ in the same period last year
<:rim.
THEN I.AST WEEK , a senior pro·
gramrning executivt.> al NBC. Irv
Wilson. told the trade paper Variety
that "Saturday Night Live," as ren·
dered by Ooumanian and her troops.
"has no bite it s hould be providing
inte ll igent irreverence but instead
it's mostly taking c heap shots."
ll was Wilson's public complaint
that prompted Tartikoff's defense of
the s how.
"Those are things we've been say-
ing interna lly," Tartikoff said "I
must say I winced a btt lo see them
out in public."
"But Jean Doumanian was given a
firm 2()-show pickup," Tarlikoff said .
"It's a live show. When you put it on.
you have lo know you're going to air
!>Orne mistakes. You don't have fi ve
weeks to mess a round with it. like
ynu do with a taped ser ies.
"WHAT YOU HAVE to do with
new writers is, keep on letting them
writ . Through a-pro~e-ss-or evolu·
lion. some of these people will turn
into fi rst-rate writers. All they're
missing now what Herbe Sargent
head writer on the old show was, a
father-figure to help the m structure
their stuff.
•
CHRISTMAS Fl:AST
WITH SANTA
I
The kid~ wi11 lt1w our ChnMm:i~ Auffct in The GramJ Ponn~l'
hc..'Cause Sama Claus will be there. Y11u11 love it fm the fahul,1u-.
army n( holtJ oy ~rx'\.iahie:.:
Roast Baton of Beef
Baked Ham, Champn!."lnc Snurc
Trout GrenohloL"<'
Roast T urkcy. Ch<'51nu1 Ort.~m~
Leg of U.mh1 Mm1 Sauce
Cnnd1tod Yams
PoachcJ Whole :ilrnon
H :im, T urkcv, Red R oulnJ111
Pumrkm T'lc
Mincemeat
AnJ Mu~·h, Much More
Serving from 12:00 Noon to 7:00 P.M. wnh contil'luous ent~oinmcm.
$12. 50 Adults, $7 .. 59 Children. RCf<'TVation n>quc..'Sted: 752-8777
~REGISTRY
ISlro MacArthur Boulevnrd. Irvine 7S2-a777
'T'M Retb•rv Hoitl Corpom lnn, 01111•, Trim
"But what I look for. my apprnach.
is that everv week 1-d like to sec
something n~" that works By the
halfway point , we s hould have
something that's on I rack , something
that works lik<' the old show did "
Tartikoff said the acerbic cnt1c1sm
of the new show has been unfair.
· Tht!!>c a.re btl{ i.hot!.; I hey rt· tryrng
to fill You kno". a:-. f<1r as I'm con-
c·e rnccl. tht•rt> isn't that much C"omedy
on teh.•\ l!'>IUO thal \.\C r an all s it and
watc h and enJOY What I 'd love to see
ts for people to re view this !'.how in
Febru<ir" Gi"e 11 a chance. instead
of huytn~ ti ··
"Sports ••• "
Keeps you
on top of
the local
scene ..
everyday
in the
SAINT JAMES E PISCOPAL CHURCH
3209 Via Lido. Newport Beach
the rlramaw • anti l n\1tc~ ,•ou lo ob:.cn t· \11th U!'
)O~ (IW1 f.'\'t'OI:> of l'hrt'I lllOl'-1111£• I
i::w P . .\f . Fam1I~ Fest1rnl C HRISTMAS EVE
l'horal Eu1·hans1
10 :20 P.\1 l'h or<1l
f'n•<.t'OliJllOO uf
Daily Pilat
\ "ald1 ~ l.i!Q.a~ ·
11 :OO l' . .\1 . FeSfl\'iJI ('horal
;\l ai:~ <Jn<I Sermon
C HRISTMAS DA\' 111:011 \.'1. l 'hural
f-:11dtar1 .. 1 :rnd St•rn111n
BALTZ -BERGERON
. .... -
SMITH & TUTHILL
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
"A/fordable funerals''
PHONE 646·9371
LJAt:k 4NOt:R~ON )
REVEALS In lht
~RTAINMENT I MO\JIE AEVIEW Mondly, December 22. 1te0
'Change of Seasons' mixed blessing
a, aGN P•NNINGTON --------Coot.ecnporary aodaJ 1tlitudel and
the emerlll'I equUty ol women an
lettlCWncJY rene<'ted in the t'llm
Fiea.Me Group preHntaOon ol •·A
ChanpolS.uona ··
The produrt.lon la btln• faceuoual)'
refetf"td to aa an Ea•t Cout venlon
of an earlier 20th Fo• releaae.
"Lo vine CouplH, '' becauH both.
hlma atar Sh:arley Ma<'L•\n• and both
deal, It leut on a aurfal'\I Ind, wllh
the ume t.heme ol a marned couple
wbQ each tqe out.s•de loven
T•• C'OMPA .. 80Nli lrtl probably
lnevltable, but It 'a too bed bttaliH
'A Chanee o f
eason1 ' Ii far
supenor and n bu
a lot to say about
mod~rn r~la
uonsb1ps It ialso
features
MacLalne, wbo as
always 1m
preS&ave, lD one or
her b e s t
performances, an
years
The film 1s not entirely successful,
however, due to some overly contrived
situations, some inanely silly dialogue
and an wieasy blend or snickering
comedy and serious contemporary
drama, But MacLaine's s uperb
performance and the positive way in
which her character faces a midlife
( &,~· J
maratal criaia muu ll more l.bao
wortbwhUt aod auperlor lo many re-
cent efforu
Scripted by Erich Se1aJ. Ronni
K ero and Fted Se1al from a 1tory by
Erich Se&al and producer Martin
Ransohort. the Wm concerna a
woman wbo discovers her huaband of
21 years, 1t colle1e professor, is
havln& an affair wilb one or bis
students: She la naturally hwt by this
revelation and ends up golnl to bed
with a young man who comes lo
Install some bookcases while her
hus bllnd is out ol town on a buslnesa
trip with his mistress.
HEil AFFAJll 8EGINS casually
and without spite or malice, but she
quickly rediscovers an ability to have
fun and a joy thal bas gone out ol her
marriage. When her husband r«urns
and finds them together, he is
s hocked -expressing expected
cnauvinistic argumenla -but she
refuses to back off and all four decide
to share a midterm vacation at their
winter home. At this point, the plot
gets overly contrived with t.he arrival
of the couple's daughter, who is
having romantic problems of her
own. and the introduction of the
bu.tband'a miatreq' father, who had
left bUI wUe for a youn1er girl.
Whlle the al.Ory ia very modem in
lta attitudes and ita presentation ot
contemporary relatlon.abips, the film a. rather old·fubiooed in terms ot
llhnmaklna. especially a lyrical •kilnc sequence which is merely ·an
excu.te ror a soundtrack theme song.
"Wbere Do You Catch the Bus ror
Tomorrow?" with music by Henry
Mancini, lyrics by Alan and Marilyn
Bercman and performed by Kenny
Rankin.
C:MAlfGE OP' SIAIONS
Jllllc:.Mwy·P'•• PrOC111ur . . , , , , . • l!Mrtln 11.,.loOl>olt
o.11119 C.W/P'-wl1I• C.ut· Stolrley Mecl..llne, Anthony Hoc>kln\, Bo
O.rek, MkMel Br-. M.lry 8eth H"'1, ECI
Wint .... p .. , Re91M, I( c.11 .... AOCICIObln.
AWWllnQ limit 110 ml...,h•s
Ml'AAl't .. r..t: It
It's a nice song, but it's an
intrusion as incorporated halfway
through the film. The story grinds to
a halt at this point and the pace is
never fully reeovered.
aaCH-'aD LAN.G'S direction i.s
basically straightforward and he is to
be credited for aiding his actors in ·
c reating fully dimensional and
marvelously shaded
characteriutions. The attempts at
surface comedy, however, are often
awkward and inconsistent with the
underlying sensibility and the basic
reality of the characte.izations.
which are thoroughly explored and
invested witl\dramtic detail.
The focus is aJmost entirely on
MacLalne's character and sbe fills
~t beautifully. Her performance is
s ubtly d eveloped with revealing
nuance and the emotional transitions
involved are relayed with
remarkable and realistic ease.
Anthony H op kins is also
impressive as her philandering
husband. He is a gentle, basically
innocent man, who is a product of a
male·oriented society and who does
not feel he is doing anything that is
really wrong or unusual, with this
chauvinistic naivete adding to the
co mplexit y of the n egative
character. Hopkins is ·particularly
amusing in the way he relays boyish
hurt and a quizzical expression over
the realization of what his wile is
doing.
MICHAEL BRANDON is quite
good as MacLaine's new playmate,
and he has an excellent scene in
whi ch he reveals his past and the
conditioning that has led to iris
carefree. noncommittal philosophy
toward life. (although the audience is
unprepared for this revelation, which
is typicaJ or the film's sudden shifts
in tone).
Bo Derek is extremely attractive
as Hopkins ' mistress and he r
performance is generally effective.
SAIS 1 Ol NO OF •O'> AMI llRISIOI SUNflOWI I'
~6-1711 "9 to 5"
A A\RMOJNT PICT\ff ~ ........ .
< MCML.)00( Dy Patlmouf\I Picl1JtesCorpora1oon :"•~
and wan O.sney ProcM:•O>s All Right$ Rese<ved ~~~
~'tf.
1:~10:20
Walt D•sney·s Song~Soulh
''SEEMS LIKE
OLD TIMES" f _"POPEYE"
I c-=·=·T=R=1=e =u =TE=·=· =>
NOW PLAYING
MAM SOUT• coan c1•1MMH aftlrr 5-. 5 ... , Cos1a Mts;i ~49 3352 Otaf!Oe 634 1~~3 ~ CH A• o. ..
IDWUDS" C•MA WIST \IA llOWIU UllCOll MIH-41 wes1m111s1e1 891 393~ 81~ 990 4022 Buen.1 Par~ d2 I 4070
IDWUOI" UDOlllACll •ISSIOll DalH·IM
El TO!o ~1 !>880 S..n Jwn Ci.P•s11ano 493·4~5
• PUIU ACClf'Tl9 fOlt Tiii •tMWllT ... .___.
•JOU I. MICHAEL\ GARTH H. DIABIHSICY 1w...,. .. ,., 18011 CLARI,-...,,
'1lla.'lt"--.JOffN MAlllEY UM CArnALl GAi.£ GARNETT
.. ICOUEEN DEWHURST!
,.,...,..., 11r IHNARD SLA.0£ ._ .. hh ~ Pioy
.......,. .. '"'"'•"MORTON GOTntEB -•,,_...TH! nJRMAN·~TERCOM~Y.,.. RJCHARO i llRIGNT
.....-i.,jO!L I . MICRAEIJM4GARTH H ORABINSICY
Dlnml.,IOLCUll "~jlUIMI! Tlflle!'-.11r9ARIY MANIWW
..,....,. .,.i.,IARIY MANILO'l'.JAa Ft:LDMAN and BRUCE SUSSMAN
.. ., UN _,.NB!llG -.... _.,..,_ ---~ lhii;::-.r.:= I\!~~~--lJlllJ.
~n
l_Pn). ~-c=&-
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Anaheim Drive·ln 81oollhursl loge South Coa~I Plaza
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ,,,., r•011fc CMtw on .. -..
Ill• Bo•rd ol Educ all on 01 th• '-AM, Caelfenl• tz111
He•port.-W Unifi ... Ser-I 01.trkl PLAIHTIFF REIHJ0HH1 U.TLIH &
of Or.,. Qounty •111 recelw seeleo CLEllAEHTS.aPM'lrwnlllP
bids .. " J:CIO "·"'· on tM \2111 cMY ol P•r1M"""' J•n.,.ry, Nt, al IN oftlu of w lCI OEFEHDAHT. FRED VAHLSIHG.
';f,11 I 01 I I« I t Cl 81 ttSJ JR : ,.RIO V"AHL$1HG. II. .•• ~~n1 1.' ~tree1~to~1. Meu. •k• F .H. VAHLSIHG, II; FRED
C•llfomle, .c 'llllflkll time Mkl Olds .. 111 VAHLSIHG, Ill, .... F H. VAMLSIHG.
beJ>UblklY__,_,_tor· Ill, XOHU IHTERCOHT IHEHTAL c E H T II AL KIT c HEH INDUSTRIES, INC.: •nO ooes"t
EOUI PMEHT lllr0U9l110, lllCIU\lw
All bldl -to be In ..:ccwdence •llh SUMMONS £2!\~lllons, lnstr11cllons, and CAMNUM811t.,t•
Speclflcetlcins -Ch.,,. now on Ill• In NOTICE! Yw ,...,. -_., TIM
Ille offke of .. PllrcNslng Director <Mr1 ,,.., '9cl* •l•tt ..., •l"9Mt
"' Mid Sd-4 Olltrkt. llSI PIK•nll• ... r ............ -.... r .......
St('ff1,Cosla-.CallfornleHU1 wlfllltt • M"-•-Ille l111'wmat ....
Ho Blddtr may •llhdr..., his BIO for Ml-.
• perlocl of forty·flw CO> cuys •lier II yo11 wllh to '9ff "" edvlu ol <in lhe Cl•I• Mt"°" ttoe op9t1lng thereof. •ltorney In this matter. you should do
12·2· ....... 10 ~
JOHN SAVAGE
''INSIDE MOVES" 1:1~ .-1tt11
NOW PLAYING
UA CITI CINEMA
Orange 634·3911
lDWUOI' IRllTDL
Sanla Ana 540-7444
UA CINEMAS
Wesrmtnster 893-05-46 ------EDWARDS' WOOOIRIDGl
Irvine 551 ·0655
STADIUM DIUH·IN
Orange 639·8700
PAClflC S
Ml-WAY JI DIUH·ll•
Westminster 891 ·3693
-i I i==:::=:::::==::::=:::i
"EVERY WHICH
WAY YOU CAN"
''THE FORMULA''
"THE ARISTOCRATS"
"LITTLE MISS
MARKE"" I CHILDREN'S PRICES
I "BLUES BROTHERS"
"'AIRPLANE" (PG)
··cHEECH & CHONG"(R
c ._J I "PRIVATE BENJAMIN"
"'GOODBYE GIRL"
l ==> I "FLASH GORDON"
"'SUCK ROGERS" ,___
"THE ELEPHANT MAN"'
"ESCAPE TO
ALCATRAZ"
Tiie Boero ol Eduullon ol 111• so promptly •O lhel your •rltten
H••PGrt·MHe Unified Scllool Dlslrl<t ,._,.,.,II any, may be fllecl on time.
re .. rws tl'lt rlth\ to ntl«I ..,y or e ll AVllOI U.... 1'11 tlM ,_..,.,.._,
Bid• encl no1 neceuary •«•Pl tM 11 trt...,..I _.. _ .. ,, c-r• Ud.
lowest Bid, encl to welve eny In· •ltt • ....._ .. • --U•. r..,.,..
lormellty rx ln't911larlty fn lfl\i BIO re. •• ~ • • .... LH la ,,. .. ,.,.,...
celwCI. c1......... ·~~=~==~==~-~ DA l ED: OK...-r 1•. 1'90 SI Ullld c»tM sotlcl18r el console M
"EVERY WHICH
WAY YOU CAN"
"HONEYSUCKLE ROSE' .........,,.... un •DoVedO en •sle •sunlo, Mberl•
Unifi«! Sc'-1 Dlstrkl h acerlo lnmeCll•l•mente, de est•
Of 0r-. c-tv CA m•M••, s11 ,._i. es<ril•, sl ll•y °""""' H•WY Fl"'9r el911f1a, .....0. ter '90lstr•IM • tl1tmpo. C.P.M. ' 1. TO Tl4E DEFENDANT A tivil PIH'<N''"' Director complelnl ,,.. btefl fifed by '"" pleln· 01'1 1~n11 tiff •olnSI you 11 you •l•h 10 O.tonCI
PublhheCI Onnoe CoYnty D••ly trols l•onult. You must. wllhln JO 0.ys
Pilot, O.C. n 2', lW 509)-IO •Iler tllls ~ 1, wrVltCI on you, ' Ille will\ INS tourt • written rHponw
PUBLIC NOTICE
•Call IU•H71.
Put • few word• towotll tor
10 t"9 <Oft\Pl91nl UnlHs you do '°·
your default •Ill be t!ntef'.0 on •P·
pllt•llon of the pl•lntlll, end lhh court
m•Y enter • ,.......,, 9941inst you ror
tN relief ,..,..._ In llw complelnt,
which COUid r...,11 In eernfshmenl of
w999,, t•lno of money or pr-rty or
olher rellt'f r•o.,.stt!d In th• com-
pl•lnt. DATED: Merch 1•, .,,,
LEE A. BA AH CH
Clefll r
ByS-L, 811•lon,
Oecal\y •
81t1AM It. 8UltG•U, ....
ltRIM.IOMN, CATLIN & CLIMENTS
611 "· , ......... ,.. " L•A ....... CA.'9t7 .. .._.,.., "*'ltf llUI 6tMP14
P11bli-Or-Coesl D•lly Pilot.' O.c. I, IS, 22. 2', 1'90 4'21.-0
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOT1Ca INVITING 81DS
Holle• h hereby 9lven 11'1•1 the
... ,... of Tront-of tlle Coesl Con1-
m1111l1y Coll ... District ol Oranoe
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to wofk for ou.
TIE
"UTfST
SPUTACUUI
011 ICE!
Au.--...... ~, a.a.-··-·-PU,_
sa YOUI
FAYOllTt
SESAU ST.
F11Ellts!
FOii GllOU, llAT£S CAll
(2l31 '74-5010
•Ufl U•°" IUGSllllOU 14
Al """' • ....., .............. .... ....
By Tlte Auoelaled Pnu
The following are Billboard'• bot record hi&a
for this week as they appear in BillboarCI
magazine:
HOT SINGLES
1. "Startin1 Over" John Lennon <Geffen)
2. "More Than I Can Say" Leo Sayer <Warner
Bros.)
3. "Love on the Rocks'' NeH Diamoni
<Capitol} 1
4. "Lady" KeMy Rogers <Liberty) s. "Hungry Heart" Bruce Springsteen <Colum-
bia)
6. "Every Woman in t.he World" Air Supply (Arista}
7. "Guilty" Barbra Streisand & Barry Gibb
<Columbia)
8. "The Tide is High'"( Blondie (Chrysalis)
9. "Hit Me With Your Best Shot" Pat Benalar
<Chrysalis}
10. ·'Tell It Like lt ls·' Heart< Epic l
TOPLPS .
1. "Double Fantasy" John Lennon & Yoko Ono
<Geffen)
2. "Guilty" Barbra Streisand (Columbia) _
3. "Hotter Than July" Stevie Wonder CTamla)
4. "Back In Black" AC -DC <Atlantic) ·
5. "Crimes of Passion" Pal Benatar
I Chrysalis)
6. "Eagles Live" Eagles (Asylum)
7 "Greatest Hits" Kenny Rogers <Liberty)
8. "Zenyatta Mondatla" The Police CA&M >
9. "The Jazz Singer" Neil Diamond (Capitol>
10. "Gaucho" Steely Dan (MCA)
s.c -· •1Bt-•• 494-1514
S.C.14•-• •t8r-y
494.1514
---·---STIR CRAZY t•i , .... ,, .. ,...._ ...... , ...
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,, ...... , ....
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IUMDill'f ........ ltO I.AM.' ..,...... _, __
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Sf:EMS LlllE OLD TIMES ,.._ ,. , ..... ,.,. .,,, _,...,.. , ......... , ........ .
~ t:ta. ........ ......,. ........... .
IMPOllTANT NOTICE! CNllOllUI UllOlll 11 flUl! --·--·--Mm ~;r;:· l HO~~==L~:EF~~~ 1•1
11 Ho AM CM A-With lon'U., Aec .. -y a.1,. Y-Own AM ,.,.,, ....... ml :.ri:-...::: I '7.:;;~~;c::;::-
2 ...! .... _ --879-"50 LOvt AHO IULLETS ,._
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_.... ____ _
A CHANOI Of" NAIOHa 1111 -~---·-"" -. ANY WHla4 WAY YOU CAN--,.,._Y~l.l ftOll .,_
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artists havt• ht•1•11 q u11. u11
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ly h as alway~ ·•<"l'"Plt•tl the 11
work 1( tl ww, good I c·<Jtlhl11 1 t.1
h:ipp1er thal w t' an· th• ""'"· ''' distribute this f1 ln1 ·
THERE IS/\ flip -;ulf· 111 1111 "
sue Polan~k1 ~ ll·g:.il ,.r .. til,·m ...
may not mflut>nC'l' thr• mo.u hut
the movie also 1c; unhkl·h 1 .. I 1·lti
him in court
D1stnct AllOrn(.•\ Jnltn \'Jn tit·
Kamp, whose offt<·<· pro\t•tut1·d
Polanski for unl:.iwful S(.'Xual 111
tercourse w1tti. a 1:1 'P;11 olcl
girl, s ays. "I don t tlt1n k tit<·
movie is C11>t to niakt· '"' d11
Richard Chemberlaln
DIRECT~J.l AND
f>olansk' ;"'M1._ i( n 31\t
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-----1 "THE LAST WAVE'' . ,
I ~ \ 1t n 1. •II 111•1 i1•
-.. PLUS /o//h1q ':~'::\~:::,•:•·1 11 NEil DIAMOND lAUR~NCf. OLIVIER
·~, ."'1£ -'~tli~dr11J1
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I
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The Power Behind The Throne
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ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES
.'h.,er ihe Hil l Gang?
Tilt· ti5th lttr·thda~ pan~ for Frank Sinatra 1 right> had a
'"''IL'rn 11.J\ or ;1 s cowpoke-; \I1lton Berle 'left > and Burt
I .1111 ·'"' l'J v. 1•1 1• Jmwit ll1l' 2rt1 gu,,..,ts pay ing t ribute to < 11d Hhw t-., t·~
edf ord's 'People'
board award • ns
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,l)All t I 0Ct J"tt \?0 'QI). 00 ~
ROBERT DENIRO
"RAGING
BULL'' IRJ
OAM. t ) ' ; \ 00 , x. o~
Feminist
musical
fizzles
By JAY SllAKBVTI'
NEW YORK (AP) -"Onward
Vi ctoria" is a new musical
about Victoria Woodhull, the
19th century American feminist.
Alas, it's the kind of show where
you'd best look for the exists in
ca se it starts.
It stars the talented Jill Eiken-
berry as Victoria, advocate of
women 's suffrage and free love.
She was quite a wowser in her tim e,
But "Onwa rd Victoria" is
anything ~ut a wowser . It drifts,
lw<rnder s , dawdl es, seem s a
show in sea rch of a focus and is
no good, either:
IT OPENS WITH Vi ctoria and
her sister <Reth Austin > arriving
in Ne w York. from an itinerant
bar ks:.ro.und nl ·'magnetic heal·
ing." fortunt:·tclling and such,
a nd vowing lo do "some thing big ...
IL ends more than 2'h hours
lali'r with the two exiting Fun
City as dutcasts, but with Vic ·
toria undaunted , vowing with a
glint in her eyes to take her
r<idi cal ideas to England.
It 's nev<•r clear whether our
heroine was a flim.fl a m gal who
h1·laledly he<:ame a feminist
<·rusader or whethe r s he st arted out nobl1•
011, 'VES, SHE run:c; for Presi-
dl·nl. hut this mainly serves to
a ll11w a rou!>tng, flag-waving,
~11ng ftllf'd campa ign number.
,\ft l'r 1t'!> over, there 's no talk of
th1 t·ll'<'l1on t·xcept briefl y, when
!\Ill' 111-.1·:.
Th•· whole lhrng looks as if
then• WdS JU!>t too much about
Woi>dhull to deal with, so the
J ul h11 r 'i· lyricist s <C ha rlotte
AnkN and Irene Rosenber g )
Just lt•t 'er rip and hoped for the
ht:!>t
~-~=.;
ROBERT DENIRO JOHN SAVAGE
''RAGING
BULL'' <R>
"INSIDE
MOVES" IPGI
OAIU I lO Jot s 00
1 00 • 00 10 Ml
"A CHANGE "THE
OF SEASONS" ARISTOCRATS
• (POI I· (0)
OAll'f t )0 ) 10 a )0 OAll T t 10, J tt
r ~t» 4MIOOtOOtH
MOW~· t tNCtt;fHC hi II COM~l I MARLON
8 RANOO ROBIN WILLIAMS
GEORGE r. SHELLEY DUVALL
scon IN
"THE POPEYE FORMULA" (PGJ
(RI
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OAIU I tO • M e 11 l )t ll U
ZIP·A·DEE·,
DOO·OAHI 0 Wa lt I
0 1sney ·s T
10
:J-~~ South@
GlNl Wlll>H
llCHAU> PIYOtt
S1'1R
C~RAZY :.C,~.:u..,. [!J
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co•
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I
•
CALIFORNIA
... '"' .. Outg o ing Sen
Gaylord Nel>on
Dem W1 ~ . ha !>
turned-down high
pay wg lobbying JOb:,
lo accept the po~t o(
national chairman of
the Wildern e ~~
Society
Ship line
transfer
OK'd
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP> Prude ntial
Lines Joe. has been
authorized by the state
Public Utilities Com·
mission to sell and
transfer some operating
rights and property to
Delta Steamship pnes
of Louisiana.
The operating rights
involve transportin g
_ passengers, their lug-
gage and cars between
the ports of San Fran-
cisco and Los Angeles.
Delta, an international
passenger and freight
shipper, bought certain
Prudential business and
services.
AMONG THE services
were those involving
Prudential's vessels SS
Santa Mariana, SS San-
ta Maria, SS Santa
Mercedes and SS Santa
Magdelena.
Used in Prudential's
worldwide, intercoastal
and intrastate water·
carrier service, they
have been chartered by
Delta and continued to
offer tfie same service.
T hrough passengers
receive priority with
any remaining s pace
avaltable· for Catifomla
intrastate travel.
The vessels will berth
at Pier 32 in San Fran·
cisco and Berth 154 at
Los Angeles with steam··
ing time betwe"E?n the
ports or about 20 hours.
THE P ROPOSED
service will be designed
for t hose desiring to
take a n overnig h t
pleasure cruise on a tux·
ury-type passenge.r ·
ca rgo v essel. The
vessels are 508.6 feet
long and have fi rst-class
accommodations for 130
people.
The regular fare will
be $150 and deluxe fare
$200. Most of the route
will be beyond the three-
mile limit in interna·
tional waters off t he
California coast.
Delta also was grant-
ed permission to have
the operating certificate
amended to "&uthorin
service at Los Angeles
rather than Long Beach,
providing flexibility if it
desires or has to change
berths in the Los
Angeles area.
Penalty told
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP> -A San Francisco
man has been sentenced
in federal court to six
. months in jail for sub·
milting false claims lo
the government in an in-
come-tax refund case.
Tim P . Wells, 37, also
was placed on probation
for 21,-', yean with the
condition be complete
100 boun ol community
a e r v i c e aft d m a k e
restitution.
C.11142-1171. -
··..Put • I•• word• to work tor ou.
_._... ·~·...-----~--------........ --.........
Mondlly, O.C.m~r 22. 1980 CWLY PtLOT •I t
----
irtJC.Penney £l RL'YllON ISlAND ~ NEWPORT CENTER
• ·re-r1s
ue-s I •
Here are some of the hundreds of items we 've reduced to
clear before Christmas ... lots of great gift ideas, but
quantities are limited to stock on hand, so shop early for best selection!
SAVE 30% to 50%
for children
Boys plush velour hooded robes,
Size L & XL. Orig. $19.12.44 .... 33°/o Off
Toddlers boys robes,
Orig . 9.50, 6.35 ................ 33 °/o off
Girls' Dittos Jeans, size 7-14
Orig. $10-$16, 5.99 ...... 40°/o-62°/o Off
Girls' knit tops, size 7-14
Orig. $8, 4.99 .................. 37o/o off
Jr. Hi gi.-,,.s knit tops
Orig. $9, 5.99 .. :: .............. 33 °/o Off
Girls' ski jackets, size 4-14,
Orig . $20-$22, 13.99 •... 30°/o-36°/o Off
School age and
Jr. Hi girls' woven tops
Orig. $11-11 .50, 6.99 ...... 36-39°/o Off
Jr. Hi girls' fashion pants, I
size 6-14. Orig. $15, 8.91 ........ 53°/o off
Girls' fashion pants, size 7-14.
Orig. $13, 6.99 ................ 46 °/o Off
Girls' fashion pants, size 4-14,
Orig. $10, 5.99 ................ 40°/o Off
Girls' knit skirts, size 7-14.
Orig. $10, 5.99 ................ 40°/o off
Girls' velour dresses, size 4-14.
Orig . 8.88-10.88, 5.M-7.21 ...... 33 °/o Off
-for 111en
A.B.C. sportswear for men,
assorted shirts & shorts.
Orig. s12-S18, sw1 .... _ ........ _50°(o off
Me.n ;·s ~r~ sport sbirts,
long and short sleeve.
Orig. $12-$14, 7.99 ............ 30°/o Off
Ketch velour shirts
in stripes and solids. 32 42 0/c ff Orig. $~5'13. 18.11-11.99 .. -o 0
Watm-up suits for men
and women ........ 30°k to 50°/o off
Men's U.S.A. sweatshirts
Orig. 8.99, 4 •••••.•.•...•.•... 44 % Off
Men's umbrellas, black only.
Orig. $6, 2.• .................. 50°/o Off :
• •
Of couree you can charge It
~~
for men
Navy velvet blazer.
. Orig: $115, $70 ................ 39°/o Off
Wool sport coats in plaids.
Orig . $80, $54 .................. 32°/o Off
Men's summer-weight suits
Orig . $59, S39 .................. 34°/o Off
for the home
Deluxe Microwave oven,
Orig. 579.95, 399.99 ....... ~ .... 45 °/o Off
Patio set, table 4 chairs
Orig. 499.99. $299 .............. 40 °/o off
Stereo clock radio 0 ff
Orig. 59.95. 39.88 ............... 34 Yo 0
Imported basket assortment
Orig. 3.99 to 9.99, 1.80-4.99 .... 50 °/o Off
Woodware kitchen acc., cookie
jars, breadbox. cannisters. Orig. 21 .99 to
35 .99, 10.99-17.99 .............. 50o/o off
Christmas print dish towels
assortment. Orig. 2.75. 99• .. 64 °/o off
Pot holders
Orig. 2.25, ggc ................ 64 °/o Off
Oven mitt
Orig-:-:J.20,99c ................ 64 °/o 0-Yf
White turkey platter
Orig. 7.99. 4.88 ................ 38°/o Off
~ Graphic wall-clocks ~
Orig. 13.99. 7.88 .............. 43 °/o Off
for women
Jr. fake fur jackets
Orig. $65, 45.50 ................ 30°/o Off
All weather & suede cloth coats
Orig. $62 to $79, 43.40-55.30 .... 300/o Off
for women
LONZ wool coats, Jr. & Ms.
Orig. $85 to $99, 59.80-89.30 .... 30°/o off .
Wool pant coats, Jr. & Ms.
Orig. $69 to $75, 48.30·52.50 .... 30 o/o Off
Rabbit fur coats, Orig. $189
to 199,00. 132.30-139.30 ....... 30% off
Jr. ski jackets
Orig. $39, 27.20 ................ 30°/o Off
Blazers, corduroy. velvet. wools
Orig. $25 to $60, $15-40.80 ...... 30°/o Off
Cord jeans, Sassoon or Jordache
Orig. $29 to $42. 20.30-29.40 .... 30% Off
Jr. embroidered tops
Orig. $16, 7.99 ................ 50°/o Off
Skirts, Jr. Ms .. full-figure
Orig. $22 to $36, 15.40-25.20 .... 30°/o Off
Trina canvas handbags
Orig. $14. 4.00 ................ 60°/o Off
Asst. mirrors & compacts
Orig. $3 to $12. 99--7.70 30°/o-50°/o off
Biba cosmetic closeout
Orig. $4 to $10. 2.64-$7 ........ 33 °/o off
Knit headwear & gloves
Orig. $3 to $10, 1.99-8.19 ...... 30°/o off
Maile leaf jewelry
Orig. 9.99. 4.99 ................ 50% Off
Floor length wrap robes
Orig. $22, 13.M ..•....... · · · · • 360/o \off~. ~' . .
Floor length-gown·
Orig. $20. 11.99 ................ 40°k Off
Womens pajamas
Orig. $16. 8.99 ". ............... 43% Off
Toys
300/o to SOo/o off
Electronic Snoops Playmate, 14K Gold chains .... 25-50 °/o off Dolls, Games, Hot Cycle
Women's Fashion Shoes and electronics fo_r
Orig. 15.99-24.00, 5.99·10.19 .... 54 °_Yo_off -'--;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;:;::..' _a_n_a::,;.;,;es~. ____ __.
T~tlCPenney
E~~D
Shopping hours
Monday anti Tuesday
9 a~m. to 1 O p.m.
Wednesday
9 a.m. to & p.m.
"Going caroling "
SHOE
'IANUTS lty CMrtel M. Scl!Ul1
FUNKY WINKERIEAN
o~s~,
~~c:r
A.IAA. ~ ff'\l.w"
.. -.t-~ ~ 1h ~. '-¥(~~!)
by Jeff MacNtlly
.
n -za
ORABBLE
--
by Tom Bitiuk
'*'· {.ol4 12> 1'•*" tf, l ~~ 1f'S Molt\
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
\llG GEORGE
A'
i i
lCOMICS I CROSSWORD
"Whit do you m11n, your teg Is going to slHp?"
by Kevin Fagan
by ·Lynn Johnston MOON MULLINS by Ferd & Tom Johnson ---------------------'i!l:J Y. )k>UR MOM'S NICE BUT I 11--'0UGHT You
lb T~~E us~ SEE. I' f\LREAO~ WEH\ t -~ME.
SANTf\. 'iOO'RE Gol~ f\GAIN ?
I DON'T TiilNK HE. GOT M'{
W~LE LIST THE. f\~<OTliME.
MISS PEACH by Mell Latarius
,~ H~ coM.et;, TH"'O~H , THAr~
t.rEAT. IF NOi, WeL.L,HE 6£1S
Prerrv ov~su~eo SOME
1~,WHAT
~IC':E YOU ueTnt-.16 Me ,:oil!
WHAT x·ve DONE
I'S W~ff e TO HIM
ON VOi.A~
0E,..1Al-F. "T"IMES. 81.AT C'ON'T WO~lt.Y ... HE'$ Cl«~TMA~?
THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane
"Poor little' baby Jews-he only 90t, gold,
frankincense and myrrh-flo toys."
DENNIS THE MENACE ..
GORDO
lJSLAALL.Y lrEl..tA8l.E ...
JIEVI A
SPITTl>JG
IMAGt'
OF Ot.Jll ~1~rv
FAMILV FEW.JI:{
HoW 00~
Fl:EL ~T
THAT, ~,
12·22.
._ ______________ ~
JUDGE PARKER
NANCY
1'1..l. ONL'I' !'>E A FE.~ MINUTE~.
J£ANNIE ! YOU CAN WAIT IN
THE CAR!
60'T Wf LA1EST fOOP
ON llif: iUMl'f..EWl=EPS
ANP HIL..t7~RP STORY,
8055! HE'S SllU.. l..o5T
IN "TliE PJ:SERT, MW
SHE'S S'Tll.l-SM~CHIN6-
FOR HIM!
OR. SMOCK
c>OC1"'0R !
'f'HA"T" MAN IN
2.14 IS .JUS"T"
HAN<SIN<S &Y A 1'HReAP.'
by Gus Arrlota
by Harold Le Ooux
I QU~llONEO HIM ONCE! HE l OLD
ME HE DID HOT ~EE TIM AClUAl.l.Y
HIT CHET fHAT Nl(:JH1' ! l WANTTO
KNOW WHY HE CHAN6ED HI~
MIND! .. r------
by Tom K. Ryan
WAV 10 GO, f'OY! G-AP, I CAN seE
1li~ HfAPL.INl= ~L.AZIN6ACROSS PAGt
ONE!: II Au.1MI a..AMT "'°"!"
by Emit lusttmiUtr
I THINK HE'S FULL
MY NEW BOYFRIEND
AYS RE'S GOI NGIO
MARRY ME
OF HOT AIR
I'
;----\--~---
------__..._..... ..... ...-•• -----------~ ..... ..-... ~4"1 ............. ~
..,,
by George Lemont
'f'H ES POOR FOOL..
i"H I NKS He's
A SPIDSR.' ,-
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
l Allan VIP
4 Club
9Simple-
14 Curtty
15 Instrument
160nenesa
17 Army VIP
19 Si.vet
20 Amorous
looker
21 s.lne
22 Colof
23 Old Tor onto
T llegrem · 1
nlcllnttne
24 Return
26 Went
29~
31 CMmical IUf •
fiJ
32 Autoc:tlt
33 Flowers
36 Stratum
36 Wood IOfrll
39 C:OC..ltOOI
4J 8llMd -· <43Mlnerll
«tncublt•
46 Tlllr*
47 Study
49 Pile
50 Zuldlr OI
1
Tappen -
Sl H .. d: Fr
52 Mllllm
54 Expert
58 Dlvll
60 Hind
61 P .. on
UNITED Fea1ure Syndicate
Saturd1y·s Puzzle SolVed
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62 Ar11t1'1 need illliili~ 84 Prlllnt ee Combat ., ..
87 An alcohol
68 Scotch river
89 Savory
70 Gn11
71 Curve
DOWN
1 Heed monk
2 Ra'Mt
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3 ''Wtllr• dOmlln
there's -18 Hot IC>fino
... 24 Retulng
4 DlfMI 25 Understand
5 Sptlld hly 27 AIPIC1
8 Strligtlten 28 Commerc.
7 Swindles 30 Gteell God
8 Deltlnlll ~ 33 t:eltWWd
9 Petlllo111d 3" Allan garb:
10 Indignity VII,
11 Ontwto'• 35 ElllYt
~ )-7Cf.-cl
12 Origin: Sufft11 40 -rtb roeet
13 Gov. CllfY'I 42 Hect to~
45 Courter
48Gomad ' 53 MonlrMI'•
IUbwty
55&cape
58Confron11
57 LatgeBC
Nimon I'
59Stagef1r1
61 Rock'• P9'1·
ner
12Gne.
83 Mecaw
65~10n
--,
..
...... o.c.mber 22. tl80 twl.YPllOT
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSlf IED ADS
You C•n Sell It, Find It,
Trade It With a W•nt Ad (642-5678] One Call Service
Fast Credit Approval
...... I • ........... S. ...... 1P.,S. ....... tForS.. ~SOllMtForS.4 ·.~ ....... tForS. ' Hoelw1fw5* Ho.MtfwS. Ho.HsFef'S. ·:
·•••••••••••••••·••••·• ·················i·;o-; ~;:.;;;,;··········ioc:i ;;;;;.;;;,;··········ioo·i-·~;,,··········i·o;,i· ·~;;··········ioo9i ·······;i.i·~···ii~i ·······~·;,;;;,···io9ii ~·············ii'4
.....................• ··•···················· ......... !··············· ...................... .•..•.................. • ••••••••••••••••••••...•.....••••••••••.....••.•••••••••••••••••••
EQUAL HOUSING
• OPPORTUNITY "
i I I REALTORS
675-5511
HAl909 ll&.AMD Tradltloaal 1tyled
blyfnmt bome OD 40 foot lat witJa private pier and
float. $1 , '7f0,000 with 9~% lat tnilt deed U.at may _be us.umed by
qualified buyer .
IRVIHE THRACE
ONLY 7°/o DOWN REDUCED s 15,000
::bri9'!' .. !ll Bdrm 2~ ... 1:::s. home overlcdlal ' andpart, EXCELl. N
TERMS AVAILABLE.
Psat1ll1 't Meillcr. r • • llA"'1M. DOY• SHOUS
.... , YllW~4'1.000
0... Wtl Ceny SJH,000 T.D.
J, 17 t 4• 673-4400 -
IZIJJ u .. 2121 ·
Must seJI. Beaut. 3br. or 2 + den, lge
corner lot, new paint in & out, new
cpts, new flooring, pool, s pa, redwood
decking, lots of room to add on.
Immed. occupancy'. OWC financing
$282,000 leasehold. 640·5681. 1536
Serenade Terrace
.'~r • ·;:brtct~tf I/II Rtal1g _J AU ,.,, ea\ au ad
v•rttaed t a tbla
a K:C: b aubjfft \o .._ al Falr Houa
.. Ad of ~ wtucb ~-ii W.1al to ad v..i.. "aay prefer.au,
Hmltatloa. or di• <'ri minatioo baaed on
race, color, rellaloo,
MIL, or utioaal ori11.D.
or • iDtmtiGD to make any 1ucb prefereot'e,
limitation , or d is crimination ...
Thil newapaper will ool
koowia&ly accepl ~
adverlilioa for real -.te wbic.b i.a la viola· ticm ol UM law.
T Cft A4'tettlttn ................. .., ... =~ ,.., •. n.
DAILYN.OT•t a
I a•r fw ... tint
htcerrect l•Hrtl•• ....
.......... s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._,.. 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
I JI/,% WIS e.t. Me Lem '"·
On Prestigious Galaxy Drive. You will
be unpre8sed with this lovely 4·bedrm
home with a very fabulous room for
entertaining a crowd of people. A
great open floor plan with family rm
arrd formal dfning plus a beautiful
large pool & spa on the view side.
WESLEY N. TAYLOA CO., REALTORS
Z I •. , S-~ Hith Rood
NEWPORT CEMTH. M.I. 644·49 I 0
I
.
..
CUSTOMIUD IY AICHCTICT
Beautiful 4 bedroom home in t he
Broadmoor a r ea of Ha rbor View
Hills : on the greenbelt. lo ts o f
redwood a nd glass. s kyli g hts . 3
fire places. new paint inside a nd out,
vacant: 2 doors from community pool.
Presented at $37 5.000.
U~l()U~. ti()'"~'
"" REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 EHi Coasl Hlgh1uy, Corona del Mar
-Fw ....... , .... ..,.cw first -..... .
........ re-' dmc•. A4cllt COSlde, ...... .,. •
co .... ta Memity. Al for $71,500.
COLI OF NIWPOIT llALTOIS
25 I 5 E. Coa1t Hwy., Corona chi Mar
675-5511
--.....
PIMMSUU. POINT IEACtROMT
Panoramic view al wedge. 4 bdrm. 3
bath c u s tom h o m e 3700 sq . ft.
featuring marine room, entr y. li ving
room. dinin2 room , built ·ins, etc
$1.385.000
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled traditional s tyle 3
bJrm. 2 bath home featuring large
rcC'reation room & 2 patios. Living
room has attractive beam ceilings.
fireplace & french doors leading onto
bri ck patio New k itchen bit-in
appliances . Close to tennis courts,
sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be
sold full y furnfahed $420,000.
IAYFIOMT
We have sever al fine homes
with pier & slip
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
34 1 Bo y~1dP Or1v" N B o 7S 6161
HARBOR 551·3000
4921 Barn nu Pl"•y. lrvin~
A J>1v1sinn of
llurbor l11vel'>tmcnl Co
3 bd, l'-'a ba. Twnhme
1220 sq. ft . Fabulous CoeteMno tOZ4 lntM t044 location, Tennis crts,
i~~~!!~!!!!!!~~~-1 ···;;;,··c·o··~·,·a··s· .. ·· .. ;s:;;:;r;·;iowi .. ~_L:v~ed·~~~~·4t.
w ........ "-· •w " De&lrable 4 bedroom 3 plants, great buy . This 3 Br 2 ,,., B a • b a t b p 1 a n 3 i n nlo.ooo. Call 138--8181.
townbome baa a patio N h ood F · = !~ 8ri:~~ r:r t:st; IASTstDI C.M. ~a~e f~mu1;t~;,;,';: ~~ ••••• !! ..
boat. Offered fully 2512SantaAna Ave wtlh fireplace. formal---------'
furnished for o nl y 2 BR, 2~ ba, contemp. ~&.dramatic master ONmEBEACH·llobil
S320.000. this· home has dtslp. '116·000· · !!\Ile, lush ,Y•rd w /spa Home 2 Br. red woo
been used only as a part 6~5096 646-6093 and a long list of luxury deck cedar shakes upgrades. Pnced well · time second home. UASI onlOM below comparable sales hardwood Int ,. frpl c
The charm and island $2,000-•H Y" ict at only S2~.ooo. Call 8 .900. (714) 499·•16
I if est y I e of Ba Ibo a Rent applie-s to purchase 751·3191.
Island are yours with 3br, 2ba condo. 646-3062
\his 5 J)dnn home with
private pier and slip for
f;;SELECT
JS' boal.
D .M . MAR S HALL
RLTR
544.9990
,, ..
I. l'Tfer••d 1792 LOndonderry
Costa Mesa
You are the winner of
ltr...tfc ....
($10.50 value), to
SportsYec.tto.
& IY Sllow
JanJthruJan 11
Anaheim Convention Center
Tickets must be ex· cban1ed for reserved
seats at the Convention
Cent« ahead of time.
CaU 642·5678, ext. 272 to
claim your tickets •••
Rxer-bc ... i••
I PROPERTIES
••UNIQUE
CALIF. HOMES
Custom.i.1ed Plan 106 in
the Calif Homes area of
lr+e. Features 4 Bdrm, indoor garden.
loads of ceramic tile.
single story, 2000 sq fl
with an assumable loan
Askin S146 soo.
In College Park This 3
Bdrm. l:V. bath at
Sllu.000 has assum pvt party loan. Call for de· tails Century 21 /Gold ·
Coast Realtors. 548 1168. art 6 pm. Betty at
556-8249
OltANGETIH
COM DO
I Bdrm+loft. Sharp end
wut.93,960. 2A9Tangelo Terr
~!Jf}~:~Eb j
OWJ!ers unit. Skylights
anuque doors/w1ndo
beamed ceilings. f,.P . new kitc h e n /ball> S295.000·MO.OOO down.
370 Fiora. By ownel'I:
Dys. 833·3544 . eve'6 661-0842.
EMaALDIAY
Romantic ocean view
from this eJtclusi,ve custom built 4 Bdrm
Dream house. priced at
only $545,000 Own et m~t sell and may hel• fi.nance For appt cat'I
962·9311
ALLSTAT~
REALTORS '. --------
WE HAVE 39 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN IACXIAY YllW
1---••••••-•I Tota II y up Ir• de d 1• badl:bay home with pool
•YM MISAVBDI
PARK PLACE. choice GOLF COUISI
C/2 I .... wpo..t Cettter
6 0.5357
LAGrUN.A FIXH
3 BDRM RETREAT ONLY L5'W DOWN
~H-HTS ~~==~~~~I ISTATI and spa. 3 bedrooms. 2~• baths and owner will
ccner NEW 2 slory 4 FtXH
b d r m s . 3 b a t h 3 8c1nns on the course.
OWNER DESPERATE
E.side 3 Br 2 Ba. lrg
f'am Rm w tfrplc Low
down, non·qualifying as
sumable loan. o we
$132.500 By Own er
548-2763
1 br condo. S.16.000 down.
to assume S59.000 at
11% Owner. SS9·S050 RCTaylorCo
DIC. TOWMHOMI
SIJt,fOO l.oYelf 3 Bdrm 2 bath in preat11lous Bal'k Bay
area. Bri1ht, spacious livinl room, overlooks
flower filled veranda.
Private patio o ff
muaive master suite.
Seller will help with
ranandng loo. Ca 11 now'
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990.
DUPLEX
$109,950
Costa Mesa's f inest.
Clean 6 neat. Good in·
come. Call for more de·
t.aUa ~2313.
3 Bdrm 2~ bath ex· eeutive home. Sita on
huge comer lot. Family
room, livtn1 room and
den provide spacious
ramily living. Newly
laodacaped and ler·
raced. spa too! Owner
says sell. Super financ·
ing.
A finan~ at 12% interest
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
VIEW
900/oLOAN
One or a llind ! A
IO \t ~
ii I \I I ' 1 'l
ltlALNOPU
will love thia beauUful
upgraded 2 bdrm condo. Super location. ONLY
912.500. Owner may help with financing. Ca II
9'19-S3'10 today!
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
bidden 2 story with buce 'O' ... ~~ bautiful 4 Bdrm 3 bath ~
with 20% down. Call to
view this lovely home.
1249.SOO. 556·2660.
't:=SELECT
°T'PROPERTIES
FIXER!
COSTA MESA
Best buy -ever! 3 Bdrm
Pl>Ol home that needs • handyman. Cati now and
s ave! S92.000. Ca ll
THE REAL
ESTATERS
COST A MESA PllME
Greenbrook S bedroom
with poo!l ~pa and close to everyutin1. Assum•· ble (inancing and of·
fend at only Sl89.500. ~3986 ramily room. fireplace, ~uu~ -'M'f!
formal clia.inl room and 1 • Whela country kitchen. Owner ·--•5iiit-ill1iiilili11il--• n
will carry financin112% n--1 r--witb only 10% down. YIEW-¥1EW-¥1EW 11111:'ft ~W'IMO
Price h.99,IOO, Call us Executive home with
now! ~Zill 1ood view. Courtyard
PONDEROSE home . Pool. Needs TL C 1---------Dining room · fireplace. despe rately! Assum. CU\..H-SAC ---------
(J4Q C)()()()
~~E:f ~;it H':[~ loans, owner will help Tidy 3 bdrm . 2 bath ~SITY 'All .. .. .. ..................... =:±.
F1NANCE! 1299,$00! !finance. &7J·85.'i0 I home with remodelled ~~.egee~:tiofa:::::! i 13usinessmen.' ...... ._,__ ,~.-~-~-~ j~ kitchen in eJtcellen t to pool on greenbelt \11 111111 o r e <101n11l. -.,-· -r -~ · ~· condition Just $116 ,500 nus h h J ••• •:~: = : 3 ~ Presentyou.rterms! c armer as Jt nt i ., ~'I n1•'' u 11dv' n •'75-7160• .-!-------. 1·-~1••LTY assum . finan ci ng 1~11 !!1 11111 ' llU\1111'\:-~!!!'!!!!l!~!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!~I llUUUSI 1 ..,.. Perfect starter home or ; \ 11111• l.f''ll II'•' ,,.<1111,,,tf 642-1200 bach pad. SIS8.900 i 1111 luu U 11\int''' a11<1
PLUSH ·
A beautifully 11p1reded, ~ Daletx::>ut Yt• • ""•I PAii : l 'rt1lt•\.,1011~ (ode :\t'I' ._ 'Ii'"'" I•• 11•1:111, t•i file a
Franciscan Fountains Bay & Beach
home. Fresh paint in!Jlde Real Estate
l......._•leeclt 1040 Lovely3Bdrm 2ba,sngl 1'11t1•11111' H11s111eH. ••••••••••••••••••••••• family hrne with very ard Xl I I i \<11111• .\ti1l•'mN1/ ond' and oul. Plus luxunous new c.arpet. A spacious 4 M At u••lf ucrucNCL SJHcc ,,,,
Bdrm 2 Ba beauty with
formal dinin1. breakfast room and more Super
financing by owner. Askina S208.llOO.
SlS.000 down. 2 br, 13'4 ba pvt Y . nl oc. <' ose I 11 ' OWC at Jess than In• to schools. shops & fwys ; lfll •' ti J)I• l l.\hl'U /M i
terest only to fit you S164.500 ' '"'" 1"''·'•'t't1l11 e 11•eek' '
............. ..,
67M700
WISTCUFF
An attractive three bedroom home . Two
baths . Neat fami ly room. Uke new carpet.
Lar1e lot 80x113. Sparkl-
ing pool fenced for
dlildren's safety. Quick
poueulon. $230.000.
Agt. 661"3539· '*Cote~ Realty ; \\' ,._. al ,,,,. J)A 11' \' · l '/l.llf 11111 lidµ u·1t11 FIXR UPPH! 1 & Im e~t mcnt , n .. 111 «nil th•· u :c .. \/.
Good neighborhood , 640-5777 !01-:1• \l<T .\H:\1 at
needs paint & TLC 4 • ! 'i./:! r!"!I r.'rt .I.I:? for
bdrm. 1~4 ba. SlOS.000 ; 111rfll1•r mtormnf11m OWC-Sma II 2nd.
6ll-7JOO M.I .
Broiler, 675-0185
ASSUME 11'1•%
Total Pymt.a f788 /mo
Desired H.B. location. 3 lllATHTA•IMC. br wtramily rm, open YllWS beamed ceilings. EJt
Ele,ant 4 bdrm home. el'uti ve Re altors .
spack>us family rm, pro· ~~-=
feslonally decorated and Ir.,.. I 044
landsc aped , Gate•••••••••••••••••••••••
NICELY NESTLED on a ; ...
quiet cul-de·sac, 2 Br.1•--•c•&.A•s•SwtlD•---•
I'• Ba. beautifully de· HOUCS
cor ated in ea rth
tones Priced at only
S106.500
Redhill~ Realty
552 -7500
\,h e·rll,t•r' m.I\ pl .. .,·~
1h1•tr ~•I• b' IPltphone,
II tNI J m 111 !> 30 p m •
\1undJ1 lhru t•rtda\
M Ito INVl(l S,11urtJa~
l'!IST\ \U;SA l)f'flCt:
lJtJ W H~>
M2 !)6711 .· ;;;;n. Roe a,. -, entry. formal dining B.MAMT MIWUiJaee & ~ ~ room ft 1ar1e familz COUMTaY ...... = l~TERS ::':ct Npel~~k"7t~~~s MAMSIOM
Completely n-.lec , R
Bdrm family home in
Newport Beach. Comm.
pool & \enni!i Owner
financing uvuil Fan·
tastic rental property.
$175.000
guarded <'0 mm unit Y . .. ........ m .. miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pvt tennis, pool and
breath tall log ocean.
harbor. mountains & ci· ty light.I views. S600.000.
Call today 979"5370.
Ill 'olTl";TO' Ht:AC'lt .
1711U lw.it'h llh II
Q.OSITOIUCH Pra'uat• b•ach'"'ll. Fee Ma4nificent North 3 Bed z batbl ea b u It • "' "' "" T\»Un 8000 sq ft estate • · c D ·SELL idle 1lems with a land. Showa like • on almost 1 acre . r:~~edG os:~nes: ~~ Daily Pilot Classified Ad. •model!!!!!!!!!!!. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I $1,750,000! Great financ-
mer/winter rental. Ask· 642·~8 = lng-will trade equity in1 1275,000. 548·0715 for smaller home, In · eve come prop .• trust deeds. · RJdl: Alderette; owner/·
associated
BP "'f:"') ~ff'l ,·\~P·,
41 ' V'. i;. 'I ', t ;..I
W~HSAOMT HOMI
5 BR, 4 Ila, cu1tom
waterfroal bome
w/lTD'•swtdoS: Price St.m;aoo. Por detalla on tWI ~ and appt to
... call Carol Hoff: •It·
Gl.4CJN
'II Coidwell Banke~
FAM'TASTIC
Fa ntastic Bayfront. Fantaslit· West
Bay Ave. lccation...Fantaslic pier...&
slip. ft"'ANTASTlC tOW i~RtCE«
~.soo on fee fand.
.. INNEWPORTCENTER
. -644-90.60
'::~::· S<C\lcillA-~t,~s·
-----IWll94 ~ aAT a, l'OUAN
• leorrof\99 i.tt.11 ol th. '°"' lttof'lbled -d• ii.
low to '°"" fou• """''-_.,.
t jr E ( i DI I
~1j
t
.... .....
rea.lto!:, 731·5115.
NEW EXCLUSIVE OCEANFRONT
h..tit..,: 11tnad1led Ir~ ated ift. /OllA. •rclaltecf•r•lly -•lt1H c 1 tea
porary wood & C)lass Z ~ + offlu
.... .,.... 2 Md. ............ Sllitl .....
1po itl ....tw, custom oak cabinah. Ex·
un..tt finedftcJ! $975,000. 631-1400 .
WATERFRONT HOMES.INC.
RtAI ES f!'\Tf
""'t. \ H""'i•I .. f't'~ .. ''' M,,, ... ,'t''''"'"'
24 ~ W <.: "''" llwv Newoo11 Ae.t< h
631-1400
II'> M""'"' I\.,. 8.tll'< 111 Isl.ind
'7M900
CIE
llDlll' ILlllS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
MEW IA YROMf LfSTf*i
Gorseoua Modern Home With Imported An-
. tacaue ~ ~l, RalMlaeme WCiOdal ~. Huae "Carved Wood" Antique,..,_
So lllu1 Special Amenities. Automa.)lc
Sprtnkleu, Air Condltlonln1. Security
S)'IJtem. ProleaaMeall1 Landscaped. Doek
For F1fty.Foot Boat. Prtvale 8udL By
Appotntment. Only •• .too.000.
751-11• #2c.,..,...
Mt a'6A C4imM"
.ALLSTATE,
·REALTORS
SI t.000 DOWM
$3llO total monthly pay· ment. Owfter financed. Highly.upgraded condo.
Executive Realtors.
848-043.
C.-.. M• 102
·····:········••4l·~·-t Home. Solid 38r, iBa.
Gomer cboi~ lot. South of Hwy. Prof. decor.
N . w/ lllnt 2 Br. 28• sep. aide rental. By
owner. 675-1065. 6'73·4141.
MUSTSB.L! Spacious duplex ,
fireplaces, 1•ra1e. 1700 sq. ft. each Wllt. Gross
S1650 /mo. 21% down. owe balan<'e. sns.ooo. Broker, 6'1S·Ol&s
YARDWOll
PROILEMS
not with tbi1 one. A
spedoul 3 bdrm 2~ ba
Townhome with fam. rm. eaay care plank Hd
block multi·levtl patio
rib Malibu lifbta aad fountain . C 01e to
t.utlful park area with '
TENNIS .ud POOLS.
which enablea you to
,have more Ume for
familyfua.
Have s0meihfn1 to sell?
CIMailled ads do rt well.
macnab I irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRVINE COMPANY
FAHT A STIC LAKE VIEW. Enjoy
sophis ticated living on the lake w 3
extra lg dot ks. I mmaculate·shows
like a model. Two master suitrs.
Grcenhoust• kitchen wi ndow. cen·
tra l air. $~49.900. Young Park
551.·8700. v:52 ----•
I.A YFROMT DELIGHT. Your own deck
over lhe water and a lovelv 2 BR
den condo in the Bayside Cove
$.595,000. Julie Van Wieren 752-1414.
V-53
752-1414 551-1700
(.,,,.,,pu\ Volll'y (l'n•f'• W<'<'CbodQe (en•~
642-1235 644-6200
q()I Dove< Dn•e Hot:ior v-Cen•eo
;;tu 1;co
I.Al:! , ... llt~"l'll
1!4"7 ' l'n;i•I It,.\
l..iRuna Hea~h 494 ll-\f.6
..'l'.tlR1'11 C'Ol','l;T\'
drnl fr"" $40 1:?20
11--~lba,,...
~s
llNdhnt' (Of' COP' &r kllb
'' .'i JO 11 m lhr da) bf'fn rt publtC'A I inn
f'\~rpl for Sunda' Ir \fond1t) F:d11111n' "'ht!n
ll4'allltn1• '' ~11tur<l.1v 12 noon
C&.ASWftO 1..0U.t10tes
ER l<lllt!' i\d\ crt1.>er~
<llnuTd chttlc lhttr ads
d.ttl) Ir report trror.
1mmt'd1u1el) T iff;
f)A II.\ Pll.rlT ••~um~
l1ab1l11y for lhP ftrsl
mrorrf't'I ln~t."11on onh
CASCELLATIONS·
Wh1•ri k1lhng an ad b<'
sun• 111 malll' • rttord or
I h t K I L I. N ti M Ht: R
.1:1vrn ynu by 7011r ad
1.ilter "~ rttl'lpt or )Our
ranl'tll.Cli>n This lull
numbtr m11:r.1 br
prt i.t•n1td by lh t'
ad\'tr\tStr m t'Ht of a ~
dlSPUIC' ,
l"ANct:l.l.ATION ()It I
('ORRt:t,.ION OP NEW !
All RF.POHF.
RtlNNIN(:
t;vt'r) ,.lfon h made I
lull or rorrttl • -ad thal hu bttn OfWrff.
bul '"'" cannot l(!Ulr•"" to do M umll tM •d II
1ppuMt In llw pal)('r
OlMf; A U l'CE Al>S
Thu,. ads .rt' •tr1cU
C'8&11 1n 8dvance by ma1 or It JnL.11.ll oL.O.a.i:•m-1~-......,.-1 omcl'I Ni)phalne <W'dtrs
Oudllne a p m P'nd_,
C'o$la Mtu ~ II 12
noon at 111 ltranth'
ftf(1tH TlU: OAlLV PI LOT
rutrvn \IM rl•l11 10 tla»lfy. ~. ,..,, Of
rtr111• •n t. advtrtlll'tft .. t. tl\d t!
c h•n•• IU r•tu ,...11111•·~~ noUtt ') CU1H .. .,......,._,.
PO ........ Coal••---
..
...... ......,..... H••nU ..... •d .,., ............ ........ , ••....... ,..,. ~~····················~ .•.•......•.........••.
.... ._ .. .._. IJ" .._. JJ" C......._ •a• , ... -.................. . .. ...................................... .
lllH YI•• HoaH, OlleUW. lla\un adult.I.
.... ~.Lfaa nD, ...
=apt.I ...-1 ... a,_, --•lll·lmAll.
JlrTew•••H
.....b •decor, IU pd.,
eael 11r .• pool •
d /wuller. Adulu . ... .,,. _____ _ .... ~. H , h4·HIS, --~
lbrbor View Romu C &I U71
4bllrwa, a.. fam rm, a~ •••-••••••••••••••••• MlO. ZBr, l"'Ba. Adult.I
CIHa 1aa W /It•••• caill 6 paiat, -/mo. S Br. l~ Be. H.,.bor Lane &a. dot could•red. tJO ....._ ... pr . ......_, 'W-41ST. Towabome. Biile to Joean St. Mir Apt D • ........ m W. 1144 beac.b. Pool. $575 mo. M2-7JM
......_...... .., .. , .. •••••••••••••••., C.ll10D Town.bouae -..rooor111.3531. ---------
WOOD•alDO& Area lua, Zbr, Jbi, 1pec-,... JJ90 Nr. So. Cout Piasa. 2
... COTTA• ...., ID l'tl ... dla· taC\ll.,. toll coune 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bdrm CGDdo, A/C, pool, M A Y 0 C K I a;,--a,..a•fa1t ra. la I r o o • • b a r . i-..tew, aeparate z car 2 Sty Condo wltb 2 IC •Pl· $400. UJ-2175
, . H£RITAGl . .. ... , neM•IUo•"· 1116c:iwan, famU1 rm pr, t.m. pool Ju be bdnDll pool frplc pvt
t)"POIU.TtO N ...... IU ....... for fplc, cpta drp1, AC: sritmo."4-aut • pM.io, btW fs A/C, 'very Deluxe 3 Br. 2 Ba . frplc. ,.,,EV ..... AYall.IM a.t. cm.m ;ool 6 ta.all 2 clean Ir abarp lookinl gar, nr Sc>. Cit Plaaa. No Hl Alf Ok~ 380 ~ ~ MIWPOIT •TS ear p.r., l•all lmmed .. IWimu1a Pt. DoUhouae. flWbly painted w /new' _peu. 9550. MHlOI
l Wt Coado by ownM' LAGU BE-..n a.. a ltr, 1 ba •• ,... .,. + dep. '1U·l• a Bdrm, 1~ ba, frplc, cpea, drp1 • Mexican --• .. •••--i ll' ... um n t,ooo Nr (1M)4M•2148 f d, oa nl·d•·uc Wooclbrid1e CrHhlde ~,2car1ar.1100yr· s::,:•-wt aua ru1s •me8tiB.AU· lftAl ... LOAM Chtc r J~ wm1 ................. peeaai Wlllow Leue •br, aba, y.Ait.175-1'1'71,ITS·lllO taln. JUlt perleC't •-~ J WY• • u.~Wll KldaOK -/m0 Cwt frplc , A/C , behind abdrm, 2ba, nr beach, for children. No pets
-.. ,..,. wlll• h r at-V. LOAM ............... ...... . • park/pool, decorated tll0/moy1'ly, Avail now. r~s mo. Ul-l9SO ~~-•.•.:lll~t:•::: 2 Bdrm t!.n• ·rudrii l•• ... -·.-.-..... Cl!!lll!O!IM--l•IM• ..... ••-J410 DR DPLX, =-c, UUI like model, 1ardener ~100. Leave m11. C:. .. 'lllllllilm•
-.--l'edect for lllt lim e -DOWN Pd. ............ • ••·t -56i-1J9 • 1• 1 W. ao k.ltl'a... lA nl) tA.o'"r w uoowr A• _.,. ....................... --· •· .-· Lovely Bil Canyon ........ d 1425
,..., wlUl 1tc1n1e •1114141 at.sail! 11 lc>an M8.ll90 ~vfeui':jl~b~ocf.pl~t:I! .... INI• • MGR. I ) 1ft. lPM Scenic Oran1etree 2Br McLain condo. 2 BR 2'>'. ..................... .. ~ II• f~ an 1'ARBY.l,L BK H Call Mt.fll 1611• condo . Ref r i I . Ba. alt white carpeting, VenaiUes studio condo, ...,..to .... call~\\~t >401110 carpet,dr~pes,etci.~th New J bdrm 1 batb 2 Br wHla ito ~• w /1tream1, p ool , like new model. 1 child adults only , $4 75
APAITMBfTS
BeauWul 1arden apt.a.
Pool &c spa, Adults, no
pets.
Bach. SM5
I Bdrm. $400
225() Vanguard, 54().9826
•. HERITAGE ·······················
..._......._ 1 OtO ~l ~~tr~! onl: bouae wltb fire place, ti.eQard,,... crpu 6 jacunl, tennis. etc. OK. no peg. S950. call m.2313, 7158-5600 ·-nso.ooo 7s.z.it20. w/wttr(. Wa)lltoaqaall drJil taomo ~ Adulta ooly, no pets. Jerry-Olrlsta, 673·'1'761 28drm.2Ba. S475 villqe ol Su1ar Loaf. · · .-. 875-IZZI. 7t0-l.31f7 Super Condo n r S C 398 W. Wilson. 631-5583
REALTORS A T91JflC IUY 511..,,... 4br, frplc. patio. no Plaaa 2br, 2ba, patio, -
E.tceptlonal vali•e Ll\ J_ '-'UAIL -....ef C t children , 0 r p e ta llMTALS 3 br +den Condo. 2'h ba, pool, jac. clubhse. sec 2Br, pool, child/pet OK. -•••••••-ml t.ba c:harmmi 3 Bdrm T -:, -.!. •r ZllO s 7 5 o I m 0 1 1 3 1 5 2br +den. 2"'ba S800 frplc, P1tio, gar. Lease. adults avail. Jan t $475 S4 7 5 mo. Ga r age . AIA8... home. 0 0 R 3 lot In PLACE ""'"' Bauwood arter 4 3br.2~ba '90() USO/mo No pets . 644-4976 641 ·0763 AM . 631-6679 o...r .m uaaat with pr-1roe lut"al1on near rtte>PHTllS'• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.-a ' 4br.2~ba ll00-11250 840-'1M7 wknds.
&M fta.a.ocuaa 011 th &.\ s H h ools a nd tenn1.\ For SaJe b\ Owner : Ex-4br+bon 21,\ba Sl75 *f lw .. tFwnlillMd
Bdrm 3 bath homt I~ ~.Perfect tarter 10,.. Til l :JO P.M.ll cluahe il11l~e lot I.SID I/CH IL D 3br.2ba , $650Tustin 3 b r k 2 b a C 0 ND 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
fdturu io cludr II huaw ur mvestm.-nt pro w/out.atuadia& view of WILCOMI Bal' l>Jy Area Cam rm, .... IJ .... Mla 1707
.for-al d10104 room • Pl"f1Y '79.950 l~~!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I ~~alSprin&•. tel n!!.s 3br lt. c:nt, ,_ ... ..., rm frplc, priv palio, pool. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... 1: ........n ID09t c:omp et1CU, • • "' 111U.,, • car 1ar. new crpt/pnt.
family room. V parll '••111!!!"!!!!!!~••! 1 acre lot will aacr. at fmced yard, t•r. water 17 25 / m 0 • 6 7 5. 6 0 0 0 BAY FR 0 NT A G E .
IQ&, o~w p,.lnt Aslun& 1-Z2 lllnl sns.ooo T52-l400 ut 23C7 pd. NO DOG t525/mo. Barbara Ri1&a. Beach, Pier. l Br. $450. t229,000.Fortu>11ppoint -•1• ~.•-•eves. .-<>raqe9I0-31189 Adult. Wntr. 303 E
'-clOc~r 2 Br. 1 Ba., pool, launilry
nn .. small child OK .
TSL Mgmt. 642-1603
~ I Br apt very safe.
No smoker , prev ref req.
9{,4 W. 17th St ~-0358
.. , f .. HERITAGE I Br. Carpets, drapes. 2bdr · d I stove, refrige. Utils pd. m. lba, view, a u ts ,
mmtl.oae.. call540 U51 M I W p O I T -......,............._ ••c.._01 ~iewater.1-871-~ -•CH _. __. -.._ Penln1ula Pt. home, T3i a 11 1 119? 4848 ...,,. ,..,.,,, HOO ConA•I st.es-to bay &c beach
Sixteen l Bdrm 1 Ba and ••••••••••••••••••••••• For quiet sin1le, water , Redecorated 2 Bdrm. . • REALTORS s ix h2 Bdrmit2b Ba 40AacenicOre1onCoa1t. 1•. el•. pd. $150/mo. u.s23"AMnu5Y\.. •. l"''l"'E t87smo. Ute·nsils for 4. $375. $450/$480, immed ayail. 67~ David 646-3255._. __ ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~la..,. .... httlh ---------1···················· ... ... ~ .......... .._. -ForS. 1100 Ol'ean vu, 3 Bdrm 2.,... ••••••••••••• •••• •••• ••
Ba , 3 c: a r 1 a r •I e San '"811 Capo SS.S.000. 2
s;t.!5,000. 8r 2 Ba. 1480 SQ. fl 8
town ouses w ~s-Electricity, fenced, out· 2335Eldea-.-,. '-' rv "" ,.. .. " sumable ls.t T .D. s . standin1 view. acce111i -
Owner financUJC availa-ble.owner•92-2'99 C.-0 W&COMI
b I e . l 2. 1 X G r o s s Zbr cpt drapes w /d Outs~anding Eastbluff ..... t;,Ok.up, 'ear. water pd.
5br . 3 ba , frpl c ,
tpt/drapes, fenced yard.
w/d book-up $850 /mo.
4fT1 -3230' 11156-2326
Newport Crest, pro-
fessional d~cor, 2 Bdrm + den, end unit Fplc.
wetbar Tennis & pool.
t850rno
Large 1 Bdrm. SJOO. Quiet CostaMna 1724 building with buutiful
••••••••••••••••••••••• landscaping. ADULTS
SUSCASITAS OVER 35 No pets.
~~[j ~Steve Du.nn yrs old ~gtS41 ~
:~1~9'?o~ it and buy ••••••••••••••••••••••• fSenced7" yard. ~O DOGS. · ...._,_,.. .. d ·~t!o . 1nq . 610
fUm 1 br. apt. S32S &cu p LEEWARD APTS. 2020
EncL gar Adults. no FUiierton Ave., l blk E .
Bluffs 6 Bdrm 3 ba with pets. 2110 Newport Al of Newport Ave. &c 1 Blk ••••••••••••••••••••••• c--.. w. 1122 ac.o ocwRoNT,••• J QUAIL
Woodbrid1e area 3 Br .
1% Ba. Houae, Dining
area. dsws br. stove,
crpta, drpe, comm pool
& tennia, 2 car gar $725
per mo. + dep. Avail.
Dec.23rd. Call 752-1282
or :161-3000.
pool & rec room. $1200 541!-4988 btwn 8 &c SP M So of Bay 631-0397
mo. I kllk9• leech l7 40 28r, cabana & trlr. sub· •••••••••••••••••••••••1 2br duplu 1450/m o . 75t·fZZI lettmg allowed, 3 pvt PLACE Remod. 3br, Sba, 2 sty waterpd.NOOOGS.511 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIWPOIT ~~!!!!!~~~~~! bcbl, pool & fishing pier rttOPHTllS.. home OD beach, pvt 1ate, 'B' Hamilton llS0-3989 = $19,900 RMP t7J4 ) fantasti c view , H~ YllW .-J1116 10,.. r11 l :JO r .M.I SlSOO/mo. 213/921· 1144 or NEW 2 Bdrm, 2 ba luxury
On Water, 2 Bdrm in S37S/up 1·2 bdrm. pool.
convenient loc ation jac, adlt, 18992 f'londa,
Boat slip possible $775 H . .!!:_ 842·~or_842·3 172
AlilTMINTS
2 Br S300 + utils In-
fants only. No pets. No
water beds. 4 8drm1 . bonWI family ...._-.-.-;.-;.-______ •! 714/87S-77M witb 1ara1e. 543 W.
room & oonUll rm. t.ove· ,. ~~!!!~!!~!!!~~le.... iu--J 124 !,! ~ n . U 5 0 I mo . T•tlttodl ....
Sbr, 3ba, 3 car gar,
CQ )._1234 ut. 214
mo Right on beach studio. 2.450 Newport Blvd
Iv home in superb cond1 ON'MIE BE'ACH-Mobile --v•~ Villa Balboa condo with
spectacular ocean. bay
and night light view
fro m every r oom
Spacious 2 BR 2 Ba.
formal dining room .
security building. pool
anchpa. -.SO mo.
pool/sauna sec S495 call Costa Mesa tion. Asking $299.000 for Home 2Br . rodwood I "'41'TS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
ql.fcksale. deck, cedar s h a kes , Westaide Costa Meaa.1••••••••-~3Bdnnl8a,~Orange c I z I M. w p 0 rt hardwood int , rrplc . food condition. income 3 Bdrm hmlialaed bome, Ave ID. $415/mo. Kida
964-3951 --- --
I--.. 2br garden apt. pvt patio, , ·--37 44 garage. sml child ok. no
C _...._ S59,900. RMP (714 > 40 ,800 yr . Price doublecar1ara1e.teoo OK. Frplc, fenc. yrd. 2bd,2ba,wetbar,wet ....,..... ~~~s ooo D ~ .. to ontb Ori ... b ....... 7009 1 t bar, comm pool, J·a c.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • petS S395. 5'46-9950
2Br, tBa. adlts. pool. ten
'
.. "5357 ~16 _.. . . n payment UJUUUI m . v.. y . .....,. s , -~---r.~!!!!~!!!!~~~~I SlJ0.000. owe balance. leyMcC .... lffr. _Lut __ &_S150 __ . ____ Uoiv Pit 1600/lease rus. SSSO mo I yr lse Lrg 1 Br I Ba. $350
Harbor Vu Homes 4 Br 2 at 11~ 5 .. 7729 642-C'™ or 631-6300 Ask S48-0412 carport. Also lg 3 Br 2 Ba
ba r F I d 1~~!!!!!!!!~!!~~~--•-1....a 1226 _i_or_Cb_uc_k_. ____ _ , am rm. ee an . p~fST~f 1: -..--
$2.49,5()0.6'4-<fl57 •EXCITING• __.........._"'"'"HO cc Mtw,..t.._11 316t ....................... Woodbridge 2 story . 2 Wfjaf1 ... Hw1
lllC.,IMhn
631-1400
Mewpori •ach 37 69 1425· 83fl·Pll
-DO_Y_B __ SHOIES -1-----c. > ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut. Duplell. 3 Bdrm, 2 bdrm. llfa bs, pool. spa,
•••••••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • 2 Br I '"1 Ba. Townhouse
Lrg4 Br, 2 Ba . S800 mo & Adults. no pets. $400 mo.
2 Br. I Ba . S600 mo 7~ W 18th St . 646-9507 Steps to beach. 673-9312 Magnificent Bay view. Gt-H•crf'wtr Real Estate Invest· 4 BR in Back bay area. ba. ~Sq ft. Partial tennis & lake. $465. Lse.
pool, jacuzzi, fam. rm 2 &tat. Sale ments Pool It lg back yrd. ocean V1ew. '80C>lmo. 1 (213)837·8339. ~~!!!!!!!!!!~~~
frplcs , 3 Br. 3 Ba 13r4 Ueautlful 24lt60 Bar -l333 W.CoastHwy.N8 Partially furn. Yrly lae yr lease. Call Doc. •Orangelree 2 Br 1 Ba. UDOISLI Spectacular Oceanfront
fin. 1685,000 f'ee ringt on Hnme. 1ouog 645-6646 avail. $1700 /mo . 581-1210or731-1173 lakefront , vu . pool. 2Br. 28a, frplc, elec Avail now 2 4 Br ('nn
1>42-2510,646-4848. ad lls & s mall pel 1.._ ________ ~~S3.541i.4301evealt Lar&elBdrmcondo.End patio.carport. S52S. gar. door . $950 /m o do.67J-S RF
PVT PARTY N It ~t~~Y ,appoint-•• 17 MIW UNITS _.,._,.... ________ 1 !.Wt. Pool • spa. $425. 64().9646 885-0215, 67S -6948 , or 3 ledrioo
· on rea or l••••••••••I 752-0929 Or 661 -0422 -------7!n-495.5. "' wishes to purc hase CLASSIC ....,.. COMSTIUC· Oeeal wlmdorwkdya aftS. UNIV. 'All Oc--.fr0ttt
Newer I Br with garage
$365. Adults. no ~ts
645-~77
BlufCs-<;oodo. JBr. 2Hu MOllLIHOME TIOM fplc , p~o~ ~v'!':iz ~:: BT-3212 Charming 2 bdrm. 2 Beaut. Duplex. 3 Bdrm. 2 Rent by month or wo·ek
single s t or y !7 14 1 SALIS Nice38drmowner'sun-furnished ... 1300 mo. -· bath sin gle story ba. 1.500 Sq rt Partial ly Fireplace 2aragf•
1..r~ I Br Apl wrpallo.
frplC' dshws r . pool.
Jacuzzi no ~ts. Quiet
AdulL' only $395 & up
265(J Harl a 549·2447
346-7724 t-:ves Mr 2706Harbor,Sle 206-A itwithapproa.Sl7,600pr • ••••••••••••••••••••••• townbome. Lovely, sun· ocean view. MOO/mo I pat.Jo, laundry room 111~ 1
Wright 54.,..5917 year estimated income leaaeorsbortterm. HOMESFORRENT nYP1tio.Primelocation. yr lease Call Doc hwasher lant-ns "l" IL.arge I br. Iba. SJSO
to help pay the bills. 4 Bdrm. $575. Fenced Nearby ever ything. :B1·1210or73l·ll73 640-4784 balcooy & c arport . ILUFFS Priced at l1.1XGross. Cannery Village 2 yardand1arage.Kidalr Readyl.omoveinatS600 ---a\ail now 64-0-0997 .'llr new2brmodelw l~pa llr +'-a. loveJy central Orange Bdrm, new furn. in· peta welcome. 9&t-25e6 mo.Agent.640-5560. Bayfront w/dock for 45· h lwww..ts. I t-.... Occ .. :..:~y
& many d~or items Coun.ty location. Prin-cludee stereo, TV, sun-orf'IS.2911. A&t .. no ftt. 1 _ .__.. 3 ... 1 boat; ~ Bdrm, 3°"' Ba ,.UwMwi.a...d ....... u. _.. .. fe.-land. li;cc a~sum fl 0 0 SQ F t Re a I cipalsonly. 752.1920_ ken tub in muter. $750. _,_....--&"' Avall.1mmed. SLSOO/mo S32S I Br I Ba Apt All Lt!ase/o pt1on llK R fireplace, beamed ce1I W .. afi ... Hws f t•Y6J 3234 u•uuuueuuuu•u Bill or Linda. CIR Rltrs ....................... util s pJtd Balcon y
760-aus ings tn Living rm Deck . '--•~ •••••••••••••••••••••••COZY OCEANFRONT 6Jl~or 646-S096 lcAoa ,..._.a 18071 i\dultsonlY cat OK romer lot in adult park, -· __.. HOMES FOR RENT LBr, Mobile Home. pvt ••••••••••••••••••••••• TSL M g~t. 642-1603
.SSUME l~LOAM N 8. liy Owner. $24.000 J QUAIL 611-14" 3 • 4 Banns. $550-$575. beach, adlta only. S6SO Newport Shores Cana l 2bdrm. 2ba. crpl.S drps
t bdrm coodo Close to (;aJl645-5842 l~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I Fenced 1a rd s & mo.(714)499·3816 front 4bdrm.3ba,newly gar.yrly $S50 mo Eves S395 2 Hr I'• Ba Ad ul ts
llo ag H ospit al C-rcial PLACE garages. Kids• pets decorated. 2 blocks to 64&2M8,dys .S489341 only Ca t OK All bullt-
Completely furnished '1 -r~ 1600 ----TIES'• VIEW• ON WATER 2 welcome. 964-2506 or 3 Br. 2 Ba. Panoramic ocean. 982-8683. ~ .f Mew 1122 iru. Balcony,
Pool & spa se('urity 1-r-41 .. ""'""~ 8d m.mi.Ast .. no ftt. ocean view. hot tub ••••••••••••••••••••••• TSLM~mt 642-1603 Mov~ in now before ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10,.. Til 1:10 P.M.t rm 2 ba. beautiCul Children OK. No pets. UDO ISLE
escrow closes $!25,000 furnl1h lng1. Security llwllqt•leecll l240 lllOO mo. Call 548·•'121 or 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. large 2 br, 2 ba. bit 1n apples, 2hr, Iba new cpt, drapes
Cfll MewportC...,_ MIWPOITllACH ~~~~~~~~~I bldg.Pool.$1400mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• aft8PM494·1985. sunny patio. 2 car gar.l.Jke nev..a1,a1I I I. pamt pa\1 0. lnl1 ry $425 64~5357 Pnme C·llot 57~120witb-: 2br,11,\batwnbae,encl. gara1e.accesstotennis. ~26l3so,u,,,1029213l l 3 32 83 15 ~M&
olde r two bedroom 0--W..ts.I Ocean VU penthouse, patio, 1913' Keswick APTSl&HOUSES beach • club. Prime ' =<>-_________ , home. Conspicuous ly 6 Bdrm, 3 bath diant beautifully furn ., 2 Lane cBrookburst 11 $550& UP condition. Call Ba rbara. J Br 3ba. patio. gar SS50
.. c ""MYOtf localed on Old Newport home . Aas ume"lst Bdrm 2 Ba. Security. Adams), $400 + S200 ____ 4_f11_·_1305_. ____ ,, .. ,R.H.R .. 673_7300 Large 2 Br. 2 ba. frplc . Avail a pprox Jan 15. Lu4urt"ous~3br, Jba . Rlvd. $250,000. Agent. •125,000 at 11"' a nd SUOOmo. dep , children OK . ,_._.;;....._ _______ dbl gar. walk to Little wknd t'V760-1418 "' 831-7300. • ~,., W_. f _. u~ _.._ So. t;a1una Cottage 2br,"w-••••••-• C«ona Beach si:;g5 mn lownbouse . All lg e ~~~~~~~~~ S:ZS,000 2nd at 1'%. Due •=•~• _._, "
1 blk rrom ocean
SpaciOWl 3Br 3Ba Frplc
& Dining. S900 mo Ca II
Anthony Wlldys 642-5757.
Eves & wknds 644·8889
rooms, custom decor . -: 1995. Projected income lie......... ---------1 w/frplc. t rees, view. ntl....,,.S 644_·_f11_26_
eat·ln kitchen, pnvate ~.._M~.... forlyearS19,200.lsful-6Jl-14H HOM~FORRENT very n ice, adorned Spacious 6 1potless 3 --~ _,,. 000 ._..."" l 'ed R H R A.. 3 .,....__ --F•nc-.. w/redwood, util pd. no bdrm, 2''" bath end un1"t P«uvattas. _., 5,350 Sq. t Co m -y occupie · · · · ••• ............ ...-. " ""' ... , .... / -~ LA JOLLA laOIHS mercial Bldg. 1 Bllt to ask for Beau, 173·'1300. yard and 1ara1e. Kida II ,... pets ...,75491.1155 with pvt patio on "The ~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~~J Pacific Ocean Sell ·-•••••••• l_Bdrm1udinlCoDdolln. Cotmpl1ete.. pets welcome. 9&4-25416 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. Gar. frplc, Greenbelt" in our ::: ~ o ..... -owes or..,,.. -1 A .. nof-ori1inal area. AvaiL -••••-••-I ........... 000. Lease S2. 14 ~ wnM TV set. Mov"';·in today. ,.,.,.,,,., · ••·· --~· fncd yard, quiet street. now mt tl&O. A&t. 640-S560
IE l'K•nvE Month. S...Aal Pool, 1pa. Veraaillea. Rmteatireduplea. ocean $950/mo. Linda , Agl. MUI Weta.y M. r.,-. Co. Central Oraaae County tno mo. to month. Also view, .-io1mo or 2bdrm 48'7·33Tlor4t4-S306
Near new 4 Bdrm 2 ba ••• • 644-49 I 0 location. AU 2 Bdrm un-leue option cODaidered. upt1taira, $500/m o o r EXCLUSIVE AREA 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. Jllnt coad ..
Live close to Fashion 1-.--------1ta bringin~ in S19,300 pr C a 11 Sm It h · Meyer downatain, $350/mo. 119 4 Bdrm 3 bath. W/ ex-patio • yard. SUSO/mo ,_, __ _. 2 Cout Cl ......... 1• i d t u.-1 .... -St C 11 Bob yrly. No pets please. ~....... TY .. .,,. "" C:WC.~Lot y ea r · r c e a 140-S357 ._..__.... • a tensive ocean view . Gourmet Restaurants 8.iTXGrou. Seller car-Meyer 5'6-31'10 bm. Of. Le ... ...,... Call Lloyd at Owners arucious ACT Prime atta of Newport · d d fi ue ........ .
NOW! Beach. \Jseable 2000 sq. fi~~:!in~.e Selfe'!-1 aw iii U.fwwl•d u:e: 9-3500. ~~I.E. JACllS IEAL TY
1124 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
2 ... 1 .. A.t
Newly decor C:as pd. encl ga r . po ol ,
d twasher Adult s
642-5073
CALL ft. bldg or plau for guarantee renta for ltt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. Condo oa the aand. 497·17'1 671-6670 10,000sq. ft. bldg. Agent. year and manaieforone ..... ,I I '"' l207 Security, pool, l6SO mo. .-wl.Y DECOR.
RED CARPET !~~!!~!!!!!!!!!!!~~ 752..1920 New JBr, a8a, view. 114 19 ". rl:J 3 It •••••••••••••••••••••• patio 6 Jard. ll250/MO a /washer, pool. Adults.
* * * ,at& ......
1086 Vallejo Cr
Costa Mesa
You are the wmner of
lfr'Hffck.ts
1$10.50 value). to
s,ort.Y.c9tloll
&IY Sltow
Jan3thru Jan 11
Anaheim Convf'ntion
Center
Tickets must be ex changed for reserved
~•ts at the Convention Center ahead of time.
Call 642·5678. ul.....272 l
claJm your tickets ••• •
63l-73UO year at SZ5 per month. ••••••••••••••••••••••• up . 7 1 l O c e a n . a...--... lZI 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. 11.l.Dt cood., 1 Br. I~ _pct encl ear.
754-1202 ..wPOltT llACH •/mo. US E. Balboa. 213/33)..3146 ~ cwtom Neille Gall yr!1. r(o_pe.15 .pleue_._642_-_5"1_3 ___ _
--msTOl-S'Rlff '-'"UAIL 8'1$-%1efor..,._9il_ Atlle 5bdrm, den. jac, CallUoydat Spacious F amily 2 NE W LUX U R Y .-~~~~!!!!!~~~I 100xZM', ~acre. Prime T C.... .. M• JZZ2 2,!~f~d:C,~~ ~/:o.1:;i~~es IAP015 IEALJY Br-$350. Pool & play· TWNHSE
S.Ct ... 1076 property. NNN existing PLACE ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · lflll ground. 548·9SS6 from 2 Br. 2'i't Ba. UIOO sq. ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• le.Me. SM0,000. Ocean and canyon view. all .. avail. lmmed. oc-a..,-..,... JZS 671-6670 l2-7PM. with every possible ex-Elesant condo. 38r, C/ZI Mww;o..tC..e.r rttOPEITllS'-Three bedrooma.· Two cupancy. 2131212.1138 ...................... _________ ....;...:.:.:.:.-=._-____ __,-lra. Obie gar. Fncd yrd.
21,\Ba, Dramatic 120 6 .. ASJ57 l"""-..,l-JOPMI . batba. Available now. dya,92-351Meves. . Beautilcul new twnhse. SS&.673-&136,642·9666. deene ocean view. Tile ..,_ _..,....... "' · · · 9125mo. Yearly. 780-0llt Meredith Gardena 3 Br. Cape ove, Lagun a
P1tio. frplc, pool, near.._,...,.,..,. 2000 1~~~~~!!!!~~~1~Aimt~~· -=----:-:---._.., 2~ Ba .. a car 1ar . .J...~~ Nlpel. Walk to beach. ' :d~\\ T'
foU tennis • beach. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ae.e, Spyifa1r HUJ frple, fem iin .~ll•.::rnt.' 1111-ft: Ut'k!,.,.Ba + ~ ~ ~ "~-\\"1'7~· • --ui,ooo .• By Owner. ·'flllllDli . ---u-1 4bdrm eaec:utive home, rohnal din. rm. $82$. ....... Prd.. al ten· Cl 1:11 , ·• ~ _......._ "-• _,..,173.ael ma eouna. Small unique · All9olutel1 prime loca-Near tieacb, 2-3 bdrm .• z llO depee ocean view. · , community. $175 mo.
NEW OCEANFRONT uon in Corooa del 14ar car p.ra1e • .-ear park, SUDO/mo. 'ft0..1114. LIKE NEW, s pacious C.UMO-Z5'1lorUl-ll30
Condo, 2 br. 2 ba, frplc. and Balboa Peninsula. priac.on.ly. , ... -...t-•....a 3bdrm. 2ba, witb lr1 eeiil•va...r... J267 8('6we£ vtew of coaat Ir pler. Laree aaaumable loans. TSLlnvstmtM2-JI03 -~----th ..... _ I ii '-···-._... ~ --ooo -1-Aak tor Smith-Meyer 2 Bdrm d I I t ~er. ea ~a ce · ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-.. ·-··...,.., 64~1J57 SW'lmTAXSH&THS SborecihH::t..ftre:t'. ln1 in liv rm . new 4 Br. Hou1e on quiet
COLOMYCOYI a.~ Ullib, central ed before year end -carpets Ir drapes, 1treet near scboola 6 0~?
lmmaculatebome in No .Am.IYAU.IY c.o.ta Meu. Alaum. fin . ._SIGOO __ mo_._A&t;_.;.~17-3-_5354_....;_· _ HZS/m o. · UI. '79U: aballllla1. New carpets• f
Sao Clemente, abort dis-Near new ,. Plex. 2 $1.2Uftjb50000 ... IMO. pU:it, centraJ air, Z car
to D ff bo ll 3 Id prqe, a.so mo. Walker tmce ana ar r , bdrm 2 bath each unit • yn o · cen-2bdrm + Zba deluxe con· 6 Lee 581.4000 o r
q.aet street. area baa with nftPlac:e, eocloffd tral ea.ta Me1a. Seller do, frplc, patio., pool, 55M4T1
clubbouae and park.11 patio, 1auge. 1115,000. ftn.-..000. . ten•i1, near beac h.•----·------
Ptrf«tapot for easy liY· Bill Grundy , R ll r , 211 Newer Un.all. H.B. 2 -/mo. BUJ 9'0-1217, HOllESPOR 1\ENT inl aod beach enjoy. m.flll. Br. 2 Be. eacb. Seller fin. _.. Sbd $5SO ,. d ment. O ffered at 1,810,000 . rm. ence
u.ooo.Mt-1020 "ASSUMI '"· Allcanck»eltlO. ...... J2J4 llove In DOW, lbdrm + = ~~·~~ Fourple11 near beach , D. Bourke Realtor :a.. petiaa, frplc, laun-arf71.8'Fl All. no fee.
8'K down. Counaelor 5'6-"50 · dr7 . Ne1r beach. Ll·ngo Realty, Inc. Gary D. JMlwH••H -/mo. BUI NO·l217,lelW9........ JZ6t
Bmler. Bkr.~M• llm .. 11111.. HR~· Saltlkle. .......... •••• •••••••••••••••••• •.iht•OI ·--'------· 11'0 z.lt 1falll It. All 2 -· WlllMIMSTla Bdrm, l b• patio • 28r • ......,_.Coadooa 11.UfPS .
NEWDZLUXE New 10 Unit 1.._trlal ..,...., •'/mo. AYall .._. Newmf Boat LMM. Beaut. S bdrm. s-.a-OMC~ lldl-C.M. ll,000 aq. ft ..... eaUM-n•.All. dp a•aU. im:.':i. oe-2~ b1 coado. Trina Cul• •• 1071 ll'f•• M down. o..er carry c 11 Model. End unlt on ••••;r••••••••••••••••• -bl. TD at 12~"' for 2 ltAlrl'llDI: llaarp ... I cu P • • e 1 · a 1or1eoua 1reenbelt.
IY OMnllaa PROIELOCATtON years. Pbil Sulllvan Br a la.J U1W pd, Hill IU/Hl·llH day1 , Pnlll palat HW oak
..,..,.... ~11f1;~·8·,., .. b1~ RM!t«S.-noa. _.., aa•lta. no pet1. 11119 .. •••· · floor ~•t.11
8 r e I t h t I k l n I '-&llJ._ '"'• 1---------i -·.....,, J-.r N e1 I · Of· ~mk OHAft •'" 1~iiiiiii;'";;;f110.iiiiiiii95;1J;;;-;-t=:::: fw S. JJt• pool •t ,... Ill •t. par mo. ti 0.. Harbor. S~· 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S.llDSIBR-• 80· s1111•• ·-·•ar t9t0mlaed IOOO ~/ .... Olt, dbl ... lt --------·----• .-.... -.a-t a•••• Beach prime 111.lll.I--+mrea · Toplaceyourmeaaaae ocw•cUJGe•l..,lot, 1u. UH Ora•••· 111r, 1• .... peUo, ~ Nwpal Crwt. i. det
111.0llO la upfrad•. Al· beCore the comer PU'k • Talllti, -.-Ill to Medl. kldl • petl Qectanllf OUH 6 t.-ble IOM"' flninc:· readln~publlc, a--•·•~ .......... ,---,_ ----•-· C...1 yWw, A·l loca· Ill · SllO 000. UHl phone a:i"iiiO~ ':it: a~ II you'N .......... die S:.•.m--· ~ .. ,,. ... fraat row. I .. ,,.
AHaJda Cillta. SJC. Dally Pilot .... ......,., DI.-;;;.. IUlt edl ID CIMlifW. · •I •uttr •-'$•. All m:::n· ()pa HOUie Claaalfled, 642-5&78 lip. l*,dlll, ~ t1tl9 ,_'ft ..... a II& el I llr, I IMI. ... to Maell. ....IUM. '9;!11 . tne \1, t• iJ· dDwa. ow.er wUI cam. _...., laf•maUoa 11 • ..... -. Ill Rmt· .... IAeM. rnae. •11.
<.1a1J11redAd16'2-5&71 se.ait. ....._,,.._,., ...... (IU)Gl-4711 ........ t.
)
.. -._..._.,_ .... ---. --__ .............., .__. ---.... --... -. --.......... ~ ---. -~ ...
Use Anlwe' At/ service
when placing your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number w ill
appear in your classified ad
. we take your messages
2.4 hours a day ... you cal I
in at your con venrP.nce
durtng_office hours and get
the responses to your ad .
this service is onlv S7 .so
weelL For more informa-
tion and to place your ad
call 642·5678.
Newl.Y-dttonted i Br.~
Condo, lc\.4t Ba. Adult11 ---t
only Security gate.
Enclsd gar. Pool. $465.
54$-2970 or 540-0511. ---------2bdrm. lba. I child. 590
Joanne. $375/mo + dep.
~or !213 )5919·1219.
2 Br I ~ Ba bit-in patio,
carport. "25. 1 Br 1 Ba,
s&J car 1ara1~. nu paint
• l'arpet '150. 953-18'7.
Marauerite.
1lU: GABL~: 2 Br l'"'
ba wtcar. Adults, nu
cpt1 tbru-out, drpa,
bltna, fncd yd. water pd
6'&-4120
Z437 "E" Oran1e S42G
2bdrm, crpta, drp1, bit-
Ins, beamed cellln1s.
adulta, S,W, Z2'72 Maple .
Gl·mT.
•aut. lbr,Jba, 1UO
ll'a ()pee lff it at
SMllQ!af.t MO 4400
2 8r w11ar . .-. Cpu.
fncd yard •/patio.
Wat• pd. .. "A" Su·
t aADa.m.4lJOl·Spm.
PINt: ILUFP' APT&
Spec. 2 br. I ba. Ad1dt
~lea. r.•llo, .,, ... frplc, nc • aa.r., 1a1 ................ ,., ...,.,.. ........ -.
SPllC til~Jt'r
I h ulll t.A,l) l-..
It l>.& BREt:Zt.
l lll.>!>lllt!d .\di. 6-ll ~711
.,....._. ... u.1wa. .,. ...... u..w.. .,_ ...... Uilflra. V••• •-'~• ·~so Office....._. 4400 c rcW 1 eoo L.t & ,.._.. noo...., w..... 11 oa ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......................... ,.... 4471 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
C:....M9N JIJ4 .._. Jl6f Nia,..,..._. Jl6f Tahoe Condo 3br, 3ba, Dech...~. • ...................... 1'HIADYm'ISIM6 •Found or lost a pet? AttouDtin& Clerk, major r ................................. ••••••••••••••HHH•••••••••••••••• tullyfW"D.NortbShore •:t.tCWef! Store Space for lea1e. CCJlltSULTAMTS Call us! We' re the Pet marine hardware store. ~n.rNNING lr1 1 Bdrm •• ..... , NEWPORT ISLAND 3 • ~8$eves Elepat bade lo heart 1500 eq. ft.• 1260 aq. ft. Now )'OU can reap the Pala. (714)739·2988 t;xcell. benefits. Full garden apt. Pool • rec r-, •Br new zooo 1q ft of lluatinit'on Bch i11 Huntln1ton Beach. bmeftt.I ol bilh coet ad· . tame. 6'5-1711 Tom
aru.710W 18thSt COUMTaYCLUI $1000 .. $1100, 1Ji -...tese..r. 4100 w/~oua olllcea~ Flexible terms . vertiaiq for your com· LOST . 12·10. Female _W_alk_er_. _____ _ 0-,.... JIJ6 UYI• tJn.31JOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• lky ~-wetbar. con· m t•7J02. •: puy! Let Tbe Advertis-shephe~ mix. blk & t~n.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Sln11e1, 162 bedroom Lar 2 St 2 B 2 .... ~:f u;'~1°klu~~~ ffenncePI rm. 15< per 01q. 'm f t t• I...., 4500 I.DI Qinaultants set up ~· ~r 1;~~~ • EI ~1 ~ • "~Z,~!ct~~~~~t lbdrm.s:tOO apts •townhouses It! ory. r. TO --t . u1, auper 2, 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• your own lo-house ad-ac ' a orpoan s location.644·2151 Oya •96-6111 , eves" From Md 6".1900 Ba Apt. in the Bluffs. Profe11lonally a ince sq.ft. medical bld1 .. well vertiaill1 a1ency. Ple11e weet. Reward. 963-1557
wkends: 496-6222. -. Frplc. No children or llnlHOU. llrlli..oilaTIS appointed at 75• per 1 ••A call for information. ---·------Oceanfront for Wanter .-•. 1585.&51-CMfM -"" sq.ft. Fordetailacall ..,.. 759 9545 Loet: Grey• Black Tab· &Toro JllZ Rentals. Furni1hed & .--132-4134 REDCARPET lll>OSq Fl. Lt. llfl. cor -• by kitten. male. vie
ADVANCEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
FULL TIME CLERK
To work for· ••••••••••••••••••••••• unfurn. Broker. 175·'912. E. Bhlf. 1pac. 1 br, pool. 893-Wl ner. 2 toilet.a, 5 offices 6 Balboa Blvd 44th St.
Beallt. l year new 2 Br. -quiet. secure area. LOOKINGTOSHARE? I& ml& area. Plenty N.8 .675-0442.
l..._Ba.Condowithpool. NO FEE! Apt. ll Condo adulta,nopets,$445/mo. WE MATCH ROOll--sq. ft. well located Partiac $1000 mo. 1796
jacum, & cable TV in· rentals. Villa Rentals. 6M-41'l'f llATES! Nol1heo.tallesaoffice. llonrovla. C.11 . Mrs. ~~~arly $.\5(). Broker 675-4912 Broker S..-. L 11 • 3116 752·1M75 ~~Y °':!u1f p~~':[ ~~ ;,f =-
---------All Adult. no peta. 2Br.2 •••••••••••••••••••••••Nr OCC-UCJ. Share carpet, a /c, cabiJleta • ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ llul ... •••e. Jl40 Ba. From $425. Pool, Fabuloua view, condo on 6bdrm, 3ba beaut bom.e stora1e. Reasonably • , •••••••••••••••••••••••spa, refri1e. d /washer wate-.2bdrm.2ba,SISO. wltb 1tudent1. Ava11 1 priced. Call Tom , zm lndual/otfice 11101
Brand new 1 • 2 Bdrm. incld. Acroea N.B. Golf JoeM6-4115G2. now. BeauM&-~. Harb 0 r' Bat e r Redondo Cr. 10, H.B.
PierpointeCondoe. Pool. C.OWW.~. ... ...... ,._....... Roommate needed, Sits Profeuioul . Bld1. '515Glle142-2134 ~~·r ~~ /y!~·<~~:i 2 Br. 1 ea. Avail. now. _...,,. hh1d JtOO mo. Oen aide of Balboa ISJ·UOO. 7JIO sq. Fr.
IM2-472leves. ' AreaolBalboalrCoast •••••••••••••••••••••••Blvd. N .8 : Winter ·Port.ease
Hwy. $525 mo. J .D. ~:···· d V~I ~U05. FOUMl'AIM YAUET Lovely l . 2 • 3 Bdrm. Property M 1 mt . .-.••• Sprinklered Bldt
Townhouses. 1arage. 751 ·2787 . Aft. 5pm , New lU bdrm I xury Fem lo abr 3Br. 2B• hie Concr«efncd yrd erea
paUo, laundry rac. $450 se.aoM Mu1t apt. in H plana redec, new cpl, nr bch. 800Sq. Ft.
& '57S. Call 213 /596-7202 from $415, 2 bdrm from H.B. SISOmo. 5»-11'0 Improved office
or714/980-'13'7. Condo, 2br. 2ba. bay $505 + pool•. tennis, Rapon male/female to Call Jim Bruhler view, encl gar. auto waterfalls, ponds! Gu 714 /770-9513 THI WHl-.1 Tiii -en 1 share house in La1una ~ opener._.,yr y. for eot*i111 6 heating h bl .. f Lwtury Adult'unita at af-TSL M1mt 642-1603 paid. Prom San Dle10 Beac · 2 oc..a rom
fordable 1ivin1. 1,2 Ii 3 Frwy drive North on beach. $32S , 3bdrm.
Br. Well decorated . Westcliff N.B. adult con-Beach to McFadden Eves: (!M-71M3.
Olympic size pool, U1ht-do. 1595. 2 Bdrm. 2 bath. tbm West on arcradden Mature llale 25.30 shr
ed tennia court, Jacuui, 10 steps to pool. New to Sea wind V11la1e. 2br 1..._ .. _e Cu Yard park like landscapinJ. c.arpeting, yearly lease . cn4)-.5191 • ..... · ·•· • Moat beautUul bldg. 1n Agt, 759--1616. · paUo, ~gar. $225 + utll.
H.B. , V . t-4000 _MZ-_SSM __ ....__ ___ -1
From $380. 846-0619 ersaalles-1 Br, security, ••••••••••••••••••••••• (ii.__,_,. pool/rec, $500. Steve. ,..,..11 f .. .._W 4•50 DELUXE 2 Br 2 Ba 957·1.!IOO, M0-93'5 -..u. e~ .. non·1moaer ...,.....,. •
Adults. 00 pets. $450/mo. Kit. pnvile1e1, crprt, ••"••••••••••••••••••••
990-41•S Step lo the beach. Im· pool'56wkly. 1-..,,3 Stora1e Gara1e. Hunt.
mac. 2 Br. w /1r1 petio . .,,,. ........... ____ ,.. b th BdL P.O. Box 441, Seal
Beautifully located 2 Br. I.a. '5th. St. Im med. oc-irn ~ ..... • • Be a ch • 9 0 7 • O or
S3751l up. Child OK . Gas cupancy. Vrly. 873-2507 Pool. J&!!uui, clubbou.e. 213/'31-3'35 i.ncld. IM2·16S2. w 0 r k 1 n I per I 0 D . ----------1
Rent llG eoo• SZOO/mo.
29U Randolph #9
875-5116
,..,... 4550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~. l,OOOsq. ft. avail.
in Fountain Valley near
S.D. Fr°"y. $1320. mo.
Jobn 551-ISllO, 541-7533.
t Ik IM/t. .. Hf/ Ff L e
Now You
Can
Sell
More · -
~ilh Daih J>ilot P•:ss\· Pi~c·n .:R
\US 'ilill uni~ SZ.
:J ltnl'" ltJr 2 <la\.,
on ly -.1 J rla~ :H1: ;i hne
Advert 1se nnv or
mo n • item~ '<ilut·<t
u p l 11 s 1 on F: a l' h
a dd il1on11I l1n1· I\
on ly Ulk· for I he l" o
d a .' :. S c.>r n · n o
t' tl m rn l' r c• 1 11 I a d s
a I I n " l' d l' h a r ~ e
Your Penm Prnd wr
A d or u ~v ~11ur
fl a n k i\mvr1t·ard
V1!:>a or Master<'ard
t'or mure 1nlorma\lun
and tu place your :id rail
LOST · A11an Shaved off
Coat Fem. Blk w /tan
feet REWARD 646·405\.
646-7841
PETCO
Animal suppl y
s upermarkets
Ener1etic clean cu\ hard workers apply al 15041 -----------1 Go&den West SL, H 8
FOUND: Many dogs & llU~.
cats wbo need homes.
It's oot too late to adopt-•-••••••-•
AD'911~
SAUS
a-pet for Christmas.
Come & look around
Irvine Animal Car e
Center&54-3734
Becauae ol a new ex
pans1on program the
-Daily Pilot has an 1m -f'ound . Toy Poodle , mediate openmg for a
white/parll. older. nr s a I es pe rs 0 n w i th
Te W 1 n It I e S c h o o I newspaper display ad.
540-9155. vertising uper Good
Found: Wht lerner mix
fem. dog. Beige collar -
no tag . Vi c
Baker/Bristol. CM Ap-
proit 10 yrs. Well man-
nered. 673-4295 ........ 5150 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PRE LAW student needs
S2S.OOO. WiJI do anything
Legal. Confidenti 1 I
DVM. P.O Boll 3242.
N. B. 9121663
TOMMY'S
OF NEWPORT
salary, commissions &
ex c e 11 en t f·r i n g e
benefits .Ex cellent
growth opportunities for
penon with ~areer am
bitions. Call for appoint
merit. 642·'321, ext. 277
Orange Coast
Dtlitw,llot
330W. &y Street
Coala Mesa Equal Oppor Employer
ARCJUTECTURAL
Project architect •
senior draftsperson .
Xlnt oppty w /expanding
---------1Ste111 to the beach. Im-$200/mo + sec dep. Office~
WOODLAll AnS mac. :rtra lr1. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Avail afttt Jan i.t. Hun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 5678 N e w p o r t B e a c h ..__ __ · ___ _, i--------c architect/developer.
~RT 752-9318
6100 FAin1er. Adult lux. Sundeck w/ocean view. tln&loa Bch nr ocean. 1817 Westcliff. N.B. Want
l ll2 br, beeut. lakes 6 124 4Sth. St. Yrly. ~9" financial Inst. 7000..f. • ••
•flOITLADY•
Otrl'CAU. ONLY
W Rylee AIA 640-2912
s treems . c ompl . lmmed. occupa n cy . i.t.floor.AleatS'1·503:2.
amenities, no pets, from 673-2507 1 Bdrm + bath. Pool. Cdll Deluse Suites, 1100 • * •
_S3BS_._846-659 ___ 1 ----• . ,_ J~ ~111>!!,. ~!~ + ·~W~IT ICl·ll. A~ am_pl pk&, util C11rfs ~ Jo.I OtotM
115'1 Palau Pl.
VISA MC
I · As ~i s t a n l M a n a g e r ~~·!!t~7~~!1!1!J!!!*'~~ needed. Whirrte Tree r: Apt.s. Middle-aged lady 2bdrm with patio. 11Dl sec.._... . ....., · _._ riii1'i"V pd. ZIS5 E. Cst Hwy. Babb 3Br, 28a, nr beach, bltns, location. Call Ele1ut nec:uUve suites 67seGO JODI cpts/drpe, encl garage 1714)645-9314 Rm for rent iJI Dana Pt. in prealife location. Costa llesa
SSL0.536-0921 $175/mth. meal1. util. With complete aupport eo.t.w.te l7• St Youaret.bewlllnerof
2 Br. yrly. .,., blk from inc. Berson must be will-servicee. n l frft tlcla ...
Near S Point Shopping Bay• Bch. $550/mo. inl lo auist In Mart\al 714/&Sl-OUl ~ •bwulield, lD~l.sqA. /C·.· ($10.50vahae), to Center. 2 & 3 Bdrm. art h __ ... •-t h .........,.u ~.. ....... 673-3355, •ll-sc ·· ...... all.. an----------• pimtyofparki111. Call .....-•• .... ..._ Apt.s. $400-$4.50. Kids OK. dicap penon. Must be ~~ sq. ft. &md nr. lleaJcioomi 875 6700 & IY $Mw
no pets. 964-2566 or 2 Br SpaciOWI new decor late 17 thru 21. Call utilt pd. From $200. 779 cs · JelthruJan 11 973-2971 Agt ., no fee. near Oceanfront $600 861-1'51 W. 19th. St. C.M. Tom Deluxe Ind iv. ore. or Anaheim Convention . mo. Yearly. 675·7045 95'7·1900. ··-150' lo 3 ooo· o c ,.._._ En)OY the ocean . 1 & ...... M.hh 410 ---------SUlwn • · · '\A:U'""""
2bdrm. pool, adults, no 9650. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Enclsd ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"l'HI" Airport area 759-8978 Tlcllet1 mu1t be ex· pets. 22012\h St. gara1e. patio, walk to DO. YOU Ull D1CUT1•1 SUITE -2-<Y-'n----... -00-a-pa-·ec_e_C-.M-.' chan1ed for reaerved be h d 1 d • ~-•~ seab at the Convention 3 br. t o/• ba twnbae. nr ac .a uts,no ois. MOTILS7 t'\allaerv\ceoffices\n avail.Jan.l. Cealtr ahead of time.
beach. bit-ins. c rpt, TSLMimt.6'2-l603 Weekly rentals from SIM NewportCenter ____ MS-42 __ 12 ____ 1 Call M2·5f78, ext. 272 to
drapes, alt. gar, $.575. 1 Br. Newly decorated. ~·~tJ'~5M 2274 ____ '40-_S4_7_o ____ 18eaut . lo-cost ofc spc. claim y~~c~eta
~<ml Steps to beach. Gara1e v · · · Pl.AJA Quiet C.M. area. 2300 ---------
MAUaSWALIC
Coata llesa
You are the wiJlner of
l ........
(SJ.0.50 value), to
s,.otaVec9"°11
&IYSltow
Jan3tbruJsn 11
Anaheim Convention
Cenltt
Tickets must be ex·
chan1ed for reserved
seats at the Convention
Center ahead of ti me.
Call 642·5678, ext. 272 to
claim your tickets •••
AllAMTIS MASSA61
Sl'A
Be Pampered
Beaut. Girls
10AM·4Pll 7
Pbcne ~-3433
T
() A
I
(
by 16
Open days
(
I.
I\
~
II I.~( ORTS s
752 (18 17
with ouuide income to
help manager. Outside
cle1n1n1 & rehef o f
mana1er in office .
846-0619 9AM ·5PM.
Al!l'OMOTIVE
PAITS
COUMTBMAM
Dealership or foreign
auto parts ellperience
prefernd. Call Glen for
an appointment.
lOYCAIYH
IOUSIOYCI
ANDIMW
640.6444
Ans.
2br twnhse apts from
$475. Adulta only, yard. wit-ins. encl. 1ar. nr
Huot. Ha.rbour M0-6807
parking. uoo m 0 · Balboa Inn oceanfront. IXICUTIVI sums s/f. pvt restrm. wet bu. t ... t 111. Trwt _sn._311159 __ ._5'4_-a99 _____ , Low winter rates. Daily '"lbett ts a difference... 7 9•. R i I ht Re a It y . D9Mi 5011
Lar1e2br, l ba, 300' from orweekly.175-8740 97e.t533 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SCIAMlETS
AllSWEIS
For a total relaxing massage with 8 pro-BABVSJTJ'ER for I yr
f j I E I M old twins. 2.0 hrs per wk. ess ona. · are IOA · hni flexible. 12.SO hr beach. avail. Jan. 1. .............. 421 -~--· 638-__ 11_1_1 _____ , ••••••••••••••••••••••• PllMIH.l.LOC. .. .. Wfllr~-~·· ~-811e~IY1 -0ffice1 for leaae 00 "" types "' re .. estate &.>,....,..-ucae 7 PM. 5'8-2817 6'2-235&
Lge 2br , frplc . encl.
piltio. built·ins $400/mo.
S.attl
OCIAMROHT
Vearl)'. 3 • • br duplex. ~· 67Wll0. Open Sat &
Sun. 3214 W. Oceanfront.
"CALIFORNIA"
Palm Sprin11
Coodomlnium Rentals
714/752-0234
3ll2 lllchelloo Dr. 1212
2ml Buaioea Catr J213 Beach Blvd. from 465 illvatmenta 11.Dce 11Mt. LOADED '5TCHIC S,.~*I • t just don't think my llADIMGS Babysitter Mature lov-
Prhm comer loc. Up lo ~:~etoi~l:' cs~ri· [i~l ZlldTD neilbbor's tttnege son Ing woman. over 40
•.500 sq ft. Full aervice, • as honest. Even the fuzzy S56-ll78 wanted to care for 21h •
modern, alus blda. 88-1129 64J.Zl71 141-161 I dice in bis car are SUNNv·s infant. Occasional days
r--•blutf h 2 M&G03. D ' FMI~ 4450 Widow bu money to buy LOADED. Profeuional Massage or nipts. Ref·s & own Nu luxur. 2br, 2b1. 3br . .,._. . rust s a1; •-~portau·on c:~• 7l'"~ br 2 ba -f I d. ••••••••••••••••-••••• or a.Ile ZND T.D. any •-•--.... SlOO Reluationfrherapeutic u..... · ,.._ . .-. 3be. marble frplc. pvt : . _.,.,, rp c, IS· NWPTROMTA6E -• ...--.._ waaher/dryr, set bar. bwaaher, no pets . r~store uuocespace 1i1e above $10,000. No••••••••••••••••••••••• Call appt. 5•8·2817, Bebysitterneededlocare . ......,,_.. ... 1 _ llMTALS atreuonablerates. credit' It F~'1ti•--------1-==-~l~Oe~m~ . .:,~ ....... ~·--J cntrl vac. sy1tm, an· ..--.--~. 2JlllltalSpac•.Appro& -$M"'2}'00-S.-Pt. _, no llG ~· ~r r-· lor my 1n an an my
Ucm. We-Rom.. tuba, 30• l-=---:=.::========:l-~~...J-!:OU~~~ 550 aq. ft.• up. Jnclud-MESAVERDEbR action call ACT 173-7311 La&una Beach home.
encl. 1ar's. Mi. to bch. 2br, ~ blk to bcb, adulll. IDI utia.. SSSO • sue>. PLAZA anytime f .. AIS .,_, =_, 30hrs I wk. 0 a y time
san.Danbar.Ml-9501. mov115.!.f!1Stno.Cwa1'1~s-1'01m~o. 2•50 N t Bl d llC S ~ _,. v• • • ewpor v · 152511•• Verde E, C.M. Sky Hilh Yield. 218% on ---· -----NJCI!: AduJta 1Br, patio, Coit.a Mesa . See 545-4Ul samonLakeForestT.D. AK fill Jdfrs. Ml-OllM>I ________ _
pool, 1ara1e. frplc, 1325 WES'JU,JPF 1 Br. Con-Mana1er. Invest '81,0001et •.ooo ~ C.. Ba.nikia1
mo.MZ-1513.6'2-5251 . do, .completely re-call: (714)J21.fill JOI UASI Newport Mod.em store or back \n leu than, mos! _..._ /ca.cl•
furb11hed. Adult1, no office. Nr. po11t office. Wowee: Call Santa ~ M ... . Jf-11(1-Q.aetZBr. l~ 811. Crpts, peta."50.ITMl40 CATHEDRALCANYON 4Ell~olq, + ~nf.rm HI • / f-; J e r1' y Cl ( Dennbon 60."7f" :-..;..~=~'°·~ca.._airy a Br. ,\pt. eouNTKY-ctUB -i);~St~t. _m~t4TZ;:• ·:;700~1:·i;---;;~:;JO::aoc....:.~....:..M?.:..:.. •• ::.:.•::.:.•:..:.· ___ A_s· I~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ CCM'ATAl&ITT Ill ACCIUNTS
-· i n tbe BI uf h . No Xlntloc·nrOC Airport Commercial : stores. I.JP'l'Bl'YLESOCIETY ruLL TIME Deluxe 3 Bdr 2 Bth . childl'en or peta. $450. 34-587Cathedral <Ycfaee9beautatrium abopa,tolal 14001qf\at ade your old stU:fr ro UillorfOUDdepeUCall eu.ieaOol"f 750-08'74
fl\replace62Bdrl Bth 151-0tN Caa7aDDrive Abundantparklnl IP• up, aay aiae. E. ne w good ies w ith a Animal Auistaace SllKenOnly 750-0f77 Poslti«lavallableinour
lR .. pl-nr. 5 pts. Enc.,._________ PaJ~rin11. 11•m0--·· .,.. ..... c... Clusifiedad 642 5618 ,___ N r ~· _,., Onl 971-• So. Cout Piasa office.· -• -Ba I 2 b b I ,._,,I -• ....... ...., ·-· Sta-7Jtt . . ---· 511·2Z13• 0 ff. .... --· ., . ,.,,, "'-'d Call K ... Gara1e. bookup1. no Y roat r. 1 a , yr Y ~, • ----------• R~orded lle1u1e 2• .... _. · req · &uoY
peblD-Wl lea.. DO kld1. no pets, DeaertResortRealty ....., .. Lo. so2s Mamytolo9 50Z5W..,toa.o. 50JIMlmytoL.om 5025 ..... Ambur1ey.540-40l6 . ...... -=---.-_.-.---.-.. -,•_lm_._m.1222_· ______ •bdrm. 2ba condo on ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "••••••••••••••••••••• •--INTRO---S-P_!!_C_l_A_L_--1
•••••••••••••••••••••••Versailles 1 Br/studio. Nortb Shore ot Tahoe. llYSTIC MASSAGE
llr,ocavtew,Jll07 pool, secured bld1, f\a1l1 furn. 5/rain from NEED MONEY llASSAGESlOW/AD Solana Way, Call adulll, no pets S'85. Nortb Star. S.00/wkly. S..AIUI SM-"51
.,..aa5 se.•1 ··-· ..... Bert.
.......... >110 2 Br. l~ Ba. Townhouse Maul: NewTOWllbcMde. 2
•••-•••••••••••••••••• 1tyte. Adult.I. no pell. Br. a.t )oc, .., per day.
Nn Ur, l._, a te condo, 1175. 541-a.2. Callfardet&UI. m.'1215
IC pr, fpl, pl/teanls. '511/mo. Water • 111 Sell with EASE: Jan. reataJ. 2 br apt, ~.:,du Its /no pets. It'u BREEZE c.ar... del lier, frplc, '
Clauified Ads 642-5671 -· l'lS-DH, ITs-JllO
u1 y aen ng u1 your name and
-address and by watching for your
name In the cla11lftecl ads of the
. Dally Pilot.
Wln llcketa to the clrcua. area amusemeS't at ractrona or aDOl'lJnt eyen&a. Just fl I out t"I• ~upon and mail It tocray to the~
t1auUled Departmnt, DaUy PllO&
Ut W. Bay Mreel, eo.ta Mesa, CA tm1
J
. ....
1181'
1r you~ money for any reason and you need it rasl. 1<-.Us •call. We
won't ask you a lot of personal questions or put you through the 3rd
degree to get a loan. You 'll find us nice to talk to and easy to deal with.
S 11't. 2nd, 3rd Real Estate loans.
I tooo to '500.000
I All lYJ>H of property
S Any California ares
S No credit check
1$ Vour equity only reference needed
S Even It behind In payments
S Use money for any rea900 1
S Payment plan rnJY be tailored to your t;>uc11et
S No ballOOfl fNIYrnent necesHry
S lntereat only loans available
S No d'iaturbln1 your lst lou
I Compa~ our CC!Sb with otl)en
S App't.s ~r home Ot our office
GOLDEN PLAN of CALIFORNIA
optn ev.,Y daY. t-T, except Sunday
Yor App t. Cati Collect
(2U) •1.QllO
1852 Paclftc: Ave.
Lont Beach, Ca. SC.
• I .
Offlcea Tbrous"°"' Callfomla. Call Toll frft
for omci. ....... you
I Ml 112-7611
~·'-•··~
COYR&IRL
•OU'rCAU• &«111 MC/VISA
CAuFllllA
FOUAl
Serf. AL.em
• Towa.c...nter Dr. Calta 11 ... CA tmS Eq~ o,,ortwalty
v EmfloJ•
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•lliiji ··. ." ,-~~ -~AA~~~~ at•~';~~ •. U' ~ oau :S:.:e..,S: .,... :',.,~=.:, ~.: ~. ~:a ~~=1i";. :';..~11· 1110 ~~-• •••hi••• ~ .. fllW; ... ,.r·•. Heal"• •re. u.-Pl:NSIOR elll ... 1111. (TM-Im. . ... ! ................. ..
.... ........ .... ......,.., .... ,.... .... -·-.... l&t Uow _... •• • I I ...... q,er tW-111111 ..... lN.a . ,,._ ..... ""-· C.11. ADllDIJSnATOa .,... .. ,., ............ ra•1• • 't• -""" 1 _.... -Dmlll ..._ .._. M ... 116 a.. JIQ. lla&an. ...._. for .... 1ucll ..,....... •!•..._, Moel, fJI. ~-•1111et la· ",.,_ ...... •111 _ _. ._, __ ua.-.a-"-": .. ••--w ,.. "• .. ,_, f d d ,,.___ • t..s MM, ••aau.r· -·rr21 - ----· · . .--oo pro 11c:t1 . ...-........ ,,., ~-ir• .~ lal '8wicltla,I" C...C ..... r c ••• ~ ~·~•1--'weell. -.ft'i. .......&.0 .S ..... ,. DellurlH to local __.... lennd ~ ~n --· '--'I ,... to Cl...uled Act 1upermarllet1 from Preriou baak .. 1 ea· Rlfri,..._. La• oew. 1 ....... bo 1 • -U\l&s7 1101, DatlJ Pilot HUNTINTON ll:ACH .....i~.a-•-b'~ '"'lat 17 cu. ft. Keamore. coec:ea -a c .. ,, µ-..u...,r~wred ..... -' I' ......... ----• ...... · "'' .. , .. 1o wtth • ftlWe a aafet1 U Ta Tl M Liim•IDC • .. z Newapaper, PO Boa faetor1 . Permaaeot tn6ftl.=lla required. ce-maaer. "' l'" clMJt,. Total we&i•t b
k'9ri•Nlll CO..A.MIOM .. ~lifer.. llla8• 1 19, c.t. ll•a, Ca. ,...._,rel'• req. Good lhiJrt. notreqalred. fD-2'1'9 + · ao.• ,_,_...i-. .. Ap.
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Co.ta Neu lll Del ... ,
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Aaa1at .W.rl.J per1oa, Jrw. -· •Q· .,, -. · d r I• i a 1 r •cord. = ~000 SeU )1.,.1aarou& r•poui~Uttlea. alat (1l4) ... 11DO . ••*• 1111 over-· . llJ.illt bule ..W.. QuaUlled a.as.-.s.a. U•lt•4 C•llfer•I• ....................... w .... HM.
Drh•r. paated. Ooocl
dri rimt t'ffOltd • valid
CaUtOR•• UtHH re·
quired. Kaowled1e of
Or-.. COUlal1 atel,ful. AIPl1 at· _, lo. Ou
9L Sae&a Aaa. MO MM .
aab ... :Tu.t414Nl L1-g-1,_. Sal11-HI Pl Compo. .... SW'mlUYJ
IApllecnU.rJ MlwC• .... ? neota. Salary, •Int. llm'•r::trtt••~ .._., 1« 1e11ow sold a ua y N ... a. c: or . JoiD u.. a...,. Now lo· ~'::e~iril~~~·1~~:: m<>eean An. =i~:, :;r.'/•c~t1 rinl Ht wtu. one 0.11
pante/real .Ute offlce t.-vintq for poaltlom 1 M P 1 Laruna Beach .. carat standard round needa eap Le1al la real eat~e ulea. y . r . au •en ,. ~or14$-JOllAHa brilliant cut dlamood,
Secntary tmmed. Word ~ ticeued or not ~. 4M.o&a _i_ar_M_ut_. _____ -1 and el1ht 0.03 carat
Proee11lnc. Ca rm an callt.o..,. if you qualify SALES CUlllS a •IS round a int 1 e c u t f1~11CJZ to )oUI Ute profesaionals rr you are •rtresalve l!:.O.E. ........... • uaed d I am on d •. Ce nter · at W a Iker • L e e . diunnnct has clarity of i--------•luve lo Nun". neajble (714)D-4MS. and lookl.nC fqr a future lmCbarleSt.CM. .,..,,._. •-•-d I Drtv• ' in retail mtmt w/rood -.-ltJ ......,.__ M2·7110 "•<>2 """"'' 1ra e -J. YQ&mlcoupledeairesde· .__ 11 I · ~ ~ Will aell wbolesale
1.o ... .tce rack ud 1tore _.... r-lljJ1] paw 9am to llam Mon S:S.000. ar.tSalel Driver -.labJe ff•l-r ror 1 .? Ill co. ucne t.I •PP y ID Part time, weekends, ror s c ff" I N N 1> 0 y . II
Hun .... • Beach llC'COUDU. Some bundle year old llrl. Louly M 3 thru P'ri. Standard larce apartment com· "Scrambler". bll.1e . MZ-7512C.M. ••u• ...___.._.. ... d private room. bath • -· - -~ .w.1 So B . t 1 pin in Newport Beach. JP8f~;_;. cond~~·JS7~5~·.!'"~~U4e~_)~~~!!!!!~!!!!!~~ ~~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~ --Cot uvme •· aalary. 752·21t7. ~. ""' · ns 0 • i3. 5 o hr to 1 ta rt . r livery carriers. Com· ------------------C.M. Unllorma furn. Contact SdnrimaMuu.Scrambler. ~ct. diamond marquise
PAD.Y veblcle. Appro!' Loan Service Clerk .......... s.IH SECRETARY JimLupia aU44-1900. boys' ailv. • b~. 1uper rin(, yellow told band. 7)6-4109
i;c.tatt Jerry Ar~her
1:.0.1 .
CAI*• P/TCWJ.er will traln. call Barbara for appt
S.ml
hours lpm to 5pm Moa· .........,.__ n-ml 1 Sl.t Uae year ritbt by _ .. __ ..... a.o.·--.._. ..1, 71 ........
ci.y thtu Friday. $3.9$ • .--. ..,~ .. a c oan flDdinr ou\ about the To m Im t . t Y P 1 o I Shoe sales, full time with -...... -· ...-...,., .. · ...__,
pet"bouttoatart. ApproJt ~:::.. ~ca~c:r:; career opportunities 60WPM , public rela· or w/oot exp .. or wlll c-,..a Ranch Mink coat, rull
---• 30 bour week. Eacellent trainee clerk. Eye ror avaUable at Select tlona. mature. exper train. Good co. benefits ';II .. IOJO lmath. like new. Silver ~~!!~!!~!!~~le LE R K TV PIS T · company benerlts. Call attWKY •attention to Propertiea. U you have req. N.B. E.0 .E. Send AIJply in peraon 9am tc ••••••••·~··••••••••••• Fox scarf, 7'. Aprais.
Btn'••i permane nt. position. Georre Hardhat. Street 41&&1. Pl-omot.ioaal op. experience or an In-resumeto Cla1111ifled Ad uam Mon thru Fri Brand new Simmon papers.~11'19, ._,.I ~WPM Xlntbeneflts Sain Sue_ervisor , port.unity /o r self &ereltinlearuinrabout 1802, Daily P ilot SlandanfSll.oes 307'1So Omer• bllt/wht photo ..;;.......;;;__ ______ _ ; ... •.-..en Mon·Frt 9 ~ ( 7"U ) Orante C-out Dally starter. Call Kalie iDnat.ment properties Newspaper, PO Box .BrUiol c M ' · enlarrer w/lenses· Sterlin( Gorham But-a;qienence req'd. Xlnl. ~2270 Pilot Mt).lll350 callforacoofidentialin· iseo. Costa Mesa, Ca. · · · darkroom equip incl'd. tercupforks<l0),2serv-
aalary•beeefits Apply -----• MZ_... · terview. We alao have 912111:38. sa.cr...Artfat Padta1edealSZ20ca1h. int spoons $50/ea
I COMPANIO or Aide for EquaJ()pporlunity Lat Attmddt. must be opport unities for --Experienced on glass. 56G34 979-8727. A•llAMI t&yr old lady. Live in "'-..a....erll/F/H UI. full time, company utabllahed pro · Secretary Legal Invest· Allphues 4971556 ~~ IOlir --------~lid Anaheim beaut. Sen Clem. villa .~~-!!~,,!!!~!!~~! ffMimals wtth mana1e· ment Consultant seeks · · · · -1--·;ii 1'K.G. 10pt Diamond ·"' tln-iNO Rm 6 Board + 14oor:: _ben __ Mll_ta_._.,_·_17_02_. __ meat potential for of· exp'd person w/legal Switchboard Operator ••••••••··~··•••••••••• Rin(. 6 lOK.G. w/Jade
..., E.0 .E. salary. Ref's . req 'd. NIY•S MICHAMIC fices an Coala Mesa, sec'y skilla. ColUns As· Part lime. Will train. Persian Cat needs home. set.tint trade for piano
--6n-'006orl'15·7U4 Dial·A·Ride, located in Needed to maintain am. Newport ·Irvine and San sociates, 567 San Nicolas Swing wknd.s. 642·3013 adultsonJy,--(Free). Nll-3H4 Clemente. Call Pete M2 2727 ---------Bankiq
SICllTAIY
Experienced in loan
documentation. X Int.
_ • Mllary • benefit.a. Apply
Peieonnel Director:
tmrrA•llAHK m N. Euclid. Anaheim
911·3llO
E.O.E.
,_ _______ -I Lafr.fia Hilla ha• p/time neet of ml.nl·bUlel In vaau.o. 751·3111 Dr. #302N.B. --. . Mhcel•t•• IOIO
Cool & /time 11P1illoa1. Gd. Luuna Hilla. Esp.• td. ,.., ~/BOOKKEEPER Ka' nd!l"rgCa rHdE_an ., I T Sil .. ver 1baded Persian, ••••••••••••••••••••••• drivio( rec .. over 21 <In· referencea eaaentlal. •.• SELECT ·• ~· • "" "' .. rriaJ lif 1 MS / I
F 11 1 . t · su.rance requirement). Gd. co. a..efita. Salary 3 to 4 d~ wk , ex per private school, CM. area e ema e, ea. L.Uao41A61 T A65
u t me post ion EOE..,830-6191 Al Dirth baaed on up. EOE. PROPERTIES C.M. area6'2·0322 MZ-out 5'2·2727. from your business
a " • i I a b I e . l d e a I -..111 Al Dirth card. Send one card for ~;d~n~l~bic~0 ?:i: Oryclewn. M~ al •• t . llCllVIM6 CLHK ~sy/l.c.,t. ' TIACI~ AIDES pb!a~~:u~ Nwh~t1et.\:~g each tq plua one spare. elude: medical. dental, Wool-prener, $7 /hr. .....c Au .. t.. ront ~f· Typ1n1. phones. n o a ... ~m Aides 9eed~ hair Champ ffn ea We mum permanently ...,,,. week 1uarantee flee ror G P exp pre· 1 r •in e 1 n dust r i a I shorthand. Good opp 'ly by HimtiJlgton Beach Ca· · · · sealed attractive tag &
proflt·sbaring, life in· · · · · ' · ·• Compla Jim Ea.atwood. for n&ht person 645· 7053 ty Scbool Dial. 3hrs/day. 6S930B ------• strap. meeting airline surance. pension pro· :::J1 alv~cataon paftyr, fr~' mall resu~e3of· ~5511 ----- - -d S .... .,.,w ......... 61 /hr. Ap· "--1040 ID . p -gram & discount c lDIU~ancea e . ice manarer . 51 ---------s .... .,~ ..... .._,.. .. requirements. re· ~--------•I privlledge Apply in 6mo. ~y m penon. Hoapital Rd, Ste 118.1 llC8'TIOMtST e c re t • r Y • A ply 73S 14th SL H.B. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• veal lou •theft! for a ,-'ftlakint penon: J .C. Penney, 24 1 Kl.Ster 1 Cleaner Quall· N.B.9131G. I Newport Beacb develop-minstra~:~ _53f>.885 ___ i. ______ KE£SHOND Pupe. AKC penonaliud tag enclosl' .f ./ ,/ Fasbionllland,Newport ty Cleanen. 118 E. Ultb M al · ment company, near -,Travel A'ency in N.B. Cha.mp sire. 111 /f . Pet6 wallpaper. fabri c or
Beach ST. C.M. edic • John W•YD• Airport, SICllT AIY needs exp agent for out· s b o .,, . p v t p t Y "Day Glo" paper & we Noh E.O.E. M /F F.arly Bird Receptionist, I-IA Y TICH b8I lm.mediale openinc side sales. Call owner 213/97·13'5 afU pm will back & trim your ~~~~!!~~~~ Ra-qu•t Ball World. Parttlme, 90 bours a for aperienced Recep-Xlnt. opportunity for 7.._. ,...... tap. Or try two cards Te•rs r: .. "' week 5 da N rt sba.rpgaltowork in rut· ,,...._. Cbihubua. Pomeranian. backtoback.
COOi F.V. 912·13'14 ask for Beadtotfic:.'at..:.O ti~~lat . Muat have pace Newport Beach Yorkles or Maltese pup PRICES Career opportunities for Tricia or Huruette. llWWDWD 31n. ••per· commercial real estate TY P 1 ST· Ex Per' d 1 n · 531 ~ · S2 3/15 :...a.:.-'du·'-wa·th t yr. ·x· For pre-school. Ell· ---------i Good co. benehts. ..1ri XI · financial statements. pes. · __ ea or ........ ... "' } ~Al.llCB'T. .. ace. nt. typing • 4/5tagsS160ea perience in the perlenced. Part or foll DICSICllY'AIY Orranlsed worker :~llEy : 714 ·833-8880, dictapboaeslrills&abiU-forms, statistical re POODLE Puppies ror Sl9 tap Si:soea
documentation and ac· t.ime.lrvine.~l-4533. lntere1tin1 posit.ion neededforonegirldept. -·-·-·-------1 ty to handle IBM ports. 70WPM . Non Christmas also teacup IOormoreS1.40ea.
COUDtinl cl installment, ---C-0-0-1----1 available with loterua· Laura ..... 7 •oaftft a_._••t Pff 12 5 Memory Typewriter smolrer . CPA Fi rm. poodles 5".2M8 Sales Tax Included
real estate and com· tional corp ror all ex· ---~--------·:::---• ... ..,.•1.h ·t . needed. Challenging C.M. Call Cori nne --------NO CARD?
-ia.I loans. interest -·""'v• 1·-r•t•'"' with MEDIC•• •--ui· tant ex--+ wpm, ... -r 0 I · f · h 1 """'l~ Ch t a P pp e ........ Part Urne in Preschool. ""'uu "" "''" "' -., nu ~ t rt Xl t b fit poa tion or ng t ga ...... ..,.... ra s m s u I s Draw your own or send and collateral cakula· muu· ·m .. -5vn ••pr. We p'd. f--• bac ... 'typ. 1 • · n ene 11 • Call Lail --,., ........ _ R_. · AK C
ti C I I t d 857.J.263 .._ ., ~ ,.,... .. Faabion Island, N .B. a : 833-2900. uun.K:D .,,never name, address, phone & ons, •cu a or an a~e aeekln1 ~omeone Int. Hrs.• salary open. WAITllSSIS Reg. $175780-0240 w~·u make one card per typing experience ~th a profes11ooal at· Nm·amoker.548-7738 location. Call 9·3:30L•--------i Apply btwo 9AM & . -l .... AddZSCeach,
nM'ded. Upon comple· * COOi * t.itude who can handle ---------Julie Griem New York SICllTAIY-12PM. Charlie's Chili. AKC Champion ~od.er ~check or money or·
Uonora3monlhstrain· Ptr. Ftr Exp. Pref, ir duties an di•-•••----Lite 644-1230. M /F , ~ •lmM• :mt Redhill, Bldg •2. Span ie l puppies , 2 derto
ing program . in · not-will train. Apply in resPo111ibillties outside IEllJ E.O.E. ~ Ste.•2216.C M. blacks. 1 buff. males PILOTrRIHTtHG dividuals will be placed person: Dick Church's routine orrice work. ---------1 --491·~16.
in full time position11. Rest a u ran t . 2 6 9 8 Muat manage time erti· llCB'T ffY"ST Newport Beach based SECIET AIY --p 0 Box 1560
NewportBlvd.CM cientJy and ·make Sood 'CHl$JIA$ Need~d ror busy construction firm seek· lnteresting position for Male• Female Basset _Cos_t_aMesa,Ca.926_26_
E)fcellent 'salary, out~~~~~!!~~~~ common sense d e · Newport Beach invest· ingsecretary to support skilled secretary 70pm. Hound.s2&J yrold .need
standing benef1ts r: cisions. Applicants FROM EVERYONE AT mmt firm. Good work· mlttg. dept . Good ooshortband.musthave lov~&affection .&46-1728 Lo••lellG•t
package and congenial COUNTERhelpfordonut should bave excel. inlconditiomlrallcom-verbal/"ritten com good spelling & gram· -Sendsomeoneyoulovea
working atmosphere. shot>. AM" PM shifts secretarial (IOwpm typ· r-n. Lin_. puy benefita. 60wpm munication & typing mar skills. Mag card II. ,.,...toY• 1045 bouquet of JO multi col-For more information avl. Noeap. nee. Woman in&) • clericaf skill•. U \• ": milli.,aum. Need sharp skills. Opportunity for Savin or memory ma ch ••••••••••··~··•••••••• ored helium balloons
gleuecall: pref. Apply in person: Some accoun\inl expr. TlMf'OllARYPlllSONNHSlll'lllCls girltoatartimmediate· c areer-minded an helpfulorwlllte.ach Aust./Shep max , male. l tied with ribbon & your
SWrtey ..........
714-973-3724
·'····~)·.-·.
WELLS
FARGO
BANK
Equal Opp Em pl m If /b
Dippity Donuts, 1854 pref. ly. Hn: 1·9PM. Salary dividual. Xlnt. benefits 7S2-0Jl4 yr oid, lovable & com· own personal message
557 M.j~ comq,easurate w/ea--r. Send resume /salary hLS· _ patible ~5819 Perfect ror every oc NewportBl.CM ....., Forcletaila II Cb ,,,_I EOE --r as1on We deli ver.
C..-_ H...... Xlnt salary • benerits l72J---. ._..___. 63174'7S . ca ery : t.orY: . . . Mir tr... Free kittens. 9/wks old. 673-4419
_...,. ..,.. for the ridlt dedicated • --..,...._... · ••••••••••••••••••••••• cute. gay & iray /while --- . ---Pasta pub. Ellperience resourcelul individual. Mtw,.t .._. _R_EC_E_PT_l_O_N_l_S_T_P_a_r_t/_, IMKAY .a I IOOS Snap on side cab J
needed C M area 5 Contact Mr. Freer at l~~~!!~!!!!!!!!!!!~~ ...._ la ·1 .tCo .__ vtL QSH ~.1'28.eves_ d . 1 h If 1 ·k · · · · · Full nme Ught typing .,.,, P.• • .-. •u•••••••••••••••••••• rawers. s e . oc a days /wk,10.'4.64~33. United Industries. · · 12010c:iveSt.Ste.11200 Fw•tue 1050 ble .... ~ 714/144-9ll2. Ir other clerical work. llA$$I
Cou.-.. HELP • • Ha s s on • A s s o c . Newport Beach CA 9266.J ••••••••• ••• • • •• • • • •• • • $140 768·5837
Sandwic'h':hop. Mon.· GllJ'ageAUendent/ Miia••• 851-1151. Altn: llartetin1Dept. .a.•11t1-Lf1 AMT'lq\11 ------"~etary ... , Ofc. D.tln --------1 ,.... ....-.. llASS Im Holiday Party Recipes 1-'r i. Hours open. An · ~· Bou bo iW brand~· thony·s Dell . 17881 Fulltimepoaitiooavail. rormortragebrolrerage llC.rlOHIST I•-•••----H••tlc•I lilr•••· r n ca,_, ~
Skypark, Suite A. Irvine. immed. Call Blll at firm in Npt. Bcb. Full Receptionist. w /good ••SIC1tlTAl•S• * portll1ele1, l••p•, Circa l•t• 1100'1, dJp, etc SJ.
$56-067 499-1175 or e9·1177 rrom time. Mon t.bru Fri 8:30 typing Milla needed for Cl""'"' ••fllltl•a11 Kale's Kitchen -__ o. ________ , 8to5. to Spm. Must have valid hnury yacht mfgr. Opp· FC/Mf1/CptrsSl8,000 •-.. •· lill•••clea, 00 We Iii llZ74. CdM 92625.
COUNTER Woman. full Calif. driver's lie. Call ty for advancement. OrderProdU1Sl9.ooo ce•,••••• • •• d $S • l•c 1 •• ----------1 time, also Part time!•--------Bevedy7IMOIO. Salary commensurate ~~~~:=~~!~4:> --r.! Al w:twwtlc. ~ md -~·· ~~{!~oEr~ ·C r~:l7a~ seamstress. Mi chel's Gaaeral w/aper. Call for appt. UaReindenAgency ....... ..,_. • .,... .thr5p.a 714• Chri1tmas T ree orna· * BANKING
Our Newport Center or.
fice has an immediate opening for a
T...,_
130 Hrs per week 1
Six months previous
bankin1 experience pre-
rerrect but not required
WeU1 Fargo Bank orrers
outatmding benefits and
~1enial working at·
moapbere. For more in· ronnation please call :
... ...
Del9Me
714-64CMtOO
r~~)r~
WELLS
FARGO
BANK
Cleaners. Laguna n. ..... leJ C .. Models. remale. Sharp t7Mll50. 40208ittbFAt '&4EOE ....... ~ .........,., 9fl·l41I. Prh•t• ment. Willing to pay
Niguel.496-5124 ismw~ only . F\1ure. Xlnt. Receptionist, PIT mom· Newport/~llO/Free ..tr ltOO's! ltr.11 Ptrty. more than actual pnc~
COUPLE WANTED • money. 714-642·6282, m,. nr OC Airport. Nice Md, c1 .. l1tely r.. * * I IUY * * 644·15.111 Manage small business nX 0,.rillw Bob. phone penonaUty • ap· ,.._ ________ , 1111*3• la HC .... . w ·i . Full time 2PM·lOPM. ---------t B 1• Good used Furniture Ii SUM JIM Exerciser Ta-Part-Ume. i llram Must.beava.U.wkada. Musician: Keyboard Ir pearance •mus · usy Swi•l_,te,,... ce•4ltl••!! Late · · 1 ble with instructions
Callrorappt&46-J279 ....... ut1Cllft guitar player for con· pbonea. Misc. dutiea. No $1,000 + 0 .0 .E ll00'1. ,.-c.._. a. ::f'!S:£ur~rRY~u wil Great for muscle tone
Courier. Apply bet. 9AM· Bilinrual Muat typw temporary 1roup. Con· =1 Ask for Laurie Accurate typlnc. no ~ Ma -.wf•t•• MASTBS AUCTIOH and weight loss Top
12PM. Charlie's Chili. SO'ffpm. Full lime, MOD.· tactKatby631-40l2. ---------1 ='1~a~:!~~~·J.~j .... UllaHL Mt .. '4 ' _I' I' & cond. 165 FlSHING
=->01 Redhill. Bldg 2, Ste Fri. 8:J0.5 Pleue call .........,.,PAPER n-Uvery, Receptionist. N . B. Sandy, 54(M055, Coastal nr. p.,. Cllrta,_111 I f JS EQUIPMENT. som e
236, CM. Must be 18 yrs for. appt. M5-1151. Mon.-"'5"" ... ".y07
_.. ... ,,...,..approx Ardaltedural firm. typ. Penoonel Arencv, 2790 C.el ft 5 p ~· J~ 6 brand new incl Penn.
orover,muathavecar,2 Fr1.l :J0.5. 2 :5 ""30•A ........ A, bi ina6pboaes,&40-Gll. HartlorBlvd.,C.M. .._. _:! p~ 17 ·1-41· Redvelvet,oungechair New fresh 6 salt rods
d.,.., pr wk-Tues & Thurs . ~~!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~~I :_. : '"'· na e m. ,..._,...R .,.EE • O E '"".,_. -•r Campin .. tent (fresh ~ .r-= Fullerton. C. Men. -.rtOMIST """"'"'"' A~ ""· · · ttM•I S.shape. 3~'x7'. Very " 8-lOhn pr wk. --... •y 1_ .... __ • Npt B-h. CdM. -pluah. Xlnl. cond. u 50 clean I camping stove. -.. n...,. .. Full time Mon.-Fr i. ---------• ood 11 I s
U Tool ... ~ av-"able wltb 953-1110 , ... ________ 10.pc Roval Dalton Flow Wu ..x>. 979-7238 some g co ege c as C S A" .--au --------Must be personable 6 1• , books 98(}.5844 aft 6 &
Nltbt cuatocUan needed small •(J"OWinr tool im· ~ CLUI weU-poomed, • enjoy SecTetarial Clerical Blue jur basin set, circa 3 pc. sect ion a I W ht wknds.
by Huntington Buch Ci· part compuy ia Irvine rw•-rn meetinr the public. Re· l.8IO $1400 rarm . By appt brocade Sl.25, 2 White In· . . -
t y sch 0 0 1 Dist . Industrial com pie•. waats llcen1ed armed Q11irm rood ;c,emn1 & SKI onl.)'. S38-50ll dian cotton love.eats Bicycles, repainted, re· =-:~~~·A::&~:S ~.·b~di!:3!!i ~~o~~·:tr,anodnf;: \:"!!~rie:ci:P~~ 5ir.•50 .... •5 c:...4Sl•raa.-4 175/ea .. kln1 sz bed co~d. v ariet~·wh~~I
14th St. H.B . Ca I\ wtt.b pleuant telepbone After 8PM. call Marty. ferred. Full .s.cim»an.Y ~ " ED&---Q&k.. circa 1890 ~wJbdb.r:.d Sl.25. Qu.e.en.!-i~' ~d. pauenl U · --.-1--YOlce.,..t>'JliD&-6-1 .. ~l-of-MMM71 oeneflta. Apply Pen· COMING S2000 firm. Appl onty.' Anne dinin( w/4 chra 1 WIWll table. no checks ftce akilia. Contact Ken ---------nysaver, 11180 Placentia 53S.5Cm RiO,·inatcbinC buffet• _M_7_4'1_3_. _____ _
Day help wanted at Robertaon or Valarle MUISISAIDIS Ave.ColtaMeaa. mirror $250. 631 ·~28. Mabocany Round Table
Arthur Treacher'a. 260 Johnaclft. t?t-0711 H:JO Ir 11-1 part time. Woml TIMPOlAIY I•-------•! 66-731119 · · S.BriJtol.CM.754-8144 •---------Country Club Conv. Rataurant JOIS&HAYISSS WESTllJNSTEll ---------drapes, porcelain sink
Girl wanted for full time Holp.50-JOCU. c.o.mter help, Deli man, llOIPUMTHIM•S ABBEY .... ,............. _675-SOln _______ _
Delivery man for L.A. olftce poeltion. Apply to -~-------Short order clerk. We IHLIPll!! ANTIQUE MALL Ele1ant cu1tom de· PET·EZE all glass 11 ·
Timet1 to bornes ln C.M . Irvine En1lneerint. Nuninc need you. Call 675·2193. Dally UM. Fri 10·9 a 11 n er cont em p . IJ Udin( dooc for am all
• ff . B . a · I a m • 1#12 Unit B Hale ,\ve~,.. talAHMURSI . -~ay--tundaldnp:-tffouterun dot, retail •ieo. best of-
•. :~uatQWEmplm /f/b ~1GO/mo. + bO"tiUI". &viniorcilU.tt-TJH. Pro(reuiv.e bultb or·............ • AllOHlces.Jlt 117'1W•tml:Dlter..Ave. Some .antrque.a . ferm.-.m-t91T •!!~!!!!!!~~~~ Dependablecar.~l cantntlon located ln Wlltlw, tiUI boy, cook -......... GardmaGroft 554~103 Treaaured Cbri1tm11 --·--· --·----
or-.-Z. MAUS Newport Beach hH a helper, llitcben helper, •llST JOIS Ji1b at alnt aavin11. Ea· NEWPORT Beacb Ten· • llAU1"Y Full • part.. time. All full Ume openlnt ror • dilb w~. cubler • _...llST p.a.y ample: UOOO white nisClubmembenbtp. DELIVERY L.A. Times ....... UtUlonu fura'd. Triap Nune on the day ........ Llacb 6 dloner • A * * * modular aola for $1500. 711)..1173 l .. llflat/T., H•r to homea la Npt. Bch. Al921orover, retired abUt. Competitive houra available . * A p p L y ..._....., Turtlerodl75Z·5'20 ·
• Cllllia's 3:30AM to •AM. $550. wekw. Noesper. nee:. Salary • rrin1e benefit Restaurant openinr TOD•Yt.! 31.SlSamoa • * * Belp! We are turnln1 per mo. 548·8441 or Apply : Unheraal P9Ckqe. For interview. aocm.11$-JDl. A eo.taM•• Sofabed, brown. aood ,....S......_.•
swa1 business 6 need 5 IMtr-1413 Protectioa Serrice, lJ2tl cmtad Debbie Roberta: Youaretbewtaaerof coadtUoll.15(). m I
-' ~lve balntyU1ts W. 5th St., Suta Ana. 7 1 4 . 8 l 3 . 9 3 8 1 """'I HESJll J fNe..... m.o.lo. ~ia8M~~· • .,_.-a buaJ mall salon. Omtal nune, cbainlde, ln&entewbn: 1-1261·4, E.O.E .... M/F .......,..._'$ IRlll ( .. 0.IOval-),to y .... ·-•'--w•••erof Guaranteed 1alary. top pedo, DOD smoker, eap. Mon-Fri. .. -Maple Dinette •Tbl . ....,._.,.._ .....
fOIDm•11ion. paid v1ca· pref. but wtJI train rilht •---------•OFFICE & ASSICIATES Sparh Y•..... Hmtcb, 4 chn. slat l fne lldleh
tMm,advancedtralnloc penon.M+-OIUNptCtr. HAIRDRESSER Need ral to answer HCMl90PTHI ...... cand. t500 Beire lounce ($10.JDvalueJ,to
tr/ our traveHac atyle ~•• 8Dotla apace for rent or pboaes, type, clerical J•Ulan J .. 11 chr 6 ottoman $50. s,.ta Yee .... '41'tedora. If Jou would ..,_...,... F.mploJee witJI follow· ~ • help do book· •IOY lllllMSkyparll Blvd. ArhdmCOe.-enUon 146-1552 .. IY ._
· 1lh to achance la our Dental frcmt office. E•· iac calJ. At Tiiie VU1a11 ll..,U.1. Koura 1·5, I Immediate opteiap l.n &Utem Irvine Cater J.:StllrvJan 11 onife11lon pleaae call p'd pe1board , In · hire in Lacuna Beaeb. days • week . Open CU' famllJ ,...tauraats 540.0400 Tlelleta muat be U · Matcblnt Duicbu AnaheimCOevnUon
'. ~'1111 auruca; ..Upill1. Xlet •llllO. ulary . Call J acllie ail neerbf lout.lom. We c:baa1ed for reserved Coucb • Cbr Uh new C..ter • • locadcm. l!lft.ibllilaed of. ~,. no prevloua ••· ..u at tbe CoovenUoo SecT. '415/0BOM5-t084 Boclkk...,erl·5. Mon-Fri. flee .. Noaamoker . HARDWAllESALES. ~ut perl!DU. Join our '1""---~ .-. ~-_ ............... 1 ti Tickets mu1t be es·
Dc:ell aalary. Moulton .....-1. =.,•---: C"°"8 '" __ .... , friad!J'team.Comeaee---";-_--.;_-.-, -~~ ,!, mmet. Gir1'15pc. White f'rench chu1ed for reserved .,._....... -· •-ua• .... -1belweea2-4PM . ~·A '-tll.I -·-·-.ea~. 0 Proveeclal Bdrm Set tea11 at tJae CAHlveation Plau Pharmacf. Las are, 1• lniae, R •eptloal1t/t1plat -.......... for ... t ar-r dalmJ011FUc:keta ,.._. __ ... __ ... I tJ
.• lfh~Mr . Ororua. * * '* <WlltelUfPtau)N.B. ..=. ..... Retlcleauai ............. ~lDl•tt•a:, .. t;, • * * Good Cond . $Uo . C:U-eo.n"'."" e:. ntto .,....,.. DJt.O..• ,..J .... afftee atted• CM*Tu.11111 wtda•nowll · _-._im _______ clalmJOUl'Uckeu
1 30MGardnt8 HOUSECLEANERS P /T r•·••tloa'1t. C ... , rr ••oE · -1110 d _.,_ ,..__. 11 --Imm_. -·11 or ~ ' I 1 ' • a:.. • • •• -·-•-~a an • O"· * • * 1·~' ~·_.-..-.a •• -•• .... ... S &/I I 10 • 00 H 8 I ..... _ ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ·--· """"" "' • "f\lll c1aar1e bookkeeper Youaredae• .... rof part tlma. Top dollar. • ua : ... : · 11111Cdlqer · · rTille • .-t. aw CCIDCI *'50aet. ---------. tat facbt mfir com· ,.,_..... .,.._,.....,1 =J.:0.Nd. Call tlOlC-...-Dr. lrv. PenouelA1enc1 W•UDs'tt r..efri& 20 . •lllO...... lJDer-• To,Gla lruo
tft•J· Salarr eom· <••~>.w INS.lMl&.C.M. •.Lmb.Coatall•• .......,. sicleo rr.t free. tbartW ne. .3 • .,_.11 meatuf"llr .. /aapn. ._ ... , .. _ _ -·,m• ,.-.,, -lo.lhtltol !M'.!.,__•..-: ..-.. ~-~ ·lllnt cond. SIOO. rree Couc:la, 1ood 1bape, _,,,..· 4t'7..J'fta •
Dpwn tcut Yaclatl. Call --raiY ... ~ ------Parua.:-,:..... aeeded ...... Aa• 94> ......... , ea.t raqe, 2 ...-..... I ft. belt of. ---·-----
'.!!APP'-,,....· laal~ll '19aAr,w.•am • ._........,11 •. 11 W..,_"!,.,,.... HOWISTHITIMI I o•w t1~:;,n di•· tw.-.-4'carTld~lacUae.
ADaW o.. edoe Tw No a• He App-C .. ua /or job 1Hllen to check' .......,..,. .... .. 1111 ••· IOOll•• ~., _,.DS8P&R, lh'e ~~ar.~.•r.a•er: IMO -=-.:..~ ... &.te the Dally Pilot Help GAS STOVE, uaed Z ....................... •IR • =ldl .,... ••• nrm ...._ ... ·---_,_ Cll ,., w _. d 1r1 u 1r . 1, flt ..-~"per. TlehU aHl -••· --. er ... _. ••., ent... ue ca on. mo n tlu , W •rd 1 . 10 '!ft o If w o • • • • m.rtJ. lrtt .. aew. 1ae, • • oocl ~•••flt•. Call O.Sed for ,...,. .. llll&*lft. ~. . -..ao·i;--ra··_.111 the Job you want la not Bea.a\lful l'ondltioa. 1porttwear. 8obbl wort• 9o«* • Jr. • ._ .,_ ..... .a dl9 C.•.UC. tD-.,.,_.tOf,Mffri. U you•re In the mullet = 'f1t-:.W-there.YOU ml1ht COM!der U.IG.-. lroob. p,...eat Co., Onlill1Gh•t1:T11-l4*9 • ..__._ 0... MltM el u ... tr. La Habra area. for 1 helter car, be 1u~ offenn1 your aerv1ces Prolo1 ... alaet 1·10 • . , -.c:M•t•I• C.U __,.1 nt. m to 2 l I . It l . It 4 J. to ctieell the many auto• with an ad In the Job Xl•t rehluratora. -. Dat. a. Tw Dec. favlNSCOMTOOLF
, • ~Cab c1ma,_,..._ 1 1 4 ·•TI • I 1 t t • ldvertlaed ror aale In Sell t.hUlp fat wtth Dally Wanted cateiory. Phone w_ln6*Jert, I• la· a D1. llml Sl C..· MDIDIRIP·U.O
,.,... • • • llllGMG Clwified. PUotWaatAda. IG5171 --"-•""· l ea.n..aft.en.am. -.am
I
• ' --.. ..... --.
Siekrooa hue l la\ C9d. CM)d •• ,,, • .,., ..
....... a.ft ...
.vra VIII lllr 1 .. , pro-...... ,..... ... ,,.....
1111•a•o• •• , .... ,
w !&•ratable, 1-traelll
plarer. Two 1ar1• ......... ~.,. r... can crul f71.119.
Aar..K
... ,. .. ,.,
wmt-•Mn ................ . llllOll'l'
AVl'OIUl'l'LY ...........
•' 01 ftlBll ...... z
•• 0 ...
lt" O.S . Color T.V. All9'*• • 11•-. • ,,, ... su11oao _,... ..... . -.-
M..a TV ..... 711. llaftmttba1"• .,, ......... ..u .......... ,~ ..
,... llWllll.MNlfl.
"'l
0~'~9t ~
11~~ ~' rAAni!'4-
" Use '*""-' M service
when piecing your ad ••• •
Dally Piiot ad number will
appear ln~rpur classified ad ..• we ta e your messages
M houn day .•• you call
In •t your (onven1ence
during offke houn Md get
the rllpoilMS to your ad • : •
this service 11 only $7 .so
... k. For more lnfoe nta-
tlon and to piece your ad
aill 6G-5671 •
IOINd.AW11
&
.ON. BeubBlvd.
LARABBA
(5111. No. ol IA r.,.,)
1114t1U.IJJJ .....,.,Afifl.
"JS ........... ·--""'· a/c, tQe, perfed ......... M!OI' --.................. -. ................ ..............
'Tl ·-1111, ... ,, ' --~ ........ . _ ...... --.
w-. D .... a/c ....... ......... .
IT'S EASY! Look for yov aame aad addttu la today'•
elHlllW Ifft .... HY•,... tt. ull M2·~11 Ext. m aad
we wUI anaace for '" to pkk •P yMr tlt'kftl at Ute ....... -..... ...
too So. eo.t Hwy. L...-••" 494-1 Ill
COMM Ell
CHEVROLET
_..,_,. 11 .trl••r II ' 0 1
''~1\\1~'.\
SU-1200
'77 Caprice 4 door. 1
Owner, 32K. Xlnt co11d.
$3500. 873-0317
llmteCarlo
MUSTSB.L!!
'12 sood cood, good gas
mUeace. takes regular
Call for appt. to see -.590
'79 DELTA Win. 14.000
mi. llaay nlr!I•· $7 .~ Call: 17$-52'2 -
.. , •• tt60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·a Valiant I cyl auto. 2
dr, rune 1ood. 1375. -.9'11'7
''41MIACUDA •tOBO ~710 ~e
~ tf 65 •••••••••••••••••••••••
71T,_M
-;c:~-..
Powa-ateertq, br.U•.
wlDcloft. Power door lodl:I, ,..,. wiDclow de·
foalr. 11 llPG wi_. toS vt.-All/P'll I treek .
--· I MM411
SUPH Deal to ri1hl
,._. ·11 nrelliN. lo
1111.,ar.per(.C!Oed. New ..._.MW wide reds. a,.. _... 1 mo. eld.
.... air. lntll deal!
I Ptloae •• , OJ' •U•;
-~ , ............... _..
-· Da,. ..... : ...-.-
\
-1
•
O..YN.OT ......... -..... ,.
QUEENIE
"Cot o problem? Then wnte to Pal Dunn Pot W1ll
C1't red lopt>. getting the answt>rs and action you need
to 1olve rMqi11taes m government and bu.nness Mod
llC>Ur que1twns lo Pot Dunn. At Your Sermce. Orange
Coast Dady Pilot. P 0 Uo.t 1560. Costa Mesa. CA
92026. As many letters as possible will be answered.
btlt phoned inquanes or letters not rncludang the
rtader's /uU raame. address and bwmess hours' phone
nJimbercannot becons&der ed Tmscolumnappearsdo1·
ly except Sundays ..
""''••II to •prrlall•t
DEAR PAT: Can you tell me where l can have
an expensive Western hat cleaned and blocked? ·
The hat is dove-gray, and there is a stain -wine
or Coke, I think -on the brim. I took the hat to a
specially cleaner in Los Angeles, but they were
afraid to try this cleaning job I don't want to have
it dyed, and don't know wh at else to do.
K .P., Newport Beach
George Bennett of Kuster's Qtaallty Cleaners
lold A YS that had cleaning and blocking la practical·
Jy a lost art ln Southern CaUfonaJa. He recommends
coatuUag the manacturer and ukiag for U•e name
and address of a recommended bat-cleaning
specialist. If you nffd help locating the maaafac·
turer's headquaders, lc:t A YS lulow.
Proieeile" pool~d
DEAR PAT: It's occurred to me that a lot of
people could save their homes when brush fires
strike if only they could use the water that's in
their swimming pools . J know my pool holds apout
22,000 gallons~ there' any kind of pump that could
be used for this purpose? • ' L. E .. Sap_ Clemente
B.G. Flrenptiag Systems, Gardea)Grove, bas
this type ol pamp available. A spokesman ez.
plained tbat the system is gasoline powered aad
started wttb a push button. It pamps from 3, ... to
1%,000 gallons of water per hour, depending OD the
size. The SO.foot hose bas a lZS·foot range, enabl·
Ing the homeowner to stand back from tbe nre or
to hose down tbe roof as a preventative measare.
Bau~,.,, eearnf119 gll'ftl
DEAR PAT: I have a warning for others who
m ight purchase AAA ·size batteries to run
Christmas girts. Through a letter from Union
Carbide, manufacturer of Eveready and Alkaline
batteries, I have learned that AAA-size regular
carbon-zinc (cheaper) batteries are smaller thart
their Alkaline long-wearing (more expensive)
AAA batteries.
l teamed the hard way by trying to replace
some cheaper batteries in my pen nashlight with
the better ones. In trying to install the "same-size
AAA" batteries, as instructed on the product, l
broke off a little switch from the flashlight because
the Alkaline batte ries are a bit larger in diameter.
Since the batteries carry a guarantee or repair
or replacement, I returned the loo·large "same-
size AAA" batteries and the broken flashlight to
Union Carbide. They returned my batteries <no
use to me now) and my broken nashlight with
some new regular carbon-zinc batteries telling me
my flashlight was designed for the carbon·zinc
variety.
My point is how is a consumer to know that
AAA·size is not standard? I was just trying to up-
grade my nashlight's life, and in so doing -
terminated it. I've written another letter of protest
to the company, but just wanted you to know about
this.
.L...._c.._N_e.wprui_Beacb
Let A Y S know what you hear from Ualoll
Carbide, and thanks for passing aloag UlJ8 wa111J111
to our readen .
. "0 1 E · LLO~D ~S -~\.. I ~ flill'f.let~ sl11191
~ Last Minltl Gift
~' Giving Ideas fr• lllyd's
·vou must see our
. beautiful selection
of poinsettias, indoor
plants, plus our
large selection
of Christmas
ornaments
and gifts.
LUlflOOT llOSllMAft
AlmY9
( ,,,,. •,,., () J' l ,,,,.
I• r C.,frT t'
:, •• 1
• Cf'9f OMl9TWl8 IW UNi~ i,..
LLOYD'S NURSERY AND
LANDSCAPE CO., IMC. mt....,_...._, .. ..,.1C....W...,CA
C7141646-7441 .. I
All I-W.'9<1 To hi<• Ofl Hel!"-......... ,.. 12-1HI.:
...
.J.irael to pay U.S •. 86 nlillion for ship attack r ;
WASHINGTON (AP> -The Unlled
Statea bu accepted tarael'• offer to
pay • mlWoa to lhe U.S. Sovem·
ment ln compenHtion for an attack
by 1.r .. u fore" on an American
naval v..,.1 crulaln1 the Mediterra·
nean at the 'OUtbreak of the 1187 Mid·
die E .. t war.
On J~ 8, 1967, at Israeli troops
were battHn1 those of its Arab
net1hbon ln what came lo be known
u the Slx Day War, Israeli Jet
fiahters and torpedo boats attacked
the U~ Uberty, which the Penta1on
described as a ''lightly armed elec-
tronic• ship" crulsinc in intema·
tlonal waten 15 miles north of the
inai peninsul a.
Thlrt1·fOW' American seamen were
killed ln the attack and 75 were
wounded. ·
The next day. the Israeli Sovern·
menl apololi&ed for what it said bad
been an accidental attack l'ftuhin'
In a "tralic loea of life'' and offered
to compensate the United States and
the families of the casualtiee.
But there have been peniatent al·
legations that the Israelis speclfical·
ly targeted the ship because of its
ability to intercept sensitive military
communications. Among those malt·
ing the alle1at1ons was crewDilm
James M. Ennes, who recently
published a book about the incident
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
enUUed "Allawt on the Liberty."
' At the Ume of the attack, Defenae
Department offtcjall said the ship
had been moved into poaltion lo "as·
sure communicaUona between U.S.
1ovenunent ~ta ln the Mlddle East
and to aaalat in relayln1 information
concernin1 the evacuation of
American dependents and other
American citizens ln the area."
''The department bas no inform a·
Uon to corroborate aUe1atJona that
there wu a dellber,,,.te attack or
anything like that," said State
Department s pokesman John H.
Trattner in announcing the settle·
ment.
The U.S. Navy convened a court of
UlTRAi 6 mg. "ta(', 0.4 mg. nicotine. ULTRA 100's: 6 mg. "tlf. 0.4 mg. nicotine, av. per ciglflttl by FTC method.
'
·~ .. -...... ,_ --.
inquiry to lnvest11ate the Libert)' in·
cldeQt, but concluded that there wu
inaulfteient inlormatjon to make a
Jud1ment about the reuona tor the
Is raeli action.
Tbe ts million 1oln• to the U.S.
covenuneot ta in addition to com·
penaation previoualy paid by Israel
to individual crewmen of the Liberty
or their families alter claims were
brou&ht on their behalf.
In 1918, the Israeli covernment
paid ln full a U.S. claim for $3,323,500
on behalf of the families of tboee
killed in the attack and ln 1988, it,
paid ln full a claim for $3,'52,275 for
injuries ~~talned by the crew._
, -•.~. ilu-01 rooA'cco co.
I •
..
'
/!!o .
' '
---1110111 llllY NPll
MliNllA• : I I I Mil' ,j •. 1 fr I •"AN ' • f llJ ~'' .\ I '· ..... \ /1) CENTS
Huntingto~
.,. aoaE•TBAUE• .................
Hu.nUftl'on Qe.ch wUl me a
1aw1wt to recover nearly M00,000
that hu *'1 withheld by the
1Uate ol alllornia in the paat two
months, a <'it olfic1al U ld
St•le Controller Ken Cory held
bad~ $296,000 an m o n ey
earmarked for the city in No-
vem ber and anolher $273,000
earUert.hlsmootb.
The action comes as a result of a
dispute between state and city of·
licials on the amount of state
bailout money Huntington Beath
received alter the passage of
Proposition 13in Ju.neof 1978.
Assistant Cit y 'Attorney
$24 billion ashed of U.S.
to sue for
Wllliam Amsbary claims that the
state is actinl "precipitously and
improperly."
He also accuses Cory of plain
politics in order to attract publici·
ty ''to his rather obscure state of·
fice."
"It is our contention tbat the
state waited too long to take the
' action even if it is ri1ht • .nd we
dQD 't lhi.nk itis,," Amabary said.
A ms bary said the city will go to
court alter the first of the year.
Cory contends the city received
$706,000 to which it was not en-i
titled in 1978.
Representatives in his office
said the city had $2 million in
the general [und on June 30,
state
1978, when the correct amount
should have been S4.8 million.
State officials s aid the money
that was set aside fol' accrued
vacations, sick leave and unap·
propriated reserves in a separate
account should have been tallied
in the city's total reserve.
There aJso has been ~ mix up on
when the city took the action.
The city claims it acted prior to
funds
the Proposition 13 de adline but
has been unable to confirm when
it took the action through minutes
and tape recordings of council
meetings.
The money that Is be ing
withheld is derived through re-
newals or motor vehi cle registra-
tion rees. It had been earmarked
fo r maintenance and repair of ci·
ty roads
Hostages trial threat renewed
2-year agreenaent
FV police OK
new pay pact
By PIHL SNEIDERMAN
Of -Delly f'llM Staff
A lengthy, sometimes bitter
contraC't dispute between Foun·
lain Valley police and the city
has been resolved with the
unanimous approval by-officers
of a tentative two-year pact
Mor~fog
p 'redicted
for coast ·
Today was the third straight
day of.. pea soup mornings and
evenings along the Orange Coast,
and the U.S. We_atberServic.esaid
more coastal fog is expected
Tuesday.
The fog slowed surface traffic
and halted operations at Orange
County's John Wayne Airport.
The airport was closed by zero
visibility this morning. It also was
closed Saturday and Sunday,
although takeoffs were allowed
Sunday night when the fog lifted
fora while.
Dense fog is expected to con·
tinue along the coast through
Tuesday morning with partial
clearing expected in the after-
noons, according to a National
Weather Bureau spokesman.
Lows along the coast tonight
are expected to drop to 50-55
degrees with highs of 65 degrees
expected Tuesday afternoon.
Despite some temporary clear·
ing at times. the fog will continue
along the Orange Coast because
of cool, moist air from the ocean .
mixing with warmer air over the
land, according to weather
bureau spokesman Al Dascomb.
In errect, the mixture forms a
cloud and when !hat clou<Lcests..
--on t e and surface, a dangerous
fog condition results because of
the lack or visibility.
"In fog, I would restrict driving
to necessary trips,'· said
California Highway Patrol
spokesman Tom Comer "I~• ex·
"' 1 ··1SeeCOAST, Page AJ> -
Quatb born
in Stanford
STANFORD <AP) -
Healthy quadruplet sisters
have been born to a San
Jose woman wbo reported·
ly bad taken fertility
drugs, accordiJS1 to Stan-
ford Medical Center and
the womu'a mother.
The infants ••are all
quite fine, but the parenta
are still in a state of
shock," hospital
a p o k e a m a n I u li a n·
diCiurclo aaJd followin1
the Sunday blnu.
The lnf uta remained in
-tbe bMpltal'a lnten1ive
ca re unit wblle tbe
mother, Cbriatlne Heaa,,
was nsttni comfortably,
accordlnt to Mn. He11'
mother, Barbara
McGowan. The children
are the first for Chriatine
and Jerry Heaa of San
J01e.
l
Both s ides today were await-
ing the final legal language
before putting their signatures
on the contract.
The agreement calls for an
immediate 20 percent increase
in officers' fringe benefits, a 13
percent salary boost in No·
vember 1981 and another 5 per·
cent salary increase in June.
1982.
According to City ComptroUer
Howard Stephens, this package
will bring a c urr.ent top
patrolman's monthly pay from
$1,744 to$2,070.
The officers will not have to
wait a year, however, to see an
increase in their take-home pay.
Currently. the city withholds 9
percent of an officer's pay to
cover retirement benefits'.
Under th'e-new pact, the city will
pick UI! this fee._ thus boosting
the officers' paychecks.
"That's what's going to get us
through the next year,'' said Sgt.
Ron Manda. chairman of the
police negotiating team.
The benefit package also pro-
vides incentive pay for officers
laking colle•e courses. four.
week vacations alter 12 years on
the force and overtime pay
beginning alter an officer has
worked Ill hours within a two-
w~ek pay period.
Police negotiators had main-
tained that their department re-
ceived the lowest combination of
pay and benefits of Orange
County's 24 law enforcement
agencies. They had asked to be
raised to the average compensa-·
lion earned by five adjacent city
police departments.
Asked if the new pact will
bring them to this level, Manda
sa id, "Eventually, yes. If it
hasn't by the end of the second
year, then the main thing we'll
have to re-C'ontract for will be a
salary increase. We were very
far bebind.Jn_benefit.s:'
Some health insurance im·
provement.s are included in the
new pact. but the city agreed to
<See POLICE, Page AZ)
F-eg·causes
boat wrecks
along coast
A pleasure boat smashed into a
jetty and another ran a1round on
the sand durine heavy foe in the
Su.met Beach-Seal Beach area,
life1uard officials reported to-
day.
In the ftnt incident shortly
before noon S.turday. a lar1e
hole was torn In tbe aide of a 25-
foot cabln cruller wben lt ran into
the eutjetty of Anaheim Bay in
Seal Beach.
The Oruse County Harbor
Patrol put pumpe lD the boat to
keep it from alnklq. Its only oc-
cupant waa td.eaWled u Charles
Stahl ol Loni Beach.
In tbe aecoad incident about
three houri later, a IS-foot Hbbt
crulHr operated by Oeor1e
Dln1eria ol· Loq Beach auff.-ed propeller dam.,. whee it ran
afroundaear 1'1th8tnet lD S-
Beacb.
FourpUNlllen weretllttnotf
the-craft by Humlastoa Beaeb
Ufe1uardl and U..OraqeCoualy
Harbor Patrol. No ~uriea .,.e repo,,..
... •
GoRmns
That's not a crying towel Rams cheerleader Tina Easle·r·
ling is wavin.K:. The Cos ta Mesa resident. a former Orange
Coast College.cheerleader. was cheering the Rams to vie·
tory over Atlanta Sunday . For story of the game, see
P age Bl.
Reagan set to name
4 more in cabinet
W ASHI NG T ON (A P J
Ronald Reagan prepared to un·
veil four mor e Cabinet-level
selections today, including a
black for bousing secretary anrl
a woman for U.N. ambassador .
sources on the president-elect 's
transition team said.
The sources. who declined to
be identified. said New York at·
torney Samuel R. Pierce was
picked to head the Department
of Housing and Urban Develop·
ment, making him the first
black man seleded for a Reag_an
eablnet~t. ·
The. sources said Georgetown
University pro fessor J ea ne
Kirkpatrick was l o be an·
nounced as the president-elect 's
choice for U.S. ambassador to
the United Nations, a post that
·will be given Cabinet-level rank
and, thus, allow Reagan to fulfill
a pledge to include a woman in
his top circle of appointments.
Reaian also planned to name
conservative Colorado attorney
J a m es G. Watt as intei:ior
s ec ret a ry and former South
Ca r o li na Gov . J a m es B.
Edwards as energy secretary,
said the sources. ·
Formal announcements were
lo be made at an afternoon news
conf-ettnce her e. -
In an unexpected development
this morning, Reagan's transi·
t ion team decided to hold up an-
nouncement of a fifth Cabinet·
le ve l appointm e nt, Illinois
Agriculture Director John R.
Blo<:,lt, .as agriculture secrelafy. ·
Over th.e weekend, Reagan's
t ot> adv i•ers told Senate
Republicans that Block would
be among the choices announced
today, but the decision was
made this morning to postpone
the announcement.
Se veral sources said Block
still appeared to be in lihe for
the job: but they could not ex-
plain the reason ror the delay ..
One source speculated that
(See CABINET, Pa1e A2)
Iran says
it won't .
back off
ByTheAssodated Press
· The speaker of the Ir anian
Parliament today renewed Iran's
threat to put the 52 American
hostages on trial if the United
States does not accept the $24·
billion demand for their release.
Th e P a rli a m ent l ead e r .
Hashemi Rafsanjani, declared
that Iran will not "back down
from our demands.··
The threat of hostage tnals
came a day after li .S. ofCicials ef·
fectively reJet'ted the latest Ira·
nian terms for ending the confron-
tation -that the U.S. government
deposit some $24 billion in cash
and gold in the Algerian central
bank as a guarantee that Iran's
financial demands on the United
States be met.
The British newspaper Daily
Telegraph reported. meanwhile.
that Algeria will mediate new
<See HOSTAGES, Page AZ>
* * * U.S. taking
'hard line'
on hostages
W ASHJNGTON <AP) The
~tale Department today ·reg;
1_stered "deep concern" about
several o f th e Ameri ca n
hos tages in Iran and said a
number of them m ay be in
prison.
Spokesman John H. Trattner
said the Ame~icans are not re-
ceiving adequate m edical atten-
tion and many Of the 52 have not
been heard from recently.
"We would welcome any im-
provement in the circumstances
in which they a re being held ...
Trattner said. "Contrary to Ira-
nian reports in recent days that
they (hostages ) are now housed
in luxury hotels, we have reports
that a number of them may. in
fact, be in prison. ..
The U.S. spokesm an reiterat-
ed that the government of Iran
will be held accountable for the
well-being of all of the hostages.
He said lran had not respected
e ven minimal st a ndards of
treatment expected of th world
community. • -
Trattner said h e Clid not know
how many Americans may be in
prison or on wha t grou!lds.
Another U.S. official said the in·
formation came in letters from
hostages.
The State Department took
this tiardened line after Iran's
latest terms were denounced as
unreasonable by Secretary of.
State Edmund S. Muskie . .ffopes
for a Christmas homecoming ap·
pear to ha'Ce evaporated.
Park gear vand
·1 r
Uzed
Destruction flareup conce_rn1 Huntington
V andab uain1 everything from
pipe bornbl to crow ban are caua-
ln1 Huntincton Beach officialJ to
consider .. destructloA·preol''
play1rouncl equipment in city
parka.
Community Serric• Dtreetor
Vince lloorhouM •aid a "rectllt
nareup ol deltrueUoD" lDcluded
tbe bundnl ol lot ellmbbac • paratm et Murdy Park and the
breakinl al Ulbll, ebaln, and
toil$ lnltde a eommUDlty m.et-
ln1 hall at LeBard Pan.
llloorhouae aald tbe l,000-
square-foot meetln1 hall bas been
dama1ed repeatedly by vandals.
He 1ald be11 recommendinc tothe--CityCoanciltbntttMrr~mm .
He said the City Council alao
will be .Ued to allocat. up to
'50,000, malnl.J to nptir d~e
by vandal.I. but a1'0 to replace worn out and dama1ed equip.
ment.
Moonboule said bathrooma, = HU, alldn, merry·10-• barbecuel and ...........
alto bave been heavily van·
dall*lDt.beparb tbla year.
''We've bad c,aes where people
take chain aaws and cut down
~~It~ tear apert a wuh sin.It with crow
ban,'' MoorhoaMaald.
"We're lolna to have to take a
lon1 look it what equipment" put lD tbe pub, lloorhouae said,
addlnC t.b.t, la some ...... •wtni
aetamayberemoved. •
He uSd rock formauona and
clay ptpea for children tocUmbon
and · through may become
familiar park scenes beuuse.
they antoqh to destroy.
-----~-----
I
AP Wlr...-o
RANSOM OR TRIAL
Iran's Behzad Nabavl
Man seize·d
on Valley
asauk rap
A 21.year-old man was arrest·
ed and cha rged with assault
with a deadly weapon on a
pohre officer Sunday afternoon
aft er rhree rarloads of ma le
Latins reportedly tried to force
the vehicle of an off-duly Foun·
tain Valley Police offi eer to a
stop.
The suspect. Mark Anthony
Rodriguez. of Chino. was arrest·
ed b\' Officer Steven J Corwin.
29. a·t lhe 1ntersertion or Euclid
St reel and Edinger A venue at J ·JO
p. m . pohcesaid.
The susfect and another man
reported!) j umped from a car
a nd threatened Corwin with
empty beer bottles when the of·
ri cer stopped his vehicle at a red
tr affic signal
Police sail1 Cor win threw
Rodriguez to the ground and
pulled a pistol on the other man
The other s uspe('l ran to one of
t he thr&e Q.al'S and all the
vehicles. containing at least
eight men-: dr~·e 11way. polic..---.
said
Police said the suspects ap·
parently did not know CoN i n
was an off.duty police officer
and were "just looking for trou-
ble,·· . . ,. -.. -~
Or:::J -~oasl
----t__~
1\·eather
E xten sive a r eas .o f
dense fog late afternoon
thro ugh mid-m o rnin g
hours from Santa Monica
Ba y so uthward
Otherwise fair with some
high cloudiness Tuesd,y.
Highs at beaches Tuesday
65 to 68 with inland area.
highs t5 to 80. Lows
tonight 46 to 53.
INSIDE TOD"~
Th ink 3mall. 1ay many
1tock m~stmtnl club.t. Bui
Ut•ir profit.a c°" M big SH
P04tBf-
···~ At\'-~ OI ...... ..,,_ .. ...........
~ Al
( ........... ,
~· Ot c,.._.. 01 ........... "' ............. .......... c.w .......... .,
MM C1-S
I
.J •
2 •••
Lale Unw frotf' '*w't _,.., W •h •I.,.. ...... :..-
\ Jet fuel pipelip,e leak
closes streets in VegaB
LAS VEOAS 1AP1 Thouaancta of ••Ilona ot Jet tutl 11.&1ht4
from • t\lplur-9 plpt'llnt ....a ol the Laa V11u Slrtp tod1y,
rort ln1 th• closure ur 1ttv.-raJ m ljor 1trfft1
T he luel eruptl!d inlo flilrt1e11 1tt om: point, apparen tly
tout h«I oft h> 11 llJ•Urk frm11 ~ 1111si.1nai automobile, ~iald Capt.
Rolph lnrum1111 tif Hw <'l1o1r\ ('ount} lo'1re Departm~n\ T h.irn
"'f'ft nu 1ajurw~ r.•l)Ulh'41 howt>v.-r •
l'eople la\ In¥ In 11101..i~ 011 11 Ullll'tU\• venue welil of In
tt"r tat 1~ -...'Ould h Vt-h • n ·nu&ll\ 111 th\'11 room 'I until the st reet
"' ~ ll'f\IWned '"nw11nw 1h1" aflt>rfll""lll
I .. -.. doll•r di,..: .. Id rbn •••
I ON U(I!\ \ 11 1 I Ill' l ' dullar dJlJJ>Cd ~harply al!(1un:st
m 4' 10 1 f111 t>1~11 t•u1 1tom1e1o todu.>-for tht-.w l·011d bl r1ught tra d1n11 ''"\ ••tJ• ,., munt•\ n1orkt•t !Ju...lm·M blvwct.I dvwn for C:hnSll'Uoas
l'h .. pnt 1· nl 1i111ld 1 O\t· ln i.• mur h i.:. Siii 110 o unct:
l>t·.11t-r ... 11111tiult'd lht> ll11w11w111cl trt:nd of lht: l ' ~ currency
111 ltun 1r;,1l111.: lo ~ ... ll t't lil lul·k llf rntere.!>t • and & drop m
I-1.11 •lllull.u 111\t'rt•'t 1 ~t'-''
tlud.-ra1.-,.,.r1ltqtu11u> ltll• J',-ltraN
'I< 1 1~1 \ I 'l•I u .. I \I'' 1\ lliOdl'I Ult'I} Ml'Ong earttHtuake
!>ll i.• I>. 1 ... 11, ,H) th~· t111l} t·1t > 111 (~1111 :wd ut ht:r t'entral Iranian
l llll'' 11 .. d .J \, c11HI 111 lt'U'>l ww dcatll was rt·ported, the offll'iul
I 1 ... nn111 Ill'"., •O~t·11t·\ Pai !> !>did
It 'JIU tJlll· l'hlld """ k11lt:d <111d a wom an wa!> 1n1ure<l . but
11111 nut pee 11 \ v.h1·r1: Lhl· l'a !>ualtit·" t><'l'Urred
l'tl't' 11u:1kt· meas uring j J on tl1e Rit·htn M'alc , wa!> lht'
'l.'l'o1Hl lu ,11wk t'l'lll l'al I r;111 111 four day~
' Polblt 1ntrkf#r11 ,.,HUlnew pralr•I
W 1\ l<SA W, Poland 11\1-"J Worker!> 111 a central l'olish town
c:ont111ued 'a rnavt'rtl'k m1•al ratwninl( protest today des pite ·a
b1m on s11·1k1·' ordt:rt>d lly Sohdur1ty, the nation 's largest rn·
deµendt!nt unwn, 1n u bHI to l'ltM! tens ions between Poland and
its Sovit:t blo<' ae1J,!hbors
The protc~tens ocC'upied a district governm ent building m
the l'entral town of Piotrkow on Thursday and a re waiting there
lo m eet with ~<ivcrnment offi c111ls, Solid a rity "spokesm an
Sta n1s luw Kotlins k1 said
11111i-111al.w ac•fh•bu ••a11r pralr•I
MONTP £1.l ~H. Vt (/\P l Two dozen anti-nuclear ac·
tiv1sls took over a. waiting room ?Ulside Gov. Ric hard Snelling 's
office toc1ay, vowing to s tay Wllil they were promised that the
~late·~ only nucle~.ir. po wer plant remain shut until independent
rnvcstr~ators suy rt 1s ready.
. The protesters carried a Jetter for Snelling, which as ked
h im to "keep Ver mont Yankee dosed until such tim e that a full
a nd public inv~igation rnto rts operation is conducted."
The Vermo Yankee nuclear power plant ha s been idle s i~cc• Sept 27 whe it s hut rlown for its annual refueling a nd re·
p airs.
Lc»w <•lo11d-s d11t~
Thick fog to ease
for inland tonight
I.OS /\NG EU:s ( 1\1' I f og
tha t t k1udcd the rl 11-:h t plans of
lhousand!. of holiday l ra velcr1.
S um.lay and lh11. m orning was
ex pcctl'd Lo l('ssen toni~ht and
g1v(• way 10 l<Jw clouds. the Na
t 1onal Wt•al hc r Servi<'<: said
''Tonight som(· deeµenin~ uf
tilt' ('Oastal marin1· la yer s houlrl
res ult in rmprov(•tncnl in that we
wrll have more luw rloudincss
inst ea1I or th1· low dense fog,"
s aid a stat<:rnl•nl re leased hy the
ser vrt t·
Tht· <'X l rcrnl•ly th ic k fog ,
which c losed Ln~ Angeles In·
lc rnalwn al Airport for several
hou rs Sunday nr ghl, t ontinued to
block incoming flig hts even
aft er sunrise today
Numerous planes we re forced
to land as far as San Fr anci.s ro
<tnd Phoenix
Author ities in Los Angeles
said flighLo; were laking off by
~un rise but were s lill unable to
land . /\l Ontario International
Airport. officials said 31 planes
d iverted there because of the fog
at I.AX were a waiting on the
~round at 7 a.m. and that as
ma n y a s 50 unsc h e duled
u irplanes had been sitting on the
~round at one ti me during the
night
Ontario itself Nas clear of fo~
thjs morning.
The fog settled in at dusk Sun·
d_ay r closing -the air.port for
about six hours . It c reated havoc
for both the travelers and those
a wa it ing them. many of whom
waited al lhe airport for hours
grumbling about t he confusion
to h arried airline employees.
··People are getting a little
1l'a te at U\fs wh01e m ess:·-gnped
one woman, wno aslled not lo be
n a m ed. while w aiting for an
Ame rican Ai rlines flight. from
Chicago.
F o ur s malle r So uthe rn
California a irports also were
socked in by fog a nd forced to
shut down their runw11ys.
Intermittent heavy fog sus -
pended operations here for a few
minutes at var ious times this
m orning, but most 'flights were
a llowed to land and depart
a lbeit lute
"Th(•re we re quite a lot or de·
I ays. some up Lo t hree hours."
an American s pokesman sajd,
addin g that about six Ameri can
flights into Los Angeles and San
Diego had to be diverted.
While some flights were can·
re led until today. othe rs were
diverted to Ontario, Palmdale,
San F ranc isco or Las Vegas.
/\erome x1co had one flight
from La Paz. Mexico, land a t
Ontario. About 115 p11ss engers
we re bused from Los Angele~ to
Ontario to m ake a departing
fli ght for Guada lajara a nd Mex·
ico C rty, s a id Ae r o m exico
representative f'rank Camino.
Del ay tim e was four to five
hours. he s aid.
T h e Ame rican flig ht from
Chic ago, scheduled to land here
at 5 p.m ., was diverted to Palm
s ,1rings. Its passe ngers were
bused into Los Angeles a two·
hour trip arriving tod ay at 3
a .m .
Many of the diverted flights
waited at l he rr unsc heduled
s lops to sec if the fog would lift.
• but when the wa it became too
long. bus ing was used . • • • 1·ro111P,...AI
-COA-ST. • •
tremely haiardous m ore so
than snow or rain ."
At J ohn Wayne Airport, Air
Ca lifornia was forced to cancel
s ix flights this m orning and.
Qolden West.Airlines cut. !even
flights . according lo company'
sp okesmen.
A s p o k se s m a n f o r Air
C alifo rnia s aid lh a l 60 0
passengers we re affected by the
flight cancellations lo San J 05e,
Oakland, Sacramento and San
Francisco.
Incoming nights to J ohn Wayne
Airpert are being diverted to On·
tar io Airport whe re a shutlle bus
is transporting tra velers to the
Or ange County.
TELEPHONE
All deper11Mftte: (71') 142-4321
CIH.med Advertlel"t: '42·1111
Crash,
81;iootmg
suicide
lNA, lll. (AP) -Polle• HY.
protperoua tnaurance 11ent wbO
w u wanted on a c har1e of tryln1
to murder one of hla clienta drove'
head-on int.<> a Greyhound bus and
\hen s hot himself between the
eyes
Autho~es have ruled that the
Jt'nday niRht death of Huold
Wisnewski. 55. of Centrali a was a
s uicide.
J ust six hour s hours earlier, a
warrant had been issued for
Wisnewski 's arrest , cha rging him
wit h t he atte mpted murde r
Thursd11v or a n e lderlv woman
who had been one of h is ins urance
c h en ls for years .
About 9 .30 p.m . Friday ,
Wis n e ws ki's ca r crossed ,the
t·enter line of Illinois 37 and
headed straight for a Greyhound
bus, driver Mitchell McDowell,
25, of J ackson, Miss .. told J ef·
fer son County sheriff's officers .
McDowell s~d he s wer ved and
clipped the car. Wisnewski's car
then skidded 1,900 feet and c ame
to a halt Wisnewsl<i got out lo in·
spect the damage, accident re·
ports said
A b u s pass e n ge r told
iJUthoritics s he sa w the d river of
the car watk around the car twice
and then ta ke out what appeared
to be iJ gun When ambula nce at·
tcndan ts arrived a few m inutes
late , they fOWld Wisne wski dead
with a .22-c aliber pistol beside
hi m .
A s h e r iff's d e p uty s a id
Wis newski on T hursday a llegedly
went to the hom e or (rm a Lee on
Illinois l27, about 15 m iles from
his Irvington office. southeast or
Centralia.
Mrs . Lee told a reporter that
she wasn't afraid of Wisnewski
bec a use he had handled he r in·
c;urance 15year s.
But, she said her lawyer had r e·
cently told her not to talk to
Wisnews ki. A few weeks ago. s he
t.ried to cash in one of her life·
insurance policies and was told by
the company that it had been
c as hed in three years ago. She
had turned the matter over to her la~yer. ·
Fra. Pap A I
HOSTAGES
"de tailed negotia tions " between
Iran and the United States in Lon
don this week. Hut a State Depart
ment s pokesman said. "We 're not
a wa re of any m eeting in which the
United States is pa rtic ipating in
London this week · ·
·'I do ubt il very much.·· another
high -level U.S. officia l said of the
re port.
The Daily Telegr aph gave no
so urce fort he brief story.
Rafsa nJa ni was as ked at a
Tehran news conference about
the likelihood or t10s ta gc trials Jf
the United States reJCC"tCd I ran 's
dem ands.
lie re plil'<.I ... f have not yet seen
the official V S. reaction. But if
the U .S, is not ready to give us OJJr
righ ts ourlast act wi ll be a trial.l '
... _ Wcguess thc/\mericans
have wanted lo make an excuse of
the host ages for military in
tc rvention and conspirac ies. We
h ave no intention of back mg down
from our demands ...
Rafsanjani a lso said he does not
expect the issue to be r eturned to
the Parliament. or Majlis, which
set the four basic conditions for
I he hostages· re le ase seven weeks
ago
"Because It has alreetdy given
1ts instructions iflhe U S. does not
accept. The Majlis has said they
C the hostages) sho uld be tr ied.··
The I rani a ns a ccuse l h t'
hostages of having been spies
T he s peakers 's comments
echoed those Sunday of Iranian
E xecutive Affairs Min iste r
Heh1n!d-Nabavi,-who-is in ctrarge
of the n egotiations with the United
States. Nabavi s etid U.S. rej ection
of a ll the demands would prob·
ably lead to a decis ion to refer
the matter to the Is lamic courts
On Sunday. Secretary of Stale
.E~01un~ s. Muskie ca~ed Ute de·' ·,
mands "WtreasooabJe " a nd said
the hostages would not be home
by Christmas.
A top Iranian offic iul s aid Iran
could hold the 52 captives "for 10
more years." They s pent their
415lh day in ca ptivity today.
Muskie said It would be difficult
t o agree on t e rms for the
hostages' release before Jan. 20.
whe n Pres id ent-elect Reagan
takei:;offlce.
Suspect held
in slaying
Thomas P. Ha ley OFFICES A Culver City man was arrested Co\!•-... 230 """"' ... S-r-' 1 s d
P""ll\l'llf •
Robert N. Weed
P•t•ICllM
L...-._,.: ..,, No. CM•• Hltftw., by Buena Park po ice un ay on
-•...it11 llMdl: ,,.,, 8NC" ...,....... suspicion of murder In connection
S'eco11d elm ,. .. _ ..i• ., Cot .. -... with the shoot.Ing death of his W'I·
Cellt.f"4• IUW'I t~. tulllcfllltlell llr c.et· l li j • 1..-d •••• .,. oo """'"'"; ., ~:tt IN!ltllly; c e ear er nwec ay. """'\e,., ..... .,..... . ~wdt.a.rry =~-1-_;~~"'~~wmnJ1M11--=-+..:;tr;,.=-::o.:i.,..=~C-4="'io.1=•,:--;,.ii:1 ... :;,:-:..,;1:; .. ~-•; .. i'.1.;---:r A. Hardenon, 42, was taken into
M•"'•"'-EAl•er ~~,:.-c.i:: :t;·~~.,.:;: custody after officers found
Charles H . LOCK •d"*" .,. ..,..,_. ,..., .. ...,. "''*' Oliver T. Convoy, 56, dead of a
An"l'9111 INMtillt IEdllet ,., CM'-_.., ~ IMtll. """'...... hot -·-"' l th h d in hi
Copy rltlll IU O On,. .. Ceo \
P11lllll•lll "e '""P•"Y No "••• ........ fll~, ................... , .. ,
o< .onfll_.." Mf•lfl may M
rtpr oduCt CI w llllt11I t Ptt lel ,_r..,IUIOll OI <OOV•ltN _,
euc1111'e11111•111 vo11ey, ,','•~:":t L .. 1111• 1una ~ou o e ea ~ ~1~c..L •.... ~ •• apartment.
PllllllhllM ~" _. ......,,._ "'° ,,_._, Th ~ id Hard ,..,....1111,..,...... .... ,. _.. ..., """' ~.o. e •...-•man sa enon ... ,,...c-u ..... c.e._..•..., wu ln the apartm-.it when of.
VOL. 11, NO. a11 flcera arrived. No moUve Is
knownfortheahootlng .
•
.. .. . .. . _. .....
.. 727 jet
-ENERGY CHOICE
Jemea B. Edwerda
...
BLACK FOR HOUSING
Semuel R. Pierce
..
Laguna Hills
blaze injures
two firemen
T wo firefig hte rs s uffer ed
m inor inj uries S unday in a
$200.000 four-a larm blaze that
s we pt throug h a c n m m t!rl'ia l
str uct ure on La ke Fo rest l>rr v1•
rn LagWla Hills
Orange County Fire lJeJJart
m ent Capt Marc' llawkins :,,aid
arson is suspected in the blct1.1.'
tha t gulled fou r oul of eight
suites in the single' s to ry build
rng at 2.J024 Lake Forest Drr ve 111
La guna llills .
Mo re than 100 fi refight er!.
fro m the coun ty, Santa An a anti
Laguna Beach fought the blau·
before l!:mging it under control
The two firefightel'"s taken to
Saddleba<:k Community llospi\al
were Emmett Wells from Mis
sion VicJO and David Gruhb
from Laguna lhlls T he two suf
fered from heat exha us tion and
s moke inhalation ancl WNc rt•
leased later in the da y from lhe
hospital
H awkins s et i d th e b l aze
originated in waste ma terial ad
Jacent to the buildini.:. He s aid
inves tigators believe someone
ignited this materia l, although
no additional information is oc
mg relt•ascct on the 1nvest1ga
ti on
Anne x bill nixed
J E RUSA LE M <AP I Pnme
Mi n iste r Me n achem Ac gin's
government voted today to op
pose a bill lo annex the Israeli
or c u1,ied Golan Heights of Syn a .
vi rtually f'nding pros pects for
pa ss in ~ th e c o n trover s ial
m easure
INTERIOR Pit:K .
Jame• G. Wett
APWl ....... 1 ..
DELAY IN AGRICULTURE
John R. Block
t 'rOM ,.,.,,.. A I
CABINET • •
Ht·ag:m wanted to sa\·e the an
nr,unt·c·mentfor Tuesd ay when
lht• trans1t1m1 rna\' d1sd ose rls
chui«e for edut•at1~m sel'rl't arv.
thl' laM department h ead to be
l'h11~en Hcal!an ha!. h ad trouble
finding (•an1htlatc1' for thl!. JOh
bP1·a ui,p l)f h1~ pll'!lge to l'li m tnutc·
\ht• I lt•part mtnt nf Edut·at ion
I< l'tl g iJ n pr 1· '.., !>JI'' k 1·.., man
Jam .. ~ Brad\' 1.a11 l c.idtl1t111oal
Cah1n t·t anniJuneem t:'nb would
b l· m;ttll' Tue!.day but would not
clahoratl'
I< t·1Jga11 a I no,1d .' h a c; :in
n out1l'C~d h1::. ftr!.l 10 Cab1nt·t
11.'v t'I nomrn <1t11m!.
POLICE._ ..
d1'>C'US!> a l'hangc to ~ n<'" rn
s uranl·e pollt·v in one ve<ir
T he· nl·w ·con tr aci w ill hl·
rel roa1·t1ve to Nov 22. lti, pro
\'1s 1ons W111 add $499,054) to lhl·
1>11litl' payroll over tht' next l wo
years , with $240.34 l of that rn ad
tl 1t 1onal s alary, Comptroller
Stephens s;.iid.
Th e p act was app r ove d
unanimously F rrday night at a
mcet m~ of the 58-me m ber f'oun
Lain Valley Police Offi cers As·
soriat1on
Th e c it y 's t h ree ot h e r
employee g roups had approved
new pacts with the city prior to
the cxpirallun of three year con
tracts on Nov 21.
Sgt. Manda credited a large
publit· turnout in s upport of
poli ce at last Tut>sday 's Cit.'
('1,uncd mectrnR with he lping
br e ak n leng thy dc adlot'k in
bar .ga ining.
believed ~
stolen
l\ONKONKOMA, N.Y. <Al» -
A Boetn1m Jet wu the center d
a custody dispute today alter lta
owner new It acroe1 the United
States amid reporta that It wu
taken without authorisation alter
a bill ot repaJr work went unpaid.
A F e deral Av iation Ad·
ministr11lion spokesman said the
plane look off from Burbank
Airport on Saturday. The FAA
s aid it apparently had been un·
-d ergoing a refurbis hin g and its
owner took off wit h it without pay·
ing the bill.
It landed a l MacArthur Airport
on Long Isla nd a bout 5 p .m . SW'I·
day, the FAA said, and Suffolk
County police today we re waiting
for someone to arrive who could
open the locked craft.
According to Sgt. Frank Miller
of the Burbank police , the plane
was Oown out of the California
a irport about 8:30 p.m. Saturday,
but was not reported m iss ing until
3 · 30 p.m. Sunday.
The plane's listed owne r rs
Con stance Leasing Ltd. of the
Bah amas . and it was being re·
furbished by Tiger Air Services -
Inc .
Three pe rs ons, the num ber
necessar y to fly it , we re aboard
when 1ttookorr. Miller s aid.
T he plane stopped for several
hours for fuel at the Da llas-Ft.
Worth airport, M1ller s•id .
Two staffers
' • • set to 1oin
Stanton off ice
When Fountain Valley Cityj
Coun c i l man R oger S tanto n
moves to his ne w post as First
D1 s tri t'l Ora n ge C o un ty
Super visor in Januar y, he 'll be
ta king two t 1ty starr membt!rs
with him
S uzanne Vi c t o r , 34 . a d ·•
m in1 stra1tvc assistant to the city
m ana~er. has left to accept a posi·
l ion as Stanton's elC'ecutive assis·
ta nt on the countv board . She had
het•n with the c1ty"s1nce 1977
Also. K1Jren Davis, 37. wrll
lt-:H·e he r position as secretary to
the cit) tounC'll Dec 31 to become
St an ton's Sl'<'retary _She has been
"1th lhecrty for seven years
C11,v Manager Robert Vollmer
'a11l ~ts \'1ctor 's position prob·
<J h l.' wrll be f1llL'<I from within the
current c1\y staff Ile said the de
c·1s111n on filling Ms Davis ' post
",di be made by the city council.
Pol.ice ~ah
3 in theft
Seal He ac h police a nd t he
(Jr 1Jnge County Ha rbo r Patrol
rlushecl out three s us pet•ts in the
tuirglar~ of a cafe at the Seal
Beach pier , f)ffu·1als r cJ>orted to
d ay
/\uthorrltes s aid l h a t three
s us pcC'ts hid on a bOat landing
be ne ath the pie r a fter burgla rs
s m ashed a window and took beer ,
c·andy and e leC'lri<' sig ns late
Sat urday night.
One of the s uspeC'ts. afte r being
s potted from the patrol boat.
Jumped into the water and hid
among the pilings before being
forC'ed to sur face by the cold
water
Police said tha t George Morris .
18. of Downey. was charged with
bur glary Two JU\'eniles were re
leaserl to their parents
Gathered Sleeve fo r Maximum warm
-----------------------
Christmas and "Pacific Trail" at the Garage
A Polyester filled jacket. lull 11p to lhe
turtle neck. completely washable. featunng two
zip pockets
B Feather soft POiyester l1lled J8Cket/Vest,
lull ZIP to turtle neck and completely washable •
ALS GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(71 4) 644·7030
'" c~1lifor11ia?
That ., right Only the snow these duldren
are romping 011 d1dn 't fall from the skies.
wt11c·h would be an exceptional event al Sea
World in San Diego, where kids are play-
ing . The white sturr. at Sea World's Alpine
Village, is m an-made.
Mondale raps Soviets ...
Concerned 'behavior' undermining peace
WASlllNCTON (J\ P 1 Vice
President Walter f' Mondale is
leaving office concerned that re-
ce nt Soviet be hav i or has
.. dangerously undermined .. U.S.
opportunities to follow a course
essential for i::lobal survival.
"I'm very worried about U.S.
Soviet relations," the vice presi-
dent said.
In a wide-ranging interview
with a dozen reporters. Mondale
expressed his conrerns about
Hostages
'light-up'
• pushed
Mil.WA KF.F. (AP ) Radio
stations nationwide. spurred on
by a Milwaukee station. are urg-
ing Americans to burn lights for
417 sec:onds on Christmas Eve
a second for each day the 52
America!}$ will h.ave been held
hostage in Iran by thut date.
J P a ul Huddl eston, news
director of Mtlw<1ukec's WBCS.
!\a1d the station plans to wire
President Carter asking him to
join the ·· Li~ht Up America"
vigil by lighting the national
Christmas tree al 7 p.m. PST
Christmas Eve for 6 minutes. 57
seconds.
Carter announced earlier the
tree would remain unlit for the
second year as a symbol of con-
cern for the Am ericans r.td
hostage in Iran since militants
stormed the U.S. Embassy in
Te hran on Nov . 4, 1979.
The station launched the cam-
paign a month ago. urg ing
Americans, at the same hour. to
stand outside for 417 seconds
Christmas Eve with a lit candle,
flashlight or porch light.
The station has since been
contacted by stations in New
Yo rk . Texas. Flo rida and
•• Oregon that heard about the
vigil through the Nawonal Radio
Advertising Board and broad-
c.asting publical-ioR-s .
Advertisements boosting the
vigil are available through the
advertising board, WBCS of·
fi c i als s aid. carrying such
m essages as "We're going to
light up because we're fed up."
N...,prftl ... f
Electrical contractor Robert 8riggs has been elected pre-
sident of the board of direc-
tors of the Harbor Area
Boys Club. He succeeds Dan
Rogers.
the nation's international rela-
tions. particularly with the Sov-
1 e t Un ion. hi s un certain
personal plans; his views of the
errors a nd s uccesses of the
Carter administration, and his
recommendations for reviving
the Democratic Party.
.. lt JUSt baffles me why the
Soviets these past few years
behaved as they have," he said.
citing Moscow's arms buildup
and the militarv intervention in
Afghanistan. and asking, "why
do they have to sprinkle their in-
fluence around Ethiopia'.'··
·'When we ·re playing these
games of chess with the lives of
others, that .. embitters the
Ameri can µoliti'cal dialogue,·· he
s aid "That tbi:eatens a ll of us because you can't control arma-
ments when this is goin~ on ."
Of ··~ur generation 's "
priorities. he said, "none should
be higher than trying to limit the
chance that the damn bomb will
go off. That's everything. And
yet , you can·t ... deny that the
last couple of years. particularly
with Afghanistan , our chances·of
doing th_ose things essential for
survival have been dangerously
undermined.'·
As sunlight s treamed in
through the dining-room win·
dows of the vi~ president 's Vic-
torian residence at the north end
of Embassy Row, Mondale,
dressed c as ually in a knit
sweater-jacket and a pullover
sport shirt, touched on a variety
of topics. I le said :
The Ca rter administration
1s to blame for presenting too
many new programs at once.
failing to concentrate on a few
key issues at a time, and may
have ineffectively "explained to
the American people the nature
of the difficulties" the nation faced.
·'The publi c-education role of
the president is a crucial ele-
ment. and 1 ·m just not satisfied
we made that case sufficiently,"
he said. •
The president needs greater
authority rather than less, as
ha s bee n the trend since
Congress began re-asser ting
itself after the Watergate scan·
dal. He cited as an example the
president's need to move quickly
in the area of foreign aid and
said "the president is tied down
<by Congress) in ways that cost
this nation tremendously."
The incoming Republican
admjnisfration, which is said to
be fonsidering declaring an
"economic emergency" in its
early days, should take care not
to face the nation's economic
problems "in a frenzied" way.
If the Republicans try to
abandon "50 years of bipartisan,
shared-pro~rams" th at have
been the basis of the nation's
domestic policy since the New
Deal, "we're going to have a
very severe debate and we'll
find the American people" won't
s upport such a shift.
Mondale, who will be 53 Jan.
5, refused to be specific about
his plans immediately upon
leaving office on Jan. 20 or about
whether he will seek the 1984
Democratic presidential
nomination.
Independents si;
Libertarians no
SAN FRANCISCO !AP> -
People who seek elective office
by using st a te election pro-
cedures designed for indepen-
dents must be identified as "in-
dependent" on ballots and not by
po 1C1 caT party. the s tate
Supreme Court has ruled.
The unanimous decision by
Justice Wiley Manuel upheld the
constitutionality of a state Elec-
tion Code provision requiring
that persons qualifying for the
ballot by the ind.e.pend-enl
nomimstio.ns procedure b e-
designated as indepenClents .
The ruling over turns an
Orange County Superior Court
decision that ordered Secretary
of Slate March Fong Eu and
voter registrars of Orange and
San Diego Counties to certify
David Bergland and Jim
Gallagher with the political par-
ty designation "Libertarian" on
the Nov. 7, 1978 ballot.
Mrs . Eu refused to certify
them until ordered to do so by
the trial court Sept. 6, 1978, but
then appealed to get the con-
stitutional issue resolved.
Bergland was a Libertarian
candidate for the District 36th
state Senate seat and Gallager a
Libertarian candidate for state
Assemblyman In the 73rd As-
sembly District.
The party did not qualify to
appear on the 1978 ballot, but the
two candidates got on through
the Independent process and de-
manded Libertarian party
designation on the ballot.
The law provides that if a can·
dldate qualifies for the ballot by
"virtue o f an Independent
nomination, the word 'indepen-.
dent' shall be printed instead of
the name of a pollUcal party"
~Ide his name.
The Ubertarian party argued
that denying its candidates the
right to be identified by party
denied them equal protection
and due process under the state
constitution.
Si nce the Libertarian party
qualiflea for the 1980 general
election by raising its statewide
voter registration to the re-
quired 1 percent figure, its cao-
d id a tes no longer face the
problem.
The Supreme Court rejected
arjuments that the denial of the
right to be listed aS' Libertarians
illegally impaired a fundamen·
tat right to associate for political
activity and to vote.
"We conclude that the inden-
tification provision imposes an
insubstantial burden on the
rights to associate and vote and
that the statute serves a com-
pelling state interest to protect
the integrity and stability of the
electoral process in Califomia,"
the court declared.
It pointed out the code section
denies access to the ballot to no
one. it merely provides for a
ballot designation, party affilia-
tion and thus informs voters of
the manner in which a candidate
got on the ballot.
'Pot' arrest
nets 2 tons
MOSS LANDING (AP)
Authorities who spotted a 46-foot
sailboat crossing Monterey Bay
with no lights early Friday
boarded the ship and dl&eoYered
two tons ol marijuana, worth up
lo $5 million. accordln1 to the
federal Drug Enrorcemtml Ad-
mlnlslraUon.
»•-:· .......... __ • •t*F•--• --
Monday, Oec:em~r 22, 1880 CWLYPILOT "'
Tidelan~ suit ~emt
Trust fwtd action may hit OC :
By JORN NEEDHAM
Of•DeltyPUltltMf • The attorney for the Orange
County Board of Supervisors
says it Is a "virtual certainty"
the county will be taken to court
over It.a spending or Dana Point
Tideland Trust funds for pro-
jects out.side the harbor.
Earlier this week the state
Landa Commission authorized
the stale attorney general to rile
a suit against the coi.anty if its
position on the matter didn't
change.
C o u n t y Co u n s-e I A d r i an
Kuyper said the county's posi-
tion is that money from the trust
can be used outside Dana Point
Harbor as lon' as it is used for
recreational putposes.
The Dana Point Tidelaqd
Trust received revenues frotn
rees and rents in the harbor. The
money is used tq pay o~ratiopaj
expenses and provides aid to
coastal cities for lifeguard de-
partments. The money is also
used to maintain the Sheriff's
Department Harbor Patrol.
Because there is a surplus in
the fund that is expected to con-
li n ue until at least 1990, the
board of supervisors has ap-
propriated some of the money to
cover operating deficits at
Newport Harbor a nd Sunset
Aquatic Park and for park pro-
jects.
"We are saying that we are
legally able to keep the money
we earn,'' Kuyper said. "As long
as these funds are spent on
recreation the county can be re-
im bursed with tide lands re-
venues."
But the state Lands Com-
mission maintains Orange Coun-
t y isn 't elig ible for any
r ei mbursement because it
hasn't indicated what the funds
wiU be spent on .
''Under the trust laws, before
the county can be reimbursed. it
must make known its intentions
before it starts spending the
money," said James Trout. as-
sistant executive officer of the
com mission.
However,· Trout disputed
Kuyper's claim that the attorney
general was already drafting a
com plaint against the county
which would be ser ved within
the next two weeks.
"We are still talking wit.h the
county and are certainly in no
rush to go to court," Trout said.
"We are by no means anxious to
take this to court and incur that
expense anymore than the county is.··
"Right now this is a disagree·
ment among reasonable men."
Trout said. .. But if there is no
softening of the county's position
we will let the court decide what
the correct legal interpretation
is ."
Tide lands Trust Funds are
used to pay the maintenance
costs for public areas in the
harbor such as restrooms and
picnic facilities. The money is\
also used to pay for dredging
and repairs to docks.
Administrative services for
leases and boat slip rentals are
paid for from this fund as well
as the salaries of Sheri ff 's
Department llarbor patrol of-
ficers.
Officials of the Orange County
Environmental Management
Agency have projected that
starting in ·1981·82 Newport
llarbor will operate with a
$57 .000 deficit, whi ch will in-
crease to $97,000 by 198&-89.
Dana Point Harbor is expect-
I I
ed to have a $1 ,382,900 surpllb
10 1980-81, with that figulie
declining to $565,000 and then i•·
creasing to $1 ,149,000 by 1988-89\
Jf the county has its way, ttce
surplus revenues from Dan,a
Point Harbor would be used ~o
keep Newport Harbor o~rati,.g
in the blac)<. Some runds would
go lo Sunset Aquatic Park fn ·
Sunset Beach. which is expectect
to operate on a break-even basis
throu~h 1999. '
Antenna
limits
studied
By OONt:HAPMAN
Ol llw D•tly PtlOI Sl•ll
Laguna Beach offi cia ls are
study ing the city's antennu
• height regulations. with an eye
toward preserving views in the
hillside community
But the rec•ommendation they
g1 ve to council mcm be rs next
month may be a simple "stand pal. ..
The antenna hc1g,,ht review
tomes after Cit y Co uncil mem
bers rejected a pmposal tu set ii
36-foot maximum height limit
on the devices.
City Manager Ken Fra11k su1~
Frid<sy that retaining flexibility
10 the regulati on of the radio,
television. and broadcast anten-
nas has definite advantages.
(
Lethal street drug
"If you require a low aerial,
then the owner has to have a
bigger trans mitter with greater
power ant.I more crossbars." he
said ··That cuts.into the view ";
There currently is neither ~
minimum nor a m axi murn
height for antenna!> in the city.
Res1de11b are ~i mpl y re
quired to obtain a conditional
use permit hefore insta llin-
hroac.l{'ast.antcnnas. worrying officials
llnwtvcr, som€.' ham radio
<Jpe rators {'ontcnd the citv
should provide minimum height guarantees
LOS ANGELES !AP > A
new. highly potent street drug
known as China white has been
blamed for several recent over-
dose deaths in O range ,
Riverside, Monterey and San
Diego counties and in Phoenix,
the federal Drug Enforcement
Administration said.
The drug, which is circulating
throughout the Western United
States, is estimated to be 80
times stronger than morphine,
the active ingredient in heroin. a
DEA official said .
James M. Burke, deputy re-
gional DEA director, said the
e mergence of the drug "is caus -
in g us considerable concern ..
because of the strong possibility
that users will regard it as a
substance equal in potency to
heroin.
A synthetic while powder or
"synthetic heroin," China white
is sold for roughly the same
price as heroin and is reportedly
powerful enough to cause almost
instantaneous respiratory ar-
rest, said George R. Halpin, act-
ing regional DEA director in Los
Angeles.
Although China while 1s
believed to have been on the ii·
legal market since last June, the
DEA 's testing laboratory in
Washington was only recently
able to uncover its chemical
identity.
Halpin described the drug as
the methylanalog <a compound
with only a slight structural dif-
ference) of fentanyl. a genenc
drug prescribed as a strong pain-killer
Fentanyl 1s classifi ed as a con-
trolled drug under the federal
Controlled Substances Act
The drug is .. apparently being
c:landestine ly manufactured,
possibly in Southern California,··
Halpin said. adding that DEA
agents are payi ng particularly
close attention to the San Di ego
area in their search for an II
legal laboratory
Both China white and heroin
are usually "cut .. so that the
buyer purchases a mixture that
is as weak as I perC'ent druj! and
99 percent lactose
Users apparent I) turn the
powder into a liquid solution and
inject it, the OF.A said
They sa ~ that t he F1 rs t
Arnl.'nrlml'nt gu:iranlN'~ tht•
right to communi c ate and
lhl•rcforc the ri g h t to a
minimum antenna hl'1ght
L'ourt (':J~l"• ha\t' not been
C'lear cut on that m:ilt1•1-. Frank
said
llC' sa1d.offl cials are :.tudyin~
whethl'r an indl\ 1dual rcne"
proccs!> for antenna 1w rm l,L-;
l'Ould IX' pruct1callv and le,gally
apµlird
··Wl··rc aho lobk1ng at
whelhl·r wt• can come up with a
ma'C1mum height that "ould b<'
basrd on that eond1twnal use• pt>rm1t ..
.\ rec·ommend:.ition on Hw
matter is to hl' s ubmitted to the
Cit~ Council in January
Biggest quake due in Peru
LOS ANGELES <AP l The
biggest earthquake of the cen·
Lury is being predicted for Peru
next August and the forecast
will be the first ever brought
before a year-old federal panel
formed t.o judge the validity of
such predictions.
'Several lop scientists are
s keptical of the prediction .
which was made by Brian Brady
of th~ U S Bureau of Mtnes and
Wi ll iam Spence or the u ~S
Geological Surn~) The two
Golden. Colo . researchers
!'tress the prediction 1s not en-
dorsed by their aj?enc1es.
.. A prediction so spec1f1c m
terms of date and place and
magnitude so far tn advance or
the event 1s surprisi ng ... , said
Barr~· Raleigh . chief of earth·
quake prediction at the USGS
center m Menlo Park.
thi ·noor]ack~
by~~
~ in its awn pxka.t
Which b:z.comz.s a
COJ"l'..Kl.n 1<Znt carrying
~h your choioz Of
rrw.. cdors' rod' navy,
tan) ya.I low and ml ly ...
a rroet practical ~if't.
@)~o@@)~-
.... l'b.shlon Island• Newport Beach•714J64"4 -5070
JOOJ \M!sb.uood Blud.:-stwood Village•2J3/479-7727
•
M OAA.., PllO' H I f
J u atC
·{'~~ting
Q11 lf»ti1~ a feW head~
1.:. .11 r\NU t'O\ 1 I N4;. 1•n•h1n1ouy results ans now
111 frnm 1tw ' olh"tl ..,1e11t• t "c11)U> Uur\iau on how many
tl(l\\lt•., Uta11~' \ ou11\' h\)ltb here 10 thti wi.nmg days of
H OffH 1ah ull 11•ull tlw 1tult11j Nobody , but nobody,
"61111 ' 10 "'"' U'"' tht• hl\t'I \ """ll 111 thul th1• tW'4 tw11Jl'01.Ull show11 Or1.nge County'11
1 ... put.1111.,1 111 1 ~I' ~.~ '>uuh. whu~·h 1i. of {'Ourse already
11.illhtlt'\I I" ti .. ti1"' 1uid nw\ 1· 111i. frum <'uramonga
I hut .• .. uh U11 lv\111 1 t'Vt ti ·11\"' • ~ ~rce.nt pin when
.111t11•.ir1 .. 1 "' lhl• I 1~1 2~i '4h11 ..iti.1<.lttl tn these parts 10
, , • .,,, .1.:11 111 1117\I W1· .trt' 1 l\·.11 I 11uJ11m11 \IP against tht! 2
"""'"" 11\dl k
I tit-ttt-\IK ot TI~ 11111JVrtant tt1 our local city and
1u11t \ "''" 111111t'11h hl'( uuM• of l'ertum tax cash flow that .11." Jlt"\I 11 1•nli11g ti• th1· 11u1ober of {'1t1icnry therein
,.,,, 11110.
"u .,., .. n·,ull 111 thl· Ill''°' nm11u11 e\'en i.ome of the win
ru 1 .,, I ccHlll'll loul
1>lfll1,11 lll'.HI l uun\..r' for example, reported that 'l '°' \M.•rl 11,•at h 1.:1 l."'° frn111 19,582 in t970 to 58,JS2 today, an
11tl r l'<l'I' 111 :JC! 11t·r1·1·1ll l'rtll) heallh_y growth But
'n " pm t 11ffil'l<11, ft•ll d1catt-<-l The} may de mand a re
, 1111111 d.11111111~ tht· nH'lropolt:-. bv the bay actually grew
111111 l l.ugu11u 1!1·a1'11 wu:-. l1kew1:-.1• The.: federal number t.eave
11t11 1·1JJ,t.tl \rt I 'r1lony 17 ,HOO 1,>cople now, compared to
11 .J~)<1 111 \ L'a1., .1gu, for a growth mark of 24 percent. •
1.1\Gl NJ\ 0•·1•1<.IALS •'AINTED. They think their
11<1pulat1<1n 1' 11111rt· lakl· :J5.000 Where in the world, you
<;11('~' 11•l111'h 1t1111r leud11 111 till' OOl>lteyyed living um!"'
wonll1•1. c·c1ulcl the other 17,200 have been when the head-
llunH•r:-. ram<' around.,
Look. they couldn 't have all been s urfing al the time .
Smne unuff1c1al {'Om ment has suggested the missing
pcr'>ons wc.'rc h1d1n):l out tn a lar ge num ber of Laguna's
hooth'g~l·d hous1n1.t units
If vou b<:lal·vt• that. then the numbers would indjcate
half or"l .<1~una 1:-. living Ilk(' part of an underground riiove-
rncnt
Art ('olon)' Pl) b ra!-.S, however. insist they can tell
thl'y hav(' more.: than JU!>t l7.800 hvc-ins by calculating the
!>('wagl' flow The) cltdn 't cxµla1n precisely how they do
t hal Thank l.!oorlnc!>!> Evl'n tht' thought of it 1s disgusting.
Hut 1H'\l'' m111d thf' «II\' t·i·niws winners who
t hou~hl the) should havt been even larger winners . Whal
about lhl· losN s lh<is<· among us who actually los t
population t>ver thC' pas t JO yeC:Jrs We do have a couple in
our rt•i.!ion. for exumple
Rllfo;NA I' J\ RK; The population here actually sagged I
pcrnnt. to fi2,9:Jll But tht number of dwelling units in-
t'rt'ast•ll Well, maylw Buena Park µeople are just s pread
ing out with fewer p('r building and 1 per{'ent of them got
lost
I.OS ALAMITOS: llcre. lht population drift-off was
even more marked. down 17 percent to 9,439 The head
c·ounl was 11.:l4fi hack m 1970 Where did everybody go?
Mayb<! they JUSl got tired of waiting for a parking
pla{'{' at th(' rac('lrack and moved elsewhere.
Or m;i\ ht· the> I ,!)07 who are m1!.sing JUSI decided to
tlrifl d11wntoast to Laguna and rent a bootleg. so they
could la v{• anonyrnous ly
NATION /WEATHER .
88perlda
Crash blamed
on sabotage
ll••111t• at last
Steve and Brenda Schlientz walk away from his plane
afte r he a rri ved from an eight-month tour of duty aboard
the carrier Eisenhower. which is returning from the In·
dian Ocean. The Air Win~ of the carrier arrived in
Norfolk. Va .. Sunday
J e ep Corp. reacts
to 'unsafe' claims
TOLEDO. Ohao <AP I The
Jeeµ Corp says its J eep CJ 5 has
r haraeten !>t ics diffe rent from
some vehicles. but lhal it is a
safe vehicle ··when driven in-
l('lltgently "
The company s aid Sunday it
was reviewing a .. 60 Minutes ..
pro~ram whic h repo rted that
tests by the Ins urance Institute
of Highway S afety found the
jeep s ubject to roll-overs in cer
lain turning maneuvers .
The four wheel-drive CJ5 is
t he civilian offs pring of the
military general-purpose vehicl~
first used during World War II
cind nicknamed .. jeep" by Gls.
The CBS·T V broadcast said
tes ts showed the vehic le would
roll over during a maneuve r
desc ribed a s a .. J " turn. a
s weeping turn fo llowing a
s traight-on path
T llF: JEEP l\U50 rolled when
making a quick "eva s ive
maneuver " s uch as a sudden
turn to avoid an object in its
path, the report said.
According to .. fiO Minutes.··
the {'Ompany s aid it performed
the same te:;;ts and the J eep did
not roll. Correspondent Morley
Safer s aid Jeep re presentatives
declined to be interviewed.
of gravity, was "far more likely
to roll over than a pasM:nger
car "
TllF. PROGRAM SAID Jeep
told 1t the company now includes
literature with new Jeeps ex·
plaining that lhe ut1lil v vehicle
does not handle like a typical
passenger car
Earlier this year, rescar('hers
at the Unive rsity of M1 ch1gan·s
H ighway S afe l y Researc h
Institute said utility vehicles de-
s igned for use on and off paved
roads were 5· 11 limes more like·
ly lo roll over than passenger
c ars and had a rate of fatal acci-
dents almost 40 perl'cnt higher
AMC d isagreed with the r eport
The CJ5, which carries a basic
list price of a bout SS.500, has
been produced s 1nee 1954.
Goldberg said.
.
BOGOTA, Colombia <AP> -
An anonymous tel~phone call
hours before takeoft warned of
t he crash of a Colombian jetliner
that killed all 68 people on
baord, an airline spokeswoman
aald today, calling the c rash ap-
parent sabotage. -
The jet crashed Sunday in the
remote Guajira desert about 500
mile,s north ol Bogota, moments
after its pilot reported an ex-
plosion aboard, airline officials
said.
There were reports of a ship·
ment of Japanese firecrackers
aboard despite regulations ban-
ning such explosives as cargo,
and a government aeronautics
official said passengers could
ha ve disguised boxes of
firecrackers as something else.
ALICll\ •'ONSECA,
spokeswoman for -the domestic
airline. Aer ov1as del Cesar,
s aid "1t wa s apparent
s abotage." She s aid the com·
pany's office in Valledupar re-
ceived a telephone warning
Sunday morning from a caller
who sajd: .. It would be be tter to
detain the plane because it will
not arrive at its destination.··
She gave no indication of a
motive for the threat.
Airline offieials d eclined to
say whether the twin-e ngine
French-bujJt Caravelle Jet wa!'.
searched for a bomh after the
thre at was received
Investigators reached tht de!)
ert site today. and be~an t ry1n~
to find the cause of the cr ash
Some officials of t.he a1 rhnt•
are blami n g the c-ra s h on
sabotage. cit1n~ the anonymous
threat and the pilot's repol1 or
an explosion.
ONE OFFICIAL, '4ho dedincd
to be identified, !Wu.I II was
believed a bomb exploded
The Bogota newspaper El
T1empo quoted airline manager
Alfonso Sanc hez as s aying there
may have been a s hipment of
Japanese firecrac kers ahoartl
Sanchez could not be reached for
comment immediate!}
Anv firecrac kers or hlack
powder u sed for making
fire('rackers would nor have
been permitted as caq~o and
would have heen carried b)
passengers m their luggage. a
spokesman for the Colombian
Civil Aeronautics . .\P,enc\ :;;au!
today There is a poss1bilit) that
s ome pa ss enge r !'. had
s hi.p ped large amo u nt:-of
Al Goldberg, a s pokesman for
the Toledo-based corporation.
said J eep·s pare nt company,
American Motors Corp .. was re·
viewing the prog ram .
GIFT-GIVING SPECIAL
The company said in a state ·
mcnt Sunday: "We and our Jeep
CJ c us tomers recogn ize that
ut ility vehic les ha ve driving
c haratt(•ri stics that are
somewhat different than those of
regular passenger cars.
"J eep CJ vehicles are s pecial
vehicles that perform thei r in·
tended tasks very we ll . They are
s afe vehicles when driven in-
1 e ll1~entl y on road a nd off
road "
The program s aid the in -
suran{'c institute lesls found t hat
the .Jee11. with its higher center
The ''Blazer'' .
By Our Very Own ~
Fulton Park £l
Reg. 95.00
NOW 74.80
fireworks in boxes disguised as
something else. said the
~pokesman, Maj. Julio Otalaga,
m a broadcast interview with
the Bogota r adio station
Todelar
Von Trapp
·home hit
b y blaze
STOWE. Vt. IAP> Johannes
von Trapp s urve yed the smoking
rubble of what had been home
for 40 years to the family lbaLin-
spired .. The Sound of Music."
.. It's a mess," he said, his
face haggard. "Rut we will re·
build."
Fire s parked by a faulty oil
burner swept through the Trapp
Family Lodge early Sunday,
killing an Illinois man and forc-
ing 46 J;luests out into sub-zero
temperatures . As s moke clogged
th e hallwa ys, mal)Y p eopl~
leaped from windows into
snowbanks.
ANOTHF:R 55 GUESTS at a
motel annpx al'rni.s the street
were'.' l'Va{'uatet1 as a precaution.
.. We were'.' luc·kv there was no
wind. l'ta1<l von Trap. Otherwise
we would han· losl all ·
Ba ron<:!>!> Maria AuJ;lusta wm
T rapJ.>. 75. the hcromt' of .. The
!-,ound of '.\tusil'." fled lhc lodge
1n ht•r niJ;lhtgown She watched
;is thl' fl <.1mes burned I he inn to
thl· ground, cons ummg all the
mementos nf he r family's ltfe in
:\merara Among them were a
portrait of ht>r late hus band,
B;iron George Von Tr<.tpp, a col
lcrllon of candles, honorari~.
award:-and kcv!> to l·1l1cs.
Six p<.·oplc wen· injured. some
Jn IN1ps from windows, others
fmm frostbite Two people re
maincd hospit alized, inc luding
the wife of the m :rn who died.
T H E ROD Y OF R"n Becker.
of Salem. Ill . was rliseovered in
the rubblt' Jlas wife. Judy. suf·
fcred a fr:n-turl'd spine when she
1umµe<1 from their t hird-floor
'°' 1nd<1w Both c;hr a nd Gino
Fanicella. 39. of Salem. wen~
• lt:-.ted in good cond1t1on
/ ' .
Winter officia lly liere -
Go ahead-try
on tbis blazerr
sit, bend, walk
& stretch, feels
good doesn't
it? That's
because tnis
klopman Me rcury plumme.ts .. to 21 be low .iQ. New Yo r.k
ONDf al M'ftlt,.,..,.
0•1\\e toq ti11•• .\tt~' noon ttHouQn
mld ·morn1n9 hour\ l ul~d.ty
oltierw1w l•lr w\111 111011 tloucJI""'' C04\lll tow 48, h•Qll 10 Inland low
... 111vn 10 w.1 .. "°
El\•wN"re, t1oht v•,.••0'" w1rtd~
lhrouon ton1;M •1tn '" •pt1on ot
•l'SI lo wulhwnl S lo 11 -nol\ nor
lh• tH\I thh •lt••noon ~rnootn ·~· w1U\ w•slf'rty 1wt>fl\ oft to 7 t~I
Otn\~ foV w•t. to '•m•1" •tono
so11111ern C•lllorn1• <<141\IAI MO' trom 111t eHe<noon today tllrough
mld morn,nQ htt"\0•' wt11'\ ,.,,
we•thet •no P\lon t foudlne''
plUwhett. Ill• N111nn1I WUIM•
s.tv1<t \•Id
W •rmer \tMPtr e\vr~' ... ,~
IOfH."''· with hl{lfl\ ne•r 10 UP"< led
Co0\111 and tnlermeG1•I• ••ll•Y'
w.,e to M~ '"'' •t•th•r wU,., \ome 11i,11 tloudtne•\ and lllQh• Tia\d8y •n
,,,. 10t 80\.
Fair .... '""' MlO \Clmt n•Oh (IOUdl· "'u al lime\ ,..re al\O tore<A•I lo•
the mounl•ln• 1n4 de\trh Moun111n
t.me>e••lure. shOuld Ott up Into t,,.
0..., ......... ...,
1.0... .......
-""t1nrf1t't' t r• lttr If v1ru ')Cl ,,,,, ttf~
,,, ,,.,,,.,, bw ' tin n "' ' •• 11 ~fr,tO 1
IQ Arid AA/I {N/)i •141 tw.. dlll.u.4lleo
..
mld·.O• w1111 tOW\ tonlQhl d11>1Mno lnlo
th• ml" JO!o and 40\
11.S. Su 11 1 11w
Stalltrtd snow 1•11 uro" th•
norli..rn ACK•Y MounlalM to lht
0 1u1 LMt•'-wlllle t lHr t•lt\ anti
I bllerty <Ol<llemperarur~towrf!dnew
e"ol•lld 111 Ille llrs1 <l•y of wlnltr •r·
rived
ShOwer\ •nd wi"lb 911stlno to o
m ll•\ "° -•-<Oftllf>,...41 In tfle
Paci!!< Nortll,...•I. wllll• •~•trlno
rain 1111 In 1Nrb ol -..1arn Moftl•ne
llld norlr.rn Ullfl
I Wlnlt• oftlc•env arrt.,.o 1t • H
1.m PST~y. C~ T...,....• !1Ulltrff rain .,,_,. encl tnow ,, n..,.......,. r..,,.~1,,.tv Aitt•' •U·4Ut Uvr rl t\ .. ,, ••~led ovtr IM
.... ~·-•·~•"1•nQ1onl'""''' Pa<lll< __ , aftcl lt.e <•lllr•I """..,._,.,.....,.. u .. 111' '-o<Uft ~~·=c:;...~~·"' n .. ,n hm.-rttW"H M~ ti. NllM t O.•• I'-~ '--•n 1 _,,.,0 •I m14"'9111 PSf f'"..-.M ,,.,.. 6S In ·-.,,.... """' ~ Fort ~NI• .... l(ey w ... In
I tQw,.. _,... .. .-Flo•1441 to'' •-,.,o lft MetMIWI, ___________ ,., H V
----.... ...... _ ----_,__ ___ _
FORECAST
Te11•!""'~
AllMlftJ
Alb<IQue AmerlllO ""'"°' ... ,.,, ... 111.
A\la,.,11
Allenl< CIV
lleltlmore
lllrml!'.f!!!!! ,,.,."
llolN
Boston .,,_,,, ....
"' u .. c, U ·S •• u
" 11 ., ·12
U II
JS 1' 11 ,. ,. .. ..
-10 11 Ot
47 «> °' u ,,
0 0
!Jptfelo 11 u
Cl••rhlnSC H l•
Charl\ln WV 76 q
Cher MM ~, 34>
Chlt11vo " IS
Clntlnn•ll n ll
Clt:•el•nd 10 6
Columbus 1~ IJ
Ual-FIW1h JS Jl
Denver sa JS
OHMOlnu 11 18
O.lroll 17 10
Oululh 10 IQ 'i Felr~nu , •. 17
Hertford 2• 0
Htlene •1 16 01
Honolulu u IS ll
Hou•lon' 0 .,
lnclntDll\ ,. I]
Jet ,tnvll4' sa le
l(en\ Clly ,. 12
LU Vt9<1• ..
Lllllt ~o<k 31 10
LOt.A"091 .. 11 S-4
Loul••IUe ,. 11
Memphl• JI 7S
Mltml H 61
s-..•••a.IWn
TODAY
S.<ond 111911 10 Opm •.J
S.Concl low ).t••·'"· _, s
TUISOAY
First "'"' I SJ•.m. 6,1
f'lrtt tow 2-Jto.m. 1.1
SKondll 1o:n .rn. run \i\i ,, p,m .• rlMt Tue\dey
•·Ma,m.
; M-flM~ •·ot p,m., wts Tun4•Y •Jt• m · . ..._lw,.,. Callfor1da S..t ,..,.,. . \
he<ll
Zlllllt 5-nt•-kA ..... _,
~ 019'0 CO-•
"'" ..,. ..... _ ...... ..... A... -· ""' A... ..... Dlf I t U t 1 $W
I 1 11 I 1 SW
1 ' 1' I ' SW > I 12 1 I SW
fabric has
extra two-way
S-T-R-E-T-CH
for a per-
fect &
comfortable
fit. In
100%
woven Dacron.
Camel or
navy.
Reg ...... 48·52
Long ..... 46-52
X Long . . . 42·48
Portly .... 44·52
.,
.·
. .... .. .
HOI all a11es and colora in an al<><•• 1.ANla ANA .)81• s 11111104 SI ti.a!Oe ,,,. r,.. ... ,.,, ....... 10 LO. ANOaLU ltO a Sottng tlWtH
CMIOOA PAM 21729 Y1nowe11 l1 ac:roaa tr.. " l<om Mey Co 70HTl7
OllANAOA MU 9all>Oe et Oevonal'llrt .... f271
fOMANCI 20434 Hawll'IOf"' 8"'<1 UM ...
OUMIALl 217 H O~lf Avt , Ntlll 10 Ao0tn10l'l·a l4f.._ .... owoo UIO AOMCttna (1141 ... ,,,,
---~~II~ Weslm•n••., w.11, ,,.,, 10 &.al ""41't
Cl#llTOt 111111ll31cl 61 . .c1ou tr.. al ''°"' S..19 ... ., ..
"UU.• .. tOfl He!l>O< & Ol-"091~--tf M \ti
ll()NTCUJll ~AZA .... , 10 QT E llflOM Mtfl tf l·rt'I
~~Alff~ .-Wa .... MIO
HOUM.: lilMl. !Mo J"fl ........... LA. ....... 1°'4. ..... 11•
·----· ·--.. -----· ..
l
-. •
CALtFOANlA
Belt's da•a,,.-d
Spe ding cited
in ships crash
I.ONO )0. ('H ·,AP I A ro1u1l (iu.a11I offll'tff
II \i thfl C'UlltHIC1n or t" O ( nHtthlt•1 i'> IO d tlllNt' fOi: off
of Oc~.m.s1d1· rtl"t') h11vt' ~··n <'llU'tt'il h> onti or
pt1rha~ both o( \lw "h\pi. •l~t'<llllll
l'ht> frf'1li(htt•r". wl11t'11 •u.u!ldllll'tl oow tu bOw
dam a(ll', -.Ne bt•rt>wd hcrt· todu) 1>tmd111ai a n m · .
qu1r b' th~ ('011,1 <:u1.111l'o, M1mnl· !'\<1ft'l)' Uourd lo
dt'ltrO\tlW\\h\ lht•\ r ll lOlOl'IH'h11t h ·r
No Ollt' wus 11\jlll t:d
1
111 tht' ~aluuJuy morning
.1n·1tlt-11t ~ h11'11 nvµ~d u
~ :W foo( hvll' in lh~ bow .__ ______ _.. 111 \hi' (;,eek 1 l·g1sltirtid
\'la111.• \ l's~\\Jlls while
the I r.m~)l ••un H drrl .a l'h1hv1,1nt' sh1µ a lso su!-1
lutnt'(I ht'd\} bu" d.-r11.ii;t•
\\ ~ lurnt"d <1' t'C the II\\ t''>llgat1on to the
\\.trtllt' ~alt't\ Ulfll'f! l'oai.I tiuard Ll Mark
Jonti:. .,a;d -;untkl\ nw \\:mnc Saft't} Board will
10 \l.'l>llgdlt' lht' fu<'h
Lnder norm.ti l 11 t·u111slant ei. he !-1.tld, the
i.aft't' board 1s l'Of\\ t'nticl promptly to '>tart a n 1n
quir). It \\as nul 1mmctl1atcl~ l'lear who may have
bee n at raull In the l'vlh!.100
Ho•pital ~o•ing f ragrdt1
S PRI NG VALL EY (A P 1 A hos pit al
homecoming turned lo tragedy wht!n a woman who
had jw;t undergone a hyslerel'lom y found her two
children and tcen·agc s ist er dead, the Sun Diego
County coront:r repo rted.
Cynthia J ones opened the door Sunday of her
Spring Valley apartm ent and broke into hysterical
s c r eams wht·n s he s a w lhe three bodies, a
neighbor s aid
Deputy.Coroner Max Murphy said toxic fumes
from a faulty wall heater apparently k illed 5·y.ear·
old Ki rs tie Jones, her J.year·old brother , Thome1s ,
e1nd lhe1r 16·ycar·old iwn1 . Cheryl Balmos.
Neighbor Renee tlo werton said she ran up·
stairs when she heard lhe mother screaming. Mrs.
J ones was cry ing. "What am I going to do if lhey
die ?" as her estran~cd husba nd. Steven, cradled
their hfcless s on
Ha.•ial f P11Ni1J11 .-,,rd ht llrr
SACRAMENT O (AP I Police are investigal·
ing a delibera tely set fire tha t caused only slig ht
damage to the la w office of Natha niel Colley,
chairman of the state Horse Racing Board and the
attorney for llazam Yahya. officials said.
A fla mmable liquid was poured on a m al out·
s ide t he office door a nd down the m ail slot a nd a
racis t s lur scr atched into lhe m etal door Saturd.ay .
morning. said Fire Rat(a'lion Chief Les Heffel·
fin,ger. The fir e burned itself oul.
Colley. who is black, had been c riticized by the
Sa c ra mento bl ack l'Ommunity for representing
Yah.va . a Yemeni native acquitted last week or
s laying his teen-age <la ughter's black boyfriend,
14-year·old Ma rvi n Keol<1 .
f"'Hghf aUftldanu dUlf' 10 r.-i11rn
LOS ANGELES <AP I Continental Air lines
fli g ht allendants have agr eed lo return to work
just in time for the heavy holiday air traffic. but·
the a irline !-.ay!-. 1l will he a couple of days before
they a re back in the air.
"We have to send lele~ram~ to each of them
and it will be several days before they can be as-
signed lo flights ." company spokesman Bruce
Plowman said Sunday
Gold.-n Gair bridp ~ra•h ldlb :l
SAN F RANCISCO (/\P l /\t least lwo peop le
were killed lind three others injured in a hit·and·
r un accide nt in foggy, rainy wea the r on the Golden
Gale Rridgc, the California llighway Patrol re·
ported.
Killed was Margaret Kubuta , 26 , of Santa
Rosa a nd he r father. T akas hi Nak ao. 60, of
Chicago. The driver of the ca r was not identified
by the UI IP, wh1<:h re po rted he suffered major in·
j uries in lhe accide nt late Sunday afte rnoon.
Two Sonoma residents in another vehicle also
suffe red major injuries in the accident, lhe CHP
re ported.
A. Bracelet. $750. B. Mustache comb.
S1SS. C. Knife, S295. D. Adjustable
collar stays, S 190. E. Tiger eye
cuff links, $580.
CHARLES H. BARR
Monday. O.C.mber 22, 1980 H I J!' DAIL v PILOT AS •
Expert claims
Oil price hike".
under way
LOS ANGELES IAPI The OPEC boost in
crude oil prices already Is re giste ring at the
gasoline pump, but Ameri cans won 't really feel
t he pinch until spring, oil industry expert Dan
Lundberg s ays.
The Dec. 19 edition of ttie weel<ly Lundberg
Letter said the largest gasoline price impact will
b~ felt in Marc h, whe n , it predicts, gasoline prices
will soar to $1.33 a gallon. Ame ricans could face an
average price of $1.45 a gallon by-December, 1981.
Ute letter s aid.
Meanwhlle, in New York, the trade newslette r
Petroleum Intellige n ce Weekl y sa id the war
between Iraq and Iran helped hold the output of
the Organization of Pe troleu m Ex porting Coun-
tries to a lO·ye ar low in October
THE LUNDBERG Letter , distributed by
Lundberg, said the average pn ce increase an·
nounced by O PEC al its meeting in Bali, In·
donesia. last week could com e to $3 a barrel.
Celebrities show co1Lcer11 APWI ........ The increase will averai;!e six cents per gallon
of ru:troleum products for American consumers .
the publication said.
P resident-elect Ronald Reagan, wife Nan·
cy . and sportscaster Vin Scully < rightJ
watch as a man in audience at Riviera
Country Club in Brentwood, fainted. A
woman witnessing the Sunday incident at
the receptjon for Rea gan, shouted "get out
of here, Ronald," before she was led away
by Secret Service agents.
Lundbe rg said a s urvey of 14.000 stat.ions
a cross the U.S. this weekend sho wed an ac ross·
the ·board incr ease of cight·tenlhs of one cent for
all types of gasoline , while refiners look an im
m ediate penny increase.
~~~~~---~~-~-------~--~
Crashes involve 21 vehicles GASOLINE SOLD AT both self.service anti
full service stat ions average<! Sl.22. compa red to
Sl.2l the weekend of De<-. 5. Hefiners' prices we nt
from 9A.07 cents to 99 06 cent~ during the s ame
period.
LONG HEACll <A P > A thick fog a nd
molon s ts unprepared for slipµer y conditions arc
being bla med for three freeway accidents involv
in g 21 vehicles thal left four people wilh minor in·
Juries .
The accidents Sunday o n the San Diego
Freeway , one rnvolv ing 15 cars. for ced t·he
C alifornia f-Ughwa y Pat rol lo close the northbound
lanes of interstate 405 for nearly two hours w hile a
dozen a utom obiles were lowed a wa y and the
h ighway was cleaned up
··The roads were wel <from t he fog J and the
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FREE
GIFT
WRAPPING
f
,.. .
Private aviators
join airport fray
ln lhe hu bull•1\t dll\CW.MUl\b of .. cll\'lllc~ ll Orang•
'ouot> • .lnhn Wu' 1w ,\1rpoft th1: C'cntt-r of attention
·li ultll hK'lN'!t <•n lht• -t I h't u1r hnl•r fl1ghl:-.. lht1l ta.k t' off
,. \ l'f\ r1:t\
hirti:ollt·n 1~ thl• f:ttl thul the l'Uunty iurfit>ld is one of
lht• bu.'lit•:..t 111r1>ort~ 111 ctw t·ountr) 111 lotul takeo((s and
t.mding1ot urnl \Im\ 11 1"1 \he hub vf un"" vf lhl' lurg~!I\ CQI\·
1't•11lr tton"' ul Vl'I\ uh· vta1u .. tH'tl\'lt~ unywhcr~ in the
\H .. .,1 \\'hilt• 11 1•·h :.1 t' 1uk111~ uff t•udl da). un ~\·~t·agc of
,1)41 hJ.:h\ <.111 n af\ und bu!'J 1m•..,, Jt'l~ or commuter <.'raft
h'.1\ l th\• rull\.\ U\ l'~H·h tlJ\
\rnl tht•\ rt· tllll J ll ..,,n ... 11 1>h.•..i:,url' ,t•raft Not b,,. a
lun LI ~h111 l'h·· ,•ummt'1 t·ml aC"tf\ n~ s urrountl\11g business th~ht '-1n.i11\ 11f tht:m Jl'I~ 1~ u hu~ui l'!)~ all in itst!lf
.ithl 1n..in\ ol 1tw t'Ol'JJ<ir.Jlltin~ hulh .1rnund the :.11 rport and
f~11 n,,., uil<rnd -.t·c .Ju lt11 W<1\ nt.· J !> Jll 1mport:mt part of
l h~ lUWll \ 'l't'UllOO\\
'\;,,,, till' j)l'I\ all' a\ 1alor~. 111 the form of the Orangt•
l uunt~ P1lo1' .bsot·wt1u11. 'a~ ltw a1rµort ·~ master µlan
-. Id~ mg tht· gl'l•UOU\\urk fut• qm·cting them out of thl'
·nirimrt op{'r.Jtion
'l'hl·) :.lrt-i-:. th.it pl'l\ all· µ1lot:, ha e long been tht.·
un:atl and butler of thl· tounl~ airport a nd that rore than
'JOO li ght a1rnaft :.ire huM.·d al the curporL
fr-. illtel'l'~llllg lt> noll' 1hlit :o.l'\'Cl":..11 Of the grouµ's
rnmplaints <:<"ho ('ont~rn~ cxµrcssed by residents and
pttltttc.·rnns 111 Nl·wpor1 Bea('h, who oft <.'O art' viewed
~r m pl~ :.is anti aviation l'rybabies .
Thl' pilots point out that the ·ffHts ter plan 's C'a ll for a
nl·v. termina l appcars to be "an unspoken p lan" for ex
pandmg daily Je t de p a rtures.
Officials m Newport m a ke the sam e point. a r guing
that lurge r faci lities eventua lly will us her m m o re a nd
morl' .1ct tukeoffs . And µilots say t hey'll be the ones asked
to makl· room fur thc jl'ts.
The plight of l he private aviators is very real With
San Juan Capistrano Airport plowe d under and Hunt·
mgton Bcath 's Meadowlark Airport on the way out. the
future for gene ral aviation on the Orange Coast looks
dim .
L'nfo11unate ly . there appears to be little good n ews to
offer private pilots. But s upporters of the airport master
pla n should be put o n a lert that their opponents are s tart ·
ing to line up in evcr·incrcasing numbers.
'Gift' for housing
There's no doubt cumbersom e government red tape
is responsible for a t least part of the increased cost of
housing .
By the time a developer works through the tedious
steps of ·zoning cha n ges. tract m a ps, environmental im·
pact s tudies and f1ermits of a ll kinds. the interest he's
paid out dh his la nd climbs into m a ny thousands of
dollars and. of course. those dollars a re recovered
from buyers when lhe fina l product is sold.
So when the Board of Supervisors lasl week approved
a plan to streamline d evelopment processine . .it:"s s m a ll
wondl'r •one developer called t he move "a giant
Christmas gift to housin g ...
ll 's estimate d the improved procedure could cut proc-
t·s~mg time from 30 to 50 percent. Whether this really
will sa\'e "thousands of dollars per house" as was sug-
gested remains to be seen. But it certainly must re s ult in
~n m<.· s aving .
The n<.•\.\ syst<.'m will involve a m erger of some plan-
n tn "1. OJH.·rntions. concurre nt processing of certain
permits. re location of offices to provide a .. one-stop··
~e rvi cc to reduce t h e µresent turnover and possible hiring
of additionC:1 I planners to coordinate and monitor the pro-
gra m
Heduc:tion nf government red tape in any area is
always wcll'ome. But . the monitoring s hould m a ke s ure
the speedup does not become a s teamrolle r leading to
careless. inadequately conlrollecl development.
Tricks of the season
This is the lime of year when many people hit t he
streets to solicit charitable contributions .
Not all of these solicitors a re what they a ppear to be .
Take the case o f the Krishna Santas in Irvine. Irvine
police cited and released two men in San ta Claus outfits
w h o wer e soliciting m oney for ari unna m ed cha rity . It
turned o ut that the two m en were Hare Krishna followers
from Laguna Beac h. Neither had a valid business permit
to solicit contr ibutions in Irvine.
They told police that people a re more likely to con-
tribute to a man dressed as Santa Claus tha n to a m an
dressed as a member of the Ha re Kris hna sect.
The m oral of this story is a simple one: Know who
y ou are contributing to. It Is best to see the valid business
perm it of people soliciting charitable contributions.
The sam e ste~ should be...taken wit.b..p.eople...askin,g...for
mo"ney In the fiome in the name o f w ell-known charities.
Unscrupulous solicitors may mis represent themselves as
be longing to one of these organizations .
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views e xpressed o n this page are those or their authors and
artists. Reader comment ·is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Piiot. P .o:·
Sox 1seo:costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd/Model body
ByL.M. BOYD
Young lady , on a full·
le ngth snapshot or yourself.
draw a vertical line from the
top of your head to the tips of
your toes and then a horizon·
Dear
Glootny
Gus
l 1uess it's true that the
sins or the rathers <and
moUiers) sllall 6e vis1l·
ed upon their son1i (and
daughters>. I voted ror
Reagan for governor
when he first ran.
J .C.V.
~1~:'/ ::·.:::.~~:.:1.-::; tMCetwrlly...._.. .... .._ .. .. :=:::.. 'C,'-,..t" ,.. .. ..
tat line right under your chin.
The lower body-length line
s ho uld be s ix and a ha lf
times as Jong as the upper
head-length line . Those are
the natural proportions. This
us ually doesn't work when
yo u test it on a r tists'
s ketches of women modeUng
clothes. The body length in
those are most often exag-
' geraled.
When Viet.or Hugo wanted to
know how the sales of his
book "Les Miserables" were
doin1. he wrote bis publisher
tbe 1lmple q~ry: "?" The
publilber wrote back: "!"
Q. Old burlesque posters in
the back or our theater show
most all the glrls to be
quite plump. Wat that lM
Cad?
A. Evidently. Mott ada for
burlesque girls in those days •
stated that no one under 150
pounds need apply.
ThOmas P Haley I Pubhshet ThomH Ke4tvll/Edhor
Batbarct l<relbich/E~ltort11 P~ Editor
Jack Andenon .
SALT promo~on misled public
WA S HIN GT ON -New
~vidence has come to light sug.
gesling that Jimmy Carter and
Defense Secretary Harold'Brown
deliberately misled the American
publlcontheSALT II agreement.
The SALT II agreement, now
effectively de ad , was on the
verge of ex·
unction even
be fo r e th e
preside ntia l
campaign re-
a ll y got start-
t' d But
Carter. trying
to d epic t
Ronald
Reagan as a
warmonger ,
kept bringing up SALT II as if it
were the last. best. hope of avoid·
ang a nuclear holocaust. Brown
supported the president with re·
a ssuring s t atement s o n the
treaty's effectiveness
Al the saime time. however.
the defense secretary wrote a
..top-secret, sensitive " memo to
Carter that tells an entirely dlf·
ferent story My associate Dale
Van Atta has seen a copy of
Brown's mem orandum . which
s h o w ~ Carte r 's campaign
rhetoric on disarma ment was
iiure hogwash. The president
was told that SALT 11 , much less
the Cast-dwindling prospect of
SA LT 111, would no way lead to
a reduction in the nuc lear
ursen11ls of the two s uperpowers .
THE POINT to remember is
lhat Carter was touting SALT II
as a way or reducing nuclear
weapons. Brown 's top-secre t
memorandum pointed out that
neither SALT 11 nor the hoped-
ror SALT Ill agreement would
actually reduce either nation's
nuclear s tockpile.
"Reductions are important as
sym bols of in-ogress toward
'real' disarmament," Brown told
~the invasjon
will begin . my friend.5 ...
Bob Greene
lhe president. "but they have
ser ious drawbacks as a means
or accomplishJng strategic and
S ALT o bjectives . a nd are
the refore ina dequate as the
primary objective of SALT Ill."
Thus, even while Carter was
promotin~ SALT II as a dis·
arma me nt hope for mankind.
his chief military adviser was
warning that it mlght restrict
the number of missile launchers.
but not of missil es that could be
launched.
The b es t Ca rt er co uld
reasonably hope for, by Brown's
estimate, was to put the brakes
on a U.S.-Soviet nuclear arms
race. Yet the president was in
sisting that SA LT I I would lead to
a r eductio n in both nations'
nuclear stockpiles.
A SERIOUS deficie ncy in th~
SALT II agreements whether 11
or 111 -is thJlU.hey control only
the number of missile launchers
~ ""'n pave t.o~' ~ ... anitryfo
_hold <Xit as ~as ~can.
each nation possesses. These are
the missile silos. submarine tubes
a nd bombers that can send
nuclear devices hurtling toward
targets In the United States and
the Soviet Union. But there has
been no coverage of the number of
missiles that can be s tockpiled to
feed the launchers.
By speeding up their reloading
capability, the Russians can ef-
fectively double their nuclear
missile capacity ... Measures-de-
signed to control the number of
missi les Cnol j us t their
launchers> are needed . . to
lim it reload ca pabilities, ..
Brown's m emo warned
Gelling d<>Wn to cases. the de·
fonse chief warned that even if
the Soviet Union agreed to limit
its launchers to say. 1,000, the
lack of restraint on the actual
missiles would still allow them
lo have as many 11 .000 nuclear
warheads ready to go roughfy
twice the number they have at
this point.
And' that's JUSt 'SALT II. As
Brown's memo noted, even the
propr1sed SALT I II agreement.
'"would not require limits on
Backfin·. SS·20 (nuclear mis ·
silcs J ur other T N F rTheat<'r
!'lut·lcar. Forces Weapons I."
1
IN JDS memo. Brown virtual-
ly abandoned any chance that
SALT agreements would give
L' S missile forces a chance to
survive a Soviet sneak attack.
"It is very unlikely." he wrote.,
··that SALT Ill constraints could
he negotiated which would
restore· 1 l.' S I ICBM silo sur··
v1va bil1t \' 1n the pos t ·1985
period " ·
Bro wn al~o rais ed ot her
doubt!> about SALT l l none u(
which were raiser! by Carter in
either his fight for ratification of
SA LT 11 or h1!> re·clection cam·
pa1gn While Carter was srnging
the pra1!>e~ of SALT II. and hold
1ng out pmmise of even greater
things tu com(• fron SALT Ill.
the clefen!>e secretary was advis-tn~ him that ne1th('r agreement
\\Ould accumphsh the recluet1on
in nuc·lcar tl'rror thl' president
v. as pmm1!>111g
How can killing animals he called sp~rt?
It was a busy morning on the
radio talk show The topic of dis·
cussion was the murder of John
Lennon. and most of the callers
wanted to express their opinion on
gun control. Many were for it.
"Of ccJursc," one voice said.
"we'r e o nly ta lking about
handguns here. No one is suggest
ing that rifles be taken away from
hunters and sportsmen.··
Of course.
. Every time the subject of gun
laws comes up, people are quick
to exclude the
"'s portsmen"
from any
possible sane·
lions. Hunters
aren't in the
he takes a life. Often he regrets 1t
la ter.
A hunter. on the other hand.
plans months in advance He
reads up on his s ubject He pre
pares his weapon. tie joins
friends. And then. s anctioned by
the law and by public opinion, he
goes out to kill an animal he has
never seen before, and who has•
done hi in no harm.
Wl;ly ? He likes to kill. that's
why. He enjoys the s ight or seeing
an animal bleed to death. He is
turned on by the exting uishing of
another life If that sounds
perverted. you understanc1 me
precisely. We arc talking about
perverts here
s a m e MAVBE IT'S because I can't
• categor y as conceive of having fun by killing
street kilJers. som ething that J have such con·
th c the or Y tern pt for these people But the
goes: hunters day is long gone when hunters tru·
are solid. de ly hunted for food an in ·
aent, respectable Americans. finitestimally small portion of
Well. maybe I'm a minority of hunters are out there because
one. but I've never agreed. llun· they n eed to be sustain ed
ters. it seems lo me, are sick the mselves. Most hunters arc
sick in a different way than street there because something inside
killers are ~ick. but sick just the them makes them feel good to
~ame. watch a living thing die A person who murders another human being is usuaUy doing ii-----o h c y ca I l the m s e Ives
while filledwith somesortofemo· "sports men " What a joke.
lion al passion. Ten minutes Unl ikeother sports, hunting takes
before he pulled the trigger, he little agility, no physical condi-
might not have done it, and 10 tioning, no speed . Any slob with a
minutes later he might not do it. gut full of booze can go into the
For an instant, though. he is filled woods and ... if his weaopon is
with the awful killin~ instinct, and powerful enough, iC his te lescopic
' .
Art Hoppe
sight is strong enough standi; a
good chance of m aking a kill
In a way. the hunters are much
more pathetic than t hoi.e wh<1arm
themsel\·es to the lt'eth 1n the
name of "self-defense " Thc lat
ter are acting out of genuine fear.
it might not be wise to kel'p loaded
guns around the house. but at
least the pC'Ople who are doing 11
have no real desire to see anyom.•
else die . They just have becpme so
frightened by the tirpc!'. that they
have succumbed to the pl.'rceivcd
need for protection
HUNTERS, THOUGH, unlike
the ner vous hom eowner who
keeps a pistol in the drawer of the
night table. do not talk of fear
They are the aggressors Noone 1s
out to get them, and they know it
They wake upon a weekend morn·
ing, have a hearty breakfast, say
goodbye to the wife and children.
and go out in the hopes of seemg
something die.
They polish their weapons and
select their bullets with care and
talk about which rifles have the
most killing power. Their fetish
becomes ritual : it is twisted in the
textbook meaning of the term.
and only.because.lheir..pucsuit.has
become so all·American do they
escap-e the scrutiny of their
neighbors. The thinking has
a lways been that since there are
so many of them, what they do
must be all right.
l always find it inte resting to
"el' thn!>t' p1t·turc!> hunters like t<1
cllspla~ µ1 clure-. of themscf\·es
"landing proudly nl•xl tu some
fore ·t animal lhl'Y have JUSt
k11l~d Thl' huntl'r!> arc invariabl)-
!>m1hn~ I hk<'to l0<1k in theirey<'s
Whal J sC'l' urc• mt·n so insecure of
th~·tr nwn worth and abiltt1e:-; in
tht• n•al world so dou htful of
lhl'lr capacity tu compete with
ntht'r mt:n in 1\mcncan society
that they must lake pride 10 the
fa ct that. ;.11dcd by the most
sa,·aJ?e fircpowt>r lht•y can buy.
the\' cun causl' something large to
die. The smile~ on their faces
set•m frag11<-and weak and :.ad.
thl' dead anim<•I~ bt·sic1e them ex
h1b1t muc h more diAnily and
strength
SO IS TH•: aftNmath of the
Lennon murcler. th(' national de·
bate 1s s tarttni( anew on the
m e rits of gun con trol for
American cit izen~ Probably
nothing will come of it: after
even· assassination we have ex·
pencnced, there has been m uch
talk, but as time goes by the gun
lobby always prevails
This time. though. when you
hear people autom aticaU ex·
elude tht! hun1ers fromlfieir argu·
ments. pause a moment to think.
A famous public figure is cul
flow n by a suddenly famous as-
sassin only once in a great while
The hunters, though the
·•sporLo;mcn " are OU\-there
ever y day. wandering_theJitnd.
'·
Moral boycott of TV can lead to starvation
Having read lhe current issue of anyone who sponsors sexy TV
of Time magazine, I was none shows."
too s urprised to bump into my "Yes," I said. "l saw in Time
old friend Norm ll!ub) Bricker. that you're boycotting General
a troop leader of the Moral Ma· Foods for refusing to withdraw \ts
jority, in the Eternal Light adverlisin g from 'Dallas,'
Health Food Emporium & ·charlie's Angels" and 'Three's
Tofuleri a. Company'."
Bub wa s s t ar in g i n a -_,,,., sure do miss Jell·O," he
!lomewhat dazed fashion at a said Wistfully. "Nol lo mention
t r a y o r Post Toasties. Sanka, Kool-Aid,
s p r o ut ed Swans Down Chocolate Cake
mung beans. Mix and my nice hot cup of
"Do you mow Post um at bedtime." He squared
·em or plant his shoulders. "But we all have to
·em ?" he in· make sacrifices to stren1then the
quired of no nation's moral fiber. America
o n e i n first,Jell·Osecond ! ''
particular.
"1 assume
you 're one of
the half
million decent Christians who
are taklng part in the 'Clean Up
TV Campaian'?" I asked him.
•'That 'a right." he utd.
"We're not buying the products
WHEN I SAID J admired his
patriotism. he sighed. "It hasn't
been easy," he said. "Ori1inal-
ly, 'Soap' and 'Saturday Nisht
Live' were the only other shows
on our hlt list. So we )Jad to atve
up Oristan, that gr~at Chef Boy·
a r -dee s paghetti. and Anacin.
What a headache' Whe n we
added 'The Dating Game' and
'The Newl yw ed Ga m e .· ll
seems IJke every ti me we tum
on TV, there g~s another doren
things to eat."
"Like what?" I asked
"Well. take the other night , ..
he said . 'Tm sitting there
watching an old movie featuring
a topless Tarzan, a half-naked
Jane he's shacked up with, their
illegitimate kid, Boy. and a
totally nake d c hampaniee
When the commercial comes on, r close m e es and .. k the Mis·
sus to tell me who the sponsor is.
·Mo m 's Crunc hy Apple Pie
Mix.' she says."
Quotes
"When the press Is free and
every man able to read. all Is
safe."
Bub shook his head sadly
"Imagine, Mom 's Apple Pie!"
he said "Seems like there's
nothing decent left fit ror a
moral American to eat."
WHEN I SAID I assumed
that's why he 'd stopped shop·
ping at Safeway, he nodded.
"Safeway is a den of iniquity
with sin and temptation on every
shelf," hc said. picking up a
ginseng root. "What's this sup·
l)Osed to do for you:•··
When I told film. he quickly
put It down Bnd picked up an
egg. which. on being advised it
was fertile. he quickly put down.
too. ''Whal am r going to do?"
he said plainllvely . "I 've
already lost 20 pounds ."
·'Well," I subestcd, "you
could always j ust boycott TV."
"I'll starve to death tint!" he
crled. And, after looldn1 ov~r
my television 1<>1 . t rear he may.
.-. . I
· $24 billion a.Iced· of~S.
'
Y1B lllllnl-llllY PIPll
..
J .. HostQ.g~s ' t.~81 thr~at ·t~newed
Do11 a11d fhe "'""
Daniel Roberts . 3. Laguna Hills, makes friends with
"Sta r Man," a toy robot. Both were on outings recently at
Laguna Be ach 's Main Beach Park.
Reagan seJ to name
4 Inore in cabinet
WASH I NGTON !AP )
Ron ald Reagan prepared to un·
veil fo ur more Cabinet-level
selections today. inc luding a
black for housing secretary and
a woman for U N ambassador,
sources on the president-elect's
tra nsition team said. 1 The sources, who declined to
be identified , said New York at·
torney Samuel R. Pierce was
picked to head the Department
of Housing and Urban Develop-
rn c n l. making him t he first
bljiCk man selected for a Reagan
Cabinet post.
The sources said Georgetown
Un ivers ity professor J eane
K ll'k patric k was to be an -
nouncE'd as the president-elect 's
choice for U.S. ambassador to
the United Nations, a pos t that
will be given Cabinet-level rank
and , thus. allow Reagan to fulfill
a pledge to include a woman in
his top circle of appoint ments.
Reagan also planned to name
conservative Colorado attorney
J ames G. Watt as interior
secretary and forme r South
Ca r o l i na Gov Jam es B.
Edwards as ener~y secretary,
said the sources .
Formal announcements were
to be made al an afternoon news
conference here.
rn an unexpected development
Weather
Extensive a r eas of
dense fog late afternoon
through mid-morning
hours from Santa Monica
Bay so u t hward .
Otherwise fair with some
high cloudiness Tuesday.
Highs at beaches Tuesd~y
65 to 68 with inland area.
highs ?s to 80. Lows
tonight 46 to 53.
INSIDE TODA"
Think amoll, 10~ man~
atock inve1tment clubt. But
th~r profita can be btg. See
Page.Bf.
••••
AtY-~ DI L.M.ae.,. M ........... , .......... AJ
Cle ....... OJ.7 c-tc1 Ot ~ ot .,_....,.._.. A7
......... A6 l ....... IM;;sul CH ............ , p... Cl4
this morning, Reagan's transi-
tion team decided lo hold up an-
nouncement of a fifth Cabinet·
level appoin tmen t . Illinois
Agriculture Director J ohn R.
Block, as agriculture secretary.
Over the weekend, Reagan 's
tou advisers t old Senate
Re-pu~odrwould
be among the choices announced
today, but the decision was
made this morning to postpone
the a nnouncement.
Several sources said Block
still appeared to be in line for
the job, but they could not ex -
pla in the reason for the delay.
One source speculated that
Reagan wanted lo s ave the an-
nouncemcntfor Tuesday when
the transition may disclose its
choice for education secretary,
the last department head to be
chosen. Real?an has had trouble
finding candidates for this job
because of his pledge to eliminate
the Department of Education.
Reagan press s pokes man
J ames Brady said additional
Cabinet announce ments would
be made. Tuesday but would not
elaborate.
R.e..a.g.a n-a-( r.aa d y -h-a"6 an-
nounced his first JO Cabinet·
level nominations .
Thieves get
costly tablet ·
PAPHOS, CYPQAS <AP> -
Thieves have stolen a priceless ·
2,000-year-old mosaic tablet de-
picting Leda an4 the Swan from
the museum at the Temple of
Aphrodit.e, the goddess of love,
police revealed today.
A police statement said the
thieves struck over the weekend,
breaking the lock on the door of
the museum, near this Cypriot
city, and carting off the heavy
mosaic, measuring more than
three feet square and set on a
concrete slab.
''Thia is a very h eavy
blow .... It ia a terrible loa for
our cultural hertta1e." aaJd Dr.
V aaaoe Karageorpa, dinc\or ·ci
Cyprus antiquities. ''It la lm·
possible to put a value on this
moeaic, il ia a unique piec:e," he
added. ·
Truck overt1U'll8
HEALDSBURG (AP) -A
tanker truck overturned and
started lealrlq propane I• on
Hi ch way 101 today. forc~n1
diversion ol traffic in both direc· tioft~\ the CalifomJa Hi1hway
Patr0treported.
Iran says
it won't
haek Dff
8yTheA1sodated Press
The speaker of the Iranian
Parliament today renewed Iran's
threat to put the 52 American
hostages on trial if the United
States does not accept the $24·
billion demand for their release.
The Parliament l eader.
II ashemi Rafsanja ni , declared
that Iran wi\1 not "back down
from our demands."
The threat of hostage trials
came a day aft er U.S. officials ef-
fectively rejected the latest Ira-
ni an terms for ending the confroo·
tat ion that the U.S. government
deposit some $24 billion in cash
and gold in the Algerian central
bank as a guar antee that Iran's
financial demands on the United
States be met.
The British news paper Daily
Telegraph reported. m eanwhile,
that Algeria will mediate new
"detailed negotiations" between
Iran and the United States in Lon-
don this week. But a State Depart-
ment s pokesman said. "We'renot
aware or any meeting in which the
United States is participating in
London this week.·· 0•11' ll'llet 11'""4M '' llk!Wtnl Keefller "I doubt it very much,',.another
high-level U.S. official sa1id of the
report.
FLAMES AND HEAVY SMOKE BREAK THROUGH TILED ROOF SUNOA·Y AT LAGUNA HILLS FIRE
·Two firemen were Injured In blaze near Lake Forest, Del Largo drives
The Daily Telegraph gave no
source fort he brief story.
Rafsapjani was asked at a
Tehran news conference about
the likelihood of hostage trials if
the United States rejected Iran's ~
deman<fs ·
H e·replied: · · r have not yet seen
the official U.S reaction. But if
the U.S. is not ready to give us <fr
rights our last act will be a trial. ·
" .... We guess the Americans
have wanted to make an excuse of
the hostages for military in·
tervention and conspiracies. We
have no intention of backing down
from our demands."
R afsanjani also said he does not
expect the issue to be returned to
the Parli ament, or Majlis, which
set the four basic conditions for
the hostages· release seven weeks
ago.
"Berause it has already given
its instructions iflhe U.S. does not
accept. The Majlis has said they
I the hostages l should be tried."
The r rania ns accu se the
hos tages of having been spies.
Th e s pea kcrs's comments
echoed those Sunday of Iranian
Executive Affairs Minister
Behzad Nabavi, wbo is in charge
CSee HOSTAGES, Page A2)
* * *
Mote fog
Predicted
for coast
Today was t1 e thi rd straight
day or pea soup mornings and
evenings along the Orange Coast.
and the U.S. Weather Service said
more coastal fog is expected
Tuesday.
The rog slowed surface tramc
and halted operations at Orange•
County's John Wayne Airport.
The airport was closed by zero
visibility this morning. It also was
closed Saturday and Sunday,
although lakeorfs were allowed
Sunday night when the fog lirted
for a whilt'.
Dense fog is expected to con-
tinue along the coast through
Tuesday morning with partial
clearing expected in the after-
noons. according to a National
. Weather Rureau spokesman.
Lows along the coast tonight
are expected to drop to 50-55 .
degrees with highs of 65 degrees
expected Tuesday afternoon. U S t k • Despite some tempora ry clear-• • a ing mg at times, the fog will continue
along the Orange Coast because 'ha rd li·ne' or cool. moist air from the ocean • ' mixlng with warmer air over the
land, according to weathe r
ho ______ buuau.spokes,manAI Dtts~oomt.-.--0 R Stages In effect. the mixture forms a
cloud and. when that cloud rests
W ASHJNGTON (AP) The on the land surface, a dangerous
State Department today reg-fog condition results because of
i_stered "deep concern" about the lack of visibility.
seve ral o f t h e Am e rican "lnfog,lwouldrestrictdriving
hostages in Iran and said a to necessar y trips ,·· said
number of ttlem .. m ay ~be· in '· 0-a lHornia Highway P all'ol '
prison. spokesman Tom Comer , "It's ex-
, Spokesman John H. Trattner tremely hazardous more so
said the Americans are not re-than snow or rain."
ceiving adequate medical atten· At John Wayne Airport, Air
lion and many of the 52 have not California was forced to cancel
been heard Crom r~cently. s ix flights this morning and
"We would welcome any im-Golden West Airlines cut ·seven
provement in the circumstances flights. according to company
In which they are being heJd," spokesmen.
Tr attner said. "Contrary to Ira-A s p o k s es m a n for Air
nianreportsinrecenldays that Ca lifornia said that 600
they (hostages) are now housed passengers were affected by the
in luxury hotels, we have reports flight cancellations to San J ose,
that a number of them may, in Oakland, Sacramento and San
fact, be in prilon." Francisco.
The U.S. spokesman reiterat-Incoming nights to John Wayne
ed that the goveminent of Iran Airport are being diverted to On·
will be held accountable for the tario Airport where a shuttle bus
well·beina of all of the hostages. la transporting travelers to the
He said Iran had not ·respected Oran1eCounty.
even minimal ~tandarda or
treatment expected of the world
community.
Trattner said be did not 'know
Topi~· bar
how·mU!Y Americana may beJn ..ltam•~ by fare pri1on Of" on-wtr.t~ ~
Another U.S. offlclal aald the in· FRDMO CAP) -A topless bar
f orm.Uon came in letters from and an adjolnin1 stereo abop
hoataps. were dama1ed by fire here,
The State Department toot authortU• said.
this hardened Une After Iran's The 1Dpbur1er bar and Sun
latest t.erms were denounced u Stereo 1u1tained '102,000
unreasonable by Secretary of damqe m the fire Sunda)'. One·
State Edmund S. MutJde. Hopes flrefll)lter wu treated for an
for a Chrtstmu homec:omina ap-eye l.njury. The caute was under
pear to have evaporated. invesli•aUon.
,
~ .. ...
PARAMEDl CS, FIREMEN AID FELLED FELLOW FIREFIGHTER
Flrern.n Emmett Welle, Mlaalon Vl•Jo, wH hoapHattzed
Laguna Hills blaze
injures 2 firemen
Two firefighters s uffer ed
minol' injuries Sunday in a
$200,000 four-alarm blaze that
swept through a commercial
structure on Lake Forest Drive
in Lag\U\a Hilla.
Orange County Fire Depart-
ment Capt. Mar~ Hawkins said
arson la suspected in the blaze
that autted four out of elaht
suites in the •mile story build·
nt at 23024 Laite Forest Drive in
Laguna Hilla.
More than 100 firefi&htera
from the county, Santa Ana and
La1una Beach foutbt the bl~
before b•"inlinl it under eontrot.
The two firefi1bten tak• to
Saddlebaclt Communil)' Hoa{lltal
were Emmett Wells from Ills·
alon Viejo a nd David Grubb
from Laguna Hills. The two auf-
fered from heat exhaustion and
smoke inhalation and were re-
leased later in the day from the
hospital.
Hawkins said the blue
originated in waste material ad-
jacent to the building. He said
investigators believe someone
Ignited lhla material, althOugh
no additional i nformation is be·
ln1 ...-eased on the tnffSCiga-
tJon.
Kosygin viewed
MOSCOW <AP)-Tbouaandaof
Soviet clthena led by President
Leonid L Breabnev flied put the
body olformer Premier AlexeiN.
Koaysintoday, fovrdaya after his
death at the a1e of 78.
... ---_______ .._...,..-... _. -... ...,..,.. ..... . . ,._ ............. .._ ' . , ... ---..... ---__ ..... ,..._~-_ .......... ___ , ______ _ .. .
wx•cn L4Q .. ,. . . .------JUSTBR£41UNG-------
"'* .... ,,,... .... ....w... If' ......... ..,,,.,..,,.
Jet f~l pipeline· leak
closes BtreetB in Vega•
_ LAS V!OA. IAPI Thou.ancta ol 11J1one ol Jtt f\atl &Ulhed
from • nqltW'M plpelln• •• ol U.. Laa v .... Strip today. torclnr ~ r l<»ur• cit aeveral m~or •Ire.ta.
Th• fu•I eru1;lfd tnto nam 111t 01'• polnl. apparently
tou('bfd off b • svarll from " pautnc automobile, said Capt.
Ralph Dln.aman o! the Clark ('oW\t Fir• Depart ment There
•trt no \l\lutl"IJ r~pQl"tt'd , however
Pl'•oplt-laylni 111 1r1ott.<li wa Troi;lcan111 Avenue weal ot In
ter t lttt 16 would ha VI! tCJ rurna111 1t1 their rOC>ms until the s treet
"ai r('()pt-nt'<l ~omttll me thlti alteirnoou
I .§ • .,.,,_, ,,.,,_. ... ,, rf•r• 11 a
LO DON fl 1 1'h" l 1 S aollar dipve<J i barply aa~unst
OHlJ-ur Jort'tl(n <'UI rent'''"~ tuda for Ute second straight trading
~t·!tj,I 11 u' mom:} m .. 1 kN bw.1n~11 wlow~ down for Christmas
Thl J111,·~ ttl ~old ron b} <lb mut•h •~ S18 1tn ounce
OeaJer' aur1butw tht' downward trend of the US currency
111 thm trallrng tu ~t'nere1l Lar k of mtt!t'esl'' and a drop an
~:urodClll<lr mtcrci.l ritll!l>
tfD.;f"raf' f"flrfl1qttfdw •••• Tr•r•M
lCOSIA. <')'µru.!> 1A P 1 A moderately strong e art hq uake
:.lru, le. Tetu.rn. the holy cit~ of Qom and other cenlral Iranian
c 1t1t~ toda). and at least one dealh was reported. the official
Iranian newl> at:ency f'ars said
lt sard one C"hrld was killed and a woman w.as_injured. but
did not .!>pecif) whe re the casualties occurred. ,
The quake, .m.eas.urlng 5 3 on the Richter scale, was the
scn md lo rock C'entrul Iran in four days.
Pfdbh K"Orlwr# .-011llMew pralr•I
WARSAW. Poland <AP> Workers in a centr al Polish town
continued 1.1 m averic·k me at rationing protest today despite a
ban on strikes ordered by Solidarity, lhe nation's largest in-
dependent union, an a bid to ease tensions between Poland and
its Soviet bloc ne11i{hbors.
The protesters occupied a district government building in
the central town of Piotrkow on Thursday and are waiting t here
to meet with gove rnment otricia ls. Solidarity s pokesman
Stanisla w Kotlinski said
Antl•t1uk.P .wtlt,l•I• •la,,.-prol.-•I
MONTPELI ER. Vt. IAP > Two dozen anti-nuclear ac-
tivists took over a wa iting room outsjde Gov. Richard Snelling's
office today. vowing to stay until they were promised that the
state's only nuclear power plant re ma in shut until independent
investigators say it is ready.
The protesters carried a letter for Snelling, which asked
him to "keep Vermont Yankee closed until such time that a full
and public investigation into its operation is conducted."
The Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant has been idle
since Sept 27 when it shut down for Its a nnua l refueling and re·
pa irs.
Greeter hack
Actor portrays Eiler Larsen
T he Eiler Larsen lookalike
who struck the fa mili ar poses of
Laguna Beach's offi cial greeter
a long Coast Highway last sum-
mer will be bar k 1n town next
weekend
was in Laguna during the sum·
m e r . he set out to learn more
about the legendary Larsen.
Ac t or Ca n o G r a h a m o f
Hollywood said he is continuing
to research lhe chetracter of the
late Larsen. who waved and
s houted to motorists along Coast
Highway before his death in
1975.
Graham said he will be on the
street in Laguna Reac h Friday.
Saturday. a nd Sunday from
a bout noon to 4 p. m ·
But this li me he expects to be
joined by his visiting 77. year-old
mot h e r , E va G rah a m , o f
Pinela nd, Texas.
Graham . who left work as an
insulation contractor three and
one half years ago to become an
a ctor, has been resear ch ing
Larsen 's life for a bout a year
and one half.
He is developing a play a bout
Larsen and expects to portray
the g reeter in the play.
When the 48-year.old Graham
T his time the object ive is the
sam e .
Graham is s~cifically looking
for any hom e movie film of the
greeter and for a copy of a book
with the poem "For You With
Love," by Louis Unte rmeyer.
Larsen gave away hundreds of
copies of the book. said Graham.
And, the actor is continuing to
sea rc h out old pictures of
La rsen, and stories a bout the
greeter.
Gr aham plans to don a red
jacket and blue trousers in the
Larsen manner.
Inland fog
expected
to clear
LOS ANGELES <AP) Fog
that clouded t.he flight plans of
v thousands of holida y tra velers
Sunday and this m orning was
expected to lessen tonight and
g ive way to low c louds, the Na-
tion al Weather Ser vice said.
''Tonight some deepening of
the coastaJ ma rine layer should
result in improvement in that we
Trio attack,
rob victim
in Laguna ---witl-h&ve-more-low-cfouditres~
instead or the low dense fog ...
s aid a statement released by the
se rvice . Three men lurking outside the
public restrooms at Heisler
Park in Laguna Beach early
Saturday wrestled an E l Toro
resident to the ground a nd stole
ht!t-wallet.
Robbery victim Peter Wallace
told Laguna Beach police he was
leaving the restroom at about
1 :30 a.m . when he was grabbed trom behind around the neck
and forced lo the ground.
One of the three assailants
took Wallace's wallet contaiqing
$40 in cash and a S300 travel
dra ft and fled the scene in a late
mod~ Toyota. ·
T.he unidentified rob ber.; were
described as being in their early
twenties. Wallace was not in·
iured in the incident.
T h e extremely th ick fog,
which .cl~ed Los Angeles In-
te rnational Airport for several ~ }Jours Surtitay night, continued to
block incoming flights e ven
after sunrise todav.
Authdrities in Los Angele s
sa id flights were taking off by
sunr ise but were still unable to
land. Al Ontario Interna tional
Airport, officiaJs said 31 planes
diverted there because of the fog
at LAX were awa iting on the
ground at 7 a .m. and that as
m a n y as 50 unsch edule d
airplanes had been sitting on the
ground at one time during the
night.
Ontario itseU was clea r of fog
this morning.
TELEPHONE ~
Thomas P. Haley ""°''"'-' .
Robert N. Weed Prnlelelll
M:TtiOmas eev I Edllor
Thomas A. Murphlne --.,... .... u .. .,
Charles H. Loos A1tltteii1-......£9"or
. c.,,,1 .. 1 ,. ... Oro"'' CeOlt f'••ll•llHll (O,,,,O•Y· NO M Wt ...,... ............... _ .. , .,, ..,,...,.,..._., ...,.," _., ..
ro•r•••<041 e lltlOv l t•t<IOI ............ ~--·
All de .... le: (714) 142-4321
CIHeffted Adweftl91ftt: 142·5871
OFFICES Coste llllfte: DD Wini e.r Str"I ......,.. llMclllt *7 No. c:o-11 Hltftwer HIMllfttll1119"dlt 1111$ llHCh ...... ,,.,..
" .
Ai~rt
adds cash.
to county
John Wayne Airport l1 1 1422
mllllon 1old mine annually for
the Oran1e CQunty economy. ac·
cordlna to a survey prepared by
1t pro·expanalon airport group.
'rhe survey. conducted by the
Community Airport Council in
c onj u nct ion wit h t h e Air
Trans port As soc i ation o f
America, is being sent to all
public office holders who will
consider the proposed master
p lan for lhe airport's ruture de-
velopment.
The plan, which-calls for re·
ductions in jet noise and im·
provements to permit a double
in pas~enger lram c. was en-
dorsed Thursday by the ain><>rt
Land Use Couneil. ·
The plan wi.11 be considered by
the county Airport Commission
J an. 13. Late r hea rings will be
he ld by the county Planning
Com rrussion and the board of
supervisor s.
.According to the survey. the
"ind uced economic impact"
from visitors using the a irport is
more than $197 million annually.
That figure is based on vis-
itors entering the county via the
airport spendjng $131.5 m illion.
For each dollar s pent, one-or
mo re additional dollars is added
to the economy, according to the
survey.
In addition to visitor s pending,
oueration of the airport. where
1.449 people are employed, con·
tributes $93.7 million to the coun-
ty's economy, according to the
council's survey. The employee
pay roll alone totals $25.4 million
annually.
The Community Air port Coun-
cil is made up of representatives
of m ajor county employers, in-
cluding Fluor Corp. and Smith
International. and the aviation
ind ustry.
According lo the council , the
s urvey is among 34 nationwide
an which the Air Transport As-
soriation has participated .
Fr ... r~A1 -
HOSTAGES
of the negotiations with the United
States. Nabavi said U.S. rejection
of a ll the dem ands would prob·
a bly lead lo a decision to refer
the matter lo the Isla m ic courts .
On Sunday, Secretary o ( Stale
Edmund S. Muskie called the de-
mands "unreasonable " and said
t he host ages would not be home
by Christmas.
A lop Iranian official said Iran
could hold the 52 captives "for 10
mor e years ." They spe nt their
415th day in captivity today.
Muskie said it would be difficult
t o a.B ree o n te rm s for the
hostages· rele ase before Jan 2Q,
when President·elect Reagan
lakes office.
Asked about lran.'s demands,
Reagan told reporter s he was
··not going to com ment on that un-
til it's my turn. Then I 'll com·
ment. ..
An official English-la nguage
t ext of the Iranian de mands re·
leased in Tehran on Sunday says
Iran wanls $9 billion to cover Ira-
nian assets frozen in U.S. banks
after the hostages wer e s eized on
Nov. 4, 1979. It asked $10 billion to
cover the wealth oft he late shah of
Iran and the return of more than
J 1 2 m illion ounces of Iranian gold
deposited in the U.S. Federal
Reser ve Bank and worth almost
$1 million al current rates.
In addition. the statement s aid
Ira n wants S4 billion in cas h "or
a n y oth e r va lid g ua r a ntee
acceptable to the Algerian cen-
t ral bank. as a guarantee for the
-·----~ .. _....._..._ ..... _, __ _
Go Ro11L~
T hat's not a crying towel Ra ms cheerleader Tina Easter-
lif!.g is wav in_g. The Costa Mesa resident. a former Orange
Coast College cheerleader , was cheering the Rams to vi"c-
tory over Atlanta Sunday. For story of the game. see
.Page Bl.
Massage ordinance
eyed for Laguna
Laguna BeaC'h city officials
aim to prepare an ordinance re~
ula ting m assage oper a t ions
that would require applicants to
de monstrate professional com
petence and t raining
Police Chief Jon Sparks said
the current massage ordinanre
is too vague and should be re·
vised.
He told C'i ty council me mbers
that standards a rc needed to
screen a pplicants for permits to
ope r a t e out nlll m&ssage
services
The current law was adCJpted
by the council i11 1970. Sparki.
s aid, "be fore t he outc all
massage s ervice was practically
Two staffers
set to joi11
Stanton off ice
When Fountain Valley City
Counci lma n R oge r Stant on
moves to his new post as First
Di s tr ict O r a n g e Co un t y
Supe rvisor in J anuary, he'll be
taking two city s taff m embers
with him.
S u zanne Vi c t o r , 3 4 , a d .,
minislrative assistant to the city
manager. has left t o accept a posi-
tion as Stanton's executive assis-
tant on the county board. She had
been with t he city since 1977.
Also, Karen Davis, 37, wt.JI
leave her position as secretary to
the c ity council Dec 31 to become
Stanton's secretary. She has been
with the city for seven years.
City Manager Robert Vollmer
sa id Ms. Victor 's pos ition prob·
ably wi ll be filled from within the
current city staff. fie said the de·
ci~ion on filli ng Ms. Davis' post
·viii be made by thecity council.
taken over by persons involved
in sex-for-sale activities."
The matter came befor e the
council last week in· connection
wit h an appeal by t hree Laguna
Beach residents, who were de·
nied outcall massage permits.
S p arks emphas ized t hat the
de n ia ls of appl ications b y
Hichard Pettigrew and .P riscilla
Anne Rom ero of 818 Hilkrest
Dn \'e and Harriet Katz of I 133
l.al'(una Canyon Road were not
based on the ind1\'idua1s· baC'k·
ground or reputation
Instead. the denials were due
lo t he inadequacy of the current
cit y law regulating massage
services. he said.
T he council gr anted massage
permits to the 3PJ.1ellants, on the
condition that the~ comp!} \\Ith
t h e new massage ordinance
when 11 becomes law
"T o set the s tanda rds. we
ha\'e to do some researc h s aid
Sparks "The ordinance now 1s
\ague ..
T he re\'1sed ordinance 1i. due
lo be considered b' the counC'1 I in February ·
Suspect held
in slaying
A Culver City man was arrested
by Buena Park police Sunday on
s us picion of murder in connection
with the shooting death of his un·
cle ea rlier in the day
A police s pokesm an said Lar ry
A Harderson, 42. was taken into
c us tody afte r officer s found
Oliver T. Convoy. 56. dead of a
g unshot wound lo the head in his
a partment.
The spokesman said H arderson
was in the ap.artment when of·
fi cers a r ri\'ed . No motive is
kno wn fort he s hooting.
bona ride discharge of the U.S. governm~nt 's oblfgl1ttolrs." rt -+---
did not defi ne the obligations.
Murder try
suspect kills
self with gun
INA. Ill. (AP> -Police say a
prosperous insurance agent who
was wanted on a charge or t rying
to murder one or his clients drove
he ad-on into a Greyhound bus and
t hen shot himself between the
eyes .
Authorities have ruled that the
Friday night death or Harold
Wisnewski, SS, of Centralia was a
s uicide.
Just six hours hours earUer, a
wa rrant had been issued for
Wisnewski 's arrest, charging him
with the atte mpted murder
Thursdav of an elderlv woman
who t'iad been one of his insurance
clients for years. ·
e'
. --------····-·· -.,
127]et . .
believed
stolen
RONXONXOMA, N.Y. <AP) -'
A Boelna 72'7 jet was the center ol
a custody dispute today alter tta
owner new lt across the United
Statea amid reports that it was
take n without authorization afte r
a bill of repair work went unpaid.
A Federal Avi a tion Ad·
ministration spokesman said the
pla ne took off from ""Burbank
Air port on Saturday. The FAA
said it apparently had been Wl·
dergoing a refurbishine and it1
owner took off with it without pay-
ing the bill.
ft landed at MacArthur Airport
on Long Island about 5 p.m. Sun-
da y , the FAA said , and Suffolk
County poUce tooay were waiting
for someone to arrive who could
open the locked craft.
Ac cording to Sgt. Frank Miller
o{ the B urbank police, the plane
was n own out of the California
airport about8:30 p.m . Saturday,
but was not reported missing until
3:30p.m.Sunday.
T he plane's listed owner is
Constance Leasing Ltd. of the
Baham as. and it was being re-
furbished by Tiger Air Services
Inc .
New member
appointed to
Dana board
T he Da na Point Sanitation
District board has appointed a
romme rcial fisherman to fill the
u n ex p i red t e r m o f board
m ember Louis E. Dunning, who
died Nov 3.
Don Klaasen. 49. a long-time
Da na Point resident, will fill the
vacant seat until November 1981
when Dunning's ter m exP.i!;eS.
Board members Angus Smith,
J o hn McComb, J ac k Schmidt
and Earl Hardisty. all voted last
Thursday to appoint Klaasen.
The only other person apply-
ing for the pos t was Eric Mat-
thews. a 111e m ber of the Dana
Point Cit izens fo r Action, the
group s ponsoring a recall effort
against the four board m em·
bers ThC:1t effort was sparked by
a SSOO-a mo nth pens ion plan
adopted by the board last April
Quads born
in Stanford
ST AN FO RD (AP>
lleallhy quadruplet sisters
ha ve been born to a San
J ose woman who reported-
l y had taken fe r t ilit y
drugs. according to Stan-
ford Medical Cente r and
the woman's m other.
T he infants "a re a ll
quite Cine. but the parents-
are still in a stat e of
s ho c k ," h os pita l
s p o k es m a n Ju lia n
diCiurcio said following
the Sunday births.
T he infants remained in
the hospital's in tehs ive
ca r e un it wh ile t h e
m other, Chris tine Hess,
was resting comfortably ,
according to Mrs . Hess·
m o the r . Ba rb a r a
McGowan. The child ren
are the fi rst for Christine
and J er ry Hess of San
J ose. --
(
About 9 :30 p .m . 17riday ,
Wianewalti'a car croased t..he
cente r line of Illinois 37 and
headed straight for a Greyhound
bus, driver Mitchell McDowell,
25, or Jackson, Miss., told Jef.
f eraon County sheriff's officen.
Gathered SleeYe for MalCi1,T1um warmth
McDowell s aid he swerved and
clipped the car. Wianewski 's car
then skidded 1,IOO feet and came
to • halt. Wlanewski sot out to ln·
apect the damage, accident re-
porU aaid.
Christmas and "Pacific Trail" at the Garage
A Polyester filled jacket. lull ZIP to lhe
tunle necl<. oomPlelely washable. leaturing two
ZIP pockets
B Feather soft po1yes1er fllled iac;kevVesl.
lull ZIP 10 tunie neck and completely waShable
. .. ~ ....
ALS GARAGE
56 FASHIONJSLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
I
Monday, NYSE COMPOSITE
1 a.m. (PDT) Pricee
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TRANSACTIONS
Mi>ncMy. Oecemt>tr 22. 1980 H I ~ CWLYPILOT -
Adults find toy
manufacturing
no child's play
PAWTUCKET, R l. (AP) -A one-way mirror splits a
playroom inside the huge, red brick toy factory of Hubn>
Industries. Children play will\.-test toys on one side, UA·
aware that solemn engineers on the other are notine tbelr
delight or disdain.
"That's one way we have to develop toys and ideas,"
company vice preside nt J ohn McCann shouted over the din
of a nearby pre-Chris tmas assembly line.
McCann watch ed a s n imble -fingered workers
packaged hundreds of one of the firm's most famous toys,
"Mr. Potato Head, .. to meet a special order .
Blff MORE OF THE factory was oddly quiet on tbia
December day , unlike "Santa's Workship" of children's
dream s , where things are humming just before Christmu .
.. As far a~ this company is concerned, Christmas 1980
1s Christmas past. Most all the orders are filled and we're
into Christmas 1981. We 've already shown our '81 line to 1S
of our top 20 accounts," said Stephen Hassenfeld, the com-
pa ny president.
The assembly line lull gave Hassenfeld and Mccann
time to chat about their favorite s ubject -how toys are
born and why they som etimes gathe r dust on store shelves.
THE SPECIAL PLAVROOM is one method of develop·
1ng new toys, they said Test groups of children wtio span
many different econom1<'. social and racial groupings are
brought lo the factory to play. Engineers watch to gauge
their reactions to the new toys as well as the safety a nd
dur ability of the products, M('('ann said
.. But there are many , many othe r ways toys come to
be c reated," !><.11rf llasscnh~ld . mentioning, for e xample, a
child psycholog ist retained especially to conjure up toy
idea::..
•
0!::><11nt· of our idea!> c:umC' from our own research and
developmept department, ha!>ed on our own exJfenence m
the to) market , .. adder! llasscnfeld . whCJ has been in the
family run business for 17 years
"01-' COURSE, M ANY TOYS come to the market from
lell·vision and the movies . · he SCiid . ticking off the many
dc1lls and games ba!>ed on popular programs ranging from
t C'l{'v1s1on ·s Charleys Angels· 0 lO the movie · 'Star Wars ...
I lasbro, with sales this year of about SIOO .million has
been burned b) some s uch toys. Hassenreld noted wryly.
·Toy!> based on tt-lev11.1on and mo-.:1e characters tend
to be more fadd y .' h1• <>aid "We brought out the ·Charley's
Angels' dolls in 1977 :rnd had a fabulous year 1 expected as
mul·h \Olume 1n 1978. hut the kids had had enough A $10
m1ll1on line ff'll to S.l m1ll1on ·
THE ('OMPA~\"S EXPF.RIE~CE. with its G.l. Joe
rlol 11s legenda r~ 1n the top indu:-tr), YI t•C;rnn said.
The J oli, d1s countecl in th1~ country but those rights re·
1:enlly were sold to a 1-:uropean concern. once represented
about two·th1rds of the t•ompany·s product line.
But then cam e the anti Vietnam war movement in the
late 1960s and early 1970s Sales fell so !ow the company
dropped the line
F11el costs
Utilities get
• • • trnn 1ncent1ves
SAN F'RA,"CISCO •AP• The state Public Utmties
Comm1ss 1on has taken steps to g1\'e the state's electric
utilities a .. s ubs tantial 1nC'ent1\e to m1mm1ze fuel costs" and
"drive hard barg ains for the lowest possible prices of
purchased fuel ··
The PCC amended the method b) 1A.hll'h major utilities
ad1ust electric rates lo respond to rhan~es in fuel costs
ma1nlyo1l and natural gas
THE COMMISSION SA I 0 T H F. thange "'ould provide an
increased incentive for use of the mr1~1 <'areful managem ent
1n the fu ceof rising ful·I t'xpenSl'S
Onh reas unalJlv int·urre<I fuel c·ost:. "'Ill be recoverable.
Energ) ·cost re\·1s 1on:-. allo1A.1n~ rates to t alch up with ris·
ing t·osts wilt nolA. hem arle threP 11mes annually instead of
1w1ce
Instead or being based on c·osts after they are incurred.
rates will be on a fore<'asted resoun·e mix basis This uses
rorecasted pri('es and s ales and the amount of funds in a so·
t•alled hal<Jnn nl! a<·<·1>unt. ''here rJll' inc·rcase revenue is
matt'hNI <1ga1nl>I fuel e«1s t hikes
Gold metals quotations
Gold
By th•• .\ssociated Press
Sclt'l'lC'U world gold pnl'ei-toda)
L~mdOfl;Jllorninjl f1x111g . S5~t 00, up Silt 00
London: afternoon f1x1nJ!. $59-1 75, up Sl9 75
Pa ris : afternoon g1x1ng Sli21 66, up Si 11
Frankfurt: fix.i n!! S595 51. ,,ff S20 4G
Zurich: late afll'rnoon rixing S592 00 bid. up $18.00:
S595.00asked
Handy & Harman: Hile morning ~:>~.75, up $19 75.
Engelhard: latl! morning S594 75. up Sl9 75. • _ •
Engelhard: late-morning fabncated $615.57. up $20.44 •
. 4'tili•t.•r
NEW YORK I AP 1
up S0.250.
Hanrly & llarman silver $16.150,
Engelhard s1l vcr S 16 HlO. up $0 25 . fabn cated s 11 119. up S0.265
tlt•f(lb
silver ,
NEW YORK (AP1
clay.
Sp<>I nonferrous metal prices to-
Copper 8S·',.·87'• cents a pound.L'S destinations
Lead 39-43 cents a pound
Zinc 4112·413• cents a pound, dehvered
Tin $7.6941 Metals Week compos1t~ lb
Aluminum 76 cents a pound. N Y
Mercury S380.00 per flask
Platinum $537·550 troy oz .. N Y
Geld cioi11•
NEW YORK (AP> Prices late Friday of gold coins,
t'ompared with T hursday's price.
Kraggerand, 1 troy oz .. S627 .00. up $24 00
Maple leaf, 1 troy oz., $623.00, upS24.00.
MnkHSO 1.2\_!_C?~z. S-75'6.00~$29.00.
---~ an cr own, -:-9802 roy oz • $593 00. up $23.00.
Source: Deak-Perera
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u \ I t• I I' r l• .. I d l' n l
l l<'lllltd I Url.'1 hnt'v
h a~ bt.<t'11 .. " ardl*d
ttw Ordt'r nf Ot'tutwr
R ,. \ 11Iul 111 n r u I h 1
''gr~·u\ -.t>nll't b to
tht> ~ ommum~l P\.lrtY
J II J ">u \ I c: I '1 I ~ t ~
Tbt.• a \\ <\rd ''a~ p rt·
M'fllt'~I la:,I \H•ek 0
d tt ~ h c l orl'
B r l' i h n l' \ ') i -l l h
b1rthcL.t)
Protests
flain cats
. . reprieve
VENTURA (AP 1 To
lhe traditional sounds of
Ventura beaches the
rumble of waves. the
crtes of seagulls and the
streams of tourists s tep.
pjng on half-buried soft
drink l'ans have been
..Uded the meows or rov·
1og k11t1 es and th e
squawk of outraged cat
lovers
Al issue is a plan put
f~rth by officials to trap
t he homeless felines .
who are estimated to
number between 40 and
150 . because or concerns
abqut disease . odor, bit-
ten and s cratc h ed
children and the welfare
of the cats themselves.
.THE PLi\N has drawn
protests from sever a l
doze n cat lovers. who
s~v most of the animals
w1)uld not be adopted
and would find
tbc m selvL•S f<1cing a
de<1th sente nce at the
animal shelter.
: "Why not make them
a. tourist attraction?"
sl.l ggested one wom an.
· i\s a result or the
ft line fracas, the Ven-
t~ra City Council has or-
cfcred a study of lhe
sft uation . to he complet-
ed hy Jan !'l
OFFICli\l.S SAY the
problem amse because
unwanted C<tl!. arc often
dumped at the bea c h
and are fed by sym·
ita lhl't1 c individuals .
R o wcvc r , the cat s
sometimes peris h un·
i>1'!asanlly, often after
iticy climb under hoods
qf cars parked nearby lo
~ugglc near the warm
engines.
• P UBLIC NOTICE
... 1JlJI
SU PE•IO• CO\lltT 01' CALI l'OltNIA
CO\INTY Of OllANOI
NO. A· tt'1el
lff>TICE Of SALi Of
ltEAL PltOPl'.ltTY AT
PltlVATE SALi
ESTATE OF H C <;OOINEZ. ak•
HERMENEGILDO C GODINEZ. lkl
HERMAN c GODINEZ. Oe<uu<I
Nol•tt Is n.rto., 91wn that °" or ~lier Otumber )•. IUO. the un
dtr\•Qned, lVOt-" REINA u 10·
minl\lrltCN' of lhlo "''"'" al Ille •bow namtO dK-nt, wlll sell •I prlval•
'41lt IO 1'-ht')toe\I l>lddtf\, 'IUl>jetl to
ronflrmatlon by '"" •bovt·enlllle<I S.uoer1CN' Court, 4111 '"" ri911t, tltlt, Ir"
l•r•\I ano ~l•I• Of llW! d<l<-nt at the time ol hll dUlh •nd all the rl9'1t, II
--~"" •ncl 1..t.,.Ht Ille ntate " . bv op•r•lion ot 11\w or 01herwl\e, ., ..
qu1reo other tllan or In •ddltlon to t11'1t
01 the deceoent 1t the 11m.i of hi>
<101n. In -to tt\at certain rea111r-r-
tv lotateo In tr>e Counfv or Oranoe, State ot (Attlornla, dn<rlbed u
follows:
tmpro'tt<I real P<'Ollertv t0<1tie<1 11
JS?O Valt<Kll Or . Fullerton, CA •7'33,
dft\(rlbed M
LOI n of Tr«t .. o 450, IS"'°"'" on a m11u•t.or-In -,., ,..,. *
or MIS<ell-..s ~. ltecorcts tlf
0••"9e Coun\v. c1111ornl•
Subl1ttl to Current l••H. tove
n111t" tondlllons. restrictions, re·
ser vallons. rlljllts, rlQllh of wev, •••""
m•nl\ ot record
Bid\ or oft~'"* lnvlt*<I tor tlM pr~
P•Htv •"""''"'lie In wrtllnQ and mey be dell,..reo to '"* .Omlnlstrator or lo
the Ollie of her ellorNy, 1UI St,1tte St.,
C•rl>l>ed, CA •iaoe. or m•v be Ill*<! '"
tlw Ollke of Ille Clerk ol Ille 5'1t19r1or
Court at eny time •lier IM flf\t
ovblltatlan of th/ s notlte •rid be tore
ma~lf'9 of tlW \ale
Terms aftd cc1•1elltlons of HI• are: Cnll In t.-1111 _., of ,,. UnlttlO
SttltH of Amerl<a or 119rt <Mii ..,<I
o.rt tr..Sit, the ,.nM ol tr9C!ll lo be •
•tttPl•lllt lo IM aclmlnhtr.irta eno
1'-•bo-ltt9d Court; 10"-of II•
•mDVnt biO to «<ompeny t"* otfe<
.,.., ,,,. Mtllfl(t lo lie peld -(Oft• tlrmallon of salt by IM SuNrlor
Courl TaaH, rer1t\, operelln9 •ncl
m1lrit..,llfl<t n~ -premiums on lnturantt •<ttpt•blt lo tllt
purcll•-""'" lie Pf0ffl9d ff of IM
Oii• of conflmw!lon of Nit. n.. ••· itmlnallon tit tltlt, rte:on:t1"9 of con·
.,.,.tnct ..,. eny lltlt lftwrenct Polkv
sht 11 bt at tllt •ape nu ol tilt
purch•-or PIH<-n.
ll\t pr-rty ... rtln ckKrllMd It
commonly ,....,.rflll lo•• JSJO ll1i.t1el•
. -
Dogged' by tragedies,
tough girl hitngs on
El.KTON. Ky (A P ) Sheena
1\t•ed wu badb' lnju.red wb.n a car
ran her olf the road. Eiaht montt\11
l•ter. •ht! wu impaled on a plank
th•t dtlltro~ed a lu:o1. And after her
b•by dled ')f pneumonil•. she felt
"dt11truy~ that God h•d tried
rivery wMy htl could to aet me."
ltut at u; she'll a survivor. Her
frtt>o\lt <'ull her thti ''touahest alrl In
Lo.ia11 County " And s he says ,
"Whtin you find sotn.,body who takes
l'ur•· of yoo and loves you, you hold
0 11 ••
Thi.\ ·omcbody 18 her 18-year-old
hu~b1md. Clark
SIN('•: THE\' married tn August umi. the Reeds have hud "an awrul
lot of bad l\,lck "
· 1 ·ve l'Ven thought that maybe God
"'a~ trying to tell us that me and
Clark isren't right for each othe r."
~he said '"Uut when you've been
through as much together as we
have, you've got to figure you ought
lo stay together ..
Th~ Re.eds. who.....wanted a family
uod '"enough money to make ends
meet ... last year hired on lo strflp
tobacco for area farmers,
ln December. they were walking
home after work when a friend drove
toward thtm. intending lo make
them dive oH the road. Reed made it.
His pregnant wife didn't.
HER LE FT L EG was shattered,
her hip was broken, three vertebrae
in her spine were damaged and she
had a deep gash in her forehead.
Doctors feared she might never walk
again and worried that her unborn
child might be seriously hurt.
She was hospitalized 2 1,2 months
and' decided "to take the chance"
and carry her baby to term. The
child. Clark Vinson Reed II but
nicknamed C.J .. was born in April
with a cyst on the brain. a "lazy eye"
and a droopy eyelid.
"He wq just a little bitty \hint, a
wonderful baby, ao s weet. and pretty,
too," Mra. Reed said. "We kept on
wan ting to believe nothihg waa
wrona with him."
ttHEN THE BABY was 4 months
old . the Reeds went over to
Clarksville, TeM .• to celebrate their
first wedding anniversary with a
pizza, a few games of Space Invaders
and a few beers.
On the way home, their car
careened into a concrete culvert,
flipped twice and plowed through a
plank fence. Reed was thrown clear
a nd escaped with only bruises. ~
But a 1-by·6·inch plank plunged
Hke a spear through Mrs. Reed, shat-
tering her ribcage and destroying a
lung.
A doctor called to the scene faint-
ed. and as Mrs. Reed lay conscious.
rescue workers used a chain saw to
remove the plank. ~
BESIDE SEVERE chest tnjuries.
her right arm and leg were badly cut
and her lower Hp was severed. She
needed more than 700 stitches and
spent three weeks in a hospital in·
tensive care unit.
Then last month, after their lives
had re turned to normal, Reed
awakened one morniQg to silence, not the baby's usual crying.
"I heard Clark shout, 'Oh , my God,
please no!· and I asked what was the
matter," Mrs. Reed ,said, "and he
just said, 'He's dead, baby.'"
The infant died of "walking
pneumonia, .. according lo the cor-
oner.
"AND NOW THERE'S an empti-
ness.'' Mrs. Reed said. "We don 't
have all the money in the world, but
we gave him all the love anybody
could.
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Selection of Handmade rugs
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The Red Plate
$2200
,
A tradition amoni the early American famlUes
was that when someone deserved special
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reward a goal achieved ... or simply say
"You are Special Today." Start a tradition.
Some more reasons: B.D. HOWES and SON
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M ' N l I ,\ ' I ••• : I H .' • : IHI OAANC E. COl1 Nl y C ALIFOHNIA .. " . ·-·~ -·ce"rs--·.
Reagan nam.es f 011r ~1nore. to cabinet
I I
INTERIOR PICK
Jamn G. Wett
WASHINGTO N <AP) -
President·elect Reagan named
four more nominees to Ca~·
lttvel jobs In hia new administra-
tion today. includin1 black at-
torney Samuel R. Pierce Jr. for
housing secretary and a woman
proressor , Jeane J . Kirkpatrick,
ror ambassador to the United
Nations.
Reagan also named former
South Carolina Gov. James B.
Edwards as his choice for energy
secretary and conser vative
Colorado attorney ..James .-G.
Walt as his nominee for interior
secretary.
Today ·s annou ncem ents
brought to 14 the number of
Cabinet·level jobs Reagan has
filled. Still to be disclosed are
his c hoices ror agriculture
secretary. education secretary
and s pecia l trade represen·
tative, a post that may be given
Cabinet-level status . Additional
Cabinet announcements are to
be made Tuesday, Reagan ·s
press office said.
In choosing Pierce and Mrs.
Kirkpatrick, Reagan tutrilled a
p romise that minorities and
women would he represented in
his Cabine t . Hi s othe r 12
nominees are a ll white men.
The U.S. JJ.mbassador to the
U .N . has""li'ot always held
Cabinet rank, b~ it has under
President Carter. Reagan press
spokesman J ames Brady said
the post will carry Cabinet rank
in the new administration as
well.
The four new choices ap-
peared at a downtown hotel here
for the formal announcement by
Reagan 's · transition aides of
their nomirration. The president·
elect, who rem ained near his
home in California, continued
his practice or not being present
to announce the choices.
In a written s t atement,
Reagan said his rour latest
no minees "s hare with me a
commitment to improve the
quality of life ror all the
American people ... I know the
American people will be im·
<See CABINET, Page A2)
BLACK FOR HOUSING
Semuel R. Pterce
,.~ .........
AMBASSADOR TO U.N.
Jeane Kirkpatrick
Hostages tri~\. threat renewed
New jet spots available
. · Airport could handle 9 .quieter flights
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHI.
Of Ille D•lly Pli.t Sl•H
Nine of the 41 jet departures
permitted daily at Orange Coun·
ty 's John Wayne Airport could
be m ade available within a year
to new air carriers under an
airport access plan released to-
day
According to the plan pro-
posed by Airpo rt Mana1ite r
Murry Cable. air carriers utiliz·
ing aircran that ma ke the least
a mount of noise wo uld win
privileges to serve the Orange
County market.
\Jnder the plan, Air California
and Republic Airlines <formerly
* * *
Hughes Airwest) would be re-
quired in 1981 to give up the nine
daily· departures.
Such a move would leave Air
California.with about 22 flights
per day, averaged annually, and
Republic with 10.
However, Air California.
Republic and the two recent ad-
d itions lo the airport -Frontier
Airlines and Western Airlines -
would be permitted bid for the
nine open departure slots.'
·'Any air carrier would be
able to bid on the flights. But
they' II not be bidding with
m oney but with equipment
t aircraft> that reduces noise,"
* * *
Airport 'gold mine'
to county econoIDy
John Wayne Airport is a $422
million gold mine annually for
the Orange County economy. ac·
cording to a survey prepared by
a pro-expansion airport group.
The survey. conducted by the
CommWlity Airport Council in
conjunction with the Air
Transport Association of
Am e rica, is being sent to all
public office holders who will
consider the proposed master
plan for the airport's future de·
-velopment.
The plan. which call s for re·
dllcttonrl Jet noise and im·
provements to permit a double
in passenger traffic, was en-
dorsed Thurs day by the airport
Land Use Council.
The plan will be considered by
the county Airport Commission
Coast
Weather
Extensive areas of
dense fog late afternoon
t hrough mid -morning
· hours from Santa Monica
Bay so uthw a rd .
Otherwise fair with some
high cloudiness Tuesday.
Highs at beaches Tueaday
65 to 68 with inland area.
bi ghs 'ts to 80. Lows
tonight 46 to 53.
IN81DE .... ~Y
Think 1maU, tor ma1111
1toclc mwatmnt clubl. But
rh~r profU• can be big. ~e
Page84.
••••
At'f-WWt DI L. .... ..,.. ... ....... .... ~ .. ~ .,,.,
C.-.C• Dt c...--.i Dt
.......... 111 ......... M ......... _.~
....... 11 ,_. CM
•
Jan. 13. Later hearings will be
he ld by the county Planning
Commission and the board or
s upervisors .
According to the survey. the
"in duced economic impact"
from visitors using the airport is
more than $197 million annually.
That figure is based on vis-
itors entering the county via the
airport spending $131.5 mimon.
For each dolJar s pent. one or
(See AIRPORT. Pace A2l
•esa p anners
to study new
building plan
Bristol Plaza's proposal for
high rise office buildings just
south ot the San Diego Freeway,
east or Bristol Street, goes lo the
Costa Mesa lilannrng Com-
mission again tonight.
The revised proposal seeks
approval for sevttn and rive
story structures instead of the
nine and seven·Roor buildings
turned down earlier by com-
, missioners and appealed to the
City Council.
In discussions with council
membera, plaza apokesman
James Gianulla1 a aid he
believed homeowners who ob-
jected t.o the taller bulldlnp are
in accord ·with plans for the
smaller OfteS.,
He said he would amend pl1n1
and 10 back to the Planntn1
Com miasion with the shorter
hilh rise structures.
ut.....dty.-plannen are recom-
mending denial of the newest
atructune, ~-tboqb they an shorter, u Incompatible wttb
the neilhborbood, wblcb iD·
ckldea the nearby Brookview
Con~mlniwm.
Gianullaa un1uccea1fully
aou1ht city perml11ion to con·
atruct a 14-atory bulldln1 on
the same five·acre parcel · early
this year. • •
explained Chris Edwards. an
a irport noise specialis t who
helped draft the plan.
The intent of the plan, accord-
ing to county airport officials. is
to comply with rederal man·
dates that the airport be opened
to additional carriers while at
the :.ame time taking action to
reduce noise impacts on residen-
t i a I a reas su rroundin g the
airport.
Acrording to Cable. noise
rrom jct operations would
steadily decrease over the next
five years as the plan is im-
plemented.
Air carriers seeking access to
t he airp<>rt would be required to
torn ply with other county-
1mposed li mitations in addition
to noise standards,
For exa mple. planes heavier
than 95,000 pounds a re not
pcrmittE'<I to take off from the
airport nor may an airline fly to
a destination more than 500
miles away.
Cable has proposed that the 41
dt•pa rtures per day ceiling on
tom mercial jet activity remain
1n effect for at least the next five
\'Cars
It is proposed in the airport
master plan. a separate docu-
ment now under review by coun·
ty officials. that the lid be in·
creased to 5S departures per day
b~ 1991. but only if noise reduc-
t ions are achieved.
'nder the access plan. availa-
ble flig hts would be allocated
among air carriers ea<'h year .
~onthly records would be kept
to assess lhe 1>erform~anC"e-of-in-
div idual carriers in meeting
noise standards.
Th e count y Bo ard of
Supervisors· wiH consider the
pr o posed a ccess plan in
f'cbruary. Cable said the plan
was being teleased now Lo pro·
(See FUGHTS, Page A2>
Quam born
in Stanford
STANFORD CAP> -
Healthy quadruplet sisters
have been born to a San
Jose woman who reported·
ly had taken fertility
drugs, according to Stan·
ford Medical Center and
the woman '1 mother. ·
The infants "are all
quite ftne, but the parents
are atlll in a atate of
ahock," hoapit•I
1poke1m•n Julian
diCiurclo aaid followin1
the Sunday blrtba.
The infants remained in
the botpltal'a intensive
care unit wblle the
mother, Chrt1line He11,,
wa1 l'9linC comfortably,
accordlna to lln. Hes1'
mother , Barbar•
McGowan. The cblldrea
are tbe first for Chrl1Une
and Jerry He11 of San
JOit'.
•
Go Ro11L~
That's not a crymg towel Rams cheerleader Tina Easter-
ling is wavin_g. The Costa Mesa resident. a former Orange
Coast Coll ege c heerleader. was cheering th e Rams to \'iC'-
tory over Atlanta Sunday. For story of t he game. see
Page.Bl.
More fog forecast
for coast Tuesday
Today was the third straight
day of pea soup mornings and
evenings along t he Orange C'oast.
and the U.S. Weather Service said
more coastal fog is expected
Tuesday.
The fog slowed surface traffic
and halted operations at Orange
County's John Wayne Airport.
. The airport was closed by zero
visibility this morning. It also was
closed Saturday and Sunday,
although takeoffs were allowed
Sunday night when the fog lifted
for awhile.
Dense fog is expected to con·
linue along the coast through
Tueaday morning with partial
clearing expected in the alter·
noons, according to a ,N •tlonal
Weather Bureauapokesman.
the lack of visibility
"In fog, I would restrict driving
l o n ecessary trips." s aid
Ca lifornia Highwa y P atrol
spokesman Tom Comer . "It's ex-
tremely hazardous more so
than snow or rain, ..
At John Wayne Airport. Air
California was forced to <'8n('el
s ix flights this morning and
Golden West Airlines cut seven
flight$, according to company
spokesmen.
A s pokses m an f or Ai r
Ca lifornia said that 600
passengers were affected by the
night cancellations lo San-Jose,
Oakland, Sacramento ahd San
Francisco.
Head Start kids Lows aJon1 the coast tonight
are ex~ted to drop to 50-55 1· l d
Iran says
it won't
back off
By The Associatt'd Presa
The speaker of the Iranian
Parliament today renewed Iran's
threat to put the 52 American
hostages on trial Ir the United
States does not accept the $24-
bi.I lion demand for their release. -
The Parliamen t leader,
Hashem1 Rafsa n1ani, declared
that Iran will not "back down
from ourrlemands "
The threat of hostage triaJs
came a dav afier U.S. officials ef-
fectively rejel'ted t he latest Ira·
nian terms for ending the confron·
tat ion that the U.S government
deposit some S24 billion in cash
and gold in the Algerian central
bank as a guarantee that Iran's
finan<'ial demands on the United
States be met.
Thc·-u ritish newspaper Daily
Telegraph reported. meanwhile.
that Algeria wi ll mediate new
··deta1IC'd negotiations" between
Iran and the united States in Lon·
don this week . Rut a State Depart-! ment spokesman said. "We·renot
awareof any meeting in which the
L'n1ted States is participating in
London this week · · ·
"I doubt 1t ven much." another hi~h·level l: s official saiaorure·
(See HOSTAGES, Page AZ>
* * * V.S. taking
, 'hard line'
on hostages
WASHINGTON 1AP) -The
Stale Department today reg-
is tered "deep concern" about
seve ral o f the A m e ric an
hostages In ·rran ana said a
number or t he m m a y be in .:
prison
Spokesman John H. Trattner
said the Americans are not rt'·
ceiving adequate medical atten-
tion and many of the 52 have not
been heard from recently.
"We would welcome any im·
provement in the circumstances
in which they are being held,"
Trattner said. "Contrary to Ira-
nian reports In r~enl days that
they <hostages> are now housed
in luxury hotels. we havt' reports
that a number of them may, in
fact. be in prison."
The U.S. spokesman reiterat·
ed that the government of Iran
will be held accountable for the
well-being of all of the h°"tqes.
He said Iran had not respected
even minimal standards of
treatment expeeted of the world
community.
Trattner said he dicl not know,._ degrees with highs of 85 degrees ge oys, can y
expectedTuf!lldayaftenHM1in,...~~~--...J\tfC111irw.r-icMa"n"'",,il"liirP-e•-.n~5 .:---tiimv-mwrrVillrrm"111!manm11iY"1.-1S---:1•
Despite some temporary clear· tributed t.o the 887 Oran1e coun-prison or on what 1rounde .
in1 at Un,es, the fo1 will continue ty Head Start Protram children Another U.S. official aald 'the In·
alona the Oran1e Coast bec•we in Oranae Friday by Newport formation came In letten from
of cool, mobt air from the ocean Harbor Hilb School '1 Social hosta1es .
mix1nt with warmer air over the Studiea Club. The State Department look
land, accordin1 to weather The club l•tbered up (oys .net thJ1 hardened line alter Iran'•
bureauapok•man Al Daacomb. money for the annual proJect~ ln· latest tenna were denounced •
In etfed, the mixture forms a dudina a party for 100 Beed unreasonable by Secretary cl
cloud Ind, wben that cloud rests Start pupiles, for • month, aaid State F.dmund S. llU11lle. llopea
oa the land IUl'f~. a dan1erous spokesman and teacher WllY'fte for a Chriatmll tt0mlftl.,. •
fot oondtUon l'llultl became ~ Horowit1. • pear to have ev1 alfd •
'
·p.;...........~=--=1vsr BR£AKING---L.-....,... "°"' ·~·· ~ .. ~ .............. .
Fed Mart co-founder
dies· ill three years
l.~ NG!I F..~ t P t Muhln\Jlllonalreflnan c-1er Ben Wem
1an. bolp1t•llnd lnt'l' 1m 1.nd fht aubJl"t't of a court battle
•H 11r tht-life 1upport ">'"'h'nu that kept tu m ah H !, died today Ml
1()(1d . amarl\•n lh>811lhtl i.uthorlht> old
llo.patal '~lt•• .. wQ111tH1 lttitl) Shtilltir u•d the cauae ot the
92 H'll old rt'ul l'stwh• chwe!Jupcr'r. de11th wH nO& Immediately
J1 C'IOIWd
We\1'1 n t•o foun1h•1 of \Ill' t"~i Man d1scoun\ :..\ore ch am
nil pnm '""'I llulldl·t 111 tlw 1 11 \ of l.ttkewood, had been on a
l..hh1t' di h "'' llHH l11m· 111111 u SU!Jcnor Court Judge last week
h•d urclt-1 '"J tk)t tv1 11 tu tll'l rnunc whelher at some future ti ml•
hh· """'1.1011 Ojh<iulJ lw ~ 1thht'lu
Wt-mi:•n .-~1 t ~ H1nu~ al S:!OO million . had been in the
h.1nd" lJ' i:vrtwn ator 111.ncl' UfN when hl' w<i:t r uled mentally in
~·•a• ... tih "' h.m.111 11 · hi" 1i1rr ... ,,
l .S. d._llar •llft": .. Id rta#• 118
I 1 >"'I><>"' \I'• l'h.-l ~ dollar dipped sharply against
111J • c-1• 11 n.in l'Ol'lt!b loda) for the second straight trading '"''It' .. 111011,·\ rn~rkct bU.'>111e:.~ s lowed down for Chris tmas.
fh,· 111 ,, • 1•1 1..;old n•'l' ti} us 1111.ll'h ns $UI un ounce
{)c-.Jt"r .. <1llnlJuh·cl tht' dOY.ll Y.d fd trend of the t: S c urrency
in th•'' tr.id1n~ tu gt!11L'1 al l.n·k of interest'' and a drop 1n
Eu1 c>J\•llM 111ll•rc-.t 1 .llt!~
"odc>r,,f.-.-arfltquak~:ldt. T.-ltr..a11
"JH.'0::-,1 ,\ ~ 1 prui> 1f\P1 1\ modl'rntely strong e atthquake
struck 1'd1r:111 lh<' hol} t'tl ) of Qom und other central Iranian
t•it1t•s t1i.la\. and u1 least one death was reported , the official
ln1111a11111•\\s a~t-ne~ Purl> s uid
It .... 1111 u1w ehilrl wa::. killed and a woman was 1n1ured . but
dtd not -.pct·ih "hPre the casualties occul'rcd.
'l'ht· qu:1k•·. lfl(•ui.uring 5 :i on thf' Richter scale, was the
sec·on<l 111 nwk •·•·rit ral I run ill four days
Polish U"url~c>r• c•t111I h111.-""'°' t"•f
WA HSA V., l'ol :u1tJ t J\ I' 1 Workers in a t•entral Polish town
conttnUL'<I a ma1 t•r11·k ml•lll rnt1on1n g protest today despite a
ban on :-.t nkl·:-. 1>r<h·rNI h~ Sohdanty, the nation's largest in-
dependent u11111n. 111 a IJ1d lo t·ase tensions between Poland and
its Soviet bllw rw1ghhorl>
Th<' prott•:-otl·rs ot•t•uµ1ed a district government building in
the central \11\\ n of 1'101 rk11w un Thursday and are wa1tmg there
to meet with ~uvl·rnmf·nt officials, Solidarity s pokesman
Stan1sla" Kotlinsk1 .;u1d
MONTPEl.11-:H. \'t 1Af1 1 Two dozen anti-nut'lear a c-
tivis ts took ovt>r a wu1t1ng room outside Gov. Richard Snelling's
off ice toda~ 1ow1ng lo st;1y until they were promised that the
state 's onl~ 11ud1·ur poWt'r plant remain shut until independent
investigator:-. s<t\ 1t 1~ rl·<Hh
The protesters carnci1 a letter for Snelling, which a sked
him to "keep V<•rmont Yankct· l'losed until such lime that a full
and publit• snvcstigat.ion into 1t~ operation 1s conducted."
The Vl•rm1111t Yankct' nudcar power plant has been idle
since Sept 27 wh\•n 1l "hut down for its annual refueling and re·
pairs
t ' rmn l"flflf' A I
CABINET • •
O.ilf ... t
.~
decision
tonight?
By STEVE llA&BLE
Oflllto.llYJll' .........
The areat Newport Beach oil
ba\tle will be brought to a head
tonight when city council~meln·
bers decide whether they will
condemn 16 oil wells rooted in
city tidelands.
The wells c urrently are
operated b y Armstrong
Petroleum. The oil firm's lease
with the city expires Jan. 25.
• City o(rici.als, arguing their
.. profits will multiply greatly if
they take over the oil operation,
contend the oil firm is dragging
its feet by refusing to sell the
we lls to them.
Robert Armstrong, president
of the Newport-based oil firm,
responded b y filing a s uit
against the city earlier this
month, asking the court to clear
up the dis pute.
Armstrong also has rapped
the c ity for i t s take over-
strategy, claiming the city has
no m ore business in the oil fields
than it does manufac turing
shoes or boats
C ity ult Ii ty man ager .J oe
Oevlin maintains the current
agreement gives the city one-
eighlh of the profits, a cut that
last year came to $163,000.
D ev lin s ays if the c ity
operates the wells or hires a con-
tractor to do the pumping, rev-
enues <'Ould swell more than SI
million a year.
Armstrong, who claims he's
offered to renegotiate his lease
and ~ivc the city a larger share
of the revenues. maintains the
city's profit forecast "is all
wronl! "
f'.-...PageAI
HOSTAGES
report.
The Daily Telegraph gave no
source for the brief story.
Rafsanjani was asked at a
Tehran news conference about
the likelihood of h.ostage trials if
the United St ates rejected Iran's
demands.
He repli<.>d : "I have not yet seen
the official U.S. reaction. But if
the U.S. is not ready to give us QI.Jr
rights our last act will be a trial.'' Mr. Kennedy
dead at 59;
service l1eld
...... We guess the Americans
have wanted to make an excuse of
the hostages for military in-
t erve ntion and C01\5piracies. We
pressed with their ability, e n-havenointenlionofbackingdown
lhusiasm. dedication and fromourdemands."
Th c a., h 1·., of I 11 n ~ 1 me
Newpor1 Jk;Jt'h 1 (')>tc11·nt Wrl m
Henn· Kt•nnc<h 1.i.t·rc· o.;1·:.itl•. etl
at '\C·a Thursd;;, <111r111g pn ·ah•
hunal scn·1<'t''-
Mr Kc·nned~ ,, 1io1 NI '11ort
fisherman and 1 a rh1-.ma11 . died
Oet· 11 I IL' w:1s !)!I I
f'ricncJs said 1 ha t M ~. \l·n
nt'dv. a mNnlit·r of thr· Balhoa
Angling l'lub. w~1s n·14ard1•tl as
Ol)e of the fl!ll'I' sport ft '-ltcrmcn
in the <1re;.1 and had won
numerous 1roph1t·:-. f<1r t11s <H'
comphshmcnh
Mr Kc nned1 fr1l'nds s aul.
ha d . spent mut•h l)f his time
scouting the watcrs off Newport
and San 01 cgo <ihoarcl his boat
the ''Blue .lal·kl·t. ' wh1t•h he'd
recent! v sold
Bun.a l scn1c-e-; were hl'ld
aboard thf> ··c ataltna lloh<l<iv ·
Mr Kennt>cly 1s survived by
h i:> wife Crace and daughters'
K r 1 s t e n . l' a r ,. I 11 n e a n d
Melod~
f 'rfnft P~ ,1 I
FLIGIITS ...
t•n·atr\'ilv. ·· Rafsanjani also said hedoes not
Pierce·. 58, is a former New expect the issue to be returned to
York Supreme Court j ustice who the Parliament. or Majlis, which
held pasts in the Treasury and set the four basic conditions for
Labor departm ents during the the hostages' release seven weeks
.'.';1xon <idministration He was ago
named in a 1964 memo hy a "Because ithasalreadygiven
high-ranking FHI offi cial as the its mstructionsiftheU.S.doesnol
hl<iek that the bure au hoped accept. The Majlis has s aid they
would take over as leader of the I the hostages J should be tried."
c·1vil rights movem ent if the The Ira nians accuse the
Flll's campaign lo discredit the hostages of having been spies.
late Martin Luther King Jr. sue-The speaker s's comme nts
(•cedt'd echoed ~hose Sunday of Iranian
Mrs Kirkpatrick . 53, is a Ex ecutive Affairs Minister
political science professor at Behzad Nabavi, who is in charge
Gcoq~ctown C n ivers ity who ofthenegotiations withtheUnited
wmtc an article on foreign af-States. Nabavi said U.S. rejection
fairs that attracted Reagan's tn· of all the demands would prob-
tt"rest last year. ably lead to a decision to refer
A long-time Democ rat. s he is the matter to the Islamic courts.
a member of the American En-On Sunday, Secretary of State
Ler prise Ins t itute a con -Edmund S. Muskie called thede-
servative-oriented think tank mands "unreasonable" and said
and s1trved as a m e mbe r of the hostages would not be home
Reagan 's lransition fore i~n byChristmas.
JJOlicy advisor y group. A top Iranian official said Iran
Edwards, 53. an oral s urgeon could hold the 52 captives "for 10
in Charleston. S.C .. served as more years." They spent their
South Carolina ·s governor from 4 ISth day in captivity today.
1975 to 1979. lie has s aid h.e Muskiesaid it would be difficult
would enjoy presiding over the lo agree on term s for the
demise of the 2-year-old Energy hostages' release before Jan. 20,
Departm e nt, which Reagan when President-elect Reagan
1•owep tHfing his campaign to takes office.
dis mant le. Asked about Iran's demands,
.................
Japan prepares
P<?pe John Paul II beckons from this Tokyo poster dis·
tri buted by a J apanese department store, which is
sponsoring an exhibition of Vatican art treasures. The
pontiff has announced plans for an ll·dav Far East trip to
the Philippines . Guam and Japa n. ·
University Drive
decision tonight?
Newport Beach City Coun<'tl
members will be a sked lo decide
tonight if Unive r s ity Drive
i,hould be shown on a road mllp
in Newport 's proposecl total
coastal plan
Newport city offi cials s uggest
the long-planned street s hould
!Je s hown on the map. State
Coastal Comm1ss1on planners
want it left off
The lug·of-war over Univers1
ty began earlie r this year when
c ity planning commission ers
volt!d to e rase it from the
coastal plan road map
The move by comrn1ss1oners
Police seize
two teens
on theft rap
clrew praise from ('();,i:::.tal tom
rn 1sston planners <1ntl n1t1c1sm
I rom a number of sourct-s in
<'lud1ng the Irvine Comµany. thl'
"\e wµort Harbor Cost a ~csa
Board of Realtor:, ;.ind fin:illy. cl
t ,. offi cials
· VniverSll) Ort\e 1s :.hown on
offi cial ttl.Y and count.~ road
maps css <'Xtending aero!>~ thf!
top of the l 'pper Newport Ba~
The road now comes to H d~<1fl
end on both sides of the bay Op
ponents of the connection. in
duding the state Department of
F1:-.h and Game. contend the
road would disrupl "lldhfe a.nd
planthfe in the area.
The lJniversity issue 1s onl~ a
s mall portion of the s tate·
mandated loc <1l coastal plan.
which council members mui,\
appro\'e b~ the end of the year
The coastal plan. designed to
r estory permit granting authon
ty to the cit~', details land-use
policy in the c 11y·-s coastal areas
Once the coastal plan 1:-0 <ip
prol'ed b~ !<latl' co<istal rom
1111ss1oners. lhe 1·1tv would ha1·c
final say on granting permits
a nght now held by the regional
and st;:ite roastul comm1ss1ons
lrVine.
;village
.planned
81 &ICHAllG G&EEN OlttltD4111JNllt .....
The Irvine Company will sub-
mit development plans to the Ci-
ty o( Irvine next 11prln1 for a
400-acre village to be built o.n
land now used for agriculture,
said C. Keith Greer , director or
the company's Community
Development Division.
"Village 12." to include 4,000
dwellings, will be bounded by
Jeffrey f\oad on the west. Sand
Canyon Avenue on the east, the
San Diego Freeway on th e south
and the proposed extension OfJ
Barranca Parkway on north.
Assuming the Irvine City
Council approves the develop-
ment plan, people could start
moving into Village 12 housing
in "four years or m ore." Greer
said.
The City Council will also con-
sider ne xt s pring a company.
proposed General Plan Amend~
ment for the village.
The amendment would ad-
dre ss so me minor in -
c o n s is ten c ies be tween the
company's Village 12 plans and
the city General Plan, the docu-
ment that sets the broad outlines
for deve lopment in Irvine .
Not only wi II ihe company
. need city approval to develop
the villa~e. but it witl need the
,. n o p e r a t i o n o f S o u l h e r n
Cal1fo rn1a Edison Co .. whose
h 1g h te ns ion lines c urrently
01sel't the 1>roposed com -
munity
1'he tomµany has proposed to
lhe utility that t he power lines
he relocated at a cost of S3
m1l11on Pr esumably, the Irvine
('ompan) would pay for the re-
lotat1on
Another planning issue under
l'nns1derat1on h) the company
111\'0l\'es how the San Diego
Creek Channel should be im-
pro\·cd a:. 1l travels through the
'ill age
Som(• thoug ht 1s being given to
ma kin~. the channe l a greenbelt.
11rcording to Greer.
<:urrentl r . much of the land on
which the "village will be built is _
plantt::d 1n orange trees and row
crops. Greer s a1tJ
1\1 ost 11 n ot a l I o r these
agricultura l areas will be
eliminated by the development
of the 111lage
Greer said that much of the
1·11l age will be of an urban •
c-har acter 1-fe explained that the
hous ing will be predominately
taq~etcd to adults without
rh1ldren ,
lie l'lu1mcd that the village
"·oulfl pnJ1·1dc some "afforda-
hl e ' hous1 n J? for the m'any
· emµ l•Jyet·~ ex peel eel to work at
the proposed -1!\U·acr e Irvine
·Centt:r rommercwl project to be
lotated ;,ibout two miles to the
C'ast of the \'illal!e
Working with Santa Ana
police, Costa Mesa officers have
arrested two people on suspicion
of burglarizing a Santa /\na
dune buggy s hop operated by
Tom Neth, son of Costa Mesa
Police Chief Roger Neth.
lnvestinalor s said they re·
ceived a tip regarding th e
burglary and moved in on two
south Santa Ana homes to re-
cover about S9,000 worth of rac·
ing equipment, tools and tires.
f 'rone Pa9c> . I I
Arrested at his home and
scheduled for a hearing Dec. 31
on charges of burglary was Scott
May, 19. Also arrested at his
home was a 15-year-old boy who
was released to the c ustody of
his parents, investigators said.
May is free on $5,000 bail, of-
fi cers said.
AIRPORT 'GOLD MINE'? ..
more additional dollars is added
to the economy. according to the
survey.
In addition to visitor spending.
ooeration of the airport. where
1,449 people are employed. con-
tributes $93 7 million to the coun-
ty 's economy, according to the
council's survey. The employee
pay roll alone totals S26.4 million
annually
The Co'mmunity Airport Coun-
cil 1s made up of representatives
of major c-ounty employers. in-
cluding Fluor Corp and Smith
International. and the aviation
industry
According to the council. the
s urvey is among 34 nationwide
in which the Air Transport As-
sociation has participated.
nde for u :10 da · c.ommcn
period -
_ W a\L 42, has be~n-w,.Ming .Reagan t.old repoFlers he-was--~~-
lcgal battles a~ainst federal en-''not going to comment on th at un-
vironmental regulations. His ac-til it's my turn. Then I'll com-If appro1 L'<I lw the board, the
first ullocat wn of flights would
ot•t·ur 1\pnl I fmplemC'ntation
would takt JJla<:c Oct. l
'cahl1• noted in <• tcivl'r letter to
U1' µIan 1h;1l. c:iltho ugh not
finali7.Nt lhc· tnunt.v a'irport
istaff 1~ ronsfd+irini:? a noise fee
pr ogram for tht• airlines "whi<-h
would ro1 cr tlw full cost of noise
relat<'<I flrl t\'llles ··
Ko~ygin viewed
MOSCOW 1AP1 T hous andsor
Soviet citizens led by President
Leonid I. Brezhnev filed past the
body of former Premier Alexei N
Kosygin today. four days a fter his
death at the age of 76.
t1 vism on this front has drawn ment."
sharp criticism from e nviron-An official English-language
mental g roups that urged text of the Iranian demands re-
f{e ag-an to rec-onsicte r naming leased in Tehran on Sunday says
• Watt to head the Interior Iran wants S9 billion to cov.er Ira.
Department. · ":'nian ass ets frozen in-U.S. banks
In an unexpected development after the hostages were seized on
this morning, Reagan's transi-Nov. 4, 1979. It asked $10 billion to
lion team decided to hold up an-~ coverthewealthoflhelatesbahof
nouncement of a fifth Cabinet-Iran and the return of more than
I eve I appointment. 11 linois 1112 million ounces of Iranian gold A~riculture Director John R. deposited in the U.S . Federal
IUock, as agr iculture secretary. Reserve Bank a nd worth almost
Over the weekend, Reagan's Sl mjllion at current rates.
too advisers told Senate Jn addition, the statem ent s aid
Re publicans that Bloc~ would Iran wants $4 billion in cash "or
be among the choices announced any other valid guarantee
to day, but the decis ion was acceptable to the Algerian cen-
made this morning 10 postpone tral bank, as a guarantee for the
the announcement. bona fide discharge of the U.S.
government's obligations." It
did not define the obligations.
TELEPHONE
Thomas P. Haley p.,1111, ... ,
All department•: (714) 142-4321
c1 ... 1t1ed Ad .. ,,, .. "9= M2-se11 Mesa youth, 14,
OFFICES
Cost• Mfta: iJDW.tl e., SlrMI • ,. f . .d L.~• 8H(ll: 1027 No. Co.st H19'1••Y VIC am 0 ...awc1 .e Wa1st-T1e Pouch tor Sleeves
Robert N. Weed
Prt,ldtlll
H1tl'lllf191G11 lllee<l'I: 1mi 9N<ll llOUIO•rO ..
Se<Ol'ld Clan "'' ... .1r.'' •I CMt• MeH, Poll<;e say they aren't sure ex-Gathered Sleeve for Maximum Warm!
ce11tor111•, 1usPS ,.._ . SuM<.;1'11°".,, t«· _ _J,,t Uy_ w.h.AL tta pp en.a,cL.JlliJ:s~t--------------------===:..:=---------
M.J:Mtnas Kee.vii £dllor
Thomas A. Murphine
Meft41011\9 EdilOt
Charles H. Loos
Anl,lent Mot~ 110 Ed•IOf
~·.Jtv~i~~"''· .--... N~•·,__, weekend when a 14·year-old boy
Tile Or .. COtll 0.lly PilOI, wllll """l<I\ 11 apparently hun1 himself Oil the
l omblM4 '"' ..._...,"'· '' 1M1t11t.iwci ov '"' 1lairw•y of his north Costa Mesa
O••fltlt c.tc "'*'"""" com...,.y. S.-14• •••"o"' ... 11011Mi"'" Mol'ldllv ""°""' ,,, .. , home.
to• Con• Mew. Htwt*1 lke<ll, H""''"""" Officers said the youth's 6tac11r"•""'•'" V•ll•Y· ''"'"•· 1.•1 .. n• mother __. .. _ed home from a Copyrl91'I tt U Ora n9e ~o••I 8t•<l'I/~ cant. A t1nei. ~ edittOl'l It ,.., .... ,. ::,~~~~11.::.;.~~~ •• ~:;,:~ :::~::=.s::ir.~-=:v;.:i;:,:~~ro 11hoppln1 trip at about a:.o p.m .
., ........ 1 " ,..,,,, ... m•v " eo• '*· c.." ..-."' c.11+¥"'• ._._. to dl1COVer the boy l)'Lnc face ••P•••11<•• •lll101tl •••< ••• VOL n NO ·-down and apparently llfelell on '°'"'''....,°' ~°"'""' °"',..., · ' • _, .. the atepe, a belt around b.la neck.
L,.,;...--.... ------------------~.-------------------:ii----.. t --
~-----·-
Christmas and "Pacific Trail" at the Garage
A Polyester filled ,ackel. tull 21p to the
hinle neck. completely washa~e featunng two
ZIP pockets
B Feather soft polyester filled iackeltvest .
full np to tunle neck and completely washable
------
ALSGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(7 t4 ) 644-7030
'
-.
Mo•day'•
Cloely PrW.1 NYSE COMPOSITE •
..J-
~.~ber2t, 1llO N CWL y Pk.Or •
Dow Jones Final
-. UP 21.50
CLOSING 958. 70
Adults find toy
manufacturing
no child's play
PAWl1JCKET, R.I. (AP) -A one-way mirror splits a
playroom inside the huge, red brick toy factory or Hasbro
Industries. Children play with test toys on one side, un·
aware that solemn engineers on the other are noting their
delight or disdain.
"That's one way we have to develop toys and Ideas,"
company vice president John Mccann shouted over the din
or a nearby pre-Christmas assembly line.
McCa11n watched a s nimble-fingered workers
packaged hundreds or one of the firm's most famous toys,
"Mr. Potato Head," to nieet a special order.
Btrr MORE OF THE factory was oddly quiet on this
December day, unlike "Santa's Workship" of children's
dreams, where things are humming just before Christmas.
"As far as this company is concerrn!'d, Christmas 1980
is Christmas past. Most all the orders are rilled and we're
into Christmas 1981. We've already shown our '81 line to U
or our top 20 acco nts," said Stephen Hassenfeld, the com·
pany president.
The assembly line lull gave Hassenfeld and Mccann
time to chat about their favorite subject -ho)V toys are
born and why they sometimes gather dust on store shelves.
THE SPECIAL PLA VROOM is one method of develop-
ing new toys, they said. Test groups of children who span
many different economic, social and racial groupings are
brought to the factory to play. Engineers watch to gauge
their reactions to the new toys as well as the safety and
durability of the products, Mccann said
"But there are many, many other ways toys come to
be crS!ated," said Hassenfeld, mentionin~. ror example a
child psychologist retained especially to conjure up toy
ideas.
'"Some of our ideas come from our own research and
development depart ment, based on our own expe n ence m
the toy ma rket." added Hassenfeld, who has been in the
family-run business for 17 years.
"OF COURSE, MANV TOVS come to the ma;ket from
television and the movies." he said, ticking off the many
dolls and games based on popular programs ranging from
television ·s · ·Charleys Angels" to the movie "'Star Wars ."
Hasbro, with sales this year of about SlOO million has
been burned by some such toys, Hassenfeld noted wry ly.
"Toys based on television and movie characters lend
to be more faddy."" he said. '"We brought out the 'Charley's
Angels · dolls in 1977 and had a fabulous year. I expected as
much volume in 1978, but the kids had had enough. A $10
million line fell to S4 million ...
. fttork• In Thr
.'>pol 119111
H EW YORK IAPI ~lo. -P"n
-twt CNnlll' ol tr. llllMn "'°'' «hw ,_.,. Yon. Stot' E •<."•"9«' •\\UP\. ''"''"'II ,..,....,. .. , •I mon lll•n "
.... 'IOO
•1•,100 .00.'IOO :i.=
..
·.\-.riran Lradrra
•n ,100 J7l, 'IOO
3'-1. 900 144 • .acl Jll,500 lOl.500 106,100 )OJ,900
170.700 24',100
·~ 1 • Co•oer U • ar • (~nf, tt oovno u So
'-Qf'~1•nat10n)
'"' LH cl J'I •J c~n1s • oouno
l p• and Doert ..
HEW YORI( IAPJ Tltll lollowlr19 llS1 ~ tht Now Yor~ Stoo. E<t!lat\QI!
Sloc:llS Miii .... rr.-.IS IN I 114•• (IOI!• UC> llW ..-1 ..,., down ttw ll'>O\t 0.MCI 011
1»r<ff.!I ol CN"Of r~relt•\\ ol •olumo
l •"< •1 1 "''-4 tl',,h ~ oouno cJttltvf"rld.
''" S1 &q• t (fnt) a paun(f N V
Alwmln""' /6 cont~• "°"'10 N 'f
Mtr<••V i:Bl 00 per II••~
Pl•tlnum lSll S50 lroy 01 N ""
.4fiilrf'r
NEW YOR ~ Hanov & .,., .......... .,le>-
oay s1~ ·~ uo\O 1~
Enot ln••O ~··•~' SI& 100 up SOU; labri<••••l>U~r \17 tlq llP so 1&S
Gold Quo1a1ion11
I r llM An ocialed Pr"' ~l~CI.., world QOld P<l<U IO<l4V
I·
• -.Dogged by tragedies,
tough girl bangs on
l'.:LK'l'ON. Ky. CA P) -Sheena
Rud wa. Melly lnjurecl when a Cfr
ran her olf \be road. El•ht monU\i ·
l•t"r. • wu impaled on a pluk
th•l deltroy.d I IWl&. And after her
baby dlwd of pneumonia. she felt
''d••ttoyed . th•t God had tried
e\lery w•y ht! couJd to get me."
But Mt 18 lihe's a survivor Htir
frltmd.11 CMll ber the "toughest girl in
••••ml • Loac11rn County " And s he says.
"When you hnd somt!body who lakes
rar~ of )'00 IUld lo11e11 you. you hold
Oil " S o ' lttl l 'rt' 1dent
Leonid I llrei hne
h a~ bt>t'n lj wa rded
the Or(it'r uf Octobt-r
That somebody 11> her 1S.year-0ld
husb1u1d , 'lark
Re\ o l utaon f or h1~ SINCt: THEY married in August
· g real ~ervtre~ t o 1979. Lht! Reeds have had "an awful
the Communist Pa11) lot uf bad luck."
<tnd Sovie t t a le ·I ve even thought that maybe God Th~ award wa~ prt-was trying to tell us that me and sent~d l<.ast week a t'lark ar en't right for ~ach other,"
d a > b ~ f 0 r e she said .. But when you've been
a re l h n c \' ~ 7 4 lb through as much toge the r as we -bi~rlhllu •· have . you've got to flgure you ought ,, lo stay tol!:ethcr ."
Protest s
gain c ats
• r e prieve
VENTURA <AP> To
lhe trad11 ional sounds or
VC'ntura beaches the
rumble or waves, the
cries of seagulls and lite
screams or touris ts ste p·
ping on ha lf-buried ~oft
drink cans have been
added the m{'()ws of rov-
i n g kitties a nd the
squawk of outraged cat
lovers.
At issue is a plan put
forth by officials to trap
the ho meless felines.
who are estimate d to
number between 40 and
'Fhc Reeds . who wanted a family
und '·enough money to make ends
meet." last year hired on to strip
tobacco for area farmers . ~
In December, they were walking
home after work when a friend drove
towa rd them. intending to make
them dive off the road. Reed made it
llis pregnant wife didn't.
HE R LEFT LEG was s hatte red,
her hip was broken, three vertebrae
tn he r spine were damaged and she
had a deep gash in her forehead.
Doctors feared she might never walk
again and worried that her unborn
child might be serious ly hurt.
She was hospitalized 21"2 months
and decided "to take the chance"
and carry her baby to term. The
child . Clark Vinson Reed II but
nicknamed C.J .. was born in April
with a cyst on the brain, a "lazy eye"
150, because of concerns
about disease, odor. bit-
ten a nd s c rat c h e d
children and the welfare · •
of the cats themselves.
THE PLAN has"drawn
protes ts Crom several
dozen cat lovers. who
s11y m ost of the animals
wo uld not he a dopted
and w o uld find
the m selves fa cing a
death sentence at the
animal shelter.
and a droopy eyeUd.
"He was juat a little bitty thln1. a
wonderful baby, ao sweet, and pretty,
too," Mrs. Reed said. "We kept on
wantln& to believe nothln1 waa
wrong with him."
' WHEN THE BABY was 4 months
old , the Reeds wen\ over to
Clarksville, Tenn .• to celebrate their
fi rst wedding a nni•ersary with a
piua. a few games of Space lnvaden
and a few beers.
O n l'he way. home , t heir car
careened into a concrete culvert,
flipped twice and plowed through a
plank fence. Reed was thrown clear
and escaped with only bruises.
But a l-by-6-lnch plank plunged
like a spear through Mrs . Reed, shat-
tering her ribcage and destroying a
lung.
A doctor called to the scene faint-
ed. and as Mrs. Reed lay conscious.
rescue worke~ used a chain_saw to
re move the plank.
BESIDE SEVERE chest injuries.
her right arm and leg were badly cul
and her lower lip was severed. She
needed more than 700 stitches and
s pent three weeks in a hospital in-
-tensive care unit.
Then last month, after their lives
had retur ne d to normal, Reed
a wakened one morni~g to silence, not
the baby's usual crying.
"I heard Clark shout, 'Oh. my God,
please no!' and l asked what was the
matte r." Mrs. Reed said. "and he
just said, 'He's dead. baby.· "
The infant died of "walkin g
pne umonia... according to the cor-
one r.
"AND NOW THE RE'S an empti·
ness." Mrs. Reed said. "We don't
have all the money in the world, but
we gave him all the love anybody
could.
for Bes t Qu al ity a nd
Selection of Handmade rugs
from China. Persia. India &
Rom ania at reasonable
prices.
.. Why not make them
a tourist attraction'>"
s uggested one woman. ..... ,. -. llwot S.t. IM· ~v u•
2.421 E. Coeet Hwy. (71 41173-22J'
· CotonadefMar W.llWCJO--~-... ..... 4-"•IMl ... ~1• .... '*-
As a res ult ur the
feline fracas. the Ven
tura City Council has or -
de re d a s tu<l y of the
siruation. to be <'bm plet·
ed by Jan 5.
Ot'tlCIALS SI\\' the
proble m arosC'' hc·causC'
unwanted cats arc ofte n
clumped al the be <ich
a nd are fed hy sym-
pathe tic individua ls
H o w c v e r . t h t· c a t s
sometimes peris h un·
pleasantly, ofte n after
they climb under hoods
of cars parked nearby to
snuggle near the warm
engines.
PUBLIC NOTICE
, H·l>llt
\U .. £111011 COUlllT O~ CAU~OllNIA
COUlfTY O~ OllAlfOE
HO. A·10tlt7
MO'TICE o~ \A\.£ o~
lt£AL l'lt01'£1t'TY AT
l'lt1VAT£ SALE
ESTATE 0~ 11 C GOOINEl. •'•
HEAMENEGll.00 C GOOINEZ. •'•
HERMAN C GOOINEZ, l>«H \ed
-+>> Whirlpool
-.
The Red Plate
$2200
Some more reasons.
An old friend visits, good report
card, Mother's Day. Homecom -
ing, Won the game, New baby.
Graduatio n , En gagement ,
Ealher's Oay , Annive~anes.
LAST
A tr adiUoo among the ftrly American families
was that when someone deserved special
praise or attention they were served dinner
on the Red P late. Today t.hia custom
returns ... the perfect way to acknowledge
a friend's special triumphs ... cele\>rate a
birthday ... praise a job well done ...
reward a goal achieved ... or simply say
"You are Special Today." Start a tradition.
B.D. HOWES and SON
FINE Jt::WEL,J::RS FOR FOUR GENERA TIONS
NEWPORT BEACH
.Ml..! V1.i lido 67'>-17 Jl
Uh -\.-.c..til.\ p,UAJ)f...... ..... ..... lf•l(h•k•
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,,.. 111fi<e 91 .,. clerli ol tt>e Superior
(ourl 11 •ny llm• alter tlM llrst
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By Archer ·
14 9~~""'
Ideal for campers and motor-
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Hand-Held Electronic
Football Game Half
4-95 Prie
Reg. 29.95
Foor quarters of action for
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LEO "players" and scoret
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IOUnd. #60·2150/2151
simple computer circuits'
and more 164-page man-ual #28·248
~MlfM Stereo Phono/
"'assette System S Cfarlnette~-91 by Realistic ave 17995 s40
Reg.219.95
Records stereo from 3-speecJ changer or
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