HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-12-23 - Orange Coast PilotI
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I.UICI CIUT YOUR HDMITDIN DAllY PAPER . .. ' • • • r.!l:l-·"":.l<~,::;i .. ' .. "·,. 25CENTS ~· :f!>.:' • ,lit, • ';I . , '
MacDonald witness says
• ..
More due toui~t
Airport in · OC
clOsed by fog
Coas tal reside nts can look
fo rwa rd lo m ore lhirk fog
tonight and Wednesday
Dense fog is experted to con
linue along the roast through
Wednesday morning wit:h partfal
cle aring e xpected by a fternoon,
according to a spokes woman for
the National Weather Ser vice .
From Santa Barb ara lo San
Diego fog has socked in the
coast, closing alt major u1rports
and forcing travelers towait for
clearer skies.
Tem peratures along the coast
are expected t<J dip to 44 to 54
d egr ees tonight, with s lightly
higher temp~raturts proje<'lt:d
inland
Zero visibility from lhe de nst?
fog forced the. closing of J ohn
Wayne Airport ea rly thic; morn
ing after some n1ght!i were al
lowed Monduy wh<·n the fog
lifted.
·'I l lool.s wor~1· than it did
y<>s tcrday," s uid Dick Biggs,
s pokesmi)n for Golden West
Ai rlines "It's a solid wall I
don 't think w1•'ll do m uch to·
day "
Flight ope rations a t Los
Angt!les Inte rnational were ca n·
celled this morning. And flights
from San Francisco. San Diego
~111d Fresno were grounded
Catalina and Sa n Clemente
isla nds were the only coastal
areas not socked in by fog this
morning
M ('anwh th'. t he Cal ifornia
lli~hway Patrol reported no
::.enous acr1dc·nts as a result of
the f og r l<•f!g 1n g coa s tal
roadways
Traffic wa~ reported moving
slowly through the ro~ sh rouded
<·oa~tal ciltt•s, wi•h no M!n ous
l)r(1ble ms. -
County endorses
doubling gas tax
By GLENN SCOTT
Ot IN O•llY Pit .. Sl•tt
Or ange Cowity officials have
endorsed a plan to re pl enish the
s tate 's dwindling funds for
freeway construction by a lmost
doubling gasoline taxes in the
next five years
The proposal. approved as the
top priority of the Orange Coun·
ty Transportation Commission'c;
legislative prngram, would al
low the State Board of Equaliza
tion to adjust gas taxes annually
to fund approved highway proj
eels.
The new funding system c.'<>uld
raise as murh as 43 billion in
five years , ex pl a ined Nancy
Coss -Fitzwater, an aide lo the
transportation commission. She
said the tax could go up as much
as six cents per gallon to raise
the r evenue.
Thus. gas tax. now se ven cents
pe r gallon , could become a s
much as 13 cents per gallon by
1986 with the proposa l.
Drivers Tilling 15-gallon tanks
would pay Sl.05 in stat e gas tax
more than they pay today. .
Bt:s~ill' this obvious problem.
c;he satc..I the syste m is con·
s ide red an efficient means for
rllism g taxes bf>t•ausc it is tied to
lh<' nce<1 for highway projects.
Tht• system prevents surpluses
from devclopiug, which she said
1·an occur'with othe r funding ap-
prna<'hcs.
State analysts ha ve projected
t hat funds for al ready approved
freeway projec·ts in California
will be $1 billion s hort in five
yea rs In Orange County, that
means that bottlenecks s urh as
the inte rchan ge between the
Sa nta /\n a a n d N e wpo r t
freeways won't he improved un-
til mon ' money is available.
Mrs . Cnss· Fitzwater said com-
mission me mbers and aides are
pre pared lo take t he lead m a
statewide lobbying effort to pass
l<'gislation to finance more con-
struction.
"We don't think so me of the
s la tewi<le efforts are going to
address our needs in sufficient
detail," she said.
The proposed funding plan
(See FREF.WA Y , Page A2>
AP .....
Younpten five the "thumbs up" slgn as they s~d un·
derneath the wall of a house daubed with the demands of
Irish Republican Army pisonen in Belfast. The prisoners
rece~tly completed a 53-day hunger strike.
'
Tribute to KoS!lflln
An infantry com bat vehicle pulls a gun
carriage carrying an urn with the ashes of
former Soviet Premie r Alexei N. Kosygin
during a st ate funeral at Moscow's Red
Square today Kosygin died of a heart a t-
tack Thursd ay at the age of 76.
p ------------
.
Haig. linked
to Jt atergate
supression?
N EW YORK CAP) -Gen.
Alexander Haig. t he secretary of
state·design ate. played a role in
trying to suppress incriminating
Watergate tapes and asked the
FBI to ignore wiretap rules
when he worked for the Nixon
White House. NBC News 'report-
ed today
The network 's Wa shington re·
porter. Carl Stern, said Haig's
conduct, had it been known at
the time by the Watergate grand
Jury a nd prosecuto r s. might
ha ve led to charges against the
~eneral.
H aig was not immediatel y
a vailable for comment.
The network sa id the tape
matter involved transscr ipts
Nixon made public in April 1974
tn a n effort to quiet de mands
that he s urrender the tapes
themselves.
Minist~r, priest
to visit hos.tages
By The Associated Pres~ whether it w o ul d b e held
Two Iranians, a Protestant Christmas E ve or Christmas
minister and a Roman Catholic Day. The d iplomats said lht
priest will celebrate Christmas clergy men were Iranian citizens
with the 52 U.S. hos tages, Swiss but that their identities were not
di plomats said today in Tehran. i'rn m ediately disclosed
The diplomats also said they T he Swiss diplomats said they
met with three hostages held at met earlier in the day with three
the Iranian Foreign Ministry of the hostages who have been
a nd described them a s being in held at the Foreign Ministry in
good health. (Related stor y, A3). Tehran. The whereabouts of the
Meanwhile, a leading member remaining 49 hostages. original-
of Parliament's hardline Islam ic ly kept at the U.S. Embassy, has
party was quoted as saying he not been made clear by Iranian
s aw no chance for the hostages ' offi cials
release before P r eside nt·clecl The three al the Foreign
Heagan takes office Ministry Charge d ' Arfaires
Swiss diplomats representing Bruce Laingc n. political officer
U S. interests in Tehran said ap· Victor Tomseth and security of-
proval for the religious service firer Michael Howland -were
was received dur ing a meeting in good physical condition and
with governm ent authorities. were aware of the latest Ir anian
The re were indications t he de mands and the negative U.S
service would be held in Farsi, r esponse, thediplnmats s aid.
Doc t o 's
famiJ ~,T J
• • VICllDlS
F/\YETTF:VILLE. N.C. IJ\1')
A woma n who claim t·d a 1.1-;~
of me mory when c allt·tl a!> a dr
fense witness in Dr .Jeffrt :,
Ma cDonald's murder trial now
s ays the deaths ,1f hi ~ wife .int.I
daughte r s we r e d e liber a te
acts of vengt'c.tn<·e hy a sat:mic
cult, the Fnye\tPvillc Times r:·
ported today
The former Green Dt>re t was
convict<Xi of the killi ngs in 1979
but the 4th U.S. Circui Court of
Appeals overturn('d lhP 1•u11vic
t ion this year, .
The witness . identified as
Helena Stoeckley, 'l.7, ~igncd et
state me nt acknowl~dging shl
was present when MacDonald's
w ife :ind two d:tUJ!:hters \\er.-
slain in 1970, the ncy.-;paf1lr s·111l
in a copyn ght s tory
Quo tin g a n u n1 •1entif1c<1
source. the Ti m Pf. rl'p<irt1·d M'i
Stueckley s aHI the alt JCk ,,,,
Collette Mu<:Donald, K11nl><·1 I ~
5, and Knstf'n. 2, . .., .. ., 1\tolili11;11"
ly planned by lht• · Bl:>•·i< ("Jlt 111
~hi ch she belonged.
Ma<'Donald h as m .t111t;1111NI
that fQu r dru!! craz!!cl mtrudr·rs
cha nt1ng "K 1 It t h"" p 11• : nrl
".\rid is grOO\') · h 1d '1rri1< •n tn
to his home, ;,lao1l•t'd his w1fr
and daughter» anrl tnJur1•rl ht m
After the milita ry decl1nNI to
press chargr.s. a gr:inct J\lr)
1 Hentuallv ir>dil'trd hin: ·inti ht-
was tnecfnmc )e·:;-~ I.it• r
The appellat e cnur t 111 on~r
turning his con viction. 1 uled th:lt
be had bern deni ed act·c-;-; tn :1
s peedy trial
l ' A t l o r n t' \ .I a m e :;
Blackburn of R:.tleigh. whc1 in
tend-; to appPal that r ,1l111g to th1·
Su prcmt:-Court. d c ltnerl t o
com m cnt on the reportt·t! -;t;1tr -
m ent by Ms Stoeckle~ M:w
Donald's lawyer. Bernard S"J?:al
of San Franch cn :i lso l!echne<1
comment. . ....
In Wa s h1nj?to n . Ju5 lic l'
D e partme nt la ~ye r B rian
Murtagh, who ha~ dealt wit h t'1•·
case since 1971. would not cow
m ent e xcept to sa y · "Th i~ i-;n't
the first time Helena St"N klttv
has confessed. If you put c,·ery
bod y in that room who ron-
fessed. there would hardly b<>
r oom in there for'Jprf (Mnr
Donald )."
Ms. Stocckley told rnn•tP in
,·estigators she had wHnled to
tell the truth at the trial, but
changed her mind whPn ·1 m~n
accosted her in a RalPiith motel
and warned he r not tn t:llk. Ulr-
sour re told the Times
._
According to St em. Haig was
told that the_I!!esid~t edited out
impo ant passages, including
one from March 22, 1973, in
which Nixon said: "I don't give
a .. , what happens . I want
them all to stone wall it ... let
them plead the Fifth Amend-
ment, cover up or anything else
jf il wilLsave itc. sav~-tbe plan
t he P-crstan language.-r afher In a r eport-from Tehran, the
than in English, and that neither _Yogosla.Y news_. agency ..Tanj.ug-
l h-e-Swiss nor any other foreign said Hassan Ayat. a me mber of
_Ms_ St.oockl~ desc+i~~e£---
involve ment in the slayinps onl~
after private invc-;tigators prn
...... \\'e're going to protect our
people if we can."
Stern said, "Recent accounts
of that period indicate that Haig
told them to leave it out.•'
Doc ume nts relating t o
wiretaps show t hat Haig told
FBI officials not to follow reg-
ulations he knew existed when1
he sought taps on White House
foes. NBC said.
It cited FBI memos, including
one by then-rurector J . Edgar
Hoo ver, as saying that Haig
wanted nothing in writing and
that he wanted lhe bureau to
make the·taps without telling the
Justice Department •nd getting
lts r equired approval.
Nuke protesters
, Vt. (AP) -
Stale troopen draued 21 anti-
nuclear prote1ter1 from Gov.
Richard SnelllnC'• offt" and re-
lea1ed them outalde the buildml
a.Iler tbe IJ'OUP 1pent et1bt boun
in tbe pemor'• w.una room. The protelten had . vowed to
1tay la the waitinl room until
Snelllnl promiHd to order an in·
dependent ln•eltl1aUon lnto tbe
1afety ol the Vermont ._,.ee
nuclear power plant.
represenlatives would be al· the hardline Islamic Republican
lowed to attend. P a rty in the Parliament, the
Itwasalso unc learwhetherall M aj lis . told the ·E n g li s h ·
the hostages would be gathered I an g u age Tehran Times
together for the service and ne wspaper he saw no "possibili-
ty al all f,or the hostages to pc
~· r.eleased befMe Jan. 2'1," a day iai;~Bi~ aftel' ttrc Reagal'i inauguratioo.
AP ........ ._•••'•.,•le•
Lyn Nofziger, onetime press secretary to Ronald Reagan
who quit last month because
he didn't want to move to
Wuhinlton, apparently has
changed his mind. He bas
been riamed a presidential
assistant for political af ·
f alrs.
'
Tanjug said Ayal. the party's
defeated canrudate for president
in elections t his year. was also
quoted as saying the latest lra -
<See HOSTAGES, Page AZ)
Iraq troops
repel Iran
BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP)
Iraq said its ground forces blunt-
ed a three-day counter-offensive
in"'lran's western highlands and
the Khuzistan oil province today
and that its jets staged the first
nighttime air raid in the 93-day-
old Persian Gulf war.
Iran. however, claimed an Ira-
q l armored brigade was
"crushed" i n th e snow·
-tJITl\retecJD11 an s o Sir·e ·
Ol-e-Zahab UtdTerm ans hah ln
the foothills of the Zagros MOWl·
tairis in western Jrin, with
rocket-f\rtnc helicopter aunshi ..
destroying 40 Iraqi forward posi·
lions. •
Iraq c laimed 297 Iranian•
soldlen killed u Iran's C0\8'1·
terattack. "collapsed" bi the Za·
gros hetlbta at the nortbem sec-
tor of the 300-mile warfront and
in the rain·drenched manbland
of Khulistan at the fro nt's
1'outhemmost sector.
'
m1sed he r protection, An<I shf'
now is believed to he hidinr nu
the West Coast. lht> so111 ce told
the newspaper
The._!ou~e revcah:d these de·
(See ~B. P age .\2)
C"Oil't
\\'calht•r
F og a long the coast ,
locally dense in late after
noon through early morn
ing hours.· otherwise fair
in inland areas in lat e
m o rning a nd afternoon
through Wednesday with
some high cloudiness
Highs Wednesday in uppe r
60s at the beache to low
70s in inland areas. Lo\\ s
44 to 54.
INSIDE TODA\'.
..Stvm..cllifctrm_ouacom~-t-----:
trogac.. d.ealh o/ .par~ lo
roi1e themulves Story,
photoPogeAIO ...... ~
Vi8ib11ity .near. zero
..
Den8e fog continue8 along coa11tUne
8) 'Rt' A.IMC'laa.d Pr ...
Oeonie Inc hu1111n 'allfoml• '•
rouiline r~ Loe Anaelw ln
\t-rna\klnal lrport ror 'ltwerai
bou n W•I• (o r I hl atit•ond
s tral1M d ai) a nll fur r.-ll 1n
t•rm1llf'IU 1ur,1o rt c-lo 1Ht'l1t \n
, or,h.-m \ allfot tll• th•l •K•ll•
11Pla)t'<f 0111ht .... i!U rlllM lht• b~\'
l\Ohd6\ i'lt'W.,o O
1'hfl ff>,. cauaed by cold air
movin& over the warmer land
•utfaCC!, eatend"d rrom San
to'rand•N lo San Dleao The Na·
tWnial We•ther Service pr4'<lic\
1•d more fog tool&hl lo Sout.hen\
C•llfo~a. 'l'ht' foj It'll v11;iib1Uly ndr 1ero
111 11om1.1 arclC) and forced air
1 rafh l· controllt'rs lo <.'losl' the
r United effort
· D)'i11g boy, IJ, to get wiAh
HH ...... ,o \I'• t-:1 1thl )t'&I old Andre Reese can't have.
llh ~tt'-.11 t• v ( \ 1 ... 1un~ D1l>Mt') lllnd bec~fuse he is d ying Of
ll:'ukcmlJ !Kl lol .il l lltil'O!I an· trying lo bring part of Dis·
runways at Loi Anceles Intern•·
tlonal \bla mornln1.
The airport normally handles
about 50-75 ruaht.a between mid·
nigh\ ancl 8 a .m ., said airport
opt1ralions superintendent Ken-
neth Shipp.
locomln& lights were forced
to land at inland airports in On·
l1trio and Phoenix.
Some 15 ruehts were diverted
to Ontario JntemaUonal Airport,
a bo ut so miles east of Los
Angeles. and "m ost of the
passengers have been bused to
L. A , " said Ontario Jnterna·
t ion al operations officer Sam
King.
Flight operations at airports
an San Francisco. Oakland, San
J ose and San Diego also were
closed for var ying periods this
mormng.
APWlre ..... te
Cardinals hear the pope
n~} l~•nd to h1m \l\t>mpl!> to ~"'' \ndrt> to Disneyland failed three limes
lwl' .i UM .' hi' n inJI\ ion "orl>cned shortly before each planned
ll •P •\ pnvale J\'l h>1d ~en donate.« to fl_y rum to John Wayne
\1rµort t\ll Monda) but lhl' boy developed a nosebleed, a nd doc-
t\lr~ hari ~~1 him from lra vchng
"We 've been up and down like
a y o-yo ... s aid Fred Smith,
operations supervisor 'for the
Fede r al Aviation Administra-
lion al Oakland International
Airport. referring to the rising
and falling fog
Roman Catholic cardinals greet Pope John
Paul II upon his arrival at the Vatican
Consistory. During his speec h. the pontiff
appealed for the rnl ea~e of hostages being
l\eld for "µollt1cal retaliation" or for
monetary ransom
~ l nill'il Blac•k Men of l''resno and other . local groups
bt>)l!Jn mak1111ot Jrran~cmenb to have some of the Oisney cartoon ch nractl'r~ flown w frt.'sno Wednesday to visit Andre at a com·
munity ccntt>r The Cat y ('ounl·il was to issue a proclamation declaring
Christ ma:. E\1c "And rt:: R eese Day" and making the boy
Fresno's honorttr)' mayor Wednesday
When the fog would rise
somewhat, a few planes with ad·
vanced gujdance systems were
allowed to take orr and land.
"It's just a matter of one get·
ling off and then, 'zappo,' we're
socked in again," Shipp said.
At least 15 flights were shilled
from San Francisco to San Jose
s hortly before San Jose closed
for a period and San Francisco
reopened.
2 sucked from hole
·Of Saudi jetliner
f'ro• Pagr ·I I
FREE\\' AY
would place more control in the
hands of the state legislators,
who would rather review a list of
freeway projects fo r funding
t'ach year during budget
. e ssions Altho u g h some
ll'gislators might like the s ruft in
power. she said the proposal
·might be t oo muc h o r a
political hot potato" fo r the ma·
JOrity to support.
Because of that, she said the
(•ounty's proposal, when s ub·
milled, probably won 't be re-
solved in the first half of the two-
ycar session.
However. county offi cials
seem prepared for a long fight.
Al Hollinde n of Fountain Valley,
chairman of the county com·
m 1.ss1on, said the funding plan is
1m vortanl becaus e it assures
lt 1cal are:.i:-. that projects will be
1 11rn pleteci once they are ap-
1'' o ved ·In t wo y1•Jr'l. we 've gone
11:.ic-kward 1n our prog ress." he
:-...tld. nolm~ that rew pro1ects
have tx.-gun an growing Orange
County
H oweve r . c r1mm1 ss ion
member Bill Vardoulls of Irvine
noted that passage of lhe county
proposal plus a bill lo set up an-
n u a I ve hicle in s pections an
!'-11uthem California could st ick
cl r 1 v e r s w 1th a · ·d o uble
.... h:>mmy "
In the ins pection bill to be dis-
t·ussed this year , drivers would
J.;ay al least a $15 annual inspec·
u on fee and would be required to
µa y for rcpuirs of tht!ir air pollu·
l io n co ntro l sy st.ems whe n
nel'essary
Mrs . Cos s -Fitzwa t e r said
Orange County officials, includ·
1ng members of the commission, have been actively seeking sup·
port for long-ra nge solutions to
lagging revenues.
Analysts recently estimated
that in Or ange County alone, $20
billion worth of improvements
Ai 11 be necessa ry to continue
·urrent travel conditions by the
11>ar 2000
Lesbian mom
abducts girl
-NASHVlLLE, Tenn. (Alli -Ir
self-avowed lesbian was ruding
today with her daughter , saying
she s pirited the girl away six
days ago because a judge grant-
ed custody of the 6-year-old to a
baby s itter.
"We're fooking for ber and we.
-assume the police a;e "loo_kiri.e
-r0rhef,-.' said Greg Ganoway, a
Harbour
lights cruise
ends toni·ght
The annual Huntington
Rarbour Cruise of Lights ends
its 1980 season tonight as \he las\
of the tour boats glide by \he
brightly lighted homes and boats
in the waterways of the Hunt-
ington Beach residential area.
Tfae tour is sponsored by \he
Huntington Harbour
Philharmonic Committee with
proceeds going to the Orange
County Prulharmonic Society's
youth education program. For
ticket information. call 846-9216
or 846-3489.
Each year awards are given
by the committee to the best
decorated homes and boats. This
year's awards include :
SWEEPSTAKES -Don Clif·
ford, 16732 Wandere r Lane.
MAYORS GOLD STA R
AWARD -L.M. Weitzel. 3312
Devon Circle.
SILVER STAR 1AWARD
Gary Hollander, 16256 Tisb'1J'Y
Circle.
GOOD NEIGHBOR AWARD
Dr Carl ·Agliozzo. 17642
Baruna Lane.
BEST TRADITIONAL -Dan
Mundy, 11061 Bolero Lane.
BEST TRADITIONAL
<Second Place) -Dr. George J .
Jligue. 3351 Bounty Circle.
BEST RELIGIOUS -Julian
Zamhianco. 4062 Morningstar.
BEST RELIGIOUS <Second
Place) -Fernando B. Canon,
16902 Marina Bay Or
MOST BEAUTIFUL Ron
Botwin, 16051 Santa Barbara.
MOST BEAUTIFUL (Second
Place) Robert Herron, 16196
Wayfarer Lane.
BEST CONTEMPORARY -
V.S. Buccola. 16979 Edgewater
Lane.
BES T CONTEMPOARY
<Second Place) -Neal West,
16246 Tisbury Circle.
BEST CONTEM PORARY
Hammatt, 16262 Wayfa rer Lane .
MOST UNUSUAL (second
Place) Mr. James S. Filipan,
16531 Cotuit Circle.
TRIBUTE TO CHRISTMAS -
Stacey Brohier. 16166 Tortola
Circle.
TRmlJTE 'nJCKltfSTMAS -
Don E . Hunt, 16671 Bolero Lane.
DESLGN EXCELLENCE -
Or. Sammy Lee, 16537 Harbour
Lane.
DESIGN EXCELLENCE
(Second Place) -Danny Jones, 16402'"AraSley-cir~le. -·
MOM' A-RTl8TIC USE OF
LIGHTS -Boone Gross Jr., 3841
Seascape Drive. law yer for the state Human
Services Department
He said rus agency had ob-
tained a warrant charging Rose-
Oelaney with kidnapping.
MOST ARTISTIC USE OF
LIGHTS (Second Place ) -
James Grace, 3842 Seascape
Drive.
Duarte president
SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador
CAP) -Jose Napoleon Duarte
has been sworn in as president
of the new ruling junta, the third
government or \his strife-tom
Central Americ an nation in 1980.
BEST YOUTH DECOaATED
Roy Green, 16272 Sundancer
Lane.
BEST WHIMSEY -Dr. Paul
J . Audette. 17069 Edgewater
Lane.
BEST WHIMSEY (Second
Place) -Ron Perry, 16872
Baruna Lane.
iilyliat TELEPHONE
All de.-rtlMllta: (714) 142-4321
CIHalftect Adffrtlalng: 142·5171
OFFtCEI
CAKI• Mata: J3D-.. ., SI~ l..-9Ncfl: 1Cn7 No. Coetl Hlt111war ~-~1--__._.,,.,._..,,....-r.:---:c------t --;K!...U•ll"" ~I ,_,.~ ~
M. Thomas Keevll
!clllor
Thomas A. Murphlne
Mana91r.o !dll0<
Charles H. LOOS
AUllltlll ~1"4 Eclllot
COP'(•l9 11f l •IP Oranot Co••«
P"t111,1t1n9 Col'l'lpany Ho ne•n ''°'''"· 11111\ltMI••· tclilorl•I malt•t or ad'retll~lt tt•reln may IM
f tlHOdllC•ll wllhOul •••<l•I ..-rmhtlonatt-.nOl'I _,
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90• IMO.C.taNllM.Cet~fll•'lt•·
VOL. n,NO.all
A Trans World Airlines
worker said San Francisco-
bound planes had been shifted to
Oakland and Las Vegas as well
as San J05e .
Confusion reigned in many
terminals for the second straight
day, with passengers and those
awaiting them trying to figure
out when lights would either
leave or arrive.
A World Airlines dispatcher
said passengers waiting to board
a Qantas flight in San Francisco
had to be bused across the bay
to Oakland.
"I think the re was a lot of con·
fusion because many of the peo·
pie who were waiting for rel·
a ti ves or frie nd s for the
holidays went to San Francisco,
only to discover the flights were
going to Oakland," he said.
When the fog forced closure of
Los Angeles International Mon·
day, some 100 lights had to be
dive rted to other cities before
the fog lifted about 8 a .m ., said
airport s pokes man Alfred
Dubiel.
Diet doctor
case rested
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y . CAP)
The prosecution has rested its
case in the trial of Jean Harris ,
the woman accused or murder·
ing Scarsdale Diet doc tor
He rman Tarnower, her long·
time lover who had been seeing
another woman.
Ballis ti cs expert Jos eph
Reich, a Westchester County
police detective , s aid Monday
that Tamower was shot in the
back with Mrs. Harris ' gun from
12 to 15 inches away and two
more times at much closer
range.
Reich was the prosecution's
last witness. and following his
testimony, Assistant District At·
t o rney George Bolen told
Westchester County Judge
Russell Legget, "Your honor,
the people r est."
f'rora Pag~ A I
HOSTAGES
nian terms for releasing th~
hostages were "definite" and
there were no plans for the Maj-
lis todeba\e theirfa\e again.
frime Minlst~r _ Moham!,?1.k,.d
All l\ajai warned Mo~day the.
hostage tssbe-Would be-retuml!d
to the Parliament for new de·
cisions if \he United States did
not meet Iran's $24 billion de-
mand for their release, accord·
ing to a report carried by \he
Syrian news agency. Secretary
or State Edmund S. Muskie has
called lhe Iranian terms "un·
reasonable."
Mao's widow
disrupts trial
DOHA. Qatar I A P J Two
children were sucked out of a
Saudi Arabian Jet line r today
through a hull' in the passcn~cr
compartme nt while tht! plant•
n ew at29,000fee t over the Persian
Gulf state of Qatar. th<• Gulf New~
Agency reported
The agency reported the holl'
was caused by an exp1os1on, but
the Saudi state radio said a
wheelcover lore loose and rapped
a hole in the fuselage The Saudi
radio ,said the l wo cha ldren "f Pll
out ofthepla ne ..
The plane , carr)-1 n g 29G
passengers and a <·rc·w of Iii,
made an l'mcrgency landing in
this g ulf s he1khdom . airport
sources said They i.:.a 1d thrc•·
other passj>ngcrs were slightly in
j u red and taken I n a hospital
The SauJ i Ar abian Airlines
Lockheed TriSt.ar, Flight 16Z. wal>
e n r oute from the northea st s·auil1
Anti-!-janla
hit by j·i1le
T<> RONT O < /\ P 1 A
To ronto m dll who shouted
"There •~ no Santa t'lt1u'>
at the city's annual Santa
Claus parade last month
has been finC'd $50 by a
provincial court
Richard Dildy, 40. was
convicted of causin g a dis
.J.urbance after he J01nNl
the· par ade carrying a sign
that read in pa rt "f)own
with Santa "
"We've got lo get you off
I he st reel-; al Santa Claus
t ime ," sa id Jud~<' U G
Scott. after hear ing that
Dildy had been charged on
two simila r counts s tem-
ming fro m las t year's
parade
PEKING (AP) -The widow
of Chairman Mao Tse-tun1 de·
flant ln the face of char1es' that
could carry the death penalty
disrupted her trial today ~
branded the jud1e and pros·
ecutor fuolsta, Chinese ~'Cll'.'l~
said. They aald abe calm9CI down
after beina cited for contem]lt.
The proaecutlon Hld t.be c6ae
a1aln1t Jlanc Qtn1 wu com·
plete but that au abould be held
crhnlnally ll1ble for ber out-
bursfJn court, th• offtelal
Xtnhan.... aaency ~-
It aakl the now wtll !:l.t._ tbe chance abe bu dem -to d•llver a 1peech and .,_
berwlf. It ''" DO l.Ddlcatlml cm when tbat miPt be.
•
t·1t ) of l>hahran to KaraC'l)I ,
Pakistan when thl· an1de nl oc·
t ur rcd , the Saudi brm1.dta!>lsJ1d
An airport offi<·1<1I Hert-whri
la !keel 1o1.1th two pa~'>enger~ l>cfon ·
t he ) v.1:rc hurnerl off tu seclw.1t1n
1 n r e :-. l ti o u s 1• l> ~ a 1 tl t h e
pa~sen)!ers reported h£·anng a
thundcrou~ exploi.aon
I' o It l' e c· or don 1· d o ff th t•
lt•rm mal a nd refused 111 allov. n•
P"rler-. or photogrc1µher'> tu thl'
!-.C'ene
Thl• ~aud1 ratlu1 r•~portc1l U\i'
pilot "aid · a loud n 111M c·Jm•·
from thl' <H•·a atJo\'C tht land1nrt
~t·;H
t lhl' -.<1ml· 11m•· µr•".,!-.UI•
1m med1a t 1;:1\ ft•lt IO '>IUC· tht·
,11 r C'raft and therf' 1o1. <1'> a '>hort aJ,!c•
of ox )'l:!c•n · ·
T he <T"ad10 s111d t he c·:i bin stafl
n·ported to till' tapt a1n that a
··p1e1·c of metal fmm the covn of
1 he l andm~ wh•·el'> h1id hroki>n nff
;,in d o;truck the under~1de' of the·
planf.>. opening a gaping hnll·
about five feel long :rnd three feet
wa de
· ·T~o children s itting ne<ir th•~
ho le fell out oflhe plane . ·said lht-
repo rt. indicating the children
we re sucked out as a result of the
rnµ1 d del'ompression that c reated
a s trong out ward suction
T he Qatar S t•\.\.'\ 1\11,enc} report
l'd that Saudi Jss1slanl m1nal>ll•r
for t.Jefense and d\'1CH 11m a ffair:-.
Ka m t.•I S1 nd~ fle 1o1. to Ooh a lo heacl
an 1n H•:-.t1J.:<1l10noflh1• 1nc1dent
(Juakt' s trikf>~
'IWlC'OSI ,\, C'.\'prc·ss •Al'J
F " e ,. ti I a g"' :-. h d \' e b {' 1• 11
d('st roy{'d by an l'<ifl hq ua ki> tbat
s truck centred I ran . bu t
t'asualties we re few bec•aust· mo:-.l
pt-op le were work mg outside thl'1r
ho mes at the time. Iran 's offi cial
Pa rs news agency reported to
day Thequake l5 3onthe R1chter
scale! struck Monday. kilhng at
le as t thr~ persons and mJunng
more than200. Parssaid.
• •
l:11b ubt>ut M!-t Stot'cklcy
The 13 memhcr ·'Black Cult"
lu wh1 c•h M:-. Stockcly. then 12.
be longed. ti cw.led \11 "punish"
~a r Donald ro r his attitude
towar<I clru~ USC' by'certam cult
rnl·m hcr.
Shl' round out when he would
hl' home·. and a !.acr1fit:1al raid
.,.. a 'i :.l't for 1-\.'b IG 1970
~1 .s Stnc1·kln. cslnng wi th
m;.in) 11lht·rs 1n the c ull, had
takl'n dru~:-. thcsl night, mcludang
I.SI> Jnrl ml'!-tt:ahnc
Tlw ~roup found the doctor on
.1 "' 111g ro•>m c-oud1, <J~leep over
.1 li•iok with th<· tl·lcv1s1on on
11 1.., prr·g11an1 wi fe a wakened
.ind 1·all<·r1 out .l«ff who are
tht•"' IK'OJll «·'• Wh-. Jrl' the} do
1111! th1' ''' rn1 nw"
'" .\1.ll'l>c mald lrt('rl ti) n s e.
f11u1 ITil'll ht.-g.rn hatting him and
"'" Slot•t·klc•J l'IH·t:rNI .. Acid is
~rlll/\ ~
:\I., !-itrwC'kll'' tht·n left the liv Ill~ I 1)0111 ,,, ,;.\. what "-'CIS hap·
pt•111n)! 10 th" n·-.t <tf the h()use
.Jllrl "·'" .,111111 of ht'r friends
... trll)!J!l111g Y.1th ;i \\omun on a
lwd l\ <·hil!I 1:1) n1·arhy motwn
11·:-o'> Shl· lah•r. -;l)(>llerl another
d 1tlJ
~he ~a.,., \1 .i r l>on:tld ... tump lo
the floor 1n lht' 11\ing flll)m amt
c-hJnlt·<I. · Kill t he pig
llis face and pa1a m a top were
blnod). and s he lhou~hl he was
<ll·arl
S h\· t.111..ecl n11n..,en'>t: lo a
I l·lt·phom• l'i.lllt·r .,... hen tht• group
1•l<•rt4·<1hl'r 111 an--1o1.er the phone
\ n 11 1 h 1· n ., h " .,., 1 µ e d th e
h:rnflpac 'l'C' with h1·r hlouse
Th"' 1..in<·ount<:r had not seemed
1 l'.J I. but tht•n tht' blood began to
.,1'.J rt' hl·r When "he tried to re -
\ 1\ l' ~1 ri. M;H·Duna ld. the others
l.iughL•fl aecord1ng to tht' report
Fruit fli~s found
SA:\ ,JOSE r A I' I Saying a
fruit fl\ 1rt (e~tat1nn C'OU)d "rwn
:.latt' agrarulture ... tale a nd local
a~ric-ulturc 11fhl'1als a sked Gov
Edmund 1; Bru1o1.11 Jr on Monday
to dct'lare a state of em ergency in
Santa Clara Count)
'
t~. o.c.mber 23, tNO
••
Host_age families oppose Iran ransom
'
"' rhr \ MKl•lC°d f°r~ a
Rt'IUll\t>< 111 "'""''' nr th• • rtH•r11 1trft)11 104.Ct'' ~•)'th~) op~t' pll~ 1n1 1h bLllli·n~ "' 1h•llu1 U11 It 1tru1111"' h11' ,. 111·10,.oJ~d 11~ the
pnr of ftt•t .. lc•n1 for tlu 11 1 ~pt 1\1..,
' ... H ,, .... l1\1l1 lo.111 11\ 111111• IAll\I 1111\•h '.>IA\d l>uruth~ia \l{lr~rn•ld 'l4 1f1 ol 1t1d11111I '' \t11t•lw1tl ·it 1At h11 "'"'' lhl' LIS ron·
,ul <-11\ 1.,.1 '" I ••hi 111 v. h• 11 th• 1 1111!.rnM 14 ,,, 1·1.t:t"ll Nov 4, tln9
M1 \1111t·h1•lcl 11f S1111 1>1114" !tattl llw Ir 1.u11 .. 111' holt.lm.: tht.'
1)\1 ti.i•t u• u I 1111tl. 111 "''''"'I\ 14h11 h .H• ki.l1111ipt'<l vu r pc:o
~•It "l•'A "' ... , , 11, .. ,., r" ''", 11i1·\ "" ,,, "'' '.111 t v•n 11 1thi'
nH'\1\l \
Ut111 :-.. , II •II "' ''" \1 11111 11 1111 1, ,, "'1 r. 01 \1 1111 I .l l 'ol
( t\.H 11"' ~. •H ~ 1111 ct11 h 111 '' 11 "' 1 . n 11< 11l11u-.
I h• 11 1111 11 11.1 • 1 ti '''"' 1111 h11,1 .. , , . .., 1 uuld t~ f 11 t-tl 11 the
I 11111•11 '>la• ,, ul I I• J •• 11 , 1111 i ;n 11 1111111 m tt11 "'\l~u 1.ir1 1 ••n
u .. 1 ti....... Ii: u If '". '""' I '" • 1111.Hll'IUI 1h 1111.1111.h un th•· t n11
\ \l 'I lo•• I\ I It o I" .,_ 1 I I 1111 I I .&IU olll f•<U II <llllt'fll H'
peatttd hts threat on MondMY thaHhe hostages will be tried u s pies
1r thl' money i. not paid.
Mrs Morefield said she did not agree with Lawrence Pers-
inger the Cather of Marine Sgt. Gregory Per~inger, 22, who called
for action by the United States to free lhe hostaaes. The elder
Persingtir said he would blockade the Persian Gulf. "I'd give them
1>0 long and then I'd go in there and get them (the hostages)," said
Persinger m un interview from his home in Seaford. Del.
Mrs . Morefield said she was "afraid an overt action like that
would solidify the area against the U.S."
Richard Hermening of Cudahy, W1s ., father of Marine Sgt.
K.:v111 llermening. 20, said of the demand for money: "Putting $24
htlhon in 1.ome Algerian bank, why do they think that the United
'-'ljles ha:; all this money to give them'! ..
V1ttor Lauterbach, the brother of Stt!ven Lauterbach, 28, a
forl'1gn "l'rvic'l' employee. said . "We can't pay it." He al so said:
"Our·thought is we haven't waited a year and two months to sub-
mit to blackmail now."
Pat Lee, wife of Gary .Lee. 37, who worked u a business ad·
mipistrator at the embassy, said the $24 billion demand was "an
aainine request." She also accused the Iranians of changing condi-
tions for the hostages' release. "If we ilve in to one demand, it wiU
be something else."
Lee is the son of the Rev. Earl Lee, a minister with the First
Church of the Nazarene in Pasadena, Calif.
His reaction was : "What we need to do is to say to the Iranian
government, 'Our hostages are to be released in 14 days or you get
nothing.·
"We have to create the crisis," Lee said. "We've dabbled
along on lheir ter,ils. There's been no rhyme nor reason."
Patricia Bogts, mother-in-law of Joseph Hall, 31, an Army
warrant officer. said the demand "comes under the heading of
ransom or blackmail."
Mutual feelings . . ' Gunman
Re<1g<111 selects 1·an' beaten
A P W 1ffP"6tO
AMBASSADOR TO U.N.
Jeane Kirkpatrick
'v\ \!°)l llNl:T1 \'i ,\1'1 ll \I.a~
.11·.1111• .J l\11l..p.1l1 Hk l\hO first
1 •'l <'I\ l'd J f,111 l\'lter from
lh•lt.ild lk .1.:.111 nol lhc uthl'r
wa~ Jround
1>r1•s1dl·nt t•lf.'d llc<igan read H
!01 e1~n affairs nrt1l'lc last year
wr itl1'1\ by Mt :-. Ki rkpatrick. lhf•
5 :1 \ l' 11 r 11 l II <: l' o r g e l o w n
lllll\'l''"'ll~ poltt11·;1I s cience pro
res!>or ""hor11 Hcagan named
M1ln1IU) tu bf' l' S ambassador
t " llw lJ rn l cd N a I w "''
"ll t: WflOTE TO lit•r ~dying
lit• II ked her ar't 1l'11· ttn<I want(.'<J
tu get together wllh her to dis
1·u:-.s som e of lhrar views ... said
Mrs Kirkpal ra i.. ·s husband.
1-;1 ron Kirkpatnt'k
\\'ht'n 1h .. ) met. they found
t hl·l r 1dt•as i;o c·onger}ial lhal
\1r ~ Ki r kpatrick JO lned
H1•ag.1n·s t:1s k forl'C on foreign
llllhl'\'
A t l h l ' I I m (' . !\1 r s
LA citize1i,s armi11g
Aas m .urders soar
LOS 1\ '-J(; I I. I·:~ \I'' \l> ... ..,1, . ., ol h;1111lg11rn. g uard dog!'! and
alarm ~)..,tt•111.., to l1 11,h1 1•111•tl ho11wo1'l.11 •·1 ~ ~·1<1rf'li. police sard that
hom1 c1dt•s 111lht·111\ 111pp•tl ,1 rtlOtd 1000 for tlw ;ear during th,..
Wt'ekenJ
l>elt•tll\l'~ ''"d 1h1· 1 .1~1f1t h \JCtrm wih :!3 "ear old Monroe
Washington. ""ho "a' i.:u nn1·d dm"n as hl' rollcr·-.·1-.atcu in a liquor
'itore iJarkin~ 1111 m•ar ~1111111 \ '1•ntral Loe.. .\n~elcs J t l l 30 pm. Sun
day The J.OOOth 1•11.ll ni 1A ,1c.. Hulmuro Barbo!'>a , 42. a 1Aoodwor ker who
WilSsho1:-;at11n l<.1) 111:.id1111 \\a) tworlo<~1sfromh1swoodshop
l .. \ST \'t>\R, TllER f' wt·r•· H<ffi hon11 ,,1des a r!'cord at that
lim<'
ThP r1i.:111 f 1wl111I• tooth murclt-r'> <Hltl th•Jse li <;ted <J'i JUSt1fia hle
homu·1des. "l" 11,1• .. t.11111111, 1.n11.•onc 1n M·H cJeff'n-.~·
[11 ;ill of I .n \11 1 1 14' ( 1111111 •. I hl'n' h3\ ~· hPPn 2 130 k1ll111g!'>, a 120
pt·l'l't'nl 1111·11•w .. 1 m i•1 I hi· JI·"' do 1-.1tl<•. I ti (• r·•>nm1·r·-;1,Hu:e reporterl
Tht• n..,,. 111 h111111,·11\1·-. "'·•~ p .1ra\\1·!1•rl h) an ino•rcac..f· in pnvale
nwnt·r.,h1p•1f l!llll"
"PEOPl.E W.\N'I rv protC('l lhe111sclv1~!'> 'I hut !i Wh); thC\' are
huyrngsomanv f.!11n:-., poll•·•· U f)an f'onk e<,~11cl
J\C' a1ldt'1l, "I\''> ;11hslurb1nl.! s1~n that gun !>ale" <trc up about 10
per cent ;1 yr.:ir llut thcri• ~ JU!)l .in l')verwhelmmg fee!Jn~ off ear "
Figuri•s 111 th<' < 11l1fnrn1..i l>cpartn1cnt Of JuslH'l' s howed that
s tatewidl', gun :-ult•-. -.11.m·tl from 11«:,:,7~ dunng all of l!l71to261.048
fort he f1 rst Io 1rn1nth., of 1 h,., '<'<tr lh 1111· r·n11 of I he \'f' &r , 0ff 11·1 ab pre
d1tt , thal f1).!11rt• will n •;1d1''111<1)(111
For Los t\n~l'i1•s <"11ui1t\ l!Un -.al1·., 1umpl'<i ll'llm ~8.~fi'.l to 8'1.107
during t hl'-;;1m1• p1•1 1wl
··WE C'<H I.I) :-;J-;1.1 1~11·<.1 :.-. rri <tn1 J.!un -. if 'M' • 11111<1 1ust J.?Ct
them.· s:11rl i.:1111 d1..,trihu1m St1·\l'll Trcspp who wlls tu 4a0 c;h11ps
throught1ul S11111 h••r11 !\tiIf11r11. a
In •11!!11111111 "'1·111 11\ ,,ff,, 1.1b '"'' dcr11.111 t 1111 "'•ntn dlJt!.., hci'>
tlot1hh•1) 1111'11• l.1 1 f l\ I I' I" \\ h1l1 IJIJ"IO(''> •I )Jflllfllllll' fr1r 11 ar l!il
a nd bur µIJI ' .11 111'
Choke h o1d limited
LO" \ '\(, l'I I·" \I'• 111•
Lo~ Ang1-•k.., p,,h1' 111'1••• rr,..11 1
h .1:. lwt·n ord1 · rl'tl II_; ,1 1 .. 1h 1 .ti
----J-U(fi:R Ill 1irr11I ti 11 .1 ''' 1•1111
11111 1·r,1JI 1 l111k.-h"l•J•. in mak1ri~
<11 r1 ·-.t.., •mtil llw ri• partmcnl 1m
1,1ru\ , . ., 1 i11 · \1 •.\ ui.UW!.1-.-. are
tr ain1·d l•1U:o.l'thc holdi.
K 1r k p atr 1c k , a lo n gtime
l>t'mocrat and member of a con-
'il'rvatavcly oriented Washington
rl'St'ar<:h or ganiiation , the
Anll'r1r ;.en Entl'rprise Institute,
\\as not c·o1nm1tted to s upporting
the H <.•p ublic an f or m er
Ca Ii fomi a governor Hut after
prl'parin~ somt.' paper<; for h.im
.ind lillk1ng wi th him several
t 1 m l's . s h c d I:' c i ct e d ii was
Rca..tan s he wanted to he pres1
rlenl '-..
MRS. KJRKPATRICK helped
prcpari.: Hea~an for the pres
1Cit.'nt1al debates last summer.
'iC'rving as one Qf the ques tioners
1n p1 al't1ce ~essio n s. h er
husband s~ud And she has s ince
J(llncrl his trans1t1on fore•J?n
pohc} task force
"'Is l h11t yo11?'
M rs Ki r kpatrick , who had
hl·Pn ...1 spt-1•ch1ArttPr, campaign
slraleg1l>l and polling expert for
tht• Democratic' Party for two
decades. 1s con si dered a
pul1t1cal schol<Jt with a broad
range of interests
Seven-month-old Steven Hall can't believe his eves as he
gets his first close peek al Santa Claus during ·a visit to
the Mt. Shasta M e:tll in Redding.
She tracc•s her break with the
Dcm1wrat1c Party to lhe late
1960s whe n s he perceived
rad ic.'ulism s upplanting th<' New
Dl'a I reform a pproa(.'hes to
Amt!rican problems
Mr!'>. Kirkpatrick and some o(
h t>r friends foug ht the trend
through the Coali tion for a
Democratic Majority, which
tried lo rally Democratic cen-
trists
False alarm routs
nuke plant workers
Ht:R INTE REST IN foreign
affairs dates to he r graduate
student days.
· /\ flcr graduating from Colum -
bia Uni versity. she spent a year
as a fellow of the French govern·
ment at the prestigious lnstitut
de Science Politique. which
tu rns out Fra nce's .diplomats
and ~ovemment leader s.
M r ~ Kirk p atrick speaks
Spanish and Fr ench fluently and
teaches a re~ular c ourse in
l"rcnch politics. She is-working
on a book on the Lalin style in
politics
Mrs Kirkpatrick a lso has
w r i t ten a bQo k a bout the
m echanics of presidential selec·
t1 on an d h er G e o r getown
teachings have centered on com·
paralive politics
She 1s the mother of three
grow11 sons and hal> a strong in·
LPrest in <.·nok1ng
Whalewatch
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A false
alarrn warning of high radiation
levels caused the evacuation of
Rancho Seco nuclear power
plant for an hour. the plant's
operator reported.
Tfle radiation-monitoring in-
struments apparently were at
fault . sai d J e ff Marx ,
s po k esman fo r Sacr a m ento
Muni ciµal Uti lity District.
operator of the plant 25 miles
southeast of Sacramento.
HE SAID TIH:· instruments in·
dicated high radiation levels out-
SJde the plant at 8:50 a .m . Mon-
day.
Rancho Seco's alarm horn
was sounded, audible for several
miles , and 200 employees and an
undetermined number or outside
workers were moved away from
t he plant. Marx said.
He S<srd S MUO notified county
emeq!ency officials. who stood
red<iy to spread the word lo the
general public if the radiation
findings were verifi ed. Stale and
fede ral o ff1 c1als wer e also
c:.tllc\l
set Saturday Rl'T MAKX SAID testing rn
and 11round lhc plant showed no
Off Newport rarl1a11on rclca~es or &bnormal
lr1 t>ls. and the workers returned
an hour later 'I ht· f..IOllllC.ll Wh;.il 'Will.Cb .Iw ... w1d..._ ___ _
I UISer. f<'alurm g a cruise Off lhe
toast or NC'wport Reach in
search of whales. d olphins and
se3 lions. 1s set Saturday.
The plant. designed to shut
down automatically if an actual
major release of radiation OC·
curs, continued to operate at full
power during the incident, Marx
s aid.
He said t he monitoring instru·
m e nts had been undergoing
routine tests, and SMUD of·
ficials believe the t esting
somehow caused the false
alarm. A similar incident OC ·
•curred about two years ago.
Bill Faulkenberry , a
s pokes man for the Nuclear
Reg ul atory Commission in
Walnut Creek, said the mishap
may have been caused by an
electrical short.
JOHN KEARNS, assistapt
director or the state Office of
Emergency Services, said
SMUD orricials told the office
during the initial c all that "they
fell it was more an equipment
problem because they had no
reading" of radiation releases at
the plant.
Shortly afterward. they called
again and said no radiation had
been detected. Kearns s aid.
He said a new state law will
require all nuclear plants to in·
stall alarm systems during the
ne xt vear that will sound at the
state· office at the same time
they go off at the plant.
to death
OAKLAND (AP) A gunman
who shot a bar patron and was
chased down and beaten to death
by irate witnesses died of "blunt
injuries to the head and brain,''
the Alam eda County coroner 's of·
rice reported.
Oakland Homicide Lt. Terry
Green said he did not, a nticipate
any arrests in the wake of the
violence early Saturday m orning
in which Vernon A Bridges Ill.
30. was killed
THE DETECTIVE s aid the in·
vestigation was continuing. but
that the department 's present
belief. from what was known, is
that the killing was "self de-
fense ...
The report s aid an argument
started after midnight Friday
bet ween Bridges and Peter
Jackson, J6, at the Allendale Club
bar, and J ackson was shot several
li m es at about 1: 30 a.rn .
The bar's owner . J ose Madrid,
said he was asleep upstairs from
the bar when the shooting started.
He said his s is'fer. Allila. was
bartender and was r losing the bar
and shooing r ustomers out the
door
MADRID SAID the argument
heated up on the street outs ide the
bar. ". . Shots were fired. then
mor e shots. and the guy apparent.
ly ran out or bullets . None of the
shots were fired in the bar al all · ·
Madnd said he did not think the
bar patrons who were in the bar
when the fight started wenl after
Bridges. He didn't know what the
problem was. he said.
Madrid said he thought other
neighborhood people a ctually
chased Bridges down. Detective
Green said when officers arrived.
Bridges had blood on his mouth
and was already dead
"HE <BRIDGES> WAS beaten
before the customers got to him
. . I think they got to him a little
late . I think somebody else beat
him up," said Madrid. ") think
they were mad about getting
there late sounds crazy, doesn't it? ..
Madrid said he knows Jackson.
who was in stable condition al
Highland Hospital. but he did not
know Bridges.
Green said one man was taken
into custody after the shooting.
but was released pending further :
investigation. Green s aid he_
didn't think there was any racial
significance to the frac~
The c·ru1 s c ahQard the
"Catalina ll oliday" d eparts
from the Bul h(1a Pavil\on 1n
Newport Beach at 9 a .m and re-
l urns at 4 p.m
Whalewatc h. u non-profit or·
J(anizaL1on. sponsors an educa·
Make Your Christmas Gift-Money Last: a Lifetime
lional program coordinating a
crew of volunteers and offers
fre(• lecture and slide programs
to srhool classrs or local or·
ganiialion~.
The fw1rl raiser also kirks off
the whale watc hing season
Tickets for the ci:u1se are S14 for
adults, $12 for American Ceta·
cean Society members and $7
for children under the age of 12.
For further information or re·
servations. c all 675-9881-or
645-7811.
C hristma s gift
mon ey deserves
more than casual
spending. Invest
them wisely.
Pamper yourself
with really fine
jewelry that will be
a permanent
r e minder of the
thoughtfulness of
your giver.
A gift for your
lifetime and to
heirloom to your
loved ones. Our
seledion of quality
pieces will excite
your interest. Stop
in soon . . . and do
bring yo ur
Christmas gift
money!
--
3 Santa Barbara
bU8inesses burn ---------------1~ --
Ups and downs
Doggone, but it's easy to cli~b a metal ladder, as
Beauregard, a three-year-old pit bull, demonstrates in
Carmel, as his master, carpenter Bryan Wilson, watches.
Beauregard.sits on rooftops while Wilson works.
SANTA ~Bl\ RB1'1b\ tA PT
City and county arson in ·
vestigators are probing a $500,000
fire that destroyed three busl-
n e sa es in downtown Santa
Barbara.
, Flames were reoorted to be
s hooting up from an auto repair shop, where the roof later cQI.
lapsed. A total o( is ·cars
and two motorcycles were lost i.n
the blue, which was extingul.lbed
within two hours. .
Mary Barr. c.11fle<S Gemo1o01s1 ' CHARLES.ff. BARR
Ac......., ... "* ,..,
119116.,.. ........... ........ .....
,,., DAil V Pll.O J &. NATION WEATHER
-J •• c
,···.coa~ciott ~ Man freed in tax boss' deitth
...... ~':r Te•"~~'
· Marpllin~
Luririg the jet set
0 1.V SHta.L GA Mt: DEPT. 'f here was • bl\ of con h~ton th•t dev~lopt'd only y \erday in that Oran1e Coun·
t \' AUlK>M 11fflc1ab rni"b\ 11Uow nine n t:w aar carriers to
vrw r.il•· uut ut John W.-y11t' u"rodrom~ The newi. m1ty touch
•tf nl'~ <·~ of J til fo'o.., Jtllen.
\ 'h»l'r n ·111dlna& of \tua lHt, hOwever. s uggests lh•\ nine
11t•v. ... loh 1art n 't tMi1n~ l rNtlllt.I •t ~ MacArthur Boulevard
th"' n ) ut 1 ea.lly
Wh•t 1:. 1t1>P•nmll) b~111~ i.ugge:Jled 1s that nme fughts
"ould Ix· 1allcll'•lt"Cl .ind n~w iilrllnes would be allowed to
b1J fur th •Ill
/\ul111t!.' wllh the leiuil noisy Jets and. we presum~. the
h1 •h,.,, mtill\" bid!>. wo uld be awarded the nights
Hl 1 TH~ BASI(' N MBElt of Jet departures from
Juhn Wu ) Ill' Airport would remain al the curre nt count of
11
IJo\o\ 111 Lhe world t•an they do that? I'm glad you
...... i..·t.I
That would be itccomphshed by TAKING A WAY the
mne fbghts from the two major earners at county airport
now Air California and Republic Airlines. •
It 's sort or a biblical approach : The Board or
Supervisors giveth, and the Board of Supervisors taketh
away. Si mple as that.
TOCCOA, Ga. <AP) -The acquittal of former Tu Com-
mlaalonet Donald Addison lo lbe death of his poliUcal rival forces
a new look at char1es a1ainst two other men, says the prosecutor
In the cue.
After dellberaUn1 141h hours over two days, a Superior Court
Jury hu found Addison innocent ol murder in the execution-style
shooting death of Stephens County Tu Commissioner EUsa!Mth
Wllllanu.
Addison, who was to face Mrs. Williams in the Aug. 5 prim(ll'Y,
had been accused of arranging her July 31 death for his political
gain. She had °"8ted him from the post in 1977.
AfTER THE VERDlCT wu announced, District Attorney V.
O. Stockton ~aid he would have to re-examine the cases against
John Mi chael Jones , 29, of Greenville , S.C .. and Raymond -
MacJw\kin, 35, of Franklin County, Ga.
Prosecutors had contended that J ames Everett Castell, 35, of
Greenville, fired the shots in exchange for $1,500 from Addison.
th at Jones drove Caste ll to Mrs . Williams' home and that
Ma('Jw\kin arranged a meeting between Addhon and Castell.
Jones and MacJunkin have been charged with m urder. In an
earlier trial, Castell was convict ed of murder and sentenced l o
death..
"It 's just two juries and two different opinions." Stockton said
this week alter Addison was acquitted. "If he.·s not guilty, of course
MacJunkincouldn't havegonenCastell forh1m "
011e killed
Fire levels famed
Von Trapp home
STOWE. Vt. \l\PJ Johannes
von Trapp surveyed the smoking
rubble of what had been home
for 40 years to the family that in
spired "The Sound of Mus ic."
"It's a mess," he said, his
face ha~~ard "nut we will re
build."
f''1rc sparked by a faulty oil
burner swept through the TrapJJ
F ami ly l.odJ!e . kdl1n g an
I I I i n o 1 s m a n a n d f c1 r c
mg 46 guest:. out into s ub·zero
tt'm peratures As smok e tlol{ged
lht' hallwa~·&. many people
leaped f rom w1nd{)WS 1nlo
s now hank~
ANOTHER 55 (;lfESTS at. u
motel :.mnex across the street
were evat•m1ted as a prec•aution.
"We wen• luc ky there was no
w ind," said von Trap OtherwisC'
we would have lost all ...
Barone'<;~ M1iria Augusta von
Trapp, 75, the hcro111e of "The
Sound of .\1 usit'." fl ed lhe lodge
in he r nightgown She watched
a:-. the flames burned the inn to
the ground Sunday, consuming
all the mementos of her family's
life 10 America. Among them
we· re a port rail of h er l<tte
husband, Baron Gt:orge Von
Trapp, a collect1on or candles .
honorana. awards and keys to
(' 1l1 ('!.
S ix pl•oplc wc•n• lnJurC'd. :.ome
1n leap:-. from window~. others
from fro!.tb1tc• Two µcoµle re
mainecl ho!.p1tallzerl , including
t he wife <Jf the man "ho du•d
T H E RODY OF Hon Becker,
of Sall'm, Ill . was d1sco verc'<l in
thl' rubble llis wife. Judy. s uf·
fered a fractured spine when she
jumped from their third-fl oor w1ndo~ lfoth s he and Gino
Fan1cc'1la. :m, <Jf Salern. wcr<·
11&tedJn good c·c1nd1twn
Addison, held without bond alnce hia arrest In Auguat, r~ •
home Sunday for the first time in four monlha. He tea\ined in bta
own defeoae late last week, sayini he had nothing to do with Mn.
Wllliams' death.
He declined.comment on the verdic . ~
"Als soon as I first talked lo Donald, I knew he was not guilty,"
defense attorney Robert Reed said. "I've bffn at this for more
than 30 years, and I reel strongly he was honest wlth me."
During the week-long trial, a Toccoa banker testified for the
prosecution that Addison borrowed $1,500 three days before Mrs.
Williams was gunned down in her driveway -the same amount
Addison was accused of payine Castell.
Prosecutors had rested their case aner calling a witness from
Westminste r, S.C .. who said he had refused a $1 ,500 offer from Ad·
dison to kill the J><>pular' tax commissioner , who was s hot once in
the neck and once in the head.
ADDI.SON SAID THE NEWS of Mrs. Williams' slaying had
deeply disturbed him.
New candidates were qualified to run for the tax com-
rrt1ss1oner's job after Mrs. Williams' death. An aide lo Mrs.
Williams. Vickie Whitworth, led Addison in the primary. Addison
was to have faced Ms. Whitworth in the Democratic runoff. But he
withdrew from the race afte r his arrest, leaving her the winner.
The tax commissioner 's iob. whic h pavs about $14.900 a year.
involves collecting about $2 million in county taxes and issuing
automobile t;igs and registrations.
ff 01ne for holidays
Steve and Brenda Schl ientz walk away from plane
after he arri\'ed from an ejght -month tour of duty aboard
the carrier Eisenhower. •.vh1ch 1s returning from the In·
di <:rn Ocean. The Ai r Win g of the <."arrier arrived in
:\orfolk, Va .. O\'er the weeke nd
On the other hand, maybe it's more akin to the old
huckster and rlim-flam man who worked the county fairs
and carnivals with his shell game. You can hear him lur-
ing the prospects now:
"HURRY, HURRY. HURRY folk.sand step right up to
take your chance on winning flights out of Orange County 's
airport.
Jeep firm denies TV show's rap
".Just pick the right shell and you're going to win a
piece of wha t the Community Airport Council calls the $422
million gold mine! ..
His gold-tipped c~e. pushes back his supervisorial
derby hat and he taps UPon the table with the three shells
dis played and urges the crowd:
'Step right up, Frontier Airlines. You, too, Western
You only have two flights each now ...
"How about taking a li ttle chance to win nine?
"HOW ABOUT YOU other players? Come on over.
American . come look al the three shells, United . .
!low about a little game or flight, flight, who's got the
flight, F.aslern?"
The su1>er visorial ba rker continues his pitc h, e xplain·
ing, ."You see, ~entlemen, under one shell we have some
Air Cal flights . And beneath the second shell we have som e
Republic flights.
'•All you ha ve to do 1s pick the n ght shell and you 're the
hig C iold Mine winner!"
BUT THEN THE MAN in the black derby holds up his
hand and admonis hes, "Just remember now, all you
a irlines, we don't want any heavy noise. Try lo win your
flights very, very quietly. Otherwise, you might end up in
the company of the Anti -jet Noise Forces "
One of the pros pective players looked around,
bewildered, and then asked, "But where are they?"
"Oh, them," the flim-flam man sa id. "Why, they're
under the third shell .....
TOLEDO. Ohio 1AP1 The
Jeep Corp. says its J eep CJ5 has
c haracter ist1c·s di'fferent from
s ome vehicles. but that •L is a
s afe vehicle "when driven rn
telh~ently"
Th e co mpan y s a id 1t
was reviewing a "60 Minutes "
program wh1t·h rcporlctl that
tests by the lnsuranl'c Institute
of tltghway SafC'ty found thl'
Jeep subject to 1rnll«H er~ 1n <·er
tain turning manc•u\'ers
Tht> four wheel dr ive CJ5 1s
the t·1vi llan offs pring of. the
military gencral-purpos r vehicle
first used durmg World War II
an<1 nicknamed .. jeep" hy <;Is
The CBS·TV broadcast said
t ests showed the vehic le would
r o ll over during a m aneuver
described as a "J " tur n, a
s w eeping turn following a
straight-on path.
Bogus seals found
CA I RO. Egypt I J\ P > Police
have announced lhe arrest of a
six-memhcr gang that forged of·
f 1c 1al doc u ments with 80
duplicated government seals.
Mid-nation freeze __ eases_
Warmer air, rains cover West Coast
Onrnt11M to11 •ulnQ oraduallV
lllrou1111 mumlno 10 P••tl•I (lffrfno
IQ 11\ernoon. COHQI low ~. "'°" •l·
Inland fOW u. "'oil" w •••• '° Et~"""'"· v1"•l•ble #Inds bKom
lno sou111we,lf1 '' I lo 11 -noh In .i l•rnoon Wind w~.-e' I 10 1 Itel,
we.1er1, '""""' 110 J ltotl
Th• ln0$I 11trllst•nl 109 lltVf Of ,ur ,.., .as>«led lo cantl,,.,. Into
lhls mor,.lng with l•mmtd •Ir
termlntl' ano V\olri.<I 1<hedvl•• Ille
result, Along with more ltftder·
-der n1911,.,., c0411slons
Th•<-109 Clo...., I.OS Ano-le• lft•
""n•tlonel AlrPOrt to llndlnos for
11urly ... """" MoncltY "'°'"'"' btloft ti .,.,, •--V9'1blllly In -omt Pl41Cts was llmlled IO only • few
leet. Ftlollt~ •ho -•• Ol>t"P'ltel at
Or•no• County's Joh" W•Ynt Alrpo<I.
11.S. SIUIJ Id ...
T"-<old "911 ...,., muc:ll ot lhe
RoOIH -Plllin• eftdRcl Mond•y u
strono winch 111-werm .,, owr the
<lfllrel RK•les encl Into Ille centre!
Pl•lt".
"°''"'rn ...... fnql-. Ind lft lhe 30\
•nd•ei--. ....
TL11.!1m.-er
MATION
Duluth
F•1tb-8"._\
Hartford
Honolulu
,l:IOllllOft
lndnapll\
l •\ "'"0-' Loul\•111~
Nll1m1
Nlpls Sl.P "'•Sl••lllt Ntw Ori•..,,
New York
Not1ol-
P11•nd, Mt Piiand, Or•
Rtno ~" l •kt S.•tllt
St l.OUI\
St P "T•fn!N
SI SI• Nl•rit ., ....
Tyl ..
Wohl"OI"
CAl.ll'OllHIA
10 10 ,. .33
7S 00
13 15 50.~A !
J) tJ
•• j<J
• t 11
IS •1 JI 11
41 ,.
17 »
31 O'
J8 n
" ·10 SI SJ s• lA
4S lJ
S1 41
)I ll u ..
73 C»
.. >I ]f ,,.
JA tt
Applt Vello IS "
Balitrslltkl •• •
A cold air mau movlno Inland
from It. 0<Nn Is UM<ltd lo db
SIP•I• 1>y ton'9hl. l•evlno Ptrllaos some lo'f ,_ to <anttncl wllh, but
Sult-lltfll -el'd frffrl,,. lfl Le Btaumont 1S o
Bl>lloel H 2'
nol Ille thlo, bllnttlno 109 o1 111e p .. 1
two nl9llls
Temper .. 11res •Ito •re UP«ltd to
rlM vr~ly .to lllOfl1 of M to 72 aftd
IOW\ of .. to J3
,.,,, U t.nditd from tlW Clfllr•I •ncl .... , ... ,,,, 11 -OS
nort,_,,, RoOffl «-the nor1Nrn Aleu-S• 11
Pl•lns -Into 11W G•HI LA•es. Amerlllo .. 21
Tlltrt w .. r•lll In 110rt11-cenlr•I Ancllor... 01 .u
F lorld• •nd from Ill• P•cltl< Atl11111• lJ 1• NO•tll~t Into Ille __.,, Inter· At11111t< Cty 3l ti
mounl•ln f991eft. 11e111..,... Jt °' At ConcOf'd, ff.H'., MonNy's 1-ot lltmlftltWft 41 2'
11 ............. "' ,_.... • ,... •1-•rtll u "
Catall"• n SO
El Ctn1ro 1 s o f1t•••• .. u f'rnna SI «
l.ance>ttf Tt JI 1.ono 11 .. ac11 6A o
l Ot Af19eles 70 SI
The· JC't•p also rolled when
m :1 k 1 n I!. .1 q 111 c· k ·' c v a~ 1 ,, e
maneu\l·r"' ~uc·h a-.. a s uddl'n
turn to a\111d an ohJer·t 111 1t~
path. th~· report ~•ml
A r t:orchng lo "'tiO M 1nutes."
t lw eomµan\ said it performed
tht> s:.imt· tc•sts and the Jeep did
1101 roll. C'orn•s pondent Morlel
~;ifrr "aid .lt·cp reµresentat1ves
dec·l1ncd 111he 1ntc•rv1ewcd
J\I Coldherg. a s pokesman for
I he T11lcd11·bas ed corporation,
s aid JN·1>'s p;ire nt compa ny .
1\merican Motors Corp , "as n •·
viewing the program
Tht> l'Olnpany said in a stall·
m e nl: "We and o ur J eep
CJ customers rec·ogn1z e that
utility \'E'h1 cles han · dr" 1ng
l' h a r a c· t e r 1 s l 1 c· s t h a t a r e
!>Om ev.hat different than tht1:\l' of
regular passenger c ars
"Jeep ('J \"eh1 cle!'I are !.pec·1al
\'ehicles that perform their 1n
tended tasks vcn well The\ are
s afe vehicles when driven In·
tell1genlly on road and off
road ...
The program said the in
s urance institute tl'sts found that
the Jeep, with its highe r cente r
ot gravity, was "'far more likely
to roll O\ er than a pa!.senger
car
Th e µrogram s aid Jeep
told 1l the company now includes
literature v.1th new Jeeps ex-
platntnl! that the utility vehicle
does not handle hke a ty pical
pas!>engl'r t·ar
.1-;arltcr this vcar, researchers
<i t the l'n1 vers.1t~ of M1 ch1gan's
ll1 g h"a ~ Safet~ Res earch
Ins titute said utllitv vehicles de· S l~ne<J for USe On a nd Off paved
roads were 5·11 times more like·
ly to roll over than passenger
cars and had a rate of fatal acci-
dents almost 40 perce nt higher
AMC disagreed with the report.
Give an lrl'ine
Marathon Tee Shirt
•POMONA FIRST FEDERAL
5325 Uni versity Drive
•WELLS FARGO BA NK
5401 University Drive
• Z·B TRAVEL AND TOUR
532 1 University Drive The -child or adult runner in your life will ap-
preciate a gift of an offi cial World Masters Marathon
of I r vinc sJ>('ctator lee shirt. _
The maJor West Coast race is January 25, 1981
Shir.ts in the city 's colors -blue and green -are
available now from these Irvine Chamber or Com·
merce members .
•THE SPIGOT
18044 Culver Dri\'e
•IRVINE SAVINGS AND LOAN
Culver Drive at Wa lnut Ave.
• WALKER AND LEE Real Estate
5396 E . Walnut A ve nue
· 'Jrn"ISROWCA"SES
4624 Barranca Parkway
•BON AMIE
4616 Ba rranca Parkway
•HOBIE SPORTS fRVINE
4708 Barr anca Parkway
•J.T. PEJUWJNKLE
4614'Barranca Parkway
•MAZON FABRIC EMPORIUM
4720 Barranca Parkway
•WOODBRIDGE WINE & SPIRITS
4724 Barra nca Parkway
Onl '650
)'Proceeds benefit
Irvine Chamber of Commerce
Scholarship Fund
Kristen Engel and Irvine
..illllll Chamber Sports Committee
'1111111 Chairman Arlyn Smith
Run With Official
Marathon Tee Shirts.
yH t-olcl.-Ofett .. 9N. ..... SI JO ----~INW.._-----tltil'* 16:::---+--.!!DT.:~=~---t"°?.T~t~m!per:!! .. ~"-::_'"~.,~~~ ... ~'°"~.r:.-.-------"!13~14 $k0ft01ow -•~4'p.m. t.t
s..., ...... 11dn
'i11u .. Hr .no Sutlo•• •I ..ov 00 no< ........ ~ "°"' coo. 11. • • ... (Oil
bl'fc;t,., It J rn 4fftl1 'l"l'hl-1 (tW't'I ""'" t»
l)i"h\if'otf\f1
c: ......... , ........
Mu"()<-~., At•"' 60 '4UI ...,,,~t •1u"t1~~A.~ t\ . ..., -,..~.. . ... "" (~ c·~· c;..o...u.,..., ,.~ <;·~""""''-""'"" Dal\e,,.,.,.. -LAQv"• l.to•""'"'-9<.... .. ......
............ Fie., te -......... -~ n ,.-5.<0ftf...,. 11:u p.m. 4.'
Mio# 11111 •1 llll'ltStoftt, IMIM. Clll,... JI 1' w•oet•IOAY
R•ln~ w.n teNutl tOCMy Clncl-1 JI U Fl,.,tlow 4:11•,m. 2.1 11ont Ille 1"1<111< Cont from Cltwl-U 01 Fl"t .,._,. 10:11 1.m. •.O
nortMr" c.tlfoml• _..,,.., • ..,.. °'""" .. JS Sunrl-6!M•.m.,Mts •.4'ftt.m. 1<r•t~ ,,. _,,..,.,, Plat-, <lwlftt• 0t1 ... 11 U II Moon •Is 7' • •.m .. ''"" •· lO p .m • 1119 'jo \nlw enr tllt fttrtlltrft '
1100"' -... , • ..,. Pl•ln•. s..... ·S...M,.. €•Ulor1tla !'tf9'1 .._..,.. •M tMW tlwrlft _,. '-'"1-r r-mY<ll tf .,,. Ort« LHtt ,....... encl
lft .. tM..........,, Attentk 1tet"
"""' In "" mllll ,.., ... encl 7h
wert ~·--Ille _l .. fll lttll'il ..... t_, ,_ .. ,., w ....
In IM W-IM 1111 fr-U. MrtMfll
11.Cklft tlWWlll IN -MIMIM• •I Yalley, GHet l.alln 111d lftlo
...............
A"t Mn Dir' I t SW I J SW
t J SW
' J 1"
·---
CALIFORNIA ..
Cns••u Kt1st•111 11.,ed
C as l'V Ka'\l'lll ( ldt ) famed fo r his week Iv
ra<ij1; program ... :\lllt'l'll'U '::,T op 40, .. a run -
down ol t ill' top µopular :-.ungs and tunes of
the µrt'\ 1ous Wl'<'k . has married_ a<.'lress
Jean Thompson 111 l.os •\n).!t•lt•.., T bt• I '•
.J t.' ~s t' .J a(' k !'> () n l f'I J.! h l I' I. I I 111 1111' d I I l
t:crt•mom al thl• Ht•I \11 l lntt I I t '•"'
· ~l tkl' h11:h wa~ best 111:111
Desert plans unveile
12 11tillio11 acres f·all under proteciio11
I.OS 1\Nl:£·:1.1·:S (i\1'1 The long-a wa ited fin al
'C'l '>IOO of a plan to managl' and protect 12 million
a1·ri·-, of <'t1 ltforn1a 1h'st'rt has been releas ed by t he'
l ' S llurt•au of I .and M a nagemPnt
· · M~ gut rN1<·t i<in is this ts just the s tart in~
point ." .lt·rry I ldltt•1', B l.M distrfrt manager. sa id
!Vrnncl•n "Tlw real work is in front of us in terms
of p1·0,:1<1tni.: t•nfnn•c·mc•nl and fac'ilities."
TllE f>l.J\N WAS DEVELOPED, under a 1976
congression al mandatl'. over the past three years
at a c-ost of $Ii million ll will govern a fierce but
fragile· arNt t ill' size of Ohio half of it under
Rl.M c·o11trnl for the next 20 years
The a~cnc:i suhmilled a draft version. with
four planning <Jll l'rnat1 ves. last February and col-·
lcc·t cd comment from more than 9.000 peop le and
oq~an1wtions lwfor<' unveiling its prorosed plan in
Scµtcmlwr .
Hillier :.a ic'.I in a \Pl<·phonc 1nterv1ew another
:\.500 publH· l'nmml'nh v. r·n· rl'ccived on the pro-
21 vehicles
crash in fog
I.ON<; 1n:1\t'll 11\11 ~ /\ t hick fog and
rnotonsb 1uq11·1·pa1Td f1ir slippt·r~ eond1lions arc
tic•111g hlarrwrl fur thrt't.' fn•cwa) <:tC·<'irlent~ in w1lv
ing 21 v1•l11c-h·s that ll•ft f11u r people with minor in
1uries The :weid1•nt s on the San Uiego f'reeway.
tJ11c involving 15 care;, forcecl the Califo rnia
llighway Patrol to C'lose the north bound
l:int'" of 1nt rr<,\al l' •\05 for nt·arly twQ hou rs while a
dozen aut ornnbil<•s w1•re towed away anr1 the
hiJ:!h\\ a~ ''as !'lt•ant•d up
·'Th<' rmub Wt'r<' wC't t from the fog 1 and the
drl\ er:-un•n t prcpar<'d for wet roads." s aid CH P
offrc(•r Hunalrl Perkins
Tht· ('Ill' c;;rnl th<' frrc;t c-ras h. a three vehicle
acc1rlcnt, occ•urred al about 7·45 am Sunday Only
minute•.; l:1tl'r \~\ 11thl"r VC'h1t'lc~ slammed together
nearll\
pos al and after ·:111al ) 1111~ all llit· puhl11 111r111t .•II•
after manHgcment rl•v1t•w. WI' 11111 \\t1,1l '""' '11 1
be charactcriit•d as f!n1• I uninJ! I v.11u11I lw•i• .1l•· 1 •
use the term s ignif11·;inl .. with rcl!.trd lo th1 rh.111;••
made in thl'final version
Thl" !)Ian. descntwd at a H1\l·r~11!1· !\l'W 1 111
fer encc Mondc.iy, di v11lcs the <11".;1•1 t 1r1111 f•1111 '"·'1'''
categories wilh varying reslnd1on:-11 1111 , '"I
mino r houndar) t hangt•s '"'"' 111ad1· 111 1!1•
C'atcgories, whirh rPm a1n 0111..,th u1..-.111tJ1111 ·d "' I•
proposed plan
The mos t rc·stntll\ l' 1s C'la<,s c or 1 onl c1Jl1 I
for lands which are tandulates for 11ff111Jl pr11t11
lt0n a s wilde rne ss «iotrl•as if approvt·ll h\ Conl!' •·
These roadless a reas total about 2 mlll11>0 ..inc
Nearly six m illion widely scattered an·a•
a lmost ha lf the total, are placed 111 Class r. or
limited zon es. where natural c;cen1r N '• I• • t
c ultural resources wtll be protected l\rce-,i. v. 111 h•
per mitted but limited
T HE ('I.ASS M. OR ~·ioin;tti\TI-. 11-.1· '"'H
total about 3 :J million cierc.., whC'11· <H l1\1l11· 1 .. i
ing from mrn1ng \11 rt'<T<•a111111 ,111· p1•rrn111
<·ert:.i in rt's lrll'l lllll~
About :.i lwtr m1ll1,o(t ;Jf'rt•s 1r1 · •It , r 1
Cl ass I, f<11 1111C'lls l\1· u-.(• \\ lir·r1· \\lrt. r .111 .r
trv1llC'~ :.ire pt•rrn1t1Pd
"I fee l generall y f.!ood al.lout thr di r•·('' • l.
plan is l:ak111g ... 1111111·1 s ;11tl ·II r•· I'"'' 1
most of lh<· inti•n·st g1 oup'> .111d fl• 111111 \ '" '
commentc•cl, although ma111 ,,f tli••111 •"' 11 1•
sa y their ox has hc·c•n gored
"THF. n .. ;sERT 1s <:01N<. 111 11 rii••1 , 1
ble, hut an•tis thut a n· 1 (·<ill~ I 1,11•il1· ,er 1· 1., 11
be proll:tte<I · ·
Th<• plan 1·all-, for ali11111 S1 • 11111111.r 1 ·
pl<·mcntal1on rwx1 1 '''" .1111! """'' SI· r 11 1
\<'Ctr aflN th:.it
· ll1l11cr s aid 11 :ds11 1ndud1·-, I'''" 1 1111
view ancl poss1hh· <JnwnrlmPnl" f111 "·•' h 111 • 11
few years
I.OS i\N(; F.i.ES !/\ P 1 II\ ;1hc1u1 :~1 I" r• • 111
City personnel havt th<· full t1n11 · ••111 1 ,
begun an PXpt•rrml'ntal T Ir l' 1·' ,, • 1 1 11 r
f o u r ·d ay work w c 1• k ~I' h l' ii 11 Ii-ti , • t
'Tl*dmy, O~ember 23. 1980 s DAIL y PILOT M
.Gasoline pinch expected
OPEC action to boost prices in V.S.
l.O~ o\N GELF.S IAPl The O P EC boost in
c·1 u<l1· orl prrccs a lre ady 1s registering at the
~usohm• 11urnp. h ut Ame n ca ns won't really reel
t he pinch until !>prina:. oil industry expert Dan
f Ull{ft:Wr.: 'W \ '\
The <'urrent edition of the weekly Lundberg
L1•tt e r said thl' l<1rgcst gasoline price impact will
Ill' fl'lt 1n M;1rl·h. when , it predicts, gasoline prices
will !'>oa1 In SI :l:l a g allon Americans could face an
:I\ i·ra~·· pnl't' of Sl.4.5 a gallon by December, 1981,
1111' ll•1t P1 saul
M l'<:i\NWllll.E, I N NE W YO RK, the trade
11•·v. ~h·ttt-r Petroleum Intelligence Weekly said the "'•11 l>ehwcn Iraq and Iran helped hold the output. ,,r tht' uri:.rnu.atwn of P etroleum .EXl>Orting Coun-
1 rr •. ., In ~t JO year lo"' 111 October ·
'I ht• Lund IH' r g Lett c r . d 1 s l r i b ut e d by
I 11111!1 •'1 i' -.a11l thl· •1' 1·1 age µrrre increase an -
... _____ _
l80UT $) lftGREAT I • 1701NNER
.\
l.. t •lid~
I t /lrr n, ,...-
1\ II,){• ) •
nounced by OPEC at its meeting In Ball, In·
donesia, last week could come to S3 a barrel.
The increase will a ver ai e six cents p er gallon
of petroieum p roducts tor American consum ers.
the pu blication s aid.
Lundber g said a s urvey of 14,000 s t at ions
a cross the U.S. last weekend, showed an accoss·
the -board increase of eig ht-tenths of one cent for
all types of gasoline, while refine rs took a n im -
med iate penny inc r ease.
GASOLINE SOLD AT both s elf-service and
full service stat ions averaged Sl.22, compared to
$1.21 the weekend of Dec . 5: Refiners'prices went
from 9f:l.07 cents to 99.06 cents d uring the sa m e
per iod.
Lundberg s aid his s urvey indicated the in·
creases took place with in the la st fou r days.
It .J
-------ABOUT $6 .. Aft SUPERI
... 7DINNERI
G00<1 lrJ1 1we1ve u1cces 01 1u1c.y golelen 1,>•own Kenlucky
F11eo Cn1c~f·n ..,,th ">I• roll'> plu) your cno;ce of e11ner a
1arge c.01e ">law '" .i 1d1qe masne<1 ooia1oes anel a small
gra•y l ir 1 INO ollPr"> pllr 1.oupon pe1 cus1ome1 0 40 C.u'itl'lll"'I ""'" ~11 .,ppr.caoie sales ta•
GOURMET
MARKET
Merry Christmas
·from
all of us
at Delaney's!
\\ «' ''Ill h<' d os e d Dec. 25 to e nj oy the holiday at ho m e.
11111•11 X .1.rn. lo I p .rn. Oec. 2~
ELANEY'S
Store Hours 9-6, Closed Sunday
2920 Newport Blvd .. Newport Beach
. 673-5520 ,\' 11un11nglon H<'ath rcs1dcnl. Jeff Gude , 35, '
... was amnn~ thns t' rn1ur<'d 1n tht' s econd crash. lie
was tr<':rt1•<l at Pa<'1f1<' llosr11ta1. Loni? n each, a nd afte r the 'tlY .i,;ow1cil J.!.Lll µlu._u.:.c..:.....L.IL -....L.L~--
aulhorizcd p articipation :m,ooo
CelelJrities ronrerned
I
President-elect Ronald Reagan, wife Nan-
cy, and sportscaster Vin Scully (right )
watch as a man in audience at Riviera
Country Club in Brent wood, fai nted. A
wom an witnessing the weekend incident at
t he reception for Reagan, shouted "get out
of here, Ronald, .. before she was l~d away
by Secret Ser vice agents.
...
, classic w1ndbriakcz.r. ..
·t,~\ fr\ th<i origmal G-9 ~ wind bnza\·w .. r, 1dcz.o1 fb[
· ~lfor outdcorwz.or
!f mad£ of' hght~i~ht
I 1 cotlon· pophn w1th e
\ tartan lm1aj
evalloblcz. m natn.ra11
br\l,,5h ten, navy
or nzd.
rrOOrl.. ibr us in rzng lt!nd..
44 Fb.shion Is land· Newport Beach· 714/6 44·5070
1001 \\estwood Blud.·~stwOOd Village·213!419·11:Z1
~~1to~~·1 ~. ~~.~ .. ~ ................. lllll ................. ThQtN .... 1.P •. H.a.le•y•/•P•ub•l•lt.ht.' ... T.~ ... 1 .. Kee .. v•ll•/E•d•lt .. w ~.. ..-... .=' :...~ T'*lllW, °"*'._at, 1• a.r~ra Krtlblch/Edltorlal P191 Editor ,. • Or noa Coa1'1 011ly Pilot
Key ruling backs
zoning by ballot J
CaHlomaa' Supren1e Court hu ruled an a potentially
( r rflich1ng deC',slnn that 08l• Me.ans were wilhin
tht'u M~hl.S when they voted in 1977 to chanae land aoned
for avurtments to II s ingle family houtin& &One.
rhe Ion~ av. a1te<I d~cuuon wti received with Interest
nut onl) b\ the ('Ill of <'oe1ta Mesa , property owners and·
thl' t>~h Ct~ta Me.sll llomwwn~r. AHO<'iation but by
•'•" t•mnumt atiNll'll~ throughout the -.tale
Tht• horut't•'4 net.., ~roup wa~ con<'~rned over the
I"'"' •bit> 11np1.u: t ul 539 upartmt:nt 11nJ 127 houses
, rnv. d•xl onto ~ ..i< rt:~ JWll north of the San Diego
.. r t*t'" ff\
lh rultn~ ttJo!uHl~t tht-uwut=NS ol lht: propeljly to be de·
\ t•lupt"t \rnt:I llrH>lu~mcnl Co ctntl South toast Plaza
th .. · :'\Upr t<rtlt> l 'uur l '>lated that a ll ionang is a
lq:.t~IJll\t' µrort''-"
l'ht·rt:fort' 'otcr:-. ..idin~ a:> lt:~1:,laturs through the
litdlot pnJ('t' 1> 1111;1) rcwrn~ almo:,l any prnperty , the court
I ~lt ll~ llllhl·atl'!\
I tt")~·r~ a rc JU~l begrnnrng to -.rud y ra1n1f1cations of
l.l ... I l'hur ')tl<J \ rulmg
\mung po:,:,1btlit1 t~ ra1:,ed 1s the feasibility of
hu 111L•u" nt-rs b.tru.l ing to~ether tu th wart large com
t11l·n·1jl 1>r indu:>tnal project:> _cons idered obj_eclionable. .
Hut. law\ er:, sa y, such acts could depend on a
11u111t>4!r llf other ractors as does the case just reviewed.
Strll to be a djudkated in a lo wer appellate court is
the 1n1t1ative·s legality when compared with long.range
planning documents s uch as a city's master plan.
Abo to be cons idered 1s whether the initiative was
<.Liretlt'd to block a s pec ific project.
But make no mistake, if the Supreme Court's ruling
s tands, the potential effects have vast sociological as
"ell as legal ramifications. If a c ommunity of citizens
l·an vote on the ultimate use of undeveloped land, a set of
controls never before considered will be in effect.
It would mean. for example, that a city's majority
vote could override a low.cost housing project. Or a shop·
µing center. Or. carrying it to the extreme, a low·density
exclusive residential development that might be viewed
with disdain by res idents who resent an intrusion by rich
folk .
-whatever way the Costa Mesa decision is interpreted,
if it stands as it now appears, major changes in all forms
of building development seem to be before us.
Coast plans progress
Orange County is moving ahead on completion of
stale-mandated Local Coastal Plans <LCPs) to meet the
July 1 deadline for their certification by the state Coastal
Commjssion.
On that date. the s ix regional Coastal Commissions
wi ll go out of existence and local city and county govern·
m ents will regain their authority to issue permits for de·
vt:lopm ents on the coast. Their obligation, of course, will
ht:' to see that t he d evelopments conform to the approved
L<'P.
Last week the county's Board of Supervisors ap·
µroved four more or these documents for submission to
the state commission.
They cover unincorporated areas on the Irvine Coast
be t ween Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar, portions of
Laguna Canyon and the community of South Laguna.
Only one of the proposed plans -the one for South
Laguna -stirred a major controversy that resulted in
some modification.
In the face of bitter objections from residents of the
2fi6·unit Treasure Island mobile home park, the board
modified a proposed tourist-recreational designation by
1 m (rns ing an additional designation that would also
pt·rmit mobile home park use on the site.
The controversy was sparked by a proposal to con·
struct a 24·story lime·share hotel on part of the park prop·
erty.
Whether the dual tourist.recreational/mobile home
park designation will meet with approval of the state
commission remains to be seen .
But, given the existing nature of the quiet seaside
tom munity, it seem s obvious that low-density residential
zoning which in this case offen needed affordable
housing would be preferable to high intensity recrea·
tional use with its accompanying traffic problems. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of tM Daily Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their author9 and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Cosla Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boyd/Dormouse
Rowland Evam I Robert 'NovQ
Appointments stirring conce
WASHINGTON -Back ln
California after beln1 announced
as sectt\ary of defense, Caspar
Welnber1er placed calls to
Republican mem~en of the
Senate Armed Services Commit·
tee tbat deepened lhe loss of joy
amona Reaganites six weeks
after their great victory.
Weinberger told the senators
be wanted as deputy secretary his
o wn selec ··
lion : Frank
Carlucci, a
career civil
servant who is
deputy direc·
tor of Presi·
dent Carter's
ClA. Having
h e a r d
rumbl es
agai n s t
Carlucci 's appointment. Wein·
berger wanted the senators to
know how much he needed the
bureaucrat who was his deputy at
two domestic agencies in Nixon·
Ford days.
Almost surely, Ronald Reagan
will ignore muted alarms from
Capitol Hill and satisfy the wishes
of his defense secretary. That
guarantees more anguish within
the Reagan transition, and raises
some unpleasant questions:
Why is Reagan gelling a sec·
Earl Waters
retary and deputy sttretary at
defense who both need remedial
coura_es ln military nuts and
bolU? Why did be plck a reputed
bud1et·cutter <"Cap the Knife")
to rebuild the nation's leaky de·
fense structltt'e? Why is be nam·
Lng a deputy without known con·
viclions on national security who,
fairly or not, is lied to the Carter
administration's undermining of
American intelligence <and
whose n ickname in C IA
backrooms is' 'Hamiel''>?
THE ANSWER falls under th.is
rubric, delivered by a senior
transition officiaJ, on Reagan de·
cision-maklng since Nov. 4: ·'Dis·
o q~anize'd , disco nne c ted .
lackadaisical." Other transition
aides about to return to private
jobs agree. Viewing the nation on
the brink of domestic and foreign
chaos. they have been stunned at
the lack of urgency shown by the
president-elect and his inner cir·
cle.
None of this was obvious In the
euphoric post-election mood
when defense experts converged
on the Pentagon lo plan the
Reagan takeover. To them, Cap
Weinberger was just a ""kitchen
cabinet"' member in California
who during the campaign wanted
restraints on defense spending
Never did they dream or bJm as
secretary or defense.
One reason the non-dream be·
came reaUty is the mlsconcep·
lion of the kitchen cabinet's aged
millionaires that governing a
great nation is like running a big
corporation. Falling to perceive
that the secretary of defense is
responsible for policy rather than
administration, they 1houghl of
Weinberger managing the Pen·
tagon much like the Bechtel Corp.
Reagan did not disagree.
NO DEFENSE secretary h~s
been less familiar with defense
problems s ince Charle y
Wil son In 1953 (wh e n th e
hardware was simpler and the
dangers more distant)_ Wein·
berger's transition experts are
preparing elaborate dossiers and
hours of tough questioning so he
can survive Senate confirmation
headngs. They -also recommend
an experienced deputy secretary
for Weinberger to lean on in
choosing policy options.
The list is long: William Van
Cleave. a nuclear arms expert
who was a Reagan campaign ad·
viser and heads his. d efense~
transition team; Dr. John Foster,
former Pt?ntagon research chief
and now a TRW, Inc., vice presi·
dent; J . Fred Busey, president of
Texas lntrumenta; former depu·
ty secretary Paul Niue, a eon-
verted Rea1anUe; Ambaaaador
Seymour Weiss, former SUte
Department polltico·milltary
chief. Outside the list, a push bu
been made for Tom Reed, a
former secretary of the Air
fo'orce.
BUT WEINBERGER insists on
fellow neophyte Carlucci, show·
ing as little Interest in a
knowledgeable deputy as Rea1an
did in a knowledgeable secretary
Nor did he share apprehension by
defense transition officials that as
a senior intelligence official of the
Carter administration. Carlucci
could not be totally separated
from itsdemolitionoftheCIA.
VanCleave's mensetouttofind
evidence of Carlucci 's complicity
but discovered none. ("Frank
does not leave footprints." said
one prOber.) His govermental re-
cord is distinguished, crowned by
service as ambassador to Lisbon
during the Portuguese crisis of
the mid-19705. But he shows no
ideological commitment to
Reagan 's national security
policy. ··He could work as easily
for George McGovern as Ronald
Reagan," one transition official
told us.
Neither policy views nor ex ·
pertence seem to rate high in fill·
ing other Pentagon posts. Rep.
Robin Beard of Tennessee, an ex.
pert on the volunteer army. would
bring rare expertise if named
secretary of the Army But Beard
may be passed over in favor of
John Marsh, a White House aide
under President Ford. The
reason: Jerry Ford wants it. as a
pe rsonal favor
Dr. John Lehman. a former
deputy director of the arms con·
trol agency <ACDAl. is unus ually
qualified fo r secretary of the
Navy But be may be passed over
for a jWlior member of the kitchen
cabinet : Bob Nesen, a 62·year·old
Cadillac dealer from Thousand
Oaks. Calif.
Nobody planned a Pentagon
hi e rarchy so lacking in both
background and policy commit~
ment. As with most new ad·
ministrations. 1t just happened.
Wh a t make s this cause for
anguish is the nation's desperate
condition as it changes govern·
ment ~ a condittion not often
refl ected the last six weeks in the
pres ident-e.lect 's hunt and·peck
Cabinet-making
Brown's rail plan needs industry skills
It is small wonder that Mike
Royko labe lled Jerry Brown
''Governor Moonbeam." His
h yper ·imagination has leapt
from bicycles to outer space and
from woodstoves lo solar power
as be desperately struggles to
become the new Messiah to
California's energy dilemmas.
After six years of listening to
bis clarion calls hailing hastily
conceived
brainstorm
which are
juat a.a hastily
forgott en
.once the im·
•plausabilily
O ( his COD ·
cepts stand
revealed, it
has become
c l ear that
ca n you convert to alternate
energy sources which are yet far
distant from becoming perfected
and economically sound.
HIS LATEST flight of fancy is
yet another example of trying to
put something together before it
has been thoroughly thought out.
This is his plan for the state to de·
velop a modern high.s peed
passenger rail system linking
California's major metropolitan
areas.
L .A and S an Di e go an d turn in recent years Perhaps
Sacramento anti San Francisco too. there 1s a need for tax 1ncen
train time would actually he less lives and other encouragements.
than the overall time consumed Rut the planning. financing.
going by air_ building and operation s hould be
But the idea of the state gov le ft rompletely to the private
ernment designing, building and sector free of governmental tn·
operating a railroad is appall-terference
ing. Imagine the fiasco which The state could also be of
would result with the politicians great assistance in securing
and bureaucrats tugging and rights of way. their highway
hauling, tampering and meddl· people have acquired great ex·
ing at every step of the way. pertise in that area.
Brown s a ys he plans lo
BESIDES, what ever hap· spend $300,000 for Phase I of his
pen ed to private enterprise? rail project That is to select the
There is today a greater need routes where such service would
for r ail passenger service in be most feasible and to choose
California than there ever was the most appropriate high speed
dreamed of when Southern technology He would do better
Pacific and Santa Fe first laid to spend it bringing together the
down their tracks up and down bes t brains of industry and
the state. Ha ving recognized the finance and let them do their
need a wise governor would call own planning and selections. He
upon the industrial and financial admitted he has no idea what
r.
ByL.M. BOYD
Q What'sad~r..mous~
female cook who manages a
kitchen.
Brown's problem is a mouth that
moves before his brain is in
gear. Or, perhap__s in his burning
a mbition to be Presidnt, a
~r:§QD_al timetable whlclL.rom·
pels him to move before all
parts are in place.
,Considering the high
costs of gasoline together with
its diminishing supply along
with the lime, inconvenience
and congestion of auto travel
and parking problems that go
with it, rail alternatives would
indeed be attractive. With the in·
creasing hazards of congested
airports along with the high
airfares and the bother getting
to and from airport.a, rails must
seem the ultimate answer_
~tlis is-e~peeially tr..ue when it
is realized that there would be
small difference in the overall
lime of travel between Los
Angeles and San Francisco, all
things considered, wben going by
high speed trains rather than
planes. On shorter runs be~ween
giants of the stale lo develop the whole project might cost.
such a project with their own re· That is under,Standable..wheA-he----.
SOOTC8'.'" --contemplates state government . A U e rodent that looks
something like an under·
sized squirrel. You don't see
them around here. But
the y 've been common in
Europe for ages. The
Romans even domesticated hem. About Ule•time Be_~
ti~11s ttre tamine-byenu.
And the Scythians were milk·
mg elk.
Q. What do you call a lady
chef?
A. Don't know, don't know.
The big book al hand defanes
a chef as a "skilled male
l'Ook who manages a
kitchen." Doesn't say
an ything about a skil~d
Dear
Gloomy
Qutt
Q . What 's "q ua si ·
marriage"?
A. It's what uaed to be
called common law mar·
riage. Probably dreamed up
by the same people who
popular\seCI .. vi•ble, ••
"e1aUtari1111"' aacl ••aodo-
ttonomic."
Medical records indicate
that lint babies 1ired by
fathen after releue from
military service tmd to be
boy•. Al9o, ID09t babies C!OD·
celved by military fathers
home on leave are 'bo71.
There ii an ~planation for
it, accordin1 to Brltl1b
mecllCOI. Parents biChJ1 lie·
live in the romance depart·
ment tend to have relatively
more boys than 1irll.
Report is that 1reat new
demand ba1 1et the
chartmakera to turnln1
out maps of Iran and
Af ghanbtan as rut u tbej
can.
In the proper perspective his
notions are not always as flaky
as they seem. But you can't
force people into mass transit
systems that don't ex isl. Neither
Art Hoppe
,
Perhaps there is a need for doing it.
some kind of a state authority to The irony is the whole thJns
pa v ~ the way through the might have been done for the SS
myriad layers of governmental billion he so cavalierly frittered
regulations, permits and4 other away in bail-out funds playing
roadblocks which have been Santa Claus to the local govern.
,Uym leini. progress a&. .everv men ts attEfrpa~ngeor PfflJ{.1!'.'
Ainerican dietary rules can confuse a newco01er
I ran into my friend Wots Nu a California state senator has butcher, .. May I have som·e / "What did. he do with them,
in the supermarket the other just introduced a bill lo make horse?" then?" asked Nu.
day. Nu ii a rttent imml1ranl lo eating cats or dogs against lhe "Nor horses,"' I said, "except "He gave them to someone
our shores and often hu trouble law. He heard you refugees had in emergencies. We love horses.
undentandin1 our ways. been lrapptng them in the park. Horses are our fa~hrul servants else to eat. of course ... I replied.
"Please, have you any dog to. He wu horrified as we consider and the heroes ot cowboy mov· By now. Nu bad his pound or
day 1 ' ' be them, aa he put it, 'members of ies. Eat horses? Cows, yes. hamburger and we proceeded to
a 1 k e d the the family.· " horses. no." the next aisle. Suddenly be
b u t c h e r , "Ab, at last," said Nu, turning slopped. "You have misled me,"
cauaina the "Then 1 must go home and to the butcher. "A pound of cow he cried. "Look, thousands ol
lady behind lock up my ch.ildren, .. said Nu please... cans of do.c food to eat! .. nervowly. ''For I have read of him to IHP tbe painful experiments your I shuddered. "We caU lt beef, "No, no, that's not do1 meal
and clutch acientlstaJ.erform on these Nu. We also eat veal, wbJch is for humans. It's horsemeat for be,~11~!:.._. members ,your families and baby bed <do not refer to it u doss."
N :-", , "';"111:-1 bow your authorities arrest ;~~l .. ~w'), pork, which is pl&, ''Ah. )'OU do not eat hones
Odd that Nancy Reagan ----O.~l'°'t.-.1>&1All-llllo•lleillei!--l--wM .. 1l~"e1!b------"--::--J.tb~emm....1Afor~vv.:qr11i11:.aa111ac,c)'-IUMll-«MC~l..-::-=::::.::.:.::.=.:.. ___________ eeie-1a'"meiM-yoyou loH them,.....,...,,._-~--.
eems so eager-to move-:You. Hid Ii wit.bout &rial.·• Nu. "Instead you gift them to into the old White House Center la the larant pri•.... ..We--doa°t'____ "AH. YES, 'Mary had a Uttle your-... to eat. ..
When She _..1,. • .-..1 to Uve ly owned bualneN and enter· do11 in America. Do11 are lamb,' "1aid Nu, noddin1. "and --a-
n::1-C'\.I the "NO, NO,'' J Hid. "Tboae in l he g 0 v er n er· s talnment center ln eotm· man's best frtneda." perhaPI a little r1ce. too!"
mansion becal119e of lta try. What about Dltn•Y "Oh," aald Nu ''Then pleue doss and call aren't members al "Good heavens, Nu, she didn't World? may I have aome CJt, lbOUlh il anyone'• family· Anyway• we eat the lamb. Most people can 'l
age. v c A. It sells stock. It's a ii not neatly u 1oocJ 11 dos." don't eat them. Not ever.'' bear to eat animals with whom
public corporation. ''Then what ... " Nu they att personally acquainted. ·~c:n*•" blaHd the lady, bri&bteed. "I know! I beard a It would be like Mr. Rea1an The )M>neshoe crab 11 not •to ol'fto ff'Olell foodt. man only yesterday say he wu penonally eat1n1 t.bose two live
so much a aort of crab Ha I drew Nu ulde. "Nor cata, so huncrY be could eat a whole turkeys he was gtven for
sort of spider. either." I said sternly. "In fact, one. Please," Nu aald to the Thankl.Ovtn.c."
.. PLEA.SE. NlJ, you muat try
to understand all this so you can
become a real American." I
said. "You do want to bffome a
real American don't you?"
'.All thln1• COftlfde.-.d, 1
think I 'll become a real
ve1etarian instead." sald Nu.
--~--·
NATtc>N DAIL v PILOT A 7
'.'Baby brain use differs
Te•t• slww sex behavioral disBimilarities
OENVF.R 1AP> U1tb)' &•rib
and baby boy• uae op11u~lte ldn
of o,. brain wh n lh1tf'n1nac lo
fair talet or musH', t'ltoth1 l:t
havt' found 1'h flruhn" 'lhuuld
f uel lhf' fOnl rov•ri.•)' OH~•
whtt ht't bc>h1v1c11 a. I di rt f'rl'O<'l'"
tM>twffll lht' '•'11tt"" i.1 t• INHnt'<I or
innate
Th• rCltt'•• ('h w• ll'd la Ur
U • ' I d S h u \' 111 r •I ii
P• \•hovhH11olo"1-.1 11t 111 ... Nu
uonal Jt'\111 h tltJsv1tul \l,.t111mal
\ lhm• l'(•ntt'I ht•rt•
Sbu •rd '"1tJ br i.m .... 1tve h ':>l!>
'hu .... lh1111 11\flll\t ijlt ~ r~vomJ Lu
C.ur' tsile:. and mu-.H with 1nt-n
tat lil<'ll\ It In lht' ldt hutr Of ltw
br 1un. ""hilt' mhml tJo b lt·nd to
rl• pond "'''h tht: right h1Jlf
TH E B~N l>lt'l'l.ll ~N('t;:-,
found an the J rnontt) old 1nfa11b
1.1pp .. renll} d1'dJJJH!ar ai. tht:
brain maturt::. ~hut ard '>&1d
bet·ausc no :.ul·h 1.hffcrt-nt c:. <are
found in adultb
Both adult rncn anJ women
Ub ually use the left hemis phere
or the brain for l&n~uagc skills
and analyt1 tal l hink ing whilt-u:.
1n g lhe right hcm1:.vherl' for
'>Pat1al r elat1onb and m us ic" he
'>a id
The brain w<ivc test:. were
c·onducted while <i huhy was be
1ng fed in the arm:. of its
QUEENIE
mother, who wui.' !tCl6tl'd 1n ;an
t•IUIY r hulr
t'' ;a er y t t.1 I 1· ~ u n d m us 1 c a I
jHU1»4A1&e1t W(•ru pluyed to the
b¥1'} thwµi_h h6(hl wtl.tht head
11 h 11 " ,. i. • a n ti I h e b r u 1 n · s
I nvon'tl'lt Wl'I I' pic ked up by
i.t•n1wr tu1~I tu the head and
1lli.11l1t)td 0 11 1>:ruph 11u1>e r in
.anothl'r roo111
SH\1(.Afll) STRADDU.:s the
1•v11trovt'fl>) between st1enllsts
~ho reel l>t-huv1u1 al d1fference1>
iHt' 1'10Jo1>:H'al and thoi.e who reel
Uh' d1fft•rencci. rei.ull from up
tJ111\l(ing and uthcr social force:.
"""'l' rt•!>carC'hc1 !> believe
"onll·n Lhmk und uc·t d1Herently
I rum men lwtuu:-.c they are
hiolug1c·all}' different These
'>l'll:'llti:.h c·ontl'nd that women
'>houhJ not bl' fun ·l'd to try lo
m<ilc:h men in rnalh and phys1ts. ru1 11~letncl', bt'tause they 1n
natel,> don t l:'XC'(•I 1n lho:.e sub·
Jl'Clb
0 t h c r p s y c· h o I u g 1 l> l!> a n d
-toc1olog1s t:-. 11q~ue ~h a't d 1f-
fl'rcnc·es in 111ll'lleclual skills
;,rnd behavwr arc dul' to upbring
ang , cducett1on and s ocial cond1
Ironing c; 1 rls are cntourat(ed not to be
-good a't m athcmalscal tasks
bl•t·ause math 1:. tons1dered a
masculine suhJctt, those scicn·
t111ts HY The sam e argument.s
a re mllde in reverse on the sub-
jel'l of language ski1111 -an area
In which girls are thou ght to ex-
cel. ...
"IT COULD BE that there are
minimal differences between
boys and girls at birth that are
rei nforced by their environ-
ment ," S hu c ard s ays .
· · Hesearchers say male babies
are handled more and fe ma le
babies are talked to m ore."
But his tests may indic ate that
·genetic factors may play a
rnuch larger role than <fSSumed
1n cognitive interests," S hucard
!>Uld
S hucard . his w ife. Janet
Shucard , a nd two other re -
searchers arc t·ont1nu1ng t he
te-.ts. now using 6 month-olds
Me d schools up
WASHJ NC:TON IA.P l
E nrollment in the na tion's 126
rncdkal schools has reached a
rctord. T he Assoc1at1on of
Amcrit·an Medical Colleges said·
65.189 s tude nts e nrol le d in
medic al s tudents thl~ rail. 1,400
or 2 2 µercent m ore than last
year
r ..
Christmas at the Garage
r "'''/ lt1f •1r11·· t , ,,,,r•· ,, . l •• : 1' : i ' n1
11•11 .. ' r.1011 '""', ri ·, • , r • • i . ·1 • , • ., • : 1 , ,
tqll.,r rir 1/·;1!•11.r'••hll: •I' flft
P Hq ,fH!/ •,dtJ•• t i t'" t' •:' ,
) I ...--/~
,
/
/
Is this how
yourbankte
"OU See
er?
~/
/
"Darn stretch fabru:'"
"Got a problem? Then w nte to Pat Dunn Pat will
cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need
to solve ineqwtses in government and business Mall
your questwru to Pat Dunn. At Your Service, Orange
Coast Daily Pilot. P 0 Roz 1560, Costa Mesa. CA
92626 As many letters as posstbU! will be answered,
but phoned inquanes or letters not mcludmg the
reader's full name. address and bwtness hours' phone
number canoot be consuter ed This column appears das·
ly except Sundays "
\
-DEAR PAT I have decided to le<ive a ll m y
hfe ins urance dividends with the company to draw
interest. Will I have to rePort the interest earn'?d
on dividends a s incom e for tax purposes ·1
J .T .. Huntin~ton Beach
Usually, a lire Insurance dividend Is con·
sldered a partial re turn or the premium and
therefore not reported as income. For e xample, If
you leave the dividends with the company to buy
additional amounts of paid-up life Insurance, you
do not have to report this on your tax return.
But any Inte rest earned on dividends left with
the Ille insurance company is generally considered
taxable Income and must be reported . If your tax·
es Involving life Insurance are unusually com-
I
p llclted, you should~lrnrattomey ortarn"'" -
pert for advice.
Otftilc eelda r~arlng...._.
DEAR PAT: Our clipping service provided us
with a copy of an A VS letter from E.R .. Costa
Mesa, that asked about sP<>'¥1al ra'pe cases· and lhe'
raw. Other .readers whO are tnterested irrttre law
o r in the many cases and convictions since it went
into effect Jan. l. 1980, should contact the National
Clearinghouse on Ma rital Rape, a project of the
Women's History Research Center, 2325 Oak St.,
Berkeley 94708. As we are not funded , we require a
stamped, self-addressed envelope for respQnse.
We tfiini you aeserve ==-l>etter. · · -· · -..
L.X .. Berkeley
Tbe National Clearinghouse on Marital Rape
also ls conducting 1 m embership drive and bas
spea1'ers and consultants available. Write to the
above adclttss for details.
'f'az rafr gnfng up
.,.
Come into Imperial Savings. Our telle rs enjoy
their work and it show s. They're fri end ly, and they
know what they're doing.
You'll also find a lot of convenience. Services just
for you. Our hours are longer, and we're even open
Saturda ys.
The New Imperial Checking Account. . DEAR PAT: I'd rather know now than be
shocked the first of next year. How much more
will come out of m y paycheck due to the boost in We think all your money deserves to earn money.
Social Security tax? I read about this several N I 'II f d d · d · I b k months ago, but can 't recall the rate of increase. O onger. WI Un S epos1te ma usua an
J .E., of Colla Mesa checking account fai l to earn interest for you.
'fte rate la 1•1 1oes .. &o I.II ,.ree.a eac•, W 'II 511 Dt. • t t h k" for ••ployer ... ••pleyee, eo•pand .. 1.u ,.,_ e pay you Y4 7f) m eres on your c ec mg
ceat • ••· " •• aH ldper ..... •••• .... account balance. And our problem free checking
~~~a~~~~-~~~~HrtG .• b,•n•r1~··~~~~~ .. ~ .. ~·~·~~~+-~~a~c~c~o~un~t~works3 ways.Picktheone~atworks as.•.-st or you.
Wllat tldl •eau a. tllat II -fw ....... -a
pa1eMd _II .... &lie •• .-ta.km ..a el ll lw .
leclal a..t&J eull pa7 ,.,... wlll ...... •
5'14'X, interest on you r checking
a nd a whole lot more.
We've got the co11vv nil·nt scrvit v:-. l 11r \ 1111. .\J1111c·\
orders, travl'lcr 's check!->. nnt<ir}' . ..,,,ft · ckp , ..... 11 IH>'''"·
and <t lot more.
And with ovcr 100 branrht·-; all 11\1·1 L'.d1f1J1111.1 .
we're alw ays easy to get Jo. So if y11·11 l>;inh tc.:lll'1
isn't alw<iys there, come to lm pvrial ~;1ving .... t1>1l.1\. . .
...... ,.,... ........... u .... ...., ........ ••st••• ..... <•.•> ... , .. tu· ,, .. fw ledal lenrlt7 ,_,1111 .. 1•1, IM
........ fw IM 1ear 11 a le&al el •t,171.M eaela,
Coatll MeM, South Coaat·Plaza Town Center 3310 Bristol Street {714) 540-1591
Newport Beach 3366 Via Lido (714) 673-3130 .. ,..,... ..... ,.., ............... ...,.. .... .
eeea,_ .....,. 'ftelr ,. ........ r.... I.I ,.re•t .................................. Newport Center 550 Newport Center Drive (714) 644-1461
...
.4• DAIL V PIL.0 I
Sex suit
denied
by· court
SACRAMENTO <AP)
SAINT JAMES EPISCOPAL CHVRCH-
3* Via Udo, Newport leaela
lnvltea you to observe with Ill; the dramauc and
joyous events ol Christm~atlde . . ...., f
~HBISTMAS EVE 7:3t P.M. Family festival
. Choral Eucharist
lt:H P .M. Choral
Presenlal1on of
VivaJd1 ':1 G.lofil
11 :OO P.M. Festival Choral
Mai.s and Sermo11 CH RIST MAS DAV • 10: oo A.M. Chor ill
F.uc hur1s1 und SE'l 11111n
' P lJ8LIC NOTICE
,IC:TITIQUI Ml\INeU
NAME S1ATIMl!NT
T ... IOll-109 Ot<\Uf\ I\ l)cMnQ l>U\I
M\\ ·~ l tlflll E 'iALfll 111 0. """ "~" • 41•. Mynllnqlon 6e<l<ll ( • ., ...
Aoborl E ~ ... )) Oo•\911 Or
llunllnQl(ll• Ile&<•• C• 91• ..
ff'U\ °"''"""" I\ r nnthH ...... b y 4'(\ I"
01v1ou .. 1
kVbo,, I l WIK)O•
NATION
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'lc;TITIOUS au111t•H
N.ud ITAT•M•NT
I lie IOl-lllQ !lff\Oft t' de)jt141 IHI\! "'"" ., Ill llEACH TIME AE-'LTV, ltl
8EACll llME REAL ESTATI!, 131
llEACH fl ME AEAl..TOIU. (41
8EACH JIM E PAOPEATl•S. CSI
8(AC.'4 llME ASSOCIATES -i.1 8fACH llME lf'IVESTMENTS, ltAS
IC 1fl9ltl C. I C°'" Mew , C•
8 JH" MOwe•Y. lt<IS Kl"91ft Cl
(u~•• ~..., <:. f hi\ \IO\Hf~ot .,..,,, ltleid w ith th•
(()uni'/ , ... , .. Ut 0tAtt'I°" ( tt1Jflfy un
0.ceM-I• 1-fht\ bu\lntl'\\ 1) condV<.ted by •n '"
~Uttto "'"'du.ti
Publ••i..l V "''°' "''"' D••h Pllol 8 Jt•n Mow~r y
Dec 11 )0 l<lMQ, '''".II"" ~111 IO fl\1\ •I•••,,,..,, w .. ""'" wl01 I,..
A state appeals court
has ruled that a woman
whos e 14·year -o ld
daughter allegedly was
seduced by the school
janitor can 't s ue the
sc hool di s tri c t f or
negligent supervision.
. '. ' ( ount'f' Cl•rk 01 qr•n91 County on
Ot*t ttmbt>, llf, 1tl0
........ ,.....
BAL Tl MORE ZOO'S POLAR BEARS MAY BE DOOMED
Federal government .decitie• uter 'unfit'
'Unfit water' threat
'
to zoo's polar bears
BAl.TIMOH~ tAl'J Three i;Jd n
I) polar bears al the Balt1mun· ZC>o
may eventually have to be µut lo
death because the federal government
says their water is unfit for them to
play m.
Tfie U .S . l>eJ)artment o f
Agriculture s a ys that unless the
wate r in the polar bears' pond 1s
purified with a new S 125.000 r.ltra
lion system the cxh1b1t must be
closed within two years
Zoo director Stefan II Graham said such a m ove probably would
mean the end of the bears
"NO ZOO IN the United Slates 1s
going lo take 25·yeu .old polar bears
nobody would want lo be taking on
geriatric polar bears." he s i.t1d .
'!'he badt-r1a .11 c Jeposilt'd in the
lwt11 s pla.) po111l through fct·al mat
I <·1 , off11·1als saul \
Mu s t o f t h e y e ar . th e
Baltimore Zoo has no problem meet
mg the federal requirement. Graham
said Hut he said in the summe r, the
b a t· t t• r 1 a t' o u n t 1 n t h e w a t er
-;umet1mes :-.oars to the 4,000-MPN
range
The bacteria mult1phcs faster in
heat so lht• <:oliform count naturally
n s es tn the summe r. ht· expl<iined
lie emphasiz'-'tl, howcvt>r, lh<tt this
h<i s l'aU.St.'IJ no proble ms for the polar
bears
The court also barred
th e mother 's s ui t
agains t the district for
the seduction· of her
daughter and negligent
interference with the
par e n t -child r e la ·
tionship
A d1 v 1ded three·
member panel of the 3rd
Di s trict Court of Appeal·
issut'd the ruling
THI-: WOMAN. ide n·
t1fled only as Shirley
Mc . sued the Marysville
J oint Unified School D1s -
L ri c l. s..a y l n g h er
daughter had a sexual
r~lat1onsh1p with the
1an1tor sometime during
th~ HY77-78 school year
Sh(• said s h t.• com
plained t o sc hool
authorities. but they
took no aC'lion As a re-
s ult. s ht' ~ajd, her rela·
t1on s hip with h e r
dauf.(hter worsened. and
the girl ran away from
hom e and was late r
del'larc.>tl a w<ird of the
court
T h e Janitor. Cy ril
Montague Pearce. was
t·harged with unlawful
sexual intercourse with
a minor. but failed to ap·
pe:.i r for a preliminary
hearing in April 1979 a nd
is still being soug ht, s aid
the office.-Of >r'uba Coun·
t y 1>1s tri t·t ;\ ttorney
Thom as M<Jthcws.
TNT
Come In For
Tacos & Tequila
And The
Time Of Your Life!
1300 W. Coo1t HitJllway, M•w,_. •adt CA.
·$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• lnler••f only fNI Y"u•nl
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• SoMthern ~llfornh
'··
'I
(7t4) 759-151 5
AMERICAN HOME MOfHGAGE
/~I .4 .. ftC ,, • • •• ' I (I ' .,.,
'oit "'1; 'lt1•.t I . ,. ' ,,,
CT T: Q ,,,. --.,11·~ -v 1e'WS · n :i._ l'J '"' tw:. ,~A .. ·
fll,11110V~ 8U\1'4E\\
NAME H.t.TfMfNT
'"" l11llO't'w1H;J IJl+(IJ,., f ''')•l•tl ou· I nr"' 4\
IH:i.AtlWOl•lf•, Ml -/1 tt.tn '-t•
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M•1 \f1,1 M Ir.Iii•• lltl• W H.1lh \t
'(tl\li• Mt1\1t C t ''1611
f tu' bu tr•\ 1~ 1111•hHt111 l;1 nn111
lo•..,•tJv·•• f Mitr•h1 "l tfl •t
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P 1tttl tor I 'I'•• 'J' • 4 t
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l't(flllOO\ 8 U\IME\\
M"-"'f \lATFMENI
f P\f' fl'\l11""1ttQ 0--fV "
n"'' "' WE <,t (f,,_.,, 1111111'> ttflf '> l H\
0'111 IA A..-t>'u'" (u\•t M• ~
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l>uDll\iw'd ()tdnQl' C.O.SI O•lly P llol
l>~< n . )0 1'1911. J•n b, 11, '"' S060 60
PUBLl6 NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS f'IAME STATEMENT.
'""' tollow•F\Q ~~ 1~ do.no bu\t
1fl\\ d\
l<JRFSCO l/ltO M onrovia, A'
t .,,1. MO\• C• 'flUI
M•< II.op! l Swa•ll', )10 Ith SI
•hH't•no1on Attito1. C• 4n6"9
,,,,, bu\Hl!'\\ t\ cOfldu<tf'd by •n m
11 lldUdt
M 1t hA{tl ' !,#dint
ffll1\ \tAt~Mtl Wd\ fll@O Wft1' t~ c jtjf\tt t h•r• u• o.-.... 0'" (o\lnty on
rut ,.,,,oi , u tMO
FUISOO
Puhl!\,.._,,, Orttn~ (OtJ\I 0 d1ly PtlOt
O•• ·~ n YJ '""'l '"n ~ 1961
P BLI<' NOTICE
FICTITIOV\ &USINE\S
NAME STATEMENT
't, .. toHo'fllnnQ ~''Of\\ are CSO\n()
bUlil>tll--.1. • '>Ul'ISEI PROO\JCE COMPANY,
1614 I P<KllO( C:O.\I H•9"••1 Sun"' I
t\P1.H '1 Ulttorrua ~, .. ,
M1r~I Jt1tr.f"\ OuCh11rm~. 1000
r 1111r 1rit A'i•nu,. S••• Be..tt h
r ... 11fnn11t1 ~'~ •
Jon .. AIC~nl6f 1'1tt s FIOWPf, l 0\
Ant)f"I .. \ ( .tllfotnla C'IOOlS
T , .. , bU\lfl,.\\ ., f ondUl ,,.d by it
•t,.nt11 •ti (lo'lrltyt\h1g
M1<N1,.I J UuCh-orm,.
f f1 \ \lflle'rllltn1 Wd\ ftlf'd Wt~h th~
' 1u11ty t 1-r• ot f)t .tnQ .. Couuly on
01>r ""'~' \ t"IW)
.
Pl'Rl.IC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOIJStllJ\INE SS
NAME STATEM ENT
I •. , tvl\ow1nq~· ')'}fl 1\M1nQbU'\U~'·
C/IAMO,.Cl'>TllEEl l 10 37, M.,u .. t -ti~'-'''"1 t•P, " ';.1 , .... ,, ... ,~1.,,,
N ctf'" I P.•tf>f''" J/1 ,,.,,.rtlt-
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F1~14'< ,.,. .. ,Ort '' '"'''tit
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f'I HI.I(' NOTI C't:
ntll TIOU5 BUSINES~
'LO_,f-STArEMENI r, I 1 ,. ·J t·• r I"\'\ .)H .jl') nQ
r ,.. '
t•f\ '' I f41t VA t1tl--'4Af-4( ( Graham J>Ointed out that the
a n imals have lived two t<1 thrcc
times their natural lifes pan in the
wilcl.
Dr Richard Crawford of the
l ' S D S ' s -A n 1 m a I . P I a n t II e a ll h
Inspection Service s aid regul<1l1ons
in s tituted in Sep\l'mbcr 197!l
establis hed special water quality
standards that m ust be maintained
fo r the bears .
··w e can't deny they have gotten
along quil t• well ,'' re m arked
Crawford "But '£1 man can livt! 1n
solitary confirwmt•nt his whole life
and get along quite well That doesn't
mean it"s m·<·<·ssarily humane "
Thi· nty has allo<·atcd $1 ~1:000 to the
7.011 l o sludv lht• s1tuat1on
J USTICE E DWIN
Regan. for the court ma·
jority, said pas t state
eourl decis ions have
established the law that
a parent ca n s ue a school
dis trict for negligent
supervis ion only lo re·
cover the eost of the
t hild 's medical care
C/Jental HealtJi ~'·1 .~·
By GERALD WINKLER, o,o.S. r ) ' i I' I I\ I It '\ n l H I:
...
h /1 1.-•f .. f f -..• t ;, ,.
I •' _,u1· ,d I /II, t11111 If t ( I
t•, If' -4 j\tJtf f'l">1-'>''""'''"' d o
•'•I ' I ... ,.A1
u •• 1 P tt••'
··standards for polar bears are
stricter than for people.'· s aid Walter
Koterwas, who oversees the city's
drinking wate r.
WHEN IT WAS found that the zoo·s
polar bear pond. whll'h also 1s <'n
joyed by two brown bears. didn 't
m eet those stantlaros. tht· 1.00 wa'
l.!1 ven three yl'ars lo find a w:n ti} n·
d uce the coliform bac t eria C'Ounl in Ill"
water
··We're nol telling th~·m t;mo ol
1fcials ) they havt• to shut lh1· 1·xh1l111
now ," Crawfor d )o,aid "Th('\ have·
two years yet unttl S<·ptNnlwr l!1k2
to come into <.·ornpham·1··· with th1·
rc~ulations.
Th(' USDA says pol;ir he;ir ... must
have a pool in which thl' hCJl'ttma
count is below l ,OUO MI 'N I mo::.l
probable numhcr ) pe r 100 millihl<•r.; ot
water
NEWPORT
llARBOR LUTHERAN CHURCH
798 Dover Drive
Newport Beach , CA 92660
(714) 548-3631
f'ai.tnn.: ROl(('r Bt'rg and Ge<>rite )fint'r
Come Celebrate
\'.'t''ll ~ing praise unto th(' Lord m a setting of
warm canJlchght and brilliant poinsettias and
Pvcrvont.• 1s wr lrome on Chns tmas E ve for
'il'rv;c.l•s <ll 7 and 11 Jl m
Arrive 20 m1nuH·s t·arly and enjoy festive
YuleL1de music featuring the NHLC choir and
-;olrns ts aecornµan1 t•d hy violin, tr umpet , pipe
organ and piano
Tht• :-.l'rmon. "To All The• People", will be de·
livt•rt•d hy l'astor fto~cr Re rg and tht! services
w 111 ind 11<1e glorious Christ m<1s c <1rols and
s pcc1l.l l mus il'al scll·ctions
Wo11 'l you pl<.o;1s1• Join us for this rne<in1ngful
wors hip Ill hono1 of t ht' Christ Chtld '
Ha bys1ttl'r ;w~11l<1l1lc al 7 pm. serv!f·e only [
EARLY TOOTH OVERCROWDING
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INFORMS in the
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:'iit·~pun twad1
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Dally Pilat
•
Homeless incr.,.ru;t>
LONDON CAP ) Shl'lter. tht•
national charity for the homell'ss.
said that 1.2 million people arc wait
1ng for slate-subsidized municipal
hous ing. In its annual survey of
municipal housing wa1l1ng lists 1n
England and Wales. the rhanty s~.11<1
lh~ figur<-' was 150,000 more than la5l
year.
f: ,. THE
EARL'S
1'1.-·Hf•flrtO
Sd-4 .......... ~
vn mt.l\1\Y CJ>HJ~tttl\~ • JavfU~ ~0fL. 1R10~ RltTltL?. ·
~ FAMOUS BRAND NAME JEANS & TOPS ~
t; FOR LESS -:i
_At Raciti Jewef,.'I Co ....
<.t l ·• /1 /f .... ,
•,,.,..,,,.,,.._....,,.,,,,.1 r1•1ll •
,, • ,,_.,. N,.,.,,.,, Y1'VI Alt •I
cos 1u oua641 -1289
•UIN.....,.eh11d
MISSION vt<J0495•0401 ,..,, c ......... c • ..., ... ""°
IS•n 0..,.. ,,_,. •t A.wen ll"ll•J J
~ .?t~. $J.ip-)j_,"!. c.~_.$..
:: .. ~()\ \ ,, I
. IN ONE PORT
~~-1---..---C=u""s""t,...o~m ~esigning._ ~setting. caatlng....wax working, •P'-prats ng, gold smithing. sizing. polishing, adjusting. antiquing.
soldering. finishing, watch repair, and of courM. Jewelry for
every want and desire.
~ ~iti ~1ry Compan!J'
ii 1838 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa
Dfal 646-774 J
~ Fashions for Men, Women Boys ~
0 ,~ 17 -
DECEMBER ~ --noDRr ~ OPEN 7 DAYS
P MON. TO SAT. • 10-6 P.M . i L..-_su_N_D_AY_• 1-·4_P_.M_ ......
s
( Pilot Logbook J C•ndld comment•rlea,
e1clu1lvely In the DailyPilai
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FIC.TI TIOU\ 8U\1Nf5\
M,.Mf \TATEMfNT
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FUOIJS
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... •· ... , '"Jit' '" "'"
Pl'BU(' NOTICE
Fl( llTIOUS BUSlf'IE SS
IU\Ml STa T~EMT , . j "" 1 f.1
C.. ( ( I ~ t\f•
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NllM[ STATEMEMI
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FIOIJI
• t •h <J'" t.,.(I 'f\t Oa11y Pilot
,. , I I t'fll -'8A1 80
Pl'BLIC NOTICE
FICTI flOIJS BUSINESS ~r.n·AT~~·--------1
r """ tooow1nq 0-' \OP\ 1, do•nQ bus• .... ,, ,, ..
l"'AN'I S PLASlfRING 111 All.tn
I• Sir ttl. : 8, l~unllnQIOn B"'•ch
r ,,tt,n nhil 0?"48
('.en• C,.,ttf ''"' w,,,, 711 Atlanta
Str .. •1 #8 ltun t1noton B•A<h
r ••1••>'"•'4 t>?b-'8
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dtv•U..,;al
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Ul't•mDor S •"90 "'~ PuDlt\hpoO Or•"VI' to'"' 0•"• PllOI, o.>r O I& 11 )0 1'90 ,.,0-ICI
Pl'BLIC NOTICE
l'ICTlllOU\ aui11tl.\S
N"""E STATUUNT
r ,.,. toHowtniq ""~on '' ctotno bus•·
"fl"•\ ICONA l Af'IES 1"' H•rllO• l\hrcl
o~I• M#ll\.I Cat.rorf"tA •1t1•
t>U\tnf"
f 1C f1 TIOU\ llU\INESS
NAMF ST-' Tfll'E f'IT
... J I ' , .. , J•< ._ C..rl1#td M.Jnn • C•U•ornt•
Q (tHPOrMlofl 1otn Cr1..tord (yft llcl
Sin'• AN C•l1torn·~ •l10S
(\fll(tl lll • ... 111\M (1 I M~ T n1' bU\•nft'\, •s cOl"'Ou<tH by ,.n '"
d •••du•I J.c:• G li>UM
fh11 \tat~t •• , f•lf'<I "'""' '"" (0111\1• Cl•" ol 0•1n~ CounlY on
O.ctmDo'• 1 '"'° '11e11t
P11Dlt'""° Or •"90 C o•l\I Otlt 1 Pl IOI ~c • a ll JO '"'° ••O.ao
PUBLIC NOTICE
I
~TION
sa ... r.-..
M e rl e ll agt&a rd ,
t•o un tr mu 1e
1n1'er , h&LS been ued
b~ a anta Clara re
t'ldent who rla1ms
Haggart! reneg~ on
ti deal to se ll him
~enm pan:~ls of land
n ear 1'e rra Be ll a
P laintiff 1::. P aul J
Vincent
Wo01en's
Santa a 'l·
no-s how
llAYNEVILLE, Ala
I A P l Santa Cla us
d1dn 't come to town as
promised. and an angry
lawyer is looking for an
apparent Scrooge who
ruined Christ m as for
two women facing stag-
gering electric bills.
'"ll looks to be a very
cruel Christmas hoa x,"
Selm a attorney Henry
Sa n ders s aid after a
"Texas oil millionaire"
failed to show up to pay
e lect ric bills totaling
nearly $6,000.
SHIRLEY GARDNER
and Callie Perryman re-
ceived the large bills for
a month's service from
P io n ee r El e c t ri c
Coope rative after the
company replaced their
o ld mete rs with ne w
ones .
The women filed suit
against Pioneer seeking
Sl00.000 in damages for
mental anguish suffered
because of the bills.
News papers reported
the two women's plight
last week and Sanders
said he received a call
from a man who said he
was an oil milliona ire in
Houston. The man said
he had read accounts of
the situation and was
prepared lo pay the bi lls
for the women
SANDERS SAID the
ma n, who iden tified
h i m s elf a s Mic h ael
Shubert, said he would.
arrive in a white Rolls-
Royce on Friday to meet
the women and deliver
h is "Ch ris t ma s p res-
ent."
The magic hour a r-
rived, but the only ones
in Sanders· Hayneville
office were reporters ex-
pecting a happy yuletide
story.
Sander s s ai d Mrs .
Perryman, the mother
of five, received several
long distance calls from
"Mr. Shubert" during
the week. She s aid he
seem ed genuinely in-
terested in helping.
TH E lJTILJTY has
de c lined comment on
_the. bills. The-women.-
who live in the rural
Lowndes County com-
munity of Mosses , each
h ad a verage monthly
bills of $80 last summe r.
. -
Pioneer told the m
l.helr ekctri.c meter• ... were ciacked and the
co m1nrn·y r e p I a c e d
the m . A month later,
Mrs. Gardner received a
monthly bill for S4,500
and Mrs. Perryman re-
ceived a bill for $1,400.
Joins panel
WASHINGTON <AP>
-President Carter has
named Moctesuma Diaz
Espana. a Los Angeles
film .maker, to the Com-
mission on Presidential
Scholars. Espana. a
p rod ucer o f award·
win ning films, is vice
president of the Euclid
Foundation .
-~......-.----.,
.. T'*lily, December 23. 1980 " OM. v PILOT A• . .
'U .. •M .. a•11R81pl•••f" •
Man guilty in' attempted ~urder of estranged wife ·
LEESBURG, Va tAP > In a <'••• th at n nl s hock w&.ves
throuah Notthcn1 Vlr&in1a's aen·
t•I hone country . • well·known
born tra!Jwr hu be.en convicted
on char1e1 he tried to kill his
utrana..t wife after calchlna her
in ~ w1lh anotht!r m11n
1'ht0dc>N Gre&ory. 29, of Mid
dlt1bura. Vla • was found guilty by
a Circuit Cou rt Jur y on two
c buaes atlempted itecond·
deatre!e murdtir llnd the use of a
fi rurm during the attempt.
AC'cord sn g lo t estimony,
Gregory burs t Into a bedroom
Aug. 20 as his wife, Monique, and
Howard LaBove, a horse dealer.
were having sexual intercourse at
La8ove's cottage a few miles out-
side Middleburg.
"He stood at the door and said,
T m going to kill you, bitch',"
Monique Gregory, a 26·year-old
riding instructor. testified during
the t rial.
Mrs. Gregor y escaped, ran
naked across a field to a nearby
house. and beat through the .rlass
window of a locked door to 11eek
refuge. She required 300 stitches
on her arms.
LaBove, 30. was killed by three
aunshob Jrom a .45-caliber pistol
aa he strugaled with Gregory.
Gregory, descr ibed in court
testimony as despondent since his
separation Crom his wife in May,
pleaded iM ocent by reason of tem-
porary insanity.
"He said it was like a light bulb
exploding ," psych ologist Dr.
Reuben Horlick testified for the
defense during the tr ial. "The
aight ol hia wife with another man
made him shoot."
T he three principal characters
in the cue were well known in
society circles in Mtddlebura.
about 40 miles from W ashlnacton.
D.C. The trial had been one of the
most celebrated in recent memory
in st ill largely r ural Loudoun
County.
T he nine-man, t hree-woman
j ury recommended eight years in
prison after delivering its guilty
verdicts. No dale was set for
formal sentencing.
THE DIGNITY OF ENID LATHROP
For the past eleven years, ever since we opened for business, A t-Eose hos enjoyed
a wonderful relationship with Fairview State Hospital. We'd promised ourselves
that, if the business survived, we'd give someth ing bock to the' comm unity that
·supported us. Enid Lathrop, the Director of Volunteer Services at Fairview State
Hospital, helped us find a way to give. In our firsr. meeting with Mrs. Lothrop in
Dember of 1969 'I-le developed a two-part pion for our donations and that plan
hos been the basis of our relationship throughout the years; it is as follows: first,
we would make a contribution to a residence at Fairview, and, second, we muld
create a newspaper ad at Christmas time and we'd tell a story about the people
in that res;dence and we'd solicit donations for a project for their use.
Since ftks. Lothrop is in charge of the allocation of all donations received at
Fairview, she ms particularly concerned that our contributions be put to F.
use. She suggested that each year in our chosen residence (a "residence ' at
Fairview is home to about forty live-in clients with similar developmental
disability) 'we establish a social-living area complete with home-like furni shings
such as tables and lamps, sofas, carpets, TVs, etc.; her belief was that clients
couldn 't learn social behavior without a social setting. So each year she'd choose
the residence most in need of such a setting and then she'd review and edit the
Christmas newspaper ad-story about that residence.
She was very proud of all the people at Fairview and she was very guarded and
protective about the public image of all the residents. She always reviewed our
article and let us know that Fairview was a state institution and that the
hospital's budget was fair and that no "charity" was needed, and publicly
soliciting funds for such a "charity" had to be prohibited. She further discouraged
such vvords as "retarded," "ward," "bed-ridden," "patient," etc., because such
words if11>1ied hopelessness and that's not what the business bf her hospital wa s ~ut . She wanted the public to kn~ in our articles that donations to the
residents at Fairview were put to constructive use and offered hope and
opportunity. She fought for and emulated the dignity and respect of every client
who lived at Fairview and you always knew that she'd rather you felt that
dignity and respect before you dir~ed any contribution to them.
Through the lost years of our relationship Mrs. Lothrop began talking of
retirement; she'd arrived at Fairview in 1968 in the later period of her work ing life
and the great physical and mental demands of her work hod increased in
intensity as each year passed. So she promised herself that by 1980 she'd give
herself a long-deserved rest along with the freedom of retirement. So, on
November 13th of this year, at a luncheon in her honor, Mrs. Lathrop announced
her retirement as effective on that dote. As was her way she gave credit in a
brief speech to everyone else for all that had been accomplished during her 12
year reign as Director of Vol unteer Services. But we all knew it was she who hod
done the 'M>rk, and it was she who hod created a bond of understanding bervveen
clients and people in the comm unity, an understanding that had never before
existed.
u you Reven't-spent-oll your don-otion dollars this year tflere's a plot of ground
out at Fairview that's probq_bly about the size of your yard, and it's been
designated as the outside recreation area for Program V wh ich encompasses five
residences. ftks. Lathrop wonted to see that rather barren plot converted into, on
outside social area complet~ wit~ instructional play equipment; mean0ering
·walkways, ronversotional areas, etc. -She thought the 200 clients in Program V
deserved to learn social behavior from on outside view, from the view of their cmn
yard. If you agree with her and you'd like to put a swing or a tree or chunk of sod
or some other piece of nature in some kid's life then send a check to Program V,
Fairv iew State Hospital, 250 1 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. She'll
think you're someone special.
VOLUNTEER SERVICES FOR PROGRAM 5
FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL
2501 HAR~ BOULEVARD
COST A Nf.SA, CA 92626
Gregory was acquitted of the
third charge against him, break·
log and eoterille wJth the intent lO
commit m urde r while ar med .
which would have c a r ried a
minimum sentence of 20 years in
prison.
A mu.rder charge Gregory faced
ea rlier was dropped , couoty
prosecutors said, because Uft4er
Virginia law spouses may not
testify against each other in crimes
that are alleged to have been com-
mitted against third parties.
.,
44 fashion Island, newport center 644-5070
1001 wntwoocl bl•cl .. we1twoocl •lhge 213-479-7727
T~.~23,11m NATION
Or:phaned kids go . it ·alone and -. win
HESSTON , Kan. MP) -
Orphaned a decade a10 when
their parent.a died ln a plane
c rash, the .even Kini lddl made t
a rare and difficult ded1ioo:
they wouJd stay to1elher, in lhe
family home.
The youngest child was 4, the
eldest only 18, but, ··1 hope, and
I truly believe, that if they could
be with Wl now. they would be
proud of the way we turned
out,'' said Lynne, now 28, as the
family prepares for its 1980 holi·
day reunion.
The tragedy struc k Oct. 2,
1970, alter state Rep. Ray King,
47, and his wife YvoMe. 41, uid
cheery good-byes and headed for
Logan, Utah, to see friends and a
college football game.
THEY NEVER MADE it. The
Kings, along with 29 other peo-
ple including m ost of the
Wic hita State Unive rs ity football
t eam perished when their
cha rtered plane cr ashed near
Silver Plume. Colo.
There were 11 survivors, and
ror more than a day. the King
children pr ayed their parents
were among the lucky ones.
T erri, then 13, recalled pray·
ing to God to ··let Mom a nd Dad
be okay, Please ... you're the
only one I can turn to now and I
need you. We all do. Either way,
l know you're going to take care
of us."
After the funeral, attended by
more than 2.000, relatives held a
family council on the fate of the
orphans.
The sounds of silence
echo in V erinont hills
F• M.Acti11
Call a
Daily Pillt
Al-YtSOI
&42-5&71
;1
By HUGH A. MULUGAN APS-••I co ... ,_ .....
•\RLINGTON, Vt Stopping by
the woods on a frosty morning, r get
out of my (•a r to atlmtr<' the winter
ha I ls in the a r penC' i I st ript·tl s uits of
h a re h1rch a nd t o wa:::.h Merr y
Christ mas to lht· m<'n w<i y up on
· Equinox Mountain .
Wes t:arbon. who runs the West
Mountam Inn, tclb me t here are 12 or them Ufl !hen', C<1rthu~1<1n monks
Ii\ 111g <• Sl•vrre. '\llllplc life of pray£'r
<inrl f;a<;t1n ).!. JltOm·cl 10 thf• voa<'e o f
<:1111 by ._. vci" of '>ilPnn·
l'h~ 11low1tain . or at lc<1st the top
p;irr 11f 11 -.va-. J.!IV<'n 11> th<' monks hv
a l 'n11m L.'<1rh1th-£'H·rut1Vl' who U!>eCI
1t lor J summ1·r hrdeuwav The twist
m g toll roacl UJ> lh<'i<' as ·closed from
tht: entl of October to the middle or
May, which 1s considered winter in
Vermont
0 F; S f' IT f: T II E W t-; 1\ T II E R.
fo'.11 li1•r Tom. who ha~ thl' ancient
1111111ast11· ltllt· of "µurter and 1~ al
II>\\ t•ll lo 1!11 what mm1m<1I talking lh
""' l''>S<1r~ for 1·ocx1!'ott:nt·c with the
wi·r-ldly 1.1.orlcl dn1.1-n in the valley ,
m.111agc·s lo g1.·t to lht.· '1llag1.: i:I r ou
pk of tune!> u month to 1m·k up sup
ptw-.., llll'dH inc :md whatever food
t lit· monks d<m ·r grow 1 ht•msel ves
I wash I had r un ant11 ham un has
'ihuppml! rounds The hongt•rs-out in
l I
M ULLICAN
t he ~cveral ~eneral
storc·s <Jround Ar
lani,:tun say twas a
dl'laght
Others in t own
and around Ver·
m1>01 can't f1~ure
out wh\. amrd all
our mo d er n
mJrveb and con·
'cnat·nt·cs any
n1.in 1.1.ould want
t<> t ran'i p Ort
him<\clf back t o
the ,\taddlt• A~l''> :.ind II\ c the isolated
c:1·l1batt: l1f1· of ~· l'<mtemplat1ve
rnonk
"WHAT /\ W/\"\'fF.," one or the
local boozcrh ret'l·ntlv commented to
Pathe1 -t)'cra1d ltm'l<lliY, U\c frnif bu
teisty old pastor of ~t. Margaret
Marv's Catholic Church down in Ar·
lington "Can you imagine throwing
your life away lo bury yourself up on
a mountain and just moon around
praying all day1 "
::. .,;.f_'3J.h~r Bt;ckley \U.l. hiJJ(down like ~a cord Of maplt>, srlit and delivered:
"Now tell-me. wtrnt'inhe great hing
you 're doing with life""
Amen, Father Buckley. and Merry
Christmas to you. too
If a ballerina can dedicate her
whole life to the dance, if Luciano
-Pavarotti can sacrifice everything to
his marvelous voice. 1f people can
make a life's work of marathon run-
njng. writing novels, being shot out
of a cannon. replacing humans with
computers. inventing the hydrogen
born b, chasing rare butterfUes. and
running bacls kickoffs. it's nice tQ
kno w there are 12 men up on a moun·
t:iln in Vermont worrying about the
re11t of us, talk ing with God all day
about you and me . praying we'll get
to know and love each other enough
to hold back the holocaus t
HERE IS A TOWN in Vermont
blessed with 12 res idents who, since their arrival al th ir_;!UlW ID9D.U1i~r__ ___ __...__...__~-.o.o._.~-~
ew elll'! ei:. COlh n u o a traffi c jam, accumuJat-,
NEW YORK (AP) -Schenley
Industries Inc. withheld rallel from
~ -=
The dechlon was un · ·
anlmoua: stay tocether, with a
local couple IMn1 in u tem·
porary "houffparenU:"
I
. ,-;-finally. after every body bad
left, we were all there alone,"
recalled LyMe, lhen 18 and a
collece freshman. "l looked at
the dinner table, the scene of
some ol our happiest times u a
family. 1be silverware wu set
wrong. 1be meat was not at the
right end of the table, the place
where Daddy had always sat
and served. Suddenly I knew
that no matter how, we were 10-
in& to do it, we would ao on as
normal in an abnormal situa·
tion."
Ly nne, Gary, then 16, and
Terri cared for their younger
sisters, Lori, 11, Llsa, 7, Julie, 6.
and Dina, 4, with a married cou·
· ple overseeing life in the ram·
bling brick home in this town of
1,200.
KING, CO-OWNER OF a
bridge building firm, left enough
money in trust le s upport the
children. And legal settlements
from the a ccid ent provided
educational schola rs hips for
each child.
Over the years, the kids voted
to remode l the house, re-
uphols ter the furniture and
enclose an atrium to bring birds,
a brook and 100 plants right into
the living room. They boosted
their weekly allowance to keep
Japan: 117 million
TOKYO (AP > -J apan 's
population is 117 million, and 10
percent live in the greater Tokyo
a rea, according to a n ational
census reported to the cabinet
The census also round that the
nation's population r ose only 4 6
percent in fi ve years, the lowest
rate of increase since the end of
World War II.
pace with inflation, and ex·
tended their curfews ..
Lori, now 21 and a senior at
Asbury College in Kentucky.
says: "I'm sure each of us at
some time or another asked
ourselves why it had to happen.
We. never felt an1ry. But
hohdays and special occasion.a
such aa graduation were hard."
'' l thought about Mom and
Dad a lot," says Dina now 14
and a cheerleader. "I'd get my
grade cards and they wouldn't
be here lo see them. I tried lo
imagine what they'd advise
about problems."
LISA, NOW a 17 -year-old
senior , says the accident taught
her not to be embarrassed about death.
"When M~m and Dad died, I'd
never expenenced death before.
not even a pet's. Now I can tell
s omeone who is g rieving, 'I
know how you feel , I know what
you'regoingthrough.'"
J ulie. 16, thinks she grew up
fasteF than other-kids her age.
"We learned responsibility
and to believe that there is a
master plan for all our lives."
GARY, Z6, AND Terri, 23, both
a re involved in religious work.
h e in Wich ita and s h e in
Chicago. Lynne is a legal
secretary in Hutchinson. Lori
will graduate from Asbury in
August and wants to work with
children. Lis a will go to college
in Indiana next fall.
Lynne, now mother of a 5·
ye ar-old son , recently un-
derwent a kidney transplant. re-
ceiving lhe organ from sister
Lori
"Of all the things that have
happened to us the past 10 years,
I think the transplant has
brought us closest together,"
s aid Lynne ... Every one or my
sisters and my brothe r were
ready to save my life.·'
Meflalkf
Billy Carter has been chosen
as the recipient of the 1!8>
Millard Fillmore Mediocrity
Medal, bestowed annually
by a Colorado Springs group
"dedicated to mediocrity."
Gravediggers out
of work in Africa
PRETO RIA , South Africa
(AP> The gravediggers' union
died a quiet death.
A c ity official said the union
d isar,peared because ,the use of
mechanical diggers created a
surplus or graves.
"We have a st ockpile," he
said "We dig our holes in ad·
vance."
The Rand Daily Mail reporteq
that the union hank account still
had money in it, but government
officials railed to find a living
me mber of the union to take the
funds
ed among them one speeding ticket '
<unless Father Tom In a bunt of
monastic joy hot-rodded it away
from the general store since I visit·
ed). burdened the courts with a
divorce or the school rost er with a
d e linque nt , made the police
log for playing the hl·fl too loud, com·
plained lo the fi rs t selectman a bout
• a woman executive ln retaliation for
her sex-discrimination lawsuit, and
the compmy must pa7 -..p, wttb in·
terest, a juqe bu ruled. Tbe de-
cl1ion wu a partial victory for Aru
Boyajlan of The Bronx, one of
seven division admlnJ1tratora for the
tompuyt
Fountain Valley 18798 Brookhurst Ave. (Valley Center Plaza). Fullerton 1107 So. Harbor Blvd.
garb age removal.
. -.
I •• . ..
Mission Viejo 27521 Puerta Real. Newport Be9Cb One Corporate Plaza.
San Clemente 911 So. El Camino Real. s.nta Ana 1200 W. 17th St. Tustin 18232 lrvine Bl vd.
West•lnar/Halldnpm Be.ch 540 Westminster Mall.
NATION
Man renounces estate
Accused brother decides not to seek share
' K 1' ., L ... I ,. I /\
ftlr hmond. Ce hr 111a11 iu 1'U!Jt'(I
Cl( lulling hi~ (a t ht•f Mntl s lt'll
mother aboimJ tht•11 ~ 11d1l ~~wll
l>oun1t 111 19'18 h i. 1 """""' •·11 1i1, 'hart> ol tht> r stalt•
P SJ)f'r. ''~nt'd tn K 111.: l o u11n
~UP<'rtOI ('our1 ('4111 1111 1111 l'4jlHll
lh&l n but mn of ~"'"''" h lllll llw
t>'IUtc-ur I <~n uod 111 1111111·
l-.1ll4 1ud~ <1111011.: fuu1 1•f llw11
1 h llilrt>n l\t·11\ l-tl\4 nh
l .1rn to:thHmh lul1~1l1.i 1)011
l 111' llOd J 1d\ l"ll "' 1tHI~ ""''" fht• fifth luH \ ... ll\4 u1 1h, '>•1tl
hi' d t'<'ltk tl 4il:l"""t 'lt-t'kt11.: u
'h•rt· of lh1• ,.,l,1lt' tw11:1ui.t• of .i11
,1ffhl .n 1\ l lh·ll h \ hi!> b1ullH.•1
I ,1fl\ \4 h1th.d !'IU'>l'd hint 11f tH.
1n g a .. 1.,; t-r ul lht' iit'cHI
1 uuplt'
I ulc t"ad kno w 1 am in
11111 1•111 Cur) l::dwurc.ls i.iud
Wh.il .. \l'I ... hurc of lht' c11talt 1
1111Nlil n·4'•H· .... ouJd vrobut>ly be
\'\h.rn'h'(I 111 ,1 hu\g and' b1lU:r
l1·.:i1I hut tll· To f1g h1 thl:. sel/ish
ll.1ltll• (111 tlw '1.tkt• 1)f l'OllYlfH'll\g
111111•1:. 1:. rw t worth 11
"I Wit.I. NCYI' Rt; u part or 1:1
l(h11ul1~ti 11•hJ:..t11ng of details for
I ht• i..1kt'11f lllood Ollll'IC} "
l'lw ill'J\h:-. Jlxmrd tht> Spell
h11l1111t \4t·11· Ill\ t'!>lt~ated by lhe
I-HI .11 111 J. grand JUr No
, 111111 11.11thJ11-(t-:. t•\ t'r were riled
.• '"' '"'' I; ,11 ' 1'.1lw a rd:. an the •h-Jlh'I
I he "'r>d l tw u nd left ~eat
1 h 111 l!Yl7 On Ft-b 25. 1978,
I 1111·11 t-;d"' .1nb. apparently died
Suit charges bias
in alteration fees
S t.-.:ATTl.E 1Af'1 /\ luws u1t h<1s bee n filed against a Seattle
store allcg111g ~ex <11st·r1m1n at1on because the store charges a fee
for altering wom(•n ·~ d ot hing t.iut makes alter ations in m en's gar
rnents for frt:c
Tht' AmN1can l't\.-11 Liberties l 'n1on and the No rthwest
Women 's I.aw Center hied the lawsuit in King County Supenor
Court against Frederic k & Nelson. sa ying the s tore violates a stale
law bannin~ scx d1st'rim11rnt1on in public accommodations .
or a blow to the head. The next
da his wife died of a gwishot
wo und. Both were buried al sea.
Gary Edwards reported that
his father 's death was acciden-
tal and his stepmother's death
was a !.tulcide. Also on the yacht
a t th e time were Kerry
Edwards, then 18, and a friend
of ht!rS, Lo ri Oskem Huey, then
22
Larry Edwards was not on the
) a cht
Kerry Edwards has refused to
('om ment on the deaths.
AFTER THE INC IDENT,
Gary Edwards stayed in Tahiti
fo r several months and later
s <1 1l e d the Spe llbound to
Richmond. The yacht was sold
las t summer for $110,000, and
that money rs the bulk of the
es tate
Amon~ the costs to be paid
from the estate are about $16.000
rn legal fees and $5,000 to each of
t WO ('X~C'Utrixes.
T he order s igned by Court
Commiss ioner Jac k Ric-hey
~r ants Gary Edwards $1 ,500 for
repairs to the Spellbound prior
to the sale
Dealership burns
S/\N GABHIEL (AP1 Los
Goodalada
New York Yankees
catcher Rick Cerone
takes a turn on roller
s k ates with former
Olympi c s ki er Su zy
Chaffee at a New York
City roller ,disco as part
of a marathon fund -
raiser for "Toys for
Tots ...
Tuesday, December 23, 1980 DAIL v PILOT A I I
"The poli1·y of C'haq.:ing cml~ for women's alterations 1s an in
du5.trywide pral'lln'." !'.a1cl Judith Andrews of the law center "We
JUSt want the sa me pollc-y for both men and women."
Angeles County fire officials say a
l>lazc caused damage in excess of
SI00,000 to u car dealership here,
but there were no reported in·
juries The fire was at Rosemead
Subaru deale rship on San Gabriel
Boulevard. &PWiNP"°IO
·-
#1 RATED
COLOR TELEVISIONS
And
Video equipment
SALES And SERVICE
COMPLETE SELECTION
PRICED TO SELLI
A-OK SERVICE
CENTER
2251 Harbor, Harbor at Wilson Costa Mesa
MOM.-SAT.
8-6 j s4a.93s1 I SUNDAY
I 0-3
7\nthon~; Shlt'.-l\tf alr
Charle.s \\.~T'r :X.weltrs
~ q ~:rl.o--
1{\ c.l<or ~ ·~:rl"l'\5
l{al. H d.zJ.. ~1~
1-lvm~~
~~ft..Cm-ne.r.;5-
'7;J...v Ort. -.Yr~s
la (}~le.Na..
Vt..ta'5
Make your Chnstmas shopping a r~rding
ezpe~e , .. Shop at \U•setlilJ NJ.I
,---r-·,.,conmnve-n1•i.i1'"1f-toonfflf1JrlM cOriiir of lro1M
A\le. & 17th St .• Newport Beach. ._ W~e.liff
Store 01.UMr1 and thmr court~ Ital/ ~ -~Ui
wW 41.Ut IP" in flndinO OPPf'Opriale ,7~ ~Ii.ff
gi/ft /or tM ~people in )IOtlr U/e. . Sa~ time & ewr01 by ·~al Or'\'#~ IM'*'U PW.a. wlwn IP" "'"' find~
mnc~1Clftd wmcea with tltat peraoftGl tow:h ...
Store• opc'll llU 9 p m
Yule spending
orgy deplored
FOREST PARK, Ga. CAP) -Sant a Claus
and the annual spending orgy he represents
must go, says a religious group that urges Ct\ris ·
Li ans to simplify their celebration of Christmas .
"We no longer take a tolerant view of Santa
Claus," said Milo Shannon-Thomberry, director 01
Alter natives, a n interdenominational non·profit
'" group that proposes. for example. that a family
tlonate 25 percent of its a nnual Christmas s pend-
ing to the poor.
Shannon-Thornberry said the tradition of ex-
pensive Chnstmas g1ft.givmg, symbolized by San·
ta Claus. overshadows the celebration of Christ's
birth.
"WE ARE BOTH VICTIMS AND executioners
in the matte r of consumption. We are victims or
a system that says the only way to live is to con·
s ume. but we are also willing, joyful.· participants
in that conSumption," be said.
Alternatives encourages families to center their
celebration on Christ's birth and channel a portion of
what they spend to contributions to the poor.
Under Alternatives' Christmas formula, a
family first calculates bow much it spent the pre-
vious year on gifts, food, entertainment. travel and
othe r aspec ts of Christmas . Then the family
donates 2S percent of that total to denominational
m inistries to poor and hungry people.
"WE ARE NOT AGAINST 111E givlhg of gifts.
but we are against the notion that the only way to
expr ess love is to buy something. There are a lot of
othe r ways to give," Shannon-Thornberry said.
The group's literature suggests. for example.
that the family consider giving as their Christmas
presents hand-crafted gifts or gifts of time to be
spent with family members.
Although Shannon·Thornberry , a U nited
Methodist minister, acknowledges Alternatives "is
not a movement t hat will sweep the country,·· the
group has distributed some 41,000 mailings lo
church leaders and clergymen around the country
and some 38,000 catalogues describing potential re·
cipients for contributions.
A SURVEY IS UNDER WAY TO determine
how many people have actually participated in the
alternative Christmas campaign. according to
A. 8 . Short. a Southern Baptist minister who is
Alternatives' Christmas campaign manager.
Alternatives has been based in this Atlanta
SUl5urb sine~--
Inflation hits
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -The gold m edallion be-
ing sold to commemorate the inauguration or
Ronald Reagan is a pointed reminder of what in·
n ation hath wrought. .
The 14·karat medal, l Y4 inches in diameter.
will be sold for $975. Four years ago, a 24·karat
gold proof edition, 1 ""2 inches in diameter . was
$200. This year's 14-karat version has only half of
the gold that was in the 1976 medal.
Reagan selected sculptor Edward James
Fraughton to design the medal, which also will be
so ld in silver . bronze a nd copper.
Only 2,000 gold medals will be turned out by
Medallic Art Co. of Danbury, Conn. The silver
medal, 21h inches in diameter, will be $275 and
there will be 5,000 of them. There will be al~ inch
version in proof silver for $95.
Unlimited editions of 2~ inch bronzes will be
$25 and a l lh inch copper version is $5.
COMMUMl'J'J OMUICH. coueu.AnOMAL u.c.c.
611 llal t.,.Aft.oC-.. Mw
644-7400
etmSTMASm
CAM"• ICtfl' WOISHIP •YICIS
7:00 & I O:JO P .M.
• ... Mr .......... .......... ••4 .......
COLOR TELEVISIONS
And
Video equipment
SALES And SERVICE
COMPLETE SELECTION . .
PRICED TO SELL!
A-OK SERVICE
. CENTER
251 Harbor' Harbor at Wilson Costa Mesa
MOH.-SAT.
8-6 548-9351 SUNDAY
I 0 -3
BOTH SUITABLE AND FITTING
' c:1ir1,1m.1' µ111 1ni111 Pn~11
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DIC. 23, 19'0
BUSINESS
STOCKS
TELEVISION
MOVIES
B~
BS
86
87-8
BUSINESS:
John Cunniff tells of record dealer closings
adding to mounting auto industry ... 84
~.
DllllY """' ....... ..,..., ._
NFL playoffs set
San Diego sends Patriots home
The San Diego Charger!> ~J V(·
Ron Erhardt plenty of tame to
think about has next game
Erhardt signed a cont rat t
Monday to cout:h New En ~lund
for another season anrl ht· "d'i
hoping Monda) night that this
season would last at lt•a st unr
more g~me for tl\e Patnnt!:> It
didn't llappen So Erhardt ~ 1wxt
game will be tht> first <Jm· rm
New England's 19fil !.d11'dt1l1•
THE PATS COULD h:H ,. ht<f•rr
a wild-card team in thc-1\'JltOnJI
Football League vlayuH-.. but
Pittsburgh, the team lhl·v h·1d
eliminated rrom contcntwn or,
Sunday, couldn't beat San 1111 ~fJ
for them The Charger!>, v.1nn1n~
26·17. won the Amt•ric·Jn <'•on
ference's Westt-:rn Div!'> or 111 l•
as well, dropping Oakla11d 1nt11 ...
w ii d . c a rd s I 0 I . a I 0 n J' w I I h
Hous ton.
Had the Charger' lost tt>n
and New England v.11uld.tiJ\t
been tied at 10 r. and 1 h<· ••:.•'
would have rC'ce1ved th1· "'rM
card by virtue of a :-.up<·r 1111 r•·t
ord in ('onr1•rr r11T rila" II t
with the Roider'> a11d Oilt•r' 111
11 5, the IU 6 P;i1r1ci'" hail
nowhere to ~o but h11m for t t"
hohd:iys
Next SundJ). llrw.-.11n -..ill
play tn Oakl:rntl Ult' 1 .. 1111,·1-.
earning t hP home f1t l1J t'<h:"
thanks to thl•tr <'c1nfr 11 nr r1 ~
ord, 9.3 to lhl' Olll·r• i' An1J
in the :-.lat1<111JI Cunft l'tll 1 lh1-
wald.·card matchup -.1.dl l <.\•' l,11•
Angeles at D~ll a~. th1· ~ owht1~
being the hu ... ts ..,ir11 • tt-.1•)
finished at 12 1 11\•rall 111 the
Rams' 11·5
PlavoH pi«lur~ .. .
Wll0C"'R0 PLAYOFFS
S-•Y Oet ll
Atnfttt(.lft (QinfHf'f\(f
' # ~· J ,. ... '
H•t10M1 Confw.nc 1t
t• )I j
OIVISIO"'A• P~YOFFS
~.itLlnS..y ~..,nd•y J~n ) 4
AtM rl< •tt Conff't ""c t
,,.. ti'"1t t' t1v'''" 111 l tr • 1 •• n~1
ti! 'f • ~•t.1 tr,#' ii '),i" (I•• J
1 •..., t,., f• ~·· •#n··~rlj
Hlt~ll Cwiftttf"C •
.., I I ~,/ttl1 ~ ti At • 4'
• •"" \ ,, #IJ-rr I • ott f.'h J0t ,n t
th .,._ ~t,..,.,, "I
C'ONFl'RUtCE CHAM PIO"'SHIP~
\vndt> Jon I I . " ...
•~r1c~n (O&"f9'fetW: •
~ t .. ""'-~...,. " 1
H•l10f'\otl (.6"1trf'ft" f . ,,.,. ..
'VPl:S! llOwl X>I
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1t Nuw Ort•""' l .i
.. ,, I W t ,.
1:111.,11> 'h11 11tf lh1'. Jd\C.t lHf 11
•to / •inlt·r• n1 ,. I .1 rn µt•Jfl '>htp
h JrTll !11f.1U'< llw·, J\f: t fill
h r .\ f'I · r•·•'•ll ol 'I '! tr1 r hf' R 4 '"
Iii• IHll\\IJ.., ,.n.j th1 1S ri1 ...
H 1' " l1 1111 µ "'' 11111 1 r1unrl
"'' 1·\ 11~ ..... th lhl B II "-'vuhl l 1
'l flt.ff I• >· t .111 I ht· B ll:: l.H. l
'tit' '.1rJ,!1 • dt r •t.r· • ..'ulo r
• ·''"'' ~'· ··1 I Ii. llilh y.r,uld
\1.,1\: "' 1•1• ).!• r · 111tr ii rr.1m1t l 1 ,,, \11 , .. Uhl' 11,, .... , ,,, .. , ;,r•
dcterrruned by the NFI. on the
basis of AF'C records. Wild-card
teams can never be home teams
beyond the opening round.
If tht· Oilers beat Oakland next
Sunday, lhc) will visit San
I>icgo an the Jan 3 4 second
rnund J\ncl C\cvcland, having
l)<.ihlcJ a better ~ctinta«e lhan-
B u ff alo ajlJlnst common oppo-
nf·nts 1 71<1 to 625J will host the
Btlb
fl ut if thl' Raiders win their
"lid cant l(;HTl't' next Sunday,
thl') II pl<1 v the second round at
L'lc,·elan1l .. nd Ruffalo will visit
San f>it!g11 Thl· Raiders would
nt1I be ablt· t<> pl.iy San Diego in
roun<1 two1>1m·c they're from the
-.an11· 1J1\ 1-.111n
l'htlddt•l11h1a and Atlanta, the
EJ-.t .ind WP::.t champs in the
~ FC farw .. h1·'1 at 12·4. Atlant a,
ha\ anr lwa1 «>n the Easies during
t tll' -. ... 1.,011 1-. the conference's
loµ .... uinu The third division
1A111nt·r \t111n•·sc~a v.as 9 7 dur·
r1).! th1-.\I' 1r
•· .. 1 1r Dall as t,eat:. Los Angeles
llt ,, ..,ll/Hla\ 1n lhe N FC wild·
, a r11 1·n(•r111nt<'r . the Cowboys
-..111 \ a..1 t \tlanta while Min·
•11•,1 1., 1A1ll play at Philadelphia.
ll ut 1f tlu Jl <i m '> v.in, they won 't
l.u·t· 1 lw F·ilrnn'>. being from the
.• rn .. dl\'l'>ton Instead, it'll be
I • ,., \ 11~el1·., ut Ph1larlelphia and
\1 1n11t·s<1ta ul Atlanta in t he Jan.
.i I ~t-corH I r·nund
B enirschke, Fouts
spark Chargers
lJCI 'S QUENTIN BROWN (LEFT) ANO ROBBIE BEAL OllPLA YA TOUGH OIFENSE MONDAY.
ALL FIVE AFC µl.i~11H ll am
-division v.1nn er~ Rurfalt•
Cleveland and San 01t.-~11 plu..,
the wild·card entries wound
up the s eason at 11 !l Tht·
Chargers would have tht· homc
field advantage aga1m.t tht· <., \ "\ 1>1 EGll \ P A ) ear
a 1:1. C\un !)11·~0 kicker Rolf
H1 '''''''hkl' .1.1• ;1 14al lo nS'.!
'lo.t•ll'!on i•ftt'r wa,1!1n~ a hf P and
.clc··1th b<ltl Ir wil h a rare disease
.\t'.J r . ..rt :\FL rl•co rd He
r 1 n 1 "h ttl "' t t h 1 11 5 pa i.s in g
~ .i11.h .i11uth•·t \~I. f<'!'r1rd. New defense
VCl's experimem
labeled a success
By JOHN SEVANO defense-and whether it was re·
0t the oa11• p11o1 st.aft a I or n ot. The Ante ate r s .
It's not every day a coach will naturally. would Hke to claim it
tell his players they're ~oing to was. but holding down the Jump·
wa n a basketball game before ing Kangaroos is a far cry from
lhev've 1•ven s uited up. But holding down Nevada (Las
that's exactly what UC Irvine's Vegas). USF, Miami (Ohio) or
Bill Mulligan told has team Mon· St an ford-four teams which
day night have scored 90 points or more In
··1 told them they'd win even UCl 's four road defeats.
b'efore the game s tarted," ad-"What can we do? We can not
matted Mulligan. "What I told play anyone." says Mulligan
them was I wanted a big enough concerning his home schedule.
lead at the hair so I could experi· "We'd like to play the bigger
ment. ·· schools at home, but we can't
The Antl•ater s f o llowed get them here. I would like to
through with their instructions. think if we had played Stanford,
Thrv m anhandled and out· Miami (Ohio) or San Francisco
quit ked the Jumping Kangaroos <US F J at home we would have
of the L'n1 versity of Missouri· beaten them."
K~nsas ~·1ty for. t~e first 20 Mulligan's problem in not be·
minutes an estabhshang a 59-35 ing able to attract a big name
adv antai.tc. and then really sc h ool is basically financial. ~ed....it on en rou.le-Lo...i llo-:H-M"O'Sl Vilafmg schools. tfial carry
fin ish. names. are given Sl0,000 for a
AT THE EXPENSE ~ ~e
Jumping Kangaroos (2·7 >.
Mulligan and his Anteaters
turned the game into a giant ex·
periment. They used the first
h1rlf to finely lone Their pressure.
man defens~. and the second to
work on a new 1·3·1 zone align.
ment which was inserted within
the past 48 hours. ·
Certainly on paper, the experi·
ment was a success. While the
Anteaters were shooting a torrid
68 percent (45 of 66) from the
floor offensively, the defense
was holding the Jumping
Kangaroos to a mere 46 percent
131of67).
road appearance. OCI pays Its
visitors Sl.500.
·'I guess these games keep you
from not playing anyone at all,"
s ays Magee. . )
• 'f 1'HINK VOV · g-ai n con-
fidence... added Whie:tdon. "In
the long run it's going to help us.
Everyone plays those weak sia-
ters to gain confidence."
Achieving confidence la one
thing, though, and achieving a
false sens e or security is
another . Magee .realizes the dJf.
ference.
"We've been making a lot of
m istakes," analyzes the 6·8
center. "We just need to execute -
better. lf you don't execute and
grab rebounds ... well, that's •
our main problem.•· KevtN MAGEi 00!8 UP Fo.. TWO Of HIS 3e POINTS.
\londa\ r 1rhr bf'forP th(' !'h,irrt·r~-• 1 ur1 ti ~:im<" '"l:h
P tlf h11rgt l•r.., '' •'Tim ilt"" p.11d
h '' m 1 ~· • 1, ){ r r. r' • h k'
l'H H' ,\9'l"H' t1flh.'l 1t.1 •"' 'Thi\
ri·tm1 d htn1 h<1nnran ("1µta 1n
fl1•nrr..,l'hk1• tllllj f'~CO\t·rt!<l
f1 Jin the• tarr lnll "tlll<11 d1c;ee;<;f'
rr jJdld tlw 1, 11r1IW"' h~ t,\ tni:: ;1
ll 11'1 ri., rd \\I h f1111r f1t Id j;(ndl•.
"'..,<in l>•l"'' .·11 r1t 11• d J '\~1ltonal
J-.,11th.1il 1 • .1,.:111· 1 lt:1 \11tf spot
,111tl tlw ·'\!I \\ .. •l•·rn lhv1:">1on
It Ill Y.llh .J '' " \IC 'Ill\ l/\l.'r th~·
~lt·f'lt,,
Tift \.lf,OH'I !-. .. n l)1c)!o~
lllh 111 th 1!·•·111" 1 .1tapulled lhe
f'h ,1r-•1.,-~ •11!(• n1·'<1 rn•tnth s AFC
"'t nl I ( 111 ,1 I' ,1 t.! cl f n " I l' Ith I' r
H1111~t tn ••r H11ffJlu I\ l ame a
\t>;tr •11 '"" d·" that lfrntr!:>chkt·
n!cJdt· .m •·n c • 111.il n ·turn to S;m
1>11•1!0 ~l.tr1111n1
11..Cnr · l he g:1rnt· l rem1:rn
hf rNI "'hoit 1l v. :•., lilo.\:' to hardly
h 1 ,1 '·'I t• t '' w a I k ' s a 1 d
H1·n11 ... 1 hlo.l• ..... h11 hrok l " 14!
'1• Ir • l<l < lu 1 ~, rorcl \\Ith ht'-:!·l
f1du ),;u..tls ..lllJ :.ct a -c luh >.{orrn~
r•·r11rtl
W h 1 l-c f:tcmr.;rtrk~ war pert t'l't
111 four atwmph 1hc Charger~
..... I r t' I I l' •• I I f• r r l' ( t I n
qu irtnhack D:\O ~·ou\" c..,l1m,,
r ''11
Th,11 .., 111. llf·:-.1 .-rrr.n I ha' t
t·\ 1·r sc~n hy a C'h<1rg1·r te am, ..
s:ttd l'"outs-who directed San
Hl .. ((0 lo Srort>t., tH) lht>tr hrSl five
'>f"r 1ti.., --
l'ht \ ..1unted 5Jn Diego pa::.s·
ing game produced 308 yarqs
and numerous big plays Chuck
M unrn' ~ained a Sl'a::.on high \15
\ ard!:> ttn 26 c..1rnt'S lo provide a
hJdl} needed r unning game.
Anrl San Diego's '>tout defense
hm1tt'd the Steelers to 49 rushm~
~arch.
"WF. KNEW WE were going
home ar we lost." said Fouts.
who complete<! 21 or 37 passes
for has eighth 300 yard game tlus
Hcn1r•< hkt· put :...an Diego
aht'ad 9 :1 al halhamc on field
.!1 JI ' uf ·~1 :!IJ .rn d 2G yards The 1 h r-!l'r " tn• r1'J St:Cl their lead to
, l ,f•1 r fo'1,uts teamed up on a
1 1 ' rf ._;,r nc·r to tight end
h.l i.t n V. 1n:.l11>\ nn the fi rst play
nf ti:·· llur d 'luartcr The play
1·.1rri••d 111 Ltw P1tt-;bur gh 23 and
Foub .;r111 t'd e1~ht plays later
fr•1m th<' 1mt•
Hr .. HbniJ ' co1rntt>red v.ith a
"'h1 r lv.1nri tlrt\l' for the Steelers'
f1r-.1 tnu1 hdown. a 1wo yard run
h) Sidnev Thornton afte r Theo
H<'ll c· .11.i~h1 pasc;es of 32 and 3S
\a rrh
f ht Chargers added 10 points
on a nothc•r 33·yard field goal by
Ben1r::.chkt' and a 10-yard run by
Munc1P for a 26 ·10 lead with
thre«> minutes remaining.
PLAYING ON PRIDE, the
Steeli>r-. "marting from missing
the pla~offs for the first Ume
-.an('<: 1971 added a touchdown
\\1 th f1v1• '>t•conds left when
Bradshav. hat tii?ht end. Benny
t 'unmn~ham frlr a 15-yard TD
JlJ'"
·· PcThdJ>'> said Benirsehke.
· ma~ l:w 1t wa~ the Tea m of Yi""-----•
--ms-pravini: ~ cam or the
~o~ ..
."tl .... -.; RU Bl'\.~ON
"1/L~ REMAIN?
1:.0S ANGELES CAP) -USC r~ .. .n-oaU Co1tch J1>hn Robinson.
considered a prime candidate
for a National Football League
· ·1ob. said Monday he probably
will remarn at the Trojan helm.
·Tm much closer lo staying
ht: re now than J was.·· Robinson
said. add.in!( that he was tired al
all the speculation.
· 1 · ve s at1sf1ed a lot of lbe
things I was concerned about.
1 · m pretty close to being settled.
l want to talk to the president
t USC President Dr. James H.
Zumbergel one more lime -
and that should do it."
T he Anteaters, in evening
their record to 4·4 on the season
(a perfect 4·0 at home), put
together · three explosive spurts
which saw the m change a 4-2
deficit into a 22-8 lead; a 30-23
advantage into a 53·27 bulge;
and a 84-64 lead into a lOt-66 What football does, baseball must do better
night~are for UMKC . . By.WILL GaJMSLEY A~am. as has been. the case !11 AP Speelal Corre9P•••l'lll
UCI s last seven outt!111, Ke~ The count.down ta on for Super Bowl ~ l!tP.~!e~::Jhe._n~!lcm.:t\-!t~'v·. :the411h!st ec11tMr uiillr ,,...,
scorer, emergea=u e ea 1 one-day extrava1ansa In American lead.i,ng scorer with 36 potnta < lS a port.a .
of 16 from the field>. 20 of whAch It wu a roualni aeuon wtth only nve
came in the laat 8:40 or the con· playoff berthl sealed 1otn1 into the final
test. He alao hauled in a game-two weeb al the campalp and HVtn
hjgh 12 reboundl. olubl ba= for fln plac. throuah
SUPPOa'nNG MAGEB were thrtfj:~ ...Jk~rc:=~· ltudol
1u.ard1 Randy Whleldon, wbo are In order for Pu Rolllle, tM H•·
chipped in 11 points, and Robbie Uonal .FootMD IAque ,... • ._...,, •
Beal, who came off the becb to man al many bm -H~ldlh meldteet,
•dod,12. tr 1 ,_..... actmllMltl'atGr. promoter _. ""' tub-coune, the cen • ---:-thumper. •
followtnc the ,... WU UCI I HI• Influence II wo... ... ....,..
thread of the fabric, establishing the out. onC'c three ball!\ <now four! to walk. Yet basebalt. with all or its Inherent
NFL as the most successful and adro it· three bases. nine batters C3x3>. nine \.1rt11cs. hns one maJor drawback. That
ly governed of all the rn ~ R/9~ ... ~ninRs C3x3 agaln), 90 feet between ·. Is its relucfancc to move with the tlm~.
._ 'ftfifOhfilftjGEI. · ._ · lf'il scs aocl 60 feel 6 inches t.t.o.rn-.-This 11 ....can do wa\.ho~.eopard~al.w-1_11a.--.,.-
Blg lea1ue baseball should take pitcht?r's mound to the plate. all d!v\si· e~rthy. ~ommon man appeal its
··notice. ble by three. r ich trad1Uons
That ctoe.n't mean ttt.t pro football There also as a quiet. leisurely pa<'e to ~he success or the NFL seuon. tM
haa replaced baseball aa the so-called the game, allowlnf? time for pop('orn, ability to s~stam a!'d even build upoa
"national putime." The diamond game peanuts and periodic blnsts at the um· inte rest until the final whi.IUe al &he
remains 1 part of our culture. It wa8 pire, and tense battleground strategy s eason. can be attributed tarcelJ to
started just after the Civil War. It was leading up to that climactic moment in alignment of the tu ms to promote re.
• nurtured on 1andlot.1 and schoolyards. t he ninth with o Joe DiMaggio at bat gional rivalries and the •d•lm of the
It 11 played by kids in short pants and faclntt the blazing fireball of a .. Bob "wild card" t~hnlqu~
mllllouirw. It na produced most of Feller. The National and American Ji'Gatbell
our folk beroel. These are dee ply e mbedded at· Conrel'9'~es, ~ach with 14 team IOIUid There 11 It.Ill a simplicity and a mystl· tributes that nothing not the fiercest. Into three dlVlsloqs, provide two .. wtkl
qut about the 1ame -its unusual rel•· ·wildest. mo!ll dramatl<' rootball .i11me cord'' spou apie<'e for tM playolf1
tion lO the flpre "3" -three strikes for lmn~innble <'On <1 urmount <See F'OO'l'aAU., Pa1e •>
• _ .. _,
D•C. 23, 1M
BUSINESS
STOCKS
TELEVISION
MOVIES
84
85
86
87-8
Deify~~ ..... ._..
,_ •----• •~•-·.----•....._ ____ ....,,,._..,,. •• .,._..,..,..,.... • ..,~.-r • • ··-" r • ,-.,,, • .-.. -
BUSINESS:
John Cunniff tell,s of r ecord dealer closings
adding to mounting auto industry ... B4
NFL playoffs set
San Dieg o sends Patriots home
The San Diego Ch:.rg<:r:. ~.an·
Ron Erhardt plenty of time l11
think about his next g amE.-
E rhardt s igned a eontnit L"
Monday to <.•oach New f<..:nJ?land
for another season anrl h<· Wt1\
hoping Monda) nu~ht that \hi\
seaso n would lul>l at ll'n-.t 0111>
more ~ame for thP P;Hri,,b It
dtdn 't happen So Erh~r:dt "111 '<I
game will h<' the first on1· 1111
New England's 1981 ~ctwd11l1•
THE PATS ('Ol'LD h..t\1· t.M·i1
a wild-card teum 1n tht' "l dtll>n..il
Football L ague µla yoff.., hut
Pitts burgh, the lt><im ltu. v .h"tl
e liminated from contt:11t 111n ,,,,
Sunday, couldn't l>l'at San 1'11·go
for them Thl' Chargl'r l>, w1nninJ!
26· l7, won the Arnt•n<·.ir1 <'••n
fer ence's WeMt'rn 1>1v1s1 r111 ,., •
as well, dropJ)tng Oaklan<l into '
w ild -c ard s lo t . alonr with
Houston.
flad the l'hur)!l•r'\ 111..,t tt I•\
and New Eng I and v.11u Iii 11.1\1
been tied at 10 1: and lh1 ••:.it-.
wou Id ha vt' r<'l'l'I vr<d I h1· ¥.de!
card by v1rtut· of d '-UP'"'''' ro•1
ord in conft·rl'rJl·l' ,,1;, I. t
with thl' R<mh:1 :-. and l qfl r .• 1
'II 5 , the Ill Ii f1 atri11I ~ h.icl
nowhere to go but h11n1t f•1I l r ..
holidays
N exl Sund a> l1 <111s1 on 11. d1
µla> in <.>akland . 111(· llJ1d ,..,
e arning t ht• h1i1111· (1 1 ld f'd ••1•
lhanki. lo Lh1•1r 1·rinfl rt•11 r r• 1
ord. 9·3 to t ht• ( lllt'r' 7 ', ,\r,rJ
in the N<1l111n.,il l' 111f1r•11• • hi
wtld-card matC'hup 11. Ill I a .i• In
Angeles al l>(lll<i:-. th1 t 11•~t111\
be in~ Lile hu .... 1:;, \111< • 1t,,.1
finished al 12 1 11\•rall I•• 11>,
Raml>' 11 5
ALL FIVE Al-'l' µIJy11fl ll'<im'>
Playoff p i<·t~ r~
WllDCAllO PUIYOfl'S ~---y O.t u
&IT'«,.tC•r\ COl\,ftf~(# •• ., , • '"> .• ,, J
N~hDIWI (OltlHHH. •
'l' .. m, •' ., 1
l)IVISIOMA~ l'LA fOFl'S
~.t,l.;fCl•'t \~4\dAy J •ft l 4
Arntr1cia;t1 ContHf'f\( •
A'--)' 1\i., ~\1Jfft•I tlf ( h ,•·litUU
1,t , ••• ,,.,.,.,,W,r•••J
.. ~ 1' ,,. f). I • ,...-, ... ,,
H.thon.~I C«;nft•tn• •
• "'''• # .... , • ...
,. ,6'n \ f Y "'f· I •' t'" .MJt ~!"' t ... • r-,.,.., .. ,,.. ... ,
(QMl"f~ENCF (l<AMPION~HlP\
),vflld•''· J•n 1 l
Arn.t1(i r'I (tJ11f..,~< •
f ,.,. ~ t-.. Vt,...,• '"' 1
,,..itl10f\oll (.ocitlUH'l'"f" . )' , ...
'UPCR 110 "'1 >V
\MAd•1 J•n 11
~· Nl'w Of'I~"'"' t I
ti,,.
H1<1 .. r. ,h1·11lll ti .. •\ rtr1\Ullf• \.,
ft1 1flft I t Ill P I t&.•'ll 1Jl•IO'>!t1p
> ,1011 '10 1 111 1• l/11•\ ;i\l 'I tH t
t• 1 \ r< · r•·• 11r•I •1 '1 11, th1· 8 4 "'
ti,, Br''"'" 11,.1 1h1 Bill
H111 , t .i1q111111 liq• 1 •1u11d
111•·f'I 1w .i.1 1h th• II II w11uld I 1
11 111111. I• ,,. c ,111 1 lw H 'I• i.~ .I
'!11 ' 1 ... : l.:• 11t r .... ttof' , , .• lldl
, •• -. •• 11 1, :'I n 1.. Bt11., ""•111ld
'1..,,1 :... ,,1 1111 I!•• 111 '• 11r.d rr11H1d
t • ,l I\• I lf< t Ill••' 1/1ro"" lf t•'> 1r••
tfrlermtntd by the NFL on the
bas is of AFC records. Wild-card
le arns can nt\er be ho me t.eams
beyond the openin g round
Jf th1· 0 1 lt.'1 s ~eat Oakland next
S1111dav. they wi ll vis it San
Dit.'go in the Jan 3 4 second
r1111 nd And 'lt·vt·land. having
po:.lt:d <1 hNlN perct:ntage than
Buffalc1 ai:.,1111st common oppo-
nl'n\!) 1 ii I 111 625 > will host the
11111~
Hut if th•• Ha1de ri. win their ~ tld ( <irtl ~:11nt• next Sunday,
t hl'} II plJy lhc ~ccond round at
Cit:\ eland • .nd Ruffalo will visit
San IJ1t'l:l•• fhl' Raiders would
nfJt lw ablt· t11 play San Diego in
rnuncl IW<• ~1n t·c lhey're from the
-.am1· dt\l"ltin
l'htl,Hlelph1..i <JOd Atlanta, the
1-;a-..1 .rnd WC''>t ch<t m ps in the
:"' F<". frn1 -.hnl al 12·4 Atlanta,
ha\ inv h•·atc>n the Ea~les during
t ht· .,e.i...1111 I'> LhC' cnnf e rence's
l11p v.11111• r T ta· third division
v.111nn "1 •nn1•-..1j{d was 9 7 dur·
11)! I ht-)'' 1r
...,., 1f l >u Jl ;,ic; twab Los Angeles
111 "<I '>unr1tt\ 1n the NF'C wild·
··ar d <·m 111int<·r. tht• Cowboys
v.1 11 \1'1 t \tlanla while Min·
•11 ,,,,,,\.\Ill pla~ al Philadelphia.
Hut 1f tlif H:.m-. v. in, they won 't r ... ,. 1111· Fall-one; being from the
.1111'· tll\1-..11Jn lnl>lt:ad. it'll be
t .• ... i\11g1·l•·.., ~1 l Philadelphia and
\1 111111·v1t.1 ut Atlanta tn the Jan.
.! I ..,,.,.nnd r1111nd
B e nirschke , F outs
spark C hargers
. UC I'S QUENTIN BROWN (LEFT)ANDA0881E BEAL 0191'1.AY A TOUGH DEFENSE MONDAY.
dt" is ion winner~ Ruffalo
Cle veland <1nd San Du·gu pJu..,
the wild-card entries wound
u p the s eas on at 11 !'> The
Chargers would havE.' lht' horn~
field advantage a1?a1n~t tht> C...•\"-l>IE<:I> • \P A )C<tr 'l'Jr. Jll 'l;FL rl·co rd He
f1n1..,h•·d '"ih I 71.5 p ai.srng
\ J n.h J1111th•·r '1-l. ri 1·•·rd New defense
UCl's ~ experiment
labeled a success
Ry JOHN SEVANO Of""' Dall• Pilot St•ll It's not every day a coach will
tell his players they 're going to
win ;i ha~ketball game before
thl'v've even s uited up. But
that's exactly what UC Irvine's
0111 Mull>J?an told his team Mon-
day night.
"I told them they'd win even
before the g<Jme started," ad-
mitted Mulligan "What I told
them was I wanted a big enough
lead at the half so I could cxperi·
ment "
T h e J\ n u· a t e r s f o 11 o wed
through with their instructions .
ThPv m :.inhundle d and ou t-
qu1 cked tlw Jumping Kangaroos
of the L' n 1 ve rs1 ty of Missouri·
Kans as ('1ly for the first 20
minutes in establishing a 59-35
advant age, a nd t he n r eally
poured-it -on en-route nnn10. 7r
finish.
AT THE EXPENSE of tbe
Jumping Kan gar oos (2·7 >.
Mulligan and his Anteater s
t urned the game into a g iant ex-
periment. They used t he fi rst
half to finely tone their pressure-·
man defense. and the second to
work on a new 1·3·1 zone align-
ment which was inserted within
the past 48 hours .
Certainly on paper. the experi-
ment was a success. While the
Anteaters were s hooting a torrid
68 percent (45 of 66) from the
floor offens ively. the de fense
w as holdin g lh e Jumpin g
Ka ngaroos to a me re 46 pe rcent
(31 or 671.
defense-and whethe r it was re-
a I o r n ot. T he Ant e ate r s.
naturally, wo uld like to claim it
was, but holding down the Jump·
ing Kangaroos is a far cry from
h oldin g do wn Neva da (Las
Vegas). USF, Mia m i <Ohio> or
Stan ford -fo ur teams which
have scored 90 points or more in
UC! 's four road defeats.
"What can we do? We can not
play a nyone." says Mulligan
concerning his home schedule.
"We'd like to play the bigger
schools at home, but we can't
get them here . 1 would like to
think if we had played Stanfo'rd,
Miami <Ohio > or San Francisco
IUSF'J at home we would have
beaten them."
Mulligan's problem in not be·
ing able to attract a big name
s <~h o.2L i.LhJtS.kaJJy Cinancla.L
Most visiting schools . that carry
names. ar e given $10,000 for a
road appearance. UCI pays its
visitors $1,500.
·'I guess these games keep you
from not playing a nyone at all,"
says Magee.
"I THiN~7"you 1ain co.n-
fidence,·.:._added Whleldon. "In
the long run it's eoing to help us.
E ver yooe plays those weak sia·
ters to gain confidence."
Achieving confidence is one
thing , thougt\._ and achieving a
fa l se sense or s e c uri t y is
another. Magee realises the dif·
ference.
"We've been mating a lot of
m ist akes," analyzes the 6·8
center. ''We just need to execute
better . If you don't Hecute and
grab rebounds ... well, that's
our maln problem ... KevtN MAOEi 00!8 UP FOft TWO OF HIS 3f POINTS.
<• !'• t.;;1n Lhr•.:11 k1c-kcr Rp lf
111 11 1r•c hk:r >-.t ;i · v. al k lll~
-.i..1·lvtnn aftt'1 <11?1n)! a hf .. and
1h·ath h<•llf,, wit h a r<in• dtsPase
'\lon<l.H n1J.!hl bPfor£· lh1
C'h <llJ'l' ..,-111u·11I g;.im1• 11.l'h
1•11 1 h 1rJ!r 1 , .. 11 1•nm it"" p.p•I
h 1. Ill , ~· 1 tr, I'• n .... ,. h k •
lflll .11.:t·1>11 ... '""'''·'" '1111\ rnm• d 111111 tic.11or ai \ c"<•l1';i1n
ll1•n1r:-.d1k1 l111ij t •·coH·n·ll
ft .. 1111 th•· rar-lnt• "lfnat ct1c;ea"''
.. , pJul th1· , 11.tr"''' IJ) L,\1nJ;: ;1
It I f)I I• ~ rd \\ I h four r.. Id w•al-.
,, .. ~<HI I>•"'"• 11111 "' d .1 "i:1unnal
f "ulh .\11 I •-.1 •u1· 11a,11tf ~pot
.ind 111 .. .\I' \\'•· t•·rr1 [)1\·i..,1nn
li!it "lllt J ''•" \1!1111' 11\Lflht•
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ru t \ll'H HO ...... 11 IJll'~V'>
11111 111 11. '"' m, 1 ,11 o(lulle<I the
I h.1r •1·1 • 111111 P•·'<t rnnnlh ~A l·('
~ • n 1 if 1 n ... .. .. c .• 1 n .. 1 t• 1l h 1• r
11 .. 11-..••111 11r l<uff.tlo It cam(• Ii
\ 1•;1r •o 1i11· 11 ,, ll1JI 11 .. ntrSl'hkf·
m .Jcl1 .tn 1·n • tt i/1.d rt·t ur11 l11 SJn
Ptt•/'o ~1.11l1un1
B1·f11r · th1 ~aml· I rf.'m1•1n
1,. n ·cl 11.h;d 1l ~;t"I IJl,r· tn h;,rdly
" I " Ii I 1• t II " ti I k . ... Cl I II
Bt•n t1 '• lil..1 "h" hrokt· a 12
\'•' H • lr1 dul 1·1 re ore\ "llh hl'i 2 1
f1dl1 .,,,~t is <111d ,, I r1 1 lul; .,eonn;c
,.,.,•ord
-Wh11T' 1-tQ-nTrc:rl'lkf' • <l!> perf-t'<'l
111 four alll•n1pb. lh(· l 'h11rg1·r~
v. • 1 ,. 11 t• J • I t• r f 1 • l l 1 n
qu Jrlt•f IJ:H'k Dan I-uuh ("•l1m.1
t 1•111
l h.11 , tit. h1·.,1 f'ft<11 l I han
•'\! r seen by :1 C'hurgc•r learn.·
!' :11d l"outs wh<1 tiirt•<.'led San
f lr•·go t1l ~C01""" on tht'lr ftr~t f1vC'
~Pl ie"
!'ht \ .1un lcd ~Jn U1t'~o pa!>~
111g ~ame produced JOI! yards
anti numcroui. b1~ pli1y!> Chu(·k
M Unt'll' ~aincd a sC'ason high 11 5
\ :11 dli •IO 26 l'arrit•s to provide ,1
h.1r1l) net•dcd running game
!\nrt San Diego·-. \t out defens e
l1m1tt•d the StN•ler~ to 49 rushtn~
. \ ard!>
"WF: KNEW WE were going
hom l.' if we lo~t ." said Fouts.
wht) completed 21 of 37 passes
for hts eighth 300 yard gam e th1s
· Bt·n1 r ,t"t1)..l ' put :-..en Diego
.1heat.1 9 :1 .11 h;.il ft1mc 11n field
•:• .. ti •1f '!:! 21) ind 2f. yard5 The
C h : r .:t•r ' In• f"J-..ed lh"I r lead to
Iii 1 .. r•,., f-'c,ut-. teamed up on a
,•1 ' ti •1n 1·r t11 tight end
"-•tit 11 Y. 111:-.1"" on the ftr"t play
1f IL• 11111 d 'IU.J r!(•r The play
'"'rr11·d 111 !ht· P1tt<>bur gh 23 and
I-nub ..,. nrt•d P1~ht play:, later
fr 1m lh1 mw
Hr Hhh·r' uunt1-red with a
"'h1rlv.rnll dr1\t.' for the Steelers'
f1r-..1 l11Ul'hct11wn <.1 two yard run
b,:. S1dm.'~ T h11rnton afte r Theo
Hrll < .11,i.:ht pa~:-es of 32 and 35
';1rrf...
l'ht· <'hJrl>(ers added 10 points
on anoth.-r 33 yard rield goal by
Henir~chkt• and a JO-yard run by
M unc1e for a 26· 10 lea d with
thr<>e m1n utl'<; remaintng.
PLA \'f~G OS PRlDE, the
"'' eelt>r-. .,marttnj.? from missing
tht• pla)offs for the. fi rst time
.,inc-t· t!n 1 ~Hided a touchdown
\\ rth f1v1• ..,,.t·onds left when
Brarlsha" hit 11~hl end Benny
1 1mninj?h:.tm for a 15 yard TD
JlJ ......
Pcrhdp.., 'id1d Bem rschke.
· ma) tw 11 wa!' the T.~a miwlLl.o.s:; ___ ,
ilh rlanng I e 1'l'am of the
110~ •
,,( .. ·., R lJ BI/\ SlJ N
U-ILi., R £MAIN ?
I.OS ANG ELES iAl'> USC
fuul.b•ll C.:o<ich John Robinson.
«t1n!>1 dcn:•J J prime ca ndidate
(111 a National Football League
Jnh, said Monday he probably
11. 111 rt'ma1n at lhe Trojan helm.
·T m much closer lo slayina
here now than f was ," Robinson
said. addtnR that he was tired ol
all lhl' sJ)('culation.
'l"vt> !)a t1sfied a lot o( the
lhtngs I was concerned about .
1 ·m pretty close to being setUed.
I want to talk to the president n;sc Pr~tdent Dr. James, H.
Zumbertte l one m ore lime -
jnd that should do it."
T he Anteaters, in evening
their record to 4·4 on the seasoo
(a perfect 4·0 at hom e ). put
together . three explosive spurts
which saw them c hange a 4-2
deficit into a 22·8 lead ; a 30·23
advantage lnto a 53-27 bul1e;
and a 84·64 lead into a 104-66
nightmare for UMKC.
What football does, baseball must do better
Again. u has been the case in
UC I's last seven out1n1s, Kevin
Ma gee, the n•tion'• leading
:.caed 11 tbu eam' ~--!l11 lr-lla"'='di!""n~g ..... 1""'co-rer with 38 polnta (15
of 16 from the field >, 20 of which
came ln the Jut 8:40 of the con-
test. He also hauled ln a game·
hllh 12 re bounds.
SVPPOa11NG MAGEE were
1uardl Randy Whieldon, wt;.o
chipped bl 11 polnta, and Robbi•
Beal, who ca1ne oil tbe bencll to
add JJ.
Of courM, the central ill•
followtnc the came wu UCI'•
By.WILL G&IMSLEY AP Speelal Co,.._,.....,
The countdown 11 on for Super Bowl
XV, the latest edition of the ~at411t
one~ay ex rava1an1a n mer tan
aporta.
It wu a roualn1 1ea1on with only five
playoff berths sealed 1otn1 lnto the nnal
two ween of t.l\e campaip and seven
clubs battllns for fl•• placee tbrcMlSh
the flnaJ Sunday and Monday.
It wu perfen · orchMtraUoa. Xudol
are in order for Pete Roulle. the NI·
tioeal l"oatbell LMcue ~•lllk!Mf, a man of many hllU -H......_ mielllt9d,
adml1161ttlltor, prom4Mr Md ddltl tut>-
tbumper: •
Hit lnfluence ta won• tai. ... ,.,
thread of the fabric, establishing the
N EL as the most successful and adroit·
ly governed of all the~ major pro·
resaional ea uea,
11 lea1ue b aseball s hould take
·notice.
That doesn't mean that pro football
has replaced baseball as the so-called
"national pastime." The diamond game
remains 1 part of our culture. It was
started Juat after the Civil War. It wH
nurtured on 1andlou and schoolyarcb.
It 11 played by ktd1 In short pants and
mUUonalrea. It •u produced m ost or
our folk Mroel. There lt llill a almpllclty and a m ys\I·
que about the 1ame -Its unuaual rela-
t\on to the ftpre "3" -three 1tr1~es fo r
out. onc-e threl' balli. 1now four! lo walk. \'et baseball, with all or its inherent
three bases. nine batters (3x3), nine \ 1rt11cs. h:u. om· maJOr drawback. That
lnnlnl(s (3x3 again). '90 feet between is its rt'luclancl' t o move with t he times.
basCS a n d 60 [e•~• 'l iA~nes tf•()in----t~H~--t~-Wtthf)ut j~rdiltng'-4'P----
pitcher 's mound to the plate, all dlvisl· cnrth~. common man appe-al and" lta
ble by three. rich lrad1uons
There also •~ a qu1t>t , leisurely pare to The surcess or the NfL seuon. \be
t he game. allowin~ t ime for poprorn, nhiltty to sustain and even build upoo
peanuts and penod1r blasts at the um 1ntcre!lt until the fina l whistle of Ute
pire. and tense bi1ttle1i<round strategy season, ran be attributed lar1el1 to
leading up to that climactic moment in utianmenl of the tnms to promote re·
the ninth with a J oe Di Maggio at bal gional rivalries and the adoption of t.l\e
(acing the bl11~1ng fireball of a Bob "wild rant" l-tthnlque
Feller The National and Am erican Football
Theso c1re deeply l.'mbedded at· Conrerenc6, uch wllh 14 lean IOfWd
tributes that nothing not the fiercest, Into three div\slo.,s. prov\de two "tnkt
wildest, most drnmall<' football itame card" spots aple<.'e ror t he playoffs
Imagina ble t•an "urmount (Sff FOOTBALL. Pa1e •>
---DAILYPILOT T~.OIK11'1111UZZ.1•
Sports brea~
Falcon fans 8woop down
on 12,000 playoff tickel8 .. , .. " .......... ATl.ANT~ Atlanta ratcou fua wbo •
'buved fr zina ..,..,•\her and loGa Un• -aom• IOI •m•
ml"lr(' lhan eo hour1 bou&bt up 1.2,000 playotf •
uckcti Lu two hv11rs Monday
-t'&lcoo 5teuftty otflcl-1a rtoorted no mltjor dlaturbancea
Jc•plte the t•rowd& of peoplt1, many of whom waited for ho""
••nh to find lhe \JdtllU aon_,
K.,n Morna, the first In hoe, had waited amce ' p .m . Fri·
da) &nd endtld up with 118 tickets to the playoff aame, which
"'1 ll be plllyed Jan 3 or ' an Atlanta
Moms ~aid he at first planned to camp out at the Atl91'·
t.a Fultoo County Stadium u cket window Saturday morni@_J,
but "I started thinking that maybe people would come down
Frida) after they finished work, so we 1ot our stuff to1ether
Thursday rught to come down."
1'eam 0"1c1als put no limit on the number of tickets each
per~on could buy, and most of those in line bou1ht 30 to 40
ti\'lteb each One unidentified man Shelled out $15,000 cash
for 1.000 tickets.
}o"alcon spokesman Charlie Uayton said club officials de·
c,1ded against limallng the ticket purchases because "scalpers
are going Lo get their tickets anyway.
"This way, one guy can get a lot of tickets for friends,"
he said. "There are a lot of legitimate buyers like that."
In addition to the dieh1trds who camped out all weekend
in freezing temperatures. hundreds of fans lined up at the
s tadium Sunday By nightfall, about 200 people were huddled
around portable television sets watching Atlanta's final re·
gular-season game with the Rams.
Before the ticket window openftd at 9 a.m . Monday, some
of the early arrivals were being offered large sums for their
places in line.
"The best offer l 've got so far has been $300," said an un·
identified man who was eighth. "Could probably get more."
He said he wouldn 't sell his spot, however. "I've been waiting
too long to give it up for that ... Besides. it 'II be all over
pretty soon anyway."
Qttote at tlte...,, ----
Doug Plaak, Chicago Bears safety, on what he ex·
peeled to achieve at a hearing before NFL Com·
m issioner Pete Rozelle on his appeal of a $1,000 fine for
s pearing: "I hope to at least get an autograghed p1c·
lure ••
Grrrin "'a• the llr•t to ~lap
INGLEWOOD -When Kareem Abdul-Jabbar m
became the fifth National BasketbaJl Association
player ever to scor e 25,000 points. it took a
member of the opposition to fully realize it.
The historic moment came with 6: 16 remaining in Sun·
day night's game. But the game continued until George
Gervin deliberately fouled Norm Nixon in order to stop the
action and give Abdul.Jabbar his due.
Then Kareem received a standing ovation from the fans,
the game basketba ll from the Lakers' general manager and a
television set from the team owner.
After scoring a season-high 42 points in the Lakers'
135· 122 VlCtory over the Spurs, Abdul-Jabbar now has 25 004 point~. Jerry West scored 25, 19'l during his career. J~hn
Havlicek 26.395, Oscar Robertson 26,710 and Wilt Cham.
be rlain 31.419.
Afterward, Gervin admitted he intentionally fouled. say.
ing: "It was no big thing. I knew what the fans were calling
for and we were down so many it really d idn't matter."
"rt was just a little gesture I wanted to do for him ,"
Gervin said . "I guess I wanted to be the first to clap. He was
my hero. Him and Wilt."
Planft probf.,,,.• delay lrbla arrf11al
NEW ORLEANS -The Notre Dame football [i]
team .arrived in New Orleans nine hours behind 4. •
schedule Monday to begin practice sessions for the
Sugar Bowl.
Coach Dan Devine said he hoped the problems with his
team 's airplane were the last hitches in his plans for the New
Year's Day meetine with top.ranked Georgia.
The chartered plane blew a tire when
it landed to pick up the Notre Dame team
for the trip, then problems wer e dis·
covered with the undercarriage.
"They kept delaying it two hours , two
hours, two hours," Devine said.
He said it would take "an outside set
of circumstances·; for his team to win the
national championship even if it beat 11·0
Georgia.
"Rut as long as there is a hope, we'll
keep it alive," he said.
. 01"'1"' Devine. who has announced he will re·
tare aCter the game, said he doesn't feel his team will have
any extra el'T\otional edge because it is his last game with them.
He said the Sugar Bowl bid is everything his team could
have asked for.
"It's new to most of the kids, but we have a smattering of
ktds-who-ptayed-irrthree-bowtr and one-ot-ihose-deteTmined-
the national championship," he said.
Pain-a •lgn• 11.,e•flear ft)flfraft
Juk Patera was gi ven a five-year contract as •
head coach of the Seattle Seahawks Monday. just
one day alter they finished a disastrous 4· 12 seuoo
with their ninth straight lou . . . Veteran out· ·
fielde r ~ pinch-hitter Del V ... r baa siped a two-year COO·
tract with the Philadelphia Phillies, the team announced ...
Cor van cler Hart, who led the Fort Lauderdale Strikers
through a series of eontroversles and into the Soccer Bowl
was fired Monday by the North American Soccer Leagu~
team . Houston Hurricane Coach Ecllanl KrallU'a was hired
to replace ruin ... in the only NBA 1ame of the nltht Deaala
Jobn1CJD scored 27 points to lead Phoenix to a 1oe.• ~in over ~attle ... In the only National Hockey Leaiue 1ame of the
mght, spectacular 1oaltendln1 by Doiel 8-cb,. boolted
Cal1ary to a 3·2 victory over the New York Ran1en ... The
waiting game over Wyomin1 football Coach Pa& Dye•1 future
continued, but there were lndicationa the wall c ould be over
by today. There were unconfirmed reports Dye would meet
with Auburn Universit y officials about the vacant head coaching job there.
Tea..,1a1•-.••t1••
FollowinQ are the top sports events on TV tonight. RatlnQs
are: " / 1 I elccellent; 1 1 1 worth watching· 1 1 fair· t forget I\. • • .
(el 7:20 p.m., Channel t ./ ./ ./,
-----N8A-aASK£TIIAL&.: l"9rs-.t Portt.nd.
Announc•rs: Chick Hearn and Keith Erickson.
Kareem AbdUl·Jabbar scored his 25,000th point In the NBA Sunday night and has been playing Mii In recent games.
He wlll lead the Lakers against the Trell Blazers tonloht In
Portland. Sunday's 135· 122 victory gave the Li9ker1 their hlthest
slngle-game point total Of the YHr and Ja~r·s 42 was an In· dlvldual high. The Lakers trail the PhoenlJC SUns by four gamts
whlle Portland Is 12 games beck In the Pacific Division .
RADIO
Basketball -Dr•HI It USC,. p.m .• l(N)( (1070); Laken at Portland, 7:20 p.m., KLAC (570).
Hockey -Edmonton et Kings, 7:30 p.m., KOGO (600).
~owhoys
ready
fOr Rams
OAUAS <AP> -Thia week
the Dallu Cowboys are conctn·
traUng on payina back a new
debt.
"We owe the Los Anseles
Rams one." said Dallas wide re·
cei ver Drew Pearson not more
than U minutes after the
Co wbo ys had defeated
Philadelphia 35·27 Sunday to
earn the home fie ld advanta1e
in the Nati()f'lal Conference wild
c ard game Sunday in Texas
Stadium.
THE RAMS e mbarrassed
Dallas 38-14 just a week ago on a
n a tionally televjsed Monday
night game.
Los Angeles must travel lo
Dallas because the Cowboys had
the best overall record of the
two teams.
"I feel good about the Rams.
This is the time to pay them
bac k." said Pearson. "We 'll
have our white jersies on so the
game wiU be no problem."
The Cowboys are barely above
.500 in games played on the road
in which they must wear their
blue jersies. Dallas wore blue in
the disaster al Anaheim.
Pearson s aid: ''O u r con·
fidence is back now. We got that
home crowd behind us and 1t
made a big difference. We ha-
ven 't lost at home this year.
We're 8·0. When Tommy Loy 's
trumpet plays that national an.
t hem in Texas Stadium, we
win ''
DALLAS LINEBACKER D. D
Lewis said the convincing vie·
tory over the Eagles was the
tonic the team needed.
··You heard all over town that
everyone had given up on us
after LA," said Lewis.
"Well , LA is coming here now
and we have to play two full
ha lves to beat them. We are hap·
py to be in that position."
Even Dallas Coach Tom Lan·
dry sounded an optimis tic note.
Just a week ago he said he
couldn't bench any of his players
because they a ll played bad
against the Rams .
"We 're ready for the Rams
now," said Landry. "Right now
I 'm happ y w i t h o u r
perfor!Dance."
Vagabond
Bonds cut
by Cards
ST. LOUIS (AP> -Outfielder
Bobby Bonds . a baseball
vagabond who was idled m06t or
the 1980 season by an injured
hand. was released Monday by
the St. Louis Cardinals after the
club failed to trade him.
"By releasing him, we give
him more flexibility and
freedom where he might want to
pla y,'' St. Louis General
Manager Whitey Herzog said.
"He was not among our plans
for 1981. We wish him every sue·
cess."
The traveled Bonds, who was
acquired by the Cards as a suc·
cessor to Lou Brock in left field,
suffered his hand injury in April
when hit by a pitch.
He went on the disabled Ust in
June but was ineffective after
returning the next month. In all,
he performed in 88 gam es and
hit only .203, belting five home
:uns and-lolaling-24-runs..-batted
in.
St. Louis acquired Bonds, 34.
from the Cleveland Indians a
year ago in exchan ge for
rightha nder John Denny and
outfielder Jerry Mumphrey.
Originally a member or the
San Francisco. Oianu and hailed
as the next Willie Mays , Bonda
also played for the New York
Yankees. the Angels, Chicago
White Sox and Texas Rangen.
Pirates face
Citrus tonight ..
AZUSA -Coach Tandy Gillis'
Oranse Coast College basketball
squad, fresh off a second.place
finish in the Holiday Classic at
Saddleback College, returns to
a ction tonight w ith a non·
conference 1ame at Citrus
(7:30).
The Bucs, 68·50 losers to the
host Gauchos in the cham·
pionship 1ame of that tourna•
ment Saturday night, have been
s parked b y rreallman Cbrls
Beasley from Costa llesa Hlth,
and sophomore Tim Jol\naon
from Compton.
OCC, 7·21 hu also received
some addea 1cortn1 punch from
Rich JCindorf an all·toumameat
aelecUon at the HoUda)' Clualc.
and John Saunders, a
1ophomore from Mater Del.
Followtnc tonlcht '• conttst, the Buct bead for Golden W•t
Collete Saturday nl1bt for a
match with the Ruatlen, also at 1
7:30.
..
SPORTS BREN< I FOOTBALL
Anteater def erue
UCI's Ro bbie Beal (24 ) cuts off Greg
Decker of the University of Missouri·' Ka n sas Cit y Monday nig ht in college
basketball action at Crawford. Hall.
HB wins,
eyes title
at Cypress
f 'rone PllflP BI
FOOTBALL SUt:CESS • • •
It took an overtime period.· but
the Huntington Beach High
girls' basketball team rolled into
the championship game or the
Cypress tournament Monday
with a 61·56 victory over host
Cypress.
The Oilers will face Foothill
Hig.h in tonight's champions hip
tilt cs o'clock ) after Foothill
st opped Marina . 53·46 in the
other semifinal contest.
Huntington Beac h . with
Tracey Clinkenbeard scoring 21
points, improved its record to 6-2
with the victory. The Oilers out·
scored Cypress. 9·4 in the over·
time period after the score was
notched at 52 at the end of reg·
ulation play.
Clinkenbea rd. a junior . was
held scoreless in the first half
but responded with all 21 points
in the final two quarters and
overtime period. She also added
fi ve assists. while Kerri Carr
had four assists.
based on a complicated formuJa
The formula sometimes stag.
gers lhe mind but it defin1tel~
adds fire to compeutaon and fan
interest.
Bas eball 's Comm 1ss1one r
'Uowie Kuhn favors l1m1ted inter
league µlay and has a commit·
tee looking at the feasibility of
r e alignment and p ossible
"wildeards ...
Baseba ll . an old codg'er SH in
It!) ways, mo\'e!> c aut ro u~I~
L nlikc µro football, baseball
does not operate under a single
umbrell a but two the :-Jat1onal
Lea gue a nd th e Amcr1C'a n
League. each autonomou::. each
stubborn!} proud. ead1 su~·
pi cious of a ny c han ge that
might 1·omprom1st• 1t~ sn<lepen
den<'t'.
Cotton Bowl garue
r~portoo a sellout
DALLAS tAP1 Cotton Bowl
offi cials have said t hat the Jan.
l classic between Alabama and
Baylor is a sellout
A crowd of more than 73.000 is
Teammate Cathy Townsend anticipated for the 1 10 p.m
chipped In 10 while Carr had kickoff , said Mike Justice. direc·
eight points . tor of the tic ket sales.
Meanwhile. Marina could con· ·'The response has been over·
nect on just four of 14 free whelming Baylor has moved a
throws,includingtwo oflOinthe r ecord 25.000 plus. with
fina l quarter . In going down to Alabama around 10,000. We are
its second defeat in seven returning orders received by the
games. two institutions and our office
The Vikings will face Cypress fo r .more. than 9,000 seats, ..
t . ht t 6 . th b l f h.rd Justice said.
Th"~ pla~ undt•r · _. different
-.e t of rult'~ The· \I. ha~ a
des 1i.:n a t ed hitter. the NL
doesn t The\ h ;1\ L' tl1fferc•nt
i;;tnke zun1•s 1·11£1m·1·d b\ um
p1res beholden lO th<: lt:ague, not
to baseball
Rozelle. with tht.• _a..,sent of
o" ners, 1s an irnn bos~.
Football has mher burlt sn ad
v:1ntaj?t.!i ovu h:1~chall ll h:.is a
.!ihqrt.er season lfl games l'Om·
,,aretl "'th lfi2 for baseball
l':\ t'ry l.!arne i-. r·rucral while
bast>b<sll 11 f l e n la ~~ 1n
m1dseason
The Nf'L 111 1'l77 .. 11.!n"d a
stnJ?ll', lour year T\' pa(·k a~l· fo r
S576 m1lho11 g1v1n.e each C'luh a
cushton of more than SS mslhon
a ,·e..i r R<1<,,l'l1all becaui;p of its
!'tructure, must lca \t! all t:xrcpt
nC'l work ·howi;; '>Ul·h a s the
WtHld Series a n d All·Star
g amc>s to the sndrv1dual clubs·.
Thu s no -.1nl!le, IU ('r atrve
µ.H·kal.!e
Compt>n..,utsnn 1s ;rnfJlhC'r foot·
IJall plus ~n !'\Fl. I C'a tn los in g a
pl il\ er to t rte a~H·nc~ 1s com-
pcns<ited in the form of equal
talent l)r draft picks Baseball
l'Ompt•nsat1on even ror a lost
s upers tar is l1m1 ted to a n
amateur dr:ift pi ck an inequi-
t y , owne r s sav . whic h has
snurle<l the> final Pl:ivers Agree
ment
Wn:1t football can no, baseball
must I ry lu do better
_ Ontf( _a_ rn e all e or t_• ___ -AllmaiJ m:deu:.~~ uests to the
pt&N!. Collon Bowl Athletic Assoc1a ion ---
Seniors Colleen Herry anci Jill postmarked on or before Nov 2C
Gillingham sparked Marina with were accepted and tickets havE
22 and 10 points respectively. been mailed. he added.
NFL standings
FINAL
NATIONAL CONFERENCE AMElllCAN CONFERENCE
Ea• Ea~
W L T Pct. PF PA W L T Pct. PF PA
x·Phila. 12 4 o .750 384 222 x·Buffalo 11 5 0 .688 320 260
y·Dallas 12 ' o .750 4S4 311 New Eng.. 10 6 O .625 441 325
WashJngton 6 to o .375 261293 Miami 8 8 o .500 266 305
St. Louis 5 11 o .313 299 350 Baltmre 7 9 O .437 3SS 387
NY Gianta 4 12 o .250 249 425 NY J ets 4 12 0 .250 302 395
1 Ce11tral Central .
x·Minnesota 9 7 o .562 317 308 X·Cleveland 11 5 O .688"357 310
Detroit 9 7 o .562 334 272 Y·ffouston 11 5 0 .688 295 251
Chicago 7 9 o .437 30t 2M P!tts.burg~ 9 7 O .562 352 313
Tampa Bay 5 10 1 343 Z71 34l Canc1M ati 6 10 O .375 244 312
Green Bay S 10 l :343 231 371 x ~an 0 . Wl ett5 0 688 8 West ·~ 1ego l . 41 3Z7
X·Atlanta 12 4 0 750 405 m ~-Oakland 11 5 0 .688 36' 306
Y·•ami u 5 o ·-u. 288 Denver ti ti o .soo 310 323 San Fran 6 10 0 ·315 320 415 Kansas City 8 8 0 .500 319 336
·063 Seattle 4 12 O .250 291 408 New Orleans,..!,.1.5~ 29l 487 x·Clinched division title
s.11 o• •· 1t1tblM'gll 11 .. y·cllnched playoff berth
..
I
.,. ..
FOR THE AECOAD I GOLF I BASKETBALL
:·for the record ·
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COLL.EOE
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ST. LOUIS CARDINALS -RtlHMd Bol>-by 80nd\, O\lltlelder. S....I Ty waller, llllrd 1>esamat1. to Iha CNc990 Cull• lo comple._
• ft •• , .. .,,,..,., ~ a.MCITCIALL \ .. .................. "'""' OEHVElt NUGG ETS -Trtd•d C•rl Hl<lll, ........ to 11w VIM> JHI tor &Illy M<IClnnev . ..--... NIEW JEllUY NEn -AMO<lllCecl llw rn lr .. klt\ ol IC"'" l.O<llf\HY. ,,.... coacll. Anl\l•nt llob '"'-t1Cln11on 11am..i Macl
coecfl. WASHIHGfOfe BUl.1.IETS -A-"tad ICevln Grt"9Y, vuard, !In _,. 111--•l•llOlll CNY tor -,erne and llnetl 11,000 DY .......... ,OOTULl. ....,..., ...... ~ NEW ENGL.ANO PATRIOTS -ReM-lha tOfllrac:• ol AOfl Erll•rdl, MM coecl" lllrowgll h "'' waton. SEATTl.E SEAHAWICS -Sl9ned J«• P•ler•. Mad ca.th, 10 • llve·v-•r con•r«t HOCltlY Nl!W VOlllC RANGERS -AMouncacl tllel CralQ PatlrlO, heacl COKI>, •Ill ••meln In tll•I upac:lty ror Ille rest of tile sN-.. COl.1.IO• Oel"AUI. UNIVERSITY -A11nounced Ille rHlgnallOI'\ ol IM R••. R_,., M. GlelO'ill. dire< tor o4 •lhl .. lu.
College basketball
Stanford is slaughtered
From AP dl.apatcllles
PORTLAND -Jose Slaughter hit 17 of 22 field
goa1 attempts and led an scorers with 32 points
Mondav as he spU'rred the Univenity of Portland
to an 82·6'9 college basketball victory over Stan-
ford.
quick hands on derense to pull away from the
shorter Illinois Wesleyan team.
ASU shot 51 percent rrom the field, coM eeling
on 21 of 41. and used a height advantage to take a
28-13 rebowuling edge in the first half.
• • • -• -• • .,,_ ·--" • ,.,.. • ..---...-.... ---.. -• .,.. .....-P'-r .-..,. _. • .-..-r .,.. • ., .,. • • r • -· _, ., • • • ..-, .,, ,
Tu.day. Otctrnb9r 23. 1980 .... DAIL. Y PILOT llS
Low prices set
Kemper season tickets at $12
By BOWAaD L. BANDY . .. .....,,... ....
"The way we have ·ticket& priced for the 1811
Women'• Kemper Open at Me1a Verde Country
Club, we'll find out if anyone ii interested or not,"
says tow'Dament director Don Ruhter .
"We are aellln1 aeuon ticket.a ror SU and that
11 a big bargain. Daily ticketa at the coune will run SB. Where else can you find a day's worth or
entertainment for $2.50 a day <Wednesday through
Sunday)'?
"We have Lried to make the price competitive
enough so anybody with any interest at all in the
tournament can come. If several people split the
coet of a $12 ticket, it even coat.a them leas."
Ruhter says the committee is trying to en·
coura1e people to spend the extra $4 or a season
ticket over the price of a one·day ducat. The only
real stipulation ia the fact the season tickets will
all be sold in advance ot the tournament. March
25-29. .
Jn put years, the LPGA has had no problems
with qualifying rounds but Ruhter uys this may
com e about in 1981. The maximum field is limited
to 132 players.
"We had the largest entry list ever last year
(126 pros) and this time there are between 180 and
200 eligible 'l:.PGA 1>layus.
"111E LPGA ffA.S._ TOLD US that we can ex-
pect to have a quaUrying round on Monday. This
could be a problem for the amateurs because they
would also have to play in that qualifying round to
become eligible.
''We may have an amateur qualifying round to
place three in the Monday qualifying or we may
just pick three. l don 'l know ror sure what we will
do. yet."
The Women's Kemper could be in its last year
at Mesa Verde if crowds aren't increased in 1981.
"We are looking at a deficit figure and will
have to decide what we can afford to lose and still
put on a tournament," Ruhter says. "The club
knows that if we come in al the budgeted loss, we
will be back.
"There were rumors of moving to other places
last year but that is all they were, rumors. We
never had an idea of moving. The quality of the
Mesa Verde course and the exceptional group of
volunteers who help put the event on would make
this unlikely.
"We at Kemper feel it is run a lot smoother
than any LPGA event and many of the men's
tournaments as well. And the players all like the
course. They reel they are treated better here.
These are all reasons to be optimistic about the
future and I couldn't operate if I didn't have an op·
timistic viewpoint."
That's the situation with the Women 's Kemper
Open for 1981 at the present time. •••
TO SHOW THAT THEY not only play golf for
themselves but for others, the Newport Beach
men's golf club staged a Toy Day recently and had
40 new toys and over $50 in cash to tum over to
Share Our Selves. acharitableorganiiation .
S.O.S. adopt 283 needy families in Sou'h
Oran1e County last year wh ich included 1,400
children and had plans for even more this year.
The donation the men's club at Newport Beach
Golf Course made will play a big part in the suc-
cess of the venture. • • • OIL WIU..IAM KINCANNON of the Santa Ana
Country Club and a resident of Anaheim, has been
named to the Board of Directors of the Southern
California Golf Association. He will serve as vice
chairman 'Of the SCGA greens committee. He is a
pediatric surgeon with orrices in Orange.
• • • THE NEWPORT BEACH Women's Golf As ·
60ciation honored the winners in the recent presi-
dent's cup competition. Juanita Stafford was the
winner with Fran Miller runnerup and Mary
Smock the consolation victor in the president's
flight.
In the Secretary's night. Joan Lesnick was
Basketball scores
College .. .., vc ,,..,.. 110, Mo ·IC•nu s C•IY 11 Porllendll, St..,tord" u. S•n 01-15, H ArirON 57 Fr .. no SI IS, UC 0.llil St Sant• Cl•r•fl. New Mexico SI 7• Oreoon tl. Pa<lllC Lullleran •• 8olse SI. 40, C:.I Pol, CSLO) JI
C•lllornl• •. 5e11Ue P«lllc 11 Cal Pol• CPomona) U , Hnw1rd SI
St Cllapm.,. IS, Wf/fM< P«lflc Ml San Jow S• 11. C>uquHne Ml .......
Tul•• 'IO, P\;r~ 16
ilH• Felr·l._ld U. Selon Hall 6l Dartmouth '1. Colby SI
Ho!, Crou "· Oe•IOton 19 TOU•NAMIENTS ........ _,.,,
w T•"u s1 ''·rev u N9'acl•L.V •, Otilanoma Cl1y 7•
High echool women TOU•NAMINTS ,.,.,...
CM ........... SenllfiMh Huntington 119«11 ••, Cyp•U> .16
Foo•11111 ~3. Marl1141 4'
the winner with Gfnaer Guadagnolo rwmerup and
Bert Bloom the consolation wlM er. Elsie NI.Ille
won the treasurer's flight with Adrienne Reel the
runnerup and Sylvia Henderson the consolation
winner.
other awards went to Christine Sellner as
GOLF
most improved after dropping her handicap Crom
40 to 29 and ace of the year to Fran Miller. • • • THE 1981 TOURNAMENT Players Cham·
pionship will be played at Sawgrass rather than
the Tournament Players Club because the spec·
tator areas are not yet ready at the new layout.
"Although the playing s urlace will be accepta·
ble for tournament plav. the areas on which the
fans depend will not be ready." says Deane R.
Beman. commissioner of the PGA Tour.
"The concept or 'stadium golf' was developed
for the convenience of the fans. To brtng them to
our natural stadium before it is ready-would be do-
in g both the fans and the tournament a dis·
service." . ...
Loughery makes
his final outburst
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. !A~) 7. Kevin
Loughery's fin al outburst as the fiery c:Uach of the
New Jersey Nets was to walk off the jbb he held
for eight years
Loughery surprised team members and of-
ficials Monday by phonang team owner J oseph
Taub in Puerto Rico to quit h.ls post
LOUGHERY SAID he made his decision over
the weekend. after a four-hour meeting with Taub
last Friday
"I had the weekend to think about the tremen·
dous di fference or philosophy we have about the
operation of the team." he said. refusing to give
any specific examples of the dispute.
However , he said his resignation had .not~i~g
to do with the performance or the team, Which IS In
last place in the Atlantic Division of the National
BasketbaJI Association with a 12·23 record.
Loughery, known for his quick temper with re·
ferees. led the league in technical fouls last
season.
LAST MONnt. Taub was forced to apologize
to a partner he wrongly accused of telling the
media that Loughery's dismissal was imminent.
Taub said he later learned he incorrectly had
been led to believe the minonty owner was the one
who leaked a report that a movement was growing
for Loughery's ouster Taub;""who declined to i.den·
tify the partner. s aid none or the owners admitted
spreading the story about Loughery and he did not
explain how he discovered his mistake
But Taub made it clear at the time that
Loughery's job was secure
Loughery's decision came as a disappointment
to vete.ran guard Mike Newlin. the .\;ets leading
scorer with an average of 21 1 points a game
"I lost a good friend 1n Kevin," Newlin said by
telephone from lnd1anapohs , where the Nets meet
the Indiana Pacers tonight "He's the most im-
partial employer I've had 1n my life. in and out of
basketball. He had high standards and tie didn't
compromise those standards
"Kevin is a basketball genius." Newlin added
"He's a player's coach I haven't heard one
negative word about Kevm in my two years here.
Kevin allows a professional to be a profess1onal.
He expects you to be one and gives yo u the
freedom to be one
"It's a Joss to basketball hopefull y only tern·
porarily. ··
The Pilots led the entire way, as junior
1---_.iuaUghleL.w8S aided byJC>pbomore-Beyu-Bear
who scored 15 points and 'had nine rebounds.
Portland hit 37 of 57 field goal attempts.
Arlron• S1 •.i...111 W.sley•n 6S New Mexico n, V. (NrlUIOt! Ml __ EIYlt thrOllJI rr11•lt. ti.ans __ eo1orM1111~1
NORMAL, ILL. -Sophomore Dwayne Tyus =:~;:~!·~:.~.!:..,~
scored 18 pointa to lead Illinois State to a 74·64 vie-1nc11•ow sc.11. 811111. ••
tory over the Pepperdine Waves in a~ ~:~e~.!..~.'~~:~ ... 5• 51 "6LECTRIC SANTA/ Stanford's Brian Welch scored 19 points.
Teammates Keith Jones and Orlando Ward had 12
and 11 points, respectively.
1 The Cardinals trailed 38-32 at intermission and
oame t 'thin,_three:119jn~ or tYtn• Portland twjce.
in 1he second halC. But tlie Pilots were able to _pull awar.-.
Portland's record is 8-2. Stanford has a 3·4 re·
cord.
Spar•••• o.,erpoae~r D...-n.w
SAN JOSE -Led by forward Doug Murrey,
the San Jose State Spartans overpowered the Du-
quesne Dukes 82·60.
The Spartans pulled out to a 32-U halftime
lead. At the start of the second ball, they ratUed
ofr eilht consecutive polnta and ran their leld to
21.
Murrey scored U or his 15 point.a in the s~
half and shared hi1h·1cortn1 booora with 1uard
Mike Mendea. Also scortna in double flew-es was
pard Mike Moore, wttb 13 pointa, nine of them
from the rree-tbrow Une. '
Hilh scoren for the Dukes were Bruce Atkins
and Joey M.yen with U pointa e.ch.
San JOH boolted It• record to '1-2. Tbe t>uket
dropped to 4-4.
8-mDen&•reese.•._.
Tl!llP.E, Arla. -Lafayette Lever led a
-, uced attack wltb 12 polnta u lUb·ruked
Arlaona State whipped llUDCIU Wtlleya, ._., in
a non·emfennce 1ame.
l:lften players scored et leut ane polat u tbe
ASU Sun Dnill tmptJ.ed t.ta.lr bmch wit.II Une
mlllut. to '° lD the ffnt half. ud roar Dmla
flDllbed m cloutile ftpne.
C tlte roH to 1-0 u UUnola WetkJaa
drop toM.
S.. acored Ute ftnt alJI pobda ud
opened a D ·polat lud at Ute .S of ta. ftnt W.
..... Ariml• •at• ..... , ............ -.
Conrerence battle. Wls«1111ln 11, fu .. Southern "1
The win snapped a four-game losing streak for E ••"'""" "· •ut11n Pe•Y" Bredley 10., S.11'St.1l ISU and improved its record to 4·5. M1uour11>. ar-" " JSU hit 30 of 22 free thrlows--in the final~ive 1111M1s ~4 • ..._.,..,,,."
minutes wllh so~more.-.]\a.)'1\al'd MalaiDe.-acor· Mm11•11 u . °= ''
fng sis of lhe 20. tllinot1 won despite mating j111t Hor11t c .. oi1 ... 11, A"'"'"••
eight of 28 field goal attempt.a in the second hall. ~~.0~~~!\~,:.uc~~'""""
ISU held a 35-27 lead 1& halftjme. st
Fi lSU l bed .a-·bl fi C!--•t MlnnetoleU.1.owl"lll• M ve p ayers reac uuu e 1ures. ~~ Arunset ''· s. Mcn1u111111"
Mccollum and Bill Sadler each scored u ror Pep· i.su "· X•¥'-'. Oft'°''
d. hi bl t 'll . th t ai.-11.t NewC>rl.-IO,Oelroll .. per me, w c OS l stx s r ~· 1ame. T•""· s1.•1. r-.. Marun SI
Pepperd.lne'1 record declined to 2-7. ~" (al\MS7l~U'1
lief fl• .... , I• flele••
SAN DIEGO -Gerald Jonea and Bob
Bartholomew tallled 17 polnta apiece to pace tbe
Univenlty ol San Die10 to a 15--52 noa-coafe.rence
victory over Northern Ariaona.
San Dieto took the lead early and held a 35-31
advantace at balftlme. The Tonroe tb• ateaclll.y
built their lead in the aecolMI half and were pullin1
away at the ftnlah.
Dan Bu.ch and former Seddleback Coll .. e
atar Ted Hettt.nta each bad 13 polnta for Nortbern
Arbona. The victory railed San Dleeo'• record to S-2,
while Northern Artaoaa dropped to M . .......... , .... , .....
f'lll:SNO -Rodd Hlplal led the Bulldop
with 11 pa6ntl M P'NIDo State UDlftf'lltJ recorded
lu ninth C!OllMCUtlve victory wttll •Tl-• wtao..-UC
Dnta. . . .
-,.,,. ~· r.Ued ...-tb ID tbe ..U. oe
&fenM, UDt tlM Aul• hom ICOltq dartBI tbe lut two ...._ of-tM ftnt ball aDd ... •IT •
balftlme. TM l...S wu ltr«Cbtd to 11 _.. U
mla1MIWt. rnmo bee ,... 1J ID a row e:a''., U..
wtDI ·-,..., t.Jtq. ~bool reiecft. Daftl ..... M .
Nugg~ts deal
Nicks to Utah
DENVER (AP) -The
Denver Nuc1eta of the
NBA Monday traded
rookie auard Cul Nickl
to the Utah Jus ln ez.
chan1e for veteran
1uard Billy McKiDHY'
11neral mana1er Carl
Scheer anDOUDCed.
llcKlnne.y, 25 ,
ueraced 7:1 Polftll and a.3 au1N ln two yean
wltb tbe Kanaaa Clty
Kl.DC• but wu not pro-
tected bJ the lt1np In
.tbe NBA e:1paa1lon
draft. Ha •• pic.ked QI»
bJ tile DaUM Maftrickl
and Aortly tbeNafter
dealt to Utah. He ••• ,., .. a.s po .. u • J::.• ddl ,..r for UM
Surprise your famrly with the boat they have alwa)'S
wanted. We have three custom E'lectnc Bay Cruise.rs
left in stock., ready for 1mm~d1ate delivery.
HUGE SAVINGS uP TO 12000.00 OFF THE RETAIL
PRICE. Compwrut boat-i)f'1ces range from .$ 7900 oo
to S14,S00.~ Free delivery before Christmas to any-
where in Newport Beach, Cahforn.o
Open Sat.$ Sun 9bM to5PM.~ll l7l+l645-0715
~~~@V\)Q~
6dO ~11th 9trtet, Cost. Meu, CA
* "UNIQUE GIFT *
\
I
. . .. ,. . "
IN DAii. Y PtlOT n ..... DO_,,, .... a ,. Business
Added woes forecast for troubled car industry ·
a .IOllN NNU't .. ._... .......
EW YO RK Aluady d•n1erou1ly
""Hkf'ned b> fortl•n t'Ompetlt10t1. r1.11tomer re
iuuana and th r11ln1 ~Ollll ol oU materials and
monty, \he •utomouve l nd\.<ry I• bu b)' bat l01ln1
The 11&u1Uon could become u damaeJng as
•ny or the othera. because It was through their
wlctespread dealer 1yatems that the 1lant, distant,
1mpe"'°"al automobile companies interfaced with
local communities.
ll ltd (OtC'e lO<I More dealers clos~ their doors in the 1980
NOWOPENt
on t Hart>Our Branch. Hunting\~
~
Orange City Bank.
'We squeeze
the daylight into
full-service
banking.
Extended hours w11h extended services And I rec registered
key lags Al Orange C11y 8.ink. Huntington Harbour. we re
open Monday-F11day lrorn 9 AM to 6 PM and lrom 10 AM
10 I PM l:'ach Saturday With a lrtendly. competent s1a11 10
ass1s1 you in all aspects 01 µersonal, as well as commercial
banking Dedicated to se1v1ce. we're on the move Con
slruc11on is now underway on our Huntington Harbour
branch In the me<1nt1me. a temporary lo cation at 4972
War ner AvenL1t' is open tor your convenience And ot
course, our b1':lul1ful main ofllce al 2730 E Chapman
Avenue 1n 01c1nge 1e muins at you1 service Stop by either
location Jnd pick up :1 sturdy 0 1ange City Bank registered key tag w1lh your
personalized code numbe1 In the event ol lost keys. the tag instructs the
l1nder lo deposit the keys 1n Jny m;ul box Orange City Bank guarantees the re·
turn post.ioe We II keep your keys. and your money. out or the wr ong hands
V1s11 us soon lnte1est bearing checking accounts beginning December 31, 1980
Marn Olhct: 2730 E ChJpm 1n Av~nul.'
ur Jnue Ca 92669 • 7 14 771 3300
Hut .... •~ '4972 Warner Avenue
Hunhng1on Beacn Ca 92S.9 • ,,_. 840-1321
There is only one
Webster Cash Reserve Fund,
and only one place to buy it.
Thats Kidder, Peabody.
15.,.,~~~r~nt
/Vy,"1d
Diversified portfolio of ~hort term, quality investments. Webster
Ca_\h Rt:Wrv,. •• .. '''' l•141J 1111mry m,.,1l-1·1 fund investing in short-term debt
instrurtlt'nh -.u• ,, .. ~ 1; •, I """"rt11n1-111 .111d ('..nvemment Agency securities, co·, .and h • .rt~ ...,~· ""~,.,.,,,Ml f "''" h .. nh <tnd savings and loan associations
with tot di .. "'"''•A t i b1ll1•11 • '" "'''"'· .111J Lommercial paper. Commercial
.paper mu't fw ,.,,,.,f l'nrh•· I. A I. 111 11' N11uv.ilent.
-
,. . .,, .........
RISES TO TOP
John F. Welch Jr.
1GE names
l 1W e lch
1 chair~
NEW YORK <AP)
J ohn F. Welch Jr .. a
15·year -old c he mic al
e n gineer who w as
named head of General
Electric Co. 's financmg
s ubsidiary 1n 1979. will
become chairman or the
company on Jan 1
In April. Welch also
wtll become chief ex
ecut1 ve offirer of GE.
the nation 's ninth ·
laq~est industrial com -
µany
Wtdch . a 20-year
vet eran of GE who cur
ren ll y 1s a vice
c hairm an , replaces
Reginald H. Jones, 63,
who ts retiring Welch
r ose to the top JOb over
tw o o ld er v i ce
c ha irmen, .rohn f". Burl-
ingame. 58, and E<lward
E llood Jr , 50.
J ONES SAID in a re
cent ne ws conference
that Welch l'Omes from
··a solid core of ex-
per ienced, res pectable,
ho m e -g rown lead e rs "
among the 1',airfield,
Conn.·based company's
404 .000 employees.
J o n e s ha s been
chairman s ince 1972. GE
makes televisions and
appliances , power -
g en er at 1 n g and
trans mission equip·
ment. aircraft eng ines,
e lectr1e motors and
locom ou ves . GE also
prod u ces coa l and
plastics.
Welch earned $487,703
in salary and benefits
las t year Jones earned
about $1.07 million in
sa lary and benefits In
1979. Welch's succession
to chief exeeutive officer
s lot was delayed until
Ap r il l. whe n Jones
leaves the company
E a rly
e re tire ment
a ccepte d
model year than ever before In 1.8 years of reeord·
keeping, accordjng to Automotive News, which
compiled fl1ures. showing a Jou of 1,643 for the
model year.
The trade publication said the losses left Blc
Four manufacture rs -Genera! Motors, Ford,
Chrysler and American -with 21,945 dealers, or 7
percent fewer than the 23,558 dealers in the 1979
model year.
It contends that ''This is the lowest total since
the infant days or the auto industry when the
manufacturers were beginning to build their
dealer organiiation.''
Interest rates, to which dealers are especially
sensitive, have risen sharply since the figures
were compiled. like ly adding many additional
closin gs to the list. Moreover. buyer interest has
been only luke warm
Gas savings
cuts car fee
SALEM, Ore. (AP l Slate officials are
studying a proposal to base auto registration fees on
the ( uel e fficiency or a car.
Unde r the proposal, re gistering a vehic le that
gets 31 miles per gallon or more wo:Jld cost SlO a
year. Vehicles getting 21 to 30 mpg would pay $20,
and those getting 20 mpg or less would pay $30.
Currently. the state Division of Motor Vehicles
eharges a nat rate of $20 for a two-year registra·
t1on
No state has a fuel·effic1ency registration fee.
Eighteen states l'har ge fees based on vehicle
weight, 16 charge fl at rates, 13 charge by vehicle
value, two by vehi<'le horsepower and one by vehi·
cle age
Gi:orge Burgess, an economist with the state
Transp<1rtat1on Department, said the fuel-
efficiencr prop<>sal would raise about S5 million a
)l'Sr
The loss of dulers baa many raml9,catlons
beyond diminishln1 the sellln1 power ot the Bi1
Four.
Dealers In Japanese can,' for example, have
be•n farin rel1tively well, and could be in a posi·
lion to take an lncreasin1 share .
of the market, thua wor1enin1
'the U.S. imbalance of foreign
payment.a.
"With fewer domestic deal·
1ers, how will we cope with Im·
ports -pass a law?" asks
Albert Sindlinger, whose firm
closely monitors the automotive
market and provides marketing
data to the Big Four .
cuNN'"" Sindlinger's firm, based in
Media, Pa., predicts a prime Interest rate of 2S
percent of m ore sometime alter lnau1uration day,
leading to many m ore dealer bankruptcies and ad·
ding to the financial cr ises of the big manufac·
turers, who lost $3.S billion in the first nine m onths
Of 1980. I
Even short of ban kruptcy, high interest rates
have an immediate and markedly negative impact
on dealers. "Whe n rates are high dealers cut their
inventories," says Marina Whitman, GM 's chief
economist.
SAID MS. WHITMAN, "If we get no relief
c from rising rates l it will hurl us and the
economy." If the countr y suffers a double-dip re·
cession. she said, "it will be because of interest
rates."
With fewer models to display, the entire
marketing system can be upset. Customers are
presented with fewer choices and longer waits . Ad·
vertised models may not be in stock. In genera l,
e nthusiasm wanes.
Any eventual rebuilding of the dealer system,
should good times retur n soon. would suffer from
the inexperience of newer dealers and i he loss of
years of customer goodwill that older dealers have
built.
ONE OF TH E SAD Ironies for the automotive
industry is that one of the most likely scenarios for
lower interest rates includes an economic decline ,
which might be equally as bad as high interest
rates.
Ovt-"r 1,h t-" Cou n t t-"r
t•EW YORI< IAPI C><l•tO ~,,:~~n~o,,,~::!~1i:r.;~ Ct11SoG1 Ctt1UtA
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1\\10tt tor _,,., . ., ComCJH
Su><i. lllO A\i. (.mlSIH
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<0'. <0'' S•<M•r 9 , 0'> ~~~~:: • • ... ll ,, ... 11 '1 !.•tm\I • )l » , 2'1 • ru .. 14~ 1''· SnMeo ' IS • 1S'. n I .. 01 •POl•<•l>I• ''' · "' • 5n•wrrit 4<t • cs u•. u 1 n. 1s1. I 1&' • 11 ' 8'• , ... \. l.~D. l fl .'i111n1nary J I O·lb l'• ' lO )() ' °"' " s )01; lu 1 NEW YORK IAPI Mo'1 •l • i>we O'Ytr • ·~ ,.1, tn•-counlt>r 5100\ \upplt~d Oy ..ASO I S31 • Sl1 t Namt Volume 81d A\k•d ChQ ' ..... ,. Df'riwrWst S11,l'OO 1•. 1 S·l6 .. ' ,. 9 IS' , fSl. T•ur\O•I J0.1,JOO 7~. 2'• . 10 JI .. J1 lnttl ' 103,400 ll'. Jla.. II 1 • Po.,.,l1no 1•s.l00 l't I ... ... IJ ,01 • 10'. AppltC 1"6,800 2'1"" ,. .. • I" 13 7'• )1. CP>eynRSc 144,800 I IS 16 1 1' lO' , ll ( 1 11\C U l,100 11'" ))'. . \. 15 0 0 MCIC 141 500 I] ll'. . .. " JI )I , C•IO• 1•.100 • 4'. " U>. IS>. CmllEq IJl,.00 )'. '" . '. II II._ II'• 1' 41 • 41 , Advanceo ttl 10
19'. """' Otclint-0 "' 11 ~"-l'Q'• UnCl1•"91d •.•14 n 19' • 19'' To111 rn ..... 110 13 U '1 U"'-New P\IQM .. ,. 11 IO N~w to•s I• u IJ\o 11' • Tola\ -..IH 1•,031100 ..... ,,. t
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MU T UAL FUN DS
Instant UqujdJty. '1fl.i1•·i. • ·"' 1,.. 11•<J..i•rr1t-<J on any business day at current net
JS~I VJ Jl.lt' lrlJJ~ Jl•ll: ' ..... ,,., .. ,1 .. 1,1 •. I h(• nl·xl uusrness day. Withdrawal requests C ll lCl\GO 1AP >
+.£om~ J.,4SO ex-el'ut-i~fl
have accepted early re·
ti rement incentive offe rs
from Sears, Roebuck &
Co. and will leave the
nat ion 's largest retailer
Dec . 31 with half-pay for
the next three years, or
until age 6~; whichever
t1tcur!j fi rst. Sears said
Monday.
NEW VORK II.Pl C•lvtl'\ Bull • Bond • 75 NI. I S HIV J S6 J II MunHY I Pl•" In• "JJ NI. Com SI a \J
Tllo follOwl~ CJ\» Bulle~ ;. .. 11 Co::y," •I .. NI. IDS NO 9 SO 10 l'1 Mun1ln • 1' 1 0) Pl~" JI 11 l l 01•t.""rs._.,:S,;•.;.l_,;-.:;-------11 1.r~111010n~!1o't~c~u',-,,,.', e1~, ~.~r,,,· &*e\Q1",~ ,·~, .... 1 N ~~~ e. 1~1 ~ ~~d*:'ACM:, :rn-.:ttt,? !', ~~~~9wfh""~:,~: ii~'~,· 1ffi NL ----f-dn bt··fTmd,..ttP/mrr Yr1td•·r. 1· .. ,1,,KJyl f'XIS er epresentatrveoywTre. mall
or tclt·ph11n1·
OividenJo, J\'dan·J dai ly; .1111.J d,.,, rtlnit f'll rrionlhly.
No salescha rgl•, ru, ro·d1•111pt 11111 i1•c or w1thdr.1w;:il p<"n;1lty.
Securities 11W\agement professionals. Webster Management Corpora-
tion is the lnv~tment A<.Jvliior ilw Drt'yfus Corporation rs Sub-Investment
Advisor c1nd Admtnl911 "'"'· And KJJdcr. Peabody & Co, Incorporated makes
the fund available In lntlivldu.ll ilnd institutional investors.
Personal account 1upervlsion. Your KrJJer, l'e.ihody H~1~tcrrJ Hl•prc
sentalive handll'!> your fund lmld1n~' '" pJrt ol your invl">lm1•111 prn>;r.un
For more complete rnfnnnJ11<111, 111dud1n~t t'Xf>t•11M>,, rn.1r1.tKl'lnc.'nt Ir~ ,ind
y1ekl calculcltion, please scnJ th'° roupon fnr <• p r<1Sf>4'< 111~. Rl'.ul t hl' pruspt.'<. t us
carefully ~fore you rnvest or ~nd money.
'Ntt 1nnu•l11f'd y1t'ld for tilt' 7·dAy p.•rit>d tnJt.J 1211?/IJCJ (. urrt'nl y1,.IJt '"' ~""''" 111 th1'
Fund will Auctu1tt fro m llmt 10 lrmt', .ind .rl' 001 nK#t .. rrty rt1p1H1'nl•llvt' 11( fu1urt•
rttuhs lnwston thould rtnwmbtor th•t princ1p.1l 1n 1~ Fund I• not lnturrd .ind th•t y1tlJ ,_
• func11on of lht 'YP' .ind 1u•ltty o( tM llwtt1n1tn1t, ~mfollu m.ttur1ty •nJ up.'r.tltnK n~nws Wt1gh1ed •vtr1gt lft to m•turlty of tilt' purtftillo 11n tlll?/M> w•~ 2J J•)"
n Kidder, Peabody ---------------_; ___ , Iii Co •10 Ncwpot1 C.nter Orf"•· Sul•• 1290 1 . • ~!.'!R-~~ORA II tl Newport a.ch, CA·~ I
"",.,,, .. HIW'Y,,. .. , ~ ... ,," .... l11ft•"J'' Ttl1 tn.t) "6-70IO t I
-eo ... ..._..offtClil ~ , I ' I I Pluw ~nd a pros~ctus for tht WEBSTER CASH RESERVE FUND. I
a . N.,M I
I Addrm I I I I City St••t Zip Ttl1 J L-~~~-----~~----~---~-~----~~~~
Sears called the early
r e l i remcnt lncenli ve
program "an outstand·
i n g s uccess." O ffe rs
we r e made in Se p ·
tember to 2 ,4 00
e mployees In Sears· cor ·
porate operation and its
mer chandise, credit and
internation1al business
groups.
"We were pleased by
the hig h acceptan ce
beca use It dPmonstrates
that the plan ls good for
t he employees, good for
lhe corporation and
good ror shareholders , •.
sald lhereport.
Outer\, i;;. .. "" Mon111 ~;.;.,, E ,,~~ )A U ~t Stock 17.08 ?4 00 MMkOpt ii.ii , lntom I '3 NL SIStrfft •n• NI.
Ille Prt<t> ., wllicn NI w~ un••••I M•~· ,. 75 NI. S•ltct I 01 1 ,, MONY F 1J 01 u,. H Er• 21 SS NL Ewell ..... Nl IM•• '>e<Ulllle\ r.Fr• """""" Mun 8d • 0 NL .,,., Py 9.SI 10.41 MSR FO 1100 NL H MOftl 1'04 NL Fea r 4l :H .. I. co.Sid M•t oetn (.nt ~'" II )4 17 '3 F-IO•I 10 II NL Ir\¥ R•\11 ,,0\ 'II Mui Ben 10 .. 11 •I P<1m• 10.00 NL lnvot .-uu \Old IN•t b\.c!I CM •t Fo 1q II )0 ·~ G•I s.c • ,. ..I. httl l9,, .. l MIF """°' T• Fr• , fl Nl SIHdm ... Fun1u ••Ivel o< t>Dulll'll Chp 0 11 1' 71 NI. Ht YIO 10.. NL l•Y FG 10 U NL Fund 8 3' • 01 Pro St <•ICtt. Am tna 1.71 NL l•el\lt pl\ll u lt\ Cnt•lnul 36 84 NL LI Mun 1 14 NL JP Grin IJ.IS 14 qi Grwtn s SI b OJ MtdT IS.76 NL As-.... NL
<fl&•Qel Mon0•1. COIOl\l~I Fund> Purlln 11 11 Nl JP tnco 8 01 I 11 NelBd IM t S6 Fund t.. Ml nvest 11\ NL h!I ... , """" II 0 11 ,, Selem I Ol NL J1nus II 10 NL Mul11•1 ol em.,.. tricom I " NL USAA In< •.» NL
Able 71 "4 NL Grw111 e.40 9 It Thllll •.JI N'L .John H•n<oct<· Amer 1009 NL Pn. SIP 0.a U • .U Vnl Ac~y J ,21 I'll. ~(0((1 E 11.aa I'll. HI YJtld ... J,•a Trend J2.0.-NL 8oncl l~.46 IO.tl c;_,11 I s 47 '., nem l'lillft; Unll """' ll.01 IR
AOV IB ll NL rncom • .. 1 06 "f,•"'cl•I Prog Gn•tl1 !2.lS 13,~2 IMem • 4S • •• COfW -"·" un .... Svc °"'' Afuture 17 U Nl. Opln 11.0A 11 OJ Y.llt t,02. NL B-61•n I. i.l b t. Fr• O" 10 H Int ~ 11 ~ 1t 01 9r-"'" "·" Arr.,.;.~NJJ14 JI I\ J1 coi!'<.~ ~t ~~ .. N~ .~~~~ : :~ ~t ocI;~;· l,., ·~~ ::'~!.~~' :~ ~ ~t g :::1t :u: a~ ~·l~;· ,;,:: ;rn Ed•O<I 1'. 19 11 11 (.wllll All 11l I JJ F5I ln•t\lors Kempe< Funds. N•I A.i• 10 I/ NI. HI Yid 14.tS 1' OJ Un 11\t II 41 IJ ll . HIYIO ' ,, ' II Cw11n co I 11 I... Bno Ap "4S IS St lncom 7.9'1 1.0 ti•I Ines "II NI. Inc.om SA1 •.1' UnlleCI Funds. AIPll• F IS.. NL Comp ad 9 Ga t 11 -Olt<O I j4 t .JS Gfow 12.3' U SI l'l•I S.curlllo\ tnvttl 10.11 It 11 Accm 9 '4 10.:12 A Bl<lllf 13 46 101 Comp Fd t U 'IJ Grwtll 11 40 U SI Hf Yid l."4 t l l 8al1n 10 11 10 .. Opln 1J .. IS.JI 8oflCI ~11 S SI
Amtrlc.., FunOl ContorO It " NI. rncom 6 71 I JJ Mun 8 I Jl I SI Bono 1.41 J '' l H l!a .,...,,.11 Co" Gr ll.3' H .ft A 8•1 'IJ 9 ~ Conr1tcllcu1 Ge<\1 Opt" • S4 I.OS Oot" lJ IO IS.Ge Otvld S SI • 01 v ii i• -••II Co" lf\C IO.JD 11.2' Amcp 1J O 14 70 Funa 11 tl ti 11 Sl<><k I SI I 11 Summ It.SI 11 l1 Grwlfl I 41 9 07 \loyeg ..,. •• 11 FICIU< 11.7) JD )I
A MUii 11 JI IJ •S lncom • .. I 01 T .. E o. 111 Id Tecl1 14 C» IS JI Prefd S ... 6 40 lllelnbw ) .. NI. HI 11\C IJ.IO 14.l'!
An C.lh • u • .. Mun 8d • .. I 0 "WIEll • " 10 •• Tot RI u '7 U.17 Int om s" • " R•••re • .. Hl '"'°"' 'SI IO,,. Bond II ff 110 (.On\ •n· un.t••ll H W•ll 14 19 NI. K•Y''°"' Fund\ Stock 11.e» II., ~IKO s.c ... r Munl •• ., ....
FO Inv '. 'I• Gon\lel G u 1' NI. Fnd Giii s u •. oc Cu• 8 1 u Ol u u Tu £• '·"" • 0 1!""11 II,. NI. UIS<I 10.CI 11 J1 Grwll1 IJ lJ ll .. Co"''"" -••II FO\l"M" G<o...p Cu1 81 1.,,. II 11 HE 1.llt Fund Grwlll "·" HI. V~ 11.7t 11.IS Inc om I M I fl Cont Mui I 11 NL Gnotll t.76 NL C11\ 8• 1,02 1-'1 IEQ"ll JO~ 11 11 11\CO 10.ts NL If Sw1 t.11 NL ICA 9 u 10., Clrr C•o t• JI II 70 rncom 14.43 NI. Cul I(\ 1.•1 • ll Grwtl1 17.21 "·" IP•"' ,,._, ., ... l.IM .... N Per\ 1" 1 ... 0.t•wart G'°""· Mwt•I t.SJ 10.41 Cu1 K7 •• n 1.51 rn<om 10 10 11 °' Capll 16 ... 17... I'-11.tl 17.0 W,11 Ml I SJ • ll O.ut 14 JO u" SpeCI n .JI foci. Ccu' ~SJ\ 100.JIJJ n.!C! R~ Eq 11 IJ lJ., C.rwtll 17 14 ,..,, ll'l(Oft\ 1.S>I U l Amer~e1· 0.1•"' U1l1609Fr•nll.rt"Gnlup. c"'•· 110 •• 111 4~ TUE• s.n •OC SP«I 11'4 NL L .. GI lt.0119.M C419 110 • J1 , .. 0.1<11 l 46 I IS AGE l.46 U> "' .,. .. I • H•u1>er•• ..... m S<-r I'~ $411 Sit II .S II.fl Entrp ISC» 16 46 Tl Fie • 16 • 0 9•-11 S.'4 •.40 llllerl'il UO •ti E<1r·ev tUJ NL Co1'1 SI Ii.• NL I"<-•~· HI Yid 'lO • 91 Delta 1.. . 10 ONTC 14 l'O IS.AS MHO.C-tt Co Guerd u 1S Hl 0. ... 1 • l'O NL lft(em io.a II.II
Mun B IS to la .. Olr C•I> l Ot NI. Grwlfl 7 M Ill 1-p 10,". · 1.rlll)' J ti NI. ln<om 11 11 NI. lllWM I. U l .W Ve ntr 1t.n ll 11 OodC• 81 JS II 'NI. Ulllt UI 4 So4 MH\ -611 Men'1t 4.SJ NL Intl FCI It• Hl Capl I .... HI. Cm11~ 11 .. 14.0) OodCa SI n 21 NI. tncom 2.0l 2.lt l u t119lon G<p· . Perin 't'°' NL MMI II -••II C01'11'1 1.Jt 9 J7 E11c11 41.. NL Oru 9ur IS 41 NI. US ~v .. ., 1, It ~P Ler U. II IS.51 Scl1u1 l .II H I. MMt 1 ll NI. Oet" I Fd Am 11 2' It lO Oreyf\j\ Grp C•Plt 11 OJ ,, ,7 I '°"' u t i NL Hew Wld IJ.OS NL '4M<I .. ,. NL ».n NI. Grow » 1' NL A 8na 11 7l NL EQllll 6 2' •.71 mom I.Of NI. Newt Gt H 02 NL T11',. -••ii 1>¥•'1 I H•rbr " .. \J ,, D••v• ,.,,, ,. 21 Ful\Clt tM "•"' 19.'6 NL "••I '"" J... Nl 5e<w•ltY """"· .. ,. NL P•ce 1s.oo 17.l2 Ltv1t JU5 u., c mrce t n NL TaFOt 1.02 NL HlcM I• 11.1' NL aOf\41 1.u 1.• I"'' r u OS NI. Proyld l 7J 4.07 N Hlne IVIO NL 1"41 Tr I> IJ IJ, .. Lii• lni 10.1• 11,0I NO,..HI IOAi NL 1.""ty 1 ... e.lt 11'• I a.a Hl A Gt11Fd 1 » 7.IJ Sot IM , " NL Pllol 11.n HI. Llnclftt ~IO .. NL l'IY VHll IU4 tl.S7 1nw1t .... 11.S.4 J•IE I .. ,, NL
"Htrlt11 uo NL r .. b I0.11 NL GT I'll< ..... , NL Loom, '1'1 -·1~ ~L H .. we11 .: .. '·" Ultra ti.I? n.• $< .... , 4',J1 NL A ln1&tnd t 7S S It Tl1<d C 1,71 NL Gete 0o !.S.fl NI. Ill .,_ " 0-11• Nj.. S.t« ... .._. !l>pKI IU2 IU7 A rnwll IUJ NI. Eegt Giii 1.71 ... 0 GIE S&S ;M.71 HI. I. M1111' • .......!'·oo NL °"'Wm '°·" NL .,,, SM 7.tt NL lfa"91141•f 0.-: A invrnc 11.tt NI. E•IOfl•.._ro, GI S$ Lt • 41 NL or .. _... ~IO'Wr Fd. $411 s... IUI NL ..... » ... -NL
A HIGtfl J.a:J •.t• 8•1•n '·" t II Gen Sec une•ell AalflltCI. Ut U .I " It.JO IU4 S."llnel O... rlMf Tr 11.n HI. A NllnC 14 ... "U l'ourt 111,10 NL Grll1 llld 17... NL !If Cltl •.n 10.«I H VICI \t.U It. &pe1 S ... t.ll ~MA l.tl NL Amwav '·" •.U Orwll1 .. It 10.St H1mlllQ11: On GI , ••• J0.01, Ill( ... 1.12 •• ..... ,, ..... ., ""' •a.!! Hl All• 140Ulllllon. tn(:Oftl '--'' ... , , .. ~ s.•t ',, In<-,, .. ~.• ();1411 tt.~ t•. c.tm ' ti .. '"'" u... NL
Ffld 8 &JJ t .n s'-' IJ, IO 14, It Orwtll ll.7S ll ... L11~I"'.:,.,. J8rol ~ t• ... S..<I 12.M. t~... Orwll1 lt.• tS,7) ~II ~· el tncom '11 4.S4 Sloe-11,'1 IMI lllC01'1 8 01 ~L II,.,._ .u -t'• ~ .111 "l. 14.M lilt--'"' 1 l ~tGrll U1 l0.1' lbefttldl ~ H1'1 Olfl JU~ t. !l<-r 1,0$ e,to Allli\ a .• IUS try tt.11 It.II ~u nl f .... 1.'
tLC: Ot 17 • 1e" C ... m Fd Hen Le• •. 15 1111 •·• .... Tl,,,_ IS;: .... r-l'[i: ... 11lt Ml nL
9L( In( IJ lO u.., IO.» II.JO NerOld. 16).0 L U!t Go,• '·" ..,. OTC Se< ,.; .:n • ..,. "J· '··n f!I• I 11.1' NL S.llt tnc 1.0 NL lllfl!I ''·" 17.tl Hor Mlfl ft ... t• ... ""41U ,.,_,. jltare1'1 M IO. f IUf IMMI I . 11. ly II 7"4 NL
8HI '""' u.. NL iwrwp ,, '~ ,..,, '""' HIV '·°' '·" ~·.To '1*' .. ~ ':::~· .. ,, .... w.. "·" NL '""'" 11.n 0 ,1 "~ "·· "" 8.CM Chencllr· Elf1111 Tr n .D ISi o ,.... ... 1 .. = $4 ·1 Hl TrJ 17 H 1t f With., I~ Nl.
1t1v14 '1J 10.d 1111111 Ta '·" .. o rwt11 •.a '·°' ~~100 ~· • E --. '· "L E§ J. 1'.ll \ii. ~"' t NL HIMvn lt.70 II.JO lYrtrn a.2' Nl lll<tf!I J.71 4,0, "' ti • .. tt, tlM m t.Jl NI. I 61 NI.
THiii " NI. l'elrltCI •• '°'" TrtUI! 11.0. '''°' M D I .Jt IJ. ....,.,, 0..L _... N I Nl hK Glfl IUO NL f r1'1 IG 14,jt JS• TrPa ... -•II Ml'I 11.15 'J-1' 1"11 H ...a It.I t 11.it 0 , t\"
8M< Hiii 1U7 NL lrMtr"W ""'*' 1"4111•try. P > NL =~: t~ .. 1= Orwtll :· .. tt IKI 1· 1, 0 . ...~ leNtr 0.-; ,l\m Ulr 'tt t ,1J I~ HY II,., IU1 .. ~ 90 ,,.,.... 1S t Ill... It Ni41 l •• , •. ,,_., NL lh~ll It.II NL r .. lllf 12.11 ".·" ~,1 · • ...::..." NL $Mr... t.n •. '""" • • ..
IOI I'• '°"' NI. HI l<m 11.• 12.1' I T1I e.H •.01 -" 1 ~...--": "9(1 IUI 11. ".... ... · .... .,., eo: o,t~ ''·" u• 111 .. tt 1i.a 1s.11 i:'kll< tt-D n.1' Pll•'"' o.-.· 1.w o. •"" I lfL 1 .. 1 Ill< ,, ... 107 "•11 F 1).J41)tt 1W 1 ... IC t &' ., ..,t 1,1.si tt,14 flllt H "-1t ti. IM)f ir .._ · ML JP!fl c:!I' ae.11 NL h re I ... NL 111¥GY.i t . "77 .. .)4 ·!! Mee C 4A lt1 :t: l'W I NL :::,• "•.r'i:! 1Ut us oon UI NL ... ~ 14 IS. ~: = ~·= .t,1 ~'" "'' '""' , . "" -...... c.:m 11~4': NL "'r.4~!: °"';Ji NI. 1":'11'~ ~ • lt1t'l'mo '";:; ''fl'.i. .. :T.-· I ~~ ~" e .. u s 14 ., HI. AtWI ,,,., HI. ioi 0,, IJ,.16 ''-• LtMtl .. ,, "t:I: II IM lilf ...... .,.,. ....._. __ _
'" h ?? ..
k •• h
ttUStNESS I STOCKS
Monday'•
Cloal111 Price• COMPOStl'E TRANSACTIONS
_.. • ._ ..... ., .............. ., •• ~ ... llllHlflf,,.lw ...... DtlrolleMCll'lcll'INIHttef.11 ___._.....,..IW __ MM._.IA,_i.tlW\ .. S.~lllMOH'-'-1"'"1,.t
f~. ~ember 23. t 980 •Wl 'r 1111.v r
Terran« McCarthy is mWluger of th · Or<1nu•· I. oum.•
Real Estat~ Center of Imperial Hank . <'11..,10 Mf•'>11
lrvlae Savlogs and Loan Assoclallon J ntJ \ .. 11 .. l
Federal Savlng1 and Loan Association, \'an Nµ1s 11 •• v\·
announced an execution of an ap,reemcnt unll pl All "' r 1·
organltation under which Valle) l"ftln ul wd I a1·11 ~u1 ,.
lrvine in a cash transllct1on totahnr. <11JC1 rm.1111JTt:I\ $;{ 3
million.
Davld C. Brillon, who hCC> t auli(hl ht>ll'I t1ml r11u1 .. 1
marketing clasi.es ut Costa Mesa 's Or1tn~l' < '11,"1 1 '1111••1!1
is general managt>r fo r ltw <Jue1·0 Mai • ll<111•l I onl!
Beach
Batrroughs Corp., manufacturer of hU'olO(•i. rn 1t•hu11-..
has announced plans to build J SI U n11I 11111 1o1.1·,1t·111 11
g10nal headquarters in lrvine
David T. Blankerhorn h.1s bPen na11w d 1'11 i. I •· _ •1 1111 •
officer of Co mmerce Baok !\1·wpurt U "'' h "'"' ••· l •°if
Voss has been appointed manager of l111 r 1•1 .. 111 1\ r1,, • • l
real' estate department Thno\b~ I. Str;11h·r 'n;;1r 111 111 ,,
the board, was recently el ectt:(I pn · ... 1tl•·11I 11( Iii• 1 .t'•I 11111 1
Business Propertre:. As~,,crat:nn
Quarter Sill es of ~6.202 IJIJll h.n • lu • •1
by Rampart Gt'neral In('., II\ 1111· rt •. I I l ur ,. r•ll
quarter ended Sept :m compare-. l o sr, i'I!. ·''" r.,, 'rJI'
pl'riod of 1979 ~&les for the ~•x n1»nth' I"'' 11• 1 .. 1 J
30 were $8,797.600 tompared •11 ~.1~.~··.! ~'~' 1 , lh•
period the µrevrous y<·ar :'\1·r l•1~. I 1 1111
µeriod was $240.800 or !J t•e11r ... II' r .. h .111 11111111.11 ... 1
111eome of S5:.3.300 or 21 rr·nt~ 11 •1 •Ii• .... ,~
Sepl 30. 1979
Ji11me!> Uole Corp., f"1Ju1i1 .1rn \ .iltt,
lnJ?S of $719.1)18 or 17 t·1•11b 111:1 ... han
23 cents '19791 for l11v first 1111C11 ll·r 1 r
t l1e pert11d tnl·r •·..t:.l'd :M I•'' 1 ·n • •·•11
SJ,995,402 Thl' e a 1 ninJ:!:-. ind uil• ti .1 , 11 • 1
fir5t q11:.incr ol 191:Sli ;Jilli dlltM11·r
I •tftf : ,., II 1• 11 1
1 II 11. I
f. I" !t'
1> tj 'U
t'I I )If'
Dennis I'. Mr~alh 1:. :111c111 n 1..1r. 1 • 1 t•I '1 1111 11111 •1111u •i
and Cran:.toun Nl ·\A 1•ort lll•.i• 11
Courtney St'•·pll', a n n ll \r• 111 t.·11:•111.J r'• ,, • ' · •
president in 1•hargt· •11 LJ;, .. 11 llfl 11 1• • •·•111 1· 1"111111 .,(
Cal1forni<1, a \':rnl·C1U\ l r ln1t1 h c 11lu11.t 1 •I 1 1·d '• ••
e"tale dl!vch1pm1•11t f1rrr1
J enifer '1onro(', Lr .1n1 1• 1c : .. ••1'"llli.. o!
Or;:ini::e Count,\ fl•>ml· .mil G~·r lt·r1 111 •• ., .. 11f1l
Patrick )'I. ScruJ!~"•. ''"' por fll"i ' 11 1 111 .. 11 ·~
:'.'.t-wport Ht"arh off1 1· .. (Jf C , ,.,·kN \1111 r '.ti'• I
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-DAJL Y PILOT * 'l.llildlr· 0.C.•C. Z\ ,., Telerision TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS.
I '•I I \ '
-EW•ll-
.. , •• Nl'tll1
WONOI." WOMAN 0.-9(,_, wf\U.t o•., •
• PQPlll9I W<"J"I lu t•e..• •
' O•AIOOl~tlf~
I TIC l ~DOUGH
w ·A•t 'H
Hawo\e"t• l'\j/tll I ~..... a •..,"_a" t Old•a< •1 <•
........ -.. ~·t..,r• 0",_1...,~Hl
THIMHHY "ll~
lttOW • a .ten NC COM"4HY
; rHt AOVOCArn 1111 .,..,
S'•INIO • -• IM /1 I "' •Hlul•Wilhi -&rna.t1Jf1t61tf
.. ,.QU•' ~~fiil 6 b•lah 9'1
~ QN NfW$
AJIC NEWI
... , M.l tr<E
WllOOME llAC"'
ICOTTE.R •\'e~ feana'
QeD• •rnJ N••l11to\jlur
t\A•• • VHJOI•'" +tHtft
wa~1111•gllm •n .. "'•• 11'141
vwi.i•~ oa.i.•IC..11 '••"' .no Oeacl9 l'(,I 10 lto•v noa
•>ioml I GOOO nMES
DICtl.CAVETl
J ean Stapleto n ~tars in the title role of
'Aunt Mary" as a handicapped woman
who organizes a boys' baseball team.
an<l Martin Balsa m is featur ed tonight
al !J on CBS. Channel 2.
Gu"'1 11arulU Ma '""'""
(Patl 2 OI 21
• STUOIOSEE
Friends SGubb divu••
Nl(;Ol<i and Damtdll E1ue
mire e~plolt1 lnu {;1oyn1111l
Island~ (.n1ca90 (",.,I
Scoul5 i>lay eartnbull 1Rt
(JJ M "4 "S•H
All;;t • 1r1an&•us1on u>"'ll ~
ptnl 01 Friink ~ oluu<l
tla .. t..eye >U~l)UGIS n1m VI
having hepo1t1t~
@) BARNEY MILLER
Bainey and 111s del~lt•&s
go unde1g1<>vnd whi;n 11n
111 11 afl1C con11011et goes
t>e•ser~ and 111es 10 fond
pa9simgers smgle file 1n
the city's subwey sys1em
7:00 I C88 NEWS NeCNEWS
HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Al C1111stmes, a milrthant
seaman trom the Oroent
deli-s a g1tt 10 Fol\i•e
from 111s l<>ng·IOSI lalhel
I A8CNEWS
LYNN SHACKELFORD
• M•A•S•H
T urr1ud Oown IOI " future
postlton al nome, Cha•ln
is so 1tat11 ne relus.s tu
1aik 10 anyo1111 "' 1he uml
I &ARETTA
OVEAE.ASY
Gue~ts s1nge1 H1ldt198rd•
8e11bdra Hollman Tedi
Svtlon
'11) MA~EIL I LEHRER
REPORT
(I) TIC TAC DOUGH
@) MERV GRIFFIN
Gu.ist~ 01ena Sovltiro,
CllB•les Nelsoll Reilly. Biii
Russell. Reo•• Phllbin
7.20 8 NBA BASl<ETBALL
LO) Angeles Lakers vs
Portland Tra11 Blazers
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Matooy Roge" spends 8
oay al ine olfice 01 the Los
Angeles He1a10 Examlnu•
a new "'ater sport calle<S
Skl·lt!SS skiing " G THIS WAS AMERICA
Lea•n•ng To Play· The
1ndus111a1 1evolu1ton
bmughl n-concepts 1n
Cha••rl l...isfi•g•
8 KNXT (CBS} Los Angeles
. G KNBC (NBC} Los Angeles g KTLA (Ind 1 Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABCJ Los Angeles
(I) KFMB !CBS) San Diego G KHJ·TV (Ind J Los Ange1es
llJJ KCST IABC) San Diego
ga KTTV (Ind J Los Angeles
• KCOP TV (lflCl) Los Angeles 811 KCEl·TV 1PBSJ Los Anqeles
'1ll KOCE TV tPBS1 Hun1rnq1on Beacn
living_ ~ vacauon 411d tile
weel<eno D S,ttA NA NA
Guests The Cum11 S1sl4'<~ 8 HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
Ga ALLIN THE FAMILY
Wt111n on eloe<ty aunt 01e1
alone aod unloved. Eo11n is
Hiii 0111y one who comes 10
pay r1no1 111spec1s •
Ii) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT 69 AN ELIZABETHAN
CHRISTMAS
CELEBRATION
Proc:ess1ons. te1u1tt1g
smg1ng ano danc111g rtP<·
eel 01 the Eltzabetha,, 0011·
oo 111ghllgh1 lhe festive hOI·
1day
(I) P.M. MAGAZINE
8:00 8 THE WHITE SHADOW
A Ce1ho1tc boys· club end
un o•phanage provide
Coach Reevu and his
1eem wllh an oppor1vnl1y
10 eal)8flenu the 11ue
meaning or Ch11s1mas
0 THEUTTLE
DRUMMER BOY
Animated An 01pnan boy
goes 10 Bethlehem and
a111ves al the Ch11s1 Child s
manger w1lh nothing 10
~e except a SO'\Q (Al
U MOVIE
• • • • T Ile 400 Blows
( 19!191 Jean-P1eue Leaud
Po111ck Aullev Oirec1eo by
Francois Trullaul A young
boy dep11ved of parental
warmlh ano the ac.tePI
ance 01 n1s pee•s lurns 111s
al1ena11on ano oesp.iu
10 ... a•d a ltle ol small
crime~
Career rebllilt
Former comic now has 'control'
By NANCY GOTLF.R
LOS ANGELF.S !AP> Marty
Ingels knew it was time to quit when
he had to be earned off the set of
Johnny Carson's "Tomght'" show , a
quivering, quaking t!motional wreck.
That was four years ago. Today the
former comic has turned the "whole
Hollywood garbage rat race" that led
to his breakdown into a multimillion·
dollar business placi ng celebrities in
television commercials
After years of ha rassing show busi-
ness agents for work, s uddenly they
a r e calling him.
Instead of worry-
in g whethe r his
career will be cut
s h ort b y s ome
n a m e l es s
t e l evis i o n e x ·
ecutive, Ingels is
-"~ bu sy bui l din g careers .
The biggest pro·
blem facin g t h e
,,.GELS m a n who o n c e
and has made him a hero among
Ct!lebrities tired of cutting through
t he layer s of s how bus iness
bureaucracy
"Celebrities are surrounded by
arsenals of assassins whose whole
job it 1s to set you off your track,"
Ingels says. "After my breakdown. I
realized everybody in the world was
always trying to get in touch with
someone in Hollywood. Projects or all
kinds were dying on the vine because
people were not getting through to the
right person."
WHILE INGELS HAS made that
idea pay off -grossing more than S2
million last year it wasn't easy
getting started.
"'At the beginning I was constantly
in tears on the te lephone," he says.
"One guy said, 'You're a has-been
comedian.' The transition was very
hard. But people finally got the idea
it wasn't Ingels the comedian calling.
but Ingels the 'arranger ' "
•• ..aHN DINYll'
NC THI """"'9
Jotln C*\-\Mmt up wllh
Kwmn Ille ''OG· Foule 9Mt, Miu PIOQy and e ttvnl. lul of Muppeta IOt I
C411Mftll0f\ o4 IM Yule!~
MMOll (R)
• ,.M.MAGAZM
A llotOltal 11\el ~ti.e
In tr..ilng MMKMI. an
ettll'l\04 a1 lllt Quinnett
Book tremPQlltlt 1ec0tC1:
8111 Heuls re11tew. "Nine
lo Fl.,. .. , J«ry Bak., nu
nOlldey ll'MnVi' Pf~· uona, Capt Ca,,01 on zinc
• MOVlf
To Be Annou~
I HTONIGHT
COIMOI ··wno Speake F0t Eerth?"
()T Cart Seg1n wea11e1
t•IM< lh41 m11or themes
of the M rlea and otftll tome ceuUonety warn1ng1
ab0\11 OYr tulurt
()) F~IU THEATRE
'Going Nowhere··
1:30 G THE IEAA WHO
SLEPT THAOUOH
CHAISTMM
An1m9l&0 A young bruin
go.s 1n ae11c11 ol Christ·
m1S and finds some unv·
1ua1 adventures llong lhe
way (R)
• CAROL BURNETI
ANDFAIENDS
Guest "tan AIOI fD NOVA
Reo Dee• Ot Rhum·· A,
g•oup ot sc1en11s1s on lhe
ISiand ol Rnum oll tne west
coast 01 Scotland stuo1es
111e red dee• 1n •IS natural
11ab11a1
L.' TIN PROFILE
11:00 fl Cf) AUNT MARY
Jean S1ap1e1on po•lrays
Mary Dobkin a Banimore
woman wno 1gnore<1 ·ne<
seve1e pe1sona1 tiandocaps
and went on 10 coach
more than 40.000 cn11oren
in sandlo1 baseball tR)
0 THE MAC DAVIS
SPECLAL
Lmda Grat. Melissa M11n·
chester and Miiis Watson
101n Mac Davis Ill u Vule
tide musiG spec11t
D O THREE'S
COMPANY
Janet and Chrissy are
s'1ockad when 1nev meel
lhe older woman Jack IS
dallnQ (Rt
G) MERV dRIFFIN
Guests D1an1 Sov1ero.
Charles Nelson Reilly B•ll
Russell Regis Ph1lb1n
Glen Super
~NOVA
Rod Deer 01 Rnum A
g•oup of sc1en11sts on Iha
1Sland or Rnum off tile west
coast or Scolland studies
111e red dee• 1n •IS natural
nob1te1
11:30 D ®J TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT
11enry rebels wnen ne
1e111ns that 1115 daughters
ore plannong 10 move out
TUBE TOPPERS
KHJ e 7:20 -Laken Basketball.
Kareem and Compan y travel to
Portland to take on the Trail Bluers.
NBC e 8 :00 -The UtUe Drummer
Boy. An animated version of the tradi·
tional Christmas story, followed at 8: 30
by another children's special, "The Bear
Who Slept Through Christmas."
CBS 8 9 :00 -''Aunt Mary." Jean
Stapleton stars in this true story of a
Baltimore woman who overcomes
physical handicaps to coach a sandlot
baseball team <photo at left).
~ Ill a COIYIPfOftlltino
llliMlllon
l o MONlwt
JOICllH WtlO
HOGAN'tHMOl.I
HogM hopet 10 be able lo
UM Gen. &w11na11er·1 ., ..
,., In 1111 pten1 to blOw up
a train
• MOVll
To 8e AnnouflQ9CI
•• CAPTIOHec> AeC
NIWI
11:60 8 tll MOVlf * • "Voung Ptonaen
Cnr111mu" ( 197fl) Linda
Pu11, Roget Klfn A young
Ploneef COUC* put H ldt
pe1aona1 grlel to '•t.no
the gift ot trlendlhlp during
lhe Cllr1ttm11 aeaaon (R)
-Ml>ftGHT-
12:00. TWILIGHT ZONE
Proteuo< Fowler, a ~II· and 1n10 1ne 1panmen1
below'1is \RI
Negros An ••Plorellon ot hk&O tMCher 11 • boys·
baqu1ne: a dance·drama school. 11 asktO by the
• THEBOOYrN
QUESTION
Pe11$hao1<1 Gooos 01
Jonathan Mill., snows now
post mortems •••
1nd86penslble tools 1n
modern medltlna and as~s
10 what e•lenl improve·
men1s 1n Ille eapectanc)
ano n11ann are due to ooc·
I Ori
10:00 0 STEVE ~LLEN
COMEOYHOUA
or salsa ballet with an orig. trustM s 10 end "" 1each·
1nal musical ICOft by Will~ Ing carw
Coton 6D THE eoov IN I 'ACE THE MUSIC
QUESTION YOU llET YOUR LIFE
'Pe11sh1bte Gooot Or Buddy Hacllell hlS tun
Jonathan Miller shows how wnh an Amaz,on. a cross.
pos1 mor\ems are bow eapen and• a lady
111despensible tools in who's had 127 mamage
mooern med•tine and aslls propo11ts 1n1s Y•••
10 wh81 ea1tn1 Improve. 12:30 0 TOMORROW
ments 1n life e11oec1ancy 1 Gueata The ·Brooklyn
and health a•e du11 to dot· Boys Cho;1
1:00• MOYll To 8eA~.
1:30. THI LONI MHOllt
''COlor.00 Cold"'
• MOVll
•• Yi "Oooo Dey Fo1 A
Hangln9" ( 1959) Fred
MecMu111y, Meggie
HayM When 811 ta•ltW·
mtn cepluret a llaln thet •
1tf'1 killtl, he II _!lltmt,..cl
10 hno "''' Ille 1ownap90-pte preter 10 tlllnll of 1111
CtPll.,. H bemg gul ......
and incapeble of such •
crime 2:001• NEWS MOVIE **'Ji "s.ci.uM Ot You"
( 1952) l..oretta Young. Jeff
Cnandter Fea1tuf ot lollng
the men •he lovet, a worn •
an conceals he1 PHI
HJ1Pri1onm1n1 trom Mr
11ilfl
2:251 NEWS
2:30 MOVIE
• • • '• "Five G1ave1 To
Ca110 I 1943) F1ancho1
Tone. Ellen •On Stro11e1m.
• NEWS 2:S61 NEWS 3:10 MOVIE
• • • "People Will Talk"
(19!i 1) Cary Grant Jeanne
Crain
• MOVIE * * *' / ' Ob1eci1~e Bur·
ma·· ( 19451 E,,01 Flynn.
wm1am Prince
4:008 MOVIE Guests Loni Anderson
Jonathan w1n1e•s. Dick
Marlin Boll and Ray
tors 9 MOVIE
11·00108(1)0)) NEWS ••'} Tile Blue Da1111a"
HOLL YWOOO I 1946) Alan Ladd, Veronica
* • • ' FleSh Ano Fania·
$Y I 1943) Chatles 8oye1,
Barba•a Stanwyc~ ea NEWS D @) HART TO HART
Aller e•lend1ng het nosp•
toloty 10 a s1arvmg young
aulllOr Jenn1le• e.penenc·
es a seri8' 01 near·fa1al
acc1de111s \Al
Cl) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEW~
SOUARES Lalla An O•·ser•lceman 1s 8 NEWL 'l'WED GAME svsoected ot murde,,ng G» THE ODO COUPLE n1s un1a11t1tu1 wile and
Oscar develops an ulGer must prove h1s onnoc:ente
ano blames Fe11, Id• 11 D THE FBI
Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND m BASIC SOLAR m MISSION:
ENERGY IMPOSSIBLE
Sola• Re1rohls The IMF is assigneo 10
4:251 NEWS 4:30 MOVIE
• • Sells 01 Cap1s1rano·
1194:11 Gene Autry Smiley
Burne11e
'11) THE WHALES THAT
WOULDN'T DIE
11:30 II LOU GRANT stop a oeal 1n•olvmg lhe
Wedne•daf1"•
Oayci'"e .tforle•
Fiim t•om all areas ol "'"a'
mg aic 1nco1po1a1eo into a
program deo1c111eo 10 111e
only whale tr>e gray wr..c;t1
1111s lw•ce •OC0¥1!r&d l1orn
neo1 des11uc11on Nurrated
by Jae• Lord
10:30 CD NEWS
Cl) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
fZi) PAESENTE
BaQutne De Lo~ AngehlO!i
JOHN DARLING
THA'l'5 ~IGHT , KID!i 1 l 'M
G0fr-..IG TO 13E. COMINV
,0 EA.CH OF YOLJR
H0U5E.5 T HIS YEAR IN
fHE CHANNEL ONE:. NE.W 6 CHOP'7£t:'< .'
l ou ge1s an eouc:a1ion Pu•chase and resale 01
at.out hie m a ghello Amer1can arms 10 guerilla
scnool when he cnooses a ~ovps
S<.no1arsl\1p w1nne1 !RI 11J IHOEPENOENT
Q THE BEST OF NETWORK NEWS
CARSON 12:40 8 Cf) MOVIE
Gue\ls Bert Convy Man. • • 1 "Cactus In The
lyn 11orne l~I Snow 11972) Richard 8 PRISONER· CELL Thomu Mary Layne A
BLOCK H young soldier on leave d•s·
1/1/n~n Sha•on t11arns that c:ov11s love 1nen the hearl·
1111 has used n1s influence o•eail of sepa<1t1on wtien
to help ,,,,. son Paul •s ne is 01oe•ed ofl to war <Al
, -AFTERNOON-
12:00 G» • * The Crimson
P1tate ( 1952) Bull Lan·
caster Nick Cfavat
3:00 tRi • • * > Camelo•
tPart 11 11967) A1cna1d
Ha"'' Vanessa Redgra•e
3:30 8 • ,, • Gregot10 And
H•s Angel ( 19681 Broder·
•Ck Crawto1d
by Armstrong & Betluk
auOOLPH AND ALL O li
TlriE OfHE.a af.INDE.E.~
A'PE. G EIT>NG A WE.1...L-
Dt:5E"RvEO REST 0~K
HOWEV£~. I 010 0RING ALONG
ONE. OF MY FA ITHFUL ELVES/
A, IHE. ~I~ ,"QL.E.'
Doctor gets
inside death
By PETER J . BOYER
LOS ANGELES 1AP J An yone who's s een
any of Jonathan Miller 's 13-part PBS series on the
human body. "The Body in Question ." won 't be
s urprised that in tonight ·s final episode. Miller
considers death in a most forthright manner,
abs ent comforting niceties and euphemis ms
But even the steadiest Miller fans. accustomed
to his off-hand style while probing livers and
s pleens. might flinch a bit at the treat the good
doctor has in store tonight.
TONIGHT AT 10:30 ON KOC E. Channel SO
Miller and a colleague open a corpse. They squeeze
the liquid·filled lungs of the departed fellow, carve
up his liver, slice into his heart This "is neither
fr ighteni n g nor r e -
puls ive," Miller assures. ,
''it's simply a necessary r~· R~\'f L~W I part of our m e di cal • • r~ ... _
knowledge." '---------~ Ind eed , M i ll e r
Celebration in song manages to make a post-mortem seem like a
grand mystery. repeatedly emphasizing that only
in death can "the causes of pain, decay and dis·
ability in life be obs erved irt minute detail . . so,
in the history or medicin e, it was only possible to
understand the ordeals of the li ving after we'd
made the decis ion to open the dead.''
J ohn Denver and the MuppelS blend 'their voices in _a. mus ical
celebration of Christmas in "John Denver and the Muppets -a
Ch r istmas Together,'1.airing tonight at 8 on ABC,_ Channel 7. -------·
,.
co nfesse d he
agonized about ''whether I will be
funn tomorrow" is overseein the
opening o a okyo branch.
What Ingels is best at is getting
through directly lo the celebrity a
company w::!!ig to hire for a com-
mei:ciaJ sp · . the caller-the...ti:ou.,_. -----------
ble of contacting various agents, ch • h
business managers, lawyers and re-r1stmas s ows set
b' tbaJ.1i01-Jls...l.hey remmte an<i.Jns.pe""'-.M1l"---I
corpse's organs, Miller and his pathologist pal in-
dulge in a little pathologist's humor. Miller notes
INGELS INC. IS a huge s uc-
c~ss, and Marty Ingels says he has
never been happier.
ceptionjsts to get an answer.
Ingels is proud of what he h&1 done
building a new career and famlly
life with his wife, actress Shirley
Jones -.and-SP'1'U no bumilit.y in
CO'!J~ratulatillj( bimselfr
KOGE. Channel 50, has day favorite will be
:Scheduled an evening of f e a t u r e d o n · ·Th e holid~ family ravori\_es Festive Bach" airing at
for Cht1stmuvtewtnron -s: 30 p.m. The orchestra
Ghri1tmupay. a n d c h o 1 r o r l h e
who discovers the mean-
ing or Christmas, airs at
10:30 p.m. and, at 11 .
p.m .. the Monn-on Youth
Symphony and Chorus is -
that the deceased's liver was enlarged, but it
wasn't quite the classic "nutmeg li ver."
-"FOR SOME REASON," he obser ves,
"pathololists seem to have this ... "
• .. .. -. Tendenc y t<fnlme. ChTngs aner ood," hls
friend adds •.
"Basically I dropped out of show .
business because I couldn't control
anything," he says. "Whether or nol
you worked as a-eomedian was op-lo
some guy with an anonymous list
somewhere. Now l 'm in control."
Re claims to have been instrumen·
tal in putting together "anything
(commercials) you see on the air"
and says Burt Lancaster, Lee Grant,
Rod Slei1er and Cary Grant have
called to ask him to find product~ Cor
The Great American
Mime Experiment of
Cleveland opens this
special night or pro-
gramming at.11:30 p.m.
with a delightful half·
hour or h oliday
scenarios in pantomime
and, at 8 p.m .. "the
Sounds or Christm as I I
com b ines traditional
Christmas songs with a
fanciful ballet and pup·
pet version or "The Nut·
cracker."
University of Oregon 's
Summer F estiv al will
join solois ts and conduc·
tor Helmuth RHling. '
featured in "Caroling, --------
What Ingels is in control of is a
firm with 38 employees In six cities.
a business he says has "revolu-
tionized" the way Hollywood works them to sell on the air.
THE IMPROVED production Ex. pansion set values in the commercial·m•king business has made his job easier. he
says. "Commercials are nol only not
for 'N1'ghtJ1·ne' an onu.. now, but Bill Cosby 1ot a · television series <"Fat Albert"> out
or his wonderful Jell·O commercials NEW YORK <API -ABC News' with kids. Marlette Hartley after 22
"Ni1htline," network television's years had to wait for a silly Polaroid
first late night news program, will be com merclal to do well ...
expanded to a half·hour from its cur-Ingels knows all too well the ups
rent »minute format beginnin1 Jan. and downa of a show business career.
S, the network said. He wu on top with a television series
Johann Sebastian
Bach's "Ma1nlfical in
D" -a perennial holi·
am -t.ord. the program-1-9-ex~ut~e ln the 1980I, "I'm Dickens ... He'• MOVIE Ul'lllGS
producer. said "Nightllne" will con· Fenster," then hit bottom with a n..._ ... ot,,.,.......,,_
Unue-to_cover one_major_sWr)' .,e..,at"'b<&--__,d ... 1uc~,.o.tte.Jlt•r bankruplcy'_;irUKl-l~l-jl-==:"."'."~=-"'.'l -,.. ~"' · u aid h h _...., emotl-al ... -e-.. do-. ... ... ~.,-c,,..._ everung. ne s e opes to llUU new, ""' ur --·~ ~
elements, including essays from out· · •J 've beep called everythlna from l!:!I ~·":--~o
aide conlributors. a crude uplttart to the Henry Kil•· rm
· h lncer of commerclala," he ••-, re-AU. "011 ~"'0 "NighUine," wit Ted Koppel as -,-"-~-..,.,._
anchorman. was introduced March ferrtn1 to lnduttry reaction to h1a ~
24, and hu been broaduat Monday bu1lne1t. But the talk doesn't bother u-11 ::,i,::~
h hl m. • "-tc"...,,. a--throucb Thursday eac week. The
procram will be broadcut Monday. "Now qent.a and celebrttJes are ® NOONI U111>111 '' ADMmo
Friday beglnnint in April, ABC News caUin1 me," be aaya. "How can I 1"!9!:..~ .
tald. complain?"
• ,
, ' -".
Al 9 p.m .. Mel Torme
is h ost in an encore
performance of KOCE's
"The Christmas Songs,"
a sentimental tribute to
the holidays featuring
popular c arol s and
traditional songs .
"Christmas Lace,"
the tale of a generous
lacemaker and a thief
Caroling," a concert of
Christmas music taped
at the world -famous
Mormon Tabernacle in
Salt Lake City.
Christmas on KOCE
concludes with "Silent
Christmas" which pre-
se n ts a selection of •
tradition ai Christmas
music and a modern
adaptation of "Th e
Night Before
Christmas."
----NOW 8HOW1NaG1------... -luet11 P'•" Ori. .. 1n H~ Twin SeHleMc~ CIMdo!llt <m1121-.010 cm1 63t·l~t <71•> Sit·• <71•1 u..m3
WllMlll Cifllllll west cmr n1.JtJS
NO-~--..wrr•IT
... ,.... -... Edwtm lwtft C.lltllll V•t lO
84f.~lU IJO H90
UITlll&
Hatbot 81¥0 0, '" \ll IUl
NO-~ __ .... _ .. .,
/.
. . . .. ... . ........... -----.-.... -...... ·-... -~-.--·--......... -_......... ................ ~ .. -......... -., ..... ..--...... ~ ....,._ ......... " ............ .,.. -............. .
ENTERTAINMENT /INTERMISSION TUNday, 0Kemt>er 23, 1980 DAILY PILOT 117,
----------------~----~----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------......
Rkfte,_ CM....,.. ...
"THI LAST WAVI"
~IUY IO•lttiHll
~I '~~ .. Ml fU'll'l' I\ l'I a1
11\.,.~\t1n
u .. °" .........
T •no1 Jtll llA"9HALL
OAVtO~N
At tne Keyoo.tt'd
[I';) . Im---11:11:11-
----NOW BHDWING----
IUlllll AUil• ttSt~•u --·· Crnema Vie10 ~nal\ttm 011ve In 81oo~hur~1 loge South Co1sl Plata
819 9a~o m 6446 !146 21 11
wm..sna UA Twin 893-1306
830~94)()
SC_,
•1 8' ....... ,
494-1514
------STIR CRAZY "" ·~_.,, .. ~·-· ......_.,a• ..... ..0 IMa.f lllOMH
_., __ . .,_
A CffAHGE Of' MAIONI 1111 ,., .. ,1!9-,............,.,........,,.
-···•-llOIAM.~-,.. __ .,..,_
NINE TO FIVE -tt .. 1t1:1 ... ~H--·-l-llOIAM.f-
------STIRCRAZY "" ................... ~ ..... -·-·-1111--·-,,,,,. .... ,,, ..
POPEYE CNI ......... " ........... ..........................
-~--AAGt NG BULL 1•1 1.a·••·.klll·••·•·•·•• Sf.aiOAY ......... _, UM.'f ~
... Ml.Oil• .... ate' ............
STIR CRAZY "" '"' , ...... ,.~ ... , ·'"""9 , ................ 1, ti
SC 111-v
•1 Br<Md-y
C..v'f CM• • OCM.Oll ..,._
SEEMS LIKE OlO TIMES •J'OI
494-1514 '"' , ........ " .. .. , . .,.... ,., ................ .
llall.ft1 l:U , ......... ......,. IJOO Illa. _. IM
IMPORTAN T NOTICl! CMllORU• UltOlR 12 fRll! --·---·--INSIDE MOVES !HI -NOATlf DALLAS FORTY 1~1
If No AM (M AecMo Wllll 111n•ll°" A.c<esMlf''I' llrl119 V-0... AM l"W-lllil
Fr-.., ti f""YC..·~f-·--
all..en.i !.1 THE NIRROft CUCK'O -
I 2 • ' 87~98.50 LOY£ ANO '8uLL£TS
If No AM CM •AedlO Wlllo l(lnill°" Ac<•-~ &1"9 v-0-. AM IHI
,JIB ~= 1--°":=i-=:-
, No AMC... Aedlo Wltll lfflllkln A<:cesey llrl111,_.,0-AM .....
==-,, --·-·----1
,,....,,, ..
~--
'"' NUMTP '"'
't\ (;larlst••• Carol'
Holiday ~reat at SCR
la there a wOt'k of ncuon that bas been re.cl,
or aeen, by more men. women and children the
world ovtr Ulan Charles Dlckena' '..'.A Christmas
Carol?"
Probably not, but familiarity only deepens
one'• respect for tbia holiday claaaic, an un·
derstandable choice for South Cout Repertory's
nrat special production for the Christmas season.
It's over a century old, but ltstill "plays."
IN A "1LL·8CALE, multi-set mountins by
director John-David Keller , the traditional tale
takes on added breadth and depth as SCR's pro-
fessional act.on approach the project with aJI the
E-a•Sc ..... llk*C••cNI .....
M t\. C•M<llll ••.•• , l'red... . . ...... .. ...... .,., °"'°" .. . . . ~I ol CIW'IW..,_~ P•SI Ghost ol Olrlsl..,.s Pr....-1
MArt ... Crlklll\ . P9Mt-Cretcl1ll... . IMllllM Crel<NI .. Tll\y Tim .
FM\ •
Feul•'11. Mr~. Feµlw\v •
Yo....9 Ell9ne1e< .
&oyScr-.
~•I UnCIOnJr
• J<>M EllinQton
H-nM4ffttl«UY w., ........... ,..,.,
•..•. Don Tuc:he
JON\ Fre0erlO Jon••
Aon Ml<flfflton
I/wry hi" E••ns JeSOfl COfltl•l'llht
Keren• Cro•lon ... 011 .. r Wrl(IM
Cendke C-l•nd • Ari Kouttlll
Ann S1en ... $cllwert l
M-••d Sn.noow . ... Denni• P•lmltrl
enthusiasm of,· well, kids at Christmas. It's a boun·
tirul holiday treat which will be holding forth at
the Costa Mesa theater through Sunday.
Even before he set foot on stage, Hal Landon
Jr. had to be, in the eyes of SCR followers, the only
c hoice for the quintessential miser Ebenezer
Scrooge. Landon, his receding hairline receded
even further, t urns in a superlative performance
which veers from believability only in his kittenish
antics on the morning of his conversion. This bit of
nonsense undoubtedly was the work of SCR's J erry
'Gate' to try again
NEW YORK IAP> -Michael Cimino's trim·
med-down "Heaven's Gate" has met the approV'B1
of U'nited Artists and be will remain in charge of
the movie, a company source said.
The filmmakel"-showed a two·hour, 45-minute
version of the $36 million western to United Artists
executives. They approved, but asked for another
15 minutes to be s haved from the epic, which was
withdrawn from release in October bec ause of dis·
mal reviews in New York.
----NOW •HOWINCI ----
EDWARDS CINEMA
COSTA MESA (714) 546-3102
r--:--·-..... -~ I b:= UOll!• l>'VllO I
~ .. .,. ..
'-.JI . ~
~
PLITT CITY CENTER
ORANGE (714) 634·9282
Intermission
Tom Titus
Patch, who adapted the Dickens story.
Diminutive John Ellington makes an eCfe<:tive
Bob Cratchit, ·apd Noreen Hennessy is quite strong
as his more human, less forgiving wife. Wayne
Alexander is solid as Scrooge's well-to-do nephew,
while Art Koustik registers warmth and gusto as
Ebenei.er's first employer.
MOST MEMORABLE IN support, however. is
Don Tuche as the chain-rattling ghost of Scrooge's
de parted partner, J acob Marley his entrance
will startle most of the kids in the audience, and
quite a few adults. John Frederick Jones is splen·
did as the g)lost of Christmas Past, but Ron
Mi chaelson is somehow lacking in "spirit" as hi s
counterpart for the present
Cliff FauJkner's s~t designs are ~aultfully ex
ecuted, as are the lighting effects of Tom and Don·
na Ruzika "A Christmas Carol" is a carefully
wrapped present for the whole family. •
CALLBOARD The Irvine 1 Comm unity
Theater will hold auditions Monday for the Orange
County premiere of "Impolite Comedy," ICT's
1981 season opener .... tryouts for a cast of three
men and three women in age ranges from early
20s to early 60s will be held at 7·30 p.m. in Room l
of the Turtle Rock Community Park clubhouse on
Sunnyhill Road off Turtle R'ock Drive in Irvine
Auditions for "Match Point.' an original play
by Laguna's Mary .Jane Roberts, will be held Jan.
8 and 9 in the green room of the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna
Beach ... the play. which will be entered in the
American Community Theater Association festival
an February, will be directed by Craig Fl eming
and calls for a cast of two middle.aged couples. a
beautiful young woman and a .. Puck-like" court
jester or any age .
BACKSTAGE T he Saddll'back Valle) Com
munity Theater is putting out a call for directors
to submit a play or plays for its 1981·82 season ..
those interested should contact Betsy Southworth,
c/o the theater at 25741-C Obrero, ~iss1on V1e}11
92691 or call 830·9252 .
fM>eaflT OINl"O JOHN IAYAOI
"RAGING "INSIDE
. BULL" ("> MOVES'' ''°>
''THI
(Q)
~
'=" ... ma ''THE POPEYE OIAIY FORMULA" (N ) :.s"-=·-• '"' ............ 114Wl'1 .... 11 ......... . "·' , ..... 1;11,,,., .... . .........
The Power Behind The Throne
UIMlllM CO\UllllSI ,. ,, ~·
~,,"'~,. .,.. Li' •
I l IY ~,.
Ult !Ul•I .,\.
DAIL' , 00 l l>O \ 00
t 00 t OCI 1t \IO
ROBERT DENIRO
"RAGING
BU ~L'' IRJ
OA•l • " l\ J l-! S ~
1 >0 10 oo
,.. . ..,.,
t;,' ~ J,
meo,mt IUIKl
~ \ttlt;. UA C11~ t•nt"'4
'I~ ~l 44 l 11411>14 3911
owm1 . ... ~ >'•' •• \411 .... .
' •,,\' ")4J
NEIL DIAMOND
Zt ·A·DEI•.
DOO·DAH!
Walt Dl1ney'1
~t Soulftg
• Gl:NI WllOD
llCHUO Pft09
~
..... .......
1 11..., ......
~V~'!rJ?r,,
~~£<
MO"-, ....... _.,
• 00 • ,, tn •s t"Ot
JANE FOND.A
~?I
U-
"FLASH
GORDON " ...... , .........
.... •ti•ltN!
(Q) -······ ._. ., .......
·'
. . , ... ~~-·······~····· .. • ............ """'" ..... .-v.,. .. --.-. , •• ,. ........ , ................ ,,. •• , .. # ,, •• .,,. -•
I ··POPEYE"_,
1. "TlllBl1T1!"
c:: =
·twRY WHtat
WAY YOU CAN"
"BLUES BROT .. RS"
''AIAPLANE" (PO)
"CHEECH • CHOHG"(R
c::=:~ =:::. "--... .....J I "PRIVATE BENJAMIN"
"G0008YE GIRL"
L ••• =::i
-'The Fo~Wa' adds ~p
Scott, Brando excel in movie thriller
11 AllTlltJa &NIGHT * ............... rrwly. l can't \IDdentand wby 10me Of m;, fellow critics --~!!t1~b--4 have choMft lo jump oo MGM'•
NUW Pl AYIN li
IAClnC... Ora~ 63-4·3911
lllW ... ' .. ITOl
Santa Ana ~0·1'444
IACJ•"'I
W111mlns• 193·0546 ---IDWUOI' WOODllllll(
ltvlne 551 ·0655
ITAINll •II·• 0f'11gt 839·8700
·'The Formula.''
They claim that lbtY can't un·
deratand lt. but wlttiout 1takint
claims to a s uperior lnte1U1ence,
I bad no difflc~lty in following
the plot They also seemed in·
censed that producer Steve
Shaian. who not only wrote the
screenplay but the novel on
which it's based, took over after
director John A vildsen 's final
cut and had it re -edited to his
own specifications
WHO ELSE, I wohder . is
more qualified to achieve a
script ·s intentions than its
or iginal a uthor? There are times
lHI flOllMUl..A
*••Oeln'"~••• PrOdvcer. wrHtt Stev~ SI\~
Olrtc1or Jot\nG "••Id'••" Q nem•toor•llfltr J•mn C,rtDI'
. Melre<OI ..
COi GeorQe c. Scon M•• Ion B••nc!O
• M•rtf\• Keller Jol'v\ V•n Ore•l~n c .1,,.n
JunQ, Joh,. G1•t9ud 8••'""" S\,•IQM
Rltl'l•rd Lvn<h, Rollin Cl••~t
RWW'mQ tltnt-111 Minute )
M~AA lltllll• ll
( ~~ )
premise may be sheer fiction,
but it has the ring of truth. The
secrets, Shagan contends, feU In-
to the hands or an international
cartel ol petrochemical moguls
who a1reed on the necessity for
keeping it Qff the market. The
Germans had the advantage or
slave labor to produce oil at a
cost·efficlent price.
On the open market . while oil
was selling at a few dollars a
barrel. the cost would be pro-
hibitive. But now, with OPEC
pushing the tab past S30 per bar-
rel. synthetic fuels could pose a
clear threat to their monopoly.
This triggers the story .
The \rail ltad i to oil·
rich Adam S\eiffel (Marlon
Brando), then on to half a do&en
or IO former Nuil in Germany,
all of them implicated in the de-
velopment ol the syntheUc fuel,
all of them dead within hours
after Bame}' has inte rviewed I
them. He finally comes to re·
ali1e (even thou1h my fellow
c ritics don't ) that he's being
used by th~ cartel as a kind of
cat's paw, a way to draw out
and eliminate everyone involved
in the formulation of t h e
formula.
HIS FINAL confrontation with
Steiffel confirms this. "We're
just good business men." Stei(fel
assures him. "When the oil
stocks have been depleted, we'll
out the formula on the market."
The casting is Impeccable.
Although one might have wished
for someone more vouthful and
romantic than George C. Scott as
Barney (especially in his scenes
with the seductive Marthe
Kell er ). nevertheless he supplies
a center of ~ravity, a sense of in·
corruptibili~ and moral out·
rage. an implac ability that
makes him a modern·times
Javert. Keller has her best role
yet as the duplicitous PLO girl
who can kill at ease without be·
mg ill at ease at least. not un·
til meeting Scott.
ENTERT~NMENT I MOVIE REVIEW
• MCMUOOC 1>y Pl11arnoun1 Pt<:tur~ CorPC>flllOn :· ~ All\RMMlPICTLff!A I
and Wall Cisney P!oouc11on5 All R1gn1$ ReM1rvt!O \ ~~ .:
NOW PLAYING
Ml• SOUTM COAST CIMllOM( 'Qi.fit ~llie' \1•" Co11d Men .,.9 JJ~? Orange bl• /~)l • nLil4t "Ovt•
fnlll!OI' CUIUIA Wllf UA MCIWIU LIKOC.• INUVl·t•
Wtsllll nSlt• 891 393~ B•t• 990 40?2 But~• Pa•• °d'' 4010
IDWlfllDS' UDOlllAC• •111t011 INllWl·I•
E1 !010 581 ~880 ~·~Ju;~ C4p1s1rano 493 •~•~
llO 'Ulfl ACCllTID fOI fNll lllUIUKH
'
"FLASH GORDON"
"8uat ROGERS" ._____ _____ ......
~AQFIC'I
when the theory of the director
as auteur has been pushed to an
absurd degree, and dearly this
is one. Unfortunately, not many
writers are In the position to
step in as producer and see to it
that as much as possible of their
original concept appears up
ther e on the screen.
In Los Angeles. police detec·
tive Barney Caine t Geor.ge C.
Scott 1 is charged with the in·
vestigation of the murder of an
old friend. a former cop whose
aspirations for the good life in·
volved the trafficking in drugs
with a well-heeled c lientele.
Somehow, the clues look all too
neat to Bam ey: and when his
friend 's wife I Beatrice Straight l
1~ also brutally murdered, he
feels that something of greater
t'Onsequencc as involved. The
dead man. he discovers, had
been the American officer who
had intercepted ~he Nazi column
de ll ver ing t he synthetic fuel
formula to Switzerland. Could
this be connected with the
murrt .. rs "
AND MARLON Brando <re·
putedly at $250.000 a day > is
worth every penny for his OH·
the-wall interpretation of the
OPEC c·artel·in·ch1ef, Steiffel
"THE ELEPHANT MAN"
"ESCAPE TO
ALCATRAZ"
"EVERY WHICH
WAY YOU CAN"
:woNEYSUCKLE ROSE' AU....._ ...
Get more FUN
out of viewing
foqtball with
PAOfde
~ry Saturday
rn the
Daily Pilat
1'-WIY It IMUft·IM Wesrminster 891·3893
"'-l ~ru ""'°@fitMSAlCLNl
111E SLAI. Of lH( .. Oll()N P1C IUIU
COO( CY Sl:LF R£0UlAf'°"
..
I never saw A vi Ids en ·s cut
(nor, I suspect. have my critical
confreres), but I read Shagan's
powerful and compelling novel.
a best seller; and I can only re·
port that, while he simplified it
for his script and excised most
of its more violent e pisodes. the
thrust of his plot line remains
unequivocably clear.
Throughout World War ll, the
Germans were able to keep their
w a r machine in motion with syn·
thetic £uels derived from coat.
the formula for which was top
secr et. As the war drew to its
disastrous close, some top Nazis
sought to offer this formula to
the Allies in return for political
asylum. The pape rs were con·
fiscated by Am eri ca n and
British troops near the Swiss
border. never lo be seen again.
This much, Shagan asserts in has
novel, is all true.
The m elodramatic p lot
that he constructed around this
Shr'1 Patriria
P a t l 1 D a ,. 1 s .
President-el ect
Reagan's a c -
tress daughter
who ·s been us-
ing her mother's
maiden name.
found out there's
another Patti
Davis in showbiz
wh o has the
n ame. H ence·
forth, she'll be
k n own a s
Patricia Davis
AUTOMOTIVE
CARBURETOR SHOP
CHEVROLET FACTORY
JIM CLICK FORD
HARBOR BLVD OF CARS
HARBOR VIEW SHELL
HENDERSON CAR STEREO
HOWARD CHEVROLET
EARLE IKE IMPORTS
CHICK IVERSON VOLKSWAGEN.
PORSCHE & AUDI
JOHNSON & SON
LINCOLN MERCURY
LFO CHEVROLET ASSOCIATION
BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
MESATRONICS
NABERS CADILLAC
NEWPORT DATSUN
THEODORE ROBINS FORD
JIM $LEMON'S IMPORTS
TIRES WEST
.JOU 1:1 \11WAf.L\ l,\ICTll fl llk\HI\\~\ "'··••· ... ttOll 1 L\Rh1 ..
11Uk111 ~ ... .jOll\ \l\kll\ ~l\11 \llft\11 lo\ll lo\11\f fl
_[COLLEE\ QE\!'Hl 'RSr .,
,.,..,I"'••• lilR\\1111 'L\lll;~.. ,,. , •
,,, • · •· •••• \1UkTll\l,111fWH
1 .. ., ......... , .. rtll lll!\I" l<l,ltkl\l\I~\\\, 1Rltlt\kl>,Hkll,lfl
,, .J •••• JOH II \lll ll\11\, i.\Kllt 11 lllt\1\1\'I>.\
• 111111 1 I \ltl>. \\1• '1111 It.Hr 111111 • lnltk\ \l\\tl1l\\
'"l ""• , ll\100 \l\\1111\\ l\l ... tll11\l\\J111lhl<l1t ''"'"'
,, "'-"'\\\\\Ill It~. ~ ........... --~~··~ ~-PG ...,,., ,.-., 1Uillt .. ,, o ... .;. .. __ .. ·--· ·--..
FINANCIAL
AME.RICAN SlATt BANK
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These advertisers have made it possible for 36 hours of continuous,
unintenupted, holiday music ... beginning at 12:00 noon on
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December 24th until midnight, Christmas Day.
The stliff of K OCA:f says "Thank You."
We wish our advertisers and listerurs
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CALIFORNIA
WOODEN BOAT
SHOPPING CEN.TEAS
FASHION ISLAND
HARB~TfilL._. -':..._~~-1-~~--.
LIOO MARINA VILLAGE
OLD WORLD
ORANGE HILLS CENTER
WESTCUFF PLAZA
WESTPORT SQUARE.
RESTAURANTS
ALFREDOS
ANTHONY S PIER 2
BtACK ANGUS
CAF! M~RO
CHARLIES CHILE
DE.LANEY S
DILLMAN'S RESTAURANT
EL CHOLO
EL MATADOR
ERIC S
KAM'S
LA CUISINE
MAXWELL'S BY THE SEA
MOTHERS KITCHEN
PRONTO RISTORANTE
SPINDRIFTER
$TUFT NOODLE
TALE OF THE WHALE
TE.A 4 SYMPATHY
THE WAREHOUSE
WHAT'S COOKING
WHITE OAK
SERVICES
BAY & BEACH JAN11'0R1Al
BETIER HEALTH MEDICAL
GROUP
BLUE CROSS
COIT DRAPERY
FAOM Fash ion Island
NewporL Bcach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
M!DIA ADVERTISING
DAILY PILOT
KABC-TV
KOCE-TV
C C COLE PLUMBING
CONTROL STATION
COSTA MESA MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
DOCTOR'S HO
N
FASHION 1·HOUR CLEANERS
Special programming on Christmas p~
The Saddle back Master Concert Chorale 7 :OOAM-7 :30AM
"The Messiah" will bC featured 8 :00 AM-9:00 AM by the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
LUSKEY BROTHERS
THE REGISTER
SUTTON NEWS GROUP
REAL !ITATE
BUTLER HOUSING
H. BRUCE HANES
QUAIL MEADOWS
WRIGHT PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT
WESTERN REAL ESTATE
HAIR HUNTERS
KELLER & WEISS ATTORNE'1'S
LAURtES PLANT SERVICE
RICHARD OUELLETTE
RUBIO'$ HAIA DESIGN
SOUTHERN CAl.IFOANIA
EDISON COMPANY
SPECTRUM Pl.US
SUCCESS CENTt:RS
TELEPROMPTER
VAL·TEC
. . . . . .. ...... -...... -...--................. --. ...... ___......_..... .......... ..,,, . .-..--------..
..
DEC. 23, 1980 *
BUSI NE SS
Record deale' rlo(•
mounting auto 1 n<
acid to
problems ... B4
I
'\NN l ANDE RS
ERMA BOMBECK
C2
C2
Santa visit s 9
Shores ... Sf
Henry Heitzman ( lt·J1
made a tiny Ferns 1 .,
from urnbrel ln <>1 rv .
as part of a medt< h
scene under o , r1 .i I
Chtist mul)ft , .
•
l s
J
(
•
f
t
It's
By MARV JANE SCARCELW
Of -o.U, I'll• SI.Hf
Early in the Depression years. a
large department s tore in Indianapolis
unveiled a mecha nical Christmas scene
in its largest window .
Henry Heitzman , s upporting a wife
a nd five children on $50 a w~k . saw 1t
a nd was fascinate<t by the movm R
figures.
"A 11 my life I liked to build things."
he says. "I was working part-tame as a
machinist and decided I could make
somethi~g like that. too."
ll eittman :. d 111 I 1
Dick mey('r , :-.J~ s. I 1•' ii. "I
lights arl' comn11111 1 ,,\\ 111
made th1 :. \1 ;1r-. 1
figun· uut tm .... I.. 111 1• 1 , • 1 ,
wind1n~1h1:lf ar11111v1tl • ' •
Aflt•r "''l'lll~' !Ii• .i•
want 'o knr"' 1111 ' •
thl' ml'n. ll1·1t1111 •
A GREEN t"AHRH 111ff1 '1111
undc·rs1dc. w1I h 11 ~ 111111• 1
gears. motors ;ind 1•urr 1 • ''
minialun• mach1rw h11J1 • 1
lhe scene abov .. WITH NO MON EV to s pare. 'When I fsr<>I "", iqhlco , He itzman began creating his Christ mas I r,111 it witli ,111 nltl ,.1,., 11,
1 ~cene out o f free mate rials and leftover borrowed from .1 1111 ntf 1, , ' machinery.
J
}
"It was pretty c..cude.-at first," he s e1ys "It ~01 k•t1all1 •,' i1 ·• happy"!x•1•aw.1• c'\l'I • 1'11 1 \ adi:nits. "I used washing machine purts w 1th 1 h l' h 1 11 ., 1 ~ 1 and o ld clock gears. There were never unrl(•rnectlh
a ny drawings for 1t. eithe r. I j us t .. Another fr1t 1 1 It ,1 . ,, , 1, vis ualized what J needed an d started tn hi:. ba..,,,rnr•nl .o I h•1 k. , working on it... orr lht• mo!Clr I 1111 If "Recycling" wasn 't a word then. so•
Heitzman 'innovated."' not1<'rcl the urns\ rn:11 ti '
He carved sma ll figures from wood. Now C'IO-;i· lo :~• 11 1' ·
made a Ferris wheel fro m old umbrella 1 ctirl'mPnl hon ' 111 ' •
struts and an erect.or set, fashioned a rla ughter :-.el 11P tlu
log cabin from wood d owels with home unt!Pr hi JP"'\ 1 ' •
m atchboxes for windows and used ·1 sttll <!•111 1 h ""•
coffee g rounds and dyed sawdus t for a nct it"'> ;ill u~
dirt a nd grass ground cover. partgO<.'s "-h• 11• 1\
Improved and expa nded over the " ,
year s . He itzm a n 's effort is now a ~OT OM .Y "h '• 111
miniature world in which every fi gure 12 g randch1hl• ·n 111 il
s
t
~
I gr<'at j!randdd.lrP11 'll•· .
" m oves. but hcshar<'d 11 "''· r l1r111r1' n,nri·<.· 111
A •~~LE MAN saws .l.o~g~s~w~h~i;le~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---' -... notber-et\ep&-wood O&l\·l'b)'-;-f • I 11 ~I r (.. l l '11 r I ti e k k" ( University Mt>'11r:il '•·11'1 r
' c
t
j
t •
feeds chic ens pee ing "grain" rom ''Th 11 1 •. , l,I t}J•' 1n 0 11 .SQll'll l!J the ground, butter is churned. a li~hted ey r t•n ) '"''' ' • 11 '
carrousel spins while horses go up and smi l1n~ at lhc> n1 .. 111on I If (I '){JI(' I und 1run1(1n
down and figures in rocking cha irs bob brought chllctrcn 11·1"1 11 •\Ii•'
bac kandforth. a nd rolling IK'ds SCI \h1•\ t·1111l 1/(/ ('h t«krns ri(Jht )
At the top of n hill, a man pumps real lilt I<' f1gun•s und<·r ttw '' .. ,
water which trickles down a stream And how rn,iny hoUJ s 11f 1\"I r.
ln\o a pond, wbet:e a fislierman casts.. he estimlft(• wl'nt intQ tii C.h1i!.t.: ...
hi3 line into the water . _c reation·! Henrv lll•1\1m.1n gnn: 11111 11, Presiding over a ll is a rota ting , Christmas tree. couldn't evPn gul•ss
'1tl
llap1 t 1t 11u.'l C2
•
' '
II
I
l t
t
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~~I~..,_----~~·=--~~
Hol'iday routine c ose threat to s i t I .
t ' i . l
s..ci.• • .... 0 .. 1, ...... West Lafayette. Ind. -Besides being lhe
season (or merriment. the upcoming holidays
promise to maintain their reputation as poten·
tially the most dangerous driving period or the
year -(or several reasons.
Chief among them . s ays a Purdue Universi-
ty sQienUst , is the radically different manner of
living that the holidays often force on people.
Dieters, infreque nt drinkers, smokers, peo-
ple on medication, even hobbyists all make up
special-riak groups that are cellectlvely a
phenomenon of the season.
--1---¥'M&lll\CY-PRO a c e
contends that the season produces unique aitua-
tions that can make any of the' above uncharac-
tert1tlcally menaclng when they 1et behind the
wheel for a trip, be lt over the river and throu1h
the woods or down the freeway a atretcb.
Malckel b amqn1 a poop of experts oa,
dru1 research who have been lnvali1alln1
poulble retatlon1bip1 between dru11 and
bi1hway deaths . He i1 bead of tbe
pbarmacolop and toxicoloty depart.meat of the
Scbool ol Pbarmacy and Pbarmacal Sciences.
He polnU out that hll eommeata on lbe
dan1en ol boUday drtvtn1 come from a com·
binall<ln Of ml'd!C', I T 'I ' , 111 '"' oh
i;ervationr. on hul11l.1~ 111 '111 • 1'·•1 " IH<;
timr of ye<fr
T RADITION. Hf. "t'"' a
J ekyll-and llyt.lr rolf' ir1 t" 1° "' 1\ IL
brings fnm1hcs lo~cthl'r !•••"' 111 , 1 r. ,,\ lht.•
s.ame li"'1e the go1n~ an• , •1111 1~ a11 ; r "riure n
• i
1ra~1c footi111t c Lo a normally JOynus r 1rntl) r• u
ntnn
"'There is no oth~r time of lhl' 'Par qu t
likl' It in terms of the kinds or \ln\••ri. nn •h
road .. ob!><'rvcs Maickel "Ract 1A.1 ,1ther. "
cours<'. can add to the danger but what we H
talk111g about are dnvmK hainn1<, trnt \l 111 a.,,
<lt•rt thc'mst'lvc:. r ega rdlesi. oi th<' '', 111 h1 r
Jo or one Ihm ~. he !>ay~ tlw11· 1rP m 11
Jll'Ol)lt' who llT(' either CX('l'(llll)OJIJ. r"l.l'·t:<J lH
unusually tense while on the highw..a~ t l11~ 1111
of year. He notes lhal hc'i> not ro>ferrin~ to
routine trips a round town. but to pl<'asure dnv
mg-dining the holidays, espec1all y h1Rh wuv
trips.
··Around the holidays ... Ma1ckel remark:..
"most people fall lnto one of two e-ct rc ml's
they're· either very relaxed -so rel.txt'i..I 111
fact, they rrilght get sloppy In their p<'rformanr1:
behind the wheel -or very tense because hl·~
m ay be hurrymg to get to their de,llnRth 11
before the holiday dinner or rushing lo get hom1
Sunday night because of work or "<'hool ~.ton .
day. ·
"THAT IN ITSELF e1thN •)(tnon.
can cause a change in d nvin.: beha\1or
While most recognh.e that dnnlon.. :i•
l
111;h111,1l1rm he SJ\'S
1t lh1• problem dnnker
II 1 dr1' 1n~ 1 hn•Jl the oc
tlr•n'<"r d<•<·!-i dunn~ the
11111 In '·''-; hut that. in a
HI' '~ .11·1•1lht r con-.ume
ttt 11'" tht'' .ton L normal
1k11lm1 "ht·n th<'~ rion t
111. xpl'l ll'IH'Cd, or naive
l nown th <1l the social
dr 1'1..,•"1.1 :...l' ......... ..., •···· t~flt"t'fi trrthr-oc;e ut'nlcuhot.
" .11 t• •o a point for alcohol
B 1 11t1 111t•\ p\·nenct>d dn nker·s
h 1 11p.11red by the same
11111•1ml
I I \
..
I
C2 DAil Y PI LOT f~.o..·••••. FEATURES
• ,,.r,.
ANNIVERSARY COUPLE
John and Hiia• Meatyan•k
WITH SANTA AT CAMEO SHORES
Dolor•• Craig and Camille Carbone, 4
AT ARTS COMMISSION PARTY
Mike Manahan, Bob Hargis. Jim Straw
Bo~t p~rade brightens holiday party scene
u, '11\R \' Ji\N t: St'ARC'El.LO
Ot llW 0411¥ Piiot Sl•lf
!'he Nt·wport Hcat·h Art:. C'omrn1ssion 1n v1t·
t•d fnt:ndi. and s upporter::. for a buffet with ooats
Ju -.t Thur!.dCIV, the f1r~t even in g of the
Ch ri\tmas hoat ·µaradc
J err~ Ri ('hards opened his Lido Isle home
for :i close up view of the Clo<iting light show.
and comm1s:.1on t·hairman Beryl Melinkoff
~reeted guests
Enjoying warm c hili on a cqld night were
C.ithlee n Gallender and Gene Gardner of the
~ewport Harbor Art Museum, as well as Ron
and Novene Hendrickson . Mr and Mrs. Robert
Bonner. Madeline Rose. Bob Hargis, Mi ke
Ma na han. Peg and Laddie Reday, Tony Shield.
Jam Straw. Jean Tandowsky. and John and
Judy f-'ranco
York Corp-Oration. a d1v1sion of BorR·Warner
Helping with the pa rty-were grandchildr~n
Mrs LaRovce Kincaid of Irvine, Mrs . Leslie Cor~na of ·Carls bad. Mrs. Wendy Jansen of
anoga Park and Mrs Paula K1ng1 or Simi
Valley.
Santa came to Cameo Shores Wednesday
for Dolores Craig's Christmas party.
Enjoying a visit fro m the jolly old elf were
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Dobbie. Sandra Ouellette.
Mr. and Mrs. MichC1el Carbone. Mr and Mrs .
Louie Amen. Dr Bru<'e Seville. Mr. a nd Mrs
Wayne Ustcro. Arthur Valdes a nd Mrs. and
Mrs . Michae l Bell
Marsh Green. Landa and Bry<·tt Patterson.
Charline Weis:> and Lynn Gary an plC1nn1ng the
evening
The Acqu1sit1on Counnl and the \ie.,., port
llar:bor Art Museum BUl'>IOl''>S <'riun<·tl ho'>\ed a
reception and spt•t1al holado) prcvat·w of .. fkll,\
Asher's Cups" by C1rl1.,1 l'atnck lfogan ·
Board of Trustl'cS mt•ml>N Ceorgc H1 t htcr
attended with wife lh:tty. a'> dttl Lue1lll' Adam~
and Lee and Molly L}on , e.t'> wt•ll Cl!. Lucille
Kue hn, Ri chard and Lou Nl·wqu1sl. Clttor St('rl~
ing Holloway and art11">t.., Paul Dillon. Ton~
OeLap and George If Prm'>
The exh1b1t wall remain al thl· m u'>t·um until
Jan. 11.
Sigismund and 1-:11 ... abl•th llau cnll·rtained
friends in their New1l0rt l\lo arh homl' with a
f':uropN1n f1:a !'>t and '1111·,. l111th u r 1-11 <11111.:d
· rcstC1ur:iteur!I. 1t \\ iJ' a g11urmN l't•IH1rC1t1<m ~
1 ht· 1·n111•1· l.;lf!di t-:ll-..J1w111 "'a'> '>tufrl·d
"'l\h la\ ,.r., of 1'1111p1w•I •JlllHH h <11111 11111!'>hrti11rn-,
t·neln!'>L~ 111 a puff pa-,tr' o1nd 'l11·•·d 111 tl1•· !<>h<ipc
of a hutt1·rll\ \o\ll h 1 .ira1111·lt1•·d •·a1r•1l ~ 1n rh<,
1111 <\rll•· <:u1· ... t•. al"" . ..,,.,,. •·r,1·cl IH11J l1l•·
l '1Jn-.11nia ll1r1\al1· l•1•h ..,l1111r11• .illtl \Ju., r·I ,\u
1;1 :i1111 111 Harn1·k111 .111tl llal1li I •·11111 r· \ol.1lh
I lr,.ir1J!f''-
ll1• '"•rl v. ·•' ,, llut1J.;ot 1;i1 "1•<·<·1,d "I ••rl•·
I ill(·d '' 1tli .1111111111! P•• t•· ,ind "'1t1p1wd r•·orn it
"I"'' 1C1l 1rr·;i1 ftltlfl ll;ou I"'·' t1•1 , .. ,qr\ r·h~-r
En1manl! 1111' f.111 "t'f" l>r fJ1·11nJ\ f<O'>">f·ll
Jilt! \\lfl' :-.u-,.1n Hu ..... anti \•·lrn<i Hu..,-.•·11 anil
\nJ!1•l11 ,1 11•·1111 IS<•ll "1•••1111 •1 _,r1m0tl'ln:r Cll \n
1nn1•llt1 H1-.t•1r .in•• and ,, If•· \t.AJn•·JI., r•nJ<i~ ef'J
th•· no\l'll \ uf lw1111! L 111· I 111-.1 1·Jd •of h11-.t!'> frJr
d1nn<·r 11111
Mr and Mrs John Mestyanek of Irvine
were honored Saturday on their 60th wedding
anniversary with a luncheon. hosted by their
daughters. Mrs Roy Allen of Irvine a nd Mrs.
Wilma Franke of S herman Oaks.
The Mestyaneks were married Dec. 22.
t920. in~Harberton . Ohio. and have li ved in
California for 45 years Both are retired from
Mr Claus also v1s1ted the Bahia Corinthian
Yac ht Club Saturdav whe n Lorin Weiss. assist·
ed by Jack Johnson . distributed candy canes
and balloons to children wailing to greet them
dockside
The family party continued with a buffet
dinner. musical entertainment. and Christmas
carols around the piano, in addition to the boat
parade cruising past the c lubhouse.
Cards aren't junk mail
Girl flf 11e111·
Dionne McKovich. 8. of Costa Mesa has
been named Girl of the Year by the Girls
Cluh of the Harbor Area. She received her
award Dec 15 during a tree-trimming
party.
our classic S'M28t<:irs
J oyce Hostetter. activities chairman for the
event, was assist ed by hus band Jim. Pat and
'futors can l1elp
The South Coast Literacy Council . a non·
profit educational organ1zat1on. is seekin g
volunteers to teach foreign-born Orange County
r esidents and functional illite rates English.
Volunteer tutors don't need a college educa-
tion. knowledge or a foreign language or prior
teaching experience, according to a council
spokesman. ·
A 10-w~k . 30-hou r course will begin Jan. 17 .
Graduates can· tutor -~t day or evenjng adult
classes in 17 le arning centers in Irvine. Laguna
Hills. Laguna Beach, Dana Po1nt. San Juan
Capistr ano. C apis t r ano Beach a nd San
Clemente, the s pokesman said.
For in formation call 493-3800 or 497-1138.
Construction topic
at women's seminar
A course on the fundamentals of construc-
t ion work for women h as been slated by the
Orange County Chapter 91 of the National As-
sociation of Women in Construction.
The 10-week pr ogram introduces basics in
construction ter minology. processes and pro-
cedures. Chip Clithe roe. principal consultant
with Consultan t Collaborative. Wlll inst ruct.
A registration fee of $20 includes the text
and workbook.
For information, call Valone Paladino at
978-3115
JACKSON. M1s!. 1,\1'1 It V.o'-f)1•tcmbl'r
1942, and Jessa<' IA.'<' Coon wa., II\ 11i~ in J~rn ... l'.
Ida ho , a long way from hl·r Shrt'\l'l'"rt . I.a ,
home and friends.
She pit-kt'<l o ut CJ Chnstrna~ 1·;11 el "'1th .1
rhyming 'vers e to the effl'<'I that th(• carrl r·c1ulrl
be returned to the sendt•r
Mrs . Coon mail •d 1t tu Man l.11111-,1·
Solomon. and the card, 11<1.,., tattl'rl'd c111d
mended. has been bouncing h<.iek and fvrth t-\ f•r
since.
"We 've been exc hang1~ 1t all these years. ·
said Mrs. Solomon. now or Vicksburg. The eard
that cost 3 cents to mail in t!).12 · tost me SJ 97
this year. I sent it certified mail ..
The tradition c ame to an ahrupt halt in tht!
ear ly 1970s when .Mrs Solomon m1 <;plaeed thc
RUFFELL'S.
UPHOLSTERY _._.,_ .... .......
IU2H.rMrll•4
Cest•MeM -54'-115'
• • • • • • • •
Daily Pilot
classifieds
work for
you.call
642-5678
for quick
cash sales.
Prom j.d.mc gz.orgz, ofoc.otb.nd.:
#f #.,,.., ..... ,.'6
"Ml.0d. 1 iktz. ycu to fWl, our rmrz. azl<Z.Ction of tha.
'M:Jrlds ~tJz.et swzalczrs. JO...lr choicq, ..
eh<iUooo craw.. 15 co\ ors
lambewool "v" ... lS colors
ceeh.m<lni. ·v· 12color.s
@)~o@@J~~
44 flt:Lshion Island· Newport Beach• 714/644·~70
JOOJ "4ratwood Blud.•"4!•b.Uoo!-f VUkage•2J3/479·7727
.. . .... . .. , . -.. , -....... ._ .... ,, ., ......
ll'l1c· 1n ,1 ti.tll"ll 111\~1·d11J11~1,11d' 11·1Pl\1·rl h\
lwr d<1111.!1111·r llut 11 .. 11rt.11 ··ol 11c11·1 'l',P •. l:.,1·r
:.ind th• tr .ulll 1•1111 •· u11 wd
~,,.., I 1~111 \\h•1 .1\1• 111 \11 .. t!11 I .1 'OJld
llw L r•·l'1111~ 1·a rd I' 111' n ·I•·''' Ii' cl "''I l.11•1· ·''
11 cl 1 • 1111 q ; 1 • , 1 ' t 1 11111 \). , .. "r 111 1111 'I/ .11 l
\\ ,. I'll' ti" d.111 .. • .. ..... I., tl11 ti .11 i..
.111.f 1)11 111 Jdt• ,ci'lll \ 1'1, I II• I for l'llf\,t'
111111 .11d \11 .. I 11111 .• ''" 111• tr \·• .ttlr.1 I .1
It .. 111'-I .1h11ut 111 I.ii l •IJ 1,11 I 1111\1 11 , \ 1•1'
fragilt• II ... ta)ll'd Ill 'hlt't pl.to ..... 1-:H·ll lhl-'
Scot<'h I :JI.It' 1'> )!C'tllrl).! 11lrl
I lo" l<ing 1 an ... u1 It , 11111c•-.p11111l1·n1 1· l;i-.1 •
\ .. 10111-..,., "''' In • -.a11l .\Ir ... :...olonion.
and "I' pl.in 1111It\1nL' 1•11 ;, Inn!. 11111"
. . . .. . " ... ........
r
.~in~ r _d and green
•
1 ht·1 r 111 11U1•• 111 111•11 ,. .. .,
1111rh c 116llll~•I tt.1 ro• 11t1 111 ''"
IO\V 'h" p.111\ 114 \ h1 I Lill .. r ti ) n• ttw wu· "'h11 , ,•11111111
\Ou o( hu,. m4111\ •1111nd 11
lu~ ., 111 (.'tlr\i.t1111u1 tr,., h o l1ut11
do1ttn , th h•1nilul l•'l )ll•• 1111111 il
effet"l of t1•ll111H \ 11u1 1 h1l11
•bnut -,11nl•• c litu"' .i11ll ho~
Olln\ IW•IJtll' klll•C krd orf 1111'
ahauon ~1m \ lo•tlli•h ,.,,.l
.NU
Th4il t 14h\ I IA 41\ 41lJ\ulul t•h
J nhUt-d I• l lllkht lu ., •• , Ill\
husba nJ ,·111111• llu uu~h lh1 1h1ut
l.hlt"I\ 't\'\\h bWl•lh '
\ .. ht' \l1rt•oi1I ltwm 1•11 ll1t 1Jm
1n • ro•m1 t.ahlt I h •ht·d I ht'
'r-..,11n 1111.alh 1,111 tt11 11ud1 111
\\•U I 1 '"u ~uni ''" 111 lr<t\t'
lltr ruum
\\h.,1 l\.tl hi' 11-l..1•11
\ \.I U \ 1· ' r II U II J t' l \\ l' •J I
IJ..Cu1 " I v...i1111.·tJ 11u111l1h 1 ht·
Jut11p<'1l •ul .111 1..'> 11 'hwl ~
'hHh JJUJ \lk \.'
Whu J rrlh1•\ lul ' I .J~kt:d
l-\11 1111 I •, 11~·•·<.ll ll I hl·lll fut
n111 11 lh' \H<l 111"" ti lhl'
!\ '" Jh•1 II ~ u-. un sa\1• I r ·all)
r11 n h •d ..,11111dl1111.: hkl' th1~ lo
k u•k .11 uuod m
l It-I\ tlw bkot.Kl llrauung from
Ill \' fut•e
\\'~Il l Ulllil )UU s e e the
bt>l1r110111 1>h1>1> ·r ~ that l found.
\ 11u 111vlwhl) hatlo't notic ed. but
111\ viii 11111• ... ft-II apurt the last
1.J1111· I hJd to hunt f o r 1he
11.iJ11·r
I uvlll'l-tl '>:.tld. '>lurnp1ng
lllllO d d1.i11
I uc1k dl tlw. I II l>t1 you 've
111 ',., '>t:t!n a mu111.:) c lip hke this
11111' h.a \l' 'OU I ..
\\a111.J bt!I '' I said m is ·
t'I .!hi\
\ ou k no" will! men's pants
~11 1 1~ht. I ht•rt' :-rwver any room
fur .1 h1llfold. ~o I JUSt bought 1t
011 ~" im pulse [, l's see, what
else h~ve I ~ot • • ·
• When lS lhe bathrobe with
you r mono~ram o n al"" I
.crumbled
"llow did you know that I
houg ht a bathrobe'' ll 's al the
!>tor e Thtty can't gel t he mono-
M rtlm 011 until afte r Christmas ...
Just a wild and crazy guess.
And what about a wristband to
h old your car k ey and c hange
when you jog?"
"Right here!" he said. open·
ing up a box. "What are you.
some kind of a mind r eader?
Y ou know. this Christm as shop·
ping isn 't sur h a b ad idea after
all. I t m ight even cat ch on."
The way I se~ it. t her e are two
c hoices open t.o m e.
lie can either return all of h is
stuff and replace tt w i th what J
ha ve wrapped under th e
Christmas tree.
Or l can return him and
replace him with a new h usband
to go with all the stuff J bought
It's jl tough d eci sion
• • • tart111g over no p1cn1c
•
'i
I
s
IJEr\H A"IN l.ANl>Jrns My
IA 1fe and r m ar I lt:d yuung 11'tX>
youn~. I shoul1l ~C.1) 1 !'>ht: wal-1 17
and I wa~ ~ W1• hud a rough
t i mt' al f1r:.t . l>u l our rc1l h
helped us out Thrt't.' k 11li.1 ui l.be
f irst five \ 1•<11'::. J1 iln 't mah it
<lllY easier. I wc111 t o ~ork for a •
man who wai. mv falhl'f':. age
The busane:.!> did well , and he lt't
m e buy 111 afh •r 11 few y£>ars
When he wanlPd 10 r etire. I
bought him out So . finanr1allv
w e are OK
I 'm writing about m~ wife
Sh e is attract 1v<' and young
looking fo r 43 lier hea Ith was
good unlll two ear s ago, when
she discov~red she has diabetes
A spec1ahs( put her on insulin
and she ts doing fme The trou·
ble is my \\ 1fe a nd o ur ouly
daughler ha,·e al~ay s been
ver y compeltt1\'e The girl was
married l ast rear !-'our months
ago she ::innounccd th at ~hi' is
pregnant. Ever since m y wife
got the news she has been trying
to talk me in to having another
baby I think it 1. crazy Our
young('st boy 1i: a Junior 111 <·r1l-
lege,
·All.hough m.' wilf' lt'll.., t•vcry.
on(' :-.h1' 1s thrilled t o b<.• a
g randme1, I suspect she doesn't
like the idct1 much. and wants lo
prove that she 1s ~till y oung
enough to have a baby h erself
Please tell m e what you think.
S H OU LD WE O R
J SHOULDN'T WE IN CI NCIN -
~ NATI
•
!
t
D EAR CINCIN.: This is a de·
eision lhat should be made by
y ou, your wif~ ancl her two doc·
tors -the one who is treating
ht'r diabe t es and a good
l(y ne,·ologist . She may need a
third dO<!tor for her nerves if she
gets the go-sign from you and
the other two. Starting in with
diapers and 2 a .m . feedings at
age 43 could be a tremendous
l'mOtional strain.
DEJ\R ANN LANDERS l ow e
vou a w ho le hell of a lot . and this
letter i s to say thank you
l a m a high school senior
wrote to you last yea r when I
didn't know who to t urn to. M y
life w as a m ess. I am the guy
w ho didn't 'know whether he w as
gay . bisexual or what. It a ll
s t artt'd when I was muc h
youn~cr and had been abu sed by
a relative
I wrote to yo u when I
w::is al the end of m y string.
You advised m e l o get in touch
w ith the Family Service Assn. I
did JUSt that. and those won·
de rful peopl e really wer e ter -
rific r
After only four m onths o r
therapy I realized I was not gay
or bisexual. and the f eelings l
ha d were perfectly n ormal.
I h ope more kids will pay al·
tention to you wh en you advise
l he m to get counseling. I used to
think it cost a lot of m oney and
was very s urprised to find out
otherwise
Y ou sure do a lot of good 10 the
world. God bless you. A
CHICAGO ADMIRER
DEAR AD: I appreciate yuur
l e ller more than 1 can say.
Thanks for writln".
DEAR ANN L ANDERS
About every thr ee m onths m y
wife (we've been married six
years> goos oH her r ock er and
p ic k s a fight with m e. so she can
bounce som e glassware off m y
head or krck m y shins black and
blue
W e had a r eal go.round last
night. and sh e hit m e in the
m outh and c ut n\y lip with h er
ring. <T he diamond l gave her
w he n we w er e engaged .) I don't
drink. gamble or run around.
The reason she goes off h alf.nuts
is becau se I like to read or
watch TV after dinner , and she
thinks I should be talking to h er
instead.
I do talk to her a lot. but I
don't care to spe nd three or four
h ours a l i t , especially w hen
there's football o r hockey on the
tube. What 's the solution? -
I daho Woe
DEAR WOE : Your wife
should take the advice of the
high school boy who wrote the
letter just above this one. The
woman needs counseling. Her
behavior i s immature and
childish. Sbe needs to learn bow
to get rid of her frustrations and
aggressions In a clvlUaed man-
ner . I hope she follows through
before you get fed up and leave.
No man should have to pat up
with physical abuse .
Families find help at
Problem Talk Shop
dic~ernon
Open 1o-t Moft.·Frl.
1M Sat. & .U-1 Sun.
Westcllff Plaza
11t11a1rv1ne, Newport IHctl ,...,2,
,, . . . . .. ~ . . . .. . ~ .,,,,,, ..... 4',.
..
T!Alday. December 23, 1980 DAIL V PILOT Cl
PlJBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE P l18UC NOTICE
l'IC'TITIOU\ IUSINIU NAMl ITATIMINT l'ICTITIOU• •USINl:U lllCTITIOUS •USINIU NOTICE OF DEATH OF NAMI STATIMINT NAMI lfATIMINT T ne loUowln{I .,.,..,,., ••• dOlllQ l>U>lnn\ ~ fllt IOllO•l"O P9•Wn\ ert *'"9 ' l llo 1011owln9 '""'°"' trt 001110 DAISY E. POOLEY ANO
'""'"HH1 bu•l11ou~ OF PETITION TO AD· C:.l'I SEft\llCES. tOt• Copger CllHCI ,EIT0.o,c..111.,,n1anuo
1100.'1 J _, 111•-. 81...0lrd
C:.EM TAAVEl.ANOTOVRS,11•• THE COFFEE PEOOl.ER, ~MINISTER ESTATE NO. ea1n~r ,._, H""lllllJIOI\ INMll, , vi. OC>orto, Ne-11Mec11, ee11rc1111I• A-l070 .... ,
CenfOn Orlve, Le911rl• Bt•tll, C.atllornle~l
C•l1Cot"'' ..,._, tt..i -
Ot Mlt H. Mllltr, )4~ (OC>lif' CllH Ct . El Toro, CeWOfnl• OtJO
O.r•lcl J Olltna. 71101 p .... 11-1 AMllOllf 0 CMllO'\lor, J141 ClbOI• T 0 a I I h e I r s I
PO, M1n1o11 vie to, c.11rorn1• •i.•1 A••"Ut. eo.t• Me$0. C.lllOl'n•• .,.,. bene f ic la rles, c red I to rs MJcr.te l OlttlllJ, tllOI P•wlltrn C•t,,.rlno c; C••Ptnlff. J/41 d t ' d l t f
PO. M•u oon '"''°· ce111otn10 "'" C1110•• A ........ '°''• Me~. C•'"°'"'• an con 1ngent c re or s o Thi• 11<.t\l""u h tona .. clocl .,, • QfMt•I pet'ln .. thlp
Rollort J Mower Thi• \l•lem<tnl wa• lilf(I wllh Ille
county Cl••' ol Ot•llQe County Oii movtmi..r 19, !'MIO
fl•I• 1111,ln•" .. <ond11•1o11 b)l.,m Dais y E . Pooley and 11u1b•no e11e1 •ii• T111, .,..,.,,.u 1, t011d11e1eo 11y • person s wh o n1 a y be
Gtre•o J 0111n9 11<1tw••1 _,,,.,.hip I otherwise interested in the MIChelt l Olll"O Alllhof\y D C.rpenlor ,
Tiii\ "°'-' ... , tiled wllh ,... '"'' ••••• ,,_, ••• 111.a with .... WI 11 and/or esta te. Cou111., Clerk 01 Or•"• Coun1v 011 County c1 .. rk 01 O••n~ co""'' on A petition has been f lied
"'"111 o.om•• 11. ••· 0turn11er ~ ,.., by Lillian B Simmons In Pullll.,,.., Or.nQe Coe \t D•llY Pilol, 1tOaa11 & AU0CIA11l•, IMC. '1-1 .
Otte lt,ll,10,1'90.Jen.6,l'lll tc)4).., 411tu.,....on .. ,tt •. • Pullll\"""Or•-.C.o.t1lOa1l.,PllOI, lhe Superior c ourt of
,.. --· lll••,.,,llN<ll.CA'2!Wf o.c •, 16,ll,'IO '"'° • .,,., O r ange County requesting
PUBLJC NOTICE ••1• ,.u,.,7 - --tha t Liiiian B. Simmons be
------Pubthhe<J()-~91 c04,,0 •• tvPito\. PUBtlC'NOTICE appointed as personal
F1CTrr1ous eus1N1n Dec 16,U,J0.1"90,Jon 6,•98• ------r epresentative to ad-
NAMISTATEMENT S0Al80 l'ICTl1IOUS•uslMISS l minister the e state of r11. 10110 .. lna ""''°n' ••• ao111Q( DU$•n6\•s: PUBLIC NOTIC.... MAMIE STATEMENT Daisy E. Pooley (under
CAREFREE GARDENS. i.a• .,. l""~~~.'°'1-"'Qllt'''°"'5 do'"1111"" the I ndepende nt Ad-
Aeawooa St Foun1•1n V•llO C• l'ICTITIOUS•USINl[H l SMILE SHOP ITh, Sm••• SrioPI l ministration of E states '21~1or1a M °"'•' l•IS41 Rt<lwOOCI NAMISTATIMl:NT 241 Fot•.i A•en1W La<1uno 8~0'11 A ct). The petit ion iS set tor: SI . Fountoln ....... v. c.. <n1otl The lollo•ln9 Ptr\Oll\ ••• OOlllQ !C•l•lorntA '10' hearing In Dept. N o. 3 at 1(1ren HamW>n, 7•71 Elli\, r\pt 0, DUtlnf\$n Juav AnO•iOP 0 M 0 '1•1 ' C D I
J T ENIERPRISES, 1901 < "toos•t• lO\Aflll"lt\ <ol•lorno~•OOH 700 Civic enter r ve, H11n111191on S..cn, C.. '11"41 ~ T t S t I W•ll•r I.. PtHlllpS, ·-c.,,,,.. Ot•m-. Seti!•"""' C•ll•orn•• tt704 7,.,';;~.~ .. ,,~, I\ (ondutl•O "'.in •n W est. in lhe City 0 an a
(.r(lt We\1,Vpt-.(•91/tlo. TllOmt• F Qutnn 1901 s JuclyAnO•-DMO Ana , Cali f o r nia o n
Thu., ......... ,. conductoa Dy. O••m-.s.tn••Ane CA1tlornl•'n104 T!HS ~laleme<\I w6\ .... ., ...... "" January 14, 1qs1 a t 9·JO v•Mr•l 1MflM<\ll•P I Jeni• R• 0..1nn )<IOI s D1•mona. c. 1 Cl 1 0 C. C:.IOr•• M Clll~;or, S.nte ,.,.., C•lllQ<'nlt 91104 oun y ••• o •dne1" 011111 r on a. m .
lh" ,1•1..,...,1 .... "'"" .... ., ,.,. T111s ~~· •• tona11t11<111v •n"" ~.-~"'°'' 10 1• l'tsiitl IF YOU OBJECT to the
co .. nly Cler• ol O••n~ County on ln<otPO'"'t<I ••\OCl•h°" other lh•n • Publl\,,.., °'""'1" C.CM\I 0d•lt p 1101 granting Of the petition,
Novtmt>e< ?I, l'tlO Fl-P•'1Mr~ F 0..lnn Jr 0.-( l•.ll lO l'lllO Jdn ~ 19111 ~ 80 YOU Should eithe r appear
Pu"'",,.., °'•"00' ""°" o •• ,, P1101 This ·~·-• ••• 111.a .. 1111 ':i at the hearing a nd state
O•< 1.~.10,n.1980 _ •&:i.to.~:~z~.,;1;;\:i:, Or•"~ co11"" P lJ BUC NOTICt: your ob1ect1ons or file
n1e•1 w ritten ob1ect1ons w ith the · PUBLIC NOTICE Publl•""' cir.,,.,. cw•t o • .,, P••o1, FICTITIOUS •uSJNUS cou r l before lhe tlear ing NAME STAT£"'11fNT
FICTIT104.IS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMEMT
Det • .... 11, :io. •480 ••1f>.«l Tr>• totlawonQ ""'""' ,, <1omo DU\• Y our appearance m ay be
- ---... n .... , in person or by your at· P UBLIC NOTICE o e M C.OMP,.,.• ~w Porl tor ney.
Cl t dt Ori•~ Hunl1no1on llut h 1 F y 0 U AR E A OU\IMt'\\ I\ COUNTRI' LIVtNC. ANTIQUE~
All Jhl Slrt-el, Ntiw OOr1 tif'ft(t\
(di lforma '#?W>J
I OoMld R~y !>ell 106 ROl~lurd
pt41c~. Lorona ""' Mar Col1 IO,,.\•f' ~1bH
J~•n C•••~ ~fl t, \Oo Ro••ford
Pl1Ht Coron4l dttl Mor l ... llHJrn1t1t
9167)
ft\1\ t>u~inru t\ c.ont.1u<1ra o., •
otnt"fc)I p..ttO'~""iO Uondla Hay Sri!
t ht\ 'tat~nw-ol ""-•'-•••i.t<l •1th tnt
County ''""" 01 OronQt.6 t.01mty ur' NO•e"~' /8 I~ FISO)t)
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEME"T
ao1no
-FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATIEMENT
, ne IOllOW•t!<J Pt'f"\On\ df~ ClO•no
Ou\1n(t\~ ~h ISi.ANO OVi I SEklllt.E 1<>'113
PM• SI Sunwl llt!d(" '-• '>01•7 Jottn M il( ntll r urou•,on, l b~1l
Par• S! , !>un'411 U<!Jrn C... ~1•2 Ron Puo""y lo9n P•" SI Sun..-1 8••\h, (• IUl•l
1 h1\ t>uun .. \\ '' t<1rH,Utlt-d t,,-, a
Q~11eo, 41 Nr l0t'r\n1µ
JormM ._eorou~M
f h1\ \faU!•fOeUI flt•\ l1ltod w1lh OW
C.ount'f (;prl o• O'dflQll: ((IU'lfy 0"
"fO•t'O'i"I 1" ,.
P UBLJC NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOUS eUSINESS NAM£ H ATEMEM.T
tw\1 ..-,~ ,,, t ,..,.. fo4IOWU"MJ oit'"°" •\ aoinQ OU\•
S I E U R ( II I! .. V w I• "<'\\ h liUltil;l<•CHl[l llU•l.Otfl~ lhl81 OALBOA MAIU"A YA(HT
• fuhp'tllfOOO (H HuntmQtun a~.,,, ,, SALES, >0• E Co.t'' Hw., Nt-.. PG'' qzt>•• I 8Uth Calllo<n•• q1~
(h,H lll'\ Allt"n ')trut,-' '"'It H A\ICJOtO" e>enwvlt r 66) \11sta
fo11pw0ud ., l-41.mtu"iutnn lit-flc n C• ttontt• '-'••PG't 8t'•t t'I (dl1torn1~
~,... 9?660
C•hfOtf'll4' fllbitO Donald8rUC•M•ntn Jr •So Porl C REDITOR or a cont
c1yo• o .. n . ..,,.,,,,n111on llP•<" 1ngent creditor of the de· ca;~~;~~~~,, ronovt1 .. 0 t>• d" •n ceased, you must fil e your
a1 .. a11a1 cld1rn with lh11 cour t o r
'"" ,~~' ':~:"~ .. !',. ,..,10 ,...,. pre-,ent 11 lo tt'IE' per sonal
(.uunlt C•tr~ ol OrAnQ<' Collnh 1111 r eprt:SE'nlatiVe appointed
outmoe• ~ ·-by the court within four
"'~ months from the dale ot
Pub'"'*' ou""' <.u0•1 0 •"• '""" first issuance-of letter s as °"( • 1• n 30 1~ '188 80 !)rc\V 1ded in Sect ion 700 of
PUBLIC NOTKE lhe Probate, Cod e o f
Cal1lornia. ThP lime for
filing claims w tll not ex-
Plr~ prior 10 l our months
FICTITIOUS •us1NESS
"AMI!. SlATEMENl
rne '"''0"•"'1 ""'""'" 00•"0 D~• fro rn th!> date of the hear· ,,...,, d\
v 1ol o v.e ~r ·~ a •d·•~· ong not1rl'd above.
"••"• ca11twn••'l11I• YOU MAY EXAMINE \l~·f'f•" Dor Jn M C •n1y•,. t;. t f 1 0 th t If &"d'°'l<l 1, .. M . c.i.10,,,,., 911•• ne 1 e y e covr you
1 "" """"...,' ".onaun•o o• ~n • arc 1 n l P ,., .., t e d 1 n the "'••""d' •stale you may Ille a r e ~·P<lfl'l u M· '"' ,,, ..
Tn1\ \t•l•""'f"'\I 'll'ltl" t1 t-o ,.1tn thr'
(01.1,,tr (••'• qt ~'4",. fo"°"'"' H•
No._,.-mtiiP,-t J ••
auec;t with the court to re-
ci>1ve> special notice of the
inventory of estate asset s
G1ror-lJ ~ fho.-wn ti.ii/ AD'd"""' l"'•\ ~\Int."\'\ 1\
'>I Cf P'~'' t • cioo.-, a ... ou11
ri .. , ... rnd o f lhe pet it ions. ac· 0:,u~.,~~;°;u·~i:.,..,, 0 • '',~·.e~ c o v n I s an d re Port S
onourl.a D• •n '" dPSC.ribed '" Sedion 1200
J;can<Jdll £..,t-rt>tt ?utnt·, hn n /\Y H quoo1pt, Oirtt.-.,1...,
N C.dmbf•O~· OrdnQto> ld ~/l)fM) tt\i\. \t&t•""""' "'"" fi e',l ""1tf\ t~ rn., llV)l~\S ., •OOdu,tra b• oJ Cuvnh c1 ... rw Of o,.,,Of'" (UU'lf'f on
9t'neral Pi)rltwr"'n1u O~c•mbiPf S, 1Qfl0
C..hitfll"'\ A ~\f>l,if\'I
fH1\ -.c.iu..-rn'"''' wo' 1111-d "''"' '"'"' Coun Iv ( lH' -ut Or di\~ <..ouot y ur No.-mbt•r 7d 1060 FISIMCI '
PuDl1\hed ()fanQt• C.oJil\1 Utl!IV "'1101
D" 1 ~ lb, 13, 1980 •8•U tw
PUBLIC NOTICE
Fl~ll Publl\ht<I OfdnQ>' (o.t\t Oa1ly P•IOI
Dot ~.lo )) lO, 1"80 •~•1 tlO
P t:BLIC !'lOTll't-:
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
f t\P t::tHCM"1nq Ol'f'(X\ •"-(k)•l'\Q t)U\I
f\t'\\ IJ~ l'ICTITIOUS •usi~e:ss RA' HSI( EL l ER : LV 0 OL 0 1 NAMI S1ATEMl:NT WORLD 1.,.,,1 C,..nt•r ""' '1un11n91on llwltollow1nv~"·°"••r•do•n11 Both (d '11~1
\bu-.iM\'\A\ Lon; t1auH 'tl&\ o •. ~, A.""' WARMINGTON HVNTINGTON FounldinVdll•v C• "11C.S HARBOUR. LTD . 1U97 Htlt Avfnu.. Tf\I\ bu>•,,.>>,~ conav<t.a Dr •nun
lr""M. C_.1Ue<nl•f711• 1n(Oq>ot.ittl"d 8\~tdtlO" ottw-r-ttwn 4 Tl\e R-ri P Warm1nv1on Com .,.rlnef\lllP
\p•nv. a C...rt°""t.t cor~•11on, U1$'? L.O"IY .,.._,,.,
I.,. • ._•~. lnt1M, C...ltfornl• •11t• ~ T"''-"t~t""'4!'nt ...... , t11eo ••1" ,,..
Tl'\h t>u\lnt\~ t\ tondut ltd bv d C.o\lnty CtHtt. ot Ord•U~· C "''"'•' on
llimllea 1>¥tMf'SlllP ~c•m""'r 11 19'0 The A-ri P FUlttl W....,ln91on C.om.,.ny Pubh\llt'(I Clr..,,Qt (Odil Oa11v Ptlol Wllll.am ) Pl It man 0.< I•.)] lO 1"90 JM1 O 1991 •978 81 Secf'tl•"' This st•t.,,...nl w•s u1eo with t'°'f'
Count y Cf erk 01 O•.anoe Count' on
Decem""'' S, '"°
I ~.,...,
Pullll\lwlO ClranQ" Cw\I Oaoly P•lol
I De< '• ... 1l, JO. 11.tO •93& IO
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTl110US SVSINISS
NAME STATEMENT Tiie 1011owl119 e>ersont ert do•na
OU\H\tt\S .S HICKORY FARMS OF OHIO. 10.1
Irvine Av•nut 1wu 1c111t Pl•r•l. Nt•pO<I 8HCh, C.lllOtnl.a tit60
t( 'P•le M•n•Q41Ment Su v1tt s, Inc •• C.lllOrlllf COrl)O<'t ll.,,,. 10.1
1rvlnt .Avtnu•. N••port B••t h, Celltorn1a '12..o Tllll C....IMU It CondU<Nd .,, .. cor porauon Kl .. leAM.._menl S.,.,,lctl, Inc Mtcllffl J Mul\l. Prnlden4 •
This '~''""'"' wes 111..s with 1111 Counly Cl•rk ot Ort-Co11nh ot1 NOvttnlM<1t.l'leO ,.,.'" P11lllltNd OrallClt (.OHi 0.11• Pllol. O.ctm•r t, t, 16. U. '"° CM.eo
Pl'BUC NOTIC•.
FICTI TIOUS BV~INES\ "AME STAlEMENT f,,,.. 'Olit,.w nq C>P''>t"' .., J'J!••\J t,.1.1i..
nfo'lo'\ U\
H UGHr \ AfA~ ', '" 1 Ma< 4ttrivr at't'O Sv·~,. J1 v ,,,11,,
A~a C"l1frJrn <\ Q770• q .,0,..'' rnerit. .,....,o,,.._ 1ft0
M3c4•tnwt At"a ~ H-n "" .t•tU
And Cttllforni.-V7 t >'
T '""' D\11.'"""'\ .. onou r .. n r , '4 .,,
0 11t1di..a1
qot)l'>r-1 " H->Qhto''
1 n·'> \\4lfomMt """,. t ""'l "" tn '"' Coutu , Ctt•rlt 1 .l•4•Qt ( "''h
[J ... r U'Tlbf,-17 fQfl'
Pub•f'N>C Or:tn0t °""' U• '" Poot
D.,c \b ll JO \ff8Q J•" C '<tf,\ W•tt 8(1
Pl'BLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS eUSIHESS NAME ST•TEMENT
of tne Ca1t rorn1a Probate
Code·
Robert A. Eastman, At·
t orn e y al Law, 2790
H a rbor Blvd., Ste. 202,
Cost a Mesa. Ca . 92626;
tel : 1714) 540-5891
Put.11\"lf'O Ordl"Qf" ,. U1l\I 01t• 'V f..nut t • . , .. t ~ ,,tl,i(llf'\
Pl HI.IC NOTICE
,.,, ... ,
"OTICE OF SAl.E OF REAL PROPERTY
"t PRIV•l E S•LE
"O A 10.Sll IN THE SUPElllOA COURT OF THI: Sl•TE OF CALIFOR'NIA FOii THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
• tf\t N••t~r o• '"" l'\• .. 1~ ,.,,
l EOT" M • •C.f" Of'<U Y'O
N0fl(E •S "E11ERY C,1VEN llldl
OtJ\ift,.\\d \. ltv 1.f"<J#l'\1~ Wtll \~jl di Pro-...Jf•
lo t l. A Al+ f A I(. AN 4 N r (I t. 'l • tr f"-t r ')~'\I tt'\d 0-\t b•dO>''
CO 61)) (;..tr• cio Hw-t l•rif'J•c· 9,._,\ r-r t t ""4t )n Oi \3"0
~di h"n•it~ 11f1~• •I ,,.. ')t ;Jflt' f f"P' Sfh <Mr
P 1\fclf '1 k~tto 8'1• 1.,,1 1 ••1 • ••"t '•t 1• "'' '"''"'" 1f J ._.,,,u1nq1.~dr ,..,,,.,.,.,(II.Al" 1,A Pr.~·iA AOt, .. n .rnr•11 l ""'
fn1). DlJ\•,,,_.. '\ IT lit "•'l Lf .JI' l;J.-... • t .. , ~4,t;1 t e -.J
1nQ1'W•~Ul!li f Yllt-'1-.fl t••, 1' ..,Uit'JQt ~.,,, .. JI
ii1 r\Qf'1 Uur1 ' t 'O'" t t ,..., qtt• •• , • ·H''hJ ,,,
lf'\t '\1ct1f\m-n1 'ft<i ,,,,."'() #llottt hjr~")•,..,. ·~h'.'\,., ,..,,,.!l M th• l """' t1•
coul"ty Cltirlr • o, .. o ",.. l '"''H' -n tH1tth ""a ~+· trvi "·ont 1itlt1 i"d ,,.
Nov••f't,tlol·r-18 J ~ tt••\t '"'·d1 ·~ '"'''"'~ o• 'd1•1 [)f:lt "d"""'d
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF Dl~SOl.UTIOfl
O~t"All'T1'EllS"lt" f>UtlLI( NOTICE IS ttERE!IY GIVE N IMI OONl"l 0 WA l TEA
Tl~l.Y Mr\RIOANlOCIMOAAllON SUl'ERIOR COUaT 0 1' THI lEOERrtNE ""'~tole<• doln9 bu" STATE CW CAl.ll'OllMIA 1'011 nt\\ 11ft°"4 tr. ll<llllou\ ll<m n•m• T"E COUNTY 01' OllANOE ano ... ,, o• MAAl~EAS SHOP .,
Ne, Alt10lS l"'bl Bt""ll.olt fl' S~•l Af'\e8<cll Or OlllDIER TO MtOW CAUSE City OI Hunllnolan 8eMh Counly ot
l'Oll CHANGE 01' NAMI Or•f19e. Stal• 01 C•lllorn1" <11a on,.,.
'" II• M&tte< Of '"" "PCJ(l(fllOn al Htlll dtY OI Ot••mllt• 1~10 by MAN l(IN (MAN For Cn•not ol •llhtlrA•al O•HOI•" !flt ,.,a
T ... 114>Pllcallan DI MAN I( IN CHAN ltOM u IW't"'r-j lhtrt1n N•tne I pertMr\Np 1nd tftmlrwt4! the1r rf'IA
tor cllanoo ol nemt ""•'"' °"" llled S.ld DU'llntu 1n ,,,.. 111111rr "''" ~ In Courl, -11 -.arlnQ !torn H •O conducled t>y.., """'°""n....., w1ll 1M•
t911llcallan .,.., MAN·KIN CHAN ..... •"Cl d•\(l\&rQe ... "•"''"'•' .,,., !Wllh
rlltd .., 9Cll>lkaltan "'-""' IMI hi\ ot ,,.. rnm -•11<•••• •II monl•• nam• De (,,..,.., 10 l"\ANtCIN l(EN· P<IY•lll4'IOIM l1tm.
NETH CHAN FurlMr noll<r I\,,..,,,.,, o•••n 1"'81
Now, -•tor•. 11 •• """'"' or0trea lhe uno.~'91*1 *'" nol lie "'-" encl dlre<led, 11\al •II -son~ 1n1tro1 bit from '"" d.ty °" lor ...,, 00100.
td '" wld ma11 .. do •PPI., l>Olo<• 11•1•1 non lllcurrea bv Ille other\ 1n lh•t1• _,,
cou'1 In °""'''"""'' J °" tlw 1tlh dty t1amt o• 1n tht ,..tnf Of I,,."'"' of J•nuerr ""•I II JO o <100 A.M I DAT EO "T H11111111qton Bt u11
Of Wld ll.ly 10 ""'-011'9 wlly sue II •P C•lllornlt lhl• i.111 cMy ot Oe<tml>Or pllullan tor c""f191' o1 ... ,,,. •noot<I 1 1-.0
not lie Q• anteo ODNlld w r 111 v
II I• '"' .. °'"'"'" "''" • (Oj)y Of P11bll•lwd CIPMIOI' (O.•l Cally Piiot "'''Order to si-C.Uw lit PVbll•lwlO °"' n , 1tl0 s11~.-1n lhe Or-Coetl 0.lly Pllol a ne•so•,,., ot ~oer•I c1rculallo11,
printed In J.1!119 "'''""'' •I ltt \I Of\Cot H<ll w-for tout 'lUCteUlve wetl<s prior totlallay ot .. 10 .. ath>O
Oiied !his 1'111 cley ot r>e<em••
MARI( A SODEN JUDGE 01'
SUPEllllOR COVIH
LllllOA '•WONG, aso. ""°" & °"° , ....... ~ ......
l4llte ... LMA ........ Cl•ll Tt111t11J•· ... Pvelll .... Ct .... C•\t Delly Piiot o.c. n JO ~-J., •. n. 1•1 si•.JC
'
Wh8W you're b~lllC «
seUina. Cluslfled ad
~ will &et your
F I C!fr· lO lt• ri1ht peo-ple. Toda)' I MZ·Mil.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSt .. aU llAM~n•T~MalfT
Tiit 1e11owl"' ,,.,,,ons are dOlllQ
l>usl"'u" MEOl·AX·PH"ll.MACY, )100 E.ait Coul Hltl!WO. CorOfl• cltl ... , Cellftt'l'llf 11t2S Newport Melll ·A•. Ill< I• Cellto11111 <orllOr't llOftl, lhl I•••
Sir .. I, Gotl.t Nlttf, Ce11t•rflil41 ·~Thi\ Ml-• I• c~H •Y e ('W• ~·''°" NIW~T MEOI lllX, INC
°"'"~ ~ Ptul...,_
Soc••~ t llb ,_ -114• wllfl Ult
C ... 111; 0.t'll _. ~-G-'Y ...
OKotrnllef " l"8 ........ '""°"-Or-. C.0$1 o.fl1 l"ilel DK lJ JI _. J.,, • I) "ti Sl»a
..
J •
f4 OAILV PILOJ
. ' MARMADUK E by''", ........... PEANUTS
1ltER£ WERE ™REE
WISE ~N, SEE ...
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
ana all through the house. not a crea-
ture ~ciS ~rnmng, not even a mouse ... "
SHOE
~Vi~ia. •
Yes, there i9 a Santa Claus .. ~
MOON MULLINS
p ~
W LdE, w~NTA BRING ME
-1"1.iT Po-Of= 1-\0Lt.A DA ISE ?
MISS PEACH
t
NHAI NOTl-ltN6, IANLE,~ IT
WOUl-D COME~ ~rzoM THE HEA"i,
YOLA L..1K e RATHE~ THAN 09L16Ai10N .1
IHIG YE:AIZ,; ~ ~-
M rt:. G"IMMI~ :
.... , ................ ,.
THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane . GORDO
11 ••• Holy instant so tender and mild .... "
by Jeff MacNtllY
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
e~ C'OME'
HERE, Yot.l
S'AtJCY WENCH ?
by Mell Lazarius
TUMBLEWEEDS
: I
by Charles M. Schulz
by Tom Batiuk
DRABBLE
Wl4~f ~ltE '4<>1J (,tlJtNCi
QAO f"<>~ lllf{tSf"'A'5,
A NtlJ Al.AR .. (LOCK (
r1' ·~ C.OlRAN'fEEO '(() c,rr
~o OV1 Of SEO ANO 0tJ rAIRt ll< ~
~OOR fEE'f !
11·lJ
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
OR . SMOCK
t"\ICHAE.L I STOP COMP\..AIN\Ni:;.-Wc
WILL GET Tl-IERE.
BEFORE. 1HE.
25 "T'4 !~
SAY', GANG, eecAuse ouR HOSPl"fAt., GIF""f'
SHOP HAS RUN OUT"
OF "Ge-r w e&..t..." CARDS,
A a..o-r OF YOU SICK1es
WI L.L. HAF'T"A FAKe l'T"
TIL.L. THeY RePt..eNISH
'T"Hl!I R INVE:N"fORY.1
HO· HO· 1-10· H 0 .1
by Gus Arriola
HIV! WHY AIN'T Y'OU OUT LOOKIN' ~~-------_,
FOR "THE WEEC7 ?!-V'ON'T '(OLJ
EVEN CARE THAT HE'S L.051?!
by Tom K. Ryan
THA'PS E:ASY FOR YOU T'SAY!
HE? C?ll/tJT 'lAAW VER NAME IN
Tl1E CHIUS'1MAS G'IFT EXCHAN&f !
" ... AH'~ ~~lfNlfOC socx . 6e SLlfl ns .4 Sl1ltlat ~ ! '
},
NANCY by Ernie Bushmiller
t WANT
TO KISS
ALL MY
MONEY
GOODBYE
'
~CcfMICS I CROSSWORD
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch
"He's i~ one of his 'b1h, humbug' moods."
by Kev in Fagan
0
by Lynn Johnston
by George Lemont
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Acµoss
1 Chosen
6Sanc11on
10 Drizzle
52 Heightened
5'4 ----toe
58 Constantly
59 W1ldox
UNIT ED Fea1ure Syndicate
Monday s Puu le Solved
14 -ple~us
15 Empry
16 Nerre11ve
17 Threefold
18 Girls name
19 Once more
20 Herb
22 ""The Dove"
61 Unworldly
62 Por11on
63 MelOdy
64 Slaves
65 Ogles
66 Spruoe. e o
67 Brings up
Sp 2 words DOWN
24 u11nc1 1 Superlative
26 Nova Scotia endings
c«y 2 Erudl{1on
21 Trackman 3 Flrs1 01ynm•1:_· ~!!&
~ ~ PICS"SITir
32 Sobn~I 4 Nonh Amen-i.:..LO.~..:..
33 Garments can 13 Pollsh anew
35 Mr Uncorn 5 Delirium -21 Gormandize
38 Ponce de -6 Halt sawbuck 23 woe ...,01d
39 Sharp 7 Celebr1ly 25 Hellion
40 Swill 8 Moslem lead· 27 Season
4 1 Tit tor -111 28 En1rea1y
42 W. lndles 1101-9 Boston do: 29 Uproar
eano 2 w0rd._· 30-Aetec1
-43 T ounent 10 Noted Com-34 Weapon
44 Not many mun1s1 35 Actor -
45 St. -River 11 ··--l a Ladd
•7 "Scram!"· Mancha" 36 Pea1
2 WOfds 12 Mosi.m reug. 37 Sword
51 Scan ious COiiege 39 TV program
40 Arll
42 Laborer
43 Bo•er's 1utor
44 Blaz8'
46 M0tst
47 Game bird$
48 Olploma1
49 SVt>Ject so S11199'
53 Comp1e1ed
55 Girl s name
56 State
57 Levy
60 Gener111on
.. , ................. , ................. -............. ..._ ....... ~, ... .
·-··-···-····· .. .. ··-·--··--·-.. -·. . . .. .. .... . . -... . .... -"'" ... -.. --~ -... -...-.,. "" .,,. .. • • • .. ......... #!' ,. •
Tuesday, December 23. 1980 DAILY PILOT Cl
'.d fantaSy for Unele Len ·winner
!!
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)
s
t
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' e
I
(
t
j
t
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ll
I
i
t
t
t
i
(
' • i . I
('t1J111 f 11 "'I I I. '
\ r
l
1'"1111•\ 111" l >1'>1H'\ land an• .Jo<inne Dunn a '-t"' l· anrl IJOUJ!
,,.,, ( 1111111
•
Santa Claus spreads Christma ... c•hf><'r fr •1111 h1!' o;lf'11t h while his ·'helpers" accompany him in a scene from Fantasy on Parade
By SHER REE TRVITT Of .. o.lly ....... ,, ...
At Disneyland you "leave today behind and
enter the world of yesterday, tomorrow and fan-
tasy." /
That's what Donna Newcomb and her family
of Newport Beach did Saturday.
Donna, as winner of the Unc le Len Christmas
Card Contest , ~nd her family were treated to a
day at Disneyland, complete with rides, lunch
and reserved seating for Fantasy on Parade.
With mother Joanne, father Doug and brother
Steve, Donna anticipated and experienced a fun-
filled day.
Her fairytale extravaga nza began with a ride
on Big Thunder M ountain Railroad which, ac-
cording to Donna, was her favor ite r ide.
During the day, the Newcomb family spent
time visiting F rontierland'" Tomorrowland, Fan-
tasyland, Adventureland, New Orlear;ts Square,
Bear Country and M ain Street, U.S.A .
"We didn't ha-v e time to browse through any
shops because we were too .bu sy going on rides,"
exclaimed Donna.
Follow ing a leisurely lunch at the Blue liayou
restaurant in Frontierl and, th e Newco mb family
enjoyed Fantasy on Parade, which lasted about
an hour.
"It was fantast ic," sa id Donna. "My favorite
character wa s Goofy.
With so many things to do an d rides to go on,
the exhausted New comb family lef t Disneyland
at 7 p .m .
Nine hours of fun and fantasy which will never
be forgotten .
Watching the parade arc Donna and her father
Toy soldiers from the Disney film "Babes in Toyland" in paraide.
'
L
DAILY PIL01 .. OBITUARIES
Kids put "om agcdn·
dad out Rock singer
0 1 guard changes tune
ATLANTA CAP) -Ed
Feuz hu too many
children for the Georgia
National Guard. And
Guard officials said that
even ii the 39-year-old
rather of rive gets a
divorce, he might not be
allowed back in un -
iform.
NASllVJLLE, Tenn. <AP> -Christmas is
special this year for Jimmy Clanton, a rock ·n ·
roll at.ar 20 years ago who says he has finally found
meanm~ to Ure as a born.again Christian.
Ciani.On, wfiose rock hits included "Venus In
Bl ue J euns," "Just a Dream" and "Go Jimmy
Go." 11ay11 life lacked purpose until he accepted
Chrl~t In August.
H magry h erd
I IH '" h U ll O!l \ d11•f J I il l1hp11 ld11\g .
I 11 1 ltl 11\\ ,.,,.I 11 u11d1·1 hlclllkt•I ol '>OIJ\1.0
1n1 hl.ut• 11l .'1.i"'?t 111 .111' lhmg t>bt• <.'h •wa
l>lt> Whc11 w1nl~r snows destroy grazing
.1n:a s. !!,Mlll'kccpcrs regularly feed the
~111unab
Cl<l A-I i · fl 11'
I.\ .,f. l'(>IJI,
-. \ '\ I· I< \ '\ < ' I S l ' ( l
1 \'I' I I l'lllH' h,1.,
I II 11 I pl' d ,1 h I' ol d It f
Ir ,tll'>I~ l.1111111 ml l.11 IHll
.11111 11tlit"1 \\Ill'' Ill ... l'""
"" l hc· -..:i11 Fr<tfH'l'>l'll
H." ar1•..t :.. 1110-.1 1111pur
',1111 p111bkm' lht• Ha~
\ 11• J Cou11t•1 l :...utl
l ht• hu'illll':..' orwnt t•d
~fll\11' ... .1111 lhJl 1l:.. .... (•l)U
,, n nu .1 l 1>011 shim 1·11 Ir,
111·n·en1 of I tw 100 q Ul':..
t111nNI 11 :..lt•d l'rln1f' <1:..
t ht·1 r ma1111 1·om'l'rn
!lnh H pC'rnnt had put
1· 11 OH' I.II th<• hl.':tcl of th1·
l"t 111 ;.i ..,11111 lar t)t)JI la:..1
\J1f'll
Merry Christmas
ued in season
OV EHLANO PARK, Kan !AP) It 's going to
lw 11 Mt·rr) Christ mas F.ve for Merry Christmas,
:\lt•rr) t'hn.:..trnas Jr . Joy Carol Christmas -and
lh•hurah (.'arc\
Thal's wh.en Charles Merry Chnstmas Jr .. is
gl'IJ ir1g murnerl with his father. Charles Merry
Chrislmas, Sr , officiating, and his sist er. Joy
Can'I Olristmas. looking on.
Thl' pipe and fitting salesman from this
Jo.'.unsas City. Kan., s ubur b will be marry ing
Dl'borah Carey. The Christmases always get a lot of attention
al this time df year. says Charles Jr.
"When 1 go to cash a check ... the tellers
krnd of look at me in disbelief." he said .
Charles Sr . a Baptist minister. lives in a
lltrmingham. Ala .. s ubdivis ion ~ailed Holiday
111 Iii.
Two UCI
faculty
honored
Two faculty members
in lhe UC Irvine Depart-
ment of History have re-
ceived National Endow·
ment for the Humanities
fellowships that will al·
low them t.o do Culltime
research in the coming
year on the American
South and European
social thought.
Dr. Mic h ael P .
Yoin Kippur pay
,Jenial upheld
Scots set .
dancing
classes
Johnson. associate pro-
fessor of history . and
Dr. Mark S. Poster, pro-
fessor of history, have
bee n a warded
fellowships for .indepen-
dent research. 'Poster's
one-year research and
writing period will begin
July 1 J ohnson , who
wi ll combine his NEii
fellowship period with a
Cl sa bbatical. will
begin his fulltime re -
search in April. IH:~ ~\ ll' !·:~ "'" ;1 ,\I' 1 ~rhoob are not re
q 111red111 j.!1v1·I11111· 111 f ""1 I h µa y to ll'adlers observing
.l 1•w1-;h hohtl.1\' th<•""' a C'1v1I Hight-; Commission
h.1:. ruled
A course in Sl'otl1sh
country dancin~ hegins
in Costa Mesa on Jan. 17
1n the Community
Center, 18th Street and
Anaheim /\venue next to
Lions Park. running 8:30
to IO 30 p.m every Wed-
Poster. is studying the
work of French social
theo r ist M ic h el
Foucault. J ohnson is
studying the history of
poor white workers in
~he American South of
the 18th and 19th cen·
tunes.
Thl' <ll•C'1.,111n found lh<il a wcc1al educatwn
1~·..1£'h(•r 111 C'arrnll hcid noL be-en discnminated
.1gu1nst wtwn h1· w11~ dorkcd a dav's pay for taking
11nw off ''" \·11rn l\1pp11r lhc mo"t ... oll•mn Jewish
hol11J.1\ . 1w:..d ay '
l'lw ruli111: • •1ul1I ~,•1 ,1 1ir1·1 1·cl1•111 for 1lecid1n~
I 11t 11n· 11·lt~111u •h-;c·n rn 111.1\ 11111 1·a-,1·:.., commission
•1llll'1:tb -.;i11I l'h1· 11·<wh1•1 llt•n Kin~ \\hll offered to
1\•11 1\ !':-.tr<1 IHTll' rl11r111 µ 1h1· ('hnc,trna' or Easter re
1·1•,:..ro;. ,,lfd lw proli.ibh wt111lt! ;iµ1>t·~1I
The tea<.'her will be
.Janel Huscoc of F'oun.
tain Valley, who traces
·n er Sc:ott1sh ancestry to
the t'lt.1ns FergusQn and
Leslie.
SHERIFF
SITUSll
SPRINGFIELD. Colo.
(AP) Baca County
She riff Willard Gorr
rides a b l ue , air ·
conditioned Chevrole t
instead of a horse while
keeping lookout for a
traditional Western out·
lltl\ 11
II I\'',;, t11 I\ it 11·,11h•t11
'II l ""' •' \J 1" :1 I .1 I •:1 -.1•d
I'"" 1111 1\1'1·1•111t 11•1 I !I 111)411
·~111\I\1•d lo\ ht ii Ill 'ltl l'I
~.11 .1 \1111 "'fill~ 111 I 1.-1 ,1
\i 1 • 1 1 1 L'r :1111l1l.1u •hr1•1
I ,,, •• ,,II ,,,,. "'' t f l I ••t f I I I .1
\l 1 I I ;1 .11t1I . I lo I \l 111
11 11 I·. t 11•1 111 \l.111 lt'ld 1\1 11
' I I I " \ t • J • ~ I ... I, , , f.' \ I f t
\\ II 111 1,,.111 111 I 111• ol,1\
l>t•t • 1ttl11 • 'I 1111111 .11 Ill 111 I \ )I
,ol f'.111111 \tP\\ \11 1,,111.ol
I• ot~ l'.11111• \t•'' \1111 111,11
d111•1 1111 '
l'UI( FAMILY
COlOHIAL FUHEAAL
HOM(
lRQ I Bo b<1 A~"
W1· ... 1mon.1 .. 1
89J J'),J':l
PACIFIC VIEW
M(MOAl,U P.fJllC
Cen 1crv Mwf11.trv Chap1•1
)500 Pac;1f1< Vh•w O"v"
Nl•w(JOtf A.•.ot h
l",44 '1700
McCOltMIOC MOltTUAAlfS
l .:111una f3c> ac11
494 9415
L;u:1un;;i 11111'.
7"8·0933
San Juiln Cao1s1rano
d95 1776
HAllOlt LAW.._MT. OLIYI
Morruarv • C1•rrv>terv
--C~ilC\1
162~ G1Sl1'1 Avr•
Costa Mpo;.i
540-5554
l'IHCI H OTHUS
llU H040WAY
MOltTUUY
I I 0 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
lt \T I EY
I•. \ le l \ <l I< :'11 . \ :'\
lc \ 11 I·\ . , .. ,11t1•n1 11f t '1111111,1
do•I \\,II (',1 11.1-.-.t'd ;tW:I\ \ttl
I 11 •1 1·1111,,.1 l'I l!lkll 111 ~('\\ j1(J1 I
11 t •• I It ( ,, ;\I t• 111 111 I :1 I
'I\ fl I ' 1\1'1 I' 111'\tt 11,.l.I\ ;11 . ''"'''1 ,11 th1· l',11'1 111' \'tt'\\
\l1·11111n,ol ('h;1J'd ."t'" pot'I l\1·,11 Ii I' I 1'.11·tl 11· \ ll•\\
\1111111,11 \ d111•1·1111 '
llU~I.'
The l'Ourse is µresenl·
cd hy lhe Cost CI Mesa
Department of Leisure
Services
Cost is $1.50 per lesson
and proceed s will
benefit the Royal Scot·
ti 'i h Co untry Dance
Society, a n11nprofit
group Op<!n lo all ethnic
hack ~rounds The Scot
t1s h Lowlanrls Clan and
Families Inc co.sponsor
Ms Rusc<X.''s clal>ses .
Hagp1pe musie will be
provided
No advance r<:gistra·
lion is ncccssa ry. but
ndmis~1on must be paid
at the door each night.
law the cattle rustler
Gore has not had a
rustler in jail fo r three
years. but with the cost
of beef on the hoof at $70
per 100 pounds and ris-
ing. t he southeast
Color ado sheriff s ays
checking for potential
rus tlers is worth the ef·
fort.
The Color ado Cat-
tl e men's Association
estimates about 250 cat-
tle are reported stolen in
the state each year.
\'\'\\ \l\l(Jl-; f(ll~l·.~
111 1111 t"I v. 1t1· 111 :'1.11r111 JO
1<11" 11 111111111 •1· flf .\Iii l.1·1
1·111 ..,1 1 .rnd l<ohtn ..,11·11
111111 hl'I fll I' .1r11k l,e1rt<· <111<1 .l11l1t· .rntl i:ranclrno\hl't 111
lloh1•11 J1HI < ·ourtn1•1 . ~ol'" 'UI \I\ ·~I h~ lll'r bl'lllht·r Sam
;11111 ~'.lfllf·r .loltu Kl•nncd\'
.ind i.:1.1111lm•1lh1 ·1 ~t rs Krn flt•tl I :\1t•11\1111 ;tl ~l'I \ 11'1.!!'>
\\ill lw l11·ld 1111 Tul"Hhl}.
V ~i:..c.lllilc..1. u._1 !Hill a..t._ PlJBblC-NOTI€& -+1-PU8Ll~01'1€£
2 ;JO l''\1 al 1l1llo;11lt• I 'hrnd1 & I <:.ir<ll'll' ;11 Hn,c• 11 111:.. FtCTITIOUSIUSINESS FICTITtOUSIUSINESS \lt•11111rtal l'rirk Whlflll'r NAMESTATEMENT HAMESTAT tEMEHT
(' ll I \l I I TM lot1ow1n9 P"'\01! " do•nQ bu\I lhe 1011ow1n9 ,,..,..,.. " OOtnO ou" a 1111,1.! II~ orl u;il\ ' 11·1·1' "~'~ ,,, ""u as 1111 " FlE(IRON IC INTRIGUE, !l>OO ACADE MY OF CANINE SE\'Jo:ltS '!'
7
•• 0
3
teAn Front, Newport Buch, CA OBEDIEN CE. ?112 !>E Brl\101. , •• N•wporl Beitel\, Ca 91101
ll U :"'.J /\I. f) \\' .\ Y , Jo: M•rtv W•lson. 11>00 w Oaan Luanne H•l•n Port•r. llet.7 St-,; \'..£.ll:,..x._t•l>tllrnl ol Garden Fron1.~t-0111110rl a..c.11, C•. q766J M•»••· Tu1Jln, Cot..92680 •
(;11>1 ,., (';1 PasM·d awa) on Tnl< bll•lne\\ ts condv<tHI bv an In Th•• 1><.t!Jntt• '' eonductcd bv "" 1n
llt't'l'rrll>C'r 20. l~I Surv1 ved o1vtduatMar1v Wiison dlvtouel~uftn"" Por•~•
h.\ hi ' l\<llt· 1;,1~ h• ul (;ur1len Tl"' \tatt"""'I wa• hied wtlh ll'le rn1> \tatM'f'nt was llled with 1ne <:rm 1• C'a , :1 l'hildren. Ttf· County Clerk 01 Oran~ Counlv on County Clerk of Oran.;,e Coun•v on
fan . Tar a :.incl J<1-'hu·· all or ~<ember"· l'lllO o.umbet S, l'llO. 0 " l'Ul"S ,.,,.._, c;a11lcll l;lt)\I', l'a , 2 SISlCrS Pubtl"-0 OrllnQIO co.st Dally Pllol Publh!>ed Oranor CO.\I Oattv Pilot
:-.hell on l'arki. nf San Diego. o.c 13.lO, l'lllO.Jan 6. IJ, 1'81 *>-'° 0.< n JO. l'IO,J "" i., •l. "'' s1n.eo
( a , irn1I Laura St·v~rs of
Anaht•1111, Ca . a l>rother ,\nd1·
Sl'l'l'T'-. 2 st1•11·:.1st~r!. <.:ind~
anti 1.1~a b111h ot Liarilen
C:rov(', t 'a . nr11l a step·
b1 ot hl'r t 'url C ant rel! of
f>el'ttt-lt'{tru\"C, ("a .\11.'fnll
'cr\'l<'l'l> "~re h<'l<l on Moh·
tiny, lk.>rt•mber 22. 1~1 al
I 00 1':'.t tn lhl' ll;irbor I.awn
.\ll'm•inal Chapel with Rev.
II I t11· t• K u r r I c . o t l h e
r r(•<;l)}lcnan l'llUr<'h or th<'
C'ovcu :rnf off1r 1att11 ~ 1Scrv1c('s un;lcr the tlirer tion
of llarhor I.awn Muunt Olive
Mortuar,v of t'osrn Mes a
~411 55&1.
1'TOl.RA
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.ICTlTIOUS IUSINESS
MAMIE STATtEMENt
Ill~ Iott-Inc) l)et\O(\ I\ dolno bU\I
ne\1 .,
"~J>ORT CE'WTE'A ~OR EOVCATIONAL THE RAPY. 101
Macinoll• SI , Co11• Mew. C. tt671 Htrllerl C Crou. ,,. N !>ycamore
...... Loi AngelH. Ca 900.16
Tiiis bu\ineu Ii conctucltd b' •11 1n dlvldu•I
He•lle•I C Cron
Tiii< !lal&""""I wa\ lllllCI wllh Oltt county Cttr-ot Or•noe Coul\tY on
OectMller t•. 19'()
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IU"Hf.U NAMtE STATEMtENT
r ~· lot•-'"CI ,.,..,.. " 00.t'IQ bu••
nn>4>
-0 1 S f I N C"? I Y r--o l!'NTlll"'t: SER VICES. l TO , Ill Town and Coun try, Or<t119t. CA '2661 Herotd N-tl, 0 D s . 210? Nor'Cll llld9•WOIXI St . S.nl• A.n•. CA •1101
Tiit> butjM\\ I\ conductt'd bv an 1n
cttvlltll•I H.,otd Nemeu, 0 0 S Tiii\ slelemenl wu lllecl wttll '"" County Cler' of Q13nqe Count-, on
0.ctMller 1•. 1'90
PUBLIC NOTICE
EOWl\RUBOVOSTOLRA ----former resident o( Corona ctci ~~C:.:.','c:",111 :4'1!'1",.•,u ~1a1nous 1usiNl!ls
Feuz, 11 purchastnR
agent from Jesup, Go ,
joined the Guard as a
p a rt·lime s oldi e r In
July. He was dischari-'ed
in November when of
ficials reviewing his re·
cords noticed he had
five rhildren
COL. HARK¥ lleuth .
a s pokes man for the
Georgia (iuard, ~u1d
Feu~ should never h ;_1vt·
been allowl-d to t•n hst Ill
t he first ~Jlal·(' lwcuu~<'
AI m y r ~..: u I a t 1 o 11 :-.
s ay Iha\ n n 11uld1cr
of his pa,y raun~. I!: 3,
can have more I h trn
threMependents
"Very honestl y speitk
ing, a mis take w11 i;
made in that the number
of dependents was not
noticed," Heath said.
Feuz's com manding
off ice r . Ca pt E d
Lehman, Raid he recom
m ended that the depen
dent rule be waived and
that Feuz be promoted.
but superiors told him a
waiver was not possible.
"THE llEASON for
the regulation is pay."
he said. "They f~I that
he wo uld not make
enough money to sup
port his family 1f he
were on active duty, and
it would ca u se a
hards hip."
Feuz . wh ose
ch ildren's ages range
from 8 to 14, said he was
willing to go "to any ex -
treme" to get back 1n
the Guard.
'·A divorc e is one
possibili ty," he su1d In a
te lephone interv iew
from his south Georgia
home ... f mtJ(hl turn
over custody of some of
them (childreh ) lo my
wife 's mothe r , under
cour t order if I have lo.•·
MRS. FEUZ added .
"If I had total custody
and he had no firtancial
responsibility, the n
legally he would have no
dependents.'·
Heath sajd, however.
that a divorce might not
solve the problem
"The incidence of a
diyorce does not negate
responsibility for de ·
pendents." he said. "He
would still have five
children that are depen·
dent on him."
The dischar ge came
when Feuz was only four
months from a promo·
tion to E-4, corporal. a
level that pays $20 more
a month and where the
dependenl regulation
does not apply.
FEUZ, WHO Se(ved
four years in lhe Florida
National Guard in the
early 1960s, s aid h e
enlis ted in lhe Georgia
Guard "beeause of love
of country fl may sound
corny. but J feel there's
not enough patriotism
going on today "
Until his discharge.
F eu z was a forward
art1 ery o erverTn a
Guard unit attached to
the 24th Inf a nt r y
Divi s ion at For t
Stewart.
"I 'II (.'t:lc brute my first Christmas as a reborn
Chrlrstlun." 1u1ys Clanton. 42. of Lancaster, Pa.
"I'd twcn c1 <·ardhoard Christian for 40·some years.
I w1111 :1 plrltuully deud. Now I've got my priorities
in ordn I found out that I was vain and had no
humility I wus Murty Macho "
('I.ANTON. A l.UTllERAN, WAS SWEPT out or tlu: nK·k muH1c spotlhtht in the mid·l960s by
Ur1t 1sh l(rCJUJ>b hkc the Beatles and the Rolling
Stones lk bt•cuO'lt' u dlse jockey and radio station
l'Xt'l'UllVt' wt111t· 1•1mlinuing lo sing in nightclubs,
whH·h hl• ~\111 tlovs
111· n•c·cntly found himself SS0.000 in debt and
t rnuhlt•cl hy 11rnl)l1·m11 of kee1>1ng a band together.
"I h1I lht· IJll i.," he i.ityi..
"I ~11\ 1t11w11 110 my knees and said. 'God, l
Tll'l'tl you · J Wit when 1t sceme~-I was going over thto edge. I ~ot pulled
•>ut of lh~ flames. IL was
Ilk•· a freight train went
throuKh my soul
CLANTON
··1 be(:arnc filled
with Lhc Holy Spirit and
I t>c~an reading the Bi-
ble for the first time in
i.e vcnil years I had
nevt:r known what my
nichl· 111 life was I had
ISUC'h a void If I had
rnnllnucd on lhc fife I
wa~ on
"All my show bus1
ne ss lire ... Clanton
says. ··1·ve dealt with
people who did no t
worship my Kod Their
gods were mont:y . power p<>slt1on , material
gains"
HE'S TRYING TO P l:T TOGETHER a C'on
cert tour linked lo his new attitude toward hie
"You've heard of 'Oldies but Goodies' shows
I'd like an 'Oldies but Godlt es' tour .. lle's trying
to get singers like B.J Thoma!>, Little Anthony,
Brenda Lee. Skeeter Da vis and Jeannie<.: Riley,
all of whom have publicly professed their Chri11
tian faith. lo JOtn him in a lour They all would sin g
a nd give their testimony
"I want lo be around people of God." say~
Clanton. who appeared this fall on the relig1ou~
television progr am .. PTL Club " "I've asked Cod
for the best way I ct1 n minister 1·m look1n~
forward to being a part of a Christian m inistry.
"I've found my·purpose I screwed up royally
for 40-some years but now I see the other stde of
the coin. I've been so joyous th~ past few monlh!-i
It's a miracle "
Surgery seen aid
in stroke cases
DETROIT lAP l A Detroit neurosurgeon say~ tht're may be hope for tens of thousands of pa
tients disabled each year by minor stroke~
cerebral bypass surgerr .
Dr James I Ausman, head of ne urosurgen ·
a nd neurology at Henry F'<1rd Hosp1lal , said the def·
icate operation bein g s tudied by doctors around
the world could prevent further strokes in patients
who already have had minor ones~
fie said the procedure also could avert strokes
in some people who show certain warning signs.
such as temporary weakness, numbness. loss of
speech. dimmed vision or blindness.
"The general opinion of the public is that once
you have a stroke you're through," said Aus man.
one of 120 doctors from 60 countries participating
in a $5 million study of cerebral bypass s urgery .
"That 's not true. and there's abundant evidence to
prove it."
No leo,'e aaswers
llec••mftld•
Ly nda Johnson Robb.
head of an Advisor y
Co mmittee on
Women . thinks Presi-
de nt Carter s hould
for bid the use of'
gender as a criterion
for classifiration in
government polities
or programs .
Santa
story OK
for tots
MENOMONIE. Wi s
C/\P l It d<.resn'l hurt
s mall children to believe
in Santa Claus. s ay t .... o
U n I \' C r S I I y 0 f
W1scon11in·Stout human
development sµec1alists
Professors Willia m
S 1 an1szew~k1 a nd
J e ane\le COJu fal said
parcnt11 ma\ .... a nt t<J
avoid a flat .\('.S or 110
an:>.,.,l'r tu l'ht.ldren who
<iSk If S:.intu nau11 1
real
"I WOL'LV !->:t) 1l dt·
pends on t ht• agl· of th•·
l·hlld !-.tani!>tcv.:,lu
.,;rnl · If the l'hlld l~ a
pn •sthoolcr. I "uulct' gu
a h e arl and f O!>ll•r t hP
m yth uf Santa Claus
"Sanl;.i Clau:. 1s part of
a fant3:,y an<l childrl'n
who t:ari fanla:.1ze are
hc::tll'r adJustecl · ~s
Coufal ..;aid
Wht·11 C'htldn•n hl'gtn
a tt t•nd 1ng :..l'hnol :rn d
qucs1wn1ng lhl· rc·ahl)
tlf Santa l'la u '.
S1an1 ~1.ew ~k1 s aid.
··u 1vl' t'nough 1iiforma-
t1on t<J let them make
their uwn decision "
WHE!\" C'tlll.Dtu:s
f1nalh dt•c-1de lh(·re is no
SJnt .; l'ljUS. \1' l'uufc1l
... :.i1d parl'nt:.. ~hould ">.
i>lain lhal then• 1~ in
dt•l·d a Sant<.1 hut n<>I 1n
thr form CJf a J 11ll~ old
l'if
• · 11 c ~ Lhl· :,p1rit o f
\\ :.111 t1ng tu do things for
peopflo. of spct'ral giv·
ing ,' · sh<> said.
And Stamszewski s aid
burslint: the myth o f
Santa can be good for
children ··Discovering
there 1s no Santa Claus
is kind of the first stage
of realizing there 1s a
rea I world oullhere
Job choice dilemma
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: For the future, I plan
to proceed Into the field or-business.
My d•d Insists that to hue a guaran·
t eell JCM)an~-:
out and compUUr technology or
engineering is in. Would you please
settle our argument on which neld Is
the bes t, Its outlook. etc'!
J .0 .. Mt. Prospect. 111.
C4REERS
management program
dent approach. 1s a pru·
tn fact, a third of all new MBA
graduate s h av~ a techni cal
t aclcground Wh ether you become
an "engineer who manages" or a
Jiere.are some t.rends ;-~
-C~mpuler te_chnology is siuling-
but could crowa up in hordes of
workers hear it's hot a nd move in.
... "managef' ·who does some engineer·. -
ing, ·• you'U be in position to µursue--a
topflight career.
Engineering has been up some
vears anti down others . The go.go demand for business
grads is over although supe rior
man agers are always sought.
-At least half -some say two·
thirds -of all engineers wind up
managing othe r e ngineer s and
wo_rkers. . ' -EXECUTIVES WILL be needed
to run high-technology enterprises
Additionally, t here'll be a need for
people who sufficiently understand
business administration functions to
automate them In any industry. using
such tools as audiovisual conferenc·
ing, electronic mail, computerized
tickler files and digital decision
systems.
BEGIN TO K EEP f i les or
notebooks with data on such growth
ind ustries as semiconductor s.
biotechnology. robotics, telecom·
munications and energy. Your data
base will become invaluable in refin·
ing career aspirations as your educa·
tion progresses.
-Dad e&rTec.tly-identifies en~1neerr
ing and computers as offering out·
s t a nding prospe cts. But your
business ideas are solid too. Both of
you can win the argument
Teacher honored
CHICAGO <AP) -It was ''Marva
Collins Day" for Chicago. but the
honored educator didn 't leave her
teaching duti es at Westside
PreparatQT)' Sch~I. UL n HltGl80M
SMITH & TUTHILL
WHTCL.lff CHA,IL.
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
!>46·9371
t• '"' NIIMI ITATaMI NT Mar. ~n. and Sun Cl\y, ~. Tiie tot1••11t --1. ,.,,.. 11vs1-Tiie tcr114Mlno lltfW'i 1rao1n9 "'. Passed awav on Drcember ,..u u ; MU.,,
Gallfomi lnsul"ance
Co mmi ss i o n e r
Wesley J . Kinder,
who refused to give
up his ·post in Sep·
tern ber when Gov,
Brown wanted to
replace him, hes re·
signed effective Dec.
31.
-fl seems clear that tomorrow's
top honors will go to individuals
wbo CJln m.anage technoloay and
money. So, if you are technically
minded. who not pool your ideas?
Mrs. Collins has never taken a day
o(( since she opened the !'lchool in her
hom e six years ago to work with ln·
ner city youngsters -"teachin1 lhe
unteachables."
20 1980 II I edb hi HAWAIJT AN•SPA,..a1warl'lt• I( e ENGINEERING ANO . c s surv1v y s AY9., 5'111• H•. HIA"llnflon Beac:ll, C•. OEYELOPMEHT, IMO L0041n Av.. 1h1111:h1cr Je11nne Jackson of .,.., co,••~.c...m» Glendora. Ca .. 1 son Norman KY""I J• "°"'' "'' 00<~" or.. ICeflfefl IC ... .,crom, 1 Flor .. ,
E tolho of Palos Verdes . Ca. ~~11:t:,.~~·~ bw ""In· lr~i .... ea • .,m
"llCI llOfHUS ond ft i;randchlldten and 3 otM111t11. ' 01!~':"'.,." 1' c-.ci.a by""'"
SMtTMJ' MOITUAl't ll r f' a I · ii rand d au I{ ht e rs K,...... Ja "°"I l(tf'll a.re1rom
627 .. ,1,. 51 t'ryptslde ervlces will be Tiit. ""-' •ft 111• •11" ,.,. T1111 .,._. ·~ 111.a w1111 '"" ..... , . ,~ Co11111y c1.,11 *' O.•noe Collfllr tfl c 1 ,.... of ,.,_ HuntinQlon Beath held on l'U<'Sth1y. December oeomNr ,., ,... °"" r ...... ra ....... ,,.. co""'' on ~ 6~39 • 12:1. 1980 ol 1 :lOrM Pacific Plll>ll"*' 0r ""m DK•-"·,.. 11111"1 ...._ ________ _, Vu~w Morruarydirectors. .,,.. c..s1 o.ur 111101 "'*'"'"'Or.,..°"""°'"' Plto1 . 0., n .•. , ... Jell.'· U, "" St,... DK. n ....... Jell •• '" "'' JIU.ea
)
• f ' , , I • • • • •
Seeking an undergraduate degree
ln engineering or in engineering
technology and topping it with t
master 's degree in business ad·
mlnlstr•tion with ample courseW9rk
In finance -or some vartalkx\ of this
education . like an e ncineerinc
Her Came as an educator spread
nationally. She and her small school
were spotlighted on CBS televtslon's
"80 Minutes" and a movle about her
life and dedication is Ming ftlmecl on
the West Slde
.. ' ..
..
--... ~ . .,,._
~..... Tueeday. December 23. 1980 DAILY PILOf (7
•............•..•...... ,,.~--~---===~~====:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::~.!.-
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UMel ............ It wu ..... ~ t•t lMI'°' h -f ti'\ '4)U•TAI• \IALLIY f'llOl'l•1Y Oet<rlMCI o..CI OI lri,ttl WILi. SILL
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MA.Ttll .c)IUOAOI COMPANY • (~ti LewlllV-' .. I'll• lefwe, \\alt tit• 11111• ~Ofldff •ncl t•trlfd, 1"-HIOHll!S f 81DOER FOR CA5H
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llKt,._ >ft,.., Qtf"• el .............. , 1-.. , .. ,._ 111!• -lfll.,H I ol i.1 ... 1.,i In ,,,_ (111 ol Pout1l•1" \lelley HAITHCOC~. ""-"' -wife •~-·ti Oo-elttM"'• •"" ••141 1....,_. •-111 ..,. ~-·•~ O••-(....,l\h t-•lllotnot. Qior>etelly llE.NEl"ICIARY R08ERt E
--111 IN-·• ... _....,, -"' 11\o C:-fth .. ()ft1191' \lelo vi •l\0•11 el Ille W•'"'"' e11d ... wflOllot HA ROMAN e l\G ELAI NE J
................. _ -"4 ........ Ltll ... _ .......... 1o11 •• ~ l>tOP.,tlt i«ellt(j ....... •W"'"'"'' cor "'"ROMAN ..... _.. M'° "'"'
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( •' ~ ..... '"' .. wn~ \e.t<•• 411• , .. ,. u.i.a ,..,.,., r ,1 1 ... ou<ul.O IH•ol{lj;ll.,.AI C:Otnlie~r IV 1n O•"-' 10 ~"• c.-••-,""'• •• ,._..., •WU9'\ ,,_ O• ,Dt tn• ""'"• tQmP•"r t We >t '4'm" '"-• Ohlrlll IQ"'~"''"• end Lot tlOf ft.ct 1121•'Pt'' m•pre ~oeiWIA .,_,lot .. ,,, .-relolotJ llw \lit1jht1• {,.IAl'•ltvn h I o•W' "''° bullulnU •ludl•• rWt Ol\ery 10 tll(l'11Utl <OldtCI In bOOk SJ p.o9t SO ol Ml\·
t "••'WW " ..... --.~ ... ow ...... flt ~t,t\l'Wf• ,, -'""Iv<•• M "'f\WI UtC.IHlte,uO HWWOHJOl'1\t.•AO t.•11•1\eOu) Mt01o In tn. Office ot .,,. ~ ... tel,,,.,._ ••• ,...... • fHljh•O «ii' Mvttfthun ~ MMi •It•., 1ottH w.-.t. q AS, 'fW O•\lfld ., \()On., c.ounlyr.c..orderoh•'d0r•nQeCounty I ••" • " O~•·• P•t6-tlil• te M•~t..-• l•"'-"'' ., \•~ .-.""a.a Ill•• ,, 0'•''" •bit •"•' con\umm..i.uon ut 1~10 W1110 L•n•, CO\l• Mr~•. •~ ~ .. ••• .. ,•fl'•""••• ,..,. 1n ~ "'* ~ .,,. QtUc•4'' ''-'<" • JN\a 1ftltHMJ\ to tOm,~t ,,... C•llforn1• I
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.,... .. t, .. ,, mt •~•, \~tMt.0 '°" A•tord'\ .nd .,.._~ I>~ .,. 1"''r"' •no •PPIOV•h f"li«•U•tY to conitru<t 1\ O•'*'•n ., to 1h <OMJ>Mhtft4"\ 0t cor
.,. ti '-.....-.. • .,.., .,, • .., •""" w"• •WO nwnt .. YU *"•', / ittt ,~orOtd Uf\ ltw °'"""'''" • OUtfO•nQ 01 0...1101"0\ rec:t~ul
•11 ••• .;w, ... ~ •• m ... ,, ,,,, It\ IQQ• 10.1\ "•9' ...... ~,.,,.OW\ o'"''(J .no upon W<.Ut ' T~ btntfkl.,Y under sa.10 0..d Of
L"'' 11 ••• l."-11 ,.J >t lf'\•\. •fl Otfwt .. lltt1<4Md\ 'nc'I '"''" 'Of~ttnt\ M\d •PPt0¥•1\ tn Ttu\f,oyr••\On0f•brt4'<nc>r0tt•1.11t
• ._. ~W .....,_.. ,..._,,.., v1 0. ,ngi... (\>mntWWt' "'*""u ., f'f l-•'W• )"'* ftHHh tu tt!'I fur Qul>tiC bt\t • l>f'OQO\•J fO In tnf' OC>llQ41iO"t t,e<.,Hecl tnereby,
"'•l• ,,., \..._.•YI' •• o ..,...., n••f• ,. L''• \)t ""••OOr' •••'" rount'r' o• 41n\tru<1 '414n OU•ta1no o• u~1101nQ\ on n•retotOt"e ei&.ecutfd 4lnd c»li¥ered to
"•t..tN ~ t ~' 11 av '• Or•nQ• ~•••Of C•llfornl• tn.t OtQPIW'tY out th•t to vttec.tvot• tn• unoer~ • wu tten O.Cl•r1tlon
••••• ......... ......,.,.. '"•"' '" '"" UI • .. 011CE IS HEA£8V Gllli:N tlwl Ofl \ut" .,n •nl•nl an~ 1.•tt•'* ol \••<I ol O•t1ull -0.m,enCI lor S.IO. •no I .a• rn.--\ ~ •• , '4""'0*• vi u 1\1 I Wt'\d•' ••nu•' Y 'l •~•• •l ) OU ptOP"f ty iou\tle>n1••n •n•u19n•t>lttop· wnUen l'Otltt ot br••<n •no ot ele<.tfon
.. ..,,~,. u CIO<• 0 "' •I "''°"' Of C.ouMl'Wk.I\• tlOO to tk.fy .no'"" (On\ldftr'1tl0f"I tor to C4lUM 1"9 unotr\10~ 10 Ull S4 id
V.1o1•• ~"''""'"" ' .,nu•' • •.Ot J•mOOf" ttlvd ( lty uf NcwpOrt !u(h.~,.'.~""' rnu\I or Uw ''"' d\ tl ••11,, pruP41trty to Wlnfy S••O oC>HO•tiOns, ~•"••••• P•-.w "'-''• ij•.t'n County ot Or•no-: ~\.-t \)t vl.W "'"' •nd ltwrt•ft~• the Undersigned caused ~·w \tt.flf\l'H••• C•llfuff\ltt I •ill \.f'll ~· f)UOH< euct1on WUEAt:.AS 'lhn-•rt o""elop1n.tnl i df0 nQ\IC.I ot bfe•Ch •NI ot e1ec.11on to l
t • \tr .. t •.-M•"· .M uU•I '-\Ht1m~11 fO tht MQnif,_1 OtOdet for t•\n In l•whil I C.O"'Pony IV lnQi(dt.0 ill wllltnqneu to bt! Rwcordltd AUQu'I U , t9'() •) lrt\tf
dilt•1Qf\•ho11 ' "'4>w'' 110r...1w• ''"' w.-• fnGf'Wl'r' of ttw United St•lti ,u tr\t \e•\tt to \hr 01,hH.\ up0n \J'\.e\t \tfm') No lOSJ8 tn t:lOO' U'tS paQit ''• oe S4ld
'• 11, •• ~1..,..11 •"' '"' I up1 .. ,.,,.,. n J' rtQt'it ltlle •Al.I lftt4f,tt.I ot HllO IVd9 N 0 W I HF RE.__ 0 RE . 8 E If Otuc1al AetOfdj .,,,.,\nn\I m•lll -IOI ti\ ltw tOO•• de\Ulbe<I RESOL VEO lndl In" Bo•rO OOt> S••O \<tie Wiii bit m .. o .. bul wo1no .. 1
'••d wtl~ ••••ti.. tittJir Ck.It ... ,,..~..,,. ptoperh 01 'ii() tnvc." 1,,.,90, ., m•• ,.. .. ,~ov dnnounc.P thot •t urio"'. de co~•n•nt or wtfltrM'lly, ~AP<t'' or 1m-
v••"•"l va .... ,,•oh t•O'itn"' 1m be: n~y &o wU\ol• \.wl .,..,..,,.,on lf'fM11W\ ~ OIM"' '""1 ttw prop..rty _ph*G, r191rd,ng hHf'-" PQ\M\\•OO, 9r
p11M ·~dtn.J •1t•• lN\W!t\•(l,l'l or "" w ith •<<r""° ~ntere\.t •nd c~h Oe\(rtbld .t>ove ••H tw u\ed tor to' f'P'tumbtant.t\. \O ..,..., '~ rem•1nu-.v
' ("mD1 •nC~\ to ·'•' \h tlw un~·O O•••d Otc.emoet' ,., lf'O• PUfPQ\M\ Dy ttw (N\I commun•t'f' prtn<•O•I wm ~ ,,. notel\) \e<ureid
onnc. u•• • trw ;-.,;lc-wtWl.O Dt ... ,o o1.,1)1on H.,bOf C.olteqe °'''"ti 4"'1 tMt •I HH,nG\ to by ~td Ot.ooi Ttu\\ w•\h •nltr,,\t .,
""" of """'' _,,.,, 1mrr•'\t .no 1.;t~ OOH E RHEA •••St' tht , ,., '" ooert., Of'\c ttOttd 11" ~•Id not• Of"01'1a.d, •G¥•nc:es. "•nv
\f\4'tQe\ '""'"""' .. ,. v•O'ti•Ch!O lf\ w •O ~r'\f\4'\ OtM\oQllt Covnh •bO.,e IOI r.o rnote lf\41.n lhtff ytta'' tf 1undtt '"4t t•rm\ oi w1d 9ffo 01 Tru\f,
not.. fht; '"' •od ~'"("""'' ul fhe ev e Sm1tf\ the °'''"'' M\d \tewe1rt O.\ltloc:>m~nt lee!\ cnarQe\ •nd f ,ptnses Of th•
''"'1f't ~tO vt 1""' Jfu\I) < • ~••\"O o1 1rw O.puty cump"f\v tV <.~ muhuUr •orff on Tru\t.-f' •no ot 1r.e trust\ credteo by
OC!'e'O ot 1tu)I .no •O-'•nc.~-. 11 •nv un aA .. OAL.L J s.ttl•MAN uw tetn\\ 04 o ''""" ot ttw PfQPeth 1. \•td OM<i ot t'y\t S..1d ~•I• wilt tw I
Mr tnt: teHm\ot lrwcttreo ul ttui.t l'l•l•t•H'•A"-•Y tnat lonl.-1n" •n •nt0f'4btt.• 0011on to held on Mono•y, J•nu.trr s, 1991 at
l nr tot•t •"'Uuttl ut inc unp4910 61'Ne.,.,..c..Merr0tt... Ouy "ndof)rO~l~tonlhat tM l CH1\lcH!ra tt OOa.m di ltwOHlceot T 0 Sf,'i'1Ce !
o.ei•f"tw o• """ uo1io.ai101l \.curt"O ov Swttt M t10t1 tor lhrt lfrid\f' btl 'ent o\ •I tall'\ csue, I CotnP•n~. 6.tn~ of A,.,,.rt<• rower I
the tJ,rOCh"f\'f te> e» '°la ~nd r~cHondbl~ N•• ... 11 a..<•, CA""° ctnd •HY othet Pt0¥t\lon or e)(O¥;s1oni; Suit• t t 10, Ont City Bout•vard west, t!~l•m•led 4..0\h t'AP.:n\~~ dnO dU ~..._. 1114> ... ,.H Chttnctt110f Normdn e Wooon or El( Otet0Vtt1 CA Y•~t•\ •' tnr 11me ot int-1n1t1•I Publhned 0r'1n0t Ca..i.t D•llY Pilol I t-cuh¥e \/tlf' (hdnce11or, 8u\•n.,,ss At Al tne lime of lhr 1nn1al put>fjc•hon
PvDlit ••1on or tn~ Nohctt of ~al~ ,, t~c 111 71 10 t"'80 Joo, 1981 4~1 80 •~1f'\, (onttU-' J lhan\Q\°', upon 44 ot ,nls notice, thf total •mount of the
i14• .,., 40 I "''~ ot thilt Ot\h1cl,. G4tntr-dl Coun\el uf'\D••d b•l•n<• ot tnf' ot>llo•UOn
O•tt'O Nuwmt>wr \J t'fW p Oc-~m tM'Ct-\\o3t'f to mdk«" th~ Least' stcured by Ow •bo~ de'\ttlbed dettd ot
-""' MO•QIQollf' to UBLIC.: NOTICE tomply with lhe rt'Qutr•m~nh of 1.iw tru" •nd otomet.0 cosh , e•penn>.
I rust..., or 10 prole<I IM '"'trt\t\ ot ttv 0 1s .tnd •O-.ttnt_es,l\W,11So.t
100 M<lr-tl Sllt'•I N·llat5 Intl ano Otl• NO..,ml>fr11 l'llO
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
The Blggeal Marketpt•c:• on the Orange Coaa1
DAILY PILO;J CLASSIFIED ADS
Vou Can Sell It, Fl~d tt, 642 •5878 One Call Sef'llc:e
Trade It With a Want Ad Fast Credit App roval
...... For s• Hou•et For s• HCKIUS For Sole ......................• ··•••·•·•········•·•··· ·······••····•········•
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
GeMt"al t 002 GeMrOt I 002 GeMrol I 002 •••.•••.•.•.•..•..•..•.......••••............. ·••••••·······•········
,... .. , •• Metlc•:
All real estate •d·
vertl1ed I n thi s
newspaper ill subject to
the Federal Fair Hous · inc Act of 1961 which
makes It illegal to ad· vertiae "any preference,
limitation. or dis -
crimination baaed on
race. color, religion.
sex. or national origin. or an intention to make
any such preference,
limitat1on1 o r d is
crimination. •
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
est•e which is in viola·
Uonoft.helaw.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Gatual 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
FACT o• FtCTIOt4
FACT·TAKE OVE R
LARGE LOANS on this
very desirable condo
Su pe r local ion an d
secunly No qualJfying
11.MAKT
COUNTRY
MANSION
Magnificent Nor th
Tustin 8000 sq rt estate
on almost I acrt:'
SI.750,000. Great financ-
ing will trade equity ror smaller home, 10 come prop., trust deeds
Rick Alderetle. owneri
reall-Or. 731·5115.
Watwfrottf Ho ... s
This 3 Br 2"'• Ba
townhome has & patio
and deck right on the
bay Wllh a slip ror 35'
boa\ OffereJ full y
rurn 1shed ror o nl y
$320.000. this home ha!>
been used only as a pa rt
lime 11econd home
Th11 charm and 1shind
l1feSl Yll' ur Balboa
Island are yours with
lhts 5 Bdrm home with
pnvate ~nf'r and ~hp for
3.S' boat D M M/\K S ll Al.L RLTR
644 !1!19()
bent bpensiv~
lotboa l~l°"d
This 2 Bdrm rotlaJ(t'
rl'prCSt'nl~ a i.:ootl m
ve8tment oporlun1ty as .i
rental unit. rirst home on
the Island or JU~I ruture
ap prrclall()n C'rl'allvt1
rtnancing availahk I If
rert:'d Ill $20!! l)CllJ
G44 7trl0
WES LEY N
TAYLOR CO
REALTORS S lllCC 194
tRVIHE TERRACE
FRONT ROW -$795 000
New Exclu.c;ivr listing Mo:-.l 'ranl ~t:-.ll c·
\oc·atwn for v11..·wing t h1· ho.1t1ng a<1.I\ 11 ,
J~lly, utl'ttil. hrtght lt~hts & rum~mtic
CalCJh na l ~ltind .Jus t 1n l1nw llJ h:1\t• :i
t'lose·up \II'\.\ nl' thl' ('1111 ... tin<J'-ho.it
llaracll' \it•\\ 111-.h lt111d,tapi.:d tl·l'1,11 1 1
lk'<ln>()ms. fa m rm lurmal cl111111i.: d11,tl
stone l1n·plan•s :J t•;1r g;1 r af.!1· C',d l 1111
aµpt
WESLEY·H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
2 I I I San Joaquin Hills Road
NEWPORT CENTER, H.B. 644-4"1 IO
IU.UTIFULL Y REV AMPS>
1 olalh r1>n1oddt•d C'1mir1.1 I l ~·hl 111111,
l hom1· ('11.1 1111'111° 111111111\
l(•,1111nng :1 lll'dri111111., pl.irtl\ tlt,.111•H ~ ~r••'<•>(O. CA 9•101 CICllT.,ICATE 01' IUSI NESS RESOlVEO f'URTHER l""I Cll•n r 0 SER II ICE COM PANY
1•1 I,,.,,,, ·~ UNOEll FICTl'TIOUS <•ilO• No•m .. n E W•IW>'I °' E •tt UI••• .. w1d ''"""'
6y(rw1\ttnt' 8t v•n l'l •M. NAME Vice (hdnCfllOr 8us.tnf<t~ Alf6'1t ~. 6y ShMM\ N•tCt'
\11<.eP'""'de"' lht" undet\~ oo hf'rtby ct-rlth Con•ll•n J fN>MP\on .bt M'O nrreC>y A\.i.t~t.rtt Sfo<r•t•r•
MAST Ell MOllTGAGE co 111\tl In•, .. r• conc1 .. c11ng .. re.ii .... '" ., dUlhO•ll.O -d1tecl.O to ~..... o.wc11,&1v<1 Wf'SI
, .. M•r-tl S.'"1 OH•lopmenl .,....,,,.,\\, wolh pr1n<1pal • IH\P Wll" s ........ O••PloPmMI 0..t1>9f.(A9l~
Saft l'r•n<iw•. CA ttl02 pla<• of buSlnt'\S al I~ Adam• A•t! ComP•I'• IV 1no1 "mutually'""'&<. 111<}'>41 '1114
L S106.500. Call 979.5370 l<J
day
ALLSTATE
aungo '7 R""""'
• • • Dia.ta Todd
t·ru\\11 mo11ld111 ,t!.•. 111·1" h d•oj11• 1•
"huk1· r1111I .ind ,11'1 ,., .. 11. • ... 111111 •
! JH' I\ :11 I I 11 ... h I I I " I I 'I
Allft: Clwltll .. ary.tft • JU CO\I• Mew. C•lllOrl\o.t 91'2&, un· IO•V IO, .... l)<trl1•• and who<n ....... con Publl•""" °'""9' CO.\I D••lv Pilot • Puo11~f'Wd OrM\Qe c.o.a~t Oaily Pitot
1
.,., ''" "<ht•ou' tlr"I namt ot lain lhr llm1l•llOrt• "'' lorln "DO•t lo• On 9 I& 71 l'llO 8 • Ore 9, 1&. 73, l'lllO 4&2}·e0 TOWNE HOUSE PLAZA and lhal s.toCI pre'4'nlaflon lo tho\ Bo••<I di II> ntwl ' '
4
l•-tel
-.. • firm 1\ d L1m1t*C.1 P•rtner'inlP corn-r~9u1arlv s.cheOOltd mef't•nc;S dnd
Postel ot '"" IC>llO•lno Grneral and RESOLVED fVRIHER \nal (Mn
Limited P•rtner\, Who\e namtt~ and t t"llor No,,Nn E W~l\006r E •ecutlv"
p•acr ot rt"\lek'nCe ate tl\ IOHOW\ 10 Vt(~ Chctincrllor 8u\1nf'\\ Afl.tlf"\ P UBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE o~ SALE 01" wit (orr•ll•tn J 1nomp\On be .no neret>v
llEAL PllOPERfY A'T G<lfter•I P•'1-• o\ •ulho111ed """ dort<le<I to oo o•
PlttVA'TE SALE I TOWNE HOUSE PLAZA, INC , .. cau .. to be """" •n, and all >Uth
Ho A·10)711 Ca11torr11• coroor•llOf") •SCIO Ad•ms futtner 41Ch 6"'0 tnfnQ\ ttnd to execute
111 Hit 5-lor Cout1of111<1 A•• ... JU Co.I• Mes•. C•illorn•• •ncl Otll••• •nv •nct •II <IO<u,.....,I, St~•ol ca1ttorfll• too 97626 oa~" '"a 1n-.trumenl\ d• ~·'""' o•
\M COUf'lit• ot C>r•• 1 l••t~n<• J 5ort.. 1nrm m•v <k'f'M rw-ces"•'• 0 1 oesir.t In·~'"""'" Of lhe E\talt" of EMIL l GttOrQfJ v Nov11toff OIC' '" Otd!Pf' to , .. ,,., into tftf"(l Hw .... ABY ()0(0""'1 Limit ... P•"-· PU•PO~\ ., ... 1nt ... t Of , .... loreo<""9
Notice t\ ht'trby 91Yen '".tt 1h• un t Robet1 A C••ne ,..l AtchCl•lr ~~\Otut104'\o\
dtr\19nta >#'HI \ell a t Pnv•tf \6'1t', to r:toad, Enc.mo. (Atlro'"'• Thf' ~t'''"'d'Y ot lh•\ Board I\
tnt-"'O~\t ttno De\t b•dde• \ubiect to > Ptt~ L C••cc10 tr tor C•dt.<-IO nt'reb1 duected to pu\t copu!' o• \"'"
tonf1rm•llOf' ot \fttCI Superior Cour'I, F•mll'f" Tru\t PO 8o11 1•11 Culver Nol1Cf Of tn•tntion 10 L,.•\t Real
on or ath:r '""7th csav ot J&nu-Arv. t«181 -Ctty, c.a11torrun 'O?lO P1op~rh'. \1Ql'led b'I tn,. Se< reotdt't ot
at 1ht" otflc• ot Ger•ld A Garrett, a l Ate hard T Aketblom, 169 Not1h tnt Board, 1n lhrer public piat tt'\ '"Int" Mw coroorat100,10876u\1ne\s~'lter §41tta1r Avenufi LO\ A.noel~\, :uunlrnol l{~\ltWn1Sd•'f\~loret,,,.
Drt•e : lU l•v111e COuf\1\1 o• Oranqe. Cal1IO•lllft 4004q late ot Ille aooro m~llnQ ~' Whl~ll '""
StatP of C,.lltorni"· all lhtt r19nt title Jonn J At(.,rotom. ,,,., Tualiltan Boar-o \httll t On\1dflr ente11 no the
ano tnt~fl\~t ol ""'d d~ecneo 1111 t~ Ao•d, \.O\ 1'f'Qel. ... \, C.ahtornHt 900•C.-LPa~~ ""° to publ1\n a tC>PV ol tnt
t1m .. ot dr1ttt' and all lhf' r1qnt. tittr WITNESS lhf' \tQfMlutP\ o• the wme not l~!lt~ ttwt,, once a •Hk to,
and 1nltrt\t t"'-ll tN> .-\141'11" of \did oe Gtn,.r•I P<C)nnt'f' "''' t\1 day of Oc rnrte tGn\ec1Jt1vt week\ betor" the
<t•\td ha\ .C:ClUltf'CS by GPfUUton or tobfor. t91Q 1dtf ot w1d nwtellnQ tn tne OrdnQe
lttw or othttWl\t' Olhfot lh.i)n or ,,, aOdt TOWNE HOUSE (041\I D••lv P llOI. d ntwt,JMper 01
t1on to lhdt 01 \4t•O dtce•w-<S. at the PL.AlA. tNC ~~'•' t•rt ut•t'°" pubh\hed tn thl~
11mt o• dl>•lh '" ¥t0 10 •It lhifo certain • C..lilo,..nl• i°'P Ot\lritl reat oropen-; ~tu.ttltO 1n OW' Countv ot \ u wrtf"I<" J Sao AYES (e'ttOI J G•.ndy RoMrl L Oran~ Sl•lt Of C•l1torn1a, o.art1Cul•r PfH.atnt 1-tumphttY\. W1ll1ttm E K.,ttl•r
ly <lt\trlbe<l •S follows. 10·"'" • Sl'-'M•y 1.ou1u Sor'· Ri<n•rO E 04-.. •no a.o•oe Rodd• L~Q•I Oe'\Crlptlon Se<ret•ry Jr
Tll•I Po'11on ... LOI t:IOS Of first.... L..lwrenet J So•' dlt•On lo Nf'#P0f"1 M~Mt lr~d ., \to.owl' .. Geot~ v NO¥,•oU
O" a m•P roco•tk'<I 1n Boo• a Paoe ol Publislw!d Or Moe Co•>t Oa11y Pilol
NOES N-
'"BSENT Norw STA l EOFCALIFORNIA
ot MIV~ll~n'°"' M•t>•. r~co•<I• of Oec 16, 11, JO l'llO JM b 1qs1 50S1 llO Orange County, Cal1lo•n1a, Oe\Crl~O (OVNTYOrOl!ANC.E
as 10~1=,~~1, 1• 7 ano J "' ,nown on d 1 P UBLIC NOTICE 11 N1>rrnan E w a11on. SKret~r, ot 10•
map 1lled In Book 17 Page\ 12 and 7J ----, Board of Tru•ll•u of the Coast Com
1t Dart~\ MdP', 1n "" othte Of ow No\\<t ,\ htr•b'f QI Ytn that mun1ly Colle'QP 0's.tr1ct ot OranQ~
<Ount, rocord1>r ol Or"n9" Countv (lllZENS BANK OF COSTA ME!tA, ~ounly, lltrftlv tenlty IMl lhe abO•• (al1torn1a 1,70 He'trbOt Ooulrvard, Costa Me~a. •nd torerph"IQ r~luhon •dis duly and
NOTE E.c•Plect lfom con ql'n n•• t.ieo . ..,11n the Ftderal rtt;iui•rlv -'°by,.,., Board at a
vtv•nce 1\. 4'11 1rit1>rt\t •n tM Mct<~t O~OOS•I lnwranc• Corl)Ordt•on, .,, ap re9ular meetlno l~trot on tht 10th
Communit'f Ot\ lt'a~ Oatt.'d ht day°' p\1tat1on to E<t'44b'''" • 8rant h •h•th Oay of Dfo<embtr. t'IO Feb•u•ry 1'41 Oat•d tnl\ lllh oay ol December 1'*1
Mo\t <~Iv kno""n a\ t0.41 w ~~!:~~?: ""1~aueipttd •or titinq on dt C.OS1d Mfo\•, Ut1forn1•
18t h Stt~•t '""' pert'YWWWnl loc•t•on ot 1~ pro \ \N.orm61' E ~61\0n
(0\141 Mt"'Ml (•lltorn1a PO'f! d bt anc ,.. I\ I M p ER ' AL Sfo<.ret~,., ~~·· < ~V> ,n l•"'lui moMy I H I C. H W A V A 1 ti R A E M E R Publl-()r-COo1'1 Oaoly Pt IOI
01 '"" Un•led Slat~ on tont.,malton ol BOULEllAAO BREA CA\.IFORNIA O<!t 14• n . JO l'lllO "°79
IC
'"lf'. or '""' C'-'" and bdl.&nce: 'f1•1' I ~ -••101•n<•O by no10 vcu red ov Any ~rscin wl\hlr>Q IO <umm•nl on PUBLIC NOTICE
MOrtQl!Of' ot T'u't Ot:..._..d on thl> proe>t"t ttus a;ppl1<attc.1 may f11,. n1s, comm•nh
IV \0 \t>ld Tf'n '*' tl"f"I of ftmount b•O 1n w r1tm9 w1tn '"'° qtQlontll 01rt!t to1
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
HAME STATEMEHT
f n~ follow1n9 P•rson~ ctre 001no
bU\lfte\\ ... I HICKORY FARMS OF OHIO 11 F•~h•on h\..-.d NewPOrt S.6<h, 'c.ia .,,...,
M:1~lt' M6rwoiemen1 ~fv1Ct>\. Inc
ta C••••ornt• totpewalion), t06J 1r..-1n"
A•~ Nl'W-1 Bu<n, C• .,,...,
l "" Ou\1n•\\ 1\ <ondu\tf'd t>Y •
toroor4t1on
tCIPElE MANAGEMEN t
SERVICES, 1f1C
M1cni.rtel J Muni,
Ptr\ttMnt
fhlS .,,~,emM1 #4\ lilf!O W1tJ\ '""
County c.i.,i., ot Or•noe (oun1v on
Novembt'• 28, l'i90
FUOJtl
Publl>lw!d Or•f'lllf Co.SI Oallv Pilot
O.c 7. 9, 16, 1l. l'llO •8JS.llO
P UBLIC NOTICE
I
~ICTITIOUSeUSIHEtt-
HAME STATEMEN'T
f ne to1tow1nQ person\ •re do•no
t>u\.1n1\' .,
MANN ORGAN IZATION, MANN
SOUTHWEST, 3169 Rldn1ll A•enue,
Co•ta Me>e, Ulilorn•• .,.,.
Mitnn SO<lthwe\I COrPOr•llon. •
I C.ctl1lotn1• corPOrtttton. 31•9 Redn1u
Awenutt, Cost• Mtw, C.•l•fotni• 926'16
Tt"' bu>lnt\I I\ tonducted by a (Of
potatton
M<lnn Southwt•I CO< p
• u111or .... corp ROQttr O. long,
s.<•et••v
Tiii> •t.iement .. ._ llled •Ith the
County Clttk of 0••"9" County on
No••m-n . '"° llHOOfS, KEH DALL e
HAltlllNGTOH
A P••·--· Law car,.. 42"Mt<-114.0.. S..11• ,.,
N••flO" _,,,CA.,_
FU01'7
Publl>he<I Or•....,. C:O.sl 0•1ly P1tot,
Oecembt" 7, 9, ''· 72. l'llO "33·to
to be dePO"l<'<I wllh bid ol '"~ Fe<I•'"' o .. Po"t insur•oc• l'IC'TITIOUS IUSIHESS
81ch or Otl l''' 'o b,. m \lltflllng aoo torpora11on Jtt ''' R,.QlOOlli\ OU1t~. u NAM!. STATEMEN1' 1
w1H bt rwc,.IV{'O tlt tt\P 11lorP,01d ot11ce 'Montoon~ry s1,,.e1, So•t .. l600. Cidn lht to11owln9 s>erwn11 •r~ doin; 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
1\ dnv 111"1"\t i•ttN lht> t1r\t pubt1c~1ton Fr,,,H.•\CO, ca1r,orn1t1 qc\OC It any b'"'"!'~'" hPr~ot \did b<-lorr Oalt' 01 'wll• per\Of\ 0.-\11~\ 10 prOIO\f lt\4' 9rant1119 PARIC AOYALE rENANTS AS
O•lrCI In" l~I" Od\I OI CHc•mO..r ol tnl\ ;t®itUllort hP ha\ a n Qhl II) <lo SOCIATION JOO N R•mparl Str~t
IQ-80 \0 If ht' til~\,, wt•Htn no••t t' of tu~ 1n D u~s. OtM'tCJt. C•ll10<f'liA .. , ...
Roi; C. Zu1t.trntan, t~nt with ff'Vt ANJlonal 01tt-( IOf' w•lh1n Lyle A Beroeron, JOO N R•mpart
E Af<UIOr ot Int E\lalt 1\ ., •• , ol , .... ~ .. ol Ill• la\I OuO"'" Strut, "14S. o .... oe. C•lllornl• •"611
Of \.&•O °"<"'O,.nt t•on ot lh1\ nohtf' The non<onlKtenfl•I Bobbi 8.tt9'ttr JOO H R•mP•rt
Pvbll\1¥<1 ()r-MQIP' (Odst Oa1ty Pilot PO'llOl'I\ OI lti(t clOPh(<}tton dfP Of"I tlfr Street. # t•t, Or~oe. (.•HfOf'"la '""'
OP< 1• 11 U l<lflO SOSO 80 I on In.. R..q1oria1 Ollie• a\ part ot '"• Oonnl\ H•upt, JOO N R.omp1rl
publtc 111,. md•nto1nflld t>y uw (orOO'd 51rett. • 11 OrMWJit, C•llfornta '7641
1100 l "'' •11~ '' d ... ••ltlr:>'~ to, oubhC '" Mar~rtt Grtnvn, JOO H ~•moort \Pl"' t1on dur1nQ ,,.gvt•r t>u\fnf\\ Slt~e1, 1191,0rMQt,C•llfornl•9l668
hOl.I•' Belly W•-r. JOO N Ramp1rf
Publl\hftd pur\u>tnf to S•tt1on StrHf, #U7,0r.,,qe C•l1tornl•t1MI
PUBLIC NOTICE
l"IC'TITIOUS eUSINES5
HAME HATEMEH'T
T ne fo11ow1no J>tr'°"' d rp
bUiiM4f\\ d\
JOl H!ol ( 11 ot lh•· Rult\ ~nd !!•Quid Thi• b<l>lnt>\\ I• conctu<leCI br •nun
Oo•nQ lion\ ot the t ('dtrdl Ot'D0\11 ln\Uf'•tnC•' •ntorpore'-d •\\OCl•Uon o1t\f'r th•n a (.orpor~t·on o•rtner\,hfp
(II OENT'"L OEVELOPMENI
SYSTEMS (?I PATIENT REFERRAL
SYSTEMS Il l PAllENt REFEl!RAI.
SF Rlll C:ES 1 4 1 OENTA L
M ARKETING SERVICES I SJ
MEOICAI. MARETINC. SERVICES 161 CHIROPR .. CTIC M .. l!KETINC.
SERVIC6.S,
C••11cni, er.n• ot Lylt A BeH"'on
Co\td MP\A ("•lrmtn
Bv JoMW ""·'''" Thi\ \l .. temenl ... , 111..0 wllh '"" II\ SM10• tountv Cltrk 01 Or•n~ Countv on Voe~ P•l"o•Clf'nt ~llO November 74. 19'0
c.nnoer THOMAS WIELl.S
Publl\lw!d Oroooe (oa\I Oa11y Pilot A L•• ~au., 0.. ,, 73. •• _.._.,
FICTITIOUS IUSINE\S
HAME STATEMEHT
f he tollo'#1nq pt!r\ons Ar~ do•nQ
bU\•nt\' •s FElOM.41,. S SPORfS CENTER,
IJ.t N Bre• 8tvd . Bre•, OllfOtf"••
•2•71
1.eonoarct L Long, J1 • lw<I V'uu• I Vall•t Ro•O. \1•1enc1•, C•llforni•
91JSS Lronaro 1. 1.ono, 111, JS61' vucu
Y•ll~y Ao•d, V•ttn<••. Ca1itorn1a
91])\
l h•\ t>u,,irw\\ o (onOuctf'<J by a
1Mnt't •I 06' lntf \hip Le<Jnlf<I L \.OOQ, Jr
l.f<>Nlrd l Lono. 111
Thi\ \!Attrnenl "'"' flled wtlh the
County Clerk o l Oranoe Co.,ntr on
Nov~mt>er 11. 1'!90
NOltAIS & ASSOCtA'TES, INC:.
0 1oc.""""or1 .... s""''·
Ht•Pl'1 ... cl!. CA '26'0
1'1Sllt2
P<lbll\,,... Oranot C:O.\I Oally Piiot, i
"Y REALTORS
p
I
L
0
T
IMYESTOIS
DEll~HT
MaxJmum leverage w1lh
$5,000 down. 2 Bdrm ron do Owner will ~·arrv
balance with agreeable
terms and payment!.
Gross income S5400
Asking $76,900 Call
540·1151 ro r m ore dt>
taJls
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
1-2 I
Newpo rt H eight s
RA!modeled 2Bdrm home
with fireplace, on fron\
of lot. Plans Cor un1l in
rear included. Ca II l o
see. $135,000.
IAlllETT llAL TY
642-5200
BEACH HOME
3 PATIOS!
Upgraded beach home
ln Newport Shores W a I k
to ocean or pri vat e
beach. New carpeting
and rresh pa1nl too'
Custom decorations 3
patios. Secluded sun
deck! 2 Bdrms. and just
2:50! Hur ! 752 1700
THE REAL
ESTATERS
DIC. TOWHHOME
$139,900
:!l71J Mcvrr l'l...,1•1·
Cv<>ta M esa
You arl· th1· w11in .. 1 .. r
l free tickets
$10 50\4l11ei lo
Sports Vacation
& RV Show
J4nJthruJ.in II
A11ahL·1m C'url\ f'!ll 11111
C'1•n11•r
T 11·1\ch mu .. 1 h•· ,.,
l·han1tl'll r.ir r·· .. 1·n 1·11 I
M'al..'> HI thi: ( '1111\ e11t 1un
Ct•nl 1·r ahef!d ,,r t11nt
'all l;.1i:! 567g t'X\ Zi'.! 1•1
d;um yuu1 t 11•keti. • • •
VETS· HO DOWN!
Neat anti clean 3 Brlrm
2 ha home· Ov. nn "'111
sell \'f\ nr t·o11,c11t1on.t1
S!l5 . 000 <'a 11 nu""
!179 5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
~J/!J ()00 \\ t I h ~ ,I'• I I I 1 I o1 I ii I 111, 11
I J~lt.l i l
Ht.AL TOH~
L'I \I I '"' ( 1>d'I l h•tlo"' ,, I '""'I·• 1,
\A.I 11\\1 't'lnJ nu m-.111 .. ri•r
OCEAN FRONT
BEAUTY
ll!h :h'
K,l,1.IU )
JONES
Ht ·\U \ l'\,J{'.
I" l'MI>
1714) 673-6210 c;:;s~L .r t f'l~()l 'E.r•
"
U,_.ITS . U1'4 1lS
• 1.:t.1 f '"' 111•
llflt •u ltU\ II•
Zl1<l1 m ;11111· '"th
1.1 dt1"' I 11< r
S.\.!7 ~-I ·.i11 11.
MESA VERDE
GOLF COURSE ftXER IRVIHE l'AHK Pl .\( E I I
HEW L \ Pf'l.C..
II
' "' ' I • l
3 lldrmi. on lhl' t•nur~e I romi r , !-:\.\ t\I~• 1
P o o I N l· e d s T LC' h 11 1 m 1 '' " 1 11 rtesperatel~ • \ss111n loan. ... nv.ner , .. 11 h1·l1• "11 '111-no ..... h •m· rmanre r,73 H!>Sll l'1n111c r••Hn r11t·I' •• •
OUPll::C
ClOSE TC. 8E:AC: ~c
l.o,c<h t1( tin• I>. "o,rl>, ~ -.FU k it \\II I 111-1 11
fJJ; hf3;13 ri ~,~~ .~;~~:·p.
_ R•attors I •61s.1060 •
41D21A ,-----------· <;arrten (i nl' e S('h1141h
Q UI (' l c• u I d I' "a (' ~ I
Cl O<; l' t '' e v ,. r y I h 1 n ).!
A' ,11 I .1 h le "" 11 , • .,.,
F N M 1\ fin.in• mi<: al I.!
1 II'.
Ad How· Call 4, RED CARPET
·-754-1202
6 UNITS
!"tt1p1•r rf'nli1 1 ln1 .. 11o111
' •' .1 r I , 11 1 .. •• rr
rnl'I \4 1111 1'1 ~\tlll •I II
''"" n .tr1d "'"ll r ... 1 I I • ,1rl"\ lh• lt.1l,ir11. ,.,
1111( ~\;Ill, ...
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
U>vely 3 Bdrm 2 bath in
prestigious Bac k Ra y
area. Bright. spacious
living room, overlooks
nower rilled veranda
Private pati o urr
massive master suite
Seller will help withl•---------
flnancing too Ca I I now 1
~ $19,000 DOWM
!33() tot<ll monlhl~ P«~
ment Owner rin11n1'f'tl lh~h~ up~raded rundn
E x er u t I \'l' R r a I t o r :-
841143"3
111•1 Ol1U
'"' 110
\
t'4t Port T11991rt Pl&<e. N••Po•• e .. c .... ca111ornt••1460 ~UBI.IC NO:tlCE
• -~-M ~t..,-<--.
MtN1......,~on ...
hit•.,. I N1u_1..._I\, C•~-------------:---------lr--••
PUl>ll P UBLIC NOTICE
~comber l. •. ••. U , l'llO 4830-IO
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
114-63 J -6990. Porl Taogarl N••oorl B••cn • C:.ttolorn1<1 fl660 FIC'TITIOUS eUSIHESS I Publl\l'lt<I Or-, ... " o .u. Pltol.
Fn -""Y 111~ Port h(IO••I. HAME S1ATEMEHT Mewl)Orl 8taLll, Olltornoa 91"60 1 T lie 1011owon11 per\Qns ••• dOll\Q
Kennoln E Murr•t. "71 Aus fin 1 bu•ln4'\\ H
SlrHI, L.e49ue City, Texas 71S7J r WARNE I! AVE NV E i' S OoUQlas S. Murray., ... Port Ta9 SOCIATES, llJe E 11111 Street, Costa
gorl, Ne*"°r'I Bto<h. Calllornl• 9~ MtH, Clllllornlo 91•'7 Tiii• bu\ll\f!u ll conou<l•d bv a Thome'> Wtth. 19\S Yacl\I co .. ne,
gene••l p.orlntrshlp NtwpOrt Be~h. C.tllfornl• •1660 Robert Smltll,-. Y•clll 111olltn1.
H.M..Murra, N1•P'O<·t 11HKh,C•llio.t.ie•MO
Tiiis slti-1 w'" fllod wttn Ille I Plllllp M l'u•lontJ <lo F-J Fwd
cou1'1Y Clerk of Orange County on Se••lte., mn I.amber! SlrH I, Su11e
Dettmlltr 11 19'0 1606, El Toro, Ulllornl• ,,.JQ
l'\Sl494 Fr•nO. H•llntr. (/O FJ Food
Publls!ltd Ol'Ml9t CNn Dtlly Pllol. Services. mn L..lmbl!rt Slfe.t, Suitt
D•<. 11, U. JO. 19'0. Jtn 6. , .. , ~/ 10 606 EI Toro, C.llfotnl• •»JO
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS eUSl"IESS
HMtlE $TA'Tl!M£HT
Tiie lollowlnQ Pflrson• •rt <lolno
t>Ulil\t1$ t \.
Jt mo w Ray, 18 Sfon•w•ll.
Irvine. C.t110<nl•9111•
Mlcl\ttl 0 Rt,, 40I Ha1.i Drive,
Corone Clll Met , C .. llfornla ,,.,S
T 1\1\ bw\lneo Is conducled by a
llmlle<I ~rtnershlp
Mlcl\MI 0 Ray
Tiii\ ll.tt~I was lllfd wllh lhe
Counh Clerk of Orange County on
0.(embtlr 11, l'llO
0.c • 111 ?J JO 19'0~ -4t4).IO
PUBLIC NOTICE
--1
l"ICTl'TIOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEMEH,J
rn~ folto~ino pers,on\ are do1n9
bu.s1nn• .,, • _
OESIGNS 6Y MS. SHERR.I. 1..0~7
Butl'l 61¥0 . Suotr l~N. Hunttooton llN(h, CA.,,._./
C•1trorn1• T.t• af'd F'n•n<•••
Ptanner\. Inc f a C•lttorn •
COIPO•allOl\I, IM>SJ Bettll 81vCI . r...11•
ION, Hu,,ltnQIOn llr.t<h, c .. .,,,.,
Tll•• Ou\lnt!\\ 1\ con<lu<led bt •
tOtPOtdtlon
CAl.IFORNIA TAX ANO
FIN .. N(IAl
PLANNERS, INC
Sllaron K. ~nnemo,
0.1.i Flntncla1 Olllcer
Thi• 1laternent was 111.0 wlln the
County Cieri< ot Or•n~ County on
NovemlM!r 78. l'lllO BEAUTIFUL NAI LS. &7S
Ptularlno, Cosl• Me••. Ca11torn1a .m,.
Artl\ur Lvon•, 1 .. 31 Chesai>H~e.
Munllnoton Betcl'I, C•tltornl• q26'6
Ctncl.tet Lvons. 1"'11 Chesepeeke,
HUlltll'qlon Retch. Cellfornla ,,,,...
,,,,..,
Publl•flt<I Or.,.oo CNsl O•llv Piiot, L..1• Olll<H °'
0.< ... 73, JO. 19'0, Jen • 1,_1 S041-IO MAltC II. T()'lj MIS \Ila °"'11
This buslnen I\ conou<ted b• a
11 ..... •I .,.,,,...f\11\p
Artnur M Lyons
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTlllOUI eus1•1H
NAME STATIMINT
Tiii\ ,, .. ....,., wes llle<I w1lll IM
CouMy Cler' of Orange County on
De<1m11t1 11. 1..0 fht IOlfowtnt 1191so•••• dolno
l'UUH bv\tntH H .
, .... ,.,
Ll .. Mtt'IM\1111-N--' ~. c.a. TIMJ Put>tl.,.... Ortn0t Coast 0•1ly P•IOI
Ou 1,t,16,U.~ --~
PUBLIC NOTICE
Publl\lltd Or-Cools! 0•11• Piiot KI 0 LEH • "AR 01. E T\ end
Ooc. 16, 1), :I0, 19'0, JIM\ •.1 .. 1 j0.i.lic111.11Af tLEH, 1701 H1wporl Hiiis PICTITtOUS euSINEH Orlv1. Wt'1 Newport B•etn. NAMI S'TATIEMl .. T
PUBLIC NOTICE a111o1nl• .,....,. T nt totlowl1>9 ""o"' ere dol11g
80Mle •· 1!119\trom. 1101 ,..•Po•I blltlMU as.
l"ICT1110US IUSIHUS
NAME S'TA'TEMIEH'T
Tll• followlnQ per\On\ .t•e oolnQ
bu\1neu •'\
LAMPSON PROPERTIES, ••JO
Warner Avenue, Sulte K, Fountain
111110, Cellfornla 97'08 ,E.nlttl L. Stle1Qrow~~2 IC lntll>M<
Or I~•. Hunll119lon 8eAtl\, C;illtornla 92'-" Phlllp A Sc,,w.trll, 19321 All·
lntJn•m, CtffltO\, Ctlllornia te101
M1tllda Stnw.,11, 1'3'1 .. 11-
ln9'1em,C."l~.(.tlllMnlat0701
Oanl•I W M>d Vlvi•n R Young,
11101 Jl\Ptr\On, We\lm lfl\ltr.
Calllornla '2t&l
Tiii\ buslneu I\ conduct.a by •
oener••PM1,.r>Np.
Enid L )netQ•-
Tllls •I"'"'"''" wlt\ lllfd wltll ,....,
Collfll y Clerk of O••noo Counly o"
O.cemllotr n. '"° 1'1114'1
Publlsflt<I Oratl9t C:O.sl Oallt Piiot,
Off.. t+r'H, .JO •••• JMl:-t:-ttl' »M>IO
PUBLIC NOTICE -------S'T ATIMl"T OP AeANDONME N'T
01' USIOP
l'IC'TITIOUI eullNlll NAME
Tilt loll-Ing INftonS 11.tw 4WI\•
OOMO lht utt OI uw l'iclltlou\ Bv•I·
NU Ne ....
I N SU R ANCE GROUP
SERVICES, '10 N1wpor\ Ct nltt
Orlvt , Sullt IJOO, N•WJJl)f1 Staci\ Ct ~ .
Tile Fl<tltlov\ 8UMMU Ham• ,.
terr.a lo 41boY• wes lllttd In Ortl\Of
(ouflly OI\ AUQUSU7, 19'0.
D
•
So. Coast C oado
Hard to find 2 bedroom 2
bath all on one level
f'\Jll range or am enities
and a short walk to So.
Coast Plaza.-+'ulr prne
l.s only 18i.500. Hurry.
call 751·3191.
t;:SELECT
T'PROPERTIES
.-wPOIT HEIGHTS
ESTATE 3 Bdrm 21,; bath ex·
ecullve home. Sits on
huae comer lot. Family
room, li ving room and d~rr-provid'r"s,>1'~\~
family living. Newly
landscaped and l er ·
raced. spa too! Owner
says sell. Super financ·
ing.
(:tJ
SEA COVE PROPER.TIES
.....
:U OPEN HOUSE
, REALTY X '
,.,,,~
75 .. 1111
OWHEI FIHAHCIS
. .. ,. ·-
-r;-2 -, ....
I I
, ,• ~ •-..·t f r • '
f ( It,• ,'.(P
SCRAM-LETS Answers 1n Classification 5300
SlllC & FINlf CHRISTMAS SOHGS
S C W A I D W T '"'C'--'-'"H ...:..R....a...-.......~..-.
I 0 l D H J C E S T S N t G
0 v s -
0 H H
£ G I E
R I R I F'
l S T E S 0 0 R T L A G E
V l R A C l H V L H E L
E 0 E ~ H K L E T T R T
R l R A T H 8 A H 0 E E H N S H I I
8 N T Y H E E G H C T N E T Z 0 R L ~
EA Y l L H l N.H EA H N KS SLY S
L I C G I H T R 8 M H E E i I H W w T
L H N H Y 0 I G A A L T H W S N 0 T ~
S l Y l Y S N H H t U G K T 0 N C W 0
J 0 0 L T A G 0 S 0 L M I C A R 0 S E
/
Hiiis Orlw . WHI NtWPOll 8H<f\, AEAL'TY IHllESTMEN'T ASSOC.
(alltornl•9lt4tD II, RIALTV IN\lfUMIN'T ASSOC.
Lor .. D, E1\9Strom. 170t N-"°'' Ill, SCOTTSOi'LE IN\IESfMENT AS. ·---HI~• .....,_. ...._.,.,. SOC..-9.EAL.T'(_JJi}IU.UU
,.,, IWU M Calllor11l1'2ttQ soc VI •net HENOERsbH PIU A
Oontld M. Tippen, Jr .. 111 Illa
CorCIO••, NtWll0'1 &eatr., C•. 9*1
llotle" W, Cle ~ 2'
, n , •·
5
6
7
714-631-6990
VIEW HOME Corona del Mar beauty
Owner may carry lst
trust deed at l21o'J'i with
small down pay ment
Small. pri vale <:'n m
munlly with pool L\~h\.
airy 4 bdrm. 3 bath
hom e . 2 fi re places.
formal dining oom & s . Perle
or am1 enter atn·
Ina. Ne wly offe red at
S3r1.000.
.J HA~ M ( E l H 0 'I A HM E I l W l:-H~-__._.
0 H A A R S Y 0 8 R E M M U R 0 T D L
0 A N C I N G D A A 0 0 H 9,1.,, T •l! .... IN>, 110! NewPorl MUT, 4425 J.tmW .. ltd .. Ste. 110,
£HfEltPltlS£$, 110'h l(llO)I SI .. Cott• 141111 Drl"9, WHI N••Por·t 8ucll, ...... n 9"<1>. CA'*°
MeWl,Ct.•V CtllflornltftMO LOltAN COllPOltATION It
A.._,. -\1..,1\1, JIO'h Knoa 0•,.. J ..,.1, .... 1701 Me..,..r\ Ct llfort111 co<porttlonl, 4421 Jem·
$I • Ol\lt -·CA • .,.,, Hiiis Ori .. , Wesl Ht•Po•t &etch, -ff ltd., 549. ,,,,, He-1 8ea<ll.
• O.ttftWI' Gorl'ltlvt. 210\l't l(noa SI , Celllernlt.,,... CA ttttO , .. ,. INt4 (A, fht1 fllls llu\lllet\ I\ <•ftdv(tecl Dy e Ttlh ~l .. u h COftdv<IMI by lo
Tiii• 11\Kl .. u h Ul'ldvCllHI by ... Mrtl _.....,.p llmllH .,.,, .. "1\lp
...,.,.1....,,..,,.lp ._.. e E. ... t,.., I N. "'"'·
.._,. VOii 51•1'11 '1'1\11 Al~ '""' filed wltl\ ,... .....,. ..... Tlllt '911~ .. M lltld w1.,_ 1"9 Co•nty Ci.tit. M ON• CO;lnty °" Tiii\ ttt..,,_t we rllecl wllll 1"9
c-ty Cler~ .. Ortl\99 Co..my Oii OtCtlllMr I "" Collflly Clttti of OrMIVt CO\fftty ...
o.<tmber It. IWD· • • ' ,, .. ,, Otctm•r 12, l'IO, ,,,,.. ,u .. ltll9CI o._... ONll Oelly Plllt , .. ,.,
PuOll\lltd Oretltlt Coet1 Delly PllOt De<• ...... 21 •• It. U . 1._ .. lHf Pvf>ll-Or..,_. Coet1 o.ll., !lllMll
De<."· n. ao. 1•. ''"'· •· '~' ..iwo o.c. tt, u. 11. '"I'· J .... •· ... , 8'4-IO
Tllll ~l,..tt WIK tOfldllcl.0 by a
gener•I wt,..fllllp
Oon4tltl M Tippett, Jr.
Tiii\ S\al-1 .... lllld '""" ""' CO\llllf Cltflt. of 0ran91 CoVfll't Oii
l>e<tfllbe r •. 19'0
JA(lllON, lltOOlll &
•UCICLllfO '"''"""' ..... . , ......... ..... ................... ........... c.ew~t ..
....,.. 8Mtll, Ce .....
........
1'11 .. IWd Or ... COH 1 Dally Piiot
De<. U. a . 1'IO, Jftl, t. ta, 1"1 S 1 IUO
8
OPPORTUNITY
knocks often when you
iase result.getting Daily
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Orange Coast
market.
Phone 642-5678
For c 1ass1r1cd Ad
ACTION
t:all fl
D111ly Pilot
AD VISOR
642·5678
I l
D S Y 0 J S E l E D I F E T S E 0 A E
,
~'For S. "-wt For S.
..;a;z.._.:U;:,;A:;.:ll:...Y. rt LO t •••••• ••• • • • ••• •••• •• •• •••• •••• ••• ••••••• •• •• •
a......... · U.fuwl•d . ·~:_u...,.•d .............................................. ~ ..................... . ~.~~.~ ........ !~~:.~~ ................ ~.~'!: ........ ~~ ....... !!.~~ !.! ... ~ ..... !~.~Ml,..•rtlMd
~ .......... !!!!~~~ .......... !~~ ..... ~ .......... !~~ ~~ D~~E=a~T~1 w:.\oa'' =:a.;::ur:~:e •1::d~ I UNITS
I 06' ...._" •utw Jiit c.NMIM 3224 ~ ............ !~~~ ..............................................
• ,...._. POINT llACtR~
P a nor m11· \It•\\ at \\ ffilt> -4 hdrm, l
l> , h .. u , ,. "' hum,. n ou "<I 1t
foalurm tn tnm• 1 oom, 1•nlt). lvlnM
room rt1n1n~ room b ullt '"' t•lt'
~lllll
uoo tlU
•'" h r c·1nrlftt•lt•d tr udu 1on I h\vlf' '.l
h,frm .' t1 'th huuw ft-lhll tnt( \1.rl(••
r1'f'rt•,1t111t1 rt••m & ' p1Ul4• l.1\'lllll
room h '' 11tn11 t1H li.•11111 1 ••11111~"
hi f•pl1tl t• i.\ I 11•111 It clt•OI \ lt•och11K rn1l11
liru k s• •1 1" 1·\\ 111 twn lilt 111
lltpll,11111•'1 I "h'"' tn ll'lllll o 1 11ul t 11
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1>11111 iulf\ h11 "'"lw1I I '11 llllCI
IA Y,.OMl
\\I 1101\11 I \ l'I ,1 ( 11111' h4 •llU'"
~\ti h 1111 I ,\ """
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
I 11 tt .. , .. 1. Uo .•• "' ti r1 ., rit61
I
.. ' -~ ......
REALTORS
675-5 511
t.OVEL Y "I'' rLAM
lhtff• mo,t populcr pfon. °" 4)"Hftbeft. with
fft0Wlt«N1t •In t. l b•dr ooM, f•ty room.
k)wnt "'f'" o•all•t.. US2,tOO.
COLE OF MIWrOIT 11.41.TOIS
25 IS!. Coaat H wl ·· C o rona ct.f Mer
675-5511
ll.1\ 1• ,111n1•1h111,,: 111 '>l'll · 1 \\'1\N I /\( 'TION '
r ·1 .... ~1f1t'fl .uh ctu 11 "1·11 l 'l11M.1rl .. 11\cl:.1;.a:: !oliiK
CE
BBDRGE BLll?fS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
PRIME IAYFRONT
fo·nr l} ~onl Frn nt ;qie. PIE R & DOCK In
l·:xrluSl\t' St>r ur1 ty (:11arded lii\YSHORES
C1>mmuntt\ I.ti\ c:lv f'14u Hoom Ma~ter Suite ~Ith f'Jrt nl;H I p 1;1c; F11u1 ll~drnnrns & Bonus
HIY>rn ('.., llt·n ~lt'I' <IO\\ n Ln rng Hoom With
'"" F'•11>l < '1•11tu1i:. Sp:1<•1ouc; 1>1n111g /\re:1 Wl th
Wt'I liar Trul~ (i111 g1•c>11~ V1tw Of Islands &
I 11a1111Ph. ,\nil 0\11 l'o'Cl1 a I .111H• Front l'atm &
fJ1•1 k 1J14n 11 \\,1n 1 ... l'h1 ... f1 1111H• Sul<l
hmm 1h .111 h
LIDO ISLE
1-:;i.,y f'1n.1n('l11).! N1•11r Comm unlly Rea1·hes.
('luhhouse &. Trnn1s (.Ju1l'I Cornl'r Lol With
Tn.idit1on<1I rh1 •'l' lokdrnoms, Plus Great f~ues\
lJl.tanl'rs With Huth & Uu r. Or B1llianJ Size
llecreation ftoom k eaut1fully Landsraperl
1.anm & £'at11> Expan1lahl4' l,ot $435.IXX)
759-9100
# 2 c orpot ... P'lcrla
N•wportC......,.
NEW EXCLUSIVE BAYFRONT
Wottet.rful W A TER VU in a HCl8'1ty
blitclnq on the Lido P•ninsula. Spocioul
2 h.d. ce>-0p in a quality buildinCJ Pool &
ieeur l ty 9 a r a9•. Bo at slip a va il
')425.000. 67J..6900.
WA rt HI ROi I H OMI ~.1 .... t
HI i\I I '-I ·\II .. I I '
I H• \\ ' • 11 ..
•-J, "''"''Ii."
631 -t400
,1,. .. ., .
t ,, ,, •• ,, f
11111., .1 1,.,,,.1
673-6900
RIGHT AHO IEAUTIFUL
UNTALS
1-· R If le L-0 .. IOO W•b lde Cotta lleaa, WA'9fllO.nHOMI .~ ID* ry, ·-· w ... -icon••• . N H l.57 ~ tOOd!tloe, lacom• "' 8R, " •e <'Ull o"' """"""· '* quau )'ua a•· ~ I 76 P I ~ ... D ... bl I owe ""·-·--2bdrm. Jba s.c...... 0 ,IOO '1 r . r ce .... l.r', .... t ho nae 1urn1 • oan ..._. .. -
COl.LMIPAll
POOL HO•E. 4 BR,
lamll)' ••l1taborbood .
.. llt.lut + HCUM· '1"· O.vid ........ 3155
2'lr" + dm, 2~ba SIOO 3br.2~ba SIOO .a.., 2"'i ba llOO-SI~
.... + bon. 2~ba Sl75
3br. Zba S&50 T ustin v " •t•z 500 B o ownen un~. Skft:lt btt . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.ooo. On payment w 17.lUI' "'1 dCK'k Priu • ~ • Y wne r ' .. -000 OWC .. _I
"' ...... ...,,.. A ... '-ue doon/w d0w1, Ele1ant cond o . 3 Br , ·-· . .,. aace. fl.-,OOO ~·or drt•llt on _. 4'""'• --% o.a homf' 111111 •LIPt tu •--It io•o bdmed ce1Un11. frplc, 2~8•. Drem etic 120 all .
• .nlll'irol lfi1ff,a.ct Hii ....... __ "' n e w ltltc h e n /buh. depftoceaa view Tile l& PR€'TIG€ Clean 2BR w /1to ve,
fridle. eecl 1ar. Adults.
no pet.I. S-0. 773 W
Wlllon,Ul-4118.
tal _. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SZi S.000·'40 .000 down. paUo, frplc, pool, neer 1
ll!i.OOOdown 2 br, I~ ba. 370 Flora. By owner. Soll. tennis, & beach. I HOM€\
•---------OW(' at le1111 thu 1n Oya. 833·3544. eves· SlH,000. By Owner. ' ' lt•f'i'=I\ unly to m you. Ml-OM2. a.m.. Real Estete Inves t · 411 JVJ IA
J •lt.>f h11nt1• ,ft.till• 11.J f1 t'llh ii.1lul . IJOllO.
lili't &IMI fo,M'll ~lth• t'1111t
\t r-;11
Ro, McCer•. IUtr
1~772'
"' ... ,,, .. , . . ,, ...... , ...
DOVER SHORH
AMt.&6l 3"9 BaALD IAY -N-EW-. -oCE_AN_F-RON_T_ :s.mw.~!::'Hwy, NB
,. ... UPPH! Romantic ocun vtew c.ondo, 2 br, 2 ba, frpk . 645-6646 '
NIWPOlf H6TS
Clean 2 br , l ba. •Ilse
y d , o n c ul ·de ·11 c , <:ool.I oeltchbo rhood . Crom this exclus ive view of coHt " pier.
ot.'fdtl p1ull & TLC 4 c ustom bol lt 4 Bdrm S.,000 497·130S
txh m. 1 "'• ba $105,000. Dream house. priced a\ nwc; Sm1111 2nd. o nly $545.000 O wner S. .._
nroaer, 875·0185 must sell and may help ~tr.o I 071
AS SUMI I 0 >/40/o
rotul f>ymts S7~/ mo
l>-.,m>tl ti R lotalmn 3
tu w f;11111l y rm . op.-n
hr•utn{·•I (•1>1hn11" fo:x
,. , 11 t 1 v ,. ll •· 11 11 u r s ,
MH 4.'M:l
finance For appt c11ll •••••••••••••••••••••••
002-931 t IY OWMlll
AtLSTATEI
REALTORS / . ---t -
1arace. dabw1hr, pell• lt523 CAM,,.,5l>a~IRVINE
Kidl OK. $550/mo. Curt.
11.._w UNITS 642-5564. 5 b r . 3 b 1 • f r p 1 c .
Utea ~g:snuc. 2BR DPLX. spac, Util cpt/dra pes, fenced yard.
, , Pd. adults. 333 E. 21st w/d hook-up $850/m o . Nae! 3 Bdrm owner a un· MG R. 3 ) 8 ft . 1 p M 49'7·3Z10, ~·2326 tl with approx. $81,600 pr ~103 year estimated Income ----------Woodbrid&e area 3 Br.
to help pay t he bills. 2 B r w i t h s t o v e , J~ Ba. House, Dining
Prlred at 11.lXGr oss. blckyard , car., crpt.a & area. ds ws hr, s tove,
lovely central Oran.ce df1ia. $450mo. 675·0935 crpt.s, drps, comm pool
County location. Pnn· & tennis, 2 car gar. $725
1o11 r, 1• 1 " t I' 1 1 m t• lr W.. I 044
t .. nhthH "'°'th t ttt k l1tr •••••••••••••••••••••••
LAGU .. A FIXER
3UORM RF.TREAT
ONLY 153 DOWN
Br ea t h t a ki n ll
panoramic ocean view
d Dana Harbor Spec·
taruJar r ustomh:ed 3000
sq, ft. 5 Bdrm +retreat.
100,000 in upgrades. As·
sumable 10'-'''l fln11nc
ing. SJ IO,ooo 33801
J\venada Caltta. SJ C .
714-496-5275. Open House
1·5SlUlday
cipals Ol'\)y. 752-1920. 3 Bdrm l Ba, 2SM Orange per mo. + dep. Avail
Ave •D. $495/mo. Kids l>e<'.23rd. Call 752-1282 .
OK. Ftpk. fenc. y rd. orS51·3000. J QUAIL
PLACE
I I t .: •• 1111 ,, ' 1 .. II t
l•l'<lt IHlll\ h 11111" \ I I \ '1
I \1'1tllllul1I• \I II \4''""'
h.l\\Hlt• 11•1t111 1• pf ll"t•tl
h1wil \ 1111 •tlA.ll lh1• I 111•1
$!!4.:11•~·
6ll· 7)00 H.I
fll l A•I Ill
llo•t111llf11lh 111111< 111• d l
11,h Ill lt1tl 1i1 I • Ill Ill
1111t ~t p111l h1 11 \ll.1.J.ll ll•ll
l•11111 a-.11o 1•11\11 Al '""'
111111•1 Ill '•1•11111•lt ,,, ,, I\ .'1
lilt' 1 • .. ,1f II r 1111 ,01" 1111.!
II\ ,111 SI' i 'l\llt
Coao.tlal h tcrf,.
""' 1·1\ I 111\rm 1\llh J!t"t•:•I \It•\\ t•1 1111••
Sp~.:l.1" 11111 l111·11t 11111
(:111 !;.\'\)II .. I"'"' ·'"'' w a I I' r r a I I \ ... " 111 1:
S!\:!!\ CIOO tlw111•1 "oil
C.tfl") $400 10
FACELIFT
f'res1•nt OWOC! , .. ltJIHl l.v
n·11ovat1ng this l lldrm
Ba lbo:1 I!. I :11111 l'Olla f!l'
1ntn a !.lllll'I ru\1• s um
mt'1 g1·t <1w:i} h1111s c·
Corne down ;ind -.c .. ttw.
property today You
won't rcrogmn• 1t ""on
Askmg $274.9~
lotboo lstand Rlty
673-8700
Corona del Ma r 1022 .•.•.••••......•..••..•
COM <; OTT A GE
PlUS INCOME
Red. to $272,500
or 3 Bdrm 2 bath home
with isolated masll'r
bdrrn lr:rn be 1J<H 4'nt
re-treat or in 111 w 'I rt r'I
/\ND a 2 bdrm rntla~t'
Anyway you dc'IC ril)c ll
it'i.'charm ing, 11µ to rlatc
nnd beaut1f11lly lm:alf•d
Calf for D~toils
644-72 1 1
~ • • •
DUPUX
*•UNIQUE
CALIF. HOMES
1 ·11 .. 111m111•cl f>lnn IOll 111
1hf' 1 '11hf 1111111•"' 111 ''"or
I 1 1 111 t' I'' 1' {I I ll I I' II 4
lltlfltt 11tll(l1tl l(UI 111•11 ,
l11utl~ 111 t•1•rum 11· Ith',
mglr ~f1rv , "::t"ll.I 11{1 ft
'\II h 1111 lll<~llltllt hit• l1111n
\~k111 S l41J".~ll(!llO"'!ll
OAAHGH RU
COMDO
I fhh 111 1 loft Shc1111 1•1111
111111 ~; 11!\0
:111Tu111(1•h1 T1•1 r
C 1 1 Hewport Cent•r
640·SJS7
UHIVH StTY PAik I
1•.u1•I ••1ul ui11t l'art11rr 1
w tc•fl 0Vl'fN I lot. l'IOlll'
lo lllllll on .:rt•1•n bC'lt
1111, c•h11rm1•r hns xlnt
.1 '< :-u m f 1 n ;1 n t' i n g
l'1•1f1•t·t :ltllrt{'r ttomc or
h.1d111:id SISH.000
RCTaylorCo
040 ()900
~ ...... 1052 •••••••••••••••••••••••
/\fo' .. 'OHOABL E
1.uxu rn '-
s..taAM 1010 •••••••••••••••••••••••
* * AFFOIDABLE
TAIE OVER
w1t1t normal down Thtic 111'4 fo'HA loan w ith
unil con ht· 1·r1•11ttvely SGU.x> balanc-: payable
r111rm1·•"1 2 Uclrm 1 clt•n ut $496 P f1t'J Cleall 3 111 Lill' llt.•ur'I ul N1tiu1•I lldrmwath d lot Ask·
11~.111"1 . mg SK2.000 eller will
LCMJllM VlllO¥ R.E. l·arry $5000 2nd 'I'. D
497_,76 1 ).Yon'tlast •
tWwport leach I 06' ...............••.•..•.
MEWf'OaT HEICloHTS
e RANCH
fllALTY
S51 2000
Quulnt 3 l'drm 2 bllth. I HU Condo. by owner
it•rnocl('lc-rl horn('. h•otur ll'il• m1sum 175.000 Nr
11111 s t•p nrat c f a n)lly (.'1vw t:tr .Joe IJJ:I l lJl
rounl , 2 flr1•pl3f't'8. or~32ti72
_ raorstTIES"'
10,... TM l :JO P.M.I
Drive by. 645·7009 lsl. ----
Last Ir 1150.
EASI'SIDE s h1rp new 2
Br 2 Ba, util pd, avall
Twtt.rock Ga...
Sbr , 3ba. 3 car gar .
(4081988-1234 e xt. 214
now, adults, no pets. 2 bd. 2 ba, wet bar. wet
$5'50. 546-3937 bar. com m pool, jac
-Un iv Pk $600/leas e
E. SIDE 2 BR S500 64i2·67M or 631·6300 Ask --auldren/dogs OK. dbl OWMt°M•tS.tl. gar. 239 5 O r a n ge. forChuck.
6 Bdrm. 3 bath giant 499--4820 •Orangetree 2 Br 1 Ba. ho m e . Ass u m e l s t -~ -· 1
S125.000 at 11 ':4 a nd 4br. 2ba. new k it chen. lakefront , vu. poo ·
$25,000 2n~ at 14?-. Due cpt. S6SO/mo. patio.ca rpo r t. $525
1996. ProJected incom e 494-2561 640-9646
for I year $19,200. ls fu t. UMIV. PARK
ly occupied. R.H.R. Agt, D... roillt 3226 Ch · 2 bd m 2
a.sit for Beau, 673·7300. ..••••••••••••••••••••• arming r · -Beaut. Duplex. 3 Bdrm , 2 bal h si n g l e s t o r y
1 townho me. Lovely, sun· ba. 1500 Sq ft. Partia ny patio. Prime location FOUIP\.IXWITH ocean view. 16()()/mo. 1 Nearby ever y t h ing
SPIHDAILE yr lea se. Cal l Doc. Ready to movein atS600 Central Orange County !ill-1210 or 731-1873 640 5560 location. All 2 Bd rm un· ~· Agent. ·
hnrdwocKt rl oori;, nt•ar
new roof, c·opver plum b
lrll(. llV tll'('t'SS 20'i
1lown, owner will c•arry
ull t he fin an eiog al
131...,'il interest. l\slun.:
'225.000. Call S.,0-1151
its bringing in Sl9.300 pr Lar.ge 1 Bdrm condo. End LOfJllllCI leach 3248
ye a r pr i c e d a t urut. Pool & s pa . S425. •••••••••••••••••••••••
8.77XGross. Seller car· 752·0929 O r 66 1 0422 3 Br 2 Ba Panoramic
11 °/oLOAH ry 1ng r ea d y mad e wlmd or wkdysart6 ocean view. hot t ub
:I Hl.l rm homl' thttl ·~ financing. Seller will F·=-· ,-..... 3234 Children OK No pets. rl,.,.. r r thn Is l t1m 0 , "uaranlee r ents for Isl --Y ...,.,,,. C 115•" '121 ~;;·o~ mv;s\or . As~ yearandmanagefor one ••••••••••••~··•••••••• ;:;('6;:·494~8985.,.,... or
sume 11r1 loan t-:xtra I year at S25 per month. 3br, frplc. patJo. $750/m o - - .
large lot $7 9 ,9110 752-1920 183158asswood After 4 3Bdrm.2ba Gar.frplc
TAR RELL, HK It Cn ll 968-3836 _ fncd yard. q Ulel street ~4• HERITAGE 54().1120 ' '-'UAIL IW .... •leoclt 3240 S950 mo. Linda. Ajtl T •••••• ••• •• • • •• •. • • • • • • 497_·_337_7 or 494·5306
VILLAGE 'ARIC l~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiitj.:=. RHI Estate PLACE 5 bib to ocean. Elegant 2 ~ MlcpMI 3252
l.1ively 1 Bdrm 2 ba, sng l 11-:•---------•I • ra---T111r.s•· bdrm. fam rm & den. •••••••••••••••••••••••
. • REALTORS
_.._ " ($725 mol. Plush crpls . h ram1ly hm•• with very 1 2,,, ba . ceda r & glass Beautiful new twn se
11\tyar•I. Xlnl loc. close HeborY•Hllh t 100 10,...Tll l :lOP.M. Dbl car pvt gar, rully C~pe Cove. L agun ar---.....
to schools. shops & fwys. Ocean vu. 3 Bd rm 2•,, ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• maint. yd. Adults. no Nig uel Walk to beach' "
$164.500 Ba , 3 car garage Juan Capo. $55,000. 2 pets, lnqwre at 527 !Rth 2100 sq ft. 3Br. 2128a +
*1•ote; Realty $325,000. Br. 2 Ba. 1480 sq rt . 8 St. 7 14 1960·63 3 1 o r more. Professional len "" S DuN\ yrs. old. Agt 54 1·5032. TllftLUES 960-5112. rus courts. S ma ll unique & l nv<>st m e n t ~ te:,eCo Absolut.ly prim e loca-commun it y S875 m o
• 21r + FCllllRM tion in Corona del Mar Rent entire duplex.ocean Call&4-0·251lor836·1ll30 640-5777 8 o o S q F t . R e a 1 and Balboa P eninsula. view $800/mo or 2bdrm 9
*•MUST SELL! Woodhnd~c e legant 3
11<.lrm 2' 2 lla a Hae hed
hom~ O\'C'rlook ing pool
.mil pa rk f:XC ELLENT
TERMS J\ VAil.A OLE.
$158.500
Wo,tclbrldge
Rea lag
551·3000
•4!fltb rranra r•111•}.lrvin,.
759.922 1 fireplace. beamed ceil Large ass~mable loans upst~irs , $500 /m o or Mewporthach 326
ings in living r m . Deck AskforSm1lh·Meyer downstairs SJSOl mo 119 •••••••••••••••••••• .. •
<.'Ot'Tlrr lot in adult park 640-5357 Huntington' St Call ·Bob H
3
abdrbor r View H omes
N.B. By Owner . S24 ,000 h Of m. 2ba fam rm.
. liREFIMD c_a_ll_645-~. DUPLEX M.I. Meyer 54s.317o m new Cl'Jll, parnl. drape!..
Owner will assist walh IO•-rclal Near beach. 2·3 bdrm . 2 fice · 586·~ ~ $90 0. I H . fl 4 -l 5 !I fi 5
the financing on this ~ Pl opcrty 1600 car garage. near park. 2 Br Condo on the sand 644 7m7
Bdrm 3 bath home lls •••••••••••••••••••••• princ only. Secunty. pool. 1650 mo Harbor Vie"' tl omes.
features include : a ·--------• TSLlnvslmt 642·l603 u p . 7 1 l 0 c ea n 4bdrm. 2ba. ram rm. nu
form al din ing room , ~ltTIEACH or•-y"'vsHiuTERS 7 14 9 60 9193 & cpts & paint. $9!15 mo family room. RV park-..,., ---AA u. 213/333-3846 ing, new paint. Asking Prime C·l lot 57xl20 with 34 Newer Units, centra l 644~157
1229,000. For an appoint· older two b e d r o om Costa Mesa Assum. fin 2 Br Penthouse Condo on Newnnrt Crest 180 dl'g
t ll c:~o 1151 hom e . Conspicuously Sl'>CJ\000 f Bo -""' men to see. ca ..,.. '"""'! water New un urn at spet tac.-ul ar ocean & located on Old Ne wport 18 Uruls, 3 yrs old cen-slips avail. Im m ed or Catalina 1•1e,. ,\ 1 l<Jc.-a
Blvd. S2SO.OOO. Agent. tral C0&la Mesa. Seller cupancy 213 282 1136 1 u fron\ rov. 3 Bdrm ·~ ~~ HERITAGE 631-7300. fin. SS00.000. d .,,., ..,"""'eves on. A 11 28 Newer Units. H.B. 2 ~-...-. _ w mas lt'r suite
Br. 2 Ba. each. Seller fin Meredith Gardens 3 Br built1ns. pool. lt.'nn1s
1,650,000 2..., Ba. 2 car gar 2 sty. spa Lease Pnnt onl),
:I bcl, 11
2 ba, Twnhme. -~~~~~~~~~! 1220 sq fl Fubulous r Mntto Maior la ..
f11,·ii11on. Ten nis crts, HAllOI VIEW 5,350 Sq. t t . Co m
• • REALTORS
All can close 1980. frplc (am rm llv rm 548·78tleves agent
D. Bourke Realtor form.al d1'n r'm S82~ T h 546-9950 " Bag Canyon own ous e
-963-3436. 673-6981 I ux . 2br. 2 ba. s pee
µc10I. parks, schools, lat· 4 Bdrm, bonus family mercial Bldg. I Blk to
t1cecoverecl patio, lush room&bonus rm.Love-Pacific Ocean. Sell
11laols,. gre at b uy . ly home in superb condl· $350,000. Lease S2.140
Sll0,000 t:all838·8181. tioo. Asking $299,000 for Month. • AmlYALLEY LIKE NEW. s pacious tacular golf rourst> &
lake view. separate 2 car
gar . lenn1s. pool. jac.-. lse
S8'1S mo. 644·2416 TERMS
Beautiful Turtle Rock 3
hdrm hom e . has ex·
1·ellent terms · easy to
buy! l'all for det a ils
NOW'• 1\lso nice family
rl)om. atrium, d in ing
roo m . B e au ti f ul
l1.1ndsrap111g many fruit
tree!.. Onlv $1 74 ,500.
lndudes lhe land.
---=----
quick sale. Wesley H. Taylor Co. Near n ew 4· Plex. 2 3bdrm. 2ba . with lr g
C I 2 I ...... _ p 0 rt ·~ __ 64_4_·4_9_1 o_ bdrm, 2 bath each unit thed 1 .1 " ... ... ~ with fireplace . e nclosed master. ca · ra ce1 • C.....,. patio. garage. $l&5,000. in g in 1 iv rm . n e w
640.5357 CWceCorwerLof , Bill G run d y . Rlt r . carpe ts & d r apes. Lovely Big Can)on
Prime area of Ne wpo rt 67~161. $625 /m o . 848 -79 McUm condo 2 BR 212
DOVER SHORES Beach. Useable 2000 sq. 848-9840. Ba. off white carpeting.
,.. ·f· t B · rt. bld o or pla ns for WESTMIHSTEI d like new model I i:htld , .. agm 1cen ay view, ., NEW DELUXE 2bdrm + 2ba eluxe con· OK. no pets. s950 Ca II pool, jacuu i. fa m . rm. 2 10,000 sq ft. bld g. Agent. do. frplc, patios. pool. Ch 673 7761 frplcs. 3 Br. 3 Ba. 13~ 631·7300 <>FACE/ ten n is. n ear be a c h. Jerry n sta. .
fi n . $68 5 ,ooo. F-ee. ~~~~~~~~~j llTAIL ILDG S600/mo. Bi ll 960·1217. 700.im
642·2510. 646-4848. ...__...IT IE'" CH PRIME LOCATION S3&6S6S 3 br +den Condo. 2' ~ ba. ,._,,...r-.., • 7000sq. fl. · 16()(),000 . I
PVf PART Y-Non realtor lllSTOL STREET Call Jim Brashier Move in now, Jbdrm + rrptc. pallo. gar ,e;ise
wis h es to purchase 100X2.24'. ~acre. Prime 714/770-9513 2ba. patios, frplc. laun· S850 mo N o pe t s
Bluffs Condo. 3Br. 2Ba property. NNN exlstinj( Outof C--6w d ry . Ne ar beac h ~7647
single s t ory. <714 1 lease.S340.000. _.., $650/mo Bill 9601217 3br . 2ba CON DO
3 6 7724 E M /21 M rte t Pa-.~y 2550 . . . 4 · v e 5 r · C •wpo •R •r -r-· S3&6S6S Backbav Area fa m rm. w h ••••••••••••••••••••••• ____ . ----J
n g t 640.5357 F'or Sale by Owner : Ex· 2 Br. Pent.house Condo on frplc. pnv patio. pool. 2
ASSUME LG LOAN IUILDING elusive h~ls i~e l ot water. New unfum . Boat car gar. new crpt pnt
l bdrm condo. Close to "'M""'L"' .... D w/outstan~ing view '!' slip avail lmmed. oc'. S725 m o 6 7S·fi 000
If 0 a g H os' p i t a I • u ,.,,.... Palm Sprin gs , t ennis c up a n c y . C a 1 I Bar bara Riggs__ __
Completely furnish ed. Store building &land 1n court al.moat .completed. 213/2 82·113 6 d ay s.1----------Pool & spa. secu rity. great location at Pa lm & 1 acre lot will sa cr . at 2131592.3584 eves n /\ N <.: If U S A N Move in no w be fore LaHab n1. Owner will 1315 000 752-1400 J .2J61 ·
I "A"ll 1 N-. "-f'~t>-n-llt'} -e!Wf'&W~-125;1)®. :fflantt. Sl"i-S-.00<>--91>1't' ays, 497 . ._ eves. 2 Br 1 Yi Ba lrg condo, .., "" "' -Osen Realtors , 731·311 1 loeat1on. view. 2 Br . den. C /2 I N•wport Ceftt•r or 3'7J.IOJ4 Out of St41h pool. SSSO/mo.
only $53.500 to take over 640.5357 ,..,.rty 2600 962·3519
loans , _________ ltllc°"" rroperty 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 br 2 ba den patio "2 ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·o c · · ~ ' llG CA,,.YOM 40 A seen!<' reson oast. mi. to beach, kids " pets
mo
On WATE R 2 Bdr m 2 ba
condo, in security bl dR
Pool. Vu. S950 mo. Redhill~ Recilty
552 -7500
Lux urious 3b r . 3ba ..... HOM--E-•l•M•C-O•M-E-I Elect~city, fenced, ou~-OK. Days 642-2427 X377 .
to wnho use . A l l l ~e + standing view. accessr-Eves64.S-l97l,963·1&541. VU home for exec. '" 20%DQWN ble,-owveN92•2(99 ~1. • ..;:;,_.;._------~1 ·Hat1:1or Vu. 3 Bdr m . 6
Least C'Xp c nsive 3 BH . h o m e 111
prestigious S pygle1ss llill D<·lightfu l
fam. borne. Open & spatious on lg.
poo l sz. lol. Comfortahlc F am. ftm .
w it h i11v1t. fi n .•p latl'. C h a rm 'g .
gourm~t kiLch. Lo\:cly m aster s uite.
fi'lex. ltirm~ in(\. le~s-<' opt. $419Jl00.
Fee.
Large hay view duplex.
Walking dis tance lo lhe
beach. with tXCt>llenl
financing. 4 & 3 hdr m s.
$.'JH,500. ~':f_T,,5·k~~h~~~. p~f~![~ Fl'Vt' units compl-etely -~~-3 bi' 2 bt. walk to beach, ba, Pool.$2500 mo. -re ( u r bi s h e d ~ N e w _ _. 00 'pets, '850. 116 Hunt· ,-
. _,
IN NEWPORT CENTER
~ 644-9060
H ro., 0p,1, ~. ,,,.,,, (..,.J•
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t_.Nnrnl
(7141 671-4400
12111621·2121
HARBOR.
NEW CONDOS
LUTSIDE C.M.
2512Sanla Ana Ave.
2 BR, 2\-41 ba, conte m p.
deslp. $116,000.
646-5096 646-6093
~· • ., I ._. • ,. r ~ ,. .__ • r ,,.a ••• • • ~ • • • . . . . .
LOfJ1111C1 leech I 041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio area . S380".000 carpet. drapes, etc: w_lth ••••h••••••••••••••••• ington. (2131431-4761 LA JOLLA llOKEIS a spendable al eiusting "-" Fwwltlt•d Across from Ocean. 2
Bdr m $650 mo . short
term or lease.
macnab I irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IAVINE COMPANY
WOODlllDel IUILDl•'S MOOB..
Fully furnis h e d m o d e l with
professionally landscaped grounds
& decor ator accents . Ready for
immediate occupan cy. Priced to
sell in the low $200.000's/Sue Weiss
551-8700. V-54
---712-1414 Hl .. 700
Compu1 Voley C•11•tt ,.2 .. 2n w~Cenre<
644-6200
qor Dove.°'"'• 1icJrboo lliew (91119'
rents. All this for only ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br, t ~ ba twnhse. e ncl.
SlS0.000 752·1920. CorOIMl .. Mw 3122 patio. 19934 Keswick W• .. ofrCMlfHOlllH ..............
631 -1400
••••••••••••••••••••••• Line <Brookhursl &
Remod. 3br, 3ba, 2 sty Adam s ). $400 + $200
bomeonbeacb,pvt gate, dep . c h ild r e n O K .
(a n t a s t I <' v i e w . 882-6587 ~~~~~~~~~~ $1500/mo. 213/928·1844or -------3-24-41-=
7141675-7764 .,.... UDOISLI ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10,... Tll l :l O P.M.I 2Br-. 28•. i.yopi . ~ltt WOOI581ltDG E Area gar. door . 19so1 m o
condo. S BR 2~ Ba. din· 8&·0215. 675·6948, or i n I r o o m • b a r . ~. ~~~~~~~~~~ c;:;;;.;;;.···;222 ----111111111·----...................... . 22 UNITS Ocean and can yon view. .,. I W p 0 It T Thr4!e bedrooms. Two
" baths. Available now. llACH -.i:smo. Yearly. 760·0189
microwave, fa m ily rm.
fplc, cpts, d rps . AC , Newport Shores Canal
comm pool • tennis , 2 front •bdrm. 3b1 . newly
car 1ar., avail lmmed. . decorated, 2 blocks to
....:ms:_:.:_+:..dep_.;.:_· _7S2_· 1_2S2 __ -1 ocean. 912-6683.
Sixteen 1 Bdrm t Ba i nd Acmt. Woodbrid1e Cr eeb\d• Olte 2 Bd. M•ture adults, s Ix 2 B d rm 2 B a •--=--------WUJow LeaH 4br, 3ba, M50
to•nbouaes with BS · For lHse. Spyglass Hiil frplC!, A /C, beh ind ~orUl·l2'6Agt.
aumable 1st T .D . '1 . ~executive ho.me , park/pool , decorated ----------
Owner flnancin1 evella· 180 delfft ocean view, llke model, 1arde n eri---------·
b I e . I z. I x 0 r 0 s s . ~IOO/mo. 780-9614. -· 552 ... Out.s\andln1. Entb luff -. ~ ..._ loc.Uon. See It and buy • .., _-.--
It. 7SH920 2 Bdr'!'i. den. 'fe lot • Sborecan Home. f rent-
ed before year end -
SJOOOmo. All,173-SJM. J 9UAIL
PLACE
NOP11n1S ..
10,. Tl l :H P.M.f
2bdrm, view. lar1e
private pa tio. rrplc.
pool. tba, l car 1ar.
Pride of ow n e rsh ip .
.xi/mo. Call Barbati
AIMAl·.U. eves. I
Scenic Oran1etree 2Br
co nd o . R e lr l 1 .
w /1t reem s . poo l,
jacuul, tenn\a. etc .
Adults oal1. no pe ts . .._m ...
nttamu_
Spacloua 6 spotless 3
bdrm, 2~ bath end unit
with pvt patio on "The •
Gree nbelt" In ou r
oriSIHl area. Avail.
..,. ..... ~.MC)..SMO
Have aometblnC you n. ,.._ draw ln th•
n111t to ..an Clau lfl.cl w-. . .a DallY Pilot
.. do It well -Call a.n.t Ml Can To· NOW. toK71. dQta.5171.
. , .... -. _... .. • -... -p .. t.. • ... ' • • -• • ... • -• • .. • • • .... ' ' 'llt • • • • • ... ._ • ... ' .. ., •
)
•
J
•
it
0
,
3425 •..•.............•..•••
Versailles <,tud10 condo.
adult s u n i)· S1 75
T7().23t3 7611 5600
:t Bdrm :t Ha l 'cmrtu 1n
Newport Br a t' h $550
645 7221 a~k for Ronn1r
NEW L UX U
TWNHSF:
Spat:1ous F a m 1 ly 2
Hr $350 Pool & play
l(round 5411-9556 fro m ~nh foumished 12 7PM
2 Ar 21, Ba 1600 sq ft
with every Possible ex
tra. Obie ~ar f'ncd yrd
SS6S. 673 6336. 64 2 9666.
''THE"
EXECUTIVE SUITE
fUll service offices in
Newport Center
640-5470 ....................... -----
lc6oa Peftinsala 3707 STUNNING lrg I !Jdrm
•• •• ••• •• ••• • •• •• •..... ~arden apt Pool & rel'
South l GCJUftG 3 8 8 6 rL.AZA
EXECUTIVE SUITES
"There is a d1Her ence ..
Trailer at the Beach ••• •••• ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • •
RAV FRONTAGE . area.710W.18th St . Newly decorated 2 Bt'\ S350 mo Fabulous view. condo on
Coodo. 1"4.t Ba. Adults l{MP •7l4 l 499·3816 water.2l>drrn.2J:>a .S850 ~a<:h . Pier. 1 llr $450.
Adult Wntr 303 P.
1-:dgl'Will•'r I >n I <!866.
1 Rr ('an•t•tf.. clraµes.
stov1· refi"lR<' llt1ls pd
U tt>n~il!. fur 4 $375
1;75.(1.IJ.'i
Costa Mesa 3724 ..........••..•..•.•...
SUS CASITAS
Furn I br apt. $325 & up
Encl gar Adult!., no
pets 2110 Newport Rt
548 4968 btwn R &-!'>P M
$410. 2Br. l'hBa. Adults
Sm. dog considered_ 610
Joann St M.ir Apt 0
6421344
Ocluxe 3 Br. 2 Ra . frplc.
gar. nr So Cst J>lu.3. No
pets. S550 644 · ll 03
llle81iBAU
APARTMENTS
Beitut1rut ~arden a pts
Pool & spa Adults, no
pets
only. Sec urity gate Joe64<1-0502.
Enclsd gar. Pool $465. Laguna Hilts 3850 -
545.2970 or 540-0511 •• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~nts Furnished
. New Jhr, Iba, a /1· condo. orUnfumish•d 3900
2 Br l~"' Ba bit m p11t10, 2c gar , fpt. pl /tennis. •••••••••••••••••••••••
714 /752-0234
2(g! Michelson Dr 11212
20'll Business Cntr 11213
carport. $42.5. l Br I Da . $.575/mo Water & fi::lS
S.1(1 car iaragc. m1 pa int pd. Adults /no p et s .
& carpet $350. 95.l 1667 95.5-:n,2.
Doctor, Lawyef", Seawind Village Merchant Chiet!
New l&.2 bdrm luxury Elegant bldg . tn heart of H untin gton Re h . Mtwww.rt hach 3169 adult apts in 14 plans w /spac ious ,,r!1 ces
TIIE GABl,.ES z Br 11-, •••• [.7•••••••••••••••• from 5415· 2 bdrm from skylights. wetbar. con
b d I $505 + pools. t enni~. ference rm. 85' pet sq. a w/gar. A u ls . nu N WPORT rf II d ' G PARK E wale a s. pon s. a!I rt Plus. s ute r 2 .000 C"tli thru OUl. drps, f k •-h t a ... or coo 1nj? • eit in., sq ft medic31 ldg . wrll
bltn<;, fnrd t d water pd COUNTRY CLUI paid 1-''rom San Die.l(o appointed a t 75' per
636-4l20 LIVIMG 1-'Twy tJn ve North on sq.ft For details call
Mitrguente.
24.17 ' E"Urangl•S42U Singles. 1&2 bedroom Beach to McFadden HF:O CARPET l.uxunous hun"al{I-' for then West on McFadden 893 1351 nnn-smoktn.I( nvat. RCnl Rach S345 2bdrm, crpts. drps. bit apts. & townhouses to Sea wind Vi It a I' e
548 mn 1 !Jdrm $400 ins. beamed ce1hnis. f'rom S449 644-1900 <714 1893-5198 688 sq ft well !orated
2250Van°uard. 540-9626 itdullS, $395 2272 Maple Oc f w· Noth C t M ff h 37 .. 0 " eanfront or inte r R ,.000 1 os a esa o ice. Hwwt~a.t hac ... 631-2927. d & OCMM ... p k t d ••••••••••••••••• •••••• 2 Bdrm 2 Ba $475 Rentals . Fu rn1she ••••••••••••. •• •••••••• ar next o your oor
bd I 398w W I 631 _5583 BeauL 2br , 2ba. ssso unfum B_roker 675 4912 Laguna Beach Motor Inn. Fully equipped w ith S375/vp 1·2 rm . P<>O • • 1 son, carpet. a le. cabinets &
jac. adlt. l8992 Ftonda. 2Br. pool. child/pet OK. lt'i;Openseeit at NO FEE' Apt & <.:ondo 985 No. P acific Coast storage. Reuonably
H.B.842-2834or842 3172 _3~06G~ger~0·440ll rentals Villa Rentals. Hwy . Laguns B~ach . d C 11 T
$47 5 m 0 Gar age . 675-4912 1-'roker Daily. Weekly. Kitchen r,r~ c_e ... n r a D ... Lo m . Right on beach s tudio. 64 1-0763 AM. 631-6679 2 Br w/gar $395. Cpts. .,_._1_ r -· ~·n•~r ..J.L.~ .._._ ..c ..... IL ,_,._.. -~----,...a~i~__._w -~"' ·Pro fes s i<fn al Bld 0 ~--JJUl~auna u ' S495 call --fn-cct-yaTct-w-111lJTi" All Adult. no pets . 2 Hr. 2 rates. 494-5294 · "' 9&4-3951 ----Water pd. 2526 "A '"San Ba. From s425 Pool. 9.57 1900.
17 44 ..,_cl. Occ.Cllk:y ta Ana. 636-4120 t-5 pm spa. refnge. d/washer Pvt bedroom and bath Ir~ 2 Br l Ba .. pool, laundry '-dd. Across N.B Golf Pool, jacuizi. clubhouse. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm .. small child OK. PINE BLUFF APTS "' Work ing p e r so n START '81
. RIGHT
2Br. IBa, adlts. pool, ten-TSLMgmt.642·1603. Spac. 2 br, 2 ba. Adult Course. 545·4855 s2oot mo + sec d ep
nis. ~ mo. I y r lse. - -----complex-. pa tio, view . 2 Br. I Ba. Av:ul now Avail after Jan 1st. Hun·
548-0412 $24.5 l Br apt very safe . frplc. encl gar .. l(as Area or Balboa & Coast _tiolJlOn BcJ\_:4ir OC!l'!A. M.-rtle la .l769 Nosmoker,prevrefreq. ll~e. ~hwasher. 11pa, Hwy. 1525\mo. J.D '900·5M4 ....-r • 954 W: 17th' St 548·0358 IAdry im...Ftom $5()0, p r"o P e r l y •• am ( . t-=-=-=--=""-------•••--••••• .. ••••••••..-. m ~
2bdrm I ..__ • d 1 SPMC 631 ·6101 751.2787 , Aft 5 pm . Rm for rent in Dana Pt.
wftlt ........ OfftHI
atUdoMari11a
Villttp
Social Ac11111t1es 01
.Jj!CI~ •.Sr.e.e Sunday
Brunch• 880 s •Par
11e~. Plus much more
• ...... view. a u ts, ~-..,.... $175/mth meals. u\il
$450/$480. immed avail. Colonlal Twnhse. E·side. .....,....,.... inc. Person must be will·
Davkl64&-32$S. 2Br. l ~Ba. new crpts . Condo. 2br, 2ba. b ay 'ing to assist in Martia l SpectOI rolE'~ 11
Lt.rge 1 Bdrm. $300. Quiet paint. adults 1425 view. encl gar. Auto art sch .. and assist han· leased by Dec IS. ~kling with beautiful 67~9005. opener. S650 yrly dicap person. Must be 1980 tandacaping. ADULTS 2br 2ba, nr s .<.:.Ptaza. TSLMgmt642·1603 late 17 t h ru 21. Call SOO.l2CX>S'l· Fi
OVER 35. No pets . Sec. amt'nities Adults WestcUrf N.B. adult con-li6H.Sl ------Up11:o I mo Free Ren1
LEEWARD AP'l'S. 2020 M7S. 552·5833. do. $595. 2 Bdrm. 2 bath, N . B . Ocea nfr o nt Wei Bors !)i~ A~e .. i,.btk B~k O-roiltt 3126 10 steps to pool. New w/kitchenette . 1260 &t Wote.front Settings
"' ewport ve. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• carpeting. yearly tease. up. Util pd. 2306 W. So.~Bay.831·0397. ,bdnn.'300 Agt.'769-1616.:___ Oceanfront67J.4154. 67~662
MIWPOIT Dys : 496.-6ll 1: l'ves & VenailJes-1 Br. security , Mehis 4100 --
APAITMIMTS wkends : 496-6222. pool/rec . SSOO. Steve. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Priml' com er toe. Up lo
.... ir •• -••• -......... - ---,,,,,,_.....,.. ..
7110 SQ. FT.
For Leas e
FOUNT AIM VALLEY
Spnnklered IJldg
t'oncrete fncd yrd area
800Sq. Ft
Improved office
Cati Jim Brash1 t•r
714 1770·9513
~Ml!rnts/
Personals/ Lost& Fowtd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ftnents 5 100
rRIMEH.I . LOC.
Offices ror lease oh
Beach Blvd _ from 465
S f' to 1106 S F For
mo re tn f o C'all Jill
841:1-9929
.... PSS Rettfal 4450
······················· 1f or store &: 0H11'e space
Rent MG 60o' S20ll mo
2944 Randolph 119
67S-5116
s+o..aqt 4550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
5005
~htroMo.y?
Cati World Trade
A'>sociates 545·5493
•••
al reas onable ra tes I
500 to 2700 Sq Ft.
MF;SA VERDF. l>R
PLAZA
l 1525 Me~a \ier<le F: l . ~
C .S1Mrber
2598 Witlo Ln
Costa Mes3
You a re the winnc>r or
l fr-ff tickets
<SI0.50value ). to
Sports Vacation
&RV Show
Jan 3thruJan II
Anaheim Convention
I 545·4123
Nt!WJ>Ort Modern slorc or
offi ce Nr pm1t 11ffl n~
5 48 :. f J e rry
21.J 4i7 700 I
l'ornrnerc 1al s tnres ,
shops. tot al 1400 sq ft at
;jl< & up. any s11e E
S1de C M 548·1249
Center
Tickets must be ex
chanRrd for r eserved
scats at the Convention
Center ahead of time
Call 642·5678. ext. 272 to I
C'laimyourtickets 1
•••
Use /llllW«' Ad service
when pf"dCing your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number will
appear in your c lassified ad
. we take your messages
24 hours a day ... you call
in at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
this service is only $7.50
week. For more informa-
tion and to place your ad
ca 11 642-5678.
.........•...•.......•.
THE ADVERTISING
COMSUL TANT<
Now you can re;i p th1
benefits of h11th ('n~t HI
vertising for your 1· •m
pany' Let The Advent::.
ing Consultants se t UJ•
your own in -houst ,11i
vertismg agl'ncy P it· 1~1·
call for 1nforma 1101\
759.9545
Now You
Can
Sell
More
"1th lla 1h l'1lu1
Pt-,,\ l'l 't'llfH
\II!'-'lilt r111h ''.!
I I 1111 • f 111 ' l.i '
111111 ·I .1 ol.1, 'M •. 1
llllt' '"" "'" ""'' '" 111111 1• 111·111• I .fill, I
11 p I " 'I ttt1 I 11· I
,11fd1l f'lll.il Ill I
111)1\ 1;11 .. lrrt I 1i1 I\\
" " \ ' "•·I I I\ I II r11 rl1 t I • I ,1 I rl
all11 •1,.d '""~' '11111 1'111111 1'1111 Ion
\fl If I II • \ • • 11 I
fl ;111h \111•, ,, "" \'1,.1 Ill \l,1•11'1\ I I
Fur ml•t• 1r.<ur11111111•1
Jllil '" pl.tl" u 111r .111 • 11\
642-5678
... 1t
JoltnD.MoMon
25001 Via Portola
Laguna Niguel
You a re lhe winne r q (
l frff tickets
tSl~alueJ. ta:
Sports Vacati Oft
&RV Show
J an 3 thru Jan 11
Anaheim Convention
Center
Tickets mus t be C)f.
changed for res er ved
seals at ihe ConniiltTon
Center .;ah~ad Gf lime
Call 642-5678. c>ll t. ~72 111
claim your t ickets •••
Lost&found 5300 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
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ARE FREE
Call:
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GREAT RECREATION·
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(pro & pro 'lhop) • 2
Health Clubs• Sauna •
HycJromas<>agc •Swim
ming• Ortv1ng Rangr
2 Br. S3CJO + utils In· B Toro lllZ 957•1900• 640-9345 DO YOU Liii 4.~ sq ft. Full service.
fant.aonly. No pet.s. No ••••••••••••••••••••••• h MOT&S7 =n. &lass bldg. llily..._, lt1avesomethtngyou "u11t
waterbeds. Beaut. 1 year new 2 Br. St• lo the beac · Im· Weekly rentals from SM 1----·------r'ml to sell'! C la$s1f1ed a~ 110
34:iONewportBtvd. l~Ba .Condowithpool. mac. 2 Br. w /lr1 patio. 6 up. 841-744S. 2274 MWPTPIOMTA61 1twell IH2·5678
Co&ta Men jacuui. 6 cable TV In· U4 45th. ~·11m;3~· Ne'WpOl't Blvd. C.M . llMTALS 1-!:=:=====:;::=::=:=:::=======~-==r-~:-~-:-i BEAUTIFUL APART·
MENTS: Singles. 1 &
'J Bed1ooms • Fur
n1shed & Unturn1she<l
• Aelull livtng •No Peh
• Models Ooen daily
91.0 6
Oakwood
Gerden Apertment1
Newpoft S.ach/So.
1700 16tll SI
10o•e1 41 181111
17141 t42·5tt3
Newport S.ach/No.
880 ltv1no
Il l 161111
11141 M&-1104
2br 1arden apt, pvt patio. cld. Yearly '550. Broker cupancy. r y. . 2 Rmtal Spacn Appro•. II ' '
•arase. iml child ok. no 675-4912 a.-to the beach. Im· Balboa Inn oceanfront. ....,.. ft .._ I ,..... ' " ~ Low winter rates Dally _, eq. · ll up. nc uu· , pets 1385. 548-9950 le-&. ••40 mac. i1tra lr1. 3 Br. 2 Ba . --A.l ..,. _40· Ina utile. Sl50 6 $450. • ••
--Su-.. ~ .. w/"""'"'•n vl•w. or"'in:a y . .,,_, N Bl·..... Y be ' .i tric I Br \ Ba• $350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_.,,. """ " 24$0 ewport ~. OU can a (
r ao>0rt.Altol13Br2B• new l 6 2 Bdrm. 124 45th. St. Yrly ........ .....,. 4210 Co1\a Mu•. See WINNER '~ ~.-...1 ~Co•• ... Pool, lmmed. occupaney. •n.-.-.-..-.-........ .-.. .-•• 1_11_m1 __ 1•_. ______ 1 1 .
•P•. tennl11 1ua1ee. mZS01. bdrm, 2b• condo on .O.LIAll :
2 er.•~ e.. Townbouae. <211> •1202 dp; <7H> North Shore of Taboe. n:x~ofes, +cont. rm Just by sending us your name and ' Mwu, no peta. $.oo mo. IMM121 n•. ~ Br. nly. ~ blk from l\alb f\lnt. 5/mln from I Ml aa n t
755WtltbSt . ...,.t50'7 •1•kta. tuot mo. North St• . .-1wkl1. • ....... • address and by watching for your i
THIWlmTUTIM m.-s.aat. m.-.s. .. •Bert. ~=&:~ name In the classlfled ads of the '
Stop:• Take lime to rela
and shop at home. It·
simple with Dally Pllo
Clau Uled Ads And I
you have something t
11tll. call a f rlendl
<.:tasslhe<l Ad Viser a
642.56711
~'1e ":::S:"~:~'j 2 er &pedoul new deeor 9-llMn 4JOt acteeeabeautalrium Dally Pl.lot. l
Br. Well deeoiated.' near Oceaefront feoO •• .. •0 •:•0 ••••0 ••••• Abwldantparkln1
1
!, = .. -'•• ..;...i, u•..... mo. y ............ e:_7 .... e: ---.· 'u Alnvo6d depoalte
1
714/TTO.tllJ Win Ucket.s to the circus, area amusemtnt , .... _...,.... •"" ._,v •101 ,,_ _ .. _ auracuons or sPQrtlnJ eventa. Just nn out Utl• tamla court Jae•nt cut v I upenaet. II you're in the market coupon and mall il tocray to the:
perti like landacapla1: •· J Br. 2 Ba. lncl1d Pror•11ionall1 •Ince for • better car , be sure :
lllCJlt beautiful bldl. In pr•J•. patk>, walk to ttn. td chf'ck the many autos aanlfled Department. Dally Piiot •
H.B. beedt,adutt1.nocto11. HOU~TIS advertised ror u te In 330 W. Ba)• Street, ,..._ .. 8 Mesa, CA nm 1 From'31D.l4f-Ollt TSL M•mt. 842·1803 llMU4 Cluslfit'd ~ •
.
f
"' ' ,
..._ = ·-----
~ ... DM.Y~l&.OT 1~,0.. ... 211• MIMW.... 7'00 ....... w...... 11ooiu...... __
1
~ ~~ • .-................. ., ~:-:T............ ,.........w...... 7IOO!HllliW..tM 710C MllpW..t.4 7100 •.. I ~. -llM -W-71M W-11H Drl•f' ••n1'd Oood .............................. ,,.,...,,..,, ................................. ,
1
Pl' IOI
-.. ,_ .. ••••••••••••••• ~;;ie .. •••••••••••••••• ... ................... drtvinJ r.curd • valid Uve In Nanny. Flexible Pubtic retatlona .,.,.on to SALES ~ --·~;;:isi•~··•••••• 1'~._ • .._. • ,_.
1
Ca U • _: ca..n.. mejor a...k,uper t ), Mon· Fri California llnon r• =-~ple d@tl~ de· •tlract new bualneu. If 1ou are a11rea1lve -~ f)l' 0 k 1 •~90
A•l•al Aui ala•t• -.tM ...,....,.. •&or• Clrnll aalAI') lll 11u1ton 111.drf'd K.o o11rledi• of • le He.tr.r for I Coo1111me r electr on ic ud look!A• for a future SICllTAIY ~ fi~m cArc~ oe •
._,. .,, ,..,.. S.c•ll .... m, ••II ..,.,. """'"'"'' L•I °"""'' "°""" helpl•I '':."' old "'. Lovol1 exp.pttf•""'·......., In '"oil -•flood Looklni for lhol mcer .,.,.. · PP '" ----·---• -U•• IU \1l t T o an HI• Mr OcolU1 pp&y 1tl 3002 So Oak P vate room. bath• ---co bene fits apply In chan1einUlll!Reg111h:r
• ,._. er \oet • ,.t • WU.. SJ'fl,a SC Slu\ht Ana $40 84$8 &alary · 7~21" · Real F.atate Sale. penoo llam lo llam Moo with us now'!
Oii •i We re~ Ptrl Acrylkull1trl ,._ -Loan Service Clerk L ...... fora lhru F ri Standa r d Free"E.O.E
* * * L Wlldlt ...
... mu1•-,_. -••H DllVRS Tr•---' 0""' • ' ...._ C....-7 ~ :KT77 So Bristol Irvine -wan -· pntn1 f\lll "bar~• i...-'"lt.l't .... ·r I'" I R 1 ""-• ,. .. amlc loan J"'-..... -l·•der. Now in c .. ' ' Pe--"el Agen"" IOUUoo .,._ U" f " ... .....,.1 "" "8 A Jt f!, loc: .. ted in bf'ollnace Co. in N.8. """ .. .,.. ~ .... .-E•-u• ,., lAlll 0,.,. la l lacll Tab or yaeo m 1r t•om l.a.:wua Ill Ila haa p/tlrne bu lmmed vacancy for terviewtnc for positions --• -._, . 17th, Costa Men
~ E. COast Hwy W:WS
Newport Beach
You ere the wlnntr ol
-., kUtH. male vu• ~DVANCP.IU!NT paoy Salary ruin a. f unw Poattions Gd. \I' 1 .. In real eatale sales S C H 0 0 L Suit.eDt ~ 6421470
lal•• ah'd U\h St UPPOMT\JN11'11S men111rat• w i upl'r dnv1.n11 r , , over 21 <In· · ~ c er ... Eye for Whether licensed or not --!II I~ f\11.1. TllU.: t'l •• RK flown Ea11 Yarhta (.'a ll •uranr~ requirement) accuracy • attention to call to see if you qualify C R 0 S S I N G -
lfnetklleh
<110.$0 value>. to ..,...v ......
-Tu •otlt. for for •Pl>• '7~61)() 001!: 830-61111 Al Dirth detail. Promotlonal OP· to Join the profeaalonals GUAID Secre.tarial
Ull ftaoalbum Mont "'00.rK""'"'u '-'R rull -port unit y for self at Wa lker a, L ee aav.Nllf C1mpu1 PWTCO .. ... r.1·H c. Orydeanen s tarter Call K •lle (714 )835~. W.w"'9y SI 34.79 .......... Secretwy
&IV5'ow
Jan 3 thru Jan 11
Anaheim Convention
Jaa'-ore• 8 rutol "'n 1 m •I •up p I y rbat&e ror win mf11r t•o w ool presser . $7 /hr ~9350. --l.•l lWJ aupermarlle l • Nl't1d llnu wlt-d&•• of 4()h r week guarunte~ --------.
t)wraeUc cleanruth1rJ jlnlt.ral 1,~~r 1hru fin Wit h v&ra tlon pay , MICHANIC
~cort children across
busy Intersect ions
before and after school.
For information and ap·
plication. contact Sgt.
Wilkinson 644·3741
Newi><>rt Beach Police
Department. 870 Santa
Previous bankin& e x·
perience desirable. Xlnt.
\ypin11 skills required.
short·hand nol required .
Center
Tickets must be ex·
chan1ed for r eserved
seats at the Convention
Center ahead of time .
Call 6'2·56'78, ext. 'l72 to
claim your tickets
&nAaP Loat 11m••" C. la ta1\bhalf trH
.,.. l'Oilw Sma 11 bwld
Jyra old If found
...... <'all M4 U U
LOIT llllalft ln1h Ml.1e1
CO..t H•)' N 8 at
Gia lle111erd Iba ""~' ·d11•••• """t h •~~ .... cuw~m1 -Um: Vic ol \1111•> l'ir
.. tat &hon hltr h·~
~ marl lll&• M
•• l1 h~a rlbru ~' n
~
Ll»l t'at Li gre) •
...... male H 8 Mud1 tcw• ~4978. 830 0136
orm-*4
FOUND Golden Cocke1
~Spamet . ..Y1c lrvme 81 &
Meu tit. • ..oit_ 55 l t1772
~-·-i-
FOUND Golden Lab
Retriever, vie Newland
6 Garfield. 968· 7701
.UlST Algban shaved off
coat, fem, blk w/tan feet
reward 1146-~I. &46-784\
Caileven 1f only seen
FOUND: Man 's ring,
Lucky's Parking Lot,
C.M You desc ribe
~Shirley _____ _..;;.. __ _
Found: Terrier puppy, It
color Fem . Gold e n
Retrie ve r , M
Shepherd /Dobi e ,
blk/tan M. Irish seller
mis. M. Also wht goose
• cats. NB Anim a l
Shelter. 644·3656
SCUM-LETS
ANSWEIS
Savory -Baron
Hazel -Family
ROLL BAR I
My brother-in -law is a
ru1ly bad driver. Who
do you know that drives
a semi-truc k with a
ROU.BAR? ........... 5350 •••••••••••••••••••••••
wuR•n •ppl IU 1$041 11h•tl'-mcnh1, lncludrn~ mt.'<hc1&1 Insurance after Needed lo maintain s m <~ Ws l ~t It H A'R fl• 1p R"~um"" l"t Oeel of mini·buses In •• ~ ,.. """ "' • 6roo Ap11ly In person La to~ t\"nl to. J urco. Int• KWiter's Cle¥ner Qua ti ·guns Hills. Exp ~ gd. ~ bm·h SI , Newport ty t'\eaners. 186 t;. lSth Gdreferences es sen ti a I.
4DY8T1PM
SALIS
twach. C'a 92600 ST C: M · co. benefits Salary bused on exp. EOE.
IOOlllllPll l':RRANU v erson feSp ~191 Al Dirth
l'\lpt !Sch are¥ l11w fll m ('l)n!tl'll'llllOUb person Med.lc;JA;ist, -;;;nt or
'jeek& ft bookkeeper w r t-11.Abh· C'a r lo fice. lor G.P , exp pre
Ciood beo e fH!> Ca 11 perform vunous du\\es ferred. mail resume or
K1.1.nmgSJ 1005 I for !llpt Och rlol'tur fire mana1<er 351
•CAIDtUVllS• \1us1~1&or u.,.er&hvl' Hospital Rd. Ste 11 8,
Checker Cab UI Npl lfft.•a t-1ex hrs N B !i2ti63 no 0222 &'4 lb41 Mt'<llcal
UifOWle ol • Of'lrt l!X panswn prl)1 ranl tht>
n..ab Pilot b•• •n Ill\ mt!lii 111.. opt'n in a for • ••l e1opt1r1 0 11 w 1l h
Ol"Wl>J)ll~l \,hliplay 1'd
\<ert1s1n1 expel Good
a•llll'l comm1f101011i. &I
11 Hellen\ fr1ngt' bencllti. F.xnd lent (.' \ s H I Jo: It l~ur:iKe 1\ttcndt'lll
tirowth oppurtuD1llei. for HOl'"F.V.ARF'.'i S \l t-:~ Serrf>tary
X-RAYTICH
Pdrtllm\· :11t h11111 , ,,
v.l't!k, 5 duy) Nt'wpo11
litoal'h nfflt•t H:ll 44U
~I'!>()(\ w1lh tut!tr am Apply in ~r'lun ltion 1-\111 t1ffi4.• IJOS1t1011 a\ u1 I
b.UOm call for appuilH Hardwure I02" ln1n .. 1m1n l·lt C';;ill Bill at I
nwnt 6424321,u t 'l77 IWestclJflPl.uai N B 1 4~1175u1I~1177 tr .. 111 o0r~aoae,c1oloatst ------1 1uo ~ 1 MB>ICAL RECEPT. IJrgJutted w or k L>r
IHtlatateSalet
Start the year right by
lindina out about the
car eer opportunities
available a t Select
1'1-ope~Jes If you have
experience or a n in·
trresl 1n learning about
investment properties
CJtll for a conf1denl1al 1n
terv1ew We also have
o pportun1t1 es f o r
t>S tabl1s h e d pru
fesswnals with manage
ment potential for or-
(1cc:. 1n Costa Mesa.
Newport Irvine and San
<·leme nte Ca 11 Pet e
V1ono, 751 31!11
«=SEL ECT
U11lted C•llfonl• .... * * "*
Barbara Dr., 92663 Appl-.c.t 10 I 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
222 Ocean Ave.
SECRET AR y Laguna Beach HARBOR AR EA
Tp m g mt . l y p Ing APPLIANCE SERVICE
60W PM. pu bh c re I a · 494-6546 We buy used a ppliances
lions. mature. exper we sell recond , guar.
req N B E.O E Send E.O.E . appltances. 549.3077
resume to Classified Ad l~~~~~~~~~-1 --------
• 8 O 2 . D a ii y p ii 0 t Secwity Offlc-XI n t ref r i g er a t o r s .
Newspaper. PO Box •• washers&dryers.for in~ ~ Costa Mesa. Ca Part lime. weekends. for f_or_ma __ lion 6:'2·77_S4_ --
"OXIO large a partment com· -_ plex in Newport Beach 30" gas drop 1n range
Secretary Legal lnvt'S't SJ 50 hr \o s tart w matching hood, $75.
mt:nt Consultant seeks Uruforms furn. <:onlacl Gas dryer $95. S46·8672
exp'd person "' le~al ~m Lupis at 64~·l 900 -ltefrigera~o-r-L·-,k-e_n_e_w_
sec'y s kills Collins As·j•---------1 17 cu ft Ke n more suc1aleli.567SanNit'tllas Security W lice maker. $450
Dr 11302 N U £ 613-2789
RECEIVING CLERK ,, SCTY/BOOKKt-.:EPl-:R S CURITY llcyclH 1020
I r v In e I n du S I r I a I 3 to 4 dys wk: ex per l\aar Attendent •••••••••••••••••••••••
330 w y Street "'~ u1ERS l (' I I ne«h.'<1 for ('Int• .i I rt d l'Pl ~la Me11a ~ wner.i__ ~
Equal Oppe>r Employer TM lall>oa lay Clwb I Wui,. SS? 63(1()
U T "TE M isnowhirin9. M\o:UlC.\l. \ .. s1~tanl <!It V "''d front & b.ick, tyµ
I PROPERTIES
~c"!~~~x Jim Eastwood C.M ar!~ 642·11~2:! UUU SUf'ER IUY! .,..., .,,.,..,., Marriott Hotet M • p SKn+-hR .. c•pt.. E en s eugeot len speed
PIX O~rotor in~ Hn. & s al:o.ry or>c-11
l'\Jll ll1t1 l' 2PM <Vl"•t I _Noll '<11101'.er f>48·7~~ AkCHlTECTtJ HAL
t•ru.Ject a rr h 1t ect &' 1 senior drafts person t+-1 MAKKt-:Ts
Xint oppty w texpand~·n Ir'. For 2nd&3rdSh1ft:.
N e wp o rt B ellt'
Mu:.l IA' a,·a1\ wkurt• .~ - , ,. '"' venmg position ava1la b k '·k NEW k REl"EPTIO ... IST Typin g , P ones, n o bl I e ... u e 'As ing ~ ... horth d G e for a people oriented $170/bes t offer (;.a II
architect 1developer We promote tu roaoag~
P.nom~I C leric
l>1l1n,1?u JI M u·.~ I · I~
.'iOwpm !-'\.Ill lime. Mun
Ft 1. li J(I-~ l'teu,t• c,111
for appl 645·7:158. Mo ri
MERRY
CHRISTMAS
CWfX>rl Bearh develop· 11 . an · ood opp'ty µerson able to r heck 752-0900or645·2038 & ask ment com pa n y , near for nght person 645-7053 ID's & enforce holt>I for Mark
W Rylee Al A 640-29 2 ment & supen"11>1on frurn
within.
WANT A CAR~l!:R '
Costa Mesa
tit Del Mar
631-942\
John Wayne Airport, S -policies al the door of
ha.'1 1mmcdiatt! open1n~ e c re 1 a r Y A d our lounge En)oy ex
fl:r to;cpenrncrd Recep nunstrallve PIT . cc 11 en t co m pan y
l1on1'l Mu st ha ve __ ~~·1507 benefits Apply in person fT1 8 JO~ FROM ~-Vt:RYUNf. AT
Girl wanted for full \tnll' 1 r-M..~fr\"::. n• n1mom 3y r~ t'xp1•r SECRET ARY 9A M Noon. Mon 1-'ri
omre p«;1t1on Apply • ., I u ' .. I ,_ Gttod ('0 h c n td l t) Pe~onncl
Laguna Beach 11 \•1ne Eng 111cer•n.: l!MPOliAilYPl~NNll~llMCI~ Mick\ 714 1133 ~680 Xlnt opporlunity for MARRIOn HOTEl
AssL.Stant M anage r 494-92.13 1.,....,., Unit 8 H .. t)•• A\u. 557~045 E_O_t-: sharp gal to work in fasl OOON ~ needed. Whiffle Tree "°'' . , ' pace Newport Beach • ewport Center Dr
Apts. Middle.aged lady Hunllll"'on Beach lrV\ne 01 ('all S4Y 7714 Re<-ept1on1)t. t' T . 12 5. 1'0mmerc1al real est ale :>lewport ~ach
ASSEMBLERS We will
train Apply 7a m .
MacGregor Yachts. \631
Placenua. Costa Mesa
CRUISERS Ii llKES
Restored & used
1982 Cha d e St CM.
642 79\0
SC HW I NN boy s
'Scrambler··, blue.
perl cond S75 646·4546
Cah 8035 ..•...•............•... "th ts d · ,.. 37 23 I i s. sa........ r,qual Upp Empty r M , f'
W1 oo 1 e incom e to 962·9116
1
GUARDS rc11 ~•t 40 + wpm. $4 24 thr t•i office Xlnt typing &
help manager. Outside ~~~~~~~~--t-\Jll & "llrl llmt' /\II ~"#pOf't a.odl i.tart Xlnl bent' fits dtctaphone skills & ab1h· cleaning & r elief of .. 1 f:ish •rn b lJ.nd . NB l y to hundle IB M
StlOl' i.ales full time with Persian Cat needs home.
or w out exp . or will adultsonly, •Freel. · rr C ""'H1t• Jr •• .L!. 1 niform" f •• rn·.-1 Memo ry Typewriter manage r 1n o ice ~ "' 1\1; ,1 \ 1 .:= 11<·a 11or. C:i II !J 3 Jil train Good co henef1u. S42 Z7'l7 846-06199AM-SPM. PITCash1er ..-111 Ir. t 1t:. ~ '" 0• • r '' 1 ''' • •• JuJie c;ricm New \'ork needed Challenging ---...--caJI Barbar a Cf't apr1 "'· ll'hrr " •'\'' • le ... ·W.~~.:"'-E. I pos1twn for right Ral A\J1'0MOTIVE o 5;1(}3280 <\I> P 1"' • n' v f a· 1 __ .. _. " Lif P '\ll 1230 .,, ~· Call La1lu S3J 2900
f'AITS I f>'rot,.. •• 111 <..e1 \1 .,. l?"I Gi~1'i Ck. J\IH~' I : '1 ~ ---
COUNTHMAM * * * I W :.ll\ S• '""1 Ar'
1
"' r • .:., ' hrn.. 111 t' i'ECEPT(TYPl"'T 1---------C . Do""·nar lnlen,l'\I. h .. I • • r1 m . J>I RLl1 l"ulfl' • " SICIETARY-
Dealership o r foreign 1800 Park Newport 1121:; I 'v'lon fo11 ' m1t M,.., '"H r' P 3li ~ t" e d ,. ti I o r b u l>) u .a.Rl(ETl...al'!.. auto parts experience ·'I rm l't.~ 1 , • J .. \ .sliO ~.,, r liedch invest ~ "w
preferred. Call Glen for Newport 8Parh HJ\!HORESSl';ll I l..iltf 1.,~ .•· h .. c· 1, 11"'1'l ••rm Ccxxl work
an appe>intmenl. You are the winner of lloo(h space for 1 (•nl .,, 1k\·crl>· 7..,,.1;()6() I 111~ •ond1t1on:. & all (•om Newport Be arh ba,ed
construcuon firm seek
mg SC('retary lo support
mktg dept Good
verbal/wri tten c om
mun1cat1<rn & l ypinR
skills. Opportunity for
('areer -m1nded 1n
dlvidual. Xlnt benefits
Send r~umt' sal11r) his
tory E O €
ROY CARVER l free ticllm t::mployee with follow p.,ny henef1ts 60wpm
ROUS ROYCE ($10.50 value), tn ing ooly At Tht> VillJge -------rrummum Need sharp
AND IMW Sports Vacation Faire in Laguna Hearh Models. female Sharp girl to start 1mmed1ale·
lrRVShow 494·160(). only F ig ure Xlnl ly Hrs . 19PM Sulary -~4~·644~-Jan3lhruJa n 11 money. 714 642 f.282 , commen:>uratcw /exper
Anaheim <:onvt!ntinn HARUWARF.SALES ~b fo'or detail:., t·all Cheryl
C"nl«'r Apply 1n person Crown 631·7475 ~· Babysitter needed to care
(or my infant in my
Laguna licac:h ho m l'
JOhrs twk Daytime
494~
,. II Mntel Tickets m !•S.t be ex ardware, 102.\ lrvint> RECEPTION S' rl
h W I rr Pl N San Clemente Inn Ex -c anged for r e'ierved 1 ei;11·1 a t.al ,\ I ,... FuJI Time Light typin" seals at the Lun'' ntion penen<""' night auditor " Center aheail ,{ timi• HOSTESS ''CH lSO position open & other clt!n<'al work
Apply in person 9;.m l<> Silver shaded t'ers1an
I lam 'Io n thru f'ri l • r I Standard Sho<'S. 30'17 So ma e"' ema e. S65 ea
Bnstol, C M -~ !7'l7
Silbcrun Artist
l':xpt>rienced o n Rt;,.,.,
All phases 497 1556
SUIDIYISIOM
ENGINEERS
DESIGMERS
DllAFTSMlH
I' 1-: R S I A N k 1 t l e n .
bi:auuful while long
hair Champ lines
~.93()3
OOCJI 8040 .......................
Kl':F...<;HONO<IMlps AKC
Champ sire M F Pet &
s how Pv t pt y
2l3 007 1345 art 6 pm
Ch1huhua. Pomeranian.
York1es or Malt<-se pup
l>tl'5 ~I 5021
Chr1 ~lma PuppJt•<;
PRE LAW student needs
$25,000. Will do anylhmg
Le1al. Confide ntial
DVM. P .O. Box 3242. --------•I Call 1;42-56711 t•• t 2i2 I•> D H l ''''m'<h9t"I" A.opl)' in Ha s s on & As i. o <' EMICAY
('lal"" yourt1•ke1.· ay os •·i.~ pu,itinr: I Pt'n-t>ll to b rure ... m ul ~., 16:.l ·.. ~ .• ava1labll' Pt .. '~ apJll> O.•.ao,.-wt Co. Inc.
Career oppor \un1t1e<;
Ol\llllable rnr talented &
cxpenencc<I intl1' 1dual5
with well-est a bhi.hl'd &
,l?ro..,.'lng c·1\ ti e n1ot1neer
1nR firm nt-a r () C
Airport Apply 1n person
with rec;umt• & ~ ork
samples lo Mr i-·u l'nl {''
at Robert l.Jein Wilham
fo'rost & ''""oc1att'S 1401
1.2 u a II St '-i e "" p '" l
Ht' a ch
Golden Retnever AK C
Reg Sl75 760 0240 N.B. 921163.
TOMMY'S
OF NEWPORT
ESCORT 7~·9368
•FOXY LADY•
Otn'CALL ONLY
VISA MC * t72·1 IJI,..
AllAMTIS MASSAGE
SPA
Be Pampered
Be au l. G i r ls .
lOAM -4 P M 7
Phone64S·3433
T
()
u c:
A
by 16
O pe n
days
<:
II ESC:OllTS
7520817
I.
A s s
For a total r e lax1nR
ma11a1e with a pro·
feuional. Earle \OA M
Banking
TELLER
NEW ACCOUNTS
in per"111 ht-.1 ·1 1':.1 lus1u;.1· ... , • ,,, •' & RECEr'TIOHIST 1201 OoveSl Ste. 11200 ~'.l Lak<· 1 "'' •1 O• A Newport Beach CA 92663 Companion Hou:-.ekecper El1010 I u a• •I. " ,,.., ion l't!pt1r•111st w Rood Attn Markeung Dept to li ve with l!ld e rh I• mpur<>r) ...,1uwµ (' 111 I Vl)ln~ S1<11ls 11t·~ed for
woman_ CM ~ 328!1 . 1--------~-1 ~.. 1-:: lrl\' l>!l °" 11 ·wry yat'hl mfgr Oµp l~~~~~~~~~~I
,, • * \fall' & female Bas~el
ltCIW\ds 2 & l yr old. need
lc.1\ e & affectwn 646 1728
f\.lLL TIME• -Hotel 1 • l :." ad ~11 ccment !•---------
/
:.IWSPAPElt J>elH cry I :Liar" r nmmens urat<• ••SICIETAllES••
1
Swnehhoanl operdtor f°T'fftoYou 8045 •Host 8S) •,1.1., wl . M•t. apprm.I" l''tJ)('r c .. 11 ror apJ>l I FC/Mfg 1CptrsSl8,000 Part time \\'111 1r.11n ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pos1t1on available 1n our C009( l
So Coasl Plaza ufflc~ 1 for "'""" "ch nol ~:x E.rcper req'd Call Kathy I pcne1wed P:.rt ur full
Amburgey 540 4066 LI~ lninl' 5~1 4~13 I
I COOK CALIFORNIA Part tune in 1'11" cll r11JI j
s.!e~~.. * ;::: * I
1115TownCenterDr I Costa Mesa. CA 92626 P.'T. F IT EllJl ~r d. 1f
.. ~ft 1 o not-will lr ain /\pply in LAfua pportunity person Dick Churc·h '<, •~~~E~r:n~p~l~oy~e!'r~~~ R es I a 1· r a " l :! Ii 9 ll -_ Newport Rl"d.lM
Banking
TELLERS Cooks, I night shirt I s~
ing shift Startin!! C•ll v I
$6.00 pr hr 497 .;.\SK
r:..llTI /E 2 :K1 5.XIAM l\1taht"im 97~ Orde p Sw1m.:..,.kmh t142111l,I 1-'rrt k1 ll-!t u .... i..s .1111 "" ,_ •et l'ullerlOll. C Mf>)a r rocMfgS18.000 I '" "
'"R. nr OC Airpon Nice GO •OrderClkS14,400 TEACHER ~1428 t'H'S Port Time /01.oys I Irvine. Npt Brh. Cd M . R~ epllomst. P 1T morn GO, Rec '1'70(21$13,800 1·ule.1tray & gra) ""h1le
15.~lSllO .. phone personality & up Llz Reinders Agency I K' n d l' r gard e n F T •P Housekeeper u 'r-HT CLUI 4020Birch Esl ·54 ~oE pn\atp .. ,.n.,01. < • ..,, •• n ... ,,,nstma~ Pupp•t's ,et An::t' prarance a must Husy Newport/833-8190/f r("e f.42 11-111 H•r lab Lookrng for
fut!Tlrnt/f•u wants l\renserl armed phones Misc duties Nu guod b orn e No ft'e
Wt ,1r(I ;eek111~ r .. 1ahl•~ !>\<'ll11ly guards and ex lyping. Ask for t.aune WAITRESSES SM 81'•45
pcc'Oph• 011(•nte<I p~rsuns Jll'r boun c c:r~ only. 752-5tu_ ) Apµb bt wn !1/\M .s.
1-"nJOY t-xrpll1•n1 r 11 After ~PM . call Marty. R ece pti onist . N .H S.C,..+syto,rH 12PM Charla"~ Chill
b•"nc·rih mdudm ~ a Ir<'' 64.~0478 Arctutcctural firm. tYP· Sl .000 + D 0 E ~~I Redhill. ntd~ "2
mPal !)t'r .. tun t\pply 1n P"'ST.,.UP --Accur at e typtn)? no Ste =226. c: M ~ .. ·,..,<IO VAM Noon. ~on " ~ in~ & phones..: G4.P·6266 shorthand Mature, ~d ~·n Per~unn••I Pa rt Lime person n(>P.r1rrl ~ECEPTIOMIST dress appearanl'e Call
M>.RRIOTT t-40 . a If! book pa!!teup M'>n & • ult ti mP Mon Fr I Sandy, 540·6055. Coastal
!IJO Newport ( ,.n1 er :;; Tue:i 'lo J•-,.µ nrr A Pt> '\\ui.t be persunable & Personnel Agenl'Y, 2790
Newpoll HP.ich , I) Pr1 ny:i a~c1 lli60 well groomed. & enjoy HarborBlvd.,C M. 1-;c~unl Opp t-:m11lyr M ·r I l'l,1renlw Avl. CM meet.m g the public rte NEVER A f ~E E 0 f:.
l'HX qwres good spelling &
Wanted /\ru st to do ('on
tt'mporary oil l'ortraH
Will pa~ .,.ell 64G·l7J4
Women tu carr for t'ldt·r
I~ lad\ 11\t' 1n Sal
neRot1ablt' 642 H 'J:l .
54f!.J82t)
8050 .......................
.ANTIQUE
IRASSIEO
C irca lat• I 800's ,
compMttty refhtlsh•dC
$500. lncludH box .W. mtd rN1tren.
Cal Oft« 5 P·"'· l714 I
991-1411. ,riuh Expenence req 'd Xlnt
salary & bt>oefi\s. A.pplv
Personnel: •
tall .AGE IAMK
721 N. Euclid, Anaheim
9!H 386(1
EO.E
I lluu~··w1 1.es i.<.1pl)le IX'nmanship. No lyptnf.t
COUMTH HELP ,---------• nwnl )IO•tr huslland , Phone expe ru•nce pre Sandwich shop ;i.i1111 llHtl"I
1
'>al.•ry l'ltr' lime. fo'ull rnred Full company
F'r1 Hour-. nµl'n An l•m" po~ll inns ilV'it l brnefils l\pply P t>n
thony D (')1 JiKl!I NIGHT AUOl1 n11w l'all llar a nyi,;.ver.1r>6<t l'larenua
Secretarial WOODWORKER fap d * * * min 3 yr!> Hi yrs or agt• 40 hr wk for nRhl man SECRETARY I ~~ 6JH260. as k for
'crir·
**I BUY**
Banking Skypark, Suitt! A. lrv1n1• 1;411 11 tO '> r N 1 c k Ave. <>"I a Me'>a
S56-06'70. CLERK ~'>7_Tl77 RENTAL /\ \; F: NT s
PSYCHIC SECRET ARY COUPl.f; WA 1 t:LJ WP Me seeking u rch.i ---expt>r'd, full & part time
llADIMGS Exper ienced in loan Managesmull bUSIOC!l... hie ver.1111 with an Jp-,.x OPERATOR positions avail AudKt!I
556-1178 documentation. Xlnl Part-tlmi• W11ltram l1tudt: for C1 1:ures & Tdephone am. ~erv1cc Rent·A·Car!/7981126
7PM. 548·2117 ---------CLERICAL .
Opportunity ex1Sl!> for Mtrchaftdiw qualified typ15t m art 1ve •••••••••••••••••••••••
<'..ood used f'urnilure &
Appliances -OR I will
sellorSELLfor You
MASTHS .J.UC TIOH
64M616, lll-9625
salary & ~nefils Apply Call for :•µpl 646 327!1 calculntur )kith tu w11rk Day & eve shifts open
SUNNY'S Personnel Director~ Ntl(lll ud1t En JOY "" I Will~~~ 547_-564_~· Restaurant
Professional Massage tBITAGE IAMIC Couner ~pply h1•1 !!AM ccllcnl co tienef1 t' in __ m:1 _______ 1 Counter hel1>. Defl m:in.
Relaxation/Ther apeutic 721N. Euclid. Anaheim 12PM Chai 11 ·" Chill llud1n$: a rrf!e meal l"'r PBX Short order l'lerk We
Call appt. 548-2817. 991-3860 :.x>I Redhill Bid.: ?. Ste ~hifl Appl} ''' pnson PRXJ)bC'DIJ tS-Oto\..~ you. Call 675 2193 •t=-====u~>a~m!:.~7-~-~·==:1.·-=-=====E:..:..O~E=-'=. ===:-:+;:;;226~. ~C;;M.::·;;M;.3u;;;~• he lb v•s 'JA :\t onn Mon f''ri J:UA OR ,_ -orover ;must n~f.2'-t•rrsrmrw fRe:itttuNmt
•••••-••-• •---------dys pr wk Tue:. & Thur-; MARRIOn HOTEL f\.ill &-p7iime po~illons ·wmtrel>S, bus boy. cook .... C~y Bankin~ 8-IOhrsprwk OOONcwport CenterlH avail for r <>liablP helper, kitchen helper. ISCOITS .( .( .( Newport 8'•actt pc•r-nns Wllh pleasant & dish washer. 1·ash1er &
Delivery ror offl l'e ~up .. ;qual Opp Em1>lyr M I F <'Cf•r irnt phone mann.er. hostl!S:. Lunch & dinner
atffra. &41·0180 Mote plies. 25.40 hrs per wk N1~ht shifts w trotatinr. h o u r s a v a I I a b I e
C•/CMcl&a Good dnvinK rt'cortl & -v.l.'r kcudi. l.nJuY ex Rcstuuranl npt!n1 n g
MllpjMCLVIH Tell~rs knowledge of oc 1\irport 11o u sr.n.1-:ANEHS <'cl !'Ot co bt•nPfi\!> 1n· soon R.'\5 3331
•·-~!!!!~~~~!-~-~~! ~ · - -hirelr. J\pply -rrt t>l!r!lon SI ar\ 1mmed. Full or t'
11!1!!1g 8 Ir<'!! meal.per _ _ _ -~
-::--Career oppe>rtwlttles '°'" RippJe.. Ofllcr-Supply. part tune T1.1p. dollJr-~ 1 t ROUTE DRIVIRS •~ COt•A f AliLITY lndMduals with t yr ex-2915 Redhlll. c M G13--0!IGS. M&-4811 MARRIOlT HOl'EL Wanled ror n t>w s nack
UFESl'YLESOCIETY P e r I e n c e i n the ---· 900Newport Center Dr. I o o d prod u c l s ~Only 7..,.r..7 .. documelltation and ac. Dental nurse. cha1rs1rle. NewportBeach Deliveries to local
SClllenOnly 7;():()677 oounUngoC installment. pedo. non smoker, exp HOUSECLEANERS Equal OppEmplyrM IF s uper markets from
SCI Ladies Only 971.7979 rul estate and com -pref. but will train rifolhl ToSS,hr. c11 r 645-5123 HUNTINTON REACH
Recorded Message 24 mercial loans. inter est person. 644-0611 Npt Ctr ---------•I PHX ra<'to ry. Perm a nen I Hn. and collateral calcula-11 k 1 1 ... , ... en•• .. 0 you w"nt lo position. ref's req Good
INTRO SPECIAL
JO'STIC MASSAC E
MASSAGE SlOW /AD s.. Ana sse-4656
COVER GIRL
•OUTCALL • m4ml MC /VISA
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
P.ty-..Cen. * f72-IJ41 * llC Ii Vl8A Accepted
lions. Calcula tor a nd DENTAL ASSIST ANT ouse ecpci 11 iv •n """' .., " u dr i ving r e(' or d
t y pin g experi e n c e Skier preferre'1 . vx "'ork for !111•w1.10rt •Ju .. arn extra dollars'> (714)841!-lOOO
needed. Upon comple · per'd . fl r xihle h rs µIt'. rers 11t>t.•1:kd Cull Work part u me No ex--
Uonofa3months lrain-645-7~ 700-m4~> per ne<"essary Regular Sales -H i F i Compo·
i ni program , in -1 N C U M 1-: T J\ X raises & cu hrnd 1ls nenls Salary . xlnl
dividuals will be placed Dental R ~ Call Clara 640 IJlO or future C.M. area. EOE
infullUmepositions. Chairside Dt:ntal A11.-1s r EPAHfo~IL .it · Ntck 557.7177 MtF Call MF. 11 ·2on
tant, 4'1'1 day work wc~k pcnencl'<i Hourly rate"" P ENSION · I Y M r Pa u I s en .
Excellent sala ry, out .
s ta~ding b e n e fi t s
packa1e and congenial
working a tmosphe r e .
For more information
please call :
Slllrtey Monttl
714-973-3724
bonus 540·018i 96.l-:;634. ~ ADMINISTRATOR 213~~· ---
JAMITORS Ins company M ature ~--------Domestic
C0Mf'A"410H
Assist elderly person.
live-in or out.
131·2009
f'ltune eves. Npl . C M Exper req. N e Xlnl Sales
area Must he over 18 & ...._..r. E o d US citizen Call :>32-6558 u•:maits. · .E . Sen re· HOTEL "IA SHOP Mon·f''rl sume to Classified Ad a 8801 , Da lly Pilot Peopleoriented.reliable
L>eital Secretary • 1--------1 HwlMeMll• haeh for head o1 (lrm Min ~ 5
Newspaper . P O Box person needed to work 1.560. Costa Mesa . Ca. evening ho ur11. Should
92626. ~ sales oriented and
'~Wm.~ ......... :-Fw Ad Actjln
cal} I
yrs . Calif. o p. H vy
responsibilities, xlnl
ba1uc 1Jltills. Qualified
mly Sue· 714-847-6041
Picture Fram er. Ex·
perienced. Part time
A.rt World Frames. 656
-No. Coast Hwy, Lag.
able to operate cash rf:
gister. Enjoy excellent
company beneflu. APP· ly ln person IAM-Noon ,
Mon·~I. Personnel
MAlllOn MOTIL
900Newport Center Dr
Newport Beach
Equal Opp ltmplJr 11 /F
Jimw..-.. 1011 .......................
Wetktad tompa ·
tr;-'!o•••k••P•r; nllable.collel• f ... Call A.MWet' .. -..1an.1e1.-o. . _,,.
lliR~•toMllT a lfted .. clolt•ell.
. ·-, , , .. "' ...... ,,.. .
WELLS
FARGO
BANK
Equal Opp Empl m /(lb
-- -~ -'-....._ -----=
Daily Pillt
Al-VISOI
&42-5511
Lev•ISt!cretary
Busy N .B co r -
porale/real est ate office
n eeds exp Legel
Secretary lmmed. Word
Pr oce111ln1 . Carman
Bch 494-$105.
Production PartU~. Mon 2:30PM·
finish , Tues 1 :OOPM rinl.st\. Will train Apply
leflO PlacentJa Ave. C. M . '7~9102.
C.ll l42·5C78 0-.. -lfted Ads Sell tH\ngs fast with Daily ___ M2-S878 PUol Want Ads
t .\ . ... -. .. . . .
.,,. ' -=--~ • -.. - . --~ - --·-·-
Sell with EAS ~:
It's a BREEZE
Classified Ads 642·5678
of<' Shorthand & dtr· AHfi .. 1 1005 ta phone helpful. En JO.> •••••••••••• •• • • • • ••• • •
excellent co benefits 1n BRASSI rludlng a free meal per •
stufl Apply 1n person Al l(IRchll
9A M·Noon. Mon-Fri 1... &.L.--..a •• ~ -M"" CHt.~·~--.--tt r.TS-0
MARRIOn HOTa portholH, ..... , ••
900NewportCenter Dr. gaugea. bl•11aclet,
Newport Beach c o"' p a t a • t , a " d
Equal Opp Em ply r MI F l'llDAH Al eutlM•tl~
) ~ lwcn1 ....... fioRal•• cash,...,..,.,
.5ecrei¢e) -_Cluic1tl ..ty I fOO'sl brn1
bed. co.pl•tely r:e·
fW.a-cl! IR HCl'httt
CORdlt I 011 ! ! L ...
llOO't. pwchaw •·
chides box s,rf•CJ••
aRd -ttr•u. Jnt 1 ..
T1-for Chrfst-s!!
Call afhr 5 f' .M .
Pri•ah f'arty C714t
HM411
SKI
SEASON'S
COMING
WOlllC TIM .. OIARY
JOIS Ii HAVE SSS
FOa FUH THIN«9S
IN UFI!!!
Al Office Slitls \~pc Royal Dalton Flow
Blue Jug bas10 set, circa
1880 S\400 firm. By appt
only 536-5086
•
IW1ct.d. ..
•llST JOIS
-*llSTPAT
A P P L
TODAY!! Y1-------WE.5TMINSTER
VICll HESTON
&~SOCIATES
18004Skypark Blvd.
Suite ZS5 Irvine
540-0400
MOTICI
bow Daily Pilot Class· lfted ads display their
meua1ea with le&lblUty and Impact? Our ads ,
~ an proud to say, re-all1 1« results. Phone
M2·5171. I
. --.:
ABB EV
AN'TlQUE MALL
Daily lH. Fri 10·9
Closed Tuesday
11751 Westminster Ave.
Garden Grove 554·6103
-r --. -
Mo•lftcJ Abroad
Elegant custom de
s ign er co ntemp
furnishings <Houseful 1
Som e an t iques .'f~red Chris.~.~~
ltlfts at xlnt sa\'in1ots Ex
ample . $3000 whale
modular sofa for Sl500
Turtlerocl< 752 5920 --Matrh1ng Des i gner
Couch & Chr like new
Sacr. S47510 BO 645·1064
Girl's ~JX". White f're11ctr
··l>rovenc1al Bdrm Set
Good Co nd $350
963-1932
Couch. good s h a pe .
e.arthlooes. 6 ft. best of·
fer. 494·5890
Bdrm set. dbl bed. 1 Matt.
box s prings. fram e .
hdbrd I t ri pie drssr
w1mir ror. nite stand.
Brand n e w . S4 00
IM&-9472
K1ng-s1ie waler t>ed
Complete naugahydP
frame . h~adboard &
heat er 675·6328 or
640·4000 ext 1!6 125
81"\ice.
DIVOICISAU
8' Custom desi&ned sof• + S' lo\•eseat, loose back
pillows, new 1975. king
sz waterbed w /vibrator
& actts. $22SJ S2·9893
Must Sell! Buul new
Queen SI sofa bed $250
496·0246 evenings /
weekends
...... , 1070 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
l4K.G. \Opt Dlamond
IUo•, la lOK.G. w /Jade •e.tUnc trade for piano
}
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11
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to7o to1o••u•••-1010 ...... ..... .... 1 ..._ • ....., tlto
•••••••••••••••• •• ••••• ••••••••••••••••:•••••• •••••••••••••••••••~;·• tM. S..-.. 1091 Clilaaict 9520 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Man 1 It Kt ) ello111 l(uld tt•r)'l'I• repalnl~. re ••••••••••••.•••• ••• ••• • ••••••••••• •• • • • ••• •• • • bra~ In nuUt'I lttll le•e .. le .. t 1·o iHS vultit)' wh .. ei l d venl TV lftodel 781 A U B U K N Ph ae ton
lW"«i ('\Ub ltn~ mu1u1 ~'Od Wrl'Wtlfltt you IO\". \'hlllr. hyd ~·tlenl un. lyr old, mu.l ••1112000 ~·~· .1935 ~lanlr In& Umm in width " l•iuquM vi 3U mulll rol 11&nln& tabl h ·la 79-0719 ~ca by Calif Custom ~h Sf.t·ur~t wllh ia ort••I ht< II urn b• lluont. " no " l'l 1 C oach N t! v er r e
l'onr u lrd bn• , lop Utd ••lh nbbon ft your fW1 tJrn l3" 8 1k/Wlute RCA T V g\St~t>d U11t~d for s how
W\UI • t1cu1tt 11 ut .. h '""" ~rMK111 '""11111.. C ... STMAS •ins Portable Beaut p1c cu only ' lhrgaaned
rlup Tol al • .,111h 1 1~ l't'rfr1 t to1 '" l'r) or \I rt It tu.re IOO $40-3790 , pn ccd' Sc-e Jam Ru•<' br -, .. 1u11 W1• Lil'll\C't a oua •m• Bemu.• A~he 'fheodot t! -pt'nnywf'r1thtt "'' 1171 Miii M$)13l '78 24!nith Sol St 17" R ob in ~ fo'ord 20ti0
praiM!d uv•r U OOu ~rll 0 •• ,.._ I p T V lla rbor Bl vd , '"o"t " ,ur Sllil'll._.. ..... ~. W C N ... , R A l R • lo!. S .... m """'lro Ort " ~ ..
ur ._, .....,. ti\tlldll) l'MI) H,., IVt't> SPRAY<'. OU'ff'l'f. ~ 4800 $18S S41·~29 •ft i P M !'!~ .. '!,,call G42 0010 ur
--••••••-•) l\i1Jll•>11 ',.1i:., \ir<lnd) PSI t Ele<'l fl <'l 100 h ~• ..... .-.a..._ "'"""°"' Mu'• 14.K ullo• cold 1111 ,.,, loJ c: )()(.! ra::: • _. n.n 1114 •tth l•nt' II 111 ""''' 1\11< h1•11 holit' W1t1~1wr Gu.n •• .... ,.. ..
t 11r1tl t l anda1d rvuniJ 1 ·~1 1 1 '1IM 1Utl:!!> t'UlliJ C 11 11 (.rel( ••••••••••••••••••••••
t1n lHan1 , "' 1t1.111H•111l '11.,.~, tot 0
and t'llh\ "OJ ... , .. , M1.1tl(JlliUI\ 1111111111 l .ihli N ... vd ltlllJJh ll M a r kt-I
ruun!I \l lll(l r 1 ut l.lri.~• 1111111•111111 •1nk 1:r .. al fo:111·a1.1t•1t 1i1111111•
d ' 11 m on II • 1 1 o 1 • ' In~ W I p1.., .... 11~ Call 645.IWBS
Wl lT'illti<1 h10. 1111111 ''' 1,.,, 1-:n •. o1 1l Ill.Ju 11 "ttcrllpm urwkt•nds
\'\~ l .. rnlu1 11111dr I I •lt1lm1J clout Im ""J ll
"111 ... ,.11 1td f11l1,11l l' '"'' (\·\Olli $1Ho LJ ..... 1 .. 1
1.1 ~ frl '\,'\4! Otl~ •Ht 11110 M1 t )ll2 l M
---------•N l-~'l'\lltl llo .1111 l t•11
'>tahnlJ liurn .. m llul
tt'n;~ for~~ Ill ~ H 'I \
1n jl ~~V Ull• $~11 r-,1
'II ...
....... "' I071 .•••.•..••........•..•.
llh t lull 1111"1lih•·1 tuµ
I.Cl ~7J ......
SabriAa Y etardc
706 "" rown:wnd ~.mu •\nJ
•\ 01J •re the wtnn ... r uf
l frHticbts
1SlO ~ \'llluel lv
Sporn Vac~Ofl
& IV Sttow
W NIED Good used
u\uttrnlly clothes. i.11t•
&-10 MS 2203 art 6PM
I HO MOOR T•AIM
'vmpl\'ll· l..;\'OU I <!
I-111t1 ,. .. ,. Uc'> l ''' r
.{JO 7~1
SI 1dc t>roJ~rtor '35 Tm v:s
r.i.> .. 1u:h G re) Button
~.111 S5 t'lH'h Slt!cpin"
Bal<($..'> ~!:I 7~
H1.,,·hm·r JUSt hkt• n1•w
$75 OHO
* * •
Loretta Foa
5152 Heil /\ ve #5
lhmtml(lon "4!11d1
Yoo are the winner of
3tr...tfchts
1SIO 50\l ltllue i. tu s,ort. Vacotion
& RV Sltow
J1111 3 thru J an II
l\nahe1m Con\'cntmn
('cnlt'r
T1t'kt't:. mu:.t bl' t''<
l'hanKl'd for re:.er vl'd
seat.:. at the Con \'l'nt1-0n
<.:enter ahead of llmt•
Call 00 567f!. ext 272 tu
cla im your t1l'kt.'ls
* -*
'46 Ford Woodie. resto red
$13,000 Al..'30 29 M1)(1c_.1
A Town Sedun. 4 dr.
n~iored l<h·al tor s tu
cknt $10.000 675 6161
Won in C0tttest I
Kran<J new rc1>rodu1·tul11
of l!l:.tl Mo<lel I\ For<J
f'hUl'!Vn l'OllVl'l'l1 h l1•
\' ll, auto <llr, P S. I' ~
~tt'reu IJt lllllt', 1·11>.1
s:io 1:1::>11 hy k 1·pl1rJr-.
l\t~t 0Ht•1 l'n\al•• p.1r
Iv 17111fi4fi!J514
1'1711 \• .1hhu1
l.1•a1ll'•l
HJI Jo.lit
• ;,1 l'nr-.t'ht' 1·11111 uu r ~
1•orlfl llt'\\ \rJn-. • llJ.:
'l!.!oll IOI 1·t1 711i 04f2
95501 ....•••••.•..•...•.....
T111 llllar
hill for Your Car!
~SOM&SON
U.C•Mercwy
aa8Harbor Blvd'.
Costa MeH S.0-~
W•Pey ,,,_
OVER .........
f'or Your Good
VW. Porst'heorAudi
C'h1C'k Iver logo
VW·PORSCHE·AUDJ
445 E. Coast Hi way
ut Bayside Ori ve
Newport Beach 673·0900
Premwm pnC'es
paJd for any used <'11r
• fore11rn or dome st1c I
111 i:oo<t cond1t 1on
~Us First '
NIU lt,11 l••I lllltl
I_,' I ,,. • .. , ti 510
T'*Ciay, Oeoem~r 23. I 980 .•• ,.rt.J . ~ ....... t..,.,+td ;;, .............. ;·;;· -;;;::;:.· ...... ;;;·
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
'79 Spyckr, blue, PQWer '75 CAM'H
windows . AM /FM Ntce1(1Jl5M2)
cauette stereo, loaded. · Hitt ~= includN . 17500. • ~ MOWMd
'76 Flat X19, xlnt condi· ~ VOUCSWAGIH INC
lion. 14.000/~at oCfer. 534-4100
SSH501 13731 HarbOr
'727 Garden Grove ...................... ----VISIT YOUI '73 VW Bug, xlnl cond
OIAM61COAST
HONDA
HIADqUAITEIS
TODAY!!!
UMIVllSITY
SALES•SERVICE
OLDS MOii LE
HOHDA
G>MC TIUCICS
2850Harbor Blvd.
13.000.
548·6446 ---'7tlAlllT
Autom atic . 4 doors (TI2126l
S54tt
mwJt Mowa'ld VOll(~WAGIH INC
534-4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
COST A MESA p a r t i n g 0 u t ! I 9 74
540-9640 Volkswagen Rug parts
-----for sale 641·9157. · Wa nted H o nda c ar
1970.72, N-600 with blown
engine 531·8801
'78 Honda Cwcl' Wagon.
VW parts. '68 le(l & right
door. '73 lefl dour S50
each S48 9744
a m/fm s tereo. $3800 VW Class 10 Car . trailer.
ti ROl'~IJ 110\, Mod t>I
t' 71 5 Po"'l'r l.irth
-'u&er ~1 t h ti dt 12
Auger:. l'at't.I I hou1
COit '670 'ell for $4!:1!1
d.)l °'94 64\1 Hl5 Wantl'ri ll onda r ilt 770-7014 eves xtra tires.toolboxes,a 1r
hlK•l••CMn tOIO
OA.IL Y PILOT Cl} '
I #
9tll • •••••••••••••••••••••• '7~ '80 Many extras.->'.Jt~
t't!fuiuce. you take no down_~4373, 892,55'1
a...... t.tJO •••••••••••••••••••••••
Would You Un ve •.•
A Llttle Fl.I rt her .:
To Save A Hundreo .•.
Dollars "'."!??''>??~
Call U$ Today "
for More DetuilsN '"·'
~" ~Pi~f~·:·
900 So. Coast Hwy.
LOIJIMCI l.ach
494-113.
SEE US FIRST!
We ha ve a i,:ood seleN100
o ( N fo; W & U S lo; L> • ·
O\evrolets'
COMNRL
CHEVIOUT
.X)l ll<1rbor Hl"I
1 ·c ISTA MES.\
54~1200
·71 C:a p nn• '1 d oor .I.
Owner, 32K X IAI r•>flli...,
S3SOO 673 0317 .
...•••.•...............
Jan llhru .I .i.n I I
'\nahe1m t'onvt>nl ion
1 Ccr\tt-1 1<1·.~ooablt' ru"~ foe SJll'
'l'H'kt't!I rnu~l bt• n: 1~15 l<t'd $60. !lxl:! Kcd
7b <..:.h.e.rllk.et! C.h.td
S6,00U or bl'c;l 11ff1•r
~2 'fl!J3 11170 72. N tiOO ~ 11 h hlo~ n K__i., GL.t.-97 3 .. compressor. SI O.OoO in l•ngm1• 531 llllOI --,.._ .. vested. $4000 642 2434 _________ _,,
••••••••••••• • ·~ • • • •• • • dys 964· 7294 e e Monte Carlo UJG.(9AGI 'JACiS l'h,rng ... d tor re~l·n 1·11 "'m:u:k $411 839 1~s
r rom y our b us 1n c :.i-:.euu. a t lh1· l'onvl'ntwn
card Send one card for Cent~ uhcad •Jf 11mt·
ea<'h tag plus one 1tp11re <'all 64:! 5678. ext tn 111
We return perma ne ntl)' da1m your t1l'kets
l'ouch l>IUl'. re do1w $1\)0
Shdving u1111 6x 7 $-11>0
,11.13 81128 Eve W~·d<e·nds
:iealed attrart1 ve I ug & * • •
strap. meeting a 1rhnt• "14nical 1 es el (i c n 1•,. a 111 r
1.Q. reqwremllnts P rt• IJ111•r fur 'l'oyula t r u<"k tm..._ith 8083 KOllLl':K 20 KW \'\•rv
vent 106s & thd t ' fo'or ll 1>hurtbed , fr ts '7!* ·~u 'HI •••••••••••••••••••••••! good Pnk1ns 4 154 111lfio
persooalite<ltag cnl'I01>t.' nl'ar nt'w 49137l6 L"ONN O•rt!Clor trombonl' hours. runs le~1> lhun •,,
wallpape r . r'i brct· or , with. 1· ase to: u · e 11 en~ I nl'w l"OStli<IS. 7098, "Day Glo" paper & we 4 carved wooden India n, condition. $100. fl7S l!OS2 ~
will back & trim your unly $3IXI! aftl'r6PM ,Powtt 9040
tags. Or t ry two cardi. 640 8688 ··•••••••••••• •••• • •• •.
back loba<'k Ma rshall .100 wall s uper nt buy: 16" Glai.~trun .
P RICES f:ncly l:lnt.. n('w. sac lt"ad br~in . 1977 m odl•I supt'r fr1>hinl! or .l>kun~
S2 ea or3 '15 World Book & J r & Looks hke ne w lfardly I SUip Mrrc l hr> J uhn,on.
415tags SI 60 ea Great Book sets 731 1420 used $650. lbanci eler 673 5340
6t9tags SI.SO ea l RV lNE COAST GO Lr lnr guitar. Profess1on•1l IOor more $1 40 e11 , model with Tree or Life
Sales Tax Includ ed MEMBl!:RSHIP Sl200 gmng up lo the nec·k
· Etta.krbur S r.l()rl F1i-
her 2 mos old h><i1kCI. ii
lnl':.-~ fur1:es sa It' 11:.tll 1953 NO CAflO" 49'J 3l29 I Woodgrain body w11h
Draw your own or send RlB>EltlCICS: ~!r~ .•.• s6hell case $500 name. address. phonl' & ~-...... • Sail 9060
we'll make o ne card Pl·r T,.......s of -•• .. •••••••••••••••••••
tag.Add W each I TheOriet1t Gui t a r Ta k arn1111• NF.WPORT M()(JHJN(:
Send check o rmoneyur A nn ual 20 •, o ff w case, 5 yrs old, hkl' &28'S/\I L Bil/\T
der to · (.'hr 1s t m a s & Jan new $175 645-5916 642 6335
PtLOT PRINTING clearance sale 30"t off it OHi Fw itu & l..1\Sl-:R 13" used n·ry ht
P.O. Box 1560 bought with US Silver ~ ~.. r• 1015 lie hkt• new rond $~511 Costa Mesa. Ca 92626 coms Current rate paid ..,..,....... 6 ' Specials excluded 31787 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '4&7098
St-;LL idle ite m :. with a
Daily Pilot Classified /\d
Ci1m1n o Ca p rs t r:rno . Royal Mdl 60513 e lcl· '80 llobie <.:a t Xlt c·on.
S J l' 6613933 tr pewnte r. <'arbo n & rare r 1gRe d extr;is
ribbon SISO 1!30·3174 $3200/0HO 968 :\113!1
W!X\t-to TW\
()('I tX-t b tA-don't
~ve-firre-to~
b~ -tf'e phore 7
Use Answer Ad service
when placing your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number will
appear in your class ified ad
. we take your messages
24 hour s a day ... you ca ll
in at your con v eni ence
during off ice hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
this service i s onl y $7.50
week. For more informa-
t ion and to place your ad
call 642-5678 .
Pets 8017 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Doberm an 5 mus red
male. /\K<: s how dog.
trained, shots, etc. S750
760-8688
Grey Button Quail
S5 Each
549·7565 ------
C9IOI & 0nJ91S 1090 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Yamaha S pinet ()q~an
like new, dbl keyboard.
Sim 957-0261
Lowrey Orga n 24 pedals,
Le s l i e s pea k e r
. Slips/ Docks 9070 ...•..................
SLIPS /\VAILABt.t-:
20' 10 45 '
631·1900
MARCUS CHAHHEL
S75t mo SIDE Tlfo.:
Upto l8' 673·81 45
, StoreNJe 9090
Cherr y wd ca b $1000 1 at11poriaHon
0 80548-5683 ········~;:;j········ 1
• Rocio, Reilt 9120
.. A. S~ t091 •••••••••••••••-·•••••• •••••:••••••••··~.·••••• 'Tl Aluminum cm pr ~hell.
Beautdul RCA 25 color bubble windows , w /bool. ~· 2 yr wmly, free de· xlnl cond. $275 964·7396 livery $124. 646-1786 -----. Motoria.d llllH 9 I 4 0
In Troub le Solid Oak •••••••••••••••••••••••
Upright. perfect shape '79 Motobccane VL/\
$2400 value $1600/0 BO Xlnt cund $49S
fi15· IS02 675 7272
VfR VHS 6hr 7 day pro·
gram remote. $800.
673-48311
Ma gnavox Re<'<'1ve r
w turntable . 8 t rac k
p l a yer Tw o (arg e
speakers Sl25 or best or
Adult Elcr 3·whl bicycle,
xlnt cond, needs no ga~.
no tuneups_ Re.!>l offer
qver S300 S59· 1336
Pcugot Mop rd S'250
<iood Cond1t1on
/\fter J P M 642 1353
fer Call C7 M > 673 5796 Daily Pilat Ask for Ed ~~;:11 '' 50
"----------~--------~l \\'11111 \II l<1·-.ulh Ll2 f>ti7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
<llRlSTM/\S SPf.CIAL
6 Motnrryrle!> & ;1 5 ~•kl'
Trailer S 11JOO 1;45 fi4611
'75 ~Ml 21 Ka~ nt•"'-ti n •:.
hrk~ Sl'11111 M•H 11111
Must St>ll 7~1 111:16 /\ft :'i
XR 7 5..-1225
646-1 145 fi41(1i255
·77 ll artc·y S port1>t er
Need s liltlt•, M l 'ST s F, I.I. Mak l ' II fr c r
545·1914
·w Yamaha XS<IOOb' WK
miles. Ba ckrest & new
ti r e s min t ro n d
SJ.2:JO/OB0 . &M 1'4111
'76 llONDA S50 4 shrcld,
raC'k. hclmeL<;, xlnl cond
$1000 ~5 2600
'80 Honda min1tra1I 711
good cond. $450
645·3225
Wo Seniu, Parts
& ACCHIOri•s 9400 •••••••••••••••••••••••
$SAVISAVES
WITH USID PARTS
Imported car pa rts
IMPORT
AUTO SUPPLY
101 N Manches ter
Anaheim 776·9900
····················~·· IMPORTANT
NOTICE TO
READERS AND
ADVERTISERS
IT'S EASY! Look ror your name and 1ddrc~s in today's
d asslfied wctif'>n. U you find it, call 642·5678 Exl. 272 and
we will ar range for you to pkk up )'Our tkktts at the
The price ot Items
11dvert111ed by vehicle
dealers In lhe vehicle
cl•u lrled advertising
columns d oes not In·
elude an)' •PPllcable
taxe1, Ucenae. transfer
feet, llnance char1ea. reea for air pollution con
t.rol device certlricatlons
or deeler documentary
Tn.clu 9 560! '70 Ghia . cle :lih .' ne w _:_ v !'> MUSTSELL!!
••••••••••••••••••••••• Autos lmport•d radials, xlnt cund, $3400. '77 Bug S nrf. lo11d t'd. .72 ROOCI nin<l. i.!~•u<I ~.,v;:·
'76JEEP JI O •••••.'••••••••••••••••• ~2-3744 new brakes. e x. run rndt:a~t" t..ikl':-. i i•g1.1l.,ir '.
PICK UP GeMrol 9701....;;~a. 9740 rory<f-$4500 642 Hl-03 •lr <.'1tll ror <i Vl>l tu .. .,,:
i\ u t o rn a t 1 l' • s " 11 k ,. • •••••••••• • • •••• • •••• • •z SJ&.3590 968 SH80 w.hecl~ Jnd ~ 1dl' I If"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• · "· '
101!T75t11 • • * '71 Bug perfe C't p;11nt, Imm--------..-.
S3489 lhflma Yeaw. •Ml 79 450SL mt. am 1rm. reblt. St~so
COSTA MESA 3W<:osta Mesa !'>t 23K low m iles Laguna I 6'il 3!182 (.osta Mesa 2A mo. warranty
AMC JEEP You .cri> th1• winner nf (56370)
549-8023 3 fr~e ticbh Priced to S•H!
• 1910 CHEVY. mo so value i , 111 JIM SLEMONS
111 TOH HU LUY Sporh& RVV~aLcoatwton IMPORTS .-l(flO KARBOR BLVU • UTILITYIODY .lan 31hru.l <1n11 COSTA MESA ~or plumber!> & t•l1•1•1 n \naht.>im C'on\ 1•nll<in 631·I27 6
l'tans 15937 1 f't•nt1•r
ONLY $6295 1'11•k,·b 1n u-.t bt• ''"
HOWARD Che"rolet
Dove & Qua ll Sc-.
NEWPORT RE:l\('11
833-0555
·~ ~E. 4 spd, sunroof~
~
760 1861 or 760· I 125
VW '78 red rnnvcrl Bef•
tie, like nu th ruout. 111
rru, 16700. 546-5628
'70 Bug Xlnt ('nnrl
$1700
lf68·5275
·~Squareb111·k
Heblt eng. SI 1()(1 0 1111
645 1064
.. • *
Hick Helwan
219!H' f'111n11n;1 A"·
I '11st;1 M l''a You Jre thl' w1nnt•1 •ii
3 fru tic kets
tSlll 5AJ valut•I tu
Sporti Vacotion
& RV Show
.lan:Jthru.lan II
A11;1lw1m ('1m\ rnl""'
Ct•11t1•1
·74 C:oont'r m1· 1·h
f lSSO or lw:-1 utr ,.,
499 509 1
'lr1t
I' I'
1·hanJo?Pd fo r rt'M'r\"C'd
'''Jts .it lh1· t'Qn\ ('nt1on
l 't•11 t1T ahead of trmt•
C".111 642 ~7H. t.'XI 272 10
d;11m )llur 111 kl'h • • • 74 450SE. 47K m t. 1111
xtra.'>. ~upt!r clean
644.6449
'67 Bu~. ne~· dt·t1ll.'r l'n.I!
w1lh recc1pll. net'd-. lot'
c,QSmelt<" $1 0UO (lfl ()
497 5716 I
'fl! llus. ne"' cng "'1th n·
<'c1 pts . dt'pcn <l ablt•
d ean. ne"' urc~. $1750
497 5716
T1 r kd-. mu-.1 111· • •
r han)(t•d r111 11''''' \ •· r ~<'ilU. al lhl· I '•111\' nl•nn
l't•ntt"r aht·J•I 11f 1 rm"
('all M2 ~>ti"iH t'" lT.! 111
da1m v111rr t 1.-l.1·1 ·
·12 "'or(! •, t11ro r• rn µr
Sl)('('lal a11111 Ir.in~ gtl
<'nnd SJ H1111 O lio
fi4.5 512'1
'72 Couner , !{cl hotly . run:.
& ctnves Rd , vt•ry th•p1•11
dable <.:urn l•l•r 'h••ll,
$12!~ 641 3W5
I.Ha RC>tnr o 970 ..........••..•..•...•
LEASE
DIRECT!
1981 ALFA
SPIDERS
"78 ol50SLC. 30K m 1
p1:rfct1 car , every xt ra
644-6449
·73 280 Mer red es. lite ·oo VW SSK mt. xlnt 1·nntl
blue. mint cond. stereo. $IITTS fi3.'Hil 2fl
aulo. $7500 760·!1278
·79 3oo<.:D. 12,0011 '71 VW Bus, Clean. 1>nrr.
500 b rr m i . sleeper. S2700 O a}i;
S2l, or esl 0 er 6.11 ·2931 Eves 646·:.1371 BEACH IMPORTS 642·5392
1978 Da~un Tru1·k with 848 L>ove Stret>t 19804SOSL '68 VW Sqbk. Rood cond
Campers hl'll. F::1:C'l..'lle11t Nf:WPORT BF.A<.:H minor wor k need <'d
Shape. New Tires $3.999 752-0900 ~::is Mus t sell Make o fr
Call 831·6440 Sat & Sun 497·2779 Ke n
9am l pm Wl'ekdayi. A.Id 9707 MGe 9744 ---cn a alter &pm ••••••••. •• •••. ••. •• • •• •••••••••••. •••. • •. •••. 'llJ PICK UP rebll ,...
-----"7 1 IOO LS 4 do o r . '67MGBS1500 1700c <'.$4J00 v-9570 autoll'\lltic. air , am lfm. 645-2359 oftff 6 548 1300
••••••••••••••••••••••• Very clean. SlSOO Firm --Vol•o 9172
'74 Dodge 8100 Van. :.tl8 S43 1563 days 649 2988 0,.1 9746 •••••••••••••••••••··~·
V.g lspd . air, milRS, aft6&wknds ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOLYO $2181/0 8 0 Must Sell •~ 9712 '72 OP EL 1900 Wgn. Very ~.640-2355. .,......,. low a c tua l mil e s ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOMPG I t d A.llto. W.ted 9590 F"or the best d e a l 1n . · x n con 1· new
••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange County Com e Li.!:._~ SHJS 552-025 AHO LEASING
SALES. SERVICE
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR See Us Today'• P"'J"f 9741 OVERS~~~Ni~V ER Y
ro r lop used c a r s •••••••••••••••••••••••
foreign. domestics or ~ LE .&SE classics IC your car 1s 'I A EilLE IKE
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvcl
COSTA MESA
64'99303 540-946 7
ef1xRSTtra 1c lean . s et' us DIRECT.I
SADDLHACK
#I 111 Or~ Cowoty
292S Harbo-r Blvd.
COSTA MESA
979-2500
WEIUY
CLIAMCARS
AHDTIUCKS
CONHElL
C~"EVIOUT
2.1121! llarhor fih 11
c·c~T·\ -.. .. :S·\
54~1200
HIGH IUYER
Top dollars for Sports
Car .... BujiS. Ca mpers,
914"s. Aud i s ·
A'>k for tJ C M (; R
---,rM MAIUHo· -
VOLKSW.AGEH
18711 Bt-arh Blvd.
HUNTINGT ON ll F.Af'll
842-2000 ----
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOil
GOOD A Cl.l•t4
USED CARS!
VALLEY IMPOITS
lM02 Marguerite Pkwy
Mission Viejo
831-2040 495-4949
Closed Sund11ys
CREVIER
$1 SI & U OADWAY
SAH IA AHA
835·3171
111E UI rn .. 1[ DAIVINC. l .. (.Hllll
•USED IMW1•
'73 2002 COSSlll
'742002tll S/r 103321
'75 2002a ( 0035 )
'762002 s r 4sp 115781 n J20I sunrf air 132011 ·n 6 :wi l'SI auto I 0()401
Closed S.•days
otlAHGE COUMTY'S
OLDEST
~ales Ser vice Le asinl(
Row Car•er ,l11c.
Holls f<oyce BMW
1540Jam boree
N~"!.P.?rt_B!ach '6'0·64•~
1911 PEUCiEOT
TUll01
IEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
Por"SCM 9750 •••••••••••••••••••••••
"73 911T C IS . white.
black. s nrf. a ll "S " op.
lions 960-4942, 847·2736. --
'771"1 924 . 4 s pd, s unroof.
--
ORANGE COUNTY
VOLVO
E X C L U S I V .. : I. Y
VOLVO
Larges t Volvo Deall•r
in Orange County '
BUY or LEAS F.
DIRfo:CT
aml fm stereo. 2'6.000 mi. 10 120 Garden Gro11P Bt
xlnl cond. m us t sell GardcnGrovc5309190
7~-~ J
lolls loyu 9 7 5 6 1 Autos, UsH ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• #}DEALER IN U.S.A. Ccdhc 9915 ··•·•··•·············· ROY CARVER YOUI #I ~RO::..:L=LS"'--R"",0._,,Y=CC'-++_ CAOILI.AC
!Ste> JOlmbOru Db1.llSMfP'tM
,....,,,... Bu ell ORANGE COUHTY! \'-----' ..0-.... 4
ClOSlO SUNDAYS SALES. SERVICE
Sil ver Shadow , lon g
wheel base. royal blue
ext. lop. & inL 39.000 mi.
by OW!}J!r ~~_§3-,~~
7:>2· l.400 ex{ 236'7 Patty.
/\ND LEASING
NABERS (~ADI LL,~"f:
-------. ml Saab ----: t160 IOI McLAllN I •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
'78Gold Cpe DeVille
Xlnt cond. $6500/0 8 ()
631-7215
* * *
Chryiler 99 2 S
···················~··· 75 C "11rrluh<1 'ln1 1•01111
$ 3 , (I If 0 l1t•' l II ff I l
5."il 4501
9930
Conette 9 Ii ~~ . ••.•••..•...•......•..•
SHOWROOM COMQ..::
'75 T T OI' •
Pov. er brak e~. p11YH!r·
windows , po~1·r slet·ai~
v.l\h t ill lelc-.1•11ptl)1t
,lee r1n )! ~ht·1·I "''
A '.\1 t-'.\1 -.\1•rt>11 . I • •I
wrnd o ~ t.I e f o ~~ t• 1
automalH" trans Sno)"
while with Bur~und~ in-
tl'n11r :.>7.1MMI Miii'~ ~.·.
m ii (' u I ,1 t t• I h , II n u I
$H 1011 j .J I ";!Ill I
/\ns~l'r t\rl =.!11'1 1i 1:1 1:1011
;i.i hrs
l'hri~t ma ' S 11(•1·i;d ..,..,
Vi;.'lte, lu;iclecf "lnl 1·11nd.
$721111 1 7 1 1 175~ l)t~-<1 i
171-1 1~ 11'jJ()
~ 9935 •··••••···•············ '7 4 Charger
<:111xJ C'11nrl Nt•v. r •·lill
111~mt• C:uld hla1·k to 11
t dr t :1lt:>d !!a~ mil···•"•·
f 2 •>1111 o f r 5 ;14 -; '> 13
l'\l'i. wkmb 411 11 \\
Sunswepl St . Sant a \11 1
'11; l'ordnba ;111 I"'"• 1
lcat h1•r o;nd \\I I-\1
'\ll'rro $2~11111 11111 1
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FINEST
I.I~( UI.~ '.\1 EHl'I ll\"
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···················~ '79 DELTA W~rn 14,000
rru Many extras $1..500.
Ca ll 675 5292 miracle
mazda
2150 Harbot' ll•cl.
850 N Beach Blvd
LA HABRA
15 Mi. No. of SA 1-~wy I
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Late model Toyotas and v 0 J v 0 s . c; a 1 1 u s '78320!. lo mileage. s tereo
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----
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548·5612, 642 3273 Ive
meMage ----'720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
llACH IMPOITS
848 Dove Street
N EWPORT BEACH
75>-8900
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POl!floc ''~~ .......................
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w/ T·top & •••• c•to.lltftri~· ...... : Power steerin(I. bi'a).1 ,o;•
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leaaepayments. -----
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Dail Pilat preperat.ton charaea un· ,.,, -"°' 111.11
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gets big a iv a.rd
CllJ('J\CO I \1'1 J\ Circuit Court j ury has
,1v. arcled S!i I mill111n 111 civil cfamages to a 21-year ·
olt1 student nursf' who s uffen."tl permanent nerve
11:.imaft<' after she was rnped, stabbed and beaten
in 1976.
"WC' want th<' vc.'rdict to act as deterrent for
I hl' <·rirnC' or r<lfl<'." said the foreman, Thomas
~L The s1x m nri. six woman jury deliberated about
la minutes heforC' rl'turning the verdict.
Willram R .Jacobs ll, the woman's atlatney,
suggested only $1 million in punitive damages but
n~ked the jury tu determine what would be a deter·
n •nl to rapisL~
The Judgment came agalnsl Paul Murphy,
who ple:uletl guilty to the attack fo<ar years age>.
H e's now in a California prison serving time on
olhn charges The lawsuit "was to deter him from
ever trying ll> cont act her again." Jacobs said.
\ l
'· ..
...... "*-..---.. •• • ............................................. ...,,.,..,-. ......
AP Wr,.pnoto
NEWS FEATURES
Plan• book
C h arles
Veverka Jr., ex·
po I iceman ac -
4uitled of civil
rights charges
in the beating 1
death of a blackj Miami man. has
s ig ned a con -
t racl for a book.
•·
L.
-11111111 llllY PINI
1\11 ',,I.,. I\ t Ml\f ti. I I,;., OHAN(,f(OU N TV ·A : l~OH N IA 25 CENTS
County hacks doubling o~ gas taxes
8.J GLt:NN *-'01T ......... ..__
or....-Counl)' olftc:tabl uve
endotMd a plan lo replenish \he
atale's dwiadhna hmd1 ror
freew~ comtrucUon by &lmoit
doubbna aUoline tan• "' the next five years
Tbe proposal, approved u t.be
top priority ol the Oranae Coun
ty TranaportaUoo Commission's
legislative procram, would aJ.
low the St~te Board or Equaliza·
-coastal
fog to
• remain
Coastal residents can look
forward to more thick fog
toni9ht and Wednesday.
Dense Cog is expected to con·
linue along the coast through
Wednesday morning with partial
clearing expected by afternoon.
according to a spokeswoman for
the National Weather Service.
From Santa Barbara to San
Diego fog has socked in the
coast, closing all major airports
and forcing travelers to wait for
clearer skies.
Temperatures along the coast
are expected to dip to 44 to 54
degrees tonight, with slightly
higher temperatures projected
inland.
. Zero visibility from the dense
fog forced the closing of John
Wayne Airport early this mom·
Ing after some flights were al·
lowed Monday when the fog
lifted.
"It looks worse than it did
yesterday," said Dick Biggs,
spokesman for Golden West
AirJines. "It's a solid wall. I
don't think we'll do much to-
day."
Flight operations at Los
Angeles International. were can·
celled this morning. And fii&hta
fri1m San Francisco, San Diego
and Fresno were grounded.
Catalina and San Clemente
islands were the only coastal
areas not socked in by .rog this
morning.
Meanwhile, the California
Highway Patrol reported no
serious accidents as a result of the fog clogging coastal
roadways.
Traffic was reported moving
slowly through the fog shrouded
coastal cities, with no serious
problems.
Haig linked
to ' Ji-atergate
supression?
NEW YORK <AP) -Gen.
Alexander Haig, the secretary of
st.ate-designate, played a role in
trying to suppress incriminating
Watergate tapes and asked the
FBI to ignore wiretap rules
when he worked for the Nixon
Wbite·House, NBC News re rt·
ay. ·;->
The network's Washington re·
porter, Carl Stem, said Haig's
conduct, bad it been known at
the time by the Watergate grand
jury and prosecutors, might
have led to charges against the
pneral. -~· ... -
_"':..Halt wJls qot hnmediately
available for comment.
Tbe Detwork said the tape
matter involved transcripts
Nixon made public in April lt'74
in an effort to quiet demands
that be surrender the tapes
themselves.
According to Stem, Hail wu
told \hat the pretldent edited out
important passacea. lncludlnt
one from March 22, 1173, in
wblcb Nixon said: "I don't live
a . . . what happens. I wut
them all to stonewall it . . . let ,
lbem plead the Fifth Amend·
meat, cover up or an)'fhlna ebe.
lf lt wUl save it. Save the plan
. . . we're 1oln1 to protect our
people ll we can."
Starn Niel. "Recent accounts
of thel period indicate that Hale
told tbemtolean ltout. ''
Documents relatln1 to
.tretaps . lbow tbat Hall told .... _.... DOt-&o-folloW ..... ~
uJatacm be IDteW emted wbeni r.. lfMaOt tape on White Houle:
foel, N19C Mid. .
It dt.ed FBI memo1, mclUltinl ... bJ thln-4tnetor J . Sdlar ffoonr. u HJlDI tbat R:!S
waated naeNa1 m wrtuaa tlaat be ...... tM bm'ell8 to mu• tM tape wttboiUt WUbll the
J•Uee o.p.nmeat ud aetUnl
ltl nqalnd approYal,
lion lo ladjust ga~ lues annually
tu fund approved highway proj·
~cts
The new fw•dmg ~ystem could
raise ws much 118 Ma billion in
Uvc years. explained Nancy
Cosi Fitzwater . an ajde to the
traosportalion commission She
said the tax could go up as much
as six cents per gallon to raise
the revenue.
Thus, gas tax, now seven cents
per gallon, could become as
much as 13 cents per gallon by
1986 with the proposal .
Drivers filling l~eallon tanks
would pay $1.05 in state gas tax
more than they pay today.
Bespite this obvious problem,
s he said the system is con·
sldered an efficient means for
raising taxes because it is tied to.
the need for highway projects.
The system prevents surpluses
from developing, which she said
Nativitg driee-tlarougla
Youths of First Christian Church of Huntington Beach,
1207 Main St., play parts in six different nativity scenes
that may be viewed by visitors who drive through sets on
church's rear parking lot. Robin Schmidt pla~s M~ and
Glen Martin, Joseph in manger scene while Michelle
Surmons and Eric Shirley have parts. on trip to Betlehem.
•
~--.-:---,....,_..----------.....-... ~ _ _.._
can occur with other funclinc ap-
proaches.
mission members and aides are
prepared to tak.e the lead in a
statewide lobbyint effort to paaa
letislation to fanance more con·
struclion.
State ualyats have ,Projected
that funds for already-approved
freeway projects in California,
will be $1 billion abort ln five
years. In Orance County, that
means that bottlenecks such as
the lntercbante between the
Santa Ana and Newport
freeways won't be improved UD·
til more money is available.
"We don't think some of the
·statewide efforts are 1oin1 to
address OW' needs in sufficient
detail," she said.
freeway projects for rundint
each year during budge~
sessions . Although some
legislators might like the shift in
power, she said the proeosal
"might be too much of a
political hot potato" for the ma•
jority to support.
Because of that, sht! sitid the
county's proposal, when sub·
milted, probably won 'l be re·
Mrs. Con-Fitzwater said com·
The proposed funding plan
would place more control in the
hands of the state legislators,
who would rather review a list of <See FREEWAY, Page AZ>
Witness tells newspaper ·-'
Cult killed family
of ·HB physician
FA YETl'EVILLE, N.C. (AP>
-A woman who 'claimed a loss
of memory when called as a de·
tense witness in Dr. Jeffrey
MacDonald's murder trial now
says the deaths of his wife and
daughters were deliberate
acts oi .. vengeance by a satanic
cult, the Fayetteville Times re·
ported today.
Tbe former Green Beret was
convicted of the killings in 1979,
but the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals overturned the convic·
lion this year.
The witness, identified as
Helena Stoecldey, 27, signed a
statement acknowledgine sbe
was present when MacDonald's
wife and two daughters were
slain in um>, \he newspaper said
in a copyright story.
Quotin1 an unidentified
source, the Times reported Ma.
Stoeckley said tbe attack on
Collette MacDonald, Kimberly,
s. and Kriatea, 2, was deliberate-/ ly pl.-.cl by the "Black CUit to
wbicblbebelclllged.
MacDonald has maintained'
that four drug-crazed intruden,
chanting "Kill the pig" and
"Acid is groovy" had broken in·
to bis home, stabbed bis wife
and daughters and injured him.
After the military declined to
press charges, a grand jury
eventually indicted him and be
was tried nine years later.
The appellate court, in over·
turning his conviction, ruled that
he had been denied access to a
speedy trial.
U .S . Attorney James
Blackburn of Raleigh, who in·
tends to appeal that ruling to the
Supreme Court, declined to
commerit on the reported state·
ment by Ms. Stoeckley. Mac·
Donald's lawyer, Bernard Segal
of San Francisco, also declined
comment.·
In Washington , Jus tice
Department lawyer Brian
Murtagh, who has dealt with the
case since 1971, would not com·
ment except to say: "This isn't
the first time Helena Stoeckley
has confessed. If you pu.t every·
body in that room who con·
fessed, there would hardly be
room in there for Jeff (Mac-
Donald)." Ms. Stoeckley told private in·
vesligaton she had wanted to
ten the truth at the trial, but
changed her mind when a man
accosted her in a Raleigh motel
and warned her not to talk, the
source told the Times.
Ms. Stoeckley described her
involvement in the slayings only
arter private investigators pro·
mised her protection, and she
now is believed to be hiding on
the West Coast, the source told
the newspaper.
The source revealed these de·
tails about Ms. Stoeckley :
The 13-member "Black Cult"
to which Ms. Stockely. then 17,
belonged, decided to "punish"
MacDonald for his attitude
<See ooc.:n>R, Page A2>
Hostages
theme of
HB winner
An outdoor Christmas display
that pays tribute to lbe 52
American hostages in Iran has
won the sweepstakes award in
the Huntington Beach Christmas
decoration contest.
It marks the second year in a
row that Tom and Teddi Gold of
8991 Kite Drive have won top
honors in the contest sponsored
by the City of Huntington Beach
and the women's division or the
Chamber or Commerce.
Last year the Golds won top
indoor honors when they dee·
orated their Christmas tree
•~ .,,...... with teddy bears.
The display features 52 gift
wrapped packages. one for each
of the hostages. Lyn Nofziger. onetime press
secretary to Ronald Reagan
who quit last month because
he didn't want to move to
Washington, apparently has
changed bis mind. He has
been named a presidential
assistant for political af ·
fairs.
2 clergymen
Other contest winners include:
-Neighborhood Golden West
Homeowners Association
(between Golden Wes t and
Edwards streets and McFadden
and Bolsa avenues.>
-Merchants wi ndow .
American Beauty Florist. 17851
Beach Blvd.
-Children's fantast. Sharron
Causer. 18001 Newland St.
-Best use of lights. Al Murse.
15972 Carrie Lane.
-Indoor tree. Orville Hansen. . . h 817 13th St.
16. seek•ng __ JOID08lAge_8_ -u1dAo.r_. __ t....u..cer::.xe___u.G.c.u..c..----:1 ., Donaverr: 209 Crest.
f t-t•d -eommercial . Seacliff or 110 I a y Village, 2205 Main St. I/alley Sea• -Mobile Home. George Ant· "~ " hill. 16444 Bolsa Chica St .. By Tiiie Aaaocla&ed PftU space l38.
01 Stanto·n . Two Iranians, a Protestant
_ _ , minister and ' J\Onu'n Catholic _ pr(est will celebrate Chris~' ________ _... _ __,
-ttd=. -·-· o~~eci -~a~• Sixteen t>eopte have appUed for
the Fountm-Yalley City Council
seat that will be vacated next
month by county supervisor-elect
Roger Stanton.
Monday was the deadline for
applications.
The 11 applicants are:
-lleUJ Leta Berl'J 1 S8, a
homemaker ·active ln Ole Foun· ,
ta in Valley Woman '1 Club and the
AmertcuCancerSociety.
-0. .. 1• v. c•a•e1. 48,
formerly a lieutenant with the
Oranae County Sheriff'• Depart-
ment, now an avocado farmer and
real estate salesman.
-1 ... &.-eretaa.• ao,
owner ol Crel0toa'1 Cookie Jar"
in FomllaiDValley.
-0...N. DMI,•, worbin
eatate and employee benefit plan·
nin1.
-la-W. Dick, IS, ntlncl
veatl1ator, former Foutain
Val1•1 Plannln1 Commlaaloa
memw.
-ll11t1 ......, Grt~ 11,
coetrolllr et Kwltform America.
lnc.
• -W9la•C ...... ,a,nurec1
U .S. Navy Commander now workinl •an .clmlalstratar at
Cal St-. Laac Beaeb, eua••l
(lee llOPBJl'ULI, Pa .. Al)
diploma~ said today in Tehran.
The diplomats also said they
met with three tto.taaes held at ~ _ ~ ~
the Iranian Forei1n Ministry
and described them as beina in
good health. <Related story, A3).
Meuwbi.le, a leadin1 member ·
of Parliament's hardllne Islamic
party wu quoted as sayln1 be
saw no chance 'for the bostqes ·
release before President-elect'
Rea1an takes office .•
Swlaa diplomats represent.int
U.S. lnteres\I ln Tehran said ap-
proval fot the r.eUlioua service
was reeeind durinl a meetiq
wltb IOftl'ftment authorttlea.
There were indication• \he
ae"lce would be beld ln Farsi,
tbe Penlan lanp•••· ratber
than ln Dltfftb, ud tbat Mltber
repreaentatin• would be al·
lowed to attend.
It wu lllo unde.,-wbetber all
the ........ would be 1athlnd
to1etber for the HnlH aad
wbetber it •o~ld b·e beld
Cbri1tma1 Eve or Cbrtltmu
Day. Tbe diplomata aald tbtl
clercymen were lrulaa dtll-V"
but that tWr ldeotitiel ..,..
immediately diaeloMd.
\\1eather
Fog along the coast.
locally dense .in late after·
noon through early mom·
ing hours, otherwise fair
in inland areas in late
mornin1 antt afternoon
tbrouah WednH<tay with
some high cloudiness .
Highs Wednesday ln upper
80s at the beaches to low
70s in inland areas. Lows
44 to 54.
IN81DIE T9D1' Y
SeHft clhldrn owrcome
• tragic death o/ parnr.-' to
rotae tlaemaelvet . Storr.
photo Poflt .uo .
~ AM,X f!1LOT Hf' J) t Q 9 aw
r-----JlJ T BREt41UNC---,
U... UnY /ro"' ••~·· worM • ..,.._.,.....•••Ill •••
tro g quakejolu
norther11 Italy area
Mil.AN IW)' CAP> /. IU'Ol\I Hrthqualt )ol~ a •ldl
IUH al ~m Ital)' today P\rl\ "'°"" uW CHCU .,...,....
U1 aom~ old buJldtn11 ln tOWnl between lllllan and lololn•. but
th.-re "'~""no lmmcdl1tlo repc>Ni ol lr{)w'i.a T.C.. tr_.mot r am on~ mQ&\\h after a mda1ve earthquake
~&rut~ 110Ulbern llal) and killed onrl)' 3,000 ptOp!e.
Tc.day .., <tu•ke * t felt tn C_,,n04l, 8oJ01Da. lllUan, Parma,
P •v P1a«tmu. Or~M1111 am.I l''t'rrara. accorciln1 lO lnilial re-
ritirb
Tbt' nal100AI 11llllt:r v .wt')' 11l Mooteponao Cat.one outside
Kuni\ •mid th\ ~10¥kt' m"""ured 4 7 un lht: Richter scale. I.
qu .. 1u uf th.at m».crutudt: i.:. r•1.111blti of caustna moderate
l m '"-''
r-...lbla w•rk.-r• ····~ .......• irtlw WAft.,.\ w Pvland 1 AP j Workers at SO lactones in
l'hC'lm Just ts mal"-from lbt: Suv1et border, held a one-bour
~t1 l k t' toda) lu prul\: t the am0W1t or Chnstmas meat rations
t ht') rt"('cl\ eil from the Kuvcrnment, the illdependeh\ trade un·
•U n ~1l11l 1nl) .. .iall
1 h, >ln kt cndt"d without opposilaon from locaJ authorities.
htL tor> manuger:. or police, Soltd1mty said, addina without
.... iaoorau on lhut ,upphcs of mclil had improved in the area.
Cruise of Lights
ending in Harbour
The annual llunlington
Har bour Cruise of Lights ends
•ts 1980 season tonight as the last
ur the lour boats glide by the
brightly lighted homes and boats
1n the waterways of the Hunt·
mjillnr ~ .. ach residential area.
• :,., wur is sponsored by the
Huntington Harb o ur
Philharmonic Committee with
p.foceeds going to the Orange
County Philharmonic Society's
youth education program. For
ticket information, call 846-9216
or 846·3489.
Each year awards are given
by the committee to the best
decorated homes and boats_ This
year's awards include:
SWEEPSTAKES -Don Clif·
ford. 16732 Wanderer Lane.
MAYORS GOLD STAR
AWARD L.M. Weitzel. 3312
Devon Circle.
SILVER STAR AWARD
Gary llollander, 16256 Tisbury
Circle.
GOOD NEIGHBOR AWARD
Dr. Carl Ag liozzo. 17642
naruna Lane.
BEST TRADITIONAL -Dan
Mundy, 17061 Bolero Lane.
BEST TRADITIONAL
<Second Place) Dr. George J .
Higue. 3351 Bounty Circle.
BEST RELIGIOUS -Julian
Zambianco, 4062 Morningstar.
'BEST RELIGIOUS (Second
PJace) -Fernando B. Canon,
16902 Marina Bay Dr.
MOST BEAUTIFUL -Ron
Aotwin. 16051 Santa Barbara.
MOST BEAUTIFUL <Second
Place) Robert Herron, 16196
Wayfarer Lane.
BEST CONTEMPORARY
V .S Buccola. 16979 Edgewater
Lane.
BEST CONTEMPOARY
\Second Place) -Neal West,
16246 Tisbury Circle.
BEST CONTEMPORARY
Hammatt, 16262 Wayfarer Lane.
MOST UNUSUAL (second
Place) Mr. James S. FUipan,
16531 Cotuit Circle.
TRIBUTE TO CHRISTMAS -
Stacey Brohier. 16166 Tortola
Circle. .
TRIBUTE TO CHRISTMAS -
Don E. Hunt, 16671 Bolero Lane.
DESIGN EXCELLENCE -
Dr. Sammy Lee, 16537 Harbour
t.ane.
DESIGN EXCELLENCE
<Second Place) -Danny Jones,
16402 Ardsley Circle.
MOST ARTISTIC USE OF
LIGHTS -Boone Gross Jr., 3841
Seascape Drive.
MOST ARTISTIC USE OF
""LIGHTS ( econd Place} -
James Grace. 3842 Seascape
Orive.
BEST YOUnt DECORATED
-Roy Green, 16272 Sundancer
Lane.
BEST WIDMSEY -Dr. Paul
• J . -Audette-, 17069 Edgewater
J.,ap~.
BEST WRIMSEY (Second
~lace) -Ron Perry, 16872
raruna Lane.
, Winnen of the "Multiple Unit
Award" Include lbe following:
Jiarry Reigel, Roger Fenton.
1Jrenl Slienecker, Ken Lester,
j..eo Follmer, David Israel.sky,
J<eitb Shelton, second place win·
pers for the category include: S.
tJuergens, B. Gee, R. Breslau, D.
~oung, M. Schechter, L .
Shumway, M.Jenseo.
: Honorable mention for
:waterfront homes went to the
The>mas P. Haley Pulllf,.,.,,
"•UIO.M
M . Thomas Keevll Ed ii or
Thomas A. Murphine
M<tlletl"CI Edll""
Charles H . Loos
•ul•IMt MeMOt"CI eo1tor
Copyrtgllt IU O Or•r1ot (OUI
Pulllltlll119 (omP•llY Ho ne•t
\IOflt\, llhltlrilflOll\, fCllllWl.tl f'Nller
or •dvtttl'91'1\eftlf ll•••ln mo lit
1tpr od11teO without t P•< le t -ml\\loill ff ,....,,ltM _,
FE -
following: Ellie Atkinson, Jan
P e rumean, George Cooney,
Marc ia Lynch, Timothy L .
Turner, Philip Lupton. Dick.An·
dino, Paul Bryne.
Winners of awards for the best
decorated boats on the Harbour
Cruise route include the follow·
ing.
SWEEPSTAKES -Boris
Ralph "Ljuba."
MOST UNUSUAL -Duane
O'Dale's "Glad Seas." Serond
Place, Richard Footner's
··Footsfun."
MOST BEAUTIFUL -Joe
Martin's "LO Crea Usted."
Second Place. Sam Magione and
Phil Gibilisco's ''Gibby 11."
BEST RELIGIOUS -Greg
Savage's "Carshelke" Second
Place, Robert Windel 's ""{.indy."
SPIRIT OF CHRISTMAS -
John Pralte's "Conquistador."
Second Place, Vernal Peltz's ,;Coral Cay.
BEST WHIMSY -Lary
J ester's "Pardon Me." Second
Place, Wynn Baird's "Honey
Bair."
BEST USE OF LIGHTS -Dr.
Carl Randolph's "Endeavor."
Second Place Orin Langston's
"Reel Easy."
DEgGN EXCELLENCE -
Bill Archer 's • '40 Carats."
Second Place, Gary Sartor's
"Succubus."
Boat owners winnin~ honora·
ble mentjon a wards include the
following:
Jac k Grossman , Stacey
Brohier, Butch Suddarth, Greg
Kent. Larry Tunks. .
Homes decorated in the Hunt·
ington Harbour area that aren't
o n the waterfront also were
given awards by the committee.
"Sweepstakes" winner was
Chuck Chisolm. 16901
Westport. Winner or "Best Use
of Lights" went to Chris Kelly
and Carol Kelly, 17032 Saybrook.
Other off-water winners in·
clude Mr. Duane Foster, Mr.
Ray Coupe, Mr. Lollis Abel , Mr.
W • W. St. Clair. Richie and U~
bie Rector.
Vincent and Eugene Bums,
Kathy Ward, Christi and Scott
Morri500, Christiana Bay, Mr.
Kirk Dawson, Mr. Austin Snarr,
Mr. A. Al Diamond, Mr. Philip
La Puma. Mr. Dean Harper
Lewis.
Diet doctor
case re11ted _
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP>
-The prosecution bu rested its
case in the trial or Jean Harris,
the woman accused of murder·
ing Scarsdale Diet doctor
Herman Tamower, ber long·
time lover who· Md been seeing
another woman.
Ballistics expert Joseph
Reich, a Westchester County
poUce detective, said Monday
that Ta.mower wu shot iJI tbe
back with Mn. Hurla' iun from
12 to 15 inches away and two
more times at macb closer
range.
Reich WU the protffutica'I
lut witneu, and fe>l.Jowiq b1a
teaUIDOllJ, Alalltant Diltrict At·
torney Geor1e Bolen told Westcbeater County Judae
Ruasell Leuet, "Your boaor,
the people rett. ''
°""'"'"'' .. """"" SANTA CLAUS (DAAAEU BOUCHER) AIDS HB NEEDY
Natalle Peltz, Randy Goodman lend helptng hand
Needy families get
visit from Santa
Santa Claus made an early vis at
to 10 families in Huntington Beach
Monday night, riding to their
curbs atop a red fire engine laden
with food and toys.
However, the slender man with
the red suit and white beard ac· tually was an impostor. fireman
Darrell Boucher , in disguise.
And his seven helpers were
employees of the Huntington
Beach Fire Department. not
elves .
For the third season straight
the Huntington Beach Fireman's
Association has delivered Santa
and presents lo 10 needy families
in the city_
The parents were notified that
Santa was coming but the
children were surprised by his 8
p. m. arrival last night.
"It 'ssomething we want to do to
help the people in our communi
ty." sajd fireman Randy Good·
man. "It's the season to give and
this is a way to help the children."
Besides the toys. the families
were given dish soap, m ilk,
turkeys, bread, cereal. bacon.
paper towels, paes and other holl
day food stuffs.
Goodman said the assoc1ataon
gathered and donated about $100
worth or food and $100 in toys to
each of the IO families.
The families wer e identified by
f'roffl Page A I
HOPEFULS
member of Fountain Valley
Parks and Rec reation Com·
mission.
-C'harles "IWllke" MicbaeUs,
60. operator of a local security
business: helped organize Foun·
lain Valley's police department
and served as its first police chief.
-John F. McKnight, 41, sales
manager for a party suppUes
firm, current chairman of the
city's Planning Commission.
-Lawrence Petrina, 41 , lists
himself as self-employed in the
Fountain Va lley a rea.
-David W. Preb sb 43
engineeraog manager with
Dataproducts Corp., present
chairman of the city's Parks and
Recreation Commassio n and
Com miltee on the Handicapped.
-Roy A. Rodgers, 45, general
manager of Satellite Truck Body
Co,,-tnmlee-of the Green ValJey-
E~tates Homeowners Associa-
tion.
-Ea•ene Van Dask. 61, retired
purchasing manager with
Rockwell International Corp.,
present chairman or the Fountain
Valley Improvement Authority.
-Fred Voss, 44 , ad ·
ministralive services officer with
the Orange County General
Services Administration, current
Planning Commission member,
former Fountain Valley school
truat.ee. ·
-'1ernce Ella Webb, 33,
senior city planner ln ln1lewood.
-Marie Wla. 40, public rel•·
tiom bualneuwoman, active in
local parent·teacber 1cbool or-
1anl.aatklns.
Stanton I.a exped.ed to resip
trom the council shortly before he
lJ awom in tobla eounty po1tJan.
t . The four remainina comacil
memben then will aebedule brief.
pabtie illtervtews-wttb alhppll:--
cants.
After ~ tbe IJ'OUP to four or ftve ftnaliitl, tbe eo.mcU
wlll eoaduct edditklllal ID-clepUI
IDterriewl ad~ a suec••or
to Stant.oft.
Tbe eo.mcU must maka ltl ap-
potntmmt wtthln JO days Of tbe
reat1natloo. It.a new member
will HrVe the remainder of Slan·
ton'• term, wblcb nplrea in
April tm. I
I
the First Christfan Church and
the Lynn Center, a social servict'
o r ganizatio n , a ~ ht"1ng un
deremployed or otherwise in
need of assist;rnci: during the
holiday season.
St'vcral of the fclm1lles have on·
ly one parent present, Goodman
said .
In total. about 35 children re·
ceived a merrie r Christmas
because of the generosity of the
firemen
Santa's helpers this year in·
duded GQOdman . Miles Haskins.
Curt Campbell. Bretl Moorhead.
Birgit Davis, Martha We rth.
Natalie P e ltz and L a rry
Richards
Anti-!Santa
h'it by j'ine
TORONTO t AP1 A
Toronto m an who shouted
"There is n<i Santa Claus''
at the city's annual Santa
Claus parade last month
has be<'n fined $50 by a
provincial court
Ri chard Dildy, 40, was
convjctc.'CI of causing a dis-
turbanrc a fter he joined
the parade carry ing a sign
that read in part: "Down
with Santa."
"We've got to get you off
the streets at Santa Claus
time." said Judge O.G.
Scott, after hearing that
Dildy had been charged on
two similar counts stem·
ming from last year 's
parade.
-21ucked
•
out of
airplane
DOHA, Qatar (AP) -Two
children were sucked out of a
Saudi Arabian ietliner today
throup a hole in the passeneer
compartment while the plane
new at29,000feetoverlhe Persian
Gull state of Qatar, the Gulf News
Agency reported.
The agency reported the hole
was caused by an expJosaon. but
the Saudi state radio said a
wheelcover tore loose and ripped
a hole in the fuselage. The Saudi
radio said the two children "fell
out orthe plane.'·
The plane, carrying 296
passengers and a crew of 16,
made an emergency landine in
this gulf sheikdom , airpor't.
sources said. They said three
other passengers were slightly in·
jured and take n toa hospital.
The Saudi Arabian Airlines
Lockheed TriStar, Flight 162, was
en route from the northeast Saudi
city of Dhahran to Karac hi
Pakistan when the accident oc:
curred. lheSaudi broadcast said.
An airport official here who
talked with two passengers before
they were hurried off to seclusion
in res t ti o u ses sa id the
passengers reported hearing a
thunderous explosion
Police cordoned o re the
terminal and refused to allow re-
porters or photographers to the
scene.
. The Saudi radio reported the
pilot said "a loud noise" came
from the area abuve the landing gear.
FREEWAY
solved an the first hair or the two·
year session.
Ho wever. county officials
seem prepared for a long fight
Al Hollinden of Fountain Valley,
chairman of the county com·
mission. said the funding plan is
important because at assul'es
local areas that projects will be
completed once they are ap-
proved
"In two years. we 've gone
backward in our progress," he
said . noting that few projects
have begun in growing Orange
County.
However , com mi ss ion
member Bill Vardoulis of Irvine
noted that passage of the c9unty
proposal plus a bill to set up an·
nual vehicle inspections in
Southern California could stick
driv e r s with a "double
whammy "
In the inspection bill to be dis·
c ussed this year, drivers would
pay at least a $15 annual inspec-
tion fee and would be required to
pay for repairs of their air pollu-
tion control system s when
necessary.
Mrs . Coss-Fitzwater said
Orange County officials. includ·
ing members of the commission
have been actively seeking sup.'
port for long-range solutions to
lagging revenues.
Analysts recently estimated
that in Orange County alone. S20
billion worth of improvements
Nill be necessary lo continue
:urrent travel conditions by the
1ear 2000.
Chase trims
• pnme rate
NEW YORK CAP) -
Chait Manhattan Ban.Ir. to·
day cut ltt prime ltndin1
rate by one prcentaae point
to 20.5 percent, matebln1
the cut announced Monday
by Wella Farao BaDk in San-
Fran cls co and fuelln1
hopes that interest rates
have peaked.
A number or smaller
banks cut their rates even
further Monday, to 20 per·
cent, but other major banks
held tothe 21 .5 percent rate
that swept the banking in·
dustry Friday.
Chase. the nation's third-
largest bank, said its rate
redu ction reflected
declines in its cost of ac·
quiring funds, but added
that it wa.s uncertain
whether the declines would
continue,
f'ro"' Pagr A I
DOCTOR. • •
toward drug use by certain cult
members.
She found out when he would
be home, and a sacrificial raid
was set for Feb. 16, 1970.
Ms . Stoeckley, along with
many others in the cult, had
taken drugs that night, including
LSD and mescaline .
The group found the doctor on
a living room couch. asleep over
a book with the televi~on o n.
Hi s pregnant wife awakened
and called out. "Jeff. who are
these people" Wh y are they do-
ing this lo me?"
As MacDonald tried to rise,
four men began hitting him and
Ms Stoeckley t·heered, "Acid is
groovy "
Ms. Stoeckley then left the liv-
ing room to see what was hap-
pening in the rest of the house
and saw some or her friends
struggling with a woman on a
bed A child lay nearby. motaon-
less She later spotted another
child
She saw MacDonald s lump to
the floor in the living room and
chanted, '"Kall the pig."
Two injured
Laguna .
tn
auto accident
An early morning single car
accident in Laguna Beach Mon-
day left a Costa Mesa girl with a
broken leg and a Huntington
Reach youth with a fractured
bone in his back
Police siiid a car driven by
W1l11 am Graham Orr . 22. or
:'-Jewport Beach. went out of con-
trol on Coast Jligh"ay at Forest
A venue at about 3 a m
The northbound vehicle struck
a light pole at Forest Avenue .
then hit a second light pole
farther down Coast Highway at
Ocean Avenue. according to
traffic investigators.
Police said a teenage girl from
Costa Mesa suffered a broken
leg and a teenage male in the
car suffered a fractured bone in
his spine. Both were treated and
released at South Coast Medical
Center
Orr and a third passenger in
the car weren't injured, police
said. ._._~._._._._._._._._._._._~
• I
T~. O.C.m~r 23, 1MO *
Hostage families oppose Iran ransom
H~ Tb., A~MM"lated Pre .
Ht-h•ll\ •I •lllllt' 111 Hu Al \11wru iln t1u.'th1att'' "it} th~) OPIM>'it'
Jl•H 1n •h•, t"llton. ul 1h1ll u tl11 Ii ,1111un' hu\ 1• tlt•111unded us ltu-
pri< t' I'' fr M.kllll flll f 111 H I 1ljllt H')i
I ,.. It o• lJl1H km 111 1•u1 l. tllHI .. 111111h• '1:11d Ooroth~u ~01 ~hdd \life ul lud1t'1 J \1 \l .. 1. fu•hl ;)\ who witi. th ti S t<>n
ul t11l"flt'I J m I 1 111 111 "'lw11 t(1t , 1111 ... .,,.., WJ• ,, IJl'tt 'luv ~. l979
\l r Murdu·M 11 ~ II llltf•• uuil lh, 11,.uUW\ holding tht.>
ho\l•~t r1 ,, l1un•ll 1111.11111\!.l:-. """" 11 .. \t' k1lln..i1111t'(l our peo
1•h• ,,,,. ".-11 U11 tti h • .... 11 11 1111' i t.-N11 'IH' u w 't !Jll)' It lthc
Oh\nt•\
Hi'11\ ~ 11 , I -.111111 1111ull11111 t ... 1 \\th: 111 \rn1\ I.I \'ol
1'11.u h -..,.,,, ~ ,,,1111111 h 111.11111 \\ .... 11011 uhiu-.
111t Ir ~111e1h ""' t-... wt 111.1 lltt hu:>lJ •' c uuld lll' frct'd 1( the
l ltlll'I ,, •t•"" .. 11ul1I "' '"' II 1\1 "" \411 li11h1.11 Ill llll \I •t·l IJfl c~n
tr ul h.iJlli.. • , ~\AtH uuh·c. llwl 11 .. 11 I 111.111• 1.d th w.imb vn lhe L'n1l
,,J ""' '"'' • tll t .. 1111•1 I lu '"1•.il.11 111 1111 11 .. n1.u1 I' 1t llaml'nl re
peuted h1 threat on Monday thal the hostages will be tried as 1ples
af the rnooey Is not paid.
M,,. Morefie ld said she did not agree with Lawrence Pers·
1n1lt:r 1he father or Marine Sgt. Gregory Persinger , 22, who called
for action by the United States to free the hostaees. The elder
1•ersinger said he would blockade the Persian Gulf. "I'd give them
so.long and then I'd go in there and get them (the hostages )," said
Pe.cs\nger in'an interview from his home in Seaford. Del.
Mrs Morefield s aid she was "afraid an overt action like that
would solidify the area against the U.S."
Richard Hermening of Cudahy, Wis., father of Marine Sgt.
Kevin Ucrmening, 20. said of the dtim and for money: "Putting $21
billion an some Algerian bank. why do they think that the United
Sl;,ltt:s has all this money lo give them? ..
Victor Lauterbach. t he brother of Steven Lauterbach, 28, a
foreign service emplo:tee. said "We can't pay it. .. He also said:
"Our thought is we haven't waited a year and two months to sub·
mit to blackmail now."
Pal Lee, wife of Gary Lee. 37, who worked u a business ad·
m inistrator at the embassy, said the $24 billion demand was "an
asinl ne request." She als~ccuaed the Iranians of chan1in1 condi·
lions for the hostages' re lease. "If we give In to one demand, It will
be something else."
Lee is the son or the Rev. Earl Lee, a minister with the First
Church of the Naza rene in Pasadena, Calif.
His reaction was: "What we need to do is to say to the Iranian
government, ·our hostages are to be released in 14 days or you get
nothing.'
"We have to c re ate the crisis," Lee said . "We've d abbled
along on their terms . There's been no rhyme nor reason."
Patricia Boggs, mothe r·in-law of J oseph Hall, 31, an Army
warrant officer. said the demand "comes under the heading of
ransom or blackmail."
Mutual f~elings Gumnan
beaten Reaga11 selects 'f·an'
AP Wlr•PhOlo
W~lllN~~TON 1All1-(twas
JL'ane J . Kirkpatrick who first
rt-l"t:1 ved a fan le tter from
Konald HeCl~an . not the other
wa,\ a round
Pres1dent-e le('t Heaga11 read a
foreign affairs article las\ year
wnllt!n by Mrs. Kirkpatrick. lhe
5 3 yt:ar-o ld (;eo rgelown
U ol\'t'rs1\y p0lat1cal science pro·
fessor whom Kt•agan named
Mond<ty lo be S a mbassador
lo th\! United Nations .
"HE WROTE TO her saying
he liked her article and wanted
to get togethl'r with her to dis-
cuss some of their views," said
Mrs Kirkpatrick ·s husbi1nd,
Evron KJrkpatrick
AMBASSADOR TO U.N.
When they met. t hey found
th eir ideas $0 l'nn ~cni al that
Mr s Kirkpaln c k joined
RL•agan·s task force on foreign
polk~ Jeane Kirkpatrick Al th e time , Mr s .
LA • • • citizens arming
as murders soar
LOS i\NG F.LF.S I,\ I' I A~ales or handguns. guard dogs and
alarm s~stem!> lo fnghte1wd home!)wnC!rS soared. police said that
homu•1des 1n tht• 1·11\ tl'll)Jl<'tl iJ rerrn cl l.(XJO for the year dunng the
weekend
Oetccllvcs said th•· l.llCWilh vid1m was 23-year old Monroe
Wash111gtcin wlw wal-gu n11Nl dow.n <1!> ht! roller-skated in a liq uor
store µark1ng lot near South Cemral LO!> Angeles al II 30 p.m. S un
day Tht' l,OOOth \"ll'I un ~as Hulmaro Harbosa, 42, a woodworker who
was !'hot Sat unl;1:• in a <In \t'\.\l:t} I wot.Joor'> (mm his wood s hop
LAST Y•~AR. THERE wcrE> 826 homicides a record a t that
ta me
The figun·s inclu<ll· liflth murders anti those listed as justifiable
hom1c1dt•s. s ut•h as shooting someone 1n self defense
In all of Lo-. Angt!lt•s ('ount'. then• havl' bel'n 2,130 k1lhngs. a 120
pen· ent inc roaM· f>\•t·r t lw p.i:it ch.•t· adc, thc coroner's office reported.
The rna.• 1n homit·icll's wjs paralleled by an increase in private
ownership of 1-(uns ,
"PEOPl.E WANT TO prolcct thems<·lvcs That's why lhey are
bu} ing o;o man~ ~un-.. 'p11IH0l' I.I Dan t'ookt• s;,ud
lie a<idcd , "ll "s a d1Murbing sign lhat gun sales are up about 10
percent a year Hut ti.ere S JUSl a n overwhelming feeling or rear ...
1-'igUfl•<; b\" \he (."ahfMnl<l IJcpartmCnl Of JU!'ollC'I' s howed that
slatcwicle, gun sa lrs :i•nlr<'rl from 186,575 durm~ all uf 197 1lo261,f!M\
fc1r the first Ill tnonthl-nf 1 his y .. ar By t hl' end of the year. offit•i als pre·
di cl, thalf1gurc will rc:wh :!AA,000.
For Lo-. A11gt"lc-. <'nun\\ i.:un :ialr·s 1um1wd from SA ,56:! to IW ,107
during \hl·samt· pcni~I
"WF. ('OllLU s..:1.1 . l w1c·ti as rn;11)~ .:uni. 1f w1· rould j ust gel
them." sa1cl gu11 d1slr1hut<1r Sl1·ven Tr:tpp. who ::.Plb 10 4SO shops
throughout Soul ht•rn Caltforf\1((
In add11 i1111, -.1•cunl\ 11rf111etl~ ~J\ ch·mtintl for l-t:ntty dOJ!'> ha::.
OOUbled Ill \hi• lj.SI fl\ I \ 1·,ar-.. \I. hile bU'>lne~-. I~ lm<imtng for I Car 1!<1'>
and burglar al.Jrms
Choke hold limited
I .OS ANG t-:t. i-:s 11\ I' I ·1 he
Los Ang1.•ll':,. PolicP Dt.'(1:1rtrne11l
has i:x-<'n urdt>rt•d hy ii redcral
ud e to limit 1b u.se Ctf con
flps atad downs
Lrnver~1al d111kt• liolth in mak1n~
,1rrt•..,t:-until the dc~iJt tment 1m
111 vvc~ the W !l,Y o ffi cers a re
11· iun.cd.WJCiclhc.ho,,,.ld"":;...._ __
Ooagone, but it's easy to climb a metal ladder, u
Beauregard, a three-year-old pit bull, demonstrates ln
Carmel, as his master, carpenter Bryan Wilson, watches.
Beallfelard sits on rooftops while Wilson works.
Kirkpatrick , a lo n g ti me
-Democrat and member of a cO(l--
serv ati vely oriented Washington
r esearch o r ganizat ion, the
Am erican e nterprise Institute,
was not com mitted t o supporting
the Republi c an f o rmer
California governor. But after
pr eparing some paper s for him
and talking with h im several
times. s he decided it wa s
Reagan s he wanted to be presi·
dent.
MRS. KIRKPATRICK helped
prepare Reagan for t he pres ·
idential debates last summer,
servin~ as one of the q uestioners
i n practic e session s , her
husband said. And s he has s ince
Joined his trans ition foreign
policy task force.
M'rS. Kirkpatrick, who had
been i1 spcechwrilcr, campaign
strategist and polling expert for
the Democratic Party for two
dec ades . is con s idered a
political scholar with a broad
r ange of interests .
She t races her break with the
Democratic Part y to the tale
1960s when s he perceived
radicalism supplanting the New
Dea l refor m approac nes 'to
American problems .
Mrs . Ki rkpatrick and some of
her friends fought the trend
thro ugh the Coalition for a
Democratic Majorit y, which
tried to rally De moc ratic cen·
trisls.
HE R INTl::REST IN foreign
affairs dates to her graduate
s tudent days.
After graduating from Colum-
bia University. she spe nt a year
as a fellow of the French govern-
ment al the pres tigious lnstitut
de Science Polittq ue . whic h
turns out France's diplomats
and government leaders .
M r s . K1rkpat r1 c k s peaks
Spanish a nd French fl uently and
teaches a regular cou rse in
French politics. She is working
on a book on the I .atin s tyle in
politics
M rs . Kirkpatrick also has
writt e n "' b ook a b o ut the
mechanics of presuienlial s elec·
lion and h e r Geo r getown
teac hings have centered on com·
parativc politics
S h(· 1s the mother or three
grown sons and has a strong in-
terest in cookm~
Whalewatch
set Saturday
off N.ewport
The annual Whalcwatch fund
raiser. featuring a c ruise off ttlL
coas t of Newport Ueach In
search of whales, dolphins and
sea lions. rs set S aturday
The crui se aboa rd the
"Catala na Holiday " d eparts
from the Ba lboa Pavilion in
!'jewport Be~_ch at 9 a.m . and re·
t~Mts at 4 p,m.
Whalewatch. a non·JlrOfit or·
ganization. sponsors an educa·
lional progra m coordinating a
crew of volunteers a nd offers
free lecture and slide programs
to school classes or local or·
ga.nizalions
The fund ra iser also kicks off
t h e wha le watching season
Tickets for the cruise are $14 for
adults. $12 for Amer ican Ceta-
cean Society m em bers and $7
ror children under t he age of 12.
For further information or re·
ser vations. call 675-9881 or
645-7811.
3 Santa Barbara
bminesses burn
SANTA BARBARA <AP>
Ci l~~ou-n-ty uson ·n ·
veatlgators are probing a $500,000
fire that destroyed three buli-
neaaes in downtown Santa
Barbara.
Flames were reoorted t.o be
shooting up from an auto repair
shop, where the roof later col·
lap1ed. A tot.al o( (6 cars
and two motorcycles were lost ln
the blue, which was extinguished
wtthinlwohours.
A,.Wlr .. Mlo
•f s I hai yo11?'
Seven-month-old Steven Hall can't believe his eyes as he
gets his fi rst close peek at Santa Claus d uring a visit to
t he Mt. Shasta Mall in Redding.
False alarm routs
nuke plant workers
SACHAMEN'I'O (A P l A fa lse
ular m warning of high radiation
11•,·els caused the eval'uat ion of
Haneho Seco nuc le ar power
plant for an hour. the plant's
operator reported.
The rad1at1on-monilo ring in·
strument~ apparently were at
f a ult , -.ard .Je f f M a r x .
~voke!>ma n for Sa c ramento
M u n 1 c i p a I l " t i II l y D i s t r i ct .
Opl.'rator Of the plant 25 miles
southeast ur Sacramento,
llE SAID THE instruments in·
drcated high radiation levels out-
s1rle the t>lant al 8:50 a m Mon-
<li:I)
Ra ncho Seco·s alarm horn
was sounded. audible for several
miles. and 200 employees and an
unrll'tcrm1ned number or outside
wo1 kers wt•rc moved away from
th<' plant, Marx ~aid
He said S MUO notified countv
emergency officials, who -stood
re~dy to !>prcacl the word to the
/!l'nt•ral public 1f the radiation
fi ndings were verified State and
federal o lfH·1als we r e also
c&J llcd
ln"T MARX SAIO test ing in
and &Jro und the plant showed no
r:idiation n•lcases or abnormal
levels. ann the workers returned
an hour latt>r
The plant. designed to shut
down a utomatically if an actual
maJor release of r adiat ion oc-
curs. continued to operate at full
power during t he incident. Mar x
said.
He said the monit oring ins tru·
m ents had bee n unde rgoing
routine t ests, and S ML:D of-
f i ci a ls believe t h e t eshn g
somehow c aused t h e fal s e
alarm A similar incident OC·
•curr ed about two years ago.
Bi ll F au lk en b erry. a
s p okes man for t he Nuc lea r
Reg ulatory Commission in
Walnut Creek, said the mishap
may have been caused by an
elertrical short
JOHN K E ARNS , assist ant
director of the state Office of
Emergen cy Services. s aid
SMUD officials told the office
during the initial call t hat "they
fell it was more an equipment
problem because t hey had no
reading'" of r adiation releases at
the plant.
Shortly afterward. they called
again and said no radiation had
been detected. Kearns s aid
He sajd a new state law will
require all nuclear plants to in·
stall alar m systems during the
next year \tlal will sound at the
state office at the same time
they fl(O oH at -the plant.
to death
OAKLAND (AP) A g unman
who shot a ba r patron and was
chased down and beaten to death
by irate witnesses died of "blumt.
inj uries t o the head and brain,"
the Alameda County coroner 's of·
fice reported.
Oakland Homicide Lt. Terry
Green said he did not, ant icipate
any arrests in the wake of the
violence early Saturday morning
in which Vernon A. Bridges Ill.
30, was killed.
THE DETECTIVE s aid the in·
vestigation was continuing, but
that t he department's present
belief, fro m what was known. 4s
t hat the killi•W was ""self de-
fense ...
The report said an ar gument
started after m idnight F riday
bet ween Bridges a nd Peter
J ackson. 36, at the Allendale Club
bar. and Jackson was shot several
Li m es at about 1 :30a.m .
T he bar's owner . Jose Madrid ,
s aid he was asleep upstair..s from
t he bar when the shooting started.
He said his s ister, Anita, was
bartender and was closing the bar
and shooing customers out the
door.
MADRID SAID the a rgument
heated up on the street outside the
bar. · · ... Shots were fired , then
more shots, and the guy a pparent-
ly r an out of bullets. None of the
sho~s were fired in the bar at all. ..
Madrid said he did no~ think the,
bar patrons who we re m the bar,
when the fi ght started went after
Bridges. He didn 't know what the
problem was. he said
M adnd s aid he thought other
neigh borhood people act ually
chased Bridges down. Detective
Green said when officers arrived.
Bridges had blood on his mouth
and was already dead
"HE <BRIDGES> WAS beaten
before the cus tomers got to him
I think they got to him a little
late. I think somebody else beat
him up." s aid Madrid "f think
they were mad about getting
the re late sounds crazy. doesn ·1
it? ..
Madrid s aid he knows J ackson.
who was in stable condition at
Highland Hospital. but he did not
know Bridges.
Green s aid one man was~ake.n
into custody after the s hooting.
but was released pending further
invesligalion. Gree n s aid he
didn "t think there was any racial
s ignificance to the fracas
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,,. . .,..
Wat•R,._ ....... .....
• f
'
'
4 ONLY Pll 01
(:t
.. 1 ...... ~'I Tom~~'
M•rphiae
Luring the· jet 8et
Ol.D ~tlt:LL GAlllt: o•:P1 , 'l'herc wH a b it of con
tu .. 1cm 1h1tt dC!V •lop~d onl) )'t!tihird•.Y 1n lh•t Oran11ti Coun·
c, -\lt'Vl>rt ofht·1ah1 m11hl aJlow 11H1t< nt'w air c•rn ers to
.. , ••• , ttl' out uf Joh n \\ 4'\ Ill' ue111dton1t' The new11 ma ' touch
,,(t Ill'"' ~of J ct 1-'ot: Jllk rio ~ kto.t•1 readl11.,; 11( t he \t'Xt, hoWt'\ .. , sugge:.tt. tha t nint'
Jh''°I ')lQb iucn \ tw1111t uealcd al tht MacA rthur Boule vard
th "' u\ 'ti' n ·all \\'hut ., '*PV~nml l> b t'tnK 'UK"l:!i.l<-'li 1:. that nant' flig hl5
"''""' tit' "ll~·1ttt'd l\d nov. a1 1 hnc!\ would bt: allowed lo
11111 "" ttll.'m \ullnl.'' "'1th tht-lt'a bt no1b' JC\11 and . we p resume. the
tu>!hL''' llhlllt'\ huh v.uultJ ~awarded the flights
tH f' THt. HASI(' NUM1n:1t of Jt'l departures from
1 .. ta11 Wd' m · 11 J>orl wo1.1ld remuHI at th~ curr ent count or
II
llov. 111 tht.· "'uric.I t'dO they J o that" I'm glad you
.1' l-l'J
Thul v.ould be ac:complJs hed by TAKI NG A WAY the
mne fi1ghts from the t wo maJor (•arfi.e rs a t county alrj>ort
now Air Ca lifo rnia and Republic Airlines
It's sort of a biblical approac h : The Board of
Supe rvisors giveth. and the Boar9 o( Supervisors take th
away Si mple as that
On the other hand. maybe 1t 's m ore a kin lo the old
hucks ter and flim fl am m a n who worked the county fairs
a nd c arnivals with his s hell game. You can hear him lur-
ing the pros pects now.
"llURRV. HU RRY, HURR\' folks and s tep right up to
ta ke your i:hance on winning n ights out of Orange County 's
airpo rt
.. J ust pick the right shell and you're going to win a
piece of what the Com m unity Airport Council calls the $422
million gold mine!" ~---.
His gold-lipped cane pushes bac k his s upervisorial
derby hat and he taps upon the table with the three she lls
1h -.µla ycd ancl urges the c rowd:
"Step right up, Frontier Air lines You, too. Western.
You only have two fli g hts e ach now
"How about taking a little chance to win nine'!
"llOW i\80l"T \'OU other players'> Come on over ,
Am erican . come look at the three shells, United .
How about a little ga me of fli ght. flight , who 's got t he
flight. F:c.istern''"
The supe rvison a l ba rker continues his pitch, e xplain-
in~. "You see, genlle me n. under one shf!ll we have some
Air C al flig hts And be neath the second shell we have some
Rc publit· flights
.. All \ ou have t o do 1s pick the ri ght she ll and you 're the
h1g (;old Mine wmncr'"
BUT THEN THI:: MAN in the black derby holds up his
hand and adm oni shes, "Just re me mber now, all you
air lines. we don 't wa nt any heavy noise. Try to win your
flig hts vl.'ry , very q uietly. Otherwise. you m ight end up in
tht• com11an~ of I he Anti-jet Noise Forces "
One of the p ros p ective players look ed a round ,
hc wildcr t'<.I, and the n as ked , "But where are they ?"
"Oh. them.·· the flim-n a m man said. "Why, they're
under the third s hell
)1 •
WORLD I NATION
'Mer Chriatmas'
Price s11rge continues
WA SHINGTON (AP> -
Cons umet prices climbed yet
another 1£percem last month -
a 12.5 percent annual rate -as
the cost ol food, housing and
gasoline all rose substanUally,
the government s aid today.
No vember's increase in the
Consume r Price lndex matched
t he jumps for both September
a nd O<:.tober and brought infla·
uon for the firs t 11 m o nths of
1980 to a seasonally adjusted an·
nual r ate of 12.2 percent. the
Labor Department said .
Last year consume r prices
rose 13.3 percent.
MOST PllJVATE economists
e xpect consumer prices to reg·
ister possibly la rger m onthly
incr eases through most of the
winter because of rising food
cos'i> and continued high interest
ratt?fi
Despite .the pe rs istent infla·
tlon , a worker~s real spe naable
income inched up 0.2 per cent in
November. the department r e-
ported . Over the year . ho we ver .
a·verage weekly earn ings -
w hich deduct feder al taxes and
social security p~yment -are
down 5.1 percent on a sea sonally
adjusted basis .
The Labor Department report
for November said :
-FOOD AND beverage prices
rose--1.1 percent. compar ed with
a 0.7 percent increase the month
before. Beef prices climbed 0.8
per cent after declining 0.6 per·
cent in October . Prices for pork.
fish . seafood and e ggs a ll reg-
istered s ubst antial boos t s a s
did fres h fruits and vegetables
Sugar shot up 7 .9 percent.
-Eating out. meanwhile , cost
1 per cent more than in October ,
Smoki11g tifj.
results irz
cop 's death
J E RS&Y CITY, N.J . I AP>
Police we re searc hing today for a
s us pect in the death of an o fficer
s hot during an argument with a
man who was s moking on a com
muter train in violat ion of the
rules. authorities sa id.
Port Authority Police Officer
Willia m Perry, 32, of Rose lle
Park, was k illed Monday whe.n a
bullet appa rently r icocheted off
his badge and struck him in the
n e c k , s aid P o rt Authority
s pokesm a n P ete r Mo naha n .
Perry ha d been wearing a bullet
proof vest and civilian c lothing.
AUTHORITIES s aid Perry was
returning to J ournal Square in
Jersey City from a court a p-
pea ra nce in Harrison when he
not iced a passenger sm oking on a
train operat ed by the PATH
system , which travels between
Ne w J ersey and Manhattan.
An a r g ume nt e ns ued after
Pe rry told the passenger to put
out the cigarette. s aid Lloyd
Sc hwalb of the Port Authority
s pokesman .
Whe n the tr a in arrived in
Journal Squa re , the officer took
the m an out to the platform. Dur-
ing a struggle. both me n fell lo the
ground and then onto the trac ks.
Schwalb said.
PRELIMINARY reports in-
dic ated tha t the s uspect . using his
own gun, s hot the police officer
several limes and then fl ed. ac·
cording to the spokesman. The
weapon was not recovered .
while the pric e of alcoholic
beve rages went up 1.3 percent. _
-Housing costs rose 1 per·
cent, led by a 2.7 percent surge
in "'IJ)Ortgage rates and a 0. 7 per·
cent increase in the price of a
home . H o u se h o ld fu e l s ,
however. fell 1.1 percent on top
of October's 0.5 per cent decline .
anothM 0.9 percent alter risin&·
0.3 percent in October. Before
then , they bad fallen for five
co nsecutive m onths.
1967 sold for $256.20 In No·
vember.
Meanwhile , the Commerce
Department re ported Monday
that people's incomes stayed
barely above the inflation rate.
The department reported Mon·
day that personal spending rose
1.2 percent in November.
Me dic a l care c os t s in·
crea sed 0.6 percent, the smallest
rise since JW\e,
F inancin£ an a utom obile
ros t 3 percent more in No·
ve mber because of ever-rising 10·
le.res t r ates . Meanwhile, new
ca r prices rose slightly following
a 1 5 perce nt decline in October.
The cost of apparel and its
upkeep increased 0.3 percent,
following a 0.5 percent October
boost.
Economis ts say that j<Unp.
which followed a 1.7 percent rise
in Ocober. indicates consumers
a r e re latively confident about
Gasoline p r ices j ump ed
T h e Labor D ep a rtment's
Con s umer Price Index las t
month s t ood at 256.2 before
seasonal a djus tment. That
means that what cost $100 in
the economy and are finding
ways to cope with rising interest
rates.
Uninv ifed guests
This was the result of an errant journey by
a heatin~ fud tanker in Ma rch. N.Y. The
smashup inj ured three people and the o c-
<:upa nt of the house was trapped under a
s tove as the home was knocked seve ral
feel off its foundation. Propane gas filled
the house. The wo m an occupant was
r escued safely.
U.N. building set ~fire
300 A rabs protest failure to halt Israelis
BEIRL''f. Le banon IAP J A crowd of 300
Ara lJ villagers prote sting the failure of U.N
peat·e ke ep1ng troo ps to halt Isr aeli raids in
southern Lebanon atta ckecland s et fire to a U.N.
building and s ix U. N. c arf' here today. a United
Nations s pokes m an said.
About 80 U N e m ployees n ed their offices a nd
S{'veral women jumped from windows of the build-
ing, a s ecurity guard s aid , adding that several
l ' N employees were be aten up Other sources
said some U N staffer s were overcome by s moke ,
hut there were no reports of serious injunes
T he U.N. building houses two agencies, the
United Nations obse rver force and an economic of-
fi ce. U.N officials s aid a delegation of seven
villagers entered the buildin g to present their com·
pl<i ints to the U.N. observer force commander,
Col. Hubert Mayeur of France.
Shortly a fte rward . the rest of the de m -
onst rators stormed into the building and went on
a rampage.
Witnesses s aid the first noor of the buildingg
was ablaze .
The four.stor y building 1s located on the
airpo rt road in mostly Moslem west Beirut nea r a
shanty town that houses the headquarters of the
Palestine Liberation Organization.
"The villagers we re conde mning the Isra eli
raid on so uthern Lebanon and pr<>tfsting to the
l 'ntted Nations for not protecing them." sa id
Samir Sanbar . a U.N spokesman.
Inside the .building , a reporter saw furniture
overturned and broken, papers scattered on the
floor and windo ws shattered
Officials sa id the d em onstrators. mostly from
\'lllages affected by raids of Israe li troops and
Is r aeli -backed Christian militiamen last wee k.
be gan a pPOtest march fro m a near.by squ~re.
Give an lr'fYine
Marathon Tee Shir.t
•POMONA FlRST FEDERAL
5325 University Drive
• WELt..5 FARGO BAN K
5401 Unive rsity Drive
• Z·B TRAVEL AN D TOUR
532 1 University Drive The child or adult runner 1n yo ur li fe wall ap·
preciatc a gift or an offi cial World Masters Mara thon
o { Irvine specta tor te e s hirt
T he major West Coast race is J anuary 25. 1981.
Shir~s m the c ity's colors -blue and green -are
a va ilable now fro m these Irvine Cham ber of Com·
merce mem bers .
•THE SPIGOT
18044 Cul ver Drive
•I RVINE SAVINGS AND LOAN
Culver Drive at Walnut Ave.
•WALKER AND LEE Real Estate
5396 E. Walnut Ave nue le roads snarl Eas ~-----AR..T-SHO-WGA-81"":.~. -----:----:--;:-=I
4624 Barranca Parkway
Freezing rain causes luuulreds of crashes
Oense <O•"•• 109 ••te lod•r.
tllr'-ou Clll t H IY mor nrno hour\
O\f\•r•lwo t"ff wttt• 'O'"f "''O" ~tood!M
Co•SI Ptl9Pt l>J. I-~ lnl..,d lllOh
&1. low 'I. Waltr Ml
Elsewhere, tlOt\I •arleD•t winos
111911t "nd rnornlnQ nou,. becomlnQ
soult\weslerly I to IJ knots. Wind
.. aves I to l lffl will\ •Olerty \Wells
ot l to J Itel
Oen\t loQ Is likely •tono lhe Soutll
C•llfornl1 co.SI lonl9M •nd ur1y
Wf'<lneMlay. < rMplno Inland Al>Oul 1 s
mllH It\ plll(f$, the N1llon1t WH IMr
S.,.lceS41kl •
Aller ~ 109 burns all, 11,.re •llOulO
be l•lr -••"4r with •unny but l\ary
dtys tnO '°""' •arfaDle hlQt\ <IOUlh
T"" hlQh -MNY Ii .. P«l<lCI IO be
In Ill!! mid 10t
I ht col\ttl and lnt.,medtele •alleys _,, to ,,.,, l•lr wHlher
1hrouo1> -tel-. wttll some nloll
clouOln«\Ulllme\ T""hlot>swert ••
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,..,. 1on te•sl to rH<ll ..,.1n10 lhe '415
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.... DMUOAY
F1'11 hlClf\ tO: 11 a.rn. '"l'•"-4· 111 m Se<Of'd hl9"
60 u s.<--1·11 p rn • l Sun uh 4 4• pm., r ls as
WtdM~6·J1 • m
Mooft rho 10.07 II "'·• uh
,_,__., 10.•I • m
..... her• California .~wt Report ..... , .........
AWi MH Dir
I J SW I ) SW
t ) SW
' J w
•BON AMIE
4616 Barranca P a rkway
•HOBIE S PORTS IRVINE
4708 Ba rranca Pa rkway
•J.T. PERIW1NKLE
4614 Barranca Parkway
•MAZON FABRIC EMPORIUM
4720 Barranca Parkway
•WOODBRIDGE WINE & SPIRITS
4724 Barranca Parkwa y
Onl '650
)'Proceeds benefit
Irvine Chamber of Commerce
Scholarship Fund
Kristen Engel and Irvine
~Chamber Sports Committee
-... Chairman Arlyn Smith
Run With Official
Marathon Tee Shirts .
' .
CALIFORNIA , ......... .
Desert plan
finally OK'd
. LOS AN0£LES (Al") A plan to manaae
Callromt•'1 buce, h~ret' and fr8Ciledelert bu fin•'·
• I)' bten completed and approved, but at leaat oo
r~ral olficlal flirur that·~ .. Ju.at the 1tartln1
pMD\"
Aft4"r lhreco yean ot public hunn,11. committee
mt'<'\U'\ and wurll bup 1eu~. the final ao year
plan for \2 m\llaon acrt11 of Calllfomla deaert WH re·
li a ed Mooda b tht-S tturuu ol Land Manhc
meot
'' 1
Proud pareat• APW .........
Tueeday, December 23, t980 H 1 F CWI. y PILOT -AS
Cal Stereo Ii,...
~Wity of fraud
LOS ANGELES CAP > -Two
owners of the Cal Stereo chain of
electronics stores have been convict-
ed in federal court on conspiracy and
mail fraud in a scheme to collect
$124,608 in illicit fire insurance
claims .
Suto Frederick Jansson. 37. of
Rancho Palos Verdes and Edward
Shapiro, 43, of Marin a del Rey, each
were convicted Monday on a single
count of conspiracy and ll counts of
mail fraud after seven hours de·
liberation by a jury in U .S. District
Court.
The two we re indicted Nov. 7,
along with Richard Lorne Pierce ol
Enc ino. forme r attorney for Cal
Stereo, and Melvin Neil Belsky, 3l,
of Manhattan Beach, former general
manager or the firm.
However, before trial began Dec.
16. charges we re dropped .against
Belsky when he agreed to testify for
the prosecution and Pierce was found
s hot to death Nov. 22.
tie) rut l't"act10t1 ~ lb.Iii tlli Jun the at&rlJn&
.,oinl •· i.1Aid Jerry llllli.,r, SLM district manaaier in
R1"t'l"5Jdft '1'h real work b In front of ~ lo t~rms of
l!l'V\ •dtn& enforc-emenl 111nd factbllea · ·
I WA.\\HINGTON, INT£AIOa Secretary Cec I
ll ndrw . who •pproved the pl&n last week, called it
· uM of \.he mOli\ far reach in& regional plans ever un-
dertaken rn tbe United States.··
Christine Hess. 29. and husband, Jerry, 35, are proud parents of
rour girls born Sunday to the San Jose couple. Mrs. Hess. who had
taken fertility drug, was expecting triplets but got an early
Christmas present instead.
Sentencing was scheduled for J an.
20.
Jansson and Shapiro could face a
maximum of fi ve years' imprison-
ment and fines totaling $21 ,000 each.
Federal prosecutor H e nry
Rossbacher charged that fraud grew
out of a fire that broke out in a Cal
Stereo warehouse in Torrance on
March 12, 1978.
He said the defendants later con-
ducted a fire sale or equipment al-
legedly damaged in the fire and col-
lected $124 .607. 79.
He u ad It "strikes a remarkable balance
between soc1ely"s demands for resource goods and
iservtces and protection or the unique and fragile
publiC'Values or lbe California desert ...
_Hillier aid in lL t.elep.bone .intecviewf "l feel
iteneralJy good about the d1rect1on lbe plan Is tak·
ing Jt 's responsive to most of the interest groups and
people who have commented, although many of
them are going to say their ox bas been gored.
THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY issued a stale·
ment Monday contending the plan doesn't do enough
to limit off.road vehicles and should have recom-
mended Car more·wilderness areas.
.. This plan can and must be improved," the en·
vironmentaJ group said. But it added, "Though far
from perfect. it's time to get on with the con-
gressional actions needed to protect the California
deserts."
Hillier said the plan calls for about $6.5 million in
implementation money next year and some Sll
million the year after that. The 20-year cost is
estimated at $180 million .
Tl!E BLM HAD SUBMl'ITED a dratt version of
the plan, with four management alternatives, last
February. A final proposal was made in September
and again orrered for comment.
. Hillier said another 3,500 people and organiza-
tions commented on the pro~al and after "analyz.
ing all the public input and after management re-
view, we did what can best be characterized as fine
tuning."
The plan, described at a Riverside news con-
fe r en ce, divides the desert into four major
categories with varying restrictions . Hillier said
so m e boundary changes were made in the
categories, but they generally remain as outlined in
t he proposed plan.
THE MOST RESTRICTIVE is Class C, or con-
trolled: lands recommended for official protection
as wilderness areas by Congress. These roadless
areas total a bout 2 million acres.
Nearly 6 million widely scattered acres, almost
half the total. is placed in Class L, or limited zones,
where natural, scenic, ecological or cultural re·
sources will be protected. Access will be permitted
but limited.
The Class M. or moderate-use zones, total about
3.3 million acres wh ere activities ranging from min·
ing to recreation are permitted with certain restric-
tions.
About a hair-million acres are designated Class
1, for intensive use, where wide-ranging activities
are permitted.
Another 314 .000 unclassified acres tn scattered
tracts may, after closer study, be disposed of by sale,
transfer or exchange
Attorney General
bows out of ads
SAN FRANCISCO <AP} -An "entertainment
industry figure" will replace s tate Attorney
General George Oeukmejian in a planned media
campaign telling Californians or a $12.5 million
consumer refund from the Levi Strauss Co.
Oeukmejian, who recently hinted he might run
for governor in 1982. announced the switch Monday
in a letter to San Francisco Superior Court Judge
Ira Brown.
Earlier, attorneys for a consumer group sug-
gested Deukmejian's appearance in the ads would
help the attorney general politically if he decided
to run for governor.
Trio nabbed
in slayings
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A teen-ager who once
worked for the restaurant and two men face
charges in lhe m eat locker murders of three peo-
ple during a Bob's Big Boy Restaurant holdup that
turned into an "execution st yle" bloodbath, p0llce
said.
Raids at three residences Monday in South
Central and West Los Angeles resulted in the ar·
rests of former employee Carletha Ste wart,
Franklin Freeman, 22, and Rickie Sanders , 25, de·
tectives said.
All three were jailed without bail Monday
night pending formal filing or charges either today
or Wednesday by the district attorney, spokesmen
said.
St~lc p•rrha•e approl'ed
LOS ANGELES <AP> Shareholders of
Crocker National Corp. have approved an agree·
ment allowing Midland Bank Ltd. of London to buy
57 percent of Crocker for $830 million.
The transaction, believed to represent the
largest single investment fro m abroad in an
American bank, was approved Monday at a
special stockholders meeting here. About 64 per·
( .WATE J
cent of Crocker's 13 .5
m il lion o uts t a nding
s hares wer e voted in
favor of the agreement
and about 665,000 s hares
were cast against it.
The controversial agreement was criticized by
several Crocker shareholders but defended by
company chairman T homas R. Wilcox. who. said
the San Francisco-based bank needed new money
to expand.
Qttalw •halce• Saft Diep a...a
SAN DIEGO CAP> -Residents in rural sec-
tions of east San Diego County ratUed by an earth-
quake measuring 3.2 on the Richter Scale say it
did little damage, but sounded like an explosion.
•'Jt felt more like a blast. as if someone had set
off dynamite ," said Gloria Metivier of Campo.
which is near the estimated epicenter of Monday's
quake. •'It was a roar."
No injuries were reported in the quake felt in
Alpine. Lakeside and El Cajon.
Cotut G•ard relu•e• pf"Ofw
LONG BEACH (AP) -A collision between
two freighters off Oceanside will not be investigat-
ed by the U.S. Coast Guard because the ships were
in international waters and were foreign-owned.
"This is a matter that will have to be settled in
the courts by the two companies," Lt. Woody Love·
land of the Coast Guard's Marine Safety Office
here said Monday. "We have no jurisdiction."'
Loveland said the Coast Guard's role would be
limited to overseeing repairs and making certain
the ships are seaworthy before they a re allowed to
leave POrt.
111~ held '" n ur•e •l•fll"fl
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Alleged bragging by a
teen-ager about the slaying of a 31-year-old Sylmar
nurse has led to three arrests in connection with
the brutal kidnap. rape and murder or the woman,
police say.
Spencer Nelson , 21, was arrested Monday, the
third to be taken into custody and booked for in·
vestigation of murder. pol ice said.
The teen-ager, whose name cannot be released
because of his age, and 20-year-old Louis C.
Morgan were booked Sunday for investigation of
MONDA Y'S LTTER said Oeukmejian is mur4er, said police Capt. John Saldino.
looking for "an entertainment industry figure, one
;---....-tt· ~-tugh name"identifieatiolr,arthe"SpOtesm~-e-: -----
alert consumers or the distribution.·· uCrO oge a war
The San Francisco-based clothing manufac-
turer agreed to par consumers up to $2 per pair of
boys or men's Levi jeans bought between 1972 an(\
1977 in a settlement of a price-fixing suit.
The plan calls for a statewide mailing to 8.6
million homes explaining the settlement and how
to file for refunds. Deukmejian's letter· alao sug-
gested new linguage loT Uie letters. -
The proposed m ailings originally read:
"Pocket money: You've got it comin1 from the
Attorney General's office," and showed a pocket
with two one-dollar bilJs protruding.
THE NEW LANGUAGE, without the pocket.
reads : "State of California, Attorney General's Of.
fice; Consumer Cash Refund Plan; You May Be
Eligible For A Cash Refund From The Stale Of
California ; -Please Read Attached Notice
Carefully."
Consumer advocates have criticized the entire
refund plan, saying it lacked safeguards a1ainst
fraud and that consumers could receive as little as
11 cents per claim if millions of Californians
respond by filing claims.
Brown has not yet ruled on the plan.
Cow used as bail
WILLIAMSPORT. Pa. CAP) -A Lycomina
County court clerk has reluctantly taken the bull
by the horns and accep\ed a cow• bail.
The law allows for property to be posted aa
ball In a criminal case, but Prothonotary Thomas
W. Dempsey waan 't too sure that included four -
leaaed beasts that chew cud and live milk.
"But Judie Thomas C. Raup approved it,"
said DtmPMY· ••J told him he better start bulldinl
a corral (n his backyard ln use the 1uy doesn't
show."
The reaJ,stered Holstein was posted on btbaU
of Edward. E. Andrus, arrested on a charce of
wrtU..1 a .ortbleas *7 ~Ir in 197'7. Raup set
ball •l •• 500.
presented UCB
LOS ANGELES CAP} -United California
Bank has been·named ·•Scrooge_of the .YeM'' for
its alleged discrimination agaiust ITilale
employees by a women's _group that s d Mr.
Cratchet, the downtrodden office wo er in
Charles Di ckens' classic "A Christmas Carol."
s hould be renamed Ms. Cratchet.
"Mr. Cratchet is now Ms. Cratchet. She works
long hours for little pay in a lar1e bank and is try-
ing to support her family on her bank teller's
salary. You can be sure her check book doesn't
balance at tht:.1end of the month," Pat Banks ,
spokeswoman.,...tt>r Los Angeles Working Women
.said Monda)"'.' '
IN A CEREMONY attended by some SO office
workers outside UCB's corporate offices at Sixth
and Hope streets. LA WW handed out its award for·
what it called UCB's "low pay, few promotional
and training opportunities and age discrimination
affecting their women and minority employees
despite record high profits."
''United California Bank has been chosen
Scroo1e of lbe Year because their pay and employ-
ment policies were formulated in the time of
'Christmas Put'" said the LAWW'a Ann Gome1.
"This award ls lntended to b11hli1ht tbe overall
low pay and inadequate adYiincement op-
portunities for women in general, and particutarly
in tbe bantlnc industry. UCB is not &Jone in dis-
c rim ln a tln1 afainst women and minor ity
employees."
DvalNG 1111: Cl:RE.ONY, LA WW mem-
be ra HDI spin-offs on hollday carols as
• 'Scrooce," ln top hat and black suit, diltrlbuted
candy canes and "Workin1 Women's GU\ Lista."
Included on the 1lft U1t wu: bllher pay, job-
poatln1.1 falr promotions, treater job opportunttlea,
accurllte Job descriptions and jobs for women over
a1e40.
------------
-------AIOUT --------· AIOUT
3 $) .ftGREAT I • ~701NNER S6 Aft SUPERI
• .. 7~tNNERI
()
O Gooo tot th1Pe P•Cl."l> of 1u1cy g'Jld<?l'I ht•Jwt1 Ke111ucky
C Frieo Ch1<.~1J11 "'"" ""'9'"' ~t!r•H•Q~ 01 cc.IP ~l.iw ;g lndShf'd µOIJt(l('S ""'' l]•il•y 311lJ J 1()1 Ltnl•f IW(J (JllCt) z per oupo11 Ill'• c.u·.l<Aflfll Ci.~1r111•111 IJJ1~ ,;11 dj)IJl•t..d
t>le ""tes IJ•
GOO<I to• twelve p.eces 01 1u1c1. 9otoe11 b•ow11 t<entucl\y
F11eo Ctt11.~en w1lh SI' 1011s plus vuur C.h1>1ce ol either d
la1ge c.t>le slaw 01 a ta1ge mashed polaloPS, and a small
91avy L1m11 1wu olle•s oe• c.ouµon oer customer
Custoine1 vays .111 ap11t•c<1bte sates 1<1> I 0 40 CJll.:1 '"""'"• JJllUJI~ 4 1 Jiii
0 40
fJ'H r--s llllt'; v,•fy dt I
(1,,HllC. •fj.tfHi(l I(~•
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_.....-,--yvll '·•~t (11f:' C...rl •"·''''"' AHer·--f OU L,i __ A,.~.&,.. ~1:as1,11•·d I SN' lltl! '>r.1s ,npll ~~ C.ait·• 11n9 > w If'> SIJ"" (su--'1\•r.q' ..._. 1 i ,,,.
bdntH-'t lJdrtfle• __:...--· __ :_=-mm--1111'•----~
GOURMET
MARKET
Merry Christmas
from
all of us
at Delaney's!
We will be closed Dec. 25 to enjoy the holid a~· at ho111 e.
Open 8 a.m. to 4 p .m. Dec. 2-1
DE 'S Store Hours 9-6, Closed Sunda y
2920 Newport Blvd .. Newport Beach
673-5520
th<Z. original G-9
windbfe.oK{Z-r, idcz.el fbr
g:>l for out<lcor wu:i r .
madq, df' 1ight'Mlight
cotton· poplin with e
tart.an hniaj.
eveiloblcz. in na\J1.u-a\,
brit1 sh tan, navy
or nzd.
moda. fur us in qnglond..
44 fluhion lsfCllld• Nl!Wport Beaclt•714!644·S070
1001 ~stwood 8fud.·~srwood Viflag.e·213/479·7727
. .
E' .. ,,~~ .. , ,.,,.869!!11!11!~-... --.. ---·-------·Thoml-·•·P···H·al.•y./·P·u·bl.l•.h.•r-·T·home····l(· .. ·"'.'/.E.dl•tOrlL . .rJ.. ~ ~ :... T~. Dlciwv.., at.,.., e.rber• Krelblch/Edltorlal Paoe EdltOf' •
Key ruling b&Cks
zoning by ballot
'a.Ufonua•a Suprem" ourl hu ru.led in a potentially
far-reachtna deciJlon that c.ta M•UM were wlthln
their npu when they voted ln 197'1 to l'han1e land aoned
for apartments to • ••nwle-(amlly houalna ione
The kln1 awaited dedslon waa received with lnterest
not only b lhe Cat y of Costa Mela, property o wners and·
thf' North Co.ta Mt: a Uom~wn"rs A11oclalion but by
~(l\'emmt'flt aaeiu-ltt throu1hout the state.
The hom~wneni ' aroup was concernt!d over the
1"-'!> 1ble imp•cl or ~9 apartments and 127 houses
l rowded onto 68 a<'rj:~ JW5l n orth of the San Diego
.,.rPew~
By ruhng a1am st the owners of the property to be de-
\ t•loped Ame) Oev.,l0pment Co and South Coast Plaza
the upreme Court s taled that all zoning is a
lcglsJauve prucess
The refore. voter~ lllCling as le~1slators thro ugh the
ballot erocess mz.y rezone almost any property, th.~ court
ruling indJcalt::.. . .
l.aw)'ers are Just begmmng to study ramifications of
las t Thursday's 'rulmg ·
Among possibiliues raised 1s the feasibility of
homeowners banding together to thwart large com·
rnerc1aJ or Utdustrial proJects considered objectionable. .
Bul, lawyers say. such acts could depend on a
number ol other factors as does the case just reviewed.
Still lo be adjudicated in a lower appellate court is
the initiative's legality when compared with long-range
µlann.ing documents such as a city's master plan.
Also to be considered is whether the initiative was
directed to block a specific project.
But make no mistake. if the Supreme Court's ruling
s tands, the potential effects have vast sociological -as
well as legal -ramifications. If a community of citizens
can vote on the ultimate me ol undeyeloped land, a set of
controls never before considered will be in effect.
It would mean, for example, that a city's majority
vote could override a low-ca;t housing project. Or a shop-
ping center. Or, carrying it to the extreme, a low-density
exclusive residential development that might be viewed
with disdain by residents who resent an intrusion by rich
folk.
Whatever way the Costa Mesa decision is interpreted,
if it stands as it now appears, major changes in all forms
of building development seem to be before us.
Coast plans progress
Orange County is moving ahead on completion of
state-mandated Local Coastal Plans <LCPs) to meet the
July l deadline for their certification by the stafe Coastal
romrnission.
On that date, the six regional Coastal Commissions
will go out of existence and local c ity and county govern-
ments will regain their authority to issue permits for de-
velopments on the coast. Their obligation, of course, will
he·to see that the deve lopments conform to the approved
LOP.
Last week the county's Board of Supervisors ap-
proved four more of these documents for submission to
lhe state commission.
• They cover unincorporated areas on the Irvine Coast
between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar, portions of
Laguna Canyon ~d the community or South Laguna.
Only one of the proposed plans -the one for South
Laguna -stirred a major controversy that resulted in
some modification. _
In the face Qf bitter objections from residents of the
266-unit Treasure Is land mobile home park, the board
modified a proposed tourist-recreational designation by
imposing an additional designation lhat would also
permit mobile home park use on the s ite.
The controversy was sparked by a proposal to con-
struct a 24-story time -share hotel on part of the park prop·
erty.
Whethe r the dual tourist-r ecreational/mobile home
park designation will meet with approval of the state
commission remains lo be seen.
But. given the existing nature of the quiet seaside
community, it seems obvious that low-density residential
zoning which in this case offers needed affordable
housing would be preferable to high intensity recrea-
tional use with its accompanying traffic problems. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Oaity Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boyd/Dormouse
ByL.M. BOYD
Q . What'sadormouse?
:-x1Jftre ro<fen at look5
something like an under-
siied squirrel. You don't see
them a round here. But
they've been common in
Europe for ages . The
Romans even domesticated
them. About the lime Egyp.
tia-ns were taming hyenas.
And the Scythians were milk·
ing elk.
Q. What do you call a lady chef?
A. Don't know. don't know.
The big book at hand defines
a chef as a "skilled male
co ok who ~anages a
kitchen . " Does n · t say
anythinit about a s kil1 ed
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
female cook who manages a
kitchen.
Q . Wh a t 's "quasi -
marriage' '?
A. It's what used to be
called common law mar-
riage. Probably dreamed up
by the same people who
POP.Ulari&ed "viable,"
"egalitarian" and "socio-
economic."
Medical records indicate
that first babies sired by
rathers after release from
military service tend to be
boys. Also, moet babies con-
ceived by milUary fathen
home on leave are boys.
There ii an explanation for
it. according to British
medice». Parenta hlably ac-
tive in t.he romance depart-
ment tend to have relatively
more boys than girls.
Report LI that great ne•
demand bas set tbe
c hartmakers to turnlnt
out maps of Iran an4
Afghanbtan u fut u they
can.
Odd that Nancy l\eaaan seems ao eaaer to move Q . You aald Roetefeller
o the old wtdre H#.iui.iatie-f-~r,MitM~lJii' 1iijiil .,rr.-•
when she refused to Uve '1 oW1Mld bulinetl and ...,..
I n the a over n o r ' a tainmlllt center la tbe eom-
m analon because of ita try. Wbat about Dlta•J
World? · . age. V.C. A. It 1elll 1tock. lt'1 a
public eorporaUoa.
__ ....... ..__ ___ ,, ________ ------
Rowland Evana I Robert "Novak
Appointments stirring conceni
W ASHINOTON -Back In
Californla after belnt announced
u secretary ol defense. Cupar
Welnberaer placed caJJa to
RepubUcan members of the
Senate Armed Servfoea Commit-
tee that deepened the Iota of joy
amona Reaganitea six weeks
after their areal victory.
Weil\ber1er told the senators
be wanted aa deputy secretary his
ow n selec ·
lion: Frank
Carlucci, a
career civil
servant who is
deputy dJrec-
tor of Presi-
dent Carter's
ClA. Having
h e a r d
rumbl es
again st
Carlucci's appointment, Wein-
berger wanted the senators to
know· how much he needed the
bureaucrat who was his deputy at
two domestic agencies in Nixon·
Ford days.
Almost surely, Rona ld Reagan
wiJI ignore muted alarms from
Capitol HHI and satisfy the wishes
of his defense secretary. That
guarantees more anguish within
the Reagan transition, and raises
some unpleasant questions:
Why is Reagan getting a sec-
Earl Waters
retary and deputy secretary at
defeme who both need remedial
coune• in mlUtary nuts and
boltl! Why did he pick a reputed
budget-cutter <"Cap tbe Knife">
to rebuild t.he nation's leaky de·
fenae structure? Why ia he nam-
ina a deputy witbout known con-
victions on national security who ,
fairly or not, is tied to the Carter
administration's undermining or
American intelUgence <and
whose nickname in CIA
back rooms is "Hamlet'')?
THE ANSWER falls under ttiis
rubric, delivered by a senior
transition official. on Reagan de-
cision-making since Nov. 4: "Dis-
organized, disconnected .
lackadaisical." Other transition
aides about to retum to private
jobs agree. Viewing the nation on
the brink or domestic and foreign
chaos. they have been stunned at
the lack of urgency shown by the
president-elect and his inner cir-
cle.
None of this was obvious in the
euphoric post~lection mood
when defense experts converged
on the Pentagon to plan the
Reagan takeover. To them. Cap
Weinberger was just a "kitchen
cabinet" member in Cali(omia
who during the campaign wanted
restraints on defense spending.
Never did they dream of him a.a
secretary of defense.
One reason the non·dream be
came reality is the misconcep-
tion of lhe kitchen cabinet's aat:CS
millionaires that governin1 a
great nation LI Hke runnin1 a bl1
corporation. Failing to perceive
that the secretary of defena~ uJ
responsible tor policy rather than
administration. they thought of
Weinberger managing the Pen·
tagon much like the Bechtel Corp.
Reagandidnotdisagree.
NO DEFENSE secretary has
been less familiar with defense
probl e ms s in ce Charle y
W i Ison i n 19S3 I when the
hardware was simpler and the
dangers more distant). Wein-
berger's transition experts are
preparing elaborate dossiers and
hours or tough questioning so he
can survive Senate confirmation
hearings . They also recommend
an experienced deputy secretary
for Weinberger to leifl on tn
choosing policy options .
'The list is long : Will iam Van
Cleave. a nuclear arms expert
who was a Reagan campaign ad·
viser and heads his defense
transition team ; Dr. John Foster.
former Pentagon research chief
and now a TRW, Inc . vice presi-
dent ; J Fred Busey, president of
Texas lntrumenta; former depu·
t.y 1ecretary Paul Nlt&e, a con-
verted Ru1anite; Ambauador
Seymour Weiss . former State·
Department politics>· military
chief Ouulde the Jist. a push has
been made tor Tom Reed, a
former secretary of the Air f~orct
BUT Wt:IN8£&G£& inai.ataon
fellow neophyte Carlucci, show-
ing as little interest in a
knowledgeable deputy as Reagan
did in a knowledgeable secretary.
Nor did he share apprehension by
defense transition officials that as·
a senior intelligence official of the
Carter administration, Carlucci
could not be totally separated
from itsdemolitionoftheCIA.
Van Cleave's men set out to find
evidence of Carlucci 's complicity
but discovered none. <"Frank
does-not leav~ footprints," said
one prober.) His govermental re-
cord is distinguished, crowned by
service as ambassador to Lisbon
during the Portuguese crisis of
the mid-19705. But he shows no
ideological commitment to
Reagan 's national security
policy. "He could work as easily
tor George McGovern as Ronald
Reagan," one transition official
told us.
Neither policy views nor ex-
perience seem to rate h igh in fiJl.
ing other Pentagon posts. Rep.
Robin Beard of Tennessee. an e>C-
pert on the volunteer army. would
bring rare expertise if named
secretary of the Army. But Beard
may be passed over in favor of
John Marsh. a White House aide
under Preside nt Ford. The
reason: Jerry f'ord wants it. as a
personal fa vor
Dr. John Lehman. a former
deputy director of the arms con-
trol agency I ACDA ), is unusually
qualified for secretary of the
Navy. But he may be passed over
for a junior memberoflhe kitchen
cabinet : Bob Nesen, a 62-year-old
Cadillac dealer from Thousand
Oaks. Ca1if.
Nobody planned a Pentagon
hierarchy so lacking in both
background and policy commit-
ment As with most new ad-
ministrations. it just happened.
What makes this cause for
anguish is the nation's desperate
condition as it changes govern-
ment -a condiition not often
,reflected the last six weeks in the
president·elect·s hunt·and-peck
Cabinet-making.
Brown's. rail plan needs industry skills
ft is small wonder that Mike
Royko labelled Jerry Brown
"Governor Moonbeam." His
hyper-imagination has leapt
from bicycles to outer space and
from woodstoves to solar power
as he desperately struggles to
become the ne w Messiah to
California's energy dilemmas.
Arter six years of listening to
his clarion calls hailing hastily
conceived
brainstorm which are
just as hastily
forgotten
once the im-plausability
of hi s con-
cepts stand
revealed, it
has become
clear that
Brown's problem is a mouth that
moves before his brain is in
gear. Or, perhaps in his burning
am bit ion lo be Presidnt, a
We\sonal Umetable_wbich com-
p s him to move before all
parts are in place.
In the proper perspective his
notions are not always as flaky
as they seem. But you can't
force people into mass transit
system§ that.don't exist. Neither
. Art Hoppe
can you convert lo a lternate
energy sources which are yet far
distant from becoming perfected
and economically sound.
HIS LATEST flight of fancy is
yet another example of trying to
put something together before it
has been thoroughly thought out.
This is his plan ror the state to de-
velop a modern hig h-speed
passenger rail system linking
California's major metropolitan
areas.
Co nsid e ring th e hi gh
costs or gasoline together with
its diminis hing supply along
with the lime, inconvenience
and congestion of auto travel
and parking problems that go
with it, rail alternatives would
indeed be attractive. With the in-
creasing hazards of congested
airports along with the high
airfares and the bother gelling
to and from airports, rails must
seem the ultimate answer.
'f.hls-45-especiaUy-troe-whetri
is realized that there would be
small difference in the overall
time of travel between Los
Angeles and San Francisco. all
things considered, when going by
high speed trains rather than
planes. On shorter runs between
L .A. and San Diego and
Sacramento and San Francisco
train time would actually be less
than the overall time consumed
going by air.
But the idea of the state ~Ov·
ernment designing. building and
operating a railroad is appall-
ing. Imagine the fiasco which
would result with the politicians
and bureaucrats tugging and
hauling. tampering and meddl-
ing at every step of the way.
BESIDES, what e ver hap·
pened to private enterprise'>
There is today a greater need
for rail passenger service in
California than there ever wa s
dreamed of when Southern
Pacific and Santa Fe first la.id
down their tracks up and down
the state. Having recognized the
need a wise governor would call
upon the industrial and financial
giants of the stale to develop
such a proJeel with.their.own re.·
sources, -Perhaps there is a need for
some kind of a state authority to
pa v ~ the way through the
myriad layers of governmental
regulations. permits and other
roadblocks whicj) have been
stymieing progress at everv
turn in recent years Perhaps,
too. there is a need for tax incen·
tives and other encouragements
But the planning. financing.
building and operation should be
left completely to the private
sector free of governmental in-
terference.
The state could also be of
great assistance in securing
rights of way. their highway
people have acquired great eic·
pertise in that area. Brown s a ys he plans to
spend SJ00.000 for Phase I of his
rail project. That is to select the
routes where such service would
be most feasible and to choose
the most appropriate high speed
technology. He would do better
lo spend it bringing together the
best brains or industry and
finance and let them do their
own planning and selections. He
admitted he has no idea what
the whole project might cost.
That-is undentandable-whe~
contemplates state government
doing it. ·
The irony is the whole thing
might have been done for the $5
billion he so cavalierly frittered
away in bail-out funds playing
Santa Claus "10 the local govern·
men ts a.fle_r;>assage.of PJ'Op.13.
(
Am.erican dietary rules can confuse a newcomer
I ran into my friend Wots Nu
in the supermarket the other
day. Nu ill a recent imml1rant to
our shores and often bs trouble
undentandin1 our ways.
"Please, have you any dog to-
day?" be
asked the
butcher,
cauaint the
lady behind
blm to aup and clutch
ber tbroet.
"Loot here,
H u , ' ' I
...wb11pued
"We .. , eat
dos• ID Amertca. Do11 are maa'1blmtfrtaedl.'' "Oil." Mid Nu '"l'MD pleaM ma7 I baft ..,.. Ht, ~ tt
.. DOt -.rb' • lood ..... '
.......... bllNd tbe ladJ, ttonm.., otf to fl'OMO foodl.
I drew Nu uJde. "Nor Cati,
eJtber." I Hid 1teml1. "In fact,
a California state senator bas
just introduced a bill to make
eating cats or dogs agalnat the
Jaw. He beard you refugees bad
been trapping them in the park.
He wu "9n::\fied as we consider
them, aa he put it, 'members of
tbe family.' "
"Then I must go home and
lock up my chHdren," said Nu
nervomly. "For I have read ol
tbe painful experimenu your
sclentistsJerform on these
memben your families and
bow your autboritiea arrest
tbem for vasraaey and execute
tbem witboul trial."
..NO, NO," I 1ald. "Tboee
dol• and call ann't mem'*" ol
aa1ooe's famUJ. An1way, " don't• tbem. Not ever."
"Then wbat ... " Nu brlPtmed. ··1 bowl 1 beard a
man cmly ,_.,., say he wu '° b.....,. be could eat a whole one. Pleue." Nu said to the
butcher, "Ma y I have some
horse?"
"Nor horses," I said, "except
in emergencies. We love horses.
Horses are our raithful servants
and the heroes or co~boy mov-
ies. Eat horses? Cows. yes,
horses, no.••
·•Ah, at last,'· said Nu, turning
to the butcher. .. A pound of cow
please."
I shuddered. "We call il beef,
Nu. We also eat veal, which is
baby beef (do nol refer to it u
'baby oow'), pork. whleh ls pl&.
lamb."
"AB. YES, •Mary had a little
limb,' " said Nu, noddlna. "an4 perb•PI 1 little rtce, too!"
"Good heaveu, Nu, abe dlda1 ...
eat tbl lamb. MOit people can't
bear to eat anlmall witb Whom
tbey AN penoaally ac:qual.Dted.
It would be like Mr. Rusan
penonally eatiftl tbote ttrO live
turkeys he wu ,.,ven for
Tbanblivtn•."
. ,
''What did. he do with them,
then? .. asked Nu.
"He gave them to someone
else to eat, of course.'' l replied.
By now. Nu had his po\lnd of
hamburger and we proceeded to
the next aisle. Suddenly he
stopped. "You have misled me."
he cried. "Look. thousands of
cans of do1 food to eat! '·
"No, no, that's not do1 meat
for humans. lt 's hone meat for
dogs.''
··Ah, you do not eat horses
because you love them," said
Nu. "lnltead you 11ve them to
your dop to eat."
"PL&\SB, N\.I, you must try
to undentand all this IO you can
become a real American,•· I
Hld. •·vou do want to bftome a
,.al American doa'l you!"
"All tbln11 conaldertd, I
think 1·11 become • real
veaetartan tnllead." 11ld Nu.
-----.....
•U&INESS / STOCKS
T lie.cta1'• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
} ) ..... (PD'I') Ptk::w .......... ._ ......... -.""°'·..._..·.._"IC,NW ........ .Lo.v.11.,..C111Cl-t111.c~ ........ ,...,_.., .......... ,MleelallelltflKwllitlC..a'-'t ... IMtlMt
T'*CllV. December 23. 1980 H I F
TerTute McCarthy la manaaer of the Orange l.oumy Real Eatate Center of Imperial Bank, Costa Me11a.
lnlae IH .. 11 aad Lou AHoda&lon and Valle)·
Federal 8avtap aad Loaa AaaoclaUOft, Van Nuys, have
announced an execution or an 1tgreement and plan or re
oraanlaatton under which Valley Federal wllJ :m1uir~
Irvine in a cash transaction totaling approximately SR 3
mllUon. 1
David C. Britton, who has taught hotel and motel
marketina classes at Costa Mesa's Orange Coast College
la general manager for the Queen Mary Hotel. Ltin~
Beach. n~ e.
Burroalht Corp., manufac\~r or buslnesi. mach1m~s . n e
haa announced plans to buitd a $1.9 million w1~s1t•r11 r(' tn
glonal headquarters in Irvine . 1al
a
David T. Blankerhorn has been namt'd chief exerut1vf 18·
officer of Commerce Bank, Newport UeCJ~h. while Ted
Vo11 has been appointed manager of the recently formed .he
real estate department. Timothy L. Strader, chairman of ib·
the board, was rece ntly elected president of thr Cah fl>rn1 a re-'
Business Properties Association .
. Quarter Sales or $6,202,000 huve bef'n I l•JlOI l f'd
by' Rampart General Inc., Irvine. TtH1I fi gure for lh\•
quarter ended Sept. 30. compares to $6,792 ,300 for lht: i,limf
period of 1979. Sales for the six-months peno<i ~·11<l11d SPfJI
30 were $8,797,600 compared to $14.562 ,AOO ror the .,ism•
period the previous year Net loss for the -.1x mm1lh..,
period was S240.800 or 9 cenlS per share, con1paretl to Mt
income of S533,300 or 21 rents. for th(• c;1x mon1hi. 1·nd1•cl
' Sept. 30, 1979.
James Dole Corp., Fountain Valley, has roporH•d 1·1trn
ings or S719.618 or 47 cents per share. up r1v:n S-t5'l,1114 .irul
23 cenlS (1979> tor thE: first riuarter ended Oct 3l '-I.ill'!'! (t11
the period increased 33 percent lrorn $.! :1!Jti,!il!~1 I•
SJ,995,402. The earnings Included a l'l'{'(lll ol $20,oOu in t l1l
first quarter of 1980 and another C'red1t of Sr1!1,l/ll<1 art J!tl••
Dennis F. McNally 1s audit mana~t:r of \10111 !1 1 11l111t111 I
and Cranstoun. Newport Beach
Courtney Seeple, a nat1"e of LaJ.tUOa 111·;•1 n. I" , 11 1
president in charge of Oaon Offi<'" r ·l'11 l1 •·· firou11 111
California, a Vancouver, British <'olum h1·, h:1 wrf 1 • ,
estate development firm
Je nifer Monroe, lr\'lne. 1s advc•r1 .-.1n1.., rl1rl•1 1111 ••I
Orange County Home and Garden mugliz1 n" 1nl
lie Patrick M. Scruggs, Newport H~;u·h 1\ 111:111a f..'1 r "I the as
Newport Be1:tch office of Crocker ~1orl l.(11 Rt' r·11 c1 '1111 iss
sidiary of Crocker National IJank 1.
John P . Markoe, Irvine, Is Vlt't' p r• \1111·111
personal tr st department for Union llank
. ,, • > •
. . ..
N£W VORK (AP) P•lcoo•oo•dcoln• •,....n.-. llrotor .W.1?.00,uoU• 00 ... .,.. .. f, ltroyo1 ,MUOO,upS)4 00
Mealc• !O !MIMI. I 1 troy OI '7,.. 00" up
~::..._.. 100 <ro-. "°' t•o• 01 u•> 00 upU:t.00 So11rce o. .... ,..,..,. /
WHAT AMf 'I 0 I> er
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deterrea or 'IO a ll<l'I 1-'•" •t '"" 'O•v-~~~~.,,!, ~~'~,: o~~o, ',~•:,:;.~ ""'H•• h -"Ue t ·Oree t.l'Wd QI fN"HJ .no• ~·O•"V 17 1"nMIM PIV~ 000 Jlv•O..ot1 I I•~., to
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--lsln.
Read the Orange Coast
newspaper that keeps you
in - -the informative
642-4321 DAILY PILOT
t
DAILY PILOf * Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS.
' ' I I f \ '
• •11 "" -·l\t ll•" ..,. p• 1.111 ,_, ·~ .ior 1111
• 1-...l~YHI~
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• ! fllllC Q()Ml'AN1
; Tl1if AO'tlOCIAflt 1111
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ICOTTI" .,·_.a, feum'
\fao. .,,, .. , .,,, ••' _, .. ,
lll vl • p< i. a m 14l!f1
..... ~""" llWf• ....... ''"" • .,. ty ll••••tt.•. I••"
Je~n StJtpl~ton star~ 1n the title role of
Aunt Mary · as a handicapped woman
whu orgamzes a boys' baseball te'.lm ,
and Martm Balsam 1s featured Lonight
dl !I o n CBS. Channel 2.
ai'(I IJ"'4•t '>OI I lal e '"'
n •m•
I 0000 tllolE.S
OtCIC CAVEn Gue•' ,.,aroto M•'I,,"' ue~
1Par1 ~ .>11 D s-lUOIOSEE
Ft•llfldl Stub• u,.,, _
N~Ole ana O•m•11n ['Ide
mire ••IJIO•l> me C11ymo1'1
1s1anoa C111c.,11u C.111
StOUI~ l)lot llAlllM••" Hi)
CL M'A0 S'H
1111er ii '' antlui1on us111g u
01nt ot Fr e11"-• tll\JOU
Hawkeye tJ&ptoc;t~ 111m or
naving l\ep111111s
(JI) 8ARNEY MILLER
Barney and h1S detec.11ves
go unoergtOUrt(I when en
air 1rat1•c c;onltollet goco1
berseri. 11no 1r111s lo l811d
PH•enger ~ •1flglf> Ille 1n
the c11y·s suow1v svs1em
7 00 I CBS NEWS NBC NEWS
HAPPY OAVS AGAIN
Al Ch11s1m11'll ll mllt'ch1n1
seaman lrom lhe ~rten1
oe1tver5 a 0111 to Fonzie
Iron• Ills 1ong-1osi 181her D ABCNEWS
Q l YNN SHACl<ELFOAD
ID M 'A'S'H
I urneo OOWTI tor • tutu re
1>0t111or1 111 nome Chotle)
•• &II ""'" llt 1etu~s to
1<11~ 10 111yone m me unit
Cl) BARETTA tD OVEREASY
Ouetl• ainger ~1110901108
9"tbU•• HOflmlln T•dl
Su11on
Iii) MA~EIL /LEHRER
REPORT
(() 'flC TAC OOOOH
®) MERV GRIFFIN
Ouesll Diena Sov1ero,
Charle' Nt1leon Reilly, 8111
Russell Reg11 Phllbu)
7'20 D NBA BASKETBALL
,Lo• Anoe•e• L•~•,. vs
Pot11ano Trall Blazers •
7.308 20...THETOWN
MelOoy Ro0111s apenos a
oav at lhe ott•ce or the Los
A"Qeles Herald Eum1ner.
a new waler SpOfl called
sk1-1ess &kl1no 0 THIS WAS AMERICA
Learn•"O lo Play lhe
1nOutlfl8I revolution
oroughl new concepts 1n
Channrl Lb••ng•
• KNX'f tCBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
• KTLA (Ind I Los Angele!. 8 KABC· TV (ABCt Loe; Angeles
Cl) l<FMB CCBS) San Diego
Q KHJ·TV (Ind I LO!> Angele!>
Q]) KCST IABC) San D1P90 m t<rTV 1 Ind 1 Loe; Anqele~
Cl) KCOP TV (Ind I Los Ar1ge11'!>
8i) KCET-TV PBSJ l o'> Anqt'IPs
I:) KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hun11riq11111 Beacn
"""''ii the '118C8llOl'I ill'IO tllo
weelleno D SHANA NA
GYHll Th• Cum• S1shttS 8 HOLLYWOOO
SQUARES
.., ALL IN THE FAMILY
When .an 11oer1y '""I die , 1 Alone and unlo'lled, Edllh 11
Iha only one who aomH to
f)tly llnal 1Hf)8Cll. 9 MACNEIL/ LEHRER
REPORT
I.I) AN ELIZABETHAN
CHIUSTMAS
CELHAATION
P1oc1u1ona, 1e1111no.
SlnQlno ano d•nclno 1v1>1·
cal of the Ellubethan petl·
od hlgllUghl the tHtlve hOI·
•oay
Cl) P.M. MAOAZIHE
t;OO 9 n4l WHITt SHADOW
A Catl\OllC bOya' club and
an orphanaoe provld•
Co•Ch RMv" eno hit
i.eam wnh an opportunity
to e•pet1ence lhe irue
mean1no or Ct1r111mH
0 THELITTLE
DRUMMER BOY
Antma1eo An orphan boy
goes to Bethlenem and
arn'\les Bl the Ch•ial Chtld'1
manger w•th nolhlng lo
qt_"e B•Cep1 a song ( R)
U MOVIE
• • • • "Tne •OO Blows"
I t9591 JH n·Plerre Leeuo,
Pa1nc1< Aultey Dlfttcted by
Francois Trullaut A young
boy deprived of pare111a1
warmth and the accept·
anc;e of h+s peers 1urns h1S
a11ena11011 ano oespau
1owara a Ille or stnall
c;;:t'tfl'lO~
Career rebuilt
Former comic now haj 'control'
By NANCY GOl'J,ER
LOS ANGELES rAP1 Marlv
lngels knew 1t was time to qu1\ when
e had to be earned orf the set or
Johnny Carson's "Tonight " show, a
uivering, quaking emotional wreck
That was four years ago Today the
former comic has turned lht! ''whole
Hollywood garbage rat race" that led
to his breakdown into a multimillion·
dollar business placing celebrities in
television commercials
After years or harassing show bUSI·
and has made him a hero among
C'Clebril1es tired of cutting through
the laye r s of s how business
bureaucracy.
··celebrities are s urrounded by
arsenals or ass assins whose whole
job it is to set you orr your track, ..
Ingels says "After m y breakdown, I
realized everybody in the world was
always trying to get in touch with
someone in Hollywood. Projects or all
kinds were dying on the vine because
people were not getting through to the
right person.·· ness agents for work, s uddenly the y
are call ing him WHILE INGELS HAS made that Instead of worry. i n g whether his idea pay off grossing more than $2
career will be cut million last year it wasn't easy
short b y s ome gettingstarted.
n a m e I e s s "At the beginning I was constantly
t e I e vi s 1 on ex . in tears on the telephone," he says.
ecut1ve, Ingels 1s "One guy said, 'You're a has-been
bu sy bu 1 Id in g comedian.' The transition was very
careers. hard. But people finally got the idea
The biggest pro-ll wasn't Ingels the comedian calling,
bl em facing the but Ingels the 'arranger.' "
tHOELS man who o n c e Whal Ingels is best at is getting
co n f esse d he through directly to the celebrity a
agonized about "whether I will be company wants to hire for a com.
funny tomorrow" is overseeing the mercial. sparing the caller the trou-
opening of a Tokyo branch ___ __.,.le. ..or ...eo~ct.ing-~1.1s-agen\s,
business managers. lawyers and re-
INGELS INC. IS a h.uge suc· ceptionists lo gel an answer
cess, and Marty Ingels says he has never been happier Ingels is proud of what he has done building a new career and family
"Basically l dropped out of show life with his wife , actress Shirley
business because I couldn't control Jonei; and s pares. no humility in
anything," he says, "Whelher or not congratulating himself. ·
yo'u worked as a comedian was up to He claims to h~ve been insttumen-aom~-guy ·wiUS" an anonymous llst somewhere . Now I'm in control." · lal in putting together "anything <commercials) you see on the air"
What Ingels is in control of is a and says Burt Lancaster. Lee Grant.
firm with 38 employees in six cities. Rod Steiger and Cary Grant have
a business he says has "revolu· called to ask him to find products for
Uonized" the way Hollywood works them to sell on the air.
THE IMPROV ED production
EXPO..,.Q)eOD set values in the commercial-making
u.aao business has made his job eaaier, he
says. "Commercials are not only not
for 'NightJ1'ne' an onus now, but Bill Cosby aot a television series C" Fat Albert"> out
of his wonderful Jell·O commercla1s
NEW YORK <AP> -ABC Ntiws' with kids. Mariette Hartley after 22
"Nightline." network television's years had to wait for a silly Polaroid
nrst late night news pro1ram, will be commercial to do well."
expanded to a half-hour from Ill cur· ln1el1 knows all too well the ups
rent 20-minute format be1lnntng Jan. and downa of a show buslne11 career.
I, the network said. He was on top with a television series
BUI Lord. the program's executive ln the 19808, "I'm Dickens ... He's
producer, said "J"'l1htllne" wm con· Fenster," then hit bottom with a
··J()ttN~ ANO THI"""""'' Jolln Otft-1-\IC) wltll
1(9tmlt Ille , f ot, ,oplei
..., , MIM P199Y en<! •
tr Ill* lul of MYpoeta IOt I
~lllOn OI t~ YuletlcM
-1"1
TUBE TOPPERS Olaced 11'1 • comc>romleln9
lhu&llon
1111 MONIWS
JOKM'IWIU>
HOGAWlkMOU
Haoen llOOM 10 Qe •bit 10
uM Oen lkltkhtllet'• ....
,., 11'1 1111 plat\• 10 blOw uo
• trllin.
1;00• MOVll
To&t~
1:IO. THI lOHI AAHQlR
"COiotlOO Cold"
KHJ e 7:20 -Laken Buketb-11.
Kareem and Company travel to
Portland to take on the Trail Blazers.
• MOVIE
• • "OOOd Oey F0t A
Hanging " I 111$9) Ffed
MeeMurra~. Maggie
Hayee When an H ·l•W·
man cept1.1r" • tlall\ tllet·
IH'1 killer. Ill It dltmaY*I
to llnd that Ille lown!IC*>-
• fl.M. MA4AZJHI
A llOtP'tal that 9')41Clallna
1n tre•tlnQ llff<IAC.,.., 1111
1t1empt 11 the Gult111M•
8Q91< tr ampotlne recOfd:
8111 H91•11 review• "NIM
To ''w": J~ry B•ht ha•
hOl\day gr-y Pf~·
11on1, Capt C•uot on zinc
NBC e 8:00 -The Uttle Drummer
Boy. An animated version of the tradl·
tional Christmas story, followed at 8:30
by another chUdren's special, "The Bear
Who Slept Through Christmas.''
• MOVll
To .. ~ ··~()MC NIWI
11:IO. 9 MOVll
• • "Ypun9 Pion .. ••
Chrltlmu" I 11176) L111d•
Purl, flogef Kim. A youno
pioneer c;ouple pvt aaJde
pereorill grlll 10 exttno
Ille glf1 ol lrlen<llhlp during
the Chr11lmH -•on IR)
.. Ple 1>1elw to think or his
captive •• l*ng Qlll"*'
and 1nupa1>1e ot eucn •
C:fif'M 2;001• N1W1 • MOVll
foe. AMoull<*I .
I llTOHIOHT
CoeMOI
"WhO Speak• Fo1 Earth?"
Or Cati S901n WMffl
loOllhat tne ma)Ot tlleml•
ot the -• end often aome cautionary warnl"Qt
lbOUt our IYIUll
CBS 9 9:00 -"Aunt Mary." Jean
Stapleton stars in this true story of a
Baltimore woman who overcomes
physical handicaps to coach a sandlot
baseball team (photo at left). -Ml>flGHT-
12:00. TWIUGHT ZOHf
MOVll
• • ~ "BecauM 01 You"
( 11162) LO<etta Voung. Jett
Ch1no11r Feartut ol lo1lno
the mi n the lovtt. a wom·
an concHll h11 put
lmpt11onmen1 hom her
him
Cl) l'AMILY THEATM
' OOing Nowllete'
8:30 G THI MA" WHO
SLEPT TH..OOOH
CHRISTMAS
Animated A youno bruin
goes II\ NAtch ol Chrl1t·
mas and l•nd• tome unu·
sual edv..,tu,.t 111ono the
way (RI
• CAAOL 9U"NETT
ANd FftiEN08
Ouett Al1n Alda
• NOVA
"Red Deer 01 Ahurn ' A
group of 1c~t11tt on the
1111nd ot Rhum oll lhe w .. 1
coul ot Sco11ano s1uole1
the red deer In lt1 neturel
hatiltlt
Cl) LA TIN ftflOfllE
8:00 8 Cl) AUNT MAAY
J .. n Stapleton po•l••Y•
Mary Dobkin, • 811tlmor•
womal\ wno Ignored htr
Nvate pettonal hano1cap1
ind went on to coacn
more than 'll.000 children
In 18ndk>I b•Mball (RI
G THI MAC DAVll
SPECW.
Lind• Gray, Mtll-Man·
Che91et Wld Miii• Wataon
jOin Mee Davie II\ a Yu ...
1"'8 mutlc: tPACl•I.
•@ THNE'S
COMPAHY
J1ntt 11\d Chrl11y Ar•
lhoelted wlletl they rnMt
the o<der woman Jeck 11
dl llllQ IR)
and ll'llO lht •P8ftmenl
below his. (R)
• THE llOOY IN
OOUTIOH
"Pefllhlble GOodl Or
Jonathan Miiier 111ows hOw
post mortems •r•
tndH pentlble 10011 1n
mOOttn medicine 11110 u~s
to what e•ten1 improve·
menl6 in ht• ••~tllllCy
and heellh are due to ooc-
. IO<S
10:00 0 STEVE ALLEN
COMl!OYHOVA
Guesls Loni ..,ndt•Son 1· ,. Jonathan Winters. Dick
M1rt1n, Bot) 1nd Rey
BG NEW8
(fD) HART TO HART
Alter extending her hOtO•·
1a111y 10 a slarvlno young
1u1no1. Jennller uperleric·
•• • ser11s ol n1ar-l11al
accidents. (RI
• INOlPfNOENl'
NETWORK NEWS ID THE WHALU THAT
WOULOH'T OIE
f ilm from all areu ot wh•I·
l"Q are 1nc0<por1ted Into e
p1o0ram oecllclled 10 the
only Whale. lhe g1ay, wnlch
hH twiee recovereO lrom
near oet1ruc11on Narraled
i Jack l0td
10:30 HEWS
INDEPENDENT
HETWOAI< NEWS
• l'fUEHTE
"Baou•ne De Los Anoahtos
JOHN DARLING
Protee.Ot FC>WMf. 1 ""41·
Ntoroa· An eaploratlon ol llkecl IMC:ller 11 a tiov•·
'baqul,,.," • oanc.orem1 Mlhoot. I• ••kecl by 111t
or taiaa bllflel with an orig· 1ru•t-10 ll'ld hi• t•ach·
1naJ mu11c:.1 score by WHiie 1no car•
Colon ID THE 900Y IN I l'ACE THI MUIC
OUUTIOH YOU IET YOUf' Uft
Per11h•b'• Goolfg" Of Buddy Hacllltl hH lun
Jon•lh•n Miller thow1 how wtlll an "'""°"· • c1os ..
f)OSI mori.rns ar• bOW ••pert and • lady
11\0Upen11ble tools In wno·a h•d 127 marriage
mod11tn me(l1C1ne 1nd U lla propotals this year
10 whet extent Improve-12:30 D TOM<>f'AOW
mania 1n Ille upec;tency ! Ouots T111 B•oolilyn
•nd health ere due to dOC· ~ Boys Chair
tors 8 MOVIE
11:00 I a. Cl) ®1 NEWS • * ·~ The Slue Oahlta"
HOLLYWOOD ( t946) Al1n L1dd, Veron1c1
SQUARES Lake An e•·Hf'llc;emal\ 11 G NEWLYWED GAME suspecleo of muroaring CD THE 000 COUPLE his untalltllul wife and
011eer oevelops an ulcer must prove his Innocence
ano Dlames Fel1.• 16t 11 D THE FBI
• ONE STEP BEYOND
2:211 NEWS z:ao MOVll **•'JI "FIVI Oravts lb
Cairo" ( 1943) Frenchot
Tone. Erich von Strl>helm
I Newt
2:341 NEWS
3:10 MOVIE
e • e "PIK>Qle Wiii Talk"
(195t) Cery 011nt. Jeanne
C111n
• MOVIE
* • * '~ "Ob1e<:t1v• Bur-
m• · ( t9•5> EttOI Flynn
Wt1111m Prince
4:00 8 MOVIE
• • • '' "Flesh Ano Fant•·
sv· ( 19431 Chat1H Boye•.
98rb&rl Stanwyck
4:26 1 NEWS 4:30 MOVIE
•''I 'Bells Qt C11p11lrano'
( 1942) Gene Autry, Smiley
Burnelte ID BASIC SOL.AA .., MllSION:
ENERGY ir-ePOBSrBLE Wrdnr•da11'• "Solar Reirollts The IMF is assigned 10
, 1:30 e Cl) LOU GRANT s1op • dee1 1nvo1111ng 1he Da111 f ,,.e 1tf ovlrs
Lou gets an e0uca11ori Purchese ano resale or
aboul Ille 1n 1 g,hetlo Ameocan arms 10 guerilla I -AFTERNOON-
llChOOI when he chooses a group&
1thOllr1n10 winner IRJ • INDEPENDENT 12:00 ID • • "The Ct1maon 0 THE BEST OF NETWOAK NEWS I P1ra1e 11952) Butt Lan.
CARSON 12:40 8 Cl) MOVIE caster Nick Craval
Ouesis Sett Con11, Mar•· * * ·~ Cactut In The 3:00 !Ill • • • •, Camelot
lyn HO•ne \RJ Sno.. 119721 Rlcnard 1Pat1 11 \ 1967) R1<:haro 8 PRISONER. CELL Tnomas Mary Layne A Hams Vanessa Jieograve
BLOCK H young $OI011r on le•ve 011.
When Sllaton learns 1ha1 covers love lhen the M8•1· 3·30 D • • • Gr90orto Ano
he nu uMt<l nos tntluence breall ot separation when • His Angel 119681 Brooe•·
to help his son Paul •S he is 01dete<1oH10 war IR) ICk C1aw1010
by Armatrong l B•tluk
• MlRV cllWFIN
Guests Olan• Sovlero,
Chat lei Nelton Rell!). 8111
Russell Reg•• Philbin,
Glen Super ID NOVA
THJU'5 RIC1H"T , K105 ! l 'M
GOING 10 0E COM1NCT
10 EACH OF YOUR HOU5E6 T Hl5 YE.AR 1N
'THE CHANNE.L ONE.
aUOOLPH AND ALL OF i'HE. OTHE.A ~INOEf.a
APE: GEITING A WEl....L·
OE5ER-IEO REST 0.ACK
A! IHE-NMTH POLE.'
HOWEVER, 1 010 13RING ALONG
ONE. OF MY FAITHFUL ELVES!
"Red Deer 01 Rhum" A
groop or sc•enflsta on the
1s11no ot Rhum ott the_,
coes1 ol Scotl1no studies
lhe reo deer In Its na1ura1
hDbllat
8:30 8 9 TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT
l-4enry rebets when he
learns !hat' hla daughters
are Pl•nnlng to move out
NEW6CHOW'E'a !
celebratioa in ....,,
John Denver and the Muppets blend their voices in a musical
celebration of Christmas in "John Denver and the Muppets a
Christmas Together," airing tonight at 8 on ABC._ Channel 7.
Christmas s ows set
KOCE, Channel 50, has . day favorite will be
scheduled an evening of r e at u red on · ·Th e
holiday family favorites Festive Bach" airing at
for Christmas viewing on 8~30 p.m. The occhestra
Christmas Day. a n d c h o I r o r l h e
The Great America~ 1Jn1ve·rs1ty o( .Oregon.'~
Mime Experiment of. ~umme~ Festival w1l
Cleveland opens this JOln soloists a~d.conduc·
special night of pro-tor Helmuth Rilhng.
gr ammlng at ?:30 p.m. . At 9 p.m , Mel Torme
with a delightful half· 1s host in an encor.e
h 0 u r 0 f h 0 11 day performance of KOCE ~ . "The Christmas Songs, ' scenariOfi in panton:'.1me a sentimental tribute' to
and, at 8 P·~·· th~ the nolidays featurlne
Sounds of Chn~t!flaS popullr carols and
com binea trad1t1onal traditionaJ songs.
Chris tmas son1s with a . 'Christmas Lace,··
fanciful ballet .. •nd pup-the tale of a generous
pet version of The Nut· lacemaJter and 8 thief cracker."
Johann Sebastian
Bach 'a "Ma1nificat in
D'' -a perennial holl-
MOVIE RATINGS
who discovers the mean·
Ing of Christmas, airs at
10: 30 p.m. and, at 11
p.m ., lhe Mormon Youth
Symphony and Chorus is
featured fn "Caroling,
Caroling." a concert of
Christmas music taped
at the world-famous
Mormon Tabernacle in
Sall Lake City.
Christmas on KOCE
concludes with "Silent
Cffrhltmas" which pre·
sents a selection of
traditional Christmas
music and a modern
adaptation of "The
Night Before
Chrlatmaa. ''
Doctor gets
inside death
By PF.YER J . BOYER
LOS ANGELES 1AP1 Anvone who's seen
any of Jonathan Miller's 13-part PBS series on the
human body, "The Body in Question." won't be
surprised that in tomghl 's final episode. Miller
cons iders death 1n a mos t forthright manner,
absent comforting niceties and euphemisms.
But even the steadiest Miller rans. accustomed
lo his ofC-hand style while probing livers and
spleens. mighl mnch a bit at the treat the good
doctor has in store tonight.
TONIGHT AT 10:30 ON KOCE. Channel SO
Miller and a colleague open a corpse. They squeeze
the liquid-filled lungs of the departed fellow, carve
up his liver. slice into his heart This "is neither
fr ightening nor re ·
pulsive," Miller assures. , I
"it ·s simply a necessary r~. R c-
pa rt of ou r medic al •" r,\1(EW
knowledge... '---------~-1 n deed , Mill e r
manages to make a post·mortem seem like a
grand mystery, repeatedly emphasizing that only
in death can "the causes of pain, decay and dis·
ability in life be observed in minute detail . so,
in the history of medicine, 1t was only possible lo
understand the ordeals of the living after we'd
made the decision lo open the dead."
Idly chatting as they remove !nd in~t tb._.._-----"•
curp-u's -Organs. Min-er ana s pathologist pal in-
dulge in a little pathologist's humor. Mill er notes
that the deceased's liver was enlarged, but it
wasn't quite the classic "nutmeg hver ::
"FOR SOME R E ASON," he obser ves,
"pathologists seem to have this ... "
" ... Tendency to name thlnp after food ." his
friend adds ...
Unue to cover one major story each divorce, near bankruptcy and the ~Jllillig..l:le...1'814~.DOllteLl~IMLJ:Lew.~e&oiM!Aa.hffakdo1W&.,,....-~~~~~~==~~.i=..:~r1-ff
element.s, Including essays from out· "I've been called everythin1 from
1lde contributors. a crude upttart to the Henry KJ11-
"NlshtUne," with Ted Koppel aa lnaer of commercla.11," he aaya, re·
anchorman, was Introduced March rerrtn1 to lftduatry reacUon to hi•
M, and baa been broadcaat Monday bu1lnea. But the tal~ doesn't bother
t1arou1h Thursday each week. The him.
pro1ram will .,. broadcut Monday. "Now .,..,ll and celebrtU11 are
rrtd•Y bqlnn.ln1 In April, ABC Newa callln1 me," he aay1. "How can J uld. complain?"
......... ,, ... ,.., ...... ,
----NOW 8HGW1Nall1----_,_ .... ·--8ut111,..rlt Onwt·ln Htfbof Twin s.f!MU CIMHmt
(716)121·'010 (11t) lll·lSOl (114) Sll·SllO (114) '3HU3
wawva tlMIM h1 <1l4) n1-ms
NO-~lllQR,.... ••• _ _.IT
.,_fWIUCI
(dwtrdi Twin •
141·03"
-011nre Men 631 ·03•0
SMJ•• H1rber Blwd Or In mim
"°'"-~«> ~,,....r•·_.•"
\
' I I I ',cl.\ ., l Jt cf MB t R .' ! ~ I j th.i OnANGf COUN TY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
County backs doubling of gas taxes
a,-GLA:NN~ QI_ ..... _ .....
Ora.nae Q>unl y offir1ala have
endol'M!d pl an lo rt1 pleruab lhe ~l u e ·!I d,.1ndhna fund• fo r
fretnn,) construc·t1on by almOllt
doubhni g~oltnt' tues In thti
next rwe ears
'fhe proposal, approved as lhe
\op priont) of th" Orange COW\
ly Tra.nsportauon Commission's
leg1stal1~e prog.ram, would al·
low lhe Sllate Board of Equaliza·
Uun to adjwit gas taxea annually
to fund approved hithway proj.
ects The new funding system could
rai5e as much as $43 billion i.n
fiv e years, explafned Nancy
Coss·Fitzwater, an aide to the
transportation commission. She
said the tax could 10 up aa much
as six cents per gallon to raise
the revenue. Thus, gas tax, now seven cents
pe r gallon, could become as
Christmas celebration ---
much u 13 cent.a per 1allon b)' t• wlth the Pl"OPOfal.
Driven flWna 1$-1.Uon tanka
would pay $1.05 in state 1u tu
more than the)' pa)' today.
Bespite tbia obvioua problem,
she said tbe system is con·
aidered an efficient means for
raisin& taxes because it is tied to
the need for bi&bwa)' projecll.
The s)'ltem prevents surpluses
trom developin1. which she said
can occur wllh olber fundina ap-
proacbm.
State analysts have projected
that funds for already:approved
freeway projects in California
will be $1 billion short in five
years. In Oran1e County. that
means that bottlenecks such as
the interchan1e betwee n the
Santa Ana and Newport
freeways won'.t be improved am-
til more mone)' is available.
Mrs. Coss-Fitzwater said com-
mission members and aides are
prepared to take the lead i.n a
statewide lobbyi.ng effort to pass
legislation to finance more con-
struction.
"We don 't think some of the
statewide efforts are going to
address our needs in sufficient
detail,·· she said.
The proposed funding plan
would place more control in the
hands of the state legislators,
who would rather review a list of
freeway projects for funding
each yea r during budget
sessions . Altho ugh som e
legislators might like the shift in
power, she said the proposal
'"might be too muc h of a
political hot potato" for the ma·
jority to support.
Because of that, sh .. ,,c1id lhe
county's proposal, when sub·
mitted, probably won't be re-
<Stt FREEWAY, Page A2)
Hostages due visit f~om clergy
Haig role
in Nixon
plot eyed
NEW YORK (AP) -Gen.
Alexander Haig, the secretary of
state-designate, played a role in
trying to suppress incriminating
Watergate tapes and asked the
FBI to ignore wiretap rules
when he worked for the Nixon
White House. NBC News report·
ed today.
The network 's Washington re-
porter, Carl Stern, said Haig's
conduct, had it been known at
lhe time by the Watergate grand
jury and prosecutors, might
have led to charges against the
general.
Haig was noC immediately
available for comment..
The network said the tape
matter involved transcripts
Nixon made public in April 1974
in an effort to quiet demands
that he surrender the tapes
. themselves. According to Stem, Haig was
told that the president edited out
important passages, including
one from March 22, 1973, in
which Nixon said: "I don't give
a . . . what happens. I want
them all to stonewall it . . . let
them plead the Firth Amend·
ment, cover up or anything else
if it will save 1t. Save the plan
... we're going to protect our
people il we can.··
Stem said, "Recent accounts
of that period indicate that Haig
told them to leave it out.··
Docume nts relating to
wiretaps show that Haig told FBI officials not to follow reg-
ulations he knew existed when
he sought taps on White House
foes, NBC said.
It cited FBI memos, including
one by then-director J . Edgar
Hoover , as saying that Haig
wanted nothing in writing and
that he wanted the bureau to
make the taps without telling the
Justice Department and getting
its r~uired approval.
Thief said it all
HAYWARD (AP)-Policeaay
they chased a stolen beer truck
through several cities before
ramming it to a atop in Hayward.
The \ruck, mdecl wilh lO;GOO bot·
lies of Budwet.erot wu stokp iD
Daly Citiu the driver made a de·
livery shortly after 9:30 a .m.
Monday PoUeesald.
Chase trims
• pnme rate .
NEW YORK (AP) -
Cbue ManbMtan Bank to-
day cut ill prime lendln1
rate by oae prcenta1e point
to 20.5 percent, matchinl
tbe cut mmounced Monday
by Wella FarlO Bank ln SU
Francisco and fuelln1
bopea tbat interftt rates
bavepeabd.
A n.umber of 1maller
bub cut tbeir rat. even
fartber llanday' to ., per.
ceat. butotbtt..,_ banks
held to tbe 21.5 pereent rate
tbat ... tbe banklnl in·
duatry Friday.
Cb ... tbe nation'• thlrd·
laflelt bMii, said lta rate
reduction reflected
deeUDel ID lta COit of ae· qulrtnl tmdl, but added
tbat lt WH u11eertaln
wbetMr tbe deellna would
eoetiDul.
Delty"9t .........
lt'n C'larbt•••
Nothing like Christmas
vacation for spending a little
time at the beach, says
Alfred Crabtree, 11, of
Laguna Hills . Wintry
weather didn't bother him
Monday as he did a little
skimming on his Boogie
board at Laguna's Main
Beach.
Two injured
in Laguna
auto acciden·t
An early momin& single car
accident in Laguna Beach Mon-
day left a Coeta Mesa l(irl with a
broien leg and a lf untingtoo
_ BeachJ outh with a _fr~
bone in bis bact. Police said a car driven by
William Graham Orr, 22, of
Newport Beach, went out of con-
trol on Cout Highway at Fonst
Avenue at about 3 a.m.
The northbound vehicle struck a lllbt. pole at Forest A"WIRM!,
:Mn bit-• ~ H1bt -pole
farther down Coast Hi-1lw~ at
Ocean Avenue, ac6>rdln1 to
tramc inveatisaton.
Police said a teen-a1e lirl
from Costa Mesa suffered a
broken tea and a teen·a1e male
in the car suffered a fractured
bone iD bil apiDe. Both were
treated and released at South
Cout Medical Center.
Orr ad a third paueDler ln
tbe car weren't bQured.
Art scholar
program 8et
Repreeentatlvea of tbe Festini
of Arta wU1 be la tbe e....., room
at L.,_. Beaeb HlCb 8elloal
Jan. T from u :• a .m . to 1 p.m. to lDlonD ..... of tbe ,.. ...
1 aebolanldp Pl'OlfUD· oa-Veddlr, etaalrma ol tM
featl•al ICbolanlatp eomlllllt.e,
wt1I nplaln U. ,... ... , wldcb eoHn a. Seid ol arta, craft.a,
pboto1ra .. ,, daaee, drama, ..... ~.-wrtdq. So, ....... UillMl ., ... ,
1ear, tM ftltl.al bu alloClad
Sll,000tor11 Lasaa Beaeb BIO
Sebool paduatea coatlnal•I
art11Ucll8dlll.
SC signs
pilings
contract
San Clemente officials have
signed a contract with a Los
Angeles construction firm to
replace 15 wood pilings un-
derneath the municipal pier.
Monday's action followed City
Council approval of an informal
bidding process for the construe·
lion work, which was deemed of
emer1ency nature because of
expected winter storms.
City officials want to replace
the worn and miasin1 pilings
before winter storms have a
chance to do more dama1e to
the half-century-old pier.
And, ainff the city aa11 it eot
a 1ood deal on the treated loCI to be used for the pilings, omciab
sought rapid council action to
perform the wort.
The ts pllinp were purcbued
from a northern California lol·
&inl firm for $11,000. Dell very,
w.hich normally takes up to two
months, will take ool)' a week
and a half, city officials said.
The logs, treated with an
anenic solution to resist marine
bores. Will be installed by John
Meek, Inc .• a Los An1elea based
construction company.
The $'17,000 contract with the
construction firm includes
replacine the pilings, demolition
of an old restaurant at the end of
the pier and replacement of
some decking.
Warner Younis, the cit)''s as·
sociate engineer, said demoli·
lion of the old buildin& stiould
begin i.n about lbree weeks, and
' completion of the project about
30 days from then.
The pilings, which will be
located directly underneath the
old pier restaurant, were not
replaced during a $600,000 re·
novation of the pier in 1979
because the future of the
restaurant had not been de·
termined.
City officials now are explor-
inl alternative locations for a
-new rmaunnt f'Rlllt .
City officials hope to recoup
most of the coat of the pier
restoration from federal disaster
relief f\mds .
lmpeetion lagged
-VONTPELlER, Vt. (AP) -
The Trapp Family Loc11e, home
to the "Sound of Music" family
until It WU destroyed by fire, bad
not been inspected for fire code
vlolatioaa in 11 yean, state rec·
ord1 indicate.
"
Anti-Santa
hit by fine
TORONTO (AP) -A
Toronto man wbo lbouted
• 'Tbere ii no S.ta Claaa''
at tbe dt.J'• aaaual .Santa C)aua ,..... lat moetb
b.. .... bed .. bJ • pro.mew cwt.
Rl-...~ ...... eonYieted ol a.ma ....
turbuee .,_. ·.. JOmid Ulle,......CUTJiqalip
tht rMd ID part: "Down
wttlallll&a." ..... .__tosetrouolf tbemwtaa,....a ..
Ume," Nld=D.O. leott. ..... tlaet
DlldJ bid .... eUrseil OD two llmUs ............
. mta1 from lut 11ar'1
parade. ' -
~
AlffBODY KNOW HOW TO GET TO SAN .K>Se?
Tu.etn'a lendy ttoctaman grounded •I John Wa~• Airport
More coastal fog
forecast tonight
Coastal residents can look
forward to more thick fog
tonight and Wednesday.
Denae fog is expected to con·
tinue along the coast through
Wednesday morning with partial
clearing expected by afternoon,
according to a spokeswoman for
the National Weather Service.
From Santa Barbara to San
Diego fog has socked in the
coast, closing all major airports
and forcine travelers to wait for
clearer sides.
Temperatures along the coast
are expected to dip to 44 to S4
degrees tonight, with slightly
higher temperatures projected
Inland.
Zero visibilit)' from the d~e
fog forced the closing of John
Wa ne Ail"QOrt early this mom.
mg after some flgbts were aJ .
lowed Monday when the fog
lifted.
* * *
"'ll looks worse tha n it did
yesterday," said Dick Biggs,
spokes man for Golden West
Airlines. "It's a solid wall. I
don't think we'll do much to-
day.'"
Flight ope rations a t Los
Angeles International were can-
celled this morning. And flights
from San Francisco, San Diego
and Fresno were grounded.
Catalina and San Clemente
islands were the only coastal
areas not socked in by fog this
morning.
Meanwhile, the California
Highway Patrol reported no
serious accidents as a result of the fog c log ging co a s tal
roadways.
Traffic_.was._reported moYing
slowly through the fog shrouded
coastal cities. with no serious
problems.
* * *
LA :airport opens
as winds cut fog
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Mild
Santa Ana winds rolled out of
the mountain puses toda)', lift.
inl the dense foe that bu played
havoc with holiday air travel
and allowln1 half lbe runwa)'I at
Loa An1elea International
Airport to reopen.
All four nmwa)'I were closed
about 1 a.m . becauae ·of fos.
Take-Gfta were back to normal
and· lMMflnp were alloWed on
the two DOrtbenl nmwaya b)' t
a.m., airport lpoke1man Jack
Franeall Nici.
Al IMeomb of tbe National
Weatblr Sen1ce aatd ·tbe Santa
Alla wtndl" 11iou1c1 keep foe awa)'
-lnalD tbe.~-of lt tlaruulb ..... , but Mid. '°"'' air wauld ecmtlaue from 'LODI Beaeb aoutbward.
TIM fol. eaUMd by cold air
mcwial ~ tbe warmer l8Dd
aurf aee, extended from San
l'ractleo to Saa Dtep. Tbe Na·
tloeal W..a.ber Senlce predict·
Id man fol tMlpt ID Soutbern
Calllonla.
TM fat wt NlbWty near 8ero
ln IOIDI antM and forced air
traffic controllers to close the
runways al Los Angeles lnterna·
tional this mominc.
The airport normally handles
about S)..75.flights between mid·
night and 8 a.m., said airport
operations superintendent Ken-
neth Shipp.
Incoming fiights were forced
to land at inland airports in On:
tario ad Phoenix.
Some 15 flghta were diverted
to Ontario International Airport,
about 50 miles east of Los
An1elea, and "moat of the
puseqen have been bused to
L.A.," said Ontario lnteraa·
tional operaUona officer Sam
1Un1.
Fl!Ot operations at airports ln San Jl'raadleo, Oakland, San
Joee llDd Saa Dleto also were
clOHd for varytn1 periods this
morn1q.
"We'w been up and down like
a yo-yo," said Fred Smltb,
operaUona 1upervi1or for tbe
Federal A•1ation Admlalatra·
Uoa at Oakland lnteraatlODal
Aif1M)l't. NferrtBC to tbe 111.lnc
(lee IA l'OG, Pa1e AJ)
'
Health
reported'
good -
By The Associated Press
Two Iranians, a Protestant
minister and a Roman Catholi c
priest will celebrate Christma!>
with the 52 U.S. hostages, Sw1s~
diplomats said today in Tehran.
The diplomats also said they
met with three hostages held at
the Iranian Foreign Ministry
and described the m as being in
good health. (Related story, A3).
Meanwhile, a leading member
of Parliament's hardline Islamic
party was quoted as saying he
saw no chance for the hostages·
release before President-elect
Reagan takes office. Swiss diplomats representing
U.S. interests in Tehcan said ap-
proval for the religious service
was received during a meeting
with government authorities.
There were indications the
service would be held in Farsi,
the Persian language. rather
than in English. and that neither
the Swiss nor any other foreig'n
representatives would be al-
lowed to attend.
It was also un clear whether all
the hostages would be gathered
to~ether for the service and
whe ther it would be h e ld
Christmas Eve or Christmas
Day T he diplomats s aid the
clergymen were Iranian citizen!.
but that their identities were not
immediately disclosed
The Swiss diplomats said they
mel earlier in the day with three
of the hostages who have lx'i?n
held at the Foreign Ministry in
Tehran. The whereabouts of the
remaining 49 hostages, original·
ly kept at the US. Embassy, hal>
not been made clear by Iranian
officials .
Fire hits Vegas
LAS VEGAS <AP > -Construe·
lion equipment may have caused
the-pjpeline--rnpture tha1 sen
ri ver of jet fuel into the strttts of
cas ~gas. :w~ a ~
a passing auto ignited a spec·
tacular fire, officials say. The
cause of the break in the Calnev
Pipe Line Co. pipe, which begins
in Colton, Calif.. wa s not de-
termined immediately.
i Or:~:Cdl~::s•
"'ea I her
Fog along the coast ,
locally dense In late after-
noon through early morn·
ing hours, otherwise fair
in inland areas in late
morning and afternoon
through Wednesday with
some high c loudiness
Highs Wednesday in upper
60s at the beaches to low
70S in inland areas. Lows
44 to S4.
INSIDE TOD:\\'
Seoen childrett owrcomt
tragjc death of pa,.,_,, to
roiH themuh>tt. Stor11.
plloCo Pave Alt. .....
'
UIQ , ..
r-----JIJST BllE..41UNG---
u... --~ ..... ....w .......................... .
Stro;,,g quake jolta
northern Italy a-rea
IUl.A.N, Italy (AJ'> A 1tron1 tar\hquake jolt-4 • wide
a.rea al northern Italy loday f'\nl niporu 1ald cracll.1 appurid
ln &0me old bulldin&• In lowna h.llwMn Miian and Botosna. but
lb rt' 1u!n! n(.I lmmc.-.Jla& re1)0r\a of inJunH Tii" tnimor c·1un•• one month •fter a manlv~ earthquake·
strut'k IOUlhern lt1tl) 1tml kHlttJ n"arly 3,000 l>«)ple
T <lda)' s quatkt' w1i111 ft1lt lo O~noa, Rolotrna, M\lan, Parma,
J'a,11i. Piat'f'D:&&, Hrt111r11t II.lid Jo' rrua, •ccordin& to ln1tial re.
lle'ra Th .. m•llonal ubJJ..rv..itury 11t Mvt1h:wnlo Catone outside
ff m111• 'lud ~ht• quake llll'iil>W't.'tl 4 7 un the Rtchltir :sc1tle A
l&ua.lu· of \h •H 11111in1\ud I\ l'apabh: of causintt moderate
Jamililgt'
PolU• tror"'f"r• ••••, .....,..,rtw
\\ IC.".\~ Poltind t APJ Worlt~n. at 50 factories in
Ch .. 1111 JU.'>t 1~ 1otlt'S from the Soviet tiorder. held a one-hour
)\rikt-locta~ LI.I prute.sl lht: 1am0Wlt of Christmas meat rations
th'-'} rrt't!I\ l'd f1 on1 the govemment, tbe tndepende.nt trade un·
11>0 -;0111tanl.) '!>did
1 h" )lnkt: t-oded without oppos1t1on from local authorities,
IJl\11r) managers or puhce, Solidanty sald, adding without
ddboral1un lhat ::.upphes or meat had improved in lbe area.
•
Dollor d_.t'"lh•e•: geld prlns -'.ft'd
LONDON 1 AP > 'fhe dollar declined today on most Euro-
... !-pearr mone markets a nd gold prices were mixed rn sluufsh
pre hohda.) trading
Getting tlarir Irish up
Dt!alcrs allnbuled the doUar's decline to a belief among in·
vestors that U S interest r1ttes, soaring since mid-summer,
have just about µeaked . The high rates have been attracting
foreign investors to the dollar and raisin& its value.
Youngsters give the ''thumbs up" sign as they s tand un ·
derneath the wall of a house daubed with the demands of
Irish Republican Army pisoners in Belfast. The prisoners
recently completed a 53-day hunger str ike.
Cftl91U B11rea11 ordered•• adj..c ~•
NEW YORK <AP> A federal judie aJ(reed with New York City tcday itnd ordered the U.S. Census Bureau to adjust its 1980
count or residents, especially in poor neighborhoods and areas
inhabited by minority groups.
In a 34-page decision, U.S. District Judge Henry Werker
rf's• ,.~ined the Census Bureau from certifying the state popula·
•· -·· .otaJs to the president Dec. 31, as required by law, and or·
dered the bureau to come up with a plan for adjusted figures.
A federal judge in Detroit made a similar ruling. The gov·
ernment is appealing that ruling.
Sf' ...,ldl•g e.,ae•ated
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A building housing the state
Department of Industrial Relations was ordered evacuated
from 12: lS to 1: 15 this afternoon in response to a "very specific"
bomb ~at, a state official said. '
BW Becker, chief deputy director of the department, said
the one-hour evacuation of 700 employees in the seven-story
building was "simply a precaution, because the threat called in
was very specific in naming both the building and the ti~e."
State police said a reporter at KRON-TV rece1ved an
anonymous call that a bomb was planted in the building and
was set to detonate at 12:45 p.m.
55 held la raid
Drug suspects /ace
lwlidays in jail
FREEWAY
solved in the first h1Uf of the two·
year session.
However, county officials
seem prepared for a long fight.
Al Hollinden of Fount'in Valley,
chairman of the county com·
mission, said the funding plan is
important because it assures
local areas that projects will be
completed once they are ap·
proved.
"In two years , we've gone
backward in our progress," he
said. noting that rew projects
have begun in growing Orange
County.
Howeve r, commission
member Bill Vardoulis of Irvine
noted that passage of the county
proposal plus a bill to set up an·
nual vehicle inspections in
Southern California could stick
drive r s with a ~·double
whammy."
In the inspection bill to be dis·
cussed this year, drivers would
pay at least a $15 annual inspec-
tion fee and would be required to
pay for repairs of their air pollu·
tion control systems when
necessary.
By GLENN SCO'IT
Of-OMty ~ s-...
Mrs. Coss-Fitzwater said
Orange County officials, includ·
ing members of the commission, Police officers requested that have been actively seeking sup·
all arrestees be held and no plea port for long-range solutions to About SS alleged drug addicts
arrested in Santa Ana last week
during a citywide police sweep
can expect lo spend the holidays
ID jail.
Rail for most of the street peo-
ple taken into custody was set at
$1.000, which law enforcement
officials say is enough to keep
most behind bars.
· That was the point of the well·
organized sweep, in which
judges, jailers and prosecutors
. were contacted in advance in an
effort to get possible bur&lan off
the streets during the boUday
season.
"It's a necessary situation this
time of year or a lot of people
)viii have their Christmas
spoiled," said Deputy District
Attorney Mike Dow, who is
handling muc h of the pre·
~tminary prosecution for the ar·
rests.
The sweep took place last
week. Dow said almost all of the
suspects have been arraigned
and most were assigned Sl,000
bail unless circumstances en·
t-itled them to release on their
own recognizance.
Lesbian mom
abducts girl
,, NASIMLLE. Tenn. CAP) -A
·k if-avowed lesbian was biding
today with her daughter. saying
~he spirited the girl away six
:itays ato because a judge grant-
;ed custody of the 6-year-old to a
~baby sitter.
• "We're looking ror her and we
:assume the police are looking
for her," said Greg Galloway, a
::iawyer for the slate Human
:services Department.
He said his agency had ob-
:tained a warrant charging Rose
(Delaney with kidnapping.
bargaining take place to give lagging revenues. •
suspects lighter sentences and a Analysts recently estimated
chance to return to the streets that in Orange County alone. $20
early. ) billion worth of improvements L~. Lee Drummond, whose will be necessary to continue
m aJOr enforcement ~eam ~urrent travel conditions by the handled the arre~ts, saad of. rear 2000
ficers ooly took into custody SUS· ·
pects who drug experts on the
team identified aa being under
the influence or heroin, cocaine
or illegal pills.
"We didn't book anyone who
was borderline," said Drum·
mond.
He said officers are seeking
mandatory 90-day sentences for
all or the suapects. although the
sentences could be looser for re-
peat offenders or those arrested
while allegedly in possession or
ilJegal drugs.
Dow said pretrial bearings
will begin for the suspects -
most of whom pleaded innocent
-after the holidays.
The police originally took 102
suspects into c ustody .
Preliminary reports were that
87 were booked into Orange
County .ran on drug-related
charges. That figure later was
educed to-es.-
Dow said that, after screening
the reports, prosecutors decided
to file charges against 55 -0f the
suspects.
· All or the suspects were taken
before Orange County Central
Municipal Court Judge Samuel
Taylor.
Ke defended tfie use or bail to
keep the suspect.a off the streets
by estimating that more than
two-tbinls of the allesed drug
addicts wouldn't appear for a
pretrial bearing ii released.
"l think the public deserves
this kind of police work and pro-
tection," be said, noting that
staliatica show a direct correla·
Thieves get
• carpeting
in Clemente
Burglars took carpeting tools
from one San Clemente busi·
. ness. carpet from a home and
·other items from a third res·
idencein break-ins Monday.
PnlirP. said Frank Shaw, who
operates Shaw's Carpet, 135
Ave. Victoria, called Monday to
report the the rt of $1,230 in
carpet tools from his s hop. The
burglars apparently entered the
shop through a window.
Police also~rted ttl.e..!b.e.ft
of $.t,300 worth of nevi carpeting
.from a house for sale in the 2900
block of Via San Gorgonio. That
theft was reported by a real
estate broker who entered th.e
home and found 150 square feet
of carpeting missing.
Investigators don't know if the
two burglaries are related..
In a third break-in, Paul Bond,
who lives in the 3300 bloek of
A venida Del Presidente, told
police someone broke into his
apartment taking two television
sets, $1,230 in cash and checks
and jewelry, with a total loss of
$2,080.
tiorr between the number of drug Di d t · addicts on the streets and et oc 0 r
Christmastime burglaries.
case rested
TELEPHONE WHITE PLAINS, N .Y. CAP>
-The proeecuUon has rest~ its
case in the trial of Jean Hanis,
the woman accused of murdel'·
101 Scarsdale Diet doctor Thomas P. Haley
P..Wl111er
Robert N. Weed
Prttl•nl
M. Thomas Keevll
Thomas A. Murphlne Me~l11tEdltw
Charles H. Loos AUl\IWll MllMtlnt Editor
Co11.,rltM 1 .. 0 Ot11no t CoUI
f'u•llthl~ Compel\.,, Ht l\tW)
,,., ... , 11-••llOl\s, llditorl•I """" ., H ... ftl-1\ Mtell\ !Illy be
"""'d11ut wllllo111 •llt< tel -"'''4Mft .. '~""" -·
AN d•pertft•lllt9: (714) 142-4121
c ........ Mwrtlllng: '42·1171
OFPICH c..t• Mew: Jaw.st .. ., ......
L..._ 9Ndl: 1C1 No.CNA H1911Wr1 f'-'",,,,,,,.. llNdl: 111'9 9Mctl .........,. ·Herman Tamower, her 1001·
time lover who had been seetna
another woman.
• ca expert Joseph
Retch, a Westchester County
police detective, saJd Monday
tblt Ternower WU lhot ln tbe
·back wltb Mrs. Hania' IUD h'Om
12 to 15 lncbel away and two more lime• at much doser ,., •.
Relcb wu the proMeutioa •1
Jut wttneu. , ______ _
MacDonald
killings
cult job?
FAYETI'EVlLLE, N.C. <AP1
A woman who claimed a loss
of memory when called as a de·
tense witness in Dr. J effrey
MacDonald's murder trial now
says the deaths of his wife and
daug hters we r e d e libe rate
acts or vengeance by a sataruc
cult, the Fayetteville Times re·
Ported todav.
the former Green Beret was
convicted of the killings in 1979,
but the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals overturned the convic-
tion this year
The witness. identified a s
Helena Stoeckley, 27, signed a
s tatement acknowledging s he
was present when Mac Donald's
wife and two daughters were
slain in 1970. the newspaper said
in a copyright story
Quoting an unidentified
source. the Times rePorted Ms .
Stoeckley said the attack on
Collette MacDonald, Kimberly,
5. and Kristen, 2. was deliberate-
ly planned by the "Black Cult to
whichshebelonged.
Mac Donald has maintained
that four drug-crazed intruders,
chanting "Kill the pig" and
"Acid is groovy" had broken in·
to his home. stabbed his wife
and daughters and injured him.
After the military declined to
press charges, a grand jury
eventually indicted him and he
was tried nine years later.
The appellate court, in over-
turning his conviction, ruled that
he had been denied access to a
s peedy trial.
2 ·sucked
out of
airplane
DOHA, Qatar (AP> -Two
children were s ucked out of a
Saudi Arabian j_etliner today
through a hole in the passenger
compartment while the plane
flew al29,000feetoverthe Penian
Gulf state of Qatar, the Gulf News 1 Agency reported.
The agency reported the hole
was caused by an expJos1on, but
the Saudi state radio said a
wheelcover tore loose and ripped
a hole in the fuselage. The Saudi
radio said the two children "fell
out of the plane."
The plane, carrying 296
passengers and a crew of 16,
made an emergency landing in
this gulf s heikdom, airport
sources said. They said three
other passengers were s lightly in·
ju red and taken loa hospital.
The Saudi Arabian Airlines
LockheedTriStar, Flight 162, was
en route rrom the northeast Saudi
city or Dnahran to Karachi ,
Pakistan whep the accident oc
c urred, the Saudi broadcast said .
An airport official he re who
talked with two passengers before
they were hurried off to seclusion
i n r est house s sa id th e
passengers reported hearing a
thunderous explosion.
Police cordoned o H the
terminal and rerused to a llow re·
porters or photographers to the
scene.
The Saudi radio reported the
pilot said "a loud noise" came
from the area above the landing
gear.
f're• Pagr A I
LA FOG •••
and falling fog.
When the fog would rise
somewhat, a few planes with ad·
vanced guidance systems were
allowed to take off and land.
"It's just a matter of one get·
ting off and then, 'zappo,' we're
socked in again," Shipp s aid.
At least tS flights were shifted
from San Francisco to San Jose
shortly before San Jose closed
for a period and San Francisco
reopened.
A Trans World Airlines
worker said San Francisco·
bound planes had been shifted to
Oakland and Las Vegas as well
as San Jose.
Confusion reigned in many
terminals for the second straight
day, with passengers and those
awaiting them trying t.o figure
out when flights would either
leave or arrive.
A World Airlines dispatcher
said passengers waiting to board
a Qantas flight in San Francisco
had to be bused across the bay
to Oakland.
"I think there was a lot of con·
fusion because many of the peo-
ple who were waiting for rel·
atives or frie nd s for the
holidays went to San Francisco,
only to discover the flights were
going to Oakland." he said.
When the fog forced closure of
Los Angeles International Mon-
day, some 100 lights had to be
diverted to otl1er cities before
the fog lifted about 8 a .m., said
airport spokesman Alfre d
Dubiel.
..... , ........
8'agan•• .,ol~r
Lyn Nofziger, onetime press
secretary to Ronald Reagan
who quit last month because
he didn't want to move to
Washington, apparently hasi
changed his mind. He has
been named a presidential
ass istant for poHtical ~f
f airs. •
Visitor
robbed in
LB hotel
A Borrego Springs man was
knocked lo the noor in his hotel
room in Laguna Beach, then
beaten and robbed Monday night.
Police said Gregg G. Simmons,
34. was robbed of $40 in cash and
$425 worth of jewelry by two men
at the Coast Inn, 14-01 S. Coast
Highway,room47
Officers said Simmons re-
portedly met the two suspects in
the bar at the Hotel Laguna, 42SS.
Coast Highway. and invited them
to his room at about lOp.m .
Once there, he was knocked
down and struc k about the face.
The suspects then took the cash
and wallet, watch and two rings
and Oed, officers s aid.
Simmons was treated for cuts
at South Coast Medical Center
Basketball
deadline set
Wednesday is the las t day for
boys and girls lo sign up for the
Biddy BasketbaU League at the
Boys Club of Laguna Beach.
S e cond . third and fourth
graders will play their games on
Saturday morning~ and fifth and
sixth graders will play Thursday
night!>
Registrattun 1s SS for Boys Club
m e mbers and Sl O for non-
members. Those interested in
further information may call the
c I u b at 494-2535
Kosygin buried
MOSCOW 1APJ The Soviet
Un ion today gave Alexei N .
Kosygin a full-dress state funeral.
entombing the former premier's
ashes in the Kremlin Wall -
traditional resting place of Soviet
heroes.
I I 11 • ' ... ' • ' ~., h I n .' l I cpi( I OH AN CE COUN T V C A L IF OR N IA 25 CEN TS
Hostages a Wait Clergy for Clu-ist1nas
8y 'fte ~lale4 Pr.u
T~o Iranians, a Prntutant
mln1saer and a Roman e atbollc
pr\~t wtll c~lebnte hrtslrn~
with the> 52 S hosta&e1', Swiss
'diplomats aa.ad today m Tehran
The dtplomats 1l10 !)aid they
met wtth t.bree hoslai~ held at
the Iranian Fore1&n Mlnlstry -
and descnbed them as beini m aood health CRelated story, AJ)
Meanwblle, a leadm& member
of Parliament's budhne Islamic
party was quoted as saying he
Coastal
fog to
• remain
Coastal residents can look
forward to more thick fog
tonight and Wednesday.
Dense fog is expected to con·
tinue along the coast through
Wednesday morning with partial
clearing expected by afternoon,
according to a spokeswoman for
the National Weather Service.
From Santa Barbara to San
Diego fog has socked in the
coast, closing all major airports
and forcing travelers to wait for
clearer skies.
Temperatures a long the coast
are expected to dip to 44 lo S4
degrees tonight, with slightly
higher temperatures projected
inland.
Zero visibility frocn the dense
fog forced the closing o( John
Wayne Airport early this morn-
ing after some nights were al·
lowed Monday when the fog
lifted.
·'It looks worse than it did
yesterday," said Dick Biggs,
spokesman for GoMen West
Airlines. "It's a solid wall. I
don't think we'll do much to-
day."
Flight operations al Los
Angeles International were can-
celled this morning. And flights
from San Francisco, San Diego
and Fresno were ~rounded.
Catalina and San Cle mente
isla nds were the only coastal
areas not socked in by fog this
morning.
Meanwhile, the California
Highway Patro l reported no
serious accidents as a result of t h e fog c l ogg in g coastal
roadways.
Traffic was reported moving
slowly through the fog shrouded
coastal cities, with no serious
problems.
* * * Newport fog
could cancel
boat parade
Thick fog along the Orange
Coast is continuing to give
N~rt HarbQr_Ar:_e.Jl..Cha,mbeL
o lCom-me rce cr ffi -clals
headaches.
Chamber officers s ay a
decision won't be made until late
today whether to cancel the final
presentatipn of this year 's
"Festival of Llghts" parade in
_Newport Harbor.
Don l~>rter, chamber director,
said Oft'fdals got lucky Monday
evenin1 and squeezed in the
two-bour boat parade between
to1bants. . Sunday evening they weren't
so lucky. The parade was called
off. It was the first time in
recent memory fog has pulled
down the curtain on the parade.
u w no chalice for the ho11taaes ·
rt:leuse before Pr~s ident·elect
Rea<.D l&kb office
Swiss diplomats representing
U S interest.s iu Tehran said ap-
proval for the religious service
was received during a meeting
with government authorities.
There were 1nd1cations the s~~•ce would be held in Farsi,
the P~rsian language, rather
than in Enghsb. and that neither
the Swiss nor any other Joreign
representatives would be al-
lowed to attend.
It was al.lo unclear whether all
the hostages would be gathered
together for the service and
whe ther It would be held
Christmas Eve or Christmas
Day. The diplomats said the
·clergymen were Iranian citizens
but their identities unknown.
The Swiss diplomats said they
met earlier in the day with three
of the hostages wt!_o have been
held at lt1e Foreign Ministry in l"'
DetlY"" ..... ,_
ANDREA LINDSAY, 10, CUDDLES HER 'DANDELION'
Mother wonder• why cope h~ to •hoot dog
Tranquilized?
Darts severely hurt, pet
By STEVE MARBLE "I'm just not sure why they
011t1eoe1t1 ru.u ... tt had to shoot Dandelion," she
Jill Lindsay says she's still s ays. "They must have been at
trying to fi gure out why it took very close range, you'd think
two blasts from a tranquilizing they could have used a net or at
g un to bring her ro mping least taken better aim and shot
sheepdog's brief flirtation with her in the flank."
freedom to a halt. C ity authorities were not
The fluff y white dog -immediately able to recall the
Dandelion. descr ibed by its incident or offer details.
ow ner as "big, dumb and As Mrs. Lindsay tells the
lovable ," bolted from Mrs . story, vets were forced to take
Lindsay's Newport Heights the dog into surgery and cut one
h o m e w h e n a f u r n i t u r e of the ribs in half to clean out
deliveryman accidentally left a barbs frotn one.of th.e dans.
gate o~n. _ __ ---:be medical-at.tention....cos\rthe
-"Mrs. l:.aoosay says the next NewpO'rt family Si50 but that's
time she saw Dandelion, the dog not what h~ them upset.
was r esting in a veterinary "If it was a question of
hospital -one lung punctured sacrificing a person's life or an
by a dart and fragments from a animal's life there would be no
second dart embedded in one of question," she says, "but
the dog's ribs. Dandelion's hardly vicious. The "l'm convinced a smaller dog dog's a real love."
or a doJ with les~ hair _wyu.ld City Animal Control officials.
have daed;" s ays the young say It's unusual for lranquilizin1
mothe r, who showed up at darts to be used on a dog.
Monday's City Council meeting •'The only time they're used is
lo protest the methods used in when you're dealing with a big,
rounding up her pet. vicious dog,'' explains police
Council members request.eel a Sgt. Dave Elliott. He says the
r e port from city officials on darts are tiny, shot with a .22
animal control methods -charge and should do no more
especially in Dandelion's cue. damage than a needle.
Mrs. Undsay says it was her "Usually the officers will
· llusband that called Newport chase a dog and if they can't
Animal Control officers when catch it then they .don't catch N~ t h the deliveryman was unable to lt," he says. "The gun la only 0 ras chase down the four-year-old u'ed when the do1 poaea a .
• .. .
"' abeepdoc. ~ threat." hol .day8 While the dog's ownen were "ShootlnC our do' Just seems on f, hurrying· home from work to cruel. It's not like we're livinl in
Realdenta of Irvine, auiat, officen reportedly tried the wildll rl Africa," said Mrs.
Newport Beach and Costa to chue down the do1, which Lindsay.
Mesa were reminded to-scamr:red acroes busy Newport
da 1 that traall and Bou evard toward Hoa1
1•rN,. will not be p6cked Hospital. u p 0 a T b u r 1 d a y • It rem.tins unclear, whether
CbriltmM .. or Thun-the dot turned on officers. Mn. ~ :;.,-=i~-"1~-t:Ltnmncb .. ay 11111 tt would be llllllke
ay ne • • ew Iler pet to attack or even live vv:~~olleetton re1~ the impreaalon ol attackln1.
;.:.~c!ilf ut!:~!:! Conealate blast
• rrtc1a.7a. llomea wllere llONrRBAL (AP) -A l1'0UP
coUeedaal an made on of Cubm ..,atrlates oppoHd to =wW be aerved on tbe nstme ot Prtlklent l"ldel
S. • Wet untt.tJoa Cutro elaimed reapomlbOitJ tor
o for tile tllree an esDlaalon outaide tbe Olba
elti•. Coa1ulate flere that 1battend
windows but caused no lnJuri•.
Three bandits hit
Mesa ehoe store
Three men, one carrJIDI a
pl1tol, held up Van'• Tean11
Shon In Costa ...... late llan-
da1. eecapq wttla SMI ta ealb
and a woman clerk'• rlq1,
valued at about tm.
Poliee aald tllle mm boad dM
ll-1ear·old clerk wltll 1boe-
1trtnp blfore leaWal the ltore at
1515 Harbor Blvd. at about I :•
p.m .
Tehran. 1be whereabouts of the
remalninc 4.9 hostages, orilinal·
ly kept at the U.S. Embassy, has
not been made clear by Iranian
offi ci a.ls.
The three at the Foreign
Ministry -Charge d'Affaires
Bruce Lalngen, political officer
Victor Tormeth and security of-
ficer Michael Howland -were
in good physical condition and
were aware of the latest Iranian
demands and the negative U.S.
re~psel the dielomats said.
In a report from Tehran, the
Yogoslav news agency Tanjug
said Hassan Ayat, a.member ol
the hardline Islamic Republican
Party in the Parliament, the
Majlis , told the En1lisb·
l a nguage Tehran Times
newspaper he saw no "possibili-
ty at all for the hostages to be
released before Jan. 21," a day
after the Reagan inauguration.
Tanjug said Ayat, the party's
defeated candidate ror president
in elections this year, was also
Takeover action (
quoted as saying the latest Ira-
nian terms for re leasing the
hostages were "definite and
there were no plans for the Maj·
lia todebaletheirfate again.
· Prime Minister Mohammad
Ali Rajai warned Monday the
hostage ~ue would be returned
to the Parliament for new de-
cisions if the United States did
not meet Iran's $24 billion de-
mand for their release, accord·
ing to a report carried by the
Syrian news agency
Newport condemns
16 tidelands wells
Efforts to gain control of 16
lucrative oil wells outside West
Newport Beach were set in mo-
tion when City Council members
agreed to condemn the wells and
the land beneath them.
The condemnation move Mon-
day is the city's final strategy in
Mesa OKs
high-rise
buildings
Approval for construction of a
pair ol bicb-riae offtee buUdlDp
just south of San Diego Freeway
has been granted by Costa
Mesa'• Planning Commission
for Bristol Plua. Commisaiooen aplit, 3·2, Mon·
da1 in approvin' plans for five
and seven-story structures to
rise jliat east of Bristol Street
and north of the Montgomery
Ward store.
Veteran commissioners
Richard Carstensen and C.C.
Clarke voted against the project.
It was carried by the com·
missioners appointed by the City
Council earlier this year, Walter
Davenport, Ramona Sawyer-
Watson and Lynn Van Aken.
In gaining approval for the
project -sought in one form of
high rise or another for more
than six months -Plaza prin·
cipal James Glanulias agreed to
help fund construction of a new
city fire station north of the San
Diego Freeway.
its plans lo pump higher profits
from the wells. located on unin·
corporated county territory but
rooted in city tidelands
But an attorney for Newport
oilman Robe rt Armstrong,
whose firm holds the current
o.11, ...... , ..... ,_
NB MOVE 'TEMPORARY'
M•N Pt•nner C•r.tenNn
lease to the wells. said he wi11
challenge the condemnation ac
lion in court.
Armstrong, whose lease with
the city expires Jan. 25, argued
the city has no business in the oil
business. He has threatened to
plug the wells if his IP.ase is not
renegotiated.
H is a ttorney . Ri c h ari
DelGuercio, said the city stands
to lose more than 1t will gain
with the condemnation action.
"There may be a substantial
int~rruption in production of ~
crude oil." the Los Angeles at·.
torney warned, ··and there could
be serious consequences on th~
revenues the cit y expects to
gain."
City officials have maintained
that once they take over the
operation, their revenue picture
will be bright
They contend profits may go
'as high as $1 million a year com-
pared with last year's cut ol
Sl&s,000 -roughly one·eighlh of
the revenue from the wells.
Newport officials acknowledge
that if the oil battle dr ags on
past the expiration of the lease.
the wells could be shut down for
a period of time.
While lawyers for the city
argue there is no legal problem
in condemning property outside
city limits, attorney DelGuerc10
said there is no specific power
that gives Newport the authority
to acquire property in ordet to
produce oi l.
Mesa planner
udd l Diet doctor s en y
case rested
Gianulias' group first sought JWR-resident to construct a 14·story office WHITE PLAINS. N.Y. (AP>
structure po the five acres. -The prosecution has rested its
Objections to that plan were By JERRY CLAUSEN case in the trial of J ean }{arris.
raised by residents of the nearby Costa M:;~1'j!~=:ing Com -the woman accused of murder-Brook view Condominium ing Scarsdale Diet doctor neighborhood and planning sWf mission is chaired by a resident of Herman Tarnower, her long·
members, and the proposal was NeCwhpc;>rtBeaRch1.·h d C t time lover who had been seeing denied. airman c ar ars ensen.. another woman.
Alsodeniedlaterthisyearwas wholived f~r l3yearson Country Ballistics expert Joseph
Bristol Plaza plan Cor lwiuborter._ Club Drive m Cos~a Mesa, l'Jl.!?.l'ed-Retcb, a West~ester-COu.,;'nr.y-:---stru~t.rres ,. seven and nine tONewportBeach sHarborRidge police detective, said Monday
stories. area last week. . that Tamower was shot in the
That denial was appealed to Mayor Arlene Shafer sai~ Mon-back with Mrs. Harris' gun from
the City Council and then day she sees no ~roblem wtth the 12 to 15 inches away and two
withdrawn after Gianullas said arrangement, since he plans to more times at muc h closer
he and m e mbers of the movebacksoon. range. Brookview Condominiums. As· Carstensen sald Monday he re-
sociat.ioo were close to alfte-•~arched-the move and found no
ment oli acceptance of still city ordinan~ or rules 1pelllnf
shorterbuildinga. ou.t a requu~ment that com-
The Brookview group's leader, m!~si.onersresade~Costa M~a.
(See aalSTOL Paie At> It s no big deal, he said. ~ • people who bought my house m-
Chase trims
• pnme r,ate
NEW YORK (AP> -
Chase Manhattan Bank to·
day cut it.a prime leadinl
rate by one prcenta1e point
to 20.S percent, matchin1
the cut announced Monday
by Wells FarlO Banlt in San
Franci1co and fuelln1
hopes ·that Interest rates
have peaked.
A number of smaller
banb cut their rates even
furtb• Monday, to JO per·
cent, butotbermajorbanka
held to tbe n .s percent rate
that •Wiit the baUinC in·
duatry Friday.
Cbue tbe naUao '• tb1rd-lar1eat b.Di, Hid tt.a rate
reduction reflected
decllnel ln it.a COit ol IC• ctuirinl ,_..., but added
tbat It was uncertain
whether the *lines would continue.
sisted on a quick escrow They
wanted in immediately. We were
forced to find a place to move to on
short notice.
"We found this investment op-
portunity, so we thought we would
take it."
Mayor Schafer said Cantenaen
.consulted with her about the move
and that she saw no problem and
subsequently notified City Coun-
cil members by mall.
Asked if any council member
had objected, she said, "It's too
soon to expect feedback from the
council."
Cant.enaen told the mayor be
plans to move back to Costa Meta
within a year and requested that
he be allowed to 1tay on the P1an· ·
nin1 OMnmilltoft. Kia eurr9'1l
term apU9iD1112.
City Attorney Tom Wood
verilled thJt no law, city or atate,
requlrH a planninl com·
mluionertoreeldelnCoeta 11 ...
II ayor Scbaler said repladq
Can..__ rllht now would be
difficult became ot bl1 iD.olw-
ment ln the city's new lenetal
plan.
That plan outllMs Colt• Meta
(See PIANN'Ea. Pap AJ)
Weather
Fog along the coast,
locally dense in late after·
noon through early mom ·
int hours, otherwise fair
in inlend areas in late
mornin1 and arternoon
through Wednesday with
some high cloudiness .•
Highs Wednesday in upper
80s at the beaches to low
70s in inland areas. Lows
4.4 to 54.
IN81DET9DA~
s~vn cMld~ owrcome
lrogtc deolla o/ .,....,.,, lo
rai•• th•m••lv~•. Storr. p}M)toPQieAIO. -
.,,._..,....."'
......... Cl
LM. .... M ....... ...
~ ... c-a ~ °''' c-k• Cl
Cn• a• Cl ......... a == • r a
••-I I U
A•'-" Cl ........... ...... ,_ ..
.......... M
~---M.O.• ...... . .... ............. ........ .. ,......... .... ........ ---, .. ·~
Laa•"""'~ ........ ...., ...... ,.
Strong qualtB )ol1a
rwrthe rr:i Italy area . M~: II.al)' (Ai'• A ,..,... ~-· Jola.d I w1dl area o1..,..,.. half today ftnt,...... ..W eracq ..,..,..
ln •Orne old bu.ildin1i ln lOWU t1ttwe. lltlu ucl ...... but
tht-re wett no Immediate nsioru ol ~wiM The lnmur u me UM moMll ._.a mualve •arUlilauab
truck IOUlbtl"Q Ital)' and kiUW DHtlY S.• ,_.... 1'~'• quah wu felt la Qwa, ~· Mllu, Parma, V~h aa Piat"eftt.a. Breuia and '•nara. a~ to briUal re·
l)Or\S T~ nallon•I obaervalOr)' at Mootepor9o Catone out.aide
Roml' a.id lhc quah mt=.uured 4 7 Oft the RlcblM acaJe. A
quah of thal ma1nuude ll capable of cau1n1 moderate
da~ .. .
._ ... ererk,r• .,._.,.._..,,...
WARSAW. Poland \AP> Work•n •t ~ rectoriea in
C'l\elm. juat 15 mlle& from t.M SUviet border, lfeld a one-hour
stnte lOday w prolest the amount of ciuut.aae· meat rations
the>'. rtte1ved from the aovemmenl, U.e ~,_dent trade un-
ion SolJdanty u 1d
The strike ended without bppo&ihOQ fr'OG\ loeal authorities,
facror) managers or police, Solidarity au•. addUll without
~laborauon that suppl.Jes Of meat had improYed In a.be area.
c. ........ ..,.~ ....... ........
PLA•NS, Ga (AP > -Hundreds of smllin& Geor1ians
wett o1neo President an<rVrs. Cat\u bome for Chriatmas
loday. ct\een ng and waving signs that read, "We still love you.
J immy " ' A crowd of nearly 1,000 enthusiastically 1ree\ed \be
presidential couple as they stepped off Air Force One at
Warner-Robins Air Force Base.
Later, after a short helicopter nde over Georfia's far~s
and woodlands. the president andl"bia wife shook hands with
some 200 friends, neighbon and relatives waltin& in a field near
their home on Woodland Drive in Plains.
S.. f'r••rl•r• •lllltll•• eNIC'l•tftl
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A buildinl boUing the state
Department of Industrial Relations wu ordered evacuated
from 12: 15 to 1: 15 this afternoon in response to a ••very specific''
bomb threat, a stale official said.
Bill Becker , chief deputy director of the department. said
the one-hour evacuation of"700 employees ln the seven-story
building was "simply a precaution, becaus• ~ threat called in
was very specific in naming both the buildinl ana the time."
S\ate police said a reporter at KJlON·TV received an
anonymous call that a bomb was planted in the building and
was set to detonate at 12:41 p.m.
lJ.S.. ..,•ne• Ir•• •g•I•
WASHINGTON' (AP) -The State Department reaffirmed
today that Iran would face "serious conae.tuences" if it puts the
52 American ho5tages on trial.
County endorses
doubling gas tax
By GLENN scon
Of .. o.lty ~let St.tff
Orange County officials have
endorsed a plan to replenish the
s tate 's dwindlin1 funds for
freeway construction by almost
doubling gasoline taxes in the
next five years.
The proposal, a pproved as the
top priority of the Orange Coun-
ty Transportation Commission's
legislative prognm, would al·
lo~ the State Board of Equaliza·
lion to adjust gas taxes annually
to fund approved highway proj-
ects.
The new funding system could
raise as much as $43 billion in
Cive years. explained Nancy
Coss-Fitzwater , an aide to .the
transportation commission. She
said the tax could go up as much
as six cents per galloft to raise
the revenue.
Thus, gas tax, now seven cents
pe r gallon , could become as
much as 13 cents per gallon by
1986 with the proposal.
Drivers filling 15-gallon tanb
would pay $1.05 in state gas lax
more than they pay today.
The proposect funding plan
would plac~ more control ln the
hands of the .state leelalators,
who would ratfter review a list or
freeway projects tor fundin1 ea ~h ye1r d11rin1 bud1et
sesatoos . AUbou1h some
legislatdr's mitbt like the abift in
power, she 'Slid the proposal
"might 1>1 too rpuch of a
,oHUcaJ bot pot.ato" for the ma·. jority to support.
Because of that, she said the
county'a proposal, when sub·
milted, ~robably won't be re·
solved ift the first half of the two-
year session.
However •. county officials
seem P.tep,red for a long fight.
Al Hollindeo ofll'o\lnlain Valley,
c hairmu bf the county com-misa~. a•cl tile funding plan is
impoi'fanf \:>et•uae it a ssures
loc a 1 areas that' projects will be
completed once they are ap·
proved.
"In two years, we've gone
backward in our pro1ress," he
s aid, noting that few projects
have berw> ln growing Orange
County.
However, c ommission
member BW Vardoulis of Irvine
noted that pasS1ge or the county
proposaJ plus a blll to set up an·
nual vehicle inspections in
Southern California could stick
Special
election,·
planned
U Newport Beach City Council
members stick to tbelr plam, a
special election ·will be Mt in
June to seek voter approval for
mcreaaina the hotel and motel
bed tax.
On a 4-2 vote Monday. the
council tftltatively selected June
2 as t.he election date and direct-
ed the clty's legal staff to draw
up the necessary documents.
Mayor Jac.kie Heather, who
said she bu reservations about
calling a special election, and
Councilman Phil Maurer voted
a1ainst the el.ection move.
What remains to be de·
termined is just bow high the
council would like lo push lbe
bed tax, olficiaJJy known as the
transient occupancy tax.
According to the city budget,
the estimated harvest from this
year's 6 percent bed tax should
total $1.78 million. Each percen-
tage point the-tax is hiked._of.
ficials say. would mean an in·
crease of S298,000.
If the be<I tax is doubled, as
several council members have
suggested, the annual revenue
would come to $3.57 million.
The special election would
cost roughly $21,000. •
Council members, who pro·
posed the tax increase as a
tradeo(f to construction of a new
4'0-room bot.el near John Wayne
A!!,port, were informed the elec·
lion would be need~ because of
provisions in Howard Jarvis'
Proposition 13.
Language in Proposition 13 re-
quires a two-thirds vote of a
city's registered voters to in·
crease a special tax.
Robbers kill
trio in 2
U tries
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Three
people died Monday night and
two were injured when robbers
burst into their homes and ter-
rorized them, and the bodies of
two men, killed by gunshot,
we r e found along county
roadways as the murder rate in
the Los Angeles metropolitan
area hit a record high and kept
climbing, authorities said today.
(Related story, A3)
Robert Gilmore, 74, suffered a
fatal heart attack when three
armed men rushed into bis
Ladera Heights home as be
opened the door to walk bi.a dog
at 10:30 p.m. Gilmore was
thrown to the ground by the
men, and held down and sat on
by one of them , although
Gilmore asked for help and told
the m he had a heart problem.
Gilmor e was unconscious
when the men finally left after
ransacking the house for jewels
and cash, pointing a guo at the
h e ad of Gilmore 's wife,
Marguerite. 61, and terrorizinl
the couple for more than an
hour. Mrs . Gilmore called
paramedics when the 1unmen
left, but her hUsband was dead
on arrival at Daniel Freeman
Hospital.
Three people were bound, then
shot in the bead tn a Wilshire
District house at 11:30 p.m.
Monday. Two of the victims -
Johnnie Parker, 22, and Evelyn
Davis, 25, died. A third, a teen·
aged girl whom police would not
identify, survived the bullet
wound in her head. made her
way to a neighbor's house and
called for help. She was taken to
a hospital where she remained
in critical condition.
Bespite this obvious problem,
she said the system is con-
sidered an efficient means fOI'
raising taxes because it ls Ued to
the need for highway projects.
The s~teJD prevents surpluees
from developing, which she said
~n..QCcur....wilb-other funclin1 proQches. -
State ·anaJys~have projected
that funds for already-apptoved
freeway proje~ts in California
will be $1 billion short in five y~ars. In Orange County, that
..,eans that bottlenecks such as Mu~ intercliante l>etweeo the
Sa.nta Aita and -NeWJ)Gl'\
freeways won 'l be improved Uh·
tn more money ia available.
d r iv~rs. with a '°''lllJU tr1 e-
w~ammy."
In both cases the gunmen
wereaesffi5!G11s l>eing m es
in their 20s, but Lt. Ed Hen·
derson of the Los Anaeles Police
Major Cri!Des Section said the.re
was no ltnown c onnection
between the two attacks or any
other crime under invesUgatioo.
Mrs. Coss-Fitzwater sald com-
mission members and aides 8"'
prepared to take the lead in a
$latewide lobbyinJ effort to pass
legislaUon to finahce more con-
t Jruction.
. "We don't think some ol the
l'atewide effort.a are 1otn1 to
address our needs ln sufficient
detail." she said.
In lhe inspection bUJ to be dis·
cussed Ulis year, drivers would
pay at least • sts annual inspec-
tion fee an6 would be required to
pay f~ ""1tairs'bt their air poUu-
tlon 'iontrol · sy"Sleftu when neicaaary_ -• -
Mrs. <;oss-P'itawater said
Orae,e ~ o#lciala, iMlud·
ing lbelll'*9 al Ute commission, have been adflely seelrln1 sup-
port ff1i-lobl·taftle solutions to
laHinl menuet.
Analyftl recently eslim.ated
that ln OranP County alone, $20
billion . wortfi ol iplptovementa
will bl nMWsalY to continue
~urrent travel ~lUona by the
1ear 2000 ..
TILEP,HONI
AN d1,ats ... "8: (71•) 142-4121 a..-.. ........... : 142·1171
0"9CU ~!.....~=-~~¥ ~ ... ,,,,.~ ..........
The body of a male Latin who
ttad been shot to death.. •aa
found this mornin1 at Alameda
Street between Lomita and
Sepulveda boulevards. Sberilf's
homicide investigators were still
on the scene and were unable to-
say immediately if the victim
appeared to be the ei&bth victim
In a string of male Latins who
have been robbed of very lltue
money and then killed by a llDI
or men roaming the San Feman·
do Valley.
In Monterey Park, the body of
a 80-year-old male white man
was found on the shoulder of the
northbound Loni Beach
Freeway by Hl1hway Patrol of·
ficen this mornin1. Tbe man's
identity was wit.bbeld, pendinf
notification of bis next ol kin,
and no other detaila were avalla·
ble.
-Five vand81s-iie
OAKLAND (AP) -Five ban
, been arrested in connection with
the smubJn& of llcbu alon1 tax·
iway1 at Oakland lnternatleaal
Airport. A policeman and an
1lrport operaUona 1upervl1or hid
ln buatt. near 1 runw•Y for 8'-'
BRISTOL •••
Jim Carlloa ol m ftlt.IM Way
told eommi.....,. tbat tour Oi
ev•l'J ftwe members lD b1I u -
aoclatkln ~..appoval for tbe
l•tnt hlcb·riM project. · Hut a diaaentln1 Bl'ookwiew
are1.naident, Tom Wakefield of m Danube Way, said be still ob-
jects to tbe h.leh-riae concept aa
inc o mpat i ble with bis
neighborhood.
Alao objecting was Bob Kelly
of 3132 Trinity Drive. He resides
in a single-famlly -bomea
neighborhood west or Bristol but
near the proQC>Sed structure.
Kell y repres ents his
neighborhood in a continuing
battle to fight possible construe·
lion of a high-rise addition to the
Holiday Inn just south of the
freeway and west of Bristol.
Earlier,· Kelly had indicated
he feared approval of a multi·
story structure ·by Bristol Plaza
might set a precedent ror high·
rise construction in other areas
south of the freeway.
The city planning staff had
reco mmended tha t Bristol
Plaza's latest project also be
denied as incompatible wll-h
s urrounding reside ntia l and
commerciaJ developments and
because of pote ntial Bristol
Street traffic problems .
They said the project 's Mon-
day night approval is fin al,
though, unless the City Council
decides to review the proposal
or it is appealed to that higher
body.
F...-PapAI
PLANNER ..
development and city ser vices for
at least the next 10 years .
Work on the plan has been un-
der way for nearly a year, with
public hearings a nd Planning
Commission recomme ndations
on the lengthy document still in
progress.
"And knowing he <Carstensen)
is going to move back," said
Mayor Schafer, "l feel comforta·
ble with him as a member. "
Of the Orange County coastal
area cities, onl y San Clemente
and Costa' Mesa do not require
residency in holding down the
appointed positions.
Co s t a Mesa 's five co m ·
missioners are appointed by the
City Council to four-year terms
from a mong people applying for
the posts who are interviewed by
the council as a whole. Mayor
Schafer said.
(;ommissioners receive a max·
imum $250 a month for their
services.
I
APW.,._..
Reagan'• l'ole•
Lyn Nofziger, onetime press
secretary to Ronald Reagan
who quit last month because
he didn't want to move to
Washington, apparently has
changed his mind. He has
been named a presidential
assistant, for political af-
fairs.
Family has
roof until
year's end
Nettie J ones or Irvine said this
mornin g that, s he , her five
children and her husband will be
a ble to slay in their rented home
until alter Christmas.
Mrs. Jones. who feared she
and her family would be evicted
from their Irvine home Monday
-three days before Christmas
-s aid the family has been
given a reprieve by an Orange
County Superior Court Judge.
The judge ruled. Mrs. Jones
sa id , that the family can't be
evicted until Oec. 31.
She said s he has also been
awarded a fede ral Section 8
housing subsidy that may allow
her to move into another rented
Irvine home around the fi rst of
the year.
The Jones famHy is more than
$4,000 behind in rent pay ments
on their present home at 4542
Charleyville Cir cle.
She said last week that an
amazing chain of bad luck had
beset the family ever since they
came to Orange County from
Detroit several months ago.
Lesbian mom
abducts girl
Mrs. Jooes said the bad luck, which included car problems,
employment problems. difficul·
ty in getting welfare, legaJ en·
tanglements and general finan-
cial problems had combined into
a situation in which they were
( due to be evicted three days
before Christmas.
NASlMLLE, Tenn. <AP) -A
self-avowed lesbian was hiding
today with her daughter, saying
she spirited the girl away six
days ago because a judge grant-
ed ·custody of the 6-year-old to a
baby sitter.
"We're fuoking for her and we
assume the police are looking
for her," said Greg Galloway, a
lawyer for the s tate Human
Services Department.
He said his agency had~b
tained a warrant charging ltose
Delaney with kidnapping.
Since she told her story last
Friday, she has received two SIO
c hecks in the m a il . s om e
clothing for her children and
som e promises or furthe r
assistance. she said today.
27 escape injury
MIAMI <AP> -The 27 people
a board an Air Miami flight
escaped serious injury when their
DC-3 skidded off a runway at
Miami International Airport.
• Co11y r ltllt ltlO o, ..... CoUI
Pu-ll•lllft9 Com11011y . No fl••• ........ " ..... ,. .... ._, ... ,.,, .. ,,...,.,
Of e•...n..._..., MAlfl ,..., ..
re11re••ce• •llllOul tllotl l!j
•••lfti .... tlCtinfltiM-f, hours before cat~hiDa,....tb& aus--
pecll, polices aid S\mday. .
•
. .
·~ ~-c·---··
·Haig role ·
in Nixon
plot eyed
NEW YORK (AP) -Oen.
Alexander Hai&, the secretary or
t tate·desicnate. played a role lft
trying to suppress incrimlnaUni
W ateraate tapes and uked the
FBI to i1nore wiretap rules
when be worked for the Nixon
White House, NBC News report·
ed today.
The network's Washineton re·
porter, Carl Stern, said Haig1a
conduct, bad it been known al
the lime by the Watergate araiie:t
jury and prosecutors, might
have l~ to charges against the
ge!'eral.
Haig was not immediately
available for comment.
the network said the tape
matter involved transcripts
Nixon made public in April 197•
in an effort to quiet demands
that he surrenlfer the tap-es ~
them selves.
According to Stern, Haig was
told that the president edited out
important passages, including
one from March 22, 1973, in
which Nixon said: "I don't give
a . . . what happens. I want
them all to stonewall it . . . let
them plead the Fifth Amend·
menl, cover up or anything else
1f it will save 1t. Save the plan
.. we're going to protect our
people if we can."
Stem saad , .. Recent accounts
of that period indicate that Haig
told themtoleaveit out ."
_Do c um e nt s r e l at i n g to _
wiretaps show that Haig told FBI officials not to follow reg.
ulalions he knew existed when.
he sought taps on Wh ite House
foes. NBC said
IRWD hikes
sewer rates
$2 monthly.
Irvine Ranch Water District
directors decided unanimously
Monday night to give their con·
sumers a New Year 's Day sur·
prise a $2 average monthly
hike in sewer rates.
The increase brings to $20 the
average combined sewer-water
bill to domestic consumers, ac-
cording to Dick Hilde, revenue
manager for the district.
He said today that the rate
hik e is needed to meet "un· pla nned increa ses in energy
costs." Without the increase. the
wa ter district would experience
a "significant.. operating loss.
Hilde added.
Normally. water and sewer
rates are adjusted July 1 as part
of the annual budget process. he
said.
However, July 1, 1980, rate
hikes were not sufficient to cov-
er the rapidly risi.ng costs of
Southern California Edison Co.
electricity. Hilde said.
He added that he wasn't sure
if additional rate hikes would be
imposed next summer when the
1981·82 water district budget is
passed.
j
NYSE COMPOSI'I'E -$RANSACTIONS
T~. December 23, 1180 IWl.YPLOT -
Dow Jones Final
DOWN 0.51
CLOSING 951.QI
•
Terrance McCuthy is manager of the Orange t;ouniy
Real Estate Center of Imperial Bank. Costa Mesa
Irvine Savlngs a nd LoH Associatlon a nd Valley
Federal Savin11 aad Loan Auoc:latfoa, Van Nuys, have
announced an execution of an agreement and plan of re-
organization under which Valley Federal will acquire
Irvine ln a cash transaction lolaling approximately $8.3
million.
-David C. Britton, who has taught hotel and motel
marketing classes at Costa Mesa 's Orange Coast College,
is general manager for the Queen Mary Hotel, Long
Beach
Burroughs Corp., manufacturer of business machines,
has announced plans to bu.ild a Sl.9 million western re-
gional headquarters in Irvine
David T. Blankerborn has been named chief executive
officer of Commerce Bank. Newport Beaclt, while Ted
Voss has been appointed manager of the recently formed
real estate department. Timothy L. Strader, ci.a1rman of
the board. was recently elect~ presidenl of the California
Business Properties Association.
Quarter sales Of $6,202,000 have been rP.ported
by Rampart General Inc., Irvine Thal figure, for the
quarter ended Sept . 30, compares to $6,792.300 for the same
period of 1979. Sales ror the s ix-months period ended Sept
30 -were $8, 797 ,600 compared to SM.562,800 for the same
period the previous year. Net loss for the six months
period wa<; $240,800 or 9 cents per ~hare, l.'ompared Lo net
income of SSJ.3.300 or 21 cents, for the six months ended
Sept. 30, 1979
J ames Dole Corp., Fountain Valley, has reporter! earn·
i11gs or S719.618 or 47 cents ?('r share. up from S-45(1,014 and
23 r ents !19791 for the first quarter ended Oc1 31 Sales for
the period in crC!ased 33 percent from S2 ,996,585 to
53,995,402 The earnings included :. credll of S20.000 in the
fi rst quarter of 1980 and another credit of $58,000 1n 1979
Dennis F. McNally is audit manC:tger of Main Hurd man
and Cran.'l toun , Newport Beach
Courtney Seeple , a nati\'e o( Laguna Beach. 1~ vice
president in charge or Daon Office Centrec; Group of
California, a Vancouver. Bnt1sh Columbia based real
estate development firm
JenJfer Moaroe, Irvine. is advertising director of
Orange County Home and Garden magazine.
Patrick M. Scruggs, Newport Beach, 1s mana~er uf the
Newport Beach office of Crocker Mortgagt' Co , a sub-
sidiary of Crocker National Bank.
Jolla P. Markoe, Jrvine, is vice president in the
personal trust department for lln1on Rank.·
.'tlof"k• In Th~
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H EW YORK (AP ! S.lo ,_... D"<f
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ll<ill yw1ic11\ ~a1 h.1 ~•· r111 r,1(·1· th;11 It'll
l<I 111~ hn •ak<l•1.,..11 1111•> ;, r11ull11111l111m
dolt ar hw .. 11w'°' 1•hlf'1111.t t'l'lt·hnl u•s 111
t('ll•\ 1'111111 1 om1111·ri·1.1h
Afl1•r \t'<•t ' 11! h.11 ;p,~1111.: <,how liu<,1
nc!.!. ·H'•·nb lnr v. ork, .,urhlt·nl~ lhM
.111• <·allrng h1111
l11~t1•ad of wor r,
1111-: wllt·t h«r h i'>
1·,11 t·1·r wrll lw 1·u1
'lit1 r l h y ~ttmC
~ '• n ..i 111 <' I t· <., .,
, I 1· I 1· ' 1 •, 111 n 1• x
Pt 1111\'1•, lt1g1·I~ IS
, liu '\ 1Ju1 l 1l1ng
1·:1rt•(•f'1 __.J 'I lit• h11u~1·~1 pro
ld1·1r1 fa r 11ii.: thl'
•N<.r " 111;1 11 who 111lt'l'
I' II II f l' ~ ~ I' ti h f'
.lf.{On111•d ;1l>111JI "wltr·lh<·r I wdl hr
funn v tor1111r rnw " O\'l•rst·cin~ lht•
llp<'ntnSl nf a Tnkyn l1ra11c·h
---~n.r~.1';1;s= I NC", TS 8 u-ge-SU-C·
!'f'Sl>, 1irul Marly lllJ.:l•I-; ~uys he has
' n('\'N ht•t•u h:.ppll·r
"llft!llt'llll y I dropped out of show
bt111i111·'1'1 hccausc I couldn't control
unyth1ng · hi' says ··Whether or not
y<111 w1i1 k1'<I as a c·omr·lltan was up to
11om c ~WY with a11 anonymous list
qotnl'.'Whr·)'(· N1>w I'm in control "
Whfll fnl(cl:; is 111 t·ontrol of 1s a
firm with 38 1..•mployccs in six cities,
n b1111lnt•<;s h<' s oys hus "rcvolu
Uonlz~I" lh•• way llollywood works
Expansion set
for 'Nightline'
NEW YOHK CAP> /\UC News ·
"Nlghtllne ." network television's
first late night news program, will be
eitpanded to o half-hour Crom its cur·
rent 20-minule format beginning Jan.
5, the network said
BUI Lord, the program's c"ecullve
producer. said "Nlghtllne" will con·
Unue to cover one major story e ach
evening. lie said he hopes to add new
elements, i.ncludinJ( essays from out.
slde contri6U ors. -
"Nlghtllne," with Ted Koppel as
anchorman, was Introduced March
24. and baa bffn' broadcast Monday
lhroqh Thursday e ach week. The
pto1ram will be broadcast Monday·
Friday be1lnnlng In April, ABC New!'i
Hid.
,1n1t '''" rn,1111· h11n .1 h•·rri itm1in~
r•1·l1·h11t 1•·<, t11•·d 11f 1ut11nJ!, thriHJl(h
1h1· i,,.,,.r, ,,r .h11w hu ·~'"'"'"
bur •·.u1, r a<10,
('1•l1•t111l11•c; ..ir1· \Ur,rr1u11<lf'fl b>
,., '1f'n:JI\ 11( iJS'>il!>'11r1., whf1S<' whrJ!e
111h ii ,., ''' \C't ~11u 11ff y<1ur track.
1111:<·1.., "<t)., Mtt•r my breakdown. I
rr-;d1zPd ever) h&h' in the world was
:al way!> trying to f.(<'l 1n touch with
!lllnlCOnc In llollywnod Projects or a ll
kinds were d y m(! on the vi ne because
1wople we re not getting through to the
right person "
wmu: INGEU:; HAS made that
rck<t pay off grossing more than $2
mtllion last year It wasn't easy
1-(clting slcirted ""t thc beg1nni n~ I was constantly
1n lea rs on the tele phone." he says.
"One guy ~mid . ·vnu're a has-been
\.:11me<1ian.' The t ransition was ver)
hard Hut people finally ~ot the idea
1t wasn't lngeb thl' comedian calhn~.
hut Ingels the ·arranger · "
What Ingels 1s best at ts lo(ett1ng
lhrough directly to lhc celebrity a
<'Om pany wanti. to hire .for a com·
mcrc1al~~panng Lh.c ca.Uer....the Lrou-
blc• of contacting various agents .
bus~g.cr~.,, la-~-s-an<} r~
ceplionists lo get an ariswer
Ingels IS proud or what he has done
hu1ldmg a new career and family
life wi t.h his w1f<'. ac:lress Shirley
J ones and spares no humility in
ccm~ratulatin~ himself
He daims to have been lnstrumen·
tnl m putttng tOJ?ether' , .... anything
!C'ommercialsJ you see on the air"
and says Hurt Lancaster. Lee Grant,
Rod Steiger and Cary Grant have
called to ask him to find products for
them to sell on the air.
THE IM PROV ED production
values in the commer cial-making
bus iness has made his job easier. he
says. "Commercials a re not only not
an onus now. but Bill Cosby got a
television seri es <"Fat Albert" l out
of his wonderful .Je ll-0 commercials
with kids. Ma riette Hartley after 22
years had to wait for a s illy Polaroid
commercial to do well."
Ingels knows all too well the ups
and downs of a show business career.
lie was on top with a television series
in the 1960s, "I'm Dickens ... He's
.Fenster," the n hit boUom with a
divorce. near bankruptcy and the
e motional breakdown.
• · 1 ·v~been-nlled -eveTythln1 rrorn
a crude upstart to lhe Henry Kiss·
Inger of commercials," he says, re·
f erring to industry reaction to his
business. But the talk doesn't bother
him. ·
•·Now agents and celebrities are
cal lint me," he saya. "How can I
complain?"
• 9 JOHN DIHVl.fl •
AMIJ THI MUflNTI JoM o.n-,_UC> llltth
i<..-11'111 Ille Froq FOUJe
0.... MJN PiOoY and a
irunklul or Mvj)t)tlt 10# a
c;•bra11or1 01 Ille Yvletlde
Mlt(l(I (A)
• P,M, MAOAZINf
A h01pllal thal tj)tClalltM
1n lf .. IKIQ n..dtellel, an
111911\Cll a1 11\e Oulnt'HI
HOOi< •••rnpolllle r-d. em Ham a rav .. w• "Nine
ro Five Jeuy Ba1>11< haJ
hOl•d•y g1-y prec;au·
uons. C191 Carrot on 11nc
• MOVIE.
To ~ Annovnoed
I 26TONIOHT
C08MOS
WhO S!*lllS FOf Earth?"
O• Carr Sagen weaves
fOQelhar the m11j()t l~s
of the S411tet and o"e<s
some cau11or1ary warnings
at>cwl our luluta
FAMILY THEATRE
Go111g Nownere"
8:30 D THE BEAR WHO
SLEPT THROUGH
CHRISTMAS
An•"1114iel A young btuir1
goes in $4181Ch Of Ch11SI.
mas and finds some unu·
sual c1oven1ures &long Ille
way (Al m CAROL BURNETl
ANO FRIENDS
C.ues1 Ahin Atlla &\l NOVA ,
Red Dee• 01 flnwn' A
group 01 sc1&n11sts on llftl
island ot Rhum off lhe W11sl
coasl ol Scollllld Sludies
lhe re<J o~r 1n its natural
nab11a1
LATIN PROFILE
11:00 IJ Cl) AUNT MARY
Jean S1op1e1on po11r1ys
Mary Dobkin, a B11111more
woman who 1gno1eo het
seve1 e pe1 &0nal handicaps
11no wenl 041 to coteh
m01e than 40.000 children
on saf'dlol baseball I A)
Q THE MAC DAVIS
SPECIAL
Linda Gray Melissa Man-
chesler ano Mll11 Welson
i°'n Mac Davis Ill 1 Yuie-
lide "1USIC specl81
8 (11 THREE'S
COMPAHY
Janet and Cnr1ssy are
snociled ~ lhay meet
me oldai women Jack •s
dalinQ (Al
• MERV ciRIFFIN
Guests 01an1 Sov1ero,
Cna1 res Nelson Reilly, Bill
Russell Aeg•s Pl11tb1n.
Glen Supet
Qi) NOVA
Ae<l Dee< 01 At>um A
group ol scienll$1S Of• lhe
1~1and ot Anum off lht! _,,
lOas1 01 Scollano 1lud1es
I"<' •eO OetO• 1n 11S 11u1u1al
hdtllllll
0 30 . Q.Q) roo CLOSE FOR
COMFOR'T
t4rn1' t """I' wt\tth ''" 't"=' ,, ... lhdt h" th•u~ntt•t~
j t" \JfdOfl1't\J (l\ °'''~ft OUI
TUBE TOPPERS
KllJ 1J 7: 20 Lakers Basketball.
Karee m and Company travel to
Portland to take on the Trail Blazers.
NBC e 8: 00 The Uttle Drummer
Boy. An animated version of the tradi·
tional Christmas story, followed at ~:30
by a nother children's special, "The Bear
Who Slept Through Christmas."
CBS 9 9:00 -"Aunt Mary." Jean
St apleton stars in this true story of a
Baltimore woman who overcomes
physi<.'61 handicaps to coach a sandlot
baseba ll team <photo at left>.
and into lhe ap11<tment
betow h•s (Al
&\} THE BODY IN
QUESTION
'Perisnaola GOO<Ss • 01
Jon81han Milter sllo"-~ how
post rnorl ems llltl
1nde1pens1ble IOOI• 1n
mooern mectic1ne ano .. si.s
10 wt.at , .. 1en1 1m1>'ovo1
t1'41nts 1n Ille e~pecl•ncy
and healln are oue 10 doc
tors
10:00 D STEVE ALLEN
COMEOYHOUA
Gunls-ton1 Anderson
Jonlll'l•n Winters 01ci.
Ma.rim. Bob and Ray
BG HEWS
. ®) HART TO HART
Af\111 e•lend1119 her nosp1·
1aill't 10 1 starvmo you119
au1hor Jenmler ••pe1ienc-
es a serial> or near -ra1a1
llCCIOenlS (R) ¥\. IHDEP£NDEHT
HETWOAK HEWS
Ci) THE WHALES TH.AT
WOULDN'T DIE
Film horn a11 ateas of whal·
1"9 tr• 1nco•porated 1n10 a
program deCllCaled 10 Iha
only whale. lhe gray. whleh
nas 1w1ce recovered lrom
11e11 destrucuon Narrlled
i Jack Lora
t0:30 NEWS
INOEPEHOENT
NETWORK HEWS
• ~SENT£
Baqu•ne De Los At>Qe111os
JOHN DARLING
NeQros" An ••PIOtallon ol
'baqu1na." a danc•Clrama
or aalsa ballel w1111 an orig·
1nal musical score by Wlllla
COion ID THEIOOYIN
OUUTION
Ptfishable GOO<St" Of
J0nathan Mlllef 11\0wt hOw
posl mof\ema are
,1ndo1~pens1Dle IOoia In
mOdern me<11c1ne and atk•
10 whal eaten! 1mpro11•
mtmls m Ille ••l)eCl9ncy
a"d nea11n are Clue to Cloe·
IO#S
11:00.88(1)@ NfWS
HOLLYWOOO
SQUARES
I NEWL YWEO GAME
THE 000 COUPLE
Oscar devetoµs an ulcer
ano blames Fall• 161 It
I ONE STEP BEYOND
BASICS~R
ENE.ROY
"Sotar AeHoh\s'
\ \:30 8 (I) LOU GRANT
l ou gels an educauoo
IOOul 1111 m 8 QhatlO
schoot when he chooses •
scholarship winner (RI
8 THEBESTOF
CARSON
Guesls Berl Convv Mart·
•r! HOtne (A)
• PRISONER: CELL
BLOCKH wnen $1\aron lea1ns that
ne has used "'' inttuence
to help rus son Peul •s
pleoad In • ~omlline
~.
l .MCNIWI ..,._..WILD
HOMWaHBlC*
~,__tobelb6eto
UM 6-1\. 8'wlllllll\9r'a 116-
ltf Ill 1111 plent lo blow UC>
atfaln. .MOW!
To le Annc>unc*I. ··~MO NIWI
H :IO. 9 M0YeE
• • "Young Plonffrt
Cllflatmaa" ( tt76) Linda
Purt, Roger l<•m. A young
~ couple put etlda
personal oriel 10 ••tend
Ille gl" Of trlendllhip during
the CMaunu NUOn. IRI
-~-
12:00. TWIUGKT ZOHl
Proffltor Fowtel', a ..._
liked ltaeflet al • boyt'
acnool. le Ukad by Ille
1ri~•t-to enc1 h•• ttaell·
lngcarellf.
I FACE THE MUleC
YOU Bn YOUR LR
Buddy Heclce11 Ila fun
with an Ama.ron. a etOM-
bow ••P«t and • lacty
wno'1 had 127 marriage
prQC>Oealt 1hl• year.
12:'° Q TOMOMOW
Gu1111· The Broolclyn
Boya· Choir.
• M<ME * • '"-"The Blue o.hlia"
( 1946) Alan l ad<S, V11<onic:a
Lale a An e • ·MrV!Qln\an 11
suspec;lad ol murdet1ng
n1s unlanhlul wile and
must prove his innocence
Cl THEFBI
• M188tON:
IMPOISMILE
The IMF 11 aHIQne<S 10
Slop a dea.1 1nv<>1vmo !he
purchase and resale ol
American 11ms 10 gue<llla
~oups m INOEPENOEHT
NElWOAK NfWS
12:409(1) MOVIE
• • ,,., "Cactus In The
Snow t 1972) A1cherd
lhomas. Mary Layne A
young SOldie< on leave dis·
cove•s IOve then tne he<1rt·
01eak of S411)8r•hon ..rien
ht! 1s orde<ed o" lo war IAI
• •• MOYll
To le AMOuftC*I,
t:tO. TMI LONI MNCll1'
"Clolcwedo Cold''
•• MOYll ••'k "Good ~ FOf A
Han9lf\O" (1Hll Fred
MacMurra~. M•oOI•
Hayes. When en tJl·lew·
man c:ec>t!K" a etaln INr·
,,,.. lciller, he ii~
10 llnd tflal ... ,__.
pie Pf... IO tllink Of hit
Cac>IJo.te .. belno ~
and ~ ol llUCtl •
Cfime,
~1~
**'II "Bec:euM Of You"
( 11s21 Lore11a YOU!'Q. Jeff
Chandler. FMrlul of toeing
the rnan she lovet. a worn·
an conceal• her pall
lrnpr1sonment lrom her
him. 2'.211 NIW9 2:30 MOVIE •••'h "Five Grr.IM To
Cairo" ( 19-43) Franchot
Tone. Erich von Slroflelrn. 2:311= S:10 MOVIE * * * "People WIN Talk"
(19511 Cart Grll"I. Jeenne
Cr Ml. I
• MOVIE •••'II "Oo,.c11ve Bur-
ma" ( 1945) Err<>I Ftynn.
Wllllem Prince
4:00D MOVIE
• • • '1> "Fies/I Ano Fania·
1y" ( 19431 Cnaries Boye<
Barbara Stanwycll 4:251 NEWS 4:30 MOVIE * '> "Bells 0 1 Cap1s1rano
( 194i) Gene Autry, Smlley
Burne lie
Wedarsdafl'•
Dafll h11e ~ol'lles
.-~-
12:00 • * • 'The Crimson
P1ra1e" ( 1952) Burr Lan·
cas1e1 Nick Crava1
3:00 (!I) * • • ' • Camelo! ·
(Part 11 ( 19671 A1cna1d
Marris Vanessa Reog1alli!
3·30 Q • • • Gregorto Ano
His Angel 119631 B•OOe•·
•c~ Cr11wtoro
by Arm1trong & Betluk
TH)l(T'S RIGHI , t-<105 ! l 'M
GOING "TO 0E COMll'-0--ro EACH OF YOUR
HOU5E5 THl5 YE/IR IN
TH£ CHANNEL ONf:
~UOOl..PH ANO ALL OF
THE OTHE.a ~INOE£R
AAE GE'TTINO A WEU-·
OEE5ERVE.O RE5T E3KK
NEW6CHOPPE.:? !
Al I HE, NOa"TH "Ot-£!
Doctor gets
inside death
By PETER J . BOYER
LOS ANG E LES tAP1 Anyone who's seen
any of Jonathan Mi ller's 13-part PBS series on the
human body. "The Body in Question," won 't lle
sur prised that in tonight ·s final epis ode. '.'diller
considers death in a most forthright manner.
absent comforting nicetjes and euphemisms.
But even the steadiest ~11ler fans. accustomed
to his off.hand style wh ile probing livers and
spleens. might flinch a bit at the treat the good
doctor has in store tonight.
TONIGtn AT 10:30 ON KOCE. Channel SO
Miller and a colleague open a corpse They squeeze
the liquid-filled lungs or the departed fellow. carve
up his liver. slice into his heart. This "is neither
frightening nor re -
pulsive,'· Mille. assum.
1
I
··w s simply a neces~ary T\' RE\'IEW part of our m edi cal •
knowledge.··
Indeed. M iller
~lebration in song manages to make a post-mortem seem like a
grand m ystery. repeatedly emphasizing that only
in death can "the causes of pain. decay and dit-
ability in lire be obser ved in minute detail .. so.
in t he history of medicine. it was only possible to
understand the ordeals of the living after we'd
.John Denver and the Muppets blend their voices in a musical
eelebration of Christmas in "J ohn Denver and the Muppets -a
Christmas Together," airing tonight at 8 on ABC,_ Ch annel 7.
made the dedsion lo open the dead."
-€-hristmas sh(JwS-set
Idly chatting as they remove and inspect the
corpse's organs. Miller and...his p_alhologist paWD
---aulge ma e pathologist's humor. 'Miller notti
that the deceased's liver was enlarged. but it
wasn 'l quite the classic "nutmeg liver."
KOCE, Channel 50. has
scheduled an evening of
holway fa mily favorites
for Christmas viewing on
Chr istmas Day .
T he Great A1'Tlertcan
Mime Experiment of
Clevela nd opens this
sp ecial night or pro·
gramming at 7:30 p.m.
with a delightful half-
h our or h o lida y
scenarios in pa ntom ime
a nd , at 8 p.m .. "the
Sounds of ·Chr istmas"
. com bin es t raditional
Christmas songs with a
fanciful ballet and pup-
pet version of "The Nut·
cracke r.'"
J o h a nn S~bastia n
Bac h 's "Magnifical in
D" a perennial holi·
day favorite will be who discovers the mean-
f e at u r c d o n · ·The ing of Christmas. airs al
Festive Bach" airing at 10 :30 p.m. and, at 11
8:30 p.m. The orchestra p .m ., the Mormon Youth
a n d c h oJ r. o t the -..Symphony~Chor.µs
University o'-Oregon ·s featured in "Caroling"'
Summer Fest1val will Caroling,"' a concert 01
join soloi6«i and conduc· Christmas music taped
Lor Helmuth Rilling. a t tbe world-famous
At 9 p.m .. Mel Torme Mormon Tabernacle in
is host in an en core Salt Lake City.
performance of KOCE's Christmas on KOCE
"The Christmas Songs," concludes with "Silent
a sentlmental tribute to Christmas" which pre·
the nolidays featuring sents a selection or
popular c arols and traditional ChristmJs
traditiona l songs. music and a modern
·'Christmas Lace," adaptation of ''The
the tale of a generous N i g h t B e r o r e
lacemaker and a thief Christmas."
----NOW •HOW1N1aG._..., __ _
.. ,. mama •• Blltnt ,.,, Orrwe·ln Mnor Tw\11 ~·
<m l a2Ho10 (7\4) 531.1501 m•> sai-• lm > 63t·2SS3
IUTljlllllll c.... wet ( 1lt) 191 ·3'3!>
NO....W~_,__. __ n
..
"FOR SOME REASON,'' he observes,
"pathologists seem tohavethis ... "
" ... Tendency to name things_ after food," hlJ
ti.ind-adds .. · 1 _:::: ._::
w ....
(d•dl Tw111
148·0388
-Or14'1' Mall 637·0340 NO-~ _,_ ...•• ,