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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-12-29 - Orange Coast PilotMore fog expected tonight By JODI CADENHEAD °' .. °""' ""•' ,, ... Patchy fog is expected to con- tin u e plaguin g t he Orange Co ast tonight with heavier fog predicted Tuesday morning, ac- cording to a spokeswoman for the Nationa l Weather Bureau Service. The wave of fog began romng in Sunday afternoon, forcing the closure of John Wayne Airport t h is mor n ing a nd caus ing numerous traffic accidents. The ·second week of on again off again fog has left m any holi- day travelers st randed at Los Angeles Internat ional Ai rport and John Wayne Airport where fli ght operations have continued on an irregular schedule. In Orange County. the airport was closed at 8:20 a .m. today after visibility along the coast was estimated at only one-eighth :>f a mile. Elsewhere, the California Hi ghway Patrol reported num- erous fende r-bende r accidents a lon g fog-s hrouded coastal , highways. ''Crashes are going down like ~razy," said Highway Patrol 1pokesman William Martin. "A 1 lot of tbem are intersection col- isiona because drivers just can't l 1ee the lights.·' Ma rtin advises m otorists to lrive slowly with their windows ·oiled.down in order to hear traf. : ·::n~:'.:~~s and possible acci· Temperatures are expected to • lip to 55 degrees tonight along he coast with an expected high 1f 80 predicted Tuesday. Moist air blowing off the ocean s continuing to cause fog condi· ions along the coast, while in· and residents e njoy cl~arer kies. according to a Weather \ureau spokeswoman. Worker sees streaker The "streaking" fad may have been renewed over the weekend in Irvine when a nude man left his sports car, ran across a construction site, got back ' in his auto and took off. T h e constru c ti o n foreman at the site located on River Run and West Yale Loop told police he thought he could identify the m an if he saw him again. !\_By the lime police got to tne scene, they said the veh1c e was nowlaere to be found. The foreman said he didn't get the license number. held in--LA ea heists SAN P E DR O (AP > uthorities say they've ar1'9ted ree men in connection with a le-day string or armed rob- !ries in several coastal com- u n il i es southwest or Loa ngeles. The robberies, whose number a y have reached 30, took place inday afternoon and eveninc in 1n Pedro, Re dondo Beach, omita. Torrance and other · ·eas. authorities said. Late &mday nlabt. ofricen of e Loi An1elea Police Depart· ent's Harbor;J)ivlsion arnllted ames ~-Green, 11; Derrick A. icks. 19; and Benjamin D .. organ, 11, all of Los An1elea. --... • ··mEIAl IJilY NPll ", , I ~ • • \ ! ~ I ~ "° •, f I ' 1 ,,,,·.i,,,1 1 ( 1•N r /\, 1f<>l1~•ll\ 2!'.> CENTS o.tlY .................. ..., .1e ..... 1t ...... FIRST FtREMEN ON SCENE OF COSTA MESA F1RE POUR WATER ON BLAZE App•r•nt si•• expk>slon trtggered home fire •t 282 S•nto Tom•• St. Iran official angry over Reagan thrust By'111e Auocla&ed Preu The speaker of Iran's Parlia· ment reacted angrily today to President-elect Reagan's charge that tbe American hostages were "kidnapped by barbarians," and the Iranian official implied that the United Slat.es was trying to swidle Iran. Reagan was asked by reporters in Los Angeles on Sunday if he could go along with the latest Ira- nian proponl for a $9 billion down payment for the release of the 52 hostages, with the rest of the term a to be negotiated. "No," be replied. "I don't think you pay ransom for people that h a ve been kidnapped b y barbarians.'' Haahemi Rafaanja ni, the speaker of Majlis, or Parliament, • respondedtoRea1an'1comments from the floor of the 228-aeat as· se.mbly, aa~tran was not wor- ried about CGlfronting the United Sta tea. "We are not scared of your tbreata," beaaid. "We wmt our money back md you call It ramom," RalAnjani said. The deposit of financial guarantees S-aeeesauy to ''pre. ventyoufromawindlln1ua-:- "Tbe world mUlt know that ac· cordlns to our hlamlc morality we waaAed to IOlw the boltaee ii· sue but it is tbe U.S. which loots aboutfor meume. "We will MUie accounra with you," be sakl without elaboraUon. Iran uked the United Slatel this IDOlltb to depollt _. bWiaD with the Alprian scwernmmt u guar--. for Uleta Iran wmu retumed. Today ·~ the hoeta1ea 422lnd day of captivity. Commeatlq on the televilkla film oftbe boMac• releued °"" lb~ Cbristmu boUdaJI, Rafaan. jani Mid: "All tbe world saw tbe film of the spies and knows they are healthy and happy after a year mdeome moatbl. "You call this treatment barbaric 9D&l melvlllaed but the COSTA .._ PIM •M> -Robert Harvey, 31, of • Santo Tomu St., watches firefi&hting effom after he rescued victim Jean Jones from her blazin1 home. He had to kick open a fence gate and pull victim from a rear bedroom window. . _ I • --.------· -----t a t r .~~~~~~~~~~~~ Location of Riverside man mystery SAN DIEG01'c AP) -Police say Michael Baltes· classy · Model A roadste r was empty when it crashed off Sunset Cliffs Boulevar d onto t he ocean. lappin1 rocks Oct. 29, the day Baltes disappeared. Two days before, the 28-year- old Rive rside e ntrepreneu r withdrew about $10,000 from his San Diego bank account and the previous weekend he was with a woman companion in Palm Springs, police say. Baltes was the operator of Valley P roperties inc. in Riverside. "There was no tr ade of blood or any indication that someone had been injured" in the crash, said Sgt. John Kennedy of the San Diego homicide unit. Sandra Baltes. his estranged wife, said in the Riverside sub· urb of Sunnymeade that "there are all kinds of rumors going around" including one concern- ing the mystery woman. Mrs . Baltes, a schoolteacher, said : "I'm -of Itali an descent - and. t here a r e all kinds of rumors of the Mafia being in· volved." She called'that "one of the111c-er rumors.·· But police said Baltes, who has four children, has a spotless record. • "It just doesn't make sense," said bis brother John, who lives in San Diego, Ifs do ;heir parents. According to .friends. Baltes' (See Ml~ING, Page AZ> Le·ukemia victim . dies ' Neighbor say~ her --I from fire By STEVE MARBLE Of IN Delly ""•'Stefl A 53-year-old Cost a Mesa woman; pulled from her flaming Santo Tomas Street home Sun· day by a quick -thinking neighbor, remains in , critical condition today with second· degree burns over 40 percc11l of her body. Fire officials said Gene Jones. who lives alone al her 282 Santo <Rela ted photo, A2 > Tomas r e sid e nce, was in· vestigating a heavy gas odor in her kitchen and had lifted the top off her stove when it ex- ploded. . Officials said it was onl y a matter of seconds before the fire e ngulfed the home. sendin g flames licking out the windows. Robert Harvey, a ne ighbor, told officials he heard the ex· plosion, ran outside his 280 Santa Tomas Street home and saw the flames He said he ran to a fence separating the resid ences. jumped over it and dragged the woman from her burning home through a rear bedroom window. Harvey, 31, told fi re officials he was forced to kick down a locked gate to get the woman to the street, where the pair waited for paramedics to arrive Mrs. Jones, who JUSl returned 1 from a four-day vacation lo I northern California, was taken · to bum ward at UC I .Medical Center. Neighbors reported that the explosion sent glass fl ying onto t he str eet a nd that flaming · pillows and other items were shot from the burning hou:.e. Firefighte rs and n eighbors. who grabbed .hoses to wet down roofs. were able to keep the fire from spreading to other nearb) homes. Fire authortt1es today were unable to compute a dol lar amount to the dama ~c but estimated the house was 60 i.wr cent destroyed An investigation into the t'ause of the explosion ts continuini;: Move thwarte d SAN SALVADOR. El Sah•ador <AP ) -Army reinforcement:., rushed to the jungle province of Chalatenango, have controlled an offensive by left ist guerrillas. military sources said today Or::J~:a~I \le ather Dense nigh\ and morn ing fog to continue. with only partial clearing along t>each"'Tuesday Sunny a nd :I warmer inland· Tuesday afternoon. Lows tonight 45 along I.he coast, 52 inland Highs Tuesday mid 60s to 70s. l~SIDE TODA" On Christmas Ew of 1865. a group of Confederate velercms got togf'thn in Pulaski. Tenn . CJlld /orf'Md a club callM the Ku Kha Klan rn whrd1 the main sport was membf'r& drapi ng the m sel vu 1n bedsheets as "ghosts" to frighten m:nllJI ft'ffd slaves. Today. Ow Klan hos evolved in- to a network of poromihtory comf" ~~and women are lNming to kill. See BJ • ••• -Doi. food diet ends Stranded 8 week1, 1kier1 1afe OKANOGAN, Wub. (AP> - Tb1 two 1urvlval expert• • nND't too wonted when the)' nalilld they ... ttranded In the ru11ed Paaayt1n Wtldtr· ntll. But after 1 week-lon1 dlet of do1 food ind horse oats, tbey·~ reusessln1 plans ror a 1kl trip from Wuhln1ton to Maine. The two Fort ColUnt Colo., men were rescued Saturday by a lJ S. Forest Service helicopter team after 1pendln1 three weeks in an abandoned ran1er'1 cabin. Greg Wi11in11, 27 . and Pat Legel. ~who teach winler 11ur- viva!).ll ~lorado State Unlveral· ty, tioled up after realizins they would run out of food If they tried to complete a 100-mile stretch fro m Ross Lake to Oroville. "We kind or overestimated the amount Of terrain We COUid COY· er in a day and the. result was that we ran short of food." said Wiggins. o.11, "'*' "'9te w •k ... ,., 1CM111« • ' We t r i e d o u r be s t a n d VICTIM JEAN JONES IS RUSHED TO UCI MEDICAL CENTER A"ER FIRE RESCUE planned it the best we could," Tb• lldtn planned to rtat at a rortat Service pllot'1 houae ln Okan01an for a day or two, then . fly home for a belated Chrl1tmu celebration. The men, both stnale. uld they may resume their trip ln January, but flnt nHCltd to ,... 1atn their 1tren1th and decldt whether they could expect to take otf the next three or four wlntert. They expect the crou· country journey to take several skiing sea!IOns. HOSTAGES "DeathtoAmerica!" Iranians at separate religious holiday d e m on s trations in Tehran and other cities Sunday called on the government and the M ajhs to set a deadline for the United Slates to accept Iran's terms, Iran's offi cial P'llts news agency reported There was no immediate reaction (rom the Ira- nian g'1vernment She h.cl returned home from trtp, arnetled gH, then exoloalon followed Legel said Sunday ··But the -------------------------~-------==:::---========~-w.ealher &lowed us do wn too - HafsanJani alsc1 sint:!led ou~ thP Soviet Union for criticism , obJect- u1g to Moscow's protests SundMy a hout lac·k of µrotect1on for the Sov1f't Emhassy during a dem- f>n Kt ratmn hy Af~han exiles in Trtrran • \ . ,, . j Libya oil raised by $4 Supplier of 3o/lJ V.S. needtJ rww $41 a barrel NEU! YORK c AP > Libya, ~uppher of 3 percent of American oil needs, has raised its crude oil price S4 a barrel to the 0 PEC ceil· mg price of $4 1 a barrel. industry sources said today The source s a lso said ln- donc~ia, which accounts for 2 per- cent of oil used in the United St ates. effectively r aised its c rude price around $2.25. to about $36 per42-gallon barrel. The moves were the latest in an accelerating round of increases s in ce oal m inis te r s of the Organization of Petroleum Ex· porting Countries voted this month to allow crude prices to rise an average of 10 percent. The sourt'es. who asked not to Clemente an arrested in alleged rape A 27-year old San Clemente man was booked on charges of attempted murder and s uspicion of rape aft e r a fi ve hour standoff with polic(! early today Th(! s us pN't , tlobert Scott :\1uc·h, '1:1, of 227 /\vc Victoria. wa~ arn•st<.-d by San Cle mente pulice about it .30 am. after he had barricaded himself inside has horn<.' at I I . 30 p.m . Sunday Ma rsh is charged with raping a teen-age girl Sunday night and .d so attempting to murder another teen-age women earlier in the week who 1s now in the in· te n s ive ca r e unit at San Clemente General Hospital. Police said a young woman {·a rne to San Cle mente police headquarters at about 11 p.m. Sunday and said she had been raped /\ police spokesm an said the young woman als o c laimed Mars h was responsible for the drug overdose and near death of another young woman who was taken from his Avenida Victoria home this weekend and rushed t o San Clem e nte Ge ne ral Hospital. Mars h 1s now being held by San Clemente police awaiting transfer to Orange County Jail. MISSING ... personal belongings were stillin his residence. He had bank ac· counts in San Diego, where he was raised, and in Riverside and several ins urance policies in- cluding one for $200,000. As loog as pohce are probing the case. the status of Baltes' property and insurance remains unsettled. Thomas P. Haley Pllt>llsi.r . Robert N. Weed Pretldenl M. Thomas Keevll hit .. Thomas A. Murphine 1-.-..11..+ ... hlW Charles H:Loos · Anlste111 ~ f.dl1or tJIN.Ll•ll IU°-.Q.ultJI• Cool P•blls111,.. ComP•"'I' No "••• \IOfln, ltlWr .. i..,, .-i1w1a1 manor °' adfff11-U !MrOlll mo M •OltrOd11<0• w lll'I011t >PO<l•I permls~ ol <Gl>'I''""'-' ,, be quoted by name, said the in· creases take effect Thursday. Industry analysts have said the inc reases by OPEC members Jnd others could add up to 8 cents a gallon to U.S. retail gasoline and heating oil prices. Libya's move was expected to be followed by Algeria and Nige r ia, whose $37-a -barrel prices us ually ma t c h those charged by the Libyans . Libya, Algeria and Nigeria supply 12 per- cent of America 'soil. According to the sources, In· donesia raised prices by between $3.50 and $3.80 a barrel. but cutthe surcharges it adds lo official prices. Ha lsey Peckworth, editorial BO injured director of the trade newspaper Platt 's Oilgram Price Report, s aid the premiums were set at 75 cents to a $1.50 a barrel, down from $2.2Sto$4. l0. Among other OPEC members, Saudi Arabia -the world's largest oil exporter -has raised, its crude price from $30 to $32 a barrel retroactive to Nov. 1. Venezuela has sai<t 1t wi II boost its price around S3 a barrel to about $37. Mexico. a major supplier or oil to the United Slates which does not beloog to OPEC, last week raised prices between $4 and $5.50 a barrel. Its top grade of crude rose from $34.50to $38.50 a barrel. while its lower-grade crupe went from $29to $34.50. Train hits wall; riders scrambled NEW YORK (AP> -A four· car rapid transit train car rying about 800 rush-hour passengers overshot its terminal on Staten Island and struck a wall today, and authorities said 80 were in- jured . three or them seriously. The Emergency Medical Service said 35 were taken from St. George St ation to &t. Vin· cent's Hospital. 4 to Staten Island Hospital and 10 to the U.S . Public Health Service Hospital. Thirty-one were treat· ed at the scene, offi cials said. The three serious cases in· volved head tnjuries, officials said, and there appeared to be a number of people with broken arms and legs. "There was broken glass," s aid Julia Barbac c ia , a passenger m tne second car of the train. "Everyone went flying on top of one another." The train was pulling into the northern terminus of the Staten Mao's widow disrupts court PEKING (AP) -Shouting "I am prepared lo die!" the widow of Chairman Mao Tse-tung dis· rupted her trial again today and was dragged out of court , Chinese sources said. The pros- ecutor demanded she be sen· tem ced lo death. In a final statement in her own defense, Jiang Qing, 67, pro· claimed ber lnn~ence aeatnst charges of treason 1V1d persecu- tion, the officiaJ report said, and reviled China's leaders and the court as "reactionaries," "re- vision is t s," "count e r · revolutionaries'' and "fascists." She shouted, "It is right lo re· bel!" and "Making revolution is no crime !" the sources r e - ported. Is land Ra pid Transit system, where thousands or passengers daily trans fer to the Staten Island Ferry to cross New York Harbor. past the Statue of Liber· ty to the Battery in Manhattan. The tram struck a retaining wall in the station at 8:07 a.m. when it failed to stop while pull- ing in at what offi cials described as normal speed. Police s aid many passengers on the four-car train were stand- ing and fell when it hit the wall. A train dispatcher said a wait· ing room was on the other side of the wall into which the train rammed. The cause of the accident was not immediately determined . CQnductor Willi am Chase, who suffered a cut on the forehead. said the train was making a normal approach to its terminal. ''I have no idea what hap· pened," he said. "I was waiting for us to make our stop. We were going s low and normal like it is all the time and suddenly ever- yone was on the floor.·· Hurt Carter to carry on WASHINGTON (AP! -Presi· dent Carter is "still pretty un- com rortable" because of a broken collarbone suffered in a weekend skiing accident, but he does not plan to curtail his ac- ' tivities greatly. the White House says. Spokeswoman Kate King, say- ing the 56-year-old president was "not out of commission," noted that Carter met Sunday with three Algerian diplomats al the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md. to disc uss t)le hostages in Iran. Carter's left collarbone wu broken Saturday when he fell after one of his skis hit a' rock along a slope on a nature trail at the Camp David compound. About three inches of snow wu on the ground. Residents back T own authorities allowed Clarkton's 750 residents lo re-turn home toda followtn1 an -early-mom evacua on w fire in an agricultura.I warehouse threatened lo unleash danceroua ch~mical fumes. • . much." Before they began their trip Nov . 28, the two left thei r itinerary with Wiggins' father in Dallas, with instructions lo call searchers if the two had not called from Oroville within three weeks. When Jim Wiggins didn't hear from his son and heavy s now was reported 1n the Cascade Mountains, he called the Okanogan County sheriff's office. "When we got to the cahin. 1t had been ei~ht davs since we left Ross Lake, and we knew we wouldn't ha ve enough food because we were only doing hair the distance," said Wiggins "We decided that if we stayed at the cabin, they would be looking for us in two weeks ... "The first two weeks were not bad because we were kind of confident we would be rescued," Legel said. "The last week was the only difficult, week because we ran out or food " They had to resort to dry dog rood and oats stored in the cabin. "We'd take that dog food and heat it up with a little lard and corn syrup to make a kind of gravy," said Wiggins. "It would kind of fill us up. but we managed to lose about 15 or 20 pounds each." Their spirits dropped when they realize8' they would be spending the holidays alone Wiggi n s. wh o turned 27 Ch ristmas Eve, did get one pres· ent for his birthday. . · 1 gave him a little film canister full of honey, the last of my food supply." Legel said. The men lJVOided cabin fever by "talking about all the good food we would eat" after their rescue; Wiggins said. They also husked horse oats around the cabin's woodstove and played gin rummy with a ma keshift deck crafted from 9-by-5 index cards found in the shelle r. Legel and Wiggin'S prepared for rescue by stretching out a red signa l tarp and stamping a huge S.0 S in the snow. When they heard For e st Ser vice rescuers in the dis[ance. the men set off a s ignal flare. Grasso condition 'HARTFORD, Conn. <A P1 - Gov. Ella Grasso remains in guarded condition, but has eaten semi-solid food for the first time s in ce in testinal s urgery for cancer and is walking short dis· lances, says a Hartford Hospital spokesman Chief Warrant Offi ctr l><in Barnett. 60. a ppt!ar s s ur- prised lo learn that he 1s Army's oldest pilot on active fli ght duty He 's st<.tti on ed at Ft Hood, T exas . Hiding man rapes woman in Valley A 21-year-old Foun tain Valle) woman was raped inside h~r apartment early Sunday by a man who Jumped her fro m behind as she unlckked her fr<int door. police reported P olice. s aid th e s u s pe t t described as a m ale of Latin descent. applied a c·hoke hold on the victim during the 2 a m at tack and forced her inti) the bedroom where he raped her The s uspect fled out the front door Of the apartment, which IS located in the central part or the city. police satd The woman was returning to hN apartment from a lnp out of town Police speculated that tht> suspect was hading in "om l' hushes near her front di><>r The s usJ){'cl 1s descnbed as be ing in his latl' 20s. f1 ve feel. eight 1n t'hes tall. and 175 pounds. police said The \'.Oman was treated at Fountain Valley Com- mun ity Hospital and rel .!ased. police s aid. Tanks burn EL DORADO. Kan <APl Firefighters continued their bat- tle today lo control blazes an three giant storage tanks con- tai ning seve ral h und r e d thousand gallons of sol vent . of ficials said. Four were inj ured in the fires, wh ich began about 4 p.m. Sunday at the Getty Refin. ing and Marketing Co. refinery designed esoec1ally with you 1n mind hghtwe1ghl. comlonably ta1lore()w11h a raigbt leg,silhquette. ll\ three sbad.es ot denim indigo, washed and bleached ·-·· -·--·· --·------..... \ Thr>uMmds of Afghan exiles <ll!mC>n'ilrated at the embassy S&turrl&y thf! fir!lt anniversary (/ f a SrJ v If• t t, a t k e d c I) u p In Afg han111tan , ond lt)rf: dr1wn and humeri the Soviet n a~ Sr1 v1ct diplomats proteiiled that thc Iranian government had art v;rn t•f· wam1nJ,! f>f th1~ demonstra l Hm but lfJl'Jk nfJ ar·t1on tr, prevent 1t l)r tr11nc·rea'>•· sec·urity ·You f:!Xpe<·t millirms of ~1ple who have tx:cr1mc homeless by > ou not even th i>n1test" k al!.on J & n 1 s:11d in an open quest 1CJn t() the S<>v1et l:mon · What 1s the d1f ference between Y'>U and the CS superpower"' I ran1an propaganda frequently refer!> to the Cn1ted States as the "Satanic West' and to the Soviet L'n1on as the "Criminal East." llowever direct crit1c1s m of M<>s<:O\'. 1~ le~s frequent m Iran than thalchrected at Washington ,\ Tehran Radio commentary today said the Cnited States was tr~ ing to "open & second front." ag ainst Iran aft er failing to achieve its aims through the 14 - week old Iraq-Iran war. It ~aid l' S. connected groups wt•re creating disturbances in northern and western Ir am an ··1t1 l''i c.11med at keeping govern· ment mllitan reinforcements from rC'a c•h1 ng horder areas. It ~aid l\.urch~h rebels "linked to the Whit <.-ll ou~e De moc rats '' -.topped an army column and tried to destroy weapons and _am- munition being sent to the war front. "Although our army brothers m anaged t o frustrate this um mous plot, nevertheless the good ne\'.s reaches America that Whit<' llou~e trained remnants an lr;,i n a '> .... e11 a s the 1.,;_s _ nemoC"ralt<' Part' ·s Mannes are µn•pi.ir£'d 10 raid. reinforcement uni h hcmg St'nl to horne r a re:,is .. Pope would visit Poland if invaded :-J E W YORK <AP J -Pope John Paul 11 has quietly passed t he word that he would fl y to Poland to be with h is coun- trymen 1f the Soviets intervene mili t arily , acco rdin g to Newsweek magazine. · The magazine says in its Jan. 5 edition that the pope made that disclosure an "off-the-record au- diences with at least two recent \'ISltors. both of whom came away with the impression that the pope has made his intentions known to the Soviets." 56 FASH ION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH !1 d]6d4 7~ ., • . . -_'"'\ __ _ •• , .. ,. •. ~. NOTHING TO 00 BUT WAIT, HOPE Doug McC•rthy, dog, ne•r V•ncouver, 8 .C. Hundreds slwvel mud in Northwest By The Associated Press Bloated ri\'ers in Washington state receded and hundre<ts or residents have begun cleaning up homes damaged in floods brought by unseasona bly warm weather and heavy rain People forc ed fro m their homes by the rising water sinc·e Christmas Eve beRan returning over the weekend as lower tern· peraturcs and clearing skies eased the threat or major flood mg Wa t ers als o receded in Oregon, where three people died in the noods. And residents or Cataldo, Idaho, once again had access to the outside world as waters in the Coeur d 'Alene Hiver went down. "Everything seems to be un- der control." said Art Iverson. shift commander at the sheriff's office in Snohomish County , north or Seattle, an area among the hardest hit by nooding in re- cent days. ·'There's no impending dis· aster." said Iverson. "Breaks in the dikes have been repaired. The water has been dropping. Emergency workers have gone horn e to get some sleep.'' No one was reported injured Chrysler, • UDIOD may alter pact DETROIT (AP) The United or killed in Washington. unlike three years ago when flooding claimed the lives or six people. But dozens of houses were damaged or destroyed. Across the border 1n Canada. the noods c:losc.•d major hi ghwa ys and C'auscd major damage in British Columbia and drove more than 500 people from their homes One of the most worrisome areas, Ebey Is land east of Everett. Wash., was not serious · ly threatened. Residents or the tiny island had been advised to leave, but declined, when breaks appeared in a system of dikes surrounding the island. No ma· jor flooding occurred on the island. In central a nd w es tern Was hington, the flood s wept away several dozen houses. Crews were continuing to try to break.up a log.jam on the Sauk Rive r at Darrington, Wash. There· was concern the logs would break loose and cause more damage. About 35 people were evacuat· ed from their Darrington homes Friday. but they returned Satur· day when the waters receded. Chris Aaro of the National Weather Service said the warm. wet pattern that melted the s now in the mountains while dumping heavy rains into the rivers had been broken up. The record-high temperatures that melted the mountain snows were replaced by reading-.'l closer to normal. Temperatures at several ski resorts in the state were below freezing Sunday. Water was receding east of the Cascade Mountains as well. In Che lan County. Wash .. water in the Wenatchee River had receded about a foot. and people forced to leave their homes were able to return. Orders confUct l:WlYPILOT .. Patients' ear-e blasted SACRAMENTO '<A P> -Tbere were "incompetent or ne1U1ent actloa1 by phy•ician and nunln1 atatt memMr1" in tbt dead» ot UO 1tate hospital 1>9tientl Mtween 19'13 and lt'1&. the Sacramento Bee haa quoted an official report. The Bee reported a total ot 1.• patient.I died in CaUfom ia- run holpltala dW'in1 the period covered by the report. The previously unpublished document, dated June 27, 1978, cited quetUonable dru1 prescriblnl practices by doctors and de· tlclencles in monitor1nl patients' pro1~11 in the 120 deaths. The patients were mostly mentally ill and the "developmen- tally disabled." The rep0rt, compiled by state hospital officials and in· vestigators from the state Department of Consumer Affairs. was supervised by Burt Cohen, an official of the state health de- partment's office of planning and program analysis. Cohen was not immediately available tor comment on the report published Sunday. The newspaper also said the final -and disciplinary - stage of a much-publicized probe by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s staff into the disputed deaths failed to materialize because state licensinJt boards "never had the legal authority to review the re- cords of mentally ill patients ... · · Napa State Hospital's staff. was named in 38 of the cases. while Lanterman (then called P.acific I was cited in 25 deaths and Camarillo wu named ln 15. Other hospitals named were Fairview, Porterville, ... Metropolitan, Sonoma, Patton, Apews and .Atascadero. •• Only Stockton State HOlpital "escaped involvement with any of the serious cases," the newspaper reported. • Hospital dlacipU.nary action was recommended by ad· .. minlatrators in 81 cases, but the rep0rt did not give further de· tails. To date. there have been no criminal convictions resulting from any of the questionsed cases. The use of medication by the physician staff was cited 47'" times -2S times at Napa alone -while the competence and ' negligence of doctors was named in 46 cases. However, l:ohen sa1<1 m the report that since 1976, "sign1fi. cant changes io state hospital organizations. staffing. pro· cedures and patient care practices" have taken place. the newspaper said. Most or the 1,285 patient deaths . Cohen said, were "due to unavoidable natural causes.". The report also urged improvements in "staff performance. medical records, medication ... restraints on violent pal1enls a nd staff training,·· the Bee said. The report said major problems .. included e1<cessive dosages of psychoactive drugs; failure to recognize symptoms of overdose .... and failure to monitor blood drug levels." Mission Viejo man killed by auto Latesuit o1'er Thotmand Steps A 29-year·old Mission Viejo pedestrian was killed when he was crossing Jeronimo Road at Marguerite Parkway in Mission Viejo. Michael Hutchinson died at about 5:30 p.m. Christmas Day, seven hours after he was hit by a car drive n b y Dougla s Cochrane, 21, of Hawthorne, sa id a s po kesman for the California Highway Patrol. The spokesman said C<><:hrane told investigating officers he was headed north on Marguerite Parkway and was passing through the intersection on a gr.e.cn light when Hutchinson dl3rted in front of hjs vehicle. The CHP s pokesman said the re were no witnesses to the accident which is . under in· vestigation. Laguna man robbed of gold chains Police are looking for a man who attacked a Laguna Beach man and then robbed him of two gold chains worth SSOO. Police said Michael Ocorr was reportedly struck on his head and face in front of his clothing store. Beach People, at 168 Mountain Road last week. The suspect forcibly removed the two gold chains from ,the vic- tim's ne<:k and fled, p0lice said. The suspect is described as Caucasian. in his 20s, 6 feet . 140 pounds, with short brown hair and a mustache. Violations told WASHINGTON (AP> -About 10 percent of the firms checked by federal inspectors have been found in violation of new regulations govering the disposal of hazardous chemicals, s ays the Environmental Protection Agen- cy. Beach access -figlit-set. By JOHN NEEDHAM OI ... o.lly ,., ... ,_.tf Attorneys r e prese ntin g ,Or ange County and a South Laguna homeowners group are preparing for a February court hearing that could settle the seven-year dispute over public access to Thousand Steps Beach. Members of the South Laguna Cove A s socia ti o n . the homeowners group made up of residents living above the Ninth S treet Beach, s a y a llowing public access would resuJt in lower property values. However, the county main· tains that. under state law. the public has the right to access to all b~ areas below the high tide line. The county•s campa;gn to gain public access to Thous4nd Steps · Beach received support recently when the regional Coastal Com- mission ruled that the public should be allowed in. The commission made public access a condition on a permit it issued allowing the county to r e pl ace the dilapidated stairway leading to the beach. But the 540 residents living on the bluff above the beach con- tend that repairing the steps and allowing the public to use the Jong-time private strip of beach could bring as many as 100.000 people into the small area. In 1978 the Laguna Coves As · sociation filed a laws uit against the county over a previous at- tempt to repair the stairway. That case will be heard Feb. 23. Meanwhile an injunction issued at the same time prohibits the county from allowing the public on the beach. The action accuses the countv of using coercion and lies in 1'974 and 1975 when 140 local residents gr anted the county easement along Thousand Steps in return for deeds worth S5 each. It is alleged that county of. ficials told the property owners that they would be liable for all repair costs if the county was not granted an easement to the stairway. The homeowners a lso argue that there are no restrooms in the immediate vicinity and beachgoers have been known to trespass on private property in thei r searc h for sani ta r y facilities. D•lly I'll .. S.,11 PM to BEACHGOERS MAKE THEIR WAY UP THOUSAND STEPS Dlapute Over Acce11 to South L•gun• beach continues and a lifeguard . In addition , He rman said. Thousand Steps Beach would be closed to the public at dusk to calm fears of residents that van· dalism and noise would result from public access. "We were notified by an at· torney representing the South Laguna Coves Association that. with this provision included, the hom eowners might be ready to grant us access." Herman said. Herman savs thl' count\ ,,.. partially liable for an~ 1nJUrtt'" that occur on lhe crumbhnl{ s t a 1 r case w h e t h c r ~· n t• "' stairway is 1nstall£•d ur not Re placement of lht· aginl.! path to the beach would <·ost aboul $150,000. county offi cials ~u~ Auto Workers union may ask Chrysler Corp. to shorten its cur· rent contract in return ror wage and benefit concessions that the financially ailing automaker has asked workers lo make, accord· ing to published reports. UAW President Douglas A Fraser told the Detroit News it is "within the realm of possibili· ty .. that the unior might ask the No. 3 carmaker to approve a new contract to cover less time than is still left under the old agreement. which expires ih September 1982. Judges squabble over busing plan Peter Herman. an aide to 5th Di strict Super visor Thomas Riley. says the county is pre- pared to install public restrooms He said the attorney later in· formed him that area residents had decided to go ahead and press- the i r court case in hopes of blocking public access. Or iginal 1:s t1rn a l L'" "'"' th\ replacement costs Jt S Ill 11<>11 County offi cials ~ay tht' ongin al estimate Y.as too tu"' b<'c:1ust· 11 didn 't take into cons111 t•rat11>11 the aria topo~raph~ undl-"d'f .. ~ ficulty of a contr;ictor ha' 1ng 111 base repair t1perat1un-. ;tlon p Pacific Coast lllghy.ay _ Union leaders m et last week and agreed to reopen contract talks with Chrysler, which has asked the unlon to accept a 22· month wage freeze that would save Chrysler an estimated S600 million. Chrysler officials have said the UA W concessions are necessary for the company's sur· vi vial. Fraser stressed, however. that the umon ·s 13-memt>er Chrysler bargaining committee would not decide on bargaining terms untn after it had met with Treasury Secretary G. Wilham MilJer,' who is also chairman of the Chrysler Loan Guarantee Board. The purpose of the Jan. 6 meeting is to discuss the financial status of thefaillngcompany "Miller may sax, 'You have to have a longer c6htra~t or we (Chrys le r Loan Guarantee Board> won't accept it,"' Fraser tald. "That's why we can't mak~ those tactical decisions until we Chrysler is asking the Joan --?Oard for an additional $400 · -11uuon of the tt.5 bilUon loan .!iOhifftll· appro-.ed ult-year. :=hrysler has already brorrowed '800 million arid company of· lclals say it cannot s urvive past January without the additional unda. ALEXANDRIA. La. <AP)-An extraordinary legal fight between a state judge and a federal judge is headed for an appeals court, says a 1.awyer for three teen· agers trying to avoid a school desegregation plan. Lawyer J . Minos Simon is Uk· ing the sth U .S. Circuit Court_ of Appeals in New Orleans totem- porarily delay a federal court or- der that would send his cllent.s to a school they do not want to attend. That is the latest in a series of orders stemming from a squabble between state District Judge Richard Lee and U.S. District Judge Naul1\an Scott, author of a parishwide desegregation plan put into effect at the beginning or theacboo) year. In asking for a temporary delay pending appeal, Simon said his clients are "helpless bolta1e1" in a power struggle Mt ween the two judges. "Both have vowed to prevail in this jurisdictional conruct. 1be antagooi.sm between these two judges hu escalated to the point has characterized state Judie Lee's authority H 'make be· Utve', 'lSimaaalclillJUa pet1Ucm. whicb wn -1J1ailed tLtbe S&h Clrcu.lt Friday. Under Scott's dese1r•1•tlon plan, teen-a1ers Michelle LaBorde, Lynda McNeal and Ramona Carbo were tran1rerred from rural, all-white Buckeye High School to 50 percent black Jones Street Junior High in Alex· andria, the biggest town in Rapides Parish. The transfer also would require the gtrls to ride bases to school. a distance of about 15 miles . The girls' parents gave legal custody of their c hildren to friends living in the Buckeye High at\endance zone. Lee granted that maneuver and told school officials to admit the girls to Buckeye High. He told Scott to stay out of the case, say- ing child custody Is a stale. mat- ter, not a federal one. Scott, however, said the move was a 11ham solely intended lo circumvent his desecregation or· der. He told school officials not to adm itthe girls to Buckeye Hi1h. Lee and Scott"Wenl on to issue a strin1 or contradictory orden and, at one point, Lee sent sheriff's deputies to Buckeye Hilh to escort the 1lrl1 to class. Finally, Scott blued what he called "a put up-0.. sbut up'' order dally fine on anyone tryln1 to op. pose h1I ctese1re1ation plan by ' keepin1 the 1trl1 ln Buckeye "'''" .... -urrde ar1t ontel', 1~orrt!le last day or class before the Chriatmu holldaya, the 1trla are to show up at Jones Street Junior Hllh when clanea resume on Jan. 5. • spzrry top-sidcz.r wiili nzsist<znzd ant1-shp sola a ~tcz. fOr saili~ or str0Zt 'Jo{l.8l', ~ ~t with~ and.a bla:zar or ehOrts arrl e knit shirt. '" fllah.ion laJAnd• Newport ~h· 7141644·5070 I l ' • -~,-- ! . ~ Wftewood Bl"·m•eewood \lilla~~l~fJ.;7-+2--..------• \ ' .. J :X:-~-~~-uuz~wuaumuaasaaw .4~ DAIL V PILOT s WORLD I NATION "B i g plu.'i' Pa "i-h, 1 't110 M11rphiot' th•'! I;· u11ta11 lt,li<,11 Reagan to meet Me xico's chief \U·:Xll <> C ITY t AP ) Ambassador Julian Nava said M M 0 1.0 THIN(, ut:t"'I'. ~. 1111·• 1· 1 ... .. , .. ··"~· I' r .•· '1tJ 1· n l 1· I el' l Ron al d recently. H t•J1>an !> f 11 '>l trap Jbroad to "No U.S. administration could dov.n lo m) thrt-d blH\ I !'!lurt th.it I""' luuu I 1 • ut ·~ fov. lnjf \\'1 •t k111g "'' ''" th' f(Ottl 111h11l•11 put •"' It \\1·1 llllt Ool)l>"t-l11ut oo 11tw111·h1th.11w I u u11.1 !>Hu 111111. 11< ••· "J" u p \111(\t' l l:t)ll I Wll><:<I "' ''tllf•llWU t 1 u111111~ ''"'" ltc 11! I ll rnt·lt 111 1th l'1t•,1denl Jose Lopez e v c r ha ve ign ored the l'11 rt1llu" .i .. 11 ung m1llc·at1on the significance of Mexico to our 1v.11 ..,.. .int tu 1h.~' t•lolJ a personal own security," Nava added. 1u1r ~. in~ n l.1111m~l11 11 Americun Among other things, the two .111 rl \11·\I• .111 dqilorndt!> h~o u n tr ies i.hare a s pars ely ' h'\4 lht• L 14 u Olk1111 1 l1ul J u1J 11•' who JUSI !'It 1111 It •l 11 \ lt ..,..," .u1 in-.1Hroil11111ul l1•1ll I l..-~;.111 lo 11111 1 111 II• Uoocl Ohl -,un11ltt•rl1m\ hl-'hll) off kn 11! nu1 •· I t11 ·" µa t rolled 1.776 mile border. and ultt t111wr m ·'<\ lo rflc d t·•H t ti ht' I ht OJI II• 11 111.1111111 II 1 .1 1 "l.1l1011,h1p th<Jt Lopez arc major trading partners 1· .. 11tllu 111•\tr m an .1gcd to 1 lt1t•\t' \\lll1 l'1 1·~11ll'1tl C<1r1 1•r 11111 11..·l,1lu111\ 1 .. tv.1·1•n the l nil I quit huminm.: '4111 \ 1l111ut tt1•· ''" k••1 I .i1•t rtlJ\1"~ '\I l kl(, If I 11111 not .. .., urt li.c) ll."> t'I e 1.) thuu: 1 ht ''"'' l<0o h •" I lool-.cd bt:\'f tldt'I r tl \-\ h1 I •·'"I v. 1011~ I 11·111arkt:d 'l11tl1111.: 1'1111 lh• iw111 II • 11 "i 1't• r1t11 \11 ';l'O hd\'l' I .i \Id hi llldl 11111 .1-. ,1 I l'!>Ull. H•· 1/.:an 1 -;1 b1·dull·d tn m1•l•L l"r I h1 cl \\Ith f 11J11•/ 11111 t1ll11 \It'" or ltW 1 1.!tft:dllO~ l11lo.1111 l l.1 l I 11lil'' \IHI ll fll ll \en .1 ... ,111• -..111111\ 111• •fl • JI •II .J .in .11 r.ttt ltn ~ t11 , 1·,1nt' ~~·"" 1 1h1· f·• 1111. .Ill 1 • 111•1.; 1111 1h1 l1111 kr 1·1 \\t"J tht·r t' "' .1 11:.r·,·1, _ .-J '1u't ht 111nt:t 1 11).'hl h1·r1 \II 1111 • 11• • ,,J, 1111.1 • • 1 "'' I h 1· j round n.tkt'd PIJ):ln r11f1LIJ<tll llJl-1·11 ""' I I •ll I • , ' II ,, I ; I .11111 I Wh.s smn1?-of t he"' bramrrt-trJott;-.-11~1~.~11,...t"'1"'1 ""••"' l.,..._-.,.,rr..----,---r-r---:~:;--:".l-t-tr"t'lm-t;t-t~~ the rt' Ill the \\ <ill'r I 1·' 1' \It ' ·th:} \\hat''> \\run~ \~llh lh•" \\r ,,. 11t 1rn.r11 '·'" off111,11.., Ul'n~mlwr I 'uJ.!gc~t l·<I ·1 I I It• \ ou mu:.t l.)C unl· of 11111,t• 11,111\t' 1,11111111111r ' ''' 11.1111 11111·1111..,1· ra'tpcd ac<.·us1ngly Thul n i:ht " 111 Lit•· 1111·1·1 "Right .. 1111: I 1111 !lit• "1 lhought so Yuu h.i1 l' tfl<tl l•x1k .11111111 '"" "111111,11 I• I 111111·1 raggedy T shirt You µcopll' 1u'tt 1 an 1 111111•·1 '1 11111 ""' '' I l.1q11· / you· rt:' missing out' on t ht· ).!nod II rt· ".-: ·' " 11 I~· ;11 "" .. 1••'11!111 11.d 1•.111 "All. HOW GREAT it wa.., had , 11111111· 111 c, 11·1·11 111 \I "' 1 11 1 '·"' W1:.t·on~in 0 11 then"' 11.he11 )OU ti 11·.ilh 11·\ ,1 11.111~1 (41 '•' ..... J"nda11()rnragef1xt.\l /Wat Ji ,1 1'H" fJJ., •' 1'" r I h lh<' Sl·a..,ons . .,onny Thi· n ip 1·mn1 1•1 th• .,,, I ti .. 111 •• 1 v1goratcs you th<'SC l>t•1·1·mht-r n11:h1 '"'n•1\\ 1·111\•1t ... r1 Your breath turn!. fro.,t\ ,,1w11 \011 ~ ,, 11111 """" 1 ·I p11 a nd snow.shuv('llfl '." l lt 1· old I 11111·1 c·11tl111 •.1·rf "An' you JUSt look at wlt,11 \1111 I•• "fd" 1111 1 111111 I here No t·hangl' an tht• 'l':rs11ns Ii> 11111•11 :\11 1 "' , ' I• old ;11 r whl'n fall rolls around N11 C.1111111· ''"'\''' ''" 11 .. ,1 no s nows. "WHADOVA YOU GOT? Month in and month out. you people just have the same old thing. Sun and n1111 •' .,un Hot and more heat Look al tht•m out t hen· '"' 1 ho ,, blankets, just loll in; and ... 1athen n thems•·I \ , .. , v.11 h 11 11 111 oil " "Yeah. I'm luokm '," I rt•plH·d us tv.o ""''•I 1k r 1 •'l'l ~tided by on the Boci rd\\C!lk .Ju.,1 1tw1k ,1 di 11111, 111!1 hack in C:rccn Bay, ri ghting <li·,111 l.;11111 I•'" ,,.,.,., l1.111r froll'n radiators and lllJH''> "lfOGWASll. SONN\'," ht l"X pl•>ekd I •1,11 11 of sturr that 's mad<' tlw HP.ii J\1111 : 11 1 .. i , div1du.~Jll sm Toughne s!. in l'nmb<1t111)' 1111 11 • "" 1.11·1 1 •·Well. 1( you're so era" ali11111 .all t11 11 I 111•1ol wecither. old-timer ." I su~geslcd Wh} t1011 I }OU 1 urvt· bac k to Green !lay"" "You stipp(!d a cog. sonny·1" tr I m1~l'.'.~ . ..!.!.<Hk. I fl miss all this," he declarf'd. craning h1.., nt>rk ;is'"" rrior•• bikini maidens c ast s hadows on lhl· H11<1r1,v. <111. 1,.,1 11 111 the warming sunshine . _:j I I I ,1 • ";r I,; \' ' .11 1111i.;hl I t • l I I 1 I 1 ,11 ti I 1.1<1 I 1, t 1 1 no I i-l ., • I Iv• I It\ I I "·'" I 111 ~:11d l..t•d 1 II IC I lll"C." I I l 1• I .,, 11\ I t1 ' fl 1 '"'1' At: I\ 11• llt• I r 1 • II 11.1 Ill I II 1. ~" ''I I I ' l tt. '~ I•, .• 11'1 •I \111•'11 • .Ill Ii, ,11111.11 \\ t111 .... kt·tl llOL lll 1.1· 11:1in1·d '"\I I 111'1 1' I' 1•1 1'1 \ 11111 1~ .t I • • 111 1(1.,1~·, 111 r. ti I 11 p 1· I L • , , • 11 .snl I • ·I·· I ' '"' •• J • t I ! •II .ti I ' I .t 'I• ,,, I II• '''"' I '. I• I II " I "' ·' l\•••111 "' '" • I • I Ii , , 111 1t!1· :\l1•x w11 tt ,. ' "Id f1r11i 111 111·!'.I 1111 11.11 11,11 'If I '1 11 11 II Jll'~ll' lllfl•o:t 11 • • 111 ti• I 11111 d !-tt.tlt·s 111'>1 ..,.. 1h I \1' "'" .., polil11 al 111f1111 'II t• lll't•l lliil11111:oll\ \\ •· tr ,, • ;,Ji • ;11h •·•·n <>11.:11~ Ill I Ill \I. I 11 • I•,, lfl \Jp,l('fl an )•1.1\lllJ., .111 .1lfl I• 'Ill.ti 111lt• tn rt• • 1111\ill :i11lf ',\IH l1J .r(l.111 "'· .. I .... Thaw Mid west, E ast • Ill f..'OGJJI al ... ,._., lt.-r Cootal IOQ c~arlnii tatr mornlnq ot.._,rwne--""""Y talr -.o •11-nn-.f Co••l•I "lqh mod~, tow 411 1nl•nd htQ!'t H low ~3 Wair•, llO E ''r where. wp\t lo \OUttiwp\t wind$ 8 to n ~noh 1n ,,,,,., "°°" WPUprl~ •-If\ J l o ' 1••1 W ind W.tVf'\ 1 loJff1t't Tn• rnttrcurv movf'CI <IO'"' to norm41 Decemb<lr lt>••I\ a~ lh• 101>9 ho11d"y ~1'•nd 1; ... 10 " 110 .... , buf- f hf" w•rmtnQ tr,.nd 1n thir' MtOWP\1 And .tlot'O tht AH~nlfc•c°"'' orou9h1 < touds and toq, wi th r tt1n 1n tl't~ \Oulh•rn sldlM E a~t cttntf'dl ,,,,.'9\ 01 Gt'"CHQ•d Wftn • Ou\tf'd b't \lf'lf't "net ltOhl c.now· b, ..... , dtttf'• 1orat1no roMt cond11ton\ .o ouna •~u\ta ()thttr p.tr t\ Oi Gfl'OrQ•-' qot r••n 11""'1 drtlltfl A\ ff'fflC)f"rt-tturft' r.ov e•~d '"'he'°' A travelt-r~· M1v1-..ory ¥rt0 10 ••fff"cl tor Horlh CM041N1 Svnd&V l>M.AU\C' ol 1c .. ~cov•r@d tl)Mj" 1n tN' Pird~t ar-Plf and tootPufh. A hQht rt.tin 1n ,,.. .,.,,.,,.,.,, \r ct1on' ¥Jd'\ '''"'•no to fr~le, but ffmpft('lltllf t'"\ t1' HW' 40'-And .. SO\ ttl\flWhctrt WPrr 9'xpe< tfd to melt mo•I oft~ 11o41n< hfo•Ol l!ct umul&IPd \f'\OWW Snow M'Ct 'lff't .tho .,, .. , .. f'•C>tt frd to melt tn V1rofn1e whf'rP •t"ttttwr w~rm@d into 0¥ .e(k SOmf' •<tJ ,_. ma1n~i on •o.od• S<lnd"V Otflclats dKl11red ~now tmflrOf'n Ct•\ •f'I two .,,.\lf'rn MarvlaM coun llf'\ bf'<MI~ of tCf .wihrch tutml')t'rtCI ''"•'''°'~ •n two \outhtrn M4tryld!nitt 60unt••~ near W.e\htnQton 0 C thP '\Un hftd l"fl~1ti..•_«) 01 1\1 1 t \OUt"f'' n c 011nT.t"" Uul 1n ~'~It' ... ,,, " l flm~tAIUt ff\ ti "' 'lll!'oHtlUd lit Hu Nnrlt\t'11ts bul bOUt I~ ""' '"" •'C'•' •nitJ Por fl-"'<f M.ttttw ""' H h •ul ft f hv frn,,.n dnd DUr\t w.t•,., c ,,.,. .,.,, m f"tf'r\ Ar11on1' ~\litrd 1n ''""''" 1 ''' •• ,,.msx'rAtwr-. .uwt rt•tor·d ruon• w•·t1 v i at t~,. -''•IOn.i' 'ii•'" of • 1 '"l't ''' fut,on~nd YumA ft n .,..r.Uur.-, Hf\>\m,1 lho r Anqp(t horn 114 1U t' tl'1' I ,, t 4ll ( ,,, tbou M,\ntt r lllf <'f'ld 1n1H1 Wt•,t lt'h t w .. -. ,H1 ltc. lf:Mlf'd tor ff"O\t M 1nr '\.O•t•'' t .,., ,., Wtlh PA•n •1m1t..n to IPw \mC•f'f '''"' V•lffl" I,_. n"l1U Alf1ttlll• ( ~~ .... f th t tnf' Nor lhwf'\e 1 1qh 1 "'11'w ""'Jt fnr~c d\f tnr '""'" r;,~,., t ·•",.., .nit N1"" ____ ..;;.. _______ "'rnol•nd o..,., ,..... ow._, ··~ V ""'-IW'T'J'\"T.j°" " 9"i1 l "1\1,.,• • .,, c~ot("IJ•t , .... ., r rr ,11 ~· .,,.. 1 '--•litt U'r 1 •,•II.JI~ t ._. 1 j; ottl U""< .. •.Jf" r'" o( 11 l .. 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't " 1. 1 ~ .. ~·ontJn1Qt1 J d rm l) ~C'W"dltM' ~ H p m t .t lUESOA'r ..,_,f\1 !\I~ 4. O\M •1 f tl\I (IW 11 .u ... m 1 e ... lh,,.,,,, .. • \\p rT'I l' """ n•uU .,.... 10 IAI> m t I • .,,, •t ·~,,,, •1\fl'\. Tvt'd"" ·' m fuf'vt." t11rt "'rf tMlr1 s ... 11 '"'" '""" Ave M.111 Dir ... (~ ... , """'' t'Yd ,,,,.,,."' ' 1n : l WSW •hi 1 Ml'lln•l ,, " ' 1 WSW N"•rwwt ' " 11 , w ~'"' U•'°'4)'lt ""'"'" c •t 1 w ()utlnrotc. tM t i•"4J"" L1tUt rh-"Qll I -··--· ~--~ ......... ~ l 'NDER R EAGAN'S NEW lrep u blic an adminis tration , \1t>x1can Foreign Minister Jorge Ca~taneda says he expects "the mu~t difficult problems between \l<·\tt'O and the L'.S to come up on multilateral regional 1s · 'ul·~. as a result of Mexico's m ore a ss crt'i\·-e inte rnational rolt· \l 1·x11:a n!) are partic ularly ·-..'""rr 1ro 'by-reporrs-ttrat freagan .... 111 ht· mort' aggressive in op p11 .. 1n).! growing leftist move. 11wnh an Central America and 1 ht• Ca n!Jbc a n. two areas in ~\ hll'h MCXiCO recenfly d e 1 l'lnpcd an interest. 11 rt.•t•ently JOined Venezuela m .111 agrl:'ement g uaranteeing the ••ti 11t•1•d!. of Central Am encan ;i nd C<1r 1bbc an c ou ntr ie~. f111:111l'ed hy long te rm . low· 1nt1·rt•'tl loan., Lu help their sagg ing 1·l·nnom1c!. Mex11:0 wants no £111·, l'ful l/ S political interven 111111 1n the· area. or at least 1t \ ·"'" to be tim~ull~d before the t n1 Ll·fl St;itc~ ta kes· any action, 1 'a-.l an1.·clu ind1l'ated M 1-;Xl('O IS R ESIST ING a Hi ,1g.111 lnLil idea for a S orth \nH'nc·an l'Ommon marke t w1lh ltk I n11ed States and Canada I rdd1' amon~ the three countn(.os ,., hil ting all t1mt' high.,, and the \l .. \11 Jn.., a r e ;.tfra1 d C S t•·<'l\111 1!11~~ v.111 ah!.orh them \!1111• th<.111 lv.O·lhtrd!\ nf :\i cx • 11 ., 1•>.µurts J!•> to the L'nitcd "l .ilt•' malong It lht• third big : "'1 1r:.id 111 g pa rt n e r a ft e r 1 ·.111.11l:i ,lf!d .Japan It 1 ~ the pnn • 1p.d 1 · <.; 'UIJ plH·r nf '\1h·c·r i111• J!'Jl "llm . <tOt1mon~ 111"' • 111 \. IH..,mul h . -.elen1um. l •.s 1 111111: rh1•r11L1m and It:' ad and a 111.1 .. r 'U Pfll11·1 11f \\1 ntcr •·1••·f.1hlc-.. and fruit 'I 11t.1I tracl\• between the two 1·111111tn t·' went up rru m. SIJ l11l1 111n m l!J?li lo Sl9 b1 1l1on 1n I !17!1 Jiit.i I!. going uµ another 55 pt·n ·cnl this ye ar . APWI ...... Pinocchio remembered Professor Rolando Anzillotti, former mayor of the Italian town of Pescia elected on a plank to build a monument to the puppet Pinocchio, stands in the jaws of the whale that ~wallowed the puppet in the old Italian tale. Anzillotti has orga nized a fes tival in Collodi to celebrate the lOOth an· ni versary of Pinocchio. created by author Carlo Collodi. Man pleads guilty • to extortion try BALTI ~10RE c AP 1 An Eastern Shore m an has pleaded guil· t) to try ing to extort S2.000 from Rep Robert E. Bauman by threatening to expose a homosexual r elationshig, he claims to have had with the conservative Republican, J ames Edward Hegina. 26, reversed his earlier plea of inno· t e nt to a charge of mailing an 1!xt.ortion letter to Bauman, who lost his bid for a fourth term a month aft er acknowledging he suffered fro m "homoo;exual ll'ndc:nc1e!." and a drinking problem. ' P rosec utors said that had the case gone to trial, Bauman v.ould ha\'<: tcs\l hed that he had paid Regina to have sex with him. Assistant l ' S Attorney llerhert Better said that, in exchange fu r Hegin a'!. guilt) µlt'a . the government would recommend a six· month J<.111 ,l•ntt·nn· v.1lh an additional 18 m onths suspended and ·suh<:tant1al µrobat11m · But 1n al·c·eptln>! the plc ci an federal court he re. Chtef Judge Ed \'. ard S 'l\orthrop tllld Regina that he is not hound by the plea bargain and prosec·utl)r ... rt:rom mendat1on He noted that he could 1mpo!>.e the mt1x1mum penalL) of tv.o years in Jail and a $500 fine. :\o .sentenc ing <late v. as '>t:t Regina was allowed to remain frl'l' on $.23.000 bond • As µart of tht• pit-a bargain. Better s aid. no further charges wi ll be plact·d aga1Ast Regina 111 the t: S district courts for either Maryland or the D1slnc l of Columbia m connection with the mat· ter . ALL FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENTS FILED IN 1976 , MUST BE REFILED IN 1981 and those with changes must be r epublished at tim~.of refiling HERE IS THE LAW (Business and Professions Code ) ~t'<'. I 7!1:!11 1;11 1·11 11·.;, lht·,t:sll·lllL'f11 t'XJ111't'" t•arlll'I' undl'r ~t1 llcl 1ns11111 1lt 1 or t('t. a f1c·- t1t11111-.. l111,11H'"' rtallh' .. 1.1 ll'l1H'll l ' l'\Jllrt'' ,11 tlw l'IHI nf II\ l' ~ c•ars from f)1 1·1·11llll'I' :11111 tilt' ~1·;11 111 \\h1 ch II \\,I'• l1kd Ill t ill' llllH'l' 111 lht• ('llll lll~ d~rk _s,., .. li!ll i •It • S11 h11·c·1 t11 till' l'l'<Jll ll'l'llH'tlls 111 -..u lHll\ 1 .... 11111 .r 1111' lll'"'Jla jlt'r st·lcclt«I 1111 lhC' p11ltlH·.1t111n nl llw ~l ;1l1•mt•n1 'huuld 111· 111\1· th.II 1·11T1ilatl'~ 111 the an·a \\ lll•l t' t hl' bll~llll'~~ I!'-111 IJt• ('C11ldllt'tl•cl St'l'. 17!11 i tc·, \\'twn· ;1 Ill'\\ s l;1lt'nwn1 1~ n ·qu1n•d IH·1·:111'l' till' pnor ~t;itl'ment has l'X· p1n·cl 11ncll•r ~u lHl1 ,·1s 1on 1:1 1 111 Sel'tio111 7!1;?0. lhe Ill'\\ ~talt'rnl•nt nt'l'cl not be puhll,lw d 11nl1·~s then· ha~ l>t•t•n .1changl'111 llll'1nfornwtmn n ·q11irl'd in the ex 1111 l•d .. talt'llll'lll FILING AND FOR F URTHER INFORMATION RE G ARDING PUBLISHIN G CONSULT YOUR ATTORNEY OR CALL TH~ COAST DAILY PILOT LEGAL ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT (714) 642-4321 E xt 332 --llily-Pillt • ....... ~~ •.. -+···- ORANGE • • t:ALIFORNIA sc ......... 11er Line hardens on shoplifters LOS ANGELES <AP > 9tor• • Califwaia ud acro11 UM alliim an naellia1 dowa • ._,..,,n~ u,.rt who aa11 .af &laeh oer.a•H arowsd C'lan.&au. "We're ....._ a m'-'Clil ...,.,. u.. ~ ... b_y u.. CQID paalH," H)'I Srrul Cook, part.• and chairman ol lM na Uoaal r«aiJ tl'WJ> for lhe •c· CO\lat.iaa l\rm ol Arthur Y OUQI tr ComPlll'Y. · 'Companln are pro- &ft"11Qa more Th•y've made a ·•You tend to aee more abopllftlnl at CArialmu liMe overall aalea CC?_llf, ph• the pro. feaalcaal abOpl.ll\ar wW • ..., ... ly do MON at Chriltmu •\be theory be can 1• lost la tbe crowd," be 1a1d . "Aho you bav. I kit ol pa.rt time people In UM 1tore1 at Chriatmu and a IOOd ahopllftet knows that." Storea wbich routinely pro· HCut• anyone aboplllUDC tend to become known as bad ~ts for thieves, accordint to Cook. ..... ~ Prejea t1 .. •etl1 . - Moftdly, Oeoember 29, 1tl0 EWl. Y PILOT ..U Meese family ,cWse-knit . Reagan aide's fat~er-patriot, politician OAKLAND (AP) -As eblldren, Ed lleeae and his brotb•n Hid tbeir prayers tot•U. Md wuttd tbe nae •••ry Dllbt Won IOln• to bed, their mother rememb9rs. Sunday, only a few weeks before Edwin Meese Ill becomes President Ronald Reagan's chief adviser, he traveled back home to Oakland to celebrate the Mth birthday of the man who suggested that nag salute, his rather. "I 'm no super patriot." quick thinker and possesses a photo1raphlc mind." During the war years, the Meese brothers raised money to buy a war bond by prlntin1 a mimeographed neighborhood newspaper, selling it for $1 a year. • Today Myron. 47. is secretary for Oakland's Zion Lutheran Church . Clifford, 45 , is a telephone company execut_ive. And George, 43 , administers Livermore's Municipal Court. "We were always a close family," Mrs. Meese said. ··And today Ed and his family areclpse." • coaadoua deciaion that It '5 worth the enra cost to 1et the reputat ion o f b e 1n1 a banlliDer " "Shopllftera will 1enerally hear •bo4.al the reputation ol a slore," he •aid. "If lber~·s a lot of publicity ·about prosecutin1. it tends to ward off the ex· pe rienced guy.'' Ex· supervisor Baxter Ward's pet projeet, a seldom used commuter train, is in danger of being shelved. The Los Angeles Board of Supervisors has voted to ask the state to let the county out of an agreement de· signed to keep the train. Edwin Meese Jr. told the Oakland Tribune in an interview "But my cowitry is important to me. It's a part or my life. I'm happy to see one of my sons working in government. It's an opportunity to serve your coun- try." Leone Meese said her husband and now-famous son are much alike. Both are Republicans with law degrees, graduates of the University of California's Boalt Hall law school, ve terans of Alamedileounty governnleilt service. The father was county treasurer-tax c ollec to r six times. The son was a deputy dis- trict attorney. .... 1,.... TO VISIT DAD The Meeses said their son has called almost every week since the presidential election. "When we talk, it's about the family and very little about his busi· ness and what's happening with the government,·' Meese said. Cook aald a s urvey or 52 lar1e retallen done by Arthur Youn1 for the National Mass Retailin& lnatitUle ~ed that most will _ow ptoH.CJ&tt uyoae ~ prebeoded while shopllftin1. Tbe survey also showed that few Qf those prosecuted later sue the stores for false arrest. Shoplifting is highest ill the in· ner cities, Cook sald, and lowest In stores located in shopping malls or olber...suhuLban spots_ The ultimate victim of the s hoplifter is the consumer, says Cook. Palmdale .. Edwin MeeH 111 themselves. Arguments would ensue. but no screaming." Meese said his-son was a good debater at Oakland High School. "Giving an orderly presentation was his forte He could t-andle the other person 's arguments without any difficulty. He's a The parents said they won't be on hand to watch the inaugura- t i on . ''It 's too c old in Washington," the rat~er said. ·~Besides, h~t®"'t>usy.'~-----• Meese said he's pleased with his son's rise . "but I don't feel like a celebrity. I'm not going down to the com er to sign auto· graphs." ·•Years ago people used to believe that if you prosecuted a lot, you left yourself open for a lot of false arrest sults," Cook said. "We found two of every 100 shoplifting arrests resulted in falae arrest suits and that even fewer were successful." ·'The consumer is paying for it ont way or another because it's going to be in the price or the goods," he said. "The pricing structure of the stores has to lake into account all costs and one of them is shrinkage. Lower shrinkage means lower costs and that's why you see these at- tacks by companies trying to get their shrinkage down." bulge there, recheck shows ''Our whole family has been Republi c an s in c e m y grandfather came here in llB> and built a home in West Oakland." said Ed Meese Jr. Vote set for .1982 MENLO PARK (AP) -The "He was originally a carpenter. Shoplift.in& increases with the bolidays, Cook said. Palmdale Bulge, long con-then c ontractor and lat e r sidered evidence of seismic partner in the Spreckles Sugar strain along the southern end or Refinery. the shaky San Andreas Fault, is .. My dad worked in insurance on inherita·nce tax 'Retired guide' altering habits real. according to the U.S. and also got involved in politics. SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Geological Survey·s Office of He became a city councilman June 1982 ballot -or perhaps a Earthquake Studies. and later Oak I a n d ci t y special election ballot next year Existance of the bulge was treasurer," Meese added. will have competing in· questioned recently in a widely The future presidential ad· 1t1a tives to end Cali fornia's $300 public ized paper written by vi so r , now 49, "sh o w ed mlllloninheritance and g1fltax. Dave Jackson. a scientist at leadership qualities" as a child. Secretary of State March UCLA. He contended that the Meese said. "At one time. he Fong Eu said that the second bulge actually is nothing more planned programs a nd prac-m easure . sponsored by As· ATWATER (AP>_ A l3-year· she fed Falcon bacon every day than a series of surveying er· • tically ran the Cub Scout troop se m blyman Don Rogers and old guide dog retired from for the past u years . rors . · here. His brothers looked up to backed by the Chamber of Com· service to the blind was returned The paper was presented at him. They did things together merce , qualified for the next She also told her of the dog's the Ameri can Geophys ical He was their leader." But young election ballot. to his original owner with some penchant for beer an occas·onal • 1 Union convention in San Fran· Ed didn't talk about his ac-The Ba ke rs field Re publicen unexpected idiosyncracies. nip or whiskey, tub baths with a ciscoearlierthis month. c omplis hments, the parents claimed the tax has "forced Falcon, a Labrador retriever, shower massage and a blow dry Robert o. Castle of the USGS said. "We'd learn about them thousands of Californians an· ' was trained as a 4-H project by a rte r ward. fruit c ores. s a i d t h a t 8 r e c h e c k from other sources," Meese nually to sell their homes and Cherie Nunes Musick of vegetables. cheese and eating of the listed survey errors re· added. Mrs. Meese said her son property just to pay the in - Alwater, who was 13 and grow-out of cans. vealed that the surveys were ac-is '·patient, and a g reat heritance taxes which are near- ing up in Chowchilla at the time. But instead of sleeping on the curate and show "deformation of listener. He always sees both ly twice as high as the national The dog spent the intervening bed as he did with Ms . Bowman, the earth's crust of up to 14 in-sides of a situation. average .. 1 years with Sammie Bowman or Falcon is learning to sleep on ches between 1960 and 1974 in "When a problem arose with The measure would cost the Colorado Springs, Colo. Sbe is the floor beside Mrs. Muskick's the desert near Palmdale, about any or the boys, we always had stale about $300 million a year, totally blind. bed -and he's altering his eat-50 miles northeas t of Los table discussions to iron things about 1112 percent of the total feet Jan. 1 reduces the tax about S200 million eventually. · Ms. Eu's office said the in- litiative is scheduled for the June 8. 1982. ballot, but it could '·appear on a special statewide election ballot in 1981 if an elec- tian is called by the governor or Legislature.·· Rogers' initiative is virtually identical to a m easure sub· milted by San Francisco at- torney David Miller. Miller's in· initiative is also sched uled fo r the 1982 election. Hunter stricken TAOS. N.M. <AP) -Actor Tab Hunte r suffered a mild he art attack last week while on a ski vacation, and was reported "doing fine" on Saturday, his cardiologist said. 1 r,ts. Bowman told Mrs. Musick ing and drinking habits. Angeles. out. We let our boys express budget. A law that ~oes into ef-1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I •• THIS NEW YEAR'S EVE, RESORT TO THE FINEST,. Monte Carlo Dinner and Dancing 565 per f>ent"1 Our popular, complete package includes steak 'n lobster dinner, plenty of cocktails, champagne ... and dancing to the l+piece "Dr. Jau and the B.B.C. Orchestra." And special this year, ''TM Bright S-.de," national-touring 19-piece show group. All for $65 per person inclusive. (Pre-paid reten.arions, ~.) The White Oak A delicious a la cane menu and strolling musicians make a very special evening at Newport '· Beach's newest restaurant. .. Wines from our Cellar list and cocktails will be available. Hats and noi9emaken included. (Ramutiom reromrrvndftf.) The Library Lounge Live music and drinks from 8 p.m. 'till the wee houn, includes hats and noilemaken. • 10 per person cover. (Ram.urioru not required.) Phone today . for reservations, (714) 644-1700 Clvll Grumbling ... dloomy Gu• In the llllJPllal J We've sot two pt.n1 nailabl~ npw. Some people like to keep all 1heir m6rwv handy in a checking account. Other people like to kttp a link-money in their checki ng account and ' kx o( money in tMir savi~ acco1.mt- But a.lmo1t C'VCl'Ybodv Is loolc.ing forward to eaml~ interest on the same money they ux to wricc checks, So we've gut two plana. Ow PTemAer lftllmrtt/ Chedd .. Plaa .. flnal --idllY~~wtdl Maintain 1 $1000 minimum ba~ in this plan. ind you can hive 1n Ince~~ plan f= of momhly iiff\11crth~Yoo1tam­ S~, annu1l lntcre1t on w 111mc money you uac to wri~ check$. Our Grand lntcl"l'tlt/Chttkin1 Plan 11 fm of monthly tervicc charges with SIOOO minimum. Keep $1000 or "'"'"e in vau r qualifyinJt savmll$ or ume deposic ocrount. You qualify for an Interest/Checking plan.~ u( momhlv trl"VU charges paying s~ ..... Annual inter~ -i On any h.1lnnl't.' \\>U m:11nt.11n In \\~Ur rl:m \V\,'\'t' fo!!ll IW\1 rfnnb h.'C'rlU'I.' J't'flrl\• :lfl' Jtffl.'rcnt. But ~'t'·\'1.' !lfll (lnl' minimum thm ~"wyhodv c:in a!!fl.'1.' ••n Our Sil'\'\' minimum rs a lot lf'SS 1htin A l,l( of financ1.1l m~11tu1K;n, And no hank or s.1vm~ ;ind k>nn r·''' .l ht~ht•r r:itc of interest W11h either plan. wu '-.ln .1rplv ""' R C.Ombinc<l Ch«k :md Chal"J,?t' C1rJ IM:.istcrC1rd""or \'1sa •11Rt'adv Rl':!<'I'\'" Acrount :ind Chl'<:k Gu<1relntt'<' C.1rJ And you can ~t tither plan 111 nn~ MC • of our ovcr SQO offices all 0t>er Cal 1fom1:1 .;. __ , ___ _... ..... -..... --· .. ---.... -...... ~ .. --·-·-.. , .. -. .-...-....._ ......... _.. ................. -.... ....._.., ________ ....... ........,,,... ............ ~ -t ........ O..•• a.,., -••02 ....... . -.... 'ThorNt P. Hal•Y I Publiahar 'ThorNt f(11vll /Edttor S.rbilr• Kr•lbkr\/Edltorlal P ... editor , D•·•·P·•o• Editorial P!Hl,e ................................................... ...- Jaek Andenon Toxic dump' sites pos n w threat Narcotics trade now &irborne AbandonN or tor1ott..n l'bemlcal dump alt• pol4a a .... and danjt'rou1 threat lo the tnvlronment of IOIDe ang · County commu.nltl and many others ac~ the l on The Huntln.,-ton 8 1ch Plannlna Commllaion recetllly epproved .. rt'qut• t lhat a private developer be allowed to elcM\'Mh' an 11 banduncd dump t'Ontalnin1 t oxic c' m1cah h ' 1mp~r •ll " thll 1&ll the environmental -t•f ~guants all r hed w that •pproval ht strictly toUowed h• protN't the health or surruundinJ ruldents If done t•o1 rt·c tl) . Lhltl JJfOJe<"l could very well serve U' u mvdt•l for "mil I l' ('av.-t&Onll ln Other parts or \he l'l'U0l lnrlud~ m thl'" l4 safet) WJ'\d1tions ls a phm to cover up the f1ump 1f fume:. ~cume too concentuted. An l'mergt>nr) t-\ al uataon p1Wl .tlso is to be developed l~ 1-.i>c fun\~ l .urnut tw t•ontamed ~nd threaten nearby resa- Jenti, Th~ dumµ, loc:uu:d 700 r~t outheast of the Warner \ \'enue cind Rolsa Ch1ca Street intersection. is to be l~o eed befort! t!X<:U at1on begt.nb And the <.lcv~loper who wants to build condominiums then-, mu:.l provide i>C'1entif1 c on-sitC' testing or air, water dnct bOt.l quahty during excavation to avoid any surprases. Exc41.vallon 1s opposed by tate air quality officials ---rho -warn thSl tom· rumes-anastrong, nox1ous OdOrS c.·ould be spread throughout the t:ommunity when digging :.tart:.. l:lut state and county heaJth dt!partment officials sup· port excavation as a desirable way to prevent future haiards, such as underground water contamination or underground buildup or explosive methane gas pockets. A private. $200,000 environmental report of more than ~00 pages also s upported excavation as a safe means of ~etting rid of the dump. It appears that the Planning Commission made a well 1 hought-oul and studied decision based on scientific documentation. . But all ·the conditions mus t be strictly followed to in· sure that the toxic che micals are safely removed. Help for home buyers The toughest problem for most first-home buyers in these days of inflated real estate prices is finding the necessary cash for a down payment. Assemblywoman Carol Hallett has introduced a measure that could be or substantial help. Her bill would allow any taxpayer who has never purchased a principal residence to deposit, tax free. up to $2,500 a year $5,000 for a couple -to a maximum of $10 000 in a s pecial housing account, to be used to puttChase a home in California. That's not a huge amount. but combined with other savings it could make a major difference to the would· be homeowne r . If the money should be withdrawn ror any other purpose, income tax on the amount would become due im mediately. If it is used to buy a first home. it escapes taxation un less the home is subsequently sold at a profit. In that case, the amount would have to be included as part or the capital gain for taxation purposes. The housing tax allowance plan is similar in some ways to the individual retirement accounts that permit taxpayers to make tax-exempt deposits in a special bank account for withdrawal upon retirement. W ASIONGTON -Federal ud local law ..tott.m•t qendM bav• made •mUUliq nareodes lnto tbl Unit.cl Stat.el by Ma 10 riak_y that dope tratnellen bave ha.med lncreulqly to alrpluet to 1et thelr illltl\ 1ood• lo domttUe ctnai deal•n. "Som• or11nlHtlon1 which had formerly 1mu•a1t1d by aea now •how a preference tor 11mu11Ung by air. which lhey perceive to bt IHI rl a ky ," a Tbey could wtnd up pa.ytna f« tbelt praftta witb their U v•. Tbe reUGG for thla la that many of tb• plan11, bavtn1 mad• tbe trip from th• United St•t• to plck -.p their dope, are refueled at one of lbe bundredl of alr1trlp1 on the GuaJlre penlmul• ol Colombia. Despite the huae proflu made in the drug traffic, the Colombian sup- pliers sometlmes shave over- head cost.a by providing dlrty gasoline that clogs the plane's ruel line when the pilot Is out over the ocean on the return trip. r la u 1fl ed ''THE LUCKY ONES are D r u M E n · those with extra ruel tanks and r o r <' ~ m en t bigger planes that don't need re- Adm lnl11tr11tlon report states fueling," a DEA source told my Th~ rhanj(tt in transportation associate Dale Van Atta. The un· methodli "18 explained part1aJ ly lucky ones crash at sea. by the enforcement action In (let. aircrart crashes give againllt mothershlp drug smug-the DEA Important Information gllng operations in the Carib· on the latest trends in dope bean ~r" during the s;>ast few smu ggling. For instance. the re· years, the report ~xplams port notes, "anal sis qf aircraft Al.rt1JOr~muu~1.ng-tt~ a --ac-Ciden ata reveals that the p~o~1tuble undert_akmg for ,Pilots Caribbean area accounted for .w1 llmg to risk it:. Ferrying a approximately 75 percent of all planeload or mari1uana ac_ross drug-related aircraft crashes the ~arlbbean fr~m Colombia to and accidents in 1978 and 1979," Florida can bring anywhere The crashes also make clear from $30,000 to $50,000 for the de· that Florida is without question livery man. . . . the No. 1 landing place for drug B~t the poss1b1l!tY of arrest delivery planes. Six out or 10 a.nd 1mpriso~m.ent is not the onJy drug-related crashes in the con- nsk the cnmmal llyboys rw... linental United States during Andy Rooney 1979 occurred in the Sunahlne State. Another trend-spotter fQf the DEA is the information on airplane thefts that can be traced to drug shipments. In 1977, (or instance, Florida and Georgia together accounted (or only 11 percent o( drug-related plane thefts in the UnHed States: last year, Florida &Jone accounted for 39 percent of the total. And the DEA estimates that 85 percent o f all the airplanes stolen in Florida last yea r were stolen for drug- related purposes. THE SWING TO aircraft by drug traffickers has relegated ships increasingly to the pre- liminary stages or smuggling that is, delivery to Caribbean Islands where the planes can pick up the stuff ror deli very to the U.S. mainland. Although the advantage of the !!..i..d i lio.nal ~ o,t h e-r s-h · " operation is its· huge capa~y, the use of aircraft has I\ few plusses that tend to outweigh this. T~ese include speed. economy or manpower and de- li very directly to what the DEA refers to as ··the ultimate retail market." In other words. like busi- nessmen on the right side of the law. entrepreneurs in the highly competitive drug trade try to provide fast. efficient service while keeping costs to a minimum and proms to a maximum. ANOTHER SKELETON: Alex- ander Haig Is not the only member or President-elect Ronald Reagan's political fami- ly whOfe activities during the Nixon years have come back to haunt him. There is a member of Reagan's lransition team who also has some Watergate -era skeletons in his closet that have attracted renewed attention. He is Stanton 0 . Anderson. a Washington lawyer who in 1973 was assistant secretary of state for congressional affairs. In that capacity, he absolved former Texas Gov John Connally of in· volvement 1n a s mear letter aimed at a prominent Greek ex· ile leader who was closely iden- ti f ied with Sen George M~Q.ovem. the Democ.cauc..pres- idential nominee. The reason Connally was sus perted was that the defamatory lellt•r . alt ,ac king Elias Demetracopoulos, had been drafted on s tationer y of "Democrats for Nixon ... which Connally headed. And the reason Connally needed clearing was that President Nixon was con· sldering him as a replacement for Vice President Spiro Agnew. THE POSSIBILITY of Connal- ly on the ticket caused Sen Jar"b JC1v1ts. R·N Y , to ask the State Department if 1t had any evidence suggesting that Con nallr was responsible for the let- ter that smeared Demetracopoulos Assistant Secretary Anderson wrote Javits that there was none Anderson was also investigat- ed by the Senate Water gate Committee for hi s participation to Nixon's "responsiveness pro· ~ram .. the t!Uphemism for ex· tra ~ting polil1l'al support from rec1p1ent s of federal ~rants and contracts. And in 1974, Anderson was named as ambassador to Costa Ri ca. but he w1thrl rew his nomination to a\'01d blood) con firmat1on l1l'<mn~s Fool notl' Anrlcr~on said he doesn 1 remt>mber "'hat ht• "roll' to Ja\11..,, hut 1s · prell~ :.un"' tht•r.: "as no Whit e lluusc pr e-;surC' u, cleur C'nnnalh Cunousl~. tht.• lctler to JC1\1t.s was cleared "1th two l'areer diplomats. Gl'orge Churchill and Kay Folger. who earlier were in voh·ed in preparing and dis· sem 1n at1ng an anon ymous memo that also attacked Demetraco~ulos With the state's fiscal pursestrings becoming tighter. the bill may run into trouble. But some such relief would clearly benefit both young home buyers and the state's housing industry. A similar tax exemption at the federal level would be even more welcome. Warning for joggers Maybe we don't need a smart president A 21 -year-old man has been arrested on charges or assault with a deadly weapon, kidnapping and sex perversion in connection with separate attacks on women jogging through Irvine's Northwood area. In both cases the women were jogging along a rather remote street early in the morning when they were at- tacked by a man who tried to drag them into an orange grove and rape them. Both were able to escape his grasp without actually being raped, and neither suffered serious injuries. The misfortune of these two women should serve as a (/ reminder to joggers that it is best to jog in pairs and in populated areas. Special care should be taken when jog- ging at odd hours. Additionally, people who jog at night should wear reflective tape to warn motorists of their presence. Lastly. joggers should follow the basic pedestrian rule of jogging in the direction opposite to the traffic flow. • Opinions eitpressed 1n the space above are those of the-Daily 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 9¥626. Phone (714) 642-4321. ByL.M.BOYD It's a great comfort to each of us who isn't the smartest person in the world to realize that the man we elect president isn't either. This ls not putting down Ronald Reagan. I refer to presi- dents of the United States in general. although Reagan is an outstanding example of someone who is not the s martest person· in the wOTld. I ASKED 10 people a row..d the office to rank our last eight presi· dents in order ~ o f their in· ~ tellige n ce. H e re's the consensus. 1. Roosevelt; 2. Ke nnedy ; 3. Truman ; 4. Johnson ; 5 . Eisenhowe r ; 6, Carter: 7. Nixon ; 8. Ford. It's impossible to rate them fairly, but it's fun to try. Among the people I asked. ranging in age from 2S to 60, Roosevelt was the only unanimous choice. Sydney Harris Eisenhower evoked the greatest di((erence of optnion. One person put him last, dumbest, but three had him second and one. third. He was fourth on my list, but maybe I ranked him higher than he de· serves because I liked him so much. The reverse may be true for Nixon , whom 1 ranked seventh. IF ALL EIGHT of these men were in school together , Jimmy Carter might get th e best marks. although no one would say he's seemed that smart as President. Lyndon Johnson, on the other hand. might not have done well in school at all. but people who knew him at work in Washington cons idered him a brilI\ant politician. There~s obviously some kind or intelligence other than pure brain power. and it's a good thing, too, ~cause that's what gives so many of us hope for ourselves. Qualllies like com- mon iiense. enthusiasm and the ability to stick to a job until it's .done, often seem to make more . difference than brains . I don 't think Harry Truman was very s mart, but he had common sense and he was persistent and he did a· good job. so now younger people who didn't know him in office assume he was smarter than he was. REAGAN SEEMS to have a down-to-earth common sense. too. and we can all hope it will make him a successful presi· dent. One or the best things a president can have is common sense enough to pick reall y s mart advisers. If we elect presidents who aren't all that _:>mart. ·what quality is it that brings success to any of us? Who succeeds and why do 1hey? fn high school yearbooks, the smartest one in the class is usually voted "most likely to succeed," but 10 years later the winner usually turns out to be a dark horse who failed a few subjects. We all assume tha t the smartN a person 1s. the more ht· g<.'t s of what he "ant~ in life. but this doesn't seem to be true Arc s mart people any happier than dumb people"' All you ha vc• to rlo 1s look at your friends and d.e cide. The answer 1s no l'M NOT VER\" patient with people who :lre dumber than I am M y amount of intelligenc<> seems like little enough to ask of a nyone. This is a despicable trait of mine and 1t worries me because there must be a lot of people I see regularly who are by the same standards. impa tient with me. I mention this because I sus- pect I share this characteristic with most people. and in view of that. it's probably a good thJn-g that we ha\'e a habit of electing presidents who aren't l'l)Uch s marter than the rest of us . Presidents and citizens get im· patient enough with each otheJ over a fou r-year period as it is. It would b<> worse ir there were a bla.lQ gap between rum and us. Last applicant interviewed for a JOb has a lot better chance of getting it than appli· cants interviewed earlier. So announces an employment counselor who checked the records . He thinks It's a significant revelation. And he advises employers lo keep de· tailed accounts of each in· terview lo offset tha peculiar oddity. What bunk! Of course, the last interviewed i.s the one most likely hired. Wben they Most 'accidents' aren't really accidents at all o .. ar Gloorny Gus find the right party, they atop We don't normally think of it interviewing.dummy! 11 such, but one of the great weaael-wordl of all time i.s "ac- T hat magazine called cldent." For it i.s my dt.tinct im· "Grants" tells UDivenity p~ prestlon that perhaps 90 percent fessonhowlogoabout1etting of what we call "accidents" are money from the U.S. Govem-not that at all. ment. Think of that! A The dictionaries define an ac- periodical on how lo apply for cident u "an unex~ted or un- handoub ! ltreeenUy lbted 10 intentional phrases said to hurt an appli-event that ii cant's chances of settln' 1&1cb not etMDUal It is ironic that the tax-money. Better never uae to the nature payers now are forced thete,itsuant.s: "Afrowins o t 1 om e - to spend billions lo ball body of evidence ... "A th In'." JI out the auto industry thorough search of the • new tire But, just considering what we like to call "automobile acci-dents." we find that few of them are really accident.I at all. 'They may be unexpected or uninten- tional, but they are essentJal lo the nature of somethin1 - usually to the nature, or the habita, of the driver. 1108T ACCIDENTS are calded by recklesaneu, thoulht· 1e11neu, fatisue, drunk~. Impatience, hoatllltr. lndif· terenee,. or necleet. They are pr•cllctable, to0ner or later, after they_ w,ere forced literature .• r "Beyond the blows out it ~--J~..&;:;p.~~~~~,..._~+-M4l~~~~~~~~r-~1r-n1Fia~nria~c~cf.--"lllll oftbedl1ver -thial1whythe the road. but that people con-. spire in their own destruction or the death of others. Otherwise, it would not be true that most .. accidents" oc:cur on dry roads. in clement weather. with good vision, when traffic is H1ht, and within only a few miles of the driver 's home. There ia nothing external that creates a huard. except In ran! cases. WE EMPLOY the word "acci· dent" u a general cover-up for Not long ago l li stened to a tal)e-rerording by some young people who are permanently confined to wheekhairs after auto or motorcycle crashes. In each and everv case. the victim mentioned how easy it would have been to avoid the accident -i( the cuJprit had only been sober. or prudent. or courteous. or alert, or simply more carintt. WHEN WE violate the law. we call it a "crime": when we violate the moral code, we c.all it a "sin"; but when we \'lolate the y uman behavior, we call 1'1t an "acci- dent" to k111 two penons and T bu reauc r acl es that ·trary to public opbdon." "Ex· dnt; if a cor-Na••--• 1111-•etv "'~-ell .... -- d cltiftt fteW .,_ .• Lo-,tt l•-11-•• l f u.-a a.&' I '-'VUll ~-.. r--rulne It. important·;.;!-•• 1~.'d:,tb n c • o • diet with dllmayin1 accuracy craal\ wa "unexpected'" and "unlntentional," •ho can be held to blame! Accident.a 1lm~ly ""happreu."' BurtJi Tac ey Clo not _ thnply happen. like an Ur'\bqUake OC' a bajlltorm: they are contrived, untontclously or not. bythedrtvenlbemtelvet.\ maim t.hrtt otheCL.filrJi(LCaJ.l. _ ___...-iit '°l"ITILQ.il~~·~ -G. J . ·~ ~·•Sleeted 'lab= balWIN fella . -ttM iHiiilbir lJf 1ataD11i1 oe u Y---11-.... ,11 .... -., ..... ,. ••• •• ... , J on JCRI wblle JOU an walklQi 1tvea boUday. _., ..... " -· .......... -· ect." "1'p of tbe ieeberl." put, lt ll • ~; if JOU are ~':...1='t.~~ ,.. .. "· And: "Warranta further "-· .truck by MPtnta1. tt 11 an at-It ll not that Ures blow, or veatJ1atlGn." eldeat. bridl• collapee, or f ot •vetc,.,. nr1 itoiJ• ma H "' feel better -until and unless we are on the recelvlntt' end. The aurvlvor alw1y1 kno• It wat aomethin« other than pure "act'ident." NATION Election '80 top story -Iran ho1tase crUia place• 1econtl U;a AP poll • NP YORX (AP> -T1Mt RtpubUf.. .. Part)''t York apartm•t bullclln1 when be Uvecl, when be tWMp ol tM tlMUont, wblch put Ron:rd ftta1an waa l\IMecl down b)' a man who Jwnpecl from the ln th• Whitt Houae and 11vt th4t GOP control ol abadowa. the Senate for th• tlrtt tlm• ln 1lm01t lbrM dt· The allt.-CS uaallant, »-year-old llark Davld cedet. hu been named the top 1tory of l• by Aa· Chapman, a Oeoratan now Uvln1 ln Hawall, waa soclated Prftl member edl\ort and broadcaattra captured lmmediately. Chapman waa a Lennon The election atory narrowly tdatd lhe Iran fan for whom the slnaer had slped an autoaraph hoataae cm s. '4hlch fi.n l1hed flnt ln the lt79 poll only hours earlier. The troubled l 1 S \'\'onomy plac.d third amun1 the Lennon's death resulted in • worldwide out· top stones pourlna ol grief. Thousands held vialls outside his l The el~\100 home all week and the Sunday alter his death hun- ? The lranurn hu!>taae l'rt:s111 tJreds ol thousand.i gathered around the world for 3 TtM-l l S ecooom) me monaJ rallies. 4 Tht' Soviet ant rvtintUJn In Afa&han1Stlill ~ Thf' volcanit· t'ruµlton of Mount St ll~len~ in Wa~hmeton stalt' 6 ~ JJl PolltO<l T~ lltraktit., the &rowth or an mdt'pentJent union movemt111t and thti threat of So\ lt'I 111te n cnllon l Tht-murder of forrnt!r Bei.lle John Lennon m Nt>'t\ York tl Th" earthquakel> in !>OUthem Italy, which kllll'd lhow.4lldl> 9 The 't\ar bet't\een Iran and Iraq lO 1t1e > The boathft from Cuba and the influx of tho~andt. of Cuban and Haitian refugees and tht> fare that killed 84 pe ri.oos at the MGM Grand Hotel m La::. Vegai. The second 10 included the FBI Abscam opera· ttOn the Voyager 2 -.atellale 'i. pictures of Saturn; ~drought 111 the-"MT<twest llJfcrsoutl'iwest;t tfe dra m atic gold medal won at the Winter Olympics by the U.S hockey team. the Moscow summer Olympics. racial n ots tn Miami, the resumption of draft rcg1st rat1 on . the murders of blac k children in Atlanta. and the excitement over "Who shot J R ., " on the television show "Dallas " Among the top :-.ton es I. The Election Reagan's election on Nov 4 wasn't exactly a surprise. But pre-election polls had predicted a very close race and the size of the mandate was unexpected. Reagan and running male George Bush got 51 percent of the vote to 41 percent for Carter. a nd 7 percent for independent John Anderson. Reagan won 489 elec· toral votes to 49 for Carter. The president carried only the Dis- trict of Columbia and six states his own Georgia , Vice Presi- dent Walter Mondale's Min- n esota , Rh ode I s land , Maryland, West Virginia and Hawaii. Even more startling was con11 •• the GOP capture of 11 Senate seats 'to. tl\ie. ovec that body by a 53-47 margin. ln the P,r~c~.!t~·;· .~epubli ca ns defeated s uch Democr~li'O mtures as George McGovern of South 1. 'Dakota",' t~: '19'i2. presidential nominee; Frank Church .fl.. ldahb, .cl}airman of the Foreign Rela· lions C~ittee, Warren Magnuson of Washington and Bicshl)ayh"'of Indiana . .. , ' . %, Iran '• False hopes, crushed hopes. That was the ·' ...... ·' story of the Iran hostage crisis which, with one or two interludes, spent much of 1980 on hold. One interlude was the death in Egypt of the deposed Shah, whose admittance to the United States precipitated the crisis. ·~ Another came in late April, .· when a force of American com· mand05 took off from s hips in the Persian Gutr for a surprise raid designed to free the 52 hostag~. who were taken cap- tives Nov. 4, 1979. But the mission was abort- ed in the Iranian desert when t hree of eight troop-carrying SHAH helicopters could not continue after a refueling stop. Worse, eight men were killed on the turnaround when a helicopter collided with a C-130 transport plane in the desert dark- ness. 3. The U.S. Economy Double-di git inflation continued in 1980. the prime interest rate soared over 20 percent and a new recession threatneed. As the year ended, 0 P EC raised oil prices again and some of Reagan's advisers urged him to consider declaring a national economic e mergency. Hardest hit was the auto industry, the victim in large part of a concern for gas mileage that many buyers seemed to think could better be sup- plied ~Y imports. 4. Afghanistan Afghanistan became the center of attention last January when 100,000 Soviet troops marched in. The Marxist regime was replaced with a new one and tanks scattered into the mountains in an atte mpt to put down a rebellion that had been go- ing on for several years. American reaction was swift. President Carter, who said he fe ared Soviet expansion to the Persian Gulf, called the Afghanistan intervention "the greatest threat lo peace since World War J.v · Sales of grain and technology to the Soviet Union were cut off. the SALT II treaty was withdrawn from cons ideration in the Senate, and the United States and a number of other nations boycotted the Moscow Olympics in the summer. 5. Mount St. Helens . Mount St. He lens erupted May 18, blo"_!!lg 1.300 fee( off its¥17-foo top and twisting the s_µr- r ounding 150 square miles into a dealhscape that Pres ident Carte r said, made the moon look "like a golf course ." By year's end, 33 people were known to have died at the southeastern Washington volcano. Another 28 were missing and presumed dead. The initial erµption blew ash 13 miles in the air and dusted cities and farms in four states. Since then, Mount St. Helens has spit ash in five more minor e ruptions. the most recent coming Oct. 16~to 18. ' 6. Poland ll started in August with strikes in the shipyards in Gdansk, the city which as Danzig had ~en a pre-World War II trouble spot. Within a m onth, workers throughout Poland, troubled by low wages and food shortages, were in semi· rebellion. Facing a general strike and possible Soviet inte rve ntion, the Communist re1ime replaced party boss Edward Gierek with Stanislaw Kania, and granted the worken the right lo in· dependent unions. ~ ~ui:a~ year's end, as the councUs beaan 1fex- Uor\ once again became real. That, warned the United States and its NAT~ allies, would mean the end of delente. 7.t.a .. It harkened back to the violence of the 'IOI, the · decade John Lennon was so much a part of. Late _in the evenin1 of Dec. 8, the 40-year-old former Bealle wu enlerin1 the Dakota, the luxury New , . FOCAL POINT Ron•ld R••o•n Mondlot, December 29, 1HO CWLY PllOT A7 for Best Qual ity and Selection of Handmade rugs from China, Persia, India & R o mania at rea sonable prices. · W• -ell-..._, Or ... \111 'lllL "-......... twwk• .... 11 .... -, .. ,..., ............. ..," ......... ..._ _, ······----··..._ ...... -.......... _ ····---.... ·-··---.... -·-----... ~·· . ' .. "' . I . l• ' r r j • ,1 . ~ '· I . I ' l l "J·, • I .. . i • "i '· I J r. ~· . -· ' 1_'. j ~; ~ • i I,' I t~ . '., . . . . · I '.\ .1 ,·,, I I ... .......... R o b er t M Wa rne r . nM tlo n a l r ecord keeper, h11s ad vi ed President e lect Ro nald . Rea1an and hi assoclatt! t o pl a n n o w o n keeping a rec o rd t h ey w i ll leave bd und ··~ a I ••••••• 'Dr....., d110• aad traadent•' r Derelicts' gang wars force chui-ch to lock doors 08EENS80RO. N4C. t AP> -The Rtv. John Broome was always proud that the Holy Trinity Episcopal Churrb kept lta door• open a. hours a day for prayer, study and medita- tion. Uut the church la closlnc its doors ial naaht these days since derelicts began sleeping in the pewa and the sanctuary became a battle1round for two warring gangs or transients. "It was about 4 o 'clock in the aft.er. noon and they wer e so drunk. so out of ll, they didn't even know how early it was," Broome said. "A big fi ght started in front of the church and, before anyone knew what was hap· penln1, they came running inside and were screaming. bleeding and chas· in& everyone with their broken wine bottles." An open-door policy was in effect for deeades al m any of Greensboro's churches. Gradually, however . dif· flcultles arose with transients and min isters beca me convinced that their churches had to be protected. Holy Trinity was a holdout. but at a cost. "We'd become the last remaining ·Jhe Pure Luxury of Silkdressing ... OriginaJ/¥-'130~N_ow EH9-Q . downtown hotel for a colony of drunks, winos a nd .trans ients." Broome sa id. He said the interlopers slept in pews, on carpets and "couldn 't even control themselves. It was unbelievu- ble to see what they were doing to the church." Lt. Bob Brewer . coordinator for patrols in the downtown area, said similar occurr ences had forced the closings of other churches sending the transients to Holy Trinit y in droves "The same thing happened recent· ly a t West Market Street United. Methodist Church and we met with the ministers and othe r church leaders in efforts to help them," said Bre wer. "We can't babys it a ny church. There are more <:hurches than of. fi cers available for our patrols and we can't devote all of our time to overseeing the winos in churches," he said. . Brewer said the winos, "always knew about unlocked churches and who was going to let them stay" through what he describes as "an un- believable grapevine· .... -.-------~--'--------- ~ .. , • Here,, the important chemise ... a beautifu./ly lithe silhouette with banded collar and side slits. ,. I : •: • lt."s just one of many styles from our exclusive collection of silk dresses ... all in the season's best solids and prints. • Find them now! -for sizes 4 to 16-· in Sportdress Collections-where we are all the things you are . South Coast Plaza. JJJJ Bristol Street. Costa Mesa. Open Monday throulfh Fr~y from 10 am to 9:JO pm; Saturda y 'ril 6 pm; Sunday 12 noon to 5 pm -. ,... STOCKS SPOR'tS L•iili•llil Childbirth comical /are •1 DAVm llUftllANN ............... Al sotae point wlthln th• Hilt ••o mcmtha, I wiU oece •lain'*'-•• a,.._,. And )Ult Ulle the ftnl time UUI eon 91 U..1 happened. I "'Ill be with my wllt I.ft lM 49., lwer) room Pus the aomellie& alb SV&t:, I ADMIT I wasn't a c0n>plet.fb useless obAerver that Au&. 4 momial more than t-.o years ago when my 90a, .\aron. was born But. to be frank. sn1velin1R cowards blVe shown more race under prasure than I did. All ei1ht weeks of -naturai-chitdbirUntilnine my wife and I had tat•n seemed to drain f?om my mind lille water from • leaky radiator. I OVEIJIEATED, •fl ri1ht, to the point that my wife, cool a ice., -.8d to help me relax. I found it si>mewhat face-aavi.n1 that the gent aiding his wife in the nezt bed wu f'V• more foggy about what waa happenin1 Ulan I was. He hadn't even gone to duldbirth el uses I found out, and was as uncompreheadlnc oi the comple.xities of the situation as a 110lili· cian turned IOOlle in the real world.: Our job was t-0 help make &ur labl>rtnc wives comfortable <relativel7 spealtin1>. massage them aad help them with tWJ" breathing techniques when their bodies anw tense with contractiona, and to time t~ rolling muscle contractions. •••••• eptl•l•tle . . 1 New admini3tration must move fast[~ i •. I •1 IS&&Y CIAlJ8BN ............... R9P'lbUCID VOWI to cut federal spendin1 and atreamli.M burHuc .. ciea will be teated early next month 1n t.beballaot~1reu. Conanuman Robert E. a.dbam. R-Newport Beach, &&ya oae ol bla flnt Wk.a as a member of the HOUM Admialatration Com-. mluee will be an attempt to\ . trim concreuional committee staff t.tcets. "nl&Y <THE STAFFS> are to the point where they are out of control." be opined during an after-Christmas interview. Badham, who'll bead back to Washington Tuesday after spending two weeks at his Orange County home. said at.OMAM - domestic economic issues will require the greatest and fastest action when the 9"lth Congress con- venes Jan. 5. · "Radical fiscal steps will have to be taken im- Fire alarms SC must ly STEVE MITCHELL °' * Dellf ........... Every single home, apartment unit and coo· dominium in San Clemente is required to have smoke detectors installed by Thursday. the start of th~ new year. San Clemente fire of. ficials don't expect 100 percent compliance with the ordinance by then, but that's when the third phase ol the five-year· old ordinance takes ef· rect. T he Ci ty Coun cil adopted the strict law in 1976. mediately," he said, "and the timin& ia ri&ht. The people are expectint somttbin& to be done drastically with the economy." He said he looks for immediate proposals for tax relief in investment areu and capit.al l•ins along with cuts in other taxes and eapenditurea. "We have to strike fast while the iron is hot," he emphasized. "PERSONALLY, I AM HOPEFUL that the Congress will react favorably and agreeably to the Reagan Administration's proposals. "Having watched Governor Reagan manipulate a legislative body, I think -given the mood or the country at t his time and the Republican control of the Senate -the opportunity is there for a person with the ~rive and charisma Reagan has to really insist that the Congress agree. · "If it (Congress> is too reluctant, as President. he'll have the itbility to go around the legislative body to the people to bring pressure as he did as governor of California.·· While Badham ia optimistic about the! l.~ future president'• 41omestic plans, he 11 delithted: ":") wlth what he believes will be a dru\lc turn in! 11 • foreign affairs durln1 the next con1reaaiona• 1': session. • "My deepest involvement. of course. will be in .t the area of defense aa a member ol the House and \ Armed Services Committee. · "I'll probably be involved in procureme~ '" legislation t.o insure that the proper amounts ~ weapons systems •~ bou1ht. · ~ "ONE OF THE GKEATEST failures of the .:·~ Carter Administration was inefficient buyin& prac- tices." ·~ An outs~en hawk, Badham said he's looktn1 ,. • forward t.o a change in temperatures oveneas. .}; "President Reacan -and his surely to-be· ,_ confirmed secretary of state <Gen. Alexander .I Haig) -will send very clear messa1es t.o friends · and foes alike around the world that our foreisn pollcy will be firm ..and forward-looking and not vacillating." -.. '· -':I .; ·I ; ·~ .. THE MOllENT 01' IUGllEST oomedy. 1 • m told by observers, waa wben they wheeled my Wire into the dellWlrJ rooc*l., A n urse had told the' other needle-br9tfted huaband and me to 10 into a cMalinl roeat and put on surgical gowns. We frantically ran down the beltway, opening every door we could fllKI -~we bit the right one. The green svrcical cowm 1rere all neatly folded ud waftial for •• of science to don them. BEFORE NOW, the detectors were required only in residential units built after 1976 and those in which extensive re- mod eJing was being done. .. ~ • i All there was, lheulb. waa me .ad tM noodle-brain. And we bet•,..,......, rtflilll the neat 1tacks of •owns loo•ie1 for something that would nt. I have a vape reeaUedian al m..U Md gowns ftying through the a1r and eomtat t. rest at various locations in the l'CIOe. I ALSO a&ME•aaa findiq tl cllfftcult to locate aomelbin1 that rrt j\aa\ not. lneru paih of panta weuld almply fall doMI .._,., I pulled them on .. No fu hfonatlle Calvin JQ.la here. Deciding this wu no time to WOl"f)' about meeting Bo Derek in a hallway, I pulJM on an extra large ud bolled down the llallway. lookingfortheappropriatedeliveryrocml. It was a busy oigbt and, ,.,.....,, one rounded stomach under a sheet las just lib another. Luckily, I found my wife, doened a surgical maak and walled, holding my wife's hand and mumbling some inanitMI abt Jmt taking it easy. YEAH, sva£. t was the cne fallln1 apart. With my mask covertag my DOM, I began to hyper-ventilate, as well aa foe lftJ glasses. Aller several minutn, I was botll blind and out of breath. And that's when Aaron came. ne elector calmly snipped the umbilical and the nune put Aaron on my wife's atom.ct.. As f~ Aarat'a old man, he -u wander· ing the haJlways with bia extra lute surl}~aJ pants falling down mumbling sometJrtnc about the joys of childbirth. Now. every dwelling unit in San Clemente - all 8,000 of them -will be required to have smote detectors. San Ciemente is the pioneer in Oran1e Coun- ty in requiring smoke detectors in all res- id encea. Two years aco. it was one of the first cities in the nation to require sprinkling S)'Stems in newly con- structed homes. Fire Marshall Gary Carmichael said there will be no immediate crackdown on property owoen who do not com- ply with the smoke de- tector law by 12:01 a.m. Jin. 1. THE FlllE depart- ment intenda to send out postcard questionnaires to every dwelling unit in the city uking if smoke detectors have been in· stalled. After that , Carmichael said, the city probably will use Ex· plorer Scouts to make random checks or build· ings. BALTZ · BERGERON SMITH & TUTWLL WESTCLIFF MORTUARY .. "Affort;fable funerals" ~erica?l heaps on more .. ~e serv1r-es No monthly service charges IK ~ • If you keep a •500 minimum balance In your Inte rest Now you can not only earn Interest on your checking account. you C'an get a host of valuable free service~ too. Wllh Interes t Chec king. New fro m _ •9-blllJQn:strong AmerJcan Savings. More free 1ervlce1. plu1 lntercat We'll pay you 5 •ta% Interest. compounded dally. on your checking account balance. And If your balance Is kept a~ a •1.000 minimum. your Interes t Checking account has even more to offer: A free s afe deposit box. Free money orders and travelers checks. Free trust deed or note collection . Free notary service. Even discounts on car rentals. All thtn~s you don't usually get with lnterest- camlng checking. But you do at American. c-.eck guanntee ancl overdraft protection You also may be.able to qualify for a check guarantee card that backs up your checks . as well as overdraft protec tion. Checking account. or If you're over 62. you won't pay any service charges. So you can add those savings to the money you'll be making In Interest. 100 free chedca vatU Dec. 31 Open your lnterestChec klng account by the end of the year and we'll pay for your firs t 100 personalized c hecks. In a des ign of your choice . And all II takes to open your account Is •100. So don't wait . You'll start earning Interest Immediately and you'll be able to star.t writing checks on II after December 3l. 1980. Checks that bear the name of American Savings-a name that's meant safety for nearly 100 years. • Over 100 American Savi•• of fleet ' to Hl'Yt yo•. C .. eck the white paget fer the one nearest you. E • AIHt1 over S9 BUlkPa • FSLIC • Acco•nt1 la1•re4 to SI 00,000. .:_::..-:.~: Convenient offlc.ee 1ervlng Southern ••• Northern Callfomla tnclwdh•• .17th 801 Pacific Coast Highway at Main ~~~~~~~~,,•t-~~~~~94-"885~ PHoNi-.W71 COS:rAMESA SANTAANA 3929 S. Bristol Ave. 7830 Edinger Avenue aU:iuntington..Center 848-2222 -b\OUN~t1ttl.--S 24085 El Toro Road at Paseo de Valencia .. 770-2818 at Sunflower • 979-9800 . 1. I . .:1 · ., ... ,i, •• I ..... --. ·:. 1' ~i ~ ., ., '1 . ~ . .. .; "· !· \ • , . I ~ ~ .., ·• • .. •· > l . ~ ~ OAJLV PILOT '"'Who ...... That's rrrdtblr Actre~s Cath y l.t't' l'n\:-h y, host of tht> 'l'V s1.•rat·s. ·Th<il '!. lncrr dihlt·." post•s Ill swimsuit (or new issue'-~.~ ..i po~wr recently n•ll'llSt'<1 Miss Crosby was voted I~ Pin up Gi rl of th~ Yl·tir by tht• LIS M arine Corps. Scared ·man leaps from landing jet BELC;RADE. Yu~oslavi;i tAl» -A Yugoslav who apparently 111mped from a JUSt·landcd jet airliner because he panicked at the t'O)!int·~· noise. was r rit1c ally injured and is hospitalized in Kuwait. 1lw ne.,.,spaµer Pohttka Ekspres re~rte<i. Tht• paper said tht• man, 1dent1fied onl y as Mr. Grbic of <~adar. 'l'u~osla\'1a, jumped up from his seat, opened the back door of the l>C lO :ind leaped out JUSt a fte r the plane touched down at Kuwait. llff1cials said Grbic was apparently frightened when the crew of t h1• Yugo~lav airlines JCt reversed the engines for br aking. Offic1ab sa1rl thC' Jl'tl1ncr was moving ahoul 60 miles an hour \\hen Crh11· JUmpt'd 01te Lone Rii1iger, he says ,\NN.i\1'01.IS , Md 1 I\ P) H<'t1rcd ~l<:<:l \\ orkt.•r and lt·i.:1'>lator H :iy D y p ~k1 '><t y~ l'l<iyton Moon• 1s th(• o ne and only I.one H<inger, and wants lhl' Maryland (; 1• oe rc.1 I J\sscm bl y Io a ckr\owlcdgc that fact L>jpski has filed a res · olution for cons idera- tion'.: by the Legislature w h i.c h w o u I d g r a n t Moore state recognition as the Lone Ranger. ft'.E G I N N I N G 0 N radiJ). Moore portrayed the masked hero for 31 years. appearing in 186 t e l e:V is i 0 n e pis 0 des betfw:een 1949 a nd 1956 and.-in two feature mov- ies For year s after the television series ceas ed, he made personal ap· pea:ranccs, wearing the black mas k and white hat which personified t he Lone Ranger Shopper's Special Only $2.85 Nnw dunng 1tw lwc11c Ch11s11nos shopp1119 \ell\lln ther« 1s t..1ne great bargam left Our chefs 'P"( 1<11 crPllllOn for 1he holidays includes on r>p'1n fa ce hdm sandw1<e h tBlack fmt>St brand of course') fresh frull, sliced toma10 "nd frozen yogun Huntington Beach Pacific Coast Hwy So. of PieT NATION Designer • Jeans at Goodwill HOSTON <AP) -Those de· 111.incr jc1tr1s with chic labels and ~limning price tags have some c·ompetlHon from an unexpected t1u11rtcr "Morgie's," priced at u thrifty $:1.25 and selling briskly. in Um1ton-1.1rcu Goodwill stores. N 111 t· M orgon M e m orial <;,mdwall Indus tries outle ts here h11 v1· sold about 7 ,000 pairs of 11M•d j'•u11s sl11<'l' la~t Decem ber. wht•O Hwy started sewing a lt1 ll(hl t1luc an d white 'M11q:11··, .. putrh on a bark put kd, 1">1t1d s pok(•s woma n "'"''' 1 y ·AIJH•rt c;oouw11.1. HAS rc·cc1v{•d '>1'1111'1'> o( I l'llUt•Sll'> for just th(• p1111'11 1111111 fM'<lplt• who want to '''" 11 1111 11lht·1 i.iurnwnts, she .... 11tl, 1''1l•'1'111lly uf\1•r M•vcral 11'11°\1,11111 "t 11\1011/\ 11111 /\lorws on h 11\\ 1111' pt1l1'11 hal'> lld\lt'VNI II ,·1111 .. 1.1htl'> ,11111111..: 1·ollt·i.:1· .;tu dt•llh 111111 \Ullllj!t'I' hll)'l0r/\ 'II .. l<it lt·tl off'lttt1• h1 st·yC'nrm; 11 'l'llllf llll tlt-/\l~llt'I' Jl'UnS · W1111ltl M11q:11"s lll·com<• the ·'>'11llH1I of lh1• ·ttos '" und all." l'>llicl l\h Alp1•1·1 "Wt• Wl.'rc rcul I)' Jll:-1 looki11i.i fur 11 wuy to hel11 ..:1•1 pt•o1>h• 11110 1111r s tor es and h1111:-01 l'>lllt'I'> of l'lothing, sine<: l'>alt'I'> puy tlw sularies of han· 1h1•appt'<i pt-opll• who work for <:oodw11l and al'tua lly sew the pnll'hcs on. "It's snowballed since then, as a lmost anyone .is willing to pick up u pair of designe r jeans no matkr who the designer is -for $3 25." she said. J F./\NS BETTER·KNOWN de- l'>1gner labels on a re ar pocket retail for upwards of $30. The jeans sell better than any other item at the Goodwill store in Waltham. said saleswoman Casey Jones. who said the big- gest question from customers is: "Who 's Morgie?" Morgie's are named for the Rev H e nr y Mor ga n , a Methodist ministe r of the late 1800s . lie worked extensively with poor Boston immigrants, alcoholics and the downtrodde n, and his work was honored by naming nine Goodwill centers in ca s t~rn a nd ce ntral Mass achus etts after him. 15 Convenient Locations Newport Beach 1400 Paclflc Coast Hwy Rut a California court. at the rcq ucst or the C!lmpany which owns ttlc rights to the Lone Hanger, has prohibited Moore from wearing the m ask in his personal ap· pearances, "WHY SHOULD that man be denied the right to wear the mask ?·' -D~pski asked .. '1lt's not right after he built the c h a r a c t e r u· p f o r someone to s acrifice him without cons idering the honor and dignity of the mao." A 1981 --CALENDAR FOR YOU · 'C1ayton Moore set an ex arnple . He doesn 't s moke or drink," the Dem ocratic legislator said. ... AGAIN THIS VEAL.AS IN THE°PAST, Wl HAV! AVAllAllE WITHOUT otAaGE, A PIACTICAl APPOINTMENT CAl.ENrMI fOR lACH FAMILY WHO CAUS AT OUI OfflCf. Harbor LawI1·Mount0100 ''S.1...,AllW 1815 ~1ler A.-.a.QllM lleH•·Pllme fft4)...._. Costa Mesa's Only Complete Funeral Facilities LIQUOR SAVIN.GS AO PRICES PREVAIL: MON. DEC. 29th. -WED. DEC. 31st. Canadian Club IUMIO 1499 WHISKY 1.75 LT. 86 Pf. • Gilbey's GIN 1.7JlT. eon: Old Smuggler SCOTCH 1.75 LT. 86 Pf. 9~99 Christian Bros. t~~DY 12.19 J & B SCOTCH 1.75 LT. 16 Pf. 17.99 1.75 LT. 86 Pf. Smirnoff VODKA 1.75 LT. 80 PF. Gaetano RUM& BRANDY 750 Ml. 60 Pf. 4.99 -9.99 Black Velvet WHISKY E & J BRANDY Tanqueray GIN Popov VODKA 1.75 LT. IO Pf. 1.75 LT. 80 Pf. 1.75 LT. 94 Pf. 1.75 LT. IO Pf. 11.49 Gallo WINE •VIN ROSE •CHABLIS •RHINE •HEARTY 10.99 16.99 Andre ' CHAMPAGNE ·ORY •PINK •COLO DUCK BURGUNDY 1.5 lT. 750 Ml. 199 • . EA. 2.59u.,, Bac3rdi ""' ' RUM ·~~• Silver or ~~ Amber \i1ii111 Mr. & Mrs: 'T" BLOODY MOY MIX 1h CAL 1.99 Seaoram's 7 CAO~ WHISKEY 1.75 LT. IOPf. 11.99 Johnnie Walker Red Label SCOTCH iilS LT. ======::;":;:· ;;;:=::::: . 1.75 LT. "· La Paz ... "· 10.69u. MARGARITA MIX 1 lT. 16.99 1.39 MUMM CHAMPAGNE.-----------. 1soa. Fartey's HARD CIDER Beefeater DRY GIN - l.5LT. 1.75 LT • .. ,,. HUNT. 8UCH -AcllNN I ~-1pc1rt1•1t111.._.,._ ...... A......_ NIWPOM -1020 lf'ftH, w.-lltf "-aa IL TORO -MJn Rect!We,. .._. - Mtl8'0N YllJO -2ut2 Me'fW'"9 '9.wy, '°""'MN YALLIY -M1•lele I Wen. UMNI -C"'"' OT. I W111tut SANTA A~ -3'11 ~ .............. " rt1•F••••••••~•lrl••9rers Resu•igence of Klan alarms natio~ cam'* m A1•bam•. CaUfornia. COllnecticut, O· Tucker. the Exalted Cyclops of the Cullman ..... I I • ._ "lb. ILu ... Kl•~ ..._ • c..~ .. Cve ol lW aa a &:.:f. ol Cua,_.;.at.e veter1ma tn bed st n te, ll "11141 1utu a IMllwortl w 11~rnlla n ........ tn Anft flllil .... tr ..... fUt •flt ·., WIAT' ......... the laarnlll1 c..-la • e,Mte ul l."Olll m_.. ti. G,_ k.-.w ol ,.._ HoMed Ot-•r. ho _.. • ti ..-. ··su.rvt..i lrllUW\t" al IUclckn carntt ~ fmm CaU,._. tu COIUMtCU "' 11\Q a.lJM) .,. W. tl•n1 ,..__ aod Qhtldnm bow tu lull ~-:11SIUS lW Tm Cl~IL na1hu. ur i •n•......._ ~tar\19d 111l U.. numtMtn of ~pie t~ t fm U ralU.. m ntt'""' mun~. p.u:tlcul.ar.l ID l b • "'orth, .and lbe lt!O ll o f · ~NI_. ut VOU't :ollt'!etwd b lAll<>Wed Khu1~in.,.n i.• nchd•1m rn rt:Ct!lll electulnai They ant .,vt:11 fJl\U't• .Jarm"* ...t Ltu. Ot!W pjlr1tmilllar) <tcUv1ty 'ftwore uo nu ilvllit'Jlcu lbta KJu wu 111 vo l v.:cl 1r1 " paUt ul k1Uln1t ul bhw:lu But Uu b prep ..,. lu• fur we 1nt-v1 wbhs r <it."5 wOU' comus at a llmti wht!ti 1Mdlcc "'-' tt 1n vest 1a&1tl1tl6' lh.e sl111y&na&s of l l OJac ctuldrtm 10 ..\llanl"6 wtlh four otbers mtbS· '"II· ~ ktllw~~ uf '>IX blac k mtm LO Bul(alo and c1. Rip@!" ul.lack un ~.mon&l L rblUl Lea.guti PN!:.1dent Vernon Jordan. llno11, North Carolina and Texas. In addition, ll ltlavern who also is command e r o f the 1.1puata Klu Youth Corpe campe in San Die10, paramilitary group. ~hrn Bemardlno and Loa Ancelet; Peoria and "The Klan Special Forces are here to prepare t'h1c1t~o. 111.: Jdfersonville, lDd.; Oklahoma City, the white people fo r survival in the upcoming Okli. . ~over aod Hillabof'oulJl, Colo., and Blnn· war." Tucker said . mwh1un. TU-'cumbaa, TuscaJooaaand Decatur, Ala. The paramilitary arm of the Ku Klux Klan in W1Uunsoo's lnv1itible Empire. which has an esumall.'<i 2,000 to 2.~ members, drew national atlenllon in Mi&y l!r79 when UlO of its hooded mem- l>un eoguged in a shoot-out with demonstrators of th~ Southern ChrLo;tian Leadership Conference in Uecutur Ala. Four peoph: were wounded. roday it operates one of its "Klan Special Forces·· camp~ not far from the scene of that con- fr<111tauon The l·amp, called "My Lai~· for the Viel· ri.amti~ v1Uage wht're U.S soldiers killed scores of c1 vllums. 1s h.idden somewhere near Cullman, Ala. Thr~e reporter ' taken there blind·folded in Sep· t~mber found half a dozen tents in a secluded v..illey wtth 10. men and one woman, all dressed in m1litary·style fatigues The full squad, the Klan 'j ys. con~1sl'\ of 15 people Texas calls itself the "Texas Emergency Reserve" which conducts •·survival training" courses at Camp Puller near the town of Anhuac two weekends a month for 200 to 500 m embers. That program drew national attention when it was revealed that the camp had also been teaching guerrilla tactics to about 30 Explore r Scouts and Civil Air Patrol c adets from Ellington Air Force Base. AMONG THE INSTRVCTORS wer e Louis Beam, grand dragon of the Texas KKK, and Joe Bogart, a former Marine Corps cook who joined the Klan two years ago. The training at Cam p Puller in· eluded tactical maneuvers. military drills, map re· ading and how to use guns , particularly a Colt AR·l5 assa ult rifle with a grenade launcher . Bogart said that in boot camp training he had choked other Marines into unconsciousness, bul they didn 't go that far while traming the Scouts and cade ts. "We didn't have the boys choke each other," . ··" . .• ,.r APW1r ....... ~"un~o.rti. " former Klansm an hui. ~en l'hurged with s.hooung to death two black men jog i;rn~ wllb while g1rls in Sall Lake City and a Jury 111 Gr eens boro, N C recently acquitted six Klansmt:n. and-~ m ~m-the-deatlw u( fi ve communai;ts g unned down al a .. Death to t h~ Klan · rally THI!: KLA:'ll COMMANDOS HOSE their rn d r ks ma nsh1p with M · 16 rifles and practice M!an:h·and destroy missions at combllt training ~t!ssions one w1•ekend a month. according to Terry Bogart said. "We JUSt showed them ho~ to do iL::_ ____ _ WOODED MENACE? ~•dy-fonrtotence THE COMMUNITY RELATIONS SERVICE of the Justice Dep111rtm1:1nt reported this month it was called to inve.stigat1:1 68 Klan.related cases during fi scal l91Q, an increase of SS percent ove r the pre· v1ous year. The Justice Department said the 1ne1· dents mvolved mainly ·cross·bu.rmngs. a r med rallies counterin~ minority protesters, firebomb· mgs, d 1aUeng1:1s to police and general harassment of blacks and Hispanics." At the requ.1:1st of the U S. Com m1ss1on on Ci vil Rights. the Ant1·Defamat1on Le ague of B 'na1 B'n tb compiled a report on the guemlla warfare t raining tn five states and sent 1t to Attorney Ge neral Benjamin Civilett1. urgmg the FBI to re- new surveillance of the Klan "to protect American ·citizens from further ter ron sm and violence." "He wrote bac k lhcat he was going to ask his !>laff to study 1t." Irwin Suall. director of t he league's fact-finding department. said. "He made no commitment.·· FBI SU&VEILLANCE OF THE KLAN was curtailed in 1976 by guidelines that require evidence of actual or imminent violence before in· vestigating the actions of domestic groups . The Ku Klux Klan. which began 115 years ago an Pulaski. Tenn .. with half a dozen white-garbed "ghosts" terrorizing their recently freed slaves, today is a hodge.podge of rival organizations with similar trappings and s hared animosities toward blacks. Jews. communists and assorted a liens . Sin ce the FBI no longer infiltrates the klaverns. and the Klan never reveals its mem· bership. the Anti-Defamation League proba bly has t he best hood count of any outside organization. The ADL monitors Klan activities through 26 re· gional offices. basing membership estimates on at- tendance at Klan rallies and the mailing Usts of KKK publications. All told, SuaJI said, there are probably no more than l0,500 active members, with about l00,000 sympathizers. But t he membership is growing, particularly in Wlexpected places s uch as New England. ''MOllS IRnOaTANT AND MORE dangerous is \.he rise in paramilitary training facilities, .. Sua ll said. ''The main problem is not the number Another 1.080 more or less is not the threat. The threat is violence and ter ron s m." And a Justice Department report that came to light recently said the "most violent" of the KKK leaders was Bill Wilkinson of Denham Springs. La .. Imperial Wizard of the £nv1s1ble Empire of the Ku Klux Klan. Wilkinson, a Lou1s1ana farm boy who Joined the :'ll avy a t 17 and bec ame a decode r on a Polaris s u bm arine. agreed to an tn t e rv iew at a Raton Rou ge restaurant. saying he didn't al· low reporters inside the Em· pire's headquarters in Denham "''L"''"°" Sprmgs The impenal wizarp. no taller than a 1ockey without his hood, finished off a filet of Louisiana red sna pper, lit the stub of a cigar . a nd talked about what he sees as the "inevitable race war, .. a notion he first got when the Navy sent him to San F r ancisco and he first saw white women dating black men. "I FEEL LIKE IT'S GOING TO be ver y widespread," said Wilkinson. who was arrested in September in Connecticut for packing a .45-caliber pistol in his suitcase , and who often 1s surrounded by "nighthawks" Klan security guards toUng s ubm acnfne guns and s awed·off shotguns at rallies. 'Tve had men shot down in many places Decatur, Carbon Hill, Okolona and I've bee n s hot at in many ins tanc Ps myself." Willkins on. whose two school·age sons are mcm be rs of -itre-K:Jan ·vouth Gorps. added. "If the fact that t say we 're go. ing to defend ourselves by any means is violent. t he n I'm violent. "lf the fact that I sa y we're racing a race war in this coun· ~-try is violenL then I'm violent ." Earlier thilJ.. month, WWcinson s howed tip in W aahington at a congressional hearing conducted by Rep . .Tolin Conyers, D·Mich .. chairman of a Rouse subcommittee on crime investi1atin1 whether LlnJra exiat between any governmental bodies and "violence-prone" organiutions such as t.be Klan and neo•Nazi groups. Conyers says the klan has paramilitary a n d · p !t y. c h o I o c. i c a l • a r fa r e t r a i n i n I .=::::==--""'====---~~~~~~~-== ELE ITH THE C.:l~EI.£ .'t1AC KENZ1f. NA NETTE FABRAY LLORIA L>E HAVE N - ·. ,~ ' \ I· Saddlcback Savings & Loan has become Coast Federal Savings & Loan. And w e feel this !.:alls for a celebration. o :we 're inviting you a n<l th~ cdl'britie~ you see ht!rc to come to one of the #open houses" we're having every day from D~cember 29 through January 5 at each ·of our six offices in your neighborhood. GET A FREE GIFTs A MUSICAL HISTORY OF 1935·la5. One of these stars will oe at each celebration to au'tograph your copy of "As Time Goes f By "-a tcreo recording o f Lee C astle and the Jimn1y Dor c y Orchest ra playing the origi na I Jimmy Dorsey arrange m-ent!:> of Septe mbe r Song, T u xedo Junc tion ~m<l othe r hits of the "Big Band" era. This unique album , available only at C oa t Fedefal, is a history of 1935-4-5 in words a nd music. If you could buy it in a sto re, you1d probably pay $8. But we1ll give it t o you for free, just for com- ing in any day from December . 29 through January 17. And while you 're enjoying the celebration and talking to neighbors, you1ll be getting to T • CIRCLE THE ADDRESS most convenient for you and come in any time fr~_m 11 am to J pm, Monday, December 29 through Monday, January -5. 27832 Crown Valley Parkway. (714) 831·3451 NewpcM't leech: 2620 San Miguel Drive. (714) 759·0181 l•IBHch': -. 13900·A Seal Beach Blvd .. (213) 594.9541 FeHbtooll: 664 North Coast Highway. (714) 497-3363 uguna Hiiie: 24132 Lagune Hlhs Mall ~mr.m4J·sa1:sooo- •£1 Toro: 23562 El Toro Rd .. (714) no.6086 1371 S. Mlsst0n Road. (714) 723-1511 ·NOTE Thtrt will~ no ~uri 111h1a of11ct. but 1lbum 11 1v11lablt • t ·-... -..... ... " • ._..... .. _ I • ' ,, VIMC INIA MAYO , • ---- I - ' '\ ,/4 , ' I know -o .. bt Fcdl'ral, t oo. We 're ont: of thL' country' largest sa vings anJ loan , with 60 offi ce · tbroughuut Ca lifornia. HIGH INTEREST, CHECKING THAT PAYS YOU, AND FRIENDLY SERVICE.'1 Learn about our wide variety of-saving ptans-:-Discover our fricpdly, personal service and thl' extra s w e're known for, too-the travel program and ente rtainment discount of (JUT Coast Insiders Club, for instance. @ So celebrate with us. ~-:-,.~ Meet a star. And get to jf'SIJc j know Coast Federal. ---.. .. .. . ·. .. .. . ,•, . . .. ~ 1 .... .a ..,., ~ ~ . 1~ ~ ·~ I~ ~ .,. ~ ~o ... th ~ .... ~l ~ ea ~. no .-. un p Be £ 7 42 -~··- tlf to se ev co an . uh A11 Cin Sp< fol bo ) fif w, bt SI di . ~ Ja Use Answer Ad service when placing your ad . . . a Daily Pilot ad numb~r will appear in your ad . . . we take your messages 24 hours a day . . . you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the respgnses to your ad ... this· service is only $7.50 per week. For more information and to -place your-ad GQI) 042-43 2-1. '-----..----t Daily Pilai :...-~ ............. -...... -... ............. --.. --.. e • • -I. -• • • -• -------- ----• -... __ ~ 4. I 4 t .41 • • • • ._ ' ,._. A • •• • • • t .. f • A t • t t • IA -• .... .._ • ._..... _ _..._ ___ .""' ~ • .._ -. • • t 1 '" • t - ·' A fitting flliish Rams close 1980 on a bitter· note DEC. 29, 19IO ay .IOllN SEVANU Ot_....., ......... 1.ak r prove a point 1 t,U~UUlJ P U •lilit Jb& ~ ff tU Cb< l&l1tJtl.J ~ lloi• tl&lkoll 1.-11,.th) r .. ul ·ou.oa ,,..l th• re• ,.lilt ~·• ·w )~ u• •ht'11 tla· twu 11' 'turn1~1uo-.t11., l1no1h'l~ tndl~llcrk' T~ ,. .u .t lol •>I .:nt"l1 \ b) b.>t b le.wl!) 1:11.~ h <,\. .mh:d lo 1i1r u1 tbA~ ucw t lot l.o~ \11)1.d'=:. \ IUI. h PauJ '4 \.~lht• 11 -..rnl Ah\'r tu" Llllers ,,1;u,.n~I tht' l'~ulJJdplu~1 .,._ . .)lUghL ··K~m \bJul J 4bl>ar .mo the l..JJl~ ~ •ft! t1UI 111 prOH! lh\') li4 e rl' thl' , h.amµ.. .,.,,,J PtuladriphJa l'oa < h lilll~ t\m nrnghain · I t hou~ht tht.•) pl.t~t-"tJ outstaodln~ 111.1:-.kt'lbJll THE L.\KEllS t.icfr.at~ll thl' 76es's Ill su. 1tamt!::. for th~ BA crown last ::.t!a::.un. with E,1n 111 "frla g1r · John:.on starnn~ 111 lht• cllnch.uli; gaml' a:. AbJul JJhb.1r was out w1th an tOJUf)' !'>Wltht) ntghl, lht! Laker., werl' '41.thout the 10JureJ J ohn::.on. but At1dul Jabbar and Jamaal Wtlkl':. l'Offi bined fortiti point::. 10 lt~ad the w:ay Abdul·.J abtwr ::.cored 34 pvtnl'> and had 13 rl't)(JWHJs and f1v.-as s1sts. wtule Wilke:-. <Jdded 3<! pvint.. for the Laker:. who took control of the game latt• in the tturd Vt!rl'id In lhe only other NRA g.!mt- Suoday. Kan:.:i:. ('1l~ beat ~e'4 .le r:-e) llY! ~)9. Leadlng 72·69. Lo:<> Angelh nm off a I!>-10 string in lht' rm<tl ~1'\ m1nul~ or the third quarter Wilkes had 15 point::. 1n Lhe µt:nod andAbdul-.labbar 11 laP W1t.-c>hoo•o IRVING, Texas -It WU a nttin1. almost perfect ending to what proved to be an imperfect 1980 season for the Rams. What bad been a tumultuous year. filled with contract bassets. abrupt walkouts and constant tn· juries, ended quietlY here at Teaas Stadium for the Rams &mday WHAT AMERICA'S TEA• did to ~rgla's Team was not a preUy s ight. If it bad been a movie. people would have h,idden their races during some of the action it was that bad. In a tot al reversal of what look place at Anaheim Stadium two weeks. back, the Dallas CowbQys returned a favor to the Rams by slapping them. :W.13, in front or 64.533 at home and count- less others watching on national television Everything that worked Cor the Rams 14 days ago failed miserably m the wild card playoff re· m atc h Offensively , the Rams' running game was reduced to a crawl. while Vince Ferragamo·s NFL playoff schedule SA TUROAY'S SCHEDULE ll•-•C.,. ... _, M+f\fW'\,OU4tPnUtldlftOftt•4<hMllMll•t• JU• ••t I ·-le-~--e .. 114IO • S.,,, 0.-!<"""~"'••I Ip fn 1 • SU NOA Y'S SCHf.'DUL.E •-k••C ... 1...-1 0..r~,t...0 •f (.~fl"Wf>l..Oct H h Mm .. t 4 •t 'I 10 • m) N•llen•IC ...... _, o .. u., .tt Alf••t• h f'4"Vl.«I 'l 41 t p m ~ as Butch Johnson took the pass over his shoulder for the 35-yard score. By then. 1t was all over, except the Cowboys decided to add an lll!)uran1:e TD early in the final quarter ·'They c Ualla::. 1 did '~ hat1·yer lht-Y '4 anted or 1t looked hkc It ," said safl't) J df Delaney "I don't kno" 1f \H ! "ere prepared or nut born bs were defused into duds. The defense, "THEY Pl""\ V •:D .\ LOT hclle1 lu.tay. a nd 1t ·s meanwhile. wtuch entered the game as the N FC's hard lo say cxadh what happened ·1 he) wen~ really best. l'ouldn't stop the run. had a hard time tackl· prepared and rod) ht: we lal·kl·d 'ome concentre1 ing. anJ got burnl'd on more than one oc·cas1on try· t1on " \ inf, to blitz Dallas quarterback Danny While Dallas Coath l'vm l.a11 u1 ). althou.i::h he "We__gQLJ_nto a situatiop wh~r_e ..w_e_wue µla~-dnwnpla~P.~n~~IT71" uH wcclr,-attatll'<J1o ing their game ." a oalyzeq corner back Pal It in his µost-.i::am1• t·o11111wn1. ... fhomas. who s pt;"nt the game watching Crom the .. In defen~c uf I..\ 1t s 't>1) hard to get up to -.1dchnes with a strained lit:ament tn his rlght foot pla} a tl'am the "J) .> ou h;n t• to pla.> them 1n the ·w e Just weren 'l 10 control. and when that hap· playoff::.. after ) ou '\ t· lJcatcn a lcani like the) did pen<> ·· us two weeks a go. h•· •·'(pl<11t1cd "We ran well . When that happens the Cowboys gain a lot or we bl0<·ke<l wel I. :ind \\l took ath ara tage or the )ards and score a lot of points. s1tuat1ons as the) caml' · In fact. I.he 01wboys amassed 528 total yards The same 1·a11 ·t tw -..11d 11f the Hams how1•\ "'r against the vauntffi Ram defense. 338 of which wh11 ~ere n°' onl> ht.•atl'n in lhl' trcnr hes offt>ns1ve t:amt.' on the ground led by Tony Dorsett'!> 100.yard I> and defeos1\·el). liut t·oulcln l take ad .. antage oC performance You have to go back 16 week~. when a '>ln$!1e opportu111t) Ul'tro11 rushed for 330 tot al yard!), to find a s how 1nl( e4tl<ll l0 the Cowboys· uch1cvement "'llRACTWl'SI.\'. HOWt;VER the fta m s A•ere !>llll 111 the gamt• a t h.!lrt1me. 13 13 It wasn t until the Final JO minute!> lh.11 the Cl)wboyc; re all) l<><1k charge "There's not m uch )OU can say ... ::.aid H1ch Saul m a s1lt'nt Hams · Jockerroom aft erwi.1rds Wt• d1dn 't pla) '' l'll e11uu~h to wm by any m eans · ··This team 1., runny One week everything \\ork~ for us and the next time 1l doesn 't But you tlun 't win for a!. mall) reasons as you du win Wf' JU~l d1dn t ()lay "'t-11 and the second hair wa!> a fiasco " The nast'o ... tarted early in the \h1rcl q uarter "ht•n White l'aught the Ram!> in a blitz deep m the1 r own territor) and fo Wld Dorsett wide oµen mer the middlt' f11r a 10 yard touchdown IN THt: FIRST II \I.I . ,~h..,1 llw 1<.1111" \\•·rt· l'lea rl) the :.ig~r 1·. '"' l· , .• , 1)1.111111 rn1-.-.e1J on a pair of long pa'>"f''-1•111·-t i l1•\l.1·rl 'I hom:.a~ J IHJ the othN tu Hill\ W.11hl > \\hll h m1~h1 ha\e l·han~e<I the l·•1111pla•'<ir1•1 uf llw )! •rtl' It ~ loo 11:.ad ""' hd \ e ltJ 1•nJ w1 a c;o11r note. huh •." !'>aid l-\•1 n 1g.1mo ln 1111 one 111 J1Jrt1t'ular "I gues-.. 1t just wa:-o't mea11l to lw rltf'Y were a bt:I ter lt!am than us tod a" Ferr aRamo t 111l'>h1:tl .m llll'f ·•hhle ) ear h~ tomµIN1n.I! 14 uf 311 p.,., ... , . .., f11r 1 ~~ ) anb and on" TD. whi ch raist·il hi:-'>eas vn t11l.!I'> lo 254 of 431 passes thrown for 3.r..i and :u Tlh far and 3\\-0I) the best (Jt'rformHrit·•· 111 Ha n1' h11;;t<1r) Hut th1 ... '~ J . ""' • 11:11 •11 1·c•lf:'brdte, and F 11r ra~:imo \l.a:-11t111J 1 t•l••l11 at in~ m1,.l(), a11) '4a)' ·1 hal•· 111 h1M• l1k1 tl11' ht! -.aid "rlut the) han• Lhc se1me untl11rm' anti I ni sure we'll Set' them al!am nc'(t \ t·ar ·• 1thought1t "'as 1.mt! of <1ur '""-'"! team efforts of the year.' \aid Westbead. "We played goot.1 dt• rease and covered the break well But Philadelphta has clearly established that th~y are a team to be reckoned with ... KEN STABLER (RIGHT) IS SACKED BY JOHN MATUSZAK. t\ few minutt•i-. later 1l was the same thing as ttw H:ims hlitzt-d a linebacker out of the nick le and :.ag;un Wb1tl' found someone open over the middle "lexl year (I -;1•t•111:-. ...,, far a\\a) until )OU tak~ into acl·our1t Lh1<. ~~""'"• 1<1:-tc·d ·1ltf•11me T1IE 7,ERS, 33-6, bave the NB>A 's best record. and their loss to the l.....&en, coming on the heels or a loss to DetaveT, marked the rir s t lime lhi !) St'a'>OO Philadelphia has dropped two !'ltrnil(hl. "Our two losses in a row coold be a bless ing in disguise:· ·!>aid Cunningham, indit'ating he didn't want his team gettitig compla ce11t. The Philadelphia coach was particularly impressed with /\b dul-J abbar 's outing. comment mg.· T ve read l~ stories about Kareem nol pulling out and th~'rejustnot true.:· Julius Erving , who led lhe 7f.e rs with 26 points. said even without Johnson. the I .ake rs are extrt'me ly tough. "They are a three dimensional tcum with Karttm, Norm Nixon and Wilkes ... Ervin~ said. Underdo~ role suits both team PASADENA (/\P) Mayli..· Stahler, Oilers out I ()akland advances in AFC playoffs O/\Kl.ANI> IA P > The Oakland R.aide rs welc.'omed Ken Stablt>r back to his former home field by pounding him to the turf seven times. ··They talked to me a lot . mostly friendly stuH They asked me if I was all right afte r they knocked me down," said Stabler . who went rlowo andoutoftheNationa l Foot• ha ll Lea~ue playoffs .Sunday with the I t(luslon 01 lers THE RAJUERS, IJl.iymg what <·ould havl' twen \he1r lasl game t!ver 1n Oakland. ~ave a sellout l'rowt.I a g rt>a l show as they lrou nct'rl the Oil ers 'l7 -7 in the meet in~ 11f A merit· an Football 1'nnfert'n1·e wild can ltcams They sa1·k~J rormt•r teammate Stablt>r .;even time-; and cor nerbaC'k l.ec;ter llayes intercept ed two passes mdudm~ one re t urnE'd for (.'ti yards :ind a gaml' dml•hing t1wchdown 1n the fourth pc nod On off en st'. the Raiders ~<ll two too<'hrlowm passes from S t ablt•r'c.. l!.179 h.1c kup J im Plunket\ tenders but at a definite di~advan tagc. They knew they would have JU:.t one home game .. H they win at Cleveland. they'll be on the road against the winner or next Saturday 's .l{ame between the Buffalo Htlls a nd San 1>1ego Chargers. "I llunk lht•y'll ~o a long way,' 'aid 01h'r<> l"cn•<'h Bum Ph1l11 ps, '4 ho~w team had rl'achcd the/\ f'C title game the past two ::.ca~ons as a wild card only to lose lo the P1t - tsbu rgh Stt.•l'lno.; Stabler suffered throuj!h one of his roughest days l'ver 1n the Oakl ,m<I <..'oh-.eum T 1~ht e1)d Dave (.'asV\'r ;iml safl'l) JJck Tatum. lwu otht.•r player:. traded from Oakland to l lou<;tnn thi-; yea r. d 1dr1 't (a rt• rn udl hClll'I' 8l'T TWO FORMt:R 01 l<•rs running hack Kenn~ Kintt and ell' fons 1n• lmeman .John M alustak. a lon~ with llnu~ton n ative 11.:i)cs l'Ont r1hut 1·d greatl) 111 the Haider.;·\ 1rtur)' Matuszak. who began his NFL c areer with Hous ton. bl<X'ked Toni 1-ntsch's 3i·yard field goal l ry which would have tied the SC' Ore at 10-10 JUSl before halftime. t-'ritsch made a 32-yarder seconds before. but 1t was nullified by a pena lty. Plunkett completed only eight of 23 pas.c;es but several of lhe com plet ion s w e r e for big >a rd age The first touchdown pass was for just one ya rd, to tight end Todd Ch ristense n who made l11s first NFL recepl1on, but the '>econd was a 44 yard strike to runntog baC'k Arth ur Whittm~on a nd Jt ~ave the Raiders a 17·7 lead in the opt>.,nin~ seconds of the last quarter. "THEY WERE IN man to m a n covera,l!e f ro m the heg innin~ and w.-fe lt all along wf''•I he able to 110 ~omething ... 'a1tl Plunkett The Oakland offense had only one fi rst down before King. who ~ot behind a Houston hnebacker. haulc<1 in the 37 ·yard pass in the "c·cond penod. ... .. APW1~ il 's the smog that has hun~ over 11oulhem California for lhf' pa. ... 1 three days. Thl" tl'am wtut'h Al Davis. the manaJ?mg gc•neral partner. wants to m nvt• to J.o-; i\n~cl<-s next year JJV~lnt'l'd IO the c;em1fmalS Of the \fl' µla.> off.., and will be on the ro1.1d llt''<l Sur1da} fat·111~ the J\ .. , • Cent r ,1r 1 ha mp1on ('levelantl Hro"'ns King, h{')d uut <if lhc.f1r1dl n·~ ular <;cJson game lo rc'>I a '\prained ankle. l'aught a 37 }ard pass from l'lunkell lo set up tht• Raide r-;· firs t touchdown. fine which sent lhl'm a head t() slJ). 111 7 tn lht• 'cc<md pcrio<1 ll1s el 'ant run in the final quarter led tn ;i < 'hnc; B3hr fletd go.ii ""hkll m aiif' the s core :lO 7 llouslon had taken a 7-3 lead in the first period on a 55-yard drive 'wh1<'h featured the running of F.ar l Campbell. who blasted onC' yardforthctouchdown. DEJECTION Rams 4uarterba~:k \'111n' ferragatn() -...!- For some reason, Michigan Coa ch Bo Sche m bechter and Washington Coach Don J ames each is convinced his team and not the other s hould be rated the underdog in Thurs day 's Rnse ha ngs his head a fter thro\\ ing a11 mtt'r('epl1on that e ndecl :.:· the Ham~· last drin• Sunday John Sevano : Bowl game. Tbe Huskies, champions of lhe £acific·ID wilh a..9-2.Iecord. and Michigan, winner of the Big 10 ti- Staltlt-r was making his first ap pearaot·t• 1n 0Jkland s ince bemg t raded to Houston early lhts year II ~ demanded lo be traded after betnfil t~ target of wbal be con s1c1e re d unJ uSt l'rilir1sm from -Dev as tle, also 9-2, both went throu~h "RUTI CAME HF:REto winto- toueh. sla m .b ang prac ti ce day Al, Davis had nothing. to do Rams still have work left sessions Sunday. And. during an with the ~ame." Stabler insjsted evenjng news conference . each when askt>d about Sunday's coach pronounced his club fit homecoming .. Playoff games IRVING. Texas The Ra ms' football players themselves admitted this season and the tmderdog. a re all the same ( don •t care season may be over but only on the was not normal. The Huskies finished the rei-where they're played. Pressure playing field. There's still a lot of business • "This season sure has been a weird ular 6eason ranked No. 16 m the comes with my job." to lake care of during the off-season. im-one," admitted Jack Youngblood. "l guess Asaoci ated Press weekly poll A. "The only thing we won by beat· portant business. business critical to the a good word for this year. would be final poll will be conducted amoog ing Houston was the right to play team ·s future. rolle rcoaster. lt'lt been filled with nothing sport.. writers and broadcasters on e more game -no\ two more, First and foremost will have to be an at-but ups and downs " following the last of the m aJor not three more." said oUensive 'tempt by management to . make things bowl·games Jan. l . g uard Gene Upshaw. one of lhe harmonious again· around Rams Park. It's "THERE WAS A. lot of controversy. a lot Michigan currently is ranked Raiders' team captains. tough enough these days just trying to play or problems and a lot or players playing fifth in the nation. However. lhe "But we want to bring back root ball in the NFL. and the contract out lheir options ... added Nolan Cromwell. Wolverines have failed to wan a what belongs to us, what we de· squabbles and djscord betw~ manage· "(t just doesn't work that way. Those bowl game in seven tries under serve." added Upshaw, meaning ment and players hasn't helped matters problems should have been taken care of fiohembechJer -including rive the Super Bowl tiUe. The 1976 this year. during the off.season. Either you take care ~de(eatsinth6Rose Bowl. Oakland team coached by John of them before lbe season or you don't "It's a little easier lo prepare Mad den beat the Minnesota IT WAS CLEA a LY evident by the f!egoUate during it." when you'r e an unde rdog." Vikings in Super Bowl XI. but Rams' elevator ride thls sea50n that tJw "It's been a different season. rn say ever)onc played tog1..•ther and played for the learn .. "I HOPF. AU our problems are <.'ured ao·d we can open the season with everyone in camp and with ooe goal in mind," said a somber Pat Thorpas. "I can't s av direct· ty that what happened this year had an a/- feet on us. but indirectly I think il did .. And on. and on. and on the comm ents went. The Rams have until February now to try to s ign Vince f'c rragamo before be becomes a free agent And Jack ~eyllC>lds is another key player the Rams hawe to make happy or coursf', th1tt doesn't even take mto 11c~oo:nrthe two or tliree oCher James said. "But. we haven't Sunday's game_was the Raiden' pJa,yeu cannot perform to their 1bat.'' saiil"Rkh Saul "I haven't ~a~e &ivq -it-that mu~ attention. first playoff appearance since capabilibes wtien ttier ~oU~~;,i;._ __ ;;:_~~~~~::..:::it.:.~;;~~~~;it;---~~:S-~bo.....w.iLll.....b&...os:L..-'l~.--¥4Nlf.,..M1..,_--i::-in You'dliketobeconfi rm . adversity. There's a lot of pressure season wmany game. "I don't know that I've ever becauae teams are .0 even now." As Fred Dryer quipped, "ll wou&d be a "As far as the weekly ranklng5 s een 8 better game by 8 Raiders' Man for man, player for . player, the Said Jeff Delaney: "It's beet 8 season of lot better I( the boat is loaded. allbou.th ,are ccincemed. I think you get defense .. s aid 'rom [!Qr~ the Rams have the best talent in ~NFL. ~Gf higbs Midiowr.fhftlnecHt~"'d ~ ~rto--~ ittt's-not. •• • • --.,.-.ii wh•t v-• ..L.---··-... ....._ L.......o..._ --~ -h ho• --.-Ult not trf'i:I "'Obftl'vition, eUtier. I ha •L.~ f ood __ ,.. If the boat is not rull in 1981 it J'uat m•v ...... dtd•~-two .. ~d.def"a~ts. .... secon ·year ea coac w wasT .h .... at~ •• "' w 'hat NFL ;: __ ullv-. owners and a ways ve uu'C'IC OI' our I sames.,_ - ..... 'CT I.HI " an assis~ttoMadden "' ~~" G ~"' tben a bad one. We never cou&d set a real sinklikcthl~)·car'sshapdid . •• ......_poll that really counts is coaches are s aying about eorgi a's team. • • • •..... good streak goiq. the laat a,te. TMI\. if we're not THE ILUDERS, as a wild-card Clearly, steps have to be taken during "I hope there ·won't be any distradiods Add Dryer about the game: "We plQeCI aatisfled with \bat. we have all tum. entered the playoff with the the <.'ff.season to insure another year Ulte next year so we can play ball rtabt from poorly and they played OK. Tbere's realb Ctiee Ul"IH!llDOG. Pa1e Ill> same rttot"d. 11 s. as aJI A f'CCM· 1980 not happe n intc aoin. Even the the be.UMint. It would be a lot easier if c~nVA_NO. Pa•e Bl> ' ,. .. -......... -~· ._. _____ ._.ft ........ r=:m ....... . ' ---,. -OM.YN.C>l # ....... Q'-•lk••- ... , ...................... .... Putorini-writer duh, QB 81am8 y,_ ~· lro I 1t r.._ OAKLAND Pollt'f' la Ala ..... MU U.y'u• 0 • • a'' "'I l ht' r ra ult• of blood • lrotlol teat• ua Ua.kland ~nr. ~wart rbad OM PUUllial. ua aurcd •1wll h•~ t'ar al •-.~ i.ntu • lrH Gnb • mmutt'!lo aftn an alk-1"1 ~at llK'QUDtu walh a Howton ~i rbwnlt'I fl ... on.nt biad Dot brrn lol'~ to play LR Sunday's Na 11un111I •'uot~ll l.f'a1u• AmulC'U Ccief~reft('f' wHd card pl•' otf 111mt' '"lb tbt llOWilon 0 04!'1''i, -bif' .. lbe Raadus won n 1 I w haJ ~ 11HkhnC'd ••th • brc*~ le& early in the i.1·a~oo • P111~lorUl1 -. t' •• "l!I \ t.'d U\lu tht-Id\ lant! ol Mail.land Uru'" .. ~, lO \~ " m s.atW'da) Ul Alameda, pobce said l'uhC'\ ' 1d thc quarterback !>USt11uuid "lac;erations ol the UH•uttl ""'' h~ •nd a bnu~ nose" and that the accident '9'U \I Ute tu t!JU 't-:,0!\I\ t' ..,.,.t:<J 'W c:-h.argt::. hMd t~n fat~ late Sunday Dale Ro~rt.son. a Houston spc>rtswnter, saJd he ran tnlo f>•:-.l(""1J Saturda) oaghl at lbe Eda~ater Hyatt. the hotel "'hl"rl" rht.-(h ler6 and "nters stayed before Sunday's a a me Ru~rUon OUld Pastonna had scuffh:id in Houston prior t o a pl<i~ oV g.ww a yeiu ago. when Pastonni was playane for the 011l"r~ fortunately, ~ left 11t-t.he same-time and ran-into t'<H'h utber out:.1de One thmg led lo another, and il got very (>h} s1cal on his part, but not on mme, .. said Robertson of the 1nt1c1ent Saturday ,, ... 4P'., die ... Lefty DrineU, disclaiming a story that talked of his 'well known stupidity" as Maryland's basketball coach : "Well. I'm notstupad I just talk stupid." Qarlu>•• .... , •IP• Eflw 1111-. Z. I through the third period broke a l ·l tie and gave ' Bobby Clarke's lS-foot s lap·shot midway rt.1 Phi ladelphia a 2-1 victory over F.dmonlon in Na- tional Hockey League actton Sunday as a capacity crowd of 17,474 watched in F.dmonton ... Elsewhere in the NHL. Darryl SiUler had the 14th three-goal game of his career and teammate Bill Dert&«• chipped in with a pair of goals lo lead Toronto to a 6-3 win over Chicago ... Defenseman IUck LaPNl&escored his second goal ofthe game ~ with less than two minutes to play lo give St. ~ t \ -~--·. Louis a 3-2 decision over Vancouver. La Pointe scored at 18:47 with a shot from just inside the blue line after center Beraie F e derko wo n ' a faceoff ... Errol Titom...-•sseconct goal of the game at 12 · 30 of the third period lifted Detroit to a 4·3 vic- tory over Winnipeg. Thompson pounced on a loose puck inside the right faceoff circle and snapped a wrast shot which beat J et s goaltender Pierre Hamel low to the far side c1..uu Montreal connected on three of its four c;hot' in the second period. mchadjog Steve Slallt&'s 21st goal. as tne Canad1ens topped the New York Rangers. S-2. The Cana· d1ens v1ctim1zed ~ew York goalie Doll« SeetHrt three times in a 3 · 49 span. beginning with Yw. Lambert's goal just 3S seconds from the end or the first period . . . Buffalo's o ... y Gare scored a third pt>riod goal, his 23rd tally ol the season, lo cap the Sabres' 5-2 win over Boston. Dettll S•itla, &le~ 0..., lleb Ml'Claaaban and Doa L•tt each notched a goal for Buffalo. whit'h was meeting Boston for the first timet.bis sealClll. . ~ Caroll•a-rlii rl•.,. ,_._., Heisman Trophy winner Georce a.gen and his Eil South Carolma teamm ates clash with No. 3 Pit-•II• ts burgh and Heisman runnerup lhp Greai tonight in the Gator Bowl. Pitt.hopes the game will keep it in the running for the nationa l college football crown. Rogers, a 220-pound senior, brings a string of 21 consecutive 100-yard games into the 36th Gator Bowl against l.be 10-1 Panthers .. Injured Philadelphia Eagles naoterClaarleS..lda will be treat· ed with k1d gloves this week while the team practices in Tampa, Fla. for Saturday's National Football Conference semifinal game against Minnesota ... The countdown lo the national college football championship stMts tonight. If Pitt wins over Georg1a.1t can just sit back and wajt for the big New Year's Day bowls to settle the final standings. Wflff••• •'"• "••••• °'• nn..,, ScGU We4mu scored 10 of Kansas City's last 17 m pomts lo help the Kjngs to a 102-99 Nat.ional Basket- ba 11 Association victory over lbe New Jersey Nets Sunday night. Wedman's jumper in the fmal minute put the Kin's ahead, 98-96. Otis......_,, who scored 3S points, followed with a basket and Sa• l...ace7 hit one free throw to <'linch 1t The New J ersey Nets named PltU Jack .. a 12- yea r veteran of the NBA, as assistant coach. ' ·"'"°•" ... ,,~···",, •• fl .... , M 1ssouri basketball Coach Nerm S&ewart said • he m ight know today when sophomore center Steve Stipanovic:h, who was slightly wounded by a gun in his Columbia apartment Saturday night, will be able to return to action. Stipanovich accidentally shot himself bu~-sald earlier.a gunman had entered his apartment ... Un· beaten and top-ranked DePaul, having easily dispensed or one of the West's best college basketball teams <UCLA>. takes on Eastern power Georgetown tonight in the first round of the Cabrillo Classic in San Diego. In the other game. LaSalle meets San Diego State ... Nial,_., the greatest har-• ness colt ever lo pace, tis leaving the racing circuit with all world records• except one under his girth . . . Premier MU.Istre., riddenJ>_y LallU.ftK.u_.~yed within stri.king..d.is- talRe Of""the leia most of the way, then woo a stretch duel with GaJuy Ubra to win by a head in the San Gabriel Han· dicap on l-he turf at Santa Anita Sunday ... Bart Starr, whom the Green Bay Packers have decided to remove as general manager, said he will accept the NFL.club's offer to slay on as coach for at least another year. Tete.,1•~ r•._ Following are the top sports ~ts on TV tonight. Ratinvs are : ' ' ' 'excellent; ' I I worth watching; / 1 fair; .t for(Jet it. e I p.m., Channet 7 ./ ./ { ./ GATOR llOWL: Pittsburgh ~s. South Carotina. A-.cen: Al Mlcrw..ls and Ara Paf'SeCJhlan. TM Panthers closed out the r~lar SNson n the No. 1 c»- fensive team in the country In both rushing and tot.t defense. Three-time All-ArMrican Hugh Green Is one of ,._ big rNSons for the Panther success. He will be f.clng Helsm.n Trophy win-ner Geor9e ROQet"S who captured the NCAA OMsion 1-A rutfllng title with 1,111 pnts. Anothw Nttle to w.tch wUI b9 blttseen former .. .$CbOot ~ Teny Wttlte-of PMblKI .......... Horace Smith the GamecockS. -.. .. Is a .,._,,. bKk aftd v •SS yardS. Pitt~ Is favored by.._. points. "UiSietbli -R: ( rvine ~nas A&M "' .... OA Clesk; ' p.m •• KWVE n• FM); USC "'· Ml ........ 1:30 p.m .• KNX (1070). • SEVANO. • • no way '° define •hat happened outU.. . ''Wiiy were we flat! Who know• It'• up to each lnd.ivictual to ,,..,.... llimHlf for • came. lot..-, romea from bdac in· tent. Wl' d idn 't prepare ouraelv•• very well. When you're not lnteat, you're not n: .Uy with it. ··1 expett.ed lo come in bett and beat them but we didn't mantfnt that at all. We deserve to be home and they deserve LO be In Atlanla." .... Last add [)ryeT. on the R•m 's abilit> to tum 1l on and olf at Wlll ··we·reqwlecapableofbeating an)'bodY we play, and there are only maybe three or four t eams m fhe NFC who can do that ··Dallas can do it. So can Philadelphia and Atlanta It's runn~ the way 1l worts out ·· ••• Add Jack Youngblood: "One little exlra effort on o ur part might have changed things I re (erring lo the game I ··1 still thmk we·re the besL team in the NFC, although we weren't that good today " .-.-. Add Ferragamo, on whether he feels he'll be -.•earing a Ram uniform next yelfr ··Then~ s some doubt m m y mind ~ause the)' 've wa1tt"d this Ion~ to do anything lf you a ~k me whether I m opt1m1st 1c or doubtful, I'm both " On the problems the team had this year "I don't know 1( we were all on the same page or what The problems we had all year long finally hit us " ••• If )OU have a concrete dri,•eway near your house that s hould provide you with a good insight as to the hardness of the Astroturf at Texas Stadium Arter 10 years of use. there I!> absolutely no more give or i.oft ness to the turf at all ~faylx­ that's wh:> dub offi cials l>eran an imm(.'(hatc trans pllfr.t fur thl· 1981 season ctfl e r ~unda ) ~ game AnyUung they replare 1t with will be better than what wa~ there • • • Only one m10or t'ata~troph1 . otcurrt..od on the tn p and that <... "hen two equipment C'Onlamer:. with the Hams · game Jt·~e)' wound up in Uetro1t , alte r tht- fteld (•rel4 failed to unload them at the airport Friday upon the team 's arrt\'al A fl er a few phone call s. however. the uniforms were re- turned by Saturday morning The way the team played the) i.hould have asked the I.ions to send their Jerseys * • • With Pc.I Thomas st anding helplessl) on the :idehnes. Hod Perry nursing a tilow to the htad on the trainer's bench. and Ivor) Sully back in the lockerroom with bruised ribs. you kne w the Kami. were 10 trouble in the second half when the two t·w nerbac·ks were LeHoy Irvin and rookie f1ue1us Smith • • • J a c k H'eynolds m ay have s ummed up the:: season best when he dis gusting ly said al . pracl}Ce Saturday, "They've ruined m y birthday. they've ruined my Christmas, they've ruined my season and they've ruined my hfe " Many of the Ram players feel the sam e way, and I don't have to give you three guesses who they're angry at. ••• Just as a final crowning touch. the Rams United charter home was forced to land in Palmdale. after being re·routed from On~ tario. due to heavy fog at the Los Angeles International Airport The DC-8. which was supposed to arrive al LAX at 6:30 p.m .. landed al Air Force fl at No 42 in Palmdale at 7 Now. don't ask me where we were because I don't know All I know is thal·we landed at a restricted m1hlary base and they wouldn't let us off the plane until t he buses ar· rived. Anyway, the buses got there at 8 a nd the t.eam finally m ade it to LAX et..9:30. Quipped one playt>r : ''This is j ust a great way to end ihe season We deserved this " Miller coaches Senior Bowl MOBILE. Ala. CAP> Head Coach Red Miller of the Denver Broncos will coach the' South team in the annual Senior Bowl football all·slars game on Jan. 17, officials annount'ed. Miller, 52, has taken Denver to the National Football League playoffs in three of four seasons. His won-lost record is 39·22. The North coaching staff and the rosten for both teams will be announttd later. The 32nd Seliior 'Bowl will be consecutive year. CBS hu both the television and redio ri1hts. "We've watched the Senior Jktw.Lsblely Ln...ev_eey or:1u•u- Uon J ba.-e been with, but I think It 1ives JOU a deCmite advantage to COllCh in the u me," lliller aaJd . -.... - I SPORTS BREM I FOOlBAU. /ICE Do1fJCllG JUDY ANO JIM SLADKY ARE APPEARING IN ANAHEIM. Demanding art Sladkys: champions on and off the ice 8) C'AROI. MOOKt: Of rM-O•tlf P tlot St.-tt ·.r·1:r fl\" 11 al111n ;1I 1 t1a n1 fJ t nn ~hi i•'>, r Ill.Ir \.\ orl d r),. ..... mt·•fab <in.1 nan, ~ears 10 a pro fei.s1onal •<'t-sh""'. "'hat do ... k.ilt ini.: l'hampmn' fi'> for an <!nrort ' <:l't _,our name m tho. rult- lmnk. ad\J\t-' Jud\ ~la<l l(\ ·1 hat 14<•~ .\Ou keeµ 1n \oh;.d "'II h \11ur "'l'Url \ OUI J ( hit•\ e ,, ll' II I I... It 1111 rn IJ I r ( 11 11 I I t' n .1 rr.un•I. tl11• .,., orld drtrJ '11ur I II Cl I h I :1 '' ,J ., • I " l o II ( (' I " "'t•lcuml· .lud)' ·and her hu-.h<rnd, Jim .1p1w:innv \\ 1tn t h!:' In l-'oll1c<. Jn<I lluhday on l<·e Crimhmt."<I Sho"':. <ft the Anaheim Conven ll<>n Cent<'r through Tuebd<t) are knol4n for the \1tc.ll \\ they ·ve put mto l('e dancing · Their t ectmically dem andin~ art differs from paar s katang . t.'m phas1zmg mtncate footwork anc1 rhythmic mterpretatwn' 1n -.tt ad of JUmJl .... sp1ns and lift!. When V.l' were rom ptt1n~ lhc· h'p:-werl' mo ... tly "altz.1•-. ffJX trot:. amJ tangos "nre the "W•rt ~t<tr1ed in \'1l'.nn<t an thf' 1860i. and "'a' µrac·t ic·Pd m11'11~ in fo:uro(>(-' ·w e "'anted 111 hvt'n up thc cvcnt to make 1t more Cun for u.' and the Jud~es "During the 1·1~ht year n 1m pa1~n lo ~et 1c·e dant•mg ac·cept NBC to scrap microphones MIAM I IAf'I A little known !>C<'l1 on of the NCAA rule book will probably scrap NBC TV's plan to let the nation eavesdrop on the de fens1ve <·aptains during the Orange Bowl football game Thursday night. officials admit Spokesmen for the network and the Orange Bowl Committee said Sunday ni~ht the N ationlfl C<illeg1ate Athlcl•<' Assoc1at1on hadn't informed them that 1t would vtolate a ru-le to pot m1C'rophone ontwoplayers BUT 1\. GAMF. official had re re1vedsuch word. they said. The ruJe forbids equ1pping a player with "any electronic. mechanical or other signal de· vJ.ces for.. the purpose of CQln· muni<.'ating wi th any source Pena lty 15 yards and rlis qua lifkation orthc player ·· N RC, whJ<'h 1s televising the New Year's night bowl game bet ween Florida St ate and Oklahoma, had announced plans last month to bug linebackers Paul Piurowsk1 of FSU and Mike Rea ll y of the Sooners. "They cannot do that.·· said Tom Hansen of th.-NCAA telev1sioncommilte!'e. Ha nsen said he notified Mike Weisman, NBC's producer for the game. and bowl officials that there was a potential problem. 1•11 d " .in 01~ rnµ11 'Port v.e chcH l'Oj.!ICIJ)ht•d j /(1lJtine II.(> "' a n 1 t• 11 I 11 <iii I \ m t-r I c an l'olk.1 But It.• of1111 c.J~ s aid that 'thoY.• 11 '11r1 m uC'h na lmnah'm ~I "'. f'l1.m~1-<I I t.1 t1tlt.' lo \ .. 11!.1·1 l'i.U.:.1 Jnd tht-lnt1·rno 111inaJ ~;,11111.' Inion <1JJpron-d 11 a" tho· '1111h • 11m11ub<1n rianC't' 1 r1·,11t·d I•\ \1111·r 11 •• n I 11 ''"'"', r • 111 i-' p1 rl••r rn tt1ro·•· 1J.1:1• •-. ,, 1 •m11ul ... r~ 1·h11<-t n It'\ t.itl i!t .. I t.. nq .. M t It j " I t· J. • lJ rrq.1 t I I ' I ., r1 d n 11r11-'lri . .t •' l»tlltrn 1•l1•ctt.:d ~ 1· .1 r I' dlld ,, I n.·1 1 l1r111 l Off tht· •\l' Juth ,.., µrt>s1dt-nt ol the· lnlc·rnat1onal <...ounl'll on Therar>t ul1t.· !11 SI.Jim~ ... uJ.1 port" the Spt~·1al OJ~ mp1c!> cin d 1!. "" the ad\ 1~on board of \\'mnc·n .., Spon~ Fou.ndat100 or ht·r P"''h'''''C' ,,r tht-\lhl··11 l•·c t~r•·<-•• r;iund tht- c·•1Ufl ln .. 111 ·o• lrl<•l'H'n llatn/,! I (J rl ••• ~··I J>MJJ.llt' IO l\•n·"tl'(l 111 ~U'llltj. •.n "lidtl.'" <Ln•I h1l11n~ lilt• 111 'i ••U <I tw .1mJn·d al the· n · ... ulh ' · 1 ht· f<oun1J,1tion J 1rn' to an r n ·il 'l' lhl· numl•t r 111 "'Om t-n µart1111,.i\m,... 111 '-IJC>rt:-di ever~ l••\l•I ,.,,.n 1Aalk1ni.: arimnd !ht' hlcor i.. ~ ( ;iJ ..,,i "'P<m,or lliJ\ run!- Jnd our mal!c.t.1ne i.ho"' !'. "'oman athll'I<"'> hov. to i>pN 1ahu v.rth lwllt•r equipment d1c·t. traintn~ and c·xcn·i~e ~h1· trnn·b v.11h tv.ci pair.:. o< ..,katt'"· her u~u<sl 1>erformm~ ones and a SJ><trt I m ig ht ois 14 t-ll u:.1· rPntal.. the' -re !>O sl1tr· for l'mC'rgl'n< If'!'· 111111. often 1!01•' 1 h" c·ouple re hearse'' ' 'Yvu re a l v.:n <. ,. littl e nervou~ on a nev. n'ni... but after ~ou'q~ don.-a numbN !"><)times. ~ ou lo. nuv. 11 o~ he:i rl 'W<: hav<> on£• !>pin v. here Jim holch m~ foot a nd whips me a round with m' head near the ll'e That still ·scC1n·s me so I make sure "'e practice t hat part nnre ada\ .. Althou;ih llAo-major i<:t-sho"'s ha\<> c·omb10ed. <>he· sees the mer~er alt bener1c1C1I to skater.-. "Wt• still have three tounnJ: t•ompan1es so there's less com- petition for starnng roles, .. stie sa) i. "We feel more confident that -.•e have a home here or Ln a..oolhcr .show by ~r proQtteerS Jr\'ln and Ken~th Feld ··Wh e n y ou feei' better bac•kstage. you look better ix-rformrng on the l<'e .. Plus now we ha\'e more room for lhe young skaters who realne they won't quite become <'hampions They still have so much talent and chansma that they are Joining us earlier now ... And the mor..-gala costuming this year su1ts her fine "I've appt>ared as Snoopy on numerous TV s per1als and I eventually want to get into act in g after l'\·e repaid all that I've learned from skatJng. ·· -t ...... --· - -~I • -• .. Boxer f ryor ... abet bot -ill keep trai•iwg CINCINNATI (AP> -A , ..... wo.4 ......... 't fll"e- vent box1q clulmpi• Aanm Pryor from trainia,c for h is secood title clelense cm Feb. 1, his m-.cer uys. ··we were very fortunate n.e 1ood Lord shmed down on him:· m anager Buddy LaJtosa said of Pryer's sbootang Sunday et • Cincinnati residence. Pryor. 2S, was listed in good conclition overnight at Cmcumati General HosptW, where be ..... derwem brit"f surgery for a ne.ti wound on his chest and two wounds on his right foreJ&rm . Pryor. ongiu!Jy Jrom Ciacin· nati, is the reigning World BOx- i n g A ssoci ati on Junio r welterweight champion Pplice said they recovered a .22·caliber revolver with two spent shells 4tl the reslcienee where Pryor was shot dunne an altercation Sunday aftemOOfl Sgt Angelo Dillinger saad police would ask Pryor t.od.ay whether he want!> to press chai:ges.. A WO&&n--Vil &fl -ft4!fft-- ovemight for investigative dto- tentioo but was oot c harged, POlice said La Rosa said P ryor, 11 right· handed boxer, was fortwuite he sustained only minor injuries t.O the arm and th~t La Rosa m1lJally reared that Pryor wouldn't be able to defend' his tJlle Feb 7 against S-UI Mamhy. the World Boxmg Coul- r1l champion But LaRou later said the Wldefeated fighter suf. fered no senous damage to mus- cle or bone rn the right forearm, "'hu:h figured heavi1y m bis 25 knockouts in Z7 victor ious bouts. "As far as Aaron's concerned, 1t '!> a s uperficial wound," La Rosa S<A1d .. He's in good CCIII· d1tion The doctors ~aid he can be in the ~ym again in four or five day!> ·· ,.,...,r.,,,.~ UNDERDOG "'1ntl'r tc1 1·ompla10 about It to o u r st'I vc:-s ~rhcmb<Thlt-r "'ho 'aid he f•1rl!ot J!Jtlut the· nev.:. conft•re11ce:: ... nd :-hov. l-<l uµ dn hour ond a half lllte !'atd h1· 14 d!'-c·cm\111t·t·d that 1•\ l'r.' µl<i~t·r on Ills tf'am "'lints 1tn IJ<Jdh 111v.1nlht'ko:.c Bowlan order 10 put lhe stt(?m<J of lc1s mg IA?hmdthem · · W inrung the Rose Bov. I woujd mean d lot · said the M 1ctug.an coach. v.ho s uffered a heart al- l ack out here oo thee ve of the t970 i?amt-h1:0. (1r.>t "Set-, when you "'an a 10(. the emJ)ha ... 1s 1 gomg to l>t-<m the fe"' IOS!>~'S 'o"' I dc>n t behtve there i. a pl.i~1 r on m' lt>a m that doesn't "'.int 111 v.1n lht!-g;;mt Bui I don't "'ant lht·m '" tight tht') can t pl<t~ 11.:olxl<h s gum~ to ~Jai.h hi~ \4 rt ... , If Wt' f(l<,(• Cij:!atn J a ml·" s aid Srht-m l1echler Cl >! ret.-d that t ht' ke~ to the ~amc m1S::hl lie ~Ith tht' s pec1 <1lty ti-ams. smr t· both squads match up ~er~ \4 <'II IJOt h on offense and on dt-fenw '-' e l>ehe\•e in the k1rk in~ i.:amt-Jamf>c; ~aid "We prac I l<' e 1 I ci I m o s t l' ' e r) d a y :.omeum~ for 20 minutes at a crat•k <ht'r the sea5on. you may ,....111 the offensive game about four times and )OU ma) ,.,111 the de· fens1ve game five limes. but we tr.\ to win the kit' king game nine t1 mesa sea.son .. ·-........ -.,.JI ' { ---~--·­. FOR THE REOOAD /BOAT~/ IASKITBALL r NllCW&.D~"-.A\10'' c ............... ,. tiL_..,..._. u, ....... O.ltu De• no ...,...,. ' , . I IO It l 6 I t-I '"" l •rl • lel\-.tl Oe• "0 "'94-., ft t II t .. \.t. o.... .. -. ,, ... ~.~~ ....... " ... tC..f el '"'' 0••' Olir'-.•1 t1 •~•W1'1Ml "t •1 Oe1 0.-1 10.,. .. 1,...,.#1\ll•I'-"''., '"" O•• 0 .._.,...,... d P.•• uum Whk.., "'-''-.... • .. \J.j co.-. ''"' .. '"'' LA "'91 .... .,.-.... . .., ... ""', . .,. •n•'"'I , ... •e1"''" .~.--. ,..,,_.,., II ~ ,. •I • \9 ... 1.-0 II IOJ •~I 11 IS I """'" • ,. , 1 ... t wimttr•• .._, te lO ~.,, ... ,.,. •IO "" , .... ._1-..-n llU" .. IH(j. \I>\ 4neot"' INlm•\ If ti ,,,.,_,IO '4 U..11•• o.;. .. 11 II IM/ 11l'trl\I\ • )t P4\\tN\f i.,o\ 4nQ••t • F-•n•v•n~ I• io 1 10 0.11•• ""n•lo t I I\) I'll) rtECE1v1 .. G Lu> •~tlO\ o,,,,,.,,a • 111 1-..., l I• Otllt \ o "-•'""' 400 Oot•\•tt ) 11 AFC WILD CARO PL.A YOFF Raiden V . 01 .. r• 1 k-" Oii•""" H~ilOn 0~'9•nG ' I U 0 0 I I I 0 II 11 O" F G BM>• •I Hou C..,,...lll 1un lFt1h chklOI Oo Chrlllen>et1 1 JM\\ lram P•unkoll (8ollr 1 .. 01 Oeo W111tt1nvion •• po.-lrom Plunkoll 18•11< ~tOI Oek FG !Mnr Jt O•k M•'Y" 20 'n\t UWQHOf\ t th.trn l8et\t .. , ... " ... OM! .. 11 Fttit OOwtl~ llu•IH!>•Y-'CI\ PeO•l>O fMCI\ lteturn Y•nh Pou•• )) •I )) Ill ,,. l)t Punt\ Fumbl~ 1001 Pen•tt•~·1Meb M H ·~111 1 1>-1 ' 4• 'SI I I 1-0 ....... I ·-·-· Lo-" RUSHING HOU•lon, C•mPl>ell, 11 '1, C•re>enter S • O•llond 1<1119 I) U, ••n Ee91te<> 1-, W!ll1t"'91on S II PASSING H~lon, Sl•bler, IS 1t.·114l, C•mpbell o I O O O•klend, Plunkoll 1 11·1 I .. AECEll/ING Ho.i•lon, 8erb4" 4 ll,• llonlro, l-t.•, C~per l-11, CMPonle< l-1' OO l•nd, Wtlinl"91on ,,.., Cho~t•• ' 11 NFl. Dleyotfs WILO CAliD l'LA\-Oft'S ,_., •• k_ ·~-c---• O•klond 11, H-ton I -leul c.Mw-• Ooll .. :M, Awn\ U 011/ISIOMAL l'L.AY0f'" '-' .... , .. o_,. A-tlcM C-ler-• 8ull•lut!><tn01"90(C.~nnelhl lp.m,1 ........ Ceotler-• MllllMM>I• •I PftlloOelpl\I• ICl\Onnel 1 •I • JO •.m I ,...., .• o- A-ic. c:.MW-• O•klll'd •I Cle .. 1-ICl\OnMI •el •.JO o.m > _.....c.fw•ce Oell .. •I Att.,i. 10..nnet J •t I p.m .> COMP•a•NCI'. CHAMl'IC*tftll'I .....,,,,..ti ~~· Tums tow••....._.. -~· Tums1011edlt• .. ml- WN• 10WL XI/ ....... J ... U 1--°"9-I AFC <_...... "'· NFC c ... mplon 1 Pm IPSTI COLLEGE 8owf roundup TOlllOtCT GA TOii 80W\. -~ ...... No. l Pltallwtfl ( I0-11 vs. No II So.All C.,ollNI 1•>1, 1a-.-1 IM 4 p,m I WUHlll'.IOAY ILUl.IM*Hl.T IOWL 1 .. ..-. No. ll Not1tt CMollNI (10-11 •• r .. " 11-•), (CIWIWWl llet Sp.m .I THUllSDAY COTTOte IOWL l•tD•llltl No. • Al-,._,, vs. No fl 8ovtot (10·1), (C-12•t 11:10•.m.I OtlMM•IOWL , .. ~, No. l Flo-Ide Stole 110 II vs. No. 4 0-lor.omo ,._,,, 10\0-1401 Sp.m .1 aOMIOW\. 1 ........... , No, ltt WMlll ..... 1"21 v~ Ho. S Mk hl-1 .. 11,(~ .. etlp.m I WOAalOWL • 1•-0...-1 No. I <Jeotvl• (I 1-01 vs. No 1 Hot.-. 0..... , .. , .... 10\e<WWI, .. ""·"'·' f'alDAY NACNIOW\. , ........ , l/lr9lftie T.cll <•>> "'· No JO Mloml. Fl• 11-l l 1~•1--1 $ATU•DAY,,,_. M l'.d-............. ........... , EoSI "'-w.11 lc:Mnnel211-1 ..UU.90W\. , ........... , East~ w.111 ... TU.DAY, JU. 11 MHIOlllOWL ............... 1 Noftll w."""" 1ow,_1 J .. 10 e.m. l WHOA\' ,JAH ... JAl'U80WL ( ..... ......_..~, Ee.e vs. We1ll HIOHICHOOL Alt-CIF DlwtelOn IV "'"''-~ ""· ....,_, ..... Ht. wt. a . £-Allen, .. ldWlfl ,,_ M l 110 S.. E-o.11.WltlttlerC"' ft.I JOS 5' E-NottOll, Pat.Cle.. MO 16S Sf T-All~, "'kdro t.·1 1'S St -t.-Ge&. -.10a11 tt-> no , .. G -T ... ,T._ S·ll ''° 5'. G -A~. 81111·.Hft t.-l 1IO S. C-Worten, 819 9Hr tt-t no Sf, t -todlM, llMlodyl-tt•l l•S S. • e -S.nttevo. 8oldWln I'll H ns Jr. s-s1-. Aov•' o.. s-11 1•s s. 1--1...,..,,.,.,, 9o1>,,l119 H 110 5'. e -itlclt•r. ,_,..,.. s~ 110 s.. 8-Ad•ms. At--ro M 16S 5' K--rll-, SI. llolle. 6-0 I.. 5' '°"" T •M DeMotte 0 1.-81•. Mlralnl• ft.> 210 Sr. Ol-M lllet,AIOMne 6·l JOS 5'. OL-Spwr, Al-.tdtro Ml ''° Sf OL-... ton. TeN<Mol ,., 715 5'. 01.-VAlclH. e.lclwln I'll Sol I 11t. $r LB-A-. tit lelr H llS 5' LB-SHCll, 8-l"91011 tt-2 212 Sr Le,...Hell.-cl, VollevCllr ft.I 101 s.. LB-I• ..... I.A-le S·ll llJ Sr. oe-..--. Bf..,,..., tt-o ''° Sr oe-N...,,, Ot.,... Lulll s-11 110 Jr 09-CUMCll, S.. ,loMtlft S-4 1'~ Jr oe-o ..... .-........, .. , 11S Sr. 01-n-. ,_.._. S·ll 00 Sr .... _ .. _y_·, .......... " .. 0.- .,.. ........ OA .. A ...... , -.. ..._..,.; II NII. I '**-'· n ~. It c .. c• '" --___ _.,_-._ -- ••• ,.., , .. .,.,., I.Mb'! -U 1 ....,., a. ............. ,,. recll c ... 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"" IO ...... -... tit ... '"" -f'AltAOIM CO\'• /1 _ .. ,.. UO ,.,. .. <Gd ·\-U ld f'O ar MUl"•M• (A,,..,1, .. J >• •"41'•'1 11' f9'L<ell. I llft9t W YllfTU•A \.J ..,,..,. •SI tOO <UO I hn11 •od 10t-\OIL SA .. TA MaMltA 15-o ........ I _. •"9'•" 1• <all(O be\~, l \end beU, I bet <e<ud• •bonito, u roo lhl'l, 112 M.C ••••• 10.MU lllNClll 19 fi'91to µs roo n o lO reo roo <OO, U 11"41 coo, t1 m.ochrol 6111"4 ...... 11'9'1 -L1tl•I Ml ........ •I hn{I Cad t i red tOO <00 112 •o<~ 11\11. ll '"•( ,., .. NBA WUTlaH CON,lal .. CI ~I 04w11 ... w I. 1'<1. GI S.n """'onto lS 14 ••I K•n••• CHy 11 u OS I ' I Hou,t0t• ll n 40S • Ut•n IS 1l )'II ''I Denve' 11 1• ))J lP , 0 •11•• \ l• 178 10 l'O<lflc Ot••••• Phoenl• l1 • llOll L• .. er• 7• .. •lO • GOIOl'n Sl•I• 10 II H• II PotU•nd " 70 .. , 11' I S•nOt-•• 70 .,. I) S..•111~ II 70 o• l)+ I EASTERN CONFERENCE All•"'lc D1•1•I• Pl11l•Ol'll'f\t• ll • 8'6 80\ton 11 • ,,, l ' Mt-,. V0tk ,. \l &4·· $ WHhlnvton •• 11 411 •• New Jet\e~ I? 11 JOI 11 Cefttnl Dtvlsl• M 1tw auktt ,, \I Ill 11\0t•n• 11 II SU Chit -" 10 ••• All•nlA 11 71 .. , 10 Cleveland 11 11 lilt l \~ ' OOlroll 10 18 10J II ~f'tSce•.., l.•ll•n 111, Pllll-lpflta 110 Ken\Os CHY 10?. N., .. J.,r ... ,'" T ....... '1Gamo 0•11•> •I Cle..elMl<I T-y'IGA"'H L.aaen at Uloll Dalla\ •I New Y0tk Oetroll •I AllMlla Mllweuue al Wa~NnQton S..•111• "4 SM! Antonio GolOltft St.le at KaMOs City Now Jeu ey at Cfll('90 Son 01e911 .. Houston lndl-"4 Oenwf' .... , ..... -,. Phll-lllf\lo •I Pwil_,d Ulrers 122, 71ers 111 PNl~l .... 11' -E,."'91t, C, Jottn•. 0.wllln• 11, ~ 12. r_, 12. e. J~ 11. Hott ... ti, Ilk ,,.,,,_, 4, 'lllla •. TotAlf •7 ll·1t "' • I.OS ANGIL.ES Cl>oflltt •. Wiikes >?,Ab cNl·J -1'. C•lo< •. Nlaon u , Coocier ti, Btewff 4, ---4. Undlf-r11«r • Tolol\ ••ntn. le .. .-,. o.rvn """-1""4• ,. l1 2) )7-"" L<K A_... l l 71 JS )I 111 ,,..,.......... .... Mollltls. Fou1eo;ou1 -· T-1 louh Pl\11-lpflia 71, L.ln ·-·~·-A 11,ICK JUNtOR COLLEGE 0 1lfterd IO, Seddteback 7t OIU•AaD Collk>s 10, lloss.r l t, Busic (Ill• •• ), CM!-"· Yln<enl 11, McAdory l , w. Cle-I, Kelly •. Holl 7, SADDLEeAClt -P . 0.C.SH 11. 8owl...ct 16, Tl\orrllon I( <Arni"• I. M<Clu•k•• II Ol•i n.-~d I, Jones, Hallttme; Oxnard, Jft.JJ. Endol<~llon: ..... Tolol foUfs: ~o 1•. 0•,..rO 1l. tout~d out Corn11" C!t•Clldleb•t •,. McClusaey ISeddlebeOJ. G•ii>•rd cs.a dleb«lll. lkitkd>i• 10 .... ,.,, THfS WEEK'S SCHEDULE College To,,19'11 UC ......... , Teu • Al.M •n 1<011 et..ic .. emi,.., -"' . u 01 s... 01990 et Clllloml•; Fr..,., SI •I N 11 llt10ls; Pcilk .. Port!-SI • S.n 0 ... 90 SI \f\, US.I~ at ~lllo CloUIC tn Sa,, Or- USC vs Mi-wt• ol Holldo CIHslc on LO\ A,.tes, ....,..S.LA• II-• v•. Holy (To" of L•H v_. Clouk, P-rd'"" v• NW L-1•1_,o of Ev-ville Ct•u•< rueidey UC lrvlMol l<OA Cl•»•< Ut•h SI el ,,._SI., USIU •I l.""9 8e.o<n SI Wis. ~..,, .. St.,fOnl, ,;w~ Ft_ SI al l<•n .. \ SI Ftldey -Porllond SI •I UC S•nl• Borb•r•. Utoll ., Nu•d• L•• VtOf\ Wyomino •Son Dteeo St S.tur•y-l'lortlend SI ol UC lrvont , /•JO, eu •l Ne1t..S.U• V-•· ~· Sound di UC s ... ta B•rlMltAl Lo"!! Bt1•<h SI •I Colorado; SI•"'°'" •I C". Ottoon •I Arl.-o; ~St ... Arlro,.. SI • UC S.n Ol990 .. F,_ Sf,; 5en Jow SI . .JI NhAd<I Aeno; S•trornenlo SI. •I Pu Iii<. Wnlll"9M'ft .. UCL,., Wasllln91on SI •I use · WebttSI, .. Vtol!SI .. USIU ... w.1 .. .. $1.: c.i P01, <Pomo,.., •• u 01 SM1 01990. Junior colleve Tonlgllt -O••net co .. 1 •I Bu•low Toutn•nwnl ; Sacldl•IN<k •I Sant• Ane ,_,....,,...,.p,ry\ Tutsd•y-Orenge Conl al 8e,.low Twrna-t; S.cldlttl>ot\ ot S•nta AM Tour...-. Frldey Ent Los Altll«IU ol 0'41n9f c .... 1.1:10. S•luruy~r.nee Co"'I el lmperlol Volley, 1;.~Wdl .. S.. 01090 ~ ... l.•.~--~lo.I JO """ echool TOlll9"t~E•-.. S.. Frencl1 ,_,... ,_.,,, S.. C-.. C-. Vltto T-_,,., 0c-. v...., •• vua. ,..,_ ,_,,.. -.. """",,.... 9Ncfl .. er .. ,_,,.. me"'· D•l'la Hllh a l Horlll Totr•ll<ot ToutM,,., F_ ..... V•O•y, Meter o.t, ltlwle, ~. Newpot1 H•,_.,, Coti. -.. et Ot .... T--*lt. T...,uy-st. Frencll T--llNlt; Otenp ,_......... -b; San C'"'*"-.. Cllula Viti• TO<ltl'l•"'•"I; VIII• l'•rl Tou•n•,,_. llNI•: HunllftttMI loacll • .,.. ,__...: INttll ,..,._, , __ ,,..,,,, ....... f'rld•Y-'°"-. Cle"""i. •I Cllul• l/l1i. Tou•,..-; ltumlfttte11 1oac11 et llf•• Te'utl'•mOfll; Ne"'"" HarllOr, trvl"•• Ul'l .. "'ty, 11119W 0.1 01 C-"'" T--menl; l~4IOl;H11Vle"f ltp.m .I. S.lur•t-at"N T--1 llMla; Cllule Vltto T~ tlflalt; ~ Ho111W, lrvl11e, Meter 0.1, Urth19rllty at Coft- Tour!IA..-t. V•ll•y, ~j ...... eNclll; ....... .., ....... _..... . '"'"°"-Etl•c>-,..,,n_al'll llNls; ....... ...-.. ........................ ,~ • ...,.....,_,. .. .,. *'"" ............... llMll IMllH OoO. TlllH...,_.....,_ • ......_, l'riM....-..-tcllMlolM, .....,_.__,,.,...,.IM UC lrvlM UI rd NHl WMAl C*li,•HMCI ....... ....... ..... ~., ... M.,ttOf'd ""~ Oetroll • I. ' .......... ta ' 4 , .. ltl to It 1a 4 IM"' •7 ,. 0 • "' 17! " II II 1 lt1 ,.. 2' • " 1 1,. 14' ts .._.,. ....... 8\ltlolo 11 I • 142 * 0 1"11-Mlt• 17 • • 11' '°' •1 loto,,lo IJ 11 S HI 15' JI lk>UOfl 11 16 1 111 12t JI Ou.lie< 10 17 t IU UI 2' CAMNILl~'lal .. CI l'etrlc• Dlwlai911 ........ _,. Ph11'96elpl\I• C•IG••Y Wt1f'll"QIOft NY A•"911" W L T GP GA"'' 2J I 8 1•• tit ~ ,. • j .. , .. u IS 11 I tU 128 • IJ I) 10 13' 11' )4 12 •• s •2t ... 2' ~I lOU•S V•nco"""' C"t<•CIO co•o•ooo Edmonton W'nr-.o.g Sm1'M Ol•lt .... 13 ' I) II 11 10 -+7 It • 10 , ,, S-•y"•S<er" 8ull"o S. Bo\lon, MonlrNI '· Ny A •'19<'" 1 > tit 11• SI ' ... 11• tJ ' ... ,,, )() • I'S U) 71 • Ill ,., 21 I IO't l llO II Phll-1.pll••'· EdmonlOfl I roronlO.l..c~J ------- Otiro•I •. Wlnnlpt'Q J SI I.out\ l, V•ncouv•• 1 TetNfM" Gomo No o•rtW• .clle<lultd l<lngt 4, BKIH 4 Sc• .. by f'•rlods SI. Lou•> l.O\ Aooeht\ l'lnl l'•tl.cl 7 I I 4 0 ] \ A I St loui•, Ftcler'o I~ 1Cu,,le, MIChelll Ill, I •S 1 SI LOUI>, ll•byCh 11 (unaUl\I ""'· 17 3' "-"""''' O•t>vch. SIL. 0 "· Wtll\ LA. > 10 furnWll, SIL. o 00. Tor rion. l A, • SI, Sult., SIL 10 OJ M Murpnv. LA. 10 01 Tutnbull, SIL, 11 '1 I Murphy, LA, II SI .. orwlcn Sil 18 41 *-l'•rlod l LO\ AnQttle--,. ~;mmf't )8 t T d y1or OIOf\"4!1, I 04 4 lO\ At-U•I.-. 010<\M 21 •Sommtr, I oylO• I, S i. S LO• ilnq•lr \. Sim mt < J'I ti<or.O, l Mutpl\YI. II 01 • !>I Lou1\ Dunlop 6 (un•\~t\trd) t 1 10 Pe.--•U1~ M MutptlY, LA 1 u T • .,,Of Lil ' 48. l•pc>1n1t SIL. 9 <II Patew Sil ' .a Well>. UI 11 01 Ou,,lop, !>IL lo ll 0 10ftM, lA II lO TllN'O f'•rlod 1 St l.Ckll\ lurnoull 11 IOunlopl ll 01 I Lo\ An~ff'\ fdylor 11 fD1onnPJ '' 74 Pfln•lll•\ lt"Wt\, l .A S 00 P Ue-y, Stl S 00 P••o . St l q 40 Shoh on QO•I ~I lo • 1• l 0' •no•'"'' 10 10.,. c;oe11 ... , Sr tou•' Ltul .. o\ A~t~\ l~\\ttrd il II Sll'I Austrellen Open 1•1-nel SUNDAY'SltlSUI. TS *-·-Si ... IH M•rk Edmofld>Oft def Jou-Lui> Clrrc •' 6 3.• • POIOUe>r•del l~<1nUtndl,I S,• l .W. , •• I . 8r..O Or•-11 <14>1 S•nclY MayOI ) • tt l , • l, 1 '· C;uittr:rmo vu • .,. dtt St•'-t Ooch<!rty, W . '"· 6 7, 6 I. John So\drl clel Jon•lhOn !>mllh, O.loull VI< tor P•«• Ott l<t•ln Curren.6-<l,6·1, •·> Orange Bowl junior tourney lotMl...,11 """"',., .... Si ...... J •OIUfT" Ny\tt()f!mdt-f C•t IO\ Cttstrlf•"· I ' I. ·-·· ,., ... , si,.., .. Su••n -.c•ttn dtl Att\Ola s. ... k, • l J 4 '. Sent• Anlte SUNDAY'S AISUI. TS I Tiii,_ Of 11.Uf 1-°"'Jflllt..i m"lltHJI F'''' r«t<f rmoor t W in e ll>elahaus•a11•1. / 60, • 10. l AO, Cn1,lla111 l ook rsn.,.,mak.,), 8 •0. ~ •O, Ciano (Pittttl. II .1(1 ~cond r<l(t Sall S..nd• IOtl•houuav•I. 10 10, •.10, 3 IO, 8ron1P Sia• IWlnlandl, I 80 • 00 8•rn>I01m Sh•dow IHawl•yl , 1 IO111M11Vdoubltl/ l)pa10\4010 Third '"<'"' lm~rid' Ltt\\ (P1nc.tvJ •OO, 370, ,., fflf'dA ft4)mf \Htt'ffh~·vl. l 10, 1 IO, Sol•r Gold I foro>, l 10 Fovrtn r.oc.e Slr•"9""'"" I H•wl•yl 10 60, & ,0, • 10 Our SI r~tl r •Qhl•• 10..l•hOU•Wl'f'I. 180. llO to Pop IP •• ro),1 80 f•tt" rM.,. J tt\l tony tValenzu.,.,a) I tO l.All, J 40 King GoGo I Toro I.• 40. 4 00 Dou bit 01><ounl IM<ll0911n11. 1 00 U e•aoa 11 61 Po•O"\ lO St•tn ,.. In Totalit y IV•l~n1~•·• ,., IO. SI 60 t• IO. C• Shat P I Pin< .v I I 10 • IO Rock Softly ISnoem•ll•• I. II 80 Sf"v~ntn rd(t Bold Ott•\'f f011v4'f\t 11 00,'10, S 10 Ltntf /olto IM<Canon1, • 40, I tO NI••"" 10..l•llou\Wyfl • 60 \S o•O• 17 11 l paid .,_,. 00 U PoO <,1• (I I S8< l l o.•O~ll 91060 •""' ll w1ntunq lttlleh Ct1vf' hOr~\) n P1t 1t. Su <On\o•.thon e>ah1 \\~\ M) w''" 111 w1nn•nq HCllf'I\ (four l'IOf'W-\J i1 P•c• Sia ..c:rdlt ., poot OAld \st.;, '4lrl1t\ 1'*0 w+nn•nq ••t'"-•h Ohr•" hc>f'\of'\ •nd • \<.ratcni E•ohth '~" Prem1tl'r M1n1\1r~ t P1n < •¥1. 8 60, • 10, I •O, G~•••Y l10r ~ ISl)oem•k~rl, '-00,, IO, "'°" IV•l~n111~1a1 •OO ' N•l"llh fftlf M M No\lrum ~~iowh•yJ s tO. • 10, > 60. Shashv lllpn~ml . 6 00. ) 00 Vtkln11 (P•n<•yl, ~ . .io u ~U\la ,. IOI pa10 lU SO AlltM•n<~ iq,oso Los Alem1to1 SATUltOAV'S LATI! ltlSUI. rs ltnlh •«~ Cattho Go IP•uli,,..I, 1' !IC> ~AO, l «I, Go '"' Wlnsum IBfOOkll, 810 3 t.11 Or Sheu 1ci..wt1>. 1 l>O n ~••<t• (4.?J oe•<ltee .. Alle"°•nce t .111' Lo• Alemltos •t•ndlnv• TilreootllSotlt,,..., JOCltl.Y' Donny CMclotu l(eMtlll Hert 0.My MllChtll 1C•""''"c1.,1 ... A .. pllPeulltW Sl•••Tr-~ A•t1.Adelr Jolt,, W•nJ A-r1e...- Oo,,•ldo.i- Sto,,1 111 1,.. lf'll \JI Jl \J II US 71 II U IOI 19 t• II """. tJ II 11 t .. I• u ' 1,3 " 17 • 14 10 11 II "''" .. 1 l 6 T•t.IHlltS SIM'-IMIMJN II> It It It ~ ll , ) 81eM S<llv-ldt (;llorltt 91ooMQul t l '4•"• ,.....,...,, JollnC...., .. ,,,....._ Misc. u " •• S4 • ' s 11 • 0 > ........... ,... ........ Mond9y, December 21. 1MO ~LVPILOT New Zealand laovertl•e captures .. Sydney race HOBART, Australia <AP> Maxi yacht New Zealand over· came Tasmania's notorious Storm Bay that forced a lone stall towintheSydney.to-Hobart yachl race today. Crossley missing, Gauchos tumble New Zealand, the peoples' boat with more than 200 owners, look line honors when she crossed the finish 20 miles ahead or her nearest competitor, the Sydney s loop Helsa! II. The winner finished the race in l wo days, 18 hours. 45 minutes and 41 seconds. rifth fastest time in the 35·year history oHhe event. The giant blue·hulled s loop failed by just more than four .hours to set a race record after be ing becalmed in Tasmania's un· predictable wate rs less than 40 miles short of the finish for most of the night. Wh en the l4l -metcr Ne w Zealand, s uperbly helmed by 32-year-old Aucklander Peter Rlake. rounded Ta~man Island late Sunday she had more than 41 :z hours lo com plete the remaining 42 miles and smash the record After maintaining a n avt:rage s peed of morl' than 10 knots for most of the race. 1l s eemed the r ecord was we ll w1 th1n New Zealand's ~rasp. But soon after Ney, Zealimd rounded the island to he~jn the fina l leg a t ross Storm Bay and up the Derwe nt Ri ver, thl· wind dropped and the giant yacht was becalmed. She wallowed in lht! bay for sevenil hour:-. IJt>fore the breeze picked up s uff1 t·1en1ly t<1 <'itrry her acros~ lht• frn1:-.h Basketball When your No. 1 scorer and ... rebounder doesn 't play, you know you 'r e in trouble - especi'ally when playing a good team . And that's what h appe ned lo Saddleback College S u nday night in the opening round of the San ta Ana College basketbl:lll tournament. Curtis Crossley. a 6· 7 standout from Kankakee, UI had spent Christmas in his home tuwn, but was expected back Saturday. But he failed to s how and the Gauchos dropped a hard-fought 80·79 overtime dec is io n lo rugged Oxnard Sunday night C r ossley is ave raging 16 points and seven rebounds pe1 ~ame Stall, Saddleback appc<1red lo have it won more than onc·e With 14 second!. left 1n regula lion the Gauchos had a f;!)·65 lead Then. Oxnard fouled the Gaul·hos' Pete OeCas a!-. /\ ~I µercenl free thto"' shooter DcCasas missed , Oxnard re hounded, took two shot!\, hilling the second al the buzzer Then rn regulation t h e <iauC'hos Jumpe d to a fi ve point lead. only to see that fade to 7!J 78 with 43 second:-. tu go SaQ> dll•bac·k turned 1t over, Oxnald m 1!-.Sed a shot with ll se<·ond.!. to go, but got lhe reoound. They got orr anuther .!.hot. with seven '>N'<1n1.h left anti missed ag:un Bui Oxnard ·~ c;reg Vinl'ent wai. fouled and made both free Utah tops Fullerton From AP dispatches l'Olrfl.AND Oanny Vranes popped in 17 points. gr<ihbed 16 rebounds and blocked rour shots to pace l9th-ra nked Utah to a 76· 70 victory over Cal State Fullerton Sunday 1n the consolatiotl se mi finals of the f'ar West Classic college hasketball tournament ,.__, throws with two second!! to go to win the game Saddleback was led by Kevin Bowland with 16 point11 while Bob Thornton 114 J, Hichard Diaz ( 12), OcCa s us I 11 1 and Tom McCluskl•y 111 ) also hit m dou ble fi itures. . T he loss !Jul the <;a U<'hos 111 today's cunsolution round at •I o'clotk 6 uddlcu;ic·k is now 10 '' on tht• season wh1h· Oxnard '" fl 2 UC I faces Texas A&M Bll.J.I Nc :~ :\11J111 l < In int· f lH'l'" :.Hl un<klNilf'd 1111 T exas A&• M t1•am "'IH·n th1 Anle4't<'r:-. npen plJy 1n th•· K'''' Cla!>Sll' hal>kt•thall 1nurn111111·ri t 111n1~h1 :11tlll'I 111 1\·1·r:-.11 } 111 1\11111 Ian a 1·::1.,tl'rn \111111:111 :1 will pld) 1111' l '111v\•rs1ly ol :\lontan:i 111 ''"' :-.1•eond gam1· ton ight a nd f11 ..,1 round \'.lnllt'r.., <.1 ntl lo:,1·r" \'>Ill nll'd Tut·-,da y 111~h1 U111h l1r·1 gu mt''i 111 llw l f1111·n :cnH•nt will Ill' hr1>:.11l1·a-,1 111 1• liy KW\'.,, l<wl11 I F:V1 ltl!\1 110111i..:h·l Jl Iii Tht• 1\111•'.tll'I'" I•\ •I 1 :11 ,. 1'<•111 in~ off a h111111· 1"'''"1 1 ..... 1 \!•111 rl~•) n1i.:h1 011•1' \11 ""''"' h,,,,..,;, ('1(1 . llfl il '1'1•'( ...... ·\/l:~I l ' 1.1111..t·d llnh II tht l l'I INll .111tl l:!lh 11~ ·\I' Fullerton meets Princeton this afte rnoon for l s eventh place. Princeton fell to Northwestern in overtime. 72-68 . · After trailing 38-21 at half, Fullerton closed steadily an the early part of the final half. and trailed 46·35 with 13 04 remain an~ COLLEGE BRSHET88LL TOnlGHT! But ~·ott Marten. who had eight of his 14 points an the second half, started a break with a steal and climaxed it with a 12 foot Jumper. a nd the t:tes led 48·35 with 12:22 lcft A Vranes tip-in on t ah's ne xt possession gave the Western Athlel1t• Conference ravontes a 15·point I advantage. The Tit ans didn't threaten until the fin al three I minutes Trailing 74·60, Fullerton scored eight s traight µoints to cul the deficit to 74 -68 with 51 I s econds to go David Gilreath mude a steal at mid· court. but missed a la y up with 32 seconds to go, which would have cut the Utes' lead lo four points Pace Mannion iced 1t for lJtah with two free throws 16 seconds later •at~P r• in high gPar POHTLAND Unbeaten. fourth ranked Oregon State improved its chance for a leap in na- tiona l college basketball ratings with two strong weekend victories. I ··Oregon Stale is J USl a great basketball team." said Rhode .Is land Coach Claude English. I whose team was crushed 103·55 by Oregon State en the semi.finals of the Far West Classic in Portland S unday. The Beavers used their second team for most 1 of the second half against Rhode Island T he 7·0 Beavers w ill meet instate ri val Oregon. 7 I, in the tourname nt finals today Tfttnr••r~ up•rf S "" Dmb NEW ORI.EANS Forward Howard WOO<i scor ed nine of his 22 points in a six-minute stretch of the first half to blow open a close game and lead Tennessee lo a f,S.53 upset victory over 11th-ranked Arizona Stale in the Sugar Bowl tournament. In an earlier first-round game , Duke rolled over lhe University of Ne w Orleans 77-63 . Tennessee ha d just overcome an early Arizona Stale lead to lake a 9-8 edge 12 minutes into the gam e when Wood started his streak. When he finished. Tennessee was up by 10 points. 23·13 UlllUERSITY TEH85 8&f'l Of Clllf. US. HOR CL8551C IRUlftE s:oo Pf'l Sponsored by: Republic Insurance Brokers Denny's Restaurants and McPeek Chrysler Plymouth Executive Producer: Roy Englebrecht ~ :rhis \\'eeks Specia l 1976 <'ADii.i .. \(' St:\'11.1 .... l.\•a1h .. 1 1·11H·tt~I ""11tnc .11\,1 ilr1.t1 ,., 11111,,11 1111, Sl'.11~ &i 1\\l t-·~1 'll'rt'!1 II ~ ll.11 ~ I 'Ill 1d.1\r I t&l7l'K l'1 ~6995 Ten.nessee's othe r starting forward. Dale Ellis.!!:===-=-====-:::_---..----~-----=--....... also finished with 22 points. Sara,,,.,. Sf."" '''P SAN JOSE -The San Jose State Spartans got 17 points from senior center Sid Williams en route lo a 59-39 victory over UC Rlverside. A tough, full -court zone press by both teams forced 49 turnovers in the lo'-1-scoring game. The many turnovers and poor shodling by both teams contributed lo what the Highlanders ' Coach John Masi called "the s loppiest game l'veeverseen." Senior forward Doug Murrey was the only other Spartan in double figures with 15. UC Riverside's junior guard Melvin Bibbs was high scorer for the Highlanders with 14. Basketball scores Noftll""'tm 72. Princeton., (0 TJ (cMnl911AI ....... ) Ot....,.7J,Ot.U1J 0 1'4190ft SI. !Oa, IOIOIW I 1land U IATU•OAY'ILATI •UUL TS .... 8 '1'U·H.-il 100.MIUC:.ll ... I& TOUllNAllill"H· NC..Qletlofte n, Nef1M"'l•tn t2 lllnll Tet'\Olelt.~.,.(tl\lrdl ....... c .... .. ,."' ...... '---•tl1'11t.C~nt-•1• -•JIMt•ITtOll C:.. ... °""**"' Nllla 14, WHt Ollf'MAfl ........ ..... JunlorC....-.... .... , __ __ , ........ t O•l'Ofll •• ~kf'IOTI C yp.-. .. ttl, F11llor1on ao On Any Full Facility Membership • lo C.:hmnr111t1,~11p H.11q11•11h.1ll ! ·~1r1• • NAl I 111 LJ~ I IJt llPMI NI • !::\()I'<~·'""'""'" l l.1""' . • l~1 M"'"' Olv1111111. 1'1w11 & ..,11111f,,, ~ • p,., Shop • Rl'•l,1111.,111 1\,11&.!-11.r(1.d l.L~lll•J!' • 1~11~1111•111~ I.,, 1,.., 1.111li1i." '"' 1\11·11,\ V.••11t11 • :1 5Mlli \11~1.'VIMll l .. 11h S601 .lam bone Road Newport Beach Call 752.0565 for addttlonal lnfonaaUon ' Cambrldoe ~iA'i(' I Caffibridge ~ ~ ~ t::i ::::> -IOO's j ----r ----I ---- f -----Only - 4 mg tar -· ... Cambridge ! ....:.J • 0 nty 1 mg tar . ·~ ewnog U you hopt to add tome ell <'ltemt.1nt """ year'• boUday entertallnan.i. er•'• a IC>Od 1u11f' tlon Try yocul'1 Ml Tim nte'tpe ts aun l<> make ~ •ton'• re1ttv10cl memorabl Tiw MW ftO& li. rull or )'OIUrt '» an)' nulntnlli. 1 dtlklo~ and .ti& y omue Ol on\) Wlll )'Our t hlldren love 1u. Ute. but YOiUI"\ IS good for them. oo for adu.lt5 who mt&hl enJoY a pir1led version of the treat. JUSt add dash o( brlllld)' or rum 1f )QU want to toast the N~w Yelu 1th style. do 1t w1tb this la.s ty dnnlt YOGURT NOG 1 S.Ouoce ''up vanilla yogurt 1 egg 2 tablespoons honey Nutmeg or cinnamon to taste. Put yogurt, egg and ,honey in a >lender . .Blend at hi&h speed until rothy. Pour into a tall glass and 'prinkle nutmeg or cinnamon lo aste. Serve immediately. Makes l erving. SPARKLING CITRUS PUNCH. 1 dozen Valencia oranges 2 lemons 1 quart cranberry juice cocktail. hilled 2 bottles mineral water. chilled Assemble citrus juicer. Juice ranges and lemons at number 4. dd cranberry juice and mineral ater. Stir Yields 25 4-ounce serv- ngs . l DEC. 29, 1980 COMICS CS TELEVISION C6 MOVIES C7 ENTERTAINMENT: . ,Persistence h~ paid off for th~ new Flash Gord0n, actor Sam J. Jones C7 .... Banana nog ~.-, l By combining fresh'\ruiis • .and mlneraJ water in your blender, you · can.A*1~ua~·the Jiut..cuatural touch • to yollr bO'tfaay dlilln'g-and entertain- ing. The local produce department is the place lo start. Look for fresh fruits that are available in abun- dance al the peak of their flavor. The main ingredient ia your imagination. BANANA NOG 3egp 2 tablespoons honey I/• cup nonfat dry milk I/• teupooo rum extract dub cinnamon 1 banana 1 cup ice cubes 1 cup mineral water Put egp, honey, nonfat dry milK, rum extract and cinnamon into blender container. Cover and process at Frappe until smooth. Remove feeder cap, add banana through feeder cap opening. Add ice cubes through feeder cap opening. Put feeder cap in place and process until smooth. Reduce speed to Stir, add mineraJ water. Yields 1 quart. STllAWllE&KY SQUlaT 1 cup vanilla yogurt 6 fresh ripe strawberries 61h ounces chilled mineral water Assemble blender. Put yogurt and strawberries into blender container. Cover and process at Mix until smooth. Reduce speed to Stir , add mineraJ water. Garnish with a fres h strawberry. Yields 2 cups. Cheers 'to the · New Year At no other time of the year are people more generous. warm and sharing than during the holidays. H's a time when the welcome mat is always out and festive foods are in abun- dance. Being prepared with the just-right food and drink for holiday festivities could become a fuU - time job, but few hosts or hostesses really have the time, particularly during the holidays, to de- vote to extensive menu planning. Many rely on popular tried-and-true recipes that have become noted favorites. However, part of the holiday fun is ex- perimenting with new recipes and even new food products. Consider, for exa'f~e, the following easy recipe for Golden Frui imch. Using only four ingredients. the punch bouts ·se~en fruit flavors. Five of them -orange, tangerine, lemon, lime and grapefruit -are conveniently provided by a frozen conceQlrate. The other two. apricot and pineapple, round out the sub- tle blend of fruit navors. Keep all the ingredients on hand so you can readily be prepared for those holiday im- promptu parties -arter tree-trimming, or before going caroling, or when unexpected guests drop in. Lemon Snow Bars are a de- li cious complement to the punch. GOLDEN FRUIT PUNCH l can (12 ounce) frozen concentrated fruit beverage, thawed and reconstituted 2 cans ( 12 ounce each) apricot nectar :14 cup (6 ounce) white"rum <optional) l can 02 ounce) pineapple chunks in natural syrup In punch bowl, combine aJI ingredients ex- cept pineapple : mix well. Chill; just before ser v- ing, add fruit. If you prefer to omit rum, add l quart club soda just before serving. Makes 32 servings I If.I cup each) LEMON SNOW BARS Crust: ~ cup butter or margarine, softened I lf.i cup all-purpose nour I/• cup s ugar Filling: tr ate 2 eggs, slightly beaten o/4 cup sugar 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour 1/4 teaspoon baking powder 3 tablespoolfs lemon juice from concen- Confectioner's sugar Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In 1 lh quart mixing bowl, combine crust ingredients. Mix on low speed until blended, about 1 minute . .Pal in- to ungreased 8-lnch square baking pan. Bake near center of oven for 15 to 20 minutes or until brown on edges. While crust bakes, combine filling ingred1ents and mix well. Pour filling over partially baked crust. Return to oven for 18 to 20 minutes or uritil set . Sprinkle with confec- tioner's sugar. Cool and cut into ban. Makes 16 bars. CIOLDaEN'S HOLIDAY PUNCH 2 cups wild berry drink 2 cups citrus cooler drink 1 can (12 oU.nce) lemon-Ume soft drink Pour the wild beM'y drink into one lee cube tray; freeze. Just before Ml'Vlq, comblne tbe citrus cooler drink trltb the lemoa·llme. Pour over the wil~ berry i ce cubM in tall 11111e1. Makes 4 aervinp (about~ cup ucb). BLOODY llA&Y roa A atOWD t cu ( • ounte) tomato Julee t bottle ('7'Ai ounce) lemon Juice from concentrate, tbawed 2 t.ablMpoana Wo~n naff • 1 teMpoclD ........ aalt ~l teaspoon bot pepper' HUODlftl In ptteber, combine all iDCNdi•ta ; Dllx well. To .-... pour over lee and 1anailb witll celery, carrot, or ccblnt at.lcb. Makes 18 aervlnp ( ~ cup eacb . ·-·-. I GRAPEFRUIT OPENER 3 cups chilled grapefruit juice from con- centrate 1 lf.i cups or l can ( 12 ounce) ginger ale 1 cup gin ln pitcher. combine au ingredients; mix well. Pour over ice. Makes 6 servings (about~ cup each ). ORANGE EGGNOG PUNCH 4 eggs, separated lf.i cup granulated sugar l 'Y'.i cups milk In smaJI m1xmg bowl, beat egg whites until stiff. but not dry. Gently fold into orange mix- ture. Serve immediately. If desired. garnish with nutmeg. Makes 16 servings (about 1h cup each). PUNCH CAllEllNET 1h cup lemonade crystals 1h cup water 'n cup brandy I/• cup Curacao or Cointreau I fifth Cabernet Sauvignon or Zinfandel l lf.i cups whipping cream wine 1 can (6 ounce) frozen concentrated 1 bottle (23 ounce) sparkling water orange juice. thawed and undiluted In punch bowl. combine the lemon.ade In large mixing bowl, combine egg yolks, crystaJs, water, brandy, Curacao. ~nd wine: sugar , milk, whipping cream , and orange juice mix well. Gradually stir in the sparkhng water. concentrate; beat with rotary beaters until Add a chunk of ice or ice ring mold. Makes lS thickened and foamy. Chill tmtil servin1 time. servings (about l,'l cup each) .................................................... !'l'!'l!"""""~· Customers queue up in Corona del Mar to purchase holiday hams. Coast residents ham it up. ) lly JOEL C. DON 6'1119Delly .......... ~queue of holiday tr.me wallinl to cross the Newport Bay Bridfe bun 't been the only line alone Pacific Coast Hipway. Just a few miles south. there has been another Une of aorta. . . walt.lq to pick 'lP 6· to 10-pound bunks ol ham. TDOtJGBO'lJT TB& bollday MUGG, Unea of more than a block •• wrapped lD and out· side 1b1eJ BB• Rama la Corona del liar. . hundreds of l)()Unds of harm were also bein.z shipped from the Corona del Mar store to homes lhroufhoul the country. The boUday rush puts the pinch on the mailinfs, except for special de- liveries to local businesses. Nlx says the bama draw the thronJ(s ot pea- .pie because of the special taste ol the cured and alued meat. He doesn't see much compeli- Uon wttb the canned variety. CICLll:BIU'l'IES OF put and present aaree. O.J . Simpeoll and Harriet Nebcln in line fo; maybe IOO hama. per da, -and ~·· wbole ettber a shank portlob (at 8 to 10 pounds) or the hams," says store llaaacer Stan Nla. butt (8 to a pounds). 11.t ~·J:: ~~half ol • w~ ----· "",, .. .., ... r~bQrlmllrrof Die conven ence;'be 1m;..., . ~=:iiilGCii· 1ay1. "You cet a meal reedy to eat and sliced Tbe baml, wt.Ida ..S tMn eooked for you." for 30 houri lD a Detro&\. pl•, are ...... wltb "People tbiU they ue .-.. to have to •ait honey and aplces and •plnl-aliced at t.be lD· in line for an boar of 10," adds company Vice dlvtdual outlets. President Crall Martin. "But they are out there for 20 minutes at tbe mott." Up until • Chri1tma1. .. , -·----------..-.~..,., ---------·· .. ,. .. ___ _, . .,,. ........ _, Q DAil Y PILOl ..... 0111-=•'• o(j. Mak popovers a rly f~r le i urely bruncl1 l\nJ<> a bru te in Yt>Ur frantic hohd•y 11ch.-duh· b a•Hn& • malw abc-a1t lt'&lurt'I) brwlr b rh.-ta1tlf'r fu r lht i1a.nt P11It) POIJCI\ t•r 1 011 b t" m • d l' I h 1• 11 I 61 h I bt>fort" II louki. ~1w1· I 161·ula1 "'ht•n 11 r un1"" HUI ()f lht U\'fll ft"lll m1nutN l.att-r 11 -.111 ddlatl' ~ho-.11 1 bul 11 ,\II\ ...,.111 ' •'I t dt'lll IOU\ I ht' '' .,1n ilh hl.rnd p U ~ \\ \ l I b U t l C I I ' cnh.rnn.J "'1th 11 '"''> \;f 1H1brrr\ dn·~·d n g ni.1tlt· "•lh "'holt' bt-11\ ,., 11nh~r1 ) .. .iiul't' lt>rnun 1u11 t' bro"'n .. u~"' .ind cJ 'J.ILlbh VI l \o\O of 11r;uig1• lfll \(lrMl llqllt'UI I u "l' Jlon.: "1lh ('(11 '''" :iot'n <' J l 1 -.11~1r 1-tt'lt't\ ( 11ff1'l' l'dkt' thc1l 1 ..in h " 11\Jdc d da) ..i hl'<lli lit \. "I\ l' ffit' I ge fr11 m yuur frcclcr l'ART'V POPOVl'.:KS 6 la1 ~t· t-~g1> I t·up a ll puq.111:.c flour I cup milk 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted 1 2 teas poon 1>alt 2 tab l e s poon :. 'egetable shortening I can (16 oun ces ) "'hul~ bt'rry cranber ry !'.;JUce 2 tables poon s oran~e na vored liqueur labl<>spoon lemon JUll'l' l tablcs1>oon brown !.ugar 12 teaspoon fresh grated lemon peel Confectioners ' sugar •embl~ i.a milk 11hakc 3Cll(ll 3 tlHll. H &Um•tcd I quurt mHk• • I . l'UI> ltUtUtr 1 I I I I' ll p 0 0 0 5 ~ 11n11lu • ., h •1t1>poun ('Tl'IHO or tartar '~ t•u11 rum, brandy, "hit.kt'} t11 flav11rt>d h 4Ul'Ur OVtlOOUI \ v111t van1ll1.1 l\'l' \'I \'IHI\ utmc.i. u11ttvnul In larMl' vunch bowl blt'nd Lu.:t-fht'r whole l'U l> t'g& yolk!., milk, ~ug u 1 and vanilla In largt• mixing bowl be at l"g .: wtutes and cream of tartar al high speed un 111 s tiff but not dry, JUSt until whiles no longer i,hp when bowl 1s tilted G enlly but thoroughly Cold whites into milk mixture. Chi ll sever a l hours or overn igh t. t f'oam will form on top 1 Add rum. if de· sired, and s tir to blend Seoop ice cream into punch bowl. Sprinkle with nutmeg, if desired. Serve immediately. 2 quarts or 16 1 1~-cup ) servings• • Recipe may be doubled • • For richer drink. substitute 1 cup half and half or light cream for 1 cup of milk NUTrY NOEL DIP Whether you r holiday plans call for a cocktail party or a classic holi· day feast . s tart the f es t i vi ties with a tasty dip. This one has a sur· pris ing, yet pleasing. hlend of navors. 2.~1 cup ma.vonnaise I jar <5 oun ces ) Neufchatcl pineapple cheese spread 6 hard-cooked eggs, s liced 1 '2 cup sliced stuffed ~reen oli ves (about 20 olives) S-.~~A·letno '·'• c-'"" .$169 Wot•, Add•d 1-.... , f'-::- In a blender container rombine eggs, fl o ur, -;alt. milk and butter Process 30 th 45 seconds or until s mooth. Cover and let stand ~10 minutes al room temperature or u p lo 24 hours in the refrigerator llcat oven tu 450 dcgrct·s F Put I tablespoon s hortening in t:aeh l)f two ~l 1nth oven proof skillets o r p i e pans. hea t 5 minutes in ovt•n Pour baller evenly 111to pa n ,, hake 15 m1 nutt•s Hl•ducl' heat to 350 degrees P and bake 5 to 10 mmutes longer or unt i l popovers a r e puff ed and go lde n brown 1 .. cup c hoppe d1 pt.>(' a ns Mix m<1yonna1se and i P.!!!!~!! In a ~a uccr>an . heat c·ninberry s<iuc<.>. orang<.> liq ueur, lemon juice and peel and brown s ugar, hring lo a !'.immer ove r moderately high heal. When popovers are done, transfer to serving platter. put.ng one on top of the otht•r Sprinkle with confectioners s ugar and serve with warmed i-auce. Makes 8 scrv· in gs. CRANBERRY RELISH COF•'E ECAKE 3 cups nour 2 cups sugar 3 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 4 eggs l cup vegetable oil •1. cup orange juice l tablespoon vanilla extr act 1 t 14 ·ounce> jar cranberry orange re lish Sugar glaze Chopped walnuts P reheat oven to 375 degrees F Grease g. inch tube pan. In a bowl sift together flour, sug. ar. baking powder and s a il. Add eggs, oil. o ra n g e juice a n d van ilia . Beat with a wooden spoon until well blended-. Spoon v.J of the batter-Into greased 9. inch tube pan. Spread half of the c ranberry o range rehsh over bat- ter being careful not to have any touch the sides of the pan . Spoon in another third of batter ; s pread wilh secon d I ayer of relish. Top with remaining batter. Bak~ ror' 11A hours or Un· ti l do n e . Coo l 10 cheese spread together I Reserve 2 cente r egg s li ces and 3 olives for garnish. if desired . Chop rem aining e g gs a nd o lives and s t i r into m ayon nai se mixt ur e a long with pecans. Cov· H and chill to b lend flavflrs. Garnish with re· served egg a nd oli ve s lices. if desired Serve a s s pread for crackers and party rye or use as dip for fresh veget able dippers or chips. About 3 cups. SEASON'S GREETINGS STRATA With last-minute shop. ping. drop-in guests. and s pur -of ·t h e · m o m e n l gatherings, it's a relief to be able lo prepa re a main dish in advance! This one makes the most out of leftover poult ry and bread, too. French bread, s liced 11'.z·inch thick 1112 cups chop ped cook ed chicken o r turkey OR 2 cans CS ounces each) boned chicke n , undr ained 2 cups (8 ounces> s hredded sharp Chedda r cheese. divided lh e u p c ho p ped ~reen pep per 2 cups (8 ounces) instant minced onion 6 eggs 2 cups milk -~ teaspoon c ul'r y powder v. teaspoon dry mustard Parsley sprigs. op· tional er -Up , ....... , 29c • ,.. O..• ""' o._.~ ~ ._, I llt•t .,.__ ... ~ o. .. ...... ---....... ., .... o.. ..... Mo--wqto' ._., 1•1i1·tto-o •• , ..._... U t Wh I T s· I . s..itw•v Ckta1i1r lean 0 e Op ff Oln Beel Loon 10 ? lb$ lb s199 S..ltwdY Ouallty Lran fletl $2 94 Whole fi1e1 Butt, Lo•n T•OOf.<•om ? P1«:r lb Pro Appto• 1 lb S•lf R'b E St k 5.11...,y 0.111011 s3s9 I ye ea lun flHI Rib ~.. Ill • Ground Beef p'""'~"' OonNot E.ettd n' fal • Yellow Onions US Ho I Black Eyed Peas Fresh Green Cabba e •lb s1ss lb w--.. ~, ..... .... \Mft Ctn.• ...... ~ ..... ,-...--.o... ........ Make-o,head tf'eats_ tor Y::'~K­g~t,~ ~"fl:TilTed CT~nberry relish. .*258 ny 'light ~ggc • • 1.Kky f11m s P1omt Fresh Roasters c..111oon11 Gtown lb Smoked Ham Slices f;MmtfJolln 8on< In II> Sliced Bacon I lb s~"' AorN "'o Shri mp Meat Sc41tn a..., f•G1"1 e QI Coolird & Pttfed Prg 89' s1s9 s129 s19s California Red Grapefruit Egg Plant ~s= Orange Juice .,;~':"~ 25'. " 29' = 89' . 'lraditions ••• start at your dinner table. Baked 30 hours! •Honey 'n spice Glaze •Spiral sliced for easy ser vlng Perfect for • Whole or hall hams New Year's Eve • Nationwide shipping service Parties! • Full service Dellcateaaen , • Old Worlt1 Cheese Shop . p~.~;:;" 1 'f lf~Y~~·j~i::..s .·. ~ Closed 3 p.m. Dec. 31 ~--~ 'U J100 I. COAST HWY~ c-.. .._. ~ 67J.f000 1 ~ . J4611 LUMONO WAY • 1&. TOIO ID., I&. TOIO, P'HOHI IJ7.JU J · [ lt06t l lACH ILYD ............. HUHTIHGTOH MACH,'"°"' 141-1175 . ~lso Anaheim, 'OranQe, ·Rancho Mirage, La Habra, San-Diego,· ' Westlake VIiiage, North Hollywood, Woodla nd Hills, Santa Monica, Pasadena QOOQQO~COQOODO c:x:>OCJOOO~ EOPLE ALL ALONG THE ORANGE COAST RELY ON the Daily Pilat O.Co, Mot•' M.-dhJ"' S-1• 99c ,..,.,. o.•··~••d -;:--.c. ·-,-~( ~ F Po ato Chips , .... .-.~ ~&Be . ..... , ... ~ ._.. ""'°' ....... O.•• ·-"' IQ.,.., p. ......... ..... _ _. . --, ..... ,_ <fels~~.m:,nn:~ ~ ·----. ei1ft'l1eman'n' s Margarine ~-°" ............. ---~ ...... , ...... ........ 0.. • "' Solod _.._ ·-~- sac I•• c. ...... ·'·"li11nn I,,,, /',-(,., .... ' . . 8'!.18uy $199 ~ Cheddar Cheese ~=~~:::i\ .., ~ p t o· lUCet~r 1E;cro1 Ctilf'I 8 01 49' ..-. ar y 1ps ano Gu.umoiri c.1100 ~ ._,.. Lucerne Yogurt %--:i Mar-kes Burritos ''o'"' %--¢Celeste Pii.za r•OJen ~ 0 . Scolcn e.,., ...., range Juice f•OJcn 3 h1 s100 '""'Oft\ 5 ~°'s 1 00 "'oi 101 S-i 29 ~o I 1~69' ~ • s..1 .... ~ "'o s109 ...-. Trash Can Liners 10 GJ.1..., o• 10 ~ 1 2 e °' s100 ....., Pretze s P11r, pi111e ""os ~~Cottage Cheese Luam• %+0 L'ucerne Buttermilk .-l Pl Dicta -::-as a mas 'o""''Of< fQI I Co1v Presto logs r.,, Flex Shampoo SA11Wlf CIMAllT9 l .. NICI ... nom DOIB..E CABll llBIATE lvt I ~ ... , ... ., u ..... ,.,..,,...-t•• • ........ 0000 .. -.,,. .. ,.. ..... , \e•• ,_, nu h ...,. • .,.,. .. ,.. ,._,_ ,t'I .. '\ ff\.e ................ '""• ,..... •• ,._, .......... ,.., .... .... .. ,... ........ .,., ........ ·~ ......... ,.., ............ , ··-- ··"~ ..... "4it~ ... -· ...... ..., ••• .._... " ... ' ..... ti ••••• m inutes ; remove fro m pan. Cool. Spread with g laze. G rea~ -a 12 x 7\h x 2· Inch baking dish or pan. Line with enough bread slices to cover bottom. Combine c hicke n, l lh c ups of t h e c heese, green pepper and onion. S pread over bread layer . Top with enough additional bread slices to cover chicken mix· l ure. Combine eggs, milk. curry powder and mustard. Pour oves bread s lices. S prinkle with remainln1 Ya cup c he ese. ·Cover a nd r e f rigerate several ho ur& 01 overn l&ht. Russet Potatoes us Mo 1 lb 35' House Plants 6-lndl lldl '499 Scotch Boy Ice Cream Vat11ll• ~It $149 ~!Ion ~ ..... "" .. t .. ,..,,._ -4 11' ~·· ·~ ·····" ... t.i ..... ~··· .............. ,..,., ................... ,.... "' ...... OOUlll , ... Dlflf9fN(;I ..... , • ~-·· • °'-""""' c.-.1 .... To prepar e s u gar. combine one cup s ifted c o nfectioner s· sugar with 2 tablespoons milk until ble nded . Spre ad • ..pver top of coffeecake ; s prinkle with chopped ---~~--R!~~ one 9-Jn.clL A C\IP OF CHEER Toast ttte RDon-wttti a special beverage. This deli cious variat ion o f t ... , ... tiona l eggnog re · Bake uneovered in pre· heat ed 325 de1ree F oven until golden brown b'Olll ~ s-in T'ilUl e s . G arnish wlt)IJar sley sprigs, ii deslr . Make 6 servings. We've Given LOW PRICES• New Name ••• I..._ ________ _.. ·---·-·"-·- . , ... ..,... ... ....,,......_. ........ c..t .......,. L..-..... •14.._....., ..... ,.....L..-•S-.AM ....., .. Le ,_......._ ..... -. \..-. -•J.U.'1_~ ·~ ... ....,, ....... • JH I ,._......, s.te._ _ ---· _ ' ., ....... -~ , ... -............. _.._ __ .. . • f 000 Nut~i 1nor than Pf!Wtogs NutlDt'rls 11 trMhuon Oil bOUcbl)' l~r.)' U U Certalnly a bowJ ot •I 1•01 woWd m nailed whhout • lavl h apnnkl In& ol \Jw Neat.It' ap1 ct• Wbat mlU'\)' folh ha \>t'D \ di ('0\0Tt>d hov.t>\.-t"r 111 lht' Wtarm lnc "' .-ell 11p1r> "•""' It un IH to otht>r dl~ he ~ beauufuJ uam plf' b shown belo v. Nut mee C'C'nte'd Chu<'ul •tt< Nut Roll lJ an l'lt·1an1. atr tt-mpt11llun a b11 hk~ a Jll'!('tal c ho olalt' sourn ..... Tap~ .u,>1.U\d • fUHna of nul nw.: 1otnd ' a n 1 l l ii p e r r u m ,. d v.h1ppeJ ru'.'am l b t!' rt u t "' .. t: ~ ,,. • c: d '"'"''°' Hon Ima ~ yrc p.~rt'J at ,our le1!>un· th\' da~ b.ll(Or \' orlll r.-fngt•rated i\\ t!c.1\lng hOlt' OU maeht »bk how man> 111 your gu\':,t.s can I guesb ~h..at the p1cy d1r ferPnC\' lb I P eean MenngU\'5 an: light u.:. "' w1sp and real I) blmple to prt>par \' And wht.'lher lhl·Y melt in )Our m o uth o r 1.1 friend ':. they 're not easi l y pushed aw<1 y I after two or thret-<You can even allow yourself a n extru few bt!'cuu:,l' they 'r\' not as high m calories as many other s weets) Th e n utmeg and vanilla flavore d m er· ingues may lK! stored in airti~hl con taine r s You· 11 notice t hat the re · cipe makes a generous 41. and you can double or triple it for extra gift- giving. NUTMEG-SCENTED C HOC OLAT E N U T ROLL .J4 cup all-purpose flou r (unsifted J Cocou (un s weetened) 3'4 teas poon baking powde r ~ teaspoon ground nutmeg, divided 114 teaspoon s alt 4 eggs l •.; teaspoons pure vanilla extract . divided ~ .. cup sugar l cup heavy cream Confectioners' suga r 'Ai teaspoon ground c innamon • P r eheat oven to 375 d egrees F. Grease a 1S'r2 x101h x l -inc h jelly roll pan. Cover pan with wa xed paper <11lowing the paper to extend on e a c h off the n arr o w e nds. Jn a sm a ll bow l combine flou r. 1f.1 cup cocoa, ba king powder, ·~ l e a s p o o n o f t h e nutmeg a nd s a lt : set aside In a large bowl p lace eg~s and I teas- poon of the vanilla : beat unt il thick. Gradually add sugar. beating until well ble nded. Add re served flour mixture. bea t until s mooth Spread in prepured pan Bake until cake tester inserted 1n center com es out clcc.tn, about 10 minutes Me anwhile. libe rally dust a dis h towel wath cocoa. Loosen edges of the cake with a sharp knif e Turn t h e chocolate roll out onto the towel: carefully re- move the waxed paper. Trim off crisp edges Roll the cake up in the towel from either the nar row or wide s ide. Let cool on a w ire rac k , about 30 m inutes When ready to fi ll Brunch Whether for holiday bl'uocb or surpriseJami· Jy treat, Coconut Com Muffins will heighten the spirits. S t a r t wit h o n e pac k ag e corn m uffin mix; prepare batter ac- cording to directions . Have m easured i,.u cup p a n ca-k e a nd w affle s yrup a nd lr'1 cu p coconut. Measure 1 tablespoon each syrup and coconut into each of 8 muffin pans before pouring in the batter . Bake as directed. '• Ceterlng • M••t• • 9•9food • Dell •Produce .• • Bffr•ndWlne ·--•Martset' J44flC....HwJ ... c--.. .. ~., ............... " ult~. pl•~• Cl'(\llm In 111 m e dlum bowl with 3 labl e1poon1 t onf er Uoner'1 •ut•r. rlMamo11 iand ,.malnlnet ~.. \eaat IJ<>on v..UU and 1 • le•• poon outml'a. beat until 11 t1(f U nrv l.I c ake S1>rt>ad• •vt•11 ly wi t h t·rt•um Hull Uf> t••k~ Sprlnklr with cuntec Hooen 1u111r t 'l'o de · c·uri.atc ,.. In photo1r1&ph 1>h1cc l 1oeh wid" strip~ of WlJll~\S plApt'r about l '" 1 n r ht is u p » r l , 'l"lnlt It' cu kc bt't Wt\t\O "trip~ ut lJMJHlr with con ft•ctlom·rN :.ugsu ) ~ I •1 •• YI El.D One l5· Inch roll or one 10.lnch roll PECA.N •E&JNGUE8 2 e11 whites V4 teupoon around nutmea \'4 teaspoon cre•m ot t•rtar ~ tcupoon salt h teup oon pure vao1lh1 ~x.tract ''cup sugar 11 ru p c h o pp e d peca ns P reheat oven lo 250 de1ree& F Une-·a balr- M\g s hoot with aluminum f oi I In • larse bowl p la ce e 11 whites, nutme1, cream of tartar a nd ult: beat until foamL ,Add vanilla. Wlth'Deater set .at hi•hest speed, beat until a tlH p e aks form , 1radually addin& 1u1ar. Fold ln pecans. Drop by rounded te atpoonful on- to prepared pam about 1 inch apart. Bake until c risp , about SO minutes. Turn oU oven. Lea~e cookies in oven for 3 hours without opening oven door . Sto r e in a irtight c ont aine rs . Yield: 4 dozen. _J===~~~~~~ill~ ~~f 11,tl/;e entf:J!olds whipped '(ream rilling delicately scented with nutrn~g and vaniilci. ew Year! Holiday artv Favorites LITTLE SMOl<IE LINKS v BRAUNSCHWEIGER TURKEY BREASTS .... ,, I' TURKEY PASTRAMI n TURKEY HAM SAUSAGE & BISCUITS -v .... , . BONELESS HAM HALVES • I , •11 :.r.1t ;. , I CENTER CUT HAM SLICES 2.48 .. 98 3.29 2.38 .1.98 . 1.49 SHANK PORTION 98 OF HAM • WHOLE HAM lo 138 f;nne-1n r ullv 1 oo~co 1 .trn\f, 1nt1n UJ Kt llSf' 01 r<Of fy BONELESS WHOLE HAM 179 Fully coo~eo W,l(fr AOOl'O s ] lOS LO BUTTER BASTED 7 9· TURKEYS • PLAOY LEE t,CATSUP .79 52 Oz Hll b BRAN & HONEY 69 BREAD • Harvest Dav ?ll 01 t r.11 !'TOMATO 0 l~,~~1~nro .49 46 Oz Carl .59 !LADY LEE DIPS ' 7 var1e11e\ .39 8 OZ Ctnr .79 S 01 Pkq 899 FRESH CAB BA CE C,QltO f,lflC\ FRESH CUCUMBERS (11\1) 1110 Cruncn1 NAVEL ORANGES L irqe SUNKIST LEMONS .12 .25 .25 .12 . . ~ . •I •' 1.98 2.69 .... 79 Arn1our COIOen ~t.11 r,r.ioe A LO l"'e11 or roni 10·11 lOS Fro u •11 b TORTILLA CHIPS ldOV Lee l?C'9UIJr Taco or Nacno e oz eag !CUDAHY BAR·S HAM ranneo S lO f",ln ~etr~nong 1·t•1 ,,11qr f I tt STUFFED TURKEYS C'IV llCI' OAf1j a ' I' d'\ I 't '' GRADE A GAME HENS t • ol.'o ,._, /I.._. r. CROSS RIB ROAST 1 ''-' 1 u·'4r1t r ,,,., r .. ,,. . ~ 1.47 I 2.08 ~"\~~~.~UT CHUCK ROA.S:. 1.14 7-BONE CHUCK ROAST ,, 1.39 U l"tflf 1111 ;1 BONELESS RUMP ROAST 1.99 2.49 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK '• , I If j '9 FRESH WESTERN OYSTFRS , 1.49 LITTLE FRIERS ... ... OSCAR MAYER BACON ROASTING CHICKEN • !t'"-\" OSCAR MAYER BACON 1.78 1.98 .89 3.89 Health & Beauty Aids ~ WELLA BALSAM •, •flY '\ .. \•fl f WELLA BALSAM • 1'1' 0 ·~"I •I ,1 ,/n.1 • 0 A 'f • ~ POLISH REMOVE!? ~ • ' I ~-t y '1 • " .,,, • FASTEETH b • '\ilh.1.ec 12.~ .. , ~• 1' RAVE HAIR SPRAY b :•' 1(0)'1.0\ "LG f 1fi.lA :~~t'\i:C. '"o1~~r~·:~g~ · .. i~ri "\q l~C.(t~fl('! 4 01 t SIN~T AB CAPSULES -f •1Qa \"'01' ,..,. 1.77 1.47 .. 77 I ., 1,99 . 1.17 1.19 .. 1.89 r ~:OUIL MEDICINE "",~, 1. 79 ! 0:0YCARE MEDICINE fo~ 1. 79 f SINEX NASAL SPRAY 1 29 6 o•~c. •CT1.._C 01 • b ~1~~~.~STONES VITAMIN~, 2. 3 7 b ~L~'!TSTONES VITAMIN~a2. 57 b SILKIENCE CONDITIONER 1 29 tH.U\AO ()t 1.-11u 80Ch 10.' • f SILKIENCE SHAMPOO 1 29 b O~fNlU 001\1 .. HOi.0 I 01 • SCHICI( BLADES •011.,ulll>lu\ ~oi.J.Z GRADE A 69 HEN TURKEYS • L~nr ,uter Farms 10· 14 LO\ frozen LO LADY LEE TURKEYS .79 n.nteo 10111 Cr.ice A 17 ]2 LO\ H 0 2en LO BUTTERBALL TURKEYS .79 Toni craoe A 20·1~ Lbs Fr ozen Lt> w1111e Suoolres LJSI LARGE ENO RIB ROAST r:'l•'Oeo neet LO E~~;1,~~ s~;~ SHORT RIB~11 1. 58 LADY LEE SLICED 8A~~"!.c. 1. 38 canned & Packaged J. ~},~~,KEYE PEAS i~ci ..... 33 t ~~~~N COFFEE ao1 , •• 3.93 J CORN CHIPS 49 '-' 1AD• 111 10 07 ~or,. L ~.~~~~ PRETZELS ~ 01 , ..... 79 L ce~N MUFFIN MIX ~ '01 QO•. 24 -r CRAPEFRUI ICE 85 6 ·•11w.11• .,.,,.. •• , o I>'<• 4601 C•"<• 4601 ..... 99 -r EVAPORATED MILK 44 O tAO"~lf 4S01Cll~. L '::.~~.~ T NUTS ' fJ1 , •• 1.19 b !~~ATO PASTE •101 u ... 59 r STEWED TOMATOES 45 6 ~u~l \ 14', ?1 ('AN • L ~.:~~r~UDS 1~01eo•1 .69 b ~~~\K & BEANS ;, OH•". 58 1lf W U1 'AUM •ft"UI '"'""'• COSTA .. IA Nulttroe. !' SEVEN SEAS DRESSING 79 ¢ COt AttA~ e•ra ... ,.\AO fl."'/ 8h ... ! s~~~~IP lb 01 All 1 .12 l ~~~.~~~ .. ~~~SAGE ~ 01 o,.. 86 r SWISS MISS COCOA MIX 1 99 ~\'Ml I )'()07 ""(. o b WALNUT BROWNIE MIX 1 59 Af ,,. Cl>OC• f" 10'; 01 no1 • r SALAD DRESSING 1 07 b lAO~ \ff !)"")/ "" • [ ~~~;1c PICKLE SPE1~~1s ••• 1 . 09 r MINUTE RICE MIX 49 Oe1t1 C"o(•ll<Ol>C"·"l\l ll»JD>Ol AO .. Dairy & Frozen fl WHIPPED O ~'lv~!ING .69 11 Oz ((n 'l ~I .... 89 •o r;'"' .37 r JENO S PIZZA ROLLS 0 OfP<>IO()N, &1,.\1'1 00 79 ( a01;a.t;.r ''"'l rc.1 " .,, r. c • " FRIED FISH FILLET 3 39 ! ',IA~f1t l"A~P 14 01 P'•f~ • L ROMAN MEAL WAF~~~~ .. , • 79 b ~u~~~~;.oRO BISCUIT~1 01 ~ :. 79 r GREEN BEANS 6 "•"VUI 0"' fllflf{M 0-DtWlA.•CuT l'OOI 8•<;. 79 Delica t essen Items I' LIL WIENERS h w ••,..••1• tDANOLA HAM 0 '..CIO ~07 PWC., 99 1)07 ~.f. 3.09 r CREAM CHEESE 6 t.t.[h1lf b ~~-~~.s~,f.?~.~- • •(l('I I.YI Q A'4 . : ~ .. 69 ! I•• 5.39 [ :~~~,;E, s;.~~ADS • 1. 29 i ~-~~.~ER SAUSAGE 1. 89 L ~~;AM1 ~~~~s 1 ~~,TATO SALAD ~ •; 3.79 .. ,.1.09 Household & Pet r TOILET TISSUE ~ "• t ~'0'.!"" At.\Qqrf()QO Af t~' b ~~.~T,R, ~?~.E ~_: o~ •. ,.,. '• N<t;)O•t' r ALUMINUM FOIL G I A(tt '"" t1fAy'r O\th m • '.95 "'''"On . 79 r ~~~D GARBAGE B~.~~ ~-i· 2. 3 5 r ALL DE TERGENT 2 98 b 1ou•fl 641 0/Ah • r BATHROOM CLEA~ER 95 e l.t.n•,H • 100/f1to~ • r TY·D·BOL CLEANER 1 23 6 \.~IO'IO.,.,t. 1'lQ/Rtl • LADY LEE FOAM CUPS 69 't (f O•C.. • PAPER NAPKINS ... "''"' ... c • 59 VILLA PAPER PLATES 1 87 9 \\Q(l ""' • '\ RUSSET POTATOES u < '110 1 f li< "llJ c u LiQuor f' PABST bBEER f' VODKA b t?c~ .~!,~, . ' . L SPANADA WINE L rYROLIA w1NE b ~.L~9.°'. MARY MIX ;, ~.L~~2~ MARY MIX. .25 289 679 1.99 1.99 .99 1 .89 lA1U] ~=tr;;;m DEVELOPED ANO PRINTED 12 E XPOSUllE 20 EXPOSURE 2.89 4.09 NOCAMES. LIMITS OR GIMMICX-S ALL LUCKY STORES OPEN NEW YEARS EVE TIL 9:00 P.M. CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY! O.u 0-.o(f' Oir,f~i """Y •.tv, ,,, ...... ,' • • tt'I n,. '''"n'"' y ,,~.h •• , ·· ,.,, :1·~ rnrll ' •"'O~t J '''v o~ "'" , 11.• 11 fl I P1 ,.. \! I' l!f ' o ':i•••'\""' I .• ~ ... ) - ~ ..... ,. ..... , 10. . . .. .. JI UI '""* AftNUI rt•...,.. IOULIVMO NI*>. ila.IDAftMll .............. 11m~•- llUWTileeTOel IMrClll • ... , An.MTA A'9Mll ~A .. llADA UI MMIAOll....,........ ClllTP ~T .... TON 11A01 ""' 9llOOllWY t"'"1 Otl• .... MNl.~AftMll ~MM.I ltt1I CMOT llOM AY l.t "Al ITOMI ONN DAILY I A.M. frAWTOe1 _ _.'9.1.A,,WW. ""'* ,..,.........., ....... wttTlllW9TWll ll•rt Iii A "I STWffT J T • B rr1 Ourina th( holld"> SeatOO lh Uqtt' lo t r1•utt• M<'Ome •pu 111110 Whf'fl \I nimt•" to th1• hblt' th\' deror11tin1t COt' bt·~onll ''tthl 11 mu•t ul<io 1•11u>mpu 1 t a i.tt• l1u111I I .i'lll' 1n \er)' l'f\ll ,rf I h 1· ~m d Th l'ff'ah\1 1n11111I"' tw-romt• fort 1•f11I 111 111111 d a ' b.i k 1111t 111 par lltul.11 ~1 o1 k 1· lttt cooklt>' louk 1H11I t 1 11· thctN1•fll . h.i.~t lh1 It 1111 C»"-r an 1111 11d 1I ... ti,q .. ·•I p n .uld u 'l>t 11.al '" \\ "''"' ir t.1 ttw tr 11ti 111111 ti l"'lllft•t· 1.1k1·,. l•1·H l .. p • n ~ \\ t r 11 1t 1 1 1 " 11 1 It , 1 m.a r k .. 1t11~ •'••111 r .1111111 lol bt'llllO 41~ ..ifll11I I) 1111 i..~t l .1 .1111IOlt1I ht I I'"''' .. lo I \ II. \ •• I I It .. u •• ti .1lk •UI hllh bt I I it~ 111 11111 n.111011 \\\lt1 hul1d .1 \ b.AJ..111)( lhh htC<ojll"tt' bhle'~ltlt' \\c'lt 1 .. u111 ll11•1 fr uit lt11\ 11ll 11t llf l'\IUI 'I' lt11t 1111 II 11'1 • I:. 110!0 11 1111\\'d lco jll\ !'lt'J 'Oii '•ti '>lnl'l I 1 tll•'ll blu~·l.11·11 h ''> 1 .Hiit' 111l11 tht m.11 l..t•tp l.11·t• I 1) thJ , pt•rl1·1·th 1t. Ii l"ICIU Ulu1•h1· 1 1 ' I ltJ lt d.1, Hin.: th1i. \1·a1 11 1~ a fHt>tl~ .rnd dell 1· 11111 ... ('\JffN1 1:ak1• ,111 \\l•) I .111 b1·in~ d1ff1•n·nt Hi g ht ' from th1· :-t :ir1 11 hus un 1mp1>rt a11l µlus going r!)r 11 FH1 n both l11 vl':. bl th' ht>rrit•s T h1:v · 11 lovt· lht•lr r<l\Orlll' ht•rn 111 th 1~ \an at 10 11 R I. ll t-: R [ R R \' llOUOA \' RINC; I cup:. h1scu11 111 1'1( 11 j cupi. nulk 1? cup 1 I 'lH·I.. 1 hut ter ·1-1 c·up dr ~ hn·ad crumbs 1 ~ c up <·11.ir s 1·l~ r hopped nuh '"alnuh. pecans > 1 ' l'UP 'UJ.!,11 1 l t <'a' po" n 1· 1 n namon l teaspoon g1 J l l•cl 'Oran gl' rind 2 ('lip:-d1 \ Jl.l(·k rro1c•n lJluelJ1•1'1"11•<, I l'UIJ (01mf1·ct1nn1•1' .s ugar 2 t a b I P ' p 11 11 11 ' nrungt· JU1t·1· C11mh1m· 111,<·1111 mix with milk and Jllt'p.1r1· j Eggnog special W ith the hol1<fj \ season in full ''' 1n». you might tK' l<H>k1ng fo r rw" recipes to acid ,gl amour 111 your hol 11l:l\ la blc· . . If so, you might want l o add thC' smooth CI S vt>lvet Chocolat1· t-:gg nog Pit· shown hcrl· to your list of fa vorih.• hoh day recipes . Not only 1s it easy to mah hut (•gg nog is one of lhe ma in ingredie nt!>. . CHOCOl.i\TE EGGNOG PIE 11 :1 cups c hocolate wafer crumhs 2 tablespoons sugar 4 tablespoons bullcr. m elted l e n velo p e un CI C1vo red gelatin 14 cup cold water 1 3 cup sugar 2 tablespoons corn sta r ch 1 :L teaspoon salt 2 cuµs eggnog 1 2 teaspoon rum ex tract 2 c ups whipp1n J? cream l,4 c u p c (l n r c (.' tioners' sugar Chocol<1te t urls Mix c rumbs and sugar together; stir in butl~r Press mixtu·re firm ly and evenl y agains t bot tom and s ides of 9 inch pie pl ate. Bake at 350 degrees F' for 5 minutes Cool. · S prinkle ~elatin over ' water to sorten Corn I bine s u gar , corns tarch and s a lt 1n h eav y s·aucepan. gradually stir in eggnog Cook over medium heat. starring co n sta ntl y , until thickened. Cook 2 addi lional mjnutes Remove from heat and st1 r in sof. tened gelatin unt il dis · solved. Stir in rum ex- tract. Chill. Whip 1 cup whipping c r e a m a nd fold into gelatin mix· ture. Pour into cooled crust. Chill until set. Wttlp remaining whip. ping cream until foamy. G-radually add sugar, ........ ~ ............................ ___ _. ___ _ • r111 1l111qch C't Ill 111111 lt1 lH.11 k.aa&tt 1lt1t1 ltv1111 f11 r rollt•ll hh< \Ot" l\1w111I l It•" t1m1•' un 11 ,hl h rlou11ttl l10.i11I .11111 rull 11\ll 111 " Ill \ I lllt'll Hh 11111 111 "Ill 111 .1111·1 Jl.111 1111•11 1111!11 I :--Ill 111 ht 1""' 1•1 u rnh uuti. u M 111 • 1111l1A 1111111 .1 nd 111 .llllll 111111 tlltl •.IUt1 111.,1 tit•' 11111 ti livltt h 11111 ... llHI 1:,•1111, '>Ill Ill lol tt t 111 t I I l .. 'i 111 I ,11J hl111 111 •1 I\ fdl11t~' I \t Ill\ II\ I I 1 \llh d • tll lotll~,1, "'•Jlllll ti \1•1• 11111 I o l I Ill• I 1 • 1 1 • I I• I .... I' " I I rill t'1ff•" 111111 J>IU ("I• 1l11u~h 111 ""'II Wl'U,1·d t1 11u.1rt nu.: 11111lc1 llak .. ut n~ 1h·~ I.. F for "Ht lfi 1111111111 , un til i:ul1h 11 brulA 11 l'urn out 11f IJ.111 0 11111 ,,., \ lllj( VI Uh • '4hal1· '1\111 hut I urnbln1· t llflft•C!lt\1\1 I~ ll~,11 llllll llJ 111111• Jllll~ '>l)lllOJ; 111111! 1111111111 '-1111·.i<I ''''' t11pol "·'"" rrnl( t11 .: 1 , , , 1 r 111· , , ,. ti i.;11 111-.h \\flli 111.1r,1 ... 1 l111111 1 lll'11 \ lll,11 I II ii I •'!>I' I • 11 oJ \\ h 11 I I Iii 1••111·1111•-; "-1·1 \. ' II Ill ) I• ltl II "' HI -~---..... -- • I , .. - \ Blueberries add special flavor to holiday ring. All 08 STORES JOI N IN THE GRAND OPENING CEUBRATION·OF OUR NEWEST & FINEST STORE IN CUlYER CITY! - HILLCIEST ORANGE JUICE "' HUNT'S TOMATO SA r-----SWHT HIWlllll PINEA PPLE PLUS DEPOSIT REB. OR DIET 7·UP MAYONN ISE -~ 149 EST FD DS 3~i0: L----------------' '~.39 Ill. .29 JC Nih1<;! s Co m .,., 33 .. . ffi -c-1;~;;;;9; -... '·-ISO .. , 1 '' 219 ~ P;k Loin Roast • 1 '' {;ru 11t lM tO· '·~Red Leaf Lcttuc• ~~Wesso n Oil """''. ;~Stewed T oma•oes ... ,.,. ,.,., .. ;~Whole Tomatoes .: . 46 ... 49 t/•M .45 . . • on ~ .... l.rrt., ocm1 t 1.>sm~ '··~ 95 ••• • •• ' 10 Rcf ri . d : ~ n ~ II•• 5 2 Uft e .,., ., .. ,, t fe> Cake Mix ti ' •• 76 .. , . .. .-io Chunk light Tuna ..... 69 ,.,. . /=ei),~ t I WOME N'S ...... '"" O• Col4 0.d ffi Andre Chqmpagne +~ v~;i~;;rv odka ''-' s";~g;~;:s 7 -Crown ~ Oid·s;;;;i;r' s 110 .,, I IS ... 651 I II 11 '' 1 .. 11) 10'' 11. ffi (;~red· H;m • ,;;_ fAMll T ,ACI l th O• •••• ~~Ground Beef ... , I !Cone ~Rib Roast JAMll T 'ACI, '"f ....._., !l! Chuck Steak , .a JAMllY 'ACI , , .... ~ Por1t loin Chops FAMll Y P'ACI ,,,... Qod.., 1 111 2•• ,., •. J 39 •. 1 •• •. 2•• •. 21• •. 1 s• '.ff Emperor Rice ~ Mountain logs .• 169 •1 ..• J 3 9 I \ DES IGNER JEA NS IO P OUAtirY1 HO SECOHOS OR IRREGULARS• WHILE SUPPLY LASTS' m Thighs Or Drumsticks •. 11' ..... .,.u ... il! lucky lager Beer 12 '~·· 239 o...lio, .........,, loM 0. llMat, c.lfl. fl! Taylor Cellar's Wine ~~ 279 I •" w1 m " ""' 'H t:~; c>:··N;~d,;~ O· • • .,. ..... h f El. MOST STOllfS CHlllE DWEii •co.oo I I '' 1 72 '"' . '1' Cream Cheese ··· S9 ... TIMEX WATCHES-, • ;~. 1 D/o I (;J. 0 '" ' •• 4)J""M & t • Yt-l .tr•' -· fl~1{1\ llllC.l1VI MC~ nrc lY lllk\I fUI~ J/IN I> l '1'1 "', •. , . .. ... "'; ~ . . ' . . - 0""""'0 n•• urn ••u ~•ullf1'1 .... ... •. •. 4t, •tt •tt If • 6 J fl; I •tit 11 I 1t' I ... ,t ' lo • f. • J e l I•• '' t tllli It,; ~ fll • , I 11 ' . ..,.,., . ... . ..... ... , ·-= ., ...................... ·-' • 111 ' •) It ,11 • . . .. ~,.. .. ... . . .... rm-----, rra--:.:~-, I " s1.00 0FF 11 Horc0<0A 1 I FllM DEVELOPING I I MIX I 1 ll011&1JSCOIO•"N' i s2 09 , 1SA YE 111111 OIYHO"O ' ., 1111 I I $'1 YI ..... SAYE s4.a5 OPEN NEW YEAR'S DAY ~ ClloMit ...,...., -·-°' .... "!PI Almaden Mtn. Wines :..1 27 ' Holiday Party Trays 3'iiji'"'"".': :~· 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M. All QUANTITY •IGHTS USHYID. NO SAU TO otiun oa FOi •1SAu Olt COMMHCIA{-iJS~. t CONNOISSlUA .S CHOICI lll(AI & CHUSI SIOU•11•wn •me• ltl 2•• -1.a~GE11t .. H-• lh "' ""°" u•nHU " SfO-U ........ flOOIMlllfPl rm-----, t•-----i · I ... 15< OFF I I "' .:~ . I I .. :.·:,:,:" I I semma I I <A•YUSnE I I $200 I s100 .· .: . . 20 < I ~--•"1101 c011rot1 _J ~--• t101<ovl'Oll _,,J WIJff I s1a5v1 • .., ~~~! . ._ ... I I SAi s'~ ::.;_: .. ., ..... ._ ... _I SOTH ANNIVERSARY COUPONSl 1 I c :-:,"·.::·:: ................. I . ":,"-:::.·::··· ... -... ,.._. ~--· .... ( ... --~--· ••a.. --. . rm-----rm ---~-, 1a-----, rm·-----, r•-----, r•-----, I II• 2 ( 0 I I . 50' OFF I I s.:::r I I ltl ... ~;'~ .. " I I U I suuciliea1 LI ... 20c OFF I I o .... " o~F I I OllONl.O II "'' I I CRACKERS I I •AMI llKI I I <•ISi I I "'".:We:.::., ... n I 1 vaun ••ot••' 1 <Y<u 1OR11 1 95c 1 1 -· 97c 1 1 S 139 I 1 =<-A• 1 1s2AoYI . YITAMHIS ; 1SSAOY'E .'~.~.~-~~~.; '1s2AoVI :~:: • ., ...... ,_ •• , I 1s,a5v1.,. .. ~.,, ..... _ ......... IS2AOY~ .... ~:., .. ,~·u·-.... .,_. •'nA~~ ..... C!l!ii!_ .... ~ ( '1• ,,;• t 1 ·~• 11>, • , ;J•: ~ '" ''• ••if 11 "'" t ~ ~ ( •• ••-..i.• l•HUM •l'Stt "' ft '~"' \: C lltt tMN111 tHltf!WI • 11( It ';;J" \i C "' 1• • fOft• fi ""°" tff ,.. ';}'' ~ '~' tfftlh9' ... Wr .. •--.i litlf';J I Ito l It • W I~ •• l •• flft\ -• 1'91 II.If\ Sh \ 1"1 -• ftlt - -• lfO ICOlll'Oll -- -I HD I COllrotl -- -• ta.I t'MNll -- -• m .1 ctllN9 -- -I .... C9llN9 ---· -.1a.. - '-'---"w'-'h"'.iJ.u> i n g_ u n ti I s o~+--l-ill• PP~";~fogra":-·n~P;~adwoivte~ I ... •.c.:.':::;.::;;:~ .. no I I ' 15' OFF I I l'l fllSI I I amnum~am I I ... 'I 00OFF11 -r••·,;'1-1---------- chocolAte curls. I HTllllMT I I 0~::t:;.(,~~~~~:s"4 I . I MUSllOOMS I I -·-..m.-..--· I I ...... ---• I emu I ---=M=•k=e.;:;...;;ss~ervln_gs ..... -l __ Q wtHUnGVJS .... I wr ~--1-SAYI :-$Ut-ISAYI MICM I ~7 --~• Call U2-5678. Pul • few words to work tor ou 1sav1 ... 1 1sAv1 . !~~~·PEA~. 1 1sav1 ... I 7 ~ I I I -1 I · I un ~~ I 1 15 20 . •·' I-·... ... ,.. ... 20' ·-· ......... _ --... ., .. ···-......... ,_ --I .. -- - -"' Ul(.:l:~~~;~;;.-~;., ~..:.;:·.~~01(~ ... --' ~.:~~-·~·~:,;.;~ ".;.·-;,, ~ • .;1~;;.:.";:;J ~-.;~-=~;:.:. ·-.:.':l ~:.iil".i"\i:.~.ll . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . ~ --I ,..,..,,.,.--~------------~ -_...._ _________ ----·--...... .,...,_., __ --··----·---~-.....-------~-·.....,.......,...~~411"'~~ -r.; .;;:..;...,'.·.·-":.":":-: ... ~.~.~"::i •.. COMlCS I CROSSWORD MAIMADUKE lay lrld AMlt'Mft PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz Iii ....., __ ..,g,.;.,;;;._;;;..;;;_;.;,;..;..;..;...;.~ ... --------__, "Tear yourself away from your football game long enough to look . at this instant replay!'' SHOE MOON MULLINS MISS PEACH /v'IA~CIA I CAN! 8~1N(; ANVll-41N6 10 YOIA~ New VEA~·~ ~~~TY? THE FAMILY CIRCUS I I CI -~ L.. - -: ----!~=~ by Bil Keane 11Does Jack Frost ~long to Santa Claus, Mother Goose or Disney?" DENNIS THE MENACE ''MANS BllNt<~ AHO IF I ~ M PA6E A tlw, If lftlJ MAONi' ~TEO TME SI.VER 5'(ATes:'.. MARCIE I'll ee OOHE OH llME Fl6lU6 TMAT TWO M~D AND AU6UsT TWEHT¥-THIRD OUT, 51~~~ ~ TMIRT~-SEVEN PA6E_5_! -· 1 --___,~--f 8E ON ~TEN ... ~~ D_ f II p l-~..C:..::t::Jllllm.~m~~~i ~"-·'"""'-----~~~~ ~---1~-----........__ FUNKY WINKER8EAN games peaple play ™E~E. ARE .stVERAL. VA~IA110~ OF ~POll,l fHAT OW ADO 10 fHE. INlt.RE.ST AND EXCJlEMENi OF fHt GAME ! by Tom Batiuk by Jeff MacNelly by Ferd & Tom Johnson I THOU~~T You S'.AID )btJ WeRE ()OING TO CLEAN UP. .. GORDO JUDGE PARKER WHEN MATT TEL.~ ~IM THAT TIM AND JEANNIE COUL.DM'T eE ~ROTHER AND f>l~TER MM 15 UNAWARE THAT JEANNIE HA!> OVERHEARD JHE CONVE~A TION! NANCY I'LL SA'W A HOLE SO I CAN FISH by Mell Latarius DRABBLE ~r Aunt ~e'ff'f , Mello. 'Thi~ IS NOOIWI ' FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE OR. SMOCK LETS SEE. WE. D1~SED \KE. PR1C.E Of Tt1E.AiP-E liCKETS, THE. FlJTuRE. a= THE LARGE CAR f\"'D T~E \JJ'{S OF WOK c.oot<1NG / by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Ooux Mondey, Otcember 29. 1980 BIG GEORGE by VlrgU Partcll "I hate Mondays." -SHE. HA~ FAI~ L()'.)KS, &Y:J;J LEGS, GOOD TE.ETH A NO 'THE ~E. THlNG- wE HAIJE. IN COMMoN 1 $ RN Au.ERG)' TO DUST by Kevin Fagan by Lynn Johnston 1 ·KNOW 'fOIJ SET THIS UP,81CO 11M JUST SA\JING '/OU , tiOURS OF SEATING ,~ 'ROUNO " t -ZiH l ! • , e . by George Lemont TODAv·s CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Podllems 5Weapen 10 Sol1en ,, Millt.Comb form 15 Rich ~vet t6 Mounteln: Comb form 17 Above 18 Moclllng 20 Readtls 22 Drills 23 Rolled tel Pl 2' Swamps 25 Needed 28 Ships' plat· forms 32 Great 8-ns Sllr 33 Ari 111nster 35 Place 1911n 36 Rhyme 38 Leucom- rnon '0 OtNdlut 4 t Curves 43 LIC ..... 45 \JS tOC'f. 46 Nolie.cl 48 l1k1 trtns- mosslons SO Sh1rp 51 fish 52 Hope 55 Printing dies 59~11911 2 WOf0S 61 Except 62 Kind of 0ot 63 Resides 64 Always 65 -ol Mlldl 66C.ou1 67 Tremmltted DOWN 1 f lll hMY!ly 2 Roof edgl 3 Maple genus 4 Hit 5 Bull• llnl'9 6Coue>M 7 Winds up 8 Cuciloo 9C.gymlrl 10 An~ 11 W1*t Cortl is 12 tmpert 13qo,,. 1t'lnttttl' 21 Oilcwd 24 Tf\JMt l UNITED Feature Sylld1cate Saturd1y's PuZZle Solved ~ ~ , .. " I I I I , A II ~ r I w I C "111 111; I II O U II 0 " I T l I I -. ,. ·-.p -· All I l ~ •• 111• •• I I 'II II I ••JI I• I I '1119 I TIOlll I I .. ""fT _,. • 0 ... 10 11 I -··-01•- I l ... T I A• " u •. I Ill • l • T I II ,. "I ~II I .. c 0 l I ~· " I .... 0 1 II T I 25 Rall u Close 26 ··0n1y -47 Threefold 49 Gets up 2 7 Peale 5 1 Desserts 28 Trt~ 52 lllflan city 2j Willow 53 Joist 30 Gaspe rock 5i Combre•d 31 l ieu 55 Shitt 34 lnMrtlOll 56 Grouo n:i•rtt 57 Un1to1m 37Trysta • ~ Sp1nlS11 lrl· 39 Most correct 1st 42 Eerie 60 Equip • I I I I 1. I I OAIL V PIL.Ol Te TONIGHT·s LATEST LISTINGS ... I ( _, ( .l '- · 1 \ 11 I" I ' I ' .. , . ._. .,..,..,...... A ,.\'Cllll. wtltt l!W ..... rrufWle IU< lflllllt•tlkin-' _, .. , • ••~ •v .. ..,..,., ~-Ill• .,_. .. 111 cM'tfJll ~en.cu •• eA•O-IOW\ ~Oii •• '>cNth ' .. o llw (M"Ol'O ~ .... ''°'*' I ft:fM:OOt.-4 ... A•t •i. TIW <libtll,, IUtl\9 ,,., a K .. "'•I~ Ol ·l•t j1ll1;>I •toO ... tl 1Qu0t ....... •• • ••"'fto.d O• wn v -I ....... Hll.L ().ICTJlllC ,.ANV c • tHI 4<k 11'4 ~ATIOH 4 ..,.;>ii Al 1"-h1al1.H~ ul H ·k• ••pto•.at"""' lj,''d 11 11UlllOn "' I ... _. 1_11, ..... ~. U>i~ I Wft.OOMI t.ACk. ICOTI£" BUftlpfl •road' Ah .. ~"ii • l'Ohl [ptl..., JfNPO.••• 1>4h.aw.. nit I , .... 1r1• tt<ouaU/'IWlll IM 0111•1 SwU lllOQJI g1 .. """ • OOOOTIMES Murk Harmon 1s dt!puty sheriff in small fo'l o rida t own engaged t o d ~~g ht er t Morgan' fo'uirchildl of wealthy citizen m ·· fl'l amm~o Road," NBC's Monday Night at lhl' Movies offer ing at 9 tonight on Channe l 1 J J miolll na•• IN &n1we1 wllM FIO< IOOI llWO• a jOO &) DO< CAVETT Q.,.,sl V 5 Nat0"ul Cl'atl I ol 21 Uyu)Q pat...,I with •-t I m...-ge I 8ANTTA OV8'EA8Y dltteren1 rules '°' men •nd women • MACHIJL / LEHMA MPORT ID STUOIO SEE ·Gymn&s•oe• VoullQ oym nHl~tra1n lo• fulu1e Olym pie CGmj)f!llllOll IWO kl<la ltom IMbtHi.a m~" • "' enc:a hCllOn him (RI 0 UMll COS1Ul'M GellOMf Edith .....0, MIO<lan 0. Abtam 88'lh•r '9 l'TAUONO lttAIOffTAUTY T11is documentary <141111 Mfh current approac1-10 ,,,. phyalology ot •he eo•no ptocet11 and with tutu<• poulblllt... of Htandlno I lie humal'I Uteepan. • MACNEIL I LEHMA AtEPOftT (I) TIC l At; OOUOH CJ) w·A·a·H When '"' round • IObo•• nu11e 11 ioo.ly and Md, rhe 7:30 I 2 OH THE TOWN AOHT BACK WITH DAVID HOAOWfT2 011\et ""''-O.Clat• 11\ey wlll nold b.a< lllelt l•v«S unltl 91141 oe•• e t>oytrlend 7-00 1J C88 NEWS D N.c:NEWS D KAPf'V OA Y8 AGAIH R1<:hle 0911 1n10 trouble w'-1 he ,1>0t1ows Fonzie's apar1men1 in ordet to 1mpreu nls new glftftlen<I U JOKER'S WtLO Top1ca coins by the pound. M\1111 dalma court. 1ann1no p•rl0<s, singer -ng machlnet / Good Houaekeapino refund, popc:Otn ~c:lel ~­ *'08 CJ) P.M. MAOAZJNf' t:oo 8 CJ) FMEM AHO ntE 8EAN HOI on Ille 11111 of 1lrl>Orne cocaine smugol«s, Fr- bte get• hi• llrll •nd unptenned llylng lesson 8 IHANANA D UTT1.E HOUSE OH THEPfWM Gu.t Jim S11tt0td D FACE THE MUSIC Ch111M t>ecomea C•ro- lk>e's midwife when their •~peel~ beby err1ves uneapecteoty (R) 8MOW at w·A·s·H CharlM assumes i-otc proportions altllf rev1vino a • AU-.THEFAMILY Edttll Slagel i-own ptl· vate revolt •hen alle ec>l)I ... IOt 1 baNI loen and discovers •'-• 11e Vft'Y • • •'Ir •·c1p1a1n New· man, M 0 " ( 19631 Gregory Pede, Tony Cu1t1s An Army psychlllrlst t>ecomes en0<mously de<!· k:ated to h11 p•ltenfS Cha1u1~I Lbfi119• f) KNXT 1CBS) Los Angele s D KNBC (NBC> Los Ang eles D K rLA 11no 1 Los Angeles G KABC TV tABC) Los Angeles ({) l\fMB (CBS) San Diego U KHJ TV (lf'lcJ ) Los An4e1es l!J) KCST 1ABC1 San D1eoo ID KrTV (Ind I Loe, Anqt'lt'" ti) KCOP TV (Inn l Los Anqt'lcs &) KCEl· TV 1PBS1 Los Angel1•s ~ KOC(-TV 1PBS1 Hun1111Qlon Beach 'Signs' T\' sulJjeet II UFO "~Sll>lllfyS..t" • P.M. MA0AZJNE • 80UOOOU> Host· Ooonne WatWtCk ID29TOMOH'T "Proftln 0 1 P-" Guest Tom Oulnn, l0<mer dtr&c:· to r of the State A11 Resources Board Husband-wife team of Lawrence J ay Solow and Sharon Newman Solow. sign language instructors at Cal State Northridge, are hosts of ''Say It With Sign.'· a 2().Jesson course. It began today, airing at 6: 15 a.m. on KNBC. Channel 4. · 'Choices' blunt fare NEW YORK t AP) -Medical technology can prolong the lives of the hopelessly ill. but facilities and resources art> scarce. Who should hve and who should die? D<K·tocs now '.ar:e a ble to predict before birth just how nor mal a child will t>e Does that mean that some day the abnormal need never be born al all? lt is now possible to know the sex of a child before birth. Should medical technology take that extra step to allow parents to decide the sex of their children? "Our lives are going lo be dom.iqal· ed by the biological revolution. u the lives of previous generations were dominated by the Industrial revolu- tion." says Or. Willard Gaylin, host of a new six-part.publlc TV series on dhical issues raised by advancement in medical technology. •'These questions, and many, many more like them . have to be answered. and the fact ia. there are no experts in moral reasoning," says Gaylin, a psychiatrist and president of 'fhe Hastings Centel': The lnltllute aimed at providing the public with as much information as possible on the half-dozen issues to be considered. The series premieres with ··Boy or Girl: Should the Ct\oice ~ Ours?" and' continties weekly with pf'Oll'ams on genetic screening, human eic · perimentation, behavior control, death and dying, and medical care u a limited resource. "These are not medical prob· lems," Gay Jin says. ··They are moral problems, value problems. Who should get the kidney machine, the 25-year-old mother' of three, or the 62-year-old aenator? ··That kind of question requires an interdiacipllnary answer, lnvolvin1 doctors, b i ologists . lawyers, ministers; politicians. "And the tbin11 we are tallrinl about in the television seriea," Gaylin says, "are the U1htnln1 rods. The thinp that cause the ID09t Im· portant chan1es are more simple. The pill, for example. Tbe whole Nll· ual revolution 1rew C)Ul of the pill. "Another non-dramatic example: we now do fetal monftorlnl._ let tell ua of Society, "Elhlca and the Lile "Either the population at larte ia going to be dumb about these thins•. ~ and let someone else decide .. he when the fetua la ia ,dlatNU. 1bat bu hospital• ln New York to •·percent. Tbat'1 cruy! One out of nerJ tbNe womm need Caesanan ~1 .. ''Raid Cb0fc11;'' 1uppoitid ftnan. clally by the Natknal l'.DdownMnt for the HumanJtia, wu pC"Odueed fOf' PBS by KCTS, the public e.levlalon station In SeaUle. --aya. or 1t1r101Jfrt0be aware tbeae choices and tnnuence the de· ~ clalona.'' "Hard Choices." which premieres Friday at 10 p.m. on Channel 50, is ' -LC:.:-., -..,,.. ,......, .• ''The .................. ... , JUUOll.Wal ....... c..-... ..... , .......... o.i.. .. ·~,.,..,,.. .... ,. IM'I ·~ nrNo.111\A....., ..... KONll' vlollnllt l(vung. Wiie a... II ldOllll II\ Mencte11aotln '• "Vlo Un C-W II\ E MlnOt.'' • llCMI • • • ··My Luctiy 8'81" 11tst) Sonja Henle, c- Aomero, A Pf9ltY college G04d ~In le. •llllnO 1111recticwl. ti00e(I) M•A•t •H The 19&1 N9wY..,'1oM- 1>tellon ltldla off tnothet 12 monttw of jOyl and het«MNpe IOt Ille ate.ff Of lhe4077111 D MOYIE * • ~ "FllmlnOO Rold" (IMO) ~d Duff, Ctiell· na Reif.-A t,_,_oua e11er lff In 1 email SOUttwn city CTMI• ptot>felna IOt Ille town'• moef ~ul lamlly end m1ny 1 ... ptomlnenl people ......... !RI 8 THATl INCMDleli FNtured: 8 Clog wt» fllee: 1 hOuMWife .no communt· cet• with Ille gho911 of grMI eompo.-a; e mecli· cal dlllCiovefY th1t u- lrMZIM!ried human gland• to loeed Q<owtn CJ I WAI HUNGRY fhfa apeclll INturn 0. Larry W11d, Pleeldenl of Food For Tiie Hungry lnt.,natlonll, Tipp! Hedran end many othets. .................. •a.Miil. ex aw NINIOM .... •• &,.-, .......... '°' .... ,... ftltt•• Ttle C"Atllfl\etlo ~ lfld,..,. ... ......._ ... -... twedlft ......... .....,, • 11'1 ....... ienoe °' • .,.. vtnely'1 "Tlv.. M- IMl!ta ,,.°"' Petrouef*a." I~ 0 '"'N>QCPON) ..... A fl'lend ol Aoc*fOfd'e II the targM of Ill MNMltl In ... 1• T .::"° '°'· ITAUCING ltWOflTA&.nv Tllle ~·wy ~ with c:urrem epptoecNe IO Ille ~ of IN tglng Pf-and "'"h MU<e poeejbiljtlee Of •••ending Ille humflll lttwpM. ·~ T'HOTM .. r .. 1~1 01 Youth" Wand Wat II finally ov.., Vere return• to OxlO<d wh«e Ille mM11 Winifred Holt!>)'; they ltuneh tlleir •rlllng c11eers end DeicOtM ~fefong lrlend1 lPlfl 5) 11:00.D())O NEWS . HOU.YWOOO IOUNW.t I . I NEWLYWID GAME w·A·a·H An enllated men who wants to m11ry • K0<ean gltl comet IO Hawlleya IO< help • ONE l'TEP MYOHO .. Tiie Capt•ln's Gunia" A young couple move lnlo an old New EnQland tlNCOUI houM Of etrtnge metnO- flff end an_, stranger ·MEIN~ G.-11. Robert Wegnet, SuHnnell York. Jh•n• 811..-. MtehMI Jec:kaon. Biii Kifdwnl>Ou« • vte'TONO I p11n11no 1':30 IJ CJ) OUfMCY. M.E. PH1«1ge<a being lleld hostage on • hijacked JoMph CemjM1nell8 hOtll I lhft 11.,._llle dtama ol e 1 young man't ettempt 10 . conq.-hlle III nw>uGH HUMAH HAH08 9:30 U (l) HOUSE CAU.8 An old pat ot Ch1t'41y' a known '°' Ills ptacllc:el JOiin 11... In from New v or1I in nMd of aurgety • MYTH80f' MAANAOE jPll'I 2) tO:OO U (J) LOU GRANT An already ov-o•ked Lou •s beMI by cr•nk calls. a threatened libel aun and a feuding ttett (RI DO NEWS G MOVIE • • • •,;. "Camelot"• (Pert 21 1111671 RlcllatO H8rtil, v...-u Reooreve K•no -'rthu• bl lllff Sir Lencetot for the love of OUMn Gumevere caus1no lhe pl-lta eapoMCI to a deedly "''"' D THEMl'TOf' CAMON Gu.ts: Anthony New141y, S.,..._., Wln1er1 (R) 8 PAllOHEA: CELL 8l()Cl(H Chr11'14l's b1by errlves, l>ul with compllc:attons 111•1 JOHN DARLING ' J l J e TUBE TOPPERS KABC 8 6:00 -Gator Bowl action . features Pittsburgh Panthers and South Carolina Gamecocks. KTLA e 8:00 -Gregory Peck, Tony Curtis co.s tar in ''Captain Newman , M.D ." Army psyc hiatrist becomes dedicated to his patients. .... ADMl-tl 1:00• MOVIE • • .. llllMunt In The Jvt. ,,,. •• 11 ... 1 ~ ........ Lwle ~. An ..,.,., ~ ... junOiM Of .... In -Ch Of • mlMlno ••peditiOn °' QOld·Mlll· ., .. , ...... ntaLONI~ =l"Sl115 Sel)ctuary" t'... MOVIE * * * ,_.. "Vlvtcloul L~'' (1t3tl Ginger Aot«•· 4-St-wt. A coAege profeuor •nco11nter• .ner~ llOeflllty from 1111 conMnt•Uve pwenta KCOP m 9:00 -"Victorfo. ··Joseph Campanella hosts this true-life drama of a young man's attempt to conquer hate.· I :;, he matrlel • cebl(et 2;31). N!W8 will haw l111ing effecta on ,,., hul8 hoop Hpert, • lady whO w0tk8 lot I ICt- ~ end I l>M< cen colteclor I Tue•dat,.• -I Day• l•e itlot"le11 I =MOKE 8oNnnan ts • 1111h ,,.. ... whO lr•Yels the West min· 111.,lng lo 1 11rHm of sup. plieflllll. • HOOAH'I "°'°° Hogen mu•• collect some 11r-dropped tmmunlllon end dlatrlbute It to Ille underground 11:20 D MOVIE I * * * "Fraoc:la 0 1 Aul11I" ( 1116 t) Bradford Olllmen, OolorH He11 A gentle and I humene monk founded the Franclacan Ordet 1n the 13th c.nlul\' • MCNE *'Ir "Ov11l1nd S tage R1lde11" t 11138) Jolln Wayne. Rey CO<rigan A 1 cowboy tf)'mlee 111e ettOl1s of would·b• e1rplene Nlacltfll'I who 11e plo11Jng IO -I gold alllpmenl • ID CAPTIONED AllC HEWS al AICNlWI t1:IO QI IAON9IOE An tCQl<Mnt 1nvOl"'ng Iron· llldtt'a van lnvol11es ntm with 1 women who 11 sul· taring lrom en Old l>uffel "'°"nd 12:aoGT~ G.-t1 Glen Cempbell and Tanya Tucker; Rev Jerry Falwell, cnet Jacques P411>in, ant1·nuc1ear ec:llviat Patroc11 Shet111 end Skip Farlow, p<ealdent ol Cen· 1 lrlf Maine POW«a (RI • llPY "A Day Cell.cl • J90uar'' U THERM "Tiie Selefllte" 8t YOO BET YOUfl LIFE Buddy Hackett meets a dog who smetll out explo· 1 llvn, a woman •ho g1•es tours ot Ille g••vas ol HOI· lywOOd stets and l'rank Sln•tre's l0<mer ve1e1 -Ml>flGHT-• tNOePEHOEHl NETWOAk NEWS t2:00 8 TWIUOHT ZONE 01Vld Gurne., wlf<es uO 12:40 8 CJ) THE NEW with• hanoover tJut thet's I AVENOEAS Ille .... , ol hll problems An 91'18my agent murders a A8C NEWI I ,,,. 1nvento1 ol a l><atn • YOO 8E1' YOUfl LIFE dr11n mechlne end SIHIS Buddy Hack•ll rnMll • Ille ~vice 11:00 • • • "New l'•onl19<" I 1035) JOlln W1yne, Murlel Evens llle Thr .. MesQul· 1-s 1ld a group of 1anch· era whOM land hll l>eerl ti rUCk l>v • llood -AFTERNOOH- 12:00at ** "Ko0ge"l11161 ) MK:hMI Gough, M1rgo JOhns A demented Brltlall scientist turns • 1m111 Alri· c1n monkey Into a dHdly men-eellng gorlll• ti) • * • "Guns 0 1 Dark· ness" 111162) 01Vld Niven. LeJI.. Caron A man's sea•ch for me1ning In Ille leads 111m 1n10 Lalin Amert can pol111ca.1 upl\e•v•I• 3:00 0 ••a ' Tom Stwye<' ( 1973) JOllnny Whitaker. Celeste Holm BaNO on lhe story by Merk Twain A young M11S1ss1ppi River boy t>Komes 1nvotvec1 In a seroea of mischievous 1dven1ure5 that eiasperate h11 guardian aun• 3:30 fJ a * An Eye F0t An Eye' ( 1966) Rol>en Len .. 1ng, Pal Wayne A bounty hunlet seeks revenoe on lhOH responsible fOf the dell II OI hlS ..... end son by Armstrong & Batluk IH£ COUNTRY WAS AFFE.CTE.O BY A L.AAGE IN~E~610N TOOAY! 1980 TV (yawn) lacking Highlighted by absence of ~ghlights By PETER J. BOYER LOS ANGELES <AP ) -And what did you do in 1980, little tube? It wasn't an epocha l television year. highlight· ed. as it was. by the absence of the Summer Olym· pies. the absence of the networks' fall season and the proliferation of ··re ality shows:· On the other hand, there were the debates. Some of the worst TV of 1980 (in no reasoned order): -The performance by all three networks on Wednesday night of the Republic National Conven- tion. Talk about reality entertainment. You saw the near-creation of a ''co-presidency" before your very eyes. lelocracy in action. -·'The Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, Part II." This is the ABC movie that was made before the Rams k.nocked Dallas out of the running for the Super Bowl last year . That's why every time one of lhe actors said the words "Super Bowl,· the word "playoffs'· came out. Unimaginative, poorly written and a cted. and lhe jiggle wasn't even up to par. It has the distinction of being the only made-for·TV-movie in creation that was worse than "Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders. Part I. .. -111.E GREAT REVEIATION EPISODE on CBS' "Dallas:· Never in viewer history have so many waited so eagerly, so long, for so little. Kristen shot JR?!? I'm still waiting for the real culprit to-atep forth. -"Speak Up America•· From be1inning to (mercifully. sp_eedy > end, this NBC news- entertainment monster was the most grating TV series of 1980. It was a hyped-up "Network" nightmare come to Hfe, exploitive, frenzied and just plain irritating. "Choosing Suicide:· This PBS documentary about:,the ul im~s~U:.indJal&ence wasLamazingly. uninteresting. However ;it was very depressing. Perhaps the worst TV moment of 1980 dtdn 't occur on-screen, but in the halls or iovernment in the city of San Francisco, wMre the £1ty's landmark board found No. 302 Green Street un- worthy of landmark statU9.-That is the address where Philo T. Farnsworth invented television. Original 'Bue~' to launch 1981 Spawned by the increaatn1 interest in 1pace ad· venturers, KTLA <Channel 5) will air the 12-part 1939 "Buck Rosera" serial -the ori1inal in· terplanetary adventures that launched the film in· clu1try en the road lo "Star Wan" and "Clote En· counters of the Third Klnd." The special 5~·hour •P.ace marathon lead• off with "Tomorrow'• World ' at 11.P.m. New Year'• Eve, ccmt1auiq uaW •:• a .m. New v .. r'1 Day with aucb epUoda u "War ot U.. Planets" and Buck Roten la pla)'ed bf au.te.-Crabbe, who ·also 1alMCt fame u J'laab Gordoa. Constance Moor,, JWl~I) alaq U.an ..w:WL.J_ukie Maran (BudclyY aiil Aiitllon1 Warde (Klller Kane). Armed with paral)'lilll pUtola, ray IUD• and ln· visible ray ..U, Buck and Ida companklm battle the f otteta of evil in a world ruled by the tJTannical Killer Kane and hla 1uper .anpten. They we r e a litt le harder t o rind but there were some great moments on television In 1980 -"Playang for Time ·· It arrived under a cloud be<-ause it starred rabid anti·Zionist Vanessa Redgrave as an Auschwitz survivor. but Miss Red grave rendered a perrormance that will endure A remarkable film . certainly the best television of the year. -The Democratic and Republican conven· lions·. C'mon. they were fun to watch. Walter Cronkite & Co. almost deciding Ronald Reagan's running mate. the great Teddy Kennedy speech Good shows. overall. -The NCAA basketball tournament. College basketball has become the most exciting TV sport. and NBC handles it with loving care. UCLA's un- likely Cinderella ma rch to the finals was won· derful to watch. and Al McGuire. Billy Packer and Dick Enberg showed themselves to be the best play.by-play and commentary team in televis1on s ports. -"SHOGUN." IT WAS WORTHY if for no other reason than the fact that it arrived on time. unlike the rest of the new television season -"The David Letterman Show " It was a grand no11. but a fine try. -"United States." It wasn't successful, and it wasn't really easy to watch because it refused to be background noise. But NBC's short-lived series contained the prettiest words on commercial TV And. oh yes. "The Tom and Rona Show ." The backstage bickering between Tom Snyder and Rona Barrett .pr.oved to be much better entertain· ment than their on-camera collaboration on NBC's ··Tomorrow.'· Maybe Ne e· can drag it out for another season. . ........... .. :tf orle role A special part is be· ing written for Jose Ferrer in CBS movie .. Berlin Tunnel 21." filming in Germany . Movie stars Richard Thomas and Horst Buchholz. 'Hero' stars Culp and Katt HOLLYWOOD IAP > William Katt. Robert Cul p and Connie Sellcca star in Stephen J . Can nel l 's "The Great Am erican Hero ... a pilot for ABC. Happy New Year, little tube. ~--:~-;--;--:-::::z==::-::-:-:~.....-.--=:===:!::.;.=:~...:.1 'Murder' .filming HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"Murder in Texas," a four-hour NBC mini· series based on a true story. hasJ>egun produc- tion in Houston. Farrah Fawcett plays Joan Robinson Hill. whose death set events in motion. Sam Elliott plays her husband, Dr. John Hill. Katharine Ross plays Ann Kurth, Hill'• second wife. Andy Griffith plays As h Robinson, the father or Joan, wbo la now M and Uvin1 in retirement ln Call H2-H71. ltut • few word• lo work tor ou. You'll laugh ... you'll cry .. . you'll cheer ... you'll love .. . LA&MNCI OlMIR IDWARDI CINIMA PLln CITY CINTIR COSTA MESA (7 '41541-3102 ORANGE (7'41134-H82 ....... , .. -:~ .,..._~ ! -DO\•• •lflll!OJ --··-•· .. ..... . --. . . . . . . . . . . . ,, ' -~·---- ENTERTAINMENT _,. ---· ... " l 1oti\i '• ' Dt •• ,. .. 1111 • 1.,. ... C1llfdUll'f 1h ~11 •ll 4 t.ll J'lOI 114 bl4 '" t LPnJ -~·--~- ----NOW SHOWINO---- .. ullM AUM(IM com MESA MISSION YlflO Anaheim llnve In B1ooknu1\I t 111•• \uuin (11d\I P1.1r.1 C1Mma V1e1r1 879 98SO 177 b44fi ~4n 1111 lSJIJ &990 WfSUllllSTfl UA Twtn 893-1305 NO <>ASSES ACCEP'TEO l'OR THIS E"'GAGEMENT .. ro, 4uilf 1 •o..rj Hhti."'"""'"''•"'' ~~.., j11* '"'''" "9 to 5" (PG) "SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES" <PG> l..-=-, I "POPEYE" (PG_l. I "TRIBUTE" (PG) ~ .. "EVERY WHICH AYYOU CAN" (PG) ·--·-..., ... -r"'•••• NOW PLAYING UA CITY CINEMA orange 634 39'1 l EDWAllDS. l lllSTDl Santa Ana 540·7444 UA CIMf MAI Westminster 893·0546 EDWAllDS' WOOOIAIDGE trvrne 55 l-0655 ' EDWAllDS' FOUMTAlll WALLET "'2~ifari:mim~m~T' Foun1a1n valley 839·1500 "BLUES BROTHERS" "AIRPLANE" (PG) 'CHEECH & CHONG" (A I~::.~:~~~:: l --·. -::::> I "FLASH GORDON" "BUCK ROGflltS" (PG) .___ _____ ,, .. I I STADIUM Dltlrl·lll Orange 639·8700 PACIFIC S Nl·WAY Jt DlllWE·I• Wes1minster 891 -3693 ) . ) I ._ .. -----· ----.... ·.··· .. --~··-------~ _...,,,. ......... ___. ..... ____ -----'"'··--· .. -· -----,--.~, Gordon no flash in pan Actor }mies irorked hard to la1id role NEW YORK (A V > Two year& a&o. Sam J J ones was drlvln& trucks &nd workio& as a w1uter to achieve his goal as an actor Today, Jon~s Is riding in llmowun~ and ~pie are wait· '"' on ham He 's the new Flash Uordon · • 1 never had trouble geUing a Job until I got into the film busi· nes:i." said the 26-year -old ex- M arine "l used to be able to walk in anywhere and get hired. In the film business. I had to push a little harder " cast in a few made.for-television movies and a TV pilot lhat never was broadcast. His first big break csme w h e n Bl ake Edwards lected him as Bo Derek's hus and in "10." . However, t hat wasn't the role that led to "Flash Gordon .'' How he achieved that feat is one of the more u n b e l ievable Hollywood success, stories. While making "10," Jones ap· peared on the television game show. "The Dating Game." He was bachelor No. 3. The woman s electing her date c hose somebody else. but for Jones a ONLY PILOT Cf ' MCMUOOC by P111~t P!cf liles Ccwpota!IOt'I : ~ A 11\RM'CWT PK:TLl'C IA I ano w.11 Ol5MY l'YOCIUCIKJns All R!Qllfs ~ ~. ~ : NOW PLAYING MMI ao.ITll COAlf Cl-i5!a s-, ~"" Cost• l.IHa ~9 3352 OllllQI 634 ?~5)""" "' o. .. - ... .... t •MA WHT UA llOtlll llllCOUI N lfl .... Wesim1nsttr 891·3935 81u 990 4021 Bu•na P11k ~?t 4070 IDWUN' IAIOUU Cll MIUllMI OIUH ·I• Et. locG ~1·!1MO ~n Juan tap1strano 493·4545 ••Ula ACCIPTD ,.. , .. , ••••wu WH EN JONES arrived in Los Angeles an 1978, he hired a manager. found an agent and began audit ioning for parts. But l'a st 111g directors hardly gave h 1 m a se{'ond look. m 0 re important as peel of his riiiiiiiiiiiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiijiijiiiiiiiiii fu t ure was being deter mined "They'd tell mt-to go East and g1>t some experiC'nce.' · Jones s aid lgnonng their advict:, Jones stayed west and continued to work while going to "cattle ('all " audition~ He was determined to bl' an <at·tor . "Every time I he<ird, ·No,· I Just pushed and pushed.·· Jones S<lld . "J guess that ·~ the Story of my hfc Every time somebody would tell me'. 'Yes.' I'd say:- 'No ' But you ket•p pus hing until· 1t 's obvious therl''s no hope. then go on to something else · · AT ONE POINT. J ones tried modchng But with his 6-foot. 3 in('h frame. he was too tall. In love with the excitement of show uusiness. 1l&-pcrsC'vered until aft er about 300 mass auditions. AP WlrepMto PUSHED ANO PUSHED Actor Sam Jones he had acquired µriceless ex· perience. though not necessarily in acting ''I lea m ed that to get a part, 1 had to stretch tht· truth a little bit.·· said Jones He says he found the ke} to getting a job in Hollywood was to pretend you don ·1 really need one ; or lx'tter still, that you're too busy now to do anything else but t hat you'll l'Onsider the role. Ev e ntuall y . Jon es wa s British seold MGM elsewhere, in producer Dino de Laurentiis ' living room. Jones says h e isn't s ure whether it was de Laurentiis. or someone in his family who saw the game show. but that's whe.re the producer found the lead for his multimillion-dollar film based on the .. Flash Gordon" co mic strip and serial. "IT'S FUNNY HOW serious actors spend a lot of years try- in g to make it in this business and I come along, go on a game s how and gel cast in a major motion piC'ture." Jones said. "What I h<id in m v favor was an innocence about the husiness. and when I was asked to sc·reen tt-sl for ·Flash Gordon.' I took it wi th a gram of salt.·· he added · 1 remembered how I used to sit by the phone for C'alls that never I l':J mc I I I CISU •s• INll11m811 IUCM llllSSIOll YlllO 8r1~tol I J"d'·'' 1.,. Cinema ''1e1n '>40 1444 ~4~ ;flt 8.lO &990 SAllU AllA II~· h·H Rl~ll lh It• 11 II I. II '..t 't. "-..t'-.. A1 I t lfl'I ( 1 ,J•tfJ!f. .. •~_.,, l~_.Altf~f\,it 'Ripper' film abandoned ._ ______________________________________ _ 1--~~~-~-~-~---~-. LOS ANGELES (AP ) - MGM. whic h had come under fire in England for allegedly try- ing to capitalize on the mis- fortunes of others. says it is scrapping plans to make a mov· ie about Britain's Yorkshire Rip· per, who has slain 13 women since October 1975. When British news papers re- ported the studio was planning the film. there was a n im- m e diate protest, and a s hort time later MGM released a statement saying it was drop· ping the project. "In consideration of public re- action in the United Kingdom, MGM Film Company and pro- ducer Larry Wilcox announced ... they have abandoned plans to develop a screenplay on the subject of the 'Yorks hire Rip· per, ... the statement says. The movie reportedly was to have been based on a script by a London police sergeant who is also a crime writer and expert on Jack the Ripper, the elusive Victorian·era killer who was blam ed for at least five bloody deaths but was never caught. MGM spokesman Al Neuman 1n Los Angeles said work done so far on a short story version of a screenplay "was just an embryo idea." Before MGM decided to aban- don the movie, the mother or the la t est Yorkshire Ripper victim had called the project "dis- gr aceful .. "They are cas hing m on other people's misfortunes." said Doreen Ifill. whose daughter. Leeds University student Jac· que l ine H ill . was fo und murdered fi ve weeks before. Anelay Hart. attorney for the Hill family, said he lodged a "d irect protest with MGM ." The m e mber of Parliament for Leeds blasted the project as be· ing in the "wor s t possible taste." In an ed itorial. the London New Standard said : "MGM ex- ecutives are proposing to exploit the vile deeds or a man who has br o ught fear and misery to countless women in the North in order to make a ·contemporary mystery thriller' to titillate au- diences inured to horror on the Ann IN E COUNTY DAILY MAJINEES -52 TO 5:00 PM BlllSIOI Nfl or 40'.> AN068'.>SUNfl OWCA 546-211 I KEZY 1190AM·HFM A So. C.O.at Plaze Theatra PfH•nta Frldey & Saturday * MIDNIGHT MOVIES * Screen., "SECRET LIFE OF PLA NTS" ....... -"l.AIDES a QENT\.EMEN: THE ROLLING STONES" S<'reen and ready for ne w 1. depravities. They should be told I that Britain is not Los Angeles, 1 w h e r e 30 people ca n be l slaughtered over a weekend without special comment .. I Danny Kaye in 'Skokie' llOLLYWOOD <APJ -Danny Kaye will make his television dramatic debut in the CBS special "Skokie ," which tells how the citizens of Skokie. Ill., b e ca me embroiled in con- troversy over a planned dem· onstralion by a neo-Nazi group. · The drama, filmed in Skokie, also stars John Rubinstein, Carl, Re iner, Eli Wallach. Brian Den- n eh y. Ed Flanders. Charles Levin and James Sutorius. Kaye plays a concentration camp survivor who confronts the neo-Nazi group They' re singing, swinging and everythinging! Qe rf~IA"O '1J U NA VISI• OrSlllllUllON CO •< C llC"l U '111~ 0."'4v 91oo..a...,. ----NIOW BHOWINCJ ----- G4l.OAMDt0 OOONlWAAT 1'\AOOIN{ KMN [!] - ll TOH Sdddlebaclo. t /1 4 I 581 ~880 OIAISE SlaO•um Ill •f Ir lJ &:ig 1860 ro1111rn11 nun f Ou"ld•n \' lll•v 7 l J ';~ I ~0( OHM,£ 01an;:, Md I ll bll 03~C --------------- The Power Behind The Throne JANE FpNOA LILY TOMLIN DOLLY Pl\RTON SHIRLEY M.lcLAIHE BO ANTHONY HOPKINS l.Al'RE.'iCE Tl M\IA\ "'40A\ lO fO~'ll;N ,,....., .. , JOEL 8 \CICHAEL\ GARTH ti ORABl.\~k'I ,.,...,.,... , RQR Cl \AA 1a .. 'n.1111 Tr:. ...... JOit\ ~ARLn 1(1\4 CATTR.\Ll 1;uf ··~R\ffi ... !COLLEEN DEWHURST) ..,,_,,..."' 8Ell\A Rll Sl.AOl:.a.....i .. -..... ..,"" "' 1r1 111 "'' l'ltcll H I 110, (II I\ (Ill" If II·'·"' l'I( 11 I( I """"'rd .... ,,."•"' \!ORTO.\ c:(ITTLJER NINf.JO FIVE [,,_l't,..,,ilttl'\ THETl:'ltMA,~.fO~TERCO.\IPA.'ff .... i RJCll..\Nll 11 l!RHillT IJ/\ll\U 4JI L \J ,:-._, UJLAllJ I If \\II \U\ .~\llKf l\(,ll\\l1l\H l~\~ •• m.n 1.d .. ~.·~~;y;~~~~~~~~A~~"'~JnO~El~8~~T~-~~~~m~~~~lRT~H~H~n=~~B~l\~~~n~~~~~~~~~~ tt IM ._._ Ull \CA."\IW.- \ucrnrl•I I" COi i' llll1lol'' ;n1l l'l\IRlt I" K l '"(~ ~ll\11 h1 '""I l{J( IA Kl \\II I( '1u"I h1 f lf<\1(11 \I U\ ,._,...,""'I-Iii BARRY MA;\11,C,_,jM~ f Elll\lA.\ And IOU\,~ ~l~$\l~\ "'""a.. KEN 'A-"'S8ERG -·--"·h-... -·-~ ~ ___ ...,.. --~ . . ._ __ .....,.~ ... ~..,..~...:it DAILY PtlOT ..... °"" ·-. ,. 'Spider's Web' solid .success N.l:W YORK (AP> It ... ma Hilt • natural relaUouhlp raclo .... t.M l&ot)'ttlliaa Lracti Uotl. VIit • GM't made t1le COft• oedAGa-. Uk• Oeor1• Mor.· ty ead • .,,.. Spider'• Web" on Nat6oul~Redio ''Por • 10•1 lime," aaya. M~r. &M MriM' eHeuidve ,.. .. ., •. ·-u.. ......... ol recMo dr911a hu ..... to re·do what wu doe• la t .. e P••t I believe A••rlcan eara are more ot*itlk'ated U... daya, lar1ety becaiase of the lnfluentt ot t~leVWon ·•We can't 111• th• old Public radio drama to begi,n 10th year ture on many NPR 1laUou. · 'T"er• are Hveral obJtc· tlve1," llor .. oy aaya of tbt Hrlu produeed at 801toa'1 public rMio at.aUoD, WGBH. ·•We went to lntroduu l'hUdnn, and edwu, to lht Joys of 1ood ~teratun and tbe •SM*• word, and we want to belp llateninc aod lan1ua1e akllll. Uona drawn from the storyt.eU- lDI tl'adlUCln, arouped as "Hand· Me·Down·Heroa." "In term• of the develop· mental 1ta1e that children'• radio 11 ln today," he says, "we are all ln need of research. We need to know how effective our techniques are. We say 'Spider's Web' ls almed at the 10-14 au· dle nce. Are we hittin1 t hat audience? •·For a lon1 time we 'were told the re was no audience for this. But we know from the reaction we've had i n Boston, from teachers and librarians and so on, thal there is an audience, an~ it's not just kids." ENTERTAINMENT t~r~ ~ wrhla& atyie. , 1n prodwiq radk> drama to day,· he aays "lt comu otf u dated What )'OU need to do b rt • dev.io, radao 1JuU1. and apply n~w teehnoklcy to lbe mtldtwn "IN ADOITION TO lbet " be uy11, "we want to sU mwaie tbe 1ma1uu.lion, and ol course, en· cour.,e people t.o read more." "The Spider's Web" hu, over the years, offered youn1 people readin&s from tbe classics, lilte "Treasure Island" in 20 half· hour · seements, as well as from more contemporary literature, like Irene Hunt's award-winning novel of the Great Depl'ession, •'No Promises in the Wlnd." "TD SPIDEa'S WEB" ln· troduc:e1 lD the comln1 season a team ol youn1 "Webreporters" on a11i1nment to examine va.rloua topics related to lhe pro- 1ram1 broadcast. The young re- p o rters will interview "Webreports" that will become part of the program. "Web· cards ," which will s uggest various activities related to the stotles broadcast. Morency, whose Transcon· tinental Media Corp. is involved in other radio productions, joined "The Spider's Web" in 1973, when the program, broadcast at the time only in the Boston area. was "pretty mu c h straightforward reading. with musical bridges ... Then, of course, there is the problem inherent in producing for public broadcasting -lack of money. Morency p roduces "The Spider's Web" for about S200,000 a year, but that mean& two-thirds o r the programs broadcas t arc repeats. t• I .. • ; . ~. ... , !1~1 I •I' ,.~. : I I I ... .;. , I I.: I s I I I ' •I ~. I .;f . " J'! I -.. 1 . ~1· •>' \.1 '' I . ••' I ~. I ;i ! 1 ~ I ~~ii i' I "'!I !·t .1~ , ... ;;~1 "EACH TIME WE plan a 'eries of procrams, we try to ta Ile a developmental leap forward. First il was technical t!Jtperimentalion, and now we're ~·orkin& on youth involvement." "The Spider's Web," featurtna rudi.np of books, stories and rol ktalkes by professional !>lqrylellen and actors, begins its lot.b season in January, its third as a five-day-a-week fix· "No Promises in the Wind" will be broadcast in lS parts in February, part of the series' 10th annivenary season. WlntlN A SHORT li me. he 1'ays, the pr<)(IU<'ers began to ex· perl ml'nt with multiple-voice productions, a technique still in U!lt' lOORy "IN 10 YEARS, we have amassed quite a li brary ... he says. "and there's no reason l'ach pro11:ram we broadcast s hould be a new one. But I would like to sec a greater rC1lio of new s hows to old ones." 'The Spider's Web " seasort 1s eight months long. or 175 pro· grams , Morency says, "and ideally, I would like to do l!XH25 n('w shows each year I could do that for $.500,000. ·· Con1field <•ouple .,. ........... In addiUoo. there are produc-Oly mpic gold-m edalis t Hr uce Jenner and his wife-to-be, actress Linda Thompson. pose in the cornfield on the television set of "flee Haw." J enner will be a g uest on show in early 1981 <.1nd Thompson is a regular. Poland to present play by pontiff WARSAW , Poland <AP> -Producers in southern Poland are pr,eparing the world premiere of a play by Karol Wojtyla, better known lo the world as Pope John Paul II, Warsaw Radio said. The pontiff's serond play, "In Front Of A Jeweler's Shop," will premiere in March in Walbry1ch, 40 miles south of Wroclaw In Lower Silesia. His ftrst play, "Brother of Our God," also premiered in Poland and received what officials in this communist nation called a "warm reception." • . 0.ULY 1:30. 3:"5 1:00. 1:15. 10:30 AC..._. ...... lPG) DAILY 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, t:OO. 10:90 .. SAltilACI PWAI ~,~,Ao581·51UJ edwns mslll CINEMA m\TOLAT~ .... , ... STIR CRAZY "Al lht• tlnw. Wl' drew mainly rrom written lltnulure." he 1Ctty11 •·1 hnd 11lw11ys hccn r ll1'l'lll1tlc"Cf with orul lit crutur<•, 1111<1 1 rc•lt Wt' rnuld Improve the 1• r o al r 11 m h y t• cl d i n I( .... ·rfurm1111c•t•/'I or folk sturil'l'I "I ~.c1111 look in•: for addi tloo1tl 11toryh'lll'rt1 nround the> country. 111111 1·11tc·hi11u lht•m on tupl'. In udd1tlo11 to thot. wc started n•ut'111111ot J1ut to sornl' 11 torylcllcrs tu ditt'<'I the ir perfoi;manct•s ·Would you tell m e lhest-storlt's ., · · · '"The Spidl•r's Wt•h," says Morencyr has rcuc•hf'd a new plateau. FRENCH MOVIE Wlth ENGLISH SUB-TITLES MON·WED, FAI. 6:00, 1:20, 10:35 THUAS, SAT, SUN. J:30. 3•45, 1:00. 1:20. 10:35 (PG) EDWARDS CINEMA HAlkA A f ADAM-\ COSTAMH4 S4'·JI02 + ......... _ :.= edwards WOODBRIDGE ·::::.-:.·~:w:~=;~ 551 ·0655 """-''-=~~.- wn If you didn't kwe her last movie. that's :: :a~:~ toll]try . ,,. . : . r . 6 Agatha Christie's HI=--~ CNPkf/ edwards CINEMA VIEJO SO ,_llW•TTOU,AI MISSION YllJO IJ0.4"0 emds ·WOODBRIDGE ...................... 551 0655 ··---::.:.·· ·-· .. edwards CINE A ENTER HAllO•ATAO .... \.Con& .. UA MIS4 YHDICINTH t7'-4 I 41 DAILY 1:00, 3 15 5:30. 7:45, 10:00 I r edwardS CIN£Mf W£ST .:"!=!~ .. 891-3935 ~------ edwards SADDLEBACK PLAZA r ~'c~o ,C:.C, 581-5880 ~ SAM J JON[S MELODY ANDERSON HlllH GDH/11/f/ '°"j\tl Y I :IO, J 45 6 00 I IS 10 U AT edwards BRISTOL CINEMA •• =!.°'.._ 540.7•.u u..tta &•• 't't"f DAil Y I.JO, 3 4S. I 00 I IS, 10 15 AT ~-~-~~-·~~·~'~~~~~!~f5E5 J 2nd l'EATifiiiA T F YAlLEV "AtRPLANE" '-"""'' ... •• Aoucran' QCV'I' o.A.M • eo...o. .... _ SEEMS LIKE OLD Tl .. I tt• II •.1 ...... t •.e tt ........... ""°" ......... , .... C-U.l IMTWOOO .. ANY WHICH WAY YOUCAN(N) ••• '. 11' ' ••• ti., l~•a MC)\.tOA•*>IAMt .... ...... "'"''··· POPEYE (PQ) ti• IJ U IM t M, I f tf•U 'IUllO•' a MOUOA t ..0 I I.Al 'I M«)W llobe,, 0. Niro RAGING llULL (R) O.JO, 1:00, 3:30. 1.00, 1:30. 10: ----...,..,,,... ... ,.....0 ... lt ... - Chevy Ct\•M • Ooktl• H•wn EEMS llKE OLD TIM (PG) 10 0 , 1·00. J ·1S, S.30, 7:45, 10. Gene Wiide• •nd lllchu d Pryo< STIR CRAZY (R) 1 00, • IS. I 30 9 00 ~" S•I New Ye•r t E•• L•I• '-----' ShO• 11 1 s Chevy Chue • Goldie H•wn .~ ~:.,·,:;, SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES 494-1514 (PG) i:oo, •:oo. 1:15. 1:30 --'" t IS. S.C. Swn. _.,, 1'00 .,._ ~ •·• tMPOR YANl NOl ICf• CMllOllllN UNDlll 11 fllfl' ,,, _ _, '1 Brooke Slll•ldt • Chrl1tophef Atlllll• •• u.mon SI I Plu• TH£ BLUE LAGOON t"I ..,.IMM.,_~_i879·98SO THE ELECT"IC HOllllllllAN ('° t Ho A./ltA C.•·' Aeo.o With •vn•t•on Ac<t•iuory 9,,,.. vowr Owott AM •· IY-W"9tl,_1 '°'81(N) ,... 1ltE HUNTU (N _, _____ ..... ,, -____ .. _.,,..,,,._..,.,.._.,.. ___ ·-......... .. --~ ----. . . .. .. . . . .. -. . . IJ'P'fJ lBadl . to better life • DARLINGTON, S.C. tAP> -.Lilt ,..,, &dd 'ms....,'• Clu'la&•• .. ~ .. worry ._.... Mr hubMd, .. ,..... W ..... llltMIDrlCM\WI' ·m ..... u.. .................. , ..... ,......., ....... u.1...a, ....... .... , ............... = .. "--lMerMRir 11# • ..,.. ..... .... . ., . ........ ... naD1 Mftril •'-' ...... ty thM_.. ........ ,. ... ....,,M,''8 .... m.-......_.. ......... . ,,... ....... ,..,, ... Uy •• woftlq ............ ~.-...,....111 ....... • ....... EDELL ANO MYMONO MNl9UllY . Hls .U. worUd at a rut.food restaW'ant, and the family Uved 1D a tl&·a·moalh wood aback without nannlnc water . Tbey came to naUoQfl attention when laubury nunma1M Ulrouih the dump and HIV .... M•• pain of aboel, two pain of boots, a bandbq and 40 plecesol clodUnc. He wu spotted by the operator of the laodftU, IDd aUthoritles later traced his license •number and arrested him for treapauU\1. But tbe story of hia troubles soon reached newspapers. radio and televlaion, and lbouaanda ol people responded with Christmas cards, &«ten, lifta and cub. Tbe money eventually amounted to $30,000, which tbe family uaed lo buy a house and a aecond·baad car. The last of the money was spent tbil week. "I didn't want to waste it up," Hid Sansbury . . After the public outcry over the case aaaifl9t Sansbury, county officials dropped the ~har1es. A shy, quiet man, Sansbury was a bit unnerved by all the attention. Four months ago, llae and bis boss a1reed his nerves were so bad that he should quit his job. Now he spends bis time working on his pale green, wood·sided house, painting the bedrooms and tendin·g the yard. His wife babysits part·lime and takes care of their children, who ran1e in a1e from 5 to 13. The movie is expected to go into production in February. Drew Cummings Productions of Tanana purchased the rights to the Sansbury story, and the $1. 7 million motion picture is to be filmed in the Myrtle Beach. S.C .. area. The Sansburys are hoping that their take from the movie -which has not been determined -will be enough to keep them off the welfare rolls. Nation needs five-cent nickel DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am answering the butcher from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., wbo gives tips and says, "It would be nice if • somebody tipped ME." What does he expect, when the cost of beef is anywhere from $2.SO to $3 a pound? And with every four pounds of meat you.1et a pOUod of waste. What's more, I'll bet that character makes between $350 and $400 aw~. I was a butcher in 1915. My aalary was $12 a week. I worked from 7 a.m . to 7 p.m . daily, Monday to Friday. Saturday it was 7 a.m. to 1 a.m . Sunday. We received lips of a ni<!kel or a dime from certain customers because we trimmed off t.he fat. In those days, a five-cent tip paid for a big beer and free lunch at the comer bar. A 10.cent lip bought a whiskey or three Pllilliea c:i1an. I qwit butchering in 1918 ·to 10 iato .uto mechanics. I am IS yeers old aftd reed ·)'<Ml ,, every day. -B.L. DEAR B.L: Thanks fer belal Mr 19·111oae bl1tor1an. You've reml•ded m ata .. ~at wt.at tlll1 coatry Deeds II a •ood five-ca& •leMJ. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I wrote to JW when I was upset over my father's dea~ and ' needed a kind word .. At the time the tneat loaf , Issue was more important, so my letter alM>ut , Daddy never appeared. TUESDAY, DEC. 3' By SYDNEY OJIARK ARIES (Mar. 2l·Apr. 19): Don't press, chide or challenge. Instead , okay shrewd waiting game. TAURUS (Apr. 20· May 20 ): Ac c ept counsel from one with proven li'lfck record. Older individual has your best interests at heart -and will prove it. GEMINI (May 21 · June 20): Study Taurus message -take nothing for granted. Others ex- hibit a tendency to make many promises. ability to renegotiate agreementa and a new understanding of one who had~ duaive. AQUARIUS <Jan . 20-Feb. 18): Ooo4 lanar aspect coincides now with journeys, special co mmunications , publishing and pursuit of knowledge. PISCIS < P'~b . 19 -Mar . 20 ): Dig beneath surface indica· lions; you have chance to complete a major as· signm~t. Aries, Libra persons figure prom- inently. Later. when my marriage began to fall apart. I thought you might be able to help -but you were too busy telling people how to hang toilet paper. Today one of your .cute answers rubbed me the wrong way, and I'm going to try one more time. The lady who wrote was tired of playing taxi for her mother. I know all about such mothers because I had one. After several years of driving her 30 miles so we could pick tomatoes all day and save five cents a pound over the store price, I had a bellyful and told her off. According to you, I should have kept my mouth s hut because s he •·is the only mother you will ever have." How did a nice Jewish girl like you get such a Virgin Mary complex? Having a baby doesn't make an ordinary woman into an idol. If she is a kind, loving person, that's the type of mother she will be. If she· is selfish and twisted, motherhood won't make her a saint. So why don't YOU wake up and smell the coffee? Some of us were dumped on when we were born, and we aren't afraid to say so out loud. - SPEAKJNG UP IN UTICA, N.Y. DEAR tJTICA: Coalcl It be tlaat your m~r WH ftmped • my lier motber! You don't say wlletlliler you .. ave cllUdrea. If you do, 1 llope yoa ualoa• aome of tllat ra1e and break tile cbaln. Good tuck. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You made it clear that you don't like to be called "Ms." Would it make you feel better to know that out of 3,000 women who were polled in 1979. 7i percent pre· fe rred "Miss" or "Mrs." Only 16 percent . favored "Ms." (Seven percent said they didn't care one way or the other.) Among married women, 81 percent pre· fer red "Mrs." Only 12 percent liked •·Ms." Among single women "Miss" was preferred by 62 percent. Only 32 percent opted for "Ms." ''Chairperson" was preferred by 32 percent, while 26 percent like "Chairwoman." When asked about a woman who delivers milk, 31 percent preferred "milkperson." Thought you'd like to know. -BIG BERTHA DEAR BERT: Thanks for the Input. If I ever see a womH delivering milk, I'll know what to call her. CANCER (June 21 · July 22): Highlight in- novations, indepen- dence, originality - love and speculative venture dominate excit· ing scenario. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Follow through on hunch-teach and learn. Emphasis on ideas, calls, messages, trips involvinJ( relatives. Party Trays For You~ _ New Year's Celebration VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 23) : Areas of financial opportunity multiply - expand person a I horizons, p e rc eive potential and make ef· fort to accelerate social "activity. LlallA (Sept. 23-0ct . 22): Roadblocks to pro1res~ ~re removed. Know it, late initiative. SCORPIO (Oct. 23· Nov. 21): Take nothllt1 for granted -perceive potential, examine motives and have frank discussion with member of oppoaite sex. SAGl'ITA&IUS <Nov. , 22·Dec. 21): Ypu have reason to celebrate due to marvelous news COii· nected with family • member. Special honors •~onapnda. CAPatCO&N (Dee. Plus: • Beefstlck Summer Sausage • Cheese Ball,s & Cheese Logs • Fresh Cut Cheeses ORDER NOW! ~-------~--~~~------DF-fllflO- ,.SHIOM ISLAND. :M'ii ....,_.,., ............. ... ,, .. -.... _ ... ___ -·-._... .....----~-~---... --~_.._. .. ..--..-.. _....._._ __ ---.... ,,. ..... I' -.. o.c.n._, 21. 1MO BRODY HUMPLE, 9, (ON BIKE) SAYS HE U8E8 SKATEBOARD "UN DAILY But city •Ide uya UnlYeratty P•rk faclltty'a time ha• ,..Hd .... .... . .. ... ,• I . Skateboard track dead? .. :~: ,, Abuses may lead to facility'• closure By RICHARD GREEN Of Ille o.lty "ilet Staff ports of skateboards flying into fences and into backyards.'' . ... ' ,. ...... ..... Irvine's one skateboard course may be heading for a quick wipeout, according to city Com· munity Services Supe rvisor Gil Gonzales. He said skateboarders have abused the park and its surroun- dings. when it first opened four years I' ago but in recent yean has been '": used very little, Gonzales said. :• >c I ,. , ·•we've put fliers up around the course and tried to tell peo· , • pie that it may be closed down,'· he said. "But nobody realty seems to care too much. Everi• His department. a long with the Community Services Com- msission. will recommend to the City Council next month that the facility be closed. "Kids have urinated in the ohone booths. broken phones, thrown trash and alcohol bottles on the course and put graffiti in the area," he said. Brody Humple, 9, of Irvine, was riding a small "motocross" bicycle on the course Friday af- ternoon. (Gonzales said that. technically, the course should be used onl y by skateboarders). the kids who use It say i\ wouldn't bother them if the •• 1 course closes down." "' 1 . Gonzales said that residents n ear the Unive r s ity Park Skateboard Course. No 1 Beech Tree Lane, are ups et with s kateboarders. The course is the only ~ne o[ 1 • its type in Irvine. The neares "I don't want it torn down," Humple said. "I'm here almost ever y day using it." other skateboard course in is I Anaheim and a fee is charged to 1 use it. ·'I'd say the residences are about 20 yards from the course, .. Gonzales said. "We've had re· The course was heavily used "I guess it's like a fad that ~s really died down," Gonzales said. ~ .. . . . ~ OC lifegurad travels •, . ~ ByPIDLSN!!!Mi:-an helps teach Peru~~. were based t 'J 0tt11eo.11,P11etstet1 Lima, Crow and his comradts On most days, you can find used their spare time to expl~e ·\, lifeguard Greg Crow. 25, keep· the sights of Peru. ' , ing an eye out for swimmers in ··Peru as a whole is''a ; distress at Hunt ington City beautiful country," he says. •!t • Beach. has a lot of heritage from the la· , I But a few weeks ago, his work can civilization and Spanis1· (-. r' took him south of the equator. Ouence. The Amazon River s • w h e r e he and 1 1 o th e r through it, and there are , · Americans taught the latest Andes Mountains. rescue and first aid techniques "The Peruvians couldn't io to lifeguards in Peru. enough for us. They made sute • Between cla sses. C r ow we were well fed and well taWn sampled South American life. care of wherever we went." 1 He took a ride down a granite Cr ow's tour ranged from } • slide constructed by the ancient mode rn s treets of Lima t o 1 lncan civilization and dined on primitive villages along tl)e -;. llama hearts. ("They were quite Amazon. good," he says.) The two-week trip was CroWls The American visitors were second international excursicii. members of the United States Last year, he worked for five Lifesaving Association, which wee k s on the beaches +r 1 had been asked to send a team Auckland. New Zealand. in~.a :: t o help train the Peruvian lifeguard exchange progra~ .. '1 lifeguards. During that trip he also visit4d f. Peru has many beaches with Austrialia, Inddnesia and Hocsg high waves and plenty or surf. o.u, f'll•U"" .._. Kong. . ers. Crow said. SHARES EXPERTISE In contrast to Peru's mililao" Lifesaving in that nation. HBUfegu•rdGregCrow lifeguards . New .. Zealaitd h ow ever . is handled by a beaches are guarded primarily military force equivalent to our by volunteers who are ell· National Guard. Because of the language dif· thu siastic but not alwa1s 1 "They are not as extensively ferences. the classes frequently thorough I y trained dr ' trained as lifeguards are in were conducted in "Spanglish," 'equipped,"Crowsays. / California ,·· Crow ex plains. Crow recalls. Crow's travels have increa~ •' "They're making an attempt to "We used a lot of hand mo-his respect for the crews •t correct that by sending teams to lions." he says. "That usually home. ) the United States and inviting got the point across." ·Ca Ii fo rn i a has the bd t people like us to visit there." Crow demonstrated the use of trained and highest qualified Flames char lwme in Mesa; 2 pets saved A Costa Mesa woman escaped with two of her three dogs after fire.completely gutted her home at3120Roanoke Lane. Police sai 0 d that the fire start· ed in a fireplace Saturday after 5:45 p.m ., spreading quickly through the one story home. The roof was totally destroyed and mos t of the interior was blackened. No other homes were reported damaged. The Unidehtified woman told police that she grabbed two. ol her dogs and ran from the bum· ing home. It was not known if a Lhird d9e escaped. Fire officials are cotitlnuing to investigate the cause ol the blaze. an extrication s.plint, which im· lifeguards,·· he says. "You ' mobilizes victims of neck or might get some arguments from back injuries. People in other states. but· J "It was the first time it had think we're generally regard~ been shown in that country," as having the greatest expert*te Crow says. in lifesaving." I l ~~lier df!llfs --~---- ___ . .- Clemente police glad month ov~r q: J.J This hasn't been the month for Jn tbal incident, Officer patrol cars in San Clemente, Wilfred Moreno was third In Hie 1 especially Unit 580, which hu •t • slot) liCl'il in.the northbouDd '4 been dinted three times in lhe lanes of Ola Vista. ·• \,. past two weeks. He said Robert T. Geddes, Z3, ~ The latest Incident 'with the of San Clemente was makln{ia ~ hapless vehicle occurred at 4 left tum from Del Mar onto u;a .J _ a .m . Christmas Day when tbe Vista when he apparently lciat 1i. unit, driven by Officer Crate ·control ol bi.a car and slam..,.S ,.• Kelsey, collided QD El Camino into the icWnJ patrol car. ~ Real with a car driven by PoUc_e saiCI Geddes becamt ~ William McGuire. .belUterentfollowinttbe accidatt •' McGuire, whose a1e and ad· and be was arrested an chraps DI ~ dress we~ unknown by ~diaturbba1U.peae9-. ":.... pulled out onto El Camino from Officer MOl"IDO suffered ·•, WU m to by Kelsey'• northbound patrol· Clemente General Hoapital. lie G d .car. waa6't bolpttallnd. The polite ar ena YWCA The California Hi1hway unilwuheaYll1damqed. ' e amea Irvine Foun ..... ...,..,...--lD~=ilallDl~u.at.-a..---.. pc; ee t'rtd11 tb-e-:C::::H-:-.;IP::'"':"." l*-"'!11,..lnt~• baa awarded a $22,500 crant to And the CHP 11 also in· 1till ln...,.U.1twooUMrHtl· ~ the Gardena V.tley YWCA. veaUaattna a craab involftnc dents blwlvtal UD.lt •. wMttl ., Wltb the srat, the YWCA bu anotberSu Clemente patrol tar botb oc:ew1id Det.11. t . raised nearly Slll,000 of its Jut lb boun earlier at UM ln· The CHP rouUaely ~· bulldint and renovation fund. tenectJon ol AvenJda Del llar vatt111te1 all attklenta iavelli. The Coal ii Sl50,000. and Ola Vista. int police ..-a•. . ~~ \ f lJ A A. MNtlro IAl'' 1 h ... re art" fat In the w•llinl mom fuU of dealh aml lhtrtt •re far t• full ol hope "'lt•h hllAI I l.Y °" akel•••I franu• or r h ... klO upo,. ovwr bodl• d.la &C'llliell.., di.MAM Tt.•)I han tomt h r lo 11 "'°" ~ the rban<'t lhe r owe on would no4 or rouad nol I'',. them Lat-trU~. • sua.taMe lb" mo~\ d()("\orw r ouldtr ~urthl • \ ln lh b•tllt 111tut t'illOC\'r It th Uw carr and p•Uuu 11~ h • lhwt lk·,pi&~ aUfonua 'a '"' l..tt'lnlt-lu• I IJu•na wm r1 11) •In lbt.> ,~ ... f\ ahl t for t.•r&1\1t\.ll <'UMt•r 1H1twolb tbe 11hH1l' tu c•umt-"ht•n olher doe rnn h '~ toht tht'lll 'I mvly lo l(o 1\1101 ... nu cla.· I tt t. \ f' L 0 ( ' I( 'I 0 t h 1 !> l .u·tuh· t oi~ut.-1 vf the world not It• bl'<tt M>m~1oc lt<ll the m lht1t thq "111 hvt> OOI) th11t tht:y Ill It .. !>, h1tH• II Ch•Hll't' l't.-oplc CXJjt!('t a l l1111c wht:re I hc•n• ;u-c,: dart floorl>, fhe!> and hart•fc1Ut dcH:tur:. In the.: lab, they l'\ P'C:'cl lo l>t!e u f'OU rl<: of pt.'Ons "ltang on the floor chewing •\l'rll'ot ke rnels and spilling out .1111 > ~dahn I Lael ri le >,' s aid re '''a re· her and clinic consuJtant AnJrew McNaughton 'they won't find a ll whit\!, ,,tur(h s lafr l'd , hq£h rise hn-;pitals here, but many pa· lll•t'tts at Tijuana's two major l..1etnle clinics s ay s uch sterility 1!> exactly what they wanted to l''ll.,'UJ.)t' I NST•;AIJ, THEY come a s 1111lJJaticnts to the villa-style <'l101cs, or, if there a re vacan- <'ll'S, they stay in the facilities ' !>1m ple, homey rooms overlook- ing s mall garden plazas with fountains as cente rpie<'es. ·•J can get Laetrile at home, but not the rest the nutrition pro~ram , the holis tic health. the "'urmth here.·· :-aid Edith L•>boff, a 4l·year old Dallas hous ewife who lost a kidney lo cancer befor e the disease spread to be r spine. The Norwegian-born mother or one sat in an easy chai r at l'lini<'a Cydel with u s yringe of * * * Al"Wlre ...... lo JAILED FOR LAETRILE STAND Newport'• Or. J•rne• PrivHer• and wife Roseanne La e trile pumping into he r forearm. recalling nights of ter· rafy1ng pain. "I WAS SITl'ING up a ll night. eve r y ni g ht, so wo rried I t'Ouldn't sleep," she said. "After a week here, I could s leep again. They took me off the pain pills and I feel fantastic. I'm able to function." A New Zealand farme r in the neighboring easy chair nodded enthusiastically as they spoke. ''They told me in the hospital that they could do nothing for me , .. Jim Lapdell said "I was written off. I just said. 'Thank you very much.' and turned a round and walked out Didn't even ask how long I had · · Rut Lapdell. at 55. was not ready to die. Laetrile is available in New Zealand. he said, "but the doctors are afraid to use it ... * * * That he s itat i on is some thing the TiJuu1w chnics ar e literally banking on these days. s ince their b1~gest seller wi ll become legally available in California on Jan, I. "Th<• majority of well trained doctors are afraid to pn.:srrlbe Laetrile. so then• won't n•ully be an y ex pert s u s i n ~ at i n California at lcas l lo start ." p r edicted Dr Ernes to Con tr c ras. directo r o f Ct·ntro Medico dcl Mar. "This clinic has the mo!>t ('X- rwric'nn• in the world." he said. t'iting his 18-year cart•er as a Lat:trilc pioneer ··1t will take California many year-. to set up fal'tnries and c·lin 1cs and gel :o.ut·h 1•xpt·nent•t• "F.XJK:ricnt'e b the one thing you can 't huy or impr ovise, no·•·' * * * . CALIFORNIA place ·of last resort Allhouab hia cllpic baa no plans lo extend acl'Oll lhe border. Contreras aald he does plan lo olfer a weekend seminar for Calllomia doctors "to teach them the basics of metabolic therapy." After all, California has been kind lo hi.a clinic. Contreras estimated that 80 percent of his 2,000 patients a year are Americans, with 60 per- ct1nt coming from California. llul Tijuana will not become a l.uetrllt1 Rhosl town. Contreras 1i1u ured. because C alifornia "will never be able to offer \he c1uullty of service here al a lowtir cost. They'll c harge at l•·11~t double ." ROOM, BOARD AND treat· 11w11t 1n Tijuana a veruf(e less th:111 S200 u day. <'0111 n•ras · c onfide n ce is ct·hol•cl by his major com - pct1tor. Dr. Mario Soto. medical <h rct•tor of Cydel. who foresees a n·lut·tum·c by California doctors to use Laetrile lie claims many alrca<ly refuse to treat their pa· t1ent!I a~aan if they hetvc taken the controvers ial drug. "If a patient of mine wants to go see a witch on a m ountain a nc.J tomes back. I'll treat them. It's m y duly and theirs." he said. Soto characterizes himself as an "independent investigator" for the U S. Nationa l Ca ncer Institute, and keeps a 1971 letter from the institute framed on his office wall TH E l,ETTER SAYS Soto was to rcC'e1vi' in vestii,:at10nal sup- plies of iln anti·C'an t•er drug <·alll·!i lTNU then being tested Hut N<.:l~pokeswom an Ahce llamm :.et1d in vesl1 gat1onc.il sup· pli es of various drugs arc dis· trihutcd to "thous ands " of doc· I ors a year. and do not con.st1tute u spe<.'iul n•lt.1t ioni,h1p with NCI "We do not have any 1ndcpen- rlent investigators in Laetnle. · s he said . adding that a check of r N·ords showed Sot<i never "as a w a rded a ny NCI grant and re c·t•1ved his last 111\0ei.t1~atwnal dru~s 1n l!l74 * * * ALLEGED CANCER CURE AND SOURCES L•etrlle extr•cted from •prt~t pita The Del Rio family, which ow ns t he Cyrlel c linic etnd Laetrile factor y . may open a Let el rile factory an Ca hfornaa. brother Sergio Del Rio said, hut the re are no plans tfJ start a clinic lie said al would be too d1fflt ult to lircni.c ~1·x1can doc tor!> expt'racnccd with La ctn le to work 1n the L' S AS 0 T H E DO('TORS s ay pra ct 1t1ng their !>t y lc o f m et aboht therapy in Cali fornia would he risky until 1t 1s accept- ed as orthodox treatment 1n· Amt-n c·a And that risk, they sa~ 1s not a necessar~ c1 nt> 'There wi ll a lways he e nougti peoplc tu come ht-re. 'ontreras said * * * Outside his office. a gaunt and gray man sat stooped in pain. his ashe n face ~upped in his hands. lie stank of death that hot , s weet s mell of decaying flesh. As he spoke , each gesture, each word . shot s pasm s of pain through his thin body . "I have to get back home." he explained to no one as he strug· g led to get up ··Did me good for a couple of days. but the pain as bad now, my stomach. Cancer of the pan· c·reas I'm getting awful weak " I-le was not bitter . he s aid. not fhghtened "This was JUSt a straw to grasp at · .. .. .. New Califon1ia law legalizes Laetrile fo11_i: years LOS ANG E LES !AP1 Dr. .la mes H Pnvitera we nt to jail th is year becetuse he recom- m~ded Laetrile to cancer pa- ticpls. The cetse became a betltle cry fo r propone nts o r t he· con t 1 uvcrs1<1l l'an<:e r treatme nl. I.I'd by Roseanne Priviter a, wife of the :19 yea'r -o ld Newpo rt lka<·h doctor whose prac tice is 111 Covina. they l aun ched a public relations camp;Jistn and l11bb1cd the legislature. Al leas t partly because of what some conside r Privitera's marty rdom. California has adopted a·new law for rour years that legalizes "the m anufacture. s ale, prescription a nd use of laetrile," with certain restric· * lwns. for terminal cancer pa- tients. When the law becomes ef- fective Jan. 1. California will be al least the 23rd State with some form of Laetrile legalization law NEVt:R DID THEY realize when they broug ht t h ese c harges against my husband that this would be the cause of the final, victorious passage of t he Lae trile bill It was an e n o rmous victo r y, .. Mrs . Privitera sa id. Privitera served 55 days of a six-month sentence and remains on probation until February The controversy ove r Laetrile. or amygdalin as it's more ac- curately known, s urfaces often * * Laetrile expenses not reimbursable By The Assoc:lated Press Laetrile treatments, legal or not. are still considered lo be ex· perimental and therefore not reimbursable expenses under most group health insurance plans. Cha rles Bell, West Coast director of group insurance opera- llrms for the Aetna Life & Casually Insurance Co .. summed up the prevailing industry view. . 'The premise or a health policy is that it provides benefits for ~nerally accepted medical t reatment," Bell said. "Most policies uve a dause which excludes reimbursement for treatments which would be considered experimental. T he basic reason for that is that the insurance policy is not intended as a vehicle to support re· search. .. At this point. we reel that treatment with Laetrile does COO· slifute an experimental treatment plan," he said. "It certainlY is g"3ining publicity but it is not at this point generally accepted medical treatment. Therefore it would not become a covered ex· ~nse ooder 0ur health {nstirance policies. ThJ:l position will ~ subject to review and change as advances in t he state of lbe art -or rneditine lake place." 111 leg1!>laturcs. Congrc!>s. and the eourts Th e m edical est a blis hment 1s almost unanimous in dismiss- ing the chemical. which is ex· traC'led from apricot pits or bit· lcr almonds. a s at best an un- proven t rcatm cnl and at wur:.l a potentially dan gcrou~ and worthless elixir dbpenscd by charlatans 'We have found no cvidcnce whatever that t his 1:. of any value m the management of cancer,"' :.aid Dr G Congdon Wood . an assistant vice presi- de nt for the Amerit•an <:ancer Society. Speaking of the whole range or unconventional pratlit1oners. Wood said. "Some or these peo- ple have found a way to make a ve ry good living by e ncouraging people to go to extre me ly un · orthodox and in some cases even unethical forms or treatment.,, FOR THF.IR PART, Laetrile proponents claim thousands of individual cancer patients have been saved by the chemical and the nutrition-based therapy as· soc1ate~th it Supporters often allege con- spiracies or government, dortors and dru~ companic:. cager to protect t he profits Of CllnVeQ. tio nal anti-can ce r s urgery. radiation and chemothe rapy "You should remember." said Mrs Pri vit~ra . "that d rug. oriented medicine 1s big bucks ... The U S. Food and Drug Ad- m inislralion conside rs Laetrile an unproven and unapproved substance and bans its shipment in interstate commerce T he U.S._Supreme Couit upheld the FDA ban in 1979 and aga in last October. when it let a lc1wf'r 1·ourt ruling stand and re 1rc tcd a rguments that d ying t'anl·er patients have a constitu· tional right to use Laetrile Such j udicial dccis10QS may Virtually nullify man y s tate Laetrile statutes s ince federal l<1w s ays no ingrC'd1t•nt of a hannc•d -;uhs tanN• mav cross :-lall:' lines. · ··As lung as all its ('Om ponents aris e solely within the s tate. then Wl' don 't have a handle," :,.aid FDA spokesm an Ed Nida. "But the minute at goes out of s tate. then the FDA and the 'ommc rce Departme nt have immediate jurisdiction." Laetrile 's legal s ta tus has heen murky since a federal * * judge an Oklahoma Cat y ruled in 1977 that terminetlly 111 cancer patients can import Laetrile for their own use The result has been a streetm of cancer victims to Laetrile chn1 cs 1n borde r wwns lake T1Juana Jt:ROME HOLLA!'DER ()r tht-L' S Custom!> Service said. We a re s tall fo li o " 1ng the Oklahoma jurlg<' s rulin g We ar e permitting people to bnng in Laetrile for personal U!lc. pro· viding they ha\"e a n aHadav1t fro m a medic al doctor " that says they a rc termina lly ill In the meantime. Nida noted. "Cinical t ests are being carried out by the Nat11111al Cancer * Disputed subs lance taken from nature By T he Associated Press The center or a bitter controversy is a whitish powder that's usually extracted from apricot pits in North America or from bit- ter almonds in Europe and Asia. The alleged cancer cure known popularly as Laetrile or more accurately as amygdalin is a natural s ubstance that's found in parts of more than 1,200 plants. from apple and cherry seed!> to many beans and grasses. . Rut for comme rcial use, the m ost common sources are apricots and almonds. said Laetrile distributor Robert W Brad- ford of San Francisco · · Bradford said apricot kernels ,are ground up and c rushed . then put in boiling alcohol lo dissolve out the amygdalin. When the alcohol is cooled, the amygdalin cryslali zes and drops out. It's then put through a series of purification steps. The result is the white powder that can be fashioned into table ts. timed-release capsules, suppositories or, when mixed with wate r. into a clear, injec.table lisiuid. Hnuilord said Laetrile tablets in North America a re usually 500 milligram doses. They're a bJl larger than a s tandard aspirin tablet. lnst1tutc•, with FDA setnction, to settle once and for all whether Laetrile has any value for any p.urpose ·· The $500.000 testing program. he~un an July. is expected to in- vol \"C about 200 cancer patients in c arefully controlled studies at four leading m edical centers. Preliminary results may come as soon as April In propos ing the study. NCJ not· ed that a recent nal1onw1de opi· n1on poll fou nd Amer icans "faced legallzat1on o r Laetrile by a strong 53 percent to 23 percent majority,.. with the remainder undecided. WOOD DOUBTS THE tests wall end the debate and some ~C l researchers say Laetrile proponents are already hedging · the ir bets by contending the study is designed to fail. The Committee for Freedom of Choice in Cancer The rapy Inc. sued unsuccessfully to stop the trials "The position we are·taking is that they are using fraudulent material." s aid committee pres- ident Robert W. Bradford, head of a San Francisco Laetrile dis· tribution firm . "What they are · using is a decomposed or de· gradated amygdalin c Laetrile ) pro duct which they had manufacwred. We think they are knowingly doing so in an at- te mpt to dereat the whole pro· gram .. The allegations are vehement- ly denied by the National Cancer Ins titut e . Larry Kleinman . NCI 's head of clinical products, said the trials involve "a bsolute- ly. 100 percent" pure amygdalin produced under contract by established drug companies and checked for purity. So the debate continues . gopff~TICAT£0 PROGRAMMING ... ·---~ \r,: Beaulilu/ glBrBo Mu~iO--:-New~~MarinB WBalhBr:::_ 1 Con~umnr Rnporl~-gloak Marknl Rnporl-~ ... ·---------------·--.. -...,_ ---~ --------.,,, .. -.. -···---..,,. --.-. ... --... ' . .. . . . . . . . ... ..,,. . . . . ... ._ ,. . ., • ieh I • ID ••rily IAlll -.Va& CAP) ___ ., .. ¢, 2 I dm la ....... . .... "-.... .. t ......... .... t•• ••••• •ll•r::r :: ........... . .. b ...... .... of -e W ,, I k's ..,,, .... ...,. .. .... of ........ ,..,. ....... a.&c• ·;n• I fm tM .... a."' Ne ,.,.__ .. -......... . lo Merta Couat1 dt.Mirw ... u. ...... Glail • ~ ...... u. lM tnlll ~ '° ...... aD&l&M Y•Hb profit. for tile uwt aa tt..l ia a.beUl • millka.. C ON'llNtJ a8 dls- t.ntM&dm of tDe IDOae~ ID Marin Cowaty aJone, saya Mtairn9J Gwf'aJ Geor1e Dedmejiaa, m•)' "rmult iD a condi- tion ol cbaritable SW'· plua <W saituntkla" that could be delrimental to t.be couaty. The petition WU ftled iD Ilaria Coun· ty Superior Court. The alMJmey &en«al said in bia petition that Marin County ••ranks amon1 tbe more atrt..-t counties in tbe state," with averap bot1aebold buyin& power ol t:m.9154 a year, compared to a statewide averaae of $21,625. TB.-& MAY BE a "need to comider paMi- ble modlftcation of tbe geographic restrictions ol tbe trust.·• be said. As attorney 1eneral, Deukmejian ia in charle of "protection , superviaion and eaforee- ment of charitable truab and bequests .•• Superior Cowt Judge • Noe.I Jlartln siped an order est.abliahin1 a periodic reportin& pro- cedure tD tbe court so tliat speodia1 can be, monitmed. Tbe truat bas dis- tributed mare tb8D $13 million· to various cllariU.. in tbe CDUDt7. MISSILE ..UD PACI'· TUC!OM, Aris.. <AP> -The Air Poree and five st.ate and county agencies have drawn a plan to help each other during any accidents in- volving the 18 ntan n missile sites around Tucson. Under the agreement. lbe Air Force. the state and four area counties would jointly coordinate emergency· response plans, such as evacua- tions. if an accident or explosiftn occurred. The pact, also re· quires the Air Force to provide officiab of the four counties with an analysis of problems oc- curring at any of the missile sites. PACIRC NW ..-.OllM.f'Aa Cenwtery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Fac1hc View Onwi Newport 8Nc;h 644-2700 llllaCa...eecll MOltTUAMH Laguna Beach • ~-9415 Laguna Hills 76&-0933 5-l J"*'~p1strano 495-1776 M' I• LA~. OU"9 Mortuary• Cen.tery Cremttory 1625 Gi9'« Ave_, Cos&ll ....... 540-555' 110BIUWdWWf Costa M-. ~9t50 IM.TZ~-··· ..... ~ W8l'CIMI CMiUa. 427 E. T7lt't St. COllaM4tea ~ . -.... -....... _,...._,... __ ..,.. __ ._. ··--· ... _.. -... T •• ...,•••-••• '• ---··--••t---.•••• •• •.-....-•-•'t...-e__. • ..--·---.-••#,. • Detft'lllined Al'-...... An unidentified horn player plays Christmas tunes, with aid of crutches, during a concert at New York's Rockleller Center. The program, titled ·'Tuba Christmas,•· featured an all-born band playing for the enjoyment of holiday crowds. Jacksonville cancer-prone Ca pW.ruo &ueb ,.... ldeo1 Dr. Rlcbard T . f'roei,llcb bu been eletwJ to &be American Colle .. ot Cardloloo by lb• coUec•'• board of dlNCt.Gn. ,.,,.. PtJBUC NOTICS PUBU NOTICE l\INlttOll COUfl Of' TME N·'*H6 l"AftWCAUflilMllOA ~ NOT1Ct: TOCaEOll'Oltl tM• CDUWTY Ofl 01tAM• 01' !Mii.JC HAJfSFllt .. O*C.WCMw.... IS.O.•Mt-61•1U.C.C.I ----~'991 NOTICE IS HEREllYGIVEfll lollW . PllllUC NOTICE ... ,_ NOnca YOC .. oiTOt .. Ofl MU tauewsa ,..,.. ,., -•• u.c.c.1 NOTICE IS t4EltEeY GIVEN .. ,,_ ~MIW~ .. MANUEi. GAltAY .... ROSA M. GAltAY, ft_....,,, - ••--I• ltl) El CMlllM Ori,.., Cll'f GI C.C. Metol, ~y Of Ot ..... 5'N fll ~1*'1118, ttwlt e llUll< 1ra11ater I• allOVt I• M tn•d• to SUMIKO SCHWilltTI, TtMt"'"· ...... ~11al 11eu ••• ,. .. ,, ., W...Srvtt\, City t4 1rv1M. co..My of or..,.., ill•et c.lttoml•. T ... ~ .. bt .,_ ... '" I• •tcr.._. IR ~ a . All •tock In ., ... "*"" .....,.._. -90M wlll ti .... aEAUTY SAi.OH Wtltlftt "-• ilFFAllt IN t4Allt DESIGN __. ._ ...... tttl El Gltn"'° Orlw, (lty .. C.ta .... C-.Cy et°' ..... M••"'CM...,... .. TIM ~ lrMtfff Wiii ... C_,Wfl'I. l'l\atw ... w ~Ille ISlll cl•y Of Je1111ery, , .. , et 10;00 A.11111. el GltOVElt l!SCltOW CORPOltATION, ......,. .-.... '' ._, 1n1w.. e1.,..;, TIMllll, c.lllonlle. So,., a. I'•-to-TteMI .... , •II boitlllau -Md adclreton used by Ille Tr.,llww1 1111' -pest U1r• yoe" ere· SANIE Tiie lat Nie lor llllne Clallnl I• Jenuary I•, 1•1. O•ted: OK-• U, ttlO, Sumllw Sc .... .-t~. T,_... .. 01tov•1t HCltOW ,.., ........... .,.. ,., ... ~. fK,.WNe. .. 0711.JI P11bllllleel 0r""9t Co.HI Oelly Piiot Oec. 2', 1• SIMI«) f•UUNTll'F. lltEl~fll, CATLIN & ,..., .. .,,., Of llOllERT WAltllVltT~ PUBLIC NOTICE C!.EME~el'~1Np. nCI KO NNIE WAAllU ATO N, l'~P • Ttensle'°"• -!Mill""' -r~• 11 --Dfl'ENOAfllT FRIO VAHLSING. 1'01 M<lrtln •103, CllV ot 1 .... 1ne. co .. n· NOTIClt lfllVITING 81DS Jlt., FAEOVAHL.SlfllG, 11, ly of Or-. SCMeol C.llfornl•, 11w1 • ltECEI" OI' l'ltOl'OSAL..S s .. 1t<1 •ke F H VAHLSllllG. II . FREO bulk 1r .. t1er h -.t to c.. ,,,_ 10 prooe»h #111 lie rtt91 ... by lhe City VAH!.l>ING, 111, .. F.H. YAHL.SING, TERRY w KRAUSS. Tr•n>ltret, of lnllM, °""'9• of Ills wor-. lnll• of· 111 , XOHU INTEACOfllTlfllENTAL -!Knjness .OOrft• 1• 1201 Mertln flee ol the City Cl•rt., loulecl •I 11200 lllOUSTltlES, INC •...S OOES • 1 • IOl, Cltrol ln1lne. County 010,.,.99 Hmbor" llOACI, lrvlM . Celllornle ""~ IO, lft<IW.. Sl•I• ol c..llfornl• .,,14 ........ 1 00 p m • °" Jen .... , y ll, SUMMONS Ti.. pr-'1• to t>t l••nslerr~ It , .. ,. for II• con11nocllon OI conettlt CAS• llU-•lt M1• oucrlb«I In ~•el as All •too In oortiinQ (mow str1p01 T,,. "'" ol lhe llOTIUI Y• ........... --. ,.. I•-. ""'"""· "<1"111"'""' •no 900d •O•k " lo<eted •I Herllege P••'-<-'..., ~ ....... -.1 .... Wiii Of,,,., Video~··· D<NnH• kftOWn C' ..... A-Wl4I W•I-A ... n ""' -............ -.,... ,...._.,es THE VIOEOSTATION encl lo<eled And Turtle Roo Communlh . p,,, ....... • •ra. It ...... .._,_.,. •I 1101 -rtln • 103. Clly ot lrvlne, !Turtle Ro<-k Orive •nd Sunny Hiii ...,__ County ol Orenge Slele of Celllornl•. OtlveJ. lnt1M,c.4llornle. If .,... .,.;~ 10 -,,._-Ice ot en The llulll tr.,slet will t>t con...,.,.. 0 E SC It I l"T I 011 0 ~ WOlt I( •norner lft IN1 ,.....,.,, """sllould do m•led on 0, •II•• tM ,,,., .,., ol CMl•l•"C1'°" ol concrete curtHnq ,,_ IO premptty to lhet your wrlllen Ftt>ru•ry. 1'11 el 10 00 A.M. el \trip\ •nO releleO O••dlno re-.11-..... Ybtlll9don11tne. GROVER ESCROW CORPORATION ENGINfER.SESTIMATESl,00000 AVllOI U.... ............ t tc . ....._ -~' 11 19007 lrvlne 111-.I • Ol'ElllNG OF l"ltOl"OSAl.S: T,._ El ............... --~-· IH. Tustin, c..lllomla Thal 11\e 1811 681• propO~IS Wiii De puOllcly _...., •ncl •..-Cle• - -IH. ,_. lot 11(1119 clelm> 1n Ille ncrow reten•d reao e1 1 00 p.m , on J.,,UIJ•V IJ, '"' u __,. * • .. ._ .... i. ..._.... 10 ,,.,•In u J.,..,.,, JO. '"' at IN •bclw·mentlontd oflke ol tht <I• ... .._. Solar .. l\llnownlolheTrantftrtt.•11 Owner SI U--1ollclt.-relc-Jo• b111lneu n•mH •nd •fldt•UU OaTAINIHG CONTltACl IHI • ._._ tn •tte esunto, dltt>erl• u .. dby t1W T••nsterort0tthep••llhree DOCUMENTS: Tr.. ~ll1ulte1ns ••f ll•<•ftO lnmeellata,,.,.nt•. Cle HI• vuru,.. S.mt. enlhleCI, "(O'l\ltucllon 01 Cut1>ln9 •• m-··· ... -·· H<rll•, " 11•'1 O•led OK-· IT ·-tierltaoo P••-ICIP saG-•11 artd lurll• •19un•,puedlt-r-.Qi•I•-·•....._ T .. ryw ......... ~O(l Commul'llff P a ... tCIP I TO THE OEFENOAfllT A clvh "*'-"'" SI O 411 HO •ti · Pl •nS e na <omplelnl twt -llled by,,,. p4el,.., GltOVElt ESCltOW COltl". 'f14K•tiull~ lftd &ll contract dOtu Utt aolftSI .,.,.. II you"''"' to otfencl l".O .... f11 menrs may bf' 01>1a1~a from IP\e INS ·--··\"OU mus1, •''"'"JO de~ t•J lrvlM ...... 0.1Mrt ....... 1 al l'llOllC WOtk\. C•ly 01 •"•' 11'11 ......,._ h te,_ on l'OU, T ...... C:. ... lr.,ne, 110I Mt<;.w Ave""" 1tv1nt, Ille with IN~ <OWft • ••rrlt'9n •ffCJOft.. Et<rew Ne. ).tnn • .u Cot1tornl• A non relund•OI• ru ol to UWr c.omplelnt_ Unl.-u you dO '°· PllOll>llecl Or-Coa\I D•lly Pilot \10 00 wlll lit ,,..,~ tor each HI al ,_ _..,., wlll ti. --on •s>-o.c. "· 1te0 S•SS IO oocumtnls Pl.,,s ano •PK1•lullons pllcellonof -pl~tlH. -1111• court ---~ • ""' be m••lta tor •n •dd1loon•I mey enetr • llldlnWnl 899ln11 \IOU ~r PUBLIC NOTICE CNlrc;ie ol \S 00 Ille rellel dlt-In IN complajnt, • l"ltOl"OUI. GUARANTl!'E: E•<n wflk" ._ r-.lt In .. ,,...,,.._, of P<OOO•el ~II De accompenled llV • ,._.,._,,..of ,,..'I or P'-"''or N,.1Uff <er1111.a o• u,111er·s tM<• ol btCI 01 .... telle4 ••Qllffled In the tom· SUl'EltlOlt COUltT -tn Ille -ot 10 P<'tCMI OI P111ln1 OI' ULll'OltMIA lhot IOl•I l>fd prlcf pey•bl~ lo'"" Clly OATEO -CPI 14.1'7t COONTYOFOltAfllGE 01 lr•lne •s • -•nltt '"°' lhe blCI LEE A 81tANCH 1tl Clwic C-W Ori"6 We.I .-r, 11 ''" ~I " •«~led, wlll Clerti l'MCOfll<e ... m promptly r.e<ule 1,. t ontract, "'tu•• llyS<nan 1... 8uirton. S-.. AM, C... n1tJ oomenl al Work,,_., Compons•tt"" Cletlwl'I MARltlAGI!' OF lnsur•nu , end lurnl'1> • wllsl.ctorv 81tlAll It. 8UltG«U. t:.._ p E T 1 T 1 O N E II J 0 H N W F•lllllul Perl0tm•nce Bono In '"" ••t•JOMll, CATUll & CLfM ... TS YAUGt<AN •mo....t ol 100 ewrcenl ol 1~ IOl•I ()OCI .,, •. SI• •.• Wte,. .. II E s p 0 N 0 EH t Ju I. IE L price •nd . UOf)ot -M•lt<l•I• 8ono ~ ...... CA. ... , VAUGt<AN In 1114 -·al 100 peronl or '"' A-...y........... CAS€fllUM8Elt: 0.... taf•lb1Clprk4 C?IJI U..m4 OROEll TO SHOW CAUSE FOii WAGE ltAllS: .-,, reQu•rea by S.. PUl>tl\Nd Or-C.O.\I Oelly Pilot, /IOIOOIFICATION ol Child Cu\lody, tlon t7TJ ol ttlO C..lllornl• ut>or C.- 0.c. t, IS, 22. 7', ,._ ,.,,.., Vhll•t•on, Clllld Support, AttorMy llW Owner NI• dlelt'fmlnea ll'lf Ofnt••I Fu • enCI Cool\, enCl Ottw• (Sclecllyl. prevalh1>9 "''ft al W~\ In the tou lt MlAlll <AP) -Tbe ··-·cancer deatb rate for PUBLIC NOTICE V~UGTH~M P~lltloner: JOHN w ty ,.'" ""'"' '"• wor-•• lo D• -------1 YOU ARE QqOEllEO TO AP IW orrTW<t. CClptH of M id --••le wtai&e ....... ia Jec~ville ia 58 ~t higher llOTIC• tllV"I .. 8101 PEAR IN THIS COURT AS FOLLOWS dltlermlNlloM Me """'111··-II Ille tlaaD tk national ayerace, but tbe authors Of a· Nellce It hentt>r ,1 .. n lhlll 11\e TO GIVE ANY LEGAL qEASOfll offktt of !ht Owner and ere •vailaOI• two-ye• study say tbey cloa't know wby. !o:n~v°' c!;;::"o~1!~1 ~~•= ::TYA~~~6'~~·::.~~~,s~~~~~ :7·~~1~:~~ ~i£..::.::::.~ !'.;.: A .._ ~ 6..._ .-..:.... -..a. . ...a~ b •t..-N c-1,. c.llfornla, wlll roc_el ..... ,.., 140T BE GRANTED on Feb•u•r' 10, contractor under him SllAll pev not I•" ~ US YlllC .._,, gw.-;-_,, f LUie' a-~r '!! !..':.!~~~':°!; ::· C•tlv~ ~~::. 10",~-W~I SI !_1•.,t IMn IPIP >i*-lfoed prrva•ll"9 r.ttt al tional Caneer Institute and t.be University of -·-v-• --···~· ~· < .. -· w•o-• IUH __ _,, emplo ..., '"" Miami, al9o iactic•ted lb.at such deatbll among ..... <OfleVI .. ~tr lei loUtea .. 1370 ,.,.., C.lllornl.a '7/01 U4Cullon ol ltw cont• .. , y '" black males are 10 percent biper tban Lbe na-:.S1E;"E;Esu•1~·~~.c~ ::J:·~~~f~;:.q .. :~~1] ~,~.!~~!~~:::~T.",!~'~~~.~~~ tiaDa1 .,,....... D I p to t"9 op81U"ll ol lll<ls "'811 be doredf!CI ....,_ ol ~'-Y 5-1~, E•P•n•• e<l•••I Or'I, •ODtrh 10 Con.,rucllon Project Supervl10r c .. AJthi-ch tbe study inclieated that hma cancer s..!::i::~~c:111..:car-.c.wl\11 :;:~;,endOIMr(Oe<l•r•llonof IY oC lrwlne. 171(1 'H ·l••o11/1tl cleatbe were• percent to 5D percent bilher tban 1s.t • .-. .,. 8111 "°"" IMfnKll .... -c-1 O.ied~:.~~N~~N O\llFMElt'' ltlGMn ltEUltVEO· ••enee emanc workers in tbe abipbuildin1, COO• li.;I -5'JKtftutlGM wN1ch ~!:°'" ,...._ TPIP Owrwr ..vrw\ IM r'911I to rPfKI Stnadkln, and lumber industries, t})e llut.bors Said ., lie -nwy be '9<:U,.., n Ille vnlU -:..:::!::1~ ~~-~ ""Y or all l>idl, IO welw •ny lnlotm•ll "',,,. ~""""' .. Mid, .. ,_ --......... OC:CU1>9'i'-81 eJtpmUl"e accounted for ooly narhape dhlrlct WILUAM YACX190Ut, Jlt. ty In 't>lcl. -lo-~· •wird~ In ll'IC fourth of tbe r-E«PI ~ ,,_ ...omit •1111 Ilk a ASSOC. lnreresl of 11\e 0.0...• a OC!eU lung c.ncer deaths. lllCI • <.-.'• <119<k. certified ch«~. ,.. N._. ~ onw 011e OK-• 11. '"° ""...._,_, -... -P9ralll• to ""' s..11e • CITY OF lltVINE ··~as•s so••TBJNG v•ay FUNNY ..,,.,.. "'.,. c:.• eom..-.11v eonevo ... w_. -·CA..,_ er ,.,,,.. L. Oo1K0v & D Oltlr let Board ef Tru1tff1 In an' T .. : C7UI ....,,11 D4Poll• City Clerti here. Tbere mWll be another faetor lbat we -nt "°'le!& -fl .. pen..,I (51'1 PuDtl"*' Or-CoiSI Delly Pllol PuDllsnod Ot-Coe•t 0.lly Pllol. couldn't find." said Dr. Jobn Davies, chairman of "'"'*...,.. * • • ...,_. 1t1a11i.e D•c ~. 1•. 1 .... s, 11. "· '"' s1se-eo o.rc n.7'1. l9IO J.,, s.1"1 b bl-r wlll ..,,.,. Into lllt P<OPOMCI --l ~'-'° t e University ·of lliami Department of c ... 1rac1 11 ,,,. ....,,. •• ...... -1o PUBLIC NOTICE EpideaJiolocy and Publie Healtb, . llitw\-.., ..... -al 1611ur• lo ..... , In· PUBLIC NOTICE Davi.es --..a Dr. William Blot of ..... _ National o •uc11 conlract. ,,,. proc-• °' ,,,. _... Yft: c,,.ct .. 111 bt tott.hect. or 1n the c....., Cancer lmtitute did not speculate on wbat ac· "'• 11one1. ,,. 1u11..,,., "--w111 i. COUDU for \be bulJl of tbe HCes& luoo C&ft"U a·n lorlelled ID wld Col'-dlslrlet e '-NO --V wlthdr-hi\ bid for Jacltaanville. .. • PfflOCI of ,,,,,,.,..,. 10 1 d•v• •"•' The ....... ~ of more Lban 300 lung cancer pa-''-•••-'tor 11w _,,,. ,,_,...., <>..._.,, Tiie ......, OC T~9" rewn1tt Ille tients apparenUy is tbe first to suggest tbat pr1.11 ... "' re1«ttno ...., _, •II bless worllers in the lumber and timber industry face a °' to ....... , lrr .... lerlllH or ''" l•"'•er •t..--·~·-• Cao-r ..,:_._ lormalltlesln.,.yllldor lnlfleDICIClfno -.. ~ UDU.U ..... 1 &a&. S.cr•tarY. """'"'of Truol"• CCMISI C-ty Coll19t Oistr Kl Previous studies have shown tbat shipbuilding Pu1111.,,.., ar-c.o.11 0.11, P1101, and constru.ctioo woriters wbo have worked with Oec•m-21• "· "10 so11 '° ubestm and inhaled it.a microecopic fibers suffer a bi&h lung cancel' rate 20 to 30 years after ex· posure. TllB STUDY SAID LUU.Ea AND timber worllers develop lung eancer because of the com- bination of cigarette smoke and inhaling wood du.st. Tbe authors of lbe study interviewed lung Cancer patients or their relatives. Results of the in· tenieWB were compared witb a group of ·simifl(t men who did not have lung .. ~ancer. The study. rmanced with $1.50,000 in federal money, .,.. l•uached aft.er statistics 1atbered from death certiflcat.es showed tbat between 1970 and ur75 tbe Duval County lun& cancer dulb rate for white males was 1.1.2 deatba per u•.ooo popula- tion, compared to a national rate~ SIU. Tlie nlte amoac black mal• .... 77.7 in Duval u on 11 Ml to 8!:4 aat.ionaU1. TU 8'1l1DY CON81DD&D 1'llS ,POUlbility tbat 90IDe acesa lune cancer in Jac:bOnville wu cauaed by the area 'a paper milla, but found no cor· rai.._u. '-tween paper miU employment and lbnc cancer. Mon tha •.• men worlfed on buildin1 Libert)' ~ sbipa duriq World War Ir, account-ina. for mmt aru.e abipbuildlns IUD& cancer. ll.S. ve I re turns ex-foe's albU111 PUBLIC NOTICE 1-•GAi. NOTICE 11 fW l'OttT -M9 IA UNll'lfDSCNOOL OISffUCT -IC:elll ........... NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVE14 1 .... 1 fife llOA•O al EOu<•llon ol lht fll••POrl·Mew unified Sc,_. Plstrlct ol Or•"90 c-.ty wlll receive ... led llids up lo,. 00 p.m,"" l!te 1altl O.y ot JeNMrY, 1 .. 1, •I Ille office of U ICI School Ohlrlcl , 1oc•1td •I llS1 Plu•nll• Street. Cosio Meu , CAlllor11la. Al ""'lctl time ~IO blch wlll oe put111e1,_. Md,..., tor C ENTAAL ICI TC HEll EOVIPMENT All blO. .. 1o lie In occ..,O.On'• wllll ~!!!2111 on1, 1n11n1cljons, •nCI Sc>eclflc.lltl..,t .iildl are,_ on Ille In ,,_ oflke of ._ Purclleslno Director 1lf talcl ~ Dlstrlel. 1151 Placentia S4-t.c0& .. Mesa,cacHorn1e9•11 . No lllOllt• tney wtt'*-1111 Bld for • period <If tortv·fl..e (Ol <1ey1 elter Ille ••te -..,, .. apeftl!OO lfle..-. • T,.., 8cMtr• of Edvullon ot Ill• ~--Uftlfled Sc-OIWk1 ~ 11'19 ,..,,. to ret«t ...., or •II Ille -"°' necenery •«•Pl t"9 •-en llld, eno to waive .,..., 1,,. ,._,..., °" l ....... •lty In .,, llld re. eel wet. OATl!O; Oeumtier 1•. IMO ,__,.-.. Unll\ecl ~ OlttrlCI OfOr-~.CA Oarollljr Haoey ,,.,,.,, C.P.M. ~Ina Dirac.., 11M)~1 . 1"••11•,_, Orat1p countr 0 .11, l"11o1, o.c. n. "· .... Jett. s. ,., .., .. PlJllUC.NOTICE lltVlllE ltAfllCN N·71H1 WATElt DISTltlCT NOTICE O~ INTENTION NOTICE CW l'tlEl"AltATIOll 01' TO CltEATE NEGATIVE O•UA1tATIOllS IECUltlTY lfllTE ltEST Ti.. lrvlne Aench W•I•• 0111r!<1 11 1'-n. ,,., -lll7 u .c.c .1 preparl"V fil49ellw Decter .. lan• for NOTICE IS HEAEllY GI VEN rO llWP<o)KtsOH<rllled .. low A Or.tit Ill ~ C rrdrlor• ol J •MES M Ne~llYt o.c ......... ,, on "'" ... ,,.. GAEGOllY DPbtot .. -°"""H' dl1trlcl office lor Hell proje<I Mid i• •dd•tu 11 2211 Mortin Su•tt 101 C•I¥ •••11,bl• •or Pubtfc ln$.,.Cloon_ A ol lrvl...,, Count• Of Oran91' Sl•lr ot N~ilw Dfcl., .. IGr\ tor H <h P<Oft<I C,etllomla. INI • -utllV lnltretl I< wlll be ,_....,.., for •-o••I or di .. •l>ovl to be creeif<I Dr Oe1>1or '"° eppro••I by I,.. llOerCI ol Directors ot 9r•nted lo SVNWE!>t BANtt II Ille Ol1trk l at • "'"11"9 to tie held C•l•fornl• <ori>or<1llon. S.cur..O P.tr1y J ... uary 11. 1•1. el 6 00 PM , In Ille wl>o$e llu\l""lS .00•~• I• ~HE f 1,.1 O•UtlC1 Ofllc•, m1 CMnbU> Ori••. SI . Coty o1 Tu\lln, County o• Or"'oe trvlM, CA. -Stateol C.lltorn.• Gene r•! ObllO-llon Bond S•le ror lhe p.--111. In 9.,,.,r•I tn wP11cn I 0 Hn T!te P<"OJKI consllh ol Ille Ille Securol'f lnlernl wllt 1>t C•Hleel" • seconCI HI• of Gan•••I ObllOellon ll•ture), ~ulpm..,1, furnlturt •nO 8ond1 ol lrllP<0•-1 Oislr lel Ho. lurnu runo• ~ Otblor wllOo. """,,." IO'I. w111cll-re eu1110tlr.O b• tlw ele< I\ known H ICIOOfll f. GREGO~Y llan In lt7', llw -t of Mte ~lno db .. J AMES NI GREGORY anCI IC><•I -•O•u•-ly \1,s.t0,000. Tlw PU,_ t<I •I ,m -rtln Suit• 101. City ot tor •lllch bOt'Ch wlll t>t \Old " to ec lrvl,,., Count• 01 OrMI~ SIAI• ol tomplls/\ tllO Pl.,. ol __ , tor Im· Callfornl• P"D••ment Ohtrlct "'°· 102 .. edoplecl 11\e 11..-."'4<1 sec .. lh 1r._..s1<t1on 1,. AUQVll lt76 to s-<lorm pl.,...lft9, wlll bf' con.._.,,.., on or •lier IN' Ot•lon. «oulrw "''"tor, -cOMlrucl 1s111 0.Y al J.,, ... ,,. '"' ••' oo A "' <•Pll•I lt<llltl .. lllrouoll , .. , In •t SUNWEST BANK., --'"' •• retponw lo trw 0.11t1_.,1 dttl•lon• SlS E l'lrtl SI., Tu.,ln, Catllornl• l..,.hdlc110nal ~ncles, """••IN L•st O•I• lor rlllno cl•lml I• City .. 1~1-Tiie -...1elerin of t1W J~ It, "9• P"OIKb ere ,,,. clllr"" ot the com· So ,., a. IS 'nown 10 ,,. Secur.o munlty. P11r1y, ell IMiMnn• .,.,..., 1nd •d Ganer•I Oblioetlon llonO S•w tor dru .. s -llV the O.blo• lor IM out 1.0 103 TM projt<t c°"'lsls of Ille 11\tee , • .,, ... e: SAME. tllira ,..,. .°' Gefter•I Oblloetlon lloftcb O•ted: ~-r "· ,.., of lmpr-t Olstrl<I No. tOJ, which SVNWEST BANK, -e •ull\orlted by llW elt<llOft In lt71, • C..lllor"'•<CWJJ IN e-.t at sale llell'O _,...,,.....,. S«ureCI Perty ly l"S,000. TM pvrpow tor •lllc1' lly· Lumlr O Cerny ......... wfft ... .., •• .., «<ome>lllh ,,. v let Pt .. lcltnl PIMI of Win~ ,_ ·--DI~ IUHW•5"U..IC 1rkt Na. 1111• ...,,..,._...~II 1tn le ..,. &. ~ •- perterm 111-1 ..... ,,.,, a<4totlre T'"'"", cal...,,.••- •ll•t for, encl co11ttr11cl cepltal Aftll: UlnllrC-11'1 1«111\1" "'""411 1"2 In ,....,.. .. to Publllllld OrM191P coul D•llY Piiot IM ..... IGrWl'.,11 llKI"-of fwlldlc· 0.c 2'. I• SIS•·IO 1-1 ....,C .... tllC:fl H llW Clly of I --· ------ lnlne. Tite ...,..1c1ar1H.,. ,,. pro1«1 PUBLIC NOTICE ere ,,. clll-oA Ille c°'""""" ty. Oener., Olll•i... ..,..., Sele tor 1.0 . IOS. TM -1«1 c-lst. f/f 11'19 !lire -04 c;...r., Olllloetklfl llofldl ol llTIP•• ...... ,,, Ol1lrl<I No. IOS, ... "" --.,.,_,_by .... •le<tlclfl Ill lt7•, IN -at -wine -., ........ ., S1,2JO, ... Tiie -- .... wlll<ll ....... #IM bt _... It lo llC• ..,.. ...... ,..,. of-·· .., ,,,.. ..,._,,,.... Otttfln -,., -,.., "'~" ..,. .. ,...'" ........... .. . k....,. ........... ,_,Net c..,nat IKllltl" "'"°"'II ,,., 1" ,....,... ................ -.c ..... JwlMlutMNI ..-clft, '""" .. .,. C"y 9' IMM. T1'9 __.klatlet of tN "91«t -... clll-.... <Ml· N·12255 ltOTlta t'OCltEDITOaS or auuc t••11SFE1t csau. •~ -•• u.c.c.1 NOTICE. IS HEltE8Y GIVEN IP llw <rMllors of ttOWAltO L HAWICINS. Tran1Hror. wi-llllM""s ....,.,, 11 t ••· E ltlvenl .. , City of Ne...,..rt llHcll, County ol o ...... sutft of Ce lllarflle, INt a boilll ltM1'"• I• aeout lo Iii ~ Ill 8"00K£ GUN· HING encl 11111.t.lttt SHEPPAltO, Transto-, ..._ "'""'"' addfess It t8E. ,.,_..,., City of Ntw-1 .. a<h, County Of O•att9t. Stat• of CelltOfflla. Tiie ,,_., to bt lr-19rrecl h -.rlMd "' -·· M ; All stock In Ir .... ..._ ......_. .... .- Wiii f/11 I-il\lle ·-lnftall9'iefl llutfMH "-a AUlO AUOIO OF CALIFO"NIA ... 1«.atN f/f lf9.E. ,_,.,.,.,., City 9f Na-1 •«11, ~ .. Ortlfllll, .... ti CAI*°""•· Tiie ...... tr...-r wltl w <..,...,. -·· 9fl ., .,.., ltw ,,. .., ol ~etoeary, tfl1 et ·~~.M. e t v~lt llcltOW COIU•OttilTION, ..._...._ .. _,MM ....... -"'-( .......... _,_ l'efWfW ......... ~···""· Se fer et It lato9Wll te lfle .,., ........... ~-­.... ,. ..... ,. . o.o.mw a ,., 8 , .......... --...... ..... Or .... ea.. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS T.., C... ..... 'IN M. , .... _e_U Ml•MN I EQUAL HOUSING [ .OP~~A_T'!_N~TY, Wllilc 11 tie.elce: All real ui.te ad - vert11~d in lbh Dnlpaper ii subject to Lbe Federal Fair Houa· inl Act of ..e which • mak• it ille1al lo ad· 1002 ee•••••••• ........... .. ·VllW 'I 900/oLOAM One of a kind! A beea&llw 4 Bdrm J baib blddm 2 story wltb hUle' famil1 room, fireplaee, f~ diniq room and C!11U111rJ kitclaea. Owaer wW CarTJ fiaaaciDt 12~ witlt oaly 10~ clown. Price $111,IDO. Call us THBRRAL ~·-· ·. ;a l:ATIERB'· .. vatile "any preference. , . limitation, or dis· WATmROMTHOMI crimlnation bued on S BR, 4 Ba. cu•tqrp. race, color, relicton, waterfront bome ao, or oaUoaal ori1in. w/17X..' pvt dock. Price or an intention lo make St.•.ooo. For details on any such preference. this bome and appt to limitation. or dis. see. caJJ Carol Holr. agt. crimlnation." SD-OOM 1-~------~~~ 1b.is newspaper -.111 not knoWl.Dgly accept any advertising for real estate which ta in viola· tionoftbelaw. IUOIS: Adtrwtften ...... dMcAI ..... Mr .... ,.,....., .... ,... '-•ahty. TIM DAILY PILOT•-• ....., fw ..._first l•cornct lasertlo• -"· ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEACH HOME l PATIOS! Upgraded beach home 111 Newport Shores. W allt to o<-'ean or private beach New carpeting and fresh paint too ! Custom decoutions . 3 patios. Secluded sun· deck! 2 &1rtns. and just $1Z7_,250! Hurry! 7!>2-1700 =~ COST A MESA PlllME Greenbroo« S bedroom with pool, spa and close t.o everything. Assuma- ble financing and of fered at only $189,SOO. ~361Mi ·~ BUY NOW! VA immaculate detac_-hed 2 Bdrm. 2 bath home Big faauly room' with brick fireplace, man1c_-ured landscaping Redwood patio cover Many es-tras. ll04,900. VA terms. CaJJ 546-2313 MEWUmM• DUPLD ClOSI TO IEACH 3 Bed. 2 baths each unit. Furrus hed. Stone F tP lower . Good s um · mer/winter rental Ask 1ng 1275,000. S48·071!1 eve. · associated BAOKEAS-IHAL fOAS lnl~ W Bolb -,o b' 1 '"'' • Sell idle items 6'2·5678 rt'& time to plan t~r that' vacation trip. For ea tr a cash, •hy not sell some ~ thole items you don't need with a Classified ad? M2-5678. S2 17 per Day That's little to pay for an ad m the Daily • Pilot Service Directory \hat' can establish your professional ide ntity For more 1nformat1on call 642·5678 Ail ••·rlt•et' may pl .. ct lh1•1r otd• bv ltl,.ph1lftl• 81.111.om l<ISJOpm Mu111l.1) lhru fnday •tu noon "Murday CllSTA ~H~4'/\ llFFIC~ Ul W Ha) &42~"711 ltl"STt~r.TOS REAl'lt I itl7S llf•a!'h RI Yd S4(I 1220 I.Ma ':-IA u t:ACll 1027 S Coa~I th•~ Utituna bParh 494 ~ 'llORTll l.IJl 'liT't <Ital frc'\" !>40 1~1 CLUSll'tlll OIAllUMH fleudhnl' fur cup) &r ktllb t• ~ JO p m lh~ da)' bt•f<H<' publttalton t''t• "Pl fur ~und.i• & ~unda} t.d1t11•n> 1<1hcn dt'•dhll<' " S:.1urday 12 Ot-"')O CU.SMAlll l~nONS t.H kOttS Adv<>rll•~'> :t.lluuld ch .. ck lhl'tr ad§ 111111> & report error > 1111m<-d1a11' I y T It F. llAl I \ Pll..<Yr as~umf'S l1ab1ti1, for the f1Ht 1n,·urr1-c1 111>•rt1on 11nh (" \ -.:1·u I "Tll)'~ \\ ht·n ~·ll•ttr •n ;;d I># >Ur,. 10 mak,. a tl"<'Ord Of 1111· Kll 1 :'>l M R ~:R j!I\ !'n )OU by )'llUt id lli;,., J' r...-.;1pt of )OUr ran1·•·llJll/•n This kill numh,1 r mu*i t bt µr ~•~nted br lh t .ad" t-rU~t·r '" c.ast" of a ,,.,,~u\I C \-.:1·t:1.l,\Tfo;-. OR l'<IKRF"<ll<" IW 'f.~ \ U H E t• 11 ft E ru "sr:-;c f"' 1•r• \'(furt '' m~dv lo k1U , •r m rrrt r •• ""'" .6d thal h•S l>.·t'n urtlt·rvd bul ..,,. c:.nn1it j!UdrunlPt' tr• tin "' un11I lht' Jd hJ• app .. •red 1n 1ne ''"""' Ill \It. A I l:'-1~: \OS The"' iid• "'~ •Jrrrlh r .... h an .. J, anh· "' m .. ;, 11r .-t Jn) uni' ttf l)Ur orru-... , 'n phum' nrl1er. llt·•dhne J pm FndJ• \""''" ""'a .. rr.r .. & I!! """" Jt nll br•nl'h of(t<'t'' T ll F 11.\ll' rlf.tlT rr~t·r'''' 1h .. rui:tt1 tf, t'l-''"" rdu 1 rnC\nr •n rt'f u ~~ "'"\ ad' ••rt tot'mf'fll anl1 In ~ hJ.n~t 1l ... r.J1 f'' & re11ul~1tnr1• .. 11hou1 pm•r nut .. ~ ... CU.SSll'llO NAILM5 AOOltUS I' 0 Bo~ I*> ,.,t."lJ Mtl.sa 921\26 «iJ Coldwe.11 Banker SAClaRCI! MUST SBJ.! Supf•r. LITT LE BALBOA ISLAND locauon -Just steps to bay. 2 bedroom cotta!?e loaded with lsland charm. Brin ~ us a n offer O\mer Will carrv ~ ~95 .000 . --. C 0 M L Y L M M 1 l 0 E D l l A £ C I S A 1 A P E l 0 M 1 l T N S H l Y A H A t U N Q M V M l £ 0 E H Y N A G M M 0 I U W 0 T t £ Q T l S P M U I A C I G T 1 t .Y l P W S E U E E T A T ( " C l U D S A Y l A H T l X V E l 0 l 1 A ·NS MM HR PI [ 1lL0 TT S £ 0 C R A 0 I L 0 H P 01; ; 8 N t)s 0 M 0 A AANUROAMT KACIMAE £ Z Q U R l A M P C S l M H L 0 C S t T A l U C 0 l U [ A I I I l L M T Y D lY~LlROlMlMALTlPtTY 0. ................ ,.. •. ....,. _, .. ,, ... .,. _ ..... , ... •YIMI 'flllACI MONT IOW -11tl ... " cxrlush t h&tin~ Most ri.t.nla.-.Ur lucat rnn ro1 \ 1t•w l n ~ lht• boatuag lH'U\lt Jt•tl) ur t'IUI , bril(ht h"lts & m m a ntu.· utulinu l~lund J~t Ul um.- lo h 't-a l'lu't' up , ll'\\ or thtt <'hri lmu~ hout P•Huch• N~w lush lanctsr JW<t ll•r rnc·l· a Ut•druonb, fain r m 10 1 m a l d1n 111~ tluul i:tone fir p luct>' J l'.!I ~urua:t' l 'a ll fol' appt W.S&.IT N. TATlOI CO .. llALTOU Jiii S•Je .... Ht• .... Ml\WOIT C .. TI •• N.I . 64Mtl0 I ... I I " ~ REALTORS '7S.SSI I NIAi SO. CO.AST PL.Ali For the empty·nester or first time buyer. here's your chance. Ad ult condo, pool, spa, complete secur ity. All fo r S11.500. COLI OF NIWPOIT llALTOIS 25 I 5 E. eo..t Hwy .. c.,... .. Mw 675-5511 4. 21/J •• I •.• WIU 2 1tory home, shake Har FIMAMCE root. fresh paint, patio. 3 B R 2 B A $167.500. £astside Costa CONDO-950. Mesa. lorMcC ..... -mtr. 541-7729 W•fs_.H ... 1 Thia 3 Br 2 i.; Ba townbome has a patio and deck right on the -..;....;;;======= $11,000 Assu mable loan of $48,000at .... ,. + POIMr IUCIW Panoramk view at wtd1e. from prhne.ITi lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. sq. ft . featwin1 marine room. e try. livln1 room. dining room. built ins. etc. St.•.ooo. "'90111.1 OM SAMTIA.0 IL .. IAYClllST1 Beautifully developed family home: 6 bedrooms: Back Bay view' pool and spa : 3 fireplaces amid an eclectic blend ol beams, bricks , stained gJass and hand painted tiles. Presented at $498,000. Newly "'modeled tradlUonal style 3 bdrm, 2 bath home featuring lar1e recreation room as 2 patios. Uvlng room has attractive beam ce1Un11. fireplace ~ trench doors leading onto brac k patio. New kitche n blt·in appliances. Close to tennis courts. sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be sold fully rumlshed 1420.000. U~IVtt liC>M~§ PVT PARTY ·NOD reah.or O.A•llW wlabea t o purebau ... -.--.··.·,·.··!11!·.·.·.!l.·.·.·.·.··-i· coe•o wwr. Cmdo, ur. a. -r-1 Bdrm+IGft. lbarp end 1ia1le atory. ( 71') unit. •.llO. 346. 77 24 E ve 1 II r . 1006 Owns will flauce wl~ •TuceloTerr. Wri&bt low i Dteu1t rue . C/ZI Me ...... C....,. -...::..-,--.\::=".-------~ s Bdrm, 2 bath 64o.IU7 ..._., f miw IAYflllOMT REALTORS, 675-6000 2-.3 Eeet c-t H'9hway. COJona del Mar aiputment + remodeled ---------11 ..... ..._., 2 Bdrm 1 batb unit with This 2 Bdrm cotta1e We have several fine homes with pier ~ slip WE HAVE 17 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOW!". ftreplace and mini view. UMl¥llSITY PA• repr••ta a 1ood in· Jllll2doon from water. Eaeel ...t ualt. Cardifr .-.. atoportunity u a Callfor detaill. w /loft. Ovenz lot. cloee Nlllahmh, first bome on IAUll I llALTY to pool oa 1reenbelt. dae bland or juat future BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR Ocaufu _. lhiple• l6 2 Bdrma, completely fumi.lbed. Built-ins. 4 + car 1ar .. e. Offer down payment and take over 642-1200 1'llis charmer baa xlnt appreciation. Creative auum . f inancing finmdng .vailable. Of. ' I . f • ' l I • ~' • '· • : f' I {l ~each ~~~~~~~~~ P9fect starter home or f e red at S2 09 . O O 0 . l•TS S2Jl,SOO Good rental area. Close to the university. Call for info. 645-9161 '.lPfN Ht'll'>f ~EAL TY bacb pad .. SUI.too. ..._,_, * *. $t21.000 loan al only 11Ht£SWHICUl!NCIS...Crt-...... ST Yll.LAMP•• 14WC.,.._ ~%for30years. -SIU.! Lo¥e!y3Bdrm2ba,1n11 2711 First Ave. II~ 1£ALJY Hw IMw Ylew Hilt SP• c i 0 u s d u ·P I ell • family luae with very CorGaa del Mar ..,Ulhl Attractively situated fireplaces. garaie. 1700 p¥t yard. XJnt loc, close Youaretbewinnerof 675-6670 five bedroom hom e . sq. ft. each unit. Groaa toac:llook, •hoPI" fwys. Jfree...._ Three baths . Two Sl650/mo. 29% down. S*.JIO. -.. --llS-11--C-oeec> __ _ (.,,050 I .._ ________ finpl,ces. Three car OWCbalantt. 5215.000. * _, .. . va ue), to r-B,,.er. 675-0115 Cote Realty l.Awety l Bdrm. View of c-Yee..... Oceu•&.w D~x pr .. e. ResUul view or ear " Ocean. Owner ....,... •• 3 Bdrm• Ba nd 2 8d c ........ and mountains JI, lnv"""'tm .. nt & I v .ir......w • • rm ~-~-ANXIOUS '"' "'"' ~-wil finance. $2119 .0001 ... -2 Be l ood Pool 11ze yard. Excep· LMl5777 Jan3tbruJanll ' 'I room s, g tional pn·va"'y for com Lar&edupln +guest . _. Rita Writer , Agt. conditiaa. Priced to sell "' B 3 7,... ""'10 AnabeimConvention plete relaxat ion . 4 r , Ba, 3 car gar.r--~~~~~~~~~ __. .. , Center atSZ25,000. ' llJ0.000. $330,000. lO'k down.-. --c-11---.. -.---1-0-7-6 Red Estate c.-.. w... 1022 ....................... Tickets mull be U · 611 7300 .. I owe. Prine. o nl y . chan1ed for re1erved • • • 6C2·1Z12. AHXJOUS OWNER. 3 BR ---•••••••••••••• ~~~~~~~~~I 1M.1 at tbe Convention ----1 an T.R. Villa, Den, FR. NEW OCEANFRONT I· Center abead of lime. ] IEDROO S 1--====~~~-I Desirable Broadmoor a.do. 2 br, 2 ba. frplc. Call M2·51'71. u t. 272 to M fllOlllY9 YllW pian with lovely view view of coul " pier / llSTPllCB Best priced condo ID the area l Bdrm 10·20~ down, owner will help finance. S78.SOO. Call fm.S3'70loday. ALLSTATE REALTORS SOMETHING SPECIAL A super-duper 2 Bdrm h o m e . Pride o f ownership. Nice quiet loc:ation. Owner may carry 2nd. Community pool. $117 .soo. Ca II now 979-53'70. ALLSTATE REALTORS claim your tickets $83 8001 Ot&Y UH,000. Aaaumable loan. Ask1Dg Ml5.0ll0.417·1J05 * * * 1 • Cdlll executive home 95.000. DELUXE CONDO. BY Beautiful remodeled w/good view. Courtyd The fastesl draw 1n the ~~~~~!!~~~~ Town.bome. 2 story + -.... formal diDano rm Redhill~ OWNER. 120 d egree pool + •--:-· l ~1 "' • D.a-..lt.r ocean view. 3bdrm . West. . .a Daily Pilot I bea ~ +JO& 0 " big family rm. new &""'41L1 .£_!assifi~A<!&42·~1J. _ 1 DUPL. EX ch. lllo1t popular carpetlne 6 plank floor· 52 ?50() 2')jba. auume 9 1/.t "-4 ' i f ' -~ ~} ' .)l ,w l•t ~ ~...J '(:1 Starting •New Bualness Acccordl ng 10 Ca llfor1u lwiMM 1fMll ~·••9iofte Codi (Sec. 17900 10 119301 111 perlOfla d11i1'9 CMielllHI """' .~,.·-11111•1 flla 1 11at•-nt model, fireplace. Hurry! an&. Pvt bch. Fee land. 5 -1-n. 1118.880. ~-3334. $I I 0,000 ... nn Showa like a model. ,,_ ~=n~'1u~~rs':.°~t;: m~ffiTJ ~1111. 1024 ~~~:.~~:~· .. ~.2!!.!' ... : ..... !~!.~ Flnancilac! Hurry Call ~ C:........ nOWMB fordetaill! 641-7171 ----••••••••••••••••••••••• 1111-97.llO. l!ilc Rgfil SPYGLASS ~---,~r~ S449,900 100/oDOWM •YRll Ill COtllOS IASTSIOE C..M. 2512Sanla Ana Ave. 2 BR, 2~ ba. contemp. dm1p. $116,000. ""'"'°" 64'-6091 RCT~.ylorCo ~ , .......... 1041 . ..................... . Breathtak ing penoramic ocean view al Dana Harbor. Spec· t.acular customized 3000 sq ft. 5 Bdrm +retreat 90.• m upgrades. As· sumable 10...,"k (inane · ing. $310.000 33801 Avenida Cah la. SJC WOODS COYE 71..._.5'275. Open House IMl'LU & 1·5Smiday GUESTConA&E s.llaAm 1010 Outragecxa 2bdrrn. lba ..... ••••••••••••••••• bay with a slip for JS' boat. Offered rully furn ish ed for only $320,000, this home has been used only as a part time second home. 121/4°/o Adults 45. Oceanside. DUPLEX wftlt tit• Co1111ty Cieri! end .,.,,. It p•Jblialted lo11r l lMll I n a Mwapepaf Mnl4ng tM ara1 lt1 wlllcll Ille bual11••• ,, !Kat•d.. PARK PLACE. choice corner NEW 2 story 4 bdrm a , 3 bat h PONDEROSE home. Dinia& room · fireplace. Loads of brick work. SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE! SZ99.SOO! ..... ..,,rop. Rare beauty! Ba bbltng brook by private brick enuy. All main IJvang areas now thru French doors toward courtyard and spa. 4 huge bdrms and fa mily ro o m . rabulous country s ide view from master s uite. Open today 1 to s. 32 Dr Ba . 673 owners umt Skyltgbts. antique doon/wrndows. beamed ceilings. frplc. new kitche n bath 129S.OOO·S40.000 down 370 Flora. By owner Dys . 833·3~4 . eves 161-0M2. * •AFFllBULE The charm and island llf est y I e of Ba I boa Island are yours with this S Bdrm home with private pier and slip for many amenities. SI 091950 Roy McCcrcle, Rltr. The 11a11111efll It raq11lrad by l1w afld It 11e caner, 111 pn>tedlftt yo11r bual11111 "•"'•· Moal b111 k• re~lr• Ca11Kevin433·9841. Costa Mesa's fines t. Clean 4' neat. Good in · Oas.sifted advertising 1s c:ome. Call for more de · a better way to tell more · -2313. people about l.he service ,_-..c:.;.::::,::=,;. ___ _ 35· boat. 0 .111 . MAR S H ALL RLTR 644.9990 you have lo offer. A1k TJIB REAL about our low rates to-ES"l~TERS day. 642-5678. proof of flllng to °'"" c•M1119'Clll -''· Tlla DAILY PILOT proriclea llotlt IMl"I afld pvbllcltlofl -*-•· •• 111•1 alt tM fleCHUry lor1111 111d 111elnClln a dilly ,.,.,Ice IO Ill• Or an91 Co11nty Co11rtllouM. Elthef MOii b y on e ol our conwa11lan1 ottlc•• or phone llu lEGAL DEPAATWNT 642-4321 , Eal. :u2 for Mor• l11lonnatlofl and*"'•· OPEN THE DOOR TO A CAREER . WITH UMGO RE.AL ESTA TE IHIW...k_of.._ .... •lt•I •d rew•r•H•tt of ell ... 1a Ir ' la lea. It c• ,. ., .. JOll ...... Dpp I luelty to .... .... worts ..... ,..,.. ........ ••rled b•ck9r•••d• ••d llfHtylH, It •llowt Jff te .... bfl.. .-m... fl.-cl• ......... ,.... ........... . flwW ......... '" ., ..... ... ll•rd worll •r• rew•rde4. Or .... C...ty Is NCl .. 194 .......... c .. , ......... ............................ Newport c ...... a.~ I llM t..c... • 11111 U _...for b••••••• 9rowt• ••d •n1J11 I I. N ,_.,.. .:C..W to ..... .,,. of c..w .... .... ...... ,..of..._.,. ... _ coHlder • c .... •r wlttl ... Cl .. ., ... h .,.. .......... th H•d• of t•I• dy•-'c _....._.laO llAL ISTATI. T•• Mew,.rt IHc• Office loc....S .. -..., loc ........ .._.,.. C....... h lull"'t ..,. .., ........ w ........... ..,.... _., ... w••••u .... _. c• offw ,.. .._ best of • ........ H ,_ __., be lashrnW a. • c..ttJ IW W••lww, c .. Melt J ....... tf•••"· .. 644-7020. ' y ... ,~..... ' • MEWPOIT Lingo 1E.AcH .... ~.... 1644-7020 laMt..,....1 .. c• L ..... u.,. .. . NEW BUSINESSMEN ; Contact the DAILY PILOT for • : county requirement• tor uelng a · Flctltlou• BuelneH Name. 142-4321 EXT~ m macnab I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIA"Y OF THE IAVINE COMPANY ------ POPULAI WAIMIM•TOM PL.AM I! This elegantly decorated 2 BR, 2 ba~h condo has it all! New financing or assumable . loan available . $142,500. Lorraine Jackson 551·8700. <W·45) 752-1414 (omp.J\ Volley Cen111< 642-IJJI q() I Dovtlf Onv! Hl-17H W<><d>rtdQe (""'" 644-62M Harbor v-_ Center fiJ Coldwell Banker OPEN IM HARIOR VIEW HOMES Incredible value . condition. location & financing. 2 BR. MONACO. See RnA QUIGGLE At 1825 PORT WHEELER. OPF.N 1·4. IN NEWPORTC•~R ~ 644-906~ ·-... '""' ..... •C-·-f l.C ....... ·-•Goo .. oo ,,, .. ~~~·:~= ,.,. ..... .,, .. .. t_ 11-WUll< ..... _ ,.,_ .. _ ,,_ ·-,,,, .. ,.~ ...... ao. ,,,.._ . ....,. ·-·-.. .... t1A .,_, .. -... ·-.-... .,_ ·-·-"""' ·-u-.. _ ... ·--·-....... ~®M:- . ........ •'75-7060• PLUSH A beautifully up1raded Franciscan Fountains home Fresh paint inside and out. Ph11 luxurious new carpet. A spacious 4 Bdrm 2 Ba beauty with formal dinin1. breakfast room and more. Super financinl by owner. Aakinl l209.IOO. ..... ...,Illy TKBREAL ES'i~TJCRS 411·21.A Garden Grove Schools QWet cul-de-sac street Close to everyth ing. Avajlable W /"MW F.N.M.A fananr lDI at 127 /83 . ACT NOW · CALL • RED CARPET 754-1202 OWNER DESPERATE E.sade 3 Br 2 Ba. lrg Fam Rm w lfrplc Low down. noa-qualJfyang MS s umable loan o we $132.500 By Owner 548·Z763 SI.a .. IA.MC ... Breathtaking view of Pac ali c fro m S an Cleme nte Island to Hollywood Hills from t bas immac u late 3 TAI£ DYEI 10~ FHA loan wit h 161.000 balance payable al Mli6 PITI. Clean 3 Bdrm with deep lot. Alk· me ··-Seller will carry ISOOO 2nd T . D . w 'tlaat' Bdrm. detl. family room --------- home Amid towering l BR Condo. by owner pmea Beamed cealangs. 11•,, auum S75.LIOO. Nr compietely redecoraled C1v1r Ctr Joe 833·3231 '7M700 B.16AMT COUMTaY MANSION l~~~~~~~~~l3br. 2ba. den1(am rm la v 1239.J•O. or Kl-211i72 IOfO llla1nificent North 1'llt.ln IOOO sq ft estate on almost 1 acre . 11,750,000. Great financ· ins-will trade equity for s maller home, in· come prop .. trust deeds . Rid! Alderette, owner/· reaJtor, 731-5115 . rm w /(rplc. new crpl .. um loan $124.900 PP 979-1791 don osen :-• .. '• ... ._ __ .............. . AU.THI MESA VERDE Span1s b 1Z11 N. COAST HWY WC*°S 90ME delight• 3 Bdrm that 's LAGUNA BEACH In dlil beautiful home beautifully decorated 417-4M8 which features . 4 Just painted ID.Sade and -------cu. Sbows owners pnde. Ma pert._. 106' Bdnm. 3 blalbs. 3 car Must .. see ! $1 25 ,500. ·---···---s.arace. lovely pool and TARBELL. BKR Ca11 l-:===:i:===:-t spm. llove-m conditum. 540-l720 I ...,a.T.-.HTS A.Uin& only $197,500 Qu8illl 3 Bdrm 2 batb. ~-1151 for more 0.. P.W I 026 rem' teled br¥ne. featur· · in1 separat e fam ily room. 2 firepla ces . hardwood noon . our ....................... IM FOllCLOSUIE 3 Bdrm, 2t.a. Sl.20.000. J:m2 Mariana Or. l ·lM-4656 --~ .. HERITAGE P.f.A~TC>R~ new roal. copper plumb· 1~~~~~~~~~ 1n1. RV a cceas. 20'k I· What a Woaderful World of Shoppin1. ri1ht al .YOW' fin1ertiP1 every· day ! Daily Pi l ot Claaai.fied Ads. To place your ad, call 642·5678 and let a Claasified Ad· 1 .. Vi•11or•he••lp-you•.•••lil~~~;;;;:;:;;;;;.;.=-1 ~~~~~~.!!~~ II , AXIi UPPB! down. OWBer' will carry all the finan cing at 13~'ko interest AMIDI IZZS.llO. Call ~-1151 .............. . .................. ... .......... tE 111111 ILllllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE MIW IA YFIOMT US,._ Gorjlcous Modern Home With Imported Antique Details ThrouRhout, Handsome Wooden Mantels. lfujle "Carved Wood" Antique Puh. So M<1ny Sperial Amen1l1es AulomalH' Sprinklers, Air Condition1ni:, Scr uri t y S y s t em Profes s ion all y Landscaped Dork Fo r F1rty Foot Boat Private RC!ach. Uy Appl. OnJy. Sl.600.000 Gl ·--.......... -,. 759-91111 . #2COJ?Onule"- Mew~Cetllw '==' s~~4l~-"r..~s· -· ..... -----wi.4.., QA' I ~ •................ ol .... ._ --...... _.,. be. ........... ._ ....... _.,. I HECARP I · 1 I r I ' ENRIL I r I I I t ~.....,,...U _Pr-T-.-1 ....,L ...-ti .i .1111'.: Eteclfonlc gamat ••• always populi'i gllt1 T!ley're tl'la toye with tha 1maH but· con• 1ne1 tha big -11g• Good n ei&hborhood. needs paint " TLC. 4 bdrm, I~ ba Sl~.800. OWC-Small 211d. Broker, 675-0115 '-'* 1110 · -• • HERITAGE ....................... Rf.A L TOR~ ilD JllA:n Capo. 155.800 2 Br. 2 Ba. 14IO sq. fl 8 '~~~~~~~~ Jn. akl. Act 541-5032 --------lllliil-~11!1115!"~~~~~ l2dO mint ('M'd, &lb ant, SRAIP ............... dbl awnings , stove, CAL CLASSIC Ocean vu. 3 Bdrm 21-> nlri1. evp ceo&er. eet up 4 Bdrm. Le aaaum able Ba. l car carage an a mo1-rree Pine loan. Good buy! Century 1125.000. V&Uey. Sen Dteco Cty. lo 2a Lockhart Reaity. ~ -... -.m.-.-~--!!!!7~· !!!!!!~~~I ,..(N a Co . 2 BR + FA• R• ~ "v llO sq ft. real frplc. .a.OSI-TO llACH Htdrln-=-2 9'°ttl Priced toa~l at • $110~. 119-fDI dec,k. ·•dlt gk • ..NJ. ~~~!!!!!~~~ o...-a.i..m.Ml.-c Century 21 Lockhart 912-1147 1044 ....................... 3 bd. 'l'ril ba. Twnbme, 1220 sq . I\, Fabulous location, Tenni1 crt 1. pool, pub, acbooU, lat· tice covered patio. lwih planh. 1real buy . SU0,000. Cal\ aa.e111. DOmDOfT! DOIT! C.IJ DOW for informaUon CID t.bia , l bdrm. 2 'ril ba. f811l. MD. towabome ill VillqeJ. Loe8ted OD the p hit. Wltllin walk· iq di9tuce to ever· ytblq. l~ASIM.LOAN bmmelllate l Bdrm + -.. reo111 wltb bar. Near·Dew eartbloDe cmpata, Autten • new tile in ldtdllen. Lovely ysd wttlt -.race •bed . --Cl810W HClllS"MD .. 2Br. '-Uy rm 6 on l'1ll. frimd'1 5 •tar ,. ... . "~ • .....,,. Tiii .... l ......... KMl..W.S. • r.u.,.... MIDDI -. •. For an~~~~~~~~!! llflll to ... call MO·lW , -HERrTAG: i.·t_1-. --,p - ... . . .. ....... -.r ... _________ 1 &.uo la. ti. Com· --. ..... J lH••to P•etnc Oc~•a . &ell AS ... WfDAN 1 .._ C..-. Clme to HO•I Boapital . c ..... .., ,.,.. ...... ...... ...... ..eurity . llo•e ill now before .......a.. . .sm.-. C,IJI M ; •C 1111 ••nu -·-lAMe c .wo ......... • 1 ......... c.. •• I ...... . .. ,MU Pft.IM .-C. ...... ia ,........ ... ~ -i'r-·---------__ , _______ _ • > .. -........ -.. . . . . . . . . • ........... ------'4 .. --·-----...-----·--·--..··-· .. . . __. ......... ._-·-----------.... _...._ -_.,....._ --------..-.... I'll ......... ---·--- Ml-•U..,_:al._4' ....... u. t 'r" H1u•tU•tw••d , .,.,.............. lt.f lacat1~ ~.o.c.tnber29. t980 lW&.VPILOT 1 111•• .. •• •••••• • • • • • •• • • •• • •••••••••••••• ••••• • •••••• ••••••••'•• ••••••• • • • ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Af •-••• ~ tt.•• .. ~ 4300 D h • 11111111111 4•U 1 ~ &:. ... _...... )JJ2 ........ lJ44 .... ,.,..... JJ6t c..t.MeM JIJ4 " ............................................................................... -.'I •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••n••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••-••.•••••••• .... ,.... ..... J16t Moriae! Avoid depollta t"'or etore 6 olfiH 1pa • t1dt Urao1•are.-'Rr N•wport Sbont C•n•I MIWLYOICOA. ...utully located 2 Br ........................ 6 t'.\ll livua& upeuesi mtrwoaaba.rat.a. . r nndCl 1ll'fr 1 1 ftont4bdrm,lba,oewly 1Br.papd.ncl1ar. 11756~.t'IUJdOK.CH_,.IBr.Zlb . Encl1d Profeuiooally since 500 .. Z7ffS.Pt .... ,~ • L rr, ma. po o I dttoraled, 2 block• to dtwa.her, pool. Aduata. IDeld. ICZ-1152. aarace. paUO, wait to 1W1l. Mf3.\ VERDE bR • • Jnuut tr-noi.. e l r ~u M241e83 M2.SO'l'3 beadl.achdb.M>dop. HOU~TIS PLAZA )'l dulh ool) u u pet• Jllr, Dia, nr beacb, bllDa. TBLM1mt. l42·ll03 m.•134 l52S .... Verde E. C.111\! l'I~ wmi rl.wt""10ua 'bdrm condo Lat .. l br. l b•. saso. cpCa/ctr,., encl •• ,... 545-4 tJl • wllb rnaa U C 6 Im balcony 6 carport. tlUO._.l OCllAMROMT Female want• female llNTAlS m..-a1\1ea rdrtc ind, avail now M0-*7 Yeariy.4brduplex. Al\. roommate. Newpo rt Newport Modem ttore ~~ Us • Mn 21'4JIA _, 1 '*'· VttH llld S4I 3174 Laree z Br. Bwlt Ina, l'lS-4111>. BHch Condo. Tennis, ulfice. Nr. poll omce. I .ait.l\ bl& poo 1111\e:rton wkday1 lie I Br. Apt. w /paUo, ftHpi.llce: endad patio, ,,.._ ~•IO HUH, jac , walk lO S 4 8 s I f . J err '1 JJ14 U. i1,~ 11250 -frplc, d1hwar, pool. praae. MZS mo. Gary --beach. $Z8S. J ao l. 213/4TI-7001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •hr t .<Chb.a Wf) 3tsr. 2R•. home w /bil jacui.li. no pet.a. Qwl't Bo114!r53f.M• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5eJ.9036leave message ----------------1 JI.tr tt>;a 16SiC>Tll!'lln b.6clt encJOlied yd. acl'Olls AduJU onJy. S.W Ir up. Near S.C. Plaza. lbdrm ---· C-rcW ... O::utt,;f 'Nft the 1l tom Charles 31SORarla.5'6t-2«7. LARCE2bdr1Banrbcb, condo,$4251nclut1llrall Roo mmate want e d ._.... 4475 ,. ,,.. CCMLMI PA•I lldler Park, 237 Knox --yd,utilpd. MSG. amenities, leoms. jac, Clean, rupon:H ble , ..................... .. Jl'OUl HOM .~ Utt Pl r ail t or appt ..... 4l0cc.-cy SJ&..2216 pool.Avall J an.t.Call Femtlepreferred 3Br Store Space for k!ase 0... ._, W family o.11hborb,•u1J 1a1.53:1 $32$. l Br l Ba. Apt. All •• 44 540·8519 or a fl e r 6 , 2 Ba Newport Shores 1500 SQ. ft. Ir 1260 sq ft . -l.lt6ldl 1 ... .-u11 ut1ls paid. Balcony . lnfllt -5.57-!im. _,... 1 & 1• ti 1n Huntington Beach , 1 ..._ > Illa.till iaaru l)' l>it'l'ld, •O w. J.J;.;, .-wP<>ltT CIHT Adults only, cat OK. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ::::"c:l!!·East " u 1 s . f I ex i b I e terms . It••• uiuu lat THREE beautlful coo· TSLMgmt.642·1603 38.B.,2bacoodo'.165Qmo. s...t••" 1111 -.-'""'~ ves. 213/596-7202. ~ .. al '1 • '""" 00. Ja\llJlable 1>1ffert-nl ----A.lent ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roommate wanted, sun .____ -... Mal 14 Ou.-WR IJt.fl Jt '"•' l ul locaUoos. l'ool, tennis. $Jlll5. 2 Br I'• Ba Adults 916-1051 Bach. with patio. Utlls ny CdM hous e :!bdrm .... trial l..tal 4500 .. ma ~led ml~v,cn,e l\t .Mlullll JJJ " ~1.1 "~ CIO!ie tu beach and ooly. Cat OK. All built· 1-.. wa.--a ~.5 .. pakL $375. Call a ft SPM gar, patio. w'td. etc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l ,.-.. ' "' Mt: H J 1 •I 1 l 1' \i Ho. I U\S Balcony --.--_,..,,..... -6 980-ZMO · Z!SS' lodus'l/office l8l0'1 OHqodll ft tt K \ ., ~~(IJ , .. sn Cu•l'UsDa·IRVl"E Ho.' pita TSL Mgmt. 642·1603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---... E..-1-L-.J Easy·&Oln& ruo luv1ng Redondo Cr . !JO. H.B.' .--.a-"..,~, C / 2 I H • w port Condo 2 Br. 2 Ba. on golf ~-non-smoker d esired 1650lseS42·28l4 '450COTI'A4it •tlrJtuMn~ 4 Hr 1 Ua C..tw 2br. lba new cpl, drapes, cour se , inc Ids w~fw-•d 1900 Avail H-81 S22S ~ 12 ----, ~S l lh B1r1tk h t 1111 l ia.diunt \II ~1<101 640..Sl57 pauit. pauo. lndry $425 washer/dryer. Crige ••••••••••••••••••••••• uti1.7fi0..8201. Sf~ 455Q '·'' • 'et,y rn" Ilk·• '"""'' 1t'c:uot11t1011".i , .. 2"' ss18090 1625.492·6700. •••••••••••••••••••••"• t.99 ta~ .tel M•1 ., ..... , .... ~1·1 .... l ~·~•u Im ,, ~ tt.-~nte 3276 ---r---:. .. V1"lla1e Share ocean \'il;?W hutnt! I _.. • ..., .,.., ~ .-. ~•6t .-..nng INI Pn b h •-b I Approx 6,000sq. rt. ava1 . .._.. a.lbQa PmtMUI" .. llC!l \\,UI Jan l<il , ....................... J Br 3ba, patio. gar. SSSO. Mlwporl •oclt -. New 1~ bdrm l"xury vate al "' 1 rm in Fowllain Valley neat•! l-"'I! ...um..bt.. lv .. 11• • • W.....__Ylll ir:. .. _ tl:ll deg ocean "lt!W, nt!w Avail approx Jan 15, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... . 1 Mature ma le Non s.o Frwy. $1320 mo ~'-S.UthAh "' l. StlH.l Htt~ I _..,. .. r ...... I hurne 4Br + f H $995 wk.nd,ev760•1418 adw•~ ID 14 pans drin.ller.$350 645·9044or John556·9360.S487S33.-•.•• .-sJSl 'l.'luldr .. n Llo.i3 lll\ Jllt ' Utt 'nn+lo • ~2~ ~n o Oppn Sunday 3003 Calh.• PAii NEWPOIT from '2 bdrm from 644-8065. -------- , .. r >J~S i1r '" ,, \\,ul 11011. \1111 lrull! F'r.,ntera Agl . i\n1 ta * * * COU...--YCLUI $505 + pools. tennis. RewtcbW..ted 460~ •• AM.IY4u.tY ~-'V I oJl l2tob 770-47116ur!l6:J 1H82 I LJ.Fellows "'" waterfalls. Ponds! Gas Shr clean Balboa Opl~. ••••••••••••••••••••••.,-. :::. ;b:,b\~~~'~1117 1•br 2b~ """" Klld ... 11 l~~~l ~s.~ 1 =t~~;111~y Swgles~~1~'tedroo m ~£7}.~e :~~::~~!i! ~~10':1::ior:s ;: .. ~util . ~rr'1~1b~~;~~~le;::~~. W)l fittpl.aH· icnd~..U •P' tb:J() '"~ IH \l TORS C•strmo 3271 · 'l ouare thewmnerof apt.5.&townhouses Beach to Mc Fadden Pro( Gentlemen woulri homl' for under s5oo • pm&JO. ~a~e Slti.S OVO 1 1114 2!>f>t ' • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 frttticl&.+s fo'roms.M9 644 1900 then West on MC"fo'adden like to shr his lge ~ II "73 1722 Bill GrunJ\ Klir ~~tie 1 ttu1111 1 hJ 1 \lt ;!Hr li::'<l t'onJo, "'\d, bVi2llba.~esa.nJuai" 1$1050 value).to Oceanfront for Winter l o Seaw1nd Village hme w mtelhgenl ~ta ~il 1 W1wbr1d~I' ~~ m u J r. a. a c. pew prl\ ~. '"ac...a.:--R al f h d •· 17141893-5198. bl '>t\ ..... 5 luMMssj111•est/ , Wl(e .S4!itl Pl'f m•• t .. ii W.tyne 4~ ~7W 497 5\135 I :'-lo pets i\vi:ul tm (l)ed ..,......~., ~ ent· s urn1s e "' e ...,..45 yr woman..._., ---------1 W4 TT'J2 wk.dy~ ~ ~ 7210 & RV Sllow unfum Broker. 67~4912 tbd.nn. sel·unty bldg. on 7~ FiHRCe .... MISA YHDE r Ht< " b.a ., rrv1, ''" \l,wdbndi:e l'ottaRe de I d . . Jan 3thruJan II NO FEE! Apt. & Condo beach . Long Beach . OfficeR...t• 4400 i:;;;:; ........... , .. . Pnditol Ownenih1p nt·w · - ' · j; t:'lrht'd rww "st"''" J br f aLQ .... llllllS Anaheim Cooventwn rentals. Villa Rentals. view or ~ueen Mary . n.-...~ 5005 roel, drape i>. carpl't~ u r > l w n, n.1 .. ' ·~ I ;, ,b.t Ir I i~l r m -.form u.fw'ttislted 3425 Center ••••••••••••••••••••••• -rr-• ,_....,, wt•"--2 year'> R.-nt:. l'ltJholUt.'~ I rJd al "" < ... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tickets must be ex 675-4.912 Broker ref rig & micr o wa \.'e . 1617 Westcl.trt N R Want ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,...... ,, "I • 1 1lm rm lrpk _..5 mu $400 in c l ut1 I Ca 11 f. I /\Sl 1110"--r b8Dw mar ket Lub uf "~t r JIJ l umm P.><• I .. , K..<r..., • br. 2 ba. I s tory Adult). changed for reser ve d inancta 1 v:> • • • upaade potent 1<1I Pn ,·t'd J ..t l' u t ti 2 .. n 1 I •I ..,... <-<' no pets. pool Ma)!noha seats at tbe Convention 2~;a ~~.~:a~ Cno~~t 644•5642· S56 4564 Isl noor. Agent 5\1 5oJ2 ~~ J. S•ith nlbl. ~o var11ill'lt!) in l(Jrax~w autuoµt.'llt'" '"'"-lo<!Hr :?Ha wet bar &Katella$450 11984116 Center ahead of time Hwy. ,525 mo J 0 Roama 4000 KOLLCEHTER lll'IAustmAvt' l..a vear Ca ll fu1 ih: Si~ per mu 751 tl485 .•ltlhtl .i:.ir I east' S6-00 I Call &12-567~. ext 272 lo pro P er l Y M g m t ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT Costa Mesa Lads. '752 1920 i""W""rt lll'i "'•t~. ! ilr I •·ll ~i2-\ ur 631 6300 ;\i.k £--'-nts Furnished 1 claim your Uckels 7 51 27 87 A rt 5 Pm . l.agwia Beach Motor Inn. El l Yuu are the ~·inner uf ,,, .-.,, f t · k ...,.-·~-• * * .,.,c N p r C egant execullH' ~UJ t') I l L.....-1. L t Ouplt!ll. Pri\Jl<e \Jrd or t111l· •••••••••••:••••••••••• --548-8044 ....., o. ac1 IC oa ~t in prestige lorJl1un n~ icae I ' 9u .&IL ~o Pt-:'l'S ........ 1· & h 32 .. 1 1~Penm1..ta 3707 ._ Hwy, LaJ(una Beach With l'•'m"lt:lt.' :;V"P••fl 1Stu5011alue1,t u A · · ~., '.'" ~~ac "' •••••••••••••••••••••••THE GABLES 2 Br l '-2 wesuurr NB adult con L>a1ly. Wet'kly. Kuchen ~Drvit·es " .. y · j water vaad o1:! 2~5ti ••••••••••••••••••••••• HA\ F R O j'; TA (j 1-: IJa w gar Adults. nu do ~. 2 Bdr m . 2 bath, a \la1lahle Lo 11. wint\•r .,.. i'U 11.51 llf..>11 S~sy ;;::;on PLACE Luxury 2 Br_ 2 Bu 111 I.lb! :?bdrm 2b.t frpll' pat1n. UCal·h, P1t.'r . I Rr $15().1 l"pts thru·oul . drps. HI steps lo pool. New rates -194·~ NOPHTIES • ~ar atnum. 1.JJlao $5~5 I llt'wly di•cor.i tcd ' nr j Adult Wnlr 303 I': 1 blt.ns. fncd yd. \\later pd carpeting. yea rly leas1: 250-500 sq rt ~rn•I (Ir .~aahne~r!ih~.~~:;n~:on I,,,.__ TII l :lO '·""·' &l2 5290 l1t.-ar h & "hops Adult:. Edgewatt>r 11171 286!> I flJ&-'120 , . r\gl. 79-1616 Pvt bedroom alndb bath ullls pd From 121~1 77!1 Center -r--' no IJt'h. $550 ... u t1 I 2437 t; Ol"ange $420 Pool. )acuzi1. l' u house w l9th St ('.\I Tntn i•n 51!62 ,._ ..a.-1 M 3722 --w k · Tic kets must be ex· ..• E SIDI-. 2 Br 1 Ba no · 1~a ..-ar I PINL' BLUFF APTS 2bdrm with patio, xlnt or 1 n ~ Pc r s 0 n 957 I"''" h r d • ~~~~~~~~-·I r. S200 d JVV t an~ed or reser ,.e • pets \\all :: 1 11;6 •--Mino.wl 3252••••••1•••••••1··.:••••••1• c~nc 2br.2ba. Adult locattoo Call A l mfto +J nsels,.t 'lep1 '>THE" l seiiL'>..tt the Convent100 •---------· liroadway $1511 mu 1 :::':':':: ... ;.: .......... Bache or. me uues ult .,...._ 1714 )645-9314 va1 a er a ..-ur , ,~...., ~5 .,,0 g""O \ k complex, patio. "iew. tm"'on Bl·h nr ot·ean Center ahead or time ZS UMtTS COMDO I 67J....,.,., 1.~· JS•· Mat u r>' a cl 1 t r""' F' mo .,... "" / ~ I "' EXECUTIVE SUITE \'all 642·5678. ext :?72 t11 .... -v-b 1 or aye . • frplc. enc . gar .. gas 2 Br. yrly 1"2 bill from 900-5844 "'·ti rr· _.r."' K¥ 3 Bedruom p, Oath "'ith lllmm 2 br, 2 a l en stove. dishwuber, spa. Bay & lkh $5S01m-0. r u ~enu:e o ll'"" m I da1m your tickets Owner raov1ng out or pool $700 month "' Cri>k 1-'ml dtn $65() Cotta Mesa 3 7 24 1ndry rm. From ssoo. 673·335.5, agt. N , ij O 1· e .. n r r o n t !'/t>WPorl Centi>r * • * "lhte. Approva_I for 36 96J !I039 rn 1 1711 '*i76 ••••••••••••••• •••• • • • • SPMC 631·6107 w kitche nette S26u & 640 547o I ... nuip. Pri.ced at 10 6 X Br 2 Ba Sm~lt: ~l•lr) Mission Vie jo 3267 L'·m 1 br apt. $325 & up Lovely 2bdrm, 2ba studio near Oceanfron t $600 Oceanfront 673-4154 PLAZA ~ 5035 Condos. Tentauve tract r SUS CASIT AS -:-----2 Br Spacious new decor up Util pd 2306 w Mort~s. TnKt ~ 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r u tb f I t. e ct EXECUTIVE SUITES ••••••••••••••••••••••• groes. v wuer w1 carry double c ar enclu,t•d L·,n,·I . .,.,, Adults. 11u w1 rp c. pa 10. n mo. Yearly.675 7045 t \ I HOMES FOHIH:NT ' ' "0 d 100 ·111·re1sad1Herence .· C ~ctat12<'?.A..,ua1 ~ara~t' Commun•l' petS 211oNewport 81 gar.Newly ecor SSSO. ......._Mohh 4 .. SattterMhJ. o. ·. Pt~e-xclusive. 752 1920 pool SS2S mo 631 ti!l!IO 3bdrm S55lJ r enced !>48·4968btwn8&5PM 998-8l28. WESTCLIFF I Br Con ••••••••••••••••••••••• All types or real estate AskforRuth )ard & garage Kids & ------do. Completel y re DOYOULIKE 114/752-0234 111vestments smce 1949 ~ welcome 964 2566 Luxurious bungalow for 2 Br. $370. Pool. good loe rurbisbed. Adults . no <U12M1chelsoo Or =212 Speciaid11q ilii P'oiRt 3226 nr97J.2971Agt .noree .aoo-smoking, neat. gent QwetAduJts.nopets.423 pets.$450 673-6640 MOTB.S? ~ll:h.1SUlt'SsCn1r:213 2"dTDs •••••••••••••••••••• ••• -..---! leoch 3269 548•7197 _w ~-Y..:. S48-9S!6· ~g-e-2-Sto,:;. 2 Br. 2"'1 :~~ ~':i~::~~~:r. Doctor, Lawyer, 642-2171 545-061 l HEW COMDO · ....................... ......,._.°" leaclt 37 40 LIKE new 2 br, 2 ba. nr Ba Apt. ID the Bluffs Newport Blvd. C.M. ~L~ Clt•'-fl. 1 Bdrm +den. end u111l H bo v Lf s -., d $37 ~-... '"' ar r 1ew r om e . ••••••••••••••••••••••• wntwn. 5 mo Frplc. No eh ildreo o r f El bid h 10,-r.U:l OP.M.I ~~ja;~ez~i.0$4~0 s:;;>'~I Jbdrm. 2ba .. ram rm. S375tup 1·2 bdrm: pool, 673·21l3 pets.~.851-0494 ~~!::t'!~~~~I~· of~~~ll n~t·o1; Be:;:, ~~~~~~~~~~~I 7S2--0929,661-0422 new crpt, pamt. drapes , jac. adll. 1899'l Flonda. b d eek.I ~40 w spacious office~ 644S90E1697. lse. 6 H 5965,. H 8 842 28J.t or842_3172 3 Bdrm, 2¥> a con o E. Bl~f. spac. 1 br. pool. orw Y 67 slty1.tn1<ts, wetbar. con Dishwas her, frplc, 2 car u1··t s•cure a r ea 6'' ---------• Toro 3232 q "' · "' · ,_.._ ........ 4250 ference rm. 85' per sq 19¥44Ye LOAM ••u••••••••••••••• • • • • Newport (.;rest 180 deg Newport leach 37 69 gar. pvt st. Available adults. 00 pets, $4-45/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fl P l us. s uper 2 .ooo HOMES FOR RENT :.pectacular ocean & ••••••••••••••••••••••• now. 1625 mo. lst /last . 644-4767 ____ ··CALIFORNIA" SQ.ft medical bid~. Wt'll lit ..its. 97% occupied in Denver . St .300.000 down. Full pri ce $4.30!>.000 Call for taodtwe 4 Bdr m $575 1-'enred C.:alalina view A I loca Lrg 4 Br. 2 Ba. $800 m o . & secunty 67l-22S2. 9 to appointed at i:. p .. r 2 Br I Ra ~"00 m o Spm I Br I Ba. Steps lo beach yard & garage K1d5 & uon. front row 3 Bdrm · · -· · Palm Spnn1s .. sq fl For detJtl5 r all pets welcome 964 2566 "" mas t er s uite. All Stepstobeacb 673-931 2 BeautJCul2br 2baSSSO $375 Property Hous e REDCAR Pt:T or~J.29'1l ~gt · no rel' bwlltns. pool, tennis. Spectacular Oceanfront It's open. ~ee it at G42-EOorM2-IOlO Condominium RenUlts 893-1351 • VGH.y 12341 spa. Lease. Prin e. only. Ava1L now. 2-4 Rr Con Jt_06_Gincer ___ ~4400 Westclilf 2br. lba1 Codnd1 o Luxury Condominiums. 16118 sq ft. well locatt'd ·······················, .. 5'8-781:!_eves agenL do b'7>SU RF' pd all MW int. eoo . a u ts O>mpletely Fumisht'd. Non11 C-08ta Mesa oHu:e .frplc.pauo S7SO m o. I · 1 br. U\Jls ·car, new only. no pets. else lo CountryClubSetting Park next to your door 18315Ba.sswood After 4 Pen1ns ula Pt. bome.1•.,.,rDC1nl'llWW•llh I crptsl. off-streetl. ~~!t s hopp i n g /tran s GoU,TenoisAva1l -Pully equipped w1 1hl """"'...,..., ~~L-... 17~u~.~ .. ~.!:1s . _.. .... S650 t m o 754 1630, . R b & ......-~ / I steps to bay & beach. ~ _.1....,. _, __, 9l57-&350alter 7 PM abieat 5pec1al ates carpet. a c, <"a mets Rt>decoraled 2 Bdrm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----forour CUentsonly. storage Reasona bl" 1675 mo ~l"-d 3106 Lge1 br. all a dult. no E.Bl~f Twnhseapt.3br. Weekly,Monthlyand I priced Call Toni \ I>\\ 1..,1110 .,1 .,. enc e d y 4 r d s 1 ••••••••••••••• •••••••• pets, pool • carport. SJ7S 2ba. 2 car gar , Wedi end Rentals H a r b o r B a k e r llarhorha'l''lmi•nlC'" 1tara1ite:i Kid:1 -& 1.JelS "-ewpurt C rest pro· Yearly !bdrm. beam ed mo.+ deposit. 931 W. 644-1010 Call-(7t4)J2l-S911 Pro fessional R id~ welcome 964 :!5llti vr f<-1al del'or 2 Bdrm ce1hng. ser vmg bar. 1 2 l!lthSt..!>48·0492. r 9157 1900 . . ~~~~~-----1 97>2971 Agt . no fee • ilen t'nd untl !-'pie. gar. w d hook up:.. $54)11 UPPER Duplex apt. 3 br CATH""DRAL CANYON I wt1.t1.tr renn1:-. & pool t213l~ 1~8 2br, twnhome apt, else to 2 ba, frpl, yr. round S600 COOORY CL UB ...... Hw Ha'itwJ°" hach 3240 1 ~>mo Con:lna def Mar 3822 shops hospital $475 mo 67J.2ll3 '-'ti 2300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••·····•••• AGT64S·98SO 3 Br. 2ba. 933 W Balboa --••••••••••••••••••• 5blks to ocean 1-:lt't.Jlll L Hturr, 1, Bdrm J ba with 12·~ Bd, 2 ba. frplc. di~ 2bdrm, lba,'$J80. 645 V1<'· Dishws r. frplc. laund 34-567Cathedral P'or Sale By Owner I bdrm. f4 m rm & '"'11 · I 1•111 & r"l roum $1200 1 hwa::.her No ur PCll tona No dogs. ~ups. garage. 12 blk l Caoyon On'e 10x50ft Mobile Home ~ $72:5 ~n•lle<JPlusl'loh •·pJL'>. 1 111<J ;:ii) mu 1st la~l . :sec 546-9124 t 0 b c h s 7 5 o r m n P.alm Spnngs . Qmd Adult Park near '-i I.' 4 r .; d,,, I 1\~a1I now 1;73 2214 2 · I Cahfom1a ~ Ba c k Bay Sl5 000 I Dbl car P't itar. fulh 1111 WJtl'r .! tldrm 1n •.i 5prn 2 Br l Ba $400 mo lst. tst •Last.secunty A\::lt Desert Resort Realty I · rna nl '"'' Ad II n now Call 673-2282 from --- I 933·0009 art er .ipm ,.,,.! 1 ,u t ~ .. }'1,,11'' ""', n11·nt l11t·.111on last+ depos it. 2238State MZ S074bef 3 ,...,~ nqwre ii ,, " ' llr II 5 I,._.. 112 4 ~ fA&-4559or642·4431 9 5pm 4bdrm. 2ba cqndo on __:__ __ ore pm S t ";LI !Hill t. I.II 01 ial "111l '"'·'~111' S77 'lwVMa~.141 ,, .dM H h S hi North Shore of Tahoe. OltofSt* !lti0-5112 mu ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br l'"i Ba ,,,ear L i t: c · FUiiy furn 5/min from I P'v prrty 2600 21r.llaA,t Westside 2Br. 2Ba .. S600 m o North St~ $400 /wkly -·••••••••••••••••••• LJKt: ~ i'.\\( '>l'J• 1o1u \11la S..lboa ··•1111!0 with I Newly decor. Gas pd. 642.2205 . Fr plr . dshws hr. r us t 9157 l226.~l946 ~rt. 1 4D Asc:erucOregon Coast lbdrm , .!ba. "'lh ill( P.'t1.a•·ul..ir 11t'l'<1n. lia Y,e n c l gar pool o-..p.-.!-.& shag. no pets. pat io El«tricitv. renl·eJ uul· master cathcdro.11 t'1•al Jllll n11itht l1i:ht \It'" 1 d was her \tlul t s --_.. 3126 64-40&!5.63t-2029 Ol'ean Bluff Kauai Coo slambn.c .view acrP::.'it 1ng 1n Ii• rm ntv. lr u m •Yt!f) room 1 ~5l173 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,,..SIRISASAPTS. doGolf.ten.nis.$ZSOper ble.owner 492·249!! ca rp el~ & 1lrap,.., '\pat·iou:-. 2 HH 2 Ba I Bdrm, I hath allutllpd -week Sleeps4.673-7595 S625 mn l'.!Hi -'J 1.:> lorm,11 111n1n.: room l lrTownhCHISe 5350 AT BEACH 1 --1148-9840 ' ~N 11ntv building, pmil Newly decor 1?as pd , IUH87J Ul"ean view. Po<>I. tennis ..... lo~ 4300 ..... Jnd spa S850 mo enc I it a r . p o o I , courts. ad Its Bac h .. 1&2 •••••••••••••••••••••• • -• .. •••••••••••••••• 2 Br Penthousel'ondoon Waterfront Ho,_, d was h er /\dull s BToro 3132 bdrm from ~20 5515 Nr UCC ·UC I. S hare ...... ,_,.slwd water Nt:w unfurn ~>al ., • ., 5073 ••••••••••••••••••••••• River Ave 642 2566 ti.bdrm. 3ba "~aul home ---••••••••••••• s lip avail Im meJ tH' Inc., Realtors I ',..., 4 I tleaut. 1 year new 2 Br uc f I Yl-J\RLY "'"'""'per mo 2 with stude nt s Avail S aA 3 102 c up a n c ,. t ,, I I 631-1400 Ofol11xc 3 Br 2 Ha rp c. ll'2 Ba Condo with po<>I. ,..,.,., Be .,,,.,97..., J e. " u1 N · •· bl T\' "'-2 b ... gar. wash dr~. now. au'""" 0 ' -••••-••••••••••• 213 282 1136 .Id\' ILJIT nr,,.) '-St r aza I 0 jaCUUI,"' ca e In "' 0 J v o 4b 2b I ,...,.., ~ ~I 103 t'ld Y~:irty SS5C) Broke r cross st. from beach Fem to sh r 3Br, 2Ba hse ... rg new r . a . 21J 592.~evc:... • LIDO ISLE-,...._ . IDDdem t)wlt ins. nr ss· 675 4912 84().6436 redec. new cpt. nr bcb. NptFwy :Sl959783484. 3br 2ba.den.Xatw • l t\r 28a. fq>k . elt:c 91eSliBllU HiwtiwqtCMtleoch 3140 LrR 28r 2 Raupperunit HB.$200mo5361140 ...._1...;... 3106 nu lobeach k1 s&'pt.'ls "·'r dour S!ISU mu ••••••••••••••••••••••• wideck.ocean&bayvu. -----1 U K $700 m n (>.1ys XIS!'i 0215. tl75 ri9411 , or Br"~I nuw I •· 2 Bdrm. $695 mo yearly Call Mature Resp A!JU t lo -··• .. •••••••••••• 1;42.2427 X377 . $7110 rl11> 793 495.5 APARTMENTS '"'" ~ "' share lg Beach Hse SJOO Eves 645 1971. 91>3 IS5ti HeauWul garden a pts Plerpointe Condos. Pool. Lloyd. mo. incl util 646-3778 aft 5 Br 4 Ba home. 4 car ,.niag. avail I I lll t /IS/11. SU.25 pr mo +- Cl AIL 67~4062 -,,..._liid -n 41 ....................... HOM ~FOR REN'1 J Bdrms SS25 Fenced yards & garages Kt cts & pets welcome 9S4 ZS66. or97J.2971 Agt . no fee LIDO ISLE Pool & spa Adults, no :.pa t ennis. ga ra~l'S JACOBS REALTY 6 ::Ji. S34S ~u~7~~dys : 17 141 615:6670 M IF40to45.~hr S 8r-.f 1 Bdrm. $400 Lovely I. 2 & 3 Bdrm ~ Ba tl<Je. C.M. Spa. NI" 2250 Vanguard 540 962i> a Bed.room. 2'8a th. S C Pl ax a Ir f' r w Y · Townhous es. g arage . OCt;ANVIEW S200 $22$. Sh r otils "'-d, Ooc.,-.cy patio. laundry fac. $450 548 8083 &U"'91J CdM Deluxe Suite:-. 1 lllU sq n. AC. ampl pi.£. 11111 1 pd. ~ F. Cst 11-. > 67~Ql00 c.t.-Mnr1 7th-St 3 Room suite. 54:> s(f rt modern bl.ll ldmg. t\ l' plentyol parkmg t'all Realonom1cs 675 6700 ;1 Bdrm. 2 bath. larg~ ~tnrb y p 31 i o , -t• a r gar.rge, acc-ess LO tennis. beach & clu b Prime roodillon Call Barbara. Agt. R Fl R , 673 7300 t'Ul t' 2 Rd "ti alu re adults k511 2 Br 1 Ba .. pool. laundry & $S75 Call 213/596 7202 rm.. s mall child OK or714 liJ60-7347. TSL Mgmt. 64'2 1603 toLocm 5025 MDMytoLo. 5025 ~to Lo. 502 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 548 ~ur631 1266Agl S2.45 1 Br apt very safe No smoker. prev ref req 954 w i7lh St ~·03S8 NEED MONEY Widow has money to buy or make 2NO T U any s1z.e above $10.000 No credit '. no polty for act100 call AGT 67J.. 731 l an) lime ..........•...........• 5100 ................••....• Now You Can Sell More ~ 11 h II ii th I' ti" I I' I '\ '-\ I' I'\ t II ER "'" "11111111h ,.:! • : h • ttl ii ill• I I .: I d,1 . \-, 1 \ I t I 11 I • • r pfdt •'•fJ \,tlll••t "I' 111 •l"'' ~"tt h ,1dol JI •holi 111" t• 11uh , ..... I I lttt 1\\t l d I ...._ '' f I \ fll• , • I .1 l :,, I ~ I h It C •' ' If , .. 1111\ I'll 1111 \" I 11 I \•di I ll.1 11. \1111 II .11 d \1 -101 \l.11.11.1Jd • 1>t m•1rt· lUfurO\J t1un .. 1h•J ''' $Jl•'' t· \•tUr .ul' "II 642-5678 SCRAM-tns ANSWEIS Ptcada -Liner- -Tulip-Hawker - PRICE Electronic j!ames are always P<>PUl<lr •1rts . 'fllt>y're the toys with the small buttons and the big PRJCI': tags 4 • la BM:k bay area. ~ 6 lg back y rd. Pmtia1ly furn. Yrl..Y lse a vai l. S1700 'm o . Ml-OIU. ~l e v'es 6 ..... T-.. WHIFR.E TaH Lwcury Adult unitll at af fordable living. 1,2 & 3 Br . We ll d ecor ated ()(ympic size'pool. tight ed tmrus court. Jacu111. park hke landscapm~. Mosl beautiful bldg. in H..B. From SJ60. 846-0619 tr you IW't'f1 m11n~y for Rn~ rt'ason and ~u need ll rn~t 1?1111' II'> J ( ~1tl w.· won't a.~k you a lot o( perS(lflal'que5Uoo' or l)lll '"" 1hrou111t th•• Jnl <l~ree to ~l't a loan You·11 find lL'> nice tot.ilk l•1 aml .. ~,, t•Hh'.11 "1th $ Isl. Znd. 3rd Real Estate to..n.s \ S ~I to SS00.000 Use money fur an't' rcJ,on $ Payment ph•n m11y be t:11IQted In )'our burlget I .1 I • • " '• . : s "" t)'J>t.~ nl property S Any CahfOO'tia area $ No cttd1t dM)ck S No balloon paymt-nt n('rt••.<1:1~ S lnteresl only INns :iv111l9t1le ~ . •• Quid 2 Br. l~ Ba. Crpts, bttos. ADULTS onr 30. No pfts $330. '46-91M3 "'-' 5 Poillt s..ppial C.er. 263 Bdrm. Apta. .-.sa. Kida OK, DO ...... -~ -f'1>.8T1 "-···'-- S Your equity only reference-nt'eded S Even 1f ~fund m pay ments S No d1sturbm.r your l!lt loan S Compare nor Ct'''' 11. 1th other. $ pp'15 V'nUr hnmf' nr •l\Jr n/11('(> GOLDEN P.LAK of_CALIFORNIA--..---- ()peti evtty day 9-1. f'lll!f'pt ~und•> f'or App"t. Call CoUen 12131 ~·<YB) 1852 Pacific Ave . Lon1 Beach. Ca. 9<816 • , 11• Le.ta.._. ••,,. r ,. -su •w...., 1100 twpw..e.ct 1100 Hetpw-... 7100 HlfltW-"4 1100 ttetpw_.... 7100 ....,w..;... 111a ................................................................................................................................................................................................................ • * • K. WI.- -· Lafayette ........... Beacb You are* wiluler ol JhetkWa ($10.• valu.). to st-t1•••1• ........ J•ltllnlJu ll ,. .. b=• C.0.veotJoo c..&a- T1ckel1 m.aat be e:1· r haa&ed rm-reserved suu at UM C.0.vnt.ioD Cenler aMad of Ume. Call "2-Sl'1a. en. 212 to daim your Ucketa *** ......CS8¥1CI AlltoUMCW , ...... TeT ..... ,... ......... Traiaiac 1wicma becla Jmuary lJllt ror volua· teen intensted la work· an& wit.b &.be Rape Criais N«wort Unit. ~ to botla men and women, t.be traia.iD1 ean earn yo11 eolle&e credit. Vollmteen ean work on a '°'liae. do public speakinl or work on fund raiaing. Ca II u1 now. at 714-111-5733 !Ml. Cat L1 1re1 • LAW lludeet aeeda BLERS. we will CemeteryC.ouueliag GeneraJOfface Medical ~. some tn· .-... male. H.B. Muclla a .•. WW do aQtlabl1 traia. Appl1 7 am . "'Mini PACIFIC YllW WANT A. X-IA Y TICH in&. prior appolatment ..._ ill-4918 ..... m Leaal. Coalidential 11.ecGr-corYacbu.llll n11ra MIMOllALPAU Partllme , 30 hours a mak io1 exp aee or~-.. DVll. p .0 . Box 3242, ........-a. eo.ta Meaa I tLLU Pre-need Dept wall train (HANG E weicS, s days. Newport _~_..., __ . ----- f oup d : Co llie M ix N.B.~ Ill ACClllllTS you lo become a pro· Be.acholfice.631-4422. Retiableatudelltfor afle:r fe.le. Wbt w /brown TO...Y-S BabJait&er Deeded~ care feuional. Start the New IN 1981 ? MEDICAL Asai.ltant. ex· ICbool child eare lrYiae pat c Ila o • e 1 • . OP'NSWPORT few lll1 infant lD my "1U. TIME Year by joining a staff NEW LOOK? p'd. froat 6 back. typ. chi. t /yrs, tra~rta: Beac:lla/Knoxville, HB ISOOltT 752.a. Laauaa Beacb bome. n-"''-'l bl . that helps people before Hr ._ la tioa n•"'. Salarv, br• 5JJaDI JOlilra /wk . Daytime ~avaia em our need . Darrell Ward NEW Lil&-s .• aa ryopen. ~... ' " ===---=-~--=--t--!!~~~~--l~ .. ~G55~::_· ------1 So. Coat Plaza office. 644-2700 • Nao-smoker. 541-n• neccitiable. $52-0:SZS . FOUND. Terrier mis. •fOXYLADY• Eqaer. req'd. Call Kathy DIRECTI O N? RE E Dobie. &l&llab Sprinaer OU'ICA..LL ONL y •+tee Ambur1ey: 54CMOM. c L E R K T y p J s T ..etc AL OFftC E NT A L A G NT s . ~. <ilC). Beqle VISA MC C rcWTeler permanent po1i1ioo , COME: SE:E lJS & Penoa for youn1 MD ~·d. fuU ~part-time mia, older ao.t.oe Ter-* f7Z-l IJI * ~ experieaee de· f'll lfllMA SO-eOwpm. XJnt benefits WORK TEMPORARY startina pradiee in San pmitMlDI avail. a.did -'-aJ •~ a. Mnble .,_.. Mon -Fri 9·S t 7 14 1 IHave n eubillty Clemmte. Bkkpg 6 med Rml·A.C.r.,.... ...... aever pupp...-•~~~~~~~~~I • ._........icalif· -•a Ba-.. .,,,.......,0 otfi1---r r-lled tbeir IDOlher. at lrviDe i;: u--.... ... rnwL ;u;r-"'' I Learn new alulls "'"' ........ . -,. ---------· Aaimal Care Center. 2 W/111 Mell rrieada. Bob ZIMI Roctfield Rd. rm l Earn good pay assist traioing helpful. Reat-..t Happy New Year M14NO ElToro.5ll...U S.tl. & a..-c;:~~~~us:rde:~; All0Hoce S~1lls ~ ~ ~d t~:!!i ~ Mike ... z:lt7 •'*WC 95 Town Center Dr. woman CM. S41·3289 Needed letter .. resume w /phooe F d l .. . ............ C rcW Teler a.ta lleu, CA 1211216 APPLY TOO.A Y' no. to Dr R. Sartiai. 257 oua : B aea ktttea Prerioua experience de-F.qaaJ Opportuatly COOIC Vicki Hestoa .. Assoc Camino de lol Mares, w/WIUU markiDp. vie airable. I Emplo7er For pre-sebool Ex-l.8004Skyparll 81 . Sle 130. San Clemente Harbor View Homea. ---•••••••••••••• UaitedCaliforuia Bank ~~~~~~~~~~I ,_..;eneed. Part or full Suite23:5, lrvane 92672. N.B.M0-5111. W...... 7171 Oc Bl el l:: ,,..... 540-0400 -------.. ........ ••••••••••••• ....:;:. aee::h ~-6546 ea..n.., lime. Irvine. SSl-4S33. _ Motel UlST: Red 6 While Sala& W • • k e • d com pa . . TaLIRS ~. I night ahlf\, 1 s w· l•--------•I San C~nte Joo. Ex- Bernard, bu lie tq. vie a ioa /lto1111ekeeper ; ---•••••-llf Experience req'd . Xlnt ang sbitt Starting pay General penene~'rugbt auditor 1'lh 6 Suu Aaa. N.B. llature. reliable, collqe salary 6 beoefita. Apply ,16 .. 00 pr hr. 497-4488 flEE TUllllllf'! NCR 250 position open ~IJD edaeated. CaU Auwer * Perscmael: ---• 1mmedlate!y. Apply in Adall,3'bn,MZ_._. U..1'9•"'-l l• ... I( coUNTER Woman, full personto BrueeSmath. : White toy Poodle. •----------1 BANKING ~•1111• "'" t' I o P rt ta·m SllUS A llffi( female, 14 yra old • Ptr library work, •.tart 7ZI N. Euclid, Anaheim ame, a s a e bliad. diaappeared on •1u . Jack Helblia1. 991·»80 seamstress. M i«:h el 's llJSTY•. C hrt'atmas Dav . <m~ll.claJ. OurNewport Centerof· EOE Cleaners. Laguna r ' fice baa an immediate _ · · · Niguel. 496·Sl24 Reward!7Sl-JlOJ W..... 7110 opmiqfora BOOKKEEPER -ful l· Fo&md: Youaa male Jriah --••••••••••••• Sdter. 23rd Sl. • Npt BIYd. MZ.asll. Teler (30 Hrs per week) ...,.... SALIS Looking for local tem ~ Counter help, day shift porary assign~nll> that PT. flexible brs. M·F ap will gin you eapenenr e ply 111 person 10am-2Pm and eiiposure to the pro Orange Julius 711 E fess1onal world ~ We Balboa Blvd Balboa have s hort and long Mus1c1an· Keyboard 6 i;wt.ar player for C'On· temporary croup cOn tact tuathy 631-4062. MUaSESAIDES 7 3 :Kl .. JI 7 part tame Country Club Con v Ho!>p 5-49-306 I ., HOie OF THE 116IOY lmmedi .. e opeaiQp in our family restaaraata at wrbJ tocatilam. We nquire DO prev..._ a · perieaee. Joia our friendly team. c.o.e .. .. &oday bet wee 2~M. W .... W ... J JI Coe11Tr•11• _c n:1rs 99C2Adams Ave. H.B. 73ll Edin1er, H.B. 28502 Marguant.e.11 . V Coal& Tnh HI 23952 A veoita De La CorkJtU, Lag Hills FOUND: Gray female Lolt& ,.._.. SlOO cat. friendly. Vic So. BecaUN al a new ex- e&Jlliom pro1ram the Dm1J Pilot bu an im · mediae open.ia& for a 1ale1per100 w i th newspaper display ad- vertiaiD& uper Good aai.ry. commiuiou 6 e:1eelleat fringe benefita. E:1eellent pvwth opportunities for ,._ with career am· lbilimL call tar appoiat· mmt. aa 1m ext. m Sill moAlh.s previous bealcizla experience pre fernid bul not reqwred. char1e. for am mfgr co Need kno wled ge of gmeral ledger lhru hn statements. including AIR .. A/P . Resumes 1st to be sent to J arco. Inc 4M3 Birch St.. Newport · 'term a s signments ~I avallable No previous COU PLE WANTED I expenence necessary Equ.al Opportunity Employer PBX Hou!>t>W1 ves. s upple ~~~~~~~~~· ••••••• •• ••••• •• • •• • • • • l..acma~ 499-1593 RIM 'AIS AIE FIEE Cal: 642-5671 5350 AlUMTIS MASSA~E SPA Be Pampered by 16 Beaut. Girls. Open IOAll ·4PM 7 days . Pbime 16-Mll For a total rela&iog Wells Fargo Bank offers <UatlDdin« benefits and CODCenial working It· DM»ti»ere. For more in· fonmt.ioD please call .,..... 714-64Mt00 Beach. Ca. 92166() Manage small bussness Sever a fee Call today for appotntmrnl -------Part lune Will train •CAIDIUYHS• I ca11rorappt6463279 557 Mj5 Checker Ca b -"'Vv-t no.-0222 !Del.I very man for early I . , A M L A T ames de rn.. Lin~ Car«Mer for S units on I li ver) Erooom1r a1 «:ar '-I \• I ,-Ire lot, C.M. Prefer older reqwred Adults only -" c. 6 J l!Ml'OllAPY PU1S0t<Nh \(Pll\Cl S person. 74.,.1~• , oe .,20,., bra/day. No collert 76-GU. ing.. $47S /mo net talle ment .)our husband's Sales-Ha F i Compo '>alal") Part lime, Full nents. Salar)', x lnt 11m t' pos 1t1ons a' ail future.C M. area EOE n o w <.:all Cla ra MtF Call M·F .11·2 0l1 - 640 111 0. o r N ic k ly Mr . Paul sen . m TTn 2~ . ---------PBX S../C1 I, ... •~~~~~~~~~ massage with a pro· fessianal. Earle IOAll· OnqeCout D>~~ s ...... @ 11s: CASllEIS UTDTEM home + bonus + gas al lowanC'e. Westminster Garden Grove area 3721 lirdl StrHt ... ~ .... Students. do you want lo ffcwwnm••e. home daar· earn ext ra d oll au" ma co. lmmed. opea•c Work part tune blo ex for self -motiv ated per necessary. Recular pencm; growth l'Olell I raises & <'O benefits lial 7&fMD> for appL Lost or fouad a pet'! Ca 11 Animal Aasistaace League. S3'7·Z273. No fee •Found or lost a pet~ CaU ua! We' re the Pel 7 PM. 541-2117 PSYCHIC •EAD••&s 5.51-1171 ec.&alleaa Equal °"'8r' Emplo7er Pall. 1714)7319-29 --------- LOST : Vic. of Valley Cir . 1 -===J *** ....... ~eat abort hair. bas Mlh. l4l.Ol80 blk/crY markill11. My 17411 Newlud H......,_•acb YOll an tlae wilmer of lhetlclleh ($11.51•aJ•). to soo i1 heartbroken ! c.lljC ... dJs ~ Am .. JMC/ftM st-ts•-... LOST: Reddisb Brwa •/Wbite Huak.7 male. I mm. old. With blue eyes • browa leather collar. 12 /22/110 ~de . M eaa Wooda area. Reward + P'4' from 1st b~1. 557·50'2, S41·11Sl , ........ CAA • .A.9.A.-l'W'V J•ldlnaJaall 'VII .. '...,...I ' Aaabci• Coa•eatioa UFISl'YLE SOCIETY c-ter' aa..-Oal1 ~1 Ticket.a •••t be n · =~~ ~ claaqed for rnened ReeGrded Meua1e 24 ...a at UM Coavat.ion c.a. .._. of time. _lh_. ________ , Call ta-MTB. eirt. 272 lo daim ,.rticbta ••• 8lr1·145.5 . Lolt: Heirloom Bracelet. COVER CilRL WELLS FARGO BANK Equal Opp Em pl m /f /b USE THE DAILY PILOT ..FAST IESULT' SEIVIC! DlllCTOIY For Result Service Call 642-5671 ht. JJZ MARKETS For 2nd •3rd Shifts We promote t.o manage meal• supervision fro m Wlthan. WANT A CARE ER ~ Costa Mesa 111 Del llar 631-MZl Laauu Beach 8'-9233 "•••&1oa Beach 112-tlll 638-s.66. Debvery for office sup pl.aes, 25-40 hrs per wk Good dnving record & knowledge ol OC Airport area. Apply in person Ripple Office Supply. 291S Redhill. C M i--------• Call Clara 640 1110 or 1 ., .. , ~ EXECUTI.,,., 1 General 1 :'111ck 657 7777 ~ "''" n. ..... lay Ct.b -PART-TIME is.,.llirilMJ: Must b e c u rre n tly I Penamel emp&oyed " suecusful bst_._.M:?u;. An-c.-..r Capable or h igh .level r~ communication w /peo f\IU time, Eves ust be 1 •did? ple applysng for mem av ad. wltnds Must have Co u n s e Io r t r a 1 n e e bershlp to a prof bull· ~VJOUS restaurant ex P I needed fol' fa.st paced. ne91 assoc We are a life· Deliver}' mao for L A Penuul Ce.ril 1 h1 gb pressure tem time a.s1oc of 1eleet. nmes to homes sn C.M. 81hngual M ust type pora ry he lp oft'. Jn bieblY ambitious people & H.B. UAlll, $375-$450 !iOwpm. Full tame. Mon . t..ervJew, screen 41 test wbo research Ii amp~· mo + bonus. De~oda Fri. 8:»S. Please call applicants Train for rnml the pnaeipals of ble car. 546 .4491 o r far appt. ~7158. Mon placement counaelor acquiria.& great wealth 964-4MZ Fti.11:30-~. polSrtlOn Nat 'I. co .. xlnl. llr. R.lcbarda .,._16, ----------j~~~~~~~~~~I benefau Previous in· ---------Deatal -dustry uper desired SALES Otainide Dental Assis· 49-UAIDS tu not essential. Call · JI you are auressive tanl.4~day workweell. f'uU 41 pa.rt time All Vict or Temporary IDdloakiaafora fut.are !IG.S634. areas. Uniforms fum'd. Service. ~E.O.E. ill rd.RI mcmt w taoed Reward. 759·11$11 or * OUICAU * ~ 1805. l5J.«rl MC /VISA ~~~~~~~~~~!Drivers to chauffeur ftnd what you want so limousine OD New Years D.Uy Pilot Clasaified..!.:_ Eve . XI n t wag e s .-----------------------------------------------------... ~-t111~·-ZSS9_. __ ~--~ A«es 21 or over. retired ~~~~~~~~~~I co. benefits apply in ~ No exper ntt penmatamtollawi Men Apply Un iv ers al Picture f'ramer. Ex· •tbru Fri Standard Protertion Service. 1226 penenced. Part time. Shoes. Jl117 So Bristol, W Slh St . Santa Ana Art World Frames. 656 lnt.ervaew hrs 9·12 & 1·4. No. Coast Hwy. Lag. _c_._11_· ______ _ Lost: Male PUG . Sml beice w /blk faee. Ana to "Toay" Vie : 16th St, CM. Please call 645-4139. Reward. Fowld: Black Lab male puppy, Sbib Tzu blk/wbt •--------"-- rem. Terrier Mix . tl&CEDEZ yOWlg, gre7i1h male. •ESCORTS* NB Animal Shelter. ~ $9-11151 Mffra. Use ,,.,... M service when placing y~r ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will apJ)ftar in your classified ad ; we take your messages 24 hours a day ... yoli call in at your convenience during office hours and get the ~ses to your ad .. ~ this service is onl -week. or more Informa- tion and to place your ad 11<--·~caJI 6'2-561&. -~- -------· --. DRIVERS WANTED F.arty morning home de livery LA. TIMES Irvine/Newport areaa. $eOO +/mo. 'es• 546-0235 DllY&S Dial·A·Ride, localed 10 LaJCUU Kiili has p /t.Jme 6 l/time positions. Gd. drivinl rec-.. over 21 tin· Mon-Fti. Bch. 4M-8105. . * SAJ.&TaA¥11. • ..._, Production Partume. Moa. 2:JOPM · finish. Tues 1 ·00PM· finish. WiU train. Apply 1860 Placentia Ave C.11 Pff' or F(f' job, no exp necessary. Hr1 lOam· &pm F rr Ask for Heu· Bawaii,Ca....S.. f1orida BOYSGIR.LS- 11 EN-WOllEN ExCllml posit.ion in fued raiaiac • public rtla· tac.a. Must be neat. -.. dalble • ~y •eetiac people. HS-OS 16--=M.:..r....-___ -t '-----.i sur~remet1 HQltsses/Hosu. coellta1l Waitresses & barten· ders, e&p ok. but we traJD, apply in person. sla't immed. New 0 C night apot. part or fast growing cllain. applyt2· Spm, Moa. tues. Wed 2T.!O North Main St.SA. IM-MM. to r 11 · 603, between 10.m-'pm. SCTIY /Ll6AL Trainee. Good skills Some liti1allon e.qtr ...,,... but not reqaired. 7SMl1I Enjoy working with young people? ' ; 2 •nd • --..a... ..... .... ........... C.... .... ,CA_ •~asuswwwu-u:1u I ' IN CO ME TAX ERRAND Person. resp p RE p ARE RS Ex . Public relatiooa persoa to conscientious person penenced Hourly rate 6 attract new, bu11ness. w t rellable car t o bc:mtaS40-0l.87 Consumer electronic perform van~ dulles exp. pre(en-ed. ~ for Npt Bch doctor JAMfTOIS Real FAtaeSales EOE. 830-&191 Al Dirth ie Npt. .,.. _ _,.., . -11tettfWomen Jcomp~r I I • Must be Ill or ov~~ ~;.et F I T D I I h t w 0 r k L-I' ... 644-160 Hunt lkb IC II. -area .... C...1 Must have car 6 home Jain *leader. Now in· Secntsy Lepl ln...i-DIC SICllTAIY phone Call S32·6SSll l~ ffW positions meat CG.ultmt _.. Jntereating poaition lllon·Fti 10 real eatate aalea. exp'd penoa •l lecal ~ailable with intern•· __ .__....HELP WbdMr lic:emed or not mr·1 9*ilk. ~ A.a· ti1aaJ COil> for aa ex· . _,"'°..._... call to lift if you quabf7 aoc:Uit., 511"1 Saa NiC911as eaitive aecretarJ with <~>needed rood Pr:ep&ra· to joim &.be prolesaioaala Dr. taN.B. millimum5ynupr.We tiaa/dehveey valid Ca. a t Walker 6 Lee. are seeki.DI aomeone Drivers Lie. over 21 (714)1115-4.Se. widt a profeuiollal at-C.11 ...... .-.1004 Utude wbo cu ba..tle d u t • i e 1 a D d LqaJ Secretary. r IT . ,........Ubllilles oubtde nan41DOker. Sole Practi' rot1tiae office work. timer, Cmeral Prae-llml -use time .,.,... tke.. Prefer aome legal --------- cim&ly ... ~b l9od eQ. Salary com · eoamo• aeaae de· mea•rate witlla eap. daloaa. Appliea•h ••mimter.SJ1·t770.' allaould "a•e eaeel. MCnlUria1 ( .... t7p-u..--Clerk. full -p tr. illc> Ir clerical akilla. onr 21. reapoaaible, 9llM a« 'ial ea pr. ant... lR-l.la. '"" 9CTY /BOOlatEEPEB J to 1 4IJ-wk, eqier. C. IL.,_ IG mz s .... , ..... ....... D.O.E Aec•rate t,..ma. •• strt... llldm'e. -...~.Ci.JI s.-,. --5· CwUl Pa I II~. Z"'9 ........... C.11. ·Jf&YDA nB K.O.&. . ··-··. ....... M41 I !tt_t~ .. , ••••••••••••••••• ·········-.. -· ..... , ..... , •••••••••••• , tl20 .. ~.o.c.mber21, 1llO ll'OICl IAU ,... ... ,. b1 If "4llal lllll -.. II' Olautroe, -.................... _.,.. I'<-.. ..... M Nia au.. .... 1111 flra i':' ftlldat or 1llUa1. l 'M P~he, contours ,,,. Iii: 111&. .... ~II m.am ..... 41ap '91M1Ma, em. .... trw.•at·· * * * .. .,. 116111 . .....-..llk.m.ota ...... .._ :==,~~·-.... W M61 • ._..,.... tllO ~~=•Dr. '11Clwok .. cblef You.,.U.wiuerot ~ ~OY ••or._.olf•r. Jfrw......._ &' ,: "llOAow•v ~ AIVEI eo.t1ta. <•lUhahM), to UHtA AMA ROllS·ROYCE s,.flY ..... IWIJ•!MttH ~!!!!~!!~---1 --WAltfTOaUY ~~~-----• ToJot• Ludtruher, &RY~-w 835·3171 ~ ... , .. CREVIER -... --, to mi -CUit.om palDl -TMe.ut.T~O"IVIMG 111"'~"4Nl m.~~ -----~ -~ -~ ~~"".""""--.,...--~ M70 • ..... •I JaoUbruJanll ....... IMWt• C.Los1osuNo•vs llMa HD&. Mu& --~-II ---~UMdotfroad.Aak·1 v..-.... ...._ ud la '" I 11~ ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• loc ••OOO /bea\ ofr. Aa&MimCoovenlloo "1J2IOGll(0551) -......_ '"""' 11 _......._ • I ... I • WAHl'&D. SIDE Tll: ?SHIU C.otw '7U00Ztih/r (0332) --u. •-...................... •'Nw,artl•l•Clllaooel Tlcketa muat be ex · "7l210G11a <003S> ~llH111 Dlnclorlf'Mlboo• -.-.au. 7SZ..OllT. ,..... fl60 t bao1ed for reterved '7UOOZa/r4ilp. <1578> wlll• ta••· lllacelleat •••H•••••u••••••••••• MIU at the Convention 'T1 m awu'f. a ir (320l > 9760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! ·-6 fr•-.. e tk-ii llto 17UIOU .... It.... toto • '76 .... JIO CallCent~ •. =,a·d'"'•otf. !!m2teo. ''T76.30caiauto (<MM0l ~ . ...... ....................... --· ... ... ,,....___ ... --DrJ a\irlie available. PICIUP claimyourtickela -s..cl.ys lfll 5 ........ 1 ....... Ill .......U 100 wall aUJer Newr·rt Dunes, 1131 Automatic , s pok e * * * Mt. 9720 """" .J!!!!!l!!l~~l!!lill!!!llll! ••••••••••••••••• ••• leied twaJa, ltn model. Ba.. Ba" Dr. N B. wbeeja and wide t ires. TUllOt ' ~ .... H rcll .. ' <,._,&A) .... •-o, f 705 •••••••••••• •• • • • •• • • • • aOac. lldt aell .._ -• aew. a 1 M6-0li10 ...,,..., -......... e ... ru. ur, .._. -· lbue. •lff· ----------i Sl489 ....................... £ llACH IM,OITS ....... ..._ •--* eooda· tric l\liw. Profwluoal fa rut..._ COSTA MISA LEASE 848 Dove Street OM.YfltLOT tale Sale '72 Buick~· Ltd. Sedan. Call Moo~·.' Fri a.s Rod Bianchi.rd 5 3458 99 I 5'&.o ·············~········ YOUI #I CADIUAC DIALIRSHIP IN OIAMGECOUMTY! SALES. SERVICE AND LEASING /110(1 H.•r1 • • 111,d \ '"'" ,,,. ..... , 'i4tl '>1().1 •• ~ ....... ~ -----Fliillaml11 ••t c.aaa.rr• model wi&a Tr.. ot Lit•....................... AMC JllP D NEWPORT BEACP ~ .. to th• nffll . ..........__=-, f-10 l IRECT! I 117 Wooqralo body wilb ~ 54 2 752-otOO '77 Se•ill• ....................... bard tlMtll case. '*· Seal f I 50 * lflO CHl"Y I fl I .a.LF .a. Astro moon roor, loaded lllM'a ldl yellow lokl ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,. "" "" oyota 9765 spec ial sa IC' JH• re•• ........ la •'Atlet tea "11 HONDA 550-4 shield, 1/J TOM NU LUV SPIDllS ...................... <012Zt;tti lbaoa "Butterfly" rack, helmets, xlnl cond. UTILITY IODY '71 TOYOTA $7999 aco.Uc awt..r, model SlOOOs.&S-2900 For plumbers 6 electn-llACH IM,OITS CELICA Saddleboc:k ~. Jet black fioisbj , ......... UtMlty 9110 clam. (5937). -Clean~ 1 Ll3S01 J IMW :. w/ fancy motber·o r ... ••••••••••••••••••••• ONLY $6295 N:#~~;s~'i:~H '78 280Z, lo mileage. S41f9 831•2040 495_4949 •••• • pearl lolay. Equlpped 3"''•4\.lt' Utility Trlr. 1 HOWAID CIM•rol.+ 752 dean. xlras, must see. 1.u~ .. L 11 -.J w_I abadow transducer wheel, S7S. Dove 6 Quail Sts. -0900 67S.38S8 Court. ·~rrP4'W\ ffOU.'aut l>Uo:St::L '79 El.IWH/\ uu. pica• w/ strap button, 673-l&SS S-9PM NEWPORT BEACH Aid 9707 Mechanic's Ca r ' ~.'J vOLKSWAGl N INC 111 he pd & fuel filt•-r ,411 jaclr. plua and hardshell . lll-0555 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Smog cert I owner 534-4100 15000 m1 wty all movrni.: ---------1 case. Must sacrifice , .... S.Yke.P.,... '71 l OO L S 4 door , Lo 13731 Harbor part.s equab$608t-iclrus U ,, IFJ MOO. ALSO, new MXR &AcceslOriH 9 400 v-9570 automatic, air. amtrm . mJ, nu motor / 'parts/ Garden Grove Loaded & lo rni Onl> ••••••••••••••••••••••• f90 dul control pbase ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Very clean. $1.SOO F'1rm. batl 5 1 mpg. PP . $12.!IOOP I' &107317 .. IHI &.O.&. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~IGaoUND HOG Model abiller17s. Will lake $450 S SAVI SJ.YI S ·74 Dodge BlOO Van, 318 S43·1563 days. 649·2988 497·2455 Valis 9770 SHOISA&.ISPllSOM C·71·5. Power Earth for all ol above. (714 ) WITH USB) PAITS V·8, 3apd, a ir, mags , al\6& wknds. ..._. 9727 ••••• :~••••••••••••·;!I Eldorado. take •>Vl'r F /t peraoa, 1ood !~:::..·i~~116h~~;: ~~.16 . 631·0148, lm~':te;!J~iarts :!~.~.~~t Sell. IMW 971i •••••V•l•S••,T•••Y•O•••U•R•••••• IOVWSCIROCCO ea!>epu~~c:~:4~; b-.llta, acbaocement Colt .,-0. Sell ror $495. AUTOSUPPLY ••••••••••••••••••••••• S model. 5 speed. :.un CIPIQ.-.n. Gl.O... . JBL I040 baas reflex cab 101 N. Manchester AMtos W..ted 9590 For the best d eal in ORANGE COAST roof, air condit1on1ng ·c~v"°'et 9920 s...s.i. , ~. Custom 200 bass Anaheim 776.9900 ....................... Orange County ... Co me Very low miles. 10~4782> ...................... . we-..ve:n-opeaioafor MllH-••-1010 amp/cab.6'5·9776. ---WEPAYTQP DOLLAR SeeUs Today!' HONDA $7695 WouldYouOm c F alea •"•••••••••••••••••••• . 15x7~ Alum. Bo r r ani for top used ca rs HR..t.DftU..t.RTE M1fARIHO /\Little f'u rthl'r aaap tra penon. LU••.a.a1y.a.a5 .Baaaamp11Gwtar4 sale, wirewhJs21S-70 VR15 forei&n. domestics or & ~..,."" Vot.ICSW•GE... T0Sav1•/\llunnr1·rt .Apptyiapenoe, ukfor ,.. "".., ""• Peavey fende r ver y · l · If . TOD•y111 "" " Dollars·•"~ ............ .. Mr. ea-.. Hemplllll's from your business ood condition $400 tires. 963·2618, 770·7477 c ass1cs. your car is A ••• 18711 Beach Bl vd ('all Ls To11ay Sbou, u FaabiOD card. Send ooe card for :....,9 . or644-6018 ~RSTlra I clea n , see us s·DDLE1•ct1 UNIVERSITY HUNTINGTON liEi\Clt f'or ~fore Ul'lall-.'. la1Md, N B Mf-4121 eacb tq plua one spare. · "" "" " 842 2001 Sboe..U., Cull time wiUI aealed attractive tag & P.A. with 2 columns 302 ~gine in good run· 2.8402Marguerite Pkwy OLDSMOllLE '76 VW IUS or w/oa up., or wlU strap, meeting airline $475. O.B.O. Also looking ning condition 641 9157 . • ' Jc' Mission Viejo HONDA Must sell <OZ430Ai train. Good co. benefits. l.D. requirements. Pre· for Zildjin Cymbals 548·33'74 CiMC TRUCKS SS69 9 -. . We return permanently MUST SELL P eauey FOID ~ VAUEY IMPORTS SALES&SERVlCE • APPb' lo penoo tam to vent Ima 6 theft! For a 557-1393 131-2040 4'5-4949 28SO Ha rbor Blvd llam Moo tbru Fri. penanalized la& enclose ..._for S• I •I hi Or-,.C..tt Closed Sundays COSTA MESA ®~ Jff~~ J,:lowa'td Stmda.rd Sboea, 307'1 So. ~allpape.~, fabric or B U E SC H E R B b •••••••••••••••••••••••1 2925 Harbor Blvd 540-9640 voucswAG£111 1NC Briatol, C.M. o.y Glo pa~r 6 we Trumpet. Gold laquer IMPORTANT COST MES SADDLEIACK IMW 11:"ll .... 100 will back II lnm your f i nish co mp le t e · NOTICE TO 9 AJSOO '77 BMW 3201 Wanted Honda ca r ~ URG ENTL V NEED laCIJ. Or try two cards w/matcbing m ule & con· READERS AND 79. Aulo9221'WX 1!'70.?2. N·GOO with blown 13731 Harbor DE p END ABLE bettloback. cert C adaptor . $300. ADVERTISERS WEIUY '77 BMW 3201 eng111e.5JJ-880l Garde n Grove PERSON who can work PRICES: ' 646-8478 The price or item s Auto234RZQ ----- without 1uperri9ioa for SZeaor3/SS advertised by vehicle CLEAN CARS '78 BMW 3201 .loper 9730 •75 CAMPER Tuu oil compuy io 4/StapSl.llOea. 5ld'-J 1093 dealers in the vehicle TR C 4speed 799ULJ ~··•••••••••••••••••••• Nice ' 1135642 1 C:O.ta Me.a area. We 6!9tacs$1.50ea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• classified ad vertising AND U KS '78BMW 320i 72 XK E Convt. Auto. ps, $5599 train. Write T.P . Dick, 10ormoreSl.40ea. GOLF Carts for sale. columns d oes nol in -4speed233UNR air restor ed wher e Prff .. Soulbweatern SaleaTaxlncluded Xlnt. cond. New ball .. elude any a pplicable '79BMW 3201 needed . real beauty "@~ »f~iJt J.!owauf Paroleum. Boa 1•, Ft. NOCARD? etc.482-6128 taxes. License. transfe r • 4llpeed3S8WR E Mint cond $1 2.90 0 ~\•IJ vOlKSWAGlN 1111c Worth, Tx. 71101 Draw your own or send fees. finance charges. '79 BMW 320i ~&5093, 964·7069, '• E"ll .... 100 ----------1 ~· addresa, phone & JY, laclo, rees for air pollution con· 4 speed 175YZI ~ WAITllSSIS we 11 make one card per HIFI, Shno 1091 lrol device certifications '79 BMW 320i Merc•s leRz 9740 13731 Ha rbor Apply btwo tAll • tac. Add25<each. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or dealer documentary 4speed836YZE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden Grove 12Pll. CharUe'a Cblli, Send check or money or· BeautifuJ RCA 2S" color preparation charges un· '79 BMW 3201 3001 ReclbW Bid #2 derto: 'IV, 2 yr wmly, free de· leas otherwise specified MGH IUYER 5speed 856ZSU Ste.tDl,C.M. I · ' PILOTPllMTIM4'f livery$1.2'.646-1786 bythe adverti r. Top dollars for Sports '74VWSuperBeetle P 0 Boa 1580 Cars. Bugs, Campers. 231YMX Warebouae/ Dell very eo.tall~a. Ca. 921826 Advent TV m odel 761. iWl!19111/ 914's, Audi's '78 Fial 124 Spider pencm for party reatal ---------1 I.yr. old, mu.at sell $2000. Cltulcs 9520 AskforU/C MGR 072UJS alare. Part time. ApplJ * * * 7'1Mnl.9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JIM MAllMO 21402 M_....rite Jlm"'-Blvd.C.11. T .... aee4 A U BURN Phaet o n v-115w•~EN p~ ·--..-· ...._&M.rille Speedster. 1935 classic -,_._ _..way -=:~d tB '"'' a• replica by Calir. Custom 18711 Beach Blvd. Miaaioft Viejo Wmam lo care for elder· ly lad1 Ii ve·i• Sa I. ne10Uable U2·UU, ~. Youarethewinoerof ••• .. ••••••••••••••••••Co ac h . N ever r e · HUNTINGTONBEAC H lll-2040-495-4949 l free llclieh G 1111 .. fO I 0 giatered. Used ror s how 142·2000 Closed Sundays •Ml 79 450SL 23K low miles 24 mo. warranty 156370 ) Priced to Seti! JIMSLEMOHS IMPOITS 1970 HARBOR BL VD '73 VW Bug. xlnl cond S3,<XKI, 548 6446 '79RAHIT Aut om atic. 4 door s 1772126) $5499 631-1 27 6 t ·""l R <Sl0.50vaiue>. t.o ········-;·;·;········· ~~e:f ~ ~r'~~~~ TOP DOLLAR oUHGE couHTY'S Sperh Yee..._ lleT McL••lll• Bernie Ashe. Theodore PAID FOR OLDEST 19804SOSL COSTA MESA ®~ '•fwL I loo-a'd I~~~~~~~~~~ VOLICSWAGfN INC ........... ' ....•..•••............. *·~I . 1001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 534-4100 13731 Harbor Garde n Grove ,!:.tn.~11 8142Corlt Dr. :obt!:s ifio~d . c20~0 CiOOD & CLEAN & ~=6 Anaheim Coaveation You~f~ BelDJl. aecrhor M:!a. Call v642:001gs o: USID C .a.as•. -P ,. _ _,,_ .... ~....... "" MG . 9742 art1,ng Out' l!li l VO::-1---&1-L.....&.... 540-8211. WESTlllNSTl:R ABBEY ANTIQUE MALL Daily UM, Frl 10.9 ao.ed Tuesday 11751 W•tmlDaler Ave. Gardea Grove S54..fl03 Tickets muat be ex· ......_._.... ---------Sales·Service·Leas mg ••••••••••••••••••••••• Volkswagen B u~ p,.1 rt~ cban1ed for reserved ($10.50value). to '46 Ford Woodie, restored Roy C••er,lllC. '76 MG Midget . xlnt con for sale 641·9157 aema al the Convention Sports Yee._ $13,000. ALSO '29 Model Rolls k oyce BMW 77di~on8225. new tires $2500 VWp-art.s . 61! left & n"ht Cents abead .of lime. & RYS.Ow A Town Sedan, 4 dr, .,. ... Call 142-51711, ext. %72 to JanJthruJan 11 restored. Ideal for stu· lS40Jamboree ---------door, ·73 left cfoor S50 claim your Uclr.eta Anaheim Convention dent. $10,000. 675·S161 . Newport Beach 640·6444 Opel.. 9 7 46 each 548·9744 * * • Center 2150 tt.tNw ll•d. ........ • •• • •• • • .. • • • • • l'll/.: Tickets must be ex· W•if c...test C...W... 645-5700 , _________ '71 Opel Wagon, Am Fm ~~~~~~!!!~~~!Genuine SAPPHIRES, changed for reserved Braoo new reproduction IOI Mcl.AREN't tape deck. eng needs * * * your choice only $10 ea. !eats at the Convention ol 1931 Model A Ford W .._ .._.TED'· & work. SJOO or bsl offE'r ·oo PICK t.: p reblt 1700cc, $4300 548·131111 ~ Center ahead of time. Phae ton convertible . Al"'li -IM>·2797 31 Pierview Collector'a item, Na · claimyourUckela stereo & tape , cost Vo lvos . Ca ll u s 76 pe .43.000mL Huntinlloa Beach Uonal Geographic , * $20,8S8 by Replicars. TODAY !!! $2200 '7 1 \'W Bus. Clean. snrf . s leepl'r S2700 Dii \ ~ 631 ·2931 eves &16 J:n I • .~PL f;-J,#~I 900 So. Cood Hwy. LCICJIMG leoc:h 494-1131 SEE US FIRST! We haH• a gov<I '-t'll'l.'l11111 o r NEW & L'~El> t.'hl•\ rolcb' CONNELL CHEVROLET l.112>1 llarbor RI \ •I ('(~TA MESA 546-1200 * • • Mrs. G~ Dearcos 2005e ~1dland Ln lluntLni:,'lun llea1·h Yuu are the winner of 3 free ticbh I SIO 50value1. lO Sports Vacation & RV Show Jan 3 thru J Jn 11 \n.1he1m Con\ 1•nt11rn renter T1r kets mus t be ex c:han~ed for reser~~d seals at the <'on\ ent 100 Center ahead o ( Lime.. - <:all 642 56i8. ext :?i 2 L tt da1m )our tickets • • • !ti2 l'he\ \ Ktni!!>Wnucl l::'iLJlt' '\L:11 111n W,.1 i;1111 ,\II ell•t·t111 .,. .. ,.111.,., ~l'ah & door l<lf'k ~ \ ,\1 !! lra1•k sterl.'o Il a, .t1r cnnd lu,.:,l!:t.l!t' r ,11 k . man) \.lriJ!'> llr•"' n '" 11,h1Lt> un 0111~u.k." 1:old in t Xl11f' 1·und s1 :w11 !'all llhqrHIJ JI 'Iii:.' :i:t~r.J inentaf 9930 .,...._ H..... Call l42-S678, ext. %72 lo V-8, auto, air , P /S, P /B, Late model Toyotas a nd I -. --0 -1- YouiretbewiDnerof 1912·1977. Appra ised -----*-*----Best offer . Private par · 8SO N. Beach blvd. 673·7007 l free ticUh SZ.000. $1195/080. By M•ta•mc:e/ ty. (714J646-9Sl4. LA HABRA (S10.50value), to 1·5.142-5212. 5enke f020 TOTOTA.YOLYO (S Mi. No. of SA Fwy) c.....y-.-a1-••••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 Xcalibur 17141522-5333 'IUIJeOf 9748 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 BVS Must sell Sl9011 ••••••••• ••••• ••' •••• .. bst ofr Gd bod~. run~ '78 ~l ark \' lluri:11nd) gd. 548 490Q with "'h11e t.1rr1:1J.:C' lo p -r-•• -COIN"' -US f Lo d d 1•••~11 ... & RY a.w . b; · · proo & M A R I N E E L E C -831~~6 c .. i. ,...,. .. Sunday by Appl. Ju3tlaru Ju 11 miat uea, 1970 t«? date TRICIAN ~ U•·tJOJ • uo.to1 An•heimCoaHotioa +Sll.30 iD face pre-'64 Design/install/repair Find what you want in c.eater ailYS fflJO /alr. 875·2930 Qual. work. 549-2520 evs Daily Pilot Classifieds. Titkela must be ea-I cban1ed for reserved MIU at tlae Coa•eatioa c.t.. . ..._.of Ume. Call IG-Wll. at. m to claim,., tieketa * * *· Blond r.11ia• BipboJ witb be•eled airror. ..... romdoakdia· inc table. tnS. Square '75 BMW SJOI, 4 dr. sun· rool. a/c:, tape. perfect cood, $6500. 835-7001 or 64().3500 LEASE DIRECT! 1911 PEUGEOT TURIOs IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 ·;o Square Ba ck Sunroor Mech xlnt, dean $115() u B 0 497 .3953 23.WO m1 $7i1KI ur l1t•'t ofr 640 1611 !!Lu 5 9932 . .................... . ·ss VW Bug Very ~oud SHOWROOM COHO. cond AM FM rass<'llt' 'i5T TOP stereo $1300 494 5~1iJ l'•>"'t'r bra kt•' '"'"' ··r "'U)dOw~. W"'<'r -.L ••t>rin~ ·66 VW Bus. good l'Ond1 .,.1th tilt l<'lt'!>l'o Pllll( tion. S1400 (1 rm 551 12Xll \tl•erinj! '°' h1•el ,.1 1r eves. ·\M FM !>ll'rl.'o r ... 1r '68 VW Bug. reblt eng, lo 9750 nuleage. runs & lnok~ great $1750 u(r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 847-6572. 968 I 14i ·79 911 SC Targa Xlnt -"· 9--GM--emHa-tit& .... Pb SELL id le-items with a · Daify Pilot Classified i\d. 642·5678. conct 1'a:lre-over-lenr Vof•o 977 2 For details call 682·2222. •••••••••••••••• • • • • •• • "'•ndo "' cfe(o)!gt'r JUL•lmn tw tr~'"' !>nu" wh1tl' "'1lh Buqwnd) in tenor Zi.OOO mtles Im ma \·ul:.U t> thruuut ~ Sll .100 i 5 I fi i llO 111 An. ..... er /\d :z 211ll. 6·12 4300:-:------':'t Af .. •11:• IOIO ....................... W...._ 6 Dryer. Xlnt. eaad.SUI.._. .... mcr::a 1020 ~f ..... -.-. ••••••••• Lellma 10 apd bllle, 1ood emd. ... ID-GD D-. ----················~ ~ ..... AltC. ·a...-..111r.P.t6 ...... PYt '''· 111.wr.Jltlaftl .. . Ooot ............ .. Wlrom.alre• Terrier ............... Podllr... w /paper1 ····---.... ....................... ll&JI Hll•bo< Blvd Gerden G•cwe "' Ul-nll 8-5 wkdaysask for Joe. VPLVO 24 hrs • D~ 9935 Top Della~ Paid FQ( \'ouL£at ! J0HMS0M a-SOM U.C•Mercwy 21218Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa S40-5630 . . w.,., OVER ....... For Your Good "!'· Poncbeor Aud! Vw·PORSatE·AUDI 44S E. Cout HI way at a.,.Mje Drive Newport BNcb '73·0900 Premium prit• • s-6d for ADJ UM4 car <,...._or domeitic > ID,_. cmdltloo. ... u.nntr \< > t t I I ( < >, \ ~ T ' ..... . Use ..,,.. At/ service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your conveni-ence during office hours and get the res nses to our ad ... s serv ce s only $7 .so uaage IT'S EASY! Look for your ••me alld addre11 In toc11y '1 week.· For more lnforma- SALES, SERVICE AHDLEASIHG OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS EARLElkE VOLVO 1966 Harbor Bh•d COST A"'M ESA 646-9303 540-9467 OIAM4H COUNTY VOLVO E X C LUS I VE L Y VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer in Orange County ' BUY or LEAS!: DIRECT 10120 Garden G'rove Bl I Garden Grove 530-9190 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . •••.•••••.•.•......... '74 Char9•r Good l'und. Ne" rehll <•ngml! Gold . blal'k LUp. 2 dr Good ga~ ITllkJi;c 'S2000 urr 53J i'SjJ eve "'kn<b 44,111 W Sunswept St. Sa nta Ana \. Me-rcury 99 5 0 ·····················~· ORANGE CUL:NT\"S FUUST LINCOLN-M ERC Hr OEAl.F:HSlll P ~·?,.~· UNCULN·M ERC !(\' 16·18AutoCt!nter Dr SD Fwy Lake F'ore•H exit IRVINE 130·7000 ...... 9965 •••••••••••••••••••••• •77y,....14,.. w/T-top & c111to.1Rttrior Power steerina ._brakc • wlndo.,-a Power doof' roe1er. l6 MPG '¥1th 40:l VI. AM 1F M 8 track. moo. cl111lnM ttttloft. If )'Otl Ibid tt, call MZ·M71 Ext. m and tlon and to place your ad W• w.111, en ...... 14N-y.ou..-._p&cL., ye•r l6ffMt1~N•-iMH~ .... --trt•·--.... 1.u11.,...__.__.,,4 _ cal~78. ----t~"'4-..o DHrHt olfltt of the · ~Mta ~lt'ta 5-40~ HM~U - 1111• Pilat Wanted Road• car, lf'10.12, H.U with blown 9'1iae. 5Sl-ll01 Bonne, 4 dr, xlnt cond, :Make your ahoppln1 =-~· 968 8600• eultt by iUic the o.lly .-- Pllot Clauilied Adi. 'want Ad Rsulta 142~· , .. -DAILY PILO l ~. 010110• .... ---··--------·T·--------~~..-.-------­• , ' CONSUMER '\' QUEENIE Disabled woman wins phone company battle SAN PABLO (AP> -A dlubled woman who nya ab• aeeda a , telephone to reub a doctor ln emtrtencl• bu won a bureaucratic battle a1ainat telepboDe company plan.a to di.eeoa.Het her ~two daya be:foN Cbriatmu. kalberine Rowell, wbo aald the re· quires re1ul1r medlcaUoa for a 1eneUcally tranamltted •ut.lnl dla· ease, said the phone companJ finally aareed to accept lnatallment pay. me"t.s ot her blll -after the in· tervention ot a social worker. a coun· ty tl\apervisor and a newspaper. "l waa told tbat they wanted me to pay now because they heard I was Ill and .they wanted the money before I died.'' she said. Paafte Tt..,.._. Co. ,_t Mn. Rowell • peatcard warnla1 tbat ae,-.lee would bl eut olf Dec. aa . •· a ... lbl oaid aa outatandiq MU.13 bUl, wblela abe uld accwnulai.d on calla to bet »-year-old daUl)lter in aebool ln IWnola. A Contra Coata County aocial worker, Irene Martema, aaid the compan7 at ftnt rejected ber auaes· lion of an Installment payment plan. Company offlci1l1 repeatedly chanted Uileir explanations about the case, •ccordiftl to the Richmond In- dependent newspaper, which was notified about the situation by county Supervisor Nancy Fahden. The ne wspaper said phone com- pany officials denied sending a· dis· l)ou't you than) 1l's a little pteltmtiuwi fOT a note pad? ~ Lhe command moduJe ol C R Pordleworlh ' '' Warning : The Surgeon Genecal Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. Cot a problem'> Then wnte to Pat Dunn Pat Will cut red tQpe, getting the annoe-rs and achon you rwed to solve mequatae1 an government· and bwmesa. Mail JPUr questaons to /'at Dunn, At Your Servtce,.Orange Coast Daily Palol , P.0 Boz ISM>, Ct»la MelO.' CA ~2626. As mcay letters cu po~ will be answtted, belt pltOfW.d inqwnes or letters not including the reoder'• fWl oame. ~reu and bMlmess hoMra' phone m1mber connot be considered Tim column appeors dai· ly ezcept Sundays." DEAR PAT: How does a solar water heater work, and how much energy could it save for a typical house? G.N .. Costa Mesa la a Mlar water heater, Ute su's llleat ls eol- lected by panels. Tbe Hat-plate collector Is baslcal· Jy a weatlter·ti11tt, las.lated bo• wttb a 1Jass eov· er. A dark slll'face jut tllldenaeatll Jllle eover absorbs Ute llleat from &Ille sa aDd passes It to tubes that coetala water, air, or a DOD·fttealn1 liq- uid. Tiiie Ulbes carry lite llleat to a storage tank. Tbe solar eoeriy Is actually used to preheat tbe household's hot water. At a.lgbt aad on cloudy days, you'll aeecl your coaventioaal back\ip heater to give tile water a boost to tlte temperature you need. On suany days, a solar lmit can heat the water up to Ht de1rees F. Heatln1 water accounts for about zt percent of all the energy used in your home. In oae year, a solar unit can meet 50 to 75 percent of tbe household's demand for hot water, saving many people more titan $190 tlte Orst year. To Ogure out exactly how much you might save witb solar hot water, pboee the Natioltal Solar HeaU.1 aad Cool· ln.C Information Center at (Ml) SZ3·ZIZI, or order a fre.e copy ol "l!I Solar Water Heattn1 Rl11tt for Vou?" from Consumer Information Center. Dept. 600J , Pueblo, Colo. 81009. M't-fgllf lou fllMdonarw DEAR PAT: As us,ual. I've gained weight over l hc holidays. A friend told me there's nothing like u "ketogenic" diet to get ri d of excess pounds fast. l don't have any idea what she was talking about. but didn't want to admit this to her. I hope you will ~1ve me an explanation. N.G., Newport Beact\ "Keto1enic" diets are various veniolts of low · carb@.ydrate, high protein diets. If· iasafldeat carbohydrate is present In the diet , fat metaboHsm will increase to supply the ener1y needs of tile body. These diets often claim tbat tllley "bani fat." This results in Lhe intermediate products Of fat metabolism -acids called "ketone bodies" -ac· cumulatlGg fastel" than the body cu Ila.die tllem. When ketoaes accumulate in tile blood, the kidneys draw water from the cells to try to remove tlllem. The withdrawal of water from the cells causes an illusionary wel11tt loss. It also caa lead to ketosis, or acidosis wltlt loss of salt (eledrolyte) and severe dehydration, which could caqse circulatory failure, kidney failure, or coma If liaot corrected. The first 10 to lS poands of rapid welgbt loss on these dleL'i is primarily water from essential tis· sues rather than fat. A chaag~ to a DOrmal or bl&b carbohydrate diet reverses tJie debydraUon -lite underlying reason why welpt ls so rapidly re- gained as ~'!J'S the dieter resum1ta noon.a.I eat-__ ___ ..,.mg pa m. Steuxudess· will$ sla1uler lawsuit SAN DIEGO (AP) -An appeals court has ruled in favor of a former Pacific So\lthwest Ai rlines stewardess who accused a. PSA pilot of · labeling her a lesbian. ·Judge Joseph A. Kilgarif. writing the opinion fo r CaUfomia·s 4th District Court of Appeal, UP.· ht!td a jury award of $36,000 in damages to Cathl~n Schomer. · Schomer contended pilot Douglas Smidt slan· dered her and another stewardess, Heidi Spiu, wlten he"commented that the two were "gelling it on" and "doing their own thing." The alle1ed Incl· dent occurred when the woman refused Smldt'a in· vitalion to join hi91 and other fl4gbt crew members al a bar in a Long Beach hotel . .. SOUTH COAST DINl'ALMOUP. connect order until the MMINlper abowed It to them. They tben aald they couJd not live out Information without llrs. Rowell'• permialk>n. When she cave It, tbey said state rules forbade re· leasin1 lnformalion. A state Public Utilities Commluloo spokesman said there were no such rulea. Company s pokesman Jerry Klmata then said the disconnect or· der was issued only because Mn. Rowell refused installment pay. rnANtts. But Mrs. Martems said it was the company which had refused the payment plan. Mrs. Rowell said a company busi· ness office supervisor called to offer the payment plan only after the ULTRA. 6 ... ·.r. 0.4 mg. nicodnl. ULTRA lOO'ts 8 "'I· "tlf. 0.4 mg. nicorine, 111. I* cig .. ne by FTC method. newa,...er bad quaUoaed company offlclall. Mrs. Rowell said ahe a1ned to make the twice-monthly S.O 9•Y· meats -and sbe sald she had cut d~wn on her lon1-dlstan'ce calla. ' • 600,000 abortiom BANGKOK, Thailand (AP> -Doc· .-t I ton 1D Thailand performed 900,000 abortions, last year, termtnallDI! 1 about ao percent of the prepancles • . In this country. the 1ovemment an· nounced. Thai law permit.I abortionl only in cases ol hereditary diHues. .. where pregnancy conatitutes a threat to the mother's health, or for rape ' victims. ~ I-•-J •t•NOl.!n ToeACCO CO ,. ., I ' . , -- FIRST FIREMEN ON SCENE OF COSTA MESA FIRE POUR WATER ON BLAZE App•r•nt SI•• expk>alon triggered home fire •t 212 S•nto Tom•• St. : Woman rescued in blast Neighbor pulls Mesan from house fire By STEVE MARBLE Ol UW o.llf r l ... SlMI A 53-year-old Costa Mesa woman, pulled from her flaming Santo Tomas Street home Sun· day b y a quick-thinking neighbor, remains in critical condition today '#Ith second· degree bums over 40 percent of her body. Fire·~ficials said Gene Jones, wbo lives alone at ber 282 Santo Tomas residence, was in- vestigating a heavy gas odor in her kitchen and had lifted the top orf her stove when it ex-ploded. . Officials said it was only a matter of seconds before the fire engulfed the home, sending flames licking out the windows. Robert Harvey, a neighbor, told omcials he heard the ex- plosion, ran outside his 280 Santa Tomas Street home and saw the flames. He said he ran to a rence separ ating the res iden ces. jumped over it and dragged the woman from her burning home through a rear bedroom window. ''I hardly even remem her do- ing it," said Harvey, "It all hap- pened so quickly. I was on the phone talking with a friend when I heard the explosion -I don't know how but I kne w im- mediately what had happened." Harvey. a magazine ofCicial in Burbank, said he realized quick· ly that his neighbor was in trou- ble. "She was standing by the bedroom window whic h had been blown out ,·· r ecalls Harvey. "I knew she was in serious trouble -her hair sort or melted on her head. r pulled her out the window." Harvey, 31, told fire offi cials he was forced to kick down a lock~d gate to get the woman to the street , where the pair wailed for paramedics to arrive. Mrs. Jones. who-just returned (See FIRE, Page A2> COSTA MESA FIRE HERO -Robert Harvey, 31, of • · Santo Tomas St., watches firefighting efforts ~er he rescued' ..Y.ictim_GeneJonea..from-her blaaing--helni.-He had to kick open a fence gate and pull victim from a rear bedroom window. Teen's kick thwart.8 robbery try ~ Schools vandalized A 19-year-oldHuntington Beach toy st.ore employee broke up a robbery attempt. by kiclc.ing a knife • ~ the suspect 's hand, Vandals did about $10,000 worth ~ damage to Ocean View School District property during the holiday vacation, a school~· flcial reported today. Jim Jones, usiltant •uPerin·. tendent for business services in the elementary district, said the series ~ incidenta began last Tuesday when a fire was started Victim freed 1 SAN JrRA.NCISCO <.NP>-A -25-y.ear-old man-was-·~11r11N1 ...bar in an equipment room at Vista police said. Vie'f School, 16250 Hickory St., The incident reportedly ocl Fountain Valley. curred u the youth, an employee 10ne8 aaid t.be fire destroyed of Toy aty, 5918 Edin1er Ave., an emersency 1eqer.ator and was walldnl to a nearby bank . other equipment. tritb a depomt bq. Otber incidenta over the past The emplofee, whose name week have included wlodow was wttbbeld by police, wu con· break.,e and ramackill1 df two fronted Friday ni&bt by a knife- c laurooma at Meadow View wleldlnl man who demanded tbe School, door breakqe at 8Drtna money md took a swipe at tbe Vhw .School and windows employee when be refused to smashed at the d19trlct oftlcet, banditover,pollceaaid. 18940 It St., Huntlqton Beaeb. Tbe employee kicked the knife Jonn said 1ucll vudaUam outofbla•n"wt'•b•M,Ulfthe· sprees are cOmmon w -a .. -Juneeln.dbltoa boullni na by three men who vacatlcm. Um 1uffend a •lilbt bad cut in the lDddent., ~eeuld. threatened to blow him up, "We don 't know whether pol!ce said. In an apparent dis· they're Mer>' about sometblna H tute-e.er-.1HHlfe"of1rtr'm'lr.,-ttr•er-1amr,,..J"1U1tmt-aT1Jive O)'lbiftf1ii!l· three aceo1ted Harlen Moore as ter to do," he said. he was leaving his Haight Street The Incidents are being In· restaurant job. vestigated by local policre. Tbe ~ ltill beba1 ~ y poucef'cliiCrl6idu a lAiUi man, qe 18'to 20, 5 feet I , wear· int a green fatlcue Jacket and speaking with a Spanish accent. . , . ' llf./\~l.t (•)\IN '.' j\I II (H•N'A lS CE NTS FV housewife iwoh role probed in worli.an's attack Fountain Valley police are in· vestigating the pos~ibiUty that the wire of a former Bell city ~­ cilman was assaulted last week by two henchmen or organized More fog due for Coast By JODI CADENHEAD 01 ._ o.lly ~llet Sleff Patchy fog is expected to con· tinue plag uing the Orange Coast tomght with heavier fog predicted Tuesday morning, ac- cording to a spokeswoman for t he National Weather Bureau Service. The wave of fog began rolling in Sunday afternoon, forcing the closure of ,John Wayne Airport th is morning and c ausing nume rous trarric accidents. The second week or on again off again fog has left many holi- day travelers stranded at Los Angeles International Airport and John Wayne Airport where flight operations have continued on an irregular schedule. In Orange County, the airport was closed at 8:20 a.m. today after visibility along the coast was estimated al only one-eighth of a nu1e. Elsewhere. the California Highway Patrol reported num· e rous fender-bender accidents along fog -shrouded coastal highways. "Crashes are going down like crazy," said Highway Patrol spokesman William Martin. "A lot or them are intersection col- lisions because drivers just can't see the lights." Martin advises motorists to drive slowly with their windows rolled down in order to hear traf· fie conditions and possible acci· dents ahead. Temperatures are expected lo dip lo 55 degrees tonight along the coast with an expected high or 80 predicted Tuesday. Moist air blowing off the ocean is continuing to cause fog condi· lions along the coast, while in- 1 a nd residents enjoy clearer skies. ,according to a Weather Bureau spokeswoman. Mideast talks MIT ABUL KOM , Egypt (AP> -Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger arrived today in t his Nile delta village - Anwar Sadat's hometown -to begin talks with the Egyptian president, the first or what are billed as a series of private meetings with Midd le East leaders about prospects for an Arab-lsraeli peace. crime In retaliation for the political activity or her husband. Mary Lou Werrlein, 28, the wife of Pete Werrlein, 48, a Bell coun· cilman for 16 years, was bound on .. ~ ........... "'*-' •fJfrd• · Chief Warrant· Officer Don Barnett, 60, appears sur· prised to learn that he is Army's oldest pilot on active flight duty. He's stationed at Ft. Hood, Texas. Iran angry over quote by Reagan By'l'heAssociated Press The speaker or Iran's Parlia- ment reacted angrily today to President-elect Reagan's charge that the American hostages were "kidnapped by barbarians." and the Iranian official implied that the United States was trying to swidle Iran. Reagan was asked by reporters in Los ~geles on Sunday if he could go along with the latest Ira· nian proposal for a S9 billion down payment for the release of the 52 hostages, with the rest of the terms to be negoti'ated~ "No," he replied. "I don'tthink you pay ransom for people that have be en k idnap ped by barbarians." H ashemi Rars anjani, th e speaker of Majlis. or Parliament, responded to Reagan 's comments from the noor of the 228-seat as- sembly, saying Ir~ was not wor- <See HOSTAGES, Page A2) Citizen!s appeal HB recomidering dump fl.le-proposal By PATlllCK KENNEDY the proposed excavation process, .. -or .. De1.,,.....1..., including an emergency evacua- Because of a citizen's appeal, lion plan Involving ~.ooo nearby the H\Dltinston Beach City Coun-residentaifhighconeeJ'.ltrationsof cil next month will make the final toxic fumes were released during ruling on a developer's proposal thediUinl. to 'xcavate an abandoned dump The developer, Mola Develop- thatcontainstoxicchemlcals. ment Corp., also would be re- Homeowner Dianne Fort, who quiredtofencetheproperty and to Uves near the four-acre dump-, provide a plan to monitor air, last.week flied an appeal of the ci· water and soil quality during ex· ly Plinnins Commiulon's unan-cacatlon, prior to receiving city lmoUI approval ~ the excava· gradiDtpermtta. tionpl'O)ect. In her appeal, Mrs. Fort Tbe project calls for buildlnc criticized the planning com· co0dolll1nlum1 atop the dwnp m ission for relying on an environ· after lt 11 excavated. It was ap-mental report from a private firm proved by the plannln1 com· hired bytbedevelopertoevaluate milllononl>ec.18. tbedwnp. Tbe Clt'8~u bu scheduled MetbOdl ~ denloptq t.be re-• public an tbe excava· porU»J Jack Kr-Bryant and Aa- tlon iijpOaalon m .11. -sociatll, bowevw bu the her bed by two men who forced their way into her Fountain Valley home last Tuesday and then fled with five one dollar bills. One oflhe intruders wore a grey suit and felt hat and was armed with a pistol. The other had a metal hook in· stead of a right hand, according to the police report Her husband was not at home during the 5 p.m. assault in South Fountain Valley. As a councilman, Werrlein pushed for legalized card parlors in Bell to generate city revenue lost by Proposition 13. Gambling was approved there. Card parlors also exist in near by Gardena. police said. Police Capt. Bill DeNisi said Werrlein is the executor of the estate or the late Mickey Cohen, the high-ranking member of or· ganized crime in California. Werrlein also has the rights to Cohen's memoirs, DeNisi said. "The assault could be retribu· lion from people in the card parlor business for his position on gambling while a city coun- cilman.'" DeNisi said. "An or- ganized crime in volvement in the assault is a real possibility. but we just don 'l have a lot to go on," he said. adding that police are keep· ing "acloseeyeonthe home ." DeNisi said Werrlein reported· ly became friends with Cohen in the 1940s while Werrlein was a shoe shine boy. During the assault last Tues- day, one or the intruders reported· ly told Werrlein's wife they "had something for'" her husband, police said. They forced her upstairs an~ used surgical tape to bind her hands behind her back and ap· plied it to her ankles and mouth. according to the police report. The woman freed herself after the men left and called her husband. poU cesaid. Trash haul days chan!(e Trash pick up schedules an Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley will be altered slightly this week because of New Year·5 Day No pickups will be made on Thursday because of the holi day. Regular Thursday pickups will be made Friday, while Fri· day pickups a re sch eduled Saturday. A spokesman for Rainbow Dis- posal. which serves the two cities, said refuse crews will col· lect Christmas trees this week and next. The spokesman said the trees should be cut into smaller pieces if they are longer than 6 feet. so that they will fit into the refu se compactors. Or::cJJ~:asl "'eat her Dense night and morn· ing fog to continue, with only parti~l clearing along beach Tuesday. Sunny~and warmer inland Tuesday afternoon. Lows tonight 45 along the coast. 52 inland. Higt)s Tuesday mid 60s to 70s . INSIQETOD~Y On Christmas E~ of 1865, a group of Conf~rote ~terans got t()gfther in Puloalci, Tnn., and formft1 a club cal~ tM Ku Kluz: Klan in whk h tM main sport was members draping themselves in bed1heet1 os "ghosts" to frightn ~llf frttd 1la~1. Toda11. tlw Klan Ml evolved in· to a Mtwork of )>cUamilita'll camps where mn and women are leaming to kill. See 83. • ••• I ; ) ---JUST Bll&t~NG-----. Rioting reported iti Afghan capital N!W DELHI, lodja (AP»-RM&Mul wu 1:;...w ~: KJb'11, ~tal ol Ar1han IUD, wbwe ...... '-" tr •in1 fOf' more lhan a year lu pu& down MOllem reblla. TM Soviet ne aceno Tass roolirmM thal "crimlnll acUvltiff" O("Curred m Kabul , ~ WU ft{I 1mm-.dl•l• wurd ol any CHualUea. Thtt CIUH ol Oil' di1'turbarw w111 alM> uaknown A crowd l•lberf'd CM.1talcle the Mi.n1atr)' of lnformatH>n and t'ulh.1,.... at about 11 • m aod t.au burlln1 l lonff al Utt buUd· LOI , aC'Nrdin.a to tM ,..port from " cUplC?matic source ln New n .. u:u H•••••-.., Ir•••••• cM lit;IRUT. Lebanon IAI') Ayatullah Rutwllah Khomeuu tnda told Ir .. .iuaru the.) mu:.l ~ri.eveN: dtif•le war losses, and ur ~ lhfom ·nut tu quwcH ·· ln the f-.ee ot fue ahonaaes. In 1 JM'e('h t..n.u1dnsl bv 'l'ehr•11 Kadio, Khomeini told cnp- pl~d au tor('t-"_.tenan.!> and ran11Ueb of 1ull<Uers kllled in action that Iran ~•~ ~uffermai Wl "~onom1t• siege" as well as the Jt'flrl\ atkJtl', f'\.i.o\·d b) 9!l th1y, of war w1U1 ne1ghbor1ng Iraq ••IN••...-• rrp•rlrd ,,...., TRAM '"'I) 1I\I'1 t••ram1lllary police staged a light· 111n ~ hellt'<>1Jh:1 a''•1ull today cm a m~x1mum-security prison \\ nerc 11$ gu&I cl\ W ·n· being ht:ld ho!>lage by Some 70 re~J lO· m att!i. Tv.~nt ) 1111"' vcu1>lc 1Nert• f\!l'(Jrted wounded in the bner but I u rlOU!> allt•r k . l'wo twll<'oplc:r::. Jane.J ed ()II the roof ur the inmate-held Trani "'"on pul11 t· a-.bu ull :.quads Jumpe d out a~d headed dov. Obl.111 b , ub111~. l·xpl1J:.1ves lo break through barncaded sec· Uon::.. s~ud off11·1al l>our'l'cs an Home roa.•far•rr•ryr•Crilw WAR~AW . Poland !Al'I Poland's private farmers, who bold lhc key to t h•" nation's a lread_y depl~led larde~. plannec;t a strategy ::.cssrun here today to consider stnke plans 1f Ute Polish Supre me Court rcJe<:ts their demand for an independent union. Tti" court 1s Lo rult! Tuesday on a union chiuter for private ta rr _,::. who haw threatened to halt delivery of some produce to the stale run marketing agencies if the Supreme Court does not a llow them to form a union. Dollar •ixrd4 flCJld do"'" LONDON !Al'J The dollar was mixed today on world money mark(•ts and guld prices were slightly lower in ~x­ l r a ord 1 n a ri I y light trading, apparently lower in ex- Chnstmas-New Year's holttltlY9' OairagCJ •idrlinr• 20.'i bea.n CHICA GO 1A P 1 Several thousand Chicago commuters squeezed into school huse~. retired ~uses. an~ trains today after the Regional Tran.,Pf)rlat1on Authority s1dehrred 205 Grumman f\'lxible huscs for repair ur structural defects. Traffic· de111h '"" ICJwrr By The Associated Press . As tht' lung Christmas weekend drew to a close, the traffic death toll climbed Jlas l 400. well below estimates of the number of peoplt• who might die on the nation's highways during the holiday Th<' A~snciatcd Press tall y stood at 454. . Tht• National Safc>ty Council estimated 6iO to 750 might be killed in traffil' a1'1·ide nts from f) p.m. Wednesday through mid· night Sw1tla~ Recreation classes set in valley The Founla1n \'alley Parb and Hecreatidn l><:partmenl will con dul'l registration for a v<Jncty of \\ in1 t•r cl<.1sscs hegrnnin ~ Satur cl a} at the Hc<·r(!atwn Center, I G400 Brook hur;;t St T h e (i r s l n· g i s l r a t i o n , scheduled from 10 a m . to noon. is for Fountain Valley residents only. Open re~1 stration will lake place Monday through Jan. 9 from 9a.m . lo5p. m at the center. Winter classes wi ll include aerobics. acrylic painting, ballet a nd t ap, baton. belly dancing. c a lligraphy, cake decorating, r ow boy dancing, drawing, guitar. gymnastics. ice skating, karate, "Mommy and 'M e." modeJing, painting. pre-natal fitness and conditionmg, square dancing and "tiny tots ... DUMP ... me nt of Health Servi<"es supports excavation. while the South Coast Air Quality Management Oistrirl warns against it. State heallh-officials contend tha t excavation is a safe means of pre venting future hazards sue~ as underground wal.cr conlamina· tion by leaching che micals. or dangerous underground bujldup of m ethane gas which could threaten homes und dwellings lhal suuound Lhe dump ·~ borders: But air quality officials contend that digging up the 25-foot·deep dump would a llow toxic fumes lo sweep through s urrounding res- idential areas. Air quality officials s up_port ~n­ capsulating the dump s1Le with underground cement walls and a ccncreteconvering. Fro• Pagr A I F1RE •.• from a four-day vacation to northern California, was taken to bum ward at UCI Medical Center Neighbors re ported that the explosion sent g lass flying onto i'hc street a nd that flaming pillows and other items were shot from the burning house. l''i refighters and neighbors,. who grabbed hoses lo wet down roofs, were able to keep the fire fro m spreading to other nea rby homes. Fire authorities today were unable to compute a dollar a m ount to the damage but estimated the house was 60 per- rent destroyed. An investigation into the cause of the explosion is continuing. 3 suspects sought in . HB robbery Police were searching today for three men who robbed Casa Blan· ca , a Huntington Beach record a lbum and s mokin g gar ru>.h~allashop_ -- The incident was the third rob· bery to occur at the business, open less than six months, police said. According lo police. three men entered the shop, located at 7106 Edinger Ave .. at 7:45 p.m . Satur- day. One sus_»ecL,.puUed out a blue_ steel revolver. a second bran- dished what appeared to be a der- ringer gun and third ordered the clerk and a customer to lie on the floor, police said. The men fled with $175 cash and $26 in merchandise, according to reports. The suspects were described as white men, all about 25-yeara-old. .... ORANGE COAST . Daily Piiat TELEPHONE Thomas P Haley P114>11~ Robert N. Wef!d Pre\lde"' M. Thomas Keevll Edllor Thomas A. Murphlne MA~l"!I Edit• Charles H. Loos Co prr 1,111 l tlO o,'•n•~ Coot P11-llllll n• C.olftp•n• Ho ntw\ •torln. 111.,Pr.tlon•. t'dllortal rn.111i.r 61 M_.tl I 7 ae.... ._.. ............... "'" t e.,redvt.•0 w tthout \P•t••I "'"'lnleftOI <oorr..,.1 °""""'' . Alldepe111Wlta: (714) 142-4321 CIHelfted Adw+J .... ~ 142-1171 OFFICES c..t• MeM: uo-....., ...... ~~: 1117Ne.0.-H .... ......... 1Md1:11'11S9Mdl ......... \ ' • price NltW YORK (AP> -Llbya, supplier ol a pereeat of American oil nMda, baa ralHd lta cl'UCM oU price Ma barrel to the OPEC ceil· ln1 price ol Ml a barrel, industry aourceaaaid today. The sources also said In· dones ia, which accounts for 2 per- cent oC oil uaed in the United States , effective ly raised its crude price around S2.~. to about S36 per 42-aalJon barrel. The moves were the latest in an ac<'~lerating round of increases s in ce o il m inis ters o r the Organization of Petroleum· Ex· porting Countries voted this month to allow crude prices to rise an average or lOpercent. The sources. who as ked not to be quoted by name. s aid the in· c reasestakeetrect Thursday. Industry analysts have said the Increases by OPEC members and othe rs could add up to 8 cents a gallon to U S. retail gasoline and heating oil prices Libya's move was expected to be followed by Algeria .and Nit,1eria. whose $37 -a ·barrel prices us ually matc h those charged by the Libyans . Libya. Algeria and Nigeria s upply 12 per- cent of America's oil. According to the sour ces, In· dones ia raised prices by between $3.50 and $3.80 a barrel. but cu_t ~e s urcharges it adds to off1 c1al prices. Halsey Peckworth, editorial director of the trade newspaper Platt 's Oilgram Price Report. s aid the premiums were set at 75 cents to a Sl.50 a barrel, down .. from $2.25to$4. LO. Among other OPEC members. Saudi Arabia thi' world's largest oil exporter has raised its crude price from SJO to $.12 a barrel r etroactive to . Nov. 1. Venezuela has said it will boost its prici: around SJ a bar rel to about SJ7. Mexico, a major supplier of oil to the United Stales which does not belong to OPEC. last week raised prices between S4 and $5.50 a barrel. Its top ~rade of crude rose from $34 .50 lo $38.50 a barrel. while its lower-grade crude went from $29to $34.50. - Anaheim Stadium money maker Anaheim Stadi um , on ce plagued with deficits a nd con- sidered a white e lephant, has made money for the third con· s eculive year, officials say. General manager Tom Liegler s aid the 43.400-seat stadium. hom e of the California Angels baseball team. showed a record profit of $970,327 for fiscal 1979-80, ended June 30. That was $555,860 more than the previous year . and does not include income from the s tadium's newest tenants . the Los Angeles Rams football t eam . Liegler speculated that the big earnings were largely the result of the Angels pennant bid, which r es ulted i n two Am e r ican League playoff games against Baltimore at the stadium. The stadium 's financial ledger r eached its bleakest level in fis · cal 1968·69, whe n the deficit totaled $800,036. Meantime. Liegler . who also is general manager of the city"s Con vention Cente r , said that facility closed out the pas t fiscal year with a profit or SJ 6 m illion. E'ro• Page A I HOSTAGES ried about confronting the United States. "We are not scared of your threats," he said. "W want. our moo.ex back ~~ you call it ransom." Ra!san1~1 s aid. The deposit of fmanc1al guarantees is necessary to "pre venlyou from swindling us. "The world must know that ac- cording to our Islamic morality we wanted to solve the hostage is- s ue but It is the U.S. which looks about for an e~use. "We will settle accounts with you," he said without elaboration . Iran uked the United States this month to deposit S24 billion with the Algerian government as guarantees for assets Iran wants returned. Today was the bostaaes 422nd day of captivity. Poison threat took a botUe of poison potent enough to kill aa many u 250 ,peo,ple. ~ccoJ'dlo o poU.c.e.. Oakland Police warned that anyone findln1 the bottle of Eutha-6 should call them. : -=-80 hurt Simian .singer A male Siamang, largest of Gibbon family puffs up uni- que pouch and sings to vis itors at Dade Metrozoo in Miami. Inflatable throat permits serenading. Stranded pair live on dog food, oats OKANOGAN. Wash. <AP> - The two s urvi va l ex perts we ren 't too worried when they realized they were stranded in the rugged Pasayten Wilde r ness. But after a we ek-long diet of dog food and horse oats. t hey're reassessing plans for a sk 1 Lrip fro m Was hington to Ma ine. The t wo Fort c,,lhns. Colo . m en were rest ued Saturday by a ·U.S. Forest Service he l1 c·opter team after spending three W(!eh in an abandoned ranger 's cabin Greg Wiggins, 27, and Pat Legel. 33, who teach winter sur· vival at Colorado State Un1 vcrs1- ty, holed up aft er realizing they would run out of food if they tri<'d lo comple t e a JOO-mile stretc h from Hoss Lake to Oroville. "We kind of overestimated the amount of terrain we could cov- er in a day and the result was that we ran short of food ,·· said Wiggins. "We trie d our bes t and planned 1t the best we could ... Legel said Sunday . .. But the weather slowed us d own too much." Be fore they began the ir trip Nov . 28. the two left their itinerary with Wiggins· father in Dallas. with instructions to call sear che rs if the two had not called from Oroville within three weeks. When Jim Wiggins didn't hear from his son and heavy s n o w was reporte d in the Ca scade Mountains. he called the Okanogan County sheriff's office. "When we gnt to the cabin, it had been eight davs since we left Ross Lake. and we knew \\le••' wouldn't have e nough food because we were only doing half the distance." said Wiggins. "We decided that if we stayed at the cabin, they would be looking for us in two wee ks ." ·'The first two weeks were not bad because we we re kind of confident we would be rescued , .. Legel batd 'The last v. eek wal> t he onl y diHtcult, wel'k because we ra n out of food ... Tht'y had t<J resort to dry 1JoK food and oat s stored 1n the c·abin "We'd lake• that dog food a nd heat 1t up with a little lard and c·orn -.yrup to makt· a kind of f.!ravy. · ba1d W1gg1n!> "It v.ould k ind 11f fill us up, hut we manag1·d to loi.e about 15 1Jr 20 µounds each · · T hP1r i.p1rttb drnppc d \\hen. Lhev realized the\' would be bpe 0 nd1ng thl' holidays alone W1 gg 1n s, who turned 27 Christmas Eve. did get one pres· t•nl for his hirthda\' · · 1 gave him a hllle film l'an1stcr full of honey . the last of my food supply." Legel s aid The m en avoided cabin fe\'er h) "t alkmg about all the ~ood food we would eat" aft er their rescue. Wiggms said They abo husked horse oats arrJUnd the <·abin's woodsto\·e and p la)ed gin rummy w1Lh a makeshift dN·k c·rafted from !l b\ 5 index t·ards round in the s he lt er Hotline aides sought Volunteers a re needed for the West Orahge County llolline, a 24-hour rrisis intervention and s uicide prevention service. Two t raining classes will be conducted in January for poten- tial volunteers. age 18 and older The recently formed Hotline Auxiliary, which assists the service. also is looking for volun- teers Those interested in the hotline train in~ class o r the auxiliary can call 761·4575 for information • • in train crash NEW YORK <AP> -A four· car rapid tranatt train caJT)'1nc a bout 800 rush-hour pa11en1era overshot its termlnal on Staten Island and struck a wall today,: and authorities said 80 were in· jured, lhree of them seriously. The Emergency Medical Service said 35 were taken from • St. George Station to St. Vin- cent 's Hospital , 4 to Staten Island Hospital and 10 to the U .S . Public Health Service Hospital. Thirty-one 'Were treat· ed at the scene, officials !laid. The three serious cases in- volved head injuries, officials said, and there appeared to be a number of people with broken arms and legs. "There was broken gla~s." s aid Julia Barbaccia, a passenger in the second car or the train ... Everyone went flying on lop of one another." The train was pulling into the northern terminus of the Staten Is land Rapid T ransit system, wher e thousands or passengers daily trans fer to the Staten Island f'erry to cross New York Ha r bor, past the Statue of Liber- ty to the Battery in Manhattan. The train struck a retaining wall in the station at 8:07 a .m. when it failed to stop while puJl- ing in at what officials <lescribed as normal speed. Police said many passengers on the four -car train were stand· ing a nd fell whe n it hit lt\e wall. A train dispatcher said a wait· ing room was on the other side or the wall into which the train rammed. The cause of the accident was not immediately determined. Conductor William Chase, who suffe red a cut on the for ehead. :.aid the train was making a normal approach to its terminal. 'I have no idea what hap· pened." he said "I was ·waiting for us lo make our stop We were goin~ slow and normal like it is a ll the lime and s uddenly ever- yone wa~ cin the floor · · Hiding man rapes woman in Valley A 21 -ycar-old Fountain Valley "om an was raped inside her a pa rt ment carJ} Sunday by a man who 1umpe d he r from behind as she unlocked her front rloor . police reported. P nliC'e s aid the s uspect. dt•s<:ribed a;; a male of Lalin ck -.ci:nt applied a ehoke hold on tht' \ICtlm during the 2 am. al 1 ark a nd fttrct'd her mto the lll'droom v.here h(' raped her . Thl' :.ubpecl rll•d out the front door nf the apa rtme nt. which 1s Im· a led in t h1· cent ra I part of the . <'II). police :.aid . The woma n v. as return mg to hN apartment from a trip out of tuwn Pollet· speculated that the sus pect "'a s h1d1ng in some hushes nt'ar her front door. The suspect is described as be- ing in his late 20s. fi ve feet. eight 1n(·hes tall. a nd 175 pounds. poli ce said The woman was treated at Fountain Valley Com- m unit} Hospital and released. poli ce said · LA violence LOS AN GELES <AP > Five persons were killed and four in· j ured 1n Los An,ge les County s hootin.Rs over the weekend. police and sheriff's officers said. ALSGARAGE ucing the Al's Garage Jean- des1oned especially with you in mind h<ihtwe1ghl, comfortably 1a1lg red \ill!La stra1g t leg silhouette. 1n three shades of denim ind10~. washed and bleached 56 FASHION ISLAND --1::l.E.WeOB.LBEAGti. ----.. -----(714 )64d 70 0 I • . . . . -. _._..,..._ .. • -::-:.-:-~. --,.::. :h ~ ' • .,. ......... NOTHING TO 00 BUT WAIT, HOP£ Doug McCarthy, dog, near Vancouver, B.C. Hundreds slwvel mud in Northwest By The Associated l>i;ess Bloated ravers in Washington stale receded and hundreds of residents have begun cleaning up homes damaged in floods brought by unseasonably warm weather and heavy rain. P e ople forced from their homes by the rising water since Christmas Eve began returning over the weekend as lower tern· pera tures and clearing s kies eased the threat of major flood· ing. W ale rs also re c eded in Oregon. where three people died in the floods. And residents of Cataldo,' Idaho, once again had access lo the outside world as waters in the Coeur d 'Alene River went down. "Everything seems to be un- der control," said Art Iverson, shift commander al the sheriff's o ffice in Snohomish County. north of Seattle , an area among the hardest hit by flooding in re- cent days. "There's no impending dis- aster." said Iverson. "Breaks in the dikes have been repaired. The waler has been dropping. Emergency workers have gone home to get some sleep." No one was reported injured Chrysler, • UDIOD may ' alter pact DETROIT (AP) -The United Auto Workers union may ask Chrysler Corp. to shorten its cur-rent contract m return for wage or killed in Washmgton. unlike three years ago when flooding cla imed the lives or six people. But dozens of house s were dam aged or destroyed. Ac-ross the border in Canada. the flobds c los ed major highways and caused major damage in British Columbia and drove more than 500 people from their homes. One of the most worrisome areas . Ebey Island east of E verett. Wash .. was not serious- ly threatened. Residents of the tiny island had been advised to leave, but declined, when breaks appeared in a system of dikes s urrounding the island. No ma· jor flooding occurred on the island. In ce ntral and wes t e rn Washington, t he flood swept away several dozen houses. Crews were continuing to try to break up a log jam on the Sauk River at Darrington. Wash. There was concern the logs would '"break loose and cause more damage. A bout 35 people were evacuat· ed from their Darrington homes f<,riday. but they returned Satur· day when the waters receded. Chris Aaro of the National Weather Service said the warm. wet pattern that melted the snow in the mountains while dumping heavy rains into the rivers had been broken up. The record-high temperatures that melted the mountain snows were replaced by readings closer to normal. Temperatures at several ski resorts in the state were below freezing Sunday. Water was receding east of the Cascade Mountains as well. In Chelan County. Wash .. water in the Wenatchee River had receded about a fool. and people forced to leave their homes were able to return. Orders eo•IHet ....-.. December 21. 1tl0 Patients' cai-e blasted .~ SACRAll&NTO (AP) -Tbere were "incompetent or ne•U1mt aeUon• by pla11lcian and nunln• stair memben" ln the de.U. « lJO state holp&t.al paUeatl between 1973 and 1978, tbe Sacramento ... bu qucMd an olftelal report. The Bee reported a total ot 1,• patients dled ln California· run bolpltala durinl tbe period covered by the report. The pnvioulb uapul>Uabed document, dated June 27, 1978. cited qu.t.lonable ~ pretertblna practices by docton and de- tlciendet in monltorina patienta' pfOlreu in tbe-UO deaths. nae patients were moetly mentally m and the "developmen· tally disabled." The report, compiled by state hospital officials and ln· veati1ators from the state Department of Consumer Affairs, was supervised by Burt Cohen, an official of the state health de· partment's office of planning and pro1ram analysis. Cohen was not immediately available for comment on the report published Sunday. · The newspaper also said the final -and disciplinary - stage oC a much·publicized probe by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's staff into the disputed deaths failed to materialize because state 'lfc ensina boards "never had the legal authority to review the re· cords oC mentally ill patients ... '' Napa 0State Hospital's staff was named in 38 of the cases. while Lanterman (then called Pacific) was cited in 25 deaths and Camarillo wa1 named in 15. Other hos pital• named were Fairview. Porterville, Metropolitan, Sonoma. Patton. Apewa and Ataacadero. Only Stockton State Hospital "escaped involvement with any of the serious cases,·' the newapaper reported. Hospital disciplinary action was recommended by ad· ministrat.ors in 81 caaea, but the report did not •lve further de· tails. To date. there have been no criminal convictions resultln1 from any of the questionsed cases. The use of medication by the phyalcian staff was cited 4'7 limes -2S times at Napa alone -while the competence and ne1ligenceofdoctors wasnamedin46cases. : However, t:ohen $aid an the report that since 19'16, "signifl· c ant changes io state hospital organizations, staffln1. pro- cedures and patient care practices" have taken place, the • newspdper said. • Most of the 1,285 patient deaths, Cohen said, were "due to unavoiCiable natural causes." The report also urged improvements in "staff performance. medical records, medication ... restraints on violent patients and staff training," the Bee said. The report said major problems "included excessive dosages of psychoactive drugs; failure to recognize symptoms of overdose . . .and failure to monitor blood drug levels." Mission· Yiejo man killed by auto Latesuit o1'er TllomalldSteps A 29-year-old Mission Viejo pedestrian was killed when he was crossing Jeronimo Road at Marguerite Parkway in Mi ssion Viejo. Michael Hutchinson died at about 5 :30 p.m. Christmas Day. seven hours after he was hit by a car drive n b y Do u gla s Cochcane, 21, of Hawthorne. said a s pokes man f or the California Highway Patrol. The spokesman said Cochrane told investigating officers he was headed north on Marguerite Parkway and was passing through the intersection on a green light when Hutchinson darted in front of his vehicle. The CHP spokes man said there were no witn~sses to the accident which is unde r in· vestigation. Laguna man robbed of gold chains Police are looking for a man who attacked a Laguna Beach m an and then robbed him or two gold chains worth $500. Poli ce said Michael Ocorr was reportedly struck on his head and face in front of his clothing s tore. Beach People. at 168 Mountain Road last week. The suspect forcibly removed the two gold chains from the vie· lim 's neck and ned, police said. The suspect is described as Caucasian. in his 20s, 6 feet, 140 pounds. with short brown hair and a mustache. Violations told WASHINGTON (AP) -About 10 percent of the firms checked by federal inspectors have been found in violation of new regulations govering the disposal of hazardous chemicals, says the Environmental Protection Agen- cy. Beach By JOHN NEEDHAM Of ... O.lty "II-' Staff Atto rneys repres enting ,Orange County and a South Laguna homeowners group are preparing for a February court hearing that could settle the seven-year dispute over public access to Thousand Steps Beach. Members of the South Laguna C ove Associatio n , the homeowners group made up of residents living above the Ninth Street Beach. say allowing public access would result in lower property values . However. the county main· tains that, under state law, the public has the right to access to all beach areas below the high tide line. The county's campaign to gain public access to Thousand Steps Beach received support recently when the regional Coastal Com· mission ruled that the public should be allowed in The commission made public accc:;s a condition on a permit it issued allowing the county to r e p l a ce the dilapidated stairway leading to the beach. But the 540 residents living on the bluff above the beach con· tend that repairing the steps and allowing the public to use the long·time private strip of beach could bring as many as 100,000 people into the s mall area. In 1978 the Laguna Coves As- sociation filed a laws uit against the county over a previous at- tempt lo repair the stairway. That case will be heard Feb. 23. Meanwhile an injunction issued at the same time prohibits the county from allowing the public on the beach. The action accuses the co tv of using coercion and lies in 1 and 1975 when 140 local residents granted the county easemen a long Thousand Steps in r tu for deeds worth SS each. It is alleged that county of- ficials told the property owners that they would be li able f<h-all repair costs if the county was not granted an easement to the stairway. 1 The homeowners also argue that there are no restrooms in the immediate vicinity and beachgoers have been known to lresp.ass on private property in their searc h fo r s anitary facilities. access fight set C>Mty ~ .... '""" ~-BEACHGOEAS MAKE THEIR WAY UP THOUSAND STEPS Dlepute Over AcceH to South Laguna beach contln~ea and a lifeguard. In addition. Herman said. Thousand Steps Beach would be closed to the public at dusk to calm fears or residents that van- dalism and noise would result from public access. "We were notified by an at- torney representing the South Laguna Coves Associatiqn that. with this provision included. the homeowners might be ready to grant us access," Herman said. Herman says the county is partially liable for any injuries that OC C'ur on the crumbling s t ai rcase wheth e r a ne w stairway is installed or not Replacement of the agin g path to the beach would cost about SlS0.000. county officials say and benefit concessions that the financially ailing automaker has asked workers to make, accord- ing to published reports. UAW President Douglas A. Fraser told the Detroit News it is "within the realm of possibili- ty" that the unior might ask the No. 3 carmaker to approve a new contract to cover less lime than is still left under the old agreement, which expires in Judges squabble over busing plan Peter Herman, an aide to 5th Di strict Supe rvisor Thomas Riley, says the county is pre- pared to install public restrooms He said the attorney later in· formed him that area residents had decided to go ahead and press- thei r court case in hopes of blocking public access. Original es timates set the replacement costs al $40,000. County officials say the original estimate was too low because it didn't take into consideration t he area topography and dif- ficulty of a contractor having to base repair operations along Pacific Coast Highw_a-'y'----- Septem~!_ 1982. ALEXANDRIA, La. (AP) -An extraordinary legal fight between Union leaders met last week a slate judge and a federal judge and agreed to reopen contract is headed for an appeals court, ~al ks with Chrysler. which has says a lawyer for three teen- asked the union lo accept a 22· agers trying to avoid a school month . wage freeze lhal would desegregation plan. save Chrysler an estimated t&OO Lawyer J . Minos Simon is uk- million. ing the 5th U.S. Circuit Court ol --Chrys1er o((foi a ls 6ave. said A ~ala in¥ew Prlean1 totem- the UA W conces sion s a r e porarily delay a Cederal court or- necessary for the company's sur-der that would send bis clients to a vi vial. schoollheydonot wanlloaltend. That i• the latest in a aeries or Fraser stressed, however, that ordersstemmingfromaaquabble -the union·s 13-meniber t;hrysler between state District Judie bargaining commtttee would not Richard Lee and U.S. District decide on bargaining terms until Judge Nauman Scott, author ol a after it had met with Treuury · h 'de d · 1 Secretary G. William Miller,' paras WI esecregallon Pan who is a lso chairman of the put into effect at the beginning or Chrysler Loan Guarantee Board. theacbooly,ar. The purpose of the J an. 6 meeting In uking for a temporary delay is to discuss the financial status or pendinl appeal. Simon said his thefaillngcompany clientl are"belplesa boataaes" in .. Miller may say •You have lo a power atn11gle between the two have a longer contract or we· judges. (Chrysler Loan G uarantee "Both have vowed to prevail in Board) won't accept it,'" Fraser thia Jurisdictional conflict. The said. "That's why we can 'l make antagonism between tbele two those tactical decisions until we judges has escalated to the point talk with Miller." where U.S. Diatrlct Judie Scott Chrysler ls aakint the ~QllL · baa characterised state Judie -OOard lor an additional S400 Lee~i autliont1 as 'make be-l-tlttHie~rtf-the-tlh'S--bt!ltion-lomr--114~••~',~"~SiH.-llUff-,Mkiln hia petW., which was malled to the 5th Clrcutt Frida)'. ' l1Ade StJ>tl' duqreUIJGD plan , teen-aaeu Michelle LaBorde, Lynda McNeal and Ramona Carbo were transferred __ ,;, ..... -.......------- Crom rural, a ll·white. ~uckeye High School to SO percent black Jones Street Junior High in Alex- andria, the biggest town in Rapides Parish. The transfer also would require the girls to ri~ buses to school. a distance of about 15 miles. The girls' parents gave leg.al c..ial~ their children to friends living in the Buckeye High allendance zone. Lee granted that maneuver and told school officials to admit the girls to Buckeye High. He told Scott lo stay out of the case. say- ing child custody is a state mat- ter, not a federal one. Scott, however, said the move was a sham solely intended to circumvent bis deaecrecaUon or- der . He told school officials not to admit the tirla lo Buckeye Hieb. Lee and Scott went on to issue a strin1 of contradictory orden and, at one point, Lee sent sheriff's deputies to Buckeye Hlth toeteort the 1irll to clua. Finally, Scott lAued what he called "a put up or abut up" order and said he would impoee a $500 dally fine on an1one tryin1 to • . poM hi• deNCN1alMn plan bJ ke9~1J the 1irl1 in Bucte~e Bl1~- Under that order: iaued oti Ute laat day of claas before the -Clari~he&Waye, tile •ra. tn to show up at Jones Street Junior Hilh when clusea resume on Jan. s. t • _s~rry tQp-sida.r withnzgistm-00 ent1-slip OOla 44 Rasllion Island• Nftllport Beoch•714/64.f·5070 1 -.rwood Blud.•""twood vu~~·2131479.1121 I H I F Ja•C ·· c .. ting unny to g lwnpy Dli•rt;DINTHE GL MP8 AUU.lapul wHktnddld wu to prov you C'an 'l pr~ l'tourcouta1 wea&Mr rroauoc:n• Inland ottire with ll bureaucrat 11kMK'bed in a ltllbt r c hair, µf'enna al 1•u1e11 ran you recall b•ck tu hu1l l"riday" It waa laal Friday that a hot ~avt1 of monumental proportion• hJt the weather '~pie UM•Pttcttldly i nd tilt~ their pl'edictina app1ratU1. l'1tm~~ •·ere itream ln1 to t~ btactMta Guys were actually out 1n tbe:.u.rmne, fhp~1n1 •football around. Thu» the wulber people were suuestln& we would enjoy • Jub' •tlDOlpbere btrt aJ0011 lhe coutline in lht! waning d•>· ol December . P£0PLt: W£a£ STOUUNG up on suotan 011 in pre~­ _arataon for Saturday and Sunday It was going to be beach bonus time. Satu.rda). however, dawned foggy Hut never mind. T his was going to burn olf_into the l!llones that were being predict· t'd by the predictors Your corres pondent had to make a trip to the inland reaches of Santa Ana Saturday anyway, so t~is would be a test SWlny-bright inland would probably prove that the weather savants were correct after all and we'd get a bum-off later in the day along the coast. But the fog was thicker in the region around John Wayne Airport than it was althe surfline. MAN Of THE VEAR ..,..,,..,.... Man of gear . , WORLD I NATION . Sliutt~ creeps to launch site CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla, CAP ) -A h uee c r awler- tranaporter traveling at 1 mph be1an movine Am erica's space shuttle to It.a launch pad today for what officials hope will be a mid· March liftolftospace. 'The squat orbiter Columbia, strapped vertically to a disposa- ble fuel tank and its twin-rocket boos\er s, sat on it s mobile Jaunchin1 platform atop the port· derous transporter· as it began a J a..;-miJe trip to the same launch pad rrom where American- astronauts blasted off to the moon. THE SHU1TLE spent the r ast five weeks undergoing tests a the Kennedy Space Center's vehicle assem bly building after 20 months of critical work on its re- entry heat shield. The rollout to the launch com· plex marked the start of an 11· week countdown to blastoff. -· the launch pad near the AtllMlc: Ocean. "We feel it'a a 1re1t day fortbe United States." Youn1 aald. "Wait till March. Just wait Ull March." Much of the past year hu been spent. attachin1 and repalrin& thousanda of tiny, he~-resiatant tiles outside the shu\tle. The lileS are intended to protect·the craft ana the ast ronauts from the sear- ing heat of re·entry to Earth's at · ' mosphere . Once it reaches the launch l*f. the shuttle will undergo a tinal battery of tests, including manned rehearsals of take-off and a 20-secood firing of its three main engines. THERE HAVE BEEN" prob-lem~ in the past with the engines, and If trouble develops during the firing, the launch could be de- layed again, offi cials say. At 184 feet long, the shuttle is about the same size as a DC-9 airliner. Its cargo bay can take 65,000 pounds into space, and if it were turned into passenger space, it cpuld hold som e 200 peo- ple . Th~. all day Saturday, the overcast played tricks like an escalator. ll would rise, giving hope to the suntan oil sets; then it would descend, swirling about the ankles of the coastal citizenry and causing the glumps to set in. I N 111E END, you could write ore Saturday. The wea ther This is the cover of the coming edition of Time Ma gazine. which names ..President-elect Ronald Reagan as its Man of the Year "for having risen so smoothly and gracefully to the most powerful and visible position in the world." The target date for the much- delayed fi rst launch is March 14. That is three years later t:han the original target date. a nd George Page, director of s huttle opera- tions here, says, "I would not rule o ut May." John Young and Robert Crip· pen, the astronauts chosen for the first shuttle test fli ght. watched the Columbia begin its iourney to The last manned s pacecraft launctted from here was the Apollo-Soyuz mission in 1975, when Ame rican astronauts met up with Soviet cosmonauts in space. I -.... D•hyP'li.t,._ ,.,nday Orange Coo.st beach scene: December 1980 person's m ercury manipulations got an "F " for frustration, rlub-upandflWlk·out. But then. there was still Sunday to salvage a bright weekend. Sunday dawned along most of the coastline under a heavy, thick blanket of grey goo. Surely now, Sunday wasn't going to bea repeat of Saturday This stuff is going to Hft. The coastal heavens shall tum bright. • By mid-morning, there was a phone call from the elder daughter of our clan, inquiring as to fog conditions upcoast from her location. She wanted to get in some surfing. She ex· plained that it's difficult to get in any surfing when you can't see the surf. and she was hardly pleased to learn that the surfline was j ust as invisible upcoast as it was downcoast. AS-IT TURNED OUT, Sunday was no weather improve- ment. While the fog hadn't lifted much above your ankles on Saturday, it seemed to hover around your toenails on Sunday, So much for the s unny weather predictors. i:o_rgetting Sunday outdoors, you could hang near the old telev1s1on set and watch the professional football playoff gam e.s .. Our Rams ~f Anaheim would be down in Irving, Tex- as. ~1vmg a certain group of urban Cowboys a gridiron lesson. THAT DIDN'T QUITE work out either. The Ra ms laid an e normous Texas egg, and thus may now retire to nurse wounds of both pride and body, unti 1 next season. So there was the weekend that wasn't. Sometimes you're glad to see Mondays roll around. Trouble was, the fog was as thick today as it was Sunday. Arabs warn agains t U .S . arms trade BEIRUT, Lebanon CAPJ - Ir a n (J nd Craq repo rted paratroopers and tank-led infan- try raids today as oi l-rich Arab sl a tes reportedly warned the United Slates against s upplying lean with arms in exchange for the American hostages. THE WARNING was reported by the independe nt Beirut n ewspaper An-Nahar amid growing signs that 40 Islamic heads of stale would move next month to mediate a cease-fire in the 99-day-old war · An-Nah ar quoted unname d Western diplo mats in the Lebanese capital as saying the Arab states of the gulf had ex· pressed ··concern" that the Unit- ed Stales might provide arms and spare parts to Ir an as part of a hostage settlement. THE NEWSPAPER said this concern was conveyed to several Ame rican ambassadors by the governments of the Arab gulf slates. One official o,....an un- na m ed gulf state was quoted as te l ling the A m erican am · bassador his country would "look with displeasure " at t he possibility of having "Iran fight Iraq with n e w A m erican weapons or spa re parts ." An Nahar's report could not be independently ver ified here. The Arab s tates of the gulf. which export more than 15 million barre ls of crude to the West and the non-communist world a day, have privately sympathized with Iraq in the war. Snow, ice glaze Midwest R e_gions of fog, smog pocketed in West Oen .. IOQ lo .,..\1\1 lhrollOfl T11e~ day, clearlnq only oartla lly along O••notCout lnl•nct.reassuMyand w•rmerTUHCM., Co•stll lllQll mkl 60\, low o . lnl•nd 11'9f\7°',l-S1 W-60 else-re. v••l•lll• winds ltss th•n 10,nollthrOUQll Tuesdey .. cept moil· ly WHttf'ly rwar thl! coast In alter· noons Smooth\H. Westerly swells of 2 to J ftet Dense olhllort fOQ tonight more ut-lw Tuesday Sun1111,,. -• •-al tor m~I of lkNU--I .. .,.._MIHIMIHI. -•HI>-•.,., 1-lnlnfPltl Valley •nd r.aln lrom Gecl<QI• to Olllo •"41 Penn1y1v ... 11 Snow was ••P«19CI lo ~ suller..i from I"-'-' GnM Lahs Into New Enol•ncl. wHll ''"'1"9 tem~raturn • found only In tllt norlf1t.utern llll••l•r of ..... "illlon ' Early tod•Y. fretllno r•ln and drlrrte tell '"'"' low• MIO WIKonJln to Mlc111oen •ncl lnOl•n•. mulno rOIClslcy. -, Tra .. ltf"J ..,,.l_I_. -re POSlecl lor mo•I of Mlclll9an's lower Penln111f• a• bMlo of 119"t. lreetl"9 reln"91•Nd 1119flwen F rHJl"9 rein also ••• pleylng ..... 0( .. Wlsc.onW. ·--~ -••• 1•111"9 o,..r .,.,,J of IN c.nlral AlltNl«llt.ns '"'"' Wflt v1ro1r 11 In· to Pennsyl••nl•, the PUllon•I Wutller 59nke wkl O.nw lot...,. ~loted a1roor11 ~· san· t9ltll' Cwtrll'lllJ Boise, 10....,, .irencll1'19 IW>lkley lr•nlers S-Oay ""., .......... today. Foo 11uno ov•r Ille ontr•I •nd north Alienllc stAte\, ••well•• 1n tM centr•I v•llev of CAlllornl• and '" v1iley1 lht'OUQll tM lnlermo..M•ln ro QIOfl R•ln wn 'Kalterld •I0"9 tN E•JI Co•st from South Cuolln• to Mtryland. witrl 911e lorce wind• M\O 111011 tides on ,,.. Norlh C••ollf'• to•st. Ttmpe,.lurll .,ound Ille r14tlon ur1y tOday rwioeo from • deO•ff' In lnternellonel F•lls, Minn., lo u IMQrH• In BIY1N. . Calfter-fa Heavy fog tmbreced Soutlltrll C •II for"l e's COH lllM loclly le>< t"- 1«01141 time In•-· -In rorclno the ctowre of major a lrporU for • time •nd (re•llflQ llevoc for llOlldey travel•" ----'--------·' More loQ w.s PNOkteo tonl9h1, I •11"°"9" fair _t,.,.r wllll lllQlls In , 1"-70. wn predki.cl lor tM lnlwid I rtQlon Tuesday, Ille Nelloft•I 0.-,,..o.1 • .;y h ......... Mond•Y F•>ON II "°" 00 'IOI """" vom p-by ~ JO I> m till DelO<t I CUil AllCI ¥()Ul ClDOY WOii i.. 0•411<!<~ Solurd•v •nd'"SVfloay II "°" 0o nQ4 tK•1 ""ft "°"' OOOy by 9 • m (Ml Wulller Sen1lca w ld. I Tiit """'""' •AS mlserebfe tor •ftl'Of'lt ..,..Inv to ny 111 or o..t of <MSttlN eltl*h, 1-fWr, A"'9110 •nd Hrly mornl"9 be<•u~ of re- dllCld Vl\lblllty Bu11sttl11 H id •n<omlno lllQllh were dlwma IO Ontario, L .. V•oas fnd Pllc»nla / ,. .... ,,..,. ....... AlllVQIH .llm.,1110 ""'"°'-""•llt• a.111mo .... tllrml"911m Bl\fftaro 801 .. eo,ton 8row"'""' 81111110 C"4rlstnSC Cll•rlslnWV ,,,.Y•- c111uoo Clnc.l11nat1 ct .. •••ncl 0•1·F1W111 O."•ter OesMolnn Oelrolt 0..lulll "' La ... , .. ,, •• )I I 1 u " 40 llO " l1 .. ,, ., ,, ,. 1' ,, .. JI ,. u .. 3S u JO n u lt )J Sf l' lt '.o ,,. •l 0 u 31 ., 26 JI M .OI U IS Fair~"'-' 111 .. Harttoro 1• 18 Q1 H•t•n11 I(/ 1• Honolulu 4S 1\8 Hou\ton ., lnclnapll\ .. 28 01 J •t "'\"Yllf so •\ OJ K•n•C:tlr " 31 l a\ Vt~' I) •• Lolli• Roc.k )I )) LO\ A119tlt"> n s• l OUf\v11lp •• JO Memohl\ SJ )4 Mnlm1. SI •• Mllw.tukff JI JO )f Mpl\ St P >• 11 Na>lwlllt SJ JO NtwOrltan\ \S 3S NewVork JI .31 Okla(;Hy &1. JI Om111e ,. JO Orl•ndo .. '3 Pllll-IP111a 38 JS Plloenl-,. SJ Plt~burQll .. ll Pl•t1d,~ ,. 2S OJ P11•"41,0rt •• JI ,. Reno s• 1l C:ALIFOltNt.11 Beke-.llefd Sl •5 Blythe 80 S) FrHllO •8 ,, Mo111erey " Ne.dlH 18 S.tr1meMo SI 41> S.11te ll11'1)er1 •• " t""rmel '° lla"t-16 ~ BloBHr ., 11 S-.M .. tt.Tfdr• .. TOOAY • 5ec:lftff'iql\ l .O p m ' l I S.tond-••IP m t • TUHOAY Flrstllllfl 4 ue.m. ' I Finl-ti •l•.m t 6 Se<-lllOfl • 13p,m, l .1 Se<ondlOW t0•)4p m, I.I Slln '411\ •·Sl p.m., rise• Tue•d•Y 6:SI e.m, M-rlwt n · n 11.m . HIS n o e.mT...-e,., ·Fishing ·pacts junked Mexican mpv e bars V .S. vessels WEW YORK <AP) -In a move like ly to stir ~ontroversy just before President-elect Ronald Reagan lakes office, Mexico has decided to terminate its fishing agreements with the United States. The New York Times reported today. · The Mexican decision was to be conveyed to the State Department, the news paper s aid. U S officials were not available for comment immediately. The Mexican decision 1s likely to be am ong toptl'S for -discussion when Reagan meets with Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo on Jan. 5. THE MOVE COULD PUT dozens of American s mall-boat owners out of business and is thought to reflect Mexico's determination to build a fi shing fleet capable of competing m waters traditionally dominated by U.S .. Japanese and Cubcln vessels. Larry Bozanich. general manager of Fish· e rman's Cooper ative Association in t he West Coa st f1shmg port of San Pedro. Calif . said the de· <·1s1on would mean idle fishing boi ls and un- em ploycd fi shermen. • "We have lived up to the agreements: now Mexico doesn 't want to." Bozanich said. .. We have vessels ranging in value from $500,000 to S5 million. Without a steady means of revenue. the owners are going to lose their vessels because they are very heavily mortgaged," he said. Although the decision is not of great economic importance to the • United Slates, it seemed to dampen chances for an agreement governing the lucrative tuna fishing business . The United States and Mexico have enga"ed in a "luf\a war' s mce early July, when Washington imposed an embargo on Mexican tuna imports in response to Mexico's ar rest of six San Diego-based tuna seiners caught fishing inside Mexican waters. THE TIMES RE PORTED that Mexico's de· ris1on to renounce existing fishing agreements ap· peared to have been prompted by Washington's re · fus al to allow Mexico fi shing boats a q uota of squid off the New England coast. O ne of the treaties affected by Mex · 1co's· dec1s1on 1s a 1976 agreement that ga ve the t:n1t ed States a quota to catch snapper a nd grouper m !\1exico's Gulf wate rs and allowed s maller '"bait-boats" to fish inside Mexico's l2· mi le te rn tori al waters in the Pacific . ALL FICTITtOUS NAME STATEMENTS FILED IN 1976 MUST BE REFILED IN 1981 and those with changes must be republished at tim e of refiling HERE IS THE LAW · (Business and Professions Code ) S1•<.·. l i9~0 ';i 1 L'nlt·~:-tlw stah'nwnt expires <.·arlit•r undl·r ~uhdl\ •~ion 1 hi or 1c 1. CJ fie · tit inus lrns incs~ name st atc·mrnt l'Xµirl1:-<it I ht l'llcl nf fiYl' ~·t'a rs rrom lkl'emlwr :n of th{:· ~·(·a1· in which it was fill'd in ~h t• nffk<' of the coun t~· clt:•rk. St•t'. I i917 lh r Subjee<.·t-tn-thc r('<fulrc mC'n so !'U 1r J;um i a l. the 1H•\\Spaper st;tlcct ed fnr the· puhlic ... tion of tht• stalt·ment s hould Ill' 1111(• that circulat<.•s in thC' area \\ht•n • tht· bus iness 1s tu ht• C'OnduC'kd SN'. 1791 i ll' l \\'her£' a new st alrmcnt is required b~<wusc· the prior statement has rx· p1n•d under s uhdi\·isinn ta l of SreHon 17920. tht• nl'\\ s tat('ment need not bl' puhlblwd unless thc•r<.• has hct•n a change in thl' infcwmation requi red iii the t•x- pi 1w l ~tat e m'ent. , •·~ FOR F U R T H ER' I N F 0 R M A· T I 0 N R EGA R D I N G F I L I N G AN D PUBLISH IN G CONSU LT YOU R ATTORNEY OR CALL THE O RANGE COAST DAIL Y PILOT LEGAL ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT (714) 642 -4321 E xt 332 • - Workers on hands and knees prepare Baskin-Robbins float entry for Thursday's 92nd Pasadena Tournament of Roses parade. Three or 31 a nimals featured on the float for the parade. "The Great Out- doors.·· are shown. The parade, which will inl'lude a float from the city of Mission Vie- jo. s teps off at 8:45 a.m . and over 1 million are expected to line the parade route. .. ---. . . .. ...... -· .. . . . . . ...,___. MandlJ, l>eoemDer 29, 1te0 H I F Reagan film loans off .. Flood of reque•IA bring• moratorium ~ ;: ·~ I ,. SACRAMENTO (AP) -An ex- tensive Ubtary ol news fllma de- talll111 President-elect Ronala Rea1an'1 political life h as become so popular with joumalilta and researchers that offlcia.11 have put a halt on leodln1 the films out. Tbe publicly owned collection, operated by the Sacramento His· tory and Museum Commission, contains some 3.S million feet of film spanning a 23-year period beginnine in 1954, the Sacramento Union reported Sunday. The newspaper said television networks, publishers and others have made extensive requests for the material, which covers major events in Reagan's political de· velopment. The film archive has not been made available to the general public . Commission officials said they've placed a moratorium on distributing the mm until they figure out how to cope with the flood of requests. Commission director James Henley said the footage covers major political, social and economic developments on a re- gional and national level involv- Ing Reqan. The commisaion is a joint city-county operation. The col~tlon reportedly is one of the largest« its kind in the na - tion. Most of the film on Reaean dealt with bia rise to natkJaal.;~ prominence while camp~ for Barry Goldwater in lbe 1-. presidential race. The films a1lo track Reagan's two tel'ma u 1ovem« ol California from 1., : throup m s. Sunday bWod drive falls short of goal LOS ANGELES CAP) -The American Red Cross "Save a Life Sunday" fell short of its goal but nonetheless was hailed by of-ficials as a success. "We had set as a goal 1,981 units of bl6od," STATE day draw." said spok ~s man Ralph Wright. "It appears r ight now we'll draw about 1,100 units. But that's still almost three limes the average Sun- Sixteen Red Cross bloodmobiles were used for the drive throughout the l.ps Angeles area Sunday -mostly at churches - in addition to eight permanent Red Cross facilities. Bml trrr• •••Jlrrl 111 ,,_ ••• rnu'I Yule goes ble~k to beautiful LOS ANGELES CAPJ -A man who allegedly tried to walk away from his car after he reportedly crashed it through a glass- enclosed bus stop and killed a young boy and a woman was freed on SI ,000 bail, police said. Cornelio Escamillia, 33. who was uninjured in the incident, post · ed bail Sunday and was released from Venice Division jail about eight hours after being booked for vehicular manslaughter. His ar - raignment was set for Jiin. 13. OCEANS I DE I AP 1 Christmas for the Willie Carmack famil y wen t from b lea k to beautiful. area residents bn~htened the Carmack'sChristmas. But two days later. t he door bell • and telephone started ringing. over." said Mrs . Carmack, a teacher's aide. Olrbl•a• lrrr •parkWrti,,.,... :1 FREMONT CAP> -A family's Christmas tradition of lighting sparklers on their tree has left three people burned, Fremont fire offi cials said. "There are some wonderful people in the world." said Susie Carm ack. 54, after neighbors and •I Early last week, thieves en- tered the Carmack home and stole all the Chr istmas presents from under at ree and cleaned the kitchenoutoffood ··People from the neighborhood people I don't know -and the north <San Diego ) county started br inging food and contributions With the contributions, she and h er husband Willie, an un- e mployed heavy equipment ope rator, were able to replace the gifts for their teen-age sons, Mark, 16, and Phillip, 13. ' Erick Salzirnis. so. who officials said had taken part in the <'eremony "ever sin ce he was a pup," was lighting the fireworks Saturday night in front of a dozen family members when a branch caught fire. according to authorities. l· $4.50 brings $5 7,600 SUNNYVALE <AP > -Hal Mason says he doesn't plan any world cruises, even though he's certainly reaped a windfall. Mason, 39, of Sunnyvale, found out last week that he bad drawn the horse that placed second in Saturday's Irish Sweepstakes -a 20-1 shot named Corrib Chieftan. His winnings are 30,000 Irish pounds -S.S7 ,600. Mason said he bought a $4.SO ticket on the race in November from a golfing friend. Ticket-buyers are assigned a horse. "It's really a fantastic thing. I've never won anything before." said Mason, who runs an elec- trical-equipment service in Sunnyvale, about 30 miles south of San Francisco. "I don't have any plans. No world cruises; no new airplanes or anything like that." Mason said 'he received a telepllone call last week from· Dublin informing him of his winnings and that the telephone call woke him up. He said he thought the caller was joking. Two people. Stephe n Popovich of Fairfield, Conn., and Gordon Conway of Victoria, British Columbia , won the top prize of 100,000 Irish pounds -about $192,000 each -on the 33-1 victory of Car- rig Willey at Leopardstown track. ----------.-- THIS NEW YEAR'S EVE, RESORT TO THE FINEST..: Monte Carlo Dinner and Dancing '65 /lc.T f>t.'r.Cenl , Our popular, complete package in d udes steak 'n lohster dinner, plentv of cocktails, c:hampa~nc ... S}nJ Jandn~ to the 14-piece "Dr. Jazz and t~e B.B.C. Orchestra." And special this year, "T#w Bright Si.ck," n ational-tourinl! 19-piece show ~roup. All for $65 per person inclusive. (P'fl··f'Klid Yt'.'ioc'n'Cllirm.,, ,,u.u.~.) The White Oak A delicious a la carte menu anJ strolling musicians make a very special evening at Newport Beach's newest restaurant. Wines from our Cellar list anJ cocktails \vtU be available. Hats and noisemakers included. (Re~·Tnuiom recommcruL.·d.) The Library Lounge Llve music anJ drinks from 8 p.m. 'till the wee hours, incl• •des bau.and.noisemakers. -•10 per person cover.- (Re$t'Ttoation.( nol requin..J.) Phone today for reservations, And Christmas Day was com· plete with a traditional Christmas dinner. · Susie's daughter supplied the turkey, and one of Susie's co- workers arrived with pork meat to replace a quantity that had been stolen. ·•We had our traditional tamales nit breakfast.'• she said. ·'It was a beautiful Christmas. We won't have to worry for a while," she said, referring to the contributions that poured in from throughout the area. ··Nothing like this has ever hap· pened to us before. I ~n 't have the words to say how I feel.·· she ~aid. CIJll fall falal., b11d• ~ WRIGHTWOOD IAPJ -The body of a 15-year-old boy who fell off a 1.000-foot cliff in the Angeles National Forest was recovered late Sunday afternoon. A sheriff's search team r-ecovered the body of Timothy O'Grady of Victorville. who fell down an ice chute while hiking with com- panions on a ~rail between Vincent Gap ~d Mt. Baden-Powell. • '~ ... , ........ ;\' .. ., .. fJordft" MONO LAKE CAPI -An earthquake measuring 4.7 on the Richter scale hit a sparsely populated area along California- Ne vada border that experienced a swarm,of "good-sized" quakes in early September , officials said. No injuries or damage were reported from the trftnor, which str uck at around 3 p.m. Sunday. It was centered 35 miles east of he re and 120 miles east or Stockton. (714) 644-1700 ~'v~ sot two plan.' availabae now. SOmc people like to kctp':ill their money h:imly ma checking account Other pcopk like 111 k<'Cp a little money in their checking account :1nJ :i.101 cl moocy in their savings acrotml. Our Grand lnterac/Checkln1 Plan ill (mo( ta.08chlY~ charwa with SIOOO minimum. on nny ool:incc you maint:iin m your pl:tn ~·ve ~plans bcausc~lc ar\' J 1ffcrcnc But wt-0\1\' jfi11 one minimum th:u cvcryhody can allftt on. Our $1000 minimum L' o kx lcM 1han a kw rl financi:il mst11u11uns But ;ilmos1 everybody is looking forward tu ctimin~ intcres1 on the same money rhw use 10 wri1e checks So we've lillJl two plans Our Premier' lnlftat/ ClMclUns Pl8n is fm al MONhly~--..~ S 1000 m!n••••· intam a minimum balance in this plan, and you can h.avt an ln~ina plan fb:r. c:J month aerv'ioe d:i~ 11 n 5 , annual interest on the •me money you UIC lO write ch«ks. Kl-cp $1000 or more in your qu:lli(ying savinJ(S or rime dcposi1 account. You qu;illfy (Of ;m lntcrest/Chcckm(C plan, fu:l: n( mon1hly teTVic:e charges paying S"'1!.. annual int~ . And no hank Of savi~nd loan pays a hight-r ra1tclin~. · With t>ithcr plan, you can apply fof a Ccmbincd Cleek and Dlall'C Can.I IM.mCard"'°' v~·vR~ Reserv· Account and Ch:ck Guaran!Ct" Can.I. And you am wet either-plan at any ant d~ (M:r "59()offiees all OYf:f Callf0m111 • : . .. 1 I \ . I Toxic dump sites ose new threat At.ndonl'CI or ror1ota. chemical dulftl) alt• pote a ww and ctanaeroua lhreat lo U.. tn\llroDIMDt ol eome Oran1e County communlU• and m&ft1 others acrou the Uon The HunUnaton Beach Plun1n1 Commillioa recently !proved a r@Cluat lhat a private devek>per be allowed to cavat an abandon~d dumv containln1 toxle m1oals It la lmperatave that all the environmental .. , e1&Aal"d:s Lt ached to that approval be strictly followed rn pl'Olect iM he•lth of surrowMilna residents. If dune rorreclly. thial project could very well serve " 1t model for &imllar exc11vaUuns in other parts of the county 11\C'luded m the 14 safety condluons 1s a plan to cover up the dump if fum~:. become too concentrated. An t•mer~y e\•acuauon plan also ii to be developed in ,·ue fumb cannot be cont&lnecl and threaten nearby resi- dtot . The dwnµ, located 700 feet southeKst of the Warner .\venue and Bolsa Chica Street intersection. is to be fe nced before excavation beain-'>. And the de\•eloper, who wants lo build condominiums t ber~. must provide scientific on·site testing of air, water .ind soil quaHly during excavat.Joo to avoid any surprises. Excavation lS oppos~ by state air quality officials who warn that toxic fumes and strong, noxious odors <'Ould be spread lhrough<>Uil the community when digging ... tarts. But state and county health department officials s up· purl excavation as a desirable ·way to prevent future hazards, such as underground water contamination or underground buildup of explosive methane gas pockets. A private, $200,000 environmental report of more than 400 pages also supported excavation as a safe means of getting rid of the dump. It appears that the Planning Commission made a well thought-out and studied decis ion based on scientific document.ation. But all the conditions must be strictly followed lo in- ~ ure that the toxic chemicals are safely removed. Help for hollle buyers The toughest problem for most first-home buyers in these days of inflated real est.ate prices is finding the necessary~ash for a down payment. Assemblywoman Carol Hallett bas introduced a measure that could be of substantial help. Her bill would allow any taxpayer who has never purchased a principal residence to deposit. tax free, up to $2,500 a year -$5,000 for a couple -to a maximum of $10,000 in a special housing account, to be used to purchase a home in California. That's not a huge amount, but combined with other savings it could make a major difference to the would-be homeowner. Ir the money s hould be withdrawn for any other purpose, income tax on the amount would become due immediately. If it is used to buy a first home, it escapes taxation unless the home is subsequently sold al a profit. In that case. the amount would have to be included as part of lhe capital gain for laxation purposes. The housing tax allowance plan is similar in some •1 ways to tbe individual retireme.nt accounts that permit 1 taxpayers to make tax-exempt deposits in a special bank account for withdrawal upon retirement. With the state 's fiscal pursestrings becoming tighter, • the bill may run into trouble. But some such relief would clearly benefit both young home buyers and the state's housing industry. A similar tax exemption at the federal level would be even more welcome. Warning for joggers A 21-year-old man has been arrested on charges of assault with a deadly weapon, kidnapping and sex perversion in connection with separate attacks on women Jogging through Irvine's Northwood area. In both cases the women were jogging along a rather remote street early in the morning when they were at- tacked by a man who tried to drag them into an orange grove and rape them. Both were able to escape his grasp without actually being raped, and neither suffered serious injuries. The misfortune of these two women should serve as a reminder to joggers that it is best to jog in pairs and in Populated areas. Special care should be taken when jog- ging at odd hours. · Additionally. people who jog at night should wear reflective tape to warn motorists ol their presence. L81ltly, joggers should follow the basic pedestrian rule of jogging in the direction opposite to the traffic flow. • • Opmaons expressed in the space above are those of the 01ily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are thOM of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address Thtf Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa _Mesa. CA 92826. Phone (714) ~2-4321 . _Boydllntf!"'kws ByL.M.BOYD Last applicant interviewed for a job has a lot better chance of getting it than appli· cants interviewed earlier. So announces an employment counselor who checked lhe records, He thinks it's a Dear Gloomy Gus It ia ironic that the tax· payen now are for~ to a~d bUllont to bail • , oY.'t the auto lnda1tty ifter Qiey. were forced bureaucracies .that ruined it. G.J . ~ lloc 7 _.......C#ZUJSMr ;.. .. ,. ., , ............. . __ ,.,,,...., ......... .. =',.. ...... ,_,..,...... .. . ' , ... '*" ....... ~ significant revelation. And be advises employers to keep de- tailed accounts or each in· terview to offset this peculiar oddlty. What bunk! Of course, the la.at interviewed ii the one moat likely ~-When they find the ript party, tbey atop interviewtna. dummy! Tbat ma1aaine called "Graa&I" tellt university pro. reason bow to 10about1ettlnl money from the U.S. Govern- ment. Tbink of that! A periodical on how to apply for handoub I It reeeatly lilted 10 phr .... said to burt aa appll· cant '1 cbueel of lettiDI laeb money. Better never uae tb .. e, lt aua.ia: ''A lrowtu body of evld•ace~'' .. A tboroufll 1euell of tlle literature." ''Beyoad lb• . · trary to pubUc oPIDJoa." "Es· citla1 new,.....__•• "P'Ull aa • l~rtaa~~ --atiidj. 'IJ • ... Jee. t. • • "Tip of the lcebefa." And : "Warraatl hlrtlMr i.. ve1Uption.'' ' Thon91 P. Haley I Publllher -~-~:--i.--a.tliw• KlwlblcM Edltorlet P• Editor Narcotics trade now airborne WASHINGTON -hderll IDd local law ..tOl"C!emeat ac.cltl have made 1m....UU aareatlca lnto tbe Unla.d Sfatel by Ml 10 rialty \bat dope tralftellen bave luroed lntreaalnlly to airplues lo t•t their llllell 1ood1 to dom..Uc clnal dealen. ·'Some or1anlaat1oa1 wblcb had formerly smu1tled by sea now show • preference for smuggling by air. which they perceive to be l ess risky," a clas sified Drug En · r o r cemenl Administration report states. The change in transportation methods "is explained partially by the enforcement action against mothership drug smug· gling operations in the Carib- bean area during the past few years," the report explains. Airborne smugglinR can be a profitablt> undertaking for pilots willing to risk it : Ferrying a planeload or marijuana across the t:uribbean from Colombia to Florid<i can bring anywhere from $30,000 to $50,000 for the de· livery man. But the• po111ibillty or arrest and impriitonmenl is not the only ril'i k the criminal rl yboys run. Andy Rooney Tbey could wtDd up payla1 for t.belr praft&I wtt.b tbe1r uv ... Tbe reuon for tbl1 la that maay of lbe plaae1. bavlnt made tbe trip from the United Stat• to p£ek up tbelr dope. are refueled at one ot the hundreds of airstrlpa on -the Guajira peninsula ot Colombia. Despite the bu,e prom.a made in lhe dru1 traffic. the Colombian sup· pliers sometimes shave over· head cost.a by providing dirty gasoline that clogs the plane's fuel line when the pilot is out over the ocean on lbe return trip. "THE LUCKY ONES are those with extra fuel tanks and bigger planes that don't need re· fueling," a DEA source told my associate Dale Van Atta. The un- lucky ones crash at sea. In fact, aircraft crashes give the DEA important information on the latest trends in dope smuggling. For instance, the re- port notes, "analysis of aircraft accident data reveals that the Caribbean area acco~t~ for approximately 75 percent of all drug-related aircraft crashes and accidents In 1978 and 1979." The crashes also make clear that Florida is without question the {\Jo. l landing place for drug delivery planes. Six out of 10 drug-related crashes in the con· tinental United States during lt79 occurred ln the Sunshine State. Another trend-spotter ror the DEA is the information on airplane thefts that can be traced to drue shipmenu. In im. for instance, Florida and Georgia together accounted ror only 11 percent or drug-related plane thefts in the United Slates; la.st year, Florida alone accounted for 39 percent or the total. And the DEA estimates that 85 pe rcent of all the airplanes stolen in Florida last year were stolen ror drug- related purposes. THE SWING TO aircraft by drug traffickers has relegated ships increasingly to the pre- liminary stages of smuggling that is, delivery lo Caribbean islands where the planes can pick up the stuff for deli very to the U.S. mainland . Although the advantage of the traditional · ·_molhers hip'' operation is its huge capacity, the use or aircraft has ~ few plusses that tend lo out weigh this. These in c lude s peed , economy of manpower and de· livery directly to what the DEA refers to as "the ultimate retail market." In other words, lik e busi· nessmen on the right side of the law. entrepreneurs in the highly com1>4!tive drug trade try to provide raat. efriclent service while keeping costs lo a minlmllm -and proms to a maximum. AN0111ER SKELETON: Alex· ander Haig is not the only member of President-elect Ronald Reagan's political fami· ly whose a&twilies during the Nixon years have come back to haunt him. There is a member or Reagan's transition team who also has some Watergate-era skeletons in his closet that have attracted renewed altei;ttion. He is Stanton 0 . Anderson, a Washington lawyer who in 1973 was assistant secretary of state for congressional affairs. In that capacity. he at>sol ved former Texas Gov. John Connally of in· volvement in a smear letter aimed at a prominent Greek ex· ile leader who was closely iden· tified with Sen Geo r ge McGovern. the Democratic pres· id en ti al nominee The reason Connally was SUS· pected was that the defamatory l ette r , a tta cking Elia s De metracopoulos. had been drafted on s tationery of ·'Democrats for Nixon," which Connally headed. And the reason Connally needed clearing wa!> that President Nixon was con· s idering him as a replacement for Vice President Spiro Agnew. THE POSSIBILITY of Connal· ly on the ticket caused Sen. Jacob Javits. R-N Y . to ask the State Department if it had any evid ence suggesting that Con· nally was responsible for the let· ter th a t s m ea r e d De me traco poulos Assistant Secretary Anderson wrote Javits that there was none Anderson was also investigat· ed by the Senate Watergate Com m1ttee for hi s participation in Nixon·s ··responsiveness pro- gram" the euphemism for ex· tracting polit1tal support from recipients of federal 1'?rants and tontrarts And an 1974 . Anderson was named as ambassador to Costa Rica. but he withdrew ha s nomination to :..t\'Oad bl oody con · firmataon hearings Footnote And erson said he doesn"t remember v. hat he wrote to .Javits, but as "prett~ s ure·· there was no Whale House pressure to clear Connally. Curiou.sh . the letter to J avits was cle.are<1 with 1 wo career diplomats, George Churchill and Ka y Folger, who earlier were in- volved in preparing and dis se minatang an anon y mous m e m o that als1J attacked DemetraC"opoulos Maybe we don't need a smart president It's a great comfort to each or us who isn't the smartest person in the world to realize that the man we elect president Isn't either. This is not pulling down Ronald Reagan. I refer to presi- dents of. the United States in general, although Reagan is an outstanding example or someone who is not the smartest person in the world. I ASKED 10 people around the omce to rank our last eight presi· dents in order -::;, -. or their in-' telligen ce . Here 's the consensus. 1 Roosevelt: 2. Kennedy: 3. Truman: 4 . Johnson ; 5. Eisenhowtt; 6. Carter: 7. Nixon: 8. Ford. It's impossible to rate them fairly, but it's fun lo try. Among the people I asked, ranging in age from 25 to 60, Roosevelt was the on l_y u nan i mo u)i c_h o tc e , Sydney Harri8 Eisenhower evoked the greatest difference of ophlion. One person put him last, dumbest. but three had him second and one, third. He was fourth on my list. but maybe I ranked him higher than he de- serves because I liked him so much. The reverse may be true for Nixon , whom I ranked seventh. · IF AIL EIGHT of these men were in school together, Jimmy Carter might gel the best marks. although no one would say he's seemed that s mart as President. Lyndon Johnson, on the other hand, might not have done well in school at all. but people·who knew him al work In Wa shington considered him a brilliant politician. There's obvi~usly some kind of intelligence other than pure brain power. and it's a good thing. too. because that's what gives so many or us hope for ourselves. Qualities like com· mon sense, enthusiasm' 'and the ability lo stick to a job until it's done, often seem to make more I difference than bra ans 1 don ·t think Harry Truman was very smart, but he had common sense and he was persistent and he did a good job. so now younger people who didn't know him in office assume he was smarter than he was. REAGAN SEEMS to have a down-to-earth common sense. too. and we can all hope it will make him a successful pres•· dent. One of the best things a president can have is common sense enough to pick really smart advisers. If we elect presidents who aren't all that smart. what quality is it that brings success to any or us? Who succeeds a nd why do they? In high school yearbooks, the smartest one in the class is usually voted "most likely to succeed." but 10 years later the winner usually turns out to be a dark horse who failed a few subjects. We all ~m e lbat Lhe, smarter a person as . the more he ,gets of what he want s in life. but this doesn't seem to he true Are smart people any happier than dumb people'! All yo u have to do is look at your friends and de· cide. The answer is no l'M NOT VER\' patient with people who are dumber than I am My amount of intelligence , seems like littl<' enough to ask of anyone. This is a des picable trait of mine and it worries me because there mus1 be a lot or people I see regularly who are. by the same standards. 1mpa· tient with me I mention lh1s because I sus- pect I share this characteristic with most people, and in vi~w Qf • that. it"s probably a gooa thing that we have a habit of electing • pres idents who aren't rouch smarter than the rest of us. Presidents and citizens get im· patient enough with each other over a four-year period as 1t is. J.t would be wo~e if there-were a big-IQ-gaP.,betw~e.n him ana..;..us::-.~-~~ Most 'accidents' aren't really accidents at all ,. Monday, o.c.tnber 29, 1HO Re1•1• gence of Klan alarms natio~ I ..... I '$- ,,_ kY KMl 1C ... , .... m Olvt ·-.... •• u •a 11"CM41 of Ca.,111.W ... -.ra• a htrtr di, aa "°'"._. tnae a .._.. flf 1....W. ,......,. &n Ar1QY ra~ tr..., IDr a rac-tt war lelund U.. bur'alfta C ..... I Gad.re ol, IAGDI m ..... die Orw .._,,_ of .... • 11 1 o.dm- trtlo ................ "1.an;h1 .. ~ .. llt ....... -n•p ec.._... from C•........_ Ill ~ClllClll TIW)> allio att •••ch• ....-ud abildNn how k> ldl1 MAN~WAT<11E81i -· me a.ca. rt1Mti. 1(Q" 1an1utWlfti .,... h1rtbod •l tht• n.ambeni ol peqpaa. turwuna out for KKK r1dW.. ui NtWat O\Ulllhi, partlr ularJ)• 1n tbt' Nor•h. •nd lb4l hHtto ut thou ... ol votet coU•cwcl b) .vow.a IChuuurum ra.nctidal u' ,.N!nt eleie uc:wu. 'l'he)I are e,\/en •or.- ~ alarmed at uu, nev. paramllilMr) aatavity Ta.ff lJ "° e\/1denc~..._,10an'wu 1owlwrd m • r~ a.pallt of k1Jhn11_. nl bU.cb But t.bd JJ"14 a.rauoefor an .. ,n~v•uab1' r~wllrnuma•l•'lime •hen pohu are 1n vHhl•llD1 \he ilaylfWt> of 11 black duldren in Atlaoua with foW' Olben; IDlHltt 1n1 . Uw kil~ ol six blkC!k meo Jn BuffM.lo lll1d " :maper 11tuack on »Uonal Urban Lttaaue Prctildtmt \' e rnoo Jordan Furthermort>. a former KJ1ms man h.ah been charged Wllh shooung to d"alh two black muo ~og gina w1lh while gar b> an Salt 1.Adle City, and a jur.y in Greens boro. ·C recently a cqultled fiix Klansmt!n and neo·Naz1~ of murder in the de.at~ of h ve c.-ommwusti. gunned down at a "lluatb to the Klan" rally THE COMMUNITY &ELATIONS SllllWC.:•of the Jusuce Department repoJ!t"d this monthJt MUl8 called to investigate 68 Klan•reh1ted caseti •dut:Uli fiscal 1980, an increast: o( 55 percent over the !Pre· vious yeu . The Justice Deplll'tment said the inci· dents involved m11inly ·•crOllS•bum1ngs . .Mllruttd rallies counterm~ minority protesters, firebomb· ings, challenges to police and general ha.rlt88mem of blacks and Hispanics." Al the request of the U.S Co mm1ss1on on Civil Rights . the Ant1 -Defamat1on League of B1mu B'rith compiled a report on the guerriJla warfaJe training in five statei. and sent It to Attornt:Y General Benjamin Civileth. urging the FBI to re - new surveillance of the Khm "to protect American 'citizens from further terrorism and violence." ·'He wrote back th»t he was going to .ask has staff to study it ," Irwin Suall. director -of .the league's fact-finding department, said. "'He mBde no commitment '' FBI SURVEI LLANCE OF TllE KL&'ll 1ww; curtailed in 1976 by guidelines th11t requuie evidence of actual or imminent violence before •m· vestigating the actions of domestic groups. The Ku Klux Klan, which began 115 years a({o in Pulaski, Tenn .. with half a dozen whit.e,gat.bed "ghosts" terrorizing their recently freed iilavet>, today is a hodge-podge of fl'ival organizations with similar trappings and shared animosities 1toward blacks, Jews, communists and assorted aliens. Since the FBI no lon ger infiltra~es itlhe klavem s. and the Klan never reveals Its imem· bership. the Anti· Defamation League probebly1has the best hood count of any outside organization The AOL monitors Klan activities throut?h .26 r.e· gional offices, basing membership estimates on cft · tendance at Klan rnllies• Wld the mailing lists or KKK publicat ions All told. Suall saad. there are probably ·no more than 10.500 art1ve mtimbers. with about 100,000 sympathizers Hut the membershrp as growing, particularly an unexpt!cted place6 s uch a& New England. "MORE IMPORTANT AND MORE dangerous 1s the rise in paramilitary training htcilit1e6 ," Suall said "The main problem 1s not the number Another 1,000 more or lesi-; is not the thPeat 'Ilhe threat is violence and terrorism." . And a Justice Department re port that came to light recently said the "'most violent:· of the llQ~K leadel"8 was Bill WiMciim1on or Denham Sprm1:s. Lu .. 11mrie11ial Wizard of the Jnv1siblc !Empil!f' of t he Ku Klux Klan \\HMciinson. a Louisian11 far m lboy \Who joine d the Navy at rr.7 and became u decoder on a J>ole11ii. submarine, ugrned to un in· te r v ie w at a Baton !Rouge res taurant. say mg he •didn It .al. low reporters inside ·the !Em- pirc~ ·s headquarters m Denham w1L111NSOtt Springs . The imperial wizard. no taller than e Jockey without his hood. finished off a filet or Louisiana red s napper, lit the stub of a cigar, and ~ed about what he sees a s the "inevitable raoe,war, .. a notion he first got when the Nuvy sent him to 'San Francisco and he first saw white womun datm~ black men. "I FEEL LIKE IT'S GOING T9 be .very wides pread," said Wilkinson, who was .anretJted m September in Connecticut for packing a .lt5•aaJibeT pistol in his suitcaRe, ond who often is ilwrrouruie.tl by "nighthawks" Klan security guards -Ito.ting s ubmachine guns and sawed-off shoW"!uns ,at rallies. "I've had men shot down in man,y ,Places - Decatur. Carbon Hill . 0 kolona -anti IJ\ve tbeen shot at in m a ny 1irn::tonnei; m yself." Willkinson. w.tim~e t wo school-a11e sons areimenibeni·of · the Kiah Yo\llh_, Ob~. added. -- ':!lr-fh&.iaet41lit:+ iiti'we M '¥&-- ing to defend· oun1e.,v.ei:; 1b.y dD)Y mea ns is violent. 'then IIlm violent. "Jf the fact thatU RDN •we 're facing a race war in tthis <arum· try is violent, then l lm ;uldlent." Earlier th.is month. Wllkinlrbn showeil U{P 1in W asltington at a congressional hearine ~ by .Rep. John Conyen, D-"Mich .. chabnn.an •df ia Hou se subcommittee on crime i~ilP"h\i wnetber links ex.ill between any llMlm1DSlittll bodies and ''violenceqnone' · -or1anintionnlwtti m the. Klan and neo-Naai IJ'OUJ16. Conyers says the lelan baa pantllllll~ a nd psyc h o 1 o g i c a·1 ~w.a r f a re ll.lr1a1illllirni1 TaeMay ,,.... .. -· ..... -Pt.ff:::: 3 loultC..."'8M ..... ................ ---------"-"- ·~ "' .a&abama, CaUfomla, Coanedicut, II· Tucker, the Exalted Cyclops of the Cullman '*-*:llmtta Carolina and Tnu. In addltJon, it klavern who also .J• com m a nder of t he qpeum llQIM Youth Corpe ump1 in San DMIO. paramilitary group. 1l.-D .....,...lno and Loe .U,ea.: Peoria aDcl ·'The Klan Speeial Forces are here to prepare Obm.aelQ, llU : Jeffert0nviUe, Ind.; ~laboma City, the white people for ._survival in the upcomin1 Mla , !Dmwer and Hilla~. Colo., ud Binn· war," Tucker said. · &QlbMm, tn.eumbia, Tuualoolamdl>ecetur,Ala. The paramill!ary arm of the Ku Klux Klan in . Texas calla lCaelf the ''Texas Emergency \WlMa!uiOo I tnvl•lble Em&Ue. wblch bu aa Reserve'' which conduct• "survival training" ..-.llUla.d 2,000 to 2.500 memben, drew aaUoaal c Pull Jll lonlioo•m May 1979 when 100 ol ill hooded mem-courses at amp er near the town of Anbuac , oi two weekends a month for 200 to 500 me.mbers. , burei llllijiqed I~ • shoot-out with demonatraton . That program drew national attention when it was the iiuuthom Chrlathm Leadership Conference in revealed that the camp had also been teaching »•o•lur. It~. Four people were wounded. guer rilla tactics to about 30 Explorer Scouts and ll'•~ lt operates one o1 its "Klan Special Civil Air Patrol cadets from Ellington Air Force ~011ut!ti" w.mps not far from the scene of that con· Base. hrmuutmu !Jlbt' 1camp, called "My Lat' for the Viet· nu nu~tlt· "lUaee where U.S. soktien killed scores of 1.11 \llhMJ»., 11•hidden somewhere near Cullman, Ala. lllhltu rttJM)rters taken there blind-folded in Sep· lunibttr found half a dozen tents in a secluded valit.'Y w!ttl 10 men and one woman, all dressed in 1mJlltar.y"8tt'le fatigues. The full squad. the Klan tHtYii conttists of 15 people. AMO~G THE INSTa ucroRs were Louis Beam, grand dragon of the Texu KKK, and Joe Bogart, a former Marine Corps cook who joined the Klan two years .ago. The training at Camp Puller in· eluded tactical maneuvers, military drills, map re· ading and how to use guns, particularly a Colt AR· 15 assault rifle with a grenade launcher. Bogart said that in boot camp training he had choked other Marines into unconsciousness, but they didn 't go that far while training the Scouts and cadets. .. . . DIE KLAN COMMANDOS HONE t heir m~emansh ip with M · 16 rirtes and practice seurch.a1td·destroy missions at combat training H~eions one weekend a month. accordin1 to Terry "We didn't have the boys choke each other." HOODED MENACE? Ready for violence A~WI ....... ' Bogart said, "We just showed them how to do it." LE ITH THE .r ... ' - Gl'IELE MACKENZIE NAN£TT£ fAIRAY GLORIA OE HAVEN VIRG INIA MAYO 808 CR0,8Y .... -• c. , ,_ ./" ... ·' -· .... ~ - .. ~ r· Saddleback Savings & Loan has become Coast Federal Savings & Loan. And we feel this calls for a celebration. So we're invi ting you ancL; the celebrities you see here to come to one of the "open houses"-:we're having every day from December 29 _through January .5 at each of our six offices in your--- neighborhood. GIT A FAii GIFT1 AMUllCAL HISTORY Of 1935-U One of these stars will be at each celebriation to autograph you r copy of ''As ~ime Goes. • •f ~ t ' By"-a ste reo recording of Lee Castle and the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra playing the origi nal Jimmy Dorsey arrangements of September Song, Tu}\edo Junction and o ther hits of the "Big Band" era. This unique album, avai lable only at Coast Federal, is a history of 1935-45 in words anclmuslc-1Ly-0u cOUfcfbuy Tt in a store, you'd probably pay $8. ·But we'll give it to you for free, just for com- ing in any day from December 29 t h rough Jan uary 17. A n d wh ile you 're enjoying the celebration and talking to neighbors, you 'll be getting to CIRCLE ·THE ADDRESS most convenient for you and come in any time from 11 am to 1 p~ Monday, December 29 through. Monday, January 5. J MtntonVlefo! 27832 Crown Valley ~rtcway, (714) 1 31·3451 Laauna llMch~ 684 North Coast HlghWay (714) 497·3363 1 : 24 32 &..Quna Hffls MaM (leisure Woftd), (714) 511·5000 ·11 Toro! ----,587~ .. (714) 170·8088 • NOTl Thtrt will be no 11a" •• thlt office, but elbum 11 enilable I ' \ /4 , I. "/ know Coast Federal, too. Wc'n.: one of the country's largest savings anJ loans, with 60" offices throughout California. HIGH INTEREST, CHECKING THAT PAYS YOU, AND FRIENDLY SERVICE. Learn about our wide varie ty of savings plans. Discover our __ Jnendly, personal service and · the extras were known for, too-the travel program and entertainment discounts of ou r Coast Insiders Club, for instance. @ So celebrate with us. ~ .. ~ Meet a'star. An~ get t o jf"Sfic j know Coast Federal. ---··· .. .. • .. . . <· t. . .,. .. · • i .. ' •,•, '·' .. f I .... • C•I Incl 1,Jle " 1' CH t• 7 111 CCI I Mt CLC .. tn C~A "" 4 11 ~ ... ,. '·'° • NAI 1.1'9 •• )t 19<: J.411 • llO -- ' . 'll(Dli.1Rl))((.CJP) -Dagitil•.......aJll*I .....u.. ,,.,... .• Honomtf ht tll'oufiladl ~ • diatubln1 number of ban~ amon1 amWI! Md! ._ ....... eampaJea wttiall1 ftmmJ tbe baa.....,• of• nadcm'1 pbmlam...a lmwdil Sbme· ll.811. bmlnae, ftlilbNI w.e counted ill Nov· em:blln;, w.ltft1 nombined• dabbl ...Wvalmt to 11.2 bllll•, atwdtiirl! !tit' tbllld DMtl dle-n.•iaampany "C!rialt line" ftM' tttwtftirdl..orai-mandti 1lolo1 !8milllD. a..-...iuh1 ll.tdi. ai cJ'9dlt. survey C!91Dpaa.J ~i.alh tat>ulllbls buainlt9 ftlilla.N9 e.ery month, said total Ihm~ fbl! tft•· y.eaar w.illl be· juat below t.he reeord fl utl Ml·'ll Ht>. im on;. ~--.... •.uawas ...... of small ud medium· aizedl mtlJflgllitle widt:i 50l 1b 1S11 workers. l1nllke their bic t>oo~ im autm andl el8ntllani~ dwy wen unable to deal w.ilft1 ltildti~ COIUI aadl ~demand. · · 11ft ... auvmci etion• oti tfte' )14111) qainat the dollar. n1ln1 f\utlJ a09Un. and! lftlwlnl: aonqetitim from cteftloplnc na· tiomt -tft1I!\ ail• comtrinad! 1IJ drive us in 1 hole," said llllittfum !Rhmimu1 acicountanb9 tbr the Kyoei &Jecb1c llmanu.&cruninw Ci:oi. which• ftliledl tb:iA CaU with liabilities equiMailmU.lbJatilwr Sl!1 million "\¥&-~to r.eJJ the pinah in im." said Shimiau, whose· ctOlDlJIHll&' was f'omn:ed1 in um and made a name as an1 Wl't)lt~offtiaoe reuo11dlall5 and rradio cauettes. a .. .,... .... _., ~ indu.tries, Japan'i euorromy. ltudJ weathered! ttie oil1 shocks and sta&flaUon ol dill' l9rOtb <;bM.11111Dent foreoaetll projed economic 1rowtb ufi :iil{IJ(UlUfBltl imfiftCaJ119111., up trom a projected 4.8 percent Uhi+.y.eun andlwell aheadloflotlll!II Wtitem countries. 1Dte nilt4f• im uonsume.r prines ia expected to be less than T gucttntl tttis; YiftaJ!, and• w~Jll db:Jpi ti> the S percent level in lOffll. acuondtnwtn gov~mmente9timat.es. lndUJtQJy. h&B> lelll'nedl tn mov• to the drum's slower lluuu by nedl.lmrrg emplbyee., conservin1 energy. tA>orkin1 in ulbStt cneridlmttion with ttie government and convincing lubor tn•acaepUsmaller annuaJ raises. "!t\11.UL •"-C'l9U IN TBE recent rash of hankruptcitet, .. !Btun1ohi Naao1 ai aovemment bankruptcy ufficria.I. :iWdi ane· the betb-tiatihming of consumers whoee ruul inc11me.-t ltatJe leveled olf OJ' dropped, and the 1ovem- m ttnt:'S-l1H<JaL auJl'lll!rltly policies wJlich have clamped down on 9ublic wontt& pro1ects, a bad blow to the contstruction tndU81.ey. Some amllrrs argue that! tbe big business-oriented 1ov- llrnm ent andJ lite nallon 's banks. many of which are af. f'ilialedt w1tth mdi.lstnal conglomerates, have ignored the -;truggl lffl oil di e-5"1 a lier enterpnses. 1!m &*1-.Nllllll'flr us,•GUN a counselling pro- gnam to ttelb• ttte.'fft Mnailer companies and has increased t.tte· numtkm ofi .. hardship induab'ies" s uch as textile rrrawer.s wlto1 amt eligible fur low-interest government loantt. Duo ~ acknowledged their efforts are not alw~'t enough1 Spanish aids f 1111n relations !Wl.ON.'111EllaB:'i11 1 A p , -Dor.ens of California farmers btdieve they ttl™ll fuund a new tool to ease their frustra· u ona '" ttte fieJ dl and improve relations with workers. 1lhe.y ·re 'it11rl\ltng SVamsh. ··~·v.e,t:Jught them tu pJant and prune. pick and pack, huy, antJ1 se.Jll anrll one student asked us to teach him to negntialu in• ~wrish... said Lee Cagwin. director of language 11rognanTI:1 at the Monterey Institute of lnlema· o ontil Studies. t\:afJW"m tta& d~1gned a program that takes into ac· cmunr t11mnmulCJg.y. [arm ers use and the Spanish dialects ttlu)' ane likel~' th•uncounter. ··~ -... IES• r .. allf•as are using their ~pumsh• w.itth fle!d.l hands oominlJ from just across the hurder:· ~rudl <raa,.wm in a telephone interview. "OUler wonke1:q arte fh1rmd~p in M'exiao. Others studyin1 Spanish . mu~ ntt gmn& tn Ven1!%uele." «auwm ~df tt11 got the idea when an American Cat· tteman's ,\'$0<I.iation officiaJ said he wanted to speak with bueuress aHHCttiianet in Latin AmeriCAl 1JH1t· 11rogrnurn \WIS broadened; "because of our desire to 1mpnJ\18 aommuninations between arowers anij ranchers amtl the Sgem stt.!IDealnng employees in the field." Gold metals qaotations 9.i-'De ~1 1'rM11 ~llttttedl won!W pld prnces today: ._dhnt. murmna:thcma 11112.25. l.ambrt: albt.mmom fixing -1751 ........ : at'll:mnlllllnrfhinlf, unavaill .. Mf\!dt: fh1Urg!9I02!5l. • Jbdidlc; IBD.t!aibrmoon ft1ting aVT.08; Sll00.00 asked. _. .• ._ •-< latlt momrin19i93.75. an.....-: l&ul'momin1 -J'751 llbp.ut.nlt: lata·mormm1r'11bmnat.l!!d •17.50 . • 1HI w•·· ~ MllK ctd'l1 -lf8ndJ. A lllD1nan lflftr today SlSrfffiOI l!lryeJHBJ1dlsiiM!rll5.•~ r.tmicalAtd silver 118.S>l . ..... ~~81P8.crent.& a.pound, tl7.5-J destinations. &aiiil•48Jcnmt!ti ai pound! 8m·4111'2.~ <rl8ltlt &1 goundt dilllW!J'lll!d. 'IMnlll~ .... lt-\1Jffli aompoaibt lb . .............. , 7Rlaimut. 8l plllU1'd! ~ ~ . ........ -)Oflpen ftgjk ~9KJ\-ltt-.IY, oz., "''l. INGLE'WOOD tAP) It WU a.e 1ame "' \h., N .. \1on•I kltball Auoe1auon's len~y 1war seuan, but there i UIJ was apedal aura when the two ll'rt-• l'hamptonsb1p hoaJists llletllmUme "There was a lot of energy by both teams. both wanted lo wm ~la one a lot." Los Angeles Coaofot Paul Westhe.d uid after his Lakers downed the Philadelphia Tiers l22·l16Sund'6ynighl "Karee m Abdul-Jabbar and the Lakers were out to prove they w e r e th e c hamps," s a id Philadelphia Coach Billy Cun ningham. ··1 thoughl they played outstanding basketball.·· THE LAKERS defeated the 76ers in six games for the NBA crown last season, with Earvin "Magic" Johnson starring in the clinching game as Abdul-Jabbar was out with an inJUry . Sunday night, the Lakers were without the injured Johnson, but Abdul- Jabbar and J amaal Wilkes com- bined for66 points lo lead the way. Abdul-Jabbar scored 34 points and had 13 reoounds and five as- sists . while Wilkes added 32 points for the Lake rs. who took control of the game late in the third period. In the only other NBA game Sunday. Kansas City beat New Jersey 102-99. Leading 72-69, Los Angeles ran off a 19-10 string in the final six minutes or the third quarter. Wilkes had 15 points in the period and Abdul-Jabbar 11. ·'I thought it was one of our best team efforts or the year'" said Westhead. "We played good de· fense and covered the break well . But Philadelphia has clearly established that they are a team to be reckoned with.'' THE TIERS, 33-6, have the NBA 's best record, and their loss to the Lakers, coming on the heels ~r a loss to Denver, marked the irs t tim e thi s se a s on Philadelphia has dropped two traight. "Our two losses in a row could be a blessing in disguise," said Cunningham, indicating he didn't want his team getting compla- cent. The Philadelphia coach was particularly impressed with Ab- dul-J abbar's outing, comment- ing, "I've read those stories about Kareem not pulling out and they 'rejustnot true." Julius Erving, who led the76ers with 26 points, s aid even without Johnson, the Lakers are extreme· lytough. "They are a three-dimensional team with Kareem, Norm Nixon and Wilkes," Ervini said. Underdog role suits both-tea01s PASADENA (AP) -Maybe it's the smog that has hung over southern California for the past three days. F.oi: some reason, Michigan Coach Bo Schembechler and Washington Coach Don James each ii convinced his team -and not the other-should be rated the underdog in Thu('sday 's Rose Bowl game. The Huskies, champions of the .Padfic·lO with a 9-2 record. and ~ • 't{cbllan;"Winner of the Blf 10 ti· tie, a18o 9-2, 60Ui went through touch. slam-bang practice sessions 5'.mday. And, .during an evenJ.ne news conference, each coach pl'OOCMmced his club fit - and the Wlderdog. The Huskies finished the reg- ular seuoo ranked No. 16 in the Associated Press weekly poll. A ftaal poll will be conducted among sports writers and broadcasters followifte the last of the major bowl1amesJan.1. llicb11an currenUy is ranked ( fifth in the nation. However, the ,. Wolverines have failed to win a bowl came in seven tries under ScbembffhJer -including five defeats in the Ron Bowl. "It '1 a UtUe easter to prepare wben you're an underdo1," James 1ald. "But, we haven't 1tven It that mucb atlenUon. -You'd like to be confident that you "A1 far u tbe weeldy rankln1s are concemed, 1 lbAnk you set what you clelerve•. Tbe fact la, we ~-...Cf 1Uft'Wl'4">-..I . • - •'The poll tbat realb' count.I 11 the IMl cine. Then, lf we're not aatlafled wttb tbat. we bave all (8" VNDEllDOG, Pa1e Bl> ~ .·~tting finiSh Rama clo•e 1980 on a bitter note , J . ·-~ . ,, i. ' >,~! • 1 t' .; / 'DEC.2', 1* 81 IOllN SBVA.NU ... ...., ....... IRVING, Tuu. -It WU a nttln1, alm09t perfeet endlnl to wtjat proved to be an imperfect 1980 seuon for the Ram1. What had been a tumultuoua year, ~Uled with contract hauela, abrupt walkouts and constant in· juries, ended quiet1iY here at Texu Stadium for the Rams Sunday. · ' · WHAT AMERICA'S TEAM dld to Georgia's Team was not a pretty \ight. If ll had been a movie, people would have hidden their faces during some of the action-it was that bad. In a total reversal or what took place at Anaheim Stadium two weeks back, the Dallas Cowboys returned a favor to the Rams by 1lappln1 them, 34-13. in frobt of 64,S33 at home and count· less others watching on national television. Everything that worked for the Rams 14 days ago failed miserably in the wild card playoff re- match. Offensively, the Rams' running game was reduced to a crawl, while Vince Ferragamo's bombs were defused into duds. Tt\A! defense, meanwhile, which entered the game as the NFC's best. couldn't stop the run, had a hard lime tackl· ing, and got burned on more than one occasion try· ing to blitz Dallas quarterback Danny While. "We got into a situation where we were play- ing their ga me,·· analyzed cornerbac k Pat Thomas. who spent the game watching from the sidelines with a strained ligament in his right foot. "We just weren 't in control. and when that hap· pens ... " When that happens the Cowboys gain a lot of yards and score a lot of points. In fact, the Cowboys amassed 528 tota l yards against the vaunted Ram defense, 338 of which came on the ground led by Tony Dorsett's 160-yard performance. You have to go back 16 weeks. when Detroit rushed for 330 total yards. to find a show- ing equal to the Cowboys' achievement. -. MIRACUWUSLY, HOWEVER the Rams ·.vere still in the game at halftime, 13-13. It wasn't until the -final 30 minutes that the Cowboys really took charge. "There's not much you can say ," said Rich Saul in a silent Rams' lockerroom afterwards. "We didn't play we ll enough to win by any means. · 'Titis team is funny. One week everything works for us and the next time it doesn't. But you don't win for as many reasons as you do win. We just didn't play well and the second half was a fi asco." The fiasco st.arted early in the third quarter when White caught the Rams in a blitz deep in their own territory and found Dorsett wide open over the middle for a 10-yard touchdown. A few minutes later it was the same thing as NFL playoff schedule SATUROAV"SSCHIDULE Nat .... I C•I•-• Ml-•I Plllleot•DN• ld•ann•l 1 •• • lO • 1n I ·-k•C: .. •-· Bulfalo .. 5-1 01-.c> l<h•Mt l •• , '0,.., I SUNDAY'S SC NII OU LE Am ... lctft Celll«MU Oa~l•nd .i Clt .. land (thannel • •l ~ JO• "' ) Natleftat ,..,,.,""' Oallt l •I Allanl• lch.an11el, •• I p,111 I ,A --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---' as Butch Johnson took the pass over his shoulder : for the M-yard score. By then, it was all over, except the Cowboys , • decided to add an insurance TD early ift the final:, quarter. "They (Dallas) did whatever they wanted - or it looked like It ." s aid safety J eff Delaney ''I don't know if we were prepared or not. "111EY PLAYED A LOT better today, and it's hard lo say exactly what happened. They were really prepared and m aybe we lacked some concentra- tion." Dallas Coach Tom Landry . although he downplayed the revenge factor all week, alluded to ' it in his post-game com-ments "In defense of LA, it's very hard to get up to play a team. the ·way you have to play them in the playoffs, after you've beaten a team like they did us two weeks ago," he explained "We ran well, we blocked well, and we look advantage or the situations as they came .·· The same can't be said or the Hams. however, who were not only beaten in the trenches offensivE:· ly and defensively, but couldn't take advantage or a single opportunity. IN THE FIRST HALF. when the Hams were clearly the aggressor. f erragamo m1!.1>E:d on e pair of long passes one to Jewer l Thomas and the other to Billy Waddy whi<'h might have changed the complexion of the gam t- "lt's too bad we have to end on a sour note. huh?," said Ferragamo to no one in particular. ·1 guess it just wasn't meant to be They were a bet· ter team than us today " Ferragamo finished an incredible year by completing 14 of 30 passes for 175 ,yards and one .. TD. which raised his season totals to 2.54 of 434 passes thrown for 3,274 and 31 TDs far and away the best performance in Rams history But this was not a day to celebrate. and Fer· ragamo wasn't in a celebratin g mood, unyway "I hate to lose like this." he said. "But they ·have the same uniforms and I'm surt-we'll see them again next yea r." ,.,, w1,........ the Rams blitzed a linebacker out of the nickle and kEN STABLER (,RIGHT) IS SACKED BY JOHN MATUSZAK. again White found someone open over the middle Next year. rt seems so far away. until you take into account this season lasted a lifetime Stahler, Oilers out ,, Oakland advances in AFC playoffs O AKLAND CAP) -The Oakland Raiders welcomed Ken Stabler back to his former home field by pounding him lo the turf seven times . • ·'They talked to me a lot, mostly friendly stuff. They asked me if I was all right after they knocked me down,·• said Stabler, who went down and out orthe National Foot- ball League playoffs Sunday with the Houston Oilers. THE RAIDERS, playing what could have been their last game ever in Oakland. gave a sellout crowd a great s how as they trounced the Oilers 27 • 7 in the meeting of American Football Conference wild-card teams. They sacked former teammate Stabler seven times, and cor- nerback Lester Hayes intercept- ed two passes including one re- turned for 20 yards and a game- clinching touchdown in the fourth period. On offense, the Raiders got two touchdowm passes from Slabler's 1979 backup, Jim Plunkett.·· The team which Al Davis, the managing general partner, wanls to move to Los Ange les next year advanced to the semifinals of the AFC playoffs and will be on the road next Sunday, racing the AFC Central champion Cleveland Browns. - Stabler was making his first ap- pearance in Oakland since being traded to Houston early this year. He demanded to be traded after being the target of w'hat he con- sidered unjust criticis m from Davis-. "BUT I CAME HERE to win to-• day. AJ Davis had nothing to do with the game," Stabler insisted when asked about Sunday's homecoming. •·Playoff games are all the same. I don 'l care where they're played. Pressure comes with my job.'• "The only thing we woo by beat- ing Houston was the ritht to play one more game -not two more, not three more," said offensive guard Gene Upshaw, one of lbe Raiders' team captains. ··But we want to brine back what belongs to us, what we de- serve," added Upshaw, meaniq the Super Bowl title. The 1'11 Oakland team coached by John Madden beat the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl Xl, but Sunday's 1ame wq tbe 1\alden' Jint playoff appearance -aiDae 1'17. THE llAIDt:U, at a wild-card lea m, entered the playoff witb the same record. 11~. aa all AFCcon· tenders but at a defin ite disadvan tage. They knew they would have just one home game If they win at Cleveland. they'll be on the road against th~ winner • of next Saturday's game between the Buffalo Bills a'nd San Diego Chargers . "I think they' II go a long way." said Oilers Coach Bum Phimps. whose team had reached the AFC title game the past two seasons as a wild card only to lose to the Pit- .tsburgh Steelers. ' Stabler suffered through one of his roughest days e ver in the Oakland Coli seum. Tight end Dave Casper and safety Jack Tat1,1m, two other players traded from Oakl and to Houston this year. didn't fare much better. BUT TWO FORMER Oilers, running back Kenny King and de· fensive lineman John Matuszak, along with Houston native Hayes contributed g r eatly in t he Raiders' victory . Matuszak, who began his NFL career with Houston. blocked Toni Fritsch 's 37-yard fi eld goal try which would have tied the score at 10-10 j ust before ha lftime. Fritsch made a 32-yarder seconds before, but it was nullified by a penalty. Plunkett completed only eight of 23 passes but several of the completions we r e for big yardage. The first touchdown pass was for just one yard. lotight end Todd Ch'ristensen who made his fi rst NFL reception, but the second was a 44-yard strike to running back Arthur Whittington and it gave the Raide rs a 17 · 7 lead in the opening seconds of the last quarter. "THEY WE RE IN man- t o· man cover age from the beginning and we fell all along we'd be able to do something,·· said Plunkett. .. The Oakland offense had only one first down before King, who got behind a Houston linebacker, hauled in the 37-yard pass in the second period. ,. ·- ,.,,.,,,,,., ....... King, held out ofthe final reg- ular season gam e lo rest a sprained ankle, caught a 37-yard pass from Plunkett to set up the Raiders' first touchdown, one which sent them ahead to stay, 10·7 in the second period. His el· yard run in the final quarter led lo a Chris Bahr field goal which made the score 20-7. Houston had taken a 7-3 lead in the first period on a 55-yard drive which featured the running or Earl Campbell, who blasted one yard for the touchdown. DEJECTION -Rams quarterback Vince Ferr agamo hangs his head after throwing an interception that e nded ,.,, the RamS-' last drive Sunday, , ...:.;;. John Sevano IRVING. Texas -The Rams' football season may be over . . . but only on the · playing field. There's still a lot of business lo lake care or during the off-season, Im· portant business, business critical to the team's future. First and foremost will have to be an al· tempt by management to make· things harmonious again around Rams Park. It's . tough enough these days just tryin1 to play football in the NFL. and the contract equabbles and discord between manaae- ment and players haan 't helped matters thl1 year. " IT 'fA8 CLEA&LY ev 0 ident by the Ram•' elevator ride ttu. seuon that the players cannot perform to their c.pabWU.. wtieft Uiere are other-.prob- leru• on tbelr m.tncla. players them'Selves admitted lhls season was not normal. ·'This season sure has been a weira one," admitted Jack Youngblood. "I guess a good word for this year would be rollercouter. It's been filled with nothine but ups .and downs .·· "THERE WAS A lot of controversy, a lot of problems and a lot of players playing out their OPt.iona," added Nolan Cromwell. ''It just doesn't worl that way. 'Those problems should have been taken care of during the off.season. Either you take care of them before the season or you don't f!eaotiate durina ll." "It'• been a different seuoa, ru say that," 1aid Rich Saul. "I haven't been able • to Jia.ure. this out. It's touah to pll.)' With_ adversity. There'• a lot of pre11ure Man for man, player for player, the Said Jeff aney: "It'•.._· a ae..On of Rama have the belt tafent in the NFL. a lot of hlCba mc1 Iowa. Jl teemed like we'd That'• Just not my obHrvation. either. alwap have three or four aood aamea and 1-whet HArewuU .... ~~~._ .. aDd----dlta·..-.ctanr.Wrn•wr c:oa1111 -pt a n .. te>achel are aaytns about GeoreiS"steadt. ' 1ood ltnU aoinl-?' Clearly, ttepa )lave to be tden duftnc "I hope there won 't be any dilCJ'aetJont the olf·seuon lo'insure another year like next year IO we un play ball ri1ht from 1980 not happening again. Even the the be«innin•. It would be a lat eaaler ii . -: everyone played together and played for the team." "I HOPE ALL our problems are cured and we can open the season with everyone in camp and with one goal in mind," said a somber Pat Thomas. "I can't say dlrec\· ly that what happened this year had an af. feet on us. but indirectly .1 think it did." And on, and on . aod on the C'Ommenta · went. The lrims"""*'&Ve until February now to 'try to sian Vince Ferragamo before 'he becomes a free age11t. And Jaclt Reynolds is another ,key player the Sams hav.e lo make happy. Of course, th•t doesn't even take into account the two Qr three othet' playen who will be oo option years next season. lot better lf •t boat is loaded, althou1h it's sUll tolng to leave if It's not." If the boat ls not full ln i•1 it just may •Yak Uk•this)'ear'ut\i dJd • •• Add Dryer aboUt tbe same: "We played p0orly and they pla.yed OK The~'s rea&br (SM SEVANO. Pa,~ Bil I I • OAA.Y~llOT H I f ..... DD-•••8' ... A ca,e'lle ,.._. .,._ tM ~.,..,.. 'P88torini-writer club, QB 8lam8 car into tree r,._ AP #•f1kta.. OAKLANU Polltei tn Al•IMda HY &.bey are 0 aw•lllnt lhe rl!..llulb of bluod·•l~l tuts OQ.. Oak land Hald'!ni 11u•rter~ll Oan Paltonn&, ln· Jurf'd ,.h('ft h1 c-a.r 11limn\ed U\to a t~ only 30 minuter. an.-1 •Jl ulll"if"d phy1~h'•I fn\.'Ounltr whb a Kouston aport "'n lN rutonm haJ uol hcl"u !!Cheduled lO play in Sw.day's Na l1nnal f·oolball l.e•gu~ Am•rican Conference wlld·card l•lll ~l(r .:amt> "'1\h the lluu11ton Oilers, which the Raiders won 11 7 lie• tu.u l~t'n \1dtihnl'tl wilh a broke.n lt11 urly in lbe , ... 5()f\ • P~lonn1 '.!> rat ~werv«t into th~ lei\ lane of Maitland Ori\ t-11tK1u1 IO I~ p m Saturday m Alameda, police said f>ohr.-Mani tht: <1uairtuback sustuned "lacerations of the mouth .mll hp~ and • bruised nose" and that \he accident was Jul to e><n~!i.!>IH' :,.,.:~d · 'o ehar~e!> hi.d been hied l:.\t! Sunday. Oale R.oben:i.on a Houston sportswriter, said he ran into l'a~tonru Slilurday night at the Edaewater Hyatt, the hotel "h~rt lht! Otl~r!> .rnd writers stayed before Sunday's game ftoberts.oo and Pu:.turm1 had scuffled in Houston prior to a pla> CJff g:.tmt' j ~ t>ar ago, when Pasturini was playing for the 01h.•r-. 'l'nfortuni.Htdy. we left at the s ame time and ran into eat• h other· outside One th mg led to another, and it got very phy:.1t•al on his i.iart hut not on mine," said Robertson of the 111<·1dcOl Saturday q .. , • ., ...... Lefty Oriesell, disclaiming a story that talked of his "wcll·known stupidity" as Maryl&!'d's basketball coach: "Well , I'm not stupid I justtalk stupid." Clarfu-"• •Ito• nip• Ed....,,,.. Z.1 Bobby Clarke's 35-foot s lap·shot mid~ay (ii throu~h the third period broke a l ·l tie and gave ' Philade lphia a 2· 1 victory over Edmonton in Na- tional Hockey League action Sunday as a capacity crowd of 17.474 watched in Edmoolon .. -. Elsewhere in the NHL. Darryl Slttler had \be 14th three-goal game of bis career and teammate BUI Derla10 chipped in with a pair of goals to lead Toronto to a 6·3 win over Chicago . . . Defenseman llkk ~ La Pointe SC'>red bis sei:ond goal or the game ~ft-~~ with less than two minutes to play lo give St. Louis a 3-2 decision over Vancouver. La· Pointe scored at 18:47 with a shot from just inside the blue line after center Berate Federko won a faceoff ... Errol ThomP90D'ssecond goalofthegameat 12 :30 of the third period lifted Detroit to a 4·3 vie· tor y over Winnipeg. Thompson pounced on a loose puck inside the right faceoff circle and snapped a wrist shot which beat Jets goaltender Pierre Hamel low to the far side c1.uKE . . . Montreal connected on three or its four shots in the second pe riod, including S&eve Slu1U's 21st goal. as the Canad1ens topped the New York Rangers, 5·2. The Cana· diens victimized New York goalie 0..1 Soetaert three times in a 3:49span, beginning with Yv•Lambert'1goaljusl3Sseconds from the end of the first period .'. . Buffalo's Dmy Gare seored a third period goal, his 23rd tally of the season, to cap the Sabres' 5-2 win over Boston. Derell Smida, Ric~ 0..., llob McClanahan and 0-L11tt each notched a goal for Buffalo, which was meeting Boston for the first timethisseuon. So. CaroH•a·Plff ~••.,. , ...... , Heisman Trophy winner Geor1e ... en and his EiJ South Carolina teammates clash with No. 3 Pit· • • ts burgh and Heisman runnerup Bqla G,... tonithl - in the Gator Bowl. Pill hopes the game will keep it m the running for the national college football crown. Rogers, a 220·pound senior, brings a string or 21 consecutive 100.yard games into the 36th Gator Bowl against the UH Panthers . . . Injured Philadelphia EagleaflankerQulles.Mll Jrill betieat· • ed with kid gloves this we~k while the team practices in Tampa, Fla. for Saturday's Nataonal Football Conference semifmal I game against Minnesota ... The countdown to the national . college football c hampionship starts tonight. Ir Pitt wins over Georgia, it can just s it back and wait for the big.New Year's Day bowls to settle the final standings. lt'ftl••• aid• "••••• °'• nn-. ScGU Wedmu scored 10 of Kansas City's last 17 m points to help the Kings to a 102·99 National Basket· ball A'ssociation victory over the New Jeney Neta Sunday night. Wedman 's jumper in the final minute put the Kings ahead, 98-96. <Ma.........,, who scored 35 points followed with a basket and S.. 1.-., hit one free throw·t~ clinch it ... The New Jersey Neta named nu JM~ a 12· year veteran ofthe NBA, as assistant coach. • 1'11ne11rf .. •lcet••H pl .. H ..._. Missouri basketball Coach Nona Stewart said • he might know today when sophomore center S&ne Stipanovich, who was slightly wounded by a gun in his Columbia apartment Saturday nipt, will be able to return lo action. Stipanovich accidentally shot himseU but said earlier a gunman had entered liirapartment77 . Un· beaten and top.ranked DePaul, having easily dispensed of one of the West 's best college basketball teams (UCLA), lakes on Eastern power Georgetown toni1ht in the first round of the Cabrillo Classic in San Diego. In the other game, LaSalle meets San Diego State ... Nla&nu. the greatest bat· ness colt ever to pace, lis leaving the racing circuit with all · . world records except one under bis girth ~ . . Pft•ler _Miel!Mre, ridden by LefK&~P1mea1.-sta)'ed within striktq.dis· lance of the lead most or the way, then won a stretch duel 1• with Galaxy Ubra lo win by a bead in the San Gabriel Han· • dicap on the turf at Santa Anita Sunday ... Bart S&arr. whom the Green Bay Packers have decided to remove as 1eneral manager. said he will accept the NFLclub's offer to stay on as coach for at l~ast another year. t. : Following are the top sports events on TV tonl9ht. Ratings U are: " / ./ 1 excellent ; ./ ./ ./ worth watching; I I fair; I forget f .• lp.m., Ch•nneti ./ ./ ./ ./ GATOR BOWL: Pittsburgh vs. South Carollna. Announcers: Al Mich.els anct Ara Parseohlan. The Panthers ch>sed out the regular season as the No. 1 c»- fenstve team In the country In both rushing and total defense. Three-time All·Amerle'ln Hugh G'"'1 Is one of thit big reaons for the Panther success. He wtll be facing Helsm.n Trophy win· ner Geor99 Rogers who captured the NCAA Division 1·A rultllng title with ~!..711 yerds. Another a.ttte to watch wllt bt betw91n former hlvn schOot tnmmM9s T Whit. flt PmlbU'9h anct Ith of . • SEVANO. • • no way \0 define what happened out there. "Wby were we flan Who knows. It's up to each 1Ddh1dual to pnpare hllnMJI for • 1ame. lnten1l1.y comes from belni in· tent. We didn 't prepare o urtelvH very well. When you're not intent, you're not re.' ally wlth lt. . "I expected to come in here and beat them but we dldn 't manifest that at aJI. We deserve to be home and they deserve to be ln Atlanta " : ._--· .,,,.-* * • Last add Dr er, on the Ram's ability to um at on an o ff at will: I' we' re quite Capable or beating anybody we play, and there are only maybe three or four teams an the NFC who can do that "Da11as ean do it. So can Philadelphia and Atlanta. It's funny the way it works out.·· • • • Add Jack Youngblood: "One little extra effort on our part might have changed things <re· re rring to the game) "I still think we're \he best. team in the NFC. although we were n't that good today." • • • Add Ferragamo, on whether he feels he'll be wearing a Ram uniform next year · "There's some doubt in my m ind because they·ve waited this long to do anything . If yo u a s k me whether I 'm opt1m1s t1c or SPORTS BREAK I FOOTBALL / ICE DANCING I • CINCINNATI <AP) -A gunshot wound 1bouldn't pre· vent boxing champion Aaron Pryor from training for bis second title defense on Feb. 7, his manager says. "We were very fortunate. The good Lord shined down on him,'· manager Buddy LaRosa said of Pryor 's shooting Sunday at a Cincinnati residence. Pryor, 25, was listed in good condition overnight at Cincinnati Gene ral Hosfital, where-he un· derwent bric surgery for a flesh wound on his chest and two wounds on his right forearm. Pryor, originally from Cincin· nati, is the reigning World Box· ing A ssociation j unior welterweight champion. Police said they recovered a 22·eahber re volver with two spent shells at the residence where Pryor was s hot during an a lte rcation Sunday afternoon. Sgt. Angelo Dillinger said police would ask Pryor today wh ethe r he wants to press c h arges. A woman was held overnight for investigative de· tention but was not charged. police said. LaRosa said Pryor, a right· handed boxer. was fortunate he sustained only minor injuries to the arm and chest. doubtful, I'm both." · JUDY AND JIM SLADKY ARE APPEARING IN ANAHEIM. La Rosa initially feared that ·Pryor wouldn 't be able to defend his title Feb 7 against Saoul Mamby, the World Roxing Coun- t:i l champion Rut LaRosa later sa id the undefeated fighter suf. fered no serious damage to mus· ('(e or bone in the r ight forearm, "h1ch fi g ured· heavily 1n his 25 knockouts in 27 victorious bouts. On the problems the team had this year "I don 'l know if we we re all on the same page or whal. The problems we had all year long finally hit us." ~manding art • • • If you ha ve a con cret e driveway near your house that should provide you with a good insight as to the hardness of the Astroturf at Texas Stadium. After 10 years of use. there is absolutely no more give or soft· ness to the turf at all Maybe that ·s why club offi cials began an immediate transplant for the 1981 season after S unday's game. Sladkys: champions on and off the ice· "As far a s Aaron ·s concerned. it's a s uperficial wound," I.a Hosa said "lle's 1n good con· d1t1()n The doctors said he can l>e an the gym again in four or flvcda}-s " Anything they replace 1t with will be better than what was there. • • • Only one minor catastrophe oecurred on the trip and that's when two equipment containers, with the Rams· game jerseys, wo und up in Uetro1t. after the field crew failed to unload them at the airport Friday upon the learn 's arrival After a few phone c alls , however, the uniforms were re· turned by Saturday morning. The way the team played they s hould have asked the I.ions to send their jerseys. • • • With Pal Thomas standing helplessly on the sidelines. Rod Perry nursing a blow to the head on the trainer's bench, and Ivory~ Su11y back in the lockerroom with bruised ribs. you knew the Rams were in trouble in the second half when the two cor· ne rbaeks we re LeRoy Irvin and rookie Lucius Smith. * •• Jack Reynolds may have sum m ed up the season best when he disgustingly said at practice Saturday. "They ·ve ruined my birthday, they've ruined my Christmas. they've ruined my season and they 've ruined my life." By CAROi. MOORE Of"'" D•••r Pilot Sl•ll After fi ve national C'ha m pions hips, four world cla S!. medab and mm• year!> in a pro· fessional ice s how, what do skat· mg c hampions do for an encore" "Get your nam e in the rule book ." advises J udy Sladky "That way you kee p invC>lved with your sport, ) our <1('h1cvc men l 1s r e m c mhf"rl•d oft1:n a round lhl.' wvrlcl <Jnd your <0 0ach1ng assi:-.tan c·l· 1'> welcome · ,Judy an<I her hus band .. ltm, appearing with lhc Ire Follies and llohda ) on Ice Comtllno:d Show:-at lht· i\nahc1m Convert t1on Cenler through Tuesda). a r{' kn o wn fC>r the vi t a l1 1\ t hey've put into 1C<.' dancing · Their teehmcally de m andmR art diffe rs from pair skating, empha~iz1ng 1ntncate footwork and rhythmic anterpretat1ohs in stead of jumps. SJ,lins and hf1s "When we we re competing , the s teps were mostly waltzes, fox trots and tan~os since the s port st arted m Vienna an the 1860s and was practired mostly m EYrope. "We wanted to li ven up the event to make it m ore fun for us and the Judges "During the eight-year cam paign to get ice dancing accept· NBC to scrap microphones Many of the Ram players fttl the same way, and I don 't have to give you three guesses who they're angry at MIAMI IAP) A little·known * • • section of the NCAA rulebook will Just as a final crowning touch. probably scrap NRC TV's plan to the Rams United charter home let the natwn eavesdrop on the de· was forced to land in Palmdale. fen siv<' c aptains during t he after being re·routed from On· Orange Bowl footb a ll game tario, due to heavy fog at the Los Thursday night. offi cials admit. Angeles International Airport. Spokes me n for the ne t work and The DC-8. which was supposed the Orange Bowl t:nmm1ttee said to arrive al LAX -al 6:30 p.m.. S u-nday ni ght the National landed al Air Force flat No. 42 in Collegiate Athletic Association Palmdale at 7. Now. don't ask hadn't informed them that it m e w1'ere we were 1rec<ru~se..-"lf~_,w ..... o.uJd violate a rule to pul don't know, All I know is that we microphonesonlwoplaycrs. landed at a restricted military base and they wouldn't let us off the plane until the buses ar- rived. Anyway, the buses got there al 8 and the team finally made it to LA'JC at 9:30. Quipped one player : "This is just a great way to end the season. We deserved this.·· Miller coaches Senior Bowl MOBILE, Ala. (AP) -Head Coach Red Miller or the Denver Broncos will coach the South team ln the annual Senior Bowl football an.stars game on Jan. 17. officials announced. Miller. 52, has taken Denver to the National Football League playoffs in three of four seasons. His won·lolt record is 39·22. The North coachint staff and the l'Olten for both teams will be announced later. The 32ncl Senior Bowl will be consecutive year. CBS bu both the telnialon and radio rilhU. BUT A GAME official had re· ce1ved such word, they said . The rule forbids equipping a player with "a ny e lectronic. mechanical or other signal de- vices _for the purpose .of com. mumcatfng with any source. Penalty 15 yards and dis· qualification of the player " NBC. which is televising the .New Year's night bowl game between 1''1orida S tate and Oklahoma. had announced plans last month to bug linebackers Paul Piurowski or FSU and Mike Reilly of the Sooners. l'They cannot do that·," said Tom Hansen of t he NCAA television committee. Hansen said he notilied Mike Weisman. Nft:'s producer for the game. and bowl officials that there was a potential problem. cd a-. an Olymµit• s µort . we c:hureographetl a routine we wanted to c:.~1 1 'l\m e r 1can f'olka. But tho· 1iffi\1al:. said 1hat s ho.,.,t:<l 11111 mud1 na t1onali!>m "So we c:hangcd lht• title to Y ank<•e Polk<i ' and the lnterna 11on al Sk<.1tmg l 'nwn approve<! it as th1.: only compulsor> c1ance t·reated h~ Am<"ric·ans l t't' dant·t•r!> m U!>l µer form three d~n c1:s a c·o inpul!.ory, L"hosen h} Judi-:es lh1• n ight he f ore a t•o mpc-t1t111n . an 11n~1nal "C'I pattl'rn -.cll'<'led ) l·.irly <1nd a frl'c c·ho1cl· f>H lhl' we. Juch 1 ... prc">1df·nl of the lnlern<.1t1rmal l'nunt 11 1m Therapeutic.' Ice ~k allng . !>UP port:. the !';pec:1al OI~ mpico; :.and 1s on the ad\ 1s or} bl}ard of \\omen s !:!ports Foundation 0 f h1:r · P!>~ cholo g~ of the t\lhlt·te .. let:I ur1.·s <iround !he c·ountry. shC' -.a, s · I do t:ven . thing I can tt) ~el people 1n Lerested m putting on skates ano hilling the ire You'd he amazed at the results' ..The foundation <11ms to in C're <ise the number of \\Omen part1c1p<it111~ m sports ut every level. <•vf'n wHlking aroun<1 the blot·k ··we also spuns.o.r IOK runs and our magazine show~ woman athle tes how to spe<'1alize with bette r equiµm ent. di('I t r<1in1n g and exercise " She travels \\1th 1 .... u pairs of skates. her u~ual performing ones and a spare ··1 might as well use r entals. they're so stiff" for em ergencies How often does Lhe couple re· hearse" .. Yo u 'r e al"'a's a liltl e ne rvous on a ne w rink . hut afte r you ·v(· done a number 150 times. you knowll hyheart "We have one s pin whe re Jim holds my fool and whips me around \\1 th m y head near 1he ice That still scares m e -;o J make sure we µracti ce-that part once a day " Althou~h -two major ice shows have combined . she sees the merger as beneficial lo skaters "We still have three touring t•ompanies so the rc·s less com· petition for starring roles," she says. "We feel more confident that we have a home here or in another show by our producers Irvin and Kcmnefh Feld. '·Wh en yo u fee l better bac ks tage. you look better performing on the ice ' UNDERDOG wint er to complain about it to 1Jurselve:. ·· . Schembechler. who s a id he forgot <1hout the news conference <1ntl !>howL.,1 up Hn hour and a half I l::i tc ~aid he w<1s convinced that e\ e r~ player on his team wants \' v1.•ry bCJdly to\\ ID the Rose Bowl m ' order lo put the stig ma of losing hl•h1n<l 1hcm • 'Winn1n~ the Hose Howl would ' mc·an a 101: said the Michigan } • Mach. "'ho suffered a heart at· tack ou\ here on the eve of the 1970 J,!amt• his f1r~t .. See. whe n you "1n ;i Int. the 1.:mpha!>&S 1s going to bt• on the f C\t. losses "~o"' I don't believe there's a pla~ er on m~ team that doesn't "a nt to win this game. But. I don •t "ant them so light they can·t pl3 ) Nobody's going to s las h ttis "r1~l 1f "'e lose again " James s :iid Sche mbechler agreed that the key to the game m1j:lht lie \\Ith the s pecialty teams. s1nte both squads mateh up very W<'ll both on offense and on defense .. We beli eve in the ,ki cking game,"' J ames said ... We prac· l ice 1t CJl m ost eve r y day. som etimes for 20 minutes at a rral'k O\·cr the scason. you may "in 1heoff1msive game about four lime~ anc1 you may win the de· fens1ve game ra ve limes. but we try lo win the ki cking game nine llmcs a season ·· ··Plus now we have more - room for the young skaters who realize they won't quite become champions They still have so much talent and charisma that they are joining us earlier now ·· And the more gala costuming this >:ear suits her fine. "I've appeared as Snoopy on numerous TV specials and l eventually want to get into act." ing after rve repaid all that I've learned from skating ... "We've watched the .. Se;.'in;io~r~--l!ll!l!Jll!! ----~ f _3ADI _ _,__..,,,... _____ .__... .... wl c'nlelr~l.D ••c:J....or& Basketball -Ut rvlne vs.~texas A&M In tM KOA Cl•slc, tJon I baYe been with. but I think .. .. S:SO p,m., KWVE (109 FM); USC vs. Mlnne!Ot., 1:30 p.m., lt ctvee you a definite advantate KNX <1070). to coach ln the Hme:· Miller Hid . • 1 • l . • .. I OR THE AEOOfl> / IOATINO / IASKE18ALL llf'C-.OCA19PUVM• c .............. u .............. lM A ........ 0.11•• l I ~ ) ID 11 0.1 I.A O el ~-. .... J T~ t '"ft u 1,a t11U.ot ~,..... .... ,. • II f _. ~· l(Atie ~ftl ft JN'U tf .. ft , t; •• _..°" OM\I OA• 0. ~" u ,..,. ·~~'·" '"' '' OriwW'ft t0 ,._,, fn>tn W htt• t!MCMif!f• t 10 I O•• 0 ,.....,..... • 1 p. -.~ h c,;m ,.._,"''• tW•U~'W• A M\D 6-N•Mllc• U1 0.1 ''"' Dttwnt ........ I .... I) 1' ht/ •Ill ~.,\lftll 'fMO. ... •<tO ...... ,,, ••nh --·\.Se~ """I\ F..,.-._.,_.•a t u It) U .i I 11 U I • l'f I ... 111 10 ....... "& •••lb > ~ II It .... -1 .... -n R USHIN(; L-o\ ,"9t._,, fr-..u~•' U • 6 1 , • .,, It.. 0.Jla> 0vt .. 11 U 19') ~P""ll' . ,. PASSINI; l o• •no•IH For1•11•""' 11 JO J 11' 0.11 .. Wll1I• 11 h ) 1~ AECEIYING l O\ Al>Q•I•• O•nn•rll • "' ,.....,....) l-l• 0•11•• 0 Pf••>On • .0 Oorevl1 J 'JI AFC WILD CARD PLAYOFF Reldeta 27. Ollert 7 k-llY Qll.,ton t1ou\tOn 0 ••1•nO I U 0 0 I J7 0 1171 Oall FC !Mflr 11 Ho.. ,.,...II 1 run I Frlh Cll Mi< Id Ook CllilSltnstn I ~n trom Plunkett tBellr *IOI oo W111rnn111on " P•" from PhM~•ll 18ellr klCkl O•k FC &.!Ir JI O•k H•V .. lO ln1orC•Pt1Clfl rtlurn 18..n1 k10I . A il.1•2 c;.mesulltllo ..... ().it •• 12 Fir\! oo""'' Au)"-S w•rd\ PanlnQ v•rcn lJ '1 lS 111 ,,. 13' Return y•rch P•UH I• SS 1S l/.l I U I q U •·SI I I 1jj I•• ll '1 Pun ls F.,mbltt-IOS1 Pen• tt1H v•rct\ ••ri.i...11..-" RUSHING HOU•lon. C•mpO•ll 11" Car~nttr S·• Oo 1an<1 1o n9 •>·SS von Ee9llffl , ..... W111t11nvton S 11 PASSI NC Hou•lon, Stabler, IS h 1 11) Ca mpbell 0 ·1 O 0 O•k land, Plunutt 1·13·1·1 .. RECEIVING HOu'1on, Bart>er •·ll .. Renfro, J.6', C.•per J.l l Cer penter J.1t Oakland. W1111tu•91on 1 .... Che•ler J.11 NFLplayona WILD c:AllD f'L.AYOl'l'S S-.y'tkerft Anwric• C-lenMe Oekland 11, H...,.ton 1 IMllMalC..,..,...c:• Della> Jot, R...,., ll DIVISIONAL f'LAYOI'" s.t.,., .• o-•• AnwrkMIC ...... _o 8uffaloelS.nOle90IC,,.nnelUl lp.m ) Na et.YI c:-fer-• MlnnHOI• •• Pt\ll~lpllla ICll•nMI ; .. 9:30 a.m .) s..laY'• Gamn .r.-kM Celofer-• Oaklencl a1 c1ew1-cc n.nnel • •• 9 JO a.m.I ... ,..,..1c...,-• 0.llH •I AUM\to ccn.-11 •• I p.m I CONl'lltlNCI CM-f'l°"SMln 14Mtay, JN. II -iu.c-ter-• T ••ml to i. dlllHmlMO Nat1eN1c ... ..,....:. Tum• lo i. dlltermll'Od SUf'I• llOWI. JIV S-.y,JM1.ll , .. _o.te_I AFC <_,,.,ion ~. NFC <Nmol"" l pm (PSTI ·COLLEGE llowt roundup TONIOMT OATOlt llOWL .. J«•-ltta,l'to. No. l PlllSIMrOI' I 11).1) •• No ti 5outl'I Caroli"• 11·3), IClwlnnel I al• p m I Wl!ONIUDAY aLUl!aoNNl!T aowL (atH-1•1 No 13 Not11'1 Caroline ltO·ll •• h••I\ (1·11. (C,,.nntolllal Sp.m I TMUllSDAY COTTON .OWL (atOallatl No. t Alabama 19 11 •• No • B••lor ( 10 I), CCNnnel 1 al 11. 10 a.m I OttANGI! aOWL (atMl...,.I) No 2 Florld• Stalt 110·11 .. NO • Okl•l'IOm• 1'1-21. ICNnnell•tSP m I •OSIE aowL , ..... _., No "w.,.111n91on ... n •• No s Mlcl'l1oan ... 21, 1Ct\llnnellal1P m I SUGA• aowL , ...... on....,1 No 1 o.c>rola 111.01 •• No 1 Nolr• Dame ... , II, CO..nnel 1 el II am ) l'•tDAY f'l!ACM aowL Colt Allafltal Vlr9lnla h <l'I (f.l) '" No 20 Ml•m•. Fie ll·l> ICNnnol 2 al noont SATU•DAY, JM. It l!Hl·Wfftilori• ... I -(.etf'a leAltal Eul "'·West (Chennel 1 fl noon) MULA aGWL (atMeMltolttl EHi•• -SI SATUllOAY, JAN. '7 Sl!NIO• aGWL 1 .. Metil ... Ale.I Nortl'I •• Sou111 ICl\a,,,,.I 1 .i 10 •.m I SUNOAY,JAM. II JAPAN-.OWL ( .. YellMllma, Ja -1 Ee\! vs. W." HIGH SCHOOL AH.CIF Dlvlalon IV "'"' T•-Off-• f'ft. f'la.,..., IC_ Ml. Wt. Cl. E-Alltn, 8a!dWln Pk s.11 110 Sr E-Oall, Wllltlier Cllr 6· I 20S Sr E-Noltell, Parac.iele l ·IO 165 5r. t....,AltaDerr't,.AltUl.l'D •·2 24J Sr. T-Gff, •oyal 0.k t ·2 220 Sr, G -Ta•. Tr-Ml 1'11 Sr G -ttOYles, 8ell·J•lf •·1 710 Sr c -w arr9n, llo Bear •·I 220 Sr 8 -aodlM, MelodYI-.. 1 19S Sr. 8-Santlogo, 8aklwln P• •..O 155 Jr e-s•-· Royal O.k 5.11 195 Sr B-M.ilttomer't, Bannln(I .... 110 Sr a -Riek••. Tella<nepl Sot 110 Sr• 8-Ada-. Alat< ... ro . M 1•s Sr IC __ ,M. 9ona. Ml 1IO Sr l'tnlt.em~w DL.-Blr, Mlrelftl• .. l 210 Sr t>L-)ltar, Rio MtM .. l 20S Sr 01.-Spurr, Atatc-ro S.11 I'll Sr . DL-htWI. Tal>ac.~ "'2 JU Sr OL.-ValdlH, S-kl P11 S.11 ,.. Sr Le-tt-. Ille ... r H 175 Sr LB-hecll, .._,,ln9'on .. , 212 Sr LB-H•ll..cl, Valley Ow •·I 20t Sr LB-Ewlfll. UIWlldele Ml 115 Sr OB-~IW"""'" M 1IO Sr. 08-.....,, Or.,,.. Lull\ S·ll 1'0 Jr oa-c-li, SI.,,...... s.. 1u Jr oa-Olllte . .-..i11es .. , 11s Sr. oa-~.,.....,.. s.11 110 Sr ...~ ..... y-~ 9111""'9, lt"•IOllll I -~r. ,..~- \e1te M.AOI I....._._.,....., '1 ..... ,.. -c.ali(•... 41) .... , .. I ... .... .._I H ..... ,. i 1HeO t ee!, I c.-, .. \Alt "90• 1-• L ..... I • ..... ,.,, 1 ~·-· 1a. (Allee Mn. IJ WI04 ••U e Mli9'...._ 1• Mftlle, H l-UNI, - , • .-'"·' '"""'• ............. 0·~10 Ill .., • ..,, "' telt<• IN", 10 ~nd -• 144 MllU•, loe '"°'" fl\I\ I wlltte ... 1111•• IM M et ••r•I \IAI. N"'M Ill ..,,,,.,. • ... ;o..• c ull h .. C. .. ll1111j0 0, 1JOm•''"'el \It• 01190 11..-..1 lh •n1o1I•" •1 -.v11110 ...... ••••• ., '°'. tl\11 1 111111 <Od. ,.,, .... < ... 1111110 ........ OCIAltllM ' 1!!10 anglft, .. tMlll b•u to c •llto -.. ~ ~t. fl•ll 4U lllol t.etol •IOGelDO m •"11••n " °""••114•. It < •ll<O 110 1J QOttllll. J\ m•( •ttfl > ll"t 00 I llO rll(0.(0ll MA•lteA D•L aay • •lQle•> JOO t OO <~ JOO m..•or•I. I QOnllO SA•TA liloefl(A Ill •11111•" l;MI m•<i.tr•I 11 -lo » Wild b•u . • 011(0 M U I Dt•k \ff-~, 1 M llDf;I MALlaU .. """" n .... d ..... 10 1 •llO O." llO rO(ll llU. l'A•AOtY: COltl 12 .n9J•" tllO •O<~ <oO t l O• (00 f'OltT MUINIMI. IAmorlUIOI ,. •"91•" .. roct. coci. 1 11no <Od VIMTU•A Sl ·~·~ 6SI tOO cOd 1 11no lOd 10 •-'°" SAltTA UAUltA IS.. 1. .... 1 .. 1 .. •"II'•" 111 C.lkO DU•, ) wnd b•U. I O.• r •< "d • • 1IOl\llO. '3 ro<' "'" 112 mac Ur t i IG•MU -..Clll )9 a<>Olt"' S.~ rock COd ~ rell roc k t Oii, 11 hnQ < 00 91 rn•Oertl AVILA UY ( ... r'I '-" Lt1I') tO •nQla-. ff1 h~O <00 I t rfd ro<.~ t od I 17 roe: II. h\.h 11 m•<kttret -(_ > . NBA WUTEltN CONl'E•INCE Midwest Dl•l,1911 w L f'cl. 54 n A 1110<\IO lS .. ... IC•ns .. Clly 11 2) O S Hou510f IS ,, l()S Ulal'I IS 2J NS Denwier " ,. ))J 0•11•• s )l 118 f'ecllk 0 1w1,1on Pl'IOenl• l1 I 800 &..•ller1 11> ll •IO Go lden ~talf 10 18 SJ• Porll•nd ,. 10 . ., ~•n D••oo " 10 .,. Se•tll• ,, 20 lSq EASTERN CONl'EAENCE ltl .. lllo< Di•ISIOll Pnt••Cl•IP"td )) • 9 0!alOn ,. • Ht w 'Vor~ ,. 1l W•\tunoton 1• 11 N•wJerwy 11 11 C...tr>1I OIWISI'" M 1tw•ulf:H 11 II lnd1•na 11 " C"•<'•OO 18 10 AttanttJ II 11 Cltnl•nd 11 11 IH1ro1t 10 11 ~il't'S SC:Or·eol L.•••rt 121, Pllil-lpll•• • ,. Kansas C11y 101, N•w J•rwy ~ Tolll ... t'lG•mt Dallas at Cit.eland T-.Y'•G•mH 1.•hnat Ulall Dallas al New York Oe1rof1 al Atlanta 111111woukff •t WasNnolon Suttle •I S.n Antonio Golden Sl•lt •1 Kansas Ctl• Ntw Jerwy at Clllygo S•n 01-at Houslon lndl•n• al O.nver Bo•lon al "'-"'• Pllll-ll>f\i• •1 Porlland e .. 111 •• q •31 J08 /I I SSl .,. .. , )08 2U Lakere 122. 71•rs 111 9• ,, ' 9 qt ' ,, . ' 10 I> 11 11' I) IJ ' l '' 8 '" 21 I> • 10 u•, 11 f'MILADEL~MIA -Erwlrua 1•. c Jones 6 Dawkins II. C-• 12. TOMV 12. 8 J~ 11, Hotllns 11. Ricn•rO\On •. MiJ1 4 Tot••~ O 11 1• "• LOS ANGELES CllO,,.S .. Wiike\ J1, Ab dul·JAl>b.or Jot, Certtr 6 Nixon II, Cooper U. Brewe• •. Jorden l. Landll..i..rger • Tola•• ~,..n 121. sc ... ,, °'"'rt•" '"""-'""'• ~ ,, 13 )1-11• LO\ Af\9el~ JI :5 JS )1 122 Tftrtt-ooln1 QO.al Hollin\ Fouled out None Tol•I lou1• Pt\11-lplll• 11 LO• AT''~,~~ JUNIOR COLLEGE Oxn•rd IO, Saddleb•ck 711 OlMA•O -Collins 10. Rosur 21 8"'" Ciiia •• J Clt•wnl II, Vincent ., Mt Adory 2, W c 1e ... n18.1Ce111 •. H•ll 2 SADDLEaACK P ~Casas II, Bowland 11>, Tnornlon 11. Cornish 8 McC1"''°' I I 01 at 12. Ga\IMrd S. Jone• 1 Hallllmt' Oxnerd, 36-JS Eno of reoulallon. 6q.t.9 Tola! I01JI\ Saddle.,.n 11> O~nua 1l, foul•d out Cornisn l ~add l •bdC ~). 1111cc1 .. suv tS.dOlebao 1 Gup••d !Sad dltbockl, B")lcc1'1111 IO•nardl THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE College Ton1Qht UC trvfn~ 'WS Te•cl\ A&M 1n • KOA Clusic •I Bllllnqs Monl · u ol San 01~0 al c;..11forn1a, Fresno 51 al N 11 llnol\. P• lflc al Por11llt'ld SI San OlfOO SI vs LaSalle at Cab<1llo Clau« on !>an 0 1000 USC vs. M HY'M!\Ot• at Hohdtty (l•\\1( U\ LO\ Ar>Qelt•. Nt•ada·LaS Ye<;ia• ., Holy CroS• al l •• Veoa• Clas.I<, P•Pl>t'rd•"" V\ NW Lo..1.iana •I Evansville Cl•n•< T"t\Oav UC 1n.1ne al ICOA Clau 1t Ulall SI al IOallo SI • USIU al lonq ~at h SI w .... supPf'oor al Stanford oN•dnt\day Ftev>O SI di ''"•n•a• 51 F riday P ortland St al U C San1.i Barbara; Ulal'I el Newada l •• V•o•• Wyomtr'IO al SOn OIC}O SI sa1 .. rc10-Port1ond s1 a·1'uc 1n11n•. 1 JO, BU at NevaOa-L•• Ve99s , Pu9111 Sound "' UC Sant• Barbora! Lo no Bt&<l'I SI al Colorado; Stanford al Cal, OrtQon al Arizona , 0•'90" SI. al ,.,,,ona St • UC San ore11irarFT~l7San JDS'• St al Neveda Reno, Sa cramenlo SI al Paco llc Wnl'l1nqton al UCLA, Wa\h1n9lon SI al USC, Weber SI. al Ulan SI .. USIU "' W To es SI ; C.• Poly (Pomonal al U ol $an Oleoo Junior college TonlQlll OranQe CoaSI al Ba,.low Tournam11nl, SaddltbaCk al San1a .Ana T ourn•,,....,t, • p.m. TuH.doly...-Orenoa Coes! al Sa,.tow. Tou•natnen~;. SOCl41a0.ck •t Soni• AN Tourn•ment. Friday Easl lo• Ang•les •I Oran911 cou1, 1·J> S•l.,rday-Oran(lll Coest o1 Imperial Vallty, 7. Gotdlln Wesl at S.n Oleo<>~ ... /·>O; Saftt• Anaat~l-0.Ck, 1·>0 High tchool Ton1911t-Edl'IOft •t SI. l'r•ncls T~M· m.-i.t, San C..,,_ta .. Chula Vista Tou,..... -nl, Oceon View at VIiia Perk Tourno· m~. HIH'lllf'9IOll 8eac.l1 al 8rH T-M· melrtf D•n• Hiiis •I l\lortll Torr•M• Tournamenc, F-1.in V•ll•Y. Maler 0.1, E\leMI•, Mann•. !Wwport H•fbo•. Cotta Mue •IO....-Tout.....-. TuaMl•v-St. F<oncls Tovr'IMlment 11no1,; Ora119e Tour__. flNls; S.n Clemente .. C l'lula Vlsl• Tourftamant; Villa Pa•" Tourna,,_t llf'eh; Hl#ltll\Qfon Bea<11 .. Bru t_,.,.,,,; Nortll Torrence Tou,,.._ menltlMIL -Friday-Saft Clemente al Cllule Viti• TourMnwnt; Hllflllft9I011 8a1Kll •I 8 ru To1irnament; New119rt Harber. l<wlnt. Ulllwerslty, Mat~ Oet •I Ctnyon Tour,,. ment; ,,..._ti Ocea11 View It 11.m.I. Sat11nl9y-8tff T-M-1 flllAIS/ Cllllla Vista T~ llftelt; NtwlJIAf1 Herticw. 1rwl11e, ~ 0.1, University •I CanVCI" Tovr11•'"'"'· ... V•llty, tM!tlftllOll llHcll); Me'-' 0.1 It Pelm s.r11111--.1. ft1•'4ey-l'.1t111<I• l•to•-•llt flMta; ll'elm _,...~~lllell IMMH WedflftNy-P .. m ....... tevn1emen4 1111e1• c-.r Ottl T _ _,_...._ lldlNll•. .... 11111.,-......-k ........ 1a~,..,.... .. uc1,.,,1 ... m . NHL WM.IS CIC*l'l•INCI -1tOl,,_W • ..... MonhHI Htf110rd Pllltl>Ol'I 0.lroll W L T 01' OA Pb. u • • 1St 121 jO 1t U • U6 109 '' 13 IS I 10 172 M 11 11 1 U1 ,.. 2' . " , ... I.. 2S ---•Dl•lt .... B11t1alo 11 t • 10 10I H 11t11nneliblAI II • I ttt 10. l2 IOtORIO 13 17 S 141 1St JI IM>•lon 11 •• 1 121 11• SI Quet>ec 10 17 I 11i W ti CAMf'allLCCNlll'l•INCI! Pwlc~ Dlwl• .... W L T 01' GA f'U NY lslandllr\ Pllll•dtlllflle Colo••v w .. 111n9(0ft NY R•noorn U I 8 1'9 119 SI 1• • s 10 .. " IS 12 I 113 111 » n 13 10 llt 12' M 12 .. i 129 , ... tt sm,tt1eDlwltl• 51 lo"" V•ncouvt'r Chl<•QO Color•OO Edmonton W1nnip;eq 2' q S ISi Il l S • ll II t Ut 12t <J 11 10 • Ill 111 JO 12 11 I> IU U3 11 • 10 ~ 111 l<J 77 1 11 1 '°' llO 11 s-o,·tScern e .. 11.io 5, So\I"" 1 MO~lfHI S. NY R•noe" 1 Pllll-lpf\la 1 Edmon1on 1 foron•o •. c ... coqol Otl•oil •. Wlnnl""9 J S1 Loul• l V•ncoo,.., 1 TellleM't O•mH Nu 9amo' ~MCl.,ll'd Klntt 4. BluH 4 ScOf • llY f'trloO• SI lour\ 1 • I -• Lo• AnQele\ 0 J I ~ Finl f'erfod 1 SI LO"I~. Ftclerko IS I Currie, Micllelll• 111. S 0 1 SI Loul\, Babych 11 (unanls1· Mii, II N Penellle• B•bV<l'I. Sil . 0 n . Wells. LA, S·20. Turnbull, ~IL, 6.40, T~r ••on. LA. 8 SI. Sull•r. SIL, 10.0), M Murpnv. LA, 10 OJ ,T .. rnDull. 511. 11 II L. Murpnv, LA, 17 SI, Norw1cn, SIL. 19 " Sac-Period l Lo• t\n9Ple•. S1mmtr J8 IT dylor 01on11el, I ~ • Lo• A"Qt lt\, 0 1onne 11 'S1mm~r T tlYfOI" 1. s )4 s LM AnQttles. Sun mer 3q tKor .... L Murpl'lyl, 11 OS • SI LOI.II\. Dunlop 6 '""""'•l•d) 11 10 Pen•l11<t\ M 1111 .. rP"v. LA. 1 II T •Ylor l A • .. Ull)O'nlf' Sil ' .. Paley, SIL 9 .. Well\. LA 11 07 OunlOO, SIL •• JJ 01onnr LA II 31) Tlllrd l'enod I SI lou•~. rumbull 11 IOunlOPI, I) 01 8 lo\ Anoe It\ l .tvlor 1J t01onnot. 1q 1• Ptn•ll1n Lt••• LA S 00 P•lf'V. SIL. ) 00 P•lh SIL. q lO Sl'lo" on Q0.11 SI Lo"" S S 9 .. • Lo• AnQtlP\ q 10 10 1'I Gooltn ~· LOUI\ Lllll LO' AnQ<!lf'• l .,\\410 A I) seq Auatr•llan Open l•tMel-•I SUNDAY'S•ESUL TS Sec_A....,.Sl,.fes M.,lt Edmonctson do;! JO>e•Luls Clerc, I> 7. •·>,•·•. P•1 Ouc>rtdt'I i.an Lf'ndl, l·S.•·3.J.6, 1·•. l ·I>, Brlld Ore-ti Otf. S.ndy MaVH, >-•. 6·3, •·3. 1.1> c; .. 111ermo VIias det Stt•e Oocl'lerly, :i... 6 •. 1>·1. •·I , John Seclrl doll. Jon•lllOn Smllll. defaull, V1clor Pecci clef Ktvln Currwn .. •.•·1, 1>·3 Or•nge Bowl junior tourney l•t Mlomil -·· l'IM I Sl...,H JdokomNy\lrO<'mOM Carlo•C••l•ll•n 1 S , . Wame"'' l'IMI Sl...,a\ 5.,Hn M.uunn dtl Rf'f\016 Saw It.• J. J 6, •.. . S•nt• Anh• SUNDAY'S •ESULTS 1Tlllrdof11 .... , '"""'"!Ill"'" m .. 11,,.1 Fif \1 r &t ,. l mo o r t W 1n eo IOelaMU\\Ay•I. I oO • 20, 3 '°· Chieftain Loo~ ISho•mAkPrl, 8 •O S •O. CIAncv IP1trtf'). 11 l() Seconcl fitc• Sall !>and• I Oelallounav•I 10 10. •.20, 3.80. Bronze Siar (Wlnlandt, I 80, l 00 Barn~lorm Shadow I Hawl•yl, 2 80 \?clallydoublt l/·SI pel0540 10 Tl'llrd ,,... lml>"rlal La" I P1nuy). • 00 > 10 1 llO Fneda Framf' IHawleyl J 20, 1 80 So•A• c;o1a 1Toro>.J 10 Fourth '""' Stranoewa~• IHdwley), 10 •O. • 10. •.10 , Our Slretl F•Qlllff IO•lal'IOv\!HIYel, Ito, JllO. Icy P09 (Pon <O I 1llO r •tth r~e Fir\t f ony CV•ltf"llU~ll), 1 .,, l lO. 3 lO K•nci Go Go ITorol. • lO, • 00, Dou· Dir 01\Counl IM.oloennll. 7 00 i 5n ac1a 11 .. 1 P••d\7~ ~ S••ll'I race In Tol1lily 1va1rnzuelal. Ill 80. SI oO "IO, Ce SllorP I P1ncay I. t 20, 6 IO, Rock Solllv tShotmaktr I. 11.IO S••en111 •<Ke Bold Daisy IOll•attsl 11 eo q 20 s 10 u n•• Mo 11111cc .,, .... 1, • eo, J oO Mavttn t~l•hOuua .. 1 • tO U uacla I/ II PA•O \A1A 00 \1 P1c1t So• IS·l·S ••II paid ,11,110 60 wllll II w1nn1nQ 11<kt1\ lfove l'IOrS.0.\1 11 P iek St• con>Ol•ltO<l paid l1'1 00 wllh 111 w1nnon9 tltli~t\ lfour "Of'W \) \1 P ick S•• \Crate"' e>ool pa1d 014 wllll two w1nn1n9 ll<kth 11,,rtt l'IOr-.n and a s<r•lcl'll E IQhlll r1;0 Prtmier M1nlS1'e (Pin <•vi. I •O. l 10. J •O, G•la1y Libra ISllQem•~orl • 00, 1 llO. Fas1 lVll_eMuelal. • 00 Nlnlll rao Mar No,11.,m tHowltvl. s .o. • 10, loo Sll•.nv I LlpMm I. • oo. s oo V1k1n11 IP1ncay), S.IO. 's .. ~"· I• 101 p.!lld 5'3 so Attend1nt f' 2',0SO Loa Al•mllo1 $ATU•OAY'S LATI! AESUL TS Ten111 •llC• Catcl'IO Co tPaullntl, 1100, S 40, 3 IO, Go for Wlnsum IBrookil. 8 10, S.00, Or SNIO ICllavttl , l 60 ,1 oncta 1•·11 peodMI 60, Atle-•-t,01' Los Al•mlto• 1t•ndlng1 TI!nlltll SaltorNV JOCKEYS St•r'I• Ill 2M ,,,. O•nny C'°'dor,.. Kenne111 H•r1 D•nnv Mllctwll Kennell\ Cieri~ Rall>f\ P ... n,,. s1 .. t Trffsurt Robar1 Adelr JOfln Ward ltoberl Bard Oon•ld 0-lombe T•AINl•S Ill 13 IJ 11 11S 11 11 IS 108 19 .. 11 ...... 6 '3 1711 . ..,.13 6 •·>11 17 9 14 10 11 II 619711 .. 1 , 6 Startt 1d .. .,_ IU It It 19 ttnaa u 11 •• BleM 5<11,._.ldl Cll•rles 81oomqu l " Sit~• •olhb\""' JOllnC~ llerryW~ Misc. s• • 1 s u ' 0 l w. ........ ,,......,.., • ii --·December 21, 1tl0 H I F New Ze aland Ia o vertl•e cap tures Sydney race HOBART. AUJtralla (AP) - Maxi yacht New Zealand over- came Tasmania's notorious Storm Bay tbat rorced a long stall to win the Sydney-to-Hobart yacht race today. Crossley missing, Gauchos tumble New Zealand, the peoples' boat with more than 200 owners, took line honors when she crossed the finish 20 miles ahead of her nearest competitor, the Sydney sloop Helsal II. The winner finished the race In two days, t8 hours. 45 minutes and 41 seconds, firthfastestlimeinthe 35-year history of the event. The giant blue-hulled sloop failed by iust more than four hours to set~ race record after be- ing becalmed in Tasm ania's un· predictable waters less than 40 m iles short of the finish for most of the night. Whe n the 2l ·meter New Zealand. super bly helmed by 32-year-old Aucklander Peter Blake , rounded Tasman Island late Sunday she had more than 41 2 hours to complete the re maining 42 miles and s mash the record Afte r maintaining an average speed of more than 10 knots for most of the race. 1t seemed the record was well within New Zealand's grasp. But soon after N~w Zealand rounded the island to begin the final leg across Storm Ray and up the Derwe nt River. the wind dropped and the giant ya cht·was becalmed. She wallowed in the bay for several hour~ hcfore the breeze picked up suffi ciently to carry her across lhe fi111~h Bask etb a l l When your No. 1 scorer and re bounder doesn't play. you know you 're in trouble -· especially when playing a Bood team. And that's what happened to Saddleback College Sunday night in the opening round of the Santa Ana College basketball tournament. C-urUs Crossley, a 6-7 standout from Kankakee, UL had spent Christmas in his home town, but was expected back Saturday. But he failed to show and the Gauchos dropped a hard·fought 80-79 overtime decision t o rugged Oxnard Sunday night Crossley is aver aging 16 points and seven rebounds pea game Still. Saddleback appeared to have it won more than once With 14 seconds left in regula· t1on the Gauchos had a 69·65 lead Then. Oxnard fouled the G:w chos' Pete Decasas. A 91 per:cent free throw s hooter , DeCasas missed. Oxnard re bounded. took two shOts. hitting the second at the buzzer Th e n in re gulati on the Gauchos Jumped to a five-point lead. only lo see that fade to 79-78 with 43 seconds to go. Sad· dleback turned it over, Oxnard missed a shot with 22 seconds lo go. but got the rebound . They got off another shot with seven seconds left and m issed again But Oxnarcl's Greg Vincent Y+ as fou led and made bolh-ffet I Utah tops Fullerton From AP dispatches PORTLAND Danny Vranes popped in 17 throws with two seconds to go to · win the game. SaddJeback was led by Kevin Bowland with 16 points while Bob Thomton ( 14), Richard Diaz c 12). Dec asas C 11 > and Tom McCluskey < 11 ) also hit in dou· ble fh::ures. The loss put the Gauchos in today's consolation round at 4 o'clock. Saddleback is now 10.4 • on the season while Oxnard is ' 8·2 UCI faces Texas A &M B ILLINGS. Mont -UC Irvine faces an undefeated C7·0 ) Texas A&M team whe n the Anteaters open play in the KOA Classtc basketball tournament tonight at the University of Mon· tan a Eastern Montana will play the Uni versity of Montana m the second game tonight and first round winners and losers will meet Tuesday night. Both UC ! l'ames 1n the tournament will be broadcast live by KWVE Radio (FM 1081 (tonight at 6> The /\ntealL•rs (4 4 1 are com· ing off a home victory last Mon day night ov<'r Missouri-Kansas ('1ty,1l0 71 Te xas /\&M 1::. ranked IOlh tn the lJl'I poll and 12th by AP points, grabbed 16 rebounds and blocked rourshots lo pace 19th-ranked Utah to a 76·70 victory over Cal State Fullerton Sunday in the consolation semi· finals of the Far West Cfa ssic colfege basketball tournament. Fullerton meets Princeton this afternoon for t-P==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~-=-=-'=""=mi\ seventh place. Princeton fell to Northwestern in COLLEGE B8SllETB8LL overtime. 72-68. · After trailing 38-21 at half. Fullerton closed TOnlGHT I steadily in the early part of the fin al hair. and trailed • 46·35with 13.04 remaining UlllUERSITV TEH85 8&"1 Rut Scott Martin, who had eight uf h1~ 14 point::. in Llf. US HOA CLASSIC the second half. started a break With a steal and OF ca . • climaxed it with a 12-foot Jumper. and the l.Jtes led IRUlftE 5:50 PM 48·35 with 12: 22 left. A Vranes tip·in on Utah·s next possession gave I the Western Athletic Conference favontes a 15-point advantage. The Titans didn't threaten until the final three I minutes. Trailing 74-60, Fullerton scored eight straight points to cut the deficit to 74-68 with 51 seconds to go. David Gi lreath made a steal at mid· court. but missed a lay.up with 32 seconds to go. which would have cul the Utes· lead to four points. Pace Mannion iced it for Utah with two free throws lfi seconds later. Sponsored by: Republic ~nsurance Brokers Denny's Restaurants and McPeek Chrysler Plymouth Beavt-r• ha h igh g e ar PORTLAND Unbeaten. fourth·ranke d Ii:=~~~~===============~ Oregon State improved its chance for a leap in na- tional college basketball ratings with two strong weekend victories. "Oregon State is just a great basketball team ." said Rhode Island Coach Claude English. whose team was crushed 103·55 by Oregon Stale in the semi-finals of the Far West Classic in Portland Sunday. The Beavers used thei r second team for most of the second half against Rhode Island The 7 -0 Beavers will meet instate rival Oregon, 7-1. in the tournament fin als today Ten11es~ee •p •e• .Su11 Dm ,. NEW ORLEANS -Forward Howard Wood scored nine of hi s 22 points in a six-minute stretch of the first half to blow open a close game and lead '[~nessee to a 68·53 upset victory over 11th-ranked Arizona State in the Sugar Bowl tournament. In an earlier first·round game, Duke rolled over the University of New Orleans 77·63. Tennessee had just overcome an early Arizona State lead to take a 9-8 edge 12 minutes into the game when Wood started his streak. When he finished, Tennessee was up by 10 points, 23·13. T~nnessee',s other .s,.tarting for'!!l.r~. Dale Ellis, also finished w1lh 22 points. Sa11 Jo•e S i. 011 iop SAN JOSE -The San Jose State Spartans got 17 points from senior center Sid Williams en route to a 59-39 victory over UC Riverside. A tough, full-court zone press by both teams forced 49 turnovers in the low-scoring game. The many tu.movers and poor shooting by both teams contributed to what the Highlanders• Coach John Masi called "the sloppiest game I '.ve ever seen." Senior forward Doug Murrey was the only other Spartan ln double figures with 15. UC Riverside's junior guard Melvin Bibbs was high scorer for the Highlanders with 14. ~ketball scores Colege .... SanJ-St.,.,UCltlverlldtJt Hawell-Htlo61,0cC141tftlel42 .... CorNllU,HllblrH1 ,., ........ Mn ...... ._. ...... VH-ta. Siii trt lfltltct .. ......... Ollli•n,.....,~ T-... ""-SU I • Ctaftl!lllla, ...... TMti .. 19'1 llW1-lt."'-"• MC l~ AIUtllll.lt,IC ... lt.t• Olll ...... ll.ft,N. Te-St,lt .......a..- (11 I llMIF-) u 111111', CAii St ........... tton 10 H9nll-72,Prlnc'4an .. 10Tl , ...... 1 ............ , 0r990ft7S.Or-71 O,...i1St. t03.R"'*l•lanclSS SATUltDA'l'SU Ta ltlSUL TS ..... ayu . .....il 101,Mewcot1-u touttMAMaNTS. ....ClfYC._. Hort tarn •t 1976 CADILLAC SEVILLE Leather covert!<! ~calmi arra. dual romforl pwr St>als & AM FM s lerl'O w II track tap<.' µlayer (/>47PK PI $6 995 AJI Can JobJO<f To ,..,_ ScW AU 1"""1 ,..,. Tu A t.r- On Any Full Facility Memberehlp • 16 Ct\arnpi0nsh1p Rac~1.e1b.,n Comt~ • NAUTILUS EQUIPMEN r • Soec1<1I Arrob1e Classes • 2$ Meter Olympic Pool & Su11ck k •ProShop • Rei.tn11111n1. Bnr & S<ic1t1I Lnuogp • t rncunn11~ Lock~ FM"lhlw~ for M1m & Worntn • Sauna. s .... m. J11n1nl MM<fll\)'~ • 2 Sond Vul boll C{1u1b S601 '••boree Road Newport Beach Call 7 51-0565 for aclclltlonal lnfonuitlon .. > • -Oilty 1 mg tar --~. .. 5 } I Newnog tr )'OU ~ to add aomo .. c1\tmcnt '° um )'HJ''• hoUday enltrta1nan1. IMA'I a ,ood au11Hlk>n Trx YoC\tr1 001 Tbu rt"Cape la sure lo rnaJu~ thti " uaaon' f tlv1llH memorable T he new noc 11 full of yo1urt ·s man)' nutnenu 1-t d Ucious ..nd ~uy t ma.kt' ol only wlll your th1ldr~1 Ion •l• laltf', but >"OCUrt 1s &ood for them, too For adul\s who m11ht tnJOY a apmted version ot the treat, just add a da~h of brandy or rum If you Wlll\l to toast the New Year with tyle. doll with this tasty dnnk YOG aT NOG 1 S.Ounce cup vanilla yogurt 1 egg 2 tablespoons honey Nutmeg or cinnamon to taste. Put yogurt, egg and honey in a blender Blend al high speed until fro~hy. Pour into a tall glass and ~p 'nkle nutmeg or cinnamon to tas e 'Serve ·immedi1ately. Makes I serving. SPARKLING CITRUS PUNCH I dozen Valencia oranges 2 lemons 1 quart cranberry juice cocktail, chilled 2 bottles mineral water, chilled Assemble citrus j uicer . Juice oranges and lemons at number 4. Add cranberry juice and mineral water. Stir . Yields 25 4-ounce serv· in gs. DEC. 29, ,.., H I , COMICS CS TELEVISION C6 MOVIES C7 ENl'ERTAINMENT: ,pe·rsistence ~ paid off for the new Flash Gordon, actor Sam J. Jones C7 \; Banana nog By combining fresh fruits and mineral water in your blender, you ,c~~Jut.ilbe..right natural touch to your holiday dining and entertain· ing. The local produce department is the place to start. Look for fresh fruits lhat are available in abun· dance at the peak of their flavor. The main ingredient is your imagination. BANANANOG 3 eggs 2 tablespoons honey ~ cup nonfat dry milk v. teaspoon rum extr act dash cinnamon 1 J>anana 1 cup ice cubes l cup mineral water Put egp, honey, nonfat dry mill<, rum extract and c innamon into blender container . Cover and process at Frappe until smooth. Remove feed,r cap, add banana through feeder cap opening. Add ice cubes through feeder cap opening. Put feeder cap in place and process until smooth. Reduce speed to Stir, add mineral water. Yields 1 quart. STllAW8EKRY SQUIRT 1 cup vanilla yogurt 6 fresh ripe strawberries 6'h ounces chilled mineral water Assemble blender. Put yogurt and strawberries into· blender container. Cover and process at Mi x until smooth. Reduce speed to Stir, add mineral water. Garnish with a fresh strawberry. Yields 2 cups. Cheers to the New Year .. At no other time of the year are people more generous, warm and.sharing than during the holidays. It's a time when the welcome mat is always out and fest\ve foods are in •bun· dance. Being prepared with the just·rilht food and drink for holiday festivities could become a full· lime job, but few hosta or hostesses really have the lime, particularly during the holidays, to de· vote lo extensive menu planninl. Many rely on popular triecl-'and-true recipes that have become noted favorites. However, part of the holiday fun is ex- pe rimenting with new recipes and even new food products. Considet, for example, the followina easy recipe for Golden Frµit Punch. Usln1 onf.y four ingredients, the punch boasts seven fruit flavors. Five of them -oranse. tanaerine, lemon, lime and grapefruit -are convenieaUy 'Provided by a frozen concentrate. The otber two, apricot and pineapple, round out the sub· tie blend of fruit navors. Keep all the in~redients on band so you can readily be prepared for those holiday im· promptu parties -after tree-trimming, or before going caroling, or when unexpected guests drop in. Lemon Snow Bara are a de· licious complement to the punch. GOLDEN FRUIT PUNCH 1 can ( 12 ounce) frozen concentrated fruit beverage, thawed and recooatituted 2 cans C 12 ounce each) apricot nectar ~ cup (6 ounce) white rum (optional) 1 can (12 ounce) pineapple chunks in natural syrup In punch bowl, combine all increc:Ueata ex· cept pineapple ; mix well. Chill; just before serv· ing, ,add fruit. If you prefer to omit rum, add 1 quart club soda just before serving. Makes 32 servings ('h cup each ). LEMON SNOW BARS Crust : .'h cup butter or margarine, softened 1 ~ cup all-purpose nour V. cup sugar FiJl..ing: lrate 2 eggs, slightly beaten ~cup sugar 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour v. teaspoon baking powder 3 tablespoons lemon juice from concen· Confectioner's sugar GRAPEFRUIT OPENER 3 cups chilled grapefruit juice from COD· centrate l 't) cups or 1 can ( 12 ounce) 1in1er ale 1 cup gin In pitcher, combine all insredients; mix well. Pour over ice. Makes 6 servinp (about~ cup each). ORANGE EGGNOG PVNCR 4 eggs, separated 'As cup granulated sugar 1 'As cups milk 1 'As cups whipping cream 1 can (6 ounce) frozen concent.raled orange juice, thawed and undiluted In large mixinl bowl, combine ece yolks, 1u1ar, milk, wbippin1 cream, and oran1e juice concentrate; beat with rotary beaters until thickened and foamy. Chill until aervtnc time. In s mall maxmg bow,J, beat egg whites until stiff, ~t not dry. Gently fold into orange mix· ture. Serve immediately. If desired, garnish with nutmeg. Makes 16 servings Cabout 'h cup each). wine PUNCH CABERNET 'h cup lemonade crystals 'h cup water 'h cup brandy "•cup Cu racao or Cointreau 1 fifth Cabernet Sauv1gnon or Zinfandel 1 bottle (23 ounce) sparkling water In punch bowl, combine the le mon.ade crystals, water, brandf, Curacao. ~nd wine ; mix well. Gradually stir in the sparkhng water. Add a chunk of ice or ice ring mold. Makes 15 servings (about 'h cup each). Preheat oven lo 350--de&nea. In 1 ~ quart mixing bowl, combine crust ingredients. Mix-on low speed until blended, about 1 minute. Pat in· to ungreased 8-inch square bakinc pan. Bake near center of oven for 15 to 20 minutes or until brown on edges. While crust bakes, combine filling inJredients and mix well. Pour fillinc over partially baked' crust. Return to oven for 18 to 20 minutes or until set. Sprinkle with confec· tioner 's suiar. Cool and cut into ban. Makes lt bars. Customers queue up in.Corona del Mar to purchase holiday hams. Coast residents him it up CIOLDaEN'S BOLIDAY PUNCH 2 Cupe ~ber:rrdrtnk 2 cupe citrus c0oler drink "' .... 1 can (12 ounce) lemon-lime loft drink Pour q,e wild berry drink into-oae lee cube tray; freese. J•t before Ml'Vlnl. eombUM tlM citrus cooler drink with .the lllDCID·llme. Pour over the ~ berry lee cubll ba ·tall II•••· M akea 4 aeniDla (about 416 cap Mela). By .JOBL C. DON o. .. .....,""' .... . . The queue ot holiday tralftc walllftl to croea the Newport Bay Bridle hasn't been the only line alcJq Paclllc Cout JUpway. Jult a few miles soutb, there bu been another line ot IOrta. . . wai-lo pl~lt ~ I-to 10.pound bunks ot ham. 'l'llaOl1Gll(MJ 'l'ID boUdaJ ...... lines ol ......... Woelr ................. oat· tide....., Bated ....... can.a ...... . hundreds of PC>Unds of hams were also beini shipped from the Corona del ll'ar store to homes throushout the country. The boUday rush puts the pinch on the mailin11, except for special de· Uverl• to local businesses. Nb says UM bams draw the tbronp of peo- .ple because ol the special taste ol the cured and slued mut. He doesn't Me much competi- tion witb the canned variety. ca m.rna or put IDd present a1ree. BLOODY llilY l"Oa A...,.., 1 cu <• CMtJlff) tomato jalee ~(IJCNDee)..ea l boWe (1\t -oanee) ._ Jltee h..m '"nill lut ... Of Qrlltmu, ...... MWat •• ,. -........ .., -... tJlat'• ~ Nb notee tbat the store bu seen.John Wayne, · O.J .• Sl=.wt Harri«,,..... tn line-for either a (at I to 10 or the . I Worc••IMn-11G1t ....... lie IQa..buJ Mii Of a whole ltall•11a•eGef---S ...... U.; ..... tM~•IMM.-U-. ~ i'18811a• ....... ,,. ..._., wldela an nnd Md tblD cooked u.e...-wp:r1111•1 · •-"'tlr-.11w1 bi rDIUMill~..-~--ln piteblr, eombUM lapt•IMI; IDiJl bone.7 I jDd tpleet and 1ptral.alleed at tbl lD· • well. To serve, pour over lee ...S lanilll wttl9 dl.tdual outlets. celery, carrot, or ·auccblnl .Ueb. Mu• 11 Up untlJ a few daya befor9 Cbrtatmu, aervinp (~cup each). ~ , •. ~· . ------:-- ,-...... _______ .._ ________ ~ ... -- ... ----------r - •-n.ey bay hams for the CODvmMftee," be aaya. "You lel a meal ready to Ml IDd sliced ... , .... ,. - 1'Pwbple Wnk tbe7 are toUll to have to ,ratt In line for an hour of ao," eddl companJ Nlce Presldlnt Crall Martin. "But tbe,y are oat ta.ere for IO minutes at the m•t. '' --.. • rS \ Q oAll Y PILO t ..... ""'---.. ,. Mak popov rs early for I i un .. ly ll1·~cl1 EnJO~ d brt •k In your frantir holldav ilL'ht'dult> b\ 11\UIW u n1 k1 hC'ad h•1i.urel brum h 'fht· b1tltt•1 fol I h1 ••nt P11n) f'or1m ·• Lan bl' mud1· th · 111.iht b, f Cl t 1• It l1111k., 'I"'< tat ul r v. h1·n It c 1H1H'' UUI of lht• O\'t n \ f1•v. m I n u I , ... , I a It I II "' 111 th•Ou.h• ''" 'Sh11w11 1 IJUI 1l ... 1111 v. 11• ""' d\ In 1111.1' l'hl' lq)uall\ lddllll 11 ,, ,, 11 ' t" r I.I u t I 1· r 1 ., 1 nh11nrNt "'11n 1 1 . ..,l\ 'r nbc"r!' dr1''""~ 11\-dt' v.1th v. holt• h1•rr\ l fJn bcrr. ~di.It\ lt•mu11 ll.ll L'I.' tu-ov. n ... ugtu ;md .a ... 111 .i:.h "' 1v.11 11f 111 .mgc fl.a \\)rt•d ltlj \h'IU •wm bll' a milk ahake 3 '41Ul~ !I 1.·H •. tiparahitl I tfUIH1 lllllk • • \ • l'UI> "U¥ltr I ~ , t 1.• ' 1; '' o o n 11 \.1.111\llU 1 4 t1•11:111l10n rrt:itm 11r turtJ1 1• 1·up 1 um hru11dy, Wiiii.kl') Of (\w\IOrt'd h 11u1•111 upllonul · I Jlllll \ Ul'ltll.t ICt: l rt•um "'lulnw~. 01>tlonal 111 largt' punch bowl l.lll'nJ logl'lhcr whole ~·u' t:H yolks. milk, ... ugar and vanilla In large m1xmg bowl beat t'KK wrules and cream of tar tar al hjgh spet:d un t1l :.tiff bul not dry, just Make-qhead treats. /or gru:.1K -gi~t f5'0VeT ~~'ICetYiUed with cr{l,nberry relish. Traditions ••• start at your dinner table., I Perfect for New Year's Eve Parties! • Baked 30 hOursl •Honey 'n spice Glaze • Spiral sliced tor easy ser vlng • Whole or half hams • Nallonwlde shipping service • Full service Delicatessen • Old Worlf1 Cheese Shop Phone Orders .. ~c n1191110C... •Sandwiches 10 go 1 Accepted • ~•.Y_ • ~:rty trays · . Ctosed3p.m ._o ec.31 llG~HGftlS : 1700 L COAST HWY .. c.,.... 4it Mw rHOHI 67J.ft00 ~ 1 . Z4601 IAYMOMD WAY• IL TOIO ID .. IL TOIO. f'HOMI IJ7-JIU ; 0 l~t llACH IUD. ••AINU>, ~MTIHCHOM l~CH. rHOMI 141 .. 175 ~ f'lso Anaheim, Ora09C, Rancho M irage; la Habra, San-Diego,· Westlake Village, North HollyWOOd, Woodland Hills. Santa Monica, Pasadena OOOQOCOOCAOOQOCDOc.c:>OCOO~ PEOPLE ALL ALONG THE ORANGE COAST I o i,:u o.ilon.: v. Ith 1•uf ft•I.' ::.en"' a ('rdnbt:rn Rch:."i 1 '11ff\•t• \ 0<.1k1· thut 1·..in b1 rnaJt· J ll.l\ Jh1·ad or ~ •11 l'Olt·r~~ ft uni )Our er .. ,.,,.r until white::. no longer .---------------------------------- . REL y ON the Daily Pilat t'ART\' POPO\ .. :KS 6 large eggs 1 <·up .111-µurµo:.t.- lluur I cuµ milk 2 tablespoons bullt·r or margurane. melll.'d 12 teasp()On salt 2 t ablc s µoo n s vegetable shortt>ning I can <16 ounce::.1 whole berry crnnbcrry :.auce <! tabl C's poon ~ orange-navorNi liqueur 1 tubles1loo11 lemon Juice l tablespoon hrown sugar 11'1 teaspoon fresh grated lemon peel Confectione rs' sugar In a blender ('ontain<'r com brne eggs, flour, salt. milk and butter Process 30 to 45 Sl·contls or until s mooth. l'over and let stand 30 m111ules at room tcmµt•rature or u µ to 24 hour~ 1n tht.• rcfrigerntor I !cat o\'en to 450 dl•grN•s F' J>ut 1 tablespoon s hortening in each of I wo !I 1m·h 11\'l'n proof s killtts or pi t• pans; heat 5 mrnuu•s in oven Pour baller e\'cnly into !Jans. hake 15 minute~ lkduee hNtl to 350 degreC's 1" and bah 5 lo 10 m111utt•:. lnngcr or until 1H1 µo ver~ :.ire· pu ffcd and g old c:n brown In <I s auc·c·pan, ht·at cranb<>rry sauc·c. orangl..' J1queur. le mon Jtri('t· anrl peel. <i nd hrown sugar. bring to "' simmer over moderatPly high heat Wh e n popt)\·c r s are <tone , transfer to s cr\'ing platter. putting one on top of the other Sprinkle with confectioners sug;.ir and serve with warmed o;a uce Makes 8 ~e rv 1ngs. CRANBERRY RELISH COFFEECAKE 3 cups nour 2 cups sugar 3 tcasp()Ons baking powder l teaspocin salt ct-eggs l cup vegetable oil •14 cup orange juice I tablespoon. van ill a extract 1 (14 -ou nce) jar cr anberry orange relish Sugar glaze Chopped walnuts Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Grease ~ inch tube pan. In a bowl sift together fl our. sug- ar. baking powder and s a lt Add eggs . o i'l , ora nge juice and vanilla . Beat with a wooden sp()On until well bleniied. SPoQn 11.i of the batter into greased 9· rnch tube pan. Spread half of the cranberry orange relish over bat- ter being careful not to have any touch the sides of the pan. Spoon in another third of batter: s pread with second l a )'er of relish . Top with remaining batte r. Bake for 111.. hours or un· t i t d o n e . Cool 10 minutes: remove from pan. Cool. Spread with glaze. To pre pa r e sugar. combine one cup sifted confectioners' s ugar with 2 tablespoons milk until blended. S~ead over top of co~~Cake; tinkle with chopped nuts. Makes one 9·inch ~ube cake. 1-~-KCUPOFC'IU:g• Toast the season with a special beverage. This delicious variation of i ... v.tional eggnog re· l>lrp when bowl 1s tilted c:t'1\ll) but thoroughly fold whites into m ilk mixture Chill several ho urs or overnight t Foam will form on top I Add rum. 1f de· sired, and stir to blend. Scoop ice cream into punC'h bowl Sprinkle with nutmeg, if desired. Serve immediately. 2 quarts or 16 < 12-cupl servings• • ReC'ipe may b e doubled • • For richer drink. s ubstitute I cup half and half or light cream for I <.'UP of milk Nunv NOEL DIP Whether your holiday plans call for a cocktail party or a classic holi- day fe a s t , s t art the fostivitics with a tasty Uip This one has a sur· pris ing, yet pleasing . bknd of flavors. :.ia cup mavonnaise 1 Jar 15 ounces l :"l/c•ufc hatel pineapple cheese spread fi hard-cooked cggs.j l>lr ced 1 ~ t'up sit ced stuffed I green olives labout 20 Oll\'C'S I Sme ... A.tol"t"aCI '"'' Cookod $ J 69 ~~~ . °'co• ~a., .. , M~drwm \.lie .. ..... " 0.t1Mt•d --·.- . 99c 10 "···· o.i.,,, • ., v .... r::--· -i -~-' 12 t up C'hopped j !Jl'C':.IOl> Mix mayonnaise and J P.!!!9~~ cheese s pread togethe r. 1 Reserve 2 center egg shres and 3 olives for garnish. if desi red. Chop ' remai ning eggs a nd ol1\'l'S and s ti r into may onnais e mixture along with pecans. Cov- H a nd chill to blend 1 JI a vors. Garnish witb re-j s1;>rved egg a nd oli ve slices. 1f desired. Serve as spread for crackers ! and party rye or use as dip for fresh vegetable j dippers or chips. About 3 cups SEASON'S GREETINGS STRATA With last-minute shop- ping. drop-in guests, and s pur-of-the ·m oment gatherings, it's a relief to be able to prepare a main dish in advance! This one makes the most out of leftover poultry and bread . too. French bread , sliced '2-inch thick l 'h cups ch oppe d coo ked c hi c ke n or turkey OR 2 cans (5 ounces each > boned c hic ke n , undrained 2 cups <8 ounces> s hredded sharp Cheddar· cheese. divided 112 c u p c h o p p e d green peJ>per 2 cups (8 ounces) instant minced onion 6 eggs 2 cups milk lfz teaspoon curry powder v. teaspoon dry mustard Parsley sprigs, op· tional Grease a 12 x 71h x 2- inch baking dish or pan. Line with enough bread s lices 'to cover bottom. Combine chicken, l 'h t"u ps of the cheese. g_reen pepper and oniof\. S pread over bread layer . Top with enough additional bread slices to cover chicken mix- ture. Combine eggs, milk. curry powder and mus tard. Pour oves bre ad slices. Sprinkle with remaining... ~ cup c heese. Cover and er -U.p •j I , P~~to Chips ....... ., ....... 0 .. 1 "'"' D•IM"' ~ "'" ....... 0.M ~-,., .... f 41••· ...... 29c ~&Be ,.,.,,.,.\ , ... , . c ... . ~ '-__,.,,,,, / ,_., .... , ........ o. .. ·-... Ml\ ........ ,_ Whole Top Sirloin t~~wLa~.~·tJ''r211:" s199 Fresh Roasters Zac:ky F••m ~ Pl•mt 89' lb ea1o1 .... ~ Gto""' It -.d l°""'""";..... s199 ~Cheddar Cheese q....;;w.~s .. Sa•eway Oull•ty Ltan S.et s294 Fa•~Jollll s1e.~ Whole Fi let Butt '0'" '""'"'°'" 1 p,~, Smoked Ham Slices Pk9 Apo•o• 1 lb 5,,, I~ l!oflf In lb Rib Eye Steak Sa•rway Ow•11• 111 s369 Sliced Bacon llC) s1 29 lun !IHI Alb Sllt!>Ct< Smok A Rom~ Pk9 ~ P 1 D tucet~ ll•ttp1 c1a,,. s.,, 49c ~ ar y I PS dl1d Gumma•tl t ... u,., ~ 3 Bot $1 ()() ~Lucerne Yogurt c .... ~ Ground Beef Pie1mum Don liol 1 s1ss Shrimp Meat ScQICh Buy f16/"' a QI s19s [•c:ttO 22\o Fil lb Coo>t06Ptt1te1 Pig ~ Mar-kes Burritos r"""" 5 ~:~ 51 oo -• 101 s129 •"':';· Celeste Pizza Hlll'I'• ""v Yellow Onions us "° , Black Eyed Peas Fresh Green Cabbage Russet Potatoes us "° , 25c 25' z .... S Orange Juice Sc~:~!'rv 1~ 69' m 49 California R~ Grapefruit t11 2nc ~ . . ~' ..... "' "'9 s1og 'i!.~ c Egg Plant ~SI= lb ;r ~Trash ean Liners JO Gatton ol 10 19 89 ~ 28 OI s100 c Orange Juice ~=1 = c ~Pretzels P.-:lyPllll• ""115 , lb 35' House Plants 6-lfldl *" s499· Scotc~ Boy Ice Cream V111>ll• r::., 5149 We've Given LOW PRICES a New Name ••• A Sofod ...;-c--, ~Cottage Cheese 1~t"'' ~Lucerne Buttermilk ·-L p I o .. eo ":::!~ as a mas rn"'"""I .. FOi J COi\' Presto Logs r •• Flex Shampoo I • I I I •w•' ._.._ ........ ,,,.,..,..I'! .... ..._ .. ....._,...nooo 9f _.f'f .. ,. ...... kH ,._.. t•tJrr. , ............ '"'"' tit..-• ............ oM • .,.,... ~·· ............ ,... ... .. ...................... , ..... -·~ ...... ~ _ .... ... .. ~ ..... ·~·· .......... ,._... .,.. ........ " .. ...... ~ • htt t1' ~ ot~ ..... oft Pf•• ,....,,_ ,..t'v"' •ith , ...................... ,......,.. .................. ..., -.-_,,.,._..a , .... ~.-, ......... •--.--""· .... -·_._._ ·-... ···-··--- -~ I I .. b~~P..i!jgg!if!l!ilJ!!!~!!I!~ • ''" ............... ,.,. ..... • ,,, ..... c.... ......... L..-. ..... •14 ................ ~L.... •S-.AM........., .. Le,_, ............ ,• 1161 S...MtW,s-teA• ---• --··--_ •..JJ!.17_~Dr .... W .... '""'9 i .. 3,000 in dark 2 power fail11"res ... hit Laguna Beach Two separate power failures in Laguna Beach this morning plunged nearly 3,000 Southern California Edison Co. customers into darkness for about four hours. The first power shortage oc· curred at 4:11 a.m. when an un- derground cable broke down at Morro substation. Some 2,250 customers were af- fected by the shortage, with service restored to all but 1,000 by 5:41 a.m. By 6:01, service was re· sumed for all customers. Then a transformer blew up shortly after 9 a. m. forcing nearly 3,000 customers in the Bluebird Canyon area and Parkplace and Mountain View to go without elec· tricity. Morningside Drive in Laguna Beach was reported smoking for w some unknown reason, according to a company spokesman. Edison Company officials have ruled out araoo as a possible causeofthepoweroutage . "We don't know why we'rehav· ing a similar problem in a remote are"," said spokesman Bud Jac.k,lev. "It's probably just a cointidence that they happened Rape suspeet at about the same time." In both cases, the electrical company is resorting to back-up power systems in order to restore service to customers. while the systems are being repaired. Jn the case of a powt. fcAilurc Edison officials switch opereations to working circuits. Jackley added that the com· pany has an abundance of hackup systems for emer~cnt y ust.·. SC man sun-enders FIRST FIREMEN ON SCENE OF COSTA MESA FIRE POUR WATER ON BLAZE App•r•nt g•• exploelon trtggered home fire •t 212 S•nto Tom•• St. An underground cable along in murder attempt Woman saved from fiery home By STEVE MARBLE 01 .. O.lly P'I ... Steff A 53-year -old Costa Mesa woman, pulled from her flaming Santo Tomas Street home Sun· da y by a quick -thinkin g neighboµ, mains in critical condition ay with second· degree bu s over 40 percent of 'her bod . Fire officials said Gene Jones, who lives alone at her 282 SJnto Tom as residen·ce. was ' in · vestigating a heavy gas odor in her kitchen and had lifted the top off her stove when it ex- ploded. Offi9ials said it was only a matter of seconds before the fire engulfed the home, sending names licking out the windows. Robert Harvey, a neighbor, told officials he heard the ex- plosion, ran outside his 280 Santa Tomas Street home aod saw the flames.• He said he ran to a fence separating the residences, jumped over it and dragged the woman from her burning home through a rear bedroom window. .. I hardly even remember do- ing it." said Harvey, ''It all hap- pened so quickly. I was on the phone talking with a friend when I heard the explosion -I don't know how but I knew im- mediately what had happened." Harvey. a magazine offi cial in Burbank, said he realized quick· ly that his neighbor was in trou· ble. "She was standing by the bedroom window which had been blown out.'· recall s . Harvey. "I knew she was in serious trouble -her hair sort of melted on her head. I pulled her out the window.·' Harvey, 31 , told fire officials -he was forced to kick down a locked gate to get the woman to the street. where the pair wailed for paramedics to arrive. Mrs. Jones, \Yho just returned from a four-day vacation to northern California, was taken to bum ward at UCI Medical -Center. Neighbors reported that the explosion sent glass Oying onto (See FIRE, Page AZ> Worker sees streaker The "streaking" fad may have been renewed over the weekend in Irvine when a nude man left his sports car, ran acroi.s a construction site~ tot back in his auto and took off. The construction foreman at the site located on River Run and West Yale LAJOp told police be tbou1ht ... could identify the man U h• 1 . A. By the time police gOl to ioe aeene, they aaid the vebkle wa!_~her~Jo..be ~-,,;e-ro..eman 1atd be didn't 1et the license nu"'ber. More fog expecteil tonight, Tuesday By JODI CADENHEAD OI .. Dalt¥ P'li.t Staff Patchy fog is expected to COO· tinue plaguing ·the Orange Coast tonight with heavier fog predicted Tuesday morning, ac- cording to a spokeswoman for the National Weather Bureau Service. The wave of fog began rolling in Sunday afternoon, forcing the closure of John Wayne Airport this morning and causing numerous traffic accid9nu: The second week of on again off again fog has left many holi· day travelers stranded al Los Angeles International Airport and John Wayne Airport where flight operations have continued on an irregular schedule. In Orange County, the airport was closed at 8:20 a.m . today after visibility along the coast was estimated at only one-eighth of a mile. Elsewhere. the California Highway Patrol reported num· Commuter erous fender-bender accidents a long fog .s hrouded coastal highways. "Crashes are going down like cr azy," said Highway Patrol spokesman William ·Martin. "A lot of them are intersection col- lisions because drivers just can't see the lights." Martin advises motorists to drive slowly with their windows rolled down in order to bear traf- fic coodilions and poulblf •cci· dents ahead. Temperatures are expected to dip to 55 degrees tonight along the coast with an expected high of 80 predicted Tuesday. Moist air blowing off the ocean is continuing to cause fog condi- tions along the coast. while in· land residents enjoy clearer skies. according to a Weather Bureau spokeswoman ... 3 held in LA area heists Auto crash fatal to Niguel woman A LagWla Niguel woman has died from injuries suffered in a cac crash last week that left her pinned inside her wrecked car for nearly nine hours. Michelle Fesco, 19, was transported to Mission Communi- ty tlfospital in critical condition Fr~~oming after a workman found her inside the car at the bot· tom of a steep embankment off Crown Valley Parkway near PacilicCoast Highway. Reaidenta living nearby told California Highway Patrol of· ficials that they heard a crash al about 11 p.m. Christmas day but s aw nothing when they attempted to in vati1atetbe noise. A CHP spokeswoman said that Miss Fesco crashed after ap- parently failing to neaotiate a curve as she was traveling east on Crown Valley Parkway. 3 children made ill by tainted drink A San Clemente mechanic who police believe raped one woman and attempted tr> murder another. surrendered to police early today after barricading himself inside a home for more than five hours. Robert Scott Marsh. 27. of '227 Ave. Victoria, walked out of a house at 252 Ave. Victoria at 4 :30 a.m. and turned himself in to members of the San Clemente Tactical Operations Unit whosur· rounded the house at 11 :30 p.m. Sunday. Marsh was booked on suspicion of rape and attempted murder stemming from two unrelated in· cidents that allegedly occurred earlier iJl the weekend in San Clemente. Police reconstructed events this way: A San Clemente woman walked into the pobce station at about 6: 30 ~ SUnday to report she had raped earlier in the w~ek"1d. Sh e provided police with Marsh's name and address and told officers the suspect might have been involved in an attempt- ed murder of a teen-age girl who s uffer ed a drug overdose at Marsh'shome Saturday. That 19-year -old girl was re· 'Barbarians' moved by parame dics rrom Marsh's home and taken to San Cle mente General Hos pital where she remains in the in- tensive care unit. As a result of the rape victim's inform ation. polite drovt! to Marsh's house at 11 :30 p m Sun· day, at which tame Marsh alleged· ly barricaded himself inside the building. Poli ce <:ai led Mars h by telephone while tactical units sur· rounded the building. Police said Marsh asked to speak with former San Clemente Police Lt. Craig Steckler. who now is police chief in Piedmont, Ca. and who is vacationing in San Clemente. Steckler apparently had former dealings with the suspect. and responded to police requests that he talk with Marsh. Marsh also asked police to call a representative of the press. as well as his brother, Mark Marsh. After lengthy negotiations bet ween the former officer. his brother and a reporter, Marsh agreed to surrender. Police Sgt Jim Spreine said Marsh apparently did not have a weapon in the house. but police said they found a pi stol in his car, parked outside train rams wall, 80 hurt SAN PEDRO CAP> Authorities say they've arrested three men in connection with a SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (AP> - one-day string of armed rob· h · li ed beries in several coastal com· T hree children were osptta z after they drank poisoned Kool· m unities southwes t of Los Aid purch"ased at a local store, NEW YOµK <A P > -A four-Angeles. policesaidtoday. car rapid transit train carrying The robberies. whose number According to South Lake Tahoe about tl>O rush-hour passengers may have reached 30, took place Police Lt. Brad Bennett, the overshot its terminal on Slaten Sunday afternoon and evening in packaged soft drink mix was Iran upset over quote by Reagan Island and struck a wall today, San Pedro, Redondo Beach. poisoned before the children By111eAu odated Preas and authorities said 80 were in· Lomita, Torrance and other purchased it Sunday. He said the The speaker of Iran's Parlia· jured, three of them seriously. areas. authorities said. Kool-Aid smelled odd and the ment reacted angrily today to The Emergenc Y Medical Late Sunday night, officers of packages showed signs of having President-elect Reagan's charge Service said 35 were taken from the Los Angeles PoUce Depart· been tampered with. that the American hostages were St. George Station to St. Vin· ment's Harbor Division arrested Police would not release the "kidnapped by bar:barians." and cent's Hospital. 4 to Staten -James A. Green. l8; Derrick A. namesof thechildrenorthe store the Iranian offici"al implied that Island Hospital and 10 to the ~Hicks. 19; and Benjamin D. where the pac kage s were the United States was trying to U.S. Public Health Service Morgan, 18, all of Los Angeles. purchased. They declined to say swidle lran. Hospital. Thirty-one were treat· what sort of poison was used. Reagan was a~ked by reporters ed at the scene, officials said. Benn~t said two ottbe children in 1A>s Angeles on Sunday if he The three serious cases m-Move thwarted were treated and released from could go along with the latestlra- volved head injuries, offi cials Barton Memorial Hospital here. nian proposalfor a $9 billion down said, and there appeared to be a SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador The third, who lost consciousness payment for the release of the 52 number of people with broken (AP> -Army reinforcements, after drinking the poisoned ·hostages, with the rest of the arms and legs. rushed to the jungle province of beverage, was taken to the UC terms tobenegotiated. "There was broken glass," Chalatenango, have controlled Davis Medical Center for treat· "No,'' he replied. "I don 'l\hink s a id Ju I i a Barb !l cc i a . a an offensive by l~ftist guerrillas, m~nt. He was listed in good condl· you pay ransom for people that passenger lD tne second car of military sources said Loda . tionthetttoday, Bennettui a-ve be-err kldn a ppeet by the train. •'Everfane-went flytn barbarians." . on top of one anOlber." Haahemi Rafsanjani, the The train was pulling into the speaker ol Majlis. or Parliament. northern terminus of the Staten Rides Usted respondedtoReagan'scomments Island Rapid Transit system. from the noor of the 228-seat as- where thousands ot pasaen1ers sembly, saying Iran was not wor- d ally transfer to the staten Cut, bundle trees rtedaboutconfrontingtheunited Island Ferry to cross New York States. Harbor, past the Statue of Llber-"We are nOl scared of your ty to the Battery in llalihattan. threats,"besaid. The train struck a retaining f · h • k "We want our money back and wall in the station at 8~0'1 a.m. o· r tras pie up you call it ransom,'' Rafsanjani when it failed to stop wblle pull-said. The deposit of financial ing in at what officials described guarantees is necessary to "pre- as normal·~· ~ ventyoufromswindlln1m. Police said inan·y passensera Christmas trees must be cut 4-feet and no more than 2-feet , ·~The world must tnow that ae- on the four-car train were stand-and bmMUed lf they are to be around. -cordin1 to our Islamic morality inland fell when tt bit the wall. pl~~ea up by Soutb Coast trash Collection schedules will we wanted to sol Ve the bostqe is- A train dispatcher aaid a wait-collecton tbia week and next. "'Ctran1e at the end of tbil week sue but it ls the U.S. which looks inJ Yoom was on the Olber aide In La1una Beach. offlclala became ol the New Y~r·a Day aboutforanexcuae. oframthmeedwall. into wblch the train said • ..._ treel _.._,1d be cut and holiday. "We wUJ aettJe accounts with ...-1_ .~ .... , feet In all South Coast com-you,"beaaidwitboutelaboratloo. film of the spies and knows they are healthy and happy after a year and some months. ··You call this treatment barbaric and uncivilized but the <See HOSTAGES, Page A2) Or::~:•sl "·eather ' . Dense night and morn· ing fog to continue. with on)y partial-clearing along beach Tuesday. Sunny and warmer inland Tuesday afternoon. Lows tonight 45 along the coast. 52 inland. Highs Tuesday mid 60s ~o 70s. INSIDE TODA~ On Chrmmas E~ of 1865. a group of Con/~e Vt'lerans got tQflftfwr m PIJa..rki. Tet1n., and /Ot'ffVd a club cal~ the Ku Klux Klan in which the main rport wcu mem~r.s draping thtmulues in ~d1httt1 oa "gho1t1" to friglaln rtem~ /rnd 1lavc1. Toda11 . the Klan hol nolued m· to a !WhUOrk of paromfUIOf11 cam,,. tdwre ~ and womfft art lecmsinQ to kill. ~t Bl. The cause ot the accident wu bund '111111, no suu•er ""an · mUlllti• lt.ub pickups wW be tLan iited: the ll.nla.d Stat. not ltn-.nidiatery determined. •nd no nron than 11-lnebe• made • UIUal Monday throuSb this monUl to depoalt 124 billion I 111•• Cond-..... -WlWam Cbue wbo around. .. ______ ~W~~~~an~nd~~tn!-!~!;!~!';-;;Ht-1;;.;;i::~~ftlfimi.-f~~;;:;;-!;~~=--=-~T--lil '°"-At Y-llnte• DI P..-C'-4 ' • In Saa C'lelMllte, the trees an 1uaranteel for au«a lran wants t4:~ : ::.1~ :~ said the train wH maldn1 a to be cl& in i)tecfll no tmier than 11 be made day late retumed. ...._, .. ..... cw normal approach to ltl terminal. 2~ ~feet wi a • .:. __ m Toct•v _ .... tbe ... __.., .. ·-... catM9NI~~ .. ,_~-n t "l have no Idea what bap-· · Jn 8.a Clemente, ---...-:..=.fitlf. ·~ -.u iMftMr'' M 11i1t1 •• •.!1 ........ altille--hrinnt•·ta Sui u-n~ ,11,1'llr'11)-11'¥ • Tbur• a ... ., ..... ...,.. .,. cu • a ........ for ua to make our stop. We wete C1plltr1nO, Dana Potnt, Lacuna ptekup will bave b'ub eolleded COlllJDfDllnl on the televlalon :=...---: .,,...,..,.. C: 1oln11low and normal Ulce ~ti• Nl1ueJ and Capistrano Beach rrtday, md tboH with a= film oft.bebaltqeareleuedover ::=:: c;1 :".. :: all the time and •uddenly ever· are to eut lreel ln hall. The Friday Mnice will bav• pk the Cbrlltmu holklays, Raflan. l.~ yocte wu on the noor." bundl• an to be no tonier than made on "1day and Saturday. . Ja.nl 11id: "All the world 11w the I ---...------ -..__ .. I, Rioting repo~ in A/ghan capital .. ·• NEW 0 Ull. India CAP1-JUGUaa wu ~ &Gda)' la Kabul. capital or Alt'-•••llft, _...... S&wW r ... laaw ..._ tryln1 for more lb1n • ynr to put down M09l•m rebels. The Sovlet n.,wa •ait-nn TH" l'Uflflrtoed that "crimlnal IC\lvlUes" occufftd In K11bul ' Th wi." 1111 1mmrl11111tt' word ut Ill\,)' cdualt.ies. The cause t;f lhl' di tutl11&.nC'• "f&~ Ul'IO Wlknown A crowd 1t111thtih•1J 11ul:i1d lhe Ministry ol lnrorm11tiun and r'ull urt! ut 100111 11 ,. m 1rnlt b~atan hurUnt atones fl\ \he buald· in1 <'e>Ontto~ &u tf\ 1411a,.ort from • diplomatic source ln New Delhi ..... , ....... 1r••••••I..., UEllWT IA.<lianun 1AP J Ay1tt0Uah Ruhul11th Khomeini u~h•> h•ht lrarnani. the) mwst perisevere despite war losses, and ur1f'd 1h4"m n()I tu qulvtr" "'the r1ee ot ruel shortages. In » <>~ti IJro•d<'ail l bv 1'ehran Radio, Khomeini told crip· pl~ llir for~ vcier&nti and f•mil!es of 11oldiers killed in ac\ion lhlt Iran wai. sufrerme an "economic siege" a s well as the dt!tm • "''00' t'ltU!>etl \Jy 99 day!> of w•r with neighboring Iraq la ... , • .,. rrperlrfl ,,... ,_._. 1 kANl, Italy IAPJ f'¥ramilitary police sl.aged a light· ninK helicopter a.s!>itult today oo it maximum-security prisoo wnere 18 gu1Ards were being held hostage by some 70 rebel in- roate:. Twenty one people were reported wounded in the brier but furHw :Attack i wo hehcopters la11dcd oo the roof of the inmate-held Trani prison, police a!>sa ult squads Jumped out a~d headed downstatr!>, usit\~ explosiv~ to break through barncaded sec- tions. s:ud official sources m ftome. r.a.• tar•rr• r11r •lrfllflfo WARSAW. Poland (AP) -Poh;rnd's private farmers, who hold the key to this nation's already depleted larder, planned a · strategy session here today to consider strike plans ir the Polish Supreme Court reJects their demand for an independent union. The court 1s to rule Tuesday on a union charter for private r~. me rs who have threatened to hall delivery of sQme produce to the state-run marketing agencies if the Supreme Court does not allow them to form a union. DoUar •l.rrd, fl•ld da1n1 L.ONOON IAPl The dollar was m ixed today on world money markets and ~old prices were slightly lower in e_x· lraordina rtly ligh t trading, apparently lower in ex- Chnstmas-New Year's hohdays Odrago •idrllnr• zo:; ....... CHICAGO (AP l Several thousand Chicago commuters squeezed into school buses. retired ~uses. an~ trains today after the Regional T ransportation Authority sidelined 205 Grumman Flxible buses for repair of structural defects. Tratli.-dralh lflll lt1N'n- By '{he Associated Press As the lonR Christmas weekend drew to a close, the traffic death toll climbed pas t 400. well below est.imates of the number of people who might die on the nation's highways during the holiday. The Associated Press tally stood al 454. The National Safety Council estimated 650 to 750 might be killed in traffir aC'c1dent s from 6 p.m. Wednesday through mid· night Sunday. Reseoed by eopter Dog, horse food kept duo alive OKANOGAN, Wash. IAP) The two s urviva l ex pe rts we ren't too worried when they realized they were stranded in the rugged Pasayten Wilder - ness. But after a week-lqng diet of dog food and ho rse oats. they're reassessing plans for a s ki trip from Washington lo Maine. The two Fort Collins. Colo .. men were rescued Saturday by a U.S. Forest Service helicopter team after spending three weeks in an abandoned ranger's cabin. Greg Wiggins. 27. and Pat Legel, 33. who teach winter s ur- vival at Colorado Stat e Universi- ty. holed up after realizing they would run out of food if they tried to complete· a 100-mile s tretch from Hoss Lake t o Oroville . "We kind of overestimated the amount of terrain we could cov- er in a day and the result was that we ran s hort of food." said Wiggins "We tried our be~t and planned it the best we could." Legel said Sunday. .. Rut the weathe r slowed us down too much.'' Before they began their trip Nov. 28, the two le ft their itinerary with Wiggins' father In Dallas, with instructions to caU searchers if the two had not called from Oroville within three weeks. When Jim Wiggins didn't hear from his son and heavy snow was r e p or ted in the Cascade Mountains. he called the Okanogan County sheriffs office. • "When we got to the cabin, it had been ei~ht days since we left Ross Lake, and we knew we wou ldn't have enough food because we were only doing half the distance," said Wiggins. "We decided that if we stayed al the cabin, they would be looking for us in two weeks." "The first two weeks were not bad because we were kind of confident we would be rescued," Legel said. "The last week was the only difficult, week because we ran out of food." They had to resort lo dry dog rood and oats stor ed in the cabin. ··we'd take that dog food and heat it up with a li.ltle lard and . corn syrup to make a kind of gravy," said Wiggins. "It would kind o f fill us up , but we m anaged to lose about 15 or 20 pounds ea ch." Their s pirits dropped wb.en they realized they would be spending the holidays a lone. W iggins , who turned 27 Christmas Eve, did get one pres- ent for his birthday. ''I gave him a little film canister full of honey, the last of my food supply," Legel said. The men avoided cabin fever by ·'talking about all the good food we would eat" after their r~scue, Wiggin& said. They afso husked horse oats around the cab.in 's woodstove and played gin rummy with a makeshin deck crafted from 9·by-S index cards fOWld in the shelter. Legel and Wiggins prepared for rescue by stretching out a red signal tarp and stamping a huge S-0 S in the snow. SAN'DIEGO\Dr-~ uy MlcbH1 8a1tea' cla11y Model A roadster wa1 empty when it crashed off Sunset Cllffs Boulevard onto the ocean- ·1apping rocks Oct. 29, the day Baltes disappeared. 1'wo days before, the 28-year· old Rivers ide e ntrepreneur withdrew about $10,000 from his San Diego bank account and the previous weekend he was with a woman companion in Palm Springs, police say. Balles was the oj>erator of Valley Properties inc. in Riverside. · "There was no trade or blood or any indication that someone had been injured" in the c rash, s aid Sgt. J ohn Kennedy ol the San Diego homicide unit Sandra Baltes. his estranged wife. said in the Riverside sub- urb of Sunnymeade that ''the re are all kinds of rumors going around" including one concern- ing the m.)'Sler.Y woman. Mrs. Baltes, a schoolteacher, said. "I'm of Italian descent - and there are all kinds of rumors of the Mafia being in· volved." She called that "one of the nicer rumors." But police said Baltes, who has four children, has a spotless record. "It just doesn't make sense." said his brother JOhn, who lives in San Dit:go, cts d o their parents. According to friends. Baltes' personal belongings were still in his reiiidence. He had bank ac· counts in San Diego, where he was raised. and in Rivers.ide and several ins urance policies in- cluding one for $200,000. As long as police are probing the case. the status of Baltes' property and ins urance remains unsettled f"ro• Pa11e A I HOSTAGES savage crimes of the U.S .... in the world are not considered savage and are s aid to be signs of civilization ... Rafsanjani was interrupted three times during the course of his remarks by Majlis deputies shouting "God is g reat!.. and "DeathloAmerica!" Iranians at separate religious holiday demonstrations in Tehran and othe r cities Sunday called on the government and the Majlis to set a deadlihe for the United Slates to accept Iran's terms, Iran's official Pars news agency reported. There was no -immediate reaction from the Ira- nia n government. Rafsanjani also singled ou~ thf> Soviet Union for c riticism, obJeCt· ing to Moscow's protests Sunday 'about lack of protection for the Soviet Embassy during a dem· ons tration by Afghan exiles in Te hran. T housands of Afghan exiles demonstrated at the e mbassy Saturday, the first anniversary of a Soviet -ba<;ked coup in Afghanjstan, and tore down and burned the Soviet flag. Soviet diplomats protested that the Iranian government had ad- vance warning of the demonstr1l- lion but took no action to prevent it or lo increase security. "You expect millions of people who have become homeless by you not even to protest?·· Rafs an- 1ani said in an open question lo the Soviet Union. "What is the dif- ference between you and the US. superpower?·· f"ro• Paflr A I FIRE ... the s treet and that flaming pillows and other items were shot from the burning house. Firefighte rs and n~ighbors, who g rabbed hoses to wet down roofs. were able to keep the fire from spreading to other nearby homes. Fire authorities today were una ble to compute a dollar amount to the damage but estimated the house was 60 per- '!enl destroyed. An investigation into the cause of the explosion is continuing. Si•ian singer A male Siamang, largest of Gibbon family, puffs up uni- que pouch and sings to visitors at Dade Metrozoo in Miami. Inflatable throat permits serenading. Mob ties probed in houselrif e attack Fountain Valley police are in- vestigating the possibility that the wife of a former Bell city coun· cilma n was assaulted last week by two henchmen of organized crime in r etaliation for the political activity of her hus band Mary Lou Werrlein. 28. the wife of Pete Werrlein. 48, a Bell coun· ci lman for 16 years. was bound on her bed by two m en who forced their way into her f ountain Valley home last Tuesday and then fled with fiveonedollar bills On~ofthe intruders wore a grey suit and fe lt hat and was armed with a pistol. The other had a metal hook in· stead of a right hand. according to the police report Her hus band was not at home during the 5 p m assault in South Fountain Valley. As a councilman, Werrlein pushed for legalized c ard parlors in Bell to generate city revenue lost by Proposition 13. Gambling was approved there Card parlors also exist in nearby Ga rdena. Man facin~ theft charge A Riversid e man has been ar· rested on grand theft charges after he allegedly took $828 in cash from a Laguna Beach gas station where he was employed. Police said Leo James Long.24, of Riyerside, was arr ested at the Laguna She ll Station, 1324 N Coast Highway after the money was discovered missing. Officers s aid the suspect al- legedly used a pass key to gain en· try to the closed business office where the cash was located. The incident occurred last Friday H e is being he ld in Orange County Jail with ball set at S.5.000 police said Police Capt Bill De~1s1 said Werrlein is the executor of the estate of Ute late Mickey Cohen. the high·ranking m em her nf r1r ganized crime in California. Werrlein also has the rights to Cohen ·s memoirs, OeN i ~t said "The assault could he retribu t ion from people m the ca rd parlor business for his pos ition on ga mhling while a c-1t y C'Ou n cilman,'' Oe ..... 1s1 s aid "An or. ganized crime in vol\ ement m the assault ts a real poS's1b1lit ), liul we just don't have a lot to go on ... he said. adrung~x:· police are keep mg'"aclose cy on the home " DeNist sat 'errlein reporter! h became friends with Cohen 1n the 1940s while We rrlein was a shoe s hine boy. During the "assault la~t Tues· day. one of the intruders rc•portcd ''"told Werrletn'. wife the' ··t1a<I s.omething for her hu~hann pohC'eSatd They forced her up~ta1r~ and used surgical tape to hind her hands behind her hat·k and ap plied 1t to her ankle-; and mouth. according to the police report The woman freed herself af\\'r the men left a nd ('alled her hus band. police s aid Victim f re~d SAN FRA:"ICISCO I t\ P1 ,\ 25-year old man was rescued un harmed Sunday after he was kidnapped by three men "'ho threatened t o blow him up. poliC'e said. Jn an apparent dis pute O\'er the sale of a truck. the three accosted Harlen :\toore a~ he was leaving his llaq~ht Str<>et restaurant JOb /\ Libya ups oil • price NEW YORK (AP) -lJbya, s upptier ol 3 percent of American oil need•, has raised its crude oil price S4 a barrel to the OPEC ceil· mg price or $41 a barrel. industry sources said today. The sources also said In· donesia, which accounts for 2 per· cent of oil used in the United Sta tes. effectively raised its c rude price around $2.25, to about $36 pe r 42· gallon barrel. I The moves were the latest in an accelerating round or increases s in ce o il m inisters or the Organization of Petroleum Ex· por ting Countries voted this month to allow crude prices to rise an average or IO percent. The sources, who asked not to be quoted by name, said the in· creases take effect Thursday. Industry analysts have said the inc reases by OPEC me mbers and others coul d add up to 8 cents a gallon to U.S. retail gasoline and heating oil prices. Libya's move was expected to be followed by Algeria and Nigeria . whose S37·a ·barrel prices usually match those <.•harged by the Libyans. Llby~. Algeria a nd Nigeria supply 12 per· cent of America 's oil. According to the sources, In: donesia raised prices by between SJ SO and SJ.80 a barrel. but cut the s u rcharges it adds to official .prices. Halsey Peckworth. editorial di n.·ctor of the trade newspaper Platl"s 01lgram Price ..Report !>aid the premiums were set at 75 cent!. to a SI.SO a barrel. down from S2 25toS4 10 Among other OPEC members. Saudi Arabia the world's larj.!C<;t oil exporter has rajsed its C'rude price from SJO to $32 a barrel retrocictive to Nov. 1. \'cncwcla ha~ said it wi II boost its prtcl' around S3 a harrel to ahout S3i ~lcx1co. a major supplier of oil to the Cnitcd States which does not hcl<mg to OPEC. last week ra1st·d priC"es between S4 and S.5.50 ,J liarn'I lt!1 IOP grade of crude rose from S.'J..I 50 to S38.50 a barrel, wh1lt> 1t -; lower ~radl:! crude went from S2!HoS34 SO Newport man dies after coast crash \ ~eY.purt Beach man died frum lnJLmt.fs hL' received in a t wo- car :.tCl·idcnt in Capistrano Beach Christ ma~ Dar 1\ s pokesman for the Califomi~ ll 1~h"'a) Patrol s aid Paul Uvt:r cash. 25. died f'riday at San C IC'mente General Hos pital wht>rc he wa!. taken after the acci· dent Ove rcash was reportedly turn1n~ into Doheny Slate Park from Doheny Pa rk Road when he sides wiped a l'ar driven by Gretchen Pete rsen. 18, of Laguna Beach Ovt-rci1sh·s vehicle reportedly s pun out of control and plunged down a steep embankment. Two passt'ngers m Overcash's car , Kevin lle rtholomey. 22. and Mark :\llen. 19. both of Newport Beach, received minor inJuries. Miss Pet t>rsen was not 1n1ured in the• accident ______ ......_ _____ __, __ Employee, TELEPHONE Thomas P. Haley Pllllll• .... Ro~r1 N. Weed Preth•l!I M. Thomas Keevll Edll°' ThOmas A, Murphlne Mllflee"'9 Editor Charles H. Loos Copyrl9llt IUO Or•119e Co••I P11 .. l•lll ... CO"'P•llY Ho lltW• _..,!ft. 11-r .. kllt•. edllorMll ,,..,.,., or .. .,.,,l_.,h ~re111 t'n•y ~ , w11r-.•ec.-. 11111vt ,-.ultt IMf"'I"""'"' UIP'/f'°"I _, All de,.r;iw•: {714) M2~ ca .. .,....~.: 142·5111 OFFICES Cost•-: DI w.tt .. ., 5lr-.. IA90IN 8Ndl: 10Z7 No. ClNtl Hltfl•oy HU11tlfttllG0111Ndl: 1"7S8Mdl ...... ward -S.<0110 clan POii-Nl• at Cot .. -.a, CMll~llio. IUSPS 1~. SUM<rlptlM 11'1 CM• rlor $4.• -Illy; llY~=.:·• -Ny; m1111ary ... ...-1eM'4.• y. cash missing. San Clemente police are seek- . Ing a service station employee who has been missin& , --along with SS>O to $1,000 in receipts - from his place of employment slnceSaturday. Police received a call from the operator of 'the Texaco st1t1an al said the Ulhta to bJa business were off andthebulldin~ waaunloc:ked. He 111id employee Jesse Thelen wu not on the reml1es andc.., ~,_ tom re 1terwas mwinc. alontwitbacustomer'acar. ntro uc1ng t e designed especially with you in mind 11ghtwe1ght. comlortably 1a1lored with a ratghHe@-s.lhouette. rn1hn!e shad ot denim indigo washed and bleached 56 ~ ASHION ISLAND NEWPORT 8 ACH ~~~~~~~~--\1~0~~ ~--~~ r \ 1fmm1RlklYIVll OHANc.l t l.'LJNl 'f l AL If OPNIA 25 CENTS NeWhbor a hero Mesa·· woman .rescued Biter blast - 3/irms cleared ... of bribe By RICHARD GREEN Of .. O.Uy f'llol SIMI No conslruclion companies will be criminally implicated In connection with charges that three Irvine city employees ac- cepted Jack Daniel's bourbon, overtime pay and food in ex- change for speedy building in· spections, police indicated to- day. The Orange County District Attorney's Office has judged the companies to be legally blame· less. since they wete allegedly pressured into giving the gifts. according to police Detective Mark Hoffman. This pressure was allegedly applied by building inspectors who promised to find nit-picking building code violations if gratuities weren 't given, authorities said. Hoffman said he hasn't de· veloped enough information to ·me criminal charges against any more building inspectors :£!ban the three, who were charged ·Friday with the misdemeanor offense. Two other city building in· spectors, however, were placed on administrative leave pending ·further investigation. Hoffman said he is hoping that building contractors will provide him with further information about the case. The three who are now charged with solicitation or ac· ceptance of gratuities by public l>fficers or employees are Manuel S. Linares, 34. or Corona; Daniel B. Bullard, so. of Costa Mesa, and Arthur W. Peck, 51, of Anaheim. Hoffman said that while the investigation of these men began Dec. 5 when a building contrac· tor came forward, he has de· veloped information that gratuities allegedly were solicit· ed as rar back as September. He said he could not estimate how muc h overtime pay , whiskey or food were involved. Building contractors must pay for all city inspections in Irvine, 1lDd they can request that in· spectors loot al their projects on an overtime basis. Hoffman said that poJice have photographs of the three men accepting gratuities. Peck bas said that be and the other two will plead not guilty lo the charges. 'Body' only garbage bag Irvine police were told by a · en__at 9:30 p.m. Sunday th8t a body appeared to be wrapped in a plastic bag in a north Irvine agricultural field -the same field where a murdered woman was found early this year. . Upon examining the bag, bow ever, police discovered that t c_~ onl~ e•rbaie~ The field at Michelle and Myfqrd avenues was where the impaled body or Gayle Annel Lin1le, 30, of Tustin was found on March rt. Worker •ees streaker The "streakinl" fad may bave been renewed over the weekend in Irvine when a nude man left bis sporu car, ran acroa a construction atte, 1« back in hia auto ud toot off. The construction foreman at the site located on River Ihm and West Yale Loop told police be thw'lbt be couJa ldenUfy FIRST FIREMEN ON SCENE OF COSTA MESA FIRE POUR WATER ON BLAZE Appa,.nt o•• exploalon triggered home fire •t 282 Sento Tom•• St. Heavier fog forecast /or . Tuesday By JODI CADENHEAD OI .. o.lly Pllllt M8ft Patchy fog is expected lo COO· linue plaguing ·the Orange Coast tooight with heavier fog predicted Tuesday morning, ac- cording lo a spokeswoman for the National Weather Bureau Service. The wave of fog began rolling in Sunday afternoon, forcing the closure of John Wayne Airport this morning and causing numerous traffic accidents. The second week of on again off again foe has left many boli· day travelers stranded at Los Angeles International Airport and John Wayne Airport where flight operations have continued on an irregular schedule. In Orange County, the airport was cloeed at 8:20 a.m. tod.ay after visibility along the coast was estimated at only one-eighth of a-mile. Elsewhere, the California Highway Patrol reported num- erous fender-bender accidents alon1 fog-shrouded coastal highways. "Crubes are going down like crazy," said Hi1hway Patro~ .spokesmirf wtmam ·xartln~ "A lot of them are intersection col· U.ions because driven just un't see the lilbts." Martin advises motorilts to drive slowly with their windows rolled down in order to bear traf· fie conditiom ud poulble eccl· dents abud. Temperatures are eJtpeded to dip to 55 dean-tcftllbt alone the cOMt with • upeded bllb of IO predicted Tuelday. Moist air blowinl off the ocean is continuinc to cause foe condi· llona alone the cout, while in· land residents enjoy clearer sides, llCCOl"diDi to a WeMher Bureau spokeswoman. Mideut talks in tbla Nile delta vllla1• - -Anwar s.dat'1 hometown -to -p.:<llrea=~tbe~ ~-= bllled u a aerie• of printe meettncs with Kiddle l!ast leaden about pro1pecta for an Arab-Israeli peffe. COSTA mM ARE HERO -Robert Hafvey, 31, of 280 Santo . Tomu St., watches firefighting efforts after he rescued victim Gene Jones from her blazing home. He had to kick open a fence gate and pull victim from a rear bedroom window. Mesa driver injured in car collision A 65-year-old Costa Mesa man is in good condition today after his car collided with a Costa Mesa police patrol unit at Placentia A venue near Estancia High School. Joseph Novak was transported to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital following the 7: 45 a.m. accident. Police said that Novak was traveling eas t on Placentia Avenue when he crossed over a double yellow line. colliding with the patrol car. Officer Dale Birney was at· tempting to make a left tum into the high school parking lot when the accident occurred. He escaped injut')\. Damage to the police car was estimated at Sl,000. 3 cities set Christmas-- tree pickup Trash collection crews in Newport Beach, lryine_and ~osla \jesa will pick -"'P discarded Christmas trees atong ~1th reg· 1..1lar trash durinll_ the next twQ weeks. Trees must be cut into lengths of 4-feet or less to be accept.able for collection. Tree stands must be removed. City officials urge residents lo put trees out for collections-as soon as possible to avoid the fire risks that dried-out trees present. Trash will not be picked up Thursday (New Year's Day) in the three cities. Trash collection re1ularly scheduled for Thursdays will be made on Friday. Homes where collections are made on Fridays will be served on Saturday. sanitation officialssaid. fllea _cited Fireball engulfs home By STEVE MARBLE Of U. Dally f'llel Stall A 53-year·old Costa Mesa woman, pulled from her flaming Santo Tomas Street home Sun· day by a quick -t h inki ng neighbor, remains in critical condition today with second· degree bums over 40 percent of her body. Fire officials said Gene Jones, who lives alone at her 282 Santo Tomas r esidence . was i n· ves tigating a heavy gas odor in her kitchen and had lifte<J the top off her stove when it ex· plod ed. Officials said it was only a matter of seconds before the fire engulfed the home. sending flames licking out the windows. Robert Harvey. a neighbor, told officials he heard the ex· plosion. ran outside his 280 Santa Tomas Street home and saw the flames. He said he ran to a fence sepa rating the residences. jumped over it and dragged the woman from her burning home throu~h a rear bedroom window. ·'I hardly even remember do· ing it." said Harvey, "It all hap· pened so quickly. l was on the phone talking with a friend when I heard the explosion -I don't know how but I knew im· mediately what had happened ... Harvey. a magazine official in Burbank. said he realized quick- ly that his neighbor was in trou· ble. · • "She was standing by the bedroom window which had been blown out ... r eca l ls Harvey. "I knew she was in serious trouble -her hair sort of melted on her head . I pulled her out the window · · Harvey. 31. told fire officials <See FIRE. Page A2 l Leukemia .. victim dies FRESNO CAP> -An 8-year-old leukemia victim died at home four days after local citizens did their best to fulfill his wish of go· ing to Disneyland. Instead oft raveling out oflown. Andre Reese was visited by Dis· n ey characte rs in a special Christmas Eve party. Three trips to Disneyland were postponed be<: a use of the boy's re· curring bouts with c ancer . although a company jet, a waiting limousine and an expectant Dis· neyland staff planned to make hi s visit memorable. Coast Weather Dense night and morn· ine f o.e to continue. with _ Onl)' parti&l cleating along beach Tuesday. Sunny and warmer inland Tuesday afternoon. Lows tonight 45 along the coast. 52 inland. Highs ~esday mid 60s to 70s. IN81DETODA'W Oft Christmas Eve of JIS.S. a group of Con/«Jerol• wtmms got toS/ftltn in Pvlo.lld, Tnn .. Clftd formed a club calJal tM Ku Kha Klan in wmch tM main tpOrf wos members dropi11g themulou in bed1hHU GI "glto1t1" to frigldn r«:entlu ff'ftd alawa. TodaJI, Ow Klan llcJ.I nohif'Cf ift. to a Mhoorlc of pcm1mWtory com pa~ mn Oltd womn ar• l.ar"llinQ to lcW. SH BJ. •••• • WXN.AivsT-•• ~----- Rioting reponed in A/ghan capital NIW Dll.m. lndla tAP>-IUGUaa wu report4HS today ln Kaul, ~al ot A119'•"'-.._. loNI fGftel laave been t,.,.. tar mort tMn a 19a1 to ,.. .._ M•Jetn ret.11. The Sov6tit news a1en<'y Ta11 confirmed that "criminal activities" oc.-rurred U\ Kabul TM~ ""•" no 1muu1dl•\t1 wurd of any cHualUea The cause ol thf di tur~anc-e wu alto unknown. ltroWc1 gath .. red oul1id. th~ Mlni1try of Information and <'ulturt" •l •bout ll • m and bettan hurUna istones at the buUd· .. Intl. actordm1i1 to thti r f'j.IOl1 fHJnt a diplompta<' source in New Otltu • 1•• , ...... Ir•••••• 111J141 REIRlJT. t.eb1o1non I APJ Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini lod•> told lr~uh•O• tht:y must persevere despite war losses. and uraied I.hem not tu c1u1vtlr" m the face of fuel shortages. tn a pttch broadtut bv Tehr"1l Radio, Khomeini told crip· pied au force veterans itnd families of soldiers killed in action th1u Iran ~a:. suffering an "economic siege" as well as the dtlPl'I ' "'1•1n-. t·c.u~td b) 99 days of war with nei_ghbonng Iraq. 18 ........ r~porard ,,,,,.,. ·1 R ~NI. Ital> lA P I • Param1htary police staged a Ughl- n1.ng hel1coµ.er assault today on a maximum-security prison where 18 l:Uard~ were being held hostage by some 70 rebel in- ~ates. Twenty one people were reported wounded in the brief but furious attack · Tw1. hehcopteri. landed on the roof of the inmate-held Trani prison. police ass ault squads j umped out and h.eaded downstairs, using explosives-lo break through barricaded sec· lions . said off icial sourc·es m Rome. .. . , f'I.-. •11rn• lft•ldr prbora "' WALLA WALLA , Was h. (AP> -A fire burned inside the walls of the troubled Washington State Penitentiary today after pri:;oners threatened to riot u.nless an inmate placed in segrega- t1on was released. an official said. A group of about 100 prisoners gathered to demand the re- lea~" of Julius Gillespie, said Dick Paulson of the state Depart- m em of Social and He"alth Services in Olympia. The prisoners threatened to riot unless Gillespie was released. n LONDON (APl -The dollar was mixed today on wo~ld" money markets and gold prices were slightly lower in ex' \ lraordinarily li g ht trading, apparently lower in e·x - Chrislmas-New Year's holidays. Odc.-ago •idrllne• 20:i ....,._ CHICAGO IAP> ~al thousand Chicago commuters squeezed into school bu5es. relh-ed buses and trains today alter the Regional Transportation Authority sidelined 205 Grumman 'Flxible buses for repair of structural defect s. .. ::J'raflit• drath '"" l11wrr By The Associated Press As the long Christmas weekend drew to a close, the traffic death toll climbed past 400, well below estimates oft.he number of people who might die on the nation's highways during the holiday. The Associated Press tally stood at 454. The National Safety Council estimated 650 to 750 might be killed in traffic accidents from 6 p.m. Wednes<Iay through mid- night Sunday. Moh ties probed in_ housewife attack Fountain~Valley police are in· vestigaling the possi bi Ii ty that the wife of a former Bell city coun- cilman was assaulted last week by two henchmen of organized c rime in r et aliation for the Irvine mayor slwots down Cupid idea lrvine May6r Art Anthony has shot an arrow through the heart of a proposed city program in which costumed Cupids would deli ver fl owers to people on Valentine's Day. The plan was advertised in a Community Services Depart· ment flier, "Send your flame a flower -Cupid and his merry friends will be visiting Irvine on Feb. 13 and 14 ... Send your s pecial someone a flower and =-meuage delivered by Cupid (for a cost or S6l." In a memo lo Community Services Department Director Deanna Manning. Anthony said, "This is to advise you of my strongest objection to the City of 1.rvine's involvement in this kind of aelivity1·The city staff vellot ---employed lo perform floral de- livery services. Unless I hear to the contrary . . . I will assume that this proposed servicl! has been cancelled." Anthony explained this mom· ing that he felt the ser vice was Improper because it would put the city in competition with private florists. In response to Anthony's memo. Mrs. Manning caMelled the program. political activity of her husband, Mary Lou Werrlein. 28, the wife of Pete Werrlein, 48, a Bell coun· cilman for 16 years, was bound on her bed by two men wpo forced their way into he r Fountain Va lley home last Tuesday and then fled with fi ve one dollar bills. One of the intruders wore a_grey suit and felt hat and was armed with a pistol. The other had a metal hook in- stead of a right hand, according to the police report. Her husband was not al home during the 5 p.m. assault in South Fountain Valley . As a councilman , Werrlein pushed for legalized carQ parlors in Bell to generate city revenue los t by Proposition 13. Gambling was approved there. Card parlors also exist in nearby Gardena. police said. Police Capt. Bill DeNisi said Werrlein is the executor of the estate of the late Mic• Cohen, the high-ranking member of or· ganized crime in California. WerrJejn also has the rights to Cohen's memoirs, DeNisi said. "The assault could be retribu· ti on from people in the card parlor business for his position on gambling while a cit y coun· cilman," DeNisi said. "An or- ganized crime involvement in.Jhe _ass-a ult fsareal pOiiioility .J»Jt we just don't have a lot to go on," he said, adding that police are keep- ing ''acloseeyeonthehome.'' DeNisi said Werrlein reported· ly became friends with Cohen in the 194Qs. ·while Werrlein was a shoe shine boy. Durtng the assault last Tues; day, one of the intruders reported· ly told Werrlein's wife they "had something for" her husband, police said. TELEPHONE T~sP.Haley ~....., RoDert N. Weed ~ IE~tef' ThOmU A. Murptiine .......... NIW Charles H. Loos -............. ~ • C:e1Jyrlettt ttM OrHt• C••tl ~1t•ll1lll1t1 CeMtt•llY. lte M•l ................................ • ................ ...,. • .-Mey ... , •• , ••• ,., .......... ,., l •t .......... <...,...,._, • AN da,.,..llla: (714) ~ ct.aalled~1:M2'"8S11 OfACU c..eeMetA: • .,...., .,... ~9Mcll: t111•C.UtHltlflwey llMllll QIU eNdl: tJl7S llMdl ......,.,., . ,. 8JfteAueetaW..._ The tp1aker al Jran•1 Parlla· ment reacted ancrily today to Preaident.elect Reaaan 'a charce that the American hoataaea were "kidnapped by barbarians •. " and the Iranian otficial implied that the United States was trying lo swldle Iran. Reagan was asked by reporters in Los Angeles on Sunday ii he <'ould go along with the latest Ira- nian proposal for a $9 billion down payment for the release of the 52 hostages, with the rest of the terms to be negotiated. ··No.'' he replied. ··I don 'l think you pay ransom for people that hav e bee n kidnapped by barbarians." ' It . ~ Reagan today defended hls description of the Iranian cap. tors as "barbarians" and said he did not think his remark would make it any more difficult to negotiate with the Iranian government.~_. "Whal have they got lo be mad about? They're the ones who did the kidnapping," Reagan told reporters. o.11,~1tecstett,.,,..., VICTIM GENE JONES IS RUSHED TO UCI MEDICAL CENTER AFTER FIRE RESCUE She hed returned home from trtp, melted gas, then exoloslon followed H a s hemi Rafsanjani. the speaker of Majlis. or Parliament, responded to Reagan's comments from the floor of the 228-seat as· sem bly, S!lying Iran was not wor· ried aboutlconfronting the United States. "We are not scared of your threats.·· he said. "We want our money back and you call~ ransom," Rafsanjani said. The deposit of financial guarantees is necessary lo "pre- vent you from swindling us. · "J'he world must know that ac· cord\flg to our Islamic morality we w'1nted to solve the hostage is· sue but il is the U.S. which looks about for an excuse. "We will settle accounts with you." he s aid without elaboration. I ran as ked the United States this month to deposit $24 billion with the Algerian government as guarantees for assets Iran wants returned. Today was the hostages 4.22nd day of captivity. Commenting on the television fi Im of the hostages released over the Christmas holidays, Rafsan- jan i said : ''All the world saw the film or the spies and knows they are healthy and happy after a year and some months. "You call this treatment barbaric and uncivilized but the savage crimes of the U.S .... in the world are not considered savage and are said to be signs of civilization." Rafsanjani was interrupted three l imes during the course of' his remarks by MajHs deputies shouting "God is great !" and ''DeathtoAmerica!" Iranians at separate religious holiday demons trations in Tehran and other cities Sunday called on the government and the Majlis to set a deadline for the United Slates to accept Iran's terms. Iran's official Pars news agency reported. There was no immediate reaction from the Ira- nian government. RafsanJam also singled out the Soviet Union for criticis m , object~ ing to Moscow's protests Sunday about lack of protection for the Soviet Embassy during a dem- onstration by Afghan exiles in Tehran. Home looted in Newport A Ne wport Beach woman told authorities this weekend that burglars made off with $21,550· worth of loot from her Kings Place home while she was in the hospital. Judy Lee Feldman reported that the thieves grabbed a '10,000 diamond and gold ring, a p~ir of diamong earrings, a sterling-stl\ler pface setting and a modem art lithograph. Police said it is unclear how the crooks entered the house. Bomb alert proves hoax The Alpha Beta supermarket on Culver Drive in Irvine was evacuated for two hours when ·a woman telephoned the store and told the manager there was a bomb there. Police searched the store but were unable to find a bomb. The market reopened for business around 10 p.m. Saturday. Tanks burn .. .. FLAMES BURST FROM WINDOW OF COSTA MESA HOME Fighting In tight qu•rters of side y•rd Newport man dies after crash A Newport Beach man died from injuries he received in a two. car accident in Capistrano Beach Christmas Day. · A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol said Paul Overcash, 25, died Friday al San Clemente Gene ral Hos pital where he was taken after the acci· dent. Overcash wa s reportedly turning into Doheny Stale Park from Doheny Park Road when he s ideswiped a car driven by Gretchen Petersen. 18, of Laguna Beach. Overcash's vehicle reportedly spun out of control and plunged down a steep embankment. Two p assengers in Overcash 's car. Kevin Hertholomey. 22. and Mark Allen, 19, both of Newport Beach, r eceived minor injuries. Miss Pete rsen was not injured in the accident. f'ro• Page A I FIRE ... he was forced to kick down a loc ked gate to get the woman to the street. where the pair waited for paramedics to arrive. Mrs Jones. who just returned from a rour·day vacation to northern California. was taken to bum ward at UCI Medical Center ~cighbors~ reported that the explosion sent glass flying onto the s treet and t hat flaming pillows and othe r items were shot from the burning house. Firefighters and neighbors. who grabbed hoses to wet down roofs. were able to keep the fire· from sprcadmg to other nearby homes Fire a ut horit ies today were unable to compute a dollar i:l m ount to th e d i:l mage but c ttmatc<I the house was 60 per· r ent de~troyed An investigation into the cause of the explost<m 1s continuing. Funeral set for Newport's Miss Ahrens Funeral services for NewR<>rt Beac h re s ident Gen evieve Ahrens. a high school teacher of 40 years m t he Los Angeles area. wtll lx· held Wednesday morning at Forest Lawn in Glendale. Mass Ahrens. a 16-year resi- dent of Newport Beach. died Saturday at a Costa Mesa con· valcsent hospital where she'd been livinl! recently She was 74. The Newport woman was the first female teacher at George Washington High School in Los An~eles. where s he taught for 40 years . She is survived by two cousins J ordon Jones of Huntington ' Park and ~tt y Weston of ( Fresno. Tanker leaks oil EL SEGUNDO CAP> -Some 500 barrels of oil leaked from a tanker moored at the Chevron facility here. but only a fraction of that floated away and fouled near by beaches. the Coast Guard says .. .. .. EL DORADO, Kan. '(AP> Firefi1hters continued their bat· ------------ tie toClay lo conP,ol blues in ~b~e_ciant ~ 1•or•1• t.a.Db-cc ....... --1 tainln1 several hundred thousand 1allon1 of solvent, of. flclala said. Four were injured in the rlrea, whkh be1an abqut 4 p.m. Sunday at the Getty Reftn. in.I and Marltetinl Co. refinery . Introducing th!._Al's Garage Je:::a~n.:..__ _________ _ designed espec1al1Y with you in mind. hghtwe1ght. comfortably tailored with a straight leg silhouette, in three shades of denim. Indigo. washed and bleached ' • AL..,S_.OAflAGE.._ ___ _... 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644 7030 . . .. --Monday, Decelnbec' 21, 1MO ..,. ... Rftlll1-gence of Klan alarms nation • • D.AJ11 WA..._..... Olt Taa CIVIL n•bt• or· 1••11•1-a"' •..u.i at the numbtn ot 1)41Uplt tUrMnl aut far HI ram.. to r•cent muntN, partu~ularh 1n , ... Nur1h, and the tens of tbouuu• ol vet cuUect.t by avowed Klan11men caMtidau. \ft ...,..t~t.aaa. Tbey are \wen more alarllMld at U. ....,.,..military »etivlty ~ ~ .o e~e ta. Klan WH mvotved tn a rft'mt t.1Mttt-ol •UUap ol blaa1 But Um prep· ara&1on for*" .. .,_.nabie'' race war cumes at a time when police art-uave1t11atan1 the slay1nas of 11 blacl cb..ildren 1r1 Atlanta with four others miss· ana. tbe k J~ of Jx black men in Buffalo and a $Jliper anaclt ou aoonal rban ~ague President Vernoa Jordan F'urthermott " former Klansman he&s been charged Wlth lbootui& to death two.black men jog· e•ng with whne guili in Salt Lake City and a jury in Greens boro +I C . recently acquitted six Klansmen and neo Hazis-.of murder in the deal}\$ o( five commums~ gunned down at a ··Death to the Klan·· rally THE COMMUNITY a ELATIONS SEaVICE or the Justi~ Department reported this month it was called to investigate 88 Khtn·related cases during fiscal UBl, an incl'eflSe or 55 percent over the pre· vious year. The J_auUce Dep11rtmenl said the inci· dents involved mainly "cross-.burnings, armed rallies countering minority protesters. flrebomb- ings, challenges t:o1,olice and aeneral harassment or blacks and Hispaoics." Al the request of the' U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. the Anti•Defamation League of e ·nai B'rith compiled a nport on the guerrilla warfare training in five S'-les and sent it to Attorney General Benjamm Civiletti, urging the FBI to re- new·s utveillance or lhe Klan "to protect American "citizens from fur~ terrorism 4Uld violence." "He ·WTote b.ck that he was going to ask his staff to study it ... Irwin SuaJl, director of the league's fact·findang department. said. "He mllde no commitment.·· FBI SURVBllaANCE OF THE Kl.AN was c urtailed in 1976 by guidelines that require evidence or actual or imminent violence before in- vestigating the actions of domestic groups. The Ku Klux KJan, which began 115 years ago in Pulaski, Tenn .. with half a dozen white-garbed "ghosts" terroritiQll their recently freed slaves, today is a hodge-podge 6f rival organizations with similar trappings .and shared animosities toward blacks. Jews. communists and assorted aliens.· Since the FBI no longer infiltrates the klavems, and the t<lan never reveals its mem- bership. the Anti. Defamation League probably has the best hood count of any outside organization. The ADL monitors Klan at'tivit1es through· 26 re- gional offices, basioi membership estimates on at· tendance at Klan rallies and the mailing lists of KKK publications. All told. Su.all said, there are probably no more than 10,51() •active members, with about 100,000 sympathmers . But the membership is growing, particularly in unexpected places suc h as New England "MOllE IMPOHANT AND MORE dangerous is the rise in paramilitary training faciUties." Suallsaid "'The main problem 1s not the number. Another 1,000 more or less is not the threat. The threat is violence aad terrorism." And a Justice Department report that ume to light recently said the ·'most violent" of the KKK leaders was Bill Wilkinson of Denham Springs, La . Imperial Wizar~ of the Invisible Empire of the Ku Klux Klan. Wilkinson. a Louisiana farm boy who join e d the Navy at 17 and ltecame a decoder on a Polaris s ubmarine, agreed to an in- t.e rv iew at a Baton Rouge :restaurant, saying he didn't al· \ow reporters inside the Em- p1re 's headquarters in Denham w•L•'"'°" Springs. The imperial wizard, no taller than a jockey without his hood. "finished off a met or Louisiana red snapper. lit 'the stub or a cigar, and talked about what he 5ees as the "inevitable race war ... a notion be first got •when the Navy sent him to San Francisco and he first saw white women dating black men. ... FEEL Ul&E IT'S GOING TO be very widespread," saiti1Willtinson, who was arrested in September in Connecticut for packing a .45·caliber pistol in his sultc•e, and wbo often is surrounded by "nighthawks'' -Klan security guards -toting submachine guns and sawed-off shotguns at rallies. "I've had ma shot down in many places - Decatur. Carbon ffflll, Okolona -and I've been !Shot al in many ins tances nnyself." Willkinso~. wtrose two '!Schoot-aie sons ar~ membeti.oL tthe Klan Youth Corps, added, "tr the fact that I say we're go. uni to defend ourselves by any 1means is violent. then I'm 1Yiolent. "U the fact that t say we're flacjnc a race war in this C'OW'l· ... .,.. ltry ia violent"' then rm vjolent. .. -Eatller "lliis 11RODtb, WlWnaon showed up in Wash~ at a lftft1reukln81 hearin1 coadueted by Rep. Jobn <?myers, D-lllch., _chairman of a Bouse 1ubccnmniUee on crime in.e1ti1at1J11 whether Una esist between MY IO•emmental bodies and "violate prone" orsanluUGM such aa ~ Klan ad neo."lfut IJ"OU ... ConyeN ._. U.a lllan bu paramilitary and p1ycbo~1lcal warfare trainin1 cam,. • AlalMama, CUUonla, ~ D· Tucker. the Exalted Cyclopt of the Cullman u.-., Nort1' C&roUoa aad T ...... la _...._, it kla.vern who al10 11 commander of the oa-rat. Klan Youth Corpe CMDPI Ill S.. 06elo. paramilitary frOUp. Saa 8ernard.ino ud L09 ~111; Peon. Mel ''Tbe Klan Special Forces are here to prepare Chlcaao. Ul., Jeffeno.vlUct, .; Oltleltoea cttJ, the white people for survival in the upcomln1 ·Okla , Oeftver IN HUa.boroucta, CGAo., _.Bina· war"'" Tucker 1aid. · ua1ham, TuKumbla, TmeaJoeullldDee8tur,AJa. The paramilitary arm ol the Ku Klux Klan in Texas call• ltaelf the "Texas E1mer1ency Reserve" wbi~b conduct• "survival trainin1" courus at Camp Puller near the town of. Anhuac two weekends a month for. 200 to 500 members. That program drew oatlonaJ attention when it was revealed that the camp had also been teaching guerrilla tactics to abou.t 30 Explorer Scouts and Civil. Air Patrol cadets from Ellington Air Force Base. WilkUUIOll'' lnvi•ible Em&Nre. wbicb has an ~•llm»Led 2,000 to ~.500 memben, =.:.•ticinaJ utteoUon In May lt'71 when 100 ol lta Jnem· bers eniaaed in a shoot·out with demonstraton of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Decatur, Ala. Four people were wounded. Today 1t operates one ol ill ''Klan Special Forces" camps not far from the scene ol that con- rronu.don Tbe camp,· called "My !..a.\:' for the Viel· namese vlllaae where U S. soldiers killed scores of r1 v!Uans. ls h.idden somewhere near CuJJman, Ala. Thrtt reporters taken there blind-folded in Sep- tember round half a dozen tents in a secluded valley with 10 men and one woman, all drHHd in military-style fatig ues. The full squad, the Klan ~ays, c.'OflSists of 15 people AMONG THE INSTaucroas were Louis Beam, grand dragon of the Texu KKK, and Joe Bogart, a former Marine Corps cook who joined lhe Klan two years ago. The training at Camp Puller in· eluded tactical maneuvers, military drills, map re· ading and how to use guns. particularly a Colt A R-15 assault rine with a grenade launcher. Bogart said that in boot camp training he had choked other Marines into unconsciousness. but they dido 't go that far whHe training the Scouts and THE &LAN COMMANDOS HONE their marksmanship with M-16 rifles and practice search·and-destroy missions at combat training sessions ont> weekend a month. according to Terry cadets. L-.~~~_... .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~....J "We didn't have the boys choke each other, · Bogart said, "We just showed them how to do it. .. ELE ·y ·THE NANETTE FAHAY Saddleback Savings & Loan has become Coast Federal .._ __.....__vings & Loan. And we feel thi calls for a celebration. So we're inviting you and the elebrities you see here to com to one of the "open house " we're having ev~ry day from December 29 through January 5 at each of our six offices in your neighborhoodt. ~ .,. .... ..,. . AMUllCALtBlOIWOf Ml •s. One of these stars wiil be at each celebration to autograph your copy of "As Time Goes .... • "<"" .... ,. . ' ,~ ·' <,LORIA DE HAVEN .( ' , \ ""' \ ~,.-- , >. \ ~-· ... ~, ( "~ l r By"-a stereo recording of Lee Castle and the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra playing the original Jimmy Dorsey arrangements of September Song, Tuxedo Junction and other hits of the "Big Band" era. This unique · . album, _avaiJable only at Coast Federal, is a history of 1935-45 in words and music. If you could buy it in a store, you'd probably pay $8 . But we'll give it to you for free, just for com- irrg in any day from December 29 through January 17. And while you're enjoying the celebration and talking to neighbors, you'll be getting to CDlCLE THI ADDRESS most convenient fot you and come in any time &om 11~tu1 pm, Monday, Deamber-i9 through Monday, January-S . ............... 88.t North Coat Highway. (714) 497·3383 =--· -M~llllltMel - ( Leisure Woftd). ( 714) 511·5000 ·11111No: 23582 El Tcwo Rd., (71•) 170·eoll • NOT!. Theft will ~ no "an at tbi• ofOce, '*' alllwli It auUablc . .. HOOO£O MENACE? Ready for vlolenc• ~ ' . ,, • . ' --~. . /} =-..... ..-r, ~(_~ __ .... c;. , ~'1 . ~" ~, , ' ,·. I j I - know Coa t Federal, too. We're one of the country' largest savings and loans, with 60 offices throughout CaliJomia. HIGH INTEREST, CHECKING THAT PAYS YOU, AND FRIENDLY, SERVICE. Learn..aboot our wide varjety of savings plans. Discover 'our friendly, personal service and the extras we're known for, too-the travel program and entertainment discounts of our Coast Insiders Club, for instance. 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I NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ... .. .. : ·r .1 BUSllESI:/ STOCKI DOWN 5 .. llO ·C·LOSING IBl.17 Near~ord Bankruptcies trOuhle_ Japan TOKYO 1AP1 • Ucspit.e general glllMl health, Japan's Cl·<1nomy ls t roubled by a disturbing number of bankruptcies among s maJJ and medium.sized companies wh ich form the backbone or the nalicm's phenomenal growth Some l.631 business failures were COUDled in Nov- ember, with combined debts equivalent to Sl.2 billion, pushing the total µast the J.500-company 'crisis line'' for the third straight month Toko Shoko Re!;t:arch Ltd .. a credit· su.r vey company v. h1c h tabulates business failures every month, said total tfankruptcies for tht> year will be JUSt below the record O( 18,47 1 set m 1977 MOS1 Ot' Tltt. 1-'AlLURES are of small and meqium- :.1zcd cnl erpri!.cs with 50 to 150 worken. Unlike their bis hrother!> m auto:. and electromcs. they were unable to deal with high ene rgy costs and falbng dema1d. "The aµprec1ation of the yen against the dollar. rising fuel costs, a11rl gr<iwmg competition from developing na- tions the} all combined to drive us in a hole," said M 1ts uo Sh1m1zu act'ount~nts for the Kyoei Electric Manufacturing C<>, which failed this all ""ith liabilities t'<IUI\ ah:nl to (.lboul Sl7 m1lhon ·Wt: started to feel t he pinch in 1~7." said Sbimizu, v. hO:-.t' tompany was form ed 1n 1960 anti made a name as i1n 1•xporter of tape•r,ecorde rs and rad10 ciusettes. L EO 8\' THE BIG EXP<j RT industries. Japan's l'l'onom} had weathered the oil shocks and stagflation of tht: 1971h Government for et·asts proJect en>nomic growth <•f 5 J percent in flscal 1981 , up from a pro1ected 4.8 percent th 1s year and well ahead of other westen1.<:ountrie3. Tht-rise i.n 1·11n:-.umer prices 1s expc:,tt:d tu he less than 7 percent this }'car, and will drop lo the-5 ~rcent l~vel in 198 l , a<·cordmg to government estimates. l ndu~lry h<ii. le<1rned to m ove to I.he drum's slower lit·at b.\ rl'dutini: c..•mµloyet:s. conservinc ener}Y· ""orking m < lthl' coordinatu111 v. ath the governm«n\ an~ C(Jn vincing lah<>r tu al'Ct-IJI :-.malle1 annual ra1~1:~ · "!'\M ALL F AC.:1'0 RS I N THE recent rash of hankruptc1es Shun1ch1 Nakao, a government bankruptcy of fic ial :-.aid arc· the belt-llghtening of ronsumers whose n ·al meom<'' h:J\t"l<!vclcd ulf or dropped. and th~ govern- ment's fi sral :Justcr1t) policies which h<A\'e d amped down on puhll<· worh µroJet·ls . a bad hlo"' to lht: ccm tstruction industry .~fut·k• In Thr ,.,.pt>f light I < • ., ... 1 .... , ""'"'.., , .,. ,,,, ... ' '..C... ... ._., --((lfil• ~,I.. 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