HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-12-30 - Orange Coast Pilott'
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• Ylll llllTlll llllY PIPIR
ltlE ~C>•\Y DECE.MlHRJO l<l80 ORANGECOUNTY C ALIJ-OllNIA 25 CENTS
'Mystery men' aSsault woman
4 Vie• youths ' . I
Witness tellS
of gang rape
·~-·,..,.... WE'LL LISTEN
Iran's Behzed Nebevl
Iranians
will 'listen'
to U.S. terms
ByTbeAssociated Press
T he head of Iran's hostage
negotiatidn team said today his
government would listen to any
U.S. counterproposal that was ac·
ceptable to the Algerian govern-
ment concerning Iran's demand
for S24 billion.
He also accused President·
elect Reagan of bluffing and act-
, ing like a Hollywood cowboy, and
threatened that the host ages
would be tried if Iran's demands
we re not met.
Behzad Nabavi told a news con·
ference in Tehran that if the U.S.
government comes up with
another form of guarantee that
met Iran's four conditions for re-
lease of the 52 American hostages
seized 423 days ago "it would be
acceptable in our view.''
"As I said before. as far as we
have concluded there is no other
way for guaranteeing the un-
dert akings of Americans." he
told reporters. "I said we are
ready to listen to everything but
it's natural the U.S. is looking for
excuses and has noth~ng to say."
Nabavi confirmed Prime
Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai's
proposal over the weekend offer-
ing to drop the demand for finan-
cial guarantees in favor of im·
mediate cash payments followed
by a rbitration on unresolved is-
sues while Iran continued to hold t~lioslages.
'Jfe claim,ed the United Slates
and Iran were in agreement over
the immedJate return of about tl3
billion in Iranian wealth. and said
Iran would be willing to await the
outcome of arbitration proceed-
ings concerning the other $11
billion demanded from the United
States prior to release-of the
hostages.
,, "We cannot be content with
some papen signed by Carter or
Reagan," hesaid. "If the U.S. can
propose another way which con·
.._.MM«cu•rantee ac~·
ble to the Alsman 1ovemment tt
would be acceptable ln our vlew."
Asked about Rea1an's descrip-
(See llOSTAGES. Pase A.2)
t
The Orange County-Superior
Court trial of four Vietname~e
youths accused of raping seven
women began Monday as a 21·
year-old victim testified she was
gang-raped after three suspects
stopped her on a street to ask
directions.
The witness. a Costa Mesa
resident, said she was walking on
Katella Avenue in Anaheim when
the youths stopped their car and
told her they were lost.
Then, the blonde witness said,
hatchback car and drove to a
dead end street in El Toro where
they spent five to six hours raping
h e r . S h e said o n e youth
threatened her with a ha ndgun
and another defendant held a
knife to her leg.
Through her testimony. the
four youths, d ressed in long
s leeve white shlrts, sat in a row
behind their four attorneys. Two
translatoirs sat behind the youths
quietly s umm a rizing the
testimony in Vietnamese.
Sliaket1 b11t 1111hurf
Brian Lumby , 9, of Irvine, is treated by
Orange County Paramedics (inset ) after
his bicycle collided with a truck driven by
Parkway and Culver Drive in Irvine at
3: 15 p.m. Monday. Br ian was taken to
Tustin Community Hospital where he was
treated for cuts and bruises and released. ·Walter Jones. 62. of Riverside, on Alton
The defendants are Bo Quoc
Pham, 20, and bis brother. l>ung
Quoc Pham, 18, both of Irvine:
TunR Thunh Le, 17, of Santa Ana
and Minh Quoc Nguyen or Santa
Ana, who is listed as 18 but
claims he is 16.
They are accused or 68 counts
or ra pe, kidnap, assault, oral
copulation and robbery.
Dallas vendetta
by Hoover told
Is Mickey
subject to
D-R-A-F-T?
The witness on Monday said
that she didn't remember Le on
July 7, when she allegedly was
attacked.
Deputy District Attorney Carl
Armbrust called the witness
after he opened his case ~ tell-
ing the jury that the d~f~dants
used a simila r method in almost
every abduction, which he said
occurred from April 20 lo Aug.
11 .
Armbrust s aid the youths
stopped their victims as they
were walking along streets and
asked them to draw a map
befor e they forced the girls,
mostly teenagers. into their car
..and drove to _a,range groves in
the south couney.
He said they used a gun to
force the young women to un-
dress in the back of the car,
where the back seat was folded
down to make a flat surface.
At one point, Armbrust turned
and stared at Bo Quoc Pham,
one of the defendants. as he told
the jury lhar one victim had
heard the name "Bo" repeated
during her ordeal.
Defen se attorney Larry
Buckley objected to Armbrust's
stares, claiming they were "Ob·
viou sly designed to inculate emotion from the jury.··
Superior Court Judge Frank
Brisene overruled the o bjection
but Armbrust di'dn't stare at the
defendant again.
Greet. shared
WA S HINGTON (AP)
President·elecl Ronald Reagan
and Soviet President Leonid
Brezhnev have e.xchanged New
Year's greetings.
DALLAS <AP> -Former FBI
Director J . Edgar Hoove-t ..... con-
ducted a two-year vendetta
against the Dallas Police Depart·
ment for statementS made follow-
ing the assassination of President
Kennedy. the Dallas Morning
News reported today.
Quoting FBl doc uments ob-
tained under the Freedom of In-
formation Act, the newspaper re-
ported that the federal agency's
unofficial boycott focused on
training for city police officers.
An FB I s pokes man i n
Wa s hington said today the bureau
Dana craft,
four aboard,
found in fog
A Dana Point man and his three
passengers aboard a 2l·foot
motorboat were rescued 10 miles
off Oceanside after becoming lost
in dense fog .
William Price. the owner and
operatorofthe vessl. and h'is three
passengers were spotted at dawn
Monday b y a Coast Guard
he li copter following an all-night
search by the c utte r Point
Brower.
A spokesman for the Coast
Guard said Price's craft was re·
ported to be in distress Sunday by
another pleasure boat in the area.
The spokesman said the four
men were found tired and cold but
in good health . Reportedly none of
the men required medical treat-
ment.
Cruelest cut
~
Ill boy's ~ft bike Btolen
OAKLAND (AP> -Ten·year-old Solomon Tucker suffers
headaches. muscle spasms and pain from a bl()()\t disease which
forces him to under10 regular blood transfusions.
But he's more unhappy about something else -the theft of
his Christmas bicycle. -
Solomon's body won't produce red blood cells.-And an iron
overload in his veln1 almoet forced hlm to spend Christmas in
the holpital, &aid hJ1 metber, Rutb Tucker. lnstHd, the boy re-
ceived his ftnt bicycle, a racy black and silver model, a gift
from hb father.
· ! Mn. Tucker, warned her son not to leave the bike outside or
leave it unJock·ect. ·
"How did Solomon or I know that a couple of bad kids -bll -•ea...-on,,~corwi.-ef...,.,.llMl~-w~ptnctcrJer mr IOD ript off b1a Dew bike, throw hJ~ to the lfOUnd and run
of with it?" 1be asked.
His mother bu offered a S50 reward to catch "those mean
kidJ who atoie Solomon '1 bike."
would have no comment on the re·
port.
The dispute was triggered by a
statement attributed to FBI agent
James P. Hosty Jr. by Dallas
Police Lt. Jack Revill the day of
the assassination, according to
FBI memos.
RevilJ. now assistant chief. said
at the time that Hosty told him the
FBI knew before Nov. 22. 1963,
that the a lleged assassin. Lee
Harvey Oswald. was "capable or
committing the assassination of
President Kennedy."
llosty later denied making the
statement.
The next day, then-Police Chief
Jesse Curry s aid on television the
FBI wanted to cover up informa·
lion that il was aware of Oswald's
presence in Dallas and had not
notified police lie retracted the
state ment after Dallas FBI agent·
in -charge J. eordon Shanklin
challenged him to prove it.
In 1964 and 1965, the News re·
ported, Hoover ordered Shanklin
to reject Curry's reques.ts for FBI
offi cers to resume their posts as
instructors at the Dallas Police
Academy. During the period, no
Dallas offi cers were invited to at-
tend t he-FBI National Academy in
Washington.
On Jan. 19. 1966, Hoover wrote
Shanklin that then-Dallas Mayor
Erik Jonsson visited him and
·• "as ked to discuss t he · 81!rious
breach bet ween this bureau and
the Dallas Pplice Department, if
one exists." <See FBI, Page AZ>
FV boyBlwt
by accident
in bike slwp
A 15-year-old Fountain Valley
boy was in serious condition lo·
day after being accidentally shot
in the abdomen Monday after-
ANAHEIM <APJ -Is Mi ckey
Mouse about to bedrarted?
Probably not, say officials at
Disneyland. despite an offi cial·
looking letter he received from
the Selective Service System, ad-
dressed to Mi ckey M. Mouse in
D is ney land 's hometown of
An aheim.
.. It may be that somebody is
pulling our leg, but it was released
on official stationery." said Dis·
neylandspokesman Bob Roth.
"Apparently. Mickey Mouse 1s
in trouble with the Selecti ve
Service."
T he letter. which stresses that
failure to respond could violate
the Selective Service Act, said in
part : "Our records indicated you
have not responded to our initial
request for necessary date of
bi rth information _ .. We are
again asking your cooperation in
providing us with correct in·
formation whether your birthdate
is in 1960, 1961 or any other year ...
Roth said he would reply on
behalf of Mickey, who was creat·
ed by the late Walt Disney on Nov .
18, 1928.
"He 's too old,.. Roth said
··And I really don 'Hhink they'd be
too interested in having a cartoon
character serving in the armed
forces ...
"Wo'll inform them or the date
of Mickey's birth, and the fact
that they're dealing with a fi e·
tional characte r and see what
they'regoingtodo."
Roth said park officials were
amused by the letter. "It really
makes me laugh ... he said. "I
aon 't know if someone slipped the
name in and the machine didn't
notice , or what. The fact is. it's
her~ and it's very offi cial look-
ing."
Mickey Mouse's res ponse to the
whole thing?
"W~t)aven 'l told Mickey yet,"
said Roth. "I think he'll be pretty
philosophical about it. He always
seems to have a smile on his
face."
noon by a friend who was ahow-Chrisbnas traffic Ing him a handgun, police said.
Steven Sullivan was knocked
to the ground by the .357 toll 800"'8 decline
magnum alug at 1:30 p.m . inside
a Founlaln Valley bicycle abop By Tbe Anoclated Press
on Brookbunt Street aouUI ot Bad weatbel' alld a stumping
Talbert Avenue. police said. economy apparently had at least
Owner of the Bike-Way ahop, one benefici al effe ct this
Dana Clark, 25, wa1 showtna Chrl1tma1 -keeping holiday
Sullivan hi1 bandaun when it traffic deatba well below expec-
went off. police said. Authorities tatlons, the National Safety
ve Nied the 1hooth11 acciden·--Ooam!fl . ·
tal and Clark wasn't held. Dur in I t be four · day
Clark called police and Christmas holiday weekend. 4t6
paramedics took the boy to people were killed on the na-
Fountain Valley Community lion's highways. according to an
Hospital. Associated Press tally.
•
Husband
once on
council
Fountain Valley pol1t.'e are in
vestigating the possi ht Ii ty that Hw
wife of a former ~ell rlty t·oun
cilman was assaulted last wt·l'k
by two hent.'hmen of organ11•·d
crime in retaliation fo r t h1·
political activity of her husband
Mary Lou Werrlcin, 28. lhe "1'·
of Pete Werrlctn . 48. a Ucll 1·01;11
cilman for 16 years, wa:-. hound ,,,,
her hed by two men who fort•·tl
their way into her Fount:i111
Valley horn<' lasl Tu t~da) ·111rl
then fled with fi ve Ont.' doll.1 r litll
O.ne of the intruders wore a gn'
suit and felt hat and "a'> c1rm1 d
wt th a pistol
The other had a metal hook 1r1
stead of a right hand. a<·e1inlrn1;' '"
the police report
lier husband "tts nut at h<Jh1•
durmg the 5 p.m assault1nSou1h
Fountain Valley
A s a coun cilman, We rrlt•ari
pushed for legalized 0C1 rd parlo1 •.
in Bell to general cit y re\'t01t1·
lost by Propos1t1 n 13 Gambh11~
was approved there Card i;arlors
also exist in nearhy Gardend,
poh cesaid. ..,
Police Capt. Bill DeN1s1 "aul
Werrlein is the executor or tlw
estate of the late Mickey Cohen.
the high-ranking member of (Ir
ganized <'rime 1n Cahforn1a_
Werrlein cilso has the rights lo
Cohen's memoirs . DeNis i said
"The assault could be retnhu
t ion from peoplr in th<' card parl •r
business for his pos 11 1on 1,n
gambling while a city t·ou11
cilman." DeNis1 said '"An nr
ganized crime in volveme nt in.Uw
ass a ult is a real poss1 btlity. but '' c
just don't have a lot to go on." I e
said. adding that pol it'P a re kf•c1•
ing ··aclosecyeon the home."
DeNisi said Werrle1n reporte I
ly became friends with Cohen m
the 1940s while Werrlein ".1:-. .•
shoe s hine boy
During the assault last T11•
day. oneorthe intruders rcpor11 I
ly told Werrlein ·s wife they "h ,I(
something for'" her husbd11d
police said
P~ane f all.s,
cars crash
SIMI VA LLEY 1API Thr
Federal Aviation Admtnistr:ltll"
is investigating the crash of •
s mall private plane near a m<t
jor freeway here that caused .t
five-car accident and left rour
people injured. authont1f's saui
A single-engine plane p1loktl
by Stepen Zoerl e1n . 22. 111
Cypress. Calir .. clipped a tw1•
inch power line and sever.ti
other electrical wires near 1 ht•
Simi Freeway <State lligh~a ~
_Ll8 J Mooday ev-e nin g a nfl
c rashed near Kuehner Dn\1•
about 45 miles northwest of Lo~
Angeles. the Cali fornia ll t ~hwR)
Patrol reported
Or:~~Q, :ast
\\"ea Cher
Fair tonight and Wed·
nesday. but with increas-
i ng ch ance of fog at
beaches and much cooler
nea r coast . Lows tonight
SO at the beaches. 55 in·
land. Highs Wedne~d a}
near 70 to low 80l\
INSIDE TODA~
"Polly wants o si p of
Pernod!" If ~..Mor that
cockling request. followed
perhapa by o Jew bars of o
Sinatra nvlody. you·ve sud-
<Uml11 enttted the Morylo'14
home of Polly and Buddy See
Po11e CB.
l•tlex
AKIN.111 l A I' I A 14 ,year old.
youth who souaht help at •
farmhouse when hlJ motorcytlt
ran out ol 1u waa mauled todeaih tt"' four lar~c do"s . uUlcl.Ala Hld ~.y ,,.. .-
The bod) ot K t"ln Zook, <.t n&ral llar~la, .-a found .-onc11y
about 24 hours &artt!r ht! had bttn
Hll('lri.00 m1 'l'll"K ~MIO Cof'1lt\f'r
harle'I Sr.111t· 11 ( .~, 1.nkllo
Count)
t•<' "'ud lhl' 1lu1t ' lhtt•t'
Pr.-···
Ortat Dane and a Salnt ............
pur1111l'd the boy reltntl•aly,
8nH~lnl!C ll him, rlpplq hll
clothe. and bllln11 tdm at l•ut 100
llmH
"lt wai. • tiru~11ome thin&. not
lbt! ldDd ol Wn• one wanla to
IH, • • Seacleuid
Zook'li bod)' was found ln a
bru~h \11lr about 200 yards frorn
tht! 8 II Waallcr house. The
rurmhoUie 1~ only about on~ mile
from theboy'!oi hom~
. S.Mle Mid &be bo1 apparenuy
Wal cflaMd lato the field bJ the
do11 after be went to the
farmbome t.o uk for 1••· Waller waa not at home at the time ol the
Sunda1 aft..-noon lnctdent.
An au&olllY revealed tbat Zook
died ol elQIG9ure, trauma and ex·
treme louof blood, be added.
'[he do_sa were found dear the
farm house and impounded and
will be destroyed, Seaale said.
No charges. have been filed In
Temperature law dying
Carter urged to extend controls
~ sui:~c: roN 1 r , t'1 elt1
tent Can"r 111 bean~ urged w ex
'C'nd 1nur1dator )' federal tem
perature c-0ntrols on l II million
olfice:.. shop!> and other non
residential bwldmg~ ai. one of
bas la t t.ffl c1al act!>
. 'We feel it has been a good
program and should be ex·
l~nd e d ," s aid department
spokesman Phil Garon. "Our
estimates a re that it saves
200.000 to 400,000 barrels of oil
each day,"
The program covers all gov·
ernment and private ofhce
buildings, restaurants. shopping
malls. theaters, bus terminals
and other establishments open
to tbe public. Residences.
hospitals, hotel sleeping areas
and day care centers are ex·
empt. The coni...·ul~ expire Jan 16 un ·
leas Carter tx'end~ them. But no
1Datter "hat Carter decides.
President-elect Reatan could re
v~rse the action as soon as he
~Ices office four days later
l11spectors charged
Eve r !>I n ce Jul y 1979
Americans have had to work
and shop in buildings limited lo
6S degrees an the winter and 78
in summer.
Under lhe 1975 law giving the
president the powt!r to impose
the energy.conser vation con·
trots, the restriction can only re·
main in force for nine months
without another pres idential
declaration. Carter already has
extended the controls once.
Companies cleared
in petty bribe case
Energy Secretary Charles
Duncan sent his recommenda·
Lion for another el(tention to the
White House two weeks ago.
Department officials say there
has been no indication what the
president will decide.
Reagan ran for president on a
Republican campaign platform
t' r i t i c a I Q. r c o n s e r v a t i o n
measures as iunnecessary gov·
ernment inte rfe rence.
The controls also have been
criticized as ineffecti ve Detrac·
tors note that the government
has never fined any building
operators for non-C'omplianC'e
The Energy Department says
its studies found RO percent com
plianee with the controls, wh1eh
offitials term an ext:cllent rate·
C'ons idera ng thl· program
operates w1ttl minimal enforl'e·
m ent personnel.
By RICHARD GREEN
OI Ille D•lly Pllel Sl•ff
No construction companies
will be criminally implicated in
connection with c harges that
three Irvine city employees ac·
.cepted Jack Daniel's bourbon,
overtime pay and food in ex-
change for speedy building in·
s pections, police indicated Monday.
The Orange County District
Attorney's Office has j udged the
companies to be legally blame·
less. sin ce they were allegedly
pressured into giving the gifts,
· according to police Detective
Mark Hoffman.
This pressure was allegedly
<.tpplied by building inspectors
who promised to find nit-picking
b uilding code violations if
g ratuities we r en't given.
<.1uthorities said.
lloffman said he hasn't de·
\'eloped enough in formation to
fil e criminal charges against
any more building Inspectors
than the three who were charged
Friday with the misdemeanor
offense. Two other city building in·
spectors, however, wer-e 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
officers or employees are
Manuel S . Linares, 34 , of
Corona; Daniel B. Bullard, SO, of
Costa Mesa. and Arthur W.
Peck, 51, of Anaheim.
Hoffman said that while the
investigation or these men began
Dec. 5 when a building contrac·
tor came forward, he has de·
veloped information that
gratuities allegedly were solicit·
ed as far back as September.
He said he could not estimate
how much overtime pay ,
whiskey or food were involved.
Building contractors must pay
for all city inspections in Irvine,
and they can request that in·
spectors look at their projects on
an overtime basis.
Hoffman said that police have
photographs of the three men
'accepting gratuities.
Peck has said that he and the
other two will plead not guilty to
the charges.
I",.._ Pap A I
FBI ...
·'I informe<t Mayor Jonsson
that a breach in relations with
Chief of Police Curry and his de·
·parlment does exist." Hoover
wrote. "I made it perfectly clear
actions and statements by Chief
Curry and some of his personnel
with respect to the bureau clearly
indicated they are incompetent,,
blabtjermouths and, in some in-
stances, liars."
Hoover said Jonsson assured
him he would "lay down certain
guidelines under which Curry will
be expected to operaie." Hoover
said training assistance would re·
sume if the demands were met
within two weeks.
Jonsson said recently he recalls
meeting with Hoover, but did not
remember "any comment about
Curry or t he Dallas Police
De partment.··
Curry resigned less than a
month after the Hoover-Jonsson
meeting, citing an . increase in
blood pressure resulting from
·'the continued ·pressures and
tensionsoftheoffice."
• He.died of heart problems June
22.
Within months of Curry's re·
signation, the newspaper said,
FBI agents returned to their posts
Frie11d.~ 011 the slopes ·as instructors at the Dallas Police
Academy. And the FBI invited the
first Dallas officer in more than
two years to attend the FBI Na·
lional Academy in Waahington.
Forme r Republican President Gerald Ford and outgoing
Democratic Vi ce PresidenL Walter Mondale shared a
chairlift this week while skiing at Vail, Colo. Both Ford
and MondaJe familjes are at the ski resort for holidays. Police chief
Thomas P. Haley
...,..,~-
Robert N. Weed
President
ELEPHONE •a n
All d•pert ...... : (71•> 142-4321 arresa.e so
CIHatfted Aclvertt9'ng: 142·5e71 HUNTINGTON. w. Va. (Ar>
-The local police chief's
OFFICES crackdown on clubs that sell Coste MftA D Wini e.y SI,_ i...-._,,, Mllf No. c.n1 Hftlh••Y alcoholic drinks to juveniles has """"fttlell llNdl: 1111s llH<" ..., .. .,.,,. led to ti,e arrest of his 17·year·
s.on11 d •n '"' ... ,.,,. •• c .. ,. Meu, old son.
connect.ion with the incident.
Seaale said Zook's parent& told ·
blm their 100 had &bile to nearby
Akin to play•football with some
friends. They became concerned
wb•n the friends said he failed. to
•bow up. A aearcb.party pl law en·
forcement personnel an'd volun·
leers ibitially found the motorcy·
cle, butnotrace.oft-he boy .
·'It appears that he was
fri&htened of dogs, and the dogs
knew it as they chased him
tbrouab the field, knocking him
down aeveral times.'· Sea1le said.
While there w~o wilneues,
the trail ol clothes. blood and foot·
prints told the story.
"They. attacked him and he
tried to escape," Seagle said.
"We walked the trail that he took.
We could~ the prints his tennis
shoes made and the dogs' prints.
Every few feet there was a piece
of clothing.
O.Uy Pl ... ~ •Y a tcty"' ·-••
''They stopped three places and 1
mauled him. You could see the
blood. He made it to the brush
pile, but by the time he got the.re
the dogs had bitten him at least
100 limes. When we found him be
was naked, except for his IOCka
andoneshoe."
"He was S.foot·7, 110 pounds,
Seagle said of the boy. ''Any ol
the four dogs was bigger than him."
Fro.e P,,,,. A I
HOSTAGES
tion of the hostage taking as a
form of kidnapping committed by
barbarians he replied : "I
personally consider these threats
as bluffs especially on the part of
the new U.S. administration
which wants to gain prestige by
frightening revol utionaries of the
world.
"We consider the statements of
Mr. Rea~an as those of one who
~til! thinks he is playing in· a
Western film. We·don't take his
statements very seriously .··
Nabavi also warned that if the
U.S. government tried to dodge or
delay its reponse to the Iranian
demands, the government would
proceed with the conditions set
out by the parliament or Majlis.
"If the decision of the Majlis is not completely met. they (the.
hostages l will be tried.·· he said.
Iran wants the U.S. govern·
ment to deposit $24 billion with the
Algerian government to cover
claims on the wealth of the late
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
and Iranian assets frozen in U.S.
banks. ll also wants the U.S. gov-
ernment. to slop all lawsuits
against Iran. but Rafsanjani said
the United States should be given
time to work out any legal
problems it might encounter.
ON A CLEAR DAY YOU WANT TO GET OUT AND Pl.A Y
He spoke to reporters in Tehran
on Monday after responding an-
grily to Reagan's description of
the militants who seized the
hostages and the American Em·
ba ssy 423 day s ago a s
"barbarians."
A•ron RoHm•n, 4, awing• •t Coata MeH'• Shiffer Park "I don't know how they can call
uncivilized and barbarous the
capture of 52 s pies who had turned
the place that the Islamic re-
publican government provided
for them into a center of es-
pionage and who were busy plot·
ting against the Islamic govern
ment.'' RafsanJanisaid.
Wann, clear days
/ orecast in area
Clear skies and warmer days are ahead for coastal area resi·
dents.
Tonight temperatures are ex·
peeled to dip to 52 degrees with
no fog projected along the coast.
accordin~ to a spokesman for
the National Weather Bureau
Service.
No PW role
seen in talks
CAIRO, Egypt CAP) -Former
Secretary of Stale Henry A. Kiss-
inger said today that al the pres·
enl stage of the Egyptian·lsraeli
peace process he did not see a
useful role for the Palestinian
Liberation Organization.
Kissinger, on a private trip to
the Mil:least, spoke to reporters
after meeting with Foreign
Minister Kamal Hassan Aly.
In response to a question on
PLO participation in the stalled
talks on a form of autonomy for
Palestinians living under Israeli
occupation, Kissinger said it was
his view "that the PLO at this
stage can only confuse the issue.··
Warm dr y a ir f rom the
northeast is blowing the once
dense fog out to sea. said the
spokesman.
No fog is forecast Wednesday
and temperatures are expected
to soar as hig h as 82 degree~.
Some early morning fog may
hug coastal cities New Year's
Day. giving \\ay to more warm
weather. and fair skies by after·
noon. the spokesman said.
For the first day since the fog
seige began. night operations at
John Wayne Airport were in full
swing today. Visibility at Los
Ang e les Inte rnational wa s
esp mated at 100 ~iles todav.
"It's beautiful ." said Golden
West Airlines spokesman Dick
Biggs. "We will remain open all
day."
Cave-in fatal
BEN LOMOND CAP) -One
boy was killed Monday when a
sand cave he was exploring with
another youth collapsed. fire of.
ficials reported. Shawn Carlson .
12. of Ben Lomond. was buried beneath 21h feet of soil.
U.S. intrigue
seen by Iran
BEIRUT, Leb<.1non (AP > -
Iran accused the t:nited States
and ·pro· Eastern" g roups of
fomentmg disorders 1n Iran 's
Caspian Sea towns near the Soviet
Cnion. An Iranian offi cial said to·
day they could be designed to set
the stage for li.S. military in·
tervention in Iran.
"The current internal acti vity
is probably intended to prepare
the grounds for external action,"
Iran's govern~ent spokesman
Behzad Nabavi told a news con·
fe rence in Tehran. It was report·
e d by Tehran Radi o and
monitored here.
Nabavi was answering a ques-
tion on whethe\" there was any link
between disturbances ~n the Cas-
pian Sea caviar belt and a
"rumored U.S. attack on Iranian
islands" in the Persian Gulf.
Neither Nabavi nor Tehran Radio
lurther identified the islands.
A diamond ?he'll always have in her.heart.
..
Enlarged to show detail
SLA.VICK'S·
Fu~ 1~-i.,,. Stn«r l'fl7
Safo,f\' hl'r
heart's desire
. with.our
diamo nd
pend ant in .
18 karat Vl'llow
gold, $330.
B1·autif11/
/l'IL'l'/f1! :.tl!JS,
''I Im·;· y1111 "
FHhion Island, Nt'wport Ct'nlt'r, Nt'wport Bt'ach, 7141644-1380
Wt>1tm1ns~r I l..tguN Hills I Minion Vlt>fO /North Orang•/ TM City
lcK Curiios • lhu M.lb • M. Thomas Keevll E•ltot
Thomas A. Mucptalne
llU ........ Edllor
c.i••nl•. ivs..s ·~•. ~s•t:..., ..., CM· -Otti• ....... ,... Jr. was _ _... _ _... ,,., M...• nwNNy; .. , -· _...,,l .... -nual•-~r-..
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M('lfl~r F'"t /nutlm Gu ild ,,_. Or .... C:-C Deity Piie!, wilt\ _,, '' Jday after alletedJy USing false ~':,:."" o!.~ ==~'· ~:::::,':,*' s.:;!": Identification to buy a drink at a
ec1111ofts -...,..,.,... MonNy 111,_.,, ,.,,., club early Sunday. Charles H, Loosl (
Anl,ta11I ~Editor lor Cotl• llMM, --1 19Hcll, """"""°" $e al t.hs Chief ()t -----!!n"~~r~·= L_!f•lll_. __ ,..._-H_ .... Yer tnon aao, • ~-1~.c=rroi"q..~'.roc,. ... , ~ISf'~wde".._,.,._"' TM~ ~ be,.tt--a...eeriee-41 .tor•es. 111""re41m1,, ...,,.,, •• IMIM• ,..,11111111,. _.... tt •• ua ..,.,, .. , tcrwt .... o. "1t1n1" operations al med at
., •d--11_,_u "•'•'" mo 11t llo• u.o.c..t1M11M,c..11w111•,..· clubs, ban and stores suspected
rtpr ollut ell ......... lP•t l•I VOL 73 NO -f llin ..._ d ll uor to _,..,,MDfl .. '°"''""4 -· , • . o ae I "'"""'r an q L-..--------------------------------------------Juvenlle9.
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• • mcrease
Th~· hHlstdu o l t!Ut ero
Oranae Couol)' u uall) &et •
r aJ n d a •n~ h In a Dy t1 • r I y
Otctmber but f1rtoflathh.1r11 &rt' un on the alert In thll' \lnu11uul
ly dr)' HHOO tu• prevent lht> ,new
ear rrom arn\ in~ 111 a hl•tt
·ant a An1 vnnd> blowtn(I up tu
10 D\ph •1th aust'i u11 to :U mph
v. trt' report..J on Monda) In tht"
canyon t'OWlt IT east of ti:I 1'oro
b) off1l'U•I~ t,'llh thti Orangt'
('ount) f1r~ f''art' 0t-JHHtmt:nt
E x t r • t' ct u 1 11 m t: n t a n d
flrt'f11hter "ert' on i.tandby for
d1sp1ttrh al the hr~t Mgnul of a
fire
'Thrn~' are real dry and t on
dlltons l't' favorable for c1 ft rt!."
:,aid C'apt Sherr) Bunting in th<'
far~ departmtHH i. public 1n
formation 9ffl<'e
The depa rtment n o rmally
\\Ould w nd out ~rlH.1ps two fire
e ngine s. a t ruc k and a
paramedal"s van at the first re
port of a fire this ll me of year
Becaus e of the ht~h fire
danger. though, she said from 6
to 8 e ngines would be dis
patched, depending on the type
of fire. plus bulldozers a nd t'ven
airt·raft STURDYBUTBARAENASHTREEBEARSSINGLE LEAF 'STAR'
Mesa woman wonder a If symbol linked to deceaaed brother
As f P.w as s ix fi rt'fi~hters
might accompany the engines
during a fi re during the rainy
season. she said. Sul as m any as
32 workers could be th s patched
currently because of the alert.
Sy•bol shared
Rainfall in Orange County
since July has been .82 of an
inch compared to a normal at this
date 3.99 inches. according to
statistics s upplied by the county
Flood Control Di strict.
Mesan's tree bears 'star'
Snow has twice dusted the
hilltops on the Santa Ana Moun-
tain Range. which includes San-
tiago and Modjeska peaks, but
the snow was quickly melted by
the warm te mpe ratures that
have remained in the county
during most of December.
Two nabbed,
one flees in
burglary try
Two Huntington Beach resi-
dents were arrested on attempt·
ed burglary charges involving a
liquor s tore in Westminster.
police said.
A third male suspect escaped.
police said.
Mark Lawrence Alarcon. 19.
and a male juvenile. 16, both of
Huntington Beach~ were arrest·
ed at I :20 a.m Monday after
police reportedly saw them on
top of the Westdale Liquor store,
locaded near the corne r o1
Westm in s t e r Av e nue and
Springdale Street.
Police said the air vent on the
roof was pried open hut that.
nothing was missing from ins ide
the s tore.
Police had responded to a call
from employees of a grocery
market next to the liquor store
and grabbed two of the three
suspects after they climbed
down from the roof and ran
south.
The third su~pect. police said,
is described as a male white,
about 17. with blond hair
By STEVE MARBLE
OI tlle DAiiy "ilet St.If
Ruby Hultberg says the star·
shaped leaf that sprouted just
days before Christmas at the top
of the bare tret! in her front yard
might be a sign.
• · 1 think it could be a sign o~
symbol of some sort." suggesls
the Costa Mesa woman. "I feel
li k e it's try ing to tell m e
something. only I'm not sure
what."
'The ash tree was planted fi ve
years ago by her brother. At the
time, he promised her the tree
would be a slow grower: nothing
fancy. ·
''Then my brother died. It was
a sad. terrible death." she s ays.
"All of a sudden the tree started
growing and growing. It must be
40 feet tall now."
Then just before Christmas,
weeks after the tree's brittle,
shrunken leafs had Outtered to
the ground and had been cleared
away, the star-shaped leaf ap-
C>eared.
"My neighbor saw it first,"
says Mrs. Hultberg . "He thought
som eone put it up lhei:e. Now,
lots of people come by to look at
it Even people driving by stop ...
She says she wonders if the
"pe rfect star ... as she calls it,
has something to do with her
brother.
"The tree reminds me of him.
I've thought of him so much and
wonder about him ,'· she says.
adding alter a pause. "I miss
him a great deal. ..
When a recent wind storm
shook up her west Costa Mesa
n eig hborhood , break ing
branches off her avocado tree,
she says she expected the leaf to
tumble. But it didn't.
The Costa Mesa woman says
she also can't explain why a sud·
den urge prompted her last
spring to drop plans to top the fast·
growing tree.
·'I just had. a feeling the time
wasn 't right," she says. "When I
saw the leaf. 1 decided to let the
tree be. I'll let it grow to the
sky ."
She s ays th e s turdy ash
\. '
•/
I
DAiiy ,.lletsi.11 ,,_M
'MIGHT BE SIGN'
Mr•. Ruby Hultberg
became he r Christmas tree this
year. a tree decorated with only
one leaf.
"I don't know how long it's go·
ing to stay up there." she says .
"My neighbor, who has better.
eyesight than I do, says the stem
the leaf's on is springtime green.
"He thinks' it may stay up
the r e until next winter. That
would be nice.··
Hospital names
board chairman
A Corona del Mar resident. Al-
lan Weidman, has been named
new chairman of. the board of
trustees for St. Joseph Hospttal,
OraRge.
2 officers injured
in nabbing suspect
George Richter Jr. of Ne'wport
Beac h has been named vice
chairman.
Saddleback plans
week for women
Topics of lnterest to women
who ar e new lo Saddleback
College or thinking t.bout attend-
ing college will be discussed at
Women's Week . Jan. 12 through
16 at the school's main campus.
Further Information can be
obtained by calling the college's
women's penter at 831-4885.
"*20 men raid i8le
A 24 -year·old indecent ex·
posute suspect led Seal Beach
police on an auto and foot
purs uit. then Injured two of·
ri cers who attempted to restrain
him , Seal Beach police said.
Officer Scott Fraser. 33, suf·
fered a t5roken hand ilfllie strug-
gle. while a secon ... policeman.
Kenneth VUensky. was treated
for minor injuries at Los
Alamitos General Hospital. and
released.
The suspect. Kenneth Robert
Libke of Garden Grove, has
been placed in Orange County
Jail on suspicion of assault and
battery on a police officer, re-
sisting arrest, failure to yield to
a )>Olice vehicle and indecent ex-
posure. omce.rs were respondin1 to an
indecent expoeure report at a
KOTA KINABALU, Malaysia shopping cent.er at Pacific Coul •
(AP> -Twenty men armed with Highway and Seal Beach
automatic weapons raided a Boulevard at 1 p .m . Sunday,
fishin1 island off Semporna on when they spotted the suspect's
-ltle eat l'08lt ·Bomeo-.nct-nT"t~ .
robbed the llllDden of '10,000 iD According lo police, the IUI·
money and valuabl•. POllce peel refused to atop, and they
Hid. It wu the second auch raJd pttrsued hjm to the Leisure
in the l"elion ln a month. World senior cltlsen complex.
At Leisure World, the suspect
fled on foot from his car and was
chased by officers. police said.
Officers Frase r .and Vilensky
were injured during a struggle
to restrain the suspect, police
said.
Holidays
brightened
ST. JOSEPH, Mich. CAP)
The Berrien County Court House
isn't dark this holiday season.
Co unty officials have
darkened the lights outside the
marble-faced builclin1 every holi-
day teuon since 1975 as a con-
servation measure.
But County Coordinator Rocer
Petrie aaJd the llJhla are back
on year--..-a i1ft fiiin'St.
Jo1epb attorney Elden
Butsbaqb Jr., who la paytn1
SlJl.IO to i:eep the Uthta on
throulh Jan. 4.
1900ims
'siuxess'
/orOCC
By .IOOI CADENHEAD
OI • 0Mty HM SUH
Expanding programs in
medicine and agriculture and
taking top honors in eight sports
championships highlighted 1980 \
for Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa.
Students enrolled at the two·
year rolle1e can look forward to
a new science course being of-
fered this fall. "Evolution of the
Cosmos" will be taught in tbe
new $3.5 million chemistry
building completed las t
February.
Keeping ahead of funding in
days following Jarvis control
and collective bargaining has
been one of the to ughest
challenges faced by the college,
according to pres ident Dr.
Robert B. Moore.
"Everyone has been kept in 'a
state of nervous tension," said
Dr. Moore in reference to the
two factors affecting college
budgets.
New programs in the areas of
dentistry. radiology , diagtic
medicine sonograph y and
agricultlH'e w&re"'·orrered last
year . '
For the second straight year
eight mens' and womens' sports
teams competed s uccessfully for
the South Coas t Conference
"Sports Supremacy Award."
To help aid in creasing In·
dochinese refugees the college is
continuing to beef up its English
as a SecQnd Language C ESLJ
programs in coordination with
similar classes being offered by
the Newport Mes a Un ified
School Districl.
Echoing a trend that began
three years ago, enrollments
have ·remained at 30,000 per
semester.
During the 1979-80 school year
the Career Development Center
found jobs for 3,475 people pre-
v Io u s l y une mployed or un -
deremployed. Annual s alaries
for those workers will total S20.4
million. according to statistics
gathered by the career depart-
ment.
More than 1.000 students
participated last year in the
Field Studies program. with
classes conducted as far away
as Egypt. China and Tahiti.
Concern for a lack of books in
the college library was ex·
pressed by Dr. Richard W.
Brightman. Dean of Instruction.
.. As an academic institution r·
worry that our collection is
becoming quickly out-of-date ...
he wrote in an annual r~rt
submitted to Dr. Moore.
The dean also pointed to a re·
cent reduction in counseling
se rvices as a problem facing the
college~
Overall. Dr. Brightman called
Orange Coast College's 1979-80
school year "remarkably suc·
cessful."
Tueeday. O.OemMr 30. 1980
Seeki119 a e11re
Baby, a three·month-old Englis h sheepdog-1.<:ibrador
retriever puppy. is the object of a cross·country searth for a
c ure for Christmas di seas~. a rare affliction that r esembles
he mophilia in humans The dog, shown wi th veterina rian
Paul Newman of Tustana Pe t Hospitfll in Tus tin . is being
s ent to blood s pecialist s at Griffin Laboratories in Albany,
N. Y .. under care o f Dr. J ean Dodds .
Detroit's deficit
near $230 million
DETROIT 1AP1 Th~ city of Detroit will be $230 million in
the red by next Junt' 30 unless 1t either cuts workers ' salan es or
raises more money from taxes. loans or legalized gam bling,
Mayor Coleman Young warns .
The $230 million predicted deficit would include a SlJO m illion
shortfall for the fiscal year ending June 30. 1981. and an additionai
projected $100 million deficit fo r 'the 1981 ·82 fi scal year beginning'
July I. 1981.
The mayor's $130 million deficit prediction for the 1980·81 fis.
cal year was a sizable increase from earli er forecasts.
VOUNG, WHO ADMITTED he had no read>· solution for the
budget deficit. said one alternative for the city would be to cut
workers' salar ies by 5 percent ·
On taxes. Young said. the state Legislature could enact tax
laws Lo assist Detroit, or the city could raise the local income tax
from I percent to 3 percent for residents and from 11 2 percent to 2
percent for non -residents .
Raising the local income tax would raise an estimated $100
million. he said.
BUT HE Al$ ftAISED1 the possib1.lity of legali zing casino
gambling in the city,
"It is my opinion that some city in the Midwest is going to
become the Las Vegas of the Midwest. Thal city could be Detroit ...
he said. .
State law r equires municipalities to approve bala nced
budgets.
Detroit has a Sl.46 billion budget. and financial experts pre
viously had projeC'led a SIOJ million def1c1t for the year ending
June 30, 1981 ~
Nearly 700 pol1l'e offiN:~rs were laid off 1n Septem ber in an at,..
tempt to hold down city expen!)es ~
Midwale Corduroy Blazers
IN STOCK
Our Ladies Department
plwn, camel, navy $135.00
I
1 ll.:~ 11\ 11a· \.\'\\I'•'' I l~1·,1t h
l .Jlttm nr.1 11wm• l'.l .: -11<'1
·~
..
OAIL 't PILO'l
_Burmned b y Bangkok
at•Y MF.att• Ot;l'T. t;ot the isnltne1. achts
and wtt throat'' t.1k~ th\I)' !Iii)', tb,·r1.1'11 • lot of that 1oln&
arouod U1 t lh• a Vou shc>uld obJtwt moal 1trenuou1ly ~
i uff f'nn th Glum"11 ~ tll'11 1\ IAn't even a U S. brand ol
&'°' fulDt' , lA"1 li fa~ f u , n • b•d ~11ouaih &ha\ we ~e been Invaded th all \he-runn) llt&le r~r11 ma.de In fore1t1n places. You
kno"' lhc ,. llttl" Vt'anu\i. that whlnt! 1around \he h1&hw~ys
11 .... " bwll'll or l>umblt!bet.'S. w1\b the "e11r 001u:11 m11k1na
more-1101 t· th.in \he t•ear1u1 4 en&ln\':o.
''"' 11 , 1itt1m • tuo f<tt Vou t·a n t t!Vcn get a domestic
"'run of 111llul•ll.tci
WHAT t~\'E:ll HAPPt:Nt:U lo lhl· .:ootl old American,
romrnvn. Ol'(hna1 t'il!it of lh\' fl u ' ~ov. v.t! "''t:n hoi Vt! 111 1rn por t that
:\l'tuwl) It ~t<irtt-d somt: ~11ne ugo Back in 1957. ll was
.-11 lhl· r.igt-tu get a l':Sbt' uf lht! AMan flu. so long as you
d1dn \l'~JM\•l rom ,a me It w11s thti"1n"\htngtodo. nu .. "'"':-. folluwl·d in l!lGll h> anolher imported form of
thl· ·'"'fut, known <•!\ th1· I long Kong Flu It killed almost
f,lluk out ' llere come~ another sickly foreign lJuy
<!4.000 Aml'l'l(';m~ 11<-fon· I ht·y 1•vt·n l!ut a l'hanr e lo lis ten lo
;_1 !long Kon g trans1:-.t11r radio. That might have killed them
f<t~ter
Thc:n Wl' thought we· had suffe red the final fo reign fl u
101l1 gn1t) 1n 1!n7. wh1·11 lhl' Rus:-.1an Flu struck thousands or
our c1t 1~t·nry
Wt> rn1lllln't <.·v<.•n gt•I Frt'l' World flu We had 10 import
II from till' t omm11n1o;h, ro r l'ry111g nut loud
NOW WE ('()Mt-: to l>l'<'t'mlwr of 1980 People arc fall
in g 11vn with <·ough~. h<ll'k~. h,. ... ,.~ fevers, aches and pains
Ill :.i ll th<-l1mh~ <JrHI ..ufftori ng <.·yeballs You c·heck with the
O ra11gt· ('1111111) llt·<illh lh·partrm·nt and officnils there will
1nfurm }t111 th.it 11otl11ng "',,, 1•p1d<'m1e pro1>0rt1ons around
h1•rt•
But tllt·n. 11 ·, <l1ffil'11l t to ever get the Orange County
!lt•:Jl lh l>1·11:.i1t nwnt 111 ad m11 thal anything is going around
11111· n ·g111n 111 1·1111J<:ml(· proJJort1on~ V•)u !-uspect they are
111 lt·;1g11v w11h tht· ('hamher of Commerce
1\ny"';'~, it h :.i~ he1·11 m(.lnlioned that possibly we have
a rew case~ 11f the nu c1n:ulating.
This might he. 1t is rumored, a Corm of influenza
known <J:-. A Bangkok f'lu So here we go again . We 've im·
port1·<l anothN' virus This l1m1-. it's from Bangkok
S11 we• 1>11fft•r :.d i the:-.t· sor<' throats and we can't even
hltinw tht• d 1sl:usl11~ 1:11lm<·nt 1111 ~omclhmg domestic. It
ha-. lo he· 'om1.'nam1• y1iu c·:Jn I t·ven spell ·
Wh v don I "'' g1•t liat·k to '>11me lias1t All Amen cali dis
1·:1M·o;" '1r w .. h:.ivl' to. w,. 1·(rnld rt· nam(' them Call 1t the
lh1111in~ton lh•ad1 ll<.1('k..,, 11r maybt· the Yorba l.tnda
's'<·('h'
L1•t's .i ll )>Uy W(• have• u <"asc or the San Juan Sagi..
Wh ~ not 1·om1· down w1l11 lh(' L<i~un<i l.ous1es·1
Wt; f'Ol'I.() Al.I. takt· ti) our beds with the Newport
N111s:lnC't'. tht· Balht1<1 Uummer~ or maybe even the Foun·
lain Valll'y Vambooms
Who needs B<.1nl(k1>k, anyway" IC you're going lo feel
mttcn lo the point that you mi.l y cash in. why not believe
that 1t WU!. something American that gave you the rotten·
nt•ss''
lt 's like dnvin~ tho~e funny little l'ars Once you start
1t, you l'an i{t'l hOf>kecJ on it ·
You may never recover
···'MAN --Of THE ---YEAR
A~Wlr••I•
/tlan o( g e ar
Shuttk creeps·
to launch s.ite·
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
CAP ) -A huge c rawler·
transporter traveling a\ 1 mph
began moving America 's space
shuttle to its launch pad Monday
for wha~ officials hope will be a
mid·Marchliftofftospace. ·
'The squat orbiter Columbia,
strapped ver(lcally !o a disposa·
ble fuel tank and Its twin-rocket
boosters, sat on its mobile
launching platform atop the pon.
derous transporter· as it began a
3'h-mile trip to the same launch
pad from whe re Amer ican
astronauts blasted off to the
moon.
THE SHUTTLE spent the past
five wee ks undergoing tests at the
Kennedy Space Cente r's vehicle
assembly bui lding after 20
m onths of critical work on its re.
entry heal s hield .
The rollout to the launch com·
plex marked the start of an 11
week countdown to blastoff.
the laWlch pad near th·e Atlantic
Ocean.
"We feel it's a great day for the
United States ," Young aald.
"Wail till March. Just wait tlll
March."
Much of t he past year has been
spent attaching and r epairing
thous ands or tiny' heat-resistant
tiles outside the shutlle. The tiles
are intended to protect the craft
and the astronauts from the &efr·
ing heat or re-entry lo Earth's at·
mosphere.
Once it reaches the launch pad,
the shuttle will undergo a CinaJ
bat.tery of tests, including
manned rehearsals or take-off
and a 20·second firing of its three
main engines.
TH E RE HAVE BEEN . prob·
lems in the past with the engines,
and if trouble develops during the
firing, the launch could be de·
layed again, officials 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
sp,ace. it could hOld some 200 peo·
pie
This is the cover of the coming edition of Time Magazine.
which names President·elect Ronald Reag~n 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 first launch is March 14.
That is three years later than the
original target dale, and <r eorge
Page, director of shuttle opera
lions here, says. · · t would not rule
out May.··
John Young and Robert Crip·
pen, the astronauts chosen for the
first shuttle test Clight, watched
the Columbia begin its iourney to
The last manned spacecrnft
launched from here was the
Apollo·Soyuz m ission in 1975,
when American astronauts met
up with Soviet cosmonauts in
space.
Women plan
vote squeeze
on Florida
MIAMI IAP> The National
Organization for Women has col:
lected pledge cards from 60,000
people agreeing to give up vaca·
lJOn s in f'lorid.a until stat e
lawm akers ratify the EQual
Rights Ame ndment. the s tate
president of the women's group
said •
"They're basically fa m ilies
who are saying, ·we ordinarily
would l'Omc and visit the tourist
attractions n ut this year we're
not."' said NOW state President I-: Ileen Cudney
"I to:STIMATI:: in a very short
period of time we will have hun
d reds oft housands or those pledge
cards coming back." she s<1id in a
tele!Jhone inter view from her
Punta Gorda home
Three more states a re needed to
ratify the amendment before an
extended deadline for ratification
expiresJune30, 1982.
Conservatives in the Florida
Senate have for years blocked
passage of the E RA by one or two
votes. The House has vacillated
on the C1 m endmcnt. but has
passed 1l many times
Drink poisons 3 children
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE IAP>
Police suspect poisoned Kool-Aid
may have been the cause of an ill·
ness which sent three South Lake
Ta~oe children to the hospital.
According to South Lake Tahoe
Police Capt Dean Shelton. the
children -two boys and a girl
ranging in age from 20 months to
31~ years became violently ill
following a family dinner. Shelton
said four adults in the family had
eaten the !\ame food, but the
children had been the only ones to
drink Kool·Aid.
Police would not relea~c the
namesofthechildren
"It's a strange l'a se ." said
Shelton, who added that police
have no clues to the poisoning
"W e have no extortion letters.
nothing like that ." he s aid
Shelton said he had heard rumors
that the Kool·Aid s melled odd. but
l'Ould not substantiate them.
lte s aid the package~ of soft
drink mix were purchased at a
loeal store. which removed its re
maining stock of Kool·A1d from
the shelves immediate ly afte r
hearing of the poisoning.
Shelton said there were no i:.1gns
that the rem aining packages had
bet'n tam1>ered with 1n any way
fie i.aid two of the C'hildren were
treated and rcle <Ji.<:d Sunda:y from
Barton Memorial tlosp1tal here.
The third, a 22-month·old boy who
lost consciousness afte r becom·
ing 111, was taken lo the U .C. Davis
Medical Center for treatment. He
was listed in good condition there
Monday
Pailoice have been trying to
locate a lab that will analyze the
Kool·Aid and. the sugar used to
make 1t. So Car, Shelton said, in·
vesligators have no idea what.sort
()f poison caused the children to
become ill
Police a re advising South Lake
Tahoe residents to check any
Kool-Aid purchased re cently for
od<I smclb or <;1gn!> 11fl<1mpering
Fishing pacts junked
Mexic an move bars U.S . vesse ls
NEW YORK IAP) In a move Ukely to stir
controversy jus t before President-elect Ronald
Reagan takes office, Mexico h as decided to
te rminate its fishing agreements with the United
States, The New York Tim es reported today
The Mexican decision was to be conveyed to
. States, The New York Times has reported
The Mexican decision is Hkely to-be among
topics for discussion whe n Reagan meet5 wi th
Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo on Jan 5
The United States and Mexico have e ngaged in
a "tuna war· since early July, when Washington
imposed an e mbargo on Mexican tuna imports in
response to \1 ex1co's arrest of six San Diego· based
tuna s eim•rs ('aught fi !>hing inside Me x1t an waters
T HE TIMES Rt:PORTED that Mexico's de
e1s1on lo renounce existing fi shing agreements ap·
peared to have been prompted b} Washington's re·
fus al to allow Mexico fi shing boats a quota of squid
off the New England coast. M RS. CUDNt;Y said NOW does
not plan to ask for a vote on the ERA in the Florida Legislature ' THE MOVE COULD PUT dozens of A'tnerican
this April because the group small· boat owners out of business and is thought to
One of the treaties affected by Mex ·
1co's dec1s1on 1s a 1976 agreement that ·11iav.e lhe
united Slates a quota to catch s napper and
~rouper in Mexico's Gulf waters and allowed
smaller .. bait boats" to fi sh inside Mexico's 12·
mile territorial waters in the Pacific. -•
wants to muster its resources for reflect Mexico's determ ination to build a fi s hing
a successful vole in 1982. rteel capable or competmg an waters traditionally
Mrs. Cudney s aid boycott dominated by U.S .. Japanese and Cubjn vessels
pledge cards were distributed' in . Larry Bozanich. general manager of Fish·
all 50 states by state NOW chap-erman's Cooperative Association in the West
tersinrecentmonths.Shesaidthe Coast fishing port of San Pedro, Calif., said the de·
cards have been returned from cision ·would mean idle fishing boats and un·
"virtually all slates." although employed fishermen. ('
most were from New York, New "We ha,ve lived up to lhe agreements: now
Jersey, Mi('higan. Ohio and Pen· Mexico doesn't want to," Bozanich said.
nsy lvania. "We have vessels ranging in value fro m
$500,000· to S.S million. Without a steady m eans of
revenue, the owners are going to lose their vessels
Fatalities down
By The As~l•ted Press \
Bad weather and a depressed econom~ ap·
parently kept Christmas holiday traffic deaths
well below expectations. according to final figures
compiled Monday.
Fog covers both coasts
because lhey are very heavily mortgaged ... he
said.
Although the decision is not of great economic
importance to the United States. it seemed to
da m pen chances for an agreement governing the
lucrative tuna fis hing business.
During the four-day Christmas observance, an
AP survey s howed 494 people were killed on the
nation ·s highways. The National Safety Council
said before the holiday began at 6 p.m . Wednesday
that between 650 and 750 travelers might !>e killed
Freezing min, srww blankets Midwest area
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GOURMET
MARKET
Happy New Year
from
all of us
at Delaney's
We will be closed Jan. J to enjoy the holiday at home.
'S -51ori"llcian i.e. Cloled S.-day--
zm Newport ...... New,.. lleacll
673-5520
CALIFOANA
C...t•g up roses
Work er~ Of\ hands a nd knees prepare
B<iskm·Hobbms float ~ntry for Thursday's
92nd Pas adena Tournament of Roses
parade Thrt>e ol 3 1 a nimals featured 01)
the float for tht> parade . "T he Great Out ·
Al"WI,..,..,.
doors, .. are s hown. The parade. which ~ill
mclude 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.
T~. O.C.mber 30, fHO ONLY PtLOT Jll
Reagan· film loans off
Flood~/ requeBIA bring1 moratorium
SACRAMENTO (AP> -An ex·
tensive library o( news fllms de-.
t•i1i ng P residenl·elect Ronald
Reagan's polttical lire has
become so popular with
journalists and researchers lhat
ofncials have e ut a halt on lending
the films out.
The publicly owned collection,
operated by the Sacramento His·
tory and Museum Commission,
contains some 3.5 million feet of
film spanning a 23-year period
beginning in 1954, theSacram~nto
Union reported.
The newspaper said television
networks, publishers a nd others
have made extensive requests for
the material, which covers major
events in Reagan's political de·
velopment. The film archive has
not been m ade available to the
gene ral public.
Commission officials said
they've placed a moratorium on
distributing the film until they
figure out how to cope with the
flood ofrequests.
Commission director J am es
Henley said the footage covers
m ajor political. social and
economic developments on a re·
gional and national level involv·
ing Reagan The commission is a
joint city.county operation.
The collection reportedly Is one
of the largest of Its kind ln the na·
lion.
Most of the film on Reagan
deals with bis rise to national
prominence while campal,nin1
for Barry Goldwater in the 1964
presidential race. The films also •
track Reagan's two te.rms as
governor of California from 1961
through 1975.
Sunday blood drive
falls short of goal
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The American Red Cross "Save a Life
Sunday" fell short of its goaJ but nonetheless was '°'ailed by o~
ficials as a success. "We had set as a goal 1.981 units of blood,
said s pokesman Halph
Wright. "It appears right Sf A.TE now we'll draw about 1,100
units. But that's still almost
day draw." three limes the avera.ie Sun·
Sixteen Red Cross bloodmobiles were used for the drive
throughout the Los Angeles area Sunday mostly at churches
in addition to eight permanent Red Cross facilities.
Ball tree• •u•pr,.f f n ,,_ •ff'fJ .-nuh I
LOS ANGELES (AP) A man who allegedly tried to w§lk away
from his car after he reportedly cr ashed 1t through a glass·
enclosed bus stop a nd killed a young boy and a woman was freed
c,n $1 ,000 bail, police said.
Yule goes ·bleak to beautiful
Cornelio Escamillia, 33, who was uninjured in the incident. post
ed bail and was released from Venice Division jail ahout
eight hours after being booked for vehi cular manslaughter His ar-
raignment was set for Jan. 13.
O.ri•l•a• I rrr •pa rid..,.. burn :1
OCEANS I DE I AP )
Christmas forthe Wilhe Carmack
family went from bleak to
beautiful
area residents brijthtened the
Carmack'sChristm as. But two days later , t he door bell
and telephone started ringing.
"There are some wondertul
people in the world." said Susie
Carmack. 54, after neighbors and
Early last week, thieves en·
tered the Carmack home and
s tole all the Christmas presents
from under a tree and cleaned the
kitchen out offood.
··People from the neighborhood
people I don't know -and the
north (San Diego> county started
bringing food and contributions
$4.50 brings $57?600
SUNNYVALE CAPI Hal Mason S3'yS 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 had dra wn the horse that ·placed second in
Saturday's Iris h ·sweepstakes -a 20· l shot named
Corrib Chieftan. His winnings are 30,000 Irish
pounds -$57 .600.
Mason said he bought a $4.50 ticket on the race
in Novem ber from a golfing friend. Ticket-buyers
are assigned a horse.
"It's really a fantastic thing. I've never won
an ything before," said Mason. who runs an eJec·
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 a nything like t hat."
Mason said he received a telephone call last
week from Dublin informing him of his winnings
and that the telephone call woke him up. He
said he thought the calle r was joking.
Two people, Stephen Popovich of Fairfield,
Conn .. and Gordon 1Conway of Victoria, British
Columbia, won the top pri{e of 100,000 Irish pounds
-about $192,000 each -on the 33·1 victory or Car·
rig Willey at Leopardstown track.
· ·ce11s1we 'suf ficle11t'
over," said Mrs . Carmack, a
teacher's aide.
With the contributions, she and
her husband Willie, an un·
e mployed heavy equipm ent
operator, were able to replace the
gifts for their teen-age sons.
Mark. 16. and Phillip, 13.
And Christm as 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
lo replace a quantity that had
been stolen.
"We had our l rad ition al
lam alesforbreakfast," 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 a rea.
··Nothing like this has ever IJ.ap·
pened to us before. I don't have
the words to say how l feel," she
said.
fREMONT (APl -A family's Christmas tradition of lighting
sparklers on their tree has left three people burned, Fremont rire
officials said.
Erick Salzirnis. 50, who officials said had taken part in the
ceremony "ever since he was a pup, .. was lighting the fire\\orks
Saturday night in front of a dozen family members when a branch
caught fire, according to authorities
C'Uff fall fafal. ht1dy rrt"fJt~
WRIGHTWOOD <AP> The body of a IS·ycar·old boy who fell
off a 100-foot cliff in the Angeles Nauonal Forest has heen re·
covered.
A sheriff's search team recovered the body of Timothy O'Grady
of Victorville. who fell down an ice chute whale h1kmg with com ·
panions on a trail between VinC'ent Gap and Ml Baden-Powell.
ltuake hil11 •lalr•.\f#eada IN1rdrr
MONO LAKE tAPJ An earthquake measuring 4.7 on the
Richter scale hit a sparsely populated area along California ·
Nevada border that experienced a swarm of "good-sized" quakes
in early Septem ber. officials said.
No injuries or damage were reported from the rremor, which
struck at around 3 p.m. Sunday. It was centered 35 miles east of
here and 120 m iles east of Stockton.
LIMITED TIME OFFER Tumble
off peak
survived Conduct .report irks judge We wish to purchase your rare gems and
fine jewelry. Our expert appraisal
assures discretio n . inte grity and
maximum prices. ,
BISHOP IAP l A
31 .year-014. San Jose
man suffered brok en
bones but miraculously
survived a 1.500·foot fall
off Mount Whitney. one
of the highest peaks in
the nation.
SACRAMENTO CAP> -A judge who
made profanity-filled telephone calls to a
former secretary and her husband has
told the state Supreme Court he disagrees
with a state commission's evaluation of
his conduct.
said he disagreed with the comm ission 's
findings that he had harassed Beth and
Dick Murphy. against their will, with a
series of se xually oriented telephone calls
from January 1975toAugust 1979.
" rec6'rd s upported his position that his con·
duct as a judge has been ·'exemplary and
beyond r eproach."
Deputy Attorney Gene ral Eddie
Keller. representing the commission,
said that Stevens, while not conceding
the commission's version of the facts. is
arg uing that his private conduct is ir·
relevcint to his performance as a judge.
34 YIAaS .. THi SAMI LOCATION ,.
j. { ~ J /""'/1/,ri'1 I j,." ,,/..r.1
·: • '."' t ••· :. ·.~. f •< '! /\ r.; .t "./', 1~ J! 1 f 1 r
Author 1t1es s aid
Steven Gools ley was
walk ing down a trail on
the 14.000·fool mountain
with friends Monday
.when he slipped and fell.
FRIENDS ca rried
Goosley to a camp at the
1,200-foot level. lie was
air lifted by a helicopter
from China Lake Naval
Station and take n t o
Northern Inyo Hospital
in Bishop.
T h e hos pital con ·
firmed Gools ley had
been admitted for treat·
ment and was cons(•ious.
but refused to give any .
information about his
condition.
A S HERIF F'S
pokes m an sa id
Gool s l ey s uffe r e d
broken bones and in·
juries to his neck. back,
hip and pelvis.
"It would be very un·
usual for som eone to
survive a fall that fa r,''
the spokesman said.
It was not known what
caused Goosley to fall.
9 sente nced
SAN FRAN C ISCO
<AP> -Nine San Fr an-
cisco area grocers re-
ceived sentences rang-.
'ing from probation to
rive years in federal
prison with fines up to
$30,000 in connection
with a scheme for the ii·
• legal purchase and re·
demption of f ood
stam ps.
Superior Court Judge Robert Stevens of
Los Angeles County said in a letter to the
court t hat he wanted t he right lo
challenge any punishment more severe
than the public: censure recommended by
the slate Commission on Judi ci~I
Performance.
The commission declared Aug. 7 that
Stevens' conduct was disreputable for a
j udge and tam\ished his office. ..
SIX COMMISSION me mbers voled to
recommend censure. The other three
wanted him removed from the bench. The
state Supreme Court will decide the case.
In his letter to the court Oct. 8, Stevens
Design a winner
Laurie Janowicz of Capistrano Beach
has des igned a winning logo for KSBR·
FM. the Saddleback College radio sta·
lion. Mrs. Janowicz will receive a $100
prize for her design. chosen from a field of
10 finalists.
DENTAL IMPLANTS
B e th Murph y was Stevens '
secretary when he was in the sta te
Senate . Di c k
Murp h y i s a
l egis l at i ve
sergeant·at-arms.
Steven s ha s
acknow l edge d
making the phone
calls. which he has
described as "fan -
tasies," but has
contended the
Murph ys were
willing partici · -
pants
The Murphys said they tried to qet
Stevens to stop . They have filed a
separate s uit against Stevens, and
against the stale Assem bly, alleging a
cover·up.
ST EVENS, ,\PPOINTED to the bench
by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. in 1977. said
in his letter t hat' the commission's
Dental implantology protrude through the
!inserting a post Into gum to serve as an
"He's saying, 'Off·the-bench conduct
by m e that doesn't affect my conduct as
a j udge shouldn 't be grounds for dis·
cipline. · " Keller said.
KELLER CONTENDED Stevens' let-
ter. asking for the right to challenge
any action stronger than censure. didn't
comply with the court's rules because"'
Stevens has not filed a formal appeal of
the commission's findings.
Keller also said the Supreme Court
has never punished a judge more
severely than the commission recom-
mended, nor even ruled that it has the
authority to do so.
He said he will argue to uphold the
commission!s recommendation. but
might argue for a more severe punish·
ment if the court asked for such argu-
ments. The court has not yet taken ac·
tion in the case
Restaurant the Jawbone to act as an anchor.
anchor for dentureH W h i I e imp I an l
goes back to the times denlist)°'y is quit e
of the early Egyptians. , C'O mi>fex -and still
Mumm ies and considered
s keletons have been expe rimental· and
examined , and they pr acticed only by a
indirate that dental relatively few experts
i m p I a n l s w e r e -it does provide a new
attempted even in those approach to denture
days. proble~.
A dental jmplant is a Va rying degrees of
device that supports a success are repor ted.
sin l:llc crown. a bridge, bul it appears that the
or a full denture. when p e r c e n t a g e o r
the gums ca nnot s uccessful cases is
normally retain them. directly related to the
There are two types: amount of training and'
O n e h as a met al experience o f the framework that rests implantologlst. on the jawbone, with
the "um tissue closed over It~ The otheT i~
Claced Into the bone.
ke a root of a tooth. Both types have a post
Ge'81d Wlllkler, D.D.~. ~ '
aad .\lllOClaletl
.... ,\y~ado. 8ahe st5,
New1*18ea~• '
and Cocktail Lounge
~--~~ SCAMPI
(shrimp in herb wine sauce)
lecj. s '2.95 .,
Served with Soup du Jour or salad. rice pltaf
or baked Potato, Vegetabte de Gwdlner.
· '.t .',•" 1•.· 1 Ht 1111 1. <)',!,'\ M f ',I\
548-3401
HONEST
ANSWERS
TO HONEST
QUESTIONS
30 retreshing minutes on religion 1n which three
d1stmgu1shed panelists respond to Questions about their
deepest spmtual convictions
People ot all interests and ages crossing the plaza at the
world headquarters of Chrtshan Science 1n Boston. ask
the quesrions A panel of Christian Sc1en1tsts answers
them, and a more accurat6 picture emerges of a world·
wide religious movement as 11 enters its second century
Don 1 mis s this half-hour special
~ONE HUNDRED
YEARS YOUNG
A aHTtHHIAL ro" CH~STIAH SCl£HCE"
.
I
PIHMle:MMI• . series ol poets which . . DAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
·30 to 2·
SU
6:30 A .M,4---
On-the;-mall at South Coast Plaza near the Carousel
on the First Level. For reservatio('s call: M0-8822.
'
SUNOAY, JAN . 4
~OOVCEDB• I H( F Q\1 C•'\l"~" )I '"'" . l" ,.,. 1 fl·~ "~
~.-, ri I p ThomlsP.Haley /Publiaher ThomH KMvll/EdftOr
• 01dng (;Od'>I Dully P1IOI ~.. ta a !:!fl..e ________ T~--··O..-·mbel·-30···1·.,·---------S..-rbit_r.•.K·r·e·lb.lc·"'·'·E·d·lt·or·l··l·P·~--E·d·lt·or--..
Jael( ·Andenon Coastal ruling
may help Cities Applicants face GOP 'purity test'
I
· The nam~ of th~ plat•t! '"' GWlpowdcr l~oanL. an old
munluons i.it~ in Chula \fl ta that auddenl) h'aa~ become a
topic ol interest alone lM Oran1e Coast. ~artlcularly m
wport ~ach
II ~as Ounpov.·der ,Pomt lh\it brought Chui' Vista of·
f 1al face 10 fat~ wnh repr~1>cntnt1 ve& rrom the
hfomip CoaMul ('ommt~1on thh-. month in a San Diego
l'~urtroom ~ ar •umcnl ~·culcrt.-<l arouncl µIan!> in the Cit}':,
J)ropobed Local Cou tal Plan lo allow com.Lruction of a
hotel ill Gun~~·der But the tommlbSton agreed it would
not upf>.-O\'e the l·oaslal 111 tn until the hutcl des1~atton
w11~ n> movt>d
Tht> JUdt:(' 1.t:.kt-d to rule whether tht commission
,·ould ct .... u~h mandatur) co11d1llon~ for a pproval of the
,•oastal ~Ian. ruled 111 the l'll) ':.favor
The CH\ or Ne~l><Jrt had JOUlcd lhc s uit a s a "fritmd
Of tht court ' C'1ty officials ex vret\ ed Lhe feeling thal
lll~y tuo might t!nd uµ having a Gunpowder Point on their
hands ~hl'n their Local Coastal P la n goes to the coastal
1.·omrrus ion for approval.
The judge, 1n his ruling, sc:ud the commission must
either accept or reject a coastal µIan , oHering reasons if
a plan is rejected. He said the trouble comes when the
commission makes suggestions on how to solve problems
1t rinds in a plan.
Several city leaders in Newport are calling the court
decision a victory for local government. Mayor Jackie
Heather says it gives local representatives · 'more clout."
Others look at it differently. Coastal Commissioner
J udy Rosener. a Newport resident, says the court case
was fl .. tempest in a teapot " and brings no changes in
what1the comm ission can or can't do.
While there appears to be a la<·k of agreement on
what the deci~ion does or doesn 't mean. the attention
given this case seems to once again underscore the dis·
en chantment many local governments feel with the
coastaJ commission.
1 Danger on the road
It is the season, unfortunately, for the a nnual leap in
drunk driving statistics, which tomorrow night are likely
to hit their peak. ·
Drivers who have been drinking are involved in more
than half the fatal accidents in the country. Last year the
dead numbered 25,000 and as many as a million
Americans were injured in alcohol·related traffic acci·
dents .
There are ways to escape involvement in this
carnage.
Obviously the best way is to avoid drinking when,you
will have to drive. Thal way your reactions will be in
shape to safely guide your own vehicle and to steer clear
of the one in 10 drivers who will be under the influence.
, If you do drink. keep count. s pace the d r inks as far
apart ·as possible and be sure to combine the drinks with.
food .
Couples or groups of friends who attend celebrations
together should agree that one will take the responsibility
for driving hom.e by being especially careful about drink·
ing .
I
W ASHlNGTON Pr~sident·
elect Ronald Reaiata has sent a
mesuge through his top ad·
vlsers that he wants lo head a
moderate administration . Ap-
parently. his wishes haven 'l
reached incoming Republican
members of Congress. who have
been offered a t3·page screening
test for people seeking employ-
ment o n Capitol Hill. The
curious document is informally
known as the "ideological purity
test "
It was thoughtfully provided
by the Republican Study Com·
mittee. which
has been the
recipient or
hundreds of
applications
s i n ce th e
election from
people who
feel they are
qualified to
bring a tittle
R ep ublican
common sense to the halls of
Congress . W i th 68 new
Republicans in the House and
Senate. the job program is wide
open.
The Purity Test originally con·
tained 44 question s . But
one Question No. 12
wa s del e t ed at the
last minute. Like all the others.'
Art Hoppe
it was a statement lo which pro-
spective Job applicants were ex·
peeled to answer Yes or No. The
deleted statement read :
"Welfare is the basic right or all
Americans,•· A Study Commit·
tee official told my associate
Vicki Warren that Question No.
12 was removed because it was
causing "too much contusl<>o ...
The decision was made so late in
the hiring game that No. 12 was
s imply blotted out with wrute
ink. ·
THE LITTLE QUIZ for job
seekers was composed a few
years ago for use in the GOP
Study Committee's own hiring.
Now that the committee has
gained more clout, il has seen fit
to offer its political shibboleths
lo possibly unwary Republicans
arriving on Capitol Hill. -
Here are some or the Yes-No
statements the committee sug-
gests that GOP senator-s and
representatives use lo judge the
applicants for Jobs on their
staffs:
"Peace is best guaranteed
through military strength tather
than throu gh wo r ld ~overnmenl. ''
··Society can be improved
by giving preferential employ·.
ment treatment ror a few years
to women and e thni c
minorities " "Parents should have
no r ig ht to Interfe r e
w ith co~se conte nt and by professi . al educators and-or
boards of . cation.·:
-"Organiz~ labor should oo
i1ubject to antitrust laws."
"Workers on 11trike s hould
be permitted to collect un·
emplorment compensation and
draw food stamps.•.•
-"Federal funds should be
made available for abortion for
poor people."
-" 'Affirmative action ' pro·
grams actually limit the
avenues of opportunity for all
citizens and s u b s t i tu te
bureaucratic decisions for those
of merit in selecting personnel."
YOU GET THE idea. In ract.'
any reasonably s avvy job appli·
cant gets the \dea. ll 's not hard
lo figure out whether a "Yes" or
"No" is more likely lo land
the m a job in the supposedly
"New Right" Congress
D esp ite it s obv iou s
drawbacks. the <WP quiz has
caught the fancy or new GOP
members or Congress Accord·
ing t o u s t:ifrc r fo r the
Republican Sluidy Committee.
one out or every four ne w
Republican members has asked
the committee for rererrals on
LOOK, I'M TRYIN' .•. U~Y?.
polentlal staffers who have
taken the test.
Footnote: A Study Commlttd spokesman Insisted that the
ideological test wasn't "pus·
fail," and added that one woman
who had ralled had been hired.
WIN ~ME, LOSE SOME: A
recent cbnfldential intelligence
report sums up the Kremlin's
latest achievements oo tbe in-
ter n a tion a I scene this way:
"T he ~oviets have gained
rootholdS, whether through prox-
ies or in their own right, in
Afghanistan. South Yemen,
Ethiopia. Angola . Grenada .
Vietnam and, of course, Cuba."
The report continues: "The
importance or such footholds in
terms of giving the Soviets ac·
cess to port and repair facilities,
and of providing staging and
landing riights, training areas
and other indispensable support
to militar~ activities. should not
be underestimated."
Another classified summary
tots it all up, saying: "At the
present time, Soviet advisers or
military f.>ersonnel can be found
in 30 countries adhering formal·
ly to . the Neutral a nd Non-
Aligned (NNA) Move ment: Sov-
,iet arms are being sold to 33
NNA nations."
The gloomy cloud of Soviet ag·
gression has its s ilver lining,
though. according to the U.S. in·
telligence analysts' report
··soviet attempts to insert a pres·
ence outside their own territory
have met with setbacks as well
as successes. Their record is
h·udly unblemished >J. • ·
WATCHDOG WATCHERS:
St1rrt!d by complaints of fraud
and abusl' by field employees or
the I mmigrat1on and Naturaliza·
tion Service. the agency's of·
f1 cials have responded by in·
l'r ea s 1n g th e number o f
em ployees in its Office of
Professional Res pons ibility
from 17 to almost 50 The new in·
ternal s urveillance has hrought
mutterings of "1984 '" and "Ri g
Brother '" fmm immigration
employees
St.,cret c•amera~ and Internal
s pies arc· among the devices the
agency htass hats used to catch
horder patrol personnel suspect·
cd of dealing ll'SS than fair!)
\\ ith illegal alums tr~ing ln cross.
1ntu the l'nit<.>d States Morale 1s
uffe ring as a result, and a top
o ff1 c 1a l a t immigration
acknowledged that "this 1s a job
no one likes to have .. Party hosts can help by making sure there's food on
hand when the guests arrive so they won't start drinking
on an emot v s tom ach : by providing non·alcoholic
beverages for those who don't choose to drink : and by
refraining from urging "just one more" on guests who
don 'l really want one more.
And a truly thoughtful host will be prepared either to
put guests up for the ni ght or to provide safe transporta·
t ion home. -Marriage is tough, even for pacifists
No one wants to start the New Year as a traffic statistic. -
Not enough heart?
Poor Chrysler. Poor Lee Iacocca. Poor auto workers.
The beleaguered auto manufacturer is using up its
$1.5 billion federal bail·oul fund faster than anticipated.
the heralded K car series 1isn 't selling as well as hoped.
the holiday plant closedown has been extended,.unions
are agr~eing to unusually modest contract terms to keep
t he company alive. and Chrysler's d~bt rating has sunk to
a new low.
As if these indignities weren't enough, the California
Highway Patrol says it isn't satisfied with the Dodges it
has been using for. many years to chase s peeders and
other errant drivers up and down the state's freeways
and highways.
Deep inside that husky·looking black a nd white St.
Regis cruiser, say CHP officers, is an engine with no
heart. It just doesn't have the poop lo stay up with. let
a lone catch . many cars on the road. . .
One officer said a silly little VW beetle outran him m
a chase.
Neither is the C H P hiding the· fac t that its
impending p~rchase of 1,000 new cars -traditionally em-
phasizing Chrysler products -m ay be altered by doubt
about the company's staying in Qusiness.
_ The CHP's fleet of St. Regis s edans may be symbolic
of the Chrysler Corp. -inside. there just isn't enough
heart. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. L'
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O
Bo>t 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
My beloved wi fe, Glynda, is a
woman of many surprises. Just
the other'day she surprised me
with a .38 pearl-handled Smith &
Wes son revolver.
"I read that Nancy Reagan
keeps a 'tiny
little gun· in a
drawer next
to her bed," ...,
Glynda hap-·
pily ex ·
plained a s
s he un ·
wrapped it.
''So I bought
m yself one ,
too. lsn 't it
darlinj(?"
"You call that a tiny little
gun'!" I ~aid. "It could put a
hole in you the size of a dime."
''Nancy a nd I don't know
anything about such things," s he
said. "But Ronnie taught her
how to use hers and you can
teach me now to use mine. It's
fun to do things together.··
.. First of all," I sai~om
behind the couch, "don't point it
at me."
"Oh don't worry." she said,
putting it on the coffee tahle. "it
isn 't loaded."
"'I'he second lesson." I said
sternly, "is tnat it's always ·un ·
Sydney Harris
loaded' guns that accidentally
kill people."
"I'd load it for you," she said.
smiling prettily. "but I don't
know how."
I SAID THAT was an old joke
and whal did s he want a gun for
anyway? "Burglars." she said.
"Well." I agreed, "it would be
the only thing in the house worth
stealing. But do you realize that
peODJ&,who own guns are a hun·
dre~mes more likely to shoot
themselves or a loved one lhan
they are to shoot a burglar?"
"If it's good enough for Nan·
cv,·· s:i1d c;hnda. "1l 's ,good
enough for me· ..
"I liked it bett ~r wh en Jackie
Kennedy wai; fi r!-l l:idy." I said.
"All you bought was a pi llbox
hat Now what ha ppens 1r I come
home late and s tumble over
something in the dark and you
wake up out of a sound s leep and
reach for your trusty roscoe anci
..i.~upi:i!'e ... sh<' ~a id swt'etly,
"that you'll think twice befort-
com ing home tale ··
"I F YOU'RE referring to last
Thursday night. .. I said, "hav·
ing a dead battery 1s not a
capital crime. And what 1f you
got mad enou~h to shoot me on
purpose""
··Never ''" .said Glynda firmly.
"Not even whe n I use the•
g uest towe ls in the powder
room ?''·''
"I have a const1tut1onal right
to keep and bear arms, .. she
said evasivelv
"My wife. the gun nut." I said
··And what about my constilu·
tional right l o freedom of
s peech" Having a wife who is
armed lo the teeth is certainly
going to make m e c urb my
tongue and walk softly around
here ··
"llmmm ." s aid G lynda
thoughtfully. "I always won·
dered why Ronni e was in·
\'ariably so nice to Nancy ..
.. OKAY, YOl' win ... I said.
"And to help you defend us from
burglars. I'm buying a semi·
automatic Army Coll 45. It can
put a hole in a person the size of
a quarter."
Glynda mulled this over. voted
for total disarmam ent and
traded in her gun for a pillbox
hat. Thank God! Marriage ~
tough enough even when both
parties are pacifists.
Boyd/Bathtub Facts about ,slam. m.ay help solve the puzzle
The most reported Item
about U.S. President Millard
Fillmore Is the fact that he
Dear
Gloomy
Gu8
was the first Chief Executive
to Install a bathtub in the
White House.
The. pitch e r plant is
carnivor.ou s . But som e
spiders are immune to its de-
generative juices. They wade
around in there waiting foJ:_
insects to· drop In, Insects
that can't take it.
Things I uamed Reading .. r,fill
tanl l•lam." by G.H. Hansen:
-That Islam is not a religion,
and was n ot founded by
Mohammed. .
-That Is lam does not have a
Church . a hierarc hy, or a
clergy.
-That the Koran is oot com·
parable to the Bible.
-That the
M os l e m
calendar Ts
There a re those experts on the only pure.
Liter meters at the IH the sea who contend that more I y ' 'I u n a r ' '
pump -but it's still shipwr,cks throughout his· calen dar in
Yankee dollars on thf Lory haV'e been due to drunken w i d e u s e :
bottom line. 'helms men than to any other hen ce . the
-----N·~KNELL ---•use.· 61 di maken mates:"6r-......,_ .... ,51JYIS-lllllt-
drunken skippers. Nobody moot~ have
knowa bow m a n y ship -tH» c•nnec ·
fatalJUes, like car fatalities, lion.
are linked to liquor. But quite -That the only time women
a many, belonthal. are perCJllUed to be unveiled I~
when they are praying at morethanhalfofMoslem land).
Mecca. -That lhe basic rules for Jiv.
-That under Is lamic law. Ing in actordance with Islam
couples convicted or adultery were "frozen" about 1.000 years
may be stoned lo death. (But on-ago, and may not be cha nged.
ly when their conduct is fla·
grant. before witnesses). -THAT ISLAM embraces by
far many more people of dif·
-THAT TifE drinking of cof· ferent races and nationaliltes
fee was interdi cted by Moslem than any world reliJ(ion.
,lawgiver!rl but was rescinded -That, despite such variety. ~hen the public reCuseci to give Islam is essentially opposed to
1l up. the idea of nationalism.
-That at the end or World That Mohammed con ·
War 11 there wer~ ont~e in· sldered himself the "rinal pro·
dependent Moslem countries: to-phet," in a direct line from
day t here are 55 represented in Abraham, Moses. and Jesus.
the UN . __ .,..an_d..,.. reJ>Uilifle<Lth.e .suues.tJQO
-~t\Jie erce re tg ous a any o the prophets wer~
wars in the Middle A1es divine.
between Christian and Moslem -That Islam has bee.n more
nations were almost invariably auccessfuJ ln recruiting converts
begun by lhe former. C European in the 20th century than any
powers invaded a nd ~ubdued other religiou.'I organiiatlon.
r
J
-That Islam has virtuallv oo
theology. which it dislikes ·and
suspects: rather. its code or Ji v.
ing is wholly practical. Including
such matters as etiquette and
hygiene. inheritance and educa·
lion.
-THAT MOHAMMED
acknowledged Jes us to have
been a more gpwerful prophet
than he becau\e J esu could
work miracles. (But Moslems.
l ike Jew $, co n sider I t
blasphemous lo. attribute dlvlni·
ty to any man).
-That the b~m arriag,e __ _,
an vorce aws or Ts am put
woman in a permanently in-
ferior Position. (Polygamy is
per mitted, ii not encouraged,
and divorce is almost entirely at
the inillatlve of.the man)
...
-... ~-
CONSUMER
QUEENIE
'·
A man to SH you He'1 the special aulstanl to the
Jlf'('1al i&••1•t•nt to tM President's special advisor'•
&J>t'('aal a it~lluit tu the special a11i.1tant to the advisor's
i.pec1al Hlla&tant '
Cot a problem" Then wntt ro ·Pat Dunn. Pal will
r ur red Lape. getting the an.swers Otld achon 11°" need
co solve mequ1t1es in government and bu.nness. Mail
your questions ro Pat Dunn, At Your SerV1Ce, Orange
Coasc Daily Pilot. P .O Bor 1560. Costa Mesa, CA
92626 As many letters as possible w1l1 be anawtted,'
but phoMd 1nquanes or letters not mcluding the
reader's full name. address and bwiTM!ss hours' phone
number cannot be considered. Thiscolumnappearsdaa·
ly er cept Sundays."
DEAR PAT. With the post-holiday sales in full
swing, I'd like you to explain some of the advertis·
mg terms used to promote these sales. For e-xa-m·
l'le. exactly what should a "floor sample" be, and
does a "closeout sale" mean that a store is trying
to get rid of excess merchandise?
J .J ., Newport Beach
A "floor sample" meus mercbudJae tbat baa
been used for display or order-talda1 purposes. It
may be shopworn or soiled from llHdlla1. -A
"closeout sale" meams tbe retailer 1111 purcllued
remainin1 supplies at a redllttd •rice from a
manufacturer wbo laas permanently dJsc•ti•ued
production. The retailer paaaes oa tbe savlaga to
the consumer.
''Irregulars, lmperfec&s, seconds" are otber
terms that confuse coaaamen. B11lcally, these
are products that are defective or fall below a
maker's specifications for ftnt quality. All "Ir·
regular" or "Imperfect" may bave a small Im·
perfection In color, sll:e, or weave tbat 1e11erally
does not affect durablllty. A "secGDd" may have a
more serious defect.
"Ust price" Is a comparative price from
which merchandise Is reduced. Uaaally Ute
manufacturer's Ust price ls llOt tM 1•1 price;
nearly all stores sell below fist. "Special
purchase" Is merchandise tbat la temporarily of.
fered al a price conceaaloll •blcb wlll ead when
the period of tbe "special" ends, or wllea tbe
supply of Items Is exhausted.
A "clearance" sboulcl feature me"lludlse
that was previously offered bat DOt sold. Tllte price
shoulJI be reduced aad tile aame Items lllotald •GI
be sold agaln ln the near future. New merchaadlff'
s hould not be advertised as "clearance." A
"clearance center" is an ou&let store la whlcb
merchandise previously offered but not sold at the
advertiser's retail store is offered at a reduced
price. It is no• a ''clearance center" If tbe
merchandise is available for the first time.
Jledit•ol bill# dedu~fed
DEAR PAT: I have medi.cal bills for 1980, but
ha \'f! not yet paid all of them. Do I deduct these
bills this year or next? Also, I make estimated tax
payments and wonder if there's any advantage in
filing early.
G. L., Costa Mesa
I RS says you may take a deduction for
medicaJ expenses In the year they are actually
paid, even If this Is not. the same year as wben you
received the medical treatment. If you are maktn1
estimated tu payments, file early 11 possible. If
you me your tax return by the end or January
<Feb. 2 for 1980, and pay the balance of tax due,
you are not required to pay the last Installment
which Is due. Jan. 15, 1981.
No~c .. .-. ... No•• .... '"·
*T,.I .... to•....., wlM "'°" 10• ~-.. , ... MMll IMI Wiii ... t O•trWflllll I ...... , . .., ,..,, *°"' ... ,.... ..... ,T!lll C•lf'Mtft:· , ..
• -19"1,.., .... ., _ .......... •·
•IHI 1n tr.. ••ti '" M!
I ~. Oecembet 30, 1NO
-Urban Cowboys bounced
Bone• broken by mechanical bulb . ,
GAlNl:SVILLE. Fla. <AP> -
Tbott buckln1, •.Planln1
mec:hanlcal bW1I made POPUiar 'Y "Urban Cowboy,'' have lllloped into ban acl'Oll the na·
tton. But tome riders aren't Pl·
lln1 otf with the aame vitality
they had when they climbed on.
A man ln Colorado, for in·
stance. lies motionleu ln a body
brace with a broken neck. A
Oaytooa Beach woman auffen a
similar injury. Both were hurt
when they landed on a hard floor
after btihl hurled off one ol the
machln~
Dozens ol other patron• 1et
cu and bruised. And then
there's Rick Cheshire, 23, of
Gainesville, who despite a
thumb that was mangled on the
machine. still enjoys ridin1 "El
Toro," the nickname of the de·
vice at a Western bar here.
LIKE JOHN Travolta in the
popular"f'ilm, riders start out on
the machine with their legs
tightly braced around it, holding
the handle atop the device with
one hand. Then the operator
starts the machine, which is set
to spin and buck according to
certain speeds, usually on a
scale of me to nine.
Cheshire. a reporter for the
blame. thouch, particularly
when patrons tumble from the
machines only to land on the
noor.
Bar owners, meanwhile, say
they don't feel ne1U1ent OT
responsible when a patron's ride
falls short.
''IT'S A SPORT," aaid Rod
Marcus, mana1er of a Fort
Lauderdale bar that was taken
to court recently . ''Like
anythlnt else, it takes practice."
That club, Cowboy's, hu been
sued by Anthony Zucco, who suf·
fered cuUI, bruises and sprains
in his ride. His suit aaya that he
had a few drinks before he
climbed on the machine and
wasn't "fully cotnlzant. of the
events taking place around him"
when he signed a waiver t>,fore
hopping aboard.
The club's lawyer said injuries
usually stem from the riders' in·
experience.
"The bull rides for about 15 or
20 seconds," said attorney
Frank Sevier. "It gets used for
hours and hours. Out of about
100;000 peopl.e, only a small
percentage will &et hurt, and it's
usually the person who's a klutz
and would trip over his own two
feet anyway."
the machine if he has been
drinklna, others don 't aha re bis
dlaclpllne.
"Aa far u I'm concerned, YOU
can't ride it when you've 1ot any
atcobol ln you il all. YOu've 1ot
to have total concentration to
ride it." said Taylor, a veteran
both of rodeo bulls and their
mechanical cowiterparts.
For some, though, it Isn't the
ride itself that results in injury.
It's the fall.
In Denver, attorney Leon San·
ders said client Milton Gran·
tham suffered a broken back
when he was thrown from the
machine.
SANDERS SAID THE fad
raises several new questions.
They include the-legal
responsibility or the person at a
bull's controls, whether the
manufacturer is liable and what
type or responsibility the bar
itself has to provide a safe land·
ing area around the machine.
In the Denver bar The Wild,
Wild West, and others like it,
mattress padding is placed
around the machine, but a pre-
vious faller jostled the padding
and exposed the floor before
Grantham fell.
Gainesville Sun. said he was try· ATl'ORNEY MARTIN Hoff· Sanders hasn't filed suit. but a
ing to ride El Toro like a bare· man. who also filed suit against lawyer in Daytona Beach with a
back bronc, so he positioned bis Cowboy's, said the combination similar case, John S. Robinson,
legs higher than usual around -of alcohol and an excited au· has gone to court. the machine. dlence create a dangerous at· Robinson's c lient broke "My leg came down 'and hit mosphere around the device. several neck vertebrae after my thumb and it split my . H rr k led d th t o man ac now ge a landing on an exposed portion of knuckle in half," he recalled. ha·s cliM.t as so d unk the man .... w r the floor. Robinson s~id in the The medical bills will total at climbed_ on the bull backward, suit that bar employees didn't
least $1,500, he estimated. but sa_1d the bar m~st be provide a "reasonably safe en·
Ches hire,r a novice rodeo responsible for presentmg the Yitonnient'.' for;..ridei.:s and that
performer himself,-admitted· · · opportanlty-for1njtrf:f.-·---· · they failed to explain the injury
that his injury was probably his "In a drunken s~upor they get consent form his client signed
fault because he was riding the these people to sign a release before cUmbing on the contrap·
device like a bronc ~d not a form. They ply these people with lion
bull. Now he simply use~ his left drinks," the attorney said. ·
hand while riding El Toro. A University of Florida stu-ROBINSON'S CLIENT, Cathy
dent, Steve Taylor, 20, said he Ransley, 28, is seeking S2 million
"MY DOCTOR TOLD me has signed the release forms but in negligence damages. was crazy,'' he said. he couldn't remember what one
"I don't think it's all that said: "I've never taken the lime The threat of injury though.
dangerous. It's just like cars," to read the whole thing. I don't doesn't deter many people from
Cheshire added. "lf you just act think anybody else does. riding the bulls.
like you have some sense and either." · ' I t • s go n e o v e r I i k e
think about it, it can be run." gangbusters,:· said the manager
Several lawyers say the TAYLOR SAID THAT whHe of a Jacksonville club. "It's re·
c-
(reg. '2.95)
entitles you
to a beautiful
~5x7
color portrait
• Al P11y you can still purchase Portraits
1nd1111dually each 5 ~ 7 or sel ot tour
wa11e1s ts '2 95 each 8 ~ 10 1s '5 90
• lake advan1age 01 special savings
w11honeo1 P.,v s tnree Portra11 Packages
• Mosl oac11ages conla•n 4 dillereni
ooses
• Copies ano en1argemen1s ava11ao1e a1
s~gnlly n1gner prices
• 2 or 3 cn1ldren 1n one portrait add
•t 00 al 11me ot s1111ng
• Age 1 m1t. 12 years
PHOTOGRAPHERS HOURS:
Fri. 1/2/81 -Set. 1/318.1
10 A.M. to 1 P.M. -2 P.M. to 5:30 P.M.
.JCPenney
2300 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA &M-5021
e!\1-A~~shments mustshar~e_so~m_e~~h_e_m~ak~es~it_a~ru_l_e_n_e_v_er~to~ri-d_e~-al_ly~g-et_t_in_g_b_ig_._ .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~..,...-~~~~~~~~~~
Log ~ab~n
uncovered
OAKHURST (AP) -1
Builders uncovered a
log cabin in this Sierra
foothills communil)L.
northeast of Madera
that may be one of the
oldest of its kind in the
area ..
The yellow pine board
relic was discovered
between the walls or a
reside.nee being torn
down near Yosem ite
High School.
The original cabin was
thought to be built by
William Bluford in the
1860s.
The Sierra Historic
Sites Association plans
to move the structure to
the Fresno Flats His·
torical Park.
I' TOlllUP •
GI
GnPAID
Up until N.OW ,a
balance sitting in a
checking account
has been money
doing nothing.
But if you open
an Allstate Savings
N.OW. Checking
Account, yeucan make-your balaneework for
a living to the tune of 5.47%. (Yield based on a
5.25% rate, compounded.)
Which is a lot better than the zero percent
C!O_ordinary checking.account pays you.
GET A HEAD START AND SOME
FREEBIES TO BOOT.
The government has-approved December 3L
1980* as the start date for the N.OW. Account.
But if yousign upior:aNDWAccount
now, you 11 start earning instantly and be ready
to write checks starting December 31. Plus
.. we11 print you 200 free N.OW. Account
checks from our wide selection .
Meanwhile, we can also include
use of our exclusive Bill Call System Account
that lets you pay hundreds of creditors
5.47%on the unused balan ce in vour account.
Wellgiveyou the Bill Call System free
through the end of the year as incentive to sign
up now. Even next year. theres no additi onal
charge for this se rYice.
If you al ready have the Bill Call Syst~m. we·ll
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GET WHAT·s COMING T.O YOU.
Stop by your nearest Allstate SaYings office and
we'll open your N.OW Account today.
Its about time your checking account
became a paying proposition.
..... d NIW YIArS SPllCIAt ~1111: ·~I.fl by phone.While u mereJ_y sit back and coll=-
• STAft1'0W. SAft ... ~ ~~ ---•
"-ent thil coupon M the Nulfl ~ ~ Loee C-eJ lllted end we'tl "I!_ • oeouct S50.00 fram ~ Pf'OOl1ll'I\. One COMPO" pet~ ¥elld IOf new _ -All111tt Savings and Loan Auociarion. a rMm~r of rht-Se1 D fimllv. 100 lm1ncht-~ s111rwidt. nearly 5 '\ bilhoo in asst\s.•Subj«1 1n final S111t ~la11ons.
client• onty. Explree Jlnuary 15. 1M1. . , ,,,\ {.
HM L ....... Mii iii -I t..,.. ......... *'' .. -----1 .. .--:-·---~Vde,·-187-98-Bmokhdrst:AYe:<.VaHeyCCnter-Ptaza). fullerton~u01--so:11amor81v«t
· -. MJslion Viejo 27521 Puerta Real. N~ Beech One Corporate Pla1a
San Clemelite 911 So. El Camino Real. Sut. Ana f.200 W.17th St Tustin 18232 Irvine Blvd
~r/Buntingtm ~ 540 Westminster Mall.
-1. • -~nut· 'lv\t'-'m
-~
I .
~ti ....
... _._..,._ ...
••Mlfnl la ~ytng "" to Mt the tumlture,
but rw found IH you have to do
• keep Marmaduke happy!"
SHOE
I
r
'~ l~
u
MOON MULLINS
MISS PEACH
WHAi i lME
' $ "rt:>IA Ir PA~T'I, ?·
MAlrCIA .
r·ve ~eo
eve~YONE T'O
~HOW !,AP ~i
8 01CL.OCK ...
"I've written Aunt Nancy's, Grandma's and
Aunt Peg's. We don't hofta write thank
you notes to Santa, do we?"
• Ou> OfRlsTM n&S NEVER Off, llY ... TifEY
JUST SET HNJl.E/JA/IJfr'. •
iJ I
PIAfllUTI
-excePr ~
VOr.-4. YOlA WIU..
' .-~~1ve Ar t:~O A.M.
JUDGE PARKER
by Jeff Mac:Nllty
by Melt Lazarius
i:x...cn.v.
W~Y ~IL
'tO PEOPLE'S
EVENING ?
A&OUT Tl* 6AME ~HA1' OIO THf fHIN6 HE TOLD THE ~Eft·
by Tom latiui
ffi..l ME ... 00 00tJ
V/blT 5HUT-IN5 EVER'.>
NE.LAl <.>EARS EVE ~
DRABBLE
DR. SMOCK
:t'M 'f'HINKIN'
OF CHANGIN '
MY IMA<SE:, t'R. FRelP ... so -rei..t... ME!! .••
IF '40\) 'fKOIC£ A CA1' 's
'"~ t,()00,000 1'tM£S I~ A iOI> ...
by Gus Arriola
by Harold le Doux
I.COMICS i CR .
~ 1p ,, .,.
"Here he c~mes for his nightcap."
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
... TrlEY H~VE. R
DRTEONNEW
'/EAA'5 E\JE.. .-
by George Lemont
PO YOU "'f'H INK CHANGI N ' ONE'S
IMAGe I S A
GOOC' I PeA?
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
l Royal Cana·
diMs.e.g.
5 Muaage
10 &KYeyor's
nail
14 Heutboy
15 Bridal path
16 Dilable
17 "---
theSunsef'
19 Mangle
56 Sweet drink
60 Image
61 Send back
6' Eddo
65 Gollshor
66 Verfly
67 Louwr part
68 Stellloo 69 .. _..,
lorget"
DOWN
UNITED Feature Syndoc<1te
Monday's PuDle SOlvea
~ENOEtt C":IE.AHT, THAT HE ~AW
euT AFTH CHET HIT HIM ! I
COULD &EE Tl4E FIC:IHT &TART·
INC:l 1HAT Hl6Mf ! l TlfJEO TO
f)(f'LAIN TO CHE1 THA1' TIM
WAt> MY DROlHEft, HOftM6
BUT MATT l.NJGf.ED AT ME.
10U> CHET NOT lO 1'El.IEV£
ME ... THA1' TIM WMJ MY
DOYFltlEND, NOH.-Y
, 20 Toughens
~\If 'fO &A'<, llM HIT CHET I
~AM?
NANCY '
MV TOOTH-
PASTS '9 ALL GONE
HE'D COOl. IT/
MontfR!
by Tom K. Ryen
PAINl-C~P
FIN61:RtJAIL..5 •••
OUR MANICURl5i
1liW1l:NS 10
QUli •.
by Ernit Busl9mlller
21 leather l)W'tt 1 Round Table illliiilil9of:~
23 SPoOlt knight
2e Kid's gwne 2 Second
27 Shrub 3 Knot
30 e>v.rtuma 4 ForMlles 34 lnlectt 5 a.man king ~c...c..im::...::..c.&;::..i..:..ma=..i.:~
35 Gftk 6 Nothing 25 Witty pieces
37 Klncled 7 Cut\19 2 7 AelNins
38 ltOlllhu ~ 8 Ollmounted 2.8 Map luture
39 Joint 9 MaJ!e unpot· 29 Bovine
41 -llncoln Mlle • 31 a.dden
42 G.,,,. marl! 10 ~· 32 Leg bone
43 Wern 11 Shew 33 Forbidding
44 Roust 12 Rotnen god 36 Milbetleve:
45 Uyer1 13 Tum down 2 words
41 Oerte Of Pole 18 Merine dlrec-311 Gtatiflel
50 -toom t1on • 40.-~
51 Scoop 22 Sc:rUffl ... Uruuel
52 Apple 2<4 Tined 48 NeO•tN'tl
phrase
48 Blustered
49 PQl1sl\ tiw<_
52 Humorists
53 Compound
suffix
54 Gift'sname
SS Sassy
57 Gei tle
58 Sweet sop
S9 LelM
62Cobblef
53 S11Ut1110n
~1 l .
'I ' .
• J
NATION
Klan leader is johnny-.come-lately
(SeffM .. a rte•>
BATON RO GE. l.a <AP> Elbert Claude
Wtllclntofl d1d1n Ille• th nam• ha. mother aav•
him, so he r hanaed ll to just plain Riii A Johnny
come lately to the Ku Klux Kh&n, he Juat as 1lmply
dt'clarf'Ci hlm elf Imperial Wiaud
Today the tocky HUit' man from the bayou
C'Ountry c1' iwuthcrn LA•Uh1Umll, who 11y111 h41 always
8\0ldt'd ''&ht~ u•ltll he went to San J"r1uwl11co and
saw black men datan1 white women. hu ttm•rtttd
• th• naurt'hud of .. ft!Suraunl Klan, I croa1
burntr Jdlln.i N,.,., to {'Olllll to w•rn of & comlna
r aft war 'l'hl'owrt' 0111 vf a <'O•l&rt1$i.ional hearina
on• "Hk, tu-•vpear111 un th .. Phil Don1thue Show
the next
8111 W1lkm1mn. 31, who11ti w1fl' amd mother and
two )OUl\8 M.ltf\11 1ar1· 41\'llV\I 111 Klan alfillrs, was
"'earani a S Navy uniform dunnai lhti c1vll
tlfhl bilttll' of t ht• I O' WH.I fm,I put Oil 41 hood
)U'\l 411 ft»'A 't'Mr' llljjll
8lr'f TODA l ' t .. :·s ON TOI' IN th~ Klan bust
nc lll, often n) 111g d fOUlld 10 & $10,000 four-Se1tter
P1pt•r Ch~rolct:t: d girt from a scrap dealer in
Cullmlill, lia But ht: usually flu::. eommerctal Jets
to meet h!!t bu!>¥ '>l'hl'dult' because, he says, the
Piper 1 tou :.lu~
W1lktm0n, ~ho hai. worked as a deck hand on
.i Texas shnmp boat, an assistant manager of a
Wool~orth'!t store and an electnc1an for a cement
plant among other lhmgs, 1s indeed atlraeting a lot
of attention as a self·made wu:ard.
The Justice Department says Wilkinson's is
the most violent of the various Klan factions, not·
mg the open brandishing of submachine guns and
sawed·off shotgW\s al rallies and a network or hid·
den commando camps where Klansmen and their
women and children are being taught how to kill.
Wilkinson was evicted from a congressiona l
hearing this month when he leaped to his feet and
shouted. "This is a lie!" as a witness described
how four people were wounded in a shoot-out
between Klans men and members of the Southern
Christian Leaders hip Conference in Decatur, Ala ..
on May 26, 1979
IN A RECENT INTERVIEW ON his home turf
an a Baton Rouge restaurant he does n't allow re·
porters inside his headquarters in Denham Springs
a few miles away Wilkinson puffed a cigar and
declared matter-of.factly. "We are the Klan to-
day." ·
Wilkinson talked openly about his behind·the·
hoods rivalry with David Duke. the glib graduate
of Louisiana State University, who until recently
headed another Klan organization, and how he
"set up" his former associate.
Wilkinson said he videotaped Duke trying to
sell him his membership list for $35.000 at a meet·
ing in northern Alabama. Duke. who subsequently
shed his robe to form the National Association.for
the Advancement of White People. has denied
Wilkinson's accusations.
Wilkinson was Duke's chief lieutenant in the
Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, based in the New
Orleans suburb of Metairie. La .. until he split off
in 1975 to establis h himself as Imperial Wizard of
the Invisible Empire. Knights of the Ku Klux Klan.
1 WILKINSON CLAIMS TO HAVE the largest of
several Klan organizations competing for me m·
bers. The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith.
which keeps watc h on white supremacist g roups,
estimates he probably has about 2,500 members
out of 10,SOO Kluxers a ll told.
Wilkinson also talked about the "widespread"
race war he ·sees on the horizon. but a llowed that
he has no use for Nazis. '
"Hitler may have been great for Germany 30
or 40 years ago, but we have no affinity . to the
Nazis or the National Socialist party," he said. "I
don't like the Nazi idea of 'Let the cream rise to
the top.' Naturally. what they mean is the fellow
with the most guns and the most devious m ind
winds up as the Heil Hiller of the United Stales."
Al for the blacka, he aaid, "They've 1ot their
plau and we've 1ot ours.
.. ,,,.,.. •• plenty of wide open apace in Africa."
Wllklnt<>n 1ot hl~flnt bla dose of media ex·
posure 1n UJ76 wbenrne and two other Klutmen
r.arMied In their robes outalde lhe Baptist Church
n Plains, Oa., In protest to Jimmy Carter's su1·
aeatlon that the church admit black.a. In the sum·
mer of im. be was addressin1 a Klan rally out··
t1ldi Plain.I when an Irate whlte spectator crashed
bi• Jaauar into the .speaker's
platform. injuring 19 in the
c rowd.
OUltE
WILKINSON was born on the
Amite R1ver where his father
was operating a fish camp. He
and his four brothers a nd sisters
grew up working small patches
of watermelons. sweet potatoes
and com as the family moved up
and down the river. their father
go1ngfromjobtojobas a m echanlc. .
Finally they settled an Sugartown. population
100, with two general stores, a 6-foot-square post
office. and a lone black family that lived about a
mile out·or town. Like many other white children
in the rural South of that day. he rode a bus 18
miles on dirt roads to attend a segregated school.
"The only Negroes you ever saw was two old
men who would com e to t he store," he said. ··1
talked to them. Shoot, all the kids talked to ·em.
like anybody else. There was no problems. Of
course, they were not in our schools. They were
not in our churches. They were not in our
.neighborhoods."
After he graduated from high school -he
skipped one grade thanks to good marks on an ap·
titude test -Wilkinson went to work as a deck
hand on a shrimp boat o ut of Texas City, Texas.
Then, two weeks before his 17th birthday in 1959,
he went to see a Navy recruiter and signed up.
After boot camp, the Navy sent him to a six-month
radio school in San Diego and then to Treasure
Island, near San Francisco. That's when the fights
started.
Ford has
poor idea
DEARBORN. Mich.
CAP> -Ford Motor Co ..
which expects to lose
$1 .6 billion in 1980, r e·
cently spent S3SO to fl y a
company e ngineer to
New York City to fi x a
bent license plate frame
on the new car of a com·
pany director.
''It's an overreaction.
no doubt about it,'' said
Ford spokesman Jerry
Sloan.
The li cen se plate
frame was on a 1981
Cougar belonging to
Marian S. Hieskell.
The No. 2 carmaker
provides company direc·
tors with new cars and
asks them for s ugges·
lions on design a nd
engineering defects.
c:.11 642-5171.
Put • few words to work for you.
-•
• NOW OPEN!
. on r Harb<>Uf Branch. Huntmgt~
~
Orange City Bank.
We squeeze
the daylight into
full-service
banking ..
~iiiiiiiiii~
. • .• • :· ·.:·1";t.·-. "4~., .... ~ ! ~.. ~·1'1
Extended hours with e•tended ~er vic~s:And free registered
key ta~s. ~t Orange City Bank .. Huntington rlarbour. we're
open Monday-Friday from 9 AM to 6 P~ and from ,10 ~~ '...illlirt•...._
19 1 PM each S~turday. With a friendly, competent slaf~#,.
"It was my first encounter with inter.
racial couples, ~e said. "It was somethinl I never
even really knew about. I couldn't handle it. I
would invariably make some kind of remark and
almost 100 percent of the time I wound up in a
fight. ..
Wilkinson,/a communications sp~cialist,
became a cry~1rapher or decoder aboard the
nuclear submarine Simon Bolivar, which was
armed with Polaris missiles.
"When I went on Polaris submarines I had to
have a top secret security clearance becau~e the
radioman, along with the captain, executive .of·
ricer and navigato.,, knew the ship's movements.
And, of course. top secret war plans was laying on
my. desk as communic,ations supervisor. which is
very intriguing."
Wilkinson, who married his wife, Barbara, 18
years ago and now has two sons -Richard, 12,
and Timothy, 17 -spent eight years in the Navy
before dropping out and taking a job as an assis·
tant manager of a Woolworth's store in Fort
Myers, Fla. After about a year. he moved back to
Louisiana as an electrician at the Ideal Cement
Co. in Denham Springs.
THAT'S WHERE, IN ABOUT 1973, he got in·
volved with Klan, he said, because of the "s itua·
tion in the schools."
"The first public Klan function I ever attended
l held in my back yard," he said.
In 1974, Wilkinson joined Duke's orglfnization,
an alliance that lasted only a year. That rivalry
cam e to a head last January. Wilkinson said, when
Duke offered to sell him his membership list for
$65,000. then reduced the price to $35,000.
A list of Kla n members is worth m oney to a
professional Klansman. Wilkinson says he gets S3
a year in dues from each of his mem bers. which
includes a subscription to his newspaper. called
"The Klansman." The Anti·Defamation League
estim ates that Duke had about 1.500 to 2,000 mem-
bers at the time.
Part Ill -Who's Who Under the lloods
,. AP Wtr'•photo
IMPERIAL WIZARD SMILES
Klan's Bill Wilkinson
Warning : The Surg eon General Has Determined
That C1gareue Smoking Is Dangerous 1ti·Your Health
SAVE50~
assist you rn all nsp~l.s of pers;onal. as well :mh:ommercfil':
banking "!te'd1tated ~ice. we·re •tile move. C
struction rs now un derway on our Huntington Harbour ··
branch In the meantime. a temporary location al 4972 •.
Wa rner Avenue is open for your convenience. And of ....... .ibO!iJ. soc Off A Carton Of Your
Choice On These Brands
I
course, our beautiful main office at 2730 E. Chapman
Avenue in Orange remains at your service. Stop by either
location and pick up a sturdy Orange City Bank registered key lag wilh your
personalized code rfumber. In the event of lost keys. the tag instructs the
nnaer lo deposit the ke.ys in any man box. Orange City flank guar.mtees ttre re·
lurn postage. We'll keep your keys. aod your money, out of the wrong hands.
Visit us soon. Interest bearing checking accounts beglnnlng December 31, 1980.
Utfftlltt ,OIC
Miit! Office. : 2730 E. Chapman Avenue .OJJ~ a. • 71 41n 1.3300
H I al ~ 4972 W"'* Alienue
HuntlngtOn S.ec:fl. C&. 92Mt • 7141~t321
. -:-? •
~ -
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CAMEL LIGHTS CAMEL LIGHTS 100'1
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A •• DAIL y PILOT
No~· more
wdtithe
experts.
You'll find the experts at Bank of America. Because we serve
more c hec king customers than any other California financial
institution. Now we're introducing a new checking plan.
One that pays interest. And gives you all the convenience of
checking at Bank of America. We call it Interest Chec king.
And it could be free of service charges.
~
Check the interest. Starting December 31 st, under a
new Federal law; our Interest Checking Plan will pay 5Y4%
interest -compounded daily-on the balance in this check-
ing account. No bank or savings and loan can pay a higher
interest rate on ·checking.
Checktheprice.(ltcould befree.)With Bank.of
Ameri ca's Interest Checking Plan, there is no service charge
any month you m aintain the required minimum or average
daily ba l an ce ~ If you have a Bank of Ameri ca savings account,
our new Combined Bal ance Service"~ lets you add your sav-
ings a ~d c hecking balances together to qualify (exc ludes
M oney M arket Certificates and Money M arket Accounts).
, And even with service charges you could still come out ahead
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Check the convenience. At Bank o f Ameri ca you enjoy
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-Check with us now. S~gn up fo r Interest Checking and
Combined Balance Service right now at your nea rest Bank of
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_ , If yo u have questions, we'll be happy to help you decide if
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th . · range of other ch ~c k-an e••e• ing and savings ~ 1' ~ ., ~ pl a n~. ?o for Interest
Checking or any other
kind of checking, check w ith the ec experts. Check With us.
t •
'(Nt.Hn <. o nd11ion.,
and charge apply to
this plan .
.. This plan is dec;1gned only
for individuals and certain
org.rnization~.
..
DEC. 30, 1980
Business
Stocks
Television
Movies
84
85
86
87
BUSINESS:
Nation's leaders live in economic fantasy.
John Cunniff tells why 84
-~--
f ,JOfJSt• h11ll
._ . -
Area stars lauded
Stewart, three others make All-CIF
Four Orange Coast area stars have been
chosen on the All -CJ F Division lll football team
for 1980 as selected by the Citizens Savings
Athletic Foundation board.
Laguna Beach High star Lance Stewa~ leads
the parade with a first team selection at
linebacke r. while second team honors go to Corona
del Mar defensive back Bob Shollin. San Clemente
nose guard John Schroeder and Estancia High
quarterback Jim McCahill.
Also chosen on the two teams are four
Capistrano Valley lligh stars <all on the first of·
fense >. Mission Viejo ·guard L>ana Johnson and El
Toro ·s Greg Pacos (first team linemen l and Damon
Sweazy (second team back l .
Player of the Year honors go to Jomo Page.
the spectacular Pi~s X High linem~n .
Capistrano Villey's Big Four rnclude linemen
Bruce Boatman and Dave Mahronic. tight end Dan
Westerfield and running back Eric Fox
Stewart. the South Coast League's Qack of the
Year after guiding the Artists to a share of the
league championship.I was picked al linebacker,
another spot he ably manned during the season.
Mccahill passed for 1.816 yards and 12
·'
STEWART SHOLLIN
touchdowns in his second year at the helm for
Estancia. He averaged 61 percent in completions
during league play and ripped Esperanza High's
secondary for 298 yards on 17. completions.
"Esperanza's coach, Pete Yoder. called him
amazing." says Estancia Coach Ed Blanton.
Shollin intercepted five passes and recovered
five fumbles in additon to returning four punts for
touc hdowns <only two counted b1cause of
"penalties" 1.
··Bob was our most outstandin'g athlete on the
team. says CdM Coach Dick Morris. "If we had
not two-platooned he would have been our starting
wide receiver and he could have been a
quarterback , too . but we had a quality
quarterback lo begin with."
Schroeder, a 210-pound fullback while on of·
fense. dominated San Clemente's tough defensive
lme at nose guard ... He is the best nose guard in
Orange County as far as I'm concerned.says San
Clemente Coach Allie Schaff. "And he was last
yeC1r, too."
Schoeder was a th~e-year starter and all·
le ague star for the Tritons .
McCAHILL SCHROEDER
ALL-CIF DWISION Ill
First Team Offense Second Team Offense
Chaffey H igh ·~ Adrian Adams (above>
looses control of the ball as Costa Mesa 's Jim
Pt.'li ehow~kf Cle ft> and Dennis Jones apply a
tough defonse Monday in Orange tourna-
ment action at Chapman College. <Below)
Pelichowski (left ) and teammate Ken
Bardsley go for a rebound. Mustangs won.
62-59. For story. see page B2.
Pos. Player, school
B Jim Wolak , Covina
8 -Ronald Story. Serra
B-Eric Fox. Capistrano Valley
B-Thad Jefferson. Ontario
Ht.
5·10
5·11
5-18
5·11
Wt. Cl.
165 Sr
197 Sr.
180 Sr.
195 Jr.
B Todd Gerhardt. Norco 6·0 210 Sr.
8 -J im McCahill, Estancia 6·1 185 Jr.
B-Bob Malouf. South Hills 6·0 175 Sr.
B -Louie Galicia, Schurr 5-11 175 Sr.
B-Damon Sweazy. El Toro 5·8 160 Jr.
Whieldo~
Magee hot
forUO
Sp1·d:il 111 th1• l);iih Pilot
1111 I I '\I< ;i.; \11t11I Kt!vin
\1 .11!•·1· and H<11111' \.\ h1l'ldon
u11J1l11111•d 1111 t.1 po111t:-a s UC
11\1111· -.hoc \.1•d l:!lh r .tr1l..~·d Tex
,,, \,\ \l 'JI i I 111 llw ''l•f'n ing
1.:<i mt •11 llw I\()\< 'la-.:-ll ha-.,kcl
li,tll l•Hll l\;11111•111 l11•r1· vlonda)
111,;ht
I t I .') I h.111rlt-cl I ltt• :\gg1l'S
1h1•11 111'1 ,,,.,.., 1r1 1'ig hl guml'!'t
liar-. .t ,1-..111 lrttf lht '\Jltt':Jtl'rS
ll1tf II lht· h.ird \\:t\ 1•orning
had, fr11111 .tn l':trl\ •1 :! dt'f1C'll to
p11s1 .1 IU :!~ halft11111· 11·.id lwt11nd
\1 .1,.:1•\' "t:I p11111t pt•t l11rrr1 ;i111 I'
'With g11~!'t l1k1· \Ltl,.!t·t· and
Wh1t·lclun, 1t 1:-C;'a!-.y h• ~l'l' why I
\\as !'.Urh a good ('Oa<'h at Sad
dlt-hal'k tCollcgt'l · l'Om m1•nlcd
l lCI ('oach Bill M11lhgan refer
ring to hi:-l;,is l JOI• when · both
µlayc•cl for him
"·,·,,u could tell I ht:-\\as going
to lw a good 111ght \\ ht•n (I ..l1u1s J
Brt>momf h1l a 40 footer :ti the
h u z l I' r to c n d l hf) I.! a me. ·
~lull1i.:an addt•d
:'ll dJ.\l't'. tlw li 8 Jtlntor rc•ntcr
f111i sht•d the evening with 34
pornts wh1leo Whicldcm added 27
l't'l contrnul'd to pull a\\a)
from 1'-xas J\&M mirly in lh1•
st•concl half. building a 58·41 lcad
\\1th 12 minutes remaining The
J\gg1cs got no closer than 13
points the rest of the l'(amc.
Foul trouble plagued thl• ,\g
~ies as VcrnPn Smith , Rynn
Wright and Rudy Woods all
fouled out. The Ai!l:!ICS collected
26 fouls while ln•inc was ticket
ed 1ust nine times .J
L1C'l. in fact. outstorcd the Ag
g1es. 25·8 from the free throw
tine.
B J eff Brown. Yucaipa 6·4 190 Sr
B Robert Currie. Serra 5-10 180 Jr
,E;-Richard Rodriguez. Mt. View 6·0 175 Sr.
E-David Clinton. Mary Star 5.9 170 Jr.
E-Troy Sweet. Brea-Olinda 6-0 180 Sr.
TE-Dan Westerfield. Cap. Va ly. 6-3 220 Sr.
T-Greg Pacos. El Toro 6·4 230 Sr
T -Dave Mahronic, Capistrano Valley6·4 230 Sr
G Darryl Titsworth. Garey 6·3 245 Sr.
G -Dana Johnson. Mission Viejo 6·3 230 Sr c Bruce Boatman. Ca pis . Val. 6·3 223 Sr
K--Luis Zendejas. Don Lugo 5· 10 170 Sr .
First Team Defense
DL -Jomo Page, Pius X 6-3 230 Sr
DL -Mark McCoy, Yucaipa 6· l 190 Sr.
DL-John Hill. Rubidoux 6·4 210 Sr
OL --Glen Simonton. Verbum Dei 6·2 219 Sr
DL Adam Lowitz. Es peranza 6·1 225 Jr.
LB Nick Farris. Victor Valley 6-1 210 Sr
LB Lance Stewart. Laguna Beach fi·O 190 Sr
LB .John Roney, Esperanza 6·L 212 Sr
LB Russ Maybu~ .. Covina 6·3 205 ~Sr
LB Jorge Jatib. Senurr 5-10 175 Sr.
DB Craig Rutledge, _El Dorado 6· 1 180 J r
DB Steve Haub. St Anthony 6·2 180 Sr.
DB -Robert Soza. Schurr 5· 11 175 Sr
DB -J eff Mahbted e. Santa Fe 6-t 170 Jr.
DB -J esse Vasquez. South llills 5· 11 170 Sr.
Punter -Scott Larson. Damien 5.9 160 Sr
Ali finally
LAS VEGAS (AP l The Nevada State Athletic
Com mission reversed itself Monday and allowed
former heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad
Ali to surrender his Nevada boxing license. ending
lhe threat of hi s forced retirement in the stale.
The action by the five-member commission ef-
fectively prevents the three-time champion from
ever fighting in the state again. But the Nevada ac·
tion will have no effect·on other states or other coun·
tries.
The agreement countered a decision reached
early in the hearing when the commission voted
unanimous ly to reject Ali 's offer to voluntarily
surrender his license. which would have expired at
the end of this year.
"We saved ourselves a lot of time. a lot of court
fights.·· AJi said following th'e hearing.
•'They think I can't fight any more . According to
my last performance I don'tblamethem."
The commission had said Ali should be re\ired
"for his own safety and for the integrity of boxing In
the state of Nevada.·· It said his ability to perform
B Donald LaBomme. Alemany 6·1 195 Sr.
E -Allen Pllts. C1aremont 6-3 180 Sr.
E-Steve Rodriguez. Santa Fe 5-7 140 Sr.
E-Tom Haynes. Covina 6-2 180 Sr.
TE-Greg McDanield, Mayfair 6·4 235 Sr.
T -Jim McCullough. Hemet 6-6 230 Sr.
T -Doug Homan. California 6-2 210 Sr.
G Scott Wilkerson. Norco 6-3 235 Sr.
G -Mike Marinkovich. Mary Star 5·11 200 Sr. c -Mike Baker. Esperanza 6-1 214 Sr
K -Cle Kooiman. Chaffey 6-1 180 Sr.
Second Team Defense
DL Hugh Foster. Ganes ha 6-3 210 Sr.
DL-Mike Copeland. Serra 6·5 218 Sr .
DL Art Chavez. Schurr 6·1 180 Jr.
DL John Schroeder. San Clemente 6·0 200 Sr.
DI. Tim Mcclanahan, Brawley 6· l 215 Sr.
LB Chuck Felando. Mary Star 5·11 200 Sr.
LB Brian Breese. La Mirada 5· 11 185 Sr.
LB Tony Lamboy. Coachella Valley5·11 170 Sr.
LB -Ken Chapple. Pomona 6·1 195 Sr.
LB -Chad Corriveau. Riverside Poly 6· 1 190 Sr.
DB -Bob Shollin. Corona del Mar 6-0 170 St.
DB Billy Robinson. Victor Valley 6·3 185 Sr
DB Darrell Ford. Garey 6·2 195 Sr.
DB -Ken Wagner. Arlington • 5·10 170 Sr.
OB -Doug Williams. Riverside Poly 6·0 195 Jr.
K Pat O'Hara. Covina 6·2 195 Sr.
Player of the Year: Jomo PaRe. Pius X
round • WinS
was in question "as a result of his performance" in
the Oct. 2 title fight with Larry Holmes at Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas.
Ali had offered to relinquish his license in a letter
to t he com mission on Dec. 19. His attorneys said bis
action in doing so made the commission action moot
and they claimed the board had no jurisdiction over
the 38-year-old boxer.
But the commission had said merely ofrerin8 to
surrender the license was not enough. and that the
surrender would have to be accepted by the com-
mission. which it at first voted nottodo.
Commission chairman Sig Rogicb said be fell it
was "incumbent upon us as a commission lo set the
tone for other commissions ... "
The panel refused to drop allegations that Ali
had taken a thyroid medication prior to the Holmes
fight. Ali failed lo answer the bell for tbellth round ln
the scheduled 15-round World Boxing Council title
fight.
The commfssion also said Ali violated com·
mission regulations by taking the thyroid medica-
tion.
EME~ROLLS
IN TOURNAMENT · Sehemheehler provides -some gallows humor
FromAPdtJpatcbes PASADENA IAP ) -Bo Schem·
PORT WASHINGTON. N. Y -bec hler admitted Monday that the
Corona del Mar High senior An· Pacific·lO Conference may be stron1er ,,
tony Emerson, a 17-year-old so_n in rootball lhan his e>wn Big 10, but the
oI lennis.Jegend Roy Emerstm. Mkhigan coach isn't about to throw In
pulled out a &-4. 4·6. 7·5 victory the towel.
over Greg Voetsch of Warren, "There may be a few more &ood
N .J . Monday to advance to the teams out here right now," Schem·
second round of the fourth an-bechler told reporters 'at a joint morn· ~~~,...~~.aL.Bole lnternational .J~i.9!.-..il)i.n.en coafecence w.itb bit a... Bowl tennl'Scbamp~ns P . opponent, Washington Coach Don
ll was a split for other famous James. "If you want to say the Pic-10 is
tennis names in the first round better, I'll accept that.
-14·year-old Patrick McEnroe, "Based on the last few Role Bowl
John MGEnroc's. brother, fell to 'ames, I can't 1tye you an arpment.
3 Yu o s l a v 1 an C Nena d It's llke the American Leap in the
Markov c) 3·6, 4·6. last few baseball All·Star g1mes."
Schembechler's teams have lost five Bowl pact between the two conferences.
Rose Bowl games. Since 1970, the However, the Washington coach said
Pac-10 has won every game except one be fell the matchup made the Rose
-the 1974 victory by Ohio State over Bowl the best of the major bowls, year
Soutnem C-1Ufomra. in and year out. r
"I hon~tly feel we could have won "W-lMinM the 1978 Rose Bowl against
any one of those games,·· Schembechler a great Michigan team was a coach's
said. "If any one or those games bad dream ," said James, who was a
bffn blowout.a. I might think differenUy Michigan assistant coach under Bump
• 'n•t. &My • ...-·,~ --------EIHott·itrl988 mnd 118'. "It's·
"ll'.ll tum around. There may be a whelming an experience this year IS it
time when the Big 10 will run oft a few WIS in 1978."
victories. Jamee said he thoucht the two con·
"I'm not tryin1 to look for excuses." ferences were fairly equal ~pointed.
James said he is aware that there it out that both Michigan and W hinaton
some presaure from the West Coast go into the Tan . 1 came a.a sputed
media to drop t;.he Iona-standing Rose champions of their respective c?n·
•
ferences and with Identical 9-2 records.
"We're bot.h similar." James said.
··Both teams were auppc>Md to be in re-
building yeers. We both •lnlUled earlJ
but then came on strong late ln Lhe
season."
Schembechler, who 1ppean to bave
mellowed over Lhe years since be start·
-eel "-'"I Mi here in ••. •• •titl to apply IOIDe 1allowa humor to the Bia 10
situation.
·'I can certainly see why the Pac-11
wanu to keep ua comlral out bere," tM
Michllan coacb said, laqblna. "SoaM
of my wont moment.a bave bem out
here. -
.
• -DAil Y Pt\.OT
Beniquez now an Angel;
third free ag nt to sign
p,.._AP ..... &dMt
OuctH'k»r J'ban hnlquea, who played al Seat· Ill ti~ last ~uon. 1J1ned Monday with the Anartll, the
\llltd frN .,on\ h> jo!n th m •lnce th4! end of last
MUOD \'l& lh4l ff' Hlr)' drat\
Ben1Que1, JO hll 228 at SuuJc m 19IO •her being on the
dl abled hat mu h ol tbe e...,ott ti~ also wu suapended five
1amH b) Manager Maur} WUls for n:tustn& a pmch hitting
u 1111ncnent
Bemqutit , evn111dtired outstanding de·
ftnilvely. uffored ll dislocated rl&ht
'lhoulder durut& an exhibition game last
spr tn& <&nd later was hampered by a pulled
h1unstring
"I alwaays thought BeniquH was one of
th~ better centerflelders in the American
League." s aid Angels' Executive Vice
President Buzz1e Bavasl who signed him.
"We 're trying to strengthen our defense up
the middle. 1tnd with the recent addition o(
u1o1iouu Rick Burleson at s hortstop we feel we've
made excellent ~rogress
The Other two free agents to sign with the Ange)s since
lhe end of lhe season were pitchers Ger>ff Zahn and John
L>' Acqu1sto. 1 Since the mcept1on of the re-entry draft in 19'16. the
Angels have signed 12 players from it.
Q~teeltlw ....
Offensive tackle Doug Fruce, after the Rams lost
to Dallas. 34·13: "There's something wrong with this
team nobody knows about. Not even the players."·
Sr•.,..IJftftWr ......_ l111c-r.,lfte
' Michigan football Coach.Bo Schembechler kept EiJ
Seattle reporters waiting 70 minutes for an in· •9>
terview Sunday -so they walked out.
About a dozen Northwest reporters here to
cover the Rose Bowl game on New Year's between
Was.hington and Michigan had gathered in Newport Beach
for a telephone interview with Schembechler. who was at the
Huntington-Sheraton Hotel in Pasadena.
Simultaneously, a group of Michigan
writers in Pasadena were assembled to
talk by phone with Washington Coach Don
James.
Schembechler was scheduled at 4 :45
p .m .. with James to come on at 5:15 p.m .
After the Michigan coach failed to
show by 5:05 p.m ., Washington sports in·
formation director Mike Wilson said it was
unfair for James to be delayed because or
Schembechler. Shortly afterward, James
came down from his hotel room. spent 20
\CHEMHCHLEll minutes talking to Detroit writers and then
departed.
At 5:55 p.m .. members or the Seattle press corps decided
they had been stood up by the Michigat; coach and walked
out of the inter view room.
Schembechler, who afrived later , was asked what hap·
pen ed.
"l don't know what you're talking about," he said. "This
is the first I've ever heard about a telephone call."
A Michigan spokes man later said the coach forgot about
the appointment.
Cloaftl ftlPC ..... dtw l•r S••r •• .,,
NEW ORLEANS In 30.000 American EiJ
hom es: dea( people will s tart the' ne w year with •II•
their rirst chance ever to watch a major college
footbetll game while enjoying advantages that are
taken for granted t>y those with normal hearing.
Along with the broadcast or the Sugar Bowl on Thursd¥..
those with special equipment installed on their television sets
will see captions providing such things as down and distance.
time lert in a quarter. the score of the game and statistical
·summaries of teams and individuals.
For those with no hearing problems. s uch information is
regularly provided by television announcers as part of their
broadcast.
The Sugar Bowl meeting between top-ranked Georgia
and No. 1 Notre Dame will be broadcast with closed captions,
a s ervice for dear l)eo~ that bas been provided for some
newscasts and special programs in \he past, but never for a
rootball g"ame, said John Ball, president of National Caption·
ing lnstitute.
Socr•r nar Mt dt• • ..,.....1~11
Major lndoor Soccer League officials decided Monday to
suspend 6·4 Mike Mancini for punching 5·8 .Jor1ea Krt1&euen
or Wichita. rather than barring the offender from the league
for life as suggested by Wichita General Manager BllJ Ket1l··
Ung. "It's a weak ruling." said Kentling ... Austin Peay
football coach Watson Browa has resigned to become of·
rensive coordinator at Vanderbilt . . . The South African
s loop Wesbank sailed into Simons Bay just south of Cape
Town Monday to win the 1980 Agulhas Yacht Race, from
Cape Town to Mossel Bay and back, in an elaps"ed time of
four minutes s hort of 74 hours, three minutes . . . .Jim
Rooker, who retired as a player for the Pittsburgh Pirates re·
cenlly. has been hired as a broadcaster for the baseball
club ... The Cleveland Indians signed Cree agent Pat Kelly.a
an outfielder and left-hander hitter, to a two-year contract ...
Services are pending for Charles L. Harvey, football coach at
Chicago's Tilden Tech (now Tilden High) for almost three dec-
ades . Tilden. 90 died Sunday in San Diego where he hacl
lived for the past 10 years . . . World Boxing Association
junior welterweight champion Aaron Pryor will decline to
press charges against the Cincinna\i woman who shot and
wounded him Sunday at the woman's home, the boxer's
manager said.
T~...,twtlle
Following are the top sp0rts events on TV tonight. Ratings ~~e : o1 o1 I excellent; o1 ./ I worth watching; /91 fair; o1 forget
[el Sp.m ., Channelt 11 ./ ./
NHLHOCKEY: KingsatMontreal.
Announcen: Bob Miller and PeteWeber.
The Kings are leading the Canadlens by nine points In the
Norris Division of the Prince of Wates Conference with their hlQh· scoring trio of Marcel Dionne, Dave Taylor and Charlle Sim-
mer, all In the toP 10 of the NHL scoring. Montreal, a pereMlal
Stanley Cup competitor. had Its troubles earlier In the weson
but aPC>Hrs to be coming on strong. One hour tape delay. ·
f-) lp.m., Channel I ./ ./ v'
•ASKETaALL: Holy Cross vs. Nevada (las VeQas).
VetasL Announcers: Ross Porter and Ralph Readout.
Coach Jerry T arkanlan's Runnln' Rebels wlll tangle with Holy
Cross In the first round of the las Vegas Classic tournam9ftt.
Neither team lsln the top 20otthe NCAA but both "°"to be around atseason's~a~ t ntttfR!tnfls. _____ _
-RADIO
8a5'cetblll -Lakers at Utah, 6:20 p.m. KlAC (570); UC
Irvine vs. Montana at KOA Classic, I p,m .l(WVE (108 FM); USC
vs. LOUlsvllle, 6:30 KNX (1070).
('
JEFF CHRISTENSEN
Pitt makes
• its case
to be No. I
JACKSONVILLE, F la. (AP>
-Third-ranked Pittsburgh will
peed a lot of help to win the na·
tional championship, but
quarterback Rick Trocano says
the Panthers can rest easy
knowing that they've done ever·
ything in their power to lay
claim to No. 1.
"We don't control our own
destiny. so we just have to sit
back and hope for the best,"
Trocano aaid Monday night after
Pitt destroyed 18th·ranked South
Carolina 37.9 in the 36tb annual
Gator Bowl. "We came out and
did what we had to do and that
was win decisively. Now, if we
don't make it to No. 1, we know
it's not because we didn't do
everything we could lo make it
happen."
The Gator Bowl victory before
a record crowd of 72,287. boosted
the Panthers' record to JH and
spoiled Heisman Trophy winner
Geroge Rogers· collegial finale
for the 84 Gamecocks.
It was ttie Panthers' seventh
victory in a row since the team
dropped a 36·22 decision to No. 2
Florida State. But it still doesn't
put them in the driver's seat for
the national crown. which many
of the experts predicted Pitt
would win in preseason polls.
Top-ranked Georgia must fall
to Notre Dame in the Sugar
Bowl on Thursday and Florida
State would have to stumble
against 4th-ranked Oklahoma
later that night for the Panthers
to have a shot.
·'It's frustrating not having
the final say. But on the other
hand. you·ve got to give credit to
Georgia for being undefeated
and Florida State credit for
beating us." s aid Trocano. "I
can't predict the future. but if
they both lose, I don 't see how ~
we can be denied."
South Carolina Coach J im
Carlen agreed.
"I said going in that Pitt was
the best around and nothing has
changed. They're certainly one
of the three best and right now,
I'd t,ave to give my vote,•· he
said.
Edison girls
in showdown
with &tancia
It will be Edison against
Estancia toni,rht at 7: 30 with the
championship of the ·Eagles'
own girls· basketball tourna-
ment on the line after both
teams posted victories Monday
night.
Edison edged Fountain Valley,
64-62, while Estancia got by
Marina, 61·49, to set up the title
showdown.
In other action. Garden Grove
knocked Costa Mesa out of the
same tourney with a 70·37 vie·
tory, while Chino did the same
thing to Huntinston Beach with
a 42·31 lriumph.
Edison's Shannon Meier
pumped in Z7 points and hauled
down 20 rebounds to break a
school record in the Chargers'
win over Fountain Valley.
She got scoring help from
Angle Mallotto who added 10.
Meanwhile, four Estancia
players scored in double figures,
led by Beth Longfield with 19, as
the Ea1lea moved into the finals
of their own tourney wjth a win
over Marina. ·
The Vikings took an early 13·9
first quarter lead, only to see
Estancia respond with a 20·point
outburst in the second quarter to
take a commanding lead.
Vicky Lamar had 10 points in
a losing cause tor Costa Mesa u
the Mustangs were overpowered
by Garden Grove. Garden Grove
opened a 38-20 halftime lead and
never looted back.
Jackie 'Underpoel scored 17
points for Chino to lead her team
SPORTS BREAK / BASKETBALL I FOOTBALL
n~rons eye 01-ange title
Late free throta beat Lakewood
By &OGE& CA&l.soN Ol .. hll, ...... -.C
Fountain V.Uey Hlgh's Barons raced to ~eir
sixth straight victory Monday and set themselves
up for a crack at a second straight tournament
cbampionahip tonight -thank& to perseverance
and the Umely free throw shooting of 5.9 junior
Alan Villanueva.
"Without Weninger w1· 111-,1 lti I>-11111111!1 1111 11r
our lineup," explained \1.1r111.t <·11.n ti s11\1
1P0Povlch.
Newport Harbor SS, OrB ny,. 49
The Sailors jumped to ., 21 r I·· 11 '
The Fountain Valley guard hit a pair with two
seconds left to lift bis team into tonight's (8) cham·
pionship finals against Servile with a 61-fJO victory
over Lakewood.
spent in the second quartl'r. th1•n h ·ht 11 1 .i \ 1 r1
ing Orange defe nse with \\ 111·h1111 111or1 11 111 1
tactics.
The Sailors hit nin" or fht·•r f11 -..1 11,
from the field lOf;l!t "1hl' I ell I t 11 t• Ultl
Other games in today's finals at the 16th
Orange Optimist Invitational basketall tourna·
ment include Marina and Lakewood ror third place
at 6; Costa Mesa and Mater Oei ror the consolation
championship at 4:20; and Newport Harbor and
Santa Clara for firth place at 2:40. '
Here's how Monday's action went at Chapman
College:
Fountain Valley 61, Lakewood 80
Coach Dave Brown's crew made 26 or 49 from
the field. but appeared to be in deep trouble with
4:01 remaining and Lakewood holding a 56·51
bulge.
Emile Harry picked up a loose ball and
scored, then Jeff Hughes connected on a three·
point play to lie it at 56.
It was tied again at S8 on Jeff Christensen's tip
a nd Harr:ts free throw with 2:05 gave the Barons
a 59·58 lead with 2:05 to go.
The Barons was ted steals by Hughes and
Villanueva and Lakewood's Tony Dalton stole the
ball and scored with 13 seconds left to give the
Lancers a 60·59 lead.
An ensuing free throw attempt by the
Lakewood star missed, however. and Frank
Luongo rebounded.
Villanueva wound up with the ball as time was
running out, drove the baseline and was fouled in· s~de with two ticks remaining.
Each shot hit the front of the rim, bounced
forward and dropped in lo give the Barons the vie·
tory. Christensen was the leading scorer for Foun·
tain Valley,·netting 20 points. along with his over·
all floor game. including six assi~ts. usually to the
penetrating Villanueva on the fast break-
Servlt• 65, Marina 58
Marina's 6·4 junior Rick Smith scored 29
points, but it wasn 't enough to offset the loss of 6·1
guard Roger Weninger-, who missed the game with
a foot injury and may be out for a couple of weeks.
Servile nudged into the lead at 12·11. upped it
to 33·24, then saw it melt to 37.37 under a siege of
buckets by Smith. but pulled away behind the scor-
ing of Tim Osgood (19) and Scott Sinek 118 1.
Marina's last gasp came on Burt Lalk 's lip
with 1: 16 remaining to narrow the count to 58-56,
but Osgood's ins ide shot and a pair of free throws
put it out of reach,
Marina connected on only 21 of 64 from the
field (32.8percent 1
With three players in douhlf' f1 'IHt..,
Garrin Morton led th•· ",,, \\ 1111
while Mike Love and 1, I< 1!11 i.; 1 1 " ,
tributed 10 points
The Tars. now 5 2 lt111111 ti 11, ""
with their fast break :i11 ... k , 1
t erpunch when the 1,,, ... , t· 11111.
Newport's defens e
Al one point Orani;t· 111 , .. ,. '" v. 1
third quarter IJefon · th1· ...,,11111
buckets from their fork h,11 ,,,, ,
Ciaccio. Cory Evcrharl \111
ties and Love shared rn th1· 111· 1
Coste Mesa 62, Chall v
The Mustangs led 1tll I lt1 \\"'
rebounding pcrformarH·<.· 1111111 Jar
addition to Ken Bard!>l(·} ·,, '11 I'""
the field >
Scott McKet,.s µenctrat11111 1111
Dennis Jones in tht: liad.• 11u11
Mustangs pick up lhl·ir ,, 1•111ol 11
Bardsley m;untaanctl Ii• , ''
20.5. while · Pellt·how'>k1 • 1 • ,,
figures for the than.J s tra11•1t1 111•"
ment.
Mater Oei 67 , San Peorn
Larry Williams (1'1 1 U"t• \
freshman Chris Jatho11 I I • l• I second straight v1c·tory 111 1)11 111 1
the Monarchs a 4 11)\"l'l",111 • ',,,.a
Mater De1 J UHltll'd ,,, '" 1·,
dwindle to 33.3:1 ul h:tllt1 rnP 1111 ,· f 1
the third quattt>r
B I R M I !'/ G II A M , \ I .1
quarterback N1 ck1c Hall 'I"'
and wailing because lhl I rn1ir11 ·'
In 1980, he m adt: u11 f111 • 1
for 2.039 yards and 21 t11111 licJ•,,
Tulane to a 7.4 rec,,r.J .1,
Saturday 's Ha ll of I-111 • 1
Arkansas. ' '"The second s1·;1r h1 v. .1 I•
s aid Charle~ D ;H r:-oft• \ •
Tulane ··we wer1:n 1 th.1• 1 •• • ,, •
we were ~ctt mg <'lo,(· \~ • • ..
~amc.
Seahawks get a rem a
Ocean View High's Seahawks. Orange Coun·
ty's No. 1 ranked prep bas ketball le-am . set itself
up for a rematch with Compton in tonight's
championship finals of the Villa Park Invitational.
The Seahawks blasted Rolling Hills with a
second-half surge, while three other Orange Coast
area teams -Huntington Beach. Edison and San
Clemente -we re also victorious in tournament
action.
Here is a look at each:
Ocean View 89, Rolllng Hills 70
Wayne Carlander was his customary selr Mon·
day. pumping in 42 points with a 16·for-24
performance from the field and IO·for·12 from the
line. in addition to 15 rebounds.
The Seahawks upped their record to 9-2 and
meet Compton for the Villa Park Tournament
chamoionship toni~ht at 8. Also playing well for Ocean View was
6·9 Jim Usevilch. who had eight rebounds and was
7·for·l3 from the field, netting 18 counters.
Eric Fuscher added 11 points and 11 rebounds.
while Scott DeBrouwer had eight assists.
Huntington Beach 65, Savanna 37
Rejuventated Huntington Beach raced to it_s
sixth win in eight decisions (the Oilers were 6· 15 a
year ago> as they qualified for a championship
semifinals berth against host Brea·Olinda tonight
at 8 : 15. follo~ing a 65·37 laugher over Savanna. .
ll v.:Js •• totut 11',tfr
Thompson and .!')(-1111 II•· • 1
m a 36-16 etlgl' 111 tl1jt 11. I'·•
a ll in double f1~u1 "'" 1n 1 • r 11
18
Sen Clemente gc r,,.,, •
The Tntons 1•1in1 ar •
go No~ 9'·1 11n 1h1· ,,. 1 •
open a t'lose j.!.11lw 17 1
point second h <rl l 11 ll •
\'1~ta l'lurnaml·nl :cl g ..
The Trito11., mi·•' I ,, 1
Last wl·ek, 1 ht· I 1 1
pl ace fin• h in llw ~.1 n I •
ly to ehampaon Or;111a.:1 r 1
~onday night . .J11h11 I , • • ,
while James 11111 udrl1•d ,,
trolled the board ... ,j ... '-:1 1 • •
championship round .. f '111 '' ,
Edison 79. Monie \'1t, J
The Chargers go "'' rt
pionship tonight al 5 311 .1111•1
(Palo Al to > m the :-l•rn1l1n.1
tourney.
Ri chard Chan~ Sl'''' • !
OiBemardo added 21 frn I· 11 ''
The Charger~ ~ho1 k 1 • 1 •
throw line, conncl'tang 1111 • • 1 1
Pirates, Gauchos ,
topped • in
Orange Coast College basket-
ba 11 coach Tandy Gillis would
like to think of turnovers as
those tasty pastries filled with
apples.
Unfortunately. the only thing
he's ~hi~h'.)g a~ut \hese days is
losses, four straiiht lo be exact,
after hJs Bucs dropped a 71·66
decision to Snow (Utah I College
Monday night In the first round
of the Barstow tournament.
Meanwhile, Saddleback
College also had its misfortunes,
as the Gauchos made a quick ex·
it from the Santa Ana touma·
menl after MOnday night ·s 85· 78
setback to Fullerton in a con·
solation game.
At Barstow. the Pa rates com·
mitted 216 tu.movers in suftering
their fifth loss of the year
against seven victories.
Snow College, now 9·1, held a
10·point lead at halftime <45·351
but OCC rallied to take a 56-SS
tourneys
lead thanks to som e hot shooting
by Greg Krohnfeldt.
But the turnovers began to
take their toll late in the game.
and combined with some big
three-point plays by Snow. the
Pirates fell behind for good with
about four minutes remaining.
OCC actually shot better from
the field (54 percent lo Snow's 48
percent).
John Saunders and Tim
Johnson each scored 18 points
for OCC, while Krohnfeldt added
10. The Bucs were missing Rich
Kindorf who stayed behind
b~ause of a pulled groin.
Johnson was particularly am·
presslve, hitting eight or 11 from
the floor and hauling down nine
rebounds.
The Bucs are sche(fuled to
play In the consolation game at 6
tonight.
\
_...1
to a wtn over Huntincton Beach.
The Olien 1ot 15 .Clntl from
l'l'ace1 CUAll•bbr JD •-lolUal --·
Ullle.
While r.&tancla and Edlaon 10
for tbe tJUe, Marina and P'oUn·
taln Valle, will meet ate ln tbe
battle for th1.rd place.
; -
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..
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. .
FOR THE RECORD I BASKETBALL
f
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COLLEGE
Top 20
t "'" l op 1 tllri"nh ''-"•'"'' '" 1f\-· A.''°' 1fltt"O P• ,.,.., 'oo .. \W ll"''t-'t'kt" volt .v1H1 ,.,.,,,
(ll•C. ..Oft'\ tfl 0.H ,.ntN-\~\ In•-. '\rlt"On \
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I Ot-Ptu;I f\01
1 (Ht"QOfl Slt1t1t• t I
t V11t11n1tt
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I UllA
d w ...... t= °''''' ti ~..u.,ldf\ct
\fl l ou"'•ne \,,,,.,.
II ff!f'rl\A~M
" M IC n14t1n
11 Ar.ion 1 \tAh
IA town
t\ lnd 1;m,,
'' "''no'' t, \ AltttMmit
J8 1 .. M~'\('f>'
14 9, •Qf'ltfnt V',._,,nq
7U Uldh
ID 0 I UI~ a u ~tb
... " 88\ 6 I 80 ..
b I 1'61
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b 1 b41i\
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11 "81
1 0 "' 8 I •)4
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8 I 171
8 I 16•
d 1 1>•
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UC Irvine 91 • reaas A&M 74
1TEXAS A&M l ,.<hon ) R,,,., tb wooo ..
I), SP11tn '"' Wr•cmr tl qotJf>rt~ 11 Jont•\ q
UC IR\/INE Wll·~•(IOn 11 B•~mona J
Wulf 11 Mt OonAlrt b M 1tqt"f' )4 f u1t .. r "
HArlmdn i
HaltUmt-\C'Ott' UC H -.1nf» .I() n
Totdt lout~ ffl•d .. A&M " U( ,,.,,,nt-
f auffll(f out woo~h. Smtih, Wrion1 (l PAd\
A~MI
JUNIOR COLLEGE
Fullerton 85. Saddleblick 78
FULLEaTOH (.Uf'\I 1• StM• 11 Bdr
row 14 Van .-..o,.-n e Ftttn<.•\ tO. Artm•n l
F fll'rm 4
SAOOLE•.r.cK M<Clu\jl,~y I), Otdl '
P 0f'(411'\.a\ t1. AowlttnCI f4 ft'10rnton 10
Ga\OJtrd 6, Cor-ni\n 1 9d~ \1< 'J
H•Utt"1it' \.C~'"· r vu ... r ton .0 Jt
' TOl4tl IOur\ FuUr r-ton. 1J S-40d1Pb.t.l1' 11
Foul"CI out V•n Horn (F'uile rlont
Mc._(.tu\-.,f''f 0•4't Ot•(.t\d \ I S11ddh•tMc It. I
Snow College 71 . OCC titi
SNOW COLLEGE Mt(l•MV II
8••f\A•c.to " S1f\ft \u''Cjl .. 1 H 1U a .... ,~,.. 1 Ae>
()f'lqofttl' 18 M•H"' 11 t
OltANGE COAST M.tr.lWlf n 8 John~
18 8f'it\ffiy ) tC.ronnt,.'Ot HJ \ttvnatr' 1
Th<tmtt' 8 ~,,...,,, h) t-•""''"'" '(Orf-\nnw < .. ('lll~(tl" O 1' T ol"' touh "now Colt~Qf> lfii 0 1 ,.nt)t'
Co,..,, •~ I,...,,..., tJVt nonr
HIGH SCHOOL
Fountain Valley 61. Lakewood 60
LAKEWOOD fld,n.t-.. '" 0.-Hon \]
(o,b1H q. Po""'"" 'l \ 1Q"' 4 Murptw t 1
FOUNlAIN VALLEY V1lldnu4'•• 11
Huqht'\ '1 H,.ny I\ (,,,,.,,,,,.., .. n )0 l VC>t'qQ • \<Ott DY Ou.tr••n
l ....... """000 u ,, ,,, tJ ""°
h >un,·"" V..tllt•'f ~O 14 11 If) b1
Tntctt foult. \ *'>h •wnod l'I Fouf\t~1n \/(tlltoy
'" i:,,u,,.o 11Uf 0dJh•fl IL~Uf'WOO(U
f1•(nn11.il ro,,,, P1;w•''' •t tO ... ·..-oort1
l 1•• ,.<llll;nod f»h(,,
Servile 65. Marina 58
SEAVfTE t;ttwlr 18 (hAQPt~ll J
(rOQh•n 1 ~ l!f C...Ont~fft\ q Zun'bfo(•
t.> W1fl8
MARIN.A <.>m1tn 1G f\tuc.., n r i'wnw b
l•\I\ " s .. u., 1 8ooct0n1 1
Sc .. o bf 0...rton
\t'IY1IP JO 1) 't '" t.>S
M~'·na IJ 1) II " )8
T IJl,.I fool\ Yr y1f1 lt> Mar1nd \I F °"'f'O
out lumb-t "; '~'"''"'> r-ono"" CMt\nni11
1 "i. ''""" "\ tnvt f.on1,\tt"\ t\.Prv•tt• I
Newport Harbor 55. Orange 49
NEWPORT HARBOR N•lll.-v Lo•"
HJ ~rton '1 E.-•rh,trl ~ "MLH'•br"v ' (•"C '10 ,0
ORANGE K1•U., 10 Mt111u10 'S tvown
6 V1nc.-n11 A~1d 1 o,,.,.. ... 8 Pro\nqp ti
S<o .. bv Ou••,.,.
N~•POrf HlttfX)r •e I t f J) ~~
OranQ• b l t ,~ '' 44
T °'") tOll~\ M• wpor• t1Mb()f' 11 OrttnQl!t
11 routedaul l<.1•lly M~(IUIO 10rdn~t
Costa Me.sa 62. Chatfey 59
COSTA MESA Jon•• 8 F••IO • l •"n
t Prt1lhO\llrw\'•o1 \A 6Md\lt ... 11 Fr111 I
MtlC~ I
(Ma••• 'I C..llelW I 'rU• i• 40.0M\
It 11\i 0 AtrelC'W 1 ~I" l w .. •hO.."-" 1............ .. • t\ ,, .,
t ....... •• •• • Ill \t
hl•I lo..!\ ( .. I•_._. II Cll•llf .. lt
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Mele1 Del t7. hn ,.dro 13
MA f I• 011 {@Cl~ • h tHll •• -II•
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,,.,. ""oao V•••nt•M 11. "••• u. C.ti<I
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1 .. 1,1 '"'°'' ""41t< ti,,1 " ~n l>eOrct 11 '-.J .. \ .. \IU.Yl ._,O,W
Oc:H n Vl•vr 19, Rolling Hiiia 70
flOLLIM(itflll\ IJ llvti•• II 11.n10 tu Ill I ,f ,. V• .. , ..... °'"""'',I/ M•• ~noo•
OCf:AHVlfW tt1~r1(.ft • 4/ U\• ~,.,,n•t
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f •tltt•Vlt </'> It It /\ 10 414
r ·I• r '""' ,....,,1.1111 u.it 1• Ot -'d" V1f'wrr.
t 1u1t·J f•tlJf H.1" M.u oOUCJ Rc.'111~ . "
Hunl BHch 6!>. Savanna 37
\AYANNA 4, M ot\lf'"t\ HJ lttJ1\n.r1 U f 11t0t-
• A ,n ... l H'lO JvtH•\ I Otl'n\h•)' 1 Hott,,.
MUNTINGTON llEACH lluo lnomp"'"
IU ft•4 '.1•1 t8 fl tl6VU I qt11()t-1 11 M\ ~H1\\••t i\
,,, "'"''I H It 1 hUO\":.\llf\ tU
S<ott by°"'"'"' • '"•n,1 1 "" ,,. tu JI
•'u1U11\ijl lllfltl'oM '' ,. '" l\f lb ~\
ftrt.tf tuul '>•H'•'""'• 11 ••u,u1nqtu1'
U• !lit h 1 / • t1oi .. 11out ••u.ti.v
EdtSon 79, Monte Vista 49
E0150N ~l<'.,,...M 7 M 018ernMoo 1
C-1ouOqt"' I RQ(n('O o VOQf'l\.dnQ J Cn-.tnq 11
ti 0•8flor~roo /1 MdtO' 1 Muo1r 1
MONTE v.,, A Ml r tldt\IUI 1 ~ut~\ \
~uu•lmon l R~• 1 ~Mll1IO 8 Auq" \
••1\l4fT\1\n4 Wvnrtt1l1 14
ScoreC.• Oull'1t'"
f dl-..ot'I
Mun•u V1""1"
II •1~ II It IY
10 I J I\ 11 ri
~ '''"'" u Mont,. ...,, .. ,~ 13 ~H 11.ni4n W .. tV Ir 1\1 C Mont••
r o lat ruuh
J uul .. tl uvt
San Clemente 95. Carlsbad 72
CAAU•AO M1tcMll 11 1<0110 .. ,., 17
Mttclno l ff'W)Mt>\OO ,, fuono n M~u.-.. <4
'tf\Vfft)Otn •
SAN CLEMENTE Borlin o '°"""~'I• EdOo 1\ Hammoud 4 ~trvt_-n..,on e Col9,0vf'
.. (OAOf\f" t Hiii I J l ••tnon JO Mf11on.• b ,,.. .....
St0<• by o.wnors
CM"bd<1 10 10 18 " 11 \4n C ,.,.,,..nl~ 11 H 1• 1• q~
totdl fOUI\ San (lrmt'nlr t i C.·lfl-.o.td
t Ou l~O Ouf nOf't>
HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN
Edlton 64, Fountain Valley 62
FOUNTAIN VALLEY 'l•IYClnow\~• 18
e .. ,Qt'n 17 Hunn 2 G·n~U'Q 11 Oi.tYI\ \\
A.rlf dQf' I, Pu<tl-'1!>~•)
EDISON IC.n•p~a • M•llolto 10
\dnd"''"n 4 Rdnclall O ~,~, 11 f ttndbr 4
•~<k.,on 4
s.:we by Ou•r11n
F ounta1n V41rf"Y 10 JS, '"' 1) f'>1
EO•son '" ,e 19 1.r M
lot•t tout!. E-01"°n JO f oun\atn VaHPy,
10 F ou t•d out G1n\Dut qn 'f oun1a1n
V411~v• SaMv•"t"f"I t fd1~n1
Garde!\ Grove 70, Costa Mesa 37
COSTA MESA lomAr 10 """""°•''' I Pr let-), Kn•-•W.t 0, Sovr,,,.rn '1 M<.Alw•r
1 BM•• b s1no•1t ~
G AROEN G ltOllE C ~IUgdn \
8ren•mf'tn o. Mnor~ b. Pan.•r 111. Ct O'f•r u
Con•au 13, E<M I
Sc ere by au.rte"
Co\la M•W 10 10 10 I JI
G•rOen Glov• I) 71 11 I? 10
rot•I touh (o\l• M e \• 10. G .ttOf'n
<;rove. ll Fouled out tCn•k••• ICo<I•
Mt'\a1
Chino 42, Hun1.' B••c:h 31
CHll'IO VilnO•rpoel ,, W••l•
Ovk•\l•.t 10. Correa s. Oavl• s
HUNTINGTON 111£ACH Carr l
Cornov• 1, Cooptr •. 8uck•I"\ s. 'Nh•t~.,,.,,..,
• Ct1n1'l"nbe'•r<i \S
Seen by O...rt••• Cnrno u 1 ~ II '7
Hunt•nQlon Bu<n 8 s ' • ''
Tot•I tovls Chmo 11 • Huntington 9•..C.h
ti F outro o u' M~ndoJ a (..,.unlHHJlOn
lln<hl Wa11t fCl\<nol
E1taf\Cla 61, Merlf\a 411
' Mi.•tNA (;tlhnql\~ 1' 8•"'"' t•'
Aollm 11, Kc•I•' HOWMd ].
ESTANCIA S1mp\on 10, F•ancv 14
Howtana 10 8tlf~IJ I l0"9ftl"ld 1q
Sc .... byO...rttt\
M,v ·1nd
E'tant1<\ ro,•I •ouf\
t ou•,.d out
t f\f-.tl'Ufrl)
\) b ,q " •'' • ~ •S ti 61
f \tilf'IC•i• lb M1u 1n• 10
Rutt•\ I M dttMdl Huqh•\
Australian Ope11
l•tMol-rr,.I
S«oncl R,,..ncl 51n4lu
8111 c,, dnlon at•! '><OU M t Ctt1n 3 ~ I b. b ,
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'•\ l b, b • 8 ntt'l f P'-'' ne1 d••t Jonn Au'''" ~ • b I I b
International 1unior tourney
lat PonWnlH"'llOfl," '"I Ftr•l ltOUM So"'ll••
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M1t'lnf\~ N.v.M Y'dM Rn w Pl"I JdtOP\ ROU()\fl
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P••<I \IO'I 40
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IM•l(nelll 1) M> 10 00, • 10 SUOO.n T"-'>I
1C o•OO/~I I •O J 80 Money Adde o
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tuur w1on1nq f!t kth U1¥t1 hOt\f'\I \1 Pie'
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l(ordotd' "80 l 80 • 10 Snf<ky5 Cu\lu\
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Boys· soccer
"IGH SC"OOL
"""'">flOA kot<I\ T..,rney S«-Rouftd Hun 1·~<1ton BP6t"l. 0 Capo '\/att•v
t(ctP•'tr-'no va11ry Advctfltt~ on IW"•"•
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Alf!'mc1n y I St P«tuf I fAlrmdnY tldY-•ll<l"'r
on Pf'nt.tirv "'t "-'•
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C,!)rOfin Grov~ l. Or4n9' 1
Al•manf S Pdramou,,t.J
GiHdf'n Cir'Ovt 1 L(+U/1nqttr f tGarCll'n
Grovt-dd,..t\n< ~~on PC"n•lty "'c.,' I
f \htlKt .. J,Oc~•n V•f"¥11'0
Bell G•r~n' >. Kl'l\nedv l, 1ee11 Garoen'
•ch·•nce~on ~aU'i' ~,Cif.\I
W~\tf'r"n\tt'r 2 Aflt\•• 0 SI JoM Bo.co I, Cypre\S I ISi Jonn
90~0 •Ovanct\ on C)f'nally "'CW"il
Brit G•rden\ J. E''"""• I W t\tm1n§fpr l. St John 8o.-.co 0
Ot een v..,w •. Kt'nne<1• I Cvprrss 1, Arl~•j• o
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v•nt l'd on ~lt't lil1cil).)
Edi..,. o. D•MI.., O
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Misc.
Monday's tranaaclions
8ASE•.r.LL
A,,,.,lUtt LH4JW
(l\ltFORNIA ANGELS S19nf!O frf!t
t19Pnt Ju.an Rf'n•Qvf't ouU1rlOf'r
CL El/ELAND !NO•ANS S19n.O lrtt
dQen• PAI K,.lly. ou\hf'ldfl'r . to ~ two ve.tr
tnn1r~t1
IASKETIALL
N4\IOtWI 8Hhl1Nll A1toel•t10ft
OE TRO IT Pl!>l!ONS Pl•'"d Bob
Mc AOOO forwdrd.91"'th-t" 1n1ur,.O t1\1
F~ALL
tu1ion.1 F00 ... 11 LH•IM
OE NVER 8RONCOS S.qnNI I M H•PP
runn1nq EM< 111 Contdd Rut kPr IJ9hl tncl.
John Sm1lh, W•df' ff'CP•Wf•r an d R u..ll ~n·
nl\O,, l•nrbt<: ~~'
HOCKEY
N~UOMI HoOty Lu ....
CHICAGO BLACI< HAWICS Tr.O•O kf!O
Sol""tm ltfl w+nq 10 IM M 1nnP°'Ofd NOf1h
Sft:lt\ for GIPn s~"'"'"'Y tor Wct'd
Pl I TSBURGH PENC.UINS Rt'Ull~
Nu ~ P n<• (IOdl•,. from B•nqti ... mton ot tht
Amr·r!(~n ..,.CK",.Y l.<'dQ\K" A\\HJMO Aoo
Molt~no ooal u' dnd 8tnnttf Wolf, dr
'""'f"'~n 1081~mton COLLEGE
A.USl IN PEAY' ".nnovncl'ld lh .. rt\1Qna
f •On of Will\Of"I Brown ,,..c.tO too1b!tU to~u"
•0 h~ mav DC<.ome thr ol,.t>•lvt coorduwlOI
"' V .trtderb1H
Colkge, prep basketball
~oflege
Weil
P•ttllttl "°'"•"OSI /I
San la Cl•••'°'· Wis Supr11or ~·
C••1t0<n••60. ll ol San 0••90 ~b Cat Poly ISLOI lb, Cal L ul""<dnbl
Miftfll
S:r-~t.noSt 11,N fU1nol\~q
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Alf Forcto18.Aut>urn"6Coll
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TOUANAM•NTI
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PVBLIC NOTICf:
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
th~ tollowlnQ ~r\.On\ d't-
bu\uwi\~
MEDl·Rll PHARMAC'l', 1/00 E•\t
Co•~t H'9hw•v Coron• CS•• Ma,
C•hforn1• 926n
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tuee<Say. Oecember 30. 1980
PUBLIC NOTICF.
Robert A Eastma". At·
t o rn ey a t L a w , 2790
Ha rbor Blvd , St e 102
Co s t.a Me !.a, Ca 92626
tel (714 ) 540 5891
1r • ~ ·J _;1.1111r , • •t" , ·'... I
Pl' s1.1(· :scrTI< •.
..,,.,.,
NOT ICE Of PU BL!( ME E I 1 NC,
.. Afr A · .. r Y • y 1 " ,.n,_,,..,, '" ~
"•AC r J;,,lH '' " .;.o ff'I \ '-\ '·•""-I t :. t .A i
~LY PILOT
PtJBLIC NOTICE
lt llSOLIHION O ICLAal NO
t"T.HT TO LIAtll A I AL ~-o~e•TV '"0 "" STllW<T
OIYllLC)f'MIHT COM,&HY tY -
l'OUNTAIN VALLEY ,ltOl'IHTY Ot't 111011«t ol l M•tt w1u1.,m f tCtl
Ii#< dlllV \l'<OtlCMO •lld t•r"e0 lhll
IOllO•onq R•W'V""" 01 lnlt11l1on 10 I fa>• 11e91 Pro1Wrlv 1ro111 Stow•'!
Oeve lo1>m•nl Compa ny I II .. • \
O<IOClltd • WH(REA~. S1'W.,I 0.••IOf>f•t•lll
CompAny I'/ o• Tu'"" (AtOor"•• ''
th• OWAfof Of ,.,, t411n ''•I O'•OP,.h "'""'"a 1n '"" Cltv 01 l-O\.tl'll41•tl "•"~v O••no. tountv (Alllu•"•• qi1rw••ll'f ""°'*'" ., \I._ W~rf"/ll, .,nd Nt"'W~tw
PffJSJ•1r1Y IOC'10f!fCf 1U °''' \C'altfl w•,.t cor
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~''"'•• 1n f uunt~n va11.-v on\'''"'" nt Approa1f'Odfrl;' II.,,.. MrP\ ,.,.0 -
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PUBLIC NOTICE
"',,_ FICTITIOUS aUSIMEU
NAM£ STAT£MENT
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSIMESS
MAME STATEMENT
P UBLIC NOTICE
SlATEMEth OF •llAHOONMENT
0F'U5E OF
FICTITIOUS &USINESS NAllAE
t hf' tnHcw11of'\9 ()Pf VW'!• """'' 1t111n
doMO tM U"-P 0, fllo r t I u• ~ ''
PUBLI<" NOTICE
F1Sl4U
Pubt1stwd Or.inor Co•"' 0 •1ly P•lot
0~< 16. 1J JO 191:/ JAn o 1"81 \()•8 81) TM foUowtnq p(l'f"'WJin I\ dO•l"IQ bU\I
<>eUI~; BE'ACH TIM E REAL TY 171 I'
BEACH TIME REAL ESlAI E. IJ1
PUBLIC NPTICI':
BE.r.CH TI ME REAL TOR S 141 OUS
.8EACH H ME PROPERTIES ISi F~c:.:-.~STA:~!':::5
BEACH flME ASSOC IA TES •nO IOI I hp 1o11owtnq Pf'r\On\ ••~ ctoinQ
BEACM TIME INVESTMENTS. •••s }ll)lnit>••~
l(i"91l'l Cl , Cott~ Mne, Ca-O A N C I N G O R 4 G 0 N 11. Jun Mowery, 180 IC•notel Cl ENT ERPRt~ES. 710' 1 Kno• SI (O\M
CoO• Mts.o, C. M-.a C• '1611
Tiiis bli>•,....,> I\ conduct.ab• an 1n An•""' van ~'"<!''" 110 ,no•
dlvlclu•I SI Co\t~ ~-·· C• .,.,, 8 Jl'enMlo-ry 0•9m•r C0<no11us 710' teno• 51
Tltl\ \tal-1 ••• t1lf!d wllll ,.... Co,I• M•-.t C• '11•11
Cou"f'f Cl•r·-. o• OrAnor County on I Thi\ bU\H~-"" 1\ C4'W'ldUt tftO Dv d
Decemi.r "· 1'10 qen~r.•I ,,.,,,..,,,.,P F,Utte. ,._..,, "°" ~lt!qrl\I
Publh he<I 0.tnqit Co.tit D•lly Pilot Tl\os \C•tem....t ,. .. , 111.., wllll '""
Ott 2), JO.'"'°· J.-i • ll, 19'1 "°60·IO Cout\I~ Clerk o• Oran111' County on
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Pl'Rl.I<' SOTH't:
" SUPERIOR COURl 01' I HE
STATE OF CA LI FORNIA "011
r"E COUNTY OF OllAHCE
No A IOIOH
ORDER TO SHOW CAUH
l'OR C"ANCE OF NAME
".,,. M .\H1•, ,... •tH "•'•"· ,,
MAN ~ ,..,_,, C.tiAtt ~ , hun,,.
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of UIO GCh ft' \Mw l1hJV' ""'"'" ·•' h t•f'
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nOI t)llo Qf;lntf"d
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tf'\1' Or~t to Snow ( ~''"' n. '""t't'1"""' 1t
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PUBLIC NOTICE PVbli•hed O"'nQtP Coa\I 0Ally 1>.101 NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION
,iCTtTIOUS IUll"US
"AMIE STATIEMl!"T
Tht lollo•l"9 1>e<>On• ••• 001n9
blalneu •1
l~ACM ~TY Sl!AM Cl.£AH,
10262 K-1•, t1Ut1l lt\Qlat1 8".cll. Ca . .,. ..
ltatmond l o Smith IOJU
K•-••. Humll\gton &..wit. C• .,,,..
lilly A. -on. Jr • 114 Main $1 , .. .,..,1 .... .,,, ....... '"• ,,..
Tflh bv>l,..n h (onelus.I~ b • oefi6t.r~"'"fl __ _
•rts.Ntl\ f !tlt ,, .. _ ••\ hl..S wltll '"'
Co1tnh CIOrk ot Ot•nee Cou"" on
Dt<ff'I•• "· ,.., '""" 'lltlll ..... 0r-. CM'I QelCy PiMt
Dt< n . m. ,..,, 1111 •. u '"' so1t 11r
Otc t• ll JO 1419C) J.,.. • , .. , ••J~'tlO OF JOINT \rENTUltE
PUBLIC NOTICE.
FICTITIOUS •USIHUS
IHMI STATIMIJIT
Tll~ lotl-1..q --I> CIO'nQ llu\I
WU al
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FICTITIOUS •USINESS
NAME STATEMENT
1 lit• ro11n••no ""''""""' ,.r-. '"'"0 bu,inl>v1 A\ c.f w. 1RAvfl 1.No tOV'>\ •u A
( 4,f"lqttr A""·f\1..-.-....,1\hf"OfO" f'" ,ff rt
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1 "'" lh•'"''''' '' • ,.nau ,,.,, f\'1 ~..,,,n,.M ftftd •••r
(,r••tO 1 OH•no
""",..'~ 1 Olt•no '"t\ ~'"'~' .... "' ,., ... 1 #itl1h ,,.. (Ov'lt~ (l-1\ u1 O•~nao> C&uni. O'I
MOaat\ & •UOCIATU , ,;;c-
Olt C•-C)rlw, ,.. t
Ntw-1.8"<11 CA t)W . •. ,..
'1jl .. ,
Pvbll-()r~~" 01111• Pilot n.. It U HllO jMI • 1 .. 1
• '
---~~·
B11siness
. ;
Leaders live economic f antasjr
\nht•U:o.t!r Hu~l'h . Int ~t Louis. recently celebra ted the
hrt'" in~ of 50 m1 llton barrels of beer. August Busch Ill,
th,11r rn.m dro\ t' a bung into a gold-plated barr.el of
Bud \\1·1~l·1 d!:> .\ugus t Busth Jr .• honorary chairman of
lhl· 11atuJ11 :-largest IJrt!~.-y . looked on. J
~act as age1;t fo r
/Juycrs 011d .sellers of
Radiographic Development
Corporation
Common Stock
f-o r morl' inlormJtinn, plrasl' n1ntact
Richard J. Ma~x1pinto .it (714 l 644-7040
-Kidder, Peabody I I & Co. l NCO R. r OltATED
ro.,ndf<I U61 Mt"'~"' N 1111 Yo•.lc •nil A.;,1,,ir•n Stoc~ C>tl1•ns11
l'IO Nt•wrort Cenlt'T Drive, Newport Beach, C A Q206()
87 .10llN CUNNIFF AP..._. ..... ,. ,
NEW YORK -The ec'anomy la burning up with interest rates
of 20 percent plua, a douWe-di&il inflation rate and a S6S billion oil
importbUl. ll'aa very badacene. andev~ryonesea)t.
The auto induatry will l<11e cloee lo~ bilUoa for the year, and
the airline lnduatry ls endint the year with a record lou of close to
S200 m~lllon. That's very bad business, and everyone knows il.
Individuals are facln1 some ol their moat trying times since
the IDll because wacea are rising close to 8 percent while con-
sume r prices rise more than 12 percent. And taxes are rising, too.
They know it's bad.
So do · small-business peQple, who are al· ~
tempUne the impossible in seekin"' profits while
watchinJ sales-fall, while paying higher rents
and fuel surcharges and while borrowing, when \
they can. al 25 percent. ;:., ~
And there's the uncontrollable fede ral •
budget ooficit.S, the nearly $1 tri llion federal ~
debt. tbe decline l.n productivity. the inability of ..
a generation ol young people to buy a house. the
poor morale . . .
Yes. says Arthur Burns, but let us not scart:
the people. It would be "unwise" he says. for cuNNI FF
Ronald Reagan to declare an economic emergency when he
becomes president in January. The people might not understand
Bums may have a point, but ·since he also was aloof and aloft
as an economic adviser to President Dwight Eisenhower dun ng
several recessions and as Federal Reserve chairman you wonder
if il isn't a slate of mind.
Bums is not alone in suggesting that an emergenc} dec lara
lion would ris k an unpredictable public response. To do it or not do
it has become a Hamiel-like question among Reagan advisers, but
Burns has stated his opinion. and so the questions are directed to
him.
r.na:
UBL'S -
"~-·'*° --·-....... S• l>< 1•1f.~1
S•'W•C• ''""' SfM't\ ., '°"' OOOt 4Ct 11 S~• NMtn1 '°""••••I
CoeTA•SAl41•1219 , .. ..._.9'M.
···-~1 -~c......,_ • ._ .............. ~I
~1.ECTORS CORNEA .
Aere Coln• • Stemp• OOLD & S ILVER
Prtc:H for 12·29-IO
Iii OelolC--..• ..... Cl-l1L .. . .., -
'
l(ruoerr.,.•h wei.• 1614.se Mep .. LHI SM.• MM.tot
100 CorONS 15'6.7S Wt.71 ~ ... -.,... 57Jt ... '°' su .... ~ 11~ llfl'!I. ... -ll.......--lft C:..llr----
(714) 5514150
South Coe9t Ptue YHlege -.. -..... ·---c:--...1
Get more FUN
out of viewing
football with
PAOfde
every Saturday
'"the
Daily Pilat
•
Washington ·oostly
WASHlNGTON <API The
average privcc of a newly built
h o m e in th e Was hingto n
metropolitan area ha s been
climbing at a rate of 18 percent
a year and now sta nds at
$11 3,700, according to a local
study.
It said that within the D1stnct
or Columbia, the average pnce
or new homes was cu rrently
more than $215.000.
ALL FICTITIOUS NAME
STATEMENTS FILED IN 1976
MUST BE REFILED IN 1981 -
and
Aren 'l lhei,l' 1w1111lc who ''""Ill 111• ,, .ired U) a Ot>daral1on of
economic cmc1 ~<·nn lht· .. :1m1· pt·•·Jllc ''ho h.tvf' he ·n seart<tl for
severul years. but \\b11 lt•n'•· IH•1111 qull'lly .ind co~1rt•JH~ou~ty 1m
µrovrsmg lu makl' t•n1ti. 11\l'L I ,, h1h \I .1rl..r.,h1p \at on il!> hands .
paralyzed with the a 111• of µ1 11t1lc 111·
-ARt;N'T Tnt:~E f'l.01'1 l•. v.l1t1 ' ""Iii lwrom1• '" fr1 gh1t•r'1t:d
that God alone k11cm !. "har 1111 • 11•i. ht ti• tlw H'r) 1H·11pl,. ""CJ de
e1dcd that 1f their leu<ll•n. \\Ou ld11 1 ... 1 t lwv \\Ouhf ;,ind did IJ.>
elect ing a nt'w prf•:-1<l1•nt '
W<ti.n't 1l lhC' 1w11ph• 111 •·tr•·\ I 'fin l1111u 11 1111 1•mf'r~t:ncy
to th e t1ttcnt10n of ll'adt•r :-.h111 I JI I 11 I I Ill 111.11 I ht· ( U I I l'nl 1iresi
denr . even to<l~n 1-. 1·c1n\ 1111 • o1 1111,1 1ti1 ••"ti"'"' h ""HIOll • Isn't
that fr1ghtt•n1ng'
lsn I 1 lw A nn·1 11 .111 1
sophist icat e<I 1 h~lll 1 t h < 11•1tit • 1\ ., 11 I
bclrl'VC th<tl 1ht.· JWllJlli• \\ .... , .. 11 II• II
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wits 11ul of 1wuplt·
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and that Ltw' v. 1·11 t.1•1 11111o1.
n1a b of tlw1i· t·lt.•• t1·•I h·.1111·1
fac1
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lht.•111 .1i.:mn
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ant.I 11rl' 1 .. x 111 11111 • 111 I 1.
s h adowt•d th1· r 1•g11l.11 t• 11
lion~ ("11mm1..,.,,1111 ti., ,, 11•1:'•
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1979. fiom St:ri I rntlli'lll 111 I'·•
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)H ,,
°'' •• ,,., . ' VII • I
those with changes must be
r epubli shed at time of refiling MtrT LJAL •'I r I ».
HERE IS THE LAW ·
(Business and Professions Code)
Srt'. 1 ino
1a 1 l nll's..., tlw :-.talt·nwnt 1·xpin:s carliN unclt•r suhdid!-.1on 11>1 or 1c 1. CJ fit·
1111mi-. hu..,11H·~=-nam1.· ~lat1.·m1.·11t t•xp ircs at thC' end of fin.• ~·ea r!> from
lkt'l'll1hl'I' ~H 11f lhl' ~·ear 111 '' hu:h 1t \\a:-f1lt•d in the office of the cou nty clerk.
Sec. 17917
'h 1 Suh.1ctl to lhe requirements of subctinsion 1 a J. the lll'\\'!>p upcr selected
for the puhht;.it1011 11f the s tall'ffil•nt :-;hould ht· 0111.· thut dr<'ul:.itcs in the c.t r ea
\\ ht·l'l' tht• llus inl':-s is to hl' conduekd
St•c. 179 t7
i t·) \\"ht•r e a IH'\' ~tatt·ml'nl is r cqui rt'd because the prior s tc.ttem enl h as. ex ·
pin·d und<•r su hd1\·is ion 1 a l of SC'c:l io n 17920, t he new statl·mcnt need not be pu hh~hl·cl unll•s:-th(•rt• has tw1.·n C.t c ha nge in the information required-in ttie ex-
J)ircd ~tu \l•ment
AND
ORANGE
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION R EGARDING F ILING
PUBLISHING CONSULT YOU R ATTORNEY OR CA LL T HE
COAST DAILY PILOT LEGAL ADVERTISING D EPARTMENT
(714) 642::'4321
Ext 332 1
.·
•
~··-···-, • •
BUSINESS 'STOCKS
Monday'"
c:lo j ntc P r it·•·
.. -···-...... --·---_...._. .. _____ ~ ~_____..... . . .. . . . ----. --.,... ......... .. • • ... • 4 ............ .....--... -....... .-.._. ............... ·-•• -•••••••••• ~
T~. December 30, 1980 s DAILY PILOT -
NYSE COMPOSI'fE TRANSACTIONS Connnon Market
entry of Greece
, . . . maJor action
BRUSSELS. Belgium CAP > Greece JOllls \he Euro
peaC1 Common Market on New Year's Day, ty l{lg 1L'I future
to tlle world's lig htest association of free nations
It will be the first stage or an enlilrl(emenl process that
by l~ will add to the grouv Spam a11d Portugal. two other
countries that rid themselves of milita ry gov<'rnmcnl\ m
the l970s.
The entry of Greece as lhe 10lh member o( th<' Com
mon Market signals not only the t'ount ry s w1 llingne-:~ to
dissolve the frontiers of t rade vot h its partners and welt.I a
common foreign policy. but its comm II mc nt lCI the chu:f re·
quire ment for membership dcmorrat ic institutions at
hom e .
S INCE THE OVE RTHROW of a c·olonels' dictatorship m
1975, Greece has been knocking on lhP c·om m1.1n11y's door
Now , as Greek writer Helen VJ a(· hos put 11. "{;rtoece is gcung
lo Eurppe."
"The entry of Greeee into the l'f1mmun•I) " " maJnr
political act that constitutes a turntn~ µ01n1 in I h<· <'ommon
Market's Life," suirl Gaston Thorn. wh11 will takt· 11ff1ec• m
J anua ry as the Com mon Market'-; r h1Pf cx1•rutlvt• 'Thi·
en largement of the Common Murkt!t -.outhv.;11cl ti. i.I IH'.\
da t e in the history of l!:uropc<.in t•1v1l11.:tt111n
Under the mec·hanics of t!n\1'\ t a11fh 111•1 v.1·1·n (; n ·1•n•
und the other nane CQuntrte' v.1i1 Ill' 1h,,1>1\t><l 1n '1:.ii.:el>
over a five year perwd.
GR EEC E 'S G EOG RA Ptl IL \ I. 1JO\ll l11t1 a-. I ht•
southernmost and eastcrnm1Jsl memb1·r of tht< 1·11mmun1t)
will add an importa nt n<'v. dtrllt n<,1nn 10 th•• 1'11mmlln
Market 's outlook. act·ordini.: to (ieorgt· K1m1111.(Pnrf'1" v.ho
negotiated Greece's entry :.ind v.111hc·1t~ 11•1111 'cnt<ill\t' <in
the Commun :\tarkl't Cc1mm1~'"'"
The addition of the (;reek !>hllJPUll.( flt·•·l "111 n1:1k 1• th<·
Commun :\1arkc t lht• ;'l;o I 'h1pp111~· f'"''''r II• !hr· \\uric!
und t he communtt} will ;Jl:-.•1 h1.:111-C,1J ftom <11•·t·~ li,111\lll·
nickel, asl>t'stos C1ntl 11nr tn11H·r.ils lh1 c •111111111n \1,11 l..t•t
nov. must import, Ko111 ngc·11rµ1-. ':.111
But like Britain, lrt·lanrl ,111d 111 1111 •• 11~, v.h111 lh~·'
JOtne'11n l!nJ. Green· ""Ill f,ll'l' lll'V. ,11111 'rw•·1.d '" 11hlt•rn ...
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the ~uvemment art• 1•onl'ernl!<! iJh11111 •h• 11111·•" I •11 1.11111
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\10<.t. •'' Ptf' th.1,tt(I • '"" I~" '""t •n•t"d
(4J\f\ w-•1u-on .... ,,.,,. l,..._1 • "•., ''' "'J''""' da'" • ~~ o \1110-nd .,, • • , ,-..., ~ _. t • t , ....,'CS
•"'d .,....lf''\ 1n tun t ')Alto .,. , n
tld (ftOf'lid w0 Wt'"H\ 11 tl1 ''' tf.t _,. ;., , .. ,
i \\llf'd --YW1tr ,.. .. 014 I • ,_ ""' I• 11 .. ,.u
rttn fl •0" E• d111~rttt1.1•• "'
P E '111..o l •• f'• t '* ,, • ~ • 1 ._ " r'h• t Oil' Ot Plf ~ff' •At n1nq• !lf •• , \) ~1 \111111..0 ::~t~~~_.':!~~ •1 ~~ .,...,.._,,,'-' ·~uff' f"\o
,.. -
• OAl~ellJ) I r~. o.oii•• 30. •• Teledsion TONll:.iH r·s LATEST LISTINGS
I I ' 11 \ \
• -1··-----WOMAN WC11141et llllOfNll\ .. Ollletl
•11a1n11 tl\e •••tnalltl
.-. f'f • .1"'1-nYIOI
11a '*-' r...,""'"' •-. ''"' ".,... • llM.HOOIC9\'
10. ~ 11.111(1 ...
Monl•MI (;_...,,.
• 1111•A•l •H
• J -·-~ I•""' ......
I llf'ICil llllt'\19' • --al!...,Pll •"d 11•1• 01
f ..... •eoot~ •~HLL.
atcTNC CQMftA#Y
"" • nc AOYOCA f ... .., .,,, ....... ~.,""....,."' .. '
IVM••1 .. \== t.• ii WllLOOMf a.AO\.
IC0fT£R
W°h9" W••"·ouh . .-•utJ
~ .. ,..,....,, "9t1ti. '" ~I
,. .. ,,...., C1u•r:a. '°'"~\k.tl a
.......... I .... •"'(lol llOt>''"'
tu" ,.,t~N"'1'.• U \.,11 h.; w.it
M' 11 f <·h birdie
l.Ul'll' Arnaz and Laurence Luc kinbill , as -,u ,1ngcr~ meeting at birdwatching camp,
-.wr in movie ··Ttw Matmg Season" at 9 I OOOOTIME8
OtCf( CA VETI
Gooott It !> N"'l);IUI 1l>•rl
} 0121
tonight on CB;i ( 'hannel 2).
~ STUOIOSE£
Rue i. Mu 1.0lv< •Jo
•t\.Hi WW"H1~ J,00 rtK.t)fd 1httll
Own rC>Clri. lunes 1uvemtv
d•hnq...,.11• II"' ,. seo;ood
Chance orl ttw. Mtlfl HIQ"
Rancn 111 C11hlurn1a I At
t w·A·s·H
Aaaa1 04'" " O@ar JoN1
1etter 011 " 1oco1d ~nd
tho! doc1u1 s try 1c. como 10
h•S .t.s.ststa.nce ""''" .. n.,w
girl
6 8AAHfY MILLEA
A ma11 1w.ts police ellicie11
c.y by sellirll) ldlS.. ala1m1
Hild 11m111g in.. response
sptl6<l
7:00 8 CBS NEWS
0 N9CNEWS 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
R1ch1e has a problem "''"'"
evetyooe il•PfM:IS n1rn to
get lhem tree hCkt!I~ IOI "
rock concorl G A8CNEWS
G) M'A'S•H
Hawkeye und B J d1sco•or
Charles hving 1ne hie 01
R1liJy d\14' 10 ow altenllont
or "" ,.,.,.aally paid Korean
-·an• g) BARETTA ID OVEREASY
Guests 11u1no1 Stud•
I erl<el. nulr1flon1bf Or
Ma11on Nestle nond~m1111
Al Carrell O ' 1
~ MACNt!L I LE.HAER
REPORT
(I) TIC TAC OOUOH
(IQ) MERV OAIFFIN
Gu;ists Lily T oml1n, l ee
Gram C1rnmna Volente
7:30 8 2 OH THE TOWN 0 FAMILY FEUO 8 SHANANA
Ouesl Alta Mortlt\o
8 HOLLYWOOO
SQUARES
G) Al.l IN THE FAMILY
Archte IS caughl Delw-1
,ympathy ano 5ftlf p•eser
vllhon wnen 1nt1 olhor
woman" from his past
r•11lly nMds hrs help
&;) MACH£Jl I LEHRER
REPORT m> NEWS
C'hannf#I I .bl ing11
B KNX r rCBS) Lo5 Anc.w1 .. .,
0 KNBC1 NBC) LO'> Anqe le'> 8 KT LA tine! I l os Anqcle'>
G KABC IV 1ABC1 Lo' Anq .. h•.,
(() "-FMfJ rCBSJ S,in D1cqo C1J KHJ rv (Ind ) LO<, A11qPl1'•,
11}1 KCS I 1AB(.;1 '>an U1a·uu ID KTIV 111111 t l ns Anqo•IP
ti) KCOP IV (Ind I l us AlllJl'I,..,
fl) KC £1 IV PB'> l ,., J\nq1°1, • ., m> KO<f rv r Pll'-1 H11111 I ,, Ill B 1• H ,,
()) P.M. MAGAZINE
L-00 8 THE WHITE SHADOW
Salem• nits 81'1 oppotllng
p1aye1 1n a basketball 1r ...
lor-all and 11 cherg9d with
~ravaled assault
U Loe<>
1SeaJ100 Premiere) lobO Is
1ran1fe"ed to ttie Atlanta
pOltC>e department. w,_e
his nrst aulgnm11n1
involves mud·wrestllng
and a credit cerd Kem
8 MOVIE • * 1, "White Wiich Doc·
tor' ( 1963) Susan H•y·
ward. Rooert M11cnum A
m1ss1onory nurse 111 Alrlc&
works diligently to gain Ille
r8$J>6CI ol Ille natoYH
G HAPPYOAY8
Pro feasor Fonzarel11
uncharacter1tltCillly sets
n1s signts on 1ne nouy con·
rested "Tt!Bcner of the
Yeat" award
G) P M. MAGAZINE
ti) MOVIE
• • ·~ "Rhubarb" ( 1951)
Ray Milland. Jan Slerhng
A baseball team w111s lh11
pennant under 1n11 ownor
1h1p of a cal ED 21 TONIGHT
Profiles 0 1 Power Gul!~I
busmos-.man Nothi4n Sha
pet I m> NOH-FICTION
TELEVISION
Atn @,tCa lust Au•J
f OunO I om Jonn,,gn dllll
larice 8110 s docum.i11111ry
P'd"''nes the breakdown
1-1•1<2 u111mate teb•rlfl t>f
Amer1c11 dum1g 1111' 1930~
JOSI Jller I ho Grttnl
l)epr"~"on tRl
'\ "' '4 y. '7 11-l , ' ,. 'II~ ...
IJ11df.>reover (?) ef1ps
Cl) -.mwt Wln4 ......... 0 ce :P!!\tTa THI
CMLOl•t
...,.,. OOwM llOtt• -.. ten~ ._... wlttt oueatt Ed~.~
Kaye. Johnny 1111•1111•,
Salt encl er-. lllld
David Han-l'96d to
'*19M UHIClF. t:ao. LAVIMI l ltMLIY
L•nny and lqulOOY
bec:olN oon_..,..a on
"The o.tlnQ 0-" lllld
gl"8 °"' llhoc:tlinO lnforma.
tlelrl llDCMll ~ Md
$Nf..,,
• CAJQ. IUMITT AN>,....
au..t:Ctw <r • "'°'"' "lt"I About Time" Ac:lor
Oudl•y Moore g11ldH
-• on • queat tor IN meaning ot lime •• a con-
cept which llU k>nQ b•f·
lled K ..... tlelt. pNloao-
phetl and people -v-
wnet• O
CJ) ~· P£OPl.E 9:00 8 CJ) MOVIE
"Tne Mating SeHon"
(Preml41t•I Lucie Arna,
Laurence Luckenbut A
female ,......., find• love
and aggra1tallon at a bird·
wa1cn1ng ,.,, .. ,
8 MOVIE
• •'h "Tiie Boys In Com-
pa11y C" ( 11178) Andr-
St.,,.,... Sten Shaw A
g<OUP ol young ~lean
sOldlers m•negee to ovet·
come IN 141t"ror• of Viet·
nam ln their own. lltgtltfy
ollbeal mannet, G THREE'S COfM/'NtY
JKll. tall.• a JOO "'°'king
IOI Janet al IM flo.-
snop (RIO a cou.fGE 8A8KETBALl
Lu V41QN 1tl Unlvt1tally Of
fllevad• -
• 1i11EAV OAIFFIN
Guest• Liiy Tomlin. Lee
Grant. Caterina Valente.
P .. tl Beiley m NOVA
"Ir's About Time" Actor
Dudley Moor• guide•
v-s on • quest tor the
meaning ol lime •• • con-
cept whten has Iorio bal-
flea SGlef'lllSIS, phlloso-
pllt!rS and people -Y·
wnere o
~30 G TOd CLOSE FOfl
COMFORT
Henry finds borlll contrOI
pill~ 1n S111a's room and
le3fll1' Jackie nas 1nv11ed a
sailor over tor the mgnr (Al
ti) FROM C .. ILO ABUSE
TO PAOf>EA PAllEHTIHO: ,
THE LONG AO~ BACK
" oocumenlary of a real.
hie abuse s11uallon wl\ere a
ll'\<ither 1s IOllowed through
many areas or counseling
towArO re-... ~sum1ng custo
dy ot her cn11dren ED VIROll THOMPSON,
COMPOSER
lnletview~ with ft1er1ds, co-
-,. ,~L-~
:;~
Deputy Birdie Hawkins (Brian Kerwin 1
meets poli cewoman Amy Botwinic:ILin lOL
a ll pla-ces l a mud·wrestling match in
season prc m 1t!rc or .. Lobo " Ca ll ed
'"The.Dirtiest Girl8 in Town .·· it air~ at 8
ton ighl on N BC <Channel 4 )
"'-°' M N.\ 'llSU OIS'1AlllU!IOH CO flC.
·C loClllu """ o.,,,.. ,., __
......., ____ NOW SHOWING ---
AllAllUM
Brno~hu"I l •r•
I 114 1J7 f>'4f
flllllTlll
for
( 1141 '>2'> 414/
com111m
l dward~ c.o•md
f pnft• 1 I 979 4141
IHllll
YI> dh1,1Jp1
114 1~1.1 ,, ..
(I !Mt
Saddltbac~
ttl4• '>81 '>880
Ol .. 5(
Stadium Om• In
11.4 tli39 / 860
"'"' &111 nun r oun111n Vall•r
1/141819 l~UU
NA#Cl
Or~nRt Mall
11141 631 0340
.. . ~ ............ ....
You'll laugh ... you 'll cry .. .
you'll che!r --·. you:u Jove .. .
----NOW m4DWINCI ----•
PLITI CITY CIN'rlR
ORANGE (714) 63"·9282 ..., __
~....., ... _ .. ,,
TUBE TOPPERS
KHJ fJ '6: 00 'lbe Los Aligeles Kfngs
meet the &1ontreal Canadiens in Na-
tional League hockey:
CBS 9 8:00 -Salami hits an oppo-
nent in rree-for-all during game and
f a~es assault charge on "The White
Shadow.''
KCOP ti) 11 :30 Cowboy John
-W..~ tnfiltrates outlaw gang to gather
evidence in a, 1934 Duke film, "Randy
Rides Alone. 1
'
worketa and aomore11
hlQNlght a lllm portrait of
IN dl1llngulshed Atneri·
ean ~ wno c.-.
l>f•ted hie M lh birthday It\
Novemb41' (R)
tO:OO •• NEWI 9 MCNIWI
et.OMUP
The rel•Uonsh1p t>et-n
~ oounrrles •nd
the Industrial worlO, locus-
illQ on Jama>ca 11 an
••ample will\ It• economic,
toelal and pOllllCal pto«I·
....... IS ••emtned
• INOEPEHOf.HT
NE'TWON( NEWS 10:*'. MEWi
• lHOU£NOENT
NE'TWON( NEWS ., PM8EHT£
"Alro-Carlbt>een Si>«ial
81) FRONTUNI!
In • lllm tl>OI o-a per1od
or t 1 years, combat cem·
., •m•n Neil Oav11 COP·
lures tne horrors of the
Vielnam War from a Iron!·
llne pe<1P9Ct1ve (R)
11:00 8 D G Cl)()]) NEWS
• HOLL YWOOO
IOUAAU 8 NEWLYWED GAME
G) M~A'8'H
A small Korean boy "'''h
minor 1n1uries cal)tll(M 1ne
hearts ol alt in the 4077th
II) ONE STEP BEYOHO
Encounte< An a1tpla11e
pilot IS mys I er iou~ly
JOHN DARLING
abductec:I OUI OI IN eky.
end tud<lenly reeppean
lhOUaands ol motet away
1 t:aG 8 Cl) LOU OAANT
"I ,
Ro111 t>ecornn 1nvotveo
with a woman who 11
Obsessed ""Ith hnOlng IN
hH-•nd-run Orrver wno
killed '-son (A) 0 TOMOHT
Holl Johnny C.,ton
Guestt Angie Olc:lont100,
DomO.Lu•" 8 ""80NE'l': CEU
Bl.C>a< H
The tlalf begins 10 realize
lhll Bea still controta the
pnsont1rs even • thougn
she. in •sOlllllOt\ G ®l AitNEWS G .JOf<EA'8 WILD
8) HOOAN"8 HEROES •
An Enghsh woman defects
and d8"gns • super-effec-
tive aorcralt delenH sys·
tem
'I) MOVfE
• • .., 'Randy Rides Alone
( 19:141 Jonn Wayne, Al~
ra vaugnn A cowboy 1nfll.
hates an OUlll\w gang 10
gathe< &Yld4'1'l<;e 119ains1
rnieves wno ra1oea an
e•P•ess <.OtnlJ&ny olf1c.e m> CAPTIOHEO ABC
NEWS
11:50 0 (IQ; MOVIE OF THE
WEU<
,, • Moon,unr1t-rs
t 19Z,Sl Jame~ M11cnull1
Kiel Marllri H1llb1lly DOyS
Md a ~ glt1 rec.
CO.-ltlO ~ IO .._ _ _.._,(fill
-MmflGtfT-
tl:CIO e TWUIHT zet.a
P*'C)le Meunle ... pet•
'°"8llty Of the mMlt they --""' I TIC TAC OOUGIH
YOU llT YotM Lft
Buddy Hed&etl IMMa •
man MW> lmpetaonat•
pt ..... a Women of IM
Y•ar and • UCLA
C'-IMder
• CAPTIONED MC
HaW8
tf:lj) G TOMOMOW
0-11: David l ett.,man,
former child ,,.,, Angel•
Cllrtwflgllt, UIUren Chapin,
Jay Not1n 8lld Paul Peter·
1en, wrestler Watter
'"Kii.., .. Kow91Uil (RI
• MOYIE * * * "Spawn Of The
Not1h" ( t11G8) H9fttY Fon·
da, Geotge Raf1 Outing
11\9 ~ d•:V-In Atulla,
Auifli&n pirAl81 try 10 IP•
o,,., IN ..,mon lndullry.
1:::.0..~~
~
The IMF allemptl 10 ••pose IN unclethanded
deelingt of a mayor 8lld
Ille polillcal m.chlne that
contrOls him
-~ HETWOMNEWI
12:40 9 (I} MOVIE
• • "The tmpollor"
( 11175) Paul Hecnt, Nailcy
Ketty A former Arm~ lnle4·
hgenc;e olf1ce< imperson-
ates the builder ot a huge
resort complex wtiO has
underworld connecllon$
1:00 G BUU.IEYE
ti) MOVIE * * "Hatcner For A Hon·
aymoon 11970) Steplwtn
Fonytne. Dagmar Lassan·
dl!r N-tvwed gulS are
murderl!d w1111 • • s.lv"'
na1cne1 by a man wtio
romemoers more of his
past with each k1lhna
t:30 0 THE LONE RANGER
"Enlield Rifle
G) MOVIE
• •'~ Alfa11 W11n A
Stranger I 19!>31 Jean
Simmons \/ICIOI Mature
' I
1 M JU€iT GETTING OUR
ANNUAL NEW YEAR'S f"E:
l SHOW TOGEiHE~, JOHN.'
--1~
•• "'llacll Liiie Me"
( 1"4) ....... Wlllllftot• . o.tl ~ A ......_ "*' a.u-.., "9111 MlllLlft
IO 1tl9I he can undlt9tMd ... .....,..__ .......
lntNIGulll. 1:11, ....
1:11 ~
** "l"I Gel YtN"' (tt63) 0-0-"-"· Mly Ota,. A
lemei. Britletl epy Md 1111
FBI egent jolrl lor-IO
Cfecll • WOtldwlOe ~
of kldnepplQ.
l:OI. MOVIE • • * "Tr.. uni. Kl6-"9PP«•·· (1115') Ounc:MI
MKRae, Ad<ler!N Cotti A
peit of "' ....... dllldt ..
la1tl1h th•tr trullral•d
•Hectloo• on a baby wtlom
they hlcM In IN wood•
1:10• MOVIE * * * "Hit Kind Of Wom· an·· (11151) Ro bert
Mitchum, JaM AutMll
When • man dlaco,,.,, that
,...., being uMd to effect
IN return ol en expatrlal·
ed gangltet rrom Mextco,
N lend• hit ettoria to bO<·
cl« ottlc:lals to pt-I IN
man'• re-entry to IN U S
3:61• HEWS
4:00. MOYIE
• • ~ "lo•n Shull."
( 111621 Geo<ge Rall, Doro-
thy H8rl
4:0S 1J MOYIE • • * ·~ "Doctor tn TN
Hou se" ( 1966) Dirk
Bogarde. Kay Kendall
M't-dn.-sday•s
Boyt i111r .ff orlrs
11:00 Gt • • "The Man From
Utah" ( 1934) Jolln Wayne.
Gabby Heyes
-AFTERNOON-
,~ e * * 'h '"the Cas1111an" I ( 1963) Cesar Romt110,
Frankte Avalon
3:00 ()]J * * •'Looi! Home-
ward" ( 1968) LHlte. Rob·
ert Bray
3:30 IJ • • • ··Cra91 Dive
(1943) Tyrone Po-r. Anne
Ba•ter
by Armstrong & Batluk
TV pulls plug on Disney
After 27 years, series going off air
BllHliANK <Af>t Mlt·r 'l7
yl'ars of hring111g s ueh legend:-.
as M ickcy Mouse <ind Toby
Ty lt•r into the hearts and living
rooms of Am t>r1ca. '"Di~ney ·s
Wonderful World" h1story·s
lon gest r unning prime time
television Sl'ril'S 1s goin g off
t he air
"We're n11t going to g ive a ny
rea son puhltl'ly." N llC public re·
l a t 1on s vice pres iden t (;ene
Walsh said Monday of lhl' can
cell a lion
"N HC 1s not t·xerc·1s1ng 1ls op
lion to renew the show." he said.
adding that Lhr refusal "gives
them the r i ght l o sell it
elsewhere "
THAT IDEA MAY lie on the
drawing hoard at Walt Dis ney
Produt·t1ons.
U1 sncy studio te levision v1ct"
president William Yates said he
has been meeting with all three
networks and hopes to announce
a major commitment for next
fall sometime in the n<.'xl few
weeks •
li e cl cc linc d to cli ~r u ss
s pecifics. but Oisney officials
have sairl in th<• past that a ma
'jor ex-irans-ioli in T cOulcl m ean
a weekly comedy und drama
series for the studio.
.. Disneyland" pre mie red J\ BC
Ot't 27 . 195'1. wall rechristened
"Walt 1>1..,nt·\ l're..,l'nts '" four
'ea I"'-laH·r <i~d moH·d to :"BC as "\\'J)( l>1Slll'\ ·::; Wonderful
World of ( 'olor · · in September
1961
TH t: SERIES I S gencrall)
<"rt>d1tt·d "'1th 1mprov1111? lhe
Cjll<l llt) or childre n·s program
ming 111 a St) It• that delighted
adults as \H'll
J3 u( lht> Sunday night tradition
stumhled into hard times when
CBS began rhallcnging tis lime
s lot with the h1~hly rated "60
Minutes .. news s how
And whtlc NBC rice-lined to
pinpclint the blame. vie wers ap·
parcnlly round that Mickey.
Oum ho. Tho,masina and Old
YellC'r were simµly no match tor
P.fik<'. Harry. Uan and Morley
T he end c ame as no surpnse
to lhl' Dis ney studio. howeve r
Stockholders were warned in
Februar) that lhe series might
go o rr the air afte r the s tudio's
contr<.1rt with NBC expired 111
rktohcr
BUT THE DISNEY series is
not the only one scheduled to_gQ.....
orftheair
The hig hly touted comed y
soap opern, "Num ber 96" is be·
ing d ropped from NBC's prime·
~ff~
----NOW •HOWING----
-..... cma•sa mm.u Anaheim 011ve In Brookhur~I loR' South C0i$I Plata C1nem1 V1t10
879·9850 712 60 6 ~46 2 7 l I 830 6990
_ __!lllJllSTll UA wl().Jj)-__Uo§ __
NO PA ... ACQEPTIEO l"OR Tl-<18 IENGAO.Nl«NT
.. . . .
t1 m1• hnt·up. along with "The
SH.·vc· Allen Coml'd\ llour· and ·~lane:· little :-.1ster Osmond·s
f1 rst and rloppcod attem pl al solo
The network also plans to dump
Games P eople Play .. t!) of-
ficiall y a cancellation. al least
for the mo ment NBC said 1t re-
tains options on the othe r three
'>hO\\ ~ and could decid e to resur·
reel them at a late r d ate after
further evaluatwn
MI SS OSMOND AND
'"Num ber 96'" ooth leave the air
Friday. while Allen h as his final
show Jan 10 '"(;ames People
Play" is already gone
NBC made these dec1\i_ons last
week as 1t announced rfine new
series to debut in January in an
attempt to boost sa gging rat-
mgs
The network has finished in
the prime·time ratmgs cell ar for
five seasons.
Meanwhile. at ABC. "Break
mg Away" may be falling apart.
T he series is on a production
hiatus while the network pcm-
ders its fate . A pilot a nd six
episodes have_Qeen completed.
A It hough praised b y critics,
the series has faltered in win-
ning audie nce support s ince its
prJ!miere Nov. 29
;#"',, .... .,,,.. ·-
ENTERfAINMENf
1 AIBUT
tf"Ot
RV WHICH
OU CAN
pc;
(fl NJAM1U
1111. !Pr.)
11 tf11)(1tJ
ti .., I • t < R'I
I lol
...
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR MRINTI AND
YOUNG PIOPU:
" ~ ' " .. , ..... , '• u ,.... •w ••
Ht,..,., .... . . . . ............. ~, "" fl.... • 4ttwtf \jy.11J •r•
m.m:ttt4l:CtJ
UA CITY CINEMA
""'" b.14 I'll I
lOWAROS' BRISTOl
t I ~n, '1~·· f d,J.J
UA CINEMAS
'f\ps1m1nsrer 89J·054b
fOWARDS' WOOOBRIOGE
fff' ~ 0!, lh'J',
£.DWAJ\OS' fOUNTAl.!JI VALL£t
t "' • ~ ' •!\ ~.). 1 'J(
S TAOIUM ORIVf·IN
I ,I ij!' O.J'I 8!00
Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE-IN
v'; • •I ~'Pf 8'11 J69J
FRENCH MOVIE
With
ENGLISH SUB-TITLES
\ i
•i
; \ "'~ • 'l
H IOIO
~dJIPbar~
1 •& ~RI '>8110
/11 I l l ) 8'11 ''t >'i
I 1<.>rt' \ er lot more to being a fa:Jher
tlum j m1 having a soti.
, 11111 II \lie 11\11:. 1,\KTll II l>ltAl\l\i;ll, ,.,, .. ,...,.,,,' ,8QR Cl.AR.K111m
'"'" IClll\ \l\Kll.\ ._l\l l.ATTRALL 1;AL£ <;Alt\ffi
. COl LEEN DEW-HURST!
", •r'ft "' Ill K\"Nll !11.Allt ~ • ....i"" ~,. "• ,,,.
. • "' \lllRTO\ 1.0TTUER
t ..... ,.,...., "Tiii: Tl R\1"\ FO~£RW\tf>ANV ,.,. RICHARD~ BRIOHT
".,.....~"" IOH U \Ill ll.\l l~ ... 11 • .\HTll II llRARll'\l'._"\
fl,,.,,.J.,.8011t l\IU. · •rl>t1ll lli1.-Timl' ...,,..111 8AllR¥AA!'\ll.OI'
14 h "'Mint\ \14\111~ Ji.t.'._ H!ID~lto ~nd BIW<:E Sl'S."MAN
~ ... KL"' •A\\llf.Rc;
I \
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'
T~y. December 30, 1980 °"'LY PtU)l fl7
Thlnkla,« young
-Chat with Dick Clark ·
We 're Glad You Wanted to Ask
Ulr k Clark Thetll! Questions
Q: Ho• do you •••ace 1o .Uy ao
)OHlaoukbtl?
A "I've finadly written a book tell·
rn~ all which Bo bbs-Merrill will
pubhxb next spring. It's titled 'Look· me Great , Staying Young.' Because I
AM young unless you think Sl ia
old' The reid answer to the secret of
looking young is to select your
parents carefully. My dad is well lnto
has 80s. and does n 't look It. He also
has a yoWlg o utlook a wilUngness
to explore and accept new ideas. ll
seem s l 've inher ited young looks ~d
a yo ung o utlook f rom him.
.. Ame rican Bandsta nd" and m y
other wo rk has ke pt m e close lo
young pt.>ople and the ir interests for
muny years . . so, some or that
must have rubbed off. too ...
Q: To what do you attribule lhe
professional longevity or both
yourself and "Bandstand"?
A: "To the fact that it is a window
on the world of youth, as much today
as when 1t first went on the air more
than 25 years ago. Though we've
never changed the basic st ructure of
the show .. wc have m odernized some
of its elements fro m time to time.
Each s ucceeding g ene ration ha s
round at to fill a need in their Ii ves. I
sus p ec t my 'n ever s ay quit '
philosophy is what has permitted me
to hold on over the years ."
Q : Of all the dances featured on
"Bandstand," which bne you round
to bt-tbe most import.at? And why?
A: ··The Twist. It was the fi rsr
dunce ma' arrived in the wake of
r o<·k and full that appealed to both
older as· well as to young people. It
gave the oldsters a chance to publicly
confess they really liked at. They
went out to dance it instead or hiding
in lhe u: own living rooms." _
Q : How eome Dick Cla rk never
dances on "American Bands tand,"
like -1et's say, Lawrence Welk?
A: "Because I don't know how to
dance. f'm an tim;1dated by t he fact
that 1>eoµle think l 'Should be a great
dan<"er because l 'le cons tantly
watched all that great dancing Truth
is. Marilyn and lly, that I'm a better
watcher than a doer and I don't
want to look foolish in comparison to
those talented kids."
Q: Who do you consider to have
been tbe most important contributors
to rock and roll?
A : .. Right off the bat. t h e
personality who was probably most
instrume ntal in s preading it a s an art
for m was the late disc jockey. Alan
Freed. Alan not only named it but
worked tirelessly to popularize it.
Among performers the giant of t he m
a ll to date, of course, has been Elvis
Presley."
Q: Who sticks out in your meJnOry
as the performer you knew would be
a big BIG star before anyone else did
-perhaps even tbe guy or gal him or
herself?
A: "Easy to ans wer. Years ago I
taped a pilot fo r a TV series that
ra iled to make it -one we called
'Sorority '62. · There was one scene in
which a guy kept falling out or a
closet. He had no s peaking lines and
I didn't even know his n ame. But
·~ NOT ALL MAKEUP
Dick Clark
fina lly I beckoned m y secret ary and
said, ·Find out who tha t fellow is.
He's a natural comic aod I thank I 'd
like to develop a property in which to
star him. He has me fafl ing on the
floor with laughter. Let's pull him
out of the closet!' Some tame later I
saw ham on the TV screen -and so
did you and e ve ryone e lse as the
star of ·Mork & Mindy' Robin
Williams'"
Q : Who are lhe most dtrficuJt peo-
ple you worked wilh over the years?
A : ··The people I'm about to name
inc lude my close friend <whom I
still miss> Bobby Darin, a ls<J Lallie
Richard, E vel Knievel. Jer ry Lee
Le wis. Chuck Berry a nd J ame!>
'Glad-You Asked That'
by Marilyn ctftd Hy Gordner
Brown. Apart from b~in{ unique und
unusual in thear talents. they abo a rt'
or were biza rre. often Frustrating
personalities Far overriding the ir
difficult personalities has hecn thPir
giant talent.'· I Q : You've bf>en a great admirer or
Diana Ross. When ttid you first s ense
she bad the magic or stardust in her
syste m?
A: "When I first encountered a
s kinny teen-age girl from the slums
of Detroit. Diana. accompanied by
two othe r girls a nd he r mother ,
dragged around with me and othe r
performers on an old Dick Clark
Caravan of Stars b us tour. She h<td
c haris ma showing even then . She
was s ingular in her talent. I knew she
would gain recognition as an artist,
but I frankly didn't forsee that l>hc
would attain the immense stature of
t he superstar she has become And it
delights me."
Send yaur questions to Hy Gardner.
"Glad You Asked That." care of this
newspaper. P 0 . Bor 19620. ln.nne 9Z714
Marilyn and Hy Gardner unU ansux•r a.~
many questums as they can m tlu.>lr col·
umn. but the volume of mail makes
personal repltes 1mpo11s1ble
11.-TNICT .. IUCll MISSIOll YlflO SAMU &Ill
Laughs
puzz"le
linguiAt
WEST LAl''A YET'rE,
Ind. (AP) -DQn't be of-
fended if Victor Raskin
doesn't laugh at your
joke. Instead or chuck·
ling, he may be analyz·
ing.
R as kin , 36 , i s a
Purdue Univ e r s ity
linguist who s pecializes
in the mec ha nis m s of
humor in language
H F.'S HEA RD the m
all ~ood jokes, bad
jokes. ethnic· a nd oh·
.scene.
A bag part of ha !> JOb 1s
lo analyze the m CJnd
ti r a w f r o ·m t h e
generahzauon!> t hal can
apply to all Joke:,.
K ask an :,ays that fnr
ct'ntur1c:. thinkers
philo sopher s anti
psychologisb ha\'l' tried
lo e xplain wh) peoplt·
laugh Some believe t he
need is based on a de:,1 rt·
to frel superior, to laugh
at someone else Other~
bl'lieve humor rid~ 111:0
pie of pt-nt up anx1 etie:-..
Raskin doesn't reall)
l'arc v.hy people m u'il
l<iug h . he JUSI <Jssumc~
that they mu!>l. lie l'X
plores whal ti as an a
JOke"; text that m akl·..,
the ht•a rer laugh
gri man· or 'otht·rw1-.1·
a rk no" leclgl' that th•
hat of 'crh1ag•• '' ""IJ
puscd tu bl-fun11~. .
SJ:\f('t-; T llE°". h1· h,,,
spent a lul of tamv 1·1111
du<·t1ng a '~·nou., ... 111d~
uf humor Ill' rt'<Hh un
I h 0 I "~ I l' c; II f J I) k , ....
listens lo <:i<.nd up eomP'
d1an:-. and k<'l'P!'> un 1•:J1
c:utked for an) qua~ th.ll
might ht>lp ham an tm. rl· 1 sea n·h
One l'Ssenllal for a
s uccessful JOke 1:-that
t he lis tener must Ut'
fam iliar with lht' ~ub
.1ect. ~u fam1har that he 1 <111esn·1 ha\e to punle
too lon,e: ovt'r lhl· JOke s \
imphcataon~.
Jan•~, Kris
to co-star
HOLi.WOOD <A P 1 l
J ane Fonda and 1'ri..,
Kristofferspn will star I
1 n · · Ro 11 0 ,. e r f or
Orion-I PC fo'ilms
They v.1 II bl·ga n \\ ork
on the cont~m poran
d rama an :'l:ew York c1n
.1 an 5
ttsTA•SA Bustol
540 7444
[<1wa1<1s I won C•nema V1eio
848 0388 830·6990
Hai~nt 8'•d 01 In
'>JI 1711
OUllCI Orange Mall &37 0340 "<)DA~Sl!S AC\l Q'tE(.I
°'-JQ1~.tQ 1...-15 ilNGAGEMf.N'
I ~~Th~e~~~ow~e!!_r!!!Be•-~h!!!...ind!!_~Th!!~-~~Th~r~on!"e-~j [
JANE LILY DOLLY
FONDA TOMLIN PAl{TON • j·
"'~ .... ., .. ~., l~!'f j ... .... t1M111 • .,.,
t\ \fl'( 1-11 \f' 1'1101>1 ( 110\ 01 \ l OI I\ 1111.l•I\' I'll 11 Ill
NINE TO FIVE
Ot\R\f \ ("011\It\\•rt17\R1111\\11 '0'-
\
· OllAllGE MlU I ACK LAZA
'""'' \o.,1n 'L+"f« •• 9•. 6J/ 0340 f fl!llc.Rrt •'P0<•h•ld
{I'~• • 58 I )880
___ ___,
... ""• •It• "' I ,.-.. ...
NINE: TO flVE (PG\
(of l) J "' F +,,.. ., ,. .. ,. ..... ,.,, 11-~
/>.NY WHICH WAY
YOU CA .. (PG1
W. YI • \A • •
~···-. ""'·~· ....
POPEYE (PGI
"" 1 •• '1' \)I • t, r ~
1'I ... n., •... ••"" t•• • ...,_
AotNl'1 Oe N"o
RAGING BULL (A)
0 JO I 00 l 30 6 00 8 30 10 •5
'-"'d•f (h;. r 7 .-010,• Hewn
EfMS LIKE OLD TI ME
(PGI
• 0 • I Oii J 's s JO ' 45 \0
~~~~~~~~~-r.""• W'\1(i,.., ..t"r1 R1rr a • Pr1or
STIR CRAZY RI
-,, N .,,_, 'I • "
S ho 111t 11 1'-
:;..;:.~. SEEMS LIKE 0LO l fMES
-
--, C ~•·• lhU• G')ld•l''<•wn
2 l S J • • ~G , , '
~ ........ ., """'"'"""' ·' ..,._ .... ...___,a~·~~~
DJv•o M " • n "''"' .Jo""' S··•Jg~
INSIDE MOVES (PG)
Pt"' PROM N'GHT IR)
~A,. ... •I.I• o .. ~, -...
f I«"""'•~•:--810\Jlt..fl Shlt"hh • \. .,r-lt.lOQh"'' Atli!il,,,
•' L•'"""' ~· p1~, nn Bl uc •<:,OON 1R1.
879 91!~ 1 fHf £LFClR1t 11ClkS~ MAN (PG
.. ~., • t1•t•e
.. "".... AN Y WHICH WAY YOU "~ • ..:·.-=:. CAN (PG)
0 ' " •• HONEYSUCt<LE ROSE (PO)
I No /..M C., RO<l•O Wtl~ 19"'1""' A«"""~ llW'O '°"' 0-AM l'or1ADI•
........ • •-·· ANY WHICH WAY YOU '~~£:·~· -;;;;;.,• ;:._ .-<;AN (PG) ' ' ... HONEYSUCKLE ROSE (PG)
\Ml r. ._. •••
c .. '" ... (\"' .... .. '""''
I 'l'el'I Wll•t 1 Ye"'!
POPEYE (PG) ,..,.
THE HUNTER (PG)
mA CRAZY (R) ,.,,.
USED CARS (R)
FlAST FAMILY(") Plue
FIU•OISM flt.OT OF
09'. FU filANCHU (POI
.. OA1L V PIU)l
Soulia CfHUI Heperlort1
New shows ring in '81
South l'ua t Rf'IJ(lr\or)' U\auaurauna I\ LTlf\
... on on th Oren, c 'o .. l. will r1n& In lhtl new
\<flr Wt(h 41 r11ur 0 IW'4 VI ot.JUl"Ulll\.ll lfl il• two
th •ltr rompl ' In (.'o~l~ M i
l\U.rttn& lh1ni• off on Jan T wUI be JOhn
Gu r•· ~ lln~m 1wd t'lh•cl • In SCR '• ~cood
Staar Tht•atftr Thl'n un JMn l 3. the award ·
wmnll'\I pl• "T ht• 1-:lc vhant Mun" 11rr1ves on the
m1111n. t4
"BOSOM . I) t;lfl.t:t'T'' I.It dtitrribt:d H ll
b lack r mtd) aibout th1~t-l'l'centrlc ·and self·
n nl t'r,'\t <'t\1H Mr tt'.rK 111 mod ·n1 urbirn Amerka by
lht• •U~hot tif llou\t• o( Hlu1• L~iav~i '' Sylvia
\lt•r ,'()1th .,,, 111 nut kt' her ~:tt dtsbu\ m the c~ntral
olt•, y,1th RHh11rd l>m·lt· utl Kur~o Henstl com ·
\'t .. lmt1 ltw ~'ti)>I
Intermission
Tom Titus
finlshlna up 1\.s run at the Grand. This Laa Vegas·
s tyle production runs through Jan.18, lo be replaced
on Jan. 21 by Jack Sharkey's "Here Lies Jeremy
T roy "
"Jeremy Troy." with Tab Hunter in the title
role . will run through Ma rch I at Sebastian's , 140
A venida Pico, San Clem ente. Call •92·9950 for
Sebastian's West reser vauons.and 772·7710 for the
Grand
, LARIC IOOM ·• ._
Ml400WLAlk CiOLP COUISI
l!IVl!I
DINNER PARTY
' Prime Rib Dinner
.... C: ... ' I f•t W...
DanciftCJ
PactY Favors s35 per c~
I S5 Pw ,.,.._ Adllf..._
At T1-Door, ,..ty.o.tyl
RESERVATIONS Phone 846-3391
Ope.,, to the l)\;O•C Y••• •'Ou'"a 9•n-ov•t Aoc:wn•••.._
Grat.am at Warner Huntiftc1on leach
PlJ~lJC NOTICE
NOTIC• O~ OIS~UTION
0, ftAltTNe ltSMlft
Pullllc nollc• ll heteby (liven ln•I
CARL DANE SCHEll ENGE A, •nd
MICHAEL HOWAltD COACOAAN,
h•r•tOtOfe 001"9 OU\ln<tt\ \Incle< tlw
t lctlllou\ llrm n•,,.•• •no ,tyl• or
C•lllorni• S1ten •n<I P.,n M•IW!lf
men! ln\lllUI' •I 1"11 S.r• C•lt 01
l oovn• Hill\, c'ounly ol OtM>9'>, Sl•I•
of {•lllornl•, 010 on the '81h O•y ol
M .. 1'90. Dy tnlllu•I <Ofl'>f'lt dt\>Olvt
'"• uto 1M1•1,...,.ntp •l\G "'"''n•t• lhf'I' r t-l•tton\ •\ Odrtn.1 \ thtffl:I)
S•ld bu\f"f\\ '" ttu-tuturft w ill C>~
<OndwCleO b t' M lth •et ~o w.a rd
Corcor•n. 4nd 1n trw future. such
othtf\ ., Corcoron may a\\Ottllt~
l\ltn\911 """· wl\o Will p.&y an<! cl•• ~"•'•• •II '"°'"''"' •nd MOh or 11 .. ••rm 4nd rt~<••ve •U mon1~\ o•v.01,. to 1!'4•form •
Fur"tft,er f"IOh<.• 1\ httf"bf' 91¥•n lll•t
In• uno.,r\1Qned w1U not bf' tf'\OOft\1
ble. trom OH\ oav Gn 10,. 4nv oouq•
Hon •n<ufft-<I by W Other m hi\ own
~•mt or tn Int-namf' 01 lht' firm
.DATED AT Hun11noton 8•acn
("a11rorn1•, '"" 1tlln d•• or Mey 1911()
Cad Dane S<twlleng•r
Publl\""<I Or•r>QI' Ca.t\1 O••'> P1lol ~<~mt>tr lO l'l90 t 11•-IO
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS I U$1Nl!SS
N-E nATEME.NT
Tht tottow1nq Dt't'\On\ Af'• do1nQ
bu\1,,t)\ d\
ENTERTAINMENT
PVBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS •"s•••n NAM•S~AT•lldNT r ... loliowtno peoont .,. dolno
bu.11,..Hft
Ill DENTAi.. DEVELOPMENT
YSTEMS 121 PATIENT AE,ERRAl
SYSTEMS 0t PATIENT RE FERR Al
SERVICES 14 1 DENTAL
MA RKETING SEllVIC ES 111
MEDICAL MARt:ltNG SERVICES
i.I CH IROPRACTIC MARir.ETIMG
SERVICES.
l&q Pon T41Q96rl, Ptao, N••POft BHch, C.l1torn1•9l..i>
H.,Old (Ml~•· M Murru. , ... ,
Pdrf Teoo••I, N•woorl Bt•t n
Ce11rorn1e t2*
Fey Murrey, , .... Por1 T a941<1n
Ne .. porl lleatlt, Calllornte •~
Ket111tll\ E Murrey, "" Au•l11 Sir HI, u ..i ... Cllf. Tt•e• 17S1J
Douo••• S Murrey, , .... Pon T •o 0"'· N .. _, lle•CI• Cotlllorn11 t:i..o
fr1t\ b<J\IM\\ I\ tonclu( tod lly •
Q•ROl•l l>llfl1'fr\hip
t-i M M uff•'/
Thi\ t t,tttttn'Htnl W4\ hi NJ wlfn the
·Counly Cler~ of Or•ttOl' Counly 011
OecPmDtr 11. 1"90
P:U\414
PubltV"'<I ()r.,.~ C°"\I Daily Ptlol
Oec t6, 73. lO, 1rieo, J•n •· 1911 )()•I '°
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUlllC HEAR I NO
'1h1v1tl 0-.1 .... itlll y,hu ~\IAK\'d lht: play's Wesl
l t11t\t prt·m11.·n· h•)\ ft't•l>rulity m Be rkeley, wlll
.l11t•t·t lhr S('H \t'rl>1on ~itrc Dunnelly, Owighl
t<1l'hard lldle cand l'am llarvey·w1ll take on lhe as ·
.. 1gn mt-ob of ">l'I d\·-.1t:11 t'<n>tumes ano lighting,
I "'' P~l.'\j\ t-h
"Tht' El\•11h.rnt Man," which won 11 ton of
Jram..i <1Y,a1tb m l979. well be staged by Martin
tten:.(Jn, who h e!:> cho.!>en veteran SCR actor Ron
THE SADDLEBACK VALLEY Community
Theater has postponed its next production, "The
Runner Stumbles,·· for one week due to the nee·
ccssity to find a new director for the show. Susan
Kelley 1s now m charge , replacing He rman Bood.
ma 11 who was hospitalized for heart surgery .
PUBLIC APPROACH SERVICES -:::-=-=-------------======::::~ ~o.'oo':.18'11.0•1• S..11• c Or.onQO
NOf t(f IS ltfli(A'Y GIVEN lhdl ~
Put>llf Hl'ctflf1Q bPhJ(f" th~ ( 1ty C'°"'n( ,1
,, lhf' (tty Ot ltw1nf' Wiii bt.' heiO dt ttw
Cout1< 11 (f\dmc..r\ ~I 11200 J•mDO""'
~oao ''"'~ Ctthto'n•d dt I lO p m or
tt'ii \Oon l~t,,.dflf'r '" OO\\lbl~ on J•nu•' 'f ll tqfi1 upon t~ Pfofnion of•
n•a,ot1h oftnr o..-nt-t't of IM p,,..,,.,..,, • Buu:.i.om for l ht' \1\le rolt-of lhe deformed young
mu11 Jonn Mt·n it•k
Pt-,.:a.o pe-; WI D ST a nti Jonathan
'1l·Murtr) .... 111 perform maJOr roles In the SCR
11roducuon ..... 1\h Wa\•ne Grace. John-David Keller.
The drama. which now will open Jan. 23 and
play t hrough F'eb. 7, will feature Ch arles Roberts
and Nancy Gerrish in the leading roles of a pri~st
and a nun fi ghting temptations of the n esh. o~~ers
in 1 ht• cast are Carol Stockmever. Oliver Papan-
drt>as. Michelle Edwards. Max Kelley, John
Kruie. Kelly Bennett and ls hi Salazar
MISIO ·, c:r ~J',
ANO 6H'. •IJ'H 111wf I< S46·111 I
KEZY 1190AM-MFM & So. Co•lt Pl•u ThHtre
pr•Hnt1 Frld•y I S•turd•t * MIDNIGHT MOVIES •
lcteen 1 1
Ent Jo>.pn CP\tlllvfl<l. 0\/ ~•'"" ">I S.nta .i.na. C• '1104
ft>rrv ltt C.roo-. t.e71 J>ttkt\dm
: I I vllMon C~ '7UJ
f "'' bu\1nto\\ '' r ondu< ,,.a D'r t1 QPner al P'rtnf>'r Vl1p
Er•t J C.tt1nlufld
ff'h\ \tl\\tf'f\flof" 'flll.\ IHf'O '"'"'" u-.
C.ounly Cftrk ot Orrtn~ Cnunt ~ on ~( """°"' u 1980
PuDh\hed Or.tngp Co.nt Dd•~'~.:
0•• ll lCI 1'191> Jffn 6 13, W81 1118 110 \rt Ko~1 1k Anne l~ong and l>on Tuche rounding
11ul tht· cast Ccl11:-t . Malcolm 'ulbertson provides
musical acc:ompa nim enl. with Susan Tuohy de·
..,1gning tht• !>C'ls and hgh\eng
Performances will be given at 8 p.m . Fridays
a nd Saturdays with a Sunday matinee at 2:30 on
Jan. 25 and a Thursday performance at'8 p.m.
J an 29 al the theater. 2574l·C Obrero, Mission Vie-
"SECRET LIFE
OF PLANTS" ,.,...... ......... _ "LAIDES & GENTLEMEN: Pl'Bl.IC NOTl('E
ownf'CI ~no mtt1ftUt•l°WlO roao\ ""''"''' \11ll"Q'-P.ar._ (omrnunUy A\WC.ttit1nn
".if'\tf •blt<I uw-rtt1n r~qu,.\t1nQ thl' t it f
...,, I rv•~ o., '•Wfut1on fo drl..rm1n;o
Nh~ftH·r Dy f.,d ,.CH'\Of \UCh '040~ fltO~
lfli•tv 10 0' t onnt:-CllCm w11n t)Mb1'c
fff9h>i1111dtt~. tht-tf'llt:r,.~1t, ot At\f ''''
JPnt\ , .. ,,ci1nq .ik)f\<.t \o<.I'\ rOdiO\ .tind
lhe mo to< •n'l (')Ybl1<-..... 11 bP rxa,1 '"'"••d
by dPQl1CiUIOfl Of thf' Pf'OY1\10f'\\ ut Hit
l~nit IP(OOPOI (4hf~rl"ltd tO\V' ntottO\
A <ooy Of ~ut-f\ Pt-hhon 1\on t1lf't 1n tf'w•01
''c ~ o' th.-(1tv (lffr'lil jo. Call 830·9252 or 770·0381 for reservations ·
·Bol->oms ;.md Ncgll•l'l" will play through Jan
LS t.11 IJ :IO n1g hll) l'~cept Mondays with Saturday
.rnd Su11da~ maLtnl't.'S at 3 p.m .. while "Elephant
\1 an· run!> n1~hlb ex<·t·pt Mondays at 8 p m
1 hroui.:h Fel> 15 with .... cckend matinees at 2· 30 in
!ht• Fourth Step Tht:atl•r ,. 655 Town Center Drive,
('ol>ta Mt-i.a Call 957 4033 for reservations to both
shuws ..
Mitchell role
give11 to Ladd Gil.°" ll.AOHCJ,
000 HC'MiAAI
MAO(lH K~
SEBASTIAN'S WEST Dinner Playhouse in
San Clemente is he ading into the last week of
its popular mu:.1ca1 .. .l:'1ddler on the Roof," but the
show-·wili·-go on to . cbast ian's at the Grand
Hotel in Anaheim. where it will open Tuesday a nd
plCJ} through March I.
110 1.L\'WOOO 11\l'l Diane Ladd will play _@ j
~'lartha Mitchl'il, \\,lfe of lht• former Clttorney
~eneral. int he thc alrtl·:il film ·· M arlhu · ·
Miss L add. who 1s app1:aring as Belle 1n CHS'
.. A lit'e." will alsos<·n r as l'Xl'l'Ullve pro<lurcr
Replacing "Fiddler " in San Clemente will be
the touring "Superst CJr Awards Show." now
She t·alled the lalt' Mr s ;\11lr hell an "outspoken
lad~·· who became "a g1gan11r media star who w;,s
fa nm us for the t rulh. no matter what "
PG·=
Plll 1 I
l'\k ! tt\
DAILY 1 30, 3 45
6 00. 8 I!> 10 30
"' ' . Tl ClllETITll
l*-l'ltflllH-' MlllAl'frllllMtlllQ--f· ---F 1 l'U Wf-1.Hlm
edwards NEWPORT tftA• COA\, H'WY & M4C 4.l ... UI
N~roRT Oc~...... 444.oao #2_ --
.. ,,,~ ..... ~ ... , .... .,...
~'".~E~t-' 'W )} I (~~ ~ : -
Chevy Chase
Goldie Hawn
SEEMBIJKE
OD ks
• c-"""'" Q.,..... (PG I
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P URI.IC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS aUSINIS\
NAME STATEMENT
COMMFlOOR. 111n Collln• '"
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PUBLIC NOTlCE
"CTITIOUS a ustMUS
NAME STATeMENT
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SUHSET PROOUCE COMP .. N'I'
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P UBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS IUSINl!'SS
HAMI STATEMEHT
Th• •0Uow1rto Of'\01'1\ ar~ ao•no
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PUBLIC NOTICE
P:ICTITIOUS I USINl!'SS
N-1 STATfMENT
Tri• foflo•1no pe1t0rn ttr• oo .. wJ
US•nitO '"
RE .. l.TY INVE$l.t.\E.NT ASSOC IJ-.A~AUV INV(STM!;M T ... ,~
IV, SCOfTSOALE' '"VESTME"T AS
SOC llEALTY INVESTME"T AS
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DEC. 30, 1'80
/ ERMABOMBECK C2
It was a night to
remember for 24 Harbor
areadebutantes ... C2 CLASSI Fl ED Cl
Women
drivers
• • ga1mng
•1 lllCHAEL DOUGAN
Ol .. o.M,NM.._..
lt wu a year and a half after
V•rba Unda's Suaan Vuco bad qwul an uoes.cilina career in
medacal and party supply reo·
tats that she saw the ad.
"I'd been lookin1 for a ~i
ness." sbe said, "but ootbin&
seemed to excite me, there was
noU1in& that 1 lbou&bt I could
commit myself to."
The newspaper classified of-
fered a limousine service ror
sale. She didn't want to buy the
operation, but the ad was an in·
spir~tioo.
"I STUTED callin1 different
services," she remembered. "I
asked ii I could have· a female
driver and they acted like I was
totally out of my mind."
•
So, four months ago, Newport
Beach Limousine Service -
with only females at the wheel
-was born. The response has
been so satisfactory, Mrs. Vasco
said, that she is already con-
sidering franchising tbe service
to other cities.
Merilyn Bugbee wboveJ is a chauffeur for an all-female limousine service started by Susan Vasco f right).
"In the first three months, we
broke even," she reported.
"Then, this monlh:·our Yellow
Pages ad came out and that was it. ..
Now Mrs. Vasco is preparing
to lease a second, all-white, 25·
loot-Jong stretch Lincoln com-
plete with color television. well-
stocked bar and AM -FM stereo
to haul clients to airports, con-
certa~ parties and Rams games.
While the female driver
gimmick is an obvious customer
draw. Mi's. Vaseo said her
service offers a personal touch
that keeps them coming back. A
complimentary bottle of cham-
pagne on ice awaits each client
when the limo a rrives and
flowers are provided for every
woman passenger.
They're t.hc VIPs ."
Still, it 1s _ j.he gender of the
chaurreur that attracts rhe most
attention. she admitted.
"OUR CUSTOMERS are in-
terested in what the limo looks
like. but they're people who don't
usually use a limo and they want
something spectacula r ," Mrs .
Vasco said. "When our drivers
get out of the car at John Wayne
Airport, heads really turn.··
"lt makes people happy, it
makes them feel good, it makes
them feel important," she said.
"Our customers are people who
want to make an impression and
that's what they're treated like.
So ra r. nl) customers have
mistaken her service for a sort
of mobile outcall business, she
Before you make your fire, you should se lect just the right kind of wood.
Burning the log at both ends
By JUDITH OLSON ---°'~~ ..... Although fireplaces aren't an efficient way
to heal a home. they are romantic and can set a
cozy mood on a chilly evenJng or a rainy after·
noon.
Before you make your fire, however, you
should select just the right kind of wood and
learn how to build the blaze properly. Both
steps can save you money and frustration.
According to the U.S. Department of
Agriculture <USDA) choosing the right kind
of wood is "much like selecting a favorite wine
or cheese, since each wood s~ies can offer
something different in aroma or beat value."
SOME WOODS BURN longer, some ignite
more quickly. Others have a fra1rance, wh\le
still others produce a steady glow.
Here are the USDA guidelines for select-
ing woods:
-Softwoods like pine, spruce, and fir are
easy to i'nite because they're resinous.
Fires made of these woods bum out quickly.
-1be heavier hardwoods like uh, beech,
birch, maple and oak bum leu vitoroualy than
son~ and with a shorter name. Oak 1ives
the mo1t uniform names....00 produces steady,
glowiq_coala.
-Aroma comes from tbe wood of fruit
lftft •udl u apple -and cberry and from nut
trea IUCh u beecb, hickory and pecan. The
1moke pnerally resembles the frqrances of
tbe tree'• fruit. These wooda 1enerally are more expenalve.
Thi USDA HY• a 1iji ililx1nt-woods:--
1tartmc with softwoods and hardwoods, and
later ....., fruit or nut wood, you can bave an
ea1Uy lptted ftre that buma tot a loal time and
hu a fDCld aroma.
M DO YOU bulld a fire? "Tbe buic
prlnclClle-II to Ht a match to euUy lpltable . .
tinder. which in turn ignites the kindling, which in
turn+gnttes-the larger fiTewood.-'-'-the US DA said.
Here are the steps the agency recommends
for making a fire:
First. place two logs on the Iron grate and
lay the tinder between them.
If the classic tinders such as hemlock twigs
Jtnd cedar or birch bark aren't available, use
dry scrap paper.
Next, place a s mall handful of dry twigs or
split sdltwood kindling over the tinder. Then
place small . dry logs over this base.
A teepee formation of kindling and small
branch wood is r-ecommended. These logs
should be placed close together because the nar·
row air spaces promote better drafts.
\
FIREWOOD IS usually sold by the cord,
which is a well -slacked pile of logs 4-bY·4-by-8
feet.
Freshly cut wood will not bum easily, so it
should be aged al least for several months prior
to use. SpUtting logs hastens the drying process,
the USDA said.
There are approximately 19 listings in the
Orange County Yellow Pages for firewood sales.
Currently, a cord of eucalyptus wood is sell-
ing for about $135 ; orange wood is about $1~
and pine is about S120.
Ont§ company sells a mixture of orange and
avocado for $150, orange and eucalyptus for S160
and a combination of five woods -eucalyptus.
orange, avocadd, pinion and cedar for $190.
I -M.OS'E-DllU~charge approx ha atel)l .$20-1.o
deliver a load of wood.
You can cut your own wood free, with a
pernilt, in some forests. What is allowed varies
from forest to forest and season to seaaon~
For information call the Anaeles Na\.lOftal-
Forest. (213) 577-0050 or (213) 684-0350, or_the
San Bernardino National For~st. (71•> 383-551111.
added. Should any riders get out
o f hand. s he works with a
bodyguard outflCthat remains on
call to come to the aid or a driver
in distress. -
pany policy forbids men from
riding \:IP front.
So far. though, ··we've never
had lo do that." s he said .
··w e've had the greatest peo·
pie." ·
Further security is provided
by a solid partition between the
d ri.ver 's and passenger com-
partments that can be raised
and locked by the chauffeur. In
addition, Mrs. Vasco said, com·
The limo rents for S30 an hour.
with a four-hour mmimum on
Fridays and Saturdays. But. said
Mrs. Vasco, "it us ua lly turns out
to be a minimum of six hours.
Once they (customers > get i'n it,
they won't gel out until every
place is closed and there's
nowhere left to go.··
The drivers often have as
much fun as the customers. she
claimed.
~
Criminal caf.eer successful ·
By JOHN L. SCHMIDT
MARION, 111. (AP) -As bank robbers go,
Willie Foster Sellers was one of the best.
A bit out of the ordinary maybe, but a real
professionaJ. A family man. A charmer with dashing good looks.
Sellers, says the FBI, had no equal. He's a
thief who studied his marks well enough tc
know whel'\. and where the big money was,
· averaging 10 limes the take of most bank rob·
bers. Once, in fact, he made off with more than
$100,000 from a North Carolina bank.
After two years of grinning his way through
as many as 30 or 40 bank jobs -according to
FBI calculations -Sellers is out of circulation
and behind bars.
The 46-year-old with the perfectly combed
hair. charming smile and tan of a California
surfer has reached the lop of the federal prison
system's line -the U.S. Penitentiary at
Ma rion.
EXPERTS CALL IT the most secure prison
in the United States. Carved out of 1,000 acres of
scenic rolling Shawnee National Forest land,
Marion was built to replace Alcatraz. All who
ha ve tried lo escape have failed.
That's the kind of place the FBI says
Sellers belongs. His last escape, when he cut
through the bars of Atlanta's Fulton County jail
with a blowtorch smuggled lo him by friends.
led authorities on a two-year chase.
Newspaper clippings c hronicled his
escapades and now fill the pages of a scrapbook
kept by hi s mother in Sellers' native Baxley,
Ga. The clippings tell how he rented a house
from a judge in Lillie Rock. Ark .. in 1978 and
moved his wife and five kids out four days
before the Jaw tracked him down.
They ·tell how he and his wife, Barbara, a
former s howgirl._ w~r.e ·at ·ar~ lenath of lhe
law when they took a course for instrument
pilots at the same ti~~ a Little Rock FBI agent was enrolled.
"PEOPLE THINK there play have been
something glamorous about my past," Sellers
says, grinning the grin ~f a free man in s pite of
prison bars. handcuffs and guards. "Well, it
was ~xc1tmg, but not glamorous." Sellers has
been in and out of jails since he was 20.
Days spent on his bard bunk in cell No. 12,
Cellblock D, are given to reading law books. "I
know more about my own case. than a lot or
lawyers," he says.
He's articulate. intelligent, well-read. He
rattles off the names and birthdales of his wife
and kids with the same confidence he recites
federal· statutes. H'e has represented himself in
court and plans more appeals in the future.
"l'M IN AN ARGUMENT with the Bureau
of Prisons right now, to lel more members of
my family mil," .he says. That's just one of
several legal battles he says he's planning.
He's doing 65 years on federal charges of
bank robbery. forgery and firearms violations.
Las t November the state of Texas added
another 99 years for bank robbery in Chireno,· a
small town near Nagodoches where he went to
stand trial. ·
The FBI says the summer of 1978 wu bis
mos prOductive. With a ra.neue borderina on
perfection, they SJY, be robbed 12 banks.
operating mainly from a base in Little Rock.
r
-
..........
Willie Foster Sellers looks out behind bars at
U.S Penitentiary at Marion. Ill As bank rob~rs
go, Sellers tOOS one of the best
"I REALLY DON'T know what happened. I
think somebody thought they ~ognized me and
called the FBI and t.hey came down and there,
lo and behold, there Willie was,'' he says.
Although he denies it was glamorous, his
career may malre a pretty good book. ·'I'd lilre
to wr ite about it some day." he says.
The FBI accounts may shed some light on
the contents.
Sellers, they say, would spend two weeks ift
a town casing the bank. He'd pay cash for a ne•
car and stash it in nearby woods. He'd recruit
an accomplice. usually a thug, someone who
was his complete antithesis.
"He was pN?lly picky... says FBI agent
Tommy Kilmer in Dallas. "If a partner got t.e
bragging or acting a little fl1tkY. Willie wout•
dump him. He was a strict professional."
AL11IOUGH KILMER never met Sellen
face-to-face, descriptions from witnesses in·
di~ale his partners were rouch enough to mate
Sellen seem almost polite in the midst of a rob·
bery.
•'He never squeezed a tri11er alt.ho\lah tbt
type of partners he...UJ)t wouldn't have thought
twice about it." Kilmer says.
One-FBI qent says Sellen wu a real
charmer, rareiy smoked or drank. always wen( Sellen chooses his own words carefully. "A
lot of what they say I've done Is still under •P.
~ :-M~9Cmteday we--fll'l sit-down ~~,-et
the whole story out," be H)'I.
Sellen says the summer of 11'71 WU bil
downfall. ll wasn't a copa-and·robbwl ~
In front' of, a small town.~~ ltd to bis·--:
rest. but on a trip to tbe 'ONW&-.. IWJID lail
Central America laland hideout ,to set a part for
.his son's motor bike.
-back to hi• famn, after hi~ wot k was 11oM:-Ht1-
1ccomplices were usually cauebt. havtn1 fall•
for tbe te:C:tioos of big cars and hilh llvin1.
.the qent .
• • ·The nn thinks Sellers may die in prison Uft•
.: leq,,.,be ·escapes. Sellen may be looklnt for a
le1al way out this time. "Maybe I'm cniy, but
• I 1Wl tot a little faith In the law." he sl)'s.
-.... ~ --
..
0 DAil Y P!LOI
Oally ...... ,,_ .. Gari A...,_•
OE•UT>ANTl.I POR FOR GROUP PORTRAIT PRIOR TO IALL AT NEWPORT MARRIOTT SPONSORED llY THE CHILDREN'S HOME SOCIETY'S NEWPORT HARBOR AUXILIARY
Harbor Area debs how at holiday hall ...
•• 11
ll) MA•Y JANE SCA&CELW Ol ... 0.Ht ,.,._~
'l'"ent) four oung women from lhe Harbor
~rea "ere presented at the annual Debulanle
Ball i.ponsored by thl! Newport Harbor Aux-
1I1 a q of Children 's Home Soctel.> Sunday
ing Mrs. Lloyd Massey, Jr.. auxiliary president.
who thanked ball c ha irman Mrs . Hugh
Sutherland.
1·h~ f>a~1fu: Ballroom of the M1trriott Hotel
in ewport Beach wai. decorated with red, pink
and wtute nowers. crystal table cenlerp1eces
and miniature lights sparkling from fi cus trees. T hen Edward Ward . Jr .. master of
ceremonies for the evening. introduced each
debutanle and her father as they entered the
ballroom through a gazebo garlanded with
flowers.
The Oebutante Ball provides the main sup·
port of the Newport auxiliary. conlri buting lo
the Children's Home Society's activities of
pregnancy und crisis counseling. 1tdopllon. tern·
porary fostereare lllld family daycare. Following the presentation ceremony. the
girls were escorted to the dance floor for the
traditional first waltz with fheir fathers to the
music ol Henry Brandon's orchestra.
Pre ball festivities for lhe debulantes in-
cluded two brunches. dinner with a view of the
holiday boat parade plus lunch al the Big_
Canyon Country Club The debutantes, parents and escorts are
Portland Addy, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harlem, Ball host Wellington Bonner, Jr , introduced
Livinf{ room is temple for dust -.)
Shrine for stoleri -light bulbs
I have no idea who invented
living rooms.
But how come they aren't'1
I 've polled 135 people of vary·
mg ages and not one of them can
re member doing anything in a
li ving room but clean it. In most
h ouses a Ii vin g r oom has
become a temple for· dust , a
shrine for stolen li ght bulbs and
a lounge for guests connectin~
with another part of the house.
I didn't realize we had a living
room until one day the realtor
was going through the house and
said. "llow big 1s your living
room ?"
.. Where is 1P" I asked
"ll 's t hat large room with the
white s ofas that faces the
street."
"This is quite lovely," I said,
wa lk ing throu g h slow l y,
touching the glass table and the
glass bowl of plastic fruit "Do
the draperies go with 1l " ··
"It's YOUR hous e'" she said.
I t alked with an architect
about the living room mystique
No one seems to know why the
Ii ving room is a protected species.
but it never became a watering
hole for families.
When they got sack of gather·
ing in the kitchen. some fixed up
and he was as vagoe as anyone the basem ent so they could
as lo what they were for. Draw-create more s pace for their ac·
ing from personal experience, tivities. It was call ed the Early
his only recollection was that it Water lleater decor.
was a room with the furniture Despite a li ving room full of
w r apped in plastic or ol d soft, comfortable furniture, the
b lankets whe re you a lways family spent the evenings in the
tripped over something in the basement on a porch swipg
dark on your way to ans wering watching the condensation drip
the front door. down the walls ·
I remember ours as a room'-. Soon after the second World
that was never heated in lhe War , family rooms were added.
winter, had the draperies closed which looked like a li ving room
all s ummer. sheets on the sofa with people. -
and the cellophane still intact on I passed by our living room
the lampshades . the other day and s miled proud·
There was a sign on the door ly. In 10 years. it still looked like
reading, "Shown by appoint· a recovery room. The dog ran by
ment only.·· My mother always me and started to sniff around
said it was a room to be used for the white sofa leg He hesitated.
s pecial company. A visit from We made eye contact. He re-
Col. Lindbergh o P resident turned to my side. lie felt the
Roosevelt might have qualified. mystique too. ·
Dating questionnaire
Court decision applauded
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Will
you please comment on the
court case seeking the r einstate·
m ent of a teacher in the La
Gr ange independent school dis·
trict in Texas who was fired
after s he distributed an Ann
Landers questionnaire on dating
and sex? It seems the federal
court jury ruled that the school
district violated the teacher·s
freedom of speech. The jury
says the teacher is entitled to
$46,000 in back pay and $25,000
damages.
All this came about when an
anonymous parent complained
two months after the test was
distributed. The teacher was
first suspended and then fired by
the school board.
s pent 20 year s and m any
thousands of dollars unlll l found
a therapist (my fourth) who is
truly wonderful. I love this guy.
but he has the monumental job
of undoing the damage of the
first three. P.S. The credentials
or the first three were impecca·
ble . l 'm signing m yself -
THREE QUARTERS BACK ..
DEAR 11DlEE: Your le&&er Is
the best rihRnce daal It doe9
pay to keep trying a&ll )'Oii 1e&
the right therapist. 'l'oo b .. It's
so expeaslve lillerms of lime
and money.
When I complained to my
mother, she said, "Your father
and I have raised our children.
This is our house and we should
be free to li ve in it a s we
please." Then she pointed out
that wheneve r I drop the
children off for an afternoon, s he
never lets them out of her sight.
<She will baby-s it anytime but I
must bring t he kids to her
house.) This kind of overcon·
fidence scares me to death.
Suppo5e the phone rings, or
she needs to go to the bathroom?
I don't want to fight with either
set of grandparents. but I am
wor ried sick it will take a horri·
ble accident lo wake them up.
Please don't tell us to stop vis-
iting them. 1t would result in a
bttter parUng. -WO-RRtED-
SICK IN SACRAMENTO.
Jr .. Robert E. Smith ; T rina Auelman, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Auelman, Robert Stemlec;. Al·
llson Auer. Mr. and Mrs . Albert Auer , Rudolph
Baldon!; J ennifer Badham, Rep. and Mrs.
Ro bert Badham. Ma rk Barrett; Christine
Barnett, Mr. and Mrs Pemel Barnett, Alexis
Newman
Others are Leslie Beamish, Mr. and Mrs.
Riehard Beamish, Michael Grier; Mary Blake
Michael J . Blake and Mrs . Mary Barrett Blake:
Donald Kelliher , Mary E Brown, Mr. and Mrs.
Benjamin C Brown, Robert Wade. J r.; Susan
Ford, Or. and Mrs·. James Ford, Mark Gerard:
Leslie Greenberg, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Green·
berg, Mark Daly; Pamela Herbert, Mr. and
Mr11. Gavin llerbert. David Dunzer; Linda
tlilchey, Mr and Mrs. Robert llilchey, Thomas
McDermott.
More debutantes are Kelley Hill, Mr. and
Mrs Stanley A. Ifill, Bl;Jine Bush; Edith
Hunsaker .. Mr and Mrs. Richard Hunsaker,
Joseph Sanchez. Jill Kingsley, Mr. and Mrs.
Gercild Kingsley, Mark Schmidt. Kristin Kirk.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Kirk, Federick Stegman ,
Car ol Myerson, Mr. and Mrs. James Myerson.
Patri'ck Celiberti: Jane Rafael. Mr and Mrs
Thomas Rafael. Came ron Siems
Additional debutantes are Stephanie
Ranger , Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ranger , Scott
WEDNESDA\', DEC. 31
By S\'DNE\' OMARR
ARIES (Mar 21 Apr 19J Avoid becoming
inextricably involved 1n financial problems of
those who seek to take advantage of you
Reevaluate relationships Focus on desires.
motives and ultimate goals. Favorable news 1s
received concerning legal maneuver .
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20) Patience 1s
your ally. Avoid rushing decisions. Accent on
joint efforts, partnership possibilities. public re-
lations and contracts . Aries. Libra natives
figure prominently. You have opportunity to be
rid of unnecessary burden.
GEMINI <May 21 -June 20>: New approach
to basic services is necessary Leo. Aquarius
natives play prominent roles. Keep promises to
yourself connected with work, diet and health
,One you aided in past is ready to return favor
Optimism is justified.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ) · Emotional
responses are accented Heed "inner voice . .,
Focus on change. variet y and a new un·
derstanding of special m ember of opposite sex
Young person will make you happy. Capricorn.
Aquarius and anothe r Cancer figure prominent·
ly.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Have fun without
scattering forces. avoid unnecessar y ex-
travagance and remember that you must face
yourself in morning. Gemini, Virgo. Sagittarius
persons fi gure prominently. Highlight security,
safety and moderation.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Visits. short
trips, relatives and s urprises are highlighted.
Plans are subject to last -minute revision. Main·
lain sense of fi tness and humor . Aquarius. Leo,
Scorpio natives play key roles. Take s pecial
care i.n traffic.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 22 > Guard
Lohman; Caroline Sammis, Mr and Mrs . Lee
Sammis. Paul Bartelt; Louise Stover, Mr. and
Mrs Allen Stover, Michael Wolfe; Laura
Trebler, Mr and Mrs . Per Trebler, Gregg
Williams ; Carol Wa re, Mr. and Mrs . William
Ware, Stephen Russell ; Margaret Wren. Mr.
and Mrs. William Wren, David Lyons.
Guests at the annual Christmas Tree Ball al
the Balboa Bay Club were weleomed with a dis·
play of poinsettias to set a holiday ilberpe.
Chef Peter Solis provided a dinner of fillet
mignon, fresh asparagus m hollandaise sauce
and strawberries. Rom anoff for the more than
350 who came for dancing to the music of Wynn
Warner and his orchestra.
Enjoyin~ the party were Balboa Bay Club
owner Rob Ray with his wife Beverly and
Scott Hightower. general manager of the club,
with wife Belly.
Others from the board of governors were
Hans Prager. Pat and Paula Michaels. Jack
and Nancy Wright, Nick and llleane Doolin. Ed
and Pat Roletti as well as Dorothy Yardley.
who was made an honorary member or the
board
Hoa~ awards
• • service pins
Mrs W1ll1am Langston and Mrs. Raymond
Za mbito were awa rdert 5.000·hour pins for
servit·e b) the Auxiliary of Hoag Memorial
I losp1tal this month
Other ser vice awa rd s include Prank-'
Williams for 4.500 hours. Mrs Jack Collins for
1.500 hours. Mrs Roy Russell for 1,000 hours
and Stanford Kroman. Mrs Joseph Murphy and
Pat Seiler 100 hours each
Candystriper volunteers who worked 150
hours cire Day Bishop. Jeanette Heinz. Kelly
Jordan. Colleen Ker rigan. Sonya Madsen and
Andrea Miller
Barbara Campbell and Leah Head worked
150 hours. Kristin Basmajian, Stephanie Marx·
er. Leslie Redick and Lon Van Aken worked 200
hours. Pam Burke and Sheryl Molinaro volun·
teered 250 hours. Libby Vance contributed 300
hours and Becky Martin worked 350 hours_
Stephanie :\iarxer received a Busy Bee
Award for 53 hours volunteered during Nov-
ember. and Lc~ll e Redic k was cited for 41
hours
E\'e (;olden was rhosen Candystriper of the
month
Le Grand Casirw set
Newport Harbor Art Museum is planning
Le Grand Casino on May 9 with dinner;-~ancing
a nd games or chance.
The fundraiser will be coordinated by Molly
Lyon. Lucille Adams. Toni Ayres, Shirley
Wilson, Snoozie Ullman. Sally Somers. Madelyn
Gonzales. Judy Sledge. Ruth J ensen. Judy
Hurndall. Jo McLain and Bernie Schneider.
Tables may be reserved at $125 per person
hy calling the museum at 759·1122.
She's her own ~wit possessions A void snap decisions in connection
with financial obligations . Morale is boosted by
accolade from "a very special person ... Gemini.
Virgo, Sagittarius natives play important roles You locate "missing link." LONDON IAP) -When Bill Baker, 76,
. SCOR_PIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Celebrating married his granddaughter's husband's mother.
with family members can prove rewarding. Edna Harvey. the whole family had to sit down
Sticking close to homebase will be beneficial. and try to figure out who was who.
Cycle high and this New Year's Eve will pro· Baker's granddaughter. Lynn, 28, put it this
vi de inspiration. Mix people, not beverages. way;, . Show off luxury item. My m other-in-law 1s now my ste p·
S-AGITTARIUS !Nov. 22.rrec. -zI>: This--grandf!lolhe r . My grai:idfat-her is .rTFY-~tep-
could be one of your most ex<.'iting New Year's falher-ln·la~'. My mum as my s1ster-m-law and
Eve celebrations. Aura of intrigue, m ystery my ~.rother 1s my nephe_w . . . .
prevails. You gain access to privileged informa-But even more disconcerting 1s. that I m
The /\nn Landers fans down
he re would like a comment. -
YOUR FRIENDS JN TEXAS
DEAR FRIENDS: By the time
this column •ppurs In print tbe
case may well have been settled.
May I c hrify one point,
however? The test is NOT an
"&na Landen questionnaire on
dating ud sex." U Is • questloa-
n•lre oa drugs, d•Ung •nd sex
seat to me, first by some Mem-
phis teen·•(.ers la &be euly
11'1ts ud sabsequenUy revised
by otber teen-agers ln what they
Some competent proret.1loaals
tum ou& to be turkeys became ol
persoaaUty coaructs. A therapist
who cannot cre•le a cUma~ ol
trust and genuine urtn1 wttMn
three or rdflr m•tlt1 ottllat lo be
damped,
DEAR WORRIED: Accept
their ~rms or hire a slUer. The
Grandmas aren 't going to
chaage to alllt you.
tion. One you admire reveals a confidence. Be married_ to ~Y uncle and my own chJldren are
• discreet. Double·check invitations reser va-my cousms. . tions. · At home in Mi ckleton Close, Reddilch,
called an "upd•ted form."
I welcome anoaymoas let~n.
but I pay •blolately no •tteatJoa
to an•ymou compl•lnts. I •P·
plaad tbe decision of the reeler ..
court jury.
DEAR ANN: One of your
readers, "To Hell and Back,''
advises people suffering from
depression to seek professional
help, but adds. "If they happen
to get an incompetent counselor
the first time, tell them to try a
seco.nd Ume -and a third.•·
Ann, this is exactly the Catch-22.
'To reject a counselor -even to
evaluate a counselor -requires
emotional l'trength, and most
patients don't have it.
What's more. how is a p•tient
lo recocnlze incompetence?' All
our previous trainln1 teaches ua
-·--u.o.-»>,_.•mi.u.-•c...a.oulll'.u.aae.lite.a lM . our
failures. which makes us reel
worse.
Counseltna. with the rl1ht
lhfraptst, can work wonders. I
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
wife bought a toy poodle 13
years ago. I never cared for that
little mutt. and s he knew it.
When my wife wasn't looking,
she would try to bite me.
The mutt died las t week, and •
my wife had to go on tran-
quilizers. Now she wants me to
buy her anothero poodle. I am
happy to be rid of the last one
and don't want another. How
can l avoid it? -HATE OOGS
THAT LOOK LTKE MICE
DEAR H.D.: Yoa Ha't -IO
pve l.n like a 1•&1e•d. Tab
yoar wife to ky ...titer peGIGe
and make frte.da wlU. tile m.U
rrom tbe word co.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In
spite ol polite sua1eaUons from
me. my parents and my
hus band'• pa.rent• refuM to
child· proof their homes.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1
know I am writing awfull)' late,
but as usuaJ I lefl my Chnstmas
s hopping for the last minute.
T his is a cry for help.
I work for a church. Three
priests have been very kind to
me. 1 want t o give t hem
som~ng ror Christmas, but J
don't have any idea what would
be appropriate. Can you olfer
so m e s u ggestion s? -A
JERSEY GIRL
DEAa GlllL : h tlaeae
e•lllltteeed times, people llave
come lo reallae tllat Catltollc
prteeu are men, too. Gifts for
tll1em Med eot be aay dlffereet
from wla•t yoa would 1tve Ul)'
°'lier mu.
Book•, ma1HIH HbaMlp·
tlOltl, IPOf1 lllirU, H8dy, •Illa
or Hme fucy food Jtacb1es are
1lw •Y• appreciated. A•d lf yoa ca• 't fl•d time to 1llop, sift
eenllleeM9.,. • .. _. .......
Whenever we vi alt I run . · Whal'• prut:IUla? If WoU oms't
tbrou•h the bouae ahead of ""· rou nud tome help. It'•
my pre-1cbool·•I• cblldren, oCIGilobk *' tlw bookl.ft: "Necldftg
1rab llduon, ruon, m.clldDe Oftd P11Ung -What ore the •NJ1Alw nd sNt ..._ _. ... ~--u~m-ttf1~'-_, .,.,., NQUn1'1oiUllr
reach. I am a Mnoul wnek Lartdnt, P.O. Boz 1191$, CMeaQo.
throulhoul evft'1 Ylllt, bee-IU. Mil, ncloltng so unt• Gltd o
I mlllt keep a COalUat YlllJ Oftl' lollQ, ~. wl/-odd,..1Nd ,,._
myltttleoaes. •IDJN.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.J an. 19): Good .WQrcestershire, Baker ~aid : "If you start think-
fellowship prevails. Many inhibitions fall away. mg abo~~ all the com bmat1ons you can go on
Obtain hint from Leo message. Friendships are forever
cemented and solid plans can be made for up·
coming year. Ambitions come into focus and
feeling of security is enhanced.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Your views
a re sought: express self in dynamic, direct. in·
dependent manne r . Avoid o ne who is
aggressive. careless and reckless. Don 't drive
with individual who is victim of "excess
celebration." Seed is planted for car eer
adv an cement.
PISCES (feb. 19-Mar. 20>: You gain revela-
tion concerning personal potential. Areas pre·
viously shrouded In fears, doubts gain benefit of
greater light. Leo, Aquarius persons figure
prominently. Romantic involvement could be a
feature. •
Hypnosis worksho)l8
Experiental workshops ln hypnosis will be ·
olrer~ rrom 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. 'Tuesday evenings
January 6, 1.3. 20 and 27.
Charles Lanton•. a teacher of hypnosis, will
discuas ualn1 it aa a tool to overcome smoking,
over-eatin1. nail·bltln1. excessive anxiety and
pain. 1'TIT teCtllTH wm-be i\1lie ar1pos
Women's Center, 77'1 S. Main St. in Oranae.
Donatlon1 are welcome fol' 1clivitiH arid
services ottered by the center.
Call :W7-649' for lnform•Uon.
\I olmateers sought
Divorced single· parent
fathers and mothers , as
well as divorced parents
with joint custody of their
children. are needed as
volunteers of a research
project conducted by the
University of Nebraska.
The Nation-Wide Sue·
cessful Divorced Family
Research Projeet is five
years old and focuses on
families developing new
custody arrangem ents
beneficial to the children.
Volunteers fill out an
anonymous quest ion -
naire and are sent com-•
plete results of the re·
search.
I n lerested parents
should write to Dr. J ohn
DeFrain at the Depart-
m ent of Human Develop·
ment and the Family,
University of Nebraska·
Lincoln,68583.
Carnegie graau
NEW YORK (A Pl -It says the grant came
Carnegie Hall says i t from t he CIJll'les E .
has received a $100,000 • CulpeperFoundatiOn. grant to support its .., _______ 11111!1,..
1980-'81 toternalional
Fesitval or Orchestras -•erJea.._ __
C.11142-5171.
Put a few word•
to work for ou.
RUFFEll'S
·~-·----.-W'-Y• w.t ........ 1tu..__.-.. c .... .,...._ ... ,,~
, ....... -..... --~-------· ... ._ __ ............ -...... -.-' ... ··-.....
OIMTUAIMES
Pobionous
planta
•pread
POaTL.,ND, On t AP ) -Taae y ••1..n. a poiaMoua, _.Uer·•••IH•t weed .... klu. u ..... ,. le . .., ............... .
efferta '° eoa&rol lt, aa~aftklalau1
Tit• phat , oaee
U. ... to &llrive oal) U.
ral117 ......... On.toa.
" ........ ,..., &a lritt •r••• •••t of tlu CHudea. ••Id Dav•d
Humpllre.)', dlNtotor of
tM al.Me'• ooxJoua weed
pro1ram
•• ,,... GOI' a very bit
ter ta1te," be 1aid
· • ADhnala accid .. tally
...-it ..a.. accordina
to OM ICbool of thou&bt, ~ "'addided to It Mattb it out '.
It la DOt known how
Tanay Racwort got it.a
name. Humphrey sa id .
The weed's Latin name
is Senecio Jacobaea.
.. .. .. ....... _ ........ . . ............. --·--..... ...
8
,,.. ............. 1 ...... -.,, .... c...i
········~··••••••••• •• DAILY PILOT Q.ASSIPllD ADS
cancer suspect · 6 , .' ·· ~~~~ ... :·~:~~=··· GtMr.. I 002 •••r.. · 1002 f' ood flavoring agent teated on mice and rata 4 i' . ·····~·~~Ii.in······ ······~;~;;;·······
W Hl11Nt'1 ON 1 AP J -A 1yn In aoaps, delercenu, c ream lo-used to the "mlnlmum quantity EQUAL HOUSING Present owne~ iJ totally COUMTIY
lh tk food ad(llllve looti used u lions and perfumes, satd the nffded to produce the Intended I renovaUn1 lhu 2 Bdrm MAMSIOM
an Imitation, cau~c-1 ca.n""rs ln cancerlnstltute . effect.'' z , .OPPOATU.Nl.TY J I Balboa 111.nd cotta1e Macniflcent North
mal llnd frmalt1 •ulc~ and In Emil Corwin , an FDA Into• super cute sum· Tustin 8000 sq ft estate
m alt' r ti, Uh· N;.1t1onul Cancer EA&IJER ANIMAL s tudies spokesman, said the aeency ls ,, ....... _L_ ~-~ ... ~-:_~:.•nwaanyd sheoeutshe•~ on almost 1 a c re.
I tit t ahow.ci an lncreaised Incidence i · h t I d I WWM't Notice: .....,..,,.. """' " Sl.750,000. Great financ· 11• u ~HY" I I 1 1 ..... ...-rev ewtng t e est resu ts an s All real estate a d · property today. You in& will trade equity 'l'ht< addltlve, Nalled c lnnamyl 0 una turnors D m ce ex~ preparina a memorandum to the v er t I 1 e d i n t h i s won't recognize it soon. for smaller home, in·
anthrwuhthi. <'lll.&sed Uver can· to the chemical, but thls was not FDA commissioner on "initial-• ~paper 111 subject to Asking $274,950. ·come prop .• trust deeds.
«er• Ut llllc~ uf both SHH and found in the new test, It added. ing appropriate action." the Federal Fair Hous· lalboa l"-d ltty Rick Alderette. owner/-
""m ua ot th" kidney and oan Partly because of the result.a 5 ing Act ol 1968 which •n.a700 realtor. 731•5115. i. c·re-u tn mal_, rat~ In th~ hitih· of the early s tudies, it was THE ANIMAL TESTS, con-makes it illegal to ad· , do ~ k°'""Ctan" teljtll , the •"t!flcy selected for further testing by ducted for the cancer institute \'er1ise "any prererence. i---------1 • * •
•
8 th N t· I T · l p limitation. or d is -ST•STOl ... CH n u.I Mondn e a ton a ox a co ogy ro-by EG&G Mason Research crimination based on -SWllfWa S. D• Arco1
The Flavor lilod Extract gram, which identifies C8'lcer· Institute in Worcester, Mass., in· 6 race. color, relig ion. Two 2 Bdrm units. cor· ~MidlandLane i\t unulacturer's Association said ca u s ing (carc inogenic ) volved feeding larie amount.a of sex, or national origin. ner lot. ocean view, ex-Huntington Beach
it bout ~ pounds of cinnamyl chemk1Als by long-term animal chemical to hundreds or rats and or an intention to make ceilent summer/winter You are the winner of
anthramJale as sold as a flavor-testing. ~ mice for 103 weeks. any s uch prererence, rentaL S2lO ooo. l free tick.ts
aog ur fragrance agent uch While these tests do not prove In the high-dose groups, liver 7 limitation . o r dis· <Sl0.50value),to > l!a1 111 the LJm tt..'<.i Stat es . that a substance causes cancer cancers were found in 79 percent cnnunation .. Sports Vacatfo..
in humans, che micals found to of the ,male mice and 67 percent 1 & IV Slaow
0 AN IE I.. T ti 0 MP S ON • be carcinogenic in animals are or the females. Jn the low-dose This newspaper will not Jan 3thru J an 11 gene rall consa·de ed capable of 8 knowingly accept any Anaheim Convention <'uunsel to the manufat'turers' Y · r mouse groups, tumo rs were •dv.ertising for real
group, said the chemical "is not c ausing cancer in man. the found in 60 percent of the males estate ..... 1"ch 1·s 1·n viola· Center · u·t t 'd "'" Tickets must be ex-the pnncipal grape or cherry cancer tns u e saa · and 41 percent of the females , Uonofthelaw. chang'ed ror reser ved
flavoring" used by the food in· THOMPSON SAID HIS as · the cancer institute said . seats at the Convention
dustry and. therefore. could be sociation is having an indepen-Jn control groups of mice who Center ahead of time.
replaced dent panel of scientists review did not get the c hemical, tumors aRORS: AdYertisers WISHING YOU Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to
A bout 75.000 pounds of other the new test data and that re-were found in 29 percent of & YOUIS 14. claim your tickets
g rape flavors and 250.000 pounds s uits s ho uld be available in males and 6 percent of females , ..... cMck tlleir ads HAPPY HOLIDAY • • •
of other cherry flavors are used February. it added. daily and report er-SEASON & THE
earh year. he said, "If we find that this flavoring In male rats, cancers of the ron i,...diately. The HST FOR 1981 !
Additive
The chemical has been used is bad, it will h ave. to go," outer part of the kidney were DAILY PILOT assumes
Bradt ·'••h·r• s in c e the 1940s t o flavor Thompson said in an interview. found in 8 percent of the high· D lability for the-.;rst bcvera~cs. ice cream, candy, The Food and Drug Ad· dose group while 6.7 percent of i11correct insertion l;ENE~'11~~~f~llHL'N~. baked goods< c hewing gums and m inistration c l a ssifies the the high-dose group also had Oliiy.
"' ., numerous otner foods . chemical as a direct food ad-rare tumors of the pancreas. it
WATaFltOMT HOME s BR . 4 Ba. custom
wate rfront hom e
w/17X38' pvt dock. Price
Sl.395.000. For details on
this home and appt to
see. call Carol Hofr. agl.
631 ·00M
ft-S1denl of Ncwµort Island It I · ed f "d t' a I' ass e c.1 a \\ a } 0 n a so as us as a ragrance ditive and restricts the amount saa · Ucccm~r ~. I!~ Funeral ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
,er\'lces will be h\•ld 011 Wc·ll
iesda}. Dt>(•emt>cr 3t , l!JM at
I OOA M at Forest l.:J wn c;tend:ile al Wee Kiri. uf tlW
l le11 ven Church
C'l,QDT
lo: R IC'JH .. 'RIS Cl.CJ DT. l"CSI
dent of An11heim, Ca fur the
last 12 )ears arkr movin~
here rrom lnyokern. ('a Ill'
passed awa) on De<"cmbcr 2~.
1980 lie i::. !>urv1ved b> his
daughter Bell> Mullins or
Anaheim. Ca . :\t arlcnc
:\t ason of An aheim, Ca .
:\1 ar1o n ll un s akcr or
R1ds:e,·rest . Ca . Donna
~<'('o<>d of Va lenna. <.:a 11nd ..---
Karen Roork of l.antaster.
Ca .. sons Ho he rt or Fruitland. <.: o I o r a d o . I< 1 <' h a r d o r
lnyokern. C\I . Ronald or
Ridgecrest , Ca. and Dennis or
Norwalk. 26 grandchildren
and 11 gre11t-i;:randrhildren. 2
sisters and I brother. also sur
vived by a host or relatives
Services will be held on Mon·
day. December 29. 1980 at
J:OOPM al the llarhor La wn
Memorial Chapel. Ser vices
under the diret•tion or Harbor
Lawn·Motmt Olive Mortuary of Costa Mesa 540-5554
JACKSON
HATTIEJ J ACKSON. res·
ident of Costa :\1 esa. Ca
Passed away on Oet•embcr
!:>. 1980. She1!. survived b) her
1,t randdaughters Patt ) Grandt or Mount Baldy. Ca
and .Jeanie Gillingwators of
'pland. Ca Privat e
gr11ves1de serv1<•es will be
held on Monday. Decemher
29, l!ltWl at 2 OCIPM-at the
llarbor Lawn !\1e mor1al
Pa rk Ser\'a·cs unde r the
direetion of llurbor La\\n
:\l ounl Olh e !\tort U:.tr) of
<.:ost a Mesa 540·5554
PA!'IPOl.l.A
CENTURIES AGO, ROME: NOW, CHICAGO
Poster depicts city H ••rth focel point
Chicagoan knew it--
city's hub of world
C HICAGO <A P 1 For years. Ch icagoans marketing the poster.
''It ·s really chauvinistic.·'
Besides. h e s aid. "Chicago has
DeathJJ
·Euewhere
VATICAN CITY (AP)
-Cardlaal Egidio
Vagaoul, 74, form er
papal diplomat to the
United States and a t.o p
man age r of th e
Vatican's economic af.
fairs, died Friday at his
home,
MIAMI CAP>-Hella
Kamlske: 52, the first
'woman to hold a full
vice presidency at Pan
American World
Airways, died Thursday
of cancer.
WASHINGTON (AP)
-Cllarles S. Dewey Sr.,
100, an international ex-
pert on industry and
finance and a former
Republi c an c on -
• gressman· from Jllinois,
died Thur s day o f
pneumooia.
SAN J UAN, Puerto
Rico CAP) -Art hiS·
tori an and contem ·
porary a rt critic
Gregory Battcoc:k, 39,
was stabbed to death in
his apartment in San
Juan's Condado section,
police said.
NEW YORK (AP>
Seulptor Tony Smith, 68,
whose works were done
on a large scale. died of
heart failure fl'riday at
New York Hospital.
KNOXVILLE, T enn.
(AP) -Ray H. J enkins,
83 , a prominent Ten-
nessee lawyer appointed
s pecial counsel in the
1954 U.S. Senate Army·
McCarthy h e ari n gs .
died FTiday night.
ER NEST PAMl'Ol.l.1\. n ..
s1dent or Santa Ana, ('a
Passed away on Oeccmhcr
21i. 1980 in Santa Ana. C'a. Survived hy his wifr Anita.
Son Glen of Lon~ llcach, tu .
daughters Aniuc P<1mpolla of Long Beach, Ca , Chris Pam
µolla of Santu Mon ica . <.:a .
Lau ra Pamµolla of Lon~
Beach. Ca , Marty Pttmpolla
or Long Beach. Ca . ab<1 his
·ister Mary Nunc:r. 11( Sant<•
Ana . Ca . 2 grandctuldrcn
Services w.11 be held on Tue'\
da). Derember 30. 1980 at
11 OOA M at the Pa<.'lf1e \"1c" '.\t ortuar) Int erment al
Pac1f1e View Memorrnl l'ark
P a c1 f1 e View :\1 ortu1H).
:'-lewport Beach directors
Chicagoans have gone around with a
"Secon d C ity" c hip on t heir
shoulders
Now they have a Chicago poster
that some think puts things in the
pro pe r perspec t ive -s howin g
Chicago as making up most of the
world. The more populous New York
City is a me re pinpoint on the horizon
-a long with Europe and Asia .
lousy sports team s. so they need a i-=================-1
picture of something else to hang on
PACIFIC YllW
MIMOllAL PAIK
Ce~tery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Fac1f1c View Drive
Newport Beach
644·2700
McCOtlMICll MOITUAllH
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hills
768·0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776
HAllOI L.AWH-MT. OLIYI
Mortuary • Ce~ lery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
PlllCl .. OTHHI
1&1.•0ADWAY MOllTUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IAL'R&l•6MOH
SMITM a TUTHILL
WHTCLlff CHM'll
'427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
6'46-9371 --
,., ..... ,
COUMIAL.._.L
NOMI
7801 Bl>taaA~
W.tmlnster
~ •
The poster is a n answer lo the
ramous New or e r magazine cover
that depicts Manhattan as most of
the world. Such poster s aJso have
been made for other a reas.
THE CHICAGO POSTER 'shows
the central elements of the Earth as
Lake Michigan, Lake Shore Drive,
the Chicago skyline, and the Loop
elevated trains.
Just beyond Chicago -and still
prominent -is Peoria, Il l. The rest
of the world, including the Pacific
and Atlantic oceans, is in the distant
background: The Golden G ate -
Bridge, the Eiffe l Tower, and
Constantine's arch in Rome can
barely be seen.
On the very edge of the Earth are
Washington. D .. C., and New York
City, which Is represented by a statue
holding a torch standing in front of a tin
clusterofskyscrapers.
"WE CONCEIVED OF this as a re·
buttal to the stelnberg (New Yorker)
poster," said John Sivright, a Chicago
commodities broker who Is one of four
the wall.
Si vr ight and the others began
m a rketing the poster five weeks ago.
They have sold a thousand and say
they have requests for hundreds
m ore .
"We've got requests coming out
our ears ." said Cathy Hagman. a
clerk al a North Side gallery. "Peo·
pie who buy it are just proud of the
city."
THE POSTER, DESIGNED by
artist H enry Swierzchowski of
Chicago, seUs for $12 unfram·ed and
$42 framed.
Jn the foreground is Lake
Michigan, a nd an assortment of
strollers. skateboarders. joggers and
cyclists are making their way along
a lak~trontpalh.
Behind them rises the Chicago
skyline, Including the Sears Tower,
the John Hancock Center, the Stan·
dard Oil Building, the old Water
Towe r structure that survived the
great fire of 1871, the Playboy Tower,
the Board of Trade, and the Chicago
Publlci.ibraty Cultural Center.
''I wanted to show Chicago as a bi1
powe rful city, a c lean city -not as
dirty as 'New York -and a happy
city with friendly people, not with all
the hostility of New Yotlters,"
Swierzchowski said.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
fltCTITIOUSaUSIN•H NAMHTAflMaNf
Tiie fellewlftl ,,.,_ ltdolntbuslnen
""
PUBLIC NOTICE
.I
L
. Ho.eMs for Sole
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
FACT OR FICTION
FACT-TAKE OV EH
LARGE LOANS on th1!> very desir able condo
Super location and
security. No qualify ing.
Y $106.500. Call 979-5370 to
day.
'ALLSTATE
AEAL"fOAS
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
7 '4-631 -6990
3BED~OOMS
$83,800!
Reaut1ful re m odeled
Townbome . .2 story +
pool + tt.>nnas + JOg to
beach Most popular
model. fi replace. Hurry •
~7171
DELIGHT P INVESTORS SPYGLASS
Maximuin leverage w 1l h $4 4 9 1900
LEMON HEIGHTS
HIDEAWAY
See this secluded 4
bd rm. v i e w hom e .
Situated on ·'~ ac re , Mat ure tr ees and
landseap1ng. Lovely
pri va t e pool. many
struhed glass windows
and uniq ue touehes
throughout. $305.000
Owner will carry Isl TD
12';.
$.S,OOOdown. 2 Bdrm t·on
I g~ian~:n!fth w!~retea:i:;~ R~r~:~u~?:!!~n g '+523 C.u•PU5DldllVINE\
terms and paym ents. brook by pnvate brick
Gross income S5400 entry All main living ---------•
L Asking $76 .900. Ca ll areas flow lhru French
540,1151 for more de doors toward courtyard
lails. and spa. 4 hll'ge bdrms
and famil y roo m .
fabulous country side
oc.EAM FllOMT
IEAUTY 38R. 2BA. Bachelor·
$500,000.
0 view rrom master suite.
Open today 1 to 5. · 32 !~~~~~~~~~! Drake Bay 673·8550
T ~:~;~t·::me. !Df~~W
spacious family rm. pro· 1•-"----------
ressionall y d eeor at ed 1---~~~~--·11.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
and landscaped. Gate 8 UNITS MEW UStlNCi guarded community
Private tennis. pool and ~2 35,500 DUPLEX
breathtaking ocean. Good rental ac::eJ. Close a.OSETOIEACH
harbor. mountains and 10 lhe universi{y. Call 3 Bed. 2 baths euh unit.
ci t y li ghts v iew s . rorinfo. Furnished Stone F /P c $600.000. Call today 645•9161 lowe r Goo d s um ·
979 537 mer •winter renta l. Ask· L A~LSTATE ~~~ S27SOOO S4B071S : OPEN HOUSE
REAL TY associated "" REALTORS
BEACH HOME
S 3PATIOS!
Upgraded beach homt.'
in Newport Shores Walk
S to ocean or priva t e
beach. New carpctin.:
and rresh pain t luo '
Custom decoration:. J
patios. Secluded sun
/.
•
Oce•froftt 0 .. IH
3 ~ 2 Bd rms. completely
funu.shed Huill in~. -I +
car i,:aral(~ Offor down
pa)'menl and tak t' O\ t•r
$426.000 loan al only
123•', for 30years.
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
81H)~ £115 ll f Ill TO~S
J ] "'1f 8olh< •) f, I f, b
DUPLEX
$109,950
Costa Mesa's finest
Clean & neat. Good in
come. Call for more de
tails. 546·2313 I deck! 2 Bdrms. and Just
$127,250! Hurry~ 752 1700
F lreA~'Wei l ,. DUPLEX . . SI 10.000 ASSUME91/J°loLM
UMITS,UMITS Pnrne CostaMesaun1ti.I ASSUME LARGE 91 ,•; Clean r e furbi s h e d . LOAN AND OWNER
I Eight four-plexes. Buy F'inuncmg! Hurry Call WILL CARRY 2ND. On-
1 onBde or buy them ahll. A111 for details! 6-16·7171 ly $87.500 for tbis de ·
2 rm units wit on v J I lightlul 3 Bdrm condo. ~~.~.~c).~~rcd a·'iMfA~~ ~~g~~~ pool. Call
E ·~ -VIEW I ALLSTATE. D ----90010 LOAM REALTORS
6
~1 1 .. ~ BUY MOW!
hr ... :1~~;i VA • lmmaculale detached 2
" , ~~ . •r Bdrm. 2 bath home. Big
Sterttng
a New
Bulineas
SIU ...... fut wttll DaUJ PUatW .. Adl .
ramily room with brick'
fireplace. manic ured
landscaping. Redwood
patio cover. Many ex-
tras. 1104.900. VA terms.
546-2313
I
C4 DM.V PIL01
M11111hr .. .......................
I 11util lllJ·•-in1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
llALTOIS
"'"'"'
Mn uc:• ~ 1 •••=i...,. '-,.. .... ._ ._. .._ _. .._. ....................
cou °' .. WPOIT 'llALToas
1111 a c.... "-'·· c.,_ .. w.
671-1111
,
CCMONA OIL MAI com•
Older duplex on a central comer. near
shops. b each and oasis. The one bedroom units a r e c ute! patios,
gardens. etc .. but the real value Is in
the lot: 30 x 118 . R-2 that is very buildable. . . and at $189,000. very reasonable:
U,._,l()UI: ti()MI:'
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 EHt CoHt H19i.w.,., Coron• .S.I Mu
WE HAVE320FTHE BEST qSTINGS IN TOWJ'.{
V. I.SI I· 'i '\ J TAYLOR CO.
1\1 \I 1·1>1-:s ... , 1~1 -11;
llMIT1fUL DOYR SHCMIS
MIAT YflW-S4flMO
0--Wll c...., $370.000 T.D.
I Jl/,-ro Wuest. Ne &... ....
On Prestigious Galaxy Drive. You ·will
be impressed with this lovely 4-bedrm
home with a very fabulous room for
entertaining a crowd or people. A
great open floor plan with family rm
and formal dining plus a beautiful
Large pool & spa on the view side.
WISUY M. TAYLOI CO., llALTOIS
.Ziii 5-JH .. lt ........
MIW..,.'POlr--T CINTB, M.I. 644.4t I 0
mE
IBDllB BLlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEA RS OF SERVICE
NIME IA YNONT
Fo rty r l)()t F'ronta~e. Pl ER & DOCK In
Exclusive Se<.'urity Guurdcd 81\ YSllORES
Community. Lovely Two Room Master Suite
With Fireplace. Plus Four Bedrooms &
B~nus Room & Den. Step·down Livln~ Room
With Ten-Foot Ceilings. Spacious 91ninJ(
Area With Wet Bar. Truly Gorg~\V1ew 01
Islands & Channels. And An ~xtra Large
Front Patio & Deck Owner Wants This
Home Sold Immediately.
® ·--·-········
759-9100 ,
#2 Covpos ........
MewportC.....
macnab I irvlne
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRYINE COMPANY
WOODlllD'iE ELM MODEL!
..Be.auU!ully-upgraded -3BR-condo-
near all shopping. pools. lake and
tennis. Large family kitchen and
lovely patio. Located on a quiet
street. $112.500. Alan Beel 551-8700
(W -46 )
711-1414 Ht.a100
W~ic:JQe Cenlat
644-6200
' Horbo< V•w Cent8f
1111< a NNrt HARO ro SPELL
C S A 0 N U A T C V R H I A E M R E 0
S A Q E 0 H T T A N P T E C U 0 I C Q
• _ ........ -..-----. ·-··-~ .. 1
M111H .... S. tf•t1U.fw ht11• ..._..,_.S. Ha•HtNS. ........... I* OlllrlM ... • ~ ........ ~ ..... iiii c;,,·;:;;;;,;;;· .. iiu .............. iii4 ......... ~ .... iou .::Ci···;;; ..... ii76 ............. ; ......... , .__ ... ••-• .. ••••••• -.. ••••••••••••• -••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••• • •••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• =t:-I t M OWNtR DESPERATE LOOK WHAT ...................... .,
£,aide 3 Br 2 Ba. 1r1 IAll PfMO LJNGO'S OOT Saft Jua capo .••. a
llYIMI TlllACI
OML Y 7-r. DOWN
Fam Rm w /frplc. Low Owner will a11lat wlth IN SAN CLEM ENT E Br. 2 If. 14IO 141. ft. I
..._ non·qua1Jfyln1 ••· \he financlna on thl1 5 0 1 I Id 1 yn. okt. Alt 14141112. ......... Bdrm 3 balh home lls up u bu n1 1it e ----._::;;.-~---
aumable loan. OWC features include : a near beach. Term1. for Salt By .Owner :::~o. By Owner. formal dining room. m .500 lOdGfl Mobile Home.
Beaut. 3br, or 2 + den, lie comer lot ,
new paint in & out, new cpta, pool,
apa, redwood deckina. lmmed.
occupancy! owe financln• 1282.000·
l~asehold. 640-5681. 1536 Serenade
Terrace.
---------1 family room, RV park-Quiet Adult Parts •••r inc. new paint. Aakina Immaculate hom~ in Back Bay. Sl5.000.
SZ2t,OOO. for an appoint· Colony Cove wllh 2 133·0009 after 4pm.
mentto1ee,call540·1151 bedrooms, 2 bath·. and MUO'JtbeforeSpm.
3br. 2bll. den/fam rm Uv
nn w/frplc. new crpt.
U8&&11l loan $124,900 PP.
f7t.1791
MESA VERDE: Spanish : -HERITAGE
REALTORS
use of clubhouse and
pools, $125,000. C1 u•rcW
.... ••• rty 1600
CUITOM LOT delJCht! 3 Bdrm that's Con le mp o r a r y 3
beautifully decorated.~~!!!!!~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! bedroom home w il h
Just painted inside and minutes to beautiful "T "
•••••••••••••••••••••••
On l' flrrr + l o t
"1 archllectural plans
for 2800 .. Ml n hom\'
Rollin11 h\1111 & horse
61rra 1173.000
out.Shows owners pride. ~ ¥•Hiii Street Beach. Semi· 1002 Must see! $125.SOO, Ocean vu. a Bdrm 2"" secluded this 'cozy
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TARBELL, BKR. Call Ba, 3 car ga r age. charmer has beamed
.... , .. IOOJ 81 I ..
..................
5,UO Sq. lrt. Com·
mettlaJ Bktt. l Blk to
Pacific Ocean. Sell
N50.000. Leaae 12.140.
Month.
w..,M.T.,....Co.
4 • 2'/a IA I•-------· ~1720 132S.OOO: ceilings and attractive
2 story home, shake ~-~· . O...PoMt 10.2' ~tevel>unn entry.SIS2.000
roof. fresh paint. patio. Bay... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ll Co •1-SOO Eas•·ide Cost or. Mariner's Point lot with • v•. · ... a Red Estate INFOllCLOSURE . · forever ocean and ca·
M1e:!'u-c .... llltr -... ,.,.nuCfwca--3 Bdrm, .2ba. si2o.ooo. 759·9221 nyon views . Good terms.
......... 644-4,10.
FOaSALI
· ~r -• • ~ --· · 331122 Man an a Dr.
S4l·?72' WESTCUFF l-:IM-"56 =~iiiiiiiiiiii~= S24S.OOO
Prime-ofc. bide. In
N<irth Santa Ana. Owner
will sell all or part of
blda. Existinc finance
$350,000 al l l.S%. 10,000
sq. ft. of 1 yr. old ofc. • bade. eau John. 9S3·0SSS
~~~~~~~~~ Attractive 3 bdrm home. HuallMJt• leoclt I 040 NEWPORT Mlt6HTS Cont e m po r a r y 3
2 baths. Neat family ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quaint 3 Bdrm 2 bath. bedroom. 3 bath home
room with fireplace. FtXB UPPBI remodeled horne. leatur· dripping with eleganc.'1'!
NEW EXCLUSIVE BAYFIONT
W1 '' M WAT9 YU II• -=ltt 'n• , ..... u.Pa' 1 l•HI••• 2~...,··..-r• .... , ...
" MC.tty .-;:;· .... .., ..... $425,000. 613-69 .
NEW EXCLUSIVE OCEANFRONT
l•cdtMlr 11ao•1ta• & ,..,.. ....
la/•••· Arcltlt•ct•nltr ••l•H
CWb 'I a f wood la ..... J Mel. + office ._ ..... z M4. ,..., .....
sts,tat ........ _...,., mae.a ...
c•ltlaeh. hcelleat fl•••cl•tl
$975,000. Ul-1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES.1~.
REAL ESTATE
!>lllP•. R•nt.-lt. Ptop.'"' M,11~'91'1TWnf
24.16 W Co.st Hwv 315 M•11n• Ave tWwpcm S...och . S..Jbo.> Island
'11·1400 _ 67Uf00-
tis Coldwell Banker
UI •atlY AIU
Financing. terms, condition and
location. BELIEVE this "model
home perfect" 2 bedroom Monaco
is the best buy in Harbor View
Homes at $218,500.
Ol'EH THE· DOOi
TO A CAIER
WITH LINGO IEAL ESTA Tl
......... 11 ............
•lt•I •d rew•rdl•-. of •II
Mnlce .. t klea. "C9t ,. .. .. ,_ .......... ...., .. .... . .-..... ,..... .... .....
••rled ~ocll9ro•••• •••
llfHtylH. It ollows JM to
.... ..,.... .... .. 1... fl...cl ..
............ -.ffh•
field ....... •tas J "'-..0
la•rd work or• reworded. Or-. Ca•tr I• rec• .. _.
........ c ......... ...
-.de .... ,.... ...... _...
Mew,.. c ...... ,.....[ « ..... , ......... ..
la•tl•e•• 'rowtlt ••d •nhp nt H ,_.,.. illtllldw4
telWstypeof~ .... ... ...... ,.. ............. ...
coHIW • ••n•r wl.. ...
C1 .. mll1 .............. ....
tlae aHd• of tltl• dy•••lc _. ........ o II.AL ISTA11.
Tia• Newport IHclt Office
lee ................. ..
Mew,.t c.... It 1 ...... ..
........... We MrTe .._,,,,.... -.. _.,, ... , .... ... c ....... ,.. ........... .
worWI.: -
If, .. _..... ... W11•1fed ••
c..tf J1 tW Wanlew, c• Moel
Joa.1-. t 1• agu, ill 644-7020. Y•c•, ....... tewelt.
•
• MEWPOIT Lingo 1EAcH
"'"'"''•" 644-7020
'::~::' s~~41~-~r,~s·
-----f41tt4 ~ CLAY I, '°'4AM
• lec,.,onoe ltn•ts of "'-
four t<fOMblt>d '"°'d' be< low 10 lor111 lour ""'P'-wordt
.... .....
Uke-new carpet. Large G d · bb h ..1 ing sepa r ate family and perfect for enler· lot 8Sxll3. Sparkling 00 neia or oo.,.. 2 r· 1 t~•ft·1ngonagrand scale. pool . fenced for needa paint & TLC. 4 room. 1rep ares , ..... children's safety. Quick bdrm, 1~ ba. $105.000. hardwood floors. near Totally refined in every pouesaloo 1230 000 owe.small 2nd. new root. copper plumb· detail. this residence
'll•1~00· ' · .... I . Broker,675·0185 ing. RV access. 20"' features beveled glass.
• " down. owner will carry French doors. coffered ~!!!~!!!!!~!!!~~~1·--~~~~--·I all the financing al ceiling and dramatic de· SHAIP 13Wl, anlerest. Asking sign throughout. $365.000
HAllC>a ISLAND CAL C&.AS SIC 1225.ooo. Call 540· 1151
Fabulous bayfront loca-4 Bdrm. Lg assumable Mariner's Point 5
lion with private pier & loan. Good buy! Century bedroom. 4112 bath ha -
float. Excellent tow in -21 Lockhal't Reaily . c 1 e nd a . tot a 11 y
t ere st f i n a n ci n g -l~962~-81M~7~!!!!!~~~-·~~~~~~~~--landscaped with an an ll.780,000. r: ------tred1ble list or amenities
Q.OSETO llACH H4RIOI VIEW mcludinie : 2 wet ban. 3
17 I 4t 673°4400 4 Bdrm. 2 Bath 4 Hdrm, bonui. family fireplaces. two spas and
111 JI U .. HH Priced to sell at room & l>f1nus rm Love great views. $595,000
HARBOR SllO.SOO. ly hmn1: in Kupt!rb cond1
A Division or
Harbor lnvestmt!nt <.:o
OWLDIS
Selen Wll FIHace
2'13bdrm $255,900!
21r3bdrm 1265.000!
3br 2ba ea unit 1289 .900 ! ..... a.,rrop.
lffhn
•675-7060•
FOURPLEX
Century 2l Lockhart lion. A11k1011 '29'J.000 for
962.8847 (IWl'k ult•
104 • •••••••••••••••••••••
**UNIQUE
CALIF. HOMES
Cuatom1ied. Pl.Mn lOG in
the Callf. Home11 ar<'u of
Irvine ... ·ealurt-11 4
Bdrm. indoor g11r1lcn,
loads or ceramu·· tile.
single story. 2000 sq rt
with an assumable loan.
Ask. $146 500 e-H ,'\l\Jf'H
I. f ,\I f Y
r I~) 1 2000
C /21 N•wport c ......
640-5357
1•vr l'AllTY Non reall11r
WI" 111• 11 (II I> Ur I' h ii !t C
lllufr, <'11n1lo. :rnr. 2Bu
11 1nl(lf' s t nr y c 71 it I
340 7724 t:vcs Mr .\
Wnj(hl
ASSUMI LG LOAM I
I bdrm condo Close to
H oag H o s pital
Completely furnished
Pool & s pa. security.
Move in now berore
escrow close1;. 1125.000.
C/21 Mewport Cent~r
640-5357 .
Unique custom b uilt
oceanfront res idence
with pnvate steps to the
bear h. Whitewater an<S
O<'t'an views highlight
almost e ... ery room. Thi1o
3 bedroom home with a
spacious Cloorplan can
Ill: owner financed with
"ood down. S775.000.
498-4950
btQOO ..... c.e1tr.o I 078
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
IYOWNER
Breathtaking
tac-. Pr•••rtr 2000 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
IUMITS
Westside Costa Mesa.
good condition, income
$40,800 yr . P r i ce
$445,000. On payment
Sl.30.000 OWC balance.
at 11r1..
/('-PE:HIGE: · HOME:~
Real Estate Invest·
men ts
3333W. Coast Hwy. NB
645-6'4'
OWJMf' Mnt s.a
6 Bdrm. 3 bath giant
home. Assume l a t
$12S.000 at ll7r an d
SZS.000 2nd at 14'4 . Due
1995. Projected mcome
for 1 year $19.200. ls ful·
ly occupied. R.H.R. Agt.
ask for Beau, 673-7300.
Al'PLE VALLEY
Near new 4· Pl ex. 2
bdrm. 2 bath each unit
with fireplace. enclosed
patio. garage. S\65,000.
Bill Grundy, Rltr .
675-6161. Near So. Coast plaza. 3
year old rourplex with
community pool. and OIAMCiETREE panoramic ocean view l•--------ol Dana Harbor Spec· recreation room . located COMDO
in c ul-d e -sac style 1 Bdrm+lofL Sharp end
courtyard atmosphere. unit. $83,950.
' One unit 3 Bdrm with 249Tangelo Terr.
sundeck.3unils2 Bdrm. C/21 Ne portCettt Great assumable loan at w tt under 1 0 '1l . p r i c e ___ 6_4_0-_5_3_5_7 __ _
$242,500. 644·7020
UMVBSfTY PARK
Excel end unit. Cardiff Ll·ngo w/lo<t. Oversz lot. close
to pool on greenbelt.
•o1&...,. ,. This charmer has x lnl
assum . ri n ancing .
BE CREATIVE
Near new 4 Bdrm 2 ba
Live close to Fashion
Island. 2 Coutr> Clubs &
Gourmet Restaura nts.
Owners anx1ou1t ACT
NOW'
CALL
•
RED CARPET
754-1202
tacular customized 3000
sq ft 5 Bdrm +retreat
$90.000 1n upgrades As
sumable 1011-.11, f1nanc·
ing $310,000 3380 I
Aven1da Caltta. SJC
i l4·496·5275 Open House
l ·:>Sunday
5-toAfto 1080 •••••••••••••••••••••••
**AFFORDABLE
4-ft.D MESA VHDE
Pnde or Ownership. new
roof. drapes, c arpets
within 2 years. Rents
below market. Lots of
upside potential Priced
right No vacancies in
last year. Call for de·
tails 752-1920
WATBNOMT
LIASEOf"TION
This 3 Br 2'h Ba
townhome has a patio
and deck right on the
bay with a slip for 35'
boat. orrered fully
furnished Cor on ly
$320,000. this home has
been used only as a part
time second home.
Perfect starter home or!~~~~~~~~~ bach pad. $158.900. - -
IAYFtlOMT
TAKE OVER
10'; FHA loan with
$61.000 balance payable
J 9UAIL
Pl.A.CE
NOPllTIES"'
10,.. Tit 1:10 P.M.I
IA&.IOA
WATBNONT
VILLAGE P ARIC
Lovely 3 Bdrm 2 ba. s ngl
family hme with very
pvt yard. Xlnl loc. close
to schools. shops & fw ys.
$164,500.
'*Cote Realty
& Investment
640-5777
The charm and Island•---------
lifestyle or Ba I boa 3 bd, l 'n ba. Twnhme.
Island are yours with 1220 sq. ft. Fabulous
this 5 Bdrm home with location. Tennis crts.
private pier and slip for pool, parks. schools. lat·
35' boat. Uce covered patio. lush
D.M . MARSHALL plaots , great buy ..
RLTR $110.000. Call 838-8181 . 844·9"0
RANCHO SAN
C... .. M• 1022 JOAQUIN. green belt
••••••••••••••••••••••• location, vjew. 2 Br. den.
MUST Sil.LI only $53.500 lo take over
Sp a c i o u s d up I e" , loans. ,
fireplaces, aarage. 1700
sq. ft. each unit. Gross
$1650/mo. 29% down. owe balance. $295,000.
Broker, 675-0185
Redhill ~Realfy
552 -7500
$475,000
10', dwn . owner will
earn-. Cute 2 br. 2 ba
home w boat dor k Rm
to expand Princ ipals
only Ask for Barn at
Trad1l1onal Re ally
631-7370
al S496 PITI Clean 3 ---------Bdrm "·1th deep lot Ask
mg $82.000 Seller w1111---------carry SSOOO 2nd T.D
LidolsJe
lmme d occupaney
w 'ti l' 25 UNITS CONDO
APNOVID
Owner moving out of
state. Approval for 36
Condos. Tentative lract
map. Priced at 10.6 X
gro6s. Owner will carry
contract al 12•·;. A Quail
Place exclusive. 752· 1920 Move in cond -' br & den. I BR Condo. by owner
xlnt floor plan. huge 11', assum. S75.000. r-or.
m a s l e r s u 1 t t> Civic Ctr Joe 833·3231
wtfireplace. Pnl'C re· or543-21672 J '-'UAIL dured to S415 000 Bkr ---- -T ~!1~ . !!':~ ............ !!!.~ PLACE
HI RISE CONDO A TBtRIFIC IUY NOPllTllS'"
Lovely l Bdrm. View or Exceptional value in 10,.. fl l:JO ,_...,,
Bay & Ocean. Owner this charming 3 Bdrm ~!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!~~ will fmance. S269.000 home. on R-3 lol. Jn ~
Rita Writ er . Agl prime location. n ear --~------~7~-_ s<'hools and t e nnis
Beautifully upgraded
Westcliff 3 Br 2 Ba. pool.
$225,000 . Sl iO ,OOC
aasumable financing.
No agents pl e a s e .
642·7071
DOVBSHORES
ENJOYTIIE F INEST in
courts. Perfect star ter
home or 10\'estment pro·
perty. S79.9SO.
don osen
r1•,l} t flT'"'
731-3111 497-4848
XlMT 16UMIT .,.,.... ....
Complex
with G .0 . I. al over
155.000 per year. Rent to
be raised. Large as-
sumable at l 1'12 ' ~ and
OWC balance w iS160.000
down. Try a w r ap
around or??
A Cote Exclusive.
. OWHa ANXIOUS
Larae duplex + guest .
4Br, 3Ba. 3 car gar .
$330,000. 10% down.
OWC. Prine. only.
6t2-12'72 .
IRVIME IARGAIM
Upgraded condo. Attrac·
live assumable financ·
ing. 187 .000.
RCTctylorCo
'·"1( \ '" >l)()
a custom home; in loca Ollwl ... ltt•
t1on . i1_1 financin g ••••••••••••••••••••••• *Cote Bealiy owner will urry lst T-1).. tta•la th•t --at 13 5r;. for quahried For S. 11 OO & Investment
buyer. Spacious 4 Bdrm ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-5777 and maids room. Move
<'!:\~ nght m ! $389.500 Call
~ • _ Unda Oeth. **NEW,NEW! IARRETTllEALTY
2 BR +FAM RM
800 sq rt. real frplc, MoWleHotM
deck . adll pk. N.B. Pn
Owner $21.000. 645-5842 2100 ---------...................... . 1~==7=•=1="='====-1 Take advantage of this 642-5200 ,. seller's dilemma ! This1~~!!!~~!!!~~~·--------IFor Sale By Owner FamlYB VllW new Woodbridge at.1: S.... CUSTOM 10x50f't Mobile Hom e. ~YSZft,000. tached home will be re-S.C .... flle 1076 MOllLEHOMI Quiet AduJt Park n ear
CdM executive home adyinmid-Jan.Asking ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br. family rm &i sun Back Bay . Sl5 ,000.
w/good view. Courtyd $115.000 DELUXE CONDO. BY rm.friendly5starpark. 833-0009 a fte r 4pm . entry. formal dining rm Exclusively Ours OWNER. 120 degree Wtshop. hobby rm. pool 642·5074berore3pm.
Ii bit family rm, new lg] • ocean view . 3bdrm. &rspa. Beautiful setting.
carpeting Ii plank floor· \\bOObrldge 2"'2ba. assume 9' .. ; MustselJ. 759·1816 OltofSt•
ing. Pvt bch. Fee land. Re•htj loan, Sl89.000. 495·3334. ~~~~~~~~I Pr1p1siy 2600 Showa like a model. • I-•••••••••••••••••••••••
758-1616. 551-3000 Ml..,..tleeclt 106' INdl IOH 40AscenkOre1onCoast. e~~~!!!!!~~~~ 4t2t88M'811C'8 Pkwy,Jr"llN' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Electricity. fenced. OUl· ~~~ slandln,g vi~w. accessi .. W... I024 · ble.owner492·2499 ••••••••••••••••••••••• leach 1041 n .
NEW CONDOS ··:;;;;;;·~·~-;;···· On I~• V-'a'I, 1135, 000 ~~ ............... .
R Y P N E X A U 0 G E J N W N A C E 0
U A N I l A £ l R H G E R 0 E U E J S
PC G H CHEY A H·R R 8 V RI R KE
T H 0 U A N A V G R Y N A E W S R M 0
T T l M S C I E U T I M H V L D C D T
RI) T D ~ A Hie S E H C E R A C J E W
I IL ~ ~ ~ ~I c A k E N " 0 c E T " E s , , Ill Al 0 ,H. El v I I A l M I Y 0 6 S 0 t Y A H D U V E 1 8
S R E A L G E H T W N E M R E 0 0 S T
IASTSfDI C.M.
2512Santa Ana Ave.
2 BB, 2'r\ ba, contemp.
cimltn. SUl,000.
646-1096 64M0tl
GUIS~:JAGE Live the carefree life among ~.'!'!'~••••••
Outraieous 2bdrm. Iba wonderful neighbors'. Gracious 2 ••••.. llO!
OWMn unit. Skylights. bdrm. 2 bath + office-at-home makes •••••••••••••••••••••••
EQRURVCEAGM6ElUAXEI I SHEOW I USMANG K bENETOYBMlCI J u " v E H E T l T z E p H s 0 D T T 0 . I I I' I . t
VA k S.E I N E I U E Q 0 PRC UM 0 I SYYHl 11 •••ucttoi•. Hlddln WOl9t................... ..... I I I' I a. , .. 1,:. ~ .~-= : .... : . "'"'· •· ._ « dlllO,.....,· ''"' • 111111 '-h Ill.' .... _..._ ----------· ~ up on Monday motnlno "•-;,
Allll lllyN 0•• -J --
antiqiae doors/windows. h h 1 h f E. Ora new tbr. 2b11. beamed ceilings . frplc. t is mobile ome arger t an many o modem bWlt·in•. nr ss
new kitchen /bath. our Corona del Mar homes. Adults NptFwy.S.t7a·Ml4.
$295,000·S40.ooo down . park. Huge bayside patio. ? storage
370 Flora. By owner. 2 t 1 h p t .... l.a.d )106 Dya: 933·35t4, eves: rooms. carpor S. p US \'Br. e s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •t...a. comer fireplace. up-to.date kit~hen • 5 er • Ba 1'om•. • car just a few steps from the bayside pool partc1na. avail. 111 rn ... ~ .... 106' •••• • ••••••••••••••••• OQV9SHOIU
& clubhouse. 6tu111. Slt25 pr mo +
utU. Al\. '7MOC ,,. ... " 1111111 .. I G L E " u p I··,. ___ ,~ "'• ........... ,. -~ c:.... ~ ~ ~ I I' I I' I ~II\~"~· ~ it-O~---t"io.ttllllllllll----~ J-::::::· =·"'"'-=:::· =·=·~:.-~i--.---_.,
r ..... : FOfllfl ""-• "'i'~s'O::'l$lfTlflS IN r r r j* r t I
Ill lcmt Bay view.
· m rm 2-, a Br. 3 Ba. 133
tlD. $115,000. Fu . ...............
1llld -..& JOU wnt la aMlifled Ma. ,_, ••· D111J Nat Clwlftede. -all D Sloe HM•.
' •
I ~~~~N~ umu I I I I I I I
SCIA.M-UTS A•wen 11 C'-slfh ••IMO
H1 .. aometbiDI JOU .._ to MU? Clul.tned ... It •ell 141 • .,..,
··---· ... ·-~···· ..... """. . ....... -.
___ ,,__,. ---------... . . ~ . .. -,,, ..-..,. .. ---···--·-·-·· ...... -....... -.-.. -.. ....
...... ,. I a .. • ... "... ..... •••Ultfwtt 1'00 ......... u..tw.. ........ h""""-., ........ """"-r...._, O.C.mbtr30, 1980 IW. ........ W ... iiM .................. ;;~·~ ~~;;:·~··:;;·; ...... c;;.;M;: ....... ji.i4 t;;;.;;_;·i:;;·;;· ;t;;;;;t~0ji6;· ...... .. .. -.-4":":3-:oo:-rt.:-.~ .. :--L-...... -....... --.-.-.-, ... -.-.-,-.=CWL:::;:1:-:.:.Y..::P1LOT:.: ... ~:...,-,.:1ri:Sts ~ II.~ ..... ••••••••• ••••••••••!•••••••••••• t4ll tnu ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••~ • U l Ul4 28 t CU 0.Uemao to share horne Cott• MHa t 7ttl St OI .. 1 ...,._ M ooclbrhit• C rnktlde r, Pl10l.1eb1fd1pet OK. 3Br, 28a. nr be.ch, bltoa. ffbveo 2 Br I Ba, wilh bachelor. Call evc.s 3 Room 1 't 545 n 1 TIWI -•I • WU..., ..... 4br, Jba, Qwttt lillhl' 1 1 h 1S mo .• ~ara1e . cpU/drp1, ~cl 11ra1e patio, 1ara1t. nu 5"l'19S . w e, sq. ·· N y lfllt, ,.oo Aull un rrplc . 1r btllllnd ,' 1 , i. r 'd ~ 641 0163 AM 6;j1 667i $510.$36.(>821 crpts/drapu. o lder • • plrnodm\ bu.ildln1. A/C, OW OU
rur•la•e4 SUH mo perk1pool, d•4'urtt~d nlll<u 11 r . ~ti !bfd wknda. adu.lu, no pets. 1450 yr · M. mid 20'1, CdM condo, entyolp~rtdng. Call '-••Wt•"'"' Uh mod•I 11ardr no M•r•ttr 11p11r uua.. rm Enjoy the ocean, l " ,., u ..... ..,.., fullv furn "'""ep• 8r Relllonom1cs 675·6700 Can ' 6 I ba No t'111ldrrn or ._ ... 0 ....,, 41·-"""" , • ........ • • -tY I• pol• 100 m1> 2037 -cc • .-cy '""r~poohl • .,lidulls. no 2 BR 1u. Ba '-h Sl70 + "'utll._760-0082 5MAU. O"ICI Cannu)' 1ll•1• 2 l . a Br 1oa .. pcx1J,l1unary ~ . .;w;vl2\ el. · ~ .'1own ouse COASTHU~HWA'f Mrm. oe• fun "' t!nlc Oran••'"'"' ~Ur urw l.~ne 11 11• ~11i.t rm , ionall chlld OK -;----style. Adulta. no pets. Offlu 1t..e• 4400 Se II ~ M••· TV i vn c ondo M • t t l 1 l' M M$0&t& TSt.Mimt 64.Z·lf03. Quiet 2 Br. 11;\ Ba. Crpls, ..,.,5 541•3882 ..... •••••••••••••••••• 340 sq (t. $275 t m o .
._ ..... ,....1.., 17&41 w t t r cu nu "o o I bl\ns. ADULTS over 30. • 250-500 sq n arnd flr Avail. J 4n. 15, ~vl ·
JH\&UI \eon ••. "'" ..... ,......_ 3707 tlA.S 1 Br apt very safe. Nopeta. $330. 646·9243 s.teAM 1110 ut.ila pd. Fro~ s200, 119 restroom. con ven•.e nt More W•s ..... Mwi 41&11• only . no pct• ..................... ,.. usmoker, prev rel r eq. ---••••••••••••••••••••••• W J9t.h St c M Tom Newport Beach location .
..... ....... ... It&~ HA JI H 0 NT AG 1'. • ~ W. 17\h Sl s.8·0358 N~ar 5 Point Shopping Near S.C. Plata, lbdrm 957.1900.' . . ••lrotcOfN Corp •11·1411 Beach. Ptt•r, 1 ltr ••~. Center 2&3 Bdrm. Apts. coodo, $425 Incl ulil" a ll ----645·4400
••••••••-• •Ora11M«1rt-f :: Ur I Ua \duh Wntr, 303 E 2br garden apt. pv\ patio. $400-$450, Kids OK, no amea1ties, tennis, jac, 'THE" --------
1 .. k1:lrunl \ u vool. ~e•11l~ 1·871 2866 garugt>, sml l'hald ok. no petS. 964·2566 or 973-2971 pool. Avail Jan. 1. Call EXECUTIVE SUITE ._...1 lltwtal 4450
"Ith Dall) Piiot PE~.S\' PI Nl"tlF.R
.\Dl\ Siil! only~.
llAVAONT Lido Ill•
.... , llJOO n10 S _.,, _ .._ ITJl51111
~a\11~.r1Hp1.1r1 f )il) 1 6r Carp~t.t. dr"'p"'". l)et.$1385 !546 9950 Agt . ..no tee. S40·8S19 o r after 6 . Fullservkeo(flces In ••••••••••••••••••••••• l«>'o.ua .. "" ---M7·S892 N C For store & orrice space -a.tu~.i rt!lrltit• Uuld pd' Newer J Br with garal(e. Large 2 Br Built ins, · ewJ>Ort e nter al reasonable rates. 3 I 1111':-. lor 2 du' & onl~ Iii u rl,1). J.lc· a
l11H.' W ..... ¥11.6r•H lt!Ui 1I• for"' 1375 saM.Adults.no pels . fl.replace. enclsd patio, 5-MthCIClt llll --~547o_ 500to2700SqFt.
• ........ .., ... _. 2 KR cObdo. s~25 ctHi &lS 09M 1>45 SS77 garage. $425 mo: Gary ....................... PLAIA MESA VERDE DR
••••••••••••••••••••••• Aviil now Ci.H Crllli ,. __ ......_, M-372 ' Bosler 536·2498 Bach. with patio. Utlls EXECUTIVE SUITES PLAZA C:.w .. M• lJJJ 11311.311 _ _... -SJ95 2 lir ''• llu Adults ---paid. $:175. Call afl SPM .. There d ff ··· ~Mesa VerdeE.C.M •••••••••uu••••...... •••••••••••••••••••••• ooJy (.;at OK All bi.ult l.ARCE2bdrl Ba ffrbch , 960-2340 as a 1 er ence. 54 5.4123 For IMic' Spnla11• Hiil ~~h\:lor. U\cludc.11 u111 111S &lcony ' ycJ, ut1l pd. s.~. T-7141752•0234 . ----
4bdrm ex cullo hum~ .... 5 mo G40 9900 At>k TSI. Mgmt 642 1603 536·2216 taffa 3190 Newport Modern store or _ for fta.>,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Michelson Or. 11212 off' .
Ail n·rl l"'<' onl' or
llllll \' It ''Ill'-\ lllUl'd u 11 111 -.; I no F. a d1
jtlrlitlvnul hill' 1s
0111~ r.oc· loi th1• l\\O
,1 :1 ,. ' ~or r ' . 110
<•11r11rt1 1·11•1al ,11l 't
.1111111 t'<I Ch:ir1;:l'
\'11w 1'1•1111\ P1111 llt'r
\ ti 111 11' t' \ o 11 r
l\.111k 1\m1•r1C·anl
\'1-.:1 or :\t:t'<ll'l'l'il l'fl
,_ .,,.. OC'~•n Vl f'W Rfo;AL'f'Ol<S ''b ... I I & 2bd I """l B'"'1ness Cntr 11213 ice Nr. post office lUOO mo TiiO 14 Colta M4tta 17 24 " r. tua nl'W cpt, crapes, rms, collage sty e 2 Br. 1 •, Ba. Frplc. new "" ..., 5 4 8 s / r J e r r Y
2Hr . Ilia l'onllu, "" )'cl . paint. patio, lndry S44!5 1i v 1 n g . l' h i I d o k crpls, paint , enclsd 0 _.. L 2131477_7001 c..t.Mete 3224 Woutlbridgt." $550 mo •••••••••••••••••••••• 8.51 ltlSO S335-S35Q 1mo. patio, pool, 2 car ports. _,or, awyer, •••11•••••••••••••••••• Wayllti .&W 4Ttl9.-t!175935 SUSCASITAS 847·3020 S475 mo.495·3097. Merch..tChief! C OM M ER c 1 A I. 5 l-'uni 1 br apt $3:15 & up. 3 Rr 3ba. patio. i.:ar $550 ----Elegant bldg .. in he11rt STORl-:5, Shop~. Total
COl&....,IPAaK Condo2 lir 2 911 wet bur. £11cl gar Adults. no 1\\1111 aµprox Jun 15. 2 Br m 4-Plex $400 Nr 5 ~nhhni1h.d or Hun t ingt o n Uc h . 1400 ft "" & A POOL HOME. 4 BK . attcbd ~ar t.easc: SliOU pets 21111 Newport Ul wkml cv760·1418 Pts. New crpt, e nclsd or~ 3900 w·/s pacio us offices sq at...,• up. ny
ramaly o ea&bborh uud ~6'724or 631 6:JOOA1>k !'>484!161H11wn11&5PM gar lndry hook·Up. No ••••··················· skylights. WC'lb!lr. COO· siie. E S ide C.M Fur more• rnlorm;il1on
dnd lo 11lal'I' your ad rail ms. l.11. last + secun for Chuck ....... !..... .. h )7 .. 0 • * • ~lS 963-6551 r......:-d v·11 fen~nce rm. 85• per ::.Q 548 ~249·
t,y. l>a vld. aat. 6'&6·3255 ~ • ..,.. CK , Vicki Sandocal ------'1C«Wftl I age ft. Pl us. super 2.000 Commercial 642 5678 •~~~~~~~~~ LCllJllNt .. ach 3248 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2191 l'omona ''t'" WALK TO BEACH l Br New 1&2 bdrm luxury sq.ft. medical bldg . well R...telli 4475 •
••••••••••••••••••••••• S375t up 1-2 bdrm. pool. C..:Osta Mel>a wath stove & refnge . adult apts in 14 plans appointed a t 75• pe r ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----------' ZBR DPLX. spac" Uttl
Pd. adulu 333 E 21st
MGR 3 l dft IPM
Lie rooms lor hvul~ l'n JSC'. adll, ~8992 1-'~oncJa . Youare lhl•wurnl·rnf S325 mo 536-2456 or from $415, 2 bdrm from sq ft for.dcta1J~c·<11l Store Spal'e for leas e . tc'l'tain111~. cslm gbr, :!'~ H B.~·28J4orS<I~ 3172 3 f~ticlc•ts 5J6.i979 $SOS + puols. l ennis , k EOcA.HPl-.T 1500 sq. fl & 1260 sq. fl . • • *
Nm1cyLaqe
33Cambria Dr
Coron<1 del Mar
You are the w111ner of
3 free tickets
ba, fr pk, open bt:iull. Mtwporthoch 3769 t$105Qva1Ul'l.lo WALK TO B.t::A <..:H walerlalls. ponds! Gas _ 893 1351 in Huntington IJe<i c:h
----otn vie w $825 m o ••••••••••••••••••••••• SportsVacation B· ·h All I .d· for tookang & healing 688 sq. ft well I01·att•d Flexible l erm:. 64S-lll03
E.SlDE28RS500 ~llW2Noal(enl::. -&RVShow .ac. u1.1 s pa1 .. paid. From San Diego North ''o<t Y.'fc.-'•o(fi"1' 213 _5967202. StO\e & refr1ge $300 rno. Frwy drive North on ... ~ "·• .,M ~
Children dogs OK. dbl Wlutewuler vlt•w, 3 Hr. 2 J nn3thruJan II 536-2456ur 536 W79. Beach to Mc Fadden Park next to }IJur door lndultrialRftttal 4500
II a r 2 39 5 0 ran t.: e Ba. lmmw. ve<'upauey \nahl'Jm C011\'ent1011 then West on Me Fadden Fully l'Q u1 PIH~(! w •l h •••••••••••••••••• ••• •• 499·~-$1200 mo Owner will (.'entcr i!HR POOi. Gi\Ri\G fo; lo Seawind V1 1lai.:e carpet. ii l'. (•abinct~ & 2265' Indus'! offu:<' 18 1(11
E'sade 1 Bdrm 1 ba cot lt·ase optaon. lic1il buy in 'l'h•keh mus t 01• l'>. s450 1714)1193·5198. Slor:.i~c Ht."a::.nnal>I ,\ Redondo Cr =O. II Ii . taae. $490 per mo Ca II town. Call Heuhy World . rhang1•li for l'l'Sl'r\l'd ti44 4!578 ti46 035·1 pr i e <' d C ;i I l Tum S650 lse 842·2834
sM·TI22 wkdys. ask for Frunk Saravia or scat::. al the Co"' cntmn lrvitw 38-44 I bdrm , security bldg, on II a r h u r /l a k t• r -
Art 0 I 95 1 0200 Cent er ahead ul linw beal·h Lon a Beach . p r 1 111 ·• Stor-4550
I Sl0.50 value>. to
Sports Vacatio"
& RV Show
Jan 3thruJun ll
Anaheim Convtntion
-----very. . •' .. II (''2 ""7". l'vl ''72 t1> .••••••,••••••••••••••••• • .. r o l'1>S 1un j u ~ -'7-Newport Heights 2 Rr l!:ves497-29S6 '"' "' .,., " " ' B ''1ew of Quee n Mary, 9!'>7 19UO ••••••••••••••••••••••• YEAR·ROUND FUN: claim vourt1t·kets 3 n. 2 ba c·ondo $650 mo. r f ·,, & . , , Approx 6.ooosq. fl Ol\'illl
C.:cnter
Tic·l<ets mus t he ex
rhangcd for rtser ved
seais al the <:011vent1on
<.:enter ahe;id of time,
Call 642·56ill. tXl 272 to
cljtm your lll·k l'ls
Duplex. Pr ivate yard L ..,. I 325 Soc•al Ac•1v111e• Or · i\0 e111 era., mir ro-wa' c , START '81 NO Pl!.'TS. $385. Gas & CllJIMCI ...,..,. 2 ' • • • • " 960•10,ci $400 1 n el u t 11 C <ll I 111 Fountain Valle~· near ••••••••••••••••••••••• rerl"r•F1ee Sunuay 4--" 644·""•2.5S6·•Cc"•. S.D. Frwv $IJ2i1 m u
walerpatd.673·2256 Lease. Mature adlt S•ur1Lh •BBO~·Pu1 l'INE llLllf-'F 1\PTS LGIJUIHINI~ )852 ~-.,...,.. ~ John5569jro,!'>41'.1·7533
•LUxury28r.2 Ba.fp,dbl comnv. 4! br. 2 ba. den toe~·Plusmucri more S&Jal'. 2 hr. 2 l,,a Adult •••••••••••••••••••••••Rooms 4000 RIGHT
gar., atrium, pat\o. ,595_ w/frplc Fml uan . $650. GREAT RECREATION· t•omµlex . pa11~1. \'1ew. t.:ondo 2 Br. 2 Ba. 00 golf •••••••••••••••••••••• Storage garage for rent.
842•5280 , an>, 720·9676 Te nnrs•Frep Lesrno\ rrpk , end. )lar .. ..::is l' 0 u r s e . 1 11 l' 1 d s Laguna Beach Motor Inn, with Unique Offices On Ba lboa Pen nexl In
(pro & pro shop1 •2 sto\'c, tl1sh.wash.~r. sµa.1 washer/dryer. frig-e. 985 No. Pa:e1f1c Coasl funzone 11U12ft x2011ft l
E/SIDE 2 Br.-l Ba .. ~ Mission Vieio 326 7 Health Clubs •Sauna. lndl) rrn ,. roni ~!'>00 I $625. 492.6700 H~y, Lagunu B.earh. ot lido Marina fl13·2943. 673·3930
• • •
pets. Avail. 2·1. 166 •••••••••••~••••••:••••• Hydrom<1ssage •Swim SPMC ti31 6!07 Daily, Weekly, Kitchen Yilla9e Retttab Wanted O
Broadway s45ot mo HOMESFORR~NT m1t1g •Or1V1119 Rangc H.wport .. ach 3869 available. Low winter ••••••••••••••••••!~ •• ~
673·5638 . . 3bdrm. $550. Fenced BEAUTIFUL APART· LO\ely 21>drm, 2ba studio ••••••••••••••••••••••• rates. 494.5294. H .. I. l'•
PUILIC SERVICE
AHHOUHCEMEHT
VoluntHrs
To Train · · yard & garage. Kids & MENTS Sing t'~ 1 & with frpk . µa 110. end
3 Bedroom 1 1 ~ Bath with pets welcome. 964 2566 2 8ea1uoms . r:ur gar. ~ewly del'or S550. PARK NEWPORT Pvt bedroom and bath.
pool $700 month. or973·2971 A~t .. no Cci:_ '"Shed & Ulllurnrsheo !19tl-1!1l8. COUNTRY CLUI Pool. jacuzzi. clubhouse.
Work i ng p erson .
$200/mo + sec d ep.
Av111I after Jan Jst. Hun
tangton Bth nr ocean
900-5844
• 963·8039 H.wport hach 3269 • Aaufl l v•og •No Pe1~ • Mo'oe1, C>oen aa11v 2 Br. 2 Ba, Single s tory , •••••••••••••••••••••• • 9 to 6
liouble car enclosed Harb?r Vaew Homes.
garage. Communit y 3bdrm. 2ba.: Cam rm.
pool. $525 mo. 631.6990. new crpt, paint, drapes.
AskforRuth ~900 , lse. 6 44 -5965, -644. 7fB7.
Oakwood
Garden Apartments
MESA VERDE 4 Br. 3~-----------· bath 2 sty, 3 car gar.
Newp0rt Beach/So.
1700 l6lh SI
o •P• oi torh
Grdnr. S990. 714 '770-1804 New 2 Bdrm mobile
home. Double wide S095
mo.
On WATER 2 Bdrm 2 ba
condo. in security blJg.
1714) 642-5113
Newport Beach/No.
880 lr•ine
•di •6111 1714) 845-1104
3 Br2 Ba townhome. 2 l'ar
enrl. garage, pool. kids
OK. close to OCC S52S.
&46-3062
Pool. Vu. S950 mo r----------' 3 Br 2 Ba E.side CM. S67S.
Garde n e r . Call Vi VU home for exec. 10
646-Till Harbor Vu. 3 Bdrm, 6
2 KOUSES: 3 & 4 Bdrm~ ba, Pool. $2500 mo.
2ba. Avail now. Both
newly refurbished. Agl.
754-1202
Across from Oce an. 2
Bdrm S650 mo. short
term or lease.
l.rg 4 Br. 2 Ba , $800 mo. &
2 Br. I Ba, S600 mo
S1eps 10 bea('h 673·9312
Spe<.'lacular ()('eanfront.
Avail. now. 2 4 Br Con
do. 67J.SU RF
&Toro Wattrlront Ho.,..s ~Ids
Inc:., R.aftors Unfurnilht'd
3232 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HOMES FOR RENT 63.1·1400 •••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bdrm. S57S. Fenced G.Mral 380
yard & garage. Kids & ~~~~~~~!"'~ ......................
pets welcome. 964·2566 LIDO ISLE Nr SC Plau Newly de-
or97J.2971. Agt .. no fee. 2Br. 2Ba. frple. elel· coruted 2 11r Condo. I '~
,._..Valley 3234 gar. d oor. S9 50 mo Ba Aflult.'i only Secur1
••••••••••••••••••••••• 885·0215. 675-6948, o r I)' .:ale Endl>d ~a r
3br. frpJj:, patio. s1soimo. 793-4955. Pool $475. 964-91 l!'>.
l8315 ttbswood. After 4 Newpor~ S hores Can;il a.oalsland 380
968-3636 front 4bdrm. 3ba. newly
HOMES FOR RENT del·-0rated. 2 blol'ks tc1
3 & 4 Bdrms. S550·S575 ocean. 962·6683.
··••·••·•··••••··•···· Yearly Hxlrm . beamed
l'etling, serv1n~ b~1 r. 1,
gar. w.d hookup~. S5llU
LIKE rll'\\' 2 l.lr. 2 l.Ja. nr.
Jwntwn $375 mo
673 2113
LIVING
Singles, 1&2 bedroom
apt.S. & townhouses.
FromS449 644-1900
3 Bdrm. 2'7 b<i cundo Oceanfront for Winter N-.B~ 0 <' e ;n r r on t
Uishwash<>r. frpk. 2 <·u r Rentals . F"urnished & w/kilchenetle . S260 &
gar. P~t st. Available wifurn. Broker. 675·4912 Ut il d 2306 W now $625.mo. 1st last. -_ · . up. " .
Sl>t'Unty tl73 22H2. 9 to NO Ft:E~ Apt & Condo Oceanfront~3 .. U54. __
5pm rentals . Villa R!!nlals. Hot.ts. Motel1 4 I 00
675-4912 Broker ••••••••••••••••••• •••• Beaut1ful 2br2ba S550 ----- -Balboa Inn oceanfront. fl'sopen.See llat 2 Br.n Ba. Avail. now. Low winter rates. Daily
or weekly. 675-8'740 3106 Ginger 5<10·4400 Area or Balboa & Coast
l br. utils pd, gar. new
1·rpts. off :!lreet. adu lt
l'ouple. no pe li.. S395.
768-7633. !>48 8251
Lge I br. all adult. no
pets. pool & l'CM"port. S375
mo. + deposil. 931 W.
19th St. 548-11492
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Hwy . SS25 mo. J . 0 .
Prop e rt y M g m1 .
75 l ·2787. Afl. Spm,
548.8044 4bdrm. 2ba condo on
----North Shore of Tahoe.
Westcbff N.B. adult con. Fully furn. 5/m in from
do. S.595. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath. North Star. $400twkly.
10 steps to pool. New 957-3226. 530-3946 Bert.
carpeting. yearly lease.
Agt. 759·1616
2br. twnhome apt. dse lo 2bdrm wath patio, xlnt
Ocean Bluff Kauai Con·
~· GoU, tennis. $2SO per ,
~·Sleeps 4. 673· 7595. sho ps hos pital $475 location.Call R..tdstoS..... AGT 645·9850 1714)645·9314 ----...................... .
2bdrm. Iba. $380. 645 Vi('
tona Nodogs
54fi.91Z1I
2 Hr I Ha $400 m o Isl
lasl I-dl.'P\)S1t. 2238 State
St 646 45591>r li4Z 4431
3Hr, 2Ba. frpk . haekvd ,
like nrw nr '!rhl. $650
11111 759 HJ.10
$650. 3 Br 2 Ba. Enclsd
garage. patio. walk to
beach, adults. no dogs.
TSL Mgmt. 642 1603
.arge 2 Story. 2 Br. 2'h
Ba Apt. 111 the Bluffs
1-l'plc. No children or
pel..'t. $59!'>. R51·0494
Moving? Avoid dep<>sits
& cut living expenses!
Profession ally sin ce
1971.
HOUSEMATES
832·4134
Nr OCC·UC I. Sh are
6bdrm. 3ba bea ut home
with s lude nts . Avail
now. Beau 646·9787.
, : .
'»
u r ·
J: ( :..}! ,., ,
675-8662
•r
Pnme comer lor t; p to
4,500 sq ft. Full sen •il't•.
modern . glasi. bldg
646--6303.
Responsible couple seeks
2Rdrm Laguna Bead1
home for under SSOO. 673 -li2"l
lusinns /1 nv est/
Finmtet' . ..................... .
lusineu
Opporiw\ity 5005 . ........•.••........•.
• • •
Sue Shapiro
28S3Ch1os
Costa Mesa
You are the winner of
3 frff" ticlc•h
<SIO.SO value I. to
Sporil Vacation
Ir RV Show
Jan3lhruJan t i
Allaheam Convention
Ce nter
For Rape Hoffine
Training sessions begin
January 12th for volun-
teers mlerested 111 work·
111g with the Rape Crisis
Network Unit. Open tu
hot.h men and women.
the training ('an earn
)Ou C'o ll ege r r ed1t.
Volunteers can work on
:i holl1ne. do public
speaking or work o n
fund rais ing Call us
now. at 714-89 1 5733
Lolt& Fow.d 5300 •••••••••••••••••••••••
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
642-5671
Tit kels mus l be ex
changed for reserved
seats at the COO \'Cnllon
Center ahead of t1rne
Call 642-5678. ext. 272 10 !•-----~--.!'~~ claim your l1t ke1s • • • Lost or found a pet? Ca Ii
J\n1mal Ass is tan c e
League !'>37 2273. No fee.
50 3 5 •Found l.lr lost a pet'.'
S~Mt4J. Co.
All types of real estate
111veslf™!nts Sln<'e 1949
s,.cialitiftcJ in
2ndTDs
642·2171 545-06 I I
Widow has mone~ tn bu~
or make 2:'\L> T 0 an\·
Cj ll us' We' r e the Pel
Pals lil-11739 2988 '
F e n ced ya rd:r &
garages. Kads & pets
welcome . 964-2506 or
973-2971. Agt .. no fee.
LIDO ISLE
3 Bdrm. 2 bath, large
s unny patio. 2 ca r
(2131445·1978. Spacious W r.
caP;strano leach 3818 plex, ~5 mo
ll:fo IO 4·
A\'a1I J an
i-: Dluff. spac. l br. pool.
quiet . s ec ur e a r e a .
adults. no pets. $445/mo.
644·4767
Fem to shr 38r , 2Ba hse
redec. new cpl, nr bch,
H.B. S200 mo. 536· I 140
CdM Deluxe Su11c:.. 1100 size abtwt' SIO.lK)(J N(1 sq.fl.AC.amplpk ~.u1t1 l cred11 •.no pnlt~. F11r
LOST He1ld1sh Brwn
w wh1tl' Husk~ male. 6
mos old W11h blue t•yPs
& brown lea1her rnllar.
l 2 :! 2 8 IJ ' 1 c· )1 e s a
Woods area Heward +
pup rrom t~t breeding.
55i 5062. 5~8 11 5 1.
gg'j 1~55
..... tiMJ•hach 3240 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1. 645·fl625
garage, access to tennis. Lrg 3 Br 212 Ba Villa s tyle b_jech & c lub. Prime f:. Bluff T wnhse apt. 3br. ----
4!ba. 2 ear gar. MfF 40 lo 45, shr 5 Br 2 f'ond1llon. Call Barbara. l' 0 n d 0 · c n d u n 1 r . white wate r 'u . S795 5blkstoocean. Elegant 2 ~gt __ .R_._H ~~-3·_73_00_ 49J.ti643or 6613050
bdrm. Cam rm & den.
~IUNNI NC; lrl( I l11lrrn
garden 1:1vt Pool & rec
area. i to W 18th S t 644·1010 Ba. ~e. C.M Spa Nr
UPPEH Duplex apt. 3 br S .C.Plaza & Frw y
S200·S225. S hr utils .
641-4913 1$725 mo>. Plush crpts.1--•TH-E•l•L•U•FF•S--Corona d~I Mar 3822
2112 ba. cedar & glass. ••••••••••••••• •••••• • • Dbl car pvt gar. fully Spacious & s potless 3
2 HH. l'OOL. Gi\RAc: E 2 bu. rrpl, yr . round $600
$450 646 0354 mo. 673-2113 l'A4·2578
maint. yd. Adults. 00 bdrm. 212 bath end untt
pets. Inquire at 527 l8th. with pvt patio on "The
St. 7 14 /960·6331 o r Greenbelt " in o ur
960-5112. or iginal area Avail.
now at $950. Agt. 640-5560
212 Bd. 2 ba. rrplr. dis
hwasher • o of PCH
S650tmo. Is l l ast. st'l'
Avail now 673 22112
9·!'>pm
2 Br, clcun. I rh1ld OK
S375 mo + dep 590
,Joan11 St 54:i 4!'>29 or
213159R 1219
3 Br. 2ba. 933 W Balboa.
Ots hws r. frple. laund
hookups. garagl'. 1 , hlk
to b <'h . S750 /mo .
lst Las t. security Avail
Female wants female
roommate . Newporl
Beat·h Condo. Tennis.
sauna. j ae . walk to
bea<'h. S285. Jan I
5411-!1036 leave message LIKE NEW, s pacious
3bdrm, 2ba, with lrg
master. cathedral ceal·
1ng lnTiv-rm . n e w-
carpe l s & drapes.
S62St m o . 8 48 7945 . 848.9840,
2 Br. Penthouse Condii on
water. New unfurn. 8-0at
slip avail. lmmed. oc-
c upan cy . Ca ll
213/282·1 l36 days.
213/S82·3S84 eves.
3 br. 2 ba. den, patio, •,;
ml. lo beach, kids & pets
OK. $700/mo. Eves
6'5-1971, 963·1856.
HOMES FOR RENT
3 Bdrma. SS25. Fenced
yards fr garages. Kids &
pets welcome. 964·2566
ort73-a.7l. Agt., no fee.
2 Br. 1"' Ba Ire condo,
pool, $550/mo. Yorktown
Villu. M2·3519
• br. 2 ba, nr Meadowlark
1olf coune, S600/ m o. S4MLS9 ....... 1244 •••••••••••••••••••••••
llMTALS
2br +den, 2\.'fb• $800
Jbr, 2\\ba S900
Luxurious !bdrm condo
witb max sec._ & _im ·
Very Clean 3Dr. 2Ha . cnt•I
ga r age, $775 m t1
700.1334. 6i3-8550 Rulh
lbr SJ.15 utals pd. curport, now Call 673-2282 from
qwet <1dults. no pets 383 9-5 pm
W. Bay Wi·9516
menities. r efri g inc I. Studio. 111 COM
S550. Versailles. ~-3874 6 75.3257
l.-Ne3r-CdM H.igh-Sehl
WESTLAKE VILLAGE 2Br. 2Ba. $600 mo .
Bea utiful Adult i\pts No Frplc. d shwshr. r us t
Roo m mate want e d .
Clean . r esp o ns ibl e .
l"emale11ref~rred. 3 Br,
2 Ba. Newport Sti ores.
S200 Isl. last & • , utils.
642 ~92 l::ves after6on wkdays.
38r , 2Ba home w /big
back enclosed yd, ucross
lhe s t from Charles
Heller Park. 237 Knox
Pl. call for a ppt
J.IY.!6· 1 S37.
NEWPORT CRIST
TifREE beautiful con
dos available. Different
locations. Pool. tennis,
spa. Close to beach and
Hoag Hospital.
C /21 M•wport c...t ...
640·5357
IBr, ocean view. adlt con·
do, in Versailles. Max
security. lg pool. clbhse,
l ·Ym. sauna. jao. etc.
s.W> mo. 645·0230
'""lS Im ,,, s hag, no pets. patio Block to beach. 2 Br. lge .,.. · m~, 1>l'cupancy
Pvt p ti r 1 1 · P09l. spa, lndry r m , 644·()f;a5.631·2029 a o. rp c. mmac. gar. avuil Bal'h S3J5 Prof. Gentlemen would
Avail 11o w. No pels l0r-S385. 213r-s430.s440. LAS IRISAS A'1S. lake to shr has IRe N.B
$725/mo lsl&'last +sec TSL Mgmt 6~5g 1 22 ATl:JEACH hme w/inlellieent. sta·
SIOO . Ph 673 -1600 , ----Ocean view.pool.tennis ble J0.45 yrwomanS295
6'73-8671 0.. Point 3826 Court.-;, adlts. Bach .. 1&2 760-0802
-' --••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm fro m 1420. 5515 ---
Costa Mesa 38 24 1 Bdrm. l balh. a II ulil pd !liver Ave 642 2566. Shr 3Br Condo, S217 mo
••••••••••••••••••••••• S35i0. + •, uttl, C.M .. pool. jac·.
2 Ir. I la Apt 831 ·1873 Y~RLY S55Q per mo. 2 548 -2002 Coleen or
Newly decor . Gas pd, BT -
3832
br. 2 ba. gar. washtdry, Howard
c n c I g a r , p o 0 1 . oro cross s t from bear h. --- -
d / was he r . J\ d u 1 t s . ••••••••••••• • •• ••••• • • 840 64:J6 Large CdM Apt. 64.2.-5073 Beaut. t year new 2 Br. - - - -----23to30 Male
l .,.., Ba. Condo with pool. Lrg 2 Br 2 Ba upper unit No Flakes 760·0829
NEWLY DECOR. jacuz7.i, & cable TV m· w/deck. ocean & bay vu. ----- -
1 Br. gas pd, encl gar". ckl. Year ly $5~. Broker S695/mo year ly . Ca ll Exec. Female will s hare
d/washer, pool. Adults. 675-4912 Lloyd, w l 1 h s a m e 3 Br
842"5073 ---H;.,-.;jion hach 3140 1 JACOBS REALTY ~~':;1i!!,~e8~~~hvie;P:. l lrTownhov1e ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-6670 tennis, facque tball. wet
Newly decor gas pd .. Brand new I & 2 Bdrm. bar frplc. S290t mo. Call
e n c I gar .. ·po o I , Pterpointe Condos. Pool. 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath. Cathy 751 ·627 l . Eves
d /was h er Adults . spa , lennls . gara1tes. OCEANVIF.W 646-S604
Beautiful Duplex. 3 BR 642-5073 1213) 5'96·7202 dys, (714 1 S48·8083 --------
2ba. 1500 sq ft. Partial .::..--3-9 2 -8 -f--1-M2·4721eves. ----Exec. condo t o s hr
'ocean view S600/mo t """uxe r. a rp c, ----- --Left Bdrm. frplc. blk to w/prof. person Harbor
I C · 11 0 ' t gar. n.rSo. ''st Pla .. a. No Lovely 1. 2 & B Bdrm. b •. )'' le a Oc a "' " a y .. ocn, 2 s ly , View Knoll clsf! to · ....... '"°.644-1103 Townhouses, garage . 581-1210or731-1873 ""'"' patio. laundry rac. $450 wshr/dryr, avail Jan t. Fashion Isle. view or Ci· S4SO mo. Kim 754.0504 or ty, lots of privacy, ten· s.cte•• 127 -me8tiB"H . • SST5. call 2131596-1202 673 1966 . 1 ...,,00 or7l'/""""7 ... 7 · nas, poo . et c. or /mo.
pd. 2855 E. l.:st II~' aruon call AGT 673 7311
615 ~)() · an~rt.1~
DoY' ·~ ~t ~orv&
b ihtpherv
e ~eu ~aniJ
(l-{"'n i~ -
Use Answer Ad se rvice
when plac ing 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 convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
this service i s only $7 .so
week. For more informa-
tion and to place your ad
ca It 642-5678.
lllily Pilat
L<l'ol Heirloom Ural.'elel.
Re ward 759 l 158 or
1;45-180.5.
f'ound Young male irish
&tter. 2:lrd SI & Npt
Rl vd. 642 l!S9g
FOt::'\D <:ra ,· female
cat. fr1cncll) \'1e So
Ulgun:.t 499 1593
LOST lioldl'n Relrie' er ..
ft'rnale. lthr collar vir
\'1l'lon a & :Vl onrov1a.
CM 5~8-H.!50. 95i·501~
Anna
L 0 S-T Hr ll T U t-rn
Redhead ( v re en I \/it'. qf r n. rill a 1.indu N B.
642 1313
.OST Rew:m! Male Old
En~hsh Sheepdog. last
seen 48th St N.a
631 ·18A8
Lost Mixed breed Doc .
l2 24. whl w blk SP<>t~.
M 12 yrs, blk cnllat.
548-0263. Reward.
LOST . Tann1 s h bwn
"' wh te. d og , male
Limp;; Nds medicalion
642· 13.'>3. or 19th St. CM.
Found Female Rl1ck
Pup Sea Bright Dr,
Dana Pt ld t>ntify to
claim 492-35S5
FC>t;:'40: S mall brwn doc
\Cor kie Mix I E .S ad~
C.M. Male. s horth alr
646·8961
You can be a
er, m ba '800-11250
4br + bon, 2\.tba S87S
Jbr. 2ba NSO Tut tin
•••••••••••••• ••• • • • • • .. ~ '" . ----~91588
llOcf .. ocean v ew. new TMIWHIFFl.ITlll Exec. Female will share WINNER
home. 4Br + F /R, $995. APARTMENTS ~ury Adult unlu al af. w Ith s a me 3 Br . Share duplex in Costa
. . .
Q. ' R
()pea Sunday . 3003 Calle Buuuru1 garden a pls. Townhouse with view In M e 9 a . 0 / w , J b di d
Frontera. Act. Anita Pool • spa. Adults, no ~·~~111iv~n!co~'!t:d~ Newport Buch. Spa, wash/dryer. Focd yard, USt Y sen DI US your name an
_17M __ 7_06_oir_963_.a_i82 ___ , l::t.. sa•s Olympic ,1 .. pool. lilh&· tenru., racquetball, wet quiet non-smoking pro r address and by watching for your
•Jsm--:----,..,MIJl1l:;R-. ----p -te1&1l9eowrt. aettSt; ~·~Y tl~5J'f{/:"0'8e1~ °'-'~a $i-SO.lmo-1'1--e•·IRe-.la¥U.e lanilled-ads of-Uae
C .. hft •• 127 zz:so.Vanguard, ~·9626 park UJre land11capin1. Mf.56CM · · Kathl541..et44 Dally Pilot. •••••11•••11•••••••••• Most beautiful bide . in VUl•aeSanJuan Morefamili•are1etun1 H.B. UftL·•-to .. -h 1 •. 2bd Share• Bdrm home in Win tickets to the c.ircus, area amusemen\ the ca.mpift1 "bu," lbia FromS360. 846·0619 ..,_, "" • rms Dana Point. Close to attractions or sPOrtmg events. Just till o'" this a bf. Iba, a /c. pool priv. 1ear . If you have a --------rromS350 ~/frwy. lltt1b. in· coupon and m ail it tOday to the.
No P'U.) Avail. immed. ea.,., tbat•1 not let· Btaut.lfuUy located 2 Br. 84S-88M dMdualonly. 40·6118 ~.~~m1.' tJq UNd, .... It DO• Sil$• up. Ch.lid OK. Gas WANT ACTION? Claaslfled Department, Daily Piiot
---'42·5118 ribaCluallledAd. lncld.MZ·IW. Cla11Ued~IOM71 ·Want Adi Call M2·5118 330 W. Bay Street. Cotta Mna, CA t!tzt
I : I I
I
' I • I
. . .. --.-.--.
•
····························· ........ : ....... ~!~ .. ~ ................................................. .
Drhewa)'I. •uUnf lot 6 ...... tleaa QuMly Dependable Ell,_,tneed acl/ marttel· Haullna6: Dump Jobs. Bridlwoct, Small Joba. COLLEGE STUDENT Plumbiq, Remodelint. TREE DESIGNS '•~ira ual('Oa '"f _.Co6cw'._ ... brilMet1•nt WM s.nlt.. a•aa RalM 11 ... ••Ullve w/ media Ali for RHdy. Newport, Colla lleu • ~per'd In int/ext. any Repairs. Leak Detec-Prunlna. 1culpturin1.
SU A1phlt Ml g a cipt• IO ml• ltlut9', tn•~etM·.t.u1.lQU eaperience will create ~ lrvme.1'75-l17Seves. Job t or lus! A lex lion, 6 Drains Cleared. toppina. thinnlna. re·
Uc-'d O.. nv. dbl ,m, hll ---prtnt ad1. marketlna/ lci 1 1 • 551-5198 Top Hat Plumbln& moval . c lean -up . ... t 7 ....... " h ,..., "'C:TRICl"N priced aal 1 tl 1 adlo eanupa, l mm na -. -M6-1MS .... tll nVI rm -"olloC s:.&.o• " •• ' er • r ha .. 11R .. Fr ti t ••••••••••••••~•••••••• DAVE'S PAINTING _..,._, •10. d•r U O uar "lbl. fr .. el'11Dale on i poh, newaletteu, -.-'557~.!'1 ma es . llovlna? The Starvinl Servln1Area9ye11r1 P.O.loxl ... _.t ~Ser•lce
.iow. M•m•I R~P•lt
.. .....,. Cff•r• fklat Out·ll
\lm '2t4 Wiiii
HOME Rt:PAlll
lnl '•xt t W1t rablnrt1
1...itAtl kt;!llO\'ATlN(;
S4.\ :JJd
C.,..w•k • •••••••••••••••••••••••
\'lofl)el l pbul U) IOI( 6
l.ll'.to1n1 R o bbtfl)
~bll"r l'11rp1d Uy ~r,l>.
073.l&n
l'ilt\)Cl 6 upllul d d um11
2 r~ S. 5'1. S rms 119 9~
ti31 te33 M>Mall, 24 hr
ellmlnett1 peit udur IM•••1aaalljob1 brodwNll and PR Call .... , • t•.,.,_ .-.pair I~ yn ea uc llJJJ54 673·035I 175-12:11> . . Colleae Studenll h~ve Moel Reasonable ••••••••••••••••••••• •• r~·:~~~:t;•typ~;·~·n•
p11r '•nC'• Oo w urk -----,..,._. D.t9I Ha~a,::!;~:bs·.ups, ~.::=.•.:!::~ce. lnaured, Uc'd. 586·8425 Pvt Post Box Service IBM Correct/Selectric.
mpdf Heb )ll OIOl Compl. auto detailin&, Jeff llu RALPH'S PAINTING 'llfE MAIL ROOM ; 24 other secretarial work,
Cel .... •••••••••••••••••••••••
MOR ROCCO CU 181 NE
Q~. b••lllla, b(>n
d't1'1vr•. delklou1 e n
.tr e ¥ • b) Su I a n¥"
MiaJIZ
u·chmln& / Laad1cap1n1
Tree trim • remove,
dun up• Free eat
ftcU4Jn•ble. nZ· 134»
TIHS
•'"°'9461 ll"1Jh=5erYlc•• hr business letters. re· PU • dcliv. Call the -. lnt./ext. Prompt, 24 hrs. 2800ECstHwyCdM-NB s"me", e t c . Karen ......_ ........ .....,, 67~7G.111116 ~~ ••••••• •••••• •• • • • • • • • • Ii t f """" 4701 • ... .. " .-.-.... -~· , ~ .... ,._____., c .. nea , res."""' 640-0340or644·.....,J 67S.l230
••••••••••••••••••••••• Deluxe Uc'd priv hme run ----------It• ~· Want a REAL LY CLEAN by ownen, Or. fl RN 24 Fine ext/lnt pain Ung by oofilMJ Wlildow Cle•llMJ
••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSE~ Call Gin&ham hr• on call, 978·3484, Richard Sinor. Lie, ins. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
JACK OF ALL TRADES Girl. Free est. MS-5123 75CMI067 Try me. 831·5SSS <24 hrs I RO'Ofl~ll'!.. "Let The Sunshine In" Plumbina. elec, heatin1. "'9' eanSu h' WI dow T~1 /removed, clean oddjobl. 636-a62 "-die.-LVN desires pvt duly ........ ;a.,.ar ALL TYPES/REPAIRS Cleanin~s ~~3 SC:.8853 ~. awn renov 751 3476 •••••-~.-~=••••••••••• nurse position, run or ••••••••••••••••••••••• FREE ESTIMATES · ·
C ..
-
_,.er Home Improvement. 25 A 'l L d i P/r d w ·11 N t t h •-t t Call Bob 548 0769 H •· C I l .. , AVIL~S.,;RVICES ynexp. Fences. carpen· v1 es an acap ng , ays or eves. 1 ea pace&• ex ures . · ome • omme r ca
••••••••••••••••• •••••• L&ndic•pma. tree tnm· llY fl painting. 631_4264 service, tree trimming, houseclean, shop or Frae •t. 19l· I 4J9 New & recovers. Repair C hri s tma s s ign s 1M1wn. F1n1tnc-in' i.nd 1 .......... 1ean""".cemenl cleanupe,ydmaif!l.can cook. Mature. reliable. . 1• t i t b washed. Call Steve ,. 1 ·-• • ...... Ped M t ,~ .. ---"--' spec1a IS s ay. us y ... un•lruc l1on o u ~ .. ~ .... ...... Home improvements, ~o. arguari e or C.dM rels. Shirley. Dys * -.r ... ._..IHJ* 646-1957 don't t ( t t """'• _.._.., Elrain631 • .,..... AllT prices. Reliable. S48-0S12 '----------IW m)• ree c• ' ---painunu, electrical. . .._, 78CH837eves496·6842 1 ~::!...:~y'..!pes= __ _:S38~:_:·7~1~13::_l---:-:-:-:-=--::=-:-:--=-:::-:-=:-:-:---I rouk1 l 1 t 1 ° 1-Whal • Wonderful World l'Oli you P en Y Steve'i L.a\u Service. plumbing, carpentry . M•wy ,~ .. --'-....... , QUALITY ROOFING of Shopplni. right al
1 Llf 0711711 J ~ 9~~7 Mow, t.'dge & trim. 1-~ront 642-1492 --,1• ...,... ••.. ._ Allt f t N k , __________ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vts' a. MyCpe. s. reec.es41.~y·30 your fin1erlipe every-S 1 & black eat wor · He-clwoodFI Custom brick . stone. Painting&Papering LIDO PLUMBING -No " " day ! Daily Pilot . .. !~ .. ~:.~! ....... Averaae $10. 847 2146. •••••••••••••~•••••• block, concrete, stucco. Pror. work. Free est. job too small or too big, HARBOR ROOFING CJualfied Ada. To place
ewporl, Cu!ll :i Mesa, !!!!._ -HARDWOOD FLOORS Reis. Free est. 549-9492 Rsnbl. Steve. S47 ·4281 free est. 24 hrs. 673·2867 Have something you your ad, call 642-5478
lrvtne Prof O~U very & Sell t.hinp rut with Dally Cleaned & Waxed Have i0methin1 to sell! want to sell? Classified and let a Claaslfied Ad·
Cou.ner Service 631 4192 Pi.lot Want Ada. Anytime, 832-4881 S.A. a-Hied ada do it well. Want Ad Help? 642·5418 Classified Ads 642-5678 ads do it well. 642·5678. V11«help you.
Lost&,._. UOO HllpW..e.4 7100tWpW..ted 7100 H..,W..e.d 7100 HlfpW..e.d 1100 HetpW..W 7100 HetpW..ted 7100 HelpW.-t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 7100 7100
fOl' U Baus~l Hound :AUTOMOTIVI!: Banking Caretaker for S units on COUPLE WANTED
red & wht male , •ASSIST.AMT TB.LEIS lrglot,C.M.Preferolder Managesmallbusiness
Cul·kapuo wht mdle IOOY SHOP MGR. Experience req'd. Xlnl. person. 749·1~46; Joe Part-time. Win train ~ewport Beach Animal Permanent, pleasant salary & benefits. Apply 74s.4312. Callfor appt846·3279
Shelter644·J6S6 working conditions in Personnel: __________ ,Delivery Person needed
F'ound Or whl Kitten, busy shop! Some ex HERITAGE IANK immed. Part time. Tues.
\ 1c 22nd SttOrunge "\'e, g~:,:t;:Ye 8;:.r ~~:~:: 721 N. Eucli!.,~nahe1m CASHIERS & Thurs . Bever I y
t'M 642·l794 vancement See Mr. 99l·.-.v _641_-8820 __ . _____ _
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Halved Whose
Shyly Plunge
LAUGHS
Yott can always spot a
ret.ilee. He's the one who
geta up on Monday
m<aiing and LAUGHS.
Found: young male dog,
Springer !Seiter mix ,
Banning & Bus hard.
962.3856
Wnght. KO.E. UTDTIM ----DBJVBY PERSOM
HOW AID Che•rol•t bank mg f 0 r c 0 5 t a M e s a
Dove•QuailSts, COMMrcialT•ll•r Pharmacy. Mon thru
NEWPORT BEACH MARKETS Friday, 10to6. 642·0106
Atn'OMOTIV E
PARTS
COUMTHMAH
Dealership or foreign
auto parts experience
preferred, Call Glen for
an appointment.
ROY CARVER
ROUS ROYCE
AMDIMW
640.6444
Previous expr. prer. but
will train. Cashiering
expr. will be helpful.
Unlt•d California ...
3141 W. Coast Hw y.
C-Oronadel Mar
673-9240 E.O. E
BANKJNG
For 2nd & 3rd Shifts DBJVHY
We promote to manage-
ment & super vision from
wilhln. I
WANTA CAREER?
Costa Mesa
Ill Del Mar
631·9421
Laguna Beach
494.9233
Auto route. Approx. hrs
4-6am. Need responsible
person with economy.
type auto. Approx. earn-
ings S4SO·$SS0 /mo. de·
pending on newspaper
route. An opening exists
in Costa Mesa " Hunt· i.nglon Beach. C•ll daily
7am-12 noon. 9Sl·7114.
General Office
WA NT A
CHANGE
IN 1981?
NEW LOOK?
NEW
DIRECTION?
COME SEE US &
WCRK TEMPORAR i
/Have flexibility
/Learn new skills
1 Earn good pay
All Of lice S 111~
Needed .
,A,PPlY TODAY!!
Vicki Heston & Assoc.
18004 Sky park Bl..
Suite235. Irvine.
540.0400
MUllSES AIDES
7-3:30 & 11-7 part time.
Country Clu b Conv.
Hosp. s.9-3061.
PBX
Housewives, supple·
ment your husband 's
salary. Part time. Full
time pos itions avail.
now . Call Clar•:
640-1110, or Nick :
SS7-T777.
PBX
Student.I, do you want to
earn extra dollars ?
Work part time. No ex·
per. necessary. Regular
raises & co. benefits.
Call Clara : 640-1110 or
Nick: SS7-T777.
Personnel
Al'ft '/Olli t•Hr ---------FOUND: Christmas gift BABYSITTER-Live In. 1
CCM111Mrcial T elMr
Experience preferred .
Unit•d California
lank
llµntmgton Beach
962-9116
Delivery man for L.A.1----------1 Times to homes in C.M.
& H.B. J.6AM . S37S·$450
mo. + bonus. Dependa·
ble car . 546·4481 or
lllllMMd7
Counselor traine e
needed for fasl paced.
high pressure t e rn ·
porary help o fc . In ·
terv1ew, screen & lest
applicants. Train for
placem e nt counselor
position. Nat'l. co , xlnt
benefits . Previous in
dustry exper. desired
but not essential Ca II
Victor Temporaq
Service. SS6-8520 E.O. E
to Tom. Darla & Danny. yr old girl. Salary + lov·
from K~~Y..:. 546-27~-__ ely room & bath. Dover
Pft"SOllGls 5350 Shores, NB. 7S2-2197
••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysitter needed to care
Six Monarch Bay Plaza CLE RK TY P JS T ·
So. Laguna -196·1273 permanent position,
PRF: LAW stµdenl needs
$25.000. Will Jo anything
Legal. Confidential
DVM P 0 Box 3242.
N.H. 92663
for my infant in my i----------SO-OOwpm. Xlnt benefits
Mon -Fri 9 ·S. 1714 )
!17~2270
TOMMY'S
OF NEWPORT
1-SCORT 752-9368
•FOXY LADY•
OUTCALL ONLY
VISA MC
• 972-11 ll •
ATlAMTIS MASSAGE
SPA
Be Pamper ed
Ue a u l. Girls
10/\M 4PM 7
Phone 645·3433
by 16
Open
day s
1-'or a to t al relax 1ng
massa~e with a pro
f('SSIOnal. l!:arle IOAM
.7 PM. S48·2817
PSYCHIC
READINGS
556·1178 ---·
GrMIC~y
ESCORTS
24Hrs. 641 -0180
Cash/Cllecks
Am&p/MC/Visa
COMPATAllLITY
UFESIYLE SOCIETY
Couples Only 750-0674
Sgl Men Only 7S0·0677
Sgl Ladies Only 971·7979
Recorded Message 24
Hrs.
COVER GIRL * OUTCALL •
Laguna Beac h home .
JOhrs /wk . Dayllm e .
494·63.SS.
Medical
BACK OFFlC E . full
lime for J Internists .
Newport Beach. EKG &
chest X rays. NC'ed not
be RN. s alary , in -
surance & benefits. Send
resume Ad NQ 781. Dai·
ly Pilot, PO Box 1560,
Costa Mesa, CA. 92627
Banking. R epubli11
Federal Savings h as
opening for: run lime
teller, full time new
accts, P rr teller. Salary + fringe benefit s .
Laguna Niguel. 49S-08SO
or 831-1940. E .O .E .
MIF'/H
Banking
TRLER
NEW ACCOUNTS
FULL TIME
Position available in our
So. C-Oasl Plaza orfice.
Exper. req'd. Call Kathy
Amburgey: S40·4066.
CALIFORNIA
FEDEi AL
Sa¥iftcJt & Lo•
895 Town Center D,r .
Cceta Mesa. CA 92626
F.qual Opportunity
Employer
953-0778 MC /VISA Banking
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models -P..ty Dmcen.-
• 972-134 S •
MC & VISA Accepted
MERCEDEZ
•ESCORTS•
' TELLER
,.._.Tl ..
Wells Fargo Bank ,
Orange C-Ounly Airport
omce, has an immediate
opening ~r individual
with 6 months prevrous
banking experience.
549-9058 _ z4Hr!; We provide an ·excellent
BANKING
TELLER
NEWPORT
Immediate position
available to sharp' in·
dividual. Previous teller
expr. preferred or
minimum 6 months cash
handling experience.
Type 20-25. Good figure
aptitude a nd com ·
munication skills re·
quired. Excellent
beoerits and •dvance-
ment oPportunities.
LOSAMGELES
FIDBtAL SA VIHGS
3201 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach.
EOE M/F
•ICN/ASST.
Payroll/Personel/ Job
Collt. For urban design
firm, sal commensurate
w/exp. Pleaue send re·
s ume to PBR 18012
Skypart Cir, Irv. 92714
90C,./GIRL NIDAY
Some restaurant exp.
helprul. Apply in
person: The Village Inn.
lZ7 Marine Av. Balboa
lsl.00.
JiW what you want in
Dally Pilot Clasailieds.
COOK
For pre-school. Ex ·
perienced Part or full
time. l~n~SH~=t
•COOK
NEEDED•
IMMEDIATaY
Fu.ti Time Days. Apply
in person. Dick Church 's
Rest. 2698 Newport
Blvd. C.M.
COOK W AMTED
Mon-Fri. approx. 9-3.
Apply rrom 2·4pm at
Cask 'n Cleaver. 1660
Dove, N.B 752-2538.
COUNTER Woman. full
tune. also Part time
seamstress M 1chel 's
Clean e r s . Laguna
Niguel. 496-5124 -----Coonter help, day shift
PT, Oexible hrs, M-F ap-
ply in person 10am-2pm
Orange Julius 711 E.
Balboa Blvd. Ba Ibo a
92661
COUNTER help, lOPM ·
6AM, Winchells Donuts.
253 E. 17th St. CM.
Trade your old stuff for
new goodies with a
Classified ad. 642-5678
964-4982
Dental
General
TM lalboa lay CIMb
is now hirilH):
Rnt......tMqr.
Full lime, Eves. M'ust be
avail. wknds. Must have
previous restaurant exp. Chairside Dental Assis·
lant. 41f.i day wQrk week.
96J.S634. Pft'SOllMI Cl•rk
-----------Bilingual Must t y pe
Deputy Clerk I. Starting SOwpm. Full time, Mon.-
salar y 1841 pr m o. Fri. 8:30·S. Please call
Harbor Municipal Court for appt. 64S-73S8. Mon .-1~~~~~~~~!""-I
has openings for men & Fri. 8:30-5.
women. If you typel~~~~~~~~~~
40wpm and are interest·
ed in excellent benefits
call 833-0411 ext. 332 for
information. 4601 Jam·
boree Blvd, NB. E.O. E.
PEST COMTROL
Local leading pest con
trol company n eed s
r oute techn1c1an for
steady Job due to ex
pansion. Entry level. we
train. Interviewing Mon.
Driver : Stock for
Newport Beach Home
Furnishing Shop. 40 Hr.
week. Call T.om 644-8860.
Drivers to c haurreur
limousine on New Years
Eve . Xlnt wage s .
497·2559.
DRIVERS WANTED
Early morning home de·
livery L.A. TIMES
Irvine/Newport area .
$400 +/mo. J ess S46-023S
DRIVERS
Dial·A·Ride. localed in
Lal\llla Hills h as p/lime
& f/time positions . Gd.
driving rec .. over 21 <in·
surance requirem ent).
F.oE. 830~191 Al Dirth
Gener al orfice help.
Perm. part time. 3·4
da)'3/wk. S3S/day. Call
for details. 493·87S8.
Graphic Artis l : t y pe
exp.. color seperation.
registration
capabilities, 855-1231
GUARDS ·Jans. to to s pm 566 E.
Full & part time. All Dyer Rd.
areas. Uniforms rurn 'd. Santa Ana 979·6021
Ages 21 or over. rellred -----
welcome. Noexper. nee. Picture Framer Ex·
Apply: Univeral Protec-~nenred . Part time
tlOn Ser vice. 1226 W. 5th Art World Frames. 6S6
St.. Santa Ana . I n · No. Coast Hwy. Lag
terv1ew hrs: 9·12 & 1-4, Bch. 494·8105.
Mon-Fri.
IN C OME TAX
PREPARERS Ex-
perienced Hourly rate &
bonus 540·0187
JAMITOIS
F I T night w o rk
men/women/com pies.
Hunt Bch/C.M. area.
Must have car & home
phone. Call S32-65S8
Mon-Fri .
JEWELRY SALES
Wanted immed. for
jewelry store. Bondable.
perm. lady with sales
ability. Xlnl starling hr·
ly wag + comm. for
wknds only. Ph. 493-8822.
ICITCHIEM HELP
<21 needed food prepara·
lion/delivery valid Ca .
Drivers Lie. over 21
C. M. area. 646· 1004
Legal Secretar y, F /T ,
non-smoker, Sole Practi·
PRINTING
Pressman needed lo run
Itek plates on multi 1250.
Experience necessary.
Paid medical & dental. 4
day week. Call 951 -9500
Lagwia Hills.
Production
Part time. Mon. 2:30PM ·
finish, Tues . l :OOPM ·
finiah. Will train. Apply
1660 Placentia Ave. C.M.
Real Estate Sales
LoalalacJ for a ..... c ...... 1
Join the leader. Now In·
terviewing ror positions
in real estate sales.
Whet.her licensed or not
call to see if you qualify
to join the professionals
at Walker .& L ee
( 714183S-4S4S. -lloner. General P.rac-1_----------1
tice. Prefer some legal
exp . Salary c om
mensurate with exp.
Westminster, 531-9770.
Uquor Clerk, run or P /T.
over 21 , respons ible.
Irvine. 752·1336.
RECEPTIONIST
G....-alOfflce
Typing exper
necessa ry . Newport
Center. Property
management. Perma ·
nent. Phone 644·06()6.
RECB'TIOHIST
• •SICIET AllES * * FC/Mtg/Cplrs.$18,000
OrderProc.M fg118,000
GO /Rec(f70<2>11J.800
G0/0rderClk$14,400
Lix Reinders Agency
4020Birch Est '64 EOE
Newport/833·8190/Free
Full time Mon.-Fr1. _____ _
Must be personable & <4J4T.4.A..&JL..&A.&
well.groomed. & enjoy SECRET ARY
~ng the publi~. Re· Looking for that career
qU1res gOC?d spelhn~ & change in 1981? Register
penmanship. No typing. with us now!!
Phone experience pre· Free & E.O.E. £erred. Full company Irvine
benerits. Apply P en -Personnel Agenc:y
nysaver, 1660 Placentia 488 E. 17th, Costa Mesa
Ave. Costa Mesa Suite 224 642-1470
* • * :f!M.~ ....... lutla Roben)• Secretary to CEO. Small
296Broadway d ynamic c ompany .
Costa Mesa Collins Associates. 567
You are the winner of San Nicholas Dr. NB
l frff tickeb '
<110.50 valueJ. to
Sports Vacation
&RVSltow
Jan3thruJan 11
Anaheim Convention
Center
T1ckels mus l be ex
changed for reser\ed
sealS at the Convention
Center ahead or lime
Call 642 5678, ext 272 lo
claim your tickets
* * *
Sales H1 F1 Compo
n ents Salarv . xln t
future C ~ area EOE
~ F Call ~.f, ll-2 on
l y . Mr. Paul se n .
213-685-8543.
Sc*t /Co.sfli11q
Roommate. home shar
mg co lmmed. Qpenmg
for s e lr m o t 1vall'd
person , growth poten 1 ti al 760·0220 for a ppt
S al e :. l::xlen :.1\'t'
Houseplant knowledge a
must. Retail expt'rience
prererred S ala r) &
hours open. 645·0210
SALES EXECUTIVE
Secretarial general of·
rice. Busy office With
new organization. Full
respons1b1hty of a II a c
11 v ities in cl uding
secrelanal & lite book
keeping. Requires good
telephone man ne r
Preferred location 111
\I ClnllY o r H o a ~
Hos p1la l Beg1nn111.:
salary up tu $900 m o.
based on e'lprnence
642-1822.
Secretarial
Platform Secretary
Previous banking ex·
perience desirable. Xlnt.
lypmg skills required.
short-hand not reqwred
United California
lank
Laguna Beu<'h
494·6S46
E.O.E.
PART-TIME SEC'Y OFFICE MGR
Must be c urrentl y Irvine a r chitel'lura
employed & successrul firm 30 hr wk. rulltime
Capable or high-level benefits. 752_1195 commun1callon wtpeo-_____ --_ --
pie applying ror me~-Sewer & drain cleaners
bershlp to a prof bust· wanted light plumbing ness assoc. We are a life 964-4822·
lime assoc. of select , -------
highly ambitious people SHOE SALIS PER SOM who research & ample ment the principals of F l .Person , good
acquinng great wealth. benefits . advancement
Mr. Richards 963·0516. ~pty. 494·2796 -------
SALES
If you ar e aggress1 ve
and looking ror a future
in retail mgmt w1good
co. bener1ts apply in
person 9am to l lam Mon
thru Fri . Standard
Shoes. 3077 So. Bristol.
C.M. ------
*SALIS-TRAVEL•
Hawaii. Canada.
Florida
BOYS·GIRLS·
MEN-WOMEN
Exciting position in fund
'raising & public rela·
uons. Must be neat. bon
dable " enjoy meeting
Shoe Salesperson
We have an opening for
an exp F T salesperson
Apply m person, ask for
Mr Cannon Hemphill's
Shoes . 54 Fashion
Island. N. B. 644-4223.
Shoe sales. full lime with
or w1oul exp . or will
train. Good co benefits.
Applyln person 9"amto
I lam Mon thru Fri.
Standard Shoes, 3077 So
Bnstol. C.M, ---------
Student Aide-Driver for
partially handicapped
young !!'In 640·2746 .•
people. 963·0516 Mr. Teacher . pre·school.
Grttr. aides and subs. Mature
..
. .
~
9
k
()
R
' ~
~-
I·
.s
' II ..
2 W/M seek friends. Bob benerit.s package and 947.4700 friendly working at·
Mike 84S-2J9? masphere. Please con·
~--------tact: Etti•
714-973-5044
S1•cr +>/IS.'
Manager Emerald Bay
Tennis facility, 6 courts
& sm pro shop. exper 'd
in tennis oper ations.
Minimal investment.
Salary + c omm .
49'7·2286 blwn 2·S.
MECH A MIC
Needed to maintain sm.
neet or mini-buses in
La&una Hills. Exp. fl gd.
references essential.
Gd. co. benefits. Salary
based on exp. EOE.
RHIEstahSole1
Start the year right by
finding out about the
career opp<tr'tunilies
avai lable at Select
Properties. If you have
experience or an tn·
terest in learning about
investment properties
caU for a confidential in·
terview. We also have
opportunities ror
est•blished pro -
reuionals with manage-
ment potential for of.
fices In Costa Mesa.
Newport ·Irvine and San
Clemente . Call Pele
Vlctto. 751·3191
SCTIY /LEGAL
Trainee. Good skills.
Some litigation ex pr.
helpful but not required.
752-6818 ----------
Secretary Legal Invest·
ment Consultant seeks
exp'd person w /legal
sec'y skills. CAiiins As·
sociates. S67 San Nicolas
Or. '302 N.B.
or young. Huntington ·•.
Be ach area . Call • 1 Marilyn 847-S2M - -
URGENTLY NEED
DEPENDABLE 11
PERSON who can work
HetpW..t.ct 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Acct'& clerk. experienced
lady for accounts paya-
ble fl payroll. Costa ..
M'!~ area. 549.2239
ADY•TlllM•
SALIS
WELLS
FARGO
BANK
ei80 MacArthur Blvd.
Newport Beach. Ca.
Equal Opp Emplyr
M/F /H
Betiause of a new ex·
pan-ion program the
Daily Pilot hlas an Im·
medjatei-opening for a
1all1peraon with~~~~~~~~~
newapaper dlaplay ad· Bankinl
verti1ln1 ex per. Good Ca area.I,...,.
a.aary, comml11ioos • Previous experience de-e • c e-11 ~ n t f r hi I e tlratiae.
bendlta. Excellen t UnttedCallrornl• Bank
gr'QW\h opportunities for Zll4I B~kflekl Rd.
pel'l'fn with career 'am· El"' .... 1 ...... ..... Call for appoint· 1---'-'oro_._-_·----
merif,, 842-43121, ext. 277 Banklftl er.,..&Cfftt -r-c:.liii1HWT111t D• Plet Pl.W. bperience de·
aaow. •1 Street lirable.
I Colla Mesa UNtedC.lltomla Banlt
Equl Oppor &mploy~r mOeean Blvd.
~ Lquna Beach, 414-1546
Enjoy working with young people?
The D•lly ptlot la looklnt for men •nd women
(over 21) wtth Outgolft9 person•Ht .. • who enfoy wortclng
with klde.
Th6e poaltion en .. lta counMll"fl young c•rrtera
on ••ng ~°"their Dally Piiot rout••·
s .. rt 9t $4 per hour end work p•rttlm• evening•
end Saturdmye •
Ctll.H2---432t....utanaiCUL.250.__._Hn_ 2.._and I _
p.m. and •ak f~ Lort.
0.-.. Ceeel Deir ,_
111W . .., ..... ,C... ..... ,CA_.
Alt-*°""°"""""~
without supervision for 1
C:SELECT -
T'PROPERTIES -----
sct"Y/BOOKKEEPER
Texas oil compa,ny m
Costa Mesa aru. We
tr~n. Write T .P . Dick.
Pres .. Soulhwestern
Petroleum. Box 789. Ft.
Worth. Tx. 76101 831MU.tl Al Dirth Receptjonist, some typ.
M-edi-.c-•_l _A_u_ia_t_. -fr~o-nt_o_f--1 int. prior appointment WAITRESSES makinc ex'p n ee .
3 to 4 dys wk, exper.
CM. are• 642·0322 nee. for G.P .. exp pre· m.94(1) Apply bt wn 9A M "
ferred, mail resume of· ---·------1S«retary 12PM. Charhe's Chill.
flee manaaer : 351 llC..,.OMIST Exp. sec. wanted for 3001 Redhill. Bldg. 12.
ff09pltal Rd. Ste 118. For Medical Clinic. H.B. snack food co. Ste. •2216.C M.
N.B. e.63. Prefer mature person Shorthand. typ, som e ----------
w/background in nutrl· 'bookkeeping, perm pos. Wanted young person in·
MEDICAL Anillant. U · xlnt. s•I•"'· •••1900. lfftated in ltarnlng in-'d f .. b .. lion 6 preventive • ·~ .,._..
P . tonl • ac:a. t)'P· medicine. Lite bkkpg, ·--------.. lerestinl business. Call inl-fin. 6..aalary open.. waaet o)>en. Aak for Grarie at Tiie Destgn Nan-Smoker. 541.7731 flviel»-4077. 419.4087 s.crtt.., tePns Group 831 ·5226 or
Medi al Sl.000 + D.O.E 751-1802 c: R eceptionist, P /T, Accurate typln1. no ---------1.aAYTICH brt1ht, assertive, tor shorthand. Mature, ad. Warehouse/Oellvuy
pro1re11lve animal drea appearance. Call per.on fOC' party rental spc~f-........ 'II-MM, • SMd.y. ~'L,PQU~t~~·'ff.---...,...r:.al~.ulllll-'~Nol'
for Glftey. Moc. 7All·l , PenGnDti Acenc:y,
Wed. 5PM·t , Fri. 7Alll·l , HartliGr Blvd., C.M. Mualc:lan : K•yboard • rultar player for con·
&enliPOl"arJ 1roup. Con·
lid Kathy Ul.-Z.
I .
s.t.IAM·5 NEVUA FE~ K.O.E.
Clualnf!d Adi, YoW' one-
itop 1hoppna etnter. Clauified A d1
-.
r
. . .. -.. -.... -
.
Mii t 1 11 .. , ... •-IOI ..... . tltO Tt.meley, Oecem~r 30, 1980 CWLYPILOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-.. •••••••• ••••••• ..... ••••••••••••• •••• IOI .... Stweo 1091 fw S•
• ·: • 1111 w•• ·•• T ·• 1 • • ••••••••••• •• •• • • • • • • • • 11111 •II! • ___ ,.. ... • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••-• .. •••••••••••••• hum your biuloeaa COHN Dtrector~tombon• Advt'!nt TV rnodel 161 1~~~1;;~J' TOP DOI.LAI
PAIDFOI
.000 It CLIAM
USB>CAISI
....._ ,.,,rt.d . ~ f .. 1rted A ..... UtM .....................................................................
rwd a.done card ror with raH Eaullent tyr uW, mu1t .ell 12000 READEKSAND ...... U1 pl111QGe1pare <'WWUoo. SUM> 67~ 80!.\J 7~ "1lt __ __ ADVERTISERS
'712 W.W t76Z Well Htl ....................................................................
••• hti.t.-. JMO.,aAve ··-··••od Yw are &a. winner uf
W• """'"' perawat:1eolli al\erePM The prlct of 1tema __ ._. a&l -1 l C..UUac h1the, 1440 3hp, 3 ... -ra •• v• •I lbaoea •lectrlc sullar auvtrt11ed by veh icle .trap, mfflln1 11lrllne Prole11>un•I model with '4Jaw chk. f fpll, collet dealen in lhl' vehicle
ID r .. iaremenlt Pr" Tre.i ol l,ift' 10101 up to doeer, KOK ' ~ tool claulfled advt'rt1sing v• ._. 6 theft 1 Yur 1 b&dr, nu 1/19. Approx 800 columns does not 1n
,._..ll•td \111 encloa .. ~~.! 11•r11&b Wh oodd1rh•1
1n1 In PnrellMIO 646 8003 elude any applicuble
wallpaper, rabrlr or uuu)' w l ar • e taxes, license. transre.r
"Olly <Ho" ".~, ' Wt'! cu~ '5()(1 ~ '446 a..... lees, finance charges.
w\ll back • lrlm )'Our Nc.·w lbane.l "Uuttcrflx." ......... rees ror air pollution COO· c..aa Or Ir)' lwu t'liriJ11 ilC'UUitic ll1Ul1ar, model •• ;.T;••••••••••••••••• trol device certltirations back LO back to IO or dealer documentary P.:rno JN hllH'k r1111 11 PHlt't.:s w ftinc• mother o( ••••••••••••••••••••••• preparation r barges un Iha ur » ab J less otherwise s peci ri cd
m iracle
mazda
r ~
~W...645-1700
CREVIER '$' $; & 110.0WAY
1 1 IANTA ANA
I 835·3171
T"HI ULTIM4'JI OlllVIHO MACHltj£
•USIOIMW1•
lt71SUIAIU
GFCOUPI
~ sJ)ffd trans .. AM /FM
stereo w tcaaseue, sun root. ~ exterior & ex
tranioe! <NOVWJL
MOWSJtH
MllACLI MADA
us•CAIS
1425 Balter Street
COSTA MESA
545.3334
·•Dulek, runs good.
$500 .
548·398'7
ttl5 •••••••••••••••••••••••
YOUlt #I
~ADILLAC
~BSHlrlN
OIANGI COUNTY!
SALES, SERVICE
AND LEASING ) ...........
tlltMYalUJt),to ............. , ..... 4 bt ..i•tl 111>1'• &>ttarl llllfi) l::quipp1.1d * * * bytheadvertiser e t1111t1 sou w shadow transduc1.•r IM M .... r ---
10urmorell 4'>u ptd1.~w s1rapbutto11, 611 LldoPar,IJr.7A ~/
Top Bellar
Paid
''73 2002 ( ~)
'742002tlis/r C0332>
'752002a <0035)
'762002s/r4Sp. (1578)
'n320iswirf.air(320l> oyota 9765
'n6.l0csi auto (004-0> '••••••••••••••••••••••• ·NABE~~-Sais Tu lod~~u J1wk PIUi 11nd hardshell Newport Beach CIGa1ic1 9 520 For Your Car!
JaaJUlnaJan 11
AuWtn Coe11•nllo11
NOCAltD" (''6Sc Muan i1:u •rifil•c. Yuuarethewinner or •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ura" your own vi 11c11tl UJll ALSO new M X H 3 frM ticlleh 1111m~. 11ddn1a11, 11hu11" " 1190 dual l'votrol phase ISI0.50 value). to
AUBURN Phaeton
Speedster 1935 classic
replica by CaUf Custum
<.:oach . Never re
gistered. Used for s how
car only' Bargained
priced! See J im Bu1e o r
Bernie Ashe. Theodore
Robins F o rd . 2060
Harbor Blvd .. Cos tu
Mesa. Call 642·0010 or
54Q..8211
JOHNSON & SOM
Liltc-.Wercwy
2626 Harbor Blvd.
CloMd Stt1tday1 '71 TOY OT A 972~ I CEUCA (~A llllJL
••••••••••••••••••••••• Clean!(t~t) l••UUtt."1 •• u.-.1 # C.Dtf'f'
T1c-IL«U m111t b .. t-1'
C'banaed for re•er\ed
MMa •t \JM' Co"' enuon l'Wller &IM!ad of t 1 mt'
c.11 MZ st71 ut 272 to
t'Wm )CK&rt1r lc t't)
wt1'U makt'! ont' ,•ard IH'!r ~fter S75 Will take S4W Sports Vac .. fOft <.:osta Mesa 540-5630 S4 I tt c .. ,r.• ""''' '>110 .,,oo
t1111 Add~ lllH'h rur .all of ;abo\ l' 1714 1 & IV Sltow ~uc~k ormvnc)uf 150 25 16 . 63 1 01\111 , Jan3thruJanll
PILOT NIMTIHCi ~ wes Anaheim Convention
W•P•y
OVER
llMlool&
.·@~ft~ '77 s •• ,.
· ~ 534-4100 Astro moon roor. loaded ,
P 0 '~ s·1· s L' I. L •• Center l:k>A I~ •" '" .-eauey Tickets must be ex-Jo'orVourGood
VW, Porsche or Audi
13731 Harbor special sale price !!
l'wta Mer.11 ~u 9''626 PA with :l culumni. changed ror reser ved Garden G rove <Ol2ZER > • • •
Ba09d ~11.a~b U1"bbo)
witb bievieled mirror
950 SmJ rOWld oi.k din
IAa table M7S Squarie
oak cotfee tbl S600 Ph
67WMO
IOI ••••••••••••••••••••••
Wuber & Dryer Xlnt
cond. tmea.
646-5848
GaClt'r & Satt ler gas
stove, gd cond S75 080
557.8393
lkydn 102 ••••••••••••••••••••••
• • •
•. L4"Htl
3131 College.'
Costa Mesa
You are tht'! w11111cr of
) frMtic~•h
1s10.so value I . tu
Sports VacatiH
&RVShow
Jan3 tbruJan II
AJlaheim Con vention
Center
T1ckt•ts mus t be ex
changed fur reser ved
seats at the Cvnvenuun
Centl!r ahead ur time
Call 642 5678, t'Xl 272 to
claim your tickets • • •
$475 0 H 0 Abo looking seats at the Convention
for ZlldJm C.> mbals Center ahead bf time
557 83!13 CaJI 00·5678. ext. 272 to
ll t; I:: S l' H I:: K U b cla1m your tickets -... rrumpet Gold luqucr
I 1 n 1 s h l' u m µ I e t e loah, M-••ce/
w malcl1111g rnutc & con wYic• f020
l'crt l' adaµtor SJOO •••••••••••••••••••••••
t'46·1W78 ~IARl~I::
M1tcht'll Cab111et
JHLspkrs, SSOO
497-lSO!l
2 IS" J::LJ.:<:rnlt'l.\"I
Oes1gn1install rep1ur
Qual. work. 549 2520evs
~~ .............. !?.~~ ~=~· 9030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AKC Eni,:lish l'ol·ker Lt'wmar 30 2spd winch
Male blue rone ~helped brand new $175
'46 Ford Woodie. rcstured
113,000. ALSO '29 Model
A Town Sedan. -1 dr,
restored. Ideal for SIU
dent. ll0,000 675·6161
WOtl in ContHt
Brand new reproduct ion
or 1931 .Model A Ford
Phaeton t•on ve rt1ble.
V-8. auto, air, P S. P t B.
ster1:0 & tape , t·ost
$20.1158 by H eplil·ars
&>st orrer Private 1>ar
ty. (714 )646·9514.
Aug lst housebroken 1>75-4133 631·6174 '·54 Porsl•he, conc11 urs
VW-PORSCH E·AUDI
445 E. Coast H1way
at Bayside Drive
Nt'Wport Beach 673·0900
Premium price!>
µaid for any used ear
(foreign or domestic>
in good condition.
See Us First'
Must sell QUJckly girls '
fram e 10 s pd
Moteberane , xlnt t•ond
L'vmrud" 100 •f.P 197... cond .. new trans l'ng Sewi-Machi 8092 a:. "' ' t 7" 04 2 .:KHB 11 .11111°1 1111 ti 1"11urHSR78by l4rad1al -.,, net Rebuilt Like n t:w susp.m .. etc o7· 4 1·,,,1,1 \1,.,,,.111111.111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"°· 492.4459 tires. new $1 55 firm Must sell ciuickly-Adll'r 675.·3731 ask for Rich. 4 ~ Dri•H 9550
673-1933 sewmg mach_111e w pure loah,Pow-90 .. -0~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wanlt.>d Honda t·ar ,
chwinn Super Trick 1 b 1 ... "" •78cherokeeChicf 1970il.N600w1thblown Beach Crwser . All alloy Genuine SAPPHI RES. map e ca •ne t. ·" nl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 531118(.11
h I c~. O_YS 492 .. 1459 Xlnt buy, 16. Glasstron, $6,000 or best offl'r l'ngme components . Call Andy your c o1ce on Y $10 ea --642·9193
aft 4. 67~9696 ~8688 -Sltiinc) 809 l super fishing or skiing, ' AMICK, Imported
C II . N ••••••••••••••••••••••• SOhp Merr. 4hp Johnson. 'HO Toyota Landcru1ser. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ml69 Materials 1025 o ector s item' a GOLF C t r 1 673-5340. lo rru. PS. custum paint. ,. ___ al 970 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• l1onal Geographll'. ar s or s a e ·-1 ~
1912 1977 A d Xlnt. cond. New ball . loah SH-/ nev1:r used orr roacl Ask •••••••••••••••••••••••
9560
Rooters Hot Kellie. Com· · · ppraise etc· "92·6128 ~ ,..-1ng $8000 best ofr pressors & Guns gd S2.000. SI 1951080. By ---1 9070 751.6311 cond, xtras 548-0512. 1·5.642-5~12. rv. lodio, •••••••••••••••••••••••
540-0203 ----HiFi St 8091 WANTED: SIDETIE Trucks 19" Color TV Portable ' ereo 25' N rt I 1 Cb I ••••••••• •• ••. •• ewpo s e anne ••••••••••• ••• •• ••••••• J)ocp 1040 $125. B/W TV S3S Both •••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnl. 646-1525. Must sell stereo com po· area. ~5~· ~2·0687· '76 JEEP JI O
KEESHOND Pups AKC ----nent system. Pioneer re-loclh, Storoge 9090 PICK UP
Olampsire.M/F .'Pet&· IO"TABLESAW ceiver. Dick turntable,••••••••••••••••••••••• Automati c , s µoke
s h 0 w . pvt p 1 y DELTA ROCKWELL EPI speakers. $45-0 iOBO Dry s torage .available. wheels and wide tires
213/697·1345aft6pm, $.150,962·3S97afl6pm. XJntcond.545·7568 New.port Dunes. 1131 (0497501
'"F'lrid w at you want in Fmd wh;lYoU-want -in Back Bay Dr N B ' $3489 '::~:J~1':le blk/tan 7 Daily Pilot Classifieds. DaiJy Pilot Classifieds. 64-4-0SlO COST A MESA
545-lioto Tr•sportation AMC JEEP
Free to Y• 1045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549-8023
• • *
V.E. Tyler
IU72 Vulenc1a !Jr
Huntington Beach
You arc thew inner or
l frtt tick•h
I SI0.50 value). 10
Sports Vacation
& RV Show
Jan3thruJan I I
Anaheim <.:onvcnt1on
Ci:nter
Tic kets mus t be ex
chan~ed for reserved
seats at the t:nnventiun
Mechanic's Car
Smog cert 1 owner Lu
mi. nu motor 1 parts I
ball S I mpg PP . .m 2455
'75 6l0 A/C, 4 dr. 111 m1 ,
clean. new tires. brks
$27401 bst 840·3425
Automatic . 4 doors
(772126)
S5499
... HfcWl Uowa\d
VQLl(SWAGfN IN C
534-4100 ,.
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
9727 '73 VW B ••••••••••••••••••••••• ug . xlnt rund
VISIT YOUR
ORANGE COAST
HONDA
HEADQUARTERS
TODAY!!!
UNIVERSITY
l.Jl;S & SER VIC F:
OLDSMOllLE
HONDA
GMCTRUCKS
2850 Harbor Hl\'tl
COSTA MESA
540-9640
Wante d Honda c ar
1970·72. :°'i-600 with ulown
engine. 531 11801
Jaguar 9730 ....•...•..••.••...•••.
'72 XKE Convl. Auto. p::..
air restored whtrt
nct'<led . real bt!autv
Mint rond S12.!rni1
546-5093. 964 7069.
$3.000
548 6-146
'75 CAMPER
!111t•e1 1135642)
S5599
" ... H1~ M()U)Quf ~ V0ll(SWAGfN INC ~ ~100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
P arting Out ' 197.t
Volkswagen lfoR parts
for s ale 641 -9157
'76 VW IUS
~ust sell 40243081
S5699
® ... Jff~ MOWQ·u~
VOLllSWAGfN INC
~100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
VW part!>. '68 left & right
Mft'cede1 hn1 9740 door. '73 left door SSO
••••••••••••••• • • •. •• • • each. 548-9744 ••••••••••• •• • • • • •• • • • • 0~.._. ~ Aircraft 9 I I 0
Gennan Shepherd male. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 1980CHEVY 1/1 TOM MU LUV
UTIUTYIODY
<.:enter ahead or lime •---------1 Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to •Ml 79 4SOSL '71 VW Bus. Clean. s nrf.
9150
ad w/klds, also make gd 1969 Beach Musketeer . euarddoc. 540·5496 midlune 150 Lycoming
\A /~.t e n g . 2 Co m . n a v · s SAMO.YED PUPPY. VVof\ -foYW'I trans ponde r . 848·2509
rem . AJI abots. s mos old. ~ ,.A b, ~df'llll't eves. Needstd home. 536-~9 (./f • ~ ~I v r l
AtllFlllWOOD have +iwe-tv~ t":c-:1:..':'1
F.S:,2026'-~S48·'l797 aoso bu -{t-e phlte? ~1~·;~;.;~~··~~;·;;,:~~~
.---~, rack. helmets, xlnt cond.
For plumbers & electn
cians. (5937)_
ONLY $6295
HOW AID Chevrolet
Dove & Quail Sis.
NEWPORT BEACH
833-0555
cla1myourt1cket!> 2JK lowmiles s leepu. $2700 Days
• • • ... 1 631-2931 eves 646·337 1
Alfa Romeo 9705 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
"" mo warran y
156370) ·72 BUS Must sell Sl7So
Priud to Sell! b5t ofr Gd body. run:.
JIM SLEMOHS gd. 5411-4900
IMPORTS
1970 HARBOR Bl.VD '70 Square Back Sunrvor
COSTA MESA ~ech xlnt. clean
631•1276 $11500 B 0 49i 3953
S7999
Sodcleback
IMW
831-2040 495.4949
9920 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Would You Drive
A L1lUe Further
To Save A Hundred
Dollars??????????
Call Us Today
F'or More Details!!
900 So. Coest Hwy.
LCllJlllMI •ach
4t4-lll I
SEE USf=IRST!
We have a good selection or NE W & USED
Chevrolets !
COHHEll
CHEVROLET
X')< 11..rl••r H . I
I I"' I \ .. , ~" \
541>-1200
• * •
Mary Da•id1on
121 Apolena
Halboa Island
You are the winner or
3 freetichh
ISI0.50 value). to
Sports Vacation
& RV Show
Jan3thruJan II
Anaheim Convtnt1on
Center
Tickets mus t be ex-
changed for reserved
seal!> at the Convention
Center ahead of time.
<.:all 642-5678. ext. 272 lo
claim your tickets • • •
•••••••••••••••••••••••
**I BUY**
11000 545·2600 '911 Ford ~ Ton 4x4 heavy
duty thru·o ut. Including 1981 ALFA
SPIDERS
~~~~~~~~~~j'68 \V; Bug, reblt en.:. Iv
nuleage. runs & looks
1972 Chevy Kingswood
Est ate Station Wagon.
All electric windows.
seats & door locks. AM 11
track stereo. Has a ir
cond. luggage ra C'k ,
man)' xtras Brown &
white on 01Jts1de w /gold
int Xlnt rond $1200.
Call Rhonda a t 962-5355.
Good uaed Furniture ii
Appliances-OR I will sell
or SELL for You
MASTERS AUCTION
64MH6, lll-t6ZS
DtYC>aCI SALE
8' Cuatom designed sofa + 5' loveseat , loose back
pillows, new S97S, king
sz waterbed wfvibrator
& acres. $225 752-9893
Teacher's Desk 34"x55".
d rawers both s ides.
separate glass top $7 5.
552-7557
Dining room table w /4
capt. chairs. all wood.
SlOO. 979·1066
Bassinelle, Antique sew
mach, st~. desk. crib
mattress. dressing table
liv. rm. chair, King head
board ii frame , dinette
, set. com er desk 543·2987
I Moving Sale. Compl. kg
sz br set . 9' sora. twin
bed w/frame. s· om ce
credenza. club chrs ,
I amps . mi sc. 7 tot
Seashore, N.B. 645-8410
G.apSale 1055 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Relocating. Must s ell
furniture, cameras, car.
other household goods.
Call 495-5740
....... old Ciooclt 1065 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Com. waterbed with
frame Zenith remote
control color TV 649·2975
,,
Use Answer /It/ 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 convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
th is service is only $7 .50
week. For more informa-
tion and to place your ad
call 642-5678. · .,..
Daily Pilat
great Sl750 ofr
847-6.S72. 968 J 147
'79 Honda XL SOOS . Braden Winch. 6cyl.
dirt/str eet, xlnt cond. good mileage. $3250. 9742
SU75. 675·1768 4911-2902 eves, Chip.__ IEACH IM,ORTS
'19 HONDA Trail 90 new Vmt1 9570 848 Dove Street '70 VW. strong cnl(rne. NEWPORT BEACH needs bodv w rk S90U cond 500 ma ideal cam-••••••••••••••••••••••• . •J
perscycle S77S,640·7584 ·74 Dodge 8100 Van. 318 7 52-0900 9744 ~5-7420
•· ... -S I p--" V·8· Jspd, air. mags. IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '62 VW l111n, S850 -.. er• ce, ..-.1 S2181 /0BO. Must Sell. _.,.
& Accntori•1 9400 644-8725, 640·2855_ ~·;;·,•h••e••b•,:s•t••d••e•a•l••1•n• A v!ry97 !a~eGmlodGeTI with 962 0048 9tiJ 9984 ....................... ----~
S SAVE SAVES .WOS Want.ct 9590 Orange County Com e ·r cond. & only 60,000
••••••••••••••••••••••• Set!UsToday'' o riginal mile s ' WITH USED PARTS (600EAF>.
Imported car parts WE PAY TOP DOL.LAR & MOW $2995 IM PORT
1
fo r .lop used ca r s
AUTOSUPPL.Y ,fore1~n. domestics '!r MIRACLEMAZDA
101 N. Manchester classics. If your car is SADDLEIACIC USED CARS Anaheim 776-9900 extr a diean . sec u s 1425Baker Street
Jo1RST ! VALLEY IMPORTS NEWPORT BEACH
FORD
302 ~grne m good run-
rung cond1t1on 641·9157.
548.3374
28402 Marguerite Pkwy 545.3334
M1ss1on Viejo
Op.I 9746 831-2040 495.4949 •••••••••••••••••••••••
·12 VW Conv G1)()(.I cond.
S4000 Ask for Lorelei
days 675 9690. ''\ l'S
6t2·989S.
'58 \ W Bug rblt 1600 eni.:
SI.WO OBO
li61 1451
'WCON\ Cl.,\SSll'
Trans & enf! ::.1ll1tl
beaut1full) res t ort'tl .
$4000. 642 6820 I Bolt)
Cor•effe 9932 ...............•.......
SHOWROOM COND.
'75T-TOP
Power brakes . powe r
, windows . power s teering
wi th lilt t elescop ing
s teering wheel. air.
AM F'M s te reo. rear
window d t!f ogger .
automat1l· trans Snow
white with Burg undy in-
ten or ti,000 miles. Im
maculatc thruout!
$8.100 i54 ·6790 or
Answer Ad "209. 642 4300
2-1 hrs
4 Xtra wide tires with
chrome nms $25 each
548.00QJ
~
,_lh!Or~C~
Cl~ec.I Sundays '76 Oµel. 43.000 mi.
'75 BMW 5301, 4 dr. sun-I 6:i·~7 Vol•o 9 77 2 Cougcr 99 33 .......................
2925 HarbOr Blvd
COSTA MESA
979-2500
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
COHHELL
CHEVROLET
·~-"'If 1rt•·· f!I, !
I • I!'> l \ VI~-~ '
546-1200
HIGH IUYER
Top dollars for S ports
Cars. Bugs . Campers ,
914's, Audi's
Ask for U7C M Glt
JIMMARIMO
VOl.KSW A.GEN
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEA<.:H
842-2000
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos . Ca ll us
TODAY'!!
rool, a •c. tape. pcrl eel
cond. S6SOO 835 7001 or PNgeOt 9748
640~8590 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'72 BMW 2002111. )(Int con
d1t1on. lu mt. orf1•r
1·525 6005
SADDLEIACK IMW
'77 OMW 3201
Auto922TWX
'77 BMW 3201
Auto234RZQ
'78 BMW 3201
4 sr>eed 799U LJ
'78 BMW 320i
4 sµct.-d 233UN R
'JO BMW 320i
4 spl'ed 3S8W RF.
'79 BMW a201
4 speed L75YZI
'79 BMW 320i
4 i;peed 836V Z E
'79 BMW 3201
s speed 8S6ZSU
'74 VW Super Beetle
231YMX
LEASE
DIRECT!
1981 ,EUGEOT
TURIOs
IEACH IMPORJS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
Porsche 9750 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'79 911 SC Targa: Xlnt
eend. Take-over IHre.
For details call 682·2222.
8·5Wkdays ask for Joe. -----
.......................
VOLVO
SALES, SERVICE
A.MD LEASING
OVERSEAS DELIVERY
EXPERTS
EARLEllCE
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
646-9303 540-9467
ORANGE COUNTY
VOLVO
EX C.:LUSIVJo:l.Y
VOLVO
Largest Vol\•o Dcalt·r
in Orang~ <.:ounty !
BUY or LEASE
DIRECT
·m Cougar Eng & trans
xlnt Bod) fair $800 or
bt.>st ofr 8Ji 7796
~ 9935 ••...........•......•..
'7 4 Charqer
Goud rond ~ew rebll
engine Gold, black top.
2 dr Good gas mileage
$2000 ofr 534 .75 33
eves wknds 4410 W.
Sunswept St. Santa ,\na.
9950 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ORANGE COUNTY'S
FINEST
l.I NCOLN·MERCURY
DEAL.ERSHI P
~~·tld.· L.INCOLN·M ERCU RY
16 IS Auto Center Dr.
SD Fwy l.ake Forest
exit
IRVINE '78 Jo'iat 124 Spider
072UJS
21402 M«CJMrit•
hrtiway
Mi1Motl Vi•jo
811-2040-495·49 49
C~_!d Sund!~-
'78 924. a le. s/r, am/fm
8trk, 30K m i, 2 yr
guaranttt eng. perfect
cond, mak e o rr er
493-0374 10120GardenGrove8l 130-7000
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
'76 91 lS Targa, black. full
equip. mint. lo mi.
Garden Grove 530.9190 -----MilltmN) 99 52
Sl7.000. IM2·1l14
---'7S Volvo 164 , AC.
Rolhloyu 9756 AM/FM ster eo. irood
••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. $4500 , bs t ofr
#1 DEALER IN U.S.A. 5411.11937 eves or 991.7300
ext 2t8dys
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 Mustang Ghia. 6 cyl.
23.000 mi. Fully loaded.
Ong owner. Xlnt. cond.
S3500 Days : 640-1813.
Eves 760-0317 . ----a.-bfle tt55 •••••••••••••••••••••••
(
DAil 'V 1111..0 T
Potted parrots palaver
Shot of rye en~ouragee 1a11, aongs
ft'INKSB Ku Md I AP1 rrlacllla and
MU~ Reautlll't p1urot1 Budd)• and Poll)', have
nothlq -.alnat th• CK'C1111onal <'rachr 111 Iona H
the") ftt their d•ll> ttu11~ of t~hryl•nd ry~ whusltey
And appar"'tl)' It d<wi. wonder11 for the1r
ciawn·lo-~ualll repertolnt, wh1ch lncludc a Bronx
C'htf'r and a ft'rank Sinatra tmnauoo
'l M•~ lh.-m both fi ve• ttUIA1 drops a tla.y,'' S1&HI
lie ntl'k "I don't kno..,. 11 1n too mut:h but lhey
ttm to be hippy '
WHEN nu; ('0 PLt! GOT PoJly nine years
J o. She tam~ wnh ai boltlt' of ryt: •110 b._r kt·t1pLn~
lMt rut'hOO~ trom 8 vr~vlOuS owo~r
Sht-u ld bltd • are bas1 r~lly from hot
C'hmatf's They te nd toward colds To keep lbem
hH\\t\l )"OU have to g 1vl' th~m Iii\ ~y~rop full of
"hlliktl), t'Vt'r)' d•). ;c•1d M r~ Kt1so1ck
Whet~r n ' ~co.Ulil' vi lh~11 tappltng Ouddy
and Polly t11lk u1 MOK uv • s torm, Crom
nurser rhym~!> to e1 l'huru!> of ·hellos ' when the
ttlephone nngs, from wolf wh1stl~s to opera And
~ople ('Orne from all t1ver to ~ee the m t'arry on,
~rs Resnick s1ud
When Re!>n1ck t·c11nb homl' from work as a
~haropractor. Polly greet!. him with "fll. Dad
What's doing->'
BtJDDY, A MORE •RECENT acq u1sit1on, is
the better talke r, with a "phenomenal vocabulary
He'll s ay the complete 'Jack and Jill · I couldn't
even leach my kids that. · Resnit•k said.
Buddy also has a few choice expressions
picked up from a pre vious owner like "Cool il, I've
been there before" and "OK boys, lake it easy."
Polly is more of a s inger, given to opera and
Frank Sinatra imitations. said Mrs. Resnick
The parrots llllk constantly. trying lo mimic
whatever they hear. And Mrs Resnick, who runs
an antique shop next door to the couple 's home.
always answers them, ·•even if I don't understand
them . I try lo encourage them."
"YOU CAN'T SHUT THEM up. When they
want lo talk, they talk," she said.
But if they don't want to. you c an 't make
them. Like the lime both birds refused to perfrom
for a Baltimore radio station although they were
singing up a storm and talking minutes before the
station called. "
At night, when their cages are covered , both
birds say "Good night "
"When you t ake the cover off in the morning.
they say, "Good morning," Resnick said.
"We're very proud of oor children," said Mrs.
Resnick, who's got a thing for all parrot-related
items.
HER COFFEE MUGS ARE EMBLAZONED
with parrots. there are parrot towels. parrot jokes.
parrot cartoons. pa rrot switch plates. parrot mir·
rors. a collection of stuffed toy parrots and e ven a
parrot clock
~ ~, -
J '
/
Af'WI,.,.._
POLLY WANTS A SHOT OF AEOEYE
Mlhon, Prlacllte Reanlck, tippling pet
··We must sound like very peculiar people,"
Resnick said.
''What's normal to us is evidently not normal
to anybody t>lse." Mrs. Resnick added .
Gas dispute costly
for Iowa driver
AUDUBON. Iowa <AP) -A dispute over four
cents' worth of gas oline is going to cost an
Audubon man $168.82.
John W. Lyons. 69, was fined $100 and assessed
S68.82 in court costs after being found guilty of as-
s aulting a clerk in a self·service gas station.
The clerk, Darlene Hansen, 49, said Lyons put
$5.04 worth of gasoline in his car but paid ber only
$5. explaining that he had "run over."
Quake mail speeded
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Postal serv ee-ftas
a nnounced a special mailing arrangement to speed
deliver y of packages to Italian earthquake victims.
Parcels sent under reguiar international sur·
face rates, plus a $2 per package surcharge, will be
<tirlifted until Feb. 14 to areas affected by ttie quake
in southern Italy. Pos tal ServireofficiaJssaid .
Cambridge
Sad town
grateful
to cop
NEW HARTFORD,
N.Y . (AP> -Some
10.000 residents of
Milford, Mass.,•signed a
26· by 63-foot thank-you
card for a Ne w York
PVBUC NOTICE
"'CTITtOUI eue.••M ..... STAT .... T T ............. ,.,_ •• , .......
WllMM•1
J , T INTIAll'IUH$, "" I . 01..-.. ~ ....... c:.11 ....... ,,,..
"'•"' .. "· 01111111, , .. , $ Ol-.M, S-.U., c:.IHeml• ~
J..,.. ._ OMIM. ''" s. o._, '-• .... Coll ...... .,..
Tllle ...... lt <~tty..,..,. ......... -'-'*' ..,.., ,_ • _.._.....,
1"*"-"· QvlNI Jr,
Tlllt _,... -111• wttfl -c-•Y c....-e1 OrMVS c:-ty on .................
Pt-1
........... Or .... C:oHI 0.lly Piiot,
o.c.•.1•.n .ao, 1• 4-..0
state trooper who cap-, PUBLIC NOTICE lured two men accused . ______ _
of killing a policeman
from the Massachusetts
town.
The card, signed by
nearly half the residents
of Milford, will be given
to Trooper Leroy G.
Schultz on Sunday at lhe
Schuyler police station
near Utica, N.Y.
PICTITlOUI •u1u11ss
NAMa ITATIMINT T,,. 1o11-•no _ _.. It dolnt busl•
MHH
•ATHSl<ELLER CLUB OLO
WORLD, 1f'1 C:...ler Aw , HUt1ll"91on
Bee<ll. C:.. '2M7
Lony H•utl, tltl O•"Y A••.,
F-•••n valley, c:. •uoe
Tlllt bullneu la c-..c1..i by an ..,..
11'<0f'po<Med ASto<•llClfl Oll'ter l"-n e
... riM rWp,
LClflY Hauff
PVBUC NOTICE
PICTlnOVI MIM••H
...... ITATU..lfT
T .............. --11 ...... !Ml-.......
OIOAGE M AO.I NION
E NT l Af'•ISE$, lll Golte..,••
AYell ... , eor-... Mor, C:.llfonll• .,.u
G t o •t• H. Aottl ,.ton , 11e
Goldel\tOd Aw-. tor ...... I Mer,
Colllorl\lo t»lS
Tlllt ~-It C-.i<l..i tty efl Ill• dlYldu•I,
0.-91H •o«oln_,
Tiii' ,_, •~ lllod wllll -CovnlY Cltrk ol OrMtt C0111111 on
O.u-~.••
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITtOU• aUSINIU
MAMIE ITATIMllNT
Tiie lol-1111 l!Mtol\ I> dcNnt l>Vi l·
llH\ei
D IS TINC TIVE DENTA L
SERVICES, LTD., 1• Town _C_·
try, Ora1191, CA 92 ...
HerOld '""'911. O Os .. 1101 HOl111
Rl.,..wOOd SI, S...le All•, CA '1701
TlllS -MU h u1nc1 .. e1.o tty e11 In· .,,.,.,..,,
H.,Old N-11. 0 O.S.
Tiii> >'-1-1 wH hied wllll Ille
Cou11ty Cllrk ot Or•nve C:ou,.ty on
O.ctmlll• tt, ,..,
PVBUC NOTICE '
PICTITIOVI •utlNlll
NAMa ITATIMllNT
Tiit MllOwlc\t "°'_, I• CI0"'9 buil· ...... ,.
M ANO II Ol!VEL.OPMENT, JI»
BAY$11ore Orin, Ntwport ltecll,
C•lllo111le n..J
•ob1tl Bruce Hulep, ,.,,
llaytllore Orin . NtwPOrl •••Cll,
C•llfornlotMJ
' Tiiis ~""'' Is u1nducted by .,. ""
di.idu••·
A-.t Bruce Htllep
Tlllt Jl<l-1 wM flled wllll the
c°""'Y Cl••• of Orel\OI c...,...,. °" o.um1>ern,1•.
SGT. WALTER F .
Tllll SIM-I Wft flllld wltll the
Cou111Y Cltrk of Oran~ County on
De<ember 12. •• ,..,,.,,
Publl~ Or ..... C.0.st 0.lly Pllol
Dec ••. n. JO, '"°· Jan •. '"' 4'7a.«
Conley, 61. a 31 -year
veteran of the Milford
police force, was gunned
down in an aborted bank
robbery Dec. 10. He was '
the firs t M ilf o rd
policeman to be killed
by firearms since 1916.
,.Jtl45
Pvbll"'9d Oranve CHM O.lly PllOI.
PISltn O.' JO, 1_,, Jen •. 13, 10, 1 .. 1 Stlt«I
Publl-Or41n91 C.0.SI 0.lly Piiot k----------
On Dec. 11, Schultz ap·
prehended Patric k
O'Shea, 39, and John F.
Currie, 27, on the New
York State Thruway in
Oneida County. The two
were charged with fi rst·
degree murder and re-
turned to Massachusetts
for trial.
Schultz attended
Conley's funeral Dec. t3.
"OUR TOWN wants to
honor th.is trooper ,·' said
Anthony J . Brenna, a
deputy s h eriff in
Worces ter C oun t y,
Mass. "When · he ap·
peared at the funeral, he
was mobbed. Everyone
wanted to s hake his
ha nd. He could have
been el ec ted
selectman."
Brenna said the ca rd
was unveiled at the town
hall Dec. 21 after volun·
teers spent a week get·
ting signat~res. The 64
sections or cardboard
will be hauled 230 miles
from Milford to New
Hartford l o be a s -
se mbled and presented
to Schultz.
PVBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUSINISS
NAMI STATEMENT
Tll<' IOUow1nq _..,,, I\ do1nca Du\!
..... •s
H UGHES R E A LT Y, 1601
M•<Arl""' 8111<1 . Sult• J7 V, s.tnta
4ne, C•llfo.nie '710i
Robert Cherie\ Huoll••. 1601
M•<Arl""' 8111<1, Suite l7·V, S.nl• 4n41, Celllotnl• '1104
Tiii> l>uMM\> Is <ondUCllKI by •" In· dM duel
R-1'1C H~>
Tiii> sta1....-1 w•> "'"" wllll ,,,. County Cler-01 Oranoe County on
0.ttmtllr 12, l'lto.
Oec 1l, l0, '"°·Jen •. IJ, '"' Stt...0
PVBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUSINl H
NAM£STATEMINT
l111fo11-1no1111twnhdolno1>11••,,.u .,
BE ACH TIME RE ALTY, 211
M•r1ne A¥enue. S •IDOI l~l•nO,
C•lllotn1•92'62
Ger•ldlne Elaln4' Spr1n9tton, tt•
Coral A•enue. R•tbo;t l\lend, Cell1or11I• 91 .. ,
Tiii\ Du\lne\\ I\ conducted by.,. In·
dlvldual
GerrySP•lnQ\lon
Th" Sl•lemenl w•• ftled wllh lhe
County Clerk of Orenoe Coul\ly on
0e<em oer?6, l'l90
l'UUil
"1'1415 Pubt1\l'ted Orenoe Coesl O•lly Pilot, Publl"'9<1 0r*'99 Co.st D•lly Pilot. D•< l0, 1980. J•n 6, IJ, 10, "" S14!..0 Oet 16. ll.lll, '"°· Jtn 4, 11111 so...eo
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS aUSINI$$
NAMa ITATUMNT TM fol-no _ _.. •• dolno bu•I· nen .,.
o .11.M COMPANY, t s.i P O<I
ClyOe Ori ... , Hvnhnoton ll••t ll,
C:•llfot"'-'1.-
0-lcl ~• Me'1i11 Jr . 9}41 Por1
Ctyoe Ori ... , Hl.ll'h noton 8t•ch, c:.lllOf'l\le~
1'111• buslnH• I• conduct..S bt en In dl•lcl .. •1
Oofteld 8. Merl•n J r
Tiii\ '1.1-1 WH 111..S wllll Ille
C°"nty Cler9l of Oran~ County on
O.c1m1>er s. '"°
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUSINISS NAMI. STATEMENT
Trt• f0flow1nq per\On 1s 001no bust
neu •~
SMILE SHOP (Tne Smde SllOPI,
10 Fore~l A""""· Lagun• 8Pacn. Celllornle in.SI
Judy And••d~ 0 M 0 •1141'•>
NOO\ler. Los A"Qtlo, c..111orn1• 9003S
lht\ bu'Wn(!'\\ f\ <Or'ldU(.t~ by •n 1n
~1vidu4I
JUdy An4r-0 M 0
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUSINISS
N-1! ST4TIMINT
Tl•• loUowlno --I\ OOtno bu"·
"t!H •\ t
E LECTRONIC INTRIGUE, IM>O
"' Ocu n FtOl\I, Ntw00<1 8HCh, Ce 92 .. J
Marty Wll\On, 1.00 W Oc .. n
Front NtWllOl'l Beach. C• n .. J t hh. ~,,.,,I\ c.anm,cttd ov An tn
Otv tdUAf
~rtyWtl\On
Hu\ \tatemen' ••\ '•'ed ••tn ow County Cfertc ot Or•nQit County on
Oecemoer "· t'lto
P VBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT!OuS aUStMIU
NAME STATIMEMT
The 1ot1ow1no De•\On " d01no bu\I·
M\\ .,
A CA D E M Y OF C AN IN E
0 8 E 0 I E MC E, 2117 SE 8" \t ol,
Nt wpart Stach, Ca 'n101
Luanne "'""" Porte•. 11'62 M•u•e. Tu\t•n. C.a 'n680
T"1' bO\.tntt' ''conduct~ by •n 1n
ij1v10\Jat
Lu.arww Portflt
r .... \. \t•t'"""""' •• , '•'"'° •ttn 1ne County Cle r• ot Or.anoe C.ounly on
(ntemoer 5 1'90 ,.,,.... Tf'\i\ it•tt1"ne'rlt w•\ filed with IM
Count~ Clerk ot Oran0t Coun•" on
O..t.,mbe• 10, l'lllO PuDlt\l'W<d Or'•nqir C.O.i1 O•llo; Pilot
FUUl l !>et ll. J) 14'0, J•n • ll. "II 511l•IO PuDlo~l'teO Or~ C0.'1 O••ly PolOI,
O..t 16,ll.JO. '"° J•·" b. 1'91 ~IO
P UBLIC NOTICE . ---,.ICTITl0u5 allSINESS
MAME STATEMENT t11e f041-no _..,,. I• -no bu••-
neu e ..
ACCU AIR C.ONIPANY 117 V14
R•••Ma, ,....__, S.acn c. .., .. 3
W1tH.m H•ll. 117 V1• Ra vf'r"nil
NtwDOf'f &.eccn, u "7663 Th~\ ~~\ I\ tONkKtt'd bV .,.. .,..
d,.ldu•I
W1lham tia11
TM\ ~t•tenwnt ·a~ tHf(S ••th ·~ Coun1, Cl.,k ol Otenqe Count; on Oec•mbe• I?, l'IO
FISI ..
Pubh•l'te«I 0<~ ~>I O•Hy P1101
De< "· n. lO. l'lllO. J•" •. '"' •N eo
PVBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS aUSINISS
NAME STATEMENT T II• IOllowlno _..,., is OOlno t>u•i·
nt-\\ .,.
VIOEO WEST, II 8 1rd•ono,
1 .. 1 .... C.llfOf'nle .,, ..
S11ven Oo<•n MCintyre, II
Bltd ..... O. INIM, Colllo.nl• '7714
Tiii• DuMnft> I\ Condueled DY •11 In·
dl•ldua1.
Ste..., 0 Mclolyre Tiii• ,._,_, •e\ 111@<1 wlln IM
County Clerk of Oran90 Cou11ty on
No .. mi.r IJ, 1'90 ,.1...,..
Publl.,_., Or-Coa•I Oally Pilot, o.c •. i., n . JO. '"° • .,...
PUBLIC NOTICE
ftlCTITIOUSaVSINESS
MAME STATEMENT
Th• foflow1nQ PPnon\ •r• CSOin9 t>uSi-
l'tt'"•~ FIDUCIARY TAil( SERVICE, Jl.0
P VBLIC NOTICE
"'CTITIOUS austMUS
NAM9STAT.fldNT
TNlol_,.pw..,...eredolno
°"'\iM:\\M
WARMINGTON-HUNTINGTON
HAR&OUR, LTD. 1•"1 Hele A...,.,.,
lt•IN (Mrfornl• 91114
T .... R-r1 P W•rmlnqtOft '°"'.
p•ny, e Glllfornt• c.,_ellOI\, l•Sf2
H•le A#llUf, Irvine, C.lliorn1e •·11u
Th •\ b\l\1M\\ " conduct•d bi; • 11m11..i ~neNlllp
Tl'teR-'1 P
Watml"91on Compeny
Wllll41m J Ptttm...,,
Sec'91•rr Tiits \tat_.,I W4\ 111..:1 with IM
County Clerl of Oran90 County on
Oe<<'mO.• s 1'90 ,.,...,
Publl.-Or-Co;otl Delly Pllol,
Otc t, It, 1J, l0, l\.m ......
PUBLIC NOTICE
• "ICTITIOUS aUStMI S\
PIAMI STATIMINT
Tiie followlno cwr>ons •r• dolnQ !>11\ln•••" GFI SEltl/ICES, 24414 Co11.-r
CllttCI ,EITo•o,C.lllornlaUUO
A.ober1 J -·· 11111> Bl....,lrd C.•n .. on Or•••. t..•eun• l••<f'I,
C•llfornl• mst
0 011111• H Mille r. >•4' C:-• Clltt Ct., El Toro, C:.ltfOf'nla mJO
Tiii• l>Utlneu I• <onducled by •
~rel 1)11'1,,.,.,..p
A-r1 J IO\ow9t
Thh tt•l-1 w e\ fl1eo with Ille
Cou11t y Cieri< of 0<•n9' Cou11ty on
mo ... mi..r 11, ,,.,, ""'711 Publl.-Oranve C:O.\l 0.lly Pllol,
Dec ll,U. lO, IM , Jan •· 1"1 S0.2
-~------------
PUBUC NOTICE
Newport Blvd Sull• 715, NtwPo<I -....
8eac 11, Calllom1••166J "ICTITIOUS auSl•EU
llolll'rt Allt•<H• H•ll '" LtOO P•r• NAMIE STAT .... NT
On•e.Mewpon 8tacll Callforn1a9266l' Tiit fOllowlftt petton I' doll\9 bu,/.
W1llfM'r"I Lino Morrii. 17& V•• s,a,, neu •s
Rtmo,NeWP0t1Bte<ll,Cellloro1<1•~l BALBOA MAR INA YACHT
Tiii\ b"Jineu IS tol\dutl~d by a SALES, JOI E. CO.st Hwy., Htw100f'I
.,.,..,.1per1ne,.,lllp Btecll, c.llfomle t2MO
Wllll•mL.-Mortl\_ ---H-~ ....... Oltftwvtef', Ml Vl"e
1°'111\ '1•1-1 wa\ tiled with Ill• llonlle, Newport llucll, Celllo•nla Coul\l'f' Clerk of Orenge County on f2'60
Oecem1>e<U, '"° Tiii• """""' I• conouct.o by .,. 1,.. FUU10 dl•ldual.
Publl"""' Oun911 Coesl Oaily Pilol. H RUdolpll O.ltwyter
P VBIJC NOTICE
"ICTITIOU• aUSINIH
NAMI UATIM••T Tiie IOll-lng _ _.. IS dolno bu•I·
'WUH
IOAESCO, 1760 Monfo•I•. A·•,
CO\te -· c:. mv MICllMI L. Swelm, "° 7111 SI., l1Ul\tlngton lie.Ch, C:.. ,,_
Tlll1 bUtl,..., Is tOllduct..i D'I' an Jn·
~lvldual. MICllMl L. Swelm
This st.I-I WM lllOd wllll Ille
County Clerk of Ore1199 County on
O.umber 12, tM.
~,,,.
Publlstwd Or.,. .. COil>I Delly PllOI
Dec. 16,U,lO, IM,Jan .•• 1 .. 1
PVBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUSINIU
N-1! STAT•M•NT TN ,.,._.,.. _..,. Is dolno ,,.,,,.
"'-"' .,
CIRCLE $ALE$, 711 Oc.NI\ Aw.,
• 0 4, H""'lft91Clfl heel\, C. . .,._
R-11 E -· ..,, Oorwtt Or., Hul\llf\91Clfl llltec:ll, C:.. f»4'
Tiii\ -lnH• I\ co•.O.•Clod by an 1n dlvhtu•I.
R~E.-
Tlll' --t -· flltcl •ltll IM c ..... 1y Clffl of a..,. County °"
Detem-It, IM PIS,_
Pu1111.-Or-COH I Dally Pltot
0e< u.111. 1'90,Jen.•. 11, 1"1 sn1.-
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUSIMESS
N-E STATIMINT
Tiie fOllOWl"O .,.,...., I• doint bu>I·
~\\A\
8EAOWORICS, IU W. 16th St ,
Cost• Mew, Ce t1U7 Mar\1\41 M val lier, tl4 W. 16\tl St .
coslt MeW. Ce m21 This buslneu Is condUCt..i by •I' 1n
dlvldua1
Mer\lleV•lllotr
Thi\ stetement wn filed w•lh 1110
Cou11ty Cler~ of Or•noe County O"
0tcem1>er ••. ,..,,
"1$1"2
PuDll\llt4 0ren9' Coasl Dally Piiot
O.t 1J. JO. 1'90, J.,. •. 1). 1 .. 1 ~t.IO
P VBLIC NOTICE
,.ICTITIOUS austNEH
NAME STATEMENT
T"-1041-1"0 --is 00.111 bu>!· M U •\
HAWAII TAN & SPA, 9'01 Warrwt
Aw., Suite tit. H""llf191on -"·Co .,..7
l(y"no Je HOl\Q, 1131 Oorwtt Or ,
HU'lllnllf°" llee<ll. C<t. ~
f llis 11161,.n " c...--1..:1 by en 1n·
dlv1duel
KY""9J•H-
Tht\ stat•"-' w•• ltl@cl willl ttw
County Clerk ol Or•119t Couoly on
O.\tmi.< 1• l'lto ,.u1m
P"bll>lltd Or-Coast O•llY Ptlol
0,< 13, JO.'"°· Jan 6, 13, 1'11 Sll...O
P UBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Th~ IOllOWl"O ,_,_, ,, Ooino bu•i·
n•u as
El EC. TECH SYSTEMS & SUP
POAT. 11•1s Sloy~rk CorCle, Bldg
)IE lr•lrw,C•llfornl••27U
Wiiii""' I( 'Nl11n, 100 N M<tllard,
• l,Ora<1911 C.e11torn1atMI
T11I• bu$1M'\S ls c-u<ted D• an In·
d1w1du•I
w1111a ... K. l'Nrtln
Tftl> •l•t.menl we• flied •1111 lllt
Co""'' Cl••~ of 0••"9' Counh Ofl
Oeetm-S, '*· . ,.,,_
Pu1>11'11..i Orenot Co;ott Delly Piiot,
0.< lO, 1'90, Jen t, IJ, 10, 1 .. 1 Sl14«1
P VBLIC NOTICE
"IC'TIT10U$ aUStNESS NAMI ITATIEMINT Tiie te11.-;no _ _, L> dol11t bu•I·
NU a t OAH GILllERT INVESTMENTS.
U. E 17111 SI , C....w Mew, C:.. m21
Oe111e1 Giibert, »n Or--
..... LO\Al_I.,., C:.. «1120
Tiiis "'41111tU I> condudeo b• en on
dl•ldv•• o.it11 Giibert
Thi• '1•-..s 111eo w1111 ,,..
Co\lnly Clerk of Oran90 '°""'Y on
Oeumtllr 11, '"° Pm•
Pulllh l""' Otenot C.0.tl 0.ll'r PJIGI
Dec. "· n. JO.'"°· J.,., •,_!!!t ~ .. .,
PVBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS aUllNIH
NAM9 ITATIMINT Oec.30, 1•.Jan.6, ll.Xl. ·~I >tl4-t0 Tiii\ ............ , WM llltcl wllll .....
---Coul\ly Cieri!, of 0r.,... Counh on
PUBLIC NOTICE O.c•m-s, 1'90.
Ti.. tot1owf111 --Is Oorno busl·
NHH"
m T•TlOU' •Uii'MESS __ _ "'""' PuttlllNd Or ... Coetl 0-41, Piiot,
IC.II, ENGINEERING AHO
OEVIELOPMENT, IUO ~n AYe ,
CO\le MeMt, C.O..,_.
Box: Less than
0.1 ms tar.
NAME STATIMl!NT
Tht lollowln9 iwr>oll\ ••• doino l>U\lntt\\ as
ANTIOUE SHIPPERS LTO . 11,.
De<.t ,16,n .111.1• ,,.,,.
PUBUC NOTICE
Hewpari B•.., . c.,.,, AM ... c a111orn1• PICT'lnOUI au11•iss
•uu ...... nATl ... MT Down -· utw AnllQ.,.S. 177• Tiie leli.wlftt ,.rtollt 41,. oe1,..
1(-IC, ..,...,..,.., 1 Fleret,
,lr>lM, Ce. '211S
Tllh MINH Is <.-.Clod lly Oii lft·
dlvl-1.
Keftl llerOSITom
Tiiis ----fl ... wll" Vie Count, Cieri! of Or.,... c-.-°" o,<e...-1', "90.
l ess than
0.1 mg lar
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined 0 ""'"P MotT1t ·~ 1"°
That Cigarette Smoking ls0angem'!8 to You~Health. Leu thin o.1 mg ''tac:· 0.01 mg
.--------------------nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method.
. ---...., --..... ·-----t·-------
~~~~~~~~~~~
..
"··~
Ne'WPOl1 81..0 , C°'ta M<!\a, C•lllO<nl• lluSI""° .. ;
•nu THE COf'FEE f'EOOLEA ..... Tiiis buMM U .. (0,duCl..S bY • CO<· VI•~ • ..._.., lilo«;ll, C:.llfwftl•
PO< et lol\ fl6'J ~ ""'*"""" A_, o, c:.r ......... 110 c ...... ~ Antiqw. A-. C:.. Mna, Callforllle fMa.
O.rt4< A Jones, C•l,..rlM G Carptflter, 170
S«.-y Clllolo •-. Goll• Mna. c;.llfwlll• Tiii\ Jtet.,,_t We\ filed wll?I llW
Cou11ty Clfrk of O••not co.111ty on Tiiis llllllneu It c-ted tty o O.cember i.. 1..0 ..,_,.i ~.
Plstnl ...._, 0 c:.r_...
Publl"'9CI Or-co .. 1 De lly Pilot, Tiii• .._ was mw w1tf1 .,.
0tc. l0, 1t1D,J.,..6, u , 20, 1"1 s112.ao c_,.,. ctor11 e1 0r.,... c-y .,.
o.c....-.s,19.
·-·
PVBLIC NOTICE
Celt 142-5171.
Put • few word•
to"°'" for u.
,, .....
,..,.....,.. 0r..., c .. " o.u, f'tioc. 0e<.•.1•.n.a.1• ~
PUBLIC NOTICE
. -..... ··--·-----
"""" Putlli"""' Or .... Coost Dolly ll'llOt
Dec u. •. ""°· J ... •. u. "'1 sin•
PVBIJC NOTICE
PICT1TtOUI aute•UI
NAM9STATeMllNT
Tiie tollowlnt --IJ dolflt -·· ....IOS
N E Wl'OAT CEN TE R FOR
EDUCATIONAL THEleAl'Y, )fl
....,.. .. St., eoti. Mow, c•. tMt7
Hertlert C Gross.•• H. Svc•-• Aw ., Lot """91ft, C.. ....
Tiiis WMftnl Is c-.Cled tty .,. lll-
dMcluot ....,c Oret&
Tiiis ......._, -lllW wltfl ttlf
t OV11ty c1er11 ot Or•noe c-y .,. Decem.., It, "90.
··-~--0r-.. ColiMI Deity ,....
OK •· ••J• IJ, •• 1411 1-.. I
r
l . (
--~...... ' -~--........ ,.., ----. .. --.. ------_..,._.,..... __ .,._. ___ ....... -------·--~
-11111111 llllY Ml
1 1 11 I\ I I ll l'l MHE H HI l'IH!J OU ANGl COUN r Y <'AL U-OHNIA 25 CENTS
Seeond OC rape trial to IJe Pressed
An Oranae Co'°"'ty pro ecua.or
·•yll be wall co.nt1n1u.~ to purtue
r apt-<'hlirK ~~ •ll•i n a t a
Wt tnl.lmter man evtlo thoulh
\he Hwnlnatoa Beach woman M
•llegedl atlack~d was found
dicad in a fo1or1da motel room two .
wn-lu. af'o, an apparent su.lcide
De puty Outrtct Attorney
M~rtin £n&qwst said rape defen-
dttnt Ty Glen Clayton will come to
lnal rur a secood lime Jan. 18. Hia
flra\ Oranae Counly Superior
Court trial ended in a h~a jury
IHl November.
Engquist and investiaaiors in
Tampa, fl•·· where the woman's
body was found, said they didn't
know Kimberly Prentice's
motive ln killing herself. No
21uic ide note was found.
A Tampa polic~ spokesman
said Miu Prentice, 21, apparent-
ly died ol a drua overdose. There
were also superficial cuts on her
wrists.
The spokesman said more
definite autopsy findings are ex-
pected.
Engquist s aid the young
woman. who testified during
Clayton's first trial. had ex-
pressed a reluclanc,e lo a~ain take
the witness s tand. Prentice
moved to Jl1orida after the lint
trial.
ln order .to pursue his cue
against Clayton, the prosecutor
sajd he would have to rely on
tra nscripts of the woman's
testimony during the firs t trial.
He acknowledged it would be
far more difficult to get a convic-
tion under those circumstances,
but Encquiat said he believes
Clayton is a "danaerous man."
Engquiat a_~rt rules per:
taining to evideDce allow for use
of Miss Prentice's previous
testimony and be knows of other
cases in which convictions were
eained despite the death of a key
witness. "It has been done before,
but it makes the case difficult,"
he said.
Clayton had asked Judge Frank
Briseno to dismiss the charges
against him on the new~ of Mi
-Prentice's death, but Judgt>
Briseno ruled transcripts of her
previous testimony could be used.
Previous teslimon~ had iu
dicated Clayton allegedly at
tacked the young woman atter he
gave her several drinks at -his
apartment.
Iran would ·'listen' to-U.S. plan
4 Viet youths
Witness tells
of gang rape
T he Orange County Superior
Court trial of four Vietnamese
youths accused of raping seven
women began Monday as a 21·
year -old victim testified she was
gang-raped after three suspeets
stopped her on a street lo ask
directions. The witness, a Costa Mesa
resident, said she was walking on
Katella Avenue in Anaheim when
the youths stopped their car and
told her they were lost.
Then, the blonde witness said.
they enticed he r into their
hatchback car and drove to a
dead end street in El Toro where
they spent five to six hours raping
h er. Sh e said one youth
threatened her with a handgun
and another defendant held a
knife\Oher leg.
Through her testimony, the
four youths. dressed in lona
sleeve white shirts, sat in a row
behind their four attorneys. Two
translator~ sat behind the youths
quietly s umm a riiing the
testimony in Vietnamese.
The 'defendants are Bo Quo<:
OFV youth
shot by
accident
A 15-year-old Fountain Valley
boy was in serious condition to·
day after heing accidentally shot
in the abdomen Monday after-
noon by a friend who was show-
ing him a-handgun, police said.
Steven Sullivan was knocked
to the ground by the .357
magnum slug al 1 :30 p.m. inside
a Fountain Valley bicycle shop
on Brookhurst Street south of
Talbert Avenue, police said.
Owner of the Bike-Way shop,
Dana Clark. 25, was showing
Sullivan his handgun when it
went off, police said. Authorities
have ruled the shooting acciden-
tal and Clark wasn 'I held.
Cl a rk called police and
paramedics took the boy to
Fountain Valley Community
Hos pital.
Beached jet
fuel taiik
stirsflaP
Pham. 20, and his brother, Dung
Quoc Pbam, 18, both of Irvine;
Tung Thunh Le, 17. of Santa Ana
and Minh Quoc Nguyen of Santa
Ana, who is listed as 18 but
claims he is 16.
They are accused of 68 counts
of rape, kidnap, assault, oral copulation and robbery.
The witness on Monday said
that she didn't reme mber Le on
July 7, when she allegedly was
attacked.
Deputy District Attorney Carl
Armbrust called the witness
after he opened his case by tell-
ing the jury that the defendants
used a simllar method in almost
every abduction, which he said
occurred from April 20 to Aug.
11.
Armbrust said the youths
stopped their victims .a they
were walking along streetS and
asked them to draw a map
before they forced the girls,
mostly teenagers. into their car
and drove to orange groves in
the south county.
He said they used a gun to
force the young women to un-
dress in the back of the car
where the back seat was fold;d
down to make a nat surface.
At one point, Armbrust turned
and stared at Bo Quoc Pham,
one of the defendants, as he told
the jury thar one victim had
heard the name "Bo" repealed
during her ordeal.
Defense attorney Larry
Buckley objected to Armbrust's
stares, claiming they were "ob·
v iously designed to inculate
emotion froln the jury.''
Superior Court Judge Frank
Brisene overruled the objection
but Armbrust didn 'l stare at the'
defendant again.
FV plans
childbirth
health class
-A fitness i nd conditioning
class for e>CPectant mothers will
be offered by the Fountain
Valley Parks and Rec reation
Department beginning Jan. 12 at
the community center behind Ci·
ty Hall, 10200 Slater Ave.
Restat~Uon will beam S.tur·
day for Fountaln Valley resi·
dents only, with open regiatra·
tion starting Monday at the
Recreation Center. 16400
Brookhurst St.
The classes will be directed by
Evanne Connors, who baa a
masters degree in physical
Sunbathers and lifeguards at education. The pro1ram is de·
Friends on the slepes
Former Republican President Gerald Ford and outgoing
Democratic Vice President Walter Mona-ate shared a
chairlift this week while skiing at Vail. Colo. ,Both Ford
and Mondale families a re at the ski resort for holidays.
Warm, clear days
forecast in area
Clear skies and warmer days
are ahead for coastal area resi-
dents.
Tonight temperatures are ei~.
_pected to dip to 52 degrees with
no fog projected along the coast,
according to a spokesman for
the !':ational Weather Bureau
Service.
W arm · dry air rrom the
northeast is blowing the once
dense fog o.11t to sea, said the
spokesman:
No fog is forecast Wednesday
and temperatures are expected
to soar as high as 82 degrees.
Some early morning fog may
bug coasta1 cities New Year's
Day, giving way to more warm
weather and fair skies by after-
noon, the spokesm an said.
For the first day since the fog
seige began, flight operations at
John Wayne Airport were in full
swing today. Visibility at Los
Angeles Inte rnational was ·
estimated at 100 miles today.
"It's beautiful,'' said Golden
West Airlines spokesman Dick
Biggs. "We will remain open all
day."
Hotel powerless
LAS VEGAS (AP> -A power
malfunction in the Circus-Circus
Hotel-Casino shut off electricity
to about 400 rooms, sending
smoke into the first four noon
late Monday. Clark Q>unty Fire
Department officials said no one
was injured.
Huntington City Beach had a bitol signed \0 improve paature and
a scare 'Monday afternoon when a circulation, while prevenUng ex· 1 black cylindrical object marked cess weleht lain. varicose veins 1'1rae est eat as containing flammable jet fuel and lower back pain common to '-' --washed ashore about three-preinancy.
quartersofamtlesouthofthectty The course ia for women ln the Pi~fietJMrd c.rews kept curious ~~n~~. ~= will:h:rds:::.; Ill boy's gift bike atolen
Hostage
hardline
restated
By'fteAaaociated Press
The head of Iran's hostage
negotiation team said today his
government would listen to any
U.S. counterproposal that was ac-
ceptable to the Algerian govern-
ment concerning Iran's demand
for $24 billion.
He also accused President-
elect Reagan of bluffing and act-
ing like a Hollywood cowboy, and
threatened that the hostages
would be tried if Iran's demands
were not met.
Behzad Nabavi told a news con·
ference in Tehran that if the U.S.
government comes up with
another form of guarantee that
met Iran's four conditions for re-
lease of the 52 American hostages
seized 423 clays ago "it would be
acceptable in our view.'·
"As I said before. as Car as we
have concluded there is no other
way f9r guaranteeing the un-
cl•Tt.akinas of Americana.'· he
told reporters. "I said we are
ready to listen to everything but
it's natural the U.S. is looking for
excuses and has nothing to say.'·
Nibavi confirmed Prime
Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai 's
proposal over the weekend olfer-
ing to drop the demand for finan-
cial guarantees in favor of im-
mediate cash payments followed
by al'bitration on unresol v~ is-
s ues while Iran continued to hold
the hostages.
He claimed the United States
and Iran were in agreement over
the immediate return of about $13
billion in Iranian wealth. and said
Iran would be willing to await the
,mitcome of arbitration proceed·
' Wigs concerning the other $1 1
billion demfl!lded from the United
States prior to release of the
hostages. '
"We cannot be content with
some papers signed. by Carter or
Reagan," ht"said. "If the U .S. can
propose another way which con-
tains a kind of guarantee accepta-
ble to the AJgerian government it
. would be acceptable in our view."
Asked about Reagan's descrip-
tion of the hostage taking as a
form of kidnapping committed by
barbarians he replied: '·I
persona1ly consider these threats
as bluffs especially on the part of ·
the new U .S. administration
which wants to gain prestige by
frightening revolutionaries of the
world.
··w e consider the statements or
Mr. Reaian as those of one who
still thinks he is playing in a
We.stem film. We don't take his
statements very seriously.•·
Nabavi also warned that if the
U.S. govemmenttried to dodge or
delay its reponse to the Iranian
demands. the government would
proceed with the conditions set
<See ll08TAGES, Page Al>
Trial set
for fonner
jobs chief beachgoen away from the 500-Monday from 7 to 8 p.m. for nine ~
gallon container and summoned weeks.11'efeeiaS24. ·' OAKLAND <AP> -Ten-year-old Solomoa Tucker auffen Robert L. Cunnlntbam, the
local firefighters, who in turn headaches. muscle spasms and pain from a blood diHue which former head of Huntinaton
called for help from the nearby 2 gunmen rob forces him to undergo recwar blood tramfllliOlll. Beach's federally-funde~ job
Seal Beach Naval Weapona Sta-But be'• more unhappy about aomethlq elle -tbe U1eft ol tralntna procram, bu been or·
lion. hi• Chriltmu bicycle. dered tb ltUd tri'-1 Feb. JI ln
Lilesuard ClaucM.-Pania lakl restaurant f.Glomoa"t body won't produce red blood celll. Md A iJa1 Or-u .. ~&lperiol'Courton
the rubber and metal container', overloed in bll vetna almOlt forced him to lpiDd Chrtltlnaa In char .. be allqedly took l18,000
, A~Wi,...-e
WE'LL LISTEN
lr•n'• 8ehzad N•bavl
Continued
temperature
curbs wged
W ASHlNGTON c AP> -Presi-
dent Carter is being urged to ex
tend mandatory federal rem
perature controls on l.R million
offices, shops and other non
residential buildings as one or
his last official acts
The controls expire Jan. 16 un-
less Carter extends them But no
m atter what Carter decides.
President-elect Reatan could re
verse the action as soon as he
takes office four days later.
Ever s in ce Jul y 197!1
Americans have had to work
and shop in buildings limited to
65 degrees in the winter and 78
in summer.
Under the 1975 law giving ttie
president t he power to impose
the ene rgy-conser,·at1on con
trols. the restrictioh can only r~
main in force for nine months
without another presidential
declaration.
Coa~•
"·eat her
Fair tonight and Wed
nesday. but with increas-
l n g chan ce of fog at
beaches and much cooler
near coast. Lows tonight
50 al the beaches, 55 in-
land. Highs Wednesday
near 70 to low 80s.
INSIDE TODAY
··Polly wants o .tap o/
P~mod!" I/ p hftr that
coctlfftg r•e•t, follolNd
perlaapt flv o /evi flora of a ·
Siftatro nwlod),. ,ov'ut sud-
dnf11 nitn-ect rllt Morvlaad
home o/ PoUJ1 and BuddJ. SH Pog~ Cl.
I •
about 4-feet-long Wat maned PoUcenreHattblattodaYrc.. the bolPtal, aaJd bit mother, Ruth Tucker. l.DIW9d, tbe bo)' N · fromtMprGlnm.
1 ''JP-4" <a Jet fuel> and "namma-two men wbo robbed Spl,.. celved 1da ftnt bicycle, a racy black ad .UYer model, a lift Cunlftaham wu arrallMCI
f ble." ae.ta--.~Ooldea--8t., from bllfatber. · lloa_, Won 1\adp IUefwd • •••
.___....--Whm~UY..i..n~-·-tmtmter,ot--~-:.-l.llU....:ild._JJ~IG...Mt.:......uoJaaa.t.MMU-.W.«-1-..-u..eaal.M'm..apht
opened a bolt, however, UM ccm· W• • I rw pGlke tatd two Jene u unlocked. • · Hat to .,.._ daat lie •'-..d
talner almpl)' deflated from a._. LIUD maa tatered the reetaanat "How did So)o""on or J know that a coal• ol Md kldt -b&I •ubUc fUIHft and committed
ofpreaurtsedalr, Paniuald. at tt:• p.m., ad wwt .., a oa .. -.a tbe comer ot 50tb and Moatieelio wen.-, to~ ll'udtlalft.
He--aid Navy olftclalt, wbo r•tnoaa. .._ tMJ •-fld\ my aoa ~ off bla new bike, throw bllD tot.be pomd .ad ,_ TM .Olltld acta &oc* plaeedw· '
hauled tbe empty co-..talaer oee••lll •rtt•al'ftOlftl'. ott wttb ttf" she uked. • · · hlC t.be period June 11, 1m to •
••ay, aaJd tbe fuel cell waa U.S. Tbe-.-..NIDOYedeubfrom Kia mot.her baa offered a SSO reward to catch "tboH mea January l• wben be waa direc·
Army pi-operty. probably Iott by a the ,...._. md fled ta a ,.&low kld1 who stole Solomon 'a blk:e." tor of tbe ctty'1 Job tralnlq ll"O-
tankerveuel. Toyota, Pohff lald. tram. H /f
IAI• ~ "°'* ,...., _.... " 11 ... s r1 ;
Oil price incre~se
shaved.by Nigeria
NSW YORK (AP> Nl1eria, Amer1c1 '1 Ml'CIOd·lar1 .. t
tDreip IUPPll•r ol a*roltum. Loki CDajQr c"'tomtra today l1 will ~ midi. oU pri~ • mutlt u • a barrel Ju. 1, YMlreut· llat a .... bentl prlu lnereue annouAced a day earlier by
Libya
Nllerla'• dfftak>n to llK'ruM \he price ol its t~uallty
nude '° MO a bam.I •1 ....,. \M .. l·•·bunl eel price
M4 by t.be Or1a.-lut.b\ ot Petrole\lan &~portlq Count • and
edopted by Ubya Monday wu due to ''1lua1iah petroleum
•art.u" folluwm11 two yell'\ ol IJ,ltralln(I pricea. an ind"'try
MUrrtl H.ld
lllldcJfta•• and VenHueh1, cn.-nwhlle, announced price In·
c-r .. Ml'i of t.l to '3 ~ pt1r '2 aallon barNl In lhe rapidly ac·
relt"r alu•1 round of OP~ ; pnce hikes Analylu predict lhat the
U\crcUti Moounced and upected -by cartel members at~d
ot.bt ra rou!d boolst • &H0Unt1 and heatln1& oll prices as much
u tt C'mtl a gallon
.lel'k-1 1r1••11m. Al .. •• ••fl• •Ill#
NEW D£Ll0, India lAP' Sew.tel tr~ps and Af&h&n police
k&Jlt'd three people wbeo they ftted on ri?ters in Kabul, ~ccor~·
in& tv a diploma tac report today . and lJmled News of India said
an American ·•military adviser" to Moslem rebels was shol to
death about 200 milea southwes~ol Kabul.
Reports from diplomahc sources on Monday's riolinl in
Kabul sau<! 11 group of rioten rampaged throu1h central Kabul
_burling stone.s and tha t three of them were killed and 10 lo 15
1wounded when Soviet troops and Afghan security forces opened
fire
·--... detwr• .....
LANCASTER (AP) -Several Antelope Valley residents
were awakened early today by a mild earthquake that rolled
across the valley at 12:20 a .m.
No damages or injuries were reported from lhe quake,
which measured 2.1 on the Richter scale.
The epicenter was five miles southwest or Palmdale and 60
miles northwest or Los Angeles. said Barbara Reed at the
Caltech seismological laboratory in Pasadena.
8ollar ~lf.W. -••
LONDON <AP> -Softer dollar interest rates pushed the
dollar down on world money markets today. wt\ile gold prices
also sagged in quiet trading.
Kennedy slaying
Dallas vendetta
by Hoover told
DALLAS (AP) Former FBI
Director J . Edgar Hoover con-
ducted a two-year vendetta
against the Dallas Police Depart-
ment for statements m'ade follow-
ing the assassination of President
Kennedy, the Dallas Morning
News reported today.
Quoting FBI documents ob·
tained under the Freedom of In·
formation Act. the newspaper re-
ported that the federal agency's
unofficial boycott focused on
training forcily police offi cers.
An FBI spok es man i n
Washington said today the bureau
would have no comment on the re-
port.
The dispute was triggered by a
statement attributed to FBI a•nl
Ja m es P. Hos ty Jr. by Dallas
Police U . Jack Revill the day of
the assassination, according to
FBI memos.
Revill. now assistant chief. said
at the lime that Hosty told him the
FBI knew before Nov. 22, 1963.
that the alleged assassin, Lee
Harvey Oswald, was "capable of
committing the assassination of
President Kennedy.'·
Hosty later denied making the
statement.
T he next day. then· Police Chief
Jesse Curry said on television the
FBI wanted lo cover up informa-
tion thatit was aware of Oswald's
presence in Dallas and had not
notified police. He retracted the
statement after Dallas FBI agent-
in-c harge J . eordon Shanklin
FV.offering
dance rourse
A class in aerobic dancing,
alow paced exe rcises set to
music, will begin Jan. 13 at the
Fountain Valley Recreation
Center, 16400 Brookhurst St.
Registration begins at the
center Saturday for Fountain
Valley residents only, with open
registration starting Monday.
The classes are primarily
1eared for senior citizens.
The sessions will be conducted
from 10:30 to 11 :30 a .m .
Tuesdays and Thursdays for
ei1ht weeks. The fee is $42, with
1 25 percent discount available ·
to participants aged 6S or older.
challenged him to prove it.
In 1964 and 1965, the News re-
ported. Hoover ordered Shanklin
to reject Curry's requests for FBI
officers to res ume their posts as
instructors at the Dallas Police
Academy. During lhe period, no
Dallas officers were invited lo at-
tend the FBl National Academy in
Washington.
On Jan. 19, 1966, Hoover wrote
Shanklin that then-Dallas Mayor
Erik Jonsson visited him and
··asked to discuss the serious
breach between this bureau and
the Dallas Police Department, if
one exists."
.. , informed Mayor Jonsson
that a breach in relations with
Chief or Police Curry and his de·
partment does exist.'· Hoover
wrote. "I made il perfectly clear
actions and statements by Chief
Curry and some of his personnel
with respect lo lhe bureau clearly
indicated they are incompetent,.
blabbermouths and, In some in·
stances, Hats.·'
Hoover said Jonsson assUttd
him he would "lay down certain
guidelines under which Curry will
be expected lo operate." Hoover
said trainin1 assistance would re-
s ume if the demands were met
withinlwoweeks.
Jonsson said recently he recalls
meeting with Hoover. but did not
remember "any comment about.
Curry or the Dallas Police
Department."
Curry resigned less than a
month after the Hoover.Jonsson
meeting, citing an increase in
blood pressure resulting from
·'the continued pressures and
tensionsoftheoffice."
He died of heart problems June
22.
Within months of Curry's re·
signalion. the newspaper said.
FBI agents returned lo their posts
as inst.rQtt.ors al the Dallas Police
Academy. Andlhe FBI lnviledthe
first Dallas officer in more than
two years to atte.nd the FBI Na-
tional Academy In Washington.
Law extended
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi·
dent Carter has si1ned legisla-
tion extendin1 for three years
the federal revenue·sharin1 pro-
gram for local 1ovemments and
providln"°' the funds for state
governments for lwo years.
TELEPftONE
Thomas P. Haley .........
Robert N. Weed ~
M. Thomas Keevll ., .....
ThOmn A. Murphlne ..............
Charles H. Loos ............. I! .....
, _ _..,....e .. "4'.,.......,."0nll,• nn
Pw•ll1111At C--..11,. He W.w1 ....... ....w ............ _.. -"-' ................ _, .. re11ret111c•• wUll••I •P•<I•• ........ .,c..,.....,,._,,
' c.
All dlpMlc•el19; (714) M2..Q21
c1 • .....,~.: 142-11111
GnlCU
=.-:.~=-~.:...... ·-~• 11• .... :·uws,._....._.,
• •
"1'• /./£ /!(,>/ e y;.
I .
·Deaths link
FairvWW raps
state r~port
By JODI CADENHEAD Of .. Dally ...... ,...,
Fairview Slate Hospital of.
ficials today criticized published
reports lhat the Costa Mesa
facility along with nine o'lher
state hospitals, was linked to the
deaths of 120 patients.
"I think it's unfair to our en·
tire hospital staff and physicians
who have fully cooperated in the
past," said Dr. Francis Crinella,
Fairview's director.
"Somehow I feel that the
public is lead to believe that
there are still misdeeds taking
place on their part and that's un-
fortunate." he added.
The report issued by the state
health department concerns lhe
deaths of some 1,285 patients
who died between 1973 and 1976.
Disclosure or the report was
m ade public by the Sacramento
Bee Sunday. When the probe
was first begun four years ago,
F'airview officials confirmed
that 13 deaths at the facility
were a mong those being in-
vestigated.
o.u, ~, ... ,_.
CLAIMS REPORT UNFAIR
Fairview's Crlnell•
'Sea Yeuf' •• , •••• 'Sea Yevl' I :J <. /_ .. In the final report, Fairview
was again identified in 13 of the
deaths after the survey team
fo und "instances or questionable
hospital staff t'onducl or prob·
I ems Wlth hospital procedure!'>."
Because state boards never
had the legal authority to review
patient records it is "unlikely"
that an}I of the cases will be pros-
ecuted. s aid s tate m edical
board executive director Robert
Rowland.
COMMENTARY ON WORLD CONDITIONS, CIRCA 1962
NewPQ.rt'1 McNerney drew tor m•Jor publle•tlon1 No disciplinary action was
recommended against Fairview
officials afte r the Orange County
Dist rict Attorney's Office arid
s urvey te<tm found "no instances
w he re prosecution would be
supported by sufficient evidence
of criminality "
Cartoonist dies;
ex-NB resident The deaths at Fairview were
linked to over use of drugs.
negligence on the part of phys1
cians and starr. and problems of
hospital procedure t hat included
three choking deaths and one
strangulation
Rowl and add ed that new
legislation effective Jan. I will
make it possible for stale agen·
cies to review records or mental
patients. However . that law will
not be retroactive. meaning that
it will have no effect on the dis-
bursement of past cases. Newspaper cartoonist and ii ·
lustrator Eugene A. Mc Nerney.
a long.lime Ne wport Beach resi-
dent, is being remembered this
week by friends and family.
McNerney, a contributor to
the early editions of Life and
The New York e r , di e d
Christmas Da y following a
lengthy illness. He was 81.
Born in Philadelphia . where
he attended St. Joseph's College.
McNemey served in World War
I and returned home to teach
and study at the Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts .
He later moved his family to
Westport , Conn . wh e re he
became a part of a growing and
energetic group of young artists
that included James Thurber
and F . Scott Fitzgerald.
Family members said he often
spoke or this as an exciting and
creative period in his life.
McNemey .became a frequent
co ntributor to se veral
Philadelphia newspapers inch.ad·
ing lhe Bulletin and Inquirer. He
was published with regularity in
The New Yorker magazine as
we ll as Life, The Saturday Even-
ing Post and The Ladies Home
Journal.
H e also illustrated Ring
Lardner's popular baseball
clas~ic. "Lose With A Smile."
He was under contract lo the
New York Daily News for more
than 20 years.
In 19'2, McNerney again en-
tered military life. joining the
Marine Corps as a captain and
serving under General Holland
Smith. He took part in opera-
tions at Tarawa and Okinawa.
Leaving t~ Marine Corps as a
reserve major. McNerney came
west and became a sketch artist
for Columbia Pictures and 20th
Century Fox.
In the late 1950s, he moved lo
Huntington Beach and later to
Newport Beach. He continued
his career as a political car-
toonist, sending material lo the
Denver Post and contributing to
the Oceanside Blade.
,.,.... PflflP A I
HOSTAGES
out by the parliament or M ajlis.
"If the decision of the Majlis is
not completely met, they <the
hostages) will be tried.·· he said.
Iran wants the U.S. govern.
ment lodeposit$24 billion with the
Algerian government to cover
claims on the wealth of the late
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
and Iranian assets frozen in U.S.
banks. It also wants the U.S. gov-
ernment to slop all lawsuits
against Iran. but Rafsanjani said
the United States should be given
time to work out any legal
problems it might encounter.
He spoke to reporters in Tehran
on Monday after responding an-
grily to Reagan's description of
the militants who seized the
hostages and the American Em-
b a as y 42 3 da ys ago as
"barbarians ...
Tomahawk tiff
GOLDENDALE, Wash. CAP>
-One man was killed and al
leaat three people critically
wounded Monday in what of.
ficlal1 delctf bed aa a hatchet -~D th• YakiJN-~
Re1ervatJon. Tbe incident oc·
cand near Honethlef Lake State
Park at the Cloudville Indian
Comm..Uty, acl'Oll the Columbia
IUvertrom'l'he Dalles, Ore.
--.--
ARTIST ·NEWSMAN DIES
Eugene A. McNerney
lie won a Granville Founda-
tion Award for one of his draw-
ings.
McNemey also was a mem ber
of the Players' Club, confined to
representatives of the a rts ac-
tors, artists and musicians.
His daughte r. Nora Lehman of
Lido Isle, said one of his largest
disappointments came when he
was stricken with a rthritis,
which made it impossible for
him to continue drawing.
He is survived by his wife
Anne, daughter Mrs. Lehman,
granddaughter Bridget Lehman
and grandson Greg Lehman. of
Carmel Valley.
No fune ral services are
planned. The family has s ug·
gested tributes in the form or
donations to Hoag Memor ial
Hos p i tal i n M cNerney·s
memory.
Questionable drug practices
and de fi cie nc es 1n pa tie nt
monitoring were blamed as the
cause of the 120 deaths
A spokesman for the s tate
li cens ing section s aid that
Fairview is c·urrently prescnb
ing fewer psychocict1ve dru~..,
than any other state facility
District etdm1n1strator for th<.•
state health sur\'ey team llank
S'choenlean adm1LLerl that thE.-
Costa Mesa hospital has been
the Sile of "S l~nifu.•anl prob
lems "
"I do kno" that there were
serious probl em~ ... sa id
Schoenle1n "All I t'a n tell you 1~
that Fairview, since then, 1s a
vastly improved facility."
When the hospital was last
surveyed by the state li censing
team in April, deficien cies were found in all three areas ot care
genera l acute. skilled nursing
and int ermed1citc . s aid
Schoenlein
Althoug h the state off1c1al
declined to elaoor:.ile on the ex
act nature of the def1c1ences. he
did say that most of the "s1gnif1
cant problems" ha\'e been t·or
re ct ed.
"The level of deflcsences 1s
minimal compared to what the)
were in 1976.'' he said .
In 1977 , the Costa Mes a
hospital lost accreditation alon·g
with a number of other s tate
fa cilities when state li censing
requireme nts were changed.
As a result the facility lost
"It was a quirk of the law that
would not allow us access to pa.
titml records," Rowland said in
a µhone interview.
Other state hospitals cited in
the report include Lanterman,
Napa, Porterville. Metropolitan.
Sonoma. Patton. C amarillo.
Agnews and Atascadero
Stockton State Hos pital was the
onl y state facility not cited in the
l \\ o yecir·llld report
~I o~t of ·the 1.285 deaths were
tlut· to natural C'auses. the report
found
<;o" J erry Brown has called
for ci full 1nvcst1 gat1on this week
1ntn the c 1 rC'ums t cinces s ur-
rounding thc 120 deciths.
Clues sought
in death ··
Seal Beach police are continu
mg their probe of the murder or a
70·year-old woman found dead in
a frit·nd 's home last week No ar re~ts ha\c been made
Sgt Leonard Frisbe said the
\\\1man. Simone Sharp. of 330
Cm.1~tltnc Ori\ e. Seal Beach. suf.
fcrcd four stab wounds about the
nct'k <treci lie said he 1s awaiting
a l'oroner·s report on the official
causeordeath
The woman's body was found
las t Wednesday morning al 1125
Coastline Dr ive by her son. Ac·
cording to police. s he was
watching the house for friends at
the limeofherdeath
some $1.5 millicm in monthly Chu. rch destroyed Medi-Cal pay ments from the
federal government. Cerlifica-.) PASADENA CAP) -A fire of
tion was res tored in June 1978 uspi cious i ri gin gutte d a
after the hospital complied with t>'building owned by the Church of
the new conditions. In the case Sc ientology on Monday and
of the l20 deaths, state hospital '-'.'burned three other buildings
o ff i c i a Is r ec om m e nded .. rrext to the historic Pasadena
disciplinary action in 81 cases. Playhouse. firegfighters said.
A diamond she'll always have in her hea rt.
l_
EnllfKC'd to ~how detail
SLAVICK"S
Flnt Jtwf'lus Sln<'f' 1~1 ?
Sa tisfy ht•r
heart ~ dt•.,1rl'
with our
diamond
pend.int in
18 karat w llow
gold, $330.
Rt•a11t1(11/
/('!t'f/ r11 :'II I/:'.
"I Im~· If"" ..
Fashion Isl.and, Newport Cenr.r, ~wport kKh. n(J644-ll80
W"''m•n•~r I t..guru Hillt I Mi5$10n VifJi1 I North Or1n1d Th< City
LM Ctm1~ • '"'• M.nJ Abo C tC'•i.r 1..(1'1 ~n~k>s I ~n DI.go 11.n Vrg.1s
Uw -°'Sit""°''• <Oft-I <'-PI"°~ Of A-•" bl"'fM. VISA. ~ 0....·
M""llt' ''"' /twtlrrs C111ld
(
" .
•
,.
..
• mcrease
Tb• lilUllldu of u1ltrn
Ora ... Counl)' UJ UIU)' ••l I
rai• drea c h lna b)' early o..... -.... ,,,..n1ht•r1 ,,..
ldll m..a.a Utrt iG thi1 UllUIUUI lJ'4f) .. .._to prevent tht n w
yur from arrivll\lit "' a bltiit
San ... An• ~ 1nd1 blowln& up '°
20 mph Wlth gu t up lo M ...n.,,; ~ c-~ reported on Monday In lhe
tan>M rounl r) e&!>l of £1 Toro
b) ufrlc1al¥ -.uh tht1 Orant
('ount flrt-lo'1re Oeputrnent
E x l r » t' q u' I p m e n t a n tJ
h rd1Qhlt'rt> "'ert-on "tandb) for d1~vatl.'b al lhe hr~l signal ot :.
ftrt>
Things »re real dry and con
dJt1on~ are favorable for a fire,"
said Capt. Sherry Bun\rng m the
fire department's public 1n
formation office.
T h e department norm a lly
would send out perhaps two fire
eb.gin es . a tru c k and a
paramedic's van at the first re
port ~f a fire this time of year ..
Because of ·the high fire
danger. though, she said from 6
lo 8 e ngines wo uld be dis·
patched, depending on the type
of fi re, plus bulldozers and even
airc raft.
As few as s ix f irefighters
might accompany the engines
during a fire during the rainy
season. she said. But as many as
32 workers could be dispatched
<:'urrently because of the alert.
Rainfall in Orange County
since July has been .82 or an
inch compared to a normal al this
date 3.99 inches, according to
statistics supplied by the county
Flood Control District.
Snow has twice dus ted the
hilltops on the Santa Ana Moun·
tain Range. which includes San-_
tiago and Modjeska peaks. but
the s now was quickly melted by
the warm temper a tures that
have remained in the county
during most of December.
Two nabbed,
one flees in ..
burglary try
Two Huntington Beath rcsi·
dents were arrested on attempt·
'ed burglary charges involving a
liquo r store in Westminster.
police said.
A third mule s us pect escaped.
police said.
Mark Lawrence Alarcon, 19,
and a male juvenile. 16, both or
Huntington Beach, were arrest·
ed at 1:20 a.m Monday after
police reportedly saw them on
top of the Westdale Liquor store.
located ne ar the corner or
We s t min s ter Avenu e and
Springdale Street.
Police said the air vent on the
roof was pried open but that
nothing was missing from inside
the store.
Police had res ponded to a call
from employees of a grocery
m arket next to the liquor store
and grabbed t WO or the three
s us pects a fte r t hey climbed
down from the roof and ran
south.
The third sus pect. police said.
is described as a male white.
about 17, with blond hair.
Hospital names
board chainnan
A Corona del Mar resident. Al·
lan Weidman. has been named
new chairman or the board of
trustees for St. Joseph Hospital.
Orange.
George Richter ,Jr. of Newport
Be ach has been na m ed vice
chairman .
Saddleback plans
week for women
Topics of interest to women
who are new to Saddleback
College or thinking about attend·
ing college will be discussed at
Women's Week, Jan. 12 through
16 at the school's main campus.
Further information can be
obtained by calling the colfege's
women's center at 831-4885.
20 men raid i8le
KOTA KJNABAL\J, Malaysia
(AP> -Twenty men armed with
automatic weapons raided a -.---t'Ntrtn(111AIRt'"'Di'f~semJ>O a on
the eat coast of Bomeo and
robbed·tbe lllaaden of SI0,000 in
money and valuabl•, police
Hid. It WN the Hcond such rad
in the reston in a month.
' 19WJm1$
'sliixess'
forOCC
By .IOOI CADENHEAD ot•DtHJ ...........
Expandin& pro1rams in
medicine and agriculture and
takin1 top honors ln eight sports
championabips hiahlighted 1980 \
for Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa.
Students enrolled at the two.
year college can look forward t9
a new science course being of·
fered this fall. "Evolution ol the
Cosmos" will be taught in-the
new $3.5 million chemistry
building compl e ted las t
February.
Keeping ahead or funding in
days following Jarvis control
and collective bargaining has
been one of the toughes t
challenges· faced by the college.
according to president Dr.
Robert B. Moore.
··Everyone has been kept in a
state of nervous tension,·· said
Dr. Moore in reference to the
two factors affecting college
budgets. ·
New programs in the areas or
.-de ntis try, radiology , diagtic
medicine s onography and
agriculture were offered last
year.
STURDY BUT BARREN ASH TREE BEARS SINGLE LEAF 'STAR'
Mesa women wonders It symbol .linked to deceased brother
Symhol shared
Mesan's tree bears 'star'
By STEVE MARBLE Ot tlle O.ily ~Itel S'-ft
Ruby Hultberg says the star·
shaped leaf that sprouted just
days before Christmas at the top
or the bare tree in he r front yard
might be a s ign.
··1 think it could be a sign or a
symbol or som e sort ... suggests
the Costa Mesa worn.an. "I reel
like it 's tryin g to tell me
som ething. only I'm not sure
what."
The ash tree was planted five
years ago by her brother. At the
time, he .prom ised her 'the tree
would be a slow grower; nothing
fa ncy.
.. Then my brother died. It was
a sad, terrible death.·· she s ays.
.. A 11 of a sudden the tree started
growing and growing. It must be
40 feet tall now.··
Then just before Christmas.
weeks after the tree's brittle.
shrunken leafs had fluttered to
the ground and had been cleared
away. the star-shaped leaf ap·
·pea red.
·•My neighbor saw it first:·
sa ys Mrs. Hultberg. "He thought
so m eone put it up-there. Now,
lots or people come by to look at
it. Even people driving by stop."
She says she wonders if the
"perfect star.·· as she call s it.
has something to do with her
brother.
·'The tree reminds me of him.
I've thought of him so much and
wonder about him.·· she says,
adding after a pause. "I miss
him a great deal.··
When a recent wind storm
shook up he r west Costa Mesa
n eigh borhood , breakin g
branches off her avocado tree,
she says she expected the leaf to
tumble. But it didn't.
The Costa Mesa woman says
she also can't explain why a sud·
den urge prompted h er las t
spring to drop plans to top the fast·
~rowing tree.
"'I just had a feeling the time
wasn't right."' she says. "When I
s aw the leaf, l decided to let the
tr ee be. l'll let it grGw to the
s ky.··
S h e says-Hte s turd y a s h
D•lly Pile! S .. ,, ,.,.._.
'MIGHT BE SIGN'
Mrs. Ruby Hultberg
became her Christmas tree this
year, a tree decorated with only
one leaf.
"I don't know how long it's go-
ing to stay up there,·· she says.
.. My neighbor, who has better
eyesight than I do. says the stem
the leaf's on is springtime green.
"He thinks it may stay up
there until next winte r . That
would berlic-e."
2 officers. injured
in nabbing suspect
A 24 -year·old indecent ex-
posure suspect led Seal Beach
police on an auto a nd foot
pursuit. then injured two of-
ficers who attempted to restrain
him, Seal Beach police said.
Officer Scott Fraser. 33, suf·
fered a broken hand in the strug-
gle, while a second policeman,
Kenneth Vilensky. was treated
for minor injuries al Los
Alamitos General Hospital and
released.
The sus~l, Kenneth Robert
Libke of Garden Grove, has
been placed in Orange County
Jail on suspicion of assault and
battery on a police ofrtcer, re-
s isting arrest, failure to yield to
a police vehicle and indecent ex-
posure.
Officers were responding to an
indecent exposure report at a
shopping center at Pacific Coast
Highway and Seal Beach
Boulevard at L.P..~~_'.__ Sunday Wilen y spOtl~iuapecl'·a
car travellnt northbound.
Accordinl to police, the SUI·
peel refused to stop, and they
pursued him to the Lelaur•
World senior citilen complex.
--
At Leisure World, the suspect
fled on foot from his car and was
chased by officers, police said.
Officers Fraser and Vilensky
were injured during a struggle
to restrain the suspect. police
said.
Holjdays
brightened
ST. JOSEPH, Mich. (AP)
The Berrien County Court House
isn't dark this holiday season.
County officials have
darkened the lights outstde the
marble-faced buildina every boli· day season since 1m as a con-,
servaUon meaaure.
But C-Qul\ty CQordina,wr BQaer
Telrie lira the H1bta are back
on Ul.ll 7ear • a lift from St. Joseph attorne7 \Elden
Bullbeulb Jr., who ii paytq t111 .ao to keep tbe U1btl on
tbrouah Jan. 4.
For the second straight year
eight mens' and womens ' sports
teams competed successfully for
the South Coast Conference
"Sports Supremacy Award."
To help aid increasing In·
dochinese refugees the college is
continuing to beer up its English
as a Second Language <ESL>
programs in coordination with
similar classes being offered by
the Newport Mes a Unified
School District.
Echoing a trend that began
three years ago, enrollments
ha ve remained at 30,000 per
semester.
During the 1979·80 school year
the Car eer Development Center
found jobs for 3,4it people pre-
vious I y une mployed or un.
de remployed. Annual salaries
for those workers will total $20.4
million. according to statistics
gathered by lhe career depart-
m ent. ·
More than 1,000 s tudents
participated last y ear in the
Field Studies program, with
classes conducted as far away
as Egypt, China and Tahiti.
Concern for a lack or books in
the college library was ex-
pressed by Dr. Richa rd W.
Brightman. Dean of Instruction.
··-As an academic institution I
worry that our collection is
becoming quickly out-of-date.··
he wrote in an annual report
submitted to Dr. Moore. ,
Tfle 4ean also pointed to a re·
cent . reduction in counseling
services as a problem facing the
college.
Overall, Dr. Brightman called
Orange Coast College's 1979-80
school year "remarkably SUl'-
cessful."
...
-·
\
T~. O.C.mt>er 30, 1880 DAILY PIL..OT ,U
Seeki119 a «.-11re
APWortploele>
Baby, a three-month-old Engli sh sheepdog-Labrador
retriever puppy , is the object of a cross-country search for a
cure for Christmas diseasE:. a rare affliction that resembles
hemophilia in humans . The dog. shown with veterinarian
Paul Newman of Tustana P.et Hospita l in Tustin. is being
sent to blood specialists at Griffin Laboratories in Albany.
N. Y .. under care of Dr. J ean Dodds
Detroii's deficit
near $230 million
-'
DETROIT (AP 1 -The city of Detroit will be $230 million in
the red by next June 30 unless it eithe r cuts workers· salaries 01
raises more money from taxes. loans or legalized gambhng
Mayor Coleman Young warns
The $230 million predicted deficit would include a $130 million
shortfall for the fiscal year ending J une 30. 1981. and an additional
projected $100 million defi <:'it for the 1981 -82 fiscal year begi nning
July 1. 1981. .,,,
The mayor 's $130 million deficit predi<:'t1on fo r the 1980·81 fis.;.1
<:al year was a sizable increase from earlier forecasts.
,
YO\;NG. WHO AD~ITTED he had no read} solution for the
budget deficit. said one alternative for the city would be lo c.:ut
workers · salaries by 5 percent
On taxes. Young said. the slate Legislat ure could enal'l tax
laws to assist Detroit. or the ('1ty could raise the local tn<:'ome tax
from I percent to 3 percent for residenls and from 11 ~ percent lo~
percent for non -res idents
Raising the local income tax would raise :ln esumatetl $100 •
million. he said
BUT HE ALSO RAISED the poss1bill t) or legalmnl{ casino
gambling in the city.
"It is my opinion that some <:'lly in the Mldwest 1s going lo.
become the Las Vegas of the Midwest That city could be Detroit.'
he said
Stale law requires mun1 c1pallt1es to approve balant:ec;J .
budgets.
Detroit has a SI .46 billion budget. a nd financial experts pre·
viously had projected a $103 million def1c1t for the year end 1r\)l'•
June 30. 1981. ·
Nearly 700 pol1C'e ofrt<:'e rs "ere laid off in September 1n an ah
tempt to hold down city expenses. • .
~
r··\ < ;"' .. ,
'
'1
. .
Midwale Corduroy Blazers
IN STOCK
Our ladil'S Department
plum, camel, nary $135.00
• • ..•
..
I
i ' --~~~~~~~~~--'t
Ill.:'.~ 11 \ llll' "l'I\ I'• 1r1 0\'.1{ h
I~~ ~wt> 1.: ~.,lt.e>.1 -
• I
' t
••
1'leaa11dlN
......
I ..... c ... c1a11 ~
.... ....... ~ Tom~~,,r
farmers B~k I •
H•rplliar
Bunnied by Bangkok
•l'l' M£8H.AN Dt:PT Oot \he snlfOes. aches
Ind MN'f' thrual" l.lk lh y U)' thert:'j I lot Of \hat &Oin&
1re>und tn-e di)• You 1hould obJect m0tt alrtnuoualy to
uff•nna tht-C'.lump ~ ht'n ll isn't even a U S. brand ot
••fulne
IA'C• feet ii 1l '• bad enouah that we've been lnvaded
b all th t h&nn) little c•l'll made In rorei1&n pl1cea. You
know. tht-c llUlt• .,eanu\1 \h111t w hin-= around the hlahways
llkt-• bWK'h of bumblf>b4!t•», with th~ Kear bo"es maklng
mort-noli.e tha.n t ht' l'eanul 4 ~n(lmei. u" at "~ wonti too rur You l'ttn 't ~ven ti cl a domestic
(rain of 111fh,1t'1u u
"'HAT EVt;a HAP .. •:Nt;U tu lht' .iood old Ame rican,
rommon. onhnar • CIAb-= or U1(\ flu ''
Now we f'ven huve to import that
Actuetll)'. 1t ~tarted l'orne tune 1tgo Back 111 1957 . 11 was
1111 the rage to gel a Cb t' of th~ Asietn Flu. so long as you
d1dn 'l t!xp1re from !!amt• ll wa:. the "in" thing to do.
Thi \\ ai. followl'd 111 1968 by anottier imported form of
the .iwful ... kn own a~ lh~ lloni,: Kong Flu It killed almost
Look out • I/ere ('omes anolhtr sickly foreign bug
2·1.000 Anwri<';,ans lwfort• they C\'en got a chance to listen to
a I long Kong trans1i;tor radio That might have-killed them
rasll•r
Then ~e thought wt• had suffered the final foreign flu
mdignity an Hl77. when the Russian Flu struck thousands of
our <'llizenrv
We couidh'l evenl{et Free World flu . We had to import
il from the communists. fo r <'rying out loud
NOW WE COME to Decem ber of 1980. People are fall.
!~er w!th couJlhs. hac~s. heavy fevers. aches and pains
tn all the lambs and surrerang eyeballs. You check with the
Orange County Health Department and offi ci als there will
inform you the.at nothin~ is of epidemi<' proportions around
h NC
But then. 1t 's difficult lo ever get the Orange County
llealth Department to admit that anything is going around
our region in epidemic proportions. You suspect they are
an league with the 'hamber of Commerce.
Anywc.ay, it has been mentioned that possibly we have
a few t-ases of the flu c·1rculating
This might he. II is rumored. a form of influenza
known as A·Bangkok f''lu So here we go again. We've im·
ported another virus . This lime. it ·s from Bangkok.
So Wl' suffer all these sore throats and we can't even
blam e the disgusting ailment on something domestic. It
has lo be some name you can't even spell.
Why don't we get hack to some basic All· American dis·
coses·! If we have to. we could re-name them. Call it the
Huntington Beach Hacks. or maybe the Yorba Linda
Yechs.
Let's all say we have a case of the San Juan Sags.
Why not <·ornt: down with the Laguna Lousies? .
WE COU l.D ALL take to our beds with the Newport
Nui sance. the Balboa Bummers or maybe even the Foun·
lain Va~ley Vambooms.
Who needs Bangkok. anyway? If you're going to feel
rotten to the point that you may cash in. why not believe
that it was something American that gave you the rotten·
ness''
ll 's like d riving those funn y litlle cars Once you start
1t. you can get hooked on it.
You may never recover
~l'f·
P olish
WARSAW, Poland (AP> -
1'he ~ah Suprerne Court today
postponed a decision on tbe ._p.
plication ol private farmers to
torrn an lndepefldent trade un·
ion, temporarily defusing the
threat ol a new strike.
A lawyer for the farmers said
he was oplimisllc the court
would eventually rule in their
favor.
Chief judge Antoni Filcek said
the date for the next session
would be announced later and
that Solicitor General Lucjan
C1.ubinski would be asked to sit
In
THE ORGANIZATION, which
claims to represent a third of the
nation 's nea rly 3.5 million
private farmers and is arfiliated
with the m assive Solidarity
labor movement. has threatened
to withhold produce from the
state if the court rejects their
appeal of a lower <.'Ourt ruling
against their a pplicat ion for
registration
Last October, the lower court
ruled the farmers were self.
employed and therefore not pro
tecled by terms of the lntcrna·
lional Labor Organization cnn·
vention of 1924.
But Stanjslaw Szczuska, the
farme rs ' lawyer , t oday in
lroduced as rebuttal a 1975
French·language document 1s
sued by the International Farm
Labor OrJ(anization in Geneva.
Switzerland, which he ld that
Short-t,erm
T-bill ro1,es
hit skids
WASHJNGTON <AP) -The
interest 10ates on s hort·term
Treasury securities fell to their
lowest levels since early No·
vember. the government said
Monday following its weekly
auction.
The discount rate on 26·week
Treasury bills declined to 13.411
percent from 14.032 percent. rt
was the lowest return since
13.23 1 percent on Nov. JO.
M EANWHJLE, THE discount
rate on 13-week Treasury bills
dropped to 13.908 percent from
14.992 percent the week before.
It was the lowest since 13.514
percent, also on Nov. 10.
As a result of Monday's auc·
lion , banks and thrift institutions
may pay up to 13.661 percent on
s ix ·month m o n ey marke t
certificates, effective Thursday.
That compares with a current
return of 14.282 percent.
The interest rate ceiling on
these investments is tied by
law to the 26·week Trea sury
rate.
DEPOSITORS AT thrifts can
also earn 12 percent on 2112·year
savings certificates. while tak·
ing in 11 ~!a percent at com ·
m ercial banks. These yields are
at the top of a fed erally con·
trolled ceiling.
Brittle Midwest thaws
Freezing rain, srww nwve eastuxird
C'OG#fal M'raflarr
(041ll•t IOQ e•~t&d 10 tf'lurn tat•
Wf't'fnp\d•y w ftt'I <.oo,e-r tt-m oer.ttur.-\ Othfrw1y ,,.,,.
Coest4t low jO, 11191111ea.J o Jn1ana
low n. n•gfl '""' '°' w.r ... 60 f h .. wherf'. W•~ttr,y Wind\ 1 to
11 knols lnl\ evening wlln l 10 ~ '~"' •t Uert., ~we-II\ Fa ., l'•<,pl for
P•fchy d ens" fo9 over 'ou•hr rn .... , ...
Fo9, Cold •n<I rr..,rlno rain mad4t tor
,,.,.,do~ rravell"9 In the lowe• atld mlcM1~1ur.~1 Vallty o rly today
wMI~ sr.ow, trH11no r •in and told
re•t ,,.O trom t~ Ohio Valley 1n10
Ne• EnQl&ncl
R•tn 1•11 •lonQ lhe Norlf\ All•nl•<
CO•\I •"<I lrom '"" Pee Ille NortllWHI
ln10 Ille nonllern Ao0 1•• urly tnl•
mornlnQ. ShOWer• were al•o 1callerea O••• ,,,. tollllttrn A119<1t<K 111..,, into
\Oulll-Ctnl••I Geof'9I•
Meanwhile, re-sldent\ .tCtO\' mo-st of
Mlc1tl9M1'1 L-r ...,nlnsut• llnflllfd
up llWlr -etl"9 toci.y a11er •corn
blnetton ol 1••11119 rein ano snow ~Ille tr.lfl, Call\lnlj •1 IUll OM
l••lfk oeath ano a dav ot pr01>1em1 '°' molorlsh
Wevne C"""IY tOetrolll sltfnlll·\
,,.,.,lln ..i11 • •·vur~IO Van 8urtn To•n•nlp Qlrl, O•w n lhnet
W•tetmen, •H lllllecl Mond•y •lten •
ctr clrl...,by lier l•ther 1lllclcleOon •"
Icy roecl-w•• •lrucll broad•lde t>v •
•l<lluptn.:ll
Tem,,.returu erovnd tht ne ttOft
Hrty lod.tyr'"9fcllromJln S.oull Ste. ~erle, Mlclt.,to101n V""Nun
Cafllortlla Cllev•-
Cltlc..,i
Clncl ....... I
Clevei.ncl
Del· Ft WU.
Oe•MolflK
Oetroll
0..lvttl
Fel~
Hetel\t
HOM111lu
~'°" lndn-c»lk
J l<llftllvllf
Kent City
LHV19ft
Little "oo.
LMA~
LOOlll\lllle Me,,....,,
Mleml
Mll•e1o1-••·Sl.P
N•tllvllte N-ora...
N-Yen
Olll• Gltf ~
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Pnoanl• es 61
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8 1SllOP ~· 16
El Centro ll .,
l k .,,_....., so ~ Lono euch 17 •7
Newport 8Nclt 70 .so
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S.nt• A,.. •• 0
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S.111• Mer i. 11 • Tehoe Velley so ••
TOOAY
Se<onct hit'\ •· u p.m. J 1 SK-low IO:J4pm 17 waCNeaSOAY
First llltfl S:H •.m. •.• 1'1"1 '-11:17p,m. 11
Se<-llltll •:" '·"'· ~.1 Se<Oftd ,_ 11 : rt p,111. ..,
S¥11 •a-•:••.m .. Nt1 •:SJp.m. ~ ••-nn• •. m., •I• n:u p.m.
I
• union
" "people who work on theirown
account tnd petty landownera''
should be considered farm
workers. · ,
The Judge said that before
making a decision, he wanted
time to obtain a Polish transla·
lion and study the document.
In his arguments before the
court. Szc1uska maintained that
"farming ls a profession regard·
less of whether the farmer owns
the land or not. Therefore.
farmers in Poland should have
their own organization to protect
their rights."
POLAND IS unique in the So-
viet bloc In that most of its
agriculture is in the httnds of
private rarmers who own 68 per·
cent of the land and produce
th r ee·fourths of the nation ·s
food . Most agriculture 1n other
communist countries is colltt·
livizcd.
The farmers maintain they
are in effect employees of the
national economy since they sell
theit products through stette
ma rketing outlets and therefore
are entitled to the protection of a
trade union
A ~overnmenl move to end
meal price subsidies in July scnl
pri<.'es soaring and touched off
nationwide strikes that resulted
in the formation of trade unions
inde pendent of government con·
trol, an unprecf'ctented PVenl an
the Soviet blo<'
/llPWl ........ o
Seve n week-old boy looks· wide ·eyed at his new mother in
Louisville. Ky . The woman and her hus band. un iden·
lifie~. paid a s urrogate mother to be artificially in·
se minated a nd have the child s o that it could be
geneti<:all y linked lo at least one of the couple
No proof of Hughes will
Court rejects last re m ain ing cl.aim
CARSON CITY (API -Despite claims that a
"lost" will left Howard Hughes· fortune to a
m edical institute, tl'le Nevada Supreme Court
ruled Monday there's no proof of the doc ument ·s
existence.
cases where a w11I can't be found.
Hughes. an a' 1972 telephonic news conference.
said "the bulk of my estate" would go to medical
research and projects.
But Hughes estate attorneys contended the
medical institute didn't have a case, and the stale
high court agreed. holding that HMIM "failed to
provide evidence sufficent to support its petition to I
probate the lost will."
The high court's ruling against the Hughes
Medical Institute of Miami, Fla .. concludes one of
the la5t remaining major legal battles over the
fortune of the late industrialist, who died April 5.
1976. "The evidence in the record on appeal tends to
show that Hughes may have executed a will in
I 925, although only an unexccuted. unconformed
rlrart has heen found." the court added
The State S upre m e Court had been
urged to let a jury decide whether Hughes left his
.fortune -reportedly more than a half billion
dollars -to the institute. And there's no way to use Hu ghes' news con·
fercnce comments to meet the "second witness"
~t.itute. the <'ourt said. adding that the law would
be ··rendered ineffectual" by such a maneuver
Lawyers for the institute claimed Hughes left
a will that may have been lost or destroyed. and
offe red to produce at le~t qne live witness, an·
stitute executive Dr. John Pettitt. to so testify. Without a valid wall , Hughes' fortune is expect-
ed to go to various cousins and more distant rela·
·lions. most of them living in 'texas, Alabam a and
rlonda.
The attorneys contended Hughes' own com·
m ents before his death would suffice to ml!et
Nevada's "second witness" requirement in estate
Gay keeps security post
WASHINGTON t APJ -A
homosexual employee of the Na·
tional Security Agency is being al·
lowed to keep hjs job and security
clearances but first had to agree
to four conditions. including tell·
ing his family of his homosexuali-
ty lo reduce the ch ance of
blackmail, a gay activist says .
The decision permitting the
mid·level employee ·to keep his
job after the agency discovered
he was a homosexual was
believed lo the first of its kind in
the American Intelligence com·
munily. The NSA . based in Fort
Meade, Md .. is involved in
sensitive code-breaking work and
worldwide monitoring of com·
munications.
Franklin E. Kameny. a gay
rights act1v1st who is a com
missioner on the District of
Co lumbia 's Comm1 ss1on on
Human Ri ghts. said Monday
ni ght t ha t the unidentified
e mployee. an his early 30s .
h a s worked for the NSA
for about six vears and has
clearances giving him access to
h1ghlyclassified maten al.
Kameny said the conditions the
employee agreea to to keep has
job. in addition to telling his
mother and seven brothers and
sisters about hl!'1i0i'hosexuality.
a re that he ·
Abide by agency guidelines
on maintaining anonymity about
has place of work.
Not engage in any public ac·
tivity that ma y be illegal.
Ka meny said that restriction
"does not cover private, consent·
ing relations on the part of the
em ploye<i and adults.··
Cooperate with any in·
vestigation needed to update his
co mplia,nce with the other points.
The Washington Post today re·
ported that Daniel C. Schwartz.
NSA genera l counsel. said an in·
vesllgataon was conducted and
the case was decided "purs uant to
certain commitments m ade by
the employee to the agency.··
~------------~----------~----------------------------------~
•
GOU RME T
MA·RKE T
Happy New Year
from
all of u8
at Delaney's -
• # t . -We will be closed J an. 1 to enjoyithe holiday at home.
SlolJ! U..r.a ,,_, CloMd Smd•y.
a. Newport ...... Ne.,...n ... ~ ..
673-5520
CJrash victim sought
Pilot re.cu.d ,Yter heavy /og miahap
0 KANSIDt.: CAPI The Cout Guard aaya a cuUer lt'U
C9m bblt Ol'Hn watera today for i-. ,..,.,.r of • twln enau..
aircraft whoM pak>t 101 rllNed
almoet by a t>rldent In near
1ero-•allbilil)' roe aevtral how'• aftB the plane .,..., doWt\
Coa•t Ouard Lt 8 ob lh J•, akl, ot surrh and re•cue
~adq_uantra In l.on1 Heach,
aaid pllln8 and hf'hroptera wtirt
nlltd off thf' snrt h Monday
nt&hl tw<-aust ol dens" roa but
that lhtly ·would l"HUmC' n yanM
tad•>
durlq the aurcb, thty ~ard
th• •• rrytna fOf btlp. If the
ea1lnt dlda't llop, thty rould
have tone rilbt by him.
"Tb& vialblllty wa• unreal. It was IO bad \hat it 1UU toot 30
minul• &o find him , even afttr
tb•tt heard h11 voke.'' Curtla ·~aid.
"He w11 extremtly lucky,
..-.peC'iaUy couhierint he spent
more than three boura in ~7·
Je1rtte water He wH in pretty
&ood phy111ical condition lO be1in
with,•· Curtis aaid.
t'roaby &aid that there was one
~as•enaer aboard the twin·
eniime Pi~r Sem1nole, but that
he was wuable LO tell whether he
clicaped from the aircraft before
It s unk
tlclpaled, tearing orr both winp
Crom the plane.
Tbe plaqe was on a nl1ht from
Sacramento lO Palocnar Airport
In Carlsbad . about 30 rftlles
north of San l>le10. when U
crashed at about 5;30 p.m.
Robbins'
f utllrftl
at stake
A b•lk) mJUnf' on • haroor
P41t rol bo.t led to the rescu~ uf
th t pilot Identifi ed u K ~n
t ~re>sb) of Rancho Santa ~. in
northem San 01e&o County lie
WI ..u~n to Tri·C1ty hospital
with m anor lace rations and
p rutses to the fa~ti and l'hes t
"It waa a miracle the WMY
the) f"OW\d him," said <:apt. Jon
·'The pilot said he dove a cou-
ple of times for the passenaer,
but that he was unable to find
him," Curtis said.
Curtis said the pilot said his
engine dJed and he was attempt·
ing to "belly-flop" onto the
water whe n h e s truc k the
water 's surface before he an-
SACRAMENTO (AP> -State
Sen. Alan Robbins' legal and
political futures were at stake
today as Senate leaders decided
whether lo give ham a commit·
tee chairmanship while a judge
decided whether \o hold him for
trial on sex. charges.
AUCTIONEER TO DONATE CAA SALE COMMISSION TO LENNON SPIRIT FOUNDATION
Alck Col• wtth 1956 Bentley to be aold next month In Scottsdale
'-Curtis of the Ocunside Harbor
Police "We've been having
t rouble with the engine on our
patrol boat When 1t conked out Robbins. D-Va.n Nuys, was re·
ported to be in line for the
chairmanship or a new Senate
Ins urance Committee. The
Senate RuJ es Committee met all
day Monday to parcel out
chairmanships but did not an-
nounce its choices.
Lennon car sale slnted
Int erial County Psychedelic Bentley could bring $100,000
Rabies-infested
livestock feared
EL CENTRO CAP> -An Imperial County health official says the
discovery of six more rabid animals has heighte.ned fears of the
spread of the contagious disease among Ii vestock, as well as humans.
Yvonne Smith, Imperial County health department ad·
m in istrator. said Monday that positive rabies in a wild coyote could
indicate furt.her spread of rabies throughout the largely agricultural countryside .
"We have no greater con-
cern than when having a C"'r ~rr'E
household pet found to be Ji .1i J
rabid because the lives of peo-
ple are at stake," Smith said.
''But we did not want to find rabies in the wild coyote because of their
mobility and because we have a lotofliveslock and farming here.
"We've been told that coyotes can travel up to 50 miles before
they become infirm and die,'' Smith said.
... ,,,.....,. n.. ......... , ......... ..
HOLLYWOOD <AP) -An autopsy will be conducted to help
determine what caused the death of rolksinaer Tim Hardin, 39,
best known as the composer or "If I Were a
Carpenter," police said.
MAlllDIN
Police found Hardin's body at his apart·
menl at about 6:30 p .m . Monday after receiving -
an anonymous telephone tip, said Sgt. Frank
Spangler.
The cause of death was not immediately de-
termined, but Spangler said there was no
evidence of foul play.
8.17.8 ..a1u... ~I• •Id LA peHn-lern-
LOS ANGELES (APl-ln light of the city's grQwing crime
problem, Police Chief Daryl Gates is calling for a Sl7.6-milJion
crash program to beef up the police force.
In a letter Monday to Mayor Tom Bradley, Gates also p.ro-
posed a 19 percent increase in personnel to raise the number of
police authorized to be employed from 7,100 to 8,500.
Slab1 San Fnwa•u rep paid irt•llC•
GRANADA HILLS (AP> -Hundreds of law enforcement of-
ficers and firefighters paid tribute to a San Fernando p0liceman
shot to death on Christmas Eve.
Monsignor Peter O"Sullivan eulogized 30-year-old Dennis
Webb as a "fallen hero··; who had been "committed to the welfare
of society." Webb was shot six times by a pedestrian he had
stopped to question about the robbery of a 7-Eleven Store in nearby
Sy I mar.
3 rltargN dropJWff -•••t at"t"Uttd ldlJ.r
SANTA MONICA <AP> -"'.'fhree felony charges against Dr.
Raymond La Scola, accused of killing his millionaire adoptive
mother. Georgia Maloney Thera, 69, so he could inherit her
fortune. have been dropped because the prosecution said it
learned an intended witness may have lied i,..an unrelated murder
trial. '
Superior Court Judge Edward Rafeedie on Monday dismissed
two counts of soliciting the murder or two North Hollywood
attorneys and one count of witness tampering in a brief hearing at
the request of Deputy District Attorney Stephen S. Trott.
City honored
By GERALD WINKLER, D.D.I .
DENTAL IMPLANTS 1 ~
protrude through
The Rules Committee
chairman. Senate President Pro
Te m David Roberti· D-Los
Angeles, whom Robbins support·
ed in his leadership takeover
this month, has sai<t the pending
criminal charges against Rob·
bins won't affect his de~ision.
BVT ROBBINS could face ex·
pulsion from the Senate and a
prison term of up to sax years ii
convicted of c harges of sexual
misconduct with three girls aged
16 and 17.
The 37-year-old senator has
been indicted by the Sacramento
County grand jury on 10 felony
counts on unlawful sexual in·
tercourse, oral copulation and
attempte d unl a wful in ·
tercourse ..
HE HAS also been charged
!¥J>arately with possession of a
s mall amount or marijuana,
which aulhoFities sa y was. found
at his Sacramento home during
a search related to the sex
charges.
Robbins has pleaded innocent
to au the charges.
His preliminary hearing start·
ed Monday in Sacramento Coun·
t y Superior C ourt , with
testimony from prosecution wit·
nesses.
Reagan may
sell home in
LA suburb
PACIFIC PALISADES (AP)
-Pres ident-elec t Ronald
Reagan reportedly has asked for
preliminary estimates on the
value of his home in this Los
Angeles suburb. a move that
could indicate he is thinking of
selling or leasing the house
where he has lived since 1956.
''He couJd just be testing the
marke t ," s aid J i m Wix .
manager of Coldwell Banker's
residential property office in
Brentwood, which he said has
been asked to seek opinions on
the potential price of the home .
"Nothing is certain yet." '
A Reagan aide, who asked
that he not be identified.
declined to confirm the informa·
lion but said, "It's not Surpris·
ing."
One rumored asking price for
the rambling, ranch-style home
on an odd-shaped wooded lot
was Sl.9 million.
LOS ANGELES CAPJ-A 1956 Bentley S·l once
own ed by slain roc k s tar J ohn Lennon and
featuring "the.definitive psychedelic paini job" is
expected to bring in $50,000 to $100,000 when it is
auctioned next month, a spokesman for the sale
predicted.
Auction officials predicted the former Bealle's
ear, which has been placed on exhibition in the
past , might again wind up on the state fair cirl'u1t.
Rick Cole, the professional auctioneer who will
sell the multicolored Bentley which Lennon
purchased in 1966, said he will donate his entire
commission to Lennon's Spirit Foundation. -
COLE SAID MONDAV HE was sensiti ve about
the liming of the auction and stressed that the car
was put on consignment for sale at the Tom Bar
rett·Jackson Auction last Nov. 5. more than one
month before Lennon was gunned down in front of
his apartment house in New York
"I don"t want to be accused of e xploiting the
tragedy," Cole said. 'Tm 26, and I grew up with
the Beatles. I don't want to make money on this.'·
Cole said promoters of the popular auction.
which brought in $4 m illion last year , at first want·
ed to delay the sale to avoid the appearance of ex
ploitation.
"But we didn't want to feel bullied by his·
lory. ·' Cole said.
Joseph Molina, a spokesman for the auction
whil'h will be he ld on the grounds of a Scottsdale,
Ariz .. hotel Jan. 9·11 . said offers have already
Climber lucky
he can advise
. BISHOP (AP) -When Stephen Goolsby warns
hikers not to take trails that are more difficult
"\han they can handle, he knows what he is talking about.
But he's lucky to be able to give advice at all
-he's recovering from injuries received when he
fell 1,500 feet down the highest mountain in the
contiguous United States.
The 30-year-old San Jose resident suffered rel-
a tively minor injuries -a concussion, com-
pression fracture of the spine. bruises and a cut
forehead -and was recuperating Monday at
Northern lnyo Hospit al.
"HE'S DARN LUCKY," Inyo County sher iff's
Deputy Bud Clayton said.
"He slipped on ice and literally fell off the
mountain. Most of them who fall up there don't
com e back."
Goolsby, a guitarist who describes himself as
a "novice c limber." s aid he had ''never climbed
that high before."
HIS WIFE, CHARLENE, had cautioned him
not to make the t,rip up Mount Whitney.
"But r ~asn't worried," he said. "because we
we re well-equipped a nd r was with two ex-
perienced climbers."
Goolsby said he and his friends were descend-
ing the 14,000-foot peak. the highest in the nation
except for Alaska's peaks, and left the trail late
Sunday afternoon because it was covered with
snow.
MERCED (AP ) -
This city will be
awaraed $100,000 in free
services in honor of its
s u ccessful s ummer
energy conservalio~
program. Pacific Gas &
Electric will pay the city
for reducing power use
by at least 10 percent
during peak demand
hours.
Dental lmplantology
Clnserting a post into
the j awbone to aC'l as an
anchor for dentures>
goes back to the times
or the early Egyptians.
Mummi es a nd
skeletons have been
examined . and they indicate that dental
Implants were
attempted even In those
gum to serve as an ·
anchor.
Wh il e I m p lant
den t istry Is quite
complex -and still
c o n s i d e r e·d
ex perimenta l and
practiced only by a
relatively few experts
-it dGe!I provide a new
approach to denture
problema.
Restaurant
NEED .
HILP! ..... .... , ....
~ ...
or have our competent
plumbers do the work! ·BLoe11 ........... I\ .., .. ·
HIAT'ltte ' ...... ~ ---·~·
'days
A denta.I implant is a
device that supports a
single crown, a bridge,
or a full denture, when
t h e g u ms c a n.n o t
normally retain them. There are two types:
v arylng degrees or
sut?ceas are reported;
but It appean that the
percenta1e or
1ucce11ful cases la
directly related to the
amount al trawn1 and
experience of the
implanto&otlitt.
and Cocktail l ounge
~~~SCAMPI
(shrimp in herb wine sauce}
•~s 12.t1
Served with Soup du Jour or ui.t, rte. pilaf
or beked potato, VeOetable de Gardtner.
com e in lo his ofrice from England. Germany and
J apan. even though news that the car was to b"
sold was passed only by word of mouth amoniz
serious car collector!>
"We've had offers from all over, but we're go
ing to let history take its eour:.e. Molma !>aid Th<'
publicist i.;aid auct111ne~r'> esllmaled the ea r '<.
value based 'on th~ offers rc·1·e1ved !>ince Lennon':.
death . which r aused the bide; to incrca!><'
dramaticall y.
The Bentlt•y Y.as quiet!} 5h1pp1..·d hcr1• \!t)nd<n
from OJa1. 00 miles north <if Ll)s J\ngelt'" It wi ll rt·
main at a secret loccit11Jn for ci rew days before b1:
ing shipped to Scottsdale Thf' rar \\Ill he k,..pt u 11
dcr 24-hour guard unl1I 1l 1s put on th1· aurt1v11
block. Molina sa1<1
.. People who wt•n · Bt•atle f:.rns might want ..
piece of the mem,,,.~ a b11mpc1 or somc·thing
Molina said "We can 't t ah <in\ chanees ' ·
The Bentley glows with \·ibrant pink, hlul·
red. orange, green 1wd yelfl>" color:-There 's <•
stunning sunburst rm th(• hood v. llh blue sun ra\ s
trailing over a pearly pink background on thf•
s ide~
IT ALSO FEATlJ RES Pl RPI.I-: recir lealhcr
seats. pink shag carpets and psyt·hedehc curtains
separating the rear section from the driver.
Molina said.
The car's present owner. who insists on not be
in g identified, has kept the car 1n an air
conditioned office in 0Jat si~ce 1977
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HONEST
ANSWERS
TO HONEST
QUESTIONS
30 1efreshing minutes on rehg1011 ;n which three
distinguished panelists iespond •o oues11ons abotil rne"
deepest spiritual convictions
People of all inleresrs and ages crossing the plaza at th•
world headquarters of Christ1:in Science 1n Bosron. ,i::,11
lhP. questions A panel of Chr•slian Scientists answers
them. and a more accurate picture eme19es 01 a world
wide rellg1ous mo11emen1as11 enters •IS second century
Don 1 miss this half·hour special
~ONE HUNDRED
YEARS YOUNG
One has a m etal
framework that rests
on the Jawbone, with
the 1um tbieue cloeed
OYer It: ~ ~her it placed Into the bone,
like a root al a toot!I.
Both typea have a post
or seri• al ..,.ti whJch
~""*lw, D.D.fl. ~'
... Al I 1R• •"
l41JA ...... 8811eM. N..,_.8Mft ..._:MM•
........
A aHTtHtOAL roll.
SUNDAY ~:MPAGNE IRUNCH L . .• -STIAHSCIENCF" 6:30 A.~.I
1-&.........L ~~~:::==.l-~ll1tSoothCoeltPtaz1ne1rtheCarousel KTLA SUNDAY, JAN. ~
REVEALS '" the
ontt.Ftrst Level. FOf"reeerv1tion1cell: ~22.
--------' ..
. ------·----"'--""-·----------'--
,
JMkAnaenon
Applicants-face G9P 'purity test'
1'\e name "' the plMC.'t' ls Gunpowder Polnt, ~n old
muniUont he 1n Chwa Vllta tha' suddenly has become a
topk ol lntettst a•oa1 lht Oran,. Cout, partlcularly in
ewport Beach. I\ wu Gunpowdtr rolnt th1d brou1ht Chula Vista of·
httala face to face wlth representatives from the
ataromla Coa tal C'ommlulon th1 month in a San Diego
l"OUrtroom
The-arsummt centered around plana m the cit y's pro~ Local 'ua t ill Pllil\ to Mllow constructfon of a
hottl at Gunpowder But tht! ('ummission agreed it would
not approv.: the coa1'tal plan untll the hotel designation
~as removed
The JUdgt!, asked to rule wh~ther the commission
r tluld set u<-h ma.ndattor)' conditions for approval of the
t•oa tal plan. rulE>d in the city's favor
Th{' C'l\) of ewport had joined the s uit as a ·'friend
o ( tht l'OUJ1 ' City om e1alb t!Xpresi:.ed the feeling that
tht>y too rmgh,t end up havin g a Gunpowder Point on their
hands "hen their Local Coastal Plan goes to the coa st a l
\ omm1s~1on fol' apptoval.
l'he JUdge. in his ruling, said the commission must
t'llhl·r <H·cept or reject a coastal plan. offering reasons if
d plan is reJeC'led. He said the. trouble comes when the
1·om mission makes suggestions on how to solve problems
1t finds ma plan.
Several city leaders in Newport are calling the court
decision a victory for local government. Mayor Jackie
Heather says it gives local representatives ··more c lout."
Others look at it diffe rently . Coastal Commissioner
Judy Rosener , a Newport resident, says the court case
was a "tempest in a teapot " and brings no changes in
what the commission can or can't do.
While there appears to be a lack of agreement on
what the decision does or doesn't mean, the attention
given this case seems to once again underscore the dis-
e nchantment many local governments feel with the
coastal commission.
Danger on the road
It is the season. unfortunately. for the annual leap in
drunk driving s tatistics. which tomorrow night are likely
to hit their peak.
Drivers who have been drinking are involved in more
than half the fatal accidents in the country: Last year the
dead numbered 25,000 and as many as a million
Americans we re injured in alcohol-related traffic acci-
dents.
The re are ways to escape involvement in this
carnage.
Obvious ly the best way is to avoid drinking when you
will have to drive. That way your reactions will be in
shape to safely guide your own vehicle and to steer clear
of the one in 10 drivers who will be Ul)der the influence.
If you do drink, keep count, space the drinks as far
apart as possible and be sure to combine the drinks with
food.
Couples or groups of friends who attend cele brations
togethe r should agree that one will take the respons ibility
for driving -horn~ by being especially careful about drink-
ing.
Party hosts c an he lp by making sure there's food on
hand when the gues ts a rrive so they won 't start drinking
on an emot v s tomac h : by providing non-alcoholic
beverages for those who don't choose to drink : and by
WASHINGTON -President-
elect Rona.Id Re.,an has sent 1t
messaa• throu1fi bi• top ad·
vlsers that he wanta to head a
moderate admlnl1tration. Ap·
pa rentJy. hia wishes haven't
reached incon:aina RepubUcan
members of Congress, who have
been offered a 43-page screening
test for people seeking employ-
ment on Capitol ttill. The
curious document is informally
known as the "ideological purity
test."
lt was thoughtfully provided
by the Republican Study Com-
mittee. which
has been the
r ecipient of
hundreds of
a ppli cations
s in ce t he
election from
peo ple who
feel they are
qua I 1(i ed to
bring a little
Re publi can
common sense to the halls of
Co ngress . With 68 n ew
Republicans in the House, and
Se nate, the job prpgram is wide
open.
. The Purity Test originally con-
tained 44 qu estion s . But
o ne Ques ti o n No . 12
wa s deleted at the
last minute. Llke all the others.·
Art Hoppe
It was a statement to which pro-
sp"ctl ve job applicants were ex ·
pectc.-d to answer Yei; or No. The
dele t ed statement read :
"We lfare Is the basic right of all
Americans." A Study Commit·
tee official told my associate
Vicki Warren that Ques tion No.
12 was removed because lt was
causing "too much confusion ."
The decision was made so late in
the hiring game t.tw.t~No. 12 was
simply blotted out with white
ink.
THE LITl'Li: QUIZ for job
seekers was composed a few
years. ago for use in the GOP
Study Committee's own hiring.
Now that the committee has
gained more clout. it has seen fit
to offer its political shibboleths
to possibly unwary Republicans·
arriving on Capitol Hill.
Here are some of the Yes-No
state ments the committee sug·
gests that GOP senators and
representatives use to judge the
applicants for j obs on their
starts :
"Peace is best guaranteed
through military strength rather
tha n through world govern·
me nt. ..
-"Society can be improved
by giving preferential employ-
·ment treatment for a fe w years
t o wum e n and ethntc
minorities." -"Parents should have
no right t o i nt e rfer e
with course conte nt and
by professional educators and·<>r
boards of education.··
-"Organized labor should be
s ubject to antitrust laws."
-"Workers on strike should
-be--permitted to collect un ·
employment compens4tion and
dra w food stamps."'
-"Federal funds should be
made available for abortion for
poor people."
-" •Affirmative action' pro-
g rams actuall y l i mit the
avenues of opportunity for all
c it.izen s a nd s ub s titute
bureaucratic decisions for those
or merit in selecting pe rsonnel." .
. YOU GET THE idea. In fact.
any reasonably savvy job appli-
cant gets the idea. It's not hard
lo figure oul whether a "Yes" or
"No " is more likely to land
the m a job in the s uppbsedly
"New Right" Congress.
Despite i t s o b v iou s
drawbacks, the GOP quiz has
caught the fancy or new GOP
me mbers of Congress. Accord-
ing l o a s tafre r fo r the
Republican Study Committee,
o ne ou t of ever y fo ur new
Republican me mbers has asked
the committee for referrals on
~~K, I'M TRYIN'. KAY? ..
•
I I ~
.... ~
~: : , ..
r
J
~ ·~:•
pote ntial staffe rs who have
taken the test.
Footnote; A Study Committee
spokes man insisted that the
Ideological t.est wasn't "pass·
Call ," and added that one woman
who h~d failed had been hired.
WIN SOME, LOSE SOME: A
recent confidential intellisence
report sums up the Kremlin's
latest achievements O(I tbe In-
ternational scene this way:
"The Sovie ts have gaine d
footholds, whether through prox-
ies or in their own right, in
Afghanistan, South Yemen,
Ethiopia. Angola, Grenada,
Vietnam and, of course, Cuba."
The report continues : "The
import.ance of such footholds in
terms of giving the Soviets ac·
cess to port. and repair facilities,
and of providing staging and
landing rights, training areas
and other indispensable support
to military activities, should not
be underestimated."
Another classified summary
tots it all up, saying: "At the
present time. Soviet advisers or
military personnel can be found
in 30 countries adhering formal-
ly to the Neutral and Non-
Aligned <NNA ) Movement; Sov-
,iet arms are being sold to 33
NNA nations ...
The gloomy cloud of Soviet ag-
gression has its silver tining,
though, according to the U.S. in-
te I Ii gence a nalys ts' r eport :
·'Soviet attempts to insert a pres-
ence outside their own territory
have met with setbacks as well
as successes. Their record is
hardly unblemished."
WATCHDOG WATCHERS:
Stirred by complaints of fraud
and abuse by fi eld employ~s of
the Immigration and N aturaliza·
lion Service. the agency's of-
fi (•ials have responded by in·
c r easin g the numb e r of
e mployees in its Off ice of
Pro fess ional Respo ns ibility
from 17 lo almost 50. The.new in
tcrn<JI sur\'c1llancc has brought
mutterings of ''1984 !"' and "Big
Brother '" from 1mmig ratwn
employec•s
Scc·n·t camer<Js and internal
spies :.irt· among the devi<.'es the
al{t:ncy bras:-. hats used to catch
border µatn1I personnel suspect
l"d of d<-aling less than fairly
with illegal ;;illens trying to cross.
into the l 'nikd Stat es Morale is
s ufforing as a result. and a lop
o ffi c ial at 1mm1 g rat ion
a t·knowledged that "this is a job
no one likes to have "
• refraining from urging "just one mor e" on guests who
don 't re all y want one more.
And a truly thoughtful host will be prepar ed eithe r to
put guests up for the night or to provide safe transporta·
tion home.
Marriage is tough, even for pacifists
No one wants to st art the New Year as a traffic
statistic.
Not enoug~ heart?
Poor Chrysler. Poor Lee lacocca. Poor auto worke rs .
The beleaguered auto manufacturer is using up its
$1.5 billion federal bail-out rund faster than anticipated,
t he heralded K car series isn't selling as well as hoped,
the holiday plant closedown has been extended. unions
are agre.eing to unusually modest contract terms to keep
~ the company alive. and Chrysler's debt rating has sunk to
:.i new low.
As if these indignities we re n't enough, the California
Hi ghway Patrol says it isn't satisfied with the Dodges it
has been using for many years to chase speeders and oth~r ecrant drive rs up and down the state's freeways
arrd highways.
Deep inside that husky-looking black and white St.
Regis cruiser. s ay CHP officers. is an engine "'.ith no
heart. Ct just does n't have the poop to stay up with. let
alone catch, many cars on the road. . .
One officer said a silly little VW beetle outran him m
a chase.
Neither is the CHP hid101.f t he· fact that its
impending purchase of l,000 new cars1 traditionally em-
phasi'zing Chrysler products -may be altered by doubt
about t~company's staying in business. .
The CHP's fleet of St. Regis sedans may be symbolic
of the Ct)rysler _Corp. -inside, there jus.t isn't enough
· heart. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of lhe 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 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
My beloved wife. Glynda, is a
woman of many surprises. Just
the other day she s urprised me
with a .38 pearl-handled Smith &
Wesson revolver.
"I read that Nancy Reagan
keeps a 'tiny
little gun' in .a
drawer next
to her bed,"
Glynda hap·
p i I y ex ·
plaine d a s
s h e un -
wrapped it.
"So l bought
m yself one ,
too. lsn 't it
darlin~?"
"You call that a tiny little
gun?" l said. "It could put a
hole in you the size of a dime ."
"Nancy a nd l don 't know
anything about such things," she
said. "But Ronnie taught her
how to use hers and you can
teach-me-how lo use mine It's
fun lo do things together.''
"First of all." I said from
behind the couch, "don't point it
at me.··
"Oh don't worry." s he .said.
pulling it on the coffee table , "it
isn't loaded."
"The second lesson,'' I said
sternly, "is that it 's always 'un-
Sydney Harris
loaded' guns that a ccidentally
kill people ...
''I'd load it for you." she said,
smiling prettily . "'but I don't
know how ··
I SAm THAT was an old joke
and what did she want a gun for
anyway? "Burglars." she said.
"Well." I agreed, "it would be
the only thing in the house worth
stealing. But do you realize that
people who own guns are a hun·
dred times more likely lo shoot
themselves or a loved one than
they are lo shoot a burglar?"
"If it's good enough for Nan-
c·y." su1d Glynd<1 . '1t 's i:?Ood
c•nough fur me. ..
"I liked 1l better when J ackie
Kennedy was first lady.·· I said.
··All you bou~ht was a pillbox
hat. Now what happens 1f I C'ome
hom e late and stumblt' over
something in the dark and you
wake up out of a sound sleep and
reach for your trusty roscoe and ..
"I suppose," she sa id sweetly.
"that you'll think twice before
coming home late "
"IF YOU'RE referring to last
Thursday night. .. I s aid. ''hav·
ing :i dead battc•ry is not a
capital crime .'\nd what 1f vou
got mad enough to shoot me. on
purpose ~"
"'Never' .. said Glynda firmly
··Not even when I use lhe
guest to we ls in the powde r
room·1 •• •
"l have a <.'Onstitutional right
to keep and bear arms." she
said evasively.
.. My wife. the gun nut ... I said.
.. And wtlat about m y <.'onstitu·
tional right to rreed ofn o r
speech? Having a wife who is
a rmed to the teeth is certainly
going to make me curb my
tongue and walk softly around
here."
"Hmmm." said Glynda
thoughtfully, "I always won-
de r e d why R onnie was in -
variably so nice to Nancy."
"OKAY. YOU win," I said.
"And to help you defend us frum
burglars . I'm buying a semi· ~ :~~0:!"~~:~ :Or::1~e;s0~~ t~~ ~:z~3o~ i a quarter."
Glynda mulled this over, voted
i• for total disarm a m ent and
traded in her gun for a pillbox
hat. Thank God! Marriage i!l
1 tough enough even when both
l5 part.ies are pacifists .
Boyd/Bathtub Facts about Islani 01ay help solve the puzzle
The most reported item t
llbout U.S. President Miiiard
Fillmore is U?e fac( that he
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Liter meters at the gas
pump -but it's still
Yankee dollars on th~
-holUunJiQe__ --
NEVADA NELL
Gl .. f'l'J 0.t C-•h are ... . ,,,,.... ., .............. .
"*UtWrll, , .. IKI ... WifM .. ... .... .,.....,. """ ,_ ,.. _ .... .
GleMnf ow.~ .......
1
was the first Chief Executive
to install a bathtub in the
While Hou,,e,
The. pitcher planl is
ca rnivoro us . But some
spidens are itnmune to Its de-
generative juices . They wade
around in there waiting for
Insects to drop In, insects
•.,at can't take it.
Things I learned Reading "MiU-
fanf Islam," by G.H. Han1f!'n:
That Islam is not.a re,Ugion,
and w as no t found eti b y
Mohammed.
-That Islam does not have a
Church, a hierarc h y. -or a
clergy.
-That the Koran 1s not rom·
panbletolhe Bible.
-That the
Mo s l e m
calendar is
There are those experts on the only pure-
the sea who contend that more I y • 'I u n a r · ·
shtpwrecks throushout his-calendar in
tory have beetl due to drunken w i d e us e :
'hel msmea tban to any other h e n c e , the -n-osl!. Oi"'dnlDtn'mm . or--·-~ n 1n
drunken sklppers. Nobody months have
knows how many ship no connec-
fatallties, like car fatalities, lion,
are linked to liquor. But quite -'nlat the only Ume women
a many, betonthat. .•re pernttted to be unveiled Is
' '
when they a re praying al
Mecca.
-That under Is lamic law,
couples convicted of adultery
m ay be stpned to death. (But on-
ly when their conduct is fla-
grant. before witneslfes). •
-THAT THE drinking of cof·
fee was Inte rdicted by Moslem
lawgivers, but was rescinded
when the public refused to give
ll up. •
-Thal at the end ot World
War JI there were only rive in-
dependent Moslem countries; to-
day there are 55 represented in
the UN. '
hr'fmc-e-nttgtous
w a rs in the Middle Ages
tween Christian and Moslem
nat o ere almost Invariably
be1un by the former. <European
powen Invaded and subdued
more than half of Moslem land).
-That the basic rules for liv·
ing in accordan<'c with Islam
were •·rroien" about l.000 years
ago. and may not be changed.
That lslam has virtually no
theology. which it dislikes ar)d
sus pects; rather, its code of hv-
ing is wholly practical. includinf'
such matters as etiquette and
hy~iene. inheritance and educa-
tion . -THAT ISLAM embraces by
far many more people of dif-
ferent races and na tionalities T II AT M 0 HAM M ED
lhan any world reli~lon. acknowledged Jesus to have
-That, despite such variety, been a more powerful prophet
Islam is essentially opposed to than he beeause Jesus could
the Idea of nationalism . work mi111cln. (But Moalems.
-That Moha mm t'd l'On -11ke Jews. c onsid e r lt
sldered himself the "final pro· blasphemous to attribute divlni·
phel." in a direct line from ty to any man).
Abraham. Moses. and 'e•us , . and repud1ated the suHtstion -That the bulc marna1e
'ttrat-~oph bl t --8.lld dJ.-arce. law.s ot Ialaa> divine Vl 'C' woe-woman ln a permanently In-
-That lslum has ~en more ferlor posit!on. <Polygamy 1
1uc:cesatul 'n recruiting convert.I permitted, if not tncouraaed.
In the 20th century than any and dlvor~e Is almost entirely at
other relhtious organizatlon. the intt11Uve of the man).
, I
DEC. 30, 1980 H I F
Busi ness 84
Stocks 85
Television 86
Movies 8 7
f
B:USINESS:
Nation's leaders live in economic fantasy.
John Cunn iff tells why . . . 84
UC e ·finally getS over the wall
_1 .
A nteaters shock 12th-ranked Texas A&M, 91-74
~pt'dal lCl lht> Oially ~
tlll,l.JNG~. Moot It '>'as tht.1tnieofv1ctory
~ o.u 11 Rill \lull1i,: .. n lo\ ia'> IOOklllSt for. the kind his
l ( 11' 1nt' h~:.kctball team -.o deRperately "'""'d~>d Ah~1 four Nlra1ghl tlefeats on tht road to
4 ucthl> opiiont!nts. which lef\ Mulhgan wondering
1ust how good his Anteaters really were. UCI
l ame up lo\ 1th 1t!> be:.t performanccoflheseason in
"'hipping ~re' 1ousl}' unddeated and 12th ranked
f exa:> A&M 91 74, in the first round of the KOA
Cla:.s1c Monday night.
The win, undoubtedly, was the greatest in
l't'l s bnd h1stor} al lht' maJor college level.
\nd, 1roni call). 1t came a~ainst an opp0nent with
~pa rkhn~ credential~
The Aggie!> were not only the defending
Southwest Confernnce c hampions, but t hey en-
tered Monda) 's game with an unblemis hed 7-0
murk.
Texa~ A& M al!>O possessed the highly
Chaffey lligh's Adrian Adams (abovel
looses·control of the ball as Costa Mesa's Jim
Pelichowski <left) and Dennis Jones apply a
tough defense Monday in Orange tourna·
publicized "Wall," which featured a front line ot
7·0 Rudy Woods. 6-9Claude Riley and 6·8 forward
Ve rnon Smith.
Unphased. however. UCI -behind the
shooting of 6-8 'Kevin Magee and 6-4 Randy
Whieldon -attacked the Wall as if it was
constructed of Playdough.
Magee, the nation's leading scorer with a
32·point average, kept pace with his numbers by
scoring 34 points and g rabbing 13 rebounds.
Whieldon. meanwhile, who was a te ammate
of Magee's at Saddle back Junior College. pumped
in 27 points. mostly from long range jumpers .
·'With players like Magee and Whieldon you
can see why I was such a good coach at Sad·
d le back.·· said Mulligan jokingly.
Actually. Magee and Whleldon only played a
small part in the overall scheme of events as the
Anteaters c rushed the Aggies at their own game-
defense.
Considered one of the top defensive teams in
m e n t ac tion at Ch a pman College.
Mustangs won, 62-59. For story, see page
82.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ali finally wins round
L'ASVEGAS1A-Pl -T he ~evada State Athletic
Com m ission reversed itself Monday and allowed
former heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad
Ali to surrender his Nevada boxing license. ending
the threat of his forced retirement in the state.
The action by the five·member commission ef·
fec tively prevents the three·lime champion from
_ever fighting in the atale again. But the Nevada ac-
tion will have no effect on other states or other coun·
tries.
The agreement countered a decision reached
early in the hearing when the commission voted
una nimously to reject All's offer to voluntartly
-s ur re nder hjs license. which would have expired at
the end of this year .
"We saved ourselves a lot of time, a lot of court
fights." Ali said following the heating.
·'They think I can't right any more. According to
my I ast performance I don't blame them.'' .
The commission had. said Ali should be retired
··tor his own safety and (or the integrity of boxing in
the state of Nevada ." It said his ability to perform
-wa!-"in question "as a N:?sult-of hls-performanc~" in
the Oct. 2 title fight with Larry Holmes at Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas.
Ali had offered to relinquish his license in a letter
to the commission on Dec. 19. His attorneys said hi s
action in doing so made.the commission action moot
and they claimed the board had no jurisdiction over
the 38-year·old bo>ler. .
But the commission h ad said merely offering to
surrender the license.was not enou1h . and that the
surrender would have to be accepted by the com·
mission, which it at first voted not to do.
Commission chair man Sig Rogic:h said he felt it
was "Incumbent upon us as a commission to set the
tone for other commissions ... "
The panel refused to drop allegations that Ali
had taken a thyroid m edication prior to the Holmes
fl1ht. Ali failed to answer t he bell fort he 11th round ln
the scheduled 15-round World Boxin1 Council title
fight.
The commission also said Ali violated com-
m ission replalions by taklng the thyroid medica-
tion.
the nation, UCI 's zone defense turned thetableson
Texas A&M , which finished the night shooting a
horrendous42 percent from the field.
UC I, on the other hand. shot 63 percent for the
game, and an incredible 81 percent in the second
half.
"That's the second time we've used the 1·3·1
(zone )." explained Mulligan, who has tried a
number of defensive alignments in searching for
the r ight one. "We decided we dido 't want to over·
extend ourselves in a man-to-man."
The game started as if the 1·3·1 zone wasn't
going to be the answer, either. as the Aggies
jumpedouttoleadsof 9-2and 11-4.
But behir I the 13·point first half performance
of Magee. the Anteaters slowly whittled away at
the deficit. Finally. UC I took its first lead of the
night at 25.24 on Ranier Wulf's 18-foot j umper with
6:30 remaining before intermission.
UCI then steadily increased its margin to
40-32 at the half.
~
The Anteaters, behind Whleldon's seven
points and Magee's two, then assumed com ·
m and durin1 the outset of the second 20 minutes,
outscoring the Aggies, 11·3, to take a 51-35 advan·
tage . The Ag(ljes ne ver recovered af\er that, get-
ting no closer than 13points the rest of the way.
"I'll tell you this," said Mulligan from his
hotel room today.'· Magee played the Wall like the
Wall has never been played before.
"One coach in today's paper said it was like a
m an going into the YMCA and beating up on a
bunch of boys."
By wiMing, the Anteaters. 5-4, move into
tonight 's championship game against Montana, a
game Mulligan says the team has to win so as to
not ta mi sh what has been accomplished.
.. If we can beat Montana. it will have been a
helluva week." said Mulligan. "I think they
(players) needed the wi n more than l did. They
needed a win on the road. It was more important to
them "
Area stars lauded
.Stew_art, -three others make All-CIF-
Four Or ange Coast a rea stars have been
chosen on the All·CIF Division Ill football team
for 1980 a s selected by the Citizens Savings
Athletic Foundation board.
Laguna Beach High s tar Lance Ste wart leads
the parade with a fi rst team selection at
linebacker , while second team honors go to Corona
del Mar defensive back Bob Sholl in, San Clemente
nose guard John Schroeder and Estancia High
qua rterback Jim McCahill.
Also chosen on the two teams are four
Capistrano Valley High stars <all on the first of·
fense >. Mission Viejo g uard Dana J ohnson and El
Toro 's Greg Pacos C first team linemen l and Damon
Sweazy (second team back l.
Player of the Year honors go to Jomo Page.
the spectacular Pius X High lineman.
Capistrano Valley 's Big Four include linemen
Bruce Boatman and Dave Mahronic. tight end Dan
Westerfield and running back Eric Fox.
Stewart, the South Coast League's Back of the
Year after guiding the Artists to a share of the
STEWART SHOLLIN
league champ10nsn1p. was pic ked at lin ebacker,
another sp0t he ably manned during the season.
McCahill passed for l ,816 yards and 12
touchdowns in his second year at the helm for
Estancia He averaged 61 percent in completions
during league play and ripped Esperanza High's
secondary fo r 298 yards on l7 completions.
Shollin intercepted five passes and recovered
fa ve-fumbles in additon to returning four pun'.s for
t o uc hdowns l onl y two counted beca use of
"penalties" I.
··Bob was our most outstanding athlete on the
team, says CdM Coach Dick Morris. "If we had
not two-plat ooned he would have been our starting
wide receiver and he could have been a
quarte rbac k . too. but we h ad a qu a lit y
quarterback to begin with."
Schroeder, a 210-pound fullback while on of·
.fense, dominated San Clemente's tough defensive
line at nose guard. ··He is the best nose guard in
Orange County as far as I'm concerned.says San
Clemente Coach Allie Schaff. "And he was last
year, too."
SCHROEDER McCAHILL
I 980 Ail-CIF Division III football team
First Team Offense Second Team Offense
Pos. Player, school Ht. Wt. CJ. B-Todd Gerhardt. Norco 6-0 210 Sr.
8 -J im Wolak, Covina 5·10 165 Sr. B-J lm Mccahill, Estancia 6· 1 185 Jr.
B-Ronald Story , Serr a 5· 11 197 Sr. 8-Bob Malouf, South Hills 6-0 175 Sr.
B-Eric Fox, Capistrano Valley 5· 18 180 Sr. 8 -Louie Galicia, Schurr 5·11 175 Sr.
8-Thad Jefferson. Onta rio 5· 11 195 Jr. B-Damon Swe azy. El Toro 5·8 160 Jr .
B-J eff Brown. Yucaipa 6·4 190 Sr. B-Donald LaBomme . Alem any 6· 1 195 Sr .
8 -Robert Currie. Serra 5·10 180 Jr. £-Allen Pt1ts.Claremont 6-3 180 Sr.
E-Richard Rodriguez. Mt. View 6·0 175 Sr. E -Steve Rodriguez. Santa Fe 5.7 140 Sr
E-David Clinton. Mary Star 5.9 170 Jr. E -Tom Haynes, Covina 6·2 180 Sr
E-Troy Sweet , Brea-Olinda 6-0 180 Sr. TE-Greg McDanield. Mayfair 6·4 235 Sr .
TE-Dan Westerfield, Cap. Valy. 6-3 220 Sr. T-Jim "McCullough, Hemet 6·6 230 Sr.
T-Greg Pacos, El Toro 6·4 230 Sr. T-Doug Homan. California 6-2 210 Sr .
T-Oave Mahronic Capistrano Valley6:..4. 230 Sr. G -Scolt WiJkenonJllor~o 6·3-235 St.
G-DarryrTltsworth. Garey 6·3 245 Sr. G -Mike Marinkovich, Mary Star 5· 11 200 Sr.
G-Dana Johnson, Mission Viejo 6-3 230 Sr. c -Mike Baker , Esperanza 6· 1 214 Sr.
C-Bruce Boatman. Capis. Val. 6·3 223 Sr K -Cle Kooiman. Chaffey 6·1 180 Sr.
K-Luis Zendejas. Don Lugo 5-10 170 Sr.
Second Team Defense
First Team Defense DL-Hugh Foster . Ganesha . 6·3 ~10 Sr
DL-Jomo Page, Pius X 6-3 230 Sr DL-Mike Copeland, Serra 6-5 218 Sr.
DL-Mark McCoy, Yucaipa 6·1 190 Sr. DL-Art Chavez, Schurr 6-1 1110 J r.
DL-John Hill, Rubidoux 6·4 210 Sr. DL-John Schroeder. San Clemente 6·0 200 Sr.
DL-Glen Simonton , Verbum Del 6-2 219 Sr. DL-Tim McClanahan. Brawley 6-1 215 St .
DL-Adam Lowitz, Esperanza 6·1 225 Jr. LB-Chuck Felando. Mary Star 5· 11 200 Sr.
LB-Nick Far ris. Victor Valley 6·1 210 Sr. LB-Br.ian Breese. La Mirada 5-11 185 Sr.
LB-Lance Stewart, Laguna Beach 6·0 190 Sr LB-Tony Lamboy , Coachella Valley5-ll 170 Sr.
LB-John Roney. Esperanza 6·1 212 Sr. LB-Ken Chapple. Pomona 6·1 1~ Sr.
LB-Russ Maybury, Covina 6-3 205 Sr. LB-Chad Corriveau, Riverside Poly 6·1 190 Sr.
LB-Jorge J atib, Schurr 5-10 175 Sr. DB-Bob Shollln , Corona del Mar 6·0 170 Sr.
DB-Craig Rutledge, El Dorado 6·1 180 Jr. DB-Billy Robinson, Victor Valley 6-3 185 Sr.
OB-St.eve ~aub. St. Anthony 6-2 180 Sr. DB-Darrell Ford . Garey 6-2 1~ St.
DB-Robert Soza, Schurr 5-11 175 Sr. OB-Ken Wagner. Arlln1ton 5-10 170 Sr.
DB-Jeff Mahlstede, Santa Fe 6-1 170 Jr. DB-Doug Williams, Riverside Poly 6·0 1~ J r.
DB-Jesse Vasquez, South Hills 5·11 170 Sr. Punter-Pat O'Hara, Covina 6·2 1~ Sr.
Punter-Scott Larson, Damien 5-9 160 Sr . Player of the Year: Jomo Page. Pius X
EME~ROILS
IN TOIJRTVAMEIVr Schembechler provides some gallows hUmor
From AP dJ1pa&cltei . Bowl pact between the two confeNDces. ferences and with idenUcal t.2 recordl.
'
.... ...
• t
PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y.-
Corona del Mar Hl1b senior An-
tony Emerson. a 1'1•yeu-old""10n
of tennis le1end Roy Emerson,
pulled out a 6-4, 4-6, 7.5 victory
oveT Grea Voetsch of Warren.
N.J. Monday to advance lo the
PASADENA (AP> -Bo Scbem-
becbler admitted Monday that tbe
Pactftc-10--Confertnce-may be •tHlll•r
In football than hi• OWft Bil 10, but the
Mlchl1an eoeeb lln't about lo tbrow ln
the towel.
• 'Tbere may be a few more fOOd
team• out her. ri1llt now," lebem·
Scbembec.hler 's teams have Iott five
Rose Bowl 1ames. Since 19'70, the
Pac-10 bu won ev.ery t ame except one
-tbe 1'74 victory by Ohio State over
Soutbem California . .. I honeltly feel we could ha ve won
any one ol tboH 11mn ;• Scbembecbler
1afd. "If any oae of lbOle cam• had tt•• lll&ot111M, ,.....M ...... M•1Mly
-but they wenn't.
However , lhe Waabinston coach said
be felt the m atch up . made tJie Rose
Bowl the best of the major bowls, year
in and year out. ••w1.an1na the 1m Role Bowl at ainlt
1 1reat Mlchi1an team wu a CMcb'a
d ream," said Jamea, who WH a
Mletdprr ml1ta11t eoaeb came Bump
Elliott ln 1• and 1W7. "It'• u OV.f ·
wbtlminl an experience tllll year u lt
Wll ln Im."
·'We're both similar." Jama said.
··Both teams were •~PPOled to t. m n -'-
bull din& years. We both •tnaaled early "
but then c:arne on stronc late in the
1eaaon."
. 1econd round of the fourth an·
-, nuil'""ROlix n em ationa un or
· · · tennis c:hampionlblpt.
It wu a split for other famoua
tennla namn ln the ftnt round
-l4·yMt-old P1U1cll Mel:nroe,
Jot\n Mc: Smot'• brotber tell te
a Y u101l1v i 1n <Nenad
Markovic) M , 4-6.
_bec:hl .. told ~ ............
Inc news eoafernc:e wlth hll RoN Bowl opponent, WHbla1toa Coach Doe
Jam•. "If you wa (to.., tbe he·lO 11 better, I'll ffeeDt tut. 1 '81Md CID die lat few RoN 8owl 1•••• I cmi si1' JOU M •.-.m. ft.'a like the Amenean ......-ID tbe
tut rew beMb&ll All-Star 1a~."
I
'
"It'll tum ll'OUDCI. There may be a time .._ the Ila 10 will nm otf a few
vletorl•. • '1 'm not tr1tn1 to look lor nC\1119. '' JaM Hid ht II aware that there 11
IOIDI prMIUl'9 from tbe Wiit Cout
medla to drop the loa1·atandin1 1'ole
J a me1 aald be thou1bt the two CGft,
ferencea wwe fair\)' equal Ind polnted
out tbat both Mlchl1an and Waahlqtae
10 mto tbe Ju. 1 came u ~
ch1mpton1 of thelr reapeeUH· C:Oll·
•
Scbembechler, who appean to have ••ll••ld .. •rthe"Ydi11111t'w1'1 .
ed comlq out here ln 1•. "-' able lo apply 10_1De Callows bumor to the Bit 10 ·
al(uaUori. .. '
••• C:ID certalJSly ... why tbe Pac-HI
wantl to hep U1 eomln1 out Mrl," tbe •
Mlchlpn COffh aald, lauatdnl. "Some·
of my wont momenta have lMn out here.
-OM.YN.OT H I F
....... ,....,. ..................
Be~quez now an A111el;
third free agent to 1ign
PrMI AP• flltMe
OUll\.tder Juan .. nlQ'6111 , who pla1ed al lul· II
tie lut 9UJOD. Mped liloruiJJ with UM An•ela, the
lblrd f..-aa•t lO Joln tberii 1lnc• the end ol lut
eason ~•• lhe re enlr')' draft Bft\iQue~. JO, hit 231 al Seatllt lD t• afttr belq -\M
d1ubled U.t much of the Muon ff• alao w11 1uapeaded ftw
1ama by Manaaer Maury WUla for refuain1 a pinch h.ltttac
au••nmen\ 8e1UQue1, considered ouutandlnl d•·
fen11vely, 1urtered a dlalocated rltht
1houlder durin1 an exhlblUon same lut
1prln• and later w11 hampered by a pulled
hamstring. _
"l always thou1ht Benlquea waa one ol
the better centerllelders In the American
Leaaue.'' said An1els' Executive Vlce
President Buule Bavaai who slped bim.
"We 're tryln1 to strenathen our defenae up
the middle. and with the recent addition of
uiuouu Rick Burl~!IOfl at shortstop we feel we've
maae excellent proaress
The other two rree a.ients to sian wltli the Anse'Js ilnce
\he end of the season were pitchera Georr Zahn and JolUl
0 ' Acquisto.
Since the inception of the re·entry draft In 19'78, the
Angels have signed 12 players from It. •-••el•lle ....
Offensive tackle Doul huce, after the Rama loet
1n Dallas. 34·13: "There's somethin1 wrons with this
team nobody knows about. Not even the players."
s~ ..... ~w..... ...... ••••r.,...,
Michigan football Coach Bo Schembechler kept •
Seattle reporters waiting 70 minutes for an In· f t
lerview Sunday -so they walked out.
About a dozen Northwest reporters here to
cover the Rose Bowl 1ame on New Year's between
..W.aahlneton. and Michigan had gather,ed In Newport Beach
for a telephone Interview with Schembechler, who was at the
Hunlineton·Sheraton Hotel in Pasadena.
Simultaneously. a 1roup of Michisan
writers in Pasadena were assembled to
talk by phone with Washinston Coach Don
James.
Schembechler was scheduled at 4:4.5
p.m .. with James to come on at 5: lS p.m .
After the Michigan coach fall9d to
show by 5:05 p.m .. Washinston sport.a in-
formation director Mike Wilson said it wu
unfair for James to be delayed because or
Schembechler. Shortly afterward, James
came down from his hotel room. spent 20
scHaMHCHLlll minutes talking to Detroit writers and then
departed.
At 5:55 p.m .. members of the Seattle press corps decided
they had been s tood up by the Michlga\i coach and walked
out of the interview room. ·
Schembechler. who arrived later. was asked what hap·
pen ed.
"I don 't know what you 're talkina about," he said. "Thia
is the first I've ever heard about a telephone call."
A Michigan spe>kesman later aaid the coach forsot about
the appointment.
c1e.-ftll'C ........ l•r ........ .
homes; deaf people will start the new year with f t NEW ORLEANS -In 30,000 American •.
their first chance ever to watch a major colle1e
football gam e while enjoying advanta1ea that are
taken for granted by those with normal hearins.
Along with the broadcast ol the Susar Bowl on Thunday,
those with special equipment installed on their television set.a
will see captions providing such lhiaes as down and distance.
time left in a quarter, tht score of the same and atatlalical
·summaries of teams and individuals.
For these with no hearln& problems. such inform1tion la
regularly provided by television anaouncers aa .part of their
broadcast. •
The Sugar Bowl meetina between top·ranked G«>rpa
and No. 7 Notre Dame will be broadcast with closed captlou,
a service for deaf people that bu been provided for aome
newscasts and special programs ln the put. but never for a
football game. said John Ball. president or National Capt.lon-
ing lnst.ilute.
s~rer ....................... .
Major Indoor Soccer Leape otflciala decided • Monday to suspend 6·4 Mike ....._. for punchlns
5·8 Jorgea Krlateaaea of Wichita, rather than bar·
ring the offender from the leaeue for Ute u 1u1 · ·
stested by Wichita General Manaaer 8UI & .. &llal. "It's a
weak ruling," said Kentllns ... Austin Peay football coach.
Watac. aro .. has reai1ned to become offenalve.coord.laator
at Vanderbilt ... The South African sloop W_.... iailed
into Simons Bay Just south of Cape Town Monda1 to wln the
1980 A1ulhu Yacht Race, from Cape Town to Mouel Bay
and back, In an elapsed time ot four mlnutea abort of 74
hours, three minutes . . . II• ..... r, who ret.lNd u a
player for-the Ptttsburth Pirates-ncentty, hu been blrtd u
a broadcaster for the baseball club . . . The Cleveland ID·
dians signed 'free agent Pal Kelly, aa oetneNer ... left.
handed hitter, to a two-year contract . . . Servlcet are
pending for Claarln L Haney, football coach at Chic.,o'a
Tilden Tech <now Tilden Wah> for almoet three decahs.
Tilden, 90. died Sunday in San Dleso where he hid lived for
the past 10 years . . . World Boxln1 A1aociation Junior
welterweitht champion Aa,. Pryer will decline to preu
char1es asainst the Cincinnati woman who 1hot and womMled
him Sunday at the woman'• home, the boxer'• manaser Hid.
T~ ......
Followlno are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings
are: / 1 1 1 excellent; 1 11 worth watching; I 1 fair; 'fer19t It . , .. .A Sp.m.,Ch1nnell (I'\./
' NHLHOCKIY: KlnosatMontrHI. AMOUMert: BobMlllerandPeteWeber. ·
The Kings are IHdlng the c.n.dlens by nlnt points In the
Norris Division of the Prince of Walts Conference with tMlr tllaf\· scoring trio of Marcel Olonnt O.~ Tayler end C"8rli. Sim-
mer, all In the top 10 of the NHL scorlne. M<\ntreal, • Ptf"eftft .. I Stanley Cup competitor, heel Ila troubni\ earlltr In the tHMn
but appeers to be coming on 1trong. One hour tape dtley.
[;') lp.m.,CMnnell I ( (
IAIK•TIALL: Hoty CrOll Vf. Nnadt Clas V ... 1). Vegas) . ......._.,.! "otl Porttr and ftalph 9'Ndout.
Coech Jerry T 1run1an'1 8unnln' ,. ... , will tanglewHh Holy
Cron In the first round of the LB v ... 1 Clallk tourMmlftt.
NtlthtrtMml1lnthttop20oftMNCAAtiutboth"-tDNM9Uftd at Na'°"'' and to pettlclpete In tMplayOffs. ••Ot0-8eskltbell -l..lkers 1t Utah, •:20 p.m. KL.AC CSJO); UC: 1rvlnev1. Montane et KOA Cl1_,c,lp.m.KWVI C1• 'M>; UIC
vs. Lou'wlli., •:ao KNX (1010). •
• ,.. •-r • •• .. -• "' ...
Pitt .DJRkes
• its case
to be No. I
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)
-Third-ranked Pi&t1bursh will
Qffd a lot of help-to .. in the RI·
tion1l champloa1hip, but
qHrterba<!k Rick Trocano M Y•
the Panthers can real easy
kno•tns th1t they've ctc.e ever·
ythln1 i• \heir power to lay
claim to No. l .
"We don't control our own
dntlny, eo we juat have to ait
back and hope for OM beet."
Trocano aaid Monday nisht after
Pitt destroyed lltb·ruked South
Carolina ff·I in lite Jltb anDUa1
Gator Bowl. "Wt came out and
did what we bad to do and that
'WIS wtn Cleclaively. Now. if we
don't make It to No. 1. we know
it 's not because we didn't do
everythin1 we could to make it
happen,"
The Gator Bowl victory before
a record crowd of 12.21'1, boolted
the Panthers' record to 11-1 and
spe>lled Helsman Trophy winner
Gerose Rosers' collepat finale
for the 9-4 GamttOeks.
It was the Panthers' seventh
victory in a row since the team
dropped a 38·22 decision lo No. 2
Florida Slate. But it 1till doeen't
put them in the driver'• aeat for
the national crown. which many
of the experts predicted Pitt
would win in presealGft polls.
Top.ranked Georsia must fall
to Notre Dame ln the Susar
Bowl on Thursday and Florida
State would have to stumble
asainst 4th-ranked Oklahoma
later that Aiaht for the Pantben
to have a abot.
"It's frwtraUa1 not havtn1
the final aay. But °" the other
band, you've tot to atve credit to
Geor1ia for betas undefeated
and Florida State credit for
beatlnc us," aatd Trocano. "I
can't predict the future. but lf
they both k>ee. I don't '" how
we can be denied."
South CaroJina Coach Jim
Carlen asreed:
"I aaid sotnc in that Pltt waa
the bat around and MUUnt haa
chanted. They're certainly one
of the three beat and risht now.
I'd have to slve my vote," he
aald.
Edi80118frle
in ahowdown
with &tancia
It will be Edison asalnat
E1tancla tonl1ht at T: 30 with the
c hampionship or the ·Eatlea'
own 1lrl1' b11ketball tourna-
ment on the line after both
teams poeted victort• Moaday
nl1ht.
Edi.Ion edced Fountain Valley,
14-12 • ...whila Eataacla set by
Marina, 81-41. to aet up tile tiUe
1howdown.
In other action, Garden Grove
knocked Colla Me11 out of the
aame loume)' With 1 TO·lf vie·
tory, while Chino did the aame
thln1 to H\lntinfton kach with
a 42·31 triumph~
Bdlaon'a Sbanaoa Meler
pumped ln r7 polnta and hauled
down 20 rebouncla to break a
school record iD Ule Ch1rpn'
win over J'ounta1n V aU91.
She 1ot 1corh•1 ltelp from Aeate 11a11etto no Mdild 11.
Meanwhile, four l1t .. cta
playen HONd ......... n .....
led = Loacne•• ..... lt, u Ute moved mt. U.. ftaall
ol their own tourMJ wtUI I wln
OY., llarlall.
Tb• VW.,. tooll aa eart, 11-1
ftnt qua.rt« ..... ..a, to ...
<ueia r..-d wD I·~ outbunt la tie .............
ta.tea coauzm~ INil. Vleb Lamar JI fl!llill 18 a ....... ,._ for Col&I ... II
the ................. .s
bJ o ..... Groft. OerM .... °' ................... .. .... ...... -..._ , .... v ••• ., ......... , ..., ... c-.eo ._. ._.._ ........... " .......
.,::,~ ..... ~IP· ._.... ..:we r.rr..:: =r..: talaV.a.rwm.-.. t .... tNatti. .. ..,. ......
"-"'-··-·~ .... , ....... _. --
..
SPORTS BAEAK I BASKETBALL I FOOTBALL
Barons eye Orange title
Late free thrma beat Lakewood
By aoo1:a CAIU.ION ........ , .........
Fountain Valley Hl1h'1 Barona raced to U..lr
1lxUt 1tra11ht victory Monday and set themHlvea
up for a crack at a aecond 1tra11ht toum1ment
ch1mpionahlp tonlsht -thanlu to peraeveraMe
and the timely free throw ahootln1 of S·t Junior
Alan Vfilanueva.
The Fountain Valley suard hit a pair with two
seeonda left to lift hit team Into tonitht's <8> cham·
plon1hlp finals a1ain1t Servile with a 81 ·80 victory
over Lakewood.
Other 1amea In today'1 final• at . the 16th
Oran1e Optimist Invitational buket1ll touma·
ment include Marina and Lakewood for third place
at 6; Coeta Mesa and Mater Del for the conaolatlon
championship at 4:20; and~ewport Harbor and
Santa Clara for fifth place at 2:40. ..
Here's how Monday's action went at Chapman
Colleee:
fountain V•tt•1 81 , Lauwood to
Coach Dave Brown a crew made 28 of 49 from
the field, but appeared to be In deep trouble with
4:01 remaining and Lakewood holding a 58·51
bulae.
Emile Harry picked up a loose ball and
scored, then Jeff Hughes connected on a three·
point play to tie It at 56.
It was tied a1ain at 58 on Jeff Christensen's tip
and Harry's free throw with 2:05 gave the Barons
a 59·58 lead with 2:05 to go.
The Barons wasted steals by Huehes and
Villanueva and Lakewood's Tony Dalton stole the
ball and scored with 13 seconds left to give the
Lancers a 60·59 lead.
An ensuing Jree throw· attempt by the
Lakewood star m issed, however, and Frank
Luongo rebounded.
Villanueva wound up with the ball aa time waa
runnin1 out. drove the baseline and was routed In·
aide with two ticks remalnina.
Each shot hit the front of the rim, bounced
forward and dropped in to give the Barons the .vie·
tory. Christensen was the leading scorer for Foun·
lain Valley, netting 20 points. along with his over·
all floor game, Including six assists, usually to the
penetrating Villanueva on the fast break.
. Servlte.1..5, Mlrfn.1 51.
Marina's 6·4 junior Rick Smith scored 29
points, but it wasn't enough to orrset'tbe loss of 6·1
1uard Roger Weninger, who missed the game with
a root injury and may be out for a couple of weeks.
Servile nudged into the lead at 12· 1 l , upped It
to 33·24, then saw it melt to 37·37 under a siege of
buckets by Smith: but pulled away behind the scor·
ing or Tim Osgood (19) and Scott Sinek f18).
Marina's last gasp came on Burt Lalk's tip
with 1: 16 remaiping to narrow the count to 58·56.
but Osgood's inside shot a!ld a pair or free throws
put it out of reach.
Marina connected on only 21 of 64 from the
field (32.8 percent). •
''Without Wenlnser we lost 18·18 polnll out of
our lineup,•• explained Marina Coach Steve
Popovlth.
Newport H1rbor 51, Orin .. 41
The Sa.Hori Jumped to a 24·6 lead with 3: 18
spent ln the 1econd quarter. then held off a swarm·
ins Oran1e defense with switching man-to-man
tactlc1.
The Sailors hit nine of their first dozen shots
from the field to 1et the early edge and finished
with three players In double figures.
Oarrin Morton led the way with 13 points,
while Mlke Love and 6·8 Rick Ciaccio each con·
tributed 10 points.
The Tara. now 5·2, burned Orange consistently
with their fa1t break attack acting as a coun·
terpunch when the host Panthers would solve
Newport's defense. ·
At one point Orange drew to within 31·28 in the
third quarter before the Sailors responded with
buckets ffOm their forte -balance.
Ciaccio, Cory Everhart, Morton. Bobby Net·
ties and Love 1hared In the next 10 Newport points
Coate MeH 82, Ch1ffey 59
The Mustangs led all the way. getting a strong
rebounding performance from Jim Pelichowski. in
addition to Ken Bardsley's 21 points ClO for 20 from
the field).
Scott McKee's penetration and a steady job by
Dennis Jones in the backcourt also helped the
Mustangs pick up their second straight victory.
Bardsley maintained his scoring average at
20.5. while Pelichowski ( 14 l connected in twin
figures for the third straight time in this tourna·
ment.
Meter Del 87, San Pedro 63
Larry Williams (19), Bob Molls <14 1 and
freshman Chris Jackson ( 11 l led Mater Dei lo its
second straight victory in this tournament. giving
the Montrchs a 4·7 overall record
Mater Dei jumped to an early lead. saw it
dwindle to 33.33 at halftime. then pulled away 1n
the third quarter.
Cheerleader suffers spill -. .
COLLEGE PARK. Md. (AP> -A cheerleader for the St. J oseph's, Pa .. basketball team was listed
In good condition Tuesday with a slight concussion
surrered minutes after the Hawks beat Bowling
Green 87-76 in the opening round or the Maryland In·
vitational Tournament.
Officials at Washington Adventist Hospital in
nearby Takoma Park, Md .. said Lori Young. 19. of
Reading. Pa., would remain under observation for 24
hours.
Young apparently fell from the shoulders of a
male cheerleader while celebrating the victory Mon·
day ni ght and struck her head on the floor or Cole
Field House.
· Seahawks get a rematch
Ocean View High's Seahawks, Orange Coun·
ty's No. 1 ranked prep basketball team, set itself
up for a rematch with Compton in tonight's
championship finals of the Villa Park Invitational.
The Seahawks blasted Rolling Hills with a
second-half surge, while three other Oran1e Coa1t
area teams -Huntington Beach. Edison and San
Clemente -were also victorious in tournament
action.
Here is a look at each :
Oce1n View II, Rolllng Hlll1 70
Wayne Carlander was his customary sell Mon·
day, pumping in 42 points with a 16·for·24
performance from the rield and 10-for· 12 from the
line, in addition to IS rebounds.
The Seahawks upped their record to t-2 and
meet Compton for the Villa Park Tournament
championship tonhrht at 8.
Also playing well for Ocean View waa
6·9 Jim Usevitch. who had eight rebounds and waa
7-ror-13 from the field. netting 18 counters.
Eric Fuacher added 11 points and 11 rebound1,
while Scott DeBrouwer had ei1ht uaists.
Huntington •••ch II, llv1nn• 17
Rejuventated Huntln1ton Beach raced to Ila
sixth win in eight decisions (the Olten were 6-15 a
year aeo> as they qualified for a champlonahip
semifinals berth against host Brea-Olinda tonlsht
at 8: 15, following a 6S·37 laugher over Savanna.
It was a total team victory -Hob and Bill
Thompson· and Scott Becker each had 10 rebounds
in a 36·16 edge 1n that department. and the) were
all in double figures sn scoring, led by Becker·s
18.
.. n Clemente 15, Cerlebed 72
The Tritons continue to impress wherever the)
go. Now ~l on the season. San Clemente broke
open a · close game ( 47 ·40 at the half> with a 48
point second hair in the first round of the Chula
Vista tournament at Bonita Vista High
The Tritons meet La Qui-nta tonight at 5
Last week . the Tritons managed a ~econd
place finish in l;he San DieguJto tourne~. losing on
ly to champion Orange Glen
Monday night, John Eddo pumped 10 25 p01nts
while James Hill added 13 and Jerry Borlin con·
trolled the boards as San Clemente moved into the
championship round or the tourney.
Edlaon 71, Monte Vl1ta 49
The Chargers go for the consolation cham·
pionship tonight at 5:30 after stopping Monte Vista
(Palo Altol in the semifinals of the St. Francis
tourney.
Richard Chang scored 22 points while Rick
DiBernardo added 21 for Edison
The Chargers shot 82 percent from the free
throw line, connecting on 23-0f·34 charity tosses
Pirates, Gauchos
topped in tourneys
Orange Coast Colleee basket·
ball coach Tandy Giiiis would
llke to think of turnovers as
those tasty pastries filled with
apples.
Unfortunately. the only thing
he'1 thlnkln1 about these days Is
loaae1, four straight to be exact,
after his Bucs dropped a 71-66
decision to Snow CUtah) Colleee
Monday nisht In the first round
or the Barstow tournament.
Meanwhile, Saddleback
Collese also had tt.s ml1fortunes.
11 the Gauchol made a quick ex-
it from the Santa Ana tourna-
ment after Monday nisht 's M-'78
Htback to Fullerton in • con·
sol1tloa 1ame.
· At Barstow, the Parate1 com·
milted 28 tumovera In 1ulferin1
their llfth 1011 or the year
a1atnatseven vtctortet.
Snow Collea•. now t4. held a
10.point lead at hallUme (45-31)
but OCC rlllJed to take a 11-55
lead thanks to some hot shooting
by Greg Krohnfeldt.
But the turnovers began to
take their toll late l.I) the aame.
and combined with• some big
three-point plays by Snow. the
Pirates fell behind for 1ood with
about four minutes remaining.
OCC actually shot better from
the field (54 percent to Snow's 48
percent).
John Saunder• and Tim
Johnson each scored 18 points
for OCC, while Krohlifeldt added
10. The Bucs were ml11ln1 Rich
Klndorf who stayed behind
becaute of a pulled 1roln.
Johnaon w11 particularly im·
pre11lve, hittln1 elSht of 11 from
the noor and h1ullns down nine
rebounds.
The Bue• are 1cheduled to
play tn the conaolation same at 8
tonisbt. .•
...... -..... -...... --..... . .
t ' J
1 '
BUSINESS I STOCKS Tu.dey. December 30, 1180
Co11mion Market .
entry of Greece , . . .
i • • maJor action
8.RUMELS. 8el1lum IAP> -Greece joins the Euro-
pean Common Markel on New Year's Day, tylne ltlf futu~
to the world'• tl1hteat auoclatlon of free naUon1. 1.
It will be the flrat 1ta1e of an enlaraement pr<K'ees that
by 1915 wtU add to the group Spain and Portuaal, two other
countrtee that rid themselves of military governments lb
the 1970..
The entry or Greece as the 10th member o( the Col'D·
mon Market signals not only the country's wllltnanesa to
dissolve the frontiers of trade with Its part.ners and weld a
common foreign policy, but Its commitment to the chief re·
quirement for membership: democratic institutions at
home.
SINCE ntE OVERTHROW of M colonels' dictatorship in
1975. Greece has been knocking on the community's door.
Now. as Greek writer Helen Vlachos put it. "Greece is goln1
to Europe."
"The entry of Greece into the community is a major
political act that constitutes a turning point in the Common
Market's life." said Gaston Thom, who will take office in
January as the Common Market's chief executive. "The
enlargement of the Common Murket southward is a key
date in the histor y of Europeun civilization."
Under the mechanics of entry, tariffs between Greece
und the other nine countries will he disi.olved in stages
over a five.year period.
GREECE'S GEOGffAPHICAL pos ition as the
southernmost and easternmost member of the community
wlll add an Important new dimension to the Common
Market's outlook, according to George Kontogeorgls. who
negotiated Greece's entry and will be its representative on
the Common Market Commission -
The addit1on of the Greek shipping fleet will m ake the
Common Market the No. 1 shipping power in the world ,
and the community will also bencfil from I.reek bauxite,
nickel. asbestos and zinc minerals the Common M11rkct
now must import, Kontogeorgis said
But like Britain, Ireland and Denmark when they
jomed in 1973, Greece will file(' nf!w 11ncl special problems .
MANY GREEK POLITICIANS, notably op.ponents of
the government. are concf!med about the impa<'t of tariff.
free goO<is flood ing into Gret:ee in competition with the
country's generally less-organized industry
The same is true of agnculturl' llarmoni zat1on of
farm prices with higher Common Mark et J,1rtrcs t·ot1ld
cause food costs to rise in Greere
StfH>k• In Tlt.-
Spolllfllt•
.-t.wrtran Lradrr•
HEW VOllk IAPI Ptl<o I.Ct Monon
Ol 9010 coins. <Cln'O•••d ...... l'rldh s D•IO
llr...,,_, I ltOy 01 , Wll 00 Oii 170 00
M•,le1Hf1 I troyo1 , Wtl 00. off U t.00
MHlcM tO "'°· I 1 troy or SI" 00 ott us 00 AftlNfl 100 t r own, ..Ol l•ov or \Sil 00
""\.1..00 Sooi re• OHlt Pt,. r •
....
Doa.rJ011t-•. t e·c-raflf' ..
~EW YOIUtlAPl Fl .... Oow-J~ 9"91, for liMflMY. DK. ?'.
tTOCICI ~ CloW ~·
ff IM <>r;:ff ;r.57 .,... m·· Tr11 .00 41111.IO '"·" .ti t. VII 11•·1 Ht.,. llU• I 4 ...... l .ll. u 'tll »• • 111 tS 110.°' J11 n-, . .., \r,';,' . . '1::; ~s"~ •. m~
Mhal Sl•u•k11 Did
HEW VOIUt CAP) DK f'
T~J.
1111 Mt ... SI ,,
W"AT AMUI DID
MIW VOllK IA~ OK ...
:·
. .....
~ -ff••fab .:
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~NEWS
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8 KNXT 1C6 S) LO'I Angolcc; D KNBC (NBCI Los Angeles
I KTLA (Ind ) Los AnQelO'I
KABC TV tABCl Lu!> Anc.ielt•.,
CJ) KFMB tCBS1 S;in D•ego 0 KHJ·TV (lnd I LO'> AnqC'lt•<.
l1AJ KCST (A8C1 San 01Pgo
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KCET TV 1P6Sl Lo" l\nq1•1t•<, Cll> KOCE TV 1PnS1 H11n11nqton Bt'.1r h
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1:00 8 THI WHIT9 IHADOW
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tor · ( 19531 Su11n Hey·
11r11rd Roblfl Mllchum II.
m1111<>nary nurM In Alr1ce
worka dlllQenlly to 11••n lh•
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Prolataor Fonzerell1
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hit 110~11 on the hOlly oon-
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•* * '"' "Ahub•rb" p 9S t)
Ray Mlllano. Jen Stetlrng
A blHball team w1na lh11
pennant 1inoer lh• owner-
ship 011 cat &:l 28 TONIGHT
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Founo Tom Jonl\aon and
L1nc11 8110 1 documentsry
11aam1nes th111 b1111~down
and ultimate r111>lrlh ol
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ll'IMl\lf19 of lime ·· 1 con.
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(Premleft) Lucie Arnu,
L1ur•nc1 Luckenbill A
llfnele l•wye< !Inda lo~
end eggraveloon 11 1 bird·
wetchlflil relrHt
·~ * *'" "The Boyl In Com-
peny C" (19781 Andrew
S1tvena. Sten Shew. A
group of young /l.metlc1n
sotdleta me.n1ge1 10 OVlt·
come lhe 11rror1 ot Viel·
n1m In lhelr own. t llOhlly
ont>tel manner 8 THAll'I OOMPANY
Jeck leltH I jOb WOfklnQ
for Janet II lh• llower
-~ IASK.n9ALL
LH Veoe• ,,. Unl ...... ty 01
Neved• GI Ml...V Ol'lfflN
Gueela· Liiy Tomlln. LH
Gr1n1. C11er1ne V•llnle.
Pearl Beiley
Ii) NOVA
"II'• About Tim•" ActOf
Dudley Moore gutdH
vilwet1 on 1 queet tor Ille
meenlng 01 time •• 1 con·
capl which hu lonO bel-
111<1 11Cl1nlltll. phllOIO·
plllf• 1nd l*>Pil avery-
Wlllr• CJ t:'° 8 TOO' CLOll fOA
OOflWOflT
Henry llndt birth control
pills In Ser1·1 1oom and
learna Jackie hU lnVitl<I •
11llor over for lh• night (Al
Cit ""°"" Ct41LO A8UH TO PM>Nl'I PANNTINO: ,
THI LONG "°-'D IACK
II. oocum1nlery ol • ••el·
11111 11buaa 11fu1t1on where •
molher II tollO'Ned 11\rough
many .., .. , of counllellng
lowaro re-aaaumlng cullo·
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fl) VIAOIL TijOMPION,
COMPOSE A
tn111rv11ws with lrl11nds. co·
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,, TUBE TOPPERS
JOU e 6: oo The Los Anaelea Klilaa
meet the Montreal Canadiens in Na-
tional League hockey.
CBS a 8:00 -Salami hit~ an oppo·
nent ln rree·for-all durln,-;ame an.t-
races assault charge on "The White
Shadow."
KCOP e 11 :30 -Cowboy John
Wayne infiltrates outlaw gang to gather
evidence in a 1934 Duke film , "Randy
. Rides Alone."
wotkera eno 1dmt11r1
hlghllghl e IUm potl1al1 of
Ille dll tl"QUlilhld Am.ti·
C9" compoelf who c-.
brtled hll 14111 blt1hdey In
No....,,t>et. (AJ ~1· Nlwt Q) MONIWI
Ct.OUUlt
The rl41tlc1n1hlp t>tt-
dleveloplng counlrlle t nd
Ille 1nou11r1e1 world, locu•·
Ing on Jt m•k:e 11 an
.. .,.,,p11wOh111 econom11:,
10Cl1I and polltk:1I prob·
!em•, 11 •••mined
• INOVl.NOIHT
NrfWON<....Wt 1o:ao1 N1W1
INDINNDINT
~ON<Nrwt
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ID '"°"' LINE In 1 lilm at>ol over • pet100
01 11 )'lllfl. combll cam-
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end tuddlnly rNC>C>H••
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Rolll tlleomet 1nvotved
with 1 women wllo It
Ol>Mllld with llndlng lhe
hll·l nd-run orlvtt who
killed lier eon. (Al D TOH!Gtfr
Ho11 Johnny Cart on
Gueel1 .. Angle Olcklneon.
DomO.LulM D PMONal'l:CILL
8LOCKH
The 111n t>IQlna 10 reetln
lhl l Bl• sllll control• tht
prl1onera even though
lhl't In llOl1Uon.
19 AICNIWI
~·twtLO
HOGAN'I Hfl'IOU
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1no o .. !Qna 1 tupe<-enac·
live elrcrah 01t1nH •Y•·
llfn. Cit MOYIE
'
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TONl(.;H r ·s LATEST LISTINGS
lftd • ~ tJrt ,_
co,. encl ~..,.. to
...._~(A)
-~-, ... 1WIU9HT lONI
,...... 1111HM Ille pet•
IOlllllly of "" INll1 ,,,..,. _ _.Ing.
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YOU MT YOUI' Lin
luddy Heckell mMt• I
men Wflo lmpereonelM
pr11e11, 1 Women of Ille
veer e nd e UCLA
~
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NIW8
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Ouee11: 01vlCI Leltetm•n: '°'""' child 1111• Af>OGI•
CW1wrf0"1, L-en Ch1pln,
Jly North end Peul Petlf •
••n, •••Iller W aller
"Kllllt" K-elltkl (Al •
• MOYll * * * "Spewn 01 Thi
NOflh" ( 1938) Henry Fon·
d•, Oeorge Ren. Ou•tno
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AuMlen plt1IM lry lo lake °"" 1111 Nimon lndutlry
I 'AOI THI MUllO
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• INOINHDIHT
NITWOMNIWI
1 11:40. CJ) MOVll * • .. T lie lmpo1tor"
( 1975) P1ul Htehl. Nancy
Kelty /1. lotmtt Army lnlll·
llQl'lc:e oHICel lmPlf•on·
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Mitchum J1n1 Ru1eelt,•
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1:11• NIW8
4:009 MOVIE
• • '"' .. loan Sherk·'
( 19521 Gt0t11• 1'1111 Doro·
lhy Herl •
4:03Cll MOVIE * * * '"1 "OOCl!Or In The
Houu · ( 19!>51 Dirk •
Bo11••d• Kay Kenoall •
W.-dn.-•day••
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Ul•h .. 1193•) John W1yne.
Gebby H1ya1
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11 ;00 I D • ()) (JJ) News HOUYWOOO
• •;, "Aenoy RldH Alone"
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rem...nt>t<a more ol his
PHI wllh H CI\ kllllnQ
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 Cit * •' • ·The C1111111n ' I Hl63) Ceur Romero.
Frenkl• Avalon
~ ... 0 ....WLYWID GAME
G) M"A•t•H
A 1mell KorHn boy with
minor 1n1u•lea c1p1ur" lhll!
hear11 of 111 In lhe 40771h
g) ONl 8TEP lllYONO
"E~ovn111 An ll•P'.,,.
pllol I• my111r1ou1ly
JOHN DARLING
'
I 1:IO 8 (IJ) MOVIE~ T1'41
Wfff( • * "Moonrunn••• ·
111ns1 i amH Mnchum.
Kiel Merlin Hiiibiiiy boy1
1:30 0 THI LONI l'IANOEA
"£nlleld Alfte" a» MOVll * * '.\ ''11.ffllr With A
Str1ng1r ( 1953) Jun
S1mmon1 VIC!or "'4atull
l'M .JU61 Gf.ITING OUR ANNUAL NEW YEAR~ ~~
9HOW 'TOG£iHE.~, .JOHN!
1:00 l!J) • • "Looi< Home·
w1rd f 1968) leaale Aob·
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llnderet1ver (?) ef)ps
Deputy Birdie Hawkins <Brian Kerwin J
meets pollcewom.an Amy_Botwinick in toL .an Places)-a mud-wrestling matc h in
They' re singing, swinging .
and everyt~ingin9!
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1
TV pulls plug on Disney~ .,
A.f ter 27 years, 1erie8 going off air ·~
BURBANK <AP> After 27
yeors of bringin~ such legends
as Mi ckey Mouse and Toby
Tyler into lhe hearls and llvinJt
rooms of A rica. "Disney's
Wonderful o'rld" history 's
Oct. '1:7, 1954. was rechristened
.. Walt Disney Presents.. four
years later and moved to NR<.:
as ··Wa lt Disney's Wonderful
World of Color" 1n Septcmher
1961
lime lineup, alonR with "T'*•
Stevr Allen ·omcd\ llour· and
·· :\t ane." htlll· !-oi.,ter Osmond'ir
ri rst and floppc<l attcm pl al 'olo
The net\.'oork ;.il ... o phrn" to tll1mp
· Ga mes f'L•oplt.' !'la~' '' o r
f1c1ully a r ancellatron . al least
.TilE SE.BIBS IS i.eD1!.rally __ . .fm.Jne..ro.om£nL~l.1Lsatd.u..i:e......_ -
gest · nning prime·t 1me
js' series is goin~ ofL
c re d ited with improvi ng the tams options <>n the other three
quality of children's pr ogram· shows and could dec1dt' to rcsur·
the air. -
"We 're not going lo give any
reason publicly," NBC public re·
lations vice·presldent Gene
Walsh said Monday of lhe can·
cellallon.
ming -an a st yle that delighted rect them al a later date uftN
adults as well further evaluation
"NBC is not exercising its op-
tion to re new the show," he said ,
adding that the refus al "gives
t h e m the right t o sell il
elsewhere.''
THAT IDEA MA V be on the
drawing board at Wall Disney
Prod ucllons.
Disney studio television vice·
pres ident Willi am Yates said he
has been meeting wilh all three
networks and hopes to announce
a m ajor commitm ent for next
fall sometime in the next few
weeks.
H e decli n e d to dis cuss
s pecifi cs, but Disney officials
have said in the ~st that a ma·
jor expansion in TV could mean
a weekly comedy and drama
series for the studio.
"Dis neyland" premiered ABC
But lhe Sunday night tradition
s tumbled into hard times when
CBS began challenging Its time
~lot with th\' highly rated "60
Minutes" news show.
And while NBC declined to
pinpoint the blame. viewers ap·
parenlly found that Mickey.
Dumbo, Thomasina a nd Old
Yeller were simply no m atch for
Mike. Harry, Dan and Morley.
The end came as no surprise
to lhe Disney studio. however .
Stockholders were warned In
February that the se ries might
go off lhe air after the studio's
contract with NBC expired in
'ktober
B UT THE DISNEY series Is
not lhe.onlY cme scheduled lo go
off the air .
The h ighly t outed comedy
soap opera. "Number 96" is be·
Ing dropped from NBC's prime·'
Bl-t::.rY.,.
'"""' NOW eHDWINCI----..... ..... cma•sa _.,..
,Anaheim Oriwe·ln 81oo•hursl lo1e South Coul Plat• C1ntm• V1eio
179·9850 111·6U6 ~46 2711 830·69'0
lllT9STll UA Twin 11~1306 "°"'"'''' .,...., ll'O l'tJl'I~
........ _.. -....... -... ---
MI SS OS ~ON O AND
..Number 96" both leave the alt
Friday. while Allen h as his final
show Jan IO "Games People
Play" is already ~one
NBC made these decisions last
week a s It announced nine new
series to debut in January in an
attempt to boost sagging rat·:
lngs ·
The network hes finished in·
the prlme·lime ratings cellar for
fi ve seasons
Meanwhile. a l ABC. "Break·
ing Away" may be falling apart.
The 'series is on a production
hiatus while the network pon-
ders its rate. A pilot and six
episodes ha\'e been completed,..
Although praised by crilics.
the series hos faltered in win-.
ning audience support since its
prem iere Nov 29.
.................
H I F
, ......... -.............. c-
'l'Ol'fll!MW
llf POUa AdditiVe cancer suspect 6 ...................... , DAILY PILOT Q.ASSIPllD ADI
Yt11 CWI Ml 11, ,..,. 11, Ml•llN Olle Cell ..,_ . ,,_ .. _ .. _.. , ... ~ ........
"'"" .... s. ..... " .... '* ISU> llOlll&ONT ,,
lraall (AP) leoa
•oaUa-•ld Aleaaadre
0.U.llr• ... •-.ooed ,. tM poUre ataUon ... ,. ~=J!::"!~ ~!':!.~~~~~ .. ~n ~~ .~!":~.y 4
················~······ ·······•··············· '., .. ,.. 1002 •••rtil . IMJ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
la fHPGDH to t OID
plaiDLI UtM Ml cr,ln1
••• dl1lurbtn1 MiOMn olftdalll aay
'ftM l;/ut '• mother.
•
lhteth.' ro00 •ddltlve Iona UHd u t1on1 and perfumes. said the needed to produce the intended
an lmltMtlou, cautH cance ra in cancerin1Utute. effect.'' 2
malu and ftlm•IC! mire and ln Emil Corwin , an FDA mal~ rat11• th'· N•tlonal Cancer EAaLlt=a ANIMAL studies apoknman. said the agency is
l n1t1tutt! H Yb showtd • lncreaaed incidence reviewtna the test result. and is
T he ltddltlvt!, called l'lnnamyl of lw\g twnon ln mice expoMd preparini a memorandum to the
anthranllate:, tauaed liver can-to the chemical, but tbla wu nat FDA commissioner on "initial·
r er tn mice of' both sues and louod ill the new test, it added. lna appropriate action."
l'anctira of the kidney and ND· Partly because of the results
IQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTU.NITY
WIMr'1 Notice:
All real estate a d ·
verti a ed l o th is
newspaper is subject lo
the Federal Fair Hous· lna Ac:t ol 1988 which
makes it illegal to ad·
FACILIPT
Pre1ent owner I.a totally
renovaUng I.his 2 Bdrm
I Balboa Island cotta1e
into a super cute sum·
mer get-away house.
Come down and see this property today. Yo u
won't recoinaze it soon.
Asking $274.9~.
............ lty
'73-1700
.... AMT
COUMTIY
MANSION
Magnific ent North
Tustin 8000 sq ft estate•
on a lmos t 1 a c re .
$1,750,000. Great financ· . inc-will trade equJtr,. .. for s maller home, in·
come prop .. trust deeds.•
Rick Alderetle, owner/· • realtor, 731-5115.
N.rU. Col•wa, waa
auo-.. &o ucompaay
Mr,....._ a two·
IMMu' u.&.mlt•U. ..
dHitd lbt nei11tbor • • c ltar1e•. conte odln1
Alesanctre "only crlea
.a.en .. take tum out of
l.M batMub becauae h.,
llkee lo play in the water
allu.eume "
rru1 In maJe rats in the t\lth· of the early studies, it was THE ANIMAL TESTS, con·
do e leecUn1 ta~. th.i aaency selected for further testing by ducted for the cancer institute ~aid Monday the National Toxicology Pro-by EG&G Mason Res earch 5
6
7
vertise "any preter-ence, i---------•I limitation, o r d is· . *.
The baby has no pr e
v•ou s arreat r ecord ,
Police said •
T h e 1"146vor aod E xtract eram, which identifies cancer· Institute in Worcester, Mass., in· M~mufac1urt:r'11 Assocl•llon said c au s ing (c ar c inogenic ) volved feeding large amounts of
1tbuut 500 powids of clnnamyl chemicals by long-term animal chemical tO hundreds of rats and
ao1hramlalt! I• s old as a navor · testing. mice for 103 weeks.
lni o r Craaranc~ agent eacti While these tests do not prove In the high-dose groups, liver
)!car 111 lhc United St;ates. that a substance cause s cancer cancers were found in 79 percent
In humans, che micals found to of the male mice and 67 percent
0 AN IE t TH 0 M p S 0 N • be carcinoeenic in animals are of the femaJes. In the low-dose
coun el to the manufacturers ' generally considered capable of mouse oroups t ---,. \e~ ir-• · · th e • umo rs were -.r"W ..-g roup, said the che mical "is not c aus ing c ancer an man, e found in 60 percent of the males
8 £C'K lhe pnncipal grape or cherry ca ncer institute said. and 41 percent of the females. 1l~1H'fClJL. B El' I\ fl a voring" used by the food in· THOMPSON SAID HIS .a s -the cancer institute said. µus~ BW.i) on Deremti.!I' dustry and, ther efore, could be sociation is having an indepen· In control groups of mice who
29. 1_, ll\ Samu Ana, C'u tie replaced. d l f · · · did not 0 et the chema'cal, tumors Is :.Ur\IH'd b) hi "if.. Abo t 75 000 d f h ent pane o sc1ent1st s review e c I a r 1 !>,.. 1 nu 1 n m .. n 1 u · poun s 0 ot er the new test data and that re· we re found in 29 pe rcent of
, .. n 1t·e:. "'111 l~ held 1n 111.. gra pe flavors and 250.000 pounds s uits should be available in males and 6 percent of females,
fitmil) 1>101 111 Oak 11111 or other cherry flavors are used February. it added. l0l'11ll"ter~·. St1h Jui... <:a eac h year, he said-"If we find that this flavoring In male rats, c ancers of the
"en 1tes under tht' d1rl'l't1on T he chemical ha s been used is bad, it will have to go,.. outer part of the kidney were of H arborl.a'An~loun10ll\l' s in ce the 1940 s t o fl avor Thompsao sa idinaninter view. found in 8 percent of the high· \lortuar~ or t'osta ~l t''.i beve rages. ice cream. candy, The Food a nd Drug Ad· dose group while 6.7 percent of
$-IO sss.i DE l..ANO baked goods, chewing gums and ministratio n classifies the the high-dose group also had
L u c y E v i:: L y N nume rous othe r foods. chemical as a direct food ad· rare tumors of the pancreas, it D ~LA NO. ~rmer ~s1dent ~_I_l_a_l_s_o_i_s_u_s_ed~_a_s_a~f_ra_g_r_an~c_e~_d_l_t_iv_e~an~d~re~s~t~n~·c~ts~t~h~e~a~~~~t~_s_a_~-·~ or Santa Ana. Ca Pai.sed
av.a> on December 27, 1 980 1r--------------r---------------.---~ m 29 Palm.-., Ca where i.he has been a resident for lht•
last several yt-a rs V1sitatiun
toda} from 9:00A !\l t o
9 OOP)t a l Pal'1fil' \'1e"
\I o r l u a r ) G r a ' e ~ 1 d e
services will he held on Wecl
nesday, Dec•e mber 31 , l!ltlO
at 1 :OOPM at Parifi c View
~e mori al Par k Pat•1f1t
\'1ew Mortuarv d1ret·tors
NEISoN
F R AN K E D G AR
NELSON. rt'siclenl of llunt ·
in gton Beilt h. Ca . Passed
ll\\'ay on Oct•ember 25. I~
at Pacifka llosp1tal at the ..__"'l"
dge of 75 Mr Nelson·~ re
ma ins will be shipped Lo
L:tah whert' serv1res will oe
con d ur ted on Tuesday .
Uecember JO. 1980 at the
Jenk1hs·Soffe Mortuary in
Murray, Utah Mr. Nelson's
remains will be interred at
t h e M u r rav Ci t v
Cemetery. Murray, Utah.
Pierre Brothers Smiths'
Mortuary forwarding d1rec·
tors . 536-6539
PEARCE
f Elaewhere
VATICAN CITY (AP>
-Cardlaal E1ldlo
Va1aonl, 74, forme r
papal diplomat to the
United States and a top
manager of the
Vatican's economic af·
fairs, died Friday at his
home.
MIAMI (AP)-Hella
Kamllke; 52, the first
'woman to hold a full
vice presidency at Pan
American· World
Airways, died Thursday
of cancer.
crimioalion based on
race, color, religion, sex, or national origin,
or an intention to make
any s uc h preference,
limitation. o r d i•· criminalion."
1 This newspJ per will not
8 knowingly accept any
advertising for r ea l
estate which is in viola-
tion of the law.
D
I
L
MIOIS: Ad•erti1.r1
...., check tlteir ads
daly mid report er-
ron 1 .... dlatefy. The
DAILY PILOT a1w1M1
l..aty for the first
h1cornct huertion
Ollfr.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
G-ral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
FACT OR FICTION
FACT-TA KE OVE R
LARGE LOANS on this
very desir able condo.
Supe r location a nd
security. No quali!ying.
Y $106,SOO. Call 979-5370 lo
day.
ALLSTATE
p
I
L
REALTORS 1-------1 INVESTORS
Dal .. HT
Maximum leverage with
~.OOOdown. 2 Bdrm con·
do. Owner will carry
balance with agreeable
terms and payme nts.
Grou Income $5400.
Asking $76.900. Ca II
540-1151 ror more de·
tails.
O~~~ · .... HERITAGE
REALTOR~
STBtS TO IEACH
Two 2 Bdrm units, cor·
ntt lot. ocean view, ex·
ceilent s ummer/winter
rental. S210 000.
WISHING YOU
&YOUISA
HAPPY HOLIDAY
SEASON&THE
IESTFOI 1981 !
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
lBED~OOMS
$83,800!
Be autiful re mode led
Townhome . 2 story +
pool + tennis +jog lo
beach. Most po pular
model, fireplace. Hurry!
646-7171
!!!!B»r•B ~l:A:rKR~
SPYGLASS
. $449.900
10°10 DOWN
Rare beauty! Babbling
brook by private brick
S ...... S.DeArcH 1oo52 Midland Lane
Huntington Beach
You are the winner ot
l frff tick.ts
($10.SO value>, lo
Sports Ytte.tiH
&IYSllow
J an 3 lhru Jan 11
Anaheim Convention
Center
Tickets mus t be ex·
changed for reserved
seats at the Convention
Center a head or time.
Call 642·5678. ext. 272 to claim your tickets
* * *
WATaNOMT HOMI
5 BR. 4 Ba. c ust om
wat erfr o nt h o m e
w/17Xl8' pvt dock. Price
$1,395,000. For details on
this home and appt to
see. call Carol Hoff. agl.
6.11-0mM
LEMON HEIC.HTS
HIDEAWAY
See this sec luded 4
bdrm. vie w h o m e Situated on ~ a a e .
Mature tre e s a n d
landscaping Lovely
private pool. m a n y
stained glass wmdows
a nd unique touc h es
throughout. $30:>.000.
Owner will carry Isl TD
12"/co.
entry. All main living 1•--------· areas now thru French
doors toward cou1.11ard
and spa. 4 huge bdrms
and family roo m .
fabulous country side
view from master suite.
Open today 1 to s. 32
Drake Bay.113·8550
OCIAMNOMT llAUTY
3BR. 2BA, Bacbelor -
$500,000.
llARRY B. P EARCE. res-
ident of Costa Mesa. Ca for the past year. Passed away
on December 28. 1980. lie is
. un'ived by his wife Irene of
Costa Mesa. Ca .. sons Jef· f re y A . P e ar ce of
Se I> a!' top o I . a nd )1 iJ r k
PearC'e of llouston. Texa~.
a l so s ur vived b y 4
grandchildren. Private in·
termen1 services will be held
at the fa m il y plo t in Woodland Memorial Park.
Colma. Ca Services under
the direction of Harbor
Lawn·Mount Mortuary of
Costa Mesa. 540·5554.
WASHJNGTON (AP)
-Cllarles S. Dewey Sr.,
100, an international ex·
pert on industry and
finance and a former
Republican con ·
• gre11man from Illinois,
died Thursday of
pneumonia.
T FJ:~~~1·::me. ••=-TRB--l-~---=i-W-~---1;1-·
spacious family r m. pro· 1•-----------
WOOD
EV A INES WOOD. res1·
de nt of Cy pre ss. Ca
Pas~ed away. on .December.
28. 1980. Survived by her
hu s band l>r. Hamiel W
Wood of Cypress. C;1 .
daughter Evelyn W Damel
of Corona del Mar. Ca . ~on
ll aro l d Wood . Jr of
TaC'oma. Washington and
l(randdaughters fle atht'r
and Adrienne of Corona del
:'>1ar. Ca !\femorial St'n·1ces
will be held al the Crystal
Cathedral of Garden Gro\•e
1n the Tower of I lope Chaµel
un Tuescfay, December 30.
1980 at 7 JOPM lnlermt'nt
Rose Hills Memorial Park
on Decemher :ll. 19110 ;i t
1.00 PM J
PAClffC VllW
MIMOllAL PAii(
Cen-e1ery Mortuary
Cnape1 3500 F'ac1tic View Om1e
Newpor1 Beach
644·2700
McCOIMtal ...OaTUAlllS Lag una ~ach
494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Gap1strano
495·1776
HAllOI 1.AWH-MT. OLIYI
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
t625 Gisler Ave .
Costa Mesa
540-55S.
,_Cl•OTMH5
l&L •OADWAY
MOaTUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
&42·9150
IAl.n I 18CHIOH
SMITH I TUTHILL
WISTCU.. CHAN&.
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
NICI lmO.,._I
SMITMI' MOllTUMY
&27 Mam St.
.._,ntington BHc h
536-e539
•
CENTURIES AGO. ROME: NOW, CHICAGO
Poiter depicts city •• ••rth foc1I point
Chicagoan knew it--
city's hub of world
CHICAGO CAP > -For years. Chic agoans marketing the poster.
"It's really chauvinistic."
Besides. he said. "Chicago has
SAN J UAN. Puerto
Rico (AP> -Art his·
torian and contem ·
porary art critic
GHI0"7 Batt~oek, 39,
was stabbed to death in
bis apartment in San
Juan's Condado section,
police said.
NEW YORK (AP) -
Sculptor Taey Smida, 68,
whose yrorks were done
on a large scale, died of
heart failure Friday at
New York Hospital.
KNOXVILLE. Tenn.
(AP) -Ray ff. Jenkins,
83, a prominent Te n·
nessee lawyer appointed
s pecial counsel in the
1954 U.S. Senate Army·
McCarthy hearings.
died Friday night.
fessionally decorated 1---------•11 ________ _
and landsca ped Gate 8 UNITS guarded community.
Private tennis. pool and $2J5,500
C breathtaking oc ean. Good rental area. Close
harbor. mountains and to the university. Call
MEW LISTING
DUPLU
a.OSITO llACH
cl t y Ii g ht s v i e ws . ror into. saoo.ooo. Call tod ay 645-9161
3 Bed, z balba each 1111it.
Furnished. Stone F JP
lo wer. Good s um · mer/winter rental. Ask-
ing S27S,000. 548-0715
eve. L ;r;LSTATE
~ REALTORS
BEACH HOME
S 3PATIOS!
Upgraded beach home
In Newport Shores.Walk
S lo ocean or p riva t e
beach. New r ar pet1n g
and fresh pa in t too'
Custom decorations. 3
patios. Secluded sun·
I deck! 2 Bdrms. and ju~t
SlZ7.250! Hurry! 752·1700
/
')PEN HOU )f
~H Al TY
Ocewefront Duple•
associated
BR \ I,. f ~ •, ~ f fl .. ... •
J' i oh ~ 1 I • '
DUPLEX
$109,950
JACOBS REALTY
3 & 2 Bdrms. completely
furnished Built-ins. 4 + •
car garage. Offer down
payment and take over
$426.000 loan a t only
123.•', for JO }ears.
Costa Mes a's finest.
Clean & neat. Good m·
come. Call for more de·
tails. 546·2313.
675-6670 Chicagoans have gone around with a
"S econd Cit y" c hi p on their
shoulde rs
Now they have a Chicago poster
that some think puts things in the
pro pe r pe r s p ective -s howing
Chicago as making up m ost of the
world. The more populous New York
City is a mere pinpoint on the horizon
-along with Europe and Asia.
lousy sports team s. so they need a r==========-1
pic ture of som ething else to hang on F ji'M~~J DUPLEX .... s I I 0,000 ASSUME t 1/:z% LM
T he poster is an answer lo the
fam ous New Yo rke r magazine cover
-t hat dep~ts Mllllnatran a s mOSt of
t he world. Such poster s also have
been made for other areas.
THE CHICAGO POSTER shows
the centrat elem ents of the Earth as
La ke Michigan. Lake Shore Drive,
lhe Chicago skyline, and the Loop
elevated trains.
Just beyond Chicago -and still
prominent -'is Peoria, Ill. The rest
of the world, including the Pacific
and Atlantic oceans. is in the distant
bac kground : The Golden Gate
Bridge, the Eiffe l T ower. a nd
Constantine 's arch in Rome can
barely be seen.
On the very edge of the Earth are
Washington, D.C.. and New York
City. which is represented by a statue
holding a torch standing in front of a tin
clusterofskyscrapers.
"WE CONCEIVED OF this as a r e·
buttal lo the steinberg (New Yorker)
poster," said John Sivright, a Chicago
commodities broker who is one of four
the wall.
Si vright and the others began
marketing the poster five weeks ago.
They have sold a thousand and say
they have requests for hundreds
m ore.
"We 've got requests coming out
our ears." said Cathy ~a1man, a
cf e rk at a NortJl Side ga ery. •·l>e().
pie who buy it are just proud of the
city."
THE POSTER, DESIGNED by
a rtist Henry Swierzchows ki of
Chicago, sells for $12 unframed and
S42 framed.
In t h e foreground is Lake
Michigan, and an assortment of
strollers, s kateboarders, jogsers and
cyclists are making their way along
a lakefront path.
Behind them rises the Chicago
skyline, including the Seari Tower.
the J ohn Hancock Center, the Stan·
dard Oil Building. the old Water
Tower structure that survived the
great fire of 1871, the Playboy Tower,
the Board ol Trade. and the Chic110
Public Ubrary Cultural Center.
"1 wanted to show Chicago as a big
powerful city, a clean city -not as
PUBLIC NOTICE
H1 ...
HOTICa 01' PUILIC
Ml•TINOAHD
SPICIAL IOAlllD MEETING
DATE ANO T I M E Mond•y,
Jenuery It, 1tll, 1.30 p m.
PLACE: lltoom 11'1, 1'16 Nlnlh
Slrffl, S.Cremento. CA •seu
CONSIOElllATION OF REVISION
01'-THl-FUCAL YEAR_,...., tol
PROJECT PlllOllllTY LIST
NOTICE IS HElllE8Y Gii/EN lhel e
P<lbllc rn.11119 •Ill be lleld to rec.ive
commenh on • llf'OPOMd rev ision lo
Ille F.Y. 1tl0-t1 Protect Lisi. A SP«l•I
Stet• 8Mnl MHtl119 •Ill ••so be neld on lhe -clele lo revlw Ille prlorlly
II", II •Pll'OP'lelt.
On ~-10, '*· IN St•le Weter ll~es Control Boerd edotll·
eel Ille F.Y. ltlO-tl (Pl\He Ill) 10I
Projtcl Prloflly Liit. On October ••.
£PA ltf'letlWIY ---len PfOlecll
UNITS, UNITS
I Eight four·plexes. Buy
one or buy them all. All
28drm units with only
1 1517r down. Offered at E I $127 .500. S4().J666.
D • Real Estate
Ofl lh ll llSI '"" fundlnQ. Tiie S•••• 6
lffrd •Ill conllder r...,111119 U. IH'lofl· 1r llsl lo Include., -111-1 project
Thl1 IKOl«t -•o sludy -need lor ..... ,._,..,...,. •ttte di-I 1llU
Starting
•New
Bualneu
end lo •MKI -•llernetlve lo<•· 4 !lolls ol ""' lleDfdOvl wetle dls_.1 A c c c o rd f n II I o '"" In SoutNm c.lltornle. , Written c-is no4 Pf'H9flteel et C1lltornla llueiMM llld
Ille "'"''"9 l'-4cl lit "*""led 10 ,,,. lf>rofeeelotle Cede (he.
Stet• W-"--<n Control &oerd, 17100 to 17001 all
Specie ! Prole<ll, P.O. aoa 100. 2 pereona .... ~ ..
Se<r....-0, "'"'°'· under a ftclMlevl "'-For MlllllOMI lntormetlon r ... •d· 111u1t fife a tl•l•-nl 1119 11111 llUllll< ,,_tint. COfllecl Archie wtlll ,.,. C-1y Cletll ~"''''" .. """ m -•7. 11111 "''" " p\IWllMll OATE.:~e:r~, 1* I e u r l lfll• 1 In e
Mk_. A. Cempo1 .......... _,.... ~
o..MvlbecullveOlrector • tr•• 111 wlllcll Ill• lor ,.,...,.,,. 0. ... 1_....1 bulln•M le loceMcl dirty as New York -and a happy _,._.,,_. Tll• ,,., ... ,."' 11 city with friendly people, not with all Pullllllllel Or ... Coe1t O.lly Pl'°', 5 N4tulred "' law elld II
the hostility of New Yorkers," t>ec. 30• 1• s•n• nee .. ..,"' Pflltectlfte
Swierzchowski said. I PUBLIC.NOTICE '9°::, •::~~·:•,.":,.":~• "", ........ ....
PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ~ICTmOUI IUln••b
"AMII ITAHMaNT
_ ........ _.....
6 Tile DAILY "LOT
----·-·--·
,.. ............. aMI
Tiie fellowlflt --• are doln1 c---_.... W. llvtlllftl•; . " ..... 111•-v JAC09t.,_ & AHOCIAT£S .. ,_, 9M ............ 1
UALTY.-1.c.ttH ....... ,, .... 7 ll•llr Hr.tee ..... . s,c.r-..,Mjlr.c:.i....,.. ... u o, 1111 • co u 11 t, U.1.111. lllC., a Cellfentle <.,,..... c.wa..-. ....., ....
ti., -I , C.lt HltilWNr, Ht. '· II r e 11 e e f . e " f ,.,_..,.._,c.i...,.. ... u •11••-..._. ----, .. T ... ...._ .. ~llra ctr• ....,.. .,,,... -~._ .......... _ ....... &It• .L Dllf>A~......,,
lal. HI fer ••re ........... ~ .......
Prime Costa Mesa units. ASSUME LARGE 911'l r4
Cle a n ·refur bis h e d ' LOA N AND OWNER
Financing• Hurry -Ca ll WILL CARRY 2NO. On· fordetails~ 646-717 1 ly $87.500 for this de· .I I llghllul 3 Bdrm condo. THE REAL Community pool. Ca ll J_ESTATERS. 979-5.170now
VIEW .A LLlfTATE
90°10 LOAN REALTORS '
One o f a kind ! A BUY .... ow• beautifuJ 4 Bdrm.3 bath " •
hidden 2 story with huge VA
family room. fi replace, Immaculate detached 2 formal dining room and country kitchen. Owne r Bdrm, 2 bath home . Bi&
wm carry financing 12~ f~mily room wit~ brick
with only 10~ down . r1replac~. m anicured
Price $199.900. Ca ll us lan~scapmg. Redwood now• 546-2.313 patio cover. Many ex-~ traa. SUM,900. VA terms. ITHE RRAY Cf1U4!=2313 IESl~f&RBJ '(THB •••LJ BSl!A:i&R8
Have 101Detbin1 to sell? L~=======!!!!!...
Cauifted •dado It well. Want Ad Kelp?
T
J
I
' n
'f\!l!r• CI I •• :ID, t• ........... s. thm"U.fwzllM~ .._..,,...s. , .._...,...S. ..._..,_S. OlllrlMlllt•
····················~1 ................................................................................................................. ..
llALTOIS
'1'9111 I
.,cu... LOT
c.._.,.._ llu Cc_.,.._ 1121 ...._ ltHMlwportleecta 106' s.ca..•1 . lt76 ......,.._... 1 --~ ........................................................................................................... FerS. I IOU
'-
llYIMI TllaACI
OML Y 7,,. DOWN
Beaut. 3br, or 2 + den, lae comer lot.
n ew paint ln & out. new cpts, pool,
spa, redw9od decking. Immed.
octupancy. owe financing $282,000
leasehold. 640-5681. 1536 Serenade
Terrace
OWNER D~PERATE
E.l'lde 3 Br 2 Ba, lrg
••am Rm wtrrplc Low
down, non.quaUCylng as·
aumable loan. ()WC
USZ.500. By Owner
5411·2783
3br, 2ba, den/fam rm ll v
rm w1'rplc . new crpt.
auum loan 1124,900 Pl'
9'7tl79l
MES V~ROE: Spanish
UllFIMD
Owrftr Will assj&t With
the hnancmg on thl• S
AdtP' 3 bl&lll home. Its
reatures in c lud t! a
formal dining room .
farruJy room. RV park
mg, new paint Asking
$229,UOO. For an apaxunt
ment to see, call 540· I ISi
-~~~HERITAGE
LOOK WHAT
l.INGO'S GOT
INSANCLEMENTE
l>uplu bullcllne alle
near beach. T t rm11.
$711,500
lmmacul.ate ho m1: an
Culony Cove with 2
bedroorrus. 2 baths and
use of clubhouse and
pools. Sl25,000.
. . REALTORS deU&ht! 3 Bdrm that's Co nt e mp o r a r y 3
•••••••••••••••••••••••
s... "'*' capo. ssa.oeo. 2 Br. 2 Ba. l4IO aq. ft. 8
yrs, oAd. Ast S4J.50U.
For Sale By Owner
IODOtl Mobile Home. Quiet Adllll Park near
Back Bay. US ,000.
133-0009 afler 4pm .
642.-5074 before 3pm.
Ca rc191
""'"' 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIT ?PUC• -J ..._J .._. .._ ................. ._ .......
............... 14' .....
011 " a "r" + lo t ~ •arrh1t~s·turul phrns
for 21KJO > t>~I ft home
Hull1111i hl lli. & hor~t·
Jr{'lt 1173.000
.... , .. 1002 G1ur.a 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
beautifully decorated .~~~~~~~~~~ bedroom hom t: with Just painted inside 11nd ~ rrunutes to beautiful "T "
out.Shows owners pride. HaiMN'V11Hil1 Street Ue:a ch. Se mi -
Must see! $1 25,500, Ocea(1 vu, 3 Bdrm 21r, seclude d . this cozy
TARBELL. BKR . Call Ba . 3 car g arajl l'. charmer has beamed
MnttoMeiorl•-"
S,350 Sq. tt. Com -
mercial Bid&. 1 Blk lo
Pacific Ocean . Sell
S350.000. Lease 12.uq
Month.
•
COU Of MIWPOIT llALTC>aS
, 11111.c....Mwy •• c--.. ....,
671-1111
/
COllOMA DI&. MAI C~
Older duplex on a central com er. near
s hops , beach and oasis. The one
bedroom unit s are cute! patios,
gardens , etc· .. but the real value,....i·.-..·~l"W""
tht: lot: 30 x lt8, R·2 that is very
bu1ldable .... and at $189,000, very
reasonable '.
U,_.l()U~ ti()MCi
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 Ea•t CoHt Highway, Cornna del Mar
WE HAVE 32 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWJ'i
llAUTIPUL DOY• SHOalS
.alAT YllW-S4tl,000
0.--Wll C...-y $370,000 T.D.
121/2"0 ......... No Lem Fee.
On Prestigious Galaxy Drive. You will
be impressed with this lovely 4-bedrm
home with a very fabulous room for
entertaining a crowd or people. A
great open floor plan with family rm
and formal dinin~ plus a beautiful
Large pool & spa on the view side.
WISUY N. TAYLOR CO., llALTOIS
211 l S-Ju .. la Nit loed
Nl-11111jWPOll,.,..,.ITw CINTll, N.I. '44-4t I 0
. tlE
llDlll ILlllfS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
HIME IA YFIOMT
F<Jr t.'' "'001 1-'ronttiJ!l'. Pl F.R & DOCK In
.. ~xcluSIH' Senml.' <;uurded RA YSHORF.S
Community U1Vl'I.'· Two Room Master Suite
With Fireplu<·c. Plus Four Bedrooms &
Bonus Room & Dt-n. Stl•Jl down Living Room
Wi\h Ten· 1-~oot Cc•ilinj!s. Spacious Dining
Area With Wet Rar Truly <;11r1?t'Ous View Of
Islands & Channels. And An Extra Large
Front Patio & Deck. Owner Wants This
Home Sold Immediately,
·--............
759-9100
#2c_,.. ... ...._
MewportC.......
ma en ab I Irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IAVINE COMPANY
WOODlllDGE ILM MODEL!
Beautifully upgraded 3BR condo
near all shopping, pools. lake and
tennis. Large family kitchen and
lovely patio. Located on a quiet
street. $112.500. Alan Beel 551 -8700
CW-46> .
712·1414 111..a100
Woodbidqe Center
644-6200
Holbor v-Cente<
lfllC & ffNlf HARO TO SPELL
C $ A 0 N U A T C V A H l A E M A E 0
S A Q E 0 H T T A N P T E C U 0 I C Q
A Y P N E X A U 0 G E J N W N A C E 0
U A N l l A E l A H G E A 0 E U E l S
P C G H C N E Y A H A A B Y R I A K E
T H 0 U A N A Y G A Y N A E W S R M 0
TOO?cM SC IE UT l MN V L 0 C 0 T R H C S E H C E A A C J E W
I C A K E N N 0 C E T N E S
A L M I Y 0 G S 0 I Y A H 0 U Y E I 6
S R E A L G E H T W N E M A E 0 D S T
£ Q R U R Y C E A G M G E L U A X E I U S M A N G K D E H £ T 0 Y I M L C I
U N Y E H E T L T l E P H S 0 0 T T D
W A K S £ I N E I U E Q 0 P R C U N 0
4. Zt/2 IA
2 s tory home. shake
ruol. fresh paint, patio,
SJ87..500. Eaatside Costa
Mesa.
a.,Mcc ..... 11tr.
54'·172t
NEW EXCLUSIVE BAYFIONT
W15* M WATll VU .. • •-llt
~ ldl ..... LWe ,, ,,, J1 '••d••
2 .... c..., .. •.-mtY••••' ... & MC.tty ... ,.. .... .., e•ell
S425.000. 67Mt00.
NEW EXCLUSIVE OCEANFIONT
.. ......,,. ...... d .. ~
la/o•t. Arcltltect11rellt .......
c•ltt ••t •Y wood & ..... 2 ltH. +
office ..._ wttlt 2 '-ti. ,...... •· Slrfl&'la. .... _ ..............
celtlaeh. lxcelleat fl•••cla9!
St71,000. 631·1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
~k>> R•n••I> p.,_. .. , M•""9"""'n'
2436 W Co.i>I Hwy
Newpott Beoch
'31·14M
«Is Coldwell Banker
UMIBJl'f AIU
Financing, terms, condition and
location. BELIEVE this 11model
home perfect'' 2 bedroom Monaco
is the best buy in Harbor View
·Homes at $218,500.
r
OPEN THE DOOR
TO A CA.REH
WITH UNGO REAi. ESTA Tl ............ _ ........
•Itel •d r•werdla .. •f ell
MrTla Im* Is lea. Mc•,,.. ...
, ....... 1 .. 111 .. , .. ....
..d wort& ... ,..,.. .... .....
•arl•d beck9ro•ad1 ••d
llfestyl••· It ellow1 '" to ....... ,... . .. m... ., . ._, .. ............................
field ....,.. •tu ss•t..._ md
lterd work ere rewer4•4.
01'9p Comfy 11 rec1 .. IM wo•ll ... c.....,••tr• .... ...................... _....
N•w,.t c..... ......... ~~·
Itel IMcl•I a 111•11 ... fw
b••IR••• 9rowtlt ••d
•ul p uRf. H ,_.,. alh AW ....... .,,. .. ~ .... ... ...... ,... ............ ....
coul•r • cereer wltlt ffte Cl., ........ ., ...........
tit• H•4• of tltl1 4t•••lc
_.ts...Ut•O llAL ISTAft.
Tit• Newport IHclt Office
located la -.... loc""-.. Newport C..tw Is l11klltt fw
top ........ w .......... .,.,.
md ... Wil_ .. , ...... md
c•offw,..tttelteltof•
worWt.
If , ...... IM ltthrffted la •
c•fl•nlW Wenlew, c .. Moll
Joltit1-. tt.19u. 81 '44-7020.
YOll C•'t afford lo wait.
• HEWPOIT · Lingo •EACH
Ill.if,.... 644-7020
le Newport.._.. L1oll lo
LJatoflrtf
.... ....
---------111 S40-1720 $325.000. c·eilings and attra ctive ~ . ~try 1152,000 I Wttlty N. T•ytor Ce.
........ 644-4,10
Ddebout .
Bay &Beoch
Real Estate
¥Al Hr•rr UCfUA#Cf ,_,., ... --.
WES TC LIFF
Dc.aPoiftt 1026 ................ ; ..... .
IN FORECLOSURE
3 Bdrm. 2ba s120.ooo
331122 Mariana Dr
1·394·4656
Auracthlve 3 bdrmfhon:ie. HwaliMJa.. leach I 040
2 bat s. Neal amaly ••••••••••••••••••••••• room with fireplace.
Ulte·new carpet. Large
lot 8Sx113. Sparkling
po o l. fen ce d f o r
children's safety. Qwck
possessioo. $230,000.
631-7300 N.I .
HAalOl ISLAND
Fabuloais bayfront loca
Uon with private pier &
floaL Excellent low in
le rest fin a n c in g
11.780.000.
A Di v1s1on or
Harbor lnvestml'nt Co
FtXHUPPER!
Good neig h borhood .
needs paint & TLC 4
bdrm. H• ba. SWS.000
owe .s ma ll 2nd
Broker. 675·0185
SHARP
CAL CLASSIC
4 Bdrm. Lg assumable
man. Good buy! Century
21 Lockhart Ht•artly
962-8847
CLOSE TO HACH
4 Bdrm · 2 Buth
Prit·tJd to sell u l
$110.500.
Century 21 Lockhart
962 8847
1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
*•UNIQUE
CALIF. HOMES
~lom12ed Plan 106 in
the Calif Homes areu of
Irv 1 n I'. t' c a t u r e s .i
Bdrm. indoor J:ardl'll,
loads of cera mic Il le.
single story. 2000 sq rt
with an assuma I.lie loan
year old fourplex with -----
community pool, and ORAMGETREE
recreation room, located CONDO
in c ul ·d e ·s a c s t y le J Bdrm+loft. Sharp l"nd
courtyard atmosphere . unlt. $83,950.
'One unjt 3 Bdrm with 249Tan~elo Tl'rr
swideck. 3 units 2 Bdrm C/21 Newport Ctnttr Great assum~ble loan at 640•5357 under I O•,. . Pr 1 l' e
$242.500. 644·702<1
UMIVHSITY PARK
• Excel end ur11t <:a rd rff Lingo· j w/loft Oversz lot. d OM'
•.i&•u• lo PoOI on .: rt•en h e It • This t•harmt•r ha:-'Int
a !:> s u m I 1 n a n t• 1 n I(
'®'~
759.9221
Manner 's Point lot with
forever ocea n and ca
nyon views . Good terms.
~~~~~~I $245.000
NEWPORT HEIGHTS-C: o n I e m p o r u r y J
Quaint 3 Bdrm 2 bath. bedroom. J bath hom e
remodeled homt', reatur· dnpping with elcl(ance
1n g s epurate ra maly and perfect ror enter-
roorn . 2 r1rt'J)la t"t'S. tamingon Jgrand scalc .
hardwood n onr:.. nl'Ur Totally refined in every
new roor. copper plumlJ deta il. this res1denC"e
1ng . RV access. 2U'. features beveled glass,
down. owner will carry F'rcnch doors. coffe red
a ll the f1n ant ing a t 1 cei1Jng and dramat1l·de
tJ• ~· • 1ntercsl. Ask rng sign throu~hout. $365.000
$225,000 <.'al1 540 ll:ll
~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
HARBOR VIEW
4 Bdrm. bonus family
room & bonus rm. Lo\•C
I} humt.' m super b t·ond 1
uoo. As king $299,000 for
qwl'k sale ,
C /21 Newport
Ctnter
640-5357
Ma rin e r 's 1'<J1 nt 5
lx.odroom. 412 b;i th ha
nc nda , t ot all y
landst•aped with un in
credible hs t or a men111cs
including 2 wet bars . 3
fl replal'el>. two :-pas ;rnd
great view:. SS95,000
lin1qur l'UStom bu1 It
Ul·ean rront rt•:.1tJence
with pnvute Sl<!ps lo lhl'
beach Whitewater and
(Jl"l'all \ ICW!> h1g hl1 ght
.ilmost every roc)m This
P\'T Pi\HT\' :-.,1111 r..-J llw :l bedroom home with a
wi-.h e:. l•i µur e h J::.l· i.pal·wu:. fl oorplan ca n
n1u1rs Comlo 3Br. 2Ba l)t' UV.'Tler f1n uneed with
s 1ng 1 e -1 t 0 r ~ 1 1 14 1 i:ood tlown. f 775.000
34li 77 2 I .E ' e ::. M r 498·4950
ASSUME LG LOAN Lingo
FOi SALE
Prime ore. bldg. in
North Santa Ana. Owner
will sell all or part or
bldg. Existing finance
$350,000 al 11.S~. 10,000
sq. ft. ol 1 yr. old ofc'
bldg. Call John. 953.0555
• V1Jhela'1 Real Estate
IKCMM Property 2000 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IUMITS
Westside Costa Mesa .
good condition. income
$40.800 yr. Pr i c e
$445.000. On pay m ent
$130.000. owe balance.
al 11':.
A PR€HIG€ '-t--J HOME~
Re al Es tate In vest-
ments
3333W.CoastHwy, NB
645-6646
OWMr M111t Sell
6 Bdrm. 3 bath giant
home ·Assume 1s t
1125 .000 at 11 '; a nd
125.000 2nd at 14'; Due
1995. Projected 1neornf
for I year $19,200. Is Cul·
ly occupied. R.H.R Agt.
ask for Beau. 673· 7300.
Wnghl e
I bdrm c·1111do Clo!>e l11 AIJb••n
H u u g II o :. p 1 t a I APPLE VALLEY
Complete!~ rurn1:-hed 'S J Ne ar n ew 4-Ple x. 2 Pool & :.pJ. ">c1·urrl \ an "!I" bdrm. 2 bath each unit
M o\ e 1n nu"' bd tJr •· 1 Captstrano I 078 with fireplace. enclosed
est·row dosei. S 125.00IJ ••••••••••••••••• •••••• patio, garage. $165,000
C /21 NewportCenttr BY OWN~ Bill G rundy . Rltr .
640-5357 Hr e u t h l a 1 n g. ~5_-6_1_6_1._,...--
panoramic ocean view ----IJllllll----•I or Dana If arbor ~pee· 1• ... ---0-•E•s-•v•ER-•D•E• BE CREATIVE la1·ular rnstom11.cd 3000 _... M A
. .,q rt 5 Btlr m + r etrt-at Pnde of Ownership. new
Nl.'ar nev. ~ Brlrm 2 ha S!IU WO 111 upgrades i\:, roof, drapes. c arpel s
l.1\ 1· elm.,. 111 FJ shw11 3umabll· 10, ~·, finanl' w1thrn 2 yea rs . Rents
b l:llld , :t \011ulr' ("lull~&. in.: $3 IU.Ull ll :IJSUI below market. 1.ots of
<;ourml·I lll'~L a11~n 1 ... \, "nnJu CalilJ. SJC upside potential Priced
IM'lll"f" ,1n\111u... \t "I' ';I~ ~!16 s::!iS Oµl'n llvu~t· right No vacanc ies in ~ow · 1 S Sund a ~ last yeur (.'all for d('
C A LL lm~i~l~ll
1080
.. ~, RED CARPET
·-754-1202
I
Santa Ana ..................••••. J QUAIL **AFFORDABLE
WATERFtlOMT
LEASE OPTION
Tt\is 3 Br 2 th Ba
townbome has a patio
and deck right on the
bay with a slip for 35"
boat. Offer e d Cully
furn ished for o nly
$320,000, this home has
been used only as a part
time second home .
Perfect starl<'r homl' m I bach pad. $1~.90</
ViLLAGE PARK
Lovely 3 Bdrm 2 ba . :-n.il
family hmc with \'l'r~
pvt yctrd Xlnt loc d oM•
to Sl·hools. shoi>S & fv. ~ ~
$164,500
IAYFROHT
S475,000
TAKE OVER
10'. FHA loan with
$61.000 balance payable
A.!~S~-
to,.. Tll l :JI P .M..I
IALIOA
WATIAFtlONT
The charm and island
lifestyle of Balbo a
Island are yours with
this S Bdrm home with
private pier and slip for
35' boat.
D.M . MAR S HALL
RLTR
644-9990
*Cote Realty
& lnvt•s tmt·nt
640-5777
3 bd. 11"2 ha. Twnhmc
1220 sq. fl . Fabulous
location. T ennis cr ll>
pool, parks. schools, lat
lice covered patio. lus h
pla nts. gre at hu y
1110.000. Call 838·8181.
RAN C H O S 1\~
C... .. Mar 1022 JOAQUIN. )(r ct•nhcll
••••••••••••••••••••••• location. view. 2 Hr. dC'n .
MUST SB.L! only $53.500 to take o\"l'r
Sp a c i o u s d u p I e x . loans.
fireplaces. garage. 1700 sq. ft. each unit. Gross
$1650/mo. 29'"/, down.
CNIC balance. S295.000.
Broker, 675-0185
OWMH ANXIOUS
Large duplex + guest
4Br. 3Ba. 3 car gar.
$330,000. l O'"'t down
OW C. Prine . o nl y.
642·1Z12.
Redhill~ Realty
552 -7500
IRVINE BARGAIN
Upgraded condo A ti rat
t1ve assumable rrnanr
ing. S87 .000
JO', U141l , "" ner w ill
~arn Cut ~· '.! hr :! hJ
homl' v. hu,1t rl111·k H m
Lil 4''( p .. IOll I' rl IH I pa I•
41111\ \:.k 111r l\.11n .rl T1~d1 t 1u11,il n .... ·ll\
11:11 -;:r.u
al $496 PlTI Clean 3 ---------lidrm with deep lot Ask
ing $82.000 Sl'ller will 1---------• t•:Jrn SSOOO 2nd T I)
Won .·t last ' 25 UNITS CONDO
AP,ROVED
Owner mO\'lng out or
state ;\pproval fo r 31;
Condos Tental1\·e tract e RANCH
REALTY
551 2000 Lido Isle map Priced at IO ti X
l m ml·d 01·t·upa111·' gruss Ownt•r writ carr~·~
MO\(' 1n l'11nd 1 t1r & d1·n I BH Condo. b.\ own.er l'l>Olract at 12' • 1\ ~ua tl
xlnl tl.wr pl.111 hu~l' ti", J~:.um S75.000 Nr Pla1·eexl'lus1ve 752-1920
m a -. I t' r ' u 1 I 1• C1vu· (;Lr ,Joe 1!:13·323 1
w r1rl'plal'..-l'n 1·1• f l' or543 2672 J '-'UAIL clun·~I tu S4 J;l,OUO Ilk r . I 090 T
963H1>i2 !!':~~................. PLACE
HI RISE CONDO A THRIFIC IUY PIOPEltTIES'·
l.AJH·I~ I Hd rm. \"11!\\ of ~~Xl'Cpt1on a l \'alue in 10,.. Tll l :JO P.M.I Ila~ & 0 <'l'an Ownt•r this l'harmmg 3 Bdrm ~~~~~~~~~ \'tll (111.!nt'l' S26!1 .UOO home. on R J lol In ·
H1t a \\ r1 tt•r :\gt prime location. nea r )•--------• 7~57111 :.ch ouls a nd t e n nis
lka ulllul l~ up ~r alil'li
Wcs1c1t rr J llr 2 Ba . pvol
S225.0 0ll S J 7 0 .UO l
Ja~umable r1nanc1ng
:"tt ,1 ge nt ~ plc a l>l0
~l2 7071
DOVER SHORES
ENJOY THI': Fl:-.iF.ST tn
:i 1·u.-.1om home. 1n l11ca
l 1•in 1n r111an c 111 g
o"nl'r wi ll 1·.1rr~ .l ~I TD
ut 13 ~,· •. ror t1u .11trll'<1
courts Perlel'l starter
home or investment pro·
pcrty $79.950
don osen
fl'" 1 tor ..
731 J I II -197 41\48
•••••••••••••••••••••••
XLMT 16UNIT .,...... ....
Complex
with G.0 .1. al over
~.000 per year. Rent to
be rais ed Large as -
s umable at 1111l'• and owe balance w/$160.000
d own Try a wrap
around or ?.,
A Cote Exclus1\'e.
RCTaylorCo 1100
040 <>C)()() ••••••••••••••••••••••• I buyC'r SSJilCll)IJ~ <l H<I rm
and ma ids roo1m :"II 11\ l'
" ' ni.:ht m! S~!l.5110 t'a 11 2 UH ~ 1-~AM RM *Cote Realty
& Investment
640-5711-
l ln<l·iO"lh 1400 sq f\. r('al frplc , . ..., " ,""""" . ••NEW,NEW! iARRITTREALTY deck . ndll pk .NB 751-1111 Ownt•r,s:a 1.000 645·5842 1-:========~1 Takr advantage or th1::. 642-5200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2900 ,
1111 sellur's dilemma ' Th1~1---------··---------1ror S al e By Own e r FOltlV9 YllW ·new Wood b rid.:r at SUPH CUSTOM 101150rt Mobile Home.
OMLYS29t,OOO. tached home-will hl' rt• S-Cl9"Wnte 1076· · MOllLEHOMIE Quiet Adult Park near-
CdM executive home ady inmid.J;in .l\~kini.t ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br. family rm & s un Back Bay $1 5 ,000
w/good view. Courtyd SllS.0011 OEl.l'XE CON OO , IH' rm. rnendly s star park . 833·0009 art er 4pm
entry. formal dining rm Exclus1vt•ly Ours OW Nl-~H . 120 l1rg r1•r w shop. hobby rm. pool 642·5074before 3pm.
& big family rm. new (Uj] 1 ot'l'an v1l'w . 3bdrm &spa.Beaut1ful setting. OlttofS
carpeting &plankrloor· \\\l~ldbrldgc l!'i b a. o:.l>ume 9'•'• Must sell.759·1616 -.w!:!e 2600 ing. Pvt bcb. Fee land. loan. SIR9.000. 4!15 333-1 n-_...,.n.,
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l llf ·,ti,\ l llf l f MHf H llJ 1'lHll 0 R ANG l (_ 0 UN I Y r /\ t IF 0 Fi N 1 A ~ '> CENTS
l
C.oast fotir reseu~d in seff, ordeal
f'or 2& hour,, 8111 Prtcce ol
Dana J•oant and h11 thr"e
budd fished th sam" Kp()t off
lht" C'Oblllnt' but ll wa11n't by
choice
l\ -. be<'i.ui.t Pric~ i. fanuly
buc1l wob tlu.abled about 10 rrult!S
off of 0<-eaos1de
1'he Dana Polnl man and his
three passengers aboard the
21 foot molQrboat were rescued
Monday after spending the night
losl In dense fog.
Price , 33 , manager o f
S pe rry Univac 's computer
plant. and his lhJ'ee passengers
were spotted Ml about 10: 1~ a .m.
by a U.S. Coast Guard HH-3F
rescue helicopter following an
all-night search by the cutter
Point Brower.
• C o .... t G u a r d P u b 1 i c
Information Officer Garth Groff
said Price apparently became
disoriented in the heavy fo1 and
continued crulJing until the boat
ran out of gas. Another report
indicated a starter malfunction.
Grofl said the Coast Guard
was alerted by Price's wife at
about 9:30 p.m. Sunday that her
husband and his companions on
the boat bad not returned to
Dana Point Harbor where they
departed that morning. '
I
GrQfr said a commercial
fishing boat in the area, the
Sierra, was contacted by the
Coast Guard to tow Price's boat
to Oceanside. Groalsaid he did
not know if the vessel ~as
equipped with a two·way radio.
All four men were reportedly
in good condition despite their
ordeal. "They were tired and
cold, but in good health." Groff
said. He said none of the men
required medical tre.itrnent
Iran would 'listen' to U.S. plan
Hoover
vendetta
reported
DALL.AS (AP) -Former FBI
Director J . Edgar Hoover c<>n-
d u c ted a two-year vendetta
against the Dallas Police Depart-
m ent for statements made follow -
ing the assassination of President
Kennedy. the Dallas Morning
News reported today.
Quoting FBI documents ob-
tained under tbe i''reedom of ln-
form ation Act, the new!lpaper re·
ported that the federal agency's
unofficial boycott focused on
training for city police officers.
Hostage
hardline
restated
By The Associated Presa
The head of Iran's hostage
negotiation team said today his
government would listen to any·
U.S. counterproposal that was ac·
ceptable to the Algerian govern-
ment concerning Iran's demand
for $24 billion.
He also accused President·
elect Reagan of bluffing and 'act·
ing like a Hollywood cowboy. and
threatened that the hostages
would be tried if Iran's demands
were not met.
An FBI s pok es man in
Washington said today the bureau
would have no comment on the re·
port.
The dispute was triggered by a.
statement attributed to FBI agent
James P llosty Jr. by Dallas
Police Lt. Jack Rev ill tbf!, day of
the assassinifon. accor<ling to
F.BI memos.
,._~ . .....,~ ..... , .... -.
H0111EVw"ERS IN SAN CLEMENTE SLIDE AREA PREPARE FOR WINTER RAINS
$12,000 worth of plaatk: ehfftlng lakl In hope of avoiding further damage
Behzad Nabavi told a news con·
ference in Tehran that if the U.S.
government comes up with
another form of guarantee that
met Iran's four conditions for re·
lease of the~ American hostages
seized 423 days ago "it would be
acceptable in our view ...
Revill. now assistant chief. said
at thf! Lime thal llosty told him the
FBI knew before Nov. 22. 1963.
that the alleged assassin. Lee
Harvey Oswald, was "capable of
committing the assassination of
President Kennedy.··
Plastic ·to ·fight • ram
·•As I said before, as far as we
have concluded there is no other
way for guarant.eein1 the un-
dertakings of Americans." he
told reporters ... 1 said we are
ready to list.en to everything but
it's natural the U.S. is looking for
excuses and has nothing to say.··
N abavi confirmed Prime
Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai 's
proposal over the weekend offer-
ing to drop the demand for finan·
cial guarantees in favor of im·
mediate cash payments followed
by arbitration on unresolved is-
sues while Iran continued to hold
the hostages.
Clemente group protects against sliths
Hosty later denied making the
statement.
The next day. then-Police Chief
Jesse Curry said on television the
FBI wanted to cover up informa·
lion that it was aware of Oswald's
presence in Dallas and had not
notified police. He retracted the
statement after Dallas FBI agent·
in charge J eordon Shanklin ,
challenged him to prove it.
In 1964 and 1965, the News re-
ported. Hoover ordered Shanklin
lo reject Curry's requests for FBI
officers to resume their posts as
instructors at the Dallas Police
Academy. During the period. no
Dall as officers were invited to at·
tend the FHl National Academy in
Washington.
On Jan. 19, 1966. Hoover wrote
Shanklin that then-Dallas Mayor
Erik Jonsson visited him and
"asked to discuss the serious
breach between this bureau and
the Dallas Police Department. if
one exists ...
"I informed Mayor Jonsson
that a breach in relations with
--chief of Police Curry-and his de·
parlment does exist ," Hoover
wrote. "I made it perfectly clear
actions and statements by Chief
Curry and some of his personnel
witb respect to the bureau clearly
indicated they are incompetent,.
blabbermouths and, in some jn-
stances, liars."
Hoover said Jonsson assured
him he would "lay down certain
guidelines under which Curry will
be expected to operate ... Hoover
said training assis tance would re·
sume iJ the demands were met
within two weeks.
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ol tlle o.ilf ,,_ , ....
Wbat appears to be a mini-ski
run behind City Hall in San
Clemente is really thousands of
square feet of plastic sheeting.
And while landslide victim
Peter Linnebach says he doesn't
know exactly how much protec·
live sheeting is being applied to
the scarred landscape above his
home. he knows how much it
cost.
·'That's $12,000 worth of
plastic," said the interior dee·
orator, whose hom e i;ests at the
toe or the 35,000-cubic-yard
landslide that descended on his
property more than six months
ago. Workmen hired by the five
property owners most affected
by-the June 13 landslide are
placing additional sandbags on
the white plastic sheeting this
week to keep rain water and
runoff from triggering a new
slide on the concave hill.
The Friday the 13th slide
damaged the Linnebach home
and-thal of neighbors Tony and
Brenda Baumgartner, who live
next door on Calle Patricia. The
slide also threatened three
homes above the hillside owned
by Mike McCoy. Dan Boosing
and Lester Simon.
Linnebach said the five
families pooled personal savings
and low interest loans from the
federal Small Business Ad·
ministration to begin the "win·
terization" of the slope.
Linnebach said he received
$50.000 from the SBA. al 3 per-
c en l interest, and said the
money will go toward re-
Desist, sirs
Robben obey orders.
Two men, one carrying a revolver, fled a Laguna Beach
jewelry store when its unarmed owner told them in no uncertain
terms to get out.
Police sai_d the men entered Mr. Gold, 230 Be-.ch St., late
Monday afternoon. One rpan diapl-red a handgun and told a
wonran in the store to 10 to t.be-baek room.
8ut owner Michael Ayres yelled lo the men to "Get out of my
store," ofticen said.
Al that point, lbe palr turned and ned. They were reportedly
last seen heading eastbound ~ Laeuna Canyon Road in a belie
Dodge Dart. ---+--~e'"'ftii auspec: was escribed u a S.foot-7 Cauculan about
40 with ~ab brown hair. buet eyes, and a mustache. ife was
wearinc Jeana and boOta and reportedly bad a Tena accmt.
·ne second man waa described u a &-foot Cauculan about
29. with brown hair and eyes. Re wu wearin1 a U1ht blue
worklhin. Jeans and boots.
f --· -,
constructing the hillside above
his home.
But even if all five property
owners obtain $50,000 loans, the
total will fall far below the
estimated $800.000 needed to
make the hillside stable again.
Continued
temperature
curbs urged
And the five San Clemente
families are bitter at what they
call the city's disinterest in the
problem.
"The city is doing nothing,"
Linnebach said, "which is
typical. They told us to go away
and that's what forced us to file
claims."
City councilmen denied the
near ly $10 million in claims filed
by the property owners four
months ago. Now Linnebach
says the residents have only two
months in which to file lawsuits
against the city.
"If we don't file in two months
WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· then we legally have no more
dent Carter is beinf{ urged to ~mplaints." he said. "We are
tend mand~· !_<!reed into it by the council.
perature controls on 1.8 million They're twisting our arms ...
offices. s hops and other non· In their claims. the property
residential buildings as one of · owners contend the ci ty was
his last official acts. negligent in allowing construc-
The controls expire Jan. 16 un· lion at the base of the slope
less Carter extends them. But no which they s ay triggered the
matte r what Carter decides, slide.
President·elect Reatan could re· City council members. on the
verse the action as soon as he advice of their attorney, contend
takes office four d!!)'s later. the city cannot reconstruct
Ever si n ce Jul y. 1979 damageonprivateproperty.
Americans have had to work And while Llnnebach says the
anct shop in buildings limited to lawsuits "are inevitable," his
65 degrees in the winter and 78 major concern now is what will
in summer. happen to the slope when the
Under the 1975 law gi.ving the rains come.
president the power to impose "We'll worry about where the
the energy-conservation con-money is going to come for re-
trols. the restriction can only re· construction later," he said.
main in force for nine months "Right now we're praying for
without another presidential s now this year Instead of rain."
declaration. Carter already has
extended the controls once.
He claimed the United States
and Iran were in agreement over
the immediate return of about $13
billion in Iranian wealth, and said
Iran would be willing to await the
outcome of arbitration proceed-
ings concerning the other $11
billion demanded from the United
States prior to release of the
hostages. (.l'l
"We cannot be content with
some papers signed by Carter or
Reagan," he said. "If the U.S. can
propose another way which con-
tains a kind of guarantee accepta-
ble to the Algerian government it
would be acceptable in our view.··
Asked about Reagan's descrip-
tion of the hostage taking as a
form of kidnapping com miUed by
barbarians he replied: "I
personally consider these threats
as bluffs especially on the part of
the new U.S. administration
which wants-~ gain pTe5tige-by
frightening revolutionaries of the
worfd.
·'We consider the statements of
Mr. Reagan as those of one who
still thinks he is playing in a
Western film. We don't take his
statements very seriously.··
Nabavi also warned that if the
U.S. government tried to dodge or
delay its reponse to the Iranian
<See HOSTAGES, Page AZ>
Energy Secretary Charles
Duncan sent his recommenda·
lion for another extention to the
White House two weeks ago.
Departme.nt officials say there
haa been no indication what the
president will decide.
Reagan ran for president on a
Republican campaign plaUorm
critical of conservation
measures as unnecessary gov-
ernment interference.
Warm, clear days
forecast in area
..f!he . controls also have been
crillcized as ineffectlye. Detrac-
ton note that the government
has never fined any building
operat.on for non-compliance.
Clear skies and warmer days
are ahead for coastal area resi-
dents. Tonight temperatures are eJt·
peeled to dip to 52 decrees with
no fog projected alone the coaat,
according to a spokesman for
the National Weather Bureau
Service. The' Ener1y Department says
lll sludlea louncUO per..cent~pliance with the controls, which Warm· dry air from the
for the first day since the fo1
se11e began, flight operaUooa at
John Wayne Airport were in full
awing -4oday. ViaibiUty at Los
Aneelea International was·
estimated at 100 miles today.
"It's beautiful," said Golden
Weal Airlines apokeaman Dick
Biggs. "We will.remain open all
. _day."
otliclala term an excellent r•t.e . nortbeut ls btowtnc tbe once
conalderin& the pro1r~m dense roe out to sea, •aid the Hotel powerleM
operates wltb minimal enforce-apokeaman.
ment oenoaaet-...-------=-~N'.i-o' I ~~-~~A.2.) A. nweteent . bu been a cood an temperatures are expected malf\D!tiaa in the CirtU1-'"·U..-.-
pro1ram and should be ex-to toar u blp u 12 deer-. Hotel.c.tno llnat olf eledridty
tended," uld department Some early morainl fot may to about 400 rooms, Hndln1
spokesman Pbll Garon. "OW' bu1 coutal dUe1 New Year'• smoke lntO the ftnt four noon
estimatea are that lt snea Day, SlYinl wa7 \0 mon warm late llandaJ. Clark CO-lY f\N
200,000 to 400,000 barreb ol oil weather .nd falr lkl• by tlfter· DepartlDelll atklall uld Db OM
each day." noon, the spokesman saJd. waa irOured.
• '·
AP Wtr•ptialo
WE'LL LISTEN
Iran's Behzad Nabavi
Is Mickey
subject to
D-R-A-F-T?
ANAHEIM 1A P 1 -Is Mi cke'
Mouseabouttobedrafted '.' ·
Probably nol. say o(ficials at
Disneyland. despite an official
looking letter he received from
the Selective Service System. ad
dressed to Mickey M. Mou se in
Disneyland · s ho rn e lown of
Anaheim
"It may be that somebody I'>
pulling our leg. hut i l was releaseu
on official stationery." said Dis
neylandspokesman Bob Roth.
"Apparently. "M ickey Mouse 1s
in trouble with the Selerti\'<!
·service."
The letter. whi ch stresses that
failure to respond could violatl:'
the Selective Service Act. said in
part: "Our records indicated you
have not responded to our initial
request for necessary date or
birt.h informatfon ~
again asking your t'ooperation in
providing us with correct in
formation whether your birthdale
is in 1960, 1961 or any other year ··
Weather
Fair tonight and Wed·
nesday. but With increas-
ing chance o f fog at
beaches and much cooler
near coast. Lows tonight
50 al the beaches. SS in-
land. Highs Wednesday
near 70 to low 80s
INSIDE TOD,\"
': Poll11 wont8 CJ tip o/
Pernod!" IJ "°" Mar that
cackling reqttesc . f0Uo10ed
perhope br a few> bart of a Sinatra rrwlodJI. you'Vf It.Id·
ckftlJI ~ered tlw f.fprylmld
~me of PollJl'CDld 816ddy. SH
Pa11e a . · .....
'
"Oil price increase·
shave y Nigeria
l!W YORK IA P> Ni1•ri1, Arnerlu'a uc»nd·lar1 .. t
for• p •MPPl.itr of petrol.,um, told mll.)or tUltomen today lt wlll
,aiM crude oll pri~ a. at'6Cb u 11 a barnl JM. '' _.ttut·
tiD1 1 " •·barnl prire \Mreue ""'O\lftted a daJ ••rli•r by Ubya
Nl&en•'a det:11lol1 tu m rtUit' the price ol IU top-quality
c.-rude tn $40 a b1rrt'I ll W\d.er th• 141 a-wrrtl ceUlnj price
Mt by lhe OraPllfhoo ul PC!ltoktum Exponlot Countries and
t.dopled b) Ub)'1 Munday wu d-to "'ah&Hllh petroleum
JnarlL9'A • follow1n• two yean ol aplrahq l'ffcu. 1n lndualry
sourr~ wd
lndone1ua and Vtinei ue1h1 , mun~hJI•, aMounced pri ce In·
rreaa.n ol 83 to s:s ~ ptoc u aallon barrel In the rapidly at· ~luatlna rwnd of OPEC "r1C't! hU1a An•lyab predict that the
nr rt' aonow1r.-d and ti.I~<''~ by cartel mtmbera and
otb~n. <'fluid bomlt S a•J.()line and beatin6: Qll pr ces as much
u I c-enu 1t gallon
S.rw• 1r••1n. Al ... •• ,..,,. ldll :s
Nt.X. l>ELill lndla (AY > &v1et troops and Afghan police
·•1Ued t.tuee JM!Ol-1l1e whtm they fired oo rioters in Kabul, ~ccor~·
ina to a diplomatic rep()rl tod1ty , and United News of India s aJd au Amencan "m1hl"ary advlser " to Moslem re bels was shot to
deatb abol•t ?00 m iles southwest of Kabul
Reports from diplomatic sources on Monday's rioting in
Kabw sa1d a group of rioters rampaged through central Kabul
a.urhng s tones and that three of them were killed and 10 to 15
..woupd(l'(J when Soviet troops and Afghan security forces opened
firt ,,..,,. ... , • .,,#'r, ,.,..,.
l.ANCASTER (AP> -Several Antelope Valley residents
were awakened early today by a mild earthquake that rolled
acrosi, the valley at 12 :20 a.m.
No uamages or injuries were reported from the quake,
which measured 2.1 on the Richter scale.
The epicenter was fi ve miles southwest of Palmdale and 60
miles northwest of Los Angeles, said Barbara Reed a t the
Caltf'ch seis mologiral laboratory in Pasadena,
Dollar ~llttn .... ,. ~
...
LONDON <AP> -Softer dollar interest rates pushed the
dollar down on world money markets today, while gold prices
also sagged in quiet trading.
Man jailed
Tee~ager critical
from drug overdose
A San Cle mente teen-ager
re mained in critical condition
today al San Clemente General
Hospital three days after she
was discovered unconscious in
an Avenida Victoria house.
And the man who called police
to report the drug overdos e
remains in San Clemente jail
with bail set at $25,000 for the
alleged rape of another San
Clemente woman_
Robert Scott Mars h, 27 , who
li ves at 227 Ave . Vic toria,
s urrendered to police e arly
M o nda y m o rni ng a ft er
barric ading him self 1n a
neighbor's house for nearly five
hours .
He and J ames Steven Bayne,
25, of 25582 Charro Drive, San
Juan Capistr ano, are to be
arraigned Wednesday in South
Orange County Municipal Court.
Police said today they are not
filing charges or attempted
murder _against Marsh in the
case of the drug overdose, but
will charge him with the forcible
rape of a 34-year-old San
Clemente woman.
Bayne faces charges o( being'
an accomplice in the alleged
rape and for assault with a
deadly weapon. Police said the
truck driver held a gun to the
woman's head while Marsh
attempted to rape her durin~ a
nin e-hour ordeal at 252 Ave.
Victoria.
Police investigators were still
putting together the pieces in the
case, a nd said much of the
information they need will have
to come from the 19·year-old
overdose victim when s he
recovers e nough to talk to
ollic.ers.
The unide ntified w o m an
remains in the intensive care
unit at the hospital afte r
apparently consuming a large
amount o f coca in e and
barbituates.
About 10 a .m. Saturdar Marsh
called police to report a woman
had suffered an overdose and
•as unconsciousness on the floor
of his apartment.
The woman was treated by
paramedics at the scene and
rushed to San Clemente General
Hospital.
Houn later, Marsti allegedly
lried to rape a San Clemente
woman in the bathroom or a
friend's house a t 252 Ave.
Victoria .
He alle~edl\· asked Bavne to
hold a gun at her head while he
uns u<.'cess fully attempted to
r ape her Saturday afternoon.
Marsh reportedly left the
house, after telling friends to
keep the woman inside, then
return('d about 8 p. m . and
allegedly raped the woman.
The woman later escaped by
jumping from a window , but
waited until about 6:30 p.m _
Sunday to reoort the alle~ed
assualtpolice.
She a lso tofd police Marsh
claimed he was responsible for
the drug overdose of the other
wom an. which prompted police
lo drive out to 252 Ave. Victoria
to make an arrest.
At the home. they arre!;ted
Bayne, but Mars h refused to
come out. barricading himself in
t he house and s aying he would
engage the police in a shootout.
Five hours later , Marsh, who
was found to be unarmed.
s urrendered to police.
P o ·Jice chief
arrests son
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. <AP>
-The local police chief's
crackdown on clubs that sell
alcoholic drinks to juveniles has
led to the arrest of his 17-year-
old son.
Ollie Adkins Jr. was ordered
under his father's custody Mon·
day after allegedly using false
Identification to buy a drink at a
club early -Sunday. -
Several months ago, Chief Ot·
lie Adkins began a series of
"sting'' operations aimed at
clubs,j)ars and stores suspected
or selling beer and liquor to
juveniles.
Law extended
WASHINGTON (AP) -Ptesi·
dent Carter has signed legisla·
tion extending for three years
the federal revenue.sharing PIJ>·
gram for local governments and
providing the funds for state
governments for two years.
TELEPHONE
Thomas P. Hal~ ~._
RobertN.~ ............
M . Thonwls Keevlt ~·-ThOma-A. Murphlne ._.....h!W
Ch•rles H. Loos 'An!MIM ......... E..., •
Att de,.,.. ....... : (714) 142-4321 ca ..... ~.-.... : 142·111'1
OFFICES I C:...•Meu: ....... ., .,...
U9llN INCll: "" .... C-.4 " ..... Hwltlftllwl 9Md\: 11'17191Ncll ...,..wM•
. .
~'NE~NE'")";.
1 •
I
lfairvkw raps
state report
&yJODICADENHEAD
Of• o.11r l"li.t li.tt
Fairview State Hospital of.
ficijtls today criticized published
reports that the Costa Mesa
'facility along with nine other
state hospitals, was linked to the
deaths of 120 patients.
"l think it's unfair to our en·
tire hospital staff and physicians
who have fully cooper ated in the
past," said Dr. Francis Crinella.
Fairview's director. .·
"Somehow f feel that the
public is lead to believe that
there are still misdeeds taking'
place on their part and that's un -
fortunate," he added.
The report issued by the stale
health department concerns the death~ of some 1,285 patients
who d1ed between 1973 and 1976.
Disclosure of the report was
m ade public by the Sacramento
Bee Sundav. When the prohe
f'rOIRP,,..AI
was first begun four years ago,
Fairview otficials confirmed
that 13 deaths at the facility
were among those being in·
vestigated.
Jn the final report, Fairview
wa11 again identified in 13 of the
deaths after the survey team
found "instances of questionable
hospital staff conduct or prob-
lems with hospital procedures."
No disciplinary action was
recommended against Fairview
o rricials after the Orange County
District Attorney's Office and
survey team found ·•no instances
where prosecution would be
s upported by s ufficient evidence
of c ri minalily ··
The deaths at Fairview were link~d to over use of drugs,
n~g hgence on the part of physi·
c1ans and staff, and problems of
hospital procedure that included
three choking deaths and one
strangulation.
Questionable drug practices
and defi ciences in patie nt
monitoring were blamed as the
cause of the 120 deaths.
'S•• Youf' ••••••• •s.s Youl' I :J <. .!.. . . HOSTAGES
de mands. the government would
proceed with the conditions set
out by the parliament or Majlis.
A spokesman for the s tate
li c e nsing section s aid that
Fairview is currently prescrib·
ing fewer psychoactive drugs
than any other state facility.
--------
COMMENTARY ON WORLD CONDITIONS, CIRCA 1962
Newport'• McNerney drew for mejor publlcetlona "If the decision of the Majlis is
not completely met . they (the
h9slages) will be tried , .. he said.
Cartoonist dies;
former NB resident
'Iran wants the U S. govern·
ment lo deposit S24 billion with the
Algerian government to cover
claims on the wealth of the late
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi
a nd Iranian assets frozen in U.S
banks. It also wants the U.S gov-
ernment to s top a ll laws uits
against Iran, but Rafsanjan1 said
the United States should be given
tim e to work out any legal
problems it might encounte r
Di strict administrator for the
state health survey team Hank
Schoenlein admitted that the
Cost a Mesa hos pital has been
the sate or "significant prob-
lems."
• · 1 do know that there were
s erio u s prob lems ," s aid
Schoenlcm ... All I can tell you is
that Fairview, sin ce then, is a
vastly improved racility _ .. Ne ws paper cartoonis t and ii·
lustrator Eugene A . McNemey,
a long-time Newport Beach resi·
de nt. is being reme mbered this
week by friends and family.
McNerney, a contributor to
the early editions of Life and
T h e New Yorker , di e d
Chris tmas Day fo llowing a
lengthy illness. He was 81 .
Born in Philadelphia. where
he attended St. Joseph 's.College,
McNemey served in World War
I and returned home to teach
and study at lhe Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts.
He later moved his family to
Westport, Conn , where he
became a part or a growing and
ener~etic group of young artists
that included James Thurber
and F . Scotl Fitzgerald.
Family members said he often
spoke of this as an exciting and
creative period in his life
McNe m ey became a frequent
co ntribut or to s evera l
Philadelphia news papers includ-
ing the Bulletin and Inquirer. He
was published with regularity in
The New Yorker magazine as
well as Life, The Saturday Even-
ing Post and The Ladies Home
Journal.
He also illus trated Ring
Lardner's popular bas e ball
classic. "Lose With A Smile."
He was unde r contract to the
New York Daily News for more
than 20 years .
In 1942, McNerney again en·
tered military life, joining the
Ma rine Corps as a captain and
serving under General Holland
Smith. He took part in opera-
tions at Tarawa and Okinawa.
Leaving the Marine Corps as a
reserve major, McNerney came
west and became a sketch artist
for Columbia Pictures and 20th
Century Fox,
In the late 1950s. he moved to
Huntington Beach and later to
Newport Beach_ He continued
his career as a political car-
toonist, sending material to the
2 charged
in-SJC
burglary
Two Santa Ana men face
charges that they broke into lhe
Radio Shack store in San Juan
Capistrano and s tole $6 ,000
worth or s tereo equipment and
television sets.
Albert Rivera. 30, and Angel
Due nas D e lgado , 26, are
·charged with the early Saturday
morning burglary of the store,
32161 Camino Capistrano.
Lt. Wyatt Hart of the Orange
County Sheriff's Department
said Ri vera and Delgado tripped
a silent alarm at the store when
they allegedly s mashed a plate
glass window.
The two ·men were reported:
ly observed loading stereo
equipment and television sets in-
to the back or 8 pickup truck by '
a sheriU's deputy al about 12:30
a .m .
Hart said the two men fled
north on the Santa Ana Freeway
with the deputy in pursuit_ Santa
Ana police reportedly joined in
the chase and apprehended
Rivera and Delelldo at the In·
tersectlon of Warner Avenue
and D.,ver Road in$anta Ana.
ARTIST-NEWSMAN DIES
Eugene A. McNemey
Denve r Pos t and contributing lo
the Oceanside Blade
He won a Grenville Clark
Award for one of his drawings
McNcm ey also was a member
of the Players ' Club, confined to
representatives of t he arts ac-
tors. art~sts and musicians.
His daughter. Nora Lehman of
Lido Isle. said one of his largest
dis appointments came when he
was stricken with arthritis.
which made it impossible for
him to continue drawing.
He is survived by his wife
Anne, daughter Mrs Lehman.
granddaughter Bridget Lehman
and grandson Greg Lehman. of
Carmel Valley !'Jo funeral se r vices are
planned. The family has sug-
gested tributes in the form of
donations lo Hoag Me morial
H os pital in Mc N ern e y 's
me mory.
He spoke to reporters in Tehr.an
on Monday after responding an
grily to Reagan's description or
the m ilitants who seized the
hostages and the American Em
ba s sy 4 23 da y s a go a s
"barbarians •·
........ :: l don't know how they ran call
lll1"ti viii zed and barbarous the
capture of 52 s p1es who had tu m ed
the place that the Is lamic r ('
publican government provided
for them into a t'enter of t!S
pionage and whn were bus~ plot
ting against the Is lamic. gtJ\ ern
ment ... Rafsan1a ni set1d
No PW role
seen in talks
CA IRO. Egypt <APJ -Former
Secretary of Stale Henry A Kiss
inger s aid today that at the pres-
e nt s tage of the Egypt1an-lsrael1
peace process he did not ~ee a
useful role for the Palestinian
L1 be ration Orga n1zat1on .
Kissinger. on a pri vate tnp t<J
the Mideast. spoke to reporters
a f ter meeting wi th Foreign
Minister Kama I Hassan Aly
In response to a question on
PLO pa rticipation in the stalled
ta lks on a form of autonomy for
Palestinians living under Israeli
occupation, Kissinger said il was
his view "that the PLO at this
stage can only confu se the issue "
Greetings shared
WASHIN G TON I AP l
Presidenl·elect Ronald Reagan
and Soviet Preside nt Leonid
Brezhnev have exchanged New
Yea r 's g reetings .
When the hospital was last
s urveyed by the slate licensing
tea m in April, deficiencies were
found in all three areas of care:
general acute. skilled nursing
a nd intermediate , s aid
Schoenlem
Although the s tate official
det'lined to elaborate on the ex-
a1·1 nature of the def1 ciences. he
dad say lhat moM of lhe "signifi·
c·an1 problems" havt• been <'o r
r1·etN I
Mesa woman
with burns
critical
A Cos ta Mesa woman re·
mained in critical .condition to-
day at UC Irvine Medical Center
afte r being rescued Sunday from
he r burning home by a neighbor.
r.cne Jones , SJ. of 282 Santo Tom a~. W<JS pulled to safety by
Robl'rt llarve~
"She -; res ponding well to
t r catm.-nt. · said burn ward
nur:-e Dot Anderle •·t don't
foresee an} problems "
Damage from the fire was
e!-tlmated today at $40,000 by
fire offir1als who are continuing
their investigation of the blaze.
The woman told officials she
was mvestigalmg a strong gas
odor in her kitchen and lifted the
top off her stove.
Battalion C hief R obe rt
Beauchamp ssiW t.he explosion
was caused by natural gas com ·
ing in contact with the pilot light
a fter she lifted the stove top.
Beauchamp advises residents
who smell natural gas to call the
fi re department immediately so
that firemen can turn off the
gas
A diamond she'll always have in her heart.
Enla~ to show Jetml
SLA.VICK·s
Flrw ~wt>~n Sln<T 1917
Satisf v hi.>r
heart's 1.k s1n.•
w it h our
diamond
pendant in
lR karat Yl'll\)\\
gold, $330.
Bcn11t1f11 I
/t''ll'l'frll ~tll(S,
"I lol'i' 111111 •
Fashion Island, Nf'Wport Center, Newport Bffch, 714/644·1380
Wt'Mm&flS~t / lAgvn.t Hillt I Minion V~JO I North Or•ngt> I Th~ City
LM Cftritos • 8"'1 Malk
Ahn Crt'..Wr-Los-Af'lplft f Sin DN•l> I us Vt>g~s
Uw -of Slo'4dl't <-.............. ,i. .. , nt "-"''" £\,....... VISA. MMlitt OIMp .
M~r F1rtt /~ltrf C1111J
Hart said all the 'llto~ir ,
ai:t1rlea ..-.r.._r.....,eHd,-but ----......;:.-~,,1-----------------------------some bad been dam11ed when
they tell out ol the back ol the
pickup truck durtnc the chue.
' ( ' ~
I
-11111111 llllY Ml
I 'l ., • I I ' t Mill Ii \I.I , '1)\1 OHANGF COUN t Y l.AI If OH l~IA 25 CENTS
Fight
T ht> c-ootrnuln& H&ht for
('Ofttrol ol \ oil v.~lhi, luutt'd
outi lde •t' t cwpc.>f\ 8eaC'h but
roottd 1t1 ell) uctel11od.I, Ukely
"tit result 1n lhe v.eUJ beina
•hut down •
.,•i>Ort ~aC'h officials admit
that "'·en If the) encountt-r no
m or~ rt~l.!l t a n c e t o lhtn r
takeover effor\b, the (low or
black gold rrvm lhe ocean floor
\ .
over
will cell!N for "veral weeks at
lea11l
Th" <.·Hy's fight to establish
full ownership or tbe wells,
IO<'lllled above Coast Highway
between the Santa Ana River
and Su~rior Avenue, has been
c halle ngt!d b y Armstrong
l'elroleum Corp.
Armstrong. a Newport Beach
b ase d fi r m . c urrently is
" , 'Sea l'eul' ••••••• 'Sea l'eul' -------.L" r ------
COMMENTARY ON WORLD CONDITIONS, CIRCA 1962
Newport'• McNerney drew for mejor publlcetlon•
Neivport illustrator
E.A. McNerney dies .
_. -Newspaper cartoonist and iJ:
lustrator Eugene A. McNemey,
a long-time Newport Beach resi·
dent. is being remembered this
week by friends and family.
McNerney, a contributor to
the early editions of Life and
Th e N ew Y o rk e r . d ie d
C'h ristmas Day following a
"lengthy illness . He was 81
Born iri Philadelphia, where
he attended St. Joseph's College,
McNerney served in World War
I and returned home to teach
and study at the Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts .
He later moved his family to
Westport, Conn where he
became a part of a growing and
energetic group of young artists
that included James Thurber
and F . Scott Fitzgerald.
Family members said he often
spoke of this as an exciting and
creative period in his life.
Mc~e-rney became a frequent
c ontributo r to s evera l
Philadelphia ne wspapers includ-
ing the Bulletin and Inquirer. He
was published with reguJarity in
The New Yorker magazine as
well as Llfe, The Saturday Even·
Ing Post and The Ladles Home
Journal.
He also illus trated Ring
Lardner's popular baseball
classic. "Lose With A Smile."
He was under contract to the
New York Daily News for more
than 20 years.
In 19'2, McNerney again en·
tered military life, joining the
Mej'ine Corps as a captain and
ser'Ving under General Holland
· Smith. He took p'rt in opera·
lions at Tarawa and Okinawa.
Christmas traffic
toll shoM decline
ARTlst-NEWSMAN DIES
Eugene A. McNerney
Leaving the Marine Corps as a
reserve major, M"cNerney came
west and became a sketch artist
for Columbia Pictures and 20th
Century Fox.
In the late 1950s, he moved to
Huntington Beach and lat.er lo
Newport Beach. He continued
his career as a political car-
toonist, sending material to the
Denver Post and contributing to
the Oceanside Blade.
He won a Grenville Clark
Awardforoneofhisdrawings.
McNerney also was a member
of the Players' Club. confined to
representatives of the arts -ac-
tors, art.ist.s and musicians.
His daughter, N.or• Lehman of
Ltdo Isle, said one of bis largest
disappointments came when he
was stricken wJth arthritis,
By 1'k Anoclated PftSI which made it Tmpossible for
Bad weather and a slumpin1 hlm lo continue drawing.
economy apparently had at leut He is survived by bis wife
-0n~ benefiei•l eff eet thit Anne-:-daugtrter Mn. Lehman:
Cb ristmas -keeping holiday 1randdaugbt.er Bridget Lehman
traffic deaths well below expec· and grandson Greg Lehman, of
tations, the National Safety Carmel Valley.
Council says. No funeral services are
, D u r i n g l h e f o u r -d a y planned. The famll b~· -etrristmas1'1olldS)"'Wffk~ • 16\icJt'nl>Utei n t e form of
people were killed oa the na· donations· to Hoag Memorial
Uonts tqbway1, according to an Ho a pit a I in Mc Nerney ' s
Associated Preas tally.. • memory.
I
oil wells m.ay shut flow
operating the wells on lease that
expires Jan. 25.
Newport City Manager Robert
Wynn says a number of thin&s
must happen before the city can
fully st.ep into the oil picture.
He says the city must build a
new tank farm near lhe wells,
must compl ete royalty
negotiations with 138 landowners
through whose property oil lines
..
pass and buy the oil wells. It is
unlikely, he says, that all of this
can be done berore Jan. 25.
Purchasing the oil wells, it
appears , will be the biggest
hit.ch.
Wynn says Armslron1 won 't
agree lo a cash orrer for the
wells -thought to be about
SS.000 per well -then the city
must go to court and condemn
the wells and the land under
them.
Robert Armstrong, president
or the oil firm, has threatened to
go to court if that happens. The
oilman already has hit the city
with one lawauit, which asks the
court lo establish his rights in
the fight.
Wynn says the city has only
one ~oal in mind -to establish
/ -
ownership and then earn u
much money as possible from
the wells.
City officials speculate that
once the takeover is complete.
annual city revenue from the
wells could soar from $65,000 to
as much as $1 million.
Current thinking among city
officials is that the oil operation
(See OIL, Pa1e A?>
Iran would 'listen'
Still wants 'guarantee' for hostage~
By The Associated Press
The head or Iran's hostage
negotiation team said today his
government would listen to any·
U.S. counterproposal that was ac-
ceptable to the Algerian govern-
' ment concerning Iran's demand
for $24 billion.
He also accused President-
elect Reagan of bluffing and act·
ing like a Hollywood cowboy, and
Wann days
ahead for
coast area
Clear sl<les and warmer days
are ahead for coastal area resi·
dents .
Tonight temperatures are ex·
peeled lo dip to 52 degrees with
no fog projeeted along the coast,
according to a spokes man for
the National Weather Bureau
Service. Warm dry air from the
northeast is blowing the once
dense fog out to sea, said the
spokesman. ...
No fog is forecast Wedne~ay
and temperatures are expected
to soar as high as 82 degrees.
Some early morning fog may
hug coastal cities New Year's
Day, giving way to more wat-m
weather and fair skies by after·
noon , the spokesman said.
For the first day since the fog
.seige began, flight operations at
John Wayne Airport were in full
swing today. Visibility at Los
Angeles International was·
estimated at 100 miles today.
"It's beautiful," said Golden
West Airlines spokesman Dick
Biggs. "We will remain open all day ..
Hotel powerless
LAS VEGAS (AP) -A power
malfunction in the Circus-Circus
Hotel-Casino shut off electricity
to about 400 rooms, sending
s moke into the first four floors
late Monday. Clark County Fire
Department officials said no one
was injured.
threatened that the hostages
would be tried if Iran's demands
were not met.
Behzad Nabavi told a news con·
rerence in Tehran that if the U.S.
government comes up with
another form of guarantee that
met Iran's four conditions for re·
lease of the 52 American hostages
seized 423 days ago "it would be
acceptable in our view.··
Deaths li11k
"As I s aid before, as far as we
have concluded there is no other
way for guaranteeing t he un·
dertakings or Americans, .. he
told reporters. "I said we are
ready to listen lo everything but
it 's natural the U.S. is looking for
excuses and has noth~n g to say.·'
Nabavi co nfirmed Prime
Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai's
proposal over the we~kend offer·
Fairview officials
rap state report
By JODI CADENHEAD
Oft• o.ilf P'llet Staff
Fairview State Hospital of·
fi cials today criticized published
reports that the Costa Mesa
facility along with nine other
slate ho5pitals. was linked lo the
deaths of UIO patients.
"I think it's unfair to our en-
tire h05pital staff and physicians
who have fully cooperated in the
past," said Dr. Francis Crinella,
Fairview's director.
"Somehow I feel that the
public is lead to· believe that
there are still misdeeds taking
place on their part and that's un-
fortunate,'" he added.
The report issued by the slate
health department concerns the
deaths of some 1,285 patients
who died between 1W73 and 1W76.
Disclosure of the report was
made public by the Sacramento
Bee Sunday. When the probe
was rirst begun four years ago,
Fairview officials confirmed
that 13 deaths al the facility
were among those being in·
vestigated.
In the final report, Fairview
was again identified in _13 or the
deaths after the survey team
round "instances of questionable
hospital staff conduct or prob·
I ems with hospital procedures.··
No disciplinary action was
recommended against Fairview
officials after the Orange County
District Attorney's Office and
survey team found "no instances
where prosecution would be
supported by sufficient evidence
Oall• "li.t"'-40
CLAIMS REPORT UNFAIR
F•lrvlew'1 Crfn•ll•
of criminality.··
The deaths at Fairview were
linked to over use of drugs.
negligence on the part of physi·
cians and staff. and problems of
hospital procedure that included
three choking deaths and one
s trangulation.
Questionable drug practices
and deficiences in patient
<See DEATHS, Page A2>
ing to drop the demand for fin&n•
cial guarantees in favor of im·
mediate cash payments followed
by arbitration on un resolved ,,.
sues while Iran contin uc·.I 1<1 hOl<J
the hostages.
He claimed the United States
and Iran were in agreement o\ er
the immediate return of about $l3
billion in Iranian wealth. and s<11d
(See HOSTAGES, Page A21
CM burn
• • victim
criticm
A Costa Mesa wo man r e
mained in critical condition to·
day al UC Irvine Medical Center
after being rescued Sunday from
her burning home by a neighbor
Gene Jones, 53, of 282 Santo Tomas, was pulled lo safety l>y
Robert Harvey.
"She·s responding well t11
treatment." s aid burn war 11
nurse Dot Ande r le ·· 1 don ·1
fo resee an)' proble ms · ·
Da mage from the fi re was
est imated today at $40,000 h:>
fire oWcials wh o are continuing
their investigation of the blaze
The woman told officials she
was investigating a strong gas
odor in her kitchen and lifted the
top off her stove.
Battalion Chie f Robert
Beauchamp said the explosion
was caused by natural gas com·
ing in contact with the pilot light
after she lifted the stove top.
Beauchamp advises res1dentf-
who s mell natura l gas to call tht'
fire department immediately so
that firemen can I urn off thl'
gas.
UCI DEFEATS
TEXAS A&M
Inspeetors aeeused
UC Irvine defeated previously
undefeated and 12th ranked Tex
as A&M , 91-74, in the first round
of the KOA basketball Classic at
Billings. Mont.
Petty bribes claimed
The win. undoubtedly. was lhe
greatest in UCL's brief history .at
the major college level. CSt·l'
Pa ge Bl l.
By RICHARD GREEN
Of .. o.llr P'llet Staff
•·we bought him a bottle .of
Jack Daniel's bourbon, took him
to lunch and got him some
overtime . . . He was much
easier to get along with after
that " said construction
compMy owner Jim Eldri~g~ in
describing an Irvine building
inspector.
That inspector and two others
now face misdemeanor charges
of solicitation or acceptance of
gratuities by public officers.
"I ne ver was able to
understand why they would
jeopardize their jobs for such
s m all incidental favors,''
Eldridge said. "They <alleged
gratuities) didn't cost me more
than $100, but l felt a moral and
ethical obligation to report the
situation."
Eldridge, owner of Western
Commercial Contractors Inc.
and former director of the Costa
Mesa cily Public Services
Department, told the story to
Irvine Public Work&-Director
Brent Muchow.
Muchow notified the Irvine
P.oUce.Dlplrtmen• ,..w.hicll..belan
an investlaatlon of lhe situation
on Dec. 5. That lnH1t111t1on
ruult.ed in the fllin& lul Friday
of misdemeanor charges a1alnat
·~
city building inspectors Manuel
S. Linares, 34, or Corona; Daniel
B. BullBJ"d, 50. of Costa Mesa,
and Arthur ·w. Peck, 51 , or
Anaheim.
Two other building inspectors
-who police refuse to identify
-have been placed on
administrative leave pending
further investigation by Irvine
police.
Eldridge said he cooperated
with police in their
investigation, but he declined to
elaborate about what form this
cooperation took.
He did outline events leading
lo the filing of charges against
the th~ inspectors.
Eldridge said his company
was building the Monopoly
Business Park, a
168,000-square-foot Industrial
condominium,' when his men
first cam, across Irvine building
inspfftorl.
The J>n>ject, now finlabed, is
locateia at Bake and RotkfieJd
avenues in the Irvine lnd\altrial
Complex-Eat.
"fie started buildine in
January or February of this
~~-•••· There were no real problems, unUl our framina
construct.ion got pretty much
underway. .
''The lnspecton nitpicked and
caused us construction delays.
For example, if they found a-
shiner {a nail that slightly .
missed its intended mark I
they'd say 'Fix that and call me
tomorrow.' We 'd lose a whole
day . Finally, one of the
inspectors tol<l. us he needed lo
be 'taken care of.' He informed
us he was a Jack Daniel's
drinker.
"We decided to play along
with their requests. Then they
became more and more casual.
They would sign 'off on
inspections without actually
looking at the work. But I'm
confident the jobs were done
right. One part of the project
was actually examined by
(public works director> Brent
Muchow himself. I wanted to
make sure there would. be no
cloud over lhe project."
Coast
\\1ea1her
Fair tonight and Wed-
nesday, but with increas-
ing chan c e of fog at
beaches and much cooler
near coast. Lows toni&ht
SO at the beaches. SS in·
land. Highs Wednesday
near 70 to low 80s.
INSIDE TODJ\'t'
'' Poll11 wanti a 1ip . o/ r
Pemod!" I/ Woll htor Chat'
cackling reqwil , followed
perhaps by a fftD bars o/ a
Sutotro mrlod(I. ~·ue lt.ICf..
l!eftl11 entered r~ Marv~
home of POU11 and Budd11. SH
Page a . . •
Eldridle said ~ attended Cal
St•te 'Luac Beach with lludlow
and they ..have had a penooal
and prolesaional relaUonship for a• y_...,. .., ,... ._.... a . 20 yean. • ... ......_ a ...... .... ......... -~ ........... .. ··u I bad been in anouter city I .__. -......,_ M
would have Just done what I bad ~ C:: ,..... "":' ._ u. •
to do, to .. the job~doneiftiiim' nbuti-iiai-t1cc..-:r.':.-~aa~· tt::::-r •1wrr1 lntft-f fe1t I 1'tlp T......._
call a bad situation to their (city :,::
offlciall'> attention. II you're in ._..._
a atranae city you Juat wouldn't 1,~ ..
If -
·-JlJST BREAK!NC---
t.oa• ....... ,,.,,. ...... .,..... .... • .........
·ail price increaae
1laaved by Nigeria
NSW YOU CAP> -l'll19ria, America'• MCOlad·lar111t ......,. .:'bw ol ,.........m, told •-.ICW cua&om•n today lt wlU nllt a&l ..... M ...... U. a Mrnl Ju. l , ... Ul·
tlq 8 ..... Mlftl ,rtH lfttNMe ....,_('9d I day .. J'lMf b)'
Ubya. Na.ria '• *di*-to Lac,.... \ht pnct ol lu top.quall\y
crwle Io .. a bamtl ll _.,the tu •·Nrrel c•iUnt pric•
Mt ~J ._ Orpmaatkla ol PtlrolewD E:apor\11\1 Cou.atries and di• '8r l.A1a Monday wu d\M \0 "1lu11l1h petroleum
mark•" foUowaJ\• two ynn ot splrall~ prices. an lndUJtry '°"'" l&ld • • tndonMta and Vtneauela. meanwhd1, announced price ln·
cN•Mt o( s:t w .., 50 ~r !u .1aUon buret In lhe rapidly ac·
<'e.l•rata.q round ol OPt:C prict1 bike• Analy1t1 predict that the
1or reuett annwnced and ti.11patled by cartel members and
othua l'ould bOo t tJ S auollne aod heatml oil pnces u much
u A ct-nls • i•llon
S.rwc er•••·· At ... •,..,,,"'"~
N t1 It Dt:l.Jll Indal c At>> Soviet troo~ and Af1han police
llUled ~ peopie when they hn!d oa rioters in Kabul, accord·
lAI to a dlpaoma\lc report today. and Uf}lted News of India said
an Amencan "n'\lhtary adviser" to Moslem rebels was shot to
death abcu' 200 miles sou\hwest or Kabul. RepoN. from diplomallc sources on Monday's rioting in
Kabul said a group of rioters rampaged through central Kabul
hurhng stones and that three of them were killed and 10 to l5 .woun~ed when Soviet troops and Afghan security forces opened
fi r~
Q11alif._. ltfC• drfwrf GH'G
LANCASTER (AP> -Several Antelope Valley residents
were awakened early today by a mild earthquake that rolled
across the vttlley at 12:20 a.m.
No damages or Injuries were reported from the quake,
which mcasurt!d 2.1 on the Richter scale.
The epicente r was five miles southwest of Palmdale and 60
miles northwest of Los Angeles. said Barba ra Reed al the
Caltech seis mological laboratory in Pasadena.
Bellar clft>U..ft ..-••
LONDON (AP> Softer dollar interest rates pushed the
dollar down on world m oney markets today. while gold prices
also sagged in quiet trading. -
f',,_.PagrAI
CHARGES. •
know how far up the line this
stuff goes.··
Eldridge s aid he d1dn 't tell
Muchow about the situation until
he (Eldridge) was sure it was
widespre ad
A rte r t a 1 k i ·n g t o o t h e r
contractors who told the same
story and after his construction
company had started a new
pr oject and encountered the
s am e diffic ult y, Eldridge
r eported the si tuation t o
~uchow
Inspector Peck . contacted by
telephone. refused to comment
on the charges ag aan~l hirfl.
Linares and Bullard. other than to say the charges came as a
surprise and they will all plead
innocent when they appear in
Harbor Court Jan. 7
IA llllUJuit
claims framl
LOS ANGEi.ES <AP l -A
Pasadena woman who allegedly
collected more than $370,000 in
welfare checks was sued by Los
Aneeles County in an attempt to
recover the money plus interest.
The suit. filed Monday in 'Los
Angeles Superior Court. claims
that Dorothy Woods used at ·
least 10 aliases to obtain funds
under Aid to Families with
De pendent Children and Food
Stamp progr ams b etwe e n
March 1971 and December 1~. ·
Besides seeking lo recover the
money, the civil s uit also as ks
the court to impose liens on
seven parcels of prope rty bought
with the m on ey a nd enjoin
Woods and her husband, Joh.n , •
from transfer ring or withdraw·
ing funds from two hanks where
they hold accounts.
Chemical Bank cuts
prime rate lo 201/2
NEW YORK CAP >
Che mical Bank c ut its prime
lending r ate by one percentage
point to 20.5 percent Monday.
marking the third cut by a ma -
jor U.S. bank since a record 2J .5 ·
percent rate swept through the
money Industry 10 days ago.
Chemical. the nation's sixth
,largest bank. reduced its rate in
response to drops in its cost of
acquiring funds. but it Is uncer·
tain whether further declines will follow. said Fred Deming,
Chem ical's chief economist.
Trial set
for former
jobs chief
Ro be rt L. Cunnin gha m . the
form e r head of Huntington
Beach's fede r ally-funded job
training program , has been or·
dered to stand trial Feb. 26 in
Oran ge County Superior Court on
charges he allegedly took $16,000
from the program.
Cunningham was arraigned
Monday before Judge Richard
Beacom, entering a plea of inno-
cent to charges that he m isused
public fun.ds and committed
grand theft.
The alleged acts took place dur·
ing the period June 13. 1!179 to
.January 1980 when he was direc·
tor o( the city's job training pro·
g ram.
F.-...P~AJ
HOSTAGES
Iran would be willing to await the
outcome of a rbitration proceed·
ings concerning the other $11
billion demanded from the Unite<I
Slates prior lo release of the
hostages.
"We cannot be content with
so me papers signed by Carter or
Reagan." he said." If the U.S. can
propose another way which con·
ta ins a kind of guarantee accepla·
ble to t he Algerian government it
wouldbeacceptable inourview "
As ked about Reagan's descrip·
lion of the hostage laking as a
form of kidnapping committed by
b arbarians he r eplied : '"I
pe rsonally consider these threats
as bluffs especially on the part of
the new U.S. administr ation
which wants lo gain prestige by •
frightening revolutionar ies or lhe
world.
"We consider the statements or
Mr. Reagan as those or one who
s till think.s he is p laying in a
Western f1l~. We don 't take his
s tatements very seriously." Na~vi also warned that. Ir the
U $. government t ried lo dodge or
delay iL'! reponse to the Ira nian
d emands. the gove rnment would
proceed with the conditions set
eul by the parliament or Majli11.
"If the decision or the Majli11 iH
nol complet.ely m et, they <the
hostages} will be tried ." he said.
Iran wants the U.S. govern-
ment todeposll $24 billion with the
Algerian govemmenl lo cover
c laims on the wealth or \he late
Shah Mohammad Reia Pahlavi
a nd Iranian assets frozen In U .S
banks.
TELEPHONE
Thomas P. Haley ...... I ..
Robert N. Weed
~ ... ~
M. Thomas Keevll t..itw
Thomas A. Murphlne ~btter
Ch•rln H. Loos ,. ................ £ .....
•
..-.--------------·
AN deper1AN:Rla: (714) 142-t321
c ... ..._ Adweftlelo9: 142-1171
\
W ASHINOTON (AP) ._ Prell·
«Mnl C... W belu ur•M to•· tend mandatory lederal t•m·
perature conlrol• on 1.9 mUUon
omcea, ahopa and o\htf non·
rffldenUal buildlnlJ• as one ot
hla last offtcl&l acts.
The conlrols eitplre Jan. 18 un·
le11 Carter extenda them. But no '
matte r what Carter decides.
President·elect Reatan could re·
verse the action as soon as he
takes otfice four days later.
Eve r sl n <'e Jul y 1979
Americans have had to work
a nd shop in buildings limited lo
65 degrees in tht' winter and 78
in summer.
Under the l!J75 htw giving the
president the power to impose
t he energy -co nservation con
trots, the restriction can only re
main in force for nine month11
without a n othe r presidential
declaration. Carter already has
extended the controls once
Energy Secretary Churle:I
D uncan sent his recomrne11d1i
tion for another exltnllon 1<1 the
White House two wt•ek:. 1tl(o.
Department offi cials say thurt.'
has been no indicattion whul tht•
president will decide
• Reagan ran for president on a
Republican campai.:n 11lutform
c r i t i c a 1 o ( 1· o n s c r v IA l 1 o 11
m easures us unntil·ess11ry 1<ov
ernmenl interfercn.l't'
The controls a lso hn vf' ht•1•11
crill~zed as incffe<'livt•. U1•h'1ff
tors note that th•• .:ov1..rrrnwnt
has never rlncd 1u1 y hualdln.:
operators for non c·omplimwt·
The Encr~y Depart nwnt ~ll)'l'I
ils s tudies found 80 1wrt·t'nt rnn1
pliance with tht• controls. whtd1
otricia ls term un t'X<'e lh:nt rah•
cons ider 1 n I{ I h l' 11ru~I'11111
operates with minimal l't1Cor1·c
men t per sonnt'I.
"We (et'I II ha:. hl'l'fl u jr(UOd
program and s hould !Jc.· t'X
tended ." s a id deirnrl rnt·11 1
s pokesman Phil Garon "Our
estim<1lcs a rt• lhal 1t sun·~
200,000 lo 400,000 l1ar rt•b of ml
each day"
Frotrt P,..-A I
DEATHS ...
monitorin~ were blamed a!'. th'·
c ause of the 120 deaths
A s pokesm<1n for the state
lice nsin g section s aid that
Fairview is currently prcscrib·
ing fewer psychoact ive drugs
than any other state facility
District administrator for the
s tate health s urvey team Hank
Sch oenlein adm itted that the
Cos ta Mesa hospital has bee n
the site of "si)~nif1cant p rob··
le m s."
"I do know that there were
s e r ious pro bl e m s." said
Schoenlein "i\11 I can tell you is
that Fairview. s inc1· then. as ;i
vastly improvt•d r:u·ilatv ··
Whe n the.· h11sp1tal was las t
s urveyt'<I by the• l'llatf.' la t•t•nsi ni.:
ll'am in "l'rll . d1•f1<•1pn1·u!l'I wt·n· found in a I lhrt·t• un•as ol C'art·
general ac11l<'. sk1l11·ll 1111 rs1ni.:
a n cl 1 n I c..· r m c..• cl 1 a \ 1• . ~ a 1 11
Schocnlcm.
Allhou~h lh1• l'l\:1tt• 11ffl t•1al
d eclint•tl to clal141rutc· on llw 1•x
a ct nature.· of the: dl'f11·11·111·1·s. lw
dad s ay that most of llw "s1i.:nif1 '
e ant prohlC'rnl'I·· hav1· h1•1•11 cor
re<'INl
''The lt•vt.'I of d1•f11·1t•llt'c'h I'\
minimal t•ompart•1I to what 1111'y
Wl'rt' in 1!1Hi," lw :rn11I
Jn l !n7, lh1• ('111'la M1•s a
hospital lost 111·c·rc·1llt at1nt1 ahmi.t
with a 11umhc•r· 11( ultwr st ull•
fa t·1lit1t·s wht•n slnlc· '"'1•ns 111J: ·
rcip1ircm1·nth wc·rt· ch:rniw•I
Ati a n•sult th1• focaht)' lost
some $1 :1 m1ll111n 111 m onthly
Me d i ('ul 1rn y me11t ., frnm lh1•
fed eral J(ovc.·rnmc nl < '1•rl1f1n 1
t10n wus res tort•d 111 .lune 1!17H
a rll'r the hoMpitul 1·om111icd with
the m·w c·onditaons 1 n the ras1•
of lhc 120 dt!!llhs. i;l.uw ho11pll a.I
of f i l' i a I s r l' l' nm m ,. n 111• 11
di11c1pllnary al'llol\ in Kl 1·:1111·11
•·r,,,,. P,,.-A I
OIL ...
would he put out to bid. W• "ln
1utys It would then tw po11s11,ll'
for Armstron.i to Me l buck lnlo
the oil l)i<'I urf'. If ltw price 1s
right.
And lhut could be dirflcull
Owners of the property. Beeco
Ltd .• oppoiu: annexation at lhix
lime.
H the city 111 unable lo annex
the land, It would be required to
s he ll out up to $80,000 a year In
county \UC!;_ ..
~ 9 t)'pewriters
taken in Irvine
Nin e IBM Se l ec tr ic
' typewriters wl\h a combined
value of St.000 have been
report4d 1t.olen from the Pleuey
Sem'i·Conductor butldln1 tn'
Irvine, police aald.
Pollee theorln th• b1~il!f :~ or buulm eotered.tbe b ...a.a:..
1$41 Kaller Ave. Monday night
by 1masbin1 •window. ,
•
Shake~• IJ11f 1111h11rf
llriun Lumby, 9. of Irvine. is treated by
Oran~<! <..:ounty Purnmt!dics (inset > afte r
his bi(' ye le collulccl with a truck driven by
Wu ltcr Jon<'S. rii. of Ri verside. on Alto n
Parkway :and Cul ver Drive in Irvine at
J : 15 p.m Monday Brian was takelfll O
Tustin Community I losp ital where he was
tn.•att•d for t uts und bruises a nd re leased.
Dallas vendetta
by. Hoover told
l>A I.I.AS 1 A I') ..-ormt•r FUI
1>i r1•1'111r .I l<:1h:nr lloovtr l'on
11111·\l•d 1.1 I wo yc.•ar vt•ndl:Ha
111411in~t tll<' l>ullu1> l'oh cc Dc1mr1
mt.·nt for '\talt.'ml·nl~ mudc follow
1r1 14 th1• a.ssu~1'1rtat111n 11f l'n·s1dt•lll
K..r1ncdy, tht• l>:illui.. Momin.:
Ncw1' n •J)(1rt1•d loduy
(Juut111i.t ..-u1 1f11c111111·111 1' 1111
I u 1 nf•tl uncll·r th{· f"n ·t·1h1m 11f I 11
fcirm 11t1or1 /\1·1. llw rww"l11ap1•1 11•
1111r1t·d that lh1· f1•ll1·1·al a~c·111"} ·.,
111111H1v1al l111 yn1ll f1n·u.sl'fl 1111
t r :11nin.: for nl y pol1<·1·off11•1·r-,
t\11 "'JI J l-l pt1k••'1 1fllJll Ill
Wal'1 l1111gl1111 .,;uiJ toda y 1111' liui '""'
w1111 Id have n• 1 '·0111 rr "'"I '111 1111· 1 , •
Jlllf l
'l'ht· cll1>p11l1· wa., l111tw·rt·tl li y :1
...1111t·11wnl 11l1nti11lf'd 1111"111 ;iii1·11I
.l;irr11•1> I' II••'" y .11 11)' 1>11J J:,·.
J>o l11·1· I.I J ;ll'k lt••v1ll 111•· d:n •11
t h1· :JS!>IJ1'l>tll:1l 11111 ac 1·1,1 d111j.I '''
FBI mern111>
Rcvrll, now a.,'11\lcsnl d11 .. f ';,11J
at the t1 me that 11•1<.t" l'J!rJ h1 m th•·
FBI kne v. before ~O\ 22 J ~_.:j
that the allegf.'d a!>'-Cl''-ln '*"
Har"e.Y0s14 ald. 14C.!-cc.1->a bl,.11!
committinJ? the 35'-Cl!>'lnc.uor, r/
President Kenned ~
llo:-.ty lall•r ll1•n11•cl making llw
'latt>ment
Tht· nrxl day. tht•n Pol>r 1· Chn•f
.ll·,:-.t• Cur r) sa1<l 11n tl·h·v1:-.111n tht
FBI wanh'il 111 c·u,c..·r up informa
1 w11 that it Wal'\ av. ar<• of<hw;ild '
llf(•Senc·c in Dallas and hat! not
n11t1(1(·d 1>111 1<·<.· Jlt' retrat'll.•d th{•
'l;.itemc..•nl aftt·r Dull al'I 1-'0 I a~f·nl
in <·harg1· J eordon Sh;rnkl1 n
1'11a lien~'""111 m tu proH· 1t
In 19f~1 aml t!-111~1. the ~c·..._, 1 t'
1111rtt·d I f1x1\'l'r 11ril1·11·d Sh,1nklan
111 n ·jl'c-1 I 'urr } 1> 11•q111'1>1' f11r FBI
11ff1tTr' 111 n·...i11111• 11t1·ir ,,,,., • ., ,1.,
111l'l f r 11<·1tir:.. al 1 lw JJ.111a, 1'11111 ,.
J\1·ail1·111y f)llrt11~· 1111' 111·11111! 1111
l>:dla' 1iff11·1·1·\ Wl•fl• 111 \'lll•rf 111 ,11
t••lld ltll" ,..Ill '\';1l ll1l1i1I /\r ,11f1 Ill\ 111 w d ... 11111ii 11111
011 .1 :111 l~I I !•i#i 111111 \ 1 t ""11111·
"lt:J1lkJ111 llJ;,I ltll'll J);rl]<J• \l:Hlll
1-.r 1k .J•111-.•.t111 vl\1t1·1l him :111d
•J '>kl•(J \I; d l'>f 11\'I \hr· ,1·n1t1 ....
l;r1·a1 h 1,.·t·o1o•·tn 1111-. l;11re<111 :inti
I h•· IJallcs'> l'•JIW" [Jl•jJartmf•OI tf
''""' l.?Xl\t<,
I informed .\tcsH;r Jr1n''''°
·'°'la' a 1;rt-;ir·h ir r~l atlfln ' i.1.11h
• t •.-f ,.f Pr1!1< e r·urr:. anrl lt1., di·
~·J nmE>n' dr,e-"'=l'I lffl11\ 1·r
~ rr 't-
Cruelest eut
Ill boy's gift bike stole11
OAKI. NI> 11\ l'l 1'1•11 \l':ll 11ltl ~lomnn T111·kt'r ~11rr1·r'
hc•:11lad11•l'I, rn11srl1• l-lp;i~m ' aml pnm from ~1 bh)()\l 1llM•a't' "'h11·h
fnr1·1•s htm 11111111l1•r>!11 rl'g11lar hh'K1tl transfusmns
nut lw's 11\0I'\' 1111h11pp) 11ho11t somt.•lhtnjZ t•lst' lhl' thl'fl or
his ('hnstmas l111·vt·ll· Sol11n11111 ·~ lt<~I) w rrn 't prn•lt11·1• rt•d blood <'l'lls And an iron
uv1·rl11111I 111 111~ \'l'lllS al111111'I forrl:'<I ham to spend Christmas in
lht• h111>J>1lal. ~111 cl htl'I 11111111..r, Ruth T urkN lnstl:'a d , lht> hoy re
c·1•1\'t•cl 111:. first h11'y1·lt'. u nu·y hllwk and sil ver model, a gafl
from lus f111 11,.,.
Mrs 'l'tH'k1·r. w11r111·il h1•r """ 11111 lo lt•a\'l' the hike out.!>l<ll" 111
lt•u V(' 11 un lcwkt•il
"llow cl11I Solomon or I k111Jw Iha! IA c·ouplc nf had kuh Ing
11111·~ 1111 1111' c•11rn1•r nf ~.0\h 111111 Monllrello Wl'rf' gmnJ? to Jt•rk
my ~on rt).lht off 111~ 111•\\ l11kt'. throw him 111 th1• )!fllllnd and run
off w1I h It"" .slw a:-.k1•1I
llis motllC'r ha:. 11ff,•11·cl a S.':IO n •wi£rd t11 cat<'h "tl1111>l' m1•:111
k u\l' wh11 "luh• Solomon·, l11kt• ··
4 rescued
iii sea off
OcewlSide
ror :U hour~. Bill Price of
Ilana 1'01 n t and his three
hutlt111·-.. f1,fi••<l lhl• <1me spat off
lhl• t·oal'llhm· llul 11 143sn·l b}
t•hfll<'t'
II "ii:. bt-t·au'e l'ru:e :. fam1l}
I 111,11 ""a' r11l'l<i lllt•il .1 bout JO m u es
off 11( On•an~11fr
Tiu· IJan;.1 l'fl1nt man and his
1h11•1• pa.,c,1·0 j.!t•r' Jboard the
:!I lt">I rnt1torhoa1 ""l'rt' re-cued
\t111lll..1\ .iftt•r ... 1wntlin~ the na~h·
111-.I Ill 1lt•fl'l' fol!
I' r 1 1 1 • . :1 3 . m ;.1 n a g e r " f
•,111•ri ~ 1·111\ .tl'" co mp u~er
plan\ am\ 111~ thrt•t• passen)!~r ·
"',., ,. ,,M1\1 1•d al ,1hout 10 15 a rn
11\ .1 l S < ·oa..,l ( ;uarct IHI J F
, .. ..,,.ll•' h1•]f1·11p1 .. r, follov.111g an
.di 111a.:l11 ,;.,1rl'l1 h: lht· n 1\tt·r
1'111111 H1 "" ··r
(' 11 a .., I (; 11 a r d fl u h I 1 t'
1111111 111<1111111 Off1n·r (:arth C:roff
":J11l l'rw1· UIJIJ:tfl'ntl) bcc;,me
di...1trtl'nl1·d Ill tht• h(.'a\) fog and
1 on11nut•d 1·n11~1na.: unul the boat
• a11 11111 ••l l!:J' .\nothc..·r rl'port
1111!11 .tlf'll;, '1;11 tt·r m;.ilfunrt1on
(ii of! .,,Jiii lht-C"a~I C ~uard
\\ ,,, .1h·l1l•cl Ii\ Pnl'c ·s wife at
<.1liou1 !l :10 p m. Sunda) that her
hu:-.hand and his companions on
the hoat hacl not re t urned to
l>ana l'rnnt I lc1rhor whe re they
d t r.>•trtc<I th.JI rnorn1n~
c;1qfl ,,11tl .1 t·11mm£'rr1al
11-.lllll)! 1111,11 Ill llH' Clrt'CI the
...,l\'l"f.1 \\,,.. 'ontatt,·d tJ\ lht
< '11.l'•I < .uard t11 11111. Prate ~ boat
111 0 1'l'<.111wl1.: t;r,lff '>aid he dad
11111 k1111" 1f the• \('Ssel .... as
l'fPllPP<·d \\Jth .. \WI) \A(j} radio
Al l four mt:n wt·re reporte<ll;
111 good t·11nd1t111n despite their
111 d1'.tl "The\ wer(.' tired and
1·•1ld but in ~i><id he alth." Groff
.,111rl 111· -.:11<1 nnne {)( the men
n·qu1 rtd rnt·dw;1I treC1l ment
l...aw f•xt•~nded
\\'ASJllN(;TON IJ\P1 PreSl·
dt•lll < 'ar11•r ha1> l>IJ.(ncrl leg1sla·
1111n t'1C lt•nd1n1.: for thrN' years
I ht• f1•ilt•r:1I rt'\'•·nue sharing pro
~1.1111 for l111'al J.:11\<'rnments and
I''"' 11J111u lhc• f1101k for q<il f'
)'11\ ,., 1111w111:-for I w11 yc•ar~
<,,it I "I\' ) 11' I
'""" '' ... d1•.,1 lt'
\\'I I h 11111
fiM Jrwt'i.n C:.1nn> 1~17
d1.11111111d
\
'c •nd .1111 in
H l...ir.11 \ 1•1l11\\
g11ld . S:l:lO
f!1·1111111 "'
/1'/l'l'f I\/ "Ill/'
I /,w,· ''''"
F1~hion Mand, N\'wport (4!nter, Nt'wport 8t>A(h, 71411144 D80
w,_1m1Ml•r / I •11un1 11111' I Ml"k'° V1.,111 I Notlll Otanj\t' I fl\<t ( lly
I ('It Ct""'" It ""'' M•ll• Al'IO Grt'•l•r I~ Al\jWI•• /~<In 01t'jCO /I•• V«t1A•
Uw OM u4 ~lolll<''• r'Ofl"-"I <...,Af pl•M '" A-ft<•n '"""" Vl(;A Mui.r CIMrl!'
M""'lw' fmr jnAll'lrr, C.111/d
'
TRANSACTIONS
\ ' •
Dow Jones Final
UP 1.45
CLOSING 962.03
Connnon Market
entry of Greece
• • maJor action
BRUs.5ELS, Be lgium (AP> -Greece Joans the Euro·
pean Common Market on New Year's Day, t ying its ruture
to the world's tightest association or free nations
fl will be the first stage of an enlargeme nt process tnat
by 1985 Will add to the group Spain and Portugal. two other
countries that rid themselves or military governm f'nts in
the 1970s.
The entry of Greece as the 10th member of the Com·
mon Market signals not only t he country's willingness to
dissolve the frontiers of trade with its partners and we ld a
common foreign policy. but its commitme nt to the chief re
quirement for membership : democratic institutions at
hom e.
SINCE THE OVERTHROW of a colonels' dictatorship in
1975, Greece has been knocking on the com munity·s door.
Now. as Greek writer Helen Vlachos put 1t, ··Greece is going
to Europe ...
··The entry of Greece into the community 1s a m ajor
politic al act that constitutes a turning poi nt in t he Com mon
Market's life." said Gaston Thorn. who will take oHice in
January as the Common Market's chler e xecutive "The
enlargement or the Common Market southward is a key
date in the history of E uropean civihzatton ··
·nder the mechanics or entry. tanfrs between Greece
a nd the other nine countries will he d1s<>olvetl rn sta~es
over a five-ye(j r per iod
G REECE'S G E OGRAPHICAL )>os1 ti'ln as lh<'
southernmost and easternmost member of lht• communtt)
will add an important new dimension to tht ommon
M arkel's outlook. according to George Kontogeorg1s. who
negotiated Greece's entry and will be its representativf> on
.the Common Market Com mission
The.addition of thE.' Greek shipping fleet will make th~
Common ~arket the i\o 1 sh1pp1ng power an tht-world.
and the community will al o benefi t frnm <;reek haux1te.
nickel, asbestos and zinc minerals the Common Market
now must import . Konto~eorg1s s ail.I.
But like Britatn, Ireland an<l Dcnm ~1rk when they
101ned in 1973. Greece \\'Ill fate new <tnd spec·Htl problem!>
S 10 .. 1.t11 I n Tht-
.titpo lll9h1
NE W VORK Cl'Pi S.lr~ ,_,, Oro<• •NJ ""' ,.,..,., .. ot lhr ••tt'4'fn tT\O\t .,,,..,..
Hirw Yor., S1oc: ._, £..ct Pt•nQe-•\~~
tr.otng natK>t\alh1 •t mot• 01•n \l
LTV Corp IH 1100 •• • '• 8r•n1tt Int S'H tK>0 •~ B••• fOOO •11,000 1q-. ....
GtWnFln U ),000 tl 1 • "• ~~T~~·~ ~~ ~ .;~: '·
IBM llle ~ •" • 1 ~·r~ROPQ JO& 'Oii 'S Con~u Pow JO~ to0 I ' • Ral\lnPur ,.S 000 10 ..
Pti>S•CO 261 000 7•
fe&a<O In< 2M >00 '8 Amer T& T 73' lOO '8 • Luct.v SI• 72",100 •~ • .AmB<IC\I 21~,XIO 2b ..
Ip• a11d D own•
NEW YORI( f4 P1 Tnir to1tow1"'9 11,t
-ll'W •• Von S100 Ee<~ •toc:ll• -_,,..,Lt l!Wiall••• -· "" trw mrtt ...., do-llW ~I ... MO "°' 09rc.,.,t of ,,,.,.., rtJOardt•U of vafutnt
~. ~\""'!',:• ;r~~=~o,,':~::~~
• dttf..,..,-.c• cwr......-n thf> prt v•ou-' c tM•no
.... ,. -todly \ -o. •<• Ul"S
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Television TONluH r·s LATEST LISTIN
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.. WILOOMI~
•
(I) ..,,,... Wint ........
• cw "tMTI THI OIL.II•• .. 0-. ._.. ..
~....-.-.,... Id ._, Denny
Keye, JOflnny Metlll•. a.... .,,. CtotN. lfld
oevtci Hen"*' lield 10
benefit UNIClF • ut• LAW....1..-UV
Lenny end Squlggy
become oc>n1 .. 1en11 c>n
"TM DeOng o-" end
give out tlloe*lng l!'lf0tm ..
lion •bOUI l eWWM end
Shifley
• CAIQ. IUMITT AHO,-...,.
0-1 Chet.
• NOVA
"It's At>oul Tl.,.._" Ac;tOf
Dudley Moor• guldH
vi.-• on e Qu.tl l0t 11141 .,....,,."II of 11.,... -e con-
c:.pl wt1lctl haa long bet·
tied eei.<111111. phllOso-
~· end l*l9le -v· ""'*• a
()) ~·· PEOftl.E *'""' ~ w .. l\tng1on •no
'"'~ oec.oe l(i O-l
-11ec1 G•be conouc" 1 <:'-on ,.,.,, .. ~
M' a fell birdie ..00 9 Cl) MOVIE
.. The M•tlng Seuon'
(Prem..,•) Lucie Atnez.
L.urence Luckenbill A
temele le~ finds love
end eggrevetlon et e b<rd-
welchlllQ retrNt
to conw.ot ''*" to ••••
•eooor....
QO(CAWTT
Outl• v S N81paul (Pert
2 Ol 2)
Lur ll' rtiul und Laurent't' Lu ckinbill , as
:-.tru11lttl'I'~ m cl'tmg at birdwatching camp.
sta1 m movte "The Mating Season" at 9
ton1~ht on ('BS 1Chunncl 2> D MOYtE
• ITUOIOIU
"Aoc:k MUllC Coto11too
klde W1'11e 1111<1 rec;o1d lhftr
own roclo. tunH. iuven1i.i
OllinQuenll g11 • M<.ono
c;l\IOCe on '"* M1Mt HtQh
Aaneh In C1Ulom1a (R)
()) M'A'l'H
Rael., Qlll • "o.<lr John"
lelltr •• on a recOfd •"d
lt'MI dOCtOll lty to COfllltt 10
htl aaaltl•nce w•th • m•w
fl 8AMfY MILliA
'"''""' <1u11 tv '"" a11.,11~1a Ol 1111 n191\111ll) P••ft 1(0. .. 11
HIVAlll
I aANTTA
OVlA fASY
Ou•all au1Plu1 S1u1a
•••lo.•I. 11ut11t1<1111ot Or
M¥At •on N••ltitt tuuutymm'
• t.1 C•11tt11 l)
'11) MACHtlL / LEHRER
AlPOAT
~·) TIC TAC 000011
11.Gl MERV Q"IFF"IN
Gues11 lliy Tom1111. Lee
Gr &nl, Cet&1 one Valente
A man '"'' po11Ce ettlClen
cy by M111ng t .. M •let ma
end timing Ille rHponH
7·30 I 2 ON THE TOWN
FAMILY FEUO D SHANA NA
Guest 1'111<11 Mo<eno 8 HOllVWOOO
SOU A AES 1:00 r:ces ..wa' N9CHIWI
~OAYSAOAJN
Alc:Ne l\al a ptoblem when
~ expec;ta him to
get them free lockelS •or o
•OC:il conc;llt1
I MCNfWS
M•A•l0H
Hawtc..,.. •nd B J discover
Chet... IMng the Ille 01
GJ ALL IN THE FAMILY
A•ch11 1s caugl\I between •
sympathy and sell-preset-
v111on when tll• other
woman.. from his past
1 reeny needs hos help
tl'l> MACNEIL /LEHRER
AEPoAT
«l) NEWS
Claannt-1 Lbt ing•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angel!!'> D KNBC (NBCJ Los Anyeles
• KTLA 11no I LOS AN 1ele'>
• KABC· TV I ABC) Los Angeles Cll KFMB tCBSJ Sdn Diego 8 KHJ· iV (Ind ) Los Anqclcs
l.tJ) KCST 1ABCl San Diego
• KTTV (lno ) Los Angelr>'> .. ... ·I· KCQ.P iV tln.d.l Los An Ql!ll!5
KCET· TV I PBSJ LO'> AngelPs I!> KOCE TV !PBS1 Hun1iny1on Beach
h \.;
Undercover: (?) eops
Deputy Birdie Hawkins <Brian Kerwin >
meets policewoman Amy Botwinick in (of
all places) a mud-wrestling mat ch in
They're si~ing, swinging
and everythinging!
llt-Oy
llAll" 'llSI• OIS11119U1l()ll CO INC
CWCMln 111111 o-_., ~
~----NOW eHDWING -----
... t1m •n n tM ''"'""mm Brooknursl l01tt Edw11ds Ci~ema Saddleback Fountain \/alley
17141772-6U6 Centet1T141979 41•1 17141 SSl 5880 171418391~00
fllUIT• 11¥111( MlllCl llAllSl
f°'-WoodbrtdRt Stadium Ome In Orange Mall
(7U Jm ·4747 f1U>'>~l06~~ 1/1416397860 J /14>637 0340
-UA Cit~ C1nem1 t 71 C) ~34 3911 WUtMltlSTH UA Cinema• 114 1 8,J 0546
'
ti) P.M. MAGAZINE •IOO 8 THE WHITE SHADOW
S•l11n>I hlll •n opposing
pt•vet I" • betkatb•ll lree-
l0t·•ll and II Ch•ro-<I with
~rav81ed HHull
U L080
...
CSllHOn Premlete) Lobo IS
transferred 10 lh• Alfent•
polloe dep1r1men1, where
111s llfst eu1gnmen1
11\vo1v11t muO·wrellllno
end a credit cerd seem
D MOVIE
• • • , .. w1111e Witch [)oc..
IOf I 11153) Susen Hay.
ward. Ro~fl M11cnum A
mlHIOn•ry nurse In Africa
works dtllgenlly to ga1n the
retpec:t ot the natives
D HAPPY DAVI
P1olessor f'ont•re th
unc11a1 acter1111c111y sets
hlS sights on lhe tiolly con·
tes111<1 "Teacher ol the
Year · aw1rd
GJ P.M, t.tAOAZINE
Cl) MOVIE
• 8 't Rhuberl>" (195 t)
Ray Milland, Jan Sterl.,,g
A 1>aseoa11 team wons the
l>'llnnant under lhe owner·
sti1p of a cat fil 28TONIOHT
"Profiles 01 Power" Guest
businessman Nalhan Shi·
poll
Ci) NON-FICTION
TELEVISION
·Americ a Lost And
f'ound" Tom "Johnson a110
Lance Bud's documentary
es.am1nos Ille blllakdown
and ultimate rebltlh of
Amet1ca Our1ng the t930s.
1us1 alt er lhe Great
Depression (A)
* • 'A "The Boyl In C0tn·
p•ny C" t 11178) Andrew
Stev4ln1. Sten Shew A 1
group ol young Ame<IC•n
1oldler1 menegn too-....
come the '"'°'' ol Viet· nem In their own, sllghlly
ott~etmenne<. G THAEl!'S COMPAHY
Jack tekH • JOO working
IOI Jen41t •I Ille llo-
t llOP (R)Q
" COt.l.lOE BASl<ETMll
Les Veg .. vs Univt1tlily 01
Nev ad• ID MERV OAlmN
Gueall Liiy Tomlin, Lee
Grant. Cet11t1na Valente,
Pearl8eiley
«l) NOVA
"II s About Time" Actor
Dud ley Moore guides
v-• on e Quell tor the
me1n1no of tome •• • con·
cept which hu long b•I·
lied SCH1nt1stS, phllOSO•
phtlts end people f1'19fY·
wl>efe,o
9:30 D TOO ClOSE ~
COMFORT
Henry hnds b1nh control
pills In Sara's room and
learns Jackie has 1nv1ted a
sailor over tor the n1Qhl (R)
Q) FROM CHILO A8USE
TO PROPER PARENTING:
THE LONG AOAO BACK
A documentary of a real·
1110 abuse slluollor> wllere \l
mother is followed through
many areu ol counseling
toward re-asSul'l'\lng custo· c:!r of her children
tliJ VIAOIL THOMPSON,
COMPOSER
ln181VI-w1tll trien<ls. CC>-
s eason premiere of .. Lobo." Called
"The Dirtiest Gi rls in Town." it airs at 8
tonight on NRC CChannel 4).
You'll, laugh ... you'll cry .. .
you'll cheer ... you'll love .. .
"' --- ---"
• ,,
TUBE TOPPERS
lCHJ e 6 : 00 The Los Angeles Kings
meet the Montreal Canadiens in Na-
tional League hockey.
CBS 8 8:00 -Salami hits an oppo-·
n ent in free-for-all during game and
faces assault charge on "The White
Shadow."
KCOP ti) 11 :30 -Cowboy John
W~yne inf.iltratcs outlaw gang to gather
evidence m a 1934 Duke film , "Randy
Rides Alone."
workets end adm1rer1
hlgllllgllt • 111m potlr1J1 ol
Ille dlstlngu<llled Ametl·
cen compo-Who e.,._
br•ted Ills 84th blnhd•y In
Novem~ (Rt
10:00 I co HIWI O> A8CNEW9
CLOSEUP
l bduc:1ed OUI ol lhe Illy\ I
and IUd6enly r~· thoutand• ot mu.. 1w1y.
11:30 9 ()) LOU GRANT
Row bec:omea Involved
with a -..no 11
ObtMNd Wltll llnd1ng lhe I
hll-and·run drtver who
killed ,_son. (RI
II TONIGHT
Host Johnny C111on
Gu.eta. Angle Oick1nson,
0om0eLulM 8 PMONEA: CELL
Bl()Q( H
-·~.-., .. CCIPt Md moblMr9 to
~_.._<"I
-~-
tt:CIO. 1WUIKT --P.ople .__ Ille per·
-*"Y OI !fie ll\9'6c tlley
••-1nll· I TIC TAO DOUGH
YOU_,. YC>Ult UN
lk.lddy Hedlett IMMt I
men IWtlO ''""'tone'" pr1M11; • women of the
Yeu and • UCLA
C1-~.
• CAl'TIOMID MC ..we
11!30 8 TOMOMOW
Guetll: De\lld Letterman:
lorMet Child 118'1 Afl09le
Cattwr1ght, Lauten Chepln,
Jay No<tl\ and Peul Peter-
'"": .,.relller Waller "ki,..,'' Koweltlkl (R)
-~ * * * "Spawn Of The
"tort!\" I 11138) Henry Fon-
d•. Geotge Relt Outing
lhe ~ deys In Alellll.
~pWel .. tf"ltOtalt.•
oww the salmon indullry
I 'ltt:e THE MUSIC
MelllON;
IMP08l*.f
Tiie IMF •11ampts 10
eapase lhe undtmandll<I
dMllngt of • mayOf •nd
lhe polll~I machine that
controls him
• INOIPDIOefT
NETWOflK NEWS
The teletlOnllllp bet-
aeve1op1no coun1rlel and
Ille industrial world. locu•·
ong on Jem•k:.41 11 en
example with its economiC,
social and polltlC•I prob·
lema, 11 •••mined
• ~PIHOENT
NETWOAI< NlW8
10:30. N1WS
The lleff begins to reeha
that Bee sllll oontrola tile
pr11oner1 even though
ahe'a in 1ao1at1on 1
12:40 8 ()) MOVIE
• • .. The tmROllor'
11975) Paul Hecl\I. Nar>ey
l(elly A former Army 1n191. • IHOEPIHOIHT
HETWON< NIWS 8D PAE8lNTE
"Alro-Cerlbbeen Spec:lel"
6l!) FAONT LINE
In • tllm shot over • perlo<I
of 1 1 years, comoet cam·
t1tam1n N"I 01vl1 cap·
IUfH lhe hOllOll ol th•
lllelnam War from a front·
hne perap.c11ve (R)
11:008118())9 NEWS 8 HOl.L VWOOO
80UAM8 CJ NEWL YWIO GAME
• M'A'l'H
A smell l(Ofean t>Oy With
minor 1n1uries cepturH Ille
heerll OI ell In th• 40771h
ti) ONE STEP 8EYONO
"Encoumer" An t1rplene
p ilot IS mySteflOully
JOHN DARLING
'
e a A8CNEW8 0 JOl<E"'S WILO ID HOOAN'I HE.AOE.8
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·"T--
TV pulls plug on Disney:
A/ ter 27 years, series going off air
BURBANK CAP) -After 27
years of bringing s uch legends
a s Mickey Mouse a nd Toby
Tyler into the hearts a nd living
rooms of America, "Disney's
WonderfuJ World" history's
longest -running prime-time
television series is going off
·the air.
"We're not going lo give any
reason publicly." NBC public re·
lalion s vice-pres ident Gene
Walsh said Monday of the can·
cellalion.
"NBC is not exercising its op·
lion to renew the show," he said.
adding that the refusal "gives
them the r ight to s ell i t
e lsewhere."
THAT IDEA
drawing board
Productions.
MAY be on the
at Walt Disney
Disney studio telev1s1on vice·
president William Yates said he
has been meeting with all threi!
net works and hopes to announce
a m ajor commitment for next
fa ll sometime in the next few
weeks.
H e declin e d to di sc u ss
specifics. but Disney officials
have s aid in the pas t that a ma-
jor expansion in TV could mean
a weekly comedy and drama
series for the studio.
"Disneyland" premiered ABC
Oct. 27. 1954. was rechristened
"Walt Disney Presents " four
years later and moved to NBC
a s "Walt Disney's Wonderful
World of Color .. in September
1961.
THE SERIES IS generally
credited with improving the
quality of children's program·
ming -in a style that delighted
adults as well.
But the Sunday night tradition
stumbled into hard ti m es when
CBS began challenging its time
s lot with the hig hly rated "60
Minutes" news show
And while NBC declined lo
pinpoint the blame. viewers ap.
parenlly found t hat Mickey,
Dumbo. Thomasina and Old
Yeller were simply no mate~ for
Mike. Harry, Dan and Motley
The end came as no s urprise
to the Disney studio. however
Stockholder s were warned in
February that the series might
go off the air after the studio·s
contract with NBC expired m
f)ctober.
BUT mE DISNEY series is
not the only one scheduled to go
off the air.
The highly touted comed y
soap opera. ''Number 96" is be·
ing dropped from ~BC's pri m e·
,
time lineup. along with "The
Steve Allen Comedy Hour" and
.. Mart~ ... httle ister Osmond•s
first and flop~d attempt at solo.
The network also plans to dump
"(;ames People Play .. IS or-
f1 c1ally a t anCl•llat1on. at least
for the moment. !'I BC said it re-
tains options on the other three
!\hows and could decide. to resur-
rect thE'm al a lCJter date a fter
further evCJlualion
MIS S OSMOND AND
"Num ber 96 .. both leave the air
Friday, while Allen has his final
sho\\ J an 10 "Games People
Play" tS already ~one.
NBC made these decisions last
week as it announced nine new
series to debut in January in an
attempt to boost sagging rat-
ings
The network has fin ished in
the prime-time ratings cellar for
fiv e seasons
Meanwhile. at ABC. "Break·
mg Away" may be falling apart..
The series is on a production
hiatus while the network ~
ders its fate. A pilot and six
episodes have been completed.':
A I though praised b y criycs~
the series ha s faltered in win·
ning audience s upport since i~
premiere Nov 29. '