HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-01-05 - Orange Coast Pilot.-
'\ "4 I '' ' , •
..
D.etrolt, ·8 ..
...
Maine, ·20
' '
Bartfo~d, ·I 0
West. Virginia, ·10
Orange Coast, 81
Lab twin
birth
forecast
Morgan cuts
• prime rate
NEW YORK <AP>
Morgan Guara nty Trust
Co. today reduced its prime
lending ra te to 20 percent.
the lowest rate charged by
any major bank.
T he reduction from 21.5
Frigid
• air cuts
power
LONDON (AP! The world 's percent t·ame a few days
fi rst test-tube twins may be horn after most major banks cul By The AsSO<'iated Pres"
in Apritin Australia as a result of their rate~ to 20.5 percent. Record cold spread o ver near·
a development in the procedure and increased hopes of a ly all the nation east or the
for fertilization ou tside t he general decline in interest R ockies toda y , s talling
mother's womb. al'c·ordini.: to a rates. thousands or n 1rs. and causing
report in the British ma~azine The movt> came minutes critil'al power shorta,::cs in some
New Scientist. after the Federal Reserve regions.
The m agazine's correspondent Board reported substantial Citrus growers fret.led fo r
in Canberra, the Austr a li an dedines in the nation 's their oranges in North F'lorida
capital, reported that two set~ or money s upply where the the rmometer dippe'd
t wins are among nint: e mbryos below freezing. More than 8,000
resulting from ova rertilized out· New Yorkers complained about
s ide the womb and returned to C'Old apartments as arctic air
t he women from whom they Ch _ J _ sent temperatures diving. Car
cam e. The women are progress· ase e1uu batteries died and fuel linei:
ing normally at two Melbourne froze. hospitals. •th "We arc absolutely swamped
The report said the women Wl swpect with r oa<i ser vice ('a lls ... saj(J
were treated hy Carl Wood, a Steve Harwell or the Virginia
professor of obstetrtl's and L _ L • _ ~ L,. .. -R Automobi le A~s-ociation rn
g-y n ecology a t Me Ibo urn.e.:.s_-V ~i..1luJIJ..lUf,M-J-a.-*fl ... ~+.j.-,~~----R+e-hm"Ond . tren:ttrellfn'I .-
on as University who has de-pcrature this morning was a
veloped a procedure for rertiliz-Police arrested a 30-year-ohl r ceorllfideure(•s.
ing human eggs produt·ed by in-Santa Anan on stron~·arm roh A s pokesm an for AAA in
dured ovulation. bery chari;!es Sunday rollowing a 2 western Connecticut said 3.500
All four previous test -tube P m high s peed auto t·ha~e "t·a n 't st art" calls were re·
babies were born after eggs were th rough Cos t a M es a t hat t'eived Saturday and Sunday and
taken from the mothers during rulminated in a nash in south 500 between 6 a .m. and 8 a.m. to·
tt\_eir natural cyl'le or ovulation. Santa Ana day. the ma8azine said. It reported Held in Costa Mesa Jail 1n lieu The National Weathe r Ser vice
that Wood gave the mothers or $25,000 ·bail today is Will ie C sa id the cold weather was not
fertility drugs to induce ovula-Addison who a llegedly knocked a quite as severe as Sunday morn·
tion, the process by which a waitress to the floor in Vikki's ing, when r eadings were as
mature ovum is produced and Lounge, 1791 Newport Blvd .. m uc h as 40 degrees-below zero.
discharg-& from the woman's Costa Mesa. scooped about $75 hut was more extensive.
ovary. from a cMh register and fl ed Readings of below zero were
As a result , doctors in future north in a white a uto. recorded from the upper Mis·
can srhedule the time of ovula· Addison was pursued through s issippi Valley. through the
lion and fertilization in advanre. the city by Sgt. Tom Owen and Great Lakes region and the Ohio
the magazine said, adding that motorcycle officer Tom Warna'c·k Va lley into t he Northeast.
suc h predictability will make it as the police helicopter followed Record low temperatures for
<SeeTWINS, Page AZ ) the fl eeing vehirle north on the dat e were in numer ous
Bristol Street. cities. including subzero marks
Coast
Weather
Decreuln1 fo11iness to"
mo1Uy sunny Tuesday.
Lowa ton11ht mid to.upper
40I. Hipa Tuaday mid to
upper'10I. ·
INSl•E'IWllA~
Tht,. dtbGCt cot1Unut 1:
Iha.Id Brtat1 Sipt havt
pcllMd ..Ull *'orw m CM
8"owu' ~'!SH~ BJ . .....
Santa Ana officers picked up in Beckley, W. Va., 10 below ;
pursuitasthe rar spedintotheir Cari bou, Maine , 20 below ;
city, cutthrough a ser vice station Detroit, 8 below ; Hartford.
lot al MacArthur Boulevard and Conn., 10 below ; Portland,
Bristol Street, slammed into two Maine, 13 below, and Worcester,
cars there and the n turned east. Pa., 12 below.
pollcesaid. In North Car olina, where tem-
Addlson's vehicle hopped a peratures dipped below 10 in
divider three blocks later and most Inland areas, Duke Power
stalled, officers said. Santa Ana Co. warned of possible rotating
, police 1cutned with and subdued blackouts unless c ustomers
the suspect who, they claim, tried volunt.arily cut power conaump·
to take the gun of one'Santa Ana lion.
otricer. ' "This is an ·emergency," aald
lJ .s. military
readineM hit .
WASHINGTON (AP> A
Alex Coffin, a spokesman for
_ D~ke Power. ·:we·~e not cryln1
wolf."
Temperatures fell as far as 42
de1rees below aero SUnday -In
Old Forte, N.Y., in the Adlron·
dack Mountain• -and thl"
(See COLD, Pa1e Al)
--
.. . ..
Wl1'' 114 .. fhe right of wave?
An offshoJ'·e storm brought high waves
bet ween 4·!l feel along the Huntington
Bea('h pier Saturday a nd these early morn-
ing surfates shared one roller. Water tern-
peralure was a chilly 61 degrees. about the
same as a ir temperature. Choppy surf
continued Sunday.
--------
~ -.., -
-•.
-~-· ......... Snapper in fliglaf
As gulls wheel in background, Snapper dives off 30-foot
pier al Miami Beach lo fetch a beer can thrown by
her master . Snapper has been diving off the pier for four
months without injuring herself. After grabbing the can.
she swims to shore and is ready to go again.
Loan rate slide
spurs stock rise
NEW YORK CAP> -The
stock market rose sharply In
heavy trading today in an ad-
vance s parked by hopes for
• more than S2 billion In the basic
measure ol the money supply.
lower Interest rates.
The Dow Jones averaeeOI lo -
lndustrjals climbed 12.0S to
984.81 ht the flnt hour ol trad-
ln1.
The flpres were seen u a
sian that the Federal Reserve'•
credlt·tltbt.wlq In t_he c)Ollna
months ol t• had be&un to
achieve It.I desired effect ol re-
duclnt lnllatJonary pressures.
Galnen outnumbered IOHn
by cloee to a 4·1 marlin ln the Civil worken' over-all tally of New York 5'ock
II
English
'ripper'
captured
LEEDS. E n gla n d <APJ
British police indicated they
believe they have ar res ted the
m ass murderer knnwn as thP
Yorkshire Ripper afh'r a f'1''"
year reign of terror and lht· lug
gest manhunt 1n Britis h <·riminal
histon . -
Poh°c·e saHI today that triwk
driver Peter Sutd1r"rt'. a :15 H·ar
old marrie<I man, "oul'1 a 1~p(';1r
1n l'Ourt thi s artc•rnoon on
<"harges "relal<"d tn" thl' hrut al
murd e r s of 1:1 "ome n 1n northern t;ng1anr1 s 'Y 1Jrk:-.n1rc•
a nd Lam·ash1rt' t'ount1C"s
But they also said their qut!s
tioning or Sut<'l1ff<• ""had not tl c-
\'eloped as qu1 l'k(~· a:-. w1• had an·
t id µatcd · ·
Lia~son offlc·n Supt Fr.ink . ('-;-
'"The prc<·isc nat ur<· nt 1 he·
<'harges has not )'t'I hc•f'11 di'
cided and dis1·uss1on:-. are takinJ!
place between sl'n10r offi<·t,r:-.
"One c·har).(<' will rl'lat1· to ttw
Ripper serie!> of 1nc-1d1·nl!'. and
one to s uspel'led st11l1·11 c·ar
num ber plates ··
Asked if the H1pp<'r dwrg1•
would c·on t:e rn tht· a l'l11al
murders·. Mo rrill s aid .
··Probably, yes But I 1·an't :;ay
for definite."
He said Sutdirrc. who was ar
rested Friday night . was expt•ct
ed to appear before m aJ,!1stra11·~
i n Dewsbury. eight m 1 lc •-:
southwest of Leeds.
On Sunday, West Yorkshin ·':-
Chte f Constable Donald (;re~ory
said he and his men were
''absolutely delighted, totally dt·
lighted with the developments at
this sta ge." The police also said
they wer e "scaling down" the
Ripper investigation.
A police s pokesm an said
Sutcliffe's wife, Sonia , was also
being questioned, and the police
were guarding th e ir fou r-
bedroom home in Bradford, a
Wes t Yorkshire city where three
of the Ripper's victims died.
Neighbors said Sutrliffe was a
quiet, handsome man.,who they
believed worked ··as a 'long-·
distance truck driver. They said
his brunette wife tau1ht art
part-tJme,_ and J ho ha.d ..no
children. "He wu a very; very qui•t
man who went about his busi-
(8ee alPPEa, Page Al>
Ramona demanded
• I
HriOUI decline In the nation'•
defenM industry 11 Jeopardllint
U.S. national security became It
almOlt certalnl)' coUldn't = -,..apom produetlon fail Chief aunwaden-E~~d!';i:'!;~ •• bealll paf~-~Ved -lowered thelr-.n-• l..ttllF-~--
rates from 21" to -~ ~. WASHINGTON <AP> -..._..
WA.LI.A WAU.A, Wuh. CAP>-
-G.....W. haM 4etftbded llt
mllltoa for tilt relea11 of
Laverlt "Loa" Cummllll;I. a
I
lf war broil• out, a new report .. , ..
Tbe ltudj by a 1peelal p..a of
die JlouM Armed Servlcee Com·
mittH concluded tbat tbe
l)efeme Department bu failed
to plan well for def taH ln·
du1trta1 pnpaNdnela. -. .
KUALA LUMP.UR, Malaysia
(AP) -Tbe chief ol Mala)'Sla'1
.outlawed OommualatlartJ fGr a
quarMl'·cmturJ ad a leader ol
the party'• aaU·1overameat 1ueri1Uu "81 1urreadend to
autbGrttitl, the toYemm• an-
noueed tlOdat.
~
Today, llarpa our-., n.t dnt c.n.-,. ... to neomm.s
of New Yon eut lt* butc nee• a •.1 ,.n••UAJ-...UlH I•
blue-etpp lo-. to•.,. •. ~•••&..---1l•1•1111rtn1.a .a.D ........... ,.......,..
HopH tbat th reeeat t...U_,.
dowaturnla ..... nMllllllllt . 'l'bll"' .,..., .. 1.1 to a.a
..c:onUaue wen relllforoed dU pel'ffllCqe po'8U below wMt
mornlo1 •Ub 1'• hffr•I U.• prt19Wftt'1 IMMl1•t .....
Reserve'•-...... era iliiBlll Of ortalDallJ ........... •
i ·'
.A.mertea kidnapped from hll
obome In Guatemala o" Cllrt.tmu,. Ilia fflat.l•• ••~
S.•da1. C.mmla ... _. lolH, .............. ,..,.. ...
WaUa r••• waa a1Mh1N4 fromhll ................. . •
' Carter'• final offered pondered
1 RUT. Lebanon l AP I Th ..
• aov.,nm"' sa,y1 u 111
yi•I PH1ident Cart•r'• otrwr f« lhf' releaa. of th•
. hotlqes . h•~ tr•nllf"rrtld
thlW Amer1rans ht'ld •t th ..
lin 'l11n1ltr) to • new lOl·a
tiOa and. hat t1tkt'n full <'untrol
.t the other 49 c·•1>t• \l .. i. rrvrn
.. l1lam1<' m1ht•nts who M11ied
... tn t4 month~ •1o10
,,...,. , .... "'
RIPPER ·. • •
...... ·,:.1Ud 10ne 1Je1ghbor. 1Jav1d
• . ~ m1tn "l Just s aid ·Hello, ~er, no-. and again when I
aaw-h1m He"-.as ve r) quu:t, you
~ould sa) mysterious
"Ile often "orked late into the
night in h1~ ga rage on his c·ar
and ~omt'l1mes a friend came lo
hdµ t11m
Ill' kl•µ, tu himself but was
11\•t dhtant ! It.· and his wife
d 1tl11 t .!µµe<1 r lo' l') ·dO\'e) hul
•:a·•'-' \1.!:-. n<i 1mpre:-.sion of any
.... train l.1t-l\H~en tlw rn "
l'hl') k e pt th e ir home
h \'au ti f u II ) · u n c n e 1 i.: h lw r
'i.!ld
Polin · S!{l Huhert Hing anti
l'onstahle Roherl 1-lydes told a
nt>ws 1·onferem·c they arrested
The man Pnday n1~ht m the "'
light c11stnt l of S la•frit'ld . a
Yor.kslure town l'luse to the s ix
nt1e s in wh1 t h the H1µpe r
strutk . Although he never killed
in Sheffield, man) of his 1·1t.·l1m~
were prostitutes
1:he two polite offiters said
that during a routine cheC'k the)
found s uspicious licen se plates
on a parked Ro\'er automobile
They said after a computer
check of the C'ar 's registration.
they arrested the driver on sus-
pition of theft of the plates.
"It was just a spot che<'k on a
{'ar parked in a certain area
where prostitutes take clients."
said Ring.
(j regory said the man did not
re sist arrest. lie said a wom an
11 1th him at the time "is helping
with inquiries. but has not been
arrested." He d id not identify
the woman.
Newspaper rcµorts said the
poli<'e found a hammer. one of
the weapons used h~· the Ripper.
in the man's C'ar.
The hunt ior the Yorks hire
Ripper has c·ost nearly $10
million since his first killing. of
prostitute Wilma Mccann in
Leeds on OC't 30. 1975. The
polic·e questioned 200.000 people.
sear ch ed 30,000 homes and
<·hecked 180.000 vehicles.
The mass murderer k illed fi\'e
women in Leeds. three in Brad·
fnnl. two in ManC'heste r and one
eac·h in Halifax. Huddersfield
and Preston. all northe rn in-
dust r ial towns.
Because h~ first vi<'l ims were
prostitutes. he was nicknamed
after JaC'k the Ripper. who
butthered six prostitutes in Lon·
don 's East End in 1888 and was
never cau~ht. But the Yorkshire
Ripper 's last three viC'tims were
respeC'lable young women.
Police believed the killer was
motivated by a sadistic hatred
for women. He usually killed by
s mashing his victims · heads
with a hammer and stabbing
and s las hing them . with a
screwdriver and a knife. savage·
utitati-ng=thettt_ And tte ~
peatedly taunted the police with
tapes and leUers bragging about
his crimes and promising to kill
again.
His 13th victim was a Leeds
Univer sity student. 20-year·old
Jacqueline Hill. who was killed
Nov. 17 as she took a short cut
home on a brightly lit footpath in
the cente r of Leeds. After he r
m urder. women in northern
Enetand 's cities and towns
began going about in pairs and
groups for protection. Female
college students ar m ed
themselves with knives. scissors
and alarm whistles. Feminist
groups stormed movie houses in
Leeds and Bradford s howing
films depicting violence against
women.
Refugee slain
FORT CHAFFEE, Ark. (AP>
-A 28-year-old Cuban refugee
has been stabbed to death in
what authorities are describing
as the first slaying at the re-
fugee holding center here.
Another refugee was being held
Sunday.
Pnnw Mlru11ter Mohammad Ali
K. •J • • '• »pmn rnan. Ahmad A1ili.
told ·~ Aaloclat.cl Pr•• on Sun·
d•Y that the "U S response Is be
11111 111tud1t-'<I" 11Jld. Iran's reply
~ uulcl ~ · · •nnuu'ht't!d ltAl~r ''
Al141' 31ttd lJ S {'har~e d'Af
I 1tlrl'I ffrut•e l .• ~UQien, Voll lit Ill Of·
ftl·er V1t-·tor Tomseth and security
m1t11 Mic hael Howland had been
111uv.-d from the Foreia1n Miru~try
.............
'COLD CONTINUES
, Utica, N. Y. Fireman
Frot11 Pagr .<I I
COLD... ,,
mo rning it was 4 below zero in
Bos ton, 1 be)ow in Pittshurgh
and just 11 above in Raleigh.
N.C. ·
At least one death , that of an
unidentified m an found on a
Philadelphia s treet. was at·
tnhuted to the deep freeze.
In Cleveland. a bout 270 pa-·
ticnts were evat·uated from a
hos pital when a boiler blew up.
knocking out the heat while the
temperature outside dove below
zer o.
"We j ust totally d estroyed the
record." said National Weather
Ser vice m eteor o log ist Dean
Gulezian of the conditions in
Houlton, Maine, whe re the
m er cury s lid to 41 below Sun-
day. I
The icy storm system swept
into the Northeast on Saturday
rrom Canada, spreading snow
squalls from the Gr eat Lakes
and Upper Ohio Valley into
wes tern New York. Sunday's
frigid blasts were the icing on
the cake . -
Jet stuck
off runway
at foggy LA
LOS ANGELES CAPl -A
jetline r with no passen ger s
aboard taxied ort tne-paveme.nt
and became stuck in the sand to·
day as dense fog closed Los
Angeles Interna tional Airport to
takeoffs and landings.
Nobody was hurt in the inci·
dent. and the p lane. a United
Ai rlines DC·8. was appare ntly un·
damaged.
The jetliner. a "ferry" night
that was about to lake off for
Hawaii to pick up passengers.
went off the paved taxi way
because of the fog, United opera·
tions officer Frank Birch said.
·'The fog is extremely dense in
spots, clear in other spots." said
Birc h.
He said it normally takes a
"couple of hours" to free planes
under such conditions.
• ·w~ have to defuel or we might
damage the plane," he explained.
·'Ther e are 80,000 pounds of
kerosene on board_"
The fog, which closed the
airport at 5:45 a .m ., still had all
rupways shut down several hours
later. said operations officer
Philip Eubank.
In Tehran to "a more appropriate
place o( r esidence,·' the official
Iranian news agency Pars report-
ed Contacted by telephone from
Beirut. he told the AP Olis was
done for reasons or · 'conven·
1ence." _
"lt was decided from the begin·
ning that when the hostages were
delivered to the government. the
three al the ministry would also
be taken by the government ...
Azizisaid.
·'The other 49 ho~tages a re now
in the hands of the government.''
he reported. indicating for the
first time that the militants who
seized the U.S. Embassy on Nov .
4. 1979, had su_rrend.-re d control of
the captives as they promist>d to
do in NO\'ember whe n Iran's
Parliament set C'ondillons for lhl'
Americans' release . -
Erik Lani!. the Swiss am
bassador in Tehran. said m a.
telephont• rnter\'lew from Heirut
that he had hl•en told h\' the Ira
naans that the threl' had l>et•n
mo1·ed from lht• l-'ort•1gnMm1str)
and plan•d with tht• othl·1·
hostagl's <md that t lw I ran1 an i.:111
t.•rnment ha~ taken l'Ontrol of !ht•
t·apt11·es
Rut Lang \\host• g111·l·r11 nwnt
n•prt.'Sl•nts l ' S inter<'sts 111 Iran.
s a 1 d ht' h ad h l' t' n rt• f u s t• rl
Pl'rrniss1011 to visit any of thP ~)2
host~es s1n1·c_ lh_c Chnsuua1'
hol 11la' s 11 lu•n lw s a w tlw t hrc·t' at
tlw For'-·1,.:n :\11n1str)
"I don't know wllC'rt' I ht') <ir«·,"
Lang s;11d
I. a 111 L!1• n . T o m s t' l h and
11011 l;;nd IH'rt' at t lw ·1-·ore1gn
:\11nistr) 11h<•n the m ilitants took
m·t•r lhC' l'mhass,· and had l>ec•n
kl1J>I t hert' l'l't'I' S lfH'<'
:\ftt'r tht• <Jhorted attempt to
rcs1·ue the• hostages last April. the
militants s a i d the y hacl
l rans ferrcd I heir 49 prisoners to
01 her l'itics But the re was
Sj1t.•t·ulatum in Washington that
l he,· ne\'er left theem bassv.
l :he head of lran 's host a1-:e
negotiatin g t eam. Behzad
Na1·abi. said Dec. 21 the hostages
had been transferred reC'ently to
"\'cry beautiful hotels provided
11 1th l'omplete ser\'ll'es." The
other -19 hostages we re reported
re united for Chr istm as sc·n·u·es.
but it was not known 1f the\ re ma i nedl~Nherafterwards ·
l ' S_ offll'ials in Wasbington
said the' had no t onfirmation ot
,\z1zi's re port that the go\'ern
ment had take n C'Onlrol of lht•
hostages . But White Ho use
spokesman Jody Powell said the
re ported trans fer of the three
Am e rit·ans from the 1-,oreign
Ministry "does cause us som <!
r onC'ern." He sa id they "had been
under somewhat more fa\'orable
tonditions both m terms or rnm
mun1C'al1on with them and in
terms of the amenities whith they
enjoyed. "
There was s peculation I ran was
gathering the hos tages in pre p·
aration either to release them or
lo try them as s pies. somethinJ(
Iranian officials ha\'e threatened
to do if the United States failed to
meet 1ts<lemands .
Fl"'OMP,,..AI
TWINS ...
easier for clinics with limited re·
sources to offer routine test-tube
fertilizations.
The magazine said Wood trejlt ·
ed 160 wom~ last year . Five of
the women who became preg ·
nant produced two embryos.
Some of these have since abort·
ed. the New Scientis t said. but
two sets of non-identical twins re·
main. The firs t a re to be born in
April. it added.
The parents were not iden-
tified.
The world 's first test·tuhe baby
was Louis~ Brown. born lo a
woman in Bristol, England. on
July 25, 1978. The birt h followed
10 years of research by Cam·
bridJ(e University p hysiologist
Rob e rt Edward s an d
gynecologist Patric k Steptoe.
who have since announced plans
to open a private dinic for child·
le ss couples.
The procedure, also known as
in vitro (in glass> rertilization, is
used in cases where a n egg ~an
n o t be fertilized normally
because of a blockage of a
woman's Fallopian tubes. The
egg is removed and fertilized in
the laboratory. then returned lo
the mother for the nine-month
gestation period.
200-/~~t /all
TEaiPHONE kills worker
AlldepettlMRta: (714) 142-a21 PATTERSON'' (AP>--A
· CIHetfted Adwertlalnt: 142-1171 worker fropt Fresno ft.II iQP le.et ~Of'--PIC ......... 1-1------------t·-t0 Jiii'-deith when a steel arm.
c .... Meta; m-.. .. , tt ... 1 broke on a power line tower west Thomas P. Haley ,..........,
RC>Mrt N. Weed ~
M. Thomes K"vll .... .,
ThonHtS A. MurPhlne ..._..... ......
f-~.,a;.tes-H. Loos
AtlltteM ~Hit.,
. Ctnr1e11t 1Ht Ore111• E .. ,, fll11lllthl"t Ctt11,t11,. Ne _, ....................... ,......, w .... ,,.. lie lltNlll ,..., .. ,.,,.41., •• wltllt•t Uetl t l ........ """"""' ~.
~1 .. e1•:tt11Ne.CMttH1t11••' of here, Stant1lau1 Countv .............. llNCll: 1117S 8Ncl\ ...... ,,..-" sheriff's officers reported. . ~~~~JJr:&r.~ .. ~.: :=: The ~ctlm, Mark ,Jamea Hoff.
,,., M.• 111t111111.,; •r """ u.• 111t111111,; man, 29, had been repalrinl "'"''-" -..11111 ................. , . dama1e caused by vandals
,,,. ~ .... CM1t 0811• "1•· •1"' -" '' , .. ...-,.... at .wuilf.ment ln Crow · < ........................... ,, ,....1 .... "' ... ·~ ..., -°'....-c..e __.,.,. ~-...,_ -CanyClll, authori • uld.
llfl'""9 -................. ""Wiii ~ Th .-1..a-t Sund t •er cett• MKe. *-' 8Nc11, .._........,. e •c ... -ay wu a a
1uc111'eu111e111 "'.'.!:.It ,';~":t ="• Pacific Gu 6 Electric Co. tower =::=:.=-~~.n1urtnc.! carryint 500-mllllon -volt
,...,...,..,.. " .. ,.-...., .,..., ,.o. tran1ml11lon lln•• to Lo• ... '*· o.e......, c.i.._......_ ••••from ti1di"Oe~trtc ~-
VOL 14, NO. I ~ "* ol Wuhlnltae •
• Mid.
t
--·-···---
f)ff a11d r1n111ii1g
t\hout 8:iO S1111t lt1·r11 ( 0 id1fr11:111 ;1 111r11wr ,
t•om pt•ll·d 111 1 ltt· 11 111l 1•d < '<·n ·lw;d 1•:11"'· '
h<-·m•f'it IOK n111 S 11111f ;1\ at V:is l11011 h l:111tl
N t'\\Jl<>l't lh ·;11 It . \\II h f);1\ •• H.tl111 :i k 1 ,,,
c;ranada fltl h \\ 111111 111· !111• 1;11 1· :111d "
l'Olllld trip t11·k1 ·t '" 1111· H•1'111t1 11 1;11 ;1tli•111
\fl1·1 !''" 111L· "'" all to the nt('e. Babiraki
.• .11·1 , :111,1th1·r I his t 1m<.! a moC'k run
1.11/i t,,.., '·'"' .J rm:ithan. :1 !below) The run
1. ,, • ·1>'111 •1111·rl 11 \ I .1<10 \';rn and Storage
( 11 11f / 1 • llJI ·
1 \ ,I •
--~
-.i1 ....
Mentally ill abuses found
ATLANTA (APl Maggots
have infested the l·arpeting in
one Georgia hospital for the
me ntally ill. a nd s om e patients
have been sex_uall} ahused. ThC'
Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta
Constitution report . l'alling the
mental health S\'stem eonfusetl
and in turmoil. ·
In the first of a series <in
"Geor ~ia 's Mental lle alth
Mess.·• the news 1rnper s s a1<1
Tile casual Side of Rugby .
overnowding al man_1 rel.!tonal
mental heatlh 1nstitul1on~ has
rt>:rnllcd m µatJcnL abuse.
Thc report s a1<1 maggot~ l11·c<1
in lhl' carpet of a room used to
1·ar e for elderly patients at the
c:e o rg1a Regional lfosp1tal 1n
Augusta Apparently exC'remenl
l rom the patien ts was not
d eaned from lhc 1·arpet . th(• n •
port s aid The t·arpet has s1nl'e
hc•l•n repla1·ecl
100% cotton rugby shorts B"'1 pants;
available in colors ot red. white.
khaki. sky blue. navy, and gold.
Also, the classic bar stripe rugb>( shirt,
in a poty/oonon blend .
Reluctant
employees
at desks
:\Jon· than ~()() e'mplo) l'l~s who
\111rk tr1 tltt' (>ran gt· ( 'ount) I l<ill of
,\dm1n1-,trat111n. '' lw1 l' strul'tural
,..,:1rl't) ha-, l11·1·n 'llll'~t 11me1l. \\e re
;11 llu·ir 1h·~k-.. t11da1 hut the ir
l1d111r J.!l'OllJI \1 a :--..1 iii 11 a g ing a
mild t1;itfl1·.t'• 11:11•· t hl• \\orkl'r~
n· a~-.1).!111·d
It c• 1w1•-.t·nl at 1 ves I or t lw Or<Jnge
< 'ount) Ernpl1>_1 ('t'!> 1\ssoe1al1on
11 e r e fl.ti ~ s 111 g o u I f I ye r s to
workers in thl• liudd111 g 111 Santa
.\na 'l'hl· handout quesl11H1C'd the
Board of Supt•n 1:-.or~ · cll'<'1s1on to
kl'<'P ot fll'C'So pcn
Sup<•n 1!>ors d<·1·1clt·cl las t mont h
to shift alt µuhlir· m1·1·t1ng~ to tht•
nt·arl1_1 otcl llall ol ,\dm1n1strat1on
uni 1 I at le<Jst S'"1l,1(1_1100 11 ori hot rt•
1>.111 11ork 1:-t•11111p lt'lt•d on 111 ..
111'\1 ll\I' ~tor.1 liuild1nJ.!
Th11 ... 1· n·p:11 r., ;1n• ~l'IH•d1 tll'd to
-..turt lall'r tl11:-; month and lit·
I lll h lll'd 1111111rl \Jil'll
(ll 'E :\ n •prt•-,1·n1at11L·-. abo
11 1·rt· r•·qu .. -.tllll! trula) lh;..t llH·
1 •111nt.1 pr .. 11tl1· SI 11111111111 11ort h11f
11i-.111 .1111·1· for ;-.IC'fl 1wr-.1in 11 ho
"' c1 al\', Ill I It• l111dd1 11:.:
IH'E.\ 1;,.11,•ral .\l an.1 J,.!1·1· .John
:--:111 1 t·r--.;11cl l1Hla_1 ht:-g roup ~till
plan~ t'' ldl· ~· J.!rll'I ant·t· aJ-•am~I
t h1• r·ount _1· l.!Ol't•rnment hel'aus1•
nf u n~;i It· 11nrk1 n,i.: c·1J1l' I 1 t 111n~
\)\·~11111 hilt• lw -.<J11f a -..-..1w1;1twn
l1•ad1·r ... h;11l'1-111•n "mpl11) l'l'S lht•
1 h•11c·1· 11h1'tlwr tu n·prirl to 11ork
111 t h(• t1111 td 111;: llr· ~;11d Uw a~
•(ll'1:1l 11m".. 111;11n 11 1>1111'1•" 1:-. to
.11l11-..1•1111r k1·r,•1l thl'1r fl J.!hls
I ndepl'nd1·11t 1·11µ11 11·1·r1 111! 11111
:-Ult IHll~ l'l'J>Orll'd \I t '11unt.\ .,,
ltl'aa l., la:,l l;rll that• llH' lhrt'l'
1 t'a r old _ ~ !I rn i I lion I hi II 111 :\ti
. ·;n1n1str:.1l111n <fol'~ nol ITil'l'I ~t ar ..
t•arl hquakc· :-.:tfl't) r('(1u1n·ml'llt !'>
ltl·1·ausl' of a ta1·k 1>1 :,tnll'iural
:-up port
Thl· supt•n 1sor:-. han• 1n1t1Jlt.•d
1:11\ s uits a11111•d at re1·111 t•ra ni.: lh1
('llSt Of I hl' rl'JJatr!-. from hudrllllJ.!
<t rd11t<'l'I Lt• Ito.I Ho~l'
Alhert strick~n
O K LAHOMA CITY IJ\P 1
Forme r Speaker of the llousl!
Carl Albert was reported in slahle
l'Ondition at Oklahoma Mem orial
Hos pital. where he was undergo·
in~ tests. He was fl own to the
hospital Sunday and p la ced in the
coronary care unit "as a precau·
t1onary measure."
AL.:SGARAGE
56 FASHION IStANO
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
Mo11ey Top ' woe
LeKislatiire fa ces budget crunch
"l\\'RA"4fo:N'ro 11\I'• Ttw
19'fl Ill '"'1(11\littUI •• rC'lUI "'"' tu
"'ork tcxh1~ I 111·1n pr11l1h•111i. "'
t<>o h ·IA dc•ll•r., lo fund lttlollt' 11111
,.:ran11. ~ncl 111 .. 111 1111~ t.•..:1,.,J11tu1 ...
for ·• ~11('kt1111 1u 1·11 '""'111l1h , •• 111
Ot ht•1 , ... l>U('' t111 ... IA 1•1•k .... lit Ill'
;o.11 l'i1l1t .. 1 1itt10 .. 1 \Ollfli.: Ill th1· , ...
"'111 t.h .md 1111 "-ulunl.1 ) (,.,\
~ .• Jmuml 111 111411 Jr .., 101111 .. 1
Vrt''t'Olt•l11111 1ol 11" 111 "l'"'''tl
'tJl4• l•u1h 11•l l•.!J l h1 111·,t II'' .11
\ t"JI •
Hf .. \\ll Ill 1111 111!1'1\lt .... IJ'>I
"C'l'A, ~11 111n 1,1•d d1·1·11 IJU<1 .cl't
\Uh p,1rt11 lllttl h 11 J iii 111 li11 ,,I
!(ti\ 1•r11nw11111 tu 1n 01d ia tax m
I fl'ltltt'
qum and Stanislaus counties.
Fondse. who was seated dur ln~ a brid organizin~ session in
Dec·l'm~r. would be the first ~"' o rn rn legis lator to be re·'
rno ve~l by a re<:~ 78 years.
. -i11~ .ouster appeared to be a
:.
0\'1rtua l ('crtainty
Ai. lh1•\ l\J\ ,. for u decade.
lJ••111111•ru1i. , 1111t111l both h1>USt::..
47 :J:I 111 tht' 1\"iscmlJb and 2:1 17
111 tl11• ~·11<1tl' Hut an all1am·e of
ll1•1111hli1-.111i. untl ,·1m:-1en ·at1, t'
lll·11111, rut:-. hu:. he f'n ~a1111ng
..tr1·11i.:1 h a111t 111<1} "1eld a \'l'\O pr '"'' 1 "11 thinb lllaJIH'll} on Elt-<'ll<~n -mght retu rns gave ,~,1111. 1.,:-.ut·~ thi ... , l.'ar Fontlsc. a former San Joaquin
1111• f1r.,1 pn1l1lt•111 fa<·111g tht-Cou·nt) s uperviso r . an upset
\,.,,·111111\ \o\J '> 14 ht•lhcr tu scat 6~ \'ote \ldor} over Johnston. a
l>t'1no1·1,;1 l'ut1 wk J(1h11:,ton 111 lcgislatin· aide 1who outspent
11 14 , 1· 11t 1<c·putil1t·an At.lrian _him nearh 3-1
f''t•ll•hl· 111 the 26th Dis trl<'t. But a rt-count declared'"'
"hrc h ,.0 ,1.r., part~ of San Joa Johnston the w1gncr by 35 voles,
and a s·uµerior . C~Ji't judge re·
fused to disturb ttle result, sa~ing
burn the de1·1sion was up {o the
l.eg1slaturt.'.
Uemoc.·ratic leaders planned to
ask the Assembly t-0 seat
Jc1h11ston and unseat fo'on dse by
a majority \'Ole
Monda~. January 5. 1981 QAIL Y PILOT ,t.
•••
.J
method promising Bu t :\s st•rnhly M i nority
l.t•adl'r ('arol Hallett. R -
\tast adl'ro. had a two.front
t•ountt•rallal'k an ms1stcnt'e on
E11d of the wall
I l 1.1..\110:\1 \ I l'llll 11\1'1
.\ Ot'\I t.urr11n g pron•,., '' hwh
rt' la·:-. un 11·111p(·r<1t l.ll'L's ol :'1.l>utJ
llegn·1·:-.. 1·a11 tle·-.t r•" moll\ tox11·
d1t•m11·u l \\ ,J -.te•s · t'11111;11a1111i.:
th1· llt't'cl 1111 Ou1np111g 01 :-.t11n11g
lht' poison:-.. ~IJh.' :-.11·1sl s.· a.' s
D r .John i U tt·k :-. J r . a
f)h~ s11·1~I and rl:Sldl.'nl of J fl
U11·ks anti r\:-.:-.111·1all'S. s<.11<1 h1-.
firm ha:-. dt•\1.'lopetl a n 111
nnt•rator I hat produ1·1.":-. ''"
I r e m t• h t.' a t a n d n 1• a r I ~
ehrnmatl.'S ha1ardous 1"hcm1C'als.
sud1 as lhl.' l'linl'er 1·ausrng F>t'fl ·
lie :-.aul a patent on the m
c·inerator 1s pending. and the
li.S fo;n\'lrunmcntal Prote('t1on
i\J,!enn whu·h last ,·ear tm·
posed 'ne" rules on dis posal and
treatment of tox11· \\astes has
·been asked to \'1ew hurn tests
EPA off11·1als were una\'a1la
bit' for c·ommc·nt
"The theoret11·a l r esults rn
dic•atC' thut this m e thod wtll
sat1sf~ the ·six-nines· require·
l'TH'nl of the El'i\ ... said Oic·k~.
rt'ferrmg l<i reclt•ral rull.'s requ1r
m g <kstrudrun 11f h<Hardous
waste:-. to a h·,·el o~ .!.19~j(J99 or
one part per mlllwn
"Other te<'hn1ques an· already
being pra1·t 1c•c•d I or tht' mc·mera-
t ion of thcsl' s ulis tar11·e-;. hut
none c·omc•s dost• to orw µart µer
mrlhon ..
Yale to s~ll coin
to finance library
NEW 11/\VF.N. ('onn Ii\!')
Yale Uni\·1.'rs11 ,. sarcl a rare.
194 year old Aml·r11·an gold
doubloon will go on sale today
for $6~10.1100 to help finance the
1·onstruction of a nt!'w hhrary
The Brashc·r Doubloon 1s Ulll'
or onl\ St'\'en s lrtl<'k In !'le\\
Yo rk C'il.' golllsm1th E~1hra1m
Brasher in 17H7. The\' were the
o n I y /\ m c r i c· a n g ;, I d t' o 1 n s
cirt·ulat.ed hefon• the l ' S mint
was estahhs hl.'d
l 1 \\as tlll\'\'l't a111 how th1· hurn
111g pro,·t•:-.:-. \\ oulcl 1·11rnpan· rn
1·11st to 1·L11Tt•nt nlt'thods for t11s
1111s111g 111 hazardous \\ aslt·s. hut
ti "a:. l'\.1Jt.•1·1t·d to tw ll'"" l''<
IH'llSl\'I'
Thi• t-:1'1\ <Hloptetl stnl'l rult•s ·
.L!O\'t•rn1!lg dtsposaJ of toxw
l'lwm1t•als after chs1·0\ e r1es ttmt
many "a~:tt:'s '-'<:re hein14 cl1s
1·anll"cl unµroperl). threatemng
\\ alt•r s11µpl1e s anti pulil1t
lu·alth
U11·ks . .,aul l11s l'Ompany was
dc•,·el<>plng the huruing µroress
for llolltiy Eleet.rit Corp of
J a t·k son'vtlle. Fla .. whil'h
st'r\'ll'L•s 1 industrial and ulllit v
pown trnnsforml'rs He saHI the
prot'ess works h~· striµping eh.·t·
t rons from atoms that make uµ .
the ha1.arclou:-. da•mcials. lireak-
mg lbc·/r l'h<'mlt <tl bonds.
The .Jat·k s onville firm 1s
t•sµt·1·1ally mtl"reslNI in d1spos
m g of PCB. or µ<11.rt·hlormated
h1phenyl. om·c popular as an
elt'l'l l'lc<tl tram.former l'OOlant
hl'fon· a l!nti fcdE·ral law han11eli
its manufat·ture The C'hemie-:.11.
whll·h has been linked to t·anl·cr .
IS fv USe In many transformers ·~e qu<tlitics that madt' PCB
attradi\'e a s transformer and
hydrauli1· flu1cl also l'Ontrihute to
its ext raordinary 1·hem1t·al
stah1Jity. makmg it h ighl) re!ilS·
tanl to deactivation in conven·
t1onal intrneration pr ocesses,
Di1·ks said.
"/\lthou~h there is still some
testing lo be done, this process
promises lo solve the problem <if
rl1sposmg of many lO)(rl' organic
wastes al a fraction of the cur·
rent 1·osts for d1sposaJ or im·
puu ndment." said Lyn"o111I
Hollt•}. president of thl.' Ja1·kson·
,·rile firm.
"T~s holds out thP \'Cry real
p11.,-;ih1ht~ l1 f rt•rlU ('lfl g tilt:
h a 'I. a rd o :1 s w a s t l' t o s t s t o
t\merit·an ut1l1t1cs and
1udustn cs, while al the samc
ti me. a t•hie ving a le\'CI of
mall'rial destruf'tion lh<tl will
not harm lhl.' en\'ironmenl "
a t" o tlurds majority vote. the
tons t1t11t1onal rt•qu1rement for
"expd ling" a member. and a
\'a II I or <ill i\ssem hly in vcsllga
lion of alleged irregularities m
the n•t·ounl She s aid Fondse
wou·lct Stil• ifhe loses his seai~ --
.Johnston's lawyers sa y legal .
a uthonlies limit the definition of
"t•xpelling " to a tl1sm issal for
m 1 seundu1·t .
i\lso this '-'el'k. Assembly
Speakt•r Willie Brown is to an-
nou}lt'l' t·omm1ltee assignments
H e a l read y has give n
RC'puhli1·ans six or the 27 ('Om·
mittC'c l'hairmanships. and has
promised them two t·ommittee
memhers for C\'Cr\' three
Oe m111·rats. ·
I.a" 1•nforn·mt•nt anti t 1vli·
liberties groups wt're anxiously
~1wa1trng the rnakeuµ of the i\s·
-;em lily ( 'nmmal Justice Com
m1ttel.'. 1Ahost• hhcral majority
has ktllt•<I 1m1>ortant polit e
lo;H"kt·d bills rn lht' past. Brown.
'' I 1 hc·rnl. ::-.a~:-. Ill' will aµ1)(}mt a
l'C1m 1111ttet· that n •flet·ts the fu ll
:\:-.sernhl~ ':-. \IC\\ s un ,c-r1me 1s
suc:-.
l.ittll' lt•gislat1on 1s likely to be
taken up this WC'ek . hut one
measure that c·oulrl reat'h the
Assembly floor would prohibit
ghost \'Oting, the pral'lice of let-
ting /\ssembly members push
the voting buttons of other mem ·
hers \\ho arc away from their
desks.
The resolution was sµo nsored
I)~· Dt•monallc· l<.·aders under
pressure from Hepuhl11·ans <1nd
an anti.ghost \Oling c·rusacler.
Hal·ph Morrell of Dixlm
Dl'fl.'ndt•rs 1,f ghost \'Olrng note
that i\:-.semhl~ mcn'ibers often
an· ••llt•nchng 1·ornmittec hear·
ing::-. or wt1rki ng on legislation in
I hi.' St·1iatl.' during /\s~cmbly
rtoor sc·ss1ons, and lea\'e instrU('·
lions cm hem tlwy want to vote
One drink too many?
Stewardess fired in dispute over booze
MIAMI (i\PJ /\fter Eastern
Fltght '101 was hijat'ked hy three
homesick <'uhan rt'fugces. flight
atten.dant Carolanne Hay tind
otht•r c·rew memhers relaxed
with passengers in a lounge at
Ha\'ana's Jose ~1art1 Airport
A passenger ordered a drink
for her , Mrs. Ray s aid She s ays
she pushed it aside. an<l orrlerecl
c>rangl• sOfla µ<1p instead
But a few days after lhr> i\ug.
2fi IOl'lrlent . Mrs Ray. 2:i, w a~
<H'<·usl'cl of drinking whrle on du
ty an<l was fired
:\1rs. Ha~ sa~~ the al't usatwn
is false lier c·ase will go hcfore
a la lior arlutrator 011 Tuesday
"' I•
The n1i.:ht attendant and her
at tome~ sa) the punishment
clocsn't f1L lhc allegecl inrrattion.
L'\'l'n 1f she had ttiken the drink.
The h1Ja('kers had threatened
t hi.' 2<!8-passen~crs aboard the
Nc.·w York-to Miami rti1':hl with
g:cis olrne homhs
The dis mi ssal was "out-
rageous" and "unr easonable".
says /\Ian (;rcenfielcl. who was
hired hy the Transpor t Workers
Union to r epresent Mrs Ray
"I don't think. at that pomt in
time . that anyhocly was thinking
a bout cnmJ1<1n,:y rules and reg·
ultitions ... <:reenficld said
"Did she say sh<' was drinking
o n duty"'! a s ked Eastern
s p o k esman Ballon Ja m es.
"That 's <t ver y sore point with
the company.··
Officials at Eas tern which de·
mands abstinence d uring work-
m~ hours -from its executives
on rlown declined any further
cdlnment on the case.
"l d rink milk." sa id Mrs. Ray.
who shares an apartment on
Key Biscayne with her husband.
EmiliQ. "I have one unopened
bottle of wine in the }louse -
that 's all. I hardly drink."
The four-year Eastern veteran
claims she was fired beca use
her super visor didn't like her.
"It should be obvi()us that in a
company the size of ours. that
weuld not be a reason for firing
Bactrian camels. the kind with l wo humps.
stand near the western end of the <;real
Wall or China . on the edge of the (;oh1
D<.'sert. Although ('amels are eommon in '
the area. this trio "as brought in espel'ial,-
1) fur luurists.
·Tax ·reform target
Lungren setting priorities for Congress
By PIDL SNEIDE R MAN
Ol IM D•lly ~llol Sl•ll
Tax reform and changes in
i mm igralion law were to he
among US . R e p Dan
Lungren's personal priorilt<.•s
when the 97th Congre:-.s 1·on
vened in the nation's l'apital
Hut one of the most mter e:-tmg
po l it ic al dcveloµment s tCl
emt>rge in the l'Om1 11J,! months .
Lungren prediC'led. may be a
s howdown between Pr esident
e I e c· t Ro 11 a I d H e a g a n ti n cl
Thomas I' "T1p " O'Nc11l Jr .
Dt•mo('ratw majorit ~ leader 11f
th ... lloust.•
Lung r en . a Repub l itan
representing wester n Hunt
ington Beach. Seal Beach. Long
Bea('h and portion s of adjacent
c· o m m u n 1 t 1 es . o He r ed h i s
forec·ast in a New Year ·s
telephone interview from his
Washington office.
The congressman observed
that as Republicans lake control
of the Presidenc·y and the Li.S.
Senate, O'Neill will be t•onsolidat
ing his inf l uence over the
Democrats' remaining power
hase. the House.
According lo Lungren. O'Neill
already has attempted to deny
<;OP congressmen some key
c·om m ittee setits.
"I suspect what will hapJ>en
will he a confrontation hetwt!en
Reagan and O'Neill. .. Lungren
said, -
"If that docs happen. I think
the loser wi ll be O'Neill because
Reagan better represent the
thinking of the /\meri<:an ~eo pie_..
The c·ongr essman said he
hopes the Democr ats will gi\'e
Reagan a chance to im plement
some of the programs he out
lined during the presidential
campaign.
lie admitted the Congress as a
whole ha:; some great t•hallenges
ahead.
"l'robahly the No. I issue will
be what to do ahnut the
et'onomy." said Lungren who
will rnntinue to supµort <t major
Lax oul to relieve the a\'erage
''
~-.. 0 1111tr Pilot S•4•i PhOto
FORESEES CLASH
Rep. Dan Lungren
,\ml.'rwan \\t1rkc·r
lie s·aicl ht' \\ill pn·:-.:. f•1r C1d11p
I lOll or lht• Kl'rnp f!c1th plan.
wt11('h y,ouJcl n·du1•<· ft.'rlt·ral in
\'c1ml· taM·s h~ ;II) pl.'rn·nl ,,,·er
lhf'l'<.' ~l'Ilrs
To aul lht· nal11111 's rndustrH•s .
Lungren said he· \\ rll "ork l•ir
c·hangl'S 1n la'l:1tl).! formula:-. r•·
lated to µl<111l and equipment
dcprc<·1at111n that "di help put
J\ me ril'an ma nut al'I un·rs on par
w I I h .J a I>,, 11 (. s l' a fl d w I.' ... I
(;l.'rman 1·ninpet1t11rs
"l t ·s nol so rnul'h thil t
/\meriean husincss l'an't rom·
pt'te." ht• said "II '~ jus t that
1hcrt· an• so man\ cl1s 1n1·cnl 1\t:~
to c·ompetit ion ·· ·
Lung n·n '>aid lht.•:-.t· -tax rt'
f o r m s \\ o u I d e 11 1· o u r a g <•
Amt.'ri1·an <·ompantcs to up~raclc
their equ1pmt·nt and modern1zt·
their plant::-.
B('J,!t11nmg 111::-. "l't·ond term in
the llouse . tht· t'ongressman will
(·onlinue to st•n·e on the sub<·om
mittce on 1111m1grat1011. n:ful(<:t''>
and 1nternat11111a l l;n•.
In this l'<l'iJ<tl'it~. l.u11gren saicl
tw ,will work for c·xpans1011 of the
Bvrdt'r l'alrfll f11n·1·
JI (· pn•<l1\'11•cl that 011);!0111g
(TllllOlllll' )'1'11l1J1•111S Ill .\f<':d1·0
"Ill pro11w1 :1·c·onl111u111i! flo,, ot
ti I t• g ;ii a I H' 11 s I o nw l · n 1 tr·cl
Sta11·:-.
l.ungn•n :-.aul lw \\ 11ulcl :-upport
a guest \\orker pr11gra111 tl1al
\\ 1111111 grant s pc·1·1al \·1o;as to
SllC'IJ IJl'l)jlli'. allc)\\ Ill).! tlH'lll to
work m till' l '11it1•cl Slat1·o; lor UJJ
10 s ix m1111th s 111 :J c·al<'ridar
.' t·a r
S11111m111g up 111-; r11n·1·ast fur
I ht· !17th l'oni.:n ·s:-., 1.u11gre11 1ih
s 1·n 1•d ·· 1 ·111 1·aut1ous l) 11µ
ltrn1sllc· Tht· p11t e11t1al 1s lhl'rC'
for tlor11t..? o;onll' i.:11ocl thmgs Uut
wt"ll h~1\c• to '>l'c· 11 l ht• will is
then •
·11 tlu· t\drn1111s1ratwn <JC1~
ii ,L!j:! rt' SS I \'Cl,\ and the ( 'Ong'rCSS
al't:-r<>spons r hl~. I think 1t will
h;qipt•n · ·
Reagan t~,on 't
quit club
S:\:" FH.\:-:<"ISC'O 1A P 1
l'rt'::-.1d1·nt t•lc••·I Honald Hcagan
ha-. 1111 plan:-to n•s1gn from Ill'·
all 111all' B11t11·1111a11 ('lull. a11 ex
1 ll1 sl\1' San Frant·is1·o·ha11ed
j.!roup fa!'lllJ.! "l'.\ dis1·rim1nalioll
1'11arg1•s. a lli'ag.111 c;pokes111an
~:l\S
.Jot> llol mc:'s <;111d t ht' forme1 ,
('al1l11r n1a )!i1\l'l'IHll' \\ilS un
a" art• tha t Lile• s t al t• fo'air
E m µlo~ 111t•nt and !lo using
De1rnrt mc·111 had lorlgt·rl dis
1·r11111na1or~ h i ring • h a r ,&:f's
against ttw dub Hf'agan wlll <1c>
c·1dl' \\ht•tlwr lo rc.•s 1un from the
group wht.•11 th<' l'h<irgl's are rt'
sol n·d. he arlrletl
\ forywrs hts favor it<z.sh1rt,
mddQ. In rine__a ll cott.on I
wiLh qa l.hQ rm sleaw.s
a nd Tong tad s
ava1 \ablQ m a rainl::x:iw
of 18 di rfcz,nz.nL oolors
' '
I·' . 11 ,:
'•
:1 · ... ,.
·-~1tm e-tn>d y. '• r e·s po-n<rrr---
supe rvis0r Irene Baljet .
.. -
-
CAROl.ANNI MY HOLD9 Ll'TI'lf'8 ON .... "RING
............ dl1Cha'91d for ..... d drift~ Oft Job
-· "·-.'
Mrs. Ray also complains that
she wasn't given a chance to telJ
her side of the story after fellow
flight attendants reported the aJ.
leged drinking incident. .....L.Llfhey-dittn·nvn ca-umeu;;---
and say, 'Did you?'" Mn. Ray
siys she's anxloul to IO back to
work -for Eastern. "It'• a heavy ematioaal thlnl,
1etttn1 nrect," ahe said. "I'm
used to beinl lndepen4ent -I
have pride."
I I
'
44 R.uhio n Isla nd• Newporl B«lCh•71.f/644·50 70
1001 ~srwe>O( Blod.·~sbuoOd Village•2131419·7721
.,
•• , , .. . . •
• '\
~· J..uery •• ,., NATION I WEATHER
r .. ••••• .,.~• •• p .. i ...
····~ Te•
• security c anges
Harp•l•e
Is something ·falling?
LONDON aaaoc;a D&n. lacreuuialy 1harp re port.a.._"-.., n1•bUa1 CMll vi our eo.,nty Seat up in San-
ta Aaa aua-tinl that l.M MW Hall ol AdmiDiatration I• ln
a haUava ah..,.a AU .. •UoN .,.. that h'• •.threat to life
and lunb
· Al lut report, the county, nnplqyeea .uaocl~tioa .wu
ur1tn1 U.1 membe,.. aNl&i*I to U.:. new hall DOt ·to report
lb the ~ Wall outalde Let ·some 1uperviJ10C· flnd you
• t ard table fw • nearby lawn where bureaucracy can
ttM!n iWOCWd · nu.a dUUncbn•hon by county workers lo ent.r the hall
wu trtuered by • 11upervU10r1&l pr~lf•ll wherein the
COWtly Board decided The Putwc (that means you r•auJar
peopleJ shouldn't be allowed inside the ques tionable
wallwurb
COVNTY .:•rwvt~ lhus reasoned at 1t isn't safe
eobugb fOr us ordinaries. tht:n at surely would be a hazard
to the &rms and leg~ ol government
It w.s l•ter uplamed by Supervisor Ralph Clark that
lhr coocern wa:. that lhe regular c1hzenry would get m the
..,_.) ol work new:. shurtn~ up the walls of government:
nut Lhli1l lht:rt: t!JU~t.s uny danger per se
Ttul> 'liiirll µrotwuncement came a bat too late to
~outhe Uiu>e uµoo tht: 1·ounty payroll, .but it was still a good
try
'l'hrou~hout all tht!t. I have personally fretted about the
d1:.Lingwshed members ur the Fourth Estate. my fellow
hacks. who arr also housed an offices within the dubious
witlb
IS AN't'IJOOV &.:ALLY worried about •.heir health,
safety and welfare'' Probably not.
County bureaucrats mulling shaky b4uepnnts
It could he noted that the good newspaper people who
sn1bhle rtown the anticc; or our county government are
located on the bottom floor. That's beneath everything ex-
cept basement parking.
None or their offi ces. near as your correspondent has
been a ble to det~rmane. have any windows overlooking the
real world outside If things start dropping off the ques-
tionable edifif'e. the m inions of the press won't even be
ablf' lo delt'c·t the droppings -until maybe it's too late.
IT MUST BE ADMl1TED that there is precedent for
the press being located in the county offi ces nearest to
Lud fer . ln the old county courthouse. the hacks also
hac·ked away in the basement.
This press basement had more relation to Lucifer than
just location. In the summ ertime in downtown Santa Ana.
the county press sector could get hotter than Hades itself.
Flies had enough sense to stay out of the place. That base-
ment wasn't a press pool. It was a perspiration pool.
Listen. you know how hot it can get in Santa Ana?
Other places they talk about frying eggs on the sidewalks.
In Santa Ana. you just toss the egg across Sycamore Street
a nd when somebody catches it on the other side, it's
already hard-boiled.
THE OLD COURTHOUSE basement was about 12
degrees hotter than the sidewalk in July or maybe August.
Today. the old courthouse has also ~n declared an
earthquake ha?ard. so it's tough to ftnd a county govern-
ment building these days that isn't suspect of something.
Of course, the suspicion here is that the old courthouse
basement isn't any better or worse today than it was in the
years when the press languished within it.
Now the scribes are in another suspect lower floor. But
at least they have some air conditioning. They can go in
comfort.
WASHINGTON (AP> -Hod-
cllal Caner Ill may well have
writtm the epitaph for Pr•ident
Cart.I''• foreip policy when be
uid the bureaucratic fi1ht
bet ween Zbi1niew Brzeslnakl
and the State Department pro-
duced a "Tower of Babel" that
had many voices purportin1 to
SHak for the U.S. 1overnment.
Hodding Carte.r, chief
spokesman for State when Cyrus
ft . Vance was secretary. calla
the national security adviser a
"rat t.errier" and writes in the
February issue of Playboy that
the president should have told
him to "shut up." '
IT IS THE LATEST and
perhaps the loudest shot yet
rl red in the bureaucratic war
that has been· going on between
the State Department and the
National Secur ity Council, now
headed by Brzezinski. since the
NSC was elevated Crom obscuri-
ty in the Nixon administration
by Henry A. Kissinqer .
The council, formed after
Wo rld War II. is the Whil e
• House organization responsible
for gathering and channeling in-
telli~ence and foreign policy in-
formation to the president.
The fight between the NSC and
State real·hed its peak last
spring when Vanct? quit as
secretary in the wake of the failed
attempt to free .the 52 American
hostages in Iran.
Bnezinski recommended the
military mission be m ounted
and Vance opposed it. Carter
chose Brzezinski's view, and the
soft -spoken Vance submitted his
letter of resignation afte r dis-
covering that the raid had been
approved at a meeting to which
he had not been in vited .
. Though Vance indicated lhe
raid decision was tile chief cause
of his departure, there have
been persistent reports -which
he has done little to dispute
sin<·e leaving the administration
that he and Brzezinski were
em broiled in a running battle for
s uprcmal'Y throughout their
tenure in the Carter administra-
tion.
Flags flying
despite acts
of vandals
LINCOLN. Iowa (AP> -This
central Iowa town of 197. forced
by thieves to abandon its display
of 52 American flags to honor
the hostages in Iran, has the
Stars and Stripes flying from its
telephone poles again, thanks to
donations from as far away as
Denver.
T he Commercial Club and
Amvets. which started display-
ing the nags more than a year
ago, gave up the program
several weeks ago when the
eighth nag was stolen. They de·
cided they could no longer afford
to replace the flags, which cost
$45 each. ·
THE LOCAL American Legion
club donated $250 and donations
were also coming in from
around the state. By Thursday
they had $375. The American
Legion club in Denver sent a
nag.
In special ceremonies. Vivian
Homeyer of Wellsburg, sister of
hostage Kathryn Koob, thanked
the group that gathered on the
cold, windy day for their
generosity and support.
"IT WAS A terrible· day we
had to take the nags down ... said
Bill Schadt, who helped put up
the original flags after seeing
television reports showing Ira-
nians burning American flags
outside the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran. ·
Mercury hits 21 below
Cold weather records /all in East
ll .. 't.S-•arw
A nvrnber Of r f'<Ord\ for cold w•••.,.,. ..-.. Mt SUnc»y for .tn .,.,..
•lr•t<M"9 trorn ""'1t.rn Mlrw•oote
•nd ti.. Gn .. Lok" to H .. Entl•ncl
llHdl"lll -·• a.-rero •<ron mutll ot ti. er•. -t lrOftO wlnclt
lrorn Ylrgl"'• "' IO<llt.rn How Y«k
•11d ,,__n ...._ Enot--II .......... <~. , ... ,. _,.. -<loom .... , ,,.
Mld·Atl...Ck C:0.fl S.-wet Ket
ler•d .,.., nor1-.. Mlclll--..,.
•-•• G<Nt L-. lt•et t..,..yo,..r Ill~ HutMrft Plel111. There ... ,.
<lo<ld• .... , IMerlllk• Md lltflt -
In ,. .. ..,... Henll Oellote. Muell of 'IW
arH trem .,. ltoc-lft '""'•erd wn <t-y.
Albeny
Al .......
Amarillo
Alfte•lll• ,., .... ,.
Atlante Cty ••111,,,_
llrm l"tflm
• , ...... ,0
NA'hO..
Ml LO ·J .IJ
S7 t• u" 2' ll •t •
11 u " .. ., "
" It
H M
.. 42
71 0
s.J 21
60 lO
IO • 62 M
11 u
11 u M H ., u ,, . ,, u • • ., a
" ff ,. a " .. .. ..
11 • . '7 fl .. . __ ,.,_. t.'-1:
.. st ....
0 D .. .
......... c.a1 .......••• , • .,,.,.,
H.itMlft ..... l'WIWlll._..., ... .... .. ..
l-I IMteMMlca I ~c-ty : °"""' lllr T ....... : L ... Cf1M91,
... -• I • •
... .... ti
ti ff ..
.......... .... -.. t .... t a w f • w
I • W
A~w1 ..... 1 ..
QUIT IN HUFF
Cyrus Vance
P r es 1 d c n t l! I 1• c t R o n a 111
Reagan and his top a1l v1ser~.
dismayed by the furor .-.urround
'ing Brzezinski , ~ay the situation
will be diffe rent in the tww a1J
ministration Th e national
security adviser'!> status will lie
downgraded, they say. with lh<'
se<:relary of state·~ orrl<-e given
primacy i n advis ing. and
perh~ps more important. !>peak
CENTER OF FUROR
Zbigniew Brzezinski
mg for the l'rc-.11lt•nl in for1·1gn
affciir~
In <i re«t>r1t mten1e1A with the
:">lcw York Times. Vam·e said.
· It as of f u nda mental 1rn
portant c th<il there he uraly two
spokesmen for the f.(11\ crnmt:nt
on matters relating to forc1gn
pol1<·y the: µrc:mle nt of the t nit
ed Stl.lte!> anti :-.1~" n·1 a r) 111
:-.tate .. Tlwul!h hi· d1d n111 rc:f<:r
.'V f ,,' ,,.,.~ .f ,"J .ft )'.t;f ,t;
to Brzezinski by name. Vance
clearly had him in m ind when he
said. .. any other arrangement
leads to confusion."
BRZ.:ZINSKI HIMSELF has
·pul>lic ly said little about the
bureaucratic battles.
Initially a low-profile job. the
position of NSC director took on
added stature during Richard
M !'ll1xon 's prcsidcnC'y, when
K1 ss1 nger mou nte d foreign
policy in1tiat1ves involving the
Soviet Union. China, _the Middle
Eas t ar1d lnclol·hina often
w 1 t h o u t e ,. c n i n f o r m i n g
Sc·C"r <:t;,ry ur State Willlam P.
Rogcrl\ !{ogcrs eventually re
:.1gned d'l'iring Nixon's seC'ond
term and was repla<:ed b~· Kiss
tnJ.!1>r . who heJd both jotJ~ for a
lune
In his 1·nt1cism or Brzezinski .
ll11<lrlmg Carter s aid the adviser
";.1pparent1r ~aw himself a~
anothn llcnry Kissinger." And
··Yo h 1 It· hl' had neither Kiss·
JO j!t·r·s intelled nor his political
sa v\·~. ht' did share one impor·
llrnl asset 1mmed1atc acress to
th1• prc:s1dc·nt. ..
H1C'/1anl V Allen, who will be
thl' nalumal sceur1t y adviser in
l hc new ::i<lm in1strat1on. will be
j11!tl that. ~W) Hcagan aides -an
:11h 1~1·1 . <ind not an arlil'ulator
· ol for1·1 g11 Jl'IJ11..:..\
Announcing the 2r1d Annual
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Start thinking thin and look for
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I
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10 POLLENEX INSIDE TRACK ,_.
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CAltFOANIA
-~ ---
Pipeline inferno report ·due
LONl; B•:At'll ~A I' 1 In tht' 11t
t.-rmath of an undt'rtt1 ou111I fut1I p1l)tlhne
1nftorno th1tl <lr•ll roy<•d nll1c-t1011wi. 1&1111
1n1urNi four l)t"t111lt' 1& rcltOrt tu the ( '1ty
<'ount•1I n•c·11mm .. 11d11 l'hai1114('i. w ,llfol)
r~Ull't'm .. .nt' fur 111J)f!hne' a111l l>t'• 11,cl11·
t"!Ct!I f<V illll\ tlt•l 1•1 1111 itllOll
HOO vounds ver squue inch The
pl1H1hne was deB•Kned lo withstand pre·
ssun• of l!JO lu 200 pounds per square
Ill\' h
"were in<>peralive or did not exist."
Although Long Beach officials tradi·
tionally have left pipeline safety and
inspe('tion to the industry and govern·
ment regulators, the report called for:
l'ht! \'lly rcltOrt found ,
The lhtl'kness of the ptpe wall was
not uniform btit·ause of corrosion and
tiros ion , aml a preventative main·
tcfllAIH'c program by Four Comers did
not ciust
A telephone accident notification syste m .
f'1re 0Hu·11tl'i hilV \' l1lkllll'\I \lw I Uf'
ll1r.-111 hJ<'h M'lll fltuninl( llY~1h\111t 11\lO It
r~ 1dent11tl <.t rf't•t Ii.s t 11 ... 1· I 1m ·o, ti1
vr.--i:o.un t ltllOll I tu"' f'\ t'I tilt' I C~lrt
"' h II h "'111 .... prt.·M•nll·ll Iv t ht: l'IJUIH'll
I Ut><.'1&\ tltlt' 1101 'It) "'h.;tl I UUM·d tht'
hu1ld up t~f Jlr<'a.~urt· 111 1h1· J•11J'.' '"'~n
t'll lh<' 1 .. ~ \n~t'lt'\ 'I 111w"
I hi" l"l><"ltne• 111~1 a tor~ 1-'out l.1Jt lltil ~
l'lpt' Lln<• ('u it .. ullb1dia:11) 111 i\tlar1t11•
Rtl hftd ll Cu ha\ t' ~<ttd that at the lime
0 1 the-' r111•tur 1· pr~:-.i.urt· 1n tht IJlµto "'ct'>
t:mcr~ent·y shutoff valves were
l>va c ~d too far apart, permitting
na}'htha to keep flowing even after the
v1vehnc wallt !:>hut down Fire officials
i.a) the flaming naphtha continued to
rtQv. frnm the 111pe for two hours after
tht-vc.l ve wal> dosed the night of the
f I f t'
Re-spacing of emergency shut-.off
valves to allow no more than 350 barrels
of fuel to now from lines ~fter they have
been shut down.
1 -Hydrostatic .testing of all pipeline
systems and components at least every
four years, with a ll new or replaced
parts required to withstand ·l '1:1 times
their "maximum operating pressure."
Annual certification of pipeline
operators lo assure that they are com·
plying with all f~deral , state and local
rules Aut.nmatu• pressure release valves
Woman abducted
-..;o H 111 1101.1.YWOOI> 1 1•1 I\ IA.Oman
IE>i.1 \ tn~ \\ork al Lht• popular Palomino Cluli IA.as
~ra hhed l" t \o\11 rn c·n \\ h<1 pull<.•d her st·ream1n~
<inti k1<'k111g 111111 th1•11· l'iH . hut .,ht• esl'ctpetl IA. hen
1>ffin·r::. g :J\'t' l'hJM' :.rnd .,loppt•tl the auto, polll'e
.;aid
Offtt·t·r.'. .Jtorry IJarr a l:! yt•ar \'Cteran on the
forn· :.ind .lat·k l'ark t•r . :.i rookie on probation.
began a ~even nul1• l'has<.· that rea('hed 70 mph on
::.urfat'l' .'otl't't'l!'> aft er Lltl•y .-.polled the l'ar driving
"11 h it:. hl·:1dllght :. off <JI 2 llJ a m · Sundlll ~said
SgL Will Doiro11 nf I.A PU's North llolly1A.ood
tll\ l!>IOfl
Book1·d l11r 1n\ l'Sl1ga11on of k1dnapp1ng IA.ere
Enr11~Ut' ll1\'1·ra. ~fl. <tnd Luis l'anct!->: 23. Doiron
said . .
Andrea· 1.<Jlwlla', a 21 ~ear old employee at the
l'lluntn and \\('Stern mu!>H' har. wc.s walking to
hCr t'.;r Ill th~ park1n~ lot arter WOrk When lWO
men grnbtwd her 1n the parking lot. Doiron said
As th(' 1968 green Chevrolet M~libu left the
parking lot ancl turned north onto Lankershif'!l
Boule\'ard. offi('ers Darr and Parker spotted 1t
with 1ls li ghts off and moved in to c ite the driver
for a traffit v10lat1on.
Hut insh•ad. the l'ar s ped off with the officers
in pursuit . wca\'in~ in and.out of the early mornin~
holicta\' wc•ekend trafflt· Offit'ers nearly lost the
car as 1l turnt•d eas t on Sherman Wa y and then
south on Tu1unga noult•\•ard. but <'aught up with it
'
Firehouse closing
ignites SF furor
SAN f<,R.ANCISCO (A PO ) -~hile firemen
cleaned bird droppings from the outside of Mayor
Dianne 1-'einstein's office. their firehouse re·
mained empty, confirms Fire Chief Andrew
Casper.
Casper. who said he learned about the Nov. 8
closure from a newspaper reporter, had mixed
feelings about the inC'ident lie said "it_'s been done
in the past" bct·ause r1remen have high pressure
hoses and know how to handle them
lie added. however, that h~ was "wondering ~l
the logic"' of shutting down ct firehouse to clean C1·
t y JlalL Casµer s aid he wc.s out of town on busines~
on Nov R
"I thought it was foolis h." said 17-year
veteran fireman Di ck Ril'harclson "We were out
of servic·e for two hours and 40 minutes."
The cleanuµ t'ase made for the second incident
in recent weeks in IA. hi t•h a firehouse was un-
manned.
Las t month. the fire commission heard de-
partmental t harges . brought by Casper against
firefighters involved in the "ahalone scandal." •
·In that incident. an old woman died in an
apartment building that burned while firemen
from a station a blo<·k away dined on the seafood
delit at'y at a firehouse in another part of the city.
Of the City llall cleanup. Casper said that the
----m-it-W~'.r· offic·e requested the firemen. But Mel
Wax . the mciyor's press aide said the office would
never order a fi rehouse t.o be emptied for such a
purpose. The mayor was vacationing in Hawaii
and c·oulcl not be reached for t omment
Project to cap
gas leak due
SANTA BARBARA IAP) Agreement has
been reached by Atlantic Richfield Co. and Santa
Barbara County l<)' cap an undersea leak spewing
400,000 cubic feet of gas per day. But federal ap-
proval is needed before work can begin.
John Hundley, offs hore manager for ARCO's
California district, insisted that the project, ex·
pected to cost between S3 million and $6 million, is
being delayed "because they <government agen-
cies) can't get their acts together."
ARCO is seeklhg to link the leak-cappin&
project with renewed drilling for oil in the Santa
Barbara Channel.
The Santa Barbara County Board of
Supervisors has approved that concept in its
agreement with ARCO.
Orficials ~aid the ARCO proposal is made up of
"inlerpollution trade·offs" and that certain levels
of nitrogen released by renewed oil drilling would
be permitted.
· The leak first appeared in 1973 and is spewin1
out four to sixa>ns of hydrocarbons daily.
Hydrocarbons ar~component of 01one, the ma-
jor cause of pollution in Southern CalifQ.mia. .
as ti spun out of l'ontrol while turning east on \'ll'·
torv Houkvard.
. Offtt·l'rS found Ms l.cthella in lhe baC'k seat or
the cur. ha<IJ\' shaken from the tnC"ident She was
takl'n to R1 ve.rs1de Hospital where she was treated
lor minor mjuries to her s houlders. arms and legs
and l ht•n rell'ased, 001 ron said
_NtJ fanfare
Prize winner fearful
LOS ANGELES <A P l The s weepstakes
\\ 1nrwr of a 1961 Silver Cloud Roll s Ro} <·c·
"as ex petted lo pit•k up the $28.000 l'ctr toda).
hul her fe<ff of increa sed t•rime means the
luxury auto \\ 111 he al'l'l'ple<I y, 1thout ranfan :.
photographs or puhltl'll)
The winner . a 3\ year old 1h von·ee \\1th
four d 1ildren. asked that her na me not be an
nuuneed bet•ause she fearC'd 'thc.t someone
may try to steal the t·ar or t·aust• her harm.
sa id Rit·hard Kline. a SJ>Okesman fo r thl'
Royal Crown Re\'e ragc Co. whi l'h ran the l'On
test
The Rolls Roy1·c winn<'r wets one of more
than 50.000 entrants in the Diet Ritt' Win a
Rolls Royce Swee pstakes . The rnntest was
limited tu Southern California res1<lcnts
'Split'
movement
dropped
SACRAMENTO (APJ
The Two Calirornias
Committt-e has s a 1cl
it has dropped its in·
1tiative lo splil the state
in two. but is planning
another one wh1 t•h won't
refer to the Peripheral
<:anal.
Thl" comm1tlN• s ai<l 11
had s pent most or it s er
fort in helping to qua hf)
the Peripht•nsl <'anal re
ferrendum fo r the next
s tatewide ballot
· · W l' h <t ,. e h c I g t• d
make the ant i c·an a l
fight less or an uphill ef
fort and havi ng done so.
1t is time to put the two·
California ton1.:cpt in the
hand s of a bro ader
pcrspel'ti vt• ... the com·
m1ltce said in a slate·
ml'nl ,
.. , ~ .....
:.-: ... . ' .,.-.... " .. ' • y .
' I ~I • ,,.
•. ...... '.
Monday,~ 6. UllJ
tot still
• • nussmg ..
•OCEANSIDE <AP> '
Six months after their
11-day-old son was ab·
ducted by a "mystery
woman," Angelina and
Kevin Verville hang on
to hope that he'll some-;
day be found. •
"We have not stopped
praying for our baby."
said Angelina, whose
husband is a com··
municalion specialist al
n~arby Camp
Pendleton.
A woman posing as a
WAIT FOR BABY
• social worker drove off
with their son Kevin
July after convincing the
mother the baby should
be taken to an office
agency for a checkup. Cpl. Kevin Verv.Ut• and wife Angelina
The woman, identify .
1980shaky • ing herself, only as
Sheila, had promised to
provide food stamps and
other help if Mrs .
Verville and the baby
accompanied her to the
agency office . • year in state After driving them to
another house, she
asked Mrs. Verville as a
favor to deliver a
m essage for another
weir are client:-As--soon-
as the mother climbed
out of the car, it was dri·
venoff.
BERKELEY <APJ
The 1980s got off to a bone·
jarring beginning in
north c r n c;a+i..f Ol'-&i-a-.
whit•h was rot ked by
more ma1or earthquakes
in the past year then it
had experienced in the
las t two dc<'ades . a
seis mologist .-.a ys
Roh<.'rt t.;hrhammer
of t h(' l 'n1 vcr s ity o f
Cal ifo rn ia Sei s mo
graphtt' Sll:ttion said from
1961 through 1978. only
t hree quake~ m·eurre<l m
<i ll of ('a l1forn1c. that
ml'asured more than 6.0
on the Ri t·hter st ale. In rnRO. more than a hair
dozen quakes of that S!Ze
J Olll't.l no rthern
<'l:l l1forni<A . ht· SaHI re·
1·cntb
· s l' ll' n t 1 s t s u s e t h e
Richter Scale lo measure
the intensity of a quake .
For example, the quake
that struc!k San-Fran:
cisto in 1906 has been
estimated hetween 7.9
and8.3
A 4.0 e arthquake is
c apable or doing
damage . a 7.0 can cause
widespread destruction.
Eat·h step up on the scale
represents a tenfold in·
t'rease in the quake's
magnitude
The >ear ·~ ·strongest
q u ak e . in t e rm s or
Ril'hter intens ity. was a
7.o that struck No 8 off
th~ California coast near
Eureka
Uhrhammer says two
shakers. a 5.5 and 5.6 hit
the Livermore Valley in
late January.
Mrs. Vervi lie ran
after them until she was
exh austed. It was the
last lime she saw her
child.
The FBI said last
week that more than
11,0oo agent-hours have
been spent on the case.
But Norman Zigrossi.
agent in charge of the
FBl's San Diego office.
said there still is no
word.
.. It's almost un
believable how it could
dry up so rast." Zigrossi
s aid of the kidnapper's
trail.
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Scum Comt flfaa, JJJ) 8riJtol Strwt C'Olta Mfte.Optn Monday throuftl Friday from 10 am fO 9:JO pnr
S.turdly 'tll 6 pm: Sundly 12 noon fO sen.
-\, I
..
••
Synthetic fuels
push is Deeded .
.. ,
r .... lnl m Ball la1t month, U.. ll·uUon Or1&D1aa·
u • o1 Pan>leum Exportiftl C.ountrie9 COPSC> ........ to
aMther lMttaae ol about 10 percent la ~rude oU ~oea. ~.,. -'ftM,y Mttled on a ceilinl ol .. 1 a barrel and a floor o1 ~ When OPEC wu formtd • >'..,.. aco. tM priee ol
t'r ulle wa $1.IO a ba.rn1. Iv• lD lira, whell the HrkMAI ~d&e manipulation lot UDCiel' WAf 1 the flnt me ...... WU
f ~ IZ. 41 to a rnoct.t (by DOW) '10 .•. , n::,:r no mew over ytt. TM wt OPSC meetma ii '°"ed for May in Oeneva. and tMr•'• every reuon to l'~t the price 1piraJ to ccmt1n• ·
S&nc-e um. our aMual bW foe imported oil hu 1one
t r'tMll Sit 7 billion a year to frl bWkle l< year and, with
:;tUl mote OPEC i~cre ..... it could ruch SlOO million
\~year I
• All our efforts to curb oil import.a, from producing
more fuel-effrcient can to ex~ina dome1Uc Pr:odu~
t ltf¥l. -can't seem to release ua rrom thia bondaae to fqreagn oil
producers.
• One obvious answer would appear to be an all-out
p1.11h t-0 develop a synthetic fuels program that could re·
mo e our need for crude oil
. A step in this direction was t_aken w~en Congress
Ji.ssed the Energy Security Act which provides for some seo billion 1J1 loan guarantees lo encourage construction
nl synthetic fuel plants. ' But since the mid· l 940s the government has backed ''° fewer than 13 synthetic fu_el pilot ~lan~s and backed •
l(Wa y from eight of them. leaving only five m current pro-
qut·tion on a very limited scale.
• One of the explanations, concerning a test plant
<i>ened in 1949. was that gasoline made from coal would ~1se the price per gallon three or four cents to I.bout 30 -cr-:ir-cents! Fr<rm tooay s vlewpoinl that has !O look like
a girt. oil . . , There are those who insist the compames, which
control much of our coal production, still fmd it more
economical to import crude oil and export coal. If true,
that could only be shortsighted and self-serving. . .
There's no great mystery about synthetic! fuels . The
German Luftwaffe was fueled principally on aviation
gasoline made from coal throughout1World War 11 .
And today the government of South Africa has
virtually removed its dependence on foreign oil by con-
struction of a vast coal-to-oil-and-gas complex.
The South African installation was developed by the
Fluor Corp .. our own neighbor here in Irvine.
Corporation chairman J . Robert Fluor insists that the
establishment of a network of coal-liquefaction plants to
supply our needs would cost no more than we currently
pay for imported oil.
When the Russians launched Sputnik I in 1957 , the
lJ S. met the challenge with a space program that rapidly
hroughl us abreast and ahead of the Soviet s pace pro·
gram.
Clearly it is time to break our oil bondage by
la unching a similarly intensive synthetic fuels program.
Fads can be c·ostly
Booms in recreational activities aren't unusual.
Neither is the news that massive interest shown in a new
sparetime activity often shows a tendency to fade.
Biggest fad today, of course, is rollerskating. Skate
manufacturers are having a hard time keeping up with
the demand a nd almost every public spot with a flat.
hard s urf ace is filled with zipping, twirling skaters
demonstrating all mannerofformandnon-form.
Thus it was only a few years ago with skateboards.
Hardly a kid between 6 and 16 had any other form of
locomotion and any paved incline was an invitation to
lest the sometimes incredible skills of the latter-day hang
10 crowd.
Skateboards are still around, but certainly not in the
number when orthopedists' waiting rooms were jammed
with youngsters waiting to have broken bones put back in
place.
In fact, skateboarding interest has dwindled to the
point that the city of Irvine is closing down its public
s kateboarding course -one of the few such facilities in
Orange County.
"I guess it's a kind of fad that has really died down,"
commented the city's recreation director.
Therein is a lesson for city councils and like bodies: --
make sure a sport is going to be around for a long time
he fore investing public funds to satisfy those swept up in
a single-use activity .
Lord knows how many taxpayer dollars have been
put into bike trails. for instance. Yet we see precious few
bike riders who regularly use the trails. Certainly not
enough lo justify all the paving and curb cuts that were
put in when bike-riding interest was at its peak a few
years ago.
So before someone suggests constructing a roller
s kating arena, bear in mind that hula hoops didn't hang
around nearly as long as lawn bowling.
Besides, skaters can use the bike trails not being
used by bike riders. '
• • Opinions expressed in the space above are thoM of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Addr ... The Dally Piiot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92826. Phone (714) 142-4321. . .. . ·-,. .
Boyd/Pipe smoker•
By L.M. 80\'D
Que11tion arises as lo how
long a pipe smoker can keep
the tobacco in his pipe bowl
.
' ~
Dear
~loomy
-Gu8
E ve n Geor1e
Waahi n1ton couldn't
eacape a family "bll
mouth." 1111 mott1er, a
Tory aympathuer ,
never klat a ch1111ee to
berate him pubUJl!. and
accuae him -f ,7 -
of ne1lectln1 ber
welfare. D.11 .
•=a:~~~ -~--·
•
1towlq Won it dl9a out.
That, too.jam..._~. m coatnt,:l;..:_r. amc*er. fram
Iowa, a ad lllcbll•
1ot toptber-reemtlJ ID a •low·
smoke compeitttlma. OM Bob
Ricker, Jr., of a.artkla, Iowa,
manqed to ptttt.puft away
for 12 mlnutee K t«cmdl.
Loni time to keep a plpe 'burn·
ln1.
u_b.M.lmll...&7.raaa alaoe ~
-a-t.-Bernard do1 actuall1 •
reacaaed a loll Dllalm ID die
SwlH Alpt. Thia-eom• ..
becauH a elleat ukl H
mowmollla. M9e .... tM
Bl. 8-urd ........... .
Mlete. No. •• ~ ..... =· JJ.."r &:' = ,........,fll .......... ....
tUt ....... ~ 111111>. ... ... = .......... . ......... ........ : ........ .,.. ... ....... .., ..........
~·.
'f'h0ma1 P: Haley I Publlther ,. I P!HJ.e a.rta.r• Krelbich/£dttorl., P• EdUor Mond1y, J1nuary 5. 1Mt
Jaek Anderson
Soviets hint division of Iraii
W ASHJNGTON -The stub-
born Iranian refusal to releue
the American hollta1es, except
for a shah's ransom, could lead
to the break-up of Iran.~ This
po11ibUity has been ralM!d by
the SOviets in secret, unofficial
contacta with key Americans.
Sources close to Ronald Reagan
aay he "may not obj~t to a
bre~k-up."
The Soviets have hinted that
the most sensible solution tQ the
Iranian prob·
l e m . might
be to divide
the countr y
into separate
Sovi e t and
Am e rican
!'lpheres of in ·
I r I u e n (' e
Unde r this ·a~
rangemcnt, a
pro -So v iet
~overnment would occupy the
northern provinces and a pro-
Ameri{·an re~1 me would ~overn
the southern prov1m·es.
There have already be e n
secr et contacts between Iraqi
and Iranian military leaders.
who would like to end the war
and set up a provisional govern·
mcnt in southern Iran. They prob·
.ably would install Shahpur
-B.ak-htiar. It" former-~1 ranian-
prime mjnisler , as its head.
~ndy Rooney
He would establish close ties
with Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait
and the other Arab naUona on
the Penian Gulf. The United
Statea would keep in the
back1round; but would quietly
, support this reaiipment.
STRATEGISTS advisin1
Reagan believe s uch a Persian
G~lf bloc would be "strategical·
l'y: acceptable," even though it
would mean (hsmembering Iran
,.and permitting sorne Soviet en·
croachment. In fact. they think
this would be preferable to the
present chaotic, anti-American
government now in place.
President ~arter, meanwhile,
has been courtln~ lr$ln .bY allow-
ing Israel to smuggle military
s upplies into lra·n. Including
s pare parts for F -4 fighter
planes and shipboard weapons.
The Is raelis have also provided
arm s and ad visers to the
Kurdish rebels in Iraq this.
too. with Carter 's s ilent ap-
proval. The Kurds have drawn
some of Iraq's forces away from
the Iranian front
Reagan's advis ers expect him
to cut off this secret ai<J to Iran
and to shift U .S. support to Iraq ..
They will also advise the new
president to authorize precision-
g u id ed missile attacks. upon
serecttve Iranian targets. Thls
limited military operation would
be expanded if t he hostages
were harmed.
The s trategi s t s aroun/J
Reagan doubt that it will be
pouible to negotiate the
hos tages' release. By making
the ransom demand public, the
.,Jranians can hardly back down
without losing face. And the pres1 ident-elecl certainly doesn't in·
· tend lo pay a $24 billion ransom.
Wheri he first learned about the
ransom demand, according to
witnesses, he called it ·'insulting
to the honor of the ~ountry ."
REAGAN WILi, carefully
study all the alte rnatives before
he tak~s action against Iran. his
advisers say. The Iranians will
have to wait until after Jan.
• 20 to find out what he 'll do. But
it would be a m istake to rule out
military action.
Footnote: In past columns. I
have cited secret intelligence re ·
ports on the treatment of
American hostages in Iran.
These reports have given a grim
account of physical abuse and
psychological torture. State
Department s pokesm en ha ve
no w confirmed the reports.
Some hostages a llegedl y have
been interrogated at gunpoint.
others blindfolded and bound
-1ong periOOs. srm 0 he rs isOlated
and held incommunicado 9Y ex-
treme militanta. There are re-
ports that the latter have been
tortured to gain t>hony con·
Cessions . Six wives haven't
heard a word rrom their hostage
husbands .
THE CU'M'ING EDGE: Po~er
lawnmowers can be dange..e'us
pieces of equipment. Carelessly
handled, they can -and do -
lop off fingers or toes, causing
more than 50,000 accidents each -
year .
In F e bruary 1979, the
Consumer Products Safety Com·
mission proposed a safety rule
that would r equire manufac·
turers of power mowers lo in·
elude an automatic shutoff that
·would stop the dangerous mower
blade within three seconds after
the user lets go of the handle.
The effective date for this reg-
ulation was to be Dec. 31 . 1981.
But the industry spent much of
its time trying to cut back or at
. least delay the effective date of
the proposed regulation. The in·
dustry's argument has been that
it can't work out a safe machine
by the commissio(l 'S deadline.
The reason is obvious :
Automatic blade ·stop
mechanism may add as much as
$40 to the p.ric.e--of a powe,..._.--.
m ower, which could well mean a
lower s ales volume .
THE POWER mower industry
has found a friend in Re p. Larry
Coughli,n, R-Pii , whose district
includes Bethlehem Steel. which
m·akes mower blades. Another is
S en . William Proxmire. D·
Wis .. whose state is home base
for several m owe r manufac·
ture rs.
Through their combined e f-
forts. a six-month extension on
automatic bladc·stops µassed
Congress It was written not hy
the legislators who s ponsored it.
but the Washington law firm of
Collier~ Shannon and Rill which
represents one of the largest
manufacturers
i\(•cordin~ to the CPSC. the un·
safe mowers produced during
the extens ion pt!raod could cause
as manv as 34,000 in 1uries
IRANIAN EXPORTS: Ira n's oil
exports have b(.'en re<luced to a
lricklt' Ins t e ad . I r a n has
hcC'Om(• a lt'<.1ding cxµorter of
• nar<'Ot1 <·s J\t·eording to British
Int elli gt'nc·f· reports. .. approx·
1 m a t f:' I y 4 IJ pc r e c n t of t h e
nan·ot iC's .. seized in Britain
rom t's from Iran. Yet only two
years ago, "that country a1·
('ountt'd for only 3 percent of the
dli<·1t narl'ot 11·s seizt'd ..
Athletes deserve a decent education
Half t he basketball players in
the eight Rochester . N. Y . high
schools have been ruled ineligi·
ble. To be specific. the figure is
61 out of 123. or 49.6 percent.
Let's all stand and give three
cheers for the Rochester ·City
School Board
and it s viC'e
· pr es ide n t .
Archie Curry,
who first-in·
troduced the
new eligibili·
ty proposal.
I a m a
sports nut of
the first or-
de r . bu t
sports in hi gh schools and col-
leges are absolutely out of hand.
A great many of the professional
athletes interviewed for r adio or
television don •t sound as though
they could count to 100 or write
one grammatical sentence. They
certainl y can 't s p e ak t he
English language. I haven't
heard a professional bas ketball
player ln two years who sounded
-as though he could spell his own
Sydney Harris
name. I'm sure there are some.
I've just missed them.
Ninety percent of these pro·
fessional athletes have attended
college for four years. Did they
go to class at all? Were they
held to any standard? Did they
take examinations? What are
they going to do when they're
35'?
IT IS THE schools who are
C'heating. not these young men.
The schools a r e using the
a thletes to create a reputation
for the institution. and if the
athletes are good enough they
bring money into the university
treasury to pay for some other
things.
In R0<·hester. at Madison High
School. 18 of 23 varsity basket·
ball candidates were ruled in-
eligible. I can understand how
bitte rly d isappointed t hese
young men are and I couldn't
possibly expect them to un-
derstand why so many people
will think it's a good thing.
To so many or them, especial·
ly black kids from poor homes,
basketball looks like the only -·
way out or the dark hole they're
in. This is nonsense. but you
can't tell them that. They don't
see another way. An education is
the last thing they C'onsider
ARTHUR ASHE. fo rmer
Wimbledon champion and that
rarest or breeds. a tennis pl ayer
with inteUigence and good m an-
ners.has been telling black kids
for years now that they're kid·
ding themselves if they think
more than one in a thousand or
them is going to make it in pro·
fessional sports.
It is very unfair for an educa ·
tional institution. high school or
college, to contribute to this de-
ception by using some people's
athletic ability without giving
the m. in return. an education.
Too often . ath letes a r e
-separated from any part of their
school except the team they play
for. If they spend all their time
practicing and none of their time
studying. they are goinl( to beat
the t eam from the school that
maintains 5ome academ ic st an-'
dards for its players.
V in ce Lo mba rdi was a
great C'oach but h(' d id a had
thing when he poplularizecl !he
notion that winninJ? is the only
thing. WinninJ? is not the only
thing. Playing is the only thing
and winning is a n added attrac·
lion. The chances are that 1r.
year after year. a high school or
C'oll('ge wins more than half its
g am es. there 's-som e thing
wrong. They· re probabl y cheat-.
ing t heir players out of an
eduC'ation.
I don't know why colleges
think a winning football team
enhances academic reputation.
It doesn 't enhant'e it in my
mind. Notre Dame is an educa·
tional institution and should be
known for that. not for its foot·
ball team. Classes for football
and basketball players at some
or the mediocre colleges with
great teams are a joke
Rochester's lead in making
high school athletes get accept
able grades in class seem s like a
start in good direction and you
wonder why we ever strayed so
far from it.
Don't let' verbal snobbery steal your money
Whllelhoppln1theotherday, I aa a mere "perfume," w1'Ue a more than a "book" and 1 Mark Twain once observed
heard a woman with • hauchty "creme" can be double the prtce · • J 0 urn al · · m 0 re than a that 1 caulinower is just a cab· ~
accent ult the produce clerk to ofa1lmple"cream." · "maiaaine." In the old days in bage with a colle1e education; in
wei1h four "tom•htoea" for Men, likewise, have leamedthe Hollywood, there were "movies," much the same way. a
her. Ile 1ave her a qululcal hard way that ".alacks" are ·~ntma,•· and "motion pictures." "couturiere" in the world of
look and then replied, "You're cbeapertban "oddtl'OUlert," and A movie C!Olt half-a-buck, a film fashion may be little more than a
rl.bt, madam -at tbeH "outerwar" ii more coatly than wH lhown for a dollar, but a~ sea ms treas with a Ber Illa prlc•, tbeJ ON tomabtoea." a n ' 'o v e r c o a t . ' ' A n d • uoa picture played only twice a diploma.
It mllbl be IDIU'uetlve -and fNllt1,...,,.,,.,, vi1ltln1 ~a men'• day for a 1roa1ly Jacked-up ad· •
w17bamUllDl-tomakeutudJ ''balr talaa" I• far more ex· mlHion price. (Next year it 801'1E1111Etl' th•e tnobbllh
• of wt.al could"' · · pen1lvethan~1lntotbeold__Mcama.&::movJ.c...'') words if thelr~ .. C1>JDe"'P:.-.---be ·e•ll•d'-·· t· ~1'11'Wr1bb]r • ------ ---pance. tlietWitolthecentW')',
"Yerbal eeoaOIDlca' ~ ; tlaat la, tit• eeoaomle
···-ot •· , ..... , .... • •••••• ..... tll• •••••••• ... .,. All M lalow, for lllllt•11. ...................... -. ...........................
,,.,~a.1J1 •ore tlla• a .. .................. . ... ,.,,_ ..................... .
A •"ftll&PISC&" COltl more
than a "wateb" <altboUlb the belt
''Umep6eee'' I eyer had wu a
watela COltlnl .... t1aa11 •>.and ..,_..., .... r. ... ~ u.. ..... ..
Aa1111tablllhmmttuallala "clmtllt"elllllll..,.._• pl••• t1111at J••t ••t•H to .e•1•1rt.AM ...... 11 .. _, ............ ...., ..... ,.. .. . ...., ............. ..
•er• 'I•• for • plat• .. ........ .. .. ........ .., .......... ....
,,
NATION
C'lf 9 solit tide
While fellow New York Cit y residents
fight the elements in their autos on s lushy
streets, this lone fi~ure uses ite skates lo
gel from one location to another Steel
Trash pileup
brings alert .
LOS ANGELES CAP> Californians throw
away more trash than the slate has places to bury
it, and worried officials say the ever-growin~
heaps of rubble are piling up lo a garbage crisis.
The state Solid Waste Management Board
sounded the grim warning as one giant truckload
or trash after another slid to the ground on the last
day of operation at the Palos Verdes dump site.
Alternative dispos~ll methods must be de-
veloped before all or California's gorging landfills
hit their capacity, warned board chairman Terry
Trumbull.
THE Z3· VEAR PALOS VERDES site had been
handling up to 4,000 tons of trash a day, statistics
showed.
"The Palos Verdes closure is an example or
the fact that the garbage crisis is real throughout
California," Trumbull said.
"We will be losing 40 percent or the county's
landfill capacity in the next two years." he said ,
adding that the San Francisco Bay area ..,ill lose
30 percent of its landfill in three years.
Closure of the dump hastens the closures of
other, nearby sites, he said.
"YOU HAVE A RIPPLE EFFECT. If we
don't get alternatives moving we may . . . just
have no place to put the garbage:" Trumbull said.
;·we may find in five years tjlat there is no capaci·
ty left in Los Angeles County."
The county generates 35.000 tons of trash -10
pounds per person -each day. Trumbull said.
With the exception of Orange County, "all of
Southern California is experiencin~ similetr pro
blems; and Sacramento, Fresno and Bakersfield
have similar problems," Trumbull said
And the higher the refuse piles. the higher the
garbage collection fees, he noted. citing increased
transportation costs as close · in dump sites choke
on their last bottles and cans.
••1N LOS ANGELES COUNTY, IT means that
about half the county in the next two years will
have a large increase in their garbage disposal
costs. up to $40 per family." Trurribull said.
"It means a lot more garbage trucks on the
road because it's a lot longer way to get lo the
nearest available dump. It means a lot of air quali·
ty. noise and fuel waste impact by shutting down
th ving lo go 25 t.o...30-miles-farthff
on the road to the neares t available landfill." he
said.
Recycling and waste energy alternatives must
be developed, he stressed~··
"We're wasting resources. We could be recycl
ing and saving at a cheaper cost than of throwing
it away," Trumbull safd..
Swedes like 'pot'
STOCKHOLM, Sweden CAP) -Police have re-
leased a report saying that marijuana smokers tn
Sweden Jmoted 11 tons of the drug in 1980. Sweden
had a um populition or 8.3 million.
,.CtLL.~TEERS
\\.ITU
JIEitlOR,.
LOSS
If ,_ .. f...... FOl61TM. COM-
.... DISOIUIMTID ...... D ... can
COMCIMTIATIM6 er MAllM6
DICISIOMS. ••4 •re ltetw... 60-ll
YIAIS Of A•L ,_•SJ...., fw •
......... ry ...... -41c ..... ....,,,... "'--. ·------···---~ _,.
Y1 ... IHn wlH receln • PIM lwfef
........................... CAT ,
.... Cl .................. -..... ... ,,:-...... ...
Call (714) &34-6938
rods are un ('Onstruct1on site near 1 ludson
Ri'!,Cr where l'tty ts building sewage treat-
ment µ!ant .
• 1me
Monday. MtuM'f 5. 1•1 DAIL y PILOT A 'I
-ployes ·or utility -----....:------------
public abuse targets
SAN DIEGO (AP) -ID an effort to
curb threata of pbyalcal violence
aaainat employeea fueled by Nini
utility bWI, San Dteao Gu and Eltc·
trlc Co. bu removed lta clrcular toco
from about 500 company can.
SDGfsE 1pokeamaa Denn.is Richter
said that employees are beinc sub-
jected to ot.cene aeaturea, verbal
abuse and some 1hovin1, althouah
there have been no reports of u -
sault.s. He said uigry customers con-
front employees when they stop for
lunch, gas or even a traffic light.
"It's a sign of the times," Richter
said. "We live in an uncertain world
and people have very. very short
fuses. Our people are simply not
hired or paid to lake that kind of guff
from the public."
The logos were removed from cars
which employees use for reading
meters, inspecting property and
making energy audits. Ri chter said.
He said trucks and heavy equipment
will keep the logos because most of
the wonen are "hard hata -big,
1lJ'on1. touah men who can take care
ol tbemsel ves."
The state Public UUlitiea Com·
mlaaion approved a ss:J.7 million ln·
cr'ease for electricity. and $31.6
million increase for natural gu for
SDG&E last week. Average customer
bills are more than $50 monthly for
electricity and more than Sil in sum-
mer and S36 in winter for gas.
Train wreck blame
NEWARK. N.J . <AP> -lnade·
quate supervision of Amtrak work
trews and the absence of wrjtten
guidelines led to last summer's train
accident in Linden that killed one
pas9enger and injured 17 others, ac-
cording to a federal report. The Na-
tional Transportation Safety Board
said a railroad maintenance crew
had not been told how to secure track
being transported on a flatbed work
train.
uppy
stomper
.....
. . . ..
sentenced
ANCHORAGE/ Aluka
(AP> -A Jt.year·ol~
man who pbyaica1r,.
abused an Anchorage
couple and stomped
their puppy· to death'
during a robbery haa
been sentenced to 23
years in prison.
"From where I sit.
you pose a real threat to
the safety and security
of the rest of this com-
m unity." Superior Court
J u d g e Se ab or n
Buckalew said in sen·
tencing Richard Buza.
Buza and another
man broke into the
apartment of Dennis,
and Mischielle Smith on
July 9, physically
abused the couple at
gunpoint, and took their
last SlO, officials said.
When the puppy started
barking at them, they
stomped jt to death. ·
WE PAY CASH
Call '42:;,5678.
Put • lew words
to work tor ou.
•
., ~ ~·-·~ . - --FARMHS MUIAMCI
GtlOUP
14 .. 1154 or IJS.J4J7
1914Mlrt.r·C°'teM ...
Best Prices For
SCRAP GOLD AND SILVER
-JewelFy~tertirrg:l)1amonas -
Nugget Bill (714) 556-1233
can
• . ..--I
USC
A Bank of America 2Y2-year Time
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earns high interest-it can also
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Add to that the safety and conve-
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<The,... lhoWn ebowe II In eflMI ~ H. 1llO through Jenuery 7, 1111.)
•1100 minimum deoosll lor a 2~· Y98~ Time C.rtr11C8te Subetantiet
lntw"t penaltylor early wlthdr8W81 .
.!.
BANKOFAMERIC:A
!
. • • ,
' r
•• CWl. Y PILO f
inister walks-. streets-
Lutheran prie1t aid• people with prob!em•.
TWNlllS K1&ymu111I lloll "wean 1t'i. •
n1rknaim. t(I Vt'n hm1 l•Y .tu11 youn.1er, !tlSler
he<'1rn1u• 11( hu. twinlc 1111 "' ••yt:i
• • 011 exercising
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Chuck Lewla atridea alon1 the
sidewalk, handl stuffed in tbe
pocket.A al a blup treacbcoat,
white cleric's coll,IP-1leamin1
ltlu! a be•con In the cold fog.
11~·11 the Ni1t1ht Minister.
l''or hundreds ~ derelicts, ad-
dlds. prtlSlJtutes, runaways lllld
lonely people, Lewis 1s Father
Chr111tmas a Lutheran poiest
wh o work s fo r the N;g ht
M 1111 stry. 11pen for business from
10 I' m lo 4 11 m In the seedy
Tt.>ndtlrloan district
·our ba~lt theology 1s ·non-
Jud~mental ." sa ys Lewis," 48,
wh11 has walked the s treets 16
years. helping and finding help
for those who Clln 't take care of
themselves.
THE NIGHT MINISTRY.
operated by the Council or
Churches. 1s a nondemonina·
tional emer~ency program for
the community
0.-ar lJr Sleia crob•: My own doctor. who 1s a Lewis says he isn't afraid or
10~1.{rr 1llscs~ret!s with your theory that vi gorous the sometimes des pe rate.
l.,. ... , • l!:>l' 111 .. y ~«1u!)c Cl fatal heart attack. somet imes violent people he
t 11· .,huwed me an October issue of The helps. He's never been attacked
Journal Of The Amcru:csn Medical Association or robbed.
"hen I \l:-01lcd hrs offlt'e The article by Larry W. Once he pinpoints the µrob·
tries to solve the Immediate
problem.
"I believe the enUre world hu
already been saved," he said.
"So It relieves me or a lot of
frustration. I don't have to go
out and play God every night. I
just do the best I can."
Lewis is paid a modest salary
from the ,Ministry's $35,000 Jtn-
nual budget, which also must
cover emergency food and
shelter. He is· aided by four as·
srstant ministers who also are
paid. and volunteers who spend
the night on .the telephone talk-
ing to the desperate and lonely
Voluntee r s like S te ve
Northrup. 63. s pend hours on the
tel e phone . Sometimes he
handles 20 or 30 rails a night.
"CHRISTMAS IS BAD, and
Mother's Day," says Northrup.
"They call beca u se thei r
children don't contact them. I
listen and do what I can "
Some are regulars. who call
for weeks, needi n g a sym .
pathetic ear until they feel capa-
ble of solving their problems on
their own.
The huaband bad taken them,
out. boueht them hamburgers·
and said he'd be back.
HOUILS LATER, THEY were
still there. A guard noticed them
and referred them to the Night
Minister. Wahl arranged for the
Salvation Army lo put them up
for the night.
~
"We never heard f~om them
again," Wahl said. "They now
knew who we were and if they
needed us again, they would
have called on us ."
On a typical nigh\. Lewis may
take 20 calls that volunteers
can 'l handle.-Sometimes he can
handle it on the telephone. but
other situations require him to
meet the caller .
lie will personC11ly handle
about 25 or the 100 s uicide calls
received hy the volunteers dur-
ing the yeC1r.
SOME ARE POTENTIALLY
dangerous. like one caller Lewis
recalls visiting in an apartment
OBITUARIES ·
APWIN ..... to
c: 11Jbo11)<\, ,M I> . and has associates reported that lem. he often refe rs people to a
1111 1) cw.u..!lwcart C1tlca(·ks .-------------. community service program.
t1l·1·urrt'tl 111 2.935 adults DOCTOR IN Thal means listening and asking
.... ho had h1·t•11 t•xcrc1s in~ questions.
111lt•nM'ly THE HOUSE A runaway may r.eed someone
t1<1w c·ome so few" to send him back home. A drug ----x-;;1 .... t·"or.r 1'11crrnr-r.rrir1711TP"""taon..-.-------------Jrtht;'rt+"ft'l"'-ill.kOholic may need a
llow To Curl' Your Jo1¢gerrnC1nia ." I .believe you treatment program. Sometimes
rnl•11t1on many mun· <le<llhs due to µhysfral exer-it's someone who's broke a.nd
The ministry sometimes is
criticized for taking a "Band-
aid" approach.to problems.
"We're here to help people at
night, when there as no other
source of help but the police and
the hospital emergency room,"
says attorney John Wahl. presi·
de nt of the program's hoard of
directors.
"I told him on the phone I
would rome sec him if he put
away the gun, and he said he
would." Lewis said. "He lay on
his bed talking to me. and then
he reached under the pillow and
pulled out a Luger and smacked •
a clip into it and started waving
it around,
"I quietly told him he h<ld
broken his promise 1 told him I
was a man who kept my prom
ise. I put on my coat. lie
opene<J the l'loset and s howed
ml' more guns I told him· when
he put a\.\ay the gun to t'<lll me.
hut not tonight to call me
som e other time And he did."
Lewis s aid
Jc l'l' mi ah IJcnton k isscs II 1s '' i I e, Jane,
<ift1:r hl· .was sworn in 1111 ('ap1tol llill as
lh t• new H c µubl it·a11 senat o r f r om
Alal1a ma Elected an November. he
n•plal's Sl•n. Don Stcwa11 who resigned
Ja1 1. I l>t·nton. iJ POW in Vietnam for 7
yea r~. 1s th· firs t Heputilic·an s c•nator
'""n ,\bhanrn rn IOI ~ 1·ars .
t ion needs a room for a night. Al Two-thirds of the calls are
from people who suddenly find
thf!mselves homeless. For in
stance. there was the case or Cl
woman and her three children.
abandoned on a street by her
husband after they had been
evic·ted from their apartment
1 ·m 36, have• had adequate chec kups by an other time·s it may mean supply-
<'m incnt l'arcliolog1st, and wondn 1r I should quit ing a day's food or directing
Jog ging It becomes dafflt·ult to make a decision s omeone loaclinic.
when lh<•rc• an• so many confhc·llng opinions.
Mr. V.
Dear Mr. V.: H my book 1s handy, reread what
I've written about c·xcrtion and heart attacks.
Although there hC1ve lwcn mC1ny dol·umented.cases
of people dropping dead after jogging or other in-
tcnsf exertion. you 'II find that I probably would
tell you to go ahead and jog 1f you enjoy 1t !';O
mut·h.
Why'' llt•cause you say you have had complete
C'ht•l'kups by a cardiologasl who s ays your heart is
normal So <11cl the 2.935 adults in the experiment.
AS TIU: JAMA ARTICI.•: indicates, the re's
Ii 11 lc clanger of attacks oe('urring art er exercise in
norm al ht•arb (Although it's possible to have an at·
t a<'k t'Vl·n though prior exert1sc tolerance tests have
l11'f•n negati ve•>
llut twrt•'s the• rub. The artic•le says : "It ap·
p1·aro.; th•1t 11111ldlc ;igPd m l'n who die suddenly or
ha n • 1·ard1:11' l·v1•nl !-. 111 :iss1w1 at11111 with excrdsc
a1•1• 11~11alh 111111\ 11l11ab with :;l'Vt•rt• nirmwry dis -
II ~1111 '11 r1'11·r to llow To ('urt· Your Jog-
g1·rni;1111a · v1111'1l t mil I agrt'l' tlrnl exernsc will
nnt harm th1· 1111rrn<tl tw;.i rt
Wha l I '111 tl11111g 1 ~ warn mi:: those who don't
know wlwlher nr not lht•1r heart is normal before
lhl'Y l'llgag1• Ill phy!-.ll'al l'Xl'rllllns
110~ l1/\ '\'cw Tiii-: :\1Jl.l.IONS who jog do
vou c~l1111at1• .... ,. "" 1·ar1·ful a s you an· 111 having
lhl• do1'111r 1·val11:tlt· \11u1· h1•:irt Mr V .,
\1 ~ 1·~11111.11•· 1' tlial at kasl 75 lo 80 pcn·ent of
tho~l' who Jog ha\'1·11 \ li:itl ;1 hf'Clrl d wl'kup within
o;1x m11nlh!-.
Tlwy·n· gut''"'"J.! llw1r heart 1s normal. llow
do lhc·y k1111~ ttwy llav(•n'l got sever e coronary
d1st•as1··• S111·h ar1· t ht• JOgg1•rs I wrilt• about.
(;uessmg 1·:111 hnng on a fatality
Lewis doesn't pre<lch or
demand a religious commitment
from those he helps. lie simply
Future eyed
by dropout
By JOYCE I,, KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: My 20-yeu-old son, married and
.divorced, a ·colleice dropout and currenl 'factory
worker. has seen the light •nd knows he's got to
double-lime lo get into a career where he c an have
a bright future. 'Before he ships back to college, I'd
lih! to help him identify !iOme of the best fields to
consider. Su~gestloas?
-M.R .. Charlotte. N.C.
Semiconductors. biotechnology, geriatric care.
waste management. office automation-word proc-
essing. plant automation-rohotic-s, telecom
muniC'atioos. energy. synfue ls and computers are
among the more glitte ry options but traditional
dus ters offer promise. too. .
Until 1900, the a verage occupation will grow
nearly 21 percent Compare this rate to that of the
53 per<•ent anticipated for jobs in the service in·
dustry hotels. hair salons. auto repair shops.
business services. hospitals and non-µrofit institu-
tions
Veterans
to share
·dividend
I' 111LAI>EI.I'111 A
I AP I · Nearly ruur.
million veterans ""1th
ad1ve <;1 life ins uranC'c
poli nes will sha re in a
rcC'ord $61 !17 m illion
dividend during 1981 , a
Vet<· rans Adm 1nist rat ion
offin al SC111I
Be1·ausf• or h1ghl'r in
tercst rates earned l>y
insurance funds. the
csmount to be paid to
policy holders d uring
1981 is $53 million a hove
the 1980 figure. s aid
S . W Melillos1an. <11n•t·
tor or the l'h1ladclµhaa
VA < • l·ntcr
M EUDOSIAN. whoM.·
local offic·c C1dm1ntsll'rs
the GI ins urance lffO
gram for the country.
said dividends will he
pa id automati<·ally d ur·
ing 1981 on the a n
niversary date or cat·h
ins urance pol1t•y lie
(~attle ntstlers killed
;-.;,\I llOlll, Kt•fl \ ;1 t ,\l'r Kt•n\a11 tmrdcr
µatr11b ktlll·d :!'1 (';1tlk rtl..,tlt•r:-. fro111 T<m1.ania tn a
I w o h11ul' gu11 twt t I•· 1111 :i \\llil an11nal r l'Sl'rVt: vi:.1t
I'd b~ tl11111,:m1h .. r W1·,ll·rn tourr..,t~. µolit·c re
JJl•rl•·d
·eau 545-7123
Alid .beslim !)g3in
~!!~ .. ~~~!
JJam, you'*> lose up to a pound a day ... easily
and pfeuantly. without drug~ or
injections, •itbout brina hungry! From lhe
momma you enroll. you're undrr prof~<ional
sopenbion.
• ....... or bland "d"t" food, you'll eat
,.., ~ mnJs -hearty entrftS,
ll•Jlilla......_ even piu.a and nailbhakesl
IMlW•&--.•MMT19CWTIT91
'o ( elorir ( ounhnv '·• f11rt '"'''ii"'"~
*Tr•inf'd coun,t"IOJ' "''" ·hu~ \t1u n•·•
ntint h•hil' lh•I ,.,,1_,n•~· '""""~"' •
1h1ni u l lh~ p1,1'
*C)ur ""ri1htm1n,St"r 1'1 ''""'voft•• '""
mu'I mrt"t \OUr 1to1I or ••or »tltJ11t11n-1 .,,,.,
•irf" 1rt fr..-t until , .. u tlu'
HEW YEAR'S SPECIAL
START HOW. SAVE $50. TH}: NUMBER Of' JOB.') IN FINANC:t:, in·
surance and real estate should gallop by 34 per·
rent, with banking and credit scrvic:es rat ing ahead. said no appli<·at.1on 1s ...,
I
Present this rouoon at HH' ~•· ''' .. ,..,, ... ,,.m W""''" L • ''"' 1111t11r ,,,1 i .tt"td w .. ·11 •
dedUCt $5000 fnJrh VfJl'r li'••qt,Ho .J'U' i 1;0111 I 111 IJt'•~lrttrt v.1111! '·if rn•v.· f ..
clients only E101rPS Janudry 15 1981 c:Kt:t-:N
1•:, 1'111-:11 Ill Tll 1;111-:1·::\
', .. , 1d1·11t 111 1.:1 \I 1 r :11l:t I ·a
101 ll \t•ar~ Pa~"'t•d ''" '" 1u• ,f .11111.11·, I 1:1111 Sli1· 1' '111
, I\ 1·ol ''' 111•r ll11.,l1;111d \ltlt1111
I 1 I \'I'll 111 I 01 \l11.1d.1 I '.1
"II ' I I ·' It I. I I' I' II .. I
\I (•-..\I t' .• ,)flt d 'fl
1;1·:111•,1dl' "''r\h I''> ""' 111· 1i .. 1o1 l'ld ;t\ \l1111d.11
.1111111.11'\ • 1:t11 .11 .. 1~11'\I Ill
\11111111 i1t111· \11·1111111;11 1';1rk
'''I \ l"I'' llllllt•I' q,.. flfl"l'I lflltl
"' I l.11 l•t1 I .. t l\fl \11111111 l)(rq•
\1111111,11 \ Iii I'""' \lt•,:1
tlH • I d
Al 34 percent job growth. retail trade will
flourish but the transportation industry looks slug-
gish al only 10 percent expansion.
These kinds or projections illustrate the data
you l'an find in the U.S.
Labor De partm e nt 's
"Occu cit1onal Outlook
1500 S. IRISTOL. SUITE 20 I
necessary. •
The average payment '<f-ri
lo 85,700 World War I vete rans ' with curre nt •\~· lconttt of lrhtol & MocArtt..r if! Coo1tl_. ~I polic ies will he $296. ,_, • 0 .. , ,,~ c •• 1.., ....... ,,.
World War II veterans ~-" .. ~-----_. ·~..i ~r''~r~c~:~~1rav .... c""ru.ag"'-"-~ ·:.,~ i ·~,~1. ];J}' ~ ,,,. I ~!C?!!!!l,'!'~
,,.,., 11 1.1""" ul \\.tl11111 1.11'1'11-I an " and in the
Commerce Department's
annual "U.S. Industrial
pnhri~. Melidos1an s aid -~--------=------------about one-third or the t r1•,.i.. 1·:. .i tla11 1·ti11·1 W \llllE'\l 1111 ()1 I.t i' living World War 11 lt1.1111· l 1;1t·1·11111 I.a \1 11 ;111.1 l't I I 11•-..1111·111 11l 1 '11rm1a tl1•I
.In" :t c r a II d I Ii ti 1l 1 \'II \1,11 , ... (';!!>''"' ii\\ :II "" Outlook." each a thic k reference available m
li braries. ...i
ve t s. or m o r e than
• .I .1 nu .11 1 ., I •111 t II or 11 ~-====::.;:=~--r .. i.111:11\ ., 1:•11; 111 1:ra~;. McCOltMIOI MOITUA•tlES
I aq1111,1 H<•,11 II
An article hy Paul Plawin -"Careers With
the Brightest Future" in the December issue or
Changing Times is partic ularly illuminating. As
you research. bear broad tenets in mind:
3,230,000 men. are r>0l il'y
holde rs.
4~4 tl41'•
Laqun.i 11111 ..
l(.S oq33 Sari Juan Cdp1~1iann
495 1776
HAHCMI LAWK--MT. OLIVIE
Morluilry • Q•rrt• h••y
C11>n~11ory
Hi25 Gisler Ave
Coslil Mc::.<1
!:>40 5554
rtHCl .. OTHHS
IEU. .. OADWAY
MOITUAIY
1 tO Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9t50
IALnlHCiHOM
SMITH I TIITHILl
WISTCUff CHAN&.
427 E 17th SI
Costa Mesa 646-9371
,_Cl..OTHMI
IMmfl' NOllTUAaY
627 M•1n St
Huntmglon Beach
536-0539
\ .<ltt•\ I .1 ''"\I\ t•d 111 hi.. \\ 11 I' I .1!11.111 -..1111 .ft1.,.•ph 111
ll1111t1111·1n11 11,.,., It 1·., a11cl ,,
-.1,11:1 \dl'l.11111• \11 ll111li1·1 ol
':0111:1 H""•' 1 ',1 \l1•11111rial
-.1·n111• .. 1111l l ... 11,.1t1on W1•cl
111•,cf;11 .lanuan 1 1!1141 at
• 1~11'\l at 1h 1· io;,. "" \ ''"'
\I 11rt 11;11'\ I 'lt;qll'l 1111 h 1!1•1
"''" \11 \1111.111 111111 l:t llll).! (',11·tl l1 \I I'\\ \t11 rt U:tl'\
dll'I" 1111 '
Ends career
M t;RCED (AP)
Kenneth Riggs, 64, who
calls himself "the last of
the old-time coroners."
retired after a quarter or
a century in the post here.
-.JOB OPENINGS ARISE FROM two
sour ces: economic growth and replacement needs .
While twice as many jobs spring from the need to
replace workers who leave or die. for the fast
tracker, the growth factor is the more important
Look al the occupation as well as the in·
duatry. Health care is a hot industry but once the
anti-cavities vaccine becomes common, fewer
children's d entists will be needed. Even in a
technology industry. the file clerk is a vanishin~
breed as computers take over storing and retriev-
ing data. And the much-in-demand engineer could
languish In the shrinking railroad industry.
-By another measure. opportunity follows
geography. By the end of the decade, more than
half ol the population is likely to reside in the
South and West.
MORE THAN 510.000
veterans of the Korean
conflict who kept their
insura nce policies in
force will rec:eive an
avera~e payment or $67
A bout 16.'i.000 dasahled
vet er ans who have a
spc<"ial type of (;t in
surante will re<·e1ve an
average of $96, up $2
from 1!8), the first year
dividends were paid on
those policies.
Vietnam veterans do
not participate in the GI
insurance program ad-
ministered hy the VA .
said Dick Baker, a VA
spokesman.
"'GI INSURANCE
Deatlu Elaewhere used to be totally funded
by the VA," Baker said.
Congress placed It under
• private hands durln1 the
mld-lllllOI. TOR~NTO (AP> -FORT WAYNE, Ind. Loa An1elea into the Baker noted that ·the
Songwnter ••ti•. Lowe• (A p) -Ge• r I e comm..Uty of Downey, dividends apply only to
8a•dler, 66. dte~ or a.r • .-., •. or1anlser dJ
1
eel Dec. %7. He wu a insurance polities still ca n~er Sunday 1n .a of Liam Club IDterna-armer from Arlkanaaa in force.
hospital_. Mrs. Sandler s Uonal in 12 ltatel, died who became a de· A hou letter, aiped 197~ hit, '.'I'!! Never Sunday at bl.a home. veloper, mlWonatre and by a fktltloua ·•Navy
Smile Again,_ ~elpe_cL _ .~ _ !heJ:ib'iflnt ml)'«~-C•p&. V.R.-P~ol-T?riincrr me careeror --the Phlladelphla VA of.
..
A
1981
CALENDAR
FOR YOU
AGAIN THIS \'EAl •.. AS IN THE PAST.
WE HAVE AVAILAllf WITHOUT cHAlcE,
A PIACTICAl APPOINTMENT CAUNOAI
fOI EACH fAMll Y WHO CAUS AT OUI Off1a.
,..,..,.,
COLONA&. P4MllAL
NOMI
7801 Botsa Ave
Westmms ter
893·3525
'
Frank Sinatra. NEW YORK <AP) -LOS ANGELES (AP) · ftce," baa occ•lonally
........ 0.-, IO, a elvll -W I I I I a • B . appeand in puJ>lleaUou
rl1ht1 attorney In the -.~ ........ 51, a UCLA in varioul putt of the
VIENNA <AP)
Man Ired M ••t••r Markhof, 77. a proml·
i-.. died P'liday ln a reHareh payeholo1l1t country lneorrecUy t.ll·
New Yon hmpltal after IJld....., In the •tu41 ln1 World Ward II
1 leqthJ UlnMa. of the effeda of LID, •eter-~ an •Ull·
died Die. a. bl• for ln1uranc•
Harbor Lawn· MomJt OIOO
Mortwuy· Cemetery Crematory
PAClftC YllW ....., ..... , ...
Cell"lltery Mortuary
Chapel :J600.P.c11ic View Drove Newport Beach &W-2700 c
nent industrialist ind
patron of the arts ln
Austria after World War
11. died SUnday 1fler be
was Injured In a traffic
ace ident. 1utborlUea
Hid.
NASHVILLE, Tea.. SAN B&llNARDINO
(AP) -la ..... ,.1 (AP> ~ Q .... D. T_.
at, who pkted mUJ or .... •· a ..._... mo-
t be chan1•• tb1t lion picture and
lr1n1formed tb• teleYl1lon comedy
farmland aoutbeut of writer, died Dea. •·
dwldnd1 or refund•
eHD lf lMr bne not been..,....,_._,,
Babr Mil the VA b1e
•P•Dt tbou1a•d1 of
dOUan a ,.... eomMt· .............
........... ,...,,.,.
llm~A.-•oa.ta .... • .._. ('tM) .....
Co1ta Meaa'l'Ordy Com~ Funeral FadUU.1
-------. . ..
J
_,..,,.... '
~ >·~:i... . *"' ~ .. ""' >-' .~ .. ,,~
Monday, January 5. 1981 ' DAILY PILOT
•,
••
~
"Birds of California" , ~
your free, full color l.--r'
calendar for the New Year.
Con1e 10 I l1111H · FL·(k·r~il today -
and we'll ~~,·c \<>11 :~,;:-, be<1utifuf to-
n101Tovvs · ... ii·n '. ( )u r l q8 1 c<1ll'nch1r
fe<i turcs th(' l>i1·d;-; of ( ·,tli f<>n1ia \\·ith
bi g, brilli<111t 1_·1 )I< >r pli111 ',gT<1ph y hy
Buck Milll·r -;1 hri.~ht . u ~cful :1ddi-
tion to <1 11\' '1011\L' in-offiL'l ·.
Incluck~cl \\'it h ti iv l'<ik·11cl;1r. vou 'Jl
_-t_eceive a ~Y' x 11" ln11il Pf It ·tlitic}n print
of our proud 11;1 t 1<111,d "') 1!1 bo l. the h;tld
eagle . It ': n·pnidul·1·d ()Jl ti ·\.lun:d
paper, su it:t! >I<· fc 1r It 11 11111.L"
Put a free California road map In your glove compartment.
This up-to 1.b l l' .~uidc i:--. ;111 indi s-
pensable tr<t\'L•l (.'( >t 11p;11ii,111. And it's <1n
interesting . cclur ;_1tion:tl sourrc of his-
torical Cal ifon1i <1 f~1rt s \\·ith i11forn1a-
I The checking account that "
1
pays you 5 ~% interest.
LI 1t • _ tn1 is he1\' ! J\nd no\\', you
c< 11 \ ,Q;l't 1 n< H'l' out < >f your checkin g CIC-
cuunt t h~111 .>'<>LI put in -by t ·a111ing
[).~S(/r-in t c rest. con1poundcd dai I y
to ,·ic Id S.4 7ck an nuaJl v. It 's
sn);11t 111< mc v fn >111 1-I( >ine Fede ral that
;1clcls to vour balance and bui lds
, < )ur huch.~ct. -.
Vvl1 at 's n1ore, Chextra is free if you
cl<)< n1P <>ft \V< >things: Maintain a $500
tive li stings of cu 1nu~tl e vents.
interesting pl <1ccs -t.lven
ways to save encr.~1y \vhil e
traveling.
(?lijo11ua
rnini1nun1 bal ance or
an·ange for direct deposit
of your retire1nent or
gove nlllent check if you're
62 or over. There 's no
per-check charge, no
matter what your balance.
So feel free to write as
1nany checks as you like.
Titere's no obligation, but
hurry. Offe r gOOd only while
supplies last. To help a~
sure availability, we n:iust
_limit cale.ndars_and ~µ..~to -
oneperfamilyplease. / ~ .... _..._ __ ............ ~ .. . .
Huntington Beach Office: 2111 Main StrMt • 531·1511
8olsa-Golden West Office: 15091 Golden West Street· 898-0934
Laguna Hills Office: 24300 Paseo de Valencia· 770-7171
Laguna Niguel Office 30131 Town Center Drive. Suite 145 · 495-2880
Irvine Office: 4543.Campus Drive· 752-6161'·-..
San Juan Capistrano Ottice: 31972 Camino Capistrano • 493-0601
Santa Ana Office: 17th and Main Street • 835-4336
And feel safe \\'ith overdraft
protection up to &3.000 if
you qualify.
Chextr<1. Built on eve1ything we've
Jean1ed in 46 years of efficient 1noney
h(u1dJ ing. But it's just one part of a full
servi ce b<u lking cc >nvenience system
fron1 f~on 1c r~ederal that includes high
e<u11ing. brtlaranteed savings, tele-
phone bi JI payn1ent plus Ma ster-
Card '" and Vi sa f(. y
Chextra. The checking account
fron1 Honie Federal that puts
the ba lance in vour favor.
Come to Home FederatCountry. ~
Th<-·rt> art' futures buildin~ he r e.
Assets over $4 billion
HOME
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
··of San Biego-· ~-·
Seal Beach Office·: 1350 Pacific Ceast·Hwy. • (714) 898-3'81 (2l~) 596-5576
Home Federal Savings and L~n ~s.o<:latlon of Sen Diego
• •
,
l .....
4
1
BALTZ BERGERON
SMITH & TUTHILL
WESTCl.IFF MORTUA RY
''Affordable funerals''
427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
PllONE 646-9371
SALE STARTS
TUES., JAN. 6th
Semi-Annual SHOE
UP TO Y3 OFF and MORE I
FLORSHEIM
BALLY,
JOYCE
PENALJO
AMALFI
CABARET
AND OTHERS
BRUNO MAGI.I
SELECTED STYLES • lltOKEH SIZES
#14 PAIHIOM Ill Me, MIWPOIT llACH 1714J '44-4221
. #17MA*lftlilt.~r211t2a.u11
~~~~~_._--"'-~~~~~--~~~---~~NA~
APWfrw~IO
.............
MONEY mag .
azi n e for a
s pecial rep<>rt on
mi ll ionaires.
.persuaded the
government to
assemble one
million dollar
h i I I s i n
n u m e r i l' a I s <.'
qucnce for tl11~
rare photo
~~r--tJl~ug doses aid
• mastect~DIY patients
BOSTON (AP l -Treating women
with a combination of drugs after
mastectomy for s preading breas t
cancer greatly increases their odds
of survival. but the m edicine must be
g 1 ven in high doses. a study con-
l'l udes
Dol·tors at the National T umor
lns titull.! in Milan. Italy, gained
widespread attention four years ago
when they reported that a combina·
tion of three drugs effectively pre-
vents a new outbreak of disease in
women treated for breast <:ancer.
In the New England J ournal of
1 Med1<·ine. the team reports on a
follo\\·UP study on !XII women who
11r1<lcrwent removal Of t'lHH0erous
hr1:asts In these patients. the disease
had ~prt-ad tu the lymph nodes or
h('y oncl "
Tht;. h::c.1m . headed by L>r. Gianni
Bonadonna. <·ompared the outl'Ome
of 1,1,oml'n who received full doses of
thrct.• drui.:~ <:ydophosphamide.
1m·1 hotn•xatl' and fluoroura<·il
"tlh 1Aornc11 tho look lower doses of
I ht: mt.•dlt'inc or nu drugs at all.
1\ rt l'r f1 Vl' yt-ars.. 77 per<:ent of the-·
women who received full doses of the medicin~ were still alive a nd disease·
rree. By comparison. only 45 percent
or those who took no drugs were still
free of cancer, as we re 48 percent or
those who took reduced doses.
Sometimes doctors give women
less than full doses o f the
chemotherapy because or the toxicity or the dru~s.
"Our findings indicate that it is
ne<·cssary lo admlnist~r combination
d1t!m otherapy at a full dose to
achieve clinical benefit." the doctors
wrote.
They also concluded that cancer
victims who had gone l brough
menopause had as good a chance as
youn~er w,omen of survival if they re·
t·eived full doses of the three drugs.
In an accompanying editorial, Or.
Stephen K. Carter of the Northern
California Cancer Program in Palo
Alto wrote, "If the Milan analysis is
correct. attenuation weakening of
dost!s to minimize toxicity in adju-
vant chemotherapy is a 'luxury' that
patients cannot afford." --------
American heaps on more
free services.
No monthly service ch arges
11 vo11 k 1·1·p .i $!jl)I) 1111111m11111 lml~11ll·c• 111 yn11r l11tt.·rrs1 N1 iw v1111 1 :111 111111111lv 1·;1111 1111"n•o.,1 1111 \011111
C'llC·t·kill,g de 1·1111111 . yo11 1 ;111 g1·1 ;1 1111-.;f 111\',11\1.il1lt-111·1·
St'rvl<'I'" loo. W11l1 l1111·n·o.,1 ('lwdu11g. Nn\ 1111111 ·
Clll'c kin/.! ;w1·1111111 . 111 ii y1111·n · m ·1·r f-i'.l. )'Pll won't p<.1y
*9· b 1111011 -.... 1ro1 ii.( A 11w r IC', If I ~; 1\· 111 g...,
More free services, plus Intere st
Wt•'ll µay yo11 !l 11"n i11f1-r1·<;(. c·1111111111111dnl
dully. or1vrnir1•lwckl11g a1·1·111111I llal.11ic·1-.
AIHI II ~11111 h;1l;i11n· I~ k1·pl al .1
11 .000 111111111111111. Vflllf l1111·1c·o.,I
C'hlTkilll! ;wc·rn1111 ha~ c·v1·11 1111ir1· 111
offrr: A lrc'C' -.;aft• d<·j1no.,il '"" Fi1·1·
monc·~· nrtl1•r<-. a11cl I ravf'11·r-.; 1'111•1•ko.,,
Fret.· I ru~• cll'1·d or 1101c.· c·111lc.·<'I 11111.
Free notary st·rvl<T. l':vc.-11 <lisC'1111111 ....
on C'ar re11tals. All l hlr1~s you
don't usually ~rt wllh lnt<'res t-
earnlnJi!. cherkln~. Bu t you d o al
American.
Check guarantee and overdraft protection
You also may bt> able to qualify for a dH•t'k
~uarantct· card t h at baf'ks up your
checks. as wrll as ovcrdrafl protct't Ion.
.ill\' -;1•n'iC'f· d1:1rg<''s . Sp you C';tl1
,,c1;1 I I 1osc· o.,;H·111g~ 1<1 ti II'
1111>1wv vo11'll IH' making in ln1errst.
SIOO gets you started
You C'Hll npc·n your lnlrn·sl Chet klng
;11 ·c·1111111 wflh a~ 111111· as •100.
Y1111·11 hr :ihl<' lo -;1;ir1 writ In~ t hecks
oi1 11 rlgh1 away. j11~1 llkl' with yo11r old
d11·c·kl11g, ac·co11111 . O nly now you 'll br
c•ar11l11J.! i1111·rc·~1 011 ii. And your
dwc·k~ will hc.:ar the 11a nH'
of J\11wr\l'an Savlt1~~ -a nam(' that's
mc-ant salety for nt>arly 100 years.
• Over l 00 American
Saving• offices to serve you.
Check the white pagu for
the one..ae.areat you. .
• A11et1 over' $9 ~Ullo_n.
•Accounts Insured toSl00,000.
Convenient offices serving Southe~n and Northern California Including:
HUNTINGTON BEACH
7830 Edinger Avenue
at Huntington Center
848-2 222
'
COSTA MESA-
SANTA ANA
3929 S. Bristol Ave .
at Sunflower • 979-9800
SEAL BEACH
801 Pacific Coast Hwy.
at Main
594-8855
•
LAGUNA HILLS
24085 El Toro Road
at Paseo de Valenci$
770-2816
,.
... , ,. ,, •. ~~-..,. .-,t.., ......... ,.,. ... ,,..-.. _._ r'"•#-............. _...-.;-~-..-.....; ... ~-... -·--· -·-· ... ,.,._~-... -·--·-..... --... -._. ...... --..... _._., __ • __ ................. ,... ...
·~
CONSUME A
I '
'
.. t .. ,
c:111 a pr11blt'111" '/'11t·11 u•nl1' 111 l'ut /Junn l'at will
1•ut red I apt·. y1'11t1u1 th1• u11swer.s und u.ction yuu need
ro s11lw 11wt1wt11•s m yuuernrrumt und husmess. Mail
your qu11st1u11s 111 l'ul f)u11r1, At Y11ur S11ru1ce . Orange
Cva.~t Dml.11 /'1/11/. I' IJ lieu 156'J, Costa Mesa. CA
!l'l6'l6 A.~ mo1111 ll'llt.'rs cu µ11.~.,1tl/(• will be answered,
hut ptwrwd 11111uines 111 Lc>lln:i 1101 mdudmy the
rc•ader's full na1111•. oddrt•ss und bu.\wess huurs' phone
•wm ber can nm t>c! 1·u11sufrn•d '/'his column appearsdai-
111 •'In· pt Suridays
. tflgrafnn lalwrftrd'!
DEAR PAT· Do migraine headaches have
S ) mptoms tha t are different from other
headaches. and is it true that this kind of headache
1·an be inherited''
S. R .• Costa Mesa
A migraine headache Is believed to be related
lo a functional disturbance of the circulatiOll
within the cranium, probably involving dilation
or the crllfti•I arteries. accordlag &o &he .C•Hfornia
Medical Association. ft often affects only one side
or the head at a lime and may be accompanied or
preceded by nausea, vomitin~. blind spo&s, or
flashes of light. There Is a strong tendency for mi-
graine headaches to run in families.
Aspirin or codeine may relieve mild attacks.
Severe attacks usually require ergot derivatives,
which should be taken as soon after the onset or
symptoms as possible.
These drugs require careful supervision by a
doetor. Close cooperation between patient and doc·
tor usually can bring about good control, if not
complete relief.
s•adn draemt on ,.,., lo••
DEAR PAT: My gas heatint bill is so high
that it scares me! I've been wondering if it would
h('lp cut heat loss if I put window shades on my
windows and kept them pulled down at night. Can
you find out how much good this would do?
K.W .. Costa Mesa
l.aboratory tests at Com ell University reveal
that by using window shades you C"9n save oae-
1 quarter to almost one-third of Indoor heat that
usually is lost through windows.
Shades were mounted Inside the window frame
with a one·half ineh clearance along the vertical
sides and a three-quarters inch gap at the top. Tbe
fairly common vinyl-coated opaque cotton shade
achieved the highest percentage of heat savln'gs. It
reduced heat loss by :u.s percent when placed one
inch from thr window.
Sa1111alra11 t.-a fJannf'"d
Dfo:..\f{ PAT: What's happened to sassafras
lea '! I used to buy it, hut I haven't been able to find
any for sevcrnl years Why'•
K.K .. Corona del Mar
Sassafras root was found to coatain safrole
which produces liver cancer In rats. The saJe or
sassafras tea was banned by the Food and. Drug
i\d'm1nlslration In 1976 for that reason.
Drllrf»rll dew •oon
DEAR PAT · I pla1·ed an order with Mail
Order Marketing Co. Nov. 3 for a wooden rocking
horse for my grandson. My chec k was cashed Nov.
14. hut I still haven 't receivetl m y order.
KD .. Costa Mesa.
Mail Orde r Marketing, also known as Mass
Marketing Association, sa ys tbat your order was
shipped three weeks ago. The firm will contact you
by phone regarding this order. If It's still misaing,'
another rocklnl( horse will be sent to you Im·
medlat.ely.
A15eviously reported In A YS, this firm re·
cently ated. Its new address ls 11818 Glea Oak
Blvd., S ernando 91340 (phone: (213) 315-3207).
MEDICAL TEAM M•S
VOLUNTEERS WITH
DEPRESSION
A Medical Research Team is stwying the
use of an anti-depressant medication.
"~ ......... ""': YOlunNlirw muit be betw"n the ages oA ,,. and
.,.nenc1t.g depr ... lon (fffllng Hd or blU9 for M'I
f9111Gn) '°' at .... , 4 w9"a.
YOWMl'lmS WILL llCllYI A ...
brtef phylic.i exemlnatlon. EKG. lab teats. •nadlcltlon
and vteltl with 1 prot•1lon11.
Cal 7 l·~/634-69•
.
MONDAY THiii ... AY ,..._, ....... ~ ....
Monday, JanUal'/ 5 1981 DAILY PILOT A Ii
Language purists issue new warning list
, . THE·
EARJ.'S
"-·HlAlltt() .......................
'\I I /' , .....
S•'• t> t ,.... •.,,.,., ,t ~"'•'
4( jjoll ........... ~ .. ,_, , ..,, ..... "
~. \lll·JlS ----.
I ;'f I 1 -,411 !JIO( I
DJ:ESELS
111 """ " \I I \I< 1111 ·1 S
SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. (AP> -The
phraa• "'Moral M.;orlty," '"cam--•i&n rhetoric"
and "servet no uaeful purpo1e" top the list of
catchworda and phrases to be shunned by English
languaie purists in 19111. say t~e Unicomrunters.
they are, but I am convinced they are not a ma·
jority.··
coau._.-..641-1289 . .,. .. ._ ......
1111n10N v1uo495-0401 1.-nc. ..... c._.,.,.,.. ti•,. 0..0 ,,... •• A••'Y •11iw, t
( :. \ I >I I .. I .AC I ~
In bani:;hing "no userul purpose," Thomas
translated the phrase as meaning: "I don't want it
done, but I can't think up a good reason why
Rabe said the group, which has Jssued. the li st
ror seven years, has a serious purpose
--.--, , The aroup of writers and professors. based at
Lake Superior State Colleae here, issued their first
"Redundancy Alert," asking Americans..to keep
an eye out for "past history"
"It's to attract people's attention to the misuse
of certain words and make them think twice about
the language." Rabe said
Child , aRd Adult Orthodonta ~·; ·~
j
r ··A Beautiful Smile Could Change
Your U te!'' The group also called an all-points "Red Suf·
fax -Alert " on the use or "·gate," as in "Koreagate "
or "BUlyJ(ate." ,
The ~roup's list of "Words That Cloy lhe J.::ar "
intluded "fruit worthy," "funcralize<I " and lmY
word used hy ('elehrit1cs in talk show inter views
referring lo "paying our dues" or "sur\'h 1ng "
'\. I • '"°" of Hiqti <;>valil'f Carr at •ffY n•._.... ,_.,, ~.
,' "We've given Red Alerts before. What we're
s aying is just be on the look-out for such words.'·
s aid W.T. Rabe, spokesman for the Uni corn Hun-
ters. which .claims a national membership of
Two phrases hrantletl a), "tot:.ill~ usl'lc·~s · 111
eluded "deplane" and "for sure" ~ht.•11 11M·d 1n
stead of "yes " David A. Sullivan DMD _, ·
25.000. .
The bani.<>hmeot list . based on "'mal-. mis' or
overuse" was compiled from 1.500 entires from
around the nation. s aid Peter Thomas. a professor at the college
··Moral Majority," the title of the conservative
religiousand political group led by the Rev. J erry
Falwell. was nominated by Michael R. Maloney of
Lexington. Ky . who said. "I'm not sure-how moral
Sheriff loses copters
REDWOOD CYI'Y (AP I San Mateo County
supervisors have ordered lhe sheriff to sell his two
aging helicopters over his objections.
"This ought to make a lot of criminals happy
when they hear about this, .. said Sherirf John R.
McDonald after the vote.
The Untt·orn Hunter~ pl;.wi·d · sh;Hl' and
"adult" under "l.11nitc<I Hant).hnwnt " .1~ "OK
words. l>ut sul1j1•<·t 111 ahu!.e ··
Stan losing
weight today
Beoin losing weight 1mmeo111,1y with
ma:t1mum-5lltnQth S.,.r Otru1e1 re
oucong 1ao1e1s and O•el Pliln 11 takes ov'' -wlleie your ••II f)Owtl tta•t ) o" A gove1nmen1 i1p001nled panel Of med
•till ilnd scienflfl( e•pt'1S has •eviewe<I
the c11mca1 tesh or the md11mum strength 1ngreo1enl 1n Super Odrl,..1,
and has ter mea •t sale and ellectrve ' for appelile control and wt •Qht loss
try Super Odrlnu tr>day
To ltte waler lllHI 11141
,uftln111, lry Odrl11ll.
Otlrif1il 1s Ille''"'' r.ou want Outing the pre·menstrual eye e II 1~ a naturill
witer pill and 11 too •S ~uld w1tl\ a
money-Dae-gua1an1ee ~eao and 1()1
lo• all pacugt p1ec.au11ons t<11t1u"y
17732 Beach Blvd ' • J
H!-Jnl1ngton Beach 9at1842•2$S~··
"-14pon .. ttie_lec...._ .• ~
f,,, Bc•·.1 0 11al1t y and
SPll'<::11111 (Jf Handmade rugs
frrim < hinil Pnrs1a. India &
I • irl1 .i r 11 .i it 1 e a so n ab I e
prier",
The s upervisors voted to refuse McDonald's
reques.t for $78,000 for the craft after cutting back
on the bud2et for them over the past three years . '4?lfJ-f' Hour.. ll.\ilfl Hu., ·~1 lfl •
\und.,, 11 t.
2~<'1 E. COil!>I Hwy Ut4) l)/i I>'/~
Co•ona del MH•
W~ l>UrC"tU~ ut.00r1ef"W f 'Wfl\
AJ)liroitt\"I 4'1d j.f'f\'t(f' .. Y .. tl4bl•
$1\)5 on our7:4l) a.m. and 1:30 p.m. nonstops.
$1\)Sonour 7:3l) p.m. widebody.
$1\)5 on selected return flights, too.
$1\)5 with no restrictions.
$7875 for kids under twelve you bring along.
United saves you $88 off the regu lar
Coach fare to Seattle. Just fly one of our
selected flights any day of the week. and
you ·n fly for just $105 one way. Scats an~
limited on these flights, but there an: no
advance-purchase or length-of-stay ·
requirements at all. ·
For information and reservations,
call your 1r~I Agent. Or call United at
973-2121 .
United is P.artners in Travel with
Western International Hotels-in Seattle,
the Washington Plaza.
Most nonstops to Seattle
l..e·u"''
7:40 o.m~
I I .{() :i 111
l::JO p.m~
'l.~!) fl. Ill
fi I!'! pm
7::m_p.m~
•$105 Oiithtl'i
• I •
10 : 10 u.m .
I • 1 p 111
:l.f;:i p.m.
.; > I p Ill
I •I I p 111
!l:!l(i p.m.
l·:en·s ~11liw11 10 r h.111gr •
.· .. . , . . .
=· ~ . • . . ·. · . •• .. :; !! ,,
... f I (.IAJl t I IL If
Inf ... ·""" ·!t). .~ ng
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No minimum hal 1 H c·' It 11 t'ht•t''-" per
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Pay bills by phone!
Cl1t'cki11~ Pl.US account.
TELl:.-PAY as many
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j u~t $1 per month!
S.I\ 1.· 11m1.· <1 nd Cll'I o f po~tage ! Pay bills by
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We 're adding intert•.\'f to banking convenience! . .
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San Diego Ft•<ll·ral ~nur 11111.· :ind 11nl.' financial
ce nter for the '){I),~
Open J.'Our Interest Checking
PLUS account today!
Mlulotl Vfejo/Lapn• Hll& N~'JM)rt Bt'Kll s .. c ...... Saa J-c.,htruo w~
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lOl 12 <. 'rown Valley l'arkway
"'"t,h nf Nigud R,1aJ
2~332 Cabol RJ. near La Paz.
adjacent to Lucky's ~u~rmarket
Telephone: 770-6346
On Pnc1tk ·ou<i1 I l igh\llay.
bt-twttn M.1cArthur Blvd.
and Newport t \:nccr Dnve
Tolephu~~·~-181!5
On Avenida Pk:o at Calle
de lot Molinot
Telephone: 491-6330
32302 Camino Capi1trano. in
the Solana Rincon Building
Telephone: 661.o897
On Barranca :u Lake. 11
Woodbridge Vi111ge Ccn1er
Telephone: SS9-880J I clcph1•n1." 495·6210
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\
JAN. 5, 1M1
~··-Newport Harbor's John Moffet
finishes second to Soviet
BUSINESS
ENTERTAINMENT
86
88
in international swim meet.
See page B4.
t11rned-it &round f Qr Cowboys Rams loss
'I
is a big reason Embarrassing def eat wny Dallas • still alive I -I lS
' I
' 1 ' ) •\' '\I 11 .. 1111> Wlillt·., htlrolt:~ i.d
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I<,, 1 1 "''""·"ti l111·d t""'' t11ud1down
I••· .... I •. ._. i "" II llll' r lll<tl 'j 4(1 Sunday .
, .,, I• .. "' 1 1•11111h r crnainrng. to
"''" • , i•l..!1 qu.s1l•-d111<il 1Jl1:1yolf Vil '
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• i •I' 11 ..... 1 Jan~ ...
".. • 11111.ir 1 J'se<I b~ nur lo1'S to
ll ''". -.dHl Whr lc, r eferring to
,, 1 1>-. ' 1 tl111lil1111~'. on the nalronally
, ti \!•111•1.1\ 1111•11! 1·11r,tcst three weeks ago
Y.. al 111 1 .... 11 a11d '>lltd, 'llcy, we're the
01&l11&s Cowboys ' We've got to play better than
lh11t 1111s team established itself on spirit· and
prrde." said White. a six-year veteran who has
~utded Dallas lo a 14-4 record in his first year as a
'>tarter after Staubach re tired.
THE COWBOYS ('AME BACK lo heat the
Eagles rn the final regular season gam e, then
knoc ked off the R<1 ms 34 13 las t week before Sun .
day's c·f>mc .. from hehrnd thriller
The fo'alcon5., behind the throwing of Steve
liartkowski. who hrt on 18 of 33 passes for J 20
yards, led 27 17 on Ttm Mazzetti's second r1eld
~oi.I . a 34-yarder with only 6 :37 left
Earlier. Hartkowks1 hit on touchdown tos!>es of
five yards and 60 yards. Lynn Cain s1·orc1l on a
one yard plunge and Mauettt hooted a 38·)ard
three-pointer
T he Cowboys had sc:ored on a J8 yard f1elfi
goal by Rafael Seµtien , a one-yard run Ii) llllht·rt
Newhouse and TD strikes of fr\'e yards and 14
yards . the last to J •1·a r~1in v.1 th~l '10rt·rr1111nrn1•
"After lh<1I <·mliurr;i-.-.rnt•nt 111 ttw Karr,, v.1·
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th•· l'>f'Ufl'. "'a-. f)O o "'•· "'11uld kc·1·1" 1•l'11'J 111, ,, ·' ., ,
s aid Wh1t1: '
"WE (;OT Tll,\T J 11 '>l (Int· 11' !11 "" .in•! '"''t1
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lllll'll lu"it l'l;i 11~1· 11,dl 11, I 111! 'o .1 (! ,\ I d
.! 1 '"' t 1 c·1· l rng but I d idn 'l feel the satisfaction of it
.rll 11111 rt !lie final whistle."
h \f.IJ\S ('()A('ff Tom Landry. known for his
11011 f ,11·t-e 1 en "as seen smiling after the victory.
'\\'h at <·an vou s ay? It was just a tremendous
r h 1111., "ti"' 1·1Jriwhatk J." he said. "When we got down
''· tv.•• tou('hdowns ::!4-IO in the third quarter. I
1t,•111L1ltt 111ir 1·h11nc·es ()f coming back were slim. But
q,. i. d i l111un,·t·'i funn y som etimes."
Jr "' .... 1 he· ..,c·1·ond ti me White had beaten the
1· • .r, ,,,,, rn th(· µlayoffs with second-half passing.
l1 .. 1tl1111' 1111· < '11v. ho~.., to a 27-20 triumph two years
.1 11 .tlt1·1 ">lauliar h wa-. sidelined al halrlime with
(1:dl:1 ~ tr;dlrnl! ~II l:J
111· 1a., Ju-.1 -;uper. amazing ... "said Lan-
1· \ 11u knov. a ctually , he's a first·year
i; 1.11 • 11>.11 k although he's spent some time in the
".1.•1u•
I 11· v. ,,., '"npl~ an:iazingon a couple of plays,
I :--1·1· l.OSS TO RAMS, Page 82)
Playoffs:
• • p1zzazz
aplenty
R:> Wll.I. GRIMSLEY
AP S-••I Cerrn_.ftf
"Shoot from the hip ...
·Bombs Awa)'"
.. Lightning rn a bottle "
"Bingo' ..
It ·., t h1· m •Y. fat·e of pro foot-_..r
hJll "'tlr1 "'rrle open. un-.-'
AP W1r•pholot
pn·d1l't;il1le :.rnd so structur ed
that as 1n a good· "B " movie .
. ' ou don't know who gets the girl
u ni ii the final reel. · u ·s & whole new game."
lr1rmer O<tllas quarterback
Hoger St<tuhat·h was s aying last
S aturfia) at Philadelphia 's
\'etcrans Stadium. where the \
F.agles beat the Minnesota Vi-
kinl!s in a rl1vis1onal playoff. "It '•I
has had a facelift. Do you know l
"'hy'• It's to please all these peo. I plr ..
HE SWEPT h is arm toward
the near 70,000 s pectators in the
s t;inds "The rules have de-
~0 fo11gt•d the dt'fense. A defende r
COMMENTARY
;j
j
I ~.
WINNING PLAYS 'l'ht•se an· the p lays that gave Oakland a nd Dalla!;
, 1 ·111111" ~11n1L t\ ,,, the> left . Oakland's Mike Davis in(erl'e pts a Brian
le ft 111 thP g ttnw Thi· l1a!I \\a -. 111h·11rl,.•I 1111 I >11:" '••"·'"'•Ill• ''· \11 I 111 ( :rn 't us1· his hands or touch a re-
, ... , 1 er fl\'(• yards beyond the line
111 ""nmmagc It gives the re·
1·1·11 l'r a tremendous edge ..
the· right photo. l>allao.; \\1d•· ,,., ••t\1•1 l>t•'" 1•,.,,, " .,: ,, ·., ·
1•• ,., , 111 l lir: 1•1111 /.llnt' to t•nd a Clevela nd drive with just 49 sel'onds aftl'r SC'Ol'lllj.! th~' \\tl11l111g 111 \11111 ll''·t I ''( .... :d lt
Browns' doing led to undoing
l lleveland gambles agai_n, al)d this time it j(1i ls
1 I " r I \ 'tl r I\ I•• I' hey
I I f l'I • •111'1"' ... 1 I•) t'\.('ll h·· Ill
tltt pl ""' h 'I •·I h!'ri' I h••\ a re.
1 1 1 "'"' 11·11 I 111111 11,,. Suru•r 11 .. ,, I
I 1 ·.., 1•111111~11 tu rn <tkl' a J.!ruwn
111,tl) I ( \
If I o;t arl talking-too mut.'h
,tl,11111 thr!'." t '11<wh Tom Flores
.... 11d , "tirv<•y111g the jl•brlation 111
t 111 c 1.i kl;1nd H<11d t'rs' loc·kcr
1110111, · I rmJ:hl i.:ct tears in my
I°\ f H'\ 11
I H t: TEAR.~ rn tltc Cleveland
Ht owns· eyes are drying loday
lh1· tears of frustr ation. of dis
may, of S<'(!tng a chanrc at a
a t It ;rm prunship inching closer and
dPse r. lhen having it cruelly
.. nalched away at the last instant.
IL was Flores' clever decision
10 kirk into the wind to start the
:'l•1·ond ha lf which began the
Hrowns ' downrall. because it
forced them to fight that wind in
t hP fina l quarter
B u l · u It 1 m ate l y 1 l w as
\lt>veland 's own doing which led
to 1ls undoing on Sunday, lo the
fta1ders' 14-12 victory whic h
pl.1ct'd lhem in the American
Conferenr<' title game next ·sun-
day In sunny San Diego. far from
the bitter rold which whips In off
Lake Erle and brlnas lean to the
eyes of Rnyone foolhardy enough
to face that s ub·zero wind.
C'oach Snm Rutigliano of the
Browns chol'le not to face it in the
final minute . He opted for a 1am-
ble. a shot al a touchdown rather
th'an a kick Into the teeth ol that
wind, an uttempt at a 1ame-
wlnnlng fi eld goal.
.\ND THAT GAUi ... & almolt
certainly killed the BroW1'a. TM
team which had spent the ......
on ·the precipice, .loolda1 down 1Hlt--n...-,~fliln1 throat of defeat ..
lund.y after anothet, yet .. .,.
ln1 each Ume by tM *'8 ti II
teeth, ftnlllJ aot ••allowd •· . ''lam toak a c~. Be-... ..... Uftwla ..... .,. It ....
Ltitlf' Hiyli,lltOaklaftd CGI'·
I
Playoff schedule
SUNDAY'S GAMES
NFC champlon1hlp
o.1llds at Ph1ladelph1a
< 1 hi\nnel 1 dt 10 a .m. I
AFC champlon1hlp
Oa kland at San Oie90
(c ha nnel 4 at 2 p.m .)
n<'rbuck who stole quarterbacks
blind all season, who swiped two
of Brian Sipe's passes on Sunday.
But the inte rc eption which
destroyed the dream of yet
ano ther Sipe-inspired heart-
stopping triumph belonged to
strong safety Mike Davia.
It came on ~ond down on
Oakland's 13-yard line, with 41
seconds to play. Onie New10me,
the receiver in the end zone,
never had a chance.
"OZZIE WA.8 JIY man all the
way." said Davia. "Slpe wu alld·
ing out of the pocket ud didn't
seem to want to riM tbe nm .. , I
saw OUie look up, IO I loobd ,,
aftd l HW Sipe let .0 of tbe ball.' And Davia, cllvtq, womd up
with It, CT8Cllinl It wbllt free
safety Bar,_ 0... Md tblD
the rllt of tbe nultut Rakten
-:nveloptd blm and be1an
celebraUnctbelrvldor)'. __ _.._.i.
Rull.Ueno, of coune, def..-..u
hi• dtcllkJD to lpore -for ..
play. anyway -place·klcker
Don Cockroft and lboot fw ....
bll six polnta. "U wt tbrew • aecond down," be 1ald, "we
could run on thlrd ud IWI-.-for
th• field pl." Anet fw CleY.aad, ft.ad ....
had beea bar• '° ••••. ltf. C~Uaft ...-..... t;e. "'9 • .. u..,... .. .. .
tblnl ................ ...
bacll.lllUd .... .-..-.
from " -• ,... ...,, ... iatM ........... ..
.... .............. Ql .... _...., .. , .. -'·•--. ,,.... ...
And tht oal1 ff8¥trllH
l'ockrnft attt>mpt£•cl . aftcr Hon
Bolton's 4::! yard secomt qua rt<·r
touch<1o~n run with an tnt('r<'CP
t1on. had ended with Oakl<tnd·-.
Tc•d tlPnrlrH'ks hatt1ni: thP });ti\
down
All in <rll. not the twsl of d;n:-.
Wh1c·h is why <.:orkroft rnulrin't
s econd-guess his ('O:t(•h
"ll was very lo~ica l." he sa u1
o f R u t i g I 1 a n o · s d e ,. 1 s 1 o n .
''because we were havrn u troul)IP
with the entire kickini.: unit ·;.
But up in the press hox. sun·e}
ing the scene . Al 0<1 v1s . the
owner of the Raider s . c•ou lcln 't re
', ... , ;1 ..,1•1·11111\ ,'Ill'''-,,, h· -.11111 .. 11
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\I .11 k, .111 f':1·_h1·11 th1· 1ulll1<1ck
IS1·1• HKO\\ '\S. t'llltl' 8 2 l
frrn Br~1dshaY.. the boott'd.
•ow ho~ -hattC'<l Lo uisianan who
q11arte.rhac·k<'d the Pittshurgh
:-it1·t•lcrs to lour S upe r Bowl ''I'""' ns rn six years. was quick
lo ~1 g ree
'The· lea~ut• is loaderl with ex·
'l·lll·nt quarterba cks no w." he
... ;llfl. "fellov. s wtth stronl'( arms
and a lot or poise Thert>'s a ton
11f frnl' ret·t•tvt'rS two or three
•rn t•\ c•n d uh ..
Staulia ch and Bradshaw are
µart of football's ronng cirt'us.
doinR commentary for CBS.
l'ete Rozelle and Co. of the
:\at 1onal Poot hall League have
put some p1zzazz into their enter-
1 a1nm enl produrt and stiOed old
n1t1c1sm that the mercenaries.
with their stereotyped. pred1cta·
ti le strate~y. were duller than
t ht' colle~ians
SO NO MORE of that three
'ards and a cloud of dust stuff.
No more taking two whacks at
tht' line. throwing a pass and
fi nally punting. No more grind·
in g out first downs laboriously,
s mall rhunks at a time, and
winding up with a baseball
srore
No. sir. Now you unfasten
rour bell buckle, ruch back and
le t 'er Oy. Throw with abandon
and pray that the ball falls in the
arms of a man wearln1 the
s ame color jersey. ,
What's 100 yards? With a 1ooe1
arm and some good let• and
fingers, no reason you can't cov-
..
' , I
. l
'1
I I
'I
I I
er the distance In two minutes Oft • 1 less. If the 1ame doesn't pro-
duce 50 or eo points. for1tt It.
Keep thole calculators 1plnnln1.
In the 1.0·11 era "f pro (oot·
ball. coverln1 that kind of a
apact In second• la a anap.
FurthtrmoH, you mllhl watt
until the final 1econdl -m91be
even lht final play -Juat to ttve
th• folb In the atanda ud back
homt watehlq teltvllioft a little
thrlll. I
IT llN'T choreo1ra_phed to l
that minute dttall. lut JOU '·
couldn't h•ve told from tht '
·--pla10ffl, iiWaa up tbt 71 confenace champl•1"1pe for thepatia~MwlXV. I _ lll_Pbll ........... ...... trMttlrt~ ............ ...
blMM_t-H ............ .
11·11 ,...., .... --••••' bJ ,., ........... . , ............ ,-.. , •...... . ........... ..
· l
•• !JAR 'f Plt.Ol Mondi~ Januar; ~. 1911
~fPJ(O)rrit~ lc5Jrr®ca1~
I
A ca'*" '..-0,, from the WOftd of .,cHt•
'f icket holder pays 82;
"'ill get back 8158,053.40
\ R< ·A l>IA One I ud1' I 11 kt'I huld~r w 1l1 1·01lt!l'I ~
Sl .x 0:13 401<11 i. s;t '" \ t•l'l rtlt'rH on ~und•y 'Ii P ll'k Sui
.t '\,111\tl \nl\11 P ork \ltt• h1~t11:sl !Jlt off 'SIO('t' that
1. 1 "1111 10111.: .. 1 111~ ".iii 11111 11d111·"1I ut this tr i<'k
I h1 I'll k "" 'lu1t••ll l1a:tl '"'"'.C ll\ Hull ) wood Piark. w11s ol
SPORTS BREAK I SWIMMING I FOOTBALL
Age doesn't slow
f onner Olympian
FORT LAUDERDA LE. Fla. som ething else ," he says .
(AP 1 At age 94 J a m1son Han· He is credited with developinl
d y , believed to be the oldest liv. th e modem freestyle breathint'
mg Oly mpian, still plunges into tec hnique, the legless c rawl for
the wate r for a half-mile swim d lstan<·e s w imme rs, and t.he
ea ch d ay · idea of p a inting pool bottoms
"To m e . s wi mm i n g . •the with the lines that s printers use
w a te r. is the m os t wonderful as guides .
thin..: in m y life," s ays llandy, HANDY WON a bronze medal
I• • IJ1 -.,1111 .. 1 niti.du11n.:lhtdkt 11 No' 1701.tL Trt>erneelln
who has been <'ailed the rather of at age 18 in the back stroke at ~~---4~..l.U.l......_,""'........,~-u~u.J.LU&~u...o"-"'......,•-'uo..._~tnh~e-1~9()il:Ol'~6~~tympi'c~._,,..,.,. .... ..,,.,_..-~~•
com municate how I reel a bout la t e r he r e t i red fro m com· •I I 1111 1• It'. UI n ·11t ,1·~'11n ''l't!lll'I {'I"
I II\ "1r1111·1 v. h11 did IH•l a~1..-1a1 1mmt!d1all'1} to 1·1t~h tht•
I. lo.II 11111 1•\lh -.r·l•·(lt_•d 11 ur11 htr"I I :!6 7 :! 6 Ill lht• '''l'IJllO
h •11.:11 ,,., t•11t ll 1 t1~ ,., I ht" w1111wri. 111d ut.le1I t :11t) l >an1b "ho
1• 1111 S.'l<i lll tu ... 10111thr,t'1·undrd''l' 1tnd Amht•r ~:\t•r t lw $74 ~
'' t"t1n lh1"f11u rth l'\t'llt ,
1 lw1 t' "t·rt 57 111·k1•\'> ..,dt<1·11n~ £1' t' "inner' for 1·011i.c1lwt 1011
1••1' 1•fh .,f $9' • .N ~Ot-ad1
I h• l'li', 1uu~ h1 d1 1•11 \ ,,f~ 111 ... 1•1,.k S1" 1:1t ~1.rnt a A 111\ 11 " 11s '
t I I I I 111110 I >t-1 JI
q ... ,~.,,,.,....,
\\-1• 11· i.:111 tu do <t \\H\ "1th fn •i.hn1 u n t•lt g il1il1t .1
\n.I I lfll'<ll\ J ll o.,1i11rt o., W1•'11• got gU)-' pl a~1nl! fo11\h1tll
11 111, B1i.: "f t·n for thrt·t' ~anu:~ l)t'for c ttw~ go 111 dit:-.s
II"' , "" 1ou J U!)l ll ~ lh;.it a1·adem11·a ll~ .... Uun
\ ilnham , \11 1111g;.111 .ilhll'l11· ll1n ·dor
f 'ly.-n 01~.....-r M'a•lll•••••· 8·1
I li t• l'h tladdphta F lyt'ri., who s uffe red the ir ~
111 .i lil1·1111w los1-. It> Was hmgton two weeks ago. '
l+111 1nl the ('a p1ta ls. ti I Sunday m~ht in N1ttlon al
ll1H·kn l..1•agut• al"lwn l"he 1-'lyers got a goal from
Rr ian Propp :ro sctlirHh into the J.:ame. while IUck MacLeish,
U1ll Barber, Ke nny l .lnse man and Tom Gorence also scored
In other games, dt'fenst.•man Paul Reinhart scored two Ii''"',., pl:1} goals tu lift (.'algar ) to an 8·5 victory over the dis
organi ~.t'd T o ronto Maple Leafs. The
F la m es look ad \"anl a #{e of .defensive lapses h~· the Lea fs to tally un assisted goals by
Ke nt Nilsson a nd Eric Vall early In the
,,._ -g;,1mc• Tom Lysiak a nd Doug Wiison
-scor ed unassisted · firs t -period goals and
Dt>nls Savard added a third-period goal t o ~~ 1 lift C hicago t o a 3·2 trium ph over
P itts burgh. .Dale Hunter and Anton
Stas tny scor~ third-pe r iod goals in a span
"' of I · 27 to ra lly Que bec t~ a 2·2 tie with the
I . New York Rangers. Excellent goalte nding
M.JcLE•s14 hy t he R a nger s· Dou~ Soet•ert and
(Juc•bN"s Ron Graham, a former Kin g, highlighted the penalty-
' 1111-d t'?ntes t T he N11r1liques picked up t heir n inth tie of the
'-1 .. 1.StJll
lfof ·•hof•iltlfl Bird aparlUI Bo••oH
1 a rn Rird lrd Boston with 3:1 points Sunday m n 11~hl0
.1s .tht· l't'lti<-s heat Portland. 120-11. in Na -
l1Pnil I Huskelllilll Ass<H' 1ation action at Portland.
flll'd hit hi:-. ftrSl .SIX snots anrl had 22 points by
h,rl ft 1111(: \\ twn th1· Ct.·ltil'S held a 63·55 lead · In other
• 11 t 11111 ~1 1lwauk('l'. sp arked h} Junior Brid~eman's 25 points.
l1rok1 • to a ~:J point f!·wl in the first quarter and rolled to a
t:.!H !1ri 1r111n1ph o\'cr San IJ1t·J;!o. T he Bucks" Mickey Johnson
o.,a11k 111 11f has firs t 11 s hob and Muques Johnson added 20
j111111h 1n lhl' But·ks " fou rth eonsecutive \01ctory In·
11ta11a. IPrl h) Geor l(e McGinnis with 25 points. scored a
11 :1 !04 net o r) on·r New J ersey. h anding the Nels their
1·1gh1h straight dcff'<Al New J ersey has now lost 13 of \he last
It ~amcs. Bob MacKlnnon 1s winless s ince re placing Ke vin
l.ought>r~· a s I he Nf'ts · head roa<·h on Dec 22.
L••ngt-at fla.lut•balf "''" •fr,alc ,,.,,.
fl ing streak in high school girls' basketball was
VALDOSTA. Ga ' The nation's longest win-m
... n;ipp l'tl al 122 i.:amt:s re c e n t l y whe n
Va ld osta handed Lowndes its first loss in four
VP a rs.
Tl1c Lo wndes girls had not lost since early in the 1976-TJ
.;rason :.ind had won fo ur consecutive Class AAAA state high
... 1·1111111 1·hampionsh1JlS before their recent 63-57 loss. They
had won their first t hree gam es this season.
AP .WlropftolO
COLO WEATHER FAN A l 'levelC1ocl Brown!-fan
l'ht•<.•r s while <lt•tk('d out 111 a ll sort:-11f µ.ear I<> pro
l ct't him fro m t he lw low zero tr111per:.1tur c 111
Clt"\'C'land Sunciay
tJ11r flf.HHI tur11 df*•rrt•f*• attolhf*r
PHl Nl' f~ (; EOH<; E . Brtl1sh Colou11 d11a ~
~l t•m h1•rs of lhl' l'1t•1·huslo\ ak 1an nat1111wl u11tl "r IX •
ho<' k t•\ tea m know I hat unc• g<>Oil turn d1 .. ,1•r 1 <'!>
a not h~·r
T hC' playt·r~ had $675 IO Chr1:-.tma:-. .... t1t1pp111g munn -;tolcn
from their drcss111~ room Del' 2:! tlur111g :rn e xhtl11l 1on game
"ith t he P rml"e <leorgt• Sprue·<· Kmg's lti·-;1m 11dinl! I•> a ra1l111
s talwn :.ippt•iJI. area res11lcnl" ancl hus1nt'!>"'" s.l\•·d lht· l•·arn
from a S!loom~· l'hnstm<1s h) d1>n at1ng SI 500
Still pla ying an t•xh1h1t111n !>dwd11k 111 1t11· pm' 1111·1._ ltrt·
tt·11m has turned 11\ er the s urpluo., 111 a lurrd to a -;:-;1s 1 ho1·kt')
t•oat·hing dt•velc1pnwnt 10 lir1t1~h I '11lumh1a
CLcl'l1 Co<.i<:h J .an Kla1><u· s :11fl. thro11~h 1:111 1nl~·rpr .. 1f-'r that
lh1• lt:<Jtn \\ouhl long r(·mt·mht•r tl1t' ~l'tll'l '•'ll ' .i nd l1o'o p1lallt ~
of nortlwrn fint 1:-.h <.'olu m l11a n·s 11ll'!lh
The lht•ft "('Ott Id h::.o,·c· ew<·urn·tl :111 ~ "tH"r1 J ll d 11 1-..
a I n·;ub foriwt tt·n ... tw i.iw l
HB•11 .\".-al fnurlh h1 qualllf1ht9
Jim Neal Jr., of ll11nttngton Ht·al"l1 rn!1~1 1·red •
the fourth fastest q ua l1l°) ing spt'c'cl Sunrl,1) tor llP Xl
Sat urda y's W<1 r n 1·r W llotl gd111' :11111 <.1 and
Am e rican st11l·k l"ar rat•t· in Rl\·1·rs1d•· J o•· ku1t111 :in
of l "pla nc1 \\on tht· polt· pos1\1on 111r t hat r .11 l' \\1th i.• q u a hf~ 1111!
speccl of 117 :m mph 1\ltn los111~: 111 lour 111ns,<.·1·ut l\~'
fm <Jls s1nee Nov1·mhl'r, Brian Tc•achPr fmall ~ l1nikt• thr.oui.:h
Sundi.I~'. "aplurin~ t h<' A1.1strcil1 an Op1•n lt•n111 .. 1•h;imp11ms hq1
with ~1 7 rl, 7 6. ti 3 v1t.•tnr ) ovt-r Auslralwn Kim Warwi<:k
A four i>l a yer -man agement s tucl\ p .irwl cxam1111n~
hasl'ball's fr<'e aj?ent compeMat1on ~u1•-;1 11m will hultl 1t:-.
final mect111i.: today with 1nd1 <·ar11111s ·11i a1 11 1s -;1111 spilt 11n
lhl' q uestion wh1d1 nt'arly c•a ui.t•d hasc:t1,dl '" o;ln k• la s t Ma}
. Herscht>l Walkt>r, C:eorg1a 's All \111 1'r11 ;111 n111n1n i.: ha1·k
and his s1st<'r1-Veronica inH·nd to 111mpt.•l1• 111 111•\t 11Hmth·~
Milrose (;a m es lrCJ c k and field 1111•1•t 111 \i• ~\ Yrirk ·1 he
Mich igan Wolvcr mc•s n.'c·f'11·1'fl a 1.1arn1 <ind IJ<>l!>I• roui. lwrcr"s
welcome from ~ •. ooo fans whc 1 t~ 11 hs111rnl 1!'r1J dq:r•·t' t1•1n
rH.•raturt'.'. lo dll'Pr tlw1r H11s1 llo\.\ I \ lt'l<tr'o
Trf,rbio~ radi••
TV: Ra~kel hall Washinglon al L'SI ". 11 p m ,1·1i.1nnl'I
9, taped M1ch1gan v:-. l'11rdur• 11 :111 pm . ( 'hann.el 1:1 t;ip('d
RADIO: Bas k••ll1all Wcts l1tll1.!I011 .JI t.~r · H 11 111 •
KNX ( 1070). Was h1ni.:t•>n ~t all• al I Tl.I\ XI' m . KM l'I' • 711) 1
Hockey Calgar) <Jt Kini.: ... 7 :10 pm . KO<;O lf,1)111
LOSS TO RAMS TURNED IT AROUND . . .. PIZZAZZ ...
thP f1ntt l HttJf'11dow11 lo-Pe ar!!on and the f1 ve-y arder
''' Rilly .Joe DuPrt•e ... said the coa c h who has taken
t lw C:owhoys to I ~> playoff appear ance s in 16 years
.-oR THE fo't\l..l'ONS, who finisheri with a 12·5
rt·i;orrl after winning the West N FC title . the loss
li>fl most or the play ers in a state or shock .
"II was a bitter pill to swallow ... said Falcons·
l'oach I Rem an Be nne tt "I s till feel we 're good
t•r111u.:1t to go to the Super Bowl. Any te am that
''ins 12 games is good enou~h. But it 's a very e mp. t~· f~·cltnJ;! IO"ilOj.! IO the playoffs ..
Bartkowski a ttributed lhe loss to t he fa ilure or
I l1t·· f''u lcons to control the ball a fter Pearson 's firs t
M'qril)J! l':llch.
"WE KNEW WE HAD lo control the ball and
keep tlwir offe nse off the fi eld. Whe n we got the
hall hal'k after Pearson 's first touchdown, I
thou ght if we could make three firs t downs. we
v:ould win the Ra m e. But we couldn't make one,"
i-.:11d nartkowsk1.
Skat~r on comeback trail
Mil.WAU KEE CAP ) -S h e ila Young
<frhowi<·z. who won a gold medal in the 1976 Olym·
pi1·s. rontinued her com e back S unday by winning
;1 µl a ce on the United States women's s print speed
o.;kaling team.
Ochowicz e arned a berth on the team for the
Wm Id Sprint Championships Feb. 21·22 in Greno-
llle. Fra nce.
......
• ..... l
J e nkins. who hat.I four e1:1tche~ for 155 ..-arrls
felt Dallas' pla yoH experience was not i.I fal·tor
"Not the wa y we 11lay ed toda.> The rattnr "''"'
that Da llas bucklc•d d own and C'ame bark J"h1•\
played four quarters o r fo<1thall just Ith we <ltd
but t hey played a helter sec·nnrl half.·· ht· -;aid
Argentina ties Brazil
MONT EVIDEO. Uruguay (APJ World t"u11
holder Argentina d rew 1 · l with Hraz11 111 a t ;0111
Cup soccer matc h \hat enderl in a fre>e for all
bra wl here Sunday night
Argentina led l·O at halftime with a 30th
minute goal from Diego Maradon a . a nd Brazil
equa lized two m inutes a ltc•r lhc mlt!r val thruugli
E de valdo.
Argentina won its opening mall'h 2· I a l(ains t
West Germany. and Bra7.il needs lo b~t.ter tha t
score when it plays the Germans o n Wednes d ay
Otherwise Argentina will qualify for t he J a n 10
final against host nation Uruguay .
The Argentina-Brazil matc h ended in chaos a s
referee Eric h Llnnemayer of Austria hattled to
separate fighting players on both teams. Arme d
police raced onto the field to break up the reudin)(
players and both teams left the field.
The violent end came just 24 hours after three
players were sent off and five actions issued dur
Ing Uru1uay's 2·0 victory over lt9ly in the same
Centenario Stadium.
Zillgitt and Wright
Insur.mer agrnts aad brokrrs
Manutacturera:
Insu rance costs rising?
Cont1ct WI for competitive quotes on Proper
ty. Ll•blllty. Difficult Products 1.i1bility.
Commercl1l Auto. Group Life and Medical
•• well 111 Wo.rker ·s ('omp\'n u tlon
ln1urance.
lob GUflln
"'1 -Artfw Ill t&Md ......,.,, .... c. 92'60
(nGnMOH
•
lil'l 1.1 1•1·11 H11n .I :11\ 111,k1 .11111 I 11m
111\ K1 :11111'1
't n ~'"" fl11·1:u d :or 1n~: l>a11 1··11ul ~ 1h11•1\ o1 1:1 ... 1 o.::t ... p pa~ .... 10
H1111 "11111'1 f 11 r .1 '>0 1 .1rtl
I 11 111 hrle1 1\ 11 I Ii ;II '"' \ c• t h1•
• '11.11 cr•r,, ,1 :"11 11 \ w t111 ' •11 <'r lht•
1 m ·· 1·d ll11ll<il11 Btlb
I 11 .'"+ut1 z1•r 11 < "l1•v<'I .111d whr•r('
q11 :11 t1•rha1•k" "''''Ill lo ht• t hro"
1111• ht ll'k ...... '1111 l'h1nk1·1l . a 11rw
lt1HI· ....... 11111 . \\1111 .1 h:tll lc C>\C•r
1111' 11':11:111• .... l11p 1'·"~(·1· Bn an
<.;1111· \\h11 li11d rh10\\n lor rnon•
than 4 .IH)CJ \ ard'-and :io Tl>s a~
tho• l)akl.1111! H.1 Hlt·r-> l11•a t the
Bn rn ns. 14 I ~
C"UMAXING lhP weckt•ncl ,
Da llas' IJann y Wh1tr hit Drt-w
Pca·rson w1\h ·a pass in the e nd
zone wit h 42 seconds rcm aintn~
t o ed g1• the Atlanta F alcons
30·27. Rctwecn them, White a nd
the Fall'l)ns · Steve Ba r tkowski
t.hrew for 624 yards .
Now it's the Cowboys against
the Eagles in Philade lphia . lhe
Raiders al(ains t the Chargers in
San Diego. And, then for the
winners. on to the Super Bowl.
Whose is the fas test gun?
· · 1 like San Die go,·· sa id
Bradshaw. "Fouts Is great and
he has the most good receivers ."
"l would go with the Cowboys
if they we re at h ome." said
Staubach "I like S an Diego,
°loo."
'T •
... " ~ ,. ·--r .-..,.... ..... ___ ........
it .. petitivc s prings. and turned to
A ·one -tim e Olymµ1 t bronze lon g -distance s wimming on the
m<>da l s wimmer . the part·time a dvice' of doctors who said he
F ort l.a urlerdalt-res id ent no ha d a heart. condition . He held
longer wins rares as he once the national long -distance s wim·
did. hut hl'°s ~till doing what he ming cha mpions hip from 1007
Ions hest thro ugh 1009. ·
I.AST WEEK HE a nd
m a r athon s w im mer S t e lla
T aylor-who m ade headlines in
reeent yea rs with he r unsuc -
cessful atte mpts to swim from
the Huha mas to Florida's ea st
l'Oast led 600 s wimmers into
the 11<·ean for t he 11th a nnual
F11r t Lauderdale Ocean Mile
Swim
lla niJy. in his primr~. gamed
the title of swimm ing's '"No. l
In Vt'ntor .. He ins ists he neve r
"a" u gr ecit athh>t e To <·om
pcns;;1ll'. h<· us1·d hb hear! to w in
rat·c~. "i\s soon a~ thos<~ IHggcr
anfl I a~tN fish ~ot on to \he
r ha11 J..:1• I had tn IJe salisfied
1.1 11h ~+1·11nd plal'(~ o r try
· Twenty years after his first
Olympic success. the then 38·
year-old Handy won his second
Olympic meda l as a m ember of
the U.S. water polo team in 1924,
A t e ammate w as Johnny
Weiss mulle r , who gained fame
as T a r zan in the m ovies .
H a ndy a lso won a plaee in
Ripley's Believe It Or Not for
winni ng Oly mpic m eduls 20
year s apart .
"H.: HA ~ a lw ays d o n e
fabulnus feats for his ai,:e." said
f:Ox c <' u l i v c () i r e <· t o r H u c k
Dawson of lhc Inte rnational
Sw1mmmg llall of Fa m e here.
here llandy ser ves a s a m e mber
of lt)t' hoard of direc·tor s
Ali plans to ·fight
Etiropean champ
NJ.:W YOf<K 1:\11 1 ,'vt uham
mad Ah, ii hat h·n·d l11st•r in his
hi d to lil•c·ome ht'<11·yv..e1ght
e harnp11111 a f11urth lime in his
li.14'l f1f,!hl I~ 'll.!ll1'tl tu ft j!.hl Euri:
pt·~tn t·harn1mm .John I. I ;i.lr<lnrr
uf Brit;i1n for <ill unann11unt·•·d
prit·1· ;ti "" una111111un1 ·1·rl ... 11 1, tht·
la~t Vo.ct•k ol .'vlard1
'I ht• prom11lc•1 1:-.\111ho.imrnad
A lt l'r1 .ft:!>"111r1..ol Sp11r h Inc .
\\ h 11 h ""''" 1\11 ' n;1m1· unrl1·r a
llt·t·n,.ini.: ;1gn·1·nw11t
lfarnlrl Srn llh pr1:~1d1•nt 1,f
~t ,\I'S t11lcl Thi· \..;,0 1·1att'd
I 'rt'"" h) I dt·j.1ho111• from I AJ~
Angele~ Suntla~ that I ;a nJn(·r
ha., ~1~nerl for n SJOO.hOo purse·
Ill-dcdinNI l<> rltsl'lo:.f' 1\lt 's
pur!>t'. hut 1t v.. a" hellC\'C tl tn he
ah()ut ont' (•1ghth nf the SR million
pa ) t•ht•1·k Ill' 1111 kc:1l up \\ IH·n h<'
"'"" ~toppl•rl uf11·r Ill rounrh h~
Larry ll<1l mt·~. llil· World H11xml.'
C11unnl 1·hamp1on . la:-.t 0 ('\ :! al
Ltt~ \'t'µa')
S·,11Tlf S AJI> fw pul h 1,.:_1·llwr
t ht• l1ghl onl.1 I>•·• auM· 1\1 111 ""''
\\I II laO:l'.J ,J :in l 7 \\ :.int1·cl 11 11• 1 ho•
'' ::tkt· 111 11 1~ m 1,11iat1·h lo'~ 111
llolmP:-
11 -,111·n ·nd1·r1•d hl' :"!'\ atlc1
ltox 1nµ lw1·11:,t• D1·1 I :1 111 ;c l<.·111-r
t11 I h1• N1·\ :1d;1SI11flo .-\I hlt"11c· l "0111
1111~:-1•m "h1t'f1 :1t t•t•p11·d 11 untlt·1
a11 a1-•11•1•111t•n1 l hal .\11 not apph
a .f,!.1111 But I h.t\ a i.:n ·t·mt•nt aff t'l·t•
,\l1 'sst atus1111h 1n :"\1·,·ad;i
· If I s t11p ti ·~ 111'!':111 .... c· I \.\ant 11
s t11p :'1111l111<l~ .. -.in m,1k•· me i.lup. ·
-.aid ,\)I a1 a 'Wt•\ .tcl :t !tt-'l:tr1111-..,ntr-
t hc• rualll'r S11111.h 1-. e11nl1Clt•n1
"11111 1• plm·1• 11111 ll"f .\11t1,.:hl 11g:.un
S mllll 11!:-11 ... ;1111 lw has s1i.:m•d
,I 1 rn Wall 111 S1·11l l;1111I <1nd :\lt'x1s
\ r g u l' I I " t h c• f o r m c· r
f 1 • ;1 I h l' r11 " 1 ).! It t a n ti J u n 10 r
l1ghtv..t•1gh1 1·hamp1on from
Nicaragua. for a hout 1n which
Wall wnulrl 11t•rt•ntl l ht· WRC
ltghtw('1ght 11!11· Smith s aid he
plannf'rl the C1gh1 lo he on thP
<'art! of th<' All <;ardner 10
roundl'r
Al.SO EXP.:C'Tt:U to he on the
s how is for mer d1ainp 1on IA..'On
Sp inks. who. a<·c·nrding to Smith .
ha s signed <A three fight pr o
motiorful contract with MA PS for
a S50,0QQ bwlufi~Spmks' opponent
C'Ould be Mart.y Monroe if Monroe
docs not srgn tor a title m at rh
wit h Holmes. Smith added .
S mith also said a fig ht between
Aar on Pryor , lhe WBA cham·
pion. and Saoul Ma mhy , the WBC
ch a mpion. for univer sal junior
we lterweight li\le r ecog n ition.
pro bably will be pa rt of the big
.MA P S show set for MadlsQn
Square Garden Feb. 23. The
Pryor-Mamby fight was s up-
posed to take place Feb. 7 but is
~ing pushed back bec•us e
Pryor was shot in the ri ght
forearm by a woman Dec. 28.
The Garden show currently in·
eludes a 10-round heavyweiiht
f1S!ht be1 "t·•·n r:<.!rr_., ( ·rionf~y and
Kl·n Nori rm . a f1J,!ht for 1 ht• uni
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n •n1gn1tic111 111·1 Wl'<'n WB< · 1·ha m
1111111 Ma tth .. 1.1 Saad Muhammad
i.I n d W BA di a m p 1 o n E ddi<·
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llt'i.lrns' WHA l'.Cltcrwc11J;!ht t itle
di>r"11se ~1ga1n-;1 Wilfrect Be nitez.
;111cl Will rc•<lo (;onll't.' WHC ·junior
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11 n ~t1 t 11 r 1l.1 \, \\al 1'11111 g th1•
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llc t·umc~ J 1.-irt oJ yrJu ... ~aid
1.v lr Al1ad11 lhl' Hrowns' clo
q111•nt rlt-fc•n'I\ 1• <•ml '"Then you
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ALUMNI (leyton 11 M<N•ll . Fromm
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M•l\le.-d 10. H•t1tlun\ 4 Or•m t• Moc:9' \
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f aO.m• 10, ¥urpn• 6
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fol al •o~ Alumni J) ~CC u Fouled OYt
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College 1core1
Notre Dame 17 D•Vid\On •7
SATUllOA'l''S LA Tl •COlll\
C•I Poly ISLOI 10•. L-A B•Pll\I •I l<or
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0111 merit. 7 00,,.. '°'°'' SoM\n, U.S .. Aprll I._
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400 ,.,....y reley 1 United Stet11 A
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P•11••0tl0f\1e, I OJ IO s (Ofnell• Poll!, E•ll
G•rm•nr 1 O• 1• • O•rc1 BOdnt r, NOf1~
H unt 1nodon P• 1 0 4 l• 1. Jo•n n•
S1m p\On, Auburn Un•wPr\lh , O• tl a Meo
Mc(ully SI P.ler•l>u•Q, Fl• , 1 0~ SI
1 SOO frH t ,,.., 01.-r\, E•st G•rmafly,
16 OJ U t wolld .,.,t , t vtn1 nner held
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P• U n O J l rn•llt G ern••t .
G1 lno•tllt . Fie , 16 16 10 • Cheryl
Gilltll•. ruuon, •6 )I II } Ao\fm•ry
&•own, G•lrwhlllt, Fl•. •• U ll 6 Julie
Schulte. Fort Watl\Or>Qton, P•,. 16 J6 •· 7,
l'"d• ttf\h, Au\lln Tea•,1 I• •l.JO M4rf
T M••Ql\er, l OUl\wlllt , 16 «o )()
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F ,. 1 11 ~· ), Alk• BUW'lll•, So•ltl Union,
7 )~41 Juli• G lndtn, Auburn Un1Y•r1ity,
I ' l3 SJ 1> Kall\~ !>Mith, B•il••ut , w ......
1 33 •1 • LI\• B<>rv.011, C•n•d•. 7 l•.2' 1
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L• lo1y .._ (Acl•lr l, S.00 $1 u-ct• U I)
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Fl11e-mlle Invitational
l•I LOl AllOOI
MEH
1 Albert S..l•t•r fOrHJOfH /1 0• 0 '4V1
Moorc toft fGrt~t Bri•••"I 1? ''' ij t N in• Ros. IGrHt B"••1n), 72 13 I
WOMEN
1 Grt tf' W•1tr 0'4orw•Y 1, l\ '1 u• / u .. ,,
b•f' !.cott fC.tnttOA I 1b n J Jodn u,.n"''
tArllon••· 14 •t "
Monday, January 5 1981 DAILY PILOT
Au1trellen Open 1 ............... ,
"""" S."'lfln•• K 1m W•r-wfck def Guillermo V1l.u. A 1
•·•. • 1, 1•. • 4 lcompl~l1on ol ~~lurd~r '
•u•Pf',_d match) " ...... """"' ' .. 1T U<fle• wlM IW,000, p1u, l~.000
G r and P r1A1 bonu\CJOOO
Oowl>ltt S.m1ll"•'
Pt-\f"r M4..NdfT\dt 4t Paul Mt. N.-m t!,. \h•t Et\
d 1,. E d•ttrch Ctd1''3 f dwdtQ\, b 1 6 '/ I~
ttomphd +t.ln u• S"'IUtU•~' "''\Jh•"Ch,4
rna1ch1
ColJeQ1a1e Classic:
(•I A•"<"°"'" .... )
Meft' \11WJhrtF1n~1
M • • Um .. r 11( &,.., ~rh r ..,,., i:lt1t>tJ •
v,.,,,,., ",( l.:1tn ~ ~~ttl•\ F 1rtlll"
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M 1lu• M"'•f\ \\ .. ,, t.'f t.fJ 1' J1 181
fltt•t' \IOfHl-lO \ ~· JI 6'1 f,/ .a /11
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1-4 t i II I\ 188
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Weeke nd l raM.actlons
N,6'1!•r1,.1 9,.,"',.Hi..ttl 6 \\0(+1•l10f1
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.,
l V•'Q.1n•• t8..0) tw•I Jam•\ M•dl\On
5l S1, beat VorQ•nta Tech &• 11
c;erm•nv, U ll t.ororld ~'', OICI mer• 1& 16.
(ynthl• WOOC!Med. US , Ft b 10, 1990) 1
L•ur l• Le hn,.,, Fo r I L •udf'rd•I•. Ft•.
1\ 14 l Amy C•ulktn\, ,_,..,,..,,lie. TeM .,
11 '1 • CMOI k ltmper, C•ned•. 1h 02. S
AQntt• Er1k''°" Sw-n, l• 11 6 IC•lhy Sm •O\ Bflillt vu•. W•\h . 1b 1• 1 S•riN
HulH nlleck E•" V.rm•nr. 1• J1 I, Cy119111
W-lleM, Miu .... Viejo, U.tll.
-·---~ rr -1l~is \\-;(~k ~ Sr IC< i ;~ 1 • Motrt-O.m~ (1 O tw•t Oav•dwn. 11 •I
s IContuCky 18·11 l>o!el Mei"" 100 14 .,..,
Gooro1• 76-67
& .-.o.rtn C•rolin• c~-J) ~·· LOU•J~1ll•
96 ''· to\t 10 Mlnn~sol•, 7•·•0 lo\t 10 ICaM .. , S. ~~
I UCLA C1·11 ........ W••Nn9ton. 96 I•
8 W•tll r For•'' t 1~0) Met Dev1dwn~
ll 10. l>H1 c;.or9la Toti\, 11·1>1
• M••vleno 110·11 l>t!•I Mar•l'l•ll, 1 I•·" bul St J0'4!Ph'• 1•·51, .... 1 W1lhe1"1 ..
M~¥,4• ...
10 LOU•"•na Sla1• (10 II bUI NC
W!11tn1nQIClr\, 100 68 t»e•f St Fr1nC1\, P• .
•• •S !>NI Florida. 97 66
11 T .. as A&M (Ill 10'1 to UC lrv•no,
91 IC I0\1 to E Monl•na, l'l ll, OT, I0\1 IO
Te x•,; Cht1\tlan, ~·Sl.
II M•cnl~n (•·OI be!•• Oel•olt, u ... bH I
Northfrn Mich109n, 97•)6,
I) Arl10,,a Stal• 18·11 11<'•1 Ne,. Orle•n\,
I~ U . lcn1 lo Or"90n SL, 11 1>7
u Iowa (1·11 brel Nori""'" lowe, 86 11
1>01 Wis ·Eau Cla ir•, ... ,
1\ 1nd1.,a t7·S1 lo\1 lo Clem•on. 18·\I,
10.i 10 P•n Am4"ican 66-60
1h Illinois II II l>U 1 Sou11\ern llllnol\,
10•·1>8
11 s. Al•i..ma CI0-1) Deel N••v. •S ii,
bul Fordn•m, 19·61 but M1u 1u lppl
lfellrt Sl•le. 99-61
11 Te,,,,..nft 19 II l>o!•1 Ouk•, 904• .,...
A••b•m•. 70-&•. o r
1' BriQl\em YounQ 110•11 .,..1 Air Fo•co,
,, ... ~. l>e•l .. O .-LU 1199••· •l •'IO, OT 10. u1.i. (11·11 l>H1 Northweslu n, IJ.'1,
M•f Nf'Y ·U\ V~s. 16·7S. beel Air Foret .
1•·60
THIS WEEK'S SCHEDULE
College
lon•Ql'll o~ St ., Ar•IO .... Ort90n el
Art1on• St , Wyomlno al Hewit••t. Lono
Be•ch St •I Wtller SI • S..n Jou SI el
Loyo1•. We\/>1nQton •I USC. WHlllnQIOfl 51
el UCLA
f ut\d•Y UC S•nte B.,b•r• •1 C•I.
A.rt.j\.t Pac.,ht •' PtPPtrCS•nt, Por•lan<I St a\
SI Mary'\
Wtdnoldey Navy •t S•n Olt90 St
Tl\ur.O•r West G<!•"'•n N•h0<1•1 T•...,
•I UC ''"'""· 1 JO, S.n 01e90 SI ., llVU, Aruon• at W•ihlnglon. A ri1ona St et
W••h1nQI011 SI
Fr1dey UC S•nt• 8arb•r• at lO'fOla,
Sl•nlord al Ore90n SI
S•turd•Y U. of S.n OltOb et UC I r~le,
I JO; LonQ 8oKI\ SI .•• Pe-rOIM . Stan·
lord •I Oreoon. Pe<lllt •I St. M•r•'•. Ut•ll
St , •I Pwtl.,.d SI,, N••v el USIU Wit"
P••~•lde al C•• Stal• Fulltrlon. C•1 et
Ort9on SI ; Haw•li .II BVU, Nt•ede ILlll a1
Air Forcr . Athona at Wa\hlngton St •
Ar11ona SI at WasfllnQton , Sa n Q,.90 SI ••
UI•~, USC al UCLA,
Junior college
I ut\d•Y Le» An99ln CC al Goldt!n We\I,
)0
WtdM•INv Or.,.ve CoHI •t S•nl• A,..,
I JO
~ rlday Cioldtn Wu1 •t LA Souln-'t.
I lO
S•twroav-<•<r•to• el °'-,...,,. I JO,
S•d01tl>eek et S.n 0•'90 CC. 1 JO
High 1chool
f on•Qhl C•nyo n ..,.tQlh fowrn1m•nl (""~wport H•rbor ¥\ (ypre'~ for chem
01on\hlp, I .JD, Univt r\1ly v\ E\cwran1e fOf'
con\olaUon c"-mp1on\tup • 10>
Wed~t' K•letla .ti N~wpor1 Harbor.
I E \t•n< •• .ti ~rin•, I Coron• <tel Mer •t
Dane Ht\h, r, Un1ttr\1,., •• M''i'°" Vt•to
'. L•QUNI a.eel\ •• Ccnl• Mua I. Mllllhn
.ti Hunltngton Be-•c h, 1 Loa r• •I
Wt\tm1n\ter, 1
100 Ind mod 1 Tr•< v C•ulk1n>.
M•\hvHtf', 1 •O IO (1lllt0rld t>fo\t, OIO m•A
I 11 16, Cvntl\1• Woo<llW•O. U S . Fol>. •.
1'80• 1 ~tr• Sctvu~•Mr E•'\I ~rm.,_y
l 11 10 J P.1t1y G•••n, Pholedotpfl1•.
1 1) .. •. CyM!>le W-lleM, Ml11ierl Vleje,
1 16.M . S Julie G1nM n, 1 11 18 6 '"""'
w oo•o••. Fort L•U<ltrd•I• Fo• , l ••to, 1
K••yn SleflO<O, Caned• I 11 06 No elQflll\
pl•tf'
000 ml'dlty r•l•y I Un11ed Sl•tn A
,,.."" t t>•r<• 800Mr Traicy C•uU1.1n\. M•rv
l Mu91'1er, Cvnt.,1a WOO<l.,Ud) • 0. t i
'"'orld l>r\t, old m •r• • 10 w.. 1Jn1ted SteltS.
AP"' 1•. 11181 1 E .. 1 Gum•nr, •. 11.&1. J
Uni ltd Sl•lf' B Tom, • lt •• • Flortdo>
Aquet1c B Tf"dM1 • 10 11 S Auburn
Unl•tr\•tv. • 11 H h Wo•1Che\ler Swim Club, • JJ ~~ I t,,,rtmanto•o ~w1m Club,
• 7• I 1 8 Fotf L4'udtrdal~ Sw im Club1
• " 81
•• ... ~r ---._ -· ---.
, Hodgdon ~ellfylng • Cet •I I Suncley'1 le.01"9 Qu.111fltr• encl ev•r-
..,..0 for S.turdey'1 W••,..r H009dD'!, •
Gr•nd A,,,..l<MI 1100 ur r e<• •I ._, .. , ......
111te•nati0Not A.ctw•v .
1 Jo• Auttm•n . Uplaftd 1 C•maro.
117 110
J He .. chel IOAcGrl!f. 11<10.I Ve U. 0.. ..
C•MU O, 11$,1,.
) Ro< .. y Mor•n, Arcaota . PonUe<,
1U 116
• J IM Nul Jr • H11nlln9lo11 B•e<ll,
Cam•ro, tu 1'I • s A•• £1dltr. Caru11Wf'\. Ponti«. 111,UI.
• Odle lltober'UOft, O."w•r. C•m•ro,
1 lJ 11•
' Slew StMr, c ..... ,o. 11J,D*
I Slollfl llNlll•" C•mero, 117 1'1
t Oon Noel, l'll'ltllrd, 111."t
10 1100 S..11•••. C•m•ro, I ti t3'
NHL
WALaS COtePl•••CI
··~· Monl•H I
Her tford
Plll\l>urol\
0.1ro1t
IMn'llDlvlti.
W LT OP OA "'9 J• 11 • tt7 ,,. ,,
12 13 4 t•S 111 • 1J 11 • 117 lll ,.
1? 10 7 •• 171 JI
10 10 I 1Jl 1H 1'
ANfM OhrllllOI
M1nnno1• 1• • • 110 11J O
Balf••o •• • ti 1,. 111 47
lloslon I l 11 I I• ll't JJ
T oronlo t) 10 S 1 SO 1 TJ l t
Ouo.,.t 10 11 10 Ill 151 JO
CAMl'llLL COH,EllllllCE ..... 1c. 01••·-
Wins to11n1Py
~ahaff ey off
to fast start
PEBBLE BEACH <AP J .101!11 \.bt.all1·.'
broke a tie al the 18th hole h~ m a td11111-)!.tr v. l11l••
challenger Buddy /\llin took a bogl'~ and "1111 l lw
Spalding ln\'itational golf tournament ~u11t1:..~
The 32·year·old Texan. w1pn,er or tht' l '.17~
PGA Championship. daimed a one sl rnkl! v11·1'ir)
in the non·lour event by closing w1Lh a p<i r n ,,,,
the 6,806-yard Pebble Beach course. His 72 holt: ol
279 earned him $25.000.
Mahaffey took a two.stroke lead into thP final
round and stayed ahead of the helri until /\llin
birdied the 17th to lie for the lead.
The two touring pros. playing In the :.a m i:
foursome. had nearly identical dri ves at ll'w
oceanside oar-fi ve finish inf.! hole M ahaffe} hi t a
good second shot but Allin pulled a tv.0·1ron :.hot
into a trap near the seawall. His ball was buried
and he had to declare an unplayable he wh1 C'h
cost him an extra stroke.
"Buddy made an awfully good n .tn al m e If he
hand hadn't been so unfortunate at the IRt h . .,..,.
definitely could have gone extra holes," :.a1rl
Mahatrey, who won $165,000 on the tour last yt>ar
The bo1ey al the 18th by Allin, who missed a
15-foot par pull, was his first of the day lie had :J
69 for a 29> total, finishing one stroke ahead of
Mike Reid. Mark Lye and Dave Stockton
Donna Caponi, one of three women pros in t ht'
tournament field, led through two rounds and wa!;
second starting the final round. The treacherous
Pebble Beach course got the best of her as she look
a pair al double bogeys en route to a 79 and an
ei1hth-place finish •l 288.
Caponi, who failed to take advantagf' of the
distance break given to women on mosl holes. ~<1s
not-the only iolferstruggltng Sunday Rort F uns rlh
dropped out of contention early w11 h a 10 at l he
par-three fifth , hittinli( tee shots out of hounds
Defending champion Bob Clampeu hart 1"11
eagles and several pars. but managed onl) a (>111·
under 71. which ~ave hi m a lie for e1i.:hlh pla t·t>
l !li !H \IHI 1.\1 ~J.,\ II.I I ftll·'°'U .
I ~ I ' ' ' 11 • I 111 "' t l I I• it .. ,,,,,I
\ ~•• I'• "'' ... • <II ' 'I I • II " J;O
I ~f.&t.!~~ "~I::'.'.~~: _;:::_:_~_£~NG I ;
~~~~~~· f--:rt'!f(frtr'-1
LEASING? -· 1981 MODELS
MOW
HERE!
__..
MANY MODEL S ON DISPLAY
FOR IMMEDIATE l LASE DELIVERY
WE LEASE All MAKE
CARS AND TRUCKS.
"WE'VE GOT WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR."
THEODORE ROBINS
1£/0IMG-e 0.
2096 Harbor Bl .• FA LSI 642-00 I 0
C o \to Me\a . . . . 540-821 I
Friday Co-11• M•'• at Ed t\On, 1 JO,
Newport H•rbor •t Corona dt l M.,, t ,
Mer1n• •I L""9 Be•<" Wll.Or>, 1 JO L•QUN
H1fl\ I I Ir vin•. I . ~QU~ S.M"h a t E l,lnore,
I , S•n Clt,,,.nto •I El f oro, I MIH IO<I lllojo
., Oc•~ Vl•w, •• £\lei"< I• at K•nMOy,
1 JO, Huntlnqton lle.c:h •t 1Ca1tll•. t , Len
Al•milos el Wetlmlnslor, I
NV 1•1•nGer'
Pfll1•0.1Clflla
C••e•r• Wnfllnqlon
"" AOl\Qef\
11 I I 117 11' SI
lS 10 S I SI 101 SS
11 II I 10 10 M
1) IS ti U S 1 .. 17
U 10 • Ul 1.0 J.4
Irish
rip foe
THE SPORTING HOUSE
Seturdo>y Ed llOll •I Str•lle, I
Women fuUd•y Llkt .,ood at E•tencie Ill,
La9un• 8'.c;ll at 1<vlnt 171, Coron• dt1 M., •t O•na Hiii• (71; LB Poly •t M•rln1 (/I,
Newpor1 H•rl>br 11 Sen Clemente 171; LB
Wll.on at EdllOll 17' lOI. Cvprou •• Foun·
,.,,. ll•ll•y i.:JO)
Tl\urldey-W11tmln1ler et E•t•ncle II).
Cost• ""-•• •I Ntlu lan Vl•Jo Ill, Sen
Cl•"'•nl• •I 1r~lnt (I); Mt•Port Harbor •I Corona •r AMr (II, 1111.,lne et CVPrttl (II,
M•ltr 0.1 •t Editor> (l·l01; O<H n Vltw •t
F011ntoln Vell•Y 17:JO); El Toro •t L•lllN
••• , .. (II,
l'r ld•Y-C•I Poly CS.n Luis ObllPOI •I UC
I r•IM 11·•>. s.1ur11..,--un1 ... >'llY of Son 01'90 •I UC ..., ... ""
.,., 1·-
SI LOUI\
Vancouwf'r
Colorado
(l'llU QO
Ed,,.onlon
WlnllllMQ
,,...,_ Olvltl•
1) ' S t•t 1JO SS 11 II 11 1)7 137 .S u ... 1)1 161 )I
IJ 11 • UI 1IO l1
10 11 6 tl7 IS• 2•
) 19 7 11• ... 1l ,...,...,,,, ....
MlnnMbt• 7, Bulfaoo 1
Phil-lpl\I• I. We\~nQton I
Quell« l , NV Aa"11fr\ 1
Cl\IC~ ), Pltn b<lrgl\ 7
C•IQ•rv I. Toronto~
TIMleM'10ome1
C••e.,v .iklflts
801ton at Wlnnlpotq
T--y'tO•mH
MontrH l et O.troll
Toronto•! NY 111-r\
0..tllec •I SI, LOYll
vane°"""' •t Color-
CHARLOTTE, N.C.
CAP > -Notre Dame
Coach Digger Phelps
said hls fourth-ranked
Fighting Irish played a
much -Impro ve d
Davidson club Sunday af·
ternoon, but hls team just
wore down the Wildcats
before knocking them out
1'1·1'7.
"Davidson played
well. We tried to wear
them down. We looked for
spurts and we got them
when we needed them.
npeeillly near the end or
the firat half.'' said
Phetpa.
......Aftlt• .. Da.t41on 11 a mueh·I
l4HINY'IHtuLTS lmproyed team over last u ...... .,....,_ r .. ..._, ' , .... .......,•-wa1noin ' l'l"t ra• -.._.... IMcCMrMI, '-• .,. , a ........ vo.., • ,,;..,,....Ml awtm ,...., uo, 2.•; ,.,., ... '".....,'· •·•· ... : dleaUC. of how much
Wl911 h"'8,l'll.I Troff!<~ ca_.,.,,, u•. ·~·-t--ved." ••• I•<•"' rec• _. Or1t o.,.., w..,r •• _ .. t• MO 1. •kll Qny, ...,, KIKI, Ill. Y., U)ele ..... nt), •··· It.•, t.~ Olllelly DI• ...1.-.......;. ~--ch Eddi~ JS:Jt, C-'41 lelt; ... 191.nt, SUI, Clly •••r (~lorco>. S.H , •.to; rre.it111 ,,_."""'
•rift, U.I., ~· "· ,,,., J. ...... ._, CC.IC ...... >. .... SJ .. 11, ..... ,,.., .... llMen*h blamed th
S-..1>. H.74. i . """'Mir llltfNI..,,..,,... •tt• •· •---1 .... h num.._r o Uftllft, S6.U ••• Olr • •lcl>ttr, ... , T~I,_ rec• -.... 1. DMI COii¥-), .... --IU uw
°""'MY• 9Ut. I . ._ .,....... ....... »•. t,•; Jlft't ·-· (~), ._ .. ' tUl'DO••I . ., ..... •.& 6. JllWI .....,_, Lercllflllllt, »•; H....,_ltyte(CM91re),I.•. . . ~ NY, U.a 1. Doottf..,..,., A.,._. Ulllftrtl· ,_.,. ,., _ ,.,,_, ·-IT"ll,-7._a, • .,,.. bed thinl ii tha ,.,, u.M.1. ,, ... ""'-"· •1t1t0etf!IM'I, , .... tt•1 a..-. ,., ..... .-. •. ,.,., ••&'Ii'\ of tbtm wer
...... 6.•• Icy .... (lllllc8YI, a.a . '·· "--t. VIMllfllr lellllllew,...... ..~,.. _ ., .... ITOl'll, •••••••• Ut; , .... ".,. tbat .Notr Ufli., H:ll.11. I. ~ O!Mlrl llVtlt Pwoltlll IK""9fy Clllllceyl, 4 ... 1.•: .... , o.eadnotfal'ee
Ulltlll, tt:•,n . a. ...... , ..,.....,., .. ~ T.,,. CDlllU•"'91, ....... elllil ' ~ ~~·'t9::'M .. =t=-N~ .1:::~::· --flllUtl "'8'=: .... ~~th~~
tS:k.41. ............................. ,.. CDlllN lllP'), a.a. a.a. IA; Ill ---n-
'· C#lll ........,, "'""""" ~. "·'·· ... ;,,.";:·· ....... , '-........ .. ......... telllPo IS:IJ,tll. ........... ,1..,,1.i ... O. IMC ,UI. !::'*' •• ...,.._,, -.....1 .... 1...,_ ......,.,.._111 .... --111••••......,,. -•1 I ,
...... "-'• """"""'· .. Ail' I Kio ~·--=-~·-=~=·~ •e·i.i'=W·-· . .• = ...... ., .... ,. ,,.,,., .. _ ............ --~ ...I. !!!!'I
\\hf•rt• lfralth j, 3 \\;nor l .irt• 3ntl ('onc11l1ufll0)! I' A \\.f\ hr l.i\ 101!'
fl
On Any Full t~acillty Mf•mbershlp
NEW YEAR SPECIAL
• 16 Championship Racquetball Courts
• NAlITIL.US EQUIPMENT
Special Aerobic Classes •
• ~ Meler Olympir Pool & Sundeck
• ProShop .
ReflleurMnl, Bar & Social Loun1e
• Luxurious Locker FBcilllles ror Men & '
Women
Saune, Stearn. Jacuul, Muse1e
• 2 Sand Volleyball Court."
• i,it Mlle Jo11ln1 Track Individual !Jxerc:lae Protrarna
• Qyamuhun 1Baaketball/VoUeyball1 • rr... Baby SitUn1 Service ..
.,,.d .... .... ... ..... .... ~t:t ... 1:11.n...,..-..1_..._ , .... .....,..__..,....,~. . •• llt ....
~~~;.. .. "~~-i;;r:=:=a~ l.iliJ_· ill ~···· '------------------------------------------~------.................. ---
• 0 • • • • 0 . '""""'"" ..
twlV PllO I SWIMMING I BOATING
• • # ~ ..... 1nm11ng rr1eet----tsm.en race ac Moffet second
/ Two regattas lure 180 boats
By ALMON LOCKABEY LUDERS-18 -1. Kildee, Ben Hromadka, Ven
Light air an;·~~=~~· :::-;kies railed to de· YC ; 2. Lud~rous ; Jerry Moulton. SSYC; 3. Lollipop, Bud McNair-Bob Bonaack, NYC.·
te r Orange Coast sailors who turned out in large SANTANA.20 _ 1. Bullit, Dick Brown, BCYC: behind Soviet
• numbers for two regattas after a long holiday on 2 M d I K. M R BYC Fro• APcllap•H ht-'-,111d 111·1 · \1111•111 .111 tt .. 1111111ut1"• I the beach. · ag e ena, am c ae, ; 3. Energy, G. , Davis, BCY.C. <; A I S t: ~ \ I I. I Y. t> I 11 , 11 111 "' 11 , q ·uh t,l·t t n..--Bal boa Yacht Club attracted the most contest· SORO v .... t ti h "" -1. antage, Dick Seward, LSF·, 2. An· .. .--. ~mrt llar 1or 1 ~ Ju1111 11 1, 1 1 11 11111 ,\1111 t. ., I' 111 ants with 135 racing on inside and outside courses
J1')hn Mt1ft..-t turnrd 1r1 ,, llh•\11111 .11 owtt .... 111 1111 1 nil •·•I '-l <1\l'" r .. r Saturda~· and Sunday in a continuation of the di a mo. Bob Sodaro. BYC: 3· Micheluss, Joe
J Greenblatt, SI BYC. bt''t 11f ~· 1•,·H:1 1tl.f1111..;111111 11, 1,·1 11111•· ... 111 11• lft " Sunkistseries.
't'<'u n1I 111 th1· .·1111 ,,, .. ,,., \11'' '" 111 t ...... ,tl111 lilt' <;:1111\'°' Capistrano Bay Yacht Clubturnedout45boats Resultaof CapoBVCNewYear Re&at&a:
b , 1 1 1 PHRF·A -I. Valkyrie, Bill Murray, Ca r~ "') 1, tr"... . u r1 11 ~· 1111· 111.. _..;A~"~"~·!:"~·~· ~"'-71 ·:.!.' ...:.•~..+'...:·~· ... ~1~1 ~; ·~· 1~1~1 ~· ·~·n~'~-l--------_:_~ __ ;_ ___ !-_!,f~<>;r.;1i t~s~N~e~w~~v~~~~~~~~~~~r.a~~~~ui,'---ftV~~~miriuntter...:g~~r;rninf!lriff~~jf6,j[Yi~-----I . o • \4 1 11111111'~ jj;-11 .. 1 1 111.1• •1 ,1111 ,., 1C'ap acing Fleet Yachts on Sunday. The CapQ ·a. Ra'ndy Tar. Greg.Sands, DPYC. apo
tl'rn .. t 11111.il \lt•c•t •11·1.. -..u11dt1, 1,, 1 11,..11 .,, .. , ... 1, ral·e was delayed for one hour because the winos ~l ufft•t 11. 11111 l/f •I i.1:;1111.i 111,,.,,, 1 1 1111k111 • .., .. 111 1 ,, / PHRF·B -1. Sunshine. Ron Malanosky, . DPYC; 2. Breakaway, Gar y Allen, DPYC: 3. 01 ~ nq111 , h.i 11q1 '" u .. 1 .. 11 ..r , 1•11.1 ,,.; 11111 ""' 1110111 ,1111111 111r ~ B Id.:-.__ c l o ror..,.,s, Ed ummins . DPYC.
lu ~" 1.11 ltw '''·" t t 111 .. 11 ... 111 h1" 1111.1.· 1 11111 11 • I'' 1I111 111.1 11• •· BOAT/NC k NON-SPINNAKER -1. Seabird. Dan Renaud, \'lc.H .-d ! I.' f I" I I • ~"'I • I I I l•ll I• 1rr· JOHN MOFFET Capo BYC; 2. Thumper II ; Jim Lucchesi. Capo 11\11111 "'" 11 • IJl\111111 BYC w I d
T H t. "ORI 0 K t 1 llKU "''
the ~ hrra~hl(11I..•
, .,11111 ,,, ,1,,1 11, 1, 11111111 1,1k, 1 h d :...3. aio L. Howar Page, Capo B'l'C. were Loo 1g t to start an the breeze never filled
'A htlr lht" \tllt"I •11 11 I.
2 17 _'b but .. 1n, ,. 1111 r ,,, , '" ''
... ere hrld ''' t-1 , "'' 1
1 1•ur-.r n11rh· ·•I ~ • 11• •• 11 •..-1 ,.
' •Ill ftt• ft'\ II~' II I I .f
'l11 lld h.tJ \ 1 •• , "'" .I 11111\ 111
..! ll'I 7!1 Ill I 1111:.hlll).. 't."l 111111 111 'It·
l .., ""111111110g 'h..irnv11111..,h11·
<11 Ir' 101 111 «.11 h \ui.:u-.t
Otht•1 .. .111·..i l1~J1 11t·rl1>r 111.<111 "
:-.u11d J.. l <111\t' rr 11111 l\l :-. ... 11111 II!
J 0 . :, ·"' ... " t• \ d .. .., d 1111 II J I I el
'.\1 c·l'.1;..:~ .ind 1',nthtJ Wrwdlwatl
\'ASSAl.L.O P l .A('t;I) lh11'd Ill
th\' 200 1nd 111<l11:1l 1111·111 1·\
12 o:~ 70 1 and t1ft'h 111 1111· Hit!
bat'kstruk<: I ;,7 .1;, 1 ~'kt ' llgg .,. <•~
sel·ond an \he so fre£' t :!l 27 1
And Woodhead "a~ ftn1rl h in
the 200 tndo (2.HIM I olHI 1c·1ghl h
in the 50 fret' 1:!6 40 1
In a pcdormant·c r1•m1nrs<·cnt
of the seven gold medab Ii~
Mark Spitz in the· 1!172 01) m1111·ll.
T racy Caulkins wa)> awe~ome
every lime she h1l thl• ''"atcr
In six indn·idual event!> in thE'
three-day meet Caulkins. or
Nashvrlle, \\aS under the v.orld·
best lime in all of them She ;ils(J
was on three winning relay
teams. but in t wo of the m
di vidual rares she lost to lht·
world 's best woman huttt>rflwr
Mary T Meagher ol Louis' 11lt•
despite surµassini.! t ht-µn ... 1·1ou-.
worlf! hes! ti me
So the' 17 \l'ar 111<1 hli.!h ~<'111.>1•1
seni11r f1111sht.:d v. ti h "l'I •·n ~·11ld
rn l'dul°' :ind tw11 ~tl \'vr-.. Thn••• 11t
~p1t z·~ l!n::! i.:til1b \q·n • 111 n•la .,
"T llJS MEET \\a ~ 1rnp11rt :11H
for L'S sw1n1m1•r ... <11111 111 mt·
per:-.onalty lwt«IU,.,l· \\ 1· d 1dr1 I \'O
to Mosc·o" t for 1 ht• I '.11{11 I lh 111
p1l:~1 ." Caulkln:. ~a11l ..illt•r ~lw
' • 1 1•• "• in to more t.han seven knots throughout the day.
I• .\I 1,1 I "'' I• .t ti.II •I h• lh111k w r B ' Inside Classes
I I 1111• ·''"'I ' li.ul .. tti tt11 _ .. w ' f)\\' oys l.ASEH I Doug Teulie. BYC; 2. Guillermo
11 I 111 11• 11 1 '" ,,. l·t•1 ramoli<i. ABYC; 3 Jon Pernrck . BCYC.
• • t" 11°1111 " · • 111 "'' t.t\SEH 30 Plus I. Chuck 1-~owler. Capo
"' • '" 1 11 11111•1""'"lf .. 111 1•'7H ' l u l!YC'. 2 D1t"k Knopf, Capo BYC. "" ,, ,.i.. -...1 .. 1111·1 1 1 -.. 11.1111 ... <.UI{ ~e \Ot'l.T SAROT 1 Molly Lynch. svc ; 2 .
1'·'' 11 .lat·ktl' Smile). HYC; ;j Eleanor Forsyt h, BYC
l \ l I kl'" II \Jl I t11·1·1 "111 Id
. ··• d ... 1111 II\' 'II I "" d.11• .1t
1111 \1.1'· I l\1•11 11 I 11.1111p11111-.ltq1.
,1•.tt • ,1111111 11•\111 Ill\' I S
\\(1tl\I Ii ' l•',l ll• 11\:tl \\,I' Ill
.f1.1111lil•" .tll1•1' •\ lll l'lllL'. )11~1 1)11•
c 11ld r11• 1:t1 1:1 t ~'' "f71; 1111 mpw-.
I lilt 11 1111•1·1 \\ l'f ,. \ t'f'\ ... 11 , ...
I I I 11 1' I II 111 I' -h ll ·~ / I ft •
1·11 11n1 ... 1a11n·., .11 ,. "11 d1tl t•r1·11t. ·
,,11d ( ';1Ull-.1i1" .. , lt;11 ~· lt1iHt11•d ;1
lot a nti mat 11r1·rl <1 ln1 sin1·1• llwn
and 11111 ~·01nl.! 11> 1 lie• (>II mp11
d' a n;.:l'd t 111 rli.!~ ..
~u11d.1~. t'au!f...11b ,-,. •1 ... \.-r\ .. 1
"nrl<I lll'SI~ Ill !111• 11111 011•11 I
l1.1 <·k~trol-.1· and :!UO 1rill11111u,1l
nH•dll·~ a111l 1n I h•· pro•,.,.,.., tl1·
!t-ull'd '"1rl•J rt·• 11rcl h11ld··r:-. ur11l
l!IMU 01~ mp1<' c·h;1mp11m-.. H1l·a
Re1 n1sc·h and l 'H1 .1 S1·h11r 1drr
n·s pt•1·t 11 t•I ~ h 11\ h ol 1-:asl
(;l·rnrnn.'
1-" lll::tt FIRST 111.1;111 1·1110
Jll'll llOn Ill I '""'k ... 11111-.•· l'\t'lll 1 ':i11lk111 ... l\l>ll 1111· ,·;1 1 I .II I Ill It
:111tl n•turnt·d '"" h•1111·s 1.111•1 f111
I 111· 11\lll\ 1d 11.rJ lll•·dll'\ \It I •11''. 111
' Jlr XII
F " 11l fw1 11 "'Id 111·,I 111
ii 1 1 "I , 1 ti I" r I 11 1" .. r11 , .. " r , •
1111 i11 I " ...,1wd.1 . t•.i· .1 1111 :ii 111 ,,
.11 1 lw n 1o·•·I 111 •1• ·ll 1 l..-111 "'
.\llJl'l ll <•lh
. ()l h1•r 1\111 Id ht• 1 .. :...1ir1d:1 1
\\ 1 • II' f 11 r I I I ti I 11 I 1 \ I , I I • II
\\ 1111 \\1111 111·1 ~1·1111111 .pr 11 o \•'I I
f11 11' \\Ill .I '•,I.I Ill 1)11 I\ 1tlf11 lo
111 11 •·••
SI\ BOT :\ I J am Otis. LIYC. 2 Joan ~I ..i ~ !.l _,.] !) l 6 2 ''" rn ;tn lH 'Yl'. :i Uean Jo'ulton. SSYC ' • ... ti ... S .Hl<JT t ' Kenn Wh itehouse. BYC : 2.
\I . I ' '' , \ I ;-.. \ I ,., \\ I '.i 'I I
\I' '111 111 -.;1 ~111dlc••. :1
1111111 .. 1 .... 1o f1•1 ii .1r.tl !-o ari I· r.fn
'''It I'll " l1111f l1.1fl f !-i '••(' rill'!)
"1111.t .11 11 ,1.. lo.'
!'-l.11;•11<'1' 11;1°'· fuu11d .it Iii• lo,:!~
\J 11l1·l Ill \111tlll\,1lll \'i{'\\ lf) lhl'
n1111 l"l ~1.1uJ. ... c1 :JUlllu1!Lt1..!> :.;m..I
\ II , t 11 t t1 JI ~ I \\ ; I ~ I 11 Ji t'
tll'rf 111 1\l•·d I t i 11 1• ,1• lt••ltl'\ l'd
II•' d11•1I ,,, 11·1•111 ;el I .111-.1·~
-.1 .111•ll•·t , l,1 • l t11llh~ .. ·k 1•11
;fp ( ,\l tft fl,11),_.ll,el \\,1 ·, 'Ill/I lilt•
1<11•r ... I 111111 l 1•t1; t 11 1•1;~, ..
....,\,1111111 · l1111tt •;d1 •'J fl!t'r
t•jtdt•tl 1111 f )11' I fl!t\r .l!°fi•d J>ClhlJ
111 I' 1:,·•
111" ,\;" 1111 1111· 1!1411 Wo\\
!111\' 1111d••h•:it t'tl 111111 b;dl lc.im
"1;1, h lll':tl '1•to1 .1 .. ka tn 1!11· H''""
Hin' I l h.el 11 .. 1111 111tr11dw o·tl tltt·
r 1 .. 1 111.111•111 "' 1 .... 11,~e11
I I• \\ :1• I"" '"'I' .. ;, I lt•l'.ITl:!tl
It 'lf'li\ pt 11~1•1•1 ' Ill 11 •,•·Jr "lid
'' .1• 11 .111 11 d '" th•· \II< ,,,,•,t
11 •111
'>I :111oll1•1 111'111 nn I•• 1,1 " pr•,
,, ....... , •• 111 .. 11 l•l'li illl' 1~~11 ~··
) tf ttl.11 f 11111 11,dl I ,••;I) ti(' I lr ,11')
\•11111 ( ( II q •o 111·:11·, I h 1·t1 '.t'I'\ o•d
I ~ .111 1\1•111 ,,, I 11 l'I Ill 'v\ Ill Id 'v\ ;11
11 lt••ltll'I• 11111 1 II 1111• lil•·I''> 111•
•1•11••.11 ,, to r ·," ,1 111·1, l\q.1 I
~~ '11'~1 11 l.1 l ~l· ,.
\\.i I•' .I ~· I !1 ··1· \\ >rl,1 •t .1t
~ I I • • 1 • t I • , J • I f 1 ' I t } 1 t t •' • 1
11,1 If • ,\)'. l'I
.. • .. l~"''t#<-t> .
Hol>..r\ Lum!. BYC. 3 Eric Paul. BYC.
~'\ll'J.: l . Pett'r Newhre. BCYC: 2. Jim
t-:11gl1sh. t 'apo BYl'
l.1 ()0 1·\A I Chad Twichell . BYC.
I.JOO 14fl I. Emanuel Caster. S I BYC:. 2
,;l't)I ~~ l-'1111 011. SSYC ; 3 Don Webb, BYC. ·r111sT u : 1. Robert Ball. BYC; 2. Steve
Thomas. Frt•sno Y<': :i. Paul Kelley, SBYRC
,\JET<'ALF I Roh Reilly, BYC. ·2 <Jreg
ll:err1:-. BYl': :.I Boh ltoll1ns. BYC
Oulslde Classes
l'llHF ,\ I Hoodlum. Mike and Cindy
Sch.11·htcr. 2 RYC: 2. Spirit. Allen Brown. VYC; 3. Fa~• Company. Hl)h Williamson. BYC.
PHHF H I Summerset. Bob Marshall·Scott
'-'•·hnek. "lllYl', 2 Sparkle. Alex Irving, BYC ; 3.
IJ;rn~kumm<:r, r>1c~o Kahr. SSYC.
l'llRJo' <.: I Lan..i. W. Chang.Marr Schryer .
II YC . ~. Pin1<Jdo, Dave Will iamson. VYC; 3
\ 11rl t'!\ I II nrun• Twi<'hell. VYC.
Bowli1ig tournev set
11c·ft•n1 1t11 i.: l·hump1on 1;ary Dil-kanson will be
l1:ll'k 111 rlt·f1•nrt h1~ t1tt(' ;Ji.:ainsl some of the top
11.1m1•!-> 11\ prn IJ(1v. ling wh~n the Miller High Life
('ft,..,..,,(' 1-'('l'-undl•r v. a y Wednt'sday at Hrunswiek
\\ 111,dt•rfi<t\\ I 111 Anaheim
1>11·k111!'.11n. \1ho las t )Ntr won the cham
p1111i...h1p 11,atl'h l>Vt'r E rnie S<'hlegal. 217 198. wall
1,~. up a~<t1n~1 1\H other howlers. including 1980
111w11·1 k:uk•r. Wayne Webb Webb became the
I 111 1 l: l11111 li·r 111 h1storv last year to win 01·e r 5 1 .111 ·~11·111 .1 ... 111glr :-;euson
fi'11 "' plal'I· !Jfll.t' mom•) 1n the t<iurne~ 1s
$'1111~•
-----.. , ... · ... ,, .
CAMEL
Warrting The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health
•
Texas Tech
LUBBOCK. Texas <AP) -J erry Moore, head
football coach at North Tex11s State. was hired -
Sunday night as the new coach al Texas Tech.
"Of all the people who were available, he def·
initely fits our situation better than anyone," Tex·
as Tech Athletic Di rector John Conley said. .
Moore, noted for his offensive innovativeness
tl1e past two year s at NTSU, succeeds Rex
. Dockery. who resigned last month to become head
coach ;it Memphis State .
"Ile is Texas horn and hred. He has coached in
the Texas high school and college ranks. He
gained valuable exper ience under Tom Osborne at
Nebraska. and the fact that he did a good job in a
short time at North Texas State had a big bear·
ing." Conley said
Moore's hiring was a surprise. The names
most mentioned as likely sucl'essors to Dockery
had been J ohn Mackovic of Wake Forest . Ray
Alborn of Rice and Bill Yung of West Texas State.
Moore. 41 . coached in the high school ranks at
Corsrl'ana . Texas. and was an assistant coach at
Southern '.\lethod1st and Nebraska before taking
o\·er the head duties at North Texas State in 1979.
NTSL' was 6·5 last lleason with four of the
losses <'o ming against postseason bowl teams and
with a team thut included 56 underclassm en
among it s 70 n1rs1t~ 1>layers. ,
Moore l'oarhcd receivers and coordinated the
offense during game~ while al Nebraska from
1973· 78.
lie was at SML.' from 1965 72. He coached
linebacker s and defens ive ends the first ·two
seasons . incluo1ng the 1966 season when SMu won
the South wes \ Confe re nc•c championli hip. He
coa l'hed r~l·e1rer)> th ereafter. including the na-
tionally ranked pa~~1n1.: off~nse team of 1968 that
pos ted an 8-3 rl·<·ord and beat Oklahoma in the
Bluebonnet Bowl
·;_I. ·aCiLAU·.A. :·\' ;-::;-,: ~ ... , ....
• ~"'::'4: .... :· . "'"·'"'· •. •\C-
I
'7 mg. ...... 1.3 111-nicoine •·,. _..... br nc IMdlod. ...
\
• r
' . ..
., \ ................. ~.._ .. ........., .......... , ,. .,. ,,. ~, .... ~ .. ,. ....,_ .. ...._ ....
Monday, January 5. 1981 !JAIL Y l'lllJ I 8$
u ]O r ,-he.-bir ds
SF wildlife r e fuge magnet for thou1and1
FREMONT (AP> ~an Jo'ran 1·1..-u U11.>· Nauonal Wildlife
C°ll<'O a.y It for the b1rd1 hwi ft•fu.,.,, • 15.UOO ac·re preserve
dreda ~ thouaand11 ot them of uh m1m1h11s, mud 01tts and
And Ow. llmC' eif »•ar pr'eit'fib :.all µoodi> thi.t as host for about
one Of UM' mosl IJ)e<'tllt UIMJ Oii l !W.1 SlJtlt'l~b of bird:. it\ \'IUious '
;, portunttiet. 'for lord w•lchmK 111111•!i ul tht-)tar
that <'an bf found tovf'n 11 you Pur111.i tlw liAll anJ wantt!r.
don 't kno-. th_\'. dafftorenl't· "v.\• ul\111\atcly have hundreds of
between a 1·<1rmorant 1tnd a <'or thousand~. 1f nut nullions of
· n11h hen .. tiorc1J1nh 111 the South 81ty,"
~u1ll M1d1ac l H1tsko, a U S Fish On• of lhf' prime ~l>Ol!> to !>t'"•· uud W11tU1fe Serv1c·e recreation the> 11>ondt>r of Canada ee!>t' n ~ 1-~m;......,1,--1n--....-ro~r-m.a:--~t-10-n~tT-ea.;;.a~n~1~l.~s~uc.,..-~-ttt•
fo9t tall red le"~e.d s tilts '" It s ~t1mated that during the
the> peC'lt for fu111.I llnc.I the-w111tcr months ~ up lo 4!0.000 birds
baught) ~ril l'., u( .irtat ulut' ~•t'I anih: o! ~horehnc reside-m
heroni. lie~ "1Uun e) ei.1~ht or d lilt' South Hay, ht: s aid
bus) tugh""' 1tod lht' I'll) or Tht'} f°l' goi ng 1 0 droJ>
Fremont du" n bt-fore the snowflakes fly
· -Lol·att'il al 1t1t' "1ull1t-rn It realh 1~ rremendous," said
lip or lht' ba\ JU!'>l dl'fOl>l> lht: .. ·ran1 I~ Jat'Ol , a wildlife
-0 um b a rt on Hr 1 d g e t ro 111 b1ulot::1l>l w1 lh lhe National Park
High'°' a) IUl 1s the Si.n 1-'ran Sen ll'c
T he refuge opened last year
1tnd has a visitors' center. with
exhibits. including one on mi-
gratory birds. and about 10
miles of trails . Information on
birds. including a free checklist
of species is available at the
center
A s hort trail starts at the vis-
itors' center and winds through
lht' mars h and around s alt
ponds.
. 1e
Sa lt Co . provide both a resting
place and a source of food for
the birds
t:XHIBITS AWNG the trail
explain the process o f salt
·"farming" still used by the com·
pany and its relationship to the
bay·s el'ology Other exhibits
along the trail focus on marsh
ecology and the history of h~t·
ing and transportation in the
ar~a l!CI,,,...\ pMK•l•dure More trails are available for
hikers at the north and south
ends or the refuge. which is
being expanded to 23.000 acres.
The northern trail is aceess1ble
from thi.' Coyote Hills Regional
Park. wlule the southern trail
start~ at the Al viso c•ity marina
FrC:lnk C raig. Cape Porpoise. Maine.
thought he would do something spec:ial
with his nine cords of f1rcwooc1 . so he µut
together ·1 ").!111 ).!l1rl11 <. .1 I · .,,,II· b1 111 ~·· .• 11
rus tle 1t·1111· <lllcl 1.., n :...lit 1111111i! 111 •'
t
Technique revealed
to cut heart deaths Classics • Will
..
fJ()l ' • ID
C HICAGO <APJ A n ew
te<'hnique for dissolving dots in
be arteries around the heart
could ('Ut sharply into the 300.
000 deaths c aused b) s uch
blockages each year, a r e
sear<'her says.
A coron ary thrombosis in-
\'Olves the t·utoff of blood to por-
tions of the hea rt muscle, as
when a dot forms to block the
a rte ry. Without hlood. the mus
d e tissue begins to deteriorate
after GO minutes and ~radually
worsens until. after six hours . it
"The reason the retuge is here
is .the bay was gradually bemg
Tilled in diked off -gr-aduall)
shrinking." said Bitsko of the
government's interest in seeing
the wildlife habitat preserved.
British youth pre fers h ea,vier re.adi1t µ
The technique , if used prompt
ly when symptoms of a coronary
attack appear. could help sa ve
the lives of victims of arterial
clots or coronary throm hoses.
said Dr . Will i am Gan z .
card.iology professor at the
UCLA Medical School who 1s de·
veloping the procedure.
· The procedure 1s s till m the
1evelopmental stage, Ganz said,
md until it is perfected ·•1t can-
1ot and should not be done in an
nstitution that d~sn 't have lhe
nlelleclual and physical capaci
y to do so."
' 1s irreparably damaged.
Ganz reported m the Journal
of the American Medical As-
sociation that he and colleagues
a t the Cedars-Siana Medical
Center in Los Angeles have used
the technique to open clogged
heart arteries in 20 of 21 patienLs
who were sufferint: from cor
onary thromboses
"Wc'rt? not here to provide
gener<1I recreat1011. It's prim an
I)· for the l~nefit of ..., ild life." he
said
SOME o•· THE most common
s ho r ebi rds that flock to t he
refuge durin~ the winter are
a voc·ets. stilts ~nd willets. Lucky
bi rd wall' hers may also spot
species rare!) "een in these parts
Canada goose. w his tling
s wans. b<1ld <'agles and various
fakons
F'i Vt' endangered species can
be found in the r('fugc Four are
l'NDER T IU: T•X HNIQUE, birds the California leas t tern.
doctors feed into a patient's pc rigrcne falcon. C'lapper rail
heart arteries a small flexible and l'alifornia brown µelican
I.ONDO~ 1A P 1 Brita1n·s
;. oun.i.: p eciiill· :o.t•f.'111 to fa \'(JI
hPav1er rt•a(.11ng 11v1·r t()da) ~
l>est ·scller'!. in ...,hat ltw ·11mt·" ut
London call:-. a n·a:-.:o.ur1 ng ""'
\'elopment hut n 'illl'l>nse
In a sun l'} to cl1v·11\ er lhc
fct vontc authun-01 r,oo appl1
<:ants to London's l 'n t\<•rs 1t ~
Coll ege 1-:ng llsh Oei.-t1rtmcnt
Thomas llarcl\· t1nll Jani· Au'>\e11
beat J ohn I.~ <'t1rr1· and lcin
Fleming by a l<1ndshd1•
The poµular :-.u:,pens c w1 1tcrs
of· toda\' show<'d f:.ir down \hr·
lists. µuhltshcd h) The Times.
and authors or d as..,11·:-. rankt!d
\'C f) high Th<' l1 sl ol lht• tlip' ICI
authors·
lube te lescoped inside <I c:onven-The last endangere<I spel'ies is
tional size catheter tube inserted the s alt marsh harvest mouse. THOMAS llARl>Y. ml·nt i111wd
into the arteries at the arm or which is in<ligenous lo the Bay b) 19'1 applic-a nts ,. ,J;,1n1· Austen
BUT WHEN THE technique groin Area. 165, D II . l.J\Hf•nc·t• 151!. ('harlC':-
ecotnes available for general In addition. harbor seals 011.:kcns l~·I 1111' Br<intl' sister~
se in about two years. it wi ll Researchers mane uver the s mall. s po tted . ve r y 'sh} 106. c:eorgc Ornt·ll !O!l !;t .. orgt•
epresent the first sign1hcant tubes as near to the clot site as <-reaturcs can be found hiddt•n El iot fi9. J ;,ml'!'> J<l\SC· G6 . •
eans of reduC'i ng death rates possi ble. then extend the awa~· in parts of the refuge. c;raham (;rccne fi5 an1i E"elyn
rom coronary thrombosis in <1 smaller fl exible catheter until it although the t'h<1nccs of seeing Waugh 62
ecade, Ganz said. __ r_e_a_c_h_es_t_h_e_s_i_te_o_r_t_h_e_b_l_oc--=k=-a_g_e_. __ one are slim. Bitsko_s_a_i_<l_. ______ .. _T_h_e...:..y an-. you may say. :.i
... l.~ _,~t.t~,,. ·:·"'?' ~---~ . -.
G £{{H~~
FILT ERS
,
~owl , sol1cl , r•·as:-.iirin1-l'IJ• : '
:-.;11d Tht! TinH·s Bm 1, 11/,1' 11·1\
a :o.urpns1··· \l.'h1·1• .. r .. 111•· •11 •1
u.' l1ll•rar) t:ull f1.1.~11rt•..,"
l·11~i: I (1t•1,11tl1.111I
'-'h1• I f'l of,l•llt , lfi,.
II ' I ti\ f I • '
·Thl' i:lll:O.\A. er • .., "a\ tft1" n 11"
list Tnblrn ma:. 11nl~ r .,,, .. 1 .
m l'nlwn:-.. hut l 11TK1.•11 ~·· ...
OH'rl' :itJ aml il ('Ill\ .,,,, J. "'' I
hkt· I lt'rnwnn 111·:-.:o.·,. l';111 r:11hl•
onl~ Ii CJl011.i.:-.1fle r\f1dn· r;1•I•
..... IT I~ A 'l'ttlf-'1.1-. tf1 .. 1u.
certrn/,! to find (,u!>la \ Fl.111!1• r•
l<1n~u1:.hmg at I ~ ''l' m;1\ r·111
.,11lt· 11ur:-cfn·!> v. .th th<· 111 .. 111' I
lh:.il .J<ick !\ct <•ua1· J.!l·l ... n 11''
nl!'l(• (Jl1J1IJ.!Sldl· I .'-' 1.f•\\'I!->
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t ,,p It•·
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t t' •• '
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Fll·rr11 nl! a1 1d I-. I. 1!01·1111 .111
among thoo.;c \1 ho ~·ol rnrh ''"'
11H·n\1o n '"11·h. "~ u r P. :t ,, •
whrnngly '" <I" Tl11• T1n1•·:-. ·,
it. t hc late .JapHO("'•' 111.i.,1 • 1
\ 11k 10 :\l1sh1ma <ind :11Jt h11r .,r1·1
J>Ut'l Vl<1cl1m1r .'\'al1•1kt1\ .d11 '•
he:-.\ knov.n work t!'> L11l1tJ
I , JI f• ' I I , t lj I :
"·' 11 1 ..
I .t 11'11
..... 1ft1 !tf I j
Tilt' !'>ample wa., puc 11,,01·lli•.
bv A .S Bn 1tl. a non~lt~I d t111 ad
m1ss10n!'> ·tutor for the· c •>ll•·l I' ( 1111 t ' I I\ I I
-20 (lAo;S lo
~tCA"nns
~.:;.',.., ......
J-
l
,.,.
SMOOTH
T URKIS H & D OMESTI C
BLEND
•• '
..
lhatgreal
Camel Fihers taste,iow
· · in a_ new pack.
·~
.. ONLY P.11.o r Basltiess· .
et1 SC 00 -nave strong influence
a1 JOHN CUNNIFF
NEW YORK lAP> Sometime over the ntxt rew yeara. 1a1d
the broker, the s lodt market nl&.a•l make &.IP lta m~nd. It wUI have
lo de<'1dtt whdher th«' rnuratr)' •• 1&oin1 to 1olve 1ta problem• or
1ta1nalt' jnttead Hf' ronllJlued lt probabh mu1u• th•t you. •II ont or millions
TheH thouaand1 of braken and market analy1ta, he Hid,
aeem Lo be 1pllttln1 into two achooll that Haume either of two al·
titudes:
-st.ocka are undervalued. lnveaton don't realiie that atock
price• haven't adjusted for inflation. When they do, the Dow, no
h,igher than it was 15 years a10, will double ln the nexHwo or three
years.
clubl portfoll01.
WhenJou use dollar CCMl averaaina you assume that while
price• wt nuctuate day by day. they will riae over a prolonted
period of tjme. When you bu)', therefore, becomes of relatively
minor importance.
whou for\lll'lti!i art' involved with the lllock mukt t . either as direct
in vuton 1•t..throu1th pen111Uf1 fwaali. havf' ~ome h.,d dec•••ons to
make '
HOON TO ('Ollt:. If 11' ha1111 't '"'~W'I, hti ~aid . as • m1te1uone o(
1n \ H~tina h1ston . ;tn •H"momu· turnln~ point, perhaps equal in m»~nuud.-1f nut 10 dtrt!•'lwra to that. wh1d1 follow~ World War II
-Stocks reflect the troubled times. There is very little future
for industrial growth, and stock market growth. so lon1 u 1ovem·
ment debt, taxes. regulationa and inflation 1row, while productivi·
ty falla.
A dollar cotter is more interated in investing a fixed sum
without fail lhan in buying a certain number of shares. When
pricea rile, hla fixed sum buya fewer shares. When it faJla he AC·
quires more shares.
Since the assumption is made that prices over the long run will
rise, you could arglle that the dollar coater wins whether prices are
rising or falling. In facl, declines are viewed as a buying op-
portunity. · "' th.ti tari1t" i.ornt' wdl r .. <·1&U, thcrt• was dear d1v1sion of opt·
nwn 141lh ,,mH· P<•oplt' 1·u11v1m·ud \he l'oun\ry would return to the
dt>Vrt•,,1011 1•t th,. l !tt(.I!> unit ot ht:r-1 whv fort1l·ast the dawning of a
As usual. that dumps the amateur investor. who can't afford
the risk or an all.or-nothing bet. into the crevice between the two
planks. where he sits anxious. confused and unable io act. What
does he do?
In her book, "Money Dynamics For The 1980i" (Prentice
Hall>. Venita Van Cas 1 iv · ·
01'14 l6j..€'
, .. 11 1n" .. uru ar 1s no\\ OC('Urnng on Wall
:o\tlr <'l ,,ht·r• """"'"\ti) lh'-·· l >o'4 Joneb 1tven1ge 1s undervalued
.wd ht· .. 1lt·d hL.t:tw1 "' 1·u11t1 dl'll\ thal tl is now too _tu"h and 1s
little bit at a time op a regular monthly or quarterly basis, buying
, a few shares or even fractions or shares at a time, regardless or price. ~
ou ave mont to invest. In the first month you acquire
10 shares at $10 share, in the second you buy 20 shares at 15, and in
the third month you again obtain 10 shares for $10 share.
hr .Hird h•<-11•1 ,
l"htt"t , r J I, 1 o1~(• \ 11u "111.11tl11 l lliH't-round such a neat spilt on
tht' :.trt't't l•tll """ lh~' !\t:em 11. l1tk1ng V(l1>1t1ons . said the broker.
"ho>r lld fl•r ... u11 1111 porta11t 111 tht' :.tur} bel'ause he 1s but one of
thvU.:.d.lhb
Dollar costing is an old. old principle, already used by
thousands 'of investors in mutual funds, dividend reinvestment
plans, brokerage house monthly investment plans and investment
Result: You invested $300 and acquired 40 shares of a sloe~
tbat has a current selling price of $400. "You have made a $100
gain with the market dropping !50 percent and only returning to
where it started." .
Off shore sites up
WA!->lll"-1.lll"\ \I lht: gu\
rrnmt-nt 1 .......... 1 • u 11111111111 a1Te~ off
the l ;.., •1.1-.1 111' l'IHU h1r wl and g<ls
explur.1t1 un -,..it111,_ "l'\ l'r<tl l t!n1rds
in 1h1• p rt11 ('»!\ tht· lnlt'rior l>eµart
men1 ha:. Jnnmmr ell In a rcµort <>n
leas ml! <H'I n 1t1t"• t h1• tie part mt-nt
said the •HI 11ictu;.tf'~ pa 1<l S4 ~ l.lllhon
. for tht' rti!ht 10 1nq1l<irt· and develop
R.-tir~·
Harding L. l.C1\HCn1·c has retired
as chairman and <'hief executln·
officer of Branil'f .International
Corp .. Dall as. after ser\'ing in
those capacities since 1965.
.!IK tral'ls leased m two sales in. the
<:utf 11f :\1cxH·o and one in the
11urtht-as lt'rn t~ulf of Alaska.
Ont' of the c;ulf of Mexito sales set
a rel'ord for the amount of bids re ·
n•1ved m a smgle sale $2.68 billion
and Ill tht• amount paid per acre -
s:i:! .. 1s1
· · 1 am enl'ouraged by the generally
s trong showing of interest by ··in=·
dus\ry m the three sales we held this
year." Interior Secretary Cecil An·
drus said "Irr addition to setting
several new records. we have made ,.
import ant progress in setting a
strong foundation for the leasing pro·
gram in 1981-83 and beyond."
The department made final plans
for a stepped-up leasing program
which will involve seven lease sales
lll 1981 and 1982 and eight in 1983.
While records on individual lease
sales \\ere set this year . the total
money received from all sal~s was
only the thii:~ highest in the 26 years
of tht> offshore leasing program. In
1979. a re<'Ord SS.08 hillion was bid
anrl m 1!174 oil C'ompanies bid $5.02
hi llwn
COLLECTORS
CORNER
Rare Coln• & Stamps
GOLD & SILVER
Prices tor 1·2-81
ao;o CloM ••so
'<.'uQ••r•d'ld't
Mdpll' LP.lf
100 C..urn"a'
)() PP\O\
Q() \d"t' f.:\dy\
at•••• c1 au to
-3 MIS
16" 50 .. "so
IM7 16IO '721 so 11•0.50 I
1130, 1196'
FtKttonel ICtvge,,•ndt Ho• In
C•M fM CVf't•nt quo1e1
(714) 556-6850
South Coast Plaza Village
Su""°we' et her .....
IAc~• ffom Soutf't Co••I ~I•••'
f;>~ Earn <Q
"ft) On Passbooks ~-t
of as little as $10
9,, Annual Yield·
8.50% Annual Rate
NO TERM REOUlBeMENT l'.HRIFT BY MAIL
·V1eld •S based o n mtere$l being credited m onthly to the Passbook balance and being
ma1nla1ned 101 o ne vear Funds 1n by the 10th earn intere st from the 1st o l the month
Passbook interest •S compounded da11y and credited monthly
FOR CALI FORNIA RESIDENTS ONLY
*FREE CORDLESS EMERGENCY LITE
PERFECT FOR POWER FAI LURES,
BLACKOUTS AND OTHER EMERGENCIES
Operates on 2 "O" batteries (included)
Pull off ... it lights
Put back , .. it's of.f
Complete with wall bracket
•FREE WHEN YOU ••
.._-+-_...~.a..a...1.,...iaUook-•ooownt with t1000 or more,-
thl• em~rgency llght la your FREE. Limited quentlty,
offer good only whll• aupply laatal
HIGH INTEREST PLUS l'Ril GI"
A REAL VALUE FROM •••
A " Cedllmlal Thrift and I.om\ Ami ...
731 North Euclid StrMt 11820 lrookhurat
Poat Oftic. Box •e<>e Po9t Ofttce lox 13\0 ~-~-6.. Anaheim. C•l"ornla 12803 Fountain Valley, C.llfomla 1210I
-(71•) &33-3072 (11•> 114-1111 \
••
.-•("l r•••••-•A•••~" •-• .... _. •..-• r -
, .
Not only will Downey) Savings pay
you 51/4% interest if you have a MoneysavefSM
account with us ... 5ut we'll also give
you FREE all of the
fully-personalized
checks you can use.
As long as you have
the account with us.
Moneysaver is very
interesting.
N<m vnu can finally earn
interest on the money <hat
used IO lie idle in your check·
ing account. )1 4 ":, interest ratt'
cnmpounded dail)' for a '.'· .. \9'1
\1
annual vidd.
With your high interest sa\·
ings accounts and !vlo11t!y.\'<ll'£1r
all at Downey Savings. you'll
ne ver-rea lly have tl-rgo anywhere
else for your important finan·
cial business. One stop or phone
call will rake care of it all.
Plus. we own some o f the
m1 )St snphisticatcd c4uipment
available and have a staff o f
Money.,arer experts to handle
your account right here. So if
you ever have a question about
your /\f oneysa1·er account.
you'll get an answer ... FAST
You may not even
have to pay a monthly
servic~ .charge.
All you ha,·c to Jo is keep
a minimum of 52000 in your
Downey Savings Passbook. Or
a minimum of SIOOO in your
Mo11l!y.rn1·er i.ll'l'otmt. That\ all.
And you'll get FRfE ch~cks
and nn monthly SL'rVil·e charge.
Even if y~lur .\lo11£',l'.\'lll'er
h.alance <lrops lll "·' /01r tlS $SUU
cl11ri11g a 1111>1/fh. ~OU Sl ill W<m'l
get a munthl~ Sl.'n·il'l' chargt'.
Just a t:'r pL'I' dwl.'k handling
l'hurgc.
•
And if \nu'rc h:! 1)r l1ilkr.
J\11111£y.,a ,., ·r Pfr" ;, /11r.1·1 w: ~o
matter" lwt \otir minimum hal·
ann :. ~\)U wun't !!l'I ;1 lll <intllly
"ervice cha rµc .
Moneysaver offers
you a lot more exciting
benefits too.
Send in the coupon helow
nr stop by one nf our cnn·
venient offices today for com·
ple t.e <letuils. '
,--------------------------------
Just what you'd expect from
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
: Downey Savings and Loan A~ociation I 3200 Bristol Street
I Costa Mesa, CA 92626 I (714) s49-88t1
I
I
I
I I
Please send me more Information about your
exciting new Moneysaver account.
l Name·--------~--------~
I Apt .. # __ _ I Street .Addres.s ___ _ ------·-----···-· ---
H011n: Mon. thrvTiaur.: 9:00 AM·4:00 PM
Friday: 9:00 AM·6:00 PM
Sa111rday: 9:00 AM·l:OO PM
' COlllaM_.,_. S.-C....
360 E. 17th Street ..... ..._.
(714) 642·1422 3200 8riltol St.
• C714) S56-9710 HM¢,._lwti
· 20002 8'ookhun& St. '11f.tt962-2407 -····••V6J 17150 Maanolia Ave.
C714) '42·1424
•-
hwtM-N.•••*' 4910 Irvine Bhd.
Suite 108
C714) 8.12·9890
City·---------State __ Zip ___ _
HomePhone~--------------.
Businea Phone--------------
.. --------
•
-------------------
'E-.
...
\
,
--
. · /} well mvt&d edacalim is mt>re fh.et11 ;"6-1
the _ #!tee Rs. Ii's luu-111nf Llbt>ul-~le . J}ncl-1/;e
041o/ !llof N'ws,P'per-in Educafltm Pl?'fran?
i5 /Jelf;inf 9ire sludeA-ls 1n more #lt:1n 17!J
Om"t;e ~asf sclt~ls /"i f -/haf .. hhd' tJf' -
ecl~aif ib7!.
, Mdn:.. fhar; ct sfudy ol currt!l?I ev-81';/s v
fhe Al~~~ 1h ~ frcx;ram pmvi~
exercises 1r; C/JmptehehSltm/ prceplt~ V4/~es and
praclrCa! lk e.tpen~c.e.. f-hnntt;h presenh-lit»l.5
w~rf::shcps dncl atn-1at/U4YJ tfltds .
Al#ltXtfh Hu #;ree Rs r~ain Jmporftu?1
file Ot11/y PM ;Vewspt1~ in £ducal-i"71
P'°'!rMn 9oe& he.ytn4c/ #len;. Re+11embu-...
knowlulfe IS pnver. /Incl the Dliily RltJf 1s
4 fYllfhl-y pn11e,-IU/ piece of ~ac/1~1·
~ fntJre inlormtl/r'm CYJ #-tw6,P4',PV ii?
,
Edttca-fitn? prorrtzl'lls, Ut_!I Jund S~t:VCI
tlf q,42-/1~1. _________________ ..__,
I -----··--------' -----·-----...,.__~ --·---
l
' '
-. . , .
Daily Pi~at )
l
642-4321
-.,.. ,.
)
. ,\ -· '
I • •
mu •u •1•1• ••n .. n .....
tii1 I I t11 • I f\P"'' If '' '·•' •• I II• .. I ~ 111'1 ~1!11\1 •• ... ·~· ·~· ll lO .......
e I .......
r \~ ~-. I .I • • • " aroute1 fJ19 emotions... ,
· 1 worth cheering about.''
NEW Yo.t« o.iutr '«WI. 1Cothlee11 Cur1oll
.......
5
IUT•Snl
''"''"' ""'' • 1_.,, UA \~"'"''
. .. ," .... ,.. AC\. f'"••lt"P .\~=.:.;·:!·., h II '1 4 ~'!I l1~4~
ACADeMV Mar1••••1
•• •1 ~ 9'.Jiff' \. ''""'· ~. ~\. (J' .,,\ n•' •n··n_.,,._.
h •ueft ...........
994 2400
.. , .. ,
I ....... .....,
'' J ', 11 ~'1110
...
I •••··~ /I l ... tl '1'18?
.....
•C-
71]/~JI •s•o
,..,.,,. (•"' ".,, ,1 .,., ....
94<1 ISU
CM .. c~-·--SffMS LIKE OLD TIMES
,,..,,, • ., .. ~ .... 1 ........ ,,
#_l ... frl Sol IO:IOf...,_
l~-.. .._!Mf-
Nl'NE TO FIVE (PG)
t U $ ., • 00-a >0 11 91 ___ ,,, Se1.11 ott....,.,,.,_
a.... w1 ... , •"cf "lcf\erd l'ryor
STIR CRAZY c,.1
t It l >0-4·00~ >O tO·tS
..... -F'1 Sol ID 0 l9'ty-
I 'f9M #ftelM tla,.rt1
POPEYE "GI ,, 0 )00 ~)0 1 001015
.... •""'•' S•• 1010 f.,.t,SNw
CeM WHde• and Alctt•rtl Pr,or
STIR CRAZY 11111
I )0 •·0•-4 JO·•OO 10 JO
W~el'\d '" Sal It 00 (.,;r Sha.
I '•"' #hel t 1'•"'
POPEYE c~o1
I 00 3 Je-&•09 I 0 11•00 w .. 11:.,Ht ,,, Set tO»O f •rty Sl'IO•
"9Mr1 Oe NtH
RAGING BULL '"' I 00.J JO.a.D0-4 JO· I 0 0
•••keftd '" •• ,, 10 io ,.,., s....
CM .. ChoM ·O--
SffMS LIKE OLD TIMES '"°'
I -, ., .. , .. , ···10•09 """'°"4 '" l ol. 10·0 h ny Sho•
G.ft4t W•'d•r •nd fttcf'lera ,..,.'O'
STIR CRAZY 1r.:
100•1, •• >o t DO
PACIFIC fHEAlllfS 01111/l-IN SWAP MUlS
S f-(lClil fOUI IUCIS S'f•O fMt Ol' U
HAll8011 8l'IO 01111/f·IN I Oll&NGI Olll'll·lll u• 10 J,. Ul .. ll&f & IU-•
.. II PH•••' \UWOU~ ar au•1• StaOfU•
.......,O•N~o <t"' RAGING BULL 1111
TH£ CHOtR90VS "'1
... ,, .. ,.. "", •• .,, .... -.. •Chi .. --... ,.,. •••• '
-.. C k;.. • lillOllOft ··-fHE FORMULA,,., ~... FFOLKES cf'G1
----------,,...._.. .. _IMT-
NINE TO FIVE ''°'
..,.. BRUBAKER (R)
RBAN COWBOY lllGI
"-'•GREASE 111G1
-UP IN SMOKE c111
----•••• ..,. ...... 1 ctelat MID CMONO't llUT _,VII l"I ~
THI •LUii BROTHERS 1111
SEEMI LIKE OLD TIMIS c'°°I ,.,,.
THE MAIN EVENT c'°°I
f ttO •• \.fitl U t.0 •1111 ..r..•IOI •CUU .. t ,.. ... ,... ;tf4 '°UI OW" •• "ltll&tU
-
platter
hot hit
Thtt following are
8ttlboard's hot rtH'or<.I
h1 t:l fo r tht> weekend
t•n1tin.i J a.n lO Its they
uv1i.:ur 1n next 1.0ietik 's 1s
'li t' o f H1llb o ar<.I
m1t~iu:111i•
Htn' SINCiLt:S
I "Starttnl( Over "
Johu l~nnoo 1 c;erren >
2 · I. 11 \ t' o n t he
Ruc·k:, .. N1·il 1>1amond
1C.'a1n tol 1 •
3 ·c:udl) H11rbr11
Sl1 ~1~ • .11111 & U.1rr} (;1t>b
f ( '11lumh11t>
4 "Tht' T1dt· b ll1~h "
Rlund1c I ('hry,uh~ 1
5 • 'HunJ!r~ Ilea rt ·'
n r u \' c s p r 1 n 1:: s t e c 11
1 < 'ol umbia )
ti "t:very Woman 1n
lhl' World" Air Suppl~
I :\ rll>l'i.J)
1 ''Pu ss10 11 '' H ocl
Skwurl t Wurttt·r Hro~ l
8 "Tt•ll It l.tkr ll Is "
llt•urt C l-~1m· 1
!I .. L:Hh t\ I' 1111\
Ko.it'rs 11.1111:rt.\ 1
10 "Mon· Than I (';.111
S a } · · I. t' ti S a ) 1• r
IWarrwr Hro).. 1
TOP I.P'S
I ''l'>ouhl1;· Fanlas.' ··
John l.l'nnon & Y ok o
Ono ( (;<'ffen I
2 "(;utll\" Harbni Stn·1~und 1 l ·;1lumhia >
3 "Hottt>r Than Jul\'"
Ste\'1c Wond<'r <Tamie.ii
4 · · L' r 1 m <' ~ 11 f
Passion" l'at Benatar
<Chrysahsl
5 "BaC'k In Rla<'k "
J\C'-O(' (i\tlant1<'I
t>. "E a i.:I <'!. Li ve
Eagles (Asylum 1
7 "\.rcah•s l l ilt!> ..
Kenny Rogers 1 l.1bcrt~ •
8 "Zcn\'atla i\tondal
ta" The Polit·c I J\& M I
\J "The Jau Singer ''
NPil Diamond <l'ap1tol >
10 ··Gaucho" SteC'h
Dan (MCA 1 •
.....
Florida ~ampus
------------
Nne l'rlfttd
Baseball player
<C liff Potts .
left > find s a
friend in ~
editor Lou 1
G r a nt (Ed
Asner > when he 1
FRENCH MOVIE
With
ENGLISH SUB-TITLES
ENTERTAINMENT
...
"GREAT!" visits the I
n e w s r ~ o m on " Al "/' • • 11
.. L 0 u Grant " nel s movie IS a ge . ......_ __ ___,,.--tl ..:....__...., ......... ____ -=o=n.,..,1g:=r.-='ar-1~0""'n~-j--t---SHIR LE y EDER
Chapnel 2. 1
1---_j
NOW 9HOWIND
EDWARDS CINEMA PLITT J,.ITY t.l:Nl f fl
L()';l/\Mt ',/, ,. 1 HflN<ol I
/14t (1dt '11 , tlH 1•~ f ''" '.J~8/
Burt to get degree
TALl.i\11:\SSEE. Fla C A P J At·
for. Burt lfry nolds. who this year
i.::1,·1• $1ifl0 .000 to 1-'l o rida State
I '111' 1•r ... 11 ,. to t•111low a I heate r arts prof1·...,~1;r!>h 1 µ. "II I rcc·civl' an
lu111 11rar.'· dt·i.:n•t• from his alma
mat l'I' 1111~ month
t'rtt\'t•r:-.it\' ufftnals said that FSlJ
l'n·s 1dt•nt Ht•rriard Sli~t'r will prcsenl
ltw dt•J,!rl't' J<in 14
lll'\'110lds' IWO·vcar FSC tar('er
wa :-. ':-.pt•nl as et · halfbaek on the
1!153 ~>-I Seminolt· foothall team , not
or t ht• :-.t·hool 'it agt I It• en le red at·t
111i.: artcr a knt't' inJur~ <·ut s hort his
font b;d l t etrt·c r·
Ill-l!a,·c· lht• I 'n1vcr:-.1ty sroo:ooo to
.. ndo" tht• Burt Reynolds Ch:ur in
Prof1•!> ... 1n11al .. rncl Rt•giQ.n al Theater
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
The state augmented the gift with a
S400.000 grant for a total of $1 m1llton
endowment.
The univf'rsity a nnounct-d thl' de·
cision to awa rd Reynolds the "Pe<'1al
degree in a news release but dtcl 11111
stall• what dcgree it would he
Filming e nds .
1101.1.YWOOD CAP 1 Ocnnis
Christopher and Sus an Sa mt Jame~
s tar in the theatru:al movie "Don't
Cry. It's Only Thunder ." wh1th has
finished photography 1n the Ph1l1p
pines The m o\'ie also stars Roger
Aaron Brown. Roher! Englund ancl
James Whitmore Jr
''9to 5''
(PGJ
I·-···SEEMS LIKE.
OLD TIMES" (PG)
I "POPEYE"
(PG)
1 00 t I~~ jO f 4~ '0 1)0 I I t_· 'TRIBU~-E ;;.,.I, NOW PLAYING ti II,.,, ••• ,ou le~I 9000 •9•11"1
INSIDE MOVES"
MAllll SOUfH COASl CINIOOMI
•I 'J; ' • ! ' '
EOWIAOS" Clll[MI Wtsl UA MOYllS llNCOlll OAIVHll '·' •' IOWlllOS UOOUUCll MISSION OAIY(·lll
j k. ~'J 1
110 PUSU .ACCEPHO IOA THI$ EllGAGEM(MT
Tae
Power Behind
The Throne
J,
17 .... l 00
~f!l7 JQ94"1 l''EVERY WHICH
WAY YOU CAN"
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiltll c:--_ {PG) ~
Theres a lot more
to being a j at her
than
just having a son
~lf•"11'f'a•1 . ...........,. '''''"' ·~
~
•
"LITTLE MISS MARKER"{G)
CHILDREN'S PRICES
=i I "BLUES BROTHERS"
"AIRPLANE" (PG)
"CREECH & CHONG" (R
t' • ..J I "PR!VATE BENJAMIN''
"GOOD8YE GIRL .. {PG)
l ~ I "FLASH GORDON"
"BUCK ROGERS"
(PG)
I ::r;;-E ELEPHANT MA-;;f'.
"ESCAPE TO
ALCATRAZ" {Al
"EV£RY WHICH WAY YOU CAN"
"HONEYSUCKLE
ROSE" PG .. ...,. ....... _ ." .... ~' c ...... ,,_ ·-PUT-
<.:-? ~ •.•
~ii!:~
~,
---------~-------· ----------------------~~ ---
· JAN. 5, 1911
COMICS
CLASSIFIED
c~ cs
ENTERTAINMENT:
Kermit's opinions
to the contrary, museum
officials call Miss Piggy
~a ioork of art' ... C3
Singk-parenting
•
"'hen duty calls.
it· s double-duty
Jor some Marines
who are struggling
with the
. responsibilities
of single-parenthood.
Sta/ I Sgt. Brad
Bab<iyco ttopJ takes
3-year-old daughter
Tr.ishia on shopping
trip. Nineteen-
month-old Romel
1 center photo J
lavishes attention
. on her mother. Sgt
Melody Copley. Sgt .
Ken Meade 1 belowJ
dines out with son
John.4.and
daughter Annie. 2.
J
By Lance Cpl. Steve WllUaffi"s
' S.-lal ..... Dally Pl•
A Marine and a single parent. Can a Marine
be both? Which job carries the highest priority?
A growing number of Marines are a sking
themselves these e motion-charged questions.
Many divorce courts now are awarding
custody of children to military men as the m ost
suitable parent. and increasing numbers of
single women with children are staying in the
Marines.
For these Marines; single partenthood has
raised a new set of problems, such as what to do
with the children in cases of unaccompanied
overseas tours or unstable working ho~rs or all
night duties.
FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITIES also are
a complication as these Marin_pa are torn
between taking a second job to ease financial
bur dens and st aying at hom e to raise and care
for their childrJ!n .
Social Jives s uffer, too, becau_se the time
and money for social activities simply do not
exist for many single parents.
One single parent, Staff Sgt. Brad Babayco
who is stationed at the Marine Corps Ai r Station
<Helicopter) in Tustin, noted, "Single parent-
hood is not for everybody .. it takes a lot of
dedication to accept the r esponsibilities of rais·
ing a child alone and being a Marine.
'·A particular problem is separat ing duty
from parenthood. i'
"Parenthood starts about 5 a.m . and ends
around 7:30 a.m .• in which time you have got to
get up, pre pare yourself for duty, starr
breakfast. wake up and dress your child, feed
yourself and your child, clean up the tJouse,
plan and take the meat portion or your dinner
out or the freezer. take your child to the s itter's
and get to work.
"Then duty starts at 7 :JO a . m. and ends
after 4:30 p.m. Jn that time you have to devote
yourself 100 perc"ent to your duty and to being a
Marine.
!•Afte r 4:30 p.m. you are a parent again,
cooking. washing dis hes, cleaning house iuM·en·
tertaining your child."
SEPARATING DUTY FROM parenthood
becomes especially diffic ult during limes of all
night duty. For Babayco, who takes his 3-year-
old daughter to the child care center at Tustin
during his normal hours. all night duly means
the addi,ional cost or an all 'night baby sitter,
which strains an already stretched budget.
Not all single parents face this problem.
Sgt. Bruce Denison, a police sergeant for
Tustin barracks 133, has been exempted from
a ll weeknight and weekend duty. So far he also
has bea'I exempted from unaccompanied over-
seas tours. And, he's been able to work out his
schedule with his comm and so that he works
through his lunch hours and is able to lea.ve ear-
ly to pick up his 7·year-old son.
His commanding officer. Mai. R.W. Hein
Jr. said, "Single parents have special problems
and they seek special help. Most single parents
become very cooperative once they realize that
the command has recognized their problems
a nd is trying lo help them.
·•Jn some c a!;es we have modified the
Marine's working hours lo make it possible for
him to pick up his c hild after school. As long as
the person is trying to fulfill his responsibility to
the Marine Corps we do our best to help him."
Hein noted.
SINGLE PARENTHOOD carries a price for
some career-oriented Mannes, as some occupa.
lional fields aren't open to single parents.
One Marine who found out the hard way· is
Staff Sgt. Larry Lord, a non-commissioned of-
ficer in charge of the repairable warehouse at
the helicopter station.
A veteran of nine years of service. Lord re-
On-the-job ch.ild care
BJ l&IGB 8BlaLBY DA~ (AP) -Vlekle Home vta-
lta her to-mcmt.IMld ICJD at leMt twice
durinl a bUl7 won daJ .ttb the perm&licm ...s even tbe ba..tna ol
her.....,, •. SM .,_., dub bome to have
lunch wtda Kriltopber. Siie doesn't ftlbt .,......_ tnllk to drive ac:rou
town to a 487 ean center to pick him
up at= TIMt ., .. toddler'• lbGtbsr' la JUlt a ,... ..... walk awaJ from
ber ................ •11klla,. at
Zale c.y. '• ell&W care eeater la
DallM.
Mn. Bane. a teen&arJ ll Zale bs•h ...... ""9·Uriml ....... t1w=r:•.., can..._•.,.. ... 1 ........... pun of .......
·'The benefits of corporate
child care are manifold,'' Romaine
said. In-house child care "humanizes" a
company·, he said.
"It sets the company in a certain
image for the employees and elves
them a new awareness of children
and youth," Romaine added.
Corporate child care also is a good
seJllng point for companies trying to
woo mothers out of the home and into
available jobe, Romaine said.
· In addition to helpin1 a company
keep ita trained employees, havin1
tbe child nearby improves a parent's
atUt\lde on the job, Romaine said.
THE CHILD CAaE center la not
only a plus for i>arenta, "lt 1ets the
entire Zale's staff involved," Ro-
maine said. a.a--1~----.._,.....-.~-==""=-~,...,.-·-----'1Tl'lllne111c:rt1trn4ffftr rrlck :ar-:rrHted
r
tbroulb the hllb·rbe· Zale'1 buildlnc
on Halloween. In one department
naff members dNIHd up la coa-
tum• to JoiJJ la the fun, be Ntd.
Gall Chlldwlck, a Zale fmplofse wttll two 1C1n1 In the cblld can f8dli· tT, aakt tbe center la a roc::.r=-f• ... , .... ., ...... eett :-
~ .............. ... ~----tbm olben for .. ..... elalld care faeilltMI.
t;orporate officials at Levi Strauss,
however. said they tried in-house
child care and found it lacking.
Levi Strauss built its first child
ca re facility at the Starr City, Ark .•
plant in 1963. They closed the center
eight years later because "it was not
profitable," said Paul Cox, a
s pokesman for the garment com-
pany.
Participation was not what we
had hoped, he said. "Most mothers
preferred to leave their children in
neighborhood homes and child care
centers."
Cox said the Levi Strauss Found•·
lion, a charitable or1anlzation,
awards aranta to non-profit lf'OUP8
that are wol'klnl on developln1 child
care facllltlea ln low·lncome
net1bborhooda .
,.u
Uon, for now,•• be added. Romaine
Hld the Zale FoundaUoa, la pbllan·
tbroplc arm of the company, a1lo at·
1lltl Dlllbboltlood "cblld care co-
op1." "Bat they, tbe foundaUon, an bav·
lnl trouble ftDdlnl people who an lnternted ·la doia1 tbat ktad of thlaj," lii Aid. ---. -. ~ .
· cenlly reenlisted for three years to become a
recruiter.
"'I arrivt-d at Recruiters' School in
'Fehru<Jry ... ht' -;<Ji<I . "but had m y orders can -
celed as soon as they found out that I was a
single parent. I fought it a ll the 'way to the com -
mandant or the Marine Corps but m y appeal
was denied. I tht>n requested drill instructors'
school but was refused on the grounds that J am
a single parent "
Fortunately not all career Marines must
cope with such situations.
Sgt K(•n M<'<.1clc. an 11 ·year veteran of the
Corps, has had good command support from his
unit at El Toro.
''At first I wl:lsn't sure how the command
would react \h my becoming a single parent,''
he sCJid. ·so far I huven 't needed too much help,
but the t·omm<1nd has done as much for m e as it
could.
· '"TIIE ORGANIZATION that has helped me
: the most" said Meade, "h;,i; been Mission-H~U ·
Baptist Church They held a baby shower for
me rig~t away when 1 was j ust starting out and
different people have taken care of the kids.
Also the people of the church have r eally en·_
t•ouraged m e · ·
For Meade. an unusual problem has been
his working on Saturdays.
"I have to hav1.: the r arlio station on the air
by 6 a m on Saturdays." he noted. "Until re -
cently thllt has bcPn a real problem . as very few
people arc wilhn~ t" ~et up at 5 a m. to babysit
two young children I have finally found a coun-
ty-run fiornc io Santa Ana that 1s open 24 hours a
day-un<I clln take the children until the Child
Car t' Center opens up.
Another YI arinl· whit has unusual working
hours 1s Sgt !\1clo<l) \ 'flplr:y. personnel chief for
the !\1anne Ain·rafl <;roup-13 adJutant shop,
also at El Toro
S~t Copley works <J second JOh lo ease the
finanl'ial burdens-of rearing a child alone. but
faces another kind of 1iroblem .
"MY fo'INANC'•:s with a second job are
good, but I onl y ~et to see my baby about 45
minutes total during the work week. We spend
the weekends together but it's not enouRh.
"l feel fortunate that I've had the opportuni-
ty to become a sergeant I can be no worse off
than any male Marine sergeant with a child.
May be I'm a little better off because m any
male Marines have a hard time cooking. clean·
ing and taking care of young children," Sgt.
Copley s aid.
Colleen Trosper. who 1s director of the
Tustin Child Care Center and is a temporary
single parent while her husband is overseas not-
ed that. ··Children of single parents feel a cer-
tain sense of loss so we try to give. these
children extra positive attention.
"We 're suhst1tutc mothers eight to 10 hours
a day for th1•sc C'h1ldren.'' s he said. "We also try
to aid the s ingle parents with advice, as
sometimes we tan sec problems c ropping up."
THE CENTER O•'FERS priority head-of-
the-waiting list pri\'ileges to single parents who
can show no other means of support for their
children during wl)rking hours
Dr J\·1 1cha1·I .I l.(•\'l lle. <J c hild
psychiatrist and clinic counselor for the El Toro
base. feels that the psychological effects· of only
having one parent <1rcn 't as devastating to the
c.·hild as we might think.
"Old myt holOKY nt'eds to be laid to rest." he
said. "Children are more adaptive than we give
them credit for The old conception that the
children's mental and physical health is depen·
dent upoh an intact ramily has never been
scientifically validated
"Neither 1s there any real scientific
evidence that the sex of the sm1i:le parent makes
any difference in the ability to raise a child ."
the doctor added
I
•
(Wl f ~·11111 Mondey, Januat'l I, 1111
M i.11i:ster is a 'no-good rat'
IH. \K \~'\ I \~II .. IC"i 1\11• wu 11 .. 1
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•uun a.1111 1111, 111111 l d1•1 1dt·fl 111 '>ti~·wk
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rntl' Ui• '" "•"' lo t l l 1)11 \o\ 111111 II Ill' " ""'''""'i"' It• I • I'""''' l11i. I 111. IJtMll "tll
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I Ill' "II ,, \II \ Ill \II .. H
l\t \K .... tt l h" """'"" \o\liu
0
\o\tol"
1 au11 h1 h1·r ,;,m1 ... 1r1 """'"""'' 1n thl' 11d
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11111111•• hul .. un l otll11111 '"' "H.-lu hu1 •
tit'" 111•·· ,. uf fu1 111tu1t "Ii .. ""'II' Ill 11
'h op 1to ... 11111v.11 .rn1l t11 111 ... hi'1 ~1ndwd1.
u\ C' I l41 111111 \l hl Ml\ t'I 'ht' h 1lq1fl'''t"tJ
'9lll h4tlt'' lo "I 111111111 111\o\ I •1111 .. " tll'I
v .i11111i... ,hul H1•" l lt·ll 1111 lu ll'll\t•
htlll '\1111 I 11111 I "'""' Ill '1100 t. th••
IU\o\ l)
I 11 .. 1 I.Ill• I• I 11 "" Ill 11•·•·11 11( "'" ft·,,1011 .. 1 h1·111 11 ,1., 11•1• "I l ~t·I "11111•
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I\ I 11111 .. ll\ I I .a1 ........
llo-1 hu,t. .. m l .1111111h 1t11111\1 '' hut ht•
.111111 I \\Ill• 'h' dtcl \11111111· :111\ ll't' I
...... , I' lh'I .... , 1 .... 1 I'"'"' '"'' IJl.t•' II
l>t-:Att /\NN LN4DERS: I have bee n 11·--tl 111~ }UUI' t•olumn ror m1t11y years. I
J111 KO now, ~md you have a lot of com
111011 ~c•~c. oi;vc1..·1aUy when it comes to
l1u1111.·:>o ltltc lea vinK money to people
\\ho <Ion ·1 1lc:wr\'4:! at , just bet· a use they
di t ' I t'l..&ll Vl'b
I Ian• alum·
"', < hthh ~11 a11tt theu
\ 1:.111•tl thcru Lua found little pleasur e
11tc1 c M) grand('h1ldren were never
lit 1.1Khl lo re~J>t.'''' olller people . T)le1r -
pa n ·11b a1 t· .Jfr:wl to t.·or rect them The
I.wk of 1h:.1.·1ph11c v.as so 1rn~alin1-t to m e
I ,\11J.11icd com g lo M:'.'c the m
\I 1 d11lttre n had everything m oney
··1111ltl 111.1\ the best i n education .
l111.1111·1al helµ when they marned and
11111r1· 11111111•y lat er whe n they wanted to
1111\ 11111111·:. They owe ME somethin l( I
don l •J\\t' them :.i n1r kel
H 1·1·1.·11t l > our pastor deh v ered a ,,.,"'"II and toltl about a dau,1.!hte r who.
al 1111· }J(•1b11l~ of her dy111g father, said.
\111th1·r whc•n IJad ~oes we want you
to Hve with us.•· The mother aaid. "No,
I won't do lhal." The dauahler im·
plored, ''But. Mother. YOU are dlf.
fe rent!" The mother replied. "Yes, J
know. But YOU aren't ." I think this
puts it very neatly . -IN FLORIDA
ALONE
. DEAll Ff,ORIDA: ThHka for · an •
hoae.t letter. Sorry you area't 1etUa1
any pleasure from your family, but
1urely you bow that some people do ea· Joy their children and gralldchUdrea. So
don't paint wit.b such a broad hru1b, dear.
Job We miss ea<"h other a lot. but the
money he is making will make our
separation worthwhile. I have a good JOb
and gostra1~ht home after work The idea
of another man is norttaeteast 1>1t appeal
mg tome
My upstc\1rs ne1ghlior has toltJ several
people s he had heard rny hat k door
open and s hut at odd hours The 1m
phc ataon 1s that I a m cntertaaninr< m en.
l am rurious and want lo know 1f I
s houl1I talk to her a bout this
LEXINGTON TRUE RLUE
D EAR J,EX : No. He who excuse s
himself ac·cuses himself. Remain silent
and let your reputation speak for you.
•
1,r.it·~s up 14.4 percent • ID 1980
th IO\ l"'I' C Ooh.
lo "''"'' .. 1 .. 01'1 •\ Yr.lllw-•
I fl" ,ol• •I II I I ,,.,1 111 "lllH'I lllJI kl'!
I iii '""••ti dlll 1]11' · JICL<.!lllUCI . !Ju~ ;.11
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1111\\ t'o\ I\ 1 111• > 1•111 I'' -,lt(I "llfl.~\•d
I• ) I I l" I • 1 it d It I 111 I '!?ill
I 1 l • •I I I • • • •11111.111 ·ti \\ ll It ,1 :I !1
l • I I ··111 '. ~· 1 Ill ('I, 'I
I h• \I Ii, \\ ,. ,, 1 a11d11111 11 .. 1 11(
'troll"' I\ 111.11 ''" "" 1•11111al'tl1111n food
' '111 ,11td I I I • 1(1•.f lfll' IH'll ('' ;JI flltc•
""'I"·''~ I I '" . ·" ,, .. 1 1:1 1·1111 ' Oil '1! ·11, 11 "17 I l'r • lt.11 ,. t.P1·n
I 1•1 II" •k1•if l•I' ltf ,flllllll lht• ,l.11'1 11( 1•;11'h
r f t «'•u1 ·nqnt L
1111' l.111 t "' \ 1·. lu•'-'••d lltlll 1h1·
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l• .. r •llil"" r11111 111 ;l\1•1a,_.1 of l!I
I•' r r ,.,,, It,.. 11111 d1•1·11•;1-,1•d 111 (11\lr
j II• ""·"I .111 I\ •• , ;i1•1 "' .• :1 111•rn·11I
(Ill :. II ll\' I .tit 11.1 I' I t11· 11wrkt•1 li:1s k1·l
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f11.111 If I I It I •I fll'f l't•rt l lttdrl·I' llt;t1) II
\ ;, .ti ,,,. I.ti .. f !111· ll11111lh
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0
11 ti I j . I \' '" ; ii I I II'
1,, I ~ II ' 1111 • I'. lll t 11 lt' ·.l :1~1·d llll'
';111u· 111 l\\'o und dct'.reased in only one
(I\ t•rall. tht• 11111 went up 2.4 percent.
t'h1· s lowing o f .the s upe rmarke t
lt1fforl1111 r ate h not expectt.'<i to last .
En1norn1sts arc pred1c·ting that food
µn 1·c·s alone will n se by anywhere from
Ill pen·c·nt to 15 pen·ent in 1981. largely
1>1•1·ausc of the c·ontin uing e ffects of last
summer's tlrou~hl.
F ood ppces alre ady h ave r isen
som t•what he<·•rnse or the hot, dry
wc-alht-r anr1 the IJcccm ber s ur vey by
t h1· I\ I' turned up another casualty :
t1t'a n11l butter The pnc·e or a jar of
pt'anut huttl'r mneased at the checklist
store in nine <'it1es more than any
othe r item
.fam('s !\1al'k, mana~in~ director or
thl' J't•anut Hutte r and Nut Processors
. .\:.:,ol'l<.1tiun rn Was hington, D.C . sa1<l
l'l'('l'nll~· I hat t ht.• f)rl('l' <1f raw pcanub
\\as $1 "' pound more lhan (km hie the
11 11 r rn a I ·p r 1 1· t• I' c• a n u t h u l l c r
111anuf;ll'l1tn·rs l1av<• ra1s 11d wholesa le
prll'f'" h~ uµ to 40 pcrt·cnt in past
months.
A \\11rldw1rl<• uwrNtst• in the demand
ll•r :.11~ar also has hoos\l'd Prll'('S. not
only of' s ugar.· but of a wide variety of
processed foods as we ll. T he AP survey·
s h<>wed that the price of a five -pound
s a c k of g ranulated s u g ar at the
checklist stores doubled during 1980 -
going from $1 .42 at the start or the year •
to $2.85 at the e nd or the year.
S ugar had a major impact on the
overa ll marketbasket bills. Wl)en s ugar
was removed from the totals. the · AP
s urv ey s h owed the average
marketbasket bill went up 7 .2 percent
during 1980, half a s much a s the
increase with sugar included
The items on the AP checklist were:
cho ppffi chuck . center cut pork chops,
fro1.en orange juice concentrate, coffee,
paper towels, butter, Gr ade-A medium
white eggs, cr eamy peanut butter .
laundry de te r gent. fabric softener .
tomato s autc, m ilk, frankfurters and
gr anulated sugar
T h e t' i t i e s c h e c k e d w e r e :
Albuquerque. N.M .. Atlanta. Boston.
Chicago, Dallas. IJetroit. Los Ange les,
M 1 a m1 . New York. P htlade lphia.
Providcnte. H I . Salt Lake t ity and
St•attle
'Tonight' book • LS opinionated
'J'l'fo:Sf>A V. JAN. 6
Ill "\'f>'l.;l.YOMJ\KK
\1(11 .... \1 11
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C,f '11 "'1 •\la\ "I ,11111• :•11 , :..11 1\1· 11, 11·gu111
I'll \' Ill •l1t i'I 111111 l\I' '.k1·plll'lll Ill 11111t V11l1ial
"1111 pr111111·•1", .,.11111•11!1111• 1•11 11111111111· 111· a wan·
t'f fl\'l,i'l'lll,IJ.:t'" '1 lll itll Jll 1111 ,111tl 1111 k l'!llll'>I'~
I \'\(I· ft 1.111111 .'I .11111 ;·~1 l-'.x;11111111·
1'"11•11" p11-, .1htl1111•., dr111 I r •111111111 lo 11111·
111u1~,. 1<,,., 1" ,,.,.,;,ltltl\ l1111rtor a1111 1 .. 1·1·11ll11
'·' lt1 • lt.111)'1111• •1w1al ,1 1·111• 1.1·1111111 S:.ig,1ll 1u111:.
rl:itl\('' l'lcl\ t111p11tl,111I 11111" l';1 \ .1tl1•1tl11111 111
p11h111 rl'lal11111• \'1·11f\ ifllttl.1111111·.'
l.t-:O t.1111\ '.l 1\111• ·•:• • l'1••1·1· l•1J!t•l h1·1 l11h
t>I 1111 .. 1111.11 1 .. 11 I'll/II•• \\ttl lw • h11 1ll1·1t Y1111
an• .1-,kqJ. 111 11•\ '"' '"'I 11111·, •ii -.111•1 1.rl mutf'nal
lla:-11· ,.,~111 ... 111• l111•hl1 1•l1l1·d '°lt•·•·r dt·u1 •11
,t•ns:il11111,1h,111 \ifll.111.111 .1111 111, , . .,,,,'""'I-: lt'g11I
dt lt•111111 .1
\I ttc.o 1 \1n· • 1 "1·1•' :.·, l'•·r ·.c111.t1
111.tf-llt'l t!>lll •;n:ir" 1111·111lw 1., 111 "l•l'"'ll•· '>I'll ;,11·
dl'J\\ 11 tu \1•11 I 111'11'> 1111 • 11•,1ll\'1l y d11Jlln•11
:.p1•t·11la l11111 .111.t 1111' 1111111lu•1 !1 1;am rntlll'at1·ct through ~\ 11111•11 111at1·ra•tl
1.11\KJ\ 1:--1·1>\ :.0:1 01·1 :.!~1 Su111111ntltr1g!'> ur1·
mor•,. 1mp11rla11l than 11.,11,11 l1w11:. on o.lenirat
1ng . :-.p1•1 1111 11111 d1a:.1·" .111.J a1l111:.t 111 t nt ol
lrfC'sl~ h· 1':1111·11., S1·11q1111 and an11tl1<>r t.11tru
fig11r1• pr111111111·111 l.1
S<'ORl'IO 101'1 :!:1 N11\ <!I I St't' pla1·f·S.
pcopl1• 111 1 t•a l1:.l i1• ll g ltl i\ v1111t hrood111g, reallz•·
l~Llt l1t·111g 1110111• ,., not :.llllll' as llt!in g lonely
S 11rp r1:.i• v1s1l11r 1·. h11r l11ng1•r 11£ gtN>d nf•ws
SMilTTAIUl!S ! Nnv ~~ l>N· ~1 1 · Invest
·m l'n1 1-111)':. tl1 v11t1•11tls fH·t'Pnl on ve rs onirl
1H1ss1·~:.1 1111 .,. \ al11uhlcs , ar11·11mc potential
Can<'N ( 'Kprworn jlt.'rsons fi gure 11rominenlly
('i\PRl<'ORN f Ut••· il J un. 19 ) You am·
1·u11111Jlt· of ftn1 sh111g pru11·1·t minus l·hidin~ of
wat1111i. a:-i~11t•1 utt! or rf'lat1v~ T ie loose end11.
An{'i., J.1 hra nal 1 vt·~ fii.t ure 1,romanontly.
A4flli\JUllS ! J an 20 1-'ch 1A1 Stop brood· in.:' Vou'll twar from one who apparently
"van1sh<'<I " U<in 't h11t e from fal'ls Fe ars.
d9ulils prove gr oundless Key 1s to recognize
truth an<l l(flln slren~th l1y so doing
PIS l 'ES <F <•h l!J Mar 20 1. Yo ur ex
trul\en.o.;ory J>t!rt'eption works overtime You're
at•cused of heing a. "human lie dele<'tor ." Aur1
R} RON BERTH E L
CM U• At.MC.1•\M p,~,
TV '., "Tonight" hit!>
h t-f'n Am .. rrca ':.
'111glttlight an1S 111ghH·a11
, 11 l l1·d 11111, ,,,.... f 11r
t 111 1·1· 1h•1·i11l1·:-. I 11>111 tiff•
' H 1 11 a ti w ;, y () t• 1· II
It 11 11 ,, ,. •1 I •· a 1 I }'
1•·1··~1 :-.11111 lt•J\1111 11 g
.1•·11 ~ l.1·">11·1 and 111 .,
l 1 I •• n d ,. .., 1 ti 1· k 1 1· k
IJ<1g 111a1 111 llw 111·1·:-.1•111
da .,. Vt'r:.11111 :-.tu11111 g
111·1 hap:-. lht· 11111:-.I 111
., ll1w11tral 1w1lu11111'1 1111
· • ..t t11· ;11r w11v 1·., .111111111 v
I ':1 r;..1111
KORt:ltT Mt:'I''/.'~
li1111k I akc·:. u took al 1111•
:-.la11w tr11m 1t:. 1·a1ly 1luy:-.
···~'.hi ""ht lite' , ........ 111 Ill
1111 11111·11•:-.l 111g a 11tl
-,11 1111·111111·:, 11·vc•isl111 i.:
l!cil11r y of tl11• '>fl•IW, lb
">I a I :> ;uul :>111111' 111 1111·
go1 1q.':, 1111 111'1111111 lh1·
llll liJlll
M 1·11 111111111·:. 1·ad 1 111
·'I 1irt1ght ':-.' I lt11·1· llllJJlll
hu:.b ~lt·v1· Al11•11 .lu1·k
l11ta1 1t111I c '111•.,,111
A 111·11 wl111 1•upt111111•1l
I It" .,la11w tf111'111g t ht•
111111 ·~1:., ,., 11·v1·uh·tl u:.
1111· 1wrft•1·t :.Ir 111ght 1111111
w!10 ~ll'lll•·tl 1t1•v1·l1111 u
liand of fint' 1·11111t'll1 un:-..
1111·l11rlin1,1 '1'0 111 l'ot.lc;n ,
U1111 K11 11tts unit l.0111~
N .Yt', hut wus nc•v1•rttw
lt•ss. cltst'(lfllt•ntt•d ul Ills
t111s t .
P A i\ IC , 1' II t :
:-. 1· n s 11 1 v c a 11 11 1· rn 11
twnul host who followed
l\llen lhroul(h the e u ly
'60s, 1s treetf'cl here with
kindness and 11ymp1i1lhy
<'arson WMS the ltttlr
known hot1t of 11 daytime
qu i1. s how when .he
liec·ame · 'Tonil(hl '8 ''
ho11t In 1962, ttnd not loo
many of TV'ii in11lder11
held much hope ror hla
s ucce1111.
'••Of mystery. ~lamour dominates !l<'enario. .._ ___ .,...,______ ____ ·---Art exhibiiion.
:· brug reduces unwanted hair
The hook tells how.
over the past 18 year s.
hl' has become one of
the m1>Rt powerful ancl
t·ommandtnt( forces on
I l' I t· v 1 :. 1 11 11 a 11 d t h t·
'>l1apt.·1 11f w hal lltt·
"'l'orrr~·ht " :.liuw 1:. 111
''" y
"1'11t• Tu111g lal Show"
I :, ,, II 111 (II r n1 Ii l 1 \I , •.
' h" II g h 0 11 I II 10 n a It• cl .
1'111 111111'11· of a11 llllJ>llf
l a111 JIU rt 11f l1·l1·v1sw11
h ist or y and one that
makes for som e t(ood
read m g
"1'h,, Tm11gl1t Shaw, .. t1y
Hnf>er-1 M elz l 'layl10y 'l!J/1
/#It/#' s '" 9.~
I~ VJ 0mur:i .... ~-I
I CUSTOM FRAMING ., Opf'n 6 Day-. A Wt't'k I
Mon Fri 9-6 Sat 10 • 1 1803 Newport Blvd ~ Co<.la N\esa ,. '~" 54M511 Cl' 14,i
DON'T MISS IT
-.... --N -• ~ --..., -: • II: , .. --
Our 1Slrd
CIC Womens : , · Fine Quality Shoes -: Sharply Reduced
Not All Sites In Every Style
Amalfi, Howard Fox, Erica,
Maserati, Julianelli
3795
10 4795
Values from 63.00 to 86.00
CASUALS, FLATS
AND SANDALS
2795-3495-39'5
Values Prom 41.00 • 67.00 • 71.00
AnNll, 1v .. P1c .. , Via
. , ..... ~ .......
... MAOMtVolue
-----'----------------
Family theater
San dy Wn1-4h t <tnd M<1 yor .J ay Lytle 1)f
f;vanston1 Ill . sl<1nd in front of tht· C'1t y's n:
01H:-n t·d C'orond Thf'at"r Thi· 1·om munit y
was abl1.: tt> ~l11p tht· thealt·r lrom !->howan ).!
X nHcd films and pl'r..,u:Jrl1·d it :-. 1.11\·n11r to
d1a n ge lht• fflO\'I'' 111111•,1· 111 ·• f;_rnul~ tl11•<J 1t•r
47-year-old
verdict out·
llONN West (i,·rmun~ 1 /\ l'I /\ W1·'>l Jl..rlln
court has 111c·rtunwd ;1 t7 yf'<.1r old \1·11lwt av<•ln'I
a Dutchm an 1·011\'ll'l•·tl 11f ..,l'ft1ng tlw lfr1d1'>li11.!
fi re . an cv<'nl us1•tl h~ llw °";11.1:. l11 1·1111 ... •1l1da1t·
their J.IOwer in 19:!.1
The court rull'd lh:.1 tht· q·rd11·1 ,J ).!Ll lll\l
Ma n nus van der l.ulJ~(!. i:I cummu111:.t .• 1·1·u"·1l 11f
s t•tting lht• fin· \\o:is <t • l'lt·<Jr rn1s1·:i1 f'l<1J.!1· 11f
JUS li\'C',. h11I (\'ft lllH'n llw 11Ul''lllJ11 11f v.h1•lla1•1 \ :011
cl1•r J.ubht• <Jc·lu;tlh dad , 1.1rt 1111· 111:111·
Hoht·11 1'•·ntprwr :i d1·pu1 , pr '"''·1·ut11r 111 t h1•
NurC'mht•ri.: """ 1·r1111 ("• lrr ,ol '. an:uc·d lh1· 1';J'4·
br1111ghl h) """ dt·r I .uhlu··-. lir111)11·r 111 la :1\'1• lh1·
\'Cf'Ul<"I n11llif11•d
Ttlt; REIC'JISTAC; .Bl ILUl.'\t, l :"lt lll'rl111 'it·:tt
of the C;t·rman p.1rl1anH 111 \\ H ~ liurnt·d l: 1·1t ~7
193:1. about four ...,,.,.k., ;1ftr·r 1\rl11lf 111111·1 111·1 a1111·
t·h " m •cllor
After ,·a11 d1·1· I ,ultti .. ;111d f•111r H11li.:.1rt:111 1·11111
mun1sts "''l'I' .1rn·.,11·d f11r :1r-:.1111 t lw I-lH'l11 1·r 11.,•·d ""'4<' blaz,• a~ a l•fl·l .. xl lo ha11 ttll' t '111n111 11rt "l
Party
The Hul~arian ~ \H'rt.· aequ1lt1·d h) ;.. ;\;L111
cour t Hut \'i.111 ti er l.ulil>t' "'a:. s1·ntr•m·<·d 111 d1•atlt
a nd excc·utcd in I ~4 :..., I ht· "'1;111:. rounded u1' 1·11m
m u111:.l~ :111d 111<1\ 1·tl 111 1 1 u .. t1 fr t•1· t r;idc 11n111n., a11tl
lht.· n·m:11n111g l1·ll1:.t 11pp11:.1t11111
Sorn1· h1 .... 111nan-. li1·l11·1 1· 11 ... N:111' ..,,.,th•· 1111·
lh1•111 .... •l\1'., a•, :111 •''11'11'<1• 111 <'I ,ii k tl11\\ll •111 flll (Hl'.I
111111 11:11·1 ...... 1'111•\ 11•11• 111 .• 1 .• 1•111111'1 , ·'" ,,, llt•
!J111(ol tll/.! It 1111\ I (W I l''l'l<-1\1 <' <ti l Jt-t 0t:11tll ( :111•rtfl\'
ll1th-1 d"1111f\ .111.f H•·11 11 ,111 ••1."li :.tl
'l'ttt: C 'Al St: 0 t ' '111 t-: ..-a Ht. li.s-. 111•\ l'I li1•1•11
1·:.lal1l1 .... lwd \\1\h 1·1·rt;1111 t\ K1·n11111•·1 11l1·d th1·-.1·
a1 i.:111111·111'> 111 1 h•· 1·11url .i11d .,;_,11! 'a11 tlo·r l .uhlit·
wa:, al'l11;1tl) a \\t•ak \.\ 1ll1·d t1it1I of th•· '\;at11in1.d
S111'1al1:.I :-. Tilt· """~ U"'•·d \h(• -.1n1n~
p:.vc·hulog11·;d df1·1·h 111 th1· \ •·rdwl :.ind 1•x1•1·ut11m
lo 1l11•1r ad\':111lag1· Ill'"'"" ion Hud111 Frr•!! Herlan
K1·111p111·r HI \\Ii!• 111ok p:1rl 1n th~ r>Q!:itv. ar in
t1·r r11gat1011 ••f I;,,,., 111g 'i<11d ht· rl:~ordcd tht·
v1•1·tlwl a:. a f111al \ 11•!111'~ f11r JU1>lll'l'
Nazi ban upheld
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTJa ''"''"' ... .,... -•1c11" a. P•rcruu: $Nlw ==~ :::,..-: ~=:..~'!I. tic• ...... City c ....... teutM .. 11200
J•mMtH •Md. lrwlM, C•lll1Hnl• "714, tlfllll 2. p.m , ot1 JMu.r, I). "''· '°" I .. CM•lrtKI'°" el C9ft(tel• <11.-1, 1,,_ \lrlp\I Tiie .ii. Of l"9 wor' ' loc•IM •• H••ll•.. p.,,
IY•I• A--Walnut A•n .,., rnd Twrtl• ltocll Comm1H1llY Pao
Turi .. ffock Drive -Sunn, Hiii Orl••l, lr•IM ,C•lltornla
Dl,ClllPTIO• OP wo•1t 1
Con\ltu<llOn a4 <onueta <llflMf\9 now
\l•I P• e n d re tal•d 9 r•d ln9 .
ENGINEER'!> E!>TIMAlf M.OOOilO.
OPINING Ofl P•Ol"OIALS: The
PtoPO\•I\ will CM pUbllcly -nod •nd
fHd •1 ) 00 pm, Of> J ... uorry ll, ltll,
•I lhe •bo"" ment'°""d ollic• 01 , .. o .. ,, ••
OeTollN I NG C ONT•ACT
DOCUMl'NTS: Tiw, -clll<etton\ •r•
•nt1t1ttO. ''Con\tru<tian of Curb1n9 •t
.,......,....,_.,,.-fC~-'1'1 •11d Turli•
Ro(• (Orf\mundv P•"'-CC lP ~~.,~,· ... ~.:.~ :.,.~' .. : .~~:.:~ ;,~~.
mtnl\ m,., ff obt•1ned from th•
O.p,.,ltnMI ol Pubh< WOtk\, (tly ol
""'""· lto1 MtG•w A~tnw. lrYtne, (a11forn1d A non ,,.fund•bl• re• o•
\ 10 00 w1t1 bf-t harQf'(I tot ~•en \~t of
dOf umt"nh Pton\ dnd \pe< 1hc•t•on~
w lll bP m .. 11rd for •n •ddH•On•f th.WQ•ot ~)OO '
PllOPOSAL GUAllANTEE. Ee<I\
Ptoe>0\41 U\All ht> d((OMCMn1td t>v •
<.trt1f1t'O or • d\t11 .. r'\ check of D•d
l>Of\d 1n ttw amount of 10 prrc~nt ot
,,,,. fotdl Did c>t•< .. PdY•bl,. to ttw Cit~
tlf ""'''' .:t\ .t 9u•rantflf' th.al '""bid· 0-f 1t "'' PfogG\At " •t<-~ted, .. uu IJ";mpfl'f ,.,..,.<utr ,,_. tontrd<I • ._.,.cur•
p_.,m,.nt of Workf'ne!'n's ComS»n .. •t•on
tn\u.-ftnt ... dnd furn1\h • ... h-.f«tory
f d1lhlul P~r fotmttnc.f' Bond 1n UM'
"moun1 '1t \00 pt··u •nt ot ttu!' to:t•l ~d
P'"" itna,. l.ttbnr dnd M•ffrtal .. Bond
.n th .. ftmount of 100 Ot<rc.r nt ot lhe
1ot•• n1dpr1c ...
WAGE llATES· A\ r.ciu1red by Se(
t+rH' Pl) oft,,.. Ct1llforn1• I •l>Or Codf>.
ltv· 0 .-in..·r hd\ Clt·h.·rm1nrd tht> oe~ral
0' ••1111d1nq hlt~ ot «llJ'Qt'' 1n tht t0<.ah
rv 1n M"'' ~ '"'• ... .iwot k t\ to h ..
V''''U''''f"d Cop1t·\ nf \cfld viraq•• rctU"
rt1•f1•r m 1n,11u)n'o ,.,,. m.t1nt1tUled dt thr
otf11 ,., ,,,·,~Ow,..., •r'ld •(t dYdll.tbtt
111H>n , .. ftur'\I 1n;:. (onh(ttlor \nan
r,_nf ti 'OO'f Uf \;t+d dMUmt'nt "' ~.tc.f'\
•''" """ fh•• (Of'tr•rtor .. no tHT'f \t.+b
•""'''''n or un"""' him '\h4tl p o11 y nOl It"''
tn.111 ,,,,_ \Of"C 1f1rd "'t"'ldd1ng r•le\ of
#1•<11 • "' .,1l ftQrllmf"n fo"1Pll')Y'"d 1n lhf'
• .,., ul1tn•f>f Utt>,ontr<1't
PICOJEC'T ADMINISTRATION Alt
•ttt• \I0.#1\ ri•htl1•" to th1\ P'OJ'"( • Pttor
lt11 "'" 'l&Jf"fHrlf') ot fwh \n,,11 bl-d 1'"'''"' • '••"·""'' ""' '''01 ... ' f SuP"'rVP·,1"1t t'"1
I I/ I f 1111'4'\.. /'41 l'.4 )h°'O /14; I'" ll)t;ll OWHFll'S lllGIHS llESEAYEO ,, .. ''~'tfl>' ,,..,,,#", lhfo ''"''" ,,, , .. , .. ,,
•'•, ,,, .. 11 b1ct<. fr, ... , .,f!-... ,_., 1nft;f "~dh It I 1n ~• 1>10 .-"M:t to,,. .... ,.. d•d"1\ 1'l lrtr-
• h , ... t ,,. ·~ r,,,,n .. , ''·•ff (I.~•, mtrr 18 t"'*J
t1 ff Of 1~l1Nt
H, ion,. l fJll1'"'"" ()t.put, t11., , ... ,.
l•ufJt•._,,.,d <> ,.,,~ r ()•\I '·""~, J."11t.tt
11.,.., i1 ~· t1180 J,.n \ l<fftl •,,r,-,1 1/J
Pl '81.1(' SOTIC t;
.. 1>111
..011(( 10(.11(011011\
or llUL• TRAN\F[ ..
t\<fi.f\ •tOt l 10/ UC(. 1
ff 'ff t ''•Hf "-'1 h I' f_,1 11 '•I•. li ..
'' t t ,, ''' (J & J I t•'..i••tf t h t4 f., If•( '••tli,;.,,., #l"I""" ,,...,,,, ... , o":
•l•i• • •'\ '~JIJ llt"~olh tJ, t J f 1, *I
f I; l \ti""'' ( • .i1' t ,,., (H ~·Ii' ',1.,1 .. •
I o l;I ,,,_ 11 i'1nt tt h•,I• 'f•I' ''f •
, ,,, ,. ,,, lf11ttJ• "· h • ~
.t ''"'/\''/ •11·'1 tJ~f I ~,, n jV/..J./
't11r 11 If.,. N f't' '' ft1.1•,1~1f l rJ•1tl• I•
" ' M ,,..,,, t • • 1• ,, , ', , , ~,
I ,,, H"f'
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t ,, I 11 11 , l"loo I_,, 1' f• I .I' , ~
.,,..,,, ti.11,,,. .. ''J'''''" .... "' ,.,10 '1(1'""':
...... t ''~··' ,,,,,,, h ,,..,, rt. f f'f--1
MAC ttl NI 11u .. 1tt•" • .,,..,,_,,,rt•, 11 & J
t Uf,1NI t ktNt, '"'"' h1• 41 .. q .,, tHAJ
I t.1Qttn IJ111I 41 f•I., •If fu-tfrt Mf,.-,..,
I uw,,ly (If ()f_.nq,. ';1<11• ''' f rt11fOr"1d r ti .. hull '' ,.,..,,., ..,,,. Lit t on-.un•
lt,.ft f1 l•t'I Uf """'' ,,..,. /hf d4~ tlf
l•\H ••"I , .. .,, '' Ht 11+) A M '°''
«,U•P,ff,:;, t ~·f'411.,,,, tfU#f-'0 R•fllH'4
"''·•1•• ttW-1,,.,. • '"'"'' ""''"' h''''
It' f •1 f rtht1 ''""
I h,.. t"•t •l<th f1,1 t.111111 lf't1•h '""
I H If tr f "' 'A41 , • • ,., • • ,,.,.,. n 1., 1111
'' th ,, ........ ''" h1t\•fh ... •h•llt~ .. ,,410
1( ... 11• ..,..,.-It\,. l) f1f flW f 1.:tn .. t1•1,_. fut
Hit jut• I 1n,.,, Y"'·'l' ,., .. ~AMl
ll tf1 11 t1t11•0lt&!J /~ l'ltliJ
V.1U1 tt \# n-.,u I
tut t i ':.-•)Wttll
f '"n,, .. ,,.,., lGllOVFll ESCllOW
tl001 Ir"""' ......
II Tv>I••, Ulllwn••
l \CfOW "O ) 11804.
f>uOl•\'*'cJ Ot ,.nqr ( Ort\I 0t"tll,, f'1IM
I'•" ., 1 ... 1 "' ·~
Pl'RUC NOTICE
N 1JlH
~UPflllOlt COVA'T
OF CALll'OllNIA
COUNT 'r OF ORolNGE
1oc c,•I( """'"' Dr•V« .,.,, ..... '°"'< .......
W.I ""'°· ~ HTIJ ..._AlllllolGE 01' re · T •O "-E" JOH ,.. ¥t
H f'!ftl.IN (Al .. , A West Her fln i-ourt ha~ up· -v?"~~-;, OF 1 ht•hl tht• Interior Ministry's ban on a l'ieo-Naz.1 .... ~.: .. ," " 'vuE l
~roup whose uniformed me mbers staged mock cuE 1ou MH11 o"'JD · e ~ :-t " ·c '>"0 " c•vsr s:o1> lwttlt•s outs ide a flavan an castl& YC.D , , .. ,,0 .. o• cn"d cu••oo,
Thi· l'ourt ruJang ~aid the "Wehrs portgrupJ>E • ••• c~ "" G '>uPe>0•• "":"""'
lloffnia11 ," named after founder Karl·Hefnz Hoff· r•;· •;•g'"'~:.~0~.":'' ·~:;-:;.,••..,
man, wa~ a paramilitary association in violation · .. auc."""
nf Wt•sl <;t.•rmany 's c11nst1tut1on P: .. ;~.';',~~~cg~~~~~~ 0~~0~,
1'11. EA.t.tl Ill.~'
f'lJl/NIJ
MANILA l'hll111111111·:.
1J\l'1 F1l1p11111 dl\1·r~
h:t v f' 1'11111111 an "1111
d I' r s I' II t r t' H s II r ••..
llt'li1•v1·1I 1t'1 IH• rl()(I yt·ar:-.
old u n1I pos:-11hly to hav~
ht.•t.•n ownc•tl 11) lfil h
(·1•nt11rv < 'h11Wi.t• ucl\lt•n
t 11 r <' r · l.1 mah11 n g . l h 1·
M a n I I a n t• w s p a 11 e r
lh1lletan Totluy rl'portt•d
The treaM1rc. ronsist
ant( of rlra~on s h ap1!tl
porl'elaan Jurs. plates
and ketUes, was found
a ncl r erovered off
M a r induque island 100
mil e s sou theast o r
Manila , ll said Philip·
pine historians describe
Llmahong as a "Chinese
pirate" who raided the
Ph tlt-ppine5:
Suit8 voided
S AN l"RANC ISC O
(AP) -TheatateCourtof
Appeal• hu dt1mt11c!d
thrff l1wauit.1 1t.emmin1
from the 1'19 !lay Area
Pl'Rl.I(' NOTH·•:
10 GIVE ANY l[GAI RtASON
111'"Y T"E AfLlfr SOU(;H I IN l ol l
A 11 ol(.HEO APPL1CA I 10N ~"OVL ll
"'IJ4" ~~,' "~(-~,~:~,~~ ;:P~;,~~~;v8 1~t
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lo•n \ 11 "· 1'. I'll\ II\ I t
Pll8LI(' NOTICF.
'-l:GolL NOTICE
NEW~T·Ml'A
UNll'llEDKHOCk. DISTlllCT
-IC•I""' ..... -
I U(tQf't of 1 ht'
1luc••• •Of <our I
WILLIAM YACOllOZll, Jll
•AU OC tot NewpoN1 C...ler Dfl ••
Sw11e•
ll•• .. t1 .. Mll,Col'1 ...
hi 11141 , .... 11
Pubh\J\f'd Or.rt'I'" C.o.'t 0•1ty P11ot
(lfi I~. l'illO, lMI ), 17 I~ 1'11 ~l'WI tlO
P UBUC NOTICE
'--
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RT S1.Ai~ST LISTINGS --Te lefts ion Monday . .1#\uary 5, 1981 Dt\IL Y PILOT 0
\I I 1 '\, 11 \ )
~EVBING
•001•• NIWI It A"81CY AHO
tl\J!Ot
t '"""' •u• ll'ttw tMf\~ "4't 10
....... "..., , •• ., th•1 o.,
I l it. !AC 00U0H ...........
~ '~•1 • t ,.n• "'"it. • .,..,.,
. '. •f ,,,
. ,,
ill EL EC rFUC COMPANY
A1
~ lllG BlUE tiMR&l E
l l.:85 NEW$
IQ A8C NE'WS
o W U BUUSEYE Ma•arelJe&
neew. '"'° ...........
... """9.
•• "*" ......
,,..,,..,: ~ of the
Mt ..... H*t'• ~:
en~tolillp
IWO l'MMng CW.; a .....
-.o tetlooa '-'fl.'"' • flrlOVll * * * "TM LaM W19G"" " (19M) Ndlard wtdlMrt!,
Fellclll Fan. A c:ond1mn1d
men ~ to the ,_,.
ol wegon ,,..., autYIVOta
lollowlng "' lodllrl •lllCI\ I ~MAGAZINE * * * 'h "Long Olly's Joor.
ney lnlo Night" j 1!162)
Kalllfine Hepburn, Jason
Aobet(h
play by Eugene O'Neill. A
lam•ly ~OYnlets personal
prob,.ms 111111> aleof\ot.
na1co11Gs. lubefculosis and
cMplllS10f1 e GREAT
PEAFORMANCfS
A Lincoln C1nle• Spec1;y.
..._.,,.. ,..._ a clNdly
W\19. l"I -~ca..... Guelta: JIM Fonda, L~-
Cle c.rw. .ludlltl ~.
Pelge Aenee, Hlellgardl
Kftlf.
..... (I) ~CAL.LI
~~!Nthl
ta OM of Ann'a '-'dlofda
Ind la \urning her "*1·
ment Into • condOmlnlum. tO:OO. (I) LOU GMNT
8*le pa out on • •tO<'f
and ,..._ In love will\ lier
-aource. • prolnalon·
., baMbell pl•V9f· ·~ NETWON< N!WS
• MADE IH CHINA
·"*'IS
15 taken al the San Fran-
cisco premtef'e ol 1111 1980
Eall1btUon of 1111 People's
Reoubllc of China 1 .. tur~
1ng ll'le blSI ol China from
11s regal past to 11s compel·
llng preMnl
\0:301 • NEWS ON WORKING
AulhOr Siuda Terkel pro·
v1dea commentary on the
nature of work in America
TUBE TOPPERS
KCOPe 8 :00 -"Long Day's
Journey Into Night." Thia 1962 film is
baaed on play by Eugene O'Neill It
sr'ars Katherine Hepburn and Jason
Robards.
KNBC e 9:00 -''Oh, God." God
selects young sµpermarket manager to
deliver message of hope and good will
to modem skeptic. Stars George Burns
and John Denver.
u Grant."
1:30. THe l.OHI! AANOll'I
"Tiie Lott Cllalk:e"
• INOUINDIN'T
NllWOMN!WS 1':601 N1W1 2:00 N1W1
MOYll! *. "A a.ti From Helf"
( 19701 V1...ca Llndl0f5,
Renaud y.,,.y A dMply
MnS11tv1 young man -
revenge egaln11 hi• aunt
and lllr" c;ou11ns alter
1111v commn him 10 a men •
lat 1nstllullon
2:258 MOVIE * * "The Oeslruclor'a"
( 19671 Richard Egan, Pllrl·
cla Owens A U S lntelfl·
plot 10 dlsrup1 the de-eiop·
meni ol a new weapon
9:30• NEWS
_ .. While covering a story, Billie falls in
love with her news source. a pro-
fessional baseball player.
I Tew11day••
. • vou eET YOORuF.E .1Dayfilllf9 Mo1·i~•
Buddy Hackell meets an
• DICKCAVfTT
Guest John Gielgud tPart
'014)
11:30 8 Cl) QUINCY, M.E.
e1<orlc dancer. a lady
plumbet and a male nurse
who 1s .11110 a basketball 1
player
• WELCOME 8AC~ 110t1ER Mama (Sudie Bonet left) just wants some
rest But daughters Flo (Polly Holliday.
right 1 and Fran (Lucy Lee Flippin> de·
<:ide to keep her busy to keep her young.
It's all on .. Flo" at 8 tonight on CBS.
Channel 2.
Beverly• Her Farewell Per·
lormanc11" Acl II ol Johann
Slrau&s Jr ·s "01e Fleder·
maus" provides the sel!lng
lor Beverly Sitts in her trnal
ope• 811c perlor mance
Hosted by Carol Burnell.
gues•s include Placido
Domingo Mary Marlin
Zub1n Mehla Elhel Mer·
man and Leontyne Puce
'1!) CHARLIE CHAPLIN
COMEDY THEATRE
I '" in add1hon to inlerVl-S
w1111 men and women 1n
many d1lferen1 types ot
JOb~
A young longshoreman
conless.s 10 1 murder
which Ou1ncy is convJnce<l
he didn't commit
12:30 D TOMORROW
Guests Me1tssa Manches-
11:00 fl) • "Aiders Of Oesllny"
f 1933> John Wayrte Gabby
Hayes A gov11rnrnenl
ageril lttes to llelp a group
of ranchers regain 1ne1r
water rights ..-.," ,r1d1.."' •~ V'Ci
J '" J htght:t '-h•~
• , •tr 1nc.1uchhy
1ld •4:1rtl!. htm ta ~ldV
"''" ""' ~-.lhogs W 8EHNY HILL
10•11lt" :»t•O#S hO\llf nol 10
l '1 •«JUC.t: d C.Vll.tn6tt.UIJ
fl) Pl.OS AND CONS
11 .. ,... Hd1J•>t5 i;,1~ dboUl .;1,.., lflU)' d1t ... (.ti H1tt•f \/IC-
'Hlf!. 111 lfu•, '>onu:, at1vVt
hlJN ''' tt'fl1\lS b4'1HQ lhtt VI(
t11ri11lvm1e
{E SllJOIO SEE
D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
A µower cr111"d ac11ng
\l1urill Hikes a d1shke to
I 011L1u C111d conducl s a
hull~y-h&ndud campaign
10 1un 111m out ol town
8 ABCNEWS
'ti,1u11 Dd•W...t!. An Atu I J01<£1t'S WILD
r M'A'S'H
,,,, ''d dt-4tJuteinta. i.fn Okla
'"''" t lt,(J,._111 and Dallas ~
t uulh Ou lrlf! Mov1LCl\OU
1r• '"Qhh!J'1le<J '"' I J M •A'S'H
Wn1IP >c•lll111g down lo h~
I •'" tu thu Army-Nav'{
1 ""'' the 4077th 1s bom· •
1 11d1•d antJ lell w1tn an
•ll•••PIQdP<l bomb 10
<!t•lubH
,IOJ BARNEY MILLEA
11111r;s· hook otioul the
I ~111 nroc1nc1 ·~ llnallv
"''""' 10 Uc pubhshlld and
Wo10 tm nq<, his new '-"''
h 11ct h 1wf)1 1\
7 00 0 CBS NEWS 0 t'8C~EWS
A carc»es> colonel increas-
es lhe number ot seriously
wounded ~~tw.ing r
al Ille compound
g) 8ARETTA
Afl unstable young woman
Clings to Barella and
oc-c.omes tolally depend·
cnl on him alter a holdup
II) OVER EASY
G1Jes1s Barbara Cook.
pho1ogr11plle1 James Vafl
Dor Zllll. Dr Do1ollly Wad-
dell
'1!) M'ACNEIL / LEHAEA
REPORT
({) TIC TAC DOUGH ®J MERV GAIFAN
Goo!Ols Jar\I' r onda; Lyrt·
{'ha1111.-I l ... bfi11g•
t) 1<.llXl ICBS) Loe, Angnlt·-. 0 KNBC tNBCJ Lo~ A1111etp<;
IJ KI LA (Intl J L 0" AnQ•:h:~
U KA8C IV t l\BC1 l o~ Am1uh!'>
t&J Kf M B !CBS) San O•eqo 0 KHJ· I V (Intl J Lo'i A111J1•lpo.,
1101 V,CS I ( ABCJ San 011>qv
ID I<. I IV (11111 I Lo~ Anqell"• CE Kt,Or> rv (lrlll) I OS A nQt'lt•'i
t[) KCE r Iv (PBS) L 05 Ang<' I CS
EB KOC[ JV WBSJ Hunl11tqlo11 &ach
Disaster fliglaC
L
da Ca1u1r. Jud•lh Price
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
FIGHT &ACK WITH
DAVID HOROWIH II SHANANA
Guesl J1mm1e Rodgers 8 HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES U FACE THE MUSIC
• ALL IN THE FAMILY
A small cr1me wave in 1ne
Bunker llOOM!f>l51lf Is only
llall as unse\111119 10 Archie
and [ d1lll a~ \he reasons
why
• MACNEIL / LEHRER
AE~T
'1!) ONCE UPON A
CLASSIC
··rne M•ll On The Floss"
Jeromy Tulhvet sends ll1s
son to 1hu same school the
SOfl ot ll•s sworn enemy
auends and his lomboy1sn
dDughter runs away to hve
w11n gypsies (Part ll(RJ
(J) P.M .. MAGAZINE
&'.00 8 (1) FLO
Flo and Fran deocle lne
be~• way 10 ke<>p Mama
yOu<'g ·~ 10 keep her busy 0 LITTLE HOUSE ON
THEPAAIAIE
A v1s111ng lemin1s1 stirs up
a ti1111le ot !he seices 111
Wa1t1u1 Giove U MOVIE
• • .,. 'No Mon Is An
Island.. ( 19621 Jeflr ey
~lunler Marshall Thomp
son Slrande<l on Guam by
lhe Japanese dur1ng World
War II Amertcan George
Tweed organizes the
Lives are lost and many threatened when plane wi.th deadly dis-
ease aboard is forced to crash land in "SSf -Disaster in the
Sky " on ABC (llovie at 9 tonight on Channel 7. Cast includes
(dock wise from upper left) Robert Reed, Peter Graves. Season
Hubley, Susan Strasberg, Martin Millner, Doug McClure.
Sills sings f are:well ------~ -
A program. "A Lincoln Cjtnter
·s pecial: Bevefly! Her Farewell
Performance,'' videotaped at tile
Oct. 27 New York City Opera 1ala f«
Beverly Silla at Lincoln Center'• New
York State 'neater, will be televlaed
tonight at 8 on Channel 21.
which the made her debut with the
New Yon City Opera 25 yean aio.
Kitty Carll•l• Hart, makla1 a
special appearance with the com·
paay. t• aeen u Prince OrlolMy.
Julius Rudel, who for 22 yean wu
director ol the New York Qty ODera
and t'OllaborlMd claNly with Iola
8'111. eGnducta the J*'formmce.
.
Dough Ano Dynamite"
Charlre creates havoc 1n a
bakary and cook·house
and l1nally w11h slnke1 s
who ll1t lheu grievances by
n1d1n9 dyn11m11e 1n lhe
bread
&:30 II ([) LADIES' MAN
Afan ac1:•denlally hnds oul
1na1 one OI h•S CO•wOrkers
is making SJ.000 more
than he 1s for doing Ille
same 1ob
• CAROL BURNETT
AND FRIENDS .
Guesl Jim Nabors
'1!) MOVIE * * 'One In A M1ll1on
t 19:17) Sonia Her11e, Oon
Ameche A skater wins al
1hc Olympics w1111 tho help
ol n younq reporter
9:00IJ(I) M'A'S'H
K11nger receives a ··Dear
Max teller from his ex·
wile l,.averne and laJls in10
d ceerf depression 0 MOVIE "* • Oil God' 1 t977>
George Burns. John Den-••H God selec 1s an
un"u~Pe<:t1119 you11g super·
market manager 10 delrver
lt mP~Saqe ol nope and
9r1od will lo modern-day
SkCPl•CS (A)
8 (11) MOV1£
• • • SST Orsasler 111
Tile Sky i 1977) Lorne
Greene Burgess Mered1lh
The maiden lhg'11 ot a
sup.,rson1c lransporl \urns
1n10 a 111ghtmare when
Celelts
resolve
for '81
. NEW YORK <API
Broadway stars and en-
tertainers are like every·
one else when it comes
lo New Year's resolu·
lions . They're worried
about their weight. bad
habits and keeping to
lheir ~ood intentions .
In ('Omments. in t-he
Daily News . a number
of celebrities. including
vio l ini s t lt z h a k
Pe rlman. Bert Parks
and "Barnum" star Jim
Dale. offer ed thei..r:.
pe rsonal resolutions for
the new year.
Said Perlma n : "My
resolution is to eat less
~nd lose 25 pounds.
$ince I'm not a singer, I
don't need the weight."
"' J.>a rks, former emcee
of the Miss America
pageant, resolved "to
get fired again. It cer-
tainly did wonders-It
will be a great year . You
know it was last Jan. 3
that I got fired by the
Miss Ame rica pageant
and things have been
just wonderful since."
"Annie" star Allinson
Smith worried about her
S'occer game. "My res-
olution," she said, "is
to s lop breaking so
many windows and be
more careful playing
soccer."
"And." she added. "I
will stop biting my
nails."
fl'or Dale. slicking to
his New Year's pledges
was the main concern.
:•My reeolution Is not to
break any ol my New
Year,'1 reeolutiona after
the finl week of 1•1."
_ ••id the actor~ .
Elliotiaet
in adventure
HOLLYWOOD <AP)·
-Dftbolm mou atan u Nlceolo Polo lD tbe NBC mild...._ ''llano
Polo,.. DOW ftlmiDI la
The telecast, bei.. pr.-ted u
part ol "Great PerformaDHI," 11
made PoUlble by IUlta from &xacm,
The Andrew W. Mellon ro.datloe,
NaUoaal Endowment for tM AIU
and Corporation for Public lroed·
cutlq.
Mae Weer film 'due smou -. *"9d ta
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -TM late tM re;it• fllml ....
.....
The apeclal be1ln1 wltb a
rformanee by ta.. New Ya QtJ
ra ot Ad TI ti Jobmn •·-·-., ,,...,. • ., .. wlth JillM IOIA
appean.. u ~allnda, tbe roa. In
Mae Welt will bl tbe 1ubjeft of a l'DI D•:J·" "l•I• AaC ·....S. ..w la cle\'ll1,m1at tw Dewa," ..... 'nm~
1bowln1 till• IHIOD, Hid It• ...... f1A11 •, ....... of 8am~1 A8C vtce pr.,~ldllat11111._tiuorL-..!!Mam!§·~Lftll'rcwtc.Al"i~::~ ... ~~~. ir •otldl 111ciwr-. . ~"811i.1
QI!) MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
Oange1 uxe· Bnan Ash
IS posted 10 a bomb d•S· I
posal company assembled
10 combat une•ploded
bombs wt11cn are lhrealen-•
mg lo paralyLe London
tPart ti
11:00 tJ 0 D Cl)®) NEWS 0 STARTAEK
The 13nd1ng parly ol \he
Enterprrse 15 e•posed 10 a
s11ange disease thal ages
people a1 an incredible
rate
G colLEGE
8ASKET8ALL use vs Was111ng1on
G) M"A'S'H
Hawkeye is lhe only doctor
Iott lo ape1a1e when Ille flu
bug hlls the 40771h CE ONE STEP BEYOND
' Premon1hon" A young
gu I has a le11 •lying 111s1on
of being crushed l)y a
cllandehor
JOHN DARLING
D THEBEST OF
CARSON j
Guests Rooen Blake. -
Joan Embery. Kenny Rog·
ers. Monu Rock (RI
8 (!I) ABC NEWS
• HOGAN'S HEROES
The Heroes s1ea1 a
Lullwafle code book. but
can·1 gel lhe inlormal•on
lo London
GJ COLLEGE
BASKET8ALL
M1c':!!gan vs Purdue
fm Ui) CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
-Ml>NIGHT-
12:00 D SPACE· 19911
A race 01 super robols
torces Helena and Tony lo
teach lhem the ull1ma1e
t•uman emolions 8 Q1) FANTASY ISLAND
An escape ar11st seeks me
ult.mate challenge and lwo I
ordinary g1r1s sa~ple the I
1e1.se11er s 11te fRJ
1er, Bob Kees11an 1Cap1a1n
Kanga1001. Delores
l<r1eger. Oh Sn1nnah fR)
• YOO 8ET YOUR LIFE
Buddy Hacken plays lhe
game w11n a man who
embarrassed himself 1n r·
Iron\ 01 80.000 l)ilople. a
lady who ar•anges gortlla
salatts and tile manager ol
an apar1ment comple)( tor
nudists
12:40 tJ CJ) THE NEW
AVENGERS
The Avengers learn of a
plOI by enemy agenls lo
sab<>lage '"' Canadian government securi1v build·
1ng
\:00 II MOlllE
• • Down Me.,co Wav
I 194 IJ Qenf! Aulry rhe
enraged lownspeople ol
SaqP C11y enhsl lh11 a•d nl
a ~owpo~e to lrap a IJogus
mov;e comp111iy itial has
swindled lhem ot tunrh 0 NEWLYWED GAME
1:10IJ NEWS
®, ADAM·12
-jjTERNOON-
12:00 e • • • Or Je~yll And
Mr Hyde ( 19411 Spencer
Tracy. Ingrid Bergman A
men1a1 spec1ahsrs exper1·
ments on himself ever1\ua1-
ly causu n1s deslruc11on
fl)••• ·raku Her
Siie s M111e" I 19631 James
S1owar1 Sandra Dee A11
011er·pro1cct1ve fathP.r ha~
manv problems coping
w11t1 his tree-sp1rtlt:cl
dauqhter 1n collegu
3:00.Ji]) * • • 'Thal ~My Boy"
fl9511 Dean Maritn Jerty
l£-w1s A we.i~h11y 1\ aided
by ht~ alhlehc roomm;11e
lo llf'f ome a 1001ua11 s1a1
•n rirdPr to ple.ise '""
latnt:r
3::io f) * *', 1 hP p,.., 1IS QI
Pauh11£-11947) &ully H111
lOH John I urnJ Tl1•t llfu ol
Silent 111m &tar Puarl Whitt:
IS fr ,•C.•·U flfJm h•·'I h~1mt>lt·
bf!C)lllntnq .. lJ) r11•1 ·i .. umpll
m Uw r f')h{•\ G•·19\'f I'
by Armstrong & Batiuk
WELL I IHE~E ll IS, CHARl:tE! JHE NE. WSC.0N1 HCL i=-t~E TC<\JCK ?
I HE 51A1E. O~ THE. AITT
Ab ~A~ A S CCNE~1NG ~1 ~ES IS CONCE~NcD!
Exhibit tours museums
Art experts praise Muppets
LOS ANGELES <API -Whal
does Miss Piggy haye in com·
mon with King Tut and Picasso'.'
Genuine artist ic importance -
and the ability to draw large
crowds to museums. according
to two art experts who talked
informally about Jim Henson's
world.famous Muppets at a
Museum of Science and Industry
news conference.
"Art is a combination of com·
mentary and observation. and
the Muppets do it damn well."
said Steve Brezzo, director of
the San Diego Museum of Art,
which first presented "The Art
of the Muppets" exhibit last
year.
"THEY REPRESENT a won-
derful creative effort. both in de-
sii.:n and performance. in pup-
petry. that for a long time in the
United States was not rec-
ognized as an art form," he
added. "Muppets have done a
good deal to secure a niche for
puppetry in the United States."
"It's multidimensional art. not
just of design, painting. textile
and assemblage, but theater -
and very serious, too," said
Thomas Hoving, former director
of New York City's Metropolitan
Museum of Art. "lt's a new
world, a whole population of
MJPPETS AS ART
Creetor Jim Henion
cha racters that help us in our
da ily l.ives ...
The exhibit . on display at the
s cience and industry museum
through Feb. 8. features more
than 100 Muppet characters.
from an early incarnation of
Kermit the Fro!! rnade ll\
Henson in 1956 with his mother;!'.
old roat and sli<·NI ping pong
ball eyes to t·haral'te rs of
more r c<:cnt '1ntagc 1n lhl'
sea sonal telC'\'ts ton SJH'<·1al
.. Emmet Otter'!'. Jug Hand
Christma:-. ··
TJU:RE'S ('OMM•:NTAR\' on
the history of pup11ets . a -100·
square-foot rnllege of materials
and photographs shO\~ mg how
muppets arC' m ade. ll fe·s1ze pit'
lures of J\lupJ>t'teers at work and
a 2'7 ·minuk \'ic1cota1JP of Muppel
hig_hl!ghts
Brezzo estimated that d ose to
a million people• ha\'e \'tewe<l the
exhibit in San Diego, Denver.
Minneapolis. C.:hi1·ago and Los
An geles. where 1t is Mmpletmi.:
the first year of a pl anned thr<'e·
year national tour
Asked whethe r Miss Pq.\gy
and Kermit the Frog rightfully
belong in an art museum . Jim·
ing replied · .. , t hink since
Picasso pasted a piece of cane to
canvas. there has rcall} been no
discussion al>out the lines
between art and other forms or
entertainment."
"Museums are all about visual
quali ty," added Brezzo "The
Muppets also happen to he qualil}
entertainment "
. e Savory Savings
-------AIOUT '
SUP iii
DINNERI
Good tor nine pltcH ol juicy. gotc:len l>fown l<imlucky '''Id Ct\lclltn. wltll tour roUa, a lar99 cot• 111w, a lar99
meanie! potllo.t Ind I l'M<llum gravy. Limit two ollera
per purclllH. Coupon fOOd onty for com1>1na1100 wll•l•I
de"' ~. Cuetomer PIY' 111 IP9llc1flte aa111 IH.
• _ _:--r-I~
r
Di&.Y"-Of es "3' ~.-..,1.1'!'
1-' 11
"I know you don'' w.nt the c:Nkken to
go b9c* to 8Choof. bu\ you'll have
to gN9 me thole lunch boxee."
SHOE
MISS PEACH
THE FAMILY CIRCUS
"We're all inside that little round thing and
Daddy hos to take it to the store to get"' out."
DENNIS THE MENACE
.. ...._ .. _,,.. .. _.,,, •·~e .,r.-..-.,._.._..,. _... .... ~., .. • •T• •-ir•-•9'•
FUNKY WINKERIEAN
-FAMOUS C<llPOSERS-
Chapter Ten -Claude
Barlow
....
.....
by Tom aatiuk
In fact he often
practiced the violin
Although he came from
a family of musicians,
Claude Barlow was the
L~ost musicalJ,y inclined
while leani ainst
the wall at a forty-five
degree angle!
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
rmG:&;Ug ... 1
DON'T WRNI you
10 GO ,OHC.LE PHIL!
· HE.Y, )AKE IT ~SY,
MRN BIG BO'fS
DON'T CR'{~
llG GEORGE lty VIFlll Partch
!
.; r ....
•
"I hate Mondays."
by Kevin Fagan
11)£H~·~ Nor 'ftl£ ei~-r
fUSOfol 1'1lt"I OUf ~
~ JOtCtS OM. ~:ot.c:1
by Lynn Johnston
How B1G-1S
BIG-'?
by Mell Laiarius DR . SMOCK by George Lemont
! THINI( Tl-le COLANT2'.Y'~
001~ ~eMA~l(AefL.'r' Wcl..L.
CON~1oe~1N6' NOBODY'
IZtANNING IT.
TUMBLEWEEDS
)J.Jo IN c~, .r. KNEW, .41!10U'7;
WAn:ft Mt( HORSE FOR ME, VEPUlY..
l'JJ. ~ IN1HE SALOON.
NANCY
T!STINc;,.
T!ITING
.
DOC"T"OR, PO YOU
t<NOW "T"HER5'S
A KNO"T" IN THE
CORD OF "T'"HA"T'"
"T'"HINta ~
SORRY, l'. CAN'"f"
H EAR WHA-r YOU'RE:
ve;~ .,...H f; A .M.A.
SURE: KNEW WHAi n~eY W ERE DOIN '
WHf;N .,...HE:Y N IXE:D
SAYING ... 1"HERS'S A
KNO'T" IN 1'"Ht:: CORD or:: 1"H1S "f"HING.' 11-(A"T" HAIRPI N.'
,,,....---~-i,..I"';---
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 51 Patrol UNITED >P.alure Syno1c111e
1 Fissure 52 Opposes Saturda~ s Puule Solved
ti AM Others 54 Abstain
'} ... oros 58 Protess •o Ger.,,an 59 Prep0s111on
req1on 6 I Vmt~
14 Aaoa1 skin 62 Pos1t1ve
15 Evils Lat 63 Vehicles
16 Competent 64 Brtlltance
•; Once upon 65 UnOer&tands li':'t:-E:t-EWl'!+.?'l!!t:-'t:iiil~~
66 Hot spnnQs u
'b Ne1an 67 Erects l;t-!::'t:'lilr.'l:"t:"~~!:t.::1~
19 El)P·Oye
20 Loss of hope DOWN
n Maoe
refunds
24 Iceland ep•cs
;·6 Piano
e~perls
27 Thinnest
:JO ll'lree Preti•
J t Dines
32 E .. genc1es
37 Bygone
38 Mosl agile
40 Knock
41 Repugnant
43 Sub -
t Attireo
2 Routine
3 Molding
edge Var
4 RV veh1ctes
5 Works dougri 27 Cauterize 46 Fish eggs
6 Door recns 28 Summon 47 Poor goiter
7 Sa11or 29 Over 48 Bermuda.
8 Winglike 33 E•plain e g
9 Tots' gear 2 words 49 Stage show
10 Oevihsll 34 Gol' club 50 French 11ver
11 Slacke" 35 Comfqr1 53 Easy 1ob
12 Modify 36 Shadowbox 55 -breve
13 Deciplleia 38 Plums ' Mus
21 F~ fish 39 Synlnehcs 56 German r1ver
by Tom K. Ryan
44 Exllncl bird
45 landscape1
48 Complains
23 -almond 42 Domains 57 Seines
25 Tl'lreads 43 Go back over 60 Pew1er coin
NANCY·--
WHAT ARE
~ COtNCtt
IMILa WH~N VA U\.J ~\.:'.
ORPER Me AROUN~. ~1 ==~ Fl:l..L.ER!
TESTING,
TEStlNG
1 2 J • 5
" . ~ ,._, ., . .,,,,.,.., ........ ~, r·--~.,
t ~ .:
~
..
>
I. . . •
--.................. -·~-·-·-·-·· ··-····'-·-·· .. -·-----.-,. ..... , .. , ... --_ _,,,, __ _... __ ----~ --....... ···--··.---------·---.111 ...... -.... ,...-....
• --.......---~-·----------·--·--........... ,.:.:: •• • ... =:."'"':"'~-... -••.•• ~.""":.--:-::~-...... --··· .... -:-;:_ ~-... :-: .::., -::: .. _ ..• --· .. _.. ...
-HOW TO USE
THE FOOD SECTION
TO SAVE MONEY
Using 'the Dally Pilot food section wisely each. week ca" save you real
money on your grocery bill.
STUDY THE ADS. The Daily Pilot Wednesday food section is fuli of
supermarket and food ads which feature, every week, specials and
other bargains. Make a practice of screening these ads for the best
deals. Keep In mind that stores which publish their prices each week
make It possible for you to know how and where to save. They take the
gues.work out of shopping. You can depend on their prices and the
avallablllty of Items. And you can stock up on specials.
CLIP THE COUPONS. Clip and save "cents off" coupons. They may
save you only a dime here and a nickel there, but the savings add up
qulckly to dollars each time you shop.
USE THE RECIPES. All kinds of exciting recipes are presented in the
Dally Piiot food aectlon. From ch•••• •ouffle to stuffed green peppers;
from diet desaerts to puff pastry. You'll find many Interesting and novel
ways to liven up your weekly menu.
BUY IN SEASON. In many Instance• 'the recipes are keyed to those
foods which ere In season. Thi• means they wlll be In plentiful supply
and priced low.
PLAN AHEAD. Plan for at least a week ahead, end check the auppllea ~ ... yo1i1 have on hand before shopping. Costly return trips can be prevent-
ed ·by ni-at malling out a shopplnsfllat. ·
KEEP UP-TO.DATE. WOftd, national and state events often can Impact
food prices. It mey be·lh• weather In Kan•••, shipping •trikes In New
York or polltlcal upheaval In a foreign lend which Is• key auppHer of a
staple -ell cen tore• higher prices flere •long the Orange Coeet. For
complete n~s of food trends, your community 8nd the world, rely Oil
th•
'·Illy Pilid
~~-------.,~
N-Mhas
• Dl8DY ID
coll~e
Nearly three-fourths
or the students who were
graduat e d from
Newport-Mesa District
high schools last year
·are attending college
full-lime this year.
The figures were com ·
piled tn a 1us -re eas
g r ad u ale ro 11 ow · u.p
s tudy by district" of.
licials. The information
was provided by a ran·
dom sample of'l979 grads
who responded to a fi ve·
'page, 8~question s urvey.
NOLA HOFFMAN,
district development lab
coordinator . said the
study indicates that 73
percent are attendin g
school full-time a nd 14
percent are part-time
students.
About 17 percent are
working full -time and 43
pe rcent have part-time
jobs .
A majority of thos e
wtw are work ing, she
said. 'say their job is not
re lated to either their
hi gh school train ing o r
their career goal.
MOST SA Y....on·the-joh
training has been the
most helpful s ource or
tr aining for them. she
added . .
S t ude nt s r a t ed
E n g l is h as the hig h
sc h ool l'ou r se mos t
useful in their present
at·tivit y or to future
goa-4-s. with math second
and scie nce third
Most of the students
r eported that ex tra
curricular activities ar e
part of a s ucces sful high
school edut ation . s he
said, but some C'r1tic ized
such activities as time
cons uming and ''ell ·
quis h."
Gasoline
plentiful?
SA ~ FRANCISCO
Most Californians . two
months a go. we re op·
limis t ic abo ut t h e
a vailability of gasoline
dur i n g 198 1 . th e ·
Ca lifo rn1u Poll ha s
said.
··A 62 percent majority
of Californians believe
t her e wi l l b e
enough gasoline availa·
ble for motorists during
t h e f o ll ow in g 1 2
months ," s a i d the
st atewide telephone s ur-
vey of 1,018 people out of
a populat ion of about 24
m illion Californians.
S a id the Mervin 0 .
Field s urvey. "Should
gasoline shortages oc·
cur. the public would
favor a stricter enforce-
ment of the 55 mph
speed limit and requir·
ing annual automobile
efficiency inspections as
ways to reduce gasoline
us age."
PROJECT
SI'AKIED
MANAMA. Bahrain
1 AP > The oil-ric h
Pers ian Gulf stale of
Qatar has s t a rted a
larg e-sca le wate r de
s alination program to
pro v ide irrigation
water. the Gulf New~
Agency reported.
The agency said that
the pilot project. costing
$1 .2 million in ils first
phase. is unde r con
struction with tec hnical
as::.istance from Japan.
The project is to be
completed in m id-1983.
the agency sa~d.
GIVES UP
$10,0lXJ
I
TRENTON, N.J . CAP)
-A Newark man who
· found a winnina $10,000'
lottery Ucket in a copy.
ln1 machine baa relin·
quished· claim to the
prize in favor of an 81·
rear-old man who
'boutht the ticket ln the
flnt P?te·
f#lll.
MO"nday. JWIUaiy 5. 198i-DAILY PILOT
. . Son; 10,
aids mom
• incowt
ST, lfETERSBURG,;
Fla. (AP) When Al·
lene Sava.ge went to
court asking f o r a
postponeme nt in the
res titution paym ents s he · : -:·
h ad be en o rder ed to • ·
,
~..;;._,...~_,~~~.UU ..... ""-:-.>l~..._. ... ~1~.1.--a-R-~~~;
unus ual le gal ad viser -
h e r 10 -year-old s on.
Sam . 1.
Sa m resea rched the.: .•. ·
ca se and in a four-page."
motion cited one federal ·
ca.se and two state ca ses
indicating that a pe rson
should not be punished
for being poor.
"It was exceptionally
well done from a pro·
fessional s tandpoint ...
s u 1d Pine lla s Circuit
Judge David Patterson.
.. A lot of pt•ople attem pt
to do these things on
their own but lbey are
us ually not well Clone
"I thought a lawyer
had done it for her."
Al'Wlre~o
COUPLE COUNSEt CULT MEMBERS
Kurt Van Gordon and wtte, Cindy
Mrs. Savage, charged
w ith .grand lheft and
w r i t in g w or thle ss
ch(.'(·ks in 1974 and 1975.
sa id s ht> tould no longer
ufford to pay restitution ·
and f('arcd she wourd,_
violate ht•1· p ro bat ion if
slH· d id not
Former cultist, wife
off er help to others .
QR ~\NGJ-:. 1:\!'1 K urt \'a n
<:nrdt•n. \\ho rk sc·rilw.; himself a~ ;i
hnrn·a l!:lln fun<lam!'nl ah~I C 'hri~l liHl
sa\~ ht' b ru:fh lil·1·11m1· a mcmhtr •if
th t· Ch1 hlrcn ;,r <;1111 1·1llt d unnl! Lh1·
··.r e!->W• fr .. :ik ' 111111 l•m f'nt 111 tht· l~O!->
!'-llnp l~ tx·1·au~t· ht· '' ant1·d to ·.,1·nc·
t hl' I.tint helter
Hut \'an < ;<1n kn ~ay~ h1· \\likl' up 111
t hl' fal't th<i l t hc•n· was no n<'Pd to ('UI
himself orr from 111 ... ('hn ... t1:.in f<tm1 1\
mO\'l' 1n111 a 1·1imnwn1• ;md "'''P lhtnk
1ng for h1rn!'-elf tu o.;1•r\ 1· 1;11d
lnstt·ad. lw lll'g a n 1n ,·c:-t1gat 1n~
\'a riou~ 1•tilh . hli \\ lht•\ rt'<'rutt
h rainwash and n·t am mt:mlJl'r°' lfc
an<I his \\lfr. Cind). ha\t' !--t'I up an
organizatwn to spreud informcilion
on how 1·ult tlottrines differ from
Hibli<·a l dm·trm<·~. a nd to r11unsel 1·ult
memhc•ri. to hnng them 0111 11f th<·
c ults and ha·t·k into m iHn:-1 n·am
Ch r istiauil.\ '
VAN GORD E~ SAID h~· 1~ not a
deprogrammer .
"I don't l>ehc\'e in k1 anappmg JJ<''>
pie ... ht' 'ia11l ·L·suall ~. 1f <'ailed Ii)
a parent or frit·n<l . I 'll s.:11 \'IS it thl'
person m tht? t·11lt and a!->k 11 the)
would bt• willing 10 la lk to a ('hns t1an
m in isll·r Tht?y us uall y "a) ·ye:-·
The·~ have· no ft•ur that a Chris t1L1n
m iniste r will tr.\ lo deprogram them
If the\ re fus1·. I ask th<·m \\hat
they're afra id of and sa y. 'If )our
doctruw 1s l ru•'. 11 \\I ll !--land up un
der t1ut•st11ming · ··
\'a n (;o rrl1·n .,;11d hP ali-n tliffen.
from dcp rogramrnc·rs in lhat <1 fll'r
talking a pers on out of a <·ult. t he~
a ren't l('ft with a la('k uf a n\' re h ~ious beht-f-~t' :ittt-mpts to r~le<'t'
their eult1<· faith \\Ith a bas1e Chm .
tian faith 11£• .sa id his l'l1 cnl!-> do not
go through a· penud of disonentatum
among suhJccts of rlt·programming
THE NAME Ot' hi~ orga n11at inn .
1n Orange. 1s PAC E . for Pra<'tic·al
Apo loget1l'S. ;rnd C'hrist1an E\'an
qclis m
.. :Vl oses" l>av1<l B erg. t he Il l-year
old leader nf tlw Children of <;od.
was 'it 'pastor of lhe Chnst1an :'Ytb
sionary Allianre 1 a Protestant de
nominatmn I who at tac hed himself 1!1
the Te<'n Challenj?e organization in
Huntington Bea ch during the late '60s
and early '70s Both Teen C'hallenge
and Christian Misswnary :\lliant·c
subsequently ous ted Ber g . ,
lie hegan by criticizing all e xisting
Christian ehurches. pointing out tht•ir
proble ms and urging his young. new·
ly "saved" Christian li steners to dis·
lance themselves from churches and
form into a community.
·\ 1 I irsl on.I~· the J1•ade rs WNe
pr 1 \ ~ to t ht· dnct rint· thal wife
,,.,. :q11J1ng "a:-Liil right But l'\'l•ntual
I~. a:-lhe group lwn1m1· rnon • 1solal·
l'cl . l)l'O!--tltul1on l o c·11ll1•c·1 mont'V a nd
f1irn1ca11on lo \\II) 1·11n\1·rt!'-wa~·o11t·n
J~ ..,,m et 1nnt·d J JHI c·n1•ouragcd 1n ~
H1· r g ~ lt·t 1 l'r"
"IT'S :\ U\'l~(i 1·ul1 . · ~aid \'an
(;or dt·n Whl·ll a girl pl!'h a gu~ uµ
111 a har. ha!-> .,ex \\Ith h1m ~ncl then
upt'll" h1·r Bll1h '. ht• !-> JUSI going to
l;1ugh .ii hl'r un lc·~!-> hl· 1s 1 tcrestt•d
tn a Int 111 fn•t• !->t'X ·
I lo \\ d1tl <i younJ! m 11n r aised in a
Chni.t1an. C'hun ·h goinJ! ~amily , t•vcn
hc1·omc inLen·sted 1n s ul'h an or-
gan 1utt1on '!
Van c;orden :-a1cl ht• was attrar ted
hl'l' au.,c the Ch lld ren o f C; od we re at·
li\'l• :\t tht• "Chns t1un Explo." a
.Jesus·frf'ak convention held ir't Dalla s
..,, •• a dfllllfl f"ull. M'Jwn a
gf rl pk-Mr a f1Uf1 up fn a
bar. ltGll •rz 11."fflt ltf•
and dwn open11 lwr Bf·
hlr. hr'• Jau• going 10
laugh al IWr. unlr•• ltr f•
lnlrrr•trd fn a fol of
frrr •rx. ..
111 I !!72 tht·~ -.t·I up a 1•11ffee house
•:H'f<.>!--:-fht· stret•t from I he con\'cntwn
sill' and \\l'rt' out on thl1 streets eon
s t antl~ in,·1t ing youn g people in
The~ Wl'rt' \'l'r~ fne111Jl~
"The~ "ere h1g on lm't• bomhmJ? ...
s a id \'an Gordt·n "\\"ht•n I would ask
th em q"'estions like why I harl to
forsa ke my fa mily when my family
was Christian . one of the leaders
wo uld walk ovc•r and give me a h11?
hug and sa y . ·1 rl'ally lo\'e you.
broth('r Let 's go o ut and witness ·
The~ would drop the :rnhject. they
nc\'er ans \\c red tough questions "
THt: CHll.DRt.:S OF God were
also µcrsistt•nt Whe n he went ba ck
homt> to Ohio for the summer. the
group kept s ending him literature in·
,·iting him to JOin them in a com-
m 11 n e ··whe r e ever y thing was
peaC"C'ful and lo \'ing a nd happy
E\'eryone is looking for a Ctop1a in
this world ...
Van Gorden was nearly convi nced
But he t•redits his mother with point-
ing out to him the fallacies of the
Children of God doct rine HE BECAME THE leade r of the
,community . The members were
gathered from people who had re· ' The m ethod his mothe r used -,
cently become Christians. like Van "taking tim e to sit down and show
Gorden . me the Biblical truth" -is the model
At its peak, the_group claimed hun· for Van Gorden in his missionary
dreds of thousands of m embers work among the cults.
WMldwid-:. However , when Berg Van Gorden said the Ch&ldren of
prophesied in 1972 that a giant meteor God cult. which now exists ooly in a
would destroy the United Sates, most few European communities under
or the members lert for 'Europe. When the name. Family of Love, used com·
the meteor didn't come, there was a mon brainwashing IJ!•hnlques to re.
falling away . -tain ttrronverts: ·Members were en: '
The cult has developed into a sex couraged to lake on a ne w name, cut!
cult, with Berg publishing "Mo Let· Ung off any connectioa with the(
tera," short for Moses Letters, en· convert's past life: controversial doc-
cour•linl parents to have sexual re· trines we~ kept from the newest
lations with their children, encoura1· members until they had learned to
ln1 male and female membtn to win accept whatever they wen told;
converta by havinl eexual relaUona members were encouraged to doubt
wlth them to "show their love." _ their own thou1ht processn.
Cc,pe find artilacte
DAILY
You, C•n .lell n, Find n,
Tr•de-H With II W•nt Ad
\ ···-···
' .
One Call Service
Fast Credit Approval
CWSIFIE.D
INDEX
....... hr.. •.11 ......... " .. ':.!:'! ....... ~~".::.-:.~ ....... ~.~~ ....... ~.~~ ....... ~.~~ ....... ~.~~ ....... ~.~~ ...... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• · llU • 11ult 1 .. 2 •••r• 1002 .,,..,.. IOOZ •••r.. 1002 G1Mr.. 1002 •••r.. 1002 ••• A ltll • · ... , .. : .................................................................... , .................................................................................... ·····--···~············
...... ,. ... Cll
142·5171
---c ........
IAa•INolJ<ft i-•v-. Pn'liOftal&• Sor1al Chila• Tr•• .. •
Sen·f<'t Dwwfter1
ElfttflOT I
PIEPAIATllN Stlloob ,,,.,.., .. ,_
JobW .. nled• ll•lp W111tf'd, II 6 I'
MEICMOllSE
Aotiq1>n
Appl1aMt'S Aw hon Rkvf'n
tsuikltna M aler1al~ C"amu" • t:q .. ,p~nt ~· .. 1.1
Uoc> t't ... 10 y.,.. t~rrutur~ Gara1e Slit lwsn ,......._c_,
Jf'•f'lr)' u•"""'' Mo<luiwry Mt>ttll-M•M"tll-Waftled MIY-'JC'll IMlr'"""flb Ofhtt Furn• t:qulp Ptl• t~i:: ... ~~=-Sportl .. ~ Sl.or~.Rnt-•nc.Bar ~~.r:.. .......... .s.-.
llATSIM ...
E~T
--= ---::: ----ltlf ,. -... ,. ... ·-·-·-a.m ,_ ·-1• ,.
J-·--·--= -----119 --
Jae ---------JM ---r.: .... --'* ---.. ~ --
-10'1$ 7100
11111& .,.
•1> -----------"'5 ------m1 ------
o....... ' ... -ta ...... lln•ltt .. -..... illlif~ ---.......... ---··-~ --..wi -.......... '*'. -==:~· ..... :
TUISNITINI
' Altt .. 11 • • • • . • .. • ' : ....
llALTOIS
'7~1111
LOYILY T PLAN
........ .:::. 3 ............ ...
···1 '* .. , ····--...., ,_, ........... ''? 1211. ...
COU OP MIWPOllT llM.TOllS
21111LC.-.Hwr .. Ca_ ......
675-1111
EQUAL HOUSING
,OltPOlfTU.N~TY J
Ml1t I -SMalla:
All real estate ad·
vertised in this
new1paper is subject to
the Federal Fair Hous·
inl Act ol 11168 which
makes It illetal to ad·
vertise "any pre·
ference, limiuUon. or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion,
sex, or national origin,
or an mtention to make
any such preference,
limitation, or dis·
crimination."
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
estate which is in viola-
tion or the law.
Hwet._.S. ....................... •-:4 1002 .......................
AS5'M f'/a"le LM
ASSUllE LARGE 9~%
LOAN AND OWNER
WILL CARRY ZND. On-
ly 187 ,5CIO for tbia de-
Ucbtful 3 Bdrm condo.
Community pool. Call
m.5370DDW
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
DWI.EX
SI 10,000
Prime a.t•-. UD-lta. C1em--n!lurbiab ! P'laaadml! Hurry~all fs ,,,,., W.1111
COST A eiasA Pll ...
Grffnbrook 5 bedroom
with pool, spa and close
lo everythiq. Assuma-
ble flnancin1 and of·
fered at only $189,500.
M0-3668
llEDROOMS
$83.800!
HltGHT'S DUPLEX
Try $15,000 down! 3
Bdrm and 2 Bdrm units.
super comer lot. Newly
landscaped and r e ·
decorated. Owner says
sell now. Call
<l)
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
Now You
Can
Sell
More
wltll Daily Piiot
PIENN\' PINCHER
ADS StW..iy IZ.
3 lines for 2 days
only SI a day. 34c a
line.
Ad,·ertise one or
mor l' items \'alul'd
up to SIOO. Ea rh
additional lint> is
only 60r for the two
da~·s . Sorry. n o
commerrial ads
allo'A·ed. ChcttfCt'
Your-Penny Pim•her
Ad o r use r our
Bank Americard
Visa or Mastercard
Few more information
andtopla~ your ad ull =-c'!:': ... : ... · :: = =-=.....-····"·= iu2 5171 .._..__.... ... ··.:·::-· -~~~~~-I .., • TT ....... """91 . . ... -'---------A ~-=i... :::::: .. :: = ••111 o-.a1 .. : ................... -~1C .................. -a.c...-v111Wi. ....... _. __ s.orta......... . -•"-Pn••. ·············-T .... 11a ..•••.••.••••••••••• -i:.a;:._·_._:_:_:_:_:_::::.::.::-5 AlllS.•••o 0-al ...................... -a"i':;:_:_:_· .. :·.-·._:::·::·:·:·:·:·5 ..... ····-· ... ············ '"' ~:·:·:--·::::···:::::::".·::_~·! .,._ ..... -
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WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
lllALUTATf s... ........ PIGpntv M.Nei11•1•
2436 W. Co.t Hw\I 31.S M.rn Aw. ~Buch ~ lllend
dl·I-67WtM
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· ._.&Ill llCtu S 2 JI•
' ,
----------------------... · ..... ,A POINT llACIRONT
Panoramic . view at wedle, from
rime lar1e lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom
sq. ft . featuring marine
room, entry. living room, din.ing_
room, built-ins. etc. $1 .~.ooo.
UDO Ill.I
Newly remodeled traditional style 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large
recreation room & 2 patios. Living
· room has attractive beam ceilings,
fireplace & french doors leading onto
brick patio. New kitchen bit-in .
appliances. Close to tennis courts .
sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be
sold fully furnished $420,000.
IAY,.OHT We ~ve several fine homes
-with pier & slip
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
l I I ~\" y ... d.' [J I ' y' ~" H b 1 ) 6 1 0 1
ASSU..
1'119/o LOAH
Only $113;500 for-1his 3
Bdrm Charmer with
heated pool and fruit
trees. Call now 979-5370.
Want Ad ResulL"I 642-5018
ALLSTATE I $2
REAl.TORS ------· -
LAfMIMA Mia-.
Beautifully maintained 4 bedroom
home with mountain and canyon
views. Quality upgrades, new carpet
and appliances. antique marble
fireplace and enclosed brick .s o u r t y a r d t h a t I e n d s a n
indoor-outdoor feeling. Presented at
$189,500. (A lotta house for the S>.
U,._l()UI:. tif),"l:i. ,
REALTORS. 675~000
, 2443 Eul CoHI Hlghw•11. Coroit• d•I Mer
'WE HAVE 23 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN
You just can't find a
b~tler rombination o
l'Omfort. seclusion and ·
WATHRONT HOMI
5 BR. 4 Ba. custom
wat erf ront ho m e -w r17-X-38 pvt dock _
Price $1 ,395,000. For de·
tails on this home and
appt to see. call Carol
Hoff . agt. 6.11·0094
location at this very af.
fordable prin.• o f
$81.5001 We are a offer·
1ng a I Bdrm (•on ·
dominium in The Spr· ,
·rngs of northern Irvine.
You'll be glad you arted
on this one. 644-7020
\\ I ~I I '1 '\
TAYLOR CO.
Hl-.1\I 1111;:----. .. ,,. 1·1 11,
IRYPMl.1WIACI
.. ONT IQW -17tl.llO
New exclusive listing. Moet fantastic
location for viewing the boating
activity, jetty, ocean, bright lights &
romantic Catalina Island. _Just in time
to have a close-up view of the
Christmas boat parade. New lush
landscaped terrace. 4 Bedrooms, fam.
rm . formal dining , dual stone
fireplaces. 3-car garage. CaU for appt.
WISUY M. TAYLOI CO .. llALTOIS
-2111 S..JHQ I ... .._,
MIWPOll'T CBfTll, M.I. 644-49 I 0
CDMDUPLIX
2 YEARSMIW-
4 Bdrm and 2 Bdrm , ..
South of PCH ... Private
brick courtyard ... 4 car
garage ... Oak planked
floors . .. Italian tile ...
Super terms ... Call now
~
_$EA COVE
PROPERTIES
MIWUSTIMG
DWI.IX
CLOSE TO llACH
3 Bed, 2 baths each unit.
Furnished. Stone F/P
lower. Good s um-
mer/winter rental. Ask·
ing $275.000. 548-0715
eve.
associated
II R tj ~ E R <, R f 11 l T ()" S
lOJ' Yw BnltJ1 '' t-'' l f-t-. l
PNSCOlt,ArbOUMI
TWO 4·Plexes, now un·
der cons truct ion.
Sl24.9QO e ach. o we
w /$25.000 dow~ Pro·
jected growth monthly
inc ome . $1210. Low
vacancy factor. Offered
by Horton & Assoc. 115
E . Goodwin. St e R.
Prescott. Ariz. 8630 1.
Call 1-6021778-9689 or
6021445-6609 ask for Roger.
$100 eb!noo
714·631-6990
0c .... Nw.,..lt
3 Bdrm 3 Ha anrl 2
Bdrm 2 Ba. lrg rooms.
good condition. Priced
to sell at $225.IXXI.
--~ -----~ -
CORONA DB. MAR
Bay view duplex walk·
ing dist a nce to the
beach. 4 & 3 bdrms. plus
rirepl aces. bit. i n
kitchens, freshly paint·
ed and deluxe
throughout. Large Isl
may be assumable.
$389,500.
A D1v1s1on of
llarbor Investment <.:o
0c ........... .
3 It 2 Bdrms, completely
furnished. Built-ins. 4+
car garage. Offer down
payment and take over
$4.26.000 loan at only
12a...%ror30years.
JACB REALTY
675-6670
No need to travel •II over
town to look Cor__.araae
aalea ... you 'II find them
rilbt here in Classified.
To place your 1ara1e
ule ad, call 142-5678.
all it takn Is a
PENNY
PINCHER
AD
:1 l1n1·-.. 1111' ~ da.''
11111~ ,1 ,, cl.I\ :11 ....
llm·
,\11\1·r11,.l0 ...... l>I
rnon· 1t1•m ,. ';dut'll
up to ~toil E<1d1
acid It 11111~11 )1111• I"
1111 h fiht· for I lw 1" 11 <fa ·\~ Sorr' 11 u
1·11 m mt·r1·1.il .1ct ,
al lu""d 1·11 :1r)!"
Your l't•nrl\ l'inl'lwr
.\ ii II r II''' ~ 0 U I"
II a n k r\ m 1• l'I 1· a r <I
Visa or :\'la,.1t·r<'ur<1
can todcrr mc1 '"
yo•r ad h• prh•t
tOMOrrow!
C .. M_., ..... Frid9y
l :OOAM to S:lOftM for
Md dey'•,.... or ul
i.y -• s.lwdey fw _..,.,,......
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
CIE
llDlll ILlllS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
IA YlllOMT usn.
·Gorgeous Modern Home With Imported
Antique Details Throughout. Handsome
Wooden Mantels. Huge "Carved Wood"
Antique Pub. So Many Special Amenities.
Automatic Sprinklers. Air Conditioning,
Security System . Professionally
Landscaped.· Dock f'or Fifty-Poot Boat.
PrlVlle Beach. By Appl. Only Sl.800,000.
® --..... , .. ,,,
118C&llN
159-11• #Jc_,..,.._. ... ..,....~
FAMOUS ITOlllEI
C S A J M 0 T H £ R G 0 0 S E 0 H A L
I L R N I R 0 E T I R A T N P llAI HHRAOQWDO DDT AT IAYITUAID lOLIOOIRAICIHIRMLCC aOAllTDLIAILITAIPIO
I N I A I II T I L " I I I L A S A M,H LlllllAICADYADUWITO
LIUA llOPYllNOIDAll
AIOI AllYllDNllOMIM
TOLAlllllllAICDOATM
1aaAITLYllLTLYIMAlll IAITllDlDPLLaWCYMlA llPPltllTTARltDIOlll
lAOIUTDllTOXIUQIODY
~
-Watetft'ont Gimlf
}tight on the eunal In
NewPort Shores 1\ hugt'
4 Bdrm J Ha family
home 1n 1mmac·ulate
rond1t1on. A su1>t•r lnci:l
tum, only steps to lht•
hea(•h. Altr<H'll\'l' owner
rmanl'ing a\ <iilabh· ,\
s uper st .. rt l!r at
$280.000. lcAoolsl..t RHfty
673-8700
Owner Wil Rnmc:e
Super sharp Easts1de
dollhnuse. 3 Bdrms. 2
Ha . beautifull y
landscaped m mun.··m con di tio n . l.argt'
fireplace and open
beam ceiling add muc·h
to its charm. "'ull pril't>
$152.500.
41R21/JIA
2 story home. s hake
roof, fr~h paint. patio.
Si67.500 t-::asts1de Costa
~lesa.
Roy McCcrch, Rltr.
548-7729
WATERFRONT
SubmitYowT~!
Pl F.R FLOAT. quaint 2
hdrm home on legal H 2
lot. Two car garaJ(t.'.
$425.000 !
lcAoa 1ar Prop. .........
•.675-7060•
On e arrc + l o t
" a r c·hitect ur;tl plans
for 3800 +-sq rt home
Hollin!! hills & horse
art•a Slll.5.000
It's Ume to plan for that
vacation trip. For extra
cash. why not sell some
ol those items you don't
need with a Classified I
For an Ad in W0111tft'1 Wortd
TR\DITIO\,\I. C_. Su• 642-5671, bt. llO
~~8. -1 RI ,\I.TY
H11Mf', f, 11\JV!',TM!Nl'>
The Plus Pantsuit Non·Stop Cape
631 -7370
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
RESULT11
SUVICI
DIAICTORY
For Result
Service Call
642-5671
Eat. JU
$2.17 per DAY
That's ALL you pay
fora
JO day ad
in the
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
DO IT NOW!
642-5671
«ii Coldwe_ll Banker
UMllUIY AILI IA YlllOMT
Spacious beautifully decorated
home on prime West Bay Av.e .
Location with 35' frontage.
Fantastic master bedroom suite
overlooking the harbor lights.
Landscaped front patio & pier &
slip at the UNBELIEVABLE LOW
PRICE OF $999,SOOon fee land .
IN N.WPOllTC•NnR
~ 644-9060 _
TAR GA'ZEK .... _ ................... __ ., CLAY a POLLAN---..-------1
H. y-,,.,,, "4liril1 -k ..,. 11o .. .,,1., ,. "'-..... ..,.
To d•v•lop ..,.,,o .. lo• T ... adoy, ,.., _. CGttW&pond ... 10 ......-..
of...., Zodloc blnll 1tr
I
Sl1dt this C.Pf on 0¥t1 '"'' thine sp11011summt11 l1111
I wHolor t1c1temtnt fOf t1Pf
poncho 1n 1ltt1n1hnt llCy and
· sinclt c•ochet slric>tt Crochtt of
shtlland tyPf rarn Nott smart
s1dt tabs P1ttcrn 12 U Sim
8-18 1ncludtd
Sl.75 IOI uch "'""" Add ~oc tlCh p1ttt1n IOI lust-clns 111-
111111 Incl hlnclhnl 5-4 S .....
Needlecraft o.,.t. 105
Dally '9NoC
.. IU, ON a.Ilia Sta.; i.:i , ... IT 11111 PrilCt ..... ...... ,.,,..... ......
Clttll Oft to !tit ct•lt lllMI! s.ci tor •1llEW1911 llHOlltaAn r.A T-OG 0. 112 dncllt. l
1Nt Jllttl!M 1Mlde. Sl.00 Ml c.J _.,.SUS .. aauf.'a ......... ·111....-
Ul-Mf• -
f" --"'==' . um::~ee.. •
lust the 11<lltt 11ont is worth 1
IOltuM '" lasl110111 YOll'll Wtll II
SUlf style Wtlh the tlHlt<·WllSI
PllllS Ind 111111 II With ~llfs.
dimes. 111mpers1
P11111td P11tt1n 9208 M1ws
Sim 8. 10. 12. 14. 16. II, 20
S11t 12 (butt 341 •ttuit l !)18
Jllft S4·11Cll lellrlC ..., 11.n .. • ,.._ ... ,.. .......... .................. ... .. ---
I '
·' • -J -._ .... -"""'"'# -~.-. •• _..._... .......... ' .....
WIMl•Hm c.,a.._.._.._. n,..,.._. __. floor• ... ,....... .......
t>•~•• lMp yard
wlU1 ,.a ... for add•
Uoaal u.61 o.. ul • kW~y1nllnt .... u..,~,
I A I a TT
llMTY .....
IM*IAY
Sii. .. DOWN
I ldrm •••r u11vt-
lowaaio.. Mep down
hYutl nlOm. l .. dl lO
flower f\lled tern\'•
H1&1• m-.er awtao hQl.u.
•P•c~ be.Irony ,_uh ~rl1 8->' Vw• Wun t
last wtth ~ krm'
l'all ua for dK&lls
~
SIA COVE
PIOPEITIES
714'-631-6990
ONLY-SI 56,0001
•BR. 21 •M. A.ssumablt' mn.
-Dciebout . IE\ Bay a. Beach ~RedEstate
WISTCUff
An attractive lhree
bedroom home. Two
baths. Neat family
room wilh fireplace.
Like new carpet. Lol
80xll3.' Sparkling pool.
~ ---...... ---------~·-~---., ........... .....---·----..--·--~--··.,..--..,-·-...... ...,.. ..... ~-__ _...,... ··--.-. ..... -· -.. __ ..__ ..... _••--••--a••rr ... ,..,,,.....r"L;•~~"'C~ ... ,.... .... • · ..•. :-,.:-~~~-• · ._. ... •· -.......... -_.,,. • -• • •,.,, .... .,.. •.,,,"'" •••• -•
~ ........ Mondey, ~ 5, 1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IM•-'-S. , ....... ._w. ..._..._ .. ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ._. .... .;. ...... ,ii c •. _. ...... iii.4 r·; .. ~·~· .. ··, ....... Jllm
DAILY PILOT ..................... ...... ,.EJllfr JOOO ...... u' I .. . ....................... ....................... . ..................... .
C..Mllll JU4 llsz1 ...... JJ40 .. _._. ...... •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C•llt -1071
ANXIOUli J bedroom PLENTY OF WOOD 6 •••••1·-· .. ••••••• • ...,.
• ••••••••••••••••••• ~~~ ... !' .. Merta, Dl'J.OW
llO .uacla, ... .
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... ._..ltJOtnO mH....,,..,..,mo
l>rlve b)I, U., ull
8era Marvin. Uruqu.-ll o 1t1 ... ..,, UH
maioo
YAIDWOllC
PIOlllMS
Nv\ wllh lhla ill\l' A
•P•l'loua l bdrm1 ll' 1 bu
Tvwnhom.e w1tn fun
rm tll•) \'Vt• plunk utul
blod. ml.ll\1 lt:Vt!I 1)11\W
wllh llh~bu llt1ht1> am.I
f o untain l'loi. .. to
beauuful '*rlt llltl'll with
TENNIS aou l'Ot>l.S,
wh11:h &1m1bh:1t yuu Iv
hll\ t' lllUf l' ltfl11! 1111
f11n11J) fw1
't523 C.ot"15 Da • f ll'llNE
c ........ 1024 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NEW CONDOS
IASTSIDI C.M.
2512SantaAna Avt'.
2 BR. 2'-'a ba, contemp.
deslen. Sll6.000.
'46-SOt6 646-6093
spallilh dtti11ht' Super GLASS and ducu blftld IY OWi • w ••tilde CoRa Mesa.
...............................................
dnn Owlw will help to the dwatter ol Uw B r e a t la t a k ( n 1 food condition, lneome COU811 PAii
fl n • ou t 11 t . '00 nel1bbortlood. A C'luanD' paaoramk ocean view U . 100 yr. Pr Ice POOL HOllE, ' BR.
T A R u t; L L . an1 J Bdrm 2ba for only ot Dana Harbor. Spuc-M•s.ooo. On payment family nellbborhood .
Ht:ALTOKS S44> 172() 1281.000 lacular CUllomi&ed 3000 SU0,000. OWC balance.• ms, laUdaat + aecuri·
, L ......... u sq. f\. sBdnn +retreat. ~at11%. fRte'TIGL'. t1.•Darid,yt.-.3Z56 1026 4'7-1761 ltl0,000 in upcradet . .A.· ~J ~ --
••• •••••••••••••••••••• -------aumable 11W13 fin.w· HOM€ .-LOSUll L..,.....,.. 1012 Ing. UH.soo . 33801 ~. IM.._ ....................... Avt>nida CaUta. SJC. Lovely~Br. l\AJBa. condo.
:f bdrm, l:ha Sll!t.1.000 3 .8 K Condo on 1Jolf 71•-.-5.275. Open ffouae Real Eat ate Invest-Dbl. encl 1ar. Frplc.
Ull22 Mart&1ial.k' ........ I I l-5Sunday. menu Encl. patio, atrium, I 3IH 4&6 l'Ourst', t'auJCUra c es. . 3333 W. CoutHwy. NB balcony. Ptlol, apa. walk SUl7.~. Wallace Neff. s-t.A. 16i0 64""46 t.-.o beach . '595 .
Huthff'• .... 1040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Realtor, 714-494·9318 ••a••••••• ... ••••••••••• ..... .,,;........_.. -1,.._. PPLIYAl.LIY 1 1' . t 7 5 . a 8 8 8 ,
" r-• ~ -~ * * lftllllftlDI( A 714-9112·223>. Sl~.llllUOWN ••••••••••••••••••••••• NTUIUIRDL Near new •·Plex, 2 _:...;..:.....:...:..:...:::;_ ____ _
:l br, I:\• ba OW(.' ut lt:ss bdrm. 2.balh each unit E'SID&SHARP·NEW.
than llllt!n::>l only l<• r .. 1t.:_i---=':..:2;0f..;.;o;AS:.;;;~SM.=T~Li:l0r.AM=-~+-1n.;;--''! IJl111--\.Jw.WWJIUll~i:..."4!'.'~~i-t+Br..~~· ~If pd. Avail ~ A'ttt.lltil J5Jlt -mmac a e rm + 10% FHA loan with patio. gara1e. 1165,000. now. Adults. no pets.
lr•M 1044 honus room with bar. $61.000 balance.payable Bill Grundy, Rllr. "5:\0,5'&-311CJ7
•••••••••••••••••••••••
UMIVaSITYPAU
EXl't'I t'nd utUt C'ard1H
11o lurt Ovcrst lot. rlo:.t'
lo l'lhil on ~rl't'nbcll
Thti. i•harmur has xlnt
a s:.um f 1 11a11 \'111 ~
Pt'rfcl"I :.t.ar\t'r homl· 1•r
llal·h pal.I SLS8.!IOO.
VILLAGE PAO
Lo\tly 3 Udrm 2 b<i . i.ni:I
family hmc 11o1th 11cr)
pvt .)' ard. Xlnt 10<'. dv~l'
lo s1·h<X1ls. shops & fwy,
Si64,500.
*Cote Realty
& l_nve·slmf'nl
640-5777
**tlW,NEW! Take advanlage of this
seller's dilemma: Thi~
new Woodbrill&.e al·
lached home will be re
ady in mid·Jan. Askan1o:
$115.IXXl
Exclusively Ours
"bodbrl«fte
Reahu
SSl-3000
ttzalJarrann Pli•y. lr¥111r c.._.._.
Near new earlhtone at S496 PITI. Clean 3 875·6161. ·
I k 3 br, l '\I• ba, ranae. patio. l'3rpets.:;hullers&new Bdrmwithdeepot.A$ -frpl c. lat+ dep.
l1le m lull'hen. Lovely Ing $82,000. Seller will $650/mo.&es-9586
'.,, . :
yard with stOFage shed. carry $5000 2nd T.D.
Aslung $168.000. For an IUDS/,Pll'S OIC
appttosee.call540-11Sl E·Side, fenced yard.
. -" .... HERITAGE
. • REALTORS ---
H.._.v.,.-.
Ocean vu, 3 Bdrm 211'2 Ba . 3 c ar gar age.
$325.000.
~
759-9221
HEWPORT ... GHTS
(Juainl 3 Bdrm 2 .bath,
remodeled home. fealur·
1ng separate family
room . 2 frrep1aees.
hardwood noors. near
new rool. coi)per plumb-
10 g. RV access. 20%
down. owner will carry
a II the finan cing at
IJll'J".4 interest. Asking
$225,000. Call ~11.SI
·~-'~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
:::-f{,'\r\,;('tl ~ Hf ,\l f Y ~ ',~,1 !OOU
I BR Condo. by owner.
llo/, assum. S75.000. Nr.
Civic Ctr. Joe: 833-3231
or543-2672
MEAT ASSUMAAILM.
101':1"'. int. rate. Owner
will also carry 2nd TO.
Lo-.iely 2 Bdrm home on
large lot, close to schools
& shopping. Only Sl3.000
down. Full price $82,000.
Call Allen. Agt. 640-5357
or 972·()5(2 Principals
Only.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ............
I ,.,.~ 1100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
San Juan Capo. SSS.000. 2 Br. 2 Ba. HM> sq. 'ft. 8
yrs. old. Alt~l-5032.
I For Sale By Owner
I IOxSOft Mobile Home.
*Cote Realty
& Investment
640-5777
L.hforW.· 2200 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Bayfronl lot. a fl on lhe
Penn. Pt. Dock large
boal out f ront.
-$1189.900.00. 675-9111
CMof5'11111 ...... ,.., . 2600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
40 A sct'nic Oregon Coa.sL
Electricity, fenced. oul·
atandina view. accessi-
f>le, owner 492·2499
garage, 2 Br. S•95 .
642·2510. 646-4848.
48r 2ba. new carpet &
kitch. $000/mo. lmmed
occupancy 494-2561
Eastside J Bdrm 1 bath
collage. S490 per mo.
Call 644-7722 weekda!!:__
2 br. I ba. drapes. crpl, no
pets. gardener. $425/mo .
+ dep.~58t7
4 br, 2"" ba condo. 2 car
gar .. teMis. 2416 Les
Parre Way, Back Bay.
S44·80717:D-65.21
• * * * * NF.."W 3 Br. 2' 2 Ba. Ocean view. Spa.
garage. etc.$900 + $500
S.O. 2243 Pacific Ave.
B ·I 06. 642 ·7743 o r
S48·847S.
NWPT HGTS 2Br Cot·
lage , adlts only .
stove/rerrig, no pets.
$350 mo. 645-0767
IBr. lrg. yard, small dog
ok. $450/mo. + $200
security depo6it. See at
239 EaslZ!nd. St.
New a bdr, 2 ba. fenced yard. Comm. fac. incl.
tennia 6 pool. S750 per
mo. or HU leaae.
--5430
JJ44 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Woodbrid1e Creekside
Wlllow Leaae •br, 3ba,
frplc . A/C, behind
park/pool. decorated
like model, eardener
$925. M2-1319
Scenic Orangetree 2Br
condo . Ref rig .
w /atreamJ". poOT,""
jacuzzi. tennis. etc.
Adults only, no pets.
$495. 87 S.9'!29.
2br + den. 2~ba $800
3br. 2'hba $900
4br, 2""1 be $900-$1250
4br + ban, 2'hba $87S
Npt Terr cmdo. End wUt..1 aar. 2~. uoo+aq rt
Pool, 1pa. Great place •
price. ea>tmo. 98MOZ4-831-"'2, ~5413 ~
IUJ"S ,
New 2 Br, 2 Ba Aneelil(
JSlan w /pvt Jae ... r~
taln. All amenlti~. S~
mo. 640-9044 · •
OCIAl'ROMI'
IMMm.OCC;
Beautiful 4 br, 2 ba up-
atairs in dplx. Wood
1111-c-eltl s. rp c.
crpts, drapes. all bll-ins,
encl. garaee w/auto. a
opener, washer /dryer
incl. < F\Jm. or unfum.
$1500.
TSL Manaeemeol
6'2·1603
Npt Shn waterfrt 3BR 2
ba. Crplc. Pool/tennis.
$850. 968-82163 . .....
OCCW'ANCY .
Near Dover Shores jn
one of Newport Beache's
fineSl areas. 3 Bdrm, 2
ba, frplc. formal dining
rm. A horticulturisl de·
light. cov'd paliq. 't52J CAM"1'Da~IRVttfE Greenhouse, courtyard.
----------new drps & paint.
2Br, IBa Condo. w/yd. $895/mo on Lc;e. Owner
Woodbridge. $5~ mo. _!44·4222___ _ _ . _
_Wayne4~4~~.497_-!935 BAY f'RONT. 2 Udrm, 1
Turtlerock . New Ba, no kids or pets.
lownhouse. 2 Master _!~rly:..S675_~o.:.~3·~
bdrm. fam. rm, 2'.,C,lia.
1750 sq. rt. Prof. decoral·
ed. Pvl. patio. Pool, ten·
nis. park cl011e. $900/mo.
833·8277 or 752-6492.
U.P. Terr. 2 Br 2 Ba con·
do. w/hot lub. Agt. $650.
M2·3339
Woodbridge, 2 s ty, 2
bdrm. 11 ~ ba. pool. spa.
tennis & lake. $57S mo.
lse. 7S9·011S
**LEASES
3 B.drm 2 Ba oceanfront
ho m e . nu pa i n t. &
drapes. excel!. cond.,
patio & yard. $1250/Mo
yrly. No pets please.
Call Lloyd at
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670 -------MptHgh~
Cape Cod family home. 5
Bd/den/rec room. Walk
to schools. RV parking
$1350 . Diana s:u -1266/85.5-13.'>8
B11yfronl w/dock for 45·
fenced for children ·s __ ...._ _____ _ Mwlflwood
Oulslanding valuev 3
bedroom home . up·
graded and landscaped.
Ready to move into
Very aurac.'tivc rinam·
ing. $169.500.
PVT PARTY-Non reallor
wishes lo purch.as4'.
Bluffs Condo. 3Br. 2Ba
singl e story. 1714 )
346-7724 Eves Mr.
Wraghl
Quiet Adult Park near
Back Bay . SIS.000.
833-0009 after •pm.
642-:iO't4 before 3pm.
Idaho Land-4 acres. 20
mi. to Jackaon Hole.
Wyo. 20 mi lo Grand
Targhee Ski Resort. 42
mi W . Yellowslone
Park. Skiing. fiJrung,
backpacking ,
snowmobiling etc.
208/787-2783 home.
456-991S business. Bill
Sears.
Lee 4br. exec. hme. new
cpt. fresh paint thruout
$850 Isl/last + $200 de-
IS lo choose fro m .
S525·Sl200 monthly o.n
one year lease We're
the ones l.ocall.
boat 4 Bdrm 31, Ba.
Available immed. SlSOO
m o. <.:IR Rltrs. Bill or
Landa. 63H814. 646·509G
safety . Quick IAST5IDI
P<!SSession. '2:ll.OOO. Spatleas 3 Brnome Ls
6J 1·7300 N.I. located on a lot 77x2.34,
IAYSHOUS
I st OFFllUNG
This ou...,tand.ing quality
large family home in a
privale beach communi·
ty was completely re·
mode led an 1977. 4 Bdrms & 3 separate
patios on a pie shaped
lot. $885.000.
D.M. MARSHALL
RLTR 644-9990
c ............. 1022
···········~··········· 38r, 2Ba house. corner.
vt'ry pvt. with 28r. 2Ba
sep. unit. So. or Hwy.
Prof. decor. 67S·l0SS
4 DOORS to OCEAN
2 Bdrm teardown home
on 45' lot. Possible 2nd
story with unobstructed
view. Asking $350.000
w /$75,000 down. owe al
12% inl. only.
~
Reallon,Eet.1907
673-1600
CLAS--
MOuaS
Adverll$f'r~ may plac-e
lhl'1r ad~ by ll'lephone
11·ooam to.530pm
Monday lhru Fnd•Y II lo noon Saturday
COSTA MF,,SA m 't"ICE 330W Bay
642 5678
llUNTINGTI»I Bt:ACH
17117.5 Bf'llc-h Blvd
~1220
L AGUNA BF.AC'fl
1027 N Coa.>11 llwy
Lquna Bl'nh 4!M 9466
NORTll l"OUNTY
dial lrH !>40·1220
ClAS,.._ ......,
Dudbnt ror ropy • kill~
15 S ·30 pm lht d•y bl'for<' publitat1on .
t.act'pl for Sund•Y •
Monday Edillon~ wht•n dndllnt 1s Saturday, 12
noon.
ClAH ... ..... '"*' ERRORS· Advutlstre ahould cht'ck their ads
dally • rtport errou
lmmtdlall'ly THE DAILY PILOT uaumn
ll•blllly ror tht rlr,11
rrtrt IMl'rtion only
NCELLATIONS
n kllllna an ad b.
"'" to mah• l'ftOfd of tht KILL NUMBER
ll"H you by your ad tattr u rttt'ipt of your unttllatlon Thll ltlll n 11rnber m11a1 be
p?eaenttd by the
MUltlMr !ft US. of I ... ,..le.
CANCELLATION OR
CORRf:CTION or NEW A D 8 I P' 0 R 1£
RUNNJMO: Syary .nwt II made to
kUI or CWT9Ct • MW Ml Uiat ... bMtt order.ct, W 'ft HllllOl ........... to .. 10 •II lM ad hu
......... la Ult ,.per,
DIMS·A·Ul"E ADI: n~ ... '" ttrlctl)I ............ ..,, •• 11
or at ~., ... of "' """9.~ ............. .
.,... .... ! ••·•· ...... ,. Clllta ... olftN • ll •••a at all 'ra•tll
ft'r·DAILY PILOT
M tM rl1•1 I• ..........
r • • • a ' r :t· ......... ;-... .. ~ .. ,., .. . ~---..-
zoned R-4 . county. For
more Info ask for Rbt
Milliken. 631-1266.
REALTORS
6 ftl.IX/IASTSIDE
ltED. TO $325,000
with SUl6,800 in assuma·
ble loans ranging from
8'7. to l l'i'.. $27!'>40 j.?ross
Income annually . Well
kepl. single story units
with • garages Pl.US off
s treet parking on 60' x
JOO' lol.
644-7211
/Jn ~l[iEL
tiAIL[ Y &
ASSOCIATES
MESAVBtDE
$125,000 assum lt12•:
S46·1641
3br, 2ba, frplc an liv rm.
new cpl. ga~·, assuma·
b I e I o,a n $I 2 4 . !100.
979.1791
STEAL IT!
$89,500
In lovely Costa Mesa. 3
Bdrm 2 car garage.
large palio. new
bathroom. Call1545=9161 -
OPEN HOUSE
RlAl TY
/
NEWUSTING
0,... W/S. I 0.5
2241.11-ltePL
Charming. totally re·
modeled 3 Bdrm 2 ba
house. Huge used brick
frplc in ram rm. Lge .
mature trees in front &
rear yards. Assumable
, financing.
Play a R. E & Investment
673-ltOO
RCTaylorCo
(140 O()Q(l
NJCI-;LY NE:,')"TLED on a
quiet cul-de·SiH'. :! Ur.
11 ·• Ba. beauliCully d1•
corated 1n cu rth
tones ... priced at only
$106.500.
Redhill~ Realty
552, ~1soo
Logatna leach 1041 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SUPSl
FtMAHCIMG
Breathtaking view of
Pacific from San
Clemente Is land to
Hollywood Hills from
this immaculutl' 3
Bdrm, den. family room home. Amiri towcring
pines. Beamed t l'ihngs.
completely r\'(lc1•oratcd
$239.500.
don osen
r,.aJtorh
1213 N. COAST llWY
LAGUNA Bt:1\Cll
497.4848
THE llG STEAL
Dana Point duplex 2 br.
! ba upper. I br ln"Aer.
new crpt. fresh 11umt
beamed ceihn)!s. fprk.
dining area & 1•nt'I
patio. Offered for nnly
$144.000 FULL PHICI-:' MISSION HEALTY
494·<1131
EMERALDIAY
Rom antic ocean 'll' w
from lhis exclus ive
custom built 4 Bdrm
Dream house. prin'<i al
only $545.000. Owner
must sell and may help
finance. !<'or uppt. <•all
962·9311
ALLSTATE
REALTORS -
1044 '"'" 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
macnab I Irvine
realty
A SUISIDIAAY OF
THE lflYINE COMPANY
MOllLI HOMI IM THI •IOYISI
Immaculate 2BR, 2 bath, I am Uy
rm, double Lancer in Five Star
Park. All the amenities needed to
please the most discriminating.
Immediate possesaton. $'74,500.
Belle Chase Lee 844-6200. (W-46)
, IUILDllS SPICIALl Charmtn1
C)'prm8 model ln-Woodbridte Glen
wlth amenltl• too numeroua to lilt.
Ovenlsed yard and _ cuetoml1ed
fut..._ thraulbout· 8boWI like •· model .. Quiet ea crow ISOl•lbl•.
SUl,800. Jamie WUkl"'CJft 561·~·
(W-41)
RAIERMD
Owner will assist with
the rinanl'ing on lhis 5
Bdrm 3 bath horne. lls
fcutures include· u
form<•I dining room,
family room, RV 1>ark·
1ng, new pumt. Asking
$229,000. For an appoint·
mcnt to see. <'all 540-llSI
~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
•EXCITING• s,.cwa.,
Beautifully customized
24 'x60' Viking Home
2Br. 2Ba & enclosed porch. In Laguna Hills
nicest S star park. 21 yrs
old &older. (JE8359J. Gr••1atf'_.
&WeW.
.......
·······~··········· H-"Anl•d ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ,.... .... 116t •••••••••••••••••••••••
VIEW & ON WATER 2
Bdrm 2 ba. beauliful
furnishings, Security
bldg. Pool. $1400 mo.
Beauliful 24x60 Bar·
rington Home. young
adlts & small pet
welcome. By appoint·
menl54(M937. CLASSIC Ocean VU penlhouse,
M_._HOMI beautifully furn .. 2
-Bdrm 2 Ba. Securily. Ucloble SALES SllOOmo.
I mm ed. occupancy. 2706Harbor.a.Ste206A W•aft ... Hws
Move an <.'Olld. 4 br & den. 540-5..,JJ.~-lllC., • ••a
xlnt floor plan. huge 631-1400
m a s t e r s u i t e .:;,· !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-----------w fireplace Price re· I
duccd to $415.000. Bkr.
963·8182
HEWl'OKT CONDO
!Jon ·1 miss this rare
large 2 hdrm condo in
<.:liH lh1venUvcr2000sq.
rt. Last one llf only to.
Circat neighborhood.
ll 11 Jt. Anne Denni§.
Ai.:ent. H7J. 7300
Beautiful ly UJll(radcd
Wt•stthff 3 Br! Ba. pool.
S225 ,000. $170 ,000
aasumalJlc financinl(.
N o a gents pleas e .
642·7071
VIEW
Spect a1·u lar 4 Bdrm
'1ew home Form11I din·
mg room Mstr Udrm
s ulle Owne r wall
rmuni·e
I •• REC CARPET IL 754-1202
IALIOA PMMSULA
1 2 blk to bch. r ute 28r
Coll age, S27S,OOO. As·
sumuble Isl TU ut Hl1•i'7.
1125,000. Owncr/agt
544· 1281
2 IN llG CANYON
Dramatic ·4hr, 4ba,
<'Ustom home on golf
course. Many qualily de-
tails inchxilng: 3 frplcs,
lux master suite, pool.
spa. Sl,200,00. Beaut 3br.
3ba townhouse. Lge rms,
high ceiUngs. llte/brlghl
kilchen. $380.000. L•.W...._
IOJ2W•Sf.
L41 Jcih419-J'41
TWO• .. llACH
Deluu OCEANFRONT
duplex. Vacant · ready
to rent. Fantutic
terms I ! CaM for detaila
REAL.gr' ATE STORE '71-1n1
NOUUmfl
Cllarmln1 a Bdrm
Ptnln1ula houae I"\!!\
-ulft on llldra lat1• -· Owner Medi to sell and wm 11a-. to all often.
Ort1t uAIUal flnanc·
SUPBCUSTOM
MOllUHOME
2Br. family rm & sun
rm. friendly 5 star park
wJshop. hobby rm. pool
& spa. Beautiful setting.
Must sell. 759-1616
COllllMrdal
Propll'fy I 600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Med to ........
S,350 Sq. Ft. Coin·
mercial Bldg. l Blk to
Pacific Ocean. Sell
S3SO.OOO. Lease $2.140
Month. WnleyN. T-rtorCo.
-~ 644a4tl0
••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... J206 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Grand Canal 2 BR.
modem kitch. new cpl,
dbl gar, dock. S750 mo.
675-5182.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Ocean and canyon view.
Three bedrooms. Two
baths. Available now.
S82S mo. Yearly. 7S9-1243
Agent.
2 Br. 2 Sty. 11.AJ Ba. 1-'ronl
duplex. 7081i!t Avocado.
SS50 per mo. S8lO securi·
ty. Ref's. 213/9!11·~-
3br. 2sl)";·2ba. on park.
S 9 0 0 I mo . 4 O O ,,
Heliotrope 673·8823.
675·7137
Ctteo.M";;ap;;ty 2000 s Bdrms. So. of Hwy 4
••••••••••••••••••••••• yrs old. Sl275/mo.
FOUIPLEX ~J4S3
JO'k ASSUM. LOAN 3_B_d_r_m_. -2-Ba~ Ore:~
_S_l6-_24!_1 _ _ view. Blk to beach. Lrg
yard. Sim mo. 675·0681
NEWYEAR
IONAHIA ·ALL
OWNER ANAMCED
6 hctllllt Units
IOXGrm1AMMhR
All apts. recently re·
decorated. Three 2
Brdm. four I Bdrm. No new financing required.
Owner wllll carry .. at
12%. Hurry, won't laat!
Principals only. ••• 1u..rr..o1
OWMt t\1h+1•
Poeltive cash now sell-
ing at lOXGrou income.
Moel apts. recently re-
decorated. Owner wiU
carry at 12%. OUtltand-
lnl Or.nee County il>-
veatment.
*** 10 ........... a It I
A1 tr' Lei .. •
ThJs aupsb inveatment featu,.. ~ve eaah
flow wtlh ..... ftnane.
lftl at J.ft. A true pride al·~=;"'· At . .,...
acorat.tll. You11 ..... w act llll•tlmone. 111-1•
Totally remodeled 38r.
I Ba So. ol hwy $675 mo.
833-3:?01 dys, 675·7765
eves/wknds ----Costa Mela 3224 •••••••••••••••••••••••
3 Bdrm I Ba. 2M4 Orange
Ave JO. $4915/mo. Kids
OK. Frplc, fenc. yrd.
Drive by. ~7009 Isl.
Laat•S~.
Na.wpart Helahts 2 Br.
Duplex. Private yard.
NO -PETS. S.W. Gu •
water paid. 873-2256
Luxury 2 er. 2 Ba. fp. dbl
1ar., atrium, paUo. $585.
M2-UIO
2 Br. 2 Ba. Sin&le story,
double car enclosed
1ara1e. Community
pool. • mo. a1.-.
I Aak fOI' Jbllh.
llESA VERDE • Br. a
bath a .,, a car 1ar.
orc1nr. •· n4mo.111M
E'slcle J 8dnn, 1'-' ba,
.dm eCl8do w/tp. Yard,
me au. '&WW.JOOI • jae . •t$Oimo .
11\/lut+dep ....... ......
~a1•R...c•~ j_ qUAIL' •n-•• · PLACI
iiict 1 ts 1176 Mar.•••· .. .... ~................ ..... .........
DILVXS CONDO, aY OWICSL 111 ... ,., ..... rin, INrl!t =·=::·
~il 7~-«186 -----
Clean 2 Br w/stove &
refrig, end. garage.
adults. no pets. $480. 773
W. Wilsoo. 631-4889
2 BR, new cpl.s & paint,
pvt yard, encl gar., child
& pet OK. $42.5 mo. Ask
for Pam or Larry .
546·5880
$495/mo. 2 8d l Ba condo.
Mesa Verde Village. No
pets. refs required.
M9·6221
ms/mo. 5 8d + bonus.
Lea.e & refs required.
Singles. pets & kids OK.
979·6896
\\bod bridge
RealflJ
551·3000
4920Harrann Pllwy. lrvln•·.
----· . LOCJMMHh 3250 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
l<'ORTHEEXEClJTIVJ-:
Brand new 3 Ur 2 aa.
Condo. cenlral a tc pool.
gar . $9 50 . I. I\
Foresl/lrvine Ctr Blvd.
826·5147.
a..,....,.. 1252 •••••••••••••••••••••••
lmm ac. vu hom e ,
$650/mo lease. 3 Br 2 Ba.
F .R .. L.R . w fplc.
499·1341 dys. 831-8419
New 2 Bd condo. E.side. e_v_e_s_. __
frplc. jacuzzi SS50 mo. Villa Pacifica 2br. 2ba. Joyce.~~----frplc . gar. I blk to
D_. PoW 1226 pool/sauna. adwt com
................. . ~"S~i
Beautiful Duplex. J BR 661-1652. 493·2823
2ba. 1500 sq rt. Partial Mis"°" vMfO -3267
ocean view. $6001mo. 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
yr lse. Call Doc at HOMF.sFOR Rl-:NT S8!-E_l~~731:1873 Jbd rm . $550. f'encl'd
I Bdrm unfurn (model ) I yard & garage ~u~s &
Ocean vu. condo. Pool. pets welcome 964 2566
jac. S435. 1·645·0230 ~or 973-2971 Ai« . ._ no fre. y------· 3232 Mewportlloch 1269 11 oro ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
HOMF.s FOR RENT
4 Bdrm. S575. Fenced
yard & garage. Kids &
pels welcome. 964-2566
or973·2971. Agt., noree.
......... ..., )JJ4 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HOM F.s FOR RENT
3 & 4 Bdrms. S550-SS75.
Fenced ya rd s &
garages. Kids & pets
welcome 964-2S06 or
973-2971. Agt .. no ree.
H•tlntl•• leoch -u4o •••••••••••••••••••••••
Peninsula Pt home .
steps to bay & beach.
Redecorated 2 Hdrm
S67Smo.
Newport Crest. pro-
fessional decor. 2 Rdrm + den. end unit f'pk.
wetbar. Tenrus & pool
S950mo.
Bluffs 6 Bdrm 3 ba with
pool & rec. room $1200
mo.
Lux Harbor View lime
3br. 2ba, fam rm .
skylight. new cpt.l~e
patio. dbl gar. $990/mo.
631-4842
1-:xec xt ra l~e condo. 2hr.
den. 2br. 2 frpks. pool.
aiac. $85067~·21111
s-taAllG 3210 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I Bdrm I ba condo with
pool. $39S/mo.
Park Really 551·5000
1425 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
3 pools. Jbr. Jba. c·ondo
applia~ incl. S595 call
962-7780. 964-3871
MEW CDM LUXURY
COHDOS
Wik to heh F'ine!'t am-
men1t1t's + l0<·atwn 2hr + 3br $750 $1200 /\ppl
w owner '7141760· lH!ll
TownhOYM
U1tfwftslwd 3525 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
3 Br. 2', ha twnhs<' J yr
nl•v. $5511 mo 11:!!1 11.'>0H
Jc•anoit•
D..,aexn Unfwn 1600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2br. Iba E S1Jct''.\I
S48.'i mo.
6.11·45114
~u1et, hght & airy, tm·
maculale. pn. yrJ &
garage. spaC'11)US 2 hrlrm
& I ha N11 l'hilcfrcn or
pets . $4110 mil. 2113;
Laurie Lane = H. F:ast
C M 646-0648
S blks lo ocean. Elegant 2
bdrm. ram rm & den.
($725 mo). Plush crpts.
2"'1 ba. <'edar & glass. Obi car pvt gar, fully
maint. yd. Adults. no
pelS. Inquire at SZ1 18th.
Sl. 7l4 /960-633l or
960·5112.
On Water. 2 Bdrm an •••••••••••••••••••••••
convenient loc ation. 1 Br. Carpets. drapes.
Boat sHp possible. S77S stove. refrige Utils pd
mo. Utensils for 4 $375.
2 Br. Penthouse Condo on
water. New unfum. Boat
slip avail. lmmed. oc-
cupa n cy . Call
213 /282-1136 days,
213/592-3584 eves.
HOMES FOR RENT
3 Bdrms. 152.5~ Fenced
yards & earates. Kids &
pets welcome. 964-2566
or 973·2971. Agt .• no fee.
2 Br. 1~ Ba lrg rondo.
pool, $550/mo. Yorktown
vmaa.11112-35.19
'br, 2 ba, nr Mudowlarlt
1olf coune, MOO/mo.
MCMJ.JI
IBr, 2Ba, .,._ to bda. all
new Int. no peU. '850
mo. 111~ St.
(llJ)W.mt
Villa Balboa condo wilh
speclacular ocean. bay
and night light view
from every room .
Spacious 2 BR 2 Ba.
formal dining room.
security building, pool
andspa.=.,mo. w ... -Hwt .........
631-1400
THllWllllS
Spacious 6 apotleu 3
bdrm, 2~ bath end unit
with pvt petio on • 7ht'
Greenbelt" in o ur
orl1tn1.I area. Avail.
DOW at-.* 141)-5580
Spec. a br, 2"' be twnbM.
Nr abopplq, beKbel.
Comm-*'7 pool 6 spa.
Room ,... eyelftl • ··-...... ,mo. w/Slldlt· cowtt. Aaa. Mt-1..0.
675-0935
Allractive Bach. full
kitch. Vrly, renll. $325
inc. util. Conv. loc
Desire quie t no n
smoker. 673-5580
Coro..a-ciie Mir--1722
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Bachelor. includes uUI
$375/mo. 640-9900. Ask
for Faye.
lbr. incl. util. sep. gar.
new cpt, else in
&'B-7 .. 7 c......... J)24 .......................
SUSCASITAS . ~
Furn 1 br. apt. S325 ~IU>Encl. 1ar. Adults. 110
pets. 2110 Newport Bl.
~btwna•sPM
II N .. .._.1740 •
~ .............. ~,~·· ..,up 1-1 bdrm, pb61. Jae, adJt. _. P'kJrtdel.
)l.B. ao.mtorlG-Jl°D
Y•ea•he• ..; .. . . ~. .
WINNER
I
, .. ~ . '"' : ...... : =~ ~i. ... . ,o . . ..
~'~""'-()no8ftfrt11'1\
Ava1r nu-2 4 .. r I 'on
do l'fl-~'10-
'f'&rl) lbdf"ltl i.w ... u .. .J
l"~llln& Mii"' ~ b1a1 1 •
¥ar •' d "'-•• u~ ~JtJ 12ll1~ IV7i •
c ......... ll2J ..•••......••..........
,.~ Sd. 2 tia rrp1. ctb
hlllll6iht'r !'J11 ur l'l'tl
U$O mo bl lii5l ~ec•
\\ail nl•"' 073 jjj!.IJ2
!ISpm
\ t'f, L"lea11 :tiir 2tt.1 .. 111•1
.:•rage S775 mu
' 7dl>-1334,673-~ Huth
Studio. Ill C.:OM ~ 67S.32S7
HIO<'k to be11ch 2 Ur. li.:e
p\'\ palm, frpll', 1n11nal'
A•dll nuw Nil pt•ts
$725 mo lSt & ta:.t + !>et·
SIUO Ph 673 ltiUO
673-H671
L a rge 2 Br ~ Ha
• 1:1replat•t·, beam n~rl
inl?s . sun1Jto1·k, di.ii
garage Walk lo l.1ttl1·
t'orona Hearh. $61111 mo
&14 972(j,
2 Hdrm 2 bath Ot'W apt
Lower. $650. 213/5~·ll291
or 213/332·8345
N t!Wtif I Ut w 1(1111111111
AdulU. no 1~ ~ 1110
~ ~16'.
fl>L k Si':A."i4)NS A l'l'S
l:uuplt!. no I'd-'> I. llr I'~
bil twnhse .,al10. puol.
$370 7 3.5 J II AM 1)42 I tiOl
,whet z Ir. 2 ...
I IOO Sl.l fl. fpk. I miry
1l1'>hwr end gar. $.\50'
ll '>open St~ al at
lltJti c:111gl'r ~ .. 4400
lhr Iba, W\11.jUe apt 111
!>t!µerate h.-.t• ut1l J.1(1 SJS()
G42 3!1!">7 aftl'f G l\'e
me:>!>al(e
LKe thr. !bu "' vorch
avail now SJ50 mo 741
W Jame. St 'l " dnvc
by. then call 640-09!f7
llar, ~ ard, l(ar. th1ld pet
o k S4tJtJ :lbi Umt · i\.
llan11llon mspet•l then
I' a II 64 H.116:1
SHAH I' 2 BH, nt•w 1·pL-; &
paint. pvt yard. t'llt l
l(ar . C'h1ld OK $425 mu.
Call 546-511110, as k for
L1mla
Coda Mftcll 31l4 2 bdrm. 2 ha. l'•irix·ts.
•••• .. •••••••••••••••••• drupes. stovC'. rcfr1.: No
2 ... llCIApt childre n ur pl'ls
Newly decor. (;as pd, I $350/mu. 64&•l3!!2
e n c· I g u r . p o o I . El Toro 3832
d /washer. Adults. •••••••••••••••••••••••
642·5073 ·----ttEWL Y DECOR.
I Br. gas pd, encl ~ar,
d/washer, pool. Adults.
642-5073
31rTo~
Newly dt.>t•or. i:as 1xt ..
enl'I ~ar . po u l .
d w asher . /\cl u l ls
G<i:.!·5073
Newer I lir with garai:t•
SJ65. AdulLo;, nu pcls
64.'.> ~.S77
SJ<J5 2 Br. 11 , Ha A<lulb
only Cal OK. /\II hu1ll
ins. Bal('(Jf1y.
TSL Mgmt. 642 1603
l'IN to: liLU ...... A l'TS
Spac. 2 br. 2 ba. /\dull
complex, patio. view.
fr pk, encl gar . i.:as
s tove, dishwasher. spa.
lndry rm: l''rom SSOO
Sl'MC 1'3HiHY7
Lovt>ly 2bdrm. 2()a studio
w1lh frpk , patio. end
gar. Nt•wly dt'C'or S.'>.50.
!198 812ft.
l ,IK lo: new 2 hr. 2 ha, nr.
dwnlwn. $.175 mo
673-2113
Beautiful 21.lr 2ba $.'>.')(J
ll 's open. See il al
31116 Ginger :;.m.44410
I hr, ul1ls pd, l(ar. new
crpts. off street. adult
rouple, no pets. $395
768 7633. 5411·8251
3Br. 2Ba. frplc, ba<"kyd.
like new, nr s1•hl, $65(1
mo. 759-1040
Beaut. I yt'ar new 2 llr.
I ''2 lia. Cone.hi with r>ool,
j1tt.•uzzl. & cable TV in
dd. Yearly $.SSll. Bruker
675·4912
H•tifi9tw leach 3140 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Brand new I & 2 Bdrm
Pierpoint<' ('ondoe-; Pool.
!>pa , tennis. i:arai:cs
1213) 5Yfi.721f.! clys; (714>
K42·4721 eves.
Lo\'l•ly I. 2 & 3 Bclrm.
Townhouses. garaJ:l'.
palw. laundry fa<". S4SO
& $575. Call 21315!16 7202
or 7M/9QVi347.
THE WHIAUTRH
Luxury /\dult units at ar.
fordable Living. 1,2 & 3
Br. W.ell decorated .
Olympic· size pool. hi:ht·
('0 tennis l'OUrt. Jal'U1.ZI.
park like la ndsrnpmg
Most bt•autiful bid.: in
Jl.B.
1-'romSJOO 1146 061!1
Beauhfully localt.'<i 2 Br.
$375 & up. Child OK. <:as
incld. 842 1652.
Near 5 Puinl Shopping
Center. 2&J Bdrm. Apls.
$400-$450. Kidc; OK. no
pets. 964-2566 or 973·29'7 I
/\gt.. no fee.
I & 2bdnns, roUage style
linng, c h ild ok
$335-$350/ mo.
847·:.120
3 Blks lo ocean. 1 Br utils
paid. $375 mo. Carpel &
paint. 207Chicago. -------
Spacious 2 Br. L 'h Ba.
STUNNING lrJ? I Rdrm. New crpts, drps, built in
garden apt. Pool & rt't' slov~, g~l~o~-8258 _
area. 710W. 18th. St.
2 Dr. clean. I child OK.
$375/mo + dep. 590
Joann St. !">45·4529 or
213/598-1219 -----WISTLAICI ¥11..LAGol
Beautiful Adult Apll. No
pets. lmmed occupancy.
Pool, spa, lndry rm ..
gar . avail. Bach-$315.
lBr-$3115. 2Br·$4»-$440.
TSLMgmt
MS-8122or642·1803
MEAi THE IEACH
2 Bdrm, 2 bath, builHns.
patio, garage. Adults.
$475. 4922 F.dinger .
840·3808or1146-6234.
Nu lux 2 Br. 2 Ba: 3 Br. 3
Ba. Marble frpl. priv
washer/dryer, wet bar,
cntr vac. syst .. in·
lA!rcom, tile roman tub,
30' encl gar. Mile l-0 bch.
502 1 Dunbar .
714/84&-fl'iOl.
OoY\'f~t-~
b #pherv
~~~ tan~
(l.{(\(\j~-
Use ~It/ service
when placing your ad .•.. a
J).aily Pilot ad number-will
1ppear in your classified ad . . . we take your messages
24 hours a day . . . v.ou call
l.n at your convenience
~uring office hours and get
ttle response! to your ad ...
thls. service is only $7.50
tleek. For more Informa-
tion and to pt a~e your ad
call 6'2·5678.
--·· ···-·
LJ v l>i.n Kil. Patio eek
w/Japanese aarden .
1750 11~UMI.
L.,_.i..dt Jl41 .......................
I Bdrm. 3 blks from bch ,
Charming. $400 includes
uuht1t!ii. Avail immed .
1>61 1161 or 494·3672
............ ]169 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PARK tlWPORT
COWfl"IYCWI
UYIMCi
Singles. 1&2 bedroom
a pts. & townhouses
l''rom $449 644 1900
tll'eanfront for Winter
rtentals. 1-·urn1shcJ &
un furn, Brolwr. G75 4!112.
NU fEE' Apt & t'undo
rentals Villa Rentals
675 4!H:! Hrokl'r
2 Hr . I Ba. /\vall. now
Ar~a of lialboa & C.:oast
Hwy $525 mo J 0 .
P r o p e r t ...Y M..Jun L _
751·27tl7 /\ft . 5 prn .
548·8044
Wt•stc hH N.B aclult ('(IO·
do. $625 2 lldrrn. 2 hulh.
10 Slt'pS tu pool New
· c·arpctmg. yearly ll'asc.
/\gl. 759· 1616 .
$65(). 3 Br. 2 B<L fo:nC'lsd
garage. patio. walk to
beac h, adults . nodol!s
TSL Mgmt. 642· 1603
UPPl!:lt IJuplt•x apt :1 br
2 ba. frpl. y r rouncl S(;(JO
mo. 673·2113
3 Br. 2ha 933 W. Balboa.
U1s hwsr. frpk. laund
hookups , garuJ.:t'. 1, hlk
to bt•h. S7 50 m o
Isl/Last. St'<'Untv 1\\':111
now Call bi3·2'.!ii2 from
9 5 pm.
LAS lllSAS APTS.
AT Bl-~/\C.:11
Ocean \'lew. pool. lt•11111s '
t•uurts. ad1L5. Bac h . t&2
bdrm from '$420. f>!'>l5
Hiver Ave. 642 2566
Wlking lo bch I & 2hdrms
from $350
645-~
Chffhaven 2 Br I B;i,
p ati o . garal(l'. nu
erpts /drapes. older
adults , no peL'i $450 yr
ly.548·~
New 2 Rr. I ba. /\<lull~. no
11ets . S475. Hy A ppt
645-3864
Charming !Br Versailles
condo. Isl rloor. pvt.
patio. Was model unit.
View of f0W1tain. Lots or
privacy. Full seturity
w /guarded gale. S52S.
752-2310 days. Sot<>-7576
eves.
Across rrom beach. 2Br.
just painted. $625/mo,
yearly. ~826.1
E. Bluff. spac. lbr. pool.
quiet, secure area.
Adults, nopet.,, $445/mo.
644-4767
BeaC'on Bay. 2 Bdrm 2
Bath . Upper unit or
Bayfront home. $750 per
month, yearly. utilities
included. Available now.
675·8669
1 BR-pool-blk to
~---... edult ... mo . ..,...
OCMaW
Yearly.' br Duplex A.-,1TM110
S....L...-3116 .......................
........................
Seawill Village
New .1112 bdrm luxury
adult apts in 14 plans
from $415, 2 bdcm from
$505 + pools. tennis.
waterfalls. ponds' Gas
for cooking & heating
paid. From San Diego
1-'rwy drive North on
lieach lo Mc Fadden
then Wt-st on Ml' Fadden
t u Seawtnd VIiiage
( 714 !8!13-5191.1
ldoM• 4000 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Laguna Jkach Motor Inn.
!*85 No Pacific Coast
Hwy . La)(una Bearh.
Daily. Wt.>ckly, Ktl('hcn
available. l.<1\\ winll•r
rates. 4!W·s:!!W
N . l:l o <' 1.· u n r r o n l
w1kitt•henetle. $260 &
llJ!· t1 I pd . 2306 W.
( keanfronl bi3 41~.
Huum fur rent in h~e
I miry. frpll', I m1 fr11m
O<..:c S ltl.5/mo. !157 3!155 I
llmmte to shr new 3br,
priv I.la. sundcck "On"
T .V lndry fac S225 ut1l
pd. 631·6186C.:.M. .
F non s moker wants
l'harm1og f11rn1 ~ht•d ' sameto shrspuc.ious ll.B
garden view rm pvt en I t•ondo. $325 mo, ulll ind.
lrarH't' S5o "k Laguna 840·6263Janke
Heh. 4!j4.9575 --
Private room. furn or
unrurn Kit. W:JShl'I" &
dryer pn,-. Share huth
Sl51J mo. + sso n·ru11cl11
ble dcurung dcp. A\':&11
. Jan 17 Doi: lo<t·n; only.
Call Mt ll'Mfl42·H03k.
i\\•;111 now 2 lovt•ly nM>rns
& bakooy w IJ\'t bath .
klt e h c 11 pr1,· F or
mature prur l'l'r~un .
S2!.f5 mo 1st + last. S75
l'leanrn.: <ll'P· 675-5533.
645·64\l!j.
Mature adult to share
2Br, 2Ba. N H t·ondo
S275. 640. 7332.
Fem. non·smkr. 111·25
prer Share w same
2lir, 1 1 ~Ba apt in CdM .
Fr pk, pool. S2f10 uli I. .in
d . 7~!l·ll312
3 /\n·h Hay. J>n " rm. ha.
cnt, beach S2'J5 + ul1I
4!19·4722e\'es wknds
Rc·sp . female• '/.7 share
new plush twnhs <'
" resp working fem ah•.
t.aJ,luna Bt•a<·h . l'vt. U nbelit>vablc 'rooms.
room. hath. $200 Non overl ookin~ brook &
smokl·r. bus prof.. 411 +. waterfall Pool. jacu7.7.I,
494.0451. lake, E'll'. $250. Nwpt1CM
area 645-6325 ~~~;!:4!'!!!~ .... ~!~~ Office Rftltd 4400
DOYOUUKE
MOTB.S?
Weekly rentals from SK4
& up. 646 74<t5. 22i4
Newport Blvd. l'.M
v*=cltion.llewtds 4250 1
1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
"C.:AUFOllNli\""
l'alm Sprmi:s
Condorrunium Rentals
Luxury <.:.ondomimums.
<.:omplet.ely 1-'urnishl'<l.
Country <.:luh Setting.
Golf. Tennis Avail
able al Special Hates
for our Clients only .
Weekly. Monthly uml
Weekend Renl<lls.
Call: (714 I 328·8911
CATHEDRAL C/\N YON
COUNTHYCLUB
34.567 Cathedral
Canyon Drive
Palm Springs.
California 9'Z2G2
Des ert Hesort Really
4bdrm. 2ba condo on
North Shore of Tahoe.
fo~ully furn. 5/min from
North Star $400/wkly.
957 ·3226. 5:1).3946 Rert.
I
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1617 Wesl<'liff. N.tt. Want
finanC'1al inst 7000:s.f.
Isl. rl~r. Agent 541 5032.
KOLLCE:MTEI
NEWPORT
to:legant exerul1ve suites
1n pres tige loc atio n
With l'Ompletc support
servkes.
714/851-0681
250-500 sq. n. i.:rntl nr.
utils pd. fo'rom $200. 779
W 19th. St. <.;.M . Tom
957·1900.
PLAZA
EXECUTlVE sums
''There is a differente. ··
714/752-0234
2082 Michelson Ur. 11212
2021 Business Cnlr 11213
Costa M1Sa 17th St
3 Room suite, 545 sq. fl..
modern building. A/C.
plenty or parking. Call
He alonomics 675-6700
Exec offices· Newporl
Bch/airport area, suit es
w t tax library, con·
ference rm. copier. full
services. lmmeo oc·
cupancy 83.1·8990 ------
1200 sq fl. Orange Co .
. ·ri.--.... ~ of HU•1toa aell, •I=~ offlee1-*' ...... ... ,..... .......... . "· ·~--:..::~··-... ft. .,..u
appolat.d at 7 per
... ft.fW...U.eall Ra>CAAPST ......
*DELUXE OFACES•
From I room up lo 2300
sq. rt Low rates. No
lease required. 2172 Uu
Pont Dr. Adj A1rporter
Hotel. 833-3223. 9:12
DB.UXE
OFACESPACE
in Newport Center's
Design Plaza SI.SO per
rt for 914" 3 urftl'C'~ i-
recpl. area. More avail
Call John Api:ar at
6411·5~7 or &l6 ITT83
lusiness R.ntal 4450 •••••••••••••••••••••••
For store & offlt e s pa1·e
at reasonable rates .
500 to 2700 Sq Ft.
M F:Si\ VERDI-: Dlt
PIJ\7.A
1525 Mesa Verd(• E. C M
545-4123
<.:U MMEH C.:IAL
STORl'~S. Shops Total
1400 sq rt at 38' & up Any
Sl7.e . t:. Side (.' M.
548-7249.
Now You
Can
Sell
More
,. Ith lhll\ l'llot
l't,"li'V l'l:'lif'tH:K
\I>.., "''Ill •mh •2.
,, \ •• ' ' f .. •• ,, .. fl ,, '
111111 •• tlt·ll)~ \ .dUl'lf
11 ,.1,,,p,11 E .11 h
,Hl •l!l 11111;,I 11111• 10,
•1111\ 1~11 1•11 Iii•· lv.11
I( ,1 \ ._ \ •1 I I \ 1111
..,, n1 ru•·t ct•' t .1rl '
<•T~ t·cl 1·1i;11·J.!1·
\'1111 1' 1'•·1111\ l'1rn ·l11·1
\ti •1 I II ~ 1• \11 U 1
l!Jnk ,\mt·rac·111 ti
,.,,,. •11 .\l:..~t··n·:1rd
F11r mon · u1l•1rntJi 111n
and Ill IJIJl"t" ~HUI ,11f 1 JI!
642-5678
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Sl'nl>e> Lllhe
Knife Awhile
LIKfo.'WISE
The moot unusual l111M
ncss 1m·1tati0n I "ve C\'!'r
re('ei ved j u!>t s a 1d
"This meeting "'II~ at
ll'n o'clock sharp \'11u
arc requested to ht•
LIKEWISE."
Lost&F....t 5300 •••••••••••••••••••••••
.
FOUtlJ ADS
Newportstoreorofrttt• ARE FR££
548 s ir. nr post•ofril'e I
Jerry 213'477 11101 ~ Call:
Commercial I 642-5678
.. ~~~ ......... !~!.~ ---------
Store SpaCl' for ll'a:sc. I -
1500 sq. ft. & l:!tiCl sq rt Lost or round a pet ·1 C.:all
in Huntin~lon Heilt h. Animal Ass 1s tann•
F I e x i b I e t er m :. . l~eague. 537-2273. No rec
2131596-7202. --Industrial._... 4500 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2265' lndus'l/office 18IOI
Redondo Cr. •O. H.B.
S650 lse 842·2834 --Storage 4550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Approx. 6,000sq rt. avail.
in Fountain Valley near
S.D. Frwy. Sl32Q mo
John S56-9360. 548·7533.
Storage garage for rent.
On Balboa Pen. next to
run zone (101'7ft. xzo•,aft. )
673·2943. 673-~.
R...talsW..twd 4600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Mal. pleasant lady wants
1 or 2 bdrm uni' apt near
waler by 2/1/. 992-2269
wknds Irene 759-0833
bus. hrs.
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
•Found or lost a pct"
Call us• we· re the l'ct
Pals. 1714 17~2988
REWARD. Lost white
remale Samoyed. llunt
Bch.~~
Lost. CAT. gray & while
male. HB 536-4978,
830·0136. 892.5864
Lost: BIKE. Blue Man's
t•ruiser. Schwinn
Balboa Island. Reward
675-8771 eves.
LOST: Fe male POQ<llc
puppy. Irvine Shoppinl(
Cent er, C ulver &
Sandburg. $50 Reward.
552·8280 or 496-1431
Lost: brown & black cat.
rem ale. Santa Ana Hgts.
reward. 546-2848
Lost. Benji type dog
Light brown bla<"k
557-6035
Found Cocker /Terrier
mix , black & brown
female. Toy Poodl~.
brown r em11 le
Shepherd /Dobie, bla<'k
& tan m11le . Saint
Bernard, young female.
Golden Retr eiver.
female Newport Reach
Animal Shelter. 644·3656.
Lost Lab bla<"k female
un 1 2 1 30 /HO i n
Nurthwood . Irvine
73t 1487'
LOST · Fem Gra y
Sht>pherd cross mix. Lie
l IJS74 Holsa Chica
YI c 1-'adden 89'7-4014
I.OST Blk Lab, Fem.
chain collar. Deerfield
11rea. Irv 12130 eves
55 1·4S02 , 556 7841
-K-&WAJW
LOST · Whl Tov Poodle
F em '"Buffy··· out of
town tat.(s. please call
548·8328
FUt.:ND. Benji ty pe dug,
hlk Tgry •wht Fem
962-1288
'•nOftals 5350 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PHE LAW student ncedi.
$25.000 Will du ilnyth1ni:
Leg a! C.:onfid1·nti al
UV ~ I' 0 Box 3242.
:-.. ~-!12663
TU~~y·s
OFNEWPUHT
t-;SC.:OHTS i5:l ~:Jtll!
•FOXY LADY•
OCTC/\LL ONLY
VISA :'>1C * 972-1131 *
ATLAMT1S MASSAGE
SPA
Be Pampered
Bea ut Girls
llJA~f 4P~I 7
Phone 645-3433
IH' lfi
Open
d ;1 ys.
•• SP IRIT UAL
READINGS
IOam-10 pm . Fully
Llc 'd . 492·7296 or
492.9034 1815 S. Camino
Real, San Clem
~~& ~,. ..... •••••••••••••••••••••••
Jobs Wcmftd, 7075 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Ambitious man s eeks
position w/growing ('0.
willing lo invest +
travel. 673-8011 --------· H.tpW_... 7100 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Ac.counting
•A/Rs.Msor
•Night Aalitor
Sev:~~t!!trgk op-
port unitieli "-Xilil for ex.
perienced & qualified
a ccounting people
Prest igious hotel offers
ex<·ell. benefits indud·
ing free meal per s hift.
Apply 9AM-Noon. Mon.
Fri. Personnel MARllOTT~OTB.
900 Newport Center Dr.
Newport Beac·h
E2ua1 ?pr Emr 1rr M, ...
Ar ARTMIHT MGR.
Hu~hand and wife for 311
unit!i. Coola Mesa /\duh
complf'x. s alary & 3
Bdrm 2 Bu apt H33· 13'it
cl y ' . 5 5 7 7 fi 3 0 c• \' s •
wknds .. Dave
Arl'h1tcl'ture
Jt>BCAPTAI:'\
S H. DijAl'ISPl-:HSO:-.IS
Xlnl opportunity with
Nl'Wport licaC'h offlc·e
W. Hyll't' AIA &1\1 2912
Al""fOM(YJ'l\'1-: * ASSISTAMT
IODY SHOP MGR.
Pt•rmanl'nl. pl1>.1s:..11l
working t•onditi11ns 111
busy s hop' Soml' ex
p er1encl' prt•ferred .
Good pay Upp for ad COMPATAllUTY \'ani;emcnl See Mr.
LIFESTYLESOCIETY WrighL
Couples On!~ 75'H>674 HOW ARD Chevrolet
SJ? I !'>1 en t >nly 75'! 0677 · l>O\'e & ~ail Sts
Sgl Ladies Onl~· in I 7!17!) N l::W POHT H l':i\CI I
lk l·orcled .\ll's~a.:l' 2~ I Hr~ Al"TU!'ttm 1n: rAKTs
COVER GIRL
* OUTCAU *
!153·0778 ~IC VISA
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
r..+yo.cen.
• 972-1345 *
MC & VISA Al'<·cpted
TUUCH A CLAs.5
ESCORTS
752.Qm
Lady, yng 60. wd hke
compatible companion
social. travel etc .. fin
secure non smoke. M F.
495·6928.
MERCEDEZ
•ESCORTS*
S45·793S 24HltS
Man 37 nds fem, for cow
boy dancing <'ri;e Wed
730. Jesse646-8234 -------
COUKIUMAN
D(•alersh1p or ron·1~n
auto parts exper1en1·t·
preferred. Call Glen for
an a l!_J>!.>1ntment
ROY CARVER
ROUS ROYCE
AM>IMW
64G-6444
* AllrO SALIS
AND LEASING!
Get set for 1981 & the J
Car ~ Neal Chevy s tt1re m
exC'1ting Airport 1n
dustrial <·omplex will
add 3 combinatio n
salespe~ no~ for E7.
straight sell & lease .
Generous pay & demo
plan. Auto. expen ent·e
nol required. but pre·
vious selling helpful. See
Sales Mgr,_ HOWAllDChe•rolet
Dove&Quail Sts,
NEWPORT BEACH
VIiia Balboa Condo. New
large 2 Br. Pool & Rec
rm. Nice view. $700 mo.
675-3007. Lar~e Big Bear Cabin
Pool table, color TV. 2
frplcs, sips 14. 545·6916
Airport area. $400t mo.
675-9819
5075 Wflftlllf' H.I.
....... HelpW..t.cl 7100 H.tpWmihd 7100 Opp o......., 5005 ••••• ••••. ••••••••••••• ••• • ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
BABYSl'ITER-Live In. I
yr old girl. Salary + lov
ely room & bath Dover
Shores. NB. 752·2197
2 Br Spacious new decor
near Oceanfront $600
mo. Yearly. 675-7045
Easlbluff. 2Br. 2Ba.
frplc. $600. Dishwasher.
patio, no pets. dbl. gar.
644·0685 or 631 ·2029.
Steps to the bch. Imm ac
2 br. oversized patio.
$625 mo. 642·8235. Ask
for Berit.
-..
Palm Springs Hous e .
Yearly or monthly ren·
ta l. 3 Bdrm. 4 ua. pool,
jac, sauna. Canyon
Country Club area.
Completely fur n .
$1500 /mo , yrly
'2000/mo. + util. C~IJ.
Mrs. Long 714/645·5917.
1·323·3902
Great location, pror
bldg. l.Alls ol par kinR.
875 sq fl. S600 mo. 300 sq
rt. $200 mo. (213 ) 395·9981
collect.
E stablished Bible Book
Store, CM. Good oppty.
646·6386, l ·993-56.'>S
Morf99I. Trwt -" Dffcli 50]5 rll .. H.1.LOC
Suites for lease, one
742sf. one 8108( on Beach
.Blvd. btwn Edinger &
Heil. For info. call Jill:
848-9929.
• •••••••••••••••••••••• s ...... ..,.co.
All types ol real estate
invest menu since 1949.
to Lo. 5025 ......., to..... 5025 M.ey to..... 5025 ·············································· ....................... .
s,.cW• 1• WTDI
642-2171 545-0611
NEED MONEY.
I
If you need money for any rea11on and you need it fast. ttive us a (·all. We
won't ask you a lot of personal questions or put you through tht' 3rd
degree l-0 gel a loan. You'll find us nice lo talk to and easy to deal with.
I tsl. 2nd. 3rd Real Estate loans.
• I l500 to U00.000
I All types ol property
I Any Callromta •~a
I No credit check
I Your equity only ~lerentt nffded a Even If behind In peyment1
S Use money for any reaaon
S Peyment _plan m•.Y be tellored to your ~le\
S No belloon peyment ilecaa~ry
I lnternl only loens evelleble
S No cillturblnt your lltloe.
I Compare our c;otu with otl)ers
S App 'ta your home or our otnce
For Information cell
GOLDEN . PtAN ·of _,CALIFORNIA.
°""every ur. .. 1. ·~ lunday For App t. Call Collect ·
(JU>•l.O.O
" JIU Padfle AY•r · Loni Beacb, Ca • ..,. . . .
-Otft09 'nlrou1hout
C•Utomia. C.U Toll tree roromc.....,.you
I 111 .. ?tt.t Ctll'-"*'• .... --.
BANKING
We ..... • f9w cWce :•Ill • fw ; 'fl14 wwl ~· •4 ~ ........... t w ....... • arww= •••• ..._. 6 ..... ef co•t1.... • .,.... ...... HHllHt ....... . co•..,. ....._
e.,.... •pul • ...:
•Tellers •Messe"98r
•Analysis Clerk
w ................ ..
•Accounts Services .... ........ ......
ftlt pa ..... rt-H ....... ,._ __ •h'lli-.-.
PATMAQIU
. (714J?ll HDO
.. •
Onvewa~. .-r~lna lut
r•palra, H•lc-o•t1n1
"'5 ""*.it w A&1 I Lac'd ............... •••••••••••••••••••••••
F.tlrtlla l•rr•t.r111I Str vlc• iH l' 11 ll r
G v•)mil' i,.,.11 t.:lem~rM.e M ~'7 c 0 -•• !':! ••• !! •••••.•••.•••
C\'JfOM lNTt:RIOR
CA fC P ..:N'I' tt \'
ft) J11) ~ --
20 \ r• ~ tw~1"11
Homt'-llf'fl<'t' Kolll l>vdi
·'' ns..~ 548 smi
HUM~ RU'AI K~
IOI "'l l'wl 1·11b111 .. ta
1.1HK tU:."lluV.\Tlt-.G
~:r74ll
lhnor ~&JOI" Reµa1rs
Remodehnii ~ 8!161 or w 2.464
CspetS... ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'ar~t Uphol Uymg &
Cleaning Rob b i n ~
Master l'arJWl Oyer~
673· 73.S7
lbampw • uam dHn
t'olor brtihl...,..I Yt'ht
c.ll'h IU nun blt'ach
ClHn lh'. dUl rm. hall ll~ Av1rm17 :it> ('-Ouch
a1u r hr U Ouu
.. 11u11u•1 .. ""' u~ur C •rV4't r.,...ur I~ )'ra Ill
111• n ti'"'" Uu ""''" tn) 11clf ltd11 Ml OWi
W t' (.'111t• l:M llJ «!l
V!t'•Ot'R S*\'Mlll ~ 'ltillO &
l Jlhuls Wu1 II !iUMr
'I' I U 1' k Mt> IHll I 111 I
tl4.\ 37 111
c ...... ;c-• .......................
I' oundauotu; Ht>t1un111g
W.iili; HJllJ.1Ue tte~lora
llO ll Slal111 .,a11u:.
&lot k & l;ir11·k Lit·
64:1 13i1,t'\'~
c ..... •••••••••••••••••••••••
l>e!>1gn F'ln11n1•1ni.: .mu
Coni.trul'l aon If yuu
don l get my fri:t-csl I\
could l'1.a1l yvu vlcnty'
\Lit· 113'1"711 1 IWli-\657
SEU. idle items with a
Daily Pilot Classified
Ad. 642·51'78.
,. ..... -
Top Qulil °"1iendab&e
S.rvke ~ Ral4111 1'
YUH~.5'31·~
t:u:crRll'IAN pric:eJ
r11M. free •tim11ttt on
l•r1• or llUll jobs.
l.ac l:&:l'r.l.W fn:t·036U . -. •••'I ······~················ t;.ard•n11y11AJM111l'&1Plnl rr«1e trim ... remove,
dean ups ... rt'e est
ltuaonable 75.2 1:w1r
Toppt!CJ1removt!d. clean
ups, lawn renov 751 3476
Steve's Lawn Servu:e
Mow. edge & tnm ... 'ronl
& bat•k Neal wurk
Average $JO. IS47·2146
HB
........ s.mc.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Experienced ad market
mg ex~ulive w media
l•X perience will create
print ads. marketing
sales letters. rad1u
s pot s , newsletters .
broc·hures antl I' H. Call
675·1230
·----· -
....... -.... ,,..~ • ..-----·~·· .. ..&--·~--.-~..-.-.·~~ .. ----..,......------------.-.....-..-------.._.----_....._-~ ........ --
.........
Compl. MO detallin1 •. PU Ii deliv. Call the
Pra., .,..mt, 11•1•
H~• ..... ················~
JACK 0 1'' A.LL T RADES
Plumbina. elec. heatinJ.
oddlo~ 636·8862
Home Improvement, .25
yrs exl)'. Fences, carpen-
trt • Paintina~ 831 ·~
~ ...........
···················w· HARDWOOD FLOOR'S
<.:leaned & Waxed
Anyli~~~--4881 S.A.
H ..... •••••••••••••••••••••••
Hauling & Dump J obs.
Ask for Randy
5'l9-4368
Cleanups, trimm1nR &
hauling Freeeslimates.
557·8271
Hauling, YardClean-ups.
Handyman Jobs.
J err. 646-9461
Sell idle items 642-5678
---........... ___ .......... _... ... ..__. ..
Haul. de-.up, comrete
removal. Dump truck.
QWcklerv. M2·7831
"-•d11l. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Want a REAU.YCLEAN
HOUSE? Call Gin1ham
Girl. Free est. 645-5123
MliB Winter Sp. Clean-
ing, painting, carpentry.
Uc'd/Bonded. S46-28M,
979·6149 -----Housecleanilfg done.·
thorough & erricienl.
Refs . C all Kathy ,
631-1823
Housecleaning. Reliable.
good work. steady job
Ref's 646-7228
&..chc~~-
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Renovating·Rototilhng
Sprinklers·lawns-clnups
Dave 642-48.53
Bud646-8481 -------Maowy •••••••••••••••••••••••
Custom bric k. slune.
blor k, l'Ofl<'rele. stut•t·o.
Refs . Free est. 549-949'.!
Brickwortl, Small Jobe.
Newport, Colta Meaa •
Irvine. 875-3175 ev•. ...... ... •••••••••••••••••••••••
Movloa? The Staryln1
Colle1e Student.I Movln1
Co. has if'OWll, Insured
same good service.
ll T124·06 License.
641·8427 ----Mln ... s.nlcft •••••••••••••••••••••••
LVN desires pvt duly
nurse position. full or
P IT, days or eves. Will
houseclean, s hop o r
cook, Mature. reliable.
CdM refs. Shirley Dys
760· Ul37 eves 496-6842
PaiftffRcJl'r•rilMJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
Painting & Papering
Prof. work l"ree est.
Rsnbl Steve 547·"281
l>AV E'S PAINTING
Serving Area 9 years
M ost Jlt-a'>C>l'la b I e
Insured. he'd 586-8425
Find what you want in
Daily_P~l~_ <:.!!s.sif!.!d~. _
I•• -
RALPH'S PAINTING
lnt./ext. Prompt, 24 tan.
lie., neat, refa. 982·4701
Fine ext/Int paintinl by
Richard Sinor. Uc, inl .
Try me. &55555 (24 hrs>
Palnlina & Papering
Wallp,aper removal
Guaranteed
Paul Cutler 962·3006
30% Diac thru Feb,
Perfectiopisl. I do. my
own work. Curt 978-1314
exl 1004 ____ .......__ ___ _
REASONABLE PRICE
lnt./Ext. Free est.
CWlt. wortt6J6.9453Jack ......,...,.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Photo Jownalist-capture
th e decisive Thom
Young will s hoot your
modeling l'Omposites &
product 11lustralion.
Rates negotiable.
548-5113
Trade your old stuff for
new good ies with a
Classified ad. 642-5678 ------··-----
Neat e.~ • tuturea
"'"... nJ..14Jt
........... " ... *
All Typea 538-7113 ....... , • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Plumbing, Remodeling,
Repairs, Leak Detel'·
tion, 6 Drailla Cleared.
Top Hat Plumbin&
636·2030
r.o .... ..,.-
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Pvt POlll Box Service
THE MAIL ROOM ; 24
hr
2600 E Cst Hwy CdM·N 8
640-0340 or 644·4481
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
JOB HUNTING? Make
your Isl impression on
an employer really
count. Call M Curr
646·3806 eves.
• • '*
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•Stucco, Repair/Const.
Free Est. Cieorfe
54&-UMl
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Tree & Shrub trimmina.
removal, yd clean·u1>9,
hauling, concrete, dirt.
Jim Corum63J.4530
,,,..~-·-____ , ... __
Fast accurate typing on
IBM Correct/Selectric,,
other secretarial work,
business letters, re· F
sumea, etc. Karen.
6'75· 1230
WltMlowCIH1tJng •••••••••••••••••••••••
"Let The Sunshine In"
Call Sunshine Window
Cleaning, Ud. 548-88.SJ
Home & Commerical
C hri stmas s igns
washed. C.:a ll Steve
646-1957
lloofincJ 'lassined Ads ar, the .e•••• •••••••••••••••••• answer to a successful
New & rerovers. Hei1air garage or yard sale! ll 's
s pee i a lisll s tay. busy a better way lo tell more
y rices. Rel!a_ble. 548.Cl5t~ peopl~~ ______ _:_
Hetp Wtllhd 7100 W •ted 7 i 0-0 Help W •ted 7100 Help Wmilhd 7100 Help Waftted 7100 Help W •hd 7100 Help Wonted 7100 Help Wcded 7100 Help Wanted 7100 •...•..•...............•...................... ···················~··· ....•••..•......•...•.•..........................•..•.............................................•..•.........•.•......................•..
Bank 1 n g R c p uh 11 c CLERICAL General Ofrl<·c Help fur Hotel Front Desk Clerk. Prc·st·hool Receptionist. front offke, Sales Part lime.
Federal Saving~ ha~ Beauty p T oppty 2 3 hrs. day busy sub-contructiVl• of-Apply to Ci11dy, s urf & Hunet ~/LYN TEACHERS rull lime. for busy Costa Indal Comult.t
opening for full tune HAllSTYUST Flex s<·hed. nr airport r1 ee . t:Kp ht•lpful Sand Hotel, Laguna Heh We nct'd you now fur To s tart immediatelv. Mesa G.P, Musl have Wi.11 train. Prefer ex
teller . full time new We are vruud or nur attru<'tivc offi<-c will Scheduling. typing. ftl · 497 -4477 staffrtllil'f /u·ut1>hospl . Part time or full tim'e m edical experience '" perience an women's re-
accls. PiT teller Salary salon & stylists' Busy train, 11ppt. 833-3474 mg & phones, 548·5541 ull shifts. Desi~n your Pre-school.1!57-1263 r e c c Pt ion w o r k · tail sales.
+ fringe ben ef1li.. Npt lkh salon is Rrow -• . uwn work w~. New ~~--S8SQ~mo. to start. €all 5'46·1821 556-9333
• Lagmra Ntg1WI. 495.08.'iO mg agarn, orte-rlng~-rop-Cler1fitt--Typtst. full .or HOUSECLEAN I': HS pay ralc.-s. PRINTING 646-1631. ~ i" () ... µa y rel ire ml' n l parll1me. Xlnl opp Rita GENERAL omcE To $5/hr, car. ~-5123 Best Nurses lteg1slry Pressman needed to run RECEPT10NIST ~[1F~~l ·l94 ' '· ' m ed 1 ca I & dt"-n 1 a I EleClronics. 6.11-5031 c·osla Mesa 7!).t-6771 Itek plates 00 multi 1250.
-----vacation plans & much CLlllC Register today for llll•al HOUSEKEEPER Anaheim 956·3430 Experience necessarv. -Fp'orr Mt<di c al C linic.
Banking
TEllER
NEW ACCOUNTS
FUU.TIMfo~
Position available m our
So. Coast Plaza office.
Exper. req'd. Call Kathy
Ambur"ey · ~4066. 1
more <.:ompareourtotal ---temporaryassignments t or 2 daysi wPek. Ask Paidmedical&d~ntat.J• re e r mature !Jt-rson
k F · k M ' " w backqrOWld m nutri· earn i ngs pa e a g e ortl<' et agency. on. 557-0045 forMaggie.494-4409. uu1.r•~ •SSOC da)' week Call 951·9500 th I 1 L• • OAM 3PM w II ----• " .,.,_. tton & pre\·e nl lve w o er sa ons. n<'rease r rt. 1 · . 1 Laguna II.ills. your followmg & t'am -train. Appl : 557-921 2. H 0 USE K F. E PER 10 month position . ml'dac:ine Lile bkkpg.
angs µotenllaL. Apply m Newport Stationers In<'. r-M.. Lin-Weekend relief Rella-Golden West C.:olll.'ge. Production wagt•~ open Ask for
person: -------U \• -ble. mature woman to l2PM ·~.30PM Mon P<trtt1me Mnn 2.3(11'~1· Elv1e855-4001.499·4087
J .C. PENNEY I CLontESTIMI llMPOl!ARV PIRSO .. Nll \111\11~ I live-in With same. Ht'f's Thurs. 81\M-SPM dFr1 'finish. Tur,,. 1 OOPM
24 Fashion Island. N A. Hiring for parl lime I req'd. 644-2120&673.2991 d<ty' Possible 8wk~ ur-finish. Will lrain. Apply REC.rlOMIST
fo;.0 .E. . Mt F ~:~l~e!.~~·~t~l~er ,l!~~~ HOUSEKEl'~PER, ~xµ'd. ~~1;,s:~~~:r b~~~};'t~ 164iOPlacentiaAve l'..M G.-rdOffice
----------------"•-r-• -3PM lhru d1Mer Must Sl355-Slfi.St ,mo. Apply in PROGRAMMER TY P • n K "" P <' r
llUCPG/ASST. •COOK have knowledge of rook wrlling liy Jan 12. Id ANALYST ASST n ec-essar y . Ncwporl
Payroll/Personel /Job GUARDS mg&. serving. Pt•rma C'oa s t Co mmunit y Ce nter. Prope rt y Cost For urban design NEEDED* nent.6Jl-ll3J Colleges. 1370 i\dums (Jual1f1ed person to management. P-crma
CAUFDRtlA firm ,s al c·ommensurate IM.....-... -..y f''ull & part time All -----Avc. C<.t>ta Mesa 9'.!fi2fi. an.ilpe develop ap nent Phonr 644-l,016. w exp Pleaue send re· _..,.... areas. Uruforms furn 'd. IMMEDIATE 55fi-5!M7. KO 1-:. M F pllc·alauns & software
FEIDAl sum e 10 PBR 18012 Full Time Days. Apply Agei; 21 or over, retired OPBilNG pru~rt.1m~ for c·ompull'r RECEPTIONIST
Sk kC" 1 927 inperson.DickChurch's wt>lcome.No exper.nl'l'. NURSING pro cc s s 1 n g Full time Mon Fri y_par ir.!v· ___ l4 Rest. 2698 Nt•wport Appl y : U niv e r s al Forqualirit'd L VN part tamt' 11 7 $1fi51 s2'0 '11 •mo Must be personal>lt· & !:~!t~ ~~!~R{:~r:!D!c~. ~ty~--c~~· ~o;~~ti~ .. ~~~:· ~~: s9~~t1r ~';'~t~-~:' Convalt·s ~~~~~·:~t~fin~eb~e~:!~ ~~1~tT~~U:!~',;uti1ircr1j~'c;
CoslaMesa.CA92626 h el pful. Apply in COOK lnlerviewhrs:!l-12&1·4, DATSUN J an.13,lloCoaslCom-quires g00<1 spelhnJ,! &
Equal Opportunity person · The VlllaJ(e Inn. Mon· l"ri. 131-1375 493-3375 munity Colleges. 1370 penmanslup No l ypinl(
Employer l27 Marine Av, Balboa Opportunity exists for Ask for fo'red Sanders OFACI CLlllC Adams Ave. Costa Mesa Phone experaenc:e vn•
-------·--_-•_ Is land. , reliable person to work Hairstylist Our invoice oHke is 92626. 556-5047 . E.O.E. rerred t-'ull comµany
as a breakfast Cook for Help ! We are turning l.Afil)SCAPE s eeking an individual M/F. benefils Apply l'l'n·
Banking IOOICKIB'IR/n
Approx 20hrs wk, Tustin
Ari\ AIR. payroll. Call
lf.32·1960 or mail resume
to PO Box 18884, Jrvine.
Ca . 92713 ·
-----~ lo atf111per r /T
one or our ho l c I away business. In need MAIMr. FOREMAN with a pleasant manner nysaver. 1660 Plarenl1a res taurants. Short ordt•r or 5 full service stylists & the ability to use the P/lime. 7days. 2hrs1dai-Ave. C011ta Mt>Sa.
cooking experience pre· for our progressive Minimum l yr up. in 3 lO-key accurately. Al ly, AM delivery, L.A.
ferred. Enjoy e11cell. ~alon. ~~ train· man crew supervision least lyr ol office exper. Times. $100 per week.
company benefits. App· mg. Gu..-.....-.. salary. $1000·$1250 per mo. S is required. We offer an Laguna Beach. 494-8496 ly 9AM·Noon. Mon·Fri. loads ofbenelits. Please days . Ask for Rom I 646-'l«l 11lnl. benefit package in· rUIUC -.110HS Personnel cal:54&-T186. -----elud i ng d isco unt
MAIRIOTTHOTa HARDWARESALES MAIDWAMTl:D privilege, medical, den-
900 Newport Center Dr Apply In person: Crown Seaciiff Motel, 1661 So. lat & life insurance, pro-
Newport Beach Hardware, UJ'lA Irvine, Coast HW . Lag Bch. Cit-sharing & pension
RESEARCH ASST I
Coastline College. Foun-
l a in Valley. seek s
qualified person for re-
search in de\lelop1n11
tele c ourses le: C I S
courses. through Junt!
'81. $1424-tl734/mo. App·
Sales
SHOES
MEH'SSUITS
FINEJEWB.RY
We have rull lime C'Om-
mission sales openings
in the above depart·
ments for qualified sell·
ang spet1ahst.s We offer
the best benefits pro-
gram or any retail com
pal'J.Y,
Apply an person· J.C
Penney!>, 24 Faslrion
Island, Newport Beach
Jo:() t:;,MIJo'
SC TRY /RECEP'T
Tra1le ussot•1at1on in
trv1nl' 1 J;:arl offa·c
Gcn·1 ofr dulaes. good
se<'rl'tarial skills nee·
752·28.'i2
Se<•y Airport l;iw firm.
Good skills. or~anized.
bral(hl Nt1n·s mkr, J osie
851 9025
SECIET ARIES
Xerox 850 operators for
e11panding company ,
Top pay for top people.
t' T or PIT FlexiWe
h ours . Ncwpurt
, ~:z~;;,'.:_rial Ser vices-.
Newpo rt Beach offiCl'
seeks full lime Teller.
Ex per. preferred. Lile
typing, 10-key adding
machine. We offer good
starting salary & com·
pany benefits Qualifit'd
applirants please coll
Phyllis lm o nta ,
714-644-7255. WES,,_. flDERAL
Work for Npt. Bch. rltr.
3day wk. Top pay!
f'ree& E.O.K
Irvi n e Pers onnel
Agency
Equal OW Emplyr M/F <WestcUrf Plaza} N.B. 494-4892 plan.
HEAR US Otrr! Texas
Refinery Corp. offers an
opportunity ror high in·
co m e PLUS c ash
bonuses and fringe
benefits In the Costa
Mesa area. Regardless
or experience. write
H.F. Sean, Pres.. Box
711 , Ft. Worth, Tx. 76101
MAIMIBCANCI Tempor.ary Assirrun.eot
Part time ror resort con-
dos. Good phone voice
nee. AM/Aft. Santa Ana
office. Start: $4/hr.
543-7957 or 543-2951. ly in writing before 5PM --5·.u-..,.:i.ay~--
Jan. 15 lo Coast Com ~·-
SAVIMGS
•4 Corporate Plaza
Newport Beach CA 926(,(;
E .O.E . MI F
Bankin"8.&.as
Ex~rience req'd. Xlnl.
salary & benefits. Apply
Personnel: HlllT AGI IAMI
721 N. Euclid. Anaheim
991-3860
E.O.E.
Banking
Barclays Bank, Costa
Mesa. Drive-up Teller
exp. r eq. M/F/H/V.
Conta.C\..Cathy: 631: 1!11.
Banking
{
TB.LER
M-'TIIM
Wells fo'argo Bank.
Orange County Airport
office. has an immediate
opening ror individual
wilh 6 fnonlhs previous
banking e11perience.
We provide an excellent
benefits package and
friendly working al·
mosphere. Please con·
tact: ..
7 14-973-5044
s .... ~'''·'
WELLS
FARGO
BANK
45IO M9CAl'thur Blvd.
Newport Beach, Ca.
EquaJ Opp Emplyr
M/F/H
488 E. 17th. Co!;ta Mesa
Suite 224 642· 1470
~
COOi
To start immediately,
part time. pre-school.
857-1263. --------------
IOOilCJCMIEI COOK WANTED
for Newport Penin. real Mon-Fri, approx. 9-3.
estate office. 3 to 4 day Apply from 2·4pm al
week . A/P ·A/R thru Cask 'n Cleaver. 1660
T/B. lOkey. lightlyping. D_o_v_e_. ~._B_. 7_52·25311.
Call~r appt. 6'7S·~ _ • COUNTER Woman, full
•CAIDttlVl:llS• lime. also Part lime
Checker Cab seamstress. Michel ·s
il().0222 Clea n ers. Laguna
CASHIH
f:Kperienced. Must have
basic· photo knowledge.
Full lime. lmmed. open·
ing . Photography
Unlimited. 16889 ~ctr
Blvd . Huntington Reach.
847-3664.
CASHI ERtHOUSEWARE:
S ALE S . Apply in
p erson Crown
Hardware, 1024 Irvine
IWestcliH Plaza I N.B.
CASllERS
UTDTIM
MARKETS
For 2nd & 3rd Shifts
We promote lo manage-
ment & supervision from
within.
WANT A C.AREE~?
C06ta Mesa
111 Del Mar
631·9421
Laguna Beach
-49t-9'Z33
Huntinlton Beach
912-9118
Child Care Supervisor
for full time employ.
ment. MUil like • have
exper. w/children. Call
between 9.5: 962-13'74.
Tracy.
Cl.teal
~~uel, 4~5-~ __ _
COUNTER help. f/time.
Apply in person. Seacllff
Cleaners. corner of
Goldenw est &
-Yorktown. KB
CUSTODIAN
Full lime_ 3PM-11PM.
Male or female. Harbor
area . Call Chuck
631·2880. Mon.·f''T1 · 8·5
DEUVl:llYPEISOH
Costa Mesa Pharmacy
Mon· Fri 10.6-642·0106
Dental nurse. r hair.iide.
pedo, noo s moker. exp.
pref. but will train right
~rson. 644_:~ll_Ni;>~ Ctr.
D9fl'AL
Dental front office. F.x-
p c r p e gboard, in ·
surance ; typing. Xlnl
lorallon. Established of-
fice . Non s mok e r .
845-6501.
Domestic
COMPANON
Assist elderly person,
live-in r1t'z009
DOMESTIC. Uvein com·
panion for 72-yr-old lady
on walker. Must drtve.
prepare m eals, lite
hsakpg. Salary SSOO{mo.
For interview, 833-0379
PUC&.81
Office library filer. Part
Ume. SI/hr. Jack Helbl·
ln1: 21MM-5C'T7.
HBIWAMTID
P /T nex scheduling day
or night call for l.nforma·
lion 957-071'1 Rick. ------t
Hu1N .. SMH
RELIEF·RN's·LVN 's
Needed for all s hifts.
Design your own work
wffk. New pay rates.
Best Nunes Registry
Costa Mesa 754-6771
Anaheim 956-3430
Hotel
Housekeepm's &
LDDy
A ttllllal1ts
We have immediate full
U me openings for
housekeepers, section
housekeepers le: laundry
attendants. Must be able
to work nexible hours,
occassional weelu!nds &
holidays . Ex cell.
beneflta le: working con·
ditlons including a free
meal per shift. Apply
9AM-Noon, Mon-Fri.
Personnel MAllllOTT MOTIL
900 Newport Center Dr.
Newport Beach
Equal OW Emplyr M/F
Hotel
HOSTjHOSllSS
Full or p/Ume poslUona
avall. for reliable,
people4ierUd penona.
Varied lblfta. Enjoy ex·
cell. ~ beneftta
lncludlna a free meal
per ablti. AllPl.y tAM·
Noon, Mon-Fri'. Penon·
Work in beautiful Dana
Point Harbor. Plumbing
& painting experience
preferred. $4/hr start +
benefits. Apply Tues ..
Sat: Dana Point Marina
Co. 24701.Dana Dr. Dana
Point.
MICHAMC
Hunt Bch service sta-
tion. Exp&goodref'ses·
sential, own tools neces.
Sal based on exp.
846-8270
Medical Assist, front of.
fice, for G.P .. exp Pn!·
ferred, mail resume of.
rice manager: 3~1
HOspital Rd. Ste 118,
N.8 . 92863.
MEDI CAL Assist. Front
ofc. Some typing. Exp.
pref'd. 631-5301
Medical X-IAYTICH
IMVIMl'OIY
CLllKS
2 weeks: 1·19 through
1·31. Hours: 6AM-10AM
& 6AM·2:3>PM
A1~~:
24 Fashion Island N.B.
E .O.E. M/F
o,..._,. ••"
Back-up wire operatc>r
needed ror widely known
stock brokerage firm
Typing req'd. lmmed.
opening. Call Helen
McGinley: 6"·2291'l.
Part-time-typist for busy
Aircraf\ dealer •t OC
Airport. Flexible hrs
w /possibility for full·
ti m e . Accurate to
50WPM w/shorlhand
preferred. Call 540-2720
f or appt Mission
Beachcraft 18741 No
~irport Way,~· __ Parttime. 30 hours a
week. 5 days. Newport Beach office. 631 _4422. Part time rook a pply in person. Null Lynch's 311
Palm, Balboa 6'75-'1556
Mo~f...wSAI.
ASSISTANT
SECRETAR IAL
SKILLS & ACCURATE
TYPING .REQ .
(65WPM 1. REAL
ESTATE OR AP ·
PRAISAL EXPER,
SOME COLLEGE
BACKGROUND
PREFERRED.
Major morgtgage bank·
Ing firm is seeking in·
telll1enl trainee to assist
w I appraisal packaging
for the ranancing of lg
commercial real estate
projecla. Ml8l have own
car le: be wil.llq to malte
site inspections, after
suitabletraini.na period.
X Int benefila. Salary
bued on ex per.
Equal~ Eni~r.er IALPH-C. SUT•O co.
Newport Beech otnce
From Onnle County Callm.t Dorathy Wll9on
Income R.E. nnmee
Part lime bartender app-
1 y in person . Mutt
Lynch 's 311 Ptllm.
Balboa 67$-15..'56
PBX
Housewives, s upple-
ment your husband's
s alary. Part time, fo'ull
time positions avail.
now . C all Clara :
640·1110. or Nick .
557-77il.
P 8 X OP ERA-TOR ·
Telephone ans service
1raveyd, day & eve
s h i fts . Will train.
S47·5&65
PBX
PBX ll'OATORS
Full • p/thne poslUona
avail for reliable
penoaa wWl pleaaaat Is.
efftcl.ent phone manner.
Nl1ht llllfta w/rot•tlnt
weekend•. Enjoy ex·
cellent co. blnenta ln·
ICn,llT-.... 5
Girl Friday, part or full
lime. 1V sales & serv
HB. 963-J<n>
Real Estate agent salary. + commission do
telephone work & fill out
forms out ol your house.
& m ake big money!
Leads furnished , no
escrow work, Call Victor
834-1702
•~W.W..
Start the year right by
finding out about the
career opportunities
available ·at Select
Properties. If you have
experience or lllflll· ·
lerest in learning about
investment properties
call for a coofidential in·
terview. We also have
opportunities fo r
established pro -
fessionals with manage-
ment potential for of-
fices in Costa Mesa,
Newport -Irvine and San
C lemente. Call Pete
Vlotto. 751·3191
·c:sELECT
T' PROPERTIES
Real Estate Sales Lall* .....
M.wc.-r?
Join the leader. Now in·
lerviewing for positions
in r eal estate sales.
Whether licensed or not
call to see if you qualify
lo jo"1 the professionals
at Walker & Lee.
(714)~.
RECEPTIONIST ·
General oflice. part·
lime. nrOC Airport, con·
•truction back1round
deaired. Reaume req.
Salary commenaurate
w /qu,.llflcalions.
S4M088
munTty Colleges, 1370 I NeeoedTmmt'd WiTh or--
Adams A\'t'. Cos t a .... 1thout shorthand.Tem
Mesa 92626. 556 5947 porary & full lame. Call
E.0 . E .. M1 F Tod St>rv1<·es at !179·8900
Restaurant
D&TACO
25252 La ft• Id L.,._ ...
Grill persoo full ti me
Wkdays. General help.
part time or full timl'
wkdays . Good for home
makers. mothers. col-
lege students. Xlnl. pay
& training. Inter view
bl wn 2 & 6 wkdys.
Reslauranl
·McDONALD'S
Now hiring, full or part
time. Days & eves.
Great career o p
portunaUes. On the job
training. For more in-
formation. call 7S4·9943
or inqu.ire al 3141 Harbor
Blvd.C.M.
Restaurant •'S HO...OFlHI
llGIOY
Immediate openings in
our family restaurant."
at nearby locations. We
require no previous ex·
perience. Join our
friendly learn. Come see
us today between 2-4PM.
ColllT,.....
C..W1n
98'2 Adams Ave. H. 8. w ...... w ......... c ... , .....
C..W1 I
23952 Avt!nida de la
Carlotta. Lacuna Kiils
7311 Edinser H.B.
1S4 E.17\hSt. C.M.
3356So. Brillo&
Sln&Ana w ..... w ... ... c .... . -:::.:=t!_
Eq-un.lty
Secret.y lo ......
Sl.000 + D.O E
Accurate typinit. no
shorthand. Mature, gd.
dre.~s appearanl'e, Call
Sandy. 540-liQSS. Coast<il
Personnel Agency. 2790
Harbor Blvd .. C.M.
NEVER An: .. : E.O.E.
Secretary lO Cf':O Small
dynamic <·ompany .
Collins Associates. 567
San Nicholas Dr. NB
Secretarial general or
f1ce Busy office with
new organiuillon. Pull
responsibility oC all a<"
livalies i n clud1n.i
secretanal & lite boolt·
keeping JUQwres ~ood
tele pho ne m a n ner
Preferred location in
vi c inity o f Hoag
Hospital. Beginninl'
salary up to $900/mo,
based on experience .
642-1822.
SIClllTAIY
Stock brdterage firm in
Fashion Island has im-
m ediate opening for
secr etary/back -up
operations. Ex per. pref.
Hrs : 7-3:30. Contact
Helen McGinley for
appt. 644·2a2.
T• J
I""G
* •SICllT.-S•• You're Uwilied for the
best year in hiator)' d
buaineu. Special
• 'Thankl" to J(ana
Elder 6 Barbara
Mathieu fer makin1 It allh.f~ • * •.GUMllLTAMT * * Esper. In profesaion.
Pie ... call Ua for appt. u. Remdln Aaeocr
4CDOBlrdDt ... BOI: ,...,,.,,,,,,, *** Slis-otllce
General Oftlce amall co.
w/nat'l ult9 1ood aec'y
1111111 • bMit' accountln1
akilla nq. Knowledqe ol
otftce~ld
lead to oftke mana1er.
IC5 -7211 aak for
Charlotte.
n~UICmHOTIL
900 Newport e.e.-Dr. N~8each Equal Otit:..,,,, M/F MUISIAIDI ··-~ uU\. MM·Nooa, Mon.· .
Recepticmlet with 1enerat,
office lkilla. Pleuant
phone manner 6 IC·
curate t1l*'I __., ..
Some boc*keeplnc ea·
per. Pflllflaied. huttaln
Valley .... lll'M3G.
S1IH-ffl P'I Compo. aenta. Salar1. alat. •---------...
f\atwe. C.M. uea. EOE.
M/F. Call ll·F, 11·1 on·
11 . Mr. Paulaen, a.teal
Hotel
Part time, ll·7. '1·bed. Convaleaetnt Holptta.I. CoataMeaa,...a1.
Classy Autos .
Advertised
MA
taOMwwMt C.. Dr. N~BMeh Eaual Otz WJt 11/P'
PBX .......... ,.. .....
UtH eatr• clollara t w~ . .-u... Noa· ..... , .... ,,, .......... ....... . ~ ... .,...
Cd a..: •lut• Md:•"""·
Jl'lcepUonlat, P /T,
brl1bt, UM11lve, for
pro,re11l'fe •nlmal
hoepttal. •·l• ... .. 0...,. -'rAll·l, W ........ rrt. TAM·I, lat.MIU '
~ ...... ,~ m•-.
"f:.~ "70 ~.~~ ... !?.~ 1.,,.-. ~~l•f•fiM . I e.W ....................... ...................... ••••t••··············· ..................... .
'TUSEPaD:IOKEE ... 9711 Pw1• 9711 Y•e ml llOAT&IPllDITAL ,. -• f··"y 1 __ ... _.1 ....... -.... •••••••• ••••••-.... •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... ..,.,....... -"" -tr/ft/mo.-.-•Hoo/otter. M8·IOll 'H AUcti r. xlnt au. '1't tu IC Tara•: XIDt YGLYO . n•; 111.iwnct,. MW eomd.SUGD ctad. Tllla ""' leaM. Mawc;=..... ·---_.._. MI-.. f'•detailleaU•1111.
U to•··-1 ,.._ .. _ ......._ -11 Nw~aallforJoe. IA.IA...a ......... Ty,.. .. u., Want 1uw-
ow11 b...._. • !apert
Wl'h follUWlDM L .....
myl'~ .. 1qwp and
off •v1·a The OUiu
Delila• kla1 ·1l1e
walerbed w/llt1ler. Lttier ,..... lutbrd.
MOO. Us t ' 1 ed dUWtl
c9'alra. lplaWa 1&yle: 1eou ur t for •no
P -•-IDO. ••••••-.. ••-•• -""" YI ~ 197IG91'90Llf ....... -.......... ............. ~.TOM.tc.. ror Use bnt deal ID
'7i IM. a /c, 1/r , am/f111
llrll. HK ml. 2 Jr
1uaranue 'lnl. perfect
co ad, make offer ....,,
OVEU&AIDIUVZRY
EXPDT8 ... ... 0r..,. Oaullly-.. Come ••••••H••••H••H••••• 8 CJll., ....... mMUal lee lf1 TodaJ!.
)Cit 21• _m1a. Eateuyele·IHr.-WI
armllq movemmt. Id·
jU1t &enlion. like nu 175.
~T-N27
11' JET BOAT. fut. low
hrt. *5-1171 11k for Toho
tram .• iow .U. 6 a&ra ll!'!i c~u~H ~ TYftlTCU.
••• KIAi 11 bdrm Mt &a5(1, :r.·~. ....uerr ..... ,. Oun" C'.oul -.t:c.itlu•,
I IOYM . Mun Thura
HOWA9Q1v1•1
Dove lrQuail SU.
NEWPORl"Bl!IACH IJWlll Railroad Ue1 for aale
17.50 each or make olfer.
"8·4155 eva or wknds.
17· Fiberllue. 80 hip rblt
JohnlOll. lDcl trtr. Mutt ••II . SlOOO /b1t ofr.
~fN ...... Ii A, M • PM fl' r Id • )' 1r duama ,bl, a~&ld e&la
SHI)" llJlll mo. Apply IJt top, I (l\n, 076. 8' entry _ _ ___ '71 Chev. JAiv w/1unroci'
wr1t11111 by WM. J111. ll, U>I. 1ulld ma1&hu11. USO 2 Barber chrt, van seat 17 rt powercat ski or fis h Sharp paint job. All/FM
lo l'nut <'ummunlt)' 7fM>. .. l4,1'73~0lnu d d MercuryO.D .. bl&wheel 1ter w/ltrk. New1..&.n l'ullt11tt111. 1370 Adam & 11 con . lrg bkcase, '68 -
.\\l• l'..itii Muu w.1DJ IYU~.olS Toyota, 11 .000 m1. xii trlr. brake.a 123~0. ar pwr booster. New
1.-~-..IVf''f'"1lr-i~..t-~:-t1T1"-f-~~'4't'-1':'1tir.-1W--t'--+-~l"lf::r.r~n~~~.ir.:v~mw11~r~1n~.-;r.,~n-t-&iltit'pttc,~~~~6'td-'t:~~~=====---=-=-;-=:~+-DM500J.&1~.~SO.unm323.....J1UJl"-4COll~
ol/tf N "~ l'H·cll 1.0 11111 rm. f•mily rm, Wil>. ads. 2175MapleSt_. C"'!_ loah. se..., tOtO ----
bwtl .. ttb wilh prl't.t11111>u" ·1~~rt'.J1 •::1ow"1C';7~1 r~rr111. dreaser•, bedh. Custom Surfbo ard. 6' •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• '70 Chevy C·IO Pickup 396 ~"1 ~,\ } ll\1111 "<•tn 11111,, ~ll4f)' ., prolil TV'1, chromt!111l8J\11 din icm cond. Only $95. Ory storage available. Hi Po Eng, A/C. 2~ t'n ~ 1111 rm .set , &Ian & &33-2S47 John Newport Dunes, 1131 $1300 545-CML -nv•-'h•11n11 liroummll "' cherry wood col "'cor Bac k Bay Dr. NB. ., --·-,
CREVIER '$' s# 6 HOADWAY SANTA AMA
835·3171
"M tl18 T ... , bl•ll. full
equip, mint, lo ml,
S17 ,000. IG-1114
....
¥Cl.YO
i•iWta'mvd. •• tmt=4'1
'74 tit. Fully loaded.
lllnt cond. A/C. Elect. ...... ......
1nrf, ma11, 1tereo •••••••H•••A•••••••••
cN1ett.e. W)Ut.ew/tanln-AMC ttol
ler. 4 new radlal1 . •••• .. ••· .. ~·· .. -.••••••
Serlou1 Offen only. 'Tt Gremlin, ~l'l~~s.~1~411~,.~·~,.ol:M~~==·-=:1m,,ua~..,'-ll4la-'r~MN11--~~~~ ... ..,_ 9716 mp1, Sl.500. 5"7·5271
••••••••••••••••••••••• WcJs ff 10 . •t DEA R I .S.A. •••••••••••••••••••••••
IOY "74 El~ loaded. lo-mi. CAIVll xlnt .. SUIOO 080. ~' -101 (,'t'fll t'r Ur •lult.. '*PP"' lo 1ixrt·utr vt> ner tbl~. C~Ritllern Irv Mhctl--6'4 0510 ... -170 ~t!"'llOf) JW1u·h rht'11td1i uf wv t> i>t'1>t'l • rm i1et rrnuty decorator W..ted 1011 . ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• THI UUIMATf DRIVING MAC-. IOU.S·ltOYC( M5-81181eaveNo.
Eoual Upp t:mpl) r M I" 11011 t'dllt>• Nu 1omolu111( 1h?m11 " extr&11 AJm llfit ....................... '71 Ford Van.auto, nds
91 --· 'Thd1ff1C"e~21fllt , ali'furn leu than 3 mOll Matern ity clothes needed f,...1pat.... work $700/0 8 0 . Will •UlmlMWt•
'73 2002 (Uii58)
'7'2002tih/r (03321 &El ' 1Wto10:: ~hik W~ntt'<I >'UUlli ~r1>tlfl 11\ old t:all S2'l·l"44 1tft S JO des perately' Size 7·9. ••::._•raft•••••••••••••••••• l_ra_d_e~_-m_s~
·or wknth °' fi3s..4751 or I 'm ,busUn° out all.over. •~ ti 10 •75 2002a (0035)
'7620021/r'8p. (1578>
'77 320i sunrf. air (3201 >
'77 6.30 csi auto COOt<I)
lrqn" .H t·h llt'tt or •I lt't('tited Ul lt'4'fnm.i m 63J ·9 lll ext 362 rur callSue at~~~2200ifyou ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cirrn JO hr \ok lullllnW lt'tt'Sllll" l)u.su1ess Call t '""" ""9 B h k app s can help 1..., eac Mus eteer , bttnel1u 7s:! \WS <ira1·11! at Tilt· ~11tn madttme l50 Lycoming
4_ruup llJl.5l2ti or Sofa bd. l!)e nu. plaid. Mlllk_. eng . 2 Com-na v's
s.-, unl~
SECUITY
Door Attendant
M ....... HoW
£\ eninl( jJIJtiltlOn lJ• a1la
ble f11r a j.ll'llµlc or11•11ll'IJ
pl•rson auh• l O 1·ht'C0k
ID $ & tmfun·1• hull'I
vulH· ll'::t .11 tlw dwr of
UUI l1)Unl(c 1-:11JOY c)(
rell 1·0 l1ent•f11.., A11ply
!11\ M Noun. Mon Fri
l'cn,onnd MARRIOTT HOTEL
!JUI) !'it'wport-<--'rnter l>r
N ewpnrt kt> ;lt'h
Equal Oep ~mplyr M F
SEC'Y/IECIPT.
Mm 6 mo uperit>nc·t>
Must be able to work
\.\'ell With puhlH·. be
cager tn learn & ~row
"1th a gn1"'1nl( rn Ask ,
for Sandie. 8JK. 11>10 1
O,,...._&crow
SERVICE STATION
J~land s ales, p t or flt .
rneth anu·al ah1l1t v dr
..,1rahlt'. sal hao;rd, nn
•'\ p IS-Ill H:!l(I
'>l·wer & tlnun i'l1•a1wr ....
wanll'd. ll)lhl plurnl1ini.t
%14Hll
"ih11t• Sah•s11t·rs1111
W<• ha\'c a11 CJJH•n111i.t fur un l'XJI F T salc· .... 1H·rs11n
'1•111\ 111 pl'r..,on. ;i-;k f11r
\l • ( ';111111111 I l1•mphill ~
"lt"t'~" 5·1 l':i..,h1on
1:-1111111. N H ti44 •lll:I
'°ihll•• Mil~. rull lflnt• Wllh
or "'/OUl CXI'. or Will
train Good M benefits
Apply in pc:•rsnn !Jam lo
_·11am ~1111 1hr11 l"r1
St;inclard Shot•:-:1077 So
Hn,\ .. t. (' ~
S T A F F
DEYaOPMENT
DIRECTOR-HIM
l'r1ml' opµty lor l<:--1 who
wanls to mu\'e :ihcad
'l't·ac•h rww nurse• ass1s
t:.nts. provuh· 1n M•rvit·t•
I raininl( µr11grams for
.ill p1•r:o.111wl, msurc 1·on
I inuou~ upgradin~ of rm ·
llt'lll l'art'. must he wofi
r it•nl & 1·omfortuhlt• in
~··ri<Jtnc nursing & rl'
ha h. 11teasanl 1:!7 b1>1I
lac·thty w/qwilily 1Jf lift·
emphasis, 11art of ;1 l1•11d·
1 11~ natl healthc•art•
torp. Com pensulton
negotiable. Phom• Mrs.
Pa 11 i reto 111 rec· tor of
nursing or Mr [)111 ad 1----m~m~1=s ~ralOr at il!J6-5TIIG
le•aiyMmol-~
Co11•ale1c•11t
Hoafilt:al
Capilflw kh. Ca
STATIONERY ~TC>Ht-: m
C!IM needs sales lady
f<'/timc, 5 days Xlnt
work1n1o1 Cllnd s
F.i>pedally fine tlitmtelt•
Phont': 675 10111 for appt.
Student rude-Driver for
partially hand1rapped
young man. 640·2746. ----SWTCHID OPR
Full time day!!. Will
train. 642-J013.
TIACHIRCZJ
Elementary I PreS<'hool
F/T private schuol. CM
area. 842-0411
. TIAOBS
To start immediately. . Part time or run time.
Pre-school. 867·1263.
TIClllCiAH
C\:>sta Mesa comput er
Otm nftdl tech. to U ·
sembJe & teat complete
romputn 1y11tena1.
Computer bk1rnd.
ltelplul. s.iaty SlJ-SlaK
•an1 co. benefita. Call
Uoda.Mt.cmo
~ ....
·comp1ny In Irvine
Heel• exper'd telephone
ttlH people to work
frotl) OW' omce: Salary + comm 6 bonut while
tfa1nln1. We Mii ~
!'I A!llPI* •· office pU•. MO-J101 a.Ill for
ta. ·
758·10Cl2 barely USt'd. romforta· ... .,,. I ft 8013 transponder. 11411·2509
ble 6'.:.. Sl50. 55.!_ 9327 t •••••••••••••••••••••• eves. ,_,, __
MwC ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• D1Y-• •,..a CONN Director trombonl' C -----
--with rase. ~xrellent ~5*/
......... I005 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Wt-:!.,'MINSTt-:H
AIUU:Y
ANTH.~ll~ MALI,
U111ly UHi. f<'n IO·IJ
<.:looed Tut•sday
11751 Wc:1lmmster A\'t'
<iarden Grove ~·6103
Old Orwnt.al rugs want·
t'Ct Any ~n~' t-tmcl. <..-'a II
I llOO·~llll.13
RUTH'S ANTIQUES
~.., ca....c.s. 2o• , off on all stork
504' 2 So Rayfront
Balboa Island lnext to
fo'crry 1 Open 12·5 Wed
Sun 675 t»J3
OAK IW l.l. TOJ> Uf<:SK
Sl395 9A1\Hl'M
2132 Harbor Blvd. <.:.M.
4ppli..as 80 I 0 .......................
Wa sher & Uryer. Xlnt
rnnd Sl2.Sl'a
(i46·!">H4H
llrfr1g , frost frcr. Slfkl.
Wa!lotler. S75. Dryer. $75.
Han~e. $911. Trash 1·om ·
pa1·tnr, $100 !>42 ,1083
Hcfrii.terutor Clean. re·
aio.11nablt• good 1·nn!l
IWl-114411
~!~?~~ .......... ~~~~
.NEW&USID
& accessories. 1673
lrvml' tF.L &\24348
Cats 8035 •••••••••••••••••••••••
H E <i I S T E H E D
Bl' It M 1-:SE KITI ENS
li93 l0611
Srnmese male cat Strict-
ly <ipt ~. mos old. $100
Walter aft 6, ti31-71JW
DOCJS 8040
··················~···· Kt-:ESllONO Pups. AKC.
Champ sire. M/fo', Pet &
s how . Pvt pl y
213/697-1345 aft 6 pm.
Doberman male blk/lan 7
mos. old SIOO
545·91'10
1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ** IBUY ** Good used 1-"urniture &
Appllan~ OR rwITISell
ur SELL for You
M.ASTIAS AUCTION
646-1616, 13l-t6Z5
Movin~ Sale. Compl. k~
st br set, 9' sola. twin
bed w 1frame. ~ · office
l'rcdenza . cluh c hrs .
lamps. misc . 7101
Seashore, N.B. 645·8410
8' Cstm Oe51gned sofu. 5
Lovese.:. Tradaltunal
loose ba1·k pillows. orri.t
$1300 Thornasvillt• rntry
frem·h <'O<'kta1I tbl on.:
S500 all for $1:!:.JO/OUO
752.91193
Horwt 8060 •••••••••••••••••••••••
App aloosa Geld. 16 II. 6
years. Vt•ry teal'hable.
Dressagt' bat'kground.
Has been shown Westcrq
$1500 646;7009
Jewelry 8070 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Man's 14Kl yellow gold
bracelet. in nuggel tex-
tured curb link, m ellllur
mg 13mm m width, 8"
length. Secured with a
ron cealed box t'lasp.
with a figure 8 safety
clasp. Total weight 1s
J0.92 peMyweaghts. Ap·
praised over $3,000. St!ll
for $1850. 548-6446.
Corum Twenty Dollar
Goldpiece Walc h
Automatic. S5500 firm.
673·4000 ;'
MllC .. _OUI 8080 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LU~GAGI TAGS
fro m your husincss
card. Send one t·ard for
eac·h tag 11h1.<1 one spare
We return permanently
sealed attractive lal( &
strap. meeting airline
1.0. requirements . Pre·
vent l1>ss & theft! !-'or a
persOAahu.'<11.ag entlose
wallpaper. fabrtr or
"Day Glo" paper & we
will back & trim your
tags. Or try two «ards
back to back.
PRJO;s
S2ea or 3/$5
4/5 tags SUiO ea
619 tags $L50ca.
10 or more SJ.40 t•a
Sales Tax lncludt'CI
NOCAR I>?
Draw your own nr M'ntl
name, address. phone &
we'll make one rard 1wr
tag. Add "l9 eaeh
Send check or inoncy or
der to: PILOT NIMTIMG
P.O. Rox 1560
Costa Mesa, Ca. 9264!6
Lo•el•aa111
Send someone you love a
bouquet of JO multi col
ored helium balloons
tied with ribbon & your
own personal message.
Perfect for eyery Ol ..
casJOIL. We 4e.li ve.r.
673-4419 ----
OOUGHIWY S WIM
POOL 20ft round. 3 ft de
ep. Filler system. Makt>
ofr. 534-5728
Off-Set Press. Ricoh WOO.
fable lop, ready to prml
with plate maker. fust-r
& 11o me s uppl ies
Surplus eqwpment m a
IF YOU , ~ri~~~~=· SUMJO/bcst
have a service to offer or ---
goods to sell, place an ad ay Lallie L ea1o1ue
1n the Daily Pilot Baseball. Register Jan.
Classified Sel1ion lOlh.lllh. Wardlow
Phone 6'2·5678. School. '968-8329
Use ,,,,,,,.. It/ service
when placing your ad ... a
Daily Piiot ad number wilt
appear In your classlfled ad
. we take your messages
24 hours a day .•. you call
in at your convenience
cturlng office hours and get
the res~ses to yc>ur ad ...
this servlce ts only $7 .so
week. For more Informa-tion .cl to ptace your Mt
calf 612-5671.
tlZO l·onditaon. SIOIJ. 675·11n5l I.wt after 6PM , •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ibanez elcclrtt• l(Uilar
Professional m01kl with
Tre(• of l.ifc i:oml( Ull lo
the neck. Woodl!ra in
body with hard shell
Ca!lt'. $500. 548·6446
'60 tHl·~YY 6 tyl «hassis
tmpr .. a,. rear end, fully
self.cont.. 12 & IJOV. 4
s pd. Xlnt c·ond. $2,000.
641 ·1798 ----Motoriud.... t 140 •••••••••••••••••••••••
New lban{'? "Butterfly" Batavus moped. 6mo.
acoustic guitar. model ·old, like new. S375/or
t-'360 J bl k f' · h · best offer. 644-7353. . et ac mas J r-_______ _
w/ fancy mot.her-of-PACER-MOPE
pear~ inlay. Equipped Well maintained
w/ sh adow lransdurer $175 75g.9320
pickup wt strap button. ------
ja<·k plug and hardshell '79 Vespa. Good condi· ~ase. Must s acrifice.1 lion. $200.
$400. Al.SO, new MXR I 491Hl311
lt90 dual control phase Motorcvdn/
s hifter $75. Will take $450 Scoohn · t 150
for all ol ahove. <714 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.16' 631"01411" '79 Honda XL SOOS.
-----11irl/street. xlnl cond Office,.,.._... & $1175. 675-1768 Efeu'........ 8085 ---....................... ~/=---s.4
HOl.OUEX.(61 melt 1753. • .. ~ ..... ~ .... !~~
New $25. sal'. $15 ca . . IRM 'HO St>ll•c·trit• $1.1100 I-or Rent Harvest Mm1
642-1470!ilo4 Motor llome s leeps six.
Burns regular (;as.
ft.ts 8087 Private Party 55H·Ol!J7
••••••••••••••••••••••• ... rtcr 6pm
AKC .F.nglis h Cocke r
Mal<· blu<' rone whelped
· AUi( Isl houscbrokc11.
675 4133
Sewhtg Mochm1es 8092 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SAL£S1 R~l'Alll1 PA HTS
•St-:WIN<i MAClllNl-~S·
i\ll modeb to t·hcm .... c
f rom New •Ucmos
•Trade m •Floor mixlrTS
• Also rc1llrR •t•x1·ha11~es
H E NT ll' lux. mlr
homt•. Sips Ii. Sl.!lf·rnnl
$275 /wk + H• ·m1.
640·85115
froilen, TraYei 9170 •••••••••••••••••••••••
.'7J 17 Terry Trlr. :.elf
contained. $1000/0HO
Must sell 54G-2298 eves
frailft'i. Ulllty 9180 •••••••••••••••••••••••
S3!1ll P ~<.: Visa UtiltyTraler
Call 8.\.S.4477 S 150. 547 ·3182 .
Pit'lrup & del "'uto r____,, __ -,.-..
2385_4 Via fo'abr1cantc "' & ~ 9 400 Store 1\2. M V ! •••••••••••••••••••••••
Belvedtc;re Adler scwinl( S SAVES.AVES
mac·hinc in heaul1ru1 ·· WITHUSIDPAITS
wood cabinet. Makes all
s t1tc•hes Xlnl t·ond
llurdly usl'<l. $300 or hest
offer. 631-271!1 aft. 6PM
or wknds.
Im ported <·ar parts
IMPORT
AUTO SU PPLY
IOI N, Manchester
Anaheim 776·9000
~!~••••••••••••~~!~ Ford 302 ~in~ ln good running <.'Ol1d. $300/0BO GOLf Carts for s ale.
Xlnt. rond. New ball.,
tile. 492·6128 rv.RO.O. HIA, Shrwo 1091
··············~········ M usl sell stereo compo-
n ent system. Pioneer re·
ceiver . l>ick turntable.
EPI s~ers. $450/08(-)
Xlnt cond. 545·7568
IHh& ......
1 ... pcall •••••••••••••••••••••••
641·9157. 5'8-3374
•••••••••••••••••••••••
IMPORTANT
NOTICE TO
READERS AND
ADVERTISERS T~rice or items
acfvert 1sed by vehicle
de alers in the vehicle
rlassified adver tising
columns does not in·
elude any applicable
•-~ • t4mlll t/ laxes. license, transfer ---. csu•c\c fees, finance charges,
•• ~':=!•••••••••~~~ fees for air pollution con· trol device certifications M A R I N Jo: E I. E C · or dealer documentary
TRICIAN preparatipn charges un·
Design /Install/repair less otherwise specified
(.lual. work. 549 2S20evs by the advertiser. •,-;;.=:=-9030 ~=.rl t5ZO ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Lewmar JO :?Npd winch
brand new$175
631·6174
~vinrude 100 11.P. 1972.
Re built I.Ike new.
675·3731 ask for Rirh. .... ;,;,;w -t 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Xlnt buy. 16' Glasstron,
super fishing or skting.
SOhp Mere, 4hp Johnson.
873-5340. -------
'65 OWENS SKJ SKIFF'
26 '. Full canvas. Xlnt
cond . Slip avail
$7000/bst ofr. 983-9878
43' .........
Full1 equipped. Perfect
live-aboard. HS,000.
' Slip. '50.000 loan for 15
yn. at U~% avail. Pvt.
pty. »6-l.505 or MO-me
on boat.
For Sale: 1f11 Searay 21' w /trlr. 1ood cond .
$15G0/080 m.Ma Jim
Riddel.
~I .
toll ........................
•lllllAC•'.Jt' BOATS l/U1no.,... JlnNld
from 9J.117mo. lilc1U.U.. .Up,.__ 7.U/IMolllii .............
AUBURN Phaeton
Speedster I~ classic
replica by Calif. Custom
C oach. Never r e ·
gistered. Used for show
c ar only! Bargained
priced! See Jim Buie or
Bernie Ashe. Theodore
Robins Ford . 2060
Harbor Blvd .. Costa
Mesa. Call 642-0010 or
540·8211.
'48 Ford Woodie. restored
Sl3,000. AUiO '29 Model
A Town Sedan, 4 dr.
restored. Ideal for stu·
dent. $10,000. 875-8111 .
W••Cwtall
Brand new reproduction
of Ital Model A Ford
Phaeton convertible.
V-1, auto, air, PIS. P/B,
1teteo 6 tape coat
S20,151 by Rephcan.
Belt offer. Pri••te par>
ty. (714)Ml.1114.
('5' Ponche, concoun
cond.. Dl'W ll ..........
IUlp.-blt., etc. m.ota
4WllMI...,_ HM ...... ~ ............... .
..Wll~CJ
Pow. llWer, vall·loc
buehl •••t•, front 1ta11tm .. , roll bar • mon. y...,. lw I•· •••t•t• d•lher7.
LIDO H ..... t'14' (llJ::i-
w/tl'IJ. n.t do co.id. ~.-. ""1.., ... .,., 'MCl9
.......................
.......... .. •..
d' Cataar •• ...., 1"---------atr11.W.9l:!!f!.
tStO •••••••••••••••••••••••
WE PAYTOPDOLLAR
fo r t op used cars-
foreign, domest ics or
classics. Ir your car is
extra clean . s ee u s
FIRST!
~
• 1 lrt Or_,. C..ty
2925 HarbOr Blvd .
COSTA MESA
979-1500
WllUY
CUMICMS
AtilDTIUCKS
COHHRL
ChfVROLET
,._,.11,l'I••• fl .. 1
I ' "'I \ ,, ~ " \
546-1200
HIGHIUYlll
Top dollars for Sports
Cars. Bul(s. Campers.
914's, Audi's
Ask for U1C MG H
JIMMAltlMO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 itearh Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACll
8.U-2000
TOP~I
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLIAN
USIDCAIS!
miracle
mazda
CloeedS•dmp
OliMGICCMiilTY'S
CUIST
Sales-Service-Leasing
RoyC..w,IK.
Rolls Royce BMW
1540Jamboree
_Ne wport_Beacb 64().6444
IOIMdAW't
$
8so N. Beach Blvd.
LA HABRA
CS Mi. No. of SA Fwy I C7 I 4)5ZZ·5333
Sunday by App\.
'75 BMW 5301. 4 d r. sun·
roof, a /c, tape, per(ect
cond. S6.'500. 83.S-7001 or
640-~90
·74 2002, auto. air .
Am/Fm, blue. xlnl eond.
$4950. 67J.s:nl
D..._ t7ZO •••••••••••••••••••••••
ZISO .._.... •cL '75 610. A.IC. 4 dr. lo mi. Cott. W... 645-5700 clean . new tires/brks.
S2740 'bst. ~342.5 -----WANTED! '66 DaL'iun 410 Sqbk. xlnt
Late model Toyotas and running cond. xlnt i::as
V o I v o s . C a I l us m1. radials. 1-'M stereo. . ' . 1~,arle ll~e
TOYOTA· VOL YO
'"'~II•& CMl•M .. •
"•0-00) -'40·94'7
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow us the opportunity
to consider the purchase
or trade·in ol your clean
Porsche. Check with Us
Today! • '::'t ,_...........____~~
l;Jl.31 llall>Of 81"'1
G.den a..,.. ...... n.u
Top Dab
Paid
t 'or Your Car !
JOHHSOH & SON ll•• t t.rcwy
2626 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa S40-5630
Wei'.,
OVER _ ...
l"ur Your Good
VW, Porsche or Audi
.. . . . ~ ~' . ' . '
VW-PORSCHE-AUDI
445 E. Coast Hiway
at Bayside Drive
Newport Beach 673·0900
Premium prices
paid ror any Uled car
( rorel111 or domestic )
in 1ood ccndlUon.
SeeU1 Fll"IU
:.1988 ll11rl)11r Rh·d
Co11t1t ~h·~11 s.IO:t>J.lo
Wanted Honda car,
11'70.72, N• wtu. blown
........ 111.-1
~.~ ...... .
Alf9lelliie 97H ....................... .....
DtllCTl
l•IA&M .. , ..
I $450. 9fi8..2196 l_v m sl(
'77 Datsun 280Z. 5 s pd,
fully loaded. $6000.
847-1407 ask for A.J
'711 D a tsun 510 sedan.
4spd . A/C. am /fm .
29,000mi. lmma('. rond
$4,200:·551·9087
Mecharut•'s <.:ar
'72 8210. Smog cert. I
owner. l..omi, nu motor/
parts/baU. 5lmpg. $895
OBO. PP497·2'55
Rat ---97z5
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'77 Fiat Spyder. convt, 5
s pd, mags, wooden lug
rack. AM/FM tape. like
new 551·2343
t7Z7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VISITYOUI
OIAMllCOAST
HONDA
HIADfUAITllS
TODAY!!!
UMVBlSITY
SALES•SERVICE
OU>SMOllLE HOHDA
GMCTMICICS
2850 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA 540-tMO
Wante d Honda car
1970-72, N·800 with blown
!n!~~e. 531-8801
'75 Civic Hatchback. &ood
cond. $1850 5'9·3258
day1, 55&-IM>eves
'78 Honda Accord. 5 apd.
AM/FM cua lter. Rel
1a1. 30+ fnlll. klOO or
olr. Gt-71115
Men ...... '740 .......................
Merced .. '60SL, ltH.
Wblte/llabo1. Wire
wbeela. SIG.SCIO. ll,000
mll•.~•M0-91.
,.~.. '741 .... . .......... ~······ ''ASI DlllCT!
ltll .... IOT . 'ftJUDI
llACH I rOll'I ......... .N~
Cl0$l0 SUNDAY$
'760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE
DIRECT!
"II ......................
SALES, SERVICE
AND LEASING
1 ~ NABERS
llACH IMPORTS C~~!?.T.~~"f:
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
75J.0900 ------------
(" 1 "1,1 ..,..,, ')40 'lt()()
ttzo royota t7'5 c"".-.. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
71TOYOTA
CB.IC.A
Dean! ( 13350H_
$41"
·(f/p·1. ~ Uowcwi _ ~~.'J VOlltSWAGIH INC
534-4100
13731 Harbof'
Garden Grove
tollsw.,_--'77o • ••••••••••••••••••••••
'7tRAlllT
Automatic, 4 doors.
1772126)
S54H
@~ft~
534-4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
·73 VW Bug. xlnt cond.
U .000.
~6446
'75C .....
Nit'e! "=mtt
, ~~ ~ VOUSWAGIH IHC ~ 534-4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
Pa rting Out ! 1974
Volks wagen Bug parts
for sale. 641·9157.
'7'YWIUS
Must sell. 1024:nll $5'H
~~ft~ I ~ 534-4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
VW parts, '68 lefl & right
door. ·73 left door. sso
e ach. 548-9744
·72 VW Caw. Good cond.
$4000. Ask for Lorelei
days 675·9690, eves
642-9895.
'SlrVW"Bus rblt 1600 en".
$1400/080
661·1451
'69 CONV. CLASSIC
Trans. & e ng. solid.
be autifully r estored.
$4000. 6'2-&!0 c Bob)
'11 Squareback. reblt
..,e ng. dual carbs. new
tires. paint 6 brakes;
xlnt rond, $2150. 497-31153
·75 Bus . Cle an, air,
stereo. Low miles. $47SO.
851-21'2.
'75 VW "Great" Bill,
20MPG, radio, radlala,
orig owner. $4450/080
546·0489
68 bu& rebuilt $19115 or
bestolfer.
MHll572, 981-11'7
••• tn2 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
OIAt•ICOUMn
VGLYO
EXCLUSIVELY
VOLVO ...,.._VahoDNllr"
ln_Onm19o...iu1
BUY•l.&ASS IJllUDCT
)1 ·-. •
VOLVO
SHUSRISTl
We have a &ood selectM>n
or NEW Ii USED
Chevroleta!
COHMELL
CHEVROLET
•..,_fl, '•I I
t I • \t ~ ·
~4b-l 200
'75 Monza 56K mi. VS 5.6
lite r. new brakes. tires,
lune-up Sl500 firm
645·6127
'68 Nova 4dr, p /s. plb,
auto. S900/0BO
631·4192
·72 Chevy Kingswood
Estate Wgn, all elec win
dows. seats, door locks:
am 8lrk stereo. a /c, lug-
gage rack, many xlras.
hrown/whl ext. gold inl.
xlnl cond $1200 Hhonda
862-5355
c ........ 9932 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
SHOWROOM COHO.
'75 T·TOP
Power brakes. power
windows. power steering
with tilt/telescoping
s teer ing wheel. air.
AM I fo'M stereo. rear
w in dow defogger.
automatJc trans. Snow
wliite with Burgundy in·
terior 27.<XX> miles. Im·
ma c ulate thruout •
$8.100 754 6790 or
Answe r Ad •209. 642·4300
-24 hrs . c....,. ff]]
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
'69 Cougar. t:ng & trans
xlnt. Body fair $800 or
best ofr. 837-7796 DodP - --ft]S •••••••••••••••••••••••
'74a-p
Good cood. New reblt
engine. Gold, black top,
2 dr. Good gas mileage.
s 20001orr. 534.7533
e ves/wknds. 4410 W.
Suns wept St, Santa Ana.
'70 Polar• Stat Wan. 9-
pa11. S.500 or best. Alt 6. m -..-r
Mercsy HSO . ..................... .
ORANGE COUNTY'S
fllteT
LINCOLN-MERCURY
DEALERSIDP
~?.t.*4••
LINCOLN·llERCURY
11-11 AW>Cad.er Dr.
SD Fwy-Lake Forest
exit
IRVINE ... 7000
........ ttSZ .......................
'78 llllltanl Ghia. 6 cyl.
21.000 mi. li\illy loaded.
0rt1. owner. Xlnt. cond . P500. Daya: M0-1813,
Evea:,..7.
OCC 1H ffll .......................
•• Olda a Xlnt c:&td. Orl1 owner. Pwr ac-
ce11orlea. All/ FM
radio. AJC. llDIJS cert. ...... ,.
"75 116clabl Olcl9 Vl1ta
CndMr' -ml. h?SO .• ..... .....,,
!?!'! ••• '!'! ......... !!~
f 0120 Giwden Grove .... "' v AUAHI' teyl, au&o,
Gardeno.M630-lt101 tdr1.-,_ snit SUS. . .... .,.,.
'Tl Volvo lH, AC,
AM/Jl'lltterea,l90d co•d. .....,~,, ofr ....., ...... ,..
utlddJ9
:::::---=-----"--,~. .......................
'17...,_M
-~~=-.................. ...............
f,311.Z!.T. .....
_ ....... ......, _______ _.. ..... ,.~-. --. · ... ..-.~~ ... ·----
9y PATalQl KSNN£D\' ·-~ .... .-On the foa&Y eve{l1n1 of ~,.
23. two lt.t&P barced into the
Founta&n Valley home of former
Befl City Co unl·llm1to P.et~
Werrleln They bound •nd &•Hed
his wife w1lll sureac·al tape on llll
upnaus bed. t«>ok fi ve one dolt1tr
bills from her purse and fled
Werrlean. 48, was not al home
Pohce .are puzzled by the •s -
sault but speculate 1\ may be the
work ol orgarn1ied crime fiaures
retallaCfnif against Werrlein for
h\I p"'1,. as a councilman, in
te11alizing gamblang card parlors
1n Bell following passage of
_ ~rOpo61llOO l:J
Pohoe are keepinl!l a close
watch on the f"ountain Valley
home. an·ordini.: to Capt Bill
OeN1 s1
Werrle1n. who at'knowledges
dos~ lies with former -members
of organized crime, including
the late Mickey Cohen, says he,
too, is puzzled by the assault .. He
s aid he is waiting for a message
from the suspects.
"I don't know who would do
this," Werrlein says . "Maybe l
stepped on somebody's toes. But
from what r' know of them, or-
ganized crime people wouldn't
at·l likt! that.·They would have
l,.ft a messa~e or gotten in C'On·
Florida citrus threatened
• Arctic air ·causes
evert;'-power cuts.
By The Anoclated Press
Record cold spread over near·
ly all the nation east of the
Roc kies today , s talling
thousands of cars, and causin~
critical power shortages in some
regions.
Citrus growers fretted for
therr oranges In North Florida
where the thermometer dipped
below freezing. More than 8,000
New Yorkers complained about
cold apartments as arctic air
sent temperatures diving. Car
batteries died and fuel lines
froze.
··we are absolutely s wamped
with road service calls ," said
Steve Harwell of the Virginia
Automobile Association in
Richmond, where the te m -perature this morning was a
record6degrees.
A spokesman for AAA in
western Connecticut said 3,500
"can't start" calls we re re-
ceived Saturday and Sunday and
500 between 6 a.m. and 8 a.m. to-
ctay.
The National Weather Service
said the cold weather was not
quite as severe as Sunday morn-
ing, when readings were as
much as 40 degrees below zero.
but was more extensive.
Readings of below zero w'ere
recorded from the upper Mis-
sissippi Valley. through the
Great Lakes region and the Ohio
Valley into the Northeast.
..............
COLD CONTINUES
UtJca,"N. Y. Firemen
Record low temperatures for
the date were In numerous
cities, including subzero marks
in Beckley. W. Va., 10 below;
Car ibou. Ma ine, 20 below:
County employees
reluctantly work
More than 200 employees who
work in the Orange County Hall of
Administration, where structural
safety has been questioned. were
at their desks today but their
labor group was still waging a
mild battle lo have the workers
re· assigned.
Representatives for the Orange
County Employees Association
were passing out fl yer s lo
workers in the building in Santa
Ana. The handout questioned the
Board of Supervisors ' decision lo
keep offices open. ·
Supervisors decided last month
to shift all public meetings to the
nearby old Hall of Administration
until at leut $500,000 worth of re-
pair wort is completed on the
new. five-story buildln1.
ThON repairs are scheduled to
start later this month and be·
riniabedtnmid·Aprll.
OCEA representatives also
were requesttq today that the
county provide $1 million worth of
insurance for each penon who
work1 In the buUdln1.
OCl!!A General Manaeer John
Sawy• laid today hia 1roup atm
plan• to rue • snnance aplnat
the county pemment because ot unaafe wortdnl condltiona ..
Meanwhile, be aakl uaoct.uon
leaders have given employees the
choice whether to reporl to work
in the building. He said the as
sociation's "main motive" is to
advise workers of their rights.
Independent enganeering con-
sultants reported to county of-
fi cials last fall that the , three·
year-old. $8.9 million llal o d·
ministration does not meet st e
earthquake safely requirement ·
because of a lack of structural
support.
The supervisors have initiated
laws uits aimed at recovering the
cost of the repairs from building
' architect LeRoy Rose.
. 200./oot fall
kills worker
PATTERSON (AP) -A
worker from Fresno fell 200 feet
to hia death when a steel arm
broke on a power line tower west
of here, Stanislaus County
sheriff's officers reported.
The vlrtim, Mark James Hoff-
man, 29, had been repairln•.
damaae cauaed by vandals •hootinc at equipment ln Crow
Canyon, authorlUe1 said.
Detroit, 8 below ; Hartford ,
Conn., 10 below ; Portland,
Maine. 13 below, and Wor<·ester .
Pa .. 12 below.
In North Carolina, where tem-
peratures dipped below 10 in
most inland ureas. Duke Power
Co. warned of possible rotating
blackouts unl ess cus tomers
voluntarily cul power consump-
tion.
"This is an emergency." said
Alex Coffin, a spokes man for
Duke Power ··w e 're not crying
wolf." ·
Temperatures fell as far as 42
degrees below zero Sunday -in
Old Forge. N. Y .. in the Adiron-
dack Mountains -and this
morning it was 4 below zero in
Boston, 1 below in Pittsburgh
and just 11 above in Raleigh.
N.C.
At least one death, that or an
unidentified man round on a
Philadelphia street, was at-
tributed to the deep freeze.
ln Cleveland, about 270 pa·
tients were evacuated from a
hospital when a boiler blew up,
knocking oot the-heal while the
temperature outside dove below
iero. .
"We just totally destroyed the
record ... sa id National Weather
Service meteor ologis t Dean
Gulezian of the conditions in
Houlton. Maine , wher e the
mercury slid to 41 below Sun-
day.
Anti-draft
protesters
jam doors
LOS ANGELES CAP> Anti-
clraft protesters jammed the
locks on three local post offi ces
where draft registration was
beginning today arter a weekend
Mac Arthur Park ra ll y r eminis-
cent of 1960s demonstrations.
Employees at the Loma Sta-
tion post office in Long Beach'
had to break a window to get in-
to the building after pieces of
wood were broken off in the door
locks. Los Anl(eles police said
toothpicks had been jammed
into door locks at post offices in
Harbor City and San Pedro. but
workers al both station¥ said
they were able lo open the doors .
An anonymous caller who said
she was opposed to the draft
tele phoned a local news service
and claimed responsibility for
the vandalism.
All ma~ born in 1962 are re-
quired to register for the draft at
post offices this week.
"f dl<fn't re1lster an<S I won't
go 1r I'm drafted," 19-year·old
Pablo Huffsteter said at the
MacArthur Park r:ally. "The
draft haa become necessary
because the U.S. government
can no lonser use tools like the
CIA and dJdatorshipa to. sup-
pre11 popular movementaJn un·
derdeveloped countries."
About 500 people carrying
altm that aatd "No More Draft.
No More War, U.S. Out or El
Salvador" 1athered Sunday in
th• pan, which wu tbe site ol
antl·Vletnam War demonatra·
tlom In tbe 1.a., to march and
U.ten to 9M0bll. .,.., nu,, wu orpntdd by the
Mar ' eo.uu.. wbJcb tell• lta aamt tnaa CM aneiv......,. ol
\be Mlltioul Ourd kllllll,I ol fo•r 1tacleata at K••t State
UalY...,• ;:;a1•. .,.. .. .,. .,.. .... ............. . ... .. ~ ........... .
.,, iftij( ....... ·a· &811 ... ., ._" -.._,,,......... .
----~ ..,..._ -··" .---..
•.
• llllllm llllY PINI
<>HA N (,f COUN i f t.l\l II UHN1A 'l'> CE NT S ·.
tact with me.
"But thJs is like something out
or television .•.
' Mary Lou Werrlein, 28, who
described to police her attackers
that fogg y evening, added fud
to s uspicion that organiz.id
cri"!e fi gures were involved.
O n e of the thu gs was
described as a thin, middle-aged
man with a ruddy complexion
and pock-marked face. He was
neatly dressed in a grey suit
with a grey felt hat. ·He was
armed with a pistol. He wore a
bandaid on hi.s chin.
The other sus pec t was a
younger man with shoulder
, length hair and a metal hook in· •
stead of a· ·right hand. Mrs .
Werrlein told polire.
They gained entrance to the
home by saying they had "a
message from J oe Sica." Sica,
Whf» has the right of ava1'e?
Werrletn ·s41id, is a r etired
member of organized crime in;
California.
Werrlein said Sica is a friend·
who was "extremely upset that
someone would use his name
like that."
We rrlein admits t hat the
gambl i n g issue wa s con ·
troversial in Bell but he refused
to speculate that it had upset un-
<See CRIME, Page A2)
An offshore storm brought high waves
between 4-5 feet along the Huntington
Beach pier Saturday and these early morn-
ing surfers shared one· roller. Water tern-
perature was a chilly 61 degrees, about th.e
sam e as atr temperature. Choppy surf
~ontinued Sunday.
Motocr()ss cOurse
faces HB query
Huntinglon Beach Community
S e-rv i ces Director Vince
Moorhouse has been accused or
CXl'eeding his authority by
negotiating for a bicycle
motocross course to be built in the
t'i ly 's Central Park.
Attorney Karl Van Holl.
chairman of the Friends of the
Parks Association . claimed today
that Moorhouse has negotiated
with the American Bicycle As·
soeiation without authorization
from the City Council or the Com·
munityServicesCommission.
Van Holt said he is fearful that
the negotiations will t ie the hands
of the City Council. He also
claimed that city crews have
performed preliminary grading
work for the facility near Talbert
Avenue and west of Golden West
Street.
Van Holt said he will lodge a
protest at tonight's City Council
meeting which starts with a 6:30
study session at the Ci vie Center
Moorhouse acknowledged to·
day that he has been negotiating
with the bicycle organization. but
claims he is following normal pro·
cedures.
"We want to do all the legwork
and tie the whole package
together before it is submitted for
approval. It still has lo go to the
community seorices commission
and the City Council. We don't
know if it will fi.y. ·'he said.
Moorhouse said discussions
call for a one-year pilot program
lo test the feasibility of the
motocross course.
Negotiations call for the city to
receive 10 percent Of the grO!>S re·
ceipts in the venture.
Lab 'twin
births
forecast
LONDON cAP l The world"s
first lest-lube l wins may be horn
in April in Australia as a result of
a de\'elopment in the procedure
for fertili zation outside the
mothers wom b. at·c·ording to a
report in the British ma~a?.ine
New Scientist.
The magazine·s correspondent
in Canberra . the Aus tralian
capital, reported that two sets or
twins are among nine embryos
resulting from ova rertili?.ed out.: _ std~ the womo a nd retu-rned to
the women from whom the~·
came Tht~omen ar~ progress-
in~ norm~· at two Mclhournl?
hospitals. ·
The report saicl the women
were treated hy Carl Woao. a
profe ssor of obs tetrics and
gyne<.·ology at Me l bourne's
Monash University who has de·
veloped a procedure for fertiliz·
Hi s organization, which num-
be rs about 100 families, wants to
keep the park passive and op-
poses commercialization of the
park
Moorhouse a lso said some
~rading has been performed al
the site. but it was chiefly to con·
struct a berm to keep four-wheel
<SH QUERY. Page A2l
1 ing human eggs produced by in·
duced ovulation.
Crowdlwwls
'Ripper' suspect
charged in murder
LEEDS, England <AP> -As a Police earli er indicated
crowd howled and screamed, a Sutclltte was the Ripper but that
35-year-old truck driver was their questioning of him "had not
charged In court today with the developed as quickly as we had
murder of one of the 13 women al· anticipated.•'
legedly slain the past five years Liaison officer Supt. Frank.
by the so-called Yorkshire Rip-M.orritt told reportersearlier t.hat
per. ' Sutclltte's "facial features will Peter Wiiiiam Sutcllrte was . . . form oart of the prosecu·
charged with the murder Nov. 17 lion's cue.f· Police have -said 1
of20-year-GldcollqestudentJac-bfte mark on the body of one of the
quellne Hlll. He wu ordered held Ripper's vtdhm lndlcat.ed the
wtthoutballuntUJan.14. . murdenr had a 1ap ln hia front
Police pr.-vlou1ly de1cribed teeth.
Ml11Hilluthe13th and 11t11t vie· · -um lnareipofterrOrinnorthem Ntl-"bcll'l aatd SuteUffe wa11
E land• y_....... d w --• quiet, handlome man who they c~t,,..c!.t;.~re •DJ -· btlleved worked aa a l:fd
A crowd ot more than 1.• diatanee '"1ek dl1vw. Tber
bnle1tdthema11atratea'eamtlD bl• brunette wife tauabt art
th• town ballot Den,burt. a -•=•e, end U1e7 hid DO
town ~ Leida when the 1Up. c .. ..._ · ~ = .. per~womea. ... w• • ~. • ·
· Tbt ~·--• euwbo~•boul • lute a ....... '•• ,._ · f!'!~' Mid ............. DIWI
All four previous test·tube
babies were born arter e..igs were
taken from the mothers during
their natural cycle of ovulation.
the magazine said. It reported
that Wood gave the mothers
fertility drugs to induce ovula-
tion, the process by which a
mature ovum is produced and
<See TWINS, Page A2>
Coast
Weather
Decreuin• fot&ineas to
mostly sunny Tuesd1y.
Lows tonilht mid to upper
408. Hilhl 1'1:1'8day mid to
upper'70I. •
r,., debat~ COftUHH :
ShOMld BriH Sip• how.
puHd tOillt 'uktorw '" tlw BrotOU' grup1 IH ~BJ.
.... .., ........................ ,_.,.. "l=~·~ Ute~ Y1ltlle.. ....... , ""..,..,. Ta ....... aM tlltl.. .....~ .. Ill•. . • ~=;~~: ~·-=-=~= ~~ ...... "lii. .. . ............. ~~~~~~
•y ~ "'"\ -.
' . W.YMT Hf $1 1 ..,LlWJ
·---JIJST .. &4«JNG--~
U.S. money Bupply
haB sharp decline
1-11~1-w:uU 44P~ TM r1111r.a a...t~~~ ~
a.tian'• monev 1upply ftU thar,&Y in the wMk endM Off. at. drop ('anlt' n the t•Olit of 1h0rt lt1rm botrowlna reached a
rd hitch amid effort• by the central bank to rHtraan 1nfla·
Much of the r <>untry '• inooey •up~ly Ii In the form of credit,
h•r Uuan tallh. 11nd Loday '•report f~lowed an anqouncement by
Ff'dfral Reservt· B.nk ol N1Sw York on Friday that business
"9f'rn" inti from m11Jor Ne" York l '1ty hanks dropped by SU billion 1----tfii.1~.-~ ro1hng ("hrist m Ill> Evt·
. LA J(ILl (,\"' Tht.-('hart Uowa~ on Prospect str'eet WMS
\ 11) daniat,:ed I>) 111 t' and smoke today. but proprietors s11id
mam dmm~ ro<ml ma) reopen within a week~
F1ft) firt-fi~htt'r'> responded to two alarms There was
\ \ smo«t-1&1111 llrt-dama~e to a ne1~hborinti jewelry store. A ~pok t-'>lllttn Udl P1tu. estimated the dama)!e at $350,000
\nor ti
-;,.,,, Bl l 'Kt:Yf!: I.a 1 \1'1 State pult<.·e escorted three w~1te
~ 11rL 111to all \\ h11c liul·kc) e lbgh Sc.:huol today, .and t~e girls
.-tert' enn·llecl for da~:.e~ under s tate <'ourt order m defiance or
; ll•deral Jlt :,•t· ... clc:.e~re~at111J1 <11ret·t1ve
·we t1a\e 1111 alternali\t' hut to enroll the g irls at this time,"
,,;rnl Pr1111·1~al l'harlt':. W<tlll'S
Thl' l'Jl1)(1tl nwnt <· .. mt· oo orders of state Distril·t Judge
H1diarrl 1...c.:t.· Ill: tt>ok tht· extraordinary step · of assumin~
, 11st111h of ttw g irl~. \\l10 \\ant to go lo S<'hool at rural Buckeye
r.-i tht·r.lhan oht·) l " S 1>1!'.tl"ll'l Jullge N·auman S\•ott's order that
1 la·~ rnh.· husc~ to a 11n•\lominanlly hlac·k Sl'hool in Alexandria,
1:, mtlc~ a\\a~
ff pagan IN"ro•• bard,.r
I.OS :\N <:l-~1.t·;S 1AI'1 l'res1dent·elect Reagan's v1s1t to
\ll'x1<·0 today, a ran• pre inaugural journey across the U.S.
horclt.•r, rs intcn<lt.·d to he long on symbolism of friendship and
:-.hhrt on .. penf11·s of 1hscord between the countries. c Related
pholn. AS >
The main purpose. s aid Reagan aide Edwin Meese Ill. is to
portra} the importance the new administration attarhes to U.S.
~lex a·an ties after four years or less·than·smooth relations .
!\feesc said there was no s pecific·-topic for Reagan's meeting
\,1th Mexrcan President Jose Lopez Portillo at the Museum of
Ari and History in C1udad Juarez. on the U.S.-Mexican border
near El Paso. Texai.
r·········-·-. Frot11 ,.,.,,.. A I
CRIME ..•
tll'rworl<I f1Aures. He sa1cl 11
.:1•ncrates about $175.000 a
month for !ht· 1·11 \
(;amhlini.: 1·ard parlors also
~·-.;1 st in I hl· n<.•<t rhy 1·11y of
<iardcna, 1iol11·e nnll•(I
Wnrh'in I)> the <'Xl't"utor ol lhe
Jat1• gangster :\<tu·key Cohen's
•'.~lall' and h;.i~ th\• riJ.!hts to
rohcn ·~ m {•mm rs lie sat<I he ml'l
Cohen in thC' I !..-10~. when Wcrrle1i1
W<•~ a shew sh mt· ho~
,\ Ht•ll c·o un1·ilman for lfi
.)l':lr)>. 111· ,\a), clt·foaterl for re
<'IC-c-t 111n l;i.:;1 1\pnl lie attributes
hi~ pnlit1t·;1l d1mnfall to adverse
1111hl11•1t ~ '"' 111\ 1nl-! his tl'shmony
lwf•H·e the Los /\ngcks County
C; r a n cl J u r ~ 1 n v o I ,. 1 n g l h e
lhllsidc stranl-!ler investi~alion
I(\. 1dentifil•d strangler suspcl'ts
I\ 1·rincth R1an l'h1 and \'1t:tor
Buono as me n he saw at a paper
1•nmµc.tn ) warehouse in Cudahy.
Werrlein owns and operates
Western /\uto Parts in the l'ity of
Sell. It is one of the largest auto
parts stores in t he Western Unit·
t!(I. States. He sa1<J he also owns a
rant:h in Arizonu. He boui.(ht hi s
home in south 1-·ountain Valley
~bout I'~ years ago. he said.
Assault
try fails
Police a're searthing for a man
who broke into a north Huntington
Beac·h home a nd attempted to
rape a 20·year·old woman who
was asleep in her bed room .
The intruder. desc ribed as a
25·year·old white man. 5 feet 8.
with a slim build. entered the
home through an open kitchen
window at 5:45 a .m . Saturday:
walked into the woman 's
hedroom. clamped a hand over
her mouth and attempted to as·
saulther. police said.
The woman's mother was
awakened by the noise. however,
and the intruder fled when she
called to her daughter. police
said.
Chief surrenders
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
lA P > -The chief of Malaysia's
outlawed Communist Party for a
quarter-century and a leader o(
the party's anti-aovernment
auerrUJaa has surrendered to
authorities. the government an·
nounced tOday.
FV Council
to conduct
• • interviews
Fountain Valle} City Counc·1I
will condul't publit interviews
Tuesday and Wednesday nights
for a su<.·<·essor to departing
C:ounc·ilman Roger Stanton
Stanton \\as to be sworn in
tudav as the new 1st District
Or ange County supervisor.
The new council member
appointed by the remainin~ four
mt'mbers wil l se rve the
remaining portion of Stanton's
c·ity term, whirh expires in April
1982.
Sixteen Fountain Va lle}
residents submitted applications
~~~t~ppo~intment to the counl·1I
The c un ci l will heg1n
interview· g these applicants
1mmedi ely after its meeting
Tuesday. The coundl meets al 8
p .m .. with the interviews
tentatively scheduled for 8 :30
p.m .
/\dditwnal interviews will take
place at 6 :30 p.m. Wednesday,
also in the C'ountil thamhers ol
City Hall. 10200 Slater Ave
AC'C'ording to previousl y
announced plans. the council
will narrow the g roup to four or
five finalists and then conduct
ln6teln-depth inter views before
a final seler tion is made.
probably in early Fehruary
Police seek
man involved
in HB rape
Police are searching for a man
who allegedly abductec:land
raped a 22-year·old Westminster
woman who was on her way to a
party in downtown Huntington
Beach.
According to police, the man
confronted her as she stepped out
of her car at 1 :30 a.m. Thursday,
pushed the woman back into her
vehicle. took her keys and began
driving around.
The man stopped near the in·
tersection of 18th Street and
Pecan Avenue, threatened to
harm the woman if she resisted
and then raped her, police sa.id.
The suspect was described as a
white man. about 25 years old. 180
pounds. wearing a hooded
sweatshirt and beige pants.
TEL!PHONI
...
ThomH P. H•l•v """' ...... Robert N. Weed
~,.....,..
M. Thomlla Keevll .....
TNm81 A. Murphlne ........... C.'f:r.!ft H .. Loo& A ..............
Al ... ,.,_...: (714) 142..tn1
CIHlltled ~: 141-1171
OPPICll
C...•Male: ---.., ..,... L ..... tlNd\: MU*.t:aMIM......., ~·--!"'" ... "~
.-Off and running
A bout 850 Southern California runners
<:ompeted in the united Cerebral Palsy
benefit lOK run Sunday at Fashion Island.
Newport Beach. with Dave Babiraki 6f
Granada Hills winning the race and a
round·trip ticket to the ~ston marathon.
After giving hi s all to the rare. Babiraki
starts another this time a mock run .
with his son Jonathan. 3 (below). The run
was spe>nsored by Lido Van and Storage
.co. of Irvine.
FmmPapAI
RIPPER .•.
and sometimes a friend came to
help him.
10flt> ke1>t to himself but was
not distant. He and his wife
didn't appear lovey.dovey but
there was no impression of any
s train between them."
They kept their home
'"beautifully." one neighbor
sale
Poli<.·e Sgt. Robert Ring and
Const able Robert Hydes told a
news (·onference they arrested
the man Friday night in the red
light distr iet of Sheffield, a
Yorks hire town close to the six
c.=ities in which the Ripper
struck. Although he never killed
in Sheffield. many or his victims
wNe prostitutes.
The two 1>olite officers said
that durinl-! a routine c·heck they
found suspi<'ious hnmse plates
on a purkcd Ro ver automobile.
The) suid after a computer
<·hetk of the 1·ar·s registration.
they arrested th<.• dri ver on sus
pi I' ion or theft of the 1>lates.
"It was Just a spot C'heck on a
1·ar parked in a t·ertain area
where prostitutes take c lients."
said Ring.
Gregory said the man did not
resist arrest. He said a woman
with him al the lime "is helpin~
with inquiries. hut has not been
arres ted.·· He did not identify
the woman
Newspaper re ports s aid the
polil·c• founrl a hammer. one of
the weapons used hy the Ripper.
in the man's t·ar.
The hunt for the Yorkshire
Ripper has 1·ost nearly $10
million s ince his first killing. of
J.>[Ost1tute Wilma Mccann in '~(.feds on Ott. 30. 1975. The
polite quesl1oned 200.000 people.
sea r<'hccl :10.000 homes and
thetked 180.000 vehiC"les.
Fro111 Pflfl#' Al
TWINS • • •
1lis<·h arged from the woman's
ovary.
As a result. doctors in future
can sthedule the time of ovula·
lion and fertilization in advance.
the ma~azine s aid. adding that
such predictability will make it
easier for t linics with limited re·
sourc·es to offer routine test-tube
fertilizations.
The magazine said Wood treat-
ed 160 women last year. Five of
the women who became preg·
nant produted lwo embryos.
Some of these have since abort-
ed, the New SC'ientist said. but
l wo sets of non-identical twins re-
main. The first are to be born in
Aµril. it added.
The parents were not iden·
tified.
be world's first test.tube baby
s Louise Brown. born to a
oman in Bristol. England. on
uly 2.">. 1978. The birth followed
O years r research by Cam -
. d e niversity physiologist
Ro ert Edwards and
gynecologist Patrick Steptoe.
who have since announced plans
tn open a private clinic for child·
less couples.
The procedure, also known as
in vitro (in glass) fertilization, is
used in cases whe"re an egg can·
not be fertilized normally
because of a blockage or a
woman's Fallopian tubes. The
e11 la removed and fertlli&ed in
the laboratory. then retumed to
the mother for the nine-month
gestation period. ,.,,_ .......
LA airport clears
LOS ANGELES <AP> Los
Angeles International Airport
reopened tooay after dense fog
forced a halt in takeoffs and land·
ings and caused a jetliner with
no passengers aboard to taxi 011
the pavement and i:!el stuck in
sand
Nobody was hurt m the inc•·
dent, the plane was apparently
undamaged and the au:port re.
s umecf normal operations at 8:35
a . m . about three hours after ro~
closed it
President·elect Reagan·s
plane was among the first to
lake off. Reagan flew to a mee t-
ing in Mexirn with that nation's
presit1ent. Jose Lopez Portillo.
The Casual Side of Rugby ...
1~ oonon rugby anonaand pants.
Miiiabie In COlort d red, white.
ktwlcl. a1cy blue. nevv. Ind gold.
Nt/Jo, lht clmio blr.,.. IUQbv thlrt ....
lh I ~tillnd.
Hostage
quarters
shifted
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -The
Iranian government says it Is
studying President Carter 's
final offer for the. re1ea'e of tbe
U.S. hostages, has transferred
the three Amerirans held at the
· Foreign Ministry to a new lO<'a·
tion and has taken full control
of the other 49 captives from
the Islamic militants who seized
them 14 months ago.
Prime Minister Mohammad Ali
Rajai 's spokesman. Ahmad Azizi •
told The AssO<'iated Press on Sun·
day that the "U.S. response is be· ing studied" a~d Iran's reply
would be •' announced later.''
Azizi said U.S. Charge d'Af.
faires Bruce Laingen. political of·
ficer VictorTomseth and security
man Mithael Howland had been
moved from the Foreign Ministry
in Tehran to "a more appropriate
place of residence." the offidal
Iranian news agency Pars report-
ed. Contacted by telephone from
Beirut. he told the AP this was
done for reasons of "c·onven-
ience."
"lt was dedded from the begin·
ning that when the hostages were
delivered to the government, the
three at the ministry would also
be taken hy the government."
Azizisaid.
·'The other 49 hosta~es are now
in the hands of the government."
he reported. indicating for the
first time that the militants who
seized the U.S. Embassy on Nov.
4. 1979. had surrend"red tont rol of
the l'aptives as they promised to
do in November when lran·s
Parliament set t:onditions for the
Amerit·ans' release.
Erik La ng. the Swiss am·
hassador tn Tehran. said in a
telephone interview from Beirut
that he had been told by the Ira·
nians that the three had heen
moved from the For.eignMinistrr
and plat·ed with the other
hostages and that the I ram an go\··
ernment has takl'n t"ontrol of the
1·aptives
But Lung whose government
n•prescnts ll S 1ntt>rests in Iran.
said ht• hail h e-e n refused
pt•rmissum lo \ isit un~ of the 52
hostagl·~ ~inn· llll' Christmas
holicla.\'s wht•n he s;.iw th(• three ;.it
lhe Fon.·1gn M1n1 stn
· · r don't know "ht•rl' t hf•\ are · · Lang sa11I · ·
l.ainl.!t.>n . Tom se th and
llowl;.nd wen• at the Foreign
Min1s tr) when thl• militants took
over th<.· cmhas:.) ;,ncl had hcen
kepi llwrel'\"l'r s1111·e
Huntington
police reek
two gunmen
Two mC'n who terrorized a
lfuntinj.!ton Heal·h family at gun·
point aft1•r falsely ide ntifying
lhc m st•lves as law offieers arc
being sought hy polil'e
Sgt l.u1s Othoa said the' pair
rorc·cd I heir way into a central
l'ity homt' al 8:50 p.m . last Tues ·
day. branchshed a blue steel re·
rnh"er and said they we re llunt-
lfl J( ton Rec.t<•h polic e offi<·ers
making a drug arrest
The mlru<ler Lht'n handcuffed
lh(' 44-year-old horneowner ano
his 14 ~·ear-old son to~ether.
O<.·hoa said The man. his son
and his wife then were ordered
to lie on the floor while the in-
truder s ra n s a c ked the
hedrooms. he said
A f t er t h e i r s e a r 1· h . t h e
~unmen left the house without
takin~ anythrn~. <khoa said
AL:SGARAGE
56 FASHION ISl.ANO
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 841030
I
~
Money top woe
Legi,slature faces budget crunch
SACRAMENTO tAPJ Th~
t•1 12 Legu1laturt-retur(ll'd tu
•or• today. feel nae probl4!ml) uf
tOO ft W cioilan to fund ~lMlt' ~HI
&rem,s end lM ml'n.> h•1.n1ol11tur'
lot a . ScO<"klon ltrt'M A'l\t'tnlll)
f'lil
Othn 1'\1!.ut'" t h1~ ".-1•k." 111 I.it·
so c·11Ut>d l(hO.\l \ ollnl( HI thr '
Sf'1mbh . 1md, on '\11turih•> (;m
Edmund 8r11"" Jr , t<1ra1111l
presenti&t ion ul ,h1-. IJfCJIJl•'>'-'cl
state bud~et for tht· rwxl (1\1 ul
)t'&r
Bro""· 1n 1111 lfllt'f\ It·~ fa,t
~ t.•e k prvm 1~c<I tJee11 hud~t·t
r ut:. 1.1a111n.1l"rl.\ 111 a id 111 h1t·dl
l(O~'~nmlcl\llt lo avouj .. lluc tn·
c·r .. 11...-
Ah lhl'.) hu\'c for a deude,
l>t•111o~:r1ats n inlrul both houses,
•17 ;.,:i 111 the i\sst'mbly 1.nd 23-17
111 th1· ~mult• Hut <tn 11lh1&nce of
t<t-vohhl'IHI" a11c.l ~un:.erv-at1ve
l >t·111111 r :u s """ l1t>t'll g ainin~
''rt'll~th. a111I may wield a veto
1>r11uf two 'l'hlnl::. ma1urity on
"'inc i~SUt";. th1" H~ar
Thl> first vroulem fa('lng the
;h~e111bl.> ~ ai. ~ hether to seat
l>t·111oc r;it l'<Atritk Johnston in
pl1Jn• 111 Ht·1.1ul1l1 ecin Adrian
F 11n<ht· 111 tht' ~6th U1striet,
~ h IC'h c·m t•r-. varh of San J oa
/ . -Toxic waste burn
method promising
1Tl.LAllOMA. Tenn I Al'1
A ne\\ burning pron:ss. "liwll
relies on temperatures or 5.000
degrees. l·an destroy man) tox1t·
chemical waste~ eliminating
the need for dumµing or s toring
the poisons, a ph) sil'lsl says
Dr John B 01t•k s Jr , a
phy~icist and president of J H
Dicks and Associates. said his
firm has dc\'eloped an 1n
cin e rator th a t produ t·cs ex
trem c heat and ne<.1rh
eli m inatcs hazardous chemit•al;,
suc·h us the cant·cr-causing PCR.
He said a patent on the in·
cinerator is pending, and the
U.S. Environmental Protectio'n
Agency -which last year im
posed new rules on dispos al and
treatment of toxic wastes has
been asked to \'iew burn tests
EPA Qfficials were unanul<.1 ·
ble for t ommcnt.
''The theore tical results in·
dicate that this method will
satis fy the ·s1x·nmes.' require
ment of the EPA." said Dil'ks.
referring to federal rules requ1r·
ing dcstrut·tion of' hazardous
wastes to a le\'el of .999999 or
one part per million.
"Other te<·hniques are already
beinj! pral·ticerl for the inc·inera
tion of these suhstan<·cs. hut
none comes dose to one µart per
million."
Yale to s~ll coin
to finance library
NEW JIAVF.N, Conn. ( Al'I
Yale Universit) sa id a rare,
194 year-old Amer ican gold
·' doubloon will go on sale today
for $650.000 to help finance the
construc·tion of a new library.
The Rrasher L>ouhloon is one
of only seven struck by Ne\\
York City goldsmith Ephraim
Brasher in 1787. They we re the
on I y A mer i n 1 n go Ill l' o in s
circulated befon· the U.S ·mint
was estahlishe!I.
It "<i~ w1n·rt111n how the hum·
111g µrut·cs~ "clUlcl (·om par<' m
eost tCJ <·urrt·nt methods for di!r-
pos ing of ha:wnlous "astcs. but
it ";is cx1>N·a •d to be 1.-ss ex
J.ll'n::.l\'C.
The EP/\ adopted strit l rules
govcrninl-\ dis pos al of tox1l'
l'11cmicals <iftc r d1st·overit.•s that
man) wastt.•s were he1ng dis ·
1·arded improperly . three1tening
·W <Att•r s uppl1cs anti pubh-c·
hl•alt h.
Dicks si:.1111 his com1Hrny was
dc\'l'loping the buruing process
for Holle) Blcctrit Corp_. of
J a e k son v i II e . F I a . • w n i l' h
scrv1tc:-. industrial and utilitv
powc•r transformers. He said the·
process works hy stripping elec
Irons from atoms that make up
the h:uardous t•he m<:ials. break·
1ng llwir 1·hl•m1t·al honds.
The. Jac ksonv-ille firm-1s
cspctially intcrcslt•d in dis pos·
ing of PCR. or poly<'hlori nated
h1phenyl. on<:t' µopular us an
eh•t•tri,•al transformer 1·oolant
hc•fon· a 1976 federal law hannccl
its manufacture. The chemical.
whi<:h has been linked to t·ancer .
1s in use in many transformers.
The <tualities that made P<.:B
attractive as transformer and
hydraulit· fluid also contrihulc to
its extraordinary t he mical
s tahility. making it. highly r esis·
tant to deal'ti vation in t'onven·
tional incineration processes,
D11·ks said
.. Although there 1s still some
testing to be done. this process
promises to solve the problem of
disposing of m any toxiC' organic
\\ as l!·s at a frudion of I he cur-
n:nt t'OSls for disposal or irn·
poundment ... s aid Lynwood
Holley. pres ident of the J a<·kson·
\ille firm. ·'This holds out the vC'rv real po ss 1hi llt ~ of rcdu t 1n~ the
ha z ardo~s waste 1·osts to
Amcriran ut i l 1t1 es and
iucl ustries. whj.J e at the s ame
time. a ch ieving a leve l of
material dest.ructwn that v.111
not hHrrn th<' en,•ironment "
quin and Stanislaus c.-ounties.-
Fondse, who was sealed dur·
ing a brier organizfrig session in
December, would be the first
s worn-in le gislator to be re·
moved by a recount in 78 years.
His ouste r appeared to be a
,·irtual t·ertainty
Elel'lion·night returns gave
f<'ondse. a former•san. Joaquin
County s upervisor , an upset
69-vote vic·tory over Johnston. a le~1s)ative aide who outspent
him nearly 3·1.
But a r e count dec lared
Johnston the winner by 35 votes.
and a Superior Court judge re·
fused to disturb the result. saying
the decision' was up to the
Legislature .
Democratit· leaders planned to
as k the Asse mbly lo seat
·J ohnston and unseat Fondse by
u majorit) vote ..
But Asse mbl y Minority
Leade r C aro l Ha ll e tt , R·
Atas<'adero. had a lwo-front
t·ounternlta('k : ;in insistence on
a t wo-thmls majorit y vote. the
l'Onstitut1onal requirement for
"t.•x pellin,1(' a mcmbl'r , and a
t•all for an Assembly investiga.
tum of a lie gee.I irregularities in
tht.• ret·ount She sa id Fonds<:
would sue if he. Loses his seat.
Johnston's lawyers s ay legal
;iuthorit1es hmit the definition of
''<•xpellm1(' to a dism issal for
m1st·omhwt
Also this week. Assembly
Speaker Willie Brown is to an·
nounce rnmm1ttee ·assignments.
Il e ;ilr c ad y ha s given
Republi<'ans six of the 27 com
m ittee t:ha1rmans hips , and has
promised them two committee
tnl·mhers for ever y three
De mocrats J
Law enfor<'cmeni and t 1v1l·
liherties groups we::rc anxiously
awaiting the makeup •or the As·
st•mhl~· ('riminal Justll'C Com·
mittc•e. \\h11sc liberal majority
has ,kdlcd Impo rtant polil·e·
hal'kt.·cl hills in lhP p<.asl Brown.
ll liheral. says he will appoint a
t ommillcc that rcflcd s the full
Assemhly's news on crime is·
s ues
Littlt• le~1slation is likely to he
taken up this week, hut one
measure that could r eal.'h the
Assembly floor would prohibit
ghost voting, the pra<·t ice of let·
ting Asst•rhhly members push
the voti ng buttons or other me m·
hers "ho are away from. tbeir
desks .
Th<' resolution wa:-. sponsored
hy Dcmol·ratit· leaders under
pressure from Repuhli<·ans and
an anti-ghost voting crusader .
Ralph Morrt'll of Di xon.
Defenders of ~host voting note
that Ass1•mbly members often
ure ;ittt>nd1ng committee hear-
in gs or work1nl-! on legislation in
the Senall' during Assembly
-noor sessions. and leave instru<'·
t111ns on how they want to vote.
One drink too maDy~
-............... ·----····· ... ·----....... .. , ...
Mondey • .t.1U8ly S. Ulll 1 04ll Y P6l.OT #
E11d of the wall ,., ........ •
Bactrian camels. the kind with t wo humps .
stand near the western end of the Great
Wall of China. on the edge of the Gobi
Desert. Although camels are common in
the area. this trio was brought in especial·
ly for tourists.
Tax reform target
Lungren setting priorities for Congress
By PIHL SNEIDERMAN
Ot -D•llr "lot Sl•ll Tax reform and changes in
immigration law were to he
among U .S ·Rep . Dito
Lungren 's personal priorities
when the 97th Congress con·
vened in the nation's capital.
But one of the most interesting
politica l d ev<!lopments to
emerge in the coming months.
Lungren predicted. may be a
s howdown bet ween President·
elect Ronald R eag an and
Thomas P "Tip" O'Neill Jr .
Democratic majority leader of
the House.
Lungren . a Republic an
representing western Hunt·
mgton Beach. Seal Beach. Long
Beach and portions of adjacent
(·o m munities . offered h is
for ecast in a New Year 's
tele phone interview from hi s
Washington office.
The t'Ong ressman observed
that as Republicans take contrQI
of the Presidency and the U.S.
Senate. O'Neill will be consolidat
i n g his influence over the
Dcmo<'rats' r emaining power
base. the House.
According to Lungren. O'Neill
already has attempted to deny
GOP congre~men .some key
committee seats.
"I s uspect what will happen
will be a confrontation between
Reagan and O'Neill." Lungren
said.
"If that does happen, I think
the loser will be O'Neill becau:te
Reagan better r e prese nt the
thinking of the American peo.
pie ."
The congressman said he
hopes the Democrats will give
Reagan a chance lo implement
some of the -programs-he out·
line d during the presidential
campaign.
' .
o .. ,,~ P•lol ~1•11 Photo
FORESEES CLASH
Rep. Dan Lungren
American worker.
He said he wi ll press for adop
l'tQ(I of the Ke mp· Roth plan.
which would n•dutc federal in·
t•ome taxes hy 30 percent over
three years.
To aid the nat ion's industries,
LunJ,!ren said he "ill work for
changes in taxing formulas re·
lated to plant and equipment
depreciation that wi ll help put
American· manufacturers on par
w i l h J a p a n e ~e a n d West
German competitors .
"It 's not so mu c h that
American business tan't l'om-
pete." he said. "It's just that
there are so many clis·incentives
to competition."
mittee on imm1gntion. refugees
and international law.
In this capal'ity. Lungren said
he will work for expansion of lhe
Border Patrol for1.:e.
He predid cd that ongoing
<lC'onomi~· problems in Mexico
wi ll prompt ;i t'l>ntinumg flow of
i ll e~al a lic•ns to the United
States
Lungren said he would support·
a guest worker µrogram that
would grant ;pPcial visas to
suc h people. allowini.: them to
work in the United States for up
to s ix months in a l'a lendar
year.
Summing up his forecast for
the !nth <.:on~rcss. Lungren Ob·
served. "I'm l·autiously op ·
timistic The potential 1s there
for clomg some 1-\ood things. But
"<''II h;ivc to :st·e 1f the will is
thc •n 1 -
"If the t\dministrat1on acts
aggrl'~Si\'cl;. ancl the Congress
at ts res pons1hl). I think it wiU
happen · ·
Reagan won't
quit club
S AN .. ~RANCIS<.:0 IAP> -
Pres1dent·el(•l'l Ronald Rea~an
has no plans to resign from the
all·male Bohemian Club. an ex·
C'lus1ve San Francisco -bas~d
group facing sex discrimination
chaq~cs. a Reagan s pokesman
savs.
Slewardess fired in dispute over booze
MIAMI CAP) After Eastern
Fli1?ht 401 wus hijacked by three
homesick Cuban refugees. flight
attendant Carolanne Ray and
other crew m embe rs relaxed
with passengers in a lounge at
Havana's Jose Marti Airport.
she pus hed it aside. anrJ ordcrcrJ
orange soda pop instead
The night attendant and her
attorney s ay the punishment
doesn't fit the alleged infraction.
even if she had taken the drink.
The hi jackers had threatened
the :!28·passengers aboitrd the
New York·to-Miami flight with
gasoline bombs.
-·1" He admitted the Congress as a
whole has stfme great challenges
ahead.
Lungren said these tax re·
form s would e n co ura ge
Amer1<·an C'ompa nies to upg rade
their equipme nt and modernize
their plants.
Joe Holm~s said the form•r
California governor was 11h -
a wan' that the state Fair
Employ ment and Housina
Department had lodge d dlS·
c·rim inatory-hiring c harges
aguinst the cl uh ReaJ(an will de·
d de whether to resign from the
group when the charges are re·
solved. he added.
A passenger ordered a drink
for her. Mrs. Ray said. She says
But a few days after the Aug
26 intidenl. Mrs Ray, :!5. was
acl'used of drinking while on du·
ty and was fired .
Mrs. Ray says the a ccusation
is false. Her case will go before
a labor arbitrator on Tuesday.
, , ...
I
Th e dismissal was "out·
rageous" and "unreasonable".
says Alan Greenfield. who was
hired by the Transport Workers
Union to represent Mrs . Ray.
"I don't think. at that point in
time. that anybody was thinking
about company rules and reg·
ulations." Greenfield said.
"Did she say she was drinking
on duty ··? asked Eastern
s pokesman Balton James .
"That's a very sore point with
the company."
Officials at Eastern which de·
m ands abstinence during work-
ing hours from its executives
on down -declined any further
comment on the case.
"I drink milk." said Mrs. Ray,
who shares an epartment on
Key Biscayne with her husband,
Emili(). "I have one unopened
bottle of wine in the house -
that's aU. I hardly drink."
The four-year Eastern veteran
claims she was fired beeause
her supervisor didn't Uke her.
"It should be obvious that in a
company the sbe of o.ura, that
would nol be a reuon for firing
s omebody," responded
auperviaor Irene BalJel. Mrs. Ray alse complains that :
•he wasn't 1iyen a chance to l4U
her ildeOf tM story alt., fellow
fU1ht attendant.I reported the al·
le1ed drinkhll incident.
"They didn't "!"• call me up and aay, 'Dld you?"' lln. Ray
aaya lhe'a anxfoul to IO back to
work -fw E&MAm.
"lt'1 a beaV)' emotional thiftc, 1.tttna nr.I/' •he aald. "I'm
aid to .... lndepadent -.1
baveprtde."
··Probably the No. I issue will
be what to do a bout the
economy," said Lungren who
wilJ continue to support a major
tax out to relieve the average
Beginning his sel·ond term in
the House. the c·ongressman will
continue to ser ve on the subcom·
for ywrn h1s fevor1t<z. shirt,
m edq, in fjn<i all cot;Lon,
with qatlw,nz.d sl~s
and Tonq t.d1 ls
avai\abfa. 111 a mintow
of 18 dif'fa,Nn°t.>colors.
....
) .
J t
f -' " ' ~ t .. • • -.\ • • I r
IW
~) .,. 1
f DM.V PtlOT .. '
--. -~
~ wit•,.~· Te•~~'''
Marp•I•~.
Is so~thing falling?
WNDON amooa:s a.an. lnoreuanab •harp,...
poru bav" been rwnbhn1 out of our C,;~ty Seat up ln San·
l• Ane 1u11ean1n1 that me new Hall ol Admini1traUon la ln
a haUava shaJK" Alle1at10D.11 are that 1t'a. • Lhr.a! Lo-We
and hmh
At laa.l report. the t oWllY t1mployee1 a111110Ciataon wu
ur1me 1u mem~r'I •••11ned to the new hall nOl to report
to the 1nl\'nor Wall out.side Let some supervisor flnd you
• rard table rur • neuby lawn where bureaucracy can
then eruc.·eed
Thu. d1s1nt'lanat100 IJY county wockers to enter the hall
w lU• • tr1gger\1Cl b> ia su~rvi~al pratfall wherein the
Count) 8o<trd dec1th:d The Public !that means you reaular
~pler s houldn 't l>e illlowed inside the questionable.
•all works ·
l.'OlJNTY t.:MPLOYEt:S lhw. reasoned af it isn't safe
enough for us ordmuiel>, then it surely would be • hazard
lo the arms lUld legs or government
ll was later explained by Supervisor Ralph Clark that
the conl'ern was that the regular citizenry would gel in the
~ <t} of work t rews shonng up the walls of government;
nut thctt then: exists any danger per se.
Thi:. Clark pronouncement came a bit too late lo
:.oolhe tho.o;e u~n the <•ounty payroll, but it was still a good
tr~
Throughout <tll th as, I have personally fretted about the
d1s11n~uished members of th.e Jo'ourth Estate. my fellow
hal'ks. who are also housed in offic,es within the dubious
1 walls
IS ANVBODY REALl.V worned about their health,
s<1fety and welfare'! Probably not.
I '011nty lmreaun als. mullmy shaky bluepnnts
It t•oulcl be noted that the good newspape r people who
st·ribbll· down the antics of our county government are
loc·ated on the hottom floor That's beneath everything ex·
<·cpl hasemcnt parking. ·
Nont• of their offices. near as your correspondent has
heen able to determine, have any windows overlooking the
real world outside. Ir things start dropping off the ques-
tionable <'difice. the minions of the press won't even be
ahll' to detect the droppings -until maybe it's too late.
IT MlJST BE ADMITTED that there is precedent for
the prt>ss heing located in the county offices nearest to
Ludfer In the old county courthouse. the hacks also
ha!'ked away in the basement.
This press basement had more relation to Lucifer than
just lo<·ation. In the summertime in downtown Santa Ana.
the county press sector could get hotter than Hades itself.
F'liei. had enough sense to stay out of the place. That base·
ment wasn't a press pool. It was a perspiration pool.
Listen. you know how hot it can get in Santa Ana?
Other places they talk about f.rying~ggs on the-sidewalks.
In Santa Ana, you just toss the egg across Sycamore Street
and when somebody catches it on the other side, it's
already hard-boiled.
THE OLD COURTHOUSE basement was about 12
degrees hotter than the sidewalk in July or maybe August.
Today. the old courthouse has also been declared an
earthquake haurd, so it's tough to find a county govern·
ment building these days that isn't suspect of something.
Of course. the s uspicion here is that the old courthouse •
basement isn't any better or worse today than it was ·in the
years when the press languished within it.
Now the scribes are in another suspect lower floor. But
al least they have some air conditioning. They can go in
comfort.
NATION I WEATHE ..
6 in family.found slain
~i•covery made a/ter hu1band'1 d:eat,h
DELMAR. Iowa <AP> -When
police went to notify Bonnie
Gilbert that her hu.sband had ap-
parently committed sulcide.
they found the 34· year-old
woman and her five children shot
todealhlnthefamily home.
Ballistic• tests will be con·
ducted on a gun found a\ the site
of the apparent suicide to de·
termine whether there was any
conne~tion between the shoot·
in11. authorities sald.
Clinton County Sheriff.Michael
Galusha said Mrs. Gilbert and
her obild.ren were found in their
upstairs bedrooms Saturday
night after authorities made
several unsuccessful attempts to
contact them.
The bizarre chain of
events began Saturday in Yale.
S. D.. when police there said
Gene Gilbert. 28, committed
s uicide. Police went to the
Gilberts' rented home in this
eastern Iowa town of 600 resi·
dents and found the bodies of
Mrs . Gilbert~ Dawn Roling, 13:
Cobalt
steam
escapes •
Michelle Rolln1. 11; Jason Roi·
in1, I; Gene Gilbert Jr .. 2;
Rachelle Gilbert. 1.
The three older children were
Mn. Gilbert's by a previous
marriaite.
The body of Gilbert. an un·
employed construction worker,
was fotmd in the home of his
father. Guy Gilbert, according
to Beadle County Sheriff Mel
Scheibe. Yale is about 450 m iles
from Delmar.
Near the body. Scheibe said,
'was a note containing "personal
material." It was not clear
whether the note mentioned the
Iowa incident.
Neighbors in Delmar said
they didn't know much about the
Gilberts.
Delmar authorities roped orr
the white, wood·frame. two·
story house where the bodies
were found They refused to
elaborate on what they found at
the house. but Clinton County·
Medical Examiner Salvador
Borja said all six victims were
found lying on ~eds on thr
second floor or lhe house. Each
was shot at least onc·e in tbe
head . the medical examiner
said.
Borja said there were "quite a
lot.. or spent shell s round near
the death scene and that it had
not been determined when the
slayings took pla<·e .
•.. _ ... ..............
James ·Brady has-:tieen
named Ronald Reagan's
White House press secretary,
according to today's editions
of the Washington Star. The
paper said Br~dy, 40, will re-
port to James Baker, White
House chief of staff.
Hwnan Clon.e_ seen possible
TORONTO <AP) -Like something out or. a
science fiction movie, researchers in a. Swiss
laboratory have developed techniques that coul~
lead to the cloning of a simple mammal, such as a
mouse, and ultimately a human being
The method makes it possible to produce
clones exal'l genetic copies -of a mouse embryo,
sometrung that had previously been achieved only
with plants~!!~ Lo_wer.animals.
But scientists said that because of several am·
portant limitations, the discovery falls far short of
immediately allowing human beings lo be cloned
or lost limbs to be regenerated. The discovery's •rn
portance as expected to be limited to sc-1enlifit ?e
search.
"Worries about cloning humans are very far
away for purely practical reasons." said Dr
Philadelphia, a SC'ientist who works in the field.
"E ven if we did know how to clone a human, I
don't know why we would want lo do it.··
The main commercial application of cloning
would require tieing able to make clones from
adult l'ells. so that one could. for example , make
multiple copies of a cow that happened to be an ex-
c-elle nt milk producer. said Soller.
But the discovery may have great s<:ientific
importance. said. Dr. Michael I. Sherman of the
Roche Institute of Molel'ular Biology in Nutley.
N.J He said it would open up new tools for study-
ing the fun~·tioning or genes in growth, aging and
cancer
~ Davor Soller of the Wis tar Institute an MORRIS, Ill. <API Radioac-.-----
The terhniquc ""as de\'eloped by Dr Karl lll·
men see of the Uni \'er s1ty of Gene\'a and Dr Peter C.
Hoppcof Ja<·kson Laboratory in Bar Harbor. Maine
ti \'e steam vented unexpectedly
from a power plant, then turned to
snow in the sub.freezing air and
sprinkled an empty parking lot.
but the Nuclear Regulatory Com-
mission says there was no threat
tohealthorsafety. ·
An NRC spokesman sa'id Sun-
. day the steam, laced with small
amounts of the radioactive
isotope c·obalt·60. condensed and
feU on a plant parkin~ lot Satur·
da y al the Dresden Nuclear
Power Station during a test of a ·
backup cooling system.
Linda Scott, a spokeswoman for
Commonwealth Edison, wh1<•h
operates the plant. said the re·
lease came as the plant's No. 2 re-
actor unit was being dosed down
for refueling and said the shut -
down pr~ed without incident
SHE SAID the radioat•tive
material had been <·ontained in
what she desC'r1 bed as "C'rud"
that was stuck to the walls or a
tank of waler. The tank is part or
the isolation condenser on one of
two ba<·kup <·oolin~ systems .
When the water boiled normaJ
l.r during the s hutdown, the
material esC'aped with the steam.
she said. She said the material
was radioa<:tive hel·ause the utili·
ty several years aJ?O had used
some contaminated water in the
tank.
''Weknewtherewas going lobe
some radioactivity and we
sampled it before the lest but we
d1dn 't expect as mu<·h crud to be
•knocked loose as was, .. she
added.
NO AUTOS or people ~ in
the lot at the time of the incident.
said another Edi s on
spokeswoman. and the area was
roped off pending determination
of a proper cleanup method. The
NRC said ttre brownish snow cov·
ered an area the size of a football
field .
"It was rust color. a solid
material and within that is laced
some radioac·tivity," said Russ J .
Marabito. of the NRC's Region 3
office in Glen Ellyn, a suburb of
Chicago. "It's so low that some of
the m eao;uring devices we used al
that point couldn't pick up a read-
ing."
Marabito said measurements
made "thus far" indicate no
radioactive material was re-
leasedouts ide the plant property.
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CACJFORNtA Monday, Jenuwy 5, 1911 H I F DAILY PIL()T .4.1
-Hl.11-8peed t-h~Ht•
Tiro arrested
in kidnap
NORTll ll<tLl.YWOOlt !A l1 1 l'wo '""·tt "'tire•
arr•»led amd book(od lhr 1nvt•st 11H•l1111111l ll11i111tl)Pln.i
after 0..} •llt>iled.l.V •W1w\•'.(I • wom•n out111de •
n11thtt lub hert' •ntl lht'n 11·11 p11l11 1· 1111 11 h1~h spe:t:d
r hai1>, authotlh"" .... 111 •
Bou•u-d Sun•h•' w1·11· .. :or111u•• H1vcr1&, ;t!) of ~~ lm1u and Lu1.,( u 1u1~ ~:1 ul th·w du '>1t11ISgt Wtll
t >o1 run or . "" Lo~ I\ I •
''4t•ocl l>1\ ''""' • .\ndn·,1 1~,1~·ll1t t• ~I > t"lu l•ltl l'llll>luyttt: at the
l'.•lununo 1 'lull ""d' .,.1&l'k111~ HJ l1t"1 1 ill 1tftt:1 work
t'J rl) .~urnht) .... 11,•11 1 .... ,, 1111.:n i,:r i.l.lwd lwr 1ri lhc park
111):! h>t Jfl\I !111 1 i·ll ht•r 111lu l11t'11 1 di I >ui11111 '1t11I
. 1 i '"'' t HU> \I'• '\ \h11rt dlHI -,harv hut
• llHh) t'drlhl~Udkt" Ill' di 4 11111'111 If I itU:-.tcJ 1111 lllJUrlt!:O. \If
.t.1llld.l.!n auth11rfl ll:''> •ui \
The lt•n1l1l<ir :.tru<:k
,.,.fff. J Ju't li<:f11n· 7 v ni Sunday
"nd int:a~ul'ctl 2 1 un the
lt11·htcr -.1·Jh·. ~auJ Gar~
M dJan1cl of Lhl' Offic·e of
Jo:rn('rJ.:l'l'fh Sen1<.·t•s i.n Wt-k-m11~ si911 displayed A,.Wi'9!11Mlo
Sat r .inwlllo l'ht.• t·c·11tc l' of lhl'ciuakc wa:-. JU:>t we:-.t of
~ 'on\'onl .ihou\ l ll 1111 h::-. t·a~t of San l'ranr1~i-o
SAN fo'HAN<'IS<'O t l\I') l'rcs11.icnt e lel'l
Youngsters wave from walk hradge near
the Cham1za1 Monument with sign that
r eads: "Welcom e . lo the most impQr·
tant international <.'Ommunity in the
world ... The sign was hung Sunday in pre-
µaration for the meeting of President-
elel'l Ronald Reagan and :\1exieo's Presi-
dent Jose Lopez Portillo today.
Ronald n eat.(all ha~ no µIan~ lo ft!!'>IJ.:11 from the a ll
male Bohemian (.:Juh, an t:x l'lus1ve San Fran<·is<.·o
hased group fating ~e.'< d1!'it'run111al1on <'h<Arges. a
Reagan spokesm an ~ay ~
\"." The s pokes rniln . .Jot· Holmes , said the former
Callforma governor was unaware that the state Fair
Employment and llousing L>evartmenl had lodged
<hscr~minatory-h1rin~ <·httr};~ ai::amst rhe cffin.
Reagan wall de1·1dt• whether lo resign from the group
when the charges ar<• rcsol vccl, Holmes added
The s latt· ha~ 1·hari.:Nl the• Bohemian Club with
sex discnmmat1on be<' a use 1t re fuses to hire women
at its Bohemian Grov<· 1·amp on the Russian Ri\'er
and employs only a few women at its duh huil<lin~.
·------
ACCIDENTS
STUDIED
SACRAM ENTO IAP>
A state task force has
bee~created by Gov. Ed·
mund Brown Jr. in an ef·
fort to fi ght drug-r elated
automobile accidents on
California's highways.
Brown, in an executive
order. told the panel on
akohol. drul{s and traffic
safety to s ubmit a report ,ffan~ ~ lwalne 10 d,.allt .., by July I.
. The g roup includes the BEVfo.:R LY Jiii.LS 11\l'J The body or a 50· heads or the Highway
yt>ar oltf man apparently h<•aten lo d eath was found Patrol, the Department
in a bedroom uf the upstairs apartment he rented of Motor Vehicles, and
hl'r<>.policcsaicl. the Departme nt of
The vic·t1m was 11l1•nt1f1e" as Earl MrCray, said Alcohol and Drug Abuse .
_ Bevei:ly..ffills PoHc·t· 1.1 0111 lfunt. -as 'well as le~isl alors .
Thcapartmt>nlon North La Peer Drive in whiC'h loC'al government of·
Ml'<.'ray's hod y was found Saturday was a s hambles. ficials and attorneys. Hunt sau1. sug~t·st111g a 1>rolonged and v1oll'nt st rug
glc ·
Poll~ laaoac-la l111ap drf r.-
1.os AN<a :a.Jo;s 11\l'l P rol'eeds from a
Wt'l'kend he nl'f1l should go ti long wa.>: toward financ-
ini:: a fl million l'ampaign designed to brighten the
public· imag<' ol vol 11·1· 011 ic·<•rs. leaders of the Police
l'rotN·livc Leai.:ue s :t)
Hut. they add. they probably won't know for
several days just ho\\ mul'h money was taken in by
Saturday night's g9la at the Musi<' Center . which in-
l'luded sud1 cnlcrt<.11ners a~ Tr1111 Lopez and the New
Christy Minstn•ls
Crews to hunt pests
SANTA Cl.ARA <AP > More than
500 young members of the California
Conser vation Corps wi II 1·onr1ul't a
• house-to·housc fruit p1l'king cam
pa1j!n this week in a last·dikh effort to
wipe out an infestation of the Mediter
ranean fruit 0) without 1·ontrovers1al
al'rtal spraying ·
S I atr agri<"ulture anti forestry
workers were Sl·hcdule<I to ,·1sit re!.i
d<•nl s of ont· "hot s pot" neighborhood
near Santa Clara L'nt\'ersity to<lay. at··
1·or<li ng to Don llc nry of the Depart·
m(•nt of l"ood and Agriculture . .,,.
The rc~ulls of todc.y·s informal t'an
v<1:-s1ng will guicle('l'l'Ws from the CCC.
who ar(' st•hNlule<l to a rri \'eat the San-
ta l'lara t'ount) l<'a1rJ,!rounds today
.~
Jrom as far away as Yreka and Los
Angeles.
The t-rews will rem o\'e fruit from
trees and thC' ground Tuesday Later.
s a11l llenn . state 1·rews will return to
:-.1>ra) the ground to kill lar\'ae.
Resulenls w1 II be asked to c·ooperate.
hut he added. "We're· not going to be
tht• c:l•st<ipo We're not going to marl'h
into someom•'s yard saying we're do
mg th1smlhl•numeofthestate ..
Thl' goal of the <'ampa1gn is to deny
lht• flll'S pl<Jl'E'S to lay eggs ard therehy
rc<lUl'C (he fly population to a point
where 1t tan ht• erad1ta~d using
st erile nic:-; to intc rft're with the breed ·
1n~ tyl'lc
Laek of funds ·
Digging ends
• • • in tar pits
LOS ANGELES <AP) -An orticial or the foun·
dation that raises runds for the-~ Brea Tar P its iD
Hancock Park. where scientific digging has come
to a halt, says funding negotiations are progress·
ing and he is optimistic digging will resume in the near future.
Jt wiU ta"e five years and SS00.000 to com-
plete the present dig, which was closed Sunday
due to a lack or funds, said Stuart Ritter , ex-
ec1-1ti ve vice president or the Natural History
Foundation. .
"We have received about SS.000 in sm aJJ con-
tributions in the last we'ek or so sin ce the
announcement or the imminent closure and there
is some indication now that we may get ma jor
funding from a private source." Ritter said. "We
are. negotiating it now, and the source is ver y in·
terest~. I am optimistic.
THE CUTOFF OF FUNDS brought a halt to
scientific excavation in Pit 91 of the famed -tar
pits, probably the world's richest source of fossils
from the ke Age
A laboratory where minute analysis or each in
valuable discovery from the 101-"l·foot dig took
place also was closed. but will reopen within a
week. Ritter said.
The six professional paleontologists -two lab
supervisors and four excavators -who had been
working fullllme on the project ,and were notified
of the impending i'losure Christmas Eve wer e out
of work as of Sunday.
Patient who "wo1i
$4. million dies
SAC RI\ MENTO I J\P > I\ patient of Dr. J ohn
Gcor~e Nork who in 1973 won a me dic·al malpra1·-
t iC'e dens111n of almost S4 million. 1s <lead uf
eann~r
Alht'rl c;on:r.a lc s . 39, cl1cd Saturday in
Amern:an Ri\'er llusµ1tal. lie had \\Orked .the la~t
six 'ears as ;J lol·omoll \'c cn~ineer.
·c;onzales was u ~·}Cttr uld grocer) d erk when
he \\ent to :'llork ahout h1~ hal'k. inJured in a 1967
ear a<·1·idt.-nt '.'lu rk pt:rformet.I s urger). hut
(/onzales dE"\'C lopccl c·anc·er in l!nO ~it·h some ex
perts ;..tllriliuterl to ,,·or.-~· lf\'ff''thc pain that
foJIO\H'U. ,.
SCl<'ra mento Superior < 'r1ur1 .J u<IJ.!C R AIJIJott
c;oldht.-rg awarded c;ont.ales S:i 7 million after a
five-month trial that the JU<lgt• <·alled a "<:rilnlf
c;uignol of mer11t al horror~ "
The polit·e union leaders clec·1ded to undertake
the public· rPlal1on~ c·ampa1J.!n 111 the wake of ex ·
tensive 1·r1tr<·1s m of th<· poli1·c" parttc'ularly over a
sl rinJ.! of sh1.>ol in cs in \'ol ,., ng orfit·crs Silksational.:.
Sherlock Holmes
fans celebrate
BUHBl\NK (/\l'l Shcrllwk llolmcs fans ean
a lmost always huut u11 ~orne ot'('as mn to honor the
master sleut.h
The lal<•s t was the t•t•n tt•nnial of that da rk and
s l,(,lrmy night in Lunclnn when llolmcs first met Or.
.John Watson in a dutt<·rc tl ('hcm1t·al laboratory in
J,ondon.
"The 1·l'nll'nn1al 1s parlll'ularly important
i.'..l.:..ilJlSC •• _this was the he~inni-n~ o ~i r
t•arccrs,'.' SCK't<.'ty m<.•mhcr lkmald llenderson said
at a weekend 1·ekbrat111n in this Los Angeles sub-
urh "llad llo lmcs and Watson not met. we'd
never hav<' hc•arcl or llolmcs. for Watson set down
what little wt• kno" nf Holmes He wa s his
Boswell. ..
Besides being Holmes' trus t y assis tant.
Wat son was his faithful t·hronader
"Thal it has lived a ll these years It's amaz
ing that it g()('s on li ving," t•ommented Osl'ar-
winning c;alc Sondeq:aard. who played the
elegantly villainous Spide r Woma n opposite ~asil
Rathbone in "Sherlock Holmes and the Spider
Woman."
Actor Kevin M(·Carthy, who played in a dozen
Holmes radio mysteries. added tl)at he was sur·
prised at the exte nt of the Holmesian fervor when
once. as· he vacationed on the tiny isla nd of
Guadeloupe, a native greeted him by saymg, "Ah.
Sherl<K'k Holmes.··
Black to head
state hospital
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The new exttutive
director of Atascadero State Hospital is Sidney
Herndon, the first black to head a state mental
hospital.
Herndon. 39, who has worked in the state
hospital-syste m siDce he was 18, brolre the racial
barrier si' months ago when he was named acUn1
executive director a{ Metropolitan State Hoepltal
in Los AnJeles.
· The Job has a salary range of $35,856 to
$47,678a year .
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,,, MMlin& tn Ball tut month. the d ·•Uon Or1ulaa· a.. o1 fW'Qleum t:xPottlnl Countri• <OPSC> ....... to
mother ~ ... ot about 10 perc•t la crude oU pr1ee1.
-They Mtt.led on a cellilaa o1 '41 a bal'NI Md a ftlll' el ~ When OPEC wal rormed JO yon ap, the frice el ed~ wu Sl IO • barrel Ev.• la 1"31 wMll the ......
ce manipuJaUon •ot Undet' w~. tlM flrat mcruM wu
r.om 12 41 to 1 mod•t <by now> po.•.
1l ·bl' no mew over yet The nut OPEC m=te1 ii
•l'heduJed for May la o.neva. and ~·a every reuan to
u.pect ~ prare spiral to coaUnue.
SU\ce um. our annual bW for lmoorted oil bu ...
fNm $4 7 billion a year to trt bWka lut yur and, wtth ~till more OPEC m crea.19, lt could reach $100 million
thb ) "'~r • .\II our efforts lo curb oil imports, from producin&
more fuel elflcaenl can to upaadin1 dom•tic produc-tlon. can't seem to release ua rrom this .bonda1e to foreign oil
p.roducers One obvaoos answer would appear to be an all-0ut
~sh to develop a synthetic ruels program that could re·
move our need for crude oil.
A step m this directioo was taken when . Congress
µa s~ the Energy Security Act which provides for so~e
SlO billion in loan guarantees to encourage construction
of synthetic fue l plants.
But since the mid· 1940.s the government has backed
nu fewer than 13 synthetic fuel pilot plants and backed
a" ay from eight of them. leaving only five in current pro-
duction on a very limited scale.
One of the explanations, concemin1 a test plant
opened in 1949, was that gasoline made from coal would
raise the price per gallon three or four cents to about 30
or 31 cents! From today's viewpoint that hu to loot like
a ~ifl. . , a . . There are those who insist the Ou compames, which
control much or our coal 1Jl"OCludian, sWl find it-more
economical t.o import crude oil and export ~· If true,
that could only be sbortsiebted and self-serving.
There's no great mystery about synthetic fuels. Tbe
Oerman Luftwaffe wu fueled principally on aviatioo
gasoline made from coal throughout World War II.
And today the government of South Africa has
virtually removed its dependence on foreign oil by con-
struction of a vast coal-to-Oil-and-gas complex.
The South African installation was developed by the
Fluor Corp., our own neighbor here in Irvine.
... <:;orpora~ion chairanan.J. Robert ~uor in~ists that the.
establis hment of a network of coal-liquefaction plants to
supply our· needs would cost no more than we currently
pay for imported oil.
When the Russians launched Sputni,k I in 1957, the
U.S. met the challenge with a space program that rapidly
hrought us abreast and ahead of the Soviet space pro-
~ram.
Clearly it is t.ime to break our oil bondage by
launching a similarly intensive synthetic fuels program.
Fads can be costly
Booms in recreational activities aren't unusual.
Neither is the news that massive interest shown in a new
s paretime activity often shows a tendency to fade.
Biggest fad today, or course, is rollerskating. Skate
manufacturers are having a hard time keepin~up with
the demand and almost every public spot with a fiat,
hard surface is filled with zipping, twirling skaters
1le monstrating all mannerofformandnon-form.
Thus it was only a few years ago with skateboards.
llardly a kid between 6 and 16 had any other form of
. locomotion and any paved incline was an invitation to
test the sometimes incredible skills of the latter-day hang
10 crowd.
~
Skateboards are still around, but certainly not in the
nu mber when orthopedists' waiting rooms were jammed
"'ith youngsters waiting to have broken bones put back in
place.
In fact. skateboarding interest has dwindled to the
point that the city of Irvine is closing down its public
c;kate boarding course -one or the few such facilities in
Orange County. .
"l guess it's a kind of fad that has really died down,"
c·ommented the city's recreation director.
Therein i~-a lesson for city COU(lcils andiite bodies:
make s ure a sport is going to be around for a long time
before investing public funds to satisfy those swept up in
a single-use activity.
L-Ord knows how many taxpayer dollars have been
put into bike trails, for instance. Yet we see precious few
bike riders who regularly use the trails. Certainly not
enough to justify alJ the paving and curb cuts that were
put in _when bike-riding interest was al its peak a few
y~ars ago. )
"-' So before someone suggests constructina a roller
s'ating arena, bear in mind that hula hoops didn't han1
around nearly as long as lawn bowling.
Besides. skaters can use the bike trails not being
used by bike riders.
• • Opinions expressed in the sp.c. above are thoM of the Dally Pilot.
Other views e!'pressed on this p•ge •re thoM of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is Invited. Addr ... The Dally f'Uot, f'.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714)_8'.'~1. __ _
Boyd/Pipe smohen
By L.M.BOYD
Question arises as to bow
long a pipe smoker can keep
the tobacco in his pipe bowl
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Even G eor1e
Washin1ton couldn't
escape a f•mily "bil
mouth." Hil mother, a
Tory sympathaaer,,
never IOlt a chance to
berate him publicly and
accuse him -fllHlY -
of l)etlectin1 &er
well are.
•lowllll ...... It ...... \ :::.::..·w:::r.'\= Iowa,~_. • ...,_
tot weM ... NC •11Jt.a .....
1moke COllqill111._. 0.. ._
Rlck•,lr.,of~ ..... manapdto..-.,.nawar
for • miDut9 le MC•*· Lon1t1mewaepa,.,. ....
1n1. .. •
ltbubom'11unlllleea
•St. Bernard dot aet•all7
racued a mt D6lalm 18 U.
,Swill Alpe. Till-_... ..
· becauu a ell•& u•1 U mowmMllellaft ...... .................. ........... ~ .....
=.~J:f. Fr=H• 1111._ •L: ,..... . ... ................... ,., ...
----.· ..
, •
'fhOnai P: HaMy I Publlaher
Mond1y. Jenuery I . tM't a.~1 Krelblch/Edltorl•• P ... Edl\O'
J-Andenon
Soviets hint division of Iran
W A.SHINGTON ~ .The ·atub.
bon lraalaa rel\llaJ to ,. .....
UM "-'lcaa bosla1•. except
for a lhM'• r8llllCllD, could lead w UM bNU-up ol Iran. Tb1a
poulbW\y bu been ralMd by
the 8o¥ieta in MCret, unoftldal
e•t•cta with key Amertcau.
Soveea cause to Ronald Rea1an
Hy he "m•y not object to a
break-up."
The Soviets have hinted that
tbe mOlt sensible soluUon to the
Iranian prob-
1 e"in might
be to divide
the country
into separate
Sov iet and
Am e r ican
spheres or in·
flu e nc e .
Under this ar·
range ment. a
pro -Soviet
government would occupy the
northern provinces and a pro·
American regime would govern
the southern provi nc es.
There have already been
secret contacts between Iraqi
and Iranian military leaders,
who would like to end the war
and set up a provisional govern·
menl in southern Iran. They prob·
ably would i nstall Shahpur
Bakhtiar, a former Iranian
prime minister, as its head.
Andy Rooney
He would alabllab CIOM ti•
wltb Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait
and tbe otber Arab naUonl on
tbe Persian Gulf. Tb• United
StatH would keep ln the
backlJ"O'DI, · but wouJd quietly
, 1upport tbll rulipmeat.
8TaATEGl8T8 advisin1
Rea1u believe such a Penlan
Gulf bloc would be · 'stratestcal·
ly accept.hie," even thQUlh it
would mean dismemberin1 Iran
and permitlin1 10me Soviet en·
croachment. In f•cl, they think
this would be preferable to the
present chaotic. anti-American
government now in place.
P resident Carter. meanwhile,
has been courting Iran by allow.
ing 16rael to smuggle military
s upplies into Iran, including
spare parts for F -4 fighter
planes and shipboard weapons.
'The Israelis have also provided
arms and ad visers to the
Kurdish rebels in Iraq-this.
too, with Carter 's silent ap-
proval. The Kurds have drawn
some of Iraq's forces away from
the Iranian front.
Reagan's advisers expect him
to cut off this secret aid to Iran
and to shift u:s. support to Iraq ..
They will also advise the new
president to authorize precision·
guided missile attacks upon
selective Iranian targets. This
limited military operation would
be-expanded If the hosta1es
were harmed.
The strate1ists around
Rea1an doubt th•t it will be pouible to negotiate the
ho1ta1ea' releue. By making
the ramom -demand public, the
Iranians can hardly back down
without losinl face. Mid the pres1 ident-elect c:eminly doesn't in·
tend to P9Y a '24 billion ransom.
When he lint learned about the
ransom demand, according to
witnesses, he called it "insulting
to the honor of the country."
REAGAN WILL carefully
study all the a lternatives before
he takes action against Iran, his
advisers say. The Iranians will
have to wait until 'after Jan.
20 to find out what he'll do. But
it would be a mistake to rule out
military action.
Footnote: ln past columns, I
have cited secret intelllgehce re-
ports on the t reatment of
American hosta_ges in Iran.
These reports hate given a grim
account of physical a buse and
psyc hological torture. State
Department spokesmen have
now confirmed the reports.
Some hostages allegedly have
been interrogated· at gunpoint,
others blindfolded and bound
long periods, still others isolated
and held incommunicado by ex-
ireme militants. There ue re·
ports ~t the latter'have been
tortured to 1ain phony con·
fessiona. Six wives haven't
heard a word from their hoeta1e husbands.
THE CUTl'ING EDGE: Power
lawnmowers can be dan1eroua ·
pieces of equipment. Carelessly
handled, they can -and do -
lop off fingers or toes, uusing
more than 50,000 accidents each
year ..
In February 1979, the
Consumer Products Safety Com·
mission proposed a safety rule
that would r equire manufac·
turers of power mowers to in·
elude an automatic shutoff that
· would stop the dangerous mower
blade within three seconds after
the user lets go or the handle.
The effective date for this reg·
ul ation was lo be Dec. 31, 1981.
. But the industry spent much of
its time trying to cut back or at
. least delay the effective date or
the proposed regulation. The in·
dustry's arg~ment has been that
it can't work out a safe machine
by the commission's deadline.
The r eason is obvious :
Automa t ic blade -s t o p
me~hanism may add as much as
$40 to the price or a power
mower, which could well mean a
lower sales volume.
THE POWER mower industry
has found a f:Fiend in Rep. Larry
Coughlin, R· Pa., whose district
includes Bethlehem Steel. which
makes mower blades. Another is
Sen . Wi lliam Proxmire, D·
Wis .. whose stale is home base
fo r several mower ma nufac-
turers.
Through their combined ef·
fo rts, a six-month extensfon on
automatic blade-stops passed
Congress It was written not by
the legislators who sponsored it.
but the Washington law firm of
Collier, Shannon and Rill which
represents one of the largest
manufacturers
According to the CPSC, the un·
s afe mowers produced during
the extension period could cause
a s manv as 34 ,000 in juries
IRANIAN EXPORTS: Iran's oil
exports have been reduced to a
t ric kle . Instead, Ira n has
become a leading ex porter of
narcotics. According to British
Intelligence reports. "approx·
i m a t e I y 4 O 0fH ! r c e n t o f t h c
narcotics" seized in Britain
comes from lran. Yet only two
-yea rs ago, ·'that country ac-
counted for only 3 percent or the
illicit narcotics seized... ·
Athletes deserve a -decent educa .. tion
Half the basketball players in
the eight Rochester. N. Y .. high
schools ha.ve been ruled ineligi·
ble. To be specific, the figure is
61 out or 123. or 49.6 percent.
Let's all stand and give three
cheers for the Rochester City
name. I'm sure there are some.
I've just missed them.
Ninety percent of these pro-
fessional athletes have attended
college for four years. Did they
go to class at all? Were they
held to any st~ndard? Did they
take examinations? What are
they going to do when they're
35?
IT IS TIIE schools who are
School Board
and its vice
pres ident .
Archie Curry,
ho-firsHn·
troduced the
new eligibili·
ty proposal.
-chearrrlg;r:i"O ese young men.
I am a sports nut or
the first or·
der, but
sports in high schools and col·
leges are absolutely out of hand.
A great many of the professional
athletes interviewed for radio or
television don't sound as though
they couJd count to 100 or write
one grammatical sentence. They
certainly can 't s peak t he
En1llsh language. I haven't
heud a professional basketball
pl•yer in two years who sounded
u tboush he could spell his own
Sydney Harri8
The schools are using the
athletes to create a reputation
for the institution, and if the
athletes are good enough they
bring money into the university
treasury to pay for some other
things. -
In Rochester. at Madison High
School. 18 of 23 varsity baaket·
ball candidates were ruled in·
eligible. I can understand how
bitterly disappointed tt\f?se
young men are and I coufdn't
possibly expect them to un·
derstand why so many people
will think it's a good thing.
To so many of them, especial· ly black kids from poor homes,
basketball looks like the only
way out of the dark hole they're
in. This is nonsense. but you
can't tell them that. They don't
see another way. An education is
the last thing they consider.
ARTHUR ASHE, former
Wimbledon champion and that
rarest of breeds. a tennis player
with intelligence and good man-
ners, has been telling black kids
or years now -that they're kid·
ding themselves if they think
more than one in a thousand of
them is going to make it in pro·
fessional sports.
It is very unfair fo r an educa·
tional institution, high school or
college. to contribute to this de·
ception by using some people's
athletic ability without giving
them. In return. an education.
' Too often . athle t es are
separated from any part of their
school except the team they play
for. If they spend all their time
practicing and none of their time
studying, they are going to beat
the team from the school that
maintains some academic stan-'
dards for its players .
Vince Lombardi was a
great coach but he did a bad
thing when he poplularized the
notion that winning is the only
thing. Winning is not the only
thing. Playing is the only thing
and winning is an added attrac-
tion. The chances are that ir.
year after year. a high school or
college wins more than half its
g a m..e. 1.-h.e.r-e-· s-s.o~-t h in g
wrong. They're probably cheat·
ing their players out or an
education.
I don 't know why colleges
think a winning footba ll team
enhances academic reputation.
It doesn 't enha nce it in my
mind. Notre Dame is an educa·
tional ;nstitution and should be
koown for that. not for its foot·
·ball team. Classes for football
and basketbaJI players at some
of the mediocre colleges with
great teams are a joke .
Rochester's lead in making
high school athletes get accept
able grades in class seems like a
start in good direction and you
wonder why we ever strayed so
far from it.
Don't let verbal snobbery steal your Dloney
Wblle lboppln1 the other day, I
beard a woman with • baqbty
accent ulE tbe produce clerk to
wel1b four "tomabtoe1" for
her. lie cave her a qulalcaJ
loolE md tblll npllecl, "You're
rl1bt.. madam -.. at tbeae-pl'lcee, u.,,,;,. tomabto9a."
It ...... Ill llllUuetl" -..t
Wl'Jb :-= tomue altudy
ofwlal& · · be called • • • • r b al
a1 a mere "perfume," whlle a
"creme" can be double the price
ola1lmple"cream."
Ilea, llkewile, have learned the
bard way that "1l1ckl" are
cbeapertban ''odd trouaen, ••and
''out.wMr'' II more eoeUy than··
an "overcoat ." And, _,.,...,,,..,, YllitlDI a mm•1
"balr aalan" II far more ••· pen1l'9tltm droppiDC lato tbe old
bal'Wlbap.
eeomomln''; A·~•" emta mon ••at 11, Ua• thaaa"wMcb"(aJ&MqlatMblllt eeeao•le "Um ...... " I ftW bad WM a ..... "•· ....... ~ .......... ,, ... ,.... ... .......... .... ...., ..... . . ..... ....... ------•••• ,,. •. -r•:r ....... _ ..... ..•. ..•. .., ...... ...... . •••r. ,aaee Claa~1t tatere te Alla••--·••••• ·=: a11 .. ., . ................. -. --;-__ . ~·,......................... _.. .... -.... .. . ... t··--... ··~ •. ,. .•.. . .,.,. !i•• .. , .• ' ••• , tfli&"llM111••~· 1•1•111 " ••fm"ll1&8-hrllell...... .. ........ .., .......... ...
more th•n a "book" and a
••journal'' more than a
"ma1ulne. ·• In the old days ln
Hollywood. there were '·movies,··
"film•." and "motion picl\irea." A movie cqst half·a-buck, a ntm .
wa1'1bown for a dollar. but a mo-
tion ptt!ture played only twice •
day for a fl'OlllY Jacked-up ad·
ml11laa price. (flfext year lt
beeame a "movie.">
Mark Twain once observed
that a caulifiower is just a cab·
bage with a colle1e education; in
much the s ame w•y . a
"couturlere" in the world or
fashion m•y be little. more than a
sea ms treas with a Berlitz
diploma.
80Mt:l'IME8 these anobbilh
words set tbelr proper comeup-
pance. At the tum ol the century.
when pnUemtn 1llll wore' de·
tacbablecollan and cuff1, Oliver
Herford •trolled into a 1elf·
con1ck>ully elqant men'• 1hop to
browMarouncl.
A lia..00 'elerk .app~hed
. Mm t. tMi" famlllar pciMun ot c111.-. -dilclaJD: ··11 tbe ......... bl&tntted la IOIM : ...... ,.~ M uked. Ruled
.1lllHi' 11111 H••· 1~• elerk '!!! ..... .. ... " ..... ..., •• Al
:a ..,..., ....... .=
... --till7 .. .. ·...-.. .... . . .. _...,... -
JAN. 5, 1911
BUSINESS
ENTERTAINMENT
86
88
~etWOrl Harbor's John Moffet
finishes ~econd to Soviet
in international swim meet .
See page 84.
1 Rams loss tu1ned it around for Cowboys·
• Embarrassing -de-/ eat is a big reason why Datlqs is still alive
ATLANTA 1AI'1 O•nn> Wh1t1e 'i. htiro1c!> •d
'ant'ed Oalla11 m\o nt11\ ~ur11h1} ·.., ~11t1unal Foo\
ball ~onferenct. title ~i.n1 .. tiut •" 1.1mburasstnK
losi> three we.-ks ago mli) I~ 1111 even bigger
rf'ason the CowbOy!> ue ~llll t11!ve 111thl'tr4uel?I for 1t
th1rd~r Bo\l\I Vltturr
White. the quartertii.d~ heir lv tormer Cowtioy
ii re at Roger St11u.bau{ h fired 1 ~11 touchdo~n
pasiies to Drew Pearson in the fln&I :i 40. Sund a }.
the last a 2J y&r.der With 42 :>t<:Ond:. remaining, lo
hrt the Cowboys to a JO 27 qu11rterfinal playoff vi<'
tor~ over the Atlanta l"akun!>
l>-'LLAS NOW Mt:t:TS lht F.a8 1es 1n
l'hili.delph1a next Sunday ror the n ~lit to pla} the
\ FC wirmer m the Supe r Bowl, Jan 25
·Everybody wa!'. embarrassed h} our loss lo
lht' l~ Angeles Rams." s1:t1<t Whitt:. referring to
the Cowboys' :J8 14 drubb1n~ on the nationally
televised Monday night rnntest three weeks ago.
"We 1usl sat down and said, 'Hey. we're the
Di.llas Cowboys · We've got to play better than
that Tbls team t'S tabhshed itself on spirit and
pride ." 1uud White. a six'-year veteran who has
"u1ded Dallati to a 14 4 record In his first year as a
starter :.&fler S\aubac·h retired.
THE <:OWBOVS '<:AME BACK to beat the
F.agles in the rrnal re~ular season game, then
knockt:d off the Rams 34-13 last week before Sun-
day'i. rnme from behind thriller.
The l"akons. hehmd the throwing of Steve
Burtkowsk1 . who l11t on 18 of 33 passes for 320
yards, led 27-li on Tim Mazzetti's second field
goal, a 34 yarder with only 6:37 left. -
Earlier. Bartkowks1 hit on touchdown tosses of
fi ve yards a nd 60 yards . Lynn Cain scored on a
one·yard plunge and Mazzetti booted a 38·yard
three-pointer
The Cowboys had st·ored · on a 38-yard field
goal by Rafael Sept1en, a one.yard run by Robert
Newhoust• and TO strikes or five yards and 14
. -,~ ... " ..
yards. the last to Pearson with3:40remaining.
'"After that embarrassment to the Rams. we
deeided to µlay 60 minutes every game Even if
the score was 60-0. we would keep plugging away,"
said White .
"WE G-01' THAT first one to Drew and then
the defense rose to the occasion and suddenly we
.,.. ere only three points down and had the ball."
said White who was uncanny in the second half.
h1ttin~ 15 of <!O passes for 239 yards after going on ·
ly 10 for 19 and 89 yards in the opening half
·'This .... ilS the hi ggest game · I've ever played
in ... said White. "Sure there was a lot of pressure
but I need to get i"n those situations "
Urew Pearson. the eight·year veteran who has
been the Cowboys· big.play receiver for many
years. sa1tl the winning touchdown was "nothing
spee1al.
.. J>ann) 1s a fine quarterhaek and if you're
open. ht''ll ~et the ball to you," he !latO "lt was a
great feeling but I didn't feeJ the satisfaction or it
all until the final whistle."
DALLAS COACfl Tom Landry, known for his
stoic face. even was seen smiling after the victory:
"What t"an you say? It was· just a tremendous
thing I the comeback)." he said. "When we got dow11
by two touchdowns 24-10 in the third quarter. l
t.hought our chances of coming back were slim. But
the ball bounces funny sometimes."
It was the second time White had beaten the
Falcons in the playoffs with second·half passing,.
leading the Cowboys to a 27-20 triumph two years
aJ,lo after Staubach was sidelined 't halftime with
Dallas trailing 20-13
"lie was just super. amazing .. " said Lan-
dry "You know. actually, he 's a first-year
quarterback although he's spent some time in the
league
··Hewassimply amazing on a couple of plays .
<See 1.oss TO RAMS, Page 82>
Pl~offs:
• ptzzazz
aplenty
By WJU. GRIMSl.F.V ,,,. S-1•1 COl'rHpondent
.. Shoot from the hip "
"Bombs Away•"
"Li~htning in a hot lie "
··R ingo~"
It 's the ne.,.. fat·e of pro foot
ball ~1ld , wide-open. un -
1irerlil't.1hlC' and so s lruclured
that. as in a good "B" mo\'1e.
~ ou don ·1 krt11~ "ho ~l·ts the girl
until the final rN•I
"ll "s a wholt: new .ea me."
rormt'r DalJa ~ quarterback
Ro~er Stau1Ja1·h "as ~a yin)! last
Sa tu rrla~ a l l'hdarlelph1a 's
\·eteran=' S1ad1 um. where the
Eagles lit•at the Minnesota V1
kings 1n a d1\'1S1onal playoff. "ll
has had a facelift. Do you know
why" It's to please all these peo .
pie."
ti~ SWF.P'T his arm \o" ard
lht• neur 70.llC/(J '>IH'l'tator~ 111 the
st ands . "The rules havt• de
fan.eed the defense I\ defender
WINNING PLAYS These arc the plays that gave Oakland and Dallas
victories Sunda y. Al the left. Oakland's Mike Davis intercepts a Brian
Sipe pass in thl' end zone to end a Cleveland drive with just 49 seconds
left in the g~me . The ball was intended for Ozzie Newsome (82). And in
the right µhoto . Uallal> wide rctel\'er Drew Pearson ~·ell s ror \'IClOI'_\'
after s1·oring lh~· w inning TD with just 42 seC'on<ls to go
COMMENTARY
ran·t use his hands or touch a re·
t·ci\'t:r fi\'<.' yar1ls he)oncl th<' linC'
of S<'rimmage It gn·<'s the re
t el\·cr a tremendous edge " ' -
Browns' doing led to undoing
Cleveland gambles again, and this time it fails
Cl.EVELAND (AP> They
ar-en-!t !iupp&.;ed Lo evcnc he m-
the pfayoffs. Yet here they arc ..
just one step from the Sup<•r
Bowl.
It's enough to m ake a grown
man cry.
"If I start talkin~ too mut:h
about this," Coach Tom Flores
said. surveying the jubilation in
the Oakland Raiders· locker
room. "I might get tears in my e yes." ~-
THE TE-'RS in the Cleveland
Browns' eyes are drying today
the tears of frustration, of dis
may. of seeing a chance at a
championship inching closer anti
closer, then having it cruelly
snatched away at the last instant.
It was Flores· clever decision
lo kick into the wind lo start the
second half which began the
Browns' downfall. because it
forced them to fight that wind in
the final quarte r.
But ultimatel y it was
Cleveland's own doing which led
to It.a ~Ing on Sunday. to the
Raiders' 14-12 victory which
·placed them in the American
Conference title game next Sun-
day in sunny San Otego, far from
the bitter cold which whips in off
Lake Erie and brings tears lo the
eyes of anyone foolhardy en.ough
-to facelhetsub-zerowltHl,-· ·
Coach Sam Rutigliano of the
Browns chose not to face it in the
final minute. He opted for a gam-
ble, a shot at a touchdown rather
than a kick into the teeth of that
wind, an attempt at a 1ame-
wlanlna.fleld 1oat.
· AND Tll,\,T"Gi\1181 .. li almost
--certalnl.y killed the Browns. The
· tam which 1'ad spent the auaon
on the preclPAce. k>okln• down
lb• r•wnlnl throat of defeat one ••••al' after anotWr: yet eecap. tq Meb Ume by the lllhl ol b
.... flMlly ptlWailoftd ... f:'"lila"*•••••·He..W ................. , ..... Nkl ,.
SUNDAY'S GAMES
NFC ch•mplonshlp
D<'llla<. at Ph iladelphia
fcha nnPI 2 at 10 a.m )
AFC ch•mpionsh1p
Oakland at San D1eqo
(channel 4 a\ 2 p.m .l
nC'rhac·k who stole quarter backs
hllnd all season. who s wiped two
of Bri:m Sipe's pusses on Sunday
But the int e rception whid1
ck s t royed the dream of yet
:snot ht•r Sipl•-ins pired heart
-;toppin~ triumph helonged lo
strong safety Mike Oavis
It t·ame on serond down on
Oakland's 13·yard line, with 4\
seconds to play. Ozzie Newsome,
the receiver in the end zone,
never had a chance.
"OZZIE W-'S MY man a ll the
way." said Davis. "Sipe was slid-
'"~ out or the~pocket and didn't
seem lo want to risk the r~n . . I
saw Ozzie look up, so I looked up
and I saw Sipe let go of the ball.''
And Davis, diving. wound up
with it, cradling it while free
safety Burgess Owens and then
the rest of the exultant Raiders
enveloped him and bega~
celebrali1l4'.lhelr victory. .
Rutigliano. or course, defended
his decision to ignore -for GM •
play , anyway ·-place-kicker
Don Cockroft and shoot for \he
big 1l:x point.I. "If we threw on
second down," he said, "we
cou.ld nm on third and attll ao for
the field IOal"
And fot_Qtvtland, field 1oela
tlad been hard to come by.
Cockrdl had made two, from ID
and then a yardl, both la tbe
third period wttb the wind at Ida back. He bed allo mlAed two,
from f'I Md • yardt awa7, Wb la the ..... l*W. wD ..
wind ta llllfaee. Molw ate••
had ... _,,.••'-'elll ..... from~.
Cot·kroft attempted. afb•r R~H
Holton s 12' ~ aiirsc1·on<I quarlPr
toud1dov.n run Y.1lh an intcn·ep
tion. had Pndl'd with Ouklantl"s
Tt•cl llcntlrw ks balling the liall
down
,\ 11 111 all. nut I he hes t llf da~·~
Wh1d1 1s why C0t·kroft l'llulcln·1
set"oncl ~ue~s his coach
"It Y.as v<>ry log1<·al." he said
o f H u I 1 I? I i ci n o · s <l e 1· 1 s 1 1111 .
"he<·ause W<' were hav in~ lrouhlt•
.... ith the entire k1ckin~ unit "
811l t1p in the press hox. survey
1ng the Sl'ene. Al Davis. the
ownN of the Raiders , c·ouldn'l re
• 1 ~1 :l .se.crmct '-LU~:>. A:i. he stuffed
a n·ll'liratory p1ct c uf t·he.,.. in~
µ11111 in his mouth. he announced.
.., d1111 't kncm Y.hat th<' heck they
thn ·" I hat hall for ·· And as 1f to
µ11111·1 ual\' his ohst'r \'at ion. he
liallcd up tlw gum ~rapper and
flun~ II awa)
A~ D SO, TODA V. the Haider~
turn their thoughts to San Diego,
\\ hC're ,\N another t'hallenge
a~ a 1ts them. namely the most
dl'vastaltng passing atti.H·k in the
!'latwnal Football 1·.eague. "I'm
look 1ng forward lo seein.i m y old
-1'..rit>nd John cJeffe-r~on ai:;.im .
Ha) es said of the C hargers'
sup<'rh wide rec·c1 \'cr '"It's a
l'halleng<' to fan• s omcone on a
Jlar with me ..
And 11 \\ill nu dnuht he a
·pleasure play1n~ on soft. warm
grass which gin•s wa) under the
fee\ and 1·ush1on~ the falls "This
was the worst surfa1·e I've ever
plu~ ed on." said Hendricks. the
Raiders' hneharker. "'lt was like
playing on a roller ·skating rink
without roller skates "
Mark v;1n Eeghen, the fullhack
<See BROWNS. Page 92)
Tern Bradsh<rn . the tiootf'd.
<·O\\ ho\ -hatted Louis ianan who
'I u a rtt~rhac·k e<I the P1tts hurgh
Steelers to l•>ur Super Bowl
t'rowm. tn six y1•ars. was quick
to agret.·
·'The lcagut• 1s loaded ~1th ex-
r <•llent quarterhueks now." he
said. '"fellows with strong arms
and a lot of ix11st• Then"s a ton
of fine recei n •rs two or three
on eitery rluh ..
Staubat•h and Brads haw 'are
part of football 's ro\'1ng l'lrcus .
doing C'ommentai;y for C BS
Pete Rozelle and Co of the
National Football League ha\'e
put some p1l7.azz into their enter·
tainment produrt and st1ned old
criticism that the m ercenaries.
with their stereotyped , predil'la
ble strate~y. were duller than ·-
the colle~ians
SO NO MORt: of that three
vards and a C'loud of dust stuff
No more taking two whacks at
the line. throwing a pass and
finally pi.mting No more #-!rind -
ing out first downs laboriously.
small c hunks at a time, and
wind in~ up with a baseball
score.
No. sir. Now you unfasten
your belt buckle. reach back and
let 'er ny. Throw with abandon
and pray that the ball falls in the
arms of a man wearing the
same color jersey.
What's 100 yards? With a gOOd
arm and some· good legs and
fingers. rft> reason you can't cov-
er the distance in two minutes or
· 1ess. If the game doesn 't pro·
duce 50 or 60' points: forget it.
Keep those calculators spinning.
. In the 1980-81 era of pro 0fott.·
ball. coverin1 that kind of a
apace in seconds la a snap.
Furthermore. you mi1bt wait
untll the final seconds -maybe
even the final play -jua\ to 1tve
the folu in the atandt and back
home watchin8 t.levlalon a little
thrill.
IT llN'T cboreo1raphe4 to
ttaat minute detail. But you
couldn't have told from the
wffkel plt.yotta, aettlq up the
tonfennce champlonahlpe for Uae Hit la 8uperbowl XV. . ~~r·pbl•. UM s.c•· tr ......... ~.,....
~ • ..._rallied fw a l).H...,taa1a ....... · bJ , .................. . r•••••• •••rterlt••' •••l
Liits ~·· tbe ou1anc1 ear-And th• oal1 eonv'er1ton · .... ut=.._• -.::::==~~~r.7
l
Ticket holder pay• 82;
will g~t ·back 1158,053.40
A RCAOlA Oft• l"cky lh.·k•• 9*der -viU collt<'l E
J\:>I OM .cJ fot a fil llwe•trn•mt on swwta,y '• Plc.:k Sht
at Sant• Anita Par•, th• hllh .. t payoff since that
form °'"'aaer,n11 wa1 lntrudu<'edaUh11ltack. f ._. Ph-11. Su: •1.rted la•t 1prto11 at Hollywood Park, waa of
!f'rt'd at Sant• Anita d1&rln11 theOC'l 17 Nov. 11 Oak 'l'ree mee\ln&
i.nd i ln<'t'lh«' (·urnmt 1ta.aonupentld De<· M.
Tht> wtnnt!r 111 ho did not appe•r Immediately to cash the
1ar llr t C'orrrt·tly i,el&\'l~ ni&mlieH 1-3-6-'f-2·6 In the second
throuah -A'\'t<Oth r•1·t;i; The winners tnctuded Gray Dandy. who
pa ad~ .Oto 111 1n in the el•ond racts . and Amber E ver. thef14.20
\ h'\Or In the rourth e \-e(lt Tht'rr were 5 7 t1l'IH~ts :.elel'ling f1 ve winners for consolation
pa) orf~ur ~4 20 0 l'h The-pre\ 1oul> l\1gh pa) off 1n Ii ~u·k Six at Simla A'hita was
S~ ~H ~on l)et 31
q ... ,, ., ,,,. ....
\\t>\t ~01 tu110 a"'a) "1th freshman_eltg1bilit}
• \111.J I meitn all l>port:. We '\'e gol l!:U)S playtnl!: football
. "' the lit~ l'l•n tor thrt.'i! gamel> before they go to class u~''' 1•un }UU JUl>ltf) that al·adema·all~ ·•" Don
( anham. ~t1du~a n athlettl' d1ret:tor
f'ft1t»n Ol'f'rpGIN'I" 1fa••I"•'••• a.J
Tht• t'hiladelph1a flyers, who s uffered their ·Iii
first lifetime loss to Was hington ~wo ~eeks _ago. ,
buried the Capitals. 8· I. Sunday night in National
Hockey Le ague action. The Flyers got a goal from
Brian Propp 30 se<:onds into the game, while Rick MacLel1h,
Bill Barber, Kenny Llnseman and Tom Gorence also scored
. . In other games. defenseman Paul Reinhart scored two powIT_Pla~ goals to lift Calg_ar}· to an 8·5 vi<'tor ~-er the .dls·
... :, oq~anized Toronto Maple Leafs. The · Flames look advantage of defensive lapses
by the Leafs to tally unassisted goals by
Kent Nlls!IOll and Erle Vall early in the ~ ,.. gam e ... Tom Lysiak and Doag WlllOD
- -scored unassisted first -period goals and
Denis Savard added a third-period goal lo
~·~ I lift Chi ca go to a 3·2 triumph over
Pittsburgh ... Dale Hunter and Anton
Stastny scored third-period goals in a span
of l : 27 to rally Quebec to a 2·2 tie with the
• New York Rangers. Excellent goaltending
-~l•SH hy the Rangers' Doug Soetaert and
Quebec's Ron Graham, a former King. highlighted the penalty·
filled contest. The Nord1ques picked up th~ir ninth t ie of the
season.
Hal·llltaollllfl Bird •parlu Bo•lon
tarry Bird led Boston with 33 points Sunday m
night as the CeltiC's beat Portland. 120· ll, in Na·
tional Basketball Association a<;t ion at Portland.
81 rd hit his first stx shots and had 22 points by
halftime. when the Celti<·s held a 63-55 lead . In other
action, Milwaukee, s parked by Junior Br.ldgeman's 25 points,
broke to a 23-point lead in the fi rst quarter and rolled to a
128-95 triumph over San Diego. The Bucks' Mickey Johnson
s ank 10 of his first I 1 shots and Marques Johnson added 20
points m the Rucks· fourth consecutive victory . . . Jn.
diana. led by Georite McGinnis with 25 points . scored a
113· 104 \'ic·tory over New J ersey, handing the Nets their
eighth strat~ht dcfl'at N('W Jersey has now Jost 13 of the last
14 games. Bob ~acKlnnon is winless since replacing. Kevin
Loughery as the Nets' head coach on Der . 22 .
Lo"&'•' IHulwlllall eel" •• r'•" ,.,,.
VALDOSTA, Ga. -The nation's lon1est win· m
ning streak in high school girls' basketball was
s n apped a t 122 ~ame s r e cently when
Valdosta handed Lowndes iu first loss in four
vears.
The Lowndes girls had not lost since early in the 1976·77
season and had won four consecutive Class AAAA state high
school championships before their recent 63-57 loss. They
had won their first three games this season
Fro• r.,,. Bl
.... 1,..,....
COLD WEATHER FAN -A Cleveland Browns fan
c heers while decked out in an:sorts of gear to pro·
te C'l him from the below zero temperature in
Cleveland Sunday.
O"*' good '""' d...irrl'r• a"o_tl11•r .-
P Rl NCE (IEORGE. British Coloumb1a · Iii
Members of the Czet·hoslovakian national under-18 ,
ho<'kC) tt>arn know that one ~ood turn deserv~s
another
The players had $675 in Christmas shopping money stolen
from their dressin~ room Dec 22 during an exhibition ~ame
with th<' Prtnre George Spruce Kings. Respondtn~ to a ra dio
s tation 3JJpeal. are a res idents a nd businesses s aved the team
from a )!loomy Christmas by donating $1 .500.
Still playml! a n exh1b1tion schedule in the province . the
team has turned o,·er the surplus to a fun1I to ass1sl hoeke)
<·oathing lll'\'Clopme>nt m British Columh1a
C'zct'h Coach .Jan Klapat: said through an 1ntcrpr;cter that
thl' H•am \.\OU hl long rememher the generosity an<l ho~pttaht)
of northern Rr1t1~h Columh1a r<>sidents. '.
The theft "t'ould have o<'t·urred an)'\\ here. an<I it 1s
ulrcady fori.:otten . ·· he said ·
HB'• i\'#'GI laurih In qualllt1lng I
Jim Neal Jr., of Huntington Beach registered •
the fourth fastest quahTying speed Sunday for next
Saturday's Wa rner W. Hodgdon 300 Grand
Ame rican stock car r ace in Riverside. Joe Ruttman
of Upland won the pole position for that race with a qualifying
speed of 117.20 mph ... After losing in four consecutive
finals since November. Brian Teacher finally broke through
Sunday. capturing the Australian Open tennis championship
with a 7-5. 7·6. 6-3 virtory over Australian Kim Warwick ..
A four-player -managem e nt s tudy panel exa m1n1n g
baseball's free ugent compensation question will hold its
fi nal meeting today with inrucations that it is still sphl on
the question which nearly caused baseball to st rike last May
. . Henchel Walker, c;eorgia 's All-American running back.
and his sister Veronica inten d to compete in ne xt month's
Milrose Games tr ack and field meet in New York .. The
Michigan Wolverines received a warm and boisterous hero's
welcome from 5,000 fans who withstood zero degree tem-
1>eraturcs to t:heer their Rose Bowl victors .
Tr~sioa.ratH•
TV: Basketball Washington at USC, 11 p.m .. Channel
9. taped. Michigan vs. Purdue. 11 :30 p.m .. Channel 13, taped.
RADIO: Bas ketball -Washington at USC. 8 p.m.,
KNX (1070>: Washington State at UCLA, 8 p.m., KMPC (710>.
Hock'ey Ca lJ!ary at Kings, 7:30 p.m .. KOGO (600).
lf-ro• Pagr 81
LOSS TO RAMS TURNED IT AROUND · · -· -PlZZAZZ •••
the-final touchdown lo Pear.son and the fi ve-yarder
to Billy Joe Du Pree." s aid the coach who has taken
the Cowboys to 15 playoff appearances in 16 years
FOR THE FALCONS, who finished with a 12·5
record after winning the West NFC title. the loss
left: most of the players in a state of shock.
.·"It was a bitter pill to swallow." said Falcons'
Coach Leeman Bennett "l still feel we're good
enqugh to go to the Super Bowl. Any team that
willS 12 games is good e nough. But it's a very emp·
ty teeling losing in the playoffs."
· Bartkowski attributed the loss to the failure of
the ·Falcons to control the ball after Pearson's first
scoring catch.
:·"WE KNEW WE HAD to control the ball and
keep their offense off the field. When we got the
ball back after Pearson's first touchdown, I
thQught if we could make three first downs, we
wo)Jld win the game. But we couldn't make one."
sai~ Bartkowski.
Skater on comeback trail
·MILWAUKEE CAPl -Sheila Young
Ochowtcz, who won a gold .medal in the 1976 Olym-
plo. continued her comeback Sunday by winning
a place on the United States women's sprint speed
skating team.
: Ochowicz earned a berth on the team for the
World Sprint Champlonlhipa Feb. 21·22 in Greno-
ble. Ffance.
Jenkins. who had four 1·atches for 155 yards.
felt Dallas' playoff experience was not a fat:tor.
"Not the way we played today. The factor was
that Dallas buckled down and came back. They
played four quarters of ·football just like we did.
but they played a better second half." he said
I
Argentina ties Brazil
MONTEVIDEO. Urugua} <AP) -World Cup·
holder Argentina dr ew 1·1 with tsraz1t in a (iolC1
Cup soccer match that ended in a free-for-all
brawl here Sunday night.
Argentina led l·O at halftime with a 30th·
minute goal from Diego Maradona, and Brazil
equalized two m inutes after the interval through
Edevaldo.
Argentina won its opening matc h 2·1 a~ainst
West Germany, and Brazil needs to better that
score when it plays the Germans on Wednesday.
Otherwise Argentina will qualify for the Jan. 10
final against host nation Uruguay.
· / The Argentina-Brazil match ended in chaos as .
~feree Erich Linnemayer of Austria battled to
separate fighting players on both teams. Armed
police raced onto the field to break up the feuding
players and both teams left the field.
I
The violent end came just 24 hours after three
players were sent off and five actions issued dur·
ing Uru1uay's 2·0 victory over Italy in the same
Centenario Stadium.
~ i llgitt and Wright
fn1uranct agtnts and broilers
M•.nut•cturera:
Insurance coeu rl1ln1 '.' Conlut ua for co'!'petltlve quotes on Proper·
ty. Ll1blllty. Difficult Product• Ll1bll1ty.
Commettlll Auto. Group Llf• and Medlul
• 11 well 11 Worker'• Compenut lon lnaura~.
hetween Ron Jawors ki and Tom·
m y Kramer.
In San Di ego. daring Dan
Fo uts threw a la!>t-gasp pass to
R o n S m ith fo r a SO -y ard
to u c hdow n th a t gave the
Chargers a 20· 14 victory over the
rugged Buffalo Bills.
In sub-zero Cleveland. where
quarterbacks seem to be throw-
ing bricks. Jim Plunkett. a one-
time castoff. won a battle over
the league's top passer, Brian
Sipe. who had thrown for more
than 4,000 yards and 30 TDs as
the Oakland Raiders beat the
Browns, 14·12.
C LIMAXING the weekend.
Dallas' Danny White hit Drew
Pearson with a pass in the end
zone with 42 seconds r emaining
to edge the Atlanta Falcons
30-27. Between them, White and
the Falcons' Steve Bartkowski
threw for 624 yards .
Now it's the Cowboys against
the Eagles in Philadelphia. the
Raiders against the Chargers in
San Diego. And, then for the
winners, on to the Super Bowl.
Whose is the fastest 1un?
"I like San Dle10." said
Bradshaw. "Fouta la great and
he has the moat 1ood receivers."
·'I would go with the Cowboys
if they were . •t home," said
Staubach. "I like San Dle10.
too."
SPORTS BREAK I SWIMMING I FOOTBALL
Swl ... atN I
Age doesn't slow
former Olympian
FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla.
<AP> -At a1e SN Jamison Han-
dy, believed to be the oldest Uv-
in1 Olympian, still plun1e• into
the water for a half-mile swim
each day.
"To me , swimming, the
water, is the most wonderful
thing in ~ Ute," says Handy,
who has ~n called the father of
modem swi.mming. "It's hard to
communicate how I feel about
it."
A one-time Olympic bronze
medal swimmer, the part-time
Fort Lauderdale resident no
longer wins races as he once
did, but he's still doing what he
loves best.
LAST WEEK HE and
marathon swi mmer Stella
Taylor -who made headlines in
recent years with her unsuc-
cessful attempts to swim from
the Bahamas to Florida's east·
coast -led 600 swimmers into
the ocean for the 11th annual
Fort Laudt!rdale Ocean Mile
Swim .
Handy, in his prime, gained
the title of swimming's "No. 1
Inventor." He insists he never
was a great athlete . To com-
pensate, he ~used his head to win
races. "As soon as those bigger
and faster fi s h got on to the
change. I had to be satisfi ed
w i tll se.co.n.d-p la ~r try
Joh11 Gard11er
1omelhin1 elae.'' he ~Y•.
He i.e credited with eveloping
the modem freestyle breathin1·
technique, the legleaa crawl for
distance swimmers, and the
idea of paintin1 pool bottom•
with the lines that sprinters use
aa guides.
HANDY WON a bronze medal
at age 18 in the hackstroke at
lhe UI04 Olympics. Three years
later he retired from com·
petitive springs. and turned to
long-distance swimming on the
advice of doctors who said he
had a heart condition. He held
the natidnal long-distance swim·
ming championship from 1907
through 1909.
Twenty y.ears after his first
Olympio success. the then 38·
year-old Handy won his second
Olympic m edal as a member of
the U .S. water polo team in 19'l4 .
A teammate was Johnny
Weissmuller. who gained fame
as Tarzan in the movies.
Handy also won a place in
Ripley's Believe It Or Not for
winning Oly mpic medals 20
years apart. .
"HE HAS always done
fabulous feats for his a~e. '' said
Executi ve Director But:k
Dawson of the International
Swimming Hall of Fame here,
here llandy -serves as a member
of the ho11rd of direrto..-s:
Ali plans to fight
European Champ
NEW YORK tAP) · Muham·
mad Ali , a battered loser in his -
bid to become heavyweight
champion a fo urth time in his
last fight. is signed to fight Euro-
pean champion J ohn L Gardner
of Britain for an unannounced
price at an unannounced site the
last week-of March.
The promoter is Muha mmad
Ali Professional Sports, Inc ..
which uses Ali's name under a
li censing agreement.
Harold S m ith, president of
MA P S. told The Associated
Press by telephone from Los
Angeles Sunday that Gardner
has signed for a $300.000 purse.
He declined to disclose Ali's
purse. but it was believed to be
about one-eighth of the $8 million
paycheck he picked up when he
was stopped after IO rounds by
Larr y Holmes. the World Boxing
Council champion. last Oct. 2 at
Spinks. who. act'ording lo Smith.
has signecl a three -ft~ht pro·
motional t·ontrat t with MAPS for
a $50,000 bonus. Spinks' opponent
could be Marty Monroe if Monroe
does not sign 1or a title matC'h
with Holmes. Sm ith added.
Smith also s aid a fight between
Aaron Pryor. thi! WBA t'ham·
pion . a nd Saoul Mamhy. the WBC
C'hampion. for universal junior
"clterwct ~hl title rCl.'Ol?nition. mayhconthe F'elJ 2:Je ar<I
f 'ro• Pa9.-8 I
BROWNS. • •
who hashe'1 his way O\'er thE' goal
line t" ice. admitted: · 'l'm sur
prised I st•ored the TDs I did. I
was on ice. pushing off the hall."
Las Vegas. NOW HE, TOO, t·an l!Cl back to
SMITH SAID he put together lhinking serious!) ahoul San
the fi ght only because Ali. who Diego lie thought ahout 1t a Jot
will be39 Jan.17,wanted1t inthe o n Saturda.'. \\atc htn)! the
wake of his mismatc h loss to Chargers defeat Buffalo 20·14 1n
Holmes. t he other A FT pla~·orr game. "I
Ali surrendered his Nevada was glad whl'n that ).!ame was
boxing license Dec . 19 in a letter over so I toulrl !>tart thinkin~
totheNevadaStateAthlettcCom about Clt>\'t.'land again ... he
mission which accepted it under acknowledged
an agreement that Alt not appb And in Clc\'dand. they 'll be
again. Butthat agreement affect~ thinking ahout "h<1t m1 gh1 ha\'e
Ali'sstatusonly inNevada. h('en.
"lfistop,it's because iwantt< "You <·are and dream about
stOJ>. Nobody ~lln.rnakJ:.lJlrnQP..:_ som ething long enou h that it
said Ali at a Nevada hearing intc becomes a part of you:-'' said
the matter. Smith is confident Lyle-Alzado. the Browns· elo·
some place will let Ali fi~ht again. quenl defen!'i\'c end ".Then you
Sm ith also said he has signed c:;ec it go awa) It tmrf"
Jim Watt of Scotland and AJexis---------
A r g ue 11 o . the forme r
feathe r weight a nd j unior
l ightweig ht c hampion from
Nicaragua, for a boilt in which
Watt would defend the WBC
lightweight title. Smith said he
planned the fight to be on the
ca rd of the Ali-Gardner 10·
rounder.
ALSO EXPECTED to be on the
s how is former champion Leon
Sailors seek
tourney title
Newport Harbor High bids for
the Canyon Invitational basket·
ball c hampionship tonight at
7:30 when Coach Jerry DeBusk's
Sailors take on Cypress Hi1h.
Newport has waltzed to two
easy ·victories In the tourney.
knocking oCf Univenity <76-80)
and Valencia (75·43).
Cory Everhart, a 6·3 senior,
tallied 11 points in the win over
Uni and hit 24 Saturday •1ainal
Valencia. Newport carries a ,7·3
record mto tonilbt'• 11me.
In an earlier 1ame (4:30),
University tak• on Eaperama tor the couolaUon tiUe.
BUSINESS I STOCKS
Monday'• NYSE
I •·•· (PDT) Prioea
COMPOSI1'E
I
I •
--~--..... -..... ~~ -----·~ .. .,,. .......... .,,_~ ... .---..--........ _ • .... r
TRANSAC'l10NS
...
Mondey, .JMuety 5, Hll1 H DAILY PILOT 8f
cr1i1u .. ,..,. .... r
Do finns want
only good news?
By MILTON llOSKOWITZ
If you spot some wronadoinc in the company you work
for -a defective product. bribery, racial or Mx dis·
crimination -what should you do? l1nore it? Report it to
the top executives of the company? Or ao outaide tbe com·
PHY-and report it-to authorities-or the pre11 or pubUc ln·
terest ifOUp?
Ignoring It la a common reaction. Many people do ex·
actly that. "What's a little hankypanlly?" they aay,..lliWhy stick myneckout?" ,.. ...
Y If you do make an Issue of it inalde the company. you're likely to get a
chilly reception. Most
companies are not into
seU-criticism.
The third
alternative -goin1 out·
side the company with
your tale of woe -will
Mopey
Tre·e ·
have consequences of its own : _your Job will almost cer·
tainly be on the line. There's not a lot of room in corpora·
tions for dissenters. the autopilot system of the
Lockheed-1011 widebodies then being introduced. He re·
ported it to Eastem's management.
Three months later, an Eastern L-1011 cruhed ln
Floridap killing 103 people. When Eastern refused to do
anything about his warning, he took his complaint outside
the company to the National Tra~portation Safety Board.
The autopilot system was eventually modified -and
so was Gellert's relationship with his employer. Finl, he
was demoted to copilot. Then, he was grounded for
medical reasons. He won reinstatement, but was then in·
formed that he would be fired if he complained about safe·
ty lo an outside agency again. He sued Eastern for $1 .5
million. In 1977, he was grounded again. He again won re·
-insl1'tement. Bi.It he l'laims hi& employer, Eastem, con·
tinues to harass him.
JOSEPH ROSE IS A IA WYER who went lo work in
1973 for the nation's largest milk cooperative, Associated
Milk Producers Inc. in San Antonio, Texaa.
AMPI had figured prominently in the Watergate scan·
dal for its illegal contributions to the Nixon re-election
campaign After Rose arrived, he round there was still
much of that going on.
He t·omplained to AMPl's president. He gave his
evidence to seven of the 51 directors or AMPI. His reward
was dismissal. It took him nearly two years to find a de·
t'ent-job.
Adrienne Tompkins was a secretary at Newark's Public
Ser vice Electric & Gas Co. in 1973 when her boss took her to
lune~ and _said the only way they could have a good working
relat1ons h1p was for ber to go to bed with him. She refused -
and applied for a transfer. She told management why. She re·
fused -and applied for a transfer.
After suing the utility. Tompkins won a $20,000 court set·
llement in 1979. Jn addition, Public Service agreed to take a
num berof steps to inform e mployees of their rights.
Later retiremeny
age UXJes cited
LOS ANGELES CAP1 -Raising the retirement age
could work a,gainst minority employees because they don't
live as long as whites. says a professor at USC.
Dr. Fernando Torres-Gil. who testified recently before
the President's Commission on Pension Policy, noted, for
example. that the a verage life expectancy for black
Americans is still five years less than for whites.
Torres-,Gil. a~sistant professor of' gerontology and
public adm1nistrallon and a policy associate with the Na·
tional Policy Center on Unemployment and ·Retirement,
said many minority workers are fort'ed by health pro-ble~s to leave their jobs before reaching the traditional
retirement ages of 62 or 65.
"FOR 1:HE MO~T PART, minority populations still
lag s~bstant1ally behind whites in life expectancy and still
experience ill health earlier in their working li ves than
whites." said Torres-Gil. "Many minority workers retire
early and ~o on welfare or disability or have their own
families support them."
Raising the retirement age is favored by many who
feel that elderly employees are now pushed out or the work
fort'e before they lire ready to eave.
Torres-Gil does not support the idea of separate retire·
ment ages for s~parate groups, but s uggests that raising
the standard retirement age be postponed until minority
health catches up.
"THE DISADVANTAGES OF A higher retirement age
might not be so great in the future." he said. "Minorities
are. making gains in health and longevity. Since 1969, non-
whites have already made somewhat greater gains in life ex-
pectancy than whites. for example. according to statistics
from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and
Welfare."
Gold metals quotations
f.iold
By The Assodeted Press
Selected world gold prices today :
London: morning fixing $592.00. '--
Londoa: afternoon fixing $597.50.
Paru: afternoon fixing $631.96, up Sl4.03.
Fruklut: fixing $592.54, up $7.SS.
Z•rkh: late afternoon fixing $594 .00:
$597.00 asked.
Heady 6 Harman: late morning $597.50.
En«elhard: late morning $597.50.
Entelhard: late morning 1621.40.
Sflrrr NEW YORK CAP > -Handy & Harman silver $US.350.
Engelhard silver $15.300; fabricated silver $17 .331.
· 1tlfta&
NEW YORK (AP> -Spot nonferrous metal prices lO'
day !
Copper 88~-90~ cents a pound, U.S. destinatlon1.
Leaa 39 cents ' poUl)d. za.c 41"11·41~ centa a pound, deUvered.
Tia t7.'JMI Metals Wftk composlte lb. Al....._ '78 centi a paund, N. Y .
.. re•> '110.obperrf8* . ........ ••·Sii troy OI., N.Y.
'!
.>J .... .._ .. ~, .,.,.o
,. -~·~ , ....... !!' ........... ~,..,,
,plaue~~-
hot hit
The followlnc au
81llbovd'1 hot record
hill for lhe weetencl
endlnt Jan. to u they
appear in next week '• l•·
IHU Of Billboard m11aaine:
~*''It arou .. the etnO·INwtilo.~ •• .+--:--1 ~ .. ~Sa..t,~r~lllVna~er • • · j . . worth chee~ about." J ohn Lennon <Gerten) .......... ,_ -c o11 2 " Lo v e on t h e _,.W rOM DAll'I • ICUTT_.n "''' Rodt s' · Neil Diamond
'"""' fl\•,_. ....
?111\11q\80
....... .~, .........
113/~l 1 9~10
.... ,,...
~·-
.....
"'-71)/~l• ~o
, ... ,,. ,.,,,. ,..,. ..
~,., ......
~ISl4
<Capitol)
3. "Guilty " Barbu
Streisand & Barry Gibb
tColumbia )
4. "The Tade Is High"
Blondie (Chrysalis 1
' 5 "Hun..:ry Hear t "
Bru ce Spr i ng s teen
1Columb1a )
6 .. Ever) Woman in
the World" Air Supply
<Arista)
7 "Pass ion " Kod
St ewart 1 Warrwr Bros J
8 "Tell It I.Ike It ls ..
Heart (Ep1c1
9 "Larty " Ken ny
Rogers <Liberty I / lb .. More Than I Can
S a y • · I. e o S a y e r
<Warne r Bros.)
TOP LP'S
I. "Double Fantasy"
J ohn Lenno n & Y oko
co. .. , c ..... · o-"-Ono { Geffcn I
SEEMSLIKEOLDTIMES 2 "(.j u1lt ~"' Barbra
1pqm:1t:1:JH:Qo1~·""'"'---11e-t-,."'frelsana<Columhia1 W-11114 '" ... IO:>o la<ly ·-
, ... -.... -dfh•l-
NINE TO FIVE (PG) • n -i.o.a, .... ,,. . .,,.
·--'" .... " 00 [ .... -
.... ...., ... l ..... ···-· A CHANGE Of SEASONS 1111 ,, ... ,, ... , ... , ......... ,,.. ___ ,, ...... 10 30 1t....,_
0....-eHlllC~-....,...
STIR. CRAZY~"' I 1t·>:M·l :-,JO·I-
·--"" lat IQ.0 (a1y-
I Y•fn Wftet t Yell'W'l1
POPEYE t"'o1 n ·o Joo 1·:io .. ·oo 10 •s
WH•twt Ft1 I•• lO lD t etty ~-
Ge~ #ltct.r ... o fUc"•'d "rvcw
STIR CRAZY 11111
I >0-4 00 e1>0·•00 10 )0 .... ~•rt ••• '' ·00 f •rty lho•
'Ve"' Whel I Y•MI
POPEYE l"GI 1·eo»:Je·•· .... U ·11·00 ___ ,,, .... tt:>o ~.., -
'l-0.Ml<O
RAGING BULL 1111
MIO-J ---':IO•ID.U
-, ...... to·JO l.9ttJ -
c.....,c ...... o--
SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES fl'O>
1 .... , .. , »J·U-•D• ___ , ..... I04J(9ff\o-
a.---"~-........ STIR CRAZY 1r.:
2~-·1M...•·•·•
J "Hotter Than July"
Stevie Wonder <Tamla)
4 ··c rime s o f
Passion" Pat Benatar
<ChrysahsJ
5 "Bac·k In Btat'k"
A'C-DC ( Allant11· J
6 . ''Eag les L1\'e '·
Eagles t/\sylum>
7 "Grcatc•st 11 11 s "
Kenny Hogers I l.thert,>' 1
8 . "Zenyatta Mondul
La '· The PoliC'C 'A&M I
!j, "The Jan Sin~r ..
Neil Diamond 1Caµ1tol1
10. "Gatlf'ho" Stf'f"I)
Dan ( MC:Ai
MAllll SOUl" coas' CllllOOMI , .. '
fDWAllOS CllllMA WIST ua MOVl(S . .
f9WAll91' SAOOltlACR fl I,,,., ·,~I 'kR 1
Florida eampus
Baaeball player
(Cliff Potts,
'left) find·a a
friend in city
editor Lou
Grant (Ed ,..,,....,.---..-n r w en he
visits the
newsroom on
"Lou Grant"
tonight at 10 on
Channel 2.
Burt to get degree
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (A.P> -Ac-The state 1tugm ented the gift with a
tor Burt Reynolds. who th~ year $400,000 grant for a total of SI million
ga\'e $600.000 to F lorida St a t e endowment.
lln1varsity to e ndow a theater arts The university announted the de
proft!ssorship. will r eceive an cision to award Reynolds the spt-c1al
honor_ii ry destree. frQm his alma_ deg-r.ee in a newi; release tmHftd
rnaterthis month. state what degree 1t would be
Unive rsity offl rials said Lhat FSU
President 8t'rnard Sliger will present
tht' dcj!ree Jan 14 .
Reynolds' two-year FSU c areer
was spent as a halfback on the
195:1-54 Seminole football team. not
OI' the school sta~c. Ile entered a ct
1n~ <.ifter a knee injury cut s hort his
foot hall career
lie ){ave the Unive rsity $600.000 to
t•ndow the Hurt Reynolds Chair in
Prorl':.s1onal and Regional Theater.
----~~-
Call 642-5678.
Put a fe w words
to work for ou.
Filming ends
HOLLYWOOD IAP I Den nis
Christopher and Susan Saint James
star in the theatrical movie "Don't
Cr y , It's Only Thunder." which has
finished photography in the Philip
pines. The movie also stars Roger
Aaron Brown, Robert Englund and
James Wh itmore Jr.
.....
-.:: c
"9 to 5"
(PG)
(;.. --
"SEEMS LIKE
OLD TIMES" !PG>
1 -=-~;~~EYE'' -i
(PG) ' -----,
lt U ""••• fOV IH I 900CI 1911ft ., ''TRIBUTE''
(PG) "INSIDE MOVES" ., .. ~) 00
~ 1~ r lO t •S <==---I "EVERY WHICH
AV YOU CAN"
(PG)
~, .. ,,,.,..,
·"~" t44 1614
c11e..,c-·o--
SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES ll'OI
IMI ""U ACC(Pf(D fOll THll lllGAQ(MlH There's a lot more
lo being a fathe 2 ...... CIO .. ;ll .. :JO
Pat lflt tHUTlllS "1¥1·111 SWAP MUts 51•flt• rOU'l tllCU ~ ..... IOI ur Al
KAlllOll llVO Olllvt·lll & OllAllGE OlllVE·lll
tA•IOJ .. U1-fll-f '•ll 'All,.,_,., ..... (1. llUlll•
..... ,,. 1:11, ... lwl • ......,. I• ....... IM
IMPORTANT ltOTICU C"llORE• UllDHI 1Z HIU!
.-....,.,. ..... ,,.....,. ..
~·--It 879·M !>O
RAGING 8ULL tfl1 ~CHOtAlti~rr..-~~t=~~
1 _.,••CUI u o-o •11~ ""•u liOll M(t\\ff• "''1110• ''"" t9U• ~••"'DI''"\' . -..c: ..... ..._._ ~S.\R .ir;~ I ~ n.::o~::~,l•l
11 'f'I a• (H ...... •I• "--'IOlt a((~t ~"!.!..~·~ !--t• "!1'9hittt
_..._.c:~-.-W.Hfl .:-:-"'~: )~THE BLUE LAGOON I'll ( 3.,,.... 17MeSO J The Hollywood Knight• 1111
ff 11t a• t M H M •t• ~, ... MUU ... t fllltll_. ...... tC:V-... a.• ••t &ot
------~ ''·""' '~t ) STIR ~ZY tfl1 ... ~ .... ~-;11~•~111~~12:;:..;.'..;-«>.:.;70~. USlD CARS '"'
IBI .i.r1, I ..:.::.~:~~;;-
...... ,,.. ....... ,. ~"-ll(.(t~~l, .. '""" 10\i'l OW't •• f'IMl'11t
RBAN COWBOY ll'GI
......OREA SE ll'OI
,.._UP IN SMOKE 1"1
T"ae
Pow~r Behind
The Throne
than
just having a son
"BLUES BflOTHEAS"
.......~~...-~-......-.~·~·-· llPl..AN£'..'..
"CHEECH & CHONG" (R
(""' : ··::~" ...... _, I "PR.rYATE BENJAMIN"
"G0008YE GIRL" (PG)
t " -~ I "FLASH G~OON"
"BUCK ROGERS"
(PG) ..__
"THE ELEPHANT MAN°'
"ESCAPE TO
ALCATRAZ" (Al
FRENCH MOVIE
With
ENGLISH sue. TITLES
'' !"-
"Neil~ movie is a gem."
SHIRLEY EDER '
--NOW aHOWINQ ----
EDWARDS CINEMA -... i PLITT-CITY CENTER
C.O', IA M~SA ,:,",-;';;, 1 ORANGE
1/141'14(;310;> , ...... 11•! 171 4)634-9282
f •'•1111,. f•,~4(, •••·~t,..,J,/lol .. Y'"'•:
~~~~~~~~
:1 ..
f
y.
e
y
I
y
s
f-
0
If
.. .
• ...
I j
\.\'hen duty calls .
it· s double-duty
for some Marines
who are struggling
with the
responsibilities
of single-parenthood.
Staff Sgt. Brad
abayoo+top-1-tak~s
3-year-old daughter
Trishia-tm shopping
trip. Nineteen-
--month-old Romel
, center photo J
lavishes attention
on her mother. Sgt.
... Melody_Copley. Sgt.
Ken Meade' below;
dines out with son
John. 4 .. -and
daughter Annie. 2.
JAN. S, 1t,11
COMICS
CLASSIFIED
C4 cs
-,
~ENTERTAINMENT-:
. Kermit's opinions
to the contrary, museum
officials call Miss Piggy
~a t00rk pf arl' , C3
~\al.-___:~~le-par.enting
I
!
J
military style
By Luce Cpl. S&eve WUUama ......... .,..., ......
A Marine and a sln1le parent. Can a Marine
be both? Which job carries the hi1hest priority?
A trowinl number of Marines are asking
themselves these emotion-char1edqueationa.
Many divorce courts now are awarding
custody of children to military men as the moet
suitable parent, and increuing numbers of
sin1le women with children are staying in the
Marines.
For these Marines, single partenthood has
raised a new, set of problems, such as what to do
with the children in cases of unaccompanied
overseas tours or unstable working hours or all
night duties.
FINANCIAL RESPONSIBIUTIES also are
a complication as these Marines are torn
between taking a second job to ease financial
burdens and staying at home to raise and care
for their children.
Social lives suffer. too, because the time
and money for social activities simply do not
exist founany sin1le9arents.
One single parent, Staff Sgt. Brad Babayco
who is statiooed at the Marine Corps Air Station
C Helicopter) in Tustin, noted, "Single parent·
hood is not for everybody . . . it takes a lot of
dedication to accept the respoesibilities or rais·
ing a child alone and being a Marine.
"A particular problem is separating duty
from parenthood.
"Parenthood starts about S a .m. and ends
around 7:30 a.m .. in which time you have got to
gel up, prepare yourself for duty. start
breakfast, wake up and dress your child, feed
yourseU and your child, clean up the house,
plan and lake the meat portion of your dinner
out or the freezer. take your child to the sitter's
and get to work.
"Then duty starts at 7:30 a.m . and ends
after 4:30 p.m. In that time you have to devote
yourself 100 percent to your duty and to being a
Marine. "After 4:30 p.m. you are a parent· again,
cooking, washing dishes, cleaning house and en·
te rtaining your child."
SEPARATING DUTY FROM parenthood
becomes especially difficult during times of all
night duty. For Babayco, who takes his 3-year-
old daughter to the child care center at Tustin
during his normal hours, all night duty means
the additional cost of an all night baby sitter.
which strains an already stretched bud&et.
Not all single parents face this problem.
Sgt. Bruce Denison. a police sergeant for
Tustin barracks 133, has been exempted from
·all weeknight and weekend duty. So far he also
has been exempted from unaccompanied over·
seas tours. And, he's been able lo work out hts
schedule with his command so that be works
through his lunch hours and is able to leave ear-
ly lo pick up his 7-year-old son.
His commandina officer. Mai. R.W. Hein
Jr. said, "Single parents have special problems
and they seek special help. Most single parents
become very cooperative once they realize that
the command has recognized their problems
and is trying to help them.
"In aome cases we have modified the
Marine's working hours to make it possible for
hi111 to pick up his child after school. As long as
the person is trying to fulfill his responsibility to
the Marine Corps we do our best to help him."
Hein noted.
SINGLE PARENTHOOD carries a price for
so~career-oriented-M a1'mes-, as-som~cup
tional fields aren_'l open to sin&le parents.
One Marine who found out the hard way· is
Staff Sgt. Larry Lord, a non-commissioned of·
ficer in charge of the repairable warehouse al
the helicopter sfation.
A veteran of nine years of service, Lord re-
. . · cenlly reenlisted for three years to.become a
recruiter. • "I arrived at Recruiters' School in
r'ebruary." he said, "l>ut-had my "Orders can-
celed as soon as they found out that I was •
single parent. I fought it all the way to t.he com·
m.andant of the Marine Corps but my appeal
~as denied. I then requested drill instructon'
school but was refused on the grounds that I am
a single parent."
Fortunately not all career Marines must
cope with s uch situations.
Sgt. Ken Meade, an 11-year veteran of the
Corps, has had good command support from his
unit at El Toro.
"At first I wasn't s ure how the command
would react to my becoming a single parent,"
he said. ·'So far 1 haven't needed too much help,
but the command has done as much for me as it
could.
"TIIE ORGANIZATION that has helped me
the most'' said Meade, "has been Mission Hills
Baptist Church. They held a baby shower for
me right away when I was jwit ~tarting out and
different people have taken care or the kids.
Also the people or the church have really en-
couraged me." '
For Meade, an unusual problem has been
his working on Saturdays.
"I have to have the radio station on the air
by 6 a.m. on Saturdays," he noted. "Until re-
cently that has been a real problem, as very few
people are willing to get up at S a.m . to babysit
two young children. I have finally found a coun~
ty-run home in Santa Ana that is open 24 hours a
day and can take the children until the Child
Care Center opens up.
Another Marine who has unusual ·working
hours is Sgt. MelOdy Copley. personnel chief for
the Marine Aircraft Group-13 adjutant shop,
also at El Toro. ·
Sgt. Copley works a second job to ease the
financial burdens of rear ing a child alone, but
races another kind or problem.
"MY FINANCES with a second job are
good. but I only get to see my baby about 45
minutes total during the work week. We spend
the weekends together but it's not enough.
"I feel fortunate that I've had the opportuni-
ty to become a sergeant. I <'an be no worse off
than any male Marine sergeant with a child .
Maybe I'm a little better off because many
male Marines have a hard time cooking, clean·
ing and taking care or young children," Sat.
Copley said. Colleen Trosper . who is director of the
Tustin Child Care Center:. and is a temporary
single·parcnt while he r husband is overseas not·
ed that. "Children or single parents feel a cer-
tain sense or loss so we try to give these
children extra pos itive attention.
"We're substitute moth'ers eigbt to 10-hours
a day for these children." she said. "We also try
lo aid the s ingle parents with advice, as
som~times we can see problems cropping up."
THE CENTER OFFERS priority head·of-
the-waiting list privileges lo single parents who
can show no other means of support for their
t'hildren during working hours.
Dr Michael J . Levine. a t'hild
psychiatrist and clinic counselor for the El Toro
base, feels that the psychologit'al effects of only
having one parent aren't as devastating to the
child as we might think.
"Old mythology needs to be laid to rest," he
said. "Children are more adaptive than we give
them credit for. The old conception that UlL-----
cnildren·s men al an p ystca neaffh is depen-
dent upon an intact family has never been
scientifically validated.
"Neither is there any real scientific
evidence that the sex of the single parent makes
· any difference in the ability to raise a child,"
the doctor added.
On-the-job child care
8J~B-aUY
DAU.A.8 <AP) -Vickie Home vil-
ltl her »JDmltlt.old ecm at leMt twlee-
1 durtaa a bal1 wan da1 wtut tbe .... Permlll6m IDll .... ta.. ......... ol I her emth»•· SIM ... 't dull bome to uve
hmcb wtlla KrtltGlllaft. Sbe doan't
fl&ht r• Ill• tr.me to drive acnes
. towa to a.., care center to pkt blln up•= . · ne .,.. toddler'• matber 11
JUll a n.. ' 11• walk aWQ from
ber ............ M8 •••• 11.,. at
Zale ,,__.'I tfdld CAN "8ter lD DellM.~.. .
I .,., ....... ~.Ille
t ............ ..,. ...... ._ _. u:.:r: ... .., ........... ... 'Y .... ..,.. ........ of
lllatll.''
Corporate officials at Levi Strauss,
however, said they tried in-house ·
child care and found it lackin1.
Levi Strauss built its first child
care facility at the Starr City, Ark.,
plant in 1983. They closed the center
eight years later because "it was not
profitable," said Paul Cox, a
spokesman for the 1arment com-
pany .
Participation was not what we
had hoped, he said. "Most molhen
preferred to leave their children in
nei1hborhood homes and child care
centers."
Cox aaid the Levi Strauaa Found•·
lion, a charitable or11ni11tion,
awards 1ranta to non-pnJftt IJ"OUPI
tlaat are WGl'tdnl on develGp&q cblld care factlltiea in low-lacome
nel~.
"We've decided to ., ID_. dine·
Uoa, fClr DOW," M altded. ..... .....
tUd U. Zale ro..daU., I ..... . ~'°'* .,.. of &be com,..,, lillo 11-_.. ...... 111aood ''eldlil ......
opt," I
.... ....,, .. ,... .... ._ .. UY•
... troullle •tr.:--..... .. •• ,.,.... a. i ........ " ...............
I
H f Mondey.~•.1•1
Minister is a 'no-good rat'
D&Aa ANN l.ANDICU A,.. you lti
tia1 ...U. or whal' You've done 1l
.. ale, lad this time I dec-lded to aped ·r mu.ct. am ,...,..,...., to th4' lett•r fron1 th•
•la1-t«'1 wife He I• a no eoocJ ret whu .a ~ in bed with the WOl\\eft tw ia
..,..aMd &a be COUAHhn1 Iha l)Ol)f ~ ''"
.. bMJdehtrMlf
V°" advlMd llER lo .i"t l'OUt1,. .. l111a1
•1'> ' He 11 \he on~ who nfl'Cb ti '' I OU M vt an uplanahon for 1ud1 null ~ all
v1ce. I •'OU.Id like to read 1t I .IN
COLN. Nt!B . DAii Y R•: l>t~R
---U&-.~ ............. ..,..~
taqM lln ....... , ..... ~ .. &k •<'l
twW.. llf' lh'ft W. UMC"K-.... ...... ,
.... y ................ •lf• .. '"9) • ... ,...... .. ,.,....,. stM-.-b ...
....... ......., .... t•n• llw.r pa> "a...'IL
enr .. 1111• ...... Vf'r. "'"' b dl'p,-.....cl ... • ·1111.aa.. u. ~ waerre• <'9mf' • • tier'
,.,. ... .._ "0..'t' t•ll mt> Mt IH\f'
IUa. \u. I doe'I waa& lu ,-.o.·11 lbf' ........ .
Tt.a& lad~ 11 rlea'rh .l• IM'f'tl elf .,ro
fMaa-a.I lilrip lf alw dot-A'I ltf'I 'l>Omf'
ill•lllt& ._.. lter maSO<' .. ~lk bfoha\ lw
•••'II bttomt' itklLf'r aad 'kbr and
e\ ea&aall) <' rec.-11 up.
Her huabaad soundlll buakns bu& hr
dl4•'l •rilf' -lllht' did . .\nd I.hr ad\ kf' I
1•v• lwr ,..as ttood. I bopt' 11tw taJLf'i. ll.
l>t:AR ANN LANDERS. I have been
~•dlnai1yuur ~umn for many years. I
1m1 IO now. 11nU )'OU hive a lot of com·
mun tcmlk'. ~•pet•1ally when 1t c.-omes to
tuu111t·:. hktt le•vma money to people
"'hu Jun't dt•M!I H 1t. JU!lt bec1tuse they
IUJ!..-1'.d,j&tJ v .,.
· · I 11,.,. Wlont' • thousand miles from
111~ 1•h1hlr"n l n1I their ra1J11hes. I have
'11111h.J tht.'m but found little pleasure
th1•n • ~h .:n.mlkh1hlren wer~ never
1.rnw hi ti• rcs(M•1·t oldt>r people. Their
a1111,•11ti. ,.,.,. ufru11t to corrt~et them. The
hH'l o( 1t1~1·1phlll' "US SU irritating to me
I ~h•l'l'-"' .:0111.: tu M't' them
~1 ' d 11hh't•n luul ever~ lhin~ money
1·11ll hl '"" ttw hcst in education,
t 1111ul\·wl 'twt11 wht•ii they mitrried and
11wn· 111111\l') l111t•r wht•n lht•y witnled to
hu~ h11111t•s Tht•) ""''' M "~ somethin(.{. I
1l1111 ·1,1wt•1tw111a 111duu
ltt•1·1•nth 11111 pustur 1lt>hvered a ~··1· 11w11 11m) toltl uhout u 1lau.:hter who.
jl I h1• l"'\ls1de' or ht•r ct.nn~ rather, said,
· ~1 ot lll'r. "ht•n l>ud .:Ot's we want you
to Uve with ua." The mother aaid. "No,
I won't do thaL" The dau1hter im·
plored, "But, Mother, YOU are dif-
ferent!" The mqther replied. "Yea. I
know. But YOU aren't." I lhink th11
puu it very neatly. -IN FLORIDA
ALONE
. DEA a FLO al DA: Tllub for ••
hoaes& let&er. Sorry you a,..•, 1eu1a1
any pleuue from your famUy, IMlt
••rely Y• IDlow lllal Mme~ do•·
Joy their chlldre11 aad 1raadclllldra. 8o
doa 't palllt with such a broad bnaah, de•!.-
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband 1s overseas for one year on a construction
job. We miss ~ach other a lot, but the
money he i.s making will make our
sepa ration worthwhile. I have a good job
and go straight home after work. T he idea
of another man is not the least bit appeal-
ing to me.
My '.lpstairs neighbor has told 'several
people she had heard m y back door
open' and shut at odd hours. The Im·
pli<'ation is that I a m entertaining men.
I am furious and want to know ir I
should talk to her about this. -
LEXINGTON TRUE BLUE
DEAR LEX: No. He who excuses
himself accuses himself. Remain silent
and lt>t your reputation speak for you.
Grocery pr·ices up I ~.4 percent in 1980
· 9,. Wl'ISE COOK ............ .,rft •• ttt" same m two and decreased in only one. · only of sugar , bul or a wide variety of
The r<Ate of ant·rease 10 supt•rmarket
bills slowed durm~ Del'ember, but an
Associated Press marketbasket sune~
s howed that grocery prices still sur~ed
b)' 14.4 percent during 1980
O\'t•rall , tht> bill went up 2.4 percent. processed roods as well. The AP survey
The s lowinl-! or the supermarket showed that t he price of a fi"'.e-pound
inflation rate 1s not expected to last. .sack of g ranulated s ugar at the
E<·onom1sts are predicting that food checklist stores doubled during 1980 -
priN's alone will rise by a nywhere from __ gol_ng f.r.ruILJL42..al I.he st.art of-the-year
HI perce-nt-to ts percenti n 1 981.13rgely to $2.85 al lhe end of the year. Lnr re&r'sr ise l'Ompared \It llh a 9 5
per<'ent boost in 1979 because of the continuing effects of last Sugar had a major impact on the
The AP drew up a random list of
commonly purchased food and non-food
items and <'hecked (he price5 at one
supermarket in each or 13 cities on
March 1, 1973 . Prices have been
re<."hecked on or about the start of each
succeeding month
s ummer's drought. overall marketbasket bills. When sugar
Food prices a lread y gave risen was removed from the totals, IJie AP
som ewhat because of the hot. dry s u r v e Y :sh o ~ e d the aver a. g e
weather and the December survey by ma~ketbasket b~ll wen.t up ~.2 perce nt
the AP turned up another casualty · ~uring 19.80, alf . a s muth .as the
peanut butter. The price of a jar of mcrea~e wilh sugar mc,lu.~ed . . . .
peanut butter incr eased at the checklist The items on the Al checklist were .
The latest sur\'e~ sho" e<l that the
marketbasket bill inc reased at the
checklist store in nine cities duriog
December. rismJ: an '4\'erage of 1:9
percent The ball decreased in four
cities. down an a\'erage or 2.9 percent
On an overall basis, the marketbasket
b ill at the end of Decem ber was
four·tenths of a per cent higher than it
"as at ttre st art of the month.
store in nin'e cities more than any chopped chul·~ .. center rut pork chops.
other item. ~ · -frozen orange .JUIC'e t·on.centrate. coffee.
J a mes Mack managing director of pa~er towels. butte r. t.rade·A medium
the ·Peanut Butter and Nut Processors white eggs, cream y pe~nut butter.
Association in Washington. D.C .. said l~u~dry .. de~e rge!'t· fabric softe~er.
ecently that the price of raw peanuts tomato sau<:e. milk, frankfurter!' and ~as $1 a pound -more than double the granulated sugar.
n o rm a l price. Pea nu t b utter Th e t·it1 es c he c k ed were :
manufa<·turers have raised wholesale Albuquerque. N M . Atlanta. Boston.
During November. in contrast , the
marketbasket bill incr eased a l the
checklist store in 10 c ities. stayed tht•
pril'es by up · to 40 percent in past Chil'ago, ()alias. Detroit. Los Angeles.
m onths. Mi ami. New York, Philadelphi a .
A worldwide in«rease in the dem and l'rovidem·e. R.1., Sall Lake Cit\ and for sugar also has boosted prices . not Seattle. ·
TU•:SDA\', JAN. 6
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARU~S (Mar. 21 ·Apr. 19) · Popularity in ·
creases. s u perior rc<'ognizes your unique
abilities. Emphasis on ambition. career, will ·
ingness to let go or past and take "cold plunge"
into future.
TAURUS !Apr 20·May 201: New approach
aids in bringing long-range objectives within re·
a ids in bringing long-range objectives within.
reach . Emphasjs on communication, publishing,
t ravel and greater spir itual insight. Legal de·
c ision favor s your endeavors.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20J: Strive to regain
sense of direction Be skeptical of individual
who'promises something for nothins. Be aware
of percentages. sm all print and tnck claus es .
CANCER f June 21-J uly 22>: Examine
various possibilities -don't commit to one
course. Key is versatili ty. humor and receptivi·
ty to changing social scene. Gemini. Sagittarius
natives play important roles. Pay attention to
public relations . Verify quotations.
LEO Ll..ujy 2J.Aug 22.J.; Piece-together-bits
o1 information -puzzle will be clarified. You
are asked to revise sections of s pecial material.
Basic issues a re highlighted. Steer clear of
sensationalism. Aquarian aids in resolving legal
dilemma.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22): Personal
mag netism soars ; members of opposite sex are
drawn to you. Focus on creativity, children,
speculation and the number 5. Gain indicated
through written material.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0 ct. 22): Surroundings are
more important than usual -focus on decorat·
ing, spec ial purchas es and adjustment of
lifest.yle. Taurus. Scorpio and another Libra
figure prominently . ·
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): See places,
people in realistic liJtht. Avoid brooding, realize
that being alone is not same as being lonely.
Surprise visitor is harbinger of good news.
SAGnTAalUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 211 : Jnvest·
ment pays dividends . Accent on personal
pouessiona. valuables, income potential.
Cancer. Capricorn persons figure prominently.
CAPUOOaN <Dec . 22·Jan. 19): You are
capable of finishing project minus chiding or
Jealous usoclate or relative. Tie loose ends.
Aries, Ubra natlvea figure prominently.
AQVAalU8 (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): St.op brood·
ins I You'll hear from on~ who apparently
·•vanl1hed." Don't hide from facts. Fears,
doubta prove 1roundless . Key i.s lo recognize
&nth and aatn atren1th by so doin1.
.. Pl8CE8 <Feb. 19·Mar. 20): Your ex· ... truealGr)' perception works overtime. You're
'1ccuHd o1 betnl a "humu lie detector." Aura·
ol mystery. 1lemour dominates scenario. .. :·
·._ · l'UfJ red~ces unwanted hair-
pla•ued by excessive
hair, mostly on thelr
races. •
"Clmetldlne produced
a decreue ol M percent
In the rate of halr
1rowtb ln four ol tbe ftve
patlentl," the dHtor1 wrote. -
'Tonight' book is opinionated
By RON BERTH EL The book lells how.
Ofll•A.._ ..... ,.,"' over the past 18 years.
TV's "Tonight.. has he has bec.-ome one or
b e e n A m e r i c a · s the most powerful and
"nightlight and nightcap commanding for«es on
ro ll ed into one" fo r television and the
three decades, from the s haper of what th e
· · B roadw ay Ope n "Tonight" s how is to·
H o u se· · of ea r I y day.
television . featurin g "The Tonight Show"
Jerry Lester and h is is a n informati ve . blond e side ki c k ,
Dagmar. lo the present· though opinionated , . chronicle of an impor· day version starri.ng tant vert of television perhaps the most in·
flue ntial performer on -
the ai rwaves. Johnny
Carson
hist ory and one that
makes for some good
reading.
"The ·roruq/11 Show." by
lfobert 'Metz f'layl>0y 21¥1
pages SJJ.95
'f)·-.? 0m~rs-"~~,I
I CUSTOM FRAMING I Open 6 Days A Week j
Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 10·4 1
1803 Newport Blvd. I
? Costa Mesa t ,~,. $4M511 C'~
ROBE RT METZ 's
book takes ·a look at the
show from its early days
right up to the present in
an inte r esti n g and
s o metimes revealin g
history of the show L. its
stars mn1 some of the
goings.on behind the
curtain.
DON'T MISS IT
Metz profiles each or
"Tonight 's" three major
hosts: Steve Allen. J ack
Paar and Carson.
Allen. who captained
the s how during the
mid· '50s, is revealed as
the perfect straight man
who helped develop a
band of fine com edians.
including Tom· Poston ,
Don Knotts and Louis
Nye, but was neverthe·
less. discontented at his
post.
PAAR , THE
sen s itive and emo .
tional host who followed
Allen through the early
'&Os, is treated here with
kindness and sympathy.
Carson was the litlle-
known hoe\ of a daytime
quii show when he
became "Tonight's"
host in 1982, and not too
many ol TV's insiders
held much hope for his
success.
Art exhibition
PRINCl}TON, N .J .
(AP> -Worka by
Gabriele Munter wbicb
were drawn from
German and American
colleetlona are bel'I
lboWD M die Pl1a--UDI~ Art llUHWD tbroalbJ•.11, lm.
• • --~· -I
~ -.. -• ;., -= • = 'I. .. ... -= ... -, --. -
J>tn 153rd
Womens
Fine Quality Shoes
Sharply Reduced
Not All Sizes In Every Style
Amalfi, Howard Fox, Erica,
Maserati, Julianelli
3795 104795
Values fro~ 63.00 to 86.00
CASUALS, FLATS
AND SANDALS
27'5-34'5-39'5
......
Family "Wheaier
Sandy Wright and Ma yor J ~y Lytle of
Evanston, Ill.. s te1nd in front of tt'at-city's re ·
opened Coronet Thea~r The tornmunity
was able to stop th e theater from s howing
X·rated films ancl pers uaded its owner to
t hange_.t:..hc movie house to a fe1mlly theater.
47-year-old
verdict out
HONN. West (;l·rman\ 11\1'1 ,\ Wt·~• Rnlin
court has 11v1·rturrwd ~· .17·~1:a r·olcl \'t•r·d11·1 11J,!a1n.,t
a Dul<'hman <·on\'1t tt•d tJf sf'lllrtJ.! t h•· H1:1<·hsldJ.!
fire, an event us1•d 11\ th(• .'li:.111 :-. tn 1 'Jl1 '>lll 1d;Jll•
ll1e1r powl'r Ill l!t:l:.l ·
The t·11ur1 rulc·d th;il lilt' \t·rd 1<·1 ••l.!<1lfl "l
Man nus van tfrr I .1t11lw a 1·11mrn11111 !-.I ,11·1·11s c·d r.r
sc•tting tht· fi n -. "'a ... a l'l•«•r m1-.i·.1rr IHJ.!I' 11r
. JUStil'l'," hut ll'ft 11p1·11 th1• q1H·..,1111n 11f ,,11 .. 1h1·r ,·an
dt•r Luhbc i.l<'lltall\ lf1d "':1rl tlw ltl;,11· J
Robt: rt Kt·mp.111 ·1. a dt·pul \ 111·11st•1·11t11r an the
Nurl'inlwrg \\;tr '11 nw o., 111<11., ari::ui•d 'ttw c·a..,1·
brought by va11 1!1-1 l.lflit11·.., l1r11tl1t•1 t11 ha',. the·
vt•rdi<·t nulhr11·d
THE REl<'HS'f':\(; IH 11.UI ~{; I~ lfrrl1n ..,t·al
of the <;erni<.t(I p<irllanwnt. 11cc~ l1urn<·d l·'1·t. :!7 .
19:J3, aoout four wt•t:k!> aftt•J' \d11tf tl1l lt'I' lwl'<iml'
c:hant('llor
Afl<'r van d1·1· l.ubllt' ~ind four B11lµarian l'11rn
munii;Lo; wl''rc• arresll·tl for ;ir<.on . th1· Fu1·hn·r used
the hl:l7.e as :I pn·t1·xt lo h<in tht• ('11mmun1sl
Party
T lw Bulµ;..1na11s w1·n · <11 ·q111t11'f) hy a ,\;iJJ.I
t·ourt Hul \'all dl'r l.uhtw \\a~ sc·11tt·nc·ed 10 death
and l.'Xt't'Utl'd 111 l !l:M as ttw :\:111.., r111mclt-d up l'Om
munists and m o\'etl t11 1·1 ,,. h lr1·1 tr;i1k uni11m. and
I he remaining lt·rt 1"' 11111roo.,1t 1rn1
Sonw h1st111·1an.., ht·ll••\ •· 1111· '\az1s "t·I the l1rt•
thcms('lvcs as an 1•xc us•• 111 n .11·k do\ltn on 11ppm,1
tion part11•s Ttll'~ n11l" tha1 ;1 turmc·I r<Jll to tht·
building from th•· r"s11ll'111·1· 11( I lt·rrn;.inn (;11 .. nng.
lliller deputy and H1·11•h-;rn ur~hal]
TllF: C'/\t:SE OF Tiit: FIRE has' nt·vt·r hecn
cstCJbhs h1·d w1lh c·t>rla1nt~ l\t•mpnN 1·1tt•d these
arguments 111 the c·o ur1 and sa11I \ iJll dt·r Luhbe
was :.iclually a "\o\<'a k "'tllc•tl t1K11' of I h1· N;.itional
Social1!;ts ··"l'h<· N<i 11 s -u..,t-i r th(' "-;\rong
r>sychologi<"al l'fft:•ets . of llw \(•r<ltd and (•xt·c·ut1on
to their advant;.i J.:t'. he s:11d on Radin f''rl'l· l:k rli n
Kcmprwr. 81 . whn 1011k µart 11\ the µos twar in ·
terrogal 1on or ( :oc.-rrng. SU Hi ht• n •garded I he
verdict as a final v11·lor) for 1ust1<·(•
Nazi ban upheld
TRErtfiiVRE
FOUND
MANILA, Philippines
<AP > Filipino divers
h ave founrl a n "un·
derst'a tr ea s ure "
believed Lo be 50(1 years
old and possibly to havl'
been own Pd b \' lilt h
century Chinese· adven
lurer L i mahon~. the
Manil a n ews pap er
Bulletin Today reported. FISJUI
Pubh~O Or-C°"'' Oa1ly Piiot Jan ~. o. 19,,&, lQflt 11~,lt
P UBLIC NOTICE
*"'1U llMTI ...... --••ca1rr.., ,... •• t : s.....
..,......, .iu ... -.llllM 11¥ ._ Cttr
., ll'VIM , 0-.r 91 h Wflftl, In tM .,.. tic• .... Cltt a.-. ........ ,,.
J•M~ .. lteaf, lrwlM. c.tltwnla "114, 1111111 2:00 p.m,. Oii J_, U,
"''· , .... <OllWurtlOll Of ,_,.,. c1111t1111 ,_ ttr•I. Tiie Ille .,. IN
W.rll h located •I Horii•.. ,..,,
(V•te A-.... Wolnut •-wt oM Twtle ltoO Cenln1.,,,lly "•rll
(Turtle •oca Drive 811411 S11My Hiii Orlvel, lrvlne,Collfornto .
oasc•tPTIO• OP •O••: Ce111tru<tlon .,. , • .,er ... curlll"9 ,,_
llrl p\ •nd ••l•l•d 9 rodln9 .
ENGINEER'S ESTIMATE 11,000.00
0"aNtNG OP ,..OPOIAU: TN
propoul\ w111 be publicly Of19nocl e<>d
rucl •I ?·oo pm , on J.,....ry ll, Hit,
et Ill~ ·-·mellliofwd oflkt OI Ille
Own•r
oeTAINING CONT.ACT
OOCUMa NTS: TM -lllutt..,, er •
en1111.ci. 'Con>l•YCllCI\ of Curbln9 •I
Ht,,1•9'! P•rll !Ct P M0-411 Mid Turli• R oe ll Co mmunity P.,k t CtP
SIO •• , SIO n I .. Pl•n• •nd
'9•< •llc•h~ -ell contr«t 00<11-
m•nt\ m•y H obt••Md f rom tf\•
Oeoartment ot Public wor••. City of l••ine, :11111 M<Gew ,..,.,_, trvlne,
C•lifornl• A non·rttund•bl• I•• of
ll0.00 will i.. cn.rcaec1 '°' ucll .. , of
clocumer>I\ Pl'""' encl •PKll1<allon\
w ill bt m••ltO tor •n •dditlon6t < l\•ro-OI U 00
PltO .. OSAL GUAltANTll:. E•cn
P•oPo••' "'•II "" o1t<om1><1n11d by • ce-rt1f1ed or <•\h1er·1 checll ot blO
l>ond •n llw amount ot 10 pert•nl ol ·
,,,. IOCal bid.,..,,., P<IY•b•• Co Ille (lly
of ,,._.ne .\. ou•r•ntff t t\At """ bid
Ofr, If "'' prooow1 1\ •cceoted, will
prompt tv e.111•<.ut• tt-e contr•< t, wcure
wvment of workmen \ ComP19n\•t1on
tn\urance, •nd turn1\h • \•h\fi1<:.tory r •1thtul Perform•n<e Bond In the
amoun1 01 100 prrunl ol ti\• lot•I bid
price •nd • L•bOr and M.te<••I\ Bond
1n U\t! 11mount of 100 percent of uw toe•• bid pr it•
WAGI llATl5. A\ nquor•CI by S.t
hon 17/l ol tllo Cohlorn10 t.•bOr Cod<o.
trtit Ow1Wr h•\ dettrm1tWd trw 9"Mt•I
Pff'Vdtllnq t4'1~ of W~\ tn tM tO(Ah •
t y t n ·•h Hh fhf" wort&, u to b•
p(•tfornltfd (op1P\ Of \aid W•QP r•tfl
Mt~rm1nah0M ..!Ire m•1nt•1ntd •t UM
ott1ct!\ of•tt'tP Owrwr •no.,, •v••l•bte
uprin rt'qU~\t lht Contt4ftfor \h•ll
oo\t d t OC>Y ot \a1d document "' ••Ch
1ob \ttf't f~ <:ontrac: tor •nd •ny \Ub
~ nntr.\c tOf' t.inOf'r him \h•U P•Y not tf'u
tn.tn •~ ~1f1ed prPva11tn9 rate\ of
.--dq .. ~. to an #Orkrnen t mptoyf'd •n tM
• •t:t ""''n of ttw> ( ont1 cKL
PROJECT A0MIN15TRATIOH: All
uu ... '-l•on' ,..,,"''"'P to""'' orotr< t p,-,or
to '""'~ Upt·~1nq m O•fh \hdll be d irected
"' t .,,,. lru, t10f' ProjP( • Suf)t!t Vl...Ot C f
1, 01 ''""'' u u 1 '~' l••o u u J I ·~· 1<1!>8 OWNER·~ RIGHTS RESERVED
... , .. o .,.,nt-, , .. .,,w, HW" r1qnt to ,,.,..ct
1 7·~ :nr·:, ~:.~·:~01~ow,;:~v;,.:"!~~~~',';;~~·~ •• ,,, r• ,, ,,. tn .. 0wn .. ,
O~h. 0.,....,..mbfor II 1(i80
(ll V O~IP\/INf
Ov Ion~ L r)olv\b'f
LJ-pu11 C·•~ C•~r•
1•c11')h•n--n ()r.,n~ Coct\I OatlY J.i+lot
r1i•I ,7 'J? 1'1fW) J,-tn \ 11181
WQI 80
.. ll8U(' NOTICE
H•IJll1 '..
NOTICE TOCllEDITORS
OF llULk TllANSFEll ·
to;..u •101 •101 UC C.I
N'll Ill I~ i<fkl-ll V Gl\/EN l<i 1'1<'
''••011'1'' ~t 0 & I fNGIN([RINC,
t Ur ''··tnd• ,Of #t\fl'W" Ov,•t\t'\\ dd
•I" \ '' l1M) t OQ1tn, tJn•t U, (•h o'
r ,,. f .l M r•\tt (nunh •JI Or.tnQP Staff" of
f .,11, .,,,.,J tnrtt .i huh tri:.tn,tet ''
1n ')ut ,,, tH ni..td• t o 'N ill 1 I\
•,1 Hw lH>/ '""' I 0'11 F ~CJ.lWAN/
1,-dt'l\foo''"'"" 4rilfto'-.£ f>U\11'\1 \\ .-()Orf'''\
''\' 1 M ,1nQft ,~,,, ttf .,..,,n .. (oant v
JI fJ r dO(lf-1 ')Ml• Of ( tfhtlHt11"
(f'lt Ur~rty II) I>• l'dt",lf'rf .. (I I\
11• '' riO""<J 111 ,, ™"'di ri\ Alf \ht." 1n
h r1(JI-' ;f .. h)"'' I 'ltJIO'Titont ,U'lll qoOO
-N• I o f "'"' f"fi()O A PR('lf ') f VPE
M/-lf ...,INF t1'-'\•"''"' •nowu ..,, (.) & J
f ~f,,t f'~F f: RtN(, "'"" loc.ttt'tl ('t IH O
1 oq~n Unit U (•tv ol CO\frl M'"'d
< '"'"' 1 OI Ott1nq.,. ')lttt .. 'lt ( tthfOf'11d
f tw nuh• '' r1n\t .. , '"'"'' tw r Ol"l'tU'l1
"+th•d ou or <•'l••r '""' /1\I dd'; Of
111"1.u H 't' 1Cf8t .tt 10 00 /II. M At
,11(>\/I" F'>C ROW CORPO'IA ltON
w"c''' <irJOr1•\\ ., •W.J"n ,, '.ltt\ .. Shn .
'""''"' (_.tMo•n1t1 f n.-,,..,., o~~·· tor t1tmQ f ld1m\ ,,
J •HhJtJl''f X), t981
<'q f dr ,., ., know n t o tn ..
'"~"'''"'~ .... bu\IM~~,, n .. m~' (H'l(.1
.1001• \•,1•\ uYod oy •~ r rdnd .. •Of for
tn.-P-t'I thrtt f"dr~ .. ,,. SAME
Dal~o l><•mi..r ~ •-
W1111 a Scnwctf/
l-Ott F Sc n'#drl
''•"''l!''f'P'\ GllOYEll ESCROW ,_,,, ...... 1..ci ,.,, ... ,, '"'"°""• hcrow Ho J.11-•
Pubtt\'Wd OrdnO' Coa\t O.t•ly P1tot )~n ) '"'" I l/ ~~
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI: INVITING etDI
Noli<• " Mr•by Oln n lllet Ille
llN•O "' Trin•-ol , ... CNll COM·
munlly Coll-Olttrlct ot. Oreft99
The treasure. cons ist·
ing of dragon-shaped
porcela in jars-, plates
and kettles, was found
and rec o vered o ff
Marinduque island-100
m iles sout h east of
Manila, it said. 'J>hilip-
pine historians describe
Limahong as a "Chinese
pirate" who raided the
Philippines.
Ll:GAL NOTICI County, CAtlllo<nle, *'II r..:•lve -led
NIWl"OltT·MllA lllctt up to J-ry n. 1 .. 1. Tl1urscloly,
UNl'91D SC"OOL DISTltltT l1 :OO •• m ....... P\lrd1a 1ne DetNr1·
-k• '""'tiftt .... me11t ot w ld cotteve dltlrkt loua.d et
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN , ... , tJ70 Ad•m• .... n .... Coll• M•H .
U•• 8 NrO ot .f:'CluC'etlon of 111 .. ·Cellforn<8,.., -tll !lnlt Mllt lllctl wlll
'H•wpo1t·M.w Unlll..t S<-Oltlrkt be publl(I' _,... .... •-for: t...
of Oren99 C-ty wlll r.c .. w ... ..., LEAIF/11"\Jlt~ CHUC!o:l!lt
bod• up 101 OOp.m. on IM ~II ci.ty of LATHE; OCC
J•n .... ry "" •• , ... offlu DI Mid All ........... In 8CC9nl8ft<o ... ..
s cnool '0 1u ;ltt. toceted •I IU I IM 110 '-tft1tructl--COMI·
Pl•ce n t 1• ~•••et, Co\I• Mua, llon1encl~lfk9llelltwflklloro
Calllornl•. ol ~" lime WICI bljh wlll on Ill• a.w .._ w -ilf'Od l""'9 llffk•
be PUblkly ~ -reed,.,.. of , ... Putcllnlne....,. Clf Ml• <el ....
c E N T R A L k I T c H E H cll1lrlcl.
f.OUIPMENT E«ll ..._, -''*""'' wllfl .... All blft ... IO be Ill •<•WI<• ...... M• • ,__.. <1110 , cenlf!M CMCll, ConOllion1. ln\lructlont, e11• .. ~·...,.. ,._ .,..,.... ... 5PKlll<atl"'' wlllC'll ore now on Ille In ••r Of,.. c:.MM ~ty <:el ....
tlle oftk• ol lie Purcllnlne DI_.., Olltrlcl ... ,. tf Tr"''"' 111 ell
'Jf WHI k.'-1 DIArk l, IMI ~--.. _, ...... ._ft..,.~ C,,.I
51,..1.coue-..co1110<ol•t •t7. t111M •-• ••.-•wttllt ..
No lllM r _., •""*" 1111 II• tw ....._, wlll eMW I• .. ..,_... • 1NrlM Clf N1'1'fll..,. IOI .. YI eftlf C•rKt If .. ._ II _,.. .. .... d ........... _........... llifft;lll ........ fll ....... ...., ..
Tiie ... ,. Of tlduUllOll ol I ... '° -II ~-t, t• ....... fll .. """"'1.MfM Ufll~ Sc._. Oltlttcl <llOO ............... ., • M Ult
,_,..,.. lllt rltM te rtj«I 8"Y ef •" .. 0 MM, .. ,_ ---.... II• 8"41 1191 llt< .. tMY 8C~-t11e ................. .... ...... a lf, .,. ....... ...., ......................... .. ..,_,It, flf l,,.....,fty 111 M' ...... 0..,... fl~ ... ....,
ff& ..... ' • ----..... --. "'"TID·--tt -,,..... ....... .. -·-:;;.··-... ... ='-.. .,. • .., .... . --~ ...... 3:'......., .
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----;--······ ... ---··· ----·--·-···· -·-·----t-••M has
,,
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=---::_;:~·
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HOW TO USE
THE FOOD SECTION
TO SAVE MONEY
Ualng the Daily Pilot food section wisely each week can save you real
money on your grocery bill.
\...sTuDY THE ADS. The Daily Pilot Wednesday food section is full of
supermarket and food ads which feature, every week, specials and
other bargains. Make a practice of screening these ads for the 'best
deals. Keep in mind that stores which publish their prices each week
make it possible tor you to know how and where to save. They take the
guesswork out of shopping. You can depend on their prices and the
avallablllty of items. And you can stock up on specials.
CLIP THE COUPONS. Clip and save "cents oft'" coupons. They may
aave you only a dime here and a nickel there, but the savings add up
quickly to dollars each time you shop.
USE THE RECIPES. All kinds of exciting recipes are presented In the
Dally Piiot food section. From cheese souttle to stuffed green peppers;
from diet desserts io putt pastry. You'll find many inter~sting and novel
ways to liven up your weekly menu.
1 BUY IN SEASON. In many instances 'the recipes are keyed to those
fooda which are In season. This means they will be In plentiful supply
and priced low.
PLAN AHEAD. Plan for at least a week ahead, and check the aupplles ~ .. · you h•ve on hand before shopping. Coatly return trip• can btt prevent-
ed by ff~ matsl.ng out a •hopping l~t.
I_, Pilat
• -842-4321
..
• • .many ID
college
Nearly three.fourths
of th e stude nts who we re
g r aduat e d fr o m
Newport -Me sa Dis t r ict
h igh sc hools last year
a r e atte nding co llege
full-time Uris yea r .
T he figures wer e com ·
piled in a just .re le ased
g r a du a t e fo llow-u p
s t udy by d is trict o f .
ricials . The information
was provided by a r a n -
dom sa mple of 1979 grads
who responded to a five -
page. 8~question survey.
N OLA HOF FMAN,
·district deve lopme nt la b
c o o r dinator. s aid t he
st udy indicates that 73
pe r cen t are attending
school full time and 14
pe r cent are par t t im e
st udents.
About 17 µe rnmt a r e
working full-time and 43
per cent have µart -time
johs
A majority of those
who a rc wo rkinsc s h e
s aid . say the ir job is not
r ela ted to eithe r th eir
high school trainin~ or
their <·areer goal.
. Mo~~r SA \' on-tht'·JOh
t ra in ing has tu•en the
-r:nosl helpful sourct' or
tra ining for them . shl'
addt-<I .
S t ude nt s rat e d
Eng l is h a s l ht' h i g h
s «h ool 1·ours 1• n1os l
us eful 111 tht'1r 11resent
a t t 1v1ry or to fu ture
goa ls , "'1th math sc1·ood
anti s1·1em·t· 1 hirtl
~lost of lht• students
repor ted t hat cx tr<i
<·urrin llar al'l1 v1t11·s arc
par t of a SU('('CSSful high
sd1ool eclu <·•Jt111n . s he
s a1<l. hut som e e ritinzcd
s ueh a l'l1v1t1es as tlnll'
<' o n s u m i n g a n fl .. l' It
q uish ··
Gasoline
pleniiful?
SAN FHANCISl'O
Most C'a liforn1a ns, t wo
m o n t hs ago, w<·n· (Ip
l 1m is lic· ah o u t th t•
a vaila hility of gus olint•
dur ing 19Hl , t h e>
('a I If o r n 1 ;, I' 11 11 h a '
:-aid
"A f;2 pern •nt maJOrtl.V
o f C a lifornians ht•lit•v<.•
t hl•r c wi l l h t·
enough gasoline· uvaila
b lc for motoris ts during
1 h l' r o 1 1 '> w i " g 1 2
m II n I h s ... s LI Id th t'
statewide t<·l<•µhom• s ur
vey of l ,OlH pt·opll' out of
a population of a bout 2,1
m ill ion California n1'
S <tid t hC' Mervin I>
r i<•ld sur vey. · ·Sho u Id
gasolinl' s hortaJ.!CS oc
<'Ur, thf' p uhli1· would
favor a striC'll'r l'llfort'l'
m c n l of t h l• 55 m 11h
s p<•ed limit and n·q u1r
ing a nnua l a 11t11m oh1k
l'fficic·n<·y ins pc('tions a:-.
w<1ys l1> rccl11c1· gaso lint•
usage··
PROJECT
STAKrED
M ANAMA . B a hrain
11\ P l The o il r1t·h
Pc•r s ian G ulf s l a t e o l
Q a t a r h a s s tart ed ...
large-s cale wCJ t c r de
s alina tion proJ.!ram ltl
p rovi d t· 1rriJ.!at ion
water. l hc Culf Nc·w~
Agency rt•portcd
T he a gen1·y s aid that
the pilot project , cost in ~
$1 .2 million in its first
p h ase, is under 1·on
struction with technical
assistance from .fC!J><tn.
The project is tfl he
c·om µlelcd in micl HIH:J.
the a gency said.
GIYES UP
$10,000
Monday, Janurt 5, 1981 H I F DAIL V PILOT C°5
Son, 10,
aids mom
• in cowt •
ST . PETERSBURG •.
F la. <hPl · When Al·
le n e Savage wen t to
court a s k ing f or a
µos t p <>ne m e nt in t h e
r estitution payments she
had Ilee n o r dere d to •'
m a ke. she brought an
unusual le gal adviser -
he r 10 year-o ld :;o n ,
Sam .
Sa m rese ar ched the.
case a nd· tn a four-page
motion c ited one federar
case and two s ta te <·a se!'I
ind icating lh..<tl a person
sho uld not ~ punis ht!tl
for beln~ poor
"It was ext·eptionally
well dont· from a pro
ft•ss1onal s t and µoint ."
:-a 1d 1'1nt'l la s ('in ·u1 l
.J udg t• J>a v1d Patte rson
"1\ lut of iwoµl e ullem Hl
t 11 do th1•st· I hing s o n
I hl'i r own hut they a re·
us ually not well done
··t lh!111J.!hl u la'o\yer
had llont· 1t for hn ...
A"Wlre,....o
COUPLE COUNSEL CULT MEMBERS
Kurt Van Gordon ~e,Gtndy
Mrs Sa va ge. ehu rgcd
with J:!rand theft ;ind
w ri t i n g wo r l h l t>ss
C'hl'l'ks in l!n 1 and 1975.
s aid sht• 1·ould no longer
a fford to pay r<•stitullon
;111 <I r l ':Jrt•d s ht· wo u l cJ
v111Jalt• hIT pruhalion iL
'"'' d id 11111
Former cultist, wile
offer help to others ..
O ll \ '\ c; I·: • \ I' I' 11r1 \' ,1 n
I :11rd1·11. \\ho d1•'f·nh1· .. h1m:-df <•=-J
born a ga111 l11ndam1•nt<.1l1:-t ('h n ,lwn
-.a~.., Ii•· hnt·t l ~ llf'<"alTH' a rm•rnlll'r 11f
1h1· C'l11ld11·11 ,,f <;o d 1·1111 during till'
,J1•,u:o-li••ak rn••\•·1111·111 111 Ille l!f7fl:-.
-.1 m 11l~ lw1·;111i-" I"' '':111t ••d '" 'it·nc·
tlu• Lord l11·t11·r
llut \'an I ;11rd1•11 ... a~ s ht• \\11kt• up l••
lh1· f;w l lh<tl lh1·r1· was 11•1 nL·"d lo 1·111
h11n...,•lt oll ln im t11 :-. ("hr1 ... 1l an farnitv.
· rnm <· i11111 :1 t·11111n1 11 n(· ;ind '-lop think
111 1-: 1111' h1111:-.1·ll lo -.1·n '1· I :wl
I n:-tt·a d lw ht· ~an tn \'t·:-.t 1 i.:a ltnJ.!
\ lHIOllS ('ti ll •,_ hov. 1 ht•) ri·1·r1111
llra111wa..,1i and rl'!u111 rn1•ntlil'f'-11 ..
und 111..; Y.t fl• ( '111d~: ha\·1· s1•I 11p an
orgt11111al111n tn s p n ·ad i11l11rrn;,t111n
11n h o\\ 1·11lt d11l'lnncs tliffor fr11m
H1hl1t•al dodnnt·:-.. and lo couns1•I ('Ult
m t•m ltt•1 :-to linn~ 1 hl'm out ol lht:
1·11 11:-a nd had< 1n111 m:.11n.;tr<•am
c ·1111 •,11 :1t11h
\ 1\~ f ;ORIH·: .... s \IH ht· I!' II''' I 1lt•pl'11gr:.i m n11·r ·
··1 cJ1111·1 hl'l1t·H· tn k1tlnaµµing pt•o
pl<•." ht· :-a HI I ':-.ually . 1f «:ill1•d Ii~
a 1i:.ir1•n1 •ir friend. 1 ·11 J!.<1 \'!till the
rwrson in tlw (·ult and a ... k 11 lht•\
v.011111 Ii\.• v.1ll111g 10 l<ilk 10 a ('hns t1an
n11 n1\l1 ·r Tht•\ U1'llalh -;<1y '\ t"'> '
T hn h:l\"1 ' n11 ·ll·a r thai " hms11an
1111ni:-11·r v.111 I r~ to <h·proi..:ram lht·m
It 1 ht-\ rl'fu:-1'. I ;1s k I he m v. hat
l ht•\ ·n: afr;11d of anti ~Cl\. 'If v11ur
d111:1r11u• 1!'-lnu•. II "ill -;t.and u1) 1rn
dl'I' <jlJl'SlllHllOJ.!
Van c;onl1·11 -;a11 l ht• al-'" d1ff.,r!'>
f'n1 111 d1•prqgramrn1·r:-. 1n tl1al aft "r
talk111 g a p1•r-;011 1n1t nf a 1"ul1. \ht•\
a rt·n ·1 l1•ft wit h a l;l('k of ~Ill \ n:
liJ.!11111:-ht·l1 d 111• <l llt•mpls to rl'i1lan·
1 lwir t•ufl 11· !';11th with u 1ia .... 1r Chri:-.
L1a11 la1 lh II..-:-;:1111 h is r h<>TIIS do n11I
go I h r.,ugh a pt•n•><I of di'iont•nlat inn
a mong :-.11hw1•t-; 11( d1•progTarnm1ng
THE NA~E O F h 1-. organization.
in Orani..:1·. 1:-l'A<' E . for Prat·t11·al
,\p 11loi..:1·t 11·:-:ind ('h ri:-t 1an E\'an-
11t•lb m
· ~!11:-1•.., .. l>a\'Jd HNJ.! th1· Iii }l'a r
olrl ll·adcr uf t ht· ( 'hild n ·n of ( ;o<l.
wa~ past11r of the Chn suan ~1 i s
:-1nflary Alh<tll<'l' la Prot esta nt de
no m 111at1rm 1 who alla<'hcd h1msl•lf 111
1 h<· Tt•t•n Challenge 11q~anizal1on in
lluntmj!lon lkad1 during the late '60s
and t•arl) ·70~ Bnth T t•1•n Cha ll enge
;.ind C'hnst1:m M1 :-.s11)nan Alham·t·
s uhs c•q ucntly ousted Ut•rg ·
lit• t)1:•gan hy <·rilil'izmg all t•xisting
Christian l'hllr<'ht•s, pointi n~ 11ut the ir
p rob lems and urJ.?ing his y1,ung. new
ly '"s;ivetl" r h r istian )iSIE'ncrs lo rtb
I anC't' l h<'mst•I vcs ft'nm t•hurl'hes and
form into a <0omm11n11y
tn: RU 'AME TllE lt·adcr ,,f the
community The m e mbe rs were
gathered from people who had re
cenlly bet·om t• Christians. like Van
Gorden .
Al its peak. the group daim ed hun
dre d s or t hou sands o f m e m be rs
wo rldwide Ho wever , when Be r g
prophesied in 1972 that a giant m eteor
would destroy the United Sates. most
of the m em bers left for Europe. When
the m eteor didn 't come. there was a
falling away.
The cult has developed into a sex
c ult, with Berg publishing "Mo Let-
ters." s hort for Moses Letters . en·
co ur1ging par ent s to h a ve sexual re ·
l1tions with their children, encourag.
Ing m ale and fe male members to win
conve rts by having se1tual relations
with them to "sho w their love."
SOME OF THESE Illustrated "Mo
Letters," lncludln1 a "trow.to"
handbook on makln1 love, and one on
how to have se1t with one's children,
would be contldered UJeaal to be
mailed lA the UnUed stat... Ttwy
have, Indeed, been found fOf\ ••I• fn
pol'ftOll'apby booUtoret ln I:~.
TIM~ are pubtillMld ln Zurich, Swltaer._, Hd arciom:d lllto .............. --a.,.
\I tlr-.1 1111h l h t· l1·L111l-r-. \\f·r<•
pr 1\ ~ 111 lh•· (tol"lrin t• t hat '-'tf1·
"' :i l•lllrli! "a:-. all n~·fit Hut •. , cntual l ~ ;" tll\· )!rci1111 llf'"ant1· in·11·1· 1s11ICJI
t·d prt•=-t11tll wn lo n1llt·1·1 m11111·y <ind -
11111111 at11111 111 \\t111·1111 \1•r li-\.\:1:-•1p1·n
I~ -.1111<'1111111·!1 ;111d 1·r11·1111 rt1l!"d 111
H1·r~ 'lo·l h'r'
"IT 'S A l>\'l:'lif ; 1'1111 ,aid \an
1;11rdt•n Wh1 ·11 ;, girl p 11·ks a gu\ 1111
111 :1 bar. h;" -.1·'( \\1th l11m and lhe11
11p1·n11 IH·r ll1lil1., ht"' .1u~1 g11in).! 1 ..
1;111 1-!ll al lwr. 1111l1•s' hi' 1:-111tP1'••:-l1•cl
lfl ;1 101 ol ln •1· -;1·\ ·
lln\\ did a .\ 111111g man r:11 -.1 ·1~ 111 ;,
''111·1:-.11<111. d w rl'l1 go1111! fam1h , ,.,., ...
ll1•1·11nH· 11111·n •:-1t-d 111 '111'11 ·an cir
)!a1111,at111n"
\'an C ;onll'll :-a 111 lit· w a:-a i tr<it·ted
IJ£•t·CJusc t ht· C'h1hln •n of <;o<l Wl·n• at
tn·,-. /\t the> "('hris11an t-:xplo." a
.ll·-.11-. 11 .. ;1k 1·1111\ 1•11111111 lll'ld 111 l>alla-.
.. , I ·• a dfll "fl "'"'I. 1l'llftt a
gl rl pld.s a f1Uf1 up In a
har. ltflll •fl'X wltlt ltl•
a11d tlwn 'JflftUI lt,.r Bl·
hlr. 1tr•• Jut going to
laUflh al lwr. ""''•• ltt-I•
hllt-rfl'11tPCI In a lot of
lr••r 11..-x ...
111 1!17:!. lht'.\ ~1·1 up :1 1•offt·t• hnust•
a t'l'll!'>:-llw -.1r1·1·I lr11111 1111'1·11n n •nti11n
Silt• and \\ c.1·e uul 1111 1 lw strt'f>J~ t·on
:-I ant I_\ 111\'tl 1111! ,\ 111111g fll'llJ1lt· l!I
Tl11·.' "c-r1· '1·1") 1Jw 111tl.'
"'Tht•) \\l•rt· lug 1111 Im 1• liomh1ng.
:-a11l \'an <;ordt•n "\\'ht·n I \1.1111111 ask
I hl'm ~ul·-;tron:-. hko· \\ h.\ I hacl to
fors ak1· m } fa rnil~ v. ht•n m y famtl}
"'a:-('hrh llan. 11n1• 111 I))(' h•ad1•n.
\.\ oultl walk m t•r anll gl\·t· m l' a l11g
hui; a nti '\a_\'. ·1 re:dl.\ Ion• )llU ,
hrut hL·r l.t•I ' µo 0111 ;md w1tnes11 ·
Tlw'y would drop lhl' s uhJt'l'l. the}
ne1·t•r a ns\l.t•rt•<I tough q1ll'st1ons ..
T HE CHIU>Rt::'ll O t' <:od \H ·rt.·
a bo p1·rs1stC'nt Wlwn ht• 'o\f'nl bal'k
homl' t .. Ohio for t ht· ..,ummt'r . tht•
J.!rouµ kt·pl sending him l11eraturt' in
n t ing him to JOi n th c·ni 111 a 1·om
m une ··whc r t• t•\'t•r y t hin J! was
pea 1·c ful and lo \'i n):! a nil h<IJlJJ)
l::vl•ryone 1s lookinl! for a l 'top1a m
t his world ..
Va n ( iorilen wets m•arly t•on vtn<·ed .
Hut he cr!'d its his moth<•r with paint
in g out lo him lht• fallae1es of thP
C hildre n of God d ol'trim•
The m ethod his mother used
"l aking lime to sit do wn and show
me the Biblical trut h" is the model
for Van G<>rdcn in his missionary
work amon~ the c ults .
Van Gorde n sa id the C hildren of
God cult. which now e xists only in a
fe w European com munities unde r
Lhe name , Family of Love. used com -
m on brainwash ing techniq ues to re-
t ain its converts: Mem bers were en ·
couraged to take on a new nam e, cut-:
ting off any c onneclloa with th'e '
con vert 's past life : controversial doc-'.
t r lnes were kept from the newest ,
m em bers until they had teamed to •
a ccept whatever t hey were told : ,
m e m bers-were encouraged to doubt ~
the ir own thought ~rocesses.
\
CopB ru.t artifact&
,.
·-------.....
•
~~;.mi~;5~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~;!i··~1~";1~~ .... ~~ .... ~ .. ~!ll' .. ~ .... ~ ....... lllilli .. ~ .... ~ .......... ~ ................................ milii ............ ~~
111• Blll••t M•rk•tpl8ce on Ill• Or•~• Co•et
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
Y!tu C.n lell ~. Find It, ( ••A • .a.e.] ' · One Call Service
Tr•de H With • w.nt Ad ~ u.a ..v•v _ Fait Credit Approval
=· = BALTOIS 61 .. 1111
~:
-.. = ------..., ·-...
'"' -.. --... ·-... ·-·-·--·--·--... ------,,. --
.-~ ,.
-u~ -.......... ,. .. u.. -c 1 .... "',.. ,..
CosAIMw&A1 U•I -,...,.__ ,.,. -Ttw•• Ill U•I -.,,.... .. ,..,,. -. .,,.......u.. -~ "'"' ,,. -' Apta U•IW11 -• ~pta hn1., Gal -
11---·-· --...... . .. G--· 4UI : .. eu:.:=: = . ........... ... a .. _....... I 4m
Ofrltt llllllal -_......, -·-·..... ... ~";:t_.._ =
;l.;;-.i...aa. . -llSES. tmST· '~ IDT, FIUK£
LOYaY ..... PLAN ..,....,", ,._ ....... ..
--'•'• ... 1 'i•*•• .... .-. ........... ,,, 1111.-.
COU Of MIWPOllT llALTGaS
11111. c.-..., .. Ccu_ .. ....,
671-1111
............ ~
All real estate ad-
v ert iaed la th i s
DeWSpaps la subject to
tbe Federal Fair ffous.
inl Aet ~ 119 which
makes it Wetal to ad·
v e r tiae "any pr e -
ference, limitation, or
dilcrhnimtion based on
race , color , reli1ion,
SH , or aatioaa1 origin,
or an inCmtion to make
any s uch preference,
limita t ion, or d is·
crimination."
COSTAaes.A ....
Greenbroak 5 bedroom
with pool, as-and cloee to everytbl.ns. Auuma-
ble financin1 and of·
fered at only 11•,500. 540--
::::=: =.-=: Thlt M""lpmper will not l~~::::: =.:;' »t) knowingly accept any
Ha.Hl'SDWLIX
Try llS,000 down ! 3
Bdrm and 2 Bdrm units. super camer lot. Newly
la ndscaped a nd re· decorated. Owner says
sell now. Call ,.._11oa-: 1dvertisin1 for real _,. .--· -estate which is in viol•·
-. ..... TD'• -tion of the law. AllllllCOIOITS, ~ POSllAlS&
Lm&FMI
) .. )119
~
i.mo :i.m ----1•U ,,. -... llJ) ---------"" ------------
....... ~ ..... : . :.:: . ""'.. . ...... '"' . ... ..
:a-.f.. . ·-AITIS, ISO
~ ~:· .... ·.·:.·::·;:·/·;-;-;-;-;-;-;-;
~ .............. . a....... . ........ . 8.t.....~·-........ : :.::::::: . •.. . .
BIOIScAiltlitrt11_..
llt..w a.c. ........
-~ .,.,..... .
1t-DAILY PILOT.., -w.r ..... .., 'r awt-... ... ...,.
"-" ... ,. ....................... ·-·4 1002 .......................
ASMN fl/i"e LM
ASSUME LARGE 9~%
LOAN AND OWNE R
WILL CARRY 2ND. On·
ly "'7,500 for thia de-
Uptlul a Bdrm condo.
Commualty pool. Call
m.SITOMW
ALLSTATE
RLLTOM
SEA COVE PIOPERTIES
1 r4-6J r-6990
Now You
Can
Sell
More
wltll Dally Pilot
P ENNY PINCHER
ADS Stlll •ly IZ.
3 lines for 2 days
only .SI a day. 3ok a
line .
Ad vertise one or
more items valued
up to SIOO. Ea<'h
additiona l line i!I only 80r for the two
d ays . Sorry. no
t'om mt'rci-al ads
a llo lo\·ed . C h11rl(e
Your P~ny Pint'her
Ad o r u se your
Bank Amt'r ic'ard
Visa or Mastercard.
FM inore information
and to platt your ad u lt
WATEllFllONT HOMES, INC. IRM.UTATE ...._ ..... ~ ............ ..
~W.Comel~ . ......... leech .......
..... A "POINT ••allllOSlf
Panoramic view at wed1e. from
prime lar1e lot, 4 bdrm, 3 Mtlt .cuitom
home. '100 sq. ft. featurin1 marine
room. entry, Hvtn1 room, dining
room, built-ins, etc. 11.315,000.
UDO tlU
•Newly remodeled traditional style 3
.bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large
recreation room 6 i . ving
room has attractive beam ceili s,
fireplace & rrench doon leading to
brick patio .. New kitchen b -in .
appliances. Close to tennis urts,
sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be
sold fully fu rnished $420,000.
IAY,.OMT
We have several fine homes
with pier & slip
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
1: .. , ·I· 1 11 '4 •• • r '
ASSIM
l t/1%1.0AM
Only 1113.SOO for this 3
Bdrm Charmer with
heated pool and fruit
trees. Call now 979·5370.
AtLSTATE I
9'EAlTORS
Pr11c•.~
TWO 4-Plexes,, now un·
d e r cons t r u c t ion.
$124,900 each. owe
w /$25.000 down . Pr o·
jected growth monthly
income . 11 210. Low
vacancx factor. Offered
by Horton & ~s~. 115
E. Goodwin. Ste 8.
Prescott. Ariz. 86301.
Call 1·602/778-9689 or
602/445·6609 ask for
Roger . ------
COIOMA DIL MAI
Bay view duplex walk·
ing distance to the
beach. 4 & 3 bdrms. plus
fireplaces. bit. i n
kitchens, freshly paint··
e d a nd de l uxe
throughout. La rge 1st
may be assumable.
$389.500.
A Division of
lfarbor.fnvestment Co.
Oc1cratw1 ......
3 Ar 2 Bdrms, completely
furnished. BWlt-ins. 4 +
car sarace. Offer down
payment and take over
$421,000 loan at only
12iAClii yD.n
671-6670
No ....S to travel all over
town to look for 1ara1e
..._ ... you'll find them
riabt bere in Claaalfled.
To place your 1ara1e
sale ad, call "2·5e71.
Want Ad
$2
c .... ,..
$100 .ff .... 11•
PENNY
PINCHER
AD
:1 lrn1•s for l 1la \'
univ :-1 a thl\. :1-11: a lint: .
:\d\t•t'l b t• 11 01• ,,.
m 11n • 1h•m-. \:a htl·ll
up 111 -.11111 fo:a1·h
acld11111n;_il lint· ts
on h f~lt· for· I ht• I"' o
11 a ·, ' So r r ' . n 11
,. ti m ml" r 1· 1 a 01 a ct '
allo \H•tl Chari.:•·
Your 1'1•nn\ l'tnt·her
.\cl or 11~1· .\ou r
Hank ,\m1·ri<•11rcl
\"1sa or :\<tash·rC'arrt
c • ..., .......
y••r e4 la prlat
h••rrew!
e ..... ..., ... M-,
l :HAM .. I: .... fw .... ., ........ w Cll
~--~s-.,·.,..,.
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
Ill:
111111 11.1111 ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
IAWIOMT US,._
Gorgeous Modern Home With Imported
Antique Details T hr oughout. Handsome
Wooden Mantels , Huie "Carved Wood'"
Antique Pub. So Many Special Amenities.
Automatic Sprinklers. Air CondlUonln1.
S ec urity System . P r o r esslona lly
Landscaped. Dock For Fifty. Foot Boal.
Private Beach. Ry Appt. Only IU00,000.
® --........... ....
1911• 11c.,_ .. ..._
....,.,.~
FUOUllTOIUU
LAWA Illa&
Beautifully maintained 4 bedroom
home with mount•in a nd canyon
views. Quality upgrades, new carpet
a nd appliances. antique marble
f i r e place. and e n c losed bric k
co urt ya rd tha t l e nd s an
indoor-outdoor feeling. Presented at
Sl~,500. (A lotta house for the S>.
U~l()UI:. tiUMl:S ,
REALTORS, 675~
, 2443 Eaet CoHI H'911way. Corolfa del Mar
0 WE HAVE 23 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN
CaWftwU.-.
llllrw. WATllW' HOMI
OU J US can flnil-a-
bett er combination or
comfort. seclusion and
location at this very ar-
f or dab I e p r ice or
181.500! We are a offer· ing a I Bdrm con·
dominium in TIM? Spr· 1
ings of northern Irvine.
You'll be glad you acted
on this one. &M-7020
W•flwlGlm
Right on the canal in
Nl'wport Shores. /\ hu.:e
4 Bdrm 3 Bu family
home in 1mma1·ulate
condition. A super hx:a·
lion. only steps to the
beat·h. Attractive owner
financing availab)l' /\
super s tarter at
$28() .. o:. I l.._.hatty
'7J.1700
s BR_, 4 Ba . custom
w a terfront home
w / 17 X38' p vt dock .
Pr ice $1 ,395.000. For de·
tails on this home aod
appt to see. call Carol
Hoff. agt. 6.11-0094
4MZ'/JIA
2 story home. shake
roor. fresh paint. patio.
$167.500. Eastside Coiit<t Mesa.
loy Mcc.ch, lltr.
s-.1129
WAT8tfllOMT
s.lllf YmrT...-!
Pl ER 1 fl..OAT. quaint 2
bdrm home on legal R-2
lot. Two car garitge.
$425,000! ..... ..,,,... .....
•'75-7060•
OWllll'Wll.Aa•c•
Super sharp .Eastside dollhouse. 3 Bdrms. 2
Ba . beautifull y
landscaped m move·m
con dition Large
fir epl ace and o pen
beam ceiling add much
lo its charm. Full prict-
SIS2,500. It's time to plan for that
vacation trip. For extra
cash . why not sell some
al tlae items you don "t
need wiUt a Classified
ad? MZ·5'78. _ -1
USITHI
DA .. Y PILOT
"PAIT
llSULT"
SHYICI
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
642·1671
ht.Ill
$2.17 per DAY
That ·s ALL you pity
fora
JO day ad
inlhe
DAILY PILOT
SEIVICE
llECTOIY
00 IT NOW!
642-1671
SpaCious beautifully decorated
ho me on prime West Bay Av e.
Location with 35' frontage .
Fantastic master bedroom suite
overlooking the harbor lights .
Landscaped front patio It Pier 6
slip at the UNBELIEVABLE LOW
PRICE OF -.so&on fee land.
(•~J
I
.... ,...... •..aN-n .. IOW -l7tl.•
New exclusive listin1. Moet fanteltk
location for viewin1 the boaUa1
a ctivity, jetty, ocean, brilht Ulhu 6
romantic Catalina Island. Juat bl time
t o have a c lose·UP view of Uae
Christmas boat parade. New luh
landscaped terrace. 4 Bedrooms, fam.
rm . fo rma l dining, dual stone
fireplaces. 3-car garage. Call for ap.,t .
WHLIY M. TAYLOI CO., llAl.TOll
MIWf!.::•=.:~ ... ----::.....11
CDMDWLIX
2 YIAISMIW-
4 Bdrm and 2 Bdrm ...
South of PCR ... Private brick courtyard ... 4 car
garage ... Oak planked
-floors . . . t-aliatrtite ...
Super ter~ ... Call now
~
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
1r4-631-6990
Ck ...... .,...
3 Bdrm 3 Ba and 2
Bdrm 2 Ba. lrg rooms,
good condition. Pnced to sell"at l'ZlS.000. ·
NIWUSllMe
DWI.II
CLOSI TO llACH
3 Bed, 2 baths each unit.
Fumislled. Stoae F/P Io we r. O-ou-..... ._,..,--1
mer/winter rental. Ask·
ine $275,000. 541·0715 eve.
l :· a_~~~cial e d
One acre + lot
w1urchitectur1tl plans
for 3800 +sq rt home.
Rolling hills & horse
area. 1186.000
A C0HV(Nl(NT 9"0flPINC ANO
SEWING CUIOE ro• THC
CAI. OH TH( CO
For• A4 ift w_.•, W ...
C• S.e 64~5'71. lat. JJO
Non-Stop Cape The ~s P111tmit
Just Ille ll(lift lloM rs """' 1 fortu11t 111 llllllOll1 Tew'N .-It
Sutl style wrtfl the tlllfte·ftltt
.. ..,.., lll4 ttlfll " Wlftl •• *"".
dltua. l'H'll*t! ,.,_.'10I --SlltS I. 10. 11. I•. 16, II. 20.
Silt 12 lllwlt ~It l Stl ,., .. Stell
--.............. ........
'
-11111111 llllY NIU
~"',' r •I , ' .~, , 4 \ i , , '
Florida citru• threatened
Arctic • air causes
severe power cuts
By 11ae Ah«6a&ed Presa
Record C'old sprtdd over neu
ly all the na tion east of the
R o c kies t oda y, ~t a i l in g
t hou:.ands of t·isr:.. <.tnc.J t <.tusmg
crit1l·a l pol4 er shurt <.11-(e~ in :.ornt'
regions
Citrus ~rowers fretted for
their orange~ 1n North f'lor1da
where the thermomder dipped
below freezing . More than 8,000
New Yorkers <:omplaaned a bout
cold apartments as a rt'lil' air
sent temperatures diving. Car
batteries died and fuel lan es
froze.
11---~11.e,._,,a,...1-oe-a"""tmfluret y swamped
with road ser v1te culls." said
Steve Harwell of the Virginia
Automobi le As soci u l ion in
Ri c hmond. wher e the t e rn ·
per ature th is mornini.: 14 as u
record 6deArl'es.
A s pokesm an fo r AAA in
western Connecticut s uid 3,500
"can 't start" cuJls we re r e·
ceived Saturday anrt Sunday and
500 between 6 a .m . and 8 a.m. to·
day.
The Nationa l Weather Ser vice
said the cold weather was not
quite as severe as Sunday mom
ing, when readini:s were as
mul'h as 40 degrees below zero.
but was more extensive.
Readings of below zero were
recorded from the upper Mis-
sissj ppi Vallt!y, throug h the
Gre at Lakes re~ion und the Ohio
Valley into the Northeast.
Record low temperatures for
the d ate· were 1n nume rous
cities, including subzero marks
in Beckley, W. Va .. 10 below;
Cari bou. Ma ine. 20 below ;
De troit, 8 be lo w ; Ha rtford.
Conn .. 10 be low; Portland.
Main~ 13 below. and Wor cester.
P a .. ll helow.
Stock market
spurred by
interest cut
N EW YORK C /\I') The
s toC'k m arket rose s harply 1n
heavy tradint: today in an arl
van ce sparked hy hopes for
lowe r interest rates.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials climbed 17.24 to990.02·
in lhe firstfourhours of trading.
Gainers outnumbered losers
by close to a 4· l m aq~in in the
over-all tally or New York Stock
Exchange-listed issues.
On Friday many large banks
lowered their prime lending
rates from 21 1.2 to 20112 percent.
Today, Morgan Gua ranty Trust
of New York cut its basil' rate on
blue-chip loa ns to 20 percent.
Ho p es th a t th e r ecent
downturn in interest rates might
continue were reinforced this
m o rning with the F e deral
Reserve's report of a decline or
mor e than $2 billion in the bask
measure o( the money s upply.
The figures were seen as a
sign that lhe Federal Reser ve's
credit-lightening in the closing
months of 1980 had begun M>
achieve its des ired effect or re-
ducing inflationary pressures.
Thu"ton students
to coUect paer
Thurston Intermediate School
students will be collecUne
newspapen and ma1Hlnes Jan.
2'1 to ralae funda for the Laeuna
Beach campua/ro1ram1.
Paper shoul be bundled and
lied with twine or placed In
brown r ba 1 an(\ d,Uvered _
ac at~ay, ·
dar k Mo unt ains a nt1 this
morning it w;.is 4 below zero in
Roston. l helow 1n Pittsburgh
a.nd just l l above m Raleigh,
N.C
At least one death. that or an
un 1dent1fied m a n fourul on a
P h i lade lphia street. was at-
tributed to the deep frt!eze.
In Clevela nd. about :no pa ·
lients were evacuated from a
~ospital when a boil er hlcw up,
kn~cking out the heat while the
te mperature outside dove below
zero. ==-rr~-«f)l,ff-ifH&lifrt1~df-rr1it1t1t1•tnnti11naa-------------~-1{""just'tonrtlrdrnroyed the
rcl'Ord ... said Nationa l Weather A bout 850 Southe rn Ca~forn i a r unne rs
•PWi....,.._
COLD CONTINUES
Utica, N.Y. Fireman
In North Carolina . where tem-
per a tures d ipped helow 10 1n
most inland areas, Duke Power
Co. warned or possible rotating
l>la t•kouts unles!I.. .. <·uslome rs
voluntar ily c·ut power c·ons ump·
lion.
"This is an emer~ent·y." suid
Al ex Coffin. a spokesman for
Duke Powe r. "We're not crying
wolf ...
Temperatures fell a s far as 42
deierees below zero Sunday -in
Old f"or~e. N.Y .. in t he Ad rron
Morgan cuts
• prime rate
N EW YORK !AP)
Mor gan Guaranty Trust
Co. today reduced its prime
lending rate to 20 percent,
the lowest rate cha rged by
a ny major bank.
The reduction from 21 5
percent came a fe w days
after most major banks cut
their rates to 20.5 percent.
and increased hopes or a
general decline in interest
rates.
The move came mmutes
after the Federal Reser ve
Board reported substantial
dec·lines an the nation's
mone}' supply
Tax aid set
for: eltl~rly
,.~ree income tax assistance will
be availa ble to senior citizens in
t he Laguna Beach City Council
chambers from Fe b. 2 through
Aprll 13.
The service will be offer ed
through the Senior Cit,izens Club
and Volunteer Income Tax As-
sistance progr am Mondays and
Thursdays from 9a.m. to noon on
a nrsl-come. first-served basis.
Senion are asked to brin~ last
year's tax forms. ifavailable.
Graham in Poland
WARSAW, Poland CAP) -
American evangelist Billy
·Graham arrived in Poland Sun-
day nilht to receive the fint
honorary degree 1tven to an·
Am.u..Uaa-b.y \.he Polhh-
Tbeo&osical Ac.ademy.
Ser v1tc rncteorvlul!1st Dean · Gulezian of the t•onditions in n1m µ(•\t•d in t h<· united Cere bral Palsy
A(ter gmng h is all to t he r a(·e. Ba birak1
start:-; anot her this' t 1m~ a mork run
Hou lton. !\1aine. whe re \he l1(•t1<'1'11 lllK run Sunday at Fashion Is land ,
men·ury slid to 41 helow Sun-:"t·wporl H(•al'll. with Dave Babiraki of
t1ay. · ';r ... rw<ia If ills winning the ret(·e and a
with his son J onathan. :i Chelow J The run
Wet!) sponsor ed by Lido Van ~ncl Stor agf'
Co of I r\'in(•
The 1t·y storm system swept round t r1p lt('kl'l to the Boston marathoti
into the Nor\hea!.\ on Saturday
from Canada, sprcadin ~ snow
squalls from tht· Cireat Lak<:s 1 and Upper Ohio V;.i lley into
'>'C:o.tl'rn New Yor k. Sunday's
frigid hlasts wt're the k ini.: on
the t·••kc
·'.Ripper'
suspect
jeered
I. f; El>S. fo:ni.:land <A I' I As a
<'rowel howled and Sl·re;.imerf. a
35-y<'ar -old tru<'k driver was
charged in court today with the
murder or one or the 13 women al-
l<'g l·•ll y shiin the iw st fl\·t· ye;.irs
liy t he so called Yo rkshire Hip-
per .
·Peter Willia m Sutcliffe was
t•hari.:ed with the murder Nov 17
or 20-year-old college student Ja<·
queline Hill. lie was ordered hl'ld
without hail until J an. 14.
Poli<'e previously described
M 1ss Ifill as the 13th and latest vir·
t im in a reign of ter ror in northern
F:ngla ncl 's Yorkshire and Lan·
1· ash ire counties
A <·rowel of more than 1,000
hes ieged the magistr ates· 1:f)urt in
the town hall of Dcwshury. a mill
town near Leeds where the Rip·
perk illed five women.
The crowd screamed ahusc as
Sl4tt llffo . a ma rr ied man from
nearhy Bradford. was hroui.:ht tu
tlw e·ourt under heavy po li1·e·
l'Sl'Orl
M<'n, wo m l!n a nd c hildren
shouted "you bastard " and "kill
the bastard " as p<>lire held the
mohhal·k
Pol H:C' e arlier indi c a ted
Sutcli ffe was the Ripper but that
their questionini! of him "had not
developed as qu1r kly as wC' h..:rl
anticipated."
Liaison officer Supt. f''r ank
Morrill tole! report ers earli er that
Sutc•liffe's "fal'ial features will
. form part of the pr osecu·
lion 's case." Police have said a
bite mark on the ho<ly of one or the
Ripper's victims indicated the
<See RIPPF.R, PaKe A2)
200-f Qot fall
kills irorker
PATTERSON (AP) · A
worker from Fresno fell 200 feet
to his death whel) a s teel arm
broke on a power One tower west
of here, Stanislaus County
sheriff's officers reported.
The vtctlm, Mark James Hoff-
man, 29, had been repairing
dama1e caused by vandals •hoottna at 9e1uipment in Crow
Canyon, authorities said.
•• >':-----
Ne1v sarpervisors
Stanton, N estande
take oath of office
......... ~
Westminster and parts or Santa
Ana.
Stanton, who took the oath of
office from Sueprio r Court
Judge Bruce Sumner or Laguna
Beach, wu described in an in-
troductory speech by Fountain
Valley Mayor Al Holl~nden as ~
man oC the people.
"If there ever was a person o<
the ma11e1, a grau roots
peuon, Ro•ec ii il." 1-a-td
HolUnden. ·
Clemente
emerge11cy
plan urged
With an l'~t· 1111 t11c· ~·ttll·r11l a1
S<rn ( 'l1·rn t•ntc Fin • < 'hwl 1{011
Cole man wi ll a~u111 attt•mpt l11
<'lln ,. IO('l' thl' ('ity I 'ount·d lo
app rove u pl an tor 1•v;wualwn of
t he town 1 n th c· c· '"' n t or a
nud ear in1·1<1t:nt
Counc.·11 memhcrs la~t month
tolct Cole m an his t•\'a t:uation
docume nt doesn't evalua te thl'
con seq uen ces nr a sever e
nudl!;.ir ac·1·1<JC'nt al I ht· nl'arh~
San Onofre Nu<'ll!ar <il'nt•rntini.:
Station. -
Cole man ins ists his report.
funded by a SI0.000 i.:r ant from
Southern ('alifornia F:d1~on C'o
s ho u lrl not h t· st'1•n a s :in
. "ultimate solution," hut rallwr
a~ an interim response plan.
-1 n a memo I o 1· o u n 1· 1 I
m e mlw rs. t'olc.•man ~a11l. tw
would hlw 1·ounnl a11proval of
t h<' p l an . C\'t'n ttio u i.:h the·
dot·umt•nt. "dell'~ nllt 1111pl) 11
t·aµahi lit~· of rl'SJ11111 :-.1• to th••
must sc vcrc a1·l·1d1·nt or tht
m os t udvers<• <·irt·urn slanl'es
noy, or in thr futurt· ..
Ill' sa 1<l t ht· 1n1cr1111 n·por l
should he.· a~·cc.•ptl'd Wc•dncsdlily
n1).!ht ht'1·auM• of a 1·ount .\ wi<k
e\'a('li:Jlion t•xc•r1•1s1· :;i•ht•duled
later Hus month.
That cxen·isc wi ll t•\·aluatl' the·
e· o u n I y · s r t• et• n II) u JJ d a I t• d
res pons e plan. and \\Ill It'''
t' m e r g t' n <' y r t' s p o n s t· 1 11
<See Pl.AN, Pal(t> All
Civil workPrs"
pay plan shav~d
WASHI NGTON <AP I Pres1
dent Carter plans to rcrommcnrl
a 5.5 percent pay r aise for
federal civil ser vants . puhlished
reports say.
That reportedly is J 1 to J .2
pe rcentage points below what
the presideAt's budget aides
ori~inally proposed . T he white
colla r workers received a 9.1
percent pay Increase last year.
Weather
Decrea1ln1 fogginess to
mostly s unny Tuesday. -
Lowa toni1ht mid to upper
409. Hieh.s Tuesday mid to
upper','IOa.
T", dtbolft C411tl llUftl:
Should 8rtcf11 Sipt have
pasMd wUlt mcrorv '" th«
8'°"""' Qr'QIP~ SH Pagft BI .
' •
................ ,. ---JllST IJR£4K.IN-.---__,
V .S. money supply
has ·sharp decline
NIW YO RK tAJ• 1 The l''eder~RHerve Board aaid today
ftalloo"• mon.--. !luppt ft!tl 1h.r'plv In UH! weell ended O.C-. 24. dl"OI> c·11mf' .,. lhf' t·ost ol hort term hurrowina& reac~ecl a
M haith i.m1d .. rtor\i'I h\ lh.-1°\'f\\rtal tumk lo re"train tnrla .
Muc·h ol 1'tw c·ountry '" rmm~ s upvh 1i. 111 tht= form of credit,
l her than (• a:\h. 1&n1I to<b > • i. rt!porl followed 1tn 1&nnouncement by
• Federal tt.eu'" t.' ltarnk of N~"' York on f'rldaey that buaine111 ~rro"1ne from m•Jor N"" York C'1t) l11mk11 dr~pped by $1 l billion
In the "M .-nctin.: t'hris1m1u. Evl.' • .. -.., ............... .
LA JOLl..A 1 .\I' 1 l'ht= Chart House on Prospeet ~treet w~s
a• ii} <1amct.:t.'d h) fire •nd smoke today. but proprietO(s said
mam dinmi; mom ma} rti0pt1n within a week F1ft~ flref1~htt.'r' rc~ponded to two 1tlar~s There was
a\) i;mOkt' '*nd firt-da111aae to a ne11i:hbormg Jewelry store.
A 'puke!lman Bill 1'11t::. estimated the damage at $350.000
01\)rt'
Bl"CKEYE. La 1AP 1 Stale polic:e es1:orted three w~ite
· 1 i:. into dll ~hilt> Buckeye High School today. and t~e girls
• •ert' enrolled for (•lasses under ~late court order m defiance of
a Jederal J~·IJ.!l,.l> desegregation directive . ..
""We han~ no alternative but to enroll the girls a t this time.
•aid Pr1m·1pal l"harles Waites. . . • T he enrollment l"ame Oil orders of state D1stri<'l Ju~ge
Richard Lee He took the extraordinary step of assuming
custod\" or lhc girls. 'who want to go to school at rural Buckeye
iutther 0 lhan obey (J .S. Distri<'l Judge Nauman S<:~tt ·s order t~at
thev ride bust.'s to a predominantly black school in Alexandria.
15 miles awa}
11-~•~•~r_•flG"CN"rtN•IJordr~r~~~~~~~~~~~
LOS AN<;ELES !Al'> l'res1dent·elecl Reagan's visit to
:\fexwo today. a rare µr·e-inaugural jou~ney a cr?ss th~ U.S.
border 1s intended to bf! long on symbolism of friendship and
short ~n spec1f1ts of discord between the countries. C Related
photo. A5. I . . . The m ain purpose. saHl Reagan aide Edwin Meese Ill. 1s lo
' .. portr ay the importam·e the new administration attach~s to U.S.·
Mexican ties after fo\Jr years of less-than·smoot-h relations.
•· Meese said there was no specific topic f-0r Reagan's meeting
·• with Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo at the Museum of
Art and History 1n Ciudad Juarez. on the U.S.-Mexican border
near El Paso. Texas
. Draft protester
employs valldalis~
LOS ANGfo~LES <A P 1 Anti
draft protesters Jammed the
locks on three lo("al post offiC'es
where draft registration was
beginning today after a weekend
'M9c Arthur Park rally remin1s-
C'etlt or 1960s demonstrations.
' Employees al the Loma Sta·
lion post office in Long Beach
had to break a wmrlow to get in
to the buildini.: after p1e<.'es of
wood were broken off in the door
IOtks. Los Ani,:eles police saiii
toothpicks had hce n jammed
into door loc·ks at post offices in
llarbor City and San Pedro. hut
~ orkers at hoth stations said
llley were ahle to open the doors .
An anonymous <·allcr who said
sbe was· opposed lo the draft
tl'lephoned a lm·al news service
<i nd claimed responsibility for
the vandalism.
·:;five feeling.
·:·'fjlue a/ ter
• ·ieans caper
., 'Five Los An~cles residents
tt'ave been arrested by Orange
Cdonty Sheriff's deputies on sus·
,,.t!ion of stealin~ Sl0.000 worth or blue jeans and other clothes from
a1..aguna Hills store.
.. T he suspects were booked into
Orange County Jail on Saturday
after deputies claimed they were
ca ught with clothes stolen at 6: 15
a.m . from the Wild West Store at
25252 Mcintyre St .. according to
Sheri H's Lt. Wyatt Hart
He said deputies spotted a van
an d a car parked outside the store
and chased each vehiC'le south on
La Paz Road, where both the van
and car crashed on a curve. Three
men in the car fled into the
bushes. Twowe.relatercaughl.
They were Ja mal Shah, 21. and
RahmeeShah, Jr .. 20.
Two r iders in the van arrested
were Antoinette Mar ie Sims and
Patricia Ann Mosby. both 19.
The third rider in the car
~scaped, Hart said, but another
suspect, Carl Pouncy, 32, was
captured when he Oed the s tore on
foot.
Hart said the suspects ap.
parently pried open the store's
front door. A silent alarm system
in the store tipped off the deputies.
' All males born in 1962 are re·
quired to register for the drart at
post offices this week .
··( didn't register and I won't
go 11 I'm drafted." 1~-year·old
Pablo Huffsteter said at the
Mac Arthur Park rally. "The .
draft has become necessar y
because the U.S. government
c an no longer use tools like the
CIA and dictatorships to s up·
press popular movements in un-
derdeveloped countries."
About 500 people c arrying
s igns that said "No More Draft.
No More War. U.S. Out of El
Salvador·· gather ed Sunday in
the park.·
Clemente man
held in
break-in
A 23-year -old San Clem ente
man remains in jail today after
his arrest over the weekend on
c harges of breaking into a
woman's apart ment and lakin~
her purse.
James R. Colvin, who lives in a
trailer at 102 Calle Bella Loma.
was being held on $25.000 bail, fac·
ing charges of assault and battery
a nrl burglary .
Police said Colvin allegedly en·
tered the woman's house on West
Escalones New Year's Day
through an unlocked door .
He reportedly took a purse con·
taining a small amount or change.
When the victim awoke, the sus·
pect ned out a door and rode off on
a bicycle.
Senior citizens
get free movie
"House Calls." starring Glen·
da Jackson and Walter Matthau.
will be shown free to senior
c itizens at ~'!Ji. South Coast
Theater in La~a Beach Jan.
16 at 2 p.m . ·•
The rilm is being presented by
Laguna Federal Savings and
Loan Association. Free tickets
lo the movie are avallable·at the
Senior-Center. 515 FoTest Ave.
ftLIPHONa .
Thomas P. Haley
fl'WlltMr
Robert N. Weed ,.,........
M. Thomas K"vll . ....,
ThOmn A. MurPhlnt
All d,,.,,,.. .... : (71') 142-4121 c1e..-. .... ,.. .. ,.: 142-1111
OflPICU C.1 IMM: ........ ~
L..-. 9Ndl:.., Ne.Cefft """-" . Hwltlflllell llNOI: 1117' llNcll ~
•
Traffic
plan in
• • re'7Jew
l.11aiun• Beach city otfkl•h•
ar e taldnai. another •• 1t pro
poaed traffic-ehanaea for th•
v1cioria Beat•h area with ari ">'" toward expandlna lhC" plan,
The review c·om.-" aftt1r rritl
dents ol the VictorlM fte•d1 arr11
asked for a del~ In aedoptlon of
the phm. whWll 111 on th., ('lty
Council's aaienda Tul'itday Thi•
couneil meets ut 6 p.m
The plan. detdgned to roduc•t1
pa rking and traffic prohlcm11 In
t he area, now coven Victoria.
Drive, Sunset Terr&a <:e 11ncl
McAuJey Plate at thl' south oml
of town.
But David Lee. president or
the Victoria Beaeh homeowners
Association. said he is askm1e lor
a delay on the plan "'for a short
time."
He said some residents want
ed to study it rurther and that
there was interest in expandin~
the plan to indude Dumond
Drive and Marion Way.
The plan. which would become
effeNive during the 1981-82 fis
cal year. currently includes con· ~rting Victoria Drive a nd
, Suns.et Terrace to o n e -way
southbound streets and prohibit-
ing. parking on the east s ide of
those str eets.
Th«;re would be a stop sign al
the intersection of Victoria
Drive and McA.Yky~ee
--A so. r ight turn lanes would be
added on Coast Highway south·
bound at Victoria and Sunset.
F,....P.,,.AI
RIPPER ...
murderer had a gap in his front
teeth.
N'eighbors said Sutcliffe was a
quiet; handsome man who they
believed worked as a lo ng.
distance truck driver. They said
his brunette wife taught art
part-lime. and they had no
c·hildren.
··He was a \"ery. very quiet
man who went about his. busi-
ness ... said one neighbor , David
Bowman. "I just said. 'He llo.
Peter.' now and again when I
saw him. He was very quiet. you
c·ould say mysterious.
"He often worked late into the
night in his" garage orr his car
and sometimes a friend came to
help him.
...
"He kept to himself but was
not distant. He a nd his wife
didn 't appear lovey-dovey but ··
ther e was no impression or any
s train between them."
They k e pt their home
·'beautifully ... one neighbor
said.
PoliC'e Sgt. Robert Ring and
Cons table Robert Hydes told a
news conference they arrested
the man Friday nig ht in the red
light district or Sheffield. a
Yorkshire town close to the six
cities in whic h the Ripper
struck. Although he never killed
in Sheffield. maoy of-his victims
were prostitutes.
The two police officers said
that during a routine check they
round suspicious license plates
on a parked Rover automobile.
They said after a computer
check or the ca r 's registration.
they arrested the driver on sus·
pi<.'ion of theft or the plates.
"It was"just a spot check on a
car parked in a cer tain area
where prostitutes take clients." said Ring.
Gregory said the man did not
resist arrest. He said a woman
with him at the time "is helping
with inquiries. but has not been
arrested." He did not identify
the woman. · '
Newspaper reports s aid the
police found a hammer, one of
the weapons used by the Ripper.
in the man's car.
The hunt for the Yorkshire
Ripper has cost nearly SlD
million since h'-5 first killing, of
prostitute Wilma Mccann in
Leeds on Oct. 30, 1975. The
police questioned 200.000 people.
sear<'hed 30,000 ho m es and
checked 180.000 vehicles.
The mass murderer killed five
wom en in Leeds. three in Brad·
ford. two in Manchester and one
each in Halifax, Huddersfield
and Preston. all northern in·
dustrial towns. . / Because his first victims were
prostitutes, he was nicknamed
after-,Jack the Ripper, who
butchered six prostitutes in Lon·
don 's East End in 1888 and wa;
never caught. But the Yorkshire
Ripper's last three victims were
r espectable young women.
3-D movie due
for Lagunam
''The Creature From the.
Black La1<H>n," a tbree·
dimensional movie, will be pre-·
IDl.9cLtl1 tb• I •runa....~ Library at the loca ~ hi1tt achool
audltortum Jan. 23.
Tlcketa now beln1 aold at the
library an 75 ceata for children,
ud •1.21 for adulta. All tlchta" atfitbe door wtU be.Jl.IO ........
w ll bl cartoou before the. T p.m. fMt1nftlm.
·: .
•
Who has flee righf of wa.,e?
. \
An offshore storm brought high waves
between 4 5 feet along the Huntington
Beach pier Saturday and these early morn·
ing surfers shared one roller. Water tern·
perature was a chilly 61 degrees. about the
same as air te mperature. Choppy s urf
continued Sunday ..
Hostage response
studied; 3 111-0¥ed--
BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP) The seized the U.S. Embassy on No\·
4. 1979. had surrcndne<J c·ontrol of
the captives a s they ·promised to
Iranian government says it 1s
studying President Carter's
final offer for the release of the
U.S. hostages. has transferred
the three Amer icans held at the
Foreign Ministry to a new loca· -
tion and has taken full control
• do in November when Iran·!'>
Parliament set conditions for the
America'lj-0 relelt$C.
or the other 49 captives from
the Islamic militants who seized
them 14 months ago.
Prime Min.ister Mohammad Ali
Rajai 's spokesman. Ah mad Az1zi .
told The Associated P ress on Sun·
day that the '"U.S. response 1s be·
ing studied" a nd Iran's reply
would be "announced later ··
Azizi said U .S. Charge d'Af
faires Bruce Laingen. political of
ficer VictorTomseth a nd security
man Michael Howla nd had heen
moved from t he Foreis.m Ministry
in Tt!hran lo·· a-more appropriate
plaC'e or res idence.·· the official
Iranian news agenc-y Pars report
ed. Contacted hy telephone from
Beirut. he told the AP this was
done for reasons of · ·c·on,·en·
ience."
.. It was decided from the begin-
ning that when the hostages were
delivered to the government. the
three al the ministry would also
be taken by the government.··
Azizisaid.
.. The other 49 hostages ate no"
in the hands or the government ...
he reported. indicatir\g-for the
fir st time that the miijlants who
' LB to lwst
top quartet
T he La Salle Quartet will
perform Jan. 26 a t the Laguna
B3ach High School auditorium
as part of the 21st season or the
Laguna Beach Chamber Musil·
Society .
T he quartet. based at the
University of Cincinnati. will
perform works from Alexander
von Zemlinsky. Joseph Haydn
and Beethoven.
Tickets, at $7 each, are availa-
ble by calling 494-2822. or writ·
ing the society al Post 0Hi<'e
Box 385. Laguna Beach. Ca
92652 ..
Laguna mulls
• • restnct1ons
on parltjng
An ordinante hmitin>! the park
1ng or reereat1onal and eom
mcrdal vehi<"lcs on 1·it \ strel'ts
will be rons idered h) the Laguna
Beach City Coum·ll Tuesda~
The ordin<.1 n°1·e would l1m1l
pa-rklng time nn c·it y~streets ancl
a lle\'s to five hours for rnm·
mer.t1al vehicles. c·amp trailt'r!'>.
trailer 1·oaches. house l'ars and
trailer-mounted hoats
The law <.ouldn "t appl) to
µic:kup truc·ks. vans with a 1•arr~
i ng <: apacity of one ton or leS!'>. an cl
house l·ars less than 20 feet lonj!. !J
feet high. and 7 feet Ion!!
Also. \"Chic·Jes needed for 1·on
s trut t1on work un stfrets or adJa
ccnl properties \\Oulri bC' e:--.cmpt
from theorrlmanee
E'NlllP,.,.-AI
PLAN •.. ...
s imulated conditions at tlw San
Onofre plant.
Col eman s aid the 1:ity's
appro\'al of the· response
document should t·ome before
that Jan. 29 exerc·1se
The t'ily"s evacuation plan
outlines ctuties that would be
pe rformed hy various c·1 t)
departments in the e\·ent of' an
incident al Si!n Onofre.
It <·alls for the e vacuation or
school children. the elderl} and
handic apped . a nd outl ines
traffic control m easures .
protection or property and other .
measures .
Lagunan
arrested
~~--~~~~~~
in knifing
A 1.<iguna He.i1·h man was ar
rl'!'>tC'll on ehargcs of allempted
murdl'r after he allegedly
!->I ahhvd anotlwr Laguna Beac·h
man durin).! an altercation in a
liw a I t <i \:cm
Frank Alcxanrlt•r West.on. 3!J.
"ho listed 111!--<iddrcss as lfl81
Wards Tcrral'c. f.a).!una BeaC'h.
"as takl•n into l"UStody following
the dist urh<int·t• shorll) after 10
p m Saturda y at Mother's
Tcivern.570 E Coast Highway
Pol11·c· sa irl Wl•ston a llt·gedb
!--lcilJlw<I H1t·hard Ornllc Arnold.
:111. of fi711 <;l<·nffcyn· St • st•\'Nal
·time•!'> durini.: u pu!'>h1n~ mat1·h
bet WN·n the two nu·n
()ff11·ers :.u11l th(•\ c·unf1s1·atc·d <i
folcltn).! pcll'kl'I kn1fl' \\ ith a :11nd1
II lade from Wl'!'>lon
;\rnold \\a~ taken to :\l1ss1on
Com mun1t~ I l11:.p1t ;ii. when · lw
\\as rc>µo rlt'tl 111 "c•riou:. c·onrl1t 11m
toda \'
Weston wus transfl'rrcd to
Or<in).!l' <"ounl y ,Jail" here> ht• \\'as
ht•i1I \\ 1thlwtl 'it>I ;1t S:.!5.00U
Park pl~n
Tuesday topic
.for Laguna
Lai.:una BC'a<·h l"i\} Counl"il
mem hers Tue~da\ will take a look
at developing a 0IO·aerc park in
Arch Heath 11<>11-:ht s .
Tht> propi1st•d park property
owned hy thc Aliso Viejo Co.. is
located on the cas t s ide of Balboa
"' e nuc at tht> end of Oel Mar t'apistranounrl <'orte7. a \"e nues ·
Funds for the park \\ oulrl <'ome
from eity I $150.0001 . <rnd state
( $45.fi62 )
Orfil·1als said the park 1·oulrl in-
C"l ude a tin) tot pla.r area. hiking.
jog~i ni:: and exerC'ise trails. a dog
exercise run. view point s. a
sort hall·SOCN'r field. handhall.
volleyball..haskelball. and tenms
courts. night lig hts. restrooms
and a park in).! a rea
The C8sull Side ot ~ --..,..--------~~s GARM~-----conoo rugby shons.lnd pants. 56 FASHION ISLAND
IYlilllble In cokn ~ red. white. NEWPORT BEACH
khaki, sky blut. rwvy, and gold. (71'4) 6'44 7030 Nao. thl a..ic t»r atripe rugtJI/ 1hir1, • ·
. In. PClt11canOn blend.
I' •
Dll 11111• llllY PINI
lorida citrus threatened
Arctic • air. causes
severe power euts
8) The Assol'ialed Presi.
Record told spread over neat
I) a ll the na tion east of the
' R o <· k 1 e s t o d a ) s t ii I I 1 n g
thousands of l'ars, and l.'ausmg
l'rtt1 cal power shurla~e:. in some
regions
, C itrus growers fretted for
• : their oranges 1n North Florida
where · the thermometer dipped
below freezing. More than 8,000
New Yorkers complained about
cold apartments as arl'lic air
,•eratures dui.ing,._..,...._
:· batteries died ancl fuel lines
• froze. ·
.. We are absolutely swamped
with road service calls." said
Steve Harwell of the Virginia
Automobile Association in
Richmond , where the t em · peraturc this morning was a
• record 6de~rces. ! A spokes man for AAA in 1
: western Connec•t ic·ul said' 3,500
1 .. can't start" calls were re· ! ceived Saturday and Sunday and
: 500 between 6 a.m. and 8 a.m. to-! day.
1 The National Weather Service ! said the cold weather was not
; quite as severe as Sunday mom·
• ing. when readings were as
: much as 40 degrees below zero. ! but was more extensive.
: Readings of below zero were
1 recorded from the upper Mis· ! sissippi Valley, through the
1 Great Lakes region and the Ohio
Valley into the Northeast .
Record low temperatures for
the date were in numerous
• cities, including subzero marks
Stock market
spurred by
-interest cut
NEW YORK <AP) The
stock market rose sharply in
heavy trading today in an ad-
vance sparked by hopes for
lower interest rates .
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials climbed 15.96 to
988. 74 in the first rive hours of
tradin".
Gainers outnumbered losers
by close to a 4· I margin in the
over-all tally of New York Stock
Exchange-listed issues.
--~_O_n-'-Fr:iday man,v---1arg.e -banks
owered their prime lending
rates from 21 i,., to 20'h percent.
Today. Morgan Guaranty Trust
of New York cut its basic rate on
blue-chip loans to 20 percent.
H o pes that the recent
downturn in interest rates might
continue were reinforced this
m o r ning with the Federal
Reserve's report of a decline of
more than $2 billion in the basic
mea sure or the money supply.
The figures were seen as a
sign that the Federal Reserve's
credit-tightening in the closing
months of 1980 had begun to
achieve its desired effect of re-
ducing inflationary pressures.
U.S. military
readiness hit
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
serious decline ln the natiCJa'a
defenae industry la Jeopardialq
U.S. national security became it
almost certainly couldn't =
weapons production fut
if war broke out, a new rePCJl'l
says.
The study by a special panel of
the Houle Armed Servlc• CocD·
mittee concluded that the
Defeue Department bu failed
tO plan well for defense in·
• duatrial preparednea.
peratures dipped below JO in
most inland areas. Duke Power
Co. warned of possiple rotating
b la ckouts unless custom er s
v.oluntarily l'Ut power con.s ump·
t1on.
"This is an emergency ," said
Alex Coffin, a spokesman for
Duke Power. "We're not crying
wolf."
Temperatures fell as far as 42
de~rees below zero Sunday -in
Old Forge, N.Y .. in the Adiron·
ark MouA-ta.i-n5-a-·nrl--ttm-..-
morning it was 4 below zero in
Boston, l below in Pittsburgh ·
and just 11 above in Raleigh, O•llY PllelP-111 l"•lrK~ O'O•mnell N.C.
At least e death, that of an
unidentified found on a
Philadelphi· eet. was at-
ROGER STANTON, WIFE, KAREN, LEAD FAMILY TO DAD'S SWEARING IN
Vougstera are (from left) Rachel, 12;.Joahu•, 6; Joaeph, 7; Benjamin, 3
..............
COLD CONTINUES
Uttee, N. Y. Flrem•n
in Beckley, W. Va .. 10 below ·
C aribou, Maine, ~O be l ow ~
Detroit, 8 below; Hartford
Conn., 10 below; Portland'
Maine, 1'3 below, and Worcester'
Pa .. 12 below. · '
In North <;arolina, where te m-
Morgan ~uts
• prime rate
NEW YORK CAP) -
Morgan Guaranb Trust
Co. today reduced its prime
lending rate to 20 percent,
the lowest rate charged bf
any major bank.
The reduction from 21 .S
percent came a few days
after most major banks cut
their rates to 20.S percent,
and increased hopes of a
general decline in interest
r ates.
tributed to th deep freeze.
In Cleveland. about 270 pa·
tients were evacuated from a
hospital when a boiler blew up ,
knockin g out the heat while the
temperature outside do ye below
zero.
"We just tota lly destroyed the
record." said National Weather
Ser viC'e meteorologist Dean
Gulezian of the conditions in
Houlton. Ma ine. where the
Stanton, N estande
take oath Of off ice
By GLENN SCOTT
mer cury slid to 41 below Sun· oiuwo•1•yP11on1•11
d P ledging their attempts to
afhe icy storm system swept · make Orange County a national
into the Northeast on Saturday example of i.tood government.
from Canada. spreading snow Rog e r Stant o n a nd Bruce
squalls from the Great Lakes Nestande were sworn into office
and Upper. Ohio Valley into today as the newest members of
western New York. Sunday's the Board of Supervisors .
frigid blasts were the icing on The two men were sworn into the cake. four.year rerms of.offi ce in front
Irvine wants
no changes
in boundary
of a standin~-room·only crowd
of a bout 350 people at the Santa
Ana City Council chambers.
Stanton. a former l''ountatn
Valley dty l'O uncilman. told the
crowd of well -wishers that he
has "great expectations" for lhe
county during the 1980s.
He said it will be crucial for
s upervisors to abandon a re-
gional interest and consider is·
sues on a countywide basis.
particularly to solve overcrowd·
ing problems on freeways and at
John Wayne Airport.
Supervisor
hospitalized
Thomas Riley. Fifth
District Supervisor for
Orange County, was rest·
ing today in H oag
Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach after he
suffered ~n apparent
asthma attack Sunday
night.
An aide in Riley's office
said today that the
supervisor was admitted
Sunday and is in stable
condition.
He saicf doctors request ·
ed that Riley, who has had
earlier bouts with asthma.
remain in the hospital.
Riley's wife, Emma
Jane. remained with Riley
through the-night at the
hospital. the aide said.
An Orange County com-
mission will decide Jan. 14
whether chan ges should be
made in the boundaries of
Irvine's sphere or influence.
22,505 acres or unincorporated
county land that someday is to
be annexed to the city.
The land. primarily north of
the present city limits, includes
El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta·
tion and extensive Irvine Com·
pany a gricultural operations.
He added. however . that he
expects to gain "strength by
diversity" from his own first dis-
trict, which includes Fou04ain V a 11 e y . Ga r d en Gr o v-e ._, .__ ___________ _J
Westminster and parts of Santa
Ana. slate and federal requirements.
The move came minutes
after the Federal Reserve
Poard reported s ubstantial ~eeHnes --in-the' nation~s
money supply.
Under the Irvine city general
plan, most of the land wp--11.hi r~
_ main in rural. open space or
a gr icultural zoning designa-
tions. Other proposed uses for
the land include residential. in-
Stanton. who took the oath of
offi l'e from Sueprior Court
Judge Bruce Sumner of Laguna
Beach, was described in an in·
troductory speech by Fountain
Valley Mayor Al Hollinden as a
man of the people.
"If there ever was a person of
the masses. a grass roots
person. Roger is it." said
HoHmden.
Nestande said in Orange Coun·
ty. "We live i n a lmost a
paradise." but said the county
wiU need more. authorib · t~ pre·
serve itshigh quality life style
The two new supervisors will
immediately get a chance to test
their new roles at their fi rst
meeting on Tuesdar. when a
n ew c ha irman and vice
chairman of t he board are No tie-ins
• seenm
slayings
ATLANTA <AP> -Police
have found no connect1on
between an abandoned house
where Bibles ~ strange paint··
inga were nallec1 to walls and the
deathl or diuppearancea of 15
Atlanta children. aaya Public
Safety Commi•stoner Lee. P.
Brown.
The house, which had a
1tron1. foul smell, was pointed
out to aearchen who were comb-
tn1 IOUtbwat AUanta on Satur-
day for clues about the miuing
or dead cblldren.
Volunteer search captain
Katherine Whetatooe described
the house as 1mellin1 "like de·
cayln1 fle1h." It also had
several Bibles and "1tran1e
palntlno" nailed to the walb in·
1lde. Sbovela. an ax and a
hatchet were IU'eWD around the noon.
· dustrial and commercial.
City officials want city boun·
daries to extend around El Toro
air station to make sure it is
never turned into a noisy com·
mercial airport.
Irvine city officials plan to ask
the Orange County Local Agen-
~Y Formation Commission to
make no changes in the city's
present sphere of influence.
The commission. the gov-
ernmental body which rules on
municipal annexations. is in the
process of reviewing the spheres'
of influence or all cilie5 in the
county. In the past, the City of Irvine
· has won Commission approval
for the aMexatlon of more than
8,200 acres of formerly unin·
corporated county land.
The city's present total
acreage is 26,488.
Mentally ill
In contrast. state Senator Ken
Maddy. R-Fres no. described
former state assem blyman
Nestande as an authority on
statewide political issues.
Nestande. s worn in by state
Supreme Court Justice William
Clark. e mphas ized his ex-
perience and vowed to strive for
syste ms wher e local govern·
ments work independently of
Crowd howls
selected. .
Ralph Cl ark . c urrent
chairman who is · trying for a
second term. mentioned the im-
portance of the chairmanship
during opening remarks when
h e mentione d that the new
c h a irman w ill a ssi~n
supervisors to various commit-
tees. including the prestigious
Orange County Transit District.
'Ripper' suspect
charged in murder
LEEDS, England CAP) -As a Men, women and children
ab••illllAA found crowd howled and screamed. a shouted "you bastard" and "kill ~ , 35-year-old truck driver was the bastard" as police held the
ATLANTA (AP> _ •Magaota charsed in court today with the-mobback. ·
have lnf.uicl the carpeUnl in 1muedrd1erot1.~thofthelt3fwiomenal· Police earlier indicated
one Georila hospital for the e1 Y • .... e pas ve yean Sutcliffe was the Ripper but that
mentally ill. and aome patients by the so-called Yorklhlre Rip-their queationin1 of him "had not per developed u quickly aa we had
have been anually abused, Tbe Peter "1lllam Sutcliffe waa anticipated."
Atlanta Journal and The AUanta cbar1ed with the murder Nov. l'1 Llaleon officer Supt. Frank
CODltltutkln ~. calllnl the oUO-year.-1 coll .. HtudentJac-Morrill tokl reporten earlier that
mental beeltb ayltem conlmed quellne IBU. He'wu ordered held • Sutclltfe'a "facial features will
an:'n ~t of a aeries on wlthoutbailunUUan.1'. . .. form part of the proeecu·
''O•orit•'• Mental Health· Polle• previously d••cribed tlon'a case." Police have said a Miu Hlll u the 11th and Iatan vie· bite mark on the body of one of tbe llHt," tbe n .. 1papera Hld tlmlnanlpofterrorlnnortMrn Ripper'• vlc:tlma· lndieai.ct the :~•',:U~::'"::! ::J::'~'" and Lan· =--had a l•P In hit halt
Nlult.9d......... ...... A. enwd ·ol -than 1,000 H•'-bon ••1d Sutell .... WU • Tbe-utdm••-•llved ......._._.... .......... _=-···-•-·_.&• .... _, II' u.. ........ ----,..... .... _ -"--'... tul.t, .,........,. mu who they :,. ,.:..-=.ct ~U:-U: tbetowDUllof bun, a mW beUn-4 worked H a l~Jd
., .... towD -1.-11 ....... the ·~ ...... truck artY•. 1'be1 Georpa ..._ .. HolplMll la klllldft Illa bnMtte wift,ta'llllt ut
A.,..._ AJ1•..tlY ae..-,...TM ...==e. abw • part·tlm• aad Ci•J' bad •• from Ute patloab wa1 aot lute~ a marrW •• ,,_, flllld.-.
elo...a "-~ e9'"', ~_. ... ,, •• llllllN1•qlllllf111&Ja--_..!•_!1' ....... ._~ ..,....,'IMe~---rllt--n.t _.., ..._., pouee -
,... Nflwd. -wart. . (Ill -
_fr-. --·
N-M sets
6 public
meetings
Six murl' puhlic met·tings h<H'c
been sd1edull'd to d1st'uss d11s
ing about t.>ight Newport-Mesa
District schools during the nl'Xt
fi\'e years.
l 'p lo thret• member~ of the
distril't 's boarll or trustees are to
at tend eac·h of the :.cssions~
sponsored h~ local elementary
school parenl·fat ulty ori.~aniza·
tions _,_-..
The hoarcf ol trust l'es 1s st uch· in~ several plans for dus1n~
schools as district enrollment continues to decline by about
1.000 students a vear ·
Trustees c·11n:.11kr111g a
"an ety of dosure plan~ hing1nl!
on whether hq!h schools are
closed or larJ,!c num lie rs ()(
elemcntan Sl'hools are shut
down ure set>king an c·x
<'hange of ''it.•ws anfl "pos1tl\'t•
input .. to their l'Urrent s tuflws . a
sookPsm:m 1•rnnhas17f'll
The fi rsl in the latest seri(•s of
p ub lic session s 1s S ('t ro r
Ma riners S('hool. 2100 '.\1ariners
Drive, Newport RNH'h . at 7:311
um. Tuesda~
Another is sd\N1ulcct Thu~
day at 7 :30 p.m lit llarhor Vie\.\
School. 900 (;ol1l e nroil Ave ..
Corona del :\tar
Next Monda\'. a st•ss1on 1s sf't
for 7 .JO p m. at Kill) hrooke
St·hool. 3155 Kill~·hrooke Lane.
c·osta Mesa
Woodland Sl'hool parents han•
scheduled their session for 1 .30
p. m Jan 15 al the S\•honl. W:.!5
<.r'llrden Lane. Costa Mesa
East bluff Sl'hool 's 'par ent!'>
group has sC'heduled a meeting
for Jan. 20 at 7:30 p.m at a
Newport Beal'lt loC'ation yet to
be determined. Parents are
asked to contact Lynn Halley.
644 ·7315.
A hearing at Paularino S<'hool,
1060 Paularino An? .. Costa
Mesa. is scheduled for 8 p.m.
Feb. 4.
Coast
Weather r
Decreasing fogginess to
mos tly S\lnny Tuesday.
Lows tonight mld to upper
40s. Hllha Tuesday mid to
upper 70B.
Th• tl•bolt COllUftUH:
Should Brion Sipt havt
pcut~ "*" uk:fOf11 In Ow ·Bro"""' grmp? Sn~ Bl.
!&lit ............ t!I•
,._... _ _....;.· JIJST BRJA&ING·---,..,. ..... "'"' ~·· _,.., _,..,...., ............... .
lJ .S. mon~y · supply
has sharp decline
NSW Y()KK IAl'l 'fhe "'41ldfral tt. .. rv• Board laid today
naUon'a mon.-,· 8Ui11>ly r.11 •1\arpb In the wffll ended Dec. at. d~ <•arne ¥1' tht' <'O!il ol •hort l4.1t~rrowlng re~ched a ord hi.ch amid .rr..rt• !,y tlw ~·entr•rbank to reatra1n tnfh1
MU<·h ol lht' 1·ountt)' ·, mOMy •upply •• 1n the form of credit.
tht r thMn <'Hh antt today'• re1'CJl1 followed an Mnnoum·ement by ~ "' · • \'C H•nk ~ Naw...Yotl& on Frid•)' tbat bus·
roWlnM frum m11)01 New Vurk (.'lty be&nlui dropped hy SI 1 billion
tht' ~ndrn.: l 'hw11 m1t11 f':vl'
'LONDON · 1AP1 The dollllf fell sharply 11gainst ri\ajor
l&n cunenc-1es tod1ty . tultina a 23·month low against the a~ yen, on exvecl•t1uns or¥ continuing qecline in U.S .. in
est rate& Gold prict-i. advanct!d in Eurovean bullion markfls
a•.A ,....rf ,,..,,,.,.
BL t·K~\' K La lA P / Slate police escorted three white
Is into .di v.h1le Buf kc)e K1gh St·hool today. and the girls
e enrottt><l for <·lai.:.ei. under stale l'ourt order in defiam·e of
e ral Judge i. dese~re~at1on direc\1 \"e · We ha' e no alternative but to enroll the girls at this time."'
id Prnw1pal Charle!> Wa1te1>
• · Tht> l'nrollment t•amt· on orders of state U1stn ct Judgl'
Rh ";•rel Lt·t· He took the l'Xlraordmary step of assuming ~ui.to<l) ul llw g1 rb. v.ho v.ant to go to school at rural Buck.eye
r~ther than ol>\·~ L' S U1s~r1d Judge Naum<rn St•ott 's order that
t he~ ridt· husc·~ 10 a µn•dominantly· bla1•k school in Alexandria.
15 milt·!'. aY.a.\
HosJ&g~
quaners
shifted
BELRUT. Lebanon (AP> -The
lrsni 1overnment says it is
s tu in President Carter's fi:.n~·ffi~~r-oilr;th~e felease or the .l'l as transferred
ns held at the
to a new loca-'
en full control
-Ui~~llet~'fl eapti ves from
t he Islamic nts who seized
t hem 14 months ago.
Prime Minister Mohammad Ali
Rajai'sspokesman. Ahmad Azizi.
told The Asso<:iated Press on Sun-
day that the ··u .s. resRQnse is be·
int,! ,studied"" and Iran's reply
would be\' announced latl'r · ·
Azizi said US l'hari.:e ct 'Ar
fa ires Brut·e Laingen. politil'al of.
ficer \l'ictor Tomseth and set·uri'ty
man Mit"lrnel Howland had been
mo\"ed from the Foreign Ministry
in Tehran to "a more appropriate
pla<·e of n •s1dence. ·· the offinal
Iranian new!'i a~tc•nt·y Pars report
l'd C'ontul'ted by telt•phone from
Brirut. ht• told the AP this was
done for rl'asons of "nmven
l('nt'P
· · 1t \\as dl'1·1tle1I from the ht-g111
ning that wh<.·n thl' hostages wen•
deli ven•<I to t hc )..!overnmcnt. tht•
three at the min1str\' would iJ)so
ht• la ken by llw i.:iwcrn men I.··
Reagan. Lo~z Porllllo .,.,., i\z1zi suid. · ··nu.' oth<•r 1!J hosta,:?l')> are now
Cll/DAD J UAR~Z. Mexico (AP> President·elect Reagan, in tht• twn<ls nf thl' govcrnml'nt. ··
making a pre -inaugural journey ac.ross the U.S . bo~der, met hl' rc•1>0rt~d. ind)1·ating for the
Off and ru1111i119
Ahout K!">O Sui1ttwrn California r unners
(·ornpcll'd an thl· united Cerebr al Pals~
h(•nt'fil JOK run Sunda~ ~it Fas hion Island.
Newpo rt Jh-ad1. with Da\(~ At1h1raki of
(;r;rnada fldh \\Inning the raec and a
round lnp t11 ·kl'I to tt1c Boston marathon."
I
O•oly PolOI PholCK by ll1<1wrd "_ .. ,
.\ftl·r g1\"lng lus all to \Ill' rat'l', Babirak1
starb another thb t1mt· a mol'k run
\\1th hi s sun Jonathan. :l !hcl1m J The run
was sponsored ti~· Lido \":rn :rnd Storage
Co ~f Jn·inl·
Me xican President Jose Lopez Porhllo today on a Rio Grande first l11ne that the militants who
bridge linking their nations . ( Rela1_tttedrlp1Ph'"°'olrtmo~, Arn5rrl -.:i:rft"i1\7i1Rmaiil0-t-Ml4~1 t ht> lU i. jo;f'.»4,.;.i· ~·"°'· "'"· .uii...N<~-+-~,....-~--
.• · eetiug intended . s~ an 4. 1 !J7!1, had surn•ncl1·red t·ontrol of
An1iex OK
by Mesa
foreseen
short on specifics of discord between the United States and Mex· th•J i·apl iH•s as thl!y promised to
i<'o, the luders walked lo the Mexican s ide of the Cordova In· tlo in Non:mht:r when Iran 's
ternational Bridge from El Paso, Teitas, and went to an art Parllanwnt M•t t oncl1t1ons for the
museum in Ciudad Juarez to have lunch and a private meeting. Amt·rn·;rns' rl'll·ast·
;,· Thousands of people lined the streets here. waving Mexican
and American nags as the men drove past. Reagan was greeted
•• ~Y a mariachi band in red and green costumes.
CoWity employees .. . .
.reluotantly work
More than lOO cmployN!S who
wµrk in the Orange County llall of
Administration. where structural
!Sarety has hecn questwned, wer<;•
at their desks today hut their
la)'>Or gr oup was still waginJ! a
m,t.}d battle to have the workers
re' assigned. ·~ ..
• ~presentatives for the OranJr:e
OOunty Employees /\ssoc1alion
we r e passing out fl ye rs lo
worl(ers m the hulld1ng in Santa
Atui . The handout questioned the ~ard of Supervisors· dc1·1sion to
keep offices open
Supervisors clct·idcd last month
to shift all publi<' meetings to the
nl!arby old Hall of /\d m m1stral1on
ult ii at least $.500.000 worth of re
pair work 1s t ompleted on the
new. five-stor y hu1ldmg.
Those repairs are scheduled to
start later this month a nd he
finished in m id·i\pr il.
' . .';J)CEA representa ti ves a lso
w,s.·re requesting today that the
e.u,lint y provide$\ million wort h of
li>suranl'e for each person who
v,:.orks in the building.
A.nti-draf t ...
protesters
~·· jam doors
LOS ANGELES tAPl Anti·
draft protesters jammed the
locks on thrtt local post offices
where draft registration was
beJ(i nning today arter a weekend
MacArthur Park r ally re minis·
cent of 1960s demonstrations.
Employees at the Loma Sta·
lion post orrice in Long Be ach
had to break a window to get in·
to the building after pieces or
wood were broken off in the door
locks. Los An~eles police said
toothpicks had bee n jammed
into door Jocks at post offices in
Harbor City and San Pedro, but
workers at both stations said
they were able to open the doors.
An anonymous caller who said
!ihe was opposed to the drart
telephoned a local news service
and claimed r esponsibility for
the vandalism.
All males born in 1962 are re·
quired to re1ister for the draft at
, post offices this week.
OCEA General Manager John
Sawyer said today h is g roup s till
plans to file a grievance against
the county government because
of unsafe working conditions.
Meanwhile. he said association
leaders have given employees the
choice whether to report to wor'k
in the building: He said the as·
sociation's "main motive" is to
advise workers of their rights
Independent engineer ing t·on·
sultants re ported to county of·
fic1als last fall that the three·
year-old. SIU million Hall of Ad·
ministration does not m eet state
earthqua ke safely requirements
hecause of a Jac·k of structural
support.-
The supervisors have initiate<!
lciwsuits aimed at recovering the
cost of the repairs from building
architect LeRoy Rose.
Chase ends
wit~ suspect
behind bars
Police arrest.ed a 30-year-old
Santa Anan on sfron~·arm roh·
bery charges Sunday following a 2
p. m . hig h-s peed a uto chase
throu gh Costa M esa th at
c ulminated in a crash in south
Santa Ana.
He ld in Costa Mesa Jail in lieu
of $25,000 bail today is Willie C.
Addison who aUegedly knocked a
waitress to the floor in Vikki's
Lounge. 1791 Newport Blvd ..
Costa Mesa. scooped about $75
from a cash register and fled
north in a wh ite auto.
Addison was pursued through
the city by Sgt. Tom Owen and
motorcycle officer Tom Warnack
as the police helicopter followed
the fleeing vehicle north on
Bristol Street.
Santa Ana officers picked up
purs uit as the car sped into their
city, cut through a service station
lot at MacArthur Boulevard and
Bris tol Street, sla mmed into two
cars there and then turned east.
police said.
Addison's vehicle hopped a
divider three blocks later and
s talled. officers said. Santa Ana
police scuffled with and subdued
the suspect who. they claim, tried
to take the gun or one Santa Ana
officer ,
•• TELEPHONE
Alt d•P9ft1Mnte: (t14) 142-4321
CtH8111ed Adw9rtt8"tg: 142•1111
Thomas P. Haley ~.,....,,.,
Robert N. Weed ~,........
M. ThofNs Kffvll .....
ThOmat A. Murphlne ..............
Cherf9t H. Looi ........ ~ .....
I O,,ICll c:.t• llMM: ~ Wnl .. , 5frwt l ....... INCi\: I027 He. CMtl HJ911wey
H\Mttlflel .. 8Ncll: 1717511Hc11 .... 1 .. ..-d
FroMPIJfl'AI
RIPPER ...
ness." saul one neighbor. David
Uowman "I just said . ·n ello.
Pc\t'r.· now and agiJin when I
saw him He was \'t•ry quiet. you
t'Ould say mystt'rwus
"lk oftN1 worked late into the
nil!ht in his )..!ar:\l!C on his l·ar
and somt•limes a friend c·am e to
.help him
"lie kept to himself but was
not distant. Ile and his wife
dtdn 't apµcar lovcy do\'ey but
there was no impress ion of an)
s t ram IX!lwt•en them."
They kept th ei r home
··beautifully.·· one neighbor
said.
Poli <·e Sgt. Roher\ Ring and
Constable rtohert Jlydes told a
news c•onference they arrested
the man f'"riday night in the red
light distrit"I of Sheffield . a
Yo rkshire town dose to the six
t·1t1es 1n whi<·h t he Ripper
stru<'k Although he never killed
in Sheffield. many of his vi<'t1 ms
were prostitutes
The two police officers said
that during a routine check they
fo und suspicious lic-ense plates
on a parked Rover automohile.
They said afte r a compute r
1·he<'k of the ('ar 's registration,
they arrested the driver on s us-
p1l'ion of theft of the plates.
. ·'It was just a spot check on a
t·ar parked in a certain area
where prostitutes \ake clients."
said Ring.
(;rci:ory said the man did not
resis t arrest. He said a woman
with him ut the lime "is helping
with inquiries. hut has not been
arrested " fie did not identify
the woman
Newspaper r eports sa id the
politl' found a hammer. one of
the weapons used by the Ripper.
in the man's car .
Youth faces
arson charge
in Mesa· fire
The Orange County Di strict At-
torney's office is expectelj to is -
sue a felony complaint today
t•harging an 18-year -old ser vice
station attendant with s uspicion
of ar son following a Costa Mesa
motor home blaze Dec. 27 .
Costa Mesa investigators said
attendant Louis Parcaccio or
Santa Ana was arrested for sus-
picion of arson on the day the
motor home was torched in front
of 2868 Monterey Ave.
Investigator s sai d F ire
M arshal Russ He nderson
checked service s tations in the
area after the blaze caused .
about $200 worth of damage to
the m~or home and a nearby
garage.
"enderson discover ed that
young Parcaccio was seen rilling
a gallon can with gasoline in the
station where he works at Baker.
Street and Fairview Road on
Dec. 27. ''·
Station employees said'
Parcacclo and another young·
man had fought at the station
earlier that day, police said. .
The other combatant, inl
vesligators said, was the son or!.
Donald Enal1n. owner or the~
motor home parked In front ol .
hl1 famJly'1 Costa Mesa hOuH'. · 1
Parcacclo wu arreatM at the
aervlce lt.aUon about three-boura
after the .... ouae-1oated
motortlome.JUI Mt _ablue, tn-
v..Uaaton _!aid.
·~ ,,
1 ·11!'.li.I :\h-:-.a 0
). I 'II) Ct1u nl'1l 1:-ex
IH'I lt:d 111 <llJl'fll\'l' annf'xation of
;1h1111I 11n1• ~ll'l"t' of property north
of \font g11111Pn Wart.I 's and e(jst
111 Bn!'.lol St rt·t·I \\ lwn 1t meets
l11111 i.:h1 :ti ( '1 1 \ ll:c ll
Tlw prc11Jl't t ~ c)Wfll'I\ .h Y the '
lir 1s to l l'la1.;.i j!rou p and
s c·hl·clult·cl for I w11 l11gh rise off1l"f:
!'.I ruc-1111"1·!'.. 1:-. 111 a c'<>unl.>
)..!O\"t•1 nc·cl pw·kl'I ;,il11ng I he Santa
Ana lklh1 storm t·hannd
Orang(• Coun t'~':-. l.1ll':.d i\gcnc·)
For 111a fiiiii('"umm1ss111n u IJ
prn\'l•cl ll1t• a11n1•xat11>n :-.ought h)
l\n~tol l'l;11a laslSl•plt·mher
I 11:.ans for th1· g roup·)> s ('\ t•n and
fi\'I' Siii!'~ h111 llf1llg'i Wf'l'l' ap
prm l'cl II~ llw 1·1t) '!'. l'lanmng
('omm1..,s1011 Ill a s pill. :1 <! (lt-
..,.1s111t1 l:csl n1on1 fl
Tilt' d1·1·1!'.1<>11 ll.i:. lwt·ll appc:;ilr:d
Ill th1 • I 'll\ I 111m1·il Y.h11·h Is ('X
111·1 \t•cl 111 h1•ar ;11·1~11r1w11t s on lht'
Ill a t I c· r ,J ii II I !I . Ii\ T IJ rn
Wakcftt"ld ;,i rt')>llknl of nt:arti)
Brook\ ICY. l'11ndorn in1 ums
Bristol Plata plans t o l'nnslrnct
it s li111ld111)..!s011 :c f1 \'1• iJ1·rc pan·el
Till' 11llwr four .H·rt·s alreadv he
v.1 th111 I 'o!'.ta \1c•!\a·~ 1·11 ' l~1un-
'1-c1a1 •r
. ..
LA airport clears
LOS /\NC;EJ.ES Ci\P) Los
Angeles International Airport
reopened to<lay after dense fog
~orced a ha lt in takeoffs and )and
mgs and caused a jetlil)cr with
no passengers at>oard to taxi 1111
the pavement and get stu('k 1n
sand.
Nobody was hur l in the in<:1
dent. the plane was apparently
..
The Casual Side of Rugby .
u ndamagt•d and tlw ;11rport n ·
sumt•cl normal opc•f;Jltnns a\ H.:1~.
a m . ahout thrl'<' hour.., aftt•r f11i.:
t'IOsl'd II
I' r cs 1 cl c n t <.' I <· t· I H e a g a n · s
plant' ''as among tht: first to
take off Rca).!an flew to a mPel
1ng in Mex1('0 with that nation's
pres1rlcnt. Jose Lopez Portillo
100% cotton rugby shortsand pants.
available m cOlcxs of reQ. wtiite.
khaki. sky blue. na'ly. and gold
Also. the classic bar stripe rugby shirt,
• inapofy/cottonblend •
200-foot fall
kills 1~'0rker
I' 1\ T'I 1-: H.SO ".; I .\I' I ;\
\\11 rk1·r fri1111 Fr<•!'.1111 f1·ll :!f1C1 J1·el
to h1'i rlt·ath \d 11·11 :1 !'.lc•t'I a rm
l1r11kl· 1111 ;i P"'' i•r ltnl' tow1•r ''esl
of h!•rt" St :1111 s la11 s <'ount \' ~lwr1 ff°!'. ol f11·1•r:-. ri·1>111·11·d • ·
Thl' \'11·t1m, .\lark .J ;.11111"s lloff
m an , :!!I. had l>1•1·n r1•1n11ring
dama).!t' t·aust•ll I>\ vandals
sl1oot111).! al t•quq1mc·nt 1n Crow
(";,i nyon. authorit1t•:. said
(Jai~r ~urr~nd~rs ·
Kt i\IJ\ l.l'\tl'l H. MaliJ~s1a
f ,\I' I Tht· d111·f of Mala\f'1a·s
outla\.\t'd ('ommunist Part). for a
ftUarter 1·enlllr) ancl a lc>aller Of
t ht• 11art~ 0 !-ant 1 ).!.11\'crnme nt
g uerrillas ha~ ~urrc>nd<'rcd lo
aull1or1tlt'!'., tlll' glJ\ ernment an
nount·t•d toda\
AL'S GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND .,.-
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644·7030
M clay'
Cloein1 Pric·.-•
•
NXSE COMPOSIT~E-~R:ANSA€1'10N
Monday,~ 5, 1111
'
DAILVPILOT
Dow Jones Final
UP 19.88
CLOSING 112.M
Critlr• unpopular
Do firms wan.t ,...
only good Dews?
~ By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
If you spot some wronidoing in the co~pan.Y you wo~k
for a defe~ti 9e product, bribery, raca~l or sex .das -
crimination -what should you do? Ignore at? Report 1l to
the top executives of the company? Or go outside the .co~
pany and report it to authorities or the press or pubhc in -
terest group?
Ignoring it is a common reaction. Many people do ex-
actly that. "What's a little hank.ypanky?" they say. "Why
stick my neck out'?'·
If you do make an issue of it inside 'the company.
you're likely lo get a
chilly reception. Most
companies are not into
self -crit icism .
T he th i rd
alternative -going out·
side the company with
your tale of wee -will
Money
·Tree
have consequences or its own: your job will ~lmost cer-
tainly be on the lin-t!. There's not a l~t or room in corpora-
tions for d issenters . the a utopilot system or the
Lo<.'kheed-1011 widebodies then being introduced. He re·
ported it to Eastern 's m anagemenl. .
Three months tater , an Eastern L· 1011 crashed an
Florida. killing 103 people When Ea~tern ref~sed to _do
anything about his warning. he took his complaint outside
' the company to the National Transportation Sa~e.ty Board.
The autopilot system was event.uall» mod1f1ed .-and
-so was Gellert 's rclutionship with his employer. First, he
was demoted to copilot Then, he was grounded ~or
m edical reasons lie ·won reinstatement. but was then in·
formed that he would be fired 1f he complained about safe-
ty to an outs ide agency again. He sued Easter.n for .$1.5
m illion In 1977. he WiAS grounded again. He again won re·
instatement. Hut he C'lai~s .his employer. Eastern, con-
tinues to h-aras~ him
JOSEPH ROSE IS A l,,AWYF.R who went to work an
1973 for the nation's largest milk cooperative . Associated
Milk Producers Int· in San Antonio, Texas
AMPI had figured prom1hently in the Watergate scan·
dal for its illegal t·ontrihutions lo the Nixon re·electi?n
l'ampaign . After Rose arrived, he found there was still
mu1:h of that going on.
Ht> l'omplaincd to AMPl's president. He .gave his
evidence to seven of the 51 directors of AM Pl. Hi~ reward
was dismissal ll took him nearly two years to hnd a de-
cent job
.'tfof"k11 In Th.-
Spollighr
I p• a11d Doar1u
N~W YORK \llPo '"" 10110"'"'1 "'' \hc)W\ trw Ntw Yon• Stnc • l •th4tl'~
'toc•u •nd w."""'' th•h•o1t 90mt up ~'~~no""'~"",~"!,~~~~ :r~·o~u~
SJ .. , .. ,, I '• . .. , .. s I .... ' ..
tl••lnb
oeo~t 1n.ttt1,..-.,
L••• ~ c ,.nl\ ~ w1urid
Zif"( '1 .. , •o t ,.,...,, ,, JtHUf"ld O~llV• f••U
1 •" \J h itt> Mto1•'' w_. ... ,. , ')rt\PO'\•t• •t>
AlwmlPMHn 'f'J t••nh "'oou1~0 N Y
M•rcvry~'R>ii>r-"' ,,.,..,. "'•'•"um ,.,,,, \Q8 HOt , l N .,.
.~ilrf'r
NE: W -.QIHl 1Al-')
,.,~ .. , toc.M, ''" 1)0
I .. ..
rnQ .. ltM •O \lfVft' 11\ '-)() fdt)f1fttitton \tht•t ,,, )JI
6old Quot at io1u
•• T ... A'to<••tt'Ct _.,_.,,
Lort&on ron1n,rwJ tu 1N: ,.,,, 00
L.o"OO" ttfl~,f'\l)On f1"1rt0 \')«fl \0
P•rh 11ft.11noof'I t+•lnQ \6Jl •1t op '-'"' 411
~r•f'llturt ltJ•llQ '~'1 \4 un '' \\
Zwr,cft '"'~· "''''"'f'I01Jf'I '•••"Q , .. ~., 0() U~/ 00 4\0eO
....... ,.a "•rm41ft l<fh• tnot ,,~nQ \\llf \0
EfttttMf"d '""" '"°'n•no l)•I \0 E~tlt\Anl •~r .. mt)rn1no '611 «J
Cllll•U
lit•\h1•
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mll•t• •K• '"•••cl .... ,
H•~ 01~ -Melltun Om• 111 11141179 ga~
11 1•··~"""''"'"''•0 •••4.-, ..... ~t~ .. ,_..h t
* * *"It arout8s the emotions ...
. worth ctMtering about.''
NIW f<* MMY ,.WS,,Kothleen Carroll
Wit• 6ruu~~u• I
·1 /1 bU I,
CISIA MUA WISl•ISIU
;1 ,uu ln 1.•Jd 11 Pldf,1 •JA l 1oem•
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-UPINIMOKE1111
Tb• followln1 art
BUI board '1 hot record
biU for tbe wHll:end
tndln• Jan. 10 u lh•Y
appear in next week 'a la·
sue of Billboard
maacaatne:
Har SINGLES
I "Startin& Over "
John Len.non <Geffeo>
2 . "Love on the
Rocks" Neil Diamond
CCllpitolJ
1·'3. ··Guilty" Barbra
Streisand & Barry Gibb
IColumb1a J·
' 4 "The Tide Is High"
Blondie < Chrysa1is·1
S ··Hungr y Heart"
8 r u c e S p r 1 ·n ~ s teen
(Co.lumb1a > J
6. "Every /Noman in
the World" i\1r Supply
<Arista> 7 .. Pass 10 11 ' Rod
Stewurt (Warner Bros I
8. ··Te ll It L1kc It Is"
He wrt { Ep1l')
9 "Lady '· K t•nn y
Rogers ( l.tl>t'rty l
lO "More Than I (.'an
Sa y '' Leo S a y t'r
(Warner Bros.>
TOP I.P'S
I. "Ooubl(' Fantusy"
John Lennon & Yo k,o
· Ono < Geffen l
2. "Guilty '' Harbra
Streisand (Colurnhia)
3 ··Hotter Tfian Jul)··
Stevie Won<1e r CT<tmla 1
4 "C rim <'!-> of
Pass ion" Pat Be natar
<Chn sahs )
5. · .. RcH'k In Bla r k'.
AC DC <Atlantic·>
6 ··E a g l e:-I.i n~··
Ea~les c As) lu m 1
=1 ··Greatt•s l ll 1b "
Kenny Rogers ( l.1bctt.> 1
8 "Zen\'atla Mondal
ta" The Police t A&M 1
9. "The Ja1.l Singer "
Neil Diamond !Cap1tol1
I 0. "Gau<·ho.. Sll.-L•ly
Dan \MCA I
lOWAllOS" ClllOIA WfSI UA MOYllS
,\r \ ., .••·· ;ir,, r1
l-OWAllOS UODlllACll
l
Florida ea•pus
Baseball p•ayer
(Cliff Potts ,
left ) finds a
friend in city
editor Lou
Grant (Ed
Asner) when he
visits the
news room on
''Lou Grant ''
tonight at 10 on .
Channel 2.
Burt to get degree
TALLAHASSEE. Fla . (AP> Ac-
lur Burt Reynolds. who this year
g a\1e $600,000:.tu F lorida State
l'nivt•rsity to endow a theater arts
pro fesso rs hiµ, will r eceive an
hono ra1•y deg ree from his alma
mate r this month
Unl\'(•rsit\ uffi c·i als said that FSt:
l'n·s1dcnt Bernard Sli ger will present
lhi• degree J an. M.
Reynold:-.· two·)ear FSC t areer
was spl·nl a s a h alfback J n the
19!;:! ~ St•minolt· football team. not
1111 the sd 1ool stage lit! entered act-
IOJ.! after 'a knee IOJury t•ut s hort his
foot lia ll career
lie _l!a ve thl' l 'niver~1 fy $600,000 tc
t•nrlow the Burt Re,·nolds Chair m
P rofessional and R~giona'J Theater
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work lof you.
T he state augmented the gi ft with a
$400,000 grant for a (otal of SI million
endowment. •
The university announced the de-
cision to award Reynolds the special
degree in a news release but did not
state what. degree it would be.
Filming ends
HOLLYWOOD fAP1 -Dennis
Christopher and Susan Saint James
star ifr\he theatrical movie "Don't
Cry , It's Only Thunder:· whit•h has
fin ished photography 1n the Phifip.
pines. The movie also stars Roger
Aaron Brown. Robert En~lund and
James Whitmore Jr.
.....
·~·, -
I
'-------
''SEEMS LIKE
OLD TIMES" <PG>
I 00) ,., ~JO , 0 •O OU I I "TRIBUTE"
llllCOlll OlllYf.111
MISSION OfllYf.111
11 n ,.,, ••• ,o ... '••• 9ooa •Cf••""
(PG) INSIDE MOVES ,, .. ., l 00
., 1) 'l0 9 ·0 lr.eveRv wHiC11
WAY YOU CAN"
iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• i:=::..-=(PG) ===='
llO PUIH ACCU1TlD fCltl TlllS lllGAGIMHT There s a lot more
to being a Jatho
than
-·-•u.
The
Pow~r Behind
The Throne
just having a son
1::J' ......... ,~. ~.
~~
I "BLUES BROTHERS"
"AIRPLANE" (PG)
"CHEECH & CHONG" (R
C' . ..J
"PRIVATE BENJAMI ......
"o0oo8YE GIRL .. (PG)
I .::J I "Fl.ASH GORDON"
"BUCK ROGERs·•
(PG) •
I~ ELEPHANT MAW
··ESCAPE TO
ALCATRAZ" (R\
-. -._.., . .
..
FRENCH MOVIE
With
ENGLISH SUB-TITLES
ENTERTAINMENT
"GREAT!"
"Neil~ movie is a gem."
SHIRLEY EDER
----NOW aHoWING-----
EDWARDS CINEMA .• "'.'tJ PLITT CITY CENTER COSTA MESA ,;,',;';. ORANGE
17141546-3102 I""" (714) 634·9282