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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-01-06 - Orange Coast Pilot.. ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS _. -• ' Riiey critical, , . . • • • ·using respirator . 'H.angover flu' sweeps .eoultty . ' C·laims Lennon killing • innocence 'Hit and miss' • Diedrich_. gets closed hearing By DAVID KUTZMANN Of Ille 0.11, ...... , .. ,. Former Ora nge Co-u nty Supervisor Ralpti Diedrich's preliminary hearing on charges he laundered about $70,000 in campaign loans four years ago continued in Orange County Superior Court today minus press and public. . . That's because Daedrich's at· torney, Marshall Morgan, re- quested a closed hearing for his client Monday when legal pro- ceedings began. · •'This is not just a ploy on our part." Morgan told Oran1e County Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens, who granted the defense motion under the provisions of a 100-year-old statute which allows closure or such proceeding.s. . . . Morgan said that, af D1ednch is required to stand lri~I ~t the conclusion of his prehmmary hearing, they prefer trying the case in Orange County. And t.o limit publicity surrounding the case, he said, he wanted to ex- Bronchitis hospitalizes • supervisor Orartge County Supervisor Thomas Riley is in critical con· dition i,n the Intensive care unit at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, his staff and hospital aides said today. Riley, who was taken by am· bulance to the hospital Sunday night after an apparent flareup or asthmatic bronchitis, Was US· in1 a respirator to breathe, one or hls aides said . Thia Is the second time Riley has been hospitalized with breathing problems. He was kept in the hospital for a week last May arter suffering a similar attack. However, the 68-year·old ror mer Marine brigadier· general's health had bftn im- provint since the earUet inci- dent. elude the l>ress from the pre- liminary hearing. Morgan said he was upset at published reports before Mon- day's hearing began that said plea bargain effo(l.s with state ~osecutors had broken down. ·,.1The lawyer denied any such negotiations had taken place and used that as an example or the type of coverage he was try- ing to forestall. But an attorney for the CBS radio network , Douglas Edwards of Los Angeles, argued that little would be ac-compliehed in closinc Diedrich's hearing because or the ''hlt and miss" type or coverage that weuld result. Edwards said having an open hearing would insure more ac- curate coverage of the proceed- ings instead of forcing reporters to rely on sources within the hearing. The attorney also said he believes the statute allowing ... --. ----\ .,,,,,,,,,,,,.~ -~ ~ t -·- lleaelaed at Baba Claira •I closure of proceedings Is un· State lifeguard Dave Perry (foreground) have refused to disclose their names, he constitutional. leads colleagues from wreck of 36-foot said. Stalberg said the boat was coming · Diedrich, who briefly spo,_ke __ sailboat that went aground in fog early from Catalina Island and apparently its with reporters before the hear-Monday aft>ernoon at Bolsa Chica State crew missed Long Beach Harbor entrance. ing began, faces four felony Beach in Huntington Beach. Chief Ranger He said boat wasn 'l s alvaged immediate!y charges involving alleged viola-Bill Stalberg said three m en and two a nd broke up in surf overnight. He listed lions or state political campaign women aboard weren't injured. All .five $25.000 vessel as total loss. regµlations. -=----------------------------Though six persons were originally named as defendants in the first Cirand Jury indict- ments in urn. only Diedrich now faces a potential trial. ~-of-these -co-defendants, former Orange Coun ty S upervisor Phillip Anthony, pleaded no contest to a misde- m eanor charge in Superior Court last week. He was fined SS.000 after three felony counts were dropped during plea bareainin~. He is expected to <See DIEDRICH, Page AZ) Gold nugget sale halted 'Your worst hangover' Bangkok flu preva.lent in counly By JODI CADENHEAD Ott• 0 .. 1, l't ... Si.fl Usually it starts out with a pounding headache -followed by an achy feeling, a dry cough and a mild temperature. Or as one victim s~id, "It feels like the worst hangover or your life." • Plan on spending up to a week in bed if you come down with the Bangk~k nu. Like its predecessors: the Asian nu. the Hong Kong flu, the Singapore nu and the A-Victoria -it •a a virus not treatable with antibiotics. ago, jus t before the holiday• season. ··1 don 't have a handle on the figures," said corporate physi· <'ian Dr. Gerald B. Sinykin. "But we've certainly seen an increase or flu symptoms ... About 25 percent more pa· tients are flooding the emergen- cy room al UC lr~ine Medical Center complaining of flu·re- lated symptom.s . Dr. Jeff Kaupke said he is ad- vising pa tients to rest, take fluids and aspirin if needed for headaches and fever. , Antibiotics are not effective against viral infections, he added. Dr. John Bridgeman in Mis· sion Viejo also has seen a 25 per- cent increase in patients com· plaining of nu symptoms. Although most cases don't re· quire a physician's care, Dr. Bridgeman noted that some cases can develop into middle ear and upper respiratory com· plicalions if left untreated. · Riley wu in such effervescent apirlta, ln fact, that he already had made some preliminary • pluu for a re~lectlon campaip ror his 5tb District poet in im. MELBOURNE. Australia <AP> -The Australian government has blocked the-sale of the 51.8· pound "Hand of Faith" cold DUI· get to a Lu Ve1as caaino in an at- tempt tokeeplt in Auatralla. Contracts had been drawn for the aale of the nu11et, the lar1est discovered in the state of Vi~ria formorelhan70years,totheGold Nu11etCaaino. California is one of nine slates reporting "regional outbreaks" of the influenza strain, a spokesman for the National Center for Disease Control said. "One would expect to see ln· c reaaea in January and February if it's 1oin1 to occur," said Robert Alden, a spokesman for the center. Chemical bank ads prime to 19.5 percent Eight elderly people have died in California as a result of the Banckok nu. said state medical officer Loring Dales. •'Because nu i.s not a report•· ble disease we don't hear about all cases," said Dr. Dales. "We've only seen Die Up of the iceber1." Riley; who rarely takes a day off from work, mined today's important county Board of Supervt.on' meettn1 ln which a cbalnnMl for tbe calendar year Wal to be Mieeted. A a pokes man for the A\l•trali1n Minister for Home Attain aaid Monday the 1ranUnc of an export · license had been delayed until Ju. ly "ln the hope an Auatrali1n bUyerwillbefound.'' ,.; Already local bualneues are · reoortin« bi1her than usual employee ablencea attributed to the nu. At Smith Tool ln Irvine nearly eo percent ol the 2,000 employeee were reported aufferln1 from the nu symptom• two weeks a10. ' At nuor Corp. in Irvine the nu outbreak hit ill peak two wetka Sehoola J~ off er · CHICAGO (AP> -'ne CblelfO Board ot 1'.4...UC., bedl1 lpllt aloq radal u:s,'~-:'•&Mima.@m•n•• ael*eefora ..... teocllllt. -......... Jolt to RuUl r..o.e, M8d ot IM OMlm HMoll IM bDUC pr•ld111t lllM 111 . Tai: •ri!liiundffif wu. madella9dlJ. NEW YORK (AP> Chemi~al Bank today lowered its prime JeftdJn1 rate by one percenta1e point to 19.5 percent, undercuttlnl other major banks and addin1 momentum to a broad decline ln interest rates. The move by Chemical, the nation's 1lxth·l•r1eat com- mercial bank. came one day after Morten Guaranty Trust Co. broke with the rest of the banldq lndmtry and dropped ill prlme to 30 percent. Marine Midland Bank today matched Mor1an. Mott major banks 1tlll are quotlJIC a prime rate of 30.J per· cent, Which la down fl'Olft the reeord 11.1 perffftt· U.at became wlde1pread amon1 baakl In m14-Dtctmber. Albm*a ............... t1D1 U.-prime '""'•t-r.._, U.ere Ml bem aa ••ual twill: . TM. ..... rtt'• ........... aow followl•I tli• 1••4 of 1m.U.baab. . ·Dr. D,Jes said be expects to see an increase in··outbreab ol the nu durinc the traditional pealt nu months or January throu&b March. ~-·-·-Orance County tiaa rKK Tf1J011=-- ed any cues of 8an1kok nu to the atate epidemlolo1y offlce, said l)r. Dales. · "We'H b•d outbreaks all around it. But we've heard notblq from Oran1• Counl1," , (See f1.lJ, •••• Al) lns~ty defense planned· NEW YORK IAP) Mark David Chapman pleaded innocent today to charges tha t he shot and killed former Bealle John Len- non The suspccl's lawyer said fie would mount an inse:tnit y defense. Chapman, 25, entered his pl<;a during a brier appearance in Manhattan Supreme Court before .Justice Herbert Altman Tight security measures were once: again in c.ffcct-at_lhl· courthouse. The judge a ppointed two psychiatrists, Daniel Schwartz a nd Bernard Die:tmund. and psychologist Milton Kline to ex - amineChapman. Derense lawyer J onathan Marks said he has "an ex- celle nt relationship" with his client, but decliner\ to comment on any speciri<'s Lennon was gunned down Vee. 8 outside the Dakota apartment building where he lived with his wife, Yoko Ono. and their son, Sean. on Manhattan's West Side. Chapman was arrested at the s cene. Ch apman, whose a cquaint· ances knew him as a neatles idolator. is charged with wailing - for LeMon outside hi s r1'siclcnce and emptyin~ a s hort-harreled .38·(·alil>er rcvolvN at the record- ing star, hitting him mortally four times. Authorities s a id Chapman cam e to New York friim hi!' home in Honolulu express!)• lo kill Len- non . He had gotten Lennon lo aulo- grnph an alhum rorhim <'arlicrin lheday • A Texas native raised in Georgia and, like L<'nnon. mar ried to a woman of J apant•sc des- cent, Chapman is said to have made two suicid e <tltempts in re- cent years and undcrgont· treat- ment fo r mental disorder after each try. Following ht~ arrest for the shooting, he was put in isolation in a Bellevue Hospital c·ell. kept un- der 24-hour suicide watch and <'X a mined by psychiatrists Cliainnan nam~d DALLAS (AP1 John J . Casey. vice-chairman or l~raniff International Corp .. wall be named chairman -and chief ex- ecutive or the financially- lroubled airline, the Dallas Morning News reported in today's editions. Coast Weather Sunny and warm Wednesday. Lo~s tonight in 40s along the coast, lower 50a inland. ":-:.'::lih~•:::::l:=:=-::~==1 ::w i"&~-:f" .:et- beachea. 12 Inland. . . -· • C*YlllkOl I , INI Cold grips Midwest Mercµry dips to new lows in East a, i.e Auec-la~ Pre" A aao-.toml cm lhf' h••f'lll uf » 4-r•• day r .. r urd <·old wu v.•• -.pt ac.'ru-~ tht• MuJ-.1·:;1 11id•> and lf'mpt>1 ul ur .. , 1h 11v1> .. 1I 111 __.-tmn in r'rt1f'" t>n ttu· Y.1tslnn !liuboa.rd Ar lf'lll'>I lllllt' dNtlhl'i . 11\h411 than t 1 aft11' falulilH"• hu \t' lwt'll hl1t11tt'd 110 the IOlclllH' Cold that 0111aulh.•d th .. 1-:iot over \he ~··1·k1•11cl 1 Eurlu·r -.tory. l'age 1H l 'l'h1· fn.:111 air wu~ l'layin" h 1H'rtl' with 1·u1 butteries' 11nd ru..t hneg, tx>1lers and w1th:r 1•111,111 from Mame lo Georgia. Ht>turd luw t11m11eralures were matched by record bjgh power demand in North Carolina . Virginia and M assachuselts. Thousands of distress calls we~ reported from stranded motori.sts and from apartment dw e llers without heat. With frost reaching as far · south as fo,lorida, c1ltes posting low record temperatures this morning included Atlantic City, N .J _, with 4 degrees, and Baltimore with 8. APWore,.-e Blustery winds, snow, freezing rain and s leet made driving hazardous across the Miawesl and as far so~th as Arkansas while unseasonably warm tem- pe ratures were recorded in much uf Montana and South~'m California. One man was found dead of exposure inside a parked car· in Richmond, Va .. where tem- peratures dripped to a record 6 degrees Monday. An uniden- tified man was round frozen to death on a downtown Chicago sidewalk M o nday as t e rn · peratures dropped to ? degrees and a Cleveland man in his 60s collapsed and died while shovel· ing snow. Dreaded atfa~ker Keeping wann Heatherwood Star Wars. a three-year-old Afghan. s hows off the latest in winter neckwcar for canines al a Deland, ·· Fla .. dog show. The hound kept-w-arm despite brisk winds end wool on lo win hi!; championship. Kissinger · U..ges alert ·.J ER US A L E M t A P 1 Former Secnt ary of State Henry Kissinger urged the US government today to acquin· military foctlitit's 1n the Middle t.ast as a warning to the Soviet Union against further penetra lion into the region. The prescnn: of U.S air, naval and s pecialized ground ferces would s how the Sd\-iets that "attacking key countries is nol a matter in which the Unit· ed States can be disinterested." Kissinger said. •. ,..,. Page 11 I DIEDRICH. • testify at Diedrich's hearing. Another of the original de· fendants. attorney Michael Rem· ington, was called to the witness :-land Monday Ile is expected to <'Ontinue his testimony tod<iy. RE·mrngton pleaded guilty lo a m isdemeannr charge· and paid a S5.000fine. Diedrich. who is charged with hiding the source of campaign . runds totaling about St-2.000. re · si~ncd from office in June 1979. I le did that after a Sl'parate con· viction, alonJ! with his onetime campaign treasurer. LeRoy Rose. for conspiracy lo commit bribery. He is appealing that conviction. A father and son in Boston were overcome Monday by fumes from a gas space healer in their apartment. Ov er the weekend as the brutal cold swept down from Canada, three weather-related deaths were reported in Penn- syl v a'nia, and the body of a 70-year-old Maryland man was found near his unlit .coal stove Sunday night, officials said. Record low temperatures con- tinued. with a reading of 11 degrees in Newark on Monday tying a J an. S record set in 1935. Since Qiristmas, more than 15.000 motorists have telephoned the North Jersey Automobile Club for help with sluggish bat· teries and frozen gas lines, ac- cording to Thomas Rankin, emergen cy road ser vice manager. The mercury dipped to 9 degrees today at Baltimore - W as hington International Airport, se'tting a record low for the second day in a row. Today's reading hrokc an 11 -degree low ret:orded in 1959. The early morning t e rn · peraturc in Burlington, Vt.. was 5 degrees below zero. In Virginia. severa l boating operations shut down when ,Tide water tributaries froze over.-and hundreds of children and adults had a day off as furnaces and ·water pipes s uc- cumbed to the cold. The second and third shifts at the Norfolk Naval Air Rework facilitv were excused because of tt\c cold, and six schools were C'losed in Newport News because of a variety of weather-rdated problCJ!lS. . ln North Carolina, Greensboro and Raleigh-Durham had record lows of 6 degrees. Duke Power Co. operated at reduced voltage " Monday and warned that unless customers voluntarily cut back usage there would be rotating blackouts. Speaking at a ne ws conference before flying to Saudi Arabia. Kissinger'brushed aside fears of- lO\lih Soviet reaction to a U.S. buildup in the Middle East, say-R---Twt..·..-.~\AA.al'more can the Soviets do?" Temperatures dipp~d below freezing over the weekend in parts of Florida, but only isolat- ed, minor damage to citrus crops and vegetables was re- ported. • Frost in central Florida coat- ed honey tangerines and other specialty fruit in a small. low- lying section of the citrus belt, said Earl Wells, spokesman for Florida Citrus Mutual. f t I Airline facing aecond walkout SAN DIEGO <AP> Less than two months after s ettling a seven- week strike by its pilots, Pacific Southwest Airlines races the l ibility or another walkout - lime by flight attendants. he National Mediation Board ;lled a recess Monday to con- ct talks for representatives m both PSA and Teamsters cal 2707. which negotiates for ht attendants. ' .,. ents protest NVER (AP> -Students at -ridden Colorado Women's 1e donned white arm bands 1la1ed a protest march· · ay, demanding ttie res· on of President Sherry lng an the wake or a pro- cut that would leave half faculty jobless. ............. ..... 1 Harold C. Urey. who won the Nobel Prize for discovering t h e" h e a v y h y d r o g e n necessary for the first H- bomb, died today at 87 in his La Jolla home. ;_ But no "freeze watch" was planned unless temperatures below 26 degrees were pre· dieted. Police hunt • • rapist 10 Laguna Bfach A 29-year-old Laguna Beach woman was attacked while walking along Cedar Way Mon- day night and forced into a nearby wooded area where she was raped. Laguna police said the woman was walking northbound in Ule 300 block of Cedar Way at about 8 p .m . when she was approached from behind and forced into the secluded area. Cedar Way is~ TELEPHONE -....i-..;.A:.;11: bH!1'l'ff't9< (71!}~~­ CIHeffled Adv9r1ttmg: PJ·ll7f" alley-like street between Cypress and Coast Highway on -the city's north side. l----....>&.l~ceu ..All.id the su1pe paced a cloth over the woman's ---nnNtb -ancr lolcr er s e w OFflCEI Cotta Mne: Jlll-1 a.y SlrHI LeeuN BNdl: 1077 No. CMSI Hl ... way Hllftll .... ., 8"<11: 1117S 9Hcll 9owl••ard ~~.:~111~~~Us~'::rJi~~.:i:r;: ~:: ,,., ••.• moMllly; llY "'•" $i.'l0 "'°"'"''· mllll•ry clntlf!MIOM.14.00 mentllly. 6, --- not be harmed if she did as be said. • The suspect was described u about S feet, 8 inc"es tall with a slight build. He was wearing dark clothing. Asylum eyed NASMU, Bahamas <AP) - Bahamian official• say they'n con1lderin1 a requat for potwcal asylum from fulltlve finandc Robert VeKO, wbo bu NtUl'Md to NUHllaftar-A .. W..UWCll1edlf.- 1pentooanotMr Babam1 i1lllld. .!.---~.:.-.:...-___:_...--..-:-:_-· This is u many times enlarged view of the Mediterranean fruit fly eurrentl)· ravishing the Santa Clara Valley. Fly, in actual sizt.'. 1s less· than one-half inch in wing span. Universitv of California scientists say the small fly can have disastrous e.(fccts on fruit crops. ---------~ Ripper suspect's . wife under guard 1.EEOS. 1':.n~land IAPJ Police guardl·d lhl' wifC' of truck driver Pt>tl'r Sutl'liffc al a sl·crct hideaway today, protecting her from the mob that howled "Kill him '" When her hushand was indicted for the last of the 13 Yorkshire Hipper k11lini:s Polii:c officials sauJ 30-ycar· old. Czech-born Sonia Sutcliffe was put in prolec·t1vt: custody aftl•r more than 1.000 men, women and 1·h1lrlrcn screamed curses and 11bsr<'nit 1es at her husband whc·n hl' madl· a l1nef appearanct• Mond ay 1n the magislrates' l'Ourt in th<· nearby mill town of Uews hury Mrs . Sutl'liffr and her gray- haired fatht>r also caml' in for a harrai.(e of ahus<' whc·n they ar- rived ;.1t ttw <'oUrt csrortt"d by dett•ctl\·ros 1'<1lle1· sourres sl-\ld she had b<·,·n que1>liont'd ws u mat1•ra::il witru·ss. hut dicl ,not l'X p<•<:t a11y ('hUq..!r•s would lit· frll'rl ag;.11nsl lwr Thl· poliCl' Wl·rc c•a rdul not lo formally identify lht· 35-ycar-old Sutcliffe as the Yorks hire Rip· per. the mass murtfcorcr hlamed for tht• :-.ava1H· -;h1 y1ng of 13 women in northern f:ngland in five years · But a genl'ral rc•laxat1on of f e a r a n d I e n s i 11 n 1 n l h l' Yorkshire: anll l.<1nt·ash1rc c1ttcs the killer 1l'rrori1.1-cl 1nd1cat1·d the puhlil· ht·l1t·vc•d lh1· higs::cst · manhunt in Ht 1t rsh poli<'l' hi:- tory was 11ver .. -A lmost lrkl' !ht• old days,· said tht• manager of a tavl•rn in the red light area of l.N•1fa ··we·ve not seen so many girl~ about for ages '' "It's incredible how the at mosphere has changU(L" said a streetwalk er in Manchester's s leazy M11s:-. Side quarter "I don't havC' to keep looking over my shouldc•r all Lhe time." The bearded Sutcliffe was charged before three magistr,at.es Monda.y with t-he murder of Leeds University stu· dent .JacQuelinc Ifill , who was described by police after her death Nov. 17 as the Ripper's 13th victim. l'olice sources s<sid he ·may be l'harged l<ster with some of the other 12 killings. But prosecutor M <suricc Shaffner said there was <s lot of work still to be done. Looking dazed after three days of interrogation. Sutcliffe nodded when asked if he un· derstood the charges against him. Rut he said noChing and en· t cred no plea during the fi ve· min ute he<srang The magistrates ordered him held without bail until Jan 14 L'nconfirmed reports said he was being kept under he<1vy gua rd in a s pecial cell. we ll awa~ from other prisoners. in th e Wakefi e ld top s ecurity prison near Leeds. The Yorkshire Ripper had ' <'luded ,,.,lite sinte 1975 <ind had hN·ornc a puhlie b11gcym<.in m nortllL'rn Engl;md l'ine 11f hti-. \'1c t ims Wl'fe µrostilules. and lh1 ... togetht:r with lht• mutilation hl' 1nfllct<.•d on th<'m resultt•d 1n hi:-bl'ing nicknamt·d aftt'r Ja<:k the Ripper. Lhe killer in 1888 of six pros titutes in London 's East F:n11. who "as nt:"\'er caught Sh<tffn<:r told lht• Leeds court that Sutcliffl' was arrested rr1 da~ night parkl'd in a driveway 1n a red light distrit:l of Sheffield "1th a µrostilule in his c-a r The prosecutor :-.aid "ccrl~in 1temi-·· \\ l'rt' found near thl' rar. a nil "lht•s1· han· SJll'l'lal s1gnifr c·anN· tn lht· murd<.·r chargt· .. £'<1li<·e soun·l·s s aid tht> items inr lu<frci a ballp<'l'n hammN 1:tncl a knife. the type of weapon~ cl t·tect1vc~ i-.a1d th<.· Ripper used lo l'luh and mutilate his victims Man dies in fall LOS ANGELES I AP> A part.v guest fe ll lo his death after staggering backwards against · an unlocked French window which swung open. Witnesses re- p o.r led-th e-v+e·\-i m,--A-r+h-u r Lenora. 38. of Los Angeles. had become very intoxicated Mon- day . police Detective Bob Reynolds said, and Cell 20 reel lo a concrete driveway. F....,P ... AI FLU ••• Dales laid· "We expect if1 b.lp- penin1 there too." Oran1e O>unty epidemiolo&ist Tom Prendergast said that only two cases have been positively identified as being Bangkok nu. "It doesn't mean it's not out there," he said. "It's out there. There's certain-ly a lot of respiratory illnesses going around.'" Safer· Titan recommeruled W ASHJNGTON CAP> -An A!r Force review l?anel says the Titan JI missiles, the oldest weapons in the U.S. strategic nuclear arsenal, are basically s afer. congressional sources say. The review group. formed arter one of the giant missiles exploded in an Arkansas silo, recommended m easures to tighten maintenance procedures a nd enhance safety in handling vol a tile liquid propellants. the s ources said Monday. The panel's three-month study of the Titan ll missile system, which is nearly 18 years old, is separate from a detailed in· vesti5?alion of the explosion but draws on lessons learned from the blast, said the sources, who asked not lo be identified by name. Trapped dog freed f.1,live AVELLINO. Italy I AP > A pedigreed dog trapped for 44 days under the r ubble of a house brought down by the Nov. 23 ca r1hquake was pulled out alive b\• rescue worke rs today ·Firemen said Reno, a spinone, or Italian pointer, survived by drinking rain water seeping into th<' w rl'ckagc• The <log's owner. a 19-year-old g1 rl. returned to her home for the first time since the quake and he.a rd yelp:-. C'om ing from the rub· hit• A·v.~ter:inarian !.aid the dog was thin and put him on a diet of \'II a mins and watn for4>1 hours . Bus~s prob~ du~ FR f:S~O 11\1' 1 A represen· t at1v•· of 11 llus manuf;H·turing t•ornpan) was du1· hf'rt: today to 1n!.1ll'<·1 C-l"iH'kt·d frames on ninec1 t~ hUSl'!'> Cliff plunl{e kill.s tourist ll0:'\01.l _t.l. l t\P t /\ <:al1forn1 i. "om;1n \\as k 1 llC'd "hl'n ~hl· plung1•1l down a l .000 fool ('Ir fr i Olll lhl' ocean while laking p1e· turcs on tht' island of Maui. :wt hc1r11 i{'S said The victim was iden· llfi<•d as Jeane Marie Neal. ·10. c>f Diamond Oar. The at•cident occurred M onch1\' after Ms Nea I and he·r husband stopped to tak e pictures at Kaumahina Stat<' Park. ac cording to a police spokesman. While taking tfie piclures. MS. '"Neal ventured too close to the edge of the cliff and fell to her death. the spokesman said. .... I - .. D•llr l'tlOI St•ll ,.,_,°' . NEED FOR REPAIRS IS OBVIOUS AT ISOLATED JOPLIN RANCH County. studying whether to ebendon feclllty built In 1950• Wilderness calms kids Trabuco facility aid to delinquents By JOHN Ni:t:DHAM OI , ... 0 .. 1, 1'1Mll St•lt There are no barbed v. 1rt• fences. a rmed ~uards or sear\'11 lights at the .Joplin Hoys' llan<'h. located on a h1lltuJJ n€'ar Trabuco Can~on The ra ucous sounds or ahus1w lan~uage and danging metal loeker doors don't e<•ho through t·old . tile· floored halls where bo)'S with s heared sra lps mar«h to dinner 1n double file wearing 1dent1c:al pajama·like clothing. Instead birds argue back and forth in a thicket just above where a ground squirre l darts i nto its bur r ow . T wo tail- wagging mulls of indistinguis h· able pedigree play in a sunny courtyard receivin(! gentle pats ·on the head from several hoys {ls they change classes. There are no t'ells and no warden. The 60 residen,ts laugh at the word "escape." "That's a riot.·· says one 15 year-old. "The only thing keep· ing us here is us. lf we want to leave all we have lo do ls walk away." To Joplin Ranc·h Supennten- dent Harold Cook. the locatton of the cowity corre ctional facility is just what the doctor ordered for teen·age boys try ing to sort out their lives a fter a brush with the law. "We find t hat having these boys out here in the wilderness so to s peak has a calming effect that we couldn't get in other facilities," Cook said. Built in the 1950s. the Joplin Boys' Ranch is for boyi. agtt 15 through 17 who are transferred from juvenile hall in Santa Ana and usually spend about three to six months living al the ranch. Corrections officials and the Orange County Board of Supervisors will be considering whether to abandon t'1,e facility pending a two·month study to begin this week. Over the years. dorm itory. cafeteria and classroom build- ings have become run down. County pfficials must decide whet her to repair the ailing s tructures. move the residents lo an adjoining facility or move out or the area. Cook and Joplin sc·hool prin- ---..ict...,p~at1tilt 1i'ts11H w-anrnr move tu the adjoining Potrero boys' facility. now empty and await- inJ,? allocation or $864,000 needed to ready the new fa cility for ser vice. Potrero formerly housed 13 a nd 14-year -old boys, but was abandoned two years ago when faulty workmans hip lead to leaks under the foundation walls a n d bu c kl in g of ex terior walkways. The dormitor y and classroom buildings in the com- plex have neve r been completed. "There's n o question that something will have to be done at the old facility," Cook ·said. "You can see where the noor is sinking in the shower room from installing tiles that were too heavy ror the foundation .•. Many of the buildings on the 340·acre ranch a re from 20 to 25-years old. Peeling paint and wa rped flooring attest to the need for repairs. "It 's becoming more a nd iliDI • JOPLIN BOYS BUTCHER OWN BEEF IN THE OPEN Just what doc ordered for youths sorting out llvea? more of a serious problem with fewer a nd fewer resources." <'ook said. He added that private dona- tions were keepin~ th<' ranch afloat and supplying technical programs with equipment. "We don't have enough staff or equipment to s onduct the pro· g r ams as \H.'l l as w e would like.·· Cook said "Consequently the youn).!sters get less 1n di victual attention.·· losicle the <lorm , 60 <"Ots, !JI> to a s ide, lint• the walls The boys have three small shcl\eS to store personal belongi ngs Steren s peakers carry the banter of a rOt'k ·n· roll station d1SC' Jockey arross the open sleeping area ··For m an) of the boys the s1tuat1on of ha' 1ng no prl\'acy 1s a dchuman17.1ng experience," Fisher said . "It's hard to g1vl' youngsters a humanizing ex l)t'rien<~ when they 're thru~1. m_. to a \'er~ dehuman17.1ng situa t1on ·· llov. C'\ er. dt•sr11lc thL· f inannal sq uet'.'7.e. most ho.vs !lo well al Joplin R t.' <· o n t.... s h o" nu m c r o us youngsters alt ain1n~ sc\'eral years of m<ilh growth IO just six months at th<• ranch. Other suh· ject sc·ores showed s imilar 1m- provement "What e\'er they do to each other out on the street the} don't do it here." Cook said. "This seems to he neutral ground for them.·· Cook s a id county studtes showed better than a 50 percent s uccess rate in preventing sub- sequent offenses by boys leaving the ra nch. ''Our re<"ords show that one year after they leave 65 percent have no subsequent violations." Cook said. "One year later only 59 percent s how violations. ''The· important thinlit is for· ... these boys to get some interven- tion hefnre the i r o ffen se h(•1:omes serious enough for them lo do hard lime." Cook said "Thal ·s what we hope to continue doing here " Huntington tear ~as class slated R e~en<i!wns :ir t• he1ng a c 1·1•ptc•1I for a ll'ar gas l'erlifica tion <'lass !'>thcduletl Jan. 22 in thL• lra1111nJ,! room of the Hunt 1nJ,!lon Rc>a<'l1 Polite Depart· nwn \. <!<K)(I Main St Tht• 1'1:1ss is sponsored hy p11l1Lt' a nd Jl unlinl!ton .fu;aeh \:etl!.hhorhood Watc•ti. The lwo hours of 1hstruction IH.•J.!inntn~: at 7 p.m will forus on I he pros and con!'> of tarrying artrl usin,I.! 11.·ar gas. After eom- pll't 111n ol lhc l'lass. sturlenL'\ wi ll Ill' 1ssuc<I a perm it al lowing lht'rn to' purl'ha se ancl t arry tear gas Cosl of' th<• c-lass is $20. Space 1s llmile<I. To reserve a place. 1.·0111 al't Su1.1c Wajda at 536-5933. An ~·ont· aJ,!t>d 18 or older may t•nroll Women aided by Red plan MOSCOW IAP > C\ting the "debt" Soviet society owes to women, the government newspape r Izvestia said it is "necessar y to fill the gap " betwei!n supply of and demand for household wares. ·•Demands f or washi"ng machines and other machines useful around the home have not been met," the paper said. On the other hand, it said the new rive-year plan effective in 1981 enviaions p aid leave for _ _ _ ~ _:eNhlmL , t~. 11~ and.. tJ)e mat,i~ .9f_ more part-time jo"6s for women with small children. Pizza store asked' in Irvine A buildinl proposal for a take-out plaza restaunnt In Irvine will be considered Thur•d•Y nt1ht by the J:lt.)''1 Plannlq Commlsaion. s DAILY PtLOT . .. .u Draft· _signups q ·uiet Proteiden ~ing from county Bites By JODI CADENHEAD Of_.,_,,,~ ..... Quietly and without protest lbe county's 18-year-oldl! have begun registeTin1 ror the draft. Missing rrom the local post o ffices Monday were the anti-draft protesters who gr eet e d 19-and·20-year -olds when they began signing up for possible military service last July. INSTEAD YOUNG inen who will be 19 in 1981 trickled in to local post offices to fill out the familiar for m s bearing their names, addresses and Social Security numbers. · Al the Newport Beach main post offi ce officials rel>(!rted no p r o t est e r s _The o ffice was vandalized with spray paint last July when registration began. J ean Clifford, administrative assistant to the postmaster, said tha t vacationing 18-year -olds are * * * Draft sigrmp · drau:s uxwe . . of protests WASHINGTON I AP> In the face or prot ests across the coun try, a Supre m e Court challenge and the opposition of President.elect Ronald Reagan, the Selective Service has begun registering teen.agers born in I.962 for a· poss ible futu re military draft. Sixteen demons trators we re arr ested for condtrcling a sit-in and blocking entry to the draft registration office in the federal building in Boston .. while another 40 protesters clogging the lobby chanted, "One. two, three. fo ur. we don't want ·your macho war'.·· Anti -draft prote s t e r s vandalized three Los Angeles area post offices by jamming toothpicks and pieces of wood into door locks be fore the a ppearance of draft r egistrants. · Sign-carrying pickets gathered in biUer cold outside ·post offices o r f ederal buildin gs in Louisville, Ky.. M ii waukee. Toledo, Ohio, and many other • cities. (Related photo. AS) Plans for rallies, picketing, new s co nfe rences a nd distribution of anti-draft leaflets outside post office registration sites were reported in other cities. from Phoenix, Ariz .. to New York. fro m Atlanta to Chicago.... A half-dozen pickets carried signs reading "No Blood For Oil" and "Don't Sign Your Life Away" outside the main post office in San Francisco. Inside, on l y one t een -ager h ad registered in the first two hours. Jn New York, about 200 persons -most of them teen·agers - picketed the block-long General Post Office shouting "Hell No, We Won't Go" and then headed for a Times Square rally. Al least 10 protes ters who r e fused lo leave the armed forc~s recruiting ce nter in New York 's Times Sq"are we re carried out to a police van. driven several blocks across town and released, 1lulhorities- said . Drugs kill 194. ROME "CAP) -Drug over· doses claimed 194 lives in Italy last year . up from 129 in 1979 and 62 in 1978. a government re- port said. It said drug traffick- ing a;:d drug arrests also in· creased sharply. callin1 to aak if they can sign up at the Newport Beach post office. They can. · AT 111E MAIN Santa Ana ~t office registraliOfl was reported t o be ver y slow with n o prote$ters. One young man walked into the Costa Mesa main post office wanting to know where lo enlist. said officials. Despite the quiet calm surrounding the latest wave of re-"islration si-"nups, anli·draft protesfers prom ised to be out in force beginning today. Mike Libertelli, h ead of-'- Students for a n E cono mic Democracy at Ora nge Coa~t College. said that anti-draft supporters will be distr ibuting lean ets at local post offices all week. "T h e tim i ng i s bad ," Libertelli said about the lack of protest. It's hectic after the New Year's. .. , know many people who will not register and are willing to take the risks," he added. At UC Irvine, Paul Kenney, coordinator ror the Veter•n AUairs office, s aid students aren 'linterested. "They dld it already last year and nothing happened.·• he said. "Nobody cares.·· . SINCE LAST JULY, 3.7 million or the nation's 3.9 million e Ugible young men born in 1960 and 1(fl have signed up for the draft. h additional 1.9 million eliptale young men born in 1962 Me expected to s ign llJ> this week.· Under draft registration pl~ outlined by President Carter ~ December. young• men bom. ln ·1962 will have until Saturday to s ign up for possible future military draft. M eanwhile, the S upreme Cour t is expected to make a decision soon conce rning the constitutiona lity or the 'draft sinc,e it does not now include women. Mount St. Helens said unpredictable VANCOUVER, Wash. IAP> Mount St. Helens remains unpredictable and "extra caution should be taken near the volcano." the U.S. Geological Survey said Monday in an advisoi:y~ Small earthquakes and the buildup of a dome of Java inside tibe volcano's crater over the past two weeks have diminished, but tijt does not reduce the volcano's danger, scientists said . ,._, The recent activity led scientists from the USGS and dse University of Washington "to speculate if ash clouds or p,yroclasUc now were to lake place. it·may occur with ~it tie or no forewarnint." the statement said Pyroclastic flows are fast -moving waves of ~uperheated gas carrying hot volcanic ash and other debris, such as swept down lbe mountain in the May 18 eruption that killed 34 and left 28 peopSe missing and presumed dead. · A number of civilian helicopters have ventured near L{te mountain and landed inside the restncted red zones, which h~~e been closed since Christmas. said Tom Cocoran. U.S. Foret( Crvice spokesm~n. The mountain was quiet Monday, as it has been since it lais,t boot· with small eart hquakes Friday. .. .~ Water 01ain lawsuit settled at $201,000 The state has paid two Orange Coast agencies $201 .000 in a settlement ce nter i ng o n problems with a water main installed "tem pararily" to pipe wa ter to Cos ta Mesa a nd C~ncer topic of UL1 clWls Biologic al . clinical and psychological aspecls of cancer will be explored in a JO-week lecture series beginning tonight at UC Irvine. Biology of Cancer (Biological Sciences 25> is offered for UCI students a nd for community m embers who wish to attend one or a ll of the lectures at no char ge. Community members m ay take the four-unit course for credit tbrough Uojversily Extension. The class will meet Tuesdavs and Thursdays from 7 to 9:Jo p. m. in UCI 's Science l.ecture Hall. P hysicians. r esear chers. social scientists and cancer p atients will presen t the twice.weekly lectures to provide an overview of the disease for professionals. students and the public. H u nting t on Beach before freeway construction requded relocation. Mesa Cons o lidat ed Water District was awarded $125,000 and the Ci ty of Huntington Beach S75.600 in settlement of a lawsuit filed against the state, offi cials said this week. The suit claimed Caltrans had promised to relocate the 42·inch tem porary line laid in 1963 before Corona del Mar Freeway construction began. The two local agencies have been seeking damages since cons truction on the freew.a~ halted in 1976. and continued use of the line was required said Bob F.adie , spokesman for the Costa Mesa water a~ency. The sett le m cnt . he said. is ret m bursement for repairs on the temporary line because of delayed freeway construction. Eadie-said num't'rou:1 joint$ in the temporary li n e. which c arries wate r from the San .Joaquin Reservoir in Irvine to Costa Mesa and Huntington Reach. have detcrioratt>d. Waler pumped through the fa rility comes from NortM!i'n Ca lifornia and the Colorado River a s pa rt o f the Ml•tropolitan Water Oi strh~t water import program. !10PHl!1TIC4T£0 PRrxJRAMMINC .. 8Ba1dil'ul !llereo Mu{}iC- Nl!wt:-Marifle Wealher- ~'lo~k Markl!I Rl!porl~ Con~umer Rl!porl~ Billy was playinl( sandlot ba seball. lie was C'atcher a brave one without a mask. As fate would hove it, the butter swunj( at a p i tch and th e backswing hit Billy in the mouth and chipped orf t Wo of his front teeth. This Is a typical dental e m ergen cy down sensltivity in the area rr a pulpeclomy 1 removal of the pulp material l Is necessary. it will be" followe'd by root·canal therapy, and the use of a crown or a cap if the tooth can be prei;erved. _Wcb-W:> A.-re q u I re s ....jD'.l.ro.,edialf dent .. ! c•re. Wh en injury exposes thl' tooth pulp, It can be serious since t h e ,potential for infection ls high . The pulp Is the innermost chamber or , the tooth and contains n e r ves a nd blood vessels. ' • Temporary t.r.eatment of Injured tooth pulp lncluct. the me of a aedaUve dreulnl to cut Until you can get to a de ntist following an Injury, keep the mouth as clean as possible by "rl n11ln·1· rt with a solution or salt watel'. If thel"e are loose teeth, no food should be chewed un t 11 the teeth are stabilized In the Jaw. ••1"9•Y'• Piasa would be loea ... ID tM Arbor c.nter, at tile '""••ut eon'1' o~ the inttnectten "' l"'"-1.~=-=~---Wltirut Avenue-:-· -- • • tueeder. Jlftultr .. ,., 41•.C c .... , •• • No' stash for trash? woaal' WA&TH Dt:". So you've •tan.d ou& UM No. Vear rl1Jht . hne ~ou' Vou're not worrylJla about WAI' ur pure. de1&th, 01 t111e.. urtbquakea or fo1. Too bad. You- t•an 't bf. h•vlna& rnuC'h fun Ev~ry new )'Hr tb11t comtt• ,alon1. you ou1bt to have ~cunt" 11t-w frl'l Ir at 11n 't pers<Nla1, lt ou1ht to be 1ov- l•rnmenti\I ur m\~rnahon•I. Tranquility la out ol·atyle. San<·~ you rti so h•PPY. Ml a public service, tb11 cqmer !th ll ll off C.r yvu i.umeJhln8 new land novel lo natter over. ao 'CIU c•n 10111 1111 the relit of ua in 11...,i ... nilhll. Wh > 1100·1 ymt w-Orry about the tr.,b? vol OON'T 1u1itow why you abould wo~ry about lt? Wt'll ~e C'an hx that ri&ht up \brOU&b tbe IOod offices ol the t'alaforrua Wa1te"'Mana1emeat Board._ You can c~l them the rubbish people if you want to JUSt talk plain l::ngllsh. Thu.s al 11> that Uus state tr.,b board bas releas~ a re· port suggesting that we're runnina out of room for 1t. Not the board The trash. . . The board has announced that Calif~rnaans ~e throw- ing thmgs away at such a_ pace that w-: re runnm1 out of µlaces to bury it all. We are inundated tn rubble. We may soon fand ourselves all cast upon the heap. . ' This news could come as an enormous s~rpnse for Wrong Thinkers liying along <>Ur coastlil}e. who tend to· believe there is no rubbish around here. You can un- derstand how they got into this wrong thinking. TAKE NEWFORT BEACH, for example. Nobody in Newport believes ~her~ is an~ trash because .they've ~ll been peeking in their neighbors garages. They Ctgure thats where all of Newport's junk is kept. Further, you would calculate there is no trash in either .. . • • I I . 1..- ' ~;' ' ''1',t-1 • Good heavens' We're covering tM populace with litter ·-. --.... Costa Mesa or Huntington Beach. In those communities. when it piles up too ~igh, the people just p_ut an ad in the paper for a garage sale. Then somebody hauls it all off to Fountain Valley, figuring it's a bargain. THERE'S NO JUNK in Laguna Beach. either, the Wrong Thinkers fi gure. They guess that when an item becomes useless in Laguna. somebody hangs a "For Sale" sign on it and proclaims that it's either a new art form or an antic~uc. Either way, it should sell to somebody from Santa Ana. Faulty reasoning also might suggest there is · no trash ll'ft in San Clemente. That's beeause the natives figure that every time the sewer lines overflow, everything in town noals out to sea. And the sewers are always over· fl owing in San Clemente. _Alfili. the Solid Waste Management BoanLdeclares that all of this is just false hope. Our landCUl dumps are rapidly reaching capacity. What once was an empty can· yon is now filled with rusty bed springs and old bottle , caps. We're covering the landscape with debris. All kinds of solid waste is piling up on us. M.\VBE THEY OUGHT to change the name of that state agency. They should call it the Solid Waste Mis· management Board. , You are left to aue" that the-trouble is-we've become a disposable society -everything from diapers lo razors. Out it goes. , One of these days, we may all try to throw something away and abruptly discover there isn't any Away any more. Away has vanished. So. if you started the New Year wrong without any worries, you can join the crowd by just gettin& troubled over the trash. '' / .... _ ... James Brady has been named Ronald Reagan's While House press secretarv accordina to the WashingtOO Star. The paper said Brady, 40, wilJ report to James _Baker, White House chief of ~ staff. Cobalt steam escapes MORRIS. lll. <AP> -Radioac· live steam vented unexpertedly fr(Jm a power plant, then turned to snow in the sub-rreezing air and sprinkled an empty parking lot, but the Nuclear Regulatory Com· mission says there was no threat to health or s afety. , An NRC spokesman said Sun· day the steam. laced with small amounts of the radioartive isotope cobalt-60, condensed and fell on a plant parking lot Satur· day at the Dresden Nuclear Power StatiOJI during a tes.t of a backup cooling system. Linda Scott, a spokeswoman for Commonwealth Edison, which operates the plant. said the re· .lea1e came as the plant's No. 2 re- actor unit was being closed down for refueling and sai.d the shut- down prO<'eeded without incident. SHE SAID the radioactivf material had been contained in what she described as "crud" that was stuck to the walls of a tank of water. The tank is pa.rt of the isolation condenser on one of two backup cooling systems. When the water boiled normal· ly during the shutdown, the material escaped with the steam. she said. She said the material was fadioactive because the utili- ty several years ago had 'USed some contaminated water in the tank. "We knew there was going to be some radioactivity and we sampled it before the test l'>ut we didn 't expect as much crud io be knocked loose as was." she added. NO AUTOS or people were in the lot at the time of the incident. s aid another Edison spokeswoman. and the ar~ was roped off pending determation of a proper cleanup method. The N RC said the brownish snow cov- ered an area the size of a football field. ·'It was rust color. a sofid material and within that is laced some radioactivity," said Russ J. Marabito. of the_NRC's..JlegiDrL3 office in Gren Ellyn. a suburb of Chicago. "It's so lo.w that some of the measuring devices we used at that point couldn't pick up a read- ing." Marabito said measurements made "thus far" indicate no radioactive material was re- leased outside the plant property. Cold snap claims seven 10,000 New .Jersey residents without power ,,,...-------------------... S...019911 S.n l"r•n SHiii• SIL-..11 '"4t•M T11IM WHlll ...... CALIPOIUUA " Sf J7 41 • l7 21 ' ,. . ,. n " u .. 21 .... 70 40 J4 tt ., n 7' SI =-~----17 •t ,. . .. ,. 11 .. ., .. •t .. •1 Sf .... . ,. T1 .. r. :: I NATION I WEATHER 6 fu :f amil~f uDil' slain-- Di•coverr made a/ter huaband'• death DELMAR, Iowa (AP> -Wbea police went to notify Bonnie Gllbert tbat ber buabaad bad comaatu.d 1wdde, tbey found tbe l4-19ar~ woman and her ftve elallclren shot to death In tbe famll1 bome. A 1uidde note left beblnd in Yale, S.D., by Gene Gilbert, a, made no mention of the deathl of hia wife and chUdren, South D a kola a utborltiea said, alt'bou1b Iowa authorities speculate it waa a case of murder-suicide. Beaclle County Sheriff llel Scheibe 1aid tbe Bale was a one- p a 1 • handwritten note ad· dre1ued, "Dear Dad." In it, Gilbert apo&Oli1ed for "not be· in• ioo much of a son." The 1beriff did not release the full contents of the note. A IUD found at the site of Gilbert'• suicide and evidence from "the Delmar shootin11 scene will be subjected to ballistica tests, itulhoritiea said. Clinton County Sheriff Michael GaJuaha said Mra. Gilbert and her cbildrea were found in tbelr upataira bedroom• Saturday nitbt after authorities made several umucceuful attempU to contact them. Tbe bbuTe chain Of evenJa be· 1an Saturday In Yale, S.D., when pi,uce there said Gilbert had committed suicide. Police. went to the Gilberta' .. rented home ln lhil eastern Iowa town of 800 residents and found the bodies ol Mn. Gilbert; Dawn Rolln1. 13; Michelle Rolins. 11; Jason Rollng,_8; Gene Gilbert Jr .. 2; Rachelle Gilbert, 1. Reag8*1 ends visit with MeXico chief The body of Gilbert. an un- employed construction worker, was found in the home or his rather, Guy Gil~rt. according to Beadle County Sheriff Mel Scheibe. Vale is about 450 miles from Delmar. CJUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico <AP> -Presldent·elect Ronald Reaaan ..,d Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo conferred here for three hours Monday in what Lopez Portillo said was "a meetin1 of friend.a." . ' Reaaan echoed those com- ments a few minutes lates when he boarded an Air Force jet in nearby El Paso, Texas, for a. flight to Washington, D .C. "FriendshiJ? was the subject," Reagan said. <See Photo Page AS). REAGAN SAID the meeting bad accomplished his goal of laying the ground for future con- sultation on specific issues. A communique issued by Mex- ican authorities and the Reagan staff said the men met ln "an at· mosphere ol friendship and mutual respect and laid the foundation for a personal rela· tionsrup between· the president of Mexico and the next president of the United States. "They agreed to develop a bilateral mechanism in order to make the cooperative rela- tionship between both countries productive and beneficial," the communique said. THERE WAS no indication that the two men discussed specific problems. current government in strife· tom El Salvador. Asked whether the "right-win1" 1overnment there was responsible for the murders Sunday of t.wo Americans, Reagan said: "There isn't a right-wing gov- ernment. There is a moderate government and a right-wing and left-wing faction, a kind of a three-way civil war." Asked which will get his sup· port, Reagan indicated be would contktue current policy of sup- porting the government now in power. "We should choose which one or the others ?'' th e president-elect asked. Near the body.' Scheibe said, 'was a note containing "personal material." It was not clear whether the note mentioned tfle Iowa incident. Delmar authorities roped o(f 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 afl six victims were found lying on beds on th·e second floor of 'the house. Each was shot at least once in the head, the medical examiner said. 53.95% voted WASHINGTON <AP> -Only S3.95 ~rcent of the country's eligible voters cast ballots in last fall 's presidenUal election, ac- cording to official vote counts compiled by the Federal Election Commissfon. lt was the lowest turnout in 32 years. Figures based on tallies from officials in each of the SO states and the District or Columbia show that Republican Ronald Reagan . drew 43,899,248 votes to beat Democratic incumbent Jimmy Carter who bad 35,481,435 -a difference of 81417,813. Reagan got 50.75 percent of the total vote and Carter received 41.02. Independent John B. Anderson got 5,719,437 votes. or 6.61 per· cent, and fini.shed third. followed by Libertarian Party Candidate Ed Clark with 920,859 votes, 1.06 percent and Citizens Party nominee Barry Cemmoner .with 230,337. or 0.27 percent. There are differences between ·--------------------------- the two countries over a number of issues -unrest in Central America, illegal immigration and fishing rights. And there have been discussions between - the two neighbors about the U.S. interest in Mexican energy ex-ports. Reagan and Lopez Portillo met on the middle of a bridge across the Rio Grande, shook hands and walked to the Mex- ican side of the river for lunch and their afternoon of talks. ON THE MEXICAN side of the bridge. Reagan and Lope:i PortiUo took a short drive to a museum where they had lunch. As the motorcade wound through the streets of the border city, thousands lined the route waving Mexican and American nags. Later, Reagan pres en e Lopez Portillo -a gun collector -with a hunUng rifie and a case of California wine of a variety originally made by Franciscan missionaries who moved to California Crom Mex· ico. He said the wine symbolized the intertwifted-.palha of -the-two nations and was "a symbol of better future underatandin1." LOPEZ PORTILLO. gave Reaun several 1lfta, including an etching in 1Ius of a drawing of bones he once made. On arriving in El Paso, Rea1an indicated that bis ad· ministration will support the 'I • An egeopenerr Wayne Kottsick of Renton. Wash .. who has been blind since a motorcycle accident two years ago, sits with daughters Dee, 4, and Lanette, 8. Kottsick recently had surgery en one eye and has hope that he may regain limited vision. GOURMET MARKET Free Home Delivery Service DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD 1 SSO m inimum > dellvttred In our completely refrigerated trucks. Your order Is under refrigeration from our store to your door. · Freab DmlleHU Crabl ............ I.It lb .. Cleaned le cracked for no extra charge MORNING FRESH PRODUCE .MEAT.DEPARTMENT ..... ~~.~~Jk~JJ~~1,p_~1;_·_, ,._. ·-·: .... , · >lk lb. ..... P~l~e·&nd Top Choice Beef, a1ect not let• t.han 30days L1. Sweet Raby Red Grapefnlt .. Sfor I.II to the peak of perfectlon. Red DeUdDa "-'" .... · · · . · .3 Iba. ,_.SI GreeaO...•&ed••...._ ...... lkbtlll . . - UQUOB DEPARTMf:NT ,, ..,.... Gnlll F .. Eu&ena Pwt, Tlalck all prlca plus tu .. Cn&erc.& Pwll 0.,. W wtua Deluey'a Prba&e LllMI Claalllla Del•-i:::e·-Dr ..... t ;-;-••• ...1.11.Jl> ... ..,, ., Yla ... m• mt .... r •••••••••••• 1.• ;; : I ' ,.,... U La•b (Calif. Raiaecl) Delue,'a Qaa•plpe aaekllLa•lt coven ready> •.......•. 1.•lb. ..71,_.lilUJe,m.•pereue l'rella Lleal.._, Far•• Pwl&rJ, · &eaan .. 'I er.w. .............. <Uter>l.11 · .. .. " , .. '6 ., I ,. " ta •I · .... 1' SI ' ........... c.111 ......... , ..... ... I I . ; .............. ,..,... ......... . -=. = = ·= =''=3 ..... Mllllca • • ,, ' i :::=. I 4 II I WW e I M J CMtlT\ • ' " •• .,.. .............. .._ ....... ...., ........ , .... ........ . ....... ~(4tollb.av1.> &ea...-VO .................. (Uter>lt.• plain or atutted wtth our dl'fllln1 •......... I.It lb. CllUJ &art 8eG&d .............. lllt.rl 11.• FROZEN FOOD .. __ AU Va&a.,•1Pl111a ftla Dla1n .. I .. DBUDl:Pr. TblaadtffettlvtWed., 117\hna,._.,, l/U .,. • ..., •• a.....111111• .......... ... --~ a1r1iimi,1i -... .,..~-.. ----873·55ZI - CALIFORNIA H l((h-8..,.... •haNe -·--·~TmJ arrested .in kidnap NORTH UOl.l,YW<HJO IAt'1 'l'wo 1111m wen~ arrt"11led •ltd buok.d fOf' 1nv.-U1111t1u11 ul k1dn•ppu1a: alt~r Uw) alleaedh a lJdut·lt.'(f ,. wumrii11 out:Hdl' • nllhlC'luh ht"rt' •nll thtm lt1d ~1111 1· h ll u h1.:h lilK!t'd <'hu.e 1u.1thonlle• i.1ud f\oolll'd Wt•rt' Enru1uc H1 Vl.ll ii i:.. uf S)'ltnar, <&nd l.u11J> C M11 10 , ZJ 11( lh•,t•cl ta '1t1d Sgl Will o01ron v ( tht· 1. .. ,.. 11.:•:lci. l't>h,... Ht1p•rlmc11t ') S urth llollywvod 1)1\ 1.,11m \mll'l'a l~lwlla o :!I ''"'' 11IJ 1•111plu)l'"' at lhl' ralom1no L'l ~h 14 et' "'.slk 111..: tu her t·1t1 after work Sunda) wh..-11 11411 01l•1t ~r1tl>bt-1I hl·r 111 tht µark 10~ lot amt fon·etJ hc1 1 n•" t ht• rt iJ 1 l>otru11'd111 ,, __ .. .,,. . .: ..... ., l'O~COkD 1 \I' 1 \ .. hurt .snu 'harµ t1ut m thl tai thquakt n1•a1 t v l1l UI d c•au::.l·tl n111111urtt'b 11r dii n1 .li.:es authorittt·;.-.,:1\ -(..____'_~ •_1·1-.· __ ) T h 1: lc111 blur '>'ht c h :.t ru 1·k Sund a) rug ht . mca::.urcc.J :! 5 o n tht Htl'htc1 -.c·alc !'>llltl (;an ~k Da111cl. ol thc Offtl·t· (;f l::m1>rgc·n1·~ Scn •1tes 111 San dmt•ntu 'l'lu· n ::nlcr 111 ltw quakt-\\a!'> JU!'>l west ot l 'on l'Ord. alX1ut :.!U rn tl e!) t•a!»l ufSan l'ranr1s n1 Ma11, .m. lwalne lo dt-ad1 liEVi<,;RL.Y 1111.1.S tAPI The• body of a 5C year-old man apµarcntly beaten to death was found in a bedroom of the upstairs apartment he r ented here. poli('e said The vi <:llm was 1de nt1f1ed <1s 1-:arl Md'rnv. said Bcvt•rly Hills PoliN• Lt B11l llunl · The apart rnent on North La Peer Or1ve in whid1 McCray's body was fouruJ-was a shambles, suggest· ing a prolungN1 and violent stru~gle in the weekend incident. Poll~.-lawlt 1 .. .,,.. drlr.- 1.os AN<:ELES 1Af'1 Proc-eeds from a mus ica l benl'fit should go a long way toward finanl'· ing a $1 million campaign designed to brighten the publi(' image 01 pollt'e oll tl·ers. leaders of the Police Protec·tt vc Le<1guc s<1y Rut. they add, thl'y probably won't krow for several days jus t how much money was taken in by the weekend gala at the Music Center. which in· eluded SU('h ente rt<1 iners as Trini Lopez and the New Christy Minstre ls. The police union leaders der ided to undertake the publi<' relations t'ampaign in the wake of ex· tens ive criticism of tht' police . partil'ularly over a strini: of shootinl.!s involving offit·ers. Laek of f 1111cls Digging ends in LA tar pits LOS ANGELES <AP I An official of t he foun· dation that raises funds for the La Brea Tar Pits in Hancock Park. wher e scientiFi<' digging has come to a halt. says funding ne~otiations are progress · ing and he is optimistit di~ging will res ume in the near future. It will take five years and $.500.000 to com- plete the present di~. which was closed Sunday due to a lack of funds. said Stuart Ritter. ex· ecut ive vice president of the Natur al History foundation. "We have received about $5.000 in small con· trib lions m th ast we ek or so since the announcem ent of the 1mm1nent closure and there is some indication now that we may get major funding from a private source," Ritter said. "We are negotiating it now. and the source is very in· terested. I am oplimistil-. The cutoff of funds brouRht a ;iaLt to scientific ex- cavation in Pit 91 of the famed tar j)its. probably the world's richest source of fossils from the Ice Age. A labora tory where minute analysis of_each in· va uaole Oiscover y from the 101 2·foot d ig took plac e also was dosed . but will reopen within a week. Ritter sa id The six professiona l paleontolo~ists -two lab super visors and four excavators who had been working fullt1me on the project and were out of work as of Sunda y Patient who ivo·n $4 million dies SACRAM ENTO (AP> A µat1ent of Dr. John George Nork, who in 1973 won a medical malprac· lice decision of almost $4 million. is dead of cancer . Albert Gon zales, 39, died in American River Hospital. He had worked the last six years as a locomotive engineer. Gonzales was a 26·year-old grocer y clerk when he went to Nork about his back. injured in a 1967 car accident. Nork performed s ur gery, but Gonzales developed cancer in 1970 which some ex· perts attributed to worry over l~e pain that followed. Sacramento Superior Court J udge B. Abbott Goldberg awarded Gonzales $3. 7 million after a __ fiv.e-month trial t.hal I.he -judge-called ~!!Grand Gulgnol of medical horrors.·: Crash causes eyed SACRAMENTO CAP> -A state task force has bee, creat.ed b.y Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr. ln an ef- fort to fight drua·related automobile accidents on cauromta'a hi1hways. Brown, in an executive order, ,told the· panel on alcOhol, dna11 and traffic safety to submit a report by July 1. The group indudea thei heads of the Highway I Patrol, the Department of Motor Vehicles, and the Department of Alcohol and Drue Abuse, as well u le1ialators, local -iovernment .or· llciala and attonaeya. PRGIU.. is your guide to -pro football action, every Saturday in the 111111 TuHday, Jlnu9l'y 6. 1981 DAILY PILOT A4' P-syehi-f:ltrists seratchOO:---- , Seven ~ject 1981 schedule for fees ,,1 i IH1rder· Al"WIN ..... lo President-elect Ronald Reagan and Mex· ieo Pres ident Jos e Lopez Portillo flash smiles as they cr oss border from El Paso tu Juarez. The symbolic crossing Monday µrecedC'd dbcus!;ions a bout mutual rela· tiuns. Black to head state hospital SACRAMF.NTO (AP > Thl' new executive dire1·tor of i\tast·adt'ro Stall' llosp1lal is Sidney Herndon. th~· fi rs t hltH·k to ht•ad a sta te mental hOS!Jital Herndon. 3~1. ''ho h,,..., worked in the slate hnspltal sys11·m !'>tn1·t· he· ''a!'> Ill, broke the racia l barrit•r six months ago \~hl'll hP was na med acting exe1·11tt\l' d1n•f'lor .11 ~1 ct rop11llla11 State Hosµital in l.o~ ,\ni,:ch·:-. Tht· Joh has a ..... 11 • ..-, r:r ngt• rif $35.856 Lo S.17 .t>?li a yt·ar LOS ANGELES <AP> -Seven ex p erienced courtoom psychiatrists who complained about the rees being paid for their reports and criminal court appearances have be1'n dropped from the Superior Court's Ul81 list' of "approved" psychiatric expe rts . ·The seven" inc luding som e with 15 years' experience in court work. were a m ong 10 who signed a joint letter to the four-member judicial committee that chooses the psychiatris t panel and determines its pay. In the letter. the psychiatrists refused to sign up again for the panel under the 1961 rules and fee sc hedule, which they termed "un· aeceptable," <1nd asked for a meeting with the committee INSTEAD. the names of seven of the si~natories the other three apparently changed their minds were cons pi.cuously a b se nt from ·th e li s t of r ecomme nded p syc hiatr1c t expt>rts circulated by committee c hairman Judge C arlos E ·Ve larde on Dee. 26 Velarde's memo. which went to aO judges sitting in county criminal courts, urged that only thos e on the list be appqint.ed by the court and that the new fee s chedule be "strictly a dhered to." The list is used not only by the Superio r Court 's c ri m1nal division but b y the Juvenile Court. by Deµa rlment 95 the mental health deµa rtmcnt of the court, which e v<1luate s persons seeking re lease fri>m m ental hos pitals and som etimes by the Municipal Court The seven who were -dropped -Ors. Michael B. Coburn, Saul · J . Faerstein, Ronald Markman, George Y. Abe, Blake Skrdla, Donald Trockm an a nd F ra.nklin Drucker contend they can no longer afford to handle a high volume of ~ourt work at 'what they conside r low fees. They were a mong those panel mem hers with the most forensu: trainine. the largest number ·or court {!S s ignm ents and the highest incomes. T he new fee sche dule was . ' .Justice Wilt·)· W .\lttnLwl ol thL• Cali fo rn ia ~u p n'lll t' Court d ied ~onda,· Thi· r1· por ted e:iust· of dt•ttt h "';1:- canc(•r SFA's Semi-Annua./ Men's Furnishings Event! I • Ore:-,i:. \hlft'> and de.)1gner dress .. hirts. • De~igner ~nit 'hirh • Bripfc,, bo xer ~hort\. T-.,hirts, athletic shirts. •Shoe~. ~od\ handkerchiefs. k imonos, pajamas. ~clow left: cotton pajama!>, regularly 27.50, now 18. 90. Light blue or white.~ No t shown, po lyes ter and co tton pajama_, regularly 18.50, now 14.90. Light blue, ecru. navy or w ine. Si7e'> 5 to XL. Not shown: nylon dress socks, regularly •2 and 2.50 the pair:· now 6 pairs for 9.60 and 11.90. Wool and nylon dress socks, regularly 3.50 and 4.50 the pair; now J pairs for 7.50. Below right: cotton boxer shorts, regularly 7.50; now 5. 90. Sizes 30 to 44. Cotton athletic sh irts, regularly 3 for 8.50; now 3 for 6. 90. Sizes S to L. Not shown, cotton V·ned r . .,hirts, regularly 3 for '10; now J for '8. Sizes S to L. Po lyester and cart on boxer shorts. regularly '6; now 4. 90. Blue or white. Sizes 30 to 44. • Above, left: triacetate and nylon kimono, regularly •so02~_3{J.9.Q. 48: IQfJB.~f!d maclJlne ~ashab/e._Nav.y, camel or wine. One size fits all. • r\bove, right: our exclusive Givenchy solid color shirt, originally 37.50; now 25.90. Light blue, camel, navy cotton and polyester. Sizes S to XL. • • Far right, our exclusive oxford cloth button-down · l ~~irt. Blue or.~hit.e.polyester and co.ttonJ.or sizes 14 Vi to 17. Regularly •22, now 15.90. •In The Men's Store-where we are all the things you are. similar to the old except that for the first time in eight yea rs Uae fee for a ps ychiatric report was increased, from $100 to $135. A higher fee cun ~uthorizcd ui ca ses requiring five or mun~ hours of work. hut Velardi• said the Sfl fl.'c Should COVt'I' "95 per cent of .all situations ." T 11 F. P A Y lo' 0 R c o u r·t app t'aranc•e s r c maincd unchanged at $150 for half a day and $275 for a full day. Once a psy chiatrist has e arned $50,000 from court work in any ~""''n yea r. hC' goes bat k to the $100 fee for additi1rna l· µsy('hiatric reports T h c µ s y c· h 1 a t r i s t s w Ii o complain£'f1 h1:licv1' thosr ft-es s h o uld bt• either d o ul1lcrl l>I' reµhH·1~d w1tlt tt sli1t111g fee sca lf:. 1-·or example. lhcy waut :rn 1111 ti al frp of S20(J to c·o vcr th•· fi1 st three' hour s work orr a 111urdt•r cast•, wit h u11 hourly frt• of sso to S75 tht·n ·aftt•r Thc·y sa) P\ 1:11 s1m pl4: n ·ports som c·t 1 m1•s t ak1• Lh rt'l' l1•1u1 s cJlf work' whid1 a t s 1:15 JH'r report hrccih down to $;15 an hour · hatr of what llwy 1·011tc 111l th1·y c o u I d m a k c• i 11 p r i v a t t· c·ons ttltal 11111 or from t'OIH ts in otlt1•r <":il iful'ni:.i c·ounti1•s or s tatt·!'> But 1111' 1111l k 1:d 1·on1n1 itlt'e lws lll1l 1• !'>~111p a lh y for the s e l'•>/11 plaints If \1111 c·:i11 '1 li v1· '"it h tht lf'f':O.. d;111·1 lw •111 Iii (· p.inl'I, ·<>aid .J 1111).!I' .\ia111 ' W:it:-1111 , 1111·111lw r of I ht• l'llllll\11111·1· · 0111· JI'.' 1·111.1 111! I 11 II .,If thi:> l I '> I 111 ,f d •• Ill 'I I I I ft :I II ,HI IKH) 111 111111 I '"' h I \I' ti 11 h•· c•,m f11rl.'" 111.•I 111•·1 • 1''''·•·r ... h 11 11 South Cotst Pllza. JJJJ Bristol Stree(. Cosr. MftA.~ Monday~ Fridey from 10 •m to 9;JO pm; Slturdty 'ti/ 6 pm; Sundty 11 noon to 5 em : ,, ]". - I • > "l. I I . Oran~ Coast OaJlv Pilot &1 .. , .......... I .. _ ... r...;e • ._ _______ , __________ ThofNl __ P_._H_eley_/·P·u-bl.lah···,-·T·Nme-·l·K···v·lt·/·.-...... · . ~ ~ :s::.:.. lueeday • .&Mullly_ I. 1•1 ..,._,. KNibich/l!dttorlel P ... IE .... State batt-out ------------·----· -Why· Kissinger didn't quBlifY funds vanishing WM\ PrQPC•IUon 13 waa paaaed by tht voten ln 1111, lt wu e1tim•ted the fuU impart ot cuUlnl property tax revenues in hatr would not ht! felt for two or three yean. 1lae •l•t~ tre .. ur)' was bul1ln1 wlth 1urphi1 tunda ••a .r~ult o( ••ct-aJtvely dut~ent tax c0Uectln1 ao It ••• poal· bl• to cUIJuon city. r ounty and 1C'hool diatrkt bud1eu wtth a ~billion annual b•ll out The tale biaU out 11 JUJl ubout over, say1 Gov. Brown. Thert''& no lonft-r any Murph.&1 11nd the 1881 ·12 bud1et cannot bt> balanc ed without a tu incrHae unleH state ald to local a&enc1~ '-"I 'harply r educttd. And Brown remains de· tt>rm1m>d to~1dt>step a t ax h.llue In order ''' hold tht' bud&t7t to 16 6 percent increa1e - about half tht-n ill' uf annauon Brown will seek to remove rost or In mg uwr~ases in well are pa.ymentl and repeal in· flat1 00 ad,Justment~ m other state pro1rama, idcludine the ... uuuton 7 pt!rcent ancreuein1upportoflocahchoola. All ttui, will not be &reeled with joy on the local scene and thut.' will be enormous pressure on the new Legislature tu rescue a~ m uch state aid as possible. . .. One Rrown proposal gua~a~teed to run mt? oppos1taon •~ h1:0. µIan to ~et aside SlOO rrullion ror new environmental, l·r1l'q~v and rest.' arch programs which he describes as an in- ' t"!>t ment "lo make s ure we have a higher quality of lire l1>morrn\\ There 's no doubt this is a worthy goal, and $100 millio n uut uf a $25 billion budget is not a huge amount. But it may be hard tu get it by lawmaker s ~hose con~tituents are sure to bt> huwting over the loss ofthe1r state ba1l·out money. . Sooner or later the Proposition 13 bombshell had to find ·:,ts target This seems to ~_!he year. ~ ~itch hunt no help ~ Secretary of State.designate Gen. Alexander Haig :lhis week faces his Senate confirmation hearings. ~ It is by now apparent that the Democratic minority jntends to make th~ most of Haig's Watergate role, erhap~ not so much ~n t~e hope of a rejection ~( his con· irmat1on as for packing off a few headlines and ~cratching som e Republican sore spots. =~ The fact is that Haig probably is as well qualified for ~the Secretary of State post as anyone who has held the ;iob in recent times. Som e would say better. :. His biiu~est plus is the total confidence of our Western ~uropean allies. gained during his tenure as chief of 'O. Along with this is his thorough understanding of : military . aspects of international issues -aspects , have been overlooked or poorly comprehended in re- . cent times. • On the domestic front he is well acquainted with the >.vo rkings of Congress and, of course, with the White l lo use. which he ran for ma ny months after Presidertt · :Nixon's personal staff was ousted during the Watergate fl ffair. · :: Indeed there are those who gave him credit for ::holding the country togethe r during those troublesome :,_imes and for eventually playing a majorrole in fmahz· :;ng the Nixon resignation. :! Al~ough Haig was completely cleared of any un· ::towa rd involve ment in Watergate by Special P.rqsecut'?r -:Leon J aworski and he was one of the few who did ::eme rge unsc-athed there a re those who apparently feel :;they can unea rth something new to discredit him d':lring ~the Senate hearings . :.. Of course a full investigation of his background and ·;,1 uc.tlifi<.'ations is in order . But turning the hearings into a -it\l'w Watt•rgalt• witch hunt will not serve the country. . ·rr ax nibbling ,,.,. ~ By now most taxpayers are aware that the first :P•n·ehC'rk of 1981 will reflect the Social Security tax increase ,Jn)m 6.13percent to6.65percentof gross pay an annual in· }'reaseof$387 in the maximum deduction. . ., That's not a ll the good news the federal government has ~n st ore for us. ? Patients on Medicare will have to puy u hil(hcr pro !o1.>or t inn of lht-ir hospital bills . ? · lnl~rnat ion al mail rates will f(o up ~ Passport fees will go up. ~· Camping fees al national purks will J(o 1111 ~ H1>Wt>V~r.-ther~~ ~a-lilU~uc;cl chet!J.'....Cw· lhutlc-1.11-Lbc ~OWl'St inc·omc brackets. Somt• 24! rru lholl ruocl Hlllrrtfl rt• ~·111il'nls wi ll find their bene fit s inc·n•111wd hy 11Jll'I1·•·111 /\ml ~h1• mmimum waRe for lhmw who c·un fhul 1111 •·riti v l••w·I ~uli n st•s from S:l Ill to S:t.:l!"l { I 11 short . whilt• our lt•udc•rs prnwlly 11n 11111111• t 11 JC ,..,, ,~, 111•• :tNb still havl' wuy~ 111nlhhh'11w11y w h11ll•v1·1 l11•111•f1111 11111v ~-:tw fort lworni11J,t ~ . p1n1on:. 11111.>rossnct '" lhn ilpa cn 1thm111 1un llt111m ul 11111 I l•••v 1•11111 lhe r view~ 1111prosso<.1 0 11 1111" pnu" lllfl 1111111" 111 !111111 1t11IJ11 11 11 111111 : rt1sts Ret1dl.)I COllllllfllll Ill lllYlh lll A1lltrn11111 I llfl I h11ty l'tl•rt I' 11 • 011 1560. Cuslu Muirn. C A'9:.c!6W 1'11111111 (11'4) U-4:1 0:11 • :J. ~~ · Boyd!SnakelJilP ~ Ry·t .. M. ftOVll :,Z G ""rf<t' II Conurn or 1111 ngton. Ont . dlt'd ttl the-11tt1• C 94 11Rt•r Culllnit orr a l1&dder • rnd hn•11kln1i hill n"C'k. 111· rl'w vurious null' In h\11 llfcl'K ork n nd wn 11 known orldwldl' 1&mon.c tho11e who Id llkewhw. tie neve r ah' nt>at, fb h. dairy pruducu. MtlS or anythlns eonta,nlna dint>d nour or su1Car. But ht> ldn 't l'r edlt th•t for hl11 Df.ar Gloomy Gus ll lfflDI unlikely the ttam .. at GIT CaMUt\I· tlon lnt•nd•d lo 1u1r1Dtle ''lDaU.a1bl• rt1ht1" to crtmln,11 at th• •Q9Me at tH lnno- ""'· D.111. .... "''1 ... ,-......... • Ille ,,_ ... rt~-llel -· .... ~1 -• .... ' . i:. "'-! ,..... • "" l11utt•·v1l;v /'\n 11 d111tt. 111• •I h1•1•11 111111•11 11111'1' l1y " 1111 tl1 •1m11k1•, 111111 h1• ""'"' 1·1111 vhll'•11I ii luul 11111111• 1t1111 1111 11111111' lo 11111111 Nllllt,.,1111 'f'hl11 '" 1111 11111'111111 IN•ll••f 11111111111 /'\m1•rk1111 """""" 'l'IU'V IUH' OIOlll or ltlfl v11ry ollt ltltlllllll I hc.•m luul IM•tt11 110 hit h •11 11111•1• u po 11 11 11 n w '\ No drlv11r 11houhl fortenl thut • car'• on1ln• wlll fHm1 mor~ f\M'l durln1 • mtnut" or ldlln1 that u net!d1 tn rHt•r1 In three mlnule1 of ldlln1. II burn1 about .. much a11 lt would requl,. to 10 h•lr • mUe. Corr.ct-.pharal ol ~IOOM 11 moncooH1, but S1mu1I Ool4wyn, tM renowed movle m1in1\e, didn't know that. He Heeled a eouple of \hoM mt1n little beutl for 1 ftlm h• "u nYklftl. H• ulled hil HCHtary for the plural word. h dkM 'linow. Bo ht 11ld.1. "Ollay, tall• a a.tt.r to tbt MD Dl91D loo. We'd lake to rent I ftlClftlOOH tOiiie All a mottGn Dlet\IN, alMI wbl .. you'n at k , led • anotMr 0111." Or •• reporl U•• Holly~ ator1Wllen. -··-_____ ._..._ ... ...,.. .... f WASHINGTON -To the relief C>I muy people -from liberal Democrats lo con1ervaUve RepubUcUll -Henry Kiutnaer will probably have no otftetal poatUoa ta Ronald Rea1an'1 ad· mlnillraUon. But thanks to hla continuin1 support in Republican circles, l ncludin1 steadfast en· done ment by former Presi· dent Gerald Ford, the c tJarming , German·born ex· Harvard proress or ma y s till h a v e. powerful influence In the .new Republican re1ime. •· One ol the main reasons K.ias· in1er was considered a poor c hoice ror no m ination a s Reagan's secretary or s tale is the distinct possibility that his confirmation he arin1s in the Senate would tou ch orr a l>Olilical bloodbath that the in· coming president doesn't need. And one of lhe reasons that a Kissinger confirmation-hearing could lead to such an explosion is his myst erious meeting with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin ·on April 11, um - less than three months after Jimmy Carter moved into the White House. Reagans advisers are worried about that meelin1 -and with good reason. • KISSINGER has never said what went on at the session. The only account of what might have been said was contained in a ca- ble from the Soviet Embassy to the Kremlin. The six·page cable was turned over to the CIA by its top agent in Moscow, a Russian whose code-name was "Trigon." According to Dobrynin's ca· ble, Kissinger told him Carter's SALT 11 proposal was unaccep- table. had misinterpreted the • George~ • Sovhtt pllkm and 1bould be re· jected by the Ru11lmn1. Kl•· 1ln1er alao told the Sovlet a"'· bauador acconllna to the 1Ull· lftret cab&e, tb1t C1rter'1 Pobcy on human r11hta merely er.ow.ct the naivete and weakn ... ol the new J>19ldent and hl1 naUOnal security advlaer, Zbltnlew Bnealnlld. In add.IUon. accordlnl lo UM ultn·aecret cable, Kluin1er told Dobrynln he still bad aome aourcn on the National Security Cou~u. and fully expHttct to 1ta1 current on developmenla within that· a1ency that would be of lnter•L.to the Soviets. If THE Dobrynln cable w• authentic •nd accurate -it ron•llluted evide nce of near· trea1on •1aln11l the forme r 11ttcr.-tary ol atate '' P\e&se tremble 6 little for old time~' s-ake. /1 The Carter administration treated the Dobrynin cable u ll It were radioactlve. BfM81nMl, when told about It by CIA cblef Stan1fleld Turner, reportedly said aometbin1 to the effect of, "My God, this ia polltical dynamite!" He ordered ila dia- aemlnation heavily restricted. Incredibly, the microfilmed copy of the cable disappeared. THERE WAS • bitch to the dynamite cable, however. It was the tut transmission lhe CIA got rrom Trigon before he was arrested by the KGB. So aome expert.a believe that it waa a de· libe rate piece of m111ntorma· tion cooked up by the Kremlin. f'orgerie11 are old 'stuff for the Ru11t1lan 11ecrel service. What worries the CIA is that 11uch fl>riccries must have the ap· prnval of the Politburo itself and thu11 indicat e a significant pollttcal move by the Kremlin. If the l>obrynin cable was in- tlf!~d a fitke sent out after Tri.crm had been compromised 1t ii1int8 lo a hostility toytard SA l.T 11 from the highe'l level r1r lhv. Soviet government. It "h"w•:d a willingness by the Kr•·mlln ltJ discredit not only K111111nJ(n , twt the very able Sov· H:t arntia11P1adt1r as wel l. Tfft: C.1A'S deputy chief t>f c·r,unter 1nt•!lhgence was ordered l" !i uhm 1t a n "operation al analy!itll" rm the f.X1bryn1 n cable Sourct.~ \J}ld my associate Dale Van Alla that the CIA r1fficial's report concluded that what KJss· inger had done ··oorttered r,n treason." The report w as p1geonhol~ b; the White House Its ci uthr,r w ci.~ removed from his hudquarttn. post and transferred '>Vtr~tl&.b It is skeletons l1kt thest: 1t1 Kissinger's closet lh;,t kept tht' Reagan people from n;,mmf tht- forme r sec r etcH) l<J ci i.>tJM that would require '>4::n<1tt-tun firmation. Social Security hill hits middle class Well, fe llow suckers, il is once again lime to stand by ror the big aMual Social Security tax zap. On. Jan. I. it jumped from 6 .13 percent to 6.65 percent. However, it is r eally twice that because y"o u r e m · p l ayer has to match it and, to him. it is all just sa lary ex · · pe nse and it doesn 't make any dif - ference to him to whom it is paid. So, in effect, you have been paying 12 .26 percent or your Mailbox salary in Social Security taxes and. now. that wlll jump to the equivalent of 13.30 percent! What makes the Social Securi· ty tax so onerous is that it is the load carried mainly by the poor and the middle class. Some poor people have so little that they don't pay any income taxes. but they will still be stuck with the run 13.30 percent Social Security 'tax. AS FOR the middle class. Social Security taxes have been levied on the first $25,900 of wages, which according to the U .S. Census Bureau, m eans about 65 percent of the total wages earned in this country. That means that something on tht! or. de r of 35 percent the richest 35 percent · of the wages earned escape Social Security taxes U .S. News and World Report recently illustrated the effect or this system of letting the rich not pay their s hare . The magazine reported that. 1f you earn up to $29.700 m 1981. )'OU will pay Social Securtt) taMes for the entire year However. 1f you earn $40.000. you will only pay for the firs t 39 weeks Or, 1( you earn S60.000 you wall stop after 26 weeks Or. $100.()(J(). the 16th week. THESE INEQt:ITIES go on and on year after year because you . Mr and ~r~ A vera~e Ci tizen, don't put the heal trJ your friendly nei~hborht>Od t'Oll gres~man lie , of t ourse. isn't m the Sodal Security system and neither a re !lome sax million othe r Rovernment employc.>es u· VO~ art! tired ur Rt!lttng ttte flirty end of th1· 'illl'k on your SoC'tal St>c·urtt} taxes. 11ut th~ !>QUeeze o n your man tn Was hington ~ake him kno~ you want tht! tax apphcrl lo all i.:overnment employt•e!> and tht• ri<:h. The thought that he m ight have to pay Social Sec·unly lax es hke the rest of u!i may f0t·us his beady little mind on the problem • ID 1982 ----91-1---emergeney ~ ~in-eounty T u 1 llf' t•:ClllUI '1'111' IH'l(Mll Vt• lflnf' fl( your ••1lllorl11I 1111 lh•1· 21. on "Don't 1ll1tl IHI" wu" 11 "'"""rvlee to 11111111• who "'"'"' m1my hour11 to l1Hv1• lh1• "UI I " Hv11l11111 IH•1·ome a 1111tlll v. t11wh11l111tt thf' Or11nl(tt c '11ur11 v Hoard or Sup11rvtaora, clly 111 Hn•te"'" •t11l m11ny othen > I h1t vr• ""''" lnv11l vt-1I with 'Ill r · 11hu·•· llfti! 1111 t'lu•lrrr111tl of 1111' l1t11k fm·1·" rm "lttt" for lhtt I '1111111 V 11r 01·11111(1• 111111 1111 :lfl 1•lllr•k I h11 Vf• 111•1111 tllt' kf'y 111 IN r111·11 with l'11rlrt1· Tt•l1•11hont'. o .. n .. , ,. 1 .,. 1· t •·,,It "",, . ~u ..... lh•111ut11w11I Clt•nrrttl SC'rvh·t•li, lhr l'lllr11, 111111 I h11v1• 1tcldre1t11ocl I hr I '1dlf1u·11111 Sl11lr l.n9'll•l•tur1• 1111111v llrtu•M on lhl11 au·ol(ram I WIHthl ltk n lo telVf' you lh,. h..,k1lr1111ncl of f111•t11 IN 1'71 unde1r Uov Ht!•M•n. I h19 , ,.,.,11.1.tur., pHIUtd A 8 ~ t I\ W h I d1 Ml M 1• t 11 cl I hf' " fl I I " 11: 1u ..ricanc·y Tcole1rhon-. sy11tem 11ro.,r•t11 'f'hl11 hll r•1ulrf'd ut·h r1111nt y •nd c·ltr. to prca>•re • ten t ... I Vt' "Ill, .. ,. MO h)' I Y7~. a final , t•l•n hy 11117, Miid have an opera llonal "Y"tnm by l!IM 1'hla pru f nam 11 1·ondlllon-.d upon the ·"ICI •lurn 11rovldln1 a method nr t Uni rur tht1 I mplementa " lion 1 thla 11roiiram durln1 th11 19'11\ "'•l•l•Uvt1 Seulon. '..fhla wH not done. ·In llnl, th• l.eMl•lature ·enact· ed AH 411 to provide fundln1 for the "tlt" Pf'Olram. AB 411 pro· vld•d for • Ve per~•nt to ~ per· cent 1url'h1r1• on all telephone blUa. The dat.. for llnal plane w•r• •tit for Jul)' t, 11'71, firm or· d.r1 to be placed with the tel•phoM •mpany b)' J\al)' 1, '"'.!.. and nnal lmplement1tlon for U«. II, t ... In 1"8, the lA1l1latur• eru1ct· •d II SOT nvhln1 the 1fonmtnUoned dah, 11 folloWI : tM .... fm_J'laal .... w11 Mt tar Oct. 11 tm, a nrm .. order with the telephone com· pany for July, 1981 , and Im· plementa .. on no later than Dec. 31. I~. ON fii&EPI'. It, 1178, ~he Orange (;ounty Board or Supervisors ap· proved the county.wide "911 •• Jo;m t-r9'enry Telephone Syste m fln11I plan for submission to the ('ullrornl• De partme nt or '(i(•nc-ral Servl<'eK. In September llt711, the California Department or Cirnc-ral Servlce11 approved 111" 1·ount y'H "911 " fln•I plan On l>tw II . 1979, the Oran.ce < 'mmt y Hoard of Superv h1ora ap· 11rov1•cl the or.rlnii or . '911'. ror lht• County or Oran.ie. Then on U 1•r 13. 1"79, the l'ounty and its :.!8 l'ltleA placed an order for "911 " aK approved In our final plMnN. The lancet date ror having the "tU I " syNLem operat ive an the c·ounty 111the11pran9' of 1982. Th•nk you ror the opportunity to 1(1 ve you the accurate history or event.II that have enabled the county •nd lt11 26 cities to look fo rwud lo 11 viable "911" ay11tcm R. I.. PICKRVL l!rln<'ipal Stair Analyst IAfl-1 9dl9'1•1N To the Editor: ·Rei Bob Greene'• article, "How Can KJ1Un1 Anlmal1 be Called Sport?", Dec. 22. Never In all my Ille have I read an article that dl1par11ed my lntelll•enee mon than the 1rtlcl• wrtt&.n by Bob GrNM. • The article ll fuJI ol untruthl 1nd ijin..-dol. What lnlurtalel me 1bove all 11 the HU· rl1hwoua ..U·h\allter, mill\dded comllMIUlon, 14lllaton, aad av•ra,. ctu.... wbo waat to take awa~ our rl1bt to bear arm•. Tb• IOluUoe, I 1ubmlt, l1 to,. member that we really don 't have to defend what we do. Hunting and rishing are legal and ethical activities supported by the majority of people in the world . 15 Mr G r ee ne M vettelarian? PETER A DOUGLAS Oa•rdaGIMl•tactt , To the Ed1tor: The letter headed "Historic 11epualion'' in the Dec 21 Pilot, by Mr. Ri c hard L . Hilts. deserves respon!le fo'lrst, J question whether the lJ.S. Constitution was "founded upon scriptural ideas," as Mr. llllts l'laims. The Constitution is a m ost se<'ular doc umenl, dealing with branches of government, quallficat.ions and terms of office, rMtsing armies. navies, post olflce!I, and the like. I hope Mr. Hills will read it sometime. Also, since there were in those days religious estabUshmenta in several or the s lates, and re1l1lous tf!!llll for holding office In all but t wo or them, fqur addlllonal years of maneuverin1 and comproml1e were needed In order to attuh the lint 10 a mendmenla, The Bill or Rl&hlll , lo the ConlUtuUon, lnc:ludln1 the rl1ht ol reli1lous liberty. I .don 'l know which Foundln1 Fathers Mr. HJl\a may have had ln mind, but the one1 I have read <Jelfenon, lladil6n, et al.> envl1loned a "wall of aeparatlon" between church and 1tau t:o •u1r1ntee that 1overnment wtll be reU11ou811 neutnl, n.lther •ldln1 nor htnd•rinl rellcton. Speclftcall,y1 thll IMMI that tM Ol'llM ... rHOUJ'Gel at IOftt8••t, Md lh• Ida at am~. ••1 not be clireoced to promo&e (• tmp1d1) .th• lnterHtl of ~· parUc\l&ar nU•lou Ifft, nor indeed or a 1·ollt'<'lJ11n "' 8t'\0 I!' <e.g . Chnstians t THUS, throu~h almos t 200 year s or ~row 1n~ rt•lt.:1uus liberty in America. attempts to use pubhc schools. s ubsidies of publiC' money, or the force of government institutions and m e d i a to furthe r va rious religious causes have been most eneO\JraRmgly rebuffed in the courts. and by the people when they have had a chance to vot3 on s uch issues Obviously. religious adherents are not barred Cr om government, but those rew who have gained public om ce and then tried to use it to further their own favorite crusarfes, or as Mr. Hilts advocatt.J, "to present their views on what will ~ive us the peaceable lives we all desire," have mostly been thwarted. 50 rar, fortunately for the r eligious liberties of us all. I share Mr. Hilla' hope that "opposing vlews on •II 111ues can still be presented through all types or media," and that "this opportunity and freedom wilt never be controlled by a few." But I sense from his cloaln1 llnea that Mr. Hllt1 and his ractlon may aspire to ~e ju1t ·such a few, and to anoint l h •-IA... ..... a • th .-.1th~ cu1todlan1 of, In hi• wotd1, "that which Americana need to hear." H.W. DOYLE •• Lft&en 1'1"" NGdtr• _. w1la11M. ,,.. ,.,.,., ... Clld ..... ~ .. ,. ,,_.,,, ............... ,, ...... IAflMI" ......... -.. ........ ,. •••. Al ........ .. .......................... ............ llll'tl\M• .... J.T• ,__ .. .,, .... .. ........... ~ . , I I ·Wan1aer than ouf side Walter Knights of Avon, Mass., checks with his daughter, Michelle, right, and neighbor, Me lissa Walcott , as they emerge frQm an igloo· he built after read· ing how Eskimos .make their homes. It took two days and 125 blocks of ice to build the structure whose interior can be 25 degrees warmer than the outside which has been below zero the past few days in New England. 49 Americans in Baja jail TIJUANA. Mexico <AP) -U.S. Cons ul Generat Robert Ezelle says 49 Asnerican citizens are jailed in Baja California and Baja California Sur. They mostly face drug charges. "All these people are entitled to protection but not in the sense that we send the Marines in and gel them out of jail." Ezelle said in an interview. "We see they have proper access t-0 an attorney, are not mistreated in any way, and we assist them in contacting people back in the slates." EzeUe, assigned to Tijuana in September, uld a "surprising number" of U.S. citizens are being burl in traffic accidents in the two Mexican states In his consular district. Almost every week, an American Is involved In a serious aut'> crash on the Tijuana-Ensenada highway. Ezelle, 53, was deputy consul general in Lon- don before being assigned to Tijuana. The modernistic consulate was built 14 years ago on a hilltop a block north of the Agua Caliente racetrack. Drunken mice tested BOULDER, Colo. CAP> -Researchers at the University of Colorado say hereditary factors in- fluence the degree to which mice can become de- pendent on alcohol. Professors Gene Erwin and Gerald McCleam reported one group of genetically identical mice differed markedly from another group in their sensitivity to alcohol. their preference for it and the rate at which they became dependent. The studies, so far confined lo mice, will be ex- panded to include 60 men and their families. Erwin 'said researchers hope tolind Lwax..lo i.den· illy people who are genetically predisposed to alcohol sensitivity or dependence. Pirate$ beware LONDON (AP) -British merchant ships ·are carrying instructions on bow to rtgbl off pirates. Keep heavy-duty hoses at the ready to repel boarders, maintain clearly visible deck patrols carrying two-way radios, and nooctlicht sblpa in dan1er zones. advises the General Council of Britiab Shipping. It said the worst piracy areas are off Niceria, Colombia and in the Strait of Malacca between Sumatra and Malaysia. ........ j I 1 r MllHCAL TIAM N•S VOLUNTEERS WITH DEPRESSION A Medical Research Team is studying th& · ~of an anti-depressant medication. ( • _, ........ STiit: Yoluneeef'I ""'9t be betw"n tt\9 ._Of , ... Ind u Jiii'tiiriieli9.~n(tMnti ••or t>eue tor.,,, ...... )toret ..... 4..-a. ¥0&.UMTml WILL llC•YI A ... ..... ~ .. .,.,.., .. Ion. EKG. ,.., , ..... madlCllton ... *!ta wtth a pro~nal. Cal 714/634-69• MONDAY THIU lllmAY L •tw .............. ,.. s .. • -• . . . . . .... . •• ..... OU 0 f I Q 94 ..... •. 4 4 W-4 Tough ehew Rm found in tobacco SPOKANE, Wujl. (AP> -When William H. Blrd opened lUs packet. of cbewihi tobacco, be dldn 't smell a rat until he bit into one, be alle1es In court papers. Bird flied a $25,000 sult in Spokane County Superior Court acainst R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. He alleced he suffered paycholo1ical dama1e ts a result of his discovery of a rodent in his chaw or Day's Work tobacco. T ........ ~e.1te1 DAJL y PtlOT A 1 orig. 24. 99 to 38. 99 12.50 to 19.50 Included Jn the suit's paperwork are two color snapshots of a stiff gray rat nestled in an opened packet of brown tobacco. Bird said be ~ught the rat-packed package in Cusick on July 30, 1979 .. Selected groups. Not every size in every style. Intermediate reductio>ls have been taken. Better hurry! The suit 'contends Bird had "consumed ap- proximately one-third of tbe plug before bit\ng into a partially decomposed and mummifted_rat corpse contained therein." Since then, Bird claimed, he has suffered stress whenever he sees tobacco of any kind or people using it. His atfomey, Dennis Scott or Newport, said his client has bad lo seek counsel- ing. Handbags. included at big savings r Additional $1 off with two --, L clearance shoes and/ or bags J Officials or .. 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'"'""' ••·~•L~'" lh•11 "''''°II"° !lt,1•1111 I •luHft ...,.,. illOftt 1•1 t 1\<J' 111 I 1•1jotlf tfHlll•\ 1111 iu•lt flh• lo IH lf'\ 111 lht" f'lt'\.lfl,.tif "\.t•I fl'l"t 1 ''•'1t \11•1•t 1U111I M,1l1oH,_, ''" 'it,' 1•111w i. nl th11, ,, .. t•I Co,,,, f •n hfllt'"'''IU l't' '•'"'\ f I •'•I If .. I h11•ln• t t fl~ ...... 1. t(•t ' •• Mo .... '"'"' v••flo thw 1 '''''' f11 1 t"j .. 1 f ,tn1 I ",,11 huh I iA I t I~ 1•11111'11 y f PIM I Mr 1u ,., ''''"""''" 1 -.;J.4~' t '"'I \ "''' IH ti,t!l""il.' \th ~ •it ,1, 1 ~41 • tll1tt•N, '""''. 1111lil1\ht•~f (•+•Oil'f 1 011\I lt,ul~ l'1lt1I I ''"'~'"I " ,. , !""' '4\ ., ' "'\ t ,-1•1\'I 111.-f #f, j\ 1•11•\.,k Ii .......... 1•1•1 1 l\"1 ~1 1 Ii \ •• 41 I I•·\. \IAh•1111•UI UI.\ I •ot \\1111 tflt I ... ,,., !ti~ ' ... "'" ... ••••• I . • 1'1.\ ... I ·•1111( I ' i• '' ,, I,, .... ,,, I .1., •• ,, .111 \l••.-l 11"t"'Mt''", 1t1ti•·1• t 'f:i..'fl l''·•'"'"'J" ·~• lt\tttiO ....... '"'"! lllff 'Af,lttt ~t l'I If\, P~1I !1•hH-1IU "' .. ,,., .. ,, ...... ., ...... ,....,,, t!!A\ t1ff'lll ..,,lh Uw> \. •• ,,,., 1 ' ;;;rr u l 111 ''"\tr \ 1•\1nt\ 1t1"1 '"-•""'"'' ..... t ""'"l'W'd , "•'• , ""'' «'•••v '''''" (•. :.t I)''*' t~n • I f I'll \171&0 PURI.IC' NOTI('~ "CTITIOUS •USINEU NAME STATEMENT ( "• toU0111r1nQ Pf"'"'on ... t\,,. do•ng Du.,,1nf'\\ d\ BEACH CITY STEAM CLEAN 101t.1 t< tamueta Hunt"'q1on Bf.~< n CA 976"6 R.iiymona Lt>~ Smith 101•1 ~amu•lf'I, H1.1nt1nqton R.-._u h (.tt 97&40 8tll~ R Jo""'.,.°" '' 8 '" M•tn M "1un11n91on Bf.a< h, ca ~70~ f "'' bu\1nto\' " c ondut tflid by ~ Qtn .. r.tl Pcttlrwr,f'l•P R(ty Smith l h t\ ,,,.t..-nwnt w.t\ tllf'd wHP\ thi• County (lf'r.., ot 011uH~ .. (c1unty nn UtH 1•mbt-r 19 t9AO FHl .. l t•uDl•'.fleO Qr,•nqr· (f')rl\,,f 01111y Pilot !"et 11, lO 1911() l,ln h '1 lq81 \OIA k( PllRU(' NOTICF. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 1 ht' fOll0•1nQ Pf't..on ., OO•nq Dt;\1 n~'' ., P "Clf'ICA PRO MA INIFNANCI Co ))I \ J "m 11 , -Str f't<I Or•nQP. (.•ltfor"•• ''Wi6 .... 1"!'. R,..,.a Pfr•e1 J~ S J~"1"' c.t.~ .. , Or.,.., (.tltturn•rt 'f')t.64 fh1\ '>u\1nt\' •'-<ond u<ft'O bY ttn 1t\ d•v1d"'' Ktm R PArtlf'r ft\1~ \f•fft~f Wff' ftlf"d '.-Wtfh .,,... Counly Cl•r• of 0 1dnQf'-County on Janu.ry >, 1911 flUtH Pubt1\""d Or.itnqt• (Od\I 01td'f P1lol Jan 6 11. 70 l/ lllljl Sl"O l!O -PURI.I(' NOTIC•; FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME·STATEMENT 1 ,,,. t0Huw 1rw;, orrwn " OO•nQ bu-,1 nf>\' d\ '11 BEACH 11 Mf REAi TY. l71 Bl<A(H TlME REAL ESTAT E. lll BEACH TIME RE AL TORS 14 1 BEAC H TIME PROPER II ES. IH BEACH 11ME ASSOCIATES and 161 BEACH TIME INVE<;IMENIS, lUI K1nq1~1 Cl . Co'" Ml!,a, (d B J~itn Mo""~' V, UMS K tnQl,.t Ct Co<.t a M1>w. Crl l hh bu\1n~' '' Lnnduc. trd by an .,, <11v1dulll R Je-"n Ma._.,., T "*' ''"'•mf'o' w.t\ f1ted *'"' 1hfo County (ltrll of OrAnQf' County on t'iiil•l!\l,.•1t \\t 1n~ .... \ 11.11rit '',H\1 t'ol~\\ j,, 1 l'>IHi"Pf ., 111-Mil 1,1u"' I I .'JI t•fll l \I ~ t ... t '"''" .. , flCTITIOUS BUSI NE SS NAME STAT EMENT HM ' AVTOMllllVt ~r ~VII I~ t t&~ t '~"" 5.,,., t t1011 u ( o•+-• M, .... , ' ,..,,.., ,..,. .,.,f> J.it•l•~ .... l. N1tno11ri. Hr>v p, , .. ~•tf10 ll1 iv,. r °''" ~"-' ( .u.ru, "'' .. 91111b r P\I\ C)O,lnf"\\ I\ f Ot'ldu'-lt>d b'f ~n 1n Chv10u..tl J •r"nP\ C N•ChOf'J. f h 1'i. •\l•IP"Wnt Wd\ f1fftl WlfP\ Into (ounff' (lf'r• of Oranoe County on O,.<.f'rntwr '1&, 1Ql80 '1UJ71 Put>l1\~CI Oretnqe Coac.1 Oa11y· P1•ot, O..c 10.1980 Jan 6. IJ 70 l'ltl SllO 8< PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME HATEMENT loOllCF l OCMl DllOll\ 0 ' 8Vl II I MAN~Fl II Nlth1 r " h1ttt•h '( Ql~~fl lu lht tffl1td11t\ Of IUAN Vl\N t .. l\"4 111 (h\IH1tt_.ll_. rtod OUllWJ Ou\lnt'\' .t\ Vf f 1 ..... II.I rooo ( t'Nll R & VII· !NAM MA~f(• l ,,<t.n .. 1,.,01t'I whO,,. bu\• n,.,, 4'dd'"'' '' <tt•1 Wfl,tmu''"''' A""""" (1ty of (,41110..n C,1ov.-. touuh ~.~'~,i:,,~t~~,. .o~:',•:,";,:'•rn;:;;• t~ l ftEr lllEM CORl'O RA r lON l r\\o\itt•H"hL whO....-bu~1nt'' •Odr.-'"' I 1\ 11U W,.\fm1n.,,,., AvfllnV(' (•Iv ot Gardrn C10'1fll, County ot OrttnQt St•t• Of (•hforn1• • ft\~ Pf"CJpPrty to tw tr•n,ft>tfttc;t '' •0t•tro c1t '1'7 Wt,Hmn\lflr A'it"nUt• (tty of Wf'\lmtn .. lt'. Countv uf Or•nq...-. St•tr of C•l1fo1n1a 4'nG "'not \ub1ect fo Vo1form Cc>mlTlf"tCt•I CU<I,. ~<lion 610!> S•1d pr~rty is dt>\trlbN:l 1~''""'dl ai Alf \tOCk '" tra.., ..tnd 009 w11f n• th•t qr0<..«rv '\tore-t>u-..'n''' •"own ,,, LUAN VANT RAN 1nd1v1duttlty rind do 1nQ bU\1'1~\I a' lllE INAM r OOO CE NTER dnd VIETNAM MARK£ r d,,d "1oc.:t••·d d i 'Ht'l w,.,,,-"''"'' ... ' A'Wenue (Uy ot C,•r""n C•ow.-(oUnh ) of Or.tnqe, Cjt.1tPof Cttt1forn1rt T l\fi bl.JI• ftdfl\fl"r w ill t)t; \ Ot'l'iutn 'n 1· '0111,w1nq rv•"on ,, domu t;u,1 rntJt,.d on Of '''"·'' '"•' '1'1twt rJi•v ,,. "''" '" I J~lnU-''l' t~I, .1t Q 00 (Im .H r 11•f All AMfRIC.l\N rF XA((.) 1,i'l'i! K1em Corp0u U10" ~1'11 Wt•,lr111n .. h•f S uo1•11tH A'"'''"' ro,f.t M1•-,.:1 1 Av~nut.L1t1ut Gdrdt-nC.,rowt.•.C.ouuty < ~hlf\rf)1,\ "1b11 '"' O•dnQC· Stat~· at C.ttUtarn1c1 E 11 Mh H11t1Nr.1r1 111;11 ~1wn•<ttt l' So t a , d \ k no w n t o t tt•• P.11t1Uf.Jld EI f.1,~1 ( ..ttHf'lrr111t f '~"'''''.-''' -.II OO"n.-,, nAr.w, '"'ct• I ht\ t1•1,11u'"' ., • uru1\11 ,, c1 h., 111 Oi A\Jd'"''•'•"1 U\t-d by ''"'"'''''U'''' •o, tf+o/1#11_.1 11 lh1• th,t•f" yf.>.-V .. ltt"f 11.~-.t •P•' N i•"'' f Oflit h lf1if1 Ill to1tl {),Alf(> r.J+-1 tofttht I )\ \lfji!t) 'n1' ,,,,,..,,w111 N••"' ''""1 'lll;•ftt 1'le--l u,i~ v.1n r r 1tn ruun1.-(1t ,. 1f (,,,.,..,1, c 11,.11\v u" T•dn\ff'rf't' O•·• "'"''-....' /~ it.~~· A.alltONS &AAAOHS.tNC F 1sn11 Allorners et L..tw Publ•,ht•d Ot rtnqt' (o.l't 0 111t't P1Jot. P. 0 , ••• , ... Oer 10 l'llO l•n 6 11 10 1'181 ~18) 11C CMla Meu, CA tui. '" PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUS(N£SS NAMESTAT£MENT r ,, .. folfowt'lql'.Wr'V)f'\ 1\do1nQ bu,.,,.,, .. A lfl' S IANICIN M INIAlllllf 1 (RAr f SMAtl J)\11 M ••d1lt•t,ttt'\••dt• (Ut WI I ~QuMN1Qi"~· ( ;1l1tt1,,t1.t'i?f.ll A '"'"•tNI,., Mr R,11 St~nlon Jr 17\l 1 M,._(l+t.tH +t'W•·•n Qnv1• L.tQ\111 ... N1(1u .. 1 (dMnrn1tt97bll f hi\ n1.r.1rw'',. t nndw l••fl r>1 ,M, 1n d1v•ou .. 1 Al•·•~•,,,,,.,, M 'it..tntn n I' ff'w. ,,"te'1'wn\ """'' hh•C1 ""''" thP Counly (l,.rlr. ot n,-"',,Q•· Cmrnty on 0f't.,..,'H~''/b,trt80 F!17J1' Puhll\hf'"d OrllnO'' (_o.-t.,.I Q.uty Piiot O~l JO, l'lllQ, )an b.').1(), I'll!\ \1~~ 1lO PUBUC NOTICE Pubh\hed Or anQt' CD.a\I O.tily ~1101 J•nu•ry 6 191l tH I I PUBLIC NOTICE IMU72 NOTICE TO CllEOITORS OF BULi( TllANSFEll IS«\ 6101 4t07 u .c .c I I Notu ... '' ""'f"bt Q••f'n fo '"" ~~~O·•~;;,,~!.,~ '-~~(_,~~:,: .. ~,'~;I """' 1\ 11.0 I nq.1n t1n11 U C•'~ ot ' (O\fd M'"'-'· County nt Or•Mor \t•t• of ~ Cah to'"'-'· '""'' " butll1 tfMl\let ·~ •Dout to bf'!> mdOf' to Wdh R Sc.hwwdl't •nd LOii F ~{~W"" l rtJn'lriff,f't'\ w ho'" bu\tnf \\ rldOrf'\\ '' U \S1 Ma,.,90, City ot lrv1nr (.ounty Of OranQ~. Sta,,. ot (Al••ornia Tne pro~rty In bf. fritn\fti,,,.d 1, ~~,,~o 1n "'""'"' ., All '\toe.• in trttdt>. flJ:turi'i\, ttQ-.uptTu1•n1 ttnd qooo w111 of that Prod & Proto fyp.- M4tt run~ bu\•ntr\\ 9-now n tt\ D J Enq1neertnQ and lotated '-'' 11•0 "CTITIOUS BUSINESS loqan. Um! U, C1ly 01 C.O\ta M•,a, NAME STATEM~NT County ol Or•-. ~t•le of C•llforn"• The followinq Pf!'r\on\ ,.,,. domq The bulk •r•n\fff will be t on\um bu\•ne\\ ... m•t"d on or •fter fhf' 1'1na Otty' of Oecrmi.r 1• 1'190 GEM TRAVEL ANO TOURS. I Uc Janu•rv, l'lll ~I 10 00" rn .,1 Gro_.r Ed•nfler A~nt#. ~unt1noton BP.sen. E\t.row CCM'porahon Wl\O\lf' !\d<Srt"'\ ,, ,111..,. C•ltfornlttt?M/ 19001 trv1f"lt' Blvd , fu\lin, CalttornlA Pubi1\hf-d OranQP (.o"\1 O•HY p,,0, Geratd J Ott1nq, 21101 P,,n.at•ttm '°~~9~1 <Mffi for 1•11no <••Im\ J•nuarv Oe.L.2.l..JO..Jteo .J-...... u 1181 J06ll Ill po. Ml\\IC>n V1@10. C•hlorn.·c'"r..'26:;:;.:,';.I =+~i-1>"-i-...-,,.. •n-.,,., -1 II• • ~ l,lll Ct..to ( °'''""· ?Tf"' ..... ·~m n . • v -.. < ~UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS e USINESS NAME STATUllE NT T.,_e re1tow1nq CWt\On' .tr fll dolnq bu\1ne'\\ •\ !>URE·WOOO PROOUC T!>, t1' W B••er. C.0.1• MP~•. C• ,,.,. W1llo1<d R Liie. 61~ R•••r. Co\I• -Me.a, u. t?&2' v •ry o Lite. m w B•••r c .... 1. M•"'· C• t?•2' Tf'lf\ bU\ltW\' t\ tGndultflid Dy .t 9ft\•r•I Pttrtf\er'\h1p W1ll.trd P L•lt This \1•tement w•\ fllf!d with ,,,., Cou"I~ CIPra ol Or•n9" County on Nonmbl!r II. 1qeo Ft4'111 Pubfl\hed C>MtQP Coa4it Oa1ty P.iot 0.< IA. 23, 30, ,_,, J•n A. "" ••so IO PUBLIC NOTIC•: Po, M l\i.c>f\ Vie10. C.htornle 91'~• lr•n\h!:r"1., •" bu\H\e\\ n•me\ •nd T "'' bu\•"f\\ I\ conduct•d by Mldre\\t'\ u\ed by "'* Tr.,nfrror tof t\u\beftCI ~ wttf" th« P•'t three ye•n ar•· S.mf' Cer•ld J Olli"tl 0Aled Deombo!r 1'1. lt9C) MltMlo L Oiiing W1111 8 <,;c~warr l ht\ \t•tffnf'nt ••\> ftffld with tht ~~~~.~~a'' Couftty Cttrk or Ora nqP Count1 on GllOVEll EKllOW :!:,';:;',~~~~tans. tNC. i•t1rv1 .... , ..... , 411• Ce-Dolw. St•. t !.~;:..~·-• :;= IM<ll, Cll t?MO Pubh\-Or-CCM\I Dally Pilot. F1SU'7 PubllV•d ClrMqP Cont Oallv Piiot, Oec ll, 1l. JO. l'llO. Jan 6, 1911 SO•J tKI PUBLIC NOTICE January&. 1911 11181 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS eUStNESS NAME STATEMENT Th,. foflo•tnQ iwtr\On\ arP doing FICTITIOUS eUSINESS bu\one\\ ., NAME STATEMENT Or :,.~~N~.1.:~~o~~~l.~N~~1:~ The toUo••nQ perwn~ •'f' do1n9 Callforni1J9?611 1 bu\17~~\~~NTAl DEVELOPMENT JllmP\ H f'Wf'r\on. ••Ill \-v1llf' "OTICI 0, ···L1c•T1~ •011 ~y~TTEE~ss ((Jnl PP~TTllEENNTT RREEFFEERRRR~ll :1~:~u•, N•woort B••<n c ~"'":n•d ~.-.-~ .,.. r ,y > "' ~ " B 11 E Rab• 81111 Ouuv1ll• CNANGllNOWNlltSHl"O' !>E RVt CES CO OE NTA L 1 V · ALCOHOi.iC llYlltAGI LICINSE MA II KET ING SER V 1 CE S 11 1 Or iv•, '1unlit1Qlon Beacn. C~tlfort1"1 To Wl>om II Mav cone ... " MEDICl.L MARET INC SERVICE!> '126•• URSULA BECKER I\ -lying to i.1 CHIROPRACTIC MARKEllNv Elc!or v Orlbl!rq, 7'll Oonmr '"° O.par1ment ol At<-11< Boera~ SER Vt CES, RoadR ~·117,°: :•c~~ ~~~:~:~~ 917~ C<lfltrol for •. _, .. ON SALE BEER to 1141 Port T-rt Pia<•. Newport B•llamd pt.,u CO.I• MPu C•lllornld wit ate-tic Deveragu •t 7Slll w Boacll C41111orntat2MO • • Cefller Ortw. o~~-~-~1, HunllnQlon ' H~rold (Mikel M Murray, 11148 9167~ C.r•cly TllomP'>Oll, 18 Kt•IOa ... ,._, C•lifOf'nl• Port Ta99art, Newport 8~ac h, Court. Nrwpart 8PACh, C•ttforn•tt Putoll•N<I 0r""9P (CM\I D•ttv Pilot, Catlfor"tanwc> '7t.t.3' J•nu.,y '· t .. I 176·11 F•y ""'"•Y. lM Port , _art, Willa•d T )OtO.n, 776' SMI• Alta Nt WPOrf Beach, Ca lltor"1• •MO A•tnu ... CO\t• ""'••. C•lllO•"'" '7&71 PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS IUllNISS NAMI ITATIMllCT TM •o1.-,. .,.._ i\ doi"tl l>U\I• Mt•••· KU-111 E Mu,,av. 1'71 Au\tir Oo"ald E. Mar11n, "01 Et>Otid4' Sl•Mt, L•-Ctly, Tu•• llf/3 Ro•d. Coron.t <IO'I M•r, C•lllornta '7'71 Oo119a\ S Murray, IM Porl h Q v•r t, NewplM"t S.a<h, C.lifornia t266>0 Thi\. bu\lne\\ I\ condut ted by • Tllh bu\fr\O\\ h <onducl@d by • ~Mr•1 r.'1~'::~"'°" OtM••I partNn~ip '"" ... ._ ..... 111«1 "''" '"" ~AMUEL T ENTERPRISES, t110 H M M<irr•y Wlntllrop Cir , Fou"t•ln V•ll•Y. Tiii' •la-I ,. .. f114!d will\ fl• Cou"IV Clerk of Or•"Ot County on January 1, 1 .. 1 Celllornta t770I ·county Ctork or Oran~ County on ,11111S Publi•-Or-Coe\I Daily Pllol, s.m .. 1 T Vtcloaurr .. a. tno WI" O.cemi.r 12. 1'90 t~op Cir., F-C.ln Valley, Calilornla "'°' . llfl! .. Jan '· tJ, 70, 11, t .. t '71S·IO Tiiis """'9u '' tondv<ted by an '" .ivlduat ~IT. Vklew-.C. Tiiis ....,_. wes fllacl .,,II ,,,. C .. 111ly Clef\ of 0.-(O\lnlY o" ~~"!'-. 1J11•1 Puttll-Ct .... C-11 Dally l"llot Jen.•· II, JO, 11. t•t Sttl-IO ---.-------- PlJBUC NOTICE Pllt>tlv.d Or-Co .. t Dally Piiot, O.c "· n, JO, 1'90, Jen 6, 1te1 ~7·IO PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE CONSUMER ... AdJtufllWtlf .. .,.... hot DEAR PAT· I bought a pair of $55 leather boots at Dale's Footworks in South Coast Village two years ago. The right boot has never been com- fortable and I've nearly sprained my ankle several times while wearing the m . Since these are highly seasonal boots; I have n 't worn them yery much. slstance" c011tala1 a detalW desert..-el IMft than I.lot rtnanelal aad .... ,..._. .. IMeellU which are available to dle AIMrleu MMk. ~ tbe reference sedl4• of lar1er U'rartes for WI ca1alo1, or order your owa' cepy for t2t from U.s: Go,,emmemt Prlnlln1 Ofnte, Waab1ll1to•. D.C. f ·1r11· 1t11t,;.2 I I finally examined the right boot carefully and ' found that the right heel seam , which should go down Lhc middle of the ba ck of tbe heel. is off lo the right. I'm sure this accounts for the poor fit . a nd I don't see any way that it could be fixed. 20402. . Eight buy town for $615,000 Gen. David C. Jones. <:hairman of the U .S. J oint Chiefs of Staff, .. flew a Soviet-ma de M JG 21 during C:J r c- <:cnt trq.> to Egypt. .Jones. a fighter pilot. was .. impressed" hy lhl· pt·rform<in<'t' of I hf• fighl<•r Jl'l I took the boots back to Dale's and was told by the manager that it was ridiculous to even think about an adjust ment. I don't think t his is fair since I ha vcn 't worn the boots much and couldn 'l tell at first what was wrnnR Can you help me? PHOENIX , Ariz. (APl About 20 families J.N., Costa Mesa Nan•~ dispute St\N FH t\N('!SC 'O 1t\I'1 When parents arl• tn 1hsµutc over what lus t name their r hild should h1.«1r , there 1s nothing tn the law to say the• fathe·r·s name must ht• prefc•rrc.·d . thf' ('al irorn1a Su pr e m(' <.'ourt hus rult'<I 1n a ~»2 clCt'ISIOll. Dale Gro.<ie, owner of the shop, told A VS that thf' manufacturf'r of the boots went oul of business IH months ago, so It's impo!lslble to seek an adjust· mf'nt due lo defl'cti\'e me rchandise. Grose feels that you let this proble m go too long for the store to make an adjustment, and he emphasized that problt'ms whic h art' brought .to his attention within ;,i "rt'asonahle time" after purchase are settled to thf' customt•r 's i.atisfaction. lie s,uggests you try to have a 11hcM• r.-pair shop reset the seam . live in and around Navajo, Ariz . and some of the m work there. But town employees don't have lo worry about losing their jobs just because four C'ouples bought tht' to wn for $615,000. one of the new owners said. ··surely. they'll kee p their jobs," said Eloise Ent?ler. a Ph<1en1x n·al c!\latc agent Mrs Englcr said the pur('hasers weren't sure what they would do with the 7 5-ac·re town, where Arizona wus dcl'lart·d a territory more than 100 )<'ars ago Tllc t-i~ht huyt•rs read al1tiut the town tn the ncwspapC'rs a nd decided to buy sight unseen One of their c·hildn•n st•outcd the town on a Friday. and on Saturday the c1i.:ht 1111!1111.J lhrcc other would-hf' pu rehast·rs t••u'rrnor aid lbf rd l>Ei\H PAT. l s thcrc any book or catalog that lists all of tlw federal government's loan and grant J1rograms·1 Tht' winning lull was $6(),000 below hst pri<'c . hut $215,00 morl' lhl.ln thc minimum set hy the· town·s prevwus ownl·rs. the SpurhJl'k family K.U . Costa Mesa "The ('atalog of fo'e deral Domestic As· Town properly inl'ludc~ a r1111tt•I. a J.!as slal1on, a post offit·e· and a ~ton· Official Inauguration Day PRESIDENTIAL GOLD PIECE Annau'ncing: A historic Presidential Gold Piece honon .ng Ronald Reagan's inauguration as the 40th President of the United States --only $20 O n January 20, I 1)8 1, history will he made when Kuna'lc.J Reagan stands proudly before the Arncriuui pcoplt and rakes a solemn oath making him thc ·lOth Prcc;ide m of the United States. Thi~ single t·vt·111 . witnessed by millions of people: around th(' w< 1rl<h-mM~ew--bc-gi rming-in·A merit'a"n-Hi"St-ory. As a spe< ial tribute co the man who will guide our «>u ntry'c; fort unes for chc nex t four years. The: Hiswrit Providence Mint has .. for the firc;t time evc:r --been authorized to strike th is Prt·c;idcntial Inaugural Medal. GENUINE 10 KT. GOLD You now have a unique opportunity to atquirc this specia l Presidential Inauguration Mt'dal indivi- dually ~trutk in '"lid 10 kt . gold. F.alh g(lld picc<'. m<'a,uring a full )/H" in drnmrtn. f<.·atu rl'~ tht· 1111H1al p11r1 rail 111 Pn·..,H knr Ht·agan 1111 th <: front ;111d Tht I li-,11 >ril Pmvidcmt· Mini hall mark and u.:nifitatinn ttf g1ild u111 1cnt 011 1hc revt·r-.<:. It I Thl' firq Mnlal . number I , wi ll be prc:.cnted to Prc,idcnt Ronald Reagan fnr his PrC'c;iJc:ntial C.olb tion . Thr 10 K:tr:11 (;old Medal'. frarurin~ th<.· nffi< i:d portrait 11f Prnident Reagan wi ll then ht avail ahk to all Amcritan' ... for a limittd time· on a firo.t - w rne. fir't -"t"l"\'t" ha~ic; at 1 he· acfva nC"cd rrc;c rva11on pril c of S .W . .. AUTHENTICITY ASSURED The authent i<.ir\' of chic; hi srnrit issuC' is a<;c;u rc:d in three wa\'S: First'. the gold pie1..t· itc;clf will be pe r- manemlv marked_ with _ the. exact gold <.Ontent. Secondly. ('V('ry collt'crion will be acrnmpanierl by The-Hi~toric ProvidC'ncc Min t's money-back guarantee. FIRST DAY COVER Thirdly. and most importantly. C'ach gold piece· will be encased in a special individually-numbt'red First Day Cover bearing a portrait of the President, the American flag stamp and the official one-day· onl y Inauguration Day cancellation stampC'd in Wa-.hington f) (. 1111 ln:lllgt1r:1111H1 Da~ ·· Januaq· 20. J IJH1 -· hy The L'nirecl Stain Ptl~t:.I 1.in\'i<t'. CONNOISSEUR'S GOl.D A !>pcu.il rnnntJi"t·ur·, Gold Edition Inaugural Mi'.dal -· !>tnJ1 k from_soLd l J KL CiultLi~ ·1vaibbl.c with parchmtnt u:nifo att :\nd ,c.·rially numb<:red hr!>t Dar Covn in a <lcluxt· prnt·n1a1111n la't' f()r only S.)4 . ~O . AVAILABLE FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY! Th<: unique 10 Karat Gold lnaugur<&I MC'dal will ntl cs,arilv he lim1t<:d in avai lahilit\'. Thcv wi ll bt· i''utd on ·a firq -l omc fir't ·"rrvc ha~., in r.;i rrW'i!> tt> all For thi' rea,011 . all rewrvation'I mu!ll be.: subjc:t t 10 au c:pt:tlh t' and will h<.· filkd a!> orcl<.·p; art' r<.'· 1.t'ivcd Earlieo;1 ordrr' will rntl\'C' the lmvnt numl>c:rs O on 't mi" 11ut 1111 t h1' rart· 11pp11rtu11i1v to 11< quire 1hi:-. hi"orn wrn111<.·r1111rativc Order y11t1r Inaugural Meda l TOO/\ Y ~ .1 CALI. TOI.I. fREf. ... 1-800-228-1234 d FOR CH AI{< ;F ORDH<S · ~ z,j liOt R~ t\ I>.\ Y ~ 1>1\Y' ·\ \\'HK ,---· --------------------------- \ The Historic Providence Mint Dq11 N OCI'-I. 2l2 I l:trmon S11tc·1, Provulcmc. K I 021>01 l'fr .... , lt tf \1ll Olli11•I 1!11n•hl l!u11•n ln•u1111r•I Mc-11•11•1 111 "'".f lllKt l 1nltl ta S1H 1~1 1•r1 mr.f;I phi• SI ~\ f.,r •J'f'"~I p•••l;IRC •ttd hJ1tJlini t I",."''' l R '1111 II<'' Clllin~l ltunald Rn11an tn'au11urJI M«l.ah•I 111 '"llll I IK1 (111hl ~ S 1.\ \0 per rnr1l;I ph" SI l\ 1111 ,,..-.. al l"".,I!" ~nrl h1nd1tn·~ I ,., l1""<l lin.t 1 hr1 k "' \1,1 I 1 .. r tnr>I .,n•111111 dur I 5rnd 111 .~ddrr•• <.111 S111t _ Zip ____ _ T Jw 111110"' p,.,.J,,.,, .'llr•//1 ow •f .4 _, ., t-w-il ~-~ -41•11 '"' •/fr/ta'-'..,. 1/H t' J c; ... , \) .. . NATION . . ........... ONE Off.CE TO INftRNA TtONAl GrANT Jean .. rrier pGM8 wtlh AJax logo Pan.•nts miffed · Spit penalty has critics PAWI'UCKET, R.I. (AP> -School officials . say· it was "a harsh thing" for a second-grade teacher to force a pupil to lick up his spit as a punishment but reject demands that the teacher apologize to the boy or be suspended. Outraged, the boy's parents plan to ask the Pawtucket City Council for $115,000 in damages. "Just picture him on the ground like a d'og, lapping it up," said Deborah Shook. "Where's -0ur justice if a teacher can do that? What kind of mother would I be if I let them do that to my son?" MRS. SHOOK AND HER HUSBAND, Terry, contend that Terry Jr: .. 7, a second-grader at Agnes E. Llttle School,. suffered "great mental anguish and consciou~ pain and suffering" at hav- ing "to remove with his mouth and tongue spittle and phlegm he had expectorated on the schoolyard .ground." Beatrice 8 . Donovan_, assistant superintendent for elementary education, acknowledged that the incident took place. but said teacher Kathleen Markley's version of it differed from the boy's. Miss Markley told school officials her pupil spat on another boy 's shoe in a fight during a re- ress in October. The Shooks' c.omplaint contends the boy merely spat on the pavement while stand- ing in line to return to class from recess. "IT WAS RATHER A HARSH thing,·· Miss Donovan said of the punishment. Miss Donovan told the teacher the disciplinary measure was Inappropriate, but no other action was taken against her. \ · School officials refused the Shocks' request that Miss Markley be suspended without pay or or- dered to apologi1e to their son. "If that's her idea of &iiscipline, she shouldn't be a teacher," Shook s aid . ..... r Miss Markley refused te comment on the inci· J dent. THE SHOOKS''COMPIAJNT CONTENDS that the incident caused the boy to be "assaulted, de- graded, embarrassed, ridiculed. subjected to creat mental anguish and conscious pain and sufferine and deprived of his civil rights." They seek SS0,000 for the teacher's alleged negligence. $50,000 in punitive damages and $15,000 for legal fees. At his parents' request, Terry has since been assigned to another teacher in the school. Senator doubles Illonthly barbs WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. William Prox- mire is giving his "Golden Fleece" award for J anuary to two agencies that spent $126,729 asking federal employees how they like their jobs. Proxmire, a Wisconsin Democrat, said that the Office of Personnel Management and the Merit · Systems Protection Board sent similar job-attitude ·surveys to 19, 782 high-l e vel federal employees in November. Not every worker involved received both forms, however, he said. ~ '"lbe thought of one agency • A. spending taxpayer money to find out if public employees who ~ earn an averaee of $41,000 a ........._ year like their jobs is bad ~ PitO•M•H enough, Proxmire said. "To have two agencies sending out surveys on that topic is utterly ridicuious . . . . "Thia is the c1assic case of the right band not knowing what the left hand is doln1," he added. "Thia only deserves the back fA the hand from the taxpayers." Proxmire presents his "Golden Fleece" to what he considers the bi11est or most ridiculoua example of 1ovemment apendlne and wute. Florida slates Elm holiday TALLAHASSEE, Fla. <AP) -Gov. Bob Graham .._ declared Tbunday u SIYll Pntley -~-...... ~~.-t.lrtbQy; "12.t. Pntley wu ac:elalmed by mlWou tllroqbout our country for Ilia mulleal ud aetlq ablUU.." Graham'• MODda.J proclamaUaa s.ed. "He WM lmown u tbe 'lrlnl ol roclr •a• roll' ud • wu _.of tM 1reJ perform .. la maklal Udl atyle of mUlle popular.•.' Ill# c6lr' ataWI bave drafted ahnilar proe· lameu.., laid Patrl~la Am &m•-., a loJal = ~-wllO II lobb1lal lat a natiollal da7 of "·-·-·*••• tM late,., __ _ 0 • DAILY N.0T Year late, but rent-a-car feunder relaxing- ~~y CJTY <AP> -Jna Bar· Buri• wound up in California in to yean old and I 1ave mJMlf 10 have to be ~aliltie 1oeaa aDd· tie rierLlftull1taklaluplOll. 1H4 after • atint H a P'reaeb yean lo aeeomplllb my_,_.., .. be aeltJ.wd,"beuid.ADdaolf? . "I'm ........ larwiri to It." IAYI paratrooper 1111 Vletaam and HVeral said. "I m1tbt bave aome aeuMI -"l'IP taldnc. It up veey late la..,,, \be ,..._. Ud preadeDt of Aju years Mllin& flnt pota and pana and there bave been a couple of nceuioaa and I JUlt want to I» 1ood 90Ulb ta leat·•-Car-"I aever tooll tbt time to later pbarmaeeutleal products In 1n the meantime, a couple of times enjoy m)'lflt," be said. "I lrnow I '9a a do aa,uu.a, .... but work for a kit ol Canada. He and a doaen partnen where 1uollne waan't available and neverbeapro." yean. but now I'm tome to take the started Gibraltar Lea11n1. a local car money wu impoaible to 1et, and time -and IP•Jbe do some bullneu lea•tnc company. in iM9 and spun fAf maybe I was a litUe naive and too op- playlal toll with people I etUoY." ita Ajax 1ubaldlary u a separate com-timi1Uc -ao I am •liChtly beblnd my -PH)' in ltft: penoaaJ schedule. But my Umetable rtow 'St, -..mer-Ku coaelided 11 "It wu a very good name and I was probably~ ambitious." yean ol effort wblcb expanded AJu waan 't too proud to copy a eood Barrier··• Ajax wUI continue to :::..a:. a:~:.~: :!:t!:.~~ tbln1." he said. •'That was my t•m· rrow rapidly for apother few years bi&. Jovial man with a mane ol white ble a few yean back -that if I could and predicts that the car rental buai- balr and the accent of bit naUve spend enoush money In advertialne. ness wilJ also expand. F·ran-, n---'-r ta"• revenuea fA the public relatlOlll, whatever ex~ure. "LOOK .... ,,..., .. •n.uT 10 1"' ...... P•n.. 1 then a few yean down the road people . ,.". ,...., or . o1 private -company will bit about 11 wouldn't remember which came lint years -1t was only the top executive million tb.ia year. _ wu it the soap or the rent·a·car who was eoina to rent a car. Now, it's ''I HA VI: INVESTED the amount ol tiqie I wanted to invest to •et to a cer· tain point;•' he said In an interview. ''Now J want to atart a new style - probably just u productive, but in· stead fA workina seven days a week Uke I did in prior years I bet I can ac· complish just as much in five days bec~uae I am older and wiser." company? I definitely wanted to ride everybody," he said. "The prict; of pig1y-back. Amuinaly enouib. cars makes it not t~ ~r~ctical to Just Colgate Palmolive has never given WI ~uy a car au:'d have at sat an ~e garaee any trouble... ·~ you don t really need at all the tame." BARRIER, WHO IS married and Barrier has achieved some of his has a married daughter , seems objectives but obviously has others. pleased but not complacent over "How can .you be successful if you Ajax'ssuccess. don't have goals? You have to set "When I started the business I was yourself goals, and preferably they • 2 post office. revived /or day · TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Two 19t 1 century post offices 1ot a new 1eu ' on life -but only for one day. Poat offices in the old minln I camps of American Flaa and Oracl ! in the Santa Catalina Mountains ~ > miles north of here were revived 0.1 their tooth annivenary ~. poetmaN commemorative envelopes. The post offices were authorized b I Arizona Territory authorities 0.1 . 28, 1880. The American Flaa offk-e was shut July 16. 1890 after bein l open 10 years. $105, or more. That's how much the idJ e funds in your checking acc-0unt could be earning for you . below the service-free minimum, there will ee a small monthly fee. All you have to do to earn it, is open a UCB 5~% Checkbook Interest Account, and kee p a $2000 minimum monthly b~lance, or $3000 average monthly balance. That way, you get a no-charge checking account that earns you $105 or more a year. Interest is compounded daily, paid monthly and appears on your statement. If your balance falls ' I Don't ignore this chance to put the idle funds in your checking account to work earning money for you. Open a UCB 51/4% Checkbook Interest Account at any one of our more than 300 branches. Opening one is easy. It only takes a few minutes of your time. The UCB 51/4~-Checkbook Interest Account. It's just one more way we say, "Californ~a, thanks a million." UNITED · CALIFORNIA - i" BANK Meml>ef f 0 l C - ., -1..-w ....... 1.1•• Oc . I P\JllUC NOTICE . W!!!!!!!!!!~!!!l!...:!lll!l .... ~-..lf.,j1 ... 1 ... 1~,p ....... l .. a .. ·~Ds . talks 1 ~~~~: He'll fl,y home from aWearing-in / ete ay O.C. H\JmNG8 .................. At I p.m .. the con1ressman plana to be al a le1islatlve re· ception planned by the Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce. It will be at Ralph's Furniture Mall, 18375 Euclid Ave .. FO\lQ· bailcally the same as her 1980 bill (AB 2081), which never made lt out of committee. Oct ... , 14, ... .., .. ._,,., ewra. c..trfll._. ....... .._ .. C.ltt.nlLe, _... • ......,... -...... 111 .... •Dkll01M9!•1 .... ,......,....,......, ............. _. 14. Oele • ....,....--.r, ......... . I .... ~., td ........... , .... ....... ,......... ............. 1 .. I -• ., MM emc:llli.. I Mft le¥1M -..... rttM. '" .. --!Mer ..... .. .. ,....,_....., Ill .. ,,....,., 111 llM C-y .. ~ ........... .. c.i1 ... 111a .... 11 ............ : OBITUARIES PU14't P..-tltNct Or~ Coetl Dell~ Pllol. OK. 16, U, JO. 'I•, J ... 6, 1 .. 1 SOol~ l l a NOW ·y~ ate now" la UM, Mlf awa rf'nu• by word of teacb., Darien Oawaoo tie say11o lt'a an .-1i1u llRd mutivatlon b1ttld.-r ftep Robert Badham will make a Mr~ of appearances Thur..t.1 and Frid•)' durtn1 • quick trtp to the-Or•nae Coul'a .OCh ~reuional District feocn ·Wa1hlnlton, D.C., where the Ne wpon e .. ch Republican was s worn In Monday as a me mber uf lht1 '7th Conareas. -taln Valley. ••• STATE DEMOCRATIC Party Chairman Richard J . O'Neill of San Juan Capistrano will be lhe ~pHker Thursday al a dinner mee ting planned by Orange County Young Democrats . Mrs. Ber1eson says her measure would exemrt any houain& development th• meets local atandarda from provisions of the 1976 California Coastal Act. The assemblywoman says lhe state Coastal Commission has abused ils powers by threaten- ing to deny building permits lo developers unless they ~rovide AL .............. lfl Mill le Let 7t 111 Trecl Ne ....... .,._ M •...., recardMlll ..... t•. ~ U lo 1' 111· clu•h••. Mltul'-Mee6. recar4" of N ici Caul'lly, crwe1• 11y • certain IMM 4"• -'-"* IS, , .... •ucuted lly Ille 1rvl11• Co'"peny, • Wut Vlrtlllle CerlllO' .. IOft, as LHIOr elld H...., It. Mwcllhon, Jr. 8lld Luci• M MurcllllOll. llulo...ct alld wife•• tolnt tenen(1, H ~. r«...-ct Mey U, ltM In ._ .... paee *· Offlclel PUllUC NOTICE PICTITIOUS 8UllNISS NAMI ITATEMINT l he 10(1-lng per'°" i• clolnt bu•• neu •\ ftt•• .. •I• t\.,lt• t't•t•o•t~l l•t •t.~ltl.He,IS..r'-"••t t ftf l•t At ll 45 a .m . T hursday, Hadham will speak at the As· !lodullon of Nuvul Aviation huwhl'l»I ut the Los Alumitos Arnu.'d Scr v1t·cs Center . M AND II OEVELOPMENt HJ1 B•V\hor• Orivt. flttwport 8 t•cn , C•litorn1• 92'13 ~t.tfhA1 Wt .. ··~ •ftlttOfl •' ,,,_. ,_,hp\ Wt\w i>f ...... W>R•IU•'J Roborl 8•Ut 0 Ht!tl •P. 7831 8•y\hore Or he, N•WpOrl ft••< h, C•lllornla '1'1 .. ) • '¥'• •• , • t.. ._.,,_ t•i•4•t> Oral• \tUir .. • 1.IU (.Olltt ,, \ I I< I I 11 1.11 ~.111111( ...... ,, ,,., .. ,, ... , ·vi I I u11t 111~11·11 111 " h ( 1 f'J._.,,,, .~ ,, •II L111u.u \ t l~l 'u \ \I ti 11\ t.1 \\lit " II • ,,, •I "' "I• I I ·"''' \l.o r lo. I 1 • 11111 I t lnl ht I d ,l 1t1 11\ I"' 'llJ\ I llHI II\ 1. I'll• I " II -'''''" '" I 1"11'\I 11111 •111•\I ... •I Mll'\I 1(,, ..... \ '' 111 h.: 111 Id •I " Mt I ' \I \1,1 · ,,1 \ 111 1•11,llo l\1111,ol \\Ill lo. · , I •l " 11 11 ,. •I 11 , "d ,1 ' I 11111.111 ; J'Oq 11 Ill IHI \ \I ,II .... , 11.111.1\ • 111 111 ,. 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')4() 5554 f'IHCI llOTHHS llUHO.t.DWAY MOlTU.t.IY I 10 Broadway Costa Mesa 64?-9150 IALTl llllGHOM SMITH & TUTHILL WISTCU" CHAf'll 4U E 171ti St Coi;1<1Mei;a fl4fi-QJ 7 1 P9HCIAOTMHS INl'ntS' MOITUAIY 627 Main St Huntrngton Beach ~38·6539 . .... , ...... , CCX.ONA&. PVMMAL HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 r•c..c ••w ...., •• Al, ... Cent.tr MOl'tu•rv Chepe1 3500 Pacific V1~ Ort >1e Newport leech 844·2700 c -.11111h ,\ 111111111 \\1·--l\'1111 I 11,q.,l \<1 111 111•1 ll.11111 \1 11111 t1I I ht• \ '' •'"'UHi I \llh• 1.111 I 11111 " 1( ..... "" l'd·\ \111'1" 1111111.11111,,; JHftll1hlll ti FH1t1,1\l'fl \1 1 t1 111,d I'.••" "-•·•' ", ... ''"I· I '"' "". t 111•11 "' II.ill / l\••~··11111 "11111h ,1,. l111lilll \\•'I I 1111 I 11.opd \loot! 11.11 \ i tf t '11.,.I ti \lt'',I t• lf1 't.f, ' 1.11. 1tLI I'\ rt t H:-41~ 1~1·1·11· llWI \\JI l'\I ·~11-.11\ 11111111•!1 1 111 \,"I"" I 111-.1111 11.1-..,.·.t ,I\\ .ol .l.111 /.~ .ti ll··~•i.: "•'IUJ•n,il I l•o)<pil.11 ll••lll ~•'l•I I. l !llli.il \111 11·1" '11...1.ili11111.1 tk~1d .. 11t l'f I lt .lff,&!'\ \ 1 •11111 \ ,11·,.,1 :-UH'\' i '1111• ~Ill \ I\ o·d II\ II ti t• if1'.lll'll'1• l'.1111·1 · ... 11 .11111 ""It ,l\'llt"' I. l'.111,·1"111 td l'l,1n·1111.1 1· \ 11111• l11•uthl'r l'.111 11 I. 111·111 I l'.ol lt-i "Ill 111' \111 I II \ \ "•'I \11'1• II df )I,• lr,·ld \\ 1·tl .l.111 , I .1111 '\1 ,ti \I 1•1111111 1 :.1rtl1•11 \l,·11111r1.ol l',•t ~ \\t11l\l.tl' 111,1 \I l\•11 II ol 1111·.1 11111·11111·111 11111 '""''" \1 1•ttll<I\ 1:.11tl1·11 \J 1•1 I ti.II \ I >11 <'l'IPI' .1:.'~I ,l!lti I KO~:-.! 1;11 \n: \C~'\~:s Jll)SSL ;J , ,.,1tl1·n1 111 (""I.• ~lt·~a lt1r II 111111111t ... p:i"'t•tl ·'"·'~ J an I Sh• '" :.un 11 .. .i h1 :S :.nns . .1 ... q >h l' Hu~""· ~i'ucl Frank 1· H1t"H• holh ur 1;('11rg1:1 .11111 IL" 111111111 \ l'an•lla. 1ir l '"'"' \Jt.,:i I'\''' <la111:1t1,.r,, \1 ;11 l!t11·r111· .\ 1 •1·S1111ont» 11r I 't" I .1 \lt .... i :111d l 'haf'lt'l ll' ,\ 11111111..., ·"''' 111 ('t1sla .\)(•s:o .i nd . 11 I!• ;111tlt'h1lt.frc11 Thl' 11•11 t.1ttt111 111 t he ll·ilY 1(11'.tl I \\ill ht• hl'Jd \\'t•tl ,' .l.111 7 ,ol i l'.\l al St .luhn 'I ho· ll.1J1t 1._1 l'a lh ol1c· t'h11 1·1•1t ltw1u1t•rn l\1a:-~ \\'ill lw ,,11;) Tlt11r., .• l<m R a\ !I :111 \\I :ot SI .Juhn Tht• 11:11111,1 1·:11 h11l11 C'huri·h ( ·11,t.1 ;\)lo,,1 l11l1•r1111•111 \\Ill I 11• .I I 11 .1 .. Ii II ' I. ·' \\ II \l1•111•1t 1.1t 1':11 k \'11-.1;i ~lt·:>a . I'\ St'I 111·1·-. 11111k r I ht• d 11 1·1 111111 , 11 I b rli11r I.a\\ n .\11111111 111111• ~T 11 rt11arv ~fll •,: •. ·.1 \ Deaths Elsewhere LONC: BEACll <AP> David Lynch, an original mcmbt>r of The Pl alters, ont' of the most s u cces s ful s ingi n g ~ roups or the 1950s, died Frida y of c a~ce r . Among the grou 's hits were "Only ou," "Smoke Gets In Your Ey es," "My Prayer " a nd "The Gr e at Pre tender.'' Al 7 :so pm Thurs d ay , Uullha111 1~ s l ah'd to s peuk bdorc the Lei s ure World Hcpublll'un Club in Clubhouse l J I l.d~urt• World, Laguna flills Tht>n. on ft'riday. Dudhum will appt•ar at lht• Rt.•puhlic"Un As ~ 11 l' 1 a·t t' s · C o n ~ r c s s 1 o n H I l.11rwht•o11 at lht~ Si:ufdlt'bac·k Inn in Sanla i\rw It s turts al noon At 4 :_,that aftt.>rnoon. he 'll be 11n hand fo r an open huust' al lhc d I s I r I <' I O f f i r t.' s 0 ( A s !>-t.•m bl v w o m an Mur1 a n llt.1r )lcs111). H Nt.•wporl Ht.•at•h. Ht l ~•OU l'il mpus l>rivt•, Nt•wport 1h•ad1 The gathering is schc.-duled for 7 p .m. at the tlunKry Hombre Hest auranl In c;arden Grove, but you don't huve to cut to hear O'Neill's talk on wha t lies ahead for the Democratil: Party in California, a crording to J im flayes. a s pokt•s m an for the Young Democrats • • • AS PROMI St:I>. /\~ se mblywoman Marum lfrrgc~11n has introdun>d lc•.:1sl allhn I hal would restr ict the !.l a k Coastal Commission's authority ovf•r af fordable housinJ{ T h l' O r a n g l.' C '' a s l lkpubl kan's m•w hill, /\U lf>4 , is Nation due , f new 'slump' Ry THOMAS D. ELIAS Another rc•t•ession will be upon the nation Soon, al'l'Ording to most reliable business for ecasters. Bui as in lht• last two large business slumps. Californift won't suffer nearly as much as other areas . low cost housing. • • • • STATE SEN. JOHN Schmitz, R-Newport Beach, has been ap- pointed chairman of a commit· tee that wUI process proposed amendme nts lo the s t a te Constitution. The committee was reinstated a s a state Senate panel this year. Sc hmitz remains as v ice chairman of the Senate In· dus trial Relations Committee. lie also sits on the Senate's Banking and Commerce and Elections and Rt'apportionment committees. PUBLIC NOTICE ,,CTITIOU$ austNEU NAME STATEMENT Th• 1011ow1n9 perwn\ dH' dOtnQ b\i\H\e\., • ._. JOJOBA LA NO AND OEVEi.OPMElfr' CO. 3?'12 Falkland Cr , Hunlonqton Buth, Ca '76'9 Tltome\ C. 'Wmplt, 1?'17 Falklano Cr • Hunllnqton ~e<h, Ca 926•9 W11114'm O Ourrn •11.tO La \ V•Oltr1tM, 1Pf'twti<..ut•, (.d tf1J90 _ Tn 1\ bY\•~\\ 1\ conduc-ff'd bV a qeorw.r•I CMr1nrr\h1i,1 • TomS,.mph• Thi\ \tal~I wa\ hied with ltw (ounh (lf'U of Ordn~ (ountv on eec~mbt~ •• ,_ Publl\hfd Or•nOt" (04\I O•llY P •IOI De< 13. JO, I'll() Jan '·I) 1q11 Sl1•80 ~PUBLIC NOTICE . 1tecor4", 8lld ••recorded Oecemller U, 1'11 )n llooll ......... '49. Offlclel 1 ltecor4". 8lld _...., lly en l111tru· I -nl elated _,_..., 7, ltn, tecordecl I Nowem-14, 1'72 In llooll IOIU, P-493, Offlclel lhl(orch. co...-y kllOWn .. ,. LlllCI• ·~··· I City ol Newport a .. cll. County of 0• ...... 51 .. eoACetlfornl• I. NOTICE IS H£1tE9V GIVEN 11141 9" TuOd•y. January 13, '"'· •• ? 00 o'clo<11 p.m •I ,.,..,, of Courtllou ... Thi\ bUSlnM• I• conducled DY .. ,, In· d1v1du•t ROO.rl Bruco Htll•P Trui \t•t•ment w•' lilea with the Counly Clerk of Oren~ County on Ooumw• 23, "'° 1'1Ut0 Pvbl"N!d °'""111' COiO\I D<t•lr Piiot. CHt JO, l'llO, Jan •. I), 'Xl ,_, Slit eo PUBLIC NOTICE ..01 J-• 91...r , Chy of Newport Buell, County ot Oren ... Sl•I• ol . C•lllornl•. I will \ell ., public •uclion l'ICTITtOUS •USINESS to IM lll9fl!HI bi-r. lor <•'11 on lawful NAME STATEMENT money ol ttw United Stelet, •II IM fho 1011-1no .,.....,,. " <loollQ bu\1-•ltlll. 1111• .,., lntere>t of \•Id 1uot· "" ,., ment -or In ,,,_ -w dHcrlbed TORESCO 1160 Nlonrovo•, A-4. pr-rly, or \0 much thereof as m•y Co\1• IN<e. C. 91411 ~ n«eswry to Wli•IY \<llO •MCullon.1 M1thffl l Sw•lm, J?O 1111 St wilh •ccrued l"lerot •"" CO\I\ Hunlln9ton O.•<h, C• 9764 Oated O.C-r S. t• Thh bu.,,,..,,'' conducted ov .tn In Dl•l•lon· Harbor 21v1dual DONE RHEA, Michael L Swaim Mer"'411. or ... QO County Tll" \IAt•m""I WA~ toled Wllh '"" By B Smith, County Citro al Or~u~ County 011 llANDA~T;HlltMAN Oecemwr 17 '* FUtSOO Ptal11tllf'IA-y PUOlo\roe<I Otdl'lqe C<M•I 0doiY Polol '" N•---' c:.-on... De< 16, 7J. JO, l'lllu, Jan 6, 19111 ,~ ... -N•• ... ,, IMecll, CA '1 ... PNlte! 1714) ... 1031 Publl\lled Or-C.,.\I D•ily Pilol, o,t '~ 13. JO. 1'!90, Jan b, 1'1111 4q~ I &O PUBLIC NOTICE H·1MIS CEllTll'fCATE 01' •USI NIESS UNDEll l'ICTITIOUS FlllMNAME Tht undrlfr\1Qned 00 f\ertDy t •rHfy th•1 ,.,,..., ftrt condut h nq tt rt•I ~\t•1r dt1J1~•op,,......n1 bl.l\i+''ll!\\, •iU\ P'•nt •o•• place of bu\•nen al tSOO Ad•m' A v~. ::)\S. C.0'\'-4\ Mf.w . (a11torn1aq2'1' un dtr the ftet1t1ou \ firm nctmt o f TOWNE '10U'>E PLAZA end that woo t.rm t \ • L•m•ted P•rtnet-"'•C> tom po"W"O of tf'lllP. lollow1nq 1Gener •I a na L 1m 1ttd Pa rtf'W:',. •hO.,_ ".,.,.."\ •nd pl•c• of re'\1dff'te •r• •\ follow\ to ..... PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU$ aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Ttlt t0Unw1nq per~ '' dou'IQ bu~• nt"\\ b\ CIRClE SALES. 111 Ocun Ave .. • '74 Hunl1nq000 Beo>eh. C• '126"8 llolJoorl E Wooch. MS? Do,.ell Or . Hunllnqton Boetn Ca '1264' 1 r'I•\ tkl'al ..... \) I\ ConduCh"'Cl bV ctn '" d1v10u•I AOllt'•t F Wood\ T h1\ \ttllt-mif'tH w•o, filed w ith lht tuunh C.•,.,~ ot Oran91? t ounty on 0,.<flm~r 1q 1990 l'IS1M 'Pubh\ht<I °'""90 (C»\I O•oly Polol Dec 13. lO. 19'0, J1>n I>. 13. 19111 Sl71-80 PUBLIC NOTICE That's a contrast to the situation of 10 years ago, when every minor national slowdown hit harder in this state than anywher e else. l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS Gefter•I P•r1,_, What's happened to give. California its new immunity from the worst effects of economic dips·~ THREE •·ACTORS, ALL intertwined , work to the state's adv!!ntage. Ironically. one of these is norma lly C'onsidcred California's leading consumer problem. Most important of the anti-s lump ele ments in California is the slowdown in population g rowth. All through the 1950s a nd 196()5, frenetic mig ration to California led lo a "soft" labor for<'e, with many \. SOl 'THF.R~ C.\Llf'OR~IA FtH:l lS pe ople doing seasonal work or no work al a ll after moving here to take advantage o f now - reformed welfare regula- tion s t hat were less stringent than in othe r s tates. That population jlrowth has s lowed, coming c loser than before to matching the state's in- dus t rial growth. This m eans there are jobs for most new arrivals. and solid ones al that, jobs not likely to disappear a t the first slight dip in the na· tional economy. "Unemployment will be lower in California than elsewhere <during the coming recession >." said Larry Kimbell. director of business forecast- ing models for the UCLA Graduate School of Management. "partly because we don't have the influx of people wt' did in the 1960s. They can't come here beci:tuse they can't affOl'd the price of housing here." AP wu .. ..,,oto Lo•P•bfd NAME STATEMENT l fOWNE '10USE PLAZA. INC I• T ht' •oHowH'U~ peorwn\ are Oo1no I t al1 torn1• CMP<>'•llonf noo Ad .. m\ OtJ\1nt!io'\ •\ A'lff • :: J 1S (O'\I• Ml"\6 c .. 1,1orn1~ PACIFIC PllO MAINfENANCE •1611> CO ,~· GrHnV'll~. W~\tm'n'-lf'f, '-• 1 (6'tJttff!f\(.f' J Sarti. "' •7413 I > Geo•~ v NO••"~" G•ry LM CJchul1, Q 1 Gretnv1lle. Ltmit• ~~rt!Wf\ Nf\tmtn\tf'r. C• 92fAJ t Robert P Cr.ant-1'61 A,c h<tttl,. Kim Rttd P•rtl~r. 1~7 S Jame\ I Road Enc•no. (Ahforf\ta Or•n9~1C• '2666 ' P.-tfW l C.1<!lcc10 T, tor C.1•cc1n Thi' bU\t~\\ 1\ conductf'l'd bV " Famllv Jrv\I P O Bo,. 1&11 Cul "'"'' Qf"nt.', .. ll)drlner\h1p City Calltorn1d l107l0 Garo; L Schutt ) R1t"d'O T AtPrblOm tolf Norin '"" ,,.,,PfTHllf11 Wiit\ f!l('(j w 1t" ,,.,.; S d ltd 1f AvP"u t• L O\ A n Qt-l f"'> County (ltt'lil of O'tt"Ot (f'Vt'llv on (;.litor n1.-it QM'I Novnntwr ?• 1980 JO"" J Ai..ttOlom ti;.tt I Udn1tdf\ FOOUS Roao, lo\ ATKJPLt"'\, C.altf<>rn1a ~.t9 Pubh"ihe-d C>an(Jll {o.&\t Ottily Pt•Ot W' TNfS~ nu• \1Qnatu1 l'\ ot Utt• Of"t 13, 30, 1qeo, Jdo b iJ til81 \111 80 Ctn'"r1'1 Pd"""'' 1n1\ ''' d3V of 0« 1or>«.•r 1m 10'WNF HOUSE l'ICTITIOUS aU$1NESS NAME STATEMENT rn .. 1ouaw1no Pf'''°" , .. dn1t'tq t>u'' M \'\ ., BEAOWOll K'> 81A 'W lbth '>I to,1 a MPw. Ca .,.,, M 4r\tt• M V~lh~r 8'4 W lt.th SI (o,ta """"' Ca ~n11 "'"bu,,,...,, t .. cnndu<t~ bf""'" ct1v10u•I Md,,t\(t v,,11,,., rnt\ '\1d1Pm• n l Wd\ • h!Ni yrr,11ti lhP ft>un1y (l .. dt flt Ot.-1n~· rovntv IH'~ o~v·mh;•r ·~ 1tf80 Puo11,,....n Or1tnq.:• foa\I P1-HIV 1111ot D•t /l 'Iii 1'11lf), J~,; ~ IJ 1'•81 ~0..1 HO Pl'Rl.ll' NOTl(.'f: Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, former New .J (.'r S l'V Teamster boss cmi- v ict ed in 1978 of the murder of Anthony Caslellilo in 19f>\. lost his bid for a new trial in New York's appeal wurt. P llH!-IC' NQTICE PU.ZA oNC FICTITIOUS llUSINESS PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 9USINESS NAME STATEMENT r h~ totlow1nq pPr\On I\ OO•nQ bU\f FICTITIOUS 8USIHE!.!. NAME STATEMENT l>u\lr<u .. ,_~ _...., f AC llSSOCIAI ES 1081) L~ ftf\t•''" f Guntdm VdllfOV Caltlo,n1rt l>lot Amo' StJh•O 1~7) l d 8at•\td f oun111n Vdllt>y Cttl1h1tn•ct .;7108 nP~\ tt~ '"'' '>'-'""-..'' ... t onliv• 1 ... n n .. an 1n (, E 0 AG E H II 0 8 I NS 0 N ~·••Oudl ENTERPRI SES, 111 C.old~nroo At'lO\'>IP"O •v~nue, Cot"ona OPI Mi.tr . (4h forn1t• fh1\ ''·''"'r'n'Ml' ,,.,.tt\ t1lt>d yri.ith lh..-9141S County Cf..,rk nt OranQ~ (01.mh on Geor9e H Ao b t n\On ?ti 0.•f"U""'bt'''l~ t~ Goldfnr-Od ~wnur '°'~ .. Oftl MM FUU1' Catiforn1a '161S Publ1\,,..d Otdn~ (Od't 0 dn , Pilot Th1\ bu\1ntt\ 1\ conduttt-d by an 1n o .. t lO ,-., Jttn 11 IJ 1n tQ"tf ~llli sr d•1J1•dual ~rQP H AoC>1n\Ott ff\1\ \t•t~mrnt wa-. t1tf'd with ""'' County Cler-. of OranQf' C.ounty o" Of;ot_fllm~r lb, l'MO PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS aUStNES$ NAME STATEMENT l'IUJ.JJ Publ"Md 0.•nq> Co•~I Odoly P•IOI. Dec )Q, \980, Jan h, \) 10; '"' \10t 90 The 'tollowinq J)4"r\on\ "'~ do1nq a C...tolor<llrl Coop NAME STATEMENT \ L.lwr~nr ,,. I Sorto f "" lollow1r\Q ~r\On '' do1nq btJ\1 p.,..,.,,Ofonl l"'' 6 \ " \M.dr"'t lou•\f" Sort HAWAII TAN A !.PA. 8CJ0/ Wdr rw-1 Y.uttar f Av.. Sv•I,. 119 Hunt1nq1on 9,.d," (d l••r~nr_. J Sod1 9?64/ GeorQllP V J'llO'Jlt•off I( 1unq J~ Honq llJ1 Oor\ett Dr Pvbll~hl'G c>t\l"IQIP (o.t\I Otttly P i101 "44'nflnqlon Bt•a<h Ca '1&.tb O.l l& 11 --.:>. ''*·Jan 6i , .. , \O\' 90 l "'' bu\H"•t'-' "conouctMI by an in P i.'Bf.I{' NOTl('E STAT EMEf<TOF A8•HDONMENT OF USEOI' FICTl1'0US 9USINESS >jAME f l"lt t OllO•"'Q Of'''°"°" h,\Jt dlM" d?'l~a 1~ "'" .,, ,,.... r I flt-ow• Ru'\ nt""i>\ Nttt'l'W" •N'>V ll»,..<f r,i>OuP ~EOV fC f S ~10 Nt wflil'I ( .. ,,,,.., O••Yt>-Su1flf> •m "'" wrrp0rt ft..,.,.,,, r .. .,,,,.o ,,, .. F l(tll1110'-bt,.;\•nt-\\ N .. m,. , .. ,f',,P\) 1C> .tb(.;., ....... l1h'() '" OtM'I~ • C ()uMy on At.>qv-..1 l1 11J61) Oor\rHd M Ttcpt'lrt U 111 V•it Oh,.OU~I "'';'U'°"9 Jd HOf\g ,. "~' '-t.ttf nwnt .,.., ••lt<I ""'''ti ltw Count¥ (If',., ot OrAnQf" (t1ur'\t t on Q..lt ,.mo.1 t4J t980 l'U1'11 Pvbli\ ... d C>df\(}P (0., .. , Det1ly Pilot ot'< 1l JO 1"90 J~n o l) 1981 SI 19 l!O Pl'BLIC NOTICE FICT1TIOIJ5 8U!.>NES!> NAME STATEMENT ',, •• IOlh')WIMQ .,,..., 4.0'1 " dt'llOQ ""''' "'"'' '" (I EC IECH SVSl EMS & SUP PO~f t/\i\S SkJP,_,,. C•rt l .. OhJQ JI[ '' v1flt" (..tl1forrntt "'11" bU\tnl'H ., THAT'S THE SECOND AND MOST ironic of Pueuc APPROACH seR111cEs. PUBLIC NOTICE 1010 N &.tt•.ia. Su•I• C. · 0'""9" Co,<.toi;a Nf'lfJlfPC'H't Bt-tt\" Cf\ <f1Md R'l0tr1 W <..1,.mo •118 P,mbu ry f'iAC .. F l1r'll'1~ (,\ Q 101 I Wlll1dm ~ M.a't1n, /00 N MdllrHC1 ..;. t 0 , dnQI' l ttl1fnrn1,. 41b61 California's anti-recession t.rails. As long as hous· ca ., .. , , ing prices stay high, the population influx will s tay E•lc J.-pt1 Chintulld. ~•1 K•ron l'ICTITIOUS atJSIHEH SI , Sant• An•. Ce '12104 rela tively low and so will unemployment. Even NAME STATEMENT hrry l" C•OOI(. ,.,, Pf'C\ham firms that want to hire employees have trouble H .. 1011ow1nv ,.,...,,, " 0o1nci bu•• "1. Fu11enon. ca '12UJ M \\ a\ Thi\ bu\tMU f\ conduCtPd bv • recruiting them from OUt Of State because Of those O 1 !. r INC 1 I YE 0 EN T A I QtMral pe,,,_,,,,p prices. !.ERVICES, l TD.•• Tow11·eno Goun Eri< J c111n1uno /\ d h h . h h Irv. Oran91', CA 926'8 Thi\ ····-· We\ lilfd .... ,. ,,... f"'' bu\•fW''J'" wa\ condulttld by a Qf'nt"t al p4rlrwr,'1tp Oonalo M 1 •PPl'll Jr T n1!. .,tclttm~1 "¥A\ , •• Ml 'IOlh fhP Counly Cieri\ of 01M\Of' Cnun1-1 on Ott,.""~' q tQffO 1'104104 f ,,,, hu4.1(1ft\\ it:. t ondu• t1•d ov .ln •n ;j1Y1Cllittl W!lhrtn\ te Mdffrn J h1\ \ldtrn"'"' lllWd\ fflf'd w ith tht'l tourtlY Cit''" ot Orange Counh on o.,,..,.,.,tHr s ,__, F tSOllO PuDti\fw'.d Ot dnot Cod,, 0.tHlf Ptlol. IH< JO. l'llQ,J dM" ll, 10 ••61 111• 80 n t e lg er interest rates go, PUS ing the Harold Nt',,.,.,11, D.O S, 1102 Nor th County Cit•-ot Or•nqoo Countv on PROVIUENCE, H'.I. nation into one s lump a fter another, the higher R16Q., .. ooc1s1 .San1on•.cH1101 o..cem1>t1><1S,1'80 ( ~ E rn.1:e:.;s:u..l_,E.,.__C....,a .. l"'iC~om.ia housing prices rise,--reinforcin1¥-f:tttl"-l'ilf.._+0,..,1J;-~'~.':""~-!i.!..onOU.ueoJt~•.o""n PURI.IC NOTl('F. R y d e n , 9 4 , a h y mn tors that make this stale less subject to recessions. HMOIO N•""'"· o o.s Th h. d b' . . f l h • h Tiii\ ,,.,..,_, .,., lflfd wotll I,,. w ril e r . Lu l her a n e t 1r 1g anti-recession ac or ere 1s l e county Cl••-01 0, .. ,,'11' countv on minis ter and editor of nature of the slate's two biggest industries, Of!c•mbt•" 1..0 the c hurch pe riodical agriculture and defense. Seasonal fluctuations an.d Puou.-s 0r-, .... 0•1~'~,: · · T h e L u l h e r a n weather proble ms will always afflict agriculture , o.,c n. lO. "'°·Jan'· u. ·~• s11 .. o 0 u t I o 11 k d i e d but the re will also always be a ma rket foF the beef, Thursday. C'Otton. riC'e, lettuce and fruits produced here . So agriculture can't suffer the fate of inaustries like motor homes or apartment construction, hard hit respectively by ml price rises 11nd politital pres- GREAT NECK, N.Y. l/\P 1 Eve rett Thurne r, t he poster child publicity director of the Nationa l March of Dimes for 24 years, died l"riday at his home after a lonJ{ illness. ANNAPO LI S , Md . \/\P I He nry Rau, ow nt~r or R11u Ra dio Station s ln C'., died Friday at his winte r home in Naples, F'Ja ., a s p o k esm a n f o r the company said. sures. D EfENSE CONTRACTORS a r c even m ore immune from re<'essiona r y pressure. especia lly in the n e w cons t'rvat1ve political climate. No m atter what happ•Jns to the na tional economy, the defense buflget will rise That will produce more con trac ts and more jobs for California business. In the brief r ecession predicted for early 1981 as a result of December 's swift interest rate escalations. Californians once aguin will be better off than othe rs Wages in the state will increase almost 2 per- cent more than elsewhe re this year. while un· employment will be almost 2 percent less than na- tional aver ages, according to UCLA's business forecast. ll<~using and autos should be about the only in· dustries here that are hard hit by the renewed s lump. That's because they are most directly sensitive lo interest rates. PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAMESTATIEMENT lhfl: loltowlnq ~r\C>n 1\do1nqbu\1~"' a• BEACH TI ME R£ALfY. )18 Ma<tnt A1J1•nur-. B•lbO• '''•nd . C•l•forn1d91661 .G~raldlM Elalnfll s,>rino\IOn f'6 cor,•I A _.fflUP. Ba~ l\tftnd (.,tllfornlA 91 1 hi\ bU\1n~\\ I\ c Oflf'IV<-h•(t bY ,\n if\ di'l•duat G~rrl' SprtnQ,tt)f'I Thi\ \tdtenlf"fll w"' fd1"<1 vrttlh tnt' countv Cl"'~ or Or"nQf' C ounly nu Df'tPnil:>Pr?t,,1fHIO f'IUJll PuDh\~d °'""Of' Co"'' 0~1ly Piiot Ot<.30.1_,,J.,, b, tl.XI, 11161 '9<1 911 PUBLIC NOTIC E ~ICTITIOUI aUSINllS NAMI STATIMIHT l 11• IOll-1119 .,.....,., I\ clolnci bu\I ,...,, ., !.MIL[ SHOP ll!W Smile SllOpl, UJ Fo,.\I A.,.n.,.., l •tuna e .. , ... C•lllornl11 '16~ I Judy Andrade 111190\IH, l<K ""9l1lo _.._~ Tiii\ bu\lnt!" I\ :llYldua l )Ult'( --~·"''" PUbh"""' Or•ntt Coast D•ll• Pilot Dec U, 30, t'llO. Jen 6, IJ, "ti SI 18·90 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS a1.tSJNISS NAME STATE MINT The fo!IOWl"Q ffr\on \ .,,. doln9 bu\lnP\\ •\ BE AUT IFUL NAILS . 61S Pevl4trino. Co'\t• M•'•· C•liforn.• ,,.,. Arlllur LYOll\. 1"31 CMt .. Hh, 11unllF\(llon &.e<h. C•lllornle t?•• Cenclec• Lyont, 1"31 ClleWPHkt, Huntlnqton 8-eth, Celllornla tH4' Thi• bu\lnen h <ond .. ct..i by • oenor•I INl'1Mnlllt Arthur M Lyon\ Thi\ st .. ..,,..,t WM llled Wllll lhP Co1111ly Cler-ol O••nte Counly on O.c•mller n, ,.., '""" PuOll"'" Or ... Cou t Deify Pllol. WAL NUT C REEK (AP ) Doa1l•s Ha y den, a vet~ran detective of Pacific Telephone Co. who used lhe utility's resources to aid police in some of C alifornia 's m ost fa m ous crimes, died Dec. 29. Hayden was credit ed with trapping the kidnap-slayers or depaclmellt-... ior.. het•- Brook Harte In San Jose ln 1933 by uUU1lq new high -speed tracing equ\pm~. But California -long a haven for "have.nots" wanting a new start -now looks lncreasinaly like the home of America's "haves." Tiii\ tl•t-1 o"nty Cl••• ol O.umller 10, 1• PlllM Oe< "· n . 311, '"°·Jen •. "" 5041-40 Me8811 excels Andrea L. Taylor dau1bter of Mr. and Mrt. David L. Taylor, 2111 Bluebird Circle, Coa\1 Mesa, bu been named to the dean's Uat for aclldemic ncelltate' •t Wheaton Coll•••· Wbeatoa,W. . 1 Elw u a column••t bcu~ m Santo Monica). Tape tells feelings SALT LAKE CITY <AP) -It waa the laat meetlnc of tbe Salt l,Ake County Commluloa for Commlulanen WlWam ff~ and ·Robert Salter, and at the end Chairman WUllam Duu ••ked If tbe7 had any commenta. 1 Salter did . He turMd oe a Wpe reearder that plaJld a popular cauntrJ·.,....,. MDI with &M nfrm, "Take t.bla job llld •bo•e It, I ala'& ~. here no more." Mu. 1udlmce laqlMI, Salter Mu.ed a cap with u.. .... tt. ' Pwll-Ot-, .. ,, Delly Pllel, ---------- l6,1J.JD. 1• 1 ... •· "" !CMO• 1 PUIHJC NOTICE PUBLI<' NOTICE -·---" ·-~ PICTITICIUI IUtl N811 ... lfAHlllll"T TM hll-lflt ,.. .... It delllt butl· .~~C,llONIC INT lllOUf, 1600 . ~-~rw, N,.......,1 h•<ll, C• . J Mart, w11 .. n, 1 ... w. Ocu " ,,..,,, N-1 lletNll, C•· 9*J Tiii\ MIN" I• 'en-lw llV en '"· ..... , MartyWll- '"'' ~I -111• wltll IN ffllly (_. tf °' ..... CeWftly o.ce111•r" ..... P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aU51NE S$ NAME STATEMENT ff'!~ follo.'lnQ s:w<50't IS do1ri9 bU\1· nt!'\\ ,,. OAN C.llBERT INvESlMENTS. l3'o E lllh SI C°'I• -·• Ca '121111 O•"'•I C.••~•1. J1n OrM'11'•ood Avt . LO\ At•motO'>, C. '0110 Thi~ bu\"'~SS , .. conctuctro bY a n tn d1Y1Ch.l•I Oain"t G•lbttt Thi~ \l..tP""Hlt w•\ f1tf<I w1I,., '"'~ County Ctrrli. o• OranQiP CountJ' on D•<tml>tl>r 11. ,.., · l'Ut-Pubh•lled Ot.,,~ Cool D•oly Pilot 0.< i.. 2J. lO. 1'90. J•n 6. 19111 4949 eo P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUI 8UM•HS NAME STATEMENT Tr.. IOll-1119 ,,..,..,.. I• 001n9 bv•i· "flt H NEWPORT CENTER FOR EDUCATIONAL THlltAPV, JOI M..,,_.I• St., C•te .... c.. "16?7 Her•rl C Gron.•• N. Syc•mor• A .. ., LM ""91tle\. C•. -. Tllit llu\IMu I\ C-t.d lly an •II· dlvldu•I. Tll;t tr.=~· ~119CI wttj; ttw Ceu"ty Clef-of Or~ .... County on 0.<•111•• "· 1• PU"'4 Pllflll~ Orentt Coett O.lly Piiot OK. U, JO, t•. Jeft. •. U, 1 .. 1 '911¥ PUBUC NOTICE "CTmouteu11M .. 1 MAM8 ITATIMAMT · f!Wf .. ....,,...,._ lt...,..bullMll ,,, -- ' • t .. ,. NATION DUco turns • to religion , MERCEO 1 A ~ A da•c" llnuwn for mia l(• str lppe" and X r•led r1m11t·11 hu found n:Uilun Owner Rob (·•mvlit!ll rt1pl1u:-.oe1 the Ctintnl t••rk ()(~ h .. rt' with 111 C'hMi.Uiui r11acht11put. 111ty 1111t hf' hau bHr'I born 1ate1111n "Many peoc1.,1.. n1 MY born •&•In r 1pe:ri~nc·l' t•ampbell. who runi. ltll' Edward Sta1rr •~ ,,,.,1tw 1&I about lhl' !Jul tl I \ r't'IAI ," SIA Ill m•w 1 ·t'ntn 1l 1'1trlt w1lh . "U h•pJ*ftt-tl to mr lll•1ut I.I .)'l'lff IA~() 1 ·v,. bc-t'n vr• 111g for .. ~ ... , 11111 ul lht' bu:-.IOl'!>!> aml Ltu· vpp(•rtuntl.) 111 111w11 d ( 't111·.tt11n n1"htl'luti <tlJ 1~urt'd <"um 1Jhcll 'dlll I n1 oall fur 1l · t(1t'l\lll d K ol.If\ •• 111.1111~tt!r 111 th1:0. ''t!lllr al l'dllfonua l'll.) '' 111 .HldJ,!lllt( th1· C'lu t., Wht<:h W iii ft' .. \Uft' ('h r ''t i.Sii lt\l'll 1j rdlt1J., flllll., and l alcnl 0 1.iht:o. The 11111\ t ir11t U 11 1 lul1 \\Ill I~· l'l•1~cd a n : \\ t'dn .. ~dJ\ d llol "'lurHIJ\ II Jtllll•1llul dtUl l'h iH'l lVI I) Ol t;hL-. Decanter features likeness of pope BARDSTOWN. Ky I AP> A Pope .John Paul 11 tlt'l'anlt1r t!'> bcmg d1)'.tribut1.-d in bourbon coun· try. and 1b 11roducer ;;ays the ftoman Catholic Church will g(•t some of h1~ profits . There·~ no alcohol11· beverage m the decanter tl 1.:onta ms a m aretto syrup, an almond extra ct used to m akt.· arn<1r t·lto ltqut'ur The bollh:. c~ffcn·cl hy M1kl• Wayne L>islilled P rod ucts Cu . :.how!> l'opt• John l'a ul II, his hands in prayer and clres~cc:I in ~old·lrimmcd robes. , M ikc Wayne s <11cl ht' sought a Vatican endor~e­ m enl. but it was <k nwcl twcausc the de canter is a commercial vcnltirl· Tht• 1·hurch said, however , it would aN:e pt an y donations Wayne wished lo 01ake from salt· of lhl· d ctanlcr, he sa id After being told lly pricsLo; that money sent to the Va tican wo uld not rind its way back to the United States, Wayne de cided to donate $10 for each 12 boll.le case s<ild to the local archdiocese whe re the sale occurs The d ecanters sell for $59 to $70, but Wayne would not dis rlose his profit REVEALS in lhe Daily Pilat \. .. ' • QUEENIE '· i , # ·-... Restau rant and Cocktail Lo unge ~' I Ca1ino gete elearanee SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -Anaareementre- leaain" a Tahoe culno from any civil liability in exchanee for droppine a dist urbine ·the· peace charge against a man is valid, the stale Supreme Court has ruled. The 4-3 decision up· h e ld a Santa Clara County Superior Court ruling in favor. or Barney's Club Inc., the South Tahoe Nugget and others in a $365,000 damage s uit file d by Dav id A. Hoines, a ·U n i v e r s it y or S a n t a Cla ra Law ~chool s tu· dent. • Served with Soup du Jour or salad, baked patato. Vegetab4e de Gardiner SUNDAY CHAMPAG~E I I :30 to 2:30 BRUNCH On-the-mall at South Coast Plaza near the Carousel on the First Level For reservations call: 540-8822. PUBLIC NOTICg •te9'"°"'""··· llMMM ITAHMIJfT TIM........._ __ ,,...,..._, ... _ .. : c•A"LINI CONSTltUCTION CO,. Jlf I "•l,,.,er, c .. 1. -H. Ce lllonll•""7 K•ftMlll r>. ,,.._,,,"'· 21• I ·~.C.UMeu. c.tlfonll•t•J1 Tlllt ....,_ It c...-.CtM lly .,, lft· dlv,_..I, 1(-.. ,,...,,, .. , Tlllt .....,._. ... llled wllll tlw cevnty Ciera of o..,... c_, on 'o.ce"'-•. '* '".," Publl""'9 0r.,.. coa•t Dally Piiot, Jan.•. n. JO, 11, "" 1.a1 PUBLIC NOTICE "'CTITIOUI IUllNHI NAMI lTATIMINT Tiie lollowlno perton• •r• doing bu•l,..un: GFI SEltVICES, JUl4 Cooper Cllff Ct .. El Toro, C.lllornl•t:llilll ltotler1 J. -r. "''"' 811•1111«1 C•n'f'On Dri ve , l •g,..n• B••<"· CalllOrl\I• '2'SI D•M i\ H Miiier, JUM Cooper Cliff Ct , El Toro, C..lllornl• '1UO T"I• bll•lneu I• tondu<\•CI by • gentt•l 1NrtnenN o. Rob9r1 J Mo-r TM\ •1•1-1 ••• filed w1ln I ... Countf Cterk of Or•n9P Count, on moy~n\bef' ti. 19'0 l'lff7t• P.,bl•\hld Oren91 c .... 1 D•lly Pilot, Dec ... n . JO, •••>. J•n •. "" S04J.., PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATltMENT Tiie lol'-1"9 pen on h d0.n9 ""'' MU•\ llALUE EXPRESS, 1111~ ~•<" 8hd., H""linQlon 8H <". C• 91641 • Bt" C Comb\, "' ll1<t0t •• :: C 4, Co•I• Mow, C.. 916:111 Tnl\ ""''""'' '' conduct..i ll~ •n •n 01vldu•I • Ben C.CombO ""' •t.1.....,.1 ... , lol"" "'"" IM County Clerk ol Or•nll<' County on J ... u•ry 1, , .. t FIU .. 1 PullllsMd Clren<Jt C...•I Daily Pilot Jan. t., t3, 10, 11, 1 .. 1 · 131).81 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aUSIN£S\ NAME ITATEMENT Tht tolto••"Q ~'~ t\ cto1no bu\t ""'' ., I; ONA, L TO , .. Wol\I~. lr .. nr. C•. •111• £dw•rd H•rold ThOn"lP\On, ~8 Wet\•~. \rvln•. C• '17U Thi\ Ou\fhf"\\ is <.°"'duct~d b?" •"' 1n d111tdu•I Ed••rd H ThQmp-\on Thi\ \ .. t...-nH't w•\ f1lfld w11n the Count v C••r~ 01 OranC)if' Count ;i on J•nvat 1 1. 1911 l'Ul .. S Pul>h\""' o .. n<I" ('.°"" Oa•ly P ilot Jan • 13, >o. 71 l'llt 131·11 PUBLIC NOTl~E ' ' "CtlTIOUl 8USINESS NAME ST.(TEMENT Tht tollowH'M) cwrson •\ 001n9 Ou\1 n•'\ • ., TWI TCHE N \llBES MUSIC. ll10 Met1nt J: 1, S.l\U And, C• 911(14 1 Ed ,..•rd re Mt T•ova rt, 1770 l hi\ bu"I~\\ 1 \ c..onduc tf'd bv d qener•f C)ilrlMf\h1p. • PtJBUC NOTICE ST ATIMIW°' HlM!R>NliilrJrr' O•UMO• "ICTITtOUllUtfHUNAMI r,..,......,. __ ..., .......... d IMuwollllaPk1lta-1 .. .,,..., M•me IEACH TIME "!ALTY, '111 Marl,,., Ne-1 .. ..:,., C•lllorno• '1661 'T ... Fl<Ul*'t lklMMlt N•me ,.. lerred to -.... Ill.., In Or•- C-tyOftJvlYJI. lt7'. 8. J-Mowery, , .. ~ Konvl•I Ct . C~t• Mew, C•llloml•'2'1' Tiii\ bWfW\\ w•\ Condli<led by•" In dlvldu•I 8 )..,,_,, Tiii\ ,......,.nt ••t Iliad wllll Illa Coul\ly Clerk ot Or•ft9't CounlY on O.n m1M1ri., 1• ••"'" Pu1>11.-Or-Ccw\I O•lly Pllol, Dec. JO. tteo, Jan.•. ll, JO, Itel SI~ to. PUBUC NOTICE PICTITtOUI IU .. Nl'U NAME $TATlllll'NT Tl>e lo110Wl"9 .. ,'°" I\ CIOln9 DU\I• PWS\ .,. sue •nd COM PAN V. 1/l01 Ru•\•nor. Ml\\lon lllt jo, C•lllorn•• m 91 G•y•lotne !'>u~ H1ndtr\On, 1ao1 Autsenor, Mlu 1on v•elo. C•liforru• .,.., Ttus Dus1n~\ 1\ t ondwcled b'I •n in Cllvldt1•I ~ .. ...-,'°n lru~ \l•teme-nt w•\ "1t0 wttn thct C.ountir Ctertt ot Or~"9'J tovnh on ·J•n11•r11. '"' 1'1Ut'4 Publ1\hlfcl Or•noe (N\t D•••v P1101 J•n 6 13 10 JI,'"' Ill 81 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS 8USINESS NAME STATEMENT Tf'I~ fOll0••"9 perwn\ ''' do•nQ bu\1ne\~ •~ PACIFIC ELECTROWELO, IU Production Pl•o . Noioort B~•cll. C• tl .. 3 C"•rlt\ E Vlrltll, l3S31 ""'• CollM , 0.... Point, C• 91•1' P•ul F Eldl"91fr, 1~1 8111 -61 , Berke loy. C•. '4110 This t>Y\ines' I'\ condut tf'd b i; a oener•I Plr1twr\1Up C.E Ulrlcl> Tl>ls , .. ,..,,.,,, ..,.,, hl..CS w1t11 Ill• County Cltrk ol O•M~ (ounl• on J•f\u•ry 71 1CJl1 l'IU .. t Put>lt \""4 Or•nor co~nt Odllv P1tot Ji n 6, tJ,.JO, ti, 1'1111 •04 fi l PUBUC NOTIC•: ' ,.CTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEM£NT fhe •oflow1t"Q Pf"'\On " do1nq bu" "•",•~TAL OE~IC.N E NT f I> 1>i/1')[ "> l0'9 8road••Y (O'\fit M,.,. C ~hfl)(n1,t 91&71 Robert f d11MrO Jon,.\ H JO• Broadway. c.oc..t• M""'· (d l•f(lt t'hJ 91611 '"'' bu\•ne,-. ,, c0f\d1.1<t~o nv on,,, dlYIOual DAILY PILOT A I I PVBUC NOTICE --.tCTmausevsrww..--- .. ..-nATH .. •T Tll• , .. , ... ,"" --· .,. d•I ... 11v11 ....... . ll ,0 C I N Y a S.T MENl PAltTNl~I P ..0 t, IW c;.tuy Ori~•. 1Mwp0rt .. ull. C•lllOf'n•• '*' Cll•ltll Wllll-Ktr<ller. TruON of Illa C W IClrcller ''"'' .._, .. June I •• lt71, lilll c;.l••Y Ori ... IMwpOll ._,., Cattfofni•.,.... Tlllt tlnllWU h <Ofldu< ted by e llml-...-tMrlllip OIM ... Wllllam Kirt,..,, Trust .. ..... Gerer•,..,,- Tlllt t.....,_f ... llled Wllh I .. Co\lntv Cler~ ot Or•n91 County Of' J.,.u•ry 1. , .. , PU.._. Lew OfflC09 AONI W, MILLl'lt & CAltLSON kit. 1t9""' T-41MMec.,._-..w.nl New'9rt IN<ll, C.. tH6I Publl\Nd Or ... C...\I D•llY PllOI Ian. •, U, JO, 17, "'' _ I loi·C' PVtlLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS aUSINISS "AMI. ST""f.Mf.NT The toHowtnv per-wn• •r• do•no bu\'""''., CALIFOR NIA STR ESS AND PAIN MANAGEME NT INSTITUTE. 14911 ~r•. Uvun• Hiii\, C•lllorn14 91.SJ Moc hMI H-••CI Co<<.Of an, 1••17 S.r•. L~ Hill\, C•lllorno• •1.SJ Ar l"u' SMldon Dro1. 1401 AP plecr os\ Ln . Hunl1n9t on 8••<h C•lltorn••.,.... l •"Y N1•l'"8 1um. ••s1 Ba<.trro. Lon9 81..:1>, C•lllorno• 'CJIH Tru \ bu\lnit\\ I\ <ondu< ''"" by d QiPn•r•I p.1r-t,,,.,.-sh10 Ml<h•f Ho••rG Cotcorttn Hu\ \t•t~nl W•h hffllld wHh tn~ Count, Clttk ol Oran9f Counly on J•nu•rv l , 1'111 • ,,Sl .. 7 Pul>li\lled Qr.on<!" (o;o\t Oaoly P1lol J•n 6, 13, XI, 11, t'lll IJ~·81 Pl:IBLIC NOTICE "CTtl'ftius BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT l ht touowmo Pf'r..On!-t are dotf\\I l>U\tnt\\ tf\ D'GLANCE' COMPANY lf1o? M•dP•• ~·n~. HunllnQIOn Be•< h, Ld 9'"'41 I· M AL l IG, M D 113~7 Ma°"''' t •ntt. HunllnqtO,, 8f'at '1. (.; 91h41 (, M••vbelle All19. l/]67 M•<lo'•·· 1 •M. Hunllnqton e..arn, Ca q76'1 r ht~ bu\inf"\\ 1\ t ondut h-d by do 1n d1Y1du•I tHu\bM1d & Wife) F M Alloq,M D '"'' ,,.,, ... m~n' w4"" t,tec:J ""'tt' tt\4 (ounly (.ttor lt ol Or.tnQto Ct1unl~ ou Janu•r1 ) tQll F1U .. :l P1_,bf1'f'W'd C>dn.<r C o,.\I 0 11111ly P llrit l•n • n 10 11. 1'1111 1n ~· PURL.I<: NOTl<.:t: F ICTITIOU\ I UStMESS NAME STATEMENT llotiert E Jone• Jr 1 hn ,,.,,.tnt"nt wa\ Ull."d .,.,1,., trtP l ,_,. tvlh')w 1nq l)P• \On .. ,., .... do1nl• (ount~ C1e-r1t ot Orttn9f" (01.;ntt on O'"'",.." d' J•nu••v ~ !'Ill !Hf ~'"'"""'"in, ro ~l 181 l FU2MJ 11\,h .,,,,_..,., {O\la M ....... (. •• 11tornf'a Publl\lled Clr•nQP COa\I Oaoly P•IOl 97•71 -J•n ta. n 10 11. '"' ll& 8' H~a•~~:;~:;' o~.~: \' • ,o~,.~0~~111~:~~~ PUBUC NOTICF. FICTITIOUS llUSINESS NAME STATEMENT 976llO '"'"" ~Ult" RO\\ l•)\I Ht·~ttf'Wttc,>r-O Ort-.it ''''''"• (al1f'lrn•d 'f:&lilO t "'' bU\lt'lt•'-; ... ,.., c On(JuC h •U t\1 • <1t>nl"rtt1 p.ar1twr\h1p IMuonr 11 t, S.nl• Ana, C• 911(14 --1 Ed 1oN. T aqOert Th,.. 1011ow 1,,q Pf'f\("il\ •\ ooin<~ bU\• ,. .. ,., .\ W1ll111rn c Ao'' • Is this how yot1r _bank seesyou? · ----~-"' .. We think you deserve better. · Frustrated? Come to lmperi<tl Savings . We'll help you ;md your money. Our Checking +Interest J>b:tns pay you. · No longer will the funds you de posit in a usual bank checking account fail to earn you interest. You and your money deserve the best. We pay yo u. 51/1% Interest on your checking account bttlance. _Three. plans-are-better than tWO; Some banks offer you two. Othe rs give you no choice at all. We give you three plans to se lect from. Just right for your special needs. Services you can bank on for co~nience • . Convenience l~ke lmperial's WorldWide . ,. Clwc:king with <1 VISA1'; Check CarcJ •• ;mcl Cash f~csc rv1.:•*"'. Check into our Convenience Ca rd for easy identification in an y of our over 100 branches statewide. Longer hours means shorter lines. lmpcrial's hours ar e longer than most banks. Wl''n.· cven open on Saturdays! That's real r onven ience. So if yo ur bank keeps treating you like a number instead of-a person, you de~serve bett er. Come to your neighborhood Imperial Savin~s today. .. Upon Approval of Credit. 1 H Im~rial Savings The bat place fOr you and your money • Coabl Mna, South Coeat Plaza Town Center 3310 Brlltol Street (714) 540-7591 Newport llw:h ~Vie Udo (714) 13-3130 Newport ~..550 NewRQrt.Qenter O (714) 844·14~1 fhh \t•tttTWnt WA\ filed w,lh fh4l Counly Cltrft o• Oran()f' Count1 on J•nu••Y s. 1'111 l'IS1117 Pubh'l'le<I Oran<)t Coe't O••ly Pllol Jan •. ll, 70, 17. l'llt !Al Bl HUNTINC,ION HMHIOA M.All SERVICE. 1"83~ A1QMQt1tn <,t Hun lonqlan 8H <ll, C• ., •• , Judith Curt•\ E1uu , Hd ll W.trm 1n9to n l n . .-tunt1n9ton o .-4(h <a ~76~• Tf'lt\ b1J\1n,....\ I\ l OnthH lt-0 tl't' Jf"I trl f h1\ \fdf"1.-n.-nr 'ftd\ t•H'd w1tn lh•• C.ovnty tltortl ut Ordn~ <:oun1Y ~h ·'''"t'd''f '· ,~~•n FIUlll Publl\hPG OranQf• (t>.l\1 o.,,,., Pilot J~n &, I). 70, ?I, 1'1111 ~197 8U PtJ.BLIC NOTICE -d1vtdu•t PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSIN£'5 NAME STATEMENT COMMFLOOR, lllS1 Coll•M (or <It. Hunl•nQlon ~.t<h, C• ,,._., Ch•rl,... E !,omon. 11751 Collon> (1~< I•. H""t~"Vfon Be.c.h. C• t?MI T "'" bu\lne\S ,., COft(hK ted b y •n 1n oi:wtdu•t Chdrtf'\ E S1mo11 1 h t\ \t•te,,...,,t 'If•\ f 1ted Wtlh tr.- (ounty (tpr" Of Or•nQIP Counlf on ~tember •~. ltlO l'U1'1t PubllWd Or•ngr c.,.,, O•oly P1101 0.t 7J. JO. ltlO, J.,, •. IJ. t~.1.2,1.»IO PUBLIC NOTICE l'IC'TITIOUS 8USINE'5 N~TATEMENT Tf'I• foUowrr•l"Q per\Orl 1\ dotnQ bUih nei' •!'. LARRY MORGAN ANflOVE!> '"S Toronto W•y, Co\t• Me••. C• '12'76 l •"V Mc>r9<1n, 44S I' 70111 S\fe~t, Co•I• Mr.w. C• ot/611 Thi\ bU\•M \\ '' <onduc lrd by an 1n dlvoclw•I Larry A Mor9an ttu\ \t.,emen' "'•' ht"' •••h """ lounty Clerk Of 01 •n<I" Count y on O...tmbtr "· l'llO ~ '"'"' Fulllo\l>ed ()ranQO' Coul O•oly P•lol O.t 1J, 30. l'llO. Jan b, 13, 1'111 sin 8C PUBLIC NOTICE "flCTTTl~S 8U~I NAME STATEMENT Th• IOllOW\nq Pt'f~ '' df>1ng bV\f M \\ ., E OVlh' I ASSUAEO ~IN AN (i NC, IS0\1 Sprmqd~lf' Hu,,t1nqton """'" '" 06"1 J •tnt-\ l P W I\ M .t.,b .. ,I Sl&1 R•phtt.-1 Ot Hun,1nqton 8t!~<t't Ca •1u• TfU\ bt.1\1~\ I' r0ndu<.1Pd b• dM lt''I Ch1ttdu.1I JMn .. \ \ M•vbPU f f'll\ \t•ff'~I w•\ f1ff'd W1lh t .... County Cler .. of Oranqe Counh on Judith (_urlt\ Ell .. , f lCTITIOUS IUSIMEU NAME STATEMENT lh1\ \l •fHTif'f'I .., .. , fllf'llO w11n trw- (ount., (terll of Orttn~ ( uu"h on J •nu•ry ). 1tll 1 h"' foHOw•nQ IMf\Oft\> are no,ng ,.-,,, .. , bu\•nP\\ ., Pul>lo\""' Orinqto Ca.\I D••I• P1lol THE BAY ISL•NO EiCCUASTON Jan •. IJ,10.77 1'111 Ill Bl CO 177 M onluo SlrHt. N~wpOrt a..th. C•Htorni .. ~'661 Pl'BLIC NOTICF. 1"' Oem1•""4t Comp•nv LtCS "' (a h tUt,\11t ~ OfLJ'4J'~"t)n n1 MunlM d Sltf'~I ~ ..... PO,t 8 ,.,At h '•hforn•d•766t ,ICTITIOUS 8 USINESS NAME STAT EMENT Tl'l1\ Ou\1~\\ '' conduct.,d bY d cor-t ru• to•,o••"O l)f!lr\Or'I\ A••~ <hl•f\q por11ttion bu,,n~,, d'\ fht' O•m1dm• Co l. to ANTIQUE SHIPPFR\ l TO PIO J•H;N•,.P<'lo,on N~wport Bl"d (0\-f" M,.,_, ( ,u1totn1.t Prft.\idfoflt "'''" l h 1\ \t•ft>mt"f"lf •4\ f1ft'd ••lt't tt¥ Oo*n ~mo•v l ,.,... Ant1qu .. , 111t. (ountv c1,.,,. nt Or"n9" (ountr on N~wc>ort 81"CI (O\tll M .. ,<tt l ,, .. ,,,,,..,., J•nu•rv 1 1911 ~7071 I F1Ul71 Thi~ bu\1n .. ,, "•on<hJ• f•·tt n• • 1 U' Publl\hPd C>drt~ <<I-''' Dail'f' Pttol P0'dfl01'! Jdn 4 t) 10 11 l'M1 4 9J 80 0o ... n ,.....,""°, ,. I ~ 'o:'::.:~1·7~·~.:, PUBLIC NOTICE Sfo<:rFt4'., Tti1\ \t.tll'nwont wd\ fdf"O . ...,,tr\ '""'I 'IC TITIOUS BUSINESS Coun1y (1tir) ot O•.-.r'IQ•' t ounh 110 MAMI. ~TAT£MENT Otot"m°"'' 111 I~ J "'l to1tow1no pPr-.on-. ,,r .. rttHt\Q FU1J11 hU\IMf>'•' ,. .. Pub•1..-rwoar-._,nqr (~'''Oo11t't' r 11n1 T•tr TWO TRrE5 119• f"Or t'o\f 0,.l JO 1• JAn b 1J JO l~ljl \IHI ~I fH1t1 I 11Quf'IA Hi>d• h ra 91bH I M1.H 1f:'I M H1lbt-•' 1't•-41 fO•''' PUBLI(• NOTfCL~ H1qnwttf -,outn t aquf'..l Ctt Q7b11 "'' M~!V .. ,.,.,o,~. ~H T111 ... w~~ Co,on..t ~· Mftt (d 4t762'l f'.1CTtTIOUSIUStNESS Tt\1\ bu\•Htt\\ ., tOndu' t•·d bit' '' NAME STAT~Mf H T I q•~····· """"""hip J ht" followrnQ .,.,, '>o,,, "'' ,. ni11fltJ Mun .. e M t111bf't I Du\•"'"'',.._ 1 "'' \tttU•n\t"nt -...,," titfld ¥1111\" \t\t-' t1 O F M f4 N N ~ A '<. f) ( (Ounlt' (fftH o f OrAnQ+" Count, ''" t:-t..,tt•N0110V~ tm t nm-P;rr """"" r--H"8~ F ISllMJ Dt '"., No Q N•'W"O' I U••..t1 t Ca1ttor-n1.t 97W>l Aua• Hotm '-""" JOO t •'10 p_.,. Or ,..,,. NO t Nf.'woor ' H"'•"" (clhh>tn''°' •)tit>) (f'l,.ri.r Hotr•l .. nf'I 100 l 1(J(t P A1 • O l t tlf" No • N1 #Qf)lft 01•Af,n (•htOfn1a ~166) 11\t\ Ou\1n'"'' '' rontjutl1•0 b• -4 11m 1trd p.ar1N>"tl1p Crwrhf' HOtm an" T t'tl\ '\t•le,,,.,.n1 .....,,. ... ti1M .,.,,,,, ,,.... County Ctt-rk ot Or•n<l"' Counh "' o ... ,_ .. mbPt ,, '* ,1,nn PuDl•\nr-o 0r6f1QIP (_o.t\I Od•h P1Jvt l•n b n 10 ,, ... I 17" 8\ P\'81.IC' NOTl('f. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS HAM( STATEMENT f "'" tollo••nQ (M:>t \On, .,.,,. d O•"'Q f)u\t,....\\ "' WORD PRO so~ '"' p., ...... Wt\I, ~•lr400 0.M\'I". C• q1~ l t onard Mien.wt ,:-, ...... 1112 Ctt '\ c •nt Or .. unllnvlon 8rarh C• "7b<o f 1S1... PuDh\hed C'.>M1QI!' (O.J\t O.r1,1v P1to1 Publl\Nd Or-c o.1't Dally Piiot OM JO. ltlO J"" • u 70 IOSI \!JI II( ~c~mbPr "· '"° L nn Fl•l"\ 1711 Crft\t~nt n11nqt Br•th. C.t •?&ot6 0.c 1J JO. t'90. J •'l ~. IJ, l'llt Siil 80 '· . PUBLIC NOTICE ~ dtwlOu•I l •nd• F"tt 'ht\ \t~tttn.-nt ••\ f llfld ..,.,,, the County (.lfrit ot Or•nQf! County on J•nu1rv' 1'81 F ISlUI Pul>ll\""' 0r6nQI' CO•"' D~•ly Polo! J•n 6, tl . XI, 11 1'111 17• 81 PUBLIC NOTICE .i . ......... A ·state aud it re portedl y shows $12 .000 i nteres t earned. and unreprt td. by LA City Coun- cilman Art Snyder on deposited 1979 cam ••en contributions Hatchet man asks lenience SAN Jt'RANCJSCO 1 CAPI -A San Pablo man convicted or rapine and chopping off the arms of a lS·year-old hitchhiker has asked the state Supreme Court for a shorter sentence. ' Larry Singleton, 52, w·as sentenced lo 14 years in prison after his 1979 conviction for at· templed first degree murder, infliction of 1reat bodily injury, rape and other sex offenses. · In his petition , Singleton's lawyer said his client should have bee n convicted or as- 1ault with intent lo com- mit .murder , not at- tempted murder. Mary Vince nt was found dazed and bleed· ing near Interstate 5. Al the trial, Ms. Vincent t es tified the former merchant seaman gave her a lift in his Van. then struck her, bound her , raped her, forced her to com mil oral copulation. sodomized her a nd chopped off her arms with a hatchet. Finally, she told the court, he threw her into a culvert on the side of \he highway. Judg~ say once enough }SAN FRANCISCO t•P> -A convicted ;tmp who claimed. he was improperly convicl- r--1-becarustrltl~nty dlct it oace was turned down t;)-the state Court of AP· peal. The purpose of the pertinent statute is to •'discourage solicitation or . . . materi~I 1ain -from the practice of prostitution," said the c.ourt. ·It doesn't matter, said tbe judges, how much money a pimping de-. fendant gets from the prostitute. As long as the ptmp 1ets some support !!'om the prostitute, U!.at'senoughtoconvict. The case involved Grady Michael Jackson, who picked up a 18-year- old girl In a Portland, Ore., bus station , lirou1ht her to San Fran-1 .. co with promises of a •Oe>d job, then turned Mr out oo the streets to ~p09ltion men. >I' wu enou1h to con-~t Jackaon, the court ~Id, that "Tammy" Eed over to him the ahe m9de from ber rat encounter. There •• no 1econd time. ...... ..... , ...... ' ... ,.. .. • . • ¥ 1..-..,.~····· fl••••• eai lallefl . . ·-Yosemite w-ater-aangeroos?- YOll:MITE NATIONAL PAIK tAP> Tbe nre ultt.1 and drlnklDI water 1y1tem1 9a•r• were 'crltlcl1ed as inadequate by the General Arcouatifta olflce. A GAO atudy coochaded water ptffllln at the park'• two major IM>tela cSo. not meet naUonaJ fir• p~edlon culdelinea and drlnklnl water do.a not meet '1tate q"8.lit v atandarda. Tht! Awallnee and WawonJ hotel• cUed ln the repc)rt hOlt about to,oOo • overnt1ht aueata annu..U)' Drinkln1 water at 19 of ~ polnb in the park servlna 2.5 million vi.alt.on uuaually failed to meet ltate requiremeni., the report atated. nat Included a Yosemite Valley system 1ervin1 to percent of park travelen. million would be needed to brin1 the privately owned six-story Awahnee up to standard. Another $1.3 millton would be needed for Its older counterpart, the park service-owned Wawona , with its SO· to 100-year-old buildings, the GA0 estimated. Chlorinated but \ft'ltreated water from the Merced River serves the park. AP wt ........ Park per1100Del and the Curry Co . concession told the invesU1ative arm of Con1ress that a plan for s prtnkl,rs was rejected by the National Park Service because of low water praaure. In addition, an assistant park superintendent estimated $2.4 A state official quoted In the report contended the water has a .h ig h potential for contamination. 'FULFILLED' C'9fy.a.Jenner \ 0 CIM AC i ~ in husincss tl > hdp y< lll hu y thar ne\\; GM car l ff tn1ck )'l )ll want -at rate~ th at n1akc gooJ sense. ln spite ~>f the rise in the hank prin1e. rate, the cust of fin ancing your ca r or tn1ck with GMAC hasn't ~ocketeJ up. In fact , auto financing rates haven't changeJ that much from three or four years ago. Your GM Dealer who uses GMAC CALIFOfN,\ ~hrys·tje reveals cause of divorce - • NEW YORK (AP) -Cbryitie Jenner aaya a major problem ln her now-broken marrla.. to Olympic decathlon champkJD Bruce Jenner was her wUlinpea to keep henelf in the back1rouad. "Many women have h9d trouble with my be· ing so devoted to Bruce's wlnnin1 the lold medal. Yea, I had to subJu1ate evel')'thlna, but it wu a eoal I accepted," she said. "Now I see that i• is everybody's responsibility to set Umlta about what will be sacrtriced in a marrta1e," she said. The Jennera separated a year aeo, and their divorce became final.in November .. "Today the most important thinea in my life are. my kid\ (Burt, 2, and Casey, 7 months>, my desJJm work, my friends and my runnin1. and I feel fulfilled by those,•' she said. has money ava i an e rig t now-(() e p ----- you get that new GM car or truck you've haJ your eye on. Check out all the 1981 mtx.lels at your Chevy, Ponti ac, OlJs, Buick, Cadillac or GMC Tn1ck Dealer today. , --~-! { --·-- ' CHEVIOLET •PONTIAC•OLDSMOBILE •BUICK• CADILLAC•GMC TRUCKS • • r r l I .................................... -..--.......................... ..,.,.._..,_,"""9> .. ~ ............. --• .. • • .. ... -............. -.... ·-· ...,,,,__ .. ,r-. ... •---·-·-..... -... ,......... .... -.... -----· ............ ....,_ JAN.6, 1911 BUSINESS STOCKS TELEVISION COMICS 84 85 86 87 Local theaters off and running with new shows . . . BS Here's the lazy 1nan's way to hit .400 -· H.ypnotist-coach says he can produce better hitters IS ) •:u l l NTU. OI tllll' O•••t .. o•t ''•tt l; N•r~e f'trelt ll~ll"ll u1r Tht-re 1> -.11m l·unt• vul l hl•t 1· "h11 'd)., h1tl11li,! l\10 I'> l"8 '\ I ~l:ll l'd~) Nu\\ d11n l 1u111µ tu 1 onl'lu'>tu11' l;~..,,.~ .. !';u11· \IHI \l' ht'<.ird ll bdott• I hl'l t'' pl\'l\l\ 111 ktt1 1W ti .ill 111 111111! I llol l ti,., tlld I'\ I 'll Hiii• pl,I\• I \.\II" 11 lt•ll \nu Ill\ ,1111 • tH I flll" Id .. " diff1·11111 I 11•11r I!< I It h<I' ,I ltl I It lftl/I" 111 •ldll -,11111 'lll'cJk Jrt lht' 111.11 11 I II" llJlllt' ' l.1•1· l"1~hl'r '''" ,1J111ntcdl}, tl'l,1l 111a~ 1101 tii.: a lh1 l1 Sl'ht•ltf 0:11111' 11111 111•'11•\ I ' lllt• I ;t•o t ~··· l.t.:l' I' 1-.h1•1 111<.1,\ .... ur111•tla) lit• if lh • eun l'C/111 111111· lo 1wrforrll 1111· k111d of ni 1rat'l1·-. lw 11111 1111 "'"' of \ 11111 1111~1111·~~ a~~111·1.1H ''• 11<1\ 1• C'11llt11-. I n h1~ l'l't-\lou~ ,.,, q•:..1 :-a~ :1 pr11 f1·-.:-111nal h:.t!.t'l1.ill pl.1H·r. ('1111111-. w.1:- l1 tllt-niorl· lh;111 a h ;1111I.\111an • With a IJf1·t11111 • 2~•2 ;l\'P ta ~•'. '.t'oll1ns ;i wt·ll 1ravl'lc•d outrirlrln fir<:t l1ti~1 ·1 n ;i11 , had 11<'v1•r 111·1·11 a !\l:trler IH'T T ll't:N. 1l111 111g ;111 11U -..t·a'\on huo;kl'tlrnll gamt• a l whic·h 1 '011111~ ",,., et n1a r h anr1 Vi:-ht•1 :.i r,.ff'rt'I'. lh<· I WO nt<'I 'lie 1·anH: u11 tu rnt· anti :-aul. ·v1111 sh11ultl 1)1• hitting :wo I think hyp 1111s1-. would ht'lp y1id .... ('ollin~ s aid during lht• 1!17!l ~t·ason ·t wa~ .1 ltltlt- 11.•t•ry at first . ltul I rl<·<·1tll'd tu 1 <tkt• th1· 1·han<·1· Wt· i.:ot t11get h1·r 111<' l.1:-1 t•art of .J a n u.1n ~111<.I 1A.11rk1•il ;ti} 11f l-'1·hruarv .. Whal re~ultt·d \\<I:-a JIKJ ~•·a:-.1111 for Culltns a11d a llt'lwn·r tof Let: l,.1:-h1•1 and hypnosis . "l<:ver)th111g I.P l' fnl m1 • was pos iltVI', .. !-.a1tl Col l 111~ · Ill' h•·lt"'d rrw ti w1·1l (>II Ill.\' p<tst <.,11<·1·1•s:-1•s · SOMETIM ES. ('OLl.INS would 1•;.tll Fisher on U1l' J>honc and th1· hy p nulisl would J>lll hrm 111to a tram·e right over the phon('. Collins, pla y mg for lhc Cm dnnalt Red~. raised hi s average from 21ii to :11!\ m l!f rn and 11 ~a~ 1h1l· 111 lar~l· 1•a rt lo 1-·1~lwr .., h) pno:-1'> ·And I "a!-. d1!-.:tl1t1t11nled ... 1-'1~hn Flames find cockiness ·has price • 1N ti1.1-:woo t> 11\1'1 Tht· Calgar) Fl:11111·-.. m1J;tht Ill' <·x l'U!-.<:•d fur h1•111g a l11t ovcr e11n f11lt•nl -.mc·e l>ll'y'll wh1ppt>d the• K i n~-. in thn ·1· 11ri•\·111u-.. "We wt>n• a ltlllt> mon• nwk) than we should ha ve h1·1·n ." s;11d J<'lanws l'oa('h Al McNt'il aftt•r L<1!-. Angl'lt·~ d11wm·ll ( 'al~ar,v 5 2 M11n1lay n1 I!h• "Tht•v madt' U1> pa' -c l<'nn <;11ld11p ;111tl M a rrl'I D111n11e fired 111 :wl'ond period goals 44 sec·onds <1J1<1rl lo vowt·r t.os An~t'lt•., to lh1: vl('lory ov..r thl' Flamrs, cn<lin~ Cal gar) 0!\ f1)ur game winnij1g strce1 k After the Kings· triumph. Los ' An~t·les <'oach Roh Berry had a si mple e xplan <1 t ion for hrs st ratcgy of keepmi.t the high. st'nring Dionne line out of the game when that of the F la mes· Ke nt Ni lsson was orr the ice. "Our line of Marcel Dionne. Charlie Simmer and Uave Taylor didn't do any thing in the firs t three losses against the Nilsson line . so we decided to change by putting Dionne's line against a different line." said Berr y. ·'T here was a lot of pr essure "Jiii n·lax11114 tn his Costa Mesa home r1•1·1•11tly 'Uavc had the ability to hit :no hut he fell dramatically after I !.ll>l'Pl'ct working regularly with hyp. 11o•o1s un him that yea r." If F1i.her suunds overly bold. it's IJt•1'JUSt.'hl'I!>. 1-'1-.lwr hf.I!> l't1mbined 25 years of 11.1 .... 11.1111•t11Jl'h1n,:: knowledge w1lh t he r11,.,twa1· JJ(l"'ers of hynotherapy to lwlp 11unwrou!-. pt>opl~ 1n a wide rang<' ,,f p 11111·ss111n,.. Jl'hH·Vl' SUl'Ct'SS ti t : ll,\S II t:l.O OOWN several jobs rr11!l1 ;1.,•w;t;111t baseball coarh al Oru 11 ~l' < '11ast <.:ollc)!.l' and UC Irvine lo .1 llll:tH ston· nn1111:1gcr. bqt f<'is her 11p1•11ly 11<1rn1ts that his lift'·long goal b 111 m an1Jgt•or1 thl· major kague level < 'urr'l't1ll.' .'ht• operates a winkr in "t ruClional al·adem) for prosf)(:cl1 vl' .1r1d t urrt•11t J'l'O haseha II players a t \ illa !';irk lltgh 111· t'la1ms lo have workl•d with over !ill fJlt1yers who ha V(' al' one ti m e s igned pro <·ontrat·ts. inc l uding current l>11d gN11utCicldl'r H11tl y Law .\ gradu<ilt· of .'llt:wport lla rbor 111 )!.h. Ol'(' and Cal Stall' Fullerton. F1~h1·r hol<I'\ d1•g rN •:-m physical 1•d un t1mn and t·ommu111cat111ns . lit• IA. as an a:-s1stant coat·h at OCC 111 l!l5X 5!1 anti <•I l 1('1 in 1970 In 1959. l-'1:-.hl'r tan the l>odgt•rs' rookit· l'lub. FIS HF.R lli\S i\ROl 'T 15 pl<t yC'rs in tl11s ~car's winte r program. mostly l11 gh o;rhool agt·d. who work oul 1Jnce Ill' I Wtrc• a Wel.•k ~tnd play WCt'kly :-t:ht>llukd ~anws agains t other high s d111ols an<l C'OllcJ.(<'s !'·art 11f Fish<'r's training program 1s 1 lw hypnosis sessions he conducts Th<'rt>'s nothing fant·y or sccref :1 ho u l F 1 s h <' r · s h y p no I h e r a p y . 'I'_\ 1neally. h1"ll ask the s ubject first tu rt'lax. onc by one ea <:h musc le g roup in his body from head lo toe. During hypnos is. Fisher will play a tape c-assette rt'cording of soothing music with birds and forest sounds in the background . NEXT. t'ISHl-:R quietly su~gcsts 111 lhl' s uhjct·l to pH·turc som e or lhl' .i.:111111 mt1mcnts of ha s past 0•••• P1tot PP\otCt b• u '" 11 , .... 1 LEE FIS~R GIVES INSTRUCTION ON HITTING TO JERRY BRIDGEMAN Then. Fisher .a s ks the s ubject lo en - vision whatever ·il is h e wants to al· lain or succ1;:ed-in . "If you picture it in your mind. then all you have lo do is put yourself there physically and that will come easy." he says. C larke Smith . a se ni <1 r rightfielder al Newport Ha r bor ll1gh. s ays that a fter just two months in Fisher 's progr am , he fee ls ~onfident he'll r aise his batting average 50 µoinls by next spring . hypnm,1:-ha:-l.111t.(hl 111 11 1 1 '" 1• l.1 \ .. , pl;1) t•d f1 11 I I :-l rt ·I 11 II ,, 1 .... Arca lm!-.d iall la I u 111r111 1 111111 111 rt•c.tll~ hf•ljt('d lfl\ I l!llf!flt•flt I II 1111 plait'. .. Smith •.11ol \1 \ .1\•1.11• IA.l'nl lljl ii) JH tilll• 'l\t'I litf' '.111111111 '1 and my •• 11 Jt11t1111I l11·ltl11u! (.!:11tw "" prtJ\'t'd a,.<,, \Aot•ll ll1 •f1J1 I I d ... , lllltt s lump~ I wa-.11 l 1·111i-.1-.1•·11l 11111 1111\ anymo re When the person comcs..oul o( byp._ nos is. he should feel rested. a s if he just napped for a few hours . "l had heard about hypnosis before a nd I a lways wanted lo try it , but I didn 'l quite know what to expect." s aid Sm ith . "You read in books w he re people under hypnosis will stand up and bark like dogs. Well. it ·s really not It kc that. .. Fis her will perform t he hypnosis sessions anywhe re fro m his own front living room to the middle of a bas<'ball diamond. "L EE TEA<'llE~ \1111 11.1 aJtp\\' llw h.\IJllllll!' f1•t·l 1t1)!0, 111 , • .,, . .J ll•llol.111 •·11 lab 011 lh1• lil.•ld, ltkt• l.11111g lit• Ii.ti (St>e 11\'l':lilfffl."1'. l'al!:c UZI llis own quiet and relaxed demeanor is perfectly suited for it. S mith. like many others in Fisher's program. s avs th at the main thing • ·~·· ........ All,..stme squad JC players honored Golden West College offe nsive linem a n Mike Brummell a nd Saddle back College placekicker Guy Johnson have been nam ed to the first-team All·statt' Junior College football squad as selected by t he JC coaches. In addition . four other Gaucho players and two ""Uer-s~~th6 OR-t~d-.leams..­ Rrummett. a 6·5. 2SS·pound sophomore. was a dominating force in th e.middle of the GWC line, help ing t he Rustlers fi nish the year with a 5·3·2 over all mark and 4·1·1 Southern Cal Conference re- cord. His team mates. tight end Mark Gobel and de· fensive lineman Lindsey Gray earn ed second·team plaudit::; All three were fi rst ·team selections in the Southe rn Cal Confer ence as well. Joini~g Johnson from Sadd leback are second· team. a ll.stale selections Steve Bod kin, Mike P univin. Steve Abra m and Mike Eddo. Johnson. a first .team All America pick last year and honorable mention hono ree this season, set a school record in field goals and P A Ts at Sad· dleback. Rodkin. an offensive lineman. and E ddo. a wide receiver . wer e also instrumental in t he Gauchos' 9·1 season which culminated with a 9.3 victory in the Mission Bowl over Ve ntura . Defensive sta ndouts Mike Dunivin, a defensive linem an. and Steve Abram. a linebacker, also· • pl~yed key roles on ~he Gaucl}os' stingy d efensive unit. First Tum Oftense 01. Tony Margi~. Snr:1 ~1 111'.1 TE Hill :'llicholas. W1·-,1 \ ;tlf11~ I' I p }''rank ;\i:.ttl\'l'dud i\11 !'.111 \111 "111" I I K -Gu,· J ohnson. ~addl•·hari.. · F'irst T1•a m l11·f""'' , . +ff I ... t '<11 ..... DR Dua nc Gall<1w;i\ ~.1 nt .1 \l••ll• , 111 I 1. •, DB -SC'ott K~ans , 1 11111• -rr-li...- DB Paul Moyt.·r . F t1llNt1111 • : I'•, ., DB Todfl Sl'v1c·k. :\<1<1111·~11 • I l'tll •, LB Jerry llatlH·k. \'e111ii1 .i • 1 • 111 "'• Lfl Joe ll1nt:s. P as ad1·n:1 ·• I ·•"; !-... • LB GreJ! Towns and. 1.1tnl! I\•·" t. 1 1 • 11., ;·1•. '-11 DL Morns Bro~n . ~:111tt1 :\111111• •• 1 :• ..!l• t:L Je!>:.1c(jn ·c·n. <'••nlJ1l 1111 -, 111 ·1 •1 •,. DL Mike Langston. 1'.1s~11h•n:1 •, 1 ";-~• ..., .. DL John Rade . :\fodc·-..111 1 ! . ,., ..... Second Tf'am llH•·o"· QB Cornelius Rub1•r1 :-011 . <'••r1J1•t1111 . I 1"11 I 1 R B John B1>roadaus. W1·.,I I ./\ :, •1 1"111 :-.11 R B Donnell lfawthornt'. !\l1 •11·1tl 1;11 l:JI I 1 R B Oarryle Smith. S :111la ·\11.• • 11 IK1 WR-Mlke Eddo, Saddl<'hlH'I. n :1 t90 W R Oliver William~. l.1\ ll:irl"'' 1; I lW-1 s .. ~ti. "' OL-Steve Bodkin, Saddl.-hark Ii 2 ~23 ~11 OL Mark Bon nfer. ~af'ram 1·111 11 1. 1 .!·17 ~" OL Kevin flowcll. R1vcr!>id1• t: 1 !:I~ s,, OL-Mike Mulhcy, Snta Brli 1. <! :.>:!~. !--11 OL-Jeff Rand . Modesto 1, I .!Ii T E-Muk Gobel, Golden \\'1•!ol Ii 4 22U ·P -Gary Roberts, Chabot 5 10 u;u K Ed Kirkyakous. Modesto 5 Ill lfiS Second Team Ot·frn-..1• S•1 So. So Fr Pos. Pl•yer, acbool Ht. 6-2 6-0 6·0 6·2 Cl. DB-And y Brock, Ventura So So So. So •·r. So So QB-Todd Hons, E l Camin o 5·10 ·5.10 So. DB-Mark Jones. Antelopt' Valley So. DB Ray William s. Contra Costc.i So. DB-Lee Wilson. Com pton Fr. LB-Sten Abram, Saddleback So. LB-Steve Necke. Mt. SAC So. LB-Victor Vaca. Eas t LA So. DL-Mike Daalvln, Saddlt'back So. DL-U ndsey Gray. Golden West o n us to beat Calgary after los· ing to them three times." said K in gs captain Mike Murphy. "When we Jost to them the other n ight Ca 7·6 defeat las t Friday in <.;a11ary>. at was really dlsap. pointlni." Goldup 's goal on a two-0n-0ne bre akaway with 5:01 left ln the second period lifted the K ln1s in- KINGS' CHARLIE SIMMER IS PUSHED BY PHIL RUSSELL. RB-Ron Johnston e , Bakersfield R B-Paul L inney, Southwestern RB-Elton Veals, Marritt WR-Terry Magee. El Cam ino WR-Mariel Ford, Dlablo Valley OL-B. Armstrong, C nt ra Cata OL-Mlke Brummett, Goldee Weit OL-John Carroll, Cerr itos Olr-Ken Delgado, t habot 6·5 l ·S 6·3 6·5 Wt. 175 180 205 218 180 160 255 211 235 w So. DL-John Har vey. Lonjt Reach CC So.: .. ..DL-Ch arles Johnson. Con Cta 5 11 5 !J fl.\ 6 :! fi.;.! fi.J fl 3 6·4 r. 4 175 IHS 170 180 2211 225 <!:lO 235 250 240 240 So. SI> So So -to a _ i-2 .U• wjth the F:lames.... . l>lonne then put Los An1eles a head to stay with 4: 17 remain - ln1. nolchinl hJs 311t 101l of the lellOft. Tbe Kinp' Steve Jensen and Murpby added lnluranee 1oala In the-final period, Murphy's comtnt with 5e aecondl left into an opmnet. After Loa An1•lt1 moved to a 1-0 lead on dtfea .. man Man llM'dJ'• ,_....,.., .... J : 21 '* &.be ODlft1na pertod, &he J'I••• e ... i.ek 10 take • a.1 .......... .,~tbe r.:riod Oil ,.... b1 lhYlD ......... , ........ .................... ....... bf··~ .... --~~ ...... t ial Mdled. I • -Buffalo's-Knox named NFL~-cO&Ch of the year N EW YORK (AP> -Chuck Knox, who 1uiderl the Buffalo Billi to thelr firs t division title alnce the IHI Amertean Football Lea1u• MUOn wu named today The A11oelated Pru1 Coac:ll al the Year in the NaUcmal l'oot· =-c.:;:rowt1 edliDI Atlenta'1 Tbe ..... wtlo ,..,.. 1-11 ......, ... Kpoa'1 flnt two J••r• la 811ftalo,' IOatld to 11·5 &alia Jeat Md .. tM cbamp6oubip of tile Amertc• c.-• ferenee Salt fol' tHlr ftl'll...,.. .. •lM• ..,,, TMJ fahend ... ...., ... ... DlllD.= .. ··· Kw fl "" ........... Hit by.~ .... ,.... fl ...... 4- writers and sport.a broadcuten, three from each NFL city. Bennett wu • very cloae 19C!Ond wlth 28'°' votel and Sam Rutlalano·of Clentand wu tb1"1 with 11. The only other ·eeach Jo NCttvt more tban tbrM vott1. wu bUland'• . Tom "°"91witb4. It ii tM Meaad Ume Knox baa bMD 1elleted AP. CO.eh of -tlii Year. Re earaed ............ tM 1"' ...... ............ Loi~ .... ha a ~T·I ..... iMo a IN NaUaul C......Wllte'8mpklll.ftw•tM ftnt .... -·-" ....... ,. .... ~l-~ ..... M-Y.1 .... ........ ~. ..... -~ ................ ... . . . ) herlted a team which had won just fiv e ' of lta • 1amea ln tht preeedinl two aeaaona. Barely three montbl after hla; arrival, he traded O.J. l&IQPIOll to the San Franelloo den in .. claanle for a buacb of dNft cholcea. Tbe Bllla' new eraw•..-rwa1 . ''fit clkla '\ Mt I ti,m«able,'' boa 1Ud ol tlM IWa' reb8H'n1. "W• j•. ........... ~" ....... ..w.·· Hla...U. ..... &Ut..,_&M.._ lowl • ,... .... eo.ela a.. Nell .. PllblNr.. ••• a11le4 wMela wa• ...... ...... =., ...... ..,. ,.... .... , .... , . _,_ .. -·~·..,..... .. ...... S\eelen' dream of a third consecutive Super Bowl title by beatin g them 28·13. Their olfense was competitive, to uy ttat leut, thanks In part to rookie run- mn1 back Joe Cribbs, who 1ained 1.185 yaret1. 8ul lt waa \he defense -Knox's 1peelalty -whlch m•de the m ao com·. ,.uu.._ Uail yNr. TM defenae wh~h bad be.a raaktd 1.U. in UM leaiut in 1tTt Wll tM beet ln the NFL ln i. . Wbm the Btlta' dtv1ston Utle was ~ 1beetlw Shane Nellon 11.ld : '-rldl HalOll ii 80 0.t." Ukt .... ~tM·~ ...... to '""" I • 9'1E I ...... -~~ .. .............. ~ .. -Iva . .. ........ ,,.,. .... \ . . I ·. ., OMYPM.Of , ......... ~ .. ,., Ac1,1 ... ,..,_frOM ........ of ..... Willie May1 hope1 Ramble· with ba8eball come1 up aces l'N•AP .... &c .... N ..:·w \'ORK lf•ll of P'amer WUU• Maya, Ill •ll ll worklnll for an Atlanllc City ho&el·culno, h11i~" t ·urrm111u.1ooer 8owui Kuhn will review hia r uhn1t wh1r h order~ lhy1 banned frurn baaeball l11 "~H•~t· 1.t h1i. t·urtenl employmtmt I 1ton t v. llnt to ht!& to btl b.ck in lhe aame l 've loved for .,t, n111m 1 t·iir.. M•y11 told Ntwaday Monday. "I would llke fu1 .,11m1., .. 1nt' to tillk to \he commlaaioner. let him look at the hutd arld l'httl I do I h•ven't done anythln1 wron1." M m)) rolt-at liiillly 's P•rk Place Hotel is to sl1n .Jull1"r•phlt, vlay "oU with aiueslli and conduct tours. I v. <lJll t\lm to lmov. l am nol in the.1amblin1 business," \L.n !\ t"t•11l111ued "Tht're ue JOb8 in r asinos that have nothin& • 111 J 1• ~1th ~ambling anJ l have one of those jobs. They don't llrt'd mt' ht'rt' ror gam bling .. ~ ci):. !>cud he would not appeal personally to the t.im m 1!>:.t0ner He may '>iiY. We don't need you in the pme.' I'm 1 r~ int: to dVoid all those possibihties." he said. Ku hn o rdere d Mays to gi ve up a goodwill .unb .. ssador·coachmg Job with the New York Mets last year, \'l d 1m in~. the casino post would be ''a clear conflict of 1111 t'rc:.l. Mays followed former New York Yankees President Al Hu~cn to Baily's. Rosen later left the casino to return to h<t '>t>b!.111 as general manager of the Houston Astros. \ spokt.>sman for Kuhn said the commissioner had not l'h•rnged his feelings on the Mays' matter. Qtt0ie of dee .... -----.. Oakland cornerback Lester Hayes, on the subject of ·s ,Jn Die1eo 4uarterbar k Dan Fouts: "Fowts is the best p;1sser in the league. He's the bes t in the universe." Bu•'• ~"8 aoR •••• llrt"• .., •• •Rl•lr. • HOUSTON Houston Oilers assistant coach EiJ Wade Phillips, son of fired head Coach Bum ••• Phillips, said Monday his father's firing was un fa ir and that he may noT continue with the National Football Le ague team despite being offered the job of defensive coordinator. "There's a difference between what is somebody's right and what is fair." Phillips said in a euest column written for the Houston Chronicle. "Mr. <Bud> Adams had the right to do it. but was what happened fair?" Bum Phillips , fired last Wednesday. has been rumored as a strong candidate for the head coaching job with the New Orleans Saints. Oiler assistant coaches might want to follow the elder Phillips rather than remain under new head Coach Ed Riles. "I have a difficult decision to.-make here without even thinking what will PlllLLIPs ha ppen in New Orleans," Wade Phillips <;aid "Eddie has offered me a better position (defensive t·oordinator> than I had. To be honest about it, even if Bum hadn 'I bt•en m y father, it will be hard to stay with the Oil ers." Phillips said his father had recovered from the shock of hein~ fi red but "I'm still trying to make.tt'ae right decision. 1-'rom some or the things I've said about 'hght and wrong, I think it's pecoming obvious what my decision will be." Bhw Jnor1ew Jln.r ••-•• Dall•• ...... Tht' Philadelphia Ea gles have seized upon the EiJ · great blue jersey jinx" for Sunday's NFC title 4 t gamt• against the Dalis Cowboys. Dallas always • wt•ars white at home and norl'T\ally gets to wear white on the road. However, St. Louis and Los Angeles always make Dallas wear' blue artd now the Eagles have -;cl zed the idea. The reason: Dallas is only 10·10 in the 21-year history of the team in blue jersies. The last time the Cowboys wore blue, they were routed 38-14 by the Rams ... Dallas receiver Drew Pearson says his winning catch in Sunday's playoff with Atlanta meant more to him than his "Hail Mary"' reception in 1975 when he caught a last-second bomb rrom Roger Staubach. "This one ranks No. 1 with me over the Hail Mary in Ninnesota because l feel I did this with a purpose," he said ... Althoujh the Oakland Radiers may well be a "Cinderella" team, San Diego was rated four-point favorites to take the AFC title Sunday. Phildadt!lphia and Dallas are rated even money ... Title starved after 17 years without a championship, several thousand San Diego rans -bought Uf>' ~he-remaining-ptayoff-ttt!UU-MOlfday for lbe Chargers' showdown with Oakland. More than 300 die-hard fans endured a three-day wait, camping out in tents and sleeping bags, for a chance to buy no more than two $12 tic kets to Sunday's game ... Jerry Frei, the Chica10 Bears' offensive line coach. Monday became the second asaist~t on Nelli Armstrong's staff to resign since the e_nd or the NFL season . . . Halfback Delvla Wllllalllt, who ended a disappointing season, says he missed the Miami Dolphins' final practice becl\use or "emotional problems" ... Fred Von i\ppen, an assistant coach with the Green Bay Packers for the past two seasons. has joined the staff at the University of Arkansas . Si1110n tor Ol••plr Co••••.-. p~..._,,1 Former Treasury Secretary WUUam E. Slmoa • has been nominated to be the next president of the U.S. Olympic Committee and is expected to be elected at a USOC meetin1 later this month. Simon, who served in the Nixon administration and was ap- proached for a post in the administration ot President-elect Ronald Reagan. has served as USOC treasurer for the past four years . . . Canadian heavywei1ht champion Trevor Berblck will fight WBC champion Larry Holmes in a Utle fight, Toronto promoters said. Ne1otiations are under way with U.S. television networks on the tlminc and location of the Holmes figbl, but the networks are said to prefer that it be held In Las Veaas in March ... Gudahlpe ... .., of Mex· lco. the WBC bantamweight champion was named Boxer of the Month for December by the WBC . . . Top seeded Illa Warw~k of Australia withdrew Monday from the Berri South Australian Open Tennis Champlonablps. He bu dedded to rest the shOulder he Injured durln1 tbe recent Auatrallan Open . . . Nlalrou, the world champion pacer who woo more than $2 million and became the futeat hone in harnea1 rac· in1 history, formally wu retired to etud Monday at e.deton Farm near Lexinl\Oft, Ky .... The New York R!Jll~ N · tumed1._tt·~ Ouy1hlna to theCt New Raven farm eiub, 0penln1 a rotter apace for tbe return ol rt1bt wtq a. 0.IHAJ ... The Montreal Canacllena returned rookle~e a1ell Wamlley to the Nova Seotla Vo7.,eun . . . ABC rta reached an a1reement Monday to PNHDt eovera,. tbe famed 9850,000 HainbletoiUab bonef.C. on Au1. I ... HOUiton A1tro1 General Mana1er Al ._ ...... t 1Uffllful dnll• b)'·PUI aur1ery tn ~rrect an a"-1 lllock.,t ... C.... ..._ McNa~lcondon,, pal and lddld an lllilt to apart IOlltoe to a •·l National Hoek•Y Leasue .vtetGQ cmr Wlaalpq MODd8.)' nil~t ... In tbeonly NaUollal 1-..wiAuoetatloll ••me MC111- dl1 nllht, SeatU•, led by .... W11t1111t1•1 rr polatl, doWIMd Dallu,lCJl.ll. . ,,. ........... . T¥1 Noewte111ellltiuled: . ...., a.atMD -·----KL.AC (Ill). • .. -.... ~ -. ,. ·-,. .... , .,.. ,... ..... . . - J SPORTS BREAK I BASKETBALL. I FOOTBALL. .. Rustleril' GO be I honored •1 cun aa&DBN .. ...,,.... ..... Golden Weat Collete football coach Ray Shackleford said it w1y back in September before the Junlor colle1e season had be1un. ,, "Mark Gobel should be one ol the top prospects in the Southern Cal Conference," Shackleford praised. GOBEL lived up to that testimonial with the announcement he has been selected by the .JC Grid Wire to the rirst -team All·America squad. GWC's leadin1 receiver last year. Go1'el hauled ln 35 passes ; ,. for 432 yards and two touchdowns this season. In his two years at GWC, the talented tight end has snagged 60 passes for 752 yards and six TDs. LEE FISHER USES HYPNOSIS TO HELP HIS STUDENTS RELAX AND GAIN CONFIDENCE. Fro• Pagr 81 Against Rio Hondo this year. Gobel caught five passes for 81 yards 'Jlnd two touchdowns and also contributed in other ways. HYPNOTIST-COACH CAN PRODUCE; • • ·'He is strong in aH departments. He's an excellent blocker, an outstanding receiver and he makes a super effort on every play,·· adds Shackleford. Shackleford. "Virtually every school that has talked to us has mentioned Gobel," adds Shackleford. "Good tight ends are hard· to come by." GOBEL IS reportedly nar· rowing the field down to two· schools: Arizona and Illinois. A team captain this year. Gobel played prep ball at Kennedy High. • He received honorable mention last year in the Southern Cal Conference and also earned All-Empire League. plaudits while at Kennedy. He shared most of the pass ratching duties this year with Jim Coppom. Coppom caught 37 passes on the year for 556 yards, while Gobel was close behind, with his 35 receptions. G WC assistant coach Dennis Dixon also has strong words of prai se for hi s departing receiver. HE CAME TO US and just worked as hard as he could, and he progressed just the way we wanted him to. We feel he's goine to be just a great player for some four-year school. on your shoulder so you don't tense up as mucy. And go for a bet- ter aver*Ke rather than power. the thing is, as well as receiving the hypnosis training, under Fis· her you learn good fundamen- tals." The cost for Fisher's instruc· tional prog·ram •s not cheap. There's a $50 fee for each player just to join and another $12 re- quired to play in each game. But as of yet. no one has com· plained. They all feel it's worth it. And baseball is not the only avenue lo which Fisher takes his teachings. Th.is ye a r . Fis he r worked closely with the OCC water polo team . He brought the team together at the beginning or the season and put them all under hypnosis at once. Then he gave each of them a t a pe or the session to play back. whenever they choose. All of the players said the hyp· nosis worked and it was evident in the Pirates' 22·3 final season record and advancement to the J C state championship game LAST SUMMER. Fisher ran his own self hypnosis center in Palm Springs called the Here 'N Now Care Center. Some of the things Fisher advertised in pro- moting the center was the abili· ty with self hypnosis to : triple your income, gain better health. control your figure , become more assertive. develop self con- fidence: ·overcome smoking. ill· ness_, a~ger, ~ostili tyi guilt, tension, msomma. sh)'ll ss, im· prove thinking, persona ty. sex and emotion; develop potential, creativeness and goal direction and improve memory~ strength, endurance, power and menta l toughness . That was just a small sam- pling or wha t Fis her says hypnosis can help with. "Under normal ronditions, the subconsrious runs the body," Fi~h'r says. "Under hypnosis, you dictate to your subconscious what you want. "Hypnosis puts you in a re· laxed mood for a brief period. say 20-30 minutes . Later ,.you're able lo draw from that stored up energy. Some r eligions have Joired against hypnosis, saying that it is a form of occult science But Fisher doesn't agree . "THERE'S NOTHING in hyp· nosis that has to do with re- ligions or Gods. It's simply a mind game. And you ran play games with the mind. ''Some people are skeptir<1I I say forget them. I don't have power over anyone. J want to convince everyone of that. ... Fishei"'learned hypnosis by ob· serving other hypnotists. read· i ng bo ok s and learn i n g psychology. "I used lo think and most of us do think negatively. For exam - ple, basketball players say to themse lves . 'Don't miss th1 !) s hot. Don 't miss this shot! That 's negative and the wrong apsrroach . You mus t give yourself the perfert positive sug. gestibn and visualize it. See what It is that you want before you try to attain it.·· Fisher says hypnosis can be applied to anything that uses movement as a premise. "To me. hitting .300 is easy," s ay s Fis her . "Hitting .400 shouldn't be all that hard either. I think h ypnosis c an help anyone. "WE PROGRAM ourselves iri- •to thinking thin~s ar e too dif· fir ult. Fred Lynn, during a hit· ting tear in 1979 told reporters that he knew he couldn't keep it up. Well, with an attitude like that. of rourse he didn't.'' F isher is currently writing ii book call ed "Dynamics 'of Hit· tin~.'' lie hopes the book will enahle him to gain notoriety and p e rh a p s eil rn h i m hi s managf!rial goal "The problem with baseball pcnplt· •~ that they never qucs· lion why SU<'h :md such hap· p ens." f'"i s her s ummarizes . ·'The PQpul<1r b~.Jief is that if y o u 'r e r om fo rtable wit h som ething. then stay with it. Thal 's a ll wrong. You know Frank Tanana plainly does not throw ri~ht . And then he won· dt'rs why he has rerurring arm problems." Perhaps 1f Tanana rould JUSI. have about 2(1 minutes alone with Fisher '· M arlt definitely should be an All-America choice," Dixon adds. "It's not often you can find a g u t I i k e h i m ,. a 6 . 4 . 220 ·pounder . He's got great hands and he can always catch the ball 1n a crowd . He contributed an awful lot to this team." Redskins go searching GWChosts LA City • ID op@llel!- The last time a Golden West College basketball team entered Southern Cal Conference play with a record as good as the Rustlers' current 12-3 mark, it went on to'-win lhe only conference title in the school's WASHINGTON CAP I -Bobby Beathard, the jeneral manager ot the Washington Redskins, was to fly to the West Coast today to be&in the search for a replacement for Jack Pardee, who was fired Monday as the team's head coach. Beathard indicated he probably would look for a successor to Pardee amon1 the ranks of assis· tant coaches in l~e National Football Lea1ue, but would not rule °"' the poeslblllty or a retum by former coach Geon,.., Allen. lledskinrowl\e~ Jaer Kenrco6ie, who fired the 4~-year-old Pardee, said nothin1 about a possi· ble replacement. Beathard said that if the choice came down to an assistant in the professional ranks or a college coach, he most likely would go with the man from the NFL. The general manager said he did not intend to talk to Allen on this trip. but ·'it 's not up to me lo eliminate him. Mr. Cooke is going to hire the coach." Allen coached the Redskins from 1971 until hi s firing at the end of the 1977 season. According l o toda y 's edition of The Washington Post, two men are reportedly at the top ef Bethard's~ist -John Robtnson-. coR1firntrr University of Southern California. and former Oakland Raider Coach John Madden. And. the newspaper said, a list of highly re- garded NFL assistants includes Joe Gibbs . of- fensive coordinator for San DieRo: Neuport wins title history. ,...., And if history repeats itself, Newport l:farbor High won its ··We wanted t o get the Coach Jim Greenfield's red hot second basketball tournament of momentum going into this week Rustlers just may be the team to the season Monday night, as the with Katella at home Wednes- beat this season. GWC gets its Sailors. led by Cory Everhart's day and Corona del Mar on Fri· first taste of league play tonight 29 points, dumped Cypress. 74·56 day," said Newport Harbor when the Rustlers host the Cubs for the championship of the Coach Jerry DeBusk. "I think or Los An1eJes CC at 7:30. CanyonToumament. we got it rolling I'm very GWC, with all five starters Everhart, along with forward satisfied with our play. I avera1ing in double figures, won Garrin Morton and guard Mal couldn't ask for more." the Southern Cal Conference Durkee were named to the all· In the consolation cham· back In 1970-71 with a 26-6 tournament team as was pionship, McLcaughlln scored a record. University center Tim game high 27 points but This season, the Rustlers are McLaughlin who Jed his team to University had to go into over· In the midst of a seven-game a 56-55 overtime win over time before the Troji.ns could' winninl streak and the chances Esperanza, for the consolation defeat Eaperanaa. are pretty 1ood it wm be ei&ht champlonshipMondaynlght. University's Jeff Simpson hit strai1ht after tont1ht. Newport, 8-3, led all the way, a 15-foot shot. wtUl one second re· Coach Steve Mmer 's Los buildinl a 37-21 h•lftlme lead. mainin1 in re1ulation to send An1eles CC team ls 3·9 on the Mike Love addded 12 for the the game into a three minute year and boasts just four Sailors and Rlck Ciaccio had 11. overtime period. returnin1 players from last Junior forward Brad Guess year'• team that was 6-a 1n si·pe named MVP scored • basket and two free conference. throws and Ron Ratcliffe added The Cubl 1et mott..-...1belr EVANSTON, Ill. <AP} a free throw in the overtime to 1cortnc punch from a pair ol S.7 Cleveland qu•rterback Brian 1ive University ita ei1hth win freshmen from Crenshaw Hip. Sipe hu been named Player ol a1ain1t four losses. Jerry Leopold and Ray Reese the Year in the National Foot-Eaperanu bad. an opportunity ar, __ U.. .neweomea. wbo ban-ball Leasue and Buffalo'~~ to win tbe 1ame but a sbOt · 1lven the Cubl their only bri&bt ·KnoK bu been aeleeted Coach ol mined wtth tbne •~di left momenta Ulla aeuon. the Year by a panel of NFL H · and Ratelltte pulled down the re· GWC, meanwblle, 11 led by pertt and Football Di1e1t. boundtopnHrvethewin. Jlm Eldrldl• with a u:r •corinl ~-------....:;...__ ___ . __ __:::_..._ ______ _ avera1e and four otber pla,yen wbo are awrastnl between 10.0 and 11.t Potntl per 1ame ·~ tb•m Nco Tbompeon, Randy . Hetdennlcb and Art 11•1"· Al a team, dM Rutlen are •boot'"' at a a .a pere..t clip from U-,_. and Jti1 ftola \M "" JatOWJlllt. TM...·-·-.,. ................. ... 1••• •1111•-allowla•\, tt~tlr GIPflET•••"'1119tf .I. owe nftll • LA ..... . ....., .... <t:•> ............ , .. .......... . . 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Top Cllolu 1Cn1vul. 8 00 U '"•ell I• 101 Pt •O SA4.60 A11eno1nc• s.101 Misc. MoM1y'1 tren1actlon• IA SR IA LL Ntli ... ILt ..... NEW YORK METS-Si_.t Oy•r Mlll•r, Ptlt f'n. toaorw·vearcontracl. l'OOTIALL N•litftll l'tolMllU .. .,. CHICAGO 8El.Jl!i6 "'"'°'""eel thtl Jerry Freo,ollo•»lve llrwcoteh. hid rHl9ntd. WASHINGTON REOSICINS Fired J.ock P•rclee, he.Oco.cll C-lt11 ........ llLt .... CALG,.RV STl.MPE'.OERS Nttnecl J•rrv wi111.,,,1offe-nslwc001121t~tor. NOCKl'I" Ntt_1,-.11Le .... MOOCT"EAL CANl.OIEHS "•lurtWCI SllO Wam•l•v, -•le. to Nov• S<ollt of 1r. AmorlcanHoO•vL•tOue. NEW VOAK Rl.NGERS -Atlurrwd Gtry Burn,, l•ft wino. to N•• Havef'I ot ''- Amorot 1n Hoc-•v ~'Ill"" Acllvtl.O Aon DllQUly .r1Qllt •i"9 VANCOUVER C,_NUCl(S Sent G .. n . .,.•n•o"· 90alie-. to O•ll•s of .,,. Centrat .. H0<klyLo- COLLIOI AAKl.HSl.S Ntmed Freel VO<\A-_, .,,, .. ,ant •ootMllCNCh NORlHWESTERN flHmH Frtn<ls Puy •n •••1\1 ... l loolb<tl I COM" West Coast -tours set J:»GA wru uill open in Tucson Ry HOWARD L. HAND\' . Of '"°' D•ll• P1'41! Swll If you 're wondt•ring about the dates or the West Coast pro gotr tours. helter write t hem down on your calendar for future reference Thtc· :nen's P<~A Tour opens in Tucson with the Joe (iaragiola Open this coming weekend After that the dates include· .Jan . 14· 18 Bob flop<' Desert Classic . .Jan. 22·25 Phoenix Open: Jan. 29· l"eli. 1 Ring Crosby National Pro· am . Feb. 5-8 -Andy Williams San Diego Open : Feb J2·15 llawa1ian Open; f'eb 19·22 Glen Campbell Los Angeles Open Arter lh:.it, it's oH tu fo'lorida for the Spring tou r for the men. FOR TIIE WOMEN, the LPGA will stage it's firs t event in the Southland at Industry Hills in the Olympia Gold Classic, Feb. 26-March 1. Other West Coast dales include the Desert Inn Pro·am. March 19·22 : the Women's Kemper Open at Mesa Verde CC in Costa Mesa. March 26·29: a nd the Dinah-Shore Winner's Circle Classic in Palm Springs. April 2·5. A lot of golf to watch during the coming months with most or the top pros rfom both the men's and women's circuits competing in virtually all of the West Coast events. • • • Individual and team entries for the California State Military golf championship tournament are now available. The event will be held Feb. 20·22 at Rancho Del Rey golf course in the San Joaguin Valley town of Atwater. The 36-hole tourney is open to all military golfers with NCGA or SCGA Wyoming names coach LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP> -The University of w.-oming named Cowboy offensive coordinator A'*1.ncald..u its new lread..football coal!h Ml)h'd1y - and alped him to a pact that will withhold nearly 20) percenf of his salary until he completes his three-year contract. ~ UW Athletic Director Bob Hitch announced K~caid'1 appolntmenl at a news conference ln L ramie. He revealed that Klncald'a annual 1 ary will be "5.000 but th.:• f100 will be withheld fl m hll paycheck each month and deposited ln an ettrow account. handicaps who are on active duty stationed in California. The field will be limited to l«. For further information, contact Pele Culver at Del Rt>y Golf Course. 5250 Green Sands Ave .. Atwater, !l5301 or call 1209 > 358·7131. • • * THE COSTA MESA Golf Course men's club is now taking members hip applications for the 1980 GOLF season Those who sign with the club in January will get a free round of golf. Cards for joining the club are c;vailable in the pro shop at the course. The initi al membership fee is $100 for the year. • • • f'ormer Masters champions Jimmy Demaret, Ooug Ford. Bob Goalby and Jack Burke, Jr .. have confirmed their entry in the Vintage invitational tournament Ma rch 11 ·15 at Indian Wells. The fvent is for players who are al least 50 years of age during the 1981 calendar year and qualify in I wo of the following categories : Be a member of golf's Hall of Fame; A past winner of at least one of the major cham· pionships; A past winner of the Vardon Trophy; A past winner of the PGA senior championship <beginning with the 1979 event ) or the USGA senior open < 1980); Foreigners who have won a major International championship; HAVE A COMPETITIVE record and ac- complishment in golf over a period of time; Or gain one of six special sponsor lnvltatlons. The event will bring totether 30 of 1oll's vintage players to compete for $300,000 in prise money in· eluding a $50,000 first pri1e that is more than many · o~m ever won on the PGA Tour for a victory. ... -· Tom Watson may not have the charisma of an Arnold Palmer or a Jack Nicklaus but he certainly haa the golfing ability to match the two 1reata of the sport. Wat.son was honored reeenUy ••.the MONY player of the year for the fourth conaecutlve year, an honor he bu captured more tlmet than uy other player, ln the 13 yean It baa. been a warded by West Cout writers. Nicklaus has won It three times. ~ JI Klncud complet• hll three-year contract, Hlcr. Mid, be will recetve t.bt IDOMJ. accumulated •J lnf t.bt 11CrOW .account, plm latenlt. 11 Kincaid WATION WON ISVEN maJci t.ou.rnam•u dur· ~-....!Dialm~_. ..... .,..nrt. be •ill tadMI &llie w UMmd~ '9f l0• ..W el »tltB• M Tbe Conoy1 bave 1oet four-beM ootball of 21 toumameDfa..a-wblcb be Dland. He ta ID hll e• • UM put eta rien. TM clause in · alntb Y""' ii a pro aad II Ulilrd. an U.. aD·timt 81'1 ~II dll& .... te .W tt woru. 1111 money·111t leld8d Nlftla• _. IM TN.u.o ~ te l&a1 at W)omtal. at IMll for~ "an. tz.IGl ... 1. llleluded ta. ldl •tow ftctalt• .. feur Tueaoay. January 6. l961 DAILY PILOT ·~. !\fl N 11,.Clf""t(; !_,j.J UCLA'S KENNY FIELDS GOES UP FOR SHOT OVER TWO WASHING TO N i.,1 Al E D Er ENDEHS /) UCLA has Field(s) da Washington stWL~ VSC in ot'ertint(> Frem AP dispatches LOS · ANGELES Freshman ct!ntn Kt:nn) Fields scored 16 points and had a career high 111 rebounds to lead the seventh-ranked UCl.A Rruins to an easy 87-61 Pacific-10 Confen:nce bas ketball victory over Washington State Monday night al Pauley Pavilion. UCLA is now 8·1 on the season and <! u 10 Lh,.. Pac·lO, while Washington Stale droµpcd to f. 4 overall and 0-2 in league play. The Bruins outscored the Cougars 11 () 1n a three·minute span lo assume an early 17·fi lead after nine minutes of play. Washington State could never eet closer than eight as the Arums led 36·21 al halftime. UCLA' opened a 52·27 advantage m1dw<.1y through the s econd half a fter ou t~1·iH111 g Washington State l2-0 over four minuk s. and v.as never seriously threatened again The balanced UC LA attack included 15 IJ'llnh by sophomore guard Rod Foster, 13 p111r1l~ h\ junior forward Michael Sanders and 12 prnnb £111 sophomore guard Michael Holton. The Cougars were pac<'d IJy forward Sten• Harrie!. who scored 15 points. 13 1n th e· ''"'11nd half, guards Ken McFadcll'n and Tyront• H row11 had 14 and 11 points, respectively UCLA has now won 29 of the las! 30 rn••l'\111~ .. with Was hington State Btuld#s IJraf Trojan• al bu% %rr LOS ANGELES Washington c:ent t'r K1·nn~ Lyles took a perfect pass under the ha~k<'I frnm rorward Don Caldwell and scored on a n·v1•r:-.t• layin at the buzzer to give Washinglun :.1 ll:l lil 11\t'.r lime victory over USC Forward Andre Griffin St'llred 24 points for thr winning Huskies. includin5! four of their six 1n overtime. The Trojans did not sc·nre fnr thl' last <!·oM of the extra period aftt•r Mn Williarm.' basket f1ir Southern Cal tied it at 61. Regulation play ended with thr ~cllrl' t 1c1\ at 57, as Washington lost a chan<'c to win thr game in the waning set'<>nds as Hoh Frank wa!> callP<I f11r an offensive foul as he drove 111 the has kt•L A rfz-ona S1a1r poMnd• llr.-gon TEMPE Senior center Alton Lister tut. a career -high 23 points as 13lh·ranked Arizona State downed Oregon. 104-f>4. With the win. the Sun nevils. 9·2. t•vened their league record at 1·1. The Ducks of Ort·gon dropped to 0·2 in the Pac·lO and 7-4 overall The Sun Devils broke out of their recent scor ing slump by hitting 66 percent from the field and m ade 14 of lS attempts from the free throw line as . they opened up a 46·29 halftime lead. Lister put in 10 points -including eight strai~hl free throws -as ASU used a 14-0 scoring Basketball scores t!'v'•n•villf> H,'l!T8·~ut~ 61 H•' d'n Sinunoo\ !ti SE Loul\IAn" M Jac-•onv•ll• St. UNC Ch•rlnll• I• IJ otl Mc N•""' SI IO, ru Soult.ern 10 \.OU•\•"l• IJ lull"" Sl ~teft •. UNC Gr-DO•O U l.1<orn SI ll Mo\\ Valley•• Jtck....,SI ll,Gram1>11no&1 • LO<ll\I..,,• T.ch SO NE Loul\la11• u Ctnl•ntrJ 14, Tu .-Arlll\Qton 12 .... l'orct,..,.,H,llr"''"° · c-11cut 11 •• .,, .. ...,St "'-St."· Laft,ellt., lllOrwll .. Ok-~ •r Coaletlt 1•. Ctrntll 1t --vtttMiW •. twiWV ff \t. l<raMI,, l"t ... 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II• minlt h1 fir~I st•vt>11 -;hot<; from I ht• f11 •ld Addittonally 111· ;11ld1•d ••tghl 11·1~"'""'"' and 111 • assist." lo hi s ~a nw 'I '$50.000 to $500,000 'INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS .• lnt•r••t only peyttt•nt • lnco•• •C-•.,cl•I ,• Re•l4-nt&.1 • W••lily «o••ll••ntt • Monthly hondln90 • 6 •ontlte to 3 "••rt • 5o11th•"' Callfoml• ,. ln•n lnfor••flon •1nilc• I I ''ll 1\' \I! i\l t 1,.,. (714) 759·1515 UUMCAN HOM( flt0"'0Mll l lO ~f\AC)fH' ( •ul,., 0•11f'fll 11 .... g ... p;lll• Ne..,"o" Ae"t " (" Ah!Ofnll _.., 92tl90 ..._WM tlnt ,.,...... '1 a ttate Mllll•tor malOI' 00.., UM lriUllll ()pm _. t1M ID Ulej ••t .. to•akeltaltatelaw. =------M_u_ten_. _ --~ __ . ' 7 Ordinary people -may--have-econonty solutioDS ___ _ .We' re Higher Than AnyBankOrS&L dliaary AmericAM ! n.. New Yon Mock lbcbaqe. wldcb warMd reaped fol' ordlDar)' views _,.... .-a~ lol· inl (ud partially Nlalnial) 5 m1llioa lDveltOn lD \he early 1'70a. put lll ear to tbt pbone and Uatened. Ans• l,tU INTSaVISWI in November it found, tor example, &bat b)' a tl to IS percea,t martin Americana believe tbetr ffCIDOID)' ti in a crlall, and that more tban hall aay a depreulon ii posalble. nu.a point ol view, you may note, belpeaks a 1rHter r.copition of reality than ii aom.Umea attributed to the American . pubUc. ReeenUy, for example, the esteemed Arthur Bums. former Federal Reserve chairman, publicly cautioned Preaident·elect Rea1an a1aJ.nst cleclarln1 a state of economic emer1ency, 1u11eatin1 .it would fri1hten the public. The next flndin1 also miJht be viewed as a criticism of political and 1oveJ1lmental al· cu1011"' titudes toward the public. The flndin1: 80 percent of Americans believe the political leadenbip - Conaress and the president -have failed to un- derstand and control economic problems. reached by tbt 1une7on: n.. public doel DO& ez. ~t uy lmprovemeat in laftatklG and UDemploJ· meat ln die llGt 1ear. "Approxtmatel7 15 pereut of Americana believe it will take tlll'ff yean or ...,... to reduce inflation ud maemplo1m• to 5 ~rc:eat levela, and to balance UM budttt." ltatea ~~. Tboulb, accord.lat to UM reMarebiis, 10W' views are repraeated ln tWr ae...wle aamplint, you milbt have aome reservatioal about another important flndi.n1. ret•rdinl pu.,._c paUence, to wit: • •Si.JCty.four percent are willlnl to 1ive Rea1an three yean or lon1er to implement chant•· Fully 93 percent are wUlln• to tlve bll poUclea a chance, ., even II they penonally dl1qree with them." Tbll attitude bu not always been demonstrat- ed. ln fact, say some eeoaomlata, one of the 1reat difficulties facinl the nation today i• that economic chance talte1 lonaer to achieve than political chan1e. THE AJIEalCAN PUBUC ALSO declares it is willin1 to sacrifice to solve the economy's prob- lems. A&aln. _it hasn't always been so; tbe con- sumptive '705 are testimony to the unwillinpess to do so. Still, this is the people speakin&, and.. one lesson to be drawn from the recent election results ls that leaders should listen bec:au.se, on election day, Uie people have the stron1est views of all. utt-tn1. the 1toclt uclwlle 1tudtats learned t.bil: -Amerlcam are fHUnt the ffOnOmlc plnch even mon than they did ln April, when a similar 1urvey wu completed. -In the next few yean Americana expect in· creaHd lnterwt rates. tu lncentivea for butlneu to build plants, import re1trictlona, credit control• and a tu cut. -American• favor lowered interest rates, personal tax cuts, tax incenli~ea for bulines1, im- port nistrtctiona on forei1n can, and waae·price controls. -AMEalCANS WANT A BALANCED budget. Fifty-one percent believe balance can be acbleved even thoulh taxes are cut. They feel a 10 percent tax cut would not be inflationary and would oppoH it if it were. They say they would save or invest the money from a tax cut. -While Americans support increased tax in· centives for business they do not want to cut taxes on corporate profits. -In overwhelming numbers people believe there has been too llllJe cooperation between eov· emment, bualness and labor. Ei1hty-lhree percent say the three sectors should 1trive for more cooperation. Jn all. not a bad pro1ram, The i:ou:ntry's prob· lems. it seems. may be caused not so much by or· dinary people as by leadership. 14.87% 14.16% Ame!i~:_:·,~:'th~u~hp~h~•~'~cTQ1:! Nuke-power annua~ yield annual rate • r ' plant plansl scrapped Minimum investment certificate is $1 o.ooo· or more • 6 month certificates • Rate available thru 1{7/81 • No extra f ... If withdrawn before maturity you never earn less than 6°.4. California Residents Only. - Alk llbout ou"r ltandard p-book ate.~. · ~ • • 1525 MeN V•rde Or. Ee1t Suite •115 Coat• MHa. Ce 12'31 -(714)157-1833 . 8~ Earn (Q v8 On Passbooks 0~ of as little as $10 9% Annual Yield· 8.50% Annual Rate NO TEAM AEOUIAEMENT THAlfT BY MAIL . "·•'O .. O•••• ort ..... , ••• O••fllt ~·•d•l•d """"'"'''tu'"• ··••buolo b•I•~· •"CIO••"Q ~• "'• "•d •v• o"• t••• ,-wl'ld• tfll bl'"'• t OtPt ••'"'"'•'•" ''0"' the t ti off"• "'0"•fll ··••boo• "'•'"" •• COl"lo""'""d O•··· .,.. t'•d•l•d ""0"'"''Y FOR C ALIFORNIA RESIDENTS ONLY •FREE CORDLESS EMERGENCY LITE PEAFECT FOA POWER FAILURES. BLACKOUTS AND OTHER EMEAGf NCIES Operates on 2 "O" batte,.es t•ncluOedJ Pull ott 11 hghts Pol baci. 11'~ otl Compl(lll' with wall brackel •FREE WHEN YOU • . . ' WEST SPRINGFIELD, M•ss. CAP> -A planned $2.5 billion nuclear power plant that was the object of a 1974 tower-toppline protest baa been scrapped at least for now -because of deeUnin1 demand for electricitv. Northeast Utilities and Western Maasacbuaetta Electric Co. have •bandoaed plans to build the plant and will try to recover most of . t.be initial costs tbroutb a rate increase, _a_utmt1 spokesman said. "It's quite clear that we don't need the addi· tional capacity." said John Hickey of WM ECO. "Nobody could have predicted the plunge in de- mand we've bad." The utilities spent S29 million"'since 1973 on plans for the twin-reactor plant. Hickey said they will try to recover about $25 million through rate increases imposed on one million customers. WM ECO serves about 834,000 customers in Con- necticut and 166.000 in ·western Massachusetts. In 1974, the utility announced plans for the plant, and on Washington's Birthday of that year, Sam Lovejoy, an anti-nuclear activist, toppled a 400·foot Northeast Utilities weather tower on the Montague site in protest. Because of legal technicalities, Lovejoy. who Unusual move reaps benefit CHICAGO (AP> -Pillsbury Co. has reaped a financial bonanza by taking the highly ... unusual step of withdrawing from a class action and reaching an out-of.court settlement on its own with 23 ·paper carton manufacturers convicted of price· fixi~g. Pillsbury Co. will rec~ive S2L5 million in damages in the out-of-court settlement. about 20 times more than It would have received as its share o1 the ctass-action damages, officials said. THE Z3 CARTON COMPANIES were indicted in federal court in 1976 and convicted on criminal charges of price-fixing conspiracy. About 2,500 buyers of paper cartons, including Pillsbury, subsequently broueht a class action agaimt the 23 concerns. But Pillsbury withdrew from the action on Jan. 12, 1978, said Edward F . Ru berry, a lawyer represenline the company, and "sim\lltaneoualy continued its own suit indepen- dent of the class." Open • P8Hbook account with 11000 or more. this emergency light 11 ye>urFAEE. Umlted quantity, offeT good only Whll• aupply IHta!----- HIGH INTEREST PLUS FREE GIFT A REAL VALUE FROM ... THE CLASS ACl'ION WAS settled out of court in 1979 for $200 million. Had Pillsbury not _ withdrawn, it would have received between $1.2 million and Sl.7 million as its share. By withdrawin1 and suin& on its own. Pillsbury wu able to show dama1es "in excess of ,la percent" during the period between 1960 and 1974, on purchases from the paper manufacturers of SlOO million. .. . Now l0cal investon can enjoy personal service and,antraditioUI rates Now you can buy and sell through a national broker at bia savings on tommissions-without giving up most of the personal service that you•rc accustomed to. Seed aid to buses SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -An u1ly desert plant may help keep big buses rolling , two transit systems hope. Oil-like waxes from the jojoba plant's seeds are beln1 used as transmlsalon lubricants in teats by AC Transit, which operates in the East S.y, and by Sam- Trana, In San M•teo County. Or4tnary oil lubricant doesn't keep tr an1ml11ion1 from o•erbutlnf. and 1perm whale oil ii no loqer •••liable. Jojoba wu • =--=-··Wc'll uvc Yo._~t~two-thir_ds o(rhe commiujan• that.~.· p.YfliC full-conuruss1on houses. On some tranwt.ions we even bat the bare-bones discountcn. 1fy us and sec. Call or write for (ree brochure and commission discount schedule. ..!!~ _J~Jlla ..wbale. oil_ won't break down under hllb temperatures. ( IBS) !!!_~Boye&~ A Wiii Street btoMr a.t paJS_ loc.a, from • Calfomia ltak. 660 Newpon Center Drive, Suite_lJS, Newport Bach, CA 92660 :4 cn4) 644-2983 '1 J In c.difomia, call 800-432• 7368 «.n ••• ..., . ..,.. ~ , . . still lives in Montague, was cleared of charges stemmina from the incident. Hickey said demand for power was increasing at an annual rate of between 6 and 8 percent when WMECO announced plans for the plant. The 1973 Arab oil embargo and conservation in the United States cut demand far below the utility's forecast, he said. "The increase in demand for 1980 was zero," Hickey said. WMECO suspended plans to build the 2,300· megawatt plant in 1978, but did not drop them. The plant originally was expected to belin generating power between 1988 and 1990, Hickey said. "We wanted to keep the door opeR and watch demand for another few years,' but it's clear now that this plant would be a mismatch for demand " Hickey said. "That's not to say that we have rul~d out the possibility or building a nuclear plant there sometime in the future.•· Hickey said WMECO remains committed to-- nuclear power and did no\ abandon its plans because of objections to nuclear plants. On Jan. 16, WM ECO will ask the State Depart- ment of Public Utilities for an undisclosed rate boost lo include an inc rease to cover Massachusetts customers' approximately $S million share of expenses for the plant, Hickey said. He said the utility will seek an undisclosed rate increase in Connecticut to recover S20 million. Over 1''he Countf'r NASO Ustinqs L•J'•~ • ~;,. , •· ~ .... , ... 1~ .. ''1 S IJ.16 •I 1'"• • '- •'• .. 11 1 J I• I f ) 7 I ~ 10'J ,. , 10 ' • '"' I I ,, ; , .... ti\. l~ ,,. • ... :a.,, ,, ' . \. l "-• • , :>'• ~ J IS 1' • l .. 1 •• . ' 1 '. l' • • •• ,,.. 1•· DOWNS li\1 2 1•11 II s•. '" S'> ,. 1''• 10-. 71• 1 , .. ).t 1 S·t& ,, .. ,.,, )'!) s ,, ... • 19•;. 12 , .. s•, •.. JO • ''i 1 •• 1 ]'J 1 ,, ~. 1 '• ". ,, , .. l"'· v. ''• .,. '• ., ,.,, .. -2"4. , ... '· . ., -.. ,., '1 MUTUAL FUNDS IDS 8d UJ •.ff I OS Grt IJ,Sl l._10 I OS HIY J ... J ... 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'1 . llJO 10 I• 2 Telt• "3' J11 s• o AroCp I • IS "'-, 'o ~::~~~ 1 S~ ! 1tt ::: ' :-: FrankM " 10 16Sll H~ ,., Jtff Pl11 1 IQ 6 Jll ""' o 'O MutOm I Sl M 111'1 • 'f> 1'1.111110 2a 101 ~l.. • TtnftCO 1 . .0 I 1U I IO\'e I '<o DAILY PILOT •• /fl agaztnea vle Sports battle off Jield too B1 MILTON MOSKOWITZ Newsweek vs. Time is one of t.he great matchups ln ma1a1~e publiahin1 -and their rivalry has spilled into other areas. The latest batUe1round: sports ma1azines . Newsweek is the muscle behind Inside Sports, a monthly rna1a1ine launched last April. Muscle in this case means money, lots of it. Newsweek does not deny that Inside Sports will 108e upwards of $8 million in its first year out of the start· in11ate. To play in this lea1uf: you have to be able to invest that kind ol money. Newsweek can. Its corporate parent is the Washm,ton Post, the nation's loth largest newspaper by circulation size (600,000). The Post owns a couple of other newspapers and a clutch of TV stations. The whole shebang takes in more than $600 million a year. Newsweek's tar1et with Inside Sports is Sports II· lustrated, a weekly magazine started by Money Tree Time Inc. in 1954. It too had to absorb plenty or early lo-;ses. E"'ht years went by before it began to pa y its way. Now it's one of the top prope rties in magazine publishing, with a circulation of 2.4 million and annual income or S170"ft'lilliun IN 111E NEWS magazine field , Time 's circulation or 4 :l million is comfortably ahead or Newsweek's 3 million. Time· also takes in much more money tha n its r ival. SJSO million in 1979 to Newsweek 's $235 million. In 1978. Time Inc. went after Newsweek on another front whe n they bought the Was hington Star, forcing the Washington Post lo defend its leadership position in the nation's capital Now the Post and Newsweek have retaliated by fie lding Inside Sports lo compete with Sports Illustra ted. ,Inside Sports is selling about 500,000 copies a month, a nd they ·re doing ·it the hard way by emphas izing newsstancl sales rathe r than home-deliv.ered mail subscriptions . Nearly 70 percent or their circ ulation is coming from sports fans who are paying S2 a copy to buy it at newsst ands Sports lllustr a1 ed sells for $1. 50 a copy but gets most of its ci rcul at 11m from home subscriptions. HOW 00 YOU GO a fter Sports lllust r)afetl '1 J>•·ler A Dero w. the chairman and president or Newsweek. f>xpla tn' the strategy behind Inside Sports "We gel rnto the l<1ch1 room. not so much to r f'porl the final score but tu find out what the hell really went on " In one •f their stories Inside Sports even got into the: t>edroom. They explo red the marn ll~c and sex lift• of Stc\1' Gar vey. star first base m an of the L<is Angeles Uodgcrs Media buffs have noted 1n lhc past that Tim c and Ne wsweek. working sepci ra tcly, oft en cotnc up with the• same· co ver story. It's happening here too Tht> Decem ber 1s~wf' of Inside Sports and the Dec 8 issue of Sports lllustratNI HP· pea r ed on ne wsstands s 1de ·hy·sidc with cov~r stori•·s <>n L11s Angeles Rams quarterback Vine(' Ferrngamo And lhl·1r ston es were remarkably s imilar .'tfork• In Thr .'ipolll9h1 '• '· .. '. .. "4EW YOA•0 4 P 1 F' 1ndl Uo"" Jo"''• ~ .,,; ... '"' Monday. !•n S !ITOCK5 J) Incl 20 Trn 1S Ull ·~ S4• 1nou. 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J .... t ltw•••nl•HI t.>w•tdHt\il h ti\; .. ,,, HJ a."~~\ .. 11•"" •lv1••' • llfCl l\IC COt.IP '"' I MJ kuf. lilll\Ael t CM NEWS Aa<:NfW8 ''° 9Ull 8£Y( WELCOME 8ACll. i<OnER U "ll0ie •U~~1;11\I' t• ~I II t-- .. \' KldROp hoi• 1n 1ce .... lf'I .MOYA Tiie Doclc>tl Of Nigefle'" " Oeflng Nigerian COlll\lon ot doctOt• llOlll In whit• eoeta Wld In lrlbll robee era· trying lo lolve Ille country•• 11111111 ptOblem• • MVITPY "Dr JeliyN And Mr Hyo.·· 0t J•yll'I bo4d Hl)efl· manta 10 llOllll Ille good lrorn ti. evil wllllin 1 llngle personelll y aucc••d beyond hit wlldeat ••Pit· 1111ona (Plft 11 (I) THI aA>Cn"8 "Hanky Panky" 1:30. al l.A~E & IHIALEY S'1lfllY l•ll• "' love Witt) I m1r111<1 doctor wno cla1m1 1ha1 ne is d•vorcono Ills ... ,,. • CAAOI.. BURNETT ANOFRIEH08 Guest MIQilHJ Smith (I) KHN'I PEOPLE t :OO 8 (I) MOVIE TUBE TOPPERS M1111 Alan111ea111mp11 10 t.eep a lootbail ,..,,.. lrOfn } winning 1111 Su~• Bowl KCOP • 8 : 00 -"The Big \Rl Carnival." Kirk Douglas stirs up an ~~: "event" when he covers a mine cave·in Th• 1MF " as1ionee1 10 for hil newspaper in this movie with Jan dMtroy a Ulllltta COnllln· Sterling. ~I a 1;;,~::uclaar bombs CBS a 9:00 -"Word of Honor.'' •. ,, ·taw1ess rron11e,· Karl Maiden stars as a sma.11 town I 1935) John Wayne, St1111a Tlfry A cowbOy Jlrugoies newspaper reporter enmeshed in w Hona<a1e h1m11e11 01 freedom of the press and First Amend· crimes Dlamfld 011 him by ll ment riRhts in this new TV movie. 9°;~~:~~~~ NBC G 9:00 -Flamingo Road. In 12:30 D TOMORROW" this two-hour series premiere, Fielding Gu&Slll porno Slur Marolyro Chambere and he1 mar111-and Constance are kidnapped on their oer cnuc~ lraynor. singer honeymoon by drug dealers· (photo at Mauroon McGovern. acto• left ). Tro~o' Howerd (R) 1J THEFBt and a mummy lhal seems to have come allva • INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS • THE HEW SENATE A look •I the n-San1111 and tlle sh1t1 01 po-1n Conor"a trom 1he tradl· 11on11 Sout'1 to 111e Well 11:30 IJ (I) LOU GAANT Brlhe •S incensed over Lou • -mono d1S1nleres1 :n: ~:s~:·;~=~~:;·~:~ I MMI (RJ , D TONIQKT Host Johnny Carson Gues1s Peter o·ioole Coun11tr-S11oko 12·..0 IJ ()) MOVIE • • 'R1<11ng Tall lt!lf!">) AnCJrow P11f"te G1lmfH McCormick A 11Jde11 "dllr tails 1n 1ov., with a yourig hop New Yor~ C:•IV wuma11 (A) men 0"' 11 reunl4ed w1tfl Illa Amer1C1n offlcat wtl0411 Illa nec:1 a1r111< helPld 'P flCll)e G MOVIE • • • '" Tne oetl Bulllfa" t 111551 Rlcha.ii TO<ld. MIChMI Raooravt Du11no World War II trie B11t1!lh bt1ll1anlly plan IP blow up 111., Ruhr Dam ., Germany 2:301 HEWS 3:00 NEWS 3:05 MOVIE • • • • > ·ooe T ouc.11 Qt llenus ' ( 1960J A...tl Gardr1111 . Robart Wolkar,.f- w11HJow trimmer ~ ~urµnsed when the s11111.le or Vc11us Lo11g111s 1a1king to l\1m 3: 10 G) MOVIE • •, Oe1111 O•• Wheels' 119• 11 OOJrryl H1C'kman Nu1t•u11 Nasn A 91oup ot vo11"0 rJf't1n1went!> ~tf1, 1oge111e1 101 a 111) ••de 3 SS'D NEWS 4 00 0 GENE AUTRY r,Jm~ For frout.Jlt! D MOVIE • * . 6arnrnera I ht: '"'"'h 1f)I~ t lY6fJ1 Bt1J U rJunll'•Y Alber! Oekk ... ~-•--l'h"(J'i. .,1,..>Je 1.J 'I 1 'u u•Yle '!tl "~ • A.1 1 lht; ... ,.,,.,,. The honeymoon uf Mark Harmon and Mor~an f<'airc hild as • disrupted when the) arc kidnaµped by drug dealers on l ht' two-hour premiere of .. Flamingo Hoad · tonight at 9 on NBC. Channel 4. "Wa<d Of Honor ' (Prem- •tttel Karl Malden. Rue,. McCl•nan1n A 1m1ll-towo ne,.speper reporte r becomes embr011ed 1n the ouues 01 lrtMldom of 1he prnH and First Amend· ment t10htS over a murder case 10:30 HEWS I NEWSCHECK Ch1111e Call11 I ~ A8CNEWS GU"'9MOt<E 1'00 GI YOU BET YOUR LIFE BuddV rtackl'll pt.1y" th.- !l<Jme wllh , rOllt'• \Jl'llit oueen a m&n wriu ldl.,'\ 1t'J h<lrSt'lS onrt ,. l .t' V ... qr1~1 blnck1ack oealt>r ( t>U11w1ng Jl1 atOm+C. ,_.Y(JlO-- "!t•Ut .t QUH•I tJr.-..fH')f\)Ul. 1ur II~ unl{'J~ltP' ''' fuf)' U5,JOO li\tlh "t tn11'1f11ld!llC'j, • KfOi' ~Ill 8ttHH'f 14.9'e~ u •UUk iJI l~i fAtt<l wv ~ myr., tac.tt• '"itt' ~r1nv '""'" •tta' tot imy OC<.AIHJ(t • PROS AND CONS Burolllfv Bu,otary ••C \.d{ \.t a~t'itS'> 1t\IO At S 0HIJtt m I A8CNEWS JOt<ER'S WILD M•11•s•H I FACE THE MUSIC All IN THE FAMILY Art ll1e and Ed11n 1111roducu a rocfl w1<1ow ro e .. rn .. y Heiner aller '11~ w1lt1 ru11s a .. ay aoain INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEW!J C!> THE 12TK ST4'EET RAG A hltle cowboy r1d1rio a 01an1 norse trdes into Dodoo c1a1m1ng 111a1 me norse turns into a,, ele· pt>anl wnen the moon fs lull G) INDEPENDENT NETWORK HEWS 1:30 0 THE LONE RANGER Code 01 1 he• P11 int•Pr' GI MOVIE • • The Lil•t 011t1~r"•q 4 300 MOVIE * • .op1·11r1.rJ1 Ournes' r l!l'J91 f '" Mev~1 Chuck •~110tHMJfl 0) MOVIE 1.ms ana c.nn'11nt1l?» t.J1M.u•~ cflme with Ralph Stary '9 STUDIO SEE Falll•r MultOhy w11les d pre Ch11ilma~ leu .. r home to h1s sister II) BARETTA Barella s new par1ner IS h.Hl\\'le a llope·sn1lflng clo<J w1l'1 a conlr41Ct oul O!I her Ill MACNEIL/ 1.EHRER REPORT Ii) NEWSCHECK ()) P.M. MAOAZIHE D FLAMINGO ROAD tPromoereJ Honeymooners F1eld1no and Constance Carlyle are kidnapped by oruo dealers see~ 1ng revtmge on S11er1rr Semple G ®J THREE"S COMPANY Janet learns 1hel C•11dy s ooss 1s asking 101 non· work 1111111ed favors ano convinces her to prolP.SI l he evolutoon ot ••otome music on lhe Mossouro Val· ley anO 11s 111lluenc:e Or1 20111-cen1u•y clas~1col co~sers is examined 11:00 IJ U G (I) [DJ NEWS 8 STARTREK G) HOOAN"S HEROES Hooan a•ds a Russian spy lo ~eeµ lhe Nazis lrom l1nd1ng a r ad10 slat1on ~ 19591 Vc.1H ,,_.,,,,s,,n l111 " Ynrk 011rt'"I Woilu Wnr II ' ll·llll•• ''' l!tt; tlulQ•• •l g~ll(J•,.IJ "it/I 1~10 "'"' tMrf(J r,f ~nt1•,t••w 1 1dillh .tl•-' AIJ•ell t•uup• • • r .ons•. C.h """'I I 1g48) w .1yn1• MiJ,, I\ 1 Jt1nne I Ufflf .. IUI K••d•U""d""." -· 1Jn~11 iuw Hori•"• Crew1no Sttallle ~ G•IHI" Lake C.1Mw prt!p~res lor a r ace a youno 11c 1or e•pla1111 wna1 tie 01vo& and Q!IS lrom the stage (RI C1J M•A•s·H Hews spreads mrOl.IOhOul ine camp ma1 ~ c1111se 1110 1t1mm1nent @ aAAHEY MILLER Bamey must cope wun Levon s dosttess over 11111 removal ot a spare de\~ ar>CS a doctm and a llwyer Qel Into a wild bi\tlle over !l Cfootc wno 1os1 "'~ 1111en1 7:00 I CBS NEWS NBC NEWS KAPPV OAYS AGAIN T'1e Fo01 nas 10 come to t'1e 1e~cue wnen Mrs C s fl) OVEREASY Guests Wilham Shalrler Or Seri Eiseman. a1tosl Pal Ttiomas I!) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT (IJ TIC TAC OOVQH @) MERV GRIFFIN Sons o r Super11ar s· Guests Ethan Wayne Ch•oa l&mmon. Clla•lte Mallhau 7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN D FAMILY FEUD 8 SHA'HANA Guest Andy Gibb G HOLLYWOOD SQUARES . ,,Cha11nrl L.b1ln9• 1J KNXl 1CBS1 Los Angel~·!. D l<NBCi NBC) lo'l Anqell'l> • KlLA jhHI) LO'> Anqt>les G KABC TV l ABC) Lo'> Anqplp., Cl) l\FMB tCBS) San DoeQo-0 KHV· TV (lno 1 Los AntJelcs (!]) KCST (ABC1 Siln 011•1.1u GI KTIV (ln<l I Loi, AnQPI!'-. II) KCOP· fV 1 ln11 1 LCJ~ A nqel1•.., flD KCE r-TV 1PBS1 Lo ... l\nq1•h•5 «!) KOCE IV1P!:IS1 11uri1•11111on BPil• h 8:00 IJ THE WHITE SHADOW CoFtc'1 fleeves 15 ollvred S 1 000 to do a comnrnr · c1a1 1111c n1s wam becom11s a s1ng1no group and yets an ollor 10 Cul a 1ecor d D LOBO Deputy Perkins •S reporleU 1u ha•c su<1<1enly d"~a as a re,ult uf a minor wo"nd '"' lhe IJO"'ter 101 0 MOVIE • • •' Crosscun1Jr1t I t97ll Rober1 Hook5 Jarf' my Slate I WO San r r 311 crsco detettJVeS 1nvcsl1 qatP. thA murder ot a voulll aboard a can111 ca• G ~ HAPPY DAYS Al pruoare-. ror a H~u,,1or1 "Ith lhO womun wh() 1111011 hom 20 years ""'""r 0 MOVIE • A Ou1e1 roiac1• In Kill 119731 C f\1tQtl Ba•<t• J(',111 Sorel r nP (l:iughlor OI (I murdf?• v1C11rn fnll-IS O\tl ellt'tl> •11 ti lrAQ1C IOvt" ll 1 anQlrl GI P.M. MAGAZINE 61) MOVIE . • • , Hoe Bu;i C.IH rwHI ' 119511 Ktrk Douglas J~11 StPrlong Ir• 01d111 10 0011~1 ti•~ CM!Jr>r a tt'POrlor O <plu•I~ lilt> wrrer u10~ ol G) MERV GRIFFIN Sons 01 SuP1Hslars Guests Elhan Wayne Cnr is Lemmon. Cha• l•e ~althUU Pat11ck Ca~so~y flll MYSTERY 1 Dr Jekyll Ano Mr Hyt1t1 Or Jelo.yll s bOIC! O•De11· rnunts 10 1~ola1e me good trom 'he e'i1t w1lh1n a s1tfgle JJe' souat.ty succePd oeyo111.1 •i•s wildest "'Pe<:· 1o11tons 1 Par! 11 «!) NOVA Int: Cxxror!. 0 1 lll1ge11a A Cldr100 N•oer1;\n coahllun ot oOLtor~ t>Olh in whole tn11t~ IHICI on ltrbal robes u.rf• vv1n9 to sr1h1e tt•t> c.ou111ry s "'.'"}"' P•l:llioe"'6 9 30 fJ f(O TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT Ht"rny l~arflo; that his new llu~> t1as a reputahon tor '•'"'2-older ·employees 10:00 D 0 NEWS ~ G (fO) HART TO HART J(illd\l'il" and Jenn1le1 tJ(-'Lurne 1n11olvecJ 1n a rnur- <1r1 my~lery Iha\ mvolves <111 11,,c1tmt sarcophagus An alien mys1011ouslr boa1ds lhtt En1erprose ano ~u101cal1y oemove• Spock s or 11111 0 MEWL YWEO GAME G) M 'A"S"H Hawkeye and Trapper b&I· lie lhe orass aH lhe way 10 the lop 111 lhe11 ello•IS lo get '"' 1ncvbalor to• lht' ur11t G) ONE STEP BEYOND 111e Mllrlo. A US Aor Fort" heu1enant s plane c111>11es m me Eoyp1ta11 llese•I fD OICIC CAVETT Gue'' Johrt Got>IQull IPar1 ;> nt 41 JOHN DARLING g) ONE STEP BEYOND f he Seer el Sylvia Atk royd rummaoes lhrough old t1unks and f1r1ds a mys teroous llnk 10 lhe pasl 8i) 8i) CAPTIONED ABC HEWS -MIONIGHJ- 12:00 D MOVIE • • • 1 h!!Y Got Me Co11 ered 1 t9431 Bob Hf1P~ Oo•Olhy LamO\lr A Na!.h- 1n91on salJotagP ""9 is ;>tC•Oenlally 1nvaOf'O b• n too11~'1 newspaperman G ~. MOVIE • • Sui>e•<IOff'e r 1'17&, / Cl) MOVIE " • . fl I. A fdrrnH•<l fj lir"'" P,m1••4,\ !i, 1100 Wh1•11 u 1ri~m ,,, ,1 1/1" lt•rtt lff' ''~•f-1 h"'•'" •aw i-oh I {)(l\f, (1" t1m t-' , .. tro.1101•11 ')01c;.uu tu-~'''"' • ut ·~ 11 •f tttf• t11•. ~ 1i!1•r '"'''~ ... 1 1tn .. n(I.\. 1 45 U"N~WS 1550 NEWS 200 0 NEWS 0 MOVIE , • • f, ·ll,lf• I ''1' Jo\ '" ~ ,, ,, \''' ·~··· ' .. , .... f'•• ''· ''• ''• ·' LOO~ , r·5 NOT MY f:AULI THAI ""THE. WEA, HE~ I~ E3AD ! ( lM "'-OT l Ht 1 ONE. VllHO C'-'c: .. A' t:':I T HE. WEATHE'-<. r .... t. J ALMlGHl 1 OOf-S! 11 00 (() • • W y•11111l•lj 1 lul '' I~ t I I ,111 11 -MTERNOON- 01200 0) ••• '"''lll 11 .. • J ,.\I l'd/i ( ,If, I f f ,,tft i. tr tuo ,11 Ill • • • ''"' "' ..... , ... , '''•' J• ·a •· .. v~ , .,,..,_,, ,,,, t• r .,11t ftl ;I •l 3 30 Q • • 1~••1·1'" f•,., I l I A, •st ~ U)t\ n~ • 'i l.',1 II by Armstrong & Batluk /I If (,0 1 10 HANL.-. , , • ) rov Pl 11-•• II'"'!: r, 1 I 'A•».J l >il ...... ,. .f1•u 0 1 • •r·f I t I •OJ(~ •! '. r• -' ' . ' \ ' r-~ 'Mystery' b8ck with Briti~h accent Ry TOM JORY NEW YOHK <AP> The genteel murder m ystery tht• k ill m g generally takes place off-screen has long bl'cn the province or the British filmmaker Indeed, American television in its early day)> madt· extensive use of the resource. orten for "Th1.• I.all', I.ate Show " It was p {'rh a p!. 1ncv•1tahle that t h e English·stylc whodunit would come to prime time. as it did a year ago in publtr TV's "Mystery' series. "M yslc ry ! " begins 1t i. second season tonight I at 8 on KOCE, Channel 50. and an hour later on KCET . Channel 28 ) featuring fi ve new m iniseries covering 20 weeks . BACK THIS SEASON ARE three veterans or the series' first year, including six new episodes of "Rumpole or the Bailey." three new programs based on the stor ies or Dick Francis, and rive new shows frnm Peter Lovesay's "Sergeant Cribb'' series. The "Mystery!" series begins with a new two-pbrt Britis h Broadcasting Corp-:Time-Life Television production or "Dr. J ekyll and Mr. Hyde , .. with David Hemmings in the lead. A .lour-part dramatization or Francis lies' 1930s crime cla ssic. "Malice Aforethought," beeins Jan. 20 another BBC-Time-Life production. "Mystery!" was born. in a sense, or another British anthology series now in its 10th season on PBS. "Masterpiece Theater." Both series are supported financially by the Mobil Corp. t t .,. ............ HEMMINGS AS JECKYLL, HYDE L•unchlng aecond 'My91ery' H•aon "We weren 't talking about thrillers," he s ays, "rather about the intelligenOy developed mystery story. done ry a fine writer who has chosen mystery as hisorherschlick. "The British have had an abundance or fine mystery writers," Schmertz says, "people like Agatha Christie and so on, so there was plenty for us to work with.·· In fact, Schmertz says, Mobil soon found itself backing production or series for "Mystery!" as well as its own developing Showcase Network for commercial stations . Schmertz r<'members. "and said they had the r ights to 'Why Didn't They Ask Evans?· We agreed to make an investment in that production. ·'They came back later with 'The Seven Dials.· we agreed to that. too, and I think there will be othe rs "Oick Francis. on th(' other hand, was a project we brought lo Trident ... says Schmertz Others. like '"Rumpole," were what Schmertz calls ·'shelf products"' series merely purchased for American broadcast Cost is a primary consideration in determining whether a program will go to "Mystery!" or the commer cially broadcast Showcase Network "We 're talking the magnitude of four to five times t he cost or the Christies than for the others.·· Schmertz says, "but y·ou have to remem ber, the y were made like reature movies." BQTH CHRISTIE PROGRAMS star Sir John Gielgud, and t hat kind or casting inevitably drives up the cost or production. Schmertz s ays Mobil is ne gotiating now with another of England's independent producers -Thames Television -for production of 13 or Miss Christie's short stories. In additi o n to the C hri s tie s tories commissioned by Mobil, Warner Bros. Television announced in November it will orfer fi ve or the late mystery writer 's novels as two.hour TV movies. No broadcast schedule was announced for "The Agatha Chris tie Mystery Theater," which will include "They Came to Baghdad," "Murd~r is Easy," "The Man in t he Brown Suit," ''D estination Un known " a nd ''Secr et or Chimneys." A footnote on "Mystery!": Vincent Price replaces NBC's Gene Shalit as host for the PBS series. Stefanie Powers gets a jolt t1s an ancient Egyptian mu mmy com es to life c.i nd "\hreatens hers on "Hart lo Hart" tonight at 10 on ABC. C hanm'I 7. "FOR MANY YEARS, we had wanted to do serial mystery," says Herbert Schmertz, Mobil's vice president for public arrairs and a driving force behind both public television series. "We had been convinced for six or seven years that there was a market for that kind or programming, and we tested it a little bit with the 'Lord Peter Wimsey' progra ms we put on 'Masterpiece Theater.' All of the Francis programs, under the umbrella title "The Racing Game," were financed by the oil company with production by England's Trident America. ----------------------·- "They did very well ," Schmertz recalls , "and that simply reinforced our desire to do something with the British mystery." Schmertz says he and Joan Wilson. the series' producer for Boston 's public TV station , WGBH, had a specific type of product in mind as they searched for suitable material. THE SHOWCASE NETWORK will break new ground in March and April with the first Agatha Christie m ysteries ever produced exclusively for television "The Seven Dials Mystery" and "Why Didn't They Ask Evans?" "London Weekend Television came to us," 'Hulk' gets some lines Br URRY BUCK p ercent dear because or a LOS AfmELES <AP > -Lou childhood affliction and has had Ferripo, who plays the Hulk on to take extensive s peech "The Incredible Hulk," wlll therapy. It was easy for bim to bav• tUa..llrat..ape•kt!f sole-in an-. .pla.)ka -&he· non~akln1 role of upcomin1 episode ; the CBS the Hulk, but for a lon1 time it series. seemed that he would never Beside• the Hulk, Ferripo h.ve a speak1n1 role. wlll also play the role of Carl .,The 6 -foot -5, 255-pound Molino, a bodybuilder who is Ferrlpo was a Mr. America tryint to r*1H money to open a and Mr. Universe, but withdrew rettaurant. In at leHt one scene from professional football alter he wW appear with the Hulk by breaktnc anoUter player's leis meana of a split screen. dur ln1 •crimma1e. He now "I'm ln almost every acene," plays the alter 'e10 to BUI Bixby said P'errttno, "so It'• like 'Dr. In the popular CBS series. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.' You wlll Bt1by'1 character tuma Into the ,.. me 11 mJMlf -you will see Hulk when he becomes an1ered. tlult It'• 10 ,., from Ute HWI&. I He ut in hll dreuln1 room Dlu • ..., -IU'tt penon and waltlnl for a call on· •tat. e to I.., •rr.tlYUlnerablUty." plaJ t1'e Hulk. HP body wu f'eW r•· are probably COYend with a kind of 1Nm aware Illa Ferrl1no I• TS clay, and that combined wtth b&I . . ·----r size and musculature made him look very intimidating. He said • the 1 ree n paint is very uncomfortable: smears easily end makes bim feel verrhot. "I wanted for the public lo see Lou Ferrigno," he said. "And I wanted to show that I could act. I had learned pantomime and showlna my feeUn11 without "peakln1. They never needed more than two takes when I played the Hulk." It la Ferritno 's sensitive performance a• the Hulk that has helped lift the 1bow, out of the realm of the monater movie. Lookln1 beyond the aerl•, rerrilDO 1a1d he wuted to ...., . people that he ii "a very fine actor. I think evel'JOM wW ... that wben tbey '"thb 1bow." • Savory Savings --------------A~ 1.$1-99 GREAT I e DINNER .ssAIOUt ftft :UPERI e77DINNER z 0 Cl :::> 0 c..: (") 0 c -0 0 z I Good tor \'1rff pltCH of juicy. QOlden brown Kentucky Frlld Cll1c111n. plu• alngle 1trv1ng1 ol col• llaw. m111\ed po111oe, end gravy, end a roll. Llmll two ollers per pur<illlH Coupon good only lor combln1hon •llllet d11k ordtra. Cullomtr paya 111 1ppllc1ble 111111 tu. Oller ••PlrH January 18, 19'1 Good 101 n1no pieces of 1u1cy goldl'n n1ow 11 l\t!nlucky Froe<l C'11cken. w11n lour roll~ a lll•O<' COil' slaw A 1a1ge mas'1ed potatoes ano o meooum grt1vy Lom1f l wo oflers per purchUI' Coupon good only 101 combtnllllon wt>ole/ Clark orders C1.1s10"1•' pays all 1ppflcable s11es lo 011111 t•PllH A1A I J1nuary 18. tll81 Pr1011 mey vary el Prices mey very 11 per pa1Uclpat1no toe•· I uc1pat1no 1oca11ons Good llont. Good only In only 1n Southern Sovlhtrl\ CaUIOfnla 1 Calltorn1a •llere you SH WNN yoll... NnellCt "s Fltvoflle Ame1lca't Fla"Ofll• • WlndoW &an11e1 • WlndOW .. "'* • _.-• --------~ COMICS I CROSSWORD MllMAOUKI \ •' '' lrM AMlntft PEANUTS -l(fdnapj,m had -lrHtfp! he cried. taken him to a little "I'm bel119 held townaiJJed Abeyona. In Abeyance!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN -1'1\MOUS COM POSERS - Chapter Ten -Claude Barlow 0 I I ' I by Clulrlts M. Schull by Tom Batiuk However, Mrs. Barlow gave out i}.alfway I through the woodwinds! ,. DAIL Y PILOT 87 Tutldey, Jenulry I, 11111 llG Gl!ORGI! by Vtrvil Partch "Oh, 11 thls skMtp-ln time tor you today?" l ! r--~~~~~~~~~~t Claude Barlow was the ; thirteenth of fifteen 9 children ! It was the desire of the senior Barlow to father an entire orchestra! _ill t'lr c:J ~ SHOE MOON MULLINS MISS PEACH Al2THV2'~ ADv1 "€" otoi I \~~1'fttt~ 1b ~o THE FAMILY CIRCUS AIZn·uA~, WMAT''J r...e 9e~i iHING TO 00 VV11eN 01\J! FLIANIC~ eN6L.1~M ~o~ ~I! t:rFTl-4 ~rr,.r6rMr Ye.1'c f' by Bil Keane ( GORDO by J.tf MacNtlly by Ferd & Tom Johnson 1 5HoULDA LAIC> -n IN A Do2~N MORE ~ C,A~S OF TH' STUFF! 1-==~ by Mell Lazarius MOVE 10 F'rl:ANCC ANO M-"KE ,.- FlrE,1-1 ~iAlr'i. JUDGE PA~KER DRABBLE L.OOIC-S Uk'£ 1\tlS llllU. K ~ Mt. ~~MVU, Af MOM£ ... __ ...,.., -I I 1'141NI< l1Ll 'A~l ~tlV"' AMO A~ l4U "'1'10N~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE SO HE'S GONE. . lT1$THESTOR'{Of TF\K~N OFf'-iJUST MY LIFE.1• -LOJE 'EM LIKE. THAT~ RND LEf\\JE. 'EM I DR. SMOCK by Harold Le Doux ........ rir,.Ji£EMAN~N1E JV~T eQlltROWED WHAT AKE YOV 0011'10 ONE Of OUR CA~b! tlHE'~ tlHE FIC:lU!tED HE NEEDED OOME CLOTHE!> ... AND ~0~ TO READ' eHE ALOO PACKED A eAC; FOR HERfJEl.F IN CA!:>E ~HE HA!> TO !)TAY IN A HOTEL TONIC:lHl ' AtieEY, HAVE DAN TAl<f 'YOU · MCK UP TO THE HOUSE : I'M 001N6 ro FOl..1..0W JEANNIE! ' "P J turned over my box of'lions and they're all gettin' owoy." DENNIS THE MENACE 'I 11 1 ~ OUT AT THlt> TIME OF TAKINC:I OOME THIN(;!) NIOHT, DAN? DOWN 10 THE JAIL F~ TIM! ;-r-:r---....-...,. TUMBLEWEEDS IT'S NO use--- IT woN·T .WORK··· by Tom K . Ryan VOL) A~EP FOA AN OPINION m:: YOUR AUTOE'IOGRAPHY -'{OU 601 IT. by Emle lusttmllltr zzzzz •·6 ··You're only as old as you think.·• C.ONNIE -010 MY B~THE~ SR'/ HE LO\IE.D you 7 by Kevin Fagan by L vnn Johnstan ·a\<-OK-[!:100 7 EM F\ND LERVe 'EM THEN y-- by George Lemont TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AC~OSS 53 Strong ones 1 Range 57 Ooze 5 Run away 58 Word ol 9 Yoga poslure moulh 14 Mr Pound 59 Verbal 15 Contradict 61 Collar type 16 D1v1de 62 Abscond 17 Atrikaans 63 Stours Wolfe 18 Unique 64 London's - 19 Gravy Gallery 20 Pending 65 Drain 22 TNT experls 66 Tease 24 Sway 67 Deslloyed 26 Pflf1ur9'1S 27 Medical SUI-DOWN fix 1 Disprove 29 Eaptos1~ 2 Bl~ gas 30 Maxim 3 Rugged crest 33 MuslC 4 Eas1ern Can- c l a I> UNITED Feature Syndt<:ale Monday s Puuie Solved Ac ~ I T A l I I a A II II a M al a Al l t I II A y I T A T a II ' A I • ._I A T I I> -g g a I I T U II I II I • T ITll 1- tlGlllClt l l l llT•llA' t!T-IO IA -.• A D 1111 I II a I , I t• • c UT-• I I I • , II A I 11 i& H I' • t D p A l I I A II I" I C l A T ii i I ' A I II I A II I m1ch1ne ada 25 Tea1 43 Below. Prefix 37 ---cake S WWII figure 28 Garmen! part 45 Wh1mperer 38 Bird 6 Bound 30 Chanled 47 Hillside 39 Rage 7 Join v1; 31 A1ask1n isle 48 Sc1ttet 40 Gasps 8 Obse1ver 32 Insect 50 Essent111 4 1 Cllllls 9 Sey 33 Luggage item S 1 Ham 11 up 42 Embethsh1nc;r 10 Booms 34 Derby 52 Relresn 2 words 11 A1111noen1 35 Affirm 53 Hope god- 44 Through 12 Ple1san1 36 M1ne111 dess 45 Wltt1c1sm 13 So111 d11k 37 Und11g1r-54 S1ory 46 F11 21 Pretend ment 55 Oueued up 4 7 Vn111, 2 words 40 Quays S6 A111n dins 49 Pluck111 23 Eur()j)lln 42 Girl's n1me llO Caboodle , a a • • I I • ' I • .. t unday J1n\llly II I di ENTERT~NMENT I INTERMISSI New year, new productio-ns-un--ti fht.616(1'1 ~fUUJlh ulllllj( l111 I It t<lll(I' I '"''I •Ht "'tt lU\K nu 1111\t .it•l l1t1~ 11\1' II• v. ', ... , uff .11111 11111 Dln l Id (\\ t' lltli(t' l•I 1>fh 1t'llllll\ I ul-.1• llWtl 111 I ,1111 lh l"I ~4'i·k Ao wml.. '" 11111 11tlll ,,1 ..,, h.i 111111 , \.\, 111111111 l'lln h tl\l"lt' '' l h t I "' \ ··~·u~ 11111"' .d • o1111t•1h r • .r\Uf' l'th .... Ul• ... ,I ti \lo\ "111• ,lt .. v. Ill f••t J li1111t I t>d 114 11 v.1•1•k r1111 "'•11llt t 11<1 I 111I''r1 11 I l.t lllh Ii• ~ 11*11 .. 1·tw.tu1 .. \.\ 1·11111 ""' '' 1lh •h• "'" "'''l'. t•l ~H11-.111n' 11nd ~' ••l t•1 I 1110 ti ,, • ""''""' of• ftll''. 0, ttt"''' '"'" 1h1•.1lf't .:r11u1·· I •II 1 .. ,, .. '"'' 111• V. o ''"""'It ' I 111l)lllHfll l\ Jh1 1lt I "Ith l1•11h 1.01 I 1f l l1t \to j,,'11 I \t I)< Ht t I If • V. I'' I I 11 1 l t I \ I t I t of t1 1\1 II r h, 1.111 '" ~,., .... 1 t11 • 11it111111>""'" 11. ",, ''\,H l'Hl\J't "IJ lo I ••1<lltlt I 11!1 •1 '"._ .. ,.,,, ,, ''''·' ..... 1·oll1ltf •llltl 1.ulh'I' 11111" r '"" ol ft•i. 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I ~ 11/\M•1, 1 1 ,.. ~ -· .\ ... ,. , Intermission Tom Titus 1 11111 .J.i 'I 1 , 111 I 1 1tl.1).., ,u11I ....,<11 ur1h1ys ;;111! • 4,. -..1111111 "~ .,...,,., ,, ~1111da' hr 1111rn-11mt S<11urc1~· '" .r11111 "' l 111 11 " 1 ,di l'li' 'l'l!M for 11·-.1•r v:jt1on..; no .... 1n1.., \-..U '\l·.c.1.F<"t" ,., ,, IJl<H'k n11n od ,,, 1 .. 11111:11 oll ,111111111 "' 1'111• llt1ll'>f' •if 11\ul· 1 . '" • .111d '''"•"' .. "'' .o 111•0 •11 • 11 1•n l riC' and 1•11 1 1·1111 11•d 1w11111t S\ l\l•I 'vf ,.r o·dtth. H1c hi.lnl 11,,.J1 .ond t\.111 II 111·11 1 ! • "ftllorl'>• ttw 1•;i..,1 1111111'1' 111 f111" 111111 of ii 1\1 f I I \.dd l '11 f•1 111.111't \il)I ••• L'l\1 11 1111.!hl h 1•'(('•·101 "du v. ""' <11r::, l>n vt· < '11c,1 ,1 ,, •11d.I\ "" ""• " I II 0 Jrt tilt ltt•tl•t ol 'Ill 1, .. , 110"11 ('1·nll'I ol 11tl I\ I( lit l'\1'11111!!'> anrl :~ 1• 111 1111 H""''J \al 11111-. ,111r11 ,, 01111 111 .1 t I Ill "' , ,, ltlt.:1 11 \ • 111111 1,.1 1' 111111H1111f ' I lll'alt·1 I d k ec; •JI!' 11 1o • 1 , , Ii .. 1J. I t•ahtiU"• itf lht· J\ ugu~l ",., 1 .,~ 11 1 11' t ... • ,·k1•1HI 1·11~.l~l·mrnt under th• olp , f 1 •' h rtl I I '"" \\tll1J nl <;hf'nf. H ' I I \I ,. •I' IS• IHll .111tl I \,11 k litll '>ftll t d , , ,, I I I 'o O I I • J, lo II I 'I 1 II I. , • 11111 t I\ t "' 1 •H1 o , ,o I 11 I , . 11111 '-alurdayo.; th1011j!h lo lo 1 ti Ill• Htl .1!• I •' '\),q1lo SI V,1·~lllll!l'll•I, J \:'\t-. '"·U \ 11 ""' "'1 l:wkrnan ;11 t ·"I hi t , " I 111 ~ ~ i ti 1 Ii 1 • ' , '· J •" 1 r I t 11 at • 1 \ rh I • · 11f(·1 •Ill t ltll 111 11 '\,.>1 111111 11, .. ,.;, 11111•· \l wq1lt' \\0 111•11·11\ I d111•llJlll rft1• 1•111111 tl1 t1•\'l\;1 I 1r1 ;1 111111 l\l't l.1•11t1 111 1 (""'I ltl lll" I I ,11 ' I 1tl1\ I l~tU'>rtl<llill .1111· I'\, FIR.ST FAMILY r•i 1•~ fl 0 ,.... l f t I 14 tN<.tOE MOvrc; ,. 1111 J•. I • 1 h<'f (' \ u lot 1111 m 1 to h<'int; ti ji11 lwr tlrun ju.fit htl\'i11g u wn Pc; ··g to s·· (PG) I "SEEMS LIKE Olp TIMES" (PG> I "POPEYE'; . I "TRIBUTE"' (PG) l''EVERY WHIC . W AY YOU C AN" (PGI . I OllJfS BROTHERS I lllRl'I ANF (PGI l'Hfr<'H ['.CHONG m1 1. ' I P l~t\111 fl:: f!ENJ AMIN GOOnA 'ft \.>IRl (PG) rLA~H GORDON" BUCI< ROGERS" !PG) 1 l~F ELEPHANT MAN £SCAPE 10 ALC:ATRAZ' (VERY WHICH WAY YOU CA N ' llONFYSUCKI f" ROSE (PG ···~···"'"~ .......... ~"· ....... ,...,..,,.. .. •IOOll "• '••uvNO 1 "GREAT!" ''Neil's 1novie is a gem." ".I llHI I Y I 1)1 H 1 t I I NOW 9HOWINO I IJWAIHI'> ( INI M A 1'1 ITl C ITY c rHTfR ' ,. 'ofO/\f1•ol ,, '611f' I I 1r t 1,1 •,"U,' • • • • "lrn1dP M ov('s without a d oubt one o f the year'~ more likeable pictures." . sr lOOIS Gl08f-OEMOCRAT, f rank Hvnler ----Na# llHOWINGt--. -1 --- .... cnu •sa 11nmm1 ..a• ... -• 81ookhu1st Loar South Ca1sl Pim UA Crntm1 ~~ m 6446 !>•6 21 11 •1141893 om -=--~ AO•oe#YMW•• •• ~ ow'd .... II_..., ll'O" -• .,._,IO~ _,,Of..,.... - K11elzcr. Peter Stone , Mark Smith, Allan Slone J im llarrison , James fo'isk and Xavier Trevino'. Curta111 is 8 p m Fridays and Saturdays with matinl'('S at 2 pm on Sundays through Feb. 1. Rt•!><'nat1on1. 675 3 143 or 642·8119 Hl'>t nay m ak('S his directorial debut al the MURDER MYSTERY IN THE ll 1111lin~ton Beach Playhouse with "l.>c)uble Door." HITCHCOCK MANNER a suspense drama by F.liza~th Mc f<'adden Bettie FRENCH MOVIE \1u1• I l<'n I 1<·r~. s·u._ an Crump and Kat h_.y B rot,~h~e!!n-t••WiiilTiii~iiENGliiiiii'SHiii..1.Umll:;;··T~IT:.;LE.~S:iiiiii~iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~a-ht"-1111.t lw ra~t --- ('OMl'l.fo:TIN(; TIU~ company are Marc 1·1lla111·. ll r ,1d '<)'•'. Vicki and Ro bin Davidson., Fr <u 1k \',4·li1·1. Lt» Hc·cd and Art Wins low l'•·rform.1nt·1·.., :Jrt• l·'r11luys and Saturdays at 8:30 th1 •111g lt h •li 11 Ht•:-.crvations ~7 -4465 \1 1•a11"hd,·. "Showhual" continues its lung t 1111w thro1114h .la11uar) at the Harlequin Dinner l'l.1~ h1111 ,.,, .r;,03 s llarhor Rl vd . j ust north of 1 ·,,.,1a i\k,,1 h·rform a nn'~ a re nightly except \l 01nrlay, t t ..,o'I \"itl!Oll'> 979 5511 r.osu Ml\• Ml)NllHtlOH Bf ACM llllSSIOll Vl[IO •NAHlllll .. . N¥U.~I g9~~::~~ I ~:1;ij·~1 . . ... l 99~·1.oo ~-·I ~ .. ···-.. ) . :~ -.0: J ,tt I • ' .. , r\ ,1r-1 " , , •• ~ I ~ / 1 ""' \.. SEEMS lll<E OLD TIMES IPC.UJ-.W JU • 4.U 0!) 1-\~ 11 U W••I-t-"" ,,. S•t 10 10 ,._•fir S."O• '"• Pu .. t • B•h•n" fh• ''"'·on• NIN E TO FIVE (PG) • •• • •\' ~o t •'> ., <At ""'••"-""I" s., '\,. l ••\t S""O• lJ•"• W1id•• e nd R,1 h••J P1y0> STIR CRAZY "' 1 '" J 10 .. '>'l e " •u o "'"•"""Ir, '":1oal 10 4'+ {•th~"° .. POPEYE ·~ l ,' 4• \ t1•1 "I I\ II rn I 11 1i. W•#-4i t''•l1 I1 ...... II I AH!~ .,"'Cl~ POPE v E "'· 1 ' "ar • '" ""••••"o .. ,. Sef 0 JO (••tt ShoO• q t:tb•fl O• frllllwo RACING BULL tRI ' "IJ I llJ .. <'0 a )0 t(' ·~ #••••·"'" ~., '0 l0 f ••,,S"'1>• •• '"" 'fie ~ Ii"' t h i••i.J Ptt l•' <.I IR CHA/V r . ... • '"' 'r "' ... Mon '" I tS S.., S.... HOO-yo I 00 $11-SU" t 0 IMPOH f AH 1 NOT I Cl ° CtlllOIUN UNDl ~ 12 FRH! '4obe11 O• HHo RAGING BULL IA1 ~· <I' THE C .. OIRB OYS 1111 ftiR • .. I• t• • ~f.@Jj~ 11·~:;::;,:.~l O••>•u• C. ~1HC1t1 • lill•rlen 919"00 I HE FORMULA 1111 HOLl<ES '"ot . . Mflj~ 1t101,. • ~h••td• • l "•••lopn..., At1Uf'• l ,• I Hf OLUt: LAGOON '"' 111•1 ''"'•" ,~ I lie ~lollywoocl Knlghll 1111 ... ~t-.. •• • '"'a. ...... ,, .. .......... . 11.1 1ae1 .......... ........ •ti' l :l 1 40/0 u •"• W1ltte • .,.,, f1111 Ile rd Prye. STIR CRAZY '"1 Pho1• USt:D CARS 1"1 '"'•Po••• ••ntntJ fne ft\fon• NINE TO FIVE 01'01 t>••• BRUBAKER (Rj "'' I'! .. I• •I,, •f'I • "'" t• '•'t i> J Cn•"' Ci1••• · lioictle lfe•n SEE MS LIKE OLD TIMES 11"01 P1u1 THE MAIN EVENT tl'<ll .............. .., ... O•M ....... •fWI "•<f\ef'd ~- STl R CRl.ZY 1111 ""'' USED CARS 1111 ~----ti \ 'fefftWhe\' '•M1 POPEYE 1!'01 "'"' THE HUNTER t..at ll'ANllM ll0\'111 ALL ftlat Comd M .. loo No "-r Doe c ... II loft•mltuto ,,_ .... ,.,_ flONYICNt • ""' THIHUlfTlllCNt I\ 11\Hf\\11 JI '.' I I I 1 r'I " ..... '/ ... Io• o .. t . ·' . ' t· •' ..... , ...... , . . . . NOW PLAYING MANN SOU IH COAS f Cl!llOOMI ...... l •I.111 WL'J:J l' I • IOW.UIOS CINFMA WlS I UA MOWll S llNCOlN OAIWI IN ...... t, IDWAAOS SAOOllUCR MISSION OlllWI IN .•. .. _)_ . ' r .. • • • • • • u $ II JAN. 6, 1911 HAPPENINGS CLASSIFIED C2 C2 ·A woman who won't respond to · a garage sale might be · hopeless ... Erma Bambeck C2 Fish story 8y IOKL C. DON 611 ... o.u, ,.,..,. ~ •• ,. At the foot of A Street on the Balboa Peninsula, a c,ua1nt . rnuaewn·bke clubhoun stands as a sbowcue few more "than SO years or sport fiahin& olf the Oranae <.:out 1hut a short diatance from. \he din of lhe fUQ zone. the Balbea An1lin1 Club serves as the CO{PfortabJe bome tor shimmerin& brass trophies, en· craved plaques. emblems stuffed and mounted prize fish and a host a nautical memorabilia and antique sport fistuna gear. Caretaker or lhe meeting place is Helen Smith, the club's secretary since 1961 and unofficial historian. WITJI llO&E THAN 1.000 mem- bers. the club doesn't hold general meetin1s. Rather. the group has socials, sport fishing tournaments for all age groups, provides statistical and nautical information on offshore fis- hin1 hot spots and offers free weigh- scale service to members and the public. But the main purpose of the club. as it was when the angling club was organized in 1926. is "to promote the the conser vation of fish in local waters and rod and reel fishing as a sport." HM b~ ... ,s over 100 yean old and anythm" over 100 years old has to be touteh ·· A clubhouse chalkboard keeps tabs on lugest fi sh caught by members. And a posted navigational map is spet·kled with different colored pins to show where the fish are biting. The club also organizes lectures and training seminars on varous sport fis· hing subjects. But Mrs. Smith says the club's main emphasis remains conservation. "YOU LEARN TO fish as a sport rather than lo kill every fish you Iii.ii catch." says the 61-year-old Costa Mesa resident. "You learn light-line fishing, which can be a lotoffWl. She notes that about a quarter of member's total catch is returned alive to the sea, tagged and re· gistered for identification. That way the club help state officials monitor the growth and migratory habit!. of Pacific Ocean fish . . A ngle1 s can radio the club for the latest fishing report, or drop into the clubhouse for sorrte chitchat or to exchange a few fi sh tales. £ "And through the years a lot of our members have held world records and se>n)e still hold world records," says Mrs. Smith. ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP dues ( $50 for sin g le adults ; $75 for families; and $15 for juniors' under 18> support the group's tournaments, conservation efforts and paid s taf· fers. Mrs . Smith , though, whose husband, Gil. retired as captain of commercial sport fishing boats, en· joys her current landlubber status . · Keeping the fishing record aboard 1 above J up to date has been the job of Costa · Mesan Helen Smith <left J. She's been LILUAN SCOTI', she says, took the club record for Black Sea Bass. With a SO-pound test line, the Irvine woman took in a 462-pound prize off the western shore of Santa Catalina Island. club secretary for 20 years. •'They say that anything over 375 pounds," says Mrs . Smith of the ''.I guess as you · grow older you don 't get up so early in the mom· ing," she says, "I feel like l 've caught my share of fish . Let somebody else do it for while." ,, ,, ... .. '1l · -- Disney's dreams scary, says writer By MARY JANE SCAllCELLO OI -O.lly Pllet St.ff When NBC canceled "Disney's Won· derful World" after 27 year s on television, one local wrtier wa.s sad· dened but not surprised. Charles Shows worked at the Disney Studios for 10 years. beginning in 1954, and thinks lhe studio is ·•going downhill 90 miles an hour." Shows, who lives in Huntington Beach, recently wrote "Walt." a book about his experiences working for the man who made Mickey Mouse famous , and vice-versa. "NO ONE WILL ever replace Walt,'· he says with feeling . "He was one of my heroes. His death in 1966 left a void which can never be filled.·· In 1954 Shows joined the Disney staff after creating ''Time for Beany," an award-winning puppet show. and "Com- mander Comet," one of television's first space shows. Put into the "Tomorrowland" seg- ment of Dwmey 's television writing team, he suggested a story on space night. specifically a trip to the moon. which was still in the planning stages then. ~ "Walt was a perfectionist. so he • brought Wernher Von Braun to f Hollywood to advise us on details." c Shows remembers. "In fact. the rocket ' u ' in our sl:low was the same as the one which eventually landed on the moon. "BECAUSE THE ACTUAL space flight was so similar to our program, Von Braun wired Walt from Florida, ·congratulations. I see they followed our script.· Walt never cared how long a project took as long as it was done well." ·Shows' book. written in a folksy style. is both complimentary and critical of Walt Disney. ·'I tried to show both sides of the man. but if I had to do it over again. I'd leave out the criticism." he says. "People looked up to him so much that it's like attacking Santa Claus." Walt (he insisted everyone in the. studio be on a first-name basis) emerges from the critical sections of the book as a man with a large ego who s urrounded himself with yes-men. was stingy with salaries and cash bonuses. and left employees terrified or his criticism. • "He was a simple man from a farm background who had about a sixth· grade education, but he was a dreamer who looked ahead of his time." Shows says. "EVEN IN IDNDSJGHT, his dreams scare me. He urged his employees to . buy stock in Disneyland, but we thought it would be just another amusement park and fail miserably. "Wall was a fine, moral mart who personally supervised everything the studio made. He was the only producer J ever knew who didn't make movies just for profit. ··He made pictures to have money for the production of more pictures." Shows saw "The Black Hole." Disney Studio's first PG rated film, and was dismayed. ••THEY'VE UNLOCKED the door now," he says. "I heard they may begin to make adult-only films. And the worst part about 'The Black Hole' is that it was just a copy of 'Star Wars .' Walt created only original work." He tells about a story conference held at the studio just after Disney won an Oscar for his cartoon of "The Three Lit· tie Pigs." , One writer. thrilled with the award, immediately began to talk of another cartoon about pigs. but Disney stopped him cold . "WE'VE GOT TO do something dif· ferent, ··Disney said. "You can't top pigs with pigs." The statement became a mot· to around the studio. Shows says, whenever a project lacked originality. But Disney's zeal for perfection drove him to work long hours. "Walt's work was both hi s life and his death." Shows observes. \ h, . l Disney Studios are· going doumhill at 90 miles an hour.' claims "Now. of course. the two parks are doing well. and the studio is having prob· lem s." "Walt was old-fashioned enough to in· sist upon movies with a happy ending," Shows says. ~I \\.11l )J'lirtl• l Shows is upset especially at the idea of the Disney name going on movies rated anything but "G" for general au· diences. If his predictions are correct , the studios bearing Disney's name may not get that happy ending. I ~, I • \ ~ for mer employee Charles Shows of Huntington Beach. a , The 'gator tells what's on your mind By CYNTlllA ROBE&TS ... , ............. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Is there m allitator on your chest? Perbap1 a polo pony? Do the ln· ltiala an your tie HY "YSL, .. ••• tlallb you're not Yv• St. -. La.,.!. If IO, you ·could be "alpature 1ooda ....... .. and tbe quality tba~ nu from tbe PY· m. knit pullover la not •• .,., HK or 1tyle -lt'• perlCllUlltty. A marbtin1 study c:oaductecl la New Yori, PbUadelphla, W a1hln1ton, D . C ., and Bald_.., illdleat. lt'I wtu.l'I -oa Joar mlad -not on tile = fl,., .... -tbat de-. _ ~ wb.._, yw'U Pa1 a ,. ..... ..., ............ . ..... ,..dint .. . • .,.. ....... tlaat ... a.led waat to projeet aa 'I'm on the fut track' image. They 25 percent higher for signature are aareuive compeliton who goods. Nearly 90 percent of the need to be nOtlced and are seek: customers were indifferent inl prestt1e, '' said Rolph E. An· about designer symbols, while 9 denon, a professor of marltetinl • pttrcent indicated a strong pre- at Drexel Unlvenity. ference for notable initials and Anderson and Marvin A. 11 pereent showed an aversion to Jolson, of the University of · 1l1nature 1oods. Anderson said. Maryland's marketing de· &E8PONSE8 WE&E matched partment, surveyed more than with -allty questionnaires IOO cuatomen with chat I• ac--· ~· COunts -Jar•• department at.ores to anive at a composite of the .,. "1lpature 1oods prone" shop. and tnindy boutiques in aample per, but the results would cltl,..aloqtbeEutCoaat. frustrate any manufacturer who wanted a clear prollle of the Ideal CtJITOMS&8 WE&E 1iven customer. · simulated advertlNmenta •how· The "alpature 1oodl" buyer lnl'JWo venlODI fl 1lx Items 1ucb 11 u1re11 to be female, or black, u sweaters, jeans, neckU• and and one who enjoys en~- 1blrtl. Altboulb each pair wu ment with natr -hone racin1. ~=:.S~,:!inC:..O:'t,=, 1oii..-clbW ~ danclq, An· IJJDbol. I df~taid. - Prlee1, la Hparate aet1 • .. ,,.., tend to be involved ln of ,......_,,..., were eitMI' 1porta wben tM7 can excel, llke ....UCal ar Mt at 11 ,.,... to 11eula • tolf. ADd tbeJ wat.eb . . TV . variety shows and crime shows-the crime shows because they view the world as a fierce. competitive place, and the varie- ty shows because they want lo see what the beautiful peopl~ are do- ing, ·lo 1~ clues for their own dress and behavior,'• he said. But 'lhe study ultim1tely showed that thole who strive for deai1ner status come from all aae ll'OUIJ9, either sex and any part ol the aoclo-economlc Kale, Andenon Hid. BECAUSE THE study focused on chars• card cuatomen in bet· ter department 1to .... , tbe out- come refleeMd • more affluent 1roup, Andlluwa 1ald. £"8 so, "Income and IOClal class didn't aeem to be important," in detect· In• tbe cu1tomer1 who buy · ll~atunlQOdl, be1ald. 'A lot al = an bu)'tnl tbem no ~'t be, • tbe, bubofu..ArlMOIM,''be aclelld. ID a bl1hly competitive 1l1nature 1ood1 market ·- Cmla IDlla JeMI alODe NPGlt· eel ................ ,.... -.......... could be.,... lor Ullt ••n•d marbl .._. U .......... ioodl aHllllrS, 0 A.ad•-.... . . ' tuiMo.y, ~ •. ,., READY FOR WOMEN'S DAY ARE JANET CURTIS, JO ANNE MORISON AND NANCY WILSON Women to have their day ISy MARl' JANE S<.:ARCELLO Ott• Oally ~1'°4 le.ti "'Collage of Knowledl(e" is the theme set for I he Women's Day on J an 30 at the University of Southern California. The program begins at 9 a m in the Norris Cinema Theater and 1:. part of the ongoinR celebrat.ion or the t:ollcge's looth birthday. Speakers will discuss such timely topics as "What's Traditional About a Traditional Sex Role," "You a nd Your Aging Parent," "Genetic l!:ngineering : a Moral Issue for Scientists" and ··Ma king the Most of the Present " Lunch will be ser ved at Town and Gown, 1md the day is scheduled to end at 2 p.m. Local USC alumnae on the Women's Day committee include Diane Schweitzer . Mary Ellen Hanley and Betsy Van Dyke of Newport Reach: Pat Kollenda of Lagl,llla Beach; Nancy Wilson of Irvine who is president of the Trojan Junior Auxiliary : Helen Curt.is of Anaheim ; and JoAnne Morison of Corona del Mar. president of the Trojan Guil<l of Orange County. Ti<.·kets arl' $20. a nd interested a lums can l'all fi44·9155 (or information Th(• Bahia {'ririnth1an Ya!'hl Club wclromcd l !HU appropriatPl y al its Corunu dc l Mar C'luhhousl' Wf:DNESDA \',JAN. 7 By SVDNfo;V OMARR ARIES I Mart h 21 April 19). New m\erest.s. frt•sh ront·t·pts ;ir1· ft·atured. Y11u learn ch>out "dinsion 11f pro11t·rty." rnanagt'mcnt recs Jand frwndship. 1.t•o. Aqu<1rt us n<Jtivcs play slgnifi· c·Mnl role~ Vll'WS :ir1• v1ndil'atc<l a "lost love" n·turns. Tl\URliS I April 20-May 20 >: Fami l y m e mber talk!. (If "obligations." Maintain bal ance. refuse to he intimidated. know that higher ups will back you. Cancer. Leo, Aq uarius natives fi j(ure prominently. Hunch is on target. You'll know in whirh dircl'tiontoprO<'ced. GEMINI !May 21.June 201 : Your humor, versatility and alertness combine to your ad· vantage. Lines of communkation open news comes in connection with travel, publishing and legal principles. Sagittarius and another Gemini play key roles. CANCF.R I Junl' 21 .July 221 : Acquiesce to a rebuilding pro~ram discard "flimsy" mate rial. Acc~nt balance, structure, bas ic ser vices. Focus also on employment. nutrition, gaining new understanding of those whb rely on your judgment. LEO (July 23-Aug 22 ): Do plenty of "analyzing" find reasons. discern motives, op en dialogue with me mber of OPPosite sex. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius n atives figure prominently. Corral legal documents check r e- ference material. ' VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 221 : Make adjust· ment lo requirements or family you gain by promoting atmosphere of domestic harmony Act accordingly! Taurus. Libra , Scorpio persons figure in scenario. Money is due from forgotten or surprise source. LIBRA CSept 2:J ·Oct. 221 . Favorable lunar aspect coincides with creativity, important de· cisions leading to change , travel, variety. Ob- tain definition of terms get rid of s uperfluous material. Streamline techniques. Charism a is spotlighted. SCORPIO IOct. 23-Nov. 21): lnslst on quali· ty, focus on pract.iral matters, check accounts, take inventory. deal with Capricorn, Taurus, Virgo persons. You gain from recent contact with older individual who will share benefit of business acumen. SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21>: Ideas should be carried to fruition -relative will volunteer coperation. Display appreciation, but don't get involved with visits, mesaa1es, trips . and an ultimate waste of energy. Aries, Leo S!ll(.it.lari~ ~rsons play imPortanl roles. ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Past pro-· cedures could be holding back financial pro1· reas. Know it, take steps towards treater ln- dependen.ce and fresh concepts. Focus on personal possessions. special collections, over- due payment.a and a bility to make most of m•terial at hand. AQtJA&WS <Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Lead rather than follow; break new 1round, tlve full play to lnventlve capabilities. Special debt la collected. Judtment, intuition are on tar1et -.know It, ex· \Ide confidence, Imprint your penonal style. ADOtlMr Aquarian la ln picture. PllCD (Feb. 11-llarcb JO): Surprtae party coaJd be part of exc1Un11eenar10 -popularity tnfn .. ":filOdal lnvltatJou seem to multiply. GftWll, ttart111 naUv• ftpre promlnently, llembw oppo1lte au '°1npllmenta you on ·~ ... mour." . Olllil tOlSl »lfft.l""~s Horns. hats and cham paj?ne with Beer Wellington followed by da ncing to the Big Band Commotion celebrated New Year's Eve . Retiring activities cha'irman Joyc·e Hostetter was assisted in party arrangements by Charline Weiss. incoming activities chairman, as well as Commodore and Mrs . Robe rt Hartman, Vice Commodore Lewis Spruance, Rear Commodore and Mrs. Jack Sporleder and J ean Tandows ky. Mrs. C. Sidney Johnston of Laguna Niguel is planninf a party for 300 guests given by the Silver an Gold Chapter of the South Coast Medical Center of South Laguna. The rlub's annual Valentine party will be held Feb. 13 at the El Niguel Country Club. Assisting the chairman will be co-chairmen Mr. and Mrs . Robert Hastings, as well as Mrs. Fred Alle ma n . Mrs . Herbe rt All erhand, J eannette Hakrr . Mrs . llenry Brani, Janet f"ranks. Mrs, Donald Gamble. Mrs Leonard G re~ory a nd Mrs Adl•lbc rt lloy Others cm lhe (·ommillee arc Mrs. Jack Lyons. Mrs. G . Vi ncent M anmng, Mrs Sherman Todd. Janet Walts, Mrs. f-'rancis Welton, Mrs. Newton Whithers and Mrs. GL'Orge Wolf. Mrs. Allan McDermott. ('hairman of the ·group, and Mrs. Lowell Heacock, auxiliary president, will act as advisors. Mr. and Mrs. R.11. Johnson of tluntington Reach enjoyed ;1 seven·day cruise to the West lndies. Leaving from Miami, they visited Nassau in the Bahamas, San Juan, Pue rto Rico and St Thomas in the Vir)(in Islands. llappemngs 111 published Tuesdays an the Daily Pilot If you have an Item or event nf social in· terest. send 11 tn Sandie Joy, reature f;;d1tor, Daily Pilot. P 0 flox /51i1J, Custa Mesa 92626 James, Sarah favored LONDON CAP ) -James and Sarah remained the most popular names relMfilered In lhe births column of the Daily Telegraph last year , but the n umber of e xotic names increased, reflecting Britain's growing ethnic ~iversity, the newspaper reported Saturday. The paper said Britain's "multicultural society" was represented by names ranging · from Aoife to Zinnia. Elizabeth fell from the top 10 girls' names for the first. lime, it added. If Catherine and Katherine were taken together , the paper said, they would have topped Sarah for first place. And if Louise as a second name were counted with Louise as a first name, it would have outranked them both, a lthough it was listed only 20th as a first name. Oliver and Laura are rising fast, the newspaper said. but did not give their rankings. It reported a variety of imaginative names including Calvados, Non, Beauregarde and Welcome, and wondered about the parents who named their dauj(htc r llarlotte. Do11 't ask for Willinms CHICAGO <AP) Anyone who walks Into the Williams Clinic ahd asks for Dr . Williams is bound to be met with raised eyebrows and slightly amused expressions. Then would come t he question: "Which one?" With fi ve Dr. Willi ams, all of them related and working together, the Williams Clinic is a family-oriented medical clinic in more ways than one. • There's Or. Cha rles Williams, his two brothers, Dr. Jaspar Williams and Dr. James Williams. Then, there's Charles' son, Dr. Charles Williams Jr .• and Jaspar's sen, Dr. JasparWilliamsJr. The Williamses founded the clinic in 1960 to care for black families. More than 100,000 patients come tot.he c~~ each)'e8;C- Singles Calendar n.tna each Wedulday and con- rains informqhon on diacuation groupa, pon~s and e~nta ~ to the public in the Orarage Ccxut area. ~nd. raotice• to Single• Calndar, Doll11 Pilot. P.o: ,Boz JS«J, Co.ta Me1a, CA ~. lnclllM 110Mr name and ttlephoM number. Nolicta m...,I be ,.cftvtd two wetk• in adoonce o/ on tWfll. FEATURING Garage sale therap~utiC Since the holidays, Mother has ~en lookinl a UUla peaked. It's nothilll you can put your fincer on -just a lot of dra11ing from chair to chair and hea vy siahing. When J saw her doctor al a social gathering, I m entioned mother to him and he suggested we run a G.S. series on her. "What's a G .S . series?" I asked. "Garage Sale," he s aid, pop· ping a ·cheese puff into his mouth. "Run an old' ice cream freezer before her eyes and say. 'I'd let this go for a buck.' or a chipped candy dish that you'd be illing to sacrifice for a qua.rt.er and see how she reacts." "That's going to make her well?" ~ "I've seen women at death's oor who hiked three miles in he dark to get dibs on last year's calendar and a box of melted candle stubs. It's worth a shot." The next time I saw Mothe r. l mentioned I had a pair of cuff links with scorpions on them. a lawn chair that wouldn't open, a drinking glass with a picture of Johnny Bench on it, a jewel box that played "Happy Days Are Here Again" and four milk· stained bibs. Mother's blank fat·c slowly c a m e a I i v e . H c r d r o o-p y shoulders straightened, her Limp hands became clenched and she stood up and announced, "That sounds like the beginning or a garage saJe0 From that moment on , she became a blur. She moved the cars from the garage to the street, hung lines for display, carted card tables out or closets and attirs, posted signs. ran ads. orchestrated the comings and going of merc handise a nd barked or:..dt•rs li·k{· a no<:k worker unJoadin1 the QE JI. It was Jike watchinl a transformation in slow motion. Her steps quickened, her cheeks flushed wlth excitement, her humor was restored, her wit .....llllarpened, and I would have been willing to bel this frail woman would never have been able to carry a grill/rotisserie under her a.rm a week aco. The day of the sale was her finest hour. ''No, dear, we don't do alterations." "You want that stuffed hamster head or not~ J 11ot three waitinR. '' ''Ask ,vourself, ir the boots didn't have a hole in them, would you be <tble to buy them ror so cents?" ··we don't deliver. Who do you · t hink we are, Saks?" "We call that a hus band and put him <lown , he's not for sale. He's just n•sting." I askt..>d the doctor if a ll G.S. series were that s uccessful. Ile said, "If a woman doesn't respond tu a garage sale, very frankly, I'm not too optimistic a bout her.·' Name change helpful • is DEAR A NN L ANDERS . Because you have repeatedly said in your column, "Life is for the living" your advice to "Highland, N. Y. '' disappointed me. "lUghland,'' a widow of two years, planned to marry her de· ceased husband's friend. Friend John wanted to adopt her young children. The grandpare nts • we re against it because the grandson was the only male in the family left to carry on his deceased father's name. Your advice was: "Don't do it. It would be another heartbreak for the bereaved parents and it might be interpreted as total dis· regard" for her first husband's memory. "Highland" might welcome another viewpoint, based on my personal experience. May I share it with you? My brother, the only male in his generation. died in his early 30s, leaving two pre-school sons, the only males to carry the family name in the ir gener ation. After four year s my sister·in·law m arried a fine man who wished to adopt the boys.· My mother bN·amc very upset when s he heard of his plans, and wrote a lung letter to m y sister-in-law asking her to please reconsider . I pleaded with my mother to destroy the letter. Jove the grandchildren re· gardless of their last name. and remain on gOQd terms with the family. Thank God. she took my advice. For over 20 years my sister-in- law and her present husband have "respected the late hus band's memory " by being considerate and helpful to all members of our family. As a veteran teacher I have witnessed many upper elemen- tary schoolchildren who refu se to use their legal last name and insist on using their re married mother's last name instead. I a m convinced that these children feel a sense of security when aJI members of the family have the same last name t'cel· ings or unity ar c very import.ant. Believe me, chanjc!ing a n;ime will not lessen the gnef 11f a loved one's death. lnslcad. !Ett the grandparents share the rP building o( a far:nily unit <ind ex pc•rience some tht•rupeut1t· m11 m c nt s o f happ1n c:.:. NA MELESS I N C l.l :".:TON . IOWA Dlo:AR CLINTON: Vou arf' right. I was wron~. And hun· dr.-ds of read1.•rs h·l nw know it. \'ou said it best. Thanks for Sf'l · tin~ mt> straight. () EAH AN:'ll I.A:--.: U EHS I am m a rru·cl t•> a v.11man I C'an 't plt·ast'. no maltl•r ho" hanl I tr\' Tht• first \l•ar wt· 14f'rl• mar rti·rl I bought ·ht·r a hotllt· of h1·r favoritL• 111:·rfumf· for nur Hn 111\'t'rs;try ~lw ... <11d 11 \\ ,1 '. l(lo c·xpl•ns iVl' ;.ind mad•· 1n 1· l<Jk1· 11 bark Whl•n I st'nt lwr f10141·r-. •111 twr b 1r thcl:.i y . s ht· n1•\1•r .... aid . "Thank you .. l nsk atf I ,l!ol ;.i sermon on ··~pPnd 1nl! m•iney foolishl y " Last Christnrns I hought her an electric floor huffcr. Sht' was insulted. l havt· yt•t to pi<'k oul a gift she liked f':\·cr vthing has to go back lo tht· ston: \' t·t . whtn I a sk hC'r for a hint of what she want:.. sht• s ays, · Surpn!>c me· " What c<in I do with a woman I i k l' t h 1 s ., I.() I • 1 S \' I I. I. E ti F.ADAC HIS DEAR HEAD: Nothing. S.-nd a donallon in hf'F namt' lo a worthy charity. If you want some su.cgrstions ''Hitf' lo me aad send a self-addressed, stamped envelope. CAaa Lu- ders, P.O. Box I ltt5 Cblca10, Ill. 60611). DEAR ANN LANDERS: My favorite brother married for the second time last June. The woman Ca widow ) is very sweet and she is devoted to Ralph, but the poor thing doesn't know anything about housekeeping. I guess you'd caH her a slob. They live 200 miles from here, which is a blessing. If l had to see what goes on in that house on a 'day. to day basis it would probably ruin our friendship. I'm writing to ask you to settle a l'ontroversy Last week I spent a few days with Ralph and Ma rte Everything went fairly well until I saw her give the dog leftover stew in the same bowl she servL'<i it ln. After the dog h cken the bowl clean, Marie put 1t 1n the dishwash.er with the "upper dishes WhPn my attack of nausea 11ai.sed over. I told Marie it was a \ l'ry unsanitary thing to do S llH'I' doJ(s run loose. get into ~~1rbu~t> t•ans . run with other dogs and so on. She said I was ··roohsh" to be u1ncerned since sco.tlt11ng waln and soap will kill almost <iny germ Please. Ann. St't her straight in the column. Sht• reiids you ever y day. - WOOPSJNG IN WILMINGTON DEAR WOOPS: I •m •o authority oa dogs or 1erms, so I checked wttb a lop veterilaarlu la Chlca10. Thia Is wb•t site said: "~o harm will ceme lo the f•mlly If the dog licks the bowl and it Is pat ID the dlabwaaher with the rut of tbe dlalles. Sc• ldlng waler aad soap trill llt- drl"d kill almost any germ." So, there's your •aswer -:- straight from the vet's mouth. I l'onress I stili wouldn't do it la spilr of t~ vet's approval. So I guess I'm "foolish.'' too. . Anniversary tea Retirees to gath~r The Laguna Philharmonic Committee will celebrate its 18th anniversary with a tea al 1 p.m. Jan. 19 at the home of Mrs. Edward Quilligan in Monarch Bay. Members, guests and prospective mem- bers are welcome. The committee will sponsor a preview performance of selected works or Gilbert. a nd Sullivan al 8:30 p.m . on Jan. 23 at the Sad- dleback College Theater of Fine Arts. Mrs. Harold Hansen has arranged a post· performance reception for guests to meet the artists. and profits will go to the Orange County Philharmonic's school music pro· grams. Call 499·4260 for information and tickets. Paint it yourself A wood toy chest pro· vides sturdy s lora~e. It's mo re economical and imaginative to paint it yourself. Start with an unpainl· ed wood chest or a used chest from a garage sale or thrift shop label dirl't•l ions. Prcp<irc the s urfac·c h y painting with a priml'r t·ompatihlt.· with the enamel paint . list• one or more (•olor~ to decoratc thf' toyhox with geometric desiJ.{ns. num bers. alphab<>t . or child 's name. M a k e p a tt e r n s ,, f cardboard and draw the Tht• llunt111glon Beach cha JJter of the Amt•ri1-;m /\ssoc1ation of Retired Persons will mc•l't at 1 pm. J an 21 al Murdy Park Center in Huntington Ht'a('h A business m(•eting will be followed by hingo and refres hments . Art.<>. crafts, cards and games meetings are held the first Wednesday of each month. New president Harney Cohen will be assist· ed by other offi cer:. Isabelle Jeffries. Bernice Winters. Carmel Campanozzi, Madeline Shaw and Isabelle Fluhart. The board of directors includes Leota Rlaney, Goldie Honnel. Vesper Gustafson, Leo DePalma. Ike Kish, Marj(arel Mcleish. Aman· da Lin~ley . Lois Pctrykowski and Ma rgaret Taft Gay day planned Orange County Gay and Lesbian Resource Oay will be hC'ld S;1turday. Feb. 7, al Cal State Fullerton The event includes information on activities of c·ounty ~ay and lesbian groups as well as work~hops on a variety of issues. Hegist ration for the daylong event begins at 9 a m Cost is SlO per person, $8 for students. For more information on the program, call Bob at 997-9600 Scrub a used toy chest thoroughly inside and out with a deter gent solution. Rinse and let dry completely. tr the surface is in good condi· tion, simply sand lightly and wipe with tackcloth i10 paint win·adhere bet- ter. design with penl·il Then .. •••••••••••••••••••• rill in with paint applied Use ename l paint, since it is harder than _ ....Q.ijler .P~ints. a~d .. ~ill withstand wear and tear. E n a m e I p a i"n t i s available in a wide variety of colors. Follow with a small brush. For the more am- bitious or talente d , nursery rhyme or car· loon characters may be traced on the toy chest and filled in with pain\. Children 's coloring books ·are a gooo source I of pictures. Keep both toy chest and toys clean and sanitary with reg- ular care. FEAR OF FL YING 7 INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP TREATMENT EXCELLENT RESULTS! CALL FOR BROCHURE (7H) .... Ml9•t.41tl•C714JMl.ol70 . 4500C-.-Mw• ..... M•~ ..... ~ ... Th• ..... ,, Marketplace on th• Orang• Coaat DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You-e•n lelt lt;-,.nd ''· 142·M'78'i----One-call •lftce·· Trade tt With a Want Ad Faat Credit Approval ...... . "-"• "•r S. .._. .. ,.... S. .._..,For S. , ••••••••••••••....................................................... ·····················~· EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY 1 'WI .. 1 ., Meeice. \II rt'•I r'l .i h J •J \ fr I I > r 11 I 11 I h ., ™-~~I I~ .. 11t1w 1 I tu Uw ft"(kr .. 1 ~ .. 11 11 .. u, 11\tt \t'l ul I ~ .. 1111 ti n\Olk.,_ II 1lt"f:J I \\• J tl \t'f'tfi.t! ltJh ,.,"''" ''"' t I 11n 11 .. 1 11•" .. , , 11 .. l'r11n111alh•h '"''n l 1111 'r4l't.' U•i••I t t•1t.:H1ll >C\ U( n.lll .. 11'11 IOI lj;lll ,,.. ..tJI IJ\IC'llltl'CI Ii.• 111.i~•· •n) "'" h 1.ir1•11·r 1•111 • l1m 11 .. o1 111n "' '''' l'nn\llldltlJ(I flu,, fh '\4.!>l'dJ>t'I \4 ill fhll lr.nu .... inxl} """''µ' ""' atJ\ .. rt1:.111i.: ltlf I t'.1 1 ~talt.> Whll'h I~ 111 I 111IJ lloo uf tht> la~ aaoas: Advertitffs -..ct cheek their ods daily .ct report H · -ran ~ahfy. Th~ DAIL y PILOT CIHUfMS I~ for the tint incornct insertion ~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gwral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VETs-NO DOWN! Neat and dean 3 lldrm 2 ba home. Ownt•r wrll I sell VA or conventional ~.IXXI. Call now !17!) 5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Immac ulate 3 llclrm home on burldablt• It 2 lot . Alley at·c·cs!>. H V parking. family room with fireplace. 1·m·erc<l p a t 1 o fo' i n a n t· 1 n ~ ' Hurry this won't lust• 646-7171 1~~~1 HEIGH'tS DUPLEX Try SlS.0011 down • ~I &1rm and 2 Bdrm un1L-.. suPJ!r comer lot Nl•wly l andsc,gp-ed :rnd rt·· decorated. Owner says sell oow. t:all ~ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7 '4-63 '-6990 -CDMDUPLEX 2YEARSNEW ... 4 Bdrm and 2 Bdrm ... Sooth of PCH ... Private bnl'k l'ourtyard . " l'ar garage ... Oak planked floors . Italian trlc . Super ter m..o; . Call now ~ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7f4-63 J-6990 MESA VHDE NO. Rare 2-story 4 bt.>droom in out.standing location. Its less than 10 years old and has formal dining. fin!places. 3 baths. fa mi ly room . F u ll price $160,000. 751-3191 C:SELECT T' PROPERTIES DUPLEX SI I 0,000 Prime Coata Mesa u nits. Clun -rd urbiahed ! F'lnandnl! Hurry call far de\alls ! 646-7171 · ITHll: REAL I &&l~Tll:RS •"".a tOOJ ........ IOOJ G...,... 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• llL19WIU ._,,....NCI :t ttK ~II \ l'ONIJU s.ta.,llOU 4• 21/J IA ' '\UI) h Ullll' :,halH' 11a/ (1 t">h ~alfll IJJ I 111 lib/ .JiAI 1'.ast>.111<-I '11:.LJ Mt.,,. a Roy McCar•. Rltr. 541-7729 0c ... tw °"'Duplex :i & ~ l.klrm;, 1·orupll•ll•ly REALTORS 675.5511 CATALIHA VllW ...... .., ...... d J ........ ......, rooM ...... ,.,.... ...... S,.Ctec ........ of oc .. •ad IJey 9d Ri .. t If..... Off.red .. $450,000. COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS 2515 E. Coest Hwy., CoroM .. M... 675-551 f funu:.ht.'<.1 llulll 111' I 1 1---------\'"' ~arai:t: o ff t•r dt1\.\" µJ) ntcnt a m! lak" 11\ ,., $1\:!6 000 luan a t 1111 I~ IZ '". for :JCI yt•ar!- JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 IACIC IAY $15,000 DOWN :i Hdrm c xc l'Ul1\1• tulNnhome Slt•p Jown ll\'111)( roum . l1•atb tu .JIOWl•r fillt·d lcr r<H'C llUj(t• rnaslcr !>Ullt• hosts Splll'IOllS b;i \t'11ny WI\ h Ua1·k Hay V1t•1A· Wun 't la."t with tht'M' lt•rrns l'all tc. for dt'I a1 b SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7f4·63 J-6990 IAYSHORES I st OFFERING Ttus out.J;tanding quality large rarnily homt' m a pn\la\e beal'h 1·ommuni ty was t·ompletcly re- m od e 1 c d 1n 1977 4 lidrms & 3 sepura\c patlui; on a pie shaped luc Sll8S. ooo. U.M. MAJ<SHALL RLTH &l-l-!l900 LEASE OR OPT TO PURCHASE. 4 Bdrms. 3 ba ext'l' home w1pool. Avail ..-eb Isl. S79:'.>/mo. Purchasor1ce $148.000. Owner mot1val- <.od. Call 631·69!10. Kat hy or Vivian. Agts . 100/o ASSUMAILI LOAN Sharp 3 Bdrm. corner lot in El Toro. New carpets and pain\. New Ct'nt ral air conditionml( I .arge tree shaded yard Ask- ml( Sl03.000. to'or an ap· poinlment to see. call 540-llSI ~.:. HERITAGE REALTORS Ddebout Bay&Beach Red Estate ltfAI ESfArt UCllU'#Cf SINCE IMf IAYCIEST Elweptionally neal four b e droom home T l•akwood paneling _ Marble entry. Bras!f lilthts. (.;Qmin~ top cook ---· B u rl t -1 n microwave oven llOx IOH lot. 1':xcellcnt v a luc. Owner may.l'arry Isl TD at 13'){ . $205,\XX). 6:Jl.7JOO M.I . JUST LISTED! 0c ... 11/J llockt Warm &r cozy dollhouse! 2 Bdrms. 2 car garage Plus e xtra parktng. Land included at $179,S(K)! Wboa lay Prop. ......... •67S.7060• DUPUX STIPS TO HACH Large 4 bdrm down, 3 bd rm \ti). Built -i ns . fi replace. large s un· 'deck. Priced al 1325.000. M2·m3eve. Mcot••r'• SpaclOWI ~room. din· ln1 room . .nd family room w/wet bar. Great l~allon in Newport bllctlbay area. Flnanc-. i n1 available . Call .. ., G . Family? l.a~rm. homl' 111 1101.1ul a r Harhor V 1ew llonws Wu lk1rti.: tJ1:- laJll'l' to s1•h11ob.. rccrl'a 11o n a nd s h oµp 1 n i.: Overlooks nature "a lk Uµgrad~'ll and Jlfll't't\ i11 sell al $345.000 . t 7141 6 73.4400 :\ Ill\''""' 111 ll.1rhor· l11'"'l ml'fll <'•1 Udo Isle Dream Home Nt.'w l v rt•mo dt•ll•d :1 lA'\lro0m + d••n. J full llalhs. qu;ahty l'llfl ,,lru1· IH>n. hardwood floors thruoul. wood :.hullt'I'!> all windows . l;irg(• sunn~ palm. steps tu bay & heat h . lcnn1:; 1·uurls. ya l·hl dub. l.1do V1ll;i1:1• shoppmg. many 1•x1ras SI00.000 assum11lll1• 1st TU Pr1n'CI to s t·l I ~.000 644 71120 eblnoo COSTA MESA FIXER (~lier wrll 1"1rr v fmurw mi.:. ·I Bdrm 2 bai h. fam1 ly an·a. :110111• £in•1)1:11·1'. l'OVl·rt'<.I patm. lar).!t' lot. µoul Makt• a hu .'. $111).llUll l'al l totla ~ a4ti-l31J EXCLUSIVE !Joa.rd & cart.' home. h('.. l!l beds. Sep. OWnt.'rS J 1Ut 2 Ba house , lge game rm. agt 631 5661 . 548-0817 f!I Coldwe.11 Banker DRAMA TIC IA YNOHT With TWO boat slips . Unbelievable bay view. Newer custom designed 4 RR. + family and Dining Room s. ·Watch the sunsets on la rge inviting patio. $1,895.000. r ~ IN NEWPORT CENTER •• 644-9060 , fAUIUl ,.. ..,, 10 ' \..~ ..,.A, 10 J03J lOll S861 .. 2 GIMIHf r,_f-f twAf II ... -, ./fJ"tl 10 6 7 II l l 1)6 51 66 1• ... • J#l/I ~~ ... 111r U .. s 9 27.19 ·:· 11 .)0 80 ~ uo • i ...... ,.'I' ... ........ .... '"" il f "lllW"•"I "' ,.,,., ... ' ,, .. ..,. lfllt• 11111",u .. ,, '""''•'' ,1 1, • • 4•11. \I '/, f 1 ~ '""' I l/•1 • \ •, • +V I f •i 1· ·• ,,. .. , • + •H.,t• ,.. .. ......... ,. .. .. .. I ..... ,. •ot l• ,,t,, .~ t..,.., ...... "' }~ ......... , ii ..... ,.,. \I> /41 I ., t •• ... ,. ... . .. _, ... ,. ~ .... , .... , ., .... .. ,.,,.. JI "''"'. ... ., .. / ... .,, ... ' ,.,,.. ..... . .. ~ ,,,. "'" ,. .. .., ... .. '\•t"'' tl*'l'll"•' . ....... ~,._,. h _. ... ....... ~ t l ~ "it".-.... ..... ·I ·<,J Iii u••I "·w•t1''"'' '1t+I .,,. ... , •• , • ., ••• ii1o.t\ ,. t ' .... ff PN-•\.-d .., ""'"'-"" •"'""''"'''">' "} """•'J fl,'A'.\l\f!\ .,,,,.fi ''P>•f' • IWQ0.•-11 '-IA•f )COlllO 01"' "~ NOr If~ 12 II 17J2 • )9..081117 ~ $.AGIM,UtU\ ~o .. II I • Ott; ii f_!l ... ,~2(),,. 5 44-"6 CA•tKOl~M OfC II J ,,.,. ,, '-\, , l 42'1\..• lt-1" , .. -MISA YHDI IAMILH - $174,900. Test.My .,., ..... .... ..., ...... cll•w. ...... ......... ...., ,._ ·& Wtdia c.r ....... ., .. ~ ........... 2,..........,.1 ..... -... .., ............... . ..._....._._.c._.,a.. Mew• ... -W. -OWMH '9MAMCIS-YllW HOMI. C. a s .. W.. .....,. o......,c....;·1 ......... . I l/'12% .. --.... ,.,.llU •• ._.~c n, ... ,.... Ute, ., 4 ..... J ..... .._. 2 ...................... ,_ & ......... ,_,,.. .... fur...,. •• SELECT ~!!!~~!!!~· PRQPERTtES. .......... Mntr ......... ,,.,, ... Wlll8NOMT NOMI s Ill, 4 Ba, cuatom wtter front home W/l'JD'l"tdo8. Prioe .......... dltal ... ........... eppt to • eau Carol Hoff. a,i. .... 2744 I. COAST HWY. COIOMA DIL MAI 751-1111 PAii .. llAl 5 ... OOMS/J IATMS/HVH He re's a Unique Homes: In Harbor View Homes on a large lot; s unny 5 bedroom. fa mily room, 3 bath custom design wi th c ul d e sac location , count less u pgrades , m irrored wardrobes. view of the mountains and priced at $289,500 (fee). U~l()UI: ti()Ml:i - REALTORS. 675-6000 2443 EHt CoHt Highway. Corona d•I Mar WE HAVE 2 3 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN DUPLEX COSTA MESA HIME Greenbrook S bedroom $109,950 with pool, s pa and dose Cost a Mesa ·s fines t to everything. Assuma Clean & neat. Good '" ble Cinllncing and or· l'Ullle, Call for more de fered at only SlS9.SOO tails. 546-2313 ~3666 l~A~Weil+~ CIE llDlll ILlllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SER VICE PRIME IA YFIONT Fort\ 1-'0111 l"ronla).!t'. l'I E-H & IJOC'K In E:\1·111,1\ t' S1·l·t1nl \ I iuanh·1I BA YSllOR ES c 'om 111111111' Tn1h ·c;1,,.1!1•011~:\'w" or Island' & l 'h;1111w b J.m i·I~· 'l\•11 H1111111 !\1a,,ll'r Su1l1• W11h l"irl'pl;11·1• 1'111:; F1111r ll1•1lroom-. & Bo1111" 111111111 & l>t'n S11•p tht\lfl l.1\ 1111! Huom With 'l'l'n F11c 1l ( '1·tl111i.:-.. Sp111·11111!> 1>1n111g :\n•;i W11h \\t'I ll:tr 1·:,1 r11 J.;,ri.:1· Fru111 l'atlu & lfrek Sl.~1.'>4t 1Mll1 759-9100 #2C_,.... ... ,._. ....,..c..e.r macnab I irvlne realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IAVINE COMPANY HAlllOll RIDGE! Award winning "Dynasty" model w/panoramic ocean and city lights views. Marble e nt r y, cus t o m car peting and shutters, mirrored wa lls . Quick possession. $395,000. Belle Partch 752-14 14. CW·48> 752·1414 551-1700 (ompu• Volley Ce<>te< Woocl>rodqe (.,,,oe< 642 .. Zll 644-6100 q()I Dove< Dnve Harbor V.ew Cente< NEW EXCLUSIVE BALBOA ISLAND Woodl...tw.,...,Jl ... JINI. ... "" "-w;._,. I I*"' ... l••llf .. OWMEI WILL CAllY ltt TD.• $450,000. 673-6900. WATERFRONT HO MES, INC' RlAI 1:.SlArF 24.ll> \.\' l 01d•I 11'4\ Nt>wf}illfr B.•.1• h '31-1400 ll~M.s1111.-Aw . B.1lb .... ,,,~00 '73-6900 TUT t&ILT c.~ 'O ~ii.. l -fl 'C ~c.. won PUUlll ~\.!:) \'"lJ ~~ ~ (.;, <f" -:J IHI -----f4•ff4 ~. ClAY I POU.l'N T R U B S I I I' I 1--....,L_I_R__,T_L..---41 .. ~: Tnere·s ooe infle••ble rule of j• I I I . 1etev1s1on No show os too bad 8 r; t( l•lfMMOW l[llfPS IN I 'HI Sl ~OUARl S ORANGENESS C S T N A l N H G T l N E A R l E l H R T A T R l H C 0 H S 1 N A P S S M S A E M A 0 0 E R M 0 E A R H G U A D P G-411 I P E 'R B ·U-E·-l· /H :-Y ·£ 0 N L· T A R N A G L G 1 P G K H T 1 R D 0 H E N G N E 0 N H N U N E 0 A E A G Q N U l T E W C D A K ~ A R 8 H R D H I R 0 S R N 1 A B E T P R S C I L 1 R T 0 X H E N C 0 0 M R A 0 0 N 0 U E G J H 0 0 H T E E E 1 C 0 S 0 t Y G D 0 0 C 1 C E C V R C P U A R Z R H E D G N L P N L H A 0 E 0 N A A A A J I H 1 T A 0 R N 0 T E R I N C M T N T R Z ~ R 0 I E G C H E P G(S S E N E G N A 0 II A R 0 M I C E S R I E A H I £ S 0 Y C 8 A Tueeday. J!ey e, 1911 DAILY PILOT Q .....•..•.............. , ..•.•..•............... ... llULA POINT llACMMON'f Panoramic v iew at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine r oom. entry, Ji ving room, dining room , built·ins. etc. $1,385,000. UDO ISU Newly remodeled traditional style 3 bdrm, ~ bath home featuring large recreation room & 2 patios. Living r!>'>m has attractive beam ceilings, fireplace & fre nch doors leading onto br ic_k pa tio . New kitc he n bit-in. apphances. Close to tennis courts. sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be sold fuJl y f umished $420,000 . IAY,.OMT We have several fine homes with pier & slip BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J .l 1 fluy .. d, I>•·~" N B bl', t.1 1,: SUIMIT aJI airers oo th1:. s uper duplex lo<'ated m old CdM. The pro(>t'rty has a J Bdrm cottage with new pa.int and carpets lind a modern 2 Bdrm apt w bit-ins . The owner says sell and he'll liste n to all orrers . As kini.: S:?.89.000. lalaoa Island Rlty 673-8700 W E S L EY N OWNER WILL CARRY Owner wtll help linann~ Uus super duper 2 Hdrm h ome . Pr1clt· ol' ownership NiN! quil'I location. Commun ity pool Only SI 1!1.51/0 Call now !f79-5:170 ALLSTATE REALTORS TAYLOR C I KEALTOH.S ~111ct· 1H4 DOVH SHORES IEST IUY! GIEA T VIEW HOME! HICE llOUCED S4'5,000 Ownt>r will <·a r rv 1st T .D. loan of $370,000. 12' '.!' i 'inter est & no loan fp~ Loveh· Ivan W('lls 4 RR horn(' with form a I d i n i n g . f a m i I~· rm + a magnificent entert ainm<'nt rm \.\1th Jge sky li~hL Heautiful pool & spa View of ha~'. Newport Ctr lights & mountains. Hest financing one could ask for .. WESUY N. TAYLOR CO., IEALTOtlS 211 I S. J11, I ... lo.I NE"'W,.~-IT19 cecna. N.I . 644-49 '0 He s the most enaeu1nc doll •S he llops into lunn1 pos1l1ons Chaim a child. tltet1 tllt tum on. de«>11le 1 bfd ••th this 11111 scarecro• He's 48·•nches tall crocheted ltom t09 to toe of syn thetic •OfSled soatn Panern 7'91 us1 d11ect1on1 $1.00 IOI mtt pattern Add ~oc each palletn 101 f11si.cf1n au mail and handhn1 Stll4 le: Alice ... NH dllCI lift o.,t. 106 D...,,_ .. Ill, Ol4 C""-Sta. liltw ,.._ llY IOI U. f'rillt """'· ._... u,, ...... """'-· ~tell on lo tilt tr1ft boom1 Send for our NfW 1981 NHDt.ECRAn CATALOG <Mf 171 c1ts1ns. J ""·"'""llS IMIClt. $1.0G M.l CMn ..-s. .Sl.71 -IJ4.14 Glllll llldllM QllMI llUlillllla ......... mt:t.az:a .... ....... ,.,... .... .,.... '•' lllf , ....... l~ ....... -111--·~1111111 ··~a.-...... 1a.......-121.,..... . llu...t .. .. 117 .............. ,., llM 9?111--llNllli........, • Ill M"T9 ...... "* 1•W [ ... Shouldtt lucks •nO dulm•n steeves c1nte IM ne" look of lop wodlh w1fh !>Ollnhs makes M•rlh1n11 btlow look ~ mucll leane1 nar1owe1 P11nttd P 1lltrn 9089 M1~StS Sim 8 10 IZ 14 J6 \~ .LO , S11e 12 (busl J4flakes ?'• ra•ds 45' . 3/8 yd conlt1st sasn 5-4 $UO t.r .ti ""'"1· ................... ~ .... -.. ... SIN ta llMIM llM1111 ,....,...,. .... ..... ..... !JZ ... 1• St., .. ,.._IT 1•11. ,.... Mllll. .-SS. ZIP 1111 IM aTU: -L NEW SPAINC-SUMMEll INI PAnUtll CATAl.OC bt1f1CS fOll TEllRIF IC SA¥"9GS t111 flMI. ..... ......... ,00 .... ., C..to$16,900 Ttus spacious 3 Bdrm 2 Ba condo is tastefully det'Orllted. ll realures a 2 car sarage. communi· ty pool and spa . Assume the loan and the owner nwy help finance Corana del Mar I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5(Yl Acacia. $337 .000 620 Acacia. $286,S(IO 425 ..-cm leaf: S26!t.501J 642 Ramona . $875 mo. 721 Jlcliolrope. $11511 mo Onve by, then call Sara Marvin. Unique Homes 675·56118: ti75·1i000 JRr. :ilia house . n1rrwr, very pvt. with 2Ur. l Ba ~p Ullll. So of JIW) Prof'. dernr. 67 5 1115.'l Costa MHa I 02 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 120/o ASSM. LOAM lmman 1late 3 l\tlrm -i bonus room with har Ne ar r11·w c•urth tonc 1·arpcL-;, shu\lcr:. & new tile in kltl'ht•n Lovt•h· yard with stora gl· Shl.J i\.'k111g $1Sli.OOO For an appt to sec. t'all ~() 1151 ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS NEW.CONDOS IEASTSIDE C.M. 25l2Santa Ana A Vl' 2 lilt, 21:. bu. conlcmµ. design. $116.uoo 646-5096 646·6093 E.ASTSIDE Spotless 3 Br home L~ l0<·ated Oil a lot 17x234. 1.oned R .i 1·ounty Fur mort' info ask ror H ht Milliken. 631 121ili l~#Z~I~ Rt-:ALT• 1HS MESA VERDE Sl:!5.LIOO asioum 11 ':;', ~1&11 ANXIOliS :1 ht'tfrt111m Spanish dl'l1i.:h1 ' Suµl'r clt•an. Own~r will hl'lp fin a n c e SI l!.1 .5 011 T ARR t-;1.1. Ht.:ALTORS 540 17211 STEAL IT! $89 500 In lovely ~ta Mc.'iu. :l Bdrm 2 car ,;arage . larJ:e patio . n e "' bathroom. Call 645·9161 L OPEN HOUSE REAL TY /.' llWUSTING Charming. totally re modeled J Bdrm 2 ba house. Huge used brick frplc in fam r m. Lgt' mature trees in front & rear yar.ds. Assumable ranancing. Playa R.E & Investment 67J-lt00 ASSUM. 60/e LOAN Real value! 4 lge bdrm . 2 t.., new cri>t. new paint • in & out. encl. pat.io. rock fflllc, play area. 3 fenced yd1. Bargain p r ice. $1 15.000 . O w ne r . S57-3148. ......... 102' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1M flOllCLOSUU I Bdrm, 2be. llJ0.000 . DD eearlana Dr. . ...... LeaH·Optlon l Br "...W"~w.toceaft v11. pool, Jae .. aaooo. o..-. ....-................... ....................... ••DOWM ~ aw ..... -.oWC•lela ..... ...... tont ,...,,,.~. rill ~ . f I C4 a.'( N.OT \ 1~.J~l.tll1 ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mr 111lw.. .._ ... ._.. '-Wt ..... ,_.,,, rtlf JIM C-..._ JU4 ...•................... ••••••................ ...............••.•••.• ............... ....... . ..................... . tt S .. ._. tMI IUMITI ...... !!! ............ Ms!....... . ....... '-... taDl1'1f'otC •!•• .................. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Wea&alde c.t. llaea, E·Slde._!e!.c:ed .1ar~ ~,"::~~·:.:: VF ~n••t'!f ·-;r:a..~·1 .... I @Jee. '9tw -1artTi. 'l 1lf. PT3. __ ... _Mt-mu_ .......,.._ ·--~· llf 111'~ $40,IOO .,,. Price IO-lliO.-..... .._ . -· -, ~ J ..,... 2 • tMl,000. Oa payment ••• "' t 1• ......... , .. ,.,, JM£ ftE1 .... ouo. owe balUH. "-''* 1. Bdrm 1 bath II IL... 1n1 ••P•t•\• family IU'.4. P'HA loaa with ll ll~. ecittqe. MIO per mo. ._._, room. 2 ftrepluu. Ill.ODO bal.._.... payablt' _ ....... _...IL€'TIG£. c.&116f.7TZ2wee&day1. rr hMdwoud Own. nor M ... PITI Cl .. n 3 ' .._ ... _ dr ~rDarlilabl• velur an 1wwrool,NtJP91plumb 18driawiUtdeepklt Aall HOM£\. Z..-,1 .... apea,crpt.no -~ .,... '• mml de-1n1. It V •"''•.. 20·~ 11'1 •.ow. S.tl&or will -t--~-.-..1ardener. M25/mo. .U.bk IMiallbc"hol* dilwn. vwner w1ll 1·arry l'arry '5000 :Ind T 0 Real Ealalt' Invest +dep.Mt-51127 nu ...... u.-.1 hum• .11 lh• hnan1•1n1 at menu f.._ J Br 1~ "-· Ll"9·~ .,.,.., Mkmi l.1DW <.:out Hwy, NB • br, 2Va ba condo, 2 car do u b I" 1 • 1 1 • l' • ~ • 11)1 645-6646 1ar.. tt'nnia, 2416 Le• ....-. pan lah rHI ,. Pure ~y, Back Bay. ~ant ONy SJ u .ni 1ub APft.I V AWY ~rl3M521 ~'t RITACE mil ur m a 17 1•1 Near new 4 l•lf'X. 2 •••••NEW 3 Br. 21-" I' I I\ I I ' IN., 7119 \IOI bdrm, Z baOI Ht•h un1l 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••0,IO! --·-- •CIUTM N.!ll1 1-4 Bdrm 2 ba u ve di.e to l"H ht011 l.111-..d. 2 Country t:tut. • Guurnwt RQtlluritnts {)wmn iiUUIOWt Al..1 ' Now· CAU I RR COnoo. by uwntir ll'I, auum 175.000 Nr l'I vu: Clr J tw H33 :ll:ll ut~i!812 •llAT ,,, AHUMAIULH. lUh' , mt rate Dwncr wt.th fl~•"'" •m·ltlhd 811. Ocean view. Spa, tffl' aar•1e. etc. llOO + l500 . ltll'altt llM.000. SD ..., .. ., p 'f' A <irundy, Hllr. •· . .....,. aca 1c ve. tn)-4161 H· 105, 642-7743 or flOUlllLU IO'Y. A..411\IM . LOAN Sl6-Z4tl DOWMTOWMH.I. Rednelopment •re•. to pnc» uniia on 4 C 2 100!. •25,000 Owner mil)' carry.55-~ SM-8475. NWl'J' llGTS 2Br Cot· ta11 e . adlts only . 1\ove1refri1. no pets. Pill mo. ~0767 lltr, Ira. yard. small do1 ok. $4~0/mo. -+ S200 ltf'l'unty depo111t See at Zit Y .as I 22nd. St. .......... ..,. ...... ... ,...... 1tf-'-t°.f'8 It • .. ..... ........ , . ._. ........... ,i .. ;;;w .. ·m; ;;;;;w .. m. c;;;; ........ . ....................... ....................... . ............................................ . WoodbrAdl• Creebide ..,,.._ w /dodl for 45' 1114 Br, z a.. '1IO mo. • l.br yercl. pr, eMld~ WWow LHle 4br, Jba, boM. 4 Bdrm 3~ Ba. Z 8r._L.IL._.._ mo o.t. ... _, Uatt-:A' frplc. A IC. _. • .._. ••. ~viillitililmaiia.SDOO ~~m•u.' Halllilam imped \lMD parlr/PQC>I , decorated mo. CIR RJtn. Bill or ~Ml4111 U•lrke.~~ 1ardeaer u.t..at.-C,.._5Clll ~ Oc!eanlront. ----_.._ Avail. now. Z-4 Br. Con· SHARP28R,MWqlU6 2Jlr, lBa Coodo, w /yd, Woodbrid1e. li550 mo. WQM _.,., 497-5835 Turtleroclt . New towahouae. 2 llaater bdrm. lam. rm, 2~Ba. moaq. ft. Prof. dec:orat· ed. Pvt. patio. Pool, ten· nil. park clme . .-00/mo. ml2T1 or 1~-661112. U.P. Terr. 2 Br 2 Ba con- do. w /hot tub. Alf\. ~. 562·3338 Woodbrldae. 2 sty. 2 bdrm, 1.,., ba, pool, spa, tmnis 6 lake, ~ mo, be. 75&-0115 l5 to, choose from . 1525·$1200 monthly on one year leue. We're the ones to call. Ulll Harbor View Hme do. m.SURF. . palo&, pvt yard, •el 3br, 2ba, ram rm, ··• _..... .. pr.,daild0K.ta590. 1lryli1bt, new cpt,l1e 1 Br ad"'t .. ..,.....,, 2' nr. Call *--· uk for pmio, dbl aar. "80/mo. MNrity. View ot fowt· _Uada _______ _ 131..-Z or Answer Ad lain • 1arden1. '500. lblrm, 2ba, E. aide loea- HIJI, M2""300 24hn. Owner. ~az30 ti on. W aa her Id rye r HARBOR VIEW HOllfS3Br. 2Ba, fam rm. new inllide. nice yd, 1900 mo. 644·5965, Mf.1flll lBr Condo in magnificent Versailles, very ex· cl1.11ive place to live. "75 mo. furn . 963-9358, Ml-3119 BLUFFS. New 1 level. 2 bet. 2 ba, sunroom. D.R .. &reenbelt. W /D, refrig. $950 mo. 640·8146 , D7~!5830. ----- tHEIWFFS 3Br.Oceanlront hkupa . Nr ahopa . Weekly/ llo. Garage, '5110/mo.1G-OM1 __ . __ linem, etc. fM0-.4784 "'--' a b u.fw.w..d ••••••••••••••••••••••• JIZZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Va Bd, 2 ba. frplc, dis· · hwaaher. No or PCH. -.W/mo. tst/lul, sec. 510 Jumine. Avail now 87~Z2112. 9-Spm. Large 2 Br. 2 Ba . SHARP l BR 1 Ba, patio, new paint. cpts, nr bch. s:m. 660-8585, 851-11080 UPPER I BR. aemf furn . UPPER 1 & 2 BR apta, s:no, 1325. AdJts, no pets. 631·2171, 311 W. Wilson 2 BR duplex, fncd yard. grdnr & wtr pd. $430 +s200dep. 673-6158 Avail. now. Lge l br, adults. no pet.s. pool & carport, $375/mo. 931 W. 19lh5!:. MS~-- TMc-advlUlllJt! ol uu~ tdJ« 1 ddemcna ' ThLS ne1111 Woodbrid~t' Ill lacbed bonW Will be: ft' ady in nud Jan hkio~ Sl~.ooo ~dual\ t'I) 1 lu" • RED CARPET 754-1202 Udol• lmmed IH'l'Ul'itOC Y Move rn t•ond 4 br & Jen. }(Int floor plan. hut:\' ma s lt'r su1 lt• w fareplat·e l'rat't' rt' dut-00 tu J415,ll00. lJkr !)63. 81112 , will aJ1o carry 2nd TU l.Dvely 2 Bdrm home on lartll' ltJt. doee to st·hools & shopping Only $13.000 down Full pm't' 112.000. a.JI Allen Agt 640-~7 or !172 0542 Pranc:1 pals l.Mly MONTHLY PYMTS S'2o wHlt szoec D ... No qualifying 2 Bdrm. I ba. 2 1·ar ~ar Nt'w 1•pts & 16UNITS FULLHTOM $649.~00 Xlnl rentlll area .. Kf'nts are low $55.000 + present 1n rome. Sl~.000 down. as sume $2~0.000 Isl ut II""": ()WC balante ''" 4h< ••« ~m•. new. [ ~l)~brldge l'.J)l. frl'sh paint lhruout Realru ~ l:>l /li&Sl +-$200 de· ' pout 7~ 0!116 SS J • 3000 4t2t arrann Pkw)', lrvlaf',. 4 Bdrm <3 + den 1. Gorg eo us 2 story townhouse. Love I y features. In beautiful cond. On quiet cut.de· sac. Near pool. Move in today at SB50 mo. Agl. 640-5560. Fireplace, beam ceil· ings. sundeclt, dbl garage. Walk lo Lillie Corona Beach. '680 mo. 6'4·9'216. 2 Bdrm 2 bath new apt. I BEDROOM w/REFRIG No pets. Avail now. $325/mo. 851·2175 l.Dwer:,'650. 213/598-0291 -or 213/33Z·834S l BR. adull!i only. Deck. -----DIO mo. 1st, last + sec. Rear apt. 2 Br l:i,~ Ba,.. Lance: 64.5·2462 . c. .......... ...,..wood Outslandang VillUt' 3 bedroom home. up graded a.nd landsuj>t:d. Re11dy lo move into. v~ atlnu·llvt' rinant· ing. $189 .500. RCTaylorCo , ,J!I l)IJt)() By Owner Deerfield Park lfome. SpUl'IOUS & elegant. prof det·or. 3br. 2ba, hugt> ram rm w/bookcases. u ir . else to park tschools 1ten I rus racquetball tourts. Sl79.900 Call arter JPM wkkdays ~·4791 ------RAN <.: HO SAN J OAQUIN. greenbelt location. view, 2 Br. den only $53.500 to lakt' l>Vl'r loans. Redhill<@> Realty 552 -7500 ORAMGETREE COHDO l Bdrm + Lort Sharp End Unit SB,.1.950 Cfll H.wporiC..tr. 640.5357 TERMS ... RtSICOMDO l,.llvely I Bdrm. View of Bay & Oc·ean. Owrwr wall finance. $269.000 R1ta'-Wrllcr . A.gt . 7S2·57IO MEWPOllT CONDO Don't miss this rare large 2 bdrm condo m <..1ifr Haven Over 2000 sq. rt. l.ast one of only 10. Great neighborhood. RJI R Annt> Dt>oms Agent. 673-7300 Beautifully upgraded Westchf( 3 Hr 2 Ba. pool. S225.UOO Sl70.0UO aasumable flnanl·1ng. No agent' please. &12·7071 IALIOA rENIHSULA 1'2 blk lo heh, CUlt' 2Br Cottage, $275,000. As sumable Isl TD at 10' 2'« $125.000. Owner agt 544·ra!I - BY OWN~R ·H arbor View Carmel. JHr, 2Ha. fam rm. new thruout. will carry $190.000 TD w1981.ooo dn. 644·5965 or 644.7697 -~ . TWO on HM IEACH Deluxe OCl-:ANl-'KONT duplex. 'Vacant ready to rent . Fantastic: ll'rms ! ! Call for details REAL ESTATESTOltJo: 675-1771 tlJ QUALIFYING rlumbin.i. Ownt'r wa II 1nanl't' 1-'ul I 1.1r1t'l' $82. 000 !17:.! 05.\ :.! II r ~53.57. ask for All1•11. Agt. TmHn 1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A TERRIFIC IUY 1-:xtepltonal v a luc an Uus charmintc J Bdrm homt'. on R·3 lot In pnme location. near sehools and tennis t'OW'ts. Perfel'l starter home oc investml'nt pru perty. 179.950. don osen r••.1.ltor..., 731-3111 497·484H oehet-R"1 Estate • •••••••••••••••••••••• MDWleHoMH FwW. 1100 •••••••••••••••••••••••• San Juan Capo. "5.000. 2 Br. 2 Ba. 1480 sq . rt. 8 yrs. old. Agt 541·5032. •EXCITING• 5"cialhy Beautifully customized 24'x60' Viking Home 2Br. 28a & enclosed porch, In Laguna Hills nicest 5 star park. 21 yrs old & older. ( J E83S9 l. Gt• ..... ofPcn &tat.Sale Beautirul 24x60 Bar· rington Home. young a dlls & small p e t welcome. By appoint· ment 54().4937. '*Cote Realty & lnvttslmt•nt 640-5777 TRIPLEXES Absolutely privalt' loca Uon Ill Corona del Mar and Balboa Penimiula. Large Wl8umable loans. Ask for Smith Meyer. C /21 Mewpori Clltr. 640.5357 CM of Shih I I "•rtv 2600 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 40 A scenic Oreli(on Coast ~t'('lf\c1ty, fenced. out standing vaew. actessa hie. owner49'l·249!1 Idaho Lund·4 arres. 20 m1 . to Jar kson llole. Wyo. 20 ma to Grand Targhee Ski Resort. 42 m1 W. Yellows tone Park. Skiing. fishing. backpackinl(, snowmobiling etc'. 208/787-2783 hQme. 456·9915 business. Bill Sears.· ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HauNs UIUfurwish.d ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3222 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ocean and canyon view Three bedrooms. Two baths. Available now. 1125mo. Yearly. 759·1243 Agent. <.:lean l! Br W/stove & __ _ _ refr1g. encl. garage. TURTLEROCK Broad· adul~. no pets. $680. 773 moor Plan I. 3 br, 2 ba, W W1lsoo. 6.11 ·41189 din rm. ram rm, frpl. lge ST75/mo. 5 Bd + bonus. k.ilch. comm. pool. Nr. Lease & refs rt.~uired. schls. & shopping. Xlnt. Singl~. Pt'tS & kids OK. cond. No pets. S825 mon· ~ thly. C•ll: 494·9M2 art 5PM Mt•sa Verdt', beaut 3bdrm. 2ba. l'.hild /pet '*· Avail 1-·eb Isl S7~. 673-8333. So Coast Pla7.a area rnn· do 2 Hd. 1 1:1 ba, lge patio. rt'<' fac1l. adults only. no pets $500. 67~5160 or 646·484-4 Lovt'ly 4 br. near SC. WOODBRID<iE Area Condo, 3 Br. 2"'1 Ba. din· ing rm. bar. microwave. family rm. fplc. cpt.s, drps, a/c, comm pool & tennis. 2 car gar. Avail 1mmed. S'125 + dep 7S2·1282. 5br . 3ba , frpl c . cpl/drapes. fenced yard. w/d hook-up. $850/mo. 61 ·3'a>. 965·2326 l2IO ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Bdrm t"ba condo with pool.1395/mo. Park Realty 551·5000 -----------· ...... Nt:i.e.d or u.otw..itlied 3100 ...... , ...•............ ONTIIEISLAND 4 Bdrm 3 Ba home. 2 car garace + carport. frplc, boat lie· up on water. lllOO/mo inrl. util. Agt. Marie. 673-8700 1425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 pools, 3br. Jba, condo appliances incl. $595 c:all 962·7780. 964·3871 l'laza. family rm, frplc. atrium. cul-de·s a l". gardener. $7~. 64().749!1 a...,.. leoch 324i MEW CDM LUXURY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,.... c ... ~h Fos 2 Br w,gar. $395. Cpls fnc:d yard w /patio Water pd. 2526 .. A .. San- ta Ana. 636·4120. 1·5PM. 3br, 2ba, nr SC Plaza , 2sty, lge bonus rm. avail im med. $700 Isl . last +deposit. 556·0751, 57·53.S7. 1226 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ".,. to "" . mesl am· Country setting. Big meruties +location. 2br yard, frplc. kids/pets ok. -+ 31or. $750. s1200. Appl Large. Needs TLC· w owner <7141760·18!11 ~S52:5. -99-2286 . ----L..,..a... 3250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. I Ba. on stream with double garage. pool. ten· nis. jacuzzi. Avail. Jan 19. 1981. $525 per mo. Gardener inc:ld. 22952 Caminito Luz. Phon e 2 13 /545 03 2 4 or 213/671·6181. NWl~CREST CONDO 5 Mm walk to Beal'h 38<1rms · Master Bdrm w1study·3 Ba ·din rm sunken liv rm w wet bar-rireplate·k 1tchen wtnook. Tennis tlS·pool saWla-Security . S800 mo 962·4589 aft Spm. ... .. ...... Fwftishd Beautiful Duplex. 3 ·aR 2ba. 1500 sq ft. Partial oce-m view. $600 /mo. I yr lse . Call Dot at 581·1210or731 l!l73 3252: ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Bdrm unfurn \model) Ocean vu. tondo. Pool. Jae. $435. l ·645·02:ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• lmmac . vu home . '650/mo lease. 3 Br 2 Ba. F. R .. L. R. w /fplt . 499-1341 dys. 831 -8419 eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br. Carpets. drapes. stove. refrige Utils pd Utensils for 4 $375 DTS-0935 'adults.nopels."7~.Call ---------· - 6'4·4190. 1 Br. Stove, Enclos ed ----~fe. Adult. Ref's. No --------•! pets. $310 mo. 646-0983. 2 Bdrm. 2 bath, view. 2 car garage on Acacia near Pacific Drive. Unusual value. tJll5(> mo. Avail. now. <Sorry no dogs). New 3 bdrm, 2 bath. beams. used brick. 2 car garage. large patio Walle lo everythint: SflSO mo. Vacant & r~ady. (Sorry oo dogs> 'f.i(1U1JllL t/,t>/. 1/lm .(i>ufw1u''J 1-q.1-.tt 1.'11 205 E. COHI Hwy .. CdM 1 Br. Eastside. small but cozy w /lots of neat wood. $3Ut. '642·9450 aft 5PM. EASTSIDE Coea:t'l Woods 3 Br, study den, 2 bath, 1.n·level. frplc. skylight. deck & patio. No children or pets. $645 mo. Avail. now. 180 E. 2lal St. Days 646·4262. Eves645·9543. 382' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lease-option I Br "model" rondo w /ocean vu. pool. jac. $3000 Ownr. 64.5·~ -------eo.taMno 1124 OCEANFRONTCONDO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br, 2 ba, pooL 2 ...... ... Newly detor <!as pd. e n cl gar . p ool . d wa s her Adult s 642.5073 HEWL Y DECOll. 1 Br. gas pd. enrl .iar. d washer. pool Adults 642·5073 3 .. To~ Newly decor g11s pd , entl gar poul . d was h er Adult s 1>42.5073 $Ji6 l! Br l '• Ha Adults ooly <.:at OK All built· ~-..Balcony 496· 1921 BToro 3132 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut. l year new 2 lir. I• 2 Ba. Condo with pool, Jacuzzi, & rable TV in· cld. Yearly S550. Broker 675-4!112 ........... leoch 3140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br. 2 ba. frplc, wet bar. S"JOO. Call 9·5, Mon-Fri. ~2445 Brand new I & 2 B<irm Plerpomte Condos. Pool. spit, tennis. garages . 1213) 59&-7202dys; 1714 1 842·4721 eves. Vacant 2br. 2ba. frplr. "50. 1st & last + $300 sec. 542-3597. TSL Mgmt 642-1603 Villa Pactf1ca 2br. 2ba. C.... del Mer 3722 PINL· BLUt'f' APTS frplc, gar. l blk lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• "" 2 br. 1 ba, (rplc & wet bar. $425. Call !1·5. Monfn, !J00.2".'> ------BToro pool/sauna. adult com Bachelor, includes utal Spac 2 br. 2 ba Adult 1212 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful Turtle Rock 3 bdrm home . tuts ex. rellent lerlT).!I · easy to buy! Call for details NOW! ! Also nice family room. atrium. dinini.: room . Beautlful landscaping many fruit trees. Only Sl74J100 lndudes the land Ch a r mi n.g 3 8 d r m Peninsula house gues t Wilt on extra large lot. Owner needs to sell and Wiii hsten to all orfers (ireat existing f1nam· IOI(. CLASSIC MOllUHOME SALES 2706Harbor. Ste2U6A 540.59J7 mty. no pets $625 Isl' I $375/mo 640-9900 Ask complex. patio. \'le~. 2 Br 2 St l' 8 F t I HOMES FOR RENT 66l·l~. 493·2.BZJ for F_aye. frplc. encl gar · gas <tuPtex. ~oo:: Aa~oc~:. 4 Bdrm. S57S. Fenced WAUC TO IEACH Costa Mesa 1724 :;;·r~s~.,;:~h~ spa. $5.5() per mo. S800 secura-1 yard & garage. KJds & Brand new 2100 sq rt ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPM<.: "31·6107 ty Ref's. 213/991-0687 pets welrome. 964·2566 I --or97J.2971. Agl., noree. CAPE COVE 3Br 21'"lBa SUSCASITAS 1 1 bd 2b d 3br 2s 2b k ------lwnhse. Tennis, many Furn I hr apl. SJ2,5 & up .Dve Y 2 rm, 3 stu 10 l..ovely 1. 2 & 3 B<irm Townhouses. garage. patio. laundry fa<' $4SU 1 & $575. Call 213 596·7202 or714 960-734'1 Play11 R. E & Investment 673:1900 C: 11cial "••tr 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... to Mclior' ... 5,350 Sq . h . <.:om merrial Bldg. 1 Blk to Pacific Oc.ean. Se ll $350,000. Lease $2,1411 Month. W...a.yH. Tcrytor Co. •attor1 644-4• I 0 $ 9 0 ~~· m ~·. ~ C~\; F'cultaift V*Y 3234 amenities, lg pvt bckyd. End. gar. Adults . 00 with rrplc. patio. encl Heliotrope 673-8823, ••••••••••••••••••••••• No pets. $875 mo . pets. 2110 Newport HI. 1 gar Newly decor $.SSCI &is.7137 HOME.5 FOR RENT 640-2571 or8lf»l8.'I> 548-4968 btwn 8 & 5PM I ~8128. · 3 & 4 B<irrns. $550·$575. I ----- 5 Bdrms. So. of Hwy. 4 yrs old. $1Z75/mo. 536·1453 Totally remodeled 3Br. I Ka So. of hwy 1675 mo. 1133 3301 dys. 675 7765 ev~/wknds ' Fenced y a rd s & a.-. Fornt 3255 Large 1-"urn. Bach Apt UKE new 2 br, 2 ba. nr. garages. Kids & pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl85. Prefer middle dwnlwn. S375mo. welcome. 964-2506 or LaJce Forest home near aged. No t hildren rpet'i 673·2113 9'13-2971. A.gt .. no ree. lake. 3Br, 28a. Club 548-'*8 ·Be-·auU~ful-2br 2ba ..... "'' --------priv . Gard e ne r . ----------· ....,., .._AIA;jtOUI leach 3240 tllll5/mo. 586·4709. ......ilwJun leach 3740 It's open. See al al ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------••••••••••••••••••••••• 3106Ginger 540·4400 VACANT38R ~Ba,walk ~Ylefo 1267 $375/up 1·2 bdrm. pool. to schools. shoppinR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• jac. adlt. 18992 Florida. LclglmMlleoch 1041 CUFFHAVEH Perfect for today 's market. Vacant. first class. immaculate. and quality. All here an 3 Bdrms. 4 baths. family room and separate bdrm wings. Lovely swim ming pool, private gated entry. Beautiful area . COltdowtiUlillMI /T OWlt-Cotta Mesa 1224 ._.. ..... 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fwys. Kids & pet.s OK. HOME.5 FOR RENT H.B. 842·2834 or 842-3172 "75. 962·4471. ask for 3bdrm. $.\50. f'e nred Keith yard la garage. Kids & I br. utils pd, gar. new crpt.s. ofr.street. adult couple. no pets. S395. 76lVi633. 548-8251 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THI llG STEAL IAIRETT REAL TY Dana Point duplex 2 br. 642-5200 1 ba upper. 1 br lower.1~~~~~~~~~-new crpt. fresh paint. 1 _ _ _ beamed ceilings. rprlc. dining area & ent'I pal.lo. Offered for only S144.000 FULL PRICE' MISSION REALTY 494.0731 BBALDIAY Romantic ocean view rrom this exclusive custom buill 4 Bdrm Drum tMN&e, priced al only 1$45,000. Owner mml sell and may help fmance. For appl. cull 962·9311 ALLSTATE "EAL TORI PLENTY OF WOOD & GLAS.5 and deck:i blend to the chararler l)f the neilhborhood. A charm inc 3 Bdrm 2ba for only 1'19.000 a...-Y11mp1.1 4'7-1761 HAUOllVIEW 4 B<irm. family room and bonus rm. Lov.-ly home in superh rond1 lion. Askin!( $299,0011 fnr quick sale. C/21 MewportC..tr. 640.S3S7 ASSUME LG. LOAM •l Bdrm l'ondb t:ln!'u-to H oag ll os 111lal Completely rurnt11tw1I Pool and sp11, 11l•t·unly Move an now. lwfll1 ,. ef\Cl'OW dOllt.'!1 C/21 Me1:1Cu.tr. 640. 357 IAMCH HtQIW A Y in he1tutiful Nu Calif ;ill acres +-3 Hdrm honll'. 23lJ s /(. Cl<111e to 11k 11n.i. &hina. lnclude11 11hc-cl, pem, rnrrul 1:n:1,000 WllJ.. F.X(;llANO Ii: ror Newport unit11 or h11u111• Call John Ap1ar, ,\f(l 641).m7 or MS 117113 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful. brand m•w z BR. 2 Ba torn1•r 111111 Buy into owner11h1v rur $285() & '' fl'nl I ' ror DJ>mo. Steve . 9".>J 1220 IMOIM" operty 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-WYIAR IOMAMZ.A -ALL OwtBRMAMCID 6hc ...... UMt1 1oxa.ro. • ......,,. All 11pl11 r•••·••nlly r•· dt•f•or11tr1l Thi r t• :I. Hnlm, (11111 I lklr111 No ,,..._ f11111111·lnl( rt'4fllh ..,, Ownrr wllll "'"'" 1tl 12';1, llurry. w1111 'I 111~1 • 1•nnl'lp11l11 ot1ly ••• 1 """' ,,... of 0...1.Wp.A'""'9h" l"taltlvr 1•Hh flow rwll lnl( •I IOJ(C l r111H1 l111•11m1> Mfal a&ll.11 1·r1· .. nlly rf' •~<·1w11(rtl Ow11•r will t·•rry 111 IZ% Outal11nd In• l>ra111tr County In v...afJM!flt ••• a..-.,.._. t 052 NIWPOIT SHOUS 10 "'*'ti._.• _. .. .;.-.r.;~......... lmaline betn1 able t11 •••• J BR Condo on aolf walk to the beach. 2 Ur .eoune. cathedral cl11. + dm, hiply uptradfod • "•kn LM..._ llf'J,500. Wallace Nert Jult lilted at tt•,(XX). 1'l* ~ lnv•tmtlftl a.nor. 716..-.1311 Doa'l mla.. \hli o.e fMtur• poeUtve u1h p0rtuJ1Hy. Call nuw r-t--nnw wttlrleller nnant- ............. 106 ...... !1~IApl=n.p~~ ~...................... ....._._ •---.a.. o.._._ ,_ _.....,. _._ All apta. r•r•nt y r• PYTPARTY·Nonrealtor CrMO..... dacoreted. You'll have wl1hH to purchue Jobn~bebkr '° ed f•t an U\6a one. llWll Cando, JBr. ZBa 712 1• 1ia1l• ltory. ( 11' > S. ..._ " Hl-1724 £vu Mr. C....... 1071 ' L\11.._IL" .~ _________ .... i,ow;•··· .. · PLAC1 ...... VII... B r e a t h t a k I n a NOPllflll• ~ w, a Mnn I~ pmaramic: ~an view la. I ur ,., •••. al n..Jlarbor. &Dec· 10,.llllMP.M.t \aeular' euMolnited '°°° .... 111· ft I Bdrm +ntnat. .....__ --ID ......... M · .. ..__ r T b'I ~~ ftaW· , ••. "".J.'"· 11101 AYftiM callta, IJC. tlMUI ~HouM • CadWaea to Qo.Carll WlaatfterU.. Pad Roll ... oft 0.. marllet WM.la a C1ul&fted Ad C.U .... I ... .,. COLLIGI PAIK l'OOI. llOMt:. 4 HR. riunlly neighborhood. fn~. 1111 & llllll .. llt'C'Ufl ty Uavttl. ul(l 646 ~ J lldrm I ll11. ~ ( >run.:1• Av1• llU. $411!•/mo K11l11 OK ... rs•h". f1•n1· vrrl Uri n hy 114~, 7fWl!f lltl. l.11.111 & Sl!'Jfl Nrwpor1 llf'1t(hl11 2 fir huplr11 l'rlvMI•• yunl NO l'l'~fS 1311-'I Ci111• & wittPf 1••111 1n:1 ~ I A11111ry :i Ur 2 1111 f11. 1lhl l(ar , 11trl11m. 11111111 $."111:1 1142 :'>21111 ;i fir :.i IJ» ""n11h· 11111ry. 1l11uhlt• 1·1tr r111d1111e1l 11ura111• C:ornmunll)I 1111111 Pl mo 11:11 flll!ICI Nila for Huth ,.~·111d11 J tklrrn. 2• .... f111, 1""1 c•ur11l11 w1ta1 V11ril, ..,.. ••r 1'ttnnl11, pool It l•r 111 ~0 /mo . l111/la1l t d•SJ 648 fl6UI . ~--MUIA VY.HUI-.: 4 Br. 3 heth 2 aty, 3 car l(U. Hrdnl _, 7141770-1804 I KM, i v. Ra. Z frplc. lux· ury twnhme In UtdlnmM Tract at SO. Oil. Plaaa. Comm pool/. jat'UUI. z encl'd 1tra1es W/autoop9Ml'S. '725per mo.711·._ LawlY2Br, l .... Ba. condo. Oil. encl 1ar. P'rpk. Incl'. patio, atrtum, balcanJ. Pool, spa, walk to beach . •st5 . 1lt ·tT5 ·0111 , Ut-••lllO. l:'llD&-SHARP-NEW 2 Br, a., ud1 pd. Avail llOW. Mtllta, DO peta . ....... ...... 1 ...... ,.,., paUo. frplc:. Ut + dep . •tmo.•- . . ~bib lo ocean. Elelf.ant 2 ~"9m rm at den. ~mol Plush crpt.s. 21,, ba, cedar & glass. Ohl car pvt 11.at. fully mamt yd Adullis. no pets Inquire al m llllh. St 714 /!160 1133 I or !ltill51l2 VA<'ANT4 Hit:.! Ha. walk lo :u·hools .. is hoppinl(, fwyK KJfis & veto; OK 171WI 11112·447 l. IJllk ror K1oith 2 Hr l't·nthou1w t:ondo on w11ler New unfurn Hollt 11llJ> itvall lmmt-d IK' 1· u p u n r y C a I I :n :112.u 11 :16 day 11. 213/fMl.J.'>M eVl'll ltOMfo:S t'OK Kt;NT :J HdrlM. ~. t'enced yanlil., JCaraice11. Kids & pet.II welcome. 9&1·2566 or 9'13-21171. A.gt .. l'IO fee . 2 ltr. l'h Ba lrg condo, pool. t55(}/mo. Yorktown vm ... 1M2-as1s 3Br, 28a, wlk to bch, all new W.. no pet., '850 . mo. 116 HunUntton Sl. (213> 431-4761 Scenic Oran1etrtt ZBr con d .o . Ref r i &. . w /at rea ma. pool , jac:uul, tennis. etc . Ad•lu oaly, no pets. ... 175-ml. pets welcome. 964·2566 or !Jn.2971 Al(l .. no fee. ---- 3 Blks to ocean. Barh. utlls pa id. S325 mo Carpet & paint. 207 Chicago. ..._,.. hoch 32'9 ······················· .......... 3744 Npt Terr condo. l!:nd unit. 3Br. 2t,.;Ba. 1500+sq ft Pool. spa. Great plac.-& price. ~/mo. 9914-4024. 631-4442. OO·S413 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br + office I or 2nd Br I. I Ba. Sunny der k on stream. A t C . dis · hwasher. carport, pool. tennis. $525 mo. Yearly IWFFS lease. Adult. no pet Ne-w 2 Br. 2 Ba Angehta Avail Jan 15th. 548-0412. plan w/pvtjac .. & foun· 1~1..d;'---lJ41 Lain. AJI amenities. $1200 --row cm. ~9044 ;;;~;~=~~:~·u•;;~:~:~ Spec. 3 br. 2Yt ba lwnhae. Nr shopping, beachff·, QJmmun.lty pool &. spa. Room ror cycling & joa· slng.1700/mo. w /$25 dis· count. Ajt, 544· 1440. OCIAtROMT IMM9.0CC. Beautllul 4 br. 2 ba up· stairs In dplx, Wood beam ceilings, rrplc, cl'JIU, drapes, all bit-ins, encl. 1&•ra1e w / 1uto . opener, wHher /dryer Incl. ( Furn. or unfum. SlD). TSL Management 142-1803 Npt Shn waterfrt 38R 2 ba, frplc. Pool/tennis. 8!0.9GA BAY FRONT, 2 Bdrm. 1 Ba, no klda or pets. Yearly. a'75 mo. 87MZZZ I Bdrm 2 Ba ~anlront home, nu paint • di-apes, HC:ell. cond .. pMio • yard. IUllO/llo yrly. No .,.U pleaae. C.ULloJd•t MCllSl£ALTY '71-6670 oceanfront condo. .1800/mo. 499-4418, ...... 494·7963. ... .,...... l7't • •••••••••••••••••••••• NO LEASE REQUIRED YUlll·lllOUNO FUN: Social Achv111es 01· 1ectro1• Free Sunday Brunch• BBO's •Pai· ties• P<us much mor~ OMAT MCMATION: Tennis • Free Lessons (pro & pro sllopl • 2 ~ttl\ Qubl •Sauna. HYdromisuge •Swwn· ming• 011v1ng Ainge IUUTtAIL A'ART • MINTS: Singles. t & 2 Bedrooms • fur· n11h1d & Unfurnished • AOul1 l1ving •No Peta • Moo.11 Open d11ly 9 to 8 0.kwood ~ O.rden Ap9rt1Mftll Newport 1Nof'1 ... 1700 t8'h St 10owtt ef '''"' (7141 Ml-f11J ......... , .... llOlmne Cit 14'!fll (7141 ... ttM Br. clean. 1 child OK. $375/mo + d•p. 590 Joann St. 545·4529 or 213/588-1219 WISTLUE VILLAGE Buut.iful Adult Apu. No pets. lmmed occupancy Pool. spa, lndry rm .. gar. avail. 81ch·S315 . lBr·Sl&S. 2Br·$430-$440. TSLMgmt ~l.22 or 642· 1603 Quiet 2 Br. 1 Ba. with garage. patio. pool. Adull.5. No pet.s. 1801 H 15th. Sl. Newport Heights. "5(). 642.7340 Large 1 Bdrm. Near shape, pool, all utils pd. llll4 Monrovia. Mll·0336 2br, cpl, drapes, built· ins, $395 adulla. no pets 631·292'7 2272 Maple SPAC. 2 BR A.DUL T. Lge ltitch, open beams ceil. incl refrl1. no pets. Sll5/mo. Z2t80 Maple St. 548-7356, 873-8803 Spacious Family 2 Br-$35(>. Pool & play· around. 548.9556 from 12·lPll. ' Newer l Bl'. w 11ara1e. ~ no PeQ:-sll5 mo. 565'111. FOUR SEASONS APl'S. a..&e. no pet.I. z br 1~ ba twnhae. PaUo, pool, 910. 7JI Jo Alla 142· 1802. . ,__.a ... z ... l lGO ... ft. IDie:. lndl')' dlabwr, encl 1ar, '580 It's opm . ._It at n•a&aa• MM400 l.br. 'Iba, --· ... la ............. utllpd .... Ml·•IT atter ttl•t ... .... llw, lb8 .,,.. .. ....... ,..,,Ml ........ 'C' ..... ....... -- 3 br. 21., ba. frplc & wet bar. $550. Call 9·5. Mon Fri. ~2445 . nE WHIFR.E TREE Luxury Adult units at af fordable living. 1,2 & 3 Br. Well derorated. Olympic size pool, light· ed tennis court. Jacuzzi. park like landscaping. Moll beautiful bldg. 1n JtB. From $360. 846-0619 Beautifully located 2 Br SIBS. Child OK. Gas IO· cld. 842·1MZ. Near 5 Point Shopping Center 2&3 Bdrm. Apts. $0>-"50. tUds OK. no pet.a. 964·2S86 or 973-2971 ~~fee. __ _ I & 2bdrms. cottage style liv i ng . c hild o k SIZ-13.'iO Imo. 8ff:.J20 Spacious 2 Br. 11, Ba. Ne-w crpts. drps. built in stove, car. lnfo960-8258 ..._,.._HACH 2 Bdrm, 2 bath. built-ins. patio, aaraae. Adults. $475. 4922 Edinger. IM().311111or846-6234. • I· NlCE Adults 1 Br. patio. - pool, 1ara1e. frplc, 1325 JI ·h mo. 842-911&3. &U·s.251. I Br, crpt/dr'JIS, 11r. pvt t.1 patio, laund racil. Avail 2/1. 846-1184. l d Lee 2br. buill·inl, forced air, frplc, encl patio. avail now MOO. 531-24118 . It• NewlBr, 2~811. nrocn. 2 frplca. dbl uraae. n · lndry /alao lO'x30 ' ,.... ror rent. M0-2122 _or-.UOt CHILDREN /Peta wwlcome. 2 br. frplc:, bhm, farced air heat, mcl. 1ar. • patio MOO ,.. mo. Gary ~ler, .. .. 2Jlr. l Ba. Condo • Ntwtud,........,,, ..... (Tl4)-.-a .,,v-l•lltlfuU br, 2 ba, W7D ar Harbor . tlU. 8aollelor 1tudlo. • aterow••• tlOO . ....... ..._. s I lf1 atre 11• ............... 11" ............. . ie·· .... ··· l • • .... OMM ..... ._ .. h•• ....................... ~!' t tftf IOOI :.,... ............ .... 4000 .. __ ... . .................... ....................... ..... .... 4ll0 IJ .. Tuesday, Jln\iary 6, 1981 DAILY PILOT €5 ········-.. ·········· 1!."!:'~ ..... ~~~ ~?~ ..... !!~r!:~~ ..... !!~! .. '!?.~!?.?.:. ..... !!!'! -...... J14• a... BHcll lllutor IM . ... -• .. ••••••••••••• Iii No PacUI" Co1u1 Wyftd'r 1111...c.M.. Hwf. l.a1una 1t ..... h lliiiiiiiiiiii I • J~ Ba 1Jil&IY-WMlllV. IClt<'hcm Uv. Qm. KJt P.UU dee-la available . I.ow w1nl~r • •••••••••••••••••••••• 8Wra1• 1ar•1•. 11ln11he, 1~. (.Ulta Mwa. Sit> lftjf "IU·.,,-wi!ii(l•)'i° i.~ c..a. MIN 17• St .... -. .............. . J Room Mlite, N511q. ft.. Qipy Shop• Secrelarial modern builcilq, A /C, S.V. F.at 5\; yn. UllO ·-..ua1,.nu.a.ca11 Net prollt sn.ooo +. kealcinomk• 11~00 Gl-G056 d•'•apn111 .JarU...JUL -AP~ e.nkint --.oollCllPll .. --Rewanueuoo. lllabMd and wife for 30 Part time girl fr1day Lost: Oran1e Tabby uniU, Calta Mesa. Adult with bookkeeping back- ... • Ja.aHll 1•rdtn ,.._ .. ~ ..._ N II H 1• " • 11 t r l> 11 l ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4400 t.:x« offices. Newport Bch/airport area, au.Iles w/la1t library, con - ference rm. copier, full ser vfrea. lmmed oc- cupanc! 833-llil80 U you are lndepeodeot, mature, responalble 6 have determination. we can help you ri1ht infla· lion . Ca ll now 714/913·9181. Aak for <lwck. rema1e Cat, vie Alta ViJ. complex, salary 6 3 TRLEI ground. l..ite typing & fsl la. La1una Beac h . Bdrm 2 Ba apt. 833-l36l mg. Flexible hrs Ap Reward. 841-0191 dya. ~ 557·1830 evs. fUll TIME prox. 20hrs /wk. Near '-"'9..... 114• w ~lll'btlltOt' flt4l t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "" lllll 51d l:MMI w I ..... J blU from bt·h 011•M*I ....., IAdudh ......... Avail •mmed ell Ullor•t.1112 ,.,, Oteanfruot for W11111·1 Reolal11 t•urm11h~ 6 unlum Brukt'r 87S 41Hl ,.,._",...... rn 41)4 t'nv•lt' ruum. tum ur untuna Kn. wllah.-r • dr)'f'f aw•~ Sbu" b11lh Ila&/ mu • a'IO rdund11 bAe-""'uun• lkv Av•1I JllA 11 Uot& '°"'""' unly t.dl An II' M ~ !MUii l.1111 wn 11 U1·111 h nun, lntlh S&L"i ........ """' I>• ul -~· 1•' I N1111 ·W• tJkit,1 w1att'rl1u11t hu m l' t 'rm 11011 ~111111 i!O !JS b"7~1Mi.11.tft :it•M ~ NO FE!!:' Apt .. t'U11<lu W i ' M ,.. u m l' A I 1 ~ V1lh1 Rt:mahi II' I \ I I t' I( t' l> H l'" µ i.75 dl:t Urukl'r humwai. only Sc!!>il ut1b ~ 8r I & A\lall 110111 .\na bl &I 00.. ar l' °""' H .. ·y ~25 mo J 0 P r6 pert y Micmt n i 27 87 Aft !">µm ~ Westcllff N B adult 1·00 do. 1625. 2 Bdrm, l b<tlh, 10 steps to pool New carpetin&. yearly ll'a:S<' Agt. 75&-1616 BO. 3 Br 2 Ba t:nclsd garage, patio. walk to beach. adults, no dogs. ~ M&ml. 642· lSUJ LAS llJSAS AP'TS. AT BEACH Uce&n view, pool, tennis courts. acilts. &ch . 1&2 bdrm from $420 5515 River Ave. 642·2566. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. OCEANVIEW . S48 8083 Wlk.i.iig lo bch l It 2btlrms Crom $350 ~8684 Cliffhaven 2 Br I Ba. patio. ga r age. nu l crpts/drapes. older adults. no pets. $450 yr- ly. 548-5306 ---- Olarming 1Br Ve.rsailles condo. lst floor. p vt. patio. Was model unit. View of fountain. Lots of privacy. Full security w/guarded gate. $525. 152-2310 days , 540·7576 eves. 3Br. 2Ba. lg lower dplx, frpk, new cpts. drps. wshr ldryr. avail No pets, nr Udo Shopping area. $675/yrly lse &M-i2'75 eves. Across from beach. 2Br. just painted. 1625/mo. yearly. 988-8263 Beacon Bay. 2 Bdrm 2 Bath. Upper unit of Bayfront h<>me. 1750 per mmth, yearly. utilities included. Available now. 675-81169 Vllla Balboa Condo. New large 2 Br. Pool & Rec rm. Nice view. 1700 mo. 675-DJl. 2 Bt Spacious new del·or lJ\4." l>yi. IS<! 7Sll l'Xl ..ao. l'\'el>. ~ :~ I br + ba, pool.Ja1· CUM ~ ~~dey 64011834 4100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DO YOUUKE MOTB.S7 Wt!t!kly rentals from Stl4 & up 646 7445 2274 Newport Blvd. C.: M Y-..tioa R...tal• 42 50 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 46drm. 2ba 1tondo ·on North Shore of Tahot!. fo'ully furn. Simm from North star $40(),wkly 957·3226. SJ().3946 Bert Large Bag &ar Cabin Pool table. t·olor TV. 2 frplcs. ~lps 14. 545·6916 Palm Spran.cs Houst' Yearly or monthly ren lal. 3 Bdrm, 4 ba. pool. jac. s auna. Canyon I Country Club area. Completely furn . Sl 500 1 m o . y r l y ao>tmo. + ut11. Call Mrs. (Ang 7141645·5917, 1·32J..JY02 Monterey CC Palm Desert. 2bdrm. 2ba. rompl. furn. Golf & ten· nls priv. All amenities. Moothly. Will lse option. 675-0lllS. 346·6996. -----~to Shew. 4300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving? Avoid deposits & cut living expenses! Profession ally sin ce um. HOUSEMATES 832-4134 Nr OCC-UCI . S hare 6bdrm. 3ba beaut home with stu dents. Avail now. Beau 673·4697. Mature Resp. Auull to share lg Be<tch Ilse. $300 mo. incl util 646-3778 aft 6 Large CdM Apt. 23to:.> Male No f1akes 760-~ Resp. M/F to shr 3br hse nr O.C.C. in C.M. $225 in- -cl util. 546-8530. 953-8114 24hrs. near Oceanfront $600 M/F to shre 3 bdrm 2 ba l mo. Vearly.615·700 mi from t><:h. $225 incl ----util.5.11Vi42Sor900-71114 Easlbluff. 2Br, 2Ba. frp~c. '6(Xl, Qls hwasher. paUo, no pe(S, dbl. gar. 644-~or631·2029. Steps to the bch. Imm ae 2 br. over sized patio. B?S mo. 642·8235. Ask ror Beril. agent. Npl Shrs across from bch. Bach w/s ml br. $345, pool. en c l(ar ~5(178 3 Arch Bay. Priv rm. ba, ent. beach $295 + util 499-4722 ev1..>s twknds Resp. remale 27 share new plus h twnhse w1~p. working female. Unbelievable rooms, overlooking brook & waterfall. Pool, Jacuzzi, lake. etc. $250. Nwpl!CM area. 645-6325 Shr Nwpl ocn front. patio. l BR -pool blk to frplc.W/D,gar.utilind ~-single adult. $300 $325. Dave 631 ·2454 mo. 642-5002 OCEA ... OMT Ye~.4brDuplex Agent, 875-6160 3bdrm, 2ba, 1675 upper duplex. open weekends. 6U Clubhouse. SJll-3800. Versailles 1 Br Penlbse. Fountain view. $525 9113-01152, 9118-3791 OCEAN VIEW 2nd. noor 2 Br. with c arport. Furniture avail. '500 mo. till 6 /20. m.7902. 1.11 2 Br 2 Ba upper unit, rrp1c. deck, ocean vu. '815/m o yearly. Call Uoyd, JACOBS REAL TV 87~0 Free rent to he althy female senior titizen an nice CdM home. Part time companion to lone· ly widow. Call for de- ta 11 s . Mrs . Nee l ·. 675-~.9-5. Dana Pt. st. w male. lrg apt. pvt br & ba. $235/mo tsl & last. 168·4234. Female needs maletremale lo shr 2bdrm furn bayfront condo. Non.s moker , dbl car car. dishwasher. washer /dryer incl. Dys call 631 ·7 102. eves 673-<M05. Resp. Rmmte 21 ·30 to shr 2br apt. 2 blks to bch. Pool. CdM $250. 675-9056 S.. Clunwlt Jl7' Lag. Bch house. ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• VU. lhr W/WOID&D prof. Ocean front. Step&· lo S350. 497~165, 78CH882 ~~-a Br. 3 Ba. RtnnR needed! Lae 3br ce, lar1e deck, bee, SZIO + ~ util. Call ........ 8Clulta, DO pet.I. ~-.,., __ 7 _.,,. -.m.a&Hw!ral,r?l ,_,~......,.,.. . .._.~ves s..t ~ HH Slniol' lady wanta lo shr •• .. •••••.e•••••••-•••• her hrne w /same. · ,..... view, condo on 1'13-7075 ..... 2bclr'm, 2ba, 90. Found: Jan. 2, male ,,_....._, Dachshund. Atlanta fr Of 1s t: .. wl••• Huntln1to n , H .B . •&Wbz ht • HOO -~-------- -.. ••••••• .. ••••••••• F'9ID to ahare lbr. 2t>. hie SHiii~ .... ndec, new cpt, nr bch. New 1M ...;.ar.~ry 1 ~KB;;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;1mo;;;;;;;;;.;;us.;;;;;;;1;;140;;;;;;;. ........ aHplami.· =~,.:,..~=. Classy Autos ~ .... 10 .. ;:) ::: :_a.= Advertised dltY9 H.u. -l ~ ... aetl to llef'addH f111i._l ........ ~i ·~r.~:::•IJflQlleJI lll1 W•lcllff N IS Want f1n1nr1al ln1l 7000.. C \Ill f\wr Aaieat :Ml 5032 .._7111 evn. ··Dave O.C. Airport S5·S7 ho11r Arcbitedw'e ly RWR Ai.s1w1alt''· IOLLC...,.. Lon: l apare Ure oil RV. JOB CAPTAIN Immediate opportunity 557-9671 Area or Garfield / is now available at our Ml\Wo.T l20tJ aq fl. Oranae Co. SR. DRAFTSPERSONS San Clemente branch for i...-._.._.. .... _11111111"1111- llapolia, H.B. 963·6"29. Xlnt. opportunity with responsible teller with tlt-11ant e•eculJve sullei an 6tre1t111e lo1·at1on With romvlete suwort IM!t'Vll- Airport area. 5'00/mo. 675·11119 -Miiite I a. Trwt Dti4i 5035 REWARD. Newport Beach office. previous S&Ltbankan~ • ""'"": Male Dachshund. W. Rylee AJA 640-2912 experience. We seek m ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAJQI d" "d I h 5075 W--.r H.I. vie. H.B. area. no collar AlTJ'Oll<YrlVE 1v1 ua wit ener.:y. 7l4.Ml Olilll Creal location. prof· s.etltr~Co. reddiah brwn "Hans" e nthusiasm anrl a bl·fo Lots ol parking All types ol real estate I ..-.....,. Re'""ard WAUAMTY special nair for working ~50ll li4 ft grnll fir , uuti. ~t l"rum $200 779 W IW1 St t ' M Tom \161 I~ trl~ n: lllOO mo. 300 sq investment.uince 1949. -.. CLlltK with the Pl:'b lit• 1-:K 4111K17lh, Cos ta Mt•:-.;i ft s:mmo. (2131385-9981 SptcWblllgill sc· Bii.i ans .,._ · loellent _location makes Swte224 u.1i 1470 t'Olleet. •-.....11"WWL. """" c.Apenence helpful but IJus quit~ an apveahng ~ -,.,. AJISWERS not'necessary. Mu.'ll be opportunity for the right ;..1MI H.I. LOC ~2-217 ~ _ 54'90611 good with figures & use per.ion. For furthn 111 nu o f 10 key add1nic f "' 1 1 Suites for lease. one . Widow has money lo buy Imbued -Burst machine. Good working ormaoon P ea:.e «al IOOKKEEPiR for Newport l'enan '""'I estate offu·t' 3 lo I tic•' week A I' A It 1111 11 T II IOkt'y, hghl lypm c Cull for ap11t 1\15 ·11i.10 'LAZA IXICUTIVI SUITES Tht'rl' 1:. a difterl'nl't' 742sf. one 8105~ ~ Beach or make 2ND T . D. any Trill Memory c on di l ion s & c· o .. Blvd. ~blwn l!:.dtnger _ & size above $10,000. No SUMM ER. benefits. Please contact lletl For info. eall Jill: credit ". no pnlty. For There's one inflexible Brenda Payne at ~9929-a<.1.loo call AGT 613-1311 rule of television. No MAIERS 714/752-0234 :aK! M1cht"lson L>r •212 CUii BUSml'lis Cntr' 11213 •DELUXE OFFtCES• aoytime show is too bad not lo be C .... ..,111 .a.c run during t he SUM-IUI ..,. Doctor, Lawyer, MlircNlt CWef! 1-le tiant bldg.. Ln h~urt uf Huntington Bd1, w s pac 1ous o rfiet.-s . skylights. wetb<&r. l'<lll fert'f\ce rm. S5<' per sq. rt Plus. supl.'r 2.000 sq.ft medical bldg . wt'll apposnlt'd at 75• p1·r From I room up to 2300 For the h.ighe~t yield on MER. .a&OOHarbor Blvd sq. ft. Low rates . No T.o:s & notH. tr y Den· --------COSTA MESA lease reqwred. 2172 Ou-nisonAssoc. 547•8026 FOUND: Blk male cat. 540.9100 Pont Dr. Adj A1rporter ------ ----College Pk;CM area Hotel. IS33-3223 9-12. SS1 ·8212 .._w1•11l1/ sq rt "'or details t•all REUCARP1'.i' 893-1351 START'81 RIGHT with~ Offius at Lido Merino VIN• '•"I +• 1 , .,t,• I .. n.· 11 y D1·. ,•, :8 1><\•1)•1 '>'l ~· f,, ,, I "' ~ .. '" "'" ' W PJB JI; Wutt~· 1t1)(11 St•11"1 l · 675-8662 Prime comer 10<·. U1> lo 4.:100 sq ft. f'ull serv1t't'. modern. (!lass bldg ~ NWl'T FtlOMT AGE RENTALS 2 Rental Spares Approx S50 sq. ft. & up. lnl'lud ing utils. S350 & $4!)Cl 2450 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa . See Manager. DB.UXE OFACESPACE 111 Newport Center·s Uesign Plaza. SI.SO per ft for 914'-;J offices + recpl. area. Mori.' avail. Call J ohn Apgar at 64().SJS7 or 646-0783 1Xf1t•e Space. 340 sq Cl. rn e luding elec . In Nt•wport. near Hoag ll<i!ip. $2.50 per mo. Aft WM tall 494·6044 lusinets Rental 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l''or store & oHk~ spat·e at reasooablt' rates. 500 to 2700 Sa Ft. M&5AVERDEbR PLAZA la:>..5 Mesa Verde Jo:. t:.M 545-4123 Newport stort' or orfke !">411 s f. nr post oHsee Jerry 213 477·7001 4475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Store Space for lease. 1.500 sq. Ct. & L260 sq ft. m Huntington Bea'ch Flex i ble terms 213 596-7202. hdatrial Rental 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.is· lndus'l/offire 111101 Redondo Cr. 110. H B. ~ lse 842-2834 • w Star age 4550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Approx.6.000sq. rt. a vail. in Fuuntain Valley near S.D. Frwy. $1320 mo. John 556-9360, 548-7533. Storage garage for rent. On Balboa Pen. next to fun zone ( I011'Jft. x20i..ift. ) 673-2943. 613-3930. -----~- ....... We.Md 4600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mat. pleasant lady wants 1 or 2 bdrm unf <&pt near water by 2/l 1 992·2269 wknds. I rcne 759-0833 bu.'I. hrs. Wanted. u sed mobilt' home wider Sl0.000. Call 5:)2. 71178. ...-.Ss flnnst / "'-K• ···················~··· 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Classified Ads Established Bible Book Store. CM. Good opply. 6~2-56711 646-6386. 1·993-5655 PenoMl1/ Lost & FoiMcl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE ADVEATISIMG CONSULT4MTS Now you can reap the benefits ol high cost ad- vertising ror your com· pany! Let The Advertis· ing Consultants set up your own ln·house ad· vertising agency. Please call for information. 759-9545 Now You Can Sell More "ilh Uall~· Pilot Pt:S!''1\' PINC.'llER A l>S Still uni~· S2. 3 I I ni•-. for l tlo.l\ ~ 1111 I~ 'I ;1 tla~ :J.11.' a lint· .\11\ l'rl 1>-1· ont• o r mun• 11t•m,, ';iluNI up 111 'ilflll f:a .. h ad<l 11 rnnal l111c 1s onh lit)(· for th1· l\\O cta'y !'> Surr~ no t"l11llml'r1·1u l <1d :-o a II t)\\l•1l ('ha r i.: t' Your 1'1·n1l\ 1'1111·h1·r .\ d II r II ~ l ' \ 0 II r Han k Amt•r11·;rtl \" 1sa 11r :\1:.tsll•rN1 rd For morl' tnformation and to plltce your ad <'a II 642-5678 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 642-5671 Lest or found a pet? Call Animal Assist a n ce ~a~ue. 53'7·~~· ~o ree. •Found or lost a pet? Call us! we· re the Pet Pals. 17141739-2988 LOST. Reward Male Old English Sheepdog, last seen 48lh St. N .B. 6.11-41188 Found: Cat. black & gray long-hair, white collar. Call 540-4393 eves . Found : Sml fo'l.!m , Chihuahua mix. apx 8 y r s. Hunt Harbo ur 84().7883 ~,-5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRE LAW student needs $25,<XX>. Will do anything Legal Confidential DVM. P.O. Box 3242. N.B. 92663. TOMMY'S OF NEWPORT ~ORTS 152·9~ •FOXY LADY• OlITCALL ONL V VlSA MC • 972-1131. ATUNTIS MASSAGE SPA Be Pampered Beaut. Girls I OAM 4PM 7 Phone 645-3433 by 16 Ope n days . COMP AT AllLITY Ll FESTVLt; soc• F.T'Y Couples Only 150-0614 Sgt Men Only 750-0677 Sgl Ladies Only 971 197!1 Recorded Message 24 Hrs. COVER GIRL * OUTCALL • 953-IY718 MC VISA FIRST LADY Escort. Models Pmiy D..cers. * 972-1345 * MC & VISA Accepted -------~ TOUCH A CLASS F..SCORTS 152--0811 , Respectable business man. tall, •3. new in <.;A. Uke to mt'el nice ladies. Reply lo box 821 c 10 Ua1 ly Pilot, PO Box 1560 Calla Mesa, CA 92626 ----· --- INTROSPEC.:IAL MVSflC MASSAG~ MASSAGESIOWtAU Santa Anu 556-4651; •• SPIRITUAL READINGS lOam·lO pm . l'"ully Lic"d . 492-72!16 or 492.9034 1815 S. Camino Real. San Clem MERCEDEZ •ESCORTS• ~7935 24HltS. REWARD. Lost while ---- - ---· - female Samoyed. Hunt. Man 37 nds rem. for ('OW· Bch. 960-5293 boy dancing crse Wed --- - - - - ----7:1>. Jesse 646··8234 I.ASL CAT, gray & while ------- male. HB 536-4978. PSYCHIC READINGS s:J)-0136. 892-5864 556-1178 Jack Use ~t /Id service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... th is service is onlv S7 .SO week. For more informa- tlQn and to place your ad ca 11 642-5678. Lest: BIKE. Blue Man's c ruiser. Schwi nn. Balboa Island. Reward. 67>8771 eves. LOST: Female Poodle puppy. Irvine Shopping Center, C ul ve r It Sandburg. SSO Reward. 552-8280 or 498-1431 Lall: brown & black cal, (emale, Santa Ana Hgts. reward. 546-2848 ----1 Lost. m ale Benji type doc. Ught brown/black. 557-6035 l.ASt : Persian Cal. Male, c ream. Turll e rock Rldge area. P leue call 1151-8107 LOST: Blk Lab, Fem,. chain collar. Deerfield area, Irv. 12/30 eves 551 ·4102, 558·7UI lttWAR.D You can be a WINNER Just by sen g us your name and address and by w•tchlnl for your aame In the cla11tned ads of the Dally Pllo •. "ln tlckeu to th• circus, 1re1 •musement at ractionl or itPOrtln• evlft\I. Just n OU\ th11 ~man It tocr"•Y to tbe: Claulflecl Departmeat.r..DlllJ Piiot. 331 W. Bay Street. Cotta ,..a. CA ... ACCNTNG ASSISTANT Entry-level pasilion with growth polenlial in ar counting support Cunc· tims. Accounting, filjng & bllUng duties. Must type. Office exper. helpful. Some college training preferred. App. ly in penon with resume to Mr. Fuentes at Robert Bein, William Frost & Aasoclalos. 1401 Quail ~· Newport Beach. .AccounUnc Garment mlc. Pyrl. pro- caalq, billing, 10.key. typiq. Self·&tarter. de- taiJ«iented. Credll ex· per. Benefits. ulary open. Smd rmume: P.O. Bea 1Zl1S. N.B. CA n&&:r AUTOMCYrIVE . PARTS COUMTERMAM Dealership or for e ign auto purts ex perienn: preferred. Call Glen for an appointment. ROY CARVEil ROUSIOYCE AMDIMW 640-6444 *AUTO SALES AHO LEASING! Get set ror 19fl1 & tht• .J Car! Neal Chevy s ton · in exc·1t1ng Airpo rt 1n duslnal eomplcx will add 3 eo mb1nat11>n salespersons now fur ~:z straight sell & ll•aM' Uenerou.~ pa} llr 1l1·m11 plan. Auto. 1·x pt•r11•nc·t· not required. llul 11rc· v1ous selling helpful Sci• Sales Mgr. HOWARD Ch•vrof~t Oo\e & (.Juasl SI~ NEWPOHT lit:,\Cll Bankmg TELLER NEW ACCOUNTS 1'1JLLTl ~IE P~1t1on a\'allabk rn 11ur So. (.;oast Pla1.a 11ffit'l' fo:xper req'd Call "a•h~ Amburgey : 540·4111Mi CALIFORNIA FEDERAL S..llMJl&Locmw 695 Town Center Ur Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Equal Opportunity Employer Banking Newport Beach off1<"e ~ full time Teller Exper. preferred. Lili! typing, IO·key addml( nwchine. We offer good starttng salary & rum I pany benefits ·(,luahf1t·cl applicants pleast' l'Ull Ph y li s s l m o nt1 ., 714-644-7255. WlSTERN FEDERAL SAYINGS S4 Corporate Plaza Newpt>rt Beach l'A 92i;li0 E.O.E. MI' Banking TEI.LEIS l'.:.xpenen(·e req"d Xlnl salary & benf'f1ts 1\ ppl} Personnel tiBITAGEIAMK ill N. EucUd. Anaht•1m 991 ·38fil> KU.E. Banking Barclays Bank. Cost:i Mesa. DriVt'·UP T<•ller exp. req . M F II \' Cootacl Cathy . 631 IS II Positions a v a1lahl1• Prev ious experirn1·1• preferred. United California Bank f>JO·A Newport Center Or. Newport Beach 644-6464 E.O.E. Banking Ca:a•u cial T.tler Pr•viou1 experienl'e preferred. United CaJilomsa Bank 308 llain Sl. 11un'lfiiilon Beach E.O.E. Joan Marsell•· 714-493·5651 BRENTWOOD . SAYINGS & LOAN SIOC:<!mrnotle 1-:strt•lla. San Clemenlt'. Ca 9l!li75 Equal Opportu111l) Employer M 1 I" BANKING CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE TELA.ER Cilendalc F1'(ll'ral Sa\ rngs. a lt.'adn m th1• Sa \' mgs & 1..1wn 111tlu:.lr) I!> seeksn~ a 1 ·ust111nl'1' Serv1t·l· ll••Jlrl'~1·11 tall\ c· 'f'i'llt•r for tlwir San Cll'ml'nlt' hra1ll'h l'am1l1<1nly "1th 1.' 111111.t rcqu1n.'\I l'tt'\ 11)U,.. l•·ll1·1 (•M IJCl'lt'llC'l' Jlfl'f1•rf'l'rl Wt: 11ft1·r :111 ··~1·1·ll<'rll ~lartl ng i.al;1n a11d bt•ncf1t µa1·k:11.:1· :1111, " ~our opportu1111 \ In 111111 our rrwndl~ -.1,11 f ,11111 a11' a111·1· \ 11111 , .11 , ... 1 I "'11h1n a11 '111du:-.l1 } rlt.11 t~ gru" 1ng I· .. 1· 1111 nwdwl1• 1·1111~1 d1•1 :1t1n11 ph';L~t' C'.i ll 17141 498-59 JO GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS 61 Call~De lndYltrios San Clemettte, CA 92672 l::qual Opp11rtu111t~ ~mployer Banquet Sen1n: l't:oi.il" Waitt•rs wa11n·~,1·~ ,1,: bu.'\ bo)!'> Appl} \11 ;\;111a. S urf & Santi fl ol1·I tagwia Bch 4!17 l~il BUS BOY f)~llWSll H Thi· <;ri ncfr r , i!lllfl:' l'ar1r1l· (.\1asl llwy II II •CAI DRIVERS• Clwt:kt'r t:,111 710 0:!2:.! CafetH1a Wonen Partlln&t• 3 :J1 1 hr~ d ;J1 $4.JlJ thr /\pply N.:wporl Mesa Un1f1ctl Sch1)1.1 Dist. Foo1l St·n t(·t· lfGi Plal'l'Dl111 /\\t' 1·_'.\I 100.:r.m CASHIER Ell~n1·111·t-.I M11 ... 1 h;.' • has1t· ph1110 k11•1" li·d1:• 1''ull l11111.• I 111 rrwit "I"' , , n J.! r· h 11 1 o g ,. a 11 t l 'nllm1lc-tl l»I~!• H1 .• 1, Hl\'tl I l111111n1~l11n It• .u I• ~17 :11;1•1 t 'ASI II 1': I! 11111 '>I·.\\ \ I> I S 1\ I • t-: :0.. \ 11 p I ' II .. I .. II II I I •• '" " ll.tr<l",1H . 111~1 It \ rw1-..tl'lllf l'la!:1 •\I 1: CASHIER WANTED Full 111111• 1; ••• 1 I'"' J1""o1l ll1ll' I u 1•1·11.-f 11 11\t•r )K \\1• 11.1 TI .• II .. p •• I I .1 I I u,•,t·,~a 1 ~ \p1 1, l't'"llll ~l t•l1 11 I \\,L,h ~t~I ll.11 lu 11 Ill I (" :\I CASHIERS UTDTEM '.\I \ llh l·'I ~ l-'111 :!11d ,fl,. :11d Sh1l1 • 111·:1.1 ~"'" \1.1·.I! W1· pr11m1111· 111 111.111.1 , 111cnt •"-:.1111t•t\ 1~11·11 I1 "" "1thio W,\;>.-1' i\ l '.\ltt-:t:H 1 ·, ... 1 a :\t1•:-..1 111 r>PI \l.11· 1•:11 \'\~! l..1g1111.1 llt'.11 h 1:•1 t1:!:t:1 l l11nl 1n)!I 011 ll•·.1•·11 IARTEHDER !#;;t :11 1ti 3 day week. El H:ind11l11 1---------Newport BraC'h. appl11·a 1.wns beml( 111•c·1•p11•d I:! i; ('fl'nral T~ 111-.1 I 1111 .. 1 Mon·t-'n ti75 lill.'>f> p;irt 11nw Xl111 111111 IC1•.1 llEAUTY The I lair llan1lkr-. m ~ H, has 1mn11~l •1111.·11 I ln)!S for I' T iiairtlr , . ..,,.,, ... 1 " dll'nl«lt·. I<: I' r man1l'un~l 1;ri•.11 Im fjlt;! fWl.l BEAUTY I Hairstylist/ I Top Hair Cvtien 1 lll'lp' Wl· an· 1ur11111µ :i"'ay hu:.1111·~~ ~· 1H·1·1! ;, prnl!n .. >:>:;l\1· hJ1r~1~ 11,.1" for a hu:-.y rrwll .... .ion Guaranl1·~-d :.Jlar~ 11111 C'flmnllSSll)ll, pa11I \ .11·[1 I.Ions. ad' ant·cd Lr a111111,.: by our tran•l111j! '-l~ 11· di ret'lors If 1 • IU w1111 l d hkc lo ad\ ari1·t• 111 out professmn pk.bi· 1..tll 546-7186 Beauty HAIR STYLIST We are pruutl of 11u 1 salon & sty I 1:-.ti.' Hu:-..\ Npt. Heh ~alnn 1:. grow an.c agarn. offrrml! 1<1µ pay rt• l 1 rt' m l' n I m edical & 1frnt al vacation plan~ & m111•h more C.:omparl' our total earnings pu rkagl' w ·other s alons lnl'rl'ast: Y&>Ur following & 1•arn ~ential. Apply 111 J .C Pt:NNEY • 24 Fashion Is land. N B. E.O.E. M t • IOOICICIEIPH/PT Approx 20 hrs wk, Tustm A/P. A/R. payroll. Call 832-1980 or mail resume to PO Box 18884. Irvine. Ca. 92713 Classified Am Cashier ~:lt'l'(r11n11·-. 1;:11 ;,11;11 < ·1,.r11·:1I JR. DEPT. CLERK C "lt•J 11• • .J pc t'll lttfl t '\I Ill ••IH ..... ,., ... "'')1'1 , 'I I' ,1 p.11 \ l1tt11• p• , .. ,1 tf1 llr-. lwlfll t11 \\I · I' \I 1·:mtl11!.1t1 11111 1 11.1 • If> :~l\•f'll l I \ I'"'' -,J,, .. , }1 ,I\ t ' " fl I I\\ 11• 1\ ,.~ J 1 1 J.!\1llt. f d I q ft It ' J• l'\"fiUI ~1' t *'1'1I I olJ'J' \ ~ p ,. I.., 11 11 I' f I ' S1 nH1 uud111 l•ir It t I "·11'1'1 \I,. lf\111' I I irr.1 1 *** Sales Off ice Clerical Full Lim•· 1111111111111111 for1111alll tl'd I' 111,1 111 , • ll \l' '" 11\\1•11•-.t 11\l .. 1 )!u,,t ha 1 ,. pr•'''"• '-i'1Tt'lar1.1\ -.kilt-. l·.111·• I'.\( di ht'lh·l 11-. llh 111· I 1111! fr"<'<' 111,•.11 p••I ,lnll ,\µpl~ !I·\ '.\1 "••Ill \I Ill f'n P1·r!>111111d MARRIOTT HOTEL fll•1 Ni·" µ011 ( '1·11tt·1 111 N1·wp11rl lh:arh Equal (IJllJ Em11l.1 r .\I I· Cl.Ell". !'.far:-.hal 111 11 llmr. llt'rm J)l~1twn "11 h I> l'o :'\tar!'>hcil. Sanl .1 Ana Oft: 9Ul-1 nw IH• n t' f 1 I ~ ·I 0 " 11111 general ofr :-.k II I~ n•q d 1134 3.'1029 ·II'~ . People who need Pl'lll•lt· That'i. what lhe DAILY P ILOT SERVIC E DIRECTOI{ Y is all about• omcE CASHIER Enjoy working as Office Cashier in Slavick 's J ewelers. Duties include verifying sales balances. doing daily banking transactions. disbursing funds a nd other related duties . E x celle nt Company Benefits Package. CONTACT ·Ml. McDaMOn 17141644-1111 SLAVIOC'S ' ... ............ ,.7 1 llAll 1 ltiltJI l)l t1>•'.,."'~ f>ill li,11111 '"'@'"'""'~' & •h·~m rl1•1u 1 I('~ .... ' ''"' '' 1•111111 II .. 1... ".· ·~hlt•11t•t11I Whl ,.. \~l•ltoill h II II" I , ~·I Ill 111111 hl1•111·h l All .J I lo 111 II\ 11111 I Ill hull i L\ \q• 1111 r 1 'Ill 1'11mh ........... 11 • 111 P t ;ulfl ••••••••••••••• • ••••• •• t H U tH• .d ~ 1•\ \ \U l -ll f44til•\,tl&Ut._. tut htu11• '•Ht ••ttt tt.t1I li\f\tt"\ ta• hmd1 '" ''"' 111•• 1,, 1111 ., 11 .. ""1 k fl.o\ 1 h h i II '"' II Ito 1 .11 111111 ......,*"•It~\ •••···················· ,. .ff M f, "I II f ),1., ..>1\ I .I ,, 11• I• ....... ua• •• ,., , • ., 1 ......•................ "' \ ._I I Ill •I \ \hi I • II\ o ••.•• ' I "" It ....... " t t I .... ,, .1 •I • 111~ t l 1•h•1I 11, 111.: o\ t I llJ I h.. U U , .... ll' "'"'" 1 I ..11 t•• I th 1 I .. IJ I ,J:-1 • •..................••.• ' I 1111 11 h•tl Ut•t •• ,.,7,.._j "' ''· ; I ,, ,, I •·•I I t ti h • \ I• ··t .... ~ . " . I ~. t 11 I \I t ~ I 11 tt. t I I 1•• I ... • 11 It I 1 'l'Ufl "f'l•llly. l)\•pttnd11blt' Slrt"\'lt't' ltt'llll lla lc11 lll )In. .. ,.., .. ,.,.""" ~I !Iii~ l!U :t ~l'ltlCIAN Vrll't'd nl(ht, ht~· t-.11matl' ut1 liu-.:1· "' 11m iill 1l>l111 I "' • :t.J7:!!>4 t17 !l IJJ:ltt 1-.lo•, It H'1411 d 1•u 11 lh • """'t .. 111.. l<I'' n 1111 m I-,.,.. t'l>I J 1111 t~W. /!JIH ,..,../TI .. ........•••••.••••...•. N••IO hll 11111'..1 l'llllfll1•1 lu11.~ •\')•l\l'll,1l1• \'HUI k1ll'lh•t1 ... .... ..... 1 117:, '""' I 0,11 "•'11111): l.JllOM'Jf.1111): ,, .... 111111 Iii 11'11111\l' ' ....... 1q;... ..., .... .,,t "'""""""I" 1~:l 13'1!l TREES \j .,, \1 , ttl••I• _, Contr ' '"•'V'"I I ClllU\ 1·.1. t'lt'Jll CK VI I 111 ... IJ~lt ll'lhl\ '151 :~71i '•" ...... c QrfH'. Soff ' .... ~ ................... ,, .... ,, ...................... . '.. I f 11 tf111 Ill ''"' , I 111111 ,, , .... !'-th•\t•.., l .•• \,rl S t'l\i'H't' I I \ •• •' "'' 11 I "'' .... , .. ii.:·· I'. ll'llll Ft lllll , 1 11t1 ''I• , ,\> h.11 k .\11•,1t work ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• GAKVl!:N MAINT. VII L1eMn up. Tree Trim mmai 541-ll'llJ!f. •·~Pm s-r•Serwket ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~jld\mc·al itll1 rn11rkct 11\j( eXt-t-'UllVt' w rnl!du11 c"~r1t:r1l'c will l'realt: vrmt ads. market1111( s a l ei. ll'tl\·ri.. rucJw s pu ti.. 111·wsl l'ltt:rs, llrol·hurto:. itml f' It Call b/5 ti.:MJ Tlw,_..Det.U l 'omvl auto cJ~talli11i.t . I'll & cJelt\0 ('all lht• 1'11J1>. 1l4t; 2'27tJ. 1n:1 791;9 l'ru( tnaSSl'llr . rtt•rvou~ tl<'i.~ mu!>1•1<• t1•ns11111, 111orn &: i:v,· h) .1ppt b4ti~ M Ono 1 1 ... ,... ...... .....••..•....•.••..••• JACK 0 F i\ I.I, 1' ll lm'l:.'"S- 1-'l umbm i:. t•le<·. ht•uttni.t. IAl~I JO~ ti:Jti t;ll62 I lorn1· lmprovem1•11l. <!5 yrs exp ~\·n1·t::-.. 1•11q,l\'n try &: patrtltrtl? liJ I 12M Ha~a 61>\tmp J obtl. A!lk for Randy. ~43118 ~lnnups. trimm ing 6 twu!Ulg. Free estimates. :>57-la'll llaul. cleanup. concrete removal. l>umptruck ~ll·k Sl!r V 642 7638 HalMC ... S.nlce Wlll c:lean your Home or office al your tonve· ~·~-~8at\4pm. t...k .... • •••••••••••••••••••••• Renova tine· Rotottltina Spnnillen lawna clnup11 l>av" M2 4853 u.,.1848-MHI Mau r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I C:u11tom hnl'k . 11ton1•, M&ll Winter Speclahi ~ IJl-Oc·k. 1•11f1t'ret ... 11l u1·t·11 CI ca i11 n g • pa 1 n tin II. Ht.,11 .,.,.,.. f'lll :.ot!l!Mt12 l'arventry Lie' . borulL-.1 , est 546·~. !Yl!l 6M9 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want a Rt:ALLY c..:u :AN llOUSI-:? <:all Gtnl(ham Ci1rl "'rtt t.'St 64~ 5123 llousel'lea11tni.t· dont'. thoroul(h & df1t·tl·nl Ht!fs Call K a1hy. 6:11 1823 lluust.'l'll•antnl( lfrltalllt'. i.toud work. stt•iuly )11h lld 's 646 72'!11 aft ~, IJrwk. Hh11·k. Hhlfll'. a1l11n lcf'll & Wllllfl, Vl'r)' rl'll1' J,tt· & lrn11 1l 1•1l llo lt 54K-l'l~I. :.Jtl ll!•Ml MASONHY IC1·1t"on 11t.1o., hourly rnt1• Yuu huy rnut1•nal W111l1· 1f111 lllfi aft 6 1-:Xl'EHT llrll'kwm k ,\ rna:11111ry l.111· 1 f'I ' Fair Jlru•t•!\ ~.~,, '1~·~•=•. 1i;cncni1 ...... ......•.••..•.......•.. Pai.Glint 6 Paperi.n& Prol. work. Free est. Ranbl. Steve. 547-081 DAVE'S PAINTING Servi.na Area 9 years Moat Reuonable U.ured. Uc'd. 5116·8425 ------- RALPH'S PAINTING lnl. /ext. Prompt. 24 hrs. Ile .. neat. refs. 962·4701 "lne ext/int painting by Richard Sinor. Lir. ins. Try me. 836-SMS CZ-4 hrs ) l'umtimc & Paperini.t Wallpaper removal <iu11ranteed 1'1i1ul Cutler 962,DJ6 :JO'/. Utsl' thru "'eb . l'1·rfrdmn1st. I do m y 1.wrt work Curt !178· 1314 1•11\ ...... lt .. :A.-;ilNi\IU.l-: 1•1uc 1-: lul I E•I ..-ri·c ,.st. I 0111\I work G:lli !M!>:l J a t k ftdO Joumaliat·capture the decilive. Tho m Yount will s~ your modelina composites 6 product illustration. R8te ne1otiable. 548-SUJ ....... ti.-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,•Stucco, Repalr /Con11t. Fr9e Ell. Geor&e 546-1641 ----------T ... s.r.ke ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tree ~ Shrub trimming. removal. yd clean·ups. hauling. roncrete. dirt. J im <:orum 63l·U30 Neat patches & tu tures T~ "".... lfJ. I 4Jt ...................... . -----P......_L --~ Know SUln Lan6'uage'! * ~,.,_, ... """JI* Counle!I in local Colldl!es All Typell 5311·7113 teach Sulton Sign Writ· Plumbing. Remodelin~. Repairs. Leak De lee lion. 4t l>rains Cleared. Top llat Pl umbi ni.t GJS.~ P.O.loxRewt .. s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt POiit Box Ser vice TIU: MAIL ROOM. 24 hr ~~•~est lfwy CdM Nll 640·0340 or 644·4481 looflftg •••!••••··············· ing 644.8342 TypiMJ Ser•ice ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fast acl·urale typing on I BM Corrert 1Scleclnc . IA.her set·retarial work. bus iness letters. rt• s umes. elr . Karl'n . 675-IZlJ Window Ce..lncJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Let TheSurishine In·· Call Sunshinl! Window Cleaning. l.ld. 548·8853 ·,-iu I• -. ··~· \\ .. . \ '. " .I ~IH ··~·"I \\1 t,tj.W lilfl Hl 7 :!l<l ti 1111 Diywutl ······•·•·••••••• •••••• ! \\II l-~...,...,1-:H\'lt.'Jo:S 11ull• I I \I llf t ... \ \t I ~u11h1 ,1p111i.: Ir ... · lnrn llUlll: I h•Jfl Ujl:-. l'l'lllt'ltl ''°'I. l-'1''"1·:-.1 •'-W 1655 ...•...•••.•.•••...•... llAIU>W\IOU 1-'l.llOHS Clcant'tl & Waxed Anyttmt•. 1132 •111111 S A ll11U,,1·l·lea r1111 i.t tlort l' thoroul(hly. Call after :1 pm !'62 11675 ur !162 li7111i Movtnl('' Tlw Sia• 'v1111: C:olll•l(t' Slullo•nt;. M11v111i.: (Al ha. .. j.(rfJWn I rt~ll I ... 1 :-.a m l' 1(01111 "'' v 11·•· •Tl i!4 431i l.11·""'" liotl M:t1 l'11111l111V, Ill wnllpapnm11. 10 111 11•1111 1(ult'r:il)tl•1•1I w111k .l•l" 1;11! !lfi l•I. :M 11:11; New & rt:cP-'olers. lfrpatr spet·1al,lil1stay busy Tr•lil-yuur 11"1 11tuff for pnt•cs Reliable S-18-0512 llom<' & C..:o mml•rical C hri s tmas ~ti:ns was h c cJ C all Stl'n' 646-19.57 .,,I ' ti" i .. ,, I \ f '•I •11 .. I !t fl1 t f'. t""-l ltll.tl1• t'\1' 'I'• • fOKH h 1 t l 1UJ t'.nd what you wan t in Oai.ly P ilot Class1f1eds n .. w )(•111111 .. a wtt h a Classified Ads. your one· Ch•1011f1t'4111d 1>42 ~111 st.op shoppin g center. .. _ ---Find what you want in Daily P ilot Classifieds . -------- HelpWC1nted 1100 HetpWa1,ted 7 100 He&pWonted 7IOOH~pWa11ted 7100He4pWmled 7100 HltpWCIRhd 7100 H.tpWoted 7100HelpW.wd 7100 H.tpW.wd 7100 ........ ············~~· ············••·····•••• ......................•..............................•...•.••..•..••.....•....•.......•..... ·······•••············· ···········~··········· ...................... . CLO THES TIME IL I\.._ q p ' I I lllJ •ti•'" 1\ ·' 01 IJ1,1l111 II 1111... ' I I 1 . I 11 , 1111r. 11111 \I.I \"II ' ,_. (" f If I' t ' I I '" I '" 11 u • 1· I II" • 11 ll COOK f "' 1•1 t t t1ua11 I ' I•'""'". •I I 'o1t1 11 I 1111 l11tH Ir \ u11· ,,,f 1 d I •to 1h 1111 1 Ii 11 I I I '" 11f •q ol 714-63 1-5192 COOtt 111•1••11 I lllt•I \ I 1 I Ill I •ft .tut C•' I ·'Ill I ~ 1 ti ~ I.. ' "' t .1 ~ f f 1 ' I .... 1.. I I I I I Ill 11 •)' •1 f 1 ' f •-f 1111 1UJ ,Jt•1 f 11f 11 f •• "''1 f ' I ~II I , I I ' I I I " I fl J t t ~ ' I 11~1t•p.1H\ lu•n I \f·J , ·•\ \, " \I I f' UIPI• IYMRfllOrt HOTEL \1 \\j l I ' ! .,.,, , ••It (, t 11 I 'Jll ti 111•1 I 1•11 I• 11 I ........................ ---- COOl< lu t• I'"' 11111• >\,1 If \ ,.,.. ·'"' II I~ t' It\. I j I I J41 II•''"" \, .i ol .1111 I 1dl l)jl1i i~I 1l1u11 lll ( \hl.l \11 -..1 """' I·,,,,., ll'lllT ,, ' II.I\ I 11 1•'<1111 1 •"' 1.11 I I 'I• 111 ·,.1\I ,.,...,1..,1 \'\,I I lo 111 1tl• I 'I" 1 ll'IH ,..j \It.I• ltl ''" 11111 1111 11 .. DINl~GROOM I I PERSONNEL I II Ill\ .q i.111 1111·111 1 lh•I o•I I '1•1 111,1111•111 I <Ill p.111111111· 1Jlt<'t1t11~:-. f,d I '""I 1111· 1 1111tl I 111lol'1lb \ I 1111 \\ 111111 1' ... I) .1111 '" I \ti""' 11\ .q1pl 1',1\1 ~1 .. ,,,,,,,11 ... \l,•1 "'' 581-61 11 I Villa Voln"tdo LCJ<1"'a Hill!> I\ Hiii I I COMPAt-410N • I l.f, I I\ 111 I ""II I 1 •I 0111 R 3).2009 I". \JI· ~ 11\ I I' .... ""'" 1111fll11tl t• I ., \I 1ild l:1d .\ I •t ,. I"" \111.,I il!l\O' I'''"·"' '""" 111 1· I 'I 11.1 I \ .:;_,1M1 11111 1t1·1\11·\, !ofl.t u:1;•1 ORAFrSl'ERSOH I .I \ .. I t•• ~ •• , h \\1th ". 1111 ... 1111 .ii ,,, '1·l11p GUARDS hill ,\> l>ill'I l11111• .\II ,., 1•.1:-L'111l111111~ lur11 d \g\':.. :!I 111 11\l'I' t\'111'<'<1 ''d1·u1111· :-;,, t':l.I'"" 111·,• Appl) 1·111\1•r :..al l'r11l1T l1111t S .. t'\11'". l:l<!ti W .,1h St S.111ta .\11.1 I 1111'1 \ ll'" II 1 ,. :1 I:.! 1'<. I 1. ,\l'"' Fn 11,ur"l~ 11,.1 11.•lp ' W1• ,111• 111111111g ,t\\;t_\ 1111:-llH'"" Ill 11\'t'tl 11f !i full ,..,., \'11·1• 'l vh:<l~ fur 11111 11r11g n·;~I \ 1• ,.,.11011 1\llv;1111·1•d 11';111\ 111g 1iu;11•;111l1•\•ll s alar.'. luc11b ol llu111•f1b l'lt•IJ:>l' .-.111 ~>Ito 7 Ulli II \IW\\'A It I•: S \ l.t-:S \ppl,\ Ill llt_'l''llll ('t'U\\11 lla1d"·'n" 111:.!I In 1111· 1 W1-:-ll'l1ff !'lat.a l ,'\ II 111·:,\I< I'S lll "I'' T1•\:t'- ltl'"l111l'r~ l 'uqt ol l•'I'' .111 •IPl•ll'l1t11tl,\ lur 111,..:11 111 ,. 11 111 I' I' I.\' s I' ;1 ... h 11'11111"'" .111ol l t lll i!.•', tw111·fll:-. 111 th1• ('us ta . 1 ,\11 ·..,:i an•a ll1•g:.1nlll·:-.:- 11I t'\ Jlt'l'lf'lll'o'. I\ I I 11• 11 1-' S.·:•"· l'r•·' 1\11:. ii I l"t Wurth I'' ifillll HELPWAHTED I' T n1•\ :-.l'ltl'tlu\1111-t lla) or rui;lll t·all hu-111f11n11a 11011!6 7 0717 lttl'k llouSt•t·lt:anc·r W1111low Washt•r. t•)(IJ , uw 11 t ra11sportat ton OOll f1:J07 lloUSJo:CI. t-:i\N Jo: llS Tu$'.> hr. ear 645 51i 3 I k11L"ekt'<'p('r. It v1• tn for ht•al·h h111L'\t'. l 1·h1h1rt•t1 \'ltllklOg , Ollti.l fl l'I\ t• ' ,j!Jll 04.'i!/1•\t'S HOUSEKEEPER tlrgt•nt N1•1•1I 'ro l-akt" full rt'S()Ot1Slhtll I\ of houad1hl 1"111' 2 ;;dull.-. ltd'~ ,'I, 11111'1'\'ll'" r1•q '1L Salary o p1·11 1;.10 l~f.!H ll<1l 'Sl-:K1-:El'EH I ur l tl;w~ ~ t•t•k \-.I. fur .\J;ii.:i.:11·. 1!11 111~1 llOI SEKEEl 'Elt. 1'\11 d :tl'M lhnt dlllnl·t· \1 tt~I haH· k1111 .... l1•1ll.!" .. r ... ,,1k 111g & Sl'fvtfli.! 1'1·r11w tt•'lll ti:ll II :l:I IMMEDIATE OPENING Forqualtf11·d S\'l'I ll'l' Wl'lll'I' BARWICK DATSUN 831-1175 493.3375 ,\.-;k for f fl'fl Sumler,, LANDSCAPE MURSEAIDE !'art ltmt:. 11 7_ '11 lw1l <;onvall's 1:e nt llosp1l;1l Ccie;ta Mesa, 549 :11.161 ~AidesjLVH Wl' ncL'ti you now for s taff rl'l1cf Al·ute h~pl . all shuts l>c~. ) our uwn work Wl'l'k Nl·~ pay rale~ l~:st Nun.es ~k)!1slry Cu;la Mt:sa 754 ti77 I Anahet m !15t0 31'3o HURSlHG ASSOC lO month p o s tlton , 1;olden West l'ollt·g t·. \2PM ll·JOl'M Mo n Thurs . KAM 5 1'M "'" flay l'ossthle llwk:.. llur 111~ s umm1·r Jil'rtutl Uulstandtn~ l11·m•f1t:. $135.5 $1651 mo Aµpl) tn wnltnl( hy J:rn. Ii!, 111 t'uast (.'om11111n1ty Colll'l(t•s , 1:1111 Adam~ /\w . ( 'osla M1•su !li!ti2ti. ."xit> 5!)17 E.O. E.. ~ F HUR SI MG 1.VN. part llml' 11 1 Country Club Cun vales nml 54!) J061 OfftCE CLERIC f'HX PBX OPERATORS "'ull & p/l1me pos1t1on~ :.t v a t I f o r r e I 1 a h I 1· persons with ph•µsant & I d ri1:1tmt phorw mannt•r Nri.thl shifts w irotaltng w~1·ken1ls EnJoY 1•x I cellent l'O benef1b 111 cludmg a fret" m l!al pN s hift Apply 9AM N1Nm, Mon. t"n. Personnt!I. MARRIOTI HOTEL !llXI Newport C..:cnlc r Ur Newport Beach Equal Opp 1-;mplyr M 1..- PIX RECIPTIOMIST 1-'a s hi o n I s land broker a Rt' fi rm llrs 6 JOAM -JP~ Hca') ph<m l':... Capablt• out ~01ni: pc•r s onaltly a mus t Ask for ~1 r~ Prall 644 !1111 l'rc·~chool TEACHERS To slart imm('diat t:I) Part time or full 'ltml· l'rl'·s1•hooL 8S7-12ti3 PROGRAMMER ANALYST ASST RECEPTIONIST I )fl•· 1,f Ult' ar .. u ~ h·atl111g Jlf•t Hflll1t••I UJl 1•n1· t"l'I .,. .. -11,\ u l>ni:hl "'w' l(••tw l"'"'lfl l11 t1uni11., 1111')' 11ho11..:o. ~r•·1·t 11•·1111h· viu. .. htt· typ111~ & r1 1111i.t Alht wl1· rnt1\l tfllJlor tanl ~11·1· 111f11·1 .... 1n warm t·onl(t"n1al ~niuµ Sale1 Part time. lridatCOftllllt..t Will train. Prefer ex· n l--nce in women's re · sales 1821 !>56·9333 SAJ ... ~l't-:KS<>N wantl'<i who knows and cnjuys anltQ'Ul·~ ti3 I 333:!. IU.6PM l'lcaM· phortt· J ody at!•---------• 1f)2 61J6 RKeptionist jbp«. lr vtnc It.I-:. office has tmml'<ltale openmg for maturl•. reltabll• 111 d1 v1dual w n e at ap v e a ra n 1:e & ~u o fl J>('rsonallty to handle hea\'Y phone:. & gen uf f1<'t' cJut1c-s ='Jon smoktn~ olft~ llrs K 30·5 Jo. 5 day~ For appl \115 Ill®! RESEARCH ASST I C11as1lm" Collei.t<' . ..-oun SHOES MEN'S SUITS RHEJEWELRY Wt• hav~ full ltme cl/m rruss1on sales openrn~s 1n the ahove d e p art rtll'flts for quah<il'<l sell lllll SJJ('CtahSL"i. We offt-r lhl' bl's t benefits pro gram 11( any retail t'om pany Appl} tn pr·r:.un J C Pennl')~. l 4 Fai.hwn 1 lsland, :"'cwport H~a1·h t-:O 1-; M F 1 u111 Val lcv .. '-l'l'k ... I•---------• quahfwd pt:rson for n · ~t·arch >n tlc\'t•loµ1ni: t t• I •• t· o u r s c• s & l' I S t'ourscs. through J u111· '81 S1424·Sl734 m o. App ly tn wntmg befor e 5P~ .Jan. l5 to Coast Com munity <.'olll').(l'S. 13i0 Adam" An~ . Co:.la Mesa Y262ti. 556 5947 E II 1-:. M, 1-- SCTRY JRECEP'T Tn1de a ss11l·tal1vn 1n l rvtnt• I girl off11·1· <ri!n'I ofr dul1ci.. ~00<1 se1·rl't<1rtal ..,krlb n•·•· iS<! 28.Sl **SECRET ARIES* • Hecpt/Type6.5 $13,2\X> <.ienOfr f f !>5$ I 1.400 Recptffy~'61>$11l.800 1..1z Reinders Ai.ten<'Y 4U20 Berch l-:sl'64 Eot-: NewPort 1833·8190/ l''ree Previous banking ~x pen enl'e desirable Xlnt typing skills requir~d. s hort·hancJ nol requ1rl'd United California ... - Security SECURITY OFFICER \1•111' "1.11.t• •I' ,, •• 1<:111 • IJllljl.Jll \ &II l \I.If' :; I ,, .... .i.·1111.ol I" 111111 -----------· MAJMT. FOREMAM Mimmum I y r 1•xp "' :1 man lTt:W s upl•rv 1:-.11111 $llMN1 s 12~.u pt•r 11111 ~. I d ~1 v,., :\:.k lnr 11 11111 I Our IOVOtl'e oHu•t: ·~ set:km~ an md1v1dual with a pleas a n t manner & the• ability to use the IO key ac·curatc•ly At ll«lSl tyro! uffic;t: exper. 1s rt'<1u1red. We oHcr an xlnl. bt•.neftt piu ·kai.tt• 111 l' I u d ' n g d i :; I' II u n t prt\'llt'l!I'. ffi('ili1·al. den lal & hf<' msuranf'l'. 11ro ftl s h;.1rtnl! & J>l'rt~wn Jllart (Jualtfted per s on 111 a naly7.t" de,·elop ap phl·ations & s o(lwarc programs for computt:r pr oi:essing $1651 -$2011 m ci Ouls lancJ1ng benefits Apply in wntmg by 5J'M .Ian. 13.1 to Coa~t Com I munlly Collt•j!es. I 3711 Adams Avt'. Costa M1·sa !12tii!6 55fi 5<>-l7. E. 0 t: Restaurant S e (' r t: I a r y 0 ( f t <" <' !\fan<1~t·r Opporlun tl) lo )'.\row with younl(, al! g r es!>t\'l' ad vcrt1s111)! fir m 50 al·t·urale wµm . hie ~horthand . l'hl'l'rful ).•u11 lime e\'cnmg po,,, lmn avail for quallftt'i1. ex per' d hotel sl'curity olfic·er l::nJOY l'XCl'll 1·0 bt.'fld1l."i Wllh prl':llt~ltlU" hotel Apply !JAM NtNm. Mon 1-~r1 l'ersonncl ,\1:11 I" I .dlt·111f1 t I olo ..... 'Hit 111 '. I: I ·, 1111111'1 I)• II I. , , • II I' I. "1111 • '"'I' I I '. II• I I ..... t 11 , • .,., ,, ... I I 1: •' ,, f I 1111 1 II , ·• ,, •t••I .1 ••••• t I• .1f1 I I I I 'I I •• , f I Ill'\. 11• II 110 I)' ,\ 11 • 11 .1111 I 11 \ • I" Ii 1111 I "11 ,\I' t1 lt11· i'11t ·t f;H l'!H \.I l·.H I 1 111 I '""''' \11111 \ 111 I" I .. 1 ...... Ill I • ', ,. ,tf H • 1 '\ ' I . I ,, I' I fl' I ~: 'I ' (l , lt ',\ ' ,\ \•llklo\\ll 1111 CUSTOOIAt'.- "'"'' 1.1 1 li11tld111i.::-l I \I ..... ,,. •• , H 'IH '4• I '••. j'l.l I l j ,"", \1 ... • • I • 1, ii •••11t.'I \ ,.,,, 111 I ~ll'flt• I lttll'-1•11tl1uli\T1ll1 '''" • 1\11111 .1111 Ill •·11d1, I I I \\I 'j. \ 1111 ( ~' ' "" FILE CLERK • l'tt ' '"" ·" \ 111... , .,,, t :::,•:• 'l~i.1:11 .• : ;•: \.. 11..tlil I GEHERAL OFFICE • o•nl \\tlh 111(1111·-. m11~l 11.1• ,. •,111111• 1r 11111i.: 1 · \1 o11 ... 1 'ri'I Xl~KI I •"II' •1 "' I 111 ltT lt1·\p I Ill' f 111 . \ ,11f1 I 11111 I .1i·l 1 \ i • (If I 1 •••• ~.' 11 h 1· I 11 I 11 I S. lu~l11lt11t: I\ 1'1111.! I ti 1111! A pli11111•-. :,.1H ;,:,11 l•1tll l1tt11• .ll''J 111'\I ! 1.,•111•1,11 i lllt11• -.111,11! \'O \1.111 111 1 .. 111.il" 11.ir h .. 1 .1 t "·' I .111 I lt11t 1- t,lt ;~1 \11°11 l·t t x • I " 11.•l ' ,,., •• , L!•MM'J ~·····, I .kill•.,\ li:i"ll' :H·1·111mlt11f.! l,tll' t• q r.11m•lo•d111· 11f 1)1· LI\ 1.;1n 111< I\ I'. H ,, .. 11 111· 111 '"'l'1h1n·~ ··11111.i I S;ilt•' Tr.11111·1" 11111 ••1 Ii 1d ''' nlft r" m :rrwf.!"r 1 1'·"'1 111111• 1111 """" ljll I .. I:. ' :• 1: I " ... k I'" r 1•11111•1" .111.i .. 111 , ,\ t'ha tll•llt• 111no1 il11.:hl1•1 •, "' ''1 Ix I 1-.;i'4d.' "" '"'" ~111 ,.1,, 1:1111•r.d I p1·1 111 i.'1x 11,11,, ·" t l The Balboa Bay Club I l••I '\I I lid 1111'11 1111·1 IH 1111 I. \ I llfk"' ''• linuu•' •t• It & l \I '-lt~t ,1,1111111 ' ll(Ktn ... l•I'• 1•-•· ..... -.~1 1 I llt•hH•I) ,,,.'""' \11,1111 .. d I I' T , 11111st h,1 \1• 1~d ol t 1\ mi.: n·1·1111I tt:1:1 1xx1 DELIVERY PERSON <..,.,..,._, M1•-.a I 'harr11a1 ' Mon ~·1 1 1111\ 1>12 1111•· i!> now hirinq: Rt:Staurartt MCJr. I 11ll t1111,. t·;, , . ., Mu ... t 1,.. .1\,111 \\kt11I-. .\ltt:-1 ha11• \11 r'I lftll:. H"'l,tttr:lltl •"'-I' Penonnel Cleric ll1lt111:11 .tl ~1 11 :-;1 I\ 1'1' nwprn Full 11nw . .\1i111 )"1 I II .~I :, 1'lf•11s1• 1·;1 ll '"" ·'""' c;1r. 7:1.~ . .\11111 Jot t H ~I ."1 l'lt'll\i•n lftt\\'1 w.111t1·d 1----------for ,\11l•1 1· ... 1 s 1 .. 11· M1111.1 !Jt• IH "·"" 'al11I l'ahf 11 I. lit•Mt .11I\1111-: rc1•11rd <'• k1111\v ( ·,..,, ,, Mt·Sll \pfll.\ ·" ll 11h /\II I 11 S II 1J I' I\ . :'I :! II ll:nhot lll 1 d ,. i.1 l\l\t)·2Afill ' lll•11lul 11111 s•·. 1'11;.111s1oll•, JX~lv. 111111 '"111kl•r. 1·x11 prt'f ltul will tra111 n)(hl • J)Cr.lU(I. t;i'l4 (~;I t .tl ~ i-'!r...... DENTAL IJentul fr1H1l 11H11°l' ~;x pE'r pc~t>o.1 r d . 1 n '!urli111·1·. I YPlllJ' x 1111 IOl·a\100. t:su1bhshc1l of fl<'f' Nonsmokc•r ~l DIKJAL ;UAORCDA Wanted for prol(r<•ssive gene r a l prartire 1n ~ewporl beac h. Xlnt conditions 631 373.1 GENERAL OFACE Ill'~""'' to•la_y f11r lowa l l"llll•ll ;II') ;o~,.1 i.:11n11•11t~ 557-0045 0\-Llr\: 1723 lirch Street -M.w-pG!t r.och - GIRLRllDAY N c•wpurl Cl'lll l'r . <;cneral 11ffl<'e duties. 7 JOA M 4l'M Contact Mrs Pratt 644 !1111 . GIRL FllDA Y l'art time girl friday w\th bt.lOkkeeplng back· !(round. Lite typing & fil. mM. Ylexlble hr!I. AP· prox. 20hrs 1wk. Neu O.t:. Airport. S5 S'1 hour· ly flWR Assot1ates , $7·9871. Eaa~r buyers r ead the C lautrled acJs ever y .d • 1'· If you have tomtlhlna for sale, re-Tradr your old stuff ror ad\ \hem fut and inex· n ew 11oodie11 wlth a penalvely. call 642·517&. <.1aaslfl~ ad. &42·5871 r -Hospitol Staff llEl.11-:}· HN's 1.VN':-. .\it•1•1kd fur all ~lllft:-. I I lt'St~'" 'n111· 11" 11 "urk \\ccl: :-;~ ..... µa,• t ~ll"" llt·:-.l Nun.1·' lt1 •1;1,.,11 ~ 1 l 0•it.l.1 \l.· .... 1 ·~·· lii7 I \11.thl'trll !J.">4i :~1;1u I 1>14;Hll , L:irnb1•ap1• :\1 ;1mlt'11,111•·•· I W11rk111 ,..: S11p1·11 ,....,,., \ 11 1 ;\1 ~ m 1 t · 11 I ' ,\ltt11111urn :! ) l'Jr 1·\ HOSTESSES I pt•r11·111·1· S111 ;ill 1·11·\\ IJa)1'1,,'\;t11·:-.lt1l bJ\a1I F or 1•m ;1n S p •·.11.. \pµI~ 111 111·1 ·.1111 ~frF.111 , Eni.th~h & Spa111:..h c;1111d 1!1·11' Ila) :.111l-:1:1:1 l s alary + l11•111•f1b ll:t\'~Hl1• llr '\II 1;.1;!4!ll17. !I I I lr.11:·1 l"r1111l I lfo:-.k I 'l1·rk, I 1\f.ll'IY lo (.'11uly. Suri & S<mtl ll11t1•I. l.;11.!UlliJ 1!1'11 -\!{j 4'117 MAID WANTED Sca1·11ff Motel. Uilil ~.1 l;1a..'it llW Lag lkh .tM-'\~fl Housekeepers & Laundry Attendants W•· ha\'1· 1n11nl•1halt• lull 11 m l· 1111t•111111::-fur l11111sl'ke1•1wr~. ~l'l'ltl)tl howit'kl'l'IH'r" & la11111lr y .1llt•nd:111ls M1tSl lw .1hle In work fll•xthlc• hour:-. 11(Ta:-.st011al wn·k1·111b & h, ii 1 d a y-. E x n • I I h1•111'f1l:-. & 1N11rktn)! 1·1111 1hltOIL~ tnd111l1111: a ln ·1· tnl';tl lll'I 'lhlfl 1\pply !1/\:\1 Noun \lu ll F ri I '1•rsuonel MARRIOTT HOTEL !•~1 Nt•w111•rt ~ ·,.nlt'r llr Nl'wport llo·itt•h r:.1u;il Opp i-;mplyr M, F I lott•I HOST /HOSTESS Full or JI ltml' 11os 1t111ns a\a1I for rt•ltabll'. p1.-.1plt• or11•1111·d pt•rs11ns Vart•'\I -.h1ft:. i-:n)llY l'X l'••ll 1·ompa11y ht•1wf1b 11wludmi.t a frt:'' ffi l'ill Pl'' shtfl A11ply !IA M Nuir1. Mon 1-'rt 1'1°1'Mlll Ill'' MARRIOTT HOTEL ~l Newport Center l>r Newport Be ac·h fo~ual Opp Emplyr M If' MAIHTEHAHCE Work 1n beautiful l>ana Point llarhor l'lumhrng & yarntrni,: experten<•e I prl'fcrfl'tJ_ $4 hr start ic l1t_•ncf1ls Apply Tue~ Sat Dana l'oint Mannu 0.1 2471)1 l>ana l>r Uana l'oml ' MECHAM IC llunt n ch servi1·1• sta 1ton, t-:xp & ~ocKI ref's ei. senlial. own tools ne1•e:1. S:.tl based o n ex p 114&11Z70 Medical Assis t. front of· rice. for (; I' . c•xp pre- ferrt-0. lllatl rc..,urn1• 11f- I 11• e m u n a i: t• r 3 5 I llosp1tal ltd. Sl1· 1111. N ll :r~;J ME[)ICAL 1\s:,t:-.l Front ofr Some typing . 1-ixp pref'd . c;:11.r>J01 Mortgage R.E. APPRAISAL ASSISTAHT S !': <; R t-: T A R I i\ L SKJl.l~'i & AL'(;UKATI-: T V P I N <i ~t t: (J 1 6 5 W I' M l ft t-: /\ I. 1-: ST A T 1-: 0 ll A I' r HA I SA I. to: x I' 1-:.n . SOM .. : CO i .i. .. :t it-: ll A C K li ll 0 ll N I> 1>na-: .. ·1m1u:u. Major morl(ll(al(e hank· mg firm is scekinl( an· To•mporary Ass1gnnwnt INVENTORY CLERICS l weeks . 1·19 throui.th 13L Hours. 6AM IOAM &61\M-LUOPM Apply m Person J.C.PEHHEY 24 Fashion Island N. ll. KO.E. M /F OperatioM ,~ Back·UP wire oper11lor needed for widely known stork broke r age firm Typing req'd. lmmcd opening C all H elen McGinley · 644-2292 Pal·ker s & handlers needed for plasti cs fahricatioo plant. Apply 111 person, Jo'ahnC'ated l'laslic!'i lnl'. !H5 W 18th, C.M. Part·IJme typist for husy Aircraft dealer at OC Airpurl. "'lcx1blc hrs w posstbiltty for full time . A cc ur ate l o 50WPM w /s h orlhand prelerrcd. Call 540·27211 for appl. Miss ion Uea«h crafl 18741 No Airport Way. SA. PART· TIME A mbitiou s. goal oriented poople person to assist m expansion of who l es a lt! outle t . tie6995 Part ltme c·ook apply 1n person. Null Lynch's 311 Palm . Blllboa 675-1556 Part tim e bartender a pp· ly in person . Mutt Lync h 's 311 Pa lm . BaJboa 67~ 1556 M, 1-· J' ltml'. i days. :!hrs dat I). AM dl'h ver y. I. A Times $10ll-pcr Wl't'k l.a~una Bt?ach. 4~ H.a!lti PUIUC RELATIONS l'art lime for resort l'On dos. Good phone votc'l' ~·. AM1Afl. Santa Ana office. Start. $41hr. 54J.. 79.57 or 543·2951. Real Estate Sales LooldncJ for a HewCcrHr? J0tr1 the leader . Now m · terviewing for positions in r t!al estate s ales . Whether Licensed or not call to see ir you qualify to join the professionals at W a I k e r & I, l' e ( 714 )8.15·4545. R ECEPTIONI S T Generai 'offi «e. purt ltllX'. nr OC Airport. con struct1on back ground desired Res ume rcq. Salary i:omme nsurate w ;qualificat1 o n s . 549-8068 Receptiooist with general office skills . Pleasant phone m a nner & ac· cura te typing essential. Some bookkeeping ex· per. preferred. Fountain Valley area. 557-7242. ------- UCB'T.JTYPIST "\.tlltime for architec· tural firm in Newport Beach. Call 759-9141. RE C EPTIONI ST Part/full time. Ligh t typing & other clerical work. Hasson & Assoc. ~l-1651. .MIF*-!"ai.Dee ~o a11Si11l~i·-----------i ---. w/appra1sal pllckaiclng Ret<tpUo lllst . t y pinii . ---------for the rinancln.c or lg phones. answering. Call Hl*el TENllS ATTEflENT Part time pcJ81tlon for tenni., oriented pers<.1n . Opportunity to join pre · stigiout hotel 11taff. App· ly 9AM·Noon. Mon·lo'rl. Penonnel MAIRIOTI MOTIL 900 Newport C.Oler Dr. Newport Beach Equal Opp Empl7r 11 /F Sell with EASE I lt'uBREEZE c.if sslfied Adi M2-M71 ('Oll\mercial real estate sz.11111r DAY Ron. Sobs tad Sails. projects. Must have own !45-_'lmo __ . ______ _ car & be willintc to make lbal'a ALL you pay site inspections . after ror a !luitabletralning period. 30lnda1 ad Xlnt benefits . Salar y the baled on exper . F,qual Oppty Employer RALPH C . SUTRO co. Ul.Y PILOT SD'fl£ r-·· mBT•Y UCB'TIOMST Wltll or wtthout typing needed. Top pay. Tem- .parary • full lime. Call Tod Services al W79·8900 Newport Beach olfice Fl'Om Oreqe Coun\y Call7SHOll Doradly Wllaon Income R.E. nnence llC.-rlOMST Full lime Mon .. Frl. MUil be penonable • well·~ •• enjoy m.Uq t.he public. Re· ..... ICIOd spelllnt • DO IT NOW! pm=W!blp, No typiq. 641-1671' Pblme u.,.,;w. ,.... SIU. Idle ..... •tth a fernd. l\tU eomray Deir, Pilot Cla11llled =====:::=:::=~ =·i.v~~ _M._....,. ___ . ___ _,lell ida.bema M2·5171 Aft. o.ta-.. ...... ...., ...... ,.. .... ::-------__ ,.... """ ...... ---............................. --... --· ..... .,..... ........ ,.. -••• .I• ------·--·· ...... ~---·-... .... . . . DEL TACO 25252 La Pen Rd LC191ftG Hills phorw \'lltl'C. Organ1La Ltonal & folluw·thnlui:h skills l'nmpcr.w t.(lMHI ll'l Cinll person. full t1m1' WkcJays General help. lt-r:-. ll1i.:h t•ncrg~ & part ttme or full ttml· t•art'N ;imbtl11in :\II :1 MARRIOTI HOTEL 91..(l Newport <:ente r Ur NewPort Ueach 1-;qual Opp l':mplyr M 'F wkdays Good for home I m u ,.. l S a I a r ) makl•rs. m olht•rs. l'ol SHU I mo •. •kpl·ndtnl! ll'l(e s tUdl'nlS Xlnt pa,\ 0 n qu a I ' f I I' a t I fl fl,, & tratn1n~ lntcrncw 1 RJJ i5i2 SEC'Y /IKKPR For a1·countml! 11H11·e (.;1111<1 typing :-k ti b & houkkt:l'ptni.t back gr ound Salar) 11p1•n 631-0125 btwn 2 & 6 wkdys I St'i-retan I' T pcrm:.t RESTAURAMT ·. nenl. t~o 1, days pt·r WAITRi':SS 1COOKS ~t.oek. hrll flt:x ti:Jt 112~ Securit y E11penenced. maturt- Parttime days. Apply m person. Wed .-Thu. Frt. IOam·Jpm. 1801 8ays1dP Dr .. Corona del Mar. Restaurant MCDOHALD•s Now hinng. full or part lime . Days & e ves . G r eat ca reer o p Portunilies. On lhe job training. For more m formation. call 754.9943 or inquire at 3141 Harbor Blvd.C.M. Retail Clerk. Costa Mesa Stationers. Z10 1::. l'llh St. CM. fo'ull lime. Apply in person 10-12. Sailmalung nylon seam ing. fimshing. cultini: Sobslad Sails. 645· 7950 Sallrrulker. learn art of sailm11king Sobslad Salls, s.5-7950. Sales Hi fo'i Compo nents. Salary. x lnt ' future. C.M. area. EOF.. M/F. Call M-F. 11-2 on · ly . Mr . Pauls en . 21J.68S·M43. Sales in High Fashion S t o re . N e wport & Laguna area. Salar y + co mmiss ion & ex · p e rien ce desired . 78t).0872. SALES If you are aggressive and looking for a future in ret.il mgmt w /good co. ·benefits 'tppty ·hr pel"ICJfl 9am lo l lam Mon thru F r i. Standard s... 'J077 ~. Bristol. C.M. '· SAL&9 OPPORTIJNITY WW. amall, bftllhy Co. on powth pr'Olram with very hlp quality pro- du ct. When quality r.-. more tllan eier. relaUve to lhe dot ar. Wanted aom e ll*hanical kno'#led&e. abUity to commmlcale1 ""' _.,.., tbe penon wt.o baa won HP • .......... powtlt. St-oey Airport law (trm. <.iood s ktlls. or~ant71•d. bnghl Non smkr .ltJ:>ll' 851·9025 Secretary ASSIST TO MHGR. Upholstery decorating s hop in Costa Mes a needs bright aggresive person with good office s kills . a pleasant personality, front olfice appe arance. able to work indepe ndently . Xlnt startin& salary to right person. 9151·21115 SECRET AIJES Xerox 850 operators for expancJmg «ompany. Top pay for lop pe<>ple I'' T or P T Flexibll' hour s :"lewp ort Secrt't artal Ser\'rces. 752-2377. SECRETARY Needed 1mmed. With or without shorthand. Tern· porary & full time. Call Tod Servkes at 979·8900 s.cr.tary to Pret Sl.000 + D.O.E Accurate typing. no shorthand. Mature. gd. dress appearance. Call Sandy. 540-60.55. Coastal Personnel Agency. 2790 Harbor Blvd .• C .M. NEVERAFEE E.O.K SIClllTAIY I Stock brokerage firm in I Fashion Island has im· m ediate opening. for .sec ret41ry I bac k ·UP operatlona. Exper. pref. Hrs: 7-3 :30. Contact He len McGinley for appt. 644·2'Sl. SECURITY Door Attendant Msriott Hohl Evening position ava1la ble for a people oriented person able lo c het•k 1o·s & enfo r ce hotel policies at the d09r of our lounge. Enjoy ex· cell. co. benefits. Apply 9AM-Noon. Mon ..-ri Penonnel MARRIOn HOTEL 900 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal Opp E mplyr M IF SEC'Y tOl-'FICE MGR Irvine a rch ttertural firm. :.> hr wk. fulltime benefits. 752·1995. SIC;Y )iECEl'T. Min. 6 mo. experten<"e Mu.$l be able to wor k well with publi('. be eager to learn & grow with a growing co Ask rorSandie. 838·1040. -~~~row _ SBVICE STATION Island sales. p/t or rtt. mechanical ability de- sirable. s al based on exp. M6·82'70 Sewer & drain deaners wanted. light plumbing. !llM-4822 Shoe Salesperson We have an opening for an exp F tr salesperson. Apply In person. ask for ¥r. Cannon. He mphill's Sh-Oes. 54 fashi o n lsland. N.B. MH223. 9-sales, full Ume with or w/oot exp .• or will SICllT AlY train. Good ro. benefits. CIVJL ENGINEERING AllPAY in penon hm lo COMPANY. NEWPORT llam Mon thru Fri. BEACH. NEAR O .C. 8taDdard Shoes. 3077 So . AIRPORT. Brilt.ol, C.M. Full Ume. ex~rienced: cheerful person wanted STATIONERY STORE in Io r e n t r y -I e v e I Cclll need• aalealady secretarial poaitlon F/Ume, $ daya. Xlnt. w /opportunlty for ad· work l n I c on d a: v8DNIDlllt. SUanl typ-l!llp9dallJ fine clMnlele. 1n1 •toaae S.H. abllltia Alme: m10101ar •Pill· Dff .. Hry. Apply In ~ w/1'9Uee to llr. QMlllftM ~· eH \be ,..._et llolMlt ... __. ta • ••teaahll ' Wllba• f'nlt • At; ..... • 1enl .... , lt'1 W ump fut wlth Dall1 ...... a. QuA1 a., a.....,. •Al toa.11 •or. Piiot Want Adi. N.8. ...... , <TWMMI- -=--===========:..£,.:~~----------. -'.. ,. .. ,. 1060 ..... ............ lotJ • "l::C':'1 .....w ... '''° .........••..•.. ~ ..... . • DAILY PILOT ~.~~!.~ ..... !!~ ~r.!:: .......... ~!.~! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl\dml Aide Onvtir h1r l tO ~ Ot1Wft Riu•mii partaally ba.Ddl4'111l/Vt'd tt I k " I s l' b w I fl II ~--MO-J'Jtl *'uob&« ·~ .. ~ ~kll•• O.ld. lt ff . • yHn V et"'f t.eat-hable ~•&• b4ack1round . tw ti.m aboww. w .. a..m . .,, .. ~ ... '1. swrc.-.ON Yull llMf' day~ Will C. 1011 ,, .. ., I070 lrWI "2 ll>IJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• tcr.O l !>fl!:H~l> IJIUl(M ~·_; IU11'•:NS ..... ,, •• , .•. ,, •.•. k•······· ....,.. 1 ltJU yetlQW 1010 TIAC .. C21 t;lem.ou11r) t'te~wh~•I t• T ptha'4' 1rho111I I 'M ..,... M21MJI TIACHliS f u !llart 11nmtdu11t·h Pun tuw ur full t11114• l "'-M'hool W> 1 I 'I T~a AJl1lJtanl pr•• °"""'°' t''\V IJ4'Vt'll411tbl1• flVI 1133 TICtMCIAN I 'c•U• M.-.. w • o mpul•·I hr m ~ lrd1 II• d~ ...-mbl .. ti lat 1"\•mvt•·tr • um~>utr r ,\ .. 11•111 , ' ll 111 IJ u I r I h k ~ I II 11 hr't"'ul ~l•r• $1J $1!11\ ~l&IU 1'0 lit-111•f1h I JI! l.mJ.t ~1.~1 r .. 1~1 .. !)JI"'° 1'umv"n' 111 I•''''" J-.b .-11.per ,1 ld .. vhunt' ""Ir:. peu~I"" tu ~urk I rum our uff1u· SJ IJI ~ • 1·omm & t>uou.., wh1lt: ll '"run~ Wt: ,,.11 photo l'4>) ,.uppll~ & uH11·1· .>uppll~ >4t> 311>1 J:.k for . \rullt lelephont' work IAl You Give Good rHOME SURVEYS? tr you're rehublc. l'ltrn up Lu $1.27 Moo Thurs :-, :tt1 -!H' M 751-5528 Hermes Milano Int Tenn.is HOSl<'SS. t'tT, Wl'tl lhru Sun. l'nvate C..:oun lry Club, $.S hr 644 !'>411-1 TRUCK DRIVER Warehouse Pos11 1on 646 1696 Typesetter Want your own business·• 1-:xpert with followin.: t.cul-.c my Comp Set equip and I oCc SVCS. T he OffH'e ~2188 TYPIST. mat urt'. at· curate for <H'clg ofr Thru tax season. Slllary open. 673·4253 Typist (reproi expert. ru11 or part time f''ull time -salary & profit sharing. Groom1n ~ & skills appro to exec·uti vc clienlele of wp lypt!sel· 1 ting center. Nos mokin)!. The Office 549·2188 WATH RESOURCES PROJECT ENGINEER MAHAGH Career opportunity ror e xperienced c i vil ·engineer with stroni: bal'k.:round 1n maslerplanmn~ and or design of water i.upply and or sewer fot·1ht1es (;alifornia reg1slralloq desirable. Musl have verbal & written com munication skills. client rontact & m anagement abilities. Apply w\th re- ~ um e only to M r . f\ientes at Jtobert Bein. William f'rosl & As- sociates. 1401 <~11a1I Sl. Newport Ueac·h. • ,. Will train happy )!1 rl Anwswer phones. ll'urn o rfire work . ty ping . speed wriuni; desired. uppty for advancement. $4/hr to start. 1 5 M F non-smkr Instrument <.:ompomcnt 317:.!fi Sn Coast H wy S L uf.! 4.~4503 MlrchmMliM ••••••••••••••••••••••• .wtipu 8005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTMINSTER ABBEY ANTIQUE MALL Daily 10.6. Fri 10.9 Closed Tuesday 11751 Westminster Ave. Garden Grove 554·6103 Old Oriental rugs want ed. Any size /cond. Call l-a»s.sJ.8003 RUTH'S ANTIQUES J....-y c:a..-c.s. 20"k off OC\ all stock sot~ So. Bayfroot Balboa Island (next lo Ferry) Open 12·5 Wed- Swt. 675-0433 OAK ROLL TOP D~K $13115. 9AM-4PM 2132Harbor Blvd, C.M. ..... c.. 1010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WMher 6 Dryer. Xlnl. c:md. S125ea. M&-5148 SIU•:tit\ I• 1.h111~r11l&­ Cm " 111111lt' h1At 11t 111 I a l h t' I ll a I I 1 1' V I 11 I IJwtwn ul tihlllblt· l.11111• t'oant ~11nw1H' 11111h:ll .it•· w.d 10 phol1~ ·tll;j !Ml .aft lll'M' • 11 11 ~ 11111~· *''* ..... I040 •••••.•................ IO:t:->llONI> l'upi. AKC \ l uunv .,., t• M 1-· 1'1·t & 'I h o • I' \ I p I ~ l! 13 llf1 I :M.~ lift tl pm AK(' 1'~0~11 :.h \'11; k \!1 ~ut'I 111al" 1~·.11·h & i.h1l1• IU lllll ul;l talll!i Uu~r111a11 vuv:. AKl' tup 4u.tllt) b"15 3712 dy,,, !'1~ 7!115 e """ \KC Spnn1tcr Spann~ts h\er & i.h1lt• II wks old. SISU & UP 557 11137 131 !)31)3 brlM...&et, U\ nuaaet le• luted r111b lank. m41uur Ill& llmm In w1dlh, 8" ~ Sl!4'W't'd with » \'ofH't'llllt1d box d1t1p . Wll.h 11 fl!Jure 8 saft1ly d1a1tV Total we1&ht ill =-.i !fl r.-inywe&&hlll. l\p ll' lWltid ovtir '3. 000 S(l 11 for ll~ ~~ t 'orum l'wcnly Uullar Go 1dpIl·1· 1· Wat 1• h l\utom li I H • $.\.')(JO ri rm till <t(llO Ma11 11 14 4'l yt'l low tiold IJradet. C"urved len11th & n~11et texturl:'(!, 13 MM wi<k. II lung. apprau>ed valut' lJ.OUO Sl20CI rirm !)4g.':f144 or 548·6446 IOIO ·WGG1a11ias· from your business t·ard Send one c·ard fur each ta~ plus one spare Wl' rt!lurn permanently sealed allratlJ ve taj? & ;.trap, meetmg a1rhne LD. reqwrements Prt> 8050 ven~ I06s & thert ' !-'or u •••••••••••••• ••••••• •• personahzed ta~ ~nl·lost! **I BUY** Goat.I used f''urn1lurt· & Appliances OK l w1H sd l or SELL for You MASTEIS AUCTION 64M616. 133-9625 Used I Couch & :I Chairs Net•ds rt-upholslt•ry 700.1549 wallpaper . rabrit or ··l)ay Glo' paper & wt• will but·k & lnm your lligs Or try lwu t·urds bac·k tu bat·k PRIC.:l-:S S2 {'a or 3/ $.S 415 tags$1,60l'u 6 ~lags Sl .SO l'a . w or mort• $1.4() ea. Sales Tax lncludt•d NO <.:J\IU>" U l' I u x c k 1 n g loo 1 z l' Draw your own or send watl'rlle~ w hl'a l l'r name. addrnss. phone & Llher padded hdl>rd . we'll make one rard per $400. \Jpholslt•red dininJ( tag. Add 25< each. l'h a1rs. Spanis h sly le Senci check or monl'y or $60ea or !I for $450-derlo: b'75-72XIO. PILOT PRINTIMG I P 0 . Box 156() tr dJrung tbl. smokl!d.~ls Costa Mesa. Ca. !r.!626 loP, 6 chrs. $375. 6' {'Otry DOU (j HBO y S WIM tbl. sobd maghog. S350 • 760-8814, 673·0S50Ginl.I 1'001:20 fl round. 3 Cl de ep. F'iller syslt•m Make EVBtYTHIHG GOES dr. 534·5728 3 Bdrms. living rm. d in-OH-Set Press, Rll'Oh IOOO. mg rm. family rm. w 10 . table toP. ready to print refrig. dressers. beds. wil.h plate maker, fust•r 1V's. chrome1glass din· & so me s uppli es ing rm set. 11l ass & Surplus equipment m l.I cherry wood rof & tor. printing shop. $1800 /hesl ner tble. cane pattern liv dr. &11-0680 rm set. many dt-corator items & extras. Almost all rum less th an 3 mos old. Call 522· 1444 aft S:JO or wknds or 835·4751 or 633-911 l ex l 362 ror appts. ---------- DIVORCE SALE 8' Cstm Designed sora. 5· Loveseal Traditional loose back pillows. or ig $1:.JO Thomasville entry french cocktail tbl orig $500 a ll for SIJJOO IORO 752-91193 Newport Beach T enr11s Club Membership Sac· $700. 645-~. 493-7750 --------.. Exer cycle -Sears w 1 arm/leg movement, ad- just tensioo, like nu $75. 557-932'7 ciisto m surfboa rd. 6 · gem cond. Only ~- 833·2547 John New kmg mattress. still in carton. Simmo ns Beautyrest backcarc. top of the line. $200. Also box sprmgs $50. 661 0161 Must sell 9'sora. Bassett · --· chest. van1ty 1m irror. Phone-Mate W1remot c. MS-8442, 7:>4·6220 $12.S. Rolls wh~leh1ur. Hox spring & mattress. $25. 646-1473 Double bed-foam. Kint rood. $125 or best offer. 673-2138. 1'inette Set. "O. w _ l.et! · ·• 3'lX47. ornamental iron. whilt' & yellow. Re:;l o(- for over S225 Call 644·2Jti0 for app't. Complete king-size water bed, headbrd. heater. hner. $150 751 177!1 Coffee table. end table. chai rs . la mp!>. bar stools. afghans. Sara 's Odds& 'nds. 675-8172 Moving Sale Breakfront. 64 x 78 x 16 5·· w l{rille doors. f'~rancisean Apple dishes. drop le.ar tbi. twin mall. w bx spring. hand braided ruRs. wall rurnace. vacuum ell· 7101 Seashore. N B. ~8410 GwopW. 8055 ........................ Maple Bdrm 5 piece, spart.s equip. TV stereo. mower , hou..,ehold Item s 839-8693 Have aomel.hlni io s ell? Cluaified ads do it well. SJOO. 644-LZ71 8081 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mate rnity clothes needed desperately ~ Size 7-9. I'm busting out all over. call Sue at 645·2203 if you can help. LoHl•a•• Send someone you love a bouquet of 30 multi c·ol· o red helium balloons lied with ribbon & your own personal mcssai:e Perfect for e\'ery oe caslon . We. dell\ er 673·4419 Musical lftdru1u:A1 1013 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New Ibanez "Butterfly ·· at'014'ilil' Jiuitar. model F:liO. J et black flnishJ w fancy m otht•r o r pearl inlay. t~qu1pped w shadow transducer pickup w t st rap button. jack plug and hardshell case. Must sacrifice. $400. Al.SO. new MXR #W dual control pha.'ie shifter $75. Will take $450 for all of above. (714 > 750-2516. 631 0 148. 548-099.S. Refril. froat-rree. 1180. ~---Wr._, 111. l)ry••• P•··H--~ Raap, 91(). Traah com· pedor'. $100. S42·40ll3 TlllJPm stove, 3 yn old. orla . $700 , sel l SIJO/OBO. 6'5-2001 Kmmore elec. dryer, l1e csip., lwy duty, like MW, mo.•·•n Hotpolnt Dl1hwa1her, cleaD, work• 1d. '75. c.u-.ma. Nf.lllO all ...... ....... I020 ....................... MIW&U• • 1eee11orlt1. HU .. Im. <K>. I0-4MI HHt .... , .... fO\a .-.. ..u,c1autntc1 ill..0.la.MTI. Use ..,,,., service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad ... we take your mess~ges 24 hours a day . . . you call in at your convenie.nce during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service is only $7 .SO weet<. For more Informa- tion and to place your ad call 642-5678. MJl!lll ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONN DintCtor Lromboae wlUa cau. Excellent .....Wlml,' SJOO, '7M062 aft«tPll. 11>.Del eledric auitar. Profeaakeal model with ~ al Ute &oinl up to thl' neck Wood1rain body with hard shell ('IUle. l500. ~ OMc. ........... I• 'f 11 et IOIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ot 'FJC1'; OESKS Ill chairs. SC6ra's odds & 'nda, 87~1U7'l • 9150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... Trail 90 '300. .. ikmda Trail llO, Cll6. Gd cand. $52·116.SI Yamaha 1910 Enduro ns· Very 1ood cond. Low m ileage. $850. -..uo. For Rent: Harvest Mini Motor Home s leeps six. Burns regular Gas. Privaw Party. 556·0197 aft.er6pm. .._.&OrC)mtl 1090 RENT: 22' lux . m lr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• honte. Sips 6, self-cont. P I ANO 1''0R SALE : $275 /wk + 8•1 mi "'alrly new Hush & Gerts sto.8511.S l'lass1c style redwood Trailen, TrGYel 9170 11ta1ne d piano .. Great ••••••••••••••••••••••• shl&~. bought f!'r S750 ' ·73 17' Terry Trlr. self will sell Sl50. 752 26:ll contained . S 1900 /0 HO 5ewMcJ MacW... 8092 Must sell 540·2298 eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trailen, Utility 9180 SA1.l!:S1 Rt:PAJ Kt PAHTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• •S~WINlA MA<.:HINt-:S• Alt m odels to choose r rom New •O .. m os •Trade in •Floor models • Also repos •ex1·hanges ~UP Ml: Visa Call 855-4477 P1ckup&del ZJ854 Via i''abritanlt> 'Stort' B2. M V Sldiftg 8093 ••.•...........•....•.. GOLF Carls for sale Xlnt. l'Ond. New lialt . ett• 49'.!-G 128 1-11.o:xct-:1. HLUEl.l'l'ES 175<.:M w •Solomon 55f> bindings Sl75. SCOTT poles with st rapless grips SIS, Hoth x l11t cond. 646·3724 loah&M..w.. ;;pment .•.....•..•..•......... loah. Mainte .... ce I Senice '1020 ....................... , M A It l N E fo: L i.: c I TRJCIAN I Dt!s11tn install rt'pair Qual work $49-2520 e\'s Sea l>ragon Uoat Mam tcnance TtFak rm1sh1n~. sand and varnish. !'leun mg exterior and 1n tcrior'"LTillart 400 5717 loah,Power 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 OWENS SKI SKJl-'F 26'. f'ull. l'an vas Xlnt cond S lip a\'u 1I $7000/bst ofr. 963-98711 O' Gr. McriMr foUJly equipped. Perfect live-aboard. $65.000, SUp. $50,UOO loan for 15 yrs. at II 12•;1 avail. Pvt PlY-~·1505 or IW0-2254 on boat. - For Sale : 1971 Scar ay 21· w,lrlr. good cond. SBS00/080 835-3883 Jim R.iddet . 18' Vikinii. ~lass hull. w1lra1ler & ·79.;5 hp Evinrude OH. Call Brad. 642·6175 wkdys 8·5 loah.Rent/ Chcrht-9050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ut.llity Trailer 4x8 ft 2 fl sides. spare. gd cond 64&-3652 Ailto Serfice., Parh & Accesaorin 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSAVESAVlS WITH USED PARTS Imported car parts IMPORT AUTO SUPPLY WI N Mam·ht-sler Anaheim 77!H'-)CIO Ford JO'.! Engme In good running eond. $300 () B< I 641·9157. 54ll·l:r74 Huns for Porsl'he !114 or Super Be\'llc. $211 l'a 11r 4 for $70 54H !IHI or 548-644ti Autos for Sale •.........•........•... IMPORTANT NlYflCETO ftEADfo:RSANI> ADVEHTISl':HS I The pn(·e of 1t1•mi-l ad\·ert1sed by '<'h11·i.. dealers in lh1· vl'111dt· l'luss1flt-tl ·a'd H•rt ll> rng n1lumns dllt':l not 111 e lude any appl1eahlt· tax~. lil'ense. transfer fees. finance 1·hari,:1·"· foe; for air pollution 1·1111 trol clev1c1• ceruf1rat11u1:. or dealer dot·umentary preparation 1·har.i:cs lln less oUwrwist• Sjk't•1r1t·cl liy the advertiser ~/ · Clauics 9520 • •••••••••••••••••••••• A UBURN Ph ae t on Speedster. 1935 dass•c replica by Calif. Custom Coa c h . Nevt'r re gi.stered. Used for show car only! Bargained priced! Se<' J im Buie or Bernie Ashe. Theodore Robins F ord . 2060 Harbor Blvd .. Costa MeSa. Call 642 IJOIU or ~82lL '46 Ford Woodie. restored Sl3.UOO. Al.SO ·29 ModN A T own Sedan. 4 dr. restored Ideal for stu dent. $10,0011. 675·fil61 "·:-,.a Porsc:he. 1•ont·ou rl> ~-. new trans. -cng HHl+flUYM Top dollars for Sportl Can. Bup, Campers, tlt's, Audi's Aall for U /C MGR .IMMAIUMO VOUSWAMH mu Beach Blvd , HUNTINGTON BEACH 14Z·ZOOO ----- TOPDOLLAI PAIDFOI GOOD&CLIAN USIDCAIS! miracle mazda 21 SO H..t.or llwcl. Coda w... 645·5700 WANTED! LMte model Toyota!> and Volvos . l:a ll u s 'J'ODAY ~'' Earle Ike JOTOTA·YOLYO IU6H ..... ll•cl c ......... . "' .... ,)0) w \40·'4'7 PORSCHES • , ••• rt.cl rz ,.,...w ········~············· ...................... . IMW -'7lZ 'a II 9741 ..... .... . • ••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• IOI McLAllM11 1. & I -~ N. Beach Blvd. LA HABRA (5 Mi. No. oCSA Fwy1 17 I 4J5ZZ-UJJ Sunday by Appl. '75 BMW 53011 4 dr. sun· rod, a /c, tape, perfect rood. ~-835-7001 or ~85911 ·74 2002. auto . air. Amlfo'm . blue. xlnt l'ond. $4!!60. 673-6200 . '79 BMW 7331 t Whitc navy. auto. 16 .. BBS 11'1. Alpina. Cstm stereo. maoY extras. Only 8500 miles . 1mpl'l'C0ablc 673-c.ISO ·72 2002tii. ~ood ·cond. lo nu. $3700 or hesl oHer. 525-6695 9715 •...........•.......•.. ·74 Merc-ury l:ap~. gd running rnml Xlnt mt $1800 or be:.t 11rf1·r s.5&6812 uftt-r :>pm LEASE DIRECT! I ti I PIUGIOT TUUOt llACHIMPOITS IM8 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 75Z·0900 ,..... 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·79 911 SC Targa: Xlnt l'O'Mi. Talce over lease. For details call 682-2222. 8-5 wkdays ask for Joe, '74 911. Fully loade d Mint cond. l\/C. 1'.:lecl s n rf, mags, s t e r eo cassette. White w /tan m l er 4 new radials Serious orters o nly 67> 1•98or8S1-0834 Rais Royce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #I DEALER IN U.S.A. CLOSED SUNDAYS WANTED Allow us lh1• opportunity Datsun 972(1 S.. 9760 to t.."OO.'-'ldl!r th~ pur\·has t_• •••••• ••••••• ••••••••• • ••••••••••••••• •••••••• or trade-in ur your dean l'orsth!.' ChN'k with Ui. '79DATSUN WAGON Tuday' •;;iii._~--:-~·~ Autumutll'. likt• n(·W m 1!•'642ti> ~~M._ ~t1j0.. L I ~~~9~ ( -_J LEASE DIRECT! I 16'11 ll••hv• 111.,1 '@•1 tff~ ffOWQ'U.t <•a""'" 4,,.,,.. "• •• tll3 • \,. J llOLIC.S\oll/AGEN INC • 534-4100 1981 SAAi TURIOs BEACH IMPORTS Top Dollar Paid For Your Car' JOHHSOM & SON Unc:-.Me.-cury 2626 llurhor llh u ('.(iP;lU ~l~:J 5-W !'°>t.:Jl) We Pay OVER Blue Boole Fur Your Guotl VW. l'orsdw or i\ud1 -~JS§ VW l 10l~CllE Al'IH 145 !':.Coast ll1wav at lla~s1dc Drive' Newport. Bc•a,·h ti7:l OWO Premium prit·es paid for any USl.'(J 1·ar f foreign or domes I 1c I m )!ood cond1l1on See Us f'irst ~ Wl.lntt•d llonda t'ar. 1!170 72, N tiCJO with blown cngme. f>.11 ·11801 13731 Harbor Garden G rove 1148 Dove Strt•el NEWPORT H!o:AC:ll 752-0900 I,:. / Vol&sWagtft 9770 ~ ~ -·····~;~·;~·~········ LUSI ~lust ~l't.' 10 aµpn•l' ah· YOUR NIW ZIOIX 1!'4IUll 1 . DIRECT! $2699 tN llOtll \t llJ)-1 HI I I Mee• ................ ,_..,.... ti6 UuL-;un .nu Sqbk. xl111 runnm~ 1·ond. xlnl !!,a), rru . radials. FM ster<!11. ~ !l68·21!161v ms~ ·n UaL'iun 280Z. 5 s1KI. fully loade d S6011fJ ~7-1401 ask for 8 .J '71'1 Datsun SI\) sedan 4s pd , A C , a m rm 29.CWrru. lmmac . cond $4.200. 551 ~7 ·78 OaL'iun 8210 GX. a ir. stereo. Super Sharp Mus t see to apprt't' :-.flL'>t sell 7711-4154 @'" Jffu* Moo.'<lttd VOlKSWAGfN INC 534-4100 13731 Harbor G arden G rove '76 VWIUS .i speed. Its a 111t·e 0111·' (\fl43(~) $5399 "'~lMMlt Mowa'ld ~lj '101.KSW'-GfN INC • 534-4100 13731 Harbor Garden Grove '73 VW BuR. xlnt cond. SJ.CW. C:lass1t· .69 Roadster '71 YW DIESEL Ptly resl<>red. lo mi on Sunroor. Mus t sell ' e ng . m-:rn-y extras. cl.:!056) $1659 UBO. 645 411-HI $5799 ·1: 11 : z. 5 speed. a t. &i)J!r~~~!'t sunroof. ne\\ tires. low ~ ~100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "°' • •••••••••••••••••••••• "7t Gremlin. 1reat cond, must sell fast. 1ood aw. $1500. s.1 .5271 "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• YC>ua#I CADILLAC DIAIMSHIPIM OIAHCH COUNTY! SALES, SERVICE AND LEASING 'NARF:.R~ < :Allfl~["\l: /I~ ll ll 1"11 ~ ~ 1\1\11 ( •. ,,,, \I< ... , 'i<ICJ • 1100 '72 CDV. loaded. Xlnl cond. Brown /b eige. Lady owner. Make orrer. Ss.2·0175. Clwuoht 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sii US FtRST! We have a good seleelion o f N EW & USED Owvrolets ! COHHELl C HEVROLET ·~,.II.tr 1. •I I'· . ' I~ I ' .., ~" \ SU-1200 '75 Monza 56K mi. V8 5.6 liter. new brakes. tires, tune -up S1500 firm 64S-6lZ7 'QI Nova 4dr. pis. plb, auto. $000/0 BO 631 ·419'l ·72 Chevy Kingswood · Estate Wgn, all ele1· wm dows. seal.'i. door hwks. am Klrk su•rt'O. a c" lug i;age rack. many xtras brown wht ext. golcl mt Kint t•ond. Sl20f.I Rhonda !Iii<! 535.S ti:.! C:orva 1r 1·011\'l <.'omplelely reli ll ,\m f"m K-trll<'k. new Ure:>. w1rl' whttl co vers, 1·ht>rry t·cmd L1c 4 M 't' KTN 5UIC)I Call Ten >15.').ltl!W i!J Che\')' No'a 2 d1 hall'hbat•k. aut o. Al'. uni lg. AM radio. vinyl roof. l'lel· t lo<:k. ll ryl New .. W W radials. brks . battery. lUOI.' up. h1•ater l'Orc'. alternator. l'arburelor. xlnl cond. Company car sell below blue boOk $3300 26586 Avenida Deseo. M1ss1on Vil'j<>. 11141 IG)-5912 ..................•.... SHOWROOM COND. '75 T·TOP •IMMAC28·.34 · BOATS 6/12mo. plans prepaid from Sl89/mo. including s lip, lessons 714 /964·5994 susp.-int .. ctt 787 044:.! AMtoa, Imported miles. xt ras 57~511 I 13731 Ha rbor l-Ourt 675-3858-Garden Grove fiat 9725 Power brake-s-. "J10Wer wmdows. power steering with lilt •l e leSl·opin)! s teering wht>el. air. AM t'M s tereo. rear window derogge r . automat11· trans Snow white with Burgundy m- lenor. Z7.IJOO miles. Im ma tulate thruou t ! SH .100. 754 -6790 o r M 'iwer Ad #200. 642-4300 loah. Sail 9060 ••••••••••••••••••••••• L I DO 14. Sail 114147 w /lrlr. Xlnl do ;•ond $22CXI, 847-0646 eves ·79 Prindle lti' Catamaran Many extras. $2800 &'ii 2142 'lluslle 117211. Good \'Ond New saib. lra1lt•r SI~"' 552 0091 6PM·9PM loah.Stips/ Dodt1 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOAT St.IP Rl-;NTAL for JO' & 45· power boat. S7 rt mo. 673-4300 Marc111CIHaMel Up lo 18' $75/mo bi3·1114S NEWPORT MARIMA Slips Avail &46 l~'ll Sbpi; avail. 30 to 50 feet Newport Beach. 631-1900 to.h:s,..d& Sid 9080 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111· J._'T BOAT. fast. low hrs. 11>45·8171 ask ror John 17' Fiberglass. 60blP rblt Johnson. Incl lrlr. Must sell. SIOOO /bsl ofr. !8).2542ev. 963-3200dys loah.Stor ... 9090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dry storage available. Newport Dunes. I l3l Back Bay Dr. N 8 . 644-~lO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 91ZO ••••••••••••••••••••••• '80 CHEVY 8 cyl chassis cmpr .. ~ rear end. fully lelf-coot .. 12 • nov, 4 ..,cl. Xlnt cond. 12.000. M1·1'711 Mllal_. .... 9140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Wheel Dri•H 9550 :•::__•R•::::•••••••9••7•0•5• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ....-.llS"V .>••••••••••••••••••••••IP ;1rt1ng Out • 1914 ·n 1-'iat Spydl'r. con\'I. ;, VolkswaRen UuJi parts spd. ma~s. WO()den lu~ for sale. 641·9157 ·79J E~P <.:Ht:HOKEI': 7600 ml, rully loade d. $8000 offer 546 fl06!1 eves: 751-2160 wkdys NEW 81 JEEP CJ Pow. steer. trak loc. bucket seals. front slabiliier . roll bar & more. Yours fur 1m m ed 1 a l c ci l' I 1 \' t' r y llt.!8870) $7419 COSTA MESA AMCJIEEP 549-1023 Tnldls 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 CHIVltOUT l/4 TON PICKUP 6 cyls .. 3-speed man .. al trans., low mil~ & extra clean! (I M24662 I. ONLY$4695 HOWARD Ch.nolet Dove & Quail Sts. NEWPORT BEACH Ul-0555 '70 Chevy C· 111 Pickup 396 Hi Po Enj?. A 1C. SlJOO !'>45·45111 1976 Jo'ord Courier a t 1·'11 wholesale book. Body & paint poor . frame & mechanically 11ood 675-1056 ·73 Datsun PU xlnl tond. good gas mi. mus t see SZl!00/080 Ke n 962-6401 '590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEPAYTOPDOLLAR for t op used c a r s · foreign, domestics or -dwlc:s. If-your-car Is e xtra clean, see us flRST! ~' ,, I lit Or-. c.-, 2925 ilart>Or Blvd. COSTA,U".SA I f7f•2100 "' .........•............. VW parts. '6K left & right 24 hrs. LEASE DIRECT! 1981 ALFA SPIDERS rack. AM FM tape. likl' new 551 -2343 '74 124 Spel'lal. TC t\ulo. am fm . n 1.•w pa1nl 1!40-16'". ~·~t38. door. ·73 left ciour S50 '76 Vel. silver & red. xlnl each. 5"8·!1144 rnnd. $7 .000 P vt Ply 9727 '75 Bus Clean . air. stereo. l . .ow m1ll'S $4750. 1151-2142. BEACH IMPORTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• K4A t>ovl· Street ~ VISIT YOUR ~~~f~~hu1lt Sl6!15 •ir :"-lf':WPOHT fl F:A<.:H ORANGE COAST 847-6572. !168 1147 1s2.0900 HONDA ~ .............. !?.~~ HW>9UARTERS ·w VW pop-top. :IO cly~ 11n nu en1one S3150 l;.JJ 1364 ·75 !o'ox. 4 d r l>latmn wgn, yellow. auto. xlnl t•ond, new brakes. rm slerro ca."-5·lapc. 1(1 m 1. szas11 548-3187 IMW 9712 .••........•.....•..••. f'or lhe bes t clt•al in Orange C:uunly ( '11mc See Us Toduy • ' SADDLEIACK VALLEY IMPORTS 28402 Marguerite Pkwy Mission Viejo TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY SALES&SERVICE OLDSMOllLE HONDA GMCTRUCKS 28SO Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 540.9640 '69 Squart'hu1·k or11t pcunt. rl'blt t'n.:. $12il0 $46 Jtl8tl '63 European \'W, nr showroom cond $23011 968·26111 '69 Squarehat•k . or1i,: owner, runs hkc• nc\li . am/fm. $22.50 MO·f.ll7ti Wan t ed Honda car 1970-72. N-600 with blown '76 Bus. Xl.000 m1. am rm engine. 531·8801 c~-;. cherry cond. $5950 644·42UI eves. ·75 Civic Hat.rhback. good t•oncl , S 1850 54Y 3256 ·71 411 VW. auto. a 1<'. 4dr . days, 559-8540 eves $750/080 842·~ '78 Honda• Accord. 5 spd. 960-4212 eves Dodge 9935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74Ci-.r Good cond. New reblt engine. Gold. black top. 2 dr Good gas mih:age S2000 orr . 534 7533 eves wk nds . 44111 W Sun.swept Sl. Santa Ana '78 Aspen Wagon. clean t ar. xlnt cond Air . 52.750 bst ofrer !l60-38i9. 9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S RMIST IJN<.:OLN-Mt:R<.:U JtY Of':ALt:HSHI P ~ 7"'""~-· UNCOLN-MERCURY l& 18 Auto Center Dr. SD Fwy Lake Forest exit JRVINE 130-7000 131-2040 495-4949 Closed Sund11ys AM/FM eass ster. R~g gas. 30+ mpg. $4700 or ofr. 494-780{) ValYo 9772 •••••••••••••••••••••• • '76 Mercury Ghia. xlnt CREVIER 1 $1 S; & H OADWAY SANTA AMA 835·3171 THE UlTIMATE OIUVING MACHIN( •USIDIMWs• '732002 ~915581 ·1• 2002 Ui s /r ( 03321 '7S 2lll02a ( 0035) "762002str:4sp. (1578) 'TJ 3'all s unrl. air (32011 'TJ8.30cal a uto <0040> CtoNd s.~.,. OIANGI COUNTY'S OLDIST ·75 C IVI C 4 s pd . Hatchback . Xlnt. cond. Slereo. $2600/ofr. Dys: 75.2-1299, eves: 831·9'8t 97J4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ Karman Ghia. Good rood. Bi.g bOre k.il. $1750. iM&-7165 ... =··--'740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUil sell '73 210SEL U , tlKmi, 6t0-2N1 '742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 llG llld••t. Xlnt cand. n .oao m11 •• s.e to ................ 7117 ..... t74• ....................... VOLVO SAUS. SHVICE AJel.IASING OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS IAltLI Ill VOi.VO l9ll Harboc.Blvd.... COSTAllESA 646.-HOJ 140.9467 running cond . .xtras 493-8461 "52 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ Mustang, must sell Records avail. S2SOO . ~7128. U.·3158. "55 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7S Midsize Old&-lliU&--- Quiser eeK mi, 11750. 9 pas. 6'5-81Z1 'Ill Omega 4dr, lo miles. full equip, USWM pay· menll t44--41•7 after• ttl7 ,, .. I T WllUY CLIAMCAIS AMDTIUCD l'Ws.le7111GB-GT, NW P111&...-11'Ml.tlualc ed...,•; 115412 1 o 120 a.nten Gnwe 11. Garden GfOY9 530-ttlO ....................... RONDA XLIOP'. Like ........ ... 7117 -...- CONHfl l ' ~.fVJl()l f 1 I 1 _. I ! 1, - '71 Voho lH&, AC , ftlt r..-draw lD U.e All /f'll Clll. $1100 Wtlt. .. a Dally Pilot 090.tll·llll a..an.d M. C..11 T0:. ....... . ...... , -- " ' ' OAtlY PIU)T luelday. January II 1111 ':l ... • -- Warning : The Surgeon -Ge -That Cigerene Smoking Is o:eral Has Determined-~ ngerous to Your Health. ·~~~--.. ...-ccoco. I . -,_.. __ • _J_ ..... ~ .... .. ... " ins to __ utr RA ... EasY Going Taste 'M ·· LJ/tra LoW Tar .-.-.. ...... -... ~ ......... ~ _., .. ,_ .. . ,._ ........... s ·ng Taste " ow Tar ' ' "'• l'llCOtml · 6mg."t•" 06-.. . . av. I* cig111tt1 by FTC method . ·-· ....... -r·-.,.,,. ...... .. ~·· .. • Ta; t .i -llllllR llllY PIPll I t ,{ 1,'\ • '\ N l 1,\·1 • ,,, ' Ol<ANG[ C OU NT Y C A 1 H OHN IA l ~ CENTS Bangkok flu 'like worst hangover ever' ~ 9 ) JODI ('ADt:NHt:Ab Ot ... -·· ,._ ,~ .. s ually 1t tiarb o ut w.1th' a poundin& bead1At·ht-followt:d by •f) achy f~ehng » dry couah and a nuld t.emper11tu rt Or as OOt: v1ct1m ~aid, It reeb hke the wori.t h11nii:over of your life ·· Plan on !.pending up to a week m bed if you tome down with the Bao&kok Ou Like 11:> predt!l't'Ssors the Ai.tan Ou. thl' llung Kon& flu, lhe S10gaport' nu and the A-Victoria 1t 's a v1rui. not treatable with :mt1b1ollr!> C:ahforma 1s one of nine states rl'portin.: "reg1om1 l outbreaks" ur t ht' influenza s train, a spokesman for the National <'enter for Disease Control said . ··One woulc.J expect to see in- <· r e a s c s 1 n J a n u a r y a n d l'ebruary if it's going to occur ." Could free hostages ------ said Robert Alden, a spokesman I for the center. Already local businesses are reoorlin~ higher than usual employee absences attributed to the flu. At Smith Tool in Irvine nearly 60 percent of the 2,000 employees were reported suffering from the flu symptoms two weeks ago. . At fo~luor Corp. in Irvine the flu outbreak hit its peak two weeks ago, just befor e the holiday season. "I don't have a handle on the figures," said corporate physi- cian Dr. Gerald B. Sinykin. "But we've certainly seen an increase of flu symptoms." A bout 25 percent more pa- tients are flooding the emergen- cy room at UC Irvine Medical Center complaining or flu-re- lated symptoms. Dr. Jeff Kaupke said he is ad- vising patients to rest, take fiuids and aspirin if needed for headaches and fever. • Antibiotics are not effective a1ainst viral infections, he a dded. Dr. John Bridgeman in Mis- sion Viejo also has seen a 25 per- cent increase in patients com- plaining of nu symptoms. Although most cases don't re- quir e a physician's care. Dr. Bridgeman noted that some cases can develop into middle ear and upper respiratory com· plicalions if left untreated. Eight elderly people have died in California as a result or the Bangkok nu. said state medical officer Loring Dales. "Because flu is not a reporta- ble disease we don't hear about all cases," said Dr. Oates "We've only seen the lip of the iceberg.'' (See FLU, Paie A2> f• u l 1 accord told Khomeini, Algeria I: It c b lt i• ft "' ii "' a C• ()' ti \\ a . y ir IE a d· u is fc 0 1 tt t> SI ti ra Bi u fl a; si 0 S1 w .,. . -· -~ ~· '"-' . ._.. . -.,.-;....." ·~ ~ -.f ~'' -. o.i1r l'ht Suff -b• FIGHTS CITY HALL, GETS HIS OIL WELL Cl Huntfngton B••ch City Councllm•n John ThomH ir c w st tc 01 ci tt h Thomas wins fight uver oil drilling in Huntington Beach City Coun- tc ffc ilm an John Thomas has s« challenged City Hall and won his fight to produce oil on his trucking a1 and crane company property in al thecity. fa It ~ Gold nugget. pl sale halted a MELBOURNE, Australia <AP> '' -The Australian government sl has blocked the sale of the 59.8- it pound "Hand of Faith" gold nug- hi get to a Las Vegas casino in an at- tempt tokeepit in AUAtralia. 34 Contract. had been drawn for 2! the sale of the nunet, the largest w discovered in tbe state or Victoria r.-for morelban70years, to the Gold Nu11etCuino. ' A spokesman for the Australian Minister for Home Affairs said Monday the 1rantln1 of an export license had been delayed unUl Ju- ly "ln the hope an Australian buyer wtU be found.'' ----:::----- Thomas previously charged that he was treated as a third class citizen when the Planning Co mm ission denie d him permission lo drill at Garfield Avenue and Golden West Street because he didn't have the proper zoning. He appealed to the City Council and threatened to sue the city should his appeal be rejected. But the remaininJ. six m embers of the City Councal saw things Thomas' way Monday. They approved a zoning change for oil production. citing the na- tion's need for petroleum. The well had been deactivated several years ago, but recent tests proved it would be feaslbleto go into production, Thomassaid. Thomu said the oil well hu the capacity of producing about four barrela of oil a day Cor 20 years and would return him about $30 per barrel. The plannine commission had called for delays In restorinc pro- duction at deacUy;ated wella unW uniform tonlne c0uld be applied at1mallparcel1. ButThomudldn't want to wait. Report conflict cited By The As~ialed Press Prime Minister Mohammed Ali Rajai was quoted by re- porters in Tehran today as say. ing jhat revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini of Iran agreed to accept un- s pecified guarantees by Algeria that could lead to release of the 52 American hostag~s. But other reports or Rajai 's in- terview with Iranian Television quoted him as saying Khomeini had accepted the Algerian "un- dertaking" and did not mention guarantees. Rajai, after a meeting with Kh o meini , told Iranian Television according lo one re- port: ·•w e asked the imam about the host ages and we ex- plained the new opinion of the U.S. government lo the imam and also we explained lhe ·Algerian proposal which has suggested that it will guai"rantee to solve our problem with the United States. and the imam permitted us to accept these guarantees and we hope to an- nounce the rest of the points." Rajai did not elaborate, but when the United States sent Ir an its latest proposal for agreement to free the hostages, Iran said it could accept any guarantees that the Algerian m ediators agreed to. According to an NBC report, Iran television said Khomeini and his son met with Rajai and asked about the latest proposal of the American governmeAt forwarded through the Algerians who have been acting as in- termediaries. Khomeini was reportedly told (See IRAN , Pa1e AZ) - --- """ ------,,. -. Beaelaed aa Boba Oaira State lifeguard Dave Perry (foreground) leads colleagues from wreck of 36-f oot sailboat that went aground in fog early Monday afternoon at Bolsa Chica State Beach in Huntington Beach. Chief Ranger Bill Stalberg said· three men and two women aboard weren't injured. All five Dally ...... P-llY P•lrlclo O'Oonntll have refused to disclose their names. he said . Stalberg said the bo~t was coming from Catalina lsland and apparently it s crew missed Long Beach Harbor ent rance. He said boat wasn't salvaged immediately and broke up in surf overnight. He listed $25,000 vessel as total loss. Valley key source -for Stanton staff Not guilty in shooti11g., says Chapma11 NEW YORK <AP) Mark HBdelays decUion on high _rise Huntington Beach City Council members have delayed for two weeks a decision that would permit six-story high rise build- angs in downtown Huntington Beach and perhaps on much of the city shoreline as well. Roger Stanton, who was sworn in as 1st District supervisor Mon- day, has drawn heavily from Fountain Valley City Hall in staf- fing his county office . One of the four full-time ex- ecutive assistants hired by the ne w supervisor is Fountain Valley Councilwoman Barbara Brown, who was active in Stan· ton's campaign for the supervisor's post. Dav id Chapman pleaded innocent today to charges that he shot and killed former Beatie John Len- non. The suspect 's lawyer said he would mount an insanity de· fense. One reason for the delay wu steady pressure from various in- terests who lobbied officials to change their poeltlona in earlier straw votes on land use chaneea to be incorporated in the city's Local Coastal Pro1ram. Another reason for the postponement wu the absence of City CouncHman John Thomu, who la en1a1ed in • controversy over an oil well on hia property and stt)'ed away from the meetiq. Thomu, frequenUy tbe awtnc vote In Hftl'al 4.3 decisions, participated in a t>ec. 15 straw vote. In tbat meetin1, tbe City CCMan-Airline fa..ina ell voted to approve a alx·IWJ "'--e belfbt Umit on downtown bUtld· ln11 betWHD etb and Lake leCOIMI walkout Street• and Pacific , Coatt Hlcbwa, IDd Hardord A¥tnue SAN DIEGO <AP) -Leu tban wltb llaln Street b .. n, tb• two manUaa afte~ ..ttUnc a HVeD· foeua. -.. ---weft-ltrib bJ tu JiU«a, Padfte AllO tmUIU"'1 apprcwed at Soutbnet Atrlin•• fat.. tlM tlM U...,.. •till'• *"1 llmlt pout~ waa. -oa .,...,... oa SI bloeb .._. UaUUme ettmduta. Paetne ONll lllawar "-tdi TM Mediation Board lt1'MttoOoldmWelt......_ called a.....,._.., 'to·ew-Howww, a a-.• .... pro-tract talb fOf' ~ ... pou1 • die pl '1. ~· from both PSA aDd ,._......_.. m•t Alff ....,.... ....... Loeal 1"'7, wbteb ~for C ... Da.AY, .... tl) . _ flll1ttattetuu. I Stanton resigned from the Fountain Valley City Council to take the county post. A spokesman for the new supervisor said Mrs. Brown con- sulted with county attorneys before takine the assistant's poet, to insure that it would not involve a conructotinterest. Mrs. Brown has announced she will retain her council seat but will not become involved in any county projects directly related to Fountain Valley. a Stanton _ spokes~an said. Stanton's other three executive a11l1tanta are Suanne Victor, former admlnlatratlve aNlstallt to Fountain Valley'• clt1 manaaer; Richard "Scott" Mor1an, form•~ Fountain Valley's boulln1 . community development coordinator, IDd Ray Sltrada, former: Oraqe County bunau clalef for QtJ News Service aact a former o.&11 Pilot rtlJ)Ol1M' no '"enct ...,... tataVIDIJ. &atnda IUI the f~ a....Uft 111l1tant1 will b• a11l1ned apecUle arw ol ~6'1111· He IMd die Nlartel tM Mr po1ta were aot lmm•dlatelJ ••ailable. Chapman. 25, stood motionless. his hands at his side. and rin~ed by armed court officers. as he en· tered his plea during a brief ap- pearance In Manhattan Supreme Court before Justice Herbert Altman. Tight security was in er- <See CHAPMAN, Pa1e AZ> Coast Weather Sunny and warm Wednftday. Lows tonight in 401 along the coast. lower 50I Inland. Highs Wednesday 72 at the beaches, 82 inland. ., • . ~ Su8pected drug ~aler kilkd in police trap ' LOI ANGELES <AP> A IUIP9C&ed coca&M dealer wu ~ and llUJed by p0lke who uy he tried t'1 run them down to 'lillca.,.. a trap i.("t hy undercovt'r vlcet olfkera Pohce Lt Charlt-• 1t11&b&t! 11111d the 11~Hn1 occurred Mon· ~ay 'vftaina 111rt.-r 11 m1m 1dtmtit1~ •• Arthur J faiera. 31. ul 'ti m 1 \I allf'y. sotd wn1e c>uulnt! to an und•rcover vffh:er In lM parkana lot of an afl nicht market 1n Sunland H11btr aacl • pound of ('<t('lllint wl~h 1m "sllmated street ~•lu~ ol $100.000 "lib rN·civt•rcd fr<im Fiu t!r ':.. ('Mr W~'•·'-'~, l'hluml IAl'l About 70 fitrmers have taken over it "u\·crnmcnl bu1ldin~ 111 a town ltis:. than 10 milH from th.-&1\ 1et b1.1rdt'1 tu dt'm•nd a11 tnVcblli1tl10n into alleged of (~11tl l'i1rruJ-•l wn '>uurn•b rcjJOrtt..-d today Tht' :.ou11't'i'I :.iud tht-prultibl bti~an a ft:w days aKO m the mall to\I. 11 ul l ':.tr) k 1 l>olnc in th~ southeast l'orner of Poland -ni~> :..a_HI '* Jt'll·galluu uf farnwrs from nearby Rzeszow today JOIONI th.M· U('('Uµ) 111g lht butldmg I~.,._,., ... lrtJN baul .. ..tal•• 8E1Hl T Lt•ban1Jn 1AP1 Iran claimed today that its 4'rm~d ron ·t'b "1~d out tw11 Iraqi bngadcs, capturing between l ,71"1 .. nd :.-!.000 lr,H~I .,uld1crs and hundreds of tanks and other \ l'htl l""' •n th~ f1rbl d.J} (J f lhl' Ion~ promised t'ounter-offensivc 1>:J1 n!>l lh• ,\ adl•f!\ lra4 !\ HJi.;htJad Kadw said the counter-atl<H'k was a "myth •'\l.:.l1n~ onl~ 1n the 1mat:inaliun of the Persian racist leaders ... lrt.1Q1 mil1tar~ l'ummuniques reported "attempts against our for\\ ard pus1t1un!> that havl· all been crus hed .. Thcrt• was no 1ndept•ndcnt confirmation of either s ide's r la1m:. Japa1~~· rurr .. 11c•t1 •I UI rf .. ng TOKYO 1AP 1 1981 has opened as the "year of the yen" witt' '"" Jollar sliding below the 200 yen level for the first time 'in 23 months and most experts predicting the Jap.imese curren- cy:s upward spurl will t'Onlinue · Arter a falling below the 200-yen barrier on the London and ·~ew York foreign exchange ma rkets Monday. the dollar opened in Tokyu today al 1~.oo yen amJ declined to 198.80 yen in trad· ,~ag before the Rank of Japan intervened to s hore the U.S. cur· rency. The dollar ended the day at 199.60 yen . down from Mon· ~ay 's close of 201.40 in Tokyo Blizzard follows freeze in Midwest . By The Associated Press A snowstorm on the heels or a three-day record rold wave sw~pt across the Midwest today a11d temperatur es dropped to new lows in cit ies on the Eastern Se•board. Ar least nine deaths. other than traffic fatalities. have been blamed on the intense t'old that ass aulted the East over the weekend t Earlier story. Page A4l The fr1g1d air was playing havoC' with car batteries· and fuel lines. boil'ers and waler pipes from Maine to Georgia. R ecord low tempe ratures were matched by record hi:gh pQ.wer demand in North Carolina , Virginia and Massachusetts . Thousands of distress calls were reported from stranded m otorists and from apartment dw e llers Without heat. With frost reaching as rar south as Florida, cities posting fow rerord temperatures this morning included Atlantic City, N J ., with 4 degrees. and Baltimore with 8. Blustery winds, snow. freezing 1.18 artist M. Gregoire dead at 55 Funeral ser.vices are scheduled Wednesday for Maurice 0 . Gregoire, 55, a local artist who died Saturday after a heart attack. A resident o r Huntington Beach for 17 years, he was a her of the Huntington 'h and Fountain Valley art gues. His drawings of ntington Beach and Newport ach landscapes and other ints of interest have been played throughout Or ange nty. t the time of his death, he a field engineer for the onal Cash Register Co. is survived by his widow. elle, and sons. Michael and of Huntington .Beach and andchild. ary Is scheduled tonight at t Dilday Brothers Chapel 11 Beach Blvd'. 1 of Christian Burial is · uled at 10 a.m. al St. ventu.re Catholic Church, Springdale St. ,,_., Het Oret1 .. c .. tt ....... c.tll'911Y· Me ..... .............. ._.. • -· ......... lllHlll 1119' '" reer•••u• wltlte11t Ut<l•I ........... -~....,. rain 1.rnd s leet made driving hazardous across the Midwest and as far south as Arkansas while unseasonably warm tern· pcratures were r ecorded in murh or Montana and Southern California. One man was found dead of expos ure inside a parked car in Richmond, Va .. where tem- peratures dripped to a record 6 degrees Monday. An uniden- tified man was found frozen to death on a downtown Chicago s idewalk Monday as tem.- peratures dropped to 7 degrees and a Cleveland man in his 60s colla psed and died while shovel· rng snow. A father a nd son in Boston were overrome Monday by fumes from a gas space heater in their apartment. Over the weeke nd as the brutal cold s wept down from Canada. three weather.related deaths were reported in Penn- ' sylvania. and the body of a 70-year-old Mar yland man was found near his unlit coal stove Sunday night. officials said. f 'ro• Pagr . l I IRAN. • • by Rajai that the Alger;ians promised they would resolve a n y American-Iranian dif- ferences. NBC said, and Iran lC'levision said Khomeini then t o ld Ra jai lo a ccept the Algerian guarantees. In Washington. a spokesman for the State Department's Iran Working Group, George Havens. said the initial reports on Ra· jai 's statements were too vag'ue for the department to make any immediate comment. He would not discuss whether the Algerian m ediators were of· rering some kind or guarantees to Iran in their own name. Meanwhile, a leading m ember of Iran's ha rd·line Islamic Republican Party said today that the latest U.S. proposal for resolving the hostage crisis are "unacceptable." Hassan Ayat. interviewftd in Tehr~n by telephone from Beirut, said he had not studied the American proposal in detail, but that it .. ,. unacceptable and does not satisfy us, because it does not give enough guarantee to what we want." TELE PHO ta Aff depMMe11 .. : (714) 142-4321 CIHellled ~ 142·1171 °''ICES c .... Mele: ,. ..... y .. ,... L9lllM llNdl: 10l7 .... CNtt " ...... ' ....... ,..._~: OlrllNcil ...... •- Tiie Or ... Ceell Delly ftllet. Wltll '#Nell I\ <~ .. .....,,.,_, 11 lll*lltl!M Illy tllt °' ..... c. ...... "":..E'· ........ Milleflt -.... I.... Y llWUlll .. ,...,, ·-c-.-.......... ·"""' ........ IH<ll/hefltelw Vel_le~, 11r;111:( U9YM .... ,.. Qllllt. "..... .... " ,.1 .................... Tiie """'"' ,. • ..._,.... .... ---.., ........... o . ... '*· C.taWM. c:allfilnlle .... . VOL. 74, NO. I • _ Fountain Valley residenu can voice their view1 tonight on the tentative use of $314 ,000 In federal llouslna and Co mmunil y Development f undl. The City Council will conduct the first ol its two public hearinas on the grant application during its regular meeting beginning at 8 p m . in City Hall T he city has used these fodc·rul funds for publir works lmprovt• ments (street cons trudion. w1ttn a nd sewer l'onnt•ctions >. 1ir1 mun ly in the Colonia Jul6n•z urt'.U. ont• or the city's oldcsl t o mm \mlUci1 The t'ily also hus 1•urniurk1·cl S105,000 in SUl'h fl·dt•ntl ruruls fflr lt proposedseniort'1t1zl·ni. 1·c•11tn The grant upplt1·11tw11 for 198Hl2, tht• suhjt•c·I of tciduy·s hearing, targt•ls $2·1~1.!11111 for ·'housing c•os ts n•dut'l1om. · · City planner Don < '11111 rarr1a11 said these funds musl he• usc·cl tu aid Cunslruction of llC'W h1111s1•s Ill' apartments gl'urNI lo low 11.1 moderall'·incomt• rcsult•nls lie said lht> funds 1irobuhly will be used lo purchust• lund '" cooperation-with a d<!vcloper will ini:? to construct such housinJ( I . . If the full $245.000 is obtained 111 lht' federal grant. the city's total reserve for such a projecl would be $300.000. cTheother$5~.000was obtained in previous g rants l Contraman said, however. thal this total might only purchase a lilt I(• less than an aC're of residen l1ul land in fo'ountain Valley, at loday·s pric·es. Ile also said no agr eement has yet been reached with a developer to build the low cost housing. .IJntil SU<'h <I projert gets oH the ground'. the money earmarked for lht' projcl'I will rl'main in federal hands Other projects listed in the 1981 ·82 grant application include administrative costs, $39,443; contingency funds, $39,400; and housing rehabilitation. $77,000. These allocataons also inl'lude $9.543 in unexpended funds from earlier grant projects. Oallf P1I .. Sl•ff P- HOSPIT ALIZf D AT HOAG Ceunty Supervlaor Alley Riley'.-.. ... ill1ws.-.. "rrilic<il' (ll'1111g1• ('11unt y Su1wrvi-.11r Thomas Hlll'Y 1s 1(1 1·r1l1ral l'IJn 1litio11 111 ltw tr1l1•n '>1 vr• can· unit al llo:ig Mnrwn:il llo~pital in N1·wp1irt H1•ad1 ._ his sLaff <in•I h11!\p11 al a1d1•s -..a11l t11d<Jy Hll1·y . wh11 was taken liy <im· ll11la111·1· 111 1111· h•1!-.J11lal Sunday n1j.!ltt af11·r an aJlparcnt nllre up of :1!'>tl1111af1<' lir11111·h1tis. was us· ing :1 r1•sp1rat11r to hrt•athe. one 11( t11 -. ;utJ1·-. !'>•J11I I This 1s llw i.1·c11nd lime Hiley ha s lll'c n h11sr1italized with lir1· al h111~ problt·ms I le was kq11 111 th1· hospital for <1 week las t Mo.i~ afl<·r s ufft>ring a s irntlar all;wk ll11wf'Vt·r. th1· 68-year -old r or m 1· r M a r i n t· b r 1 gad 1 c r gcrlt'rul's hl'alth h<id been im- prov111g s1n1·1• the earlier mc1· dc•nt Ri le)7" was in sut'h effervescent s pirits. in fa<'l. that he already had made• s o m e pr elimina ry plans for a re election t ampa1gn for his 5th District post 111 1982. Riley. who rarely takes a day off from work. missed. today's im port ant l'ounty Hoard of Supt·rvisors · meeting in which a chairman for the calendar year was lo be selel·ted. Wardlow closing FV topic tonight A third public hearing on the proposed clos.ure of Warctrow School will be conducted al 7 :30 tonight at Talbert School. 9101 Brabham Drive, Huntington Beach. The Fo untain Valley School Dis trict's advisory committee on school closures currently is leaning toward a plan to close Wardlow at the end of the cur· rent term and send all but 16 or its elementary s tude nts t o Talbert ror the 1981 ·82 school year . Those 16 students. from the Golden West Estates tract, would be moved to nearby Newland School. under this plan. Assistant superintendent Jack Mahnke n said the district estimates it will save $143,000 annually by closing Wardlow. which currently has an enroll· menl or 349 students. one or the lowest in the district. The plan to combine the Talbert and Wardlow s tudents a lso require.s that 87 Talbert stu· dents from the Huntington View a nd La Cuesta 3 tracts <east of Newland Street, north of Yorktown A venue> be moved to Newland School. In addition, a ll transfer stu· dents who reside in other school attendance areas but who are attending Talbert would have to be reassigned. Mahnken said. With these changes, Talbert's Fro91Paplll CHAPMAN. • reel throughout the courthouse. The only words he spoke were, "Not guilty," in response to the court clerk's query on how he pleaded to an indictment char1· ing murder In the second degree, the ma.t severe charge possible under New York law and punish•· ble by a maximu~. of 2' yean to life in prison. A charge of lint· degree murder Is only used in the kl.llingof a police officer, Chapman was ordered to return to court Feb. 25, and Altman said, hewouldsetatrialdatethen. The jud1e appointed two p1ychlatriau, Daniel · ~hwarta and Bernard Diamond, and 1 paycbolotist Milton Kline to ex· amine Chapman. Defenae attorney Jonathan Marn withdrew his requeat tbat Chapman be eull)lned to see • wbetber be wu mentally compe· teal to.ataad trial. Tbe altorneJ , laid hewueertaln tbal Chapman wucom,....t . llU'baaldoutaicle court tbatbe would Pl Bl 1111 an luanltJ de-f .... enrollment will climh to about 702 students next Call. he· said The srhool <·apacity is 720 stu- dents Another oplion that has not been completely dismissed by the school closure committee is a more drastic s plit of the Wardlow enrollment, moving 54 percent to Talbert and 4fi per- cent to Newland. However. Mahnken said . the committee has given less atten· lion to this plan because parents +aised safety concerns related to Magnolia Street crossings. He said the plan now unde r primary consideration r eq uires no Magnolia crossings. The committee will conduct another closure hearing Tues· day. Jan . 13. regarding a separate plan to close Bushard Schooltat the end of the current term. --Diedrich gets closed hearing By DAVID KUTZMANN oe •• o.i1, ~, ... , .. " Former Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's µreliminary hearing on charges hc laundered about $70,000 in rampaign loans four years ago <·ontinued in C.lrange County Superior Court today minus press and puhlic Th"t'i, bceausc l>iednch's al· tornc}'. Marshall Morgan, re· 111wst~ u closed hearing for his l'flf'nt Monday when legal pro· 1·cl·dings hcg<m. "This is not JUSI a ploy on ·C1ur purt ,·· Morgan told -Oran~e C'ounty Superior Court Judge C'l;iuc11, M Owens. who granted I tw dl'fn1sc motion under the prov1s111ns or a ltJO.year -old statuk which allows closure of -.ud1 1iroect:ctings. Morgan said that, if Diedrich 1s rcquirl'd to stand trial al the 1·on<'lus1<1n or his preliminary hc·aring. they prefer trying the <·use in Orange County. And to limit publicity surrounding the case, he said, he wanted to ex· elude the press from the pre· liminary hearing Morgan said he was upset at published reports before Mon· day's hearing began that said ·pi e::. bargain efforts with state 11rosecutors tlad broken down. The lawyer denied any such nl'gotiations had taken place and used that ~'i an example or the type of coverage he was try- ing to forC'slall But an attorney rw the CBS radio n t·twork. Dougla s fo.:dwards of Los Angele!>, argued th at little would be ac rnmplished ip elosing Uiedrich's hearing be<·ause of the "hit and miss" lypt• or coverage that would result. Edwurds said having an open hearing would insure more ac l'Uratt· t·over age of the proceed- ings inst<'ad of forcing reporters to relv on sourres within lhe hl•arin'g. Thl' attornf'v also ~aid ht• hc·l ic\'l'S the s'tatut(' allowing closun• of prot'<•t•dings is un· l'onstitutional. , U1cdrich, who briefly spoke with reporters befor e the hear ing began, races four felony charges involving alleged viola· lions or stale political campaign regulations. Though six person~ were f 'ro• Pagr . I I FLU •.. l>r Dalt•s ~aid he expects to sc<' an incn·C1Sl' in outhreak~ of the flu during the traditional peak flu months o r .Janu<.1ry throu~h March Oran~C' County has not report NI any rases of Jfangkok nu t<J lhc state epidl•miology offi('C. said Dr Dales. "We 've had outbreaks all around it. But we've heal'd nothing from Orange County ... Oales said. "We expect it's hap· pening there too." Orange County epidemiologist Tom Prendergast said that only lwo cases have been positively identified as being Bangkok flu. "It doesn't mean it 's not out there," he said. "It's out there. There's ce rtainly a lot or respiratory illnesses goin g around."' . O•llY Pll.C Si.II P- COUAT HEARING CLOSED Ex-aupervlaor Diedrich originally named as delendants in the first Grand Jury 1nd1Cl· ments in 1977. only Diedrich now races a potcnt1cil trial. One or those l'O·de fendanls. f o rmer Orange Coun t y S upl'rvisor Phillip Anthony, pleaded no contt'st lo a misde- m l' a nor ch<irge in Superior Court last Wl'l'k. I le was nned $5,000 after three felony counts we r e <I ropped du-r in g pie-a ba rgainm~ I le 1~ expected tq tesl ify at 1>1e<lnch ·s hearing r' .. --. f 'ro• Pagr .. 1 I DELAY ... Limits be ra1si·d to six stories m ortlPr to )!l\'l' <ll·Vclopt•r!'> more inc·l·nl i Vt' t11 cons ol 11la tl· 1ir11pt•rty o.ind develop projctts. Positions takt·n lty lhl' ('ity Council on th1· Hol sa C'hica mars hlands and on otht·r rtes· ignated wl'llands along l'aC'if1C' Coast Highway soulh of Beach Boulevard also have been challengt>d. The City Council has urged thal the Ro lsa Chica. located in _uninrorporall·d counly lcrntory but in the 1·ity's s phere cir in· fluen ce. be classifi ed as a St'nsil1ve wetland habitat. That dec1:-1ioir.should it he ap- proved by Orange County plan· ning ofrir1als. would seriou~ij· 1mpa1r type!> of ckvelopml•nt on the property Thl· Signal Lanc1mark Com pa ny. "" nc•rs of most of the land. has l':tllcd for more nexi· hll' wordin~ If the City Council reaffirms its position un six-story h«.'ight limits on Jun 19. it would mean that hot.els. motels. restaurants. s hops. entertainment facilities. r esidences. o ffi cl's and com· bined office-resid ential buildings can be built in the area. Council sources indicated that 1f the limits are raised along the town lot area, high-rise con- dominium units would be the dominant deveiopment. The city's Local Coastal Pro· gram must he approved by the state Coastal Commission before becoming final. ... ---·-.. ··-------··-··-·-···· .,_ Oallyf'llMS~ ....... , NEED FOR REPAIRS IS OBVIOUS AT ISOLATED JOPLIN RANCH County studying whether to eb9ndon teclllty bulh In 1950• Wilderness calms kids Trabuco facility aid to· delinquents 8) JOHN NEl!:DHi\M Ol Ille D•lly l"olol Sl•ll There are no llarhcd "''rt' fences. armed l!Uards or scurd1 li~hl s al tht• Jo11l111 Hoys· Ham·h, Io t' a t e d on a h 1 I Ito p n t' a r Trabu(·o Canyon. The rettJ(·ous sounds of a hus1v(• language <tml danging metal locker d0<1rs don 'I cd10 through cold. tile floored halli, where boys with sheared st·alps march to dinner in douhle file wearing identu:al pajama·hke clothing Instead hirds argue back and forth in a thicket just above where a ground squirrel darts into its burrow. Two t a ll- wagging mutts of indistinguish- able pedigree play an a sunny courtyard reC"ei ving gentle pats on the liead rrom several boys as they t:ha.nge dasses. There are no' cells and no warden. The 60 residents laugh at the word "escaµt»" _"That's a riot," says one 15 year.old. "The only thing keep ing us here 1s us. If we want to leave all we have to do is walk away" To Joplin Ram·h Superinten- dent Harold Cook. the location of the 1l'Ounty correctional facility is just what the doctor ordered for tcen·agc boys trying lo sort out their llves after a hrush with the law. "W(· find that huvmg thl'sc boys out hen· in the w1 ld erness so to speak has a 1·almin1'! effeC'l that we 1·ouldn't get 111 other raC'ilities." Cook s aici. Built in the 1950s. the Joplin Boys· Ranch is for hoy~ age 15 lhrou~h 17 who are transferred from juvenile hall in Santa Ana and usually spend about three to six months livini.: at the ranch. Corre<.•t1oas <>Htl·ials and the Orange County Board of Supervisors will be considering whether to ahandon the faC'1hty pentlini;: a two·month study to begin this week. Over the years. dormitory. cafeteria and classroom build· ings have become run down. County ofri<.·ials must decide whether to repair the ailing structures. move the residents to an adjoining facility or move out or the area. Cook and JO(?lin school prin cipal Bill Fisher want to move to the adjoining Potre ro boys· facility, now empty and await· ing allocation of $864,000 needed to ready the new fac:ihty for service. Potrero formerly housed 13 and 14·year-olcl boys. but was abandoned two years ago when faulty workmanship lead to leaks under the foundation walls and buckling of exterior walkways. The dormitory and classroom buildings in the com· plex have never l>een completed. "Ther.e's no question that something will have lo be done at the old facility," Cook said. "You can see where the noor is sinking in the shower room from installing tiles that were too heavy for the foundation." Many of the buildings on the 340-acre ranch are from 20 to 25-years old. Peeling paint and warped flooring attest to the need for repairs. "It's becoming more and t lli1J1 • .... __ JOPLIN BOYS BUTCHER OWN BEEF IN THE OPEN Just whet doc ordered for youths sorting out lives? mor e of a serious prohle m with rcwc·r and few1..•r resour<·es." < 'ook said lie addcfl that pri vate dona· lions wen• keeping the ran<.·h afloat and supplying teehnical pros,!rams with equipmeet. .. We don ·1 have enoul!lt staff or equipment to conduct the pro- g rams as well as we would like ... Cook saifl "Consequently tht> youn~sters get less in dividual attention." Inside the dorm. 60 1..·ots, 30 to a s ide. line the walls. The boys have three small shelves to store personal belongings. Stereo speakers c:arry the banter or a rock ·n· roll station disc jockey aC"ross the open s leeping area. · · f'or many of the boys the situation of having no privacy ls a d ehumani7.ing exper ience." Fisher said. "It's hard to give youngsters a humanizing ex · penen<'e wht'n they're thrust in- to a very dchumani7.ing s1tua· lion " Jlowt.•\ er. dcs1Jtte the financial squeeze, most hoys do well at Joplin R l't:onh s hov. numero u s youngst ers attaining several years or math growth in just six months at the ranC'h. Other sub· jeet srnres showed similar im· provement. "What ever they do to each other out <>n the street they don't do it here." Cook said. "This seems to be neutral ground for them." Cook s aid county studies showed better than a 50 percent success rate in preventing sub· sequent offenses by boys leaving the ranch. "Our records show that one year after they leave 65 percent have no subsequent violations," Cook said. "One year later only 59 percent show violations. "The important thing is for .. these boys lo get some interven· lion before their offense heeomes s erious enou g h for them to do hard time." Cook said "That's what we hope to t•ontinue doing here." Huntington tear gas class slated Reservations are being ac· c:e ptcd for a tear gas certifica- tion class Sl'heduled Jan. 22 in the traimn~ room of the Hunt· ington Beach Police Depart- ment. 2000 Main St. The class is sponsored by polite and Huntington Beach Neii.:hhorhood Watch. The two hours of instruction hcgrnnmi.: at 7 p.m. will focus on the pros and cons of carrying and using tear gas. After com. plctton of the class. students will lie Issued a permit allowing them to purt'hase and carry tear Cost of the class "is $20. Space 1s limited. To reser\'e a place, <·ontac•t Su7.ie Wajda at 536·5933. Anyone a{!ed 18 or older may enroll. Women aided by Red plan MOSCOW IAP> -Citing the "debt" Soviet society owes to women, the government newspaper Izvestia said it Is "necessary to fill the gap" between supply of and demand for household wares. ·'Demands for washing machines and other machines useful around the home have not been met," the paper said. On the other hand, It said the -new five-year ·plait° effective in 1981 envisions paid leave for women workers whose children lake 11ick and the creation of more part-time Joba for women with small children. Pizza store a8ked in Irvine A-bulldln& proposal· for a take-out plaza restaurant ln Irvlne wlll be considered Thurlda1 nl1ht by the clty'a. ~ Plannlq Commlulon. Barae1'• PIH• "ouJd be· locatld Ill the ArW C..ter, n tbt ....._.,t ooner of tbe lnterMCt.lon of ,.,,,._, Road Md Tuetday, Jwqry 8, 1911 s DAU.Y P9LOT D Draft sign ups quiet Protat,en miaing.,/rom county 1itea By, JODI CADENHEAD Ol ... Delty ........... Quietly and without protest the county's 18-year-olds have be1un ~1isterin1 for the draft. Missing from the local post. offices Monday were the anti-draft protesters who greeted 19-and-20-year-olds when they began signing up for possible military service last July. INSTEAD YOUNG men who will be 19 in 1981 trickled in lo local post offices to fill out the familiar forms bearing their names, addresses and Social Security numbers. ' At the Newport Beach main post office officials reported no protesters. The office was vandalized with spray paint last July when registration began. Jean Clifford, administrative assistant to the postmaster, said that vacationing 18-year·olds are * * * Draft sigrmp dramuuve of protest,s WASIDNGTON (AP> -In the race or protests across the country, a Supr e m e Court challenge and the opposition of President-elect Ronald Reagan. the Selective Service has begun registering teen-agers born in 1962 for a possible future military draft. Sixteen demonstrators were arrested for conducting a sit-in and blocking entry to the draft registration office in the federal building in Boston. while another 40 protesters clogging the lobby chanted, "One, two. three. four, we don't want your macho war!" Anti -draft protesters vandalized three Los Angeles area post offices by jamming toothpicks and pieces of wood into door locks before the appearance or draft registrants. Sign-carryi1'g pickets gathered in bitter cold outside post offices or federal buildings in Louisville. Ky., Milwaukee, Toledo, Ohio, and many other cities. (Related photo, AS) Plans for rallies, picketing, news conferences and distribution of anti-draft leaflets outside post office registration sites were reported in other cities, from Phoenix, Ariz.. to New York, from Atlanta lo Chicago. A balf-.doaen pickets carried signs reading "No Blood For Oil" and "Don't Sign Your Life Away" out5ide the main post office in San Francisco. Inside, only one teen-ager had re1istered in the first two hours. In New York, about 200 persons -m09l ol them teen-a1ers - picketed the block-long General Post Office shoutine "Hell No, We Won't Go" and then headed for. nines Square rally. At leut 10 protesters who refused to leave the armed forces recruitin1 center in New York's Times Square were carried out to a police van, driven several blocks across town and released. authorities said. Drugs kill 194 ROME <API -Drug over- doses claimed l!M lives in Italy last year. up from 129 in 1979 and 62 in 1978, a government re. port said. It said drug traffick· Ing a;:d drug arrests also in· creased sharply. , Br GERALD WINKLEft, ·o.O.I. IF YOU CHIP A TOOTH callin& to uk If they can slsn up at tbe Newport Beach post omce. They can. AT '111E lllAIN Santa Ana post office reaistration was reported to be very slow with no protesters. One young man walked into the Costa Mesa main post office wantin1 to know where.to enlist. said officials. Despite the quiet calm surrounding the latest wave of re«iistration siinups, anti-draft prot esters promised to be out in forc~beginning today. Mike Libertelli, head of Students for an Economi"t Democracy at Orange Coast College, said that anti-draft supporters will be distributing leafieLs at local post ofrices all week. "The timing is bad ," Libertelli said about the Jack of protest. It's hectic after the New Year's. "I know many people who will not recister and are willln1 to take the risks," he added. At UC Irvine, Paul Kenney, coordinator for the Veter.A" Affairs office, said s tuderµs a re n 't interested. ·'They did it a lready last YeJ[ and nothli\g happened," he saJ5J. "Nobody cares." · . " SINCE LAST JULY, 3. 7 million of the nation's 3.9 million elig'Jtile young men born in 1960 and ti&J have signed up for the draft. An additional 1.9 million eligible young men born in 1962 ate expected lo sign up this week.·. Under draft registration plans outlined by President Carter last December. young men bom'.:in 1962 will have-until Saturday 'to sign up for possible future military draft. Meanwhile. the Suprerlle Court is expected to make a d ecision soon concerning the constitutionality of the dridt since it does not now include women. Mounl St. Helens said unpredictable ' VANCOUVER. Wash. <AP) Mount St. Helens remains unpredictable and "extra caution s hould be taken near the volcano," the U.S. Geological Survey said Monday in an advisory. Small earthquakes and the buildup of a dome of lava inside tbe volcano's crater over the past two weeks have diminished . but th~t does not reduce the volcano's danger:, scientists said. The recent activity led scientists from the USGS and the University of Washington .. to speculate if ash clouds or pyroclastic flow were to take place, it may occur with little or no forewarning;" the statement said. P_vroclastic flows are fast.moving waves of superheated gas carrym~ ~t volcanic ash and ~ther debris, such as swept down t~. mountain 111 the May 18 eruption that killed 34 and left 28 peoPJ.': missing and presumed dead. ( 1o• A number of civilian helicopters have ventured near tlfe''- mounlain and landed inside the restricted red zones, which have been. closed since Christmas; said Tom Cocoran, U.S. Fores\ Cce spokesman. . ~ The mountain was quiet Monday. as it has been since it liAt : with small earthquakes Friday. · Water 01ain lawsuit· . . .. .. settled at $201,00{) The state has paid two Orange Coast agencies s201 .ooo in a settlement centering on problems with a water main installed "temporarily .. to pipe water to Costa Mesa and Cancer topic of Ul1 cllUls Biological, c linical and psychological aspects of cancer will be explored in a lO·week lecture series beginning tonight al UC Irvine. Biology of Cancer <Biological Sciences 2S) ls om~red for UCI students and for community members who wish to attend one or all of the lectures at no charge. Community members may take the four-unit course for credit through University Extension. The class will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays from 7 to 9: 30 p.m. in UCl's Science Lecture Hall. Physicians. researchers, social scient,sts and cancer patients will present the twice-weekly lectures to provide an overview of the disease for professionals. students and the public. Huntington Beac h before freeway t•onstruction r equire.<! r<!location. Mesa Consolidated · Water District was '-'warded $125,000 and the City of Huntington Beach $75,600 in settlement ot a lawsuit filed against the state, officials said this week . The suit claimed Caltrans had promised lo relocate the 42·inch temporary line laid in 1968 before Corona del Mar Frt:eway construction began. . The two local agencies have been· seeking damages since cons truction o n the freew.a; halted in 1976. and continued u~e of the line was r equired said Bob Eadie, spokesman for the Cosla Mesa wate r ag<mcy. The settlement. he said . .is reimbursement for repairs on the temporary line because or delayed freeway construction .. Eadie said numerous joinls.'.,.ift the temporary line. which carries water from the ~n Joaquin Reservoir in lrvine·tO Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach. have deteriorated. Water pumped through ~lie fa cility comes from NortheYn California and the Colorado Ri ve r as part or tbe Metropolitan Water District water import program. · ~10PHl!:TIC4T£0 PRrXJRAMMINC .. B~uli/i,1/ S'leroo M1.1~ie­ New!:-Marine Wealher- !:loek Markel Roporl~ Con~umer Reporl~ Billy was playing s andlot ba11eball. He was catcher a brave one without a mask. As fate would have it, the hatter swung at a pitch and th e backswing hit Billy in the mouth and chipped o(( two or his front teeth This is a tlpical down sensitivity in the area. If a pulpedomy I removal of the pulp material> is necessary, 1t will be followed by root.canal therapy, and the use of a crown or a cap I( the tooth can be preserved. 'dental emergency which requires immediate dental care. When 11tjury exposes the toottt pulp, It can be serious si nce· the ,potential ror infection Is high. The pulp la the Innermost chamber or ~the tooth and contains nerves and blood . veaaela. - Temporary trHtment ol lnJured tooth pplp Includes the use ol • Hd•llve ~I to cvt Until yoo· can get to a dentist following an injury, keep the mouth as clun as possible by rlnstn1 It with a solutl~ salt water. If there are k>oae teeth, no food should be cb•wed until the teeth are sta~lllaed In the jaw. Walnut Avenue---------~-- H 1 ' ..... c ...... . No stash for trash? I • woaaY WAaTtl osn. So you've alerted out UM Nr• YC'u ri•h\, have yw~ You're not WOC:fYlDC about war (lr Pt'•~-... death ur tuM. n~rt~ullka ot foe Too bad. You r an't ~ havinl mu\'I\ '"'" Every new )'Ht lh•I l°UIDN aJona. you ouabt '° have •om.. .,... frt't If II aaJI ., penionaJ. It ouallt to be IOV· rr-nmmta_I ot anlttmallu'n•l TranqY!lity la out ol atyle. Sl~ )'W ·,... 10 h•pP>. u • public aervice, tbb comer ~hall olfC'r )UU wmelhll\f ""w •nd ft(}Vel lo natter over, so '\OU ('al\ pn all the' real of l.&I In lllttepleH nilh\a. Wh) 1kW\ 't you worry •~\the truh? YOl' UON'T -~~'1( why you s hould worry about it? Well. wt-<·•o fill th•t n1&ht \IP lhrou1&h the aood offices of lht-('ahfonu11 Wu lt' ~hna1ement Board. You can call lht'm lht' rubbish peuplt' .if you w1ml to just talk plain fnt:hst1 Thus 11 1:. that this sl11lt~ tnsh board has released a re· vurt sug~~sung that wt.-'rt-rwmang out of room ror it. Net tht' board 1'ht' trash Th\' board.has announced that Californians are throw· 1ng thing:. away at s uch a 'p~ce \hill w~'re runnin& out o~ places fo bury at all We are inundated m rubble We may !>OOn (and OUrSflVeS all CltSt Upon the heap This news could come as an enormous surprise for Wrong Thinkers living along our coastline. who tend to believe there 1s no rubbish around here. You can un· dersland how they got into this wrong thinking. TAKE NEWPORT BEACH, for example. Nobody in Newport believes there is any trash because they've all been peeking m their neighbors· garages. The~ figure that's where all or Newport's junk is kept. Further. you would cal~ulate lhere is no trash in either . . ~· .. I r: , ' -f~~~. .. " "' .,;\:P• '..:..I .f ,.; 8 · "'~. ..£. .. . ·-·-·:. ~ '=-'It . ....... "• '~. ~ .... 'I Good heo~s! We're covermg tM populace with litter ... .. ~ Costa Mesa or Huntington Beach. In those communities. when it piles up too high, the people just put an ad in the paper for a garage sale. Then somebody hauls it all off to Fountain Valley. figuring it's a bargain. THERE'S NO JUNK in Laguna Beach, either, the Wrong Thinkers figure. They guess that when an item becomes useless in Laguna. somebody hangs a "For Sale" sign on it and proclaims that it's either a new art form or an antique. Em1er way. it should sell to somebody from Santa Ana. Faulty reasoning a lso might s uggest there is no trash left in San Clemente. That's because the natives figure that every time the sewer lines overflow, everything in town floats out to sea. And the sewers are always -over· flowipg in San Clemente. Alas. the Solid Waste Management Board declares that all of this is just fa lse hope. Our landfill dumps are rapidly reaching capacity. What once was an empty can· yon is now filled with rusty bed springs and old bottle caps. We're covering the landscape with debris. All kinds of solid waste is piling up on us. MAVBE THEY OUGHT to change the name of that state agency. They should call it the Solid Waste Mis· management Board. You are left to guess that the trouble is we 've become a disposable society -e verything from diapers to razors. Out it goes. One of these days, we may all try to throw something a way and abruptly discover there isn't any Away any more. Away has vanished. So. if you started the New Year wrong without any worries, you can join the crowd by just getting troubled over the trash. .d r • 1 A ~,~~-~\ • .\ I f -. \ lapper •a11ia ..... ,..._ Two youths. one holding noose, we r e among 1,000 howling and screaming abuse Monday as Peter William Sutcliffe was charged with murder in De wsbury, England. court. Sutcliffe is suspected in November s lay ing of Jacqueline Hill~ described as 13th vict im or "Yorkshire Ripper." Reagan, Haig huddling -' Senate's nominee heariflRs start today WASHINGTON <AP> -Fresh Crom a "wonderful" meeting with the president of Mexico. Ronald Reagan sat down for a talk with the forme r general whose nomination to be secretary of state could prompt the incoming president's first test on Capitol Hill. ' - ln addition to the hour-long meeting with Alexander M. Haig Jr .. the president-elect planned lo m eet today with former Sen. Ri chard Schweiker, picked to head the Department of HeaJth and Human Services. Haig and Reagan had not met since the Republican convention last summer . REAGAN IS meeting later in the week with other Cabinet nominees and, with just two weeks before Inauguration Day, still has two Cabinet-level posts to fill. A Reagan source who asked not to be identified said those two jobs education secr e tary a nd special trade representative - probably will be decided before Reagan returns to California Thursday. Several h ave turned from invitations to head the Education Department, which Reagan hopes to abolish even· tually. THE INCOMING president ar- rived in Washington Monday night on his third visit to lhe capital since his election. En route from California, he de- toured to Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, to talk with President Jose Lopez Portillo in a meeting spokesmen for both men said s tressed "friendship and mutual respect." Reporting on that visit Monday night during a reception honoring Sen. Howard H. Baker, R-Tenn., the new Senate majority leader. Reagan said it was "a very suc· cessful and won\lerful meeting, establishing the ~ind of friendly relations neighbors as close as us should have." Reagan aJso was expected to- day to name James Brady as White House press secretary. Brady, 40. has been Reagan's press secretary throughout the transition but was not offered the job on a permanent basis until last Friday. 'rhe president-elect hosts a din· ner Wednesday for all the people he has nominated to be Cabinet secretaries and plans to meet with them again Thursd ay. Brady said the meetings would focus on administration goals and s pecific issues. Reagan's trip coincided with the opening of Senate committee hearings today for his nominees to head the departments of the Treasury. Defense. Agriculture. Commerce, and Health and Human Services. The commit· tees will question lhe nominees and recommend whether the Senate should confirm their ap· pointments. HAIG'S NOMINATION has r ankled some Democrats wtto want to question his activities as White House chief of staff and de· fender of then· President Richard M. Nixon in the final days of the Watergate scandal. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee is scheduled to begin hearings on lhe nomination Friday. and Sen . Claiborne Pell of Rhode Island. the panel's senior Democrat. is trying to get the White House to release Watergate tape record· ings and other information. Reagan says he expects Haig to be confirmed and that he sees no need for the committee to review Watergate tapes F acuity, students Wss out pickets TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) In a series of bloody confronla· lions. a group of s tudents, teac hers and administrators cras hed picket lines and wrested control of the a uton omous Un iversity of Baja California frQm striking workers . Representatives of the strike breakers. numbering 300 to 400, said they were acting in ac· cord ance with unive rsity ad- m in isl ration appe a ls that classes be resumed. After the Monday skirmishes. administrators said they had broken the 54·day illegal strike over representation by two un· ions -the Academic Workers Syndicate and the Service Workers Syndicate. "This is the most critical point of the strike," said Rene An· drade Peterson, head of the Ti· juana campus. "We have to hold this campus and restore a sense of normalcy.·' But normalcy didn't last long Monday afternoon when strikers seized control of four buildings a nd an auditorium they were us- ing as their headquarters and sleeping area. The administration called the action illegal and vowed to re· take the building. They spliced telephone wires and cut elec· lricity and water supplies in an a ttt mpt to force out a group of about 100 that remained to guard the buildings overnight. The only other action at three othe r strike-bound HaJa uni· versity campuses was at Mex· icali . where strike breakers at· templed to force their way inlo three buildings but were turned back with fists and clubs by un· ion representatives and support· ing students. NATION I WEATHEA Disaster damages limited __ _... CHICAGO <AP> -A federal ap- peala court bu banded down a r'llillJ_!llM could mu.a the loM r1 rtillfiona ol dollara in damaces to the estates of the 773 people killed in the nation's wont air diuater -, the May 1979 crash of an American Airlines DC-10 here. A lhree-judie panel of lbe 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals aaid Monday that McDonnell Douglas Corp., manufacturer of the jumbo jet, and Arqfrican Airlines, the owner of the aircraft, were not liable for the punitive damages -awards made to punish defendants. COMPENS.\.TOR\' or actual damages claims in suits by the estates were not affected by the decision of the panel. The court said in a 61 -page o pinion that the "wrorigfuJ death'' lawsofthestateof Illinois, as opposed to those of several other states, should be applied in the McDonnell Douglas case. II· linois law does not allow punitive damages in "wrongful death" suits. The interests 01 the state 01 11· linois, where the crash occurred, a re greater than those of other states, such as Missouri. where McDonnell Douglas ls based, or California. where t he plane was built, according to the appeaJs court. A total of 118 suits, filed in fi ve states and the commonwealth of Puerto Rico and consolidated in Chicago, were affected by lhe ruling.~ THE DECISION reversed a lower court's ruling in May that McDonnell Douglas, des igner and manufacturer of the DC-10, was liable for punitive damages under Missouri law. At that time. a U.S. District Court also ruled that American Airlines was not liable because il was based in New York, which also doe s not permit punitive damages . Salvadorean anny fights guerrillas SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador <AP J El Salvador's a rmy waged a new offensive agains1 leftis t guerrillas today .as the government extended a state of siege and authorities hunted the killers of two American advisers and the government's land re· form chlef. A military source said army patrols killed 30 guerrillas Sun- d 8 Y, destroyed t WO Of their secret camps hiRh up on a volcano near San Salvador and launched a series of other search·and·destroy missions in the, a rea. "It is an orrensive, this lime by the army against ex· treme leftist groups who refuse to live in peace and freedom." the army officer said. Guerrillas and army patrols fought an all-day gun battle Monday near the village of Guazapa, 14 miles north or San Salvador. It started al 6 a.m . and· shooting could still be heard at sundown, witnesses said. Villagers said there were "a lot of dead and wounded." but the military source said he had no immediate tally of casualties. Cold snap claims seven 10,000 New Jersey residents without power .u .. "l. s-••rw ..... Oeeftllt ...... c..e " ~-----------..... _, ... -. ··-·· .... ... lttll .. MMM6 IA .... .._ •••• , ... , "' I ............... . .................... ' ........................... ., ••• 'AJAA*P W wnll I· ............................. ......... ...., ............. ............ c.111 ... 1 • ..._ ..... ra • 111..., -----s ..... -----w ...... =:.::= =---= ... ~---·­---...................... ..._. FORECAST GOURMET MARKET DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD Fresh Dangene11 Crabs ............ 1.69 lb. Cleaned & r racked for no extra charge · MEAT DEPARTMENT Prime and Top Choice Beef. aged not less than 30 days to the peak ol perf.ecllon. Freah Gnmaci Beef <around houri>'> .... 1.'9 lb. ~na-Enlirn Piii'i;nlek r Center ca& Pork Chops Staffed with Deluey'a famoua Brea..., ........ 1.18 lb. Fl'eUAmerku Lamb <Calli. R111ec1 1 8aekGfLamb (oven re1dy> ....••..•. t.lllb. FreM Loeal Zacky Farm a PollJtry, Roa ... Cldellelll (4 to 8 lb. av1. > pl1ln oratuffed with our dres1ln1 ..•....... 1.1....._ Thlud effedlve Wed .. 11'1 thru Tuee .. l / lJ 'S Free Home Delivery Service 115~ minimum> delivered in ou r co mpletely refrigerated trucks. Your order is under refrigeration from our store to your door_ · MORNING FRESH PRODUCE So. American BananH ...... -...... .-tk lb. Lg. Sn« Ruby Red Grapefruit .. 5 for l.M Reel DeUdoa Appia .......... 3 lbe. for fl Green Olllon or lled aacUMea ...... lfe bu. -LIQllOR DErARTllENT all prtcn plua tu Delaney•• Private Label Claablla or Via a.e <T50 ml> •••.••••••.••..••. 1.n Dela11e7•a Claampape sz. 75 per boUle, m.• per cue 8eafr ... 7Crewa .............. 1Uter>l.M 8eafra .. VO .................. Uher> lt.M c.u, San~ ........ , ..... lbtar> u.• FROZEN FOOD --- All Vu aa_,•1 J'r111• ftlll Dllllntn .. 1.• . Du,IDBPI' . • • ..., .• a.a .................. lie .. . 'I CALIFORNIA T~l.1911 H I ~ FinatiClal elllpire save~ • WeJJtgate-Calif omia rescued from bankmpt,cy 1 Draft protrsi .. r arrested \11 un1dt-ntll1l·d dr .. dt protl-:-tl'r 1:-. ;,irre~ll'd b) ifrrkdt·\ µolH'l' PfflC'e r:-. 111 <i µos t offic:t· 111 Bi.·rkl•lt.·~ (11110"1 11~ ;,i d1.sturhcam·~ <ind at ll'mptl•d ':J ntl :..ih~rn Eight \H·n· arrested during the prott•st ~ond ay in oppos ition to n•newed draft registration where young men were required to sign up at post of- fit•t•s throughout the C.S. -------- SAN DIEGO (Al'> ~ Le1al experts a re putting the final touches on lhe reorganiiation of Westgate-California Corp .. which has bee·n saved f rom financial ru.in after seven years of complex litigation. ·-A federal judge overseeingthe bankruptcy proceedings Monday authorized payment of final fees to two trustees and two law firms principally involve d in the lengthy reorganization of the former conglomerate and credit· ed them with salvaging it from ba nkruptcy. "But for the efforts of a ll the ap- plicants. Westgate would have been liquidated rather than being reorganized successfully.·· said U.S. District Court Judge l~etand C. Nielsen in issuing the $JO million payment order . "The ap· plicants succeeded in court dis· allowance or elimination of over $80 million in claims (against Westgate ). Kunzel said the substantial price paid for the FDIC shares. triggered by the bidding war, was a "sple ndid r es ult " f o r Westgate's c reditors and the firm's shareholders, who. he pre· _dis ted,, "~ill...re.c_tliv~ ~ubstantial a mounts in lieu of the credits they · would have had in Westgate bankruptcy ... BESIDES NEWPORT Reach· based Air California, the only re· maining Westgate entity is a tuna cannery in Puerto Rico. which trustees have offered for sale for a bout $15 million. In the event the canne ry sale a nd the tender offers go throuqh as expected, Westgate will exist in nameonly. Gas pump hike seen By TheAssodated Press Man stabs two 'I'WA employees TR USTE ES H E RB E RT Kunzel and Cur vin J . Trone Jr. were the financial architects behind the detailed plan which culminated Nov. 16 in the court auctioning off the portion of the firm held by its largest creditor. the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The prize in t h e 1.:ourt · sponsored bidding war was Ai r California, Weslgak's lone prof it-making entity 1 Whol~sale gasoline pril'e increases by Exxon Corp a nd four other United States refiners may be fell at the pumps almost im m ediately. according lo published reports. T h e New York r>ady News reporlt'd today that rive firm s had uppt·tl wholesale gasolinc prt CP~ by OQe 1.:ent to thret· ccnb a gallon. LOS ;\:'-I<; 1-:1. i.:s I t\ I' 1 'l'wo Trans World ,\ 1 r lrnl'S t· Ill ployt·1·:-. h tt \'t' bt•t•n l rl'ate<I for minor \\11umb :..f11·r tht•\ "l'rt' stahbt•d bv a man who ran aboard a 'l'W t\ jt'l ;i~ 1t w~1s atX1ut to leave Los Angdc~ lntt·rnat 11mal t\1q>11rt , authorities said . Ihm Hoh1nson and Kennl'lh L t\flams, both 36. \\t•n· trl'all'd al tht• ;.11rporl':-. mt'theal cliniC' and re lea~l·d . ~aid 11ff1<'l'r J irn L>ahl of tht• Los Angeles l'olict• Ocpartm1•nt ·~ a1r11<1rt unit P11llc-1· sa1<I th1· pair saw a man in a restricted Budgt.•t hike? Brown views crime fight LOS AN<: El.ES ( t\ I' 1 <;ov Edmund G BrcJwn has wurn('d that the only rl'al solution to the state's rising tTimt• ralc including an increase in homi<'ides in Los AnqcLl·s is "each person's com- mitmC'nt lo himself. his neighbor and his neighbor's nt'ighbor .. A few m ort• cups won 't change the mora l fabric of a societ.y." th~· gov1.•rnor told reporters Monday af~er meeting with more than 20 California police <'hlcfs tu get ideas on what measures can be lakc•n tn ('11mhat tht• trit·rca~r 1n 1.-rimt· Brown :1nr111uru-cd proix>st·d s tate budget in- crt>c.1ses 11r Sl:W m1ll11m for tnme·fighting measures. morC' than half of whic'h would go for improvements of county Jatb :.inc1 :-.tall' prison construction. if ap. prover! by the st<tl(' l<'gislature. . I.OS AN<a:Li.:s It\ I' 1 Tht• county coroner's 0Ht1.•c• has ruled lh<it the shooltn~ death last Oc toher of Ru·hard Carlton Meeker Jr. only son of al'I rt'ss :\"! ar.~ Tyll·r Moon• was an atcident. J a rn..c.s K 11 n o I s1111k csm<Jn for the cor orH•r 's orrict>, said Mon .. duy thal the ruling was ..__ _______ _. has<'<I primarily ,on th1• ~t<tlt•ffil'nl of witncss('S Mt•t•hr. i 1. a rncssC'11ger at CBS Television City. W<iS k 1lkd 111 mid ( ktober when <i short-barreled 410 s ho\)!un tw was ht>hling wt1nl off. striking him in the hr ad Poli<·c•1M1.•c·tive Jerry 1-'t-rrinsaid Meeker was lo;ic1i ng and unloafll ng tt11· i.:un when it dischar ge<! • I • -& -- I.OS.AN C ;t.;I. 1-;s I A I' I t:vclle J . Younger. an uns u1·ccssful t andidate for gov· c•rnor 1n 1978 after two ter ms as C.il1forn1a ·s attr1rncy gt-neral. was dt'alt another set back when a JUdgc rc1cclcd his claim lo re compute and nearly double his state pension. Superio r Court .Jud ge ThornasT Johnson ruled against YounJ;!t'r in his c ivil suit against the uclministrators of the Public vouNou Employees Retirement system and its execut ivl•of(iccr. Carl Blechinger . I The de<'ision upheld an earlier decision by the Board of Administrators of the Public Employees Retirement System that Younger was being correct· ly paid Sl,583.33 a month under a 1966 law providing cost.of-li ving increases for anyone serving after 1968 when state salaries were greatly increased. llrl ,...,, •• d'alll ••aclrldr• LOS ANG ELES CAP> -The county coroner's office says actress Ra~hel Roberts, whose body was found in the backyard of her West Los Ange les home in November , d ied of acute bartiburate poisoning and has ruled her death a suicide. "The doctor said s he still had a whole handful of1 phenobarbital a fast ·acttng sedative -in her stomach 'l e.v_en.d.iunJved," J a1Ree e coroner's office said Monday. '·No one takes that muchofthatdrugunless they want to die:·· The S3-year·old Welsh·bom actress, who once lamented that he r best-known role was that of actor· Rex,Harrl11on 's real-life wife, was an accomplished 1ta1e and screen actress. She was divorced from Harrlsonandhadnochildren. DI t11en -rc111r1 •1t1ar1 lal . SAN DIEGO (AP J -The U.S. Marine Corps 1111 a drill Instructor wlll be tried In a special court-I martial later thla month on char1es of tlnancial im-cropri«Aes wtth recrulll and ualn1 dero1atory an1u11e. . un·a near TWA 's H1wing 727 J<'l. flight HI I. !;ound for San 1-'ranciseo aliout 11 15 p m Monday ,\~ 1rnssengt"rs Wl'r<' !warding the plane. Robins<in and Ad<im~ lltll'lllPll'tl to lt'ad the man. 1dl'ntifil•d <is Hunald .Jo1w~. :1s. of los Angeles . hack ins1dC'lhet.C'rm1nal, pull1T ~iud Rut .Jonl'~ allt·gl'tlly boltl'll <iway from lhl'm and ran up tht· lu11!11.·r into tht• p<Jsscnger cabin of the a1n·raft. wh1·n· ltohin~•>n a nd Adi.Im~ were stabbed du ri n~ a hril'f :-t nigglt-\\ 1th .J 11111•:-. poltn· s;ml. M iami·bascd Air f''lor1d<i bought the l"DIC's interest in Westgate for$18a s hare . The car. rier is expected to make a tender offer to the remaining Wl'stgatc s1wrehold<'rS to gain 100 percent owne rship of Westgate. at a total cost of about S47 .5 mill ion Besid(•s Exxon thl' na lion 's largl'sl refiner <·ompanics raising prt<'h are Sun 011 1 ·o .. <;l·tt' 011 Co , Atlanlit• HH0hf1t'ld C•1 and D1am11nd Shamrod. Corp SFA 's Semi-Annual Men's Furnishings Event! • Dre!>'> .,hirt-. and de~igner dre.,.'> .. hirt ... • oe.,1gner J..nit '>htrf ). • Rm.'!<>. boxer .,horh, I shlfh, iJthletic .,hirb. • Shoe.,, .,ocJ...,, hanclkf'rchief!i, kimonos. pajamas. Below left: cotton pa1cima.,, regularly 27.50, now 18. 90. Light blue or white. Not 5hown, polye.o,ter and cotton pajama, regularly 18.50, now 14.90. Light blue, ecru, navy or wine. Si/es S to XL. Not shown: nylon dress socks, regularly '2 and 2.50 the pair; now 6 pam; for 9.60and17.90. Wool and nylon dress socks, regularly J.50 and 4. 50 the pair; now J pairs for 7.50 .. Below right: cotton boxer shorts, regularly 7.50; now 5.90. Sizes JO to 44. Cotton athletic shirts, regularly 3 for 8.50; now 3 for 6. 90. Sizes S to L. Not '>hown, cotton V-necJ.. T-shirts. regularly 3 for '10; now J for '8. Sizes S to L. Polyester and cotton boxer 'hort.,, regularly '6: now 4. 90. Blue or white. Sizes JO to 44. • Above, left: triacetate and nylon kirnono, regularly 150; now 38.90. 48" long and machine washable. NavY, camel or wine. One size fits all. • Above, right: our exclusive Givenchy solid color shirt, originally 37.50; now 25.90. Light blue, camel, navy c-etton-end po/'yestet. 'izes S ro-xr:---· - • Far right, our exclusive oxford cloih button-down shirt. Blue or white polyester and cotton for sizes 1416 to 17. Regularly '22, now 15. 90. • In The Men's Store-where we are all the things you are. J Martne otAelal1 Monday klenUfied the man aa Stt. llalebanlQes,21,ofEIPuo, Texu. ' ------------------------------...; · It t'Oftvtcted. a.,_. C!OUlcl reeelve a bed conduct Cll1cbar1e, 1ix month• 'eonftMmentandforfeitureof two-thlrdlothlap1yfor1hun~•· · ' South C01st Pllza, JJJJ Bristol Streee. Costa Meu.()p«t Monday thtouftt Friday from 10 am fO 9:.JO ~ Slhndly 'til 6 pm; Sundty 12 noottlfO s pm. . •. ' . f West~ate was the financial ~­ pie in the eye of former San Diego fina ncie r C. Arnholt Smitti Although having lis ted assets lJf $J75 million m the early rn10s. the co.nc.em weut into significant debt to Smit.b 't;_U .S.Nailonal fumk. In Octotx-r 1973, U.S. Natior1al Rank was dc<·lared insolvent, t)ecoming the biggest l.rnnk railurl' in the nation's history at that tune It was surpassed by the failurt• of frunklm National l:Jar1k in 1974. In tlw wakl' of the bank's col· lupst·. 111vest1gations wc11• nir1 ducted into ttw rinandul ba1·k ground of Smith. the chi1•f 1·x N•ut1v1.•orricl'r, and Westgate SMIT H Wi\S ('ONVl(Tt:U 011 c•hargt·:-. of tux c•vas1on anrl grand theft hut 1~ 1..·urri•ntly free 1iending appt•al of tht· gr:md tt1l'ft 1·011\ w lion In Fl'llruar·y l!J74. W1'-.lg:1lt!'s l'OU rt appo1n11•d I rush·t·~ Wl'lll looking fot• ('l·Onomic• t·over in C'haJ)ll'I' IO liankruplry I 'nder t'haph•r IO, nrttnagt•ffil•nt of a 1.:11n r t•rn is t akt•n awa·y frm11 cxistmg 11frr1.:1.•rs and turnl·tl ov<-r lo in d<.•111.•ndt•nl t rustt•(•s. who mig~t 1)vt.•rst•t.· l'ittll'r ll11uidatio11 or ,,. org;rni zat11111 of llll' 1.•ornpu11~ Tht· W1·slgall· truste1·~ <·v1 ·1. tually Sc)ld 11ff th<· p11'l lr W1 ·\IJ.!o1h • l'lazu llotc•I 111 dow111 11w11 Sari l>11•go ;1 sl111pp111g 1·1·111t•r , a pro dun· and p:u·k 111g 1·11rnp;111.\. 11 tuna o;1·1111·r-.. 1:1x11•;rl1 1·11111p11111(''> 111 r:t11f111111a :rnd Ar11.1111:1 :1 111111 i11g (11111 a11d "' \'1•1·al :111 pl;w•:. a 1111>11~ 11t Ii• ·r 11,·,1.i 111g ... l/11 \!:1r1'11 II l'IHO lf11 111111h .1pprt1\l d lh1• tr11 -.l1·•"' 1e 11rga1111.1lt•111 pl:i11., '' 111«11 \\.,11ltl ,., 1•11\\1:1lh ltll ''" l1r111 11111 or lla11k I 11(11 t '~ --·· State bail-ollt funds vanishing When Proposition l3 wu paaaed by the Jfol•ra in 1978, it ••• e1tima1l"d tht> lull impart of cuttln1 property tax r.venue&inhalf would not bef.,lt torawoorthree yean. 'J""hto t alt-treasury w u bul1tn1 with lurplua funds aa a '" ult ot f'Jl<'t"fi~1vely diU1ent lMx colleclln1 ao h waa posai· • ble lQ t \&ltuof\ r Ill', coun\y 11nd 1chool di1trict bud1et1 with a $S h1lbon <&nnual bi.al out · T'be st ate bi.al out 111 jUll ubout over. says Gov. Brown. There') no lol\jl('r any 111urplua lilnd th" 1981·82 bud1et caMot bf> balant·t"d whhout a tu U\crl'•li~ unleH state aid to local agt>nC'1<'~ L'\ ~huply reduc~ \And Brown remains de· t f"r mm'"'Ci tu-.1dl•t-l ep a \lsx h1kt• In o rder to hold t ht> bud.eel to a 6 percent increase - a bout hulf 1 ht-ratt-vf 1nnat1on Brown will seek to remove rost of "'''"~ mt rt'aiw::, 1n we lfare payments and repeal in· f1 dt1un ddJu~tmttnt~ 1n other state proarams, including the :.lalulolJ 7 pt.-rcent inaec.se an support of local schools. All thb "ill not be grt!ded with JOY on the local scene a nd the re ~1 II bt-enormous pressure on the new Legislature tll resl·ue as mut·h Slate aid as possible. · One lkown pr<Jvosal guaranteed to run into opPQsition 1~ h1~ pJan tu ~t:.'l as1dt: SlOO rrullJon for new environmental, e nt>rgy and re~earch programs which he describes as an in- \ t'st mcnt "lo makt-~urt.' we have a higher quality of life lom urro" Th~rc's no doubt this 1s a worthy goal, and $100 million out of a $25 b1lllun budget is not a huge amount. But it may be hard to get it by lawmakers whose 'constituents are sure to be howling o vC'I· the loss of their state bail-out money. ii: Sooner or later the Propos ition 13 bombshell had to find ~·s target This seem s to t>E-the year . !• Fitch hunt no help ~ Secre tary ·of State-designate Gen. Alexander Haig ~is week faces his Senate confirmation hearings. ~ It is by now apparent that the Democratic minority f.tends to make the most of Haig's Watergate role, e rhaps not so much in the hope of a rejection of his con- r ma tion a s for picking off a few headlines and ~cratching some Republican sore spots. ~ The fact is that Haig probably is as well qualified for ~c Secretary of State post as anyone who has held the :job in recent times . Some would say better. :· His bi~~est plus is the total confidence of our Western !uropean allies, gained during his tenure as chief of : A TO. Along with this is his thorough understanding of : he military as pec;ts of internati.onal issues -aspects ~hat have bee n overlooked or poorly comprehended in re- ~ent times. --:=; On the domestic front he is well acqua~nted with t~ ~orkings of Congress and, of course, with the White ?.'tfo use. which he ran for many months after Presjdent ;'3"ixon 's personal ·s taff was . ..o.usted during the Watergate ~ff air. _ ."\ Indeed there a re those who gave him credit for :\.holding the country together during those troublesome '.times and for eventually playing a major role in finallz- ·l ng the Nixon resignation. :~ Although· Haig was completely cleared of any un· ·~oward involve ment in Watergate by Special Prosecutor ~eon Jawors ki · and he was one of the few who did :Jc'm erge unsc a thed there are those who apparently feel ;they can unearth s'omething new to discredit him during ~he Sena te hearings . ~~ ·Of course a full investigation of his background and qu<J lifkations is in order. But turning the hearings into a 'tu.~~ Watcrgate witch hunt will not serve the country. Jf ax nibbling ~ By now most taxpayers are aware that the first :irnychl'ck of 1981 will reflect the Social Security tax increase ;(.1ro m6.13 percent to6.6,5 percent of~ -an annual in· -:trc aseof$.187 in the maximumde<liction-. · =':· That's not all the good news the federal government has ::Jn store for us. ? Patients on Medicare will-have to pay a higher pro· ~ortionoftheirhospital bills. ,,. International mail rates will go up. ~ Passportfees willgoup. ' . ·Camping fees at national parks will go up. ~ However. there's a little good cheer for those in the ~owest income brackets. Some 22 million food stamp re- ~ipients will find their benefits increased by 11 percent. And a.he minimum wage -for those who can find an entry-level ~ob -rises from $3.10 to $3.35. • ,: In short, while our leaders proudly promise tax c.uts, the :Cf eds s till have ways to nibble away whatever benefits may :}>e forthcoming. -Ii ~ . tp1nions e)(pressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. theJ v1ews.e.J.f)ressed on this page are those of their authors and rt1 sts. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. .~.ox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) ~2-4321 . _ • -;~ ~ ~ !: Boyd/Snakebite ,.t By L.M. BOYD j George H. Corsan of lsl- ~~nglon, Ont.. died al the age ~f 94 after falling off a ladder ~nd breaking his neck. He rew various nuts in his life's ork and was known ·~orldwide among those who ' id likewise. He never ate eat. fish. dairy products, ggs or anything containing • eflned nour or sugar. But he ldn't credit that tor his Gloomy Gm ' It IHIDI willkely the framers ol our Comtltu· lion lntended to · •u•raatee "inalienable n,hta" to crlmlnall at tit• expmse of the tnno- etat. .J D.M. longevity. As a child, he'd been bitten once by a rat- tlesnake, and he was con· vinced it had made him im· mune to most ailments. This is an ancient belief among American Indians. They say most of the very old among them had been so bitten once upon a time. No driver should forget that a car's enpne will bum more fuel durin1 a minute of idling that lt needs to restart. In three minutes of idlin1. lt would require to 10 hall a mile. , Correct plural of mon1ooee Is mon1ooee1, but Samual Goldwyn, the renowed movie ma1nate1 didn't know that. He needed a couple ot tboM mean little beuta for a ftlm )M WU mak•n1. He uled bb secretary for t... plural word. Sbe dktn't know. So be said, "<*&J, take a l«ter to the S. 06.,o Zoo. We'd lib to .................. ... a ...._ Jllture, Md wbde ,.,...,. at rt, lend .. anotber one.'' Or 10 report tb• llollJwood ltal'Jte~. -. Thomla P. H8'e¥ I Pu~llher Battwa KreHttch/Edltot&et ,.eet, ....... . Jack Andenon Why· Kissinger didn't. qualify 'II ASHI.NGTON -To the relief of many people -from liberal Democrat• to conaervatlve Republlcana -Henry Kilainpr will probably have no olftcial poeitlflft in Ronald Rea1an'1 ad- mlnl~atioa. . . . But thanks to bis continuin1 support in Republican circles, includin1 · steadfast en- donement by former Preli· dent Gerald Ford , the charming , German-born ex-Harvard professor may still h a v e powerful influence in the new Republican regime. One of the main reasons Kiss- inger was considered a poor choice for nomination as Reagan's seuetary of state is the distinct possibility that his confirmation hearings in the Sen ate would touch off a oolilical bloodbath that the in· com mg president doesn't need. And one of the reasons that a Kissinger confirmation hearing could lead to such an explosion is his mysterious meeting with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, on April 11, 1977 - less than three months after Jimmy Carter moved into the White House. Reagans advisers are worried about that meeting -and with good reason. KISSINGER has never said what went on at the session. The only account or what might have been said was contained in a ca- ble from the Soviet Embassy to the Kremlin. The six-page cable was turned over to the CIA by its top agent in Moscow, a Russian whose code-name was "Trigon." According to Dobrynin's ca- ble, Kissinger told hi,m Carter'~ SALT II proposal was unaccep- table, had misinterpreted the George Mair Soviet pasWon and aboWct be re- jected by tbe Ru11ian1. Ki•· 1in1er abo told the Soviet am- bauacb' accordin1 to the ltlll· aeeret cable, tbat Carter'• policy on human ri&hta merely •bowed the naivete and wealme11 ol tbe new president and bi. -n'atioaal security ad viler, Zbicntew Brie(inlki. . In addition, accordinJ to th\ ultra-secret cable, K1ssin1er told Dobryn1n be atilt had some IOW'ffS oa the National Security Council, and fully upected to stay current on developmenta within that a1ency that would be of interest to the Soviets. ' IF THE D'obrynin cable was authentic -and accurate -it constituted evidence of near· tfeason against the former secretary of state. '' Plet.se tremble <\ little for old time~' S6ke. /1 The Carter admioiatratlon treated tbe Dobrynla cable u If it were radioeetlve. BnaiMlri, when told about it by CIA chief Stanafield Turner, reportedly Hjd llOIDetbina to the elf'~ ol, "lly God_. tltta ia 201tUcal dynamite!" He ordered ita dla· seminatlon heavily reatrieted. Incredibly, the mlcrofllmed copy of the cable dUappeued. THERE WAS a hitch to the dynamite cable, however. It waa the lut transmission the CIA got from Tri1on before he wu arrested by the KGB. So some experts believe that it was a de· liberate piece of· masanlorma· lion cooked up by the Kremlin. For1eries are old stuff for the Russian secret service. What worries the CIA is that such for.genes mu.st have the ap- proval of the Politburo Itself and thus indicate a significant political move by the Kremlin. If the Dobrynin -4able was in· deed a fake -sent out after Trigon had been compromised :.... it points lo a hostility toward SALT II from the highest level ·-• of the Soviet government. It showed a wilJingness by the Kremlin to discredit not only Kissinger, but the very able Sov· iet ambassador as well. THE CIA'S deputy chief or counter-intelligence was ordered to submit an "operational analysis" on the Dobrynin cable. Sources told my associate Dale Van Atta that the CIA official's report concluded that what Kiss· inger had done "bordered on treason." The report was pigeonholed by 'the White-House. Us author-was removed from his headquart.ers post and transferred overseas. It is. .skeletons like these. in Kissinger's closet that kept the Reagan people Crom naming the former secretary to a post that would require Senate con· firmation. Social Security bill hits middle class Well. fellow suckers, it is once again time to stand by for the big annual Social Security tax zap. On. Jan. 1. it jumped from 6 .13 percent to 6 .65 percent. However. it is realJy twice that because ·your em - ployer has to match it and. to him, it is all just salary ex - pense and it doesn't make any dif - ference to him to whom it is paid. So. in effect, you have been paying 12.26 percent of your Mailbox salary in Social Security taxes and, now. that will jump to the equivalent of 13.30 percent! What makes the Social Securi· ty tax so onerous is that it is the load carried mainly by the poor and the middle class. Some poor people have so little that they don't pay any income taxes, but they will still be stuck with the full 13.30 percent Social Security tax. AS FOR Ute middle class. Social Security taxes have been levied on the first $25,900 of wages, which according to the U.S. Census Bureau, means about 65 percettt of the total wages earned in this country. That means that something on the or· der of 35 percent the richest 35 percent of the wages earned escape Social Security taxes. U.S. News and World Report recently illustrated the effect of this system of letting the Fich not pay thei r s hare . The magazine· reported that. if you earn up to $29.700 in 1981. you will pay Social Security taxes for the entire year. However, if you earn $40.000. you will only pay for the first 39 weeks. Or, if you earn $60.000 you will stop after 26 weeks. Or. Sl00.000. the 16th week. I J ) THESE INEQ.UIT.U:S go.-on and on year after year because you. Mr: and Mrs. Average Citizen, don't put the heat to your friendly neighborhood con- ~ressman . He. of course, isn't in the Social Security system and neither a re some six millaon other government employees. IF YOU are tired or getting the dirty end of the slick on your Social .Security taxes. put the s q u e e 1.e on your man in Washington Make him know you want the tax applied to all government employees and the rich. The thought that he might have lo pay Social Set·urity lax· es like the rest of us may focus his -bead~· little. miruL ori h e problem. 911 einergency number due in county in 1982 To the Editor: The negative tone of your editorial on Dec. 21, on "Don't dial 911 " was a disservice to those who spent many hours to have the "911 " system become a reality. (including the Orange County Board of Superviaors, city managers and many others). I have been· involved with "911" since 1972 as chairman of the task force for "911" for the County of Orange and its 26 cities. I have been the key in· terface with P.acific Telephone. General Telephone, State Department General Services, the cities, and I have_ l\.ddressed the California Slate ~islature many times on this program. I would like to give you the background of facts: ' IN 1172 under Gov. Rea1an. the Legislature pused AB 515 which enacted the "911 " Emergency Telephone System program. This bill required each county and city to prepare a ten- tative "911" plan by 1975, a final plan by 1977, and have an opera- tional system by 1912. This pro- gram was conditioned upon the Legislature providir,ig a method lion of thia pro1ram during the 1975 Legislative Session. This Wll not done. In 19'18, the Le1lslature enact· ed AB 411 to provide fundlnl for the "Ill" Pl'Oll'•m. AB 411 pro- vided for a "' percent to ~ per· cent aun:har1e on all telephone bil11. The date for final plana were Ht for July 1, 11'71, firm or· ders to be placed with the talep~ company by July 1, 11'71,' and ftnal lmplementatJon for Dec. 11, t•. In ltrl, the lAtillature mact- ed SB USl1 revl1ia1 the lforemeatloned datH at followl: the data for ftaal plaa1 ... •~on. 1, 1171. a ftrm order with the telephone com- pany for July, 1981, and im· plementation no later than Dee. 31, ·~· . ON !i!EPF. 11, 1'78, the Orange County Board of Supervisors ap· proved the county-wide "911 " Emergency Telephone System final plan for submiHion to the California Department of ·General Services. In September 1979, the California Department of General Services approved the county's "911" final plan. On Dee. 11. 1979, the Orange County Board of Supervisors ap- proved the ordering of •T911'' for the County of Orange. Then on Dec. 13, 19'19, the county and its 26 cities placed an order for "911" as approved in our final plans. The target date for having the "911" system operative in the county Is the spnn1of1982. Thank you for the opportunity to give you the accurate history.· of events that have enabled the county and its 28 cities to look forward to a viable • '911 " member that we really don 't have to defend what we do. Hunting and fishing are legal and ethical activities supported by the majority of people in the world . Is Mr . Greene a vegetarian? PETER A. DOUGLAS Cla•rda ......... . To the Editor: The letter headed "ffistortc separation" in the Dec. 21 Pilot. by Mr. R ichard L . Hilts . deserves response. First. I question whether the U.S. Constitution was "founded upon scriptural ideas," as Mr. Hills claims. The Constitution is a most sec ular document. dealing with branches of government, qualifications and terms of office. raising armies, navies, post offices, and the like. I hope Mr. Hilts will read it sometime. Also, since there were in those days religious establishments in several of the states, and religious tests for holdin1 office in all but two of them. four system. R. L. PICKRYL additional years of maneuvering Principal Starr Analyst and comproft\ise were needed ln __ ._ _______ OL.dn to attach the lirat 10 •:--•I llrflelf... amendments, The em of Ri1hts, ......, to the Constitution, lncludin1 the To the F.ditor: rltht of reli1ious liberty. Re: Bob Greene's article, 1 don't know which Foundlnl "How Can Killln1 Anlmall be Fathers Mr. ffilta may have had Called Sport?", Dec. 22. in mind, but the ones I have Never in all iny life have I read <Jefferson, Madiaon, et al.> read an article that diaparqed e n v i 1 i o n e d • • ' w a 11 of my lnteW1mce more than the separation" between church and article wrttte by Bob a...... •t• te to 1uarantee that Tb• article ii full ol 'untnltbi 1overnment wlll be rellpoualy and blnulndal. What tnf\lrtatel neutral, neitber aidta1 nor me above all l1 tbe Hlf · hlndertn1 reUpon. Speelfteal1J1 rt1bteoua antl·bunter, mlquided -thl• meena that the or1am ana COJDmetatol'I, Ltclllaton, and reaouree1 ot IO"l'IUIMat, and a\#er.,e dUHDI wbo want to tbe adl. ol offteebolden, 1DQ' take awa1 our rlfbt to bear not be ........ to promciiie <• arma. Imped•> tb• lntere1t1 of a· TIM lalutloa, I 1ubmlt, le to re-particular nll1lo\ll 11ct. '*' indeed or a collection or aects <e.g .. Christians!. THUS, through almost 200 y ears or growing religious liberty in America, attempts to use public schools, subsidies of public money, or the force of government institutions and media to further various re ligious causes have been most encouragingly rebuffed in the courts, and by the people when they have had a chance lo vot.3 on such issues . Obviously, religious adherents are not barred from government. but those few who have gained public office and then tried to use it to further their own favorite crusa'1es. or as Mr. Hills advocatt..>, "to present their views on what will give us the peaceable lives we all desire." have mostly been thwarted, so far. fortunately for the religious liberties of us all. I share Mr. Hilts' hope that "opposing views on all luues can still be presented lhrou1h all types of media," and that "this opportunity and freedom will never be controlled t>y a few." . But I sense from his clolin1 lll\el ttl'lt . Mr. Hiltl -an· I faction may aspire to become just such a few, and to anoint themselves as the aole custodians of, in his words, "that which Americana need to hear." H.W. DOYLE ~ "" •• IAHne 1'0fft .......,. ott llllke-.. T'lat ,.,., lo CG ....... ..,.,. .. /fl . ,,.. "' ................. ,.., .... Ute.nol•_,,.,or ,,.. .. fW .. ........ All ............ ... .. ... Lrt ......... ... ...,_ ...... ..,. ..... ..... 'J...":!r.., ..... .. .., ..... . . .. ............ .. f ·, ' ------------------·-~ ' . ... .. - • -" _ ............ -..-.-_ ...... ____ . BUSINESS / STOCKS '·------- T~. Mluly I. 1111 DAILY PILOT •• Sports battle off field too By MIL TON MOSKOWm Newsweek va. Time ia one of the great matchups in ma1az.ine publi1hJn1 -and their rivalry has spilled Into other areas. The latest battle1round: sports 111a1azlnes. Newsweek is the muscle behind Inside Sports, a monthly ma1ui.ne launehed last April. Muscle in this case m eans money. lots of it. Newsweek does not deny that Inside Sports will lose upwards of S8 m illion in its first year out of the start· Ing 1ate. To play in this league you have to be able to invest that kind or money. Newsweek can. It's corporate parent is the Washington Post, the nation's 10th largest newspaper by circulation size (600,000). The Post owns a couple o r othP.r newspapers and a clutch ofTVstations. The whole shebang takes in more than $600 million a year. Newsweek's tar1et with Inside Sports is Sports JI. lus trated, a weekly magazine started by Money Tree Time Inc. in 1954. It too had to absorb plenty of early losses. Eight ye~rs went by before it began to pay its way Now ii 's one of the top properties in magazine publishing, with a circulation of 2.4 million and annual income of Sl 70 milhon IN ntE NEWS magazine field. T ime's t·irculation '1f 4 3 millioh is comfortably ahead or Newsweek's 3 million. Timf' also takes in much more money than its rival, $350 m1lhon IJl 1979 toNewsweek 's $235 million. In 1978, Time Inc went artl'r News weeit on another front when they bought tht> Washington Star. forcing the Washingtoo Post to defend 1t~ leadership position in the nation's capital. Now the Pos t and Newsweek have retaliated by f1t'ld1n g Inside Sports to com pete with Sports Illustrated Inside Sports is selling about 500,000 copies a month, and they're doing it the hard way by emphasizln~ ne"'sst:.incl sales rather than home·deli vercd mail s uhsai pt 1011s N car ly 70 percent ortheir circulation is coming from s1)ort:-. ran~ ~ht) are paying $2 a copy to huy 1l al newsstand!-. Sports lllustral ed sells for $1.50 a ('()JJY hut gel'> m1)sl 11f its ('lr!'Ul:.1t1on from horn e subscript ions HOW DO \'OU GO after Sporb lllu~tratPd '' J>1 ·tt·r ,\ Derow. the chairman and president of Nt·ws wet·k , 1•xpl<.1111~ the strate~y behind Jnsid t: Sports "W1• get into ttw l111•k1·r room. not so mue h to rnport the final scorr· hut to rind uul what the hell really went on." In one of their stories Inside Sports t•vt·n got 1nt 11 th{· bedroom. They ex1)lored the marriage and sex llf•• of Stev1· Garvey, star first bast-ma n orthe Los Angeles Dodge· rs Media buffs have noted in th<' past that 1'1ml· ;.111!1 Newsweek, working separately, ort<•n c·om(· u11 w11 h th1· :-.arn1! cover story. It's happe ning ht:rc t1...o. Th,.. Vl'c:-•·mhl·r 1s~u•: 11r Inside Sports and the De<'. 8 issue of Sport:-. lll11:-.trat1·d a1• peared on new~stands sid~·hY .'.i<t1· with cover ;:,t•lfl l•:-. on 1.,,., Angeles Rams quartcrba1·k Vinl'c F~rragamo An•I lh1•1r s tor ies were re m arka bly :-.1m tl<1r SPORTS IU.USTRt\Tt:D be~an 1t:-. art1d1· Ii )' 1·ulhng Fcrragamo "that walking JllN 't: or hand:-.om1• lt altall sculpture.·· lnstdc Sports began its article with thc!-.c wortl:-. "He has an arm like a hullwhlp. :t fat·e hijacked fri1m <• schoolgirl's dream.'· Whether Inside Sports will make it rem a ins to h\• Sl'l'O It took a long time for Sports Illustrated to convince advt:rt1srr~ that people other than tee n-agers were r~ading the magazine. That they have won this argumt>nt 1s dear from the heavy slug of liquor and tobacco ads t h;.it now i.:racc thl' pages of Sports Illustrated It seems that advertisers ser spt>rts fan:. as b111 -.mokPr'> and big drinke rs . S• ork• In Tltr Spodlghl NEW YORK IAPI S~•~• Mun~Ar \ prltf' •nd ne' t h..lnQe-o• '" .. ,,.n mo't t\fH"J .. Amer''-" Stack f rch-tn'l'f" 1"1\tw\ tt «t010Q f"l•flon.HI~ .tt f1'W)f'p-lh•n \1 Ho.IOI( M J10. 600 c;oc-9 • 1q) .o11 ~Itron •81 .00 •ntrCtrC.• 11 10 too Hvtil y()c; ' I 11, 100 .... (Mp 110 * A4!PfdA ..-1 I I S.000 I~•' 107 .00 SY"I•• (or p \QI 100 R.,_Q•I < 100 000 ~11 • ,, I) • , .. II • 1 I s • •• ,, ,, 18 • ,,, t I' '• '• UP •0) IJoJrJfJHP" 'rt-rOfJP• NEW VOR~ A_P r ,,-,,,, Oow hH'"' ,..,.,,, ~croc~o.., Jdn ., Opt-n H tgn l o~ 11 ,..,,. ' ""i J) Inc> ~ 6t.. q4f. 'fl ~ 111 JM '4<41 flt\ 1 1•1 Hlo 'JO. Tm "1/ -66 .lttJQ IC 400 .. , •1)f'. If· '• tt 1\Ull II)"'/) 11¥JJ 1')11 ,11 t1\ /I+• ·~ !.1.. 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'"''' "'"ht \.'I)! .. tt"•' \1f'1W ~111, II• th" o~~•otUo • QO()() f IMI I f tofll04 •111•"• '•••ve ,, • QlfOYO •tl .h1.0••· li-.>tioU n • W."""'" tttJ '•• iwrn,.nl '-""°'fl\I Ju o•w If "'"ut \. "t\..g\. ..,,,, ... "' t " • lLl!CTRIC COMP"N~ \ K id11ap fJaif i lil(l aLUl MAA8lf CUNfWS" A.IC '*ws 6 "1 I OH S£YE WELCOME &ACM. ICOTTEA \J41De ~\i•)I> '-r> l'tu ~~~d\'\YQ~ .. ,l,t~~ • ' ... to Oh>ht~I tn~ fC• "-' ,, "'' .iife!hf'•Q T ht:' hunt.•\ moon t>f Mark Harmon and Mor~;.in ~·a1n.·hlld 1s dis rupted whe n the) C:Jrt:' k1dnapµt:'d by drug d~alers on tht· two hou r prt'm1ert' or "Flam ingo Houd t11111gh t <11 !J 0 11 N HC. Channe l 4. • 9lNNYHILL 8;;<\n\ I&~"" .; •vu• .JI 100 ... ~ dr\0 ..-,e .,..,.,. 1nvtt• t.ces 1na• 8e'1fl• 4.d f• w~L .. !Or ~n> <X.c4'&1un • PROS ANO CONS Burgldry Bu• u1a1v ••l f11T'\S d "'J Cllft11U.JI~ cJl"t4..U~::t c11nw w•lh Aalp'1 SlurV QI) STUDIO SEE Crewing S1111111., > '"'"'" L a-e G•ew pr 11par ~b tu1 '' race o yo1Jng <•l 111r 8JiPla1n$ Wl\ftl IHI gwt1s dllCl ~ts 11om me s10011 1A1 CIJ M•A•S•H News spreads 1nrougn11111 1ne camp thal o1 c.ias" '"" 1s 1mm1nen1 l.LI! \ ld~ht.'' "'"' f\• ~ \JtU,.t " 8 A&CNEWS G JOKER'S WIL 0 e 11r~·s·H • JH\'-'t MHh .. ''"" YWf\h'" "' Vit• l fH b lt1t,1!; l•'ttto hi''"'' hl n1~ "'''''"'' g) BAREnA H,1nH1'-1 ., '•'~ t'1U\n,~1 1. h•1Ht4h~ • 1.t,•Pt• •.n1H1110 1.h)\J ft'11h ,I \.\H11Jih l ,)UI ''" lh-•t EID OVER E.ASV ~•ut').1' W1H1r1m S'111llltH 1 )1 t~•'" f 1-.t-tmt.tn ttt list ,._,..,it lfhllHO~ ~ MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT ( TIC TAC DOUGH ,fO MERV GRIFFIN ::;,"'" 0 1 Supe1star ~ uu~sts Etn.'in Wavrie. ~n .. s l O!mmon Cttarlie Mallhau (!I BARNEY MILLER Barney mu:»t ... ~,cw 11\+trl le•11t S Cl1Sll6S~ 0 ,,_., llW 1emova1 or a soarP •ll•s• ano a ooc10< ano o1 1.-.. >e• get into a w1to oalUf! over,, crool< wllo lost 111s 1.i1en1 7:00 I C8S NEWS NBC NEWS 7.30 8 2 OH THE TOWN FAMILY FEUO 8 SHA NA NA Guest Andy G•bb IJ HOlLYWOOO S'!IUARES HAPPY OAYS AGAIN The Fonz has to come to Ille reSGue whilf\ Mrs C s Chann.-1 LI•• lngs 8 KNXT 1CBS1 Los Angeies. G KNBC1NBCJ LO'> Angele'> " l(TLA find I l OS Angples G KABC fV (AE:lCI l os Artgf'lf''> ()) '\FMB tCBSI San D •ego G KHJ· rv (Ind I Lo-. A nqt>ll•'> ®l KCSl \ABCl San 011·1.10 ID KTTV (Incl 1 Lu<. Ancw l•·<. g) KCOP rv (Incl 1 l us An4Pl"5 .ID KCE T· rv 1 PBSI Lo:. Arn w l,•o; 6i) KOCE rv 1PB~1 HU'lllnqton Bt.'.Ktl G FACE THE MUSIC ID ALL IN THE FAMILY A,, n1r '"'" E ct1lh mtroauc~ ,, n"tl '-t'10uw to Burn~y Ht:tfflt'• '""It" tus wile H.HIS ,.rwa\ "0~1f\ El!l MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT lii) NEWSCHECK (I' P.M. MAGAZINE 8:00 IJ THE WHITE SHADOW Goacr1 R11eves is olterud $ I 900 lo 110 a con1m11r ~·at ano "" 1011m b .. c:omo" J ~·"g"'g group and gois a•• 0111.11 10 cut a •tlCP•ll CJ LOBO Oei;uh Per~1n!o is rtJPO•l"o ru ~avt-"udde111y O•ed as J ,, .. sute of d minor wound m tnl! µos1e111.1r D MOVIE • • ·, C•o:.scuff t:1n ' ( 1'1111 Robert Hoo~s Jere- rnv S1111e Two San Fron· CISCO oe1ec11ves rn.e~•· 9a1e 1t1e murOer ol 11 youln aboard a cable car IJ :1f HAPPY DAYS Al ort-pares tor a ''•union w11h tht> woman who 1•1\il<I n1m 20 v11.ir s "'" 1'"' G MOVIE • 'A Ouoel Place 1 o Krll \ 197~11 Carroll Saller l•'il" Sorel ThA aaughler ol ii murd13r ;ic11m ll)flli, the ••He<..t~ of \:t tragic tovP tn anglr Q) P.M. MAGAZINE Cl) MOVIE • • '1 lne 810 C111ni11.11 I 19!> t ) K11k OouglO~ .Inn Slr-r tr"q lrt O•dll• 10 hOOSI '11s carcPr ii H'Port~r 1•vplo11"' the •uller•nQs ot Ille .... OI a _, tr...., tn •~-"' • *""' "TN Ooc:1or• Of Nlgat1a" A d•ing Nigerian C0911tl0n of doctor• llOlll tn wN .. coet• end In tribal 1ot1M lie. trying to IOIW 1he coun1ry'1 health ptobl9m1 • MYt~AY ··o. J ... yll And Mr Hy<le" 01 Jekyll's bokl experi- ments to Isolate th.I good lrom Ille evll wllhln a slflgle • penoflallty IOCGHd t:Mtyond tire wildest expec- 11110<11 !Part II ()) THE aAXTEM "H1nky P1nky1 8:30. 0 1.AVEAHE & SHIRLEY Sh1tley lalla In love will\ a marrted doctor who claims lhal 11e is d1¥01crng his wile • CAA<>\. BURNETT ANOE'AIEHOS Guest Maog.e Smith ()) KEEN'S PEOPLE 9:00 9 (() MOVIE 'W0<d Qt Hono• · (Prem- •et•I Kart Malden Rue McClan1h•n A small-town newspaper repone• becomes emll<Ollll<I m 11\e rssues ol lree<lom of the p1ess and F11s1 Amend- men1 rights O•e< a murOf!r case 0 FLAMINGO ROAO 1Prem1erel Hon@ymoo~•s F1eld1ng ano Constan<:e Carlyle are lodnapoed by drug Oealers seekmg re•enge on Shertll Semple U ®l THREE'S COMPANY Janel learns trial Cindy's boss •S asking for non- wor k 1e1a1ed la•ors and convinces her lo p101esl Q) MERV GRIFFIN Sons 0 1 Sup11<slars Gut<SIS Ethan Wayne Cllri!> l emmoi• Ctiarhe Maun.tu. Palttc~ Cass10y fli) MYSTERY Or J"kyll Ano Mr Hyde Ot Jet>,ytl s bold e.pen · n111n1~ 10 1sora1e me good hom t11tJ e••• w11n'" a single pt'r sonahly surceeo lleyond his wildest expec.· 1:111ons 1Part II lii) NOVA 1 rw Do..10,s 0 1 N•geria A ddrmg N1ger1an 1.oahhon ol tloi;IO•~ bOtn 1n wru1e coa Is ano '" lnbal miles arP lryu1g to solve tne CO\Jhtry s nealll\ problems 9·30 IJ If-OJ TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT Hen1y •earn~ that h•S new boss h9S ,1 1epu1011on 101 "nng · olOer ' erriotoyees 10·00 D G NEWS IJ ®J HART TO HART Jo11<1111a11 and Jennifer hec.omtt involved 1n a mur- der · mystery Iha I involves ;:i11 t1nc1unl sarcophagus TUBE TOPPERS KCOP • 8 :00 -"The Big Carnival." Kirk Douglas stirs up an "event" when he covers a mine cave·in for his newspaper in this movie with Jan Sterling. ' CBS 9 9 :00 -"Word of Honor." Karl Mafilen stars as a small town newspaper reporter enmeshed in freedom of the press and First Amend- ment ri~hts in this aew TV movie. NBC G 9:00 -Flamingo Road. In this two.hour series premiere, Fielding and Constance are kidnapped on their honeymoon by drug dealers (photo at leftJ. Ind a mummy lh•t aeems to have come allve • INDEPENDENT NETWOAK NEWS • THE NEW SENATE A rook al the new Sen81e anel ttie snrlt of po-m Congreu trom Ille ha01 11ooar South lo Ille W11s1 CD NEWSCHECK 10:30 • HEWS Cl) IM0£P£NOEN-r NETWORK NEWS ~ THE 12TH STREET RAG 1he e•olul1011 01 1agt1mfl mus•c 111 tll•· M1~sou11 v111 ley ilnO 115 1nlluenc.•· 011 :.>01n-t on11uy (las"c.al compO!,tu ~ ·~ tt.tHnuned • 11:00 a o o <ll ®J NEws 8 STAR TREK An nllen mr1ffJ(1t1u~fy UfJarlls "'" Fnt11r1m~~ aml sur g1i:a11y 10111ovt11> Spock s tir 111n G NEWL YWEO GAME Q) M•A•S•H Hc-1wt\,.·y•· ruul Tr,•PPO• hat. 1f(• Hitt fHt•~~ llfl thfj WfJ''( to thv loµ m Hom Hlft.)ff5 to Qt•I Wt HU HhHff1r fQf fhf' unit Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND lllP M.ir> 1' US Atr ' OH~•· 11 •• ,,,.,.,"'''' ~ ~lanff t.1 <t«it•'·~ m "'" E9vot,an ,, •. t..en • EE) OtCK CAVETT r~u•·~• Jonr1 Cn•lguO !Port ~DI 41 J0'1N DARLING 11:309(1) LOUGRAHT B1111e •s incensed over Lou's -mlflil d11mt111est 1n a .. ,ou11ne .. ghetto krlllng Ind PUl$UllS the story her· sell (RI I D TONIGHT Hosl Johnny Carson Guests Pe1er O'Toole Cha•lte Callas l ®J A8CNEWS GUHSMOt<E A tlltle cowt>oy n<Jmg a grant hotse ttOes mto Dodge 1;la1m'"g that the norse turns into an e•e· pnanl when Ille moon 1s lull • · ID HOGAN'S HEROES Hogan a•ds a Russian spy to i.eep 11\e Nazis lrom f1nd1ng a 1ad10 station Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND The Secret" Syl•1a Ack. royel rummages through old ttunks ano lmOs a mys- 1e,,ous llnk lo the past f:ilD CD CAPTIONED ABC NEWS -Ml>NGHT- 12:00 8 MOVIE • • • fney Got Me Cov- ered' ( •943) Boo Hope Doro111y Lamour A Wa!>ll· 1ngton saoo1age rrng 1s accidentally 1nvaoeo Oy a lootrsn newspap.,1man G l!Jl MOVIE • • Suoerdome 119781 TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTIJiCiS Da'trld JeneNn, Donna Mlllt A 1-11e attempt• 10 k*-P a football teem "°"' WIOIMnQ tl'le Super Bow! (A) • MIA.oH: ~ TIM IMF la ualgnecl to dfttroy • 11telli1e contain-ii •:iucleat bomb• • '" "L•wle11 F1ont.., .. ( 1935) ~oftn Wlyne. S'""I• Te<ry A cowboy str~glft to .-one1ete l11msell ol cr11TMt1 blemed on lllm by a crOOlcll<l lhe•JH • PRE,SDITE 12:30 G TOMOAROW Guesta. PDrno slat Manlyri Chambers Ind he• mana· ge1 Chuck Traynor. singer Maureen McGov111n. actor Trevor How.,Cl IR) Cl THEF81 ··co11n1er·S1toke • 12:40 9 ()) MOVIE * • "Rrdlno Tall' 1197!>1 Andrew P11ne. Gilmer McCormick A •Odeo .. aer lalls 1n love wult a YO\lrtg hip New Vo1k C11y woman • (RI 1:00 .. YOU BET YOUR LIFE Buday Hackel! plays 1n11 game wrlh a roller oerb, .,.. Queen a man wno 1a1i.s 10 l\01ses and a Las Vegas blao,ack dealer g) INDEPENDENT NETWORK HEWS 1:30 G THE LONE RANGER ·cooe Ot lhe Pioneers" ID MOVIE * * The Last Bh1Zkr1eg' ( 19591 van Jori,.son D•~k York Ourrng World War ll's Battle or lhe Bulge a gung-ho Nill• 11n<l his hand ol 5abol'lu•~ 111f11trate Alhed lroops Cl) MOVIE **''DOA 1194!11 Edmond 0 B11an P11m,.l(I B1111on w ne11 11 man re<ll 11es trial rie has been q1•f;r1 a oose ol 1tme·1e1PaSNl woncr w111 n. e yGU11g o.- man girl I• reunited wtVI tl'le Amertean omc:.r ..,,,~ .ne had ..,lier helped to ftC8')e • MOVIE • • •'l'I "The D•IJI Buaten" ( 19551 RlcnarO Todd. M!Cf\ae4 Redg1ave Durlflil W0tkl War tt. the Brltllh bcl441an1ty plan to otow up the Rull• Oafl\.Jfi Germany 2:301 HEWS 3:00 HEWS 3:06 MOVIE ••'It "One Touc~ 01 Venus · ( t9501 A•• Gardner. Roberl WalllM.;.#. w•ndovv '""'mer t. surp11seo wheri the s1a1"'8 of Venus begins lalkmg tD him ' 3:10ID MOVIE : • '> 'Oev1I On Wheels" t 19HI Darryl H1ckroan Noreen Nash A group ~I young delinquents gill together tor a 1oy 11de 3:551 NEWS 4:00 GENE AUTRY, ·frame For Trouble G MOVIE * • '> Gamme1a Tne lrw1noble 1191>61 B11an Oonlevy Albe•I Oel<l<er Followmg an a1om1c e•PIO· s1on o, g111n1 P'""'~'o"c tur lie unleashes •Is l11ry upon Earth ~ 1nhab1tanls 4·30 D MOVIE • • Operation Da"!ef' I 19591 E•e Meyt:!• C""tk H11•1derson t Q) MOVIE • • C•oss Channel I '") W.Jyne Mor11s. Vvollne Fu1neau:t ft'PdHP•dOfl~" """' hnP .tfot·iP• 11 :00 Q) • • WyOfntng OW-_: law 119::191 John Way11t• r1~v Hut1~111 -AFTERNOON- :~; n.:~.11~1~ ... ~~~ ,.~~ 12 00 ID • • • I"'" 01 th., lo"" I 19421 CMy Citdnt hie enos JP;rn Arthur 1:450 NEWS 1:55 0 NEWS r II),* * * illf' !>t1111p1•1 2:00 CJ NEWS 1W 631 Joanne Wo(ldv. ~·<1 0 MOVIE -· -Aor ndrO Seymer • • F1au1e1n t 19581 3 JO 0 • • , Bota11, Otlv Oana w,,.,,., M~t Feu41-t 11Q53: Alan l ac.ht s ,,, •·"j Ir ""' CIOs1nQ Oars OI Md~JI\ by Armstrong & Batluk 'Mystery' back with British accent By TOM JORY NEW YORK 1AP 1 The genteel murder m ystery the killing ~enerally takes place off.screen has long been the province of t he British filmmaker Indeed, American television in its early days made extensive use of the resource. often for "The Late, Late Show " It wa s perhaps 1nev l t a hle t h at th e English·St yle whodunit would come Lo prime time. as it did a year ago in public TV 's ''Mystery ' series. "Mystery~" begins its second season tonight (at 8 on KOCE, Channel 50. and an hour later on. KCET, Channel 28) featuring five new miniseries covering 20 weeks. BACK THIS SEASON ARE three veterans of the series' first year, including six new episodes of "Rumpole of the Bailey," three new programs based on the stories of Dick Francis. and five new shows from Peter Lovesay's "Sergeant.,.. Cribb'' series. The "Mystery?" series begins with a new two.part Rrilish Broadcasting Corp.·Time-Life Television production of "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," with David Hemmings in the lead. A four-part dramatization of Francis lies· 1930s crime classic, "Malice Aforethought, .. begins Jan . 20 a nothe r BBC-Time·Life production. "Mystery!" was born. in a sense, of another British anthology series now in its 10th season on PBS, "Masterpie<.'e Theater ." Both series are supported financially by the Mobil Corp. "FOR MANY YEARS, we had wanted to do serial mystery," says Herbert Schmertz, Mobil's vice president for public affairs and a driving force behind both public television series. "We had been convinced for six or seven years that there was a market for that kind of programming, and we tested it a little bit with the 'Lord Peter Wimsey' programs we put on 'Masterpiece Theater.' "They did very well," Schmertz recalls, "and that simply reinforced our desire to do something with the British mystery.'· Schmertz says he and Joan Wilson, the series' producer for Boston's public TV station , WGBH, had a specific type of product in mind as lhey searched for suitable material. •~Wlr.,,..... HEMMINGS AS JECKYLL, HYDE Launching second 'MJ.•tery' se••on "We weren't talking about thrillers,'' he says. "rather about the intelligently developed mystery story. done fy a fine writer who has chosen mystery as hisorher schlick . "The British have had an ·abundance of fine mystery writers, .. Schmertz says, "people like Agatha Christie and so on, so there was plenty for us lo work with.'' In fact. Schmertz says, Mobil soon found itself backing production or series for "Mystery!" as well as its own developing Showcase Network for commercial stations. All of the Francis programs, under the umbrella title "The Racing Game," were financed by the oil company with production by England's Trident America. THE SHOWCASE NETWORK will break new ground in March and April with the first Agatha Christie mysteries ever produced exclusively for television ·'The Seven Dials Mystery" and "Why Didn't They Ask Evans?" "London Weekend Television came to us," 'Bulk' gets. some lines 81.IEaltY BUCK percent deal because of a size and muaculatur_e made him LOS ANGELES CAP> -Lou childhood affiiction and has had look very intimidating .. He said Ferri ·' ~.IHLD.los lhe...Hulk-on-to t•tt-e-xtettstvtr speech the green p·alnt is very· e lncrecflble-Hulk," will therapy. It was easy for him lo uncomfortable, smears ~aslly have hia nnt speakinf role in an play In the non·apeakln1 role ol and makes him feel very hot. • upcomln1 episode o the CBS lhe Hulk, but for a lon1 time It "I wanted for the public lo aee series. seemed that he would never Lou Ferrtsno "he said "And I Bealdea the Hulk, Ferrlpo have a apeakln1 role. wanted to show lhat 1 ~ould 1ct. will a1lo play the role of Carl The l ·foot -5 , 255·pound I had learned pantomime and Molino, • bodybuilder ·Who la Ferrtpo waa a Mr. America ahowln.• my feellnss without tryln1 to ralae money to oped a and Mr. Universe, bul wlthdnw apeaklnt They ne\>er needed 'reltaurant. In at IHat one scene from proteulonal football alter more than two takes when I 1 be wiU appear with the Hulk by breakinl another player's le11 played the Hulk " means ot a apUt screen. durln1 aerlmma1e. He now ll ls Ferriino'a aenaltlve "I'm In almoat ffll'J scene," plays tbe alter esc> lo Bill Bixby performance 81 the Hulk that tald r.rrtpo, "IO It'• like 'Dr. In the popular CBS aeries. hH helped Utt the sbow • o1 JelEyll and Mr. Hyde.' You 1"ll Blxby'1 ebal'•cter turna Into the the realm ot tbe monater IUQVie. • ,.. me • mJHlf -you wW ... Hulk wbm be beeom" an1end. Looklnt beyond tbe lieii• tbat tt•.-eo far from tbe H\A. I He Mt ln hll drelllnl room l'errlpo aald he wanted to .boW Dlu 1 ._., ._ltin pencae and waltlu for a eall on atqe to ,...._ 11otofw1Mrabtllty.'' plar tlMt Hulk. Hit body wu re• p•or•• are pro\1bl1 eovend wWa a klad ot .,.._ aware tba P'trrt1no 11 71 clay, Md U..t eombUMd wlt.b bit people tbat be la "• veey fine aetor. I tldnk nerrone will .... that wbm t.ber '"dUa •bow." · Schmertz remembers, "and said they had the rights to 'Why Didn't They Ask Evans?' We agreed to make an investment in that production. ··They cam e back later with 'The Seven Dials,· we a~rced to that, too. and I think there will be others. "Dick f''r ancis. on the other hand, was a project we brought lo Trident," says Schmertz. Others. like "Rumpole," were what Schmertz calls "shelf products " series merely purchased for American broadcast. Cost is a primary consideration in determining whether a program will go to "Mystery!" or the commercially broadcast Showcase Network. "We're talking the magnitude of four to five times the cost of the Christies than for the others," Schmertz says, "but you have to remember, they were made like feature movies." BOTH CHRJSTIE PROGRAMS star Sir John Gielgud, and that kind or casting inevitably drives up the cost of production. Schmertz says Mobil is negotiating now with another of England's independent producers -Thames Television -for production of 13 of Miss Christie's short stories. In addition lo the Christie stories commissioned by Mobil, Warner Bros. Television announced in November it will offer five of the late MUllDll•• n1ia mystery writer's novels as two·hour TV movies. ::I No broadcast schedule was announced for "The Stefanie P owe rs gets a jolt a s an an cient Agatha Christie Mystery Theater," which will Egyptian mumm y com es to life a nd include "They Came to BAjhdad,'' "Murder is threatens hers on "Hart to Hart" tonig ht at Easy," "The Man in the Brown Suit," JO on ABC, Channel 7 "Destination Unknown " and "Secret of ----------------------- Chimneys." A footnote on "Mystery!": Vincent Price replaces NBC's Gene Shalit as host for the PBS series. Savory Savings -------AIOUT 1$199GIEAT I 9 DINNER () 0 c Good for thrM plcteH of juicy, golden brown Kentucky .,, F1111<1 cnrc11an. ptu1 1111glt 1erv1ng1 ol cote tlaw. 0 m11hed polaloH Ind Oflvy. and a 1011. Limit l'#O 011111 Z pei purchHe. Coupon good only lor comblt1allon whilal I dark order1. Cu1tomer pay1 •fl appllcablt Hitt tea. I j Oller ••Pitta January 11, 1ee1 1 A1A Pfict1 may yery 11 pa11lclpallng loca. I tlonl. Good Oftly In loutftlm Callfotnte 1 ~·,c,,-: Good for nine pttces of 1111cy, golden brown Kentucky Fried Chicken, with lout 1ollt. I 11109 cole slaw, 1 taroa maahed potltoes and• medium g11vy. Limit two olle1s per ourchHe Coupon good only for comb11tallon wh1tt1 dark orders. Cu11ome• P•Y• all appllcabft Hits t•• OTltf ••Pllll J1n11•rv 1a. 1ee1 Pflctt may vary at oar· tlolpallf19 locatlona. Good only 111 Soutlletn Calllofnll •'*-you ... ~ .. ,,._... WlfldowlaftMI', w....e.w.. I -----·-. . 1 > .. · I I I I . ' I I (\ • I t. ~ J ,\ I • • ' ' \ _ .. . . . . _ .. Dll 11111• llllY NPll OH AN<>E C OUN TY C A L If OH NIA 25 CENTS Bangkok flu 'like worst hangover ever' I •> JODI C'ADENHi:AIJ OI -0..lt ~ .......... l11uilll) It :.tarts out with ;, pounding head11trh~ follow~<J by an a<'h)' fet-hng, • dr> t•ouKh and 11 ri\Jld temperature Or as one victim s1t1d . ··it feelb lille thf worst h111ngvvttr of your life Plan on s pending up to a week in bed rf you come down wllh tht' 81mgkok nu Like 1b predt!ct'ssors t he Asian nu. the Ilona& Kona& nu, the Sinll-Mpore nu and the A-Victoria lt ·s IA virus not treatable with an~1b1ot1c11 ('ahforrua 1i. on~ of nine states reportinK "regional outbreaks" o f the i nflue nza strain, a i.po kes man for the National {'entt'r for Disease ControJ said. ·one would expect to see in· c reas e s in January a nd fo'ebruary 1f it's going to occur." Could free hostages 4 uid Robert Alden, a spokesman for the center. Already local businesses are reoortin~ higher than us ual employee absences attributed to the nu. At Smith Tool in Irvine nearly 60 percent of the 2,000 employees were reported s uffering from the flu symptoms two weeks ago. At F'luor Corp. in Irvine the Ou outbreak hit its peak two weeks ago, just before the holiday season. "I don't have a handle on the figures," said corporate physi· cian Dr. Gerald B. Sinykin. "But we've certainly seen an increase or nu symptoms ... A bo4t 2S percent more pa- . tients are flooding the emergen· cy room at UC Irvine Medical Center complaining of flu-re- lated symptoms . Dr. Jeff Kaupke said he is ad· vising patients to rest. take fluids and aspirin if needed for headaches and fever. Antibiotics are not effective against viral infections, he added. Dr. John Bridgeman in Mis- sion Viejo also has seen a 25 per· cent increase in .patients com· plaining of nu symptoms. Although most cases .don't re- quire .a. physician's care. Dr. Bridgeman noted that some cases can developlnto middle ear and upper respiratory com- plications if left untreated. Eight elderly people have died in California as a result of the Bangkok flu. said state medical officer Loring Dales. "Because nu is not a reporta· ble disease we don't hear about all cases." said Dr. Dales. "We've only seen the tip or the iceberg." <See FLU, Page AZ) Khollleini, Alg.el-ia accord told On vaeation 2 Laguna kids die in traffic DIES IN IDAHO Cameron Blackburn KJUD IN TAHITI Kevin Carter Stocks edge near 1,000 MEW YO~P) -The Dow Jonea lnduatrt&r avera1e fiirted wltb the 1,000 level today u the stock wn.artet continued It.a 1•1 rally with a.notber advance ln heavy t.radifta. • Tbe Dow lonee avera1e ol 30 blue eblpe rote I point.a to • _.after.. baula.ol tl'acffq. . By STEVE MITCHELL 01 tt1e o.11r ,.,..,. s .. tt Two Laguna Beach school children are dead as the result of accidents that occurred while they were on Christmas vaca- tion trips with their parents. Officials at Thurs ton In· t e rmediate School sctieduled memorial services today for 12-year-old Cameron Blackburn. a seventh grader who was fatally injured in a head-on collision while returning with her family from a ski vacation in Idaho. ,-And the flag was at half mast at E l Morro Elementary School today for Kevin Carter. a second grader who was struck by a vehicle while walking across the street with 'llis parents on the island of Tahiti. Students and teachers at both schools learned or the tragedies Monday, following the two-week holiday break. Cameron Blackburn died at St. Benedict Memorial Hospital in Jerome. Idaho, Saturday following an early morning col· lision about three miles east of that city. . Idaho State Police said her father. William Blackburn. a Laguna Beach manufacturer, was driving south on U.S. 93 at about 8:30 a.m. in heavy fog. The roadway was covered with i ce, po lice said, ·and Blackburn apparently lost con- trol or the family van while try· ing to slow for a vehicle in front of him. The van careened across the center divider and into the northbound lanes where it col· lided "right headlight to right headlight" with a large tractor trailer, police said. The family was taken lo St. Benedict's where Cameron later died of her injuries. Her mother, Kathleen Blackburn remains in serious condition in the Intensive care unit at Magic Valley Memorial Hospital, officials there said this morning. Cameron 's ninth 1rade brother David was slightly in- jured in the accident, a nd William Blackburn suffered some cuta and bruises, police said. The family lives at 5 South Vista de la Luna in lower Three Arch Bay, South Laauna. Details on the death ol )'OUDI Kevin Carter were more sketchy this momina. School officials said the family was vaeationinl In Tahiti when the 7-year-old youn11ter waa killed. Hia parents had crossed a ! street and aP.Parenll)' ur1ecJ the (lee UDe. Pa1e Al) •' -· o .. ,,~ ... , ........... WORK PROGRESSES ON REVAMPING OF LAGUNA BEACH'S OLD LEGION HALL Some cla•H• may be held there H earty H next week, city offlclal1 HY Donald Dumf ord, ex-mayor, buried· Progress on center reported Funeral services were, held Saturday for former San Juan Ca,,is tra nn .mayor Donald Durnford, who died Dec. 27 following a Jong illness. He was 68. ( Durnford served on the San Juan City Council from the time the city was incorporated in 1961 until 1970. In 1961 he was elected mayor by the council. Durnford, a 26-year resident of San Juan Capistr ano. als o ser ved on the city planning com- mission. He was also a member of the city Historical Society, the American Cancer Society and the National Rine Association. The former mayor and plan- ning commissioner was born in Los Angeles. He 1st.er attended Loma Linda College and UCLA where he earned a degree in civil engineering. Before moving to San Juan, Durnford worked as an engineer for Los Angeles County. Durnford is survivd by his dauihter, Mary Durnford of San Juan Capistrano and two aunts, Inez Frank of Hawthorne and \ EX·MAYOR succu•• Oon•ld Durnford Molly Winkler of Santa Paula, California. Renovation of lhe Laguna Beach American Legion Hall for use as a community center s hould be done by the end of the month. but the facility may be in use before then. In fact, some Laguna Beach recreation department classes may be held in lhe 50-year·old building next week. The building was Laguna's first schoolhouse. The $217.350 remodeling job. funded by city and federal rev- e nue s haring money , was begun late last summer. It includes a 1,000-square-foot addition to the second story of the building , a r e mode led kitchen and restrooms, and con- struction of a wheelchair ramp. Also. five parking spaces are being installed at the site at 384 Legion St. and the front porch portion or the structure is being rebuilt. The project includes a new roof, heating system, insulation. lighting, and paint. When the work is completed, (See CENTER, Page A2> Chapma;n .enters plea NEW YORK <AP) -Mark· .. David Cllapman pleaded 1nDoetDt today to~ that be abot and killed former Beatie Jobn Lm· •·non. The ampeet's lawyer sauf be would mount an l.DlanJly cle- f .... Cb.,..,., •tood motioalrtD:i bll ~ • Ida atcle, Ult bJ•,_.'eoart._.., ...... .......... =•lllW• ~-lf~•l@J N c_,.· .,._ l•Uee ·BerMlt u...=.....,=fl· felttlllr tMum u ..... i..._ ........ . .... .. .......... .. ... ··=· ... .. , ...... -~-.... . I ln1 murder ln the second deiree, tbe m09t severe char1e poulble under New York law and punisha- ble by a maximum of 25 yean to life In prison. A char1e of ftrlt- de.tree murder i. only used ln the klllincot a police oftlcer. Chapman wuordered to NtllrD to court Feb. •, and Altmm said. be would Mt a trtal datetbeD. Tb• Judie appotDted two ptye~. Daatel lelawarll and hnard Diamond, ••4 PIJO....,.. lllltGD OM to •· aaiaeaau111m• tent to stand trial. The attorney said he wu certain that Chapman waa competent. Marks said outakle court that he ·would praent an insanity de- fense. "That's clearly the w•,'' he said lnN1PQDHtoaq .... t1on. Lennanwu=downl>lc. I oataldl tbe akota :fart.meat bulJ41M wMn M liY wD Ida wife, Yolo Ono, ud UMir -. ..... -................ . cu, ..... .,,... at .. ..... r.aaw-. ldl.,... ,_ * Defwe attone1 .loaa~ , .,,. ... , ..... =•IMl•M•• Mua•Mewldl=MlttMt a......,_lli1~nll ._. . a..,... .. ..... '°.. .... ...... , ... a..w' ....... ....._.._ ....... ...,ea~~ ... : . .!~!~~·~· --.. ·-··-·-....... _ ·- Report conflict cited By The Assoc:iated Press Prime Minfster Mohammed Ali Rajai was quoted by re porters in Tehran today as sa.v- i ng that revolutiona r y leadt·r Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini of Ira n agre ed t o a c cept un specified guarantees by Algeria thal could lead lo release or the 52 American hostages. But other 'teports or Rajai's in- ler view with Iranian Television quoted him as saying Khomeini had accepted the Algerian "un- dertaking" and did not mention guarantees. Rajai. after a meeting with Khom e ini, told Iran ian Television according to one re· port : "We asked the imam about the hostages and we ex- plained the new opinion of the U.S. government to the imam a nd also we explained the Algerian proposal whi ch has suggested that it will guarantee lo solve our problem with the United States. and the imam permitted us lo accept these guarantees and we hope to an· nounce the rest of the points.'' Rajai did not elaborate, but when the-United States sent Ir an its latest proposal for agreement to free the hostages. Iran said it cou ld accept any g uarantees t hat the Algerian mediators agreed to. According to an NBC report, Ira n lelevis ion said Khomeini and his son met wilh Rajai and asked about the latest proposal or t he Ame rican government forwarded through the Algeri ans who have been acting as in termediaries Khomeini was reportedly lold by Rajai that the Algerians promised they would resolve a n y American-Iranian dir. ferences. NBC said. a nd Iran television said Khomeini then told Rajai to accept the Algerian guarantees. In Washington. a spokesman for the State Department's Iran Working Group. George Havens, said the initial reports on Ra jai 's statements were too vague for the department to make any immediate comment. He would not discuss whether the Algerian mediators were of· fering some kind or guarantees to Iran in their own name. Coast Weather Sunny and warm Wecfnetday. Lows tonight in 40s along the coast, lower 50s inland. Highs Wed n esday 72 at the beaches, 112 Inland. IN81•BT9~~ Tlwn ii o Bolboo cl-.b that 1wll plntv of ,.,,. dorie• ad ..-orlw oil on trw. scorw. plaoloa CJ. .J ' .. lWLYPllOT .... , ------JIJST BR«.-4«1NC---• lAI• "~ /fom 1..-w·• MIOrW _,,.rt I,..... ..... ..,"''""' ... SiupPt·t~d d"'lf ~aler killed i11 police trap L.08 A.NO t;l.t:.S <AP' A auapeded coulne dH&er wu ehot Md kllled by pollc .. who HY he tried to n&I\ them down to "C•pt' " tnlp 11t•t ~·> undt-H'<IVt-r van• otfwers Ptillt•t• l.l Ch1&ri1'1> U11i1h1t> 11•1d the shootm1 un•urred Mon · ••Y ~venmg ii(h•r ia m1m ltlt1ntl(h .• -c.I '"' Arthur J f auen . 38, of •m• VaUey. 1t1(1ld 1on1t• t'(M'ldnt' tu 1u1 \&ndercovt1r officer ln the park •N "" rl( •n all nlah\ nuarket m Sunhrnd Jhabtt' said 11 pound of eo<•ai11t1 with •n estima ted 21treet '•lut· nl Slllll IJUO wui. n·1•11"1•rt'1l frum t-'OAl!:!f 's ('lir na,..... .....,,,. •r•• ""'" .._,,r...,.tl•M "· 1 t\ t. Y to; L<J 11\1' 1 Thi t't: white tcirh~. i:scurtt.-d by a toy. n c·<~l•blt· <tlt1•ndt•d dil'>'>t'"' ut ull white Buckeye High ~h~•I tudl4\ (ur thi· .. 4.'1'1111d 1Ju) 111 ddutnt:t:.of a federal Judge's 4Hegrnac•t11111 111dc1 Tht> 1'lllt:>t11blt· wits s-erved with a eourt nrder h4~' lctlt'r tl'lh11t,! hln1 flt•l h.1 1111 •·r fer .. in the case S1·h1)0l 11HH 11tl' 'a1<I th1• ~1rl:-. wouh.1 lie allowed to slay on t'arnpU3 um1I lh\· t-1111 of llw d1ty hc,·.iU:.l' then· v. as no one lo lake.> lht'lll hon 1t' 1,... drlt•.-. lra1t fta••lt' t-laf .. 8E1Hl ·1 Ll·li,101111 •Al'• Iran da1med today tha t its .irmed fur<'t:':. w1~d out l~o lra41 bngades. capturing between I 7'10 ..tmJ L ooo I ru41 '>ohh t:'r-. <Jrul hundreds or tanks and other 'chidt·• on th,· ftr'l da' of Utl.· Ion~ prumi:.cd cuunter·offens1vc ..igain:.t li. Ill\ ader... .. lrd<f-.. ki.l~hdad Ha\1111 '>i.ud lhl: countt'r attack was a "myth l'X l:.lll\i.'( unl~ in th1· 1 m aginallon of the Persian racist leaders " lraq1 rntlitar~ t·ommuniqu~ reported "attempts against our forward pos1tH111:. that have all been c rushed " Then• Wl.ll't nu 1ndepc11dt.'nl confirmation of either side's t'la1ms Japan•• t•11rrrnrt1 ••Ill ri .. 119 TOKYO <Al'l 1981 has opened as the "year of the yen" wi1" •.. dollar slidini.: be low the 200 yen lt.<vel for the first time in 23 months and most experts predicting the Japanese curren- cy's upward spurt will <·ontinue. After a falling below the 200·yen barrier on the· London and ~ew York foreign exchange markets Monday. the dollar opened ~ an Tokyo today at 199.00 yen and declmed to 198.80 yen in trad· ing before the 811nk of J apan intervened to shore the U.S. cur· rency. The dollar ended the day at 199.60 yen. down from Mon- day's close of 201.40 i.rJ Tokyo. Beeordeold Blizzard follows freeze in Midwest : By The Associated Press A snowstorm on the heels o( a three ·day record cold wave swept across the Midwest today {a l)d temperatures dropped to 'l'lta.v lows in cities on the Eastern St> aboard. Ar least nine deaths. other Ulan traffic fatalities. have been blamed on the intense cold that -.liSaulted the Eas t over the ,.,eek end. 1 Earlier story . Page A~) . The frigid air w:.i s playing ha\'OC' with car ballcnes and fuel hm·s. bflllers ll nd waler P,JJH.'s from Mam<' to G oor~ia .R ecor d l<1w tern pc ratures w<:re matched hy record high power demand 1n No rth C ll ·rl:> Ii n a . V 1 r lo( 1 n i a a n d "Jassachusctls . Thuusands of d.i.stress calls we re r eported {.r.om stranded motorists and .horn apartme nt dw e lle r s ,.wjthout heat . _With fros t reaching as far s outh as Florida. c1t1es posting _low record le mpe ratures this morning included Atlantic Cit y. N .J ., with 4 d eg r ees, and Baltimore with H. . .Blustery winds. s now. freezing Police hunt • • ·~PISt ID 'Laguna/Beach A 29-year-old Laguna Beach woman was attack ed while walking along Cedar Way Mon- night and forced into a rby wooded area where she as raped. Laguna police said the woman as walking northbound in the block of Cedar Way at about p.m . when she was approached om behind and forced into the eluded area. Cedar Way is an lley-like s tree t b e twee n press and Coast Highway on ity's north side. flcers s aid the suspect ed 1 cloth over the woman's th and told her she would be harmed if she did as he rain and sleet made driving hazardous across the Midwest a nd as far south as Arkansas while unseasonably warm tern· peratures were recorded in much of Montana and Southem California. One man was found dead of exposure inside a parked car in Richmond. Va .. where tem- peratures dripped to a record 6 degrees Monday. An uniden- tified man was round frozen to death on a downtown Chicago s idewalk Monday as t ern · pcratures dropped to 7 degrees and a Clevc•Jand man in his 60s collapsed and died while shovel- i n~ snow. /\ rather and son in Boston W(!re o ver com e Monday .by fumes from a ~as space heater in their apartment. Over the weekend a s the brutal cold swept down from Canada. three weather-related deaths were reported in Penn· Sylvania, and the body of a '1t>·year-old Maryland man was found near his unlit coal stove Suhday night, officials s aid. Record low te mperatures con· tinue d , with a reading or 11 degrees in Newark on Monday tying a Jan. 5 record set in 1935. Since Christmas, more than 15.000 motorists have telephoned the North J ersey Automobile Club for help with sluggish bat· leries and frozen gas lines, ac- cording to Thomas Rankin, e m ergency r oad s ervice manager. The m erc ury dipped to 9 degrees today at Baltimore- W a s h ingron Inte rn a tional Airport, setting a record low for the s econd day in a row. Today's reading broke an 11-degree low recorded in 1959. The early morning tern· perature in Burlington, Vt.. was 5 degrees below zero. In Virginia, several boating operations s hut down when Tidewater tributaries froie over , and hundreds of children a nd adults had a day off as furnaces and water pipes suc· cum bed to the cold. e suspect was described as t 5 feet; 8 Inches tall with a' t build. He was wearing The second and third shifts at the Norfolk Naval Air Rework Facility were excus~ because of the cold, and six schools were closed in Newport News because of a variety of weather-related problems. clothing. TiLEPHONI AM d•P91tiMMa: (714) M2-4321 CtHeMted Adveltlelftl: 142•1111 O,,tCH C4ilt• MeM: ---... Slrwt L ...... 9Ndl: ltl7 Ne. C.tl Hltft-y HllMllllMft 9Ndl: l111' INcll ......... ,. ---------- !Mlly ...... Haff ....... HOSPITALIZED AT ttOAG County Supervlaor Afley Riley's illness 'critical' Oranlo{c C~>Unly S upervisor Thomas Riley is in critical con- dition in the Intensive care unit at l loag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. his staff and hos pital aides said today. Riley, who was taken by am· bulance to the hospital Sunday nilo{ht after an apparent flareup of aslhmatic bron{'hitis. was us- ing a respirator lo breathe. one of his aides said. This is the second lime Riley h as been hos pitalized with breathing problems. He was ke pt in the hospital for a week las t May after s uffer ing a similar attack. Howeve r . the 68-year-old fo rm e r Marin e brigadier general's health had been im· proying_ since the earlier inci- dent. Riley was in such effervescent spirits. in fact. that he already had made some preliminary plans for a re·election campaign for his 5th District post in 1982. Laguna study refused No environmental impact re· port will be prepared for 1 pro- posed 56-unil federally sub· sidiied apartment complex in Laguna Niguel. The Orange County Phan.nina- Com mission voted 4·1 on Mon- day with Commissioner William MacDougall dissentjng to turn down a request for the study sought by the Laguna Niguel Community Association. Paul Hasem~n . association pres ident, said his group wanted the in-depth study because of the unique characteristics of the project at Alicia Park way and Niguel Road, which would be a low·income e nc lave in the otht!rwise arnuent area. He said county planners had railed to address cr itical issues involved in the project . includ- ing whethe r Jhe s tate Water Quality Control Hoard will lift a sewer moratorium and whether lhe housing will decrease air pollution, as suggested, by local in~ workers closer to their jobs. Hasem an st r essed that neighbors to the proposed site aren't against housing for low· income people, but he said more effort should have been made to seek alternative sites Ralph Clark i&e/,ected board chief By GLENN scon OI llM D•ll1 ,., ... SC.fl Ralph Clark was re-elected to day as the "quarterback" of th( apparently team ·o r ientec Orange Count y Board 01 Supe rvisors. rn an episode filled with a l- lusions to football, Clark wa~ chosen to serve a second con secutive one·year term as th( T Riley. who rarely takes a day orr from work, missed today's importa nt county Boa rd of Supervisors ' meeting in which a chairman for the calendar year was to be selected. .-board chairman. f 'ro1t1 Pa.-,, I CENTER ••• the facility will have 3,075 square feet upstairs. a.nd the same number on the first floor. Under a new 10·year lease agreement wjth American Legion Post 222. the co~t of the improvements would be applied to the purchase of the building if lh<' city decides to acquire it. The city originally budge ted $100.000 for construction costs, and received $40,000 in revenue sharing funds for the project. But the City Council allocated m ore than $50,000 more for the work to meet the low bid of $192,500 from D.W. Contracting of Laguna Beach'. • Previous architectural and eng ineering costs brought the total project cost to $217 ,350. Adults who rent the hall, now named the Veterans Memorial Community Center, will be able to serve liquor in the building. but will have to pay SO percent more in fees to do so. City officials also will have the right to reject applications to serve alcoholic beverages, un- der regulations adopted by the I City Council. l Also. there will be city supervision at all gatherings at the buildini;:. l'l"09IP~AI FLU ••• Dr. Dales said he expects to see an increase in outbreaks of the nu during the traditional peak rtu months of January through March. Or ange County has not report- ed any cases of Bangkok flu to the slate e pide miology office, said Dr. Dales. "We've had outweaks all around it. But we·~ heard nothing from Orange County," Dales said. "We expect it's hap- pening there too." Orange County epidemiologist Tom Prendergast said that only two cases have been positively identified as being Bangkok flu. "It doesn't mean Ws not out there ••• he said. "It's out there. There's certainly a lot of respiratory illnesses going around.'" ,.,...,._,,.Al KIDS ••• youn11ter to hurry up ana Joan them when he was struck by a vehicle. 1 School otnclali at El Morro ' Hld they plan to hold some IOlt of Hrvi"c. at the 1cbool "bllll we're JUlt wa.IUnl t.o ... tM& wbat .. ., la olla1 1'ttla tM famn1." a aclMM»l ,,_ ..... Hkl. One might s ay he has a two year win streak. Rooki e Su pe r visor Bruct Nes tande, in his first boarc meeting, was elected by other . board m e mb e r s a s vice c h ai rman , s u ccec din 11 Supervisor Harriett Wi eder. Mrs. Wieder was rumored to be interested in the chairmanship, but an aide said a fter the meetinf? that "given the m akeup or the board," she didn't purs ue the position . In a prepared s peech. though . s he no min a te d C lark a nd Neslande. She said Clark's nine years of experience on the board should allow him lo "maintain a team relationship" on the board. The other new s upervisor . Roger S tanton. added to the athletic melJtphor by describing Clark a s a "ve t era n quarterback" and Nestande as a ·'freshman running back. '· Supervisor Thomas Riley missed the meeting because he is hospitalized at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach in critical condition with asthma- ,·elated breathing problems . Clark continued with the teamwork im age as he delivered a year-ending "Slate of the County" report, in which he said supervisors will need to pool their talents to find solu· lions to expected r eductions in state funding. D.tlly ,., ... Slafl ~ COVRT HEARING ClOSED Ex-1Upervlaor Diedrich Diedrich gets closed hearing By DAVID KUTZMANN Ol I ... O•ily Pilot 5 .. 11 f'o rme r Orange Co unty Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's preliminary hearing on charges he laundered about $70,000 in campaign loans four years ago c;ontinued in Orange County Superior Court today minus . press and public. T hat's because Diedrich 's at- torney, Marshall Morgan. re- quested a closed hearing for his client Mon.day when legal pro· ceedings began. ·'This is not just a ploy on our pa rl." Morgan told Orange County Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens. who granted the defense motion under the provisions of a ltlO-year -old statute which allows closure or such prori!edings. Morgan said that, if Diedrich is r equired to stand trial al the conclus ion of his pre liminary hearing. they prefer trying the case in Orange County. And to limit ·publicity surrounding the case. he said, he wanted to ex- clude the press from the pre- Ii m inary hearing. Morgan sai$1 he was upset at published reports before Mon- day ·s hearing began thal said plea bargain efforts with state prosecutors had broken down. Th~ lawyer denied any such ne~otiations h ad taken place and used that as an example of the type of coverage he was try· ing to foresta ll. But an attorney for the"CRS radio n etwo rk . D o ugla s Edwards or Los Angeles. argued t h at l ittle would he a c - complis hl'd in closing Diedrich':. hearing because of the "hit anc! m iss" type of coverage that would r esult. Edwards said having etn open hear ing would ins urt.-more ac curate coverage of the procet•d- ings ins tead of forcing r eporters to r ely on sources within the hear ing . The a ttorney als o said he believes the statute allowing closure or proceedin~s is un- constitutional. Diedrich. who briefly spoke with reporters before the hear· ing began. races four felony charges involving alleged viola- tions of state political campaign regulations. Though s ix persons were originally named as defendants in the first Grand Jury indit't· ments in 1977, only Diedrich now faces a potential trial. .! Housing protests slated State coastal commlaaionera wlll hear arauments this month fr o lJl a So uth Laguna homeowners group op~sing a development or nearly 500 units in the hills above the seaside village. Broadmoor Development Go. has received regicmal coastal commission approval for their proposed 212·acre s ubdivision which lies just southeas t of the Aliso Creek Golf Course and north of South Laguna . State c.•ommissioners will hear an appeal by the South LagUl),a Civic Association during a meet- ing al lhe Queen Mary Hotel in Long Beach Jan. 20 to 22. Broadmoor has received re- gional commission endorsement to build 28 single-farruly Jots on about 15 aeres. another 354 con- dominium units on 55 acres. and 100 affordable housing units within that a rea . The r e maining 142 a c res, touching on the Aliso Greenbelt, 1s open space dedicated to the- county. Rut members of the civic as- sociation say the project in- cludes mass grading that it believes will deface the Aliso Peak ridge linc. Rroadmoor plans to remove R70.000 (•ubic y~s of earth for the project. and says the s ub· division will require 709.000 c·ubic yards or fill dirt. But the development firm says it is avoiding rigid. s leep slopes and rial building pads in an ef- fo rt lo provide as natural a slope as possible on the hillsides. And a regional commission re- quire ment insists the develop· mc nt would not be visible from the Aliso canyon floor or Pacific Coas t Highway. The civic group also fears r unoff from the development will affect the open spat'e por· lion of the pro perty a nd flow through what members term in- adl'quate drainage syste ms lo be dumped on West Strl'et beach in South I .aguna Owmical bank cuts prime to 19.5 percent NEW \'OR K !/\J>J Chc·mu·al Bank toda r lowered its r>nmt· lending ra'tc hy one 1wrcent agi' point to Ill 5 percent. undcrculttni! 11tht'r ma1or banks ;.ind add1ni.: moml·ntum t11 a broad dc<'ltn<' 111 intl•rcst rate~ Tht· rnovt• hy Chl·m1c;.il . the nat111n ·:-. ~1 xl h largl'Sl t o m mcrctal hank. 1:amt• onP day aft<.'r Morgan <:uaranty Trust Co broke with the rest of the bllnkin~ industry and droppea its prime to 20 percent. Marine Midland Bank today m alclled - Morgan. Most major banks still are quoting a primt• rate of 20.5 per· cent. which is down from the record 21.5 percent that became wl(lespread amon~ banks in mid·December As banks nationwide are cut- ting their prime lending rates. there has been an unusual twist: The trendsetting big banks are n ow follo win g th•e lead of smaller banks. .!. • • lllllln UllY Ml OHANGl COUNTY C A LI~ OH NIA 25 CENTS Bangk~k-flu 'like w:orst hangover ever' •1 JODI CADENHt:AIJ Of .......... _ ..... L'11u•ll> It J1t11rb out with ti pound1n& head1i1cht followt<l 'b)' an a<'h)' fttllni£ • dry 1•ough and a nuld ttmVl'rlillure Or au ant' v1C't1m i.i.1d. · It r.,.,lii like tht' worst h1u1&over of youa lilr Plan on spending up to a w~k ln bed lf )'OU ('Om t do wn with lht' Bangkok nu Like 1l!> pre<..l t't'e!>sori. lht! AlilMn Ou, lht! Hon.i Kon& flu, the Sln&apc>re nu 1tnd the A-Victoria it '1 111 virus not treatable wilh 1rnt1biotics l'~lllforni1i1 1s one of nine states rt!portlna "regional outbreaks" of the Influenza s train, a i.pokei1man ror the National l'~nter for Disease Control said_ ·'One would expect to see in· 1· r 1: a s e s i n J a n u a r y a n d t"ebruary 1f 1t 's going to occur." Could free hostages I ' ~ said Robert Alden. a spokesman ago, just before the holiday for the center. season. Already local businesses are "I don't have a handle on the reoor1tinll higher than us ual figures," said corporate physl· employee absences attributed to ciao Or. Gerald B. Sinykin. "But the flu. we've certainly seen an increase Al Smith Tool in Irvine nearly of flu symptoms." 60 percent of the 2,000 employees A bout 25 percent more pa- w ere reported suffering from tients are flooding the emergen- the flu symptoms -two weeks cy room at UC Irvine Medical ago. Center complaining of ll.u-re- A t F1uor Corp. in Irvine the nu lated symptoms . outbreak bit its peak two weeks ' or. Jeff Kaupke said he is ad· vising patients to rest, take fluids and aspirin if needed for headaches and fever. Antibiotics are not effectlve against viral infectlops, he added. Dr. John Bridgeman in Mis· sion Viejo also has seen a 25 per- cent increase in patients com- plaining of nu symptoms. Although most cases don't re- quire a physician's care, Dr. llridgeman n~ted that some cases can developlnto middle ear and upper respiratory com· plications if left untreated. Eight elderly people have died in California as a result of the Bangkok nu, said stale medical officer Loring Dales. "Because nu is not a reporta· ble disease we don't hear about all c ases ." s aid Or. Dales . "We've only seen the tip of the iceberg." ' (See FLU, Page AZ) Khomeini, Algeria accord t~ld 5 Irvine aides assailed By RICHARD GREEN Ol U. Dolllf Pl ... Steff Irvine City Manager William Woollett Jr. has recommended that four building inspectors be fired and a Fifth be demoted for allegedly a ccepting gr atuities from building contractors. One of the city employees has resigned, another isn't talking to city officials and the other three will appeal Woollett's recom- mendation, according to Assis· tant City Manager Paul Brady Jr. In addition to __ the ad - ministrative action, three or the inspectors -Manuel Linares, 34, of Corona; Daniel Bullard, SO . of Costa Mesa, and A1thur Peck. 51, or Anaheim -will be arraigned Wednesday in Harbor Court on misdemeanor charges of solic iting and accepting gratuities. Brady said the ther two in- spectors -Lou Perley. 64 , of Mid way City and Lowell Shepard, 58. or Irvine -weren't criminally implicated, since they didn't solicit gratuities but merely accepted them when they were given. Bullard, Peck and Shephard will appear before a personnel board headed by city Director or Administrative Se rvices Michael McNamara in order lo appeal the administrative action pending against them. Bullard and Peck face dismissal from their jobs and Shephard would be demoted from a supervising inspector to a senior inspector, meaning his annual s alary would be reduced fron $29,472 to $27,996, Brady said. Perley chose to quit his job rather than appeal the dismissal recommendation. Linares hasn't filed an appeal with the city and his employment Is therefore now terminated. The men are accused ot pres· suring building contractors for liquor, food and overtime pay in exchange for speedy building in· spection s . Without tile gratuities, some of the Inspec- tors would "nitpick" and slow down construction process, police uaert. In Sbephard 's case, the primary alle1auon aeainst him is tbat a bulldlnl contractor placed a bottl~ of Uquor ln hla car and be ne1lected to report the 11tuatJon to author:tUes. Brady aald the admlnlatrative acu.-. .,alnat the men and tbe criminal action are two separate matt.en and there la no CODcena that oae would prejudice the other. , o.llr Plte4 l&efl ,..._. HOSPITALIZED AT HOAG County Supervisor Riiey Riley's illness 'critical' · Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley is in critical con- dition in the intensive care unit at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, his staff and hospital aides said today. Riley, who was taken by a m- bulance to the hospital Sunday night after an apparent nare\Jp of asthmatic bronchitis~ was US· ing a respirator to breathe, one of bis aides said. This is the second lime Riley has been hospitalized with breathing problems. He was kept in the hospital for a week last May after suffering a s imilar attack. However, the 68-year-old former Marine brigadier general's health had been im· proving since the earlier inci· dent. Riley was in such effervescent spirits, in fact, that he already h ad made some preliminary plans for a re-election campaign for his 5th District post in 11182. Riley, who rarely takes a day !>ff from work, missed today's important county Board of . Supervisors' meeting in which a chairman for the calendar year was to be selected. · Swutikas at fire SONORA <AP) -Swastikas and anti-Semitic slo1ans were painted on the wall of a restaurant east of here before It was d•troyed in an arson fire, Tuolumne County sheriff's office reported todaf. The blue caused tl00,000 dama•e Suaday to Rube'• Steak House alon1 State Route IOI. ' Chapman pleads • innocent NEW YORK <AP > -Mark David Chapman pleaded innocent today to charges that he shot and killed former Beatie John Len· non. The suspect's lawyer saad he would mount an insanity de- fense. Chapman, 25, stood motionless. bis hands at his side, and ringed by armed court officers, as he en- tered bis plea during a brief ap· pearance in Manhattan Supreme Court before Justice Herbert Altman. Tight security was in ef· fect throughout the courthouse. The only words he spoke were, "Not guilty," in response to the court clerk's query on how he pleaded to an indictment charg- ing murder in the second dearee, the most severe charge possible under New York law and punisha· ble ~ a maximum of 25 ye.ars to life in prison. A charge of first· degree murder is only used in the killingorapoliceofficer. ~ Chapman was ordered to etum lllllllllm• to court Feb. 25, and Altm n said. he would set a trial date then. The j udge appointed two psychiatrists. Daniel Schwartz and Bernard Diamond, and psychologist Milton Kline to eJC· amine Chapman. Defense attorney Jonathan Marks withdrew his request that Chapman be examined to see whether he was mentally compe· tent to stand trial. The attorney said he was certain that Chapman was competent. Marks said outside court that be would present an ins anity de· fense. "That's clearly the issue," he said inresPonsetoa question. Lennon was gunned down Dec. 8 outside the Dakota apartment building where he lived with bis wife, Yoko Ono, and their son, Sean, on Manhattan's West Side. Chapman was arrested at the scene. Following bis arrest for the shooting, he was put in isolation in a Bellevue HospitaJ cell, kept un- der 24-hour suicide watch and ell· am ined by psychiatrists. Bank lowers • pnme rate by one point NEW YORK (AP> Chemical BanJt today lowered it. prime lendint rate by one percentqe potnt to U.5 percent, undercuttlnl other major bank• and addinl momentum to a broad decline ln lDtereat rates. The ~ by Chemical, the nation'• 1ixth-larieat com- mercial bank, came one day after Mortan Guaranty Trait Co. broke wttb the rest ol the banklnl . iadUlt.r'y and dropped lb D1ime to JO percent. Marine Midland Bank today matebed Mor1u. Moet major bank• 1tUt are cauMbll a prime ra• ot •.a,.,. cat, ,,tdch &a down hom tM neor.s n.:reeat u.at ••me wlde1pre ~moa1 baalt1 bl .... o........ . ....................... *' .... --= ~ ........ ~. --~· fte ta11P IIHll Illa ...... ••• ,........ ti• •••• .. ........... r 0..1,~su"- SIGNING OFF AT McCARDLE'S STA MESA LANDMARK N08talglc meHage board victim of bureaucracy Sign language Me.sans 'to miss' messaf{es By JERRY CLAUSEN Of ... 0..1, ...... , .. " A small, sometimes humorous and often philosophical bit of Costa Mesa nostalgia will be up- rooted Friday -the victim or a city ordinance des igned to ·eliminate business s igning cluster. When Randy Mccardle opened his first Real Estaters office in an abandoned Van de Kamp's bakery outlet at Newport Boulevard and 17th Street, a 3- by S·foot plywood signboard came with the building. That was in 1960. Twenty years and seven addi· tional offices later , the signboard is bearing its last message this week. The city's sign ordinance - passed by the City Council in 1974 and strongly enforced the past three years as Planning Department personnel complete a canvass of all business signs - cau1ht up wt.h Mccardle early this year. No permit ever was issued for erection of the signboard in the mid 19508. And, says city zoning inspector Winnie Renner, the plywood structure Is in the · public right-of-way and Its paint· ed messqe chan1es e;,ery Mon· day -a "no-ro" under the 1974 ordinance. McCartile remembers the first message he put on the board, one he aays set the pace for the Stocks edge near 1,000 . . NtW YORK (AP> -TM Dow .Jon'1i ladultrtal averaa• IUtt9d wltb die 1,000 level toda1 u die 1tock market cont.lnued HI 1111 rallJ .. wlU. IDOlMr 9Cl•uee la .... ., tndml. t.u b9elt mu. ...................... ,,.. .,.. 1IMI ...... ., • _... ........... ,..... .. ,,. .,_..,... ...... .,tn .... next 20 years and drew rar more attention than a real estate ad· vertiseme.nt. "It was . 'Experien ce Eliminates Experiments ·." Mccardle recalls Subsequent messages have in- cluded: "Houses Are Built of Brick and Stone, Homes Are Made of Love Alone," "A Path Without Obstacles P r obably Leads Nowhere," and "Luct< is What's Len. After Maximum Ef. fort." Othe r mes s ages were humorous, like "Happiness Is Four Green Li~hts In a Row.·· One motorist who passed the office daily on his way to work penned a note o r thanks to Mccardle: ·'For the past 10 years I have been driving by your office and I've been amused by the humorous, homely words of wisdom displayed . . . Thanks for the chuckles." Another letter writer often trapped in the traffic backed up behind the signal at Newport and 17th noted: "I've enjoyed your sign. That's one red lilhl I don't mind 1etlin1 caught at." McCardle says he hates to lose the s mall message board. "It's been there so Ions and we've had so darn much fun with It. Moel (messaees> were corny UtUe thiqs, but people would Identify us throu1b that si1n." ~ McCardle's l.ln 't the only lou. A 1~111 er who lettered a new eve11. Monday ia out of east one JOb, lro cally, that moonll1bter. who doeln't want to be Iden· tlfled, la a city employ• durtq lb• rel\llar workday . . . Report conflict cited By Th~ Associated Press Prime Minister Moham m<:d Ali Rajai was quoted by rl;' porte rs in Tehrun tod:.iy as say- ing that revolutionary lt;oadcr Aytttollah Ruhollah Khomeini of I rttn agreed to a cce pt u n s pecified guarantees by Alg<:ria that could lead to release or the 52 American hostages But other reports of Rajai 's tn· terview with Iranian Television quoted him as saying Khomeini had accepted the Algerian "un· dertaking" and did not mention guarantees. _ Rajai, after a meeting wit.h Khomeini , told Ir anian Television according to one re· porl : "We asked the imam about the hostages and we ex- plained the new opinion of the U.S. government lo the imam and also we e xplained the Algerian proposal which has s uggested that it will guarantee to solve our problem with the United States. and the imam permitted us lo accept these guarantees and we hope to an· nouncc the rest or the points." Rajai did not elaborate, but when the United States sent rr an its latest proposal for agreement to free the hostages. Iran said it ('OUld accept a-ny guarantees t hat the Algerian mediator!> agreed to. . According lo an N RC report, Iran televi s ion said Khomeini and his son met with Rajai and asked about the latest proposal of the Ame rican government forwarded through the Algerians who have been acting as in· termediaries. Khomeini was reportedly told by Rajai that the Algeria n!> promised they would resolvf.' an y Ame ri can ·lranian d if· Jerences. NBC said, and Iran television said Khomeini then told Raja i to a cce pt the Algerian guarantees. In Washington. a spokes man for the State Department's Iran Working Group. George Havens. said the initial reports on Ra- j ai 's statements were too vague for the department to make any immediate comment. He would not discuss whether the Algerian mediators were of· rering some kind of guarantees to Iran In their own name. Coast Weather Sunny and warm Wednesday. Lows tonight in 40• alon1 the coast,. lower 50s inland. Highs Wednesday 72 at the beaches, 82 inland. I •, l,C ... '"9ICia • Jin . ,., ---JIJST BREAKING--- ~pected dnlf{ ~aler · fd,llRd in po.lice trap • ~· .. LOI ANHELES l Af"I A •"9..-Cted coulne dealer WH a.M and kll~•·d h)' f"•lk•· whti &Ill)' ht' tried to run them down to nt·•~ a tras; ""' l1y undt•ffovc·r v1t•e olfh:tin • P<Mw•· LI t 'httrl .. i. llll(hlt' u1d thti 1hoollnti ~t·urrttd Mon d'y ev"1u1ai llllN' 11 ,~~urn 1cJt.nt1fiC!d u Arthur J lo'111ers, 38. of uni Val~yi 11old aom4' l'oc·auw to an un.de!n·ovtir officer in the _parluna k>t of 11n till m~ht mMrll .. t lft SW\l•nd · . H1Kbfe ·said 1t ,,.,und M 1•1w111m· with ian \·11t1matl'd street ~·•tut' uif $\<Kl 000 11.." n •1·11\·1•1t•d 1111111 l"1ut'r ~ l"ilf ............... , .. ,,,., ............... . ot '\'KI':\•: I.a (f\l' 1 Thr~ wh1l l! ktrl~. ei>cort~ by a lV. n l.'ciru.l 1&hl(· 111t•·ndt'd dll!ll'tci't al •II whale liuckeye lliih ~ool Wdin rur lht• 'lt•l'hnd d111y tn tJd111tn<'l' of a federal judge's ... e1rr11ftl 11H1 uul .. 1 Thti C'OltNtitblti wus "ierved with a court cwdt'r hour li.ll•r tt·ll111t( him n4.lt tolfllcrfti• c in the t'a se S.'hulll uU11·l1s1., :>dtd lht• .i11 I~ wuuld ht· allowed to stay on ~mvu..' u.nt tl tht· t·ntl 11r lhc thl\ hN·a u:.t· there was nu one to t .i k r I h t-Ill hull If• ,,_... ,.,...u • .-d u•• •ap.-• \\ \!'\H 1~(;·1•11\ \I ' 1 H1t·hard M N1x-un·s lawyer thrt'.1lr111-.1 1·uurt .w111111 tc l(f'a) U1 kccv ~nutti Democra ts from reC't'I\ u1~ rh., lorrnN 1->n·:.Hlt'nl )) taµl'l> and other doeuments re l.111ni; tu \,,. 1r11h:r M llat~ Jr , a federal lawye r said Thr l>t•mu, 1 Jb have ai.kcd for all tape!. and papers on llJ1g.,. m il• in '1;1Jwn ... Wah:n~ale dt:ft:nst', on Nuwn admintslra lH•O 11.1rcta1JVHll!.. tlt•l·1~1un)) on bornbmK C1'mbodia and other is :.ues for u.se in ht'artng)) starltnK l''nday on Haig ·s nomination 'lo llt'come Ronald Hcagan l> M.'t rt:tary or ~talc. ( Re lalt>d story. A4 > Befort> Nixon·)) n•s 1~nat11m at the hei~ht of the Watt'r~ate :-t•andal. llaig :-.erved as Whitt• Jlouse l'hief of staff Japa11 •• t•urrr11c·11 •fill n•h•fl 'I''~~.,.., 1td '1 l~HI hal> opened us the "year of the yt'n" . wittl tnl" i111llar !'>hd1111'! hl·low Utt' 200 yen level for the first time i(.I i3 mouth~ and most l'Xµerl!> prcd1tt1ng the J<.1panese curren· 'c)''S upward !>purl will continue After a falling below thl· ~IO yt•n barrier on the London and ~ew York fore11o(n uch<tng(' markt•ts Monday. the dolla r opened U\ Tokyo tot.Jay al I~ IHI yn1 and dct"ltned to 198.80 yen in trad ing before the Hank of Japan intervened to s hore the U.S. cur rency The d ollar t•ndetl the day at 199.60 yen. down from Mon· day's C'losl' of 20 1 411 in Tokyo Blizzard follows · 'freeze in Midwest • "'Ry The Assoclalf'd Press A snowstorm on I.he· hN·ls ,,r iJ thi:ee·day recc>rd cold waVl' :.wtpt across the Midwest today anJ' t emperatures dropped to new lows In l'ltit•s on the 1-:astern Seaboard. Ar least nine deaths. other lh¥1) traffie fatalities, have been bla111ed on the tnll'nst· cold that assaulted the East over the we,Ckend. C Earlier story. Page A4l The frigu1 air was playing havoc with car batteries · and fuel lines. h111lcr-; and water pipes from M<1tn(' t11 <;l·org1a B e cord low l l•m peraturcs wcrt' matched hy r1·c1>rd high po~e r <l<>munrl 1n Nort h Carolina. V1r1::1n1a a nd Massachusetts Thousands of dist.ress calls were reported f,rom stranded motorists and fr9.m apa rtm e nt dwell e r s without heat. Wlth fros t re ac:hing as far i>Oulh as F'lorida. c1t1es pos ting low . record temperatures this morning included Atlantic City, N J :· with 4 d<·J(rccs, a nd BallJmore with 8. Blus tery winds , snow, freezing rain. and s leet made driving b.aurdous across the Midwest and as far south as Arkansas wt\ilc unseasonably warm tem Poell'.!illu re s were r ecorded in Fram Pagr . I I FLU ••. Dr. Dales said he expects to en increase 1n outbreaks of flu during the traditional ak flu months of Janua ry rough March Orange County has not report· any cases of Bangkok nu to e stale epidemiology office. id Dr. Dales . .. We've had outbreaks all ound it. But we've heard "ng from Orange County," • said. "We expect it's hap· g there too.·· 1e County epidemiologist .Prendergast said that only ales have been positively fled as being Bangkok nu. doesn't mean it's not out ," he said. "It's out there. e 's certainly a lot of r~~.ory illnesses going much of Montana and Southern l'<1hforn1a. ( >ne man was found dead of t·x pos ure inside a parked car in H il'hmond. Va .. whe r e te rn· ~1eratures dripped lo a record 6 degrees Monday . An uniden- tified man was fourrtJ frozen to death on a downtown Chicago s idewalk Mo nday a s tem - peratures dropped to 7 degrees a nd a Cleveland man in his 60s c·ollapsed and died while shovel· ing snow. A father and son in Boston were over come Monday by fumes from a gas space heater 1n their Clpartm•mt. Over lhe wt-e ke nd a s th<: hrulal cold swept down from Canada . three weather·relatcd deaths were reported in Penn· sy lvania. and the body of a 70-year-old Maryland man was found near his unlit coal stove Sunday night. officials s aid. Record low te mperatures con· Hnu~d . wirh a reading of 11 d'egrees in Newark on Monday tyin~ a J an. 5 record st•t in 1935. Since Cllristmas, mor<: than 15,000 motorists have le It: phoned the North .J..rsey Automobilt> Club for help with sluggish hat teries and frozen gas lines, .._c cording to Thomas Kank1n. t• m e r g en l' y r o a d :. 1· r v 1 c· c• manager The m c rrury d1ppe 1I to 9 degret's today at Balt imore Wa s h1ngt11n lnte rn <1twnal Airport, st·ttmg a ri:c·ord low for the sN·ond day tn a niw Today's reading broke an 11 ·dcgn ·c· low recorded in 1959 The early ·morning t e m - perature in Rurlington. Vt., was !i degrees below zero. In Virginia, several boating operations s hut down when Tide water tributaries froze over, and hundreds of children and adults had a day off as furnaces and water pipes suc- cumbed to the cold. In North Carolina. Greensboro and Raleigh-Durham had record lows of 6 degrees. Duke Power Co. operated at reduced voltage Monday and warned that unless customers voluntarily cul back usage there would be rotating blackouts. • D•llY ,.,I .. la.ff .._. UP IN FL VINO RINGS Hell~opter Foe Wllaon Heliports opposed in Mesa Tht· Los-Angl•lt•s Times' and Uow1wy Saving:-. <1n1I Loan·~ rl'· (!\H•st for approval Of hl•licllpll•r pads at thl•tr norlh Cosla Mesa l1uildmgs wc•n · tahlcd hy lhl' Cilv Cc>urll'tl Monday urrud 1·umplamt:'i bv l'omrnunit .v lt•atlt·rs l•'o rnwr mayor llubt•rt Wilson bltslcrcd lht• eour11.·1I for consider- i_ng lht• c:onlroversrnl requests on its consent l .. ..ilendar which con· I a ins items routinely approved withoutdisl'ussion. W ii son, one of Sl'Vl'ral residents who has complained about low· flyi n~ helicopters over north Mes a in rel'ent months. said he had learned of the proposals ac· c•idcntally "It actually stunned me ," he told Mayor Arlene Schafer "I havt· hea r1l no discussion (of the ISl>Ul'S) .. llt• as kt•d why no puhlic hear· 1ngs had hccnsc hedulcd . Charil's Hobe rts. the l'ity's l)l unrun~ din•ctor. explained that hoth requests had been approved by the Phmning Commission lhl' Times request in September. 1979. and the Downey Savings ap· plication in fo'ebruary , 1980. Roberts noled that under city policy. ust· 1>ermil decisions for sul'h issues havl' been delegated by the council lo the commission and arc final unless appealed. Neither decision was appealed. he said. But. Roberts noted, the state's Division of Aeronautics isn 't satisfied. It wants City Council approval. City Manager Fred Sorsabal told council members by memo that City l\ttornc.:•y Tom Wood had SUf.!~Csted it would be wiser to t•o nn·dt• to the stale than fi ght over the• 1ssut• of power delega ti on "In a spitting contest with the state,·· Sorsabal quoted Wood as rl·porting. "we're lik~ly to gel all wet." Wilson requested that the issue be tabled for s tudy and an e n v1ronmc•ntal impact report drafted to deal with noise pollu· lion. ·'I would consider this as possibly one of the most imf.\QT· tan I a(·liom; before you in 1981 ." Wilson told the council. The former mayor noted that M nditional council approval last yt:a r for a heliport at Pacific Sav· 1ngs and Loan 's proposed clt1wntown headquarters already had raised the wrath or citizen or· g:.antziilioni. all over the city. "You are opening the door for pri vale helicopters that are going to hl' lhc· J l'l type," he ad- monished lie claimed that on one recent day he counted 32 helicopters Oy- inl( below 500-fcet altitudes over his north Mesa home, flights that shook a picture from the wall and jt•opardize1I pl ales on shelves. U a vc Lieighton, president of the Notth Costa Mesa Homeowners Association and leader of a re· cenlly formed coalition of Costa Mesa homeowners associations, reminded the council that the or· ganizations he represents a lready had protes ted helicopters over the city and heliports in the community. Councilman Donn Hall, who moved to table the proposals until Feb. 2. said he has been told that helicopters are continuing to cut across north Costa Mesa at low levels. -~--- Guns stoleri in Costa Mesa Pollce believe a burglar used a knife or screwdriver to jimmy the locked door latch at an eut Co1ta Mesa apartment and •teal three rlfies and three pJ1tol1 Sunday. Resident William 8. Braden told officers the 1una were -valued at about Sl,500. Police laid tbt thief apparmt. ly 1tuffed the WHpol\I lato a plllo• cue and ned . L , • Diedrich closed By DAVID KllTZMANN Of .. o.ity Hee ..... Former Orange County Supervisor Ralph Oiedtich's preliminary hearing on char1es he laundered about $70,000 ln 'campaign lo¥'s tour years a10 continued in Orange County Superior Court today minus press and public. · That's because Diedrich's at· torney. Mars hall Morean, r e· quested a closed hearing for his client Monday when legal pro· ceedings began. "This is not just a ploy on our part, .. Mo rgan told Ora nge County Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens. who granted the dcfenst motion under the 1>rov isions or a 100-ye ar-old st<1t ull' which allows closure of such proceedings. - Morgan s aid that, if Diedrich ts required lo stand trial at the conC'lusion of his preliminary hearing. they prefer tryi ng the l' asc in Onmg<' County. And to ltm1t publit•ity surrounding the t·a~l'. he said. he wanted lo ex- clude the press from the pre· ltm111ary he aring. Morgan said he was upset at pu bit shed reports before Mon- day's hearing began that said plt'a bargain efforts with stalt· proseC'ulors had broke n down. The. l~wyer denied any such Ot');!Ot1at1ons had taken place and used that as an example of the type of coverage he was try- ing lo forestall. But an attorney for the CBS r a d i 1) n l' I w o r k , I> o u g I a s Edwards or 1.os Angeles, argued t h a t l i ttl e wou ld be ac· complished in l'losing Diedrich's hearing bcrausc of the "hit and miss " typt: of covcra~e that would result Edwards said having an upt:n hearing would insure more ac· curate coverage of the pr:oetcd· . ings instead of fo rcing n•1><>rte rs ·to rely on sourc·,::s within the ht· a ring. The atlorn<.'Y uls11 !'iaid he bC'l it•ves th1· stt1tut<' allowing closure of prm·ccdings is un con stilut1onal Taxi ride unsn't /are A grouµ of a1Jpa renlly impatient rounders are be· ing sought by Newport Beach Police today <.tfter they depart e d fro m a Newport watering spot in a taxi. m inus the taxi driver. Cahbic Clyde 1-'<>w lcr told police he 'd driven to Hobby McGee's saloon on Coast Highway to pick up a fare and went inside, leaving the engine run ning. I\ parking valet later told police he witnessed a group of men pile into the cab and drive off into the night. Newport P olice Sgt. Jim Carson later located th e cab p a rk e d un · damaged in front or the Rusty P elican , a nothe r Ne wport night spot. The miscreants re main at large. Clark retains county gavel D•llY ,.llet St.If I'-• CARRIES BALL AGAIN 'Quarterback' Clark Mesa to reap $1.3 million in U.S. funds Costa Mesi! is expected to re- c·c i ve about Sl.3 million i n ft>deral General Revenue Shar· ing Act of 1976 funds and has set in motion a plan to offer one 10th 11( the income to social program organizations serving the city. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said the 1981 allocation follows Cong ress' recent approval of a new appropriation for the next three fi scal years. lie noted that the council ha s disbursed $410,000 in such funds to ~O different or ganizations UVl'r the past five years. The or. gan1 zations, he said. gencrnlly provide social services directly hent'fiting the poor . dis<idvan- tagcd or a~cd . M <.1yor Arlene Schafe r set Jan 21 as the deadline for applil'a lions from groups hoping to ~ha n· lhe newest allocatwn Sht• mimed Councilman Donn llall and Councilwoman Norm<t He rtzog a s a committee to screen applications and rec- vmmendations for allocations on fo'eb. 6. During the past fi ve years. tht> largest allocations h<1ve gone lo the Orange Coast YMCA for use in its Family Crisis Center and the Del Mar Shelte r. Sorsabal not<>d Othl·r organizations rct'eiving laq.(l' shares tndudl' lht• Assess· m ent a nd Treatmenl Services <"<·ntt·r . thl· fo'amily Ueve l1Jp ml'nt Program. Youth Employ ment Service. Feedb<ick Foun dCJlion tTLC1 , Share Our Selvt.•s <SOS i and the Mardan Founda - tion Stud~nts protes-t 0 ENVEH t AP, Students at de bt-ridden Colorado Women's College donned white arm bands and staged a protest march Mohday. demanding the res· ignation of President Sherry Manning m the wake of a pro· posed cut that would leave half of the faculty jobless. By GLENN SC01T Of .. o.lly ~ ....... ., R alph Clark was re-elected to day as the "quarterback" of lht apparentJy t.eam-orientec O range County Board 01 Supervisors. fn an epi1;ode rilled with al· lusions lo football , Clark wa! chosen to serve a second con seculive one-year term as tht board chairman. One might s ay he has a two year win streak. Rookie Supervisor Bruct Nes t ande, in his first boarc meeting, was elected by othe1 b oa rd m e mbe r s as vict ch airman . s u cceedin 11 Supervisor lhrriell Wieder. Mrs. Wi eder was rumored to ht. interested in the chairmanship, but an aide said after the meetinJ? that "given the makeup of the board," s he didn't pursue the position In a prepared s1n•ech. though. s he nomin<ited C lark and Ncstunde. She said Clark 's nine ycurs of experien<.·<' on the board should allow him to "maintain a team relationship" on the board. The othe r new s upervisor, Roger Stanton. added to the athlettr m<•la phor by describing C lark u s a ''veteran quarterback" and Nestandc as a ··freshman running hack." Supervts <Jr 'l'ho m <1s Hiley m 1sscd the meettnJ! hec<1use he is hospitalized al lloag Me morial Hospital in Newport Heach in critical condition with asthma· ··elated breathing problems. C lark l'ont inued with the l<'amwork image as he delivered <1 year-ending '"Stat e of the Co unty" repor t. in which he s a11f s upervisors will need to pool rhctr talt•nts to find solu- tions to expected reductions in state funding. 1-;arly tndicattons . he said. arc that st ate· hail-out funds offered !>IOC(' lht• passaJ::l' or Proposition 13 will h1· dramatically cut in 19RI . ml•<ming that the <"ounty will nt:t•d to find nl'W sour<·cs of fun<l s or ahun<lon somt• un · Sp<•(•tfi1.·d (JfOJ.t'fUlll~ lit• saul tllt• h11anl 's <·ap;tl'tl~· for innO\·ut ilm wi ll he tested in 1981 . addlni.t "It ap1wars now thal ltw pa1·1· of t•\'t•nts is mov in~ so <1u1<·kl) lhut unlc•i.s w<: kc·cp our sights on tomorrow. we ('an't keep in lom·h with today .. Clark said the county did use c·realive thinking to ··forge a po1u•rful a lliunc·t·" with husin<'si. and community leaders to get thl• statt• I A·g1~l:.it urt• to pass a hil l to Sl'I up a st•parate Caltrans fund ing <11 s tric'l for Orange t'ounr ~ And tlf' not t•d that lh<' dl•vcloµm (•nt of a housing bond ts:o.ut• to ftnan<·t· ht•lo"' markt·t· ralt• hnmt· morlgagt•i. also was an 1•xa m1lh-of finding modern snlut1ons ~o f}re~stng problems 11 0"1'\'t•r . ht· l'laim crl that c11u n ty"1d1· lt•amwork broke down wtwn 1t t·amt· lo me rging th P Sheriff"-" Dt.'part ment wrth · the county Marshal s 0111cc 1ast year. which. he said, c·ould s ave lhl' c<>unty $4 million Clark laid the· hlamc on the county's j udgt•s. who he said "only want lo look at it as a very narrow fight to protect their own piece ofturr .. Vot e r s pas sed a county . sponsored initiative la!>t year sup· porting a merge r of the two agen· cies that both s1 rve the courts. I ! .I;- • I • t I . I .11,,, l/\N 1.t\11• I/\ OH AN<.~ < OUN I Y l Al If UHNIA 25 CENTS Bangkok flu 'like worst hangover ever' 8t JOIN CADENHt;l\D .......... N91_ .. llaually 1l slaaru ou\ wllh 11 poundina bead•t•ht .follow"'1 b)' an achy re.,lln&. 11 dry cou&h and • mild 1em~n1turt- Or as 1)Re VJl'hm s a.1d. 'll f.sels hk~ lM wuri.t ha.ngover or ywr lift' .. Plan on s pendan& up l o 11 week t.n bed 1f you t.·ome down with the Ban&kok Ou Like 1t!> pr ~del"~S!>ori. the Aa,l•n flu, the HOil& Kone.flu, the su"apore nu and the A-Victoria it·., a virwi not treatable with 11ntlb1oou C1&llforrua ill one ol nine states reportina •·re11onal outbreaks" of the influe nia strain, a spo kesman for the National Center for Disease Control said. "Ope would expect to see in- t· re a ~e si n January and fo'ebruary if il 'ii going lo occur," Could free hostages said Robert Alden, a spokesman for the center. Already local businesses are reoortin" hiMher than usual ~mployee atJsences attributed to the nu. At Smith Tool in Irvine nearly 60 percent of the 2,000 em~loyees . were reported suffering· from the flu symptoms two weeks ago. At Fluor Corp. in Irvine the flu outbreak hit its peak two weeks a10. just before the holiday seaaon. "I don't have a handle on the figures," said corporate phyai· cian Or. Gerald 8 . Sinykin. "But we've certainly seen an increase of nu symptoms ... -About 25 percent more pa- tients are Oooding the emergen- cy room at UC Irvine Medical Center complaining of nu-re- lated symptoms. Dr. Jeff Kaupke said he is 11d· .... .. . vising patients to rest, take fluids and aspirin If needed for headaches and fever. Antibiotics are not effective a1ainst viral Infections, he added. Dr. John Bridgeman in Mis· sion Viejo also has seen a 2S per- cent Increase in patients com- plaining of flu symptoms . Although most cases don't re- quire a physician's care, Dr. Bridgeman noted that some cases can develop Into middle ear and upper respiratory com- pJlcations if left untreated. Eight elderly people have died in California as a result of the Bitngkok nu. said state medical ofricer Loring Dales. "Because Ou is not a reporta- ble disease we don't hear about all cases." said Dr. Dales. "We 've only seen the tip of the iceberg." <See FLU, Page 1\2) -Khomeini, Algeria accord told 5 Irvine aides assailed By.RICHARD GREEN Of t11e o.u~ ll'li.t su" Irvine City Manager William Woollett Jr. has recommended that four building inspectors be . fired and a fifth be demoted for allegedly accepting gratuities from building contractors. One of the city employees has resigned, another isn't talking to city officials and the other three will appeal Wc>ollett 's recom- mendation, according to Assis· tant City Manager Paul Brady Jr. In additio n to the ad · ministrative action, three of the inspectors -Man&li!I Linares. 34, of Corona; Daniel Bullard, SO, of ea.ta Mesa. and Arthur Peck. 51, of Anaheim -will be arraigned Wednesday in Harbor Court on misdemeanor charges of soliciting an(l accepting gratuities. Brady said the lher two in· spectors -Lou Perley. 64, of Midway City and Lowell Shepard, 58, of Irvine -weren't criminally implicated, since they didn't solicit gratuities but m erely accepted the m when they were given. Bullard, Peck and Shephard wiU appear before a personnel board headed by city Director of Administrative Services Michael McNamara in order to appeal the administrative action pending against them. Bullard and Peck face dismissal from their jobs and Shephard would be demoted from a supervising inspector to a senior inspector, meaning his annual salary would be reduced fron $29,472 to $27,996, Brady said. Perley chose to quit his job rather than appeal the dismissal recommendation. Linares hasn't filed an appeal with the city and his emj>loyment is therefore now terminated. The men are accused ot pres· suring building contractors for liquor, food and overtime pay in exchan1e for speedy buildin1 in· s pections . Without the gratuities, some of the inspec- tors would "nitpick" and slow down construction process, police &Qert. ~ In Shephard 's cas~. the primary aUe1ation a1ainst him 11 tbat a building contractor placed a bottle of liquor In hlJ car and he ne1lected to report the situation to authorities. Budy said the •dmlnlstrative action aaalut the J;Den and tbe criminal llCUon are two •eparate matten and there ls no concern that one would prejudice the other. · Dell, ................ HOSPITALIZED AT HOAG County Supervteor Riley Riley's illness 'critical' Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley is in critical con- dition in the intensive care unit at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, his staff and hospital aides uid today:- Riley, who was taken by am- bulance to the hospital Sunday night after an apparent nareup Of asthmatic bronchitis, was US· ing a respirator to breathe, one of his aides said. This is the second time Riley h as been hospitalized with breathing problems . He was kept in the hospital for a week last May ~fter suffe ring a similar attack. Howeve.J;;.; the 68 -year-old former Marine brigadie r general's health had been im· proving since the earlier inci· dent. Riley was in such effervescent spirits, in fact, that he already had made some preliminary plans for a re-election campai1n for his 5th District post In 1982. Riley, who rarely takes a day off from work, missed today's important county Board of Supervisors' meelin1 in which a chairman for the calendar year was to be selected. Swutika8 at fire SONORA (AP) -Swaslikaa and antl-Semitlc sloaans were painted on the wall of a restaurant east of here before it was destroyed in an anon fire, Tuolumne County sheriff's office reported today. The blase caused '100,000 dama1e Sunday to Rube's Steak House aJon1 State Route 108. Chapman pleads • innocent NEW YORK <APl -Mark David Chapman pleaded innocent today to charges that he shot and killed fortner Bealle John Len· non. The suspect's lawyer said he wbuld mount an insanity de· fense. Chapman, 25, stood motionless. his hands at his side, and ringed by armed court officers, as he en· tered his plea during a brief ap- pearance in Manhattan Supreme Court before Justice Herbert Altman. Tight security was in ef- fect throughout the courthouse. The only words he spoke were, "Not guilty," in response to the court clerk's query on how he pleaded lo an indictment charg- 1ng murder in the second degree, the most severe charge possible under New York law and punish&· hie by a maximum of ·25 years to life in prison. A charge of !i!3t· degree murder is on,y used in the killing of a police officer. Chapman was ordered lo return to court Feb. 25, and Altman said he would set a trial date then. · The judge a ppointed two psychiatrists. Daniel Schwartz and Bernard Diamo nd , and psychologist Milton Kline to ex- amineChapman. Defense attorney Jonat tran Marks withdrew his request that Chapman be examined ~ see whether he was mentally compe- tent to stand trial. The attorney said he was certain that Chapman was competent. Marks said outside court that he would present an insanity de· fense. "That's clearly the issue," he said in respanseto a question. Lennon was gunned down Dec. 8 outside the Dakota apartment building where he lived with his ·wife, Yoko Ono, and their son, Sean, on Manhattan's West Side. Chapman was arrested at the scene. Following his arrest for the shooting, he was put in isolation in a Bellevue Hospital cell, kept un· der 24-hour suicide watch and ex- amined by psychiatrists. Bank lowers • pnme rate by one point ·-o.ily f'IMI IU" ,_ SIGNING OFF AT McCAADLE'S COSTA MESA LANDMARK · Noataf91c meHage bo•rd vlctJm of bureaucr•cy Sign-language Mesons 'to miss' messages By JERRY CLAUSEN next 20 years and drew far more OfU.M•v~•i.esc.H attention than a real estate ad- A small, sometinres humorous verlisemenl. and often philosophical bit of · · I l. wa s . · Experience Costa Mesa nostalgia will be up-Eliminates Ex peri m en ts'," rooted Friday -the victim of a Mccardle recalls. c ity o rdinance designed to Subsequent messages have in- eli minate businen s igning eluded: "Houses Are Built or cluster. · Brick and Slone, Homes Are When Randy Mccardle open~ Made of Love Alone," "A Path his first Real Estaters office ih Without Obstacles Probably an abandoned Van de Kamp's Leads Nowhere," and "Luck is ba k e ry o utlet at Newport What's Left After Maximum Ef· Boulevard and 17th Street, a 3-fort." by 5-foot plywood signbf>ard Other messages were cam e with the building. humorous, like "Happiness Is That was in 1960. Four Green Lh~hls Ina Row." Twenty years and seven addl· One motorist who passed the ti on al offi ces later , the office daily on his way lo work signboard is bearing its last penned a note of tha nks to message this week. Mccardle: The city's sign ordinance -"For the past 10 years r have passed by the City Council in been .driving by your office and 1974 and strongly enforced the 1 • ve -been amused by the past three years as Plannin& humorous, homely words of Department personnel complete wisdom displayed . . . Thanks a canvass of all buainess signs -for the chuckles.'' cau1ht up wth Mcc ardle ear:Jy Another rflt'er writer often th~:peear~il ever was issued for trapped in the traffic back~ up behind the si1nal at Newport N E W y 0 R K (A p ) erection of the signboard ln the ~nd !7th noted: "I've enjoyed Report conflict cited ' By The Associated Press Prime Minister Mohamm<'d Ali Rajai was quoted by rt•· porters in Tehran today as say- ing that revolutionary leaclC'r Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini of fran agre ed to accept un specified guarantees py Algeri a that could lead to release or lh<' 52 American hostages. But other reports or Raja1 's in· terview with Iranian Television quoted him as saying Khomeini had accepted the Algerian "un dertaking" and did not mention guarantees. Rajai. after a meeting with Kh o me ini , told Iran ian Television according lo one re- port: ··we asked the imam about the hostages and we ex- plained the new opinion of the U.S. government to the imam a nd also we explained the Algerian proposal which has suggested that it will guarantee to solve our problem with the United States, and the imam pe rmitted us to accept these guarantees and we hope to an- l'11ounce the rest-of the points.·· Rajai did not elaborate, but when the United States sent Ir un its latest proposal for agreement to free the hostages, Iran said it could a('cepl any g uarantees - that t he Algerian mediators agreed to. According to an NBC report, Iran television said Khomeini and his son met with Raja! and asked about the latest proposal of t he American government forwarded through the Algeri<ms who have been acting as in- termediaries. Khomeini was reportedly told by Rajai that the Alge rians prom ised they would resolve an y Americ an-Ira nian dif- ferences, NBC said , and Iran television said Khomeini then to ld Rajai to a ('cept the Algerian guarantees. In Was hington, a spokesman for the State Department's Iran Working Group, George Havens, said the initial reports on Ra- jai 's statements were too vague for the department to make any immediate comment. He would not discuss whether the Algerian mediators were of· fering some kind of guarantees to Iran in their own name. Coast Ch 1 al B--'" mid 19508. And, says city aoninl ..-I Th • ed Ii b em c .... today lowered inspector Winnie Renner, the your 11p. at s one r i t I its prime lendiq rate by one plywood structure is in the don't mind 1ettin1 cau1ht at." Weather percenta1e point to 11.5 percent, pubUc ri .. "'t-of-way and its paint· McCardle says be hates lo loee undercutlinl other major banks .,. the small message board. S u n n y a n d w a r m and addlnt momentum to a ed messa~e cb~1es every Mon· :;It's been there so long and Wednesday. Lows toni&ht broad decline ln interest rates. day -a no-no under the 1974 we've had so darn much fun in 40s alona the coast, The move by Chemical, the ordinance. tm...-flt..t--!Wl\b-:U. MOil (meuaca> ___ __._ lower ·509 lnlamt, Hilh!f natlo&!s--ltflb.-lartnt--e1)11r.---Mc€81'dle-nmembers flae ftiil corny UttJe thins•. but people Wednesday 72 at the merclal . bank, came one day messa1e he put on the board. would idenlily us throu1h that . beaches. 82 Inland. after Mor1an Guaranty Trust one be says set the pace for the stan." Co. broke wltb tbe net ol tbe Stoc•--CIOSe McCardle'a lan't the only loa. banklq blduatry and dropped A8 A alp painter who lettered a ill prime to ID percent. Marine ne• meu.,e every Monday la Midlaad Bank today matebed out of at least one job. Mor1an. o~er I 000 Ironically, that moonlllbter. MMt major banb 1tlll are '• · · ' who dolln'l want to be Idea· quotlnl a prime ra~ ot •.s per· NEW YORK <AP> -The Dow tilled, la a city employee durtnl cent, wldcb ll down from tbe Joaea IDduatrial avera1e nt.rted the re,War workday . . . reeord n.•r•ttDt tba\ .... wlth the 1,000 level toda1 .. the wlde,.rea aiDODI baak1 la atoell man• conUnued Ill 1•1 m&d·DeclmW. • rall7 with anotber adnnee in Al ................ cut· beavy t:r8dlal. fell back ud dMD \lal tMlr pliml ...... raa., NCOftNd.W.,&laatklu . .............. .....attwilt:. Tb•Dow~ ....... ~ • .,... &NJtrttt• .... .... .. blue cldp9 bl\ Uae 1.000 mm Ill aow foll9wlaj tlie lead of mld~ fell ~ tlaee J...;.t •••lier...... to 1,00C.tt In the ftnal bour. -1 ,. -~'n· I ·" ' ... .. ,., ,..----JlJS'f BREAKING--- Suspected drug dealer .. killed i11 police trap ·~. LOI ANO t:l.f;S I A,.' A IUlpteled cocaine dealjtr WH itot and lriJlt"tl b)' ..,111·'-' whu HY he tried to run them clown to ••cape• tr•11 !>Vt IJy 1.mdNt'uvt>r vi<'• utnc•n PolJC't' I.I 1 'h11rl•11 ll1icb1«' aaad the 1huutan1 ()('t·urr.ci ,Mon· day f'\IHllflM •ftrr 11 rn•n tdenUfltld •• Arthur J Faaert, 31, ol S1m1 Va.llf'y sold ~Joa .. e·~11an1• to an l.lftdercover officer in tbe parlun1 lot ul 1rn 1111 ni1ht m11rlln In ~unland' H11tMf' 'lil1tt .. ~·uncl of 1·1x·111tlt' wtth an l'i.llmuted street y alut• "'SIOO 0110 ~It' I t•r'UVl'tt.'fl rrum t'111t.•r 's 1·1ar ,...... .....,,_. •rl• "*''• ....,,,...., ••• AITKE\ t;, t.11 1Al'1 'l'hr"" whalt' tjltli., tiscort~ by a 1ow11 1•omtaM1.• 11llnickd cl!Abi>t'1> 11t 1111 whale liucktiye lh&b $thltul ltltiil) fur lht· Sl'{'urad d11y Ill dtif11rncc of u federi.I JUdtee's .&••e-&rt'tc.tl1u11 ordt·r 'fht' c·onstltble wws served with 11 court ordt-r hour:. I 1th'r tt>lllnti: h1a1 not tu 111terfoft' In tht' c11:.e S hoot 11rft 1·1ah l>aitJ the "iri.... would be allowed to :.tay .on ••mti"' .~ulil the nul uf the d1t~ becaust-lhert• was no ont• to l;ek t' lhr111 tn1111t• fWJf pro•brd Ull fapr• ~ \~1t1 :,t; 10!\ • o\P • H11·ha rd M Nixon ·~· lawy<'r thrl'dll'llrti court a\'111111 l1Kla\ ln kl·e11 Senate Lll'mocrals from r('r1·1 \1ng tht· rurmt-r 1•n .... 1dt·n1 ~ li.lµt"!> und uthl'r doc uments re 1.11111~ tu .\ll•:\andcr M lla1g Jr a rl'lll•rnl la\\)l'r s aid I !1t; IJt'OIUl'rab h.t\ I' .t:;,kt•<I rlll' ,111 laJ1l'!> dnd )'aper~ Oil Haig, rull' ir1 :-.:1:\1111 · .. Watl'rgalt• tk fl'll!>c, on Nixon adminislra taun wirl'tav111ng, dt1·1:.1u111> on l1ornl11n~ l'ambodaa and other ts :>ue-s for use in hc;.iring:--;t.trtln~ Frnl<1y un lla1J?'" nomination lo tlt'comtc" Ronald ~kagan 's M'l'n·t:tr} of s tall' (Related story. A4 1 Before N1xun :.. r1·~1gnat11111 :it tht• hl•1ght of the Watergatl' :>Candal lla1g "t'n cd "~ Wh1h' llouM• l'had 111 staff. Jap•111·• c•tcrrr11c-11 •1111 rblHfl TOKYO 1,\P 1 1\181ha!>11µt>m'<.I :1s tht' ')'<'ar of tht--yen" with the dollar ~111l111g belo" the 2\10 yt•n lt•vt•I for the hrst time in 23 moriths ancl must l'xpt'rts pn•tl1 N 111g the Japant'se curren c~"· ·'P".trd spurt will <·ontlllut' Aft er a falling bclc1w th1• 200 y1·n barrat'r on tht> London and New York fon•1gn l'xt·hani.:l· mark1•ts Monday, tht• dollar opened lD Tokyo toda~ at l~ 00 ~•'II and cl1•1'l111t'd to 198 80 yen in trad- ing before the Rank of Japan inten·1•n1;1d tu shore the U.S. cur· rency The dull.tr l'nrkcl ttw dt1) at 199 60 yen. down from Mon- day's ch11>l' nr 2014111n T1lky11 lleeord eold · Blizzllrd f Ollows freeze ill Midwest By The Assodated Press A snowstorm on the hc•:ls of a t,)ree -day r ecord cold wave ••Pl across the Midwest today cliut te mperatures dropped lo new lows in cities on the Eastern Seaboard. 'J\r least nine deaths. other U)An traffic fatalities. have been ~~med on the intense cold that ~$aulted the East over the *eekend. I Earlier story. Page A4> The frigid air was playing b.avoc with ear batteries and {U•l lines, boile rs and water pipes from Maine to Gl·orgia R ecord lo w tem pt:'ratures we re matched hy record high f'Ower d e m a nd in No rth Ca r o l ina , V1 r g 1n 1a e1 n d Miu;sachusl'tts Thous:rnds of di.stress c alls were re ported ("om stranded motoris ts a nd Cro m apa r tme nt dwell e r s without he:it. ____ \.\_,·"~th frgst rt'achi~ as far south as Florida. c1t1es pos ting low · record t emperatures this morning included .. Atl.antic City lll, J .. with 4 d e g r ees , and Baltimore with 8 ~lustery wind~. snow. freezing n••n and sleet m ad e dri vin g hazardous acr oss the Midwest and as far south e1s Arkansas w)tile unsea sonably warm tern~ Pttatures we re r ecorded in Fro. Page . I I FLU •.. Dr. Dales s aid he expecL'i to an increase in outbreaks of flu during the traditional ak nu months o r January ough March. range County has not report· any cases of Bangkok nu to state epidemiology office. d Dr. Dales. 'We've had outbre aks all ound it. But we 've h eard ing from Orange County," es said. "We expect it's hap- lng there too." ange County e pidemiologist Prendergast said that only cases have been positively tified as being Bangkok nu. It doesn't mean it's not out , " he said. "It's out there. re's certainly a lot of plr~~.ory illnesses golni rt ltflt ttlt Ore111• (Hit 11111111 ~,. Mt lltWI .......... . ......... """" ., ....,......... lllrtlll "'.., " rt•re411U41 Wltlltlll 1,.Cltl ........... Ul'rf ..... -· much of Montana and Southern California . One man was found dead of exposure ins ide a parked car in Ric hmond. Va .. whe r e tem· peratures dripped lo a record 6 degrees Monday. An uniden- tified man was found frozen to death on a downtown Chicago s idewalk Monday a s tem - peratures dropped to 7 degrees e1nd a Cleveland man in his 60s collapsed and died _while shovel- ing s now. .}. father and son in Boston ~re overcome Monday b y fumes from a gas s pace heater 1n the ir apartment. Over the weekend a s the brutal cold swept down from Canada, three weather· related deaths were reported in Penn· Sy lvania. and the body Of a 70·year -old Maryland ma n was round near his unlit coal stove Sunde1y niJ!ht. officials s aid. Hecord low temperatures con· linued . with a r eading of 11 degrees in Newark o n Monday tyin~ a Ja n. 5 record set in 1935. Since Otristmas. more than 15.000 motorists have t~lephoned the North J ersey Automobile Club for help with sluggish bat- teries and frozen gas lines. ac- cord ing lo Thomas Rankin . e m e rgency r o ad s ervi ce manage r. The m e rc ury dipped lo 9 degrees today al Baltimore· Wa s hington Internation al Airport. setting a r ecord low for the s~cond day in a row. Today's reading broke an 11-degree low re~ded in 1959. Ttle early morning tem- perature in Burlington. Vt .. was 5 degrees below zero. In Virginia. several boating o perations s hut down when Tidewater tributaries froze over, and hundreds of children and adults had a day off as furnaces and water pipes suc- cumbed to the cold. ln North Carolina, Greensboro and Raleigh-Durham had record lows of 8 itegrees . Duke Power Co. operated at reduced voltqe Monday and warned that unless customers voluntarily cut back usage there would be rotating blackouts. 0.llYPllttt .......... UP 'N Fl YING RING& Hellcopter Foe Wllaon Heliports opposed in Mesa Tht' I.us Angeles Times' and l>owney Savings and Loan's re· quest for approval of he licopter pads at their north Costa Mesa IJuilding!i Wl.'re tabled by the City Cuuncil Monday amid complaints bv ('ommunily leader s . Fo rmt•r mayor Robe rt Wilson blistered the council for consider- ing the controversial requests on its <'onscnt calendar which con- tains item s routinely approved with out discussion. ' W i Ison, one of several residents who has complained about low- fly ing helicopte rs over north Mesa in recent months, said he had learned or the propos als ac- <'ide nlally. "fl <1clually stunned me," he told Mayor Arlene Schafer. "I haVC' hl•ard no discussion 1or the issues 1 .. lie asked why no public hear· ing!' had been sch(•dult'fl. Charles Roberts, the city's 1Jlanning director, explained that both requests had been approved by the Planning Commission thc Timt•s request in September. 1979, and the Downey Savings ap- plication in (<'ebruary. 1980. Ro bt•rts noted that under city Diedrich closed By DAVID IUFrz•ANN Of -...... """"-" . Yormer Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's preliminary hearing on char1es he laundered about $70 000 in campaign loans four ye,;rs aeo continued in Orange County Superior Court today minus press and public. That's because Diedrich's at- torney, Marshall Morgan, re- quested a closed hearing for his clie nt Monday whe n legal pro- ceedings began. ·'This is not just a ploy on our part," Morgan told Orange County Superior Court .(udge Claude M. Owens. who granted the d efense motion unde r the provisions of a IOO·yea r -old s ta tute which allows closure of s uch proceedings. Morgan said that, if Dit:drich is requirt.-d to st and trial at the tondus ion of hts prt>liminary hearing, lhl'Y prefer trying the case in Orangl' County And to limit public·1ty s urrounding' the case. he s aid. he wanted to ex- clude: lht• µrt'ss from th(• pre- liminary he<Jrang Morl{an said he we1 s upset al published reports before Mon day's hearing bei.:an that s aid plea bargain efforts with state prosecutors had broken down. The_ la.wyer d<'n1 ed a n y , such n<'~ot1at1ons h<JrJ take n pl:ice and used th al i.ls an t·x amjJle of the type of t•ovcrage ht· was try· ing lo forestall. But a n allorn<'\' for lh<' C RS radJo IH'twor.k . fJ u ugla s Edward~ of Los Angeles. argued that l itt l l' woul d he a c compl'ish1·d in closing l>iedrich's hearing bt.'<«.1u1>t· 11f thc "hit and miss" lyiJl' of l'OV('rage lha.l would result. . · Edwards ~atd having an or)(:n lte<trinJ! would insun· more ac- <'urah.• coverage of the• proceed· in~s instc;1d of furC'ing re porters to rl'I\• on s11urc·cs within the ht·arin.g. Tht• a tt 11rnl'y a ls o s i.iirl he la·li t•vc·:.. lht• 1>talute allowing t'los un• 11f prot'l't'dings ts un· constitut1on:il policy. use permit decis ions for ,.,,ax,· n·-' ~ s uch issues have been delegated i ~ (.le by thel'ouncil to the commission and are final unless appealed. -,..,,..0 n't ~rs•~ Neither decision was appealed, ~ Ju. t he s aid. But. Roberts noted, the state's A group of opparenlly Division of Ae ronautics is n 't impatient rounders are bc- s atisfied. II wants City Council ing sought by Ne wport approval. Beach police today after City Manager Fred Sorsabal they de parted from a told council members by me mo Newport watering s pot in thatCity Attorney TomWoodhad a taxi. minus the t<Jxi suggested it would be wiser to driver. conc('dc to the s tate than fight Cabbie ClycJe !''owle r over the issue or power delega-told police he'd driven lo tion. Bobby McGee's saloon on ·'In a s pitting contest with the Coast Highway to pick up state," Sorsabal quoted Wood as a fare and went inside, reporting, ''we're likely to get a ll leaving the e ngine run- wet " ning. Wilson requested that the issue A parking valet la t er bc tabJed Wl: i.t..udy-ftfttf-.. -11..--1 -r-Loht-police he-W1rnessed a e n v ironmental impact r~e~oo ... ir..._t -+--'!g:::roup or men pile into the drafted to deal with noise pollu· cab and drive off· into the lion. night. "I would consider this as Newport Police Sgt. possibly one of the most impor -Jim Carson later located tant actions before you in 1981," l h e cab Pa r k e d u n - Wilsontoldlhecouncil. damaged in front of the The forme r mayor noted that Rusty Pelican, another t onditional council approval Jast Newport night spot. year for a heliport al Pacific Sav· The miscreants remain in g s and Loan 's proposed al large. downtown headquarters already --------------J had raised the wrath or citizen g:inizations a ll over the city. ··You are opening the door for private helicopters that are going to be the jet t y pe,.. he ad- monished. Ile claimed that on one recent day he counted 32 helicopters f}Y- ing below 500-feet altitudes over his north Mesa home, flights that shook a picture from the wall and jeopardized plates on shelves . Dave Leighton, president orthe North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association and leader of a re· cenlly formed coalition of Costa Mesa homeowners associations, reminded the council that the or· ganizations he represents already had protested helicopters over the city and heliports in the community. Councilman Donn Hall, who moved to table the proposals until Feb. 2, said he has been told that helicopters are continuing lo cul across north Costa Mesa at low levels. -... ~---- Guns stolen in Costa Mesa Police believe a burtlar Wied a knife or screwdriver to Jimmy the looked door latch at an eut Co1ta Mesa apartment and ltMI three rtnea and three plltol• Sund•y. . Rnldent WUUam 8. Brllden told offlcer1 tlt._auaa were valued at about Sl,IOO • Police uld tbe Wei a,.,.,_t . ly atutfed tM weapona Into a pillow c ... and fted. ••-de .,,,,e.1 Clark retains co~ty gavel O•llf "ilel SI.Mt -CAR~IES BALL AGAIN ·auarterbllck' Clerk Mesa to reap ' $1.3 million in U.S. funds Costa M<'sa is expected lo re· c· (' 1 v c e1 bout SI 3 m i 111 on in federal General Hevenue Shar- ing Acl of 1976 funds and has set 111 motion a plan to 1>ffer one 10th llf th e income to social program or ganizations serving the city. City Manager f'r<'d Sorsabal said the 19RI a llocat1on follows Coni;(ress' recent approval of e1 new appropriatwn for the next I hrce fi scal vears lie nott·d 'that the cnunc·tl has clashurscd S4IO.OOO in such funds to 20 difft•rent oq,'"an1zat1uns .ovN the past five year~ The• ''r gan17.allons. ile said, generally pr<Jviclc sot tal serv1c·c~ dirN·tly hl'nefit111g the poor. dbadnrn tagl•cr or agl'd Mayor Arlenl' SctrafE>r ~et Jan 21 as the dt•arllinC' for appltc•<.1 lions from groups hoping to ~h<.1 re the newest allocation Shl' named Councilman l>onn tiall and Councilwoman Norma Hert zog e1s e1 committee t o scrt'en applica tions and r ec- ommendations for allol'attom. 1m J<'ch fl . During thl' past five years. the largest allocations havl' gone to lh<' Or<mg<' Coast Y M CJ\ for u:;c in its F amtlv Crisis Centc:r and lhl· Del Mar ShellN. Sor:,ahal nOll•d . Otht•r or~an1zalion~ n•c·f..'iv ing largt• shan•s induck the l\!>st•ss mc nl and Trl•atmenl Service~ r l'.•nl er. thl' F<t mily Dt•vt•lop ment Program. Youth t;mpluy- ment St•rv1<'f'. f''<•l·db<1<'k f''oun- d ation rTLC:1. Share Our Seln•s <SOS> anti the M arilan Founrla I ion Students prot~st DENVER (AP) Students al debt-ridden Colorado Women's . Coll ege donned while <Jrm bands and s taged a protest march Monday,-de manding t he res· ignation of Preside nt Sherry Manning tn the wake ot a pro· posed cut that would leave half of the faculty jobless. By GLENN scon Of -o.lly ,.elel Se.ff Ralph Clark was re-elected to day as the "quarterback" of th• apparently team -o ri entet Orange County Board 0 1 Supervisors. fn an episode filled with al· lusions lo football •. Clark wa~ chosen to serve a second con secutive one-year term as tht board chairman. One might say he has a two year win streak. Rookie Supervisor Bruct Nelitande, in his first boarc meeting, was elected by other b oa rd members as vicl chair m an , s uc ceedin 11 Supervisor Harriett Wieder. Mrs. Wieder was rumored to h< interested in the chairmanship but an a ide said after the meetinl! that "given the make up of th•' board," she didn't pursue the position. In a prepared speech. though, s h e n o minated Clark and Nestande. She said Clark's nint: year:> of experience on the board should allow him lo "'m<Jintain a team relationship" on the board. The other new s upe r visor. Roger St anton, added to lhl· athletic metaphor by describin~ C lark <.1 s a ··ve t e ran que1;terbaek " and Nest andc <is a "freshme1n running hac k." Supe r v is or Tho m as Hiley missed the meeting because he is laosp1t<.1liie<I e1t Hoag Memorial lfospilal in :--.lcwport Beach 1n critic<.11 Nmdil1on with a sthm<J ,·e latNI bn•a th1ng problems Clark 1·ontin ucd with the tc:amwork 1mag1· e1s he delivered a year c:nrllng ··stale of lhf' Count) .. re port. tn which hl' s <.11'1 :..upt•rvis11rs will ne<'d to 1.11101 their talents to find s()Ju - t1o n:.. to expecl1;'IJ reductions 1n .... t<ltl· fund ing F:<.1rl\' indiC':illlm:-.. ht• s <iHI. <l re lhal ~t~le ha tl nut funrh <ifferN1 s1ncl-thl' paSSH.1.W r1f P rnpos1t1on 13 \\Ill ht• dram at1 c:ill~ cpl in l~RI. ml'aning lhiJI lhc· M Unl\' "Ill n1·1-d 111 find rll'w 1>11urct·:.. r;r fund ~ 1ir a hand11n -;11011 · -un '>lw•·1f11·rl p1·11gr .1m :.. lie ~:ud th1· h11<1r<l s t<.1pac1t y fur inn<1\al1on \\ill lw lt·~ted 1n 19Hl . add 1 n~ "JI a ppt•<Jr'i nr:iw that lh1· pa<'I' o f l·n·nt1> 1~ moving so qu1ckl) lh<al unll·s~ wt• k<'t'P our s1ghL'i on tomorrow. wt• can 'I keep in touch with today " Cl;.irk s;.iid the· count \ dirt use• nr><.1tivc· thinking lo "'forge a p11werful allianl't'" w11 It hu~ine1>s and tommu111t) l1•<.1dc·r~ to gl'I lhl' stall' l.1>J;!1~lal un• to pa~!' <1 lull to :wt up <1 st'flil1·11te· l 'altr;.in~ fu nding d1 )>tr1l't for O rung1: < 'nunt) Ami h1 · n11t1•tl I hat th1• dl•veloµmc•nt 11f ii h11u~111g honrl •~:.Il l' to finanl'I• lwlow markt'l r:ill' h11m11 mortgagf•-; also was an l'Xamph• of finding m o<lcrn 'olut11m:-. to prt•ss111i: prohlt·m~ llo" 1•\'1•r. ht• r'latmt•d th<i l c<rnn t~·\\icle• lt·amwork hrokl• clown wh<'ll 1t l'a me· tn mt•rging thP Sh<•nff's l>t'parimt•nl wi"tii lht• c-ou11ty M<.1r:-.hal s 1 u11e•t• tas1 year. which. he· s;.11cl. l'tJuld save the <·ounty S4 m1lho11 Clark laid thl· hlam1• on tht• county ·~ judges. who he s aid "only w<Jnl lo look at it as a very na rrow fight to proll'cl their own p1cceofturf ·· Vote rs passed a county sponsored initiative last year sup- porting a merger o r the two agen· cies that both s1 rve the courts • NYSE COMPOSITE .. TRANSACTIONS DAIL V PILOT •• Dow Jones Final -UP 12.03 CLOSING 1,004.69 1'laf1G.%ines vie Sports battle off field too . By MILTON MOSKOWITZ New5week vs. Time is one of the great matchups in magazine publishing -and their rivalry has spilled into other areas. The latest battleground: sports magazines. Newsweek is the muscle behind Inside Sports, a monthly magazine launched last April. Muscle in this case means money, lots. of it. Newsweek does not deny that Inside Sports will lose upwards of $8 million in its first year out of the start- ing gate. To play in this league you have to be able to inve~t that kind of money. Newsweek can. Its corporate parent is the Washington Post, the nation's loth largest newspaper by circulation size <600.000). The Post owns a couple of other -newspapers and a clutch of TV stations. The whole shebang takes in more than $600 million a year. New~week's targe.t with Inside Sports is Sports 11~ lustrated, a weekly magazine started by Money Tree Time Inc. in 1954. It too had to absorb plenty of early losses. Eight years went by before it began to pay its way Now it's one of the top properties in magazine vublishing, with a circulation of 2.4 million and annual income of $170 mill ion. • -• -• •+• •• t' I •'' -.- JN 111E NEWS magaz.ine.field, Time's circulation of 4 :J million is comfortably ahead of Newsweek's J million Timt! also takes in much more money than its rival, $350 million in 1979toNewsweek's $235 million. In 1978, Time Inc. went after Newsweek on anothe r front when they bought the Washington Star, forcing the Was hington l'ost to defend its leadership position in the nation's capital. Now the Post and Newsweek have retalialNI hy fi.eld1n ~ Inside Sports to compete with Sports lllustrated Inside Sports is' selling about 500,000 copies a month, and they're doing it 'the hard way by emphasizing newsstetnd sales rather than home.delivered mail subscriptions. Ne arly 70 percent oftheir circulation is coming from sports fans who are paying $2 a copy to buy it at newsslands Sports llliustrat- ed s~lls for $1.50 a copy but gels most of its circulation from homesubscriptions. HOW 00 YOU GO 4:1fler SP<}rts llluslraled'1 Peter /\ Oerow, the chairman and president of m wswt!ek, explains the strategy behind Inside Sports : "We get into the lockt'r room, not so much to report the final score but to find out what the hell really went on." In one of their stories Inside-Sports even got into the bedroom. They explored the marriage and sex life of Steve Garvey, starfirst baseman of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Media buffs have noted in the past that Time and Newsweek, working separately, often come up with the same cover story. It's happening here too. The December issue of Inside Sports and the Dec R issue or Spor ts Hrustralt·d a p- peared on newsstands side-by·side with C()ver st'fmes on Los Angeles Rams quarterback Vince F'erragamo. And their stories were remarkably similar . . 'ilaf"k• '" Tltr s,,o, If glu NfW YORI( IAPI S.ltt. noon om~ MM! rwt <'WlnQf of thf ''""n t'l\O\f dfliw Nitw Yorll 'Sloe-~at t'I~ 1\\uto\, tr41d.ng Mtt~lll' •f f'nOf'f ,,...,, t• llJ1."10. ISi.JOO •S3.e00 S71,000 "3.IOO ssuao •UtOO .. 7.500 -.:zoo •,100 '1".600 Jf7.SCO ]12,60) :.>.JOO Jll ,600 • 'II ... ..... .,, ..... •l' .. .. ,. .,, . '• > ... .,. .... .. , ... · cop,,r &e ... 1,u·" ·~;,;;, .... .' n~;,,~,, · \>"'' Of"t;flllitU~,-, lt_. l~ t flf\\I, "-' f)Ounrt Zlnc•l '1111,,f'.'nh.,.pr.11nfl th ''"'""(; Ttlt 11 A.f1' Mort~I\ VY~·· I •lll'jl'J .. •l~t I~ ... ··-··· .. I p• aHd 1!•11.r·•u Ah.U,Uttiift't76t .. n l'td PHvr'lf'f N., , ,.__,. __ _ M""<WlfJllOf'O f>iol1fii\•'·-. --NiW YORK I APJ f~ IOllOw•f!V' 11\1 -the HPw Yo111 '>tot• E•th-''°''' •f'ICI Wlr-t•nl\ "''' '1111Yfl' QOn" up tf'W "°'' MM) dOM'I OW "'O\t t..Md on ptr<rf of <"'-"91' r~ullt~\ of volufrW ....... I CadMC• Ind 2 AmH-pf l H•ll•rlnt pf • CwE t .4CIPl8 S O.tol'dtnd 6 H•lenC"'1 A 1 Mft91AUC • $HCcwlt • T•IH Cori> tt t~l~tfW 11 WelUlm pf lH~•"""I tS E,:r.,.. .. W.tkl 0 T.il 11 KtlJrAh11n It UIGYPll'I~ IO HevP 1, I TreMO " Knllfli.f 1 .. 111 Ullt · ltt AICI IUlltl Cp Pl•llftllfn\)10 \'>8~ '"" '" ,.. Nf W t'ORfl" rAP> 1'11'trHh A ~ .. ,man ~,,..,l", tort•v '1ti oo 111> Ml 1'~ Enq,.1,.,.,,. -..iv•r \f> .. 00 11u \(I HI .,,t}qf"t fld itl\t,.r '" 4)1 up SO 103: ., TIM A1to<•atH Pr"'" S•,~< ,,.a wndo o">td P' ., .... to..,,, 'f lalMtoth mt>rnmQ ft •tng S\trl n •tO 't I'!. La..-..,••ff@rnoont1111no \'t~7'.i uo i11~ Parll. •ll••noon !t.,nq ~7 11\l "" ~10 8• ll'r•ftlrfltrt! '•••~ \600 >-I, VD U: 00 l•rtdt: l•t• A•tf'r"oon fl.:u1q t't"'S 00 up •'-< oo. "°' 00 ~--.... H•fldy a Marm." MtF mon~•*'Q \S" 15 up~\ IS .,,... • ...,...late morn1nQ S~" )5 uo 11 7'> e,,..lllMd: lftte mu,,11no '613 17 11p SI A7 I" I OM.Y"'-Of .. l!L-:O ... , lfld ~l ·-~.-. -~· \Gm ...... .,. ,_, ~el(>tl .... bv •ICIH1'11 ol ..-.II 9'00 -.... 1'*11 ......... ---·•-.n•• .. , I Tte: f AG DOUGt4 _. ..... .. "-'-Wfj\ .. l\U! ... II IMO mott\et #twe H••• •r• I Mt ••"" tout .,...,._h,m ••uJ COi ttQu., ~· ... ,,, ,,, fh .. oeco..io. .QOOOT ... "°'"'' ,..... 11•1~ •• ~ orOU&J "' '"''<""'' ··~ 111 • o.-•oKI , ..... 11w11 ~ <ly#lllQ • 111{1•\I c.._ollO'-, 9'\,\n-\\\lff1\ • llfCfMIC CQMl'AHY \ K id1aap bait l ~=-WAMl[ A8CNIWS .. I UU.llYl llWELOOMEAACI< l(Orrtfl Gao. ~-h 1•1 .. 1 ,,,~ S••••f'K>QS 'S\o9~ :) ..,., ft tb ptOltt~1 tr\u • • .d , lfw C.•tet .. t• T hl'. hout'y moon of Mark Harmon and Mor.:an Fa1 r ch 1ld 1s disrupted when the\ are k1dnap~H.•d by dru~ dealt-rs on thl'. L\\O h11u1 lfft•mil•re of .. flam ingo l<11J11"' tonight .1t ~ 0 11 NBC. Channel 4 • IEHNYHILL &t'lllt t~w~ 1• ~uvt.. •\ ~Sa.ltd "NV .>Vt'.-fhtltt" tac:es '"-l' s~l\h) J' ""~ •• _u ,Of an) OCC..iiMUrl • PAOS ANO CONS 'Burglury 0uryl.ilv .il tims ano crmunr11~ tJ1~l u'>~ crime w1111 Aa11-111 ::>tui r G STUOIOSEE "CrewlflQ Sealll" ~ <J1u«Jfl lake Crew p111pu111" tu1 11 race " youJtg 11c1u1 ••Plains wnat n11 g1v11i. uOll ll!'-lrom 11111 stage !Al (I) M'A'S'H News spreads th1oughout 1118 camp 1na1 a u1a-.•• 1111· 1s1mm1nent 0 &ARNEY MILLER 88/ney must CO!k! -t''" Lev111's · C11SHes~ u~e1 1n,. removal ol a >Pa"· ,1 .. ,• ana a doctor ,;ru.1 d law\''' 081 onlO 8 WllO balllo; OVt:I ot crook who IOsl h•s 1.11.:111 7:00 I CBS NEWS NBC NEWS 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Tne Fonz n •• ~ to com .. 10 tne rescue wrten M•~ Cs • 1t 'lolt;,th•~ r1h A '"''' '" I ABC NEWS JOKER'S WILD M 'A"S'H t d1h~t!I Muk. ;\t\) 'hf\\\h, , -µ1t' C.tllt"lt,,, ... i. l••llt:, h1)(flt1 tlt ht~ ··•:>h~t a) BAAETIA a .. UU\lol ... llt::f'W \)<lthl~t ;•. 't•n111I•~ ,. JUpt1 lt11f1111\I !J1)\l with 1 runt1ac\ uv' •>I' t\Of Ell) OVEREASY (..uP~I.. W'lhom ShJtn-1t l..>1 u ... ,. t•~l'l•1dfl <t•H'>1 µ,1t f tuJmJ~ '1i) MACNEIL I LEHRrn REPORT .1 TIC TAC DOUGH _ ~ M ERV GRIFFIN !'-.u11•. r H '-.upof I u' f HJt'"tl { Ill.JU WJJ'tyfll c ,,, temo1"''' ( t1..irlu M1UOl.tu 7 30 IJ 2 ON THE TOWN 0 FAMILY FEUD 0 SHANA NA '~oe;t AritJy C..11hh 0 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES C'hannrf f ,,bf ing• e KNXT 1cec;n o· AnQ"lf''i O ·KNBC (NBCJ Lo-. An1wl•"' '. • KTLA .rnu I LO!> Arnwr.,. .... D KABC rv I A~C1 l•J ' l\1oq1·I·"· W i<.FMB 1CBSl ·~·'" n1vqn 0 KHJ· TV ( lf)(l I l ,,., /\11 "''"'· ®) KCST IAHC) ~"'" O'""" m KTTV llnd I Lo'> An1JHl,.., -,~ m KCOt' TV 11nn ) Lns Anqr•1,.•, ll) KCEl ·TV I PBSJ L t•-. •\ll!Jf'I•·'> I!) KOCE-TV tPBS) Hun I nql on ne 1th 0 FACE THE MUSIC II) All IN T~E FAMILY A,r-ru ... muJ Fo11r) 1111,utJutY , 1 ~i,..h v.~UOw 11J U1Url\' f ~··lra•r ulh.•r 111~ wilt> ''-"''> ,,WU) jgr.un EZl) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT ml NEWSOfECK •8 P M MAG'-ZINE 8 00 IJ fHE WHITE SHADOW \ .(.hh h f(H1l'1_ .. _, .... Ottttf{_•\1 $I 000 In <t• J t.unHrh1' I 1,n t!Hl h1·, h·.un h111 OUH' ... t •1l!1'JllHf 1,fd"D 1nt1 fl'''' Ht 11HP1 \.i \ ,., .1 Ito. Oii\ 0 LOBO \l••ftl,1\ U, tlot"'• 10, t1•&1t'U\Pt1 f· 11 I\;• I tHhh''''~ u ••. ,, ,., I r••'iiJ11 qi I rn1t11H Wl'W•l' 1q IUP PCl,IUfU1I 0 MOVIE. * " { ' 1 •t 1ff ••• I 1c.. ... 11r• ••• '''"'", 1t ·• 1Hy 111 tl1• l ('11 ,1 It ii I' t dt4 ft I f1VI llw•••,fj •J •h nu m,,,,,,., f't 11 ",., 111•0 IHJ t L.tt1ft I If 0 10 HAPPY DAYS A• l·l••f).111•, '11' t t•uti ,,, Wllf rr ,. A ,, ••• ,, \NII I' I 1 f •fl .'tJ 'JI'~·· •• Hlu•, ()MOVIE 1i A , Ju .. t • u , r, ,. ,.. 1 pr;'' r.,, ... u H.t~•·• ,.,, ,, 11•1 Tfu '! hHll·ll•r I t 1•1u11h·r \II 11111 ft 1·t· .. 1 t t •f ~ •. 11 , ti 11 J r I , , I ! 111qlp m P M MAGAZINE (I) MOVIE • • rt11t fj1q ( u•1,.,.,,, 1 l'l~ll tu~. Ouuy!o.1~"...W11 '.jtp11t04~ 1'1 014.li•r 1•• !i+J'•'I hi", 1,1llf'• f ,1 t••pr1rl,•f .... r,,,,.,., ttiJO ~""''"""'; ,.,, tM llllfte of a m.n trl!PP9d on aca..,._ln .NOVA "The Doctor• Of Ni(tene" A 0111ng N19«lan t;a.lftlon OI OoclOll boll! In white coeta 91\d In ltto.I robes ... t•y•ng •o .ollttl I,,. I country'• health p<oblems • MYITUIY 01 Jellyll Ana M• Hyoe" D1 Jekyll'• bolO expert· ments to 1101ate 0141 oood lrom the evll within a single pe1 $0hlllty SUCGeOCI b~Onel hll wvoest e•P8C ta110111 (Pert 11 (I) THE BAXT~AS Hanlo.y Panky" 8:30 8 @)· LAVERNE & SHIRLEY Snirley falls in love w1lh a marroed <loclor wno claims H1at Ile is divorcing n1s w1te • CAROL BURNETT ANDFRIEHDS Guest Maog1e Smun ()) KEEN'S PEOPLE 9'00 8 (J) ..M_OVIE WOrO Qr Honor" (Prem 1er111 Kart Ma1oen AYi! McCtanahan A small-town newspaper repo1 ter becomes embro11eo 1n Ille os~ues ol l•eeOom ot the p1ess a110 1'1rst Ameno- n1eru ugtH5o over a murder ca~I' 0 FLAMINGO ROAD 1 Pr11m1 .. 1Pl Honeymoo1•t-1> ~ ... 11t•ng dnO Co'"'"nc,e Co.1rlyli> are ~lllrodppeo by !lruQ t11rnlf!1 ~ seelu nq 1 .. ve11y .. un &1>(!1111 SemPlf' 0 °1_q THREE'S COMPANY Jat1el lp(u us I hat Cindy s bns.i; ., u-;k1oy for tH1n "'"'~ •11!a•e.i t.ivo.-tir11J { t1lh1ltl(...~ ... hm ta fJ!Oh~SI II) MERV GRIFFIN' """' 0 1 SllPl'<S\11!'. 1 1u .... c..h ( 'tlJn Na-1n~ (.,tu1~ l t'01"\0lt t j11Hh•• M;ltlh IU J1:tlflt " l..:J:.tSICh' tii) MYSfERY (Jr J1•!. ,11 Aml Mr fly(1•' t tt h·~ ,O .-.. OUld .~_. p,._•n U1t• ;f t i t•,i)l,fh.'. ftit• 1J11C1<J t~ \tt tit t'\t\ 11<1\h\to \ ":tlf1~h1 lt• Jt,\1•1 t ,, y.,1kh·~t 1• ... Jft!'\ I 1fl •'I' •. 11 t ti 01) NOVA r h,. 11. t ,, ,. , r ~'"''''•·• fl "'".J N•1t" •• 1hl Ill l 'I I,. I •'' ' '/\flt,,_. It l'tt) I fJ·" 1l FltlJ .... •, ,ft 11.,.1'•11 ... ·, •• , •• ,,_,; I I Ul!'t f t,I 11lf t1• t 'f rt t 9 JO 0 10 TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT · 111·111\ It' J'fl" H\iJI ,,, ,,t-. .,_ t 1 I; I l•-'iJl,hJI II f\,tl t11111q l Id""' ... n 1µ1n·,...-u·. 10 00 00 NEWS 0 10 HART TO H,AAl Jc1t1.11! +lfl .J.ULl-~r..wilt,,;:t • "' '!'fl\" If llJl~f•tJ Ill I lll!jl d1J1 '"l'•l .. 'V llql 1rtVf•l\l'•-'!1 1-tfl -;11tru ... 111 ~arr.f')ph~•gtJ .... J j TONIGHT 'S LATEST LISTINGll -I TUBE TOPPERS KCOP • 8 :00 -"The Bil Carnival." Kirk Dou1las stln up an "event" when he covers a mine cave·in for his newspaper in this movie with Jan Sterling. · ~ CBS 9 9:00 -"Word of Honor." Karl Maiden stars as a small town n e wspaper reporter enmeshed in freedom of the press and First Amend· ment ri~hts in this new TV movie. NBC 11 9 :00 -Flamingo Road. In this two-hour series premiere, Fielding and Constance are kidnapped on their honeymoon by drug dealers (photo at left J. ano a mummy 1na1 -111a to nave come allve ., INOEPE.HOENT ,NETWORI< NEWS SI THE HEW SENATE A tool< al tne new S.nate ano the sn111 ot po-• 1n Congress from ttie tra01- 11onaJ Sovtn 10 the West 61!) HEWSCHECK 10:3011) NEWS g) INOEPEHOENT NETWORK NEWS ml THE 12TH STREET RAG ThP avolutinn of ragtime music in 1ne M1ssour1 VBI· 1ey t•nd 11~ 1nfluencP or' ~01 h ·Ctt!I tur y CIO S~IC81 'ompoSer\ •S e•&m1n110 11:00 1J 0 D I.I:®, NEWS D STAR TREK An .ot1e11 my\tu,,ovsty l)l)atels Ille r111wp11se dltt.l surq,c.1lty rllrnnves Sµc1f'I-s tu.,111 0 NEWLYWED GAME II) M'A'S'H H.1w.,u,.•· u11t -,,hJJJJttr out~ 111• Hu;t ,., ··~· •• ;II the wHy to ''"' I••[ ,, 1h1•11 ertoqs 10 0 .. 1 "o *''""u 1l'J' tor tne ""'' (I) ONE. STE"P BEYOND 1tr Mur• A \JS Au r f( ft 1 ... .,,,.., .-tnl ' '''''"~ 'J 't • ·~ 111 ,,.,.. (qvi1t1df• (Jf~ ... , t tii) OtCl<CAVEn ,1' JOHN DARLING t 1:30 8 (I) LOU ORAHT B1ll1e 1s 1ncenMd over LQll 1 seemmo d1am1 .. es1 In a · roullne" glletto lulling and purS\181 tlle SIO<y ,,.,_ sell (RI . II TOHtOHT Host Jortnny Carr.on GuestS· Pele• O'Tootl! CnarlleC•llas 8 (!)) ABC HEWS 0 GUH8MOKE A little cowboy 11d1ng a giant horse rides inlo Dodoe cla1m1ng that 1ne '1orse turns into an ele· pnant wnen the moon is lull G) HOGAN'S HEROE.S Hogan aids a Russian spy to keep tne Nazis from linelong a raeloo sta11on g) ONE STEP BEYOND I lie Secret Sylvia Ack. royel rummages through old trunks and lonels a mys- terious link 10 Ille pasl fm '1i) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS -MIONIGHT- 12000 MOVIE • • • ··Tnev Got Me Cov tJreo 119431 Bob Hotie Oorotny l amou1 A Wasn· motor. sabotaqe rmy 1$ .iCG1!len1d11y onvdOeo l>y a ICJOl•sn n~wsoa~rman IJlfO MOVIE • • Sup.,roome • •9781 DaYld JaMMft, DoftM ..... AIMeltc...._.IO llelll a foo4Mll ...,,, lrOl'll wWWn0 IM hOer eowt ~ -~ IWOIMU The IMF le ~ to deelroy a Nlelllte cont.W.-il t~ t>Onlbt *'~ "LawleM Frontlet"' I 1936) JOf\11 Wayne. Shella Terry A cowboy 1trUQQlft to ••oner••• ll•'!'IMll ol cr1mM blemed on him by• cr00ke<1 lher1tf • HIUIHTE 12:30 II TOWO..AOW ' Guett• p-01r10 1111 Merilyn Crtambtlfa •no ''"'' "'""' o« ClluG~ "·~n()f "''ll"' MIU•-· MGC.o;em 1t<;H1t T1ev0t H.,.., .. o tR1 G TH(F91 Courite<-S11ao." 12:40 8 'L MOVIE • • f.4fdlf~J hd! , 1<,1•,, A.(1<Jf41.,.. '"'''"" (~ n ., Mf..IC·tlt'"H(," ~ ''"°"""~ ' tl4rl .... , '" ,,,, .. "''" . ,,.,~ . .,,, "'" ,..,_,, (,,,, '~''' ,.,,,. •' !R1 t:OO. YOU l£f rOVA LJf[ Bu<J<>t H..,..-.._ .. , "•i~ ''•• game "''" 41 ,,,,1...,_, 'l.,.,.,1 QVMn • ,,.,., l'lf '· '• .,, ''· h(lf~ ilfilj ;, 4\: ,...,, .... lllacl\1•<-~ ""~ -· ., IHOEPEHO£HT H£lW()N( HEWS t·30 0 THE LONE AAHGER Cod!t Ot T n., '°',,,, .. ,...,, G) MOVIE • • !no; l•~· EIH!H • • .,, r 19S'iJ va n J,,,,,nv;' J··~" 'fork Ounri9 w',,"" 1J4, II s Baille ot ""' Bu17~ • gung-n(J t~a11 ano ti!\ f1&t 0 0 1 sabotevr~ •nl 11•••<> AlllM1ror:;ps g) MOVIE * * '• 0 0 /; I 10.,4</1 Eomono O 9,,;;,, P;,rn"'" Brillon When ~ man •ta 1ze~ tnat ne na\ b"en !Jll•r a dose 01 11mc-i1;1,.1ts~11 poison n1; s.-1s, '>ul ,,, tocate h1~ 'tiller "'=''1rt• fl•\ Ille end~ 1:46 8 NEWS I . 1:55 0 NEWS 2:000 NEWS 0 MOVIE t * • f,ttuu·t• , ... , b1 I Dara w ,nrP, 1',1tt• f ... ,,~, In fr'le Ir', rg 1rtj f1I 6 . lM NOT IHE ONE ~HO ~C:A1 E.S \ TH~ WfA1HEi:<. Tr1t j ALM1Gt-i1 'f DOES_/ World Ww U, e )'OUfl9 Ger-_._,. II ,..._, Miii IM Allwricen offloer wtlOl'll af'9 heel Mtiler helped to lec.pe, • MOYll * • * •,; "The D•m au ....... 11eu1 ~ICl\lltd Todd. Mlcttall Redgr1~. Outing World War II. Ille Britllh btlllltntty plan to blow up the Ruht Dam In Germany 2:~1 NIWI 3:00 NIW8 3:06 MOVIE . I * • '"' One Touch Of · Venus" t 111501 Ava 1 Garoner. Roberl Walker A f windo w trlmrrter is t ~urprosed wnen the Siiha ol Venus begins 1alk1ng to I him I 3· tO. MOVIE ' •'' Oev•I On Wheels" • I l'J• 71 Darryl ~ilckman, ll llo•11en Nasti A group ol 1011ng Oetmquenls gel ' 1'.IQ'<lh8r tr;r a 1oy rooe · 3 551 NEWS '00 OENE AUTRY 'r<1me r or Tt!'Alble G MOVIE • • , r,,a,nmera The • '' '· L ~ 1~66, Br•an 'J'lf , .. , , J.tt,,trf Dekker ''· '"' r 't dr affJtn1(. &AplO• -:. 1,r ., 'l·~V1t pretustor1c • ,,, ,_ ... , .. d•.rte\ ··~ ru,y .. ;_,1,· 1 ·•'" •, , •1ao11an1~ '30 8 MOVIE • • r..1t>'''&t ''" Darnes •11' • .'• 1 ,,. 'Ae.1,,., Chuck •1•·1 <')s,1v,1 CD MOVIE • ' l,.u •'· r,r1rlrlrl,..I l t948) '•"•i' •· 'l~.n1• fl/011ne MPdHP•day"• Doyf hnP .tlorlt•" 'l 00 Cl) • • Vt'''" 1f\9 Oh\· .Jh ''•"~'· JOf\n V'l.-.yri~ -AFTERNOON- ..., oo m • • • , .1~ 01 It•• 'I> • • • '"~ "'\ffllii,;••t \ •b \f J ,,,,,"" ""''''0""''''' r-'(., t .1·1J (,1 ,n1.,.1 I 3 30 0 e * £«11.11« I< t> I by Armatrong & Batluk !c-n-ysterj-,--OOck with British accent By TOM JORV NEW YORK <AP > The ~cntcel murder m ystery the killing gener ally takes place off-screen has long been the province or the Br itish fi lmmctker Indeed, Amerir an television tn its early days made extensive US<' of the resource. often for "The I.ate. I.ate Show " It was perha p:-int•vitabl (' thal th e English-style whodunit would come to prime time. a s it did a year a~o in -public TV's "Mystery ' series. "Mystery~" bc~1ns i t~ second season tonight <at 8 on KOCE. Ch·anncl 50 , and an hour later on KCET. Chi:mne) 281 featurin~ f1ve new ______ m_in_is--'eriei?_ CQYC!in_g 20 ~eeks. __ _ I BACK THIS SEASON ARE three veterans of t-he ·series:·fi~l ·yeHr : ·incl uding·~ix m?W .. t'J)isodcs-uf " · "Rumpole of the Bailey." three new programs based on the stories or Dick Francis. and five new shows from Peter Loves ay 's "Seq~eant Cribb" ---!lffies-:--·------·-·---··--------------__ ,. The "Mystery!" series begins with a new two-part British Broadcasting Corp -Time-Life Television production of "Dr. J ekyll and Mr Hyde," with David Hemmings in the lead A four-pa rt dr a matization of Francis Iles' 1930s crime class ic . .. Malice Aforethought.·· begins J a n. 20 an other BBC.Time'°Lif•' production. "Mystery!" was born. in a sense. of another British anthology series now in its 10th season on PBS, "Masterpiece Theate r." Both series are ' supported financially by the Mobil Corp "FOR MANY YEARS, we had wanted to do serial mystery," says Herbert Schmertz. Mobil's vice president for public affairs and a driving force behind both public television series. "We had been convinced for six or seven years that there was a market for that kind of programming. and we tested it a little bit with the 'Lord Peter Wimsey' progra ms we put on 'Maste rpiece Theater.· "They did very well,·• Schmertz recalls , "and that simply reinforc'ed our desire to do something with the British m ystery .·• Schmertz s ays he and Joan Wilson. the series· producer for Bosto n 's public TV s tat ion, WGBH, had a s pecific type of product in mind as they searched for suitable material. 4 . ""·'-... ~ ( • I APWir ...... tOt HEMMINGS AS JECKYLL, HYDE Launching second 'Mystery' seHon ··we wcn•n't talkini.: about thrillers.'" he say~. "rat her about the• intclhgently developed mystery stor y. 1lorll' fy a fine writer who has chosen mystery as his or hl'rs<·hhck "Thl' British havt• had an abundance of fine myslrry writers ... Schmertz says. "peopJe like Agatha Chris lie and so on. so tht>re w<1s plenty for us to work with · · In fact. Schmt•rtz ~ays. Mobil soon found itself hacking production of series for "Mystery!" as well as iL'i own developing Shl)wcasc Network for rom mcrcial stations. All of the Fran(•is progr ams, unde r the umbrella title "Tht• Racing Game." were financed by the oil company wi th production by England's Tr ident Amcrira. THE SHOWCASE NETWORK will break new ground in March and April with the first Agatha Christie mysteries ever produced exclusively for television "The Seven Dials Myster y" and ''Why Didn 't They As k Evans?" "London Weekend Television came to us." 'D~lk' gets some lines 81 JERRY IUtK LOS ANGEL~ <AP> -Lou Ferrtpo, who plays the Hulk on ~ "TIN Incredible ~.. will ban bll nrifipealrin1 role In an upeomln1 epllOde of the CBS ........ Bealdea ffit11 Jfulk, Ferrl1no will abo play the role of Carl Molino, a bodybuilder who Is pe rcent deaf be~ause o f a .childhood affliction and has had lo take extens ive s p·e e c h therapy. ll w as easy. for him lo play In the non-speakin1 role of the Hulk, but for a lon1 lime it seemed that he would ne ver have a speaking role. size and musculature made him look very Intimidating. He said th e green paint i s v e r y uncomfortable, smears easily and makes him feel very hot. ''I wanted for the public lo see Lou Ferrl1no.'' he said. "And t wanted to show that I could act. I had teamed pantomime and sbowln1 my feelin11 without speaking. They never needed more than two takes when I played the Hulk.·· · lrJiDI to ralle money to open a hetaunnt. In at lea1t one ICtl'le be will ipPeat with the Hulk by meam of a apUt aereen. "I'm an allDOlt every acene, .. laid f'tnilDo, "to lt'I like 'Dr. Jekfll ...r Mr. Hyde.• You wUl ...... 11 ID.1Mlf -)'OU will ... tut lt'I IO far from tb• Hulk. I .au • ..., ...ttJ.•• penoa ud I .. I Ill of nlnerabWty." Wew people are probably aware Uaat Perr11ao 11 71 The 6-foot -5. 255-pound Ferrigno was a Mr. America and Mr. Universe, but withdrew from proteuional football an.er breaklnf another player's le11 durln1 1crimma1e. He now play1 the alter e10 to Bill Blxby ln the popular CBS aeries. Blxby'1 character turn• lnto the Hulk wben he ~mea an1ered. He aat ln h1a dreuln1 room Waltiq for I Clll Oii 1tqe to plaJ the H~. Rla bocl,J WU COYend wttb a llt8d of l"lft ela1, llDd that eombllied wltb bit .It is Ferrigno'• aenalijve performance •• the Hulk th1t. haa helped lift the 1bow out d the realm d the monster movie. Looldnt beyond the aerlea, Ferrloo said he wanted to show people that be II , "a Yet")' ftne actor. I Udnk ... f'Jone wtll ... tbat wtaeD tbeJ ... WI 1bow. '' -. Sl'11nwrt2 rcm£'mbcrs. "and said they had the right~ lo Wh y t>1dn '\ They Ask Evans?' We agrt.•Nl to rnakt• ;m investment in that production. - "Thl'\· l·amc hac:k later with 'T he Seven 1>i.1b. · w<."a~n·cd to that. too. and I think there will be 111h1·r~ "Di1•k Fr:.tnl'i~. un thl' other hand, was a prOJl'<"l Wl' hrought to Trident. .. sctys Schmertz .. Others. lik<.• "Jlumpole." were what Schmertz ca I ts "-;he! r prt1ducts" series merely purchased for A merit-an hroa1lti.1sl Cost is a primary consideration in determining wh(•ther a proi.:ra m will go lo "Mystery !" or the com m f'rrra tt r broailcast Showcase Network. I· "We'rt< talkin~ the magnitude of four to five times th<' rost"of ·th~ 'Cl'l't'isl'les 'th"ati for the '()(tiers.'•····" Srhmt•rtz says, "but you have to remember. they were made like f(•ature movies.·· BOTH CHRISTIE PROGRAMS star Sir J ohn Gielgud, and that kind of casting inevitably drives up t he <'OSI of production. Schmertz says Mobil is negotiatinj! now with a nother of England's independe nt producers Thames Television -f.or: -production of 13 of Miss Christie's short stories. I n addi t ion to th e C hris tie stor i e s rom missioned by Mobil, Warner Bros. Television announced in November il will offer fi ve of the late m y!'tcry writer 's novels as two-hour TV movies. No broadcast schedule was announced for "The Agi.i tha Christ ie Mystery Theater ," which will includ<' "They Came to Baghdad ." "Murder is Ea sy,·· "T h e Ma n i n th e Bro wn Suit,". "Des tination .Unknown " a nd "S e cre t of Chimneys ... ,.- Stefanie Powers gets a jolt as a n ancient Egyptian mummy co m es to life a nd threatens hers on "Harl to Hart .. tonight al 10 on ABC. Channel 7. A footnote on ··Mystery!··: Vincent Price rep I aces N RC's Gene Sha lit as host for the PBS series. Savory Savings I ·1 1 ---!!!!'!!!!..!!1!!1----~---.,... AIOUl I $) ''GREAT _ I I e · DINNER () 0 c Gop<! 101 lhrff p1ecea ol juicy. golden brown Kenluclly -U Fried Chicken. plua tingle Hrvlnga ol core a11w. 0 mashed potatoea and gr1vy. and 1 roll. Llmll two oflefl Z pe1 purchaae Coupon QOO<I only for eomblnallOli wllltll I dark 01der1 Cuatome1 PIYI 111 applle1bl• aalea ta• I Otter ••PllH January 18. 1181 At A ~ PrlcH rnay vary at pertlclpetl"f IOca· tlont. Oood only In loutllem calllol'l'la .......... AINMe't ........ .. --.. ..... . I AIOll I $5 ftft SUPEilll e77DINNE Good fOf nine pltcH ol Juicy. golden bfown Kentucky Fried Chicken. wllll lour ro111. • large cola sl11111, a large maalled potatoes ana a medium g1avJ'. Limll two ollera per purcilllM. Coupon good only lor combination 11111111e1 dark ordlrt. Cuatomer p1y1 all applicable ••lea ta• 0119' t11plrH Jan~ry ti, 1911 Prtcet may very 11 per. tlOlpetln(I IOOlllOM. Good only In loutlletn Celllol'nle .... yOll ... Amertol'I ...... .. Wl ...... IMMf. z ~I 0 t.> ----