HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-02-02 - Orange Coast PilotORANGE COUNT)'. CALIF OANIA 25 CENTS_.\.~·:
Bloody Lag'una Niguel scene
..
Storni
buries
Plains
By Tiie Auocla&ed Preu
A long-awaited snowstorm
that blew out or the Rockies has
left at least 17 dead, including a
s kier who died unde r an
avalanche the day after Utah's
fir st major snowfall of the
season.
The storm. carrying high
winds and generous helpinp of
snow, moved over South Dakota,
Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa and
Missouri during tbe weekend,
chilling the unseasonably warm
air and bringing much-needed
precipitation to an area worried
about drought. (Related story,
A4 ).
Meanwhile, light rain in the
Northeast brought hope of relief
from a drought that bas prompt-
ed officials in New J ersey, New
York, Connecticut and other
states to .encourage water con-
servation.
Alter the rains went amag
Weekend sailors at ~wport Harbor found clear s kies,
s unny weather and some stiff breezes to play in Saturday
afternoon as they tacked about in fairly heavy company.
It was a glorious way to celebrate the end of January.
Photo was taken with a 500 mm lens from The Arches
Bridge at Pacific Coast Highway, looking south.·
What forecasters called the
season's first "bona fide" winter
storm in the Midwest lost much
of its punch as i~ moved
eastward into Wisconsin, and Il-
linois. But more snow was ex-
pected today in Michigan, where
freezing. rain and snow were
blamed for two deaths. One man
died after collapsing while
s hoveling s now, and another
man was tiUed when the car be
was in skidded and bit a Ught
pole.
Bi11ingual schooling off Runaways
raped by
migrants? 'Har~h, inflexible' plan cu·riailed
In K'aDSU, where rain and up
to 'six inches of snow fell, the
driver of a tanker truck carry-
ing anhydrous ammonia was·
killed durinl the weekend when
it overturned on a rain-slick
highway. Parts of Missouri got
seven inc hes of s now and
Wisconsin got up to 4'h inches.
Six people died in Iowa, in·
elud ing five who died on
highways and one man who died
in the crash or a light aircraft in
Pochohontas County. Up to 9
inches of snow fell on sections of
the state.
The storm left at least tour
dead after traffic accidents
·on s lick roads in Ne braska,
where winds gusted up to 45 mph
Sunday. Two traffic deaths were
blamed on snow and ice condi-
tions in Colorado, and the U.S.
Fores t Service iss ued an
avalanche warning ror mountain
areas.
In Utah, a man was killed
Saturday when hit by a pickup
truck as he walked along a road
<See SNOW, Pa1e A%)
W ASIDNGTON CAP) -The
Department of Education ls dis-
carding heavily crit.ici1ed bi-
lingual education rules proposed
by the Carter administration,
Education Secretary T.H. Bell
announced today.
The rules would have rorced
the nation's schools to teach
c hildren who a r en't nattve
speakers of English in their
native language and in English.
Congress had put a freeze on the
rules, proposed by Bell's pre-
decessor . Shirley M. Hufstedler.
on Aug. 5, and they never went
into erfect.
But they ignited an avalanche
of criticism from school boards
a nd many education groups,
which claimed that for the first
time the federal government
was _trying to tell school districts
how and, what to teach.
· 'Tbe policies are harsh, in·
fl exible, burdensome, unworka·
ble and incredibly costly. The
rules are fiercely opposed by
many, supported by few.·· Bell
said.
He called the rules "an in·
trusion on state and local
responsibility."
''Nothing in the law or the
Constitution anoints the Depart·
ment of Education to be Na·
tional School Teacher, National
School Superintendent or Na-
tional School Board. I would like
to use this regulation. symbolic
of many of the Ills that have
plagued the federal government and this fledgling department. to
telegraph a message of change
to the American people ...
Bell told reporters .he pro-
posed withdrawing the rules a
week ago to President Reagan
"and he was in full support of
it~"
The Education Department
estimated that enforcing the
rules to teach children reading,
writing and other primary sub·
jects in two languai{es could cost
..school districts SIBO million to
$.591 million a year.
Bell said that until his staff
can rewrite the rules to make
them more fl exible, the depart-
ment will revert to guidelines is·
sued in 1975. Those guidelines.
never put into re~ulatlons, were
l•t eletml ... are .. d
Four-year-old lallet Cottle puta ftnilhin1 toaebll an makeup for Clown Konty. who
ii really f.year-old Neville Campbell at Ho-
ly Trinity Cbureb In Eat London V{here
the 35th annual clowna • service wu held
Sunday. Juliet's father, Gerry, ii president ..
of Clowns Intemallonal. .
a response to the 1973 U.S.
Supreme Court decision that
held schools must instruct non·
English-speaking students. The
high court , however. did not
·specify how they should be
taught.
The Carter adminis tration
rules stipulated that instruction
in two languages be the norm for
classes of limited speakers or
English, and that any variance
must get special permission.
The proposal -infuriated
e du cators us ing inte nsive csee SPANISH! Page A2)
Bus service
threatened
I
by strike
A strike shutting down Orange
County Transit District bus
service became more likely to·
day after mechanics reportedly
rejected the latest contract offer
from the district.
Ttie mechanics, voting on
Saturday, cast all but one vote to
reject the unspecified offer , ac·
cording to a spokesman for the
United T.ransportatlon Union.
w h ich repr esents th e 210
mechanics and the district's 760
bus drivers . The mechanics could go on
strike as early as Thursday -60
days after their three-vear con-tract expired and 30 days after
a fact rinding process was im-
ple m e'hted to unsuccessfully
solve contract disputes.
The drive rs voted on a
separate contract orrer on Sun-
day. Results were unavailable
early today.
The drivers are expected lo
honor picket lines in the event of
a mechanics' strike .
The district's board of direc-·
tors was to meet today to dis-
cuss the situation.
Top pay currently fo r
m echanics i1 $9.82 1n hour;
drivers earn $1P.46 an hour.
~d earthquake
felt ,at Palomar
MOUNT PALOMAR <AP)
No damqe or inj"1'ies were re-
ported from a mlld earthquake
that struck a remote modn&aln
area 11 ~ nortbeut ol the
famed·PalOmar Qblervatory.
The oblervatory'a IOCMnch
Hale refledJDI tel•cope, ane of
the world'• lar1eat, wu un-
disturbed bf tM tremor, wtdeb
occurred Hrl7 S••day, •aid
Palomar ~....taker MID• ._.
mon1.
I • i
SPOKAN E. Wash. CAP) -
T h ree teen-age girl s who
hitchhiked from a school for dis·
turbed children claim they were
forced to have sex with as many
as 50 migrant workers a-day in
California authorities said.
The girls. one 14 and two 15.
left the Antonian School for Emo·
tionally Disturbed Adolescents
ne;ir Cheney, about 15 miles
southwest of Spokane. on Jan. 22
and were found at a We st
Sacramento motel by Yolo Coun ·
ty deputies Jess than a week later.
The two 15-year-olds later ran
away and ar e still m issing.
authorities said.
A day after leaving the school.
the girls told police. they were
picked up in Oregon by two men
who allegedly forced them into
prostitution.
Rudy Ancira. 32. of Red
Coalville, Utah, and his twin
b r oth er , R oy Ancira of
Sacramento. were arrested and •
booked for investigation of pan·
dering. pimping and statutory
rape.
Deputies arrested the pair after
the 14-year -old girl called the
sheriff's office and pleaded for
help. said Detective Sgt. Ron
Moore.
The 14-year-old girl has flown
back to the Antonian School, but
the two 15-year-olds ned from
foster homes before they could
be returned, Moore added.
He sai<tthe girls told authorities
they were forced to have sex with
as many as 50 men a day during a
weekend sweep of migrant labor
camps in the San Joaquin Valley.
(See TEENS, rage AZ)
Two hostages
linked to CIA
NEW YORK (AP) -At least
two of the Americans taken
hostage in Iran were United to
the Central Intelligence A1ency
by documents seized when Ir'-
nian militants took overtbe U.S.
Embauy in Tehran, aecordina
to pubUlbed reportl.
The reports appeared ~
in Time ma1uine and the Lon-
don Oblerver. The Oblerver ac-
count wu written• by reporier
Ian llatber, who aald be aaw die doc ument.a ta Tebran in No-
yembef, 1"'.
Time mapa-, la• npast •
the ~ of lDteJD..-.
matertal8 aC Aa.erttaa elD·
ba11l•. salcl that ••Olll a
"tn-. troft .. " ...... .foad'lllr•••111&1w-..
ladleatl•I tl•at #Ulla• o • ...._ .... ..._..., ... ~ ...... .
Bedroom
stabbing
probed
By FREDERICKSCHOE MEHL
Of IM D•llY Pit.I St•fl
A bloody Sunday night slaying,
in -which a 25-year-old man was
repeatedly stabbed in the chest in
the bedroom of his Laguna Niguel
residence, is under investigation
today by the Orange County
, Sheriff's Department homicide
detectives.
Investigation Capt. James
Guess said no motive has yet been
established in the slaying which
he said is believed to have oc-
curred some time around mid·
night at the Ellendale Drive ad·
dress.
Captain Guess said the victim's
identity has been determined. but
that its release would be withheld
pending notification of the man's
parents.
The body. which was clothed,
was found at 12 :30 a.m today by
the victim's roommate.
"There was no evidence of rob-
bery. burf(lary o~ forced entry."
Guess said. Nor we re there signs
of a struggle, he said.
Guess. when asked what the
motive mlght be. responded "I
wish we knew."
He said initial investigation
showed th at the slaying had
neither sexual nor drug-related
overtones.
Guess said the slain man was
employed as an engineer. but
declmed to name the firm where
the vlctip:i worked. ·
'0 The victim was last seen alive
by the roommate at about 6 p.m.
Sund ay, Guess said.
Guess said the slaying isn't
believed to be related to the µn-
solved murders or Keith Eli Har-
rington, 24, and his wife. Patrice
Anne , 27 . who were found
bludgeoned to death in the
bedroom of a Niguel Shores home
Aug.21. .
"There are just too many dif·
ferences In the two cases." Guess
said.
ln the Harrington case sheriff's
homicide investigators also have
been unable to determine a
motive.
Reagans retreat
at Camp David
WASHINGTON <API Presi·
dent Reagan and his wife1 Nan-
cy, explo-r ed the grounds of
Camp David, Md., during their
first weekend at the presidential
r etr ea t , a White H ous e
spokesman said.
David Prosperi, an assistant
White House press secretary
who accompanied the Reagans,
said the president and his wile
appear ed r ested a fter the
weekend. He said the Reagans
walked along the paved roads or
the camp, located in the Catoe·
tin Mountains about 60 miles
north or Washington, but not on
its nature trails.
Coast
Weather
Variable high cloudiness
otherwise fair through
· Tuesday with chance of
coHlal foe Tuesday morn-
ing. Lows tonight 38 to 46.
Hlgha Tuesday a to 73.
INSl•E .... AW
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Cop 101., ••
Olm 11&e/1 Seal Beach
' D•TIOIT CAP) Del~ PoUu Offlttr WU Pruer U•Ml .. t ta.. ,.,, PlyllMMh k>oktd , .......
WIMa IM' pu.li.d lt O\'tr,
pollce HJ, lt h&rfttd out to
man queried
&. hl• own • fra..,. WH on p trol
wlan M lpM&M I.he car Alth~ tl• dr•Hr hMd
•lilat .,.. ..... tu lM' l•1al Uta.. lt wu f'rutr·~ •uto,
1tot.n from bl home's
drl v.•••> th e m onth
before. polite aid •
Offit"t!n 1uT tM G l•nn
OeJat'MU. 23, of Detroit
and accused h m of 1elllna
t bt r•r for s.300 to the
dravt<r "Tai.er 'itopped
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
former Seal Beach man wanted
at a whntla ta tbe blaarre aerie• of .. ,.....,.,)' Kiiler" murders
w11 belna held for questioniftt ln
a i>eooayf vania Jail SWlday.
tie was Identified as Ralpb
Leonard Kincer, 20. now beinc
held ln the Somerset County jall ln
Heu otsl00,000 bail.
Kincer was arrested last
Au1u1t in connection with the $100
robbery ol a Somerset gas station,
said Somerset police officer
LesterD. Lensbouer.
Noted yaehtsman
Newport attorney
Webster succumbs
Funernl services ror Thomas C.
Webster. a Newport. Beach and
Los Angeles attorney who died
Saturday at the Los Angeles
hOspital where he was born, will
beheld Tuesday in Westwood.
Services for Mr. Webster, a
Newport resident since 1920. will
be conducted at 2:30 p.m. at
Westwood P ark Memorial
Chapel, 1218Glendon Ave.
Mr. Webster was prominent in
yachting for most of his life. He
was the son .of the late J im
Webster, founder of the famed
Flight of the Snowbirds, and for
whom Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's race committee boat was
named .
The long-time Newport man
and his brother. Robb, owned lhe
first Snowbird, a 12-foot catboat,
christened Tom Robin.
In addition to being known as
the craft for the mids ummer
spectacle known as the Flight of
the Snowbirds, it was also re·
nowned as the singlehanded boat
in the 1932 Olympics in Los
Angeles.
/ Prior to his illness. Mr. Webster
was president of Perpetual Sav·
in gs and Loan and later chairman
of the board. Perpetual Savings is
sponsor of the Flight of the Lasers
and donor of lhe primary trophy.
The Flight of the Lasers was the
successor to the Flight of the
Snowbirds. Both events were con·
ducted by the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. Webst er h ad been a
member or NHYC since 1943. He
was a long-time mem~r of the
Wils hire Chamber of ~erce
and the Redlands Chamber of
Commerce. He was president of
the Beverly Hills Rotary Club In
1978, and prior to h1s Illness was
scheduled to be president of the
YMCA of Beverly Hills.
He is survived by his widow,
Fran.ces Mary (the former
Frances Atwood of Sa n
Bernardino): two sons, Thomas
C. Jr., Portland, Ore. and John,
Newp0rt Beach1 and his brother
Robb. Laguna Beach.
The family req uests that
memorial contributions be made
to CARES of the Los Angeles-USC
County Medical Center in the
name of the Webster Wing, Com·
prehensive Cancer.Center.
"Kinc~r gave us a lot of names
and addresses when he was Cirst
arrested." Lensbouer said.
Kincer was questioned by
Orange County sheriff's inves-
tigator Bernie Esposito on Jan. 23
and 24. Orange County Chief
Deputy District Attorney James
Enright said Kincer is "not a
suspect'' in t he murders,
·•although the Orange County
sh~riff's office sees him as a
potential witness.'•
Lensbouer sai.d Ki.Jlcer pleaded g~ilty Friday to a charge of
"criminal conspiracy" in connec·
tion--with the gas station holdup
and was scheduled for sentencing
Tue~day.
Details of Kincer's involvement
in the Califoroia slaylngs are not
clear but a source in Somerset
said the man is believed to have
been a roommate of one or the six
men arrested earlier io connec·
lion with the series of grisly
murders.
William Bonin, 33, a Downey
truck driver, is charged with
muqfering 14 teen-age boys
within the jurisdiction of Los
Angeles County.
Bonin faces trial May 4 in Los
Ange les and also races possjble
proseclllion in several other coun·
ties, including Oran1te County.
Three other men also have been
charged and face trial in Los
Angeles .in connection w&th the
killings. They are: Gregory Mat·
thew Miley, 19, of Bellflower,
charged' in five killings. James
Munro, 19, of Long Beach, and
William Ray Pugh , 18, of
Norwalk, both charged with one
murder.
Another man charged in con·
nection with the case, Vernon
Butts. 23, hanged himself in his
Los Angeles County Ja~I cell last
month.
-rhe strangulation killings
became known as the "Freeway
Killer" murders because the 44
bodies of the victims -all young
men or boys -weredumped near
freeways or highways.
Authorities say, however, that
the murders. which occurred in
Los Angeles, Orange. San
Bernardino. Riverside and Kern
counties since 1972. m ay not all be
related.
In later years, Mr. Webster was
sailing-master aboard yachts
owned by the late Howard F.
Ahmans on H e made one
Trans pac race lo Hon olulu on
Ahmanson·s Sirius II. the yacht
Monsoon and the famed yacht
Goodwill. 'Colle«!tion' taken
E',....P .. ~AJ
TEENS ...
The men reportedly paid pro·
curers $20 for each sexual en-
counter, Moore said.
··It's not an unus ual occur·
rence," said Antonian School pro·
gram director 'Robert Olson. "In
the last two years that I've been
here, I'd say we Jost six to IO gi rls
to pimps.··
Church disrupted
by woman bandit
Olson said most or the girls at
the school are ·•perfect can ·
didates" for prostitution because
they h ave been emotionally
deprived teen-agers referred to
the. school are among the most
psychotic youngsters in the
state, he added.
Olson and school administrator
Matt Wright said they were
hamstrung by Washington state
hlws which bar them from holding
their charges forcibly.
"If at bedtime they slip out the
back door, that's it," Wright said.
"We don't have the authority to
pursue them and bring them
back."
Body found
under train
A 31-year-old Burba nk man's
dismembered body was round
beneath a railroad freight car
early Sunday during s witc~ing
operations in Anaheim.
The Oran1te County Sheriff·
Coroner 's office identified the
dead man as Jonas Petras.
Investigators said It was un·
clear at this time if the victim was
run over by a train or died by
some other means.
Officers said a cr ewman
noticed a portion of the victim's
body beneath one or the freight
cars during track switching
operations al about 3 a.m. in the
Southern Pacific switching yard
area adjacent to the Santa Ana
·Freeway.
The death is still under in·
vestigaUon.
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The
Rev. Glenn W. Ralpt) was telling:
his two dozen parishioners
wabout Moses leading children
into the promised land \Vhen a
stocky woman armed with a re·
volver took up an unauthorized
collection, police say.
The woman and h'er three
co mpanions took an un ·
de te rmined amoun~of cash, jewelry and credit ca ds Sunday
from the congrega on at the
Cal vary Assemb y of God
Church, police said.
Burglars hit
Laguna homes
Burglars took more than
S3. 700 worth of cash. jewelry.
and other items from two
Laguna Beach homes over the
weekend.
Police said thieves possibly
used a key to enter the home of
Hugh Simon Owens, of La Vista
Drive. They made orf with $1,771
in c ash, jewelry and other
belongings .
At the home of Phyllis T.
Butler. of Hillcrest Drive, sus·
p ects entered by unknown
means and look a diamond ring
valued at $2,000. I
Rabies epidemic?
LEAKEY. Texas CAP) -With
the number of confirmed rabies
cases rising at an "alarmin1"
rate in a six-county area of south
Texas, health officials are warn·
ing of a possible new epidemic
of the deadJy virus.
TELEPHONE
Thomas P. Haley
~ ....
Robert N. Weed ~
M. Thomlis K..vll .....
Thomal A. ~lne .............
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,.
Phyllis Oldenhouse. who was
sitting in the rear of the church
in Rio Linda, a northern rural
suburb of Sacramento, said the
armed woman told her the half
dozen children in the nursery
would not be harmed ··as long as
you do what you 're told to do."
The woman forced. Mrs .
Oldenhouse to take two pillow
cases ar.d collect wallets, purses
and jewelry from the people.
Police said they had no leads
to the robbers, who appeared to
be familiar with the church and
nailed some exits shut before en·
tering. 1
Jn addition t o the armed
wom an. a man stood at the rear
of the church, another woman
s tood guard outside and a
second man was in one of the
two cars, police said.
Kalph speculated that the rob·
bers picked his church because
"we are in the middle or a field .
We are really not close to
anything residential. So we are
Isolated from the rest of the
community."
Plane 1tuck
of/runway
MIAMI <AP) -In the rourth
weekend mishap involving ma·
jor U.S. air carriers, a Delta Air
Lines jet turned too sharply orr a
runway, became stuck in mud
and had to be towed onto the
airstrip, officials said.
Delta spokesman Jim Ewing
said the L·lOll jetliner carrying
162 people from Chicago to
Mia mi became mired in the
mud just after landing Sunday.
Passengers got out safely.
Also Sunday. a United Airlines
• jet landed safely tn Los Angeles
after being diverted 0n ·a flight
from Las Vegas , Nev., to
Chicago because of landing gear
trouble. Similar landings OC·
curred Saturday ln Washington
and New York. where six people
suffered cuts and bruises while
leaving a Boeing 727 after land·
ing ~ear collaps~.
FBI joins probe
LJHUE, HawaH (AP> -
Federal a1enta will ioln the ln·
ve1tl1aUoa al a bomb blast that
ripped ~lb the omc.. of
Kauai Count} llayor Eduardo
llalap6t °"" UMWMkend, • eoua· i,1potesawa1a)'I.
Trial nearit19 end
Ma rine Pfc. Robe rt Garwood arrived in court today with
Donna Long a t Camp Lejeune, N.C .. as his court martial
neared final stages on t·harges that he collaborated with
the enemy durin_g Vi<.'lnC:Jm War Closin g ar gum ents were
s cheduled today.
Laguna schools cite
spf nding concerns
cul nearly Sl million in programs
a nd services the pas t three
\'Ntr5, and the next step appears
i o be elimin at ion of som e
tcach~r and classified employee
positions.
Lagwrn Bearh school tnic;lees
have sent letters lo Governor
Brown and a half dozen ">late
legislators asktng that priorities
for state spcndrng be directed at
educating students.
The letter, signed b~ a l) fi\'e
board members. cites the dis
triers concern that next yt'ar s
proposed state budget shim !> on
ly a 5 percent 41ven1gc increase
in income for publi c schoob.
,, Because of declining enroll·
m enl and the cff<'cl of the Ser·
rano-Priest state Suprem e Court
decis ion equalizing. d istrict
fina nces, Laguna trustees say
the local school system wi ll "oh·
viously g<'l much less·· thm1
even 5 percent
The letter re<ids. ··Jn this dis·
lrict (Lagun<i ) spec1hcall). our
income since 1!176 has only m
creased a total of 4 percent.
"When comp}1red with the in·
flalionary rate of over 1\0 per-
cent as shown in the Consumer
Price Index for the same period
or time... the letter continues.
"it is obvious thar d1s'tricts such
a s ours ha ve already .been
forced to make cri·ti<·al rfro~ram
b u d g e t a r y <· o I s I o a v o i d
bankruptcy.··
The s mall schoo1 <listric·t has
Cuba pact told
CHICAGO !/\P l A document
obtained by the State Department
indicates Mexico secret!~ agreed
to "make all efforts·· to supply
Cuba with oil·drilling equiµment
'and goods manufactured in other
countries. according lo the
Chi cago Tribune Sunday
"We are deeply frustrated and
dist rt'ssed O\'er this situation.'"
the letter sa,·s The trustees !>ugg(':,t that ··im·
mediate de<:1 sion:. r~garding
<.>ducal1on as a priority for pro·
per f unding will require
courageous. bold and creative
leadership.··
Dis tri ct S u per in l ehdent
Robert Sanchis said he hopes the
letter encourages the legislators
to act.
Milk theft
brings shot
F RESNO 1AP1 A Fresno
man \\as shot in the right eye al·
legedl y for stea\ing milk from a
child. police reported.
Mi chael Rampel. 20, was
walking along a street Sunday
with a friend when a station
wagon pulled up. a man got out
a nd fired three shots from a
.22 -caliber revolver . offi cers
, said.
Rampel was taken to Valley
Medical Center~here he was re·
ported in c ritical condition.
Police said the shooting might
have resulted from Rampel and
his companion, Jerry Chavez.
18. ta king a half gallon ..of milk
from a t0·12·year·old boy in the
area
----------
Introducing the Al s Garage Jean
designed espe<.ially w11t1 you m mind
llgh1we1Qht. corntort<1bly tailored with a
stra1gh1 reg s1lhouet1c. 1n three shades
of t1en1m 11'1d100. washed and bleachoo
'
SNOW ....
durinl the 1nowstorm. On SUD·
-day, a :car-old cro11-eouD&Y
akler, D Arthur LaPave al
Salt Lake, died after bei•I
burled under five feet of 1now in
a small avalanche at Donat Fa111
in Bil Cottonwood Canyon. Two
companions escaped and aum·
moned help, aulboriUea said.
The National Weather Service
issued avalanche warnln11 for
all ~ack-country areas u the
new snow sUpped off the old.
hard-packed base.
Alta, the sk1 resort ln UtUe
Cottonwood Canyon east of Sall
Lake City, reported havin1 90
inches of snow. on the ground, an
increase of nearly five feet since
Wednesday.
In Connecticut. where the 0:38
inches of rain that fell last
month m ade it the dri.est .
January on record, olfictals
were hoping that the light rain
.>unday and rain expected today
would alleviate the current
parched conditions.
A co mpany with 500
employees in the affluent city of
Greenwich has gone to a four·
da y work week to .conserve
water. orricials s~y.
f',....p._.AJ
SPANISH. • •
En~lish-as-a ·second·language
ins ruction , or i mmersion
cou ses, to teach· youn·gsters
Eng ish.
But Bell said schools should
not ha ve to get special
perrr.ission for such methods.
"It was like Henry Ford used
to say about his Model T, 'You
can have any color you want as
long as it is black,' because that
was the onl y color he produced,"
Bell said. ·
The Education Department
estimated last s umme r that
more than 3.5 million children in
America speak little or no
English. Seventy percent are
His panic.
But it said only 1.3 million are
doing so p oo rly with the
language that they would have
qualified for bilingual education
under the 1975 guidelines.
Two nations
call for truce
LIM A. Peru <AP) -Peru and
Ecuador each called for a cease·
fir e a ft er fi ve da ys of
s kirmishing along a disputed
stretch of their Andean border.
but each reiterated its claim to
the territory and demanded that-
the other recognize it. Peru asse'rted Sunday night
that all Ecuadorean forces had
been driven from Peruvian ter·
ritory and said its troops "have
been ordered to cea se' firing
when the adversary adopts a
similar meas ure and abstains
from any act of aggression.··
Several hour s later ,
Ecuadorean President Jaime
Roldos called for a cease-fire
that "respects the territorial in·
tegrity of Ecuador." His govern·
ment admitted the loss of one of
its three military posts1n the re·
mote. mountainous area but
claimed ground and air fighting
was continuing for another one.
work grants eyed
CHICAGO (A ) -A state
senator is g that jobless
r~idents ( Il ois be given
grants or to $9,000 lo leave the
state and go to places where
there is work. "I hope this is not
pe'r.ceived as a bounty on
minorities," said Sen. Jeremiah
Joyce, who said the bulk u un·
employed people in Illinois are
;n-embers of minorjty groups.
ALSGARAGE
56 f A&ilON ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
I
TOiigh line takeri
I
Reagan milita~t toward Soviets
WASHINGTON f AP' -A fft
wfflla .,o. ' wu a commonl)'1
UH ..... VMtW •mona Carter Id·
mUtittraUon olntlalt U.1& ..,_..
deal llt11an would t'ODthad•
lhl lht rills• ol UAC'OftlltalMd
rlvatry with the 8ovlel Unlon
oul•.1-the reward•
Bu& after a..1 than l wo weeb
In Q(fiN, lhfire 11 evt1ry lndk•·
Uon that the Mw •dmlolatraUon
t\a decided to opt for 1 contron
tat~al poJk)', t'OnVlnced that a
t'OftllNCUve rel1tum1hip It not
pou1ble because o r ovlet
~hl\'lor worldwld
Th s altitude <-ontrasts sharply
w1lb that which prevailed under
~mocrat1c and Republican ad·
min1strat1ons over the past 20
years Tbese adminis trations
have believed that competltlon
with the Sovie~ must be coupled
~·1th policies that e ns ure
peaceful coexistence.
\
Tit• tone of the new •d·
mlalalration'I lpproAtb Wll Mt
thl• put WMk when Rea1an and
Secretary ot Stale Al•xander II.
H1l1 Jr., held thelr first news
confe,...cee.
On Wedoelday, H1l1 aald the
world.. bu been wi\Ml1~ '"an
un preodenl·
ed at least In, character
Hd scope -
rlak taking
mode on the
part of the
Soviet Un.ion"
in terms of
''l rai ning ,
fundirtg and
equipping in-u.o•,.
ternational terrol'ism."
On Thursday, Reagan added a
ne w dimension to the ad·
ministralion's criticism with
some of the strongest anti-Soviet
Two-prong strategy
backs budget plan
WASHINGTON tAPl President Reagan is preparing to bat·
tie the nation's economic ills. starting with a one·two punch de·
signed to draw m aximum political support for t\,is plans in a
possibly reluctant Congress. · . · .
The president will deliver a televised address to the nation th.is
week to focus attention on the economy. Two wttks later, he will
make what an aide called a ··s tate of the Union-type·· s peech to
Congress detailing his economic program. · • . -
The first speech will be made just before Congress begms a
12·day recess. Reagan hopes to be able to send the· members of the
House and Senate home to constituents who have just heard a con·
vincing pre$idential argum~nt for cutting the budgets of even their
favorite federal programs. .
A White House offi cial, outlining Reagan's plans. said the
president would offer a "can·do approach" to the American public,
rather than saying ··you have to be miS'erable" to solve the nation's
economic problems.
Shortly after Co ngress returns on Feb. 17, the presidenl will
visit Capitol Hill and presen~ a "much mort; detailed" .report on
his comprehensive economic package. said the White House
source who asked that he not be identified by name. •
Referring to the De mocratic majority in the House, the official
observed that ··if we don 't do some careful planning to try to trim
those odds, we'll be carried out on our shields."
Few specifics have evolved about how the new administration
plans to trim the Carte r administration's proposed budget forthe 1982
fiscal year, which begins Oct. l .
lan1u11e beard since the Cold
War era.
He aald the Soviet.a have re-
served for themselves "the right
to commit any crime, to lie, to
cheal" ln order to achieve their
1oal ot "world revolution.•·
The new militancy has evoked
strong expressions' of suppoft
from some officials who believe
Moscow for too long has been
trying to take advantage of un·
stable situations in the Middle
East, Central Ame rica and
Africa by providing arms and
other support to rebel forces.
One official, who asked not to
be identified, credited the ad· ministration with a "n ew
realism" in addressing Soviet ac·
tivities.
But a dissenting official, who
also requested anonymity. said
the U.S. government has ~n
taken over by "a bunch or hard·
lin e rs who are acting like
nothing has changed in the past
30 years."
Said another , "Wha t we are
seeing is the release of pent-up
frustrations which have been ac·
cumulating for the past four
years."
He said he is hopeful that the
new administration will show
more restraint as time goes on.
At his news conference,·Haig
singled out the use of Cuban
tro o p s in
Angola a nd
Ethiopia as
an issue of
"utmost con-
cern·· to the
ad m inis tra·
tion.
The Carter
ad m inistr a ·
lion held the
view that, in HAIG
ti m e, t he African nations
themselves would invit e the
Cubans to leave and would con·
elude that only the Western in-
dustrialized nations are capable
of assisting their pressing de·
velopment needs.
But Hail'( t akes a much more
alarmist view of the Cu ban pres-
ence. "It is a subject." he ,said.
··which will be high on the
priority of our national security
and foreign policy agenda.··
Chapman .turns around
Orange Coast gets out of mo~ey problefl!Jl
Six years ago C hapman
. ~ollege in Orange was faced
with a $3.5 million debt. Its
Campus Afloat progr a m was
dry-docked and its faculty was
for ced to take a 10 percent
saljiry cut. to keep the private
college from sinking altogether .
But things have turned around
drastically at the 120·year-old
campus . ·
In a "Statement of Condition
1980'" report r~leased last week,
the college's net worth was list·
ed at $14.5 million. .
<;onstruction, hastily halted in
1976. was resumed so that the
college's Memorial Hall and 75
percent of its classrooms could
receive a face lift
The school has a reported
$26.6 million in assets, chiefl y
from the worth of the buildings.
Liabilities are listed at $12.1
million.
Ramsey Alexander , vice·
president in charge of finance
for the college, credits hefty
donations and wise investments
for the tum-around.
Since 1977 Chapman has re·
ceived more than,$2 m illion each
year from private contributors.
Alexander 's firs t move as
head or finance in 1976 was to
liquidate all stock market ·in·
terests invested by the school
and convert the cash into short·
term certificate of deposit ac·
counts.
Tuition at the private school
has jumped from $2,930 per year
in 1977 to $4,280 this year to
$4,800 next year .
In addition to renovating
classrooms , the college also con·
structed a new S2 million Hutton
Sports Center in 1978.
Chapman officials claim that
admissions at the school have in·
creased. 65 percent. Also, 100
percent of those applying for
de ntal schools a re accepted
from Chapman and .6() pe rcent of
those applying for medical
school are admitted following
gradJlation Jrom the Orange col·
lege.
Authorities also claim th~t 161
out of 162 master's candidates in
Marriage and . Family Counsel-
ing passed the '1ate licensing ex·
ams, compared to 50 percent
statewide.
"In the next two years we are
moving toward more improve·
ments," said Alexander. ··we
will increase our endowment
tremendously.··
Alexander said th~ he expects
the college's net worth to in-
crease from $14.5 million to $20
million by 1983.
Chief among the sc hool 's
moneymakers over the next few
yea rs will be the anticipated
s ale of 242 acres in Mission Vie·
jo, which could net $15 ,million.
said Alexander.
Smog, business tax
facing Legis·lature
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The
Legislat ure this week begins
cautious looks at two 1980 issues
that have refused to go away -
how to clean up auto e missions
and what tQ do with a $550
million windfill business tax.
Assembly and Senate commit-
tees are planning hearings on
t hose two complex a nd con·
troversial issues, but aren't like·
ly to make any s wift decisions .
The Senate Transportation
Committee will look at SB33 by
Sen . Robert Presle y , D·
Rivers ide, "for technical in·
·formation only" on Tuesday.
The bill by Presley) who. un·
succ essfully pus h ed several
vehicle inspection bills last year,
is desigi:ied to comply with the
federai requirement that
smoggy .cities which won't meet
( \ean air standards by the end or
1982 have an annual car inspee-
tion program.
In California. those will be the
a reas around Los Angeles.
Sacramento, Fresno, San Fran·
cisco and San Diego.
Because the Legislature has
refused to impose such a pro·
gram on car-loving Californians.
the federal E nvir onmental
Protection Agency has cut off
"$850 million in federal highway
and sewer funds.
Opponents of the program
hope the Reagan administration
will reverse that policy.
Presley's bill calls . for local
air pollution districts to set up
programs to inspect all 1969 and
later vehicles each year for $15
and to require repJlirs to meet
emission standards.
One proposal for dealing with
the $550 million business tax will
be heiird Wednesday in the As·
sembly Revenue and Taxation
Committee.
W Ood future bright
The tax, known as the "un·
secured roll." is going to be the
subject of much debate in .the
Legislature between now and
July.
Proposition 13, the Howard
Jarvis initiative approved in
1978, clearly cut tax rates 57 per·
cent f<M' taxes on real property,
namely land and buildings. But
It was unclear if il applied lo
property taxes for "unsecured
property," such as equipment
owned by businesses.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Wood,
man's oldest fuel and one enjoy·
inl a resurgence ill home beat·
Ing, also may have import.ant
uses 1n transportation and ln·
du1try in Ul1I day of decllninl
enerl)' sources, a report by the
Worldwatch Institute aays.
Wood "could provide up to
one-flftJJ of the country's enern
by the year 2000," says the study
by the non·proflt research or·
1anbaUon. Tbe report, UUed "Wood: All
Ancient Fuel with 1 New
Future," also Hld plentlful
forests make wood an lmpoftlnt
fuel IOUl'ft la the Am&IOll ncloa
of Soutb America, Africa '1
Con10 811la, llale11l1, tbe .~pplw. tr-da•11te, c.....sa. nortbenl Europe, ud tbe So¥iet
Union.
It warns, however, that the in·
discriminate stripping of forests
could have serious environmen-
tal implications, particularly in
• Third World countrtea where
wood remains in widespread use
for cooking and heatin1.
"Planting rates must be
stepped up five times to meet
1rowrng population needs,"
Ni1el Smith, author of the re·
port, sald at a new• confeNDce.
He poin~ out that much ot the
population IJ'OwUl will come ln ,
developins countri•.
In tbe United States, SaUtb
aald, tbe number tJI wood ltoYel
few bome bNtlq ba balkMmld
and tbe UM ol Wood ID lDdulVJ and power 1eaeration also
•bowl ..... tJI ..,,.u..
•
Thirty.eight counties used the
hi1her, pre-13 rates for un·
secured property and the state
Supreme Court upheld them last
March. The court also indica~
the other 30 counUn 1bould col· ··~t the ......... tu bec•ViM tu
laws an aupposed to be uilllorm
statewide.
TIM countlel have beea hold·
ln1 tbat moneJ peadU.1 tile
court deelllon and tbe
IAIOalltln lMt ....,..., tr.. tt
atll JalJ 1111 to deeWe wlMll &o clo With tt.
I
-Monday, februa~ 2, 198\ DAIL. V PIL.OT
. .
'~
l)Mly~ ...............
DE HAVILLAND DASH 7 GOLDEN wEsT.AlRLlNES' VEHICLE OF THE FUTURE :1
Commuter line to atert flight• of new 50-peHenger plan•• next week
Sh! wDash 7 taking ·off
·-Golden West Airlines huys quiet turboprops
By STEVE Mt\RBl.E
Of lhe D•llJ Pllet S .. 11
A model of the blunt.nosed
ye llow. orange a nd white
airplane sits on a desk corner in
Henry. Voss' Newport Beach of·
fice. The re~I thing is across the
street at .John Wayne Airport.
Th e 50 .pn sse n ge r D e
Havill and Dash 7. billed as the
quietest transport plane in the
sky. is viewed as thP vehicle of
the future for Golden West
Airlines
Go lden We!>t . a s m a ll .
Newport Beach bast'd com
muter line that began business
in the 1950s flying an amphibian
craft known as the .. Gremlin
Goose·· between Long Beach
a nd Catalina Is l a nd . h as
purchased five of the Dash 7s at
S6 million each
Voss, president 'of Colden
West and a 20-year Marine pilot.
claims the Dash 7 is qui<'tcr than
m ost of the light private planes
that fl y in to John Wayne
··v ou could literally stand out
by the runway and not t:.>ven hear
it take off.·· he say~ of lhC' Da~h
7.
Golden West will start flying
the turbo-prop plane out of the
Orange County airport on Wed·
nesday when it begins to Oy its
new Lake Tahoe route.
The Newport airlin<' already
serves Los Angeles. San Diego.
Santa Barbara. -Oxnard and
Palmdale.
The new plane will replace
Golden West ·~ flee t of 18 ·
passenger Twin Otters. a craft
al s o manufactu r ed b) De
Havilland .
The Dash 7 is 80 feet long. has
four wing -mounted engmes and
can reach speeds of 250 mph It
Need a car?
Go see Sam
Would you buy a used car
from these guys"?
The U.S. government has an·
.nounced it will sell 62 surplus
vehicles to the public at its
Riverside motor pool on get
t his Friday t he 13th of
February.
The sedans. s tation wagons.
pickups and Jeeps will be sold
on a spot bid basis starting 'l1 10
a.m. The sale wi!J take pl~ at
the General Services Ad ·
ministration·s motor pool at 1765
Massachusetts Ave.
If you·re not superstitious and
don't have a runn) reeling about
the sale date . you can check out
the vehicles in advance starting
Monday.
gets a respectable one mile per
gallon and. if it mus t. can land
and come to a hall on an 800·foot
strip.
The airplance can handle
ab<l ut 830 miles ¥ a full tank
and can approach airports at a
muc·h sleeper angle tha n most
pl a nes. sharply reducing lh<>
area surrounding an CJirporl af
fected bv aircraft noise.
Stat1si1cs aside, the Dash 7
represents Golden West·s plunge
in to the vacation c.1 nd tourist
market. \'oss savs Lake Tahoe
is tne first target. Palm Springs.
he says. is probably nex t
Air California and PSI\
stopped hc.1 uling s ights eers.
gamblers and skiers lo Tahoe in
1979. citing the short runway and
f reque nt foul v.eather that
forced planes to delCJur tCJ Reno
\'u!>S matnla1 n s that th e
airlines lost money bec ause
roughly 30 pe rcent of the flight~
were forced to land at Reno
Sul·h maneu\'ers. ht:.> maintains.
did little lo bobter pa~senger
confidente in an airline
With the ab1lille!:. Vo!>~ "ec!> in
the nC'\\ Vash 7 and plans hi!'.
firm ha:' for installing a nev. In·
s trument landing system al
T ahoe. he predicts that by the
!>Um mer of 1982. Golden West
never will have to reroute a
T ahoe·bound night.
He also calculates that the
Ta hoe runs will boost Golden
West 's annual passenger figure.
from the 600,000 range to more
than a million.
"We've even r emoved two
scats on four of the Dash 7s to al·
low storage area for skis," the
('Om pany president says . "This
1s definitely a change in profile
for us."'
Golden West is even addit\g a ·
fli ght allendant on each Tahoe
r un. an amenity never used by
the Newport firm before.
Voss says his firm. which has
traditionally served as a feeder
line shuffling passengers from
airport to airport and jet to jet,·
intends to stay clear of the jet·
market until a ··truly quiet" jet
is built.. possibly by 1985. Voss
savs :.Our company has been, and
s till 1s. very concerned about the
environ·ment and our impact on
p eo plE' livi n g around an
airport.·· says the president.
When vo u. ser ve sensitive
marh•ts ·like Newport Beach,
S;rnla Harbani and Tahoe, you
have lo be. Plus, it's nice not
havin~ to answer all those com·
plaints."
AMENITY OF FLIGHT ATT£NOANT TO BE INAUGURATED
Natalia Corlch, In-flight Hrvlce manager (left), Kethy Pule
J \J ~ tlitf"'1 ~
I \ for ywrs his fevor1t<z. shir~,
'' mad<i. m frn<Z.all cotton,
-.
,. \ w1t,h ~th(lnzd slcz.aws
and on~ ta1 ls I~
, ava1 lab a. m a n•nnb:Jw
of 18 di rfeninL colors
\ by ~
~ ..
..
...
...... ,..,.,, .. ,.,
My t ry cannons
'1.0l'llA• 11 .Jt.'TIA• Dan. rranucally ac~
n .. _. diapalttwl over the put Mvtral daya, I've faUed10
f~d any addttional i.nttlUt•n~ Ol'I tbe "vtry •ilniflcant"
d1 cov.-ry mad rectntly oo the beach upcout. lt'a diaap-
pomtinc
Datil tMr on Jan 21, after we had aone lhrouth aome
e. torm.s, hf'tty s urf 111nd h11h tides, ll waa reported tbat
a man ni4med Nolon llarter had made an eatnaaina dis·
tm t<f) ou the i.horeline about one·half mile south of Goleta
llt"urh County Pull •
llurte1 h1&d round r1vt ancient ca.noons washed up on
th.-beach Each was 111boul three and one-half feet lone and
.ear h weighed about 700 pounds.
THE DIS(.'OVEaY, OF course, led to s peculation that
th~ mighty Pacific on . an uproar had dislodged the okl
weapons from an ancient Spanish galleon and fetched the
hardware up on the shoreline. Further speculation woukl
1.uggest that cannons do not grow on the seabed. They
must have come from a shipwreck. Early Spanish ships
were noted ror carrying hefty loads of gold and other
treasures. So who knows. what the sea off Goleta might
fetch up nex.t?
.. seafaring expert from UC Santa Barbara. one
Prank Frost, commented, "'I've lived here nearly 30 years
and I've never heard of a discovery of this magnitude."
LONG ·TIME COASTAL beach bums like your cor.·
respondent ·would cer-tainly second the motion on that one.
Scouring our sands for many decades, about the best I've
.. Just a lnl to port, Zeb, and we'U start diving .. "
ever discov~red was an old piece or Paul Salata sewer pipe
and a rusty Kills Brothers coffee can.
This stuff was hardly in the class of a Spanish cannon
from a centuries-old treasure ship.
When the sea fetches something up on me, it's usually
a s melly pile of old seaweed.
Anyway" the citizenry up around Goleta got pretty ex·
cited over the old cannons for awhile and got out there on
the shoreline with meta l detectors and other hunting de-
vices.
YOU SUSPECT EACH one of them may have figured
it could have been their ship that just came in .•
That afore mentioned Mr. Frost, however, apparently
cooled off a lot't'>r the treasure hunters when he suggested
the cannon didn't look to him like they came from an early
gold ship.
More likely, he said, the weaponry came from a
British or Dutch galleon that plied our coastal waters in
the early 1800s, long after the Spanish gold bearers had
vanished from the scene. ·
Still, .it would be nice if the news dispatches woukl
come through with some sort of verification on the origins
of those five old cannons.
IF WE DON'T get some act~on on this, I may have to
pack up my own sand.sifter and short-handled shovel and
do some rugging on my own up around Goleta.
Better we hear from the experts and' sea savants,
however. before I get up there and start plowing up the beachfront.
I probably couldn't do any better than another rusty
coffee can anyway. ·
~
Iranians
U.S • • m
.'not pigs'
WASHINGTON <AP> -Hear-
in I Iranian• denounced by
AmerieMI u barbariua, plp
and Mim••• ia diaturbiq to tbl
e1Uma&ec1 t,ooo lrwua lirinl
, la the Wublqton area -many
ol whom oppoee the cu.mint re-
1ime in Iran.
About 100 ol them marched in
fronl of the Wbite House to
honor the 52 freed Americans
and to charee that the real
barbarian 11 the Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini.
"WE CA•E BESE to
welcome home the relurneea,
and we want to empbuize we
are not barbarian•," aaid
Mohammad Tabatabai, presi·
dent ol .the Iran Freedom Foun-
. dation. "The barbarians are the
government in Iran and the ter-
rorists who seized the boata1ea.
"U I could go to every sm,le
hostage family and apoloeile
personally· on behalf of all Ira·
nians, I would do so," he said.
Tabatabai is the twin brother
of an Iranian man assassinated
in nearby Bethesda, Md., last
s ummer for what law enforce-
ment officers believe were bis
outspoken views against Kho·
meini.
As the dem o n strators
marched behind a protective
ring of police officers, Tabatabai
begged reporters not to de-
nounce his country for the sins
of a few "brutal hoodlums."
"MOST OF THE 35 million
Iranians in my country a re
brutalized into submission, and
we would like to plead with the
American people to clearly dist·
inguish between the terrorist,
Godless regime in Iran and the
peace-loving, law-abiding, God·
fearing people of Iran," he
declared.
Most Iranians in this country,
whether pro or anti-Khomeini,
say they are not beine mistreat-
ed here, only misunderstood.
"How could we as a nation
have done it?" asked a former
Ira nian army colonel i n ·
terviewed by The Washington
Post. "Everyone is so depressed
because people in tbe United
States think Iranians are pigs
and animals because of these
fe w people who have done
crimes." said a former admiral.
ABC seeking
Elvis records
M EMPfDS, Tenn. (AP) -An
attorney for ABC-TV asked a
judge to rule soon on the
oe~work's 18-montb, fight to ob-
taan the autopsy records on
singer Elvis Presley.
The motion, filed by attorney
Charles C. Harrell, asked Chan-
cellor D.J . Aliasandratos to re·
view depoeitiona and affidavits
in the case and tben require "the
records ol the autopsy . . . be
declared to be public records
and open to . . . the genetal
public."
ABC newsmen Charles
Thompson and Jim Cole ftled
suit against Dr. Jerry T. Fran·
cisco, Shelby County medical ex-
aminer, in August, 1979, claim·
ing the autopsy reports were
public records.
Snow hu.-ries Midwest
Major storm mOvea eaatward; 13 killed
SI Ste MM ..
5"oll•ne TulH
Wasllln9'0n
14 .,
>I n ,. n
Al 20
Claenai~al time bombs Al'WI .......
Jan Murphy and her da ughter Michelle, 11.
o f Corpus C hris ti, Texas, sp are th e
symptoms of thallium poisoning . Up to 21
cas es have been reported along the Gull
Coast of Te xas . blamed on a rare, banned
m e tal
----------~---
H~art ills heredita:r;y
Children i1zherit parents' 11'.-e_aknesses
T UCSON. Ariz. (AP) -The
genetic and nutritional sins of
parents are often passed on to
their children, and a researcher
said that s hould allow doctors to
identify and help youngsters
with a high risk of future heart
disease.
['Families that have a history
o~premature h eart disease.
stroke or hypertension or other
risk factors for heart disease are
much more likely to have family
members -· children -with
~imilar patterns of coronary
hea rt disease risk than are
families without such histories ...
said Dr. Charles J. Glueck of the
University of Cincinnati College
of Medicine.
HE TOLD AN American Heart
Association scie nce writ e r s
forum that early identification
or high·risk children is crucial.
Since "many studies suggest the
~enesis of atherosclerosis. the
narrowing and ha r dening of
arteries which set the stage for
heart attacks and strokes is in
childhood."
He added: "The age at which
atherosclerosis is most reversi-
ble is certainl"-in ilhe mid to late
teens ... so iNe want to pre·
vent atherosclerosis, many of us
feel we'd best begin at an age
when if is most reversible ."
Testing lll children for risk
factors would be enormously ex-
pensive and impractical, he
said, but a more effective ap-
proach is to identify and test
those children most likely to be
at risk.
THE OOCl'OR said a continu·
ing, seven·year-old study of 6,857
children and 3,079 adults in the
Princeton School District of s ub·
urban Cincinnati confirms that
heart disease and its r isk factors
cluster in affected families.
The study found, he said, "a
very powerful and profound
genetic component which relat·
ed to coronary heart disease risk
fa ctors." And on top of the
hereditary predisposition are
added environmental factors.
especially <liet and smoking.
The study examined such risk
fa c to rs as choles tero l and
triglyceride Jevels in blood. hi gh
. blood press ure and e ating ,
d rinking and s moking habits It
also checked blood levels of two
s pecifi c types of cholesterol:
low-dens ity lipoprote1n , which
increases the ris k of heart dis
ea:Se , and h1gh-dens1t y lipopro·
t ein , which seems to give some
protection
THE STUDY sh OY.S "It's Ob ·
vious we should look at the
chi ldren so lh<'y will not grow up
with the same risk factor pat
(erns." he said. For instance. he
said . the children of men who
died of heart attacks before age
50 had higher-than-average
levels of LDL the bad form of
cttolesterol and t riglyceride
and lower levels of beneficial
HDL.
Ch1tdren whose parents' LDL
levels were in the top 25 percent
of the study were twice as likely
to have hi g h LDL l evels
themselves. he said.
"If you know what the risk
factors are and if you can identify
them securely, what should you
do a bout them?" he said.
Productivity falls
third straight year
WASHINGTON 1AP1 Productivity in private business feU by
0 3 percent in 1980. the third s traight year of decline. the Labor
Department has reportt'd
The decline in the fo urth quarter wns 1.9 percent on a seasonally
adjusted annual basis. a re\'l'rsal from the 1.5 percent.rise registered
by business and labor in the third quarter.
PRODl.:l'TIVIT\' DECUNF.D last year because paid working
hours increased at a fa ster rate than economic output. said the de-
partment ·s Bureau of Labor Statistics
Hours-rose by 8 4 percent while output in goods and services rose
by only6.J percent
The 0.3 percent d<'c hne in 1980 followed a .drop in productivity of
0 4 percent in 1979 and 0.2 percent in 1978. and was only the fourth an·
nu a l decline since the years following World War 11.
Productivity measures the effici ency of the U.S. economy by
computing how many j'!oods and services are produced in one hour of
paid work.
WHEN PRODUCTIVITY DECLINES, rising wages cannot be
offset by increased production. As a result, unit labor costs go up
even more sharply, producing upward pressure on prices.
Although productivity in private business as a whole fell by 1.9
per cent in the last three months of 1980, there was a substantial gain
of 10.6.percent in the manufacturing sector.
Manufacturing productivity registered neither a gain nor a
decline in 1980. Production in the non·farm business sector declined
by 0.5 percent. In the third quarter, manufacturing jumped by 10.5·
per cent while non-farm business declined by 1.1 percent.
Economists have expressed mounting concern about the decline
of productivity in this country after several years of robust growth.
Tbe decline in production is the principal cause of inflation
and economic6ta~nation.
A m•jor !tllO~IOrm clumped up to nine Inches Of snow from the llocky
Mou1>t•iM .ocrou the Midwest. •nd
wlntt!r stonn wArn1~ •nd tr•v•ten
•d•lsorlH -• In effect S..ncl.ey In
Mlchlo.n -much ot tne ut>Ptr Ohio Valley.
Acepylco
8•tbMM termllde
Cure<M
FrM-1
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HHardo1a driving conditions wet•
bltmed lor •t 1 ... 11 1J deatn•. wltll
Ille snow upe<te<l to turn to rein as It moved ust .crou the A-l.ocll11H1s
onto New E"91end.
Thundentorms rumbleo al-the
centre! Gutf to.st -what m19"t
na•• -• torn-'""'""' down just west of L•k• Charles. L<t. A
trailer was overturned, bul no In·
1urles w.,. r-led.
hmi>e<atures .erouncl Ille netlon •I 1 p.m. EST renged trom a 1119" of 12
et Fqrt Myers, Fie., to a low of t
_,.low zero et Oevlls Leke, N.O.
Snow was UPKled Monclily from
L•k• Mlcnlo•n east to I"• Ap.
P•le<llllHIS, u well u 1., M.elne. Snow
~omir19 rein wu predicted for Ille
rut of New Enol•nd end the All11ntlc
CoeSI stetes, with much cold9r tem·
ptratures .. petted In m11<ll Of Ille
E Hi
Wh~ly IUtlered r•ln was eapecled alonq the P.clfk Coe1t. with ctovcty
s~lu o .. r much Of the l\OrthwHtern Querters of tilt county.
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Art stolen
SAN DIEGO (AP)
While Dr. Wllllam
Canon wu attendtq to
bla dermato101y prac·
tice ln El c.tro, police
lnvestlpted tlMft ot a
plecea ol ClolloaDe art
worka from bl• San
Dle10 home.
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-~------------UOUT· AIOUT 1$1 "GREAT I 9 DINNER
$5 ftftSUPER
e77DINNERI
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0 c ,,
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I
Good ror ll'lr" ptec:a1 of juicy, golden b1own Kentucky
Filed Chicken, plu1 1lngle seivlng1 of cole s11w,
m11hed poe11oes end gr1¥y, end 1 1011. Limit two ofhH1
P9f purchaM. Coupon good only for combination wl'lll.,
d1!11 ordere. Cu11omer paya 111 1pphc1ble 11IH 1111.
Gocd ior nlnt pleats or juicy, golden l>fOwn Kentucky
Fried Chicken, wlll'I lovr rotla, • large colt 11-. 1 11109
m111'1ed Polttoe1 Ind 1 medium QrMY. Umll two ofl«•
per pure"-"· Coupon good only tor oom«linellon -"lie/
dark ordelS. Cullomet pav• 111 applicable Mite tu.
011« explrn I FttlNlry 15, 1981
Prices m1y nry 11 Prices m1y ••ry II par.
participating IOCI· I llclpallng locauona. Good
Ilona. Good only In only In Southern
Southern California 1 Calllomi. wl'lef9 )'OU ...
Wl'l«e )'OU ... Amer~·· Fll llOfltt
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I
Seizure of dn:tg
declari d illegal.
1A.N •'RANCISCO<AP> TM 1lale'1 bid to'
rtlHlat• <'hu1ea of po•Hlllon for u le of
psUwybln, a hallutenoaenlc d.-UC fowwl In some
muahrooma. wa• reJ•cled by •Court of Appeal on
tr~ Otl 1Ue1al•elaunt
Poli('fl had enttred. without a warrant, a Fre·
mont warehowle to nveatl1ate a bur&lary. While
the invt11tl1at100 w .. an proaress. an officer
ooUted everal rootalners of m\&lhroom1 and ob·
talntd OM th•t was. later ttsted for psilocybin.
Arter th lH t proved po1iUve, omcers ob·
talned a searrh warrant to further lnve.stigate the
v. a rehouse and the home of Larry Van Williamson,
who rented space at the warehouse
Sa ••l•rtl ew,..llmftll ..
STANFORD (AP) -The soaring cost of an
eduration at Stanlord Universit y appa~ntly has
had little effect on the number of people who want
to attend. Despite that annual tuition, includlnj{
room and board, Is now about $10,000, freshman
applications have hit an all·time high of 13,800,
according to admissions dean Fred Hargadon.
When all paperwork
has been comple'ted, the
figure may climb to over
14,000, he said. Last
year's total was 12,731,
---------and Hargadon says ap-plications have been jumping by about 1,000 a year
for the past few years.
A rt• pat re•• t• paff
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> Ballet, theater and
symphony patrons here may have to pay an extra
dollar a ticket to help overcome a looming $1.2
million deficit in the Performing Arts Center
budget, lhe San Francisco Chronicle reported to·
day ..
Members 9f the War Memorial Board or
Trustees, which operate the arts facilities, contend
the city has a "moral obligation" to increase its
funding for the facilities. . But Deputy Mayor Nothenberg said the city's
fiscal condition "is grim any way you slice it" in
the post·Proposition 13 era. And that, the
newspaper said, means a $1 surcharge on the 1.2
million customers is the most likely solution to the
deficit. •
\'alletf ~ t••rk••
FRESNO CAPl -The San Joaquin Valley
may get more visits from foreign tourists who
already tiave been in California's big cities and
want to "branch out," a state tourism official said
here.
.. Maybe you'll gel more as foreign travelers
discover the major cities, a nd ' then repeat
travelers branch out to the rest of the stale.·· said
Tiffany Bouselob of the state Department of
Tourism. .
Ms. Bouselob was a panelist at the 1981 Valley
Business Conference. · .. We are undergoing shifting travel patterns,
particularly a decline in long distance motor
trips," she said at a press conference.
'
Monday, February 2, 1111 DAILY PILOT ,4 ·-
'Flatlaad'· Just that
Tm>-dimensional 1rorld book 33 /eet long
,,
_.
f f
~.
• .r '
...........
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Why wollld anyone
print a 33-foot·lons book?
At Arion Presa, Andrew Hoyem is doin' just
that because the book, Edwin A. Abbott's
·''Flatland," is about people who can't imagine tbe
third dimension.
''Since the book is about a two-dimensional
world, we made a book that opens nat," says the
master printer, who will soon offer to !{ell about
2'15 copies at $400 each.
Hoyem has produced onfy two or ttiree "proj·
eels" during each of his 20 year.1 in printing. Most
were limited editions of a few hundred copies
printed on hand-made paper with band-set letters.
"WE'VE WORKED Wrnl VEllY traditional
styles arid in ways· that are supposed to be of our
time," he says. "We're not so stuck on method as
on results."
The last great project was "Moby Dick."
printed on 10·by-15·inch sheets of "Barcham Green
Handmade" paper, each watermarked with the
image of a sperm whale.
Alter 18 months of labor, the 50 copies, filled
with splendid Barry Moser wood-block prints, sold
for $1 ,000 each a year ago and are worth about
twice that much today.
MARILLA SALISBURY WITH HER MEDALS
'Sunbonnet Sue' top runner for •ee
Hoyem produced 300 copies of "Coronado's
Children" for the 1980 Nieman-Marcus Christmas
catalog. The volumes featured goatskin spines,
22-caret gold initial letters and Italian hand-made
paper. They sold out at $700 each.
Perhaps the greatest bargain was a
San .Diego's 'Sunbonnet Sue'
• running . for
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Marilla
Salisbury, known as Sunbonnet
Sue to fans who watch· her set
world running records aLage 73,
has some advice for the elderly:
"It doesn't hurt any more to run
than it does to sit. ..
Mrs. Salisbury, who took up
running three years ago, now
holds world records in the 100,
200, 400, 1500, 5000 and 10,000-
meter runs s anctioned by the
Amateur Athletic Union for
women 70 to 75 years old.
"RUNNING HAS stopped my
aging,·· said Mrs . Salisbury,
who is called Sunbonnet Sue
because she runs in a wide-
brimmed hat to protect her from
the sun. "My doctor tells me I 'II
live to be 100 -if I don't run in
front or a freigh(train ...
The S.foot·6, 114 .pound retired
school teacher said in an in-
terview that the idea of running
hit her an.er she got a divorce
and married Earl Salisbury, a
76 -yea r -old r e tired s pace
hardware instrument maker
who doesn't run but sometimes
exercises with his wife .
''I not.iced that all my friends
were complaining about their ill·
nesses, using aches and pains as
excuses to jus\ sit and look at the
boob tube," Mrs. Salisbury said.
~WilUjSSmen . ~ given terms
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Two
owners of the Cat' Stereo chain of
high fidelity equipment. stores
were sentenced to federal prison
for collecting nearly $125,000
through fraudulent insurance
claims stemming from a Tor·
ranee warehouse fire.
Suto F. Jansson of Rancho
Palos Verdes was given a two-
year prison sentence and fined
$21,000: Co-defendant Edward
Shapiro was sent to prison for
one year and given a $21,000
fine.
They were convicted Dec-: 22
by a '?~al jul'y in Los Angeles.
her life
"I went down to the local fitness
center ·and started working out
with weights, two hours in the
morning three days~ week.
"I STARTED running around
the block," she said. "I kept on
running around the block. Then
they told m e about a 10·
kilometer race -that's 6.2
miles -in San Juan Capistrano.
and I went and ran that in 93
minutes."
The races ~ame fast and
faster as oid ttte medals -
dozens won at the national track
and field championS'hips in
Philadelphia, nume rous state
and regional meets and the
World 's Veterans Games in New
Zealand.
"I never exercised until I went
to San Diego State University
and got my master's degree in
health education." s aid Mrs
Salisbury.
·'But when I turned 70, I began
hearing that it was not only be-
ing careful about what you ate,
that you had to exercise to stay
healthy."
At all Holiday Spa Health Clubs we're celebrating the
grand opening of our new ~super Club" in Cerritos. J oin
now and get a two year membership for the price of the
first year alone!
What.ever you want in a health club, Holiday Spa Health
Club has. The lat.est space age exercise equipment, indoor
swimming,jogging, hot hydro-massage whirlpbols. Finnish
rock saunas, even fun aerobic dance exercise classes. And
your membership is good at all Hol~day Spa loc~tions.
And don't miss our grand openmg celebration the
weekend of Fri., Sat .. Sun., Feb. 6, 7 and 8. From 9:00 am to
10:00 pm there'll be special celebrity appearan~s oft~e
stars from television, celebrity fashion show with rash1ons
from Petit Fo,rs, Holnitsky Co., Carla of California a nd
Dippers Swimwear. Also appearances of Los Angeles
sports figures from the Lakers, Dodgers, Kings,
Angels and Rams. Plus two surpri,se super_stars.
There will also be equipment and aerobac
dance demonstrations, disco dance perform·
ances by Kat Knapp & Kompany, also refresh-
ment& and much much more. "
'IBke advantage of our Grand Opening and join
the party, and don't forget our two years for the price
ofoneoffer.Seeyou~~·-·1
Fl CelebriiY appearance" ,..bjeei to chan&"·
1971 prinqn1 of Allen·Ginlber1'1 "Howl." Because
of the "radical'' nature of the work, Hoyem bad
trouble selling editions at teO each. Today, they
may be worth 10 times that amount. But the 1oln1
price ls unknown because theynrely are sold.
''I'm very reluctant to say these are invest·
menta," aays Hoyem. In fact, he is reluctant to
talk about the value of the works at all.
The 'Abbottr book currently is beinl pieced
together page by page.
Some of the pages are die cut. one by one.
Edges of the cuts are hand-painted, literally inch I
~in~. ! The type is set --tn and around perfect
geometric shapes with each chapter starting and
ending on a full line.
"WE WOllK AS A TEAM as we work through
the different phases of a book," ffoyem says of his
five-member staff. Each worker is credited in the
book and each receives a copy.
After the oversized pages are l{lued together,
with a mixture of wheat paste and poly vinyl 1 acetate, they are finally enclosed in a brushed
aluminum case.
Hoye"' has already decided on his next proj·
ect. It will be an anthology of "shape" poe:ns with
the type artistically set in patterns suggested by
the titles.
Says Hoyem : "We have a lot of ideas and
somehow they all seem to gel when we -need to be
working on them."
Dog or coyote?
court to decide
CHOWCHJLLA !AP> Madera County may
be known as coyote country. but that is not a re·
commendation to keep the animals as household
pets .
Carol Wiley is learning this lesson the hard
way in Chowchilla Justice Court.
She contends her pet now q"artered at the
WiHHife Way Station in Los Angeles is a dog, but
game warden Fred Cole thinks differently.
The Chowchilla woman was charged with in·
terfering with a game warden, illegally freeing a
wild animal and failure to cage a coyote. .
Cole contends the woman set her pet loose
when he attempted to check for a wild animal
permit.
Madera County officials are at a loss to prove
a biological distinction between the standard
canine and coyote since the best evidence is a dead
animal's skull.
A trial on the misdemeanor charges · is
schedule here Feb. 25.
-=' .. It' ... ~~1 p . -trhomesP.'Haley/PubUsher .-:,.. U°"~ age Monday, Februery 2. 19&~ S.m.r• K,..lbiCtl l!dltorlal P .... ldltilr
w answer to •
\
wast disposal
. WKi ti&I") wia•t~ "h n l t'An be burned lo produce steam
and l"let."lnretr
~)' lndHd, a k offirlala of the Oran11 County Sanita·
n Piltrif:'tl ln the wakt• u( a propo.aJ by a Costa Mesa· ~ t'lllinHrlna corn pany ·
O'Cmnor P'.n1lnt•t-rini Laboratorlet ll propo1in1 to
kl a maehJM th•t wc>uld bum waste from lhe districts' 23
to fife' up boaltir to m ke steam and turblne·produced
lectrlc·,ty
t:rllleid rotar} <.·uml>u ton, tour of the Costa Mesa Com·
P n · d \'lt-es an• nC>w mOl)eraUon ln Japan, a fifth is about
to begm o~rat1un an (;1.tlatin, Teru1 • and a sixth is being
en mttred iI1 t'out1 u l'osta County.
'hadv.t'U o· onnor, owner or O'Connor Engineering
Laboratorae~. ~uvs h•s rotary rombustor more than meets
all b pplu:able env1ronmenlaJ laws. ~
Th..--.ate r cooled dev1c~ can burn anything from a can·
non ball to human waste material. O'Connor sa ys.
Wlule 1t 1s too~arly to say definitively that the O'Connor
~-<~tar) combustor is the answer to Orange County 's waste
-01sposal problem, the device seems worthy of serious con·
')llJeration
As lhe pnce of la nd Cor sanitary landfills continues to in·
crease and as energy becomes more and more p pensive
1 and scarce, the r-0tary combustor may very well be the
. ; )''a ve of the future in waste disposal. r---.
A s currently envi sioned. the proposed rota_ry com·
' bus tor plant in Fountain Valley would be built by private in·
vestors who hope to profit by the sale of electricity to
( Southern California Edison Co.
Since waste i:j al\V ays with us and energy is alway~
needed it would iotleed be useful if one could be made to sup·
. ply the other . ·.
Curb for 01olesters
• Last year 651 cases of child molestation were reported
to the Orange County Child Abuse Registry. That compared
with 407 cases in 1979 and offi cials believe up to 80 percent
of molestation cases are never reported.
Unfortunately,· medical and law enforce ment people
who deal with child molesters have come to the conclusion
that many wi ll continue to repeat the offense and do· not
seem to respond to treatment.
Following a lengthy series of hearings and studies on
the subject, Newport Beach Assemblywoman Marian
Berg~son has introduced a bill that could be of some help.
The measure. AB265, would ensure that convicted child
molesters serve time in prison following psychiatric treat·
ment. . .,
At present, child molesters who are declared mentally
disordered sex offende rs are sent to state hos pitals or or·
derec:t to undergo psychi atric treatmertt that usually lasts
a bout 14 months . .
After that they can be released on probation or continue
in out·pati entcare .
.._ M rs. Ber geson's bi ll would require that the treatment
period be followed by imprisonment for the bala nc.e of the
term they would have had to serve under a felony conviction
us uall y three to seven years.
Whil e this might not serve as a cure. it would at least ·
keep them from repeating the off ense during a proba·
tiona ry period . And conceivably the guara ntee of a prison
term in addition to the t ime in hospital could act as a deter·
•.Tent for some. ·
.-The bill merits strong support.
Courtroolll access
Jn another of its yes·no·maybe decisions, the U.S.
Supreme Court has ruled that there is nothing in the
Constitution to prevent states from permitting· radio,
television and still photography at criminal trials, even ii
.. • the defendant objects. -~ On the other hand, the court did not say that such
access must be granted. Nor did it comment on the action
of states that have la ws banning courtroom photography.
In 1964 the high court· threw out the swindling
conviction of financier Billy Sol Estes on grounds that
television coverage had deprived him of a fair trial.
Now the court says that ruling was not intended as a
permanent ban on courtroom photography. New
technology, it was noted, can make photo equipment
much less obtrus ive.
However . the justices concluded that decisions on
courtroom coverage should be made on a case.by-case
basis by the trial judge. .
Such a decision was promptly made by a Los Angeles
superior court judge who last week denied a request to
use a television camera during a rape trial.
At present 27 states permit televised trials, but some
require advance consent of jurors, defendants or
witnesses, since it is conceivable that the presence of
came ras could have an inhibiting effect on trial
participants. .
A Supreme Court ruling last Juty upheld the right of
the public and press to attend criminal trials, even if the
def endaUW>bjects~. The new ruling is a logical extension
of the amhpt to ens ure that members of the public who
cannot be present are kept informed, within the limits of
technical and legal feasibility.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comme nt is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. <;A 92626. Phone (714) S.2·4321 .
Boyd/ D'og hero
By L.M. BOYD
Near the zoo in New York's
Central Park is the s tatue of
a dog named "Balto." Client
asks whv that dog should be
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
This ls a "rree .. country
if you are a relu1ee1
STRUGGLING
so honored. In the tough
winter or 1925, Balto led a
sled team through a bliuard
to Nome. Alaska. It carried
serum to stop an epidemic
among the eskimos.
Another common word to
come from the lingo of the
sea is "aloof." To pilot a ship
windward was said lo "hold
It aloof."
Q. What country tu m s out
the strongest beer?
A. Last I heard Ens land
had one brewery wblch cave
It that distlnctlon. Thomas
Hardy Ale, brewed ln July or
1968 by the Dorchester
Brewery, Dorset, En1l1nd,
containe d 10.15 percent ,
alcohol by wetcbt and 12.5'
percent by volume. ·
......................................................................
Jaek Anderson
North ~orea arms .·'superior'
W ASHlNGTON Wh1le tht>
foreign µolac) spoth~hl h:i<! be 11
focu$c<l on the M1d<l ll' t;u111.
another area of th<' wor ld ha!I
been virtuaJly i~norc1I tfor·ea
8 ut highly C'l a ss1f1ed in
t ellige n c:c rcro rl:s 11HJH·ate
th at th e
1deotogicull y
di v id e d
pen lns u.lu
scene of the
ft rs t ar m ed
confrontation
in the East
West c:onflit-t
a fte r Wo r ld )
W ar I l
ma) bec·ome
the ne'<l linderhox th;il the L1111
cd Statl'S will ha\ l' to P011l1111I
with Indeed. Ille 111lclligL'rll'l'
eslimatl's give the t't1m mu111:-t
North Koreans an 11v1·1 ~ htl111 111).(
cdjle in un) fut111('11uthrt•uk
The consensu ... ol 11u 1·'<&>\·1 ts
in I ht> Pentagon and tl11 !'1•111 r al
I ntcllt i..~nt·e i\1H·111·' .., 111:.11
North Korc;i 1·oulil 1 l 11gh1
ove r its n<.·i~hbur lo tit< !-.11ulh
unlt·s-; thc•re 1s llPd\' .i.,
Richard u, .•. , t ·~
• hstunce to South Korea .
Al! lntcllt gf'nre sources ex·
vlalnC<.I 1t to m) associate Dale
Van Attn. it 's a malter of cold
rnll1tury hard ware:
"RV ALMO T ever y
rn~asurPment, Norlh Korea ex-
l·eedR South Korea in both quan·
l ily and q ualtty of t anks," warps
a secret CIA appraisal. "The
North ha<; a 2 S·to·l numerical
lead over thl' South in m edium
tanks a11d , w1th1n t his catcgOf'y,
a better than J to I advanta ge in
n umbt•t s or ftr!>l ·hnl', l11gh ·
quaht~ tl1nks ··
Th<• two Koreas ure approx·
1111 :•tt•h <oqual in ground troops :
~20.t>OO rn th•· 'Wuth, fi00,000 in
lht.• 'orth But .1 tov·<;ceret Pen·
t :1•:1111 r 1•11111 t c r1n <:lude., lha l
w1th11v1 " ~. e11mbal a nd
lo1!1st11·~ s upport l<.;nuth
1.-urt'a11 1 gro\111d 1111 n·'> would
prohahh 1111t lw r•tV&ll lt-of sue:
1 ,.,,.full~ ll1>lc•nd1 n ~ Seoul
,1g;t111'>I .1 ..,11ri1n ..,<: North Korean
;1 I'" l j., In th,. Ull'. tl1l• disparity is
11111d1 \H1r-w South Korea has
a 33,000.man air force with 424
com bat aircraft. North Koree
has a 51,000·man air force with
724 aircraft. "Without sub6lan·
Ual augmentation, the (South •
Ko reans) would be bard pressed
to re~t a ll,lzable North Korean
air attacl<," the Pentagon report
decla res. A s mall crumb of com·
fort is added with the estimate
that the North Koreans would be
"c apable of performing a
prim ary mission of air derense
and limited offens ive opera·
lions " on their own, but would
need "outside assistance" to
conduct sustained ope rations.
-NORTH KOREA'S navy is
"markedly superior" to South
Korea's in number of combat
personnel, mate riel read iness
<.1 nd firepower . It has 31 ,000
marines lo South Korea's 22,000.
All things considered , the Pen·
1 a gon experts con clude tha t
.. Norlh Korea.has the ability to
launch and support a surprise
attaek against the Republic of
Kore a."
What ·s m ore. inte lli g ence
AND lODAY ~ DAY. lWENTY-EIGWT f'O'R
T~t fO°QMtR WQ)Tt6~5 Btl~ ~tl'D IN CA11f1Vl1Y BY
lU[ W NtTV.O'RKS-···
sources offer the ominous pre-
diction that, despite infusions ol
aid rrom the United States,
South Korea will be militarily
ihrerlor to North Korea tor at
least three years.
IN·HOUSE INPUT: I've often
lam basted senior bureaucrat.a
for their Milquetoaaty reluc·
tance to stick their necks out. So
I have to applaud the half-d~en
career civil servants at the
Agen cy for International
Development who recently
wrote a confidential m emo to
the Reagan ladministratlon, de·
tailiflg the kind of boss they'd
Hke to have. Agree with them or
not. you have to admire their
guts in putting their views on the
line.
The new AI D administrator,
they wrote, should be someone
who:
"Can awake n this country
to a new thrust in foreign as-
sist ance . . . helping poor coun-
tries to develop w hile they
become customers for our pro·
ducts and stable s uppliers of the
raw materials we need to main·
lain our standa rd of living."
-Is an expert in the fi~d of
food production and distribution
a s a m e ans o f com bating
hung e r . a rtlajor c ause of
political instability in the world.
-Is ··not afraid to deal up
fr o nt w ith a ll poli ti c a l
per s uasions i it showing them
that regardless of their political
system. there is a place ... for
e n te r p ri s e ·a nd e n -
t repreneurship."
··can relate to and es tablish a rapport with Congress·· and
"ha s a flair fo r public rela·
·lions ." ·
WATCH ON WASTE: The
D epartm e n t o f En e r gy's
o pe nha nded d is bursement of
fede ra l money has given at least
one state -Pennsylvania -an
une xpected bonanza at the ex·
pense of the nation's ta)(payers.
Under DOE"s program giving
stat es federal funds to provide
.. weatherization'" for needy r~si·
dents' ho m es, P enns ylv ania
found itself with m ore than $1.6
million more money from Uncle
Sugar than it could spend. So
Keystone Stale officials prudent·
ly put the surplus in interest'
bearing atcounls.
Crime • rise spurs death penalty support
'
LOS A 'I.le ; El.ES «11' <-'1111
troll er I r:.1 H1·1111·1. 11111• 111 1111
best known puhlt t .. 1r • ._.1:ils 111
Southcm Californ1:-1 .. 11rnuur1<·t•d
~ast week that J1e had Ckcid<'<i to
run for city attorney ·'We an·
facing a clear and vc•r y present
danger ." Reiner said "Our firs\.
responsibility is lo protect tlle
public."
Thos e wef'"e prc lly s tr ong
words from the candida.te for a n
office that is • ·
r est ricted to
a c1.in g a s
counse l t o
city agenci<'s
and p r<1SC'C0 Ul
ing m is d e ·
meanors. But
they were no
s hri ller lh:w
the first p;tr<t
graph or thl'
lead story In th<· next d;,1y'i; LQs
Angclt-s Times <1 ho111 'tlu.• ,.,, .. '-.
wave or violent crirrH' '
Los Anj!clec; 1s .1 fr 1,:(hl<'n1·rl
city. It reminds me nf New Yo• k
i n t h c m i cl d I (' I !I (i 0 ... " I
W ash in~ton in thr· J11 t•• l!JfiO-.
An gelenos arc so sr;in•d lll'n 1us 1·
they arc still ~o innot•Pnt Tht•)
thought it wasn·t ~!11111~ lo hap
pen to them ; t he) l1111ughl the)
cou ld live w11 h11111 kf'\<, nn1I
alarms and dogs, that lt11:y 1·1111111
Art Hopp< ..
'"·•l k ii "'1' 1lw .. rrt••·t without
(' Ii ,. ' k I II J! I "(' I 1 g ht s a n d
tlt Ull '"" ... I"''
1 '' tlll'\ k 1111\\ 'l'hf'\ know
111 :11 1h•·11 ' st1>r eos :i nrl their
uurses arr going to be ripped off
and . <'ve ry om·e in awhile, i.01Qfune·~ he ad i~ going to be
lnTY\\ n ofr Th<' r andom violence
that hit Eet'lll'rn citie'\ 15 yea rs
a,l!o is now <•n•rywh<'re; no one
"" eomplt-tt-1\ secure from the
r1n t n lf ba"ds of o utlaws in'
1\ ti id <I/; 1ih111•..,
F:VEN IN llw l•:ast, with self·
defenses n •fHll'd over a decade
weap1111..,, dt•\'1<·t><; <ind animals
p urd1a:-1•d ir1 r<•c·og ni1 ion lha l
the p11h1·1• 1o;111 ·t µrotecl you
1111• f.-;11 1.., -;till f!row1nf! "Major
1111 11 ,,..,•, 111 hurJ!larit•s troubles
N1'\\ \ ork ~uburbs. ·· r l.'ported
Ollt' ht>a1 ll111" 111 '\111n1lc1y's New
\ ork Tinw" •\1111llwr , from an
:iffl111•11t ·°"'•'W .lf'rSl'' '>Ubur b.
-;.111 I · I 11 H 1dg1•w111 >ti. I hl·fl is la·
lilt• 1 uplt '
. The 11nl\ 1hffi'n•11cc hack Past
1 ~ th.11 1w11pl1· l <•kl· ~nrnc of this
f "' g1a11l1·d Tiit•\ c•x pc·c·t to be
,·111 l ;11t·~I . tl)t'\ llop1· to i;ur vive.
l'h.11 f111.i11.,111 h a .., n<>t vet
1 t'.11 hc•d llw \\'(''>l. or. nt le~sl,
!lit• 1111111111• !'I.ts°' \V(.'s l
Ttw \\ • I \\;int~ lo fight back.
,\1111 I 1h111k 1l will Politicians
<ire ~omg to give people wha t
tht') want and the people
"a nt blood. T hey also want
tou~her laws, m andator y sen·
tcnces. overcrowded prisons -
who really cared or ever care()
a bout prison r eform ? -and
more guns Gun control. for this
lim e. is dead middle class
people. honest people. scared
people are the ones who wa.nt
I ~c guns now.
MORE AND MORE poht1·
cians will be sounding like Ira .
Jl('iner. Or. to be m ore precise.
like George Deukmejian, who
m a y very we ll be the next gov·
ernor of California. Deukmejian.
a Republican who is now the
s tate·s attorne y g!neral, has
moved his c areer a long by
becoming California's leading
capital punishment advoc ate .
Last week, as he has for years ,
De ukmeji a n wa s making
s peeches which tracked the rise
in Califomia ·s homicide rates
since the effecti ve elimination of
the death penalty in the early
1960s.
When the state was executing
killers its murder r ate varied
between 3.0 and 3.9 for each
100,00Q residents e a c h year.
Since the last execution, t hat
num be r has steadily risen to 15.0
per 100.000
I On a national bas is, there has
also been a r ise in homic ides.
but the num be rs have not been
as dra matic. Jn 1963, there were
i.s murders for l00,000 people in
the United States. Now. there
a re 10.0 per 100.000.)
DEUKMEJIAN may be our
dark prophet. Whether capital
punishment is revenge, or deter·
rence or both. it is almost cer-
tainly inevitable. The panic in
Los Angeles reminded me of a
conversation I had in early 1968
with John Mitchell, who was
then a Wall Street lawyer who
haooened to be a fri end of
Richard Nixon. e were talking
abcut black riols at were then
sweeping Americ cities and
he said they could be stopped
quite easily.
How?
"By, killing a few of t e.m,"
Mitchell said ... As soon as they
know we are shooting back, that
we mean it, they'll think twice
about burning property:'
It has gone much further than
burning property now. There are
desperate and amoral men and
women. killer s, among us. And
soon there will be killers on both
sides .
T-shirt craze revives the art of conversation
_,,, The innate desire of human
beings to sa y so·mething about
them selves . t o d eli v e r a
message to their fellows and to
express t heir inner most feelings
has never burned brighter than
in present times. Witness the
proliferation of bumper stickers
and T·sbirts.
Yet there are other ways to
communicate.. /\ new method
was . dlSCOV ·
ered on t h e
Numbe r 30
c rosstown bus
b y Spurgeon
L. Ktnse y1 a
young man·
a1 eme n l
banking
trainee.
Spurgeon
made his way down the aisle,
taklna in the s logans on the
chests or the other passengers.
He Ht uncomfortably on the
ed1e or a rear se,_t, feeling
tomebow lna~equate In his ell· ..
pressionlNl'> lhre e·piece suit .
Suddenly, he turned o n the total
stra n~er next to him a nd said,
right out loud for all to hear :
"l 'd Rather Ile Drinking.''
IT MIGHT all have ended
right there had not that lotal
stranger been a n attractive
stewardess. Alice HuHit, who
was we aring her inarticulate
uniform. She hesita ted, then
replied primly : "J'd Rather B.e
Ski in~.''
"I love New York ," s aid
Spufgeoon, gamely m aking con·
versa tion.
"l Len My Heart in San Fran·
Cisco," she responded.
"Where the Hell Is San Fran·
cisco?" he uked to show he was
a with-It guy.
"1 Left My Liver in Kat.J's
Meat Market?" she suggested.
The)' both laughed. Spurgeon
lool(ed al AUce with a 1hnt of
admiratJon. She certainly wu a
run person. "I'm an Alcobolic."
be uld. "In Case of Emer...,cy,
Buy ,Me a Beer."
"Schlitz Is the Breakfast of
Champions." she agreed, gig·
gllng, "Save t.he Chocolate
Mousse."
"Nuke the Snail Darters!"· he
countered.
SHE PATTED her raven hair.
"Blondes Have More Dandruff,"
she said .
"Bankers Have More Funds,"
he said. "My Other Car's a
Porsche.''
"Don't Laugh," she said. "It's
Paid For."
But he felt the convenation
was becoming too frivolous.
"Have You Thanked a Green
Tree Today?" he Hked.
"Have You Hu11ec:t Your Fer-
rari TodQ?'' she aaid, but when
she saw h1a look or annoyance,
'he added quickly: "If It Mows,
Fondle It."
He nodded. "Bltllt Wood, Not
Atoms," be aatd. 'rhen waa •
awkward allnee. '1lt'1 Tea
O'Clock.'' be taic1 lD ........
lion. "Do You Know Where Your
Cat Is?"
She becan to gigile a1ain and
he couldn't help but take her
hand in his. He-let his caze rove
her attractive fl1ure. "It's
What's Up Front That Counts,"
he whispered.
WELL, ONE thing led to
a nothe r. Alice and Spurgeon
could tell they were soulmates,
for both ao enjoyed this new
method of verbal communica·
lion. In no time they were mar·
ried and Alice was expectina.
She strolled the atreet.s in an
unlnaertbed. materntl1 drua,
tapplJll people on the aboulder
and aaJlDI, "I'm Not· Fat; I'm
Prepaat."
A J•ar aft.er tMlr Ma .. bona, tblr left ldm wtU. Alee ..
motlMr -....... u.. oa their ,..., tbe little tJ'e llM
Mtftnl ..... 'ftQ ... : .
... _, ... Deddr ·-. Laa V..-_. AD Tlllu ......
Me W• 11111 Lo9J T.IWft. ••
..
NATK>N•
QUEENIE
English flay
Yankee words
LONDON CAP) ~ Lord Simon of Glaisdale,
one of Britain's most prominent lawyers and a
graduate of Cambridge University, has asked
Pa rliament to help the nation economize by male,
ing cuts·-not in the budget -but in the English
language.
His proposals sent shudders through the
honorary House of Lords, where the nation's peers
often spend as much time debating in pristine Ox·
ford · English the state or salmon spawning in
Scotland as the state of the economy.
Legislation in Britain is passed by the elected
lower house of Parliament, the House of Com,
rrtons.
"LITERALLY HUNDREDS OF thousands
of pounds" would be saved, Simon told the Lords.
if the English abandoned the distinction between
capital and small letters, thereby reducing paid
typists' and printers' hours by 2S percent.
,
~ '*'-' 2. 1•1 DAILY PILOT .t
Watch your ki~uage NO FIUS TEETH 0 1 Ulllle $22 IOUIM COAST
ONLY DIMl'AL M0UP
The 'peraon' puaher& are OD •the move again 642-0112 ............. c-. ..... •1 .V08 A. •uu.IGAN .u ..... owu ,
RIOOBn&LD, Conn. -To u.e trwM~enden of free and pre(iM 1 ch. Man the
barricadll, on you have, to
person them. The laquaie vu·
dab an at the 1ate1 a1a1D.
In Sin P'rancilco, a Hrloua
move wu afoot to chan1e the
name ol flaberman'• Wharf to
"Fi1berpenoo'1 Wharf."
"If we can boycott lboae states
which have not ratified the
Equal Ri1hts Amendment,"
Maurice H. Kiebolt wrote the
Board ol Supervisors, "how can
we continue to tum the other
cheek in the area or uain1 public
monies to advertise and extol
the virtues or a sexist tourist at,
traction?"
KIE.BOLT WAS identified in
the news story report.ing this as
president of the city's Citizens
Advisory Panel on Transporta,·
lion. It was not clear whether he
had his tongue in the cheek be
was no longer willing to turn,
because in that part of the coun-
try you can never tell.
It was in San Francisco that
an ardenl-feminist campaigned
to change the designation of
sewerlids to "personhole cov-
ers."
Let's hope both de,sexed
usages blew out to sea with the
morning fog. Otherwise that
lovely city by the bay win rand
itself in the same ridiculous situa,
lion as the Democratic Conven,
lion in New York's Madison
Square Garden.
pedantry had been reached
when a letter writer ln 111 . .;.
ma1uine slped in with: "I pro-
teat the uae or the word
'testimony' when referring to a
woman's statements, because
ita root i.s in 'testes.' which bu
nothing to do with beln1 a
female . Why not use
ov arimony'? '·
WELL, WHY NOT! Peter
DeVries, the novelist, 1ot so car,
ried away with deaex.ed job des,
ignations he found himself re-
ferring to the phone serviceman
as •'a telephone line person tree
climber."
In a writing pamphlet put out
by the Associated Press Mana1,
iog Editors organization, a
journalism professor seriously
advised editors to unsex their
·language b.y referring to
firemen as firefighters.
In other words if a fireman,
· the male of the ladder.climbing
species, falls off a root or
rescues a kitten from a tree,
newspaper writers should refer
to him as a firefighter rather
Speaker bans
·"J.R.' name
than aftend the MnlibiUUes of
deHxilt press. ure l"OUPI· Hire 11 a journaliam profeuor ukinl
u1 to be le11 P.reclae in our
lanrua1e, to lie vaaue de,
llberately about the sex of peo-
ple involved in stories, for the
1ake of lftleu harmony.
DON'T LAUGH -caY, ii you
feel ao inclined -but there i.s a
book on the market devoted to
in1tructin1 editors and public
speakers in how to bowdlerize
the languqe, rid it of ita "male
domination," in ways that would
shock the spats off Thomas
Bowdler, the 19th century prude
who set out to take the sex out or
Shakespeare and made a bis,
toric ass of himself.
''The Handbook of Nonsex..iJt
Writing" by Casey Miller and
Kate Swift urges persons
em ploying· the langua1e in
public places to do a "skillful
job ," rather than a
."workmanlike job" in cleanin1
up their speech so that in the
future a "fisherman" becomes a
"fisher," a "gateman" is r~
deslgnated a . "gate tender" and
a "draftsman" ends up a
"drafter."
A young nun told me she was
offended by Ronald Reagan's .----_;;._-opening bis inaugural address ===========~;;;;___
with "my fellow Americans" •
and his choice o( the hymn "God r.=====~~~~~~~~~~~~ifi or Our Fathers." She eagerly
awaits a new translation or the
Bible by progressive Catholic
and Protestant theologians that
will "rid the Scriptures of sexist
language." Amen, brother; or
rather, Aperson, people.
Judge
Mason L. Fenton
Municipat Court (Retired)
Superior Court (Retired)
• The Conservative peer also urged reform of
Afraid of the feminist word
mincers in their midst -people
who mince words have suddenly
become important -the Dems
got into a terrible quandary over
whether to adopt such come
pr~ising coinages as
chairlady, madam c hair,
chairperson or chairwoman.
CAPE TOWN, South Africa
<AP> -1be speaker or South
Africa's aJl,wbite Parliament
bas forbidden its members to res
fer to the prime minister in
public as "J .R." after the
wheelerdealer villain or the
American televis ion series
"Dallas."
THE FATHERHOOD OF God
and the brotherhood of man are
in deep linguistic trouble. Jesus,
in a probable rewrite o( Mal·
thew's lovely _ Gos~I. will en·
counter Simon and Andrew, two
fisberpersons of unidentified
sex, along the shores or Galilee
and offer to make them fishers
of people. 1'he language Lud·
dites would pull down the temple
to change the prayer writing on
the wall.
J\ttorney at Law
I
the alphabet, where he said 17 of the capitals and
s mall letters bore no resemblance to each other.
Irregular verbs should be made regular, he said;
and the country should return to the 18th,century
pr actice of saying "I was," "we was" and "they
was" lo simplify English grammar:.
App~rently .taking to heart Winston Churchill's
dictum that the Americans and the British are two
peoples separated by a common language, Simon
s uggested Americanizing the language of
Shakespeare and Dickens to ta.Ice out the ex,
I ran.e<>us letters.
LORD AIREDALE OF THE OPPOSITION
Labor Party demurred, claiming that Americans,
while econ0mizing on spelling, "undid this good
work" by using long words instead of short ~es.
"An Englishman leaves his flat by the lift and
~ets into his car to go and see a film," be said.
··An America~ leaves his apartment by the
elevator and ge~ into his automobile to go.and see
a motion picture."
THEY nNALL Y settled for
· just "'chair," dehumanizing and
unJexing people to the point
where they became inanimate
objects. Granted there was
much wooden oratory in that
once and perhaps future seat or
power, but going around calling
people chairs and having them
gaveJ,.. the hall into silence re·
duced' the proceedings to the
Mad Hatter's tea party in prime
time.
At one poirit, a congresspers0n
from Massachusetts was sud·
denly turtled into a temwrary •
chair, which must have come.as
a surprise to her husband.
John Simon, the critic, thought
the outer bounds or feminist
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SAVER AT SPIRES
TOP SERVED
ANYTIME
s
STE (l.E'(fGS
Ttndtr Top Slrtotn
Steik 1nd two llrge
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h11htd brown potatoes
1nd cholcl of t111t. *2.99
.. 'AIAKrNa GOOD FOOOIASY 10 FIND.
,
Speaker Jannie Loots banned
the niclmaD)e used by opposition
members for Prime Minister
P . W. Botha on grounds the
character, J .R.,.Ewing, "is sort
of a rogue." He announced the
ban shortly after the ruling Na,
tional Party's disciplinary com,
mittee dropped an investigation
of claims an NP member had
called Botha "the J.R. of the Na·
tional Party" at a constituency
meeting last October.
Academia is way out front in
this sort of affrontery. Gene
Brown, who writes an amusing
"About Town" column, says he
received a circular from his old
alma mater telling about prep-
arations to receive. "incoming
rreshpersons."
There is a moral in ,~lj ·this:•
Watch your language, there may
Announces his retire~ent from·
the Superior Court to re,enter
the private practice of law at:
Pine Plaza Professional Building
744 E. Chapman Ave.• Orange~a. 92666
NO CHARGE FOR
INITIAL CONSULTATION
714/771~5640 "Dallas," a weekly soap opera
about a Texas oil family, is con·
sidered the most popular pl'Os
gram on South African
television.
be ladies present. If so, don't let ~=======~~====~=~~~~ on. Sex bas gone back in the Ii
closet in our language.
•
Introducing The $1,000 , ·
Thrift Certificate That Earns 1414%
Anntial Interest Rate
After Just ·3 Months.
If you really want yoor eyes opened, readrthis ad,
then compare with other ads by banks and savings cl loan
associations. You 11 see why we believe "The 90 Day Won-
der'' just may be the finest thrift package in America
today.
The key is an unbeatable combtMtio11 of benefits.
Short 3 month tenn. Low Sl,000 minimum. High 141ACJi
interest with an effective annual yield of 16.02% when .
compounded quarterly.• Eve"' on earty withdrawals,
you eam ~annual inteft!llt rate, no matter what.
Look at what hanks and savings •Joana offer and
you11 eee how they compare. With their 80 month ce~
tificates, your money is tiM up at todar '• iJtterut rates
for~ rears.' And if yoy wi.~raw earty you forfeit six
months' intereat.
.• Their six month cerd!icates Mlt'irt l{.0,()()0 "''"i.-
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So fer the first time you can pt ~acat.e aise
rates tuitJa t.""' tltot Ji• p jtwdtlwt" to .._ pr
~ to/lcre it CCIJt d.o f"l fM WIOltt f'l/lll. To take adftft-
• of a biP rate. To bmlt In opparlU8ltJ whln It
lmoeb. Even in en~. 7911atill19tft imllnlt
rate fw eut)' wltMnwal.
·While conwndollll 111•baok ICDOUntll olf• aw·
lmum of~llltlrwt, tht..,...,_.blelnw.t fl'ma ............... _ ...
............ u..1on..
our Thrift Certificate, after penalty, is ~-still WJ
higher. .
So, if you'd like to see your 1money begin earning
what it's r1-ally 1oorth. without having it hopelessly tied
up .. .send this coupon with your check or money order, or
hring it into a Commercial Credit office. Available to Cali-
fornia residents only. r------------"" I Here's my check or money onter ror a 3 month Thnn I Certificate In the amount of$ ($1.000 minimum) I Typeoraooount:OlndMdual OJointTenancy I
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I COMMERCIAL ~T I I· CCJMMll'1M. aim RM INCCllOWID I
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MERIT
Ultra Lig _hts ---
Mond.y, Febtuery 2, 1M1 DAILY PILOT A•
--
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•
•
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!, _ Now the MERIT idea has been introduced at only 4 mg tar-
: New MERIT Ultra Lights. A milder M.t/UT for those who prefer
' ,,
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: · New MERIT Ultra Lights. It's going to set a whole new taste
~ standard for ultra low tar smoking
(
•
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0 PllUlp Morris""· IMI
Warning : The Surgeo n Ge neral Has Determined
Tpat Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health .
4 mg "tar'.' 0.4 mg nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method ............... .-------"""!""""-~-.::
. .
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Mon4111Y. ''°''*"I, tMt
&~ \'?@lYJ[f
®@rrwn@@
....... .. ., •• r•rr••••
01:.AR PA'r I know » complaint letter about a
prod~t should be iuldrened to one of the officers
Of the company How do you find these names?
I've al.lo had problems aettine addresses .of com·
panie:s and even the name of a company that
'
anulactures certain producta. I'd also appreciate
1ooct ··sample" complaint letter.
A.J .• Newport Beach
Y• eaa a..I &M aaawen , .. Med a. lite ref.
•~•ee ...._el al•H& uy Uk'uy. Ju& elled1
lite "'i'Mau &ealaVY" wide .. •••ts &Mua8da of ,...._.. ...a tM&r •ualadaren, ud "S&a8darcl
u4 tt.w'• &epa&er el Cel'pOl'adoM, Dlredon .. c1
t:xffllliwes" wWe .. U.U 31,• V.8. Malaeu ftrm1.
' WMa d1eckJa& tile .. mes of corporate of •
.tc1al1, loM for el~r &be president or lite cor·
,1Dnte cou•mer olflelal.
Here'• a Hmple leUer of complaint.
Appropriate Person
Company Nime
Street Addttu
Clty, State. Zip
YourAddre11
Your City, S&ate, Zip
Date
Dear CompHy PrHlff•& (aame}.~
0. (date> I purcllaud (or llad ttpalrecl) a
(Hme of p.ndu<'t wl&Ja serial or modf-1 aumber or
1ervl~ perfor'mf'd). I madt' tlWI l*ttllast" a& (loea·
tloa, date Hd ot .. H laportu& df'&alls of &lie
crauactm).
h You product <or SHVlttl Ila' no& performf'd
tlsfucorlly (or &llf' sf'nltt was iaadf'qH&f'l
ea rue <•ta~ problem). To aoh'°" ik problem, I
wo•ld •1.pr-edate yot1r ( ktt s&atf' ~ sPttiflc at'· ~ yoa woo. t:ae~ att <copN-s -NOT
*'111.aab> of my rtt0rcls <~lpts. paraatees,
warruitJes, caaceled cllecks. n.eruts. model aad
.. rlal aumbers, aad any ocJM.r d9aamf'tlts).
I aa1 lookla1 forward ·ao you reply aad resolu·
Uoa of my problem, and will wait &lutt weeks
hfore lttklag third·party assistantt. Coatact me
at the above address or by phone at (home and of·
bee numbers here).
Stace rely,
Your Name
Remember to keep any complaint letter brief
and to t.be point. The person reading your letter is
not pel"90llalty responsible for your problem, but
may be respoulble for resolving It. Therefore,
avoid wrltlag a sarcastic, lbreateafag or angry let·
ler; It may lessen your cbaace of resolution. Keep
a copy of t.be letter for your r-ecords.
Forwome•
.
Work increases risk
·Victim
memorial
setup BOSTON <AP> -Two medie'al ,._
... rellel'I 18)' women wbo lake Jobi
outaMle tbe bome n&11 a areater NII
of 1.uial nncer than thole women
wlllo are bomemaken.
Tbe dodGn' atudy cites two U ·
U.al trendl bl tbe lut «Wade that
have lnflumeed women's health: an
blcreue lD the number ot womea
worldn•, and a ll"Owinl number ol
women amollera who work. "
cbemic:all, radiation and other toxi· eaata."
Tbeir lludy aays beautJeiana and
co.metololiata wbo UH balr sprays
are expoaed to viayl ebloride
monomer (VCM), a proven human
carcino1en that can cause liver
damaae and lun1 cancer. Many
women a1ao are occupatiooally ex·:.
posed to medical and dental X·rays.
HOLLYWOOD <AP>
-The United Collel• ot
Butlneu hM let up a
memorial fUnd for one
of it.a atudent.a wbo WU
alain durtnc a Bob'• Bil
Boy Restaurant rob·
bery.
The study wu published in Ca, an
American Cancer Society journal for
clinlclana. The researchers were Dr.
Steven D . Stellman , an
epldemiolo1iat, and Dr. Jeanne
Stellman, associate professor of
Public Health at Columbia
Unlvenity.
The Stellmana allo say teachen in
older school buildincs and textile
workers often are exposed to
• asbest.ol.
·The fund for JO.year·
old Ahmad Muhuk was
set up to help bis family
meet expenaea resulting
from tu. death.
lu1...-1er
Former Cleveland
Mayor Dennis
Kucinich has started
teaching speech and
communications at
Cleveland State
University.
The doctors say while many work·
int women hold "traditionally
female" jobs such as secretary, sales
clerk or waitress, '' ... tens of
thousands ol women are employed in
high.risk Industries involvin1 ex·
posu re to numerous dusts ,
Accordin1 to the study, working
women moat likely to smoke are
waitresses mMI factory workers, as
well u thole ln managerial, sales'
and executive positions. ·
"Many women smoke to relieve ex-
ternal atreu. These women have a
harder time quitUne than men do,"
Steven Stellman told the ·Boston
Herald American in a telephone in·
terview from his New York office.
..............
Mfllcnpla••
Rep. Paul "Pete"
Mccloskey, R ·Calif.,
says he won't seek
another term in the
House even if he de·
cides against a bid
for the Senate in 1982 .
Maahuk, a cuhier at
the restaurant, wu one
o f three employees
murdered durin1 the
Dec. 14 robbery . A
native of Bancladesh,
Masbuk bad been study·
int at the colleee since
October.
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SMITH & TUTIDLL
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
''Affordable funerals''
427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
PHONE 646-9371
U COME NOW WITHOUT INVESTING A LOT OF MONEY TO GET STARTED! (This
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0 O This seminar. given 1n person by Mr Lutz. r.an change vour future by introducing you T
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L TOPICS: H ~ • Prepcwe For The Recession • W~n In Business Today ~
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l Workshop
seeking
dancers
AdveftlMment 50-pou~d· Weight · loss helps woman "recapture" her youth!
Dancers with some ex·
perience are needed for
a Golden West College
workshop that is prepar-
ing students for a s pring
,,dance production.
The 12·week course.
••Dance Productio n
Workshop," begins to·
day at the Huntington
Beach campus. Partici•'
pants will study choreo·
graphy, lighting. direct·
ing, costuming. ~n d
1pusic. Pre r eq\u s1tes
are completion of a
basic dance co~rse or an
audition.
1 The class will meet
from 1 to 4 p.m. Mon·
days, Wednesdays and
Ji'ridays, under the
direction of Nannette
Pistole· Brodie.
1 Registration wlll con·
~ue through Saturday.
~formation can be ob·
i;ai n ed by ca lling
191·0660.
By: Sue Hart
!!pedal Wrl&er
"H~ school sweetheart''
The image this phrase inspires
brings a smile to most peoples'
races. Dates and proms. class
rings and going steady. year·
boob and football games are
all part ol the happy glow ol
young love.
For Stefri James that glow is
more lhan merely a pleasant
:memory. At 22. her high school
years only a yesterday away
and she ~dUy recalls meet·
ing her own "l~rt"
St.effi and Rocky started dat·
•Iii IOOf1 alt.er they met in high
IChool At I 'S" tall and over
·llO pcM.ndl. Rocky lireraJly
towered over Steffi. who wa1
j\lll 5 '2" Their hlltl IChool
romance led them dltecUy to
the altar.
Weig)IU. only 111 pounds on
her weddi~ day. Steffi.• viva·
doua. IP'fflMYed brimette.
couJ<1 h"'1e innocently trig·
gered a little ol the "green·.
eyed monater" in a lot of men
and Rocky wu no exception.
As a reauJt. when Steffi's
wefght llarted aoaring aft.er
the bir'h ol their second child.
Bobby. three years •• Rocky
did not uy DICh Qout her
appearance. &n. be knew she
was~ 1wfuUy "-vY but.
outlkle ol 111 occulonal com·
ment. he did not encourap her
toloee~
But Stem'• family. who are
Ill small and lleftder. more
thin made up for Rocky's Ii·
lence Oft the lllbject. "Every·
time I'd tee "'1 mother" re-
mertied Stefl! in • J"eC.'81&,lnl«·
view. "she'd say, ·oti. Steffi.
wben ue 10U 10iJW to lote wept'... Wle ber mother
•• not Mltlnc her wllen she
"81 ... to tllre olf the atn
poundlee. ha' ~
WM; Mfl'I entire family,
with U. .......... of Ridy.
all ,.,. IDlo u. ad.
Ste«i ...,.o.e.1 ._ ram&-
ly'• COllLWJI. She .. ...
..... of lier .... problem
.... .... ... fact .... ebe lo .... ,..,.. ........... .. .,. ..,., • IRI • u. .........
Before 1taltlna the Nutri
&)'Item Pros.ram, StaphanJe
Jam• tipped the ec:ale1 11
171 lbe.
Then Ille ... en ad for the
mtJonwide Nutri System
Wefeht Lou Cent.en In her lo-
cal newspeper. The ktea of
pro(euionelly supervlsed.
quiet weig.ht·lou rully ap-
pealed kl her IO she enrolled in
the Pf'Oll'lm.
Oii her first vtait to the Cen-
ten. Steffi •• wurt~ Ii• 11
llacb and tipped U. teaJn at m pcMICfl. •
Sn. ..... later. Steffi
Wlillbld ID ll lG pounde. In
jUlt • clQI. Mfl had Iott IO
pouadl et U. Nutrt Syatem
~ I.Gii c.ac.r. wtthcM
........ futlnl ar m.uoue U · em..
9l8fn lt eurreatiy CID the C..
ten ......... ........, and." .. jult,... pouadt ...,rn. .. ,..of .....
... Ila It lll ,...... . ...................
............. of ...... ... Nlllrt.,... .. IAll o.r.. ...... ,... I fw
•
c
months! She now weighs 123
pounds and has fonallen her
size 11 wardrobe for junior size
9 clothing. '
It could take the most dill·
,eftt and aelf-dbciplined diet.er
\
over • yeer to accomplish
what Steffi did et the Centers
In a '"' short months and, chances are. !hit ~r would
never make it.~~ 90
many pillalls in weieht redUC·
Uon plans that it tOmetimes •ma the dieter ii doomed to
fall before they even llart. ·
Some diets are so incredibly
slow. t.het dieters throw in the
toweJ lhortly efter they start.
While pounds •m to melt oil
on aorne crash diets. diet.en
inevitably regain every ounce
they Iott once they go off the
diet Ind resume the old eeUna
habits that ,,X them Into
trouble in the first place.
The Nutri Syltem Weleht
Lou Centers tom all ol these
problems into consideretlon
before deligniJll their "mulU·
faceted" weight program.
The Centers have incor·
porated professional supervl·
slon. weight COUNll!ling. a
maintenance program. behav·
lor educaUon training. exer· ~le inltn.tctiOn. and a quick
weilbt·IOll syltem bued upon
the Centers own foods to pro-
vide their client.I with a sim·
pie. easy.(O.(olJow. rapid
weilflt·lou pl•n.
: The lmtial pbue ol the c..
.... pl"Clll'am ia ieWnl that
acm .tcbt aff ·cpckly and
'euily. Tiie Py element in the
'quick ........... coecept Is
"Nutri s,.t.em m>''. the ceo-
'ten on. ..,.oally far·
nulated.' nutriUoaall)' IOUftd.
food u. that ....... the Wte
In foodl but ...... c:,aJories.
N.ai System m> on,r-. the
dieter a "'* llieetion al low
calartt. low fat. low carbohy·
nte and hill' prot.etn meala. Amoal ..,,. •• l•YCll'tte dlsllla
.... dla chDcollte .._ w.,
....... cNcm Solar
..... cbk'-eaa:lltan. and
... _. ...... _....IDa ...., .... . .... , ............... . ...Nmt.,.__....., ...............
the table for elcb ·meal. Of
caune. lhe conceded • ._. .. ms. that " not a.1wa11 pouible rill nv.,_,. a1c1 Sbe.lby and u...e.,..,. old Bobby around!
WbUe ti. promllt ol a rapid
Wlilllt.._ dlll wu what con-
.-.S Mn to join the Nutri
Sylt.elll •• 1.-eeat.n. ......... ,.~u.re,..., ...... ........_ ....
receMll. 8leftl ......... the
ndleal ......... ft u.
C...llObe•' ......... . .....,u. .......... Eacllof u..-. ......... .mc..af
dla Oilllrt ......... by I ..... .._co lar'land
-~...,..... . ,.. ............ ................ ,... ..... .., .........
ply don't recopi.e me". Per·
eota ol the other children on
her IOll 'I IOCcer team haid not *" her In four months and
SI.elf I la still chucltJ llW about
the Je1111Uon she stirred. "I
could tell they knew they re-
CIClll'i.t me from somewbett
but they ;mt t'OUldn't put their
rineer on who I was rig.ht
away!" lAlinl 50 pwnds can make a
........ dlaap in anyone's
..,..aruce. Now Sl.elfi. who ii
II. loob ewn ~·And
ewt'yofte Ille .... ii "definite-
ly lnipresaed" with her new look. __....,
Alone with the chll'lt in
Sl.elfl's ~ came •
~ in Rocky's attkude.
After thoee l'lnt JO pounds
rolled olf In jUlt leWll weeb.
Rocky developed • keen lnttr·
est In rnak1nC Mn Steffi fol·
lowed her mainl.tl\ance
IChedule Ind he bu lrep I
de. eye on ewrytlli• lhe
•ta eW!I' •Incle. Of ccute. he
lt -.... a de. eye on Steffi
henelf. jlat becaim lhe II re-
ally somethlne to ~ at now.
NOT'll: "'"" --..... ..,_ w.-a-c-.••o.....c.. -.,. .................. ............ _ ..... ....... ................ ,.. .....
-------'-~ ,.. -...... ,....,.,_ ... c1 11 , ..
llllTillTOll BEACH/
RlllTllll VALLEY
842-3400 .
11121lilallwt ......... _ .. " .... ,....,
SANTA AllA/
CISTA IBA
541-t7123 • s. •1st11 .... '
... ........ ,. I . .. -... ....
•
..
Diiiy Piiat
MONDAY, FEB. 2, 1981 .,
BUSINESS 84
STOCKS BS
COMICS 86
TELEVISION 87
MOVIES 88 I'
•
What's the confusion
all about at the Crosby
Pro-am? For the answer,
~ ··See ]Xlge B3 .
a
0
Life~s wonderful. • second tiDle arollnd .. •
nd Angels' Jason _Tholnpson hopes it stays that way in 1981
th' •;o ZINTF.L
Qi lflllt Delly l'le.. \141"
lf hf\: C\IUld po t.1bly be any more
Pt'I feel loduy for 26 -year-old
J•~on 'lbornpson. 1l would probably
border a lhln line between wonderful
llnd nnuseal1ng •
fhompl>un, the former De troit
Tigers fari.t bui.emun for four years
before bemg traded to the Angels last
sca::.011, has ever vthina vou'd am
agine a bag league playe r would
have a beautiful house, a beautiful
wJfc . two bt.•autaful cars, a beautiful
little doR It'.., n lwauliful life.
BUT Mi NIC'E ..as the Immaculate,
two story Spa nish house , with a pool
and, jal'UZZi uvt•rlookiug a sprawling
l(olf t'ours<• in Mission Viejo seem s,
th1og wercu't alwu)'~ lh1s way for
Jason Dolph Thompsnn
l.1•ss thun 11 Yt'IH' ago, he and his
.,.. ,ft• Bl'rnt1dt•lt1> wC'rl' fimlin1it life a
bat cl iffit·ult 'l'hl'rl:' wa::.n 't any prob·
lem .ht>twN•n t h1•m They were, and
sl tit art'. r t•h:.hrng th<•ir ·young mar
rtlll(e
The prohlC'm was other· people
'l'hr.~· ei..pc<:ted too much of .J uson
It was o nly 'natural for them to do
that Thompson broke into the major
ll'ague~ with a b1rn~ in 1976, at the
tender ugl' of 21 lie was. lo put it
mildly, a prodigy
Thomp•m11 "us the cager ku.I with
the big bat with whom the Uetroil
T1gns wc•n· trying Lu rebuild an en·
ltrt> balkluh
l>un11J.! tht• latt.• liOs and early '71>;;.
lhl' Ti~t.·1 s \\t'l'l' c11w of the more pre
m i t• n· a 11 ti d y rm m i c l r a ms i n
lias l'l>all 11111 those• were in the days or Nor Ill ('a :.h Hiid Willil' llort1111 and
.J 1111N11rtl1111p a11<1 i\I l{alinc
T HOSE WEK E VER\' dtffrrcnt
<!UY!> ftotn w~1 Thompson broke in-
to tht• l>\•troet ltn€·up 111 tht• fifth garnl.'
of I !l7fi
Man ager Halph llouk 's 1975 club
f1n1 shNI a dismal 5?-102 and in last
place in the American League East
divis ion. 37 12 gam es out.
ThomJJson, originally drafted c but
•
unsigned) by the Dodgers while a
senior at Apple Valley Hlg~hool,
had made the transition from a
pitcher to first baseman at Cal State
Northridge. "I was kind of an erra~c
pitcher anyway," he laughs.
It was at that time that Thompson
blossomed j nto the kind of hitter of
whic h major league playe rs are
m ade. fie hit well over .300 both his
years at Northridge and led his iel\m
to the District 11 World Series
playoffs his sophomore year.
The following year , Thompson was
signed by the Tigers as the club's
A• aooM a• Spar~w
ea...e, peaple •aid lw ud
• •mtWtldng agaln~t .w.
fourth selection in the June, 1975
draft.
Tigers as the dub 's fourth selection
in th e June , 19 75 dr u f t
H1': WAS SENT directly to the
C'lub's /\A farm club in Montl(omery,
Alu 1 "I thought thut wus quite a
feather in m y cup," he says) where
he hit .324 in 75 gamcs
In 1976, after J\ISt four games at
F.vansville, Thomi.>son was called up
by the Tiger s and tn'ierled as the
regular firs t hascman He responded
by hitting safely in \4 of' ht'> first t6
gaml's . .
By the end of thl' yea r. hP had
slumped tu 218 hut ll'd llll' club 10
hom t• runs with \7
In HJ77, Thompson had u st.·nsa-
tiollul seac;nn lh• hit :J I home runs
I thl' first Tigl·r to hit more• than 30
Stnl'C Cush in Hl71 wlwn he hit 32)
and hnd 105 HBI
THOMPSON <av•:s a lot of the
-credit in his t•arly sut·t·1.:.ss to Houk.
''ll e 's a grea t m11 11 , very
knowledgeable . I'd love to play for
h im again ."
That year, 1977, and again in 1978.
T h ompson was selected lo the
American Lea~ue All-star sq uad .
DAii• PrlOI PllOIO b• Lee PIV ...
JASON AND BERNADETTE THOMPSON ENJOY THEIR SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LIFESTYLE.
And though his stats dropped s lightly
i11 1978 I 287. 26 home runs, 96 RBI),
Thomµson was Detroif's hope for the
future The nt•x t J\I Kallne
There was good rt•as on. too In
1976, the Tigt•r., 1mµruvl'd thl'Jr r'l'
n>rd lo 74 R7 ancl in HJ78 finished
flG 76
nut that 's when the pressure start·
ed mounting on Thompson.
The press went on an undesired
pub lic r e l ations campaign for
Thompson with such headlines as.
"Is this the year Thompson hits 60
home runs""
I t seemed <'Vt'r\1>nP wanlr·d
m 1raclcs from ·htm in-br111g1ng IJurk
the glory day-. to Oetroil but th<·
burden got to b<' too much for llw
young Thompson
"I STARTED letting lht1se thengs
set in and I jus t got µlam screv.t•d
up," Thompson said, looking out at
the rain-soaked golf course from hl"o
ups tairs study.
"Oh. 1tnd a lot of people tried to
blame it on our marriage, can yuu
believe that?" Bernadette inteqel'ts
In 1979. after what he sa~'i \\.J<; ••
""''' .,, .1111! t1a 111111~ for me. I "asn 't
111 \ t•t ' gi1<1d .,h;qw, ·· TIHlm!JSOn took
a o.;1111!· dm\ ti tht· I nll<-1 C:CHIStf'f'
I Jll'il 1·1>11ltl11 1 g1·t 1l l(i>ing . it was
"" fr 11~11 ;1 111111 I lnuk Jwc.J r<·•ircd and
n1t•111 all ~ I w:1sn'I prc•pun•d for the
••'(I '>lltl ..
l od1•l•tl "lwn llnuk rel ired from rnuna~111~. h1• took with him the cori-
falt.•rH't• th:.il he• hut.I instilled on one of
his favonu· playt•rs Thompson.
I.ES ~10SS lwi~an 1979 as manager
for ll••trr11t h11t d1dn 'I last lnng. giving
1 ~e 1.1 • t. ·~. P age 8 2)
Defensed it
' NFC stops 11?(~'. c1gai11 , 2 1-7
HONOLULU <AP) Uetroit
Lions' rookie Bddic Murray wns
the Pro Bowl Mos t Vnluable
Player by virtue of his four field
goals, but m embers of ,the Na
tional Football Conference de
fcnsivc eiif!t made most of the
d ifference in the game.
With Tampa Bay's Lee Roy
Selmon. Dallas' Bob Rreuni~
and the Hams' J ack Reynolds
among the standouts. the NF(.'
de fense held the potentially ex·
plosive AF'r off<'nse in check in
Sunday's 21 7 Nat ional Con
fcrence Pro Ho" I 1;ic tor y
"OUR SEC'ON DARV did a
gre:.it job a nd gave thl' defensive
li ne l ime l o ge t t o th e
quarterback." said Selmon. who
logged four lackll'S and hrHl two
or the N l''C's tour quarterback
sacks.
T he N FC he ld llouston run·
ning back l!:arl Campbell. the
NFL 's lending rus her the past
three years, to just 24 yords on
eight carrie11 . 't'he entire AFC
running gam e nolted only 65
ya rds on 22 atte mpts . and the
American Confer ence passing
attac k was l(enerully lneCfecUve.
N F'C Coach Leeman Bennett
of Atlanta lauded the entire de-
f c n se a n d added : ·'I was
particularly pleased with the de·
fenslve play of Charlie J ohnson.
Randy White and Rod Perry.
·'The re was some outstanding
play from both team s' defensive
secondaries."
1-~
JACK REYNOLDS
covered a fumhle th.it f Vl·ntuul
ly led to one of Murru ~ ·., ficlc1
goals and the R ums· Pera ~
figured in fi ve tucklcs
Murray hit field ~onls or 31 ,
31. 34 and 36 yarns . lie missed
on pair of 37 yard a ttempts. the
last hittlog t,he crossbar with
just 22 seconds left to pluy
I••.-tlreo l'eo llmd," .,;11d Mur-
I he s 1-. 011• hi ~hli~ht of my
1 ook 11 • \.1·:11 <ind 11 :. a nic e way
111 1 ap off 1111' .,l'a~on I 1ust hope
I II hr • h;wk a1w 111 ·
I 111 • otllt't "'F< · s t·or1ng l'ame
1•11 a !'!'1 \ <1rcl 111111'hcluwn pass
ft 11 111 Stt·vt· llartko\\s ki to Alla n·
1,1 11 ·.1 r11111;1tP ,\lft l'd Jenki ns,
a11d a .... trtl\ wht•n the 1\FC was
1·.el kcl 1111 h11l1ltnJ! 111 ns own e nd
71111l'
Pia~ tnJ! \\<'II 111 the game
rr11·ar1t ,1 Int to till'. µartirularly
'olllt't' I had 1wllt•n into the game
"h(•ll I •Ill' 1 ltll wa:. hurl.·· said
.J1•11k111". n rrplacC'mcnt Pro
Hem ll•r \d111 \\ ao; the· con test's
lc'it dtnJ! 1 C'<'«'l\'cr "1th t hree
eat r·lw.., for !I\ 'n1 ds
· 1 \\ a1111•cl ,,·, prove I belonged
on lht• ltC'lcl . it's u great way to
1•ml a gre;11 \ l'ar .. i\llhu11~h ·,, gave up 21 points
!ht' A ~T tkfe nse turned in a
~ood t.•ffort Kunsas City safety
S IC'v c B arba r o s a v e d a
touth1)0\\ n when he recovered a
fumhlc b y. Phi l a d e lphia
quurtt>rback Hon .Jaworski in
tht' /\ FC end zone, a nd also in-
t er c1•ptC'd a J aworski pass.
'fh(• AFC's lone score came on
u 9 ya rd pass fro m Brian Sipe of
Clevela nd to New England's
Stnn)f!Y Morgan
NO WAY DR. J. -NBA West All-star
Jamaal Wilkes of the Lakers snatches the
ball away from Julius "Dr. J " Irving dur-
ing action Sunday In the NBA
gam e.
T he Ea1les' J ohnson was In on
seven t ackles, Dallas' White re-
"I WATCHED the Pro Howl
on television las t year and at
that time, .I wondered af 1 could
even make it In the N 1',L , much
"We j us t we r e n 't very
a rtistic." sa id J\ f'C coach Sam
RuliJ?lluno of Cleveland. "I just
hope l'm not the first Pro Bowl
couch to ~et fired.··
Scuba diving
class to open Eftst • WlllS a .starless All-star game, 123-120
RICHFIELD. Ohio CAP> It can be
considered, possibly, a tribute to the un-
selfishness of the players, or to the de-
rense1 or both teams.
~ But the fact la that, In a 1ame laden
with s tars, no one e meried u the clear-
cut s t andout. of Sunday's National
Basketball Association AU -Star Game,
won by the East, 123-120.
•·w e played team ball today," 11id
East 1uard Michael Ray Richardton,
repreaentln1 the New York Knicks.
"We had 10me one-on.one moves, but
they were in a team concept."
No one for either team eould crack
tbe »point barrier. Paul W•lDhal of
Seatde and Dennll JohalGll Of Pboenia
1bared scortnc honorl for Ule Welt wtUa
It polata apl~e. whU1 Julhll Snt111 of , . Q
Philadelphia had 18 lo lead the Eaat.
"These 1uya' atU\udes ar e beautiful."
said Philadelphia's Bllly Cunnln1ham.
n ow undefeated In three All-Star
coachln1 appearances. ''They have the
ability to adapt lo any aituaUon. I Just
thou~ the overall attitude wa1 1"9at."
Ee West Coach John MacLeod of
Phoenix: "BWy and I talked before the
' tame and about how it's • pleuur1 to
watch tb... IUYI pla1 -IUYI you
usually coach a1ala1t, and now you
have them on your team.''
About IOO 1nedia rePNMlllallv• •· ed yeteran Bo1toD 1uard Nat•
Archibald MClll v-... ...,_ ta U..
1ame -"'9 thouP Arehlbeld '"'9d
oal1 nlM polnta. 1111 ablt UlllU _.Ma pla1maldnl..,... Mm U.. ......
I
Celtic teammate Robert Pariah, who
had 16 poln\.s and a 1ame-hlgh 10 re·
bounds , was runne rup in the ·MVP
balloting.
But the ravorite of the 20,211 fana -
r epresentatln1 the aecond-lartHt
crowd in the 31 years of NBA AU·
Star play -was Cleveland Cavalltr
f01"ward Mike Nttchell, who stored H
· points.
... thObcht Mlc!hael played HCIP·
Uonally well for bla first 1ame. and be· lna a\ home,". aald Cumtmpam. ''H1
1borftd he belonted out there today."
lllkbell waa edcled to tM Seat tH• afttt: AUanta '1 Dan RouDlllllld Md le
drop out becauae of ealelum cllpoeltl l8 "" "°' .... ~--1
you hear ch eers like I did," s aid
Mit chell, who received a standing ova-
Uon when he entered the gome ln the
second quartf'r . "It makes you e itcltcd,
and il made me want to play great."
The West took a 27 -23 lead after one •
quarter behind 10 points from Westph~I.
But Mitchell's elthl second-period
polnll helped the East Jump on top 61·51
at the hall.
Guard F.ddle Johnson ot Atlanta then
scored nine of his 18 point$ 1n tbe third
quarter 11 the East n panded its
m•r•ln to •rr.
A Mitchell stuff on a f H tbreak
pua from Pariah ..... UM But a 1g.
potnt edp, ltl laraest of I.be 1ame, wltb ..... ,, ............. ,
l
'J'he Capistrano Bay Park and
R ecreation Department will
hold a scuba divin1 clasa •
Tuesdays and Thursdays _....
·wl II enable 1tudenl1 to b1
-eer tirled ns NAUI divers. ·
A spokesman for Ute depart-
ment said th• class wm start
when enouah penou alp ...
Ctrtined inatruetor Claria_...
Carter will teach UNI elau.
The ewne will 1tud1 ...._.
animala. safety babttl, •edlail
atpedl and iMtude two ......
div• off Sba .. Con la I.alma Beach.
Co.t al the Pf'Oll'•• la 111. wlltcb ._..._ ,.... .. tf .....
m•t acept ..... lllOl'hl m .....
\
..
88 ~K. Y ,.LOT MDM9~. '"''*Y I , 1N1
Ferrqaino pliaye cat
and mou1e with Rama .. ,..,., .........
NEW· YORK -Ram1 quuUrback VlDct J'tr· •
ra1amo will me.t ln Toronto Tueaday with t •
llamUwn Tlaer-Cat.t owner Ha.ro&d Ballard to ells·
t>uu playina ln the Canadian Football Leapt next
)'ear, h.i• •I nt said in an lntervlew wl\b ABC Radio Sunday
nicht
A1ent Bob Fiahoff aaid tbat two ne1ottaUq atnlou with
Rama General Manaaer ()()0 Klotterman h•v• 1oae nowhere
t nd both sides are atlll far apart in contract \alka.
Fisbolf said that the *52.000 1aJary Ferraaamo recelved
last year wu "ridiculoU.. He iln't lookin1 to be paid a
million dollars a year, but he ii lookJnl to receive a contract
comparable to the top four quarterbaclla in the Natlonal Foot·
ball Leaiue." '
f'erraiamo led the Rams to the 1110 Super Bowl ucl wa1
one of the top-rated quarterbacks in the leape laat aeuon ..
Fiahoff said that, when Ballard often a contract, be will
out or courtesy meet wlth Kloeterman for a poulble coun·
teroffer. ·
But the a1ent added: "At this point, Vince la all ready to
go to Canada and be 1iven the respect that ht 11 due. I would
love for him to play with Loe Anaeles next year, but lf ~e
can't aeree, Vince will either play ln Canada or sit out next
year and Vince ·will go back to medical school. He baa
already completed o~ year."
Flshoff sald thaY with the present NFL compenaaUon
system it would be difficult for Ferraeamo to .alp with
another team as a free aaent. • .-----fl-•• ol llw fl••-----
sMu athletic director Rua Potta, on colle1e football:
·'The i.mperfection of our .a a me is one of our area test sell·
ang points. The blocked kick, the intercepted pus are ex·
actly what make our game. It's exciting. Added to the col·
or and pageantry of college football, it's unbeatable. Our
game is exciting precisely because these are kids, prone to
,mis takes. ltaddstothegame."
Pa•er d•• ,,.U , •• ,.....
DEERFlELD BEACH, Fla. -Sandra Palmer !I
overcame two bogeys on the back nine and aur·
vived a challenge by Amy Alcott for a 2·stroke vie·
tory in the Ladies Professional Golf Association's
$100 .000 Whirlpool. Championship of Deer Creek Sunday.
Palmer had to fight a strong, unpredictable wind to re·
cord her first LPGA Tour victory since 1971.
"This means a lot to me," she said as she accepted the
$15,000 check for winning the fint event of
the 1981 season. "I didn't think I'd ever
win again."
Palmer, in her 18th year on the tour
shot a 75 over the 6,280·yard, par·7l
Deerfield Country Club Course and
finished 72 holes at 284, 8 under par.
Alcott, the tMo U.S. Open champion
and holder of last year's low scortna
average of 71.51 on the tour, started the
day 3 under par.
'---A----..llL-• Alcott was only 2 strokes behind when
P•LMe." s he reached the 16th. Palmer was in trou·
ble behind her after losing 4 strokes on the 11th, 12th and 13th
holes.
Mlddlelo•'• ,.., ..... , ...... 8t'tll•• M•
08 seconds apart, early in the second period sun'. '
Rick Middleton scored his Uth and 2Sth 1oal1 Sil.
day. leading Boston to a 6-3 National Hockey
League victory over the New York Islanders. In
other action of an abbreviated schedule .· .. &oll Edber1 and
. Dennis Manak scored two goals aplece aa Wuhlnston defeat·
ed EdmontonJ.. 7·4 to stretch its unbeaten streak to four 1amn
... Bemle rederko scored a pair of 1oal1 and St. Loubs
1toalie Ml_ke Llut was brilliant in the net.a as the Blues 1bted
to a 4· 1 victory over Oetro1t. The victory left St. Louil, which
leads the .Smythe Division, with a 31·12·8 record ... Van·
couve~. w1~h six players scorln'i and eoalle-&lellard Bndnr
sparkling m t he nets, s napped a five-1ame winlen streak
with a 6-2 win over Calgary . . . Buffalo's Crall •••NJ and
Ric Selling fired in first·period goals and 1oalie 0.. Mwardl
stopped·23 shots, as the Sabres shut out Winnlpe1, 4.0.
Brett ,,et• 11.,P 1.-rw.., Ye .. •rh•n
(;eorce Brett of the Kansu City Royall, whose •
:390 average was the highest in the major lea1uea
an nearly 40 years, was honored as the player of
the year Sunday night at the annual awards dinner
of the New York chapter of the Bueball Writen AuoclaUon
or America ... Japan's Olympic veteran T•lale•I NaADlll
shared .top honors with UCLA's Mlkll Ga1lord in tbe men'• championship of the inaueural All·Amertcan Gymnastic•
Classic at the LA Sports Arena and •arela
Fredertck of North Haven, Conn., narrow·
ly won the women's title ... BUl7 •qer
of Waco, Tex., lost the en1lne in fill car at
well over 200 miles per hour, but couted
to a narrow victory over the 1moktn1
racer of RaymOlld Beadle of Dallu in the
Funny Car final• at dra1 ractn,'1 Win·
ternatlonall in Pomona ... But
Germany's Benllard Ger•.U ... and
Haa1 Gerlaardt, won the world two.man
. bob1led title to end tbe domination of tbe
. evet by Swl11 Olympic •old medallata
Erich Schaerer and .JOHf Beu . . . A truck 1tnack a bus car·
ryin1 the University of Tenneaaee·M•'1fn basketball team
s haking up team membtn but cau1in1 no 1ertoua lAJurtn
· · · A fund bu been e1tabU.bed at Ferrta State ln lltcbitan
to buy a defibnllator, an emer1ency rncue maebiDe erecm.ct
wlth aavin1 the life of basketball coach Im WIU on Jan. 11
Eastern Montana Colle1e buketball, coach Die' &n.,..
who also held head coacbln1 Jobi at the Unlvtralty of Pactfte
and the Univenlty of Calllomia, Berkeley, died Saturday ot a'
heart attack. He waa ~.
T .............
Following •rt tht top sports events on TV tonlo"t . .-atlnot
ire: ' ' ' ' excellent; " " " won" watc"'"': I ' ,.., : '' forget It.
c;) l.p.m •• Chennef t I I I
• NHL HOCK•Y: Kll)91 at NY AMQert. A........,.: Bob Miiier Ind ..... Wtblr.
The 1<1ng1 Improved thttr !Md In the Norris OMtkln of the
C•mObell Conftr9nCt to nine DOlfttl wl~ • 4-1 vkWY over tM c1nadlens Saturday nftht 1t the florum before 1 lllloUt ,,....
D•v• Taylor had two goal• and Marcel Dlonnt ont
wit" CMtttt -.mtMr Mn1nt up ttne Of tM ecorea wtttt 1111111.
OTMIRTll.IYtllON
Batlcetball -Arl1one ltn vt. catlfornla, ChanMI t, 11:• p.m. , •
RADIO Hockey -l(lftll •• New York .. .,..,., •:U p.m •• KOOO
''°°~:
I AD old
. .
• prow1ns
Daytona
DAYTONA BSACH, J'la.
<AP> -Oki pro Brtu Red.maa1 wbo baa waa more 1porte car•·
duruee racee Ulan an1 o&Mr
active driver, dldn't Ukt tbt way
tbin11wen1u1.
It WU Saturda.y tvtllinl, Oftly
a few boura into \be M·Hour
Pepel Cba11•1• at Daytona Jn.
ternatJonaJ Spelldway, and b1a
team wu leadinl .
"It wu about s p.m.," •x·
plained co-driver Bobby Rahal,
ln only b1I aecoad aeuon ofloq.
dlatance racln1.
"I CAME OVT of the car and
met Brian on the way to tbt
motor home. He uked me what
place we were in. I Hid, 'Flnt.'
He aald, 'Oh, God, it'• too early
to be flnt.' ·
"I said, 'But I haven't pUHd
anybody; they're all droppin1
out'."
The heavy rate of aftrltioa ln
the 1ruellna race never caUlht
up with the metalltc·blue
Poncbe Turbo 935 piloted by
Redman, Rahal and Bob Gar·
retaon, allo a maater en1ine
bu lid er from Calflfornia. ·
THE T&IO LOST tbe lead for
a wbUe, but 1ot It back for IOOd
alx boura lnto tbe race.
Challensea came durtn1 tbe
darkness from several ol tbt
other powerfUl Poncbe tas. but,
by dayUaht, accident• and
mechnanical ills bad eliminated
them all.
From titat point on, it wu
simply a matter-or keepin1 the
car runnJna.
"It wu toush to concentrate
because everytbina went 10
smoothly," explained Redman,
a native of Ensland, who now
llvea in Lake Forest, lllinoia.
The winners, avera1tns
113.153 mph, finished lS laps
ahead of the second-place
Porsche 935 of Bob Akin,
Engliahman Derek Bell and
Crate Siebert.
THEY COMPLETED 708 lape,
or 2, 718. 72 m ilea , around
Daytona's 3.84·mlle road course.
Garretaon, the owner of the
car and the team manacer, said
the only real problem durtn1 the
race was a broken exhaust
header, which w.a1 replaced in
13 minutes.
Al that point, shortly after
midnisht, it appeared the then·
1econd·place car was about to
erase a three-lap deficit and
move into the lead. But, wtth
Danny Onaala al the wheel, the
car wu involved in a cruh on
the Speedway's hiah bankin1.
Onsaia wasn't injured, but the
traffic waa slowed by a caution
na1 and, when Rahal wheeled
his car out of the plta after the
Ions stay, he still held a 1mall
lead. He quickly built It back to
flve. lape. . ·
"Aft.er that," noted Garretson,
"we didn't mill a beat."
A Pouche 911 driven by'
William Koll, Jeff Kline and Rob
Mc Farlin was third, a dlatant 84
lapt off the pace, while a Dataun
ZX driven by Frank Camey,
Dick Davenport and Ramt1u
JobnfOI' finished fourth, 12 lape
behind.
A Lancia Turbo, 99 laps
behind, 1Upped into fifth place
with the ltallan trto of Carlo
Facettl, Martino Flnotto and
Emanuele Pirro at the wheel.
Diii, ~li.t ~ ..... ty LH ~''W!
THE THOMPIONl IN TH!lfl HOME WITH A CONSTANT REMINDER IN BACKGROUND.
,. .......... J
UFE'S WO~DERFUL FOR THOMPSON •
way ·to Sparky Anderson aner
ju.st 55 sames.
And then, for reasons ~till un·
beknownat to Thompson, his
problems really beaan. From
the beainnina. Anderson and
Tbompeon did not 1et alon1.
...... A1 soon aa · Sparky came to
Detroit, people said that he had
1omethine asalnll m e,"
Thompson said. "He was used to
fiery t ype players and he
thouaht I waa too introverted.
I've always been a qulet type of
person but in Detroit, they
looked at me as beine moody.
"My confidence bit an all-time
low that year. As lone aa I was
hitting, the people in Detroit
liked me. When l hit 30 home
runs that year. they wanted 40
the next. And Sparky expected
the same."
WHEN ANDERSON be1an sit·
tins the left-banded Thompson
down on the bench aaainlt left·
banded pitchers, Thompson
be1an to aet suapicioua. "I could
see the writin1 on the wall for a
trade rtaht then," he said.
Thompeon fini1hed the year in
diaappolntment, blttin1 .246 with
20 home runs and 79 RBI. It jUJt
wasn't up to hia own atandardJ.
So Juon did the only thinl he
thoueht would brins him back -
hard work.
He had a 1ood aprina ae1aon in
1980 and ca.rrled that over to the
flnt month of the re1ular
1ea1on. He waa hitttn1 n•ht
around .300 in mid-May, yet
amadnely eQ....ou1h, he bad hit
only four homil"flu tbrou1h the
flr1tae1ames.
"I looked at that aa a positive
note," Thompson aald. "When
I'm bittin1 well, I hit to all
fields. It'• when I so into 1lumpe
tbat I at.art pullin1 the ball, look·
int for home ru.na ."
Sttll, the wrttin1 remained the
wall.
THOMPSON ADMITS now
that he wu •hocked the day he
heard he had been traded to the
Ansell for Al Cowens. The date
was May 27 , 1980.
''At first it was a real shock.
because I enjoyed playing in
Detroit," said Thompson. "But
then I realized it was the best
thing that could have ever hap·
pened to me.''
In Thompson 's f irst a p·
pearance as an Angel, mana&er
Jim Pregosi sent him in aa a
pinch hitter -aeainst a left·
hander. And Thompson came
throu1h with a game-winning
base hit.
"Sparky would hav•-never let
me hlt ln a situation like that, ..
Thompson laughed.
For Jason, coming to the
Angels was like being born
again. He s ays that Fregosi and
then h i tting coac h Deron
Johnson helped him on his swing
and he immediat ely got his con·
fidence back.
He wound up hitting .317 last
year and led the team with 17
home runs (21 for the season I.
SO NOW, as another season
looms near, Thompson is once
again bubbling with optimism.
Ironically though. his future
rem alns 4:1oudy.
The An&els have a fixture at
firs t base in the form of Rod
Carew. who few will ar1ue is
perhaps the ereatest player ever
to play the position. Thompson
au.rely won't ar&ue.
"There 's no animosity
between Rod and me," he aays.
"He told me lut year that he
wanted to play another three
years and if I have to be the de·
•icnated bitter for three years.
then I'll do it and wait... ' '
Compoundinc Thompson's
dubioaity is the recent acquisti·
lion of 1lu11in1 outfielder Fred
Lynn. And that's another ironic
1tory.
NOT a EA LL Y bein& sure of
what An1el• manaaement had in
mind, when Thompson first
heard of the rumors to trade for
Lynn he waa told by hb brother
that he mlaht be involved ln the
deal. .
another city," Bernadette says.
"We love it here. The people are
diffe rent he re in California.
They keep to themselves more
a11d Jason and I are basically
loners so it fits us more. In
Detroit, they're sports fanatics.·
They used to drive over in out
busloads by our house and try.
jumping over our fence to s~
Jason." .
It's not that the ThoQlpeons
.don't like to socialize. Last;
weekend, J ason was honorary_
chairma n i n the Cal State·
Northridge alumni game. .
But things are sp perfect henr
for the Thompsons and beaides,:
Jason thinks the An1els bave a
winner going this year. , •·
·'The only question ft. th~
h ea lth of o ur pitchers ,''
Thompson says, soundin• .very
much like General Manager
Buzzle Bavasi .... .
"OF COURSE I'd mucb rather·
play on a club with fOQf Cy•
Young pitchers but we· ha ve·
some good arms on thi• .flafl• rm not saying we're gotag to
win the ·division but we have-
what it takes to get us there."
A1:1 for himself, Thompson says
he has three goals set for this
season : l l to play every day; 2>
being the RBI man he thinks he
is, to knock in 90·100 runs: and
3) win the pennant.
· Then, before he decides to re.
tire from baseball. ntompson
hopes to play on a World Series
team. .
But for now, Jason Thompson
ha~ to settle a few little things
like signing a contract for '81.
Two weeks ago, he filed for
arbitration, more out of th~
necessity to protect himself than
anything. "I'ro not greedy; as
soon as I sign . I'll be happy.
Some ballplayers doh 't realize.
how good they really have it." I
Then. it'll be back to baseball
and hopefully. the perfect life of
Southern California.
, ........... "I don't think I would have
minded because then I 'd be
playln1 for Houk asaln,"
Thompson chuckled.
In any event, when Fre1osi
:fi1cl0Hd on a recent radio pro·
1ram what bit tentative llneup
card would read if the aeuon
wer to st.art announced tht next
day, Thomp1on wu the des·
e1nated hitter, battlnt fifth.
TbomPIOQ heard the show, and
It f.leued him very much.
ALL-STARS.
10 minutes rematnin1.
Walter Davia of Phoenix and
Loa Anselea Laker Kareem Ab-
dul·J abbar, however, ltd a W•t
1ur1ethateut thedeflett to llt-111
with Just over tbree mlnuta to
play.
Baaketa by Archibald and Ed·
die Jobnloa maintained tbt Eut
ed1e, and a lut·••eond W•t
thrte·polnt attempt by S.attle'•
JackSlkmamilHd.
"There are always 1oln1 to be
•pun. like that, where you're
playlq sloppy. beeaUH you'r.
playlq wtU. new fac ... " Hid
Cunnlqham. "First you'r. dead
and out of It, but tbtn you 1et a
epurt and you 're back In It.
, "The key WU Wbat WI did de-
f enaively, wltb Pblladelpbia'a
Bobby JOMI maktq a tteal and
DallyPllotTop I~
Or .... .::..-:~.:'ltW .... ...... . ....
t. r-.•v.u.r iw 1.0..Vln 1W •. LaQalma ...,
4. C..,.__, ValltJ 1M
........ 14-4
t .C-clllllar 1M
T.C1P1• .sw •. ""'-111111 -u .. t .T.-IN
10 ..... AuValler to.f
• •
Michael Richardson makln1 a bif
play."
MacLeod held true to a pre·
same vow to 1tve all hll player• an equal amount of playins Ume.
All performed between 20 and 2S
minutes except KanH• City's
Otla Btrdlons. who played only 12
mlnutel because he was battl1n1
tbenu. · .
Playtnc Ume varied more tor
<the l:ut plafertt ran1ln1trom11
mtnutee for Mttenell to 2t minutea ·
for Ervtnt. Bolton'• Larry Bird,
nuntn1 a badly brutatd 111.
played 11 mlnutel and scored j&11t
two .POlnta.
The vtetory wu the flf\b in the
la1t HVea 1am" for tbt Eut,
1tvln1 lt a IO-tl martin in the
"""· aad mede Cunntn1ham the HC.'Olld·wtnninl"t coach lD
NBA All·ltar bittory behind Red
Auerbach, who coached MYen
wlllnen.
'Everyone wanta to play, cer·
tatnly I do," Thomp1Qn 1aid.
"With the trade• and all the
trade rumon, it'• 1ometimea
hard to stay mentally prepared.
I know that the lant come to ...
Carew. Tbat'1 not what makt1
me bttter. I Juat want to know
whit I'll be dolna.
"Al far u future trades, I
don't know more than anyone on
the streets does."
· AND Al EXCITED a• both he
and Bernadette are about tbe
optDlq of the 1•1 HalOft, they
can •t help but k .. p tbelr ftnltrt
croeHd Uaat tMy won't have to
pull up ltak• from Mtnlon Vt•· Jo IOOll. "It'• really hard movlftl to
What's going on?
Croaby tourney jilkd wiih corifusio'n
• • .. PU&& ISACH CAP > -TM 8iaa Crotby Tben'a a1lo tbe qutttloa ol who's ltadln1 10· ,._ • ..._. ........ Goll TounaalaMM, w~i ..a.ally inl ln&o tbe lut NUIMI. ,....~~ POA Tow la apectac"1u aetMry ud By tbe' numben, lt'a Tom Wat.aon ud Brad
•;:.:•· la alma.t certala to top the aeuon Bryaat, wtlb •bole totall o( m, tllbt abota und•r .. tbla Ume par.
...... U..rt'a Jolla Ceok. Oalr afttr ,. Nat ao, .aid Watlon. -·i:'s'w<' play lalt l&aDday did be cllaeovtr tba\ "Tbt real leader la Jerry Pate," Wataon aald. '9 ~ one more round \o play. H• lbou1ht ..... ..,.. 11 holtt ytt to 10. PATS HAI A d1 TOTAL. but also an ad·
v anataat. Me wUI complttt the tournamtnt at
Pebble Btacb. Ma.t of tit• otber leaden have to
plar t.betr third and ftnal l'OWld at Spnlua mu.
which Btn Crtnahaw H)'I II "two abota harder
tban·lbe otbva. It stvea everybocl7 the wllllea."
ftlS CONF\JIED PINUUI -wblcb wUl bavt Ill•,.. eompletina thtlr rounds today on al• dll· hflM .,._. on thrff dltftreal 1011 coune• -=too much of a lo1l1Ucal problem for lbt
... after provld•1 national televlalon cov·
., ... al the tint two rain·dtlayed rounda of the
famed toumament, lbey packed up and left the
llOll ... Y Ptnluula to the H all playln1 OD lb• roea ln Carmel Bay. the IO&rlAI Hatulll &nd the
players, 111 pros and a matchln1 number of
amateun. There will be no naUonal TV coveraae
of tbe ftnal round.
•
1981M:Ir
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Call Today
''Patt baa that courn behind hlm,'.' Watson
sald. "Jf we 1et 1ood w~ather. h~ certainly hu tbe advantqe."
Watson, the out.atandin1 performer In the ii 10H'1 Playe~~~;ear for the put
lour aeuons, aot a 1hare ol the lead when he
r.ammed ln a 22·f.oot blrdJe putt on the 18th bole at
Pebble Beach, about an hour after the TV cameras
bad ended their coverace of the tournament late
Sunday afternoon.
That ftnJ1hed off a 3·under·par 69 and tied
Watson for the numerical lead with loncshot Br•d
Bryant, who ls seeklnc his first title In three years
of PGA Tour actlvlty. Bryant blrdied·hia last three
holes. also at Pebble Beach, for a 87.
TIED WITH PATE at 137 we~ Crenshaw and
Cook. Both played their second round at Pebble
Beach. Crenshaw shot a 70 In sunny weather with
1entle breezes. Cook, a 23-year-old former national
amateur champlon and the flrst·round leader, took
a 71.
"I thought we had two more rounds to play,"
he said, a puz&led look on his face.
But there's only one.
A series of 1torma washed out the first two
days' play Thursday and Friday and prompted of-
fi cial• to cut the tournament from 72 boles to 54.
T-he purse was reduced from an announced
$300.000to1225.000.
Bob Clampett and Greg Powers were two
strokes off the pace at 138. Clampett shot 71 at
Spyalus and Powers had the same fl1ure at Peb· ble Beach.
Jack Nicklaus. a frequent winner here and
current holder or the U.S. Open and PGA titles,
moved into contention at 139 shootina a 68 at Peb·
ble Beach. Former Presldent Gerald Ford was hls amateur partner .
Heiden favorite
to win Sullivan
INDIANAPOLIS CAP) -Speed akater Eric
Heiden. the superstar of the 1980 Winter Olympics,
is re1arded u the favorite to wln the SuJUvan
Award to be presented tonipt.
The honor la awarded by the Amateur Athletic
Union to the athlete selected the top amateur of
the yea.r in national vot1n1.
Heiden la one of 10 flnaliat.a , and should be wln,
he would be the first speed skater to receive wbat
Is recopl1ed as the top award an lndlvldual
American amateur athlete can receive. It la
named in memory of James E. Sullivan, the
founder and a past president ol the AAU, a.nd has
been presented every year alnce 1830.
The more than 2,000 voten were uted to COD·
sider demonstrations of leadenhip, character and
sportsmanship In addition to athletic ability. Seven
of the 10 finallata, lncludinc Heiden. were expected
to join a group of 1,000 at the eventna award dinner
·in the Indiana Convention Center, when the winner
will be announced.
The flnaliata include diver Grecory Lou1ani1
and Robert Nieman, a two.time member of the
U.S. Olympic team In the modem pentathlon.
Both are finalist.a ror the second consecutive year.
TOMWATION
Tune-up
regatta
to Hill
Forty.fl ve boats in
five classes turned out
Saturday and Sunday
for Dana Point Yacht
Club's Midwinter Tune·
Up recatta.
W i nner in t h e
Performance Handicap
Racina Fleet Class A
was 0 . W. Harrold, skip·
pered by Tom HUI or the
host club. Class B win·
ner was On The Way,
sailed by .Al Nelson, also
of DPYC.
Trophy winne rs In
each class:
PHRF·A-1. O .W.
H a rold, T o m Hill ,
DPYC; 2. Re d Line.
~.'*'*Ya. '"' DAtlY PILOT
Dumain wins Manning
Tr~phy for Alamitos
Kevin ·numaln brouabt the 1:. E. Malllllni perpetual tropby back to
Alamltol Bay Yacht Club Sunday by
deftaUn1 31 rlvala in the Naples
SabotClau.
The Mannln• Trophy soea to the
winner in the class with the moat en·
triea in the dinthY raclna series dat·
ln1 back to um.
ABYC dornJnated the competition
for the Mannina trophy, placinl lour
of the top five ln the Naples Sabot
Claas.
Last year's winner, Chuck Queen
of Ventura Yacht Club, was the win·
ner ln the Sn.Jpe claaa with 18 entries. and 'Muk Rastello, ABYC. won the
Lldo·14 clus with us entries.
The weatherman provided ideal
conditions for the 128 boata in 10
classes which turned out for the
event which ls sponsored by the
Southern California Yachting As·
soclaUon.
Trophy winners ln each class:
NAl>LES SABOT (32)-1. Kevin
Dumain. -'PYC ; 2. Patty Moore
ABYC; 3. Mlke Sentovich, ABYC; 4'.
New format
for Corkett
Newpo rt Ha r bor
Yacht Club has a new
format for Mid get
Ocean Racing Class
<MORC> sailors seeking
the Corkett Trophy this
year.
Tom Newton, ABYC; ~· MarthaJI
Madruaa. SYDYC.
LASER (lt )-1. Chuck Queen,
Ven YC; 2. Brian Ledbetter, SDYC;
3. Mike Pinckney, BCYC: 4. John
Vroom, SBSC; 5. Steve Roaenburc.
ABYC. ~
SNIPE < 18)-1. Tom Shadden.
LBYC; 2. Ro1er Stewart, SDYC; a.
Mark Reynolds , SDYC; 4. Keith
Dodson, ABYC ; 5. Mike Bartell .
ABYC.
LIDO·H (18)-1. Mark Rutello,
ABY C; 2. Charlie Cummlnp, ABYC;
3. Kurt Miller, KHYC; 4. Ron Roaen·
bur1. ABYC : 5. Bruce Golison.
ABYC.
SIDNEY SABOT (13 )-1. Dou1
McLean, DRYC; 2. Hldeaki Doi,
DRYC; 3. Duke J on es, WYC; 4.
Mark Wimer. CIVC.
CO RONADO·lS (9 )-1. Jim Holder.
WL YC; 2. Ted Stoker, ABYC ; 3. R.H.
Blyes. CBYC.
WI NDSU RFER (6 )-1. Bruce
Matlack. VVC: 2. Tom Doyle, LIYC.
WESTWARD SABOT (5)-1. Ned
Garland, SMYC: 2. Bob Halderman,
KHYC.
Fred Perez. Capo BYC; Instead or being par t · 1
3. Aries. Bob Burkhardt, of the nine-months long !'!:=.'t.~.=:..~ S 59·95 · DPYC. . Ocean Raci~g Series for (791Kll)
PHRF-B-1. On The the Ahmanson IOR : MCwt M,..,r.,.__ Au,_,,,....r .. •i--
Way, Al Nelson, DPYC ; Dickson, IOR, PHRF A
2 . Ji~ J l m 11 • J i m and B, and Corkett fo r ~Nillfif ~DIP THAT CIUAT GM nlUHG
Wesslin g , DPYC; 3. PHRF C. the Corkett =!iii* +11w 1wc: WITH QIHVDft QM PAHi. I
F a n t a s i . W a 1 t Series will now be s ailed
Dieckmann. OPYC. as a separate single •r;·~.Jd~O~ ~ I CATALINA·~ An· we e k e nd even t fo r l-.ng&~ • .
tlcipaUon, Bob M.cl~R~C~ 27·28 and '=lf&.--•u.&.._ ,/J• DPYC; 2. Skosh1 Tiger, Ma rc . _____ ,..,,_... ':1.J.
Bob Strang. Capo BYC;
3. Vivace, Bill Clore , --.. **ii**** .. ******* 'II**** m ·-. * * * * * * * * * * DP YC. it . R ~~P~~-;~;,7~Pt~c:~ : _CAREER OPPORTUNITY :
B YC ; 2 . Fr e s h it :
Squeezed, Craig Froley. • .,.
DPYC. it _..
CRUISING CLASS-1. .. SALES/MARKET I NG • R e nandi , Charmain it
Coker, unattached ; 2. • MANAGEMENT No Y No, Charle. Berc. • DPYC; 3. Tbe Pats y, it
Dave Condon, DPYC. •
Otis wins
Sunkist
Balboa Yacht Club
wound up it.a four·month
Sunlllst Series Saturday
and Sunday in weather
that Justified the name
of the series. The wrap·
up race was sailed un·
der ~right sunny skies in
light to moderate winds.
The Sunklst Serles
features s malJ cen·
terboard boats sat11n1
courses inside the bay
on Saturday and laree
boats sailing inside·
outside courses on Sun·
day.
Final standings on in·
side classes:
.. • .. • It • ... • • It .. • ,.
• • • • .. • • • • • .. • • ..
•
•• .. SABOT A-1. Jim .
A sales orie nted fndivl dual, early in
career development with the desi re to
move quickly to siqniftcant client ~n d /or
management responsibi lity w ith a lll ghly
profitable, dynamic and ex pa~ g com -
pany with national corpof'ate h e ad -quarters in Newport Beach.
This opportunity can be explai ned in
confidence by catting either Mr.· Friess or
Mr. Larson at (714) 6-40-3029 on Monday
February 2 or Tuesday, February J from 9
A.M . to 5 P.M . If you prefer to send a
resume, forward to the address below
attention of.either Mr. Friess or Mr. Larson.'.
PCC FINANCIAL SERVICES COMPAN Y A DIVISION OF PACIFIC CONSULT I NG COR P.
700 Newport Center Dri ve ,
Newport Beach, CA 92660
953·1234
Other nomtntts were bOxer J a~e Heard,
skier Phil Mahre. swimmer Mary Me &her, mid·
die distance runner Donald Palae. reaUer Ben
·Peterson, synchronised swimmer Linda Shelley and
distance runne r Craig Virgin.
Heiden. who set fi ve Olympic records in win·
nlng five gold medals at Lake Placid. N.Y .. cur·
rently looks to bicycle rldln1 for competition, but
he says ror now his studies come first.
~tis. LAYC ; 2. Joann ~·~*=*~*=*~*=*~*=*~*=*=*~*=*~*=*~*=*~*=*~*=*~*=*~·~·~:*:*~*:*~*:*~*:*~*:*~* Norman , BC YC ; 3 . 1
~ !.~~ .. ~.!.~~!.·~~ .. ~!?.~~~!
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for additional lntonDatioD
Brown takes
Campbell
Allen Brown's Spirit
was the wiMer In the
racln& class in Voya1ers
Yacht Club's Campbell
Sloop Re1atta Saturday.
Runner-up was Cat's
Pajamu, skippered by
Carl Lut, and third was
Taunami, Dave Gray.
Wlnne.r ln the crulslnc
claaa wu Wlld One, Leo
Fortunl, aecond was
Amoore, Jerry Moore,
and th1rd wu Wander·
ln1 Star, Howard
Stevena.
Call 141-5111. Put a few word•
to work tor ou.
'Worth Houghton, SSYC.
SABOT C-1. Robert
Lai rd, BYC; 2. Steve
Lum s don . BYC ; 3 .
Kevin Whitehouse. BYC.
AD ULT SABOT -1.
Jackie Smiley, BYC; 2.
Eleanor Forsyth, BYC;
3. Elaine Llnhoff, BYC.
LID0·14A -1. Chad .
Twi c hell , BYC : 2 .
Rowland Lohman. BYC:
3. Dudley Johnson, BYC.
LID0·14B-t . Georae
Fulton, SSYC; 2. Wlll
Templeton, BYC; 3 .
Doris Kirst, BYC.
LASER-Doua TeuUe,
BYC; 2. John Pernick,
BCYC ; 3. Guillermo
FerramoUa, ABYC.
LASER 30 PJus -1.
Chuck Fowler. Capo
BYC; 2. Dick Knopf,
Capo BYC; 3. Graham
Glbbom, BYC.
SNIPE-1. Peter
Newbre, BCYC ; 2. Jlm
En•Uah. Capo BYC.
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U ertpm v_,. II~•> loll to Ut.ef\,
60-1'
It. $Gull! Al--117•JI 0.tl J•Cll-•
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11 Mk "'9Mo C U·JI ... , flt0t1--11.
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••·••. •o.t to Rllode ltleM , 11-1s, -Menllett.11, 1J.M
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V• Comn111111wMllll M, Ric~ U
THll WHK'I ICHIDULll
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Tll11rt0ay ~ '*"' J-SI. et UC 1,..,IM,
1·JO, UC Senle 1 .. -. •t ,,_It.; Cllf
Sl•le f'11I..,_ el l'Klfk.; U\al\ k . el \..el'I
eeecll St.; Soln 0...-St. et c:-• It.
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V•t•tl llfeVU.
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Hetlffrd
o.1 .. 11
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11 " • ,,. ,,. .. 11ue1t•m4'
UIS ti 1'720 fl
IJ t1 II U7 212 11 .... .,........
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HY ltlMl!Wt J.J I) e = 212 1' !'Ml..... • I• • '" .. , .... ,.., ,, 20 ti '" SJ Wetlllf1910t1 1' 21 12 ltS ltl JO
HY R~ It 2• t 190 I02 ..
St. Leult v--Clll<eoo
ldmo111on c .......
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JI 12 I 227 11t It
11 .. u ,.. '" $7 111411"• ..
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M
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letCl!kaetl ....... ......
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•• ·:·· -•• # -· •
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.....Ill'""': I. ltlM ~ ..... 118'\el lfltl ..
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I U .1 SI lfttlflt .
l . 0.t•" h ll, ... Alllft anti Cr•'9
11e .. r1, P'W9CIW '""'° C'3t,..,1. J. Wiii'*'" Kall, ,._ Mc,.,.1111 .... Jeff
ICllM , 1'9nc .. '911, "4). •. ,.,.,,. c:.r .. 1. Otcll Oe_,.,1 -R•-------· ~ zx ••• ,. J. GMie ,tceOJ, MlrtlM ,, ...... llM
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ar1111. aMWM-1 ( .. ). t. L .. ....,..,_, -Ketll' i.lldlt, ..._
a JMl•t. t . J-, • .,. Ardo lerri.lllff lfltl
Carlel 0-.1, ...-.CM T ..... 1'3J, fftl.
•. 11..., Men*wll'-, ArNt ~ -01..-, ...... *-llX·7 (ttJ). 10. WeH lloflfen, Jim Mollleft Mid J. KW1
llMflri.. Ma• llX·7 ( .. I.
fl. Jim o..nlftt, Irv H-r and k«I
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aer'-, l"Wt<IW\At,.,a c•>.
U . OWllM MltclWtt, M.L . '"8r lftd II_,.
••1e11tt, "9rtcM u• ueo.
"· Lllftle Helmrotll I r. eftd LlldWlf ,..,,,.,..,. .. , .• 1'9nc,. r ..... m um.
• U. 0.,.,. °'91..,,,, 11911 HeMIM llltl 1111 J...,._, PlwtcMttl ()ti).
... Oft'ld ....... MltC ... ,., •1111 o ......
Qw ... r, IMW Mot !SHI.
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1'. Ok i& MellM, a• K111WI Md Nen
NlnMl!I, c:-. cm>.
te, Ttc. Al-IM. II-~I -M,._l ......_ l"WKIW cer-• ISHI.
21. J8'lll MNW11 .,_. f..,. Ki--... I'--...... m11. H . ,.. MlltH, '91 9Mar• lfttl ...._..,
-•Uttlttdl, ...,.,. tM um. U . J ..... Ceff,, J llft ( .. k a"d ... ..,_,""°"' ._.. ax.p UUI. "' .....,. ,.....,, ..., ... 0.... .... .... ...,_ ..... ll"lwk .. ,.,,.. .. , .... ... ~-~. J-• lllft ... ...... ,...,...,......_ •x-1 c.m.
Misc.
-
A lot of ~hanges made
The woodclw£k ha• mi11ed out on much
NH YORK <AP> -8uppoet tbat. Jut for tbt
Hkt ol Yaria)', tbe Mllbbcftood woodeb\&Ck dt·
etdM to do IOllMdliDI difteND& oa -Groundboc Day tbilyear.
lllllMd of J• PHkinl out of b1a wtnt.r ......
Mlnee for tbe cuatomary weather fONCut, wbat
II be tuned tlAI pndlctJnt pown to the American
economy? •
Hil cNdtntlall ror th• Job an certalDly tood.
.... I . IAU LI chairman of the chain •al•
dep1rtment for Dr. Petter BoUlln• Co. ol Southern
Calllomla. Lott Uvet ln Hunw.,toa Beach.
897 .... n and Dale E~aM will be at Fu
Wnt Savtnp and IAan Anodatlon'1 corporate
beadquartera in Newport Beach on Feb. 1a. They
will appear from 11 a .m . to 1 p.m.
Daniel lnt.ematlonal, Greenville, S.C., a 1ub· 1ldlary of .,_, Corp., Irvine, bu lMen Mlect.ed by
Anaconda Aluminum crto deltcn the iatters •• $tOO million plant ln IAI County, Ky. .
I._; Browa LI aa1i1 t vice president of tb~"
real eatate department for Paclnc City Bank, Hun· llnaton Beach.
art.tlM llaralaall, Hunt·
lnitba Beach, f.t tour and travel
aaln manqer for the The Inn
at Tbe Park, Anaheim.
llUJ .Jo Zalltb la branch
vice pre1ldent of the Lasuna
H1ll1 olftce of · Great Western
Savinp and Loan Alaoctatioft. lltOWN
• ,,_ IAIWJer LI mana1er of Alpha Beta 1torea
ror Co.ta Meta.
.Joa. a. Gordom .Jr., Colta Me11, bas been
named 1eneraJ accountln1 chairman for Callfomia
Federal Savina• and Loan A11o ciatlon, Lot
An1eles.
'l'llomu .I. aAeUy, executive vice preaident of
U.S. operations for Daon Corp., bu been nemed
senior operatin1 officer of the firm's Newport
Beach headquarten.
Dulel a. 8lroda ls preaident of Wood Ll&ht·
ln1. lrvine, while E•tne E. Grtlfttlt baa been
named vice p.realdent of finance.
Amerku llo•e Secutty bu opened sn office
at 18e82 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine.
Col. ..._. Albena1de, who piloted the pre·
1idenUal Air Force One from i.. t.brouab 1174 will
1pe1k at 'l\aelday'a meetJ.na or 0tan1e County
aaJet and marketlnl executives. Dinner at the 7
p.m . at the Grand Hotel ln Anaheim, followed by
the pl'Qll'am. Information, reservations 118-7520.
Lille Ul1 OODWDUoeal ecGnomlit. be'I UMd to
worldq wtth lbadowJ n...,.... ADd ..... l••'"•r
with the buardl ot 1Ucldq tlAI aecll out too far.
To live tbt liUl• marmot a ,._.. clauee ID
hi• new ullpment, bt will Med I flll·fn OD wbert
the economy ltandl todiy. Tbat brteftq II benb)'
provided:
Wblle you were bu.ly /tUiac reedJ for your
annual hlbematlon, Ronal Rtatan won tM pret·
ldency. Hla election waa 1reat for Ult atoek
market (the Dow went up 1' pohlta) but bll ID·
auauratlon waa not Ctbe Dow went down 10
polnta).
PaESIDENT •EAGAN WANTS to lncreue
mllltary 1pendln1. cut tun dra1tleally, and
balance the budaet. The experta 1ay that 11 an lm·
po11lble comblna"on. But if he doesn't do lt alli
and aoon, they say. the whole country wlll f ..e
betrayed. ' ·
Tbe receaaloo of lt'7t never came. It arrived in
ll80, but left aiatn 10 quickly that many people
were 1ute lt would aoon be back. It dotln't appear
to have returned yet, thoreu,:ieu you uk the
manulacturen of cart and , wbo report that
it haa been here all alon1 and 1bow1 no alp of 10-
in1 away.
Atwr the oU 1horta1e a while back which rt·
suited in hither price•. there wu an oll 1lut wblcb
reaulted·ln bilher prtcn. Laat week there wu full
decontrol ol oil, which resulted ln bllhtr pricn.
The Federal Reaerve, accordln1 to ill crttlc1,
has been both too lax and too 1trtn1ent lo controll·
in1 the money aupply. To be honest about it, juat
keepina track of the money 1upply bu been a
problem.
A FEW MONTHS BACK, a new method wu
adopted to try to do a better job, but then aJon1
came the NOW accountl in January that threw the
calculations out of whack. There wa• al10 aome
mention of Social Security paymentt dl1tortln1 the
seasonal 1djuatmenu, or somethln1 Dke that .
· The numbers. in any cue, will certalnly be re·
vised.
Speakin1 of Social Security. the payroll tax
went up between 8 percent and :M percent lut
month. It wUl 10 up much further ln the next few
years, but the system still ml1ht collapae. •
THE WEATHEa HAS BEEN ho1Ule all
around. At the Hme time that lt wu too cold in
the East and too hot in the Wett, it wu too dry
almost everywhere .
Oran1ea froze ln Florida. An aunt ln
Oklahoma writet that the farmen are detperate
for rain. A friend ln Rhode llland tells or panic
buyin& of peanut butter, which la now aellinl ln
New York for S2 or more for an 18-ounce jar.
A lunch ·of a tuna fish 1andwlch and a IOft
drlnk, ln a brown paper ba1 wtth a pickle, went up
to S3.25 lut week at a Manhattan coffee 1hop.
WIBLE INFLATION KEEPS roarln1 ahead,
sad to report. some of the lnllaUon lnvt1tment1
aren't doln1 so well. Gold LI down 40 percent
I more if you adjust it for inflaUon) ln tbe put
year.
When an occuional bit of 1ood new1 cropa up
-say. a rise in industrial production or a drop in
unemployment -it depresaet all the marketa
because It Implies that interest ratea wtll 1tay
bi1b.
There doesn't seem to be much point in con·
Unuin1. The 1roundho1 just scW'ried back into hb
burrow for six more weeks. Or maybe a lot tonier /
than that. .................... ------------------------... I NBSIMINAI I • ... ,.c. .... , .... .........
• ftaf.. • • .::::.':'AU I .....................
RareColM& ......
GOLD&&VU
HoeetDr14CM1 ........ _,,. -Cll."UI ""*'·'~ .::t.. .:: .. ...... _ ....... .......
MtCat.-..... ...... ....... ..... .. ..... --Ill-.... ~ .. .... .........cs ..... .. .............. (n., ..... .... c...e,....v..._. ............... ...... a..--..
C•ll 142-1171.
Put 1 ,.,, word•
lo work for 011.
seminar
"The Economics
and Tax Advantages
of Oil and Gas Investments"
Wed., Feb. 4, 5:30 P.M.
The seminar will be C()()ducted by the principals of Wiggins,
Townsend & Co. of DalJos, T exos, and will include a presentation
of their limited Drilling Partnership Program fOf 1981 .
Balboa Boy Oub (Moin Ballroom)
1221 West Coast Highway
~Beoch
t For leurvattoM Cal
· Orovvell, 'Weedon •Co.
(714) 644-1890
Absolutely no one
pays more interest
on cheC:king accounts
than Bank of .Newport
Newpqrt Plus Accounts at Bank of Newport
have an annual yield of 5.47%~
Why not stop In today ind make arr1n1ements to earn more
Interest tomorrow. Our New Account representatives have
complete det1lls of this specl1i new service.
•tnwretl yield e1rn1nts comput11lon It bated on 111 depotilt ind lnteml e&"""8• ~on
deposll for 1 full year .
q ,,
. .
. .
'
•:
.
.
• ' . I
)' I
,. .
; II
. -
. .
....
Use lln$W•t lltl service when-placing your ad . . .
I ' '
· a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad . . · .
we take your messages 24 hours a day . . . you cdll
in at yOUr convenience during ·off ice hours and · get
the responses to your ·ad ... this service is only .
s7 .50 per week. For more . information and to
place your ad call 642-4321.
. ~lilJ Pilat _.
1642-4321
• *""°' ....
rdlLW
c1•c111
,
I ,,, , . -•
"Gronc*na put P J'11tringbeon1 on her plate
and NOW he likes thtm."
111 h1te Mond1y1!'
MAall,\DlJKI by Brad Anderson DENNll THE llEN,\(;E
"Don't just sit there yawnlng ... get rid of
him before he sells me something!"
llJDGI P ,\RKIR
'l ·'l
;.-~/-.
"Just think, Mom ... aomeday I'll be 1 paper boy,
an· when It's too cold 'n wet or stormy.
YOU 'LL be doin' my route!"
by Harold Le Dowe
,...l~~~-(iH~E:JJu~~;rT lctO\.iioDiHAwsLFA:~ul.1EE7!HiH1~!> ~. HOW AeOUT lT ... TEI.I. ME ~HAT
WHEN lOl.D DY lHf
l'Q.IC! Hlt<;EANT
THAT A FINGElt.-
l'RINT o.l&CK HA~
lt.!V!Al.ED TMA'f
1'1M·~ NAME I~ NOT
KE1.eo. JEANNIE tRIE~ TO HIOE
HER ANXIE1"( !
MISS PE,\(;H
..
Fl~T NAME ·~ TIM eur Hlf> YOUlt. lt.E .. I. NAME 1€>. JEANNIE : l ~T NAME'!> NOT KEl.~0.' KNOW YOU'VE NEVER efEN lN
T~&l.£ VWITH THE f'Ol.ICE &E.·
CAUM THE«.E AAf NO ~INT~
ON RfCOftD fOlt YOV!
by Mell Lazariua
MOON Mt1LLIN8
~1 DEA~· IF LORI> P
STAYED Ot.lT1~1S LATE
t'P 8~ FIJ/llOUS !
-·--, ... .-• .-,, ,..._, ,.,,..,, ,,. • "' ra ;~··; i • ,,,_.,
YES,MA1AM ~ «>---......... ~·
ftJNKV •tNKEa8UN
I 'TOOK 1ME ~c. FOLOE.R
f«:WtE ~ 1JE IAIE.Et'ENO
.U,T UKE ~ .5AIO , MR.
Olt«U: !
(i:X)D ! ~ MUlH DID
~ PRACTlC.E ~
N••r••••n•H•••
I HPIM.R ~Ol'F ~~A "'6f'T::.
-SO·-I -rHOU8t4T ~~ff. ... HO
l'o 00 "'!) f'IAC1NAl PM'TICULRR I~.
PHlt.:8 N>OAES816
%71 RUE 0&8 ~:
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batiuk
)
,'1
111.::o
MUTOt
...... , #\Cl H\lltfl to
..,....,00•• IO ...... Ot.11 e
.... ,.... Ol'llt.-aon .....
,_,~.,.._ ....
• '"-MCIOC9'f
LM ~ l<lflee we New
v~~,, .......... Glldlag ~119
''•"II It e"t .. O"ltllC •-d • .-ldlld Nonll
l(oree11 ollloer wllo
Comedienne IJJy Tomlin brinaa back
Emeetine (above) and her other cruy
characterizations on the special "Lily:
Sold Out'' toniabt at 10 on CBS, Channel
2. ~Ille own"'~
9'>CI GOffKlly ~
Ille WOll"Ot ot Olhet .,._.
•eooo~ A tftleil·trt ealOfllonlal
~ ~ into henO·
lf'9 -1111 mlltl money °" ·~ ...... •• IUCTNC °'*"Nlr,., I CleeNIWI
MCNIWI
~ WILCOMe UCK. ~
Tiie ·-·~ IMt tlllt -'lllnQ I• w1ong '#4111
Alnold wMll he dltep·
PNl'I. (Par1 tJ -~~ lellny p11119 • bebyllttet
Wl'IO WOl\'t be .. hd beell
-~ .. ~ OuH t Wlllllm Gould,
Ctlw eno Ch4-f Eaeeuttve
Offlcet ot Sout'*" Cell·
fotnla Edleon. •moo-~ M•A•t•H
When Frenll decldel tllel
11cotio1 11.. become 1
CHANNEL LISTINGS
menec:e to ,.,. 4071th. lie
Heier• totel ptohlbltl<>n 0 eAMF(MllLP
81t"9y't er-,,..,,. their
llen4• lull with .,, lt•t•
llOoll et. • hOf.. llllel •nd
u.1"'"=~· 1:00 cee .wt .
NIC..wl HA'9'V ~YI AGAIN
When • burieeque troup
1111t wu to perlQlm 11
Hc>W11d'1 10ctoe lilt to
ehow, Fonite end Ille 11&1\0
111991helt own .now.
I MC..wl
flll•A•l•H
'ljllen H1wtie~ II !Mnled
111 A end A P"I lie .....
he l!Mdl, ,_ IYOIY91 • wild
c-llitlO"f tor 111 Army
ptyc:l!Wtrlll IO tludv.
• llAIWTTA .
Alte1 1n undercover
pol~ll'I •• llllled In.
menliorl wi-e Ille ...nhy
"" lndUlge In llleg9I P"'.
8 KNXT tCBSI Los Angeles 8 KNBC tNBCI Los Angeles
I K'TLA tlnd I LOS Angeles
KABC· TV tABCI Los Angeles
(() o<FMB tCBSI San Diego Cl KHJ· TV (Ind I Los Angeles 9 KCST tABCt San Diego
I t<rrv (Ina 1 Los Angelos
KCOP TV (Ina 1 Los Angeles
KCE T. TV I PBS> Los AngrltJS •
I!> KOCE TV 1 PBSt Hunt1n91on Beach
e;M11, llenlttl 1111111 Ille
-lrlcognlto. -~IAaV "The Otel•• w omen••
0 -11· Ttlh Som""''·
1.aurle 811191da. (A)
• MM:Hlll. I l.IHMI'
~
(() TIO TAO DOUGH 9 t.IPY CMWf'IN
OUMlt: Olen Cempbelt,
Redd Fou, Guy Miika,
H1rryJ-.
T:IO 8 I ON THI TOWN
Ho111: Steve Edward•.
Melody Aogeft. Eapiore
UC\.A'a COUIM In Clf-
CllenQM. D fl1GHf Mac WITH
DAVID~
Topjcl: Penny "'°'1'09.
clllld eer ...... video
Cliact, home burgler ellrmt
1nel Tum• comme1clll
Cl\allenoe
• IHANANA
0-1· MMton Berle.
• HOUVWOOO
~ ...
• AUIN,,..,AMILV
Gloria 1111 .. out lier tru ..
trellon• about b41ir1Q preg·
Miiion Mike
• w.cNlll 'llMMf' ~ ID ONCe UPON A
ClMllC
"The MIH On Tiie Ftoea"
After Tulttver'a death.
Meggie ind her motllet
1 .. ve Dortcot• Mitt Ind
move In with Uncle De~
(Part S)(R)
(() II' .M. MAGAZIHI
Tiie eoll•PM ot th• Teco-•
m• N111owa 8rl0Qe; mod·
...................... ,..,.., .... ,..... ...,. ...... wl(J) ,,.....,.. ... ......... ~w~
C..,.... ·-OOOOlltNd .......... ...., ...
lllllM ............ '-'=-_..ON
~ by ..,.. oi.on··
, ........ Ill '* a...
,_, L.91#1 QUlt• .., ....,. ..
• MOYll * * "Al lOllO lMl LOllO" pt?I) lurt Aey11otd1,
Cytlllt ..,._d, DllrlnO
tlle ':IOI, two couplet
"'Ill' In 1 round of
ro111111t10 edve"turH
eooentect by the mue1c: of
Cole Pewter. •• '*" ~
,111urect: 1 pereehule
~ atte!ftPtl 10 lend on
1 llNllf etop a mcw1nO IMP: ,..,. f.cofdll'l09 of 9'l0Stty
\'Olcee; • --tilter lilting belllnd In lltplefle. • ...... MMaA2iHI
The ~of the Taco-
me NafrOWI Brldoe: mod· elli\Q'• ,_. auperallf,
19·)'Mf-olcl lime .......
lhall: llltly .,. Chell wllh
~,., Cllerlel Foa;
CMf Tell on tend«lllng .-1: 0r. wfllll«) ,,.. a qua
on ¥Ilion t•l1t19,
• MOYll •*•'Al "Joh" P1ut
JonH " (1959) Robert
Steel!. Meedonllld Cerey.
John PIUI Jenee ple)'9CI I
mtlot ""1 In Ametlet 't
·~··Of~. -
.GNAT
~
"Live From Linc;Olll Cen·
let" The Chamber MulllC
Society ot Llncoln Center
under the dtreetton ot
Chltlee WedlWOtlh with
vlollnl•t lt:thl k Pettmen
pr-II I Pf~rlnl of
Baell, a .. 111oven ano
T d\llllOYlk y.
•aww..11~ OOMIDV THIATM
"The Tremp" Charlie , ...
euee • girt lrom robbefe.
,... In IOve wlth ,,. end
"'-,,. up '"'*" II« ""'-"'"-· l:.IO·~~ ANO,,....
• MOYll * * ~ "Tllet Night In Alo"
(1941) Alice Ftye, 0on
Ameclle, A 8rutbn notlje..
m111 i. lmperlOnlted by
hit double. en entetlalner
trom the U.S
t:008()) M•A•a•H
The 4077tll 11ttt wr .. ltes
wltll the s....iter1ng wm·
mer heel anel I I\ IUOtt.-I
ment or penonel p•Ob·
!ems.
D MOV1l * * "Heroet" ( 1977) Hen·
ry Winkle<. Siiiy Fleld. An
emo110n1tty dt1tu1beel Viel·
When the truth harts
Writer not a ·very convincing liar
By JAY SBA&BUTI'
NEW YORK <AP> -I am banlin1 around the
hallways at NBC, watchlnl vice presidents scurry
by and talklnl .)VUh my old man, who baa just
atumped the pan'el on "To Tell tbe Truth."
They falJed to 1uesa he ls the real Del
Sharbutt, famed announcer ln the glory days of
network radio. Two imposters with blm fooled the
panelists. We have many laughs about this.
WE GET TO CHA'M'ING with Su.aan Handy,
a prett)' lady who helps pick lmpoaten for the
1ame show, which la taped at NBC, syndicated to
10.citles and once was a very t>l1 CBS series.
Mias Handy 1ets a 1tran1e loOk ln her eye.
"ffow'd you like to be an impoeter?" she asks me.
We have many laughs about thb, too.
But I wtnd up ln her office, pouring out my life
1tory. "Ah·hah~e says. "Just what we need. A
man of acUon."
Well, perhaps exa11erated a blt wlth that
t>ualneu about c mblna Mount .. Everest, fiyln1
tJavy ftthteta. comln1 In third at USe Indy $00 and
wlnnln1 the Hellman Trophy without a press
egent.
Btrr TllJ8 18 OK, as she ii ju.at looklnl for
~pie who Ue well. Besides, I bear there la bll
clou1b In TV and 10 does my bookie, to whom I am
lreaUy Indebted u a rule. ·
' A few months pasa. Then the phone rln1s and
~iH Handy la on the other end. I am on my way to
)>ecomln1 a TV atar like Erik Estrada or someone.
Kids' f il01 slated
HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Ted Be11ell, Cloria
Leachman and LeVar Burton star in "The Acom
People," a atory about the Alatlonabip between
••verely handicapped children and thelr COUDHlor •t • 1ummer camp.
I hasten over to the "To Tell Uae Truth" office.
There I am meetin1 another im.,o.ter, Jay
Henry. a financial consultant, and Ute 1ent we are
auppoeed to pretend we are, Jack 1Viieeler, wbo
runs an adventure tour a1ency ln Beverly Hilla.
Jack baa been aroun'd. He's climbed'uie Mat·
terhom, swum the Hellespont, re·traced .the path
Hannibal took when he cro1Hd the ·Alps with 37
elephants. He's also been to the North Pole alx
times.
HE nu.s US IN 'ON auch things as the
whereabouU of the Matterhorn, the Hellespont and
the Alpe. He remlnda ua the bat Ume 'to visit the
North Pole la ln April. And he wiabes ua well.
We sign various forms. Two days later it's
show time.
We do two run-throu1ht befoA the cameras
without the panel. Then a makeup man pummell
us with powder and we are ushered into a small
room rtlled with poseur• and The Real McCoy.
If l stump tbe panel. I can make up to 1291.
Failure will 1et me but ISO and that much ln
prh:ea, lncludin1 ~ worth of Cloretl. I am not
nervous. altbouah everyone aeema alarmed that I
am pacing about sayln1. "I am Jack Wheeler. I
am Jack Wheeler."
Finally, we face the panel, which consists of
Kitty Carlisle, Tom Seaver. Nlpeey Russell, the
flne comedian, and Pat Collins, a local TV celebri·
ly. Th4!Y start 1rillln1 ua .
MISS CAaLISLE ASKS If I 've ever met
py1mtea. I say, 'Yea: I could tell on account of
they were abort.' Then Mr. Ruaaell aaks where one
can flnd Users in Africa.
"Zaire and Tamania, motUy," I say. There is
no end to my confidence. Tb1a la Easy City. I am
sllabUy above brilliant. Then they 10 and poll the.
panel. It aeema I dJdn't fool anyone.
My book.le tells me later there are no tlgen ln
Africa. He alto wanta' l ahould aell my '25 worth of
Cloreta pronto and pay off.
l Tbe NBC movie l• baaed on the book by Roa
1oaea, ud the UUe refen to the playful cblldren
•• · "Ttho called themaelvea "nuta" and wore acorn
1eeklae11. Joan Tewketbury, who .wrote
'Natbvtlle." wrote the 1creenpl1y.
Tbe tllm, to be telecut at a later dale, wu
lmed on loeation near Dallu ualn1 diaabled
npten from tbe area.
N.Y. TIMU:
"lahlW.Ufttly ..._,.., CMIHHM, ••offlnt. tcrerf,
wtldly ...,..tto." _..,.... ......... ""',......
One ol the r•r'• 10 Met. _,..
,
TUBE TOPPERS
Mondly, febtuery 2. 1•1
Mii ff .. II ......._ °"' °' "' ..... ,....,..., to Per· ---~--· ••'4 ''C111row•'• Ill
• •
bAIL V '9LOT .,
-KTLA • 1:00 -"At ~.!::: Love." Cole Porter'• .muaic
NllM"(I ... ) .......... ,,_,_..,A Mlllot'I .. ............. ....
I bj9 ........... ... tbia Peter Bo1danovicb mualcal with
Burt Reynolda and Cybill Shepherd.
....... ...,.,c..... ,,,..
• OOCCAWTT
NBC 8 9:00 -''Heroea. •• Henry
Winkler Pl•Y• a disturbed Vietnam
veteran in thia movie with Sally Field.
Cklelt: New Yorll fi..o.
wttw~...,.. (11'9"
IOf~ tt:to e (I) CUNOV, M.& ,
Quincy retwN to ..,.,.
pt1Ctloe If\ "' etton 10 llOw
clowl' hie WOltl peot. D TONeCaHT
CBS 9 10:00 -''Uly: Sold-Out.'' A
one-woman Laa .Yeaaa ahow with Lily
Tomlin brinatna back her f amlllar
characterizations (photo at left).
Ou.t llOat: Join f'l.,.,1
o-t1: l.·at'Y Haome11.
INclr'~~ OOllW
M8Q'rML.L
Arlrotle I tel• ~ Cllltor·
nil
""'" vettrlll meet• I girt
Ind , ... I" love white lrl ·
~ oroa.-couotry (A) e a DVMAITY
Cedl Colby llOldt F eltol\
Cltrlngton to thelf Dior·
gllln. enc! Metthtlw 9lalldel
...,,.. 11'111 tll«• ii I 19)'
on hie u.,, of wlldce11.,..,
l ~WIU>
...WCMWf'IN
G-11: Olen Campt>ell
Redd Foo. Guy Markt,
Herry J-. Oua111 I.Ok·
en.~ Burtctey .. .ao 8 ()) HOUU CAUi
AM 11119«ll l10llble wllet1
1 new1 teem 1eq-11 per.
mlulOI\ 10 fltm II Kenllng·
ton0-11.
I TlC TN; DOUGH
tO:OO ()) Lil. Y: IOl.O OUT
1.lly Tomtt"'' on.-woman
I.II Veglt allow wllh HM·
vey 1.embeck, A1.1drey
Meedowl. Melenle Mly· '°"• Alex Rocco 1nd 119'
lllTIOUI chereetett It pre.
Nnled.
llL~v
G!Mla Ind T uc:ket become
ceug/11 up In I mu1det
'"""'~''°" lnvotv1ng I corpee bvrteel In 1 time
c.,..,ie
..... ,..,.
HAN.DI
"The O..,,eeelorl V-1 .
1930-1940" Herlem'1 et~
111c 11ettt199, It• reec11on to
the a, .. , Oepf~ 111e1
Ill mualc and 11\oW !Mlel-
"e U tt1dttlon1 ire ••plored.
• "CM'T ""°" THe INm4
'-" H l mtnetlon ot the vwi.
oua typ11 ol geothermal
lelOUI~ lfld how lhey
Clll' be uMd IOf ~.
llelt. Ind agrle:uttur• t0-.ao1~
NITWOMNIWI -~ THIATM
"01nger UXB" S1.1u n
"''"" In l.ondon une•· pectedly 1nd Brien llllff '* tor en -Ing on the town. (Part 5) ttioo1••(J)lfl HIW8 IT-"'TMK
Kl1k mutt tllld the entldote
to • plague thlt tllrNlena
to klN 111 lhe er-of Ille
EnlerptlM .
I NEWLYWID 8AMf M•A•a•H
Reeler he!~ out • lamt>
meenl tor • GrMk 1 .. 1tvel
• HOGAN'IHMOU
8gt. 8chuttJ te 0tdered to
IN Aulalefl tront tor goof·
~Off.
•• OWJ10HIO AeC
NIWI
-~-
1l:OO. UACI: t•
When I pl_. II dtee0¥·
ered 1pproxtm1tlng
Eerth't environment.
Alptl1 peraonMI prepe1e
tor 1111aodu1.
• 9 '""'M'f *-AHO All linneele victim l1111ted
to 1ec:eill9 1 S30 mllllon
lnlleril111Ce. •nd two cnJ[.
dren try to reunite tf\elr
pwenta. (A)
• MINION: IMll'OaleLa
811ney auumea the ldll\·
ttty ot 1 p1ycntc In order to I hypnoure • d elecling ~
crime 1yridlce1e leeder
1
11-.ao D TOMOMOW
Gue.II: 6onetd WllCIMOI\.
I heeel ot the Co1J11lon ror
'Beller TV; alnget Ot.nn
Y11brough
11:40 8 (() THI H1W
AVIHGaM
An 909"t'S reco~ l1om I
20.yeer 1m"e111 •P•ll
endenqeta "'9 Ille (Al
Tewsda1••
Da11tl•' Mol'I«-•
-MORllN0-
1 1':00. * ·~ "P1l1 Of T~Sad·
dte" ( 1938) JOhn Weyne,
R1y Coulg1n
-AFTEANOON-
11:00 tD * * * "Pfcnlc" (195el I Wl1tl1m Hotelen. Kl"
Novak, e • • "In Old C1Ulornl•"
( 19421 John W1yne, 81Mle
BltnH ,
1:009 *** "Fo11verVoung, Fo1eve1 Free" (1977)
Keren v11ent1ne. JoM
Ferret
3:30 D ••·~"The Amoroua
, AdvenlU<" Ot Moll f11nd.
era" (IH 51 Kim Novllt,
AICll1td JOhnlOI\
JOHN DARLING
~ ......
John James plays the
nephew of an oll ty·
coon who is seduced
aboard the corporate
jet and drawn into a
Las Vegas marriage
on "Dynasty" tonight
at 9 on ABC. Channel
7.
Movie cat\
HOLLYWOOD <AP >
-David Birney stars in
the CBS movie "The
Five of Me," about a
man tormented by a
multiple personality.
The film also stars Dee
Wallace, Mitchell Ryan.
John McLlam. James
Whitmore Jr. and Judith
Chapman.
•
Coercion charged
'Bonanza' in lawsuit
LOS ANGELES CAP > -A
multimlllion·dollar civil suit has
been filed a1alnst the National
8roadcaalin1 Co. and National
Telefilm Associates Inc. by the
creator of the long·runnin1 western
televiJion series ·•Bonarua. ·•
The suit filed ln federal court here -
alleges, among other things, that the
defendants coerced buyers of
television programming to buy ri1ht.s
to other programs as a condition or
1etting Ucenaes to show "Bonanza"
and another series created by David
Dortort.
National Telefllm syndicated pro.
1rams for NBC, the suit said. It ac·
cuaed the defendants of "block·
bookin1" -givtns distributors and
broadcasters rights to certain pro.
1rams only on the condition th•t they
distribute or broadcast one or more
other pro1rams controlled by the
.bookers. J
Buyers of licenae,_{o distribute and
broadcast the two series also were
compelled by NBC and National
TelefUm "to artificially allocate a
lower licenae fee to these procrams
than economically justified" and to
allocate unreasonably hl1b fees to
other pro1ram1 sold by the def en·
dants, the ault alle1ea.
Dortort uked up to $50 million per
count in his 13·count action. 1n which
he makes various antltruat claims.
Under federal antitrust law,
dama1ea are trebled if proved.
The defendants could not be Im·
mediately reached for comment.
FAYE TO PUY
JOAN CIUWFORD
HOLLYWOOD CAP > -Faye
Ounaway wtll plar. Jt>an Crawford 1n
Paramount ·Pictures' "Mommie
Dearest." based on the book by her
dauahter. Christina Crawford.
Miu Dunaway. who won an Oscar
for ··Network," also stars In "Evita
Peron." which airs on NBC Feb. 23.
NET Milli .... "?
HIU19•TU£S
.. YllOITY
CALL 751·3911
.. ftr •. "'* Pita
Certified F manc1al
Plainer
first ~ ... c1 nn•
atlllCllrp
ST CHANCE .TO SEE THIS
ZANY COMEDY THIS YEAR!
l&Cl9~ !U~OW!i~ = (~ola~)
The
PowPr Behind
TbeTbrme
'
,
1
till .calls the shots at 82
...........
OlOROE CUKOA, t2, WITH LATEST STARS
Cendlce .. rgen (left), Jecquelln• 811Ht
Rooney plans series
HOLi YWOO H IAP > Mickey Hooney. cur
rently slurring cm Broadway in "Sugar kabies."
'1tll play u ~eedy , cigar chomping private detec
tlve in o new 'tern.·~ for NBC called "O'Malle)' " o· Malit'} dllVt'S a battered 1959 Cadillac and
opt•rates out of an art gallery run by the son of a
late crony Tilt' µ1lot will he filmed on location in
New York <..:ity
1
,
5
F•tulty
olC....Ole-l'J ~1 •MO
F-•t..,nv
tlC-•-11J lll·•itO
P:e< .. lly
at C.,,dlt....,.,
11J s.JI •MO
F•\.U\l'f' . ,,_.,_
1•1 ~· •llO
s ( ,.....
•1 81000 ....
49<-ISl4
s ' ... , ... ,
•t 8'o•h•••
49•·1S14
JA(.a '"'-...... ..o.•• .... '°" •U t•t.O
TRIBUTE 1••1 u•·••·••·••·tt •
JENNIFER O'NEILL •
STEPHEN LACK
.~,Al!'!~~~ j~J ..
r"' "O*IA IU,.tflfO f ,.( fMAOHt
NINE TO FIVE '"°'
I ti • J 0 • • to• I >0 • '' 4
POP EYE 1•0• .•. ,, .. , .. , ... " ..
STIR CRAZY 1• tot·l•• .... ,..,."'
'A Very Spec•t Comeoy
EAA"Tli80UHD '""' \ ti,.• t II•• 6t • r•M • t .. · 1t 10
STIR CRAZY ,., ., .. , ... , ......... .
POPEYE 1•oi , .... ,. .......... ..
ao•••t oa N"90
RAGING BULL i••
U IO• I M • IM• I .. • lfJID
CP'll'f'" Cf'4AH • OOLOtl .,._...,..
SEEMS LIKE
• -OLD TIMES ,..,,
f ... 1to•t.\'''"'''O!!I
C:LlffT t••rwooo ...
ANY WHICH WAY
YOU CAN 1..a1 ..... 9"" , ••••• , •• ,.
.... , ............. -' .... ,....,..
THE INCAEDllLE
SHRINKING WOMAN 1•01 ..,...,,., , ... .. '·" ..,._ , ........... , ... ...
IMn-fll t U, .... lut> • ..._.,, 6 DO .,._ "*' t 0
IM,ORUNT llOTICl' CHllORlll UNOlR 12 f RH•
.ffNWUtO HttU • tfl,ttf flf..M*
SCAHHfAS 1•1 ·-, ... '00 ··-
., HoAM C41' R.ct.o W1I" ''"'''°" ~(K\Of''W .W•ne VCNt O•t\ ,.,,,,, flort•~·
'n•-, ..,M"•• "'°'"'• t AATHllOUNO ,.,., ....
ltil "ILO t ""'
O.WI0 .......... 11'-.•IUAIOll.••-U.Oto
•LOOO HACH (II) •w• CAl'DIAC AllllHT (II)
........... ·~ yw• °"""AM ... IV ...
81 808 THO•A.S
HOU..YWOOI) (AP> Slumped In a director's
d1alr, weartna a •ult that appears three sizes too
lar1•, be ....... • email, frall fi1ure, perhaps
1omebody'' 1reat unc:Je vl•ilUlJC a movie set.
8"1 u '°°" as he •nap "Camera 1" the 1ray
eyea 1low btblnd thick lenses, the m a nner
becom" tllert 1nd vital This is Geor1e Cukor at
12 dlrttllnl Jacquelin Bisset and Candice Ber1en
ln a conlrontaUon scene for Mr.M's "Rich and Famous "
THE EVENT HAS ALL kinds of r amifications.
tllstonaN can't recall anyone directing ·a major
mm at such an aae. Cukor returns to MGM. site or
hlis duzillna succt"Sses : "Dinner at Eight," David
Copperfield," "The Wom en." "Camille," "The
Philadelphia Story, "Gasli ght.'' "Adam's Rib."
'
Also. Cukor again cas t a s a "woman's direc·
lor," a Utle he abhors, pointing out he has directed
Cary Gra.ot. Spencer Tracy and James Stewart as .~
we ll a Garbo. Sherer. Crawford, Bergman, both .
llepburns, Loren. Holliday, et. al.
Suggested by but not copied from "Old Ac·
quainlance•· (Bette Davis, Mi riam Hopkins , 1943)
"Rich and Famous " is the $lory of two authors
whose li ves cre>ss a nd compete over a 15-year
period George Cukor was not the first director of
'the new fil m.
"ROBERT MULLIGAN l>IRECTEO a week's
work in New York lust s ummer," says producer
William Allyn. "Then we had to shut Uow n because
of the actors' str ike. When it appea red certain that
Bob would have to fulfill a nother commitment, we
sent the script to Ceorge lie udored it and· we
started all over again None of Bob's footage wi ll
rema111 "
"I was very tempted by the !>Crtpt." Cukor re·
m arked. "But I questioned whether I should -un·
dl'rtake such a big proJect at m y age. I'm not 'ga·
ga· a s yet, but it is a big job
· ·1 am maniacal in the morning, but I go home
uftcr 10 anti \'2 hour tlays with my ai.s dr agging.
They're very <'nnsiderole here , they somel.l mes
1-(i\'C• me a late <'<ill in the morning 8 30.
.. , OJUN"J' 'I HINK l 'U Im '>Cnt1menlal about
returning to MGM. hut I was The studio itself
hasn't <:ha11~cd m uch. but the ft.tees have I don't
see :my wl"\u \\Ii'-here 111 tlw old days, except
m aybe a st•c r1tlary, Mo!-l uf Lht· crew members
werPn't evt'n born when I 4'l,irl<'ll here
·'The tradition . is llw same. llollywood
crews are still the bt's t rn tb.c world .. highly skilled,
well paid and 4otally JO\olved There is a won·
The Associal1•d rrcss
Thr followmg are fl ill hoard's hot n •c·ord hits for
this week as they a p).ll'IH rn B11ll.Joa rd maitazint'
llOT Sl~(il.E~
l "Celtobrutwn" l<uol andtht•C;,mg 1 l>e htc•1
2 "ThcTldcis Ui~h" 131ondil· CC'hy rsalisl
3 "I Love a fl ainy Night'" Eddie Rabbitt
t Elektra= ~
4 "9 · ·Dally~9n <RCA1 5 •·p n''Ro f(art.<\VarnerBros )
6. "~ingOver" dbn Lennon !Geffen>
7. •t ry Woma n in the World" Ai r Supply
'<Arista '
8 "Woman" John L~nnon tr.cffcn>
9 "It 's My Turn" l>t•~~a Ross c Motown>
10 "Giving It Up Jor Your Love" Delbert
McChnto11 I M~'\·CaOf~) ' ,
TOP LPs
.., _ 1 'Uoublc Funta~y· John Lennon Yoko O"no
t Gen.1,~
2 "~.QJ Passion" Pat Bl'nalar <Chrysalis)
:l '"f'heJ ait'~nser ·Neil Diamond !Capitol)
4. "Greatest llits" Kenny RogMs (Libe rt y) "-
4'5 "Zenyatta Mond att~'.'l'he Police c A&M >
6 ... Back m Hlat k .. AC· PC 1 All ant LC)
7 "Hj Infidelity" RE0Speedwag6n l~lc >
9 . "Autoamcrican" lllortrlie CC:t\;rs ·
de rful humor about ther11, a sharp lntllntt ror de·
tecUn1 buJI.• You can't rool them. They ran amPll
out the phony.baloney."
Cukor was directing an emotional scene b\ a
corridor of New York's Plua Hot.el ; the lobby or
the Algonquin Hotel has also been reproduced on
Stage 26. Bisaet stalks to an. elevator &r\d tRarlulJy
tells an astonished Bergen lbat she envies her
married nre and motherhood. Cukor shot the scene
"Six times. picking up the pace as he did.
"Should I have tears?" Blsset -.sited.
, "You're 01htlng them." the director replied
·ft.et them happen ir they do."
AFTE&WARD BISSET, WHOSE company put
together ''Rich and Famous," told a reporter, "I
know this character I'm playing well . having
worked on the project for a year and a quarter.
Georae has taught m e a lot. particularly in terms
of pacing. I resisted al first, fear ing that he
wouldn't let me play the de pth of the character.
"He is obsessed abo11t having no pauses, a n<! I
reaJize he is right. It is the same lesson I learned
from Truffaut: Don't confuse speed with precipita-
tion.
"George is interested in high tone, with an fla1r
'Simple. simpler.' he says. 'Don 't do too much with
the face. Don't try to milk a comedy line · lie un
derstands the deeper side of human nature. I've
never found a director-actress relationsbj p easy ·'
"IT'S Q\ffl'E THRILLING lo be working with
a m an who as such a myth," added Bergen. "Yet
he is very human acerbic. witty. high 0 11111
ionated, with specific t astes. likes a nd disli kes
It's a pr ivilege to have the benefit of 60 yea1 ., of
accumulated instinc•ts .
"llis direction ii, quite simple I had a .,renc
where I leave a New Year's Eve party and stare
out a window. r eflecting on the ~rears of rny ll f~·
'Look insid e you, d ear. don't look out.' Georgi· told
tn<'. Thal solved it a ll."
Directors Guild
picks five best
HOLLYWOOD tAP) Nominat11111-. for !lit·
best-directed movie of 1980 h iWP heen an1111u111•ptf
hy George Schaefer, president nf tl11• ll1r"c 1111 :-.
t;uild of America
The nom mees Michal'I AptE-d · c '11;il \llni 1
Ouughter", David Lynch. "The Elephant ~:m
Ro bert Redford. "Ordinary Peoµlc·" ~hl l lll
Scorsese. "Haging Aull.·· anrl H1l'hard 1111-.tt ·1 t.1·
St unt Man "
Winner of the guild's 3Jrd annual av.'" d \\ti!
be a nnounced at banquets in !"e\\ Ynrk 111d
lloll vwood on Marl'h 14
Nominations Wl'fl' made from u 1 non~· 1; 1~111
Guild members
Onl \' t w1 ec ha vc• the guild \\ 111nr·r' <I 1 ff ••rf"tl
from the best d1r1;>ctor a\\ ard of th" \( ;ul•1111' uf
~olio11 Picturt>s /\rl!> and Sc1ent·c·s
In 1972, the guild worner v.a ~ Frdllll" I urcl
Coppola for "The Godfather, .. v. h1l c Uol1 "'"~"'
won the Oscar for "Cabaret ·· In 1968. Anth1m~
llorvev scored for "The Lion in Winter" from tht·
OGA. ·and the Oscar went to Carol Hc·<'cf fnr
"Oliver "
Brezhnev book f>n TV
MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet tele\•ision \\<Ill :.11 ·'
M w . six-hour documentary film hast-cf on 1'1 t'St .
dent Leonid I. Brezhnev's book. "ThP \'1 rg1n
I.and," the Soviet news agency Tass rrport<.•<I Sun
day.
Tass said the film 's director ,called the ho<1~· 11n
farming "a work of literalurte of which :in~ C1lr11
director can only dream."
H "I lotter Than July "Stevie WoifJJer J'amia)
10 "Paradise Theater" StH I!\ ~ ~~ ~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~
"9 to 5"
tPGI . ~ . ~ f "SEEMS LIKE rcSi o, 1:1"'-fi~:· IPO)
I "POPEYE "
(PGl _,
I "TRIBUTE"
t _.,.._~
I "INCA!DIBLE
SHA INKING WR¥N" 191
"ALTERED
STATES" <Al
"INCRIDIBLI
. lttf'INKINQ WOMAN" "Tffl HUM BOMI"
I 'llLUU IAOTHEAS'
AIAPlAN£" (PG)
"ANIMAL HOUH" (R)
I 'PA!VATE IENJAMIN"
QOOOI YE GIAL PG
'
, "TftflUTI"
1
• "lftlAKfNQ AWAY"
!}0PHl!!TIC4T£0 P(<OORAMMINO ..
8Bauliful !!lereo Mu~ic:
New~-M;irine Wealh er-
~look M;irkel Reporf~
Con~umer Reporl~
• 4>••---.. .,. ... ,,,
ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES
LILY TOMl!IN AND CHARLES GRODIN l~AN EPIC COMEDY
IV•t Of. '""I ~ oNI "·
THE
INCREDIBLE
SHRINKING '~
CllllDOtlt
r (JA I"
UA Tlllllll ClllUUI
l/tM'l"''llo• 89) 130~
1owa1101· WOOMIUDCI(
J->' oo·,~
WOMAN l .
NOW PLAYING
UIWAllf "I ClllflU CHTlll 11101119>1 Hill 111 ,_ ,, ..,~ .. ').., '"' ·'~f' _,.,,,
IOWAllDS" WllJO rw111
"'" I. ~ l•I H-N rac111c·s aour11 cour
tl1\if ' ..... ~ • •• • ..
UllCOLll OlllWf-111
ti , ... ' •. '.i
''POPEYE'1'•a.
MON fttU9'$ • U t 00
SCANNER S" ,.,
MO" """"I 1)09)0
GENEWILDIEA RICHARD PRYOR
"STIR CRAZY",~, _,_, ,,..,.
"EARTHBOUND"
CN I -'"""' '·'' ...
f
r
Appliance rock:·
latest wave in
.80s' pop 1DUSic?
'[
be Nu-Beams are not only playtn1 to
packed county ni&htclubl, but are now
enjoying both American and European
airplay of their recently released-
' e, "Men Uke Pie," makiq them one of the
hottest commodities on the Orange rock scene. Sincer Ted Ary and bassist Mark Soden
found time in their bu.sy scbedueles for this U-
luminatinl interview.
Guitar player Chris Velasco and Ricky, the
drummer. were unavailable.
Pilot: I undei:stand that you two do moet of
the soniwritiDC for the Nu-Beams. Sede9: Ne& rean,. &AQJ, _,.._mer la aa
18&epal part el tile .......... fneesl, He9 &M9p lie'• a ~HI drma•er.
Ary: ~ we n.4 a t'9Cep& we wut &o
wrl&e a _, abotl&, like ou lat ..e • ..._ u
astnaall& wllle retvu &o eadla ud edlMU
suuse beMner, we coulllt &ldy fer aa ap-
• pnprta&e beat.
e ilot: Any dra~backs to worldn1 with a
rhythm machine as opposed to a reat
drummer?
Ary: Be'• very ....... b fad, Ille
a drtMlq pl'Mle• llOt .... a .. aH we
&.-.... '° &aletP Billa for l'daMIKaU... Be
ca•e Mdl laappler ud yu&Jy lmpreye4 aa a
dr11mmer.
Pilat: Grand. What's behind the son1 about
the utronaut? S...: ~dale., die .................... .
aa• we .nae it aa.o.t Bea Aldrt8 reUlndq
fr•• apace ••• dol•I 1tru1e tMa1• like
HH .... I Illa tr.t lawa. MUaly a ,,..,, Y•
btow "lie~ toa1& alld for1et die Taa1."
Pilot: What kind of feeling are you trying to
get acro&1 to your audience in a song like "Thal
Buzz?"
Sodem: A etlpilerlc freuy.
Pilot: Llke the punks stir up?
Soda: 'fte pak1 are ba--.. We alaa
paak1 ud uytlalac &o do wt&ll &Item.
Ary: lnat we're after la emJey•eat. We
waat ear aadleaces to eajoy tlae•selyes. n....p _, mule ud ou tlte•es, we try &o
eaceva1ell.
.-Pilot: Themes?
Ary: We 1eaeraUy try &o IMdld oar lar1er
11tew1 ...-4 .a tlteme. W-. &Idly tile drtlm·
aer Sot aarrled &e UUle Rll&lde, we kMI tile
eere.-y ..-.ce alld ball& tile ... w aromd a
wNdlq tlteme. .J
S.S.: Al ome coacert we u4 a t•I• claJtff
coate.t wM!re die wtaaen ._ a N•·Bea••
dream date, wMcll la free bo.U.1 came alld a
1tr11cu.n..,..
Pilot: Wbat exactly is a structure bum?
S odea: I&'• wltere we 1et some 1oed
acnpwood ...
Ary: By pllla,..1 a CGMtnetlell ..__ .•... ,.
Sodell: AINI b.ud I ltome la OH of tile ft.re
rilll• at Newpert Beacla. ne. we I• &e dU
cake .._.... More ... '*1 fllVH fer~
lllleue. n.e. ,.. make Q a llUle •ry &o IO
wltli die .a.ctare ud tile~ wt.en Ht It
oa flre. Al1 : We did a Madie 54 atnctare .,_,. OM
\bae, 'WMd-Wu nry ,...aar.
Pilot: Back to the music. Who do you look to
u influmees?· ·
.._: 1t .._.. a uuae ,...._.., .. '* aay •WJ, ._ re.UJ, aobody la parUnlar.
ArJ: We're ••& aher a e.•fllat._ of .. , ... Oartl .... pl&arllt, ,,,.. ,_ ... a ••
a&Jle -M'• la.mar wttli U.e 1rlee ... ewe,u
""..,. 8eftl' ,..1 .., .. elle'• .... CUerM • l•lt...., I._....._. die m~•e ,_
a ....... ,... .. , .... die way ti .,
l'laJlml. 0... ••leal baeqr•••• are De a
t.fte&: ,.. lake lnat Y• llMAIMI lean tile ......
llot: What's your approach lyrically?
. Sede9:' We're after ...._, uUre, .... ..,..
Pilot: What 11 "Men Uke Pie" all
t
-... ,, I
.J
Off er of ring has lots of
·MONDAY ,$.EB. 2, 1tl1 .~""' . different meanings . . .Ann Lander c2 ·
0 HOROSCOPE
CLASSIFIED
C2
C3 0 0 0 0
O 0
0 a>o o 0 0 • 0
c.
••.. ___ .. 4 --o.u,~..-. •. v-...
~ w>
Magka/, laundry tour
'Round 'n' round with Nu~Beams
By IEFF PAPE&
Ot .. DeltT ........
1be Nu-Beam.a are an appliance-influenced,
Costa Mesa-baaed rock band that first 1ained
locaJ and national attention in late 1979 when tb~y performed a series of surprise concerts in
South C.OUOty laundromats .
"We played about a half hour or 40 minutes
at each one, trying to fit in with the dry cycle,
which requires little attention and is a good
time to bear mwsic," explained busist Mark
Soden. The group raided four laundromats in the
course ·o1 a few months, utooishinl laundry-
doen with Nu·Beams numbers such u "Men
Like Pie," "Bargain Basement Girl," "Sterile
Swab" and "Ob Chico."
TllB CONCE&TS PEAKED in popularity
with the now-legend fourth show, u doaea.s of
homemakers and nearly 100 young people stood
on the washen and dryers in a Huntinston
Beach laundromat on 11th St. to bear the raucua
rock. Soden, singer Ted Ary, guitarist Tom
Zwicker and Ricky the drummer all fled the
scene shortly before the police arrived and won-
dered what "so many funny lookina people were
· doing in a laundromat.'•
"What's Up America?" heard about the
shows ahd senf their film crew out to capture
the next offerini of Nu-BeamJ laundry-rock.
While Michael Braverman's crew did their
sound c.heck, people gathered at the Kono Laun-
dromat in Costa Mesa to see just what wu co-
ing to.happen.
So did the police, who arrived 8:1 the Nu-
Beams and the camera crew fled for Soden's
house in Costa Mesa. Ted Ary's father, wllto bad
beard that hil l()O's band was to perform~ con-
cert at lbe laundromat, was questioned at
length by police and then released.
"We weren't brealtinl any lawa I know of,
but hlindreds of people jamming into a laun·
dromat can be a little up\etting to some people.
What we were hoping for was a little notoriety
before we started getting club dates." said
Soden.
THE PIAN WO&KED. On the strength of
their lawwiromat enga1ements the Nu-Beams
were booked into the Cuckoo's Nest in Costa
Mesa for a one-night show. Some 140 fans
showed up for the performance, pleasing the
management, which ls happy when 75 fans show
up to hear a new group.
Since the first Cuckoo's Nest
. engagement, the band bas
\ played dozens of clubs in
Oran1e County, Los Angeles,
San Diego and San Fran-
cisco .
"We've played a lot of funny little clubs,"
admits Soden. Among them are the Jett Club in
Watts <'1lere the battery to tbe Nu-Beams car
was atolen), the Ante Club in Los Angeles
(which was closed just before the. Nu-Beams
were to take the stage when a riot broke out and
a car cruhed through the wall>. the Handlebar
Saloon (foUowing an act in which the lead
singer of Null and Void tried to rip off bis pants
in a moment of erotic menace onstage -only to
have bis zipper stick), Malone's of Santa Ana
(closed three times in a week because the police
found too many minors in tbe crowd, UC Irvine
Cfor a lesbian student union dance), and the r
~~
COOL. JS .
CooL
8 v .
. ,-, e ..
Record CoUecton Swap Meet (where hundreds
of mecal bootle~ albums are sold each month -
ironically, in the Capitol Records parkine lot in
Los Ancel•>.
"And so on," said Soden. "We were really
quite Battered that the people in Watts stole the ~ battery from OW' car. We t.ooll it u a sip that ! .. they didn't want ua to leave."
To date, the bipll1ht of Nu-Beam1 concerta f' locally wu the Cuckoo'• Nest performance lut '\ ~ .A a um mer duriq wbicb Ricky, tbft6r drummer ~ h (actually a rhythm machine Teel boqbt at •-' 111 tbe swap meet for $12) wu married to "l.Jt·
! 9 tie Ruth," a. papler·macbe dummy that
...A ,,. formerly lived with Ted. -_, -' "People abowed up in droves for tbe
concert/weddlna. Tbey all brou&bt weddiAC
lifts too -moatly bome appllancee. Rieb aad
Little Ruth received a clmdt ...._from oae
well·wilber, to be UHd u a marital aid lD cue
Ricky tat tired and shorted out," ..ad Soden.
Tbe =.,::?!Uances were mon Ulan juat te.-cJq te ltftl for a MW ..... -lbe7,,... tr1bu1e to tbe Nu-Beaml' fuebultkm
wttll'111P"11aa.
Ary's 1962 Ford T-Bird sits in bis driveway,
tribute to an era gone, and inspiration for the
band.
"I nicknamed my car the Pulsar Nu-Beam
T-Bird because it had a good ring to it. Kind of a
cross between a car and an appliance. Later,
we decided to call ourselves the Nu-Beams. lt
fit,'· said Ary.
ARY CAN'T AFFORD to keep the Pulsar
Nu-Beam T-Bird in running condition, but be
keeps up the car's appearance by buyinl bis
favorite body pa.rta for it. Meanwhile, he drives
his girlfriend's BMW.
"But we're· not after nostalgia," Ary ex-
plains, "we're trying to recapture the feelin1 of
1962, not tbe aound of it. Our music encourages
having a food time. That's the feelin1 we're try-
ing to evoke in an audience." Tbe Nu-Beams' sound is definitely not
nostaJcic. The music is driving, enersy·pifked,
yet somehow Ucht and clean to tbe ean.
Ricky's relenUessly perfect timing pushes the
sound forward with precision, while the human
members of the band
arry melodies Uaat are full
of surprises.
"WE LIST EVERYBODY and
nobody as our influences,'' said Soden.
"We influence each other more than
anything else. We're defmitely not carrying
Beethoven's piano around with u.s."
Appliances are more than just a motif for
the Nu-Beams -they're pa.rt of the music
itself. Ary's contribution to musical invention is
the "Ted-Tone," a guitar-like instrument that
produces sound not from strings, but from a
blender attached to the neck. Wired into the
group's amplifiers, the "Ted-Tone" brings a
mega-decibel appliance squeal to Nu-Beams
performances.
Other Nu-Beams appliance/instruments
produce t1>e sounds of "ironing the cats," and
''trash trucks mating.''
THE AUDIO lllAGE&Yproduced by such in·
ventions fits both conceptually into the music. and
compliments the Nu Beams stage set-up, where
the ampllflers are mocked up as home stereo con-
soles and television sets.
The essence of the group is not Soden,
Ary, or Velasco, but Ricky the drummer -a
musical appliance incarnate.
"A totally euphoric frenl)' is what we try to
"bring to our audience," said Soden. "We en·
courage them to c1o·wbat they want to·do, when
they want to do it. "If you think that by si,nclin& on a state
and pla)'inl notes you're foiq to cbanJ(e socie-
ty, tbat'a a miashapen idea ol what music is.
1 People don't have to be forced to have a Sood
time, really. All they need la a cnlile dlreetor
sometimes. That's what tbe Nu;&eama are ri1ht
nbw." ~
I
..
Masters 011 exlail>it
ftlaDAY,n&.I
BJ SYDNEY OllA&a
AUD Olar. 21·Apr. lt)~ Time becomn
crucial element -empbaals on coatraeta,
apeelal qreementa, a unique joint effort. You
walk UlbtrOPe -between ~ achievement
and "llvblc up." Pisces, cancer and Scorpio
play key rofea.
TAtJa1J8 (Apr. 20•May 30): What appeared
an easy tut requl.res more att.enUoo, cliJclpllDe
than oritinally anticipated. Laat1n1 rela-
tJonships are initiated. Pace is deliberate -and
thll is to your advantage. A "powerful! alb"
will make presence felt.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Love, style,
personality, speculation and added recopitlon
dominate exciting scenario. Aries, Libra
figure prominently. You're asked to re-
Vlse, review -you'll have chance to rebuild
and to rectify put erron.•
CANCEa (June 21-July 22): New contacts.
experiences aid in unraveling mystery. Focus
on credit ratings, money affecting one close to
yo~ flDa.Ocial maneuvers i.n coonection with
special aireement or contract. Leo,~ Aquarius
play significant roles.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Pace changes; take
stock, stand back and view siluaUon.s from dif-
ferent perspective. Focus on public relations,
partnerships, joint ventures and marital status.
Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius natives play Im·
portant roles.
Mesa Harbor Club members Julie Gray (left), Nan J.,ong (standing)
·and Joan Barber. chairman. display a few of the paintings to go on
sale at an exhibition and auction in Costa Mesa's Balearic Communi-
ty Center Friday. Proceeds will go to a program to aid the communi-
VUlGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Scrutinize pro·
posals, opportunities; maintain sense of fitness.
humor. D1versify, give full· rein to intellectual
curiosity. first offer is provocative -second
will be better and third will top them all.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Revisions, re·
views are featured. aloni with rare OPPOrtunity
to recoup losses. Scorpio, Pisces, Can cer
figure prominently. Focus on creativity, special
performance and romantic interlude. Stick with
number4.
ty elderly
--r-
No signific~
Ringing her chimes
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov .. 21 ): Be ready for
change, variety, possible travel and intensified
relationship. Channel emotional responses. Get
thoughts, ideas, views on paper. Written docu-
ment aids in establishing "territorial rights."
Communicate!
SAGITl'A&IUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Family
member may be changing residence. Ideas,
notes, special requests come into sharp, clear
focu s . Taurus , Libra, Scorpio fig u r e
prominently. Short trip could be necessary.
Money dilemma is on brink of resolution.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: 1 have been
bothered by something
ror a long time. I am
sure you can help me.
When I was 15, a
J ewish boy wanted to
have sexual relations
with me. I asked, "Whal
will you do ir l get preg
nant?" He answered. ·•t
will give you a ring,"
Doe s thi s m e an
s o m e thing s pe ci al
among people of that re·
ligious faith? We lived in
New York at the ti me
but now we li ve 1n
Spokane and I don 't
know any Jewish people
here except a doctor I
am uncomfortable about
a s king him su<'h <J
personal qucstwn
I rf'ad ·your c•olu m11
vvery clay a ncl will lw
looking for y1rnr :1o~wt•r
0 N E Y<Hi II J\ V E
llELl'E I> IN Tllf: l'AST
DEAR ONF.: The fact
that the boy WaH Jewish
didn't gJve the offer of a
ring any s p ec ial
significance tbat I know
of. tie was just another
dude oa the make, deu .
A ring does not
necessarily indicate the
i._tentloo to wed. Lott of
guys give girls rlng1 but
d.o n ' t m arr y the m .
There are friendship
rings, class rings, also a
ring on the telephone
and one aroand the
bathtub. la any event, I
•m glad you .sked me.
That's what I'm he re
for.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS : Now lhat
the holiday s eason is
behind us (thank God 1. I
want to comment on a
letter you ran telling a
woman who complained
about an office party to
which wives were not in·
viled. You said, "If it's
company poli cy, be u
goo.d sport about it."
Every year I have to
be a good sport about
birthday cele brations,
s ecretary -boss day
luncheons. and
Christmas parties where
liquor is served and the
s tenographers and
secretaries dance with
the executives. Frankly,
I have had it with this
kind of coziness. Your
letter· d1d1n help mat·
~~f> any
Office 1Jart1e:-. without
., )()Ubl'!\ (';JJI Sl3rt a lot tJ(
trouhlt' ('ompumes a rc
n•il ohhgawd to enter
liur1 ltw11 (•mvloyees. If
1 h1•y were smart. they
would spend that money
t o pro mo t e fami ly
solidarity. A person who
1s happy at home will
vcrrorm better on the
JOb.
Of course your column
wa s pinne d on th e
bulle tin board in my
husband's office. For a
person who is supposed
to solve problems you
sure do know how lo
make trouble. -NUTS
TO YO U IN OLD
MAZOO
DEAR MAZOO: You
must be a new reader.
Please-wlpeibe foam off
your. moutb and let me
explain.
Years ago I came out
nat-rooted against office
Chrl11tma1 parties. Too
many people get druak
at these bashes and dis·
grace themselves. I H«·
gut 'lvlng tbe moaey to
charity wtead.
The party , the wife
wrote about wa11 to
honor I.be vice-president
who wH about to be
married. It waa a one-
time aff~lr. Tbey WHt·
ed le keep H "employees
only." Tbe wife who
complalaed said lf her
hu1b•nd went 11be waa
1otag le leave him. I
tbought abe was belag
aarea11011able and said
ao. Now do you 'et It?
DE •• R ANN
LANDERS: I am a 75·
year-old woman with a
bad cue of spider veins
on my lega and thighs. I
love to swim but have
avoided it tbese last few
years because the veins
are so unsightly. -
U lt'a all rlaht to wear
pantybole With shorts,
why not with a bathing
suit? What do you think ?
NOT SO YOUNG lN
KY .
DEAR KY.: Of course
it's all right. Go ahead
and do it. You ma)'"start
a trend.
DEAR ANN
LANDERS : I come
from a la r ge family.
The re used to be eight or
us Now there are only
four r have been married
nearly 40 years Twenty-
five years ago my wi(e
told me she didn't want
to have anything lo do
with my family. There
were never any argu.
menls or fights. She just
decided one day that
they were not her type.
l love my brothers and
s i s ters a nd their
childien and feel that we
should s~ each other as
much as possible in the
years left to us. (We are
in our 60s and 70s.) l
have asked my wife lo
put the past behind and
pretend she is meeting
my people for the first
lime. They are per-fectly
willing, bu\she is not
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Streamline
budget; emphasis on income potential, personal
possessions, locating misplaced objects. Pisces,
Virgo natives play significant roles. See places,
people as they are, not merely as you wish they
might ex.isl.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cycle high;
timing, judgment are on target. Accept·
challenge. added responsibility and make
special appearances. Circfunstances favor your
efforts. Apparent loss boomerangs in your
favor. Capricorn. Taurus. Vi r go figure
prominenUy.
PISCES C Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Finish rather
than initiate project. Aggressive associate is
sincere but could be misinformed. Know it,
respond accordingly. You do not h•ve complete
story. More d ata will be forthcoming. Look
behind scenes.
Valentine Special
aids sick · children
Orange County residents are invited to join
a "Valentine Special" ous Saturday to join the
benefit at the Hollywood Palladium to aid
catastrophically ill children and their families.
The Bossi \'und donates money to Kaiaer-
Perma.nente Medical Care Facilities lo aid
families of children with cancer and other
serious illnesses. .
A price or S20 per ~non includes a. vane~y
show, diMer and dancmg, or a $10 llcket lS
available for the show and dancing only. Bus
fare is additional. Call 978-4103 for information and tickets.
Jf we can't have peace
amo ng ra milies. how OCEA.N directors can we hope to have it
a m ong nations? Any
s ugge s tions ?
UN HAPPY IN NEW
JERSEY O EAR UN HAPPY: The Orange County
Many people put up with 'Employee Aasistance r~latlvu they uen 't Network (OCEAN), a
crazy abciut because It program or the National
pluses a spouse. Too Council on Alcoholism,
bad the woman you h as named Santiago
married 18 M> stubborn Estrada as director and
and selnt h. James Nugent as assls-
Don't aUow her to Wedding and engage.
make your llfe mlseu · ment form• can be ob-
ble. II your wife won't 'taiMd from the OaiJ11 Pilot
go with you to family af· ~ 1ending a ltamped. ul/·
fain; go without ber. addrt1wd mw'°P" to the
A no -nonense ap· Feature ~co.t:Mment._!-£· proach to hOw to deal Boz J5'0, t.a , __ ,
with life's most difficult 1 PUBLIC NOTICE
a nd most rewarding ar-
rangement. Ann Lan-
ders' booklet, "Mar·
riage -What to Ex-
pect." w1U prepare you
for bettel'or worse. Send
your request to Ann
Landen, P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago, Illinois 6061),
enclosing 50 centa and a
long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope.
N711'7 PICTITIOUI .UllNIU
MAMalTAT• ... NT Tiit tellowl119 "''°"'ere c101,.. llutlneu••: PA fAOI. 100, 1440 S. Stete College llwd., SUlle tO. Mel\tlrn, Ctlltonll•
~. THE TEltTTU CORPORATION,
1-Mey.Ml, N«ttt<I•. Celltornle
tll2•. Tiii• MIMss ., <Cll\CllKttel by • <9'. ,., .......
P~llY Day, 18,. a
senior at Capistrano
Valley Hilh School,
wa s amon1 ·30
semi·flnallsts at the
recent Miu Drill
Team CalUorn la
competiUon in Santa
Monica. Miu Day
captained the CVHS
drlll team for four
1ean. W\nnen are
bound 1or the nattooal
cllaaploa1bip1 ln ...._ llODtea next .,,,.
Meals /or seni.on
PIATUMI I HORIOICOl't
ft111UC NOTICS
tu"~:=.fi ... caa,.11.,111•_.~ 'C~• .. "•tw;:n\~ 1i a
CM1 Mint .,. .......... ..,_.,.. llCHI -=·i UR& CITA,_ IP••• .... ..._..,__ ..,_..._...._. •APf ,11 .. L•\', at II ____ _, .......
---........ .......,. a.en. C.11 ......... , c :•'Wll"n .... e&.W eHt•N•lft. 1nu .... l~I OeNle D. aeff Jt ·~ ay ......... I& I ... , CllllMM
I ..
'
II• ... ,,., •f DAtellL ' ., ~.. -... -CelltwM tefMf..._, n lie _ ... TNOMll'ION, .... A ,__ Ille..-......... S..Cll C ,...,.. ftle ............. NeMe ,.. •llWl4 _. ........ .,.. ~ ..... 0 ' • ..... ..... _ ..... Of-..
c~ .-CMINl.tlllt•llltL Tl11S Ni11eM 11clMWC"411W e ,., c-w .. ,,_.,., tS, ""· T• .._..., _. .... , .. , Ill ff el ~ 0•1LAL~, INC., e ~ leeH Mturel t.-r la._, (yf\ Get91c!O ._"9,Jr,.lllC. <tt_.,MNll. m• Mly Petti,""* flt. 1•1• T....,.... ,....,, _,....,, o...0,._.,.,J,,, 1r11 .... ,c.........i.m1• llftll-. * '1t ell _.,_ <lel"' "'"'*"' Tlllt 1111ut1MM -<-"4 IW •
le M llW ...._, W ~ of UICI Tl'tl• "41-t WM lllW wltl\ <~...._ ml.-,.,_,~ 11enwct. County Clettl .. or-.. ~y OIUL..OL09e. INC. .,., • .,Ullt<-'~•,..M•tlrll Je1111•ryJ0,1•1, Tlllt ....._, ... tiled wlll\ IM
tllM eNI l'""'tt' IOI -•r lletof'I PIM ~ftly Clttt< of 0.efllt CWft\Y 9'I
IM J .... ~Hlilnt In oep.rtmOlll Pullllthld Oret19t CM•I Delly Pllet J ... uary IO, 1•1. t~. ,_.,. 7,311 of 1111 -~ e1111tlH JOll. 26, ,,. 2, t, It, 1•1 41... "*"' ceurt. ioc.IM at Crlmlnel Coun l14'e., Pllllll.-Orel\99 C...tt Delly Pile\.
110 w. Tempie, l!u t.n9e1u, PUBLIC NOTICE Jen.i.,Fet1.t,t,t•.••• m41 C.lltornl• t0012 Oii Me~h JO. 1•1, •I
t :OO •.m.,.Of lllel O.y, 11111! •net llwtt I • lllCTITIWI IUSINIM
•Mw t-. II •11\' 'IW 11•'"'· wlly '' NA* ITATl ... NT PUBLIC NOTICE
"'"" "*"Cl not lie ~"'" ''" from 1111<41fttrolot111, "'°"'' •«.Ofd TM ttllowlnt PtrlOftt .,. OOll\9 NOTICE OF DEATH OF ~.i ....... , 1'1:~1:!":':.=i:-::. ... NY TOWN ' COUNTltY OeNTAI.. RUTH M. DUNN AND OF
.. ,,... ..,.11, ot • cORIMlfll of cOllrt. LAIOUTOl'Y, 1• ,._ & C-try, P E T IT I 0 N T10 A 0 •
TIM llflltlOI\ flied lllf•lll It for IN Or ...... Cellf9rl\le'*l. MINISTER ESTATE NO.
1111,,. .. of ,_1,,. !tit t<AIJ«I ,.,110 for H•rolll .......u. o.o.s., 1102 Nonfl A·107416. pl•U-... ~loft. RICltewOOf, S.nl• ,.,,., Celllor11l1 T 0 .. I I h e I r s I Oaled J_r, It, 1•1 n 101. .. .10t4N J. co1tC01tAN, 1•11 Rou S.11••,.011. u u < beneficiaries, creditors ~'Cle•'-Horten" or1 .... wutft'lln•(er, and contingent creditors of av" KUl\lpo, C•tlfom• .,..,_ o.puly Thi• ~I• coMu<-.. "' Oii In Ruth M. Dunn of Orange,
p1111111_0<_ eoe.1 Don, Pltot 51Y~. Callfornla, and persons J•n u , '"' 1, t, ••. '"' .,... HA1tcxo NEMETZ who may be otherwise ln-c:..~111., ~~= ~:!:' /: terested In the will and/or • PUBLIC NOTICE n. ••• e.state:
P1~mout auttNHa "'s.'" A petition 'has been filed MMM HATtllldMT Pullfl-er.,. coest 0•11• Pltoe. by Evelyn Jean Clarke in
I ...... A Fell 1. '· "· n. '"' S#otl M~~: .. ~ --' -t1u•1· the Superior court of
\ti/IN-Ptf11•"9 S.•Y•o PUBLIC NOTICE Orange COunty requestln~
111 ,. 111 .. rtldo ""· that Evelyn Jean Clarke
l'ff-1 tH<ll, CA,.,..., PICTITIOUI IUllNIH be aPIJC)inted as personal Jam .. w O'Sll•11M<Y 111 . 1.0 NAMalTATaMa1n • t d Wll.eR a)), Gotle ,,,,. .... Calllo.-nla fl>e tollowln9 penoflt ore c1oln9 representatrve 0 a •
.,.,i 11u•lneu n minister the estate of Ruth r .. 1.-..... ,,.,_lffby•n•n· JERRY'SSANOWICHSHOP .... M . Dunn (under the In· 01.1c1va1. C•m11U• Ori .. , Unit ,.. iot, N••P011 dependent Ad""inistratlon J-W O'sn.un.t'r 111 8ea<I\, C:.Htornle t'lMO • "• Thi• , .. .,,_1 ••• "'" •"" ,.,. Kru won Hen, 1~1 ~nnvvol• of Estates Act). The peti-County C1erk ol Orante coun1yon Jan. A•enue.GttdenOrove,C•lllornlo. tiOn is set for hearln9 in
1'1, lft l Hui Suk Hon, ,,.., Sunllyv•le Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
'1$4"4 A .. nue. c;..c1en Oro .. , CAltllornl•. . . PuD11.,.., 0r-. Cot•• o.111v Piiot Thi• lluSlnft• 11 cONtuctecs bv in Center Drive, West, rn the Feb 1. • "· "· 1•1 4'l:(.i 01.1c1u•1, IMv....,' wue1 C 'i t y o f S a n t a A n a ,
1 PUBLIC NOTl<:t · ~~r=!!.°n Californ'.a on February 25,
'"" 11 • ...,_, ..... lllecl wllh lflt 1981 at 9.JO a.m.
N·JIUI county ClerkolOr.,.e Co.,.,tyonJ.;. IF YOU OBJECT to the
NOTIClf TOC .. OITOU n.1•1 granting of the petition .... A·WIAlt NOHll ANO AllOCtATH you should either appear ,~~~~ .. ~~~.~~~:i~r::" :::!~""==.C.:'..':'r!:-at the ~arino and st~te . TMIECOUNTYOPOH .. 6E "1S47W' y~u r Objections or file 1n ,,,. ~ o1 ,.,. h i.el• o1 JOA" Pub1t11WC1 0r.,. Coe•• 0 •11• Pt1o1. written objections with the AOlATER JOWH~. OU JOA'° R Feb 1• t, 16• 7l. '"1 S'1 .. I t bef th .. _ . JOH NSON, oa eoee•E JO~N cour ore e nearing. JOHNW!'f. Oka l:IOBB IE JOHHWN. PUBLIC NOTICE xour appearance may be o.cu~ m person or by your at·
.. OTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEN 10 .. OTI(( ... VITING ••OS lorney. <rl'<lllor1 tw•ll\9 cJ•lm• 09•'"'' ltw NOTICE IS HEREBY' GIVEN ""' I F Y 0 U A R E A \110 cl~ to Ille wlO cfaotn\ 1n ltw tne e .. rd Of Tr11\1ff\ o1•1t.e CO.ll offl<e OI -...... of .... alott-.•G Commvn1tftoil-01>tr1<totOronve CREDITOR or a cont-'""" or to ..,...,,, ,,,..m 10 .... un ~ ......... C.lllornl• ...... recti•t .... 1.d ingent creditor of the de· def\I0...0 al 11'e Olli(~ of MICHE LE Old\ up to II 00 • m. Thu"dO, Ceased, YOU must file your
M BERGE.R ON. OLD ,..EN ~February It 1•1 .. ,,,_Pu1clla•IROcla'm 'th the CO rt or OLOl!o\EN. «II Oo""' Orivt. Sult• toO, O•Pirtment' ~ ~Id <o41egt dl\tr ltl I w.r U• Newport a. .. 11. CA n..o ..... ,.,. 1a11er toutto 01 mo A<Som• ,.,.,.,,.,., Coste present It to the personal OttlCe It lheoltceol bUllfttt~ IM un M•w C.hl0fn1•. •I •ho<h time WIO representative appointed oer•lv...o"' .. 1 matter•,..,, "'°'V '° D•d• ... 11 .,. Pllbll<•r oi>eM<I .,,. reeo by the court within four u icl utete Sv<ll <••Im• '""h '"• 10, · neot..-,Y YOUChtf\ mll\I llt 111.0 or PU RC HASE OF COMP Utfi R months from the date Of presented H eforeuocl wllllon lovr FOR JOURNALISM. GWC first iSSUance Of letters aS montM .n.• tl'e t1ts1 puohuhon °• All bods.,, 10 llt in ..:corcs•nct wit" prov lded in Section 700 of thlt notice 111e 6 •G FO'm IMtrucllon• ""' Conell· oa1eoJ-,:n. , .. , 11.,., .,,. si.<ll•ctHon• • .,1,.,.,.110w th e Probate Code of PATTI JOH NSON on 111e .,,dm•Y 1>e tac:ured In,,,. olllce California. The time for Admlniwetor 01111t purch~ino aoen1 01 Hid coueve filing claims will not ex-with will onne•ed dl\lrlct • I f th of 11\e U ltlt of E eel\. blclcler mull sUC>mll wllh hi\ pt re pr Or tO OUr mon S wlclde<-nt boO f CHlll<Pr't the<~, certified ChK•. from the date Of the hear• MICMELlf llo\. a11toE1tON or b1011er·• llOl\O m-~yebte 10 ti.. ing noticed above. Att_,_..L.aw order 011,,. co.st Community co11eve YOU MAY EXAMINE OLOMIN e Ol.OMEN 01\lrtcl Bo1rd ol Tru\110 In •n . ft10e...,.Dfivt.5'1hant •mountnol ltt\11\anllveperc.enl \S'I the file kept by the COUrt. Mew,.rt a..c:11. CA.,... 01 "'' s .. m Dtd •• • , ... ,.n,.., '"'' the If you are interested in the Ttt: 111•1 .. ~,_ . b•dder ... 11 enlfr 1n10 tht ProPOi.ed estate you may file a re-Pullll"*' Oronte c.,.sl Oaoly Pilot Contract ii Ille .. ,,,. I• •warded 10 • • J.tn U, F.0. l~ .. '"'--_ OWi him In, .... e_,I ot toliure to tt'ter In QU_eSl Wt th. the co;urt tO re·
10 W<" ~°"''"'· "" ""oc""• 01 1i.. ce1ve special notrce of the PUBUC NOTICE t lWO Woll De forfeited, or In Ille , ... inventory Of estate assets ----------of• -"· ltte fvll sum thereof •Ill be I • P1CT1nous auttNESS 1orte1111d 10 .. ,., cotlt9e db1rio and of the pet trons, ac-...,. ITATE-NT No bl-,,.., wtt-ow "''bid 1or c o u n ts and reports Tne fotl-1"!1 per.on• ore c101n11 • period .,. 1...iy·ll•• co1 d••• otter described in Section 1200 !Mnlftffl •: '"'"•1•wttwtMooen1no•twrtol of the California Probate EXECUTIVE ,,.VEST ME,.T Tf\e Boord o1 Trust"• rew"'tt 11\c • PROPERTIES. WALL STREET C>fl•llt~ ... r•1e<llngany•nO•llblcU Code . INVESTMENT PROPE~TIES. '91J or to w•1ve iny 1rre,.u1ero1ttt °' ln -Warner A-. Hv11t1noton 8ucn. torm•llloe\ ln ""• ll1cl or In '"' blcldi110 Mil.n Dost•I, Attorney Ctliforl\le .... 1 NOl\MAM E Wit.TSON Robert Loul• Oeml'rs. C·• • Se<ret.try, •I L•w, SOS City P•rkw•y
s..11\lde, H""tif\!llOn Beech, ~11101r••• Boorc1o1 T"'""' West, Suite 1000, Or•nge, ,,.., C.W\ICommunoty C•liforni• 92661 · tel : Cl-J Oen>tn., 17'11 Av•lon CcHI-01\lrl<t '
L•ne. """"""°" &etch. Coll!O'lll• Publiu..d or.,. c ... 11 Oa•IY Piiot IJS-291•.
t'l .. I J•n 16 F~ 1 1•1 41Hll Thh 1><1sintt~ i• condutl.O by •
.. ...... ~p.
~L.Oerners Tiii' >t.C-1 wes Wed •1111 the c-1, cwr11 o1 o..,,.,. c°""'" on J.,. "· '"' F1S47'0 Pullll....., OrM191 Coe>I O•ltr Pilot.
Fetl. l, t, 1•. l>, 1•1 S*-11
PUBUC NOTICE
---~~----·
PUBLIC NOTICE
• s GRANDI 1t '11 not the. prlcE' or their
t•ur , t•~plaln C'._pl and Mrs Wllllam
\ 1lUh1t • Of opa It 'I ttl\ t!Xp.feliSiOn O(
prui1• In tht,lr fh•l! tirundchlldren.
Dea1lu
Elsewhere
'RED BANK N J <Al'I
r-~ or me r N e w a r k
Mayor Hug h J . Ad·
donbio, 66. who served
14 years in Congress and
~pent time in pr'ison for
a k1ci.back scheme, died
today
SOUT H A MPTON .
N y l AP) Di:.-John
M arquis Converse, 71.
a n internati o n a ll y
known plastic s urgeon,
died Saturday
D.-oda ,.,.,Irr•
DAGGETT
LAURA CUTLER DAG·
GETT, resident of Balboa
Ca . Pa ssed away on
January 31, 1981. Survived
by sons Robert S. Daggett,
Jr. and William C. Dag-
gett, daughter Orrilla Ann
Blanpied, grandchildren,
Robert Hess Daggett, 111 ,
John Daggett, Rick Dag-
ge tt. a nd Kenneth Daggett,
Corine Poetschlag, Carol
Dunham and John Blan.
pied, great-grandchildren,
Robin A. Daggett, Katelyn
Daggett, Nathaniel Dag-
gett, Theodora (Te ddy)
Dagget t and Daniel
Poetschlag. Mrs. Daggett
wa s a member o f the
P .E .0 and St. Andrews
Presbyterian Church .
Services will be held· on
Tuesday, February 3, 1981
at 2:00PM at Pacific View
Chapel. Interment Pacific
View Memorial Park. In
lieu of flowers the fam ily
s ugges ts memorial con-
tributions to your favorite
c harity or the P .E .O .
Scholarsh ip for Women
c o Mrs. Richard Evans,
320 I Delaware Place,
Cost a M esa , Ca. 92626.
Pac tf1c View Mortuary
dil"ec tors.
ITTERLY, II
HARRISON M . IT·
TERLY, II, age 54, resi-
dent of Riverside, Ca.
Passed away on January
31, 1981 in Loma Linda,
Ca. Survived by his wife
I D e an named
SAN DIEGO CAP>
S heldon Krantz o f
Bos ton has been named
dean of the University of
San Diego law school,
effective July l. Krantz.
a 42-year-old Boston
Universit y Jaw pro-
fessor .
PVBLIC NOTICE
'"~mous aUsii.us - -NAMa STATIMINT
T lie lollowl"Q perw•u ue doing bu1lneues. SAMUIEL JOHNSON GALLl!RY, l3001 CflrlSllM Orlve. C»na Point, C•ll•ornla ml't.
Sam ... 1 T. J°""son, llOOI Clldstln. Or Ive. 0.... Point, Collf0<nlo '2'19.
Patrtcla C. Jolln1on. UOOI C11r11t1 n• Or1ve, Oono Point, California.,.,...
T 11" i.u,JrMS• I• conduel..i by on In olvldull.
S...,...1 T JOl>n<0n Tiii\ 1tott<l'Wll wa$ filed with the County c .. ,. "'Ora1>9e County on Jan
tt.1 .. 1
1'1541'1 Publill'te<I Or 4"1Q1 Co.,.t Oatly Piiot,
Feor1141rv J. 9. "· 13. lttl 411MI
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUS\Nf:U NAMI STATEMENT Tiie following perwn1 ore doln9 OUsiMHOS
ARMSTRONG HARDWAR E CO ,
JSSO Cocliltac A-. Suite C, Hunt· l1>9ton S..Cf\, Cotllomla ~ Pll1lllp T. COS~y ..... Victor11, Sovth9a ... Colltomla tllleO.
Gerold J. Sou••. Ul" Wo111nvl0<J Lane. Hu"\•ni;ton Se.ch, C•1trorn1• t1'46.
Clllloro A Monuel. 14121 All· tennouse Clrcl•, Loguna Hlt11, Calllornlo t?il3
Tnl• Duslneu " conduct"d Dy o o•nerol partnership.
Gerald J. Sou10
T Ills statement w11 111..i wlll! tne Counly Clerk of Orar199 County on.Jan.
19, '"' FtS<11% PuDll\lled Orar19t Coa1t 01ily Piiot,
Feb.1. 9, ''· 23.~ ---~
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.CTITIOUS aUllNISS NAME STATIMIENT T II• followlnv persons or• doing
buitneua.s:
COMPV SEARCH. 1flt -u Ort ve • 0 Co\11 M•s•. Colllornlo t2n• Tl-y ~ G<ov. ZIJ,. ~n·
0 0 1• Ortve • O. Cos.t• Mesa, Collfornlo m2'.
Leslie A-Gray, 2879 ~ ... do10 Orivt, • 0 , Costa Mu a Calllornlo '261' Thi\ bu11...,,, Is conducted Dy • genero1 panrwnllip. Timothy EU'1fnt Gray Th11 \tatement WH lill!d .. 1111 the Counly of Oronvt County on Jan tt,
1 .. 1
f'IMr.J Publlllled Or 4"191 Coal! 0•11., Piiot,
Ftb. 2. ~~Jl. '"' -~'
PUBLIC NOTICE
Romaine ltterly, 2 sons -N-1"iit1 ____ _
Harrison M . l tterly, 111 suP11ue>11 cou•ToFTHE
a nd Terry Lee ltterly, 1 sT•T1ol'CALIFO•N1A FO•
daughter DonnaKay Hter-TNE ~,:'1"~~.~1~,'!.~NoE
ly, brother James ltterly O•OHTOSNOWCAUSI
and his mother Erma 1c.c.P.12m Kessl~r. 3 grandchildren. in '""Matter of Ille Appliutlon ol OE WEY ALLEN CURTIS Services will be held on WHEREAS, DEWEY ALL EN
Tuesday, February 3, 1981 CURTIS. Pet11ioner,anoou11.11asflled
at 2 : 30 p M at s I err a a P111t1on w1t11 '"' """' 01 this c .... rt for on Or«Mr CM"91"9 PtUlloner·i Memoria l Chapel With name lron1 DEWEY ALLEN CUIHIS Bishop Charles Griffith of 10 OEWIEVALLEN REEVES,
the Los Sierra ward of the 1 Tis OROEREO ,,.., an person• In·
Church of Jesus Christ of ~-:;;:!~ ~=-t .. ~.=:t~~1~:~'.~'.
Latter-day Saints Officiat· on M•rcn II, ttll, In Ille c°"rlroom of
1 n g . I n t e r m e n t a t Oepartme"t l , loca1..s at roo Civic Cenler Ori"9 WHt, Softto All•. Oror19t Cr e s l I awn Memo r i a I coun1v. eo111o<nio, •no,,_,,..,..,,,, Park , R iverside, Ca. any, why ,,,. ""t111on for c,..,. o1
Services d i rec t ed by Namui-IO""' begr.,,t..s.
Sierra Memorial Chapel IT IS FURTHER OROEREO 11\ol • copy Of llllS ()(clef to snow Ca<IM be Mortuary, Riverside, Ca. pub11111eo in "'• Oa•IY P1101, • 687-0SSl. nt*IP•Pet of general circutotlon
------------' orinteo 1n Or-County, Collfomi•.
'9HCI llOTMHS
SMITHS' MOaTUAllY
627 Mam ~I Hunltnglon Beach
536-6539
f'l8C f AMfl Y
Cot.OHIAL FUHl•AL
HOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westm1nsler
893-3525
,ACIFtC YllW
MIMO•IAL,AltK
Ceme1ery Morluary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Ortve
Newport Beach
£>.M-2700
MeCotlMICll MOaTUAl•S
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Hills
768<0933 San Juan Capistrano
495-1176
MA.MOI LAWM-MT. OUYI
Mortuary • Ce!Tlll tery Creq tory,
1625 Gtsler Ave .. CoslaM9u
540-5554
NICl•OJ._I
-.L•OADWAY
MOITUAH
110 eroldway
Cc»taMeaa •• 642-9150
once • wee« for tour suc.<•nive wMks orl0< to tile date wt 10< Mlrtl\Q on Ille
Pelil•on.
Oiied Jonua<y 11. '"'· AONALOH PRENNER
JUC!Qeof Tl•
Superior Court
Hu•w1n. ltlMIA. MocOONALO & MEADE
A,,....._..~
Aftor,,.~ ot Lew
W.N•~~on ... Swlte IHI .
11••"°'1 e.Kll, c •. ""° Tel: 171417,,..,., P11bllstwd O.anvt Coast Dolly Piiot Feb. 2, t, 16, 1l, 1'81 314·fl ·----------PVBLJC NOTICE
A Review of ,,,. Pl'OClrMn\ !Of" hen·
dlcoPPe<I 1tudtnts -ratfd by lhe 11• K-1 Cllstrleb c-lslft\) !he WHt
Of" anve County Con-1 lwn for S.-cl• I EtN<atklll will be condllcted bY • , .. m
ll'OM the state ~t ol Educe• 1tlon Fa-y 11 lllrougtl F--y 2'. Tflh wlll lnch.Je Fountoln Volley, Huntl"Qlon Beech City, HunllntJIOfl ••ec:fl Union Hlgfl Sc-. Ocean View, Seal heell, -Wltmnlt'lll« Sc,_, Ol1trlcts. The Progr..,. Ae1flew ,...., #ill visit
JS K'-R -0 cla..---"lie .... , ... hen. Tiiey will ...... •1111
eclmiftlSb'etJv. -_. --·· H •ell •1 IH<hers, _ _,ts, olMI l1twdenb. A•onb -.,..~•Ill lie ,.. • ...,... lo clatennlM WMtNr .,..
Mt IM pr'09r--'" comoU~• wllll st• w '-'•• 1-and.,. ef 111111 ..... fty,
A IH*k input ,,_ti"I la KllOdllled
for ~y -"'9. F--y 11, f"I'" 7:• 1111 t:• P.M ... Ille w.tt Ore,,..c;......, TN<lltn' C:-, 6591 leftllH Drlw, H ............ 8Hcll. Tiiis
..... \1,.1, WlllCll la llHIH 'tly 11141 c--ty AIM_,., c:.Mmltte t.f IM
COftMr1hlm, la -" lo ...,.,_. ""'° llrltllet ....... IN ,._,,_ IHnl'.,.
Ofty """9r.
OtMr ,,.... ..... llllllkll -..-t. .... ~ .... ~ ... '"".-Ctlofl I Ill• rt•leW tHm flffmi.trt '" flltlNy, ,.,..,. 11, .. •:., ~;:J: ........ """" " .... "-" .. Mii l.lllltft Nftll IC""' O'""" -<>ffk• et tllSt v~ ... ..,......, " -.. "",...,. ... ,.....,, .. ..,,,.,.. ae 111 a:• P.M. 111 .. -.............. -.c ... __....
1t11•e11• •t KM611 Ml~t .. fof wl•llellOllJ wlll ,.Cthro ... clel IMl\ettoM te _..... ...-11t ....
KtlMll.
All.,_ Wllfllftl te ett ... IN
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.,Yonder. f"ebruery 2, , .. 1 OAtlY PtLOT
The Biggest M•rk•tPlec• on the Orange Coeat
DAILY Pl·LOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can lell t, Find It, ( 842 ••a.e )
:t:r•de It With a Want Ad WV• U
One Cell Service
· Feat Credit Approvel
.._...ForS... .._.nForS. H1••• ... S. "-'"'-S. ·········•············· •.•........••.••.. , ........................................................................ .
G1•r• I 002 .._,._, I 002 «HMr• . I 002 G~.r I 002 ..... ,_, I oft •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNfTY
''*'hr•.atWlce:
MISAWOOOS
Brt1t.t. airy ' Bdrm PoOI home with apa a rew
steps from the mailer
suite. Dual fireplace
between family room
and ~veraatioll plt, thia
home makes entertain-
Int a deJilht. Full price
$183.000. Call ?Sl-3191
C::SELECT
T'PROPERTIES All ,..... estate advertised In tlda ...,.paper is 1ub-jeet to the Federal Fair, _________ ,
Housing Aet of lHI
which mall:es it illegal to
adve rtise "any pre-
ference, limitation, or
ditcrhnirulUon based on
rue. color, reli{ion;~x .
or naUonal ori&tn. or an
intention to make any
such Pft(erence, limit•·
tk>n. or discrimination."
This newspaper will not
ltnowinaly accept any
advertfalnr for real
estate which ia in viola-
tion of the law.
I YEARNEW
$79,900
Beautiful 1 year new
Sandlewood townbome.
Superb upper location.
Beautiful view of green·
belt and recr eational
facilities. Balcony over-looks pool and spa. Space
a1e kitchen with lots of
cupboards and counter
space. Xlnt noor plan, all
decorated in earthtones.
Shows like a model.
PeHect for the guy or gal
on the go! Call now.
......
lllWJ IACK IAY
SpaekNI 4 Br, SV. ba. 2
mafter aultea w /bu1e
walk in cloMta and 1it·
line area. Nr .. S.A.C.C.
Newt cpt1/drapes Ir
pain Priced for quick
sale. $151,000. Wk loan
avail at 13.9%. 20172
Redlands. S.A.H.
MISSIOMYIUO
DIC YllW HOMI Auume ~% loan. 4 Br.
3'4 ba. Hardly Uved in,
on a hill. Try JZS,000
down , lse /opt or ?
Outstanding condition.
$250,000. 27742 Tor ija ,
MV
WAnmiltOMT
LUXUIY CONDO
2 Br, 2 ba, mirrored
wardrobes 1 ml from
S.D Fwy. Panoramic
water view. O nl y
$102,000. Carlsbad.
R & H Investments Co.
752-21'7
752-1700 I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
BIOIS: A4hertlaen 1nm REALI 3Br, 2 car garage. re· ....... clltdt tllelr-.. ~ePP.11.~RS sldenUaJ area. close to detlf ..., ,.,.. .,.. ~ &6'A a. town, store. school, etc.
ron ' g llJlsly. n. ..!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~=-'!!'-_. Buy thJa one now It'll go
DAILY N.Of •1•111 OWMrWllFl11•u fast. Priced ror quick 1111•j fw .. first... Super sharp Eastside sale by owner 547-3182
c~••riloaOllly. t~-:e~'::1·1 :
Ha•nfwS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ge•r_. 10021 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1
...... I fo..t'v
Fourpaex-sharp,"lrg Wilts
in excellent rental area.
We ll maintained a nd
owner will help with the
finances. An excellent
value at SU2.7SO. Don't
delay! ~31160
C:SELECT .
landsca~ in move-in
condition . La r ge
fireplace and open beam
ceilinl add much to its
c harm._ Full price
~.soo
· llSTPlttcED
Best priced condo in the
a rea. 1 Bdrm. 10-20'.ll
down, owner will help
finance. $78,500. Call
9'79·53'70today.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
: . . ~ ' .. : . ., .. : .
. . .. ; . : . ~
llLAI. U rArr f lfflllflfHCC SIN('.f ....
19UC9T •
111J,ooo /) A
4BR, 2v.BA. Aaaumabte l,.o{e r o/ n."'f"'"' loan.
f( >\.I ...,
t t \I I I I\\
BACI BAY
3 Bdrm. Hardwood
floors, 2 fl.l"eplaces, large
family room ft pool.
Good assumable loan.
$140,000
EASTSlOE
5 Bdrm, family rm .
frplc. Great for the large
family: Owner will help
finance.
Sll7,500
TRADE??
Always Owneri want to
trade this clear 3 Bdrm
home in Santa Ana
Heights for income pro-
perty.
BUILDERS .•.
158' x 185' Rl lot uan
Juan Capistrano. Comer
Calle Sspero & Paseo
Ciel a. S2a5,00 or trade for
??
FUU.a UAL TY
~14
REALT.OiS
'75-5511
.. .. ..
CAUH Of'POITUNITY -..... e ........ ,,. -4 • ·
._.c net e1tete fir-. be ..... c ...... elee ............. ,.. ... " -............... .. •If I , • .,, ........ C .. hllllerY~•'7Wlll
COLE OF MIWPOIT llALTOIS
2515 E. Coast Hwy., Cor'OM .. Mar
675-5511
COSTA MESA
DOLLHOUSE
Located on a quiet
Eastaide street! 3 bdrms
+ separate laundry.
screened ptitio, RV park·
ing. A real bargain at
$135,900. Offered VA .
You must -see to ap·
late! 646-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
$106,000
C011 ... PAll(
Ass ume larre loa11
SlOl,000. 3 Bdrm 2 bath
expanded famlJy room
welbar. fireplace anc
pool. hl6.000. Call fo1
more details. 546-2313
liM~~I
JUSTUS19!
SHOf PB'S Oc.-I '!'I. llDas Sl'ICIAL Owner Amdous! Warm &
Lowest priced 4 bdrm cozy doUbouse! 2 Bdrms.
Home in area. Very at· 2 car garage. Plus extra
tractive noor plan. Close parking. Land included
to beach. WiU ~II VA. at h79.SOO!
Only $147,500. Call today ..... a.,,,.,.
979-5370 .... .
ALLSTATE 1!!!!!!~·~"~'-~1M~0~·~
REAL TORS $79, 900
LUXURIOUS
TOWNHOME
BARGAIN
One year new East.side HEWPOlt'T HBfiHTS Costa Mesa! 3 Bdrms. I•--===~=~-~ One of Irvine's most o,.. D-'r 1-4:30 2'1't baths. loaded with de-
T'PROPERTIES 3 BR. FAM,RM,
POOL
Townhome. 2 Bdrm over·
looks greenbelt near
South Coast Plaza in
Costa Mesa. 546-2313
1 IM"-llSTOllS established communities 421 S.. ........ tlw 1---------1 signer touches! Sparkl· DllJeHT in an excellent location. 3 Custom three bedroom ,...._Pt W /Y• lng clean! Owner anx-
MHlmum leverage with big bdrms +den+ fa mi-ho me . Sunken living This nice 3 Bdrril 3 Bath ious! Steal.it at Sl33,SOO.
SS,CIOOdown. 2 Bdrm con-ly room. Beautiful room. Family room with home is just steps from 646-'717\
do. Owner will carry crackling fireplace in we t bar. Ow.ner will one of Newport's finest ~~---------, WHATLOCATIOH!
balance with agreeable family room. The back carry complete flnanc-beaches. The upstairs & ~ REAL
terms a nd payments . yard is an entertainers ing. Quk lt possession. deck area provides a IATERS
3 Bdrm + ? room. 2 Ba
Peninsula borne on a bil
R-2 buildabte lot just 100'
to beach. All new carpet-GrcMls income~. Ask· delight with spark line S360,000. beautiful Catalina view. _ _
J:>I. huge natio, terrific 631•7._ Tbe owner will finance ing S76,900. Call 540-USI _. __ f.:i ... n......--.,.., M.I. with a Pk down pay.
for inore det.alls. or "'~ .......... """'"" '"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I -ooo hirhly motivated. call 1= ment. -· . .
aow. won't last. ~v-1100 HIWPOllT POINT. D.M. MAISHALL '~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~r~THEJ'A~Rsl ...... ~ ••• ' ...... =Tm.ls '"" _ 6'4 a. _ bedroom units. Picture~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! windows provide birds ._ ________ _
-~'~HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
J IDRM ' I.side Da•-• eye view of the ultimate "
U.._.IV.P•RI( Tbi.s3 Br2Babometruly i n seaside l i ving . S~TOllACH
Two 2 Bdrm units, cor·
ner lot., ocean view. ex-
cellent summer /winter
rental. SZI0,000.
" Ill has loads al charm with F ireplaces, new tile Super Ou.ibae rmancing it.s large"l>nck Ii pine kit che n a nd baths .
on thil fabulous Village fireplace, and b posed Owner will carry flnanc-
111. Universit y Park. wood beamed ceilings. lng.Asteal!C•ll now.
Beautiful carpets and Features i n c 1 u d e
drapes, big rooms s prinklers, detached 2
thruout: Near shopping car garare and golf
a nd sch ools. Owner coune view t.o boot. The
highly motivated. Call owner will rmance the
now, 7SZ.1700 sale or carry a large 2nd. ionm RP:AJ., FUllPrioeSllUOO
~l:ATICRS_
.;-~.,,. HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
4-PLEX
SI 55,000
P rime location , new
carpeta, new paint. new
drapes! Take subject to
$87 ,000 loan. Hurry!
M.w7117
SAHTAAMA ... TS
SlOl,.500
I011l Ordaid
3 Br 1 Ba. IOCJCf sise lot.
A11umable ht. Owner anxloua and will carry.
Cbuck SpWer, Gl-lal.
REALTORS
~ · DOING ~".': BUSINESS
.:.: UNDER A
-.... FfCTITIOUS
-NAME?
you h..,• ju1t llltd ., r new Flcllllou1
Bu1ineu N•m• and
l\an nol ye1 •ublftlned
II lor pubMcatton, plHM
dor1·1 lore•• thet the llmllatlon 11 30 day1
lrom dete of flllng. The
DAILY PILOT wlll
1K1bll11t your lletemenl
tor S3a.so. Our
clrculetlori lncl11dt1 the
entire Orenge CoHt
area end "9111 notlcH
eppeer In ell edltlon1. In
order to 111bmll your •t•t•t11•t\t ,.,,
publlcellon ••nd
epproprl"• eopy •nd • clleclt lo THE DAIL y
PILOT, P.O. 8o1 1MO,
Colla ...... CA 1212'.
We'll do ttle '"4. '°' lnlorlftlltton elloul "9111
•dY•ftlliftg pie•• call
Mt-4321 Est. m.
GAZEKtr~ ----....---e, CLAY~ POL14N
11. T-o.ilr Acmllp Gwldt Ji. Y Acc.rt/i•e 10 Iii• Sien To d•YtlOCI "'*UOQe fQr TU«~day, ,_ ~'°'~''111 toruN:le<s Qf YGJr Zodloc bin!\ t9'
@~
SEA COVE . PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
IEACHHOUSE
$175,000
Believe ill 6 Bdrm.
newly painted in & out.
2 blocks from ocean in
NeWp<>rt Beach.
IMlaALDIAY
Romantic ocean view
from this exclusive
c us tom built 4 bdrm
dream house, priced at
o nly S553,000. Owner
must sell and will help
finance. For appt. call
962-9311.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
macnab I Irvine
realty
A IUlllDIA .. Y OF
THE l"VINE COMPANY
BROOKVIEW
FORMER MODB.
HilhlY upgraded 3 BR, 2" bath
town.home w /fplc, decorator wfn·
dow coverings & wallpapers. Close.
to pool & clubhouse. $143,500 Myme 8oOrn 551-8700 (A83)
• UDOIS&.I inr, drapes thruout.
lmmed. occupa n cy. Really different! Only
Price reduced. No quali-S239,500wltb terms.
fylng. oo Points. no pre· JACOBS REALTY payts. Seller will carry
contract. 4brlrden. 4 ba. 675-6670 frplc, new crpt It paint.•----------
$415.000. Agt. 913-8182. NOi IHWOODS
NWPTICH
HOUSE
llAUl'Y
183.500. Fantut.ic buy of
the wtti', in beautiful
Northwoods of Irvine. $132,900. Singles. young Lower unit with terrific
married, steps to beach. locatiop near pool and
pool or tennis from this 3 clubhouse. Big rooms.
Bdrm cathedral ceil-earthtone decor. air. 2
inged style beach ·home. p 0•0 1 5 . 2 s p a s . 2
Cozy brick fire place. clubhouses. 3 lighted ten-~~~~~1~1· e5:cc11:::~ n,isdc~~· "!~··etc. Call . ff . 1 or "'"'""· 7-·1700 patio. urry. won t ast. I I Call 67l-8550 THE REAL
(THE REALI ESTATERS ESTATICRS ' I ' ------: ~ 419100M
H •w-$101,500
S ~ F~mily living. at its best ,._. Y• . with room to grow.
4 Bdrm (2' Mstr Stesl. Dramatically upgraded
formal dining room. throug hout. H uge.
large game room. quiet encl<>Md patio overlooks
c ul-d e-sac. Unus ual s unny rose gardens .
courtyard e ntry with Super assumable rinanc·
fountain a nd running ing. Don't wait!!! brook. Many upgrades .
teso.000
RCTaylorCo
<>40 <)()()()
SEA COVE
PR()PERTIES
714-631-6990
M•MeAllOffer on this s uper duplex
located In Oki CdM. The
property baa a 3 bdrm -
cotta1e with new paint
and carpets and a!
modern 2 Bdrm a pt·
w /bit-ins. The owner!.,
says sell and be'U listen;:·
to all offers. A1ltin1::· .... ;:;
.... ~.., !:: .,,,.,.. ..
DIL .. HTl'UL IYMl.L
Charming area of Corona de! Mar
with private beaches & sunset
·views. 3 bedroom & den comfort on
a lovely street in Cameo Hlghlands. ·
Excellent assumable loan ol 10'A%
or owner flnancin1 available. ssas.ooo.
I
ASIUNI I ~. LOAN 9" COM
Qua int htlJt' home on u 40' lot with
'ue c ho utH' out 10 ba<·lc ' Near
Beaom a Park 1 tsb1.m w 10'{ loan <bat
$149,000) N uull) the home is ~
pacioui:. 2 bdr m . with scrvwe porch .
i Wl room , aar conditioning and a nice
ya r d A s k ang $275,000 an d
owot>r agent will c·a rry a 2nd. Call
Umque! .....
Jssoc iatrid llutt If• ....... I04Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ ...;._ _____ ,SPECTACULAR 38r,
JBa, fam rm, frplc. ap.
prox 2,000 IQ n. spa &
1 ... ..,.. ~~ 1279,000. Agt,
Wood floon, .ftffll&ace,
LA'RGJlcl&. SMO... 9"M I 044
•
• . ~
~.~.~ ....... ~::.~!!'-..... ~~!~~mi.~-~-=~ ..... !~! = ......... !~ er? p 1611 , .. , .. ~ •• :!............ ..... ..
A.OM& y WR I . *S .
•ASTIALI . . ..
Husband already lert 3 beautiful 3
bedroom condo unit. Pool, spa, near
schools and So. Coast "Plaza. Great
investment property . Owne r will
help finance at 12%. A Quail Place
Exclusive .
... J 'l)UAIL PLACI
PIOPllTllS
712·1920
.COMM•CIAL ll&DIMCI
For 1ale, 4.400 aq.ft. bmldlnl. leued
lo aovernment acency In South
Orange Coun\)'. Financinl assumable
and terms avaHable. Total value,
S27S,ooo. cash down S'lS.000. Call for details .
M A .Y 0 CK
OORPO RA1'fO N
380 GlENNEYRE LAGUNA BEACH
(714) 484•2148 1., Mac... •. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Ma.nit 4br. SlM.900. icw.~ loan. f•fflt 1090 ,,_. 1090
balance 1102,500, view, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........, For S. "t • t 1091 It nNANCES vaulted ceilings. asaoc:la· · ••••••••••• ............ ••••••••••!!••••••••••• V\ew hoO'I• In Cd M. BeautlfuJ 3 Bel 21o; Ba con· lion &32-8067
Owner may rarry lst do , s ky llte1. 2 c ar _G_R_E_E_N_B_'E_L_T_,
tru.st deed at lZ~':( an· 1ara1e .. 10'7. down. All
nuaJ perceotaae nte terms. caUSltip731·'304 LOCATION in Rancho
wlth small clown pay. San Joaquin. view, 2
m e nt Small priva te ·ASSUMAIU bdrms. den. only 153.SOO
comm\.anlty with pool. Oc.ean v~. 142,ooodown to takeoverloans
IXICUTIVI HOMl-S..Ch I .. '°" JUSTUSTm • •••••••••••••••••••••• $3100 .............
POI FAST SALi .. Z"'-DM· IJ%1NT Gorteoua 3 Bdml. glass 0... & 6elf end ,.tio. Huce lot. O..ly C..... Ylewt 1115,IOO.
Motivated teller will Bette M ~Ir Assoc
u rry ~ · contract at "2..442.4 U~IVUI: Ii
Ute. airy, 4 bdrm, 3 batb to assume. 2 br. 2 ba con·
ho me . 2 Fireplares. do, 1 y r old forme r
o formal dining room & model. Call •0060 •Jet. breallf~t room. Perfect 2 houses~-klt. 1 3bdrm. ~or family It ent~naln· 2ba. frplc. 1 2bdrm. 2ba.
RecibJIJ ~Realty
552 ·75QO
LIASI on10N 01 IUY
Lease it, lease option it or buy it
with extraordinary terms . Family
sized executive home in e xcellent
a r ea . Own e r tra n s f e rre d and
motivated . Ca ll us fo r a n a ppt. to
s ee this . outsta nding 4 bedroom
home.
13% for 5 years on -----.......... ........._._
spacioul c&11tom hom e. _. --REALTORS. 675·6000
2443 ~., Couc Hl9h1nv. Corona d•I N•r
WE HAVt:<t2UFTtlE t:tt:ST LIST INGS I TOWN'
\\ I I \
1,AYl.JOR CO.
I :1 ·,; ! (I!:-...., ..... 111 l ' I ~H1)
NOMT IOW--llVI .. TIUACI
•ST VllW LOCA110M
Fantastic vie w of Oce a n , b a y s.
islands, Catalina. lights & the jetty'.:
Such a joy to wa tch the sailboats and
a ll the boat parades. Custom-built to
take advantage of the view from most
rooms. Love ly 4 Bdrms'. fam rm &
d ining. Be autiful new la ndscaping on
rear terrace & slope. 3-Car gar age.
Call today for a ppt. $795,000. •
WESUY M. TA YLOI CO., llALTOIS
211 I S. JHqulr ... loed
.HE-WPOlt,..,.,.IT,.. CBfTll. N.I. 644-4' I 0 .
,...NSUU 'OINT IEACHROMT
P a nor a mi c v iew a t wed ge. from
prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath custo m
---h~. 3700 sq . ft. featurin~ marine r oo entry . li v ing room. dining
room . uilt -ins. etc. Sl,385.000.
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled traditiona l st yle 3
· hd rm. ~ ba th home featuring large
recreation room & 2 patios. Living
room has attractive beam ceilings.
fireplace & french doors·leading onto
b r ick pa tio . New kit c he n b it-in
a pplianc~s . Close t o tennis courts .
sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be
sold fully furnished S420.000.
IAYNONT
We have severa l fine homes
with pie r & s li p
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J41 Bo y\•d•· Or •v•· N B b75 blbl
·~v!~!~~·
YFRONT L
Gorgeou odern Ho With Imported An·
Uque tails Throug ut. Handsome Wooden
Man , Huge "C ved Wood" Antique Pub.
any Spec · I Amenities. Automatic
Sprinklers, A r Conditioning. Security
System. Profes ionally Landscaped. Dock
Fro 52' Boat. Private Beach. By Appl. Only
$1.000.000.
TERRIFIC TRIPLEX
In Rapidly Appreciating Area Of Costa
Mesa. Adjacent To New Rede\lelopment
Area . Charming Rear House. Would Make
Great Owner's Hom~. Other Two Rental
Units Help With Payments & Taxes. Ex-
cellent Financing Avail able. $159.000.
759-9100
# 2 CotpPI .It Phne .... ~c..,.
PENTHOUSE ON WATER-rJ
'-""' -.............. c.-do .. ........ Ir ope• with ........ W.rlor
.-. JW. ..... patto -...... loet .
.., .......... $510,000.
BWJTIFUL MOVE~N CllllTION
Pert.ct N•• for f•HJ IMlyert ht
Me~Sllwes.Zstwy ..... a .. _. Mmy dee_......_......_ Wiil
.. c1 nltf ,... Ir ....._ Sltt,SOO.
611-1400. •
WEST IAY DUPl£X ....... , ................ _..., ....
.... ,... 2 ...,, ..... .Izw.
.... c .... ...., ........... ....
.-, ..... efeww1•t t' 'f Ble.
OM ........ e ....... P7-. .
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. llEALUT~TE
~ .. RfntM•. "'-"Y M.n.ttnwnl .
831~1400
ing_ S3'1'9.000. l w o 2 c a r g a r .
759-I 6 I 6 O w n e r / b I d r m a y l!!!!'~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!l-1 fl n a nee. 9S I· 1446.
IASTStOI
AXla Be auti ful tree ltned
street. Walkway through
nower filled yard leads
to s hake front home .
Cloucester Dr, Easts1de, 2
br condo w/dbl gar. pool.
clu b house. putti ng
gr een. Adult complex.
$125,000. Agt, 67S-5200 -----
Channing bay windows i---------enhance this 3 bedroom
c uti e . O ld c harm
abounds . Ha rdwood
floors , decorators touch
will-make this doll house
a beauty. Not many left.
Call us now.
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
C/MESA
UNITS
Eight 2 Bdrms at
1370,000_ Six East.side at
$37S,OOO. Four units at sns.ooo. Three houses on
a lot, $179,500. Call
645-9161
: OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/
HOME
INCOME!
VA , FHA TERMS : 3
Bdrm Mesa Vertie home.
tmm aculate. Sits on
(l) 4 Bdrm, 2 bath + 2 la rge lot. Owner may
more llnits, Costa Mesa. help finance_ SI 19.SOO.
12552 .OOOBdrm. bath TARBEll. REALTORS.
C ) 2 . l + one Call 540-1720 more tD'lit, Costa Mesa. ----
1109,9/50. Call for more f.o91t• Val.y I 0]4
deuils. 546-2313 •••••••••••••••••••••••
l ~ri-Re-11.LI E xec utive pool home. & ~ ~ Four br. Assume 103'.'ii ESTATERS AgentJean964-S500_:_ _
----H•tiwgtw leoclt I 040
1.-.oa 1.-d I 006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• FllErLACE. CLOSE
Cottage, near South Bay. TO llACH
2Br. tBa. $2915,000 Agt-Lovely 1 year old home
631 -7022,67~. attached. Low down.
1.-.00 Paxks• I 007 ~:1~y B~~sELt12~~t
•••••··~·•••••••••••••• E S T A T E
3 b d rm . l "'1 b a . o n I N V ES T M E N T S ·
Penins ula . Nr. wa te r 960-5402
w/front yard & ~a r.
O:*nerftnancing FIRE,LA~E. CLOSE
L1to ( agt l __ 7~.:_!5~ TO IEACH I
CMOtMI .. Mar I 022 Lovely 1 year old home
••••••••••••••••••••••• a ttached. Low down.
S'YGL.ASS OCEAN
VIEW
5bdrm. '595,000. lo down,
gd terms. 963-4758.
S02 Acacia: S337.000
620 Acacia: S286.SOO
2200 W at.erf ront: $580 ,000
Drive by, then call
Sara M arvln
Unique Homes
675-561111 : 67s-.6000
.Easy ter ms. $125,000.
Call BRICKELL REAL
E S T A T E
I N VE S TM EN T S ·
960-MO'Z
2900 s/f, 3 Bdtma, 2t,; ba. •••••••••••••••••••••••
*DOWN $11 000 rlOPllTllS kitchen , formal dining ,.,. s. I I 00 J 1'1)UAIL Pl.ACE 3 frplcs, lge gourmet ......._..._.
, r m , 'Ai acre lot, oak •••••••••••••••••••••••
Selle r's plans ha ve parguet floors. open San luan Capo. 155.000. 2
chang·ed quickly ' We 75Z· I f20 beam ceilings & much Br. 2 Ba. 1480sq. rt. 8 yrs.
h ave r~.du ce d th is more.Ocean·Golf course old.Agt541·5032.
SUPER Madison model views trom every room. in prestlgtous Wood· ,,._ s:no.ooo 2Br. Cabana & trlr. 3 pvt
bridge Est a t es from L.J-e.._. 1041 ~porta..dt IOH 447 Ave. Cres pi, San bchs, pool Ir fish'ng pier_
$189,000 to I.he kive-away ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C le mente. 492-8084. Slt ,900. 4119-3916
price ot Sl78.000. Call for CA~-·TTHIS THl......S. o -11 " 1 ~ p i ( 1 h wner w1 cooperate M bll ho f det ails on thia super buy, BEST BUY in Laguna anor.in c vlllta o us with brokers. o e • me s.P-e or
flexibletennsloo! Assume S'T0,000 1st or gree_nbell from this'"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! rent, S2 , E.st e. CM.
this spacious 2 Bdrn spacao~~ 3 bdrm .. 2•.~1:: S200.873-7'787.640-9900
~hr1dge
Real1u
55 1·3000
4t?t8arnnca P\wy. lrvl.af'
* •DEEIAELD!
Larges t mode l in
Deerfield. The Pla n S
ddne as never before !
Pool. spa, magnificent
decor and landscaping.
All this It assume a high
loan balance. Call now •
condo . near everything b a th End Un 1 t S-"-
Only $110,000. townhome Offered at C1,I t.. 1071 DE ANZA BAYSIDE L-~ l.l. 1249,SOO. Agt, 640-s:i60. ••••••••••••••••••••••• VILLAGE ---IYAtiW~ Located on e xclusive 497.17 I cu•_.... ·v, •W Ba y IN /pools . s p as , rw... · .u•-Breathtaking panor amic marina , etc. A beautiful
2Br, Cabana .tr trlr, 3 pv 1 block to ocean. As· ocean view of Dana dbl wide coach. 2Br, 2Ba bchs. pool & fishing pier sumable Sl.52,000 loan at Harbor. Spectacular
$19,900.499-3816 t errific inte rest rate customized 3000 sq. rt. s + d en. Only S4S.000.
This duplex is pnced to Bdrm +retreat. 990.000 <714 I 673-1331 , 300 E.
YBYCllATIYE sell at ~.000. No quali· in upgrades. Assumable Coast Hwy, N.B. Other
NO QUA.!-:;_NO POINTS fying required 1 o ..., ~ f i n a n c i n g units also avail. Assume lAJ INTERES1 .......,. CAA ..._..I A 'd --
*
M>T.J,ol<IV • ...,_., veni 8 B · 4S' b'I h'd LOANS! Lovely 3br, 2ba Cote Realty Calita. SJC. 71H96-SZ7S. •J•. mo 1 e 1 e ·
+ den. HUGE MASTEi & ln•·"'slm""n t Open House l·SSunday away home. PoPotla 6 SUITE. 2 poolside yards •"' ~· -----------milh South Rosarito
S20K down or s ubmi _ 640-5777 Assum e 8 ~~ loan . 115,000lirm. Patio. cust .
trade-will consider 2bdrm. pool, walk to shed . beaches. pool.
\\\lodbrtdge LIASI Ol'TIOM. schools & shopping. Bike restaurant . 499·2080 or
640-99tl6 days 494.505· Duplex-Two 3 bdrm. 2 to beach. Parklike' set· 494·0567. Reallg eves Sl.99.9150~r/Agt bath. patio, balcony. dlb ting. Owner may carry
551·3000 ,---------e ncl . garage, ocea n reduced to 183.000. Chris i-----11111•--
1t?0 8 arranca l'kll~.lnin<' Bea~tiful lrv i~e Cove view. Steps to beach. Handlir661-8Ul0. BAYVIEW __ __ _ _ White water view. pvt S27S.OOO. Terms. 97S-0888 -UDO PENIN
streets. Guartled gates or 962-22:20. S-. Am I 010 Delu.xe mobile home, 2 * *UNDER lOOM! s 8 r . 3 1;1, B a . p oo I ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• yrs old. Pass by ••2 El
Sl,S00,000.494·54:.l OpenHouseSunday Paseo, L ido P a rk . Yep! We've just listed 2
condos in lrvine·both
with enclosed garages
and both have nexible
ter ms and are priced
below $100,000! Call for
details. HURRY! e ~ANCH
Rf A LTY
5'.11 2000
-M;w C.... ~ s=f i!°a~~ A N $ 8 0 , 0 0 0 149
•
950
·
Crescent Bay. Tota Comerlot,oceanview HOUSE! CANNERYVlLLAG E
down payment S.S0,000 441 Redlands Ave_ 2 Brn 2ba. Finan cing
Assumable loan l4«r. Owners asking $275,000 3 Bedroom, 2 car garage. avail. 165,000. See at 700
Call Owner/Bkr. 953-055! Sea led Bids Probate large lot. by owner. Lido Park Dr. 122.
or 76CH88S sale later 547-3182
• Whelan 1/538-8611. l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I We have other mobile C Kruse homes from $22,000 & up. Real Estate --_:_ -9'/J'YoAH••h WaterfrontHomeslnc.
2 H0USES Wood panelled, 3br con· Realtors 631-1400
Lalle Fond I 055 Nwpt ffgt.s _ Owner fin. do, end unit on Green-I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
**VALENTINE' Onl y $169,000 both. belt .193.900.54S--0337 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-9628 Laguna ' Beach mobile
Your· special someone ----------Tnfflt I.Oto home, steps to beach.
will love lhis beautifully LUXURIOUS NEWPORT HEIGHTS •'••••••••••••••••••••• lbdrm. Iba. new crpls &c
apPointed 4 Bdrm. 2-sty NIWDICOI Charming 2Br. "'1 Ba, lg drps. pool. laund ry ,
d e t ach e d h o m e in Beautiful in and out with lot, cul-de-sac. $167 .000. 2••tieMIW s h ops. many xtras
Irvine's Col)eg~ Park. beamed ceilings. sk) Ownertagt.646-2671_ CUSTOMHOMIS S pace rent S375 /mo
U pgrades galore a nd lights. In a woodsy set TOsaKTROM 114 ,750 offe rs . Call
askan,g onJy ting with atrium. m ature MEWPOIT CUST Botb in excess of 3000 sq C714)49!M635.
65 000 tre es and greener y THREE beautirul condos rt with 4 bdnns. central ----------
Ac ross fro m t e nnis available.Dirrerentloca· air , gr eenhouse win· hProptrty •1350
courts. Very private with tions. Pool. tennis. spa. dows. vaulted ceilings. 3 •••••••••••••••••••••••
a spa. Spacious 2 Bdrm & Close to beach and Hoag I 75• -·e.._OMT den, formal dining rm Hosp. fireplaces and many -............
and coordir:ated neutral C /21 =rt C•. a menities. Open Daily 12 OCIAMSIDI decor. A beautifuJ home Lill dusk. Doe Run. (Orf 36 UNITS. Elevator. 0~& for the perfectionis t ! i----'---7-'"'-7__ Newport Blvd> and north aoo.ooo:s.'WI0,000 COMK> $149,SOQ, 0 _ & VIEW--of 17th.> -Prices from win handle. Bkr.
WAs 11_ .......______ ,,..,_ S264.9150tol276,9!50. t -433-17230ceanside
lBE'DROOM +lort --..-s 3br. +den, 3ba, 200 CAUFOalMFO. ah&J'l>end unit Ille. le•ors Kings Pl. 10o/. financing. 64._7211 183,9/50 67Ut00 Call for appt. 646-7590
C /21 M.wport C•. CHOICE
o 1a11UcW rrop1rty I 600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
JASMIME CIEEtC Absolutely spectacular
ocean view from la r11e
balcony. Decor ator s
own home. 3 Bdrms, "2
story. Tennis. pool. spa .
LOW DOWN 'YMNT.
Innovative New program
allows you to buy your
h<1me even if you have a
very low down payment.
Little Ca.c:h Needed I Call
ror an appt. w/one or our
invest ment counselors today.
Don't le Left 09'
___ 7'_0-6_7'7_6_7 __ MltU-Viejo . I 067 BUILDING LOT
(•-------~··••••••••••••••••••••• C le a red and ready! l llSTIUY As-.L.09fl/J% Desirable Penin_ Joe. /JD.NIGEL
OAILEY &
ASCjlJ[IAHS
:· :
C/21~C•.
76M767
Costa Mn. 1024
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
HllGHT'S AlllA
348 E. 16th Pl
$109.SOO
'llCED FOi QUICK
SALE
Mo 9••1. ~,roble1H ......
Owner will help finance
this 4br, 2ba. Huntington
Beach Beauty. 127 /B'l'
inte rest rate available
loo:
Hwry 'nk W•'t Lost
-WALMUTSOUAIE De lightru1 3br, 2ba. steps to sand. Oori't wait.
Nice2story21:1drm "C" w /c ountry kitc he n. Call CarUordetails .On· ---------
plan. Freshly painted , cathedral ceilings. many ly $169,000. A fWWWMC IUY
central air. Priced below upgrades:' Earth tones. REAL ESTATE STORE Exceptional value in thi$
comparable sales for im· Sll8,000i70..5934 67S-li71 charming 3 Bdrm home. med. act.Ion. a .soo. -----------on R-3 lot. In prime loca-
CAU 644-72 I I ~__. •----1069 llAUTIFUL ! · tion, near schoolsrfand .._....,r-• -Spacious clean Portofino tennis courts. Pe ect
' s ' • . ••••0•·;;
222
·;:.35th••4••7St•.5••0•0•••• in Harbor View Homes. st.rter borne or invest·
-Prestigious family area -ment prilperty. m.950. t nr Newport Center. Com· .
' • Good buy. Excellent munit y p ool a nd
location. Near ~ach . c lubhouse. Ready for don osen
f t .t il• !.._
... ; . :··
ltfAl lSIAff f lCfl\.fotCf $1NCC 1'4f
Newport IMclt Busy comer in NB, near
Hoag Hosp: Existing
2000sq ft bldg & plarui for
101ooo.q ftolfices. S50 Old
Newport Blvd.
611·7300 . .. ...
... ,,.,.,., zooo
••••••••••••••••••••••• Super clean 2 Br 1 Ba.
cute litUe hQme. Owner
anxious. Chuck Spiller .
631-1.286 At$129,tOO
~ GOLDENWEST
LOCA TIOM park, st.ores. Fee ground. happy living. Seperate . . n~ $142,000 assumable lst. area for teenagers. in· . .Al'P\.I y AL1IY LOCA "" Cbuck Spiller63H .21116 I aw s . guest s o r 731-3111 497...tMS Nearnew4-Ptd. 2bdrm.
~-EALTORS
3 bdrm , 2 ~ ~ba . In hou sekeeper: $299.000 ---------• 2 bath each unit with
University Park. Liv~g fee. Owner may carry **Olde Justin . fireplace. enckleed patio,
REALTORS ~ ... ,<f'1 f ASSOCIATES room looks onto maJOr 2nd. double 1ara1e. $115.000.
greenbelt. Many extras,•---,-------• C /21 M.w,..C•. rr you appreciate the Bill Grundy, Rllr .
NEW CONDOS • I.
Ins ide laundry room ,1---------i 11..a 1..161 looks and quality of days _17_5_-f_l_ll_. _____ _
protected patio. nice • H ..... v.... -gone by-you1J love this
sized lot. Owner will hetp Ocean vu, 3 Bdrm 21,; Ba. ASSUME La LOAN immaculate 2 bedroom
finance. 3 car g~,000. 1 Bdrm condo. Close to ho m e . T 11 e roof ,
POllfflSTOIS ~ h ardwood noon, sun· IASTSIDI C.M. Split Ownership Pro-• H 0 a g H 0 1 P I t a 1 · room balccildes and to
2512Scmta Ana Ave. gram allows you to buy a Comple.tely furn. Pool 6 m ucb more-a II ltt a
2 BR, 2~ !>.. contemp. home without negative spa. Securl\y . Move parklike letting. Call for
design.-nte.ooo. cash flow with o ut 719-9221 beforuscrow doses. detallund your pel"IOll•I
646-5096 646-6093 management problems. C /ZI ............. c.lr. lnlpedjoa.
Mesa Verde Villa Condo. using minimum down 7664767 payment! Sta.rt your nest llST Y A&.UI W7,000. 2 Brdm, 1 Ba. edg today. Call for more .... ~, Newport Htta by Owner: N e a t & c I e a n . " '"._,,.~ 2 b r , w / 2 db I I• r ! Information. Cliff ff C d z 0-•ner/Agt.551-C21 't52'CAMPU51\c..~IRVttfE aven on o, 9210,000. thm.91 ~ ~ bdrm +den, Sl!l,500. ---------•
A 1 .. ·.·.·.
~ .11
NeO.W.VA
L..w Ooww flHA Super S Bdrm l~ Ba
family home, close to
Tustin Ave • Santa Clara. Prime area, seller
will i« crHtlve. Offered
at •.taO. 540-3111
·~
'CHICITHISI Larr. •Jilttt. Last one1-~~lmlllll!llllllll-•I --------~~~~~ Att•lilll TAllOVB 111/2% LI .. ,.._. IHI ava lable out c'A only 10. MIWUS1tee ,., .. , 0..1"11:11\.,...& _ })~ hS• .... 11111: ... a.e.t ....................... Commmdty pool, lcwely Bayfroat, a rare dtuce "11"' g\lit l'CIU ~~ C-. ~ 11•• COSTAMISA1S 4 mos. new! Zbr. 2ba. ,_......,. AIOr'-t nelthborhooct. R.H .R. to tnvell ud own (not ....,..,GA,..,o,, ... __ ••-IUY condo, completely up· -Ast,mTIDO. lease) yvurown private .• .......,.. ~"""' " ..,.
avrmR graded with custom WOGDSCOYI . qu.iet a Bdrm bayfrwt ...,':"~~~ _%
I L 0 C AT I 0 N · drapea at carpe.t1n1. DUPLll & •UIST BYOWNER·RarborVtew home, wlth room to
TERRlnC cathedral ceilint•. pro-COTTAM Carmel, IBr. IBa, lam IJ'OW. Pkbn :rounelf In I H ( M S A F I
ISIZE-llllOSQ. PT. fentonally landscaped HO.• DOWM "" . •.oao. WUl carry a bl,., c91Dpd Hvin1 . I I I 1• r IDOUBLE GARAGE wltb prh . pat\o , new loeD at reu. rate. room.-.. _.,._ ta• W/OPENER Outra~eout 2br, lba, Mf._or..._19'7 ...,.. ~ .. •u•. ,.. ' M IC R 0 0 V » N . pool/1,.1 Won't last, call OW1M'f' • unit. SlryUlhta. Int at yuur own sandy
DISHWASHER now. AuUca•Doan/WindOws .... -------• bHch and 0Yerlooldn1 I AME ll R I 1, ITRASHCOllPACJ'OR Beamed Cellint. Frplc. ,_,..far a .. to 41' I' I I r
./AIRCONDmONER New ICltehea /Bath =· 'ftt kltcben af· l
IHUGE WALK·IN T=~~A sm,oaobyoww. QaJt vi•• -:.~-::r'i:!r. I s 0 IU T I' ..... ~•ln l•*Jnal¥e.He
CUlll:'l'I c1mlllla. at ·~~ In· US-IM4. ftel •t.-U paUO, from wldell 1" * ... , ~cs11D1T DRIVES --1 ~ •a11 •u... _,,. __ non_....-____ "'•• ,_....... ................ :=• 1• I I I .. ~ tttt'*• • 'ftc11tMM ...... ~ ~ POOL• ACl1Zll ·-~ .,. ~ - -'" ~ YoU '°' • --...... 'w&.!.ap .. .., mil all often ! Don't TM1•S11A&. dueQ.c.IJefta.t~-oona -~ ...... Walt,C.UNowformore DauPallltduPlalbr,J ,_. ... ....._ ' SL t VA H I c 111 •1 a r 1 l:llor1nalbl. .. tlPP'I'. 1 brlower.... • ' • a o .. ' ...._ I' I I I I' • ~--::, = •W.WUONIT. ~lftln£-.c8J f.!!..!.:....1:=::.'~~ ctfAIMll. SUPH .......... ... ... ...,. COITAtimA IULlllJIWL ::'=.-' -1s-i. ::!:i..' T I IM I -I I 4Mt
...... ~U:•to ------)_~!!!: l!!·!J·~lA!!~l!. ~O~l!!S!!D~I!!~!!. -~i11,;.ll:lli1_~.IA·TI·'· ~4':."° =. ~ '::~ .... 714 ...... .... ......
..
/•
••AC•I IHIMt UIAILI Priced 11 $1000 pr 11rre, free and
clear O*nCt "'1 hes to fxchanae
for commerc• al ndu ·trial Water
well on Pr'OPt"rtY
712-ltOO
u f I t .~. Monday. February 2, t911 DAILY fttLOT Cl.,.. ...................... ....................... ....................... ~ .... JU4.,.... 1144.,.... U441N1-•V I I··~ .................. IAI~--..... .. . ................ . ...................... ....................... . .................... .. , ....... -. .... _ ......... -
,... y c .. , ..... , ............. l•Hd Em ..,........ . ~-·
i..r. .... 1•rd, ., ..... ..
~:r.-·.,... ;Mi .... c.-..... aeu • .,. at• l•r•• ........... 11.n. m •
, .. , ..... ,., •0 • fl,i•t loc:aUoa. Only AHu.11 • .-t &elm /W> ....... Aft. 1eue ....... m .mo .. 1--------
SAITllDE, avail, 2/l. llACOM IAY Baatll. I Bil 2 Ba, dbl
J lw, l lief\lra. lilome, pvt car .... ...UO. •/Jac::tn·
INeeMI • ._.. ct. D'IO. '° nil 6 pool. l1'0 mo. Aft.
mo. -+ uWa.171-GQ ...... .......... ----------1 -!!. Side, 2br, l\.'i ba condo,
BAVP'RONT·Lldo l1le. deck + 1ar. 1525. Ann. JBr. 2Ba. $llOO mo. J..4~ 14$·9111. mo.IM.msm. ___ _.._ ___ _
-48r, l 'tlBa, fam rm, lg yd,
Wa&.erfnmt home w/dgck. kids OK, vacant. $600
2Br. l8a, t mo. IN 11000 mo. 841-31ZT
mo. 'ID-.... f7$-1Jl7 --------2Br. lBa, sinele car
~V!l!ll!!~!IJ!ll .. •.111!!12•11!1-garage, avail now. S'1S
I f ..J... ..... r bort'' mo .. erdnr /wt r incl. wiury um. a.uu. I 141·ll2'7
term. WOO per mo.
* •WOODBRIDGE
LEASES
1U191.0Wll J .. C.... 1111/W
f"Of'L.u 2 .. c... WHt-
CHAIDOMAY JlrC:..-Wiit-
ASH 21rC:..-WH;-
•CH Jlr~ Hitt-
POf'l.AI JlrDet.cllH $77lt-
CAIM&' Jlro.tuW $1Ht-
TeeotMntocr.oo......._ w •. ,.. ....... eo~u
'•'>1 lOOO
. ........................................... .
S.Cb JJ76~.._ ..............................................
UVE ON Golf CooTJ MIWLYllCOI. 8rUd D1W l 8drm • ._.
hll ocieea w ! a~-1 Br ,.. pd. ._1 t•r ......... ~ . ....,.;.,
be1 ~I ~~w/D, d/wU.... pool. Adun.'. leall1a, 11r1 .... MTS: ~ · -mo. MMon (IU) .,.. dJs: <TM>
1-~-~~~~~~-1·~~~~--~~~1 IMl-41Zl9"18.
Me JUI l .. T ..... 1 n Newl)' dilecw. ,.. pd.. THIWIMUUTW en e I 1 a r . . po o l , i.u.,, Aa.lt lllllt.a at af·
d /wuher. Adulu. fordable Mvtna. U • S "2·5011 Ir. Well deeorated.
1--------1 Olympk lbe pool, lilht• Id a..nil court, Jaeuzai, iet 2 Br. 1 Ba. with parlt like 1aDlhc:apln1
gara1e. patio, pool. Moat beautiful b1ct1. m
Adult.. No pett. 1801 ff H.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• J 5th. St. Newport Fromal0.~19
52'72 Bel1rave, Garden Height.. $450.142-7340 --------
Grove, 3 bdnna, 2 ba, 2 &i J Bdrm . Aph .
f/p, fenced, cpt, clean pacious 2 Br-$350. Pool It MOO·MSO. Kida OK, DO
847-m. la undry fac. S48·9SS6 pets. 964-Z:. or WJ3-2t'U
.. ~. I 1 from 12·1PM. Act .. no fee.
Uwf& J t 1d 3415 LOVELY 2bdrm . 2ba M ....... w• .&:oA.o
••••••••••••••••••••••• studio with rrplc, patio, z • J Br twnhH -.;,:;;m
Lux l BR/view. gar •. Mi.I· encl gar. Newly decor. $475. Yard. buih·lns, encl
slon Viejo. SSSO. 998-8128. U SO 1ar .. nr H. Harbour Z Br I ba, pvt yard, gar. ~3052 allowance. 840·88Cn.
)t"°'l>l>:iAll'l•!,f
Ill tu ! l
lZ«tO LIDO ISLE: Z Br , l~ ba n e w I Y d e c . 2bdrm. 2ba. ocean view, 2 Br. l \AJ Ba. SOO. 610 Jo ---------
......... l'l~~~~~P'!l!llp,~ ho:.~~~.:: =~~:c ~-~al~ w a Y 1 E 's 1 de llmtk'w Mew,.+.._. JHt $150 /mo. Open House A n n st. c . M . No ~~~~hi~~-::. built·
CI .......... ,. t wport , ee 1 1.,,,. _ H_._ JJ4Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sat. 1/31, 10-4pm. 2367 children small dog con· 142•1652 IM-.. :S•l..ift Oceao A 8ay View, Realtors 13 ·'"""Mesa Verde, 4 br, 2 ba, ....................... Newport Shores Canal Paci/ic Ave, •211M. C,.M. sidered.Ma-T3". ---------
Ave •+htf·awmtna above the Arches By . frplc,din.nn,2cargar.J B_r 2 Ba at 17052 front4bdrm,3ba,newly 968-0080. 1----------28drm.2 bathtownhouse.
wear atore. undw1ch Owner. noo. 846-2821. Ed gewater . S900/mo. decorated, 2 blocks to ---------2 Br. Apt. Dishwasher. gara1e. near beach. MSO.
alilop • 2 Bdrm pt Alls SZlO 000 Avail. immed. Call Tobin ocean. 9112-61183. 2br. condo. fully secured. bbq, patio. $4.25. 99().1279. · •o:-000 aA . ' •••••••••••••••••••••• c~s Rlt ..... 1371 luxurious clbhse lots of "'-"S ,_ ~ ...,13 J d ---------IDI -· · u ume 1....&-...1 J206 ~v y._. Lua Harbor View Hme · · ' '" . ...._.,.._."" u Y Dl7.• lit To. at 1~ R ...,._ C . -3br 2...,b SHOO extras. reason. rent. Nr beach. Lge 2 br. 2 ba. forJO,n.OWC2DdTD. Two ·2 ...... apiatr~•••••••••••••••••••ft•• . a, I"... )J44 3br, 2ba . fam rm , (213)325-95Z2daysSam/· ~ II frplc. gar, yd It patio .
.-.00 .. l ~ 1 s Beach view. by owner, Vrly lease Newly dee 2 3bbrr,2ba.1112S ••••••••••••••••••••••• skylights . new cpt,lge My rna, (213)516-1992 _..,;;BtiB" S57S . Avail 2-S. Call ~ .~ fl€°:TlyGra€ terms.'•15'2 ___ br.2ba,fam.nn.2do0rs ~ach!it!:.~ TURTLEROCK Broad· patio , d bl gar, nice eves I wk n d s. APAITMIMTS 842-8329.
___ 1 0...... fro m S . Bay front . 760-UJ9l moor Plan I , 3 br, 2 ba. yards. 631·4842 or (714)631-4115 Beautiful garden apts. HOM€~ ,.a"~•-1111, • .,.00 974·5631, 83l·S3'79 din rm. fam rm. frpl, lee Answer Ad IJ408. 642-4300 Pool & spa. Adults. no 2. BR . I ba condo. Pool &
-----...-,... 41R. ZIA kitch, comm pool. Nr ~hrs. 2br. J t;;ba, underground petJs, heat paid. Jae. lmmac cond. $450. R.E. lavestments ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~--cWMw JJU Kids/Pets OK So. of 17th schls. ai sboppins. Xlnt. parking,jac. kidsok. will 1 Bdrm $390-$400 Avl 2/2. 962-~ 3333W.CoutHwy, NB S7500 Partner Wanted.'••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. No ...... ~ mon· CUSTOM ILT. con sider pet . """'"V d """9626 - -----p I S ' C d ba k St S600~16 ~ _~ __ anguar __ ._,,..,._ -Beaut. 2 Br 2 Ba, vlnt MM646 a m prings on o, 3br. 2sty, l~ . on par . · thly. Call: 494-9542 aft 4 br/den. ram. rm +. Broadway/Santa 'Clara, "
tennis, J>C?Ols. year ~und S 8 S 0 I mo . 4 O 0 \.'I SPM. WestcUfr-Dover . Call 751-7984 lBr. Small yard. Stove & location, SSOO. 963·2361 .oulPLU use: Pr1v. Exclusive, Heliotrope 673·8823 , BToro JZJZ . . 646-4844 days 548-3117 . .-refrig. Adults. no pets. ~!~·Z158eve.!:..
1714)861-MISS 675-0774 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Customized smgle family eves/wknds. 3bdrm. 2ba, like new. air. S3IS. S48-l377 Westside Costa Mesa
Needs some work .
S22.000 yr income. Full
price 1225,000. Owner
will carry I~ Interest
w /980,000dn.
A U€HIG€ q_ ____ ~_HOM€\
R.E. Investments
sm~w. Coast Rwy. NB
64'""46
. 3bd 2ba condo l I home. 4 br. 2v. ba . utilities except elec. All of Sf* Spectacular Ocean & City "i\mc1 f 'cen ~a rormal din rm comm E. Bluff Condo. 3bdrm. amenities. Children ok. Newer 2 Br 2 Ba. $425. ,,.,...., Z600 Ught view. Lrg 2 B~. 2 ~I al car~~rn~op~, pool teo'nts.' frplc : 2~ba, din rm, fam rm. Nr. S.C. Plata. S500. Avail. approx. Feb. lst.
•••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Ba. with formal dintng. d' L • • .-,51~ 551-IMO 6'7S-&585Agt. 964-1688 ask for Alta or 760-1418 or 548-8675 eves
Beaut units, Zbd 2 ba
F/P's. washer dryer, 30'
Gar's S48Slt up. 846-9501:
5021 Dunbar. A scenic Oregon Coast. I $975 mo. Call Anthony KI a o ,.. SS IO I m o . ----·----------------1
Electricity. fenced. out-1 Wlidys 642-5757 Eves & SSZ-08tl after 4pm & Lease WOODBRIDGE MEWPo.TCUST 983-6940after 6pm orwknd.s. •MltlMEIEACH•
st.anding view. accessi-I Wknds~.· wll:endl. Twnhme 3br, l""ba, :dnt 114R.EEbeautiful condos • S47S~ Br. 2 Ba. Br and new l & 2br, 2ba, bit-ins .
ble,ownerdZ-2499 I HOMEFORRENT rec. priv. tennis, pool. available.Dilferentloca· ApwMwtsFw .. slwd Townhouse All built·ins. sk yliles. patio . gar.
llmmac. S ~R So. or hwy. 3 Bdrm. 1575. Fenced MTS /mo. 7S2-0773 d . lions. P~. tennis, spa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rrplc, lndry rm .• carpart. Adults. 1410 & up. 49Z2
X Int neighborhood. yard 6 garafe. Kida 1rl az-73115eves. Cbe to beach and H'oag C.,_cW Mer 37ZZ Adults only, nopel.s. Edinge r 84 0·3808 .
IAAMAPALI SHOllS Sl200/mo. 536-1453 peu welcome. 964-2SM or ' Hoep. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TSL Mgmt. 642-6221 or 846-6234 MAUI I WJ3-2f7l A_. no fee Northwoods 3 Bdrm. 2 C /21 Mewport C.er Oceanfront l Br. patio. 642-!60.1. _ _._ 1 Maui's most lux. resort 4 Br 4 Ba. vu. pool. pv · .... · Ba .. Fam rm, frplc, 7 .... 767 frplc. gar . adults. no lbdrm .. vuuu, 1425. Poo ·
•--::::::=:---!condo on 700' of white 1 beach. Cameo Shores F .. t•Y.-.Y J2J4 dshwsbr. patio. No Irids pets. pvt st. $600/mo * 2 Br. Condo near SC jac . Eves /Wkends : MISTOIS I s a nd b eac h a t CdM · Sl900/mo. Bob ....................... or pets. Avail now. S7SO THl-.....S 673-7787.640-9900 Plaza, SA. Pool. s pa. 848·3805: Dys: 879-8903
Z1%DOWM Kaanapali. Built resale I Xoop631-121fl6. Agt. 3 br exec twnhse. up-914·2* or WJJ..2971'. Agt. Beaut. 3 Bed. end un}t. CostoMna .3724 S480-SSOO No pets. child ext E1..:_ __ _
Sharp tri..a. •. •·aturing of 4 units possible at last d graded, gar., pool, kids NQ fee. closedto pool •ct
1
enms. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OK ~3232or 641·1460. 3 BR. 2li'z Ba twnhse. fplc . .-.. '"" d years prices to qualified 3br · 2ba, c~/ rapes. gar, OK. $..'585. 983-491 Bran new cpt. ose to separate gara1es an buyer. lndivdual sales f rplc. dis hwasher , RIMY'ALS schl Ir shopping. Avail SUSCASITAS S475-SS2S 2 Br '''°"Ba gar .. ch.iJdren&pets OK.
pallos.Newroof,carpets will be conside r ed. S700/mo.MS--Z752 4br.2ba,houseclean.clse 2br.2ba Sl62S ·immed. Drive by 1757 Furnlbr.apt.S32S&up. Twnhse. Near new l600mo.AND.2BR2 Ba. ::~r:r:::Sn~T~g w~: Prices from SJ.29.~ to 2Br lBa Home Old CdM to fr w y Is hop Ping 2 br +D2'1'l ba S800 Vista Umbrosa. Then Encl. gar. Adults, no Small 'child. pet OK. All gar, chjldren OK. I mile 13~ % . Askin" $165,000. SS60.000. Completion of b d .. I . . 1695/mo. 968-0079 3 br 2'h ba t90C> call pets. 2110 N'ewport Bl b ll ·ins. ga r .. r r PI c. to PCH. S47S mo. 964-2917 " construction Dec. '80. ea !"e ce 1 1 n gs • ---4 br+bonus2\12ba $875 C /21 Mow-rt c--S48.4968btwn8&5PM patio/backyard. from 9AM-SPM. For more details call , Only those clients de-Swedish frplc. sunny ter· tt.t .... .._. 3240 ~ r-"'"' TSL MGM.T ., ... 1603 ----------
540-1151 monstrating fina ncial race. wlk to bch .& ••••••~••••••••••••••• 760-6767 S32S Mo. Deluxe Mobile ._... · 1 & 2 b<lnns. cottage style
.. ~ S• HERITAGE capability wi ll be con. mark~ Garage unava1I. s. blks to ocean. Elegant 2 ---home. Mature adults. No 3Br, 2Ba, new condo. Dis Ii v • n g . ch i Id . 0 K
sidered. Contact Richard No children or pets. $675 bdrm, fam nn &t den, 3 BR 2 Ba. gar. blk to pets. Quiet. secure. 1991 · hwasher. stove, laundry s.135-$350 /mo.
Dorfman. F&E Invest-mo. 673-7335 (S72S mo). Plush crpts, beach.18116yrly. Newpart Blvd. 646·8373. hook -up Pool Lovely ,847·3020
'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ments, 841 Bishop St .. Ste 2'n ba, cedar & glass. ___ 631·7~: ~-5099 -------area South Coast Ter L •-a. 3l4I
. . REALTORS
1925. Honolulu. Hawaii Dbl car pvt gar, fully Lux . bglo for neat, empl · · 04JIMO __.. -UIA •YL d Lge Bluffs twnhse . 4br, ..... ,_ 'd race. S unflower & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 96813. (808 ) 524-6142 VK'-"..,,. malnt. Y . Adults. no 833·8600 3ba, bright & clean. lge nonsmuouug gent. ma1 Bristol. Children OK. Lrg studio. very pvt. S395
Leasehold. Cute single story cottage pets. lnqulre at S27 18th. service. 548-71~ u so/mo. Call 838.8084. 1n c 1 ut'i' I. l>a r 1 Y n e. •----------· convenienttoshopping& St. 714 /!J60·6331 or patio. close t o pool.---------..,
Appr 2"'7 acres of nat tran s portation . 2 960-5112. cho ice area. Walk to llt 2bdnn.Trailers.$200 9.5 497-3629,661-1162.
forestacreage"'1mileofr bedrooms.t&OOpermo. 't523C.otPUSDl:IRVl9'£ schools " s hopping. & up + security. No Bdrm B -----.... Interstate H1·-ay 140. HOME FOR RENT Sl200/mo. 644-0350 children or"'-· 642-91J3 Lrg 1 l a upper l Bdrm. convert den. New ·~""' -----------•--------=:._...· ---encl. gar, $350/mo. Mesa cpts/drps, nr Heisler MIWPOIT llACH Property 30 miles East or 4 Bdrm. SS95.• Fenced S Br. 3. Ba. fr PI t . d l.. 9805 l . bch dlt +du-'-on the water In Klamath Falls. Oregon. yard Ir prage. Kids It cpt/drapea. fenced yard. Harbor Vie w Homes ltaullatl• .._.. 1740 e ... ar. 751-v msg. Park. mam vu. a s.
NewP';';t Beach . We Good road access year pet.a welcome. 964-2se6or w/d book·up. $150/mo. prlme loc. Exec. ~br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S36S·S4SO· 2 B 1 B A ts no pets. 9&00/mo. 499-l60l
specialbelnincome pro-ro und. SS600. Write 9'73-2971.Agt.,no fe..!.:..__ 497·3230.&-ZD 3ba.3gar,S1200/mo.incl. S37S/up l-2 bdrm. ~I. Crpt.s. d,..ps,rP.u!.' ,J>ood
d in th' gardener, call 8· 12PM Jae. adJt. 11992 FJonda. be In 5 11 pel ""9.-"'...... 1152 ucin& properties ts Mustang Pines, Rt 1, Box 3 Bdrm. l ~ Ba. Up-Lovely 3bdrm condo with 6'4·5554 H.B. 842-2B34or842·3172 am c gs. ma •••••••••••••••••••••••
area. 339. Bonanu Ore. 97623 graded. Enclosed yard carport. Call between 8 & ----OK. 603 Condo 2 Br. 2 8.a. on golf C /21 M.w,.,.C.tr orphone71464S-816S with jacuni. double S daily 645-3940 ask for ILl"5COMDO IFum . lBr.Apt.Adultson· -TSLMgmt.&t2-t co ur se I nc Id s
760-6767 640.5357 Once in a life-time oppty. Har~r crn~~!!~~~~l Co garage. Near shopping. R.ay. 3 Bdrm condo in Bluffs ~~~-Near beach. Westside 2 Bdnn. stove &I washer/dryer . rrige.
R ockledge Ma nor in ' t6SO. mo. 213/596-7202 or w/laundry nn & frplc . · --refrig adults no pets. ~75 49'2.o700.492-Z796 ,,......,-' Colorado Springs area. 714 /960-7S58. WOODlmDGoE Avail. 3/1.1125/mio. Call lniM 3744 carport. $360.111 W 18th -----
2"'1 acre estate includes StudioAptl~blocks from Rich earthtone colors, EdatT804r35. gt. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• St. "a".645-1926 ,...port.._. 3169-8 space putt -.SK equity,
owner w/trade for your
Oranse County Proper-
ty. 545-1449
carriage hse. 3 c ar beach ai stores S32S ulll ATlHlllACH 28~· 2Ba ~com.er 3 Br Cllffhaven w/2 car Furit./unfurn Condo. ---ba -d 1 I •••••••••••••••••••••••
I 2 8,r. 2 Ba. Large yard. unit, landaca.-. pat10, · North Irv. 2bdrm, lba. 2br. l'-!i . a u ts on y. i;::~=~~;;:,',O:,~ 6c:i~ pd.494-3324 Ref's & dep. No pets. sto'tle, refri1, wshr/dryr, gar. Lge yrd ~verlkg Availnow.63'7-tOOl. Crplc. patio . washer PARK NEWPORT
for more details Dianne Coste Mesa 3224 1525. 842-&'WO&i 536-2190. auto dr OIJllU', lse, adtts nature cent.er. Kids /pets -I dr yer. carport. 1410/mo i RAa--•v Crain•-Assoc. R.E.•••••••••••••••••••••••Nr ocean.Ma.in St.lrpier. S417S mo. Owner/agent OK . $975 /mo. o r lse &.aCJm-llNdl 3741 543 .. 0967aft.4. COUNTIYCLUI
rvvlU"-..A "' S 631-515.S w /opt t o buy . Dys ••••••••••••••••••••••• --~ Near So. Coast plaza, 3 <714) s:J&.5400 2 Br: lba, ~ K~x. t. 3br. 4ba. t750 +sec. dep. 11w'OOl6 494 0395 S d' I TV ·d THE VI CTORIAN 2Br •" b d year old fourplex with ---------E .~1de. ,SS9S ut1I in c. Mature cpl. 536•5031 or Woodbridge Lee -4br, Zba .,._.. ,ev · tu 10, we. spa. . ma1 . Singles. 1 .. 2 e room · 1 d _ _............._, Dr1veby,call 645-7009 (213)......,""&9 atri·um/yard, commty service. phone. SlOO /wk l 11'Ba w/gar Adlts apts.&townhouses. community poo · an ..,. .....,_,.. JtOO _..,, THllLUffS 499.2227 cpts, drps, bltns.'fncd yd From $429 644-1900 recreation room. located W..e.d ..._ _______ ••! lall:e, pool, tennis, 1875. C h a r m i n g 3 B r water pd. 636-4ti?Q. -----
d h PVT PARTY Non realtor 3 BR 2 Ba. carpets. mac ----'. Qui"et com· ..-' in c ul-d e-sac s t y le ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br condo. lyrold. Im-559-8476 townhome.Availnowun· Mew--'hach 3769 667 v1·cton·ast.S385. Oceanrront for Wint~
courtyar atmosp ere . · · d fi I ce d uble "vnu tU 6/30/81 on mo tp mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Rentals. Furnished & u · One unit 3 Bdrm with wis hes t o purchase r apes, arepa · 0 \>lef'. close to frwy & W 0 0 DB R IDGE basisatonlylS75permo. Spectacular Oceanfront. tbdrm adult condo. sec., furn. Broker.675-4912.
aundeck, three units 2 Bluffs Condo. 3Br. 2Ba garage. fencedJ ard. RY s hops . Avail. now. "CREE~IDE" Wiiiow Calltoday64G-S560Agt. Avail. now. 2-4 Br. Con· pool. spa. S.C Plaza ---------
Bdrm. Great assumable s ingle s tor y . (714 ) access.lll&Smo. SSOO/mo. 962·7278 or Plan. Avail. 2-15. Prof. do.673-SURF. area $450/mo.646-0686. NO FEE! Apt. & Conctp.
loan al under 1~. Price 346·77~ Eves Mr. Wright Roy Mce.11e, lltr. 960-3214 landscaped model home N e w P o rt I s I a n d ------• · rentals. Villa Rentals.
1242,500. 144-7020. 541-172' ------1 on the park. 4Br 3Ba. 2 Waterfront 2 Br. lower BALBOA BAY CLUB 2 2bdrm. Zba . frplc. end 675-4912 Broker
....... 4bdrm, 2ba. new crpts. sty. F.M .. Din. Frplc .• duplex. NO P ET S. bd. 2 ba 'I.!""· Sub-lse. gar,$450.Adults.nopets ,-------
••••••••••••••••••••••• stove, clean & in quiet Dshwshr. M/W. S850. No $595/mo. 673-2256. 642-4097; 642-4736. 673-2113. 2 Br. l Ba. Avail. now Mesa Verde 3 Br. 1~ Ba. area. (213)421-3339. ..... •. By appt. 964•2566. -r -Area of Balboa & Cout
Quiet cul-de-sac. Near A_; No fee. 9600/mo. 3br._ 3ba condo, Fem to shr w/same 3br. 2bdrm. cpts. drps. bit-ms Hwy. SS25 mo J . D. ••••••••••••••••••••••• schools. f1SO mo l5t & 3bdrm. 2ba. l /yr old. 2000 &" frplc. pool. JIC. rec ctr. twnhse in Park Newport. adults only. no pets . Vic pr 0 pert y Mgmt~.
..... ,. I •• 3I07 last. W\days ~9-2744. sq ft. frplc, gar, bike lo Irvine Grove. Super nice Newport T e rr ace. $290/mo. Cathy 751-6271. toria St. nr Brookhurst 751-2787 Af t Spm .
lingo
•.t"••tl
••••••••••••••••••••••• E .~ be h ms 5$1-8110 -~--partne--rs-h.i-.-p-in-te_r_e-st Charming 5 bdrm, 3 bath ves 64l..._.... ac · · · & clean. Largest mdl. 4 730-21651, 483-• 760-8847 eves. ___ _ $425/mo 631-6812 after 548-8044 ·
i n 6 /plu in N .B . bayfront with Jll' boat 1.ASTSIDI 3 bdrm, 2 bath,.S700. Br.2\1.z ~.llvrm.diningBIG CANYON LEASE -; 118 "'1 44th St . !Br 5pm. ---- -
S 00 B· 11 · d · rm , family rm. frplc, lge · 2 Br 2 Ba All Adwt rs> Owner/agt, 640-~96 . rtoat. 16 mo . 1 Lovely 3bdrm. 2ba with Refrig. stove . is -a ll e lec. kitc h. Encl BR 2 Ba. ~Mis Ir comm. rurnis hed. '"-' blk to 3bdrm, l'hba, nr new. pe~ Froin S42S P~\.
MO-llOOAlyl. Grundy. 675-6161. lrg custom reblt kitchen. h w as h e r . Donn a . patio. Small front yrd. lo pool. Avail. now. t90C>. beach. S4SO/mo. yr ly frplc. Newport Hts. area spa.'rerrige. & ds~shr id-.. ~=4 L..-.leadl 3141 ~~~~t:ea.fg~ ~il~'i~;· ~-9ltl. maintenance. Pools.ten· 85l ·08ll 673·8954· SSS0.5S&-500l. cld . Ac r oss fr om
2100 •••··~·~··••••••••••••• t6S0.1-756-3246.S48-0J70. 4Br.2t;;cargarage.large nisCOW'U.spa.s.Nrshop-Nwpt bayfront hi-rise LuxuryOceanfrontWeek-La r ge l Bdrm . Near Newport Beach Goff
••••••••••••••••••••••• Magnificent oceanfront --kitchen. crpt & dra~s ping. schools, frwy. $800 view or Cat alina i, ly. 2or 3 Br. Comp. rum. shops. pool. all utlls pd Course. Shown by app&.
Industrial cond os. home. Sbdrm. 3ba._lrg 'IHARBOR/BAKER area. dsh~sh r . SSSO mo: incl asso'c fee. 1st fl Village,2br,2ba,securi· incldlinens.640-4784. IBMMonrovia.548-0336. only.545--4855. i 1200-4100 sq ft. 12% decks. 2 frplcs. stained 3 B R 2 Ba. pool + 846-2986. last+secdep. Avail now. ty ·bldg. Dock avail. ---.-------r
financ:in&. Located In glass, $1800/mo thru 6/15 jacuui SB57 mo + util. 851-9489 S 8 9 0 /l e a 5 e . D a 1 5 2 Br. Fireplac~. garage. Newer 1 Br. with garage Westclifr. nwly deco •.
HB .tt FV Call ~ul o r •S2200 /mo yearly.great fa m i I y Beautiful 3000 sq ft. lge T60-lt33' S48-9094 $4 75 Call Eves & Adulls.nopets.S365mo ZBr.IBa.lrg.kitch.pa~· 5'5-fo57. · · -497-2042, 497·54!92. neighborhood , oa.vid exec. home, 4 br, 3 ca rf 4bdrm. l~ba. nr !;!:itage •eves _ Wknd.s. 213/430--4327. · 645-SS11. Ir encl. gar. $475. 642-21
646.3255 gar. 3 ba, idnt area o Park, no pets . .-... tst. Fantastic Bluffs. 2 Br. 2 •
IMwPw•rty 2000 t.cw,,.rty 2000 HB, *O. 9G-71MO last+ Sl!OO aei:. 830-8675. Ba $950 mo 20LS Vista $365. Coty 1 BR duplex, Studio Apt w/frplc & NEWPO~ ~GTSd~ BR:1
.. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-•••••••••••OCEAN VIEW condo. Cajon · ., w/gar. "'1 blktobch. ll8 patio.tmmo.2Br.1Ba Ba, no tc .. a ts,'!'
21 UNITS-TUSTIN
25 good rental units on 2.2 acres in
booming Tustin. Brings in over
$105,000 pr year. $400,000 d own and
owner will carry a contract for
$750,000 at 10%.
I UNITS WITH WAITIM• UST
Nice seacJous units with 3 bedroom
owners unit + seven 2 Bdrm. Cen·
tral Or. Cly location. Only 10.6X
Gross. 27% down wi ll handle and
seller will carry financing. Don't
miss thjs prime property.
PllMI POUIPLIX-
OCIAMPIONT
Unobstructed panoramic view,
stepa to beautiful sandy beach.
Own.er will carry.
fUSIY IUY• POUIPLD Spacious owner 's unit with
ffreplace. 5 car garage. Beautiful
tree lined street. Top Mesa Verde area.
~.1 "AIL PLACI ..,..Tiii
711-lfJO
rent or lse. New. luxury llllTOllACH Wdbridg new 2 Br. 2 Ba. 3 B 3 Ba SlOOO 401 36th St. Matureadlt. dshwar, frplc, balcony. pets. S400mo.644-6780 '
3 Br ' 2 Vi Ba. rr PI c. NEW 3 Bdrm , 2 ba Fam. rm. dbl gar. up-r. . mo. w /~ncl gu. S495 mo. In Adults. 2 br, 2 ha, new"
S7SO/mo. 963-2484 or w/frplc, fncd yard, grades. nr lake, lease Vista Suerte. 675-5930. A ...... quiet adult co.mplex d•"or pool Walk to $700/mo w /0 ardener. $700 /mo. 548-8684 640-Sl4& '-!II 1 / 1 bbq/L.I d "'~ · · 964-5354. ............... ,. Di It /St•·.&.. Eves Uafu J •id w poo ,spa. • n r beach. USO. Ev ....., . ......., c """Ill'· Newport Condo 3Br. 28a, ••••••••••••••••••••••• No pets. 2650 Harla. 841•29411• daysS48-'34l ':5~'!:-f Brio~ ~~fan~;. 3 BR 1% Ba. encl patio. 751·08'75 pvt spa, community pool, ..... ,_, I I • 3107 549·2.MT. •
'd.['N";, ~et.s 1002 new carpets, drapes, L1 ... 1.._. 1241 3 car 1.arage, adlta only, ....................... Bach. fr l Br. with loft. 2bdrm, Zba Veruill i .d. 979· 6996 fplc. Grdnr. $'750 mo.••••••••••••••••••••••• no pet.a . .,5.mo. 1st ai Nl (!e 3bdrm , 2ba . carpets, drapes . condo,peftthouse.~u ~~ io . . • 1&1-1•. aak for Jackie. On Tempie Terrace, lr1 lut. 972..ff109AM·SPM. tl50/mo. tiO June. Will fireplace. l370 It up. 213 t y ame~itles. imma
1-------~ --Liv. Rm. Din. Rm. Z Br. Bachelorette unit, lbdrm. furn.675-$110. Avocado. ltay1oft. Apg. 9550. Elaine-..o8SO.
•Clean 1 Br. Duplex, oft H•--+ 3242 Stove, ~1e, g~ra1de. nr Hoat Hoap. t325/mo. c ........ M9' 1122 ~7-y•ARLY ---·• • ... _. street parltln& quiet ,,,.... •• S'TOO mo. Utlls incl . C It • (714)•""' ""15 c. ._.. ... • .,... • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• '94--0154 a evee. .......,,. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• St · I• 1 6 2 be ~tobeyA:ocea
S3Z5mo.Nopeta.m-Ga WATER P' R 0 NT BIG CANYON. McLean Nice View, !bdrm. 2ba, 2 M::,1,n21Ba. ~~·apt. rrSolltr . .._,
*2 Br.l Ba. House with TW.NHM,, lrl 2bdrm, Lease: Oceall view 28r, Townhouse 2 bdrm, 2 a · frplc, beams. Pool It rec. area. 710 W. 1ara1e. quiet. $450 mo. Z~ba w/30 boat 1Up, all den, $'TJ.5/mo. no pets. b tb f l di I I a . s. no pets. r : 11th St WESTCUFP ZBr. LB NopeCa.~ rec: faellltlea avail. Dave.ActM4-72ll n:.,b. o;ba n n. Rieb rd 640-1850 ys. · · CoDclo. l'ool, adlta.
hJOO/mo . ...-. SJ'EPS TO BCR, , 2Br. tennls~imma/' !:!d. 175-eves. . Avail. Now 2br. 2ba, ,.... -mo. 714-laO '::;J':~':!s.P:~t~ WTRFRNT RENTALS IBa frple, St,000 mo. Adalta, DO pets. Reduced Lee 3 br 2 ba all new, 1ar. patio. £. 5'de M50/mo .,,._aft TPll.
sch9ola, santeoer lnd , JBr, Z'68a, hJ.50 mo. RllP~ to USO p e r mo . patio. *'50· Open Sat. ~ S..peto~. lmlllat.
... 541-119 2Br, l~Ba. '15Gmou. 145' •·La--Jbe .. ooomo ... Col!!.!'orthy 6 Co .. IG'7~1ria.$14oolll2. ....,.. Jl26 .,,.. ~~~~
boat doelt av•U. Ca o-... •-• .. · vwww. ..,. Mlle JIJ4 ,...................... • .. --. "----·
AM, (714)Mf.IOU. ~~n~~~;~·,1f, "",. beeef\-clale d.&plex ......... •••••••••••••• ~~· ~~-;:/1·8-&_A_C_H_...,.Y_l:_A_R_L_.,. MESA VEJU>I: 4 Br. 3
beth 2 tty, J car 1ar.
Grdnr. •· '114/T10-1804.
I Br I Ba. clea, bll yard,
'750/mo. SlOO cltnln1 ,.,. AQdlne Mt-4'10ll
NEWPORT HOHTS J br,
~ ba, .,. mo . ..,... ..
... ,.; ...... aftSpm.
Lale aomethlDI va1H-
1118t PlaH •• •d ID our Loi\ and P'o•ncl eol·
-· Tllat'I where peo-ple ..... ..., ... . ......... ., ...... .
WA r8Mllf nJ.m.-r• 4 bdrm, s betll. z level J ... I .. ._. llMtR ' lbdnn, a.A:a.lrlll. ltltRun L I...__. "'211 "/fr pie. MOO /IHH. Ne•lJ deter. c:Ju pd. .mta ...... ""' ll'ftlW -IJE; ... ....,..... • (211).,..._,..... ~l1ar.pool,d/•..W .• ,.,. JIJJ p1U• •Ha pore ~ ·····••IN••............ Adaltl. eo.911 ... ~................... _,..,.. (111)-1111.
in lllllllliqtm Ha,,,_, fte Aonl • 8eH\lf\ll , ...... 1,_,. _. I 8r. ... , _
Le ... optkllcmfutade beaeb. comm . All 8 rm WBft.Allft.LAM 1" a.. a..w1111..a. Newport a.acla term1. Brad new .... ....._.,. ... ,.., •/pool_. recre•Uon ...aa.NAdlllAfU.No jaftai. 6 _.... T9 e... "8w, 91r, • ""'·
C• ........ drapld.Ontlll9 ............ Jl6' ,_, .. /mo. $ ...... ~. eW. Ywtr-. ...._ __. !"'· Yltr-•-~ ....... ,.. ~t:'.:·· .... · ......, -----··-··.-.WWW , .... _ ............. VJSWllOllS: Pot'Saet • *•J ..... trJ. Vllwl. I_. unae. ._ --... 8 • ...._ ..._ .., -1 d:t: ..... ~.1••1Nrm .. , ..... ...,.--..... --·-·. ..... ·-• anti Imm ... T'= pool + jat, not M.,..._/mo: • .. ---,-. _. Maruret Dr. Mtt. ..,. •• ...._.. -
, 1 , •, , • o . c • 11 .,.,.., •-Alli• •• n r •· "--'M 11.4,9 IRI SQ. ... -
I
.Ap«tMHt5 u.fwft. Hofwh. w.e-. 4100 l..tah lo sa.r. 4300 Office a..tal 4400 I 0Mce...... 4400 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MewportlHcll Jl6t DOYOULMI Manover40 AIRPORT AREA. Birch MWnfllOMTAM
• ••• • • •••••••••••• ••••• M01'a.S7 to shr home. pool. & Bristol 225 to 750 sq ft. l8fT ALS
2 br, 1._, ba + gar. Hoag Weetly rentals from 184 Call6'2·l313 From C!IOO. No lease re-2 Rental Spe~ Approll. d & up. 646·7445. 2274 qulred.CaJISST-7010 550sq.ft.•up.lncluding Hos p area , nu ecor. Newport Blvd. C.M. · Need rmmate·M/F, 2S +; utila. $350 6: USO. 2450 open hse Sat & Sun 11·3, lge 2Br, 2Ba apt-CM. cat 0 .C. AIRPORT AREA Newport Blvd. Cos ta
4238 Hila r ia W ay , Ocean view Studio Apt. ok. ~398'7day, 953-8681 150 t.o 3000 sq. fl. or Mesa.SeeManager. ~/mo. 830-5875 S350. mo. 2306 w. Ocean-eve. elegant uec. space. No1----------1
front. 613-4154. lease req. 75&-8!r78. CdM Deluxe Su.ites, 1100 ·o-c•EAtRONr----.•ft-L•Y•!'l...:..:...::..::.......__:.:.:....::~ • .:.=..:~::...._-.. -.-5-0
1 Resp. roommate to shr 3 450 ft M50 4001 sq.ft. AC, ampl pkg, uUI
•--,,., br condo Woodbridge sq. · per mo. pd. 2ISS E. Cst Hwy. 1111..dOc~y ••••••••••••••••••••••• n90 & 1,!i ii Bir c h St . Ne wport 8'75-tlOO
Beaut tBr. 2Ba upstairs 4bdrm , 2ba condo on :;;~ es ut s. Beach. Agent541·5032. 1---------1
in Duplex. Wood beam North Shore or Tahoe. . ev . --•DILUDOMCES•
ceilings, frplc. enclsd Fully furn. S/min from Fem 25 + to shr 2bdrm Great Loe. Ample park-From 1 room up to 2300 gar . v./auto ope ne r . North Star. $400/wltly. 2ba apt E side C M. ing. 600sq rt. ~15/mo. sq . ft. Low rates . No
wash /dry. furn or un-957 -32:216. 5»31H6 Bert. 548...elSl de~ Spm. · · Call 494-6404, 494-7551. lease required. 2172 Du-
furn · ~ ' ... H 545 c.n FT Pont Dr. Adj. Airporter OC~ONT·ftLY ~· ""'.. ~ Excellentiy"" iocated on Hotel.l:D-3ZZ3.~l2. JBr. 2Ba. frplc. enclsd 2br. 2ba. condo, slps 6. tor-...t 4150
ga r . w/a uto opene r . wllt/bus to lifts, avail ••••••••••••••••••••••• l7th St,CostaMesa.Call WATERFRO~ .,..~hook-up. Call Mite646-9811 l0lt20 Gar. Storage only. RealonomJcs 67S-6700 n I
HUNT. HAUOUR Large Big Bear Cabin Costa Mesa S.O mo. Call Unique Bayfront Offi ce N~ ~
WllldowClen I I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''Let Tbe s..tline ID''
Call Sunlhine Window
Cleaftinc,Ud.~
S.rgain shoppers read
the littl e ad s In Classified re aularly.
And they find wha t
they're looking for .
....... ._ .. ,. Mort91911, Trwt Lost & ,_., 5300 0..a luJty 5005 o,,, Wit 5005 Dei4i 5015 ..................... ..
••••..S•••••••••••tt••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• A found or lo.t pet!
APPUAMCI STOii
Been in business 81h years. P riced
at $70,000. Owner says s ubmit on
down and will help fin ance. Owner
retiring. and lea ving state .
SMALL •IFT ITIM
MAMUFACTUllN• COMPANY
7 years in business netting approx·
imately 223 pr year . Priced at o,nly
$44,950. Seller says submit all ot -
ters .
EqUIPMENT llMT Al. IUSINISS.
Price $1,011,000. Profits last year
$300,000 . 25 'k down with owner
financing available.
SRAISERS-INVFSl'ORS c an A Pet Hotline
W A N T B E T T E R ___ <'1_l_4>_7&1_·l208 __ . --
YlELDS Lost llale Tabby PolJlt
on T.D. 'S & Notes?! Siameee. Vic. Hamllton-
Ca 11 Dennison Assoc. /Broothunt. Heart sick.
&'73-73ll CAllta.UOI.
T .D. Pea SAU Lost cat. Gray • whJu
l year Sll,000 T_D. on a male. Hldiniton Beach.
Newport Beach condo S3&-d7I r
project at ~ interest payable monthly, dis-Found : Dachshund,
counted t.o yield 26~. neutered male, black.
Rltr.~1111. brown feet. llapotia or.
!Am .... a. .... /
Ptna •1/ Lost&,....
Lampeon, (213)512-1'132.
• Found: Dog, part German
Shephecd, injured left
I r o n t l e g . V 1· c
College/Victoria, C.M . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~1.
5100 --------3~r 2\.'.tBa condo w/boal Pool table, cok>r TV, 2 l-SPM.136-4120. 600 sq. ft. View
slip. Ocean & bay view. 2 frplcs. sips 14. 545-aUI 6'73-Ul03 Also larse space avail. J ""UAIL PLACI frplc's, 2 car gar w/auto •...... 4400 •BOAT SPACE '""' Priv. Studjo Photosboot
opener. wash/dry, fully l ...... tose.r. 4100 •••••••••••••••••••••• 250 sq ft office. Share Davta•ClaneR.E. PllOPHTllS on Sun. Feb. 22nd. 2
furn. ror renttoJune 8l. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pf.Ali recpt rm .ti secty sp, use 151·1• shooting s essions '
TSL l!MiMT SVCS Moving? Avoid deposits & IXICunYI SUmS o f c py m a c h . Law tor2otftces avaJI immed 712-1920 t -U /l -4. For serious 642-1601 c ut living expens e's! "Thereisadlfference." library. Westcliff Bldg. occupancy prim~ loc. in amatew-photographers
••••••••••••••••••••••• Found: Old Engl. Sheep-
dog, Terrier mix .(Benji
t y p e ) . d a r I i· n I
Dachah\ftl, Aust. Shep,
Lhasa AJllO, Husky mll.
Adopt a pet at lnlne
Animal Care Center.
Open every day. 754-3'134. Contact Delores for Ren-Professionally s ince · 646·4844. N.B. nr ai;,,.,n. Recept. ~~ist.e.~~U ~~':
tals in Newport Beach & 1971. 714f75J..02l4 avail Non smkrs Con Costa Mesa. HOUSIMATIS 2082Michel.sonDr.#21.2 AllPo.TARIA tactSaraeSHll41.. · ............. 4450 la•shlll ...... 4500 Bo"' er Produc t ions . Found. Small white poo-
832-4134 2021 Business Cntr J213 Furn i 5 he d o r u n . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••:•••··~··•••••••••• _m_._24_98 _______ 1 d I e . N r . Magno Ii a I
Westcliff area large l Br.
ratio, pool. Adults, no
pets. 645-8152.
* $Wwd U.t.g• Start the new year right in
Counselors to personally well established 2:000
select your compatible sq.ft. doctors office .
rmmte to suit your Onsit.e puking. Adapta-
3 Br. 1 \.l.r Ba. l house from lifestyle. Shared-Living ble for one or 2 phyai-
ocean, beautiful view. 631-1801. 83.1 Dover Dr. cians. Call,
Bit In kitchen. Yearly Ste 31 NB REDCAR PET
S750 mo. 67S-8018. fl9S. US1 --------1M/F to shr semi-plush W. ---------•
I Br Condo with ocean Bay Ave res. in NB. 1617 Westcliff. N.B. Want
ni g ht Ii g h t v ie w S260/mo. Call673-4034 fina ncial inst. 70009.f.
•Prestigious Versailles F 1st. floor. Agent 541-5032. Complex. with pool spa em. 2S-35 to shr 3br1---------1
clubhse. guard gate: tw n h se i n lr•ine . ~
SSSO. 642--0435. $300/mo. Nancy. S43-84S6 AT lHI SIAlltS 1 wtdys. ft -n· Lido Isle , on wate r . ---------1 Elegant 3'100 .q .. u111ce
lbdrm. lrg liv rm• din· Want M/Fto shr new. dlx ~:!'e/0bt:;:"':~n~~e ing, bay view. S77S. C.M. condo. nonsmoker 675· 71$5. pref. S300/mo. + Yi utils. parking. Call,
---------1 Call M.W274. RED CARPET
Ocean view lwt 3bdnn ·ex.-m.1z1
ecutive condo. all new Saddleback college stu-IOU. Cen&
appliances. trash com· dent needs peraon to shr
pactor. washer /dryer . 2 br apt, fum. h7S + Ml'WPOIT
micro oven, sell-cleaning utlls. 49&-5446 Elegant executive suit.es
oven·, new crpt & drps, in prestige location. With
r I 1 Se Fem.toshr spac.3brapt c omplete _,s uppo rt rp · spa, poo etc. c. w/2 same, CdM, S242 + services.
gate. SISOO. (714)972.-3023.. UI .. H -an • 114,_1-1 ('lUI:. ·71n. _u_._.,....__ __ ·~ __ .v_. ___ , ____ ,_.,.._......., _ _..~
2 Rmmtes shr Condo in 250-500 aq. ft . gmd Or, .,....,,_ .... d C.M . Lge rm's plus utils pd. From S200. 779 orUsufu h•td JtOO lltra 's S225 Dwight W. 11th. St. C.,M. Tom
·····-················ 898-ses.2 957-1900. .. Seawind Yillqe Rmmt.e Wanted mature
New 162 bdrm luxury lady noft..smtr to shr de-
adult apta ln 14 plans luxe•condo wlk(to bch.
from S41S, 2 bdrm from priv. quart.en, Szo/mo.
$505 + poola. tennis. Aft7PMm417'7 waterfalls, ponds! Gas ------
for cooking ir heating
paid. From San D\e10
Frwy drive North on
Female to 1ook for apt.
H.B.atta.
9M401 Beach to McFadden then ---------1
West oa McFadden to 3 br, 2 be apt, ocean.front
Se a wind Vi II a 1 e . on Balboa Peninsula.
(114)~. $100/mo. 751-SMO
BEST RATE
In
NEWP~T BEACH
600to 4200Sq. Ft.
Laguna Beach beautiful 1 Exec. Sbr Twnhae Pvt. •Janitorial Service&:
bdr apt $475 lncl util. 2br, 2~ba, wa /dry, UtilttialDcluded
4t4·1'735, 497 ·M8'1 f r p I c I pool / j a c U 5 0 • Adjlle8lt to AiflM)l't
a--4000 ,_w._s_l42 _______ •A~c~~~Jor
••• • •••••••••••• ••• • • • • Seelt to lhr YOllr hotne. f'Wn,
Lasuna Beach Motor Inn, a pt. or condo I prof.,
115 No. Paclflc CoHt quiet, mature, male, 833-8813
Hw)', La1una Beach. non·stralstil by llarcb 1.1-----------1
Dally, Weekly, Kitchen 4'4-7172 unau.. fall .....tee of. available. Low winter nee lpete, 1-4 rma, COft·
ratee. ...... WOODBRIDGE fereaee room, sec'l 2 111, Ti 8dult M lookln& I N WOl'tlnl mom bu ham. for p to rent bdrm ln bl& ae"' ce •. e •port rm for rent, 1mkr o.k. hie mUll be eoMMlerate Be.ell, Call for Info:
Sf15 + \; utll.151~11t aft of ca... be to lilt. to ...,1_11_-1111 _______ ,
4Pll mu1le • aa.ve a food LAGUNA lbCll
Prtvate entrance. Prefer
m•t•re wontns llale.
Non •moker /drlnhr.
tMS/mo....,.,
Ume. Claee to UCJ CJO Emerald la)' Prof. BIQ~
mla. drtYemo.>. Aeeee1 NJ Ml'T • ....,....., fit.
to ~ cea, a.Ire <uJI· ne. •..U. mo. eo mo.
ln1. 1wtmmJa1 • na-....... nn. ,.. • .,ualdlt.
1'ln1>. pool• • 1pH. ..... -· • mall ...... . Chlet Hll~rlllood . .. ....... tee'J ..... 1111 .-istmo. + ~ ......... N.eo.&llwJ,., ...
lat wk a M . Wbdl OI aft........ ..:-i:...~=~
Clllarml111 ••• lrm a ... ao••ll•••• JOU .............. ,, .... ~,_..._.,WI wutloMllTCl....n.d ................ Al.
,. .. ,.....,._ ... dok ..at ea.-.. .-.. •un.
t
furnishe d Executive Office apace for rent, up Newport Beach, h .25 Z2ISS Indus I/office UllOl Talbert. -.&tll&.
Suites l2xl5 in Irvine, to3500sqft, Modem bldg sq. n. New dJx office or Redondo Cr. 10 . H.B. SCRAM-LETS
waiting dista nce to nr a irport. covrd plrlng, mailw/pytbat.h,secllri-"50lse142-21134
Airport. 2IOl2 Michel5on, all uW pd. h .05/sq ft. ty, a /c, 800-3400sq. ft. 508 Slot... 4510 ANSWERS F o und : spayed F
Siamese, blk collar,
BolsaSprintdale. H.B. 7141752-02:.M 83S-1119Petcy. 31.st St. (next to-Bank ol ••••••••••••••••••••••• Famish_ Rearm _
Newport. Lido Cannery Approll. &,ooo-. ft. avail. J---La · h M6-7!il0 ' 116W.~ area). &75 -3238 . lnFountaioVaueynear HAS'~~gME
Corner or Main " (213)141·5'700 S.D. Frwy. S1320 mo. My comiD is very naive. Found : gray It white F
cat, YOUDI, Goldenrod
Av. CdM, l/a. f'13-57t'7 MacArthur, Santa Ana. JolmS..-0,548-7533. He t.binb a vlct.lmleu
1200 sq. ft. + -sq. ft. PRIME . -......_ b 2nd. floor. Ideal for at.ore cnme 1a w1oa1 you ro a or omce. t7t-•••t or bankaftereveryoneHAS FOUND: Shellie Mi• -HOlllE Male, vie: .U.O/ClifIDr.
M$-UllO. WATERFRONT ••••••••••••••••••••••• aoae . N .B . Jewel Collar ...... ....... 5200 548-l5C7 A TERFROMT o,, lllliltr 1001 ., ..................... ---------~ .. Wies RETAIL ....................... DIYOICNT-MAIL Pwun• IJll
Ofc sp frm *2.25' NNN. ~tore. prime location Fa at , Accurate , •••••••••••••••••••••••
Alao eo.tsp .•. 50' NNN ln Laguna Beach. 1200 sq Complete SIS Action PRE LAW student .,...
Davta6:Clan15H• SPACE ft. *-«nl. (714)142-'10ID 125.000. Will do aa.Ytbbll 1----------1 Le1al. Confidential -.-i• ._... 4450 Need tm>,000 start up for & ,._.. 1100 DVll . p .0 . Box 1141.
•••••••••••••••••••••• P'or store 6: olftce apace at
reuonable rat.es.
500 .. 2700 s. Pt. llESA VERDE bR
PLAZA
1525 M .. Verde E, C.M.
54M12l
1000 sq n,from 9900/mo.
Ideal for ins., accti. r .e.
or tv repair. C.11 .
14().~
1st TIME
AVAILABLE
50(}2600 Sq. Ft.
NEWPORT BEACH
SPECIALTY
CDITER
s,. ..........
.. , M•HMew
17141671-1662
new pat.. will pay 25~ for••••••••••••••••••••••* N.B. 983 . 1 yr aecured. or will aelJ ---------
up to 4K-of busines• '5YCHIC 11.ADl18S
w /exceptional world fOOlll ADS -.muack wide poteat.ial to reliable
Party. Write Ad '7&5 IDr fR(( C /O Dally Pilot Ml. News paper P .0 . Box
lSeO,C.11.CAtml Cal~
9"n•11t 642-1671
* fllOXY LADY * OUTCALL OHL Y
VISA llC * f7J..1 Ill• o., • ..., 5015
••••••••••••••••••••••• "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l'l'berapeullc 11 .... ie by Hip Yield IDvestmenta. i= . Ph7Blcal 'nerapiat. Earl tJ5.SZ5K. Staa Bartnick. Loet or found a pet1 CaJI 541-1117\)yappt. lM
Mana~ Investment Co. Animal A11l1tance H d W Ith
ln·*lorta-.a. Leape. ~7S1. No fee. .;;o::,:~aExJ.
w..y .. &.o. 1021 * P'OUDd or mt a pet? Call aeeka nftned. atvactive,
••••••••••••••••••••••• us ! We' re the Pet Pala. wealthy bMly to share an
Equity• PurdaaM llOlleJ (714)7»--etljoJed lie, warm com·
Loans; .-.fTSOI[, no POUND · S f 1 panionshlp 6: travel. down pyint Credlt. or ln-· m ema e Photos 6: bl 1hea t
come requirements. Golden Retriever mix penooal • flaanciaJ ,.
Homu, Aptl, Com-dot. vie Hamilton 6: fereacea 1tadl1 ea·
San Clemente on busy El merclal bldp, courtesy '11uuin, Cll. IG-1Jl5 _ cban1ed. Pleue write
camlnoit.l.newbldt. to blrn. llr. Thomas Lost·SealPobttSU.mese ErmaadDuvarP.O.Bcll
1paeea, 1000' ea. COD-BICR. <n4>7Sl-G3 -...... Peaialula Pt: 711La Hain Ca.~
cession avail. 111-7117 Widow"-money ror ZND Reward. Call 175--. •---... ---•
Newaar./Offtce. T.D.'1 •DJ •lae above 1_5tf:...._•_1_1_. ------•
Nr ....,_. Beaeb City =-~·:,'· :=, C:::a'·c:i LOST: Black w/trhlte,
Hall, --ICI ft, •tree& AGT171-71llall}time cat, r.m lbortlaalr. Hu level.-.-abdominal dcbet. Old
Use "'6Wfl At/ service
when placing· your ad ... a
Daily Piiot ad number will
appear In your classified ad
W.T. llOltTAGAGE Cdll, 1/kMNIM ,,._Lee.._ Ind Trult Deed loeu, •---------•
1170 Sq ft OD balJ Beach $10,000 to h.IO,OOO. All L 0 ST : Be,~ I e II a I~ f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Boulnard·Huat1111to11 &enn•. Ml:r~J. llr. Coehpoo SCOTTr NS&DD: llale Ute, ...
Beaclt. •••I ror real Bturt.-.nu GoklwaUlt/ lie,...._ trHth9, ,.., nlr I' a
est•te oftlte, atore or .,. •. __. to a~ 711 old, • f'rt·
otbet'tultallle_l.,....J ,,... Reward. Lolt llallllltoll .. , .... s. ....... Prt•• betlll, Hallable Mii part7 at T·•P• fw . we take your messages
· 24 hours a day . . . you call
In at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad .•.
this service Is only S7.50
week. For more Informa-
tion and to place your ad
call 642-5678.
,
lmmedletely. 10 Year •••tt•-•••••H•••u Dlamoad wlltdl • 1 told Vl c:to.. ,;... ""il!I
luu. AttraeUvely ......... C.. rtap:~· No bl~daJ -''l. I.cl• '7;'z:..111 ..... All t7Pl8" n.i..,.. ..-· 1att 110 .. ,. a.,1, -~ ...... r .. UNI. LOST: r •• Golden ctlllllftadM .. .,..., Spul 5' ... 1tetrl"9r Yie, le.ell/ Pilot, P.O .... lllt. lilln. all .. Mill.' ta 111 Uc c.a. .... Ca. -
4411 '41·2171 141 Ml I 111111 DmlOIPmAL
•••••-••••• .... ••• i.c.r· ...._ llYIDC llAllAGS _............. Tnll ~. 8la'W . ,.........
11· ~: -:.:·A.: :~~ ~:; =-~=::~~· .:::.0··1:-. ......... _..,.._ r ... ,_ ... ,_ LOIT: h• II, w'1 ,..._ ..... t .. FI
.-... ,. ..... ~ .. Dn'armlWA!ft'SD ...._._ ......... '91 ....... •Id
•• ........... • ......... '191. ., ...... OuftlN • .... ....... -s-..ea•-.. ._....___ "**' , r.Y.•Me ..!""=--•
..... ~-#< ...... ~..._._.,.., ... _____..,,....-,.L.o-..J ...-~ • .......,..~ ... ~ ..-........~~~· .
. • .
t .
MoncMy. 'ebruery 2. 1~1 DAIL y ~LOT R .
,. e I~ tClll .,...., -·---·,----c~~~ -~~ ..... !~~r.;.?'~~ .... .?!.'! Wal·-.. ?~~ ... -.~~ I!J::. ~lee elm A'9b 19 ,._:a... &l'TAL A11t. Sa· GDDALonlCE 8*I :
I• •• 6 'etr. r••r · ~~Dr . .....,,............,. BANCING Ha• ... 1• rnt.e U•ua..ue penoa tor Au .... tn1et ....... .... ... a.. ~=~'i*=~~,-=·~·~~"=·;~,;:9~1 UoHI "· tHb H · ON Ya.JR FUTURE (W..edHf PlwUl.8 . •IUIM •9lrmt. la •· ....,_ »bJ bJ toad. Sa,.,.._~........ . ......, .......... ................ La1w. &a,. pret'•. Put ._.. npertea~ Mi1b1 to a.f •· ·
2 ·-~: htrt•'l•J11M:lllol9 CIVIL l:NOINSl:a Call.._..-...~ ll•l•hl. Wka~~ laa~ Hotol i.a1au· .. =.., =-:...~ 11111--AHtt. ~ ..... , eo~ Tollen oaAD. Raper ....... -All ...... ,. •. u . HU • ... • .,....,., •
...-. ....... 1 --. ._ ...-1 ..,... ~ Partrme30Ho\6s dhlalona, 1radla1. la1toa Beuh C•ll ._...,... 0 •WO• c p I · • lrillle. CW. lnlml • 10. utllltlee. Doaald I!. lmCTOI: ... 7111-..ftt · HouHeloaaon wanted, •II k ·a• 11 ~ h1 ea~UH re· JI yoa'rt a ureer a. ... 1at.-..U for ,,.. .... tlemea· · = PQ. Call Cle .... JIM~~ .... C..-1 , I :J'::!· .... :r,t,!: mladedladlridualwttlla ~d.llC'Smlla6nper. allmJ&ed...,,.
• ........ "r~~ -• • mlalm-ol I IDCIBlhl Cltrical . '*I . --.... ..,-.....
........... I •• • ... ... •• , ........ pr .. tw bHllla1 ... --···· IG4Nll ·--HOUSllCLEANERS COOU91T~MT : I ..:...j:.,s!:f beHftta ta ,1 .. uat peritnee w u. ,. T ta ll ............ To work for Janlo•'• O•r••,~ll •••· a -r ;g worklq ••lroameat. Baall cu ofter YC:'! ar:'f/'ao;* ..,.r·Glrl Dryeleaalq Help, Ptr, Ra eel Aon Ptr a.s = ..:· t:. 't ': = W .. ........._ Coa&act1: ':-' llW. pormaaoat part time .q'°w~ :,1•e:d ~~I ~ d a 1 •~I m m lt t Im 4 I C•t• ,.u!~ . ..:.. tTS-2sH. ' ' ....,.. ......, .....a -P'll f:ltiae <• houn) 1.n Salary eommeaaur~t~ ..... · 79-•t. Eap. req'd., mut bti---------= ... t. Mel..... t111w •ILC.1 • 1Wllllla• EIToro. w/nperiwe .... JZU. laYWAU; avail . .,um. .
._6 ,.,...w •"' -. •••·· mu....,.,.... • 'd --an Hotel ·-........ • ... ---·. '"'---•1 ~-"'--· ............. --Uent CLlllCH ... ap .,., ... -Hanser-H .... ,. PM flGlusek ...... .C'J[E 0-·~·11 •1ol,... __ ,. ,wr. ~ ......... ... ........ ----P 6Patnter ----eepe
• ..._ 6 :r-.= ....... _. • 'llll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j salary and beneflh Ptrmaaeat, Ptr, aelf. aper Gl·JOOt Mwatbeuw'd. e f -· • ... .... 'fllfi .... -;: ll ~· ;=·~-;~.·::..:•: .. I~ ACC~-.~~~r::.$:~ :::.t..~c~ PleaH call for appt. We~~-=•bte _ • __ 1 · .. _. -~-......,., offlee 1kll11 needed. aocnit.J Exp desired 145-7-llon·Fri, 1:30-S people orien penona •
.._.......,. . .._ ....._ N r 1, Ire c 'e, Career de\elopment op-rormation......... call: Airport area. Call Grace ror ......... tDt.ntew. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I EnJoy excellent co .
.,.,.,.... 0..-..& to 114-71Wl71 portunlty in amall, fun .. , 18 !!.. K1..:.~· Andenon Co: 1 call: Dana,ID-'1'111. ' benefits includin1 a free
laata AM 6 Now.wt c-C.... corporal e off l c e . 714-t7J.J724 ---. •• .... y meal per abift. Appl)' i.n
PnrJt.PxlldaiaVaDey. _..., "'-II--'-All · <+ ·--------·Earn up to SI-SI/hr PARTTlllE person tAll-Noon, Mon···· "'-~· 11-.....: UA _ S ""'.,.... ··-area. 1-I i t Eap'd .• raponalble • Fri p I - -I fa~-.J ..-. e.. _.._ S1•u :..-... "' • ClEllC aerY c DI cu1 om era ., encnne . fla,al ••• ablt lo ac..;.... w~i~i:y.-~ ~ • AL from home on your matureforh'antdesk in MAlllO'nHOTB.
........ ..., ,.....,..~!!!!!!-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!1 typ•-1 ..,..d. n-.. ye•.. ----.,___your h-buaytuolc. •· perh.r• 900N-"'-t D
aw: J ,.
.......................
....... ' 7171 ....................... • worti ..U wb people. r= b _': ·~·-"'""' .. Register today for local ...--. "OUUllC ••· up. Send resume stating ..... ....,. • .....,..,er r . Youq ..,....Uve com-a ... or ....... clal exper. WELLS temponryuaipmenu. ,_a.. __ 11115_. ______ 1 qualiftcaUom to: Allen Newport Beach
puy wM)i paUaUal to Classy Autos r;;~~~U:i::ci:: FARGO 557 n.uc ELECTRONICS-Solid Hammond CPA,. 20.0 EqualOpp.EmplyrM/F 1row with. company. ~-_ "UU'N . bench t.ffh: Dl11tal k Bwau.e. Ctr. Dr .. 1103.
s.1ary Keordiq to H · Advert1·sed co.............. BANK Cf\·Lln-: poeonw~~ aupplies. 141-1111. rrv1ne .... c•.,..tr115., HousECLEANERs Ptrience.Sendrwumeto Call8etlyat:~S4l3 ...., PIT or Frr. Start Im·
Ad t7•, Dally Pilot, t"n the E.O.E. M/F Equal Opp Empty m/f/h edl I T doll G-....&-J-.. _ _..... II P 0 ._ llMl'OllARY PfllSONNIL suMcu New l'Wniture Co. typ-m ate Y. op ar.
--w-: OW· · · t la., Coeta AnawerincService takinll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! r--;;;;;•==--1 673-1311Sor646-~l la1 -•d1la1-ralll•1· lleea,Ca.... applications for ltPll-J7ZJ~Slreot B•I lie Ing , bUpg , exp'.------'--
••••Pl•I 'free e1t•---------1 1•11 _ ... , .. Sun.._ Mon on-..._ .___.. n-rrllCW... . nece11.,-y. Good oppty HOUSBIB'aS
...... Cl fiedAd 642-567 " HUI• • IA*I... ,_.,,..._ -" forrightetr'l.MZ-8400 We have H immediate ust s ly. 312 3rd St., JC, Savinp TeUer C°:ition l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!fl-2 yrs. lleebanlcal / ...
-L_a...;1_wia __ Be_a_c_h ____ 1 at Ne-Beac S .._ L. Electro-Meebanical ex· ... RIDA y o p e n I n g f o r 2 --· -ca·-·· perien-housekeepers. Full time Minimum 1yr exf:. s 6 -.-"~ OR 1 1itJ~61'f1ce, English &
VALENTINE LOVE LINES
Sfind a valentine me••age to .Your wife,
husband, sweetheart, boss, 1ecret11ry, teacher,
friend or an~ 1pecial with a LOVE LINE ad.
Your ,,,.,.ge will appear on Saturday morning,
February 14, on the VALENTINE LOVE l,.INE
page in the Daily Pilot.
For only 14.00 you can create your own
message (approximately 4 words per line)
... each additional line is 75•.
We also olfer a choice of he11rt1
to place at the top of your
LOVE LINE AD
•
n I wish to send a message through the DAILY PILOT
LOVE LINE. D I wish to create my own •2()00 Valentine. D Payment enclosed.
Q . VISA # ...... ,., ... · .................. : ........ Exp ...... .
D Master Charge # .......................... Exp ...... .
0 Please bill me.
Name ................................................... .
Street .................................................... .
City.·.· .................................................. .
State ........ Zip ........ Phone ....................... .
ASSEMBLERS. We will L er d Gen.Ofc.P/llmepoa.for Spanlah apeakin". ac-positions. 10PM·6AM
S I mme I r t... 5 " curate typin1. C.M. train . Apply 7AM . eap · pre erre · mature, older woman. 1·2 yn. coll~ee, ...... " shifts. Xlnt. fringe
llacGrep Yacbu, 1831 a ary co · n u a'" Interesting work in tronic tech. ac or benefit. package. Apply Placentla,eo.talleaa w /H~Qmal ct: pleuant olc. on P.C.H .. mllit.aryt.ech.s I( / _556-__ im_. _____ in person al Advanced
-Fiii Npt. Bch. Ellp. a muat. -Co.willtraln ;1 MAUS Health Center, 1300 1-------•-i MMIOI Accurate typing, no •Rep~ota . ect(J to Full • part time. All Bristol St. North, Ste. ASSB• •s E.O.E. shrthd. 2IO hr. wk .• in· Chlef r areu. Uniforms fum'd. #100, Newport Buch.
Loe. Miuioa Viejo co. B _ ... IS'-L chides Sat.• Sun. Hn. -Co.paid s ring Ages 21 or over, retired,_E_.o_._E_.M_IF_._ need1 Auemblen w/2 auaUlg • 10All-2:30PM. Call : •Vacatl II olidays welcome. No exper. nee.
yra. exp. Candidates 141-7431 paid App I y : univ er s a I IMPORT ASST must have gd. manual 1'B.1a •Medical-life lna. ' Protect.ion Service, t226 dexterity, gd. eyesight, ~ w "'th St Sa ta A 1 For small iron & steel ,_ C'·rical . " .. n na. n- . rt f. . L neat au appearance• de· Immediate openin& for ""' terview hrs: 9-12 & 1·4, tmpo •rm in aguna.
pendable. Work ia in lire full time teller in rrow· CAim POSITIOH those seeking Mon· Fri. Good oppartunity for
support medical elec-Ing Savinp' Loan. Ex· . nent employmt. 1---------1 bright. friendly . a m·
lrollica. Gd. benefit.. On-1 perienee preferred, but L.A. Federal Savings qply. HAIRDRESSER Assist bilious person who has
ly responsible persons1 will train. Apply at: cWTe11tly aeeka capable Cosmetology lie .. req'd. an analytical mind & en·
seeking permanent llVNS&L indl";idualwith50+wpm Ask for Mgr. Judy , joys woning with peo-
emplymt. need apply. l43'71C\llverDr.. typing to train in a ll 640-&MJ pie. Position involves
Call : Mrs. Parelli, Jrvi.ne,CAllZ'7l4 phases ol Pension Ad-bookkeeping, typing .
Sll-3830 ~&SSl mini.atnlion u Pension HARDWARESALES computer operation &
M/F Services Processor in Apply In person: Crown telephone CQntact. Good
ASSISTANT
_E_._o_.E_. ______ , our Newport Beach of· . Hardware, 1024 Irvine. typing skills. 10 key , _________ , fice. Energetic. W1U t ct (Westdiff Plaza>N 8 touch, bookkeeping ex·
Office Ur 191r Ellp bcdkeeper Ii typist.
Firm In Newport Beach
area. Xlnt benefits, send
resume to: Mr. Anderson
177 'F' Riverside N.8.
92M3
IRA/Kqhorcorporate morning clas•~· · · · per ience & pleasant
ex per. a muat. Learn Female. -.sa. "\ "'.. Help wa nted for Der personality are essen·
Previous experience de· sirable.
word processing & use of llilrdM .. .. Wienersnitul, top pay, tial. Start around $1000. CRT. flex hrs, lunch help & Contact Dave Scott at
All replies will be lwtsctor ves. 2:50S. Bristol, C.M. T·MARK,497·5477
acknowledged. Contact: <~·natal> 7-<1717.
ASST.DIUCTOI FuUtlme. §7.U113
United California Bank
630 "A" Newport Ctr. Dr.
Newport Beach
~
Debra Braddick 4hrs per week. Female.
213-625-7341 geg.5419 \HBIWAMTED
LOS ANGELES Exp sales personnel wanl·
FEDERAL SAVINGS ed for contemporary re· ""!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!~!!!!!! ta ii shop . M us t b e r-fashion oriented 6
JAHITOI. .
Im medi ate opening.
Part time. wknd posi -
tion, 2·11 shift. Salary
negotiable. Apply In
person at Adv anced
}fealth Center, 1300
istol St. North, Ste. A UTOM<YnVE
PMTS ~!!!!!!!~E;·~0~-E;·~!!!!!!r-~;j=~~--1 career minded. Salary !! 0 .CAL open, ref's req. Call for COUNTBMAH Dealership or foreign Beauty
auto parts experience Haircutter w/rr pays up
preferred. Call Glen ror to 70% or lae a apace, be
lmmediate()penings app'l . Aak for Bed1ie.
•AccomitingClerka Apropos, #29 Fashion
•EDP All Levels l1land. 844-JIU
We\ are now acceptin~
apJ)ljcationa for a full time~~ition in our re· ader dept. Telephone
6 co ter sales. Re·
quiresi good spelling, gram ii\ er, & pen. J 00, Ntwport
man1bi •. Must enjoy E .. E. M/F.
meet.ins it.e public. App-J ri 1 ly : Pe uver. 1660 an ° a
Beach.
an appointment. your own bo11. 2411 •Secretaries
•Payroll Female companion to Placentia ve.,C.M. \JANITOR
aoY c....a P .c .H .. Cdll.1'73-2552. • Bookkeepen
IOU.SaOYCE
AM>IMW
640-6444
11!1111111!11!1111111-----1 1003 Free Banking Accomt M•tl9•
Un-in for 2 days a week, • • Hitti
no pets. Choose Sun/Mon needs hel
or llon/TUes. SZS/day. sales exper ca I cW ,..... PfJl"IOllllfJI Services Call evesl3S«Y19. area.~
Babysitter, arternoons, Previom experience pre-
for 1choola1e children, ferred.
Irvine. SS.'7388
United California Bank
Temporary6 Permanent nJLL TIME, P/time ans. HOSTHS
llOOQuaiJ,.N.B. serv. No np. nee. Call: 21yrs or over. Eves only.
Ask for Karen 640-1110 E.O.E. lnqulft: 548-7418 Ask for
Day1 shirt opening for
resp. sell-starter with re· cent exp. Scale to 96.20.
Numerous benefits in-
cl u d, n g fully p a id
medical&dental.
IOSAN,IMC.
7l4-548-5S33
Equal Oppty Emplyr
9155-2770 E.o.E.r-~;;:ii;t:iii~--·~c~b~e~rne~·~·~~~~;;;; Ba b Y s I tt er with -~•IDB• .._ ______ ... 1J anitorial couple needed. tranapoitalion to watch 309MainSl ,.._. .-8 ... 1 f' II t' ll31 e kb · LE R K. 7 . 11 Store, FuU time day poaltion vu:: u lme. ac ay pre-1chooler at my home Huntington Beach available for r•li·abl• Dr. NB . 644-~10 · 3 ev-a ___ ._ St SO/h graveyard or swing. Full .. .. f t 0 Ir .... ....~. . r. person with knowledge of ron es" Call Kay 540-3554. E.O.E. ~~ll=e. For info planll 6 landscaping. LEGALSECIETAIY
9am-4pm. Should have a current Clerk Litigation exp, desirable.
BABYSITJ'ER. mature IO"'T .... .--.., C~TYPIST driver·s Uc-. enjoy ex-Gd. s kills ; last. a c-,.. --II be f'ts We are seeking a people curate. Willing to as· adult. ror 20 mo. old in Full time. Some expr. Clerk Typist needed for cie lud. ~pafny nel 1 oriented person able to s ume respont ibility & our home. Please call preferTed. Apply at l401 our sales ofc. Need so-nc IDI a ree mea per work varied hours. Must · · · I I
(714) -........ F db S m•one who can type shift. Apply in pe~o. n use in1hat1ve essenl a . ...,, _.,. or am, anta Ana "" ...... N M be adept with figures. Xlnt. benefit . salary Vagabond Sall Boau. 40-45wpm •, ia able to "" · oon, on· 1 • • Full time position offers c 11 A H Babysitterlhousekkeeper. handle hvy. filing load. Penonnel excellent company ~f:.~~; "l' arvey,
mature woman, 3/days ---------•I Great growth potential. MA•mo-.. n~HOTB. benefits. including a free -----+---wee k , gd pay .Own Bankinl We will train to use our 900NewportCenlerDr. meal per shift. Apply in LEGAL SECRfTAIY
tranaportation.551·8987. Cas ascWT..,. computer terminal. Ex-NewportBeach person, Mon-Fri., 9AM · Small. lnformja l office
cell. co. paid benefits. Equal Opp Emplyr M /F Noon, Penonnel needs mature person.
Banking Cash iering experience Pb. apply In person: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I MAlllonHOTB. Good typist. •bilily to LOAM SICY would be desirable. Plesaey Semiconductors 900 Newport Center Dr. learn will tram. Salary Tll~ ... FT/P'T 1641KaiaerAve Irvine GARDENER. 1 house .th __ _. ' D Pt Ml · N-Beacb commensu.rate1 w1 ex· UnitedCalifomiaBank •---------• ana . n1mum .. w...,.. MIW ACCOUMTS Companion/Nurse (L VN ) maintenance. rr you are Equal Opp Em pl.yr M IF perience. 67~
SW ITCHIO A ID· 19!MSBeach Blvd. Weekends. e lderl y interested in job, calll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ILegal ~·y.TraSnee
llCB'J Huntington Beach woman pleasant, pretty 64S-lmev/wtmds. needed by spiall con·
Immediate openln1s for 98MiS7S surroundings, Laguna HOSTJHOSTISS genial N.B. fir.n. Gd typ-
llfiied ppti u E Beach 4!M-445'1 General Office F II /ti ·r qua . a can . x-ManufacturingCo.needs u or p me pos1 tons ing /dictaphdne skills·
perience required. Xlnt E.O.E. Clf/lll&IVI .. l avail. for reliable, will train w o rd benerlts. Call Sylvia VVR sRharp self·st.a1 rter ~~exp. people-oriented persons. processor. &a lary com-
Waters, ssz.-100 Conv. hospt. Exper d .on-1 ecept., nvoicing. Fl~xlbleshlfts. Enjoy ex-mensurate' with exp.
IAI« OF MYtMI lo a ... ._., /T~ Jy. E•ceplional benefits. payroll, accurate typing, ceO. company benefits Non-smkr. Contact Sara
Equal Oppty Em pl yr for CPA, fWI or patttime Mrs. Day: 642-9044 14>-key by touch, lite fit. including a fl'ft meal per 8Sl·Sl4l. Salaryopen.875-20'10 1---------1 ins. 1d pay • benefrta. shift. Apply in person
Banking COOi Salary open. Bouae 9AM -Noon, Mon-Fri., Legal Secretary. H.B. Tll'BS · IOC*IW• Sauteorbroller,partor Manufacturing,557-9090. Personnel min 3yrs, Calif exp.
X Int. opply for u . Full time, fUll charge, tuJlt.lme. -.mi, ask for < n r ff a r b o r • MAlllOTT HOT& heavy responsibility. pe1board, a /r , a /p. her •u Se-ntrom> N ,.._ D perienoed penoa in at-payroft, bent rec. • i n .... c_._._ .. _pm_. ___ -t .~ · 900 ewporh .. •1:nter r. xlntskllls, qualified only.
tra'""'ve .,..._. -·•1 t1·m... N-Beach Call (714)0~7 <!IUJ. S• ..... ,,;u .-:J&\J. r"' "" 642-8400 OUNTER help for donut F\nd what you want in ..--.-. • ... .....,. ...., poalliona in Costa Mesa --------EqualOppEmplyrM/F II Anaheim. Offer varied BOOKKEEPER shop, AM II PM shifts Daily Pilot Claasifieds. Want Ad Results 642·5678
duties' includinl new ac· For R • D Ii.rm. Usual avl. No exp. nee. Woman
count.. Call Kathleen: b f pref. Apply in penon:
7S4·ll01. Orange Coast en e 1 ta · Marge · Dippity Donuts, 1854 ... ~~-Savinp 6Loan. E.O.E. _7_52_-C19 __ . _____ ,_N_e_•_idt __ Bl_vd_._c_.M_. __
lo al* ••l I CM OUPLE Excellent op-
Banklnl/SlrL Full lime, aper. helpful portunity for exceptional
1111 • but not nee. Many com· le ..._ ... _. e.. p1 t pany btn eftta. Apply at: coup ""' flUlllC • an
Fullerton SltL ha1 an lHO Placentia Ave .. care l.n Newport Beach
openln1 at the Hunt· Coetalleu andoutolltateproperty.
instoa Beach offtce for •--------Frequa hoUle and dos
full Ume teller. Exper. •CM• .. S• 1lttln1. References es-.. . . UM the handy box below to write your Love Line Message
(Minimum 4 lines) Dreferred, but wiU train. CbeclwCab aentlal. Pleue write C/O
Typing requirement rnMllD Dally Pilot P.O. BOX .. -
.,
l .
-
D Add 14.00 heart to my Love Linea
O Add $2.00 heart to my Love Line•
~.u to: DAIL y PILOT LOVE LINES
P.O. Box 1MO
ea.ta Mela. CA 92129
,,-
4.00
4.75
5.50
8.25
30wpm. Call n4~1-G44 la. Ad Im C.11. CA
fora1111t. ...
Eq-10ppEmplyr CASllEIS .--------•
A potltloe la open at
lrvlat Savini• for a
m•t•re, reapoHlblt
teller to ... OD lloe.
Wed. 6 ftt. at oar malD
oftlee • OD lat. at om
Htritar: Plaaa otftee.
both a lnlat. Ex·
perleace preferred. ..... ....,.: .................
....... Blwd. ~llfll
1:.0.1:. 111'
WANT ACl'IONT aa.uad Adi.._,.
CIT OPmlATOll •
UTaTIM,. -~~=.a:-.::e
fut• aeeurate. Rn. I :•
. to 4:• 11-P'. Call for
llARltrl"8 Fora.I 6 Int Shlfta
DELI llANAOER
We .,......,.. to mana ..
m..a6...,..._ft'om ........
W Alft' A CAaSl:ltT o.t. ...
lllDllll• . ... ........... --........
appt. a.MU aak for
'Nonna.
DILIYllY P'or llortlt. .. ,,...... App.
11 la ,._: Newport
RUiii nortlt, 1M1 San
lll ..... N.8 .... ,_. .,.....,,.... ...... . •rr . ...--.. ..... . ................. ............. ..,. ... ,.., .. -. .............. ·e· .... nrae ._ ~ww ...... , .....
Reach the richest recruitment market In
Ora"99 County In a special Dally Piiot JOBS sec-
tion planned for February 25, 1911.
Orange Coast households served by the D•lly
Piiot and Coast Life number more thM 103,000.
They make up the most responsive, Mst educ•ted
•nd affluent re.ctlng audience In the county.
JOBS st•nct.nf.sl1ed sections Include a story or
a photo prepared by th• Dally Piiot st•ff
describing mvertlsen' servkn or employment
needs.
JOBS sections .,111 llPPM' botft In the D•llY
Piiot end Clelt Life Oft ~ 25. ONdllM Is ~''ff• story w _.Is dellt"9d or ,...,.,.,., 16 far ...... ,'-"""' only •
• '
J.
u, .. , Cltrk, 1natutt .,.™, for totktof, de·
""•'' ' aUart tlfed• P • "1<-Jttty nlahta App
If ln Ptrtan. ltollda)
Hou • Uqucu·•, 2!kJ7 t: ~1111• ,l'dM
~ r l 1 r\ l'an lime
Ad for ~eve
fl4Z W1
LOA>IC>fflCU
SICalTAaY Pteft'r t'Jlpr'd real n talr
loaf\$ ., "° $b00 _pt!t
mo t bonus & beJ1eflts
Wcwk in <>ni..nat Co
PAN & Comp:any
2131~74 170?
SS SRIOAIY ~IWL MOllm•,.. Accountlna department ot naUooal o.Qr.._r.-1-.1
. •IOY mort1a1e bankln& firm need1 C'lmed,._., • ....-....,. • secretary for controller. TbM entry UThW..a• ...... Aft. •---------• .. 1.-.,~.a I O....._O.V.. llMI• loll·A·W. Al.._ a.
• __ 1 __ .__ .. w l e v e I po 1 i ti on per •ct for ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f .... laardlJ ......... 1-----------•c-. •,. numben-oriented penoa with tood r-= Ml •• 'Tft9 m ....... ..._ •.U. • ,_. • ._ ••· ,... a..u1. N .,. _ _. ... __ _. ··' T.lffaaJ .tam,, ca.la... ed. De _. ftn& -~~-_,......._ • ..:.. typ.._. IA.U&D. O luu1-uMU1U reQwred. •mbrolclerd robe, Supertwta .......... •· •·1741efUPM z.;;w; --Call l«na (714) '7~1•. wlrertable6more. n. 111e1 ..... ,.._taJ,.. t ft•--_.; ____ _
........ ·-.~;:::-.... Niii ...:iL ••n Purple Plam, MT So. Ufa, •It UDd uo. Kltetla .... Clllllltta . .,..:........a.~· "ULIHIU. DUIWIUI Coast Hwy, La1una. -.sm. ~ Priee. V-1'0V 7;:;-::.1:!.!",H::~f ::-:•;,1 4N.WDciays NM ;.~.!*'-=~o.:
,_A...W.dew -...-• r . 1010 ••••••-•••••••••••••• JI ._...._-.-ou Id' -a .. • 1oooad orm--.----. Carlolla, i..,..,a HlU. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... • hOrM -----=----~-
Till s.IDMr. H. I . HARBOR AREA J1~m~ ~-4 Nlc1I 1• -S. lriMol, APPLIANCESERVJPE • • WmlM -· ..,._AW Saale~ W•buY-;:~ance. 1ra o d, Rocket Bar .... •••-••-• .... •••
•YM'I IM'S ..01eam.-nr .. 1rv. Secretary ··we..U .1uar. ~reedJC ..... m.151t LUGGAGE. llllM -~ . -·:=e· ........ SECIETARY appUa~. Me-907'1 .... "'' ~far U1p. '9M0Da· ClmCAL CAU nuaMld cudklatAM ull ....._ ~ f'UIHnftL I IUY ·-... .-IS •••••••••••••••••••••• b1e price. 517..-. N~ for •t81f ~Uef. "' W .... W•cMff · p · ·d of ' l b _-y-~ . •-• ell •llifta, acute botpt. for •Pit· lln. Pierict. tesa ent ruaUona mortgaae ank-Let 951-1113 ew e._.. dryao -· "71 M91k .. D~•lan ~ own work.~51!!1!! • .ae!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j Ct tl1n ing firm needs self starting, bright, canlater vacu11u1 clnr IMI la IOIJ
W\! k ~pay ratH r: 154 E. l7lh. ~ta Mes• energetic person. Good typing and New LS cu ft. rro.tfree *· Xlt ~ «·3472. •••••:•••••••••••••••••
.... ......_ PIOOUC'nOM Equal Opportunity shorthand skills and Hte bookkeeping retri1. sao. Microwne 1110 CONN Director trombone •tl•try Help wuMd part time. Em..,yer experience necessary. Salary com· Amana R•dar Ranae ., .................... ,.with cw. beelleat~-
Coata Mtsa 7S4•1'1tJ M•llroom. Mon• Tuet.l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I mensurate with background. Ca ll Sl50M0-')'8U Biiie Lapia Scarab pen-ditlon,Sl00.8'75-11152aft.e.r
uahelm t5e-3dl nltea . Apply : lHO ALES. Acaresalve co. Patty, (714) 975-1080. G.E. Refri1eralor-1re.t dant Mt iD 1'Kt 1old _•_P_M_. ______ _ Placentl• Ave .. C.M. b I cond S200 w/sotid 14Kt IOkt he•vy lb .. l•ctrlc I It a e to h i re i o COLDWELL 1••(1 • . 11" chain. Appraised an..z ~"' u ar.
Nunln& RIAl.HTATI ulHpenom! Comm. up . """ 493-2475. u . ooo. sac rifle e ProfeuiorW model with
HuttSIS AJDIS ~ to JJOO per cby •more. •rlJ Mui tt1st111r s.nlcet Washer, gas dryer. Ken· SUOO/b1t orr. Robb Tree ol Lif• aolnl llP \o
E>CC e l bene fits , a ll Leadlnl real esute com· Muat hne a posttlve. An equal opportunity company more gold. $175/aet. Gold 815-ltOO the neck . Wood1raln
shifts. top salary. Cert. pany aeeta professional motlvatint attitude. Signa~ure washer, white Pvt party wtll sell fine body with hard sheU
classes on premises. people to malUICe rH•le Call: 914,.... for appt. Hotpoint gas dryer. $75 ladies' round di•mond ease. $500. ~
147·71J7 tm w an.tt. tt. a A.
Conv lies~-642-8044_ offlcea. Prime uu1 Mon·Fri,9-5 ea. AU look• work fine. ring, 3_31 ct , Hklnf 12 strln1 Fender elec,
---------1 Nur:1ing b:n:~~. :J: t P • Y 6 SALIS FASHION ne:~~~!'t"lp A Sm•U Puu Aalembly 875·2072 (wkendi arter $12,500. (%13)1131-6318. Music llH •mp. xlnt
Loe Offlc« HOME CARE (714)~1 Expefience necesHry firm. Nies ind. typing. Cieanwort area Spm ). Can deliver. cond, ofter. ta-8*
$1800 '2000mo Pref. so R N 's, LVN's , HtlA, for women'a •pparel fllin1. answenn1 phones STA.11$4.25 19 ft Fri ict . T Ready Cuh-GoldlSilv . ......,.__ &
ineooe wbo intcrfacea NA 's, South & Central Receptionist. X·RA Y store. X1nt benefits ror •some •ccnti. No upr. WILL ftAIH cu · g aJre op any cond. Special att. ~rw•ae
well wl pt ople. must Orange County. ,Call LAB.N.B.litebookkeep-fulltime.Appt:·144.7100. nec.CuU33·90S2 Apply~weeq41t5PM !'0Z::~~~~t.xlntl ladleslsmiors.631.(1811 •• ~.£.~ .. ~!~ ...... !!!~
~Ye ltP in const. or Medoit. 641-8551 ing, .promotional duties, 51C11T••y W Productidn Pl•ce lk a-.. IOJO ._. • ........, 1071 COPJ ERS: zerox Pro
. loans Marian · ---training in X-Ray pro-SalH . -. Newport Beach ye..-••••••••••••••••••••••• $100 Toahib• •750 60M. CQastal Person· OFFICE. cedures. For Interview OPPClnUMl'TY Good tfp1n1 slulls a ••••••••••••••••••••••• A · c 646 os'.45 641 7030 • · ~ Agy, 2790 Harbor Bl. Shurp, alert girl, fold. phone640-02Crl COMT'IMUIS muat, a/11 helpful, but not K ff s J u n i 0 r 1 r Oto Pres s 0 ~ • • •
CM Neverafee. EOE w/numbers. MacGregor . TOllMOCK required. Great position Teachers, qu.lifed for Rac er/burgundy gd tught~~ service.
Yachts. LG31 Placentia. llCB'TIOMIST When wort for the ror seU motlv•ted in· pre -school, fulltime. cond. Best offer . 'c all s..!!!· s:,-hamp, COPY MACHINE
Muat4\ell, $450 or beat of.
fer. SSZ..5255 C M 1........ Yo'I dividualw/Jldv.ncement Fount•inVal.-....Sl SS1-0ltsafter5. ~y. · · MoctJ..R-"""ISIGlt . . Duties will lne.....: typ-Los An1elea Timea lb·i · · C II ---------...-OFACESERYICE ing. filing, u swerlng Circul•t.ioa dept. •• • poss I ittes . a TIACtaAIOE 1-11..111-•~10"'5 Mhcel•1-IOIO MocWnlst phones Ii lite accounting. field represent•tive in ._ Catherine at 751·8271-cug Mtihrw ' ....................... SklllMJ 1093 Repair tool room & pro· Leading computer firm Call Kim: SS7--086l. part••~ __ ._ -•m N.B. E.C.E. unit& required. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LU~• ...... T•as ••••••••••••••••••••••• d ue lion macj'line ry . nee ds office service U&UllC--....... Cos t• Mesa a r ea . Bulk Sale. Various elec. ...,.,. ... .,...,
Machine r~placement person. Detailed work which involves sipinl SICltlTARY 642-Mll. equip. Assorted wires, from your bmioess card. SACIUfllCI
parts from drawings . with numbers & math llC.ilOMIST upnewa';'IJscribenlnthe lnsuranceomce•7·850'7 --conduit, switch boxes. Send one card for each PRICEREDUCED Must be able to operate ba c kgr ound r ecom IPM-SPM commlmity. Many now Teachers circuit breakers. fuses. tag plus one spare. We HEXCEL BLUELITES
all machine shop equip. mended. Xlnt. introduc· Phoneansweringandlit.e In this pro1r•m eun1 SICalrAllY ESL TEACHRS desk files & other.misc return permanently 175CM w/Solomon 555
ment. Jo:xcellent com-lion to small business cleric.I. in Executive more than SIOO per weekr Lite bookkeeping, typ-& •our REP items Sale to be held a{ sealed attractive tag & bindings $189. SCOTT
pany benefits. Call computer indus try . Suite operation. Plaza r:,.:oridq Jmt a few in1. phone. S•lary Being hired now for lOam . Sat Feb. 7. 1981. strap, meeting airline poles with strapless
898·0IU1.
1
Rapid growth offe rs Executive Suites, 2092 W , e:::,ay.1 h ne1otlable. lrv. SS&-2323. employment in Feb. 1981 3001 Redhill Ave. Bldg 2. J.D. requirements. Pre· grips and ice ti)lll $15.
WM« L.oC• Co. many opporturuties. Call Michelaon m.2, 752-0234. mdi~iduab ~boor ti!v!'! SECR.-rARY-P•rt-t1'me. with student exchange Ste. 1Cl1. C.M Min. bid of vpeenrstonlossali_'!}~fgt!en~ol~ae Both xlnl cond.146-3724
ltCCC M"Fadden Av. H.B. DanneU: 714·673-6243. IC;& prog c u bet ,,.._It StO 313 61 ....,., ... '-u" -·--~ '-neat •ppenMc:e •nd a can le8dtofuUUme, xlnt ram. a · ......... · · · wa llpaper. fabric or '.,-, -
Equal Oppty Employer OROSt DESI< llC.rlOMST knack for talking with typing skills & SH . (Zl3>947-7?AS Mon.-Sat. D-1040 "Day Glo" paper & we HIFI. Shr'90 1091
I ed i r --"ed ' i •-.....,.pl• W.. ""'Y .__·rly &... -'7-••••••••••••••••••••••• mm . open n1 or a n~ In our nu:rna· ..--"'· "' -uuu Jmmed. 542; .• 12 TIACHB-••••••••••••••••••••••• will back & trim your
MACHl._.E P e r s o n w h o i s tional corpor•te• hHd· wages + geMrOUS com-. KEESHOND Pups. AKC tags. Or try two cards Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr
1 " m~chanically inclined & quarters located in missions. Previous Hies SECRETARY Kindergarten & Elemen Champ sire. M /F Pet & back to back. wrnty · Free delive ry SHOP has a sales personality. Irvine. Beaut. working experience helpful, but Costa Mesa orfice. tary. Full time. Pvt. s h 0 w . pv t pt y . PRJCF..S : St48.HH1'911.
Will train in the supply e nvironment. PBX not necessary. Minimum S yrs expr. In school. Costa Mesa area 2t3/697·u.t5aft6pm. S2 ea o~3/S5 ·~
l11uned. ope11i11g., bus . We orrer full pd s witch board expe r . C •ll Monday·Friday typing, communicative M2·Mll. --- - --.(/5tagsSl.60ea. l4Nlh MOChillle ,....... .......... health. dental & retire-helpful. Some typing re-9AM ·5PM. ts7-2361 ext. skills : car ........ xlnt fr. TEACHERS AKC English Bulldog 6/9 lade ... £/\ea. I e '; ... -r'" t . F r rth I 'd If look' f "l....... -~.. Id r I .,.... ._. <141 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .All qirt dept 614.M-men ms .. or u er n· q . youare tng or .. "'"· Inge bene. salary negot. T . d' 1 7mo. o ema e. $350 10ormott$1.40ea.
2:JOPM. Cotta MflCI for.caUKim.551-0961 acareerwilhexcell.opp· Send resume to ad no. o st~rt 1mme 1a~e y 545·1867.orl·714·340-1429 , SalesTaxlncluded lotlh.t .... lc •ce/
ty for 8dvancement plus Sales 359• Daily Pilot, P.O. Box Part Ume or fu ll time for 'A knds. NO CARD? ~ f020
pla n t . X'lnt. co. PARTTIME.F /time ans. gd. company benefits ,.......... l""" Cost ... CA Pre-school.851·1-263 --- -Draw your own or send••••••••••••••••••••••• ltet1eftts. & re•iews. serv No exp. nee. Call: contact: Pit Miiis s.s People <IVY. a ... esa. ---A A A H 0 M E D 0 G name. address, phone & Marine Electrictan
Apply S.iS..04 ll. 640-lllO E.O.E. ScWffic o.lw 92626 ___ TB.IPHOHE TRAINING we'll make one card per Deslgn/inslall/repm\r
Drims1g Jmmed. hig'h income Secretary HELP! our S~IT~S We train owner /dog. tag. Add25<each. Qual. wort. 549-2520eva
--· --PART-TIME lsA11..tiUIGI potential selling a pro-secretary is in the Need imm ediately Obed1ence/problem solv· Send checkormoneyor· lotlh,......_ MAID Double your income. 18011 Mitchell South duel that is wanted & hos pltal and we need you Housewives or students ing, show & protection der to: Eq Ip 11 I 9030 • F ull time Tues.·Sat. urgently net:d ambitious. Jrvine, !i57·ll05l, EOE n~ed by everyone. to rm in for a month or to work 9-1 or.3-9. No exp _!ree evaulation 739-768.( , PILOTPIUM'TlMG ••••••••••••••••••••••• Richard Ouellette Salon people person to assist in Company Training two. lbere is a chance nee No sel~ng. Across P.O. Box LS60 WANTED· Avon Zodiac
inflatable s port bo•t
c•pable of handling
~HP motor. 751·8967.
200 Newport Center Dr. expansion or wholesale Qu•lirted Le•ds that this pos ition will from O.C. Airport. Call VALENTINE GIFT Costa Mesa. Ca . 921626 N.8 outlet.848-6995. HighCommisslons become permanent with ~;046-47 or aft. IPM Multi Poo's. 2 re m .
McMtt~taMe MCISI
Ge neral mecha nical
knowledge. experience
in electricaJ & plumbing
helpful. Apply to Larry:
--------l~ST Call Al for app't. 545--6793 us or. transfer lo one of ;pvu4' 151. Adorable. SSOea. 646 .. ~ Buying Gold jewelry &
PART TIME Front ofc. ·~ranee, or754-0535. our othe r companies TIAFAC MAMAGH LAlaADOltS 12t Silver & Diam onds.
HUS B ~:A~~ W 1 FE accurate typing, gd. SALES Person wanted for here 'in Newport. N~ lntemaUonal mktg. firm Brown males for sale ~~:~of the Kingdom
phone manner. Excell. lt ,.., • hoe great skills. ace s peller needs person exper'd . in 8mos. papers , ver y
lO'XlO' Canvas Bo8t Top
on tl · X 12' alum. frame
cost $1800. S500 /0fr
846-31811
Get away rrom the T. V. a d van ce ment 0 p . a · r•"uve women s s eves! Earnan e.xtraSJOO portunilies.644-76'4 dept. in Fashion Island. and canoperate anlBM air & ocean cargo. Ex· friendly, loveable. OAK FIREWOOD
Delivered & Stacked
Judy, 494-4764 Sur( & Sand Hotel
Laguna Bel)('h. 497.4477 .
a week! 54~ 7951. Call 3 to Full or p/time. ex per. Memory 1.00. Good phone cell. oppty. Top benefits I gorgeous best offer Jess
5PMor 6to7PM. nec.640-7810 personality essential. For a ppt .. call : Mrs. 754-7S45days 9040
Mak l' money in your1----..:----spare time. f'lorist needs
a ttractive women for
sales promotion Hours
nex•blc. unlimited earn-
ing. Call 646-37\5 ---
MANICllltJST
Part Time h~
COUNSELING
YOUTH
CARRIERS
llC.rlOMIST Salary a nd age open. Coplan.559-G'901 E.O.E. y 1045 Exper. phones . type SALES:SeadolC?mputer Pleasecallforappt. -------to • 45 +wpm, lite bkk pg, Corp. IS exf)fnd1ng. We Interior Design Firm TIA YB. JOI ••••••••••••••••••••••
misc. clerical. Irvine have v acai:icies for 7H-644·8330 . Woelld YCMI •• Doberman. 11!,yrs, male, mfr. C811 K.H. ~88!M. qu•llfied outside sales & gentle. must have lrg
Hies mgmt. candidates. SICIETAIY a fob wlttl yard. 548-0261.
llC.nOMIST Call~. "~ Ad•..._. & TrGY.e? Jiem Labffenier M-ix s
Full time Mon-Fri. Must s•us-••...,..S 4-t tin. day. Irvine. Like Nation•I concern will mos. old freeto good
be personable It well· • ·-~ phone worll. ty p~ 65 select 10 people 18 & over home 644--0125
Lo .........
Helium Bouque ts de·
Ii ve red. Perfect for
every occasion. 613-4419
,WAMRD Com mode a nd utility
sink. 751.a'T.-
•••••••••••••••••••••••
41 ...........
Fully equipped. Perfect
live-aboard. 953.000. Slip.
SS0.000 loan ror 15 yrs. at
11 \.ll~ avail. Pvt. pty.
534·1~ or MO:,~ on
boat. .
MAIL ARTIST
Esta b clientele awaits
sh~rp artist with exc~I
sk111s. Call ASAP. Jay
groomed. Ii ef\Joy meet· Full or p/llme. Mission wpm? Want ch•Uenge? who are rree to travel -------------16' GLA5l'RON with trlr.
Adults with outstanding ing the -•'-lie. a-uires Viejo .ru. Xlnt opport. Lib --i.p Xlnt skills. Follow the Sun. Miami. 1050 Phone Mate Telephone xlnt n•· ... •-• & ska· boat. attractive personalities .,..., • ._ , 1 d ~ N ~ .. nn· g m ch;ft w1.th .... uu.,. good sn.lling It pen· 1or co lege stu ents It xlnls•J•rv. 833-1122. ew Yortt. Chicago. & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ans..... a uoe ..... c.._ who co.joy working with ,,_ 1 -~ t ..... •th 0 '".....,..,
10.15 year old youths. manabip. No typing. moon lghters over l!I. other !"18:jor U.S. cities. * * I BUY * * warran y .• ,., w1 re· ---------
Start al s4.00/hour. Phone experience pre· Easily earn $1~Sl5 per ••SICllTAllllS•• Toassistmorderdept of mote $149.7S0.379._l_. __ ·--------• 963.0009
2 :lOPM a nd S:lO PM. re rred. Full company hr.CalJJ•cllbtwnl-4pm l eadi ng Cas h io n Good used Furniture & ,.._ . , Joh W ll'CttllSTWIH M e c h 3 n i c w n n t e d benefits. App'u: Pen· al 951-21642 Acct!Degreie l20.000 publis hel'3. Must be a ble Appliances OR I will sell .,., pn~e . n a yne SU vail SI-S VHF· w /genera l eq uip . 642·4321 F.xt.250 Ask ror v Sec/Dlct/RE/$17.400 ed Tennis C lub mem · · Pa · .... • .__0ll,1....,0 f 11 Lori. nysaver, 1660 Placentia ._._hool a...n.trar Enjoy GO/Tii6/R.ecp/SAS12,000 to start imm lately. No or SELL for You b h . M t e 11 , CB. gre•l shape. -.c>
LU ~ """e or sma con· Ave C M ~ ..... _. . experience necessar y. MASTaSAUCTIOM e r s ip. us s . 080.545-!900 st.ruction equipment de-On..ge Coast ·· · · people! Permanent part 'M5{Sh100/Fshls1St.S.600 2wlts. ~ ellpenses. paid 64.._ •616 13• 9625 7~·2484,644·1586.
aler. Health program, Dallw~ RIC.rlOMIST time position in voca· LizReindersAgency tr a 1n1ni per i od -• r ___ . ERN L 32' Grand S.nks diesel
1,., O.T. Call ror app't. 330W. day Street With or without typing tional school. Eves It 40208irch Est'64 EOE Transpo rtati o n Boy's Trundle bed with FLY INT ATl~N~ tnwler, xlnl cond. prol.
Mobil Scaffolding. 14792 Cc6taMesa.CA n~ed. Top pay. Tem-days. Vacation, im · Newport/833-8l90/Free fumished Forinterview · on Pam Am with airline maint. Abeolutefmetton
E: Firestone. La Mirada. Equal Opport. Employer porary & full time. Call medi•te start. South c a II M ~. Ha rris at matching dres:ier. spa~e two· for-one ticket slip. W. Coast. Firm $49,500.
( 7 14 ) 9 9 4 · 6 3 6 o ·l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!'I!!!!!!~ TodServicesat9'79-8900 Co8St Plaza area of San· Secretuy/'J'ypist for 714-635-4082. ext. 11161, ~arveesrsebedr gdw1tqhuablt.1tt·y•n Si n gaporeG. Cen tra I PP.644-2614.
(21.3)8<rl-1378. ----ta Ana. Call Anthony dynamic ihvestme nt .. .,.._ lOA M · 5 P ~ 842.5286 · ~ A.,erica, ermany----------
PBX Answering Service. 1-'ind what you want in Schools at 979.2353 for company. Top salary for Par~nts welcome at in· __ ,......:__ any ~f II cou~tries. 16' Chris Cr•ft. Gull wins
MECHANIC Eves. Full & Ptr. Exp Daily P1Jot Classifieds. appt. exceptlonial s kills & ~w . BEAlfJ'. •pc liv. rm set. Hurry. Good until Feb. Se a sport . 15 0 hp fa~tory trained Porsche nee. C.M. ~1777. --------~otlvation .. Reply in eon· ~s S 1 wk . old. Cost S&OO. sell _28_. 7_60-_1999______ Buick /Chrys engine. Slip
mfthnnic. Apply at 1890 --~-----------------fid'"'nce to p 0 Box • , .... T~ S3SO also like new corr avail. N.B.642-4844. 80.• Coast Hwy. Laguna Person capable of handl· "' · · · •Immediate Openings · · Chandalier. five lights, bt!lt. i n g .a m a n in a MEN &·WOMEN 1296• Corona del Mar. •P/lime. F/lime. Temp. tbl set.S250.963•2489 amber glass ch1mneys, 31' Ow~ Express, '5'7.
-----wheelchair. Sat-Sun 92625. •TopPay European smoked glass antique copper finished dbl pink hull, twin
Mecha nic. Ge ner ator , each weekse7549 lsa't lttlme SICllTAIY For more info. call Tod dining set. almost new. metal put.s$35. 962-1437 screw. recent refurb 6
diesel & gas. with exp. _,___ ------to begin• SALES CAREER, Services at 919-8900 Sora & Loveseat $275. survey. W /prime Peter's Tom Ke 11 y M a r in e Plants; Int. maint. F rr not Just another Job? Health Care Company in•---------Newport Beach Tennis Landlng, H1mt. Harbor E . . S Irvine ha art lmmedjate Mnr8Dtz Stereo. tradl· Club members hip ror nglnC(!nng,548-9617. 4 1hr to start , Co. openln•forafast-paced Y"'LTIC~Y-tioulColfee&EndT•· slip. Must sell . benefits Call 5'15-6252. " .,. ._ -• sale· S&OO. 752·26311 S'T000/080 MO-tl34 MEDICAL OFFICE Individual who works ·Optlcallabtechtrainees. ble set , bentiful 25 ---------1 _____ . ___ . _
Bright & e nthusiastic Pr e -school pa rt time well under pressure. Duties Include working ColorT.V. DIG. Formal 3 NB Tennis Membership loah, W t060 45M
pers o n needed fo r teaching posiliof\s avail. Must have xlnt. typin11 1t with precision optical pc Sofa set lnchtd. Sora
medical office in Fashion Experience & education shorthand skills. Ideal ·components & perform· bed ·(immaculate> all in
40M
35M
Island. F rr or p rr. Typ· needed. 968-8833. candicbte will be detail ing a variety of pro· xlnt cond. C1111 mo ve. 30M Ing. 640-2023 (Cindy). ---oriented, h8ve good or-cesses. Need dependable (714)641·2998
·MEDICAL
PROMTOfflCI
Booklleeper. Medicare &
Preschool teach.ers. 1•nlutlonal & com-per son with desire to
aides. & subs. Full time munic•tioo skills. and be learn It work in produc-
& part time pasilions. •ble to interface well tion oriented environ-
Flexlble hrs. no.1999. with all levels of ment. Call: VALTEC ln man•ge ment & co · Costa Mesa. 714-GJ.-OO
25M
20M
-· 15M
12M
King-szWATER BED
With htr. liMr, mirrored
hdbrd · 2 shelves. 1 yr
old, szso. 983-0433
$300 cit tr•ns fer f ee •••••••••••••••••••••••
730-0283; SC&-7901 11' Hobie C.t. perf. cond.
Rembdellng in Newport. 5/mo old. Sailed 4 timH.
Dbl Ov-,......._ Top, Dis· SSSOO lnvat. HC. 93500· """' ~ 5'5·25JO.tler8. hwHher. TrHb Com·---------
pacter. Nutone Ji'ood "t•l 25, 1 hep fut,
Center. Kitchen Sink, S5000illnewequlp.
Used Brick Pillars . tl500fmnMO-SlJ5
workers. For interview. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I contact Sharon Rasins : r: MS-2421 ~--------1 IUY flUaMITUll C•l 20, 1Un2, dnt cond, I MediCaJ exp req. Heavy Pre-school
pbones. 97t·6480. TIACHIRS I
~ To start immediately.
) Part time or full time. JOIN US IN YOUR CLIMB
TO THE TOP!
714-641-1818, E.O.E . M/F
SICllTUY
Needed immed. With or
without llhorthand. Tem· por•ry A full Ume. C•ll
Tod ~ces •l m-llOO
WAITllSHS Les -957-8133 SPLITASEASON!:D . ba11 with apmuer, low
Apply btwn tAM It . • NIWOOO * use Slip 08, VHP'.
12PM. Charlie's Chill. 7·pc di.Ding muet. t•ble. 6 • • • .._1111 • • • $4000/080. Call after , Mecllca1 Sec'¥ Pre-school8SH.2J63 Woodbridge Med. t:tr. I ---------
person ofc. lite bkpg. no
Sh,
·,,Irvine Personnel Agy
488 E. 17th, Cot!ta Mesa
SuJte 22t 642·1470
Printing
~---~
Offset,.,_.__
Exper'd. bl Pressman.
Goes Community • unit. Apply : 1660 Placentia
Ave .• C.M.
MODB.S PIODUCTIOH
Jtemale only. Photo· Growing company with
l~l'eenlng free. Sat. great benefits need•
211181. Females needing person for production
e'Xferlence & exposure line \o code, rm. It label
with local radioa A: bottles. Knowledge of mazlnea. Photos for GMP at FDA rega pre-f!!~ date book & poeter ferred . Ame.rican
cl>ntest. N .0 . R.M .L. Dia1no1tics: 631-tSSS. T't tn es m a If a z In e . 1--=------...-:..--1
$:..W. PrlnUn1
OffMt"' 11 B MOOH SWllYISOllS Ellper'd. 2Dd Preaaman. ~~needed 0.. Cocnmunlty c ud.. ]{ Beach Cl-Apply: lteo Placentia
Schoo Olstrlct. l· Ave., C.M.
tday .... 35/Jlr. App. •------------•
IJ 735 14th-6~.B. Prod•dklaPlaa.Rootn ._,, Put U... Mon. 2:11Pll· .. "" ""~15 fast. withDal\1 1'tql Want Adi .
flaltla, ..... l :OOPM·
......._ Wlll tnAa. A""' ....... , itleAve.C.M.
I , ... .. ,
Ezcellent ComponJI Bme/U•
Include Medical, Imilal
and Compony Car Plona.
Paid Vocation.f
Complde Vocational Prcf&rom
Sole1 Esperience Helpful
Bul Not Nece111ary
1981 WILL BE OUR BEST
YEAR. WILL IT BE YOURS?
1·
__ l .. _____ ... ...,. ...
3001 RedhiU, Bldg. u . chrs, p•ds, drk wood 1---------1 t :IOpm (714)MO.ll15.
Ste. 12218, C.M. 921828 $750. BG-.. V•lentlne Special! Bou-
•nted depend•ble Ocbgonal Drexel din. la·
babyaltter 2PM--4 :30PM ble, 2 Ives, 4 c.ne-back
SIC...-rYHAaD Mon·P'ri. 142 .. 9792 aft ch81 rs. perfe,ct. S900.
quet of B•lloon1 tied
w /satin Order by 2 /4 frft
delivery L.B. ueu.
49'7-1064/4M-131N -
AJba...,_, 21'. wood aloop,
muf' aaila. rl11i111, needawart ..........
ta. beltolfer ...... F'tr. Jl!l S.ckbay Dr. a:30PM M2·2J73
N.B.&M-Cll510 ,C --on_t_e_m_p_._fi_u_m_l-tu_r_e-.-.-d Time ck>clt, me\81 deab. 21' Erlelraoa. apotlHa, ~e 'y-alrport law firm. M9r1h r 4 11 C'Oftd. Sol•, SZIO. dlnlnl industrial ahelvin1, 4 clleMI, ~t boet.
Self·atartet. or1adiaed ........................ tblel•chnSl'7S 831__ drawer file c•bleet. __. : • -
ad 1klll1, nonamoker. """' a I ... .&.-.M. -~ .:_, 1 :..._... P11r_!!~.;!c~ 11'11,,!C~!!!.: -•--•·-------Joeie, •l.tem. • •••••••••••••••••••••• nuwotl.le -..... e -_ ..... --· -...... .,,,.,
Victorian owal marble-top chair,•· Complete wall abeJYiaf 6 m*. am. 0.. tt7I
SERVICE St.tion att.ead. table 19 $450 Louis unit, delves, desllr ......... ...-a. R.M. ••••• .. •••••••••••••-•
P'ull time. Exp. pref'd. XV ~:~ chalr · SSSO cablneta. $450. Plald Alwan. wt New'°" Doc• apace for .._ ...
Cltevroa .station, 3000 llabot lldfront 'c lMJ ,...,... I/Of• A lo•aeat. Blvd,C.11. aaUboet oHrloolll•I'
Fainiew.C.11. mo al.al ' · ' SJOO. Clrl'a Scbwlen M• I _._. u.19'111119a.1r1-1111. ~ · bike , S$0. Hammond ,.. ,._ I c....--DL'l";'f~~ON OA.llBUP'n:T Slfftrank Orpn. S/yt'I ............... ,... G' .............. boat
D 11 •a. Appl' Shell 11.• old, -.IM-2111. ...... .... ~ Balboa ....... 111,lii S:.tb.. l711a .. lrvble, .... LlYtal ....... f'OrMf ..... 2 a aU.C411 =--~)···(Ill)
N.8.to.ml. ~pedtlllSIY91_ ... ~ dlt coed. Ute 141ol•&f0 I .,,._to~wtdl ro1hop l"°' '1110 .......... ftr'lft .... 1111 """" ..... ,._.. ............. I fw
JOal ...... nae • ..-.a .... 1wt.da .... at•:• a. I I D 2 .. nd. _.,"= .....
portullr fGI quallfted faat•l draw ln the Hardwood ......... dta. Ml••, ...t. '1'H•ll
....... ....._. or Miiii· Wat. . .a Dally Piiot ,. &.a. wlteal. pelf, ..... '": u •:. ...... • ... a.,., ,....
........ ,...._ ,.._.: Clwll\edAd.CaHTodaJ .... ~ ,_ •*' _., • ••I ... lf8.r11:=!1:1 fl' ..9111 ... 1. ..... ..... • ..,.. .1111.......... t --=:!!!·
•
•
Miiie Wwils• flff .......... rled ...... l .. erW • ,-. ~. F.t)ruaty 2, 1981 DAILY PILOT ft ...... ~ ... -.......... ... ...... _ __.,........ ••··•··•·•············· •••..•..•......•....•.. we ·---------• ...=: .. ---... w~~ ... ~-;;.;;···--!?.'.! ~--!?!! ~.'.~~~·;;;'~~~ .. ~~~.~-.... .:;
....... •Lu ..,; ,_.he aa.• ftna. Yeh••· '.Call •• or t 1t deal Jo '7t HOllll8 Afford. alat r.------------
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r .
~ ~
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i
••I· 1 C••·•••' ,.-.. 11 t:tf:'~,, ... Com• :.:!. ::_~ .:.r:I::. ;;·;:;·:;;:·;·~;:.: DANNY'S CUSTOM WAXIMCIJ
lreu.-..r, .... 'II MllTIN HSALSY & m.71& ltereo, allo11, ver1
... , ....... reH•llJ fe• C .... , ... Tlf.Jm. LI 11 LMI ._. ftrlal ........... OIO w _ 'Tl Att'Clld. W. I 1pd, J
.......... •Yd ........ .. ....... door, ....,..,. D ...... ......... 9716 SS OFF ...a._ •••••ft!. l tH nat Md t ruck. IAl17"4Ctl eeed •••• -.uia. ...... ._ ............ .. ~·~ cau,..._ MM• YAWYNOliS ',,.._ t7JI , *iDEALERINU.S.A.
uii:jj•t ,,,. Tep llllf --::r::-.."•1. ~;;;:;;·;;;:~~·;; ~ ~~~v11
.
with this tld • I I
..... -•••••• .. ••• •••••• .... •••••••••••• ~ IJt~MO 4fMt49 ::1.,1 •• ~.f~~/~~ ROUS-ROYCE -..a.DA II~ 'Tl .,..... RV Vu. Self· f"-C'loledSundaJS Brld1•1tone ndial1. , ... ,,.,,...," On c:onip'9te wax wtth Int~ &
exterior. Ask about our monthly aervice .. • ........ I ~ roa&a'8ecl. Xtraa, low ' For Yes Carl Seulbly priced for quall· ::•=r .. •cit
--_ ··-mU..•DO J011n-..a.a-. .,,t 9715 ty car. '7250. Private . ' -• _... ·~·••••••••••••••••••••• j Party. <n,)541-5"7. ClOSEo SUNOAYS .
DUt .a. ... a.pl• tlll L~ 1'3 tb "'/ '73 Capri VI JllOOcc 4 -----.----l\11\11D _,.....1 N -u•uuHueuu•••••• -HarborBlv . apd, air. it.,0. Muat!ll, lw&_.... 9734 ~l•!f .. Wratth II xlnt
e•••l'•d. a•10 1• ca....,,•.• oria Col&a-. s.o.sao 640 •• -' ....................... • _../Brown, tBO.ooo
495 No. Newport llvd. ...... ,. ....
... ,.. . ml. oew~, new paint, Wea... '12KannmaGh11 eonvt. -~--'11m----·---• -... e Perfett • -r 9720 ...,, RR ,.,.,,.. • 'Tl ...... OL ie. GoWw· . . OVER ' ""'· 73, SS, SIM •
.... -··......_•at =·: ~: SSMJUJ, ui•f•7••7••·•••0l••••J••+••J••• s,s1..-,. mint coed, SSl,500, cons. 642-4454 • ~ . ..,,,..\d, •Int ...... W... 9731 trade.1-S35-S5G •-------------• CIOllll. pp (TW)a.4·-· ,...... ,,.. Fer Your Good A Ir' •• t ••• tic ' ....................... 1981 SUver Cloud, whJl&, Allto1, l•porhd c ... ,... ttze
........ t' .. S.l •••••••••••••••••••••••
... /ll&up ,,.. •fOID ....................... ftC1RI'
Rl!NT: l.Z' lu. mtrbome. 4 1peed overdrive.
SIP11l,aelf·oont. 1215/wk. <RGJlDI&) .
+ • l mi . .-..8515. $6195
Por Sale : '76 F ield·
Stream ZZ, rear dinette,
alp1 s. Ford 440 ea"
27,000 mi. WIOO. P.P.
413-2319.
~u~
VOUCSWAGEN. IHC
V1',PancheorAudJ le1d1• 1006111 AMAtmM good cbnd. S21,SOO ............................................... .
MAZDA Owner....... vo111...-9770 •C'-!JW...7t -. ":~·~~ .. . ' ~ ,
VW-PORSCHE-AUDI
~!.Coast Hiw1y
1t Bayside Drive
Newport Beach 873-0900
Premium prices
paid for any Uled car (roman or domestic)
in 1ood condition. .
-~ BAll W ICk
1 , r ·U'•
~---· ... . -~ -·· -.. ' "
NOW OPEN ••••••••••••• •••••• •••• 2 + 2 ff t h b It I · S.-9760 vw parta •• teft • riaht E ~ -c, s • 0 d Orange County s •••••• •••••••••••••••• ' CODOmJCI a pee VolumeMuda ~aler door, '73 left door. 950 manualtranl.Cleancar! 916-1120 LEASE each.541-9744 (052XJU).
71DATSUN510 ............. M DIRECT• '•VWBUG OM.YS41tl Sh.rp! coum> IVW'Wm • • ca bod HOWAIDO.wollt S4lt5 MAJ.DA e·~unroof. DoveA:QuallSU.
.. IJ _____ "._J I 601 s ....... 1. '"' SAAi NEWPORTBEACH ~ ROW'Qllq •cl TUllO. '74 Orange Bug, 53,000 ml, IJJ.OIH
'vo"l(swAGEN.•NC __ .. a m I f m stereo . SHUS "IST!
For Rent: 22'. 1lp1 e. --------534-4100 .t.•1111 llACH IWOl'ts' $3000)080. Call Leslie,
drives 11 lie a car. 'IO Toyota s 1pd 1on1 bed 13731 H bo 644).1031,675-tOM. We have a iood selection
534-4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove SeeU1~ntl
1110/wkend. 10•/mi. pickup, ao.ded, camper ar r Mere ... .._ 9740 .. DoveStreet o f NEW It USED ..-...... h II U.. _......,. Garden Grove ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT BEACH '77 VW BUS: lo miles, Cbevroletl! __ ..,. s e , ae new, •• .,.,.,. I
49S-2551 SB I •• JOUI 71J..0900 552-Gn ~ ~/OBO COMMEll
CHEVRO LET ·13 ro"'~ •LTON MIRC9IS? · o• .......... c--n.u -n Can be painless & quick. ~ """'"'' EUICJllllOUMD Tooltao.-lumberrack highest dollar paid. SAAi •7gn·-nooomi /"\.,...,ll 1 i,. f'
• ,..._ I \ \1 I '
WICAMSILL
YOUll.V. •UIM SUOO. T7~5301 CALL PETER KAY at BUY or LEASE ...... ' . . 546-1 200 ,,....._ TN\'et f 170 ·a ~vy ~T. econ. 6 cyl. HOUSEoF IMPORTS by DIRECP ~!.~~~
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 pd __. cond .. di1lln1 2U or 714 MER· OVERSEAS 76 MONZA 2+2 'Tl All"llream 23' elect 1 • •""" • new Allloi,Mfwtecl CEDES is 213 or 714 DEUVERIES jack am/fm ~tereo radlO ti res • me c h . p e r f . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 637 •2.333. Y olYo 9772 Fuel ••vine. 4 cyl, loolr.a
... pe.declr. Roof air. com· camper· shell. OBO. Alfel-.o , ... ,~.,~.~11:~1 ··•••••V••OL••••V•O••••••••• ~7~:r'~~ Mike
pletely 1elf·cont1lned. 492·0'198 lOllm·3pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• a:.;,;;;;i;iii;i;;iii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:ll •77 300D, pert. cond, 78,00ll • •
Call-.mt '70 'h T . Fo rd P .U Ll!•SE , m l. met allic gr een. --Chevyim-Ja'65 V..S8cyJ ~ SU ,900. (714)54S-574S. s••-•--1 ..-.... S..4c9 ,_.. •/overhead camper . DIRECTI DATSUN z turbocharger -10 120Garaen Grove 81 ~. -..-n.. eng for sale , S2SO. Ir.A~ 11; ... 9400 S3200orbestorr.6*7AS . • at Installation kit.~-COMPAU GaraenGrove5~0·9 1 90 AMDUA~ M2·10'K.
I h ....,,. Co It OVERSEASDEUVERY •----------••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Luv flat bed, lge Pus p. -.-. mp e e fiiBCIDIS EXPERTS '75 MONZA liftback, very S••-••-s _.. 1911 ALFA Datsun Z turbo motor, Huge Inventory Price '79 Saab Turbo s dr ood _.. -'-ti ht . t _ .... _.... custom ra\;A, new eng, _,.,.,. Fibe I Trad--an' n:_... ·• -··· •-hatchback, buroandy g ~,. ... wn w ID .. WnMUS9PAltTS PP,984-1230.531'"'501. SPIDllS -"""· rg ass rear ~-• u -=•....::~• " 29mpg,$2250644·1855aft Imponedcarparta · racing fenders -extend 60 Mos. Finan. Pride in color , 14,SK mi, xlnt. IAILlllU ·&PM ·-
DIPORT le Pord Rancbero 8cyJ llACHIMPOITS stock I Inches -$250. Service 1t Factory cond . (Lik e New ) YOLYO --------
AlTl'OSUPPLY auto,newengnewpaint, 761-5831. Author ized Dealer . w/cstm pinstripe, a /c, 19911JbrborBlvd. w.efle ftJJ
01 N M __ ...__ 21mp& see to app Sl650 141 Dove Street House or Imports. DiaJ GrundJg Stereo, am/fm COSTA ll{lSA
Anakim .uo;'T::!'9900 9'79·039. . NEWPORT BEACH '79 Datsun 280ZX. D
0
rk MER-CEDES is 213 or cass, 4 spkrs, custm COV· 646-fJOJ 540.94'7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SHOWIOOM COHO. 752-0900 brwn, Sspd, Alloyed 714 63'1·2333 er , S 1 o, 5 o o ca II
DATSUN z turbocharger 'IO Chev CUstom Dht ~ wheels , 1m/h n /cass. ( 7 14 l5s2 -7 2 8 9 or OIAMlilCOUHTT
& installation kit. 5"-· ton pickup, ps, pb, a /c, A.. 97~7 X lnL cond. S8500. 1971 280SL. Flawless (714 )552-3132 VOLVO
'75T-TOP
Power brakes, power
windows, power steerinl
with tiltfte lescoping
s teer ing whe el, air.
AM /FM stereo. rear win·
dow defoger, automatic
tra ns. Snow white with
Burgundy interior. 21,000
miles. Immac ulate
thruout! a .100. 7S4-l'190
or Answer Ad U09,
MZ-4300 · 2t hrs.
plus hp. tllSO. Complete dual tanks. std trans. ~······~··••••·~··••••• 714-546-03:11, contact Pal· classic, concourse cond. ------
Datsun z turbo motor $S700~ 79 AudJ Fox. Like new. ti. Moo.·Fri, S.S. 19,SOO. 675-3652 Toyota '7'5 E~~~~~: ~~te~O S2000 Fibe I . · Low mileage 35 mpg , ••••••••••••••••••••••• . · r1 ass rear ,_ 9570 41pd. Many extras $5150. '77 280Z, xlnt cond. many 81 ~D Turbo Diesel. '79 Celka uttback. Sspd, in Orange County!
racmg f~rs -extend!'•••••••••••••••••••••• 960-Ztlll extras.-roc> s nrf, choose colors . snrf, i /c, Am{Fm, cagg, BUYorLEASE
stock 8 uaches -$250. '7l DODGI ' . 496-5257 "' 1.15,SOO. &Tl-4305. S S S O O I 0 B 0 DIRECT
761-5837. Tradesman '200' Cam,....r '72 Audi LStOO. 4dr, cl.ean ..... ,.....,, . . • (714)9'74-422'7. P.P.
,,.. body & int Needs minor '78 510 Sedan am/fm, a /c. v• .....,.,,.., 1mmac. in .. ~·,·~· ~.tlt1.,,~.·~ JA&UAll c.......-. S~ial. Loaded, w /ex-le • O O immac. cond. 29K mi, out, bllt/red, auto. 2·tops.-'80 Corolla liftback a /c. -• -·-~ ' - - --~-
1'1S-I001 ... 1'12Seve. ~=•=~~BO Call ;;.~. S7 00 1 B · 551·9087 orig. owner. l driver. aJI p/b, p f1, am/fm cass, aft
s vc record s . P .P . SPmcaOT70-4199
DATSUN,AITS ._ l •-...... -vy, c·-tom IMW 9712 '78 280Z 2+2, xlnt cond. 67S·89'3 10120G de G •--------', ..... "'~ .... a~ n rove Bl '7S c0-..-..-. CUit.om p1a·nt
• Convel"I•~, .... -pilot. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Am/Fm caas. A/C, snff. --------~Toyota Ce1'ca. Special G G • • ........,
N d ,I ..,., ._.. .7 .. M ___,.__ ,._D to , __ .......... arden rove 530-9190 ... t'nt, T-top, new ., .... , ee parta to t 72 tires chrome rlmi Air SHSO. PP. 640-1948 • e ... ~ _.., , au . model, __,.,,.. w/exlraa. • ~ ... ..
Dat1un: bucket 1eat PoW~r $5500 5'S·04Zi evea/wltends. Am/Fm cauette, St6.995 2:1.000mi. P.P. Call aft.1---------1 53,000 mi. l~ a kind, PP
(black), rear bumper, d · · bstorfer.4M·2023. tPll:tlH• AllhK.UMd (114)244--.
left rear taUU1ht. Pis ya. '78 210Z, A/C, 4 spd. xlnt. , ••••••••••••••••••••••• c-9933
pboa her M t be "" SAl'ITA A"A 657·1322 552-8211 blue.wlntcond. S7500. •••••••••••••••••••••• .,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• call~aft3PM61v 'TS 'ood•e IS pass. bus &'Sf a HOAOWAY , cond. S7,1SO. Mic hael 73 210 MBZ. 4 dr , ........ 9770 •we 9905 --..,.-
e num · 1 m van, n~ pnt, new trans, • 780-9278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Cou1ar XR7 Conv.
REASONABLE. sac.at$2000.983-051S. 835·3171 •79 J10GX. &Int cond,, OVER 190 $DWOIKCAI Loaded. S3200. Call W..e.4 tStO rHEuLr1MATE0111v1"GMACH111r am/fm stereo cus lo 79 4SOSL, 15,000 mi, all ,73 Hornet, A/T. new 752-ee8Zor87S-3SIM
'SI Ford pickup parts. ·•USID IMWt* ml, best offer. M2-S3'73 xtna, alum. whls, 2 top5, tran1. alternator. gen. ... C ood t
Frame, running 1ear, WEPAYTOPDOLLAR •73200Z (Clii5I) s ell/lease, $32,500. starter.Xlntlltnewtires. v7 ougar g rans.
body.-..Sl2 Rot f725 76CH933,548-90IM NEW AND Loob iooct. rw:i.S -great. _, 080. 673-4W. Ah , _ _..;.. _______ • for topUled can·foreitn •. '7S200Za (CICDS) ••••••••••••••••••••••• As is 950 O.B.O. 951.2551 lpm days-wk.nds all day.
domestics or claulca. If '7UOCIZl/r4sp. (1571) '74 y 1·at , .... Sport""-· ..... 'IO MBZ 300SD, Turbo ft• ...... S . .... " 'T1 --(.._4) .-""""-• v. na. .or ue "'""~-9950
•••••••••••••••••••••••
lllPORTANT
NorICETO
READERS AND
ADVERTISERS
The price of items
ad vertised by vehicle
dealen in the vehicle
classified 1dvertislng
columm does not include
any 1 pplicable taxes.
license. transfer fees,
finance cbartes. fees for
air pollution control de·
vice certifications or de-
aler documentary pre·
paratJon charges unless
otherwise specified by
the advertiser. .... ,~ '510 ••••••••••••••••••••••• v ......
u..ctc.nu
'77 Ced. s..-.
Aatro roof, .,11t ,.w ..................
.. wt.I. cnlM c...
trol, .......
(OlZZER>
$&995
YoW" car as e .... a ciea11, _,.. .,., S11SO /OBO. Am (Fm Dsl. Wbl/blue leath. ...,....-,._,
aeeuanRSI'! '776.~caiauto(0040) stereo cus, gd cond. AM /FM stereo cass. DEMOS lolc• 9910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cto.ds •• ..,, •·ZSOS. SS2..0Ul5,m-t883 ....................... ORANGECOUNTY'S
IST ATI SAU FINIST Ol.AM&ICOUMTY'S •• 124 Sport Cpe,am/fni, DO YOU,... OPEN EVERY '76 Buick Electra Limit· LINCOLN-MERCURY le OlDIST nice new eng, extras, A U51D ed, 2dr, fully equipped. DEALERSHIP .. & 11750/0BOtlM-22441 . MllCBIS TO A NIGHT TILL Mon·Frl, '1tpm. 759--43112.
#I "'0,..... C..ty '78 FIAT 1M Spyder, new MEW AMtlHIM6 '78 Buick Century Limit· ~ ~,.~.
2125 ffarbii. Blvd. top, lo mi, xlnt cond. -·-ed 4d l d LINCOLN· .... ERCURY COSTA M~A .._, . r, x nt con . $3,950. ...,
,7, 2500 Sales-Service-Lea.sing $5,500 080. Must sell Compare House ~ Im· 9.·00 .64().4277. 16-18AutoCenterDr . • loY c.r..r,lllc. 151-3057 Mon thru Wed. porta Direct Lease and 60 SD Fwy· Lake Forest exit Is Ito llos . sen.sible pymts . '80 Bu.ick Part Avenue. • IRVlNE t.,hlr. \ Rolls )te BMW Ho.do 9727 Dial 213 or 714 MER· FREEWAY CLOS£1 6fmo old. xlnt cond. 130.7000 I LI• C 'Sii• I IStOJambore:e ••••••••••••••••••••••• CEDES is 213 or 714 ' Velour int. fully loaded. --~-----
For"!:: c1ean !ecs '1m· NewportBeach 640-6444 ' VISITYOUI _637_·2333 ______ WEllSCOUNT! asking S9,7SO. CallM•t.-g H52
port or domestic cars or 0 ..... COAST •es MB Z5(6, lo mi. xlnt N N u (714)•~. ••;;·77MUSTA"4i•• ...~ BobW•lk<' IOI&· :w·. H "°"~s ::C:.1o..\"~i:..: e 11 . A A L ~~:: .......... !!.'.~ ................ ........ EADOO~ '71 4SCS£. 31K mi, lthr DEMO YOUI #I •h•ri•g, A•·F• TODAY!!! int ., nu tires. lite blu CADILLAC steno. ~ ..... ,
UMVmlSITY m etallic, sunroof, all SALE D~ IM mMI •Wit!
SALl!SASERVICE x tr as . 1 mm a c . Ol ....... COUNTY!
BARWICI<
lJhl\UN ---·· ·-.. r •· •' ~ ti • .., J'',
WllUY
CLIAMCAIS
AMDftUCIS
COHMEll
CHEVROLET
-':'-11' '• I' .
,, I \ \1 I '
5~6-1200
._..IUYR
Top dollars for Sports
Can, Bue•. Campers,
114'1, Ad's
.utforU/C llGR
.-.MADeO YOl.DWA ...
850N. Beach Blvd.
LA HABRA
CS Mi. No. or SA Fwy)
l7 I 41522·5Jll
Simday by Appt.
OLDSMOllLI ._7_1_41_644-'449~---~-·
HOMDA '76MBZ.lomi.ori1ownr. NOW IN
SMC TIUCIS Sharp. Xlnt con<\ ltSOO.
SAL~. SERVICE
AND LEASING
28SOHarbor Blvd. SSS·2485. Iv msg ir out. PROGRESS
COSTA MF.SA M• '742
'7S BMW SIOi, very gd 540-fMO •••••••••••••••••••••••
cond, Burgundyftan int. , . . '74 MIDGET BOB WITHAM
-NABERS
CAOILLA"C
'H Classlc'Mustang
Convt . Sl.500 rmn. Must
!ff. (714)855-l300dys.
Am /Fm stereo, a ir . 78 Ctvac, S spd, cass. 1Z7SC W be rb
SS200 . (114)839·8025. deck, silter, xlnt cond, SZl50. cenc· e ;,;:71Z1
1100 H.1110 Blvtl
(I,.,\,\ \'\<.._\ ')40 'll()() Nifty '65 Must Convt.
Redone SUSO nrm. Day:
141-1655; eveM0-1722. eves.P.P. ~.~ •. VOLKSWAGEN
M61 '744 7eGOWellmlnaterAve. '•ELDORADO '72 Mustang, V·l /351,
••••••••••••••••••••••• · In Westminster Niceoond. l1000. 4'.000 mi, pe/pb, immac.
'7J MGB-GT. 1d cond, 893-7551 al-7ll01 ____ 110-__ 530_t ___ Bestolfer.131-7S74.
snrf, c1u, $2200. PP. '71 Cpe DeViJJe, brown . ,
MZ-1011. 79 YW SCllOCCO w /camel. loaded. lllnt '79 Mus&aq, hpd. aar. ~· Lo Miles! <_,> cond _. ~176 c111. stereo. 101 m1,
,...... '741 ""' • · mlat cond , S4990.
•• TO)<CQ Land Cruller, tmlBuebBlvd. __. ......., __. HUNTINGTON BEACH OoY'·+~t ~
b #phetV/
••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Eldo loaded MUST 4fl5..908'1, 131·7540
LEASE ~~ Uawt.Wi SELL,XlfttCond. Lolli.,....... ,, •• .....-~· ....... Int, eng MJ.JllO . nda wort, dn ea1. for.__ _______ _
pa11a si•-.5M3 TOP DOU.Al
Aadl!fu •/ PAID fOll .. ~~ ........ !~!! •OOD & CLIAM
'57T-lllD
CLASSIC!
Yo• m•t '" to •P-pneiateGlll beaul7 at
THEODOIH
.~OBlf\15
I \ I" ( •
.. '
•• hll'dWoodlo,,....... Sll.•AUO .. llolal
A Towa ..... 4 dr, , .............. .... ..........
..... Ra .... P.U.
lllllt • &1¢1 'e•llr r 11 .. -. ... m1 .
.. .
U•CAISI
m 1r(1r:l e
n1 i-;d.1 , . ._.. -~
POISCHES
WANTED
e ~tJ\A
tan ad
(Uf\r\if\4 -
Use ..... At/ service
when placing your ad ... a
Dally Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad . we take your messages
2~ hours a day ... you call
in at your convenience
during offlce hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
• this service Is only $7.50
week. For more Informa-tion Md to place your ad
ca II 642-5678. ..
DIRECT! ~ voi;;;:.~1;,,1Nc 14115e\'e, wlmdaS..711Z ~-;.•••••••••••••••• .. ••
'80 "Cad. Eldondo. X1nt lmllEOENCY 13731 Harbor cond SHIGO cub 6: take Top eoncl. .. ml, a-. 1911 ...-toT ~rden' Grove • over peymta. m-2172 -..r•
TUllO. __ '7_• __ YW_IU_S---• "71 Seville, low mi, loaded, 'IO CuUau Brou1ha111,
•••CH•U.OITS MmtSelll (.._) leather, 11500. Call · lJ·• mi, loeded. Wlmd _.. ......-__ m-sm-'d)'I. ora1t.1.•an. .. no.e 9lreet ..--w•
NEWPORT BEACH ~~ ~
, ___ 1u.ett0_...;.. ____ 1 ~ voucswafN.IHC
Ettate Sale, "71 Dteael, all 514-4100
opUoaa, make otrer. 13731 Harbor
.. Gerdln Grow
'·
•
WAmaNOTON (AP• -"9 ~., ..............
• nr4 ... MHU, eriticlNd llli· ...,... .... ..-ndel..C'''"• -tM c...... ... tr.U., ~--....,,T.H.leU ··••wed todaJ. The rua. woWd bave forced
tbe nation'• 1claool1 to teacb
ct.ildrea wbo aren't native
speakers of Eull1b in Uaeir
.... Ye ......... wllaSn··· eoq,... ........ a frMle -tlae
nalel. ~-1 Bell'• .... deeeuor, M.H..,....._., :.0 ~ and y ..... --
But tlaey lplted aa avaluebe
ol crttidam from acbool ~
and many education 1roupe;
wbicb claimed that for the ftnt
lime tbe federal 1onrnment
Just rloaeafllfl are.a.d
\
WU trJilll to ..... Hbool dlatrieta
bow m wbat to teacll.
''Tbe poUc._ are hanh, la·
fteuble, burdellllome, un1"Jl'b.
ble ud lncndlbly coetly. Tbe. ruin are fiercely opposed bJ
maay, supported by few,•• Bell
said.
He called the-rulea "an in·
truaion on atate and local
reaponaibillty."
;
Four-year-old Juliet Cottle puts finishing
touches on makeup for Clown Konky, woo
is really 6-year-old Neville Campbell at Ho-
ly ·Trinity Cburcb iD Eut ,...., where
the 35th annual clowns' service was held
Sunday. Juliet's father, Gerry, is president .
of Clowns lntematlonal.
I 11
Witness ·in county
deaths detained
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
former Seal Beach man wanted
as a_JN'itness in the bizarre se.ries
of ,. Freeway Killer " murders
was being held for questioning in
a PennsylvaniajailSunday.
He was identified as Ralph
Leonard Kincer, 20, now ?>eing
held in the Somerset County jail in
lieu of $100,000 bail.
K incer was arrest ed last
August in connection with the $100
robbery of a Somerset gas station,
~aid Somerset police officer
LesterD. Lensbouer.
"Kincer gave us a lot of names
and addresses when he was first
arr ested," Lensbouersaid.
Kincer was questionea by
Orange County sheriff 's inves-
tigator Bernie Esposito on Jan. 23
and 24. Orange County Chief
Deputy District Attorney James
Enright said Kincer is "not a
s uspect" in the murders,
·•although the Orange County
sheriff's office sees him as a
4 • , •• ,,..
Bus service
threatened
by strike
potential witness.··
Lenabouer said Kincer pleaded ~
guilty Friday to a charge of
"criminal conspiracy" in connec·
tion with the gas station holdup
and was scheduled for sentencing
Tuesday.
Details of Kincer 's involvement
in the California slayings are not
clear but a source in Somerset
said the man is believed to have
been a roommate of one of the six
men arrested earlier in coMec·
lion with the series of grisly
murders.
William Bonin, 33, a Downey
truck driver, is charged with
murdering 14 teen-age~ boys
within the jurisdiction of Los
Angeles County.
Bonin faces trial May 4 in Los
Angeles and also faces possible
prosecution in several other coun·
tiesL including Oran~e County.
Tnreeothermen ~lsobave been
charged and face trial in Los
Angeles in connection with the
killings. They are: Gregory Mat·
thew Miley, 19, of Bellflower,
charged in five killings, James
Munro, 19, of Long Beach, and
William Ray Pugh, 18, of
Norwalk, both charged with one
murder.
(See WrrNESS, Pa1e AZ)
Engineer
slain in
S. CouRty
BJ FREDEaJCK sceoi.\.EBL
Of .. CMily NM IUfl A bloody Sunday ni1ht slay-
ing Jo.. in which a 25-year-old
eng1ne~r was repeatedly
stabbed in the chest in the
bedroom of bis Laguna Niguel
residence, is under investigation
today by Orange County
Sheriff's homicide detectives.
Investigation Capt. James
Guess said no motive has yet
t>een established in the slaying,
which occurred at 297'2 i£Jlen·
dale Drive.
The captain identified the vie·
tim as Donald Frank Cook, a
construction engineer emplOYed
by Bechtel Corporation at the
San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station south of San Clemente. ·
Cook's body, its torso riddled
with stab wounds, was foUnd at
12 : 30 a .m . today by John
Hasircoglu, a roommate and co-
worker of the victim.
"There was no sign of rob-
bery, burglary or forced entry,"
Captain Guess said. ·
Aaked what the motive might
<See SLAIN, Paae A2>
.. NCltbina in the law or tile
Constitution anolnta tbe,Depart-
ment ol EducaUoa to be Na-
tional Sc:bool Teacher, llfaticmal
Sebool Superintendent or Na-
tional Sebool' Board. J would like
to UH tbia replatloa, IJIDbaliC
of many ol the Ula that have
pla~ the federal 1overnment
anotbi.s Oed1Ung department, to
telegraph a meaaa1e of cbanle
to the American peqplf."
Bell told reporters he pro-r
po&ed withdrawtna the ruin a
Wffk qo t() Presldent Rea1an
"and be was in full support of
it."
The Education Department
estimated that enforcin1 the
rule1 to teach children reading,
wrilinl and other primary sub-
jecta in two lan1uages could cost
school ~.ricts $180 million to
$591 million a year.
Bell said that until hh 1taff
can rewrite the rules to make
them more nexlble, the depart·
ment will revert to gui<telin• la·
sued in 1975. Those guidelines,
never put into regulations, were
a r esponse to the 1973 U.S.
Supreme Court decision that
<See SPANISH, 'Page AZ>
Iran, Iraq eyed
Sf:ludis threatening
. . .
to reduce oil flow
.11DDA, Saudi Arabia (AP> -
Saudi Arabian Oil Minister
Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani was
quoted today as saying b1a na·
Uon, the world's lar1eat oil ex·
porter, mipt cut production in
half if OPEC's share of the
world market continues to
dt;.cline and warring Iran and
Iraq resume high levels of pro-
duction.
A drastic production cut by
Saudi Arlabia would drive up the
price of petroleum products
worldwide 400 have an especial·
ly stronc effect in the United
States, which gets about 8 per·
cent of its energy needs from the
desert ldntdom. ·
The sAudi Gazette, an English
language daily, reported that
Yamani addressed some 1,000
studenta, teachen and oil ex·
ecutiv• over the weekend at the
'Uni\'enity of Petroleum and
llinerala in ~ahran.
It ·quoted bim H 1 ~bl :
"When Iran and Iraq produce 7
mllllcm barrels a day and wbeD
tbe OPEC 1hare Of the world oil
market falls to below 24 mlllloD
barrels a day, the kin1doni will
have to drop production to no
less or no more than 5 million
barrels a day."
Saudi Arabia, America's ma-
-jor supplier of f oreip oil, pro-
duced some 10 million barrels a
day ln 1980.
The price of its benchmark
crude la currently $32 a ·42.gaJJon
barrel. Other .OPEC exporters
charge 11P1 to $7 more per barrel
for simifar quality oil.
The 13-nation OPEC·cartel ex·
ported some 25 million barrels a
Classroolll8
lease eyed
A plan to sub-le ase two
classrooms at Robinwood School
in north Huntington Beach will
be considered tooi1ht by Ocean
View School District trustees.
The trustees meet at 7:30 p.m.
in the district board room, 18940
B St., Huntington Beach.
Since. lut fall, Robinwood bas
been leased to Coastline Com·
munity College, which is con·
ducting classes there. College of.
ficiala toniaht will discuss a plan
to sub-lease two classrooms to a
third party during daytime
hours.
day in lf8>. Some oil sources
have SUllested that increased
exports by non-OPEC pro·
ducers, such as Mexico, could
cut the OPEC share or the world
market lo 22 million barrels a
day. .
In s uc h circums t ances,
Yamani said, "the burden will
be upon us to go down."
Thompsoa favored
Huntingtoll picks
city chief tonight
The Huntington Beach City
Council is expected to appoint
veteran Downey City Manager
Charles 'nlompson as the new ci·
ty administrator tonight, pend·
inl approval of final detaila.
It wu learned that Thompson
esnerpd u the top choice from neutf .._ candidftes for the
post and that he was the un·
aJUlD~ telection of the seven
cl(y eounell members.
Salary terms with pay expect·
· ed ran1ed from $50,000 to
$80,000' bu reportedly been set·
tied upon.
Thompson, who has been
Downey's chief executive officer
for 11 years, is expected lo as-
sume his new job March 16.
He will s u cceed former
finance director Ben Arguello
who had been the interim city
ad~inlslral4>1' since the firin& of
Bud Belsito last summer.
Arguello is scheduled to take
over Lhe po1ition of director of
the newly formed department of
administrative services.
Tonight ·s city council meeting
gets under way at 6:30 at city
hall, 2000 Main St.
Higher speed limit
proposed in Valley
Posted speed limits on all of
Fountain Valley's arterial streets
could be raised lo 45 miles per
hour under a proposal prepared
by city Trame Engineer Jim
McClendon.
Some arterials in Fountain
Valley currently are posted IS low
as 30 miles per hour (Bushard
Street), .. but the 'traffic flow is
usually at45, McClendon said.
·'The posted speed has_ nothing
to do with how fast people drive
until Lhey see a black and white
police car coming up behind
tbem,"hesaid.
According t o the traffic
engineer, the city must justify its
speed limits tothe state in order lo
continue enforcement by radar.
McClendon said an expensive
survey conducted last year found
that '5 was the "safe and pru-
dent" speed used by most Foun·
lain Valley drivers on the
arterials.
A proposed ordinance that
would put the speed lim.it change
into effect will be considered by
the city council Tuesday night.
HB finance
·firm held up
Police are hunting for a lone
gunma n who robb e d Avco
Finance, 18894 Beach Blvd., of
$320.
According to policl:'-the
suspect entered the business at
3: 30 p.m. Friday with his gun
drawn. The man pointed the
weapon at a woman employee
and demanded cash, police said.
The suspect placed the cash in
a small black briefcase, ordered
the Avco employees into the -
back and fled on foot. He wlS
described as a white man, age
28, with a slim build, and sloppy
in appearance.
Coast
· A strike shutting down Orange
County Transit District bus
service became more likely to-
day after mechanics reportedly
rejected ~latest contract offer
from the dtltrict.
The mechanics, votin1 on
Saturday, cast all but one vote to
reject the unspecified offer, ac·
cording to a spokesman for the
United Transportation Union,
which represent• the 210
mechanics and the district'• '780
HB seeks j11ry .. pro~ «>f CETA Weather
bus driven. ...
The mecbanics could 10 on
atrlke aa early u Tbunday -80
day1 after tbelr tbree-.vear eon-.
tract •=And IO days after a fact proceu wu lm·
plemented to un1ucce11fully
aolye contract dlaputes. .
Tbe drivers •oted on a
aeparete eontract offer on Sun-
day. Multi were unavallable
earlytodQ.
Tbe drtftfl are e:a:pect9d to baDorJilllltllwlDtMnem~ a mear..la' ltrlke.
Tiie dlmtd'I board of dine·
ton ... to meet '°°' to •· ............. ~ Top ••1 current . for
meeUDla II •·• an r; drtY .. eanlfl.tlanbour.
87 .OBERT BAUll:a HUJltinlton Beach wu atfect· __ _,,....... ed early lut 7ear when .the
The Huntincton Beach City Weatem Jnatltute of Careen
COundl plam toallbt to call far lac., a non-proftt ~&aallatim
1 1rand jury lnveetiptlaa o1 all Ht up to bandle tbe JOb tralalq
faeeta of tbe Comprebnll.. prolfam far tbe dtJ, waa dis·
Empao,mmt and Trabdq Act mantled by tbe Orut• Comly
(CETA) Job trabaiq Pf'Oll'aln la llaapower Comml11ion .after oruae CouatJ. they found mllu• and ml•· .. .,. Katia 8aileJ Hid today ...... IDllll ol f ...... ,.. by
It la obYlou tbat tbere are w..i.na. ~ .................... _ ...... dlnctGr Robert em.
we an _.... lw a ll'ad ~ . · alap1m wu ladlet.d bJ tM
invndptlma to c1arllr tM wWa Or .... OlmllJ Orm Jury aad
.CETA 11tuatlaa, IDcludlQ tbe 11 1eWllld to .-trtal cm ==--=--~ Jlmt. ::.~•l•meat cbar1H tbl1
CG._-'.!!! lt'1lla "1l1u. a It allo Ml.._ 1enaled tMt
member of the cltJ'1 CITA a ...... 1t•ct>a111t81._ n-
eommlttee, alto Aid lbe wlllled tmlled lie' rt • .. ...,_ ol
to1et1o ...... o1=-· ()per .... c .......... ....
"It • .,,..... tlaat ~ A11aCllrA= .. r11A .. = = =--= .:=: =o:=: .. '•:::::c:: an DOW oomAnl to tM fin." ~·
Marie Terry ii achedul.a to
1tand trial on char1n of fWnl
false pay vouchers for perlada
which she alle1edly did not
work.
Robert Nellon, wbo ,.........
aa eaec:utlve dlrector of the
Manpower Comml11ion last
Wff~, wu called to testtf) at
botb ........ p .
· Tbe llaapower CommlaloD
OHrMea ad admlalaten • mllW 18 ,.._al _, fear Job
tralalq prosram1 la Oraqe
Co tr. •
.............. .._ .... com • ....... _ ... ..., ....... ~ . ........ ~=it,:-·· ·n•u•.... .. ..... .... _., ..... . .......... ........ . ............ _ ... .
c.aata1loa •••••l'I wh '
neither hire nor fire the ad· mlniltrator.
That decillon ii up to the local ·
1o•ernment members of the
Manpower Commiuion -
repN1eatatlvea who Mm from
Santa Ana, Anaheim, Gardea
Grove Ind Oraqe County.
HUllltlaltcm Beach pulled •out.
of tbe ccmorUum after' aDeo· tlom .... lodaed .. alBlt ..
Western lmUtute ,,r c,,....,
Inc.
N el1on '• a11l1ta•t, Jud1 a. • ..., ..... ,.... ...... . ..... ~ ....... ...
CS,. A pro1ra• o•talde ti•• -.Q. . .
la a,...... iaau.r,'a.t· ......... := ... ..... ......... """"9 ... "" .e11tcn~ ..... ,
Variable bllh cloudlneu
otherwise fair tbrou1h
Tue.day witb chance of ·
coa1tal IOI Tuesday morn-
in1. Lowa toallbt • to •.
m1u Tue.day a to 11.
.
America'• ent10y·
lo El Sa"'8dor /ired
NSW YOU ,.,, ........, "= Mt111drr Kaia bl ftredlilllllt....._ .. ~u.-...---••rtoatlalv14ot
............ "al' MW pOllt1 &. C ..... &I A....nra." TM New Yon 11••,......atodar
.,..... ... taUed '° WuWnatoa lut wNk and lDformed that
1M l111u admUailtrauoa wt!Ufd 1ooe na1n• a new ambauador. w~'UM 11••• repon, wbkb waa b&Hd on Slate 0tput . .... , ••rn. ..
""'-· • carHr diplomat bu bffn 1tr0ntb criUcla.ct b_J,...--a.~an ~ryatlvu The }'tmu aald White bad not btH oft
ferfld I MW .....,nm•nl Whlt• aaid any anno\lnct ment about hla
f\ature -ould have l o come from the State Department, the TlmH
aid • .......... , ................... ~.
CA PE CANAVERAL. Fla CAP> The launch ol lbe fi rst
Pitt' shutUt', already runnln1& twp years behind original plans,
••Ube delayed at leut a month beyond Its scheduled March 17 date.
The NattonaJ Aeronautics and Space Administration in
Washinltoo confirmed the delay today after The Associated Press I arned about It from sources at Kennedy Space Center here
. Th~ sources sajd the latest delay was due to a problem ~ith the
an uhat1~ of the external fuel tank. which will feed the orbiter
Columb1a'. three main engines durine fUghtandorbiL c...,. ......................... rem ..
WARSAW , Poland (AP) Teams of government and trade
union negot1ator-s met today to try to resolve local wildcat s trikes
by farmers and workers in southern Poland after a national union·
government compromise eased Poland's labor crisis.
A commission led by Deputy Agriculture Minister Andrzej
Kacala met with represent.ativesorrarmers and workers who have
been holding a sit· in for a month in a former trade union building in
Rzeszow, demanding legalization or a union for the nation's priv11te farmers
Fire e•1Ue• • .,.e_, ... •I eH l•..,_r
PORTSMOUTH, Va. <AP> Sixtypeopleaboardan emptyoil
tanker off the Virginia coast were evacuated as a fire in the
vessel's engine room continued to smolder. the Coast Guard said
today.
The fire was on the 800-foot tanker Aikaterini, located 40 miles
east or Chincoteague.
lleflflG11, So11tlt KOl'ftl preetflettf .wet
WASHINGTON CAP> -President Reagan met today with
Sout h Korean President Chun Doo-hwan a mid expectations the
United States wlll pledge to maintain troop levels in that country.
Chun. arriving at the White House in a driving rainstorm. was
greeted by the president and by Vice President George Bush, who
escorted Chun inside for his hour-Jong meeting with the president.
Chun's visit is intended to symbolize a return to normalcy in
Korean-American relations after four years or friction over human
rights and other issues during former Pres ident Jimmy Carter's
tenure as president. Some•• ellarge poattftll ••.,er ... •
~ MOSCOW <AP) In a new escalation of its war of words with
the Reagan administration. the Soviet leadership today publicly
accused W<1shi ngton or "deliberate political subversion" for
charging that the Krem lin was responsible for acts of international
terroris m.
Minister rebuffed
. .
'i • ..
~
Judge ,rejects bid
·io ban Penthouse
/LYNCHBURG. Va. (AP) -A
federal judge refu sed a request by
television evangelist Rev. Jerry
falwell today for a preliminary
injunction banning distribution or
the March issue of Penthouse
m agazine.
Falwell asked that the adult
m agazine. which contains an in·
-fi'romP .. eAJ
WITNESS • •
Another man charged in con·
nection with the case, Vernon
Butts. 23, hanged himself in his
Los Angeles County J ail cell last
month.
The str angulation killings
became known as the "Freeway
K·iller" murders because the 44
bodies of the victims -all young
men or boys -were dumped near
freeways or highways.
Authorities say. however. tha t
the murders, which occurred in
Los Angeles, Orange, San
Bernardino, Riverside and Kem
counties since 1972, may not all be
related. ·" ·
Mild earthquake
felt at Palomar
MOUNT PALOMAR (AP)
No damage or injuries were re-
ported from a mild earthquake
that struck a remote mountain
area 11 miles northeast of the
fained Palpmar observatory:
The observatory's 200-mch
Hale reflecting telescope, one of
the world's largest, was un-
disturbed by the tremor, wbkh
o~curred early Sunday, said
Palomar caretaker Nina Sim·
mona.
ThomAS P. Haley
~
Robert N. Weed
~
M. Thlmes Keevll 1(--
Thornes A. Murphlne ............
Ch•rles H. Loos A .................
terview with him, be ordered
p u lled from newsstands on
grounds he h a d asked the
free-lance authors of the in ·
terview not to sell t heir story to
Penthou se o r Pl ay b oy
m agazines.
The miruster has sued Pent·
house for $10 million. U.S. dis-
tricl ·Court Judge James Turk,
who granted Falwell a temporary
restraining o r der Friday .
declined today lo extend it after a
90· minute bearing.
The judge said "the public in·
terest" outweighed Falwell's in·
terest and he would not extend the
injunction beyond its 1 :30p.m. ex-
piration.
Falwell said later he would not
appeal to the 4th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in Richmond.
Falwel11 was the only witness at
today's hearing in federal court
here, saying he didn't contend
that the interview in P enthouse
was inaccurate, but adding,
"Penthouse magazine is a very
poor package for the gospel of
Christ."
Falwell is founder and presi·
dent of Moral Majority Inc.,
founder and star of the Old Time
Gospel IJ<>ur radio and television
broadc ast , pa s t o r o f the
17 ,000-member Thomas Road
Baptist Church here and founder
of a local we b of Christian
schools. ·
The March issue already was on
sale today at some stands in
Anchorage, Alask a, and in
Virgirua.
Falwell said two British free.
Janee writers, Andrew Duncan
and Sasthi Brata, interviewed
h1m and sold the story to Pent.
house after he made it clear to
them no interview could be sold to
what Falwell considered a porno.
graphic magazine . "
Alter tlae r.ains teent ateag
• .. Weekend sailors at Newport Harbor found clear skies, It was a glorious way to celebrate the e nd of January.
Photo was taken with a 500 mm lens from The Arches
Bridge at Pacific Coast Hig.hway, looking south.'
s unny weather and some stiff breezes t~ play in Saturday
afternoon as they tacked about in fairly heavy company., . ~
fi',....r.,,.AJ
SPANISH. • • .
held schools must instruct non·
English-speaking students. The
high court, however , did not
specify how t hey s hould be
taug~t.
The Carter administration
rules stipulated 'that instruction
in two languages be the norm for
classes of limited speaker-s of
English. and that any variance
must get special permission.
The proposa l in furi ated
ed u cators u sing intensive
E n glis h-as-a -second-langua·ge
i ns truction . or immers ion
courses, to tea ch youngsters
English
But Bell said schools should
n o t h ave to get s pecial
permission for such methods.
"It was like Henry Ford used
to say about his Model T, 'You
can have any color you want as
long as it is black.' because that
was the only color he produced."
Bell said.
The Education Department
estimated las t summe r that
more than 3.5 million children in
Am e rica speak little or no
English. Seventy percent are
His panic.
But it sajd only 1.3 m illion are
doing so p oorly wit h the
language that they would have
qualified for bilingual education
under the 1975 guidelines.
Two nations
call for truce
LlMA, Peru (AP> -Peru and
Ecuador each called for a cease:
fir e aft e r fiv e day s o f
s kirmishing along a disputed
stretch of their Andean border,
but each reiterated its claim to
the territory and dem anded that
the other recognize it. .
Peru asserted Sunday night
that all Ecuadorean forces had be~n driven from Peruvian ter·
ritory and said its troops "have
been ordered to cease firing
when the adversary adopts a
sim ilar measure and abstains
from any act of aggression."
Seve r a l h ou r s l a t er ,
Ecuadorean President "Jaime
Roldos called ror a cease-fire
that "respects the territorial in-
tegrity of Ecuador." His govern-
ment admitted the loss of one of
its three military posts in the re·
mote, mountainous area but
claimed ground and air righting
was continuing for another one.
Body found
under train
A 31-year -old Burbank man's
dismembered body was found
beneath a railroad freight car
early Sunday during switching
operations in Anaheim.
The Orange County Sheriff·
Corone'r's office identified the
dead man as Jonas Petras.
Investigators said it was un-
clear at this til'&le if the victim was
run over by a train or died by
some other means.
O fficers s aid a crewman
noticed a portion of the victim's
body beneath one of the freight
cars during tr ack s witching
operations at about 3 a.m. in the
Southern Paci(ic switchlng yard
area a<ljacent to the Santa Ana
Freeway.
TM death is still under in·
vestigation.
Windows smashed
at 8Chool in HB
Vandall s mashed 31 windows
at Pleasant View School, 18882
Landau Lane, Hunlin1tqn
Beacb,over.iheweeJr:end, poUee
reported.
Tbe Incident took llace
betWMD e p.m. ~day an noon Sunday. The total 1011 waa estlmated at 1551.
•I
SnoWstorm buries
I ' -Plains; 17 perish
By Tbe AssocJa.&ed Presa
A long-awaited snowstorm
that blew out or the Rockies has
left at least 17 dead, including a
s ki er who died unde r an
avalanche the day after Utah's
fir st ma j or s nowfa ll of the
season. I
The s tor m, carr ying high
winds and generous helpings of
s now, moved over South Dakota,
Nebr aska, Kansas, Iowa and
Missouri during the weekend,
chilling the unseasona bly warm
a ir and bringing much-needed
precipitation to an' area worried
a bout drought. (Related story.
AA.1".
Meanwhile, light rain 10 lhe
Nor theast brought hope of relief
from a drought that has prompt·
ed offi cials in New J ersey. New
York , Connecticut and other
states to enc'ourage water con-
servation.
What forecasters called the
season's first "bona fide" winter
storm in the Midwest lost much
of its pun c h a s i t moved
eastward into Wisconsin, and JI.
linois But more s now was ex-
pected tod ay in Michigan. wtiere
freezing rain and snow were
blamed for two dealhs . One man
died after coll a psing while
s hoveling snow. and anothe r
man was killed when the car he
was in s kidded and hit a light
pole.
In Kansas. wh ere ra in and up
fi'ro• Pflfle A I
CETA ...
of a n audit initiated by the city
of the local program.
Officials said the aurlit has
been a year in the making and
s aid they have been told it was
d e layed by re.s ignations of
persons working for the auditing
firm.
Rabies epidemic?
LEAKEY. Texas CAP> -With
the number of confirmed rabies
cases rising at an "alaiming"
rate in a six-county area of south
Texas, health officials are warn-
ing of a possible new epidemic
of the deadly virus.
to six inches of snow fell. the
driver of a tanker truck carry·
ing anhydrous a mmonia was
killed during the weekend when
it overturned on a rain-slick
highway. Parts of Missouri got
se ven inches of s now and
Wisconsin got up to 41 2 inches.
Six people died in Iowa, .tn.
el uding fi ve who di e d on
highways and one man who died
in the crash of a light aircraft .in
!'ochohontas County. lJp to 9
inches of snow fell on sections of
the sl<1te
The st:>rm left at least lou r
dead after traffic accidents
on s lick roads in Nebraska .
whe re winds gusted up to 45 mph
Sunday Two traffic deaths were
blam ed on sno\o\ and ice condi -•
lions in Colorado. and the U.S.
F o r est Ser vice issued an
avalanche "'arning for mountain
areas
In Utah, a man was killed
Saturda\ when hit by a pickup
truck as he walked along a road
day, a 20-year·old cross-county
skier Daniel Arthur La Fuve of
Salt 'Lake, died after being
buriea under five feet of snow in
a s mall avalanche al Donut Falls
in Big Cottonwood Canyon Two
companions escaped and sum-
moned help. authorities s aid
The National Weather Service
issued avalanche warnings for
all back-countr~ areas as the
new ~now sli pped off the old.
hard-packed b~~e .. ,
Alta, the s ki resort in Little
Cottonwood Canyon east of Salt
Lake City, reported having 90
inches of snow on the ground, an
increase of nearly fi ve feet since
· Wednesday.
In Connecticut. where the 0.38
inch es of rain that fe ll last
m onth made it the driest
J a nuary on record. offi cials
were hoping that the light rain
Sunday and rain expected today
would a lleviate the curre nt
parched conditions.
A co mpan y with 500
employees in the affluent city or
Greenwich has gone to a four-
da y work week to conserve
water. officials s ay
Introducing the Al's Garage Jean .. designed especially with you 1n mind.
lightwe1gh1, comfortably tailored with f1
straight leQ silhoueue. ln three shades
of denim indiQO. wa~ed and bleached
\
--.. -··u·-·-·--~---------
HB executive
robJ»ed b.y
two bandits
P olice are searching for two
men who robbed a businessman
of two wallets and a wristwatch
in the garage of his Huntington
Harbour home.
The victim, who was identified
by police only as a 57·year-old
corporation pces ident, told
o ffi cers one of the wallets
contain~d a check for $70,000.
The incident occurred al 10
p. m. Friday whe n the man
ste pped out of his car after
returning home.
According to police, one
s uspect came up behind the
victim and placed s om ething in
his back that appeared to be a
weapon. After taking his wallets
and wris twatc h . the suspects
fl ed on foot.
The sus pects were described
as black men. both age 18 to 20
and 5 reel 10 inches tall.
SLAIN .••
be. Capt. Guess s aid, ··1 wis h we
knew."
He said initial investigation
showed that the slaying had
neither sexual nor drug-related
overtones.
Guess s aid the slain m an was
employed as an engineer, but
declined to name the firm where
the victim worked .
"The victim was last seen alive
by the roommate at about 6 p.m.
Sunday, Guess said.
Guess said the slaying isn't
believed to be related to the un-
solved murders of Keith Eli Har-
rington. 24 . and his wife, Patrice
Anne. 27 . who were found
bludgeoned to death in the
bedroom of a Niguel Shores home
Aug. 21.
"There are just too maAy dif·
ferences in the two cases." Guess
said.
In the Harrington case sherifr's
homicide investigators a lso have
been unable to determine a
motive.
Seiner held
SAN DIEGO <AP ) -A
spokesman for U.S. tuna fish-
ermen says Ecuador has freed
the captured seiner Rose D. with
its 817 tons of tuna without impos-
ing a threatened $1 .2 million fine.
'1'l S GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) ay.1030
. . . -~-----~ ------------~ ..... ..,__..,.. _____ ....... _____ _...... ___ ___
......... ~ ...... --i..-....... "":.-··--..-----------·-....... -----·~·-~-···----··-··
rnger rhldeyurdt' does a dance as she
look. at tnrthdoy cuke m.a.de m honor 6/
her 15th birthday during a party at ,New
York's Luchows Restaurant.
'Boris tokes
Texas lli11g
Boris Badenoff, the liny
vlllaan whose plot:> against
t h e moose and squir rel
heroes of TV's "Rock y and
Bullwmlde" cartoons seldom
bore fruit. has C'lcared out or
Hollywood and moved to cen·
lral Texas.
H is hoar!>e , vagu e l y
Russian voice occasionall y
pops up on KTEM H.adio in
Te mple. Tex., nowadays,
along with his friends Astro,
George Jetson's s pace-happy
dog; Scooby Ooo. another
pooch that usually ha unts
Saturday morning television;
and Mr Ar rax . a r e d,
long-necked alien featured on
severa l o f t h e
car toon-version "Star Tr ek"
episodes. lo name but a few.
Bob Raleigh created lhe
voices for all those charac-
t ers and 80 others. and
Raleigh has said goodbye to
Southern California a nd
become a disc jockey in this
Texas city.
R aleigh , a Ha r vard
niverslty graduate, gave up
a career in psyc b o logy
because he thought it wa,s too
muct1 like "a J erry Lewis
movie "-
Playwright Arthur MiUer
is expected to m eet Egyptian
President
Anwar Sadat
in Cairo this
week a long
with o t h e r
figures pro-
min e n t i n
E1tYP t 's
cultural life. l
Miller told
th e Middl e
E a s t New s M•1..1..ER
Agency that Sadat 's efforts
to sec:ure peace with Israel
wer e "great." and expressed
hope that such efforts would
lead to a "just and genuine"
peace in the Middle Eas t
Miller is t he author of
"Death of a Salesm a n,"
"The Crucible" a nd other
plays.
G r and Ole Opry s inger
Ernie Ashwo rth is making a
bid for ownership of a radio
c;tation m Ala bam a.
The diary of Anne Frank,
the tale of the J ewish girl's
ordeal in hid-..... ,
ing from the
Nads during
Wo rld War II,
w i I I b e
pu btished in
full next year
fo r the fi r s t
tim e, t h e
Dut c h W a r
Docume ota·
tion Institute said. OTTOP'RANI(
Ins titute d irector Harry
Paape said the hard-cover
book will conta in the so-
c a 11 e d first a nd seco n d
versions of Anne's diary and
the version edited by her
fathe r. Otto, who d ied in
Basel, Swit ze rl a nd , last
August at 91.
Paape s aid the new book,
to be pus11shed an Uutch in
1982. will include sections or
the original diar y om itted by
Otto Frank in his editing , in-
cluding passages in which
Anne discusses disagree-
me nts with her mother and
tells or the awakening to her
sexual development in her
ea rl.v teens
Chapman turns around
County college geta out of money problema
Six years ago C h a p man
College in Orange was faced
with a $3.5 m ill ion debt. Its
Campus A0float program was
dry-docked and its faculty was
for ced t o t ake a 10 per cent
salary cut to keep the private
college from sinking altogether.
But things have turned around
drastically at the 120-year-old
campus
In a ··s tatement of Condition
1980" report released last week.
the college's net worth was list·
ed al $14.5 million.
Construction, hasti ly hailed in
1976, was resumed so that the
college's Memorial Ha ll and 75
pe rcent of its classr ooms could
receive a face lift.
The school has a reported
S26.6 million in assets. chiefly
from the worth of the buildings.
Liabilities are listed at $12.1
m illion,
R a m sey Al exande r , vice -
president in charge of finance
for the college, cred its he(ty
dona tions and wise investments
for the turn-a round.
Since l!r77 Chapman has re-
ceived more than $2 million each
year from private contributors.
Alexande r's firs t m ove as
head of fi nance in 1976 was to
liquidate all stock ma r ket in-
terests invested by the school
and conve rt the cash into short-
term certificate of deposit ac-
counts .
Tuition at the private school
has jumped from $2,930 per year
in 1977 to $4,280 this year to
$4,800 next year.
In add ition to r e novating
classrooms. t he college also con-
structed a new $2 million Hutton
Sports Center in 1978.
Chapman oCficia ls claim that
admissions at the school have in-
creased 65 per cent. Also, 100
' pe rcent of those a pplying fo r
den tal schools are a ccepted
from Chapman and 60 percent or
those applying for m e dical
school are admitted following
graduation from the Orange col-
lege.
Authorities also claim that 161
out of 162 master 's candidates in
Marriage and Family Counsel·
ing passed the state licensing ex-
ams. compared to 50 percent
statewide.
·' ln the next two years we are
moving toward m ore improve-
me nts ," said Alexande r. ''We
will inc rease our endowment
tre mendously ...
Alexander said that he expects
t he college's net worth to in-
crease from $14.5 million to $20
million by 1983.
Chier among Ure school's
moneymakers over the next few
years will be the anticipated
sale of 242 acres in Mission Vie-
jo, which could net Sl5 million,
said Alexander .
s.,,,,og, business tax
facing Legislature
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
Legis lature t his · week begins
cautious looks at two 1980 issues
that have refused to go away -
how to clean up auto emissions
a nd what to do with a $550
million windfall business tax.
Assembly and Senate commit-
tees are planning hearings on
those two co m p lex and con-
troversial issues, but aren't like-
ly to make any swift decisions.
The Senate Trans portation
Committee will look at SB33 by
Se n . R o be r t Presley, D-
Rivers ide, "for techn ical in-
formation only" on Tuesday.
The bill by P res ley, who un-
s u c cess fu 11 y pus hed seve ral
vehicle inspection bills last year ,
is designed to comply with the
f e der a l requi r em e n t that
s moggy cities which won't meet
c lean air standards by the end of
1982 have an annual car inspec-
tion program.
In California. t hose will be the
area s a r o und Los Angeles,
Sacr amento, F resno, San Fran-
ciscg and San Diego.
Because the Legislature has
refused to impose such a pro-
gram on car-loving Californians,
th e fed e ral Envir on m e ntal
Protection Agency has cul off
'$850 million in federal highway
and sewer funds .
Opponents of the progra m
hope the Reagan administration
will reverse that policy.
Presley's bill calls for local
air pollution districts to set up
programs to inspect all 1969 and
later vehicles each year for $15
and to require repairs to meet
emission standards.
One proposal for dealing with
the S550 million business tax will
be heard Wednesday in the As-
sembly Revenue and Taxation
Committee.
Heliport bid due
The tax, known as t he "un·
secured rofl," is going to be the
subject of much debate in the
Legislat ure between now and
J uly .
Costa Mesa's City Council is
expected to act tonight on ap-
plications for two heliports in
north Costa Mesa when it meets
at 6:30 at City Hall, 77 Fair
Drive.
The pads are sought by the
Los Angeles Times for its
O r ange County f acility on
Sunnower Street near Harbor
Boutevara fDU Dy uowney Sav-
ln11 and Loan in the Town
Center complex near Bristol
Street and Anton Avenue .
llayor Arlene Schafer said
that the council has severaJ
options regarding the request.
The t!OUDCU, ahe said, could
approYe or d e ny lhe pa ds
.tonl1ht, call for envlronmenlal
Impact repe>rU on the proposals
or tet the appUcations for public
bearlq later this month
TM hellpads are oppoHd b)
r
former mayor Robert WUson and
the Joint Associations Board of
Costa Mesa, a panel composed of
r e presentatives of severa l
homeowner associations .
Although approved by the
Planning Commission following
pubUc hearings over the past
t wo ~ars, the two heliports are
being held up by t b e State
De partment of TransPortation's
Aeronautics Division.
The division is demanding ap.,
proval by the council befort it
rules on the pads.
Mayor Schafer said she has
received a number of letten in .
oppo1ltion to the beUporta.
Resldenta ol north Cotta Mesa
have complained to the council
that helicopters fiy low over
their ho~ dally, shakin1 pic-
tures oil wall• 1n'd rattUog
dis bes.
& -
Proposition 13 , the Howard
J a rvis initiative approved in
1978, clearly cut tax rates 57 per-
cent for taxes on real property,
namely land and buildings. But
it was unclear if it applied to
property taxes for "unsecured
property,'' such as equipment
owned by businesses.
Thirty-eight counties used the
h igher , pre-13 rates for un-
secured proj)erty and the state
Supreme Court upheld them Jut
March. 'lbe court also indicated
.lhe other 20 counties 1hould col-
lect the hllber tax becaU;H tax
laws are SQppoted to be uniform
st1tewlde.
The counties have been bold·
int that money pendlnt the
court d e chlon ind the
LeglJl1ture Jut summer froze lt
until July 1911 to dftlde wbat to
do wlt.b lt.
• Mondey, February 2. 1981 H/F
Dell, ...............
OE HAVILLANO DASH 7 GOU>£N WEST AIRLINES' VEHICLE OF THE FUTURE
Commuter llne to •t•rt fllght• of new 5C).p8aHnger pl•n•• next week
...
Sh! Dash 7 taking ·offi
Golde~-·W est Airlines buys quiet turboprops
1
By Sfi MARBLE gets a respectable one mile per never will have to reroute a
oue. •v "11•0 '-'" gallon and, il it must . can land Tahoe-bound flight. .....
A11 model the bludnt-noh~etd and come to a ha lt on an 800-foot He also calculates that the
ye ow , o nge a n w 1 e s trip T h -11 boo t G Id airplane sits on a desk corner in · -a oe runs w1 s o en Henry Voss' Newport Beach of-T he a 1rpl_a nce can h a ndle West's annual passenger figure (' -. a bout 830 miles on a full tank from the 600,000 r ange to more ice . The real thing is across the a nd can approach airports at a tha n a million.
str eet at J ohn Wayne Air port. much steeper angle than most ··w e · e e o ed t o T h e S 0 , p ass e n g e r De . v even r m v w Havilland Das h 7 bill d s th pla nes, sha q:~l y i:edu.c1n g the seats on four of the Dash .7s to al-
. t t t rt 1 e ~ e area surrounding an airport af-low storage area for skis " the ·
qkuae ~ . ranedspo thp aneh~01 thef reeled by aircraft noise. company president 'Says. "'This s y, lS view as e ve ace o S t 1· t. 'd th o h 7 -d · -· t he r t f G Id w t a is 1cs as1 e, e as rs ef1rutely a change m profile . . u ure or o en es represents Golden West 's plunge r ·· · A1rhnes . . . or us .. \ · into the vaca tion and tourist Golden West is even Jldding a
N G 0 1d etn 8 W e sht b. a ds m 8 11 • market. Voss says La ke Tahoe flight attendant on each Tahoe e w por e a c -ase com -· · t h f' p 1 s ·
l I. th t be b .. is e 1rst target. a m pnngs, run an amenity never used by m u er me a gan us mess h · b bl · · . th 1950s n -h'b' e says, is pro a Y next. the Newport firm before.
an e ying an 8,r'flP 1 1~n A ir Ca l ifor n i a a nd P SA Voss says his firm which has cra ft known as the Gremlin stopped ha uling s ightseers t d't' ·II ed ' feed Goose" between Long Beach . . · ra 1 1ona y serv as a er a d C t 1 · I I d h gam bl~~s and sJuers lo Tahoe '° line shuffling passengers from n h aedafi ina f ths a0n h' 7 a st 1979, c1t1ng the shor t runway and airport to airport and jet to 1·e. t pure as 1ve o e as s a f f I h h -· ' $G ·m h req uent ou weal er t at intends to stay clear of the Jet
:1 on eac :d t f G Id forced planes to detour to Reno. market until a "truly quiet" jet
W ~ss.dpr20esi en Mo . 0 .1etn Voss maintains that t h e is built, Possibly by 1985 Voss e~ an a -yea~ a~ine P1 o · airlines lost m oney because says '
claims the D~sh 7 IS .11u1eter ~han roughly 30 percent of the nights "Our company has been, and
most or. the light private planes were forced to land at Reno st'll · d · bo t th that fly Jn to John Wayne . . L 1s. very concerne a u e "Y . Id rt 11 . · d Such maneuvers. he maintains, environment and our impact on ou cou 1 era Y s tan out did little to bolster passenger p e o p I e Ii v 1 n g a r o und a n ~Y ~he run':".ay and not even hear confidence in an airline airport ." says the president. ~t take off. he says or the Dash With the abilit ies Voss sees in When you s er ve sens itive
· . . the new Dash 7 and plans his ma r kets like Newport Beach. Golden West will start fl ying firm has for installing a new an Santa Barbara and Tahoe, you
the turbo-prop Pl.ane out of the sl r u m ent landing system at have to be. Plus. it 's nice not
Oradnge Chountyt abeiri~ort ton0W~dt · Tahoe. he predicts that by the having to answer all those com-
nes ay w en 1 gins o Y 1 s sum mer of 1982 Golden West pla'nt.s " new Lake Ta hoe route. • 1
T he Newport airline alceady
serves Los Angeles, San Oiego,
Santa Barbar a , Oxnard and
Palmdale.
The new pla ne will replace
Golden· West's fl eet o f 18-
passenger Twin Otters. a cr aft
al so m a nufact ured by De
Havilland.
The Dash 7 is 80 feet long, has
four wing-mounted engines and
can reach speeds of 250 mph. It
Need a ·car?
Go see Sam
Wo uld you buy a used car
from these guys?
The U.S. government has an-
no unced it will sell 62 s urplus •
vehicles to the public at its
Riverside motor pool on -get
t his -Friday the 13th of
February.
The sedans, st ation wagons,
pickups and Jeeps will be sold
on a spot bid basis starting at 10
a .m . The sale will ta ke place at
t he G en e r a l Se r vices Ad-
ministration's motor pool at 1765
Massachusetts Ave.
[( you're not superstitious and
don 't have a funny feeling about
the sale date, you can check out
the vehicles in advance starting today.
I
AMENITY OF FLIGHT ATTENDANT TO BE INAUGURATED
Natalie Conch, In-flight Hrvlce m•nager (left), Kathy Pule
\
\
\
for ywrs hu~ fevont<Z-shirt,
mad<i m f1n<Z. all cottion,
with qath<Z.nzd sl~s
and f ong 'ta1 ls
ava1 labkz. ma n~mbow
of 18 d1ffq,nz.n t.. oo1ors
•
••
..
• ...
44 A:lshion I la nd• Newport Beach• 114 644 5070
1001 \\+'stwood Blud.·~stwood VaUagt'•:lJ:J 47~ 7727
'
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M .... ~1.tll1
tl••C "•: ~ .. ·-·11
My t ry camtons
narMM a 1rnA• Dan. rruUeally 1cannlq
MWI •paltt... onr tM put several day1, l'v• failed to
ftM any addkklftal Int lUCMff on the "very •lllllftcant" diko~O' made r~ently <Mt •tbe beach upcout. ft'• dllap-
polnt"" j"'
8acll t.btr. on Jan ll, after we had 1one tbroutb aome au''°""'· hf'f\y •~f and bJ•b lides, it wu reported tbat a man named NoJoo Harter had made an amazin1 dis·
C'Q\'U)' on the hort'line about one ball mile south of Goleta
Rt>a<'h C'ounty Park
llarter bad found Cave ant'1tml cannons washed up on
the b &ch. Each wa 1&bout three 1&nd one-ball feet lonl and
Nath '<''tlahed about 700 pound11
THE OISCOVE&Y, 01/ course, led lo speculation that
the mighty Paci(jc on ao uproar had dislod&ed the old
weapons from an anclent Spanish galleon and fetched the
hardware up on the shoreline Further speculation would
uggest that cannons do not grow on the seabed. They
must have .come from a shipwreck. Euly Spanilb sbipe
were noted for carrying hefty loads of gold and other
treasures. So who knows what the sea off Goleta might
fetch up next? /
A seafaring expert from UC Santa Barbara, one
Frank Frost, commented, "I've lived here nearly 30 years
and I've never heard of a discovery of this magnitude.''
LONG-TIME COASTAL beach bums like your cor·
respondent would certainly second the motion on that one.
St'ouring our sands for many decades, about the best I've
.. Just a bit to port, Zeb. and we'll atart diving ... "
ever d1s('ove red was an old piece of Paul Salata sewer pipe
and a rusty Hills Brothers coffee can.
This stuff was hardly in the class of a Spanish cannon
from a centuries-old treasure ship.
When the sea fetches something up on me, it's usually
a smelly pile of old seaweed.
Anyway. the citizenry up around Goleta got pretty ex·
cited over the old cannons for awhile and got out there on
the shoreline with metal detectors and other hunting de-
vit'es. ...
YOU SUSPECT EACH one of them may have figured
it could have been their ship that just came in.
That aforementioned Mr. Frost, however , apParently
cooled off a lot of the treasure hunters when he suggested
the cannon didn't look to him like they came from an early gold ship.
More likely, he said, the weaponry came from a
Bcitish or Dutch galleon that plied our coastal waters in
the early 1800s, long after the Spanish gold bearers had
vanished from the scene.
Still , it would be nice if the news dispatches would
come through with some sort of verification on the origins
of those fi ve old cannons .
IF WE DON'T get some action on this, I may have to
pack up my own sand-sifter and short-handled shovel and
do some digging on my own up around Goleta.
Better we hear from the experts and sea savants,
however, ~fore I get up there and start plowing up the
beachfront.
I probably couldn't do any better than another rusty
coffee can anyway.
a a
•
:r..r-Awela ........ Be tbl mte~ and
ben .. tb tbe weleom•bomt ban· nen • ..,. of tbe fl'Md boltac•
wbo are UMd to quiet bomeeom·
ln11 HY tbe)''re be1lnnlq to
IHI embarrUNd by crowdl and
•PffCIMI. ''I went to downtown Da.Uta
the other clay in elvWaa clotbes
and walked lnto a bulldiq, 11
II arine Staff S1t. Johnny
. lhKeel Jr. of Balcb Sfrtnp, Texa1, 1ald, "and before could
Fishermen·
plucked
from ice
COREGON, Ohio CAP) -
John· Myers is safe on 1bore
after be and some 80 other ice
fishermen were plucked from
giant bobbing lee noes, but be
thinks bi1 cousin'• truck is still
out there somewhere, fioatina
around on Lake Erle.
"I ain't never ioing to Jee flab
again. Only my second time out,
and we get stuck on a lltUe
island of ice," said Myers, a
26 -year-old plu mber from
Toledo.
SOME OF THE fishermen
who were out chipping boles in
the frozen lake surface Sunday
morning didn't know right away
that the ice they were standing
on was coming unstuck.
First, as the weather warmed
up, a few chunks of ice broke off.
Then, at about 10 a.m., a chunk
measuring five miles by two
miles pulled free and drifted
some four miles from shore near
Crane Creek State Park, Myers
said.
"It started off with about
three or four people on a smaU
piece of ice," said Frank Hen-
derson . a Coast Guard
spokesman in nearby Toledo.
"By the lime we got the call and
our people got there, this big
hunk of ice had broken off."
THE FLOE gradually broke
into smaller jigsaw pieces as the
temperature climbed to 37
degrees.
Within four hours. all the
fishermen, including two boys,
had been rescued without
serious injury. But a tJozen
vehicles. including snowmobiles,
cars and trucks, were left on the
ice.
Myers' cpusin, who had taken
Myers and another man fishing,
left his 1978 Chevrolet Suburban
truck behind on the ice.
"We had just jumped a crack
in the ice and then got a nat
fire," Myers said. "We decided
to go back and headed east, but
the crack got worse. 8y the time
we got back to where we
originally started, there was a
100-foot crack so we couldn't
cr.oss."
THE MEN SAT in the truck,
on a chunk of ice about a half-
mile long and 200 yards wide,
singing and drinking beer,
Myers said.
"I kept checking the ice depth,
making sure we bad enough ice
to sit on, 11 he said. The ice was
14 inches thick.
·1et to tbe elevator 1 waa
mobbed."
Some ol tbe 52 ex·hoatat!:
have been tbrouCh celebra
after celebration since beinl re·
lea•ed from Iran Jan. 20 after
14\t moatba in captivity, and the
weekend brou&ht another round
,of feltJvtUea.
Marine Sat. Jimmy Lopea,
who was at the Lopez Day
festivities in Phoenix Sunday,
also wu honored by a parade in
his hometown of Globe, Arla ..
last week. The former captive
• in
told a crowd •tlmated at ao.ooo
people It the state capital in
Phoenix that he found the
celebration "sli&bUy embarrau-
inlf."
When former hostaae Robert
Blucker, SS, got off the plane at
the Little 'Rod:, Ark .. airport
Sunday, he was met by re-
porters. Again.
11Notbing profound, please,"
he pleaded, and brushed off
questions. about his captivity
before going lo a private family
gathering at the North Little
,.,..,,..,....
YELLOW·AIBBONED GROUNDHOG TELLS THE BAD NEWS
Handler Jim Meena holds febled forecHter
Winter stay s
Groundhog spies sh a dow
PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. <AP> -Punxsutawney Phil, the
famous weather forecasting groundhog, poked his head out of a
burrow atop Gobbler's Knob today, saw his shadow and predit'ted
six more weeks of winter, according to his interpreter.
"Sco-co-colese. Eeny meeny miny mo ... Phil reportedly told
C.harles Erhard, president of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club,
and the only man who t'laims the ability to translate the ground·
ho~ ~s predictions.
"AT 7:Z7 A.M .. THE king of all weather prognosticators
seemed temporarily confused by the unpredictable nature of the
winter thus far," said Erhard. after rapping on the door of Phil's
heated burrow.
"But Phil definitely saw his shadow. There will be six more
weeks of mild winter weather," said Erhard, wearing tails and a
silk hat. As Erhard made the prediction. a crowd of a few hundred who
braved wet snow and chilly temperatures, booed loudly. No
shadow, so the legend goes. would have meant an early spring.
The groundhog, according to tradition rooted in Pennsylvania
Dutch legend and the Christian feast of Candlemas. will St'urry
back into the burrow and hibernate for six more weeks if he spots
his shadow.
' "A MORTAL MAN CAN readily miss the shadow. but Phil
never misses it," said Erhard. president of'\he Punxs~awney
Groundhog Club. "He'll whisper into my ear. He doesn't lie. He
tells me the exact truth."
And Erhard says Phil has !\ever been wrong.
The groundhog made his first official prediction in this town of
10,000 in 1886.
Last year, by Erhard's count, some 1,500 spectators braved
cold winds to hear and film the animal's prediction. Foreign ex -
change students visit. High school students elect a groundhog king
and queen and a man and woman of the year are named at an
evening banquet.
Roell home ol bia mother, Huel
Albin.
"I Just plan to relax for a
while," he 1aid. "There bMn't
been a mlnute to collect my
thouaht.t.''
Eight ol the hoeta1ea attaaded
ceremonies durint the weeklnd,
and some aot presents raqing
from champagne to the city ken
to. in the case of Lopez, a bunt·
in& and fishint license from the
Arizona Game and Fish Depart-
ment. Lopez said he planned to
use it right away.
A CROWD OF 40,000 lined the
parade route Sunday as Lopez,
his eyes fixed straight ahead,
rode by in a vi.()tage roadster
with his two sisters and his
parents beside him.
In Walt,liam, Mass .. a crowd
estimated al 400,000 people,
bearing yellow ribbons and
balloons. jammed a 2 ~-mlle
parade route Sunday to welcome
William Keough, who said if hi s
ordeal helpell revive America's
patriotic spirit, it was "worth it. ..
Marine Sgt. Paul Lewis of
Homer. 111 .. rode down the main
street of Danville, Ill., on Sun·
day in an antique fire truck with
his parerits, two brothers and a
sister. After the parade, be was
presented with a key to Danville
by Mayor David Palmer. On
Saturday he got a bottle of
champagne from Champaign,
111 .. \1ayor Joan Severns.
"IF WE WERE responsible
for a rebirth of spirit and of ·
patriotism, then our time over
there was well-spent," Lewis
said in his hometown Saturday.
In Rensselaer, Ind ., the yellow
ribbons that greeted ex-hostage
Ri ck Kupke had turned a bit
soggy by the time of his official
w e l come·home party, but
nobody seemed to mind. About
1.000 people showed up despite
freezing rain and snow foi-a
celebration Sunday in the local
high school auditorium .
Elementary-school childre~
sang "Tie a Yellow Ribbon
·Round the Old Oak Tree," and
a bright red banner proclaimed
"Welcome Home Rick."
Kupke said at a news con-
ference later that he was one of
the last to surrender when the
U.S. Embassy in Tehran was
overrun Nov. 4, 1979.
"I REALLY didn't want to
surrender. but I was forced to. I
was on the roof of the embassy. J
didn 't have anywhere to go."
He said he sympathized with
Vietnam veterans who staged
weekend demons trations
bet'ause they were not afforded
the same homecoming hoopla as the hostages.
"I was in the service from 1966
to 1970." Kupke said. "When J
got out nobody thanked me for
that. r symp'"dthize with them ...
He also said: ·'I'm anxious for
the quiet life now ...
Congressma n
punched out
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. CAP>
Rep. Albert Lee Smith, R-Ala.,
who needed five stitches in his
head after a punch from an aide
knocked him into a marble
stairway, says he will ask
federal attorneys not to proceed
with charges today against two
fired aides.
Weather fatal to I 7 "IT'S A HOLIDA V TO enjoy without a present or a card.'· said
Elaine Light, whose husband Samuel <Vas president of the club for
25 years.
''I am disappointed in a man I
had high hopes for," Smith said
of Lige Richardson.
Strong winds ~ccompany heavy sn o w storm
A pair of the marmots, Phil and his mate Phyllis. are kept in
groundhog comfort at the center. Their heated home is complete
with a burrow, a tree and a running stream.
"This time of the year, most groundhogs are hibernating and
frozen stiff underground. B1,1(we 've been 4ble to observe them no
Richardson, who along with
Pete Gresham was taken into
custody for two hours Saturday,
said he hit the freshman con-
gressman in the mouth because
Smith lied about jobs for
minorities.
· IJ.S • .s ........ ,,,
Rain •PIUlle<I Clown •tro" Ftorlc:ta, lnlo Ille nonr-.rn 01110 River
valley anc:t over lne nortn Allanllc COHI Hrly IOCl•y H • COl<I front
moved .. slw•rd acrou Ille n•tlon. In Ille colder air i.llln<I Ille front, snow fell In 1"9 lower Olllo valley, Ille
nortllern Great Laktt r1•9lon •nc:t Ille eutern ml<l·Mlululppl River
V•lley
Stro119 wlncb ace-led Ille flrsl
tllg sno""lorm ol tne s.uon •• ll mec:te Its w•y lllrlJUll/1 Ille tHlern ~•II ot lht ,,.uon. Al least 17 oeooif! c:tle<I In weetller·relete<I acclc:tenh
during Ille wHken<I, Inc lu<1ln9 a
crou-co....1,.., Ml'-< wl'IO was l>urled
unc:ter an avalanclle fn Ut•ll one <lay
after Ille stale 001 Its llrst major snowfall this winter.
Tiie front brOUillll mucll·neecled prec lpflatlon to Ille Midwest encl tlle
• ~Ht, wht,.. _.,,. area• are 1ufferfne
un<Nt dr0119ht or new-drouvnt c-1·
lions.
Ll911t lnow wat upecteo today
over Ille Ofllo Rl¥er valley enc:t ti.
G,.at ~ Rain was lorw<atl from
Ille lOllth Atlantlc coal! nortll Into
New Enetan<I-eest ... n New Ye>tk.
Tem-MllFH Hrly IOINly raft99C1
from minus u In ln~nell-1 Fall•. Minn • to 74 In FOt1 UMlderoa1e, Fla.
Albany
AllMlqllt
AmarlllO
HI LA ~c,
'7 11 .41 .. " 34 11
...,,.. ... _., ............
MonO•Y Fnd.ly II YoU 00 1'01 -you• Pt""' by b 30 pm call ll<rfOf• 7
p ... •n<I 'tOUI COPV Wiii be 1Mh"91'.ct
Slttu•<lrt !WI SMnCla'f II you 00 -rece1.. ,our cooy Of 9 • "' c.e11
balo<• 10 • m IM'd you• copy w1t1 oe
I (lotlt"ltred
~T...,.._
Mott 0.8'19" Co<i<\ty ArtH '41>4111
Noflll-1 Hlltl•"'910<l 8ucll -WWlMIMfff .... llN
8111 C~1e C•ll'tH•n() BHCll 8a11 Juan C.O.t1r1r>0
0911• "'°'"' 9out11 L111111na Li.ouna~ ., ......
•
l lw•t.C"\
C!!IiJ .. ,~ Cot4 ~ .. ,. ---Sho••" S•f'll•Of'IO•w Outv4td
«Imm ---===
Atlanta u 31 .'2 Baltlmon SI '° lllrmi119Nm St 11 1.16 BIMnarck II ·I llOIH 40 " Botten .. 31
llrownsvll• n .. Bulla lo 40 :M .61 Cl\artstn SC .. st .13 Cl\arlUnWV u JI 1.22 ClleyetwM " ·I .CM
Clll<avo )6 12 Cincinnati 41 20 .tS
Clevel•nc:t 1t 14 .61 Coh1mb\ll 41 Jj 1.11
Oel·FIWlll SJ u Denver 2t .) .02 DesMo1,., 2t ·2 .OJ O.lrolt J7 23 .57
0\1111111 21 ·13
Helena 27 10
"°"°'"'" 11 '5
Hov1ton 67 37 .2J ln0flapll1 42 ,, .J7
Je<llMVlle 11 " •• Kans City » 2 .01
Lesv..-S7 »
Llttle._on 0 II •• l.osA"ltlel .. '° LOUllvllle 44 n ...
Mempflll 4' • •• Miami 71 10
Mllw ...... JJ 1 .JO
.... I-St.It H • .01
lt..ilvllle 4' • 1.5' '"-~'-7J .. 1.00 .... y.,.. 4, .. .u
Ol!la CltY • 14 0 Omafta 14 •
FORECAST S.ntellerll9<a
Stocllton TMrmat .... ,_
Ille Beer
lll"'°P
C•tallna
matter what the-temperature in the zoo," said Mrs. Light. " 31 51
)4 Frederick Greeley, a University of Massachusetts wildlife pro-
» fessor and unofficial groundhog guru. says "somebody should
;; shout down the groundhog's hole that the price of heating oil went The two former aides are
black. Smith is white .
El Centro Lone llff<ll N..,fport 9Hc1!
Ontario
71 u 4l
SI .. ..
67
63 ..
11 .. ,.
.., up again and that we're really hoping for spring."
: -;========================================i::=========================::-:=========-~-=---.
Palm Sllrlnl& San .. .-dlno
SanJ-
SantaCnu
Santa Marla •> ..
4"
J7 • )4 • 1t
:M •
VwlalMe 111911 clOVd!Mu ""°'*' Tue.-.y ....,... .. fair. GMnee of
coeatel fog T....., "'°"""'· n ., .CM Coatie! low In low •· lnllln<I 111911
50 4" ·°' JOI. COlllUI 111tf1 In mld-40s, lnl•ncl
6l 40 71. Wat.,. 51.
ft JO .9' EtMwN!el, 1'9M ••'llillle wlncll • 37 .20 n'911t .... "*'11111 ,.._., 119<omlntl -------"°"' -------AIOUT
Orlando PllllaOflflla
Pi-nl•
Pltbbll ....
P11ancl, 111119
P11ancl, °'9
Reno
S.11 LaH •
Seti 0"99 S...Fr.,.
S.atlle
St Louil
St P•Ta"-
StSteMarle SpollaM
T11lu
Wall\lf191n
.. :M -•lerly I to 1S knoll wltll Moot wlncll 44 24 wevH TlltldeY afternoon. Westerly
: ~ •-lll tolfeet. ,. .
.. :M
41 10 .17
71 '5 .7S
• ·2 .»
JS 2S
1$L"GREAT .s-. ... ,.. Tlfln I I DINNER
s5 ftft SUPE
e77DINNEI
CMJ'°9MIA
... erlf .... ..... ,_
~y ........
OellleM Seer__.
40 1S .. TOOAY ()
Se<ltlll 11111\ ,1;4S '·"'· U Q ~UHOAY C
l'tntl-1:•e.m. 1.t "'O
SS., Flntllltlfl 7:•a.m. 6.1(0
'1 <tS Se<llM -t :U p.m. ·U Z ,. . Sec.......... ''"'·"'· 4 ••• I st 41 lull lets S: M '-m., 'iW' lllltf!X
el 6;••·"" I 16 MMft llbl!ll 11.m-. rl_ T.,...'i
5' It s:oe.m.
... .... ,. .. ... .. ...
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........... ... -.., I t W ZlllM I S.....Mllltlee I =-;::~,....,, L""9~,
• • I • ti .. , . .
1 I W I I W
GOOd for thrM plecet of Juicy, golden brown Kentucky
Fried Chicken, plu1 1lng1e aerv1ng1 of cote slaw,
maatled potetoet end gravy, and• rot I. Limit two off.,.
per IMltChaM. CouPol\ good Oftly for comblnet1on whltll
dart! ~. Cutlomef pays ell ap.,ilceble aelff tu.
Good for nine piece• of Juicy, golden bfOwn Kentucky
F"rled Chicken, with lour rolls, a llf99 COie ..... • terve
methed poleloet enCI • medlutn or-vy. Limit two often
per4PUfChaM. Coupon good only tor comblnetlon wMMI
dart! orderl. Cutlomef pays all ..,,ilcet* ..,_ tu.
•
Prlcel may Yll'f et I Prlcea may "''Y at par-AM
pertlClpallng IOc• I Uclpellng locetlona. Good
tlont. Good onty In Jonty In Soultlem
lout'*" Ca41fomle I Celllomla .._. '°" ... Wh«w rou... Ameflce'• Fl~t•
Amelica'e F1eworlt• WlndOW Benn.t
WlfldOW ..,,...,. I __ ... __
z
0 ~ 0 v
•
Ex-hostage laughs
despite ordeal
PAIADl:NA <AP> Nowt.bat he la rticoverlna from hla "'· clar ~al. form•r hott .. • Oary LM t. able to talk about It with
occuloaal nMMt of humor, but he aaya there w&J not.blnc to
...... abou\ wtMm ht w•• lmprilOl\ttd ln lran
So alt.houah Lee traded
O<'ca lonal quips at·a church lllCC~ eervlce Sunday with his ~ti.of~ rather. the Rev. Earl Lee, be
turned serious when the sen-
ior Lee asked him if any hum-
or ta•• out dwinc the captivity
''Who'• a\ aolna to come out to"" asked Gary ''Laugh at muelf.,.. 'r
He revealed that on two occaslonr. 1t appeared the hostages ~
"'°"Id be executed ...... .,... ,...,. .. ,.. , ...... ,, ...
SAN DIEGO (AP> A sky diver fell 4,500 feet to his death lo
Lower Olay Reservoir. apparently entangled in the shrouds of his
parachute, coroner's investlg~tors said. • · trben the main chute flUled to open. Robert Hamilton tried to
release tbe auxiliary chute Sunday but it snarl~d. An autopsy is
scheduled. Hamilton, 34, of Chula Vista , was a sailor stationed on
the Navy aircraft earner Constellation c.1••· ., • ,....,, .............. ....
LOS ANGELES (AP) The U.S. Coast Guard says it is in·
vestigating the collision or two s mall tankers just outside Los
Angeles Harbor in calm seas and good visibility. \
Both vessels were carrying petroleum products, but there
were no reported injuries or loss or cargo foUowing the accident
Sunday, a Coast Guard spokesman said. There was no danger or a
petroleum leak into the harbor, he added. ·"··-·· ... ·-··· .......... ,,.....,, LOS ANGELES (AP> -Mandaiory busing of students could
be replaced with voluntary busing if a recommendation to the
scboot board and the judge supervising the desegregation case is
approved.
"We have concluded that an aU-voluntary plan would be more
effect\ve," Associate Superintende'nt of Schools Jerry Halverson
said Friday. He said exactly what will be recommended to the
Board of Education is still being drafted.
Oaldalltl rmdell• €allt ...... ,_ .. r ,,, ...
SANTA ROSA CAP) Kristi Becker, a 17-year-old Oakland
High School student, has been named 1981 California Junior Miss.
Ms . Becker was selected from a field of 66 entrants Saturday
night to represent the state at the national Junior Miss competition
later this year. Lori Evenson, 18, of San Diego was named first
runner-up, followed by Oakdale's Junior Miss. Kristi Brown, 17:
Allison Farnsworth, 17. Fres no County, and Donna deSurville, 18,
.San Rafael.
IA ..,... ... pl1111,,a 8 stories to de•t•
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> A Los Angeles woman fell six
stories to her death from the San Franciscan Hotel after writing a
letter apologizing to her husband for their failed marriage, accord·
ing to police.
Police withheld the identity of the woman, whose body was
found by passersby behind the hotel Sunday.
Police say she checked into the hotel Saturday. Her letter was
written in Spanish.
BJ fte A.NeelaM heel
A llon\erey Park teen·ater
dled froln injuries received
when be fell over a 800-foot cliff
near Cryetal Lake, one man died
and another spent 30 minutes 1n
the frenlna waters of Baldwin
Lake near Bl& Bear Lake and a
Loa AnaeJea man survived a
50-foot plWl&e to the bottom of a
waterfall on Mount Baldy ln
weekend incidents, authorities
said.
Four other mountain NKUet
were made Sunday -Gile man
was injured akttn• and three
other men were injured bikini
-but.none of the lnjurles were
serious, said San Bernardino
County Sheriff's Deputy Randy
Phelps.
Melvin Calderon, 16, was play-
ing in the snow about noon Sun·
day near State Highway 38, 35
miles north or Loa Angeles,
when he feU over the cliff, said
Ala, contentment
Los An&eles County Sheriff'•
Deputy Ward Finch. He died
later. ~
Yarlv Havatselet, 24, wu in
aerloua condition at UCLA
Medical Cent.er with a severely
fractured arm, cuts, bruises and
possible lntemal injuries after
he fell while cllmbin& icy rocks
on Mount Baldy, Phelps said.
Phelps said aulh<l!ilies had to
block off the heava, used nar-
row road leading to the Mount
These two a nglers didn't see a fish during
a weekw outing on the San Lorenzo
River . BM"they would be the first to say it
s ure beats mowing the lawn. The scene
was part of what was a favorable weekend
weatherwise for most of the slate.
Killer gets 2 life terms
MERCED (A,p) -Calling it one of the "most
gruesome" case&. he'd ever heard, a Merced
Superior Court judge has sentenced a handyman
to two consecutive life prison terms for the torture-
slayings of a Hollister couple.
Fred Maurice Anderson, :n, stared at the floor
Friday while Judge Donald R. Fretz announced
his sentence for the March 1979 murders of
Thomas Thompson and his wife, Barbara
Thompson.
Authorities arrested Anderson, who had
worked as a handym an on the Thompsons' Benito
County hog ranch near Hollister, about three
weeks after the family disappeared.
The arrest came after sheriff's deputJFs dis-.
covered a pit on the fa rm containing at>Out six
pounds of charred bone fragments believed by ex-
perts to be those of the four family members.
At all Holiday Spa Health Clubs we're celebrating the
grand opening of our new "Super Club" in Cerritos. Join
now and get a two year membership for the price of the
first. year alone! •
\V}iatever you want in a health club, Holiday Spa Health
Club has. The latest-epace age exercise equipment, indoor
swimming,jogging, hot hydro-massage whirlpools, Finnish
ra;ck saunas, even fun aerobic dance exercise classes. And
your membership is good at all Holiday Spa locations.
And don't miss our grand opening celebration the
weekend of Fri., Sat., Sun., Feb. 6, 7 and 8. From 9:00 am to
10:00 pm there'll be special celebrity appearances of the
stars from television, celebrity fashion show with fashions
from Petit Fors, Holnitsky yo., Ca1la of California and
Dippers Swimwear. Also appearances of Los Angeles
sports figures from the Lakers, Dodgers, Kings,
Angels and Rams. Plus tWo surprise superstars.
There will also be equipment and aerobic
dance demonstrations, disco dance perf onn-
ances by Kat Knaisp & Kompany, also refresh-
mertta and much much more.
'Dike advantage of our Grand Opening and join
the party, and don't forget our two years for the price
of one offer. See you there. 1 CR . _tA.!5· Celebnt'Y appe ·
Holiday ,. ,.,..
..
Baldy Ski Resort ao tbat a
helicopter could be broucbt ln.
He said the three blken wbo
were not hurt seriously were in·
Jured while sHdln& down the
back ol t.be mountain.
He said the waterf alla area,
which is on the opposite side ol
the mountain from the ski re·
sort, ia very popular with bikers.
He said Havatzelet was biking
up icy rocks there with a friend,
who was not Identified, who
tried to rescue him but whe> also
'slid to the bottom or the falls and
then went ror help. :
Identity of the Baldwin Lake
victim ls being withheld pending
notification or next or kin. The
victim died and another man
spent 30 minutes in the freezing
waters before being pulled to
safety after the two fell through
thin ice whHe du~k bunting, a 1
sheriff 's deputy said. A third
man in the hunting party did not
walk out onto the ice at Baldwin
Lake just east of here and ran I
ror help.
Fishing boat, ~
I
quartet he kl,
in pot bust
LONG BEACH (A P> -A 50·
fool fi shing boat fill ed with 4.5
tons of marijuana worth more ·
than $.5 million was docked un-
der guard here and four people
were arrested for investigation
of s muggling drugs after the •
U.S. Coast Guard discovered the
illegal cargo.
The Coast Guard was on
..routine patrol " when it
boarded the San Francisco-based
Rachel M about 330 miles
southwest of Point Conception,
said Coast Guard spokesman
Gary Starks.
He said the boat's four-
m e mber crew. whose names were not r eleas ed pending
fu rther in vestigation , were
brought to Coast Guard head·
quarters here and then turned
over to fcder<il Drug Enforce·
ment /\dmin1strat1on officials.
··The cargo holds of the vessel
were comple tely filled with
bales of marijuana.·· said Lt.
J eff Hathaway .. They just
stuffed marijuana into every
s pare usuall y reserve~ for. fish."
Call 642-;.5678.
Put a lew words
lo work lor ou.
'• '
'
,
' • ' D
' D ,
d t-i· , •
\
Of ange Coa11 011ty P.1101
New answeE to
disposal
Why bur) w .. tt wh nit can be burned loproduteateam
and.e'-ctricat) ~
Why lndffd, uk offiriall of the Oranp County San.it•·
DWricta in the wake of a proposal by a to.ta Meta·
Hd~rtnacompany . ,
O'Cnnwv £qlftffrinl Laboratorl• ii propoatn1 to
a mactun that wuuldburn wutt from tMdiltricta' 23
Un tc• ft~ up boiler. to make 1team and turbine· produced ·~t'lrictt)'
Called l"Ollir) rombUiton, four of the Coat a Mesa Com·
pan ·'sde\·\<' ur~nowinoperatJoninJapan,aflfthlsabout
Lo bf.1in opt-ration In Gallatin, Tenn . and a sixth is belna
~n11rwreoc:t In Contra Co•taCounty.
adwel\ O' 'onnor. owner of O'Connor En&ineering
Laboratorie . t-U)' h.i rotary combUJtor more than meets
a ll applkable t-nvironmentaJ Jaws
The-. atPr·cuoled device can burn anythin& from a can·
1 non ball to human waste material, 0 'Connor says.
While 1t l too early to s ay definitively that the O'Connor
rotar combustor ts the ans wer to Orange County's waste
d1 posal problem. the device seems worthy of serious con·
ideration .
t As the price of land for sanitary landfills continues to in·
crease and as energy becomes more and more expensive
' and scaree, the rotary combustor may very well be the
waveofthefuture in waste disposal.
As currently envisioned. the proposed rotary com·
bus tor plant in Fountain Valley would be built by private in·
vestors who hope to profit by the sale of electricity to t Southern California Edison Co.
• Since waste is always with us and energy is aJways i needed it would indeed be useful if one could be made to sup·
, 1 pl y the other
~Curb for IDolesters
• Last year 651 cases of child molestation were reported
to the Orange County Child Abuse Registry. That compared
with 407 cases in 1979 -and officials believe upto80 percent
of molestation cases are never reported.
Unfortunately. medical and law enforcement people
who deal with child molesters have come to the conclusion
that many will continue to repeat the offense and do not
seem to respond to treatment.
Following a lengthy series of fiearings a nd studies on
the subject. Newport Beach Assemblywoman Marian
Bergeson has introduced a bill that could be of some help.
The measure, AB265, would ensure that convicted child
molesters ser ve time in prison following psychiatric treat·
m ent.
At present. child'1lolesters who are declared me~tally
disordere.,q sex.offenders a re sent to state hos pitals or or·
_ de red to undergo psychiatric tteatment that usually lasts
about 14 months.
After that they can be released on probation or continue
in out·patientcare.
Mrs. Bergeson's bill would require that the treatment
period be followed by imprisonment for the balance of the
term they would have had to serve under a felony conviction
us ua lly three to s even years.
While this might not serve as a cure. it would at least
keep them from repeating the offense during a proba·
tiona ry period. And conceivably the guarantee of a prison
.. term in addition to the time in hospital could act as a deter·
""rent for some.
The bill merits strong support. •
CourtrooDI access
In another of its yes·no·maybe decisions, the U.S.
Supreme Court has ruled that there is nothing in the
Constitution to prevent states from permitting radio,
television and still photography at criminal trials, even if
the defendant objects.
On the other hand, the court did not say that such
access must be granted. Nor did it comment on the action
of states that have laws banning courtroom photography.
In 1964 the high court threw out the swindling
conviction of financier Billy Sol Estes on grounds that
television coverage had deprived him of a fair triaJ.
Now the court says that ruling was not intended as a
p e rmanent ban on courtroom photography. New
technology, it was noted, can make photo equipment
much less obtrusive.
However. the justices concluded that decisions on
courtroom coverage should be made on a case·by·case
basis by the trial judge.
Such a decision was promptly made by a Los Angeles
s uperior court judge who last week denied a request to
use a television catnera during a rape trial. ·
. ' . At present 27 states permit televised trials, but some
require advance consent of jurors, defendants or
witnesses, since it is conceivable that the presence or
cameras could have an inhibiting effect on trial
participants.
, A Supreme Court ruling last July upheld the right of
the public and press to attend criminal trials, even if the
defendant objects. The new ruling is a logical extension
.of the attempt.to ensure that members of the public who
cannot be present are kept informed, within the limits of
technical and legal feasibility.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views .expressed on this page are those of their authors and ,
artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321""
Boyd/Dog hero
ByL.M.BOYD
Near the zoo in New York's
Central Park is the statue of
a dog named "Balto." Client
asks why that do~ should be
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
This iJ a "free" country
if you are a refusee !
STRUGGLING
~-.. 'l Otot ~-........ . ....................... __ ,.., ............... w ==·'· .... .-~--., 0.. Olil• Ne(.
1
so honored. Jn the tough
winter of 1925, Balto led a
sled team through a bliuard
to Nome, Alaska. It carried
serum to stop an epidemic
among the eskimos.
Another common word to
come from the lingo of the
sea is "aloof." To pilot a ship
windward was said to "hold
it aloof."
Q. What country Luma out '. ·
the slroQlest beer?
A. Last J heard Ensland '
had one brewery which save
It that distinction. Thomu
Hardy Ale, brewed In July ol
1988 by the Dorchester
Brewery, Dorset, En1laad,
contained 10.u percent
alcohol by wei1bt and 12.51
percent by volume.
~. 'Thoma p. Haley/PultlllMr
Mond1y, Fe1>'"''1 ~. \tit
·.
North Korea arms 'superior.,
W ASllJNGTON While the
foreign policy spotlight has been
focused on the Middle East,
anothtr area or the INOrld has
been vlrtuaUy ignored: Korea.
Bul hi1bly classified in~ ..
lelligence r eporu i nd icate
that t'h e ldeologkally
div[ded
peninsula
scene of the
flrst armed
confrontation
in the East·
West conflict
after World
War 11
may become
the next tinderbox that the Unit·
ed States will have to ('Ont.end
with. Indeed, the rntelligem·e
estimates give the communist
North Koreans an overwhelming
edge in any future outbreak.
The consensus of our experts
in the Pentagon 1";1nd the Central
Intelligence Agency i that
North Korea could roll right
over its neighbor to the south
unless th~re is heavy U.S. as·
Richard R eeves
sistance to South Korea.
A s intc>Uigence sources ex·
plained it to my' associate Dale
Van Alta. It 's a matter of cold
military h3rdware:
-"BY ALMOST every
measurement, North Korea ex·
ceeds South Korea in both quan·
tlty and quality or tanks," warns
a secret CIA appraisal. ''The
North has a 2.S·lO·l numerical
lead over the South in medium
tanks and, within this category,
u better than 3·to·l advantage in
num ber s or first -line. high·
quality tanks."
The two Koreas are approx·
imately equal in ground troops .
520.000 in the South, 600,000 in
the North. Rut a top.secret Pen·
tagon report concludes that
.. w i thou t 'J . S co m b a t and
logis tics support . . (South
Korean) ground forces would
probably not .be capable of suc·
cessfull y defend ing Seoul
against a surprise North Korean
attack ··
-Jn the air, the dis parity is
much worse. South Korea has
a 33,000..man air force with 424
combat aircraft. North Korea
has a 51,000..man air for~ with
724 aircraft. "Without subetan·
tial auamentation, the <South
Koreans) would be hard preued
to repel a siuble North Korean
air ~ttack." the Pentagon report
declares. ~mall cr.umb of com·
fort is added with the estimate
that the North Koreans would be
"capable of performing a
primary mission of air defense
and limited offensive opera·
lions" on their own, but would
need "outside assistance'· to
conduct sustained operations.
-NORTH KOREA'S navy is
"markedly superior" to South
Korea's in number of combat'
personnel, materiel readiness
and Cirepower . It has 31,000
marines to Sol.Ith Korea's 22,000.
All things considered. the Pen-
tagon experts conclude that
"North Korea has the ability to
launch and support a surprise
attack against the Republic of
Korea."
What 's more. intelligence
aources olfer lhe omlnoua pr•
diction that, despite infuaions of
aid from the United States,
South Korea will be militarily
inferior to North Korea for at
least three years.
IN·HOVSE INPfJT: I've often
lambasted senior bureaucrats
for their Milquetoasty relu.c·
tance to stick their necks out. So
I have to applaud the half.dozen
career c ivil servants at the
Agency for International
Development who recently
1Nrote a confidential memo to
the Reagan administration, de·
tailing the kind of boss they'd
like to have. Agree with them or
not, you have to admire their •
guts in putting their views on the
line .
The new AID administrator.
they wrote. should bt ~omeohe
who:
-"Can awaken this country
to a new thrust in foreign as·
sistance ... helping poor coun·
tries to develop while they
become customers for our pro·
ducts and stable suppliers or the
.raw ma~erials we need to main·
tain our standard or living."
-Is an expert in the field of
food production and dis tribution
as a m eans of com bating
hun ger, a major ca use of
political instability in the world.
Is "not afraid to deal up
front with a ll p o liti c al
persuasions in showing· them
that regardless of their political
system. there is a-pl ace . . for
e n \.,.e_r p r i s e a n d e n ·
trepreneursh1p . ··
.. Can relate to a nd establish
a rapport with Congress"' an<l
"'has a flair for public rela
\ions.··
WATCH ON WASTE : The
Departm e nt o f En ergy's
openhanded dis bursement of
federal money has given a\ least
one· state Penns.rlnmia an
un expected bonanza at the ex·
pense of the nation's taxpayers.
Under DOE"s µrogram giving
slates fed eral funds to provide
· ·weatherization ·· for nccdv resi·
dents' homes. Pennsyi"vani a
round itself with more than $1 .6
million more money from l:Jncle
Sugar than 1t could spend. So
K-..stone. State officials prudent·
I~ put the surplus in interest·
bearing actounts.
Crime rise ,spurs death penalty support
LOS ANGELES City Con
troller Ira Reiner, one of the
best known publiC' officials in
Southern California, \lnnouncf"d
last week that he had decided to
run for city attorney "We arc
racing a clear and very present
danger," Reiner said. "Our first
responsibility is to protect the
public."
Those were~ .pretty strong
words from the candidate for an
ofrice that is
r estricted to
a ct in g a s
counsel t o
city agencies
and prosecut·
ing mis de ·
meanors. But
they were no
s hriller t~a n
the first para·
graph of the
lead story in the next day's Los
Angeles Tirrres about ''the city·s
wave of violent crime."
Los Angeles is a fri ghtened
city. It reminds me of New York
in the middl e 1960s o r
Washington in the lat'! 1960s
Angelenos are so scared because
they are still so innocent. They
thought it wasn't going to hap-
pen tQ them : they '\hought they
could li'(e without keys and
alarms and dogs , that they could
Art Hoppe
waJk dtiwn the str eet without ar e going to give people what
thec ki n g th e li g ht s a nd they want -and the people
doorwavs first w a nt blood. They also want ~ow ·they know They know tougher laws. mandatory sen·
that their st ereos a nd their tences. overerowded pr~ons -
ourses are going lo be ripped off. 'fho re~ly cared or ever cared
-a nd, every once in awhile, about prison reform? -and
someone's head 1s going to be more guns. Gun control. for thjs .
blown off. The random violence time. is dead middle class
that .hit Eastern cities 15 years people. honest people, scared
ago 1s now everywhere; no one -·p-e"ple are the ones who want
is complc·IC'ly secure from the tpe guns now.
ro" ing bands of outlaws in
/\d ul as shoes.
EVEN IN the East. with self·
defenSl'S refined over a decade
weapons. devices and animals
purchased in recognition that
the pohc·e can't protect you -
the fear is "hll growing. "M.ajor •
in creast• rn burglttries troubles
New York suburbs." reported
one headl inC' in Monday's New
York Times Another. from an
affluent New J er sev suburb.
said : '"In Ridgewood. "theft is la·
ble topic."
The only difren•ncc back east
is that people take some of lit.is
ror granted. They expect to be
violated. they hope to survive.
That fatalis m has not yet
reached the West. or. at least,
lhe middle class West.
The \Vt>sl wants to fight back.
And f think it will. Politicians
.,.
MORE AND MORE politi·
cians will be sounding like Ira
Reiner. Or. to be more precise,
like George Deukmejian, who
may very well be the next gov·
ernor of California. Deukmejian,
a Republican who is now the
state's attorney general, has
moved his career along by
b"ecoming California's leading
capital punishment advocate.
Last week, as he has for years.·
De ukmejia n was making
speeches which tracked the rise
in California's homicide rates
since the effective elimination of
the death penally in the early
l96-0s.
When the state was .executing
killers Its murder rate varied
between 3.0 and 3.9 for each
100,000 residents each year.
Since the last executfon, that
num her has steadily risen lo 15.0
per 100,000.
(On a national basis, there has
also been a rise in homicides.
but the numbers have not been
as dramatic. In 1963, there were
<1 .5 murders for 100.000 people in
the United States. Now. there
are 10.0 per 100,000.)
DEUKMEJIAN may be our
dark prophet. Whether capital
punishment is revenge or deter·
rence or both, it is almost cer·
tainly inevitable. The panic in
Los Angeles reminded m e of a
conversation I had in early 1968
with John Mitchell, who was
then a Wall Street lawyer who
happened lo be a friend of R~ard Nixon . We were talking
. ab<'ut black riots that were then
sweeping American cities and
he said they could be stopped
quite easily.
How?
"By killing a few of them."
Mitc!hell said. "As soon as they
know we are shooting back, that
we mean it. they'll think twice
abOut burning properti ...
It has gone much further than
burning property no'Yi..'.Ihere are
desperate and amoral men and
women, killers, among us. And
soon there wiJl be killers on both
sides.
T-shirt craze revives the art of conversation
~
The innate desire of human
beings to say something .about
themselves, to deliver a
message to their fellows and to
express their innermost feelings
has never ~urned brighter than
in present times. Witne~s Jb.e
proliferation of bumper sticlters
and T·shlrts.
Yet there are other ways to
• communicate. A new method
was discov-
e red on the
Number 30
crosstown bus
by sr,urgeon
L. K nsey, a
young man·
agement
banking
trainee.
Spurgeon
made his way down the alale,
t1kin1 in the slogans on the
chests ol the other passenpn.
He sat uncomforuably on the
ed1e or a rear 1eat, feeUnc
somehow inadequate In bis ex·
presslonless three-piece suit.
Suddenly, he turned on the total
stranger next to him and said,
right out loud for all to hear :
"I'd Rather Be Drinking."
IT MIGIJT all have ended
right there had not that total
stranger been an attractive
stewardess, Alice Huffit, who
was wearjng her inarticulate
uniform. She hesitated, then
replied primly: ''f'd Rather Be
Skling."
"I lo•~ New YQrk,'' said
Spurgeon, gamely makinl con·
versation. "'
"I Let\ My Heart in San Fran·
cisco, ''she responded.
·'Where the Hell Is San Fran-
cisco?" be asked to show be was
a with· it guy.
"I Left My Liver in Katz's
Meat M•rket?" she suggested.
They both laughed. Spurpon
looked at Alice with a ,U.Ot ol
admiration. She certalnl.J wu a
fun penon. "I'm an AlcoboUc,"
he uid. "In Case of Emerpncy,
Buy Me a Beer."
"Schlitz Is the Breakfast of
Champions," she agreed. gig·
gling. "Save the Chocolate
Mousse.:·
"Nuke the Snail Darters!"· be
countered.
SOE PA'ITED her raven hair.
''Blondes Have More Dandruff,"
s he said .
"Bankers Have More Funds,"
he said. "My Other Car's a
Porsche.'.'
"Don't Laugh,'' she said. "It's
Paid For."
But .be felt the convenalion
was becoming too frivolous.
•'Have You Thanked a Green
Tree Today?" he uked.
"Rave You Hu11ed Your Fer·
rari Today?'' ahe said, but when
s he saw his look of annoyance,
$he added quicldy: "If It Moves,
Fondle It."
He nodded. "Split Wood, Not
Atom1," he PW. Tben wu an
awkward 1Ueace. "It'• Ten
O'Clock.'' he said lD d..,.....
·-·-...-..-----.,...... ........ ...,._,, ..
tion. "Do You Know Where Your
Cat ls?"
She began to gigele again and
he couldn't help but take her
hand in his. He let bis eue ~e
her attractive fi1ure. "It's
What's Up Front That Counts,".
he whispered. ·
WELL, ONE thing led to
another. Alice and Spur1eoa
could tell they were soulmatel,
for both so enjoyed thil ne•
method of verbal communica·
lion. In no time they were mar-
ried and Alice was e~pedina.
She strolled the streets in ID
uninacribed maternity dreu,
lappin& people on the 1houlcllr
.and sl)'inf, "I'm Not Fat; I'm
Pre1nant." A year after their son .,..
born, they left bim witb Allee'•
motbel' and took a vaeaUon. Oa tbelr retun, tbe UtUe tyke 9*
laU ftnt wordl. TIMy wen:
"MommJ and Dlddr Went ..
Laa VePI and AU-..eJ 8olllM
Me Wa 'nu. Lou11.T.aart."
•
• HIP-
Prlee••••r
Planning s&ves
travel expe:Dses
BJ U.YLYIA fOll'na PropeJ.led by ap&ocHn1 ......., pri"9, tn..t ......
akyrocktdn1. In= tbe two yean 1iDae Im, tM eq ?Sit ot lettial from.be to-tben bu rt.MD DNrb .. Wrd: ta
tbe lbart lpaD I ff 1'72, Udl DION tbaa doubled. To put
tbia la perwped.lve, tbe pace ot lallaUoD lD the 1l'IMl
period bM been• percent.
But wttbout major aacriftce1, you cu •lull u muela
u to ,..cent from ~--"nonnal1' COIU -~
advance plunlq on where you IQ, tbe •AJ you pt tlMn,
bow lcms you ltay 1 what accommodation.I you ..i.ct.
l'or haltance, a
typical •Mk·loni,.New
York·Saa 1'raatbco ~..lftld\l
aolo air trip -flnt -'~ 1'V,I' "' • cl~•· dowatoWll, 1pur ~ of tbe moment, in
seuoa -could coat you
u mucb u Sl,580. But
wltb proper planntnc, a couple could mana1e tbe.aaine ~
for leu than Sl,000 per person.
THAT 18 .. PERCENT leu. And that's tbe bottom fOC'
peraonal travel.
Plane Rlltes. An American Airlines ftnt·clau New
York to San Francisco round trip Ucket '!WU priced at
Sl,138 u ol Jan. 1, 1•1, an almOlt lacredl'ble m percent
Jump over the~ coat of a flnt·clua ticket la 1972.
But u AA itself streues, with advance plannlal, you
could buy a Super·Saver ticket for u little u sm. up juat
38 percent from the lowest 1972 fare of $245.
ACCOMMODATIONS. A &OO• at a Holiday Ina la
downtown San Francuco may run as much aa "5 a nltht.
But an equivalent slsed accommodaUon at one ol the
chain's facilities OD the city'• outskirts is $t0. Smaller
rooms la local bbtels·motela can 10 at $.10-'32.
Room sharial also can save 33 percent ii two are
travellaa and can share accommodations.
If you visit a resort area durin1 off aeuon and &et off
season rates, you can abave 15-40 pereent olf the normal costs.
PACKAGE TOU&S CAN save 20-30 percent on the coat
of both rooms and meals -and can add enormously to
your trip's com.fort.
Hint: Breakfasts cost about 25 percent of the COits ol
dinners; lunches come to about one· third of dinner tabl.
Car rentals. At traditional flrat.clus time-aad-mlleap
rates (any day, no advance reserVIUon, rent·it·bere·lfave
it there) a sub-compact for 100 tuJea would cost •.25 a
day. fuel included. That's up 110 percent over 1972, Herta
reporta.
BVT WJTB ADVANCE bookin&, returnin1 the car to
the same place from which you rented it, the C08t ol
weekly unlimited m1lea1e ls just $183, fuel included. That'•
S2S a day, a 83 percent saving. (Under a special deal, for
$11 more, you could take a week's drive alone the cout,
drop the car at Loa Angeles and fly home.)
Getting there and gettin1 back takes the biateat slice
of what we spend on domestic trips -$90 bllllon ...for
transportation out of the estimated S152 bllllon we spent on
these trips in 1880, with automobiles takinl more than • billion ol the S80 billion. ·
BUlineu auto travel was an estimated $3'7.2 billion;
family car trips came to SX.t blllion; car rentals, tut and
airport bua·limoualae ouU&-ys ol $4.1 billion rounded out
the motor vehicle segment.
NEXT IN 111B TaANSPOaT cateaory waa air travel
at SZ2 billioa. TraWna far behind at less than SI bUlioa
were lnter·ctty bus and railroad.travel.
Meals away from home came to $35.2 billion and
lodainaa to$2.4.7 billion in the year Just completed.
These fiaures come from special estimates made for
th.la column and based on top travel industry sources, data
in Travel Market Yearbook and in Sales & Marketina
Manaeement magazine.
Money market
covers globe •
·NEW YORK <AP> -When is a ban.It no lonaer a bank
a saviqs and loan no longer a.savtncs and loan, a mutual
·fund no lonaer a mutual fund, a atock brokeraae firm no
longer a brokeraae firm?
Answer: 1D the not very distant future.
At least that's the picture many experts paint when
they st.art describing a kind of undeclared revolution that
is already under way in the American financial·servict1
business.
IT.IS TAKING PLACE fitfully, in one market today
and another tomorrow .. so that at any aiven moment oety
parts ol it may be visibl~ to a casual observer.
You might notice randomly that a aaviap insUtutloa
has bel\Dl offerin1 a form of cbeckinc account tlult pap
interest, or that a brokera1e nrm ii taklnl part la a plan
to offer a new type of mort1&1e.
Financial people aay these ire only bill and ,&eeea of
somethiq much blater -a vut overhaul Of tbe system
that ii certain to continue tbrouCb the mid·U.., ll OD)J
because ol lestslatlon that ii already on the boob.
&BCENT IAWS.JIAVB, amoaa other tb.lqa, decreed
cban1es in many ol the rules under wbicb banb ud HY...
in11 inltltutions operate -iDclucUac a mucb-debaa.d rer·
ulatlon that aeta Umlts OD bow much inter.st tbe:)t can ,.,
out. It la lebeduled to be ellmiaated _.,. stat• ner tbe
next ftve 1ean.
Gold ~etals quotatiom ·
Geld
., ...... .u.cta&ed heel
Selected world aold prices today:
1•._: morniD1 nxm, tm.as. off Jl.S.ZS.
Lr .. : aft.moon flxiDI tm.50, otf llJ.00.
Pu11: .rterD00D fbdnl M .•, oil ta.•.
Phulldwt: ftxinl ..... 00, off W .51.
Smtcll: lat. aftmaooa ftldq ..... 00, olf •. 00; ..... 00
••keel. =. • au.u: aa .. IDOl"Aial ..._.,,on m.oo . .,_ ... _ .... :late moraial ..... off SI.LOO.
llq1'_.1 late mondDI tabrteated lllJ.11, off m.a ......
NEW YOU (AP) -"'°' acderroua IDNI prieea. da1:
CW-.._ .. C9tl a pomd, U.S. deltluttaal . ................
.. 41,MH• _..I ...... dlll.....S .
................. ~lb. '! 0 a ............ Y • ........ ,. .. .
F 1 &•MtNJ-.,N.Y . . .,...
Nn YOaK (AP) -... • .... llMr ..... na.-.•aa. . · .._,,.,. .u ... aa.-. .. aa: ,......... ...._ aa.111.••• '
..
•
,...
PAlllLW
Cl•CIJI
\\Grandma pvt PJ's stringbeans on her plate
and NOW he likes them."
Jl.48M.4DUKE by Brad Anderson
"Don't just sit there yawnlng ... get rid of
him before he sells me something!"
JUDGE PARK ER
•
• I ~ / , . . ,,,, -, ... ,
"I h1te Mond1y1."
DENNIS THE MEN.4CE
1--i {,
~-"'-~ -"Just think, Mom ... someday I'll be a paper boy, an' when it's too cold 'n wet or stormy,
YOU'LL be doln' my route!"
by Harold Le Ooux
J~~~!mi(;HifEJiJU~t>>lT lClOJULDD°iHA;;uLF:;;A.~LiE°IE:-;' Hii;llb 50. HOW A~OUT IT ... lELL ME ~HAl
W1-1EN TOLD ~y THE
f'OLICE 6ER0EANT
THAT A F'IN(;ER-
PRINT CHECK HAb
REVEALED THAl
TIM'!:> NAME If' NOT
KEL60. JEANtJIE
'TRIEe> TO HIDE HER AN)(IETY :
MISS PEACH
FIRbl NAME lb TIM ~UT Hl6 YOUR REl>.L NAME If>. JEANNIE: I
LAbl NAME'b NOT KEl~O.' KNOW YOU'VE NEVER OEEN IN TROU~LE ~tlH THE POLICE M ·
CAU5E THERE ARE NO PRINTb
ON RECORD mR YOU!
by Mell Lazarius
WH.<\I A~ THE ICM.llAN~
($C)IN6 TO DO WITH AL.L. TH&
MONeY THEY 60i F~ THE ~TA&E' f'
F« ON& ,......,~I TM&"'{ COULD 8'AY
A W~IK~ Grt'OCSll'tE~ FOE ~E L.IAC~Y X~IAN S:.AMIL.I( ....
---MOON MULLINS
we MlJST Do
IHISMoRE
OFTEN, GIRLS.
ACROSS 58 Eden boy
1 Wood 59 Compound
• e Heno toot suttlx
10 Ceptur• 61 Heeddress
14 Sheepljke 62 Koran cnap-
15 PeMc bones ter
18 USSR City 63 Center
• 17 C..al &4 Ms. Bronte
11 Can. a'tllt 85 UK monev
Emlly -88 Hurried
19 Floor pltc. S7 leveeque
20 &IPPOll end Coty
22Jlwll
14 Blow up DOWN
2t Wlpl9 OU1 1 BUI. llbbf.
27 Ordlrty ht 2 Alwtyl
IO AllltNl;,,lnt. 3 Coln
3, Gltdenld 4 F1e¥ottng
32 ,..,., dfttce 5 Come beck
. 37 ,_,. 8 A1111tc ,,..
• • NFL lqUedl 7 lteee: At>bf. ..... ....-., ........... ta..
!ell tungue 10 CMNM:
......... 2wordt Dlldld , 1 lolO ..
~--12~ tAMaln ,,...,... ..... ,, ........ _... n Mlllllr n """" .......
UNITED FMture Syn<lat•
Saturday's Puaie Solved
25 "Gull!Yer'• 42 Ml• ~
' -" 43 Frtndl OOln
27 F1lh ... Girt'• '*"' n Fnc-me 47 kf11> n Z.U.'1 48 Stupid .....,... 49 Dllpro"9 •
3111 ... __, IO fllOM _,.,
M~. 53._ofold --~ ..... +-31..... SI Aldlnlcl
MOglld MMr.0...
...... Ofold 11 ......
·~ ......
•
II<~/ Y ES, MA1AM ~ c•--.,._. ...
FUNK\' •INKE8BE.4N
I iOOK THE ~IC. FOL..DtR
UCYt'\E. QIJER mE WEEKEND
.l.)5T Ul<E ~ SAID I MR.
DINKLE!
LET ME
SEE IT
(iX)D ! OOW ~ 010
t;()l.) PRACnC.E ~
fH'L'S ADORES816
. Z7' RUE l>EiS fbes.
by Tom Batiuk
,
)
' • : ,\ I I ' I I
Stabbed repea1edly
Lagi1Da Niguel
~
An~i-ralffes 8tlellp ·. •
It was a llme of soci•lidng and a litue
tender, loving care Saturday at anti-rabies
clin.ic conducted at Laguna Beach Fire
Department headquarters by the Pet
Respansibility Pommittee. Owners and
dogs socialized (above) and Al Hester
(below) comforted his sbeltie, Toby, who
wasn't so sure the clinic was the place to
be. Pet Responsibility spokesmen said 319
dogs and six cats got anti-rabies shots.
Lagtina schools cite
spending concerns
Bus strike
loo~ing
•
Laguna Beach school trustees
have sent lett.en lo Governor
Brown ucl a ball doseo state
le1ltlaton ukiq tbat priorWel
for state speodlnr be direeted 9t
educating students.
The letter, siped by all five
board memben, cites the dia·
trict's concern Ulat next year's
proposed state budget shows on-
ly a 5 percent average i.Dcrease
in income for public schools.
Because of declining enroll·
ment and the effect of tbe Ser-
LB /e1tivala
will provide
tram 1ervice
Tram service again wUI be
provided from Laguna Canyon
Road parking iots lo three local
arts festivals during the six·
week festival run this summer.
Representatives of the
Festival of Arla, Sawdust
Festival and Art-A-Fair have
agreed to again pay for the
service, which cost about ts.000
in 1980.
Last year, the festivals re·
ceived $800 in contributions to
help cover the cost of tbe
service.
Tbe festivals will be open from
10 a.m. to 11 p.m. seven days a
week from July H through Aug.
30. The tram fare is expected lo
remain 50 cents per ride. All day
passes are $1.
The trams run on varied sche~ules-. with increased
service in the evening and on
weekends.
Coast
Weatll"r
Variable h11b cloudiness
otberwlH fair throu1h
Tuesday wltb chance of
coastal foe Tuesday mom·
in1. Lows lollllht. lo 48.
Hl1bs Tuesday 13 to '73. ..
IN81•E .... .4~
Watelt '011r la"IJh2.: becCIUI tltere mGW N
preletd, IClfl commut H11111t
Mlllllp. S. ~ A1. .....
MY----A• .._ ........ a ...... ..,. M....... ... -................... -1 &:11 .... ~ •: CM......, M ......... a
L
rano-Priest state Supreme Court
declaion equalizing district
finances, Laguna trustees say
tbe loul school· ayatem will "ob-viously get mueb less0 than
evenSpe~t.
The lettet reads, "In l.bia dis·
trict (Laguna) specifically, our
income since 1976 baa only in·
creased a total of 4 percent.
"When compared witb tbe in·
. flaliQIUlr)' rate of over 40 per-
cent as shown in tbe Consumer
Price Index for tbe same period
of time," tbe letter continues,
"it is obvious tbat districts such
as ours have already been
forced lo make critical program
budgetary cuts to avoid
bankruptcy."
The small scbool;.fistrict bas
cut nearly $1 million in programs
and services tbe past three
years, and tbe next step appears
to be elimination of some
teacher and classified eqiployee
positions.
"We are deeply frustrated and
distressed over tbis situation."
the letter says ...
The trustees suggest that "im-
mediate 'decisions regarding
education as a priority for pro-
per funding will require
courageous, bold and creative
leadership."
in county
A strike shutllng down Orange
County Tranitit District bus ~emee became more !lkttf to-
day after mec}\anks reportedly
rejected tbe latest contract offer
from tbe district. The mechanics, voting on
Saturday, cast all but one vote to
reject tbe unspecified offer, ac·
cording lo a spokesman for tbe
United Transportation enion,
whi c h r epresents the 210
mechanics and tbe district's 760
bus drivers. y
The mechanics could go on
strike as early as Thunday -60
days after their three-year con· tract expired and 30 days after
a fact finding process was im·
plemented to unsuccessfully
solve contract disputes. .
The drivers voted on a
separate contract offer on Sun·
day. Results were unavailable
early today.
The drivers are expected to
honor picket lines in tbe event of
a mechanics' strike.
The district's board of direc·
tors was lo meet today to dis·
cuss tbe situation. •
Top pay currently for
mechanics is $9.82 an hour:
drivers earn $9.46 an hour.
Moves eastward
Snowstorm buries
Plain~; 17 perish
By Tiie Aaoelaled Press shoveling snow, and another
A long-awaited snowstorm man was killed when tbe car he
that blew out of tbe Rockies baa was in skidded and bit a light
left at least 1'7 dead, including a pole.
skier who died under an In Kansas, where rain and up
avalanche the day after Utab'a lo six inches of snow fell, tbe
first major snowfall of the driver of a tanker truck carry-
seaaon. ln1 anhydrous ammonia was
The storm, carrying bilh killed durin& lb~ weekend when
winds and generous belplno of it overturned on a rain-slick
snow, moved over Soutb Dakota, hl1bway. Parts of Missouri got
Nebruka, Kamas, Iowa and 1even inches of snow and
Missouri durinl the weekend, Wisconsin 1ot up lo 4"' inches.
cbllllnc the umeuonably warm Slx people died in Iowa, in·
air and-briQling much-needed cludln1 five who d ied on
precipitation to-an area worried hl•bways and one man wbo died
about aroupt. (Related 11.ory, ln tbe crash of a U1bt aircraft in
A4).. Pocbobontu County. Up lo 9
Meanwhile, llpt rain in tbe lncbes ~ snow fell on sections of
Nortbeut brouCbt hope of relief the state.
from a clrouaht that bu prompt-The storm left atleuCfoor
ed olftdals in New Jeney, New dead after tram, accidents
Yotk, Con~ectlcut and otber . on slick roada bi Nebraska
states lo mcourqe water eon-where wlndl .-..W up to 45 mph
aenatkln. Saaday. Two tratftc deatbl were
What forecuten called tbe blamed cm mow and. le. eoadi·
1euca'1 ftnt ...... fide'' winter U.. la Oolaredo, and the U.S.
storm lD tbe Mldwe1t lost mueb Foreat Service l11ued an
of Its putacb as It mo••d Haludte ..ma., for mountain
eutwar4 b1tO Wilc:GDllD, and ll· anu.
llDols. But_......,•••· · la Utah, a mu wu tilled
PHted toda1 m lllelallu, .._. SaharllQ .._ ldt. ~"'*"> tree .... rala ud 1aow .,.... tn8 •be..... a "*9
blamed far two deatlll. Oae man durbll dae ....... ...
died after collap1la1 wblle C"lae ..._ .... Al>
OHA N <.t ( <JlJNI y l Al I f ()fH~JA .",I f NJ ',
\
e~gine~ir ·sl~in .
Police
seekinJ
• motive
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
Of*Oellyl"l•leMt
A bloody Sunday night slay-
ing, in which a 25-year-old
engineer wlls r epeatedly
stabbed in the chest in the
bedroom of his Laguna Niguel
residence, is under investigation
today by Orange County
Sheriff's homicide detectives.
Investigation Capt. James
Guess said no motive has yet
been established in the slaying, _
which occurred at 29742 Ellen·
dale Drive.
The c.aptain identified tbe vie·
tim as Donald Frank Cook, a
construction engineer employed
by Bechtel Corporation at the
San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station south of San Clemente.
Cook's body, its torso riddled
with stab wounds, was found at
12:30 a .m . today by John
Hasircoglu, a roommate and CO·
worker or the victim.
"There was no sign of rob·
bery, burglary or forced entry ''
Captain Guess s aid . '
Asked what the motive might
be, Capt. Guess said, "I wish we
knew."
He said initial investigation
s howed that the slaying had
neither sexual nor drug-related
overtones •
• Guess said the slain man was
employed as an engineer, but
declined lo name the firm where
tbe victim worked.
"The ~ctim was last seen alive
by tbe roommate at about 6 p.m.
Sunday, Guess said.
•
Guesa said the slayiq isn't
believed lo be related to the un·
solved murders of Keith Eli Har·
rington, 24, and his wife, Patrice
Anne, 27 , who were found
bludgeoned to death in the
bedroom of a Niguel Shores home
Aug.21.
"There are just too many dif·
ferences in the two cases." Guess
said.
lo the Harrington case sheriff's
homicide investigators also have
been unable to determine a
motive.
' Parking time
for big LB
vehicles eyed
Laguna Beach City Council
members will consider adopting
an ordinance Tuesday that would
limit tbe amount of lime recrea·
tional vehicles. commercial
trucks and large boats can be
parkedo~·ty streets.
Mayor ne Baglin has pro-
posed the cit adopt an ordinance
that would restrict owners of such
vehicles from parking on residen·
tial streets for more than five
hours.
Baglin said the city currently
has no law regulating the size of
vehicles parked on city streets,
other than that they are legally
parked.
He said large campers, trucks
and boats create a safety problem
on some of Laguna's hilly. narrow
residential streets.
In other action Tunday at 6
p.m., the City CouncU is expected
to:
-Consider an ordinance reg.
ulating tbe height of antennas
atop Lquna Beach homes.
-Conslder enaclln1 an or-
dinance that would desl1nate tbe
Planning Commission as the
Board of Appeals.
Boat impounded
PORT ANGELES, Wuh. (AP)
-,A 41-foot sallbHt from MOD·
terey, Calif., bu been impouaded
at a Seldu marina for ••.....,..
dnll trafftcklq, but ODl7 ata.r fu
car10 of 111arijuda wu lac·
ce11fully unloaded~ Clallam
CouDtJ olftciall laid. TM .......
muted. •.ooo 1aU'-t x...-
wu lebed by Clallam = 1berUl'1 deputiel ud t
DnaSDlwMmlM ........... • u. .... .......,atl:llp.a. ..... _.., __ ......
tlla&tlllllm&earrt.dateDoflUft.
ju ......... atate.
" .,.. .. ~ ...........
CPlEMONY MARKI OPENING OF REFURBISHED HALL
Better book ~ Nffy, L9funa Offtdat wame
New Laguna Legion ,
hall makes debut
It was standing room only at
dedication ceremonies for the
newly renovated American
Legion HaJl. with senior citizens,
Legionnaires and city officials
coming out to inspect the
$218,000 facelift. ..
The yellow walls still smelled
of paint Friday as local resi·
dents filed into the 6.SOO·square·
foot building to hear speeches
and drink punch.
The&" were welcomed inside by
Mayor Wayne Baglin. who cul a
ribbon on the front porch of the
building, the first schoolhouse in
Laguna Beach 52 Y.ears agO'. The $217,350 remodeling proj·
e ct. funde d with city and
federal revenue sharing money,
was begun last summer.
Now. the building has a
1,000-square-foot addition up·
stairs, a large kitchen area
downstairs, modern rest rooms,
* *· *
offices for o.fficers of tbe Senior
Citizens Club, drop ceilings, and
a fres~ coat of paint inSide and out. ·
A new roof, heating system,
carpets and flooring round out
the facelift. The building will
now be called the Veterans
Memorial Community Center.
The building is leased to tbe
city by American Legion Post
222 under a 10-year agreement.
The city will maintain the two·
story building, and revenues de·
rived from groups using the
facilities go directly fnto the
city's general fund.
For groups who want to use
the building, two words of ad·
vice: Book early.
George Fowler. the city's
director of re~realion, said tbe
building is "booked prettv much
<See LEGION, Pa1e AZ)
* * * Legion's memories
recalled by Price
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of-D9ltr "9.e .....
If it's a clolorful bislory of tbe
old Amencan Lesion ball you
want, talk to Laguna's O.W.
Price.
The IS-year-old former Navy
muaician can trace Americ:an
Legion Poet 2Z2'1 bumble belin·
nin1s back to ll2'J, when tbe
14-member pwp Used lo meet
in a IOrt of lean-to qalnat tbe
Hotel t.quna. '
The preMDl Lelioa Hall, ded·
teated "'1'tday aa tbe Veteran'•
Memorial Community Center,
was tbe dty•s only scboolbouH
back then.
And when the school dilUtct
cleeldecl to build a new aehool.
\be fled1lln1 le1ion poat
purcbued the two . ...., wood
bulldlnc for SI.
"It WH the oalJ bld ff•
eelHd." Price Wei pertlclpMU la a dedlcatila ..... ., IMt ....
Tbe 1d11 I 1•1 WM louted . nearlM,..•lll._.....,.
(llieM:ll:a, .....
•
. .
.,__--JVST BREAKING-...._.~ ........
JAIN~,,...,.,._., ..w .................... ,.
America l. envoy
I 10· El S(llvador fired
NtW YOU CAI»-&tcretary ol S.ate Ateundtr Hall bu ...._..._. ........ u..u-...u.. .. M111dlc'lOS18alvadlr'
··-I ...... uf ... _ ...... , la C.Ual America," TM~-Yon
T'm" nporlfd luday
Whale v.111 can~ to W11l\&naton l••' week ud lntormed that
lbe at .. an 1dnnni1trauon would IOOft name a new amba111dor, •co~ to the Tlrne report. which w11 baaed on St•te Depart· ••l~t'ff .
WlUt@, a r r r diplomat, haa bun 1troo1ly critlciled by
Atpubbran roo1uvatf vea TM 'J'ime• uld Whl\e h~d not been of·
fered • new aulfnmtnt White aid any an.nounceft'tent about hiJ
futun-would hne tu eon1e from lb.a Sta1t~ De"artment the Time~ ••kl . .. I
Cle •••• ... •u•l'•l••.,la .. rci,...
WARSAW. Poland lAP) Te~rn\11 of i overnment and trade
union necotiatoris mt't tod111)' to try to rt11olve local wildcat strikes
b farmus 1Ul~ 1o1.orkers m outhern Poland after a national union-
go' ~mment e<>inprom1se eased Poland ·a labor ens IS
A comm1sl14on led by ~puly A'grkulture Minister Andrzej
l<acala m~t with representatl ves of farmers and workers who have
bt'C!n holding a ~1t i~ for a month In IA former trade union buildin1 in
Rienow, demandLng legahzation of a union· for the nation's
priv4terarmers•
nre e ... e• e.,•e..C ... •I .Cl l•llleer ·
PORTSMOU~H: ~a <AP)-Sixtypeopleaboardanemptyoil
t~nke~ off t~e V1rgm1a coast were evacuated as a fire in the
'essel s engine room continued to smolder the Coast Guard said today. '
The f~re was on the SOO·foot tanker Aikaterini. located 40 miles
east ofChmcoteague. ...... s.,_,. 1'ere. JIN .... I ~el
WASHINGTON. (AP ) President Reagan met today with
So~th Korean ':1res1denl Chun Doo·hwan amid expectations the.
United States ~1.ll pledge to m.aintain troop levels in that country.
Chun , arriving ~t the White H?use in a driving rainstorm, was
greeted by the .Pr~s1dent ~nd by Vice President George Bush. who
escorted ~h~ ~n~1d.e for hts hour-long meeting with the president.
Chun s v1~1t 1s mte~ded lo symbolize a return to normalcy in
~ore an-Amen ca~ relation~ after fou r years of friction over human
rights and 0th.er issues during former President Jtmmy Carter's
tenure as president.
Seftel• elaaf'fle ,,.,.,~ ... .,.,.....
MOSCOW (A.P~ -I~ a new escalation of its war of words with
t~e Reagan admm1strallo~, th_e Soviet le~dership today publicly
accus~ Washington o~ deliberate political subversion" for
charg~gthal the Kremhn was responsible for acts of international
terronsm.
Spaee ••••le••• • ... ,_,. •e•~•
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. <AP> -The launch of the first s~ace shuttle, already running twp years behind original plans,
will be delayed al least a month beyond its scneduled March 17
date. ·
The Natfonal Aeronautics and Space Administr ation in
Was hington confirmed the delay today after The Associated Press
learned about it from sources at Kennedy Space Center here. ·
Minister rebuffed
Judge rejects bid
to ban Penthouse 1
LYNCHBURG, Va. <AP> -A "Penthouse magazine is a very
federal judge refused a request by poor package for the gospel of
television evangelist Rev. Jerry Christ."
Falwell today for a preliminary Falwell is founder and presi·
injunction banning distribution or dent of Moral Majority Inc.,
the March issue of Penthouse founder and star of the Old Time
magazine. Gospel Hour radio and television
Falwell asked that the adult broadcast , pastor of the
magazine, which contains an in-17 ,OOO·member Thomas Road
terview with him. be ordered Baptist Church here and founder
pulled from newsstands on of a local web of Christian
g rounds he h ad asked the schools . · ··
free-lance authors of the in· The March issue already was on
terview not to H ll .their story to sale today at some stands in Pentho~se or Pla yboy Anchorage, Alaska ·and in
magazines. Virginia. '
The minister has sued Pent· I Falwell said two British free·
house for $10 million. U.S. dis-lance writers, Andrew Duncan
trict Court Judge James Turk, and Sasthi Brata, interviewed w~o granted Falwell a temporary him and sold the story to Pent· res~raining order Friday, house after he made it clear to
dechned today to extend it after a them no interview could be sold to
90-minutehearing. what Falwell considered a pomo-
The j~dge said "the public in-graphic magazine.
lerest'~utweighed Falwell's in· ..
terest d he would not extend the
injunc ion beyond its l: 30 p.m. ex·
piration.
Falwell said later he would not
appeal to the 4th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in Richmond.
Falwell was the only witness at
today's hearin& in federal court
here, saying he didn't contend
that the interview in Penthouse
was inaccurate, but adding,
Boys Club offers
sell-defense aid
·Classes in self-defense and
-self-improvement through u.e
use of martial arts are being of·
Cered at the Boys Club of Laguna
Beach Mondays and Tuesdays.
The classes, which cost $30 a
month, include philosophy,
health, nutrition and physiology,
as well as self-defense.
For more information, call
494·2535. The Boys Club is local·
ed at 1085 Laguna Canyon Road.
F,....P.,,eAJ
SNOW .••
day. a 20-year -old cross-county
skier. Daniel Arthur La Fave of
Salt Lake, died after being
burled un~r five feet of snow in
a small av lanche at Donut Falls
in Big Cot onwood Canyon. Two
companions escaped and sum·
moned help, authorities said.
The National Weather Service
Issued avalanche warnings for
all back-country areas as the
new snow s lipped off the old,
hard-packed base.
Alta, the ski resort in Little
Cottonwood Canyon east of Salt
Lake City, reported having 90
!nches of snow on the ground, an
mcrease of nearly five feet since
Wednesday.
In Connecticut, where the 0.38
inches of rain that fell last
month made it the driest
January on record.
TELEPHONE
AN de,.,.....-: (714) 142~
Cleaelfled ~.: 142-1171 iiilf'1ilt
,. OFFICES T~sP.Haley ~~
Robert N. Weed ~
M. Thomas Keevll
..... I ThOmas A. Murphlne ........,.r:..., .
Charles H. LOOS ......... ,.....,.f: ...
, ·niillitlf-flt l brili11 ·c.111 ~•••ltlllllt C:omP•"'' M• "••• .......... ltltM. ... 111'1 .. ~ ......... _,,.,_ ... '"". , .. , ... , ......... , ... , .. .
,...... ..... "' tilPrt!I"' -r-.
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a.ceMfte:•Wlllt .. ,.,...
L...-. llNdl: 11111-. CIMtt "..,_.,
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W AlllJNGTON (AP) -Tbe
DepartmtDt ol Educ1Uon la dla·
c1rdln1 beavily crlliclaed bi·
Un1ual education rules proposed
by the Carter adminl1tratioo,
Education Secretary T.H. Bell
announced today.
The n.ales would have forced,
the nation's schools to teacl{
children who aren't native
speakers of Encliah in their
native Janiua1e and in Enllish.
Congress bad put a freeze on the
rules, proposed by Bell's pre-
decessor, Shirley M. Hufstedler,
on Aug. 5, and they never went
into effect.
But they ignited an avalanche
of criticism from school boards
and many education groups,
which claimed that for the first
time the federal government
was trying to tell school districts
how and wbat to teach.
"The pelicies are. harsh, in·
flexible, burdensome, unworka·
ble and incredibly costly. The
rules are fiercely opposed by
many, supported by few ," Bell
said. ·
He called the rules "an in-
trusion on state and local
responsibility."
"Nothing in · the law or the
Constitution anoints the Depart·
m enl of Education to be Na-
tional School Teacher, National
~c hool Superintendent or Na·
ltQ1.1.al School Board. I would like
to use this regulation, symbolic
of many of the ills that have
plagued the federal government
and this fledgling department. to
telegraph a message of change
to the American people."
Bell told reporters he pro·
posed withdrawing the ruJes a
week ago to President Reagan
:·and he was in full support of ll... .
~he Education Department
estimated that enfordng the
rul.e~ to teach children reading,
~r1t11~g and other primary s ub-
Jects in two languages could cost
school districts $180 million to
$591 million a,year.
Fro•PqeAl
PRICE •.•
Price said. and legionnaires.
with a little help from their
friends, rolled the huge building
down the hill on logs .
They had purchased the pres·
.ent lot on Legion Street for
$3,000, and ~pent another $1,800
for a foundation.
The maple wood floor came
Crom an old skating rink, the OC·
togenarian s.Ud.
And where did the money
come from to do all this work?
·'Once we had a street dance
o n the newly paved Forest
Avenue," Price recalls.
He said the legionnaires
served "near -beer" to the
celebrants because of the. lack of
(eal alcohol.
': "We spiked it with generous
shots or White mule," he s.Ud
with a smile. "The res ult was a
terrible drink, but we had a ter·
rific sale and made a huge pro£·
it."
Another fund-raiser would
have bei?n a disaster were it not
for the quick thinking of one
member, Price said.
"Somebody gave us a couple
of deer. and we decided to have
a venison barbecue," he began.
"We put the carcasses in the
Ice house, took out ads and sold
lots of liclcets."
But comes the day of the barbecue. the dismayed
veterans discovered the meat
had spoiled.
So one of the veterans rushed
out and bought som e young
goats at $S each and barbecued
them.
"The meat was delicious and
everyone came back for more "
Price s.Ud. '
The veterans' group will con·
tinue to use the ne wly re·
furbished building for their
Thursday meetings and social
events, sharing their historic
facility the rest of the week with
Laguna Beach aerobic dancers,
karate students and gymnasts.
And revenues for maintaining
the old building will come from
fees charted the new partlci·
pants.
Not from barbecued goat.
Burglars hit
Laguna-homes
Burglars look more than
$3,700 worth of cash, jewelry,
a nd other items from two
Laguna Beach homes over the
weekend.
Police said thieves possibly
used a key to enter the home of
Hush Simon Owens, of La Vista
Drive. 'Ibey made off with $1,771
in cash, jewelry and other
belonllnal. .
Al tbe home of Phylli• T .
BuUer, of llWentl Dri.e, IUI•
pecta enterfd b7 unknown
meant and IOok a diamond rinC
valued at $2,000.
.Just clowning around
Four-year-old Juliet Cottle puts finishing
~ouches on makeup for Clown Konky , who
is really 6-year-old Neville Campbell at Ho·
ly Trinity Church in East London where
the :>5th a~uaJ downs' service was held
Sunday. Juhet's father, Gerry, is president
of Clowns International.
Witness in county
deaths detained
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A-
former Seal Beach man wanted
as a witness in the bizarre series
of ''Freeway Killer" murders
was-being held for questioning in
a Pennsylvania jail Sunday.
He was identified as Ralph
Leon.ard Kincer , 20, now being
held m the Somerset County jail in
lieu or $100.ooobail.
Kincer was arr ested last
August in connection with the $100
ro~bery of a Somerset gas station,
said Somer:set police officer
LesterD. Lensbouer.
"Kincer gave us a lot .of names
and addresses when he was first
arrested," Lensbouer said.
• Milk theft
brings shot·
FRESNO <AP> A Fresno
man was shot in' the right eye al-
legedly for stealing milk from a
child, police reported .
Michael Rampel, 20, was w~Jking a!ong "a street Sunday
with a friend when a station
wag.on pulled up, a man got out
and fired three s hots from a
.22 -caliber revolver , officers
said.
Rampel was taken to Valley
Medical Center wh ere he was re-
ported in critical condition .
Police said the shootihg might
have resulted from Rampel and
his companion, Jerry Chavez
18, taking a half gallon or rnilk
·from a 10-12-year-old boy in the
area.
Artists program
plann~d in L'aguna ·
Members of the Laguna Beach
Panhellenic A~ociation will
view the "Artists by, Artists"
exhibit at the Laguna Beach
Museum of Art Wednesday.
The group will gather at the
museum, 307 Cli ff Drive, at
10:30 a.~.
Kincer was ques tioned by
Orange County sheriff's inves·
tigator Bernie Es posito on Jan. 23
and 24 . Orange County Chief
Deputy District Attorney James
Enright said-Kincer is "not a
s uspect .. in th e murders ,
"although the Orange County
~heriff's office sees him as a
potential witness."
Lensbouer said Kincer pleaded
guilty Friday to a charge of
"criminal conspiracy" in connec·
lion with the gas station holdup
and was scheduled for sentencing
Tuesday.
Detailsof Kincer 's involvement
in the California slayings are not
clear but a source in Somerset
said the man is believed to have
been a roommate or one of the six
men arrested earli er in connec-
tion with the series or grisly
murders .
William Bonin, 33. a Downey
truck driver. is charged with
murdering 14 teen-age boys
within the jurisdiction of Los
Angeles County.
Bonin faces trial May 4 in Los
Angeles and also faces possible
prosecutioninseveral othercoun·
ties, including Orange County
Three other men also have been
charged and race trial in Los
Angeles in connection with the
killings. 1'hey are Gregory Mat·
thew Miley. 19. of Bellflower.
charged in fi\•e killings, James
Munro, 19. or Long Beach. and
William Ray Pugh . 18 . of
Norwalk. both charged with one
muPder.
Another man charged in con·
nection with the case. Vernon
Butts. 23. hanged himself in his
Los Angeles County Jail cell last
month.
The str angulation killings
became known as the .. Freeway
Killer" murders because the 44
bodies of the victims -all young
men or boys -were dumped near
freeways or highways.
Authorities say, however. that
the murders, which occurred in
Los Ange les , Orange, San
Bernardino. Riyerside and Kern
counties since 1972. may not all be
related.
,,..,. P.,,e A J
LEGION •••.
solid now," during mucti of the
week. •
There a re children's dance
classes da ily on the polished
wood floor upstairs, and night
recreation classes Monday •
through Wednesday.
The legion post has the build·
in ~ Thursday nights , and
Fridays are already starting to
fill up .with parties, and wedding
receptions.
"Y'fe've got one wedding re·
cep\lon booked, and I've heard
~rom four other parties who are
interested," Fowler said.
Village Laguna. Inc. has the
building on St. Valentine's Day
f~r its 10th anniversary celebra·
t1on .
Body found
under train
A 31-year-old Burbank man's
dismembered body was found
beneath a railroad freight car
early Sunday during switching
operations in Anaheim.
The Orange County Sheriff.
Coroner's office identified the
dead man as J onas Petras.
Investigators said it was un-
clear al this time ifthe victim'was
run over by a train or died by
some other means.
0 fficers s aid a crewman
noticed a portion or the victim's
body bent:ath one of the freight
cars during track s witching
operations at about 3 a.m. in the
Southern Pacific switching yard
area adjacent to the Santa Ana
Freeway.
The death is still under in-
vestigation.
Work grants eyed
CHICAGO (AP> -A state
senator is proposing that jobless
resi.dents or Illinois be given
grants of up to $9,000 lo leave the
slate and go to places where
there is work. "I hope this is not
perceived as a bounty on
minorities," said Sen. Jeremiah
Joyce, who said the bulk ol un~
employed people in Iltlnois are
members of minor,ity groups.
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56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(71 4) 644-7030 .,,
..
0 HAN C. l (' () u N 1 y (,Al II 0 f I"' i A ) 'J u N T s
&rioU.lj fldtmed'
Grand · Jtiry J fl'1ys ·
. '
ort plftn
NB seeks
·dumping
• action
Newport Beach city officials
are asking that Laguna Hills
Sanitation lnc. be fined for
dumping polluted water in ~e
Newport Bay's main tributary.
Jn a Jetter to the director of
the regional Water Quality Con -
trol Board, Newport officials
complain that the waste water
"poses a health nuisance" to
thousands of boaters and swim·
mers in t.M low~r bay.
They say the polluted water
also passes through the bay's
ecological reserve.
"It just seems ridiculous to be
spending thousands of dollars
cleaning up the bay while
they're dirtyin~ it uo." com-
mented Rob e rt Wynn ,
Newport city manager.
The waste water, a byproduct
of-the sewage treatment proc-
ess. be&!lJl spilling into the San
Diego Creek in early January
when a pipeline broke. The
pipeline was repaired several
weelts later.
Notmally, the pipeline carries
the water into the ocean off
South Laguna.
Officials from the water quali·
ty board contend the sanitation
company poured polluted water
into the creek throughout 1980.
The pipeline was built last
December.
City Manager Wynn suggests ··
that the sanitation company
should be faned and tbe money
used to help clean up "the pollu·
lion and silt" findlng its way in-
to the bay.
City officials in Newport are
also studying the possibility of
seeking a court injunction
against the sanitation company
to block the possibility of future
dumping.
· . .., .. Laguna Hills Sanitation Inc.
could be fined a maximum of
$6,000 for every day that waste ·
water was dumped into the San
Diego Creek.
A spokesman for the state At·
torney General said his office is
considering taking legal action
against the sanitation c~mpany.
Meeting set . . on airport
Newport Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather and Murry Cable, John
Wayne Airport manager, wiJI be
on the hot seat Friday morning
during a town hall meeting in
Newport Beach on the airport
master plan.
The 7:30 debate is sponsored
by the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce and will
be held at the Sheraton Hotel.
Tickets are S.S.
Also attending will be Hugh
Coffin, Newport's city attorney
and Walter GillfilJan, airport
consultant. For more informa-
tion, call 644-8211.
Coast
Weather
Variable high cloudiness
otherwise fair tbrou1b
Tuesday witb chance of
coastal IOI Tue141., ay mom-
ln1. Lows tonl1ht. to 46.
Hi1ba Tueaday a to 73.
IN81•ETeltA~
Watch wour loftg11ag1 '*°"" UwN maw be .. , preNfd, _. columtlitl Htlfll
Mulllp. SH Po91 A7.
. ""
After the rains teent ateafl ·•
.5 areas
reported
deficient
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEID..
Ol -.o.lty ~lllt SIMt
The Orange County Grand
Jury condemned the proposed
John Wayne Airport master plan
today as being not "a master
plan at all" but rather an "ex-
pensive facilities improvement
_project" that is seriously
flawed.
The jury, in a 1_6-page report,
listed five areas in which it said
the plan, pre pared by VTN
Consolidated Inc., of Irvine, was
deficient -passenger service
demand, airspace capacity,
vehicular traffic and airport ac·
cess, jet no~se, and private
aviation needs.
Weekend sailors at Newport Harbor found clear skies,
sunny weather and ·some stiff breezes to play in Saturday
afternoon as they tacked about in fairly heavy company.
It was a glorious ·way to· celebrate-the end of January.
Photo was taken with a 500 mm lens from T~e Arches
Bridge at Pacific Coast Higt\way, looking south.
· The jury said consideration of
the master plan by the county
Board of Supervisors -now
scheduled for Feb. 18 _.. "l>e de·
ferred until a compre hepsive
plan for addressing the ~ntire
spectrum of Orange County" air
service needs is completed and
Shots fired
bi capture
of suspect
.,~~9,~~
A 21-year-old man wbo al·
legedly ran down a Costa Mesa
policeman with his car and sped
north from the CUckoo's Nest
rock bar in a hail of police
bullets is to be arraigned Tues·
day.
Patrick E. Brown of Long
Beach was arrested about three
blocks north or the parking 1ot at
1714 Placentia Ave. where he al-
legedly hit uniformed reserve of-
ficer Cr.aig Coulter late Satur-
day.
Coulter, who police said
landed on the car's hood and
then hit the ground, fired three
shots at the fleeing vehicle. All
three hit the car, police said.
Brown, held in Costa Mesa
Jail in lieu of $25,000 bail, was
arrested on suspicion of assault
with intent to murder a police of·
ficer .
Coulter was one of about a
dozen uniformed and un-
detcover officers assigned to a
special police task force clamp-
ing down on weekend crime near
the rock bar, investigator Alan
Kent said.
Coulter wasn't injured serious-
ly. police said.
But one of two officers who
had approached Brown's car in
the lot suffered ankle and wrist
injuries when the driver alleged-
ly started up his car and headed
for the exit.
That officer, Steve Labbitt,
and reservf officer Art Kassel
reportedly spotted an open can
of beer in Brown's car. The beer
was being passed among Brown
and two other persons in the car,
Kent said.
Arrested with Brown when his
fleeing car was .stopped by of.
ricers Gayla Smith and James
(See SHOTS, Pafe AZ)
Medici free
man/rom tub
Orange County paramedics
bad to cut through the wall of a
house ln .Irvine over the
weekend to rescue a man who
was pinned under a bathtub for
more than six bouts.
Michael Jaeobl, 28, of Stanton,
wbo wun't hurt m the milbap,
told the paramedic• that be wu
tryta1 to install the tub when be
slipped and became trapped
between tbe tub and tbe wall.
He wa1 dlacovered by an
l"lne pollae officer who went to
check after Jaeobl' wtfe told·
pbllce Friday nl1ht that Itel'
buabaad'1 return home waa
more 0.. lbl boan overdue. WblD tbl oftlNr went to tbl
lrvbte ..._at .. Aleona A:.t
be bard JMOlll' sereams
weal to tbe maa'1 aid.
State nixes Irvine
dam water boost
State authorities have denied
an Irvine Ranch Water District req~est for permiuion io_r• t• .. .tnter lfYtf""llti~f:" ~ •
ttesna!w Dam, which experts
/"'? ..... ,,.""" ~r1ATILESlllAKE
RESERVOIR say mllht collapee in a m~ -w • •
earthquake. •
Water dis trict ·General
Man ager Arthur Bruington aJM>
was ordered to prove that Rat-
ti es n ak e Reservoir. in the
foothills north of Irvine, is pres-
enlly_being~~rated safely.
The water level in Rattlesnake
Reservoir was cut by two-thirds
in late-1979 when a Newport
Beach engineering firm c9m-
pleted a study that determined
poor soil conditions should cause
the dam to fail in an earthquake
measuring 7.5 on the Richter
scale.
Wahler Associates engineers
found that slipl)age of the up·
stream slope of the dam could
occur if an earthquake occurred
along the Elsinore Fault. located
about eight miles east of the
dam .
Despite the study. Bruington
wrote a letter last September
to the Califomia Department of
Wate r Resources asking for
permission to .raise the water -
ll'IVINE &VO
I Vtllage of 1·
,_
Notlhwood ·-' ~ ! ~ R
.,. .. ,~ ......... ~
MAP LOCATES RESERVOIR
N••r city of lrvln•
level from its present 390-foot
level to 409 feet.
Under a water management
plan proposed by 'district
engineers, the water level would
be slowly increased from mid·
February to m id-June. The
added water storage could earn
the water district $40,000 in in·
creased revenue from farmers
who use the re se rvoir's
reclaimed w ater, IRWD
engineers said.
Newport attorney,
yachtsman, dies
Funeral services for Thomas C.
Webster, a Newport Beach and
Los Angeles attorney who died
Saturday at the Loa Angeles
hospital where he was born, will
beheld Tuesday in Westwood.
Services for Mr. Webster, a
Newport resident since 1920, will
be cOQducted at 2 :30 p.m. at
Westwood Park Memorial
Chapel, 1218GlendonAve.
Mr. Webster was prominent in
yachting for most of his life. He
was the son of the late Jim
Webster; founder of the famed
FU1ht ot the Snowblrdl, and for
whom Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's race committee boat wu
named.
The Ions-time Newport .man
ud hil brother, Robb, owned the
flnt Snowblrd, a lJ·foot catboat,
chri1tened Tom Robbi.
la adclltlan to beta• non,.
tbe craft for tbe midsummer
•P9etMle lmowll u tlM '1llbt of
the SaowbUda, lt was also .,.
nowned u tbl liallebaaded boat
In tbe ltu Ol7mplc1 In Loi
Aapa.. IDlat.-,..n,Mr.w..._,,.. =u -•uter altoard r•cMa 1tJ U. IN Howard r. All••••oa. B~··· ODI ~neelo • Alriii-·· 11r1 n, tlM Jllelll
~rgeson
seeks aid
for water
implementation begun."
Such a comprehensive plan,
the jury said, should examine:
-Selection of a site for a
"major airport" that would
service the long and medium-
haul demands of Orange County
residents.
John Wa yne Airport is cQn-
sidered a short-haul facility,
meaning that .it provides
transportation to destinations
within a 500-mile radius. ..._blywo~pp ll1rlan -Revision of the VTN plan so ·· ·ierg'etoo, R-New-port "'Beach, that service at John Wayne
has introduced a bill designed lo Airport would complement that
aid tbe Irvine Ranch Water Dis-of a major aJrport.
trict in its attempts to generate -Selection of one or more
electricity through the use of s ites for general aviation
water wheel-like devices. airports for use by private
The bill, now in an assembly aircraft pilots.
committee, would authorize the At a morning press con·
1RWD to finance, construct, ference, jury member John J .
maintain aft operate plants for McGinnis said it is not in the
the generation of hydroelectric county's best interests to spend
power. S75 milli-on to make the
JRWD engineer Gregory VTN -recommended
Heiertz explained that the bill ls improvements at the existing
a technical requirement for any airport when projections show
water district that wants to that it will meet less and less of
generate electricity. He ~x-future passenger demands.
plained that this requirement In its report, the jury said the
· h · airport now handles about 50 was originally set wit a view percent of the short-haul de· toward regulating the large. scale generation of electricity. mand placed on It by the travel-ing public. Despite the improve·
However, in the case of the ments contemplated in the,
IRWD, small-scale generation of master plan, tha\ figure'wiU
electricity is envisioned through dro! to 33 percent by 2000, ac· the utilization of small water cor ing to VTN. ~
wheel-like devices on water dis· s eaking to the jury recom-
trict pipelines. mendation that s upervisors
setect a site for a major airport, Heiertz said that about 300 McGinnis said, "Orange County
kilowatts of power could be needs a site and Orange County
generated at two separate sites bas the responsibility to choose in the water district. One one ...
kilowatt. could power 10, 100..watt (See AIRPORT, Page A2> lightbulbs.
.---~~~~~~~~~~~-• * *
Airporf'plan
high points
Here are key points discussed in the Orange County
Grand Ju.rY's report on John Wayne Airport:
-"111E GllAND n iaY concludes that there now ex-
iats a serious need for a major loq-baul airport in Orange
County and that need will ll'OW treater each year.••
-''THE UKEUBOOD THAT such an airport will be. ~
bullt diminlsbes witb each year that paues. Tbe criais in
air service wbicb will confront Oran1e County 10 to JO
years from now is a crilla which must be met today."
-• ...,. MOST SSUOVS and mott fundamental of all
problems ii tbat tbe Jolm Wayne Airport wW HTer tGtall1
aene tbe air MrYiee needs of Oraqe CouatJ. ''
. -TllB GUND ivaY Nt'Ollllaea that there la COD·
liderable lll'•UN bJ IOID• memben of tbe bUlm.1 com·
munltJ to implemmt tM YTN .J::i!:t':tdlateb. To rWd to tbat pr e11ure would M . ble lD a PDllUeal
.... bat It would be • ........, Of ............. lo
NPnMDl .U o...,. eo.tJ .ettu.., ntblr tban JUlt oae apeetal ....._ ,.,,..,.
· -'l'llS JOST__,., ........ ......._. emb9n
•te ...... ,....... • .... ~laordlrlo
--~r:c,-···· .. ~ &.. ·---Lt 111U11DD ........ - -. U ... die ........... It 'would H1W lbl IDilloe, bJ .. ,..,._.
---------
...... -----·1VST811&4UNG~------
w.. .... h-._.,..,.. .. lfl ..... ~ ............ .
America'• envoy
lo El Salvador /ired
• NIWVOAK CAPJ ·~~oll&a&eAl•x ...... HU,w ftrM-.nWMWMIM~•h•1a&oa&a1vedor
.... I ...... ol a NW ~p0Uc1 la c.lral .... H ... TM New Yen
rtm .. reported today
WMCe •u <'Iliff lo Wuhlnlton 1Mt wHk and Wormed that
UM a....,. 1admlnl1lraUoa would IOOft namt a new amballador, •c~ to tbe Tlmt1 report, which waa butd on State Depart-aaent eour~
WNte, a rarHr diplomat, h.. beto atronaly criticlaed by
Re&Htbllcan ('CM\atrvaOvei. The Times Hid WhJle had not been of·
f•Nd a .. _. l1n11•Ht Whit• uld any aADOuneement about hiJI
future would h1v1 to come rrom the State Otpartment, the Times .....
1/.41' ••e .. a. ... 1 ... ,..WC
DETROIT lAP> United Auto Workers unton members
voted by a 3 to 2 l'J\»r1an to ratify contract concessions to s trug.
1lln1 Chrysler Corp that w•ll &Ive them a 13 percent pay cut,
the union announced today
UAW vice president Mark Slepp, la charge of the union's
Chrysler affairs , s aid 26,942 members voted for the third round of
concessions and 18,859 voted against, clearing the way for the
company to r~ce1 ve $400 million in eovernment loan guarantees if
Chrysler's lenders approve sacririces asked of them.
nre e••e• e.,tse_, ... •I .U , • .....,
PORTSM OUTH, Va. (AP > Sixty peopleaboardanemptyoil
tanker orf the Virgini a coast were evacuated as a fire in the
vessel's engine room continued to smolder, the Coast Guard said today.
The fi.re was o·n the 800-foot tanker Aikaterini, loca'ted 40 miles east of Chincoteague. •
Ollletal .... " ....... .....
BElRUT. Lebanon CAP) Thespeakeroflran's Parliament
reacting to a new attack by President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr on th~
• clergy-led government, appealed to Ayatalloh Ruhollah Khomeini
today to intervene in the political powerstruggte.
Bani·Sadr stepped up the political strife over the weekend with
an interview in the newspaper Enghelab Isla mi that quoted him as
, saying there should have been a national debate on freeing lbe 52
American hostages to determine whether it was "a great service
or high treason." He also accused the clergy.dominated
Parliament of trying to exclude him from political decisions the paper said. '
11eatrta•.,·~·••nlf1Nse•
WASHINGTON <AP> President Reagan pledged today to
South Korean P resident Chun Doo-hwan that the United States
would not reduce the level of troops in South Korea or the
Pacific.
"We shall maintain the strength of our forces in the Pacific
area." Reagan said as he and the South Korean leader finished
a White House meeting.
Standing outside the White House with Reagan at his side,
Chun said: "President Reagan gave me firm assurances that
the United States has no intention of withdrawing its forces
from Korea. I am pleased that the present level of U.S. military
forces in Korea will be ma intained."
Quick switch
·'Three held in Mesa
• in mo~y con game
Three Long Beach men are be-
ing held in Costa Mesa City Jail
today after they were arrested
for allegedly operating a con
game that in vol ved exchanging
$2 bills fbr $20s.
Held in lieu of $5,000 bail each
are Ervan E. Cantrell, 42, Doyle
A. Goodwin, 34 , and Richard K.
Yanagihare, 36.
Their scam, police contend,
revolved around approaching a
restaurant cashie~ith a $10 bill
and two.$5 bills.
The men asked to change the
cash into ·a $20 note. After re·
ceiving the $20, police said, they
would walk a few steps, palm
• Slide show slated
on airport plan
A slide presentation on the
proposed master plan for John
Wayne Airport will be given
Thursday e v e ning at the
Mariners branc h libra r y in
Newport Beach.
Norman Ewers, a plans and
programs officer for the airport.
will be present atthe 8 o'clock pre·
sentation. Copies of the master
plan are available for viewing at
all Newport Beach libraries. For
further information, call 640-2141.
Merger sought
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The na-
tional executive secretary of the
Screen Actors Guild says he ho~
SAG and other actors' union cab
merge by early 1983 when the two
unions again face film anct-
television producer s at the
bargaining table. Chester L.
Migden made the comment as
S~G 's national board moved Sun-
day to consider a merger with the
American Federatiorr-of
Television and Radio Artists.
the cash and then re-approach
the cashier. claiming that she
had given them a $2 bill instead
of the $20.
The three were arrested out-
s id e the Sizzler Family
Steakhouse, 2196 Harbor Blvd ..
where they allegedly had made
such an exchange.
Officers moved in on the ttio
after an em&>loyee at Country
Bill's restaurant, 2000 Harbor
Blvd. declined to exchange the
$20 bill, and called police.
Police said the group carried
several $2 bill&.
F,....P.,,e.41
SHOTS •••
Miller at Victoria Street and
Placentia'. Avenue were
passengers ~ David Neely,
18, of 5902 LOurde.t Drive, Hunt-
ington Beach, an<r Raymond E.
Mondragon, 20, of Westminster.
The y were releas ed later
without being charged, Kent
said.
Arrest of the three, all wear-
ing closely cropped punk-styled
haircuts and clothing, came on
the third weekend of the special
tas k force"s operation, Kent
said.
The Placentia Avenue area
has been the scene or continuing
weekend ·delinquency problems
including alcohol and drug
abuse, pedestrian traffic in-
juries and malicious mischief.
he s aid.
The Cuckoo's Nest, operated
by Jerry Roach or .Laguna
Beach, features rock and punk
rock music groups weekly.
In an interview last year,
Roach said problems in and
· around his club had been halted
by his <>wn stepped up security
force.
TELEPHONE
Thomes P. Haley ........
Robe~ N. Weed
"'"*"' M. Tttom.s Keevll .....,
T~ A. Murphlne ............
Charles H. Loos ~ ..............
'
AH de ...... nea: (114) 142-4321
Ct•Hllled Adw9'lllili•; 142-1171
Of FICU <*'•Mne:m-...e.y••wt '
i......-9Ndl: *7 Ne. OeMt """'"' HwlCI ...... lliedl: UUJe..ctl ~
WASHINGTON (AP) -'l'be
Department ol Education is db·
cardin1 heavily criticized bi·
nncual education rules proposed
by the Carter administration,
Education Secretary T .H. Bell
announced today.
The rules would have forced
the nation's schools to teach
children who aren 'l native
speakers of Enilish in their
native language and in English.
Congress had put a freeze on the
rules, proposed by Bell's -pre-
decessor, Shirley M . Hufstedler,
on Aug. S, and they never went into effect.
But they ignited an avalanche
or criticism from school boards
and many education groups,
which claimed that for the first
time the federal government
was trying to tell school districts
how and what to teach.
"The policies are harsh, in·
flexible, burdensome, unworka-
ble and incredibly costly. The
rules are fiercely opposed by
many, supported by few," Bell
said.
He calle<l the rules "an in·
trus lon on state and local
responsibility." "Nothing In the law or the
Constitution anoints the Depart-
ment of Education to be Na-
tional School Teacher, N~tional
School Superintendent or Na·
li.Qoal School Board. I would like
to use this regulation, symbolic
of many or the ills that have
plagued the federal government
and this fledgling department, lo
telegraph a message of change
to the American people.'·
Bell told reporters he pro-
posed withdrawi\lg the rules a
week ago to President Reagan
"and he was in full support of
it. ..
The Education Depa rtment
estimat ed that enforcing the
rules to teach children reading.
writing and other primary sub-
jects in two languages co'1ld cost
school districts S180 million to
$591 mitlion a year.
WEBSTER. • •
of the board. Perpetual Savings is
sponsor of the Flight of the Lasers
and donor or the primary trqphy.
The Flight of the Lasers wls the
successor to the Flight of the
Snowbirds. Both e vents were con-
ducted by the Newport Harbor
ChamberorCommerce.
Mr. We bs t e r had bee n a
member of NHYC s ince 1943. He
was a long.time member of the
Wilsh~re Chamber of Commerce
and the Redlands Chamber of
Commerce. He was president of
the Beverly Hills Rotary Glub in ·
1978. and prior to .bis illness was
scheduled to be pF'esident of the
YMCA of Beverly Hills.
He is survived by his widow,
Frances Mary (the former
Fr a n ces Atwood of San
Bernardino): two sons, Thomas
C. Jr., Portland, Ore. and John.
Newport Beach, and his Q.rother
Robb, Laguna Beach .
The family reques ts that
me morial contributions be made
to CARESofthe Los Angeles· USC
County Medical Center in the
name of the Webster Wing, Com-
prehensive Cancer Center.
,.,.... P,..e .4 J
AIRPORT. • •
McGinnjs, who said he was
speaking on behalf of the 19
members who serve on the jury,
sa id it will tak e '',s trong
leadership" on the part· of the
board or supervisors to take the
actions necessary to place a ma-
jor airport'in the county.
In the past , he said, such
leadership "has been missing."·
·'The board has an opportunity
to take actions necessary to give
Orange County the kind of air
service it needs," McGinnis
said.
The jury spokesman said the
panel decided not to endorse any
site for a major airport. "None
of them is perfect, but 'there are
sites out there."
"The supervisors know where
they are," he said.
There was no immediate reac-
tion this morning to the jury's
recomm.endations from county
Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose
district includes the airport.
Riley said he bad not yet seen
the jury's report.
He and board Chairman Ralph
Clark w're the only supervisors
lntervle'fed by the jury in the
course of its inquiry into Ule
master plan.
• .
Work granta eyed
CHICAGO (AP) -A stale
senator la propo11D1 that Jobleu
realdenta ot JWnola be Ii••
1ranta of up to •.ooo to lean lbei
state and 10 to places where.
there ii won. "I hope~ II not
percelnd ,., a bou:,~1:: mlnorltl•," lakl Sen. J ·
loyct, wbo 1al4 tbe buJt-of ..-.
employed people ln }WDoU an membln of mtnor;alJ IJ'OUPI.
'
IJCI king and queen
Arceli Ines. 20, and Danny Johnson. 24, bask in the glory
of bein~ named homecomin2 kiniz and queen over the
weekend at UC Irvine-Long Beach State bas_ketball game.
They are the first homecoming king and queen at UCI .
Anti-porno ·forces
plan protest rally
By STEVE MARBLE
Of IM Dally Pilet 51alf
Newport Beach residents who
s t a ge d a one ·da y, tra ffi c ·
blocking protest rally in front of
Talk of the Town adult bookstore
last year. say they're ready to ma~shal their ariti-porno troops
agam .
The bookstore. closed since
late October when a pre·dawn
fi re charre d its s t ock and
shelves, was given permission to
r eo pe n by t h e Cal i fo rn ia
Supreme Court last week.
Jim Helfrich, who organized
last year 's protest . says his
neighbors were "shocked and
alarmed" at the news or the hieh
cou rt's decision.
"I think I can safely say that
we just aren't going to let it hap-
pen ," said Helfrich His sup
NB to study
coastal plan
Newport Beach 's proposed
local coastal plan. the document
that will dictate land uses along
the coastline. will be discussed
tonight by city council mem-
bers.
The 7:30 p.m. public hearing
will be held at city hall, 3300
Newport Blvd.
Tonight's agenda is expected
to include discussion o'r public
restrooms along the city strand.
The coastal plan. once counci l
members have approved its con·
tents. must be okayed by the
California Coastal Commission.
I porters, he added, alr~ady are
mapping out battle plans ai m~d
at fi ghting the bookstore.
The bookstore at 2930 W. Coast
Hi g hway, however , remains
closed. Workmen al the white
stucco shop sa y the establish·
m e nt will be r ea d y fo r
customers thjs week.
The Supreme Court agreed
last Wednesday that shop owner
Thomas Wade can go back in
business unttl justices decide
whether to hear his appeal of ci·
ty laws that have kept him out of
busin~
The Orange CoQ/lty Superior·
Co urt and the Foi)rth District
Court of Appeal already had re·
jected Wade's argument that
Newport's adult entertainment
la w violates his First Amend·
ment rights.
In legal papers filed with the
state's top court Friday. though,
city officials claim Josh Ka plan ,
attorney for the bookstore. mis-
represented the facts or the case
to the Supreme Court.
Specifically, says Assistant Ci·
ty Attorney Robert Burnham.
.. the shop owners as ked the court
to maintain the "status quo'' or
the bookstore.
Burnham maintains that the
status quo or the bookstore "is
that the business is closed"
s ince it was the fire and not city
laws that forced owners to board
up the place.
Also, Burnham s ays, the
Supreme Court decision re-
verses last year's Orange Coun·
ty Superior Court order that the
books tor«! cease business.
Nipel · . r
J
• -E engineer ·
slain
A ~ s.mdaJ llilltf Ila,·
Ina, In. wblcb a H ·year·old
en1tneer was repeatedly
1t,bbed ln the cheat In tbe
bedroom of his La1una Ntcuel
residence, la wicler invest11ation :
today by Oran1e County •
Sheriff's homicide detectives. ·
lnvest11alion C~pt. James ~
Guess said 119 motive bu yet '
been established in the slaying,
which occurred at 29742 Ellen-
dale Drive. 'f .
The captain identified the vie-:
Um as Donald Frank Cook, a
~onstruction engineer employed :
by Bechtel Corporation at the
San Onofre Nuclear Generating ·
Station south of San Clemente.
Cook's body, its torso riddled
with stab wounds, was found at
12 :30 a .m . today by John ·
Hasircoglu. a roornJJlate an<t CO·
worker of the victrm.
''There was no sign of rob-
bery. burglary or forced entry,"
Captain Guess said.
Asked what the motive might
be, Capt. Guess said, "I wish we
knew."
He said initial investigation
showed that the slaying had
neither sexual nor drug-related
overtones.
Guess said the slain man was
employed as an engineer. but
declined to name the firm where
the victim worked .
"The victim was' last seen alive
by the roommate at about 6 p.m.
Sunday, Guess said.
Guess said . the slaying isn't
believed to be related to the un-
solved murders or Keith Eli Har·
rington, 24, and his wife, Patrice
Ann e , 27. who w er e found
bludgeoned to de ath in the
bedroom or a Niguel Shores home
Aug.21.
"There are j ust too many dif-
ferences in the two cases," Guess
said.
In the Harrington case sheriff's
homicide investigators also have
been unable to determine a
motive.
.' . Purse thieves -
-J
get 54 ~ents ·
A ~6.yea r-old wo man was
pushed to the ground in an alley in
the 2000 block of Palace Ave.,
Costa Mesa. early this morning
by two men who police said
grabbed her purse and drove off.
Orricers s aid Mary Alice
Gillilend told them she was walk-
ing in the alley at 12 :30a.m . when
two men in a white van drove up
and asked her if she would like a
ride.
When she refused. she told of·
ri cers, one of the men jumped
from the van and pushed her to the
ground.
The p\Jrse, offi cers s aid, con·
tained only 54 cents. Ms. Gillilend
was not injured.
(:itizenship
class slated
A 15 -w e ek Am e rican
ci tizen s hip course for
Vietnamese speaking residents
is to be offered beginning
W e dne s day by the
Newport·Mesa School District's
adult education department.
The 7 p.m. class, meeting· in
Room 114 at Costa Mesa High
School, will be taught by Dr.
Lam Le Trinh. Registration is
sc heduled during the first
session. a spokesman s aid.
--------------~ -
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•
Nf!ll I IJOOKI 0 -
NYSE COMPOSl'l'E TR~SACTIONS
,
... febtuelya. ,.,
'
.. .
DM.YN.OT -
Dow Jones Final
OFF 15.1.o
CLOSING 132.17
Prlee••oar
Planning saves
travel expenseS
By SLYLVIA POaTEa
Propelled by exploclint enerty prices, travel COltl are
skyrocketin1. In just the two years since 1171, tile QJtDM
of 1ettint from-here-to-there bu rt.en nearly ODe·Wrd: ID
the short span since 1972, this,more than doubled. To put
this in penpective, the pace of lnflaUon in the tm-11
period bu been 88 percent.
But without major aacrl!ices, yO\I can alub u mucb
as 60 percent from these "normal" coell -lbroulb
advance planning on where you 10. the way you set there,
how long you stay. what accommod1Uon1 you select.
For instance , a
typical weelt-lon1, New
York-San Francisco if\l
solo air trip -first ~-CV'~ \il\)I, n class, downtown, spur ~1.1 ~ 1'
of the moment, in
season -could coat you
as much as $2,560. But
with proper plaMing, a couple could manage the same trip
for less than $1,000 per person.
THAT IS II PERCENT less. And that's the bottom for
personal travel.
Plane Rates. An American Airlines first-clua New
York to San Francisco round trip ticket was priced at
$1,138 as of Jan. 1, 1981, an almost Incredible 222 percent
jump over the $353 cost of a first-class ticket in 1972.
But as AA itaeU stresses, with advance pl&Min1, you
could buy a Super-Saver ticket for as little as $338, up just
38 percent from the lowest 1972 fare of $245.
ACCOMMODATIONS. A ROOM at a Holiday Inn in
downtown San Francisco may run as much as $95 a n11ht.
But an equivalent sized accommodation at one of the
chain's facilities on the city's outskirts is $40. Smaller
rooms in local hotels-motels can 10 at $30-$32.
Room sharing also can save 38 percent If two are
traveling and can share accommodations.
If you visit a resort area during off season and get off
season rates. you can shave lS-40 percent off the normal
costs.
PAdCAGE TOURS CAN save 20·30 percent on the cost
of both roo~ and meals -and can a<ld enormously to
your trip's comfort.
Hint: Breakfasts cost about 25 percent of the costa Of
dinners; lunches come to about one-third of dinner tabs.
Car rentals. At traditional first-class Ume·1nd·mllea1e
rates (any day, no advance reservation, rent-It-here-leave
it there> a sub·compact for 100 mUes would cost see.~ 1
day, fuel included. That's up 110 percent over 1972, Herta .
reports. • BUT WITH ADVANCE bookln1. retumin1 the-cv to
the same place from which you rented It, the cost of
weekly unlimited mileage is just $183, fuel included. That's
$26 a day, a 63 percent savtng. <Under a special deal, for
$11 more. you could take a week's drive alont tbe cout,
drop the car at Los An,1eles and fly home.)
Getting there and getttna back takes the bi11eat slice
of wbat we spend on domestic trips -$90 billion for
transportation out of the estimated $152 billion w~ spent oo
these trips in 1980, with automobiles laking more than $68
billion of the S90 billion.
Business auto travel was an estimated $37.2' billion;
family car trips came to $26.9 billion; car rentals, taxi ancj
airport bus-limousine outlays of $4.1 billion rounded out
the motor vehicle segment.
.fifof"k• In Tltr
.tiipolllghl
l p• a11d Down•
HEW YORK IAPI ll'lf IOllOwlnv 1111 -trw New Yo•~ Sloo Ek<Nnoit 1100, -_,, ... ,, llWll ...... -· .... tlW molt -down tllt mott beMd on peteenl of <IWlnOe ·~rdltu OI VOIU-
c.,,., IJ'-"M1;, cenll • P011nd, U.!>.
cle'lln•I'°"' LtM n ceftls • poynlf
l lAC .,.,._.,,.. cenll• PO\lftd, clellvt r.cl.
TIR S7 IU2 Met•h Wt ... <-lie lb.
Atwml-7• c..,tu PO<lftd. H 'f
Mtrcwy "'S.00 per lies~.
, .. ,,_MIO 00 trov 01 •• H. y
Sllt• .. r
HEW YORI( (API -"-· & Harmait
sUvt• tOClay sn "°· 011 '°"' En9tlha •d 1llvtr llJ t40, llP S0.41;:
l•brl<eltcl 1H,..r 113.74', 041 $0.415.
Gold QtMU af lo"• .,n.~'""' S.IK ljld -Id 90H1 ptkH !Oday:
L9.....,: mom1ne "•'"' .... us. on iiu.s. Ltll .. 111 ane;-llall'lt ... U .SO, olfo
t U,00. , •••• , eft••-"•'"' u. ...... , "·"· ~,........,.: l lll11'19 .... S.00, Off SIUI.
Z.rtcll: tale lift~-llxl119 MS.GO, eft .... ; ........... "'
".., a "-: ••tt """"''"' ...,,., off '''·'°· ·····~: •• ,. """"'"' ... u .so, .,, tu.to. ••1t1a.~: Iott mor111119 lnrlcatef
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-
•
•.
"Grandma put PJ's stringbeons on her pldte
and NOW he.likes them ."
MAaMADUKE by Brad Anderson
l ~ --.
"Don't just sit there yawning ... get rid of
~Im before he sells me something!"
.
IUDGE PAR KER
~I ... ,,. , . . v , -, ..
_,, Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
'-1. .. , "I hat• Mondays."
·Fl .:.. --/-~ . ~·------"Just think, Mom ... someday I'll be a paper boy,
an· when it's too cold 'n wet or stormy,
YOU 'LL be doin' my route!"
by Harold Le Doux
J~~~~~H~EJiJuwei;T°rrcroiLDD HAHALILf;jAli:LJEIE:;-;! H~I~ eo. HOW AOOUT lT ... iEl.L ME WHAT
FIR5T NAME 15 TIM W i H16 YOUR REAL NAME 16. JEANNIE .'\
WHEN TOLD BY THE
POLICE !:>ERC:iEANT
iHAT A FIN<":IER-
PRINT CtiECK HA5
REVEALED THA'f
TIM'6 NAME I~ NOf
KEl.60. JEANNIE TRIE~ fO HIDE HER ANXIETY.'
MISS P'EACH
LA6l NAME'5 NOT KEL50.' KNOW YOU'VE NEVER OEEN lN
TROUOLE WITH THE POLICE flE·
CAUf>E THERE ARE NO PRINT6
ON RECORD FOR YOU!
WH~"T" .AG THe l:ICMll.AN~
by Mell Lazarius
(!ie)IN6 TO DO WITH AL.L. THE
MONeY Tl-ll!Y ~O'T' Foe._T'H£ ~iA6E~ f'
FOr ONa T~, ~ COt.ILD 9CAY
A weeic~ GIZ'OGaJrtE~ ll"OIC ~
L.IACICY Xir.ANIAN S:~LV ....
---MOON MULLINS
•
UNITED FMIUl'e Syndbte
S1turday'1 Puzzle SolVed
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FIJNK~ 1HN&EBBEAN
I 'TOOK THE r.\J51C. F'-04.DE.R
H()"f\£ OJER THE WE.EKtND
~r uic:e <,lOt.) .sA10 , IVI~.
(;i)OO ! ~ Ml.IW 010
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DINKLE ! .
BRABBLE
DR.SMOCK
na•n•t:•••r••••••t:
I HAVe. A Wt:EKdF.F V\JST ~ A V\&IT.:. -So··I~ ~O\AttQe ... NO
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BREAl(f A~f , .. 8£D.
PHIL'S ROORESS I&
Zll RUE Oll8 fbes.
by Ernie Bushmitler
by Gus Arr!ola
by Tom Batiuk
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
by Lynn John1ton