HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-02-04 - Orange Coast Pilot,
\ \
.
denied-· i~ee-aeeused ~~plSt
.. ., nrnz1m.m-....
A.a Ormle ~ 111--CCMU't~ Ml ...... a .. w Judge-kee'ps Lagu"nan behind. bars the time," 1bomson said. "I tblak
it ($25,000) was a substantial ball
for someone with no criminal
background." · Mid••=:-----·· rested •11 I__. r .... cbar.-wtlllleMwufl'ee,_. ............. a ............ .
feDHecm ..... . Juqe ....... ,,..,.... -ta..
aame J11ri1t wllo permitted
Donald 91epla• Gtwa, a, to re-
maia fnecm a••a'"al bond fOllowialtileAupatconv,etiaD-
aaid be hoped t.M victim in tbe
••t ree.t rape cue wW not
blame blm for what happened.
Gitlin, ol 2I07 Alta Laauna
Blvd., wu arrested by Luuna
a.,cb Nice before dawn Friday
after a 19-year-old woman
• clalmedabe wu abducted, driven
to an unknown location, raped and
forced to participate in other sex
acts.
Double execution
Vicious
letter
revealed
·WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)
-The jury in Jean Harris's
murder trial heard today the so-
ca lied "Scarsdale letter" in
which Mn. Harris attacked her
rival for diet doctor Herman Tarnow~r 's affectlbns as "a
thieving slut" and a "vicious,
adulterous .. ycbotic."
A11istant District Attorney
George Bolen read the letter to ·
the Jury. "I am distraught as I write
this," her letter to the 89-year·
(Eerier etory, A4)
old cardioloeist began. "Your
call telling me you prefer the
company of a vicious adulterous
psychotic kept me awake for
almost 36 boun."
Mn. Harris, 57, former bead·
mistress of the Madeira School
in McLean, Va., wrote the tetter
last March 10 before she drove
to Tarnower's home and alleged·
ly shot him to death. She claims
she did not kill Tarnower in a
jealous rage but that he was shot
attempting to prevent her
suicide.
Mrs. Harris closed her letter,
handwritten in r ed ink on
M ildeira School stationery, by
telling Tarnower, her lover 14
years, that he was "the most im· portant thing in my life."
In the letter, she reacts to
learning that Lynne Tryforos,
her 37-year-old rival, would be
invited to a testimonial dinner
April 19 held by ,the Westchester
Heart Auociation to honor
Tarnower. Mn. Harris appealed
to be allowed to attend, writing:
"Indeed, I don't care if she
pops naked out of a cake with
her -breasts frosted with
obocolate," Mn. Harris wrote,
adding, "I intend to be there.
, "She bu you every single mo-
ment in March, for God's sake,
;lve me April. T.S. Eliot said
it'• the cruelest month."
, Mrs. Harril' birthday is April
21. She concluded the letter by
saJlq, "in all these years, you
b&Yenev•spentmybirtbday ._lb me.
"There aren't many left," she
added.
llrs. Harris wrote that she
b"ad received a coov of·
• (See oocroa, Pa1e. AZ>
OA...-hlee
Admiral E.R. "Bobby" In·
man, nominated to be depu·
ty direct.or of the CIA, ap-
pe ars before the Senate
Select Committee on In-
telligence on Capitol Hill.
Talks resume
• as transit
strike nears
By GLENN SCO'M' °' .. DllllY "'-' ..... A s tate conciliat or was
scheduled today to resume con·
tract talks between union and
Orange County Transit District
officials on the e v e of a
threatened strike by 957
mechanics and bus drivers.
U called, the s trike could
begin at 12:01 a.m . Thursday,
halting bus service t o an
es timated 80 ,000 daily
passengers -many or whom
are commuters who ride twice a
day between work or school.
District officials were passing
out ruen today to bus riders.
The notices cautioned them that
buses may stop running on
Tbursct.y .
The conciliator was requested
by district officials after
workers voted lut weekend to
reject three-year contract of·
<See STal&E, Page Az>
i.plonagt! elaarges
CotPt records show that Gittin
wu convicted by a jury of uaault
with intent to commit rape, U ·
sault with a deadly weapon and
oral copulation in a case involving
two 16-year-old girls who bad
been hitchhiking from Buena
Park to Huntington Beacb.
Judge Tbomson sentenced Gil·
tin to six years and four months in
2 people
killed ·in
crashes
A 4-year-old Costa Mesa boy
and an unidentified 20-year-old
motorcyclis t were killed in
unrelated traffic accidents
Tuesday in two Orange County
cities.
The child, identified as Brent
Wilson, died of jnjuries be
suffered when the car bis mother
was drivin& collided with another
vehicle at the intersection of
Broadway and Edinger A venue in
Santa Ana.
Neither the mother, Olga H.
Wllson, 32, of 147 21st St., Costa
Mesa, nor the driver or tie other
vehicle, Virgil Starnes, 65, of
Santa Ana. was seriously hurt.
Officers said Mrs. Wilson's
vehicle was northbound on
Broadway while Starnes was
proceeding in an unspecified
direction on Edinger when their
cars collided. The accident is
under investigation.
In Orange, a 20-year-old
motorcyclist was killed when bis
vehicle slid out or control on
Glassell Street and struck a trash
truck, which was backing out of a
driveway. ·
The Orange County Sheriff
C oroner 's Office said
identification or the crash victim
was being withheld pending
notification or next or kin.
Both accidents occ urred
Tuesday morning.
'Bra strap'
suspect held
PAWfUCKET, R.I. (AP) -A
District Court judge bas set bail or
$50,500 for a 25-year-old woman
accused in a series or "bra strap"
burglaries.
Patricia L . Christoff, mother of
three young c hildre n , was
arraigned Tuesday on five
charges of entering a dwelling
and onecountoflarceny.
The robberies were dubbed
"bra strap burglaries" because a
woman would knock on doors, tell
residents her bra strap bad
broken and ask if she could come
inside to fix it, polfce said. Once
inside, the woman would steal
money, watches, jewelry, and
anything else she could carry out,
authorities said.
state prison, but stayed impoal-
tion ol the term pendiq tbe ap-
peal. He allowed the defendant to
remainfreeootbe$25,000ballGit·
tin posted sbortly after bis arrest
byCypresapolicelaatAprll.
"He has a right to ball on ap-
peal," Thomson said in an in·
terview late Tuesday afternoon.
"His appeal wun 't considered a
frivolomooe."
The judie noted that Gittints
lack of a criminal record and the
support of-bi.a family and attorney
were factors be used in permit·
tins the convicted felon to remain
free. ·
"I waa wrong, but that's the ·
kind or decision I have to make all
.,.." ............ _
SCENE OF COSTA MESA 'EXECUTION' SLAYINQS
. Officer• confer outalde Beker Street home
...
Kids chide Reiigan
' .
about jelly beans
CATHEDRALCITY (AP)-As
if President Reagan isn't getting
enough counsel these days, a
group or elementary school kids
here are advising him to change
his eating habits.
"Jelly beans equal sugar" and
"are bad for your teeth," wrote
Ricky Bowen, admonishing the
president for bis penchant for
jelly beans.
He advised Reagan to "eat
celery sticks."
''Try something like apples,·'
urged little Paul Silva. ·
"Cheddar cheese misht be bet-
ter,"offeredShelbyHammer.
"Too much sugar can make you
sick. We need a healthy presi-
dent," declared Jennifer Steb·
bins, concerned about the state or
the nation.
The stack or letters came
from the class or Judy Bashore, a
kindergarten and . first-grade •
teacher at Cathedral City School.
She said when her class learned
that Reasan distributed jelly
beans at Cabinet meetings, they
decided to send him a •'Sood nutri·
lion edition" of the "Kid.linger
Report."
Although all the letters
criticlaed the president for being
a jellybean junkie, they were all.
signed: "Love."
Thomson said he was "COD·
vinced:; that bad he denied GiWn
bail on appeal the decision would
have been overturned by an ap-
peals court. "Ban· would have
been set and bis brother (Harl•
Gitlin, p~rt owner of •n
automobile dealership) would
have made it."
•'The reasi>n for the appeal bond
(See BAIL, Pa1e AZ)
Pair's
home
looted
By JERRY CLAUSEN
OIU.O.llw~li.tSt.ff
Costa Mesa police are in-
vestigating the execution-style
gunshot slayings of two men
whose bodies were found in a
ransac.ked fourplex unit Tuesday
afternoon. .
The still unidentified victims,
described as in their mid 20s, ap-
parently died of shots from a sun
or suns held to their heads, aald
detectiveU.JackCalnon.
Officers estimated the two died
abouttwotothreedays ago.
Their bodies were discovered
by a s .. picious Costa llesa man
who Uled a borJIOwed ladder to
climb to the murder scene in
Apartment D on the second noor
of 1251 Baker St., officers said.
Calnon said inv~stigators are
following one theory that the two
died during a robbery.
Neither victim's wallet was
found in the apartment rented to
Brent Wheeler. a butcher, and
Giovanni Paz, a hairdresser in
Laguna Beach:
While officers reported that
neither or the dead men had been
Identified today, neighbors said
late Tuesday that they last saw
Wheeler and Pa.z Friday.
One neighbor said she thought
the two, described as "quiet and
polite.·· had gone away for the
weekend because both or their
cars were parked in a lot behind
the fourplex.
Investigators said the murders
were reported by Michael Angire,
30. Wheeler's brother-in-law.
Angire, they said, had tried to
raise someone in the apartment
three times Monday and Tuesday
because Wheeler had not kept a
weekend appointment with his
mother in Tustin.
Police said Angire borrowed an
aluminum ladder, climbed to the
men's second-floor apartment
balcony and parted the curtains
behind a partially opened sliding
glass door.
He saw two bodies lying in blood
<See SIA YINGS, Pa1e AZ)
Coast
Weather
U.S. writer on trial in Iran
"You should stop gtvlns away
jelly beam," warned Autumn
Jlrlnd.Je. "It will make a bad habit
for little ldds."
••Don't pan around Jelly
beans," Implored Galla1ber
Crook, 1'ho bad aa1e •dYlee for
the pneldent, but needs to~
up on biupellins. "It wW 11veyou
cavatiea."
Patchy low clouds in·
creasing tonight throu1h
Thurs day mornin1.
Otherwise fair with swuay
arid cooler afternoons.
Lows toni&ht 45 inland to
low 508 at beacbea. ffilba
Thursday 63 along coast to a inland.
IN81•B .... "W
QllGfflJ GIMdk ceec .. 1 are ,,,..,... Old of tM loC9I Iran to write about tbe Iranian
reyolutlon aad was arr81ted
llay 5 OD suapldolt of •plonale
for the CIA. Swtu olftdala, look·
iDI an.. Amertcu intenlltl ln
lru, haft bMn attemptlns to
ne1otl8te ber na .....
· Jobn Dwyer, ber buabaad1 aald lD Bufralo be bad beara
news reparta about the trial but
bad DO coauneat P8W be bad
. talked to tbe U.S. State Depart-·--. .
.,.,.. .... ........, tUt be
.,.. .....,.. tiDdQ wwld = word cm wlMtber hlt wife ·
I .... ,.. •••••
'~
II rs. Dwyes; wu not Included
ln n,ecotlatkJDI between the Unit· ·
eel States and Iran on release ot
52 American bo1ta1es freed
from 44ot daya ol captivity Jan.
20.
Dwyer 1ald Tuesday th8t be
bad bem ln cont8ct wttb tbe,U.S. 8'ate Departmmt and that ••ap.
parntly ber bealtb coetla-to
be lood." OD TueldaJ. the Buf.
falo Caurter·Sxpreu quoted a ..,. DlpmtaMat ....... .
telllq tM ........... lt ... ...
dentaed .. lrlllltaDI wen IDOY·
lnl to deeidl ......... of ... c ................. .......
tlon u to what the Iranians plan
todo "
llr1. ·Dwyer, the mother ol
three, bu been beld la EYID
Prlaoa in Iran.
Tb• 8wl11 For•~• Office IPok ...... dklDGt cklle ...
talll of tile trial pnc11#&•·
He uld be 1llldentood ~ ... pubUc,,..-~eoa. . trlal. Rt aaldtDraala•
autllorlU. .. , u taYIUdla . .........,. ........... 1-17
laT.,.tolllilda-.a .. to tbetNI.
, ... IUJI ..... Al)
Felipe DeLeoa wu more to tbe
•point: "Daa't ·~ money oa c•Ddy." •
A8d TMba Gut reaal ..... tile
cblef of "8le tlult .. candy II nat
.... of tile four buic foods."
Tit• prnlt•t al8o wu bl· . 1arm.e11ra...-..eut1MJ flM•"b 111MnrYeareel1ln· .... ftlllllh!f ......... lee ,,. ........... at ..... f
....... ftllt ,... • atft·
ea.tit.
aceM. Writer ~ Corlaoa
apiora ..... of ... ,_.
·Sft,,.BJ. . ..... MY_.._.,..,_ I CW ... ... ..,_ ..... ~ cw ........ -.: =--·: c...~M "'~~. -!;;=.j =-:: ==-::
•
i
Getting a taste ol tlae dnd
.............
"
I Vllll "et• IP f I
.J11ry d~bates·
Garwood fate . .
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP)
-A Jury ol five Marine officers,
all vet.It-ans of Vietnam. belan
deliberating charges today that
Pfc. Robert Garwood collaborat-
ed with his captors during
almost H years in Vietnam and
assaulted a fellow prisoner of
war.
The jW'y began considering
the charges after hearing 17
pages of instructions by military
judge Col. R.E. Switzer.
Switzer said the jury m ay flnd
Garwood innocent of the charges
if it believes defense claims that
the M-year-old Indiana native
was mentally ill during the
• period of his captivity and could
not distinguish between right
and wrong.
Garwood could face life Im-
prisonment if convicted.
'-..., I
Jt also reJled heavily on
t eaUmony of psycbiatriats.
Those for tbe prosecution
areued Garwood wu une and
knew what be wu doin1, and
those for the defense contended
lmpriscinment pushed the youa1
man over the edge of in~anity.
Defense lawyers arped the
case was "one of a kind" and
would not set any precedents for
the Marine Corps.
Cattle dig
new 'Gra11'
:
Alan Larsen, a professional' skier, bends into the wind
aboard a speeding car in Edmonton, Canada. Larsen,
currently in third place· in the Pacific Western Airlines
pro ski tour in Canada, is simulating wind conditions to
build up his endurance on the slopes.
Switzer detailed the charges in
his instructions to the jury, say-
ing Garwood is accused of
"holding intercourse" with the
Vietnamese by wearing their uni·
form, carrying arms and ac-
cepting a position in llieir army,
acting as an interpreter during
political indoctrination classes
in POW camps, acting as an in-
form er concerning prisoners'
complaints, questioning POWs
a bout military units and at-
titudes, teaching them Viet-
namese, suggesting they "cross
over " to the other side, and act·
ing as an armed guard.
LAJAS, Puerto Rico
(AP) -The mountain
farmer thought his cows
~ere walking funny . Little
did he know at the time that
the bovines were high on
mar ijuana. .>
Police said Tuesday that
the farmer, who was not
identified, told authorities
his herd of cows apparently
r ... P ... AI
DOCTOR ..•
Tarr1ower's will with her· .name
"viciously' scratched out" and
Mrs . Tryforos' name written in.
She accused Mrs . Tryforos of
slashing clothes Mrs . Harris had
left at Tamower's home and of
smearing a silk dress with ex·
crement. f
"I have indeed grown poor lov-
ing you while a-8elf·serving, ig-
norant slut has grown rich,"
Mrs . Harris said. "It made me
feel like an old piece of dis·
carded garbage."
Mrs. Harris admitted in the
le tter that s he called Mrs .
Tryforos' house at 1 a .m. or 2
a.m. almost daily. On Tuesday,
Mrs . Harris testified that she
had telephoned her anonymous·
ly "to ask her t o leave me
alone."
"I didn 't t hink an ything
second rate belonged in Hi 's
<Tarnower 's) life," Mrs. Harris
said during her sixth day on the
stand.
"She denigrated him and gave
me a great deal of trouble with
my integrity a nd common
taste ," Mrs. Harris said.
Mrs . Ha rr is s aid Mrs .
Tryforos "socialized" with the
van der Vrekens. Tarnower's
live-in servants. and added :
"It's not like me to rub up
against people like that.··
P r osecut or Geor ge Bolen
asked Mrs. Harris if she had ·
mentioned Mrs. Tryforos when
she was writing a letter to
Ta rnower the weekend before he
was shot.
"Yes, she was part of the let·
ter to Hi." Mrs. Ha rris replied.
"How did you refer to Mrs.
Tryforos In that letter?" Bolen
asked.
"In as m any unattractive
ways as possible," the defendant
replied.
"Did you describe her as a
dis honest adulte ress?" Bolen
asked.
"I think so," she said.
·•And did you use the words,
'your psychotic whore'?" he
asked.
"Thal pretty well sums it up,"
she answered.
"And did you use the word
'slut'?" Bolen asked.
"I may have," Mrs. Harris
r esponded. "Do we have to go on
this way? You've got the letter."
Mrs . Harris said Tamower 's
relationship with Mrs . Tryforos
"probably had something to do
with my loneliness.''
"I knew about Mrs . Tryforos
but 1 r ationalized the rela·
tionship to continue," she said.
"I didn't like being touched by
what I was being touched by.
They were unsavory.·'
Valley foggy • By Tiie A.uocla&ed Press
Fog socked in Northern and
Central California valleys today,
forcing officials to c all a
travelers advisory due to poor
visibility. There is a chance oC
showers near the Oregon boun·
dary Thursday, the N atiohal
Weather Service said.
Nude set ffte
Ckarges dropped by Navy
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The Navy has dropped charges
against a female petty officer who posed in the nude in Playboy
magazine, officials said .
Asked about the status of Yeoman 2nd Class Darlene
Aubrey Rein. the Navy said Tuesday in a statem.ent it decided
to drop charges and discharge her from the service because of
delays in pre-court-martial procedures: The statement also said
she had been kept on duly beyond her scheduled discharge date
of Oct. 21 pending a court·martial. ·
"The Navy does not condone activities either on duty or out-
side normal working hours which bring discredit upon members
of the naval service or the Navy uniform." the statement said.
·'The Navy considers it inappropriate for its personnel to pose in
the nude or semi-nude:"
In October. the Navy fil ed charges against Ms. Rein, alleg-
ing conduct prejudicial to good order and discipline. disrespect
to a superior commissioned offi cer and violating a general or·
der or regulation.
Building bought
Mesa historians
• given quarters
By JERRY CLAUSEN at,.,. 0.11, ,.. ... Staft
City Council members have
decided to purchase an Orange
Coast Savings and Loan Associa·
tion office for $80,000 to house
the Costa Mesa Historical Socie-
ty and its collection of docu-
m ents and artifacts.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal
proposed lbe purchase, report-
ing the 3,000..square-foot build·
ing's estim ated value at
$200,000.
He said the savings organiza-
tion looked at the lowered price
as "an opportunity for com-
munity sefvice."
In agreeing to purchase and
move the office from the comer
of Adams A venue and Mesa
Verde Drive, the council also
dis played thanks by ordering
$100,000 in municipal funds de-
posited with the savings firm.
Orange Coast Savings recently
moved its offices from the older
one story structure to a new two-
story building next door.
The city is expected to move
the three-year-old building
New labor boss
holds no grudges
WASHINGTON <AP ) -
Raymond J . Donovan, con-
firmed as labor secretary after
a two-week d elay, says he
harbors no grudges that his ap-
proval was held up in the Senate
by unsubstantiated allegations
that be bad ties to organized
crime.
"I'm not a grudge carrier,"
the SO-year-old New Jersey con·
struction executive told re·
porters Tuesday after the Senate
confirmed him on a vote of 80-17
-the most opposition to any or
Preside nt Reagan's Cabinet
choices.
complete with a walk-in vault -
to a new location at Llons Park,
part of the new so·called Swper
Block in downtown Costa Mesa.
Be tty Beech e r. historical
society president, called Mon·
day ni ght's council action
"almost unbelievable."
Former mayor and active
society member A.L. Pinkley
said, "This is the best news the
Historical Society has had since
we acquired th e E s<tancia Adobe-.·· ·
He said the group bas been
struggling for 15 years to find a
place to store artifacts.
Society Vice President Trudy
Ohlig thanked the council, but
admonished members not to
give up her group's request for
land on which to place several
buildings considered historical
in nature.
Councilman Donn ·Hall, who
motioned to approve the build·
ing purchase, said later, "There
is a possibility it (the structure)
might be available for other or-
ganizations."
But he s aid he basically
moved to spend the $80,000
because it enables "some very
nice people to be custodians of
the past.''
F,....PqeAJ
STRIKE •••
fers . Talks resumed Tuesday,
but little progress was made,.
sources said.
However, district officials
made public their latest offer -
a three-year contract to bus
drivers that represents a 31 per·
cent salary increase, including
projected cost of llvinC raises.
O"ANGE COAST D1ilyPllat CIHalhd edvefttelng 7141142·1171
Ale.ot'* depertmenta 142·4321
OCTD drivers currently earn
a top pay of $9.46 an hour .. The
contract would boost that' pay at
the end of three years to a pro-
jected $12. 70 an hour, district of.
ficlals said. Union leaders were
unavailable today for comment.
James Reichert, district
aeneral manager , said
negotiators a.re trying to reach
an ag~ment with the driven
fint. Once that contract ii ac-
cepted, negotiators hope to use
Tho,,,_. P. Hiley .........
=:N,WMd
M. Thomae KHYll .....
Thom• A. Murphin• ........ .,
~H.L009 A-. ..............
lement 8chulman a....
Cerl c.nteneen ,.....o.-
~~e.!odderd. Jr.
C:t111f'19M 1 .. 1 Ofentit C:..ll PUllllMll"I Gomp9fty. No
new1 UOrlOi, illustrollons, Mltoroo: molter or tO-
vort: n menlt l>•reln moy IM reproctv<td w1tM11t '"<'•' perml,tiOft 01 <09r•'9111 owner.
S•<-CIOH ""' ... pold •• Coste MoM, C:olllornlo. IUPS 1 .. .-0). SUIK<rlpllon llJ cerrler ..._00 ........,ly;
llr moll u .to "*""'"; mlflt.,y dettlNtiOftt M,00 mOlllftlY. •
f l
I
, much of the same aet of agree-
menta as a bull for a contract
with the mechanics, who so far
have been lea willine to settle.
''I'm 1Wl confident that we
can •till resolve our ditterenc.
without bavin1 a strike," be
said.
Reichert said the district ii
trylq to help Ht up car poollq
-or "r1cle 1barin1" -pro-
1ram• wtlb muy of ltl patrael In the n'tllt there .. a ttrtte.
-
F,....P.,,.AJ
BAIL •••
was -it was him. There was
nothing in his background that
would indicate tbal he would go on
a crime spree," Thomson said.
The jud ge Tuesday revoked
bail for Gillin at the request of
Deputy District Attorney Jan
Cummins. She prosecuted Git·
tin· s earlier case.
Ms. Cummins , who had argued
against Gitlin re maining free
pending the appeal, said, "I felt
he w as dangerous all along.··
"When it comes to these sex of·
fenders, we need to take a closer
look." she sajd.
Gittin has been charged in the
Laguna Beach case in a com-
plaint filed in South Orange Coun·
ty Municipal Court with kidnap·
ping, false imprisonment, rape
and sex perversion. Judge Blair
Barnette has sel bail in that case
at $500,000.
However, Gillin could not be
freed becaus'e of the additional
no-bail hold imposed by Judge
Thomson.
r ..... Pa,,eAJ
IRAN •.•
He was Wilhelm Schmid, head
of the embassy's fo reign in·
terests section, who was accom-
panied by an interpreter and a
local Iranjan employee of the
embassy, the spokesman said.
Japan auto
boss booed
SMYRNA, Tenn. (AP) -The
e xecutive vice president of
Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. says he has
no second thoughts about building
a S300 million pickup truck plant
in Tennessee, d espite being
je e red a nd booed at
groundbreaking ceremonies.
• 'l share the opinion that it was a
s mall minority," Mas ataka
Okuma said Tuesday after jeers
from hundreds of union members
pr otesting the hiring of a con-
s truction compapy which
employs some non-union workers
as well as union workers.
The other charge accuses
Garwood of maltreating Army
Pfc. David N. Harker by strik-
ing him in the ribs with his
hands without justifiable cause.
Under military regulations,
only one vote need be taken dur·
ing deliberations, and four of the
fi ve Marine officers on the jury
must agree in order to return a
guilty verdict.
Garwood, an Indiana polis
native, was a teen-age jeep
driver when captured in 1965·
n ear Da Nang. He returned
home in 1979 after passing a note
to a Finnish bus inessman in
Hanoi.
Charges of desertio n and
verbally abusing a fellow POW
were dismissed last week.
The ll·week court-martial -
the only one to involve alleged
collaboration by a POW in Viet-
nam -was widely regarded as
a test of the U.S. military's code
of conduct requiring captives to
resist.
Burglars hit
seven off ices
in NB center
Thieves, possibly armed with
a passkey, burglarized seven
Newport Center firms early this
week, grabbing $6,500 worth of
loot, mosUy of oriental rugs.
Police said the break-ins in the
1800 block of Newport Center
Drive were reported Monday.
In five of the break-ins, orien-
.lal rugs were snatched. Clocks
and typewriters also were taken.
At one of the bus inesses -
Heiman Opticians, the thieves
g rabbed $1 , 700 worth o f
binoculars and opera glasses.
Other bus inesses bit were
American Energy Corp .• Marwit
Capital Corp., Newport Regency
Corp., Neben and Starrett Inc.,
LeGaye Financial Corp. and
New West Development.
·stumbled upon a bundle of
marijuana that had been
tossed from an airplane.
Mistaking the marijuana
weed for hay. the cows
feasted.
Authorities said they
found uneaten portions of
the pot when they searched
the pasture in the island's
southwest corner .
F ..... P ... AJ
SLAYINGS • •
ol'l"'m Ii ving room floor.
Angire, officers said, climbed
back down the ladder, went to a
ne ighboring apartment and
called police.
Thatwasat5:30p.m .
Investigators, hampered by a
U.S. Supreme Court ruling re-
quiring a warrant to enter a home
where murder is susi>ected, did
not begin their death scene in-
vestigation until nearly 10 p.m.,
.Calnon said.
Neighbors said late Tuesday
that Wheeler and Paz had moved
into the white and gold fourplex
a bout two months ago.
·'They weren't low Ii ves like
some of these guys who live in
a partments," commented one
neighbor woman who said she did
not wishto beidentified.
·'They were pretty quiet and
polite. Oh. they held some dinner
parties once in awhile. But it's
been quiet up there for the past
few days,·· she added.
None of the neighbors in-
terviewed heard shots, and police
said today they have found no
murder weapon.
House unit OKs
debt ·Jimit hike
WASfUNGTON <AP) -The
House Ways and Means Com·
mi\tee has voted to raise the
government's borrowing power
after the Reagan administration
assured lawmakers such a vote
wo u Id n ot e ndanger their
credentials as fiscal conserva ·
tives.
Without debate or dissent, the
,panel approved a bill increasing
the limit on the national debt to
$985 billion from the current
$9".l billion.
·winter Clearance .
Feb .. 6 to Positively Feb. 8
Super Savings to 70%
on Skis and Boots
Save 50% on all
Men's, Lcdes', Kids' Clothing
-:
(
=I
~
ll
[
11
-c
]
1
1 ..
c
E
.
c
.... w ..........
Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger
says L' . .S may deploy
neutron warheads to
st rengthe11 tacttcal
11udear forces armmcl
globe.
American actor Burt Lan·
castt'r arn v1·d in London to
finish work on h1:. latest film,
··The Skin ··
··1 pla ~ an Am erican
gene ral 1n the film which is
set in Wor ld War 11.·· he said
al llcathro" Airport .. Most
of the work 1s f101sh<'d but I'll
be over here fu r about a
m onth just to tidy things up "
Costa Mesa's C1ly Council
will atte nd lhe Nationul
Lea gue o f C i tie s'
Co n gres~1onal -C1 t y Con -
ference 1n Washington on
Feh. 27-March 4.
It came with no apparent
surprise to council me mbers
during a sludy session when
Councilman Eric Johnson an·
nounced to colle ag ues that he
is in a 30 day hard -stuff
drinking hiatus .
"I usuallv do tl for lent." he
c·onf1ded. "but I want to get 11
out of the way befort' I g11 to
Washington "
J'e~•••top
'Maellead•'
Forll\f'r c;ov I .... c ... any
t btlo-w l, who spent "l-4
monthl aad St mllllon for one
df'le11te" to the Republican
N •lional Convt"htlon lo hls
quest for the pre1ldency, is
an1onac ttu.~ nominees for the
llMll "Rotwhead of the Vear"
11ward
Th Uc>nebead Club of
&>alias. which last year gave
11• e1ward to the SuH• B. Aa·
t~oay dollar. said that act.or
Larry Hagman, the villain of
thl' "DaJla " TV series on
C'RS. was nominated "for
proving that getting shot can
bt' proritable ."
And Nelson Bunker Runt
and WUllam He rbert Hunt of
Dallas . the billionaire in·
vestors, were suggested "for
being on the wrong end of the
world's biggest market jug-
gll n g at'l. the 1980 silver
riasco "
The· a" ard goes each year
to a person or gr oup that
··ha!> l'Ommttll•d an a('t or
part1c1p ated 1n an even t
which. 1n lhl' eyes of the
Boneh(•ads, is a monum ental
goof.
Tht• \\ 111nl•r will be an
nounn•cl Feb. 13 'during a
lunl'hcon at Lakewood Coun
tr) Club 1n Dallas .
.............
Lady Diana Spencer is
quoted in West German
magazine as saying she
wants to give Britain's
heir to the throne lots of
pretty babies. London
reports said Prince
Charles is upset.
particularly with
magazine's mock photo
showing ·him c.radling
baby in his· arms.
Singer Helen Reddy filed
for divorce from manager·
producer Jefr
Wald , h e r
hus band of 13
years .
In a S u -1
p e ri o r
Cour t peti
t io n . Mi ss
R edd y cited
· ·irrcconcila J
b I l' di f W
ferences." REDDY
The couple separated in
early January. with Miss
Reddy staying in the couple's
Brentwood home and Wald
m oving into a Beverly Hills
hotel.
Sho rtl,· thereafter. Wald
revealed· that he was under a
doctor's care lo s toµ using
cocaine a habit he said did
not c ause the separation "but
it certainly was a factor."
Muhammad Ali has found
a job at Smith Tool in Irvine
for an unide ntified 21-year·
o ld man who last m onth
threatened to commit suicide
by •jumping from the ninth
floor windo w le dge of a
Wils hire Boulev<ird bu~lding
in Los Angeles. said com
pany personnel officer Ron
Crowder . Th e f o r mer
heavyweight cha mp talked
the younger black man out of
j umping a nd pro(llised to
he lp him get straighten ed
o ut.
Glass out on beaches
Srtpen'isors cite fool danger in ruling
Hy GLF.NN SCOTT
OI the 0411y Pilot St•ll
Glass containers and othl"r
da n gerous articles t ha t can lead
to foot injuries will be banned
from Orange County •heache:..
the county Board of Super visor:.
has decided.
Despite obvious problems with
strict e nforcement of the rule .
the s u pervisors agreed the or
dinance will help reduce cuts
and punctures c·aused by -;tep
ping on sharµ oh1ect~
.ra n ger for the county, said
lifC'guard:. are r eporting 1ncr eas-
1ng 'cases of c uts ca used by
pieces of glas~ in l he sand.
ADDITIONALLY. s he s a id
lifeguards at S unset Beach
believe that youths have planted
jagged bits of broken glass un-
der the !:land to in ju re uns uspecl
1ng sunbathers.
In som e <·ases. the g lass a p-
parently has been placed in
front of lifeguard st ations or
nt•u r the water'i. edge. where
broken g lass normally 1sn·l
foun d . officials say.
Count\' officials have stressed
that lhe· prohibition won 't be en-
fnr'l'<'d st r ingenlly. bul is needed
lo ha rness troublemake rs.
l n vot ing in favor of the or-
dinance. 1s t Dis trict Supervisor
Roger Stanton said he had res-
ser v at1ons about the county's
a bility to enforce the rule. lie
said after the meeting lh at his
approval was based on the no-
tion the prohibition .. would be
relied on only in d1fftcull situa-
tions ...
Because the tillC' of the pro·
posed ordina nce wa~ modiftt.'<I
part of its title w<1 s changed
fro m "glass con tainers" to
"d angerous conlaint'rs " the
s upef\'isors won·t take official
actio n to approve il until next
week
· TllF: ORI GI Nt\L p ropos<ll
from the count v ll arbors.
Reachl•s and Parks Commission·
was a rt'stnct1on onl) against
g l ass . But 2 nd 01 s tr ict
Supervisor Harriett Wieder "lll'
cessfully pushed fo r am e nd ·
me nts lo the law so 11 would 1n
dude other materials. s uch a s
c·rockery. Volunteer Aviles
Mrs. Wieder·i. s uggestion was
m eant to b£• a <:ompromise to
placate lobbyists for the glas::.
i n dustry and related labor
group:.. who hegan visiting
s upervisors two weeks ago to ob·
ject to what they said was a di:.·
crim inatory. glass-only r estric·
tion .
honored for service
... Pickett Scott. vice p res ident of
Glass Containers Cor poration in
Fulle rton, C'xplained that in-
dus try officials don 't like the
t •·outright ban" against glass on
•beaches.
H E SAID T llF. law appears in·
tended to stop t roublemakers
: who purposefull y br eak bottles
·,pn the beach. Ins t ead . he
rtlaime d , the res triction will
:tiave the opposite e ffect it will
"tonvince res ponsible beachgoers
·11ot to buy and bring glass prod·
,ducts. even ketch up bottles to
the shore. t: The s upervisors, however ,
hid the pcohibition will help
~ifeguarcts and county Sheriff's ~eputies c rac k down on bottle
reake r s w hile ridding the ~eaches of products that add
~tential for more injuries.
~ P,atty Schooley. senior park
HONORED FOR EFFORTS
Votunteer Avlle•
We''e Listening •.••
The Daily Pilot wants to hear from .its readers. what ·yo~ like
about the paper and what YOU; do~·t like. We also woul~ hke to
publish your views on a ny subJecl m oar letters lo the editor col-
umn. Call the number below and your message will be recorded. ~. Messages will be transcribed several times daily and de~vered ~o
the desk of the appropriate editor. Mailbox contributaons wall
• be delivered to the editorial page editor. Mailbox
contributors must include their name and telephone
number for verification. Nv circulation calls, please.
Tell us what's on your mind, The number is in
service 24 hours a day. seven dllya a week. .
642·6086
t
On e wo uldn 't t'xpert /\rt
Av1ks. of alJ people. to be much
of a voluntee r
He spent 21 years in the l ' S.
Air Force and. in lhl' military.
one usuall y does n't volunteer for
anything
BUT AVILES, who flew both
B-52 bombers a nd aerial tankers
over Communist targets in Viet-
nam , has been a devoted volun-
teer for civic activities in Hunt-
ington Beach
In fact, he was honored re·
cently as the top volunteer for
January by Mayor Ruth Bailey.
Aviles. who sells insurance in
civilian life, has put in countless
free hours as a chairman of the
city's sp ecial events bo ard
which is planning.this year 's
17th Fourth of July arade.
MAK E THAT pas t te n se.
Aviles announces that the plan-
ning Is already com pleted with
the e xception of lining up
celebrities for the patriotic
march through Main Street.
Last year an estimated 200.000
people viewed the para de .
Aviles s aid the event will be
even bigger in 1981.
The parade also will be funded
entirely by voluntary contrlbu-
tlons'to the tune of about $35,000,
he said.
Aviles, 47. e ntered the Air
Force out of the ROTC program
in Loyola Univers ity in 1956.
H E FLEW MORE than 100
com bat mission s durjng the
Vie tnam war and when
hoslllitles ended. he was special
proj~ officer attending lo the
efleiPI' of about 40 prisoners of
war.
'
w.d'*"-y, Februaty 4, 1981
'
OAILV Pll.OT A I
.... .-.., .
D.ity ,.. ... SIMI P-
1 NSPIRATION POINT AT CORONA DEL MAR MAY UNDERGO SOME CHANGE$ SOON
Newport Beach City Council reatored residential zoning on bluff areas
Enroll01ent
• soaring
atOCC
Enrollm<.·nt ;.it Orangt• Cua .. 1
Colleg<' in Cost n M e"a ·has 1n
crt'aSl'd G !:I pt•reent on·r last
H•ar. \\Ith 32.00{J l'XIH'l'tctl lo
e n roll in class<'s before the
:.pring semestt•r 1s over. <icc·ord
ing to school offic:ials.
,\ pµrox 1 matt•ly 25.200 o;t udl'nts
ha \'C l'nrollcd in <.;pr111J! ~t·mcl'>tl'f
classc:. that l.>1.'gan ~onday. at·
co rd ing to K 1·111wth \1 own•\
o cc·s dt•an or adm1ss1ons and
r<•t·onJs
AnyOOl' utll'mptm g to si'gn uµ
fur ~lasses lht:-. \\eek probabl~
found tht·m aln·<1dy closed
Mown•\ war11~t
Pnoubr c las':w" arl' r1llt•d soon
after prC'·registr ation in No-
venber. :.aid Mowrey
E nrollments :.ire l'XJH:-r ted to
111c rea~l' when s hort n1nc·Wl'l'k
courst'" begin April 6. Th<· Costa
Mesa t·ommuntt\ collt•gc 1s th<.'
largl'Sl in tht· ~'ount y and the
thir d largeo;t in tht• st<ile
Boy Scouts
out for blood
in Laguna
Th rl'l' Lagun a Be ac h Boy
Scouts are just one project away
from bet•oming Eagle Scouts.
/\nd they're asking he lp from
the communit) 111 completing
thl•ir final good rlecd Feb 13.
That's the day the Red Cross
com muntl\o bloodmohtlC' wt II roll
o nto thc .park1ng lot a t lht'
Morm on Church at 682 Park
/\ \'e . just across the ..,, rt-el fr(}m
the high :-.chool
Rohh1e llelle"t•ll . Chris Eadtt•
and c;rc1o: Matson on~anized tht•
blood drivl'. ~('lecled the lo('a
t1on , and arc coordin;tling ap
po1ntmC'nls for ttw Rl'd C'ross.
T hose tnll'rL'stcd in <lonatin1o:
hlnorl ..,houlcl c-all !l51 ·0i2!l after 2
p m for apfJ<•tntment ttm('s
Tht• hloodmoh1le will bl' at thl·
l.agun:i lh·a('h "llC' from 1.15 111
h :111 p m Feh 1:1
Gem
Talk
lh ,/ C 111 '.\fl'l/Hlf::-;
< ',·rtt(ll'rl < ,·, "'""'/.!t~t. A US
PRESIDENTIAL JEWELRY
II /1(11 • rlw 'IQlltfwanl'I'.,
Down throu,:th the yC'ad. our
presidC'nls have been jewelry
conscious. Th<'1r advisors, very
much aware that a president
must look his best. have often
recommended tha t they wear
tas teful jewelry ln the closing
days of President Carter's final
election campaign , he began to
wear a collar p i n a t the
s ug gesti on of hi s m e dia
advis ors. who believed it would
mak e h im a ppear more
•st ates manlike.· Cufflinks
bearing t he presidential seal
h ave long been considered a
s pecial gift from any pr esident.
The Reagan inauguration
·included an unusual number of
jewel r y and s ouveni r
keeps takes . lt w i ll be
interesting to observe what kind
of jewelry President Reagan
will 4'vor. Incidentally, the
fellow who sells watches with
, the likeness of famous people on
t he watch faces knew who was
going to win t he presidential
election. Jn October, his Reagan
watch outsold his Carter watch
by 10 perc e nt. T h at
measurement or popularity
proved to be more accurate
than the POliUcal polls.
'Point' made
Neuport OKs bluff building
Of lht D••IY PtlOI Sl•fl
A batth• 11\'C•r c·on')truttion of hluff fot'C' ho111c·s on lhrt't' lots
bl·low lnsp1rat1011 l'oint 111 Corona dl'l Mar has t'11Ch·d
The 1•nd v. a:. a hapJI\ one fo1 tbe thrN' ;\;Pwporl llL·ach lot
owners who rtO\\ ('all mo\<' aht·ad with nm<,trUl'I 1011 plan~ or <;<•II
lht• lot~ to potential h11m1• luulder.,
o~ A 4·2 VOTE. !'it:WPORT count1lmen agreed lo restore
t l•:-.1dentwl 1oning o n the lots, striking down a n.•c1)mmendation
that theol'Can·v1 1•" lnts b(• preserved as open space.
Cuun1·1l11,en Durr Strauss and l'aul llummel \Uted a~11insl the
<H't1on ~1a\or J ack11· llt'athl·r "'"' abst'nt during Mnnday·s vote
\\'onhng in ;\;t•\\ port .., propoM·d local toast;.tl plan suggested
t ht• 1 hrN· p;irn·b lll'lo\\ ( 1c·1·an Boult·vard he µu1 l'hast•d with slate
fund-..
l~SPIR \TIO:'li POINT run-. asidt' OtPan lluull-vard from
\/arc1ssu.., i\n•nu1• to a pn1111 m1~1\\ny hetwN'n On·hid allll Poinsct
Ila a\enU('"
""'f'he trio or h1t' bt•m•ath the slato: O\\nt•d po111t at c va1·;,1nl One
or the lot':, O\\lll'f'•, though, W<J~ l~~ll('d a buildtnj! pernlil last yl'ar
and has begun grading
/\ sC'cond lot o" ner. ('liff Cuopf'r. told counc·1lmcn that he had
h1·en more than willing to sell h1!> land lo the cit~ to past years.
"Rut I think the ti mt• ha:. past where tlw 1·ity rnuld t•ven ttfforcl
11." said ('uopcr lie on<'t' offered the land lo tht• 1·1ty for less than
$200.000. lie said hl'·s no" been offered $1 2 1111llton for the parcel
h) a pnv<1te party
~S EAR LY AS 1973, according to Newport City Man~ger
ltobert Wynn. Cooper turned away priv<ite offers on hi:. land so he
<'OUld let the cily purchase it. But that never happened.
In 1974, then-assemblyman Robert Radham introdu.ced legi::.la·
lion to purchase the lots The bill failed. In 1976, a s.pec1a l Newport
honcl elN·llon to purchasl' the loL<; and 11 othNs tn thC' l'll v was
he ld. The bond rn.oasure was defeated.
Moodav evenin g, eouncil members were told tha t the lot
owners had ~<11tc'rl lon g e nough ·
• "ATTF:MP'l'S TO Bllff,D on this property lwvc hec11 frustrill·
l.'d for more than e1~ht ·~ears hcl'ause of s ta tements , like 'Gee.
we.'d like to buy I his prn1>ert~. · said attorney Sherman Stace},
n •prescnting ont• of the lot ownns .
~le said ~tvl'n thl' hi story of the rrnn·els. 1t was unhkt-ly tha t
l he r1t y orlh<' s tatt• ever would bf> able to buy the land
Panel slots open
Fountain \';illt') l'ily ('11u11c1I
is ~('C'ktn,g :tppl1t•ant" ror tin·
c it'·.., .tel\ 1-.or~ 111m1t1 1tlt•(· r11•
thl· h:md1rnppl'd
ThP l'ommitt1·t' nH'l'l~ on thl'
lhtr<I Thur."I·•' 111 l'.IC'h month at
I :\(I p Ill Ill tin· t OU lll'll l'lln
ft•n·nn· room at C'lt\ llull. 111200
~lat1·r ,\q•11111•
T h l' l ' , 111 rn 1 t t t • t • ...
rP..,p•ms1b1ht H"· m1 ludt· hl'lpin~
c·11' offtt·1;1l-.. Plim111:1lC' harrll'f"'-
lo thl' ph\'.,11·alh hantl1<'<1ppPtl 111
h111lrl1 11g:-. pro111011n g l'dur:1
Ha~
Heart
of Gold
t ion al attd r•·t·rc•a1 w11al pro ·
i:ram ... for tht• h:indit•apped ancl
1•11t•n111 agmg 1•111pl11\ 1111•nt of cl1:.
<ihlt•<I l•l'l'"llll ...
If a111!1t·:ippl·d '' r1111t•11 and pt'O
1ol t• \\Ill• ar1· \'l"Uall) han
tl1l';q1p1•tl .,,... 1·~1•1·1·1:ill~ en
1•11 u ral.!1'cl t o apph for this
1·om n11 llP1· lw1·at1M'. 1·111·1 enth. il
1nl'l11dl'.., 1111 1••1111•..,t•nt;1l1\P<; from
t IH'S•' l.!l'tllll'"
,\ ppl11·;1111111-. 1·;111 ht• obi ai m•d
t rom ttw 1· t' 1·l1•r·k 11r h\ <·:II ling
111;:1 X:l:!I
OUR ~RF E FALLING HEAln •
-.uspendeJ on clll 18" rope cha111 will let
l~r know tha t yClu l.'.clrl'. l leart .rnd clMin
arc of 14J< Gold. .
J. C..JJump/u.ietJ }ewefm
MEMBER AMl:AICAN Q[M SOCIETY @~
1823 NEWPORT BLVO COSTA MESA "u'-'
INTHE SAME LOCATION SINCE 1946
81nkAmtrtcard-M11ter Chtrge PHONE 64t-3401
. ~
4 DAil \' PILUl
Ja t
C .. Ciag ~ ..... ~ To•~~'·'
Ma.rphin•
Wand • • ring typewriter
l P< J\Sl', IM)"'NOOA : Tumoo loose from desk·
bN111d duue mi 11 •uno) l'.\'bruary afternoon, there's
nuth111ai llkt• 111 rnvtor JUUl'll ul{u\g our coaastllne to sootho the
a1e1m \pint Wt•ll, t&t least ~1011t thinas soothe •
Tht 1.m ~ d, rulhog hall dnve along Pacific Goa.st
tlichw• .. tlt'hu•t'n Coronu dd Mu i.nd Laguna Beach still
lmld s th u•c·ord an thlb l'c.>rner tor the most peaceful and
bt·aut1ful rcm1umng w our eascaped region . Sun dapples
th1• t•ttl'lfa \ al¢ranl gul111 hover und dive over the
btt•Jd1hont ('uusllll hills remam vacant Not a billboard in
... 1J;ht "•mt ... t.tc·o ~tand to be found. The orange juice stand
'lllk b~ the "indow Did they re· paint the front porch?
\Lt\ bt· thl'\ huilt a ne" front porch. Tough to tell at SS
1111 lt•, per h;1ur Ht:'tter to blow down and e njoy
('ORO!\ Ot:L MAK IS the community record-holder
"" L t11t morl• frantic note You can still traverse from
\ \ 01 Jtlo w Popp) and never hit a single signal on the
.ircen Humph
L>v" ntown t.a~un<1 <1c:tually has parking at this time of
'l'a:.on 't ou dr1"e right down to the Lumberyard shopping
l'Omple~ :md park no hasble A man wearmg a metal
h.irdhat haru.b uut your parking tab. Is he trying to t ell you
,oml•thmg'' J\ hard case. maybe? Don't fudge on the park·
1ng lab 1
You may wonder. new f.!Oasl resident. why they would
l <tll a :.hopprn~ complex In downtown Laguna the Lum·
ht'ryard Thal's be<"ausc the site once was a lumberyard.
· Bac·k then. vis itors to Laguna , on tour, would sight the
tu mb£>r plle~ und In g c:hip·burning s mokestack and ask the
I
'[II ~ ..
t.agunn tounsts 1crrcle1 pondenng Ira/fie spurts
natl\-l' gu1dp · "Why do you have a lumberyard in the mid·
lilt> of yo ur n1c·t· lillll' town·.··· ·
ANO T llE NATIVE \H1uld reply. '"Because we've•
:ti\\"'~ had a lumhNyard there. What's wrong with that?'
,\ncl the• v1~1t or alway~ looked a little funny.
\\'ondl'r" of February in Laguna: A beautiful lady in a
h·t'll) wt•t•n1c gn•t•n b1kmi. walking her poodle down the
-.1d1•,tn•l'I Th<• poodle wears a g.reen ribbon on his ear .
Everylhrng's color coordinated in Laguna
11 \: \'Ol ' Ull>N'T think l"d see the green ribbon . did
'ou., You d1dn ·t even think I'd see the poodle.
Choo-ehoo ride not easg
Robert Stewart. who commutes to his
credit manager job in Boston. waits with
red flags to stop train at a closed station in
Plimptonville , Mass ., near Walpole.
Stewart. admitting he was a bit spooked by
his action, said he stopped the train to pro·
test the station closing late last week. A
s p okesman for Massachusetts Bay
Transportation Authority called the move
"stupid and dangerous."
GM loses $763 million
· Automaker's deficit first since 1921
DETROIT (AP) -General Motors Corp., pro·
ducer of 23 percent or the world's motor vehi~les.
has lost money for the first year since it was mak·
ing S800 Chevrolets. And the nation's other
automakers are expected to do even worse.
The No. l automaker has reported a loss
of $763 million. or $2.65 a share. for all or 1980. Not
s ince 1921 had GM reported a loss.
However , GM made money in the last three
months of 1980. reporting earnings of $62 million.
or 21 cents a share, for the fourth quarter
costs and unemployment in Detroit was twice the
nationaJ a verage. · ·
In 1979, GM earned $2.89 billion, or $10.04 a
share, including a S326 million, or $1.46 a share,
loss in the fourth quarter.
GM's wholesale sales or cars, trucks and buses
fell 10 percent for 1980's final quarter , from 2.1
million to 1.88 million. For the year, the decline
was 21 percent, from 8.99 million to 7.1 million.
In the United States. the drop was 14 percent
in the quarter. from 1.47 million to 1.27 million,
and 26 percent for the year, from 6.45 million to
GM IS THE FIRST automaker to report 1980 4.77 million.
results. Other companies plan to report next week Revenues for the fourth quarter totaled $16.2
or later . billion in 1980, a 0.5 percent increase from $16.1
Chrysler Corp. expects to show a loss or about billion in the corresponding 1979 period. Full-year
$1.7 billion and Ford Motor Co., according to revenues were $57.7 billion, down 13 percent from
a nalysts' estimates, will show a loss of about Sl.5 $66.3 billion the year before.
bil li on, making 1980 by far the worst year in the THE OVERALL 1980 loss would have been
history of the a uto industry· $385 million more except for tax credits. Those E~en in the Great Depression of the 1930s, G M credits for t he first nine months totaled $703
made money. although its $165,000 profit in 1932 million. but GM said it paid income taxes of $317
was S9 mi llion short of covering di vidends on pre· million in the fourth quarter, more than expected
ferred stock. under statutory U.S. tax rates as a result of losses
In l921. a recession year when the company at "certaln overseas subsidiaries where no ap·
last reported a loss, GM was just beginning to pli cable income tax refund credits were currenlly
transform itself from a collection of scattered, avail able."
som etimes feuding and badly coordinated com· Wall Street a nalysts. impressed by GM's
panie!> into the tight COf'poration of later years. steady market share -45.9 percent of all cars sold
GM. then one of .86 ·companies building cars. in the United Slates both io 1979 and 1980 -recent·
had a 14 percent s hare of the domestic car market ly had raised their estimates or the company's
and was relying on pre-World War I designs. ln· fourth.quarter results, with most predicting a
Harris
Ieiter .
unveiled
WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. CAP)
-Jean Harril i.tlfted 'helday
that ln her laat letter to
Scandale Diet doetor Hennen
Tarnower 1be called Lyan
Tryfol"OI, her rival for tbe llhyslt
ciao '1 affection, a "dl1..-•t
adultr"•·" a "1lut" aad "• p1ycbotlc whore."
••A whore la a whore la a
whore, •P llrs. Harrla repeated
on her sixth day on tbe wttnell
1tand, testifytn1 in her.own de-
fense •l•inst chat1e1 she
murdered Tarno•aer in a
Jealous ra1e.
i
"A&E TRESS worcla you
customarily use?" A11i1tant
District Attorney Geotp Bolen
asked quietly durtllt Ida third
day of croaa-examinatlon.
"No, that's what wa1 so
troubling," the tenner 1irl'1
school headmistress r.siued.
Bolen souaht to sbc,,t that the
57-year-old defendant'• jealousy
over Tarnower's affair witb
Mrs. Tryforoa, a IT-year-old
divorcee, provoked her to shoot
the doctor to death in an up.,
stairs bedroom of hl1 estate in
Purchue, N.Y., lut March 10.
THE DEFENSE contends that:
Mra. Harris, the former head-
m istress of the Madeira School
for a irla in McLean, Va., was
not jealous of Mrs. Tryforoe.
Mrs. Harris bu said that the
69·year -old Tamower wu shot:
accidentally aa he tried to atop"'
her from committin1 auicidit.
Mrs. Harris also char1ed •
Tuesday that IOtne of the PfOl-
ec ution 's witnesses had "te-,
peatedly perjured" themselves
during their testimony.
S h e s aid Tarnower 'a
housekeeper a nd caretaker,
S uzanne and He11ri van der
Vreken, lied when UMy said she
did not try to 10 for help for
Tarnower the night he was shot.
AND SHE SA.ID a HartilOft,
N . Y., police qfficer lied in
describinc Tarnower as '!on his
knees with blood all over lhi·
place pourinc out of his Melt"
when the officer first came to.•
the mortally wounded doctor's ,
aid.
But Mrs. Harris, stonily ad-
dressing the prosecutor aa "Mr.
Bolen" and once as "George,''
saved her harshest remarks to
describe Mrs. Tryforoe.
''I d iclnt think anytt.i n1
second-rate beloneed .tn Hi's
life," Mrs. Harril said, usinc
Tarnower's nicknam~. Nohod) ever tries walking across North ~oast
l11 gh'Aa) m the Art Colony That's because the traffic all
t'Offit'S in spurts It ~purts downcoast in a stream and then.
111:.1 "twn ynu thmk thcre·s goin~ to be a I.apse. 1t spurti.
uproci..i Pcdt·~tr1ans ha\'e to try spurtmg a cross in
h<•t" <•1•n traffic s purts
ventories we re hii?h. car companies were cutting s m a ll profi t. :.::~~~~~~~-====~~~-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=------=----_-_-:...-:...-:...-:...-:...-:...-:...-:...-:...-:...-:...-:..~~~~~~~~~~-.
Thi~ «011111 ht:' h<itardous to you r health It's a lesson
t 'orona clt·I '.\l ar peckstrians never learned. upcoast
~E \'ER MINO T llF. spurts. they say Corona dcl Ma r
pl'1h.•st nan ... '-till <'rOs!> ~C:J~t Coast . High~ ay with all the
1·u Im l'Onf1clc11N• of a Christian. hold mg four aces.
St Ill furthl'r upcoast. wonder of wonders. you can get
:ino:.:. Nrv. port Bay Bridge at 3 p.m .. despite construction
of Newport Ba y Bridge II And tht-new bridge? It's com
1ng ;.don~. toming along. ·
•· \'Ol' ARE LEFT to wonde r what they did with the his ·
torical marker for N~wport La nding. site of the beginnings
nf all things New Port Maybe they gave it to the Elks
Lodge'! . .
And you can still puzzle over why the bridge warning
s igns light up to tell you to "Prepare."
But for what? Maybe for dinner. Who knows?
Call it what you want, this is still the best or all possible
eoasts
Iraq gets
French jets
B E IRUT . Lebanon (AP) -
Iraq reported it had received
four Mirage F·l jet fighters
from France a nd renewed its of·
fer to negotiate a peaceful settle·
m ent of thl' war with Iran.
An 1:-aqi Foreign Ministry
s pokesman said the first planes
of an Iraqi order of 60 French
Jets had arrived and that "the
French decision to deliver the
planes is <:onsidered a good ex·
a m ple '3rid Iraq must look at
France differently from the
s k eptical look at the big
powers··
Sunny skies forecast
East getting little relief from drought
('OW1fol M'eafltftr
L.1Qhl , v1n1b1e wind\ s.outnwe\t 10
to IS •not\ 1nl\ dlltrnoon. Wino "'••es 1 10 7 IMt We\IP.rly swell\ 7 10
J !Kt. Fa., 1ooay Low cloudlneu In c r&aslno •nd becom•nQ more ~•
ten11ve latp afternoon.
Sunnv and cold w~•Owr covt,.ed
• mo\I ot tf\t n•tion lue\d•Y. wtth
t>elOW•lli'O ttmPtt a1urt' ln the Gr11t
Lakes r991M •nd lree11n9 weel!W!r u
t•r soulh ., Flor•O•
Snow Ml""'" conllnueo In lhe w1•e of a storm ,,..., mo•...i 011 Lau Erie
into western New Yor., •"'° Ptf'
nsyl•anla, t>ul weall'lerm<tn w lo the
•torm lh•I mo.eo 111rou9h lhe
oro..0111 \tro<ktn EHi Coul on Mon
O•y br°"9111 only t•mPor1ry rtlltl
T .... P.colo< Nor1h ... sl "eel \Gmt •oo hmi>eret""' around lM nallon 11 m1<101y T~MYY ranoeci lrom 1nrtt
bel-•• , .. 1n Sa<.111 Ste M1rl•. Mich
10 73 In P11m Sc>flng\
Sunny s•les 10< mosl ol tlle country
wert UPl<ltd 1000. wll ... lt f!
.,.,,lures r-lno from Ille tffns In
lh• Ro<klu •l)CI New En9l1nd lo
the 10\ In "•orlO• a nd lh•
$oulhWHIH'l'I 0He•U •
Tht only u c1Ptlons lo Ille lo•ttOI
ol natioN I SUMlllM .,. IOUlh ftu s.
wh1cn can ••PKI tomt rtln, end lhe
nonnern Rockie' end Greet LU H .,. .. ,, whl<'t may get 50me 'now.
hily'llet Del•.,.y ,,._-.4
MoM•y r1o<1tv 11 )'Ou ~o ~01 ,.. • ..,
vOur NC-'1 !Iv ~ 30 II "' r •II ll<'IO<t r
II "' an.i You' roov "'" O<I tl•"~'8fl
S•lurll•y fft~I "~l>dlly II yOu 00 Mt
tfl(;"'Y* y<>ul C l\IJ't by 0 a <'I toll
t..lo•• 10 • "' ....n yn.., t1111• '"'" 1>e lh'"""'""
c.........r...,._.
Mo11 0r""1Jt CUU'llY ~'"'' t•t•Otl
NO•lll,.9'1 """'"''1111" 8'o.cll .,,,, w._,,.."""., .... 1111
San C-CA!"'"•llO 8•oc:h Sa<'I Juetl Ca1>Wtn0
Dan•"°'"' Soul~ l~Ulll latttn•....... • .......
f
• 0 ••• t. t ~ ---===
California
Patchy loW 109 and low clo..ch are
••P«l•d nur the coast, lncre.sln9
lcM•Qftl In Soulr.ttn Cetflornl•. -t·
'' 'unny Tllu~f. Sll111tt1v cooler
oeu.near lhe coast
Oran<,jf County wlll nave overnl9lll
..... , • IO .... HIQhS 1001, MO Thurs-
day 6S 10 n. Loi Angeles w111 heve
low' In IN SOs, hltfls loday .. lo 13
and Tnur-y •S to 10,
!louthfrn C.llfornla mountains will
lie lair tlvOU9fl TiturSO.y. HlQhs lo-
oay ancl Thur-y •S to SS. 0._.rnlQht
low ' 1S to U
OeMr1 .,..., will also haYe lair
wuther. Hltfls loel•Y •lld T!lursday se 10 •s _, ""•'" anc1 u 10 11
lowtr desar1s. Lows 2S to 3S UCIP9f' de'
MMI and l$ to 0 IOwtr dtstr1s.
For Nor1~n C.lllornle, tlleH wlll
lie nlo11t and ,,...,,.nln11 lot In m.,,y
valleys i.comlnv IOcafly clenie In tn.
Sen JoaQUln. Otherwl• ,,_II., fair.
111cr1ul119 clouds·from lllt west
to11l"'t Ind Thllrldey IMdl119 lo •
chenc.e of tll'IMllet or tlt!M sllowlrs
mal11ly -IN coastal hills t011'911t
elld •l'Mdlllt to"' Sierra Nevada TllurM9v.
T...,.....i•rn
Al .. llf
AIW4!W Anc...,_ "' ... 20 u '° 11 u"
Miami
M1lwauktte
MnPI• SIP
Nasnv111 ..
New Oriean>
N~• Vortc,
Norlolk
Okla City
Oma11a
Orlando
., Phll&delOhle
Ph~n11~
Pllhbur911
Piiand, 1'M
Piiand, Ore
Rapid CllY
Reno
Richmond Sall Ltke S.•tll•
SI LO<i" St P Temc>i
SI SleMarle s .........
1>1 SI s _,
IJ -I
33 I•
~ JS
1• 18
JO 7S S4 11 n .\
Sl :M
11 17
ID 41
10 . 1
32 14 so tt
30 ' u ,, ,, " 36 16 so J7
21 0'9 so 3'
0 ·2• 31 ,,
Allenl• 3S IS TulH 0 IS " ,, Allanllc etv 1S n W-shln91on
BaltlmOA 74 1' CALlf'O•NIA ::~:~:"" :
1
: BakmllelO .0 l1
Boise 30 19 Barslow U 33
80,lon ll 70 8H UrnOl'lt 6" U
Oullalo 11 °' 819 a .. r I 0 1
Chari II II K •I 21 Blythe /..-.. 13 u
Charl,tnWV 11 t Cetellne M •
Cheyenne 3' t1 Eureka ?67 ~O I Chi 10 .5 FrH no • Cln~:-::atl IS 4 t=t~~ ~ l I ~l~vel::° :~ ! Monterey 61 D~~~t ~h SI l4 NU. WllM>n SJ 39
Denver 40 t1 Nff41H 66 40
Des Moines 11 0) Newpor1 8Hcft ~ ~
o.troll 10 01 Oekl•lld 7-0 ~
Felrl>ellkt l2 lt OlllMIO 1I ~ ~:r=.:0 ~~ ·~ :::--•• 11
Ho..,1on JO 3' Sac remento S7 n
lndnaplls 11 l San 01990 1 " 4t
Jacksnvll• 4t 2t ~n l'rentlKO :: ::
Km City !~ 3~ ~::=..ca u fO tJ.~~-=-46 11 Tehoe Valley fs .3~
Loulsvlllt U 10 Therma l J" .• Mtmlllll• M 21 Yuma • ""'
S ... Mrll C_,tlerttl• S•rl •r,,•rl ..................
"" ....... ow 11 1 IW$W
,, 1 ' w 11 i a w
,
Wailing la Haar?
Have you sent for merch•n-
dl1e and not received It?
Are you having • dl .. gree-
ment wtth a bllllng computer?
11 City H•ll giving you the run-
a-round?
"At Your Service" offers help In all u. ..
matters and more. You can count on P•t Dunn
and her "At Your Service" column to help 90IYe
problems.
If you need help, mall your quesllo~• to Pat
Dunn, At Your Service, <>r.nge Coast Dally Piiot,
P.O. Box 1580, Costa Me .. CA 12121. Be 1Ure to
Include your telephone number. ·
Pat Dunn gets ~ctlon and fight• red tape In
"At Your Service," publllhed every day except
Saturday In The Dally Piiot."'
lailyPilll
l J
--·------.,.~~-_..-
. ..
. ;
; ..
~ • ..
.:
I
' =1 ~(
:• :, :r
:t
:t
.s
;V
:0
:a
-0
J1
i. ..
. »
c ... .
Skycap Blalh •
draws attack
LOI ANO&l.&S CAP > Offtclall of CoaUnea·
tal AirUMI uve dea*I accUMUona \hat t.Mir ct.·
tl•loa to tlimlHtt 1kycap crewa la raclally
motlvlled ud HY \My II.ave ta.ken •t• to pro· vhh op&icma for thoet thrown out ol work.
The company 1tatemeall -. ... la retpoue to
tall• rrom two clvll rltbt.11roups Monday, 11kin1 aupporten to back wbat amowtll to a boycott of
lbe COIDINUU b«ause of lll decif k>rl to elhninate
the workers from the
Continental corporate
structw-e.
"What we did here in
Los An1etes was to call
all the skycaps in, told
them ol lht situation and offered them a series of
options· so that they would not be out on the
street," said Continental spokesman Julian
Levine. "One of the other options was that they
could form their own company and contract back to us at a lower pr ace.··
The company maintains it was forced by
losses of $13 million in 1979 and S5 million to SlO
million in the first half of 1980 to cancel the
services, amone other cutbacks.
....... r•INl•••tNllt
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A 20·year-old Marine
charged with murdering his infant daughter h~s
been found innocent by a Superior Court jury here.
Lance Cpl. Clarence Edward Taylor was con-
victed of misdemeanor battery Monday and sen-
tenced to six months in custody, making him eligi-
ble for release because of time already spent in
jail.
Taylor also was acquitted of child abuse and
,molesting his 21-month-old daughter.
Terftlft! l••t•.W. ........
TORRANCE CAP) -A prison fantasy or
Lawrence S. Bitlaker was to live in a self.
contained underground city complete with torture
chambers and holding ceUs for young kidnapped
girls.
That bizarre testimony came Tuesday from
the first defense witness in Bittaker's Superior
·court murder trial after 11 days of testimony. 68
witnesses and more than 300 exhibits entered into
evidence.
Richard Shoopman, a confessed murderer
serving a life sentence at California Men 's Colony
East at San Luis Obispo, sent an audible gasp
through the packed courtroom when he said Bit·
taker and he had different sexual appetites.
lflfNlters' .... ,,,..,.,,.,
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The state Health
Services Department says it will cut 20 ,000
mothers and children from a supplemental food
program to avoid a $6.2 million deficit.
But the statement also sa'id that about
160,000 pregnant women, breast-feeding mothers
and Infants with nutritional problems will remain
on the federally funded $57 million program.
The department said the cut, thr:ough the Sept.
30 end of the federal fiscal year, became necessary
last month when the department learned of the
funding levels authorized by Congress for the Sup-
plemental Food Program for Women. Infants and
Children.
'Smit•' ............ .
BERKELEY (AP) -A man accused or rob-
bing a bank while dressed as Santa Claus has
pleaded guilty to felony grand theft. .
Eugene Lundin, SO, part owner or a strugghng
computer firm in Pleasant Hill, was captured by
police as he walked out of a Bank of America
branch on Dec. 18, 1980, with a bag containing
$7 ,500 in cash.
Police said Lundin entered the bank, bellowed
a few ho-ho-hos to those inside, passed out some
candy and then presented a package to a bank of·
ficial and said it contained a bomb.
..... ,__..
Gun OUC!tfon set
Actor 'Clark Gable, shown in this old photo
examining one of his rifles, was an avid
camper and hunter. More than two dozen
of his rifles, shotguns and handguns will be
auctioned off Sunday at Sotheby's in Los
Angeles.
0..-eltnaep•..C•
LOS ANGELES (AP> -In a decision of in-
terest to religious bodies nationwide, the
California Court of Appeal has ruled that three Los
Angeles-area parishes that broke._ away from the
Episcopal Church may take the church property
and assets with them.
The property dispute erupted in 1977 when the
four parishes opposed the 2.8 million-member •
church's 1976 stand favoring ordination of women
· pries!s and modernization of the Episcopal prayer
book.
Ge11eraer dH '~
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. is no longer seeking exemption from jury duty.
81t0WN
The Democratic governor's
legal affairs secretary said that
Brown is seeking arrangements •
to serve at a convenient time, and
that an earlier request that the
governor be excused was a
"staff-level decision" and didn't
come "to his considered atten-
tion the way it has since."
M-'d9• P••• llrw
SAN DIEGO CAP) -An attorney representing
Grateful Dead rock guitarist Robert Wier has en-
tered a no contest plea for the entertainer in con-
nection with a disturbance after a concert at the
San Diego Sport.s Arena.
Alex Landon made the plea Monday to a
charge of disturbing the peace and paid a S50 fine
for the 33-year-old Wier. who was originally
charged with resisting arrest and battery d~ring
the disturbance.
Hot Air Balloon Adventures·
Spend an hour drUt Inc ower
P•rrle Valley In a balloon
We ean •klm.a lake or ftoi&t
mll•• abowe lb• earth • truly
apectacvlar eaperience
rll1ht lor 1 .. 0 • 11110. 4 · 1260. 8 1300
Qift Certificat~ Available
fJ;
CHAMPAG.f~
Pss1-so33
Send Your Valentine • The Very Best
Loving Hallmark Valentines . . . the very best
way to tell · someone special you care on
Saturday. Feb. 14 . -·-w
"Purveyors of Oldtime Neighborliness" ~
. ,Bg,§!~.~~!~~Q!
71CMt111
DAILY PILOT ,4 •
'1'nsslli.g of~icial~ tags
ankers with fraud
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man beli~ved to be
a miaaina orficial of Muhammad' Ali Professional
Sports Inc., named in a $21.3 million civil em·
bezzlement suit, claimed in a phone interview that
Wells Fargo bank official• were responsible for the
missin& funds.
In an interview on a KABC Radio talk pro-
gra\n, a man identified by sportscaster Bud
Furillo as Harold J. Smith, a chairman of MAPS,
said: "You can start at the Miracle Mile District
(in Loe Angeles) of Wells Fargo Bank. This thing
involves bank officials.
"We're not talking about $20 million ... What
I've learned is that there were two or three hundred
million dollars involved, and that's over a period of
time, overeigbt, nine years."
He said the alleged embezzlement "is going to
reach at least 15 bank managers and about 20 dif·
ferent officers and about· 20 different banks
throughout California of Wells Fargo.'' ,..
The suit filed Monday names Harola J . Smith,
37, chairman of MAPS, and L. Ben Lewis. MAPS
director and loan officer for Wells Fargo's Beverly
Hills branch, who left the bank Jan. 23 after 11
years. Neither bas been seen for more than a
week.
THE OTHER defendants are Muhammad AU
Amateur Sports Inc., also run by Smith, MAPS
President Sam Marshall. Barbara Smith, Gladys
Lewis and Bodak Productions Inc.
Ben Lewis was the bank branch's operations
manager until J an. 23. The only connection the de-
fendants have with former heavyweight boxing
champion Muhammad All Is that they were using
his name in return for a $10,000 fee or a pel'cen·
tage, wplchever wa's gl'eater. ,
Ali is seeklnJt a private audit of MAPS and
has asked that his name no longer be used in con·
nection with the company.
In reeent interviews, Smith was quoted as say·
ing that MAPS l?st up~ards of $1.3 91i.llio!1 but
boxing sources said the figure was protiably in the
neighborhood of S7 million.
Wells Fargo .said the total amount of missing
bank funds was $21,305,000.
"Wells Fargo ... believes that all but Sl
million of the loss would be covered by in·
surance." the bank added.
The California State Athletic Commission has
confirmed that MAPS, which has staged fights at
the Forum in Inglewood, does not have a license to
operate boxing matches this year in California.
"Everybody is just curious where they get
their money," said Don Fraser, boxing organizer
at the Forum in Inglewood.
Fraser said MAPS .always came up with
enough money to stage fights at The Forum, but
last year at two bouts roughly only 2.000 people
s howed up for each fight .
A S POKESMAN F.OR the New Olympic •
Auditorium in Los Angeles said Monday that a
MA PS-sponsor ed fi g ht card will go on as
scheduled this Saturday night.
Giant Sale
Crown Hardware Stores
ONE
WEEK
ONLY
e.
• 3.71MNsepower
• Swfoce Mlector
• He• .. ght
• Po....-cord rewtftd
• Uft off tool pock
• logsic)MlmdllMN't
• &celewt for carpets ..ct ._...wood floors·
HOOVER VACUUM
CLOSE OUT. SPECIAL
s5411
• Al .._. agitator
• Ilg Dl1po1 ... bOCJ .,,. ...... ..
~
...............,., .......
Model U4119
Self ,,., ..... ,.... ... .................
Model 13105 also has
heedlight. tools, retractable
cord. Model 13103 has
Med light
t-••mP"IModel 13105 and #3103 are on limited supply.
Model #3109 shown .
PORTAPOWER '"
VACUUM CLEANER!
VACUUM PACKED
l w•y flfhnd
olrsyshtft
Ea1y....,
dltttbog
co ....... wfth
tools
HOOVll
SHAMPOOll/POLISHll
CROWM HARDWARE .. NOW 3 LOCATIONS TO s•v• YOU Iii ••
w ........... (~-.. IOn)
llZ41nmAfto.MI.,......_.
Mlallll
, .. , ...... c.r' ... (b'IMr~hftperial
,,, ............... pert ..... ...• ,.
.. Laws a mystery
to many refugees •= travelin1 tbcuandl of mla... endurtni count· leu Ml.Pl ud eveatlA&lly HtWna ill a complex urban
~••1 whll'h bean little raemblance l-0 the rural,
aom--.. priautlve We you once had known.
1'161 ODIMI very c"*t to deacriblQ the situation ln
whlcla li lndoellln ... retuaee• have found themselves
a1 °"1 new ll vt1 ln Oran1• County. Plrt their acliuatment process, tn addition to le'arning 1JmPIJ a.a. to au.rvlve ln thelr new home, ls coming to grips
-.•Ith dMt maH of leaal re1uJaUons that 1overn the lives of all
Atnerieam.
SamealU..e rules can be mundane and simple. others
far morecomplei.
M Oran1e County's presidjog superior court judge,
Robert E. Rickles, observed recently, certain laws can be
cons idered universal, especially those that prohibit acts or
violence.
But there are others which take ti me to learn and which
can easily be misunderstood because of obvious cultural dif ·
ferences.
Tboush resettlement agencies already provide orienta·
lion programs that touch on such topics as traffic and
welfare laws, overall refugee interaction with the law is an
aspect of the resettlement equation that bears close
scrutiny and perhaps extra effort by public and private
agencies. ·
As Judge Ri ckles noted, it is better to spend runds on a
preventive basis than on a remedial one.
Court vacancies
With two vacancies on the state Supreme Court,
eyes are on Gov. Jerry Brown as he ponders filling the
posts. ·
The death of Justice Wiley Manuel and the departure
of Justice Willi a m Clark, who was summoned to
Washington for a State Department position, has re ·
moved two conservative voices from the high court.
The issue of the death penalty is one of the places this
situation becomes most visible -and most volatile
politically.
Both Manuel and Clark had voted to uphold the death
penalty in a 4·3 decision.
Brown himself is known to oppose the death penalty.
Following a popular vote to reinst ate capital punishment,
he refused to sign enabling legislation. which eventually
was passed over his veto.
Confirmation of anyone he appoints to the vacant
seats is sure to run into problems with the three-member
Commission on Judicial Appointments. which must ap-
prove his nominees.
The commission's members are Chi ef 'Just ice Rose
Bird, a Brown appointee who voted against reinstate·
ment of the death penalty, Attyh Gen. George Deukme·
jian, who supports capital punishment, and the senior
pres iding justice in California , who now happens to be
85·year-old Les ter Roth of the Second Appellate District
in Los An geles. Clearly the swing vote will be that of
Roth, who is reputed to take a middle-of-the-road stance
in judicial matters.
Meanwhile, Chief Justice Bird has been accused by
Assembly Democ ra t Alister McAlister of attempting to
..:.:St ack" the court by appointing two temporary replace·
ments to hear a current death penalty case.
Both were named to the appellate bench by Gov.
Brown and are declared by McAlister to hold liberal
views . A Bird aide called Mc Alister's accusation an insult to
the two justices.
The question of the next two appointees to the
California Supreme Court has much broader and more
significant aspects that deserve consideration. But the
death penalty is the lightning rod in what promises to be
a heavy storm.
Rivers not quite lost
In one of his last acts before the Carter admfoistra·
lion left office, departing Interior Secretary Cecil D. An·
drus acceded to Gov. Jerry Brown's request to place four
Northern California rivers in the National Wild and
Scenic Rivers system.
The rivers already were protected in the state wild
rivers system and could not be developed without a
popular vote or a two-thirds vote in the Legislature.
Nevertheless, Brown took it upon himself to take the
protection a step further by having them locked up in the
federal system. ~
This sparked an unsuccessful legal battle to block An·
drus' administrative action on the part of Californians
who insist the rivers should remain under the jurisdiction
of the state.
Now, however, a move is afoot to persuade the
Reagan administration to overturn Andr us' decision. The
law appears to require an act of Congress to remove
lands from federal control, but that rule has not been
tested in court.
As things now stand, it appears such a test may well
be forthcoming.
It's estimated that some 22 million acre feet of water
from the rivers now flows into the ocean each year . For
Southern Californians, the status of the northern rivers
could be critical in the event of future severe water
shortages. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed o n this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited .•. ddress The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1580, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boyd/War fortune
By LM. BOYD
Another military contract
that eventually led to big
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
~n occaalonal natl
placed under the tire of
a car puked Wea11ly in
a handicapped spot
mitbt help .. ake tbe
driver Just wbat be
aeed1 to be -han·
dloapped.
J .C.V. .._,· ........... -.... .. ....,,, ..... " ....... .
--"""'...!! !!!W.! .. .. l:/L.t:L..-~.
..
business bad to do with a lit·
tie mutton. In 1861. a
Philadelphia butcher named
Peter Widener, 27, landed the
deal to sell meat to Union
troope thereabouts. A quick
$50,000 profit. He bou1ht
more meat atores and put
money into streetcars. His
fortune grew. By 1890, James
"Buck" Duke accepted
Widener money in bis invest·
ment pool, merged some
firms, and wound up with the
American Tobacco Com·
pany. It hu been .. id -or
wlll be -that behind each
f abuloua fortune of war
1tand1 a military supply ol-
licer wltb a •mil• on bit face.
' Do you reallae that more
than 100 entertainen now are
makin1 a llvtn1 by lm·
P9rtoll8tlnC Elvlt PreaJey!
~ .~
rrhom~ P. Haley/ Publlwr Th0me1 keevll/Edftor. ~1
Wednftday. February 4, 1911 Bar~r• Krtlblch/Edltorlal P ... Editor
• Jaek Anderson
Persian Gulf crisis continues " \I
WASHINGTON -The re·
moval of the American bostaies
from Iran unfortunately baa not
defused the Iranian crisis. The
captive Americans were merely
pawns in a tar more deadly
s truggle for control of the
Persian Gulf. He r e are •tbe
frightening facts that now con·
front President Reagan: .
-Iran dominated the Persian
Gulf, which is the source of moet
of the western
world's oil.
Yet t hi s
strategic land
has fallen in·
to the hands
o r fanatic s
w h o h ave
brought the
gove rnment
lo the brink or
chaos. Their
ruling ayatollah, who looks like
the Wrath of Allah, with blazing
black eyes and a fierce pon-
tifical scowl , is vicious ly anti-
A mer i ca n . A devotee of
purposeful s urrering, he has
dramatized the vulnerability of
the mighty United States before
the powerless zealot.
-The nearby Soviets are ex-
pected t.o slide across the treat
di vi de into oil dependence lat.er
this year. In a desperate at·
te mpt t.o lncrease their produc-
tion, they injected water into
som e oil fields but me rely
flooded the wells and damag4'd
the understructure. Now the
weakenin1 of Iran has presqnted
the Soviets with an opportunity
to move in on the Persian Gulf
oil region. They have positioned
23 divisions near the Iranian
border and are effectively ran.
ning the pro paganda fi res
throughout the area.
...... WITH THE RED Army in
Afgha nis tan and s ui:rogate
Cuban forces in So uth Yemen
and Ethiopi a, the Kremlin has
thrown a ring or steel around the
P ersian Gulf oil region. Thus the
Soviets "could curtail access to
the oil that is required by the
.United States and its allies,"
wa rns a secret Pentagon study
-Jimmy Carter established
\l ~~~r~I ~~
.AMERICA-
ANEW
BEEtINNING
Andy Rooney
t he far·flun i. multi-service
Rapid Deployment For~ to pro-
tect our oil lifeline. tYet top
miljlary hands warn it not only
is c rippled by interservice
rivalry but could never be a
match for the Soviet Juuemaut
across the Jranian border. Its
Marine commander> Gen. J>.X.
Kelly, had admitted in claasified
testimony that the Rapid
Deployment Force would be no
more than a "trip wire" against.
the Soviets. The contingency
plan calls tor a nuclear strike to
slop the Soviets from annibilat·
ing the rorce.
-According to Kelly's secret
testimony, the force might be
used to seize oil fields, "most
likely in Iran." Yet the Defense
Intelligence Agency. bas warned
that any U.S. military operation
against Iran wouJd likely trigger
Soviet intervention. The Joint
Chiefs have added their opinion,
also classiCied. that the Soviets
can now be ~peeled "to take
greater r isks to achieve their
goals."
-.
I. 42 :
PRICE P£R ~N
·.
l._5 2 ,
-Indeed, the Joint Chiefs
foresee "a period of particular
danger t.o American security in·
tereats in the early 1980s . . .
The pouiblllUea of a military
confrontation with the Soviet 1
Union will Increase stsnificantly •
in the first halt ol the decade."
WHAT ALSO worries the
Jolnt Chiefs la "the susceptibility ••
of U .S. allies and non-aligned ma.
Uons to yield to political intimida-
tion by the Soviet Union."
The oil caliphs in particular. 1
fearful of Soviet military power
and uncertain of U.S. protection,
might seek an accommodatbi
with the Kremlin.
I would add to this dark pie·
ture one other cloud. Throughout
the. oil crisis that certainly lies
ahead, the corporate oil giants
will be pullin g wires in
Was hington. They have dem·
onstraled their· ability in the
past to manipulate U.S. policy to
advance their own selfish ends.
Yet the oil companies have a
history in the Middle East or un·
reliability, crimina lity and
dubious loyalty.
DURING THE last Arab·
Israeli war in 1973, the chairmen
or Exxon, Texaco, Mobil and
Standard Oil of California dis·~ ·1
patched a secret, hand-delivered •
memo to Alexander Haig in the
White House. The memo warned
bluntly agains t inc r easing' •
military aid to Israel.
But the oil companies did 'not
stop at trying to influence U.S.
action ; they also furnis hed
Saudi Arabia with exact in·
formation about the amounts of
Saudi oil normally going to t.be
U.S. ar?ned forces and the pre-
cise steps necessary to choke orr
this supply.
When I learned about this, I
alerted the Senate Subcommit-
tee on Multinational Corpor a·
lions . J erom e Levinson, the
chie f counsel, checked into it
and reported back to a secret
session of the subcommittee :
''You can form your own judg-
ment as to the propriety of these
activities. but to us it reads as if
(the oil companies) are inslru·
ments of the Saudi Arabian gov-
ernment and carrying out Saudi
orders in terms or influencing
U.S. foreign policy ...
It's hard to keep up with national images
The runniest story I read this
week was about the U.S. press
officer in Ireland . He wrote a
letter to a friend about what it
was li ke in Ireland and his letter
got mixed in with his press
handouts by mistake, so the Irish,
newspapers got the letter and
printed it.
Our man in Dublin, Robin Ber-
rington, told his friend in the let·
t e r that
I r e l a n d i s
"pretty small
p o t atoes"
compared to
other Euro·
p e a n coun -
tries .
That just
isn 'l the kind
of statement
you wa n t
your press officer to make if you
sent him there in the first place
to maintain our friendships with
the Irish. He had a lot more to
say, too.
"THE tDGH COST or goods,
their unavailability, the dreary
landscapes, the constant strikes
and the long, dark and dlimp
winters combine to gnaw away
al one's enthusiasm for being
Art Hoppe
here." he wrote. "The hottest is·
sue seems to be whether Presi-
dent Reagan's ancestors really
came from Tipperary."
"I s ubmit," o ur man in
heland s aid , "that while Ireland
is a great place to visit , living a nd
work in~ here is something else.·'
' H the story was about Italy or
Israel or a lot of other countries.
I probably couldn't tell you I
think it's runny, but in the case
or Ireland, my name gives me
my license. You aren't going to
accuse me of beinJ? anti· Irish.
Fortunately for Mr. Ber·
rington, he sort or saved himself
with the Irish al the end or the
letter because he s aid, "What's
a m a zing is t hat the Iris h
manage to muddle through with
such good humor. pluck and in·
ventiveness."
I HOPE Mr. Be rr i ngton
doesn 'l get fi red or demoted in
our State Department over the
letter , because it isn't going to
do us any harm. It won't change
our minds about Ire land or
theirs about us. Our perceptions
of fo reign countries do change
but not for reasons like that.
The coun try Ameri cans have
'changed their _mind about most
is Japanese. We've had three im·
press1ons or the Japanese in my
lifetime.
When I was growing 4P before
World War II. J apan was the
place all the cheap. poorly-made
i mitations of so m ething we
m ade better here, came from .
We couldn't tell the J apanese
apart from the Chinese.
During and for a while after
World War II, we thought or the
J apanese as s neaky, double·
dealing Orientals whom we
wouldn't trust as far as we could
throw a Sumo wrestler.
NOW A THIRD image of the
Japanese dominates our im·
pression of them. We see them
as careful craftsmen. capable
businessmen and international
friends. I don't offhand recall
anything more amazing lo me in
international trade than the way
the J apanese have taken the pre·
cision, high-class camer a market
away from the Germans.
Another statement about a
foreign country that appeared
this week was Bruce Laingen's
memo from the e mbassy in
Tehran to Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance. and t here was
nothing funny about it. It was
written s ho rtly be fore the
t a k eo ve r o r the e mbassy.
Laingen was trying to explain the
Iranians to Vance.
"Perhaps the single dominant
aspect cor the Iranians) is an
overriding egois m ," Laingen
told Vance.
The Iranians have •·a bazaar
mentality." he said. By that, I
guess he meant that they'd cheat
you in a deal ii they got a chance
but they w e re always
ready to dicker and m ake a deaJ
the way they do when they're sell·
in~ rugs in the bazaar.
THE IRANIAN, he said,
"often ignores longer term in-
terests in favor ol immediately
obtainable advantages and coun·
tenances practices that are re·
garded as unethical" by normal
people around the world.
"One should not expect an Ira-
nian readily to perceive the ad·
vantages or a long-term rela·
tionship based on trust."
Laingen wrote that three
months before he was taken
prisoner. Not a ll our St ate
Department operatives are such
lovable bumblers as Robin Ber-
ringlon was in Ireland.
You can't keep a truly dedicated worrier doWn
Once upon a time, there was a
m a n named Huntley Tureen,
who was a big worrier. HunUey
was a big worrier because he
worried about a lot of big wor·
ries.
Huntley wun't always a big
worrier. He used to be, like most
of us, only a
little worrier
with a lot of
little worries.
He used to
worry about
problems like
bl• IOCb fall·
in1 down,
tbrlps in bis :
ficua1 1eWn1 druu at tbe
office party and seUlnt fire t.o
bla dllk. bllla, where be putt.be
claim check for bl1 re·IOled
11loea, ftndinl • Pattin8 ~. ftlln1 hll Form tCMO on time and
remem......_ to tell bis wife.
Hilda, that be loved her on Kay
2', the _. • .,..ry ol tbe day
they ftrat met at a Boston fern
rollerr\S*.
aVT 'l'BDI one monaina be read ID die paper Utat 1dendlt* •
now predict the proOigate burn·
ing or fossil fuels will increase
the earth's temperature to the
point where the polar ice caps.
will melt, the sea level will rise
20 feet and coastal communities
around the world will be inun·
dated -all within the next cen·
tury or two.
"Good grief, Hilda!" he cried
at the breakfast table. "Here
I 've been worried about little
things like the soaring price of
charcoal t}riquets when cities
from Boston to Bombay are go-
ing to be up to their second
stories in ice water."
"Yes. dear," said Hilda, as
any good wife would. "Don't put
so much salt on your egas."
ONCE HUNTLEY be1an. wor·
rying about · blg worries, little
worries no longer held any al·
lure. The nitbt t.be Ugbta went
out, Hilda asked If be bad ~d
the electric bill.
"How can you worry about tbe
electric blll," uJd HuDtlty,
Uchlinl a candle, "wben New
York f1ee1 a abortate ol ..._ million rowboat.I?''
To do-1111 part. be bt1an walk·
ing lo work, poundin1 on the
doors of cars stopped at in·
tersections and shouting at the
drivers: "Don't you know JOU're
contributing to the coUapee ol
the West AntarcUc ice abeet and
resultant climatic cbanc• that
will tum Central America into a
desert?"
TRIS, PLVS tbe fact that be
wore no shoes and hia socks fell
down, gave bim a reputaUoa u
an. eccentric. Nor did lt help
when be 1ot drunk at the olflce
party and set fire lo bil desk.
When he mentioned to bit boaa
as they waited on the sidewalk
for the engines to arrive that the
Quotes
.. Nobody bu ner done Wa
before, but we don't npeet aay
unusual emluloa." -lhrJ
A.-t' a 11, •pM•wom• tor
Florida Powel' 8Dd I.apt Co .•
wb.lcb wUJ ttok• tlM boUilll'9 of Ila
power pbmt at Pwt Svwll Ir
•ltb mariJuaaa .... ...._.
.. ••• bJ c--.. ...... ..
IOUtla Plorida. ••
earth could be struck at any mo-
ment by a meteorite as large as
the one that wiped out the din0ttaurs 80 million years ago, be
wufired.
Hilda left him after be re-
membered to tell her on May 2'
tbat ftuoreca.rboOI WOUid prob-
ably wipe out tbe bwnan race
by destro)'inl the cmllle layer
before anotbel' mapetic polar \.
reversal bolllud up all Ute com-"-
panes and no one COQ.ld find
their way bolne.
"But my blllest worry," be
told tbe Judie at bis trial for tu
evaalon, "la wbeUler to worry
that the aun wlll bum itaelf out
in nve billion yean ud fNese
us all to death or explode blto a
supernova and fry ua all to
death.'' -•
AT TIO: Daffodil DeU HaPP1
Farm. to .t.lcb Ute tudc• eom·
milted blm. tile cblef
DIYCldatril~ otter.cl a ...... .,..i. Of naaureHe. ..YOlll' •
w•ra. .. OYW, a--.,;• M nl4. ..w.·u ua can Of au ,...c:s·· ...... " .. ... ,... ............. .
··--·~of-?" .. ..
--·
NATION 'Wedfleld8y, February 4, 1811
Women bigger targets for depression
•¥11MAIMC..._,Pretl
Oeprts1loo '' not an ~Wll opportunity lllneaa.
T •o thirdl ol the 2 • million Americana who are
uff nna aevn symptoms ot Wt dl11blin1 all·
m t-nl and milUunt more wil.h mUd•r problems
are ~om~n
\\h..> •TIMI an11wtir reruaau a pui.lle. But acien-
o u say deptt11&on 1 grobably eiUHd by a mix of
baolo1y, PiYCholon an llfetllperiencH. \
. "£>-pr Alon probably ~ 't txill DY luelf,"
s a&d l>S> cbolo1ist Violel Franks ol the Carrier Clinic
&n Belle Meade, N J "It's lied up with feelln1s and
elf image and life s ituation."
ONE THEORY IS THAT DEP&E~ION may
have a • genetic component: Researchers studying
identical twins found there is an 88 percent
bkelihood lhat if one twin becomes depressed. in
time the other will loo. ll may be that some
mothers pass to their daughters a predisposition to
depression.
" ... Certain culturally tranamltted requirements
altfft women •very day, whether they know It or
not."
Delpite theories that a bouaewife's duties may
be deprea1ln1. there's no difference between
depreuion rata of working wives and housewives,
said Lenore Radloff of the National Institute of
Mental Health.
WHAT 18 WO•EN'S &OLE today? A study re-
leased by the President's Advisory Committee op
Women found 50 percent of Americans still think a
woman'• place ls in the home. Most also thought
(Second In a Hfte1)
doctors, lawyers and banken should be men,
while nurses and salespeople should be women.
One-third of the women surveyed thought they
could have done better in life if they'd been men, and one fourth said beinJ female bad kept them
from accomplishing what they wanted.
The litany of rules for femininity is familiar, but
experts say that even in these liberated times it still
applies:
Utrls aren't aggressive or competitive. Th~y
are warm and sympathetic. Girls ~ren 't fighters.
They are peacemakers. Something is basically
wrong with a girl if boys don't like her.
psychiatrist Carol Nadelson, is that "1irlJ really
are led by guilt a great deal. A girl ls held more
responsible than a boy if she violates certain
norms ... girls get pushed into seeing themselves
as accountable for everything.''
''If you set up a soeial psychology experiment
that can't be solved. women students always say
they couldn't solve· it because they're stupid. But
male students say they didn't have enough lime,
or it was unfair," said Ms. Franks.
SINCE MOST DEPRE~ION CAN be traced
lo some triggering event -a divorce, say, or a
disappointment -many experts believe the ten-
dency of women to b&al.'le themselves when life
goes awry is a k~y to theilJhigher depression rate.
At t he Uni versi t y of Pennsylvania,
psychologist Martin Seligman has identified an
"attributional style," or way of viewing events,
that is common to depression-prone people.
Healthy people blame a failure or disappoint-
ment on external things -like bad luck -and
they figure it's a temporary state, he said.
But Seligman foun~ that people who become
depr essed habituallb' blame themselves and
believe that this personal shortcoming will affect
everything they·lry to do.
Women in general are more likely to have the
depressive attributional style. he said.
DAILY PILOT
Another theory is that depression stems from
che mical changes in the brain. Another suspect is
hormones. Women experience wide hormonaJ
changes during chlld-bearin&.years, when they're
most vulnerable to depression.
Sixty-five percent of the center's depressed pa-
tients are women. and mostly they're depressed
about men, said psychologist Jeffrey Young.
"WOMEN ARE SOCIALIZED TO respond to
failure with helplessness, pllssivity. by giving up
and accepting it," said Seligman. "But men are
taught to ri ght. challen~e. endure."
Teaehing now
It may also be that
men mask depression
be tter than women.
T hree times more men
than women commit
suicide -perhaps part-
ly because men succeed
more o ft e n . Men
typically use deadly
weapo n s : wo m e n
typically use poisons or
drugs.
"mE WORST THING THEY CAN imag\ne is
being without a man," he said. ''They'll tolerate
' enormous amounts of unhappiness and misery to
avoid losing one ... Girls are taught that if a
woman isn't with a man, something is wrong with
her.''
It's not surprising, then. that one way to cure .
depression is to change the way its victims view
their world to reshape their thinking to avoid
depressing pitfalls .
Hamilton Jordan, former chief of staff in
the Carter White House, now serves as a
visiting faculty member at Atlanta's
Emory University . He believes Presi-
dent Reagan will inevitiibly move
toward the center of the political spec-
trum. Another ingred ient, said Lufts Uni vers ity NEXT Talktngyourwoyouto/depreu wn.
_Curtain
-Gloom
"Stud ies h a ve
found that tbe overt ex-
pression of depression
is less socially atcepla· of ble in men," Slid Dr.
Aaron Beck, chit! of the
Univers ity of Penn·
sylvania Center for Cognitive Therapy. ·•women
get a sympathetic reaction, but men get rejected"
whe n they act depressed.
THAT MAY EXPLAIN WHY MORE women
·seek professional help, but it doesn't account for
the fact that even among those who don't seek
help, experts have found that women display more
depression symptoms than men.
F inally it may be that it is simply more
depressing to be female.
Yale res ear c he r Myrna We issman and
psychiatrist Gerald Klerman. in a swdy often cit· 1 _ ed as a classic in the field, concluded that women ·s
:lives may 'be al the root of women's higher
:depression rate
That conclusion came after the two reviewed
:evidence fo s upport other theories to explain
§depression -biological, chemical. genetic -and
_found none had been scientifically ,roved.
: They concluded that "elements of the tradi·
:tional female role" may contribute lo women's
:higher depression rate .
: THEY NOTED, FOR INSTANCE, that "r!al
:Social discrimination " makes it difficult for ~women to achi eve, that women's jobs -in and out
:1>f the home lend to be lower status than men's,
:and that married men are less likely than single or
.:divorced men .lo become depressed. while this is
'Jlot \.tie ~ase for women.
"Many othe r experts believe a source of
;women's depression is the way women learn le
l hink. lo cope and to live.
: Ruth Greenberg of the Center for Cognitive
:fherapy says the high rate of female depression
has·· a lot to do with what women learn.··
' . "Women learn more 'shoulds' and if they can't
:deliver the payment may be depression," she said.
I Sears !
Titanic .
hunt to
resume
ST . JOHN 'S , Ne w-
foundland (AP) -Tex-
as oil millionaire Jack
Grimm says he will re·
s ume his search for the
Titanic on the Gra nd
Banks off the Ne w -
fo undland .coa st this
summer.
Grimm led an expedi·
lion last summer to find
the British liner that
w e nt d o wn o n h e r
maiden voyage in 1912
after hitting an iceberg.
The searc hers last
s ummer identified 14
promis in g target s ,
Grimm s aid . He
desc ribe d six as ex-
cellent.
Grimm said each loca-
tion will be scanned with
s on a r and a
magnetometer. U the
object turns out to be
magnetic, as a ship
would be, television·
cameras will be sent
down to try to identify it.
Scheme bared
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-A businessman con-
victed of operating an
advan c e fee loan
scheme which a federal
prosecutor called "very
popular in times of high
interest rates" has been
fined $13,000 and placed
on three years' proba-
tion.
For Valentines Day
WE'RE NOW SELLING
REF/NEMET PURE
GOLD
MEDALLIONS
999.9 -24K
FOR
HIM
WE ALSO HA VE
I Troy oz. 999.9
1 gram 54988
2.5 grams S 11244
S grans S 17988
14K GOLD
FRAME
INCLUDED
SILVER
SJt•• I troy oz.
FOR
·HER
STERUNG SILVER
FRAME I NCLUDED
Every medallion is accompanied by a serialized assay certificate.
Available at the precious metals purchasing booths
February 8th thru 14th only.
BUENA PARK LAGUNA lllLL8
ORANGE IOUTll OOAIT PLAZA
TORRANCI: WD'llONl'l&R BREA
I sears I Where America ahope
· , f« Value
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now. •• a
beau way
to pay taxes:. ·
". ,. . I . $ ,..... ' .......... . ...,. ... ,,.,. . ~ ·-·~----........ -~_ .. ·~·~-~·~~·;~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~::;::::::::::::::::::::::;:;;. ..... ": . -·'=">¢":':::!""· ----
Citizens Income Tax
Preparation SerVice •.
Why tax yourself again? ,
Citizens Income TaXPreparation Service coul d save you time. head-
aches and maybe hard-earned lax dollars as -well. "
Citizens offers qualified savers complete preparation of their 1980
Federal and California individual returns.
Your returns are thoroughly analyzed to maximize legal deduc-
tions. They're computer-checked to maxim ize accuracy. And
they're backed by year-round personnel availahl e any time you
might ever need them.
The cost of Citizens Income Tax Preparation Service to
our savings customers is surprisingly reasonable: fees and
discounts depend on the complexity of your returns and
your total Citizens deposits. Customers 62 years of age.
or older, receive an additional senior citi zens' di:;count.
Don't miss out on a beautiful way to pay your taxes.
CitizQns is sch~duling· private appointments now to
have returns prepart!d between January 26 and
March 31. 1981. So call or drop by while the best times
are still available.
Then let Citizens relieve
a taxing situation
for you. Beautifully.
• CITIZENS
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
So many
beautiful ways
to save.
NEWPORT BEACH: 3300 West Coast Highw.y near Newport Blvd., 631·9205 ••
'
i
I
DAtl V PILOT
~-=-=-.---
~------------------
-------------------
---------------.::.
•
· .
.....
Warning: The SUfgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health .
.....
I
,,
• • •• • =.~:
EasY GOingTasterM
Ultra LOW 11!-r . t .
C> , .. , "J . . "IYNOLOI TOeACCOCO
( .
DAILY PILOT
Warning. The S Th . urgeon G at Cigarette Smoking Is Deneral Has Determined !ngerous to Your Health .
. 20
ct.ASS A c1GARi:rrES
A
.1oos
·ngTaste ™
ow Tar ·
A •• CWl. v flltLOf
QUEENIE , ,
Child abuse
New sex law
stirs furor
SAN FRANCISCO I AP ) California doctors
and others say they are concerned about a new
state law that requires them to tell police about
the sexual activities or women patients under 18.
The law makes doctors who fail to report such
activities liable for criminal charges and jail sen-
tences.
The language is contained in a law designed to
revamp and clarify the state's child abuse law.
But the law removed language that left it to doc-
tors' discretion whether to report sexual activities
or women between 14 and 18.
The law took effect J an. 1.
IT WAS SPONSOR ED BY STATE Sen. Omer
Rains. D-Ventura. but an aide said the senator was
against the reporting provision.
"We are defin itely against this· provision, ..
said Bob Moore of the reporting requirement. "It
is innappropriate and ineffi cient.
"This (result) clearly was not the intent of the
law. The purpose was to clarify child.abuse report·
ing in California.·· he said, adding that the
language's inclusion came at the instigation of
Sen ate conservati ves.
"Compliance with the literal language could
result in teen-agers becoming reluctant to seek the
medical care they need ... the California Medi cal
Association said in a statement
The group represents 28.000 doctors .
THE LAW IS ALSO PRESENTING problems
fo r Planned Parenthood. which 1s trving to seek a
clarification. ·
David Alois, leg1slat1vc d~rector of Planned
Parenthood. said he heard of one woman running a
birth control clinic who collected the names of the
minors she saw.
"Periodically. s he'd call up the cops and s ay,
·Do you want them 7 • The cops said no.·· he said.
He said police offi cers he·s talked to are ignor-
ing the law.
"They just don't have the time to deal with it.
unless they feel 1t 's a real case of child' abuse and
not just a girl who's having sex with her
boyfriend ... he said
Moore and others said they had not heard of
any cases in which doctors reported their patients'
sexual act1v1tles and then had to deal with the
c ri minal.Justice system ,..
·--
Beeler,....,. e..i
DEAR PAT: When I tum on my car's beater, it
never really warms up. A car mechanic told me I
probably need a new thermostat. I've heard anyone
can check it. I'd rather save the money and do it
myself If you can tell me how it should be done. What
effect would it have on my car if I don't take care or
this problem?
H.T .. CorooadelMar
Tbe Automotive CooU.1 Sya&em lu<wte aaya
tbe thermoetat caa be clteckecl by remo'flal It from
the engtae and 1aapeadla1 It la a paa ol wa&er laeated ·
to tbe temperature apectrled oa tbe tbermostat Hu·
lag. TMI ls tbe &emperature at wlllelt &M u.e ... ostat
should begin openla1. A meeb'8Jc ff9ld et.eek tbe
coolant temperature wltlt a tempera&llre l••le ...
serted lato the radJa&or. Tllla a....W llo& ceet maclt,
and It sounds a lot leaa complicated.
A defective t•ermoatat cu cane a •amber of
problems, sucb aa tlte enllae wearta1 •t Utree
tlmesasfaat num.ta1 at IZ5deireea FU.ult woald at
a normal 180 desrees. Fuel couamp&lem may la·
crease by aa much as It percent wlaell u.e enstae
te mperature drops by that amoe111t ud wHn &em·
perature drops &o I IZ, fuel consumptloll lacreuea by
20percent.
Slllpme11t flew
DEAR PAT: I mailed a $12.98 check Nov. 13 to
Instant Improvement Inc. for a book called "In·
ternal Exercises," by Dr. Stephen Chang. The check
was cashed right away, but my two letters asking
where it is haven't been answered. Help!
H.T.C., Huntington Beach
A replacement book wUI be malled to yoa. A YS
bas bad many complalats about vartoaa boob
published by tbls firm. Some lavolvecl delivery
problems, but most were dluatlsfactloD wltb tbe
books' con&ents. In these uses, tbe books were re-
turned for refund under tbe firm's gaarantee, bat
refunds were not issued wltbl.n a reasonable time.
The ''Internal Exercises" volume also ls belag
advertised by Personal ReaUzatlon Inc.
Sotlle rlotlabag flecl11rdW.
DEAR PAT: Are work clothes and uniforms
deductible on tax returns? I've beard that it de-
pends on what type or uniform is involved.
R.H., Fountain Valley
Getler.Uy, tbe coat alld m ... &elluce of won
cloU1lag la a peno11al espeue ud Mt declu&tble.
However, lf ycMar oeupatloa la ..e wlllelt req.trea
special apparel or eqalpmemt. las aaya ce.t a8d
m alateaaace are dedac&lble oa Seltedale A,
l&embed Dedaeliou, 11 It la Mt ada,Uble &e
general wear.
Some examples of deductible work clot.bes ex-
penses include the cost or special apparel and
equipment required in occupations such as ball
players, fi remen , police officers and nurses. In ad-
dition. any protective clothing or uniforms with the
company's name would qualify.
1t'llere'• par• ~tltecl't
DEAR PAT: Somewhere along the Southern
California coast there's a mobile home park which
excludes auU>mobiles, and allows only bicycles.
The owner bas a Scandinavian name. bu\ I don't
have any more information. Have you or your
readers ever heard of this park? I'd like to
find its location. ·
J .A .. San Clemente
A YS ltas aever lleard of I.Illa moblle Mme
park, aacl aeltlter ltu &lie Goldea State
Mobllelllo'me Owners 'League Inc. If any of our
readers can help, you'll be contacted.
Choose your own money plan!
DIY-IN/DAY-01J'I' ll'i'ERESI'
oa C:llecldag lccoaats
,,,, .. ,,.~,
l,IJllll""""'"'' Ull y1111r 111111v 1111l1111ti••
,,,,.,,,,.,
1111110 lfJ
lltolhl
fr!11111fol
No monthly charge
11 your balance I•
t 7tK> or morel
Nominal fee ot
$3 ptr month If
your b1l1nc1 la
No minimum
for those 62
and over!
l 1trn l11t9r""'
Al llHJ r1tln
ot GW""I
lower!
or TIME-PLAN llrtDFSi' •• 30-..a. ... 6--111 Cdllale lcco+"8
Call UI for Ihle ..... 'a ltlflt refell
·Penalty for Nrly withdrawal on term accountl.
'! -. -/ ( -l ~1, :,/////(/ /t ,/( -:11 ~,th r/.'f'/) I
\__ --·-· -
Ml.80AIRANCH
IOO het lalbol B~ llllH, CA ... 1 (114) 171-3101
Addltlon11 offlcee In
Lagun18Hch ... 494·754, • LeQuMHlllt .... 511-5'00 • a.tmontShore .. (213)..._..2,
S.n Clemente ... 482·1'95 • L•~• Elllnore ... 17 .. 2191 • Murri.ti ............... 177·5832
Ulgune Nlguel ••• 49&-1201 • Olive/Orange .•• IN 1400 • Bailboe lel1nd.,, ••••••• 175-3212 • GltnA¥On ...... 111-011'
.
WE ·HONOR
YOUR CREDll •••
GREAT PLACE TO SHOP • ~ AD PRICES PREVAIL:
WEDNESDAY . fEBRUARY 4th THRU SATURDAY. FIBRUARY 7th
COMPARE E>it.:;;JJ PRICES WITH
NAnONAL
BRAND PRICES &
&.ca~ ..,,, J·r r:t
!U••\tllll4Mf
SAVE BB'
VITAMIN C
ORANGE Fl.AYORED
250 "''·
250 ;."". 3. 4
SAVE&O'
HIGH POTENCY
8-COMPLEX
WfTM FOUC AaD & IRON
100 TAMJlS 1. 7 9
SPECIAL!
SUPER 8 with
C-800
(ltCCUl.Alt) ltCC. 5.29
(with lltON) ltCC. 5.49
10 TlmLT~ 3.99
SAVE70'
VITAMIN 8-12
100 mcc.
1oor:lm 1.69
SAVE 60'
VITAMIN 8-1
100 me.
IOOTAIITTS 1.89
SPECIAL!
VITAMIN E-
ltCC. 3.99
400 l.U.
lOO's
ltCC. 6.95
1,000 l.U.
60's
3.29 4.99
~-:!tf:i:J) BEST of NATURE
SAVE t .00 SAVE t .tO SAVE78'
8-COMPLEX VITAMIN C LECITHIN
WfTM YfT AMIN C 8EST? IW\TORf wmt ROSE HIPS CAPSULES
EOJ.j.,j SOOm1. 19Grain
IOOTAUTS Vlt•C 100Tla£TS IOOCAPSULU
2.99 "'th Row Hips 2.79 2.89
BAUER& BUCK ATHLETIC
SUPPORTERS
CLASSIC TOPSY TIPS
.. _
ADULT
Mllltlllt•
NAIL TIPS
SUPPOITEl4 99 Lenglhen one or
11111 s..t. all ten last
& easy
YOUTH ew • 5 99 SUPPOlnlt -~ "'3.35 • IOIGf 24
ADULT SIU
CUP su"°':J13
'
PMKE-DAVIS THROAT DISCS
Ettectivefor soothlno
temporary rtlltt ol
minor 1hroat
irritations.
l •
..
,
Ne..-• 4,. ..........
Former Secretary of
Defen s e Har o ld
Brown will join the
John s H o pk i n s
University School of
Advanced Inte rna -
tional Studies a s a
visiting professor in
national security af ·
fairs. He will tea ch
through May.
Liquid
• nutrient
backed
NEW ORLEANS (AP>
Federal approval or a
high ·c alori e liquid
nutrient should mean an
end to w~ighl Joss for
hospital patients who
have not been able to get
enough calories from in-
travenous reeding, ac-
cording to a spokesm an
for I!. drug m anufac-
turer.
Food and Drug Ad·
ministration approval of
the solution, IntraLipid,
will be announced in
next week's issue or the
Federal Register, said
Ronald De Vore or Cutter
Lab ora t o ri e s o f
Be rkeley, which will
market it.
UP TO NOW, in-
travenous solutions fed
into an arm vein could
provide fewer than 1,000
calo ries a day, Me l
S n y d e r , a C utt e r
spokes man, said at a
m e et i n g o f th e
American Societ y for
Parenteral and Enteral
Nutrition.
That was not enough
to keep most patients at
their usual weight, he
said.
.. What the doctor and
patient basica lly pray
for is that the patient
wil l get well quick
enough to begin eating
before he depletes the
blood proteins whic h
protect him against in·
fection," Snyder said .
THE ONLY WAY a
doctor could ens ure a
full calorie count was to
insert a reeding tube
just outside the heart, he
said. But that left pa·
tients open to the risk of
infection.
.. The e nd o f th i s
catheter is lying just
outside the heart. and
any infection will be im·
mediately t ransmitted
to the valves of the hea rt
and could be fa ta l,"
Snyder said.
With the newly ap-
proved solution, he sa id,
patients can take in up
to 2,500 calories through
a vein in the arm, a nd
m ore t h rou g h th e
catheter.
Spanish
class set
Conv ersatio n a l
Spanish wiJJ be offered
daily with the exception
of Sundays, during
spring semester classes
at Orange Coasl college
in Costa Mesa.
Be1inning a nd ad-
vanced courses will be
offered at various times
throughout the day.
Relbtration lnforma-
tlon may be obtained by
calllq 556-5772.
Wedneedey, February 4, 1981 .()AIL v PILOT .4 I I
·Reagan calls. himself an 'inveterate reader'
WAHHJNOTON <AP> Ronald
Ru~an ont't durrlbed himaell u
an • invtt ral('I reader" and lilted
amon1 tu fa,orite bookJ "Kini
Arthur,'' "fi'rank lhrrlwell at
Valt '' and !Waar Rice Bu"'°"*bl'
'raaraan 1toriff.
A urn I ller Crom Rea1an ls a
prl1• exh bit •l this we•k '• con·
venUua ol the American Ubrary
AH OC'htllon
all my llle." tbe futare pre1ldent
wrote. "My klea ol tortu_re would
~ lo rlnd rny1ell ovtmipt in a
room with notbln1 to read."
The aetter wu in reapoue to the
Moblle, Ala., Public Ubrary'a sur-
vey ukinc 100 ramopa people to
name five boob that influenced
them .
Tarzan lalee, he listed the novels
of HoraUo Alier, J ames Fenimore
Cooper and Mark Twain.
Of special pleasure to the 4,000
librarians here for four days of
shoptalk and s tock·taking was
Reagan's rond memory: ''At least
twice a week in Dixon, Ill., begin-
ning at the age or 10, J wouJd hike
down to t he library for books."
Libraries are having t roublPs in
some places these days con-
tending with budget squee1es in
impoverished big cities a nd in
states like Re agan's Cah(orn1u
where Propos ition 13 has cul off
money, and contending with self·
appointed censors ever~ where
libra ries havt> ancreased from a
rate of three to fi ve 'a week before
• last Novt-mb<'r 's t>le<'tion -when
conservallves demonsl rated their
political mu'\ctr to a rate of
three to fi ve u day now.
Conser vatives nr·en 't the only
ones at 1t reports J udith Krug, the
a:.:.ocaalaon'i. censor watcher.
Feminists, too. are trying to purge
hbrJry ~ht:hc:. ol materials they
consider sex1:.l "l 'v ~an inveterate reader
Rea1an didn't atop at five.
Besides "Kin& Arthur.'' "Frank
Merrlwell at Yale" .and the
The librarians a re pleased to
have a friend in high places,
The association's Office for In
tellectual Freedom reports that,
nationally , atte mpts to censor
SPECIAL! SAVE38 ~
••11111
HOT COCOA -EDGE
.VICIWI
TYLENOL
TmE'TS
Assorted Fl~ors
IOI Of 12 0¥0.0PIS
1100 REBATE*
1.CUP MELITTA, Electric
COFFEEMAKER
Compacl and Portable
SM••ND 15.95
-CISl lllR 3 00 •un•-1 • . ... I ;~•!:n 12.95
·•1•-ll&11M•-~1 .. ,. .... _,, .. IEJl1,
SPECIAL!
OIL OF OlAY
Y9UTlt r• YOUI SUI
Protects tile skin
a9a111s1 wrrnkle
dryness
4.69 .... •
SAVE t .29
SUPER PLENAMINS EXTRA STRENGTH
..... ,....,,
.... .. s .........
6.66 100 + 30 TUUTS
SAVE 1 2.00
MEN'S
$llOl'T Sil(Vl
SPECIAL!
MEMOREX
60-MIN.
For quallly
sound
, .. .,,4.99
SPECIAL I
Rl'gular SlrF-ngll•
7 u. Sill lOO's
\ Moster Card I •
The ALPINE MOUNTAIN
STONE~RE Lav·A-WayPlan.
( t. ... ,,. hon• 4 f'w-.tut1f1., fldll'"'',..
AD PRICES PREVAIL
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4th THRU SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7th
ONLY 12 DAYS LEFT
To Complete your Saver Books and Purchase
the Completer Pieces
lllOllUJOR ~CfAlS
VODKA
• NOCW
Count Yasya & g g
1.75 LT. • "'" 0 1110 Ends S1111dJy Febtu;;ry 15th
Foster Creek B g g STIWGNT IOURllOH
WHISK•Y IOPIOOF
COMET Cookware ---1.75 LT. ' • 9" ROUND
CAKE PAN
Mac Kinnon' s IWIDlD g 2 g SCOTCH
Seamless dnd easy 89" 10 clear> \I
IO NOOf 1.75 LT. •
. Canadian Reserve g 29 WHISKY
"«»PROOF 1. 75 LT. •
SAVE•1.&4
GAYISCON
ANTACID
For relief ol heara
burn acrd
.... ""' t11d•oes11on ~:TAIU1S4o49
================ SAVE&Oe
CORICIDIN .. D"
DEC,..OUTMfT
~~~-·~:?! Cold. Srnus and tiii ·,I ,.,,., .. ---...:_:....._::_::_24.J..~ i49
SAVE 2oe ....
D.ME & PEANUT -No Preservatives Added
SPECIAL!
SURE
ANTI PCRSP111AHT
& OCOOORAHl
As,u'1~d forrr· ·•as
-, ~
6oi.SIZE~•
SAVES4c
VASELINE
''Intensive Care ''
LOTION "'° For beau11lul ,..,.,,_.
look1n9 hands H"'"' e : ... -•
SAVE 5 1.10
RAYE
HAJR SPIAY
So llu rble vou can
even comb through
11
ASS'T. MUGS
"STMWAll"
Choose from many
styles and colors
I, II & 11 •· SIZU
-1•1 ....... ,....
NMlllll -c. "Dr .. .......
BREAD
LOAF PAN
~=::, ~ ,;~ 11 in!! ·119
STANDARD SIZE •
SPECIAL!
NEW! "EXTRA ST1UNGTH"
SHIELD ~. 1~ ~~::ORANT \~\"'\)
3.S" BAR 3 i age
SAVE 81 c
ENGLISH LEATHER
DEODORANT
STICK
For lr>n9 1as1mc;
p101rc11on
...... ... .. 1.19 2.75 oz. SIZE
SAVE so~
Wll·HOLD
SHOE BOX
Crystal·clear p1as1rc w11n '
assorted color lids
ULTRA BRITE
TOOTHPASTt
• 7.8 01. TUBE
S AVE 9 4 .0 0
OS f£R lO·Sf'l::H>
BLENDER
SAVE •S.3 4
SUNBEAM
"Air Pumper"
CORN
PO PPER .~~ :,-.. :
""' 27.95 ~
; ·j; , . ' , ..
b
SA
~~~l't:i
HAND
1 MIXER
I ~· · • . t 'b -
1~,
•H~ 12.95 ~~,
S PECIAL!
Q-TIPS
COTTO,., SWASS
BOX 79c or i10
SAVE eac
ALKA-
SELTZER
( ''r·ve< • · r
P, •e1• '•A '
SAVE30e
M & • llMS "Suck Size"
CANDY BARS
. I
..
Al• DM.V IJl'tt.Of
.
. Authorities baffled
by victim Of amnesia • •"O RT I.A OF.ROAi.•~. 1'1• IAV ' n.me for female unknowns, ahe llvea
The polite )'ounai woman In the H • ward ot the hoapltal.
South ti0t1da Shatt' flo-pltal uya ahe ''Thia 111 • ruclnatlna c.ae. A
•ondf'ni., muC'h aa anyone t l1e who beautiful c1&8t1 for •detective 8lory,"
be wu twfore St!ptt'mlHlr, when 1t said Dr. CHu Ht1rna ndei. e
park r11n1u found ht!r nakl'd and p1ycttl1&lrlsl who evulu1alod her.
fnth)',too wu ktoNy forhelp "Who broll1i1 ht her there ?"
Jantt ~. as he now I known . lltirnu11dti1 filfkt•d ''Whal was so
U) ht' doe n t know how h.i aot to truumalk to twr t hut she doesn 't
Barch Stall• P1trk ht-rt-, or why 11he even remembtl•'. or won't talk about
wa tomarlatf'd. drhydrated. rovertid tt" Wus s he uttu('kt•d '! Abused ?
with dirt and near death when 11hc Abundonccl '!"
Ye u di t't>vt-rt'd · ·vt 19 Dol'lor~ bttlh.wu J Mnc Doe'1 prob·
• ht' lso U)'i ht' wonder11 who an<,! lcm i:i "c·otwtirslon r e1tl'lion," a
"'berto b r famal and friends ian• und insythologlcnl 1>ht.4nomc•no11 In which
"'b the haven't v1s1ted her u lruumn or breM kdown Is converted
•• 0 ONt.: HAS i.tupv ·d I.I> to :wt•
me, he saJd in an 1ntervltl'4 "I feel
forgotten I Kuen hrt• wurki. uut thut
Into a phyi.lt·11I •ilml•nt such as am·
ncsau or blinllnl'M•
"SO Ttn: t-•:KSON Is rnure com-
fl)rtublc, but ht• nrny he less fl1nc-
t lon 11l. whld 1 1:. u very bizarre
thlnw." !'l111d l'l'Y<'h1utrast Dr J esse
t\ '" 1•. "h11 nwl'ti. with Ms Doe duily.
wa •
Ranger EhJah Hro"" s uul thul
"ht>n he found her. the woman, "lw
appt>ars to be about 30. wui. rllth) 111111
s urrounded by flies In u . mall 1'11•111
ing in the underbrush Sht• wu:. ul'1111t
50 yards from a pavllwn fr(-c111t•11h•1I
by park v1s1tors.
"lkn"' 11 lully who tnl'rely wulks
11l1111w nnll "IY"· 'I don 't know my 11.:1" I ilo11't k1111" 1f I huvt• any fumi-
h I JllNt 111111·1 k1111w · So she doesn't
'"" 1• 111 111•111 with 1t II 1s u protection
··~~1111:.t sl'lf 1111x11·t~'. .. Kaye said .
Her legs were covered "1th :.iwt•:-
brought on by weeks of l'Kp11~111 t'
Fou r white. plastic· c·ups luy 1w:ir
her. There was nothing elsl• T lw wo1111111. who introduces herself
ms J um· n ot•. I:. 1>0lik ant.I articulate
but 1s tlc•salbt.'d us a loner al the
hosplt ul. She is about 5 fcl't ~ inches
tall .
She was hospitalized and re(.'l)\ll'rccl
her health, but her me mory aoc•s
back only to September.
ATTEMPTS TO ESTABLISH her
i d e nt it y t h r oug h n ationwid e
fin gerprint chet'ks we re fruitless.
a net now. bE'ari n~ customa ry
"I guess if I'm meant to have a
family and friends. they'll find me."
s he said. "And if I don't have
a nyone. I'd like to know that. too ..
·WINS FELLOWSHIP
Olene Wells
Grant
received
Hun tington Be a c h
s pecial e du c a t ion
teacher Diane Wells or
Newport Beach has been
awa rded a Rotary Club
fellows hip t o study al
Universit y College or
Swansea in Wales .
Ms. Wells. a resource
s pecialist with the Hunl-
i n g t o n Beac h C ity
C e le m entary> School
District, is a gr aduat_e or
UC Santa Barbara. Her
fellowship is sponsored
by the Sant a Barbar a
Rotary Club.
NEW11U.4L
REJECTED
V~ALIA CAP> -Try-
ing a n Ivanhoe m a n
again on a charge of try·
ing t o murd e r his
estranged wife would be
double jeopardy because
'he was convicted of a
lesser offense in his first
trial, a judge ruled.
Tom Swallow original-
ly was charged with at-
t e mpted murde r o f
Karen Swallow, who
headed Tulare County's·
battered wom e n 's
s helter when she was
shot in the face Dec. 6,
1979.
A Superior Court jury
found Swallow guilty or
assault with a deadly
weapon, but that convic-
tion was thrown o ut
later .because a juror
conducted his own gun
tests.
State senators
01old policy unit
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Ol IM Dallr "llet JtMt
Re publicans John Schmitz of Newport Beach
a nd John Briggs of Fullerton are among six con-
servativt> stale senators -s upporters of Sen. H. L.
Richardson, R-Arcadia -who have formed a new
campaign group.
·'Whal we are trying to do is lo gel som e
t hings done -policy m atters, put together is·
s ues." said Richardson. "We figure a Republican
study group is the best way to do it."
The study group will try to raise $500,000 lo
help elect a Republican majority in the state
Senate in 1982. said its chairman, Sen. Ollie
Speraw. R-Long Beach. The Dem ocrats have a
23-17 edge in the stale Senate.
As ked why the group is needed in addition to
the Senate Re publican caucus. which also ra ises
cam paign funds, Speraw said : ··Som e or us just
have concerns t hat not enough was going to be
done."
Speraw s aid Steven Bailey. president of
Starburst Communications. has been hired as ex·
ecutive director.
The six senators in the group are Richardson.
Speraw. Briggs, Sch m itz. J o hn Doolittle o f
Sacramento and Dan. O 'Keefe of Cupertino. Each
contributed SS,000 to get the organization started.
Speraw said.
* * * FORMER ASSEMBL VMAN Dennis Mangers
has been a ppointed lo the Ta hoe Regional Plan-
ning Agency by the slate Senate 's Rules Commit-
tee.
Mangers. 40. a Huntington Beach Democrat,
r epresented wes tern Orange County in the As-
sembly four years before his defeat last November
by Republican Nolan Frizzelle.
His appointment to the expanded two-state
board is for an indefinite term at the pleasure of
the Rules Committee. Congress last year approved
a n agreement between California and Nevada to
expand the board from 10 to 14 members and lo
cha nge its voling procedures to make it more dif·
fi cult to win approval for new real estate develop·
men ts. . *. A~EMBLYWOMAN MARIAN Bergeson has
proposed a constitutional amendment that pro-
bably won't make her popular with colleagues in
the Legislature.
Her ACA 17 would prohibit compensation fo r
legislators between June 30 (the slate budget
deadline) and passage of the budget bill.
Doubtless her proposal would s peed the
legislative process.
* * * MRS. BERGESON also has introduced :
-AJR 10 which would ask federal permission
to satisfy 'minority voting rights requirements by
informing vote t s that election materials in
languages other than English would be a vailable
upon request.
-AB 264 which would include victims of sex-
ual assault in assistance progra ms for victims of
crime.
-AB 265 which would prohibit a mentally dis·
ordered sex offender convicted or a felony sex of-
fense from being placed on out-patient care or pro-
bation.
':\. * * * StATE SENATOR Schmitz has introduced SB
154 which would require an unmarried minor seek-
ing abortion to provide written parental consent,
or a Superior Court order saying she is sufficiently
mature and informed to make a decis ion. or that it
would be in her best interests.
for Best Quality and'
Selection of Handmade rugs
from China. Persia. India &
Romania at reasonable prices.
24111. c.... ""'· {11•) 1?1·2ftf'
•' C-dallllr
Mae Weit
lecture
1ubject ...
Actress Mae West will
be tbe subject of a talk
by South Laguna author
Leland F. Cooley in a
pro1ram sponsored by
the UC Irvine Friends or
the Library Feb. 10.
Tbe program, open to
the public, will be held
at the home or Nellie
Ansley Reeves, 1210 S.
Bayfront, Balboa Island,
at 11 a.m.
A salad luncheon will
follow the talk.
Reservations may be
made by calling 833-5300
by Thursday.
Pay 'insult'
-----
----
Judge
Mason L. Fenton
Municipal Couf't (Retired)
Superior Court (Retired)
Attorney at Law
Announces his retirement from
the Superior Court to re-enter ~
the private practice of law at: ~
Pine Plaza Professional Building ~
744 E. Chapman Ave. •Orange, Ca. 92666 •
NO CHARGE FOR
INITIAL CONSULTATION
714/771, 5 640
...............
'JANE DOE' CAN'T RECALL PAST LIFE
C•M 'dHalc paychologlc81 tr•um•'
MADERA CAP> -A
Sierra Judicial District
judge will be paid a.
s alary o f $14 ,000,
a It hough a Madera ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ County supervisor ob-Ii
Following the City's
ori ginal pla n, Irvine is
grow ing into a bal-
anced community.
Reside ntial and recrea-
tional areas are being
located conve niently
close to employment
centers. So mo re time
ca n be spent enjoying
a home and less s pe nt
getting there.
It's another example
of Irvine's continued
growth toward the
goal of becoming an
energy-efficient, eco-
nomically balanced
ject.s to the pay as "in·
suiting."
city. Growth guided by
two important factors.
The City's farsighted,
living G eneral Plan.
And .concerned resi-
d ents from the commu-
nity, City government
and The Irvine Com-
pa ny w ho work to-
gether to make it ·
na ppen .
We may not always
see eye-to-eye on
every d e tail , but the
result has been, and
will continue to be, a
city that gets be tter to
live in every day.
Goodp .....
lets you work
•
While enjoying the
close proximity of
places to live, work
and play, Irvine re-
side nts also benefit
from the solid tax base
generated by light in-
dus trial and commer-
cial development. For
informa ti on on this
growing new city,
please visit or call
The Irvine Company
Info rma!,!on Center.
Culve r Drive exit off
San Diego Fwy. (I-405).
To corner of 6arranca.
(714) 551-1500.
-.. -,. -, ,. ........ -..... -. ....... -. ·-.
·~
. . .
I . ( .
I
I I
I I
I
t l
•
\
w.dneeday, Febtuwy 4, 1981
..
CELEBRATES ·VALENTINES DAV
The Winged Cupid
... Our most popular Volentfnes Doy act.
Dolly Parton
Need we soy more
. OFFICE HOURS
Monday-Friday
8:30AM-6PM ·
Saturday 10 AM -2 PM ...
ALSO: Tap Dancing Hearts, GQrtllas, Bumblebees, Steve Mar-
tin, Belly Dancers, .The World's Largest Non-Marching March-
ing Band, PhoneGrams and Morel
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, AND TO.
PLACE YOUR ORDER-CALL
Rosanne RosannaDonna
A comedy roost lhot 1o1111 bong tean to vovr eves
•
Our Singing &. Dancing Meuenger
Will sweep vou off your feet
..
DELIVERY
· HOURS
Everyday from
9AM-11 P~
. Anywhere In Orange
County & Long Beach
.
WE ACCEPT ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS AND IN THE SPIRIT OF FIGHTING INFIATION, CASHI · J
, AND IF YOUR SWEETHEART IS IN RIVERSIDE/SAN BERNARDINO CALL 714/788-16.40.
f
-----~-~---.---+~· ~~--·
Ii ..
I
.............
Beaten bog cmalorted
Cos tumed clowns at Illinois Masonic Hospital in Chicago present
balloons to Stevie Lynch, 18, who was beaten and robbed of two
dollars by unknown assailants. Parents of Stevie, who had Down's
syndrome, say they need to find an eyewitness to the assault.
Teachers get bonus
for bright students
SEILING, Okla. (AP) -Teachers
he re get more than a s hiny apple and
a sense of satisfaction from en·
couraging students to learn. They get
up to $1,000.
An experimenta l bonus plan offers
rewards to teachers whose students
s ho w above -a verage progress on
before-and-after standardized tests.
The program was started here a
year ago as an alternative to grant·
ing teachers across-the-board raises.
Superintendent Gerald Daugherty
said that with the help of federal
funds, the state Board of Education
and cons ultants from the University
of Okl a hom a and Central St a te
University. tests were devised as
yardsticks to measure the students'
progress.
The board's goal in starting the
bonus program was to stop a 10-year
decline_ in the test scores or gradual·
ing seniors. he said.
liberately do poorly on the test as re·
venge against an unpopular teacher.
he said.
Students are tested early in the fall
and again in m id-April. Their scores
are fed into a com puter and the re·
s uits dete rmine t he reward the
teachers receive.
If the average progress of all the
students in an elementary school is
above the norm in reading. then all
teachers get a $500 bonus. Individual
elementary school teachers are en-
titled to additional $250 bonuses for
improvement in test scores by in-
dividual classes in math and reading.
Secondary school teachers are
eligible for $300 bonuses for the prog-
ress students make in reading and
$140 bonuses for classes in which stu·
dents progress beyond the norm in
other subjects.
The maximum bonus total for all
te achers is Sl .000
Although the school board paid out
approximately $40,000 in bonuses the
nrst year as test results or all stu· Steer axers he ld?
d e nts s h o we d improve ment ,
Daugherty said it is too soon to know
whether the success can be attribut-
ed to the incentive progra m .
Ma king that determination difficult
is the realization that some classes
may have brighter students than
others. and some students might de-
GREEN TOWNSHIP. N.J . (AP)
Two Sussex County teen-agers have
been accused of ax and knife attacks
on two Black Angus steers. One of
the $1.600 anim als was so injured it
had to be slaughtered . authorities
s aid.
Mental illness
prog_ra01 slated
Families or mental health patients are invited
to attend a program designed by the UC Irvine
Medical Center to help them understand mental illness.
Sessio ns be gin today in room 851 of
the mental health racility, building 2, at J he
medical center in Orange. Parking tickets wiJY be
validated for all those attending wbo park in the
visitor parking area.
The weekly sessions are open and free of
charge to families of current and former rhentaJ
health patients.
Information concerning the program is availa·
ble through the medical center's Department of
Psychiatry, 634·5801.
Kidnappers sentenced
PEKING (AP) -Five men have been sen-
tenced to prison for kidlfll>ping and selling 115
peasant women into fol"Ced marriages. China's
leading newspaper reported.
The People 's Daily said the women were kid·
na pped from Guangzi Province and sold as brides
in Guangdong Province for the equivalent of $133
to $333 each.
The paper said the men lured the women into
the deal by posing as matchmakers and promising
to find them good husbands.
1981 CARS I
andTRUCKS •
ALL MAKES!
833-0555
Ask For Ray,
LEASE Srt:CIAUST at
HOWARD Chevrolet Cot-. 01 Dow..,., 0..... Sii
NEWPORT BEA'CH
To klll lri ees
Two ·face charges
of hiring 'hit man'
CHARLOTTE, Mich. <AP> -A
doctor and his farmhand allegedly
tried to arrange a package d~al to
have their wives killed -by a "hit
man" who Jumed out to be a police
officer. One man was motivated by
money, the other by hate. s tate police
said.
"They did some real stupid things.
They didn't realize they were talking
to a policeman ," said Detective Lt.
John Fiedler , who posed as a gun for
hire . "They did all the right things if
they were talking to a killer ."
Fiedler saJd Guild had a $L2S,OOO
life ins uraoc'e policy on his wife
which he wrongly believed would pay
double ln the event of her death.
"The suggestion was made that she
might be shot in a house burglary, or
run over hy a car ," he said.
Fiedler added he originally agreed
to a $5,000 fee for Mrs. Guild, but
raised the price when he learned the
job would involve travel.
THE PAIR WE R E arrested
without incident Friday after Fiedler
met Guild for the first time and ac·
cepted $135 "up front."
··He seem ed a ver y likable ,
ch aris m atic individ ua l." added
NATION
After 33 years of
quality service, we ore proud
to announce the opening of our modem
new shipyard.
To acquaint you with our new facility~
we will retain'
1980 yard prices.
thru the end of ~ebruary:
LARSON SHIPYARD
2703 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach
17 I 4J 54a.l641'
Fiedler said Tuesday be agreed to
a $15,000 payment for the doctor's
wife and was still dickering over the
second contract, but expected it to be
about a $.1,000 job.
ARRAIGNED ON three counts
each were Dr. Robert Arthur Guild,
46. an os'teopath who worked as an
a n esthesiologist a t a Lansing
hospitaJ , and Gera ld Lynn McKenzie,
43, of Lansing, a handyman who
police said worked on occasion at
Guild's farm in Mason.
Fiedler. 45, and a 16-year veteran of --------------------
Fiedler said McKenzie also faces a
felony fraud charge in volving rental
property a nd that a warrant had
been issued for McKenzie's arrest on
that charge in December in Lansing.
Guild is charged with conspiracy to
murder his estranged wife, Susan
Mae Guild of Alabama, inducing
someone to murder, and possession of
a firearm during a felony.
McKENZIE FACES the COO·
s piracy and inducement charges in·
volving Mrs. Guild, and a count of at·
tempting to i~uce the murder of his
wife. Judy McKenzie of Lansing.
The conspiracy and inducement
cha rges carry maximum penalties of
life in prison.
Fiedler said the state police in·
tclligence unit learned through an in·
formant that McKenzie was trying to
hire a killer on Guild's behalf.
Fiedler said he met McKenzie at a
Lansing-area motel Jan. 26 and was
asked at that time to kill Mrs .
McKenzie as well.
"IN m E DOCTOR'S case, there
was a dj vorce pending and he ap-
pa rently felt his wife was not deserv-
ing of any property,'· Fiedler said.
··Hate permeates the McKenzie mat·
ter. lie even ga ve me the gun to kill
her ."
Bay area park
adds acreage
OAKLAND (AP> -Hikers will be
able to walk along the east San
Francisco Bay ridge for 2S miles
from Richmond to Castro Valley due
to the newly approved purchase of
two pieces of land.
T he Eas t Bay Re gional P a rk
District approved the acquisitions.
Wildcat Canyon Regional Park will
be expanded by 162 acres at a cost of
m ore than $1.6 million under the
plan. •
the state police.
In 1975. Fied ler said, he was
"hired" for S500 by a woman m Erie,
Mich .. who wanted her boyfriend
killed.
The woman eventually pleaded
guilty to a reduced charge, he said
Orange Coast
students make
Dean's list
Thirty-seven undergraduate
students from the Orange Coast
area maintained a 3.S average
last quarter a t UC Santa
Ba rbara, earning themselves
positions on the Dean's List
Making the list from Costa
Mesa are Judith Cameron. San-
dr a Daniels. Glen Florey, Nancy
I ssacs. Judy Pascoe a nd
Richard Pascoe.
Fountain Valley students Mil-
ly Allen and Todd Dean aJso
made the grade.
Huntington Beac h students
named to the list a re Laur a
Cad r a , Gail Enfield , Garrett
Essres, James Glasgow, Melissa
Hankin, Kathleen Mccourt and
Davis Mertz.
Diane Howard and Patricia
Turne r , both fro m Laguna
Bea ch, made the list .
Those from Newport Beach
who were named to the list are
James Baldwin. Ma ry Becket.
Julie Bonnett, Thomas Brock.
Kri sten Casper s, Deborah
Fle ische r , Cyn t hia Fulton .
Katherine lsberg, J ulie Lewis.
Lynn Loeb, Beth Newbro. Stella
Shirar, Maria Wallis, Nancy
Weiss. Constance Wiener and
Donna Yamaguchi.
Neal Harris of South Laguna
a nd Catherine Mussachia.
Shelley Penner and Beck Lee
Wilks. all of San Clemente. also
m ade the Dean's List at UC San·
ta Barbara.
Wehandcut
Our fish
fillets
everY.daY-
... dip them in batter made fresh
every hour and s erve them '¥ith
plenty of golden fryes.
Fish & Fryes
52.49
1961 us
CWng<john 8i}ver~.
SEAFOOD HOPPES
3095 H•rbor Blvd.-COata Meaa
Just South of the Sen Diego FrHwey
AeroH From Fedco
Orl'lf'• T nr-u SforY•C• Av••l•b~
Quantities and assortments are limited, so hurry in!
We sC'll fi rst q uality and dist·ont11111t•tl
merch an dise frnm Sl•ars Hl'la1 I and
Catalog L>istrihution.
"\\'as''.pril't•s q uolt'd ;11't• lht• rl'gu l:ir p r11·1·:-. :i i \\ h1 C'h I h 1·
1tt•ms \\'t•n· forrnt•rl.\ offt•n·d h~ (';it alng nr 111 111;111~
S<.•a rs Ht•l;lil storl':-. ;1ro11nd thl' t·1111 n lr~
LITTLE GIRLS'
3 PIECE SETS ·
were 19"
NOW
•1111
·-·
was 16799
NOW
s12999
Eflect1ve 2'4181
CHILDREN 'S
SLUE JEANS
NOW s311
14" ELECTRIC
CHAIN SAW
was 8499
NOW s5599
MEN'S WESTERN DISCO ROLLER SKATES
STYLE JACKETS
NOW
s15aa
BOYS' HOODED
SETS
were 15"
NOW s9 99
--CAST ALUMINUM
COOKWARE was 6999 ~·fJ··eNow ~~S2999
--~'=
STOR t: IHlllll.'\
"'"' • rl., t .:111 t • ~ ....... ,. , . .,. .. .
~ ........ 11·•s.•
was 5899
NOW
s17aa
i\!Jl ...... s.-., .. tl"f'dtt ,. .....
,.,. . ..,..,
CBS new s man I
Walter Cronkite will
make bis farewell 'ap·
pe ara n ce as
anchorman on the
ne twork 's evening
news show on Fri·
day. He has anchored
the n ews at CBS
since April 1962.
Memory
• seminar
atOCC
•'Memory Techni·
ques ," an annual
seminar on memory
training mettiods, will
return to Orange Coast
College in Costa Mesa
on Saturday.
Arthur Bornstein will
instruct students on
techniques and methods
of association systems
which establish rapid re·
call patterns.
• The seminar fee is $45.
•Tickets can be
pu'rchased at the OCC
• ticket office in the cam·
pus Administration
Building through Friday
1 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m . j J and 6 to 7 p.m. ,
The seminar will be
• held in the campus Fine
Arts Hall 116, from 9.
a.m. until 4 p.m.
Tickets, if available,
: can be purchased at the
door.
·Whale
• cruises
:forming
Saddleback College in ,
Mission Viejo wi ll
s po n sor two whale·
watch cruises on the col·
lege's sailing vessel
..................................... It ................... .. = ....................... .., ............................ ,. ...... ..., ...
................ ..., ...................... lb~· ..... _.c.. ·= ...................................... c--. .. -... .............................
LYSILK
FLOWERS
SPECIAL PllCE 1 0 0 2 YOUI FOR CHOICE
DOWNY
fAlllC
somN11 .llG.1'' 2.29
lteoli1tlcolly detoiled polyallk flower•
lend o touch of spring to ony home.
Choose Rotes, Cornollons, & morel
•
WILHOlD
STACKING
SHOl IOXES llG.119
1 .69 EA.
Super orgonl:rerl
long·losting.
GLAD 3-PLY
TRASH BAGS
IEG. 2'' 4.29
.................... 11.
R ENTIRE STOCI OF
"Sea Mentor " Feb. 28 ~~, ..
and March 7.
Registration for the
all·day events is being
held at Saddle back's
m ain campus, 28000
Marguerite Parkway,
Mission Viejo, in Build· lllll-
ing A. ,,,.-~---
Signups are also being
taken at the Irvine cam·
pus at 5500 Irvine Center
Drive in Building 100.
Th e cost is $65 pe r·
person.
The boat will depart at
9 a.m. from the Orange
County Youth Dock at
Da n a Point Harbor .
: Lunch will be served on
board. For information,
L'llEAL
PllflllKI llA .. COLOI
~;2s•
.....................
call 831-4646 or 559-1313. >--~--~.--------11111!11---
,..s•·s
IAIYllMPOO ....... I.It • ·
...... a ... ...., ....
nm
OllOSI
llllTUCIJ
IOUllON
2!1.
4.lt
750ml.
4?1. S.tt
750ml.
CANADIAN
WNISIJ
4U Pita
750ml.
~~''·'~
DUNCAN
SINCLAIR -SCOYCll-J
8!1.
11.Jt
l.7Sltr.
IUSl'm
MUI .• OlllMal
=·II!. a:. ...
,. c.
* DAILY PILOT A I•
MEN'S
T-SHIRTS , PACIOfa•• 3 IEG. FOR 6.39
Your choice of Crew or V·N9ck .
100% coHon. Sl1e1 S thru XL.
MEN'S
BRIEFS PACIOF341 3 IEG.
FOR 4.99
Super fit ot o super price I 100%
cotton brleft in 1lze1 28 thru 42.
MEN'S
''COURTLEY''
DRESSSOCIS
~~:,99c
PAii
~g·fitting Orlon/Nylon °' 100% Nylon tod.s ore
·textured for comfort.
Choice of populor colon.
MOBIL Oil . ~~:1 69c
ltWJ.t..rt.
MOllL1 = 3!1. One Ouort. I.ff
s••·s CWl·GIOWDa
=Jlc
,. I
I
.......... , ... UllV •• "''
\ .
•
/• ,.
',' ' I
I
. . .
· ! Now the MERIT idea has been introduced at only 4 mg tar-
New MERIT Ultra Lights. A milder MERIT for those who prefer
an ultra low tar cigfl,rette. _ ·
: · . New MERIT Ultra Lights. It's going to set a whole new taste ·
standard for ultra low tar smoking
1
'I •
I ,
I •
. '
" l
. Only
4mgtar
Regular&
Menthol
1119 "1•:' 0.4 mg nicotine av. per ci ... ne by FTC Method
•
Werning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
. Thlt Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
·-'I
Roger Car"on
W•DN•SDAY, FRI. 4, 1•1
BUSINESS
STOCKS
86
88
J
LA Southwest put a dent
in Golden West's plans
f o~ a basket ball title . . . 83.
. ~p ·coaching: it's a revolving doo~
For IO ,..,. U..N lau bMa a Mady
aad .._u., problem wltllla lal1la
act.ooa lddetiea -10m• HJ tM key Ml
bMD tM -11iD1 ol PropoUtioa 11. or decreu~ enrollm•Dl, Of laereued
earollmlllt, or too mucla ,,....... aa tbe
coacla or too muy walk-oe eoeeMI.
you to el&ber keep up wltb the Jones' or
pack up and move out, too many are,
ud bave been, daUlt just tbat.
there'• always someone ready to try it.,.
but few la•t long in the revolvin1
doonolcoa~bing.
aa the Barona' bead coach, says: for boys cooaiata of 70 percent walk-on
coaches. On the 1irl1' staff are two
teacben and 18 walk-ona. Quality eoaeMI, one by one, have
been droppinc from the rub limply
beeaue you caa't expect a penoa to
take ..,,000 a 1ear for day-t.Hlay dutiel
at 1cllool, U.. accept $1,000 for double
duty durtnc tbe aeuoa, and peonies for
slx·to-eiabt months of extra duty.
Football alone requires weiabt·liftine,
pusinl leagues, flag football, football
cluaea and otber assorted items, out of
aeaaoa.
"Cheat.en will proaper and kids who
normally don't 1et to play .durtn1 the
regular aeaaoo do play during the sum-
mer". Costa Mesa? Estancia? Huntiqtoa
Beach? Any school with any sort ol
time erodin1 the staff bu the aame
problem.
TMre ii validity la eacb paUat, and
othen, but there ia alao a tMafD-GUt fac-
lcw Utat sbould be couidered, and will
be under scrutiny March 11 at the cu·
1eneral council meetina.
Tbe rub is tbat when they tou in the
towel, a vacancy la the teacbina staff is
not create4. The ex-coach is still a
teacher. The replacement enten u a
waUt--00 coach unless the school can
come up with some sort of ju11Un1,
whicli is usually very difficult.
Buketball summer league participa-
. lion is a requirement by many if you
want to play in the wi.nter. So it goes,
name the sport, and chances are it's be-
iDI overdone, not by choice, but by
circumstance.
· Cheating -t.b.ia was the basic issue
when the CIF Southern Section decided
some 15 yean ago to forsake most
restrictions. It waa just too bard to en-
force the rules and guarantee everyone
a fair.shake.
In the past 20 years the avera1e
length of service for a vanity baall:et·
ball coach is four years in "th.la Oranie
Coast area. That's 75 coaches for 15
schools in 20 years. Marines 1et better
distance out of recruits. Al it 1t&Ddl now, reatrictlom are
few aad far between re1ardinl tbe limit.I one can do to prepare an atliletlc team or individual.
But on the other band, take a look
around.
And because of it, with everyone
handcuffed to a system which requires
To be sure, there are some bonuses to
the present system . Athletes are more
proficient, teams are stronger. And as
Fountain Valley basketball coach Dave
Brown, who bas been around since 1970
Laguna Beach, the smallest 2-A
school in Orange County, has enough
former coaches on its staff to take over
any school's program.
Usually it takes that muc.h time just
to pull yourself up to the level of com·
petition. ·
A recent s urvey throughout the CIF
<See CARLSON, Pa&e 83) Actually, tbat's what is expected and Newport Harbor High's coaching staff
A pirouette to saf etg
UC Irvine's Mark Morrison glides around the out-
stretched arms and glove of Chapman's Frank Martinez
at third bas e. Action was part of the opening game of the
collegiate baseball season for both teams with a second
game at Hart Park this afternoon. UCI won, 3·2. See story on page 83. · ·
In Toronto
Ferragamo gets·
the run-around
HAMILTON, Ontario ~AP) -
Vince Ferragamo says he's
comingtoTorontototalk contract
with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of
the Canadian Football League.
But Ticats owner Harold
Ballard, whose club owns lheCFL
negotiating rights to Ferragamo,
HYS he won't be around to see the
Los Angeles Rams· quarterback,
who became a free agent Sunday
and can negotiate with any team
1 National Football League team
he pleases.
BAUARD WILL be on the road
with the Toronto Maple Leafs of
the National Hockey League,
another team be owns. He won't
be back until Feb. 13, at which
time, presumably. the 26-year-old
Ferragamo will be back in Los
Angeles.
"I was going to meet .with
Ferra1amo and bis agent next
week in Los Angeles during the
NHL all-star break, but they
called me and said they would be
in Toronto for a banquet and
wanted to meet me," Ballard
said. "Since I can't meet with
them, l'JJ have somebody else t.al.k
totbem."
Ballard said Ticats Vice
President Ralph Sazio would be
the logical one, but he's on ,
vacation. And head Coach Frank
Kush is in Arizona testifying in a
lawsuit brought against him by a
former Arizona State football
player.
THAT LEAVES Joe Zuger,
Tlcat director of player
personnel. who said he doubts
he'll be talking lo Ferragamo or
his agent, Bob Fishof.
·'They are coming to Toronto to
get a connecting flitht to Thunder
Bay for a banquet Wednesday
night," Zuger said. "They'll be
back in Toronto Thursday night,
but I don't know if I'll be seeing
tbemornot.
"From what I have been told,
they're not going to be talking
contract or anythin1. Any
neeotiatioos reearding contract
or money would be done la the
presence of Sazio. As far u I
know, they're just stopping off to
aeewhatCanadaislite."
McD011ald _ not timid anyIDore
Ferrqamo earned $52,000 with
the Rama laataeaaon and luaid to
be loolrlne for in excess of $250,000
a year. However, ne1otiatioos1
with Don Klosterman, tbe Rams'
general manager, have not eone
well and Ferragamo said be is
serious about quitting the NFL for
the CFL and that bis discussions
with the Ticats are not merely a
bargaining plov.
All-star game
for .collegians
being sought UCI freshman overcomes nervous beginning
By JOHN SEVANO OI t• o.lly ,., ... ,._..
To a freshman. particularly an athlete,
entering college can be comparable to ex-
periencing Disneyland for the first time. A
person becomes wide-eyed. amazed and
intimidated by his surroundings, not·really
knowing what to expect.
UC Irvine's Ben McDonald knows that
feeling. He's been there. As a.freshman on
UCl's baske tba ll team he was often
bewildered, at the beginning. as to what was around him.
{l showed on the court, too. Many times
early in the season be would pass up a shot
for fear he was making the wrong move.
Not anymore, though.
Now, McDonald is playing with the
same confidence that made him the City
Player of the Year in Long Beach in
1979-80. As a matter of fact, his develop-
ment and maturity bas reached such a
level, Coach Bill Mulligan says, "he's one of
three guys carry int ua right now.'•
"I even hesitated to start him at the
beginning because I didn't want to put any
pressure on him," added Mulligan. "But
he's really come out of bis shell."
McDonald, initially, was wrongly mis-
taken for being shy during his first few
days on the Irvine campus. Assistant
coach Bob Schermerhorn enjoys telling
about e.arly meetings between the two
VCI REPORI'
where all be could get was one-word
answers out of the Long Beach Poly High
graduate.
McDonald claims he wasn't timid ... just quiet.
"I was cautious at the beginning," ad-
mitted McDonald, "but now I feel just like
the rest of the juniors on the team.
· ."At fint, I didn't really know if I could
help the team or not. Now I know I could
have done it all alon1."
M~nala is belpin1 to the tune of
ll.S pointa and 5.4 rebounds per game. lo
PCAA play, the numbers are even more
impressive-13.3 'and 6.3.
If there is any nervousness left in
McDonald it certainly doesn't show-on or
off the court. In fact, he's almost looked
upon as one of the team leaders despite his
freshman status.
"I like to consider myself one of the
leaders because we don't really have too
many players willing to lead," says the
soft-spoken McDonald. "Whether they ac-
cept the fact I'm a freshman trying to lead
them is something else. I think a lot of
them do.''
McDonald did a lot of leading during his
two varsity seasons at Long Beach Poly.
In both years the Jackrabbits advanced to
the CIF finals only to lose to Ve~bum Dei
and Inglewood. respectively.
"My coach bad a lot of restrl~tions on
what you could do there," explained the
6·8, 212-pounder who averaged 14.8 points
and nine reboun~ as a senior. "Mulligan
just lets you do your thing." .
By doing his thing McDonald feels his
<See UCI, Pa1e BZ>
BEN McDONALD
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Sao
Diego Stadium Authority is
considering an offer by Olympia
Brewing Co. to sponsor a college
all-star football game with
players to be picked from a
national pool.
Bob Sundmacber, Olympia's
vice president for public affain,
described it Tuesday as "an
exciting new concept to all-star
games."
The so-called Olympia Gold
Game proposed for next Jan. 16
would be played on the weekend
• between the National Football
L e a g u e ' s c o n f e r e n c e'
champions'1ips and the NFL
Super Bowl. Coaches would be
p~ked from pro ranks and the
players alllDed geo1raphlcally,
with pro. teams. each side in
effect representin1 the relioos
of the two NFL conferences.
Caponi_: she .gets better with age
•
$1 million in career earning• ;,, her top priority thil year
BJ llOWA&D L. BANDY -0. • ..., .........
Wbm abe 1ta.rted OD tbe LPG.A. loll
tour la ta, Doua Capcmt can nt·
member ~ ID Lu er.., New
Mesleo wbwe tben ..... Glab Dine
bolea and the playen Ud to tWalt • to 1
JO mlautel bet•._ nlw to JlaJ tbeir
1econd l'Cllmld. • .
"ID tbe lat Hv•~r yean, tlalDp ... nall7 c ... ... t'
Caponi 1ald receat11 ,r •iaitlD1
MHa Vmle C= Clab ID Coate ........................ teU..••·---~·--.... . v.-
..... •par•tlaM baa ••ea•• •
TOl•ed m 11a•1r-. ow ...... Md ...... .,__.. ........... . ,.. .....
''Tbtll ..... 'Ill Mesa V.erde ii fabulous
and U.111'19.U lo.e it. You c•tell bJ the
'"at....,_.. wbo lbow up to plQ ill tbe
tounwDlllt Jmt how much the llrla Uke
_II
u. ...... , ii a dlftleult CCMne1Mitla'1. ......
''Thia area needl a lood aolf .._...
meat and it bu pro..S I wD tlle
Pllerllldallllaftbffnbln ... IMt two ,.an. ~ '
"I tlllM tM .... •1••91 W. ._.
aNUllMIMliteltwellaft•tlll ....
ltwoaldlledlftlelllttellk*•-'* -........ ,,.., .,. ,. --~·
/.. ber father and .. lODI u be WU allwe,
he WU tbe only inatruetor lbe bad. "I
could call blm • tM pbODe Md a;plala
what .. bappe'•I ud lie ...W WI me rilbt away wbat to do to C!GITlet uu...··-.. ,..
"11j ...... alao 'j! ......... tlUul I ..,_ off the _,.. a. ................................
llf I eeramica. I •110 •• •••• 1 ----ftlld1tM119· ..... · . -=-==~·' =-~
I ain't 1onna flpt,
I'm a promoter-All ,,.. ........ ..
Maw~ elua•p6aa Mn to partldpa&e la ta1kl NIW voaK .......... AU. tlM \lane-Um• •
aimed et aa¥Ut• a Peb. II boxlq lhow at llaclllon
SquaN 0.,...., aakl T\aelday: "I ain't tonn• Raia,. I doa't need fl•bU..,." Ali INMSly beaten by World Bo.alnt Council cbamplon
Larry Ho.met lalt (kt. 2, repon.dly wu beaded for • ft1bt
wltb .,... .. eltamplon Jolm L. Gardner.
"l"M "'aat wu to have be9 promoted by 11'-lhammad All Prof•.._al Spona, wbleb allo wu to bave co-promoted the
major card lD Uae Garden Feb. 21. Haroad Smith board cJWrman ol llAPS, and All were
auppoeed to have been lD Puerto Rico lb.is week to apply for a
Ucenae after lbe »-year-old Ali bad been unable to obtain a
liceue iD Honolulu.
But tbe whereabouts of Smith is unknown and Monday he
and some other principals in MAPS were amon1 the defen-
dants named in a $21.3 million fraud suit filed by the Wells
Far10 Banlt. "It (another fight) was just sometbinc I bad in myself
... to come back," said Ali. "All I'm going to do now is pro-
mote and lecture.
"I'm going to be a promoter ... the greatest." .
Al a brief news conference Tuesday. Ali was asked 1f he
had retired, and he replied: "I'm going to stay out of the
ring. I haven't retired."
' . fl-I• •I llw ti•• -----,
Al Davia, owner of the Oakland Raiders, on bis long
running feud with NFL Commissioner Pete lteaelle: "If
Rlebard Nb• had had Pete Renelle's public relations
staff. be still would be President."
••••IN'• 3• ,,. •• ,. ~ ··-···
•-11.-e poured in 38 points, including ·m six crucial points in overtime, to lead Houston to a
135-128 victory over Denver in a National Bas.ket-
ball Association game Tuesday nigbl. "llH
Lea.ell pumped in a career-high 24 points for the Rockets
... llOly Kal&lit scored 24 points and Jamea E•wanls added
18, leading Indiana to a 108-99 win over Milwaukee to snap a
16-game bomecourt Buck winning streak ... San Antonio's
Paal Grtlfta intercepted a Detroit pass and
hit a layup with 2S seconds to play to'ltey
the Spurs lo a 102-99 win over the Pistons
. . . Pldl Ford scored 30 points and Scott
Wedmaa 29 as Kansas City rallied from a
poor first quarter to defeat Dallas, 121-100
. . . J.Uu Erving scored 26 points and
Bobby Jo.es added 21 as Philadelphia de-
f ealed Atlanta, 97-93 ... BW Cartwrt1llt
scored a season-high 33 points, including
20 in the second half. to lead New York to
a 101-98 win over San Diego ... BWy llay
MALOHE Bates scored seven of his 24 points in over-
time lo pace Portland to a 111-104 win over Washington ...
The Seattle SuperSonics have placed veteran backup center
Dennis Awtrey on the injured list because of a bad back
. . . Phoenix assistant coach Al Blanclal says be bas been
fined $650 for his actions during the Suns' loss to Boston. Dec.
30 . . . The New Jersey Nets are interested in trading power
forward Maarice Lacas lo Seattle for guard Gu WUllama
. . . Forward llermard IUa1 bas been named NBA player of
the month for January.
T10e ... 11n .,.,t! ••••••9'•• • ,,.
BrilUant goallending by the Washington duo of ~
of Mike Palmateer and rookie Dave Parro allowed ,
the Capitals to tie the Vancouver Canuclts, 3-~. in
the National Hockey League Tuesday nagbt
. . . Doug Rlsebrougb scored twice and Pierre Mondou
added another goal as Montreal snapped a 2-2 tie~ the ~ird
period and beat Colorado, 5-2 . . : Rls~ SUtanea nfied m ~n
unassisted goal with 8:38 left, climaxt~g a two-goal ~ally 10
the fin al p e riod as Edmonton tied St. Louis, 3-3
. . . Defenseman Reed Larson fired in a pair of goals, his
21st and 22nd of the season as Detroit dropped Toronto, 5-3. . T....,• eeae• MeK• _.,erw•I .. l••I•
Tampa Bay Coacti Jolln McKay has been un-•
dergoing tests for several days in a Tampa
hospital a team spokesman said. No other details
were released but McKay's wife Corky says the
tests had been planned for quite some time . . . Jockey
Jorie Velaaqaea, who last week rode his 4,oooth winner, suf-
fered a broken collarbone in a spill in the fifth race al
Gulfstream ... Mission Viejo Nadadorea swimmen Brtu
Goodell and Jesse Vassallo were ,named swimmen of the
year in their events by Swimming Wo.rld Maguine . . . Erle
Brewe leads the Pugel Sound men's buketball team in aeor-
ing this season with a 17 .9 average as a M senior forward.
His wife, l Kelly, a 5-8 sophomore guard, leads the women's
team in scoring with a 16.7 average ... ABC Sport.a bas re-
ached agreement with the U.S. Olympic Committee to
televise the American Olympic Trials for the 1984 winter am
summer games along with the 1981-83 National Sports
Festivals. . . . Virginia reserve forward Terry Ga&ft hit a
foul shot with six seconds left in overtime as the No. I-ranked
Cavaliers escaped with an 80-79 win over 11th-ranked North
Carolina. •
FollowinQ are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings
are: / I 1 I excellent; / 1 1 worth watching; 1 1 fair; 1 forget tt. I
[-) I p.m., Chennel I ./ ./ ./ ./
NIA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Indiana.
Announcers: Chick Hearn and Keith Erickson.
The Lakers hope to continue their surve to get In front of the ·
Phoenix Suns with a victory at Indiana tonight. Only 3'h games
behind, the Lakers will rely on Kareem Abdul-Jabber and
Jamaal Wiikes to get them past the Pacers who defMted
Miiwaukee Tuesday night. Biiiy Knight and James Edwards
paced the lnc:Uana scoring.
OTHER TELEVISION
Basketball -La Salle vs. Notre Dame, Midnight, Chan~
22. I RADIO
Basketball -Lakers at lndlMll, 6 D.m .• KLAC (570).
I
UCI •••
,.... .............. to take tbe
....... 11•1 ..... otblrwiM
.... objeetift .. to •• tbe ball to
Kerill 11 ..... tM uticm'1 lead-lDC ICGIW, MU' tbe basket.
"I try to .. It lato ...... u
mueh M poulble blca11te ev901
Umt WI do bl ... IDI to put the
ball In the buket," says
McDonald, who 11 phy1lcally
1tructured alOftl tbe Hme Unea
u Jamaal wut... "And 1 a1ao
tty to keep the team calmed
down, if I can. becauae we have
a tendency to tum it over too
much.
"Of course, I 'm alw1ys think-
tn1 •bout rebounding. Coach
Mulli1an .ls always reminding
me to IO to the boards, and go
hard."
Playing bard is almost
aynonomou.s with McDonald. He
really doesn't know bow t.o play
any other way. Thal isn't to say
be wun'l in awe of his situation
al the outset.
"Al ftnl I let It get to me."
said McDonald. "I said to
myself, 'This is college. It's sup-
posed to be so much better.'
Now It seems like high school.
Now when I face teams it's just
Uke they're another team; that
they 're all not great.
"I feel like I can do anything
now. I feel ~ure of myself.
Before. I used lo wonder
whether I should lake a jump
shot or not. A,-id by the lime I de·
cided I'd have to ,pass it. Now I
just take it."
And not only does be take it,
he usually makes it-or at leaat
SO percent of them, which usual-
ly helps open the middle for
Magee to go lo work.
"I don't think there's any doubt
he could be a pro some day,"
says Mulligan. "'He can shoot,
he can run. he's 6·8 and he's in·
telligent."
''All I can try to do is the best
I can , tha t 's it,'· explains
McDonald. "I feel a lot better
,now that I know I can do the
job."
USC, Japan
play a~ UCI
Defending NCAA volleyball
champion USC and a Japanese
all-star team go head-to-head
tonight in an exh i bition
volleyball match at UC Irvine's
Crawford Hall (7:30).
The Japanese college all-
stars. on a five-game tour of the
U.S., annually compete with
NCAA teams and hold the series
edce with ll wins in 18 matches.
But the all-stars should have
their hands full tonight with the
Trojans. USC boasts three re-
turning starters from last year's
team which finished with a 22-6
record and defeated UCLA in
the NCAA finals.
Pacing the Trojan attack is
two-lime All-American middle
blocker Tim Hovland.
The Japanese team opened the
five-game series Tuesday night
against Pepperdlne. Japan then
travels lo Santa Barbar• for a
Friday night match with UC
Santa Barbara's Gauchos.
On Saturday, UCLA, which re-
corded fow-victories last year.
all in Japan, hosts the all-stars
at Pauley Pavilion.
The tour winds up in Hawaii
Feb. 9.
The Rainbows feature former
Golden West College standout
Dan Moorhouse.
I
Real Islaii~rs ioo much·~ • .
King•' rooki,e 60alie bombardeil
UNIONDALE, N.Y. <AP> -Denla PotYtn
knew it wu Ume for the real Denla Potvia to abow
up on tbe ice. IJWe did the AU-Star defememan
know that that wu exactly what hil teammMea
were tbink1nl about themselves.
The real lllandera, the Stanley Cup champion
lalanden, took the ice Tueeday ni1ht and de-
moliabed the Loe Aneeles Kines. their cl09est
pur1uen in the overall National Hockey IAague
standinp, 8-1.
"I realize this team needs a strong
performance from Denis,'' said Potvin. "I still feel
I can control a 1ame and that's what I have to do
to help the team. A lot of limes I'm not spectacular
but I know my teammates appreciate my contribu-tions."
POTVIN'S CONTBIBUftONS Tuesday in-
cluded lbe game -winning goal and two assists. His
first-period goal was on a 35-foot wrist shot that
clanged off the post and behind Kings rookie
goaltender Paul Pageau, who was makinf his
NHL debut. That power-p,ay tally was one o four
for New York with a man advantace -the Islan-
ders have the league's best power play.
"We had let ourselves slip a bit," added Pot-
vin, who will start on defense for the Campbell
Conference in the NHL All -star game next week.
"But it didn't do much damage. Here comes a
team like Los Angeles, three points behind us fnd
we know we have to turn it on and the intensity is
there."
Eitbt different lalanden -Potvia, Butell Gor-'
in&, Stefan Peraaoa, Steve TambtWnl, AadWI
Kallur and Wayne Merrick -leond IOall acalut
Pa1eau, wbo played for U.. Canadian Olympic
team at Lake Placid lut winter.
"YOU HAVE TO STAST somewhere," 1aid
. tbe 21-year-old netmlnde.r. "I wu very aenoua at
the be,umin1" -Nystrom ecored Juat 2:CM lato
the contest -"but I wu OK Iller the lint period.
If it had been 0--0 at the end ot the lint period, it
would have been OK."
.
Playoff tickets on sale
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Tickets for the NCAA
first and second-round basketball playoff 1ames,
scheduled for Thursday. March 12 and Saturday.
March 14 at UCLA 's Pauley Pavilion, will go on
sale Thursday.
UCLA's sports information office announced
T_uesday that the tickets will be available begin-
01ng at 9 a.m. at the school's central ticket office,
as well as all Ticketron and Mutual Agency out-
lets.
The tickets are priced at $10 per day and must
be purchased for both days at a total cost of $20.
Each daily session will feature two games with
Thursday's winners facing two other schools on
Saturday. The participating teams will be an-
nounced on March 8.
tare s tone \!)
TALIN TIE TIREMAN
COSTA MESA
c.,..,. of
H.._.11¥4.&Wl"-
Acrou.,_ ,..., .• u • ., .. ,c ......
PHONE 631-0712 9UALITY SERVICE ••• FAST
PRICES IN THIS AO 0000 THAU SAT .• FEB. 7th
HOUIS: MOM. THeU RI. 7:JO AW TO I PM
SAT. 7:JO AW TO l PM
Our 16tlaed rnec:Nnic:a _. C89t-
9f, cwnber a toe-In to «19'"•
1pec:lbtlons.
All Am.rlun cer1 e•cept ChevettM and compact• with front.
wtleet drive II~ t.tac:Pher1on tu8')enllon Parts eat•• If needed ... no addltlonal Ctlarge for feclory lllr or torllort bar.
ENGINE ares tone
TUNE-UP MAINTENANCE-FREE
' 38 BATTERIES
Group $36 22F ' . he~
Most 4 Cyl. Cars with Electronic : =:: =-......... $,3gnitions-Fore19o· •• ·~·!!
• s.I Tillllle I•• • 1111 11nerr a aw .... 5¥•-· ...,. e -..Ct ..... Ola~Clf,,CV UIS •Cen ...... ~ ..... VIM. _....... C..... II/ii ,_ ... .,. blll-5-II/ii C.......... t.n 511111..,
CllMCISI v.oc '""· ,..., c:--.... ~-f On Cars Without Elec1r'>nie IQnthons. In edcMion IO ·~·1
-n ta•tll PM11t~Nn GsrMMnp -
AH Ot"9r S.1 .... (1d1.
f •r• • ron• 48
BATTERIES
Groupe 21 . s49
22F. 55 a 12 he•.
All 0t"9r Sii .. -~ICfl.
BRAKE OVERHAUL
l·WIEEL
FlllT lllC
~~
We lnetlll front IHlll• PHJ, new front
... Ind tlflh ......... , ... ~
,.. •• re1urf1t1 rotore, re,acti front ....... ~-'""*' IMltlr cyllndlr Ind .,, ... hoele. .... """" end edd
MW fMd. thin roed .... h cs.
4-WIEEL
llUl·TYPE
Moel AIMrlcen Cw• .
We'll ln1tall factory p~e-erced llninoa.
new front •••I• end return 1prln91/ combl. llllta, retluitd 811 four wtlMll cy-
linder• end rHurfece llrellle drum• I "4iw _,,... cyt. t 10 Hcil If needed), repeca ftCIM ..._. bNtlnOI. titeact 'YI· tem end ldd lluld end toed tell
e-~
I ,, •• ;, •• e~
Sie;
41? = ~ ' ~ , •... ~, ..... '
49 ~-·-·-1 ---..;,;;,;;_--#
Ya res tone
lll·IEA•I
SID Alie• Mr.1111 '·'-'·
P111/IOR13 1•·11 "' 11.•
P11Sl75R1S "'11·11 • a.• P11SllOR13 a.11·11 11 1.11
P111171A14 CR11·14 • a.11
==175R14 EIUl·14 • ••• /711'14 "'"·14 " ...
Pl11/75R14 G"11·14 • I.II
'221175"14 Hlft·14 • 1.11
P111/IOA11 111A·11 • 1.11
PIOl/75"11 • FR11·11 • 1.11
Pl11171A11 GA11·11 • 2.71
Pnl/71R11 HA11·11 " ••• Pnl/11R11 LA11·11 " S.11
o.11, ,.. ... ,._ .-, ~•trio O' 0-.11
Wedl"t1ad9y, Fabtuaty '· 1881 DAILY PILOT ••
OV faces big test/
Seahawks meet old rival Katella
By aOGEa CA&LSON
Ot .. 0.11, ...........
They have fallen on hard times, but Katella
High's Knights are still the team which stands in
the way of a potential Empire Lea.gue basketball
championship for Ocean View.
It's just that the ~ituation has taken a different
form.
Instead or a showdown for the title tonight
between 6·8 Wayne Carlander and his Ocean View
mgh teammates and the awaiting Knights of
Coach Tom Danley, it's strictly a matter of sur-
vival as each tries to stay within range or surprise
leader Cypress, which Is heavily favored to
become 5-0 against winless Loara tonight.
Still ranked No. 2 in Orange County despite
their No. 2 status in the Empire League with a 16-3
overall and 4-1 league mark, Coach Jim Harris'
Seahawks will be ti;ying to produce a second vic-
tory over the struggling Knights, who are 9-8 over-
all and 3-2 in league.
Carlander enters with a 32.7 scoring average
and rebounds at a rate of 18 per game. He has
help, too, with 6-9 J im Usevitch and 6-7 Eric
Fuchser in the front line.
Katella's offense revolves around 6·5 Dan
Wright and a pressur:e defense in what is normally
a pressure-packed scene in the Knights' gym.
Corona del Mar ( 12·4 and 3· 1 in Sea View
League) attempts to get back on the winning track
at University following its upset Joss to Costa Mesa
Friday -a verdict which has scrambled the race
for the title. and playoff berths.
Huntington Beach, despite a 12·5 overall rec-
ord. owns only a 1-3 leali?ue mark and is faced
with the prospect of meeting the 4·0 Barons, the
No. 1 ranked team in Orange County, at a scene
where Fountain Valley has compiled a 37-3 Sunset
League record in the past eight years
Edison and Marina square off in a key Sunset
League struggle, in addition to Fountain Valley's
entertainment or Huntington Beach.
Newport Harbor has already lost to one Sunset
·League team outside of Fountain Valley (Hunt-
ington Beach) and can ill-afford a third first-round
loss tonight at Westminster.
Tonight's scbechtle
Suaset Lugue (7:30>
Edison <2-2) at Marina (2·2)
Huntington Beach ( 1-3) at Fountain Valley (4·0)
Newport Harbor (2-2) al Westminster < 1·3)
Sea View League (7:30)
Corona del Mar (3· 1) at University (2·2)
Costa Mesa Cl-3) allrvine <2·2)
El Toro (1-3) at Estancia <3·1)
South Coast League (7 >
Mission Viejo (3·1) at Laguna Beach (2·2>
Dana Hills (0·4) al San Clemente (2·2)
Capistrano Valley (3·1) at Laguna Hills (2·2)
E mpire League (7)
Ocean View (4-l) at Katella (3-2)
Los Alamitos <2·3) at Kennedy 0 ·4>
Loara (0·5> at Cypress (5·0)
Angelus League (7:30)
CHAPMAN'S JOHNNY MADRID KNOCKS THE CAP OFF UCl'S MIKE NAGLE AT SECOND BASE.
St. Paul (0·3> at Bishop Amat (0-3)
Bishop Montgomery < 3-0) at Servile (3·0)
Anteaters nip C4ap~an
When UC Irvine and Chapman
College meet on the baseball diamond,
it is usually a close encounter.
Tuesday afternoon's battle on the UCI
field was no exception as the host An·
teaters came from, behind to post a 3-2
decision in the opening game of the
year for both squads .
UCI scored the winning run in the bot-
tom of the firth inning with Dave
Woodhead, a former Saddleback
College left-hander, getting the win.
In the fifth, Steve Haworth opened
with a single, m oved to second on
Carlos Rivera's ground out and to third
on a passed ball. This set the stage for
Pirates attentpt
to snap long
Cerritos jinx
If history repeats itself, look for
Orange Coast College's basketball team
to drop to the .500 mark in South Coast
Conference play.
The Pirates, who have never defeated
a Cerritos team on the Falcons' court,
travel to Norwalk tonight (7 :30) to face
the Falcons, one of three teams sharing
first place in the conference.
And at Saddleback, the Gauchos have
a chance to move into a first-pl~ce lie
with their opponent -San Diego CC -
in a Mission Conference battle, also at
7:30.
At Cerritos, Coach Tandy Gillis'
Pirates need a victory if they have any
hopes of winning a conference crown.
But in 35 games against the Falcons ,
the Bucs have won just six times -all
al home.
"Cerritos fields a solid club every
year, and that's certainly one of the rea-
sons we haven't played weU there,"
explains Gillis , whose t ea m was
dropped from the ranks of first place
Saturday by Santa Ana.
Still, OCC has already defeated Ce r-
ritos once this year, a 59-57 decision
Jan. 10.
The Falcons are ·sparked by 6-3
sophomore guard Joe Stephen who is
averaging 15 points per game. Freshman
forward Tim Kuyper, who scored 10
against the Bucs three weeks ago, also
boas ta a 15.0 average.
OCC's top scorer, Chris Beasley, is
still going through a cold spell from the
field . While . averaging better than 12
points per contest most of the season,
the freshman forward from Costa Mt:sa
Hilb is 1veraging just nine points in
conference play.
At Slddleback, Coach BUI Brummel's
Gauchos have been waiting for
t.oni1bt'1matcbupwit.bSan Diego CC.
'•First place is definitely our "oai.
But it's not 1oin1 to be easy," warns
Brummel.
Saddleback, 5·1 in the Mission Con-
ference, bu had time to prepare for the
Knl1bt1. The Gauchos had a bye Satur-
day, while SID Diego CC was defe.aUng
Southwestern, 114·95.
The Knlghll are led by Harry Watson,
the No. 3 scorer in the conference with a
20.0 averase. Te.mmate Regie Home
brinp 117.5 aver~1e into the contest.
The G1ucboe • Kevin Bowland la the
No. 5 scorer in the Miaalon Conference
wltb an 11.0averqe.
Te1mmalel John Saunders and nm
Jobmcm .... both IYW•ctnl 10 pobdl
nd Jollal6a1 wblle no& 1tartlnl lM pal
few ....-. nu been particularly toulb
OD def ....
TM torll IJlnOn from Compton HIP
... •blocked .,.. tldl year.
Mike Nagle's game-winning single.
Chapman opened the scoring in the
second inning with the Anteaters com-
ing back to take the lead at 2·1 in the
bottom of the same frame. Chapman
scored on a walk, balk, wild pitch and a
single by Tony Champous.
UCI put two on the board when Dave
Glick opened the inning with a double,
the only extra-base hit for the Anteaters
in the game. A walk to Mark Morrison
and two infield outs, the last by catcher
Troy Ybarra. got one run across.
Haworth then singled in the second
marker.
Chapman came back to tie the count
in the top of the fourth when Frank
Martinez doubled, then after two outs,
scored on a single by Stuart Miller. This
s et the stage for Nagle's heroics in the
bottom of the fifth.
Larry Hicks, a right-hander from
Orange Coast College, , took over on the
mound for the Anteaters in the seventh
inning and shut the Panthers out for the
rest of the game. Larry McLane went
the distance for Chapman.
The victory was the first for Coach
Mike Gerakos who took over the helm
this season. ·The same two teams met
again today at Hart Park in Orange.
Rustlers upended
LA Southwest surprises G WC
By CURT SEEDEN
Of U. Defir ~I ... Staff With the start of the spring semester
it's only appropriate that a surprise
quiz should be in order.
Question No. 1: Why did Golden Wesl
College drop a 63-52 verdict to visiting
LA Southwest Tuesday night in a major
Southern Cal Conference basketball UP·
set? h d · 10 A ) The Ru stl e r s a JU Sl
throws all night; b) The Rustlers made
only two of the 10 ; c ) The Rustlers shot
poorly from everywhere else (25 of 57
from the fl oor ); d > The Rus tlers
couldn't control the offensive boards : e)
Tim Garrett ; f) All of the above.
THE ANSWER is "f" as the Rustlers
saw their conference record dip to 6·3
going into what could have been a battle
for first-place with Santa Monica CC
Friday night.
,.,....Pa9e•J
CARLSON. • •
found coaches, principals and ad-
ministrators favoring some sort of cut-
back despite the problems that go with
it (cheating).
Cutbacks in this a rea can be usefu1
and can work -but only if there is Ef
way to maintain a strong grip on en-
forcement, with penalties tough enough
.to discourage the cheaters.
As for the argument that a decrease
in off-season activity will hurl an
athlete 's c h a n ces for college
scholarships, etc., well , look around.
The Los Angeles section is almost in
the dark ages compared to the Southern
Section, but rosters at USC. UCLA and
the like are filled with Los Angeles
athletes.
The "idle" factor doesn't sell. either.
Athletes keep busy re1ardless, and a
day at the beach doesn't hurt anyone.
As for the cc\aches, well, it's for sure
they won't be seeing much more in the
way of paychecks. But a system which
requires off-season duty simply to keep
pace, let alone winning, isn't working. .. .. ..
Former Edison Hilb defensive
back Jeff Hyder, who, sparkled at
Golden West College, then 1ot lost in the
shuffie when USIU of San Die10 folded
its football pro1ram after Hyder com-
mitted himself, has found • home at
Nevada:Reno. Justice prevails. .. .. .
The recent State Department or
Educ1Uoa 1tudy on tbe state'• CIP'
171tem reeulted in a vlrtual status quo
1ltu1tioli.
No eUnl• are belnS demanded, but
tbe Clf' ltMll l9 comtlnulq an effort tbro\llb Senate Blll lt to nold the
poulbllity of the SDE to take onr It tll
wblm. l
Instead, for Coach'tfim Greenfield to
capture his first conference cham-
pionsnip, and the school's first in 10
years, the Rustlers almost have to win
the rest of their games and hope for a
couple of Corsair upsets.
The last thing they want to do is dwell
on Tuesday night's outing.
With 6-7 sophomore Garrett pumping
home 25 points, LA Southwest im-
proved its record lo 4-5 and 11-12 over-
all, a deceiving record for a team with
such talent.
But the defeat was also the result of
poor execution on the part of GWC.
"WE HAD A BAD NIGln', we shot
poorly and we let the game get out of con·
trol early," explained Greenfield.
"Southwest is a good team. They've got
enough talent to beat anyone in this con·
ference."
Greenfield opened the game with
what looked like a deliberate orrense,
waiting lo take a shot until more than
two minules had passed.
When Dave Atkins connected to give
the Rustlers a 4-1 lead, nearly five
minutes had gone by.
But with the Cougars battJing back,
an d Garrett connecting on three
straight baskets, LA Southwest sudden·
ly had jumped out to a 14·6 lead wilh
11 : 11 left in the first half.
·'Whal I was trying to do was pull
them <LA Southwest) out of their zone
de fense and into a man-to-man. We
seem lo do better in a man-to-man
situation," explained Greenfield.
"But once we got behind,~ we had to
start making things happen and attack.
We had to get back that lead," he con-
tinued.
But the usually accurate GWC
shooters continued their frigid first half
shooting.
Several times, GWC managed lo pull
to within eight points only lo see Garrett
and company push it back up to 10.
IN THE FIRST HALF, GWC could hit
on only eight of 25 shots from the field
for a cool 32 percent. They also connect-
ed on just two of eight free throws.
The Cougars didn 'l fare that much
better. hilting 44 percent of their shots
in the first half.
GWC's sour shooting continued in the
setond half, while Garrett, an All·
Southern Cal Conference selection last
year, continued to work hard un-
derneath, de.spite the sandwichlnc de·
fense of Randy Heidenrelcl\ and Dave
Atkins.
"Garrett's as good aa they come," ad·
milted Greenfield. "Half the time, he'a
shooting before be even loots at the
basket. He'a somethlns elae.''
Garrett, in fact, looked more Uke a
Harlem Globetrotter constantly chant·
ins abd screaminl for the ball, while all
the Ume displaying a bhr 1mlle.
Garntt entered tbe same u the No. I
· 1cortr in the conlerence wttb 1 20.1
averaae. \.
' ..
16 Fluid Ounces
More surprising taste.
New 16-oz.can.
Nnw ynu can get mnr~ of the llurprising rnsrc M
a )(m\ [.ight. 16 hig ounces of ta ·re that comes from pure
Rucky Mouncain sprinJ? water and s~-cinl High 0.>Untry
harlcy, <mJ a way of brew in~ th<1t squectcs n t, it
of the caloric" nut while lc;wing all the taste in .
~~'f'Pt" 12~• c1CJeOA~~~ GOl!i.n Cood>
0
.
t
j
DA11. y Pu.or
~ > .
NB~
,..,,,. .. ,.CO .. ~li•e."~' .......... , . ._.,,.. .. \. "" .. ,. ,,., <-•
,. It
I H 11 ,,
.. , .,
)I._ 1'
-•1 u J• .,. •• JI )I 61).0 11 ...._..,.," ~n••
lo "' H ,~
.... ••.I ~ )\ •l
11 11
(I I~
.,. tQ
••• 11
J H ' .. -.. l A\f Ll<H LON' Lll EN('. E
AU~-.11t 0•••\I°"
~ ·~t; .. ..,
llCi• •••
f • ,&U
"" ..... ,t4'i
•H1.111lw ,,.,,.,,,
.I\ IU ie fl!
tJ I
JI >I ,. '"' "
l't 1\
II H
·' JI
" Ji 1¥ •••
IJ 0
-II ~'IJ I/•' . ,. ,,
.'"\ "' '
'" \•I t• I
IOO II
'4Jf " 01 llJ /J) ,,
T "91.d•Y • Scof'•~
NI w (Uf ~ IOI OU l.Ju•on "'
P tut•·h·l&.lltioJ "fl '\tt ... nld 'IJ
111d1,.nA tUi; M•lwav-.-.• ~
" .. ,., .. , {tt~ 111 0.;1h\\ IUD
,,.,.,, An1.-w110 tO'J. Ottrc,ut IN
tlDU"°" IJ), 0.-M~t 178 IOll
f'urtl.md 111 Wd1th10Qh>n UM •otJ
COLLEGE
UC lr111ne scoring
Pl~y•r
tt ~vtn M~
R•Nlt Whlt'I_,
~ .. n Mc Oonald
A•1ner Wutt
1Ctov1n i-ullf'r
J•>on WO<h
Gr•nf f •YKW Robb•• Beat
LOUI'\ 8rt mond
Sc:ott H•rtm.1n
Don H•rnt-\
o.,.n11n ltrown
I Ip ••9 119 II >" ll I ';4
18 lOI I• I l1 18 101 II S 1()
" ,... '1 .. II IH I 1 IS
II '1 S 1 19
II •1 l f f
IJ ., l • I)
I I 16 1 • • • .. " ,. 10 s 10 10
' 1 0 1
PCAA statistics
S<on,,.
' M•9cr UC I ,,,.,'lie
(ornellU\. Pdltff1t
J,)c ~'<In. UMh St
N t lH , C > t-ulltr1on
Nh•fl'ldon Ul. INlnt
ti 1•,Qlft\ • f't ... ,.,, '>t
M An'1 .. t \Ull.(.!Jf
t ( A'ltJ,•rV>n Ur SU
""'' lo'l1fh lll;W Sl N,1f1J1v,. P toi 1111
't 111fl IH .1t1 ti
Q 19 " .. 18 700 , ,. "" II tu /1 <00 ti I\• 61 '169
·~ 1)/ •• l3J
II IJ' JI JOI
Id !lo '6 7118
' lff llU ~ lrlb
111 \7 191
'" 'OiJ ,. t ,,, '" ';/ •• WO U .i
" '11
1
.,,.
191
n~
IO S 18)
1\ 1
I• 0
11 O
11 1
I> I ". I) I
'"'''' ,1-.h,,·dll•tl ,,.,.~,.. r .,. t:K>unct•nQ
~·•)•1 •111 1 t'' t<J , nta • ..... 1 p .. , I!"
I • ,. M I >t { j 0 • l• , ... , I 'flV 18'1
f rt t 1u "' tJ-, rflt.t )' th JQ1f1 t '*LI II -'
t"' ~· " t\t\ ~ ,,,, .. ,. l,J • • "' ,.,
,,.,.,"l•~t :J11CH1n1J ut. l rvm t 888
svq (' """I~ ~ ,,.,..,'° '-lt(ttto ~I ~ •v\,I f ,_.,..
I tuow p.,."·"'''_,,. p,.. "'" .. • rnr .. n1
STANDINGS
Southern C•I Conference
>•nl• M,;ll(.a
<;.v1~n w""''
RIO HOllOV t .,t \A LA ~o .. lh,.._t <:tutth
l.~\ An"'•'••t<.
L .. "•rb<><
CCIM<tnA<t o ... r•N w I. w I.
I I 10 t . ) ... , • •• 9
•) 1111
·~ .. ., • \ .. tl
J t t H
1 I I U TIHISd.o) •$tor•• l A '>outn ... ..i •J GolOtfl Wnl )l l.tDte\\t} RooHOft()oH Lu> Angwl"" CC aa uP< rl•rbor .. 011 \Ant• Mon•<•~ io•\I LA .. Fr-y •O•m•> ..,uh)~n Wnl dl S..nl• Mon1t .a ll •o Hc>n<l<>•l LO-.A~l·S <.t
L-4 tt•rQOr dt LA ~'"""~I
L• l l A •I '-V'1'~"s
HIGH SCHOOL WOMEN
Irvin~ 72, Costa Meu J 1 COSTA MESA L"'11•r 9 Ameno4t11 11
t r'lt~.,.. 1 McAl~t 4 8fa,, 1 StlJO•tc. 1
M "'• lhf' I Sulh~ u ~Uthltrn 0 P tt( t' 0 IRYIHE HWll 14 r .. u er S LYMOd
fl.wtl• r It OOen • St~Umttn 10. Pr~tt .t Tt4Mn
tn«H I•, l yM flttllf't l M•OW'n 1 f-rrncti 3 ........ ,,t', ..
ScOf.-by ~neri
(O\I• Mew 0 I • 12 JI
Ir ¥one 2? IJ I& 11 n
'ot•I tOUI\ (Qi') ta Meu ••.• , \Hlll ,, t
-=ovtt<J out N~
Edison 65, Marina 52 MARINA Gllh"91"'m 12, 80,,y i.. &v<rh 10, Bonem •O. Crall 1. R•m•~ket\ 1. (ort,.tt 0 EO ISON Mey er ?<, RanO•ll 10, C....no•tketl 17, -llot10 }, Hou~ 1, Oen H•.er
1 I\' up~.o 0, Cavallato 0
S<ore lly °""'"-" Marin• u 8 11 11 S) Edlwn 10 It ti 11 4~ Tot•I 1ou1s· -rln• ••. E<llson 1Q, Fou~
out None TKM•<•I\ EOiSOl'I bencn
Fin. Valley 51, Hunt. BHch 27 FOUNTAIN VALi.ET Hul\n •. S.~n
11 Wy<1roow>~1 25. Tucllatskr l G1n•llur9 •.
O•v•S 1. Porte o. 8•r•on O. Armour 0,
Hutscnm•OtO HUNTINGTON llEACH C•" 1, Mffl
<IOt~ s. 8<>(Mts •. T-nse<>O 1. ChnUnburd • C:orck>•a 0. P«ll•O 0, Floret 0 C.,_r 0
S<-tty °""'"•" Founta•n Vall•Y 12 II .. 11 SI HunlonQlon Be.ch 8 10 J • 11
f ot•I tou1s Fount•in v .. 11 • ., u t-4unt onQlon ~.o<ll 11; Fouled oul Norw
Westminster 56, Newport 40 WESTMINSTER Tok•ndgo 10. Watson
H , Gulhr"' 2•. Hu..,lh J. E•st•n 10. Ono O
FO\\un 0, TC*ar 0 NEWPOllT HAll8011 Ecnl•rn.och ti.
Jdns~ma 6, Gr.anger 1, Holmai" 6,SectcJ•t' •·
Wayn• 7. ArimuroO
S< -by °"" ,,.,, W•\lnllll\I"' 10 18 11 16 S&
Nl!wPOrt H1trbor 6 t t 1 •• .tO
r or•I tt~uh Wtt\lm 1nstp1 1', Nt•i>Or1
•tdrbnr 10 Fou•edoot No~
Estancia 61. El Toro 47 EL TORO <.1C>Olli S Ehlv 8, Holme' IS,
Roe.• 9, C.etrlc)nder 10, Young O ESTANCIA Somp"'n 10. llluShl ? Frdn
(I u Reid 1 Hug ne\ 1, HOlldnd 1, ... O•l•no
1. b11vtu 10. Longh~ld ~ Hdnd Ht ~c
M1llctn O
S<on by °""'r1•n Et l oro II IS & r~ 41 E'1an• •d ll IS 22 11 61
Totttl fou1c. E• foro 11 E\ldn<•• lJ
Foul~°"I Non.
CdM 41 Untv.nffr 31
CO•ON• oet *• SIOUO~lon 10 IWV941t 2, hti119tr 1• Or"'*trQ 1. I(~ .. u •• M<N.etMe 0
UNIVl .. ITY ,.••tM U, (;ontrer• a Yar9<1 t. 11&.-Jt S, ColllTIMt t, l1mm•r,,..,. o M.ttww•o. v,,...._o
k-•Y Qolar1•rt
(;Dfon.a ., .... r • .. u 1$ ••
Ufll••nll~ f 11 I 1 Jt Tot•I IOU!t (.or-dlll ~r It Ulll••t\rly
16 l'Olll<lcl !NI (OllU'-" CU111-.r,Hy)
Loera 41, Oc••n View 43 OCIAN YllW OIMl'I It. 8ufll\ • WeOb •. Hou •. .-, 1, s..11on 1 l.OA•A Ben.on t, Scllm1C1t t I t)O ii k oll '· i-14 8tflll\ • Sc•t ill~ OIUUUtl OCH n YHlw 10 IS LO••• ll 10 Total toul' CkHn Vl<fw a. Foutedovt N-
• 1' •l ll 1• )9 lou• 1'
San Clem4tnt• 80. Dane Hiiis 62 DANA HILl.5 C••PO 8, Mlllll tl Jollnwin 10. llodntr Ii, L•rwn 1 Hao•n 11 Nor1011 l, Carllon 0 Wll""'1 0 SAN CLEMINTe Jonno.on 11, WtlJI•• 1 ), R0tl\•mP t• Rad•n 12, S•mu~ 11 Port II to 0 LYWltr 0, Slevens 0 S<or• by o .... ,..,,,
O•n• Hilt' , t 10 '" •• ,.,. S•n (1e..-1t 10 i. 11 l\ IC
f ol.,. foul• e>.n• H1Us U. ~" Clen1f'r.t~ ll ~oul~out 8001.,, 10.n• Htll"
NHL
WALES CONFERENCE "°''" Ofv1uon
Klnt11
MOl"tHC'•'
P1lhbut Qfl H•1llo1<1
Otttro11
.., l 1 () f
l) ..
16 lio
1/ h
, "' !t 11
/I)
'} "t , ... ,,..
14 } 11 t&J
AdJlm\ OtVUI°"
1-\ultdh> 1"J HI I& ."(J.1 t W.
M 1nne\Olri 1 '' •1 0' ,.,,
90\lun JJ lu 6 l\d ·~ >'
fr,1ontv " l1 " 1u~ ~•t tJ Ouebt>< tJ l b 1 J 1&4 • lJ CAMPBE LL CONFERENCE Patrick 01•,.lon
NV l\l•nGrt\ ]A 1] 1f Ht ,11 •1, l'r11ladelon•• lO I• " lOtl 111 1><1 <•111arv /1 10 11 1'1'1 '" wc1,n1ru~t°'' tq 11 1 J 181:i ,,.. ')l
NV R•n0t1r\ t~ H 'I tfl/ /t)\ -6(
Smyttw DI'""°"
St Lout\
VJ n (.OvYtf C:hltaQO Eomonl0<•
to1oraoo
W•nn1peq
Jt 1. " 2JO ,, It
II I& •• 1U• 1"4• ...
,1 14 I 1W • '•
tb 16 .. '10 ;''• ..
1~ /ti t' II) /II
Cl Jct ~:I If:,/ l• l.
T~cw~·\ Score-\
NY l\l~n l Kt"9i l
Detroit ~-r o,.Ol\10 1 Edmonton l 51 LO..· J
Monlr••• s (OIOfddO 1
wa,nu-.qton l VAn<e:"'·•""'-'' J
Islanders 8. Klnqs l
Scor~ Of Pt,.•Od" LO\ Anoett<.
NV l\tt1n<ler\ 'S t t
~not\ on QCWI l o< A"<!'•• I l l \ Ii
N~w Vor• q 10 •> ~ Go•ti•') Lo• A.no .. 1t µ.,~, .. ,_ . r .. ,.
Yor> Re...-n A IS OUll
Flr·1t PtrtOCI
1 Nf'w Yo'' Ny\trom 11 '"'" Ldl'\Qeo;~nL 1 04 1 Ntow ..,Of ~ CJ f.' '"''
l Trottier 8<h\lfl 11 01 J Ni-... ")'" _.,
bef11n1 16 (Ny\lrOm 0 Po1o;1,, 'J ~c.·
P~nt1H1t\ Lofimt>• NV ) J~ l·••nJ • NY 1 11 l Murpn~ LA 10 1/
Second Period
.. Nrw YO• k .. .,,IUf J' 1 IJt .. o· ·~' •
Q .S• ~ lO\ Anqf"lt•~ "'-'-" ~O ,, '
ti AO Pt'n,,lt1t"' lr• "''' •1'
t-"4 e lw4'rd l A. fl 1,J r' •• • '' Cl
lOnQt"'•n N..,. \U ~ CJ ~ hi! ''
8on~r LA ~hJh11· m r ' "' • iJ'\ 1111
l A 18 11 tt,u ,,, t /.. /U .~
Third ~"Od
t. Nftw 'fl)f ~ '"''' I' J.. ..
N••W (l>f II, (,or '"1 I,, U'-'"' t
l ~ 8 Nf°"" Vur ~ f'rt"~--n,.
l•t-r t e. lb ~ "4t>N (, ~ M, r •
H Ow41tJ 11 l I p,..,, 111 t
S 4~ Hoe>"in-. l A ,_. l "'1 .. 1 '-''',
' 01 G 1lt1f \ N f 1~ J~
Lot Alamltot TUISOAY'6 •UUl.TS Uhl If t64ott• •v.trtH..., .. mHt1 .. 1 rtt\I t• t lrtllOh f<l.Wft It ,.,ltfll,
It 00 1080. 1411° Jo.tQutf\ l•H C8•1<11 1~
• .0, J•mbo< 4<t \M•l(l'l• lft ) lO U t -.Vi.
11· l l .,.. .. , ,", '° ~ec.ond ,.,. Mtdd~-t uw n M •n 1C•rou1•1 .• JU ) •o I •II Nu LHlllh 18•rd) •to l ~ T•n• H•v fp9 •(h•••ll
H O
ftlt'd r• • A•JOfo-d 11 .lfu• Pi••h A lO
, 40, , 'O. ~lf(IUW l mu,, i l lf'\IJVj••> A 00.
I 00 C,t>I '"" t.oh IA.ht"°nl ) t<l \l • •A<IA I •O " t>••O \1~ 'II
r-ourth '*'" T•i!U Mu1 f1 TvY'» tU.•ft.h
I VO, I 10 l llO. )01~ k••l<l•ll 1 flf•'< •11. I U(r ,.0 '"'>'111 Mllch4 11t 41,0
f "'"' • '•''l"' Ret .. 1 t1,, rv.a•1•, 1 II itlJ
'I ti T ~ lt1 .. \iAI ,.,..,ti fj IQ )i V', 1,,)vl
, .. .,, t''"·••l1 t fl(\ '' t'>il U 'A l\•1 J)f!IO
,, JIJ '
•.•I'' •• trqf'.I Pt.11(~ ... n l)Vt•>
~ •O "'1t.i o lt 111' ~ • .i CH liQht
.101Ji kl ,/qH'h• Nt.1 Mnt•
# JI fj.t ,,.,
l ',.i'\\•Uf
Hollyw'>Od Parlt rUF\uA r !>Ill SUl H
' ft•-4 ...
I 111h•i U<l .. t• h•'11Ht"1t .. ·n•t
t I H h W1ll1•to•u •
V W h.ur, '' 1 AO l *>
\)'·•do\ ""I J)
~ . . . • •
COLI.EGE
UC lrvlM 3, Chep,.aen 2 ,,,.pm.,, 010 100 000-2 1 ,
I.IC: trvlrw 020 010 00•-l 1 I
M~L•lle -Frtnell, W-otcl, HlcU C11 •no vurra w-woodllHd Cl·OI I. MCll M (~11 S....,_Hk-,., 18-Mertlrwi, Fttn<ll !C,,.pmanl, Gli<lr. CUC l"'lnel. Otlltrkwtt
AlllON St IS, LonQ Boch SI. • IMll\t
~.,,, 1ormerOra11g1tCoast Coll• i>l•r-r.
"""'"' .. ru,,llor,,.rlorASU!.
UC Irvine 1chadule Wed .. Fet> • JI Chllpm•,, S•I, F•b 1 -•I San Oiego Slalt ldollbC•· llUdtr, t om I Wed .. Feb t t at Southern C11 Colleve Ftl. Feo 13 UCL.A Sat . Feo •• -UC Berk•ley 11 p.m I Sun., F@b. IS -UC B•rktftr ( t p m .l Tues . F•ll 11 •• Ntnda·LH V191\ Wtd Fet> It at No••da l.H Vt(ll•
!<IOubl~·he-r noonl Wed • Feb 1S A1uw Pa<ill( Thurs F•o lo lln1ver~1ty ot s.,,i. ,.,.,.
r,. F el> >I •I UCL4 r,.., M4t<hl SM1 01tQOStatt
r '' Mortn 6 at U s .. lnternc1tl0f"IAI v ruv1rs1ty
Su• Ma•cn ii Un••••S•IY ol P11911 S>uno •-• M-r. t p m I
1 u•s Molrcl> ·~ SovtMrn C•I COll999
t nun Sun M<trt1> 11 IS SCBA l""r""·
mt-"' • \ltf' •no ltme to bf' Oeterm1ne1U
l u•\ ~,.ch 1• al Pt00erC11ne • W•d M.trt n H S1an•0<0
fl-"rt M.lrt.h 11 •t Un1;~fltly ot ~
'>•• M.lrcn 78 Un1ve<\lly oi !><on 01~·
OQI' o f' M ilder noon f
Tu•• Mai ch ]1 C•I Siii• LO• An9<1IH' fr . Aprrt J Lovot•M4rymo..nt'
'l•t , •Pf•• 4 "' Lovo••~Mar.,.mounr <doubl•·~r1 noon>
Tun . Aprll I L0"9 Buel> Slate•
F rr , A.prll 10 Cal Stale Los Angelo • \at . AO"tl 11 al C:•I Stat• LOS Alli!"•••• IOOublt hta<l<'r, noonl
T ve• . Ai:><ll .. al C•I Stal• F .. 11.rton• rr1 . A0<1t 11 LOftll Be~n St•t••
Sat . APrtl 18 al lon9 8tetn St•te• ldOVi:>I• ~ddel, ,,_,I
T uo ., AP•ll 11 C•I POiy Pomon• w,o . Al)<•• t1 ., C•I Poly Pomona
f. r 1 • Aprtl 7• U ~ lnt1rn•t1onal
lJF'llYe r\1ly
Tue-. . APf'H 28 -Loyol•Marymount• Wta 'April,, •• llSC 11 pm )
Fri M~P/ 1 •t P~ra1ne•
S•t Ma f 1 Peoperd1ne • (double neaofl!r noont
l ..1•\ MA.,'° UC Sctnta Bar~r••
t , iv..-t & at C•I St,'1t-Fvllt rton•
;>ol M •y ~ C.a Slatf' ~uile,.ton•
1 ~ , t ~"°'"' noon
"""-l '· ,. ,
• r M 1, • 1.,,( ~nt• B•rO.r•·
... 41 M.it l• •' lJC Sdn1A 8 •ro.r••
t'>'-i" '°H.' .\GI'· r houn
A 4 .,,,......\ "•"'' df J lO unit'\\ Olt\trwt~
ntJ "'' Jh·'W:.itt\ S(BA o•rne
Wrestling
•HGHSC.HOOI. ~ounl-ttn V•llty SO M.aftn• l1
' I H • I l)t. I U'U.S. io JI!, •
' J. / ~ ,r OU·"\•\ll 1 1,
t -''YQ·!1t&. ._.., t>f' Po.,,., ti l
.\ • ,~ ;.1, 1.-l R, n.ttro 1 J
1o ~ lllf M ~ f" ·'»0 l)Yt'•it4 d i ..
•' ' ... "' ,.r--: ,,,.,.f -,n 1 }; '-' P,"', • "' o nn• 1 r. -. f\#r
r•U ti'
,. ,. 1 ~ ~
'". t '
, .,
' . ,.,.
FOR THE RECORD
...... Ml ... ................... AoM:oe T-*'· llrvc• .__.,, ,.._ ... ,. Y-'<clr. HoM ... Ktithl (lltrefl, .. 1, ... ,, .... ; Iv_, Lo...-*' Tim GlllllllMll, M ,
6·2, Yin« y_. ~ .. -. .... ar!M Qotttr•
M , 6·2; 0-,.,...,., dtf, ... Kai Por1M, .. ,,
•·I, Jo11n s.cir1 def. Trey 11¥•1111•, ... ,, 1-6.
Women'• toum1ment (e1°"'961l _ .......... " ......
Ctaudl• IC-otl. Reelna MAralkeve, .. ,.
•·3. Ylrglnl• llutkl Gel. a.111 Norton, .... 1·•· Mlm. Jauto...c Clef. • .. bell• Vlltl .. r, •·t, • 1; Llw lloncltr dtl. Nina 8ollm, '"'· •·'· Barber'• Polter dtt. l(•tlly Hof~•lll, .. ,, • •; Ha,,. ~llko•a det. Iv• lllHNrove •·I, •·t, Pam Sflrl••r def, Sherry Acker,"'·
• 3, Suw B•rker <lei. LH Anl-lls, 6·2, H. ••
Coll•o• UC l"'IM I, L9flt 8NCll $1. 4
Si"lltt Snyder Ill dlll. MOr•vec. '"'· •·I, M ; Sla<>Qhl Ill cltl HeHlt<. M , , .. , E-ry Ill ... , Hardi, w. M . Giit (I) def. Nl<llolson,
• l . 6·1. Tyrell (LB) cltl N•l""'1, 4-1, •·I, ._I;
Shepttd tLBI def. M<Pntrson, l,., 4-l, W .
~
$nyd~·SIAUQ111t (I) cltl MOr1•ec-N1 ... 1.
I •• •·l, H•uter-Slle,,.rd IL.Bl dllf Emtfy• Gill, • '· 4-J, NlcllOlson·Tyttll ILBI dtl Mc Phe/ton-N .. SOI', .. J. l-4. 1·•·
Misc.
Tu.lday't tr•nHctlon1
aAH8ALI. Amtrlunl..I ..... MILWAUKEE BREWERS -Signed
MOOH H .. s. e>ClcNr NEW YORK YANKEES -Signed Mlk• Gnfl ln ano Tim Lollar, P•lcllers; Pal Tab I tr, lnllelO.r , and Br .. c• Robinson, Utclltr. IASICIT8Al.I. Nat'-1 • ..-... 11 A1-i.t1t11 ATLANTA HAWKS -Placed James McElroy. guard, on lhe Injured list Sl(IMcl Ar1 CotllM, guard, to • to-d•r conlrKI. SAN OIEGO CLI PPERS -Awar-a lh•td·round l~I d<att cllolte; and tither •
tllrrd round 1"3 clrall '"°''• or a sec:ond-rouno 19'7 d<ell Cllokt 10 11\e Plloet'll• SllllS
n compenwllon tor 119"1"9 Gu i le Id He•d. 1orwa10 It HHrd IS strll on •n •<11ve NBA ro\ltr d..r11>9 ll'lt 19'1·tl w•son. P,_,,ta .. 111 oe ••••dee! IM 1"3 CllOke II rMt It not. Pr-n.a wrll be •w•rdecl Ille lttl <llolce SEATTLE SUPERSONICS Ptec:ed 09n·
nl\ Awtrev. <t.intttf'. on the •n1urt'd hst ~
h¥<tl~O J•rne• Donaldson. tenter ~OOTIALI. H•ti...1 F-Nll L•l9"' C.LEVEl.ANO BROWNS S1Qned Molton H•r0•...,•1. off~Jlve t.ckte, J a1 .Croek.w .
punt•r >-~\ Petrott, p11c1"1t"•', •nO L.!i#r~(~V·~· UM06Cke,. t<ANSAS CITY CHIEFS N•med Tom
8re\rwnctn otteni1ve 11.w <N<f'I NEW TORK GIANTS SoQned Sam
8owt1\, l•Ql>I end HOCKEY N•llonal HOOay LH9U. OETROIT REO WINGS Traded Oan
L•br ••ttn. rtQht w 1nQ, to th• C•toarv
F ••mt> •or E•rt l1>9arf1eld, c.nltr NEW YORK RANGERS Re<.oliCKI Gary
Burn\, torw•rd, from New Haven or the
Amr11c•n HOC. .. ty l f 40Ut
Field hockey HIGH SCHOOL
Vn•••r·snv 1, CottOft o
Un1vf '\1ly ~or1n9 S J)f',.Oi.o
Edison J, HUftlln<Jlon BH<~ 0
Men's soccer HIGH SCHOOL Hldll llH<ll I, Fin. Y•llty 0
Hun11n.g;1on S..c,, s<or1no M Or1uo11 EdoSOft J, ~rtn• 2
Ed•Wn w:or1n; Slr•cn•n 1 Snutt M •rln•
S<Of•nQ Grttn J<.1rby
U ehe1Toth foots the h ill 1
l'l 'Rl,J( :'li!O flt t
'
Pl RI.IC' "OTJCE
l f l tJ".aPt l.t(ATtON
~·LL A l,( O"OLI( l<Fl/f Qll(,f'.\
' :J" ...... ...
P UBLIC NOTICE PURL.JC NOTICE
N-72597 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT NOTICE OF DEATH OF
HELEN HART MILLER, ~"" r<.o •l>'>•O NA L AKAHELENH.MILLER
T ... •S'>O• I Al[S •OOU AND OF PETITION TO
l.f SOC president rescues sports foundation
lh ltO(.J:R C'J\RL"'ON 01 tM D.,ly Piiot Sult
W fo:S'l('llJ-:~T .. :H Ln1ted States Oly mpic
l'om m 1ttN• l'n·~Hl<.'nl Pt't cr U1·berroth made it of
f1<'iul Tut·~cl:t> th«.' &thlNic foundation originated
In W I< "Hill Sc·hr<wd<'r 44 years ago, will con ·
t1 nue 111,J ac·t
The Ent·1no rt'sidc nt anrl his wife. Ginny. will
foot the 't•nt1rc hill for the operation of the founda ·
lion in add ition to seeking out a ne w site (prob·
ably near the Museum of Natural Histo ry at Exposi-
tion Park in Loi> Ange les> •
"Whtn I s aw t h e
library packed in box
t's. · · sa ys l'e berroth.
"that's when I sa"' they
"'er e St'rious about this.
I s aid to m yself.
·"'a 1t, :,,omeonc has lo
s l o p t h1 h ... Out of
p ock e t e xpenses to
maintain the found ation
is in thl' $200.000 range
µer year
Bravcn "Bud dy "
Oyer said lht' 43·year·
old na tive of Chicago
and product of San J ose
S tate became· m volvcd
1n ttw .;ituatwn n fter
~ c e 1 11 g n l' w .., p a p c r PETER UEBERROTH
s1 orws po1ntrnS? out lhl' dile mma of the foundation.
whirh l.\a"i losinr.: its s ponsors hip with Citizens Sav·
in gs.
"Of ull thC' people we had t hought o f that
might help us , he was one of the las t we figured."
said Dv1'r
Th·c USOC boss is a personal friend of Tony
Franco of the Citizens Savings firm and became
invo lved through that avenue, also.
L'eberroth was required to divest himself of
bus iness interests while serving as the USOC
pres1denl and says the future of the foundation will
not include his name and shuns publicity.
: "1£ you're going to put something back into the
; •com rnunity and see what is at stake he re you feel
:::you 're on the right track .'' says t'.Jeberroth.
::_ "I believe in continuity and wanted to play a
sm all part in preserving what many believe to be
the most unique collection of sports me morabjlia
and literature in the world.
Basketball scores
Coll•o• Wtsl M1ln• 73. Boston U. S8
' C.on1-1', W Montan• S• A111\a•P«•f1c ll, Cluemonl·~ull<I ..
E Mont•,,. u. Puoet !.ound .ss po1n1 t.om• ,., SoC•I c:o11e911 10
, wu1mon1 10.. Cal l.ul~~"" •1 Atnlt11!5 In At. lion SS, 8lo1a •t FrHno Pec1llC >I, LA tleptlll 71 Seol1"'""' l\r,.M•$ S•, Tu.t• •t Bnlor 60, Rice ~• Houtlon '9, !.MU ...
Ttu• Tttll 10, TCU 60 loll Mltwt•I c;1n{1,,,,.11 '" Loyo1• 1c1111eoo11• lllllWltt St 14, Ct.ve1o111t1 St SI
' *'" N I OW• 10. (..,lef\<lrY tt
$1.i'4ft M Jet,IOllVlll• ~I lllrt1111•.,, MO GM611NI 1t (GO
• C1rol1N II D. N ( Wllrnlnoton 4t hH\ Arl"""'1 a . $W I ou1\l_,I U YI C-1--1"1 to, H C .CMtlOttt IO
''"' HOIY (;f"OM tAfrrrw t0
R llocltt I \land M, BrO'#n S1 $1. Peter's SI, F•lt'lleld SS
HMVlfel IOI. Y•I•"
R~t0tr\'IO, Manhlln•n S1
eommun"y coll•o• 10111MnO (el C-r...ce I.II Soul-I '3, Goldltn West S2
(YPftH,1, RIO Hondo •I Lo' AnQetH c;c •.LA H1rbor k toll
l>Anl• Mani~ ... Eut LA ...
High ecftoOI women ,.....u...,.
E!dlton U. Merine st irntn V•li.y)l,-lflt!01111t1027
"t"t'1Ml-16, """'°'lHar-40 •. ... ., ...........
EtlM<;le ... El T .. oo
CfM ft, \Mjwn!IY • trwlM11,C.W _,.,,
...... <-'~
$Jin c~ •· Oeftjl """., .... uee-C..N1•ft,C){ff11V-4'
'
.................
"It would have been criminal for th1~ '•1\1• l
t10n and these s ports pro~ram.., for :,uuth 111 h l
frag m ented in a ny fashion .. •
The foundation includei; an extens i'\·c mu~eum
and library, sport s awards program-; on lh<' high
school level (primarily football. bas ketball and
baseball), and several other items geared tov.11rtl
the Olympics.
"We're expecting to expand our program v. 1th
an International Hall of Fame." says Oyer
Girls' roundup
Ediso~ FV
remain tied
Estancia's Eagles took command of lht' Sea
Vie w Leag ue flag c h ase with.. a S·O record and
Edison and Fountain Valley tied for the Sunset Lea~ue lead with 4· 1 r ecords a fter the firs t round
of play in girls· high school basketball action
Estancia· defeated El Toro, 61·47 behind lhl·
play of Brownyn lland with 18 points and 12 rf'
bounds.
E lsewhe re in the Sea View League, lr vtnt•
stopped Costa Mes a , 72·31 and Corona cltl Mar
beat University, 49-36. .
In the Sunset League, Edison defeated Marina.
65·52 wh.il e Fountain Valley was winn i~g ov~r llunt·
ing t o n Beach , 51·27 and West mins t er b e at
Newport Harbor, 56·40. . .
San Clem ente ha d little trouble 1n stopping
Dana Hills in the South Coast League, 80·62 while
Ocean View was droppin g a 49.43 decision lo h ost
.Loar a in the Empire League.
Coach Joe Wolf's Estancia team is ranked
second in the C IF 3·A division and with H ~nd get·
ting help from Vicki Simpson ( 10 points , e ight as ·
sisls) and Cara Francy (14 points. nine .rchounds
and four as!iiSts) the outcom~ was never m doubt
Irvine had 1'1 player s hit the scorin g C?lumn
with Dominic Tramme ll leading the way with 16.
Kim Oden had ni ne blocked shots and Lis a Steff·
man played we ll at point guard. ~hris '_fuck~r. re·
turned to the lineup for the first lime since 111J11r·
ing her ankle . . .
Edison's Chargers knocked Marina out of a t ie
tor the Sunset lead but It took a controvers ial call
to get the Chargers In gear .
"The team seem ed to fire up after that call
went against us," Coach Dave White s aid. .
Shannon Meyer h ad another out standing
game bitting 24 points, grabbing nine rebounds
and getting six steals. Sue Randall hit 20 point~
with eight rebounds , four assists a nd two steals .
Edison also s hot 88 p e rcent from the free throw
line , a school record.
Fountain Valley pulled ahead by a wide
margin ih the third quarter with Chris Wyci.nows kl
bitting 25 Points ror tame scoring honors for the
Barons.
Mary Johmon had 28 Points ln leading San
Clemente alont with nine assists, four steals and
five rebounds. AU tive San Clemente starters were
in dou~ ft~. J
'
I•
.. ,,
t 1 IO•l
,., »I ,, :'>0 0 f l< f
It>
bU HI•
FtC:TITl()flS llU 'll"l ~\ NAME '>l ATl "1(NT
11,. 'l
, ... I>
U• •
',.., J
,.,
I
l'l HLI< '\OTICE
~•CTITIOUS BUSINESS NAM( S!A TEMENT
""".. t..,. •fl ~4wf'\l·'"-::'o" 8t•<n
'\ ~ 13 "'fl .. \ l-l1ofOP•OD11S '1 J1
,..,, I'll
..,, q 1"0 0 • ,.,., (:.iron• u-1 M,jr
.. ' fQf I"\ ,j<l'101~
•' , bu\•"""~' ~ .,;,not.IC tfO bY &n 1n
K.oim•\ Protoo.tPO•\
.,.,,.., st•tt~ri• ••s '•ff(l "'''" trw
C~t.1n1 , (it,.., o; Orttnqe Count~ on
F'tU I 1991
FIS•'8
P vOh\""° 0.anQe '""" 0•1ly Pilot. FtD • 11, 16 1$ 1981 63' 11
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A·107476.
To all he irs ,
b e nefi(iar ies, creditors
and (Ontingent cred itors of
H E LEN HART MILLER,
a ka HELEN H. MILLER
and persons who may be
otherwise interested in the
w i 11 and/or estate:
A petition ha s been filed
·;•,._,,.N, A•·O 1.,1111.•couA. PUBLIC NOTICE by JANEE N J . HAHN in
, , ·"'" "''"• c..A>1 Roeo L•t;1vn• the Superior Court of
""'' • ll••~•n•• •ll>Sl NOTICE OF INTENTION TO Orange County requesting
'lut>t-rl F w~··•~· •Ma'1a9•n9 E "' E cu T £ s £cu 11 IT T that JANEEN J . HAHN be 'nH~I l'M1n•r ol lr~nl Lid • ·1 AGllEEMEHT a ppointed a s pe rsonal
( 1li•\11m• Q~ral p.itfttwrS"1P'· J'8tl CS.Cs..6101 ·6101 U.C.C.)
<•II" C•" Road '-"llvn• Holl\ NOllCf IS htrfl:>Y (l rven IO lhf r e presentative tO ad•
•1"01n·••1&sJ Cr•o110<s01 TOUNGJAKIM,O.D1or. minister the estate' of
H ' ..:; B•a•H •C.•n~r•I wllOse Du .. ~.,,."°"'"'" 11 R"•lll"9 HELEN HART MILLER, ' ... ~•r o• Tront LIO ~ (.OhfO<n•• w1na.1r~ ..... CCXJnly ofOr.,,(lt. Sl•I• akaHELEN H, MILLER,
,. .. ,.or. J ..,,.,,,,rqu• HJa Pomona :~::·::,.:_•9~':'t~ ~u~;r~~"~~~'',!' Costa Mesa, Ca. (under the
'.,...., Bu <n. CalllOt"n•a 00903 HA N 0 LE R • n 0 s u z z AN E Indepe ndent Admlnistra-ov< ~ ... ,(' <onoucleO Dy a HAN OLE~.,.,.. Sl<Uf'"CKI P•rly, WPIOM lion of Estates Act}. The .,, ... ,.., .,_.,.,.,,...,,n.c buJtM\5 .adctr~i is }U Vi• Gr•t••n•. l'IOllfrl E Wh#eler M•'1•0 N•wP0'1 Buell, County ol OranQe, petition iS set for hearing in
' I oPllrtAI r.,,,., Slat• ol C:..••IOt'n1a. on D<Cll>t•ly IO<lled Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic 1 ~ .,.,,......,, """ • "" '"1n ,,,. ., '110 •r••ne Avenue. NewPO,, a.1ch, Center Drive West, Santa .~ .. I. ... QI O•~nQ<' Count~ On ;::ounty ot Ot-Slal•OI C•hlornl• Ana, CA 92701 on February r r. 1 ,~, S.iel pr()C)IPf'ty is Oie:KnbrtcHn .,..,...,.,
< '~"'1·· All lr"1uros and .ciu•omenl ol 11\111 25, 1981 at9:JOA.M. P '' ,...., °'""9< Coa.1 0~111 Pilot. Bu uh S,,ron bUSA,...H kroown H HAIR IF YOU OBJECT to the
, ,, , , ' 11 • ., 1 ·~· •Jla1 H"'NOLERSano 1oca1edet 1110 trv"'• grantinnofttiepetition, you
l~v•nue N.w-..porl Be.c.n Counh of ,..,, . ' '• . ..
Pl 81.1( NOi i< ·,.;
t ··~
OCJf,'
FICTll IOUS llU\l>U ~\ NAMf ST•~£MFN1
r q u
...
• v\l4Mt Ii I 1'hf1.f1 1
Pl'BUC NOTICE :>r•"9~. s1ai. 01 c11r<or,,1e should either appear at the An uecut.o •ec:unty a91ttmrnt 01 hearing and st~te your Ob·
~1cT1nous BUSI NESS •n• i..me ,.,,, i»t1tlr•er..i.,.., ,.,.. con. jections or file written Ob· NAMESlATEMEHT "0••at.ont...._,., ... DA•Oo;_or•1te•0'': je(tions with the court
'n .... 110 .. 11>9 ""''°" " oo•nq bu•• "'~ d•v ot F•bruarv. I i. e1 ' before the hearing. Your > c•oc .-AM al Rf'\1cknt1al Eft<row,
"" ~~IHC Rfr PROOUl T~ 181S!h'OJambor•eR0ttO,NtWC>OrlBH<h. appearan(e may be in
M '" • "'"""~ Co\!., M"" coun1votOran11e.Stateo1ce111orn1a personorbyyourattorney.
1 '. A~lo1' So •ar "'known to lhe St<urtd Par I F Y O U A R E A
•• , •• :tr• 'I tt('c • 1@n Monl«•v It all bul~n~:,na';'e1,~~,,•dd•eUH C R EDITOR or a "Ont· t\ ,,,.,. .. ,. r"o-.td Mr! .... ( <411fOr'"•A q1'11ti u~d by ,,.,. """"""'or Of lllr tP• Ytt•'' ....
t.lutl\ MM•• UN ._ 18'\ Monle<•Y "'1 PdSl •I OtllPttnl from IM above ingent Creditor Of, the de·
• ,.,;~:.: '";;,,'~" n"' .. ~.~t~~~ ~~~~":,~';0~1:!• ~ "~a~e°o""51J.=n•My2.'H·,,'n0'l8',,, cej!lsed, you must file your .---c laim with the court or pre-~·"· ...... ~::.,·~~~ •• 8.,, Su1t6,. H8tld•er sent it to the personal
1. ""~r.';::~~tt~t~\:l,. ,l: .. .-
11/64<
''"' 'Ml~m.11n1 Wit\ ftllflld w .tn tr.. Se-cured Pa r'1V t ti I t d Id .. :,~'~ .~·u· "'" • " 1, '• •' r-. Ml ,~
I 0.Whtlc.I ~· ,, I H•U , ounly Cl•rk .,, Or•nqe C:ounh on P1P10u1bFl~sbne,a 12,r1anQ• (oua\t Oart y represen a Ve appo n e 1••, , , 1 7 , 8, • ,. by the court within four
•·•• F 1}<9'IO .,.,., months from the date of
I f '"' \1Alrm r 11t "" I• r·•l ,,, I Count1 Cttrk ,, 0, .,,., ~nl o
?• i.a1
PR OFi:.~S I O NA.L kSCl>O W I SERVICES
1'Jt Horth lt.thrt AV9"1H S•nta AM Callfor,,.• 0 101
Publ•'-hl-d Or•flQI' ( 1.t\t O" 'f • tJtt•
J•n 11 •b • 11 IA 111 • '''
P l HU(' NOTIC'J.
~· .. 1n1"""J 01•n9" co .. , oa11v P1•01 f I rst issuance of letters as frt> , 11 10 n. 10@1 m -a• P UBLIC NOTICE provided in Section 700 of
HoricEo,o£1<Au1.r the Probate Code of
NANCY E SHAW, " •ubst1Med California. The time for fil-Nor1cE TO CllEDtTORS 1 ... s1.e -lllAI ort•ln -of trust in9 cfalmS Will not expire 01' llULIC TA AH$FEll •• ,. cu I. d b ¥ w I L L I AM c prior to foor months from NL\':~':~' H:~,~~Yc't,~EN ,0 ~::.~•:G.;~~u~1~ :0 ·~~~:,..11': the date o'f hearing noticed
'"' td,IOtSOt LEI; B CROSLEY -H WALU'<CE. ,,.,_ •ncl wile ts above.
Pl'RUC NOTICE
'"0 1:1uslnt H •• CROSl.E v IO•nt ,.....,.,.,,as -lt<lerltt, d•led YOU MAY EXAMINF. HOftCE 01' BUl K fl.-.NSl'E R I ( N Tl RPRISES r ..... , • .,.., .. ,,.,se •nO •u<ule<I September 20, .. ,. -the f1'le kept by the c .... ·rt. f IS.C< •·0 •10• u ( t I:> •dd " • 1SS WUI 1t1n ·~··-Oc:-3. 19/t u lnSl•-1 vu Nut • t ~ l ••~ IC. '•• u\ln• \ of'~ Me C I 1 No 1113, 8odc tlW, P-115', OI· YOU are interested in the (fr01IOt\<>ISTCPt~ftJM tfANOlfll Slttel C•IY Oil• SI, ounv o C R ~ estate, riou may file a re· ,111 " , v l l ,. N l ,1 A ,.. 0 1 C 11 Orang•. StAI~ of C•hlor111•, 11\el •but~ trc••I rec:o"'• of Ille ovnty «or ... r,
tr•n\l•r '' •bout lo be meo~ to Or•nQ• COii"''• C•lllor11I•. llerellp quest W th the COUrt to re-l f41n•l@r1>r, .. n'"' '"''"'hS 4"'1• ~"" C R 0 s l. E y e. c 11 o s L E y 91 .. s nollet tll•I 1 bt'Mch of Ille ob-• I I ti ....lt the
1U V•• C,r u1•M Now1 •rl B~ACh ENT FRPlllSES, INC.. franslerH llgallon, lor"°"'l~wld-Ol lr .. I IS ce1ve Spec a no (8 Vl Cou~ly ~ °'"""" SI•! Of c. ,in,,,,. f ~~ oro~r1, to ... tr•ns l•rred b ~<urlly. ,,.. occ .. ,.,..,. ,,,. Nlvr• of Inventory of estate assets ::;::,/to ~~~~:~HI<;~~;.·:,::,,'::' Of>Hrtl»<I 1n ~net.ti H-All sloe~ In Ille brta<llt.lfWllllturt IO and Of the petitions, •C· .. ha•• bli\rt>f'\\ ldd If>> 11 Rusllong tr•dt. lixlu,...\, .,qulpmenl and good I Pay IO Ille -ltclarleS Ille prln• C 0 U n t S 8 n d rep 0 rt S
wind. 1rvi"" • "''"• 01 o .. 1n()' ~,.,# ~~~5~~~,,t~riu11'~~~~~s~:~;i'~:,• ~~b~""., ~~"':!,!~~~,°: ::=. described In Section 1200 Of 01 i~!''~=ny 10 .... 1,.n,1~"•" ,, ~d et as Wttl 111~ s1~1. C•h 01 emt>er J. '"° •tld ~m•• l. '"°· the Cal lfornla Probate l«•h•d Al '''°I rvtn" A•rlW•. Ntwoort Cost• Mew, County of Or.,,9f, State ol •1111 Code C•lllO•lllA 2 To pay -dUt .... IMH rental • , Buell COunly ot OrAtlO\' '>1•tt 01 Tiit 11111-,,.,,,1.,. wtll lie consum• ln Ille sum ol 11JO.OO end •ccrued ~ JANEEN J. HAHN In ro ca~~~'::~~:i,.,ty "°"I<'•~,,, QMMttl m11td on or •II•• 111e u111 day 01 cll••9tS -1n1.,.ei1, II anv. Clue and Per
•• All J!«ll in ha<IM, '"'u•••. "'llllP FtlHu•rv ""· II 10.00 a.m., al ,,.Y•bl• to The tNlr-e ComPMI\', wllkll 550 Paua.rlno N-207 m•nl • ..., _,... will ~I 111•1 6•••ulv c: R 0 s L E v .. c R 0 s L e y sum was PltY.bl• Oft ~UQUSI I,'*· Cost• aA-a-c' ............ _.... ENTERPRISES, INC., wflose eddreu ). To pey..,.n -, .. secured pro-,,,__!.:' ,,_..,_ Salon bU\lflt H ~no,.n U H °'IR IS ISS West lt\11 St.-., CJly ol C:Osll pert}' t .. H to OrMIOt County h a (714) 556-11• HANOLl:l(S M\CI ..... ,..., 81 1170 1'"'"~ MtH, (ounly of Ortn~. Stitt OI Colleclo• for ,,,. YH n ltl ... .... Published Or•-coest A•enue, Newpo<I BM (ll rounly 01 Celilornla All clllm\ mu\I lie sub· '"'°" 0 II PflOt ~...:--: S 11 Oranot. St3lt ol Ca11111r111~ m1111d by rebru;u v 16111, 1911, al By rfflon or Ille lore90l119, Ille a Y ' rwu ... , 1 i
Tiie bul-1'""'1• '*'11 °" conwm c: 11 o s L. E y & C R OS 1,. E y t1e11tllcl11rles ll•S dlre<lecl Ille •u• 1911 615-t mated Oii or •11•• 11"' 191" d•Y ol ENTrR PRISE$. INC. •llOM ..sdrtU slllllleel tnnt• to Ottl•rt. ~Ille Ftbl'\llf\f, '"'· ., Rt\•Qtnt••• l• row It IU Wnl 111\11 $!•HI .. (;lly OI Cost• ....... ts .. ,..., dKlarltd, ..... Ille ,,. •• C«P . W O J•m~to1 llo;id N~ .. POrt ~ ell MC ,.. ... Jo P'1llLIC NOTICE BHCll, County Of Orange. SI••• lit MU• County 01 Or111oe, Sl•I• ol Oebl-S, --· ... ..., • C•tllorflt• So "' •• ,,,.,,.,,to ,,.. Ctlllornl• wit '*111'*' ~ ~ ete<1I l-----Uii-,...,Ml-...,•,-----Tr•t1sl••ft.•ilflll'l,..nMme .. n11u So l•r o I• 'nown to lh• to seH.•-•••MN..•t drtn. .. ""'° bY '""'"'"", 1.,. 1.,_ h•nsler•, olll bu\1119\\ N,,,.• -H • .,,_,, • ...wy.,.. ... ........_ ...._.,It,"" tllr .. y•M• I.hi l)ot;I ti dlll•t~nt lrom O•enet I/ltd bY the Ttenli.fOt IOt IM 0et9111: ~a, "91 ~--jNJI lllrff YM"l•t•. k!Tlt ti-.... *""' E . ..._ ............... .... !M lbo11t.-.. _ Oi\Tao J-ryM.1 .. , .......... ,....... ..._.,., ...... . O•ltO J.,..,.,.,,, ,,., U AN&,lT C.GOULD DOVeUILWH•aca _ ...... -. YCILln9 J•Klm 1911.._......_y _C.......... ...-.--Tr_,..t .._,._,ca...,_ ........ -.CA-....._._Cllall...., .._. PullffSlllCI Or ..... c;.e.tt 0•11¥ Pilot, ~t*t""CI C> ... Qnt o./ly Piie(, .._,....Gr-.. OM91 o.!ty ...... ,_ 4.1 ... ~a • Itel tl>-tl ~tO 4 l!ft 'fll ....., ~a,, II.,_ .... ' -tlMt •
(
' $6Ml·CUS10M
...... to! CAR COVERS
\OW PIK:IS All -WEATHER PROTtCTION
YOUR CHOICE : ::a: =~~~·~62~~~~~~~ --~=--.,. • HlAVY OUTY Pt..A5TIC
~' -D -'THE INVISllU
Ce '1J WINDSHIELD
W"H'" LehyCMI._
----tlllenevetbef«• .,~.~~-: 2'' ~"''"°' ...
ltDBOYS
HEAVY DUTY
SHOCKS I
1 Y,," PISTON
PROTKT
Y<Mlt
CAR'S
f NSH
Reploce wMn ~ln
iiet a comfortable
\table ride-
e4iminot• rood iwoy.
'·• ""°'' ........ aft ' ......... . MADI lS,ICllll Y FOi
CAMl'BtS, Pia-UPS, YAMS,
IV1 & 4 WD's
15~
PEP IOYS STILL 'IVES A
LIMITEI IOAD IAZAID WAllAITY*
AT 10 EXTRA COST
CORNELL
All SEASON
RA~DIAL
8~
$36.99
$38.99
$39.99
$43.99
$43.99
$46.99
$47.99
$49.99
$'1."
$50.99
'"' '" ion OIVH A UMITIO w.OltANlY ON COltHEll TlltU fOll A 5'1CWllO HUMlll Of MONTHS AGAINST All ltOAO HA1AllOS IN NOit·
MAL 'ASSINOll CAii UH. OAMAOlO TlltU Will IE lll,lACfO WITH
NOaATIO MONTHLY AOJUSlMlNT CHAltGf IA$l0 ON llfGUlAlt Sfll·
1NO MCI Af TIMI Of MCHAN.
11111 BUY ON CREDIT ·
NO TIAOI~ llOUlltO e ML ,.ICH 'Ult .. OHAl IJlCIH TAil
FEO. EXC.
TAX
$1.60
$1.90
$1 .87
$2.07
$2.15
$2.30
$.
$ .70
w.dneeday, February•. 1981
~BARDAHL
TOP OIL
VAL VE LUBRICANT
0 AIL Y PILOT ••
T•l-MAGe3WAY
SPEAKER
SYSTEMS
YOUR CHOICE
BATTERY SALE
.
SPECIAL VALUES
FOR TODAY
THRUSUNDAY
c O!.T~s!~~A FULLERTON GARDEN GROVE SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER
S 0 Of SAN DIEGO FWY.
S. ltol>lo E sponol
1530 S. HARBOR 8lVO
PHONE 870-0700
. \
10912 KATElLA AVE.
!CATELLA & EUCLID
PHONE . 638-0863
120 f . FIRST ST. AT CYNU' S 15121 IUCH llVO. •
PHONE: 5•7-7•77 ,. PHONE : 191.~
•
r
BlllNISIU ____ ..., __________________________________________ -----------
A,...1111.,
WlUlam IUtHhftlck baa
IUCCleded rhoraton lra..,..w u pr•ldeat
of AUanUe IUehlield Co.
and lhlAkt h.ll tenu ...
will bl\ martlecl by a ...
ar1 umenl and more el·
(ort '-D developlDI
ener1Y.
Gold invest•ors get severe test
NEW' YORK CAP) -The gold
buta of tbe world have un-
der1ont1 a severe test of faith
lately.
Ove:r the past 12 months the
price of gold bas taken its
abarpusl drop in six years -
from a peak of $875 an ounce in
Janyai-y 1980 to under $500 early
tbla we~k. Anyone wbo got a gift
of 1old for Christmas bas seen it
fall more than 20 percent in
value since January.
That 's an awful lot of
turbulenc e for an investment
that is supposed to be a haven
from political and economic
storms.
,Absolutely no one
J>ays more interest
on1 checking accounts
thatn Bank of Newport
New l!lort Plus Acco·unts at Bank of Newport
have an annual"yield of 5.47%!"
Why nH> t stop in today and make arrangements to earn more
intereslt tomorrow. Our New Account representatives have
~omple te details of this sp ecial new service.
'lntt•fl•\t ~·c Id t'Jtntn~' l ()mput.1t1nn" hJwd on all dPpo''" .ind inlt·r1·,t l'drfl1ng, r1•111J111tng 11n
dl·po"t for , I full yt:.ir
'Bank ~of
.... Newport
N l'Wporl Bt'd< h, C dhiom1d
MAIN O FFICE. Pd~llt( Coa!>t H1ghWd) di A\Ol ddo • i'bO-bl.XXl
OOVlR OFFl<.E: Dover at ~·~•eenth ~lret·I • U45·5J3J
UlJO OFFICE: Th1ny-~econd ~treet dt ldtcl\t>t1e • b75·bHI
?SlltRVIVAL IN REAL ESTATE?
Sal.ING YOUR HO~ ll!?
How much should it 1 ·{)ally
cost to sell your home! '
IUYIHG rllOPHTY?
How to deal with brokers
and homeowners.
HEW REAL ESTATE AGENT7
'M'lat is your real future in
real estate?
RE,~LESTATE
SUI t VIV AL KITS
nan ..... YOU HllO TO IHOWTO SIU. oa IUY YOUI OWH HOMli IHCLUDIS
FoaMS, IMSTIUCTIOHS. •LV .. C AIDS
Ate N09MATIOH TO MAH YOU A UAL
HTATINOI
!L~ ~.RN NOW AND SA VE s I ooo·s LATER!
Trtdra ef .. .,... -and he )\<t to
avoid those wtto make mon~ / as a
result of your Ignorance.
... .,. C I hllH .. What V0U
c:en do to reduce or eliminate 'ac-
ton thllt Inflate your asking p , ice
and aa a result lose a sale on ~ '( lUr home.
a.a .H hh. Yo u will reoe h1t tom. that answer important qu t \&-
tions about the home you are b u Y-
ing -questions many Peot > le
don't ask -and pay later after t tie
pUrchase.
._..._.. flf 1 n• '"-1 on how to
economically i mprove your
chances of successfully selling
your home .
,_, ...... -how some brokers
hire anybody who can walk -and
why the -vent you are thinking of
hiring may be gone tomorrow
..., ....._~ ... ......._What they
can do for you as far as services
and saving money and com-
missions.
.... • ....... •du ah • I about your largest investment.
......., ............ Why the
smart buyer or seller tells the truth
-and what happens if you don't!
Y--.._ ~ Things you
ahould know before you buy that
will help or hinder you wtten you · are ready to sell.
...... tricb. Learn how to rec·
ogmze good agents from the bad
ones. and the ploys they use to
foroe decisions.
&..wyera -do they know real
estate? Will they do the Job?
NEW 2 I --ID EDITION THI COMl'Lln MOHIY·SAY .... .utDI TO
.._, YOU HLL YOUR HOMI. COteO,
MOllLI HOML ITC.
SAVE BIG MC :•NEY-COMPLETE INSTRUCTION GUIDE
You will learn and ean , from our oomprehensiVe A-Z Guide. compiled by experienced
professionals in all arE 1;1sof real estate; and edited for fast comprehension by anyone.
CJUa 1111.SOMMU NI IS IAsm OM ,,,.. COST -?WHY SUCH L( l 'WCOST7 IMmAD °' ... H. ... IO CCMolSStOM RATH MOST llOlmlS CHAa•a.
MOHIY-IACK LIMITID n ~ • OfflR. FIU IH AHD SIMD FOi YOUI SUIVIV AL KIT HOW!!!
YESll I want to save $11) oo·s by learning the facts. Rush me my Real Estate Survival
Kit, regular $50. For limi1 t td time, Spec_ial Price O! $29.95. If within 10 days I decide to
return It. I will receive a F °l Jll Refund (minus handling costs).
,.._ do not ~nd CHh with yout c ~ der. You may use person~I check,
money order, or one of the following 1 :i "edit cards. If you use a credit card, we muet heve your card number. e1CP1r1 It Ion date. and signature.
.....,o.iap -... t t • •I• t • • • • • • • • • • • 1 o , , , 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • Eact o.a. I • • o o o,. ---.r.-............... I •••••• •• ••••• •• • •••••••• 1 •••••• EJIO cs. ..... . C.O.O.• 1.1 ........ _,
0.-•--0.....
~-• ...-.-°' ........... .-..-~ ....................................... _ .......... . .,..,,, ...................... .
....
°"·•··•••••••••••••••••••• • . l tAfl. ..... _. ___ ._.....,..._.__ '
-Chectt If you IMtlr• mobile home~ Mf'nent (add S5).
'
••
AMmcAM .... llTA11 IOAIM A1iiiii...., .................. ._.. .
r
As happens with o 1ost market
convulsions, a wld, e variety of
explanations, rangi IJ g from the
simple to the abstru s e, has been
offered for gold's de1 ! line.
High interest rate ' are one of
the first factors mt ·1 ltioned. At
the moment, money -market in·
vestments a re yie l ding con·
siderably more than I .he rate of
inflation.
That's important, bt ·cause one
of the principal arg " 1ments in
gold's favor is that it serves as
an inflation hedge. fl ight now,
however, an investor in the 33
percent income-tax bt " 1cket can
choose among seven 1, I money.
market mutual funds ) • 1elding 18
percent or better.
vestors were ·looking ahead
warily to President Reagan's
economic message this week.
Reagan has already voiced
some personal feelings about
go ld . At a meeting with
Chairman Paul Vol cker of the
Federal Reserve a couple of
weeks back, he talked happily of
a bearish forecast he had read
on gold as a sign that inflation
might abate.
Volcker replied, "I would love
to see that."
Tangi ble evidence of any pro-
gress against inflation isn't ex-
pected any time soon. In fact,
with such recent developments
as the full decontrol of oil prices,
economists warn that the con·
sumer price index reports over
the next few months could look
downright nasty.
There are, however, other
signs that hopes are mounting
for better news later on. Stock
prices of oil companies, which
soared for most of 1980, have re·
cently been taking a beating.
With all this facing them, it's
understandable-that many in-
vestment adviser~ who have
been advocates of gold have
turned cautious or just plain
negative on it. For instance,
Charles Stahl, writer of a well
known commodity-market let·
ter, predicted reeently that the
gold price will go as low as
$380-$420 this year.
STILL, SOME diehard' gold
bugs are standin1 their tround.
James Dines, an adviser who ·
has sung the praises of gold for
almost 20 years. says it is not
yet time for b is
"M VAOOAOGASSS." which
stands for "much vaunted all·
out one-and-only gold and silver
sell signal." •
In the 1981 forecast issue of his
newsletter , Dines continued to
urge his followers to bold on.
"We never promised you a rose
garden." he said. "Gold bullion
has already had seven signifi-
cant declines during this major
bull market.
"Those who have held these
precious metals through every
technical correction and period
of bad news have racked up in·
credible percentage profits."
Savings rose
in December -WASHINGTON <AP )
Savers deposited $2.1 billion
.more in savings and loan institu-
tions than they withdrew in
December, taking advantage of
record interest on six-month
money market certificates, the
government reported.
However , the Federal Home
Loan Bank Board said a "weak
deposit now earlier " in 1980Jcept
net new deposits for the year to
$10. 7 billion.
... ,.,,..
CH NJ WI Jo100 un B•llt k \/IQll.anu MorgJIH
""'°" ~~:,"JcEn Q OllCty~
V•lta Omni,,_ s L1nc:Pl1e Omni FIS< Bst" pf TONM
GAC Lr. Tween ~ Q CHW!cl Gr.,.., lmvtf" un IUly ~·.1r.;ni wt
FtLncFn E"'-W•lkrClr
UPS La~~ •• c"'t. u:c~6
J .. Up 26 J
2 1 • 1 Up 1S 0
•'-1t "'• Up 194 1t'' P-• Up 11 '
• I I'. Up 11..2 • > .. Up .. I 2'• • '-Up IS.O ll' 1 • I\. Up 1 ... l .., Up l •.l
II • • I.., Up 13.•
" 2~• Up tl.A
"" 2'• Up U,2 J1 1 • ~ Up IJ.O
1t t 1'• Up 121 • .., • ~ Up ll.I 21 J Up 12 S ...
1 •
I •
1 '
> Up 11 8
'• Up 118 • •• Up 11.S • Up II l
7 1) .. • Up II l
2 ' 11"· H i
DOWNS
L41\t 1•. 1'> , .
3 31,
JI I
3'> ••'• •'• 2 1811 • J•• 1 ,..,
1'• • l '>
2'' , . .,
2 .... •V. ,...,
IOl. ,..,
51.
• Up 11 I .. t•. Up 10 CJ
2 ' Up 10.
c~. Pct.
011 2S.O
\o Oft 20.0 •• Off 14.3 ., 0 11 ••.J
' Off ll.l
' 0 11 12 s
' 0 11 11 s
1 Off 12.? -... 011 II • '• 011 II I
2·~ Off 10.1 I Off 10.0 ... OH 10.0
~ 011 9.7 v. 011 9J ~ Off ••• ... Off ••• .. Off '·' .. Off 9,1 .. Oft • I '• Off 'l -•• Off ••• ·~ Off •.t I Ott ..,
"' Otl 1,7
~. Off ..7
:KUTUALFUNDS
NEW YOJIK IAPI •tvln BulloCk E ct Inc 1137 NL I !>elK I 6.'3 7 4' Grw1h S «I S.S. lnolnvEq C51eo 0o t191.,!! NNLL Bullo IS S2 .. '9 E ;:ch lJ I• NL V•r Py 9.11 10.01 N•l8d 1 ... t •t 00 .v~ The loll-1"9 QllO N I 1S 0 NL Inv llelft s 2.S s 7• MUIU•I ol ~ Geori Stft~I lt.17 NL ~r::~,~~i~ s!~" ·! il 1i~ ~: ~ \r~ 1!.~ ~t ~!it.~.. :::~ .J~~ ?Z~ ::~ t~ ~lcTu :!·~ :F ~~!hi. J:i 1:2~ ~~·~·;.~11ZfWf11;~ ~:~i •u lo 1l1 H• 1nco 19? NL JP lnco 7 4' 1.14 h Fr• IO.IJ 11.01 bntHI 1J-r: :~·~1 iunGrtfl 10,9211.n
TaFre • II • ... HI Yid to.ts ~t J:~~·HencO:i.., NL ~:!.~~· ~ ~~ ~t T:: E• 11.07 .. :., +:p~ '::fl 1::~: ~:~ ,,.~u·~~ nl SM I0.43 tl.lS ~~ .~~n 1a~ NL Bond 13.28 t•.4.J N•I Avl• 9.3' NL VI$!• ts.:19 16,12 fmpl w 17.l2 tU2
sold (Net •sstl ~:'h.~d ~·.~1 "N~ I Se lo 1m 7 S7 NL. Grwln 10 .. n .9S N•I Ind IS.01 NL Voy•g 14.U IS.O Trns C'• ,,., 10.1' r:~~~! :ius ~~~ hetlnul :14.... NL, Th r Ill 9.20 NL Balan 8.S1 9.U N•I SKurUles Jlelnbw l .'1 NL Trns Inv 1.16 8.11 olonlel Funas· T" I 'd 21.18 NL Tu E• '21 10.01 B•l•n 10,16 10 u 11....... ''°' NL Trev E~ "'" II.JS
chergel ~1.~:~jl ~~ze111 I~:~ 1rn Fla~'~ ~Jal P;1, NL ~=~;!~ Fu~11. NL/ g~,~ rn rn S.G~~~thSecis1.'.,22N NLL ~:'n'c F9~ :~:~ ~t ~~~~n F IS.SI Nl HI Yield 6.'lt 7.63 Ind' isl .... NL lncom 1.11 I 2 Grwth 1.IS 1.36 I CO 1011 NL rwnC ..,.1 13.33 NL AOV 1',JO NL lncom • :Je 6.'7 inc om a.JA NL Grow II 13 1217 Prtld s ... 6 4J SIP• 1 in esi USAA GI 11.69 NL
Alulure 13-9' Nl Optn 10.'4 11 .. Fst I•' vest°". Ho Vied 8.76 9.39 lncom •.OS •.SJ C•Pull v IS~ , .... USA, A Inc 9.SI NL AIM Funas. T•• Mg IS 07 .... 1 Bnc: I Ap 13,12 1'.'IO Mun 7.47 8.00 Sloe-10 SI 11.lJ · • Un A<Cu S,13 NL CvYld 13.'1 U,l'i olu Glh 1'.81 NL 01~ ~ ' 8.91 9.lS Os pin 13 .. IS.23 ha E• 1.14 I... Gs:.:,\" 1,ss .... IO 16NISL Unlf Mut 10.• NL with AB 1 ti 1.21 Gr" r ·n 11 I• 12 83 umm 11.70 tt.:M NE Lile Fund: ~· Unit..i Funds: Ed son u .n "·28 I>' 1 n • 10 1 32 Teen 12 ti u 00 Eqult 11.28 19 11 Scudder "-· Accm 1.92 t .75 'Al~~!'i in~ 'NI( :'~~ ~d U~ ~·ri 0":1~; 6:/4 7 21 Toi RI 11.21 13.3' Grwth IS.JS 16.. Com SI U t7 NL BoiWI s.o. Bl
A BlrthT 11.Jt IJ.!A omp Fd • °' 9,. Sloe k 1 JO 1 91 Kt_yu•.IOMBI FlunaJ _s:,.... lncom '., 10 .. Otvet '7.21 NL Con Gr 12.IS 13,9)
Amerlun Funds oncord 1' St NL Tu 1 ~· 1.09 a.n C1 • .,. -Flee Eq 11·,. .. :,,. l"f1°';d :tr, ~t COfl Inc 10.0. 10 ... 8 l ff onn•cllcu1Genl •Wll\I .... ••I Cus 81 16.4711.00 T .. E ••. 01 .,. ,;MB ,·,, NL Fld« 27.1'1' ... !mt~ 11:01 .rn r~~ '!.r: 1rn F,:~.'.' 2~ .. r, S~I~ ~~! ~~ ~::~ U! N•t~;rr ,~r NL Soe<I ..:,, NL ~.:c~ 1t.~ l}: A Mull II ... 12 77 Mu" 8d I ,, I 11 Found< I •• Gr""P Cu\ IC2 6.S.0 I.IS Guard 31.09 NL TaFre ·"' NL Mwnl •.o •. n An Giii •.OI 9 '1 ons Inv 12 st U 00 Orwl I• •. JO NL Cu\ St 11.32 10,07 LIOly l.n NL. S.Cwrlly Fllnlb. Ut5<1 UO 10,., Bono I I ... 12·7• on$1tl G ..... NL lncor ' I 1' 64 NL Cus SJ •.•7 10.JS M•nfll • 10 NL Bond 7.S. 7.7S Vllftt 11.17 12-11 ~~..:r"· l~·r. 1;·~ onslltu -·" Mui• I ,,,. 10 12 Cus S4 .... 10 :M P•rln IS.. NL Equty 7.01 '·" Uld Svcs UIS NL onl Mui • :JO NL 5"<• 70... NL lnlernt 4.:12 • 72 S<,, .. , 14.'3 NL lnveSI •.«> 10 27 V•IU. LIM Fd: ln,om 7·77 I.•\ Ir'( Ceo IS Sot l6 IO Fr•nkl 11 Gr-Mos 12.77 IJ.'O New Wld un11v•ll Ult•• '10 IO.OS F-1'.lW 16.0 ~C!ers ~·~ :·~ l•w•re o,_ . AGE J 41 l .14 LU lllOIOft G<p: Newt GI 1112 NL S.!ecte;.ct._F-S · N lllC""' 6.M 6.IJ Oeul "OJ 1s lJ Brow ,' s 0 s. Cp l dr 11.tO IS 26 Newl IM 7.U NL ~m .... 7. I L Ln Gt lS,'7 ».JI WSh Ml 7 S2 I 1? Oetaw II.IS 6.IJ ONTI : tJ,O-1•.0. ,ONMA 1.fO NL Nlcl\01• 17 S2 NL Sot Slit 1'.61 NL Sl>I Sit IOM 11.0I Amer <>-•I Oelclt 111 7 77 Grwtl, 1.15 7 92 Grow 10 JO NL Noru sl 10 n• NL S.tlvm..i "'-·
C•P 8d • )4 • " h Fr• • «> 6 70 Utlls "°' •.«> Flesh IS .. NL NY Veftl 11.ff 10 lJ ··-12 ll 11.21 11..-c• s..dtt": Enlrp l3.5J 1',, Oett• • t3 I.. lncon I I . 2.03 TaFOI l.O'I NL Nu .... n 7,17 7.. Net ""' Lll I ... In<""' 10.J7 11.'3 HI Yid 9 J) 10 01 ,, Ceo J,16 NL us °' > •• SI 7.07 Ltl• In$ 10.«> 1117 o...... 16.t:I NL u Ceo 1L7l 10 1' Ill...... I.AS '·" ~: •• B :;.-: ,t~.6,,S C• Bl ,. ft NL C•Pll '·" •.12 LllWlnr 11 • NL OM Wm 11.14 NL Un Inc 1U7 11.n C•E I ''·" NL • C• SI 11.!A NL EQVll S.61 6.11 L~ls S...19\: ~-· fl'd· S.ntlMI "'-' c""'"' Lii • " ~':c'~k ~~ "N1~ ,.. BUt 1us NL Funds hH C•Pll )6.33 NL •.• 10.11 :=~ ::: N! o.e,.11 • Fd Am 10 12 ll.IJ reyfus Grp· c mr<e ...,.v•ll Mui IJ." NL Id 11.42 1'.75 C S i•• 1,·n Jt,n NL A Ind 12 41 NL Ind Tr unev•ll Lord Allbell: In< BM 7 7• t.• °"' .. • 0¥9" I ~~~:, :::~ 12~~ Oreyl 14:01 U.ll Pllol t 1Mvall Alflll!:,. I.ff "26 0.tn D.7' lMAS Grwth 11.93 IJ.CM •7"1 NL
L••ae ,, • 2J.. f Pa< 16.t. NL BM -'·" 10.11 Spec• 17.JI 11.n s...oi. U.D NL hes I "1'1 NLL ~~!!td lJ·~ '!:= N f'ilne 11:.. NL ••• Op IS.lJ NL o ... GI 17.'7 ...... Tr "" Ut N.'i Sent,., 21.12 n... hFd I ,..., N
"GlhFd 7.21 1.11 ~· Inc 7.31 NL E S&S 21.10 NL L tncom a1Q71 2·92 ~.:. 1:::~ ~:SJ si= j:11:11.• Fi.E f l7.S1 NL ~ r,,~~~ w S~I~ T~~ll .1t~ ~t :In SL,;LI I 1t~ ~t 11f=.: I~.: l~ ~!;.~M 1;,•IO it,:f :~~:; it.~ l!:~ ~~ 1 1"::: u"..~
A '"vest 11.oe NL :r.:.i~~~· t.4s H~~111:. 16"'' NL "'~~1 • ,;s. 1:u i>eo1wid u• NL 1r1..i11 11n11." 11.....,., "'-:
A ln•lnc "·" NL B•••n 11,43' '·°' ,. HOA ~-00 )... us Gov '·°' ....... ""SQ Lt7 NL Slerr• GI l'-71 NL hplr H..D NL ~ Nt~lfl ,i·: 4,1t Fours '·" NL Grwth •.to t .9S MISS Flnencl. p...,. Mu ... NL t-rm 0 1.11 NL llld Tr 16.H NI,.
.. :~:: 1•19 1, ~ Gr#llt 1U4 20.l l lncom •·• NL Mlb )J,10 IJ,0' Pllll• to.21 11.1• r=t~~ 1611 G"MA US NL
A•F•_!IOWhll 1on5'2• •• • Slncr:or i::~ !~·:;; ~=~: r!~ : :tu =t ::o :u: :u~ ~.Z\~ ~~ •.IJ IMO 7,0S 1:10 ~~ ll:il ~t ~ • .1. ''° IO •s N MCP 17 '3 ,, » l"rCMll 1.11 ,,.. • ..... ,, 1UO u... MllHY '·" NL 1ncom •• 07 4,42 s oo 11.u t ,.u ~•roM. ~.1 70 u _:. MFO t1:SJ 12'.4J SMc:t 11.ao 12. Trwst '·" "·S M11S111 14.IO 51. Stoo .... 9 rt Et1eralotdl Group: iloA ~ 'tts tll MFB q '° U e Pll11r1m Grit· Vellt 11. .. 14, ~111111 tt.11 L ILC Gt 16,"2 11'•s CMm I'd H H • ' MMB 1·,. t'.1s ~11 ,.. u, .. u. SI •1111 '"" 15, ••t •·• " I LC Inc Ii .. 1iH t.71 t0,61 ISi o,...,..· .. F.... .·., 6 76 sa l&Or •• I.ti ... I.
U N• L Ent"' u ,tl 16.JO Ott•lfl '·°' .... ,.':'1 .... "r• ,.:-:,_ N' L M .. C 4,e •.1 "' QO • I la.Ii B•bs lllC • Inc°"' I S1 ).'° .... .... • .. .. M .. I" 7.Jt 7.t ~Ill tW .... , 001• II 1.22 HI. Bas 111~ II. • NL E1t''1~ ~·!:,/'·" Trat 5'I ·Ji 1:.S,, It.St ~rrl!I LVftCh; P~ fl'llfllt• w 111"' .... ti. f~ t7.D et B~~ .. ~'.''·11 .. Elf:::: Ta I.JI .... Ti'PI Sii ~ nevell •est< !'·" llAI ,._. lt,.u 11. llll-.C '-JI •. ....... ti. ..
HIMun ti,)tl l J'.t7 E¥•lf'll u.1~ NL lllWttry tUO NL CE~1 .... 91.u,. ",•!! 11 IM UL U. ,.., 111 IUI 11.1' #elttil tt.• L
NwQeud fl'•l•fld .... t.U It< .. HY ' •• 1t 11..SI ii -:.. s.n ~ .... 111• -8:' fj' 6 10::. ,.. ""
II.II 100 l'rm BG 14·· JS.Jt ·~-find 1 t ... ,. 1!-! ~l ~ ~ ... It.ts Pl~ I t ~ t , : HD.II ff =" I h ••• 1 • NL _ _... ,_., I IP • t ' • -t11tl'n11 ° ...;.c..,,..-; ' = . t4'° Bff< Gtll UM NL Aom ~ t 11 • IS I lll'ltll lil .¥/ II.JI •tt .. , 01 1 II.ti "" CM _.,..' M
Me( tClll 12.H NL t!•Cfl 1t:SJ NL Ill¥ 1.-C 1•!!.i"' UMM U t UI ?: ll.N :-,., .. 1J --~ :t ~7~"~ NL 2!!'!"' :;::l 11·;1 I~~ ':j~ IJ t~ 16 =H.: : .. ,.. H .... u NL '":.( .... . :
111 ,.~ ... 17 NL ~,, ,, •• ti. I Ill~~~~:·....... '".,.. -r11·ll !!.=", ~ •• 1 ~ !-!! =t ~llC :JIJOU• u~:~~ '~ =t I ~n~iJtUt ..... v .. II. '::I Y.11,. Nt•ilf-J'!'i ;;;" u .. JllllC.tS.n NLF ... ltrO-.: NL 1'0 NOY •'•n11J.! NA .M\ .... n NL 1111 .... __ ...
'"' '"" "~ 11.-J ~uet . 11.M ' •• nM 11.U NL Ae'9C -I ... ~I Bwlt &IMr : a.. .. w NL ~ :1·~ :I f't 17 ... ~ I~ =--1. ,_,,.......,, ~$ ;t =ti ~~ ::: ::t f;:'9b I. •a ==-11.111t I '"'1111 ..... ~ ~ ...... __ _
g;f'Cj. 11.Jt NL OM •• , t .. 1 .... • ,.. ' ' M.,_. ... Uf ,.._ ,._,. a11--. J
..
! •
•• ti
f I , _,
0 1
' • I
I I
'
Auto woes touch lieartland
Town dependent on Chry1ler euff ers setbacks
NSW CAITL&. lM <AP). --WlU. a • ..._o1.a.uwu....,oau..
~ equare ud tM Im stat•
buketlaall tbam,._....p ......., ln UM
Hw Wab 1daool n•. New C11Ut ..... tlae v•ry tmbocu .. t ol mMldl•
A••rka. A l'6ty ol ll,IM peo,a. lMq amid
l'Ora and toybeu rfeldl. mu .. from
tDdlanapoH1. it it a plate ol unlaillna
CO\HUay and dt p pride and deep
anai«y
H•re la w9'at people la Ntw Cuue are
aylftt, In \Mar own words, u their ma·
jOt tmp&oyer Chry1ler Corp atrua·
1le1 for Ute
... y ClllLD&EN A&£ arowlnc up
the areatest people in the world because ot lbil pl.ce. . U they say lbty're
1oin& to play basketball al LO o'clock at
night in the school tym, that's where
you'll find them." -Dick Gross, who
was manacer or Chrysler's forge and
machinine plant here from l974 to Jan.
23 of this year.
"The community was comfortable
with the situation before. There were
seasonal, and market, ups and downs.
Now it's a hungry community for the
first lime in decades. It will not allow
itself to be kicked into lhe ground. . ..
Whether Chrysler fails or whether
Chrysler lives , w e have got to
diversify." -Rick Thrasher, a busi-
ness development specialist.
"No n ames, please. They take
repr isals over there. Not Gross. The
superintendents. Gross was the best
m anager we ever had. Re shook every -
body's hand every Christmas. The
others just put up a notice on. the
b'ulletin board." -A worker quaffing a
cold one al Brown's Hole, a tavern
across the street from what people
som etimes call "lhe Chrysler" when re-
f erring to the 74-year-old plant.
Synthetic
fuels
plan last?
WASHINGTON (AP>
-The head of a group
of companies trying to
build the country's first
commercial synthetic
fue ls plant has an -
nounced a financial plan
he described as "in all
proba~ilily the last ef-
fort " to save the $2
·'After lu t week '1 layoff1, there are 743
p eo pl e on .roll there ; 2,800
uaed lo be lbt ma1ic number." -
Mayor Bud Ayers, who once ran a
1team hammer la "the Chrysler." •·t remember friends whose dads
were laid off ln lbe '50s. They ate potato aandwtches. There were a lot fewer
benefits then." -Insurance agent John
Lane. .
"We'd be beat If It weren't for the
TRA (Trade Readjustment Act) -
down the tube." -A worker in Brown's
Hole. The federal TRA payments may
provide up to 70 percent or a worker's
pay for a year.
"In December, Chrysler workers got
3,819 weeks or TRA payments. The
December unemployment rate was 17.7
percent." -Cletis Kinser of the state's
Employment Security Division office in
New Castle.
"l'VE GOT THREE JOB orters in
Florida, I'm s ingle and 1 may go:· -a
newly laid-off worker in Brown's Hole.
"I've got two houses. one paid for and
one not, two kids in school, a wife and
I'm supporting my mother. 1 can't pack
up and leave, I jus t can't. That's why I
voted for lhe concessions." -The first
wo rker in Bro wn 's . United Auto
Workers Local 371 approved, by a 3·1
margi,n, a contract that cuts workers'
pay .l>Y 13 percent.
"Any decent jobs out there, the young
guys laid off early have already got ..
them." -a worker in Brown's.
"I WON'T TALK TO you, not after
that Wall Street Journal article." -
Larry Lawson. night bartender in
Brown's, referring to a story 17 months
ago.
"The article was not orrensive; it was
everything that came after that. The
article made us a hot topic and the TV
stations descended on ua. They were
beatlni people over the head for stale·
ments. One of lhe stations asked a
Realtor the same question seven times
-what does Chrysler mean to New
Castle? -and she answered il aeven
limes and finally she said, 'I don't real·
ly know,' and what gets on the air? 'I
don't really know.' •· -ex-New Castle
manage r Gross. now manager of
Chrysler's Kokomo plant 65 miles
away.
"IN lt8t, WE HAD 65 attempted
suicides up to Nov. 1. In all '79 we had
only 61. The average age of the people
who attempted suicide was 56 in 1979
and 31 in 1980." -Roger Reeves, head
or the police department's emergency
medical service, which covers all or
Henry County. with 48,000 peopl~.
"ll has not been a textbook case. We
have yet to experience what we expect·
ed in behavior problems. . . . What has
happened is the adults a re trying to up.
g r ade their credenpals in the job
market in our General Equivalency
Diploma program ... and in the
machine shop and welding in the voca·
tiona l school, we now have to tum peo-
ple away.'' -School Superintendent
Phil Borders.
"FROM A MARKETING viewpoint,
we can tell potential cliel')ts the new
contract shows that they are practical
people here." -Thrasher.
··It could operate as a job s hop.
There's a lot of forging work out there."
Local 371 president Luther Ferrell.
''The first positive thing is the people.
Wi th the productivity these people have
begun to generate, you can't tutn your
back on it. ... Selling the plant as an
ongoing operation is still a live option."
-Gross.
1 billion facility.
The new financing
I plan for the Great
1 Plains Coal Gasification
I Plant in Beulah, N.D.,
I tries to meet objections
by gas consumers who
~ were successful in de·
feating an earlier pro-
posal.
-. Arthur Sed e r Jr ..
n
le u
n:
m
cl
S1
si
F1
.; -:
·' ~ ::
,..•
~
chairman of American
Natural Resources Co.,
said Monday the project
likely would be aban-
doned if the consortium
did not have affirmative
res ponses on the latest
plan within three weeks.
THE PLANT was a
major element in
former President Jim·
m y Carter 's push to
spur development of a
domestic synthetic fuels
indus try. The plant
would convert coal into
125 m11t1on cubic feet ot
natural gas daily.
The C a r t e r ad -
ministration gave ten-
tative approval for a
$1.5 billio n l o an
guarantee.
The future of the plant
wa s se v e r e l y
jeopardized by a fede ral
appeals court ruling in
Dece mber whi c h in-
validated a financing
plan approved by the
Federa l En e r gy
Regulatory Com -
mission.
MEANWHILE, o f·
ficials said multimilllon-
dollar synthetic fuel pro-
jects in seven states may
be halted or sharply cut
back because of stiff
budget cuts being con·
sidered by the Reagan
administration.
ALL IS NOT SERENE IN PICTURESQUE, SMALL INOIANA TOWN
Chryaler fln•ncl•I trouble• c•ualng •nxlety In New Caatle
APWI .........
Adoptions·
aided by
business
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
-Big bus i ness is
reaching out a helping
hand to e mplo yees
wishing to adopt a child.
• A typical new adop-
tion policy now offered
by Honeywell , for exam·
pie. provides that the
company will pay all
direct adoption expenses
up to a maximum of
$1.000 per child. Typical-
ly, adoption costs here
range from $300 for a
stepchild to $.1,500 for a
foreign child.
"Since the company
provides medical cov·
erage to employees who
have children through
childbirth, we decided it
made sense to also help
our employees who have
children through adop-
tion.·· said Ed Lund.
vice president or ad -
ministration.
CORNER
Rare Colna a Stamp•
GOLD a SILVfA
prlcea for 2-3-11 -C-.-.00 -C1.11it1 ... , -Kru99rr•nd\ UU.,. U1•.M Maple Leal UOt.M U14.M
100 CorONI '474.00 '417.00
lO PHOS '611.0I U U.00 "°°"' SllYer 8~ 1t17,. 1077'
,-~-"' e..a ... ...-......
(714) 556-aSO
South Coeet Plan Vlllege
____
, ___ ~"9H)
MET WOITH SS00,000 -.i?
IMRATIOll All TAXCS
MPll YOU OUT?
CALL 751-3911
AU fw '*· Cris Price
Certified Fmanc1al
Planner
First ~ ""' c.s.ttm.
At .. Qarp
Call 642-5678.
Put a f ew words
to work for ou.
THE
ROADSTER
When you're away and someone's trying
to reach you, an Answer Page beeper lets
you know-instantly!
• World's largest computerized paging agent.
• Widest selection of pagers: single·tone,
dual-tone. silent (vibrating)/ audible
combination. memory storage and more.
• Wide-area coverage-15,000 square miles.
• Direct dial access.
• A location near you, plus field representa·
tives at your beck and call.
• 24·hour service. We never sleep.
• Daily rental or month·to-month.
• Free unlimited beeping, free delivery and
free full maintenance.
• Quantity discounts.
• Call today for literature and a free
demonstration!
With Answer Page, you may be out of
reach, but you'll never be out of touch!
~~~&\JER PRIJE
645-1342. 731-7777. 831-2493
.. ul ..,_"' .... ..__ ..... tlllct _, ftll
..-... .._.........._....-·-· ... -·~· .......... _..._ ....... _ .....
4 -~ Emn ~G ~· On PasSl>oo:ts "•
of as little as $10
9% Annual Yield. _.
8.50% Annual Rate
NO TERM REQUIREMENT THRIFT BY MAIL · '
•Yleld 11 baled on lnterHt belnt credited monthly to the Pa11Dook balance and being
maintained for one year. F11nd1 In by the 10th earn lnlere1t fro"' the 1 at of ttle month.
Pa11book lnterelt 11 compounded dalty and credited "'onthly.
FOR CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS ONLY
*FREE CORDLESS EMERGENCY LITE
PERFECT FOR POWER FAILURES,
BLACKOUTS AND OTHER EMERGENCIES
Operates on 2 "D'' batteries (Included)
Pull off ... It lights
Put back ... 1rs off
'Qomplete with wall bracket
*FREE WHEN YOU •.•
Open a passbook account with $1000 or more,
this emergency light is your FREE. Limited quantity,
offe'r good only while supply lasts! .
HIGH INTEREST PLUS FREE GlFT
A REAL VALUE FROM ...
A Centennkd ThrUt and Loan Assodation
731 North Euclid Street 18820 Brookhurst
Post Office Box 4606 Post Ottice Box 8310 • ~-6,. Anaheim. California 92803 Fountain Valley, California 92708
..... (714)533·3072 (714)964·911 1
THERE'S ·
A THIEF IN
YOUR HOUSE!
You're being robbed this very moment and it's an inside job. The
thief is disguised as your water heater. It can account for up to 40%
of your total energy bill.
The sun can heat your water and at the same time reduce your
cost by as much as 75%. State and federal governments and the
public utilities provide unheard of incentives. Government tax
credits alone reduce installation cost by more than half.
1. Federal tax credit: 40%
2. State tax credit: 15%
3. Utility credits totaling from $720 to $1,475
4. 100% financing on approved credit
There will never be a better time to consider solar. The sun
will be around forever ·· but not the incentives.
Call: (71 4) 661 -6881 or (714) 831 -5670
SAVE WITH SOLAR I GAS
Authorized Distributor For
King Energy Systems
Systems Inc.
32422 Alipaz, Suite B •San Juan Capistrano, CA 92675
Contract ors St•te L icense 391 503
If it'sgot
wheels,
you'll move
it faster In a
Daily PllOt
classified
ad.tall
6'2·5611 and a
trlendlY ad-
viser will
j
• . i . .
;
f
I
i I ~ l i
i t i
! l I .
!
i
i
i
i l !
I
I
I w.-11•111. ,.,_,, •· t•t
TRANSACTIONS
....................... YM, ......... llllrHlc,~ ........ DtWt ... ~1~11 ~-................... ,,.._'-""'"ltcwtt ... ON!ert ... 1 ........
•
BJ SYLVIA POaTB&
Our 1980 cenaua profile says that on aver .. e.
Americans have now reached the "mature'' 11• of JO -1
bigher aae level than ever bu been achie~ed by mo.t Of
the rest ol the world. and a ripe .,. that we ln our own. hll· tory have reached only
once before. ·
(That previous 30· --year mark was re· _,,~
corded back in 1"°, a ~
generation ago, when
the low birth rates of
the great depression
era followed by World War II compelled a rise in our
average age).
Now at the start of the decade of the 19805, we've re·
turned to t.be unusually high average age. Is that 1ood or bad news?
FOR ntE ECONOMY. it's good news. And it's a dem·
mographic ractor upon which I have been basing my op·
limism for our nation's outlOOk as the decade rolls on.
The reason is simple -as this generation's workers
becoD')e older, they will become more skilled in their jobs.
more experitnced and productive. A more productive
worker means a more productive economy.
The prolonged era during which our nation's produc·
tivity (amount of goods and services produced per worker
per hour worked) has lagged so conspicuously is drawing
to a close.
WITH THE smn will come a revival in the rise in
Uvinf !l&.andards and a return to economic stabili{y.
Of course. there are many explanations that
economists submit for the slowdown in growth in recent years.
Among them are the spiral in energy costs; excessive
spread or government regulations throughout our
economy; destructively steep and broad taxes; degenera·
tion in relations between labor and management and
decline in the fundamental work ethic associated with
America's history of prosperity.
But no matter how much weight ls given to any or all
these explanatJ.ens, a basic cause that cannot be Ignored is
the influx during the decade of the 19705 of masses of
young, unskilled workers into the labor force.
THE RISE IN THE proportion of young to older
workers, or unskilled to skilled in our working population,
had to reduce our overall productivity -and did.
The oversupply of young workers Is a major, th9ugh
overlooked, reason for the persistence of a high rate of in·
nation side by side with a bigb rate of unemployment, ac·
cording to Richard A. Easterlin, University of Penn·
sylvania economist.
Easterlin argues, past gove.mments would revive a
sluggish eeooomy by cutting taxes, biking federal spend·
i.ng or increasing the availability ol cheap credit. ·
Those policy moves would prompt consumers to spend
more liberally and in tum prompt business to produce
more goods as well as invest in modernizing equipment
and plants, Easterlin said.
THESE DEVELOPMENTS would, in turn, always
create more job.5 and lead to a general era or prosperity.
But lacking in the 1970s was a fairly steady supply of
skilled labor. As Easterlin emphasizes in his new book,
''Birth and Fortune," throughout most of the past decade,
the labor force consisted largely o( the young and un-
skilled. And according to ~sociate Brooke Shearer, it has
been "an important contributing factor" to our problems.
As the numbers or teen·agers and young adults looking
for work stabilize (and fall ) the unemployment level will
decline. The contrast. between the 1980s and the '70s will be
dramatic.
"Reachjng 30" is a complex achievement for the na·
lion and it undoubtedly will take years before ·•experts"
fully understand all the implications of the years.
But this degree of maturity has done wonders for the
population. It will for our nation's economy, too.
Sto~lu In Tllr
... pot light
Oo1rJ0Mr11. t 1•rrap•
HEW YORKCAPI Fin.ti Dow·J-s •-Woc~-:-V· Feel. 3.
NEW YO~IC (AP).S.lu, luu. prlu °""' HIGll Low CloM a.a end Ml (.,..,.°' IN 1111 .. n most 41<11 .... 10 Ind ..,.,,. .U.31 '7S.77 .. , ••• t.13 H-Yon Stock Eachenoe luws. JO Tm J91,'7 "1.tS J17.4.J ,..,SI • >.• rr~1.~~11on.11y ·'·=.'•',..n,:~ • \t,l u ~J: ~~ ~·;:=·~urn~ ~:~
MoOll ~.500 71~ • 11'> Ind~ J,Jt3,t00 • ~~1f.~, m:= ~ : 1~ i~~~ . . . . . . . 1·~:= UAL Inc Q0,600 71~ • 1"' 6S Stk . . S,ls.t.100
MlctScM.tUt 411,400 111• ~ ..---------------FedHet Mtg '14,200 I~> • V. Sclllumllf'1 s ..,., 100 ,.,..,.. • t\4 ~ s 401,SOO ~ 'I. Fl""'° Ent 379,700 10\f• • ~ NEW YORK CAP) Ftc J Amer T& T 371,400 SI .. hkerlnt s J14,600 41V. • •• TOO.y Cltk.,,. 151-tt.. • ~ Advenc:..i •1> IBM ,...,tOO .. 14 • 'I> De<llned 60I THM:O Inc )M,SQO 41'°" •IV. Un<Nn9ed 3'l ~---------------1 Total ISSUH , ..
:I llWrft"an Lradrr• =:: ~ ~
fHW Y~I( (Af") -~Int ....... .. .... '*""· ~ .... ,.,., .• llr'k ••
WHAT A~EX 0 10
NEW YO~IC (API F~. J Prev. °1r. m 121 11 21
It~, I tnty0&.,Ul• ... ,eftt1S.a
......... 1 lroyot.., .......... ,u, •.
.... Pa .. • ii •• • . ., ........
........ • ...... t,f""" M., .. ,,,., rtilf ...... .......... ~.-1,...,.,,, ..... .... " ...
Souow: ..... """"' •
!
I
For be
., adY JANS ICAacsu.o ..............
Moat cook~• aren't de·
1ipedfora..,....r.
Some fru1trated novlua. faced wtUa _...._ potaloel, •
leaUMry rouu ud blaeulta that
could double for hockey IMda
area 't ev• coovineed UM CliNc:-
tiou are wriU. lD tbelr native
laa ...... ··cw up• onioa'' aowada lim·
pie, but aome questions come to
mi.Del. What kiDd ol onion -tbe bit. fat brown kiDd or tbe lk1nny
wlaite cm. with peen tops? How
bi1 •bould it be? Do you wub lt
first! Peel lt? Chop up the t,op,
too? And bow blc are the pieces?
What kind ol a knife do you use,
and on wbat surface?
'• t:Vli:aY BEGINNE& knows
tbe slimy joys of separating egg
yolks from the whites .
Permanently attached, the parts
usually fall into the bowl
together with bita of egg shell,
uppiq the recipe's calcium and
routhace content considerably.
However, nothing strikes ter-
ror into the heart of an untried
chef like the well-known phrase,
"Cook until done." Experienced
cooks know just when that is,
but HOW do they know?
That's why David Carpenter
wrote a cookbook.
·'I've directed it to the begin·
rier who doesn't know what he's
doing in the kitchen," says the
Huntington Beach resident.
"I told the reader how to know
when something's done, how t.o
taste foods and know what to
add, how to save 'ruined' food
and how to make a pie crust
naky.
"IT'S A BOOK of techniques
-a road map to go by -rather
than just a collection of re·
cipes."
The boot isn't in print yet, but
publishers are looking over his
manuscript, which includes such
t;asics as a description of a
pot~to peeler ("It looks like a
'
.. . -'
Ml,.
WEDNEIOAV, FEB.~. 1tl1 .
$UPERMARKETSHOPPER
SLIM GOURMET
C2 cs ca SPECIAL DIETS
Dell• Pll9' "--.,..., .......
'Usually,. we don't make dishes,' says David
Carpenter. 'We cook meals.'
parmg knife, except where the
blade ought t.o be is something
that looks almost like a giant
flat sewing needle with an eye
big enough to stick a postcard
through. One side of the eye is
sharp. That's the blade."> Carpenter compares pork
spareribs to xylophone keys and
gives a cookie recipe that's done
when tbe dough turns the color
of com flakes in an effort to re-
1 ate food preparation to
something familiar for rookie
cooks.
Most of the rec ipes in
the book come from his wife,
and Carpenter describes himself
before his marriage, 12 years
ago, as able to "cook TV din·
ners. steak and boil eggs. I could
read package directions and sur-
vive."
He began to cook seriously two
or three years ago and says,
"Techniques are as important
as ingredients.
"I don't like most restaurant
food, because it's not pr~pared
well. If you can't use loving
Giacomina'• Stuffed Mu1hroom1
care, I think· you shouldn't
cook."
Carpenter admits cooking can
be therapy. "Making bread is
great, because you can take out
your frustrations while kneading
the dough, and the bread's all the
better for it,•• he says.
The book is organized lnto a
section with recipes and another
containing directions for full din·
ners so new cooks learn to pre-
pare dishes simultaneously.
"USUALLY WE DON'T make
dishes ; we cook meals,"
Carpenter notes.
••But you needn't learn to
cook on inain, dull food . You can
cook good things right from the beginning."
Anyone expecting a cooking
primer to include tuna casserole
and hamburgers will delight in
Carpenter's suggestions of lamb
curry, spinach souffle, beef
stroganoff or carrot cake.
Specific techniques, such as
chopping onions and separating
eggs, are repeated throughout
the book wherever called for in
recipes to save flipping back
through the pages with greasy
hands.
··Reading the book cover to
cover would amount to taking a
cooking course," Carpente ..
says. "When you finish, you can
call yourself a good cook."
REINFORCING THAT idea is
the last section, called "Using
What You've· Learned." It en-
courages the reader to experi-
ment to create new recipes.
As he says at the end of the
book, "Good or bad, you now
have the ability to feed others as
well as yourself. Sometimes
you'll be thrilled al the prospect
of feeding hungry guests. Other
times you'll feel burdened with
the responsibility and wonder
why you ever learned.
"But you, like your mother,
are a member of one of the
oldest fellowships -those · who
can cook. Honor it by teaching
someone else to cook."
Here's preview from David's cookbook
. We were over at Giaco's one t largesharpknife again. If it's n~ longer pretty a 4~-ounce can of small cleaned
nightBndsheservedusthese. We lcookiesheetorpizzapan enough,don'tuse1t. shrimp and pour some water on
loved them 80 much she let us put t plate % H 0 LL 0 W 0 UT T 8 E top o~ the shnmp. Place t~e top of
them inour~ookt_><>Ok._ ·Paper towels MUSHROOM CAPS. Carefully · t~~~mu~ac~h~v~ai:e ~~~Pi:i~
Preparation llme is about 20 1. WASH THE MUSH&OOMS. break off the stem from each fhumbs pressdown.onthetopand
minutes. Each mushroom should be about mushroom as close to the cap 3:S the jui~e will come up. Drain it
1 ~~~:Eo~1'~~ whole as big as a half-dollar. If you tum you. can 50 that when y~u tum it down the sink. P.ress down hard
h P · ' one upside down and look where upside d<?wn and .set it ~n-the and get out all the juice. Set it mus room:; counter, 1t looks hke a bny fat 'd 8ouncessoftcreamcheese the stem meets the cap, you can bowlwilhlittlecrustystuffinside. asi e.
141h·ounce can of small see whether it's fresh. If it's With your thumbnail gently 4. MAKE THE FILLING. Emp·
cleanedshrimp beginning to open up like an um· scrapeoutthecrustystuffdownto ty an 8-0unce package of. s_oft
Juice or lh lemon . brella, it's getting old. If it's where the mushroom begins to cream cheese into.a small mi~~
Teaspoon of Worcestershire closed up like a button, it's fresh. get firmer Wash out the caps bowl. Add the shr1.mp and mix 1t
sauce The fresher they are, the better a ain and ~ake sure they're real· up with a spoon so tt bre~ks apart
2 or 3 d~ops of hot pepper they will taste. Drop them all in 1: clean, but be gentle. Set the i~to ~tile strands ,and 1s evenly
sauce, if you bke the sink and run them under caps aside (keep the stems if you distributed througtithe cheese.
FOK COOKING UTENSILS YOU water. Scrub the little dark spots want for pizza or spaghetti or 5. ADD THE JUICE OF YI
WILL NEED off. If there are any parts thatlook something). LEMON. Put a lemon on your cut-
1 SIJ'.'~1 mixing bowl shriveled and terrible, cut them l. DRAIN THE SHRIMP. Open <See PREVIEW, Page CH) 1 rruxmgspoon out and look al the mushroom
··-------------------------~~ • f :;
•'
~
•
I ;:
1' I ~, • ··: ql
• ·~
II . .
: ..
4:
. :
•:
Experiment with f e~nel
Fennel, also known as finoccbio or anise
ls a celery.like vegetable with a taste re-
miniscent of licorice. Mainly, it's available
October through April.
The fennel plant is entirely edible and
can be eaten either raw or cooked. The
feathery leaves may be chopped and
sprinkled over salads, eggs, and, fish or
added to stuffing.
FENNEL STALKS may be separated
from the bulb, sliced and steamed until crisp-
tender, then chilled and marinated for a tasty
relish.
The fennel bulb at the baae of the vegeta-
ble can be quartered and served raw in
salada or with dip. It also makes a good hot
ve1etable, either creamed, braised or baked
with parmesan cheese.
To buy fennel, aelect buncbel which ap·
pear crisp. LeHes sbould be fnlb and ,,_n.
The bulb .-id be medlum shed and weU· developed, ftrm and white ln color. A void
bulbs with brown 1pota or blemishes.
STOaB PENNEL ln a plutic bat in your
refrt,_.ator and uae wlthln 'five daya. It's
bftt to remowt the coaner leaf tope before •torlnl. .
To prepare feanel1 ?J•b and remove
tou1b .., atalb. Tba owb cu be halved or
quan..d, cooked ID a 1mall amemt of boll·
lDI aaW water for I to 10 miDut., dralned aM ,...... wltll lauft or salt and pepper.
R•llW ...... ad ltalb and UM U IOOD U poullalellt ............ . __... ..... ,...., Allllt ,.. ..
... ., ftnor .... --=·"· ......... wide ......... to,_. .... • IOOCI
source of vitamin A.
FENNEL PARMESAN
2 fennel bulbs 'I• cup butter
Salt and pepper to taste
'h cup grated Parmesan cheese
Trim green tops and outer stalks from fen·
nel. Trim the base and slice the fennel from
top to bottom into lh -inch slices. Cook in boil·
ing, salted water until tender, about 10
minutes. Drain well. Season with salt and
pepper. Place half o/ cooked fennel in
shallow buttered casserole dish. Add half of
melted butter and sprinkle with half of
cheese,.. Top with remalning fennel, butter
and cheese. Bake at 400 degrees for 20
minutes, or until the cheese is golden.
Makes: 4 servin1s. ·
FESTIVE FENNEL
2 fennel bulbl
2 tableapoom butter
2 tablespoons oil
1 garllc clove • .
1 large tomato, peeled and chopped
1 pound lreah mushrooms, sliced
· ~ cup hot chicken couomme
Salt
Frelbly.J"OUDd pepper
"' teaspoon bull Trim the fennel, cuttinl bulbl into "'·inch
1Ucea llqthwlae. Heat tbe butter and oU ln a
aaucepen; add the 1arllc and cook unUI
browned. Remcwe the 1arUc. Add tbe tomato
and tbe fenael. Slmmer t"01•ed, about S
mtnutea 1ttrrtn1 frequentlJ. Adel tbe
mmbrooma, ccmacmme ad ••ummp. llm·
mer eowwed for abcMlt 10 =Md• flt ..W tM .. ........... ~ ......... .
..-wbtp.
,
•
Ideas for all that
extra thyme on your
hands. Recipes on CS. •
Dicillg an onion
To dicr.,an onion, cut a slice about ll•·inch thick from each end
(stem and flbot). Wash it under cold waler and peel off the skin with a
sharp knife.
When it looks slick and shiny, set it on the cutting board. Cut the
onion in half through the siem and root (as though it were the earth
and you were cutting through one of its lines of longitude).
Place one of the halves on the cutting board with its cut edge
down. Cut the onion into slices about ~·inch thick and parallel to an
imaginary line that connects the stem and root while holding the
slices together with your free hand so it still looks like half an onion.
Now, dice the onion by slicing it again, but this time make the slices
perpendicular to the ones you just made C as though you had already
cul lines of loogilude and you are now cutting lines of latitude).
As you do that, the onion should fall apart in little hunks. The last
slice will be difficult so lay it flat before you chop it. Do lhesamethipg
with theotherhaH.
• Separating an egg
Separate the whites from the yolks of 3 eggs. Fresh eggs make
better filling and meringue. Hold one of the eggs over a medium·sized
glass mixing bowl. Don't use ceramic or plastic. The oils that collect
in the pores wiU prevent the whiles from gelling Ouffy. Don't use
aluminum. It makes the whites tum gray. Stainless steel is o~y. but
pyrex is best.
Tap the egg lightly a few times on the edge of the bowl so it leaves
an indentation big enough to stick your thumb in just a touch. Hold the
egg over the bowl with both thumbs on the hole and the rest of .your
fingers holding the egg. Hold the egg so it's pointing up ttnd down.
There should be a tiny crack forming around the egg.
Gently, very gently, pull off the top of the egg shell so most of the
white falls into the bowl and the yolk is caught in the bottom of the
shell. When you've done that, pour the yolk and whatever is left of the
white gently from the bottom to the top of the shell so the yolk is caught
in the top as though it was a cup and most of the white falls into the glass bowl. • .
If there still is a little bit of while in with the yolk. don't worry. But
don't let any yolk into the glass bowl or the meringue won't gel Ouffy.
U that happens, get another egg and try it again. Put the yolk into
another bowl Cit needn't be glass), and repeat the process until you
have 3 whites in the glass bowl and 3 yolks in the other one.
...
..
.. DM.VN.Ot
Boo1t coupon collection
I ., llAlrnN II.GANS
.............. ·~·· J wGl&ld Ullle lo llart a c-.-el • How dllflcult
would lMI M Md wa.at beMfka could I u · l*'t' .,. ... w. from a..&U..
DMr DIMI Startlaa a NUPOD chab ll
relatJftlly euy because 10 aaaay lboppen
are • .,.. to trade coupona Md Nl\IDd rorma.
J'tnt. •wte bow muy PIOPlt you wilb
to aUend your h\lUll mMdai. rut.-to 30
C'OUPQB tUppec'I uaually pl"OVide plenty of IUI·
lalHd tradln1 action Your tradlo1 op·
portunkl• wiU be dlmlolahed lf you have
fewer Oum 10 people
ONE Or TH.& 8&8T waya to interest.
people ln 1 coupon club la by po1Un1 sips.on
aupel'marlllet bulletin board&.
Keep the aanouocemeot brief. For exam·
pie "CouJ>oo club bema formed. Call Diane
at "Theo 1ive your telephone number.
A coupon club can benefit you in many
ways.
The club will mulUply by two of' three
your inventory of useful coupons and refund
forms. Th.is is especially true when club
members trade refund forma by mail wilb
refunden in other parts of lbe couatry.
IN ADDmON, much valuable shoppin1
information is excban1ed at coupon·club
meetinp. For instance, you' will learn about
stores lhal offer unadvertised specials.
Members often comparison shop to find
out which stores have the' lowest prices on
items such as milk and e11s. And they may
form car pools to take advanta1e of special
aales or double·coupon offen at stores in
other towns.
Besides, a coupon club can be a lot of
run. Clubs get involved in a variety of ac-
suw:Aa
tMUes, lncludln1 some that benefit the whole
community. For example, they may provide
speakera for schools, senior centers and
other or1anlaaUon1.
THE COUPON CLUB'S spirit of learn-
lnlJ, worir.inC and savln1 to1ether can result
In wonderful friendships.
Find out more about or1anl&lnc a coupon
club and makln1 its meetina• worthwhile in my Coupon Clipper's Newsletter No. 2,
"Coupon Clubl.' For your copy, send 75
cents and a stamped, self-adclreued envelope
to THE SUPERMARKET SHOPPER in care
ol this newspaper, P.O. Box 481, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to re-
quest the newsletter by name.
REFUND UPDATE
Did you send for the La Pi.ueria "Buy
One, Get.One Free" offer and instead receive
a certificate requiring you to buy still
another pizza?
The people at La Pizzeria apololiz• for
this mix-up at their fulfillment house. Within
the next few weeks, you should receive the
proper certificate for your free piua.
REFUND OF THE DAY
Write to lbe followln1 address to receive
the form required by this $1 refund offer: Old
London Toast and Margarine Get To1etber,
P.O. Box 1080, Arlington Heights, Ill. 80006.
This offer expires June 30, 1981.
-------------------------------------, CUP 'N' FILE REFUNDS
...... ,_,.
Cllp oul thll Ill• .nd •-II with 1lmllar <-coupons ---refWld Offfrs wllll .. ...,..,.
couponl. for .... mpl. Star1 c.ollKllno --proofs of pure:-whli. -lno tor the r9CIUfred re-
f uncl lo""' .i IN -rllel, In ,.--' -m~ul,. -when treclin9 with tr-. OfNn may not ti. .van-In all .,.., of the country. Al._ 10 weo s to r.c:tln each rtfu...,,
CHlfl'S aLINO Free l l'l·Pound Slie Ofttr
Rtctlvt a 11«11_ of Chef's Bland. s.nd IN r•
qu1rtd refund torm and the ••'9111 clrcle1 ln>m ti"" l"1-l>OUnd P«kages of Cllef't lli.nd. Expires l!Mrc:h
ll, ""
l'IOAllO CoU90ns Offer. Rtulve 1-cans of
F IQaro Tuna C.I Food. Stncl Ille required refund form ancl Ille lat»I from OM F lg.tro Tuna CM Food
can with the word• "riel welQhl 12 oz." clrcl..S. E•· plro Aprll JO, 1'111
LINATOfll. Receive a SI retund. Send tr.. rt· quired rtfund form and lhe lront panel from any
Lon•IOn~ Food Supploment label. Ewpires March
JI, 1'1111
TINOlll Yln\.IS.L'I005 Oller Receive 1-pefrs of L'E99s Knee Hlghl and a JS cents In
coupon$. Send Ille requlr~ refund torm and net· wel9ht si.temtnts trom Tender Vfllles urtOM total·
1"9 SO ouncH. There Is no llmlt on IM numlltr of tlmu you CMI sand tor lhh refund Expires Aug. JI, 1'111.
THlllALIN VM ... Aecetvea SI rtlunO Stndl,,. , ..
quired r.tund torm •nd flle front pariel from any Tr1tr•flnVMPTa~ISltbel. Eaplr•sMarch)I, 19t l Bonus I This offer ~·t require a torm:
f.LIYl'.5 " Cesh Refuncl Offer. p 0 Bo• n11•. Houston, Te•as 170SS. Recltve a refund of S or $2.
For JI, .and IS complete 1ai..1, lrom •ny 12· or !)-
ounce Cl"'' of •·Ll vH Cat Food For n , ...o ?S labels. Include ., IH St Ontt label from a 'IJKl•llY
marhd can. Ewplrts June JO, t'lll
-------------------------------------·
Rice can be quickly prepared side dish ·
Even the least or·
ganized cook knows what
main dish , (meat.
poultry, or seafood) is be-
ing planned fCTr each
evening. But what is
often neglecteo?
. . . and lbe meal can
seem exactly like what it
is -thrown together.
was in 79 percent of lbe
homes visited. So all
that's left to do is prepare
it.
Try it plain, buttered ,
sauced, or seasoned in
any number of ways.
serving suggestions, plus
microwave directions for
all recipes as well as
basic directions. ·
The foods to accom-
pany that entree. Open a
can of this, or cook a
frozen package of that
Rice is a good food to
keep in mind to make
quickly-prepared meals
interesting. It's likely to
be on the pantry shelf. A new book.let tells all
In fact , a survey -how to make 15 rice
showed that rice already side dishes along with 15
Get your copy, rree.
by sending a stamped,
self-a.ddressed, business-
size envelope to : Rice
Council. P.O. Box 22800,
Houston, Texas 77027.
HOM.ESTEAD COO.KOUT
Leg of Lamb
Life on America's Great Plains was full of
\JPS and downs as early settlers str;yggled
to stake their claim to what has turned out
to be the Breadbasket of America. But you
can bet that one of the up91Was the aroma
of a full leg of seasoned lamb roasting on a
Write for more free lamb recipes.
.m.1mcomc1
Dept. L-480. 200 Clayton Street
Denver. CO 80208
Oller good 1n U S A only ""hue euopOea lut PIH•• allow • to e •Mk• tor <1et1very
· spit over an open fire. Todayyou can serve
a bit of history to your family over your
backyard grill by making this the main dish
often this summer.
6 to 8 servings
Leg of lamb X teaspoon Powdered
1 teaspoon salt thyme
1 clove garlic. finely J.< teaspoon dried sage
mmced X teaspaon dried
X teaspoon ground marioram
pepper 1 tablespaon olive oil
X teaspoon gro\!nd or bacon drippings
ginger
Cut small but deed'llashes 1n top surface of lamb.
Mix together salt, garlic, pepper. ginger. thyme.
sage, marjoram and 1 teaapqon oil or drippings
Fill slashes with mixture. Rub remaining oil or
drippings over surface of Jamb Skewer lamb with
rotisserie spit Plaeil sp1t 8 inches above hot coals.
Cook for 20 to 25 minutes per Pound. or until meat
thermometer registers 145°F for medium-rare.
1eo°F for medium or 170PF for well-done.
Serve American lamb for farm fresh quality.
_._ S 1, I
Rice enhances cas1e.ra .
and stretches /pod_ pvon
i. Tbe popu_larlty .of
casserole meall 1rowa
.. food prie. rile.
IAP apeaaive way1
bave to be found for
famllf meal•, and
cu1erol• ftll tbe bill u
economical, flavorful
and appeallnt, all at the
same time.
'Rice i• a perfect
casserole in1redlent
. . . it baa little navor of
its own, but 1l eabaoc•
and stretch• tbe navor
of tbe other iqredlentl.
Rice abeorbe Uquida
and navon u It eoob,
so the juice that cooa
out of tbe meat and
vegetabl• la picked up
by the rice, addinl td
the overall dlab.
Rice, at about three
cents per half-cup
serviq, la juat about tbe
moat ffonomical food
you can rmd tbeae days.
Any way that It can·be
used in meal plan.n.lnl
will help the bud1et.
In California Rice
Skillet and Beef and
Cabbage Combo, one
starts witb uncooked
rice, the other use•
cooked rice. But they
both end up the same -
FLAVORFUL CHICKEN AND RICE CASSEROLE
delicious.
CA·LIFO&NIA &ICE
SKILLET
3 wbole chicken
breasts, skinned, boned
Eacb serving
provides: 330 calories,
3YJ meat exchanges, 1
bread exchange, 1 fat
exchanae.
and cut in large pieces CALIFO&NIA RICE
l tablespoon butter SKILLET
or margarine (lllcl"OWne lledleci)
t t a b 1 e s p o o n Place butter in a deep
2 teaspoons salt
'I• teaspoon ground
black pepper v, teaspoon crushed
red pepper
If.a of a smal l
cabbage, s hredded
(about 1 quart)
3 cups cooked rice
Orated Parme11n ch ...
Cook beef. onloaa, and rarUc until meat la no
on1er pink and
Htetablel are tender,
1tlrrin1 frequently to
crumble meat. Add
tomato aauce, broth1 1easonin1s. ana
cabbaae; cover and
1immer about 5 minut•
or untll cabbaae is
tender. Add rice. Heat
thorou1blf. Sprinkle wttb Parmesao cheese.
Makea 8 aervin&•.
Eacb aervin1
providel: 340 calories, 3
meat exchan1e1, 1
bread excban1e, 2
ve1etable excbanaea.
BEEP AND
CABBAGE COMBO
< lllerewue lletMdt
Break up beef in a
s hallow 2 -quart
microproof dish. Add
onions and garlic and
cook OD HIGH
(maximum power) for 2
minutes. Stir to crumble
beef; cook on HIGH 3
minutes more or until
beef ls cooked. Pour off
drippings. Add tomato
sauce, 1 teaspoon beef
bouillon crystals ,
seaso nings , ·and
cabbage. Cook on HIGH
2 minutes, or until
cabbage is tender crisp.
Stir in rice and cook on
HIGH 1 minute to beat
thoroughly. Sprinkle
with Parmesan cheese.
vegetable oil 20 ·quart microproof
1 cup uncooked rice baking dish. Cook on
1 ~ teaspoons salt H I G H ( m a x i m u m Russian beef sala.d
If.a t e a s p o o n • power) 1 minute or until
powdered mustard b u tl e r m e Its . A d d
~cup sherry chicken and cook on
2 cups chicken broth HIGH S to 6 minutes.
If.a cup sliced green Add rice, salt, mustard,
onions, including lops sherry, and only 1 cup
If.a of an 18 ounce broth. Cover and cook
packag~ \21f.a c ups) on HIGH 5 minutes ;
frozen Califor~ia -style reduce power to 50
vegetables•, thawed. percent and cook 15
1 cup s hredded minutes longer. Add
sharp Cheddar cheese, onions and vegetables;
divided cover and cook on HIGH
Brown chicken lightly 4 minutes. Remove from
in butter and oil, using a oven; stir If.a cup cheese
lO·inch skillet. Add rice, into rice and sprinkle re-
salt, mustard, sherry maining cheese on top.
and broth. Bring lo a Replace cover until
boH . Reduce heat , cheesemelts.
cover, and simmer 15
minutes. Add onions and
vegetables; cover and
continue to cook for S
minutes .. Remove from
beat; stir YI cup cheese
into rice and sprinkle
remaining cheese on
top. Replace cover until
cheese melts. Makes 6
servings.
•or use a combination
of caullllower, broccoli,
and sliced carrots.
BEEF AND
C'ABBAGE COMBO
lit\ pounds lean
ground beef
1 cup chopped
onions
2 cloves garlic.
crushed
2 cans (8 oun ces
each) tomato sauce
1 cup beet broth
1 teaspoon ground
oregano
· Meat in the recipe
makes this salad a satis-
fying main dish, con·
tributing to the diet high
quality protein plus im-
portant vitamins and
minerals.
&USSIAN
BEEF SALAD
3 cups julienne strips
cooked beef (about 11/•
pounds)
3 medium potatoes ( 1
pound)
1 can (16 ounces)
who It' beets
1 small onion, sliced
crosswise
Confused
~cup mayonnaise
lh cup dairy sour
cream
l lh teaspoons salt
~teaspoon peppe.r
Cook, chill and pare
potatoes and cut in
pieces. Drain beets
thoroughly, pal dry with
absorbent paper and cut
in quarters. Separate
onion slices into rings.
Combine mayonnaise,
sour cream, salt and pep-
per in large bowl. Stir in
beets. Ughtly fold in beef
strips, potatoes and onion
rtngs.Chill.6servings.
by all the conflktlns
fuQd barsaln claims?
When you want food bargains -prices
you can count on . the proof is in print .....
in the grocery ads in the Daily Pilot. Shop the
Daily Pilot. get the facts. compare .....
then you know' you're really getting the most
for your money.
642-4321
! •
•• 11
I
4 •
o. • I 'I
s.. ... ,
w: • ..
~·i ..... -I
Wednelday. February '· t98t DAILY PtLOT ~·
Slim Gou~mei
Italian sauces can he low-cal
NonlMro ll&Uan ''OUll t.aa la often delM'n'-d .,
••n1bt " ftat c&onn't
mea• U.. ti.Jorie ('C)Uat
The ti....,._• rt1fel"ll to
wt.ate ••UC' ba•t!d on
r rtam. butt•r and
<"he .. A<t, ratht'r than tho
mor 11 f1m 1l 1•r rt'd
1auru ot tht eouth.
'hUY)' Wllh Oavvrful
to m •to~•. pf'pper a.,
1arll(' and ~rt.
It's Pa ltlr to dt'
C'alonzeo' t.ht' ·w utht'rn
c-ook1nlC " of Jtah b'
llm1thna the 011
Northern d1shes tre
qut-ntly art' ·auc~ with
t hic k <'r eam mad t'
thicker sUll by simmer
ang heavy cream wilJI
1t s t>ven heav1er with
calories But I've round
a n u tritious . n o n
fatte ning s ubstitute
whipped part-skim ricot
ta c h e e~ e Wh e n
whipped in the blender
or food processor, rlcot
ta h as the t da ir y-r ich
f av o r and s m ooth
creamy texture of heavy
cream, with only a frac·
lion of the calories. 2 l a
tablespoon ins tead of 52.
My whipped ricotta
"Lean Cre am" is so
vers atile that I always
keep some handy an the
refrigerator. I wish a
market-wise 01ary com -
pany would save me the
trouble and s ell it
already whipped. But it
is easy to do it yourself: '
ITALIA N 'LE AN
CR EAM'
(Whipped part-s kim
ricotta)
Empty a 15-ounce con-
tainer or fresh part-skim
ricotta into the blender
or food processor, us ing
the steel blade. Add a
pinch of salt, if desired
(or butter salt or butter
flavoring or bulter-
flavored buds). Process
until a ll graininess dis·
appe ars and ricotta has
the texture of thick
whipped cream. Store in
the refrigerator ; 21
calories per tablespoon.
Flavor Lean C ream
with cheese, he rbs or
seasonings. Serve tossed
with pa s ta , ove r
v e getabl~s o r a s a
spread. Sweeten wi th
liueurs, fruit juice con-
cen trates, vanilla or
spices and use as a lOP·
pin g for fres h fruit.
Some ideas to try:
FRESH PASTA WITH
'LEAN CREAM'
Flavor whipped ricol·
la Lean Cr eam with
freshly grat ed le mon
peel and nutmeg , and
loss with hot, tender·
cooked fr es h pa s ta
made with a pas t a
machine or purchased
fresh from an rtalia n
grocery (or s ubstitute
coo k ~d noodles 0 1
s pa g hett i for fr e s h
pasta). Drain the cookerl
pasta and return 1t to
the pol it was cooked in.
For e ach 12 cu p of
pasta, add 2 tablespoons
whipped ricotta at room
temperature and lemon
pee l and nutmeg to
taste. Toss until pasta is
we ll coated with the
sauce; 120 calories each
12 c up se rvin g
<Garnish, 1f desired .
with grated im ported
Pa rmesan c heese 123
c alories pe r table l)-
poon). fresh parsley (2
calories per tablespoon)
or a few thin slices o(
pitte d bl ac k o l ive
Nutritious
junk food
Don't despair if tacos.
~he es ebur ge rs an d
pizzas have ca ptured
your chi ld's imagination
lind appetite : t hey 'r e
-a mon g th e m ore
nutritious foods he can
eat.
In a taco, for example.
your child will be eating
cheese from the milk
<group, ground beef from
~h e m eat g r oup ,
s hredded lettuce and
~omalo from the vegeta-
ble and fruit group, and :a taco shell from t he
bread and cereal group. •
· • Catering • Meat•
• leefood • Dell
•Produce
• ... rand Win•
&&vrgl\
•wwwwtw.rtlet
1444 .. c:.... Hwy ... c._., ...
~,,..,,,u,_...,_,.
t.ver ... I taior\H per
ullvt). Or &ry tJUa:
I. I G U a I A N
8PAOllSTn
CO<• I.\ pound pro&elD·
t nrerhed 1p1chetti in
boaUn1 aaJl.ed water un
tll t•nder. Munwbale .
cornblnt in blMder or
foud proteuor. 1 cup
p 1ul a klm ri<'olla
chet>se, l peeled dove of
ttarhc <optional>, V. cup
fresh parsley tt nd 4
\ableepoou Parmnan T W 0 C B E E S E lemon wedges, parsley
cbe•M. 81ud 1mootb. a.m.rrs If using veal, pound
When 1pa.bettl II PIEDMONTESI! thin wilh a meat
cooked, drala it and toes 1 pound v ea I or pounder. Cut into ' serv·
w th the ricotta cheese chicken cutlet.a ing pieces. Or. sub·
mlxture. MakH four 5 tablespoons Lean slitute 2 skinned boned
main·course aervln11. Cream (whipped part· chicken breasts, split in·
320 caloriea each; ei1ht skim ricotta) to 4 "cutlets." Whip a
1lde·di1h servings, 160 3 tablespoons grated conta1ner of part-skim
calories eacb. Parmesan cheese ricotta until light and
ltaJlan Lean Cream 3 tablespoons Italian-fluffy as whipped
can be used as an lngre· seasoned breadcrumbs cream. Put a few tables·
dient for coating low-Optional : grated poons of the whipped
calorie cutlets. Try this: lemon peel, nutmeg, ric otta on a s hallow
~~~~;..._~~~~--=-~~~
plate. Stir the Parmesan
c heese, breadcrumbs ,
lemon peel and nutmeg
together on another
shallow plate.
To coat the cutlets,
lightly press or roll
them first in the
whipped ricotta. then in
the cheese-crumb mix-
ture. Place them in a
'>ing l e l ay e r , n ot
touching, on a nonstick
skillet or electric frypan
which has been liberally
coated with cooking
i pray. Tu r n heal to
medium for veal (or
low , for chicken) ; cook
undistu rbed until un·
derside is brown. Turn
and brown other side.
Serve with lem o n
wedges and pars ley .
Makes four servings, 220
calories each with veal
FRESRE 109· GROUND BEEF:~?:t.~)1
B(Jl I\ P.\t I\ i I H" < llo •• ,1 11<11 jO'f. I A I
l t'-\11 (,I l\"i d'u• • 1· • p·r 11t11f ,, •• , t·•M •• lh I l<H l 0 HEINZ
KETCHUP ROll<T 80r11t
l 180 calories each wJth
~hicken ).
Chicken Cacciatore, Veal
Parmlgiono, MinestrOM -
'or the1t a n d m o r e
tli mmed down Italian
favorite1, Mnd o 1tamped,
telf-addreued envelope
ind 35 cent1 to Slim
'";our~t Italian Recipes,
P.O. Box 624, Sparta, N.J.
17811
.89
t ..Wt I 0-\.~""'" t.•1111 troq 1•• r I 081
APPLES Oh' 3 1U lol ll Pl N llAG
Wi\<.,l llN\ o I (IN \jli!( 1W N •
l 1m1t i H•ttJ' (J'ufdh'.J,•• .._l-.ir1 hn11111·q J'UC ,. 98t_.J'
ROYAL
GELATIN
HAMM'S
BEER
\ . 269 IVORY 59 BAR SOAPc:':-:.:.1,e
4 ...... l'N " '" W:--. "'N "'11 I "'°"I .>4t\_.,~ .. ,...., ~-, .. '"I f••r lt•I
~2~~~~sH 1 ss
I llW\lf '9 tl\tft h.""· IJl\••t ktn'9 ,., ... , 1°''" t f t\Qt
.39 t C '.ltl"'t I t•tu, -'\ "' ft f I t "'' •t" • • "''' ''' ,,,..,.1 • .,.._, ,A .. O I 1~11 hi iol~t • ""' '''''''' I, ..... I tt
GROCERIES .... ~, ........ '
Del Monte Green Beans
" .. 1 ..... , , ... Rosarita Refried Beans
,, "'~'"°II 1• •'Ill-I .., ...
Tomato Juice
' 111111••1< I ,,..., "'' "'" 1 Heinz .Dill Pickles
1"'•"/ ltli1\ ,..., .... 111 \'\110' I ..
Duncan Hines Cake Mixes
0 1'tl"°"\I t\W ,.... ... , \Nt Hills Bros. Coffee
\H ii11M• I I '' 1'111\Lt H'tl1'1(11' Sunshine Cookies
.,., '._,,.., r"' P\o\4.1 nit.,"' Lipton Tea Bags
'" ~' l'\"1 ''"""'"""'" .,,. .. Tropical Preserves
'''"""'' , ..... Libby Corned Beef
LIQUOR
I 1"-llU 'i Gordon's Gin
l~lllllllUflt l """"-*110 J& BScotch
r.o,. t. lrt.# ftH'•t« .... ,. Smirnoff Vodka
I ''HfllA Alm•den Mt. Chablis
.39
.79
.69
.99
.99
3 s2
149
.89
119
.99
198
999
81 9
4s9
349
PRODUCE
lti•ft '"',.' Crisp Crunchy Celery
IW\W-., "' lwt ... fl''lll"\.MH
Pineapple
'•"""ff I ...... ,,•• 't H't l l Emperor Grapes
l'\\rlw.ttlr ,,,.,,,""'""' Brown Onions
'""""'""'""''"J'' .... Garden Fresh Cabbage
... 29
.. ,.19
.... 49
"' .33
Ille 15
VONS OWN BRAND
t • lfN I ' '\f"o ''"I \1 .. !INti I I I I• Vons Apricots
I l "l"°'I. I t "~ Vons Stewed Tomatoes
.,,., .... ltl\411
Vons Flour
"ii~,...,.. I it1: 11111 Vons Pre·Wash
~ -,.... I 1.-I \ Vons Natural Raisins
.59
.43
.88
149
] 33
HEAL TH f, BEAUll' . ..,. .... , ltWlll'\M" \Al.AYI OW ]99 EfaShampoo
"°' ........... ()OP-~''" '''"'"'"' 109 Old Spice Deodorant .'<> oor
".-....cc "'c. ··""" Jergens Hand Lotion ]88
IOUt<l IUM. Colgate ToolhpHte ]15
MEATS
-h• I ,,. '' Center Cut Beer Roasl 1 49
]98 •I I,.,. Chuck Roast
'"''I"• Hit
Boneless Family Steal< 21 9
2 68
,.2 58
ftl t I J.1 ~ ''"I' t '•I I Sirloin Tip Steak
1-.1• I..,~, ' ,, •• ,, ..
B eef Cube Steal<
t "~ t ,.,.,..1 I••,..,,, I ..,
Lean Stewing Beef
f '-•h I ~r.-. '"'"· ,, 1 .. Ill ' Lean Ground Beef
.2 09
.. "' 1 79 t J •1 It
SERVICE SEAFOOD
~~'d''s',;apper F111e1s , ... , ... ,
Mountain Trout
IWU/1..,1~"'' It• Silver :::.almon Steaks
I 169
,. }99
..3 29
DELICATESSEN
I tt/~t. •• I,, f'f• I".,, "'I
Vons Cooked Ham
... 1 1_9
AW .... 't-'l'W ' . ,. .85 Cottage Cheese
l'H'lr~I l llltol "'"·' '""~''""' ... ' Pillsbury Biscuits 5 100
lft\111.""" I H\11: l"I f U( '•f I II\( 139 Vons Salad Dressing
MC.U tn.-cnw ~ ,.., ........ , ..... , ro Ff8 ..... , (AU C1'J) '" 1400 FOlll LOCATIOf't Of" &fOM. "'-AM.Sf •OU ·~MO Ntera'" ftt•S,,,,,, ,...,,, n n CfM "' VOf°"S
tJ..M w • ...,. ••.. l.OS N'tCELES '"'° w ...co M.W> lil.» AltGl.l.Ca, "'' w IOTH ., • L.09 N'Ott..a:.s..""" o«GO N"fC') lAS WGA&. ...._,."" --· tMl, QOAr1nt1tS ~ y
48 0Z.
CRISCO
SALAD OIL
..... , ........ ..
2 .49
DASH
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
10007~ 3.42
DASH
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
49 0Z 1.80
''"',_.
VONS BAKERY
"•"-~ ...... .,..."' .... ~ Jr. Pita Bread
"''"~ \.~JN *''"'.; Danish Nut Rolls
.69
t05
-llubu,1Y<'tW.nl>«t-.1t><V(Nt t 19
lloll• llfO> C'tWltt, .. O ,._ 11 I\ ~· H II 1 •:)
11.tl•lltm (-°'1p. H_.. 170
0.. et ~ Uni< s.......,.. llOI' 109
K••Hltflll• NL.....,,Anwnr.~~llUt 119
I M12a.,._.a~1 ... .. •1• •• ,....c. 9'd.
,, ...... ,,..., ,.., ....... ..... c... .....
t• E. tM ...... eMI ~•nee Awe.
.... .,.... c., ..... ....
ue11 c....... c .. ,.., .... a.,...,_, ...
' .
,, ....
..OO"WM19'"
\
C•llW .... >4111 ....._,.._..,,,a.,......
FROZEN FOODS
.79
239
,_oa--t--J1I ,_,,s.. Hoowy~-11'1 -,,,
0..."""'8-....... ,. _, • ._.,.,. Z..19
o.c-~-~-·"'-., e.-t. ....... ~ ........ --...
,
Yams 'native' root
In maay Peril ol U..
world , upttlall y
Polyn .. ta, Ute CarUa
bran, Aila aed Utt
1outber1 part of ttlt
Un•ttd tb&el, lM yam
or ••Mt potato 11 a ma·
lor 1t ..... UM diet
For ~nu• UU. ct.I
1c•c)' Mle bMo rou&ed
on an °'*' fir• ud •· JOYed .. a muJ ti lt.Hlf.
Althou&h lh onliA ol
t h,e s weet potato 11
&o m awhat o b1c:ure,
lh~rt ll no q~Uoa lbat
ll '*I· U ~ by Hrly
<'h'lhiau both In lhe
\mencu and Aala
Tht-plant ta a vlne re-
htt t-d lo the mornlo&
•Ion It» Uuckened root
lH.1t l1on I the edible
.. weet potato
SOME CLAIM THAT
th1:. 1i. one of lbe truly
American foods, since
t he Indians 10 the
tropical regions ol the
<'onlmenl cultivated this
n ulr1tious ropt long
before the first e x -
plorers arrived.
The s weet potato
rollowed the routes of
the early explorer and
became an indispensa-
ble basic food .
The S panis h i n -
troduced the s weet
potato to lbe Philippines
and East Indies, and the
Portuguese shared the
s weet -tas ting r oot
vegetable with India.
Ch ina, and Malaya.
EARLY SETTLER S
in the Americas quickly
a dopted the "native"
root, and it is commonly
included in a tradiitional
Thanksg iving feas t
a long with other in-
digenous American
foods.
Many are confused by
the terms sweet potato
and yam. Actually, all va r 1et1 es are s weet
potatoes. The term yam
IS used pri marily for
th ose varieties wh ich
have a bright orange or
deep reddish -orange
flesh .
Th e skins of yams
range from copper to a
pu rµl e C'Olo r . These
types of sweet potatoes
are tender and moist,
ravornd by many over
the traditional s weet
po tato whi c h has a
cream-colored skin and
a yellow. somewhat dry
and mealy flesh.
ALTHO UG H THE
ha rvest se a son e x -
tends from May to Oc-
tobe r , fres h s weet
potatoes may be availa-
ble ror a longer season if
"cured," a process in
which the f r es hly
ha r vested roots a r e
placed 1n warm (85
rlegrees) storage houses
with high. humidity for
about ten days.
This "cure" allows the
sweet potatoes or yams
to be marketed over a
much longer period_
Wh en selecting sweet
potatoes, choose t hose
which a.re firm, smooth,
and reasonably blemish-
free and handle careful-
ly lo avoid bruising.
"Cured " s weet
potatoes or yams can be
kept at a cool room tem--
perature for long
per iods. but. for best
quality should never be
refrigerated.
NUTRITIONALLY , s weet potato es
rate high. They are ex-
c e 11 e n t s our c es o f
several vitamins and minerals . One 3Y•··
ounce sweet potato pro-
vides more tban 100 per-
cent o r the recom-
mended dally allowance
of Vitamin A, 36 percent
of the RDA for Vitamin
C, and 5 percent of the
RDA for iron.
Despite its sweet
taste, this size serving
has only 141 calories. or
course, butler, a brown
s ugar glaze, or other
rich sauces increase the
calories content.
Sweet potatoes are
usually baked or boiled
but they can also be
fried, broiled, prepared
in a microwave or can-
died.
They can be used in
making breads, salads ,
c roq u ettes pies.
custards, cak es, and
cookies.
Before cooking a ny
variety or sweet potato,
scrub the skin and trim
off any bruJsed or woody
portions. · ·
TO BOIL, cook un-
peeled potatoea in a
small amount of sailed
waler in a covered
s aucepan tor 20 to 30
minfat• .W done.
U tbey are to be used
for 1alad1 or cubed,
cook Just untlJ tender
but It.lb quite flrm.
To ...._, p&.e ea.u
pot.atoll • • ....,. ..
owe• Hd bake Htll
teader; lar1• tweet
potato wW N111"'1e about ..........
TO fry IWMt.po&atoel,
PHI Of deUnd) ucl try
la boa oU YDUJ 1olden;
drala oa f:I*' unwell
aad 1priM • wltb brown
1u1ar, aalt.l or 1round
nutm11 ro r added
navor.
poona freab lemoa or
oran1e Julee t~ eacb
four fUlll to prevmt d.la-
colorlltion.
Tbe navor of 1weet
potato. can be accent·
td wltb clnn•mon,
YA• CAN ALSO be clov•. nutm91, giqer,
cooked and tben fl'OHD and butter.
BacOfl-Mllftl ...
Stuff•d $t0••I
Polaloa I
are pacad /t.lf ·
for a later UM. To retain For tboee on apecial
tbelr briabl color, dip I diets, add J.-t a squeeae
tbe cooked, cooled 1Ueea of lemon or oran1e
Into a mixture ol lemon juice, and skip the salt
Julee or ucorblc acid and •uaar.
of nutrtnt1 CMd
flavor.
SwHt potatoes can
al.lo M cbarcoal broiled
In lbw aklna. To protect
potatoes, wrap them in
heavy foll.
·and water, then place For a color f u I ,
the drained yams in a nutritious and delicious
freeaer container. treat, include the sweet
For mashed aweel potato in autumn meal
potatoes, add two tables-planninc.
l•IRODUCl•I
A 31ll 110.flllLLS WAY II SAYE Wiii A llfflllEllCl ••• c .. n111 •Autt
IAft • llAIUT IASllT'S l'YllYNT LOW
...... • 111TtOllll 11MDS.
mmm !ltmEll •W 16·0Z CAN .49
~M;:C...,....
~., ..........
m''iive ,.,.r Towels
~i~~&a....
.75
.95
.37
SAYE IP 10 30% O• BASIC llEMSI
•UUT WllfT MAI SfUCTO All UaAY Of THE ITEMS YOU IUY MOST ON EACH TIU' TO THE STOllE TO IEM THE COST CUTTtll lMEl. COST cunu IS YOUll SYMBOL Of llOCK aonoM PlllCES
EYEllYIAY. YOU MAY U¥t "' TO •% OVEll NATIONAL IUllOS THE llG OlffEllENCE IETWEEN COST
cunu NO·fllll PllOOUCTS AllO OTHfll llO·fllll LABELS IS CONSISl(NI OUALllY
RED DELICIOUS
APPLES
•annaa•n cenw11a
•AHi • ..lllCll
IAYI IP 1't II"' W llltwl -IAft W 11 It"' -Ml I LI L W wnwumrwan......... QJT<1'8811 wn1na-•Mlf..._
••n w 39 saw aeaiss cm una .II -ma ... 1MZ CM • 11'9 ...... 1MZ,CM ...
1'.e&.C............ ~ tt-ea.C.,C..C.... •. , ... C..,_.. .69 '" ; , ... Clli,, ..... St 11"-.,...................... .. ........... c..c-. ,.,., ,..... .63 33" ,..., ,... .55 41%
714.................... 1i. .... "9..C..C...
M•cerolli&CltHH .31 16% M•tt Ml&O... .26 It%
QIALllY A•D SAnSFACllOll llAIA•l .. 1
If YOU All( AT All DllUTISFIED WITH COST cunlll PllODUCTS. llETUllll THE UllUIH NllTIDll • NCUll " ..., IASKET fOll A llEFUllD. If YOU UE UllAILE TO llETUllll TO THE STDlll. SEJID WHll FOii lllUTllFACT•. UM.
ADDllESS a BOTH £110 FLAPS 011 lAIEl TO' THE KllO&Etl CO .. COllSUMEll AflAlllS DE..uTMOIT. lit• Ml IT .. ~Tl.
OHIO, 0201. DUALITY AllO UTISfACTIOll GUAllAllTEED
.....
• 110'lls
iq,.
TOWELS
. . lllllEOLI d29 HUllT'I TOMI TO .1 1111111 llM T lllLETS ·=·33
l&fllll rom11111E TlllELOS
~ .....
Broccoli •.• 39
~ .....
.._Sprouts •.• 39
8! !: 4••
SAUCE HZ. CORI CAI
~ .... .... Ht""'~ ............ Mayonnaise ".:· 1 •• Layer Cakes u .... 76 .....
~ We11onOil H ·M. 11• .... Ht ;;;;·Chi;'"~~·· ..... 89 .....
FllllLY PICll IEDUCED :;c PEI LB. 01 llOIEI
STEii
.. 1 ..
.. 1••
~1··
'*
.,,... ...... ...,
~4'' S•••••'s 7 -Crown
a.ea ................. ,, .. .._.,
H! •••••••• s, •• ,. ...1--~ fAMllY PAa .... ~ fAaY PACI... ·
mrT-loneStMk •. 251 !l!lo•ltuC111ckStMk .. 211
cWCHi1i1·rEoioiii'"1l·1~ .... 1u . ., 99 • .a ..... Bt_~----~_;._:_C_°' ...... __ n_'"'cw_;_._··_11_·_~_-_s;-_._,~_•_ ..... _~_'-"' __ ""' __ ... 1
_
1
_· J7Mm111 ... ~ ....... ,...,s, ..... 21• ~M'st.:r. .. 1•• !{!STE
\ \ I
:
i
' l
1
•
U1i ffer61
Set a red Valentine table ........ _ .... ,.....,.
&1• ... of tow. U plauiDI I
rom.-K Val•'-~ lot
two, you'U •* red det0t1UGM.
Why -~Nd lood1 too• laaen .,uak cuplcla ln a r.cl
,... l'41Merp~
Cover the table wltt. 1 red
cloth
Suiter red heart• around tM
\able . or f1ue them on red rib>
bo•u dan11tn1 from celllna
ll1ht•
911&1•P COCKTAIL
~ cup ch.lie uuce
I 1ea1poon bor1t1radlsh
.)Wee ot "' lemon \,teaspoon tarragon
l • teaspoon baail
"• teaspoon thyme
12 large s hrimp, cooked,
cleaned
2 lettuce leaves
4 wedles lemon
Blend rll'St 6 in1redients. Set
sauce on lettuce leaves inside
liner of shrimp compoliers con·
tainina c r acked ice. Hang
shrimp over edges. Garnish with
lemon wedaes. Serves 2.
COQ AU Vl?'f
2 full chicken breasts
2 slices bacon
\14! tea.spoon thyme
1{4 teaspoon ground black
pepper
2 pats butter
8pearlonions, peeled
l clove garlic, minced
2 large mushrooms, sliced
1{4 cup brandy
1 cup Burgundy wine
1 cup beef bouillon , un·
diluted
Eating vegetable•
l carrot. 11lced
l 1talk celery, aUced
a larae bay leaves
S whole clovea ~ t.eaapoon cornstarch
l pat butter
Over high heat. fry bacon
cris p . R emove ; reserve .
Sprinkle chicken, on both sides,
with pepper. thyme; brown. Set
chicken aside. Discard bacon
grease. Saute 2 pats butter,
onions (after cutting a cross in
each end), garlic, mushrooms.
Lay chicken on top, breast·side
up.
Tum heat high. Heat brandy
in a ladle; flame it; (stand
back) paur over chicken. Alter
flames die. add bacon .
crumpled; Burgundy, bou.iUon,
carrot. celery. bay. cloves. Boil
15 m inutes. Turn chicken breast·
side down. Cover; bake in pre·
heated 300-degree oven 1 hour.
Place chicken and vegetables
on plates in hold·warm oven.
Skim fat from sauce. Boil S
minutes. Melt pat of butter;
blend in cornstarch; stir through
sauce. Simmer 3 minutes. Pour
over chicken.
TOMATO SALAD
2 tomatoes, peeled. sliced ;
on lettuce
HSU oaasJNG
• tableepoou on
2 table&poona freab lemon juice
2 allces 8arllc, minced
~ leflSpoon onion, minced
V. teupoon bull, the tomato
herb
V. teupoon parsley
~ teupoon marjoram
~ teaspoon oregano
Pinch thyme
PINK MAYONNAISE
Color mayonnaise with beet
juice.
ROSE MP SOUP
(overnlgllt)
Buy dried rose hip pods, not
powder, at health stores. IDps
are rich in the Vit amin P
n ecess ary for h earthy
capillaries. but the required
boiling of the soup destroys it.
. Tint cream pink with beet
juice before whipping.
~cup rose hips
~ teaspoon rosemary
2 cups boiling water
ju.ice 1A lemon
V. cup Port wine
~tablespoon cornstarch
\/4 cup pink whipped cream
Cover rose hips and rosemary
with the boiling water. Soak
ove rnight. Cover ; simmer (2
hours) until hips are soft . Mash
through sieve. Return to soup
with lemon ju.ice, sugar , wine;
boil. Dissolve cornstarch in
tablespoon water. Stir through.
Semi·cool. Serve warm in
parfait glasses topped with icy
pink whipped cream.
-------a.IT 1·s1 "GREAT I 9 DINNER (') .
0 c "tl
0 z
I
Good IOI three piece• ol Juicy, golden bfown Kentucky
Fried Chicken, plu1 elngle servings of cote •law,
mashed potatoes and gravy, and a 1011. Llmll t11110 ollelS
pe1 pu1chase C0opon good only lor comb1nt1ion white/
darlc O'defS Customet pays all applicable sal" tu
If it 's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Dai Iv Pilot
•
D"IL Y PILOT C•
-------AIOUT .• s5 .. n. SUPERI e7 DINNERI
Gocd tor nine plecH of 1u1cy. golden !Kown Kentucky
F11ed Chicken. with four rolls, a la1ge cole slaw, a large
mashed potatoes and a medium g11vy. Limit two otters
per pu1chase Coupon good only lor combination white/
oarll orders Customer pays all applicable sales tax
Oller exp1res
February 15, 1981 A3A
Prices may vary er par·
rlclpahnQ locahoos. Good
only in Southern
California where yOo see
America's Fiavorlte
Wlodow Banner.
classified
ad.Call
642-5678 and a
friendly ad-
vi ser will
help you
turn your
wheels into
cash.
Daill Pilat.
Give children choice
Reme mber being
chided as a youngster:
"Eat your carrots or
you 'II get no dessert?"
Children's fussy eat·
ing habits have always
been a challenge to
parents concerned that
children will eat only
what they like and, as a
result, not receive
eflough or the nutrients
they need Crom each of
the four food groups -
milk, meat, vegetables
and fruits, and breads
and cereals.
be served raw o r youngster choose what
cooked. kind of salad dressing to
"He's much more like· put on the salad may en·
ly to eat a vegetable if courage him to eat it.
he's had some input as Veech advises against
to how it ends up on his serving what she calls
plate." "mystery foods" -in-
. Introducing
Vegetab l es, in
particular, have a bad
reputation with ma~y
children -but there are
m ethods mol'e elfectiv.e
t han threats to entice
children to eat enough
foods from this impor·
tant food group.
Carvi! Veech, reg.
istered dietitian and food service director for
San Mateo City School
District. offers parents
some pointers based on
her experiences serving
two thousand lunches to
children each day.
The most successful
technique, says Veech,
i s to "involve
youngsters in the selec-
tion of what they will be
ser ved."
For example. let your
child decide if he will
have carrots or zucchini
for his vegetable, or
whether the carrots will
However, she points gredients disguised so
out that a child's options that they are not easily
s h ould be carefull y identifiable.
limited. The choice of S h e n otes t h a t
not having a vegetable casseroles are often
shouldn't be one that is children's least favorite
available. foods, but that "varia·
The sensory aspects of tions on a sandwich
food are also very theme" -submarines,
critical to children, says ta~os, hamburgers -
Veech. Certain physical ate !avorite.s bec!'use
characteristics such as the d1ffer~t 10gred1ents
bright colors, distinct . are r~zable.
shapes and crispy tex· She potnts ou~ that one
l ures generally are easy way .to intr~u~e
more attractive to vegetables 1.11to a child s
children. di~t is lo serve them
Green beans, for ex·
ample, s hould be a
bright green and firm in
t exture when served.
That means not over·
cooking them, as well as
making the in itial
purchase carefully, she
says.
Fresh vegetables past
their prime will not have
visual appeal, nor will
they be as nutritious .
Green salads are often
m ore a cceptable lo
children with the salad
dressing served "on the
side," so the gr eens
don't become what
children -and many
adults -caJl "soggy."
Again, letting the
with these favor ite
foods. Lettuce, tomato,
cucumbers and sprouts
a ll go we ll in thesE:
dishes.
One final word of ad·
vice: a child's first ex-
perience with a new food
might be his last unless
it's correctly prepared.
Hot foods should be
served more than just
warm ; breaded fish-
sticks s hould be crisp,
not soggy; vegetable
sticks should be cold and
crisp, not warm and
limp.
"Children can't be
fooled -foods must be
served the way they're
supposed to be,·' says
Veech.
Nachos Con Salsa -hearty snack
1 cup barbecue
sauce
1 4 ·oun ce can
chopped green chilies
11.s c up c hopped
onion
1 teaspoon chili
powder
~ teaspoon hot pep·
per·Sluce
1 18·ounce j a r
pas teurized process
cheese spread
1 8-ounce pkg .
tortilla cbiJJll .
Combine barbecue
seuce, V• cup chilies,
onion, chili powder ud
bot pepper 11uce. Sim·
mer 10 mlnuta.
Combine process
cheese spread and re.
maining chilies; heat.
On large platter. layer
hair of tortilla chips and
process cheese spread
mixture; repeat layers.
Serve with barbecue
sauce mixture as dip. 6
to 8 servings.
--~ ...... -----
Li n Herbal Teas.
Nat11rally:dmcious
with no · ine.
Quietly Chamomile. A soothing blend
of c~amomile, lemon grass and orange petals.
Toasty Spice. A heartv. spicy blend of
-_.. chteorv and cinn,1111011
Gentle Orange.
A gentle blend
. of or.mge petal<..
.. DM.Yflt&.OT
.Nutritio~packed prodrree
11 v•,,_JH .... rkllap=••..... . faaU1, leok for Uae A VOID COOKING
off .. W fl .. ...... C---i&aW hH trl1• ... frullaett U... ........ •tooloq . • ..._ ..... a. ,,_, HM ,_. •lal wtater anllMll Y....._ ol n., lbould be prepared
,.,.-...-. TM Na· 1al .. fawrttel .._. U.. U.. INY911Ddie.a.O¥er· quickly ud wttb UUle ex-
0•••1 Dtetar1 Ooal1 ploe ... ~~· Cabba1• maturtt1 Md a 1 ... d•· tra maUture to preserve •ta....._. by U.. U.S. haa eaeelleal keeplDI 1lrabMproduet. tbe brilbtcolon, natural
._ate 8tilect Commlttff quaUU. Md a relatively AU varieti• keep belt cri1pne11 and vitamin
• N'*"'-empUllaM low tCIM, .UU., lt u wlaea ...... eovend lD content. U..l~ollaehad ldHl .a11b1Utut• wS.•• tM ,..,.......... Bnauel Over-eookial tends tQ ... =,...... fnltt o&W ..a.d ......, are 1pro•ta au collard• tarn tbHe ve1etables
ud vari«l• more..,m1tve. alaould be UMd wttb.ln a l>W"Pl• or brown and pro-u ..-inyowd1«. da1 or two for beat ducea an unpleasant
tlae 1t1t lur1eoa TaY al-.mrnNG quail&,. kitebenodor.
Oeaeral't r-eport al10 aavoy, ~or Nd cab-Calullllower ud broc· ·By lncludin1 these
•lNIMI tM ...,.Uoa.. b•I• a. trdu.al tlaw coll allould be med wltb.ln w I n t er v e I et a b 1 e
valu• ol fNlh produce. reel..-far a chance of tb.rff to four days, but varietJes on your shop·
Tlae tack of lat and pace . r .. ular cabbal• can be pin1 Uat, you'll ease your
cholHtetol, tb• low· Who Hleclln1 pro· kept for over a wee~ un· bud1et while enriching
Try banana squa&h •
with butter
or low-cal &alt
and pepper .
calorie '** aklAa wlth duce from the cabbace der refriJreratJon. · · your menus. hi1h vilam.la, mineral, ___ .....;_;, ______ _;_~_:.,.;..;::..;.._ ____ __::...._ __________ _.;;.. ____________________________________________________________________________________________ _
and ftber cmt•t and • tow per-aervlna coat
make produce a .Tmuat"
OD every lbopplna Uat.
Wbi.le fall And winter
ve1etabae varied• are
often bypaued, winter
a quaab, broccoli and
other memben of t.be
cabba1e family offer
nutrition b01u.IMI ud are
tasty treats wben well
prepared.
BESIDU TBS bet·
ter kaown wint,r
aquub varieU• such u acorn, be•a, .......,..,t
and ............ there are
new type• in the
marketplace. Spqbetti
aquub. wbleb la shaped
like a small yellow
watermelaa, iatwl ol auc-
cu lent apa1bettl·like
stranda whmcooll:ed.
Some add a dub of
spa1betti sauce for a de-
licious main course;
others like this squash
drlszled with melted but-
ter.
For those on a diet, just
a dash al salt and pepper
seasons this growing
favorite.
WINTER SQUASH are
best baked, but they can
also be boiled or mashed.
All varieties are bard
shelled, allowin1 for long
storage pe.riods in a cool
place.
Don't store winte r
s quash in the
r e frigerator for long
periods as chilling con-
verts the starch to sugar.
All varieties have
lfbout 130 calDries per
cup. They are rich in
vitamin A, with one cup
providing approximately
170 percent of the Recom·
mended Daily Allowance
(US RDA).
VITAMIN C conteot is
also high, with one cup
providing about 45 per~
cent of tbe USRDA . They
are also good sources of
riboflavin, and iron, with
l esser amounts o f
calcium, niacin, tbiamin
and protein.
The cabbage family is
also well represented in
t h e fall and winter
vegetable line·up. Broe·
coli, Brussell· s prouts,
cauliflower, collards,
nappa cabbage, savoy
cabbage, chinese cab·
bage, red and green cab·
bage, kale and kohlrabi
are some of the nutritious
and colorful represen-
tatives found.
NUMEROUS ETHNlC
recipes utilize these
varieties. which are
particularly low in
calories but very rich in
vitamins C and A. Broc-
coli also has good quan·
lilies of riboflavin,
calcium and thiamin,
with lesser quantities of
protein, iron, and niacin.
In r~enl years, broc·
coli has been a bit on the
party circuit when cul in
strips and used as a "dip·
per" in place of calorie·
* ·FIESl'A BURGERS
~ cup chopped
celery
~ cup chopped
1reen pepper
1 tablespoon butter
or marsarine
1 e nvelope ( 1 ~
ounces)· taco seasoning
mix .
~ C\Q> tomato juice
1 tableapooo vinegar
1 ~ pounds around
beef ............
Cook celery and pep·
per in butter in small
aaucepan 5 minutes. Stir
ln 1eaaonin1 mix ,
tomato juice an·d
vlne1ar; beat to 1lm-
merln1. Sbape IJ'O'l!ld
beef Into • pattiel; pill .
over bot coal• until
done. Sene bambur1en
on roll•. topped with ........... Mrllnl•·
* EGG WRITES
If JOU baYe leftover eu wa.n.., or JOlla!i.. tbe ••tell WQ to put mem to UH II to aWt them lD
wltb lll• wbol• •711
7oa're beaUDI or
ffl'•lllMllll·
WE ACCEPT COUPONS \ ·.
·FROM ALL MARKETS .;
!ncluding "DOUBLI COUltON" coupons from any food market d \....
tn Los Angeles, Ventura and Orange Counties. Rules' in stores. 0
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS LOIN CUT OF BEEF
NEW YORK s3sL9Be STRIP
U S.0 .A Choice 8eel loin USD A Ckooce Ckuck Cu•
NEW YORK STEAK LB 4.59. 0 -BONE BEEF ROAST l 8 1.69
El Roncho Center Cut Woter Added O•e" Rt"ody Fre•h E~111 .. Butter
HAM SLICES LB 2.49 El RANCHO MEAT LOAF LB. 1.89
leon Doe• Not Eace.d 12°'o Fot
2
I
9
O•en Re.ody Hom. Pork, f•e•k EQg• . Crumbs
El RANCHO G ROUND BEEF LB • El RANCHO HAM LOAF LB 1.89
FRESH ARMOUR'S VERIBEST ROLLED BOSTON BUTT
El Roncho Sweet or Hot
ITALIAN STYLE SAUSAGE . . .Le. 1.49 =::1tt&lsTS 29
Porli & Seasoning
1
•
9 El RANCHO BRATWURST ... le ... LB. U.S.0 .A Choice 8oneleu a..t Chucli Rolled 2 49 CLOD SHOULDER ROAST .... LB •
leonru Doe• Not E•ceed 15"b Fot
CHOPPED STEAK l8 2.40 fl lloncko llonck S1yle
THI CK SLICED BACON LB 1.29
U.S.D.A. CHOICI •llF
7-BONE ROAST
CHUCK CUT
USDA I 2 ·9 CHOICE
Lii. •
FRESH FILLETS s
PACIFIC RED SNAPPER ........... L•. 1.59
Fre•h New Englond Cool.ed & Peeled fro1 Oelro•••d 3 99 cH1aaYST0111cLAMS ts 1.29 HOaSD'01UvnsH1t111• le •
Fto1.·0elro\ted Nonkern Center C1it Fro1 Oelro•tttd
HALIBUTSTIAKS ts 3.49 CaABTWINMIAT te 3.99
POP UP 200 COUNT WHITE, ASST. FACIAL
KLEEtlEX
TISSUE
<4·01. Sdullong
.99 BLACK PEPPER
2 5 01 Ant 1101 Moruchon
.49 INSTANT LUNCH
46·01 Ant Doll
1.35 VLASIC PI CK LES
48 0 1 ICnvd•en Pu1e Chilled
1.49 APPLE JUICE
16 01 Nob•\CO Honey Mood
SUGAR G RAHAMS
7 l "• • Re9 Su9or Frrr
DR .PEPPER
6 P~ Reg ~urdovgi. ThotnO\
ENGLISH MUFFINS
6 0 1 6 0 1 Vo1
9-LIVE5 CAT FOOD
.99
1.09
.99
.33
2 lb CH8
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES 1.69 7SO·ml
(1"' !:il j\ t t~,;
16 0 1 Inc 30 ofl ~1
2.49 HEINZ
KETCHUP
32·01.
Bottle
• 99c
Fre•h Poli
ORANGE JUICE .............. "'1 ·GAl.1.69
COVENTRY
VODKAorGIN 2.97
sTilaiG'ilim&o(uliao• 4.99
759·ml. Weibel
GllllN HUNGA•IAN .... 2. 99
J 6. J BABY
SHAMPOO
14 01 J & J BABYPOWDI•
16· lkiirAND0:A'19sheer 1.79
1.29
. 1 LB. LO-CAL
CELLO
CARROTS
FRESH
MUSMROOMS
9 c79c 8-0Z IA. PKG:
I '1 01 ltl f •'• Savo·
TERIY AKI SAUCE f'()f)CS f)F Ttf£ f.i ~£rtT , ., 01 lotH• ~1hw'o"' !.otod .. 1.25 '"°"*,_.,...,._~0.,. RICE VINEGAR .75
J 8 Of (o .. ttot• 4 11 t(fiHbO"t 1.05 RtlSH FISH & VE GET ABLES . • 7 5
'-NOODLIS.ASC J )or P\v ..... ,oioc-. ...
8 0 1 lot"* M•1o'io AJar1~1w•e
PICKLED PLUMS
'6 lo9 VOMOf'ft010t0""0
GENMAICHA TEA .. .. • I 5 RICE CRACKERS .......• 85
CHINISl lllW YIAR
"GUNG HAY FAT CHOY"
6·01. Plig. C & W
CHINESE 99c PIA PODS ..
6 01. AHi. Vor. Chu,, King . , c .....
........................................ 89
12 01. Chfcbn & Stirlmp
CllUllKING ....................................... 1.39
I 0·01. Wi"' Pork CllUllK•G ,._ lllCI ............................ 1.09
Li5111~ , . ~
I ·lb Boll Porlt
MEAT
FRANKS
l·lb. Pre<ious '
29 ••con A CHllA .............. I e
8-01. loll Pre<ious •
1 29 MODA•ILLA C-1 .... •
Huj!he\ Rondom We!Jht' Mo,,te<ey Style
28 'aCKCHll•l ............... La. 2.
16·01. lob'\ Colllornio I
29 COUNT•YHIS .. G ...... •
THIS wtEK'S fEATUltE CAW-I( OUT lttAl SAlllNGS WITH THIS EXTJIA SH...., VAlUf ...
U S 0 A .Grode .t.• Hond Cut
FRESH FRYER WINGS
U SD A GRADE A• fre•k fryo ng
CHICKEN LIVERS
l8 .69 .
l8 1.29
Fre\h Grod e ·A•
CHICKEN STRIP BACKS ......... tB .• 29
F•ISH HAND CUT CHICKIN
LEGS &·THIGHS
U S.0 A. GIAOI
A LB. 99c
16 0 1 Reody Cut or Stewed
S & W TOMATOES ..• 49
HUGHES
HALF&HALF
PINT
CARTON 47c
I
· COUPONRUUS SAlllitWICll .... STAlllLISS STllL CUTLIRY .,.,.,_c_ ...... _
h4e •·-hill ._.Ill _. ~o"4ll• ... _ -.... ...,., "" ..... '
•llodo & Ho_ I_...,~.---
Co,..poroble Volue 6. 99 • Hollow C..o•"" !>too,,&.., ''°•' t todo• e o . .i.. ,.,,., s..i. ~t ,roof
--------C-A.WY1&-----------........ -·······-t•-01 '""" Ko"9 ,.,,_u._ -.---°" , ... -·--C-0-1 CHOW MEIN VEG ET ABLES _ ........ ._.. ,. .. ..._.._ . ._.,....._, -a Wl•T IAW ~ s .. , C..... K ....
,_, ---SOY SAUCE , __ ....,_,
..
' S-et CHUN lllNO .H CHOW MEIN NOOOlfS .
"
'·'·
. .
...
• l
,.
rft .. . ..
DAILY PILOT f:'I t9 .
High-fad diets: soup is chic
......... la home •·
ter\1lain1 c han•• H
mucltMlaW.cm.teut
O n• year it '• lht
cod \all par\)' , anot.her ,
brunth 1 bit Tben lt '1
r h•"na dllh Now lt '•
oup
ll CUl ~ 8ouUlabalut
1f >Ou ue coakln1 wlUa a
nc-nt h ~t'tlnt Or Thlrll
Mu 111111 awny If your
fnend1 are Into Hindu
mtdllauoo
b ~ a i1 comin&
up fast That'~ 1 Middle
t:a l«rn llOt.lp mach wdb
dried ,~. around meat
a nd S ll l n a r h , •n d
rlu·ored with c1nn•mon
The whole idea as a
meal·tn·• dJsb Served
i.om ettmes over r ice,
"tu ch 1s an easy com
plement to prepare.
As long as the main
element of lbe repasl is
oup) and can be eaten
with ease with a spoon
from a tray on the lap,
it's in fashion.
Nourishing, as well as
complete, lbe soup din·
ner is eas y on t h e
hostess and pleasing to
the guesl .
Particularly gratify.
ing and satisfying is lhi!>
new entry in the field of
soupy enlrees. Sopa de
Rock Lobster.
The recipe is Spanish;
the rock lobster is South
African; the results are
r avishing.
Naturally. you don 't
have to be a party.giver
lo fall in love with this
Sopa. Make it just for
yourself and immediate
family.
The recipe yields four
s e r v ing s . It c an b e
doubled if you have out·
side friends you want to
shre it with.
S O P A DE SOUTH
AFRJCA
l pound frozen rock
lobster tajls
4 t a bl es poo n s
Spanisholi veoil
2 c loves g arlic ,
minced
l largeonion, minced
1 can (6 oun ces
each 2 cans (8 ounces
each) tomato sauce
1 teaspoon salt
v~ teaspoon oregano,
. Everyone
needs did
!with irotJ
All Popeye has t<do to
get enough iron /n his
diet. is squeeze f>en a
can of spinach. Jut the
rest of us need avaried
selection of base foods
d aily to do ttu trick ,
says Pat Orma1. a reg·
ist e r ed d ietitia n a nd
nutrition spedilist for
the Los Angel<li Unified
School District,
.. Iron is o~ nutrient
n e e d e d i n 3irfer ing
amounts by teen·a ge
boys and girll . men and
women. Tee•·agers re·
quire more ion because
they're growng fast and
wo m e n need m o r e
bec a u se o f t h e i r
mens trual cycle," s he
!explains.
• "The rtcommended
d aily alloyance <RDA )
1
for iron is ~8 milligrams
for womeoi and teen.age
boys and girls. For men
,and for wtmen over 51,
the RDA is 10 milli·
gra ms," says Orman.
"Those daily amounts
will provide enough iron
for building red blood
ells , which are the key
lo tr ans porting oxygen
'
through our bodies as
well as for burning of
fu el by body cells," she
dds.
"Th e b e s t f oo d
ources or iron a re found
in the meat group, one
f the foui food groups
f milk , m e al ,
egelables and fruits ,
and breads and cereals. -~[iver, for example, Is an xcellenl source or iron.
• lher meats and egg
ollts a r e also good
ources," she advises.
·'The vegetable·fruil
nd bread·cereal groups
lso offer signUicanl
mounts of iron ,"
rman says. "Good
elections from these
roups include dried
ruita, dark 1reen lfafy
egetables, plus whole
rain a nd e n rich ed
reads and cereals.
cruahed lO powder
~ tHIPGOD black
l>fPP« ateupoone aromaUc
blll•l'I
2 to !I CUPI cOOlled whlt.,ict
Parboil froatn rock
lob•t•r taJll by dropplAa
lato kettl• of bollln1
11lttd wate r When
water reboill, drain im·
mediately and drench
w i th c old waler .
Reserve .. cup ol rock
lobater liqwd for mil·
Ina sa~e. Cut away un·
derslde membrane and
remove meat from shell.
Food fcuhkms
change cu fcut
as designer
labels. This
season'snew
favorite is an
oldstandy-
soup.
c...-..'llaWls ~th ~nniversary with... • Ral s· ble Coupon · Savings
Present 1ri1s coupon a10"9 wit•• a11v eine Monu1ac1urers
CenlS·Olf COuPOI' dnO Qf'I douDIP lnP savings w'1en you
purCl'l3Se lne 1tP"' NOi 10 include "'tailer tree or
grocery purcha>t> t.Ouf.IU"~ or l'•CePd me value ot me
•lem E <~tude~ l•Quor tntiat.co anu ""'O m1tk prooucts
Limit One Item Per Manufacturers' Coupon
end Limit 3 Double Coupons Per Customer
Coupon Eftective Feb. 5 thru Feb. 11, 1911
«D
Double Coupon
Presen1 m1s coupon along ..i1111 any o,,e Ma,,utac1urers
Cents·otl coupon and oe1 oout>le 1'1e savings w'1en you
purchase 1ne rte'1'1 Not 10 1ncluoe retailer tree or
grocery purcnase coupon5 or e.ceed 1ne value ol the
olem Eacludes hQuOf 10D8CCO ano ttu10 milk prOduCIS
Limit One ll•m Per Manufacturer•' Coupon
and Limit 3 Double Coupons Per Cuatomer
Coupon Ehcllve Feb. 5 thru F•b. 11, 1111
USDA-holce Beef Loin USDA Choice-Beef Loin USDA Choice-Beef Loin USDA Choice
Large Meaty End T-Jone
Sfeak
Top Sirloin
Steak
Porterhouse
Steak
per
lb.
Farmer John-Fully Cooked
Sliced
Ham
1 lb •• loaf
59
per
lb .
59
per
lb.
Extra Fancy •
Red Delicious .. ·
Apples per
lb .•
.71/2 oz.
pkg.
~1 ~ ... ._,Pure Vegetable • ~-_.;Wesson : -~ Oil
·~~-
···-----------------------------------
------·-·········· ------------------
48oz.
btl.
Over 350,000 Prizes
available to win!
OOQS CHART EFFECTIVE FEB. 5, 19~
... ,. ,.,..._ --t•lf ..... ...... "".
'""-' ,_Jl\••-.t-•fltf •..-1•· tt"'\.•I •J~·fl -. -. . . .. ... ....... '" . . . .. .
• •• v
f ~ (0 I '• ..
f I t ,..,., #..... ... ... ...... 'l'I " ... ,... .. ol.. ~ • II W ._. ............ "'"''.... ' ... , .... (lll ....... l.t ... ,..1.-t f I __...,.,.....,.._..o•• ,. ......... ~ .......... .._., . .. .. -.. ........ .
j ...... f\ ..... "~ ....... ,.. ......... .,,,.,,~ ... .......... , ....... _ ..
.,~ ~·-#+ .... f .... "' ..... '*"""'. . . ...... ,, .. ,,..,°"""""~''" •• ..., ·~ ......... , .. ~-·~·...,... .... ,..~ .. ~~:-':.fl:.:::"' ,... ..... oi-w.t•·• ... ~ Mlt ,, .. Mf1l .. fll'Jj111t•• •W• ' '\I • ....
""' •I Ml , •• a ••._O ti.tJ
......-... ......... _.., •• """,......., t+t\•W.,tt .~lllliDttit.•.-"11t•I.,. ... ., .. ....... ................... ,,, •• ._...,.wfo\t• ...... .,_, ... ._.,..,, I if.,.._""" .. -..... ..... .................. ~ ......
II() PURWS( N£Ct:SSAR1 • '
C ~ l981 Dy R#llS"' G~ COfllllll'Y llld SMnon ~el'"9 Ill( AU NGllTS R(S(fMO
Beef Rib
Stea
per
lb.
for
Prto.e lfllal•Peb. I..,.. Feb. \t_1tl1 .,..,..., • ..._ "'tNa ..... tM....,. ,,_ • ....,"'.a,,.,.. ..._.,..... ......... .._.. .._...,.... • "" .... ,.._
•c..,......1•1 ........ ..._,.~. M ...... ___., ........ all911. ltfioaa....., "-' adwartlMd,,.... fMJ warr te ............ lldllll I 11 Itta ........... ,...ltRll ... _ .. ""11................... .......... .. ........... ..,) .................................... 111 • ...--...n. ........
... ,... •l 11111 .. mama •• -. ... au _,.. •-aa.mt••-1Mn1 ••••
Wt•.. ..,, __ ms 1214-. ._lllfllll-Rll. CISTlllll 411l~----.• I ... a. ....... Hllllt
&.Al ... El 111111111 SI... / f I I I ..
' h ~
... ------
OAILY PILOT
Special diei.
Dried heaDs figure hig'1}y in 1 w cholesterol diet
Thti \owly dnfd ~10
l• finall)' f'm•ralna a•
lM tood toUrt>• ot pro
lean It hu *n lnr• th1·
days ol the Rrona A&t'
Tiie-1mportanl th n• lo
rt"membt-r If you are u
1n1 bean In 11ln• of
mf'at. poultn ui '''"· •-to f'r \' j(r1&m at tht'
11tme nw•I
roflether lht-I ttum~
And gr&1~ form a l'Om
plet~ prolt tn ~Ith all the
'" Stntlal .wunu 1c1di.
netdt.'<i a. .. lht" 'bu1ld10g
bl~kbo ol th Wd>
Dried t>t-•ru. '> l<> 1 " in
Jehnitt>l) 1f they are in a
tlght container tn a dry
place If )Uu wish to
cook a large quantity at
a time and then use
them up in different
ways, be sun! th at the
c<>pked bean~· are cov-
e red and stored in the
r e fri ge rator for no
longer than four or fi ve
days
Eac h cup of dried
beans will make three
cups of cook ed beans
ll 's bes t lo soak dry
beans before cooking, to
replace the water lost in
the drying process. A
good rule of thumb is to
use2 l /3to3cupsofwater
for each cup of beans.
If you have the time,
let the beans soak over-
night, then dr ain and
cook. a eans soaked in
this manner keep their
sha pe , have a more un-
iform texture and cook
i n considerably le i:;s
time.
But. if you are in a
hurry. bring the beans
and water to a boil, cov-
e r and cook for two
msnutes ; then remove
from the heat and let
stand in the water for at
least one hour. Then
drain and proceed with
the recipe.
For plain cooked
beans , add fresh wat er
and simmer with the lid
tilted until the beans are
tender . Add additional
hot water. if needed .
Add one tablespoon of
oil during cooking, 1r you
want lo reduce foaming.
To prevent skins from
bursting, simmer gently
a nd stir occasionally to
keep the bean s from
sticking to the bottom of
the saucepan
I Here-are several in-
teresting legume/grain
dis hes from a com -
p re h e n s i v e n e w
vegetarian t'Ookboo k
"The Age or Enlighten·
m e n t Cookbook " b y
Miriam Kas in ·
LF.NTIL LOAF
I cup lentils
3 cups wate r o r
broth
t carrot. grated
t celery stalk, cut
fine
l/2 cup bulgar wheat
t cup fresh bread
crumbs , packed
4 tablespoons butler .
melted
1 large t omato.
chopped
'h teaspoon s aJt
\.ii teaspoon pepper
Br i ng the lentils,
water or broth. carrot ! a nd celery to a boil.
Reduce the heat a nd
simmer for 30 minutes.
Ad d the bulgar wheat
and simmer, cover ed,
for 2Q minutes, stirring
' occasionally, until all 1 the water is absorbed.
_ (Don 't bur n the m ix-
( lure ) Add bread
crumbs, butter . tomato,
sail a nd pepper; mix
1 well. Place in a greased
-loaf pa n. Bake in a
350-degree oven for l
, hour. Serve with tomato
I ~auce. Makes 4 to 6 serv-
ings.
I HOPPIN' JOHN 'n cup black-eye
peas
3 tablespoons butter
or oil
2 s t a l ks celery ,
sliced thin
\4 tea s poo n
rosemary
1 teaspoon thyme
2 tomatoes, chopped
2 c ups broth or
water
:¥,,cup brown rice
~ teaspoon salt
\.ii teaspoon pepper
Cover peas with water
and cook untll tende r.
Drain. Heat butler or oil
in a pot. Add the celery,
rosemary, and thyme,
and aaute for S minutes.
Add the tomatoes and
cook for another 2 to 3 mlnutes~ Add the water·
or broth and brine to a
,boll. Add the rice, cover,
reduce Mat and simmer
until tbl nee ii tender
and tbe water Is
absorbed. Add the
blaek-eye peu. Season
-.uh H ll and "pper.
M 1kn .a W 6 IMll'YlDll .
l teupoon orecano
l 1talk celery. sliced
thln
~ teatipoon paprika v. teupoon cloves
l,'i teaspoon salt
saule the cumin in the
oil in a large skillet for
one minute . Add the
or egano, celery, a n d
green pepper and saute
for a few minutes. Add
the tomatoes. Saute for 2
to 3 minutes. Add the
tomato mixture to Ote
be a~s. Add the cor -
I der , cinnamon ,
Cp ika, and c loves. -----------111111! o and simmer for 2
hou or longer on a low ~\l II Kl.ICM' t-'HIU
l cup kidney beans
2 cull' water
l areen pepper. cut
ln chunks
~ teupoon pepper ~~~t·~t~::U~~dsa~~= ~''•" \I'" -.L~
l bMy lul
2 l ••poons cumin 2 tablespoons olive
2 c ups c h o pped
tomatoes
l teaspoon coriander
'>'\ t easpoon cin-
Soak the beans over-
night. Drain and place
ln a pot with the water
a nd bay leaf. Bring to a
boil, then reduce to a
simmer. Meanwhile,
beans e tender. Add ~-·\. ~" ~ sail an: pepper. Serve
over coo~ rice. Makes ----
A serving~ -----------
rou MWAYI SAVE/ WITll ITATEI lllOS.
lOW-ltlW /111/CESI
FRESH PORK SALE
1011.DER STUK .. $1.29
Mln'IBS u Sl.59
SlilOll IOAST u $1.48
iiicHOPs IJ sl.89
lfJll !oPS u s1 .98
FIKSAUSAGE IJ ggc
1
$TATER BROS
CEKTIRED BEEF
PRICES EFFEC.
7 NU Mft.
FR. S-ft. '911.
lff mBltf 1Nl 611/lr
TO LMff fM lllRJll
JMD TO DD I 1tlQ4l
llNBlfM
JlllOtUAUn.
• DENNISONS• REG OR HOT
• CHILI W/ BEANS
.. SKIPPY•4.YAR. ... DOGFOOD
LAUNDRY DETERGENT ! DASH
.. BAR SOAP ' ~ CAMAY
I SiFi:i.:PiETTY I KLEENEX•BOUTIOUE PRINTS OR DEEP COLORS -TISSUES ·--..... ..
I iiiiatA1s
9 iiiii"MiADS
• CHUN KINO•CHICKEN, BEE~R PORK CHOW MEl11 ...... ..
M.JB
&.VARIETIES !(ElLOOOS SUGAR
1~oz.73c
l~OZ.21 C
100-oz.
5342
~0~45c
~Rl99c
12~c~9c
.»cr5214
30-CT.
52°'
. 42·0Z.
5 1 ''
CHEESE lOAF SPREAD
RICE MIX FROSTED FLAKES CHEFS DELIGHT
1 ~z S4• ' J, 1 •a I 32.oz t2a•
TOP RAMEN BROWN, OOlO OR WHITE STATER llROS 4 \IARIETIES CREAM SOAP 1000 ISi.ANO f NOODLES SOFTSOAP DRESSING
3·01-21· ~HOZ • 1 a• 1e.oz $ lff
I BEER & WINE I tAY&IUIU IN &ll 5'011£5 f'CEot l O.A UND•1
PIP\ Mlll81 !i.K&~~~~ ................ 1 ~l 12.88
TIYtOl lmi~y:~~:~~· ......................... ·~l •2.78
111111~ ~~~: ............................. 15l ·~-~I
LUGIY lllEI n~~rse~.~,~~ ....... l ....... 12111-0l •2.21
I LIQUOR SPEC/Al$ I IA'""'"'lll IN STD'IU WllH UO\IDtl LIClNMI OM Tl
., TillEI ~'°" .............. 11Sl
110.88
• 900~ .............. 17k
111AI ••ff ~tts.~l ............. ~ .. "k 110.18
ftlllEY ~~l.Y~ .............. .' •• ~ 110.18
WASHHITOll RED DEUCOUS
5A
STATER BROS.•SLICEO
LUNCH•
MIATS
6 It ARIETIES &-OZ.
79~ACH
IUF•llAO( CU"T
8EEF•LARGE·ENO ••• ROAST
s 1 ••LB
EACH
llWICE OEU
i ABlE IN 5T0flE!> WllH <fR,ICf ll(ll ONI'
IU.CAllONI 3 9 C LAD ··l• •
CUCUMIUI 6 ONION 49 C •uD .t• oE~llEY s I 59 ..... CllHSI ·o1.e
TIY0ll•i;(;£o TO OAOER • 1 •• aOl .. D HAM . t•
FllESW cu~EDDU • 1 •• Cllll~ l ll
CllUCIC •OAST
lllCH S•t<>Z C
TU•1Clla0t.MNA u79
t(EF•CHUC~•llOAST .......... lllCH'S•..OZ..TUf<ty •• C a ALA.Ml ca
tcff CHUC• lllCH'S•IUJl~EY•SU••Ell
T••ONl•OAST aAuaao~z tA99c
If.ff llOONO 10ti£~H lllCi;'I• TUll,fY• l~Z
•UMtt•OAaT PllA•KS u • 11•
ICU CHUC• IONElEU IAJI ... • It-OZ.
allOULDI• aoAST COOICIDH-u•2••
KING COLA PEG OA~l•M
TOMATOES ,~~~~f=!~.l
• · s129 ... c.•1 ,, •
! ~-c: 79c
'
CHICKEN
llOOllE SOUP CAMP8Ell!>
MAYONNAISE WE~HlWATCHERS I 3101 ggc
SALAD DRESSING 1~~'~ ! ·~z $117
MAZOLA SPRA y PAN I 9-0l Sl.(I
CHOW MEIN NOODLES o.uN ~•Nof~&7c
-.. TEA •i BAGS MAGIC MOONTA•N·PEl'PVIMINT 79c -SWEET lllMONO, ORANGE 011 -CINN SPICE 16.CT
BEAN SPROUTS CHUN KING I
SYRUP MllS eun ERWORTHS !
OYALTINE MALTORCHOGOLATE
RINSO LAUNDRY
DETERGENT I
t • WIZARD MIST H AR I
TRASH BAGS ;;;[~~LY •
PEPSI COLA ;::~R ~ET I
~ GREEJI AOSARIU ';; CHILES ~:g.~\o oz ·JI'
·~01 49c
MARGARINE ~~HT WATCHERS I . 218-0Z 5gc
SALAD DRESSING ~fr,~;<?5 llOl Sl.65
SHRIMP COCKTAIL L11scco , oz 77c
CHEESE SLICES ::~~~11$ ' ·~ Sl.49
11 lou1x ...... . •. ., $1.38 I
SHARP CHEDDAR ~KE TO uK1 . ,~ s419
COLBY CHEESE !i~·~•NOOM UI
52.TI
JACI CHEESE -~'~:~ LB
12.&9
COTIABE CHEESE ~=Fi:.reo t 1801 ggc
•4l 45c
PEAIG
t AROE•US
1'<0 I O ANJ01
:· \ . SRAPEFRUT
FAHC'l'•OESERT SWEET•8·8S
ASSORTEO•LAACE•HE"LTHY•UPRIG""
POTHOS PLAITS
HUil llOWI POTATOES ·-.
PIREMIOUIE IOUI ." . " FROZEN WHITE llEID ·~ c, -FOODS MGITOI DOIUTI tA":folAo ....
'' IUIT JEMIMA Wlff LES "
DOWIYFUIE WlfflH "~
99ceAo a
I '>(H PQ1 14.71 . • ... e ... ~ ...
! ! • ...
8!f
791
11.09
"'' ... 751
., : 11.01 .. ..89'
11.5
971
. 771
19c
11.11
•• 11.oa
• '1 .0I
I mm IMln ., rot111011tr1 i' _._. _____ ,_,,,.. ...... _._ ... ,........_, .. ,.._ ... _ .. ,.. ... ______ .. .....,_
.... Til•·nlM . ...,..... ..................... .....-.... ........
............ 4"111N•et• ........ .....,....... ....,....., ........... .., ..... ...
---"" t U. C..Gll .. • -._..._ .. ..., ... -.... -.,.. ............ -....... . _,. .. ..
!
I
1
: -
I t
l
• ~
" •• -
, II
" i
FOOD
OU
f:atin1 bt·tw•·• 11 annl•
h11 bl't nm 1111r' ut
Amtrh an l'lft, But un
fnrtun t•h. th "' c ~· mu I JIOl>ular an
\ n1t•r1ra lt'ad h1 bllh
in o htt1 nit lo* in
nutrhh1n 1oolu.-
f,. • mul b uiiar and
rut Mll1I I "' rcw ~·It.min!>
and 111111crul'> art• tutu
(II ( II I ftill ath!J I U ~·i. Uf
nuuu pruc 1· " d r.run k fc .. 111
t-;, 1·r 'i h·11 \ 1•t1r lh ..
t " t '"\••r nni.-r11 lull~
II llO,U~H'h 1tht l''ood
l 011 un1ptio11 Sur"""y"
•nil l•11m11 l\'llb n or
h ur,~ fr1,rn ont 1Jcciu.t~
lo th1 111 ~' "t '''°"" lh•ll
t'Wl u1111•ll<J11 ol l•OJJ\All\r
\O lll k 1111111' 1, I htOg
fJ,ll'.'J 011111 Ow JX>~Ulll
• I 1in wr;1wth In a smgle
1 •• r ".-rrHn11 h n1 ore
' lh•• .... lulhon worth of
Mi d< kfooJs
st (fl ~TUOIE~ .also
11,.;~e,1 th<1I 1r1 bf'tween
mt!al c>atint: 1!\ likely to
101·11 ·''"' ratllt'r th::.n
1l 1114M11\h Thou~h you
1111 n1Jl l>t• ablt· to
«hangt-yuur fhmlly'..,
ha h 1 nf ~na<'k 1ng yvu
,JI) \ :.ir v lht•JI choal·e or
-;n a<'ks in order t11 pro·
mote ltt•tlcr hl'Hlth.
\~ ht-ttwr yo11 or your
l.1m1h f';Jl them vl t•of
f,., t;t11•'. a fter sehool,
"h ilt· "'a t r h1ng
11·11 \ 1Mon, or a'i ~m on
1ti1 run m•n1 m e al , '"·H k' :-hould he nuln
t 1n11 h o.111 \l'S a nd not
1111•itl ''II'-' ll•r:;
h l'<'I> 'l ~ araely or ap-
fW Ii 1111~. nutrilioul> a nd
•Cll'\.fl t'OS I VC foo d s
,t\',11l<1ble at a ll limes,
.1 11 d I et I h cm "s e 11
tl11•m•;clH'S ·· When the
.1 t!fri~t'rator as oµened,
n 1t•rt 'ihn11ld be <I p1trher
(>( frull ju1re milk. fruit.
1 :i " ~ t• ~· t· t .1 b I e s .
1 h .. 1·s 1·s 1.i·1haps a
I t•;ttl \' lo h1•Jt "Oll!J. :J
<·11-t ;i rtl. •tr h•flc1\ r·r ml'at
t11 U'•'On a sand"' ll'h
Tht• rupl><nnl :.hould
11:1\" who:e gr a10 bread
o r na\·kersP..ivailable
!nr s nark1nN Th r'ie
f 11 u d s ,1 r t' r i l' h 1 n
nutrients but lnw in sug
ar. unlike eandv and sort
d ri11 ks wh1•:-.t• ·rn4'1n in
l!rc>tl11•nt 1~ !'>U>?:Jr
\ (; O On ~. \CK
~.tw11ltl 1·1.111s1!>t of a soltd
f,,..,J .111v d i 14u1d .
I Hemember, dehyd r a-
tion can cause fatigue )
Even a glass of water
ca n be a wonderful
p11 ku p a nd n o
C' a I or I!", f) r. 1 o u can
p•1111 .1 gl.c.., of tom ato
llllt·t• or frui t j ut<'t:' anti
hl·nt'f1t from the bonus
nutn<•nts. fhr solid f!)()d ·
., h 11 u I d < '1 n t r 1 h u t 1•
111111 11'f1h lltJ! m .n h1· 111
'>hort :-.uppl) 10 tht• Forni
•l a~ kN~~· in mmd th<•
four food group:-..
fJo watd1 the size of
t ho.,r sn:11•k .,,•rvings
Th" amount o f rood
h11 11l<I rlt•1w•HI on thc-
;1i'" and .ll't1\ 1t) ,,f ttil·
.; n ·1 1 k, r M ;111 v pr t·
·;d1•111I d11ldn·n neerl ,1
hll ,,, (1•1el lo tide them
fl1 ,., from onf' meal to
I ht Ill''<(
R \' T <; ll 0 WT H
Sl.OWS down aflt"r the
se<'ond h1rthda~ and a
s m <ill ~erving s uch as .i
grah<Jm cracker and J
small glal>S of JUi<'t:' or
milk is usually all that 's
nC'ccssary.
Permitting C'hildren to
e at larger servings than
they r('ally n eed may
start them on tht' road to
obesity
F rom trn to twelve
a n d a g ;1 i n tl u r i n g
a dolesceBce , C'hil<l ren
grow raP.1dly in weight.
height, and bone density
w h ile d eve l o ping
stronger muscles.
They nee d larger
quantities of nutrient·
laden food. Some active
teenagers. esp~cia lly
boys, may need a sub-
stantial s nack , e ven
~hen they eat regular.
I full ·!>ized meals.
AS ADULTS approach
middk age, their eating
habits can lead to over-
weig~if not modified. Gettin the nutrients
the needs without
gett i n g t oo man y
calories is important.
B ecause we are
generally less physically
active.than past genera·
tion s. our Reco m -
m ended Daily Al-
low ance (RDA) for • I • I I
Daily Pilot
classifieds
work for
you.can
642-5678
forquiclt
cashules.
t
I
W9dneectay, Februaty 4. ,981 DAILY PILO'T ft
on nutrition when snacking
calorl 1 ba been re p e 1 nu l bu lle r and cut surface will prevent cup of fruit (frozen,
duced from the pre· cheese but 10 euy with discoloration. fresh, .or canned) and
\.lou1ly recommended tbeae hi.th calorie ac· YOGURT MAKES a sweetener to taste.
l•veh1 , co mpanimenu. good dip for fresh f.-uit Blend until the shake
Adult• s buuld pay Green pepper strips, or can be used alone for is thick and smooth. If
11arllcul1r athmtion to broc coli , cauliflower a cool snack. you wt.ab, you may also
cbf.IC,)jlf\I foods hi&h In pl~ces and radishes can If the weather is add 81\ eH in the final
e11cnl11l nutrients but bt: kept wrapped in moist warm, consider a low· blending to give extl'a
r •lat l v e I y I<> w in paper towel inside a calorie blende r fruit protein nutritiion.
c•lon . plastic tMag for quick cold s hake. These can be Look at your daily
L091iC IN TttF. fresh
produce d~partment for
ouurisJu.n~. luw c~l itnd
low calorie i.nacks. Car
rot strip~ are always
PQflular when u isped in
1c.: water
and crisp sna cks. very nutritious and fill· menus, then plan snacks
A II kinds of fruits ing "snacks." to complement them
make good snacks with Start by adding one and rill in any nutri·
Uttle or no preparation. cup of non-fat milk to tional gaps. Make this
Buy those in season for y our blender <can be p art of your meal-
hest value. lf you cut a p-made be reconstituting p l anning r outine and
pies or pears. a htlle dry milk,) then add 4 or the rewards will b e
lemon juice or a scorbic 5 ice cubes. one al a great in terms of your
I Tempt yourself
with nutriti011
when you snack ,
· ke ep healthful
foods on hand for
just that purpose .
"
Celery 1s gr_e_u_t _w_a_lh __ a_ci_d (Vitamin C~)~o~n~th~e~t~i~m~e:_:;~ne=xt~.~-a~d~d~~l/·~to~'h~~w~h~ol~e~f1~am.i~.~·~1y~·~s~h~e~a~llh~!-------------=~~~~~~...:.::_ _________ _
BLADE CUT
CHUCK ROA ST
BOncled Beef
ROUND
STEAK
.98
Lb
199
Boneless Full Cut eonoeo Beef lb
FRESH
PORK LEG
snank Hall •Butt Half Lil 1 281
FRYINO
CHICKEN
Lil
.59
wnote eoov southe<n eraoe A lb
TOP ROUND STEAK
Ot~HH• (tON(W P '41t'-
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
eor«1,c.. 9C"l"Gf'Of1HJ-l(la.Jt
7 BONE CHUCK ROAST
fllMIOflfH 1
CROSS RIB ROAST
,,., fl l>j I 1t1tfr f..-•
BONELESS TIP ROAST
ft()N('(O IJH• iKJVM>
FILET MIGNON STEAK
I ""~)ft•91f( 'I' ·101~1'~
T BONE STEAK
• •.t'l(r ~£H •'t
PORTERHOUSE STEAK
FRESH BEEF BRISKET
BONELESS LEG OF PORK
.• 2.49
.. 2.58
·~ 1.38
.. 1 .. 98
.• 2.39
.4.98
I~ 2.58
.. 2.68.
"'2.38
... 1.69
Health& Beauty A ids
r HEAD CONDITIONER 1 99 b sul>tt eoov ,. 01 •
r SINAREST TABLETS ,,, 2.29
b HALLS COUGH FORMULA101 1.59
l NOVAHISTINE OMX ,o, 1.99
b UNISOM SLEEP AID ,g, 2.29
b COOD NEWS RAZOR. ,.,.63
r DIAL ROLL ·ON 97 /:J A..N,1 Pl•~A,H Vttt"OltV liOl •
l POLIDENT. T.~~~:s . . '°' 1.89
b WER~~.~~ ~EN~~ C~E~~o, 1.39
r TEGRIN SHAMPOO 1 67 b 011¥ lllWJ>• ()It"'""' . j,, 01 •
b~1~c~R·T·~.S~~E~. 001 2.17
L ~~-~~~~~. '"°' 1. 79
~~~~~~D ...... , .. 001 2.29
L ~1.~~.·.~.~~s.Y .~~1.~.~~~~ 2.39
L c~.~~.~ .<:'~~. ~A~~~.~1~1<~.. .• .99
L ~~!~~CIC ~~.~Y. ~~!~ot 1.39
! ~.~T~ ......... "o' 2.39
!~~.~~~-· ..... 1~01 1.39
! ~-~~~:~~~~~~ ... I0\3.99
! ~ ~~~~.~.'!~~~.~ ·'°' 2.49.
PORK
ROAST
snou1oer Fr~n P1cnoc St ylP
PORK
SPARERIBS
Fr~n Meolum Size
, COUNTRY STYliE
SPARERIBS I
Rib End Pork LOtn
PORK LOIN
ROAST
.89
lb
12s
Lb
12s
lb
12s
Sirloin cur J lb Average WPlght Lil
SHANK PORTION OF HAM
BUTT PORTION OF HAM
l'~ .... J1J~I' '00tl0
CENTER CUT HAM SLICES
RONr ,,. ''"'' rf'tf't.,rO
PORK LOIN CHOPS ..
PORK LOIN CHOPS
!-,If I
ROASTING CHICKEN
~O( ,..i /4f•1 1.11o1-..i~' '•B'
ARMOUR SLICED BACON
PACIFIC RED SNAPPER
ftf4H "lFT AV41lA8l( l~i.,,~t '" A~ ll;At ~l'
18 .98
•a 1.08
,.1 .98
e1 .68
.. 1.88
, .. 89
te 1.28
e 1.39
LAD Y LEE SLICED BACON0~ •·•c.1.28
('anned & Packaged
• KRAFT DINNER
b 011u•r "'"••OHi • CMfl\l 1 07 1'01 llD• •
r C
0
.00,F1FrrEE CREAMER 1 29 0 :101 ,.. •
b ~~WAllAN BREAD ,.01 10 .. 1. 29
r HERSHEY COCOA MIX 2 69 b !NStANf UOl (4.N •
r HYDROX COOKIES 1 35 6 -~ 1901 Pee •
PANCAKE MIX t AU'O JE•MACOMP\(U 1 15 IVTfC•M!llf! n 01 &OJ •
r CAKE MIXES 77 0 t l!THllOC<lt t VAftlfllS II' 01 IOI•
r TANG ORANGE DRINK 2 14 b POWOEIHO 17 01 JU~ •
r TREESWEET JUICE 1 39 O GllAPUO .. I ()It OOt~HGl t• Ol I ll •
r OOlE JUICE DRINK
b ... -..PllllOUPl<ttlol
..
$601 , .... 68
< ·an11ed & Pack.aged
!'STEWED
b ~~~ATOES
!:FRUIT
COCKTAIL
laOv tee
.43
16 01 can
.75
50 oz can
rHARVEST DAY 69 BREAD •
Split Top wn1te or wneat 10 oz Loar
!'LADY LEE b ~v~:::~RAGES
!:GATORADE
DRINK .
Lemon Lime or orange
.79
7 ltr Btl
.79
1& Oz BOX
.59
32 Oz Btl
!'IMITATION 89 b ~~L~eONNAISE • n oz Jar
~ VIENNA SAUSAGE
0 W()i!'M(t ~01 ca.1rw.51
i DINTY MOORE BEEF STEW 2 29
A:0 01 CAN •
r CORNED BEEF HASH 65 6 ~Ah <lfCHffrf 1 01 <"'-•
b• HORMEL CHILI
liitOM 1~::il CAH.69
! BEEFARONI
o c•tfrsov••ou 1~01 C41'f.69
r UNCLE BEN'S RICE 1 63 ¢ CO!<vO HO . 'I 01 ID> ,
r AUNT JEMIMA SYRUP 1 119 b M4Pll MINO . 1.t01 8Tt .&.f
b TOMATO JUICE
V'D> l(l • •
b ~~-~:To. SAU.CE
r SCHILLING'S MIXES b '°"-TACO CHIU
DO SlOOt'T JO( ••••
•SOl C•~.29
t1\0l [IWY .36
Key Buys Mean
Extra Savings!
k t) Bu)~ art Htm\ pncr-d ntn loY.tf 1han
thtH re1ulu J1'-Count pritu ls a rt,uh ot
man\Jracturth u~mrnrar) ptomo11onal
allo"'1~t> 01 <«<ruonal rurchou > You11
find hundred• of Kt) Huy 11tm; ocry hm<
)1111 •hup
/)efi /( ey llu.n
!:LADY LEE
FRANKS
Meat
bCINNAMON
ROLLS
POISbury
.99
16 oz Plcg
159
12 Oz Plcg
.79
9'/iOZ C~
b ~PY. LE.E ~ANKS ,,0 , "'' 1.19
r HUNCRY JACK BISCUITS 57 b PIUUUIPV JYO IEftU 1001 CIJll .
r CHEDDAR CHEESE
6 tltATT CltA«l• 9Ant\ 1 99 SI<•.., , IOOZ .. , ,
r CHEESE SPREADS 1 29 h AL.OUlt'ft '11,H:lfflfl •liOI PICC. ..
r VLASIC PIC,l<LES
A OIUO!lt ~~· 'NHOlf OI MAtVI\
"ti ,.,.97
r ITALIAN SALAMI CHUB 3 79
u trilAICO POlO • , ,, Ol PIG •
/)airy & Fro:en
!'·CELESTE b DELUXE PIZZA 289
.r ~~~~(CREAM TOPPING OW • _85
• SWANSON MEAT PIES 39 t. (WK':ef-t OI TUI'((• 1 01 ~ •
i MRS SMITH'S PIES 2 37
.!) 10 UP\.f ~ O\lfCM APf'!ll -16 01 DI( •
L ~1~?Ul ~LAMS \ Ol .. c 1.17
J. NUCOA MARGARINE 65
-Hi OZ h t •
F,·eryday /,ow
l'rie'ed ltnn\
HI CLASS CAT FOOD 6t01UG1.49
HARVEST DAY CATSUP
1101 lfl .67
HARVEST DAY CORN
(l(A.M \TV\_( 0t WM(ll[ W(lfNfl HOlCAH.39
CRUSHED PINEAPPLE
HMVISfOAY 1001 C•"•49
VILLA DETERGENT
POWDltfll .• OOl IO·l.99
VILLA DETERGENT
OOS-!><lt •..••.....••• sooz eow 1.39
CAlln .93 VILLA RINSE
llOUIO ......... ' •
HARVEST DAY SYRUP
'901111 .83
VILLA PAPER TOWELS 55
.••••••••••••••••••••••• t,SftKl.l •
Lower • pnces
overall
-· ,.. •. u .......... -· l ttlO ITOft..OU-~---•'IU!llt ·-
"""""'9 t•-0.M---·---I • -.:~=----ntterOll-·-.....-r--=---
NUlllT ... NlllO _.,, .. _
~ ..... *"--., ........ -·-·--·-"----~-·
...,_ __ -·--..... ~ ....... ----· -·----
• gs!
DELICIOUS
APPLES .29
GolOen Wa\tllngton fxtr3 Fancv to urge or small
CHERRY
TOMATOES .59
sa1ao Favorite
TABLE
CARROTS .19
roos 1n Vitamin A lb
ROMAINE
LETTUCE .29
Always A sa1ao Favome Buncn
RED
GRAPES .59
llefr~rilng Ill
RUSSE·T
POTATOES .29
US NO I BaWong Size LO
l.iquor & Jf 'ine
999
t 75 ltr 1111
l !!'~COTCH '"'"m 16.99
r CROWN RUSSE VODKA ·7 119 6 90 PIOO' 1 ,, t ro ua • '-t
, PAUL MASSON WINES
b C:._.A,ll!\ V'li •OSl 3 29 Oll l~UNO• • 11 c!t •
llou\ehold & Pet
b ~~~u~PRAY "ni •• 2.43
b ~~lT!!~:;~~~~~ :-•<•so•. 72
r BRAWNY TOWELS 69 0 PAPU f'\ ~ ~Oll •
T SANDWICH BAGS
0 IADY Ul P\AHlC •!oOC.I 901 , 71
r SOFT SOAP
b UOlitO \OAP c.Q.D DO lllO-. 10\01 I ll 1.36
b NU SOFT RINSE
IJOUIO ' .. Ol ITl 1.87
C'\lt'rOCJ'C!t'C1•TlfT'tl .. ~lr 1 .i.tr:' '""""l'll'\i'-+"'•t"f'"'f.._.~\'·~..-,,~ I~ f......,._:,.., ~u.\'1 'fl't ~ ••
TRELLIS
PLANTS
6 -Po~ lf1d !Vy
~ "~ 3~! -~-...en\~• ........-.-... ii·~., .... ~:t"W~ ..... ~
--=---. I
.•
C.I• OM. v PtlOT
Workaholics not all bad
Gathered at Hoag
Roast/Toast are
(from left in photo above) Charles and
Nova Hester. Gene
Baum, Judge Robert
Gardner and Phyllis
Baum. George Hoag
(photo at left) chats
with Rev . Tom·
O 'D on n e ll a n d
Em a nuel Fineman
(right).
Life better on positive side
DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1
r ead the letter from the wife
w h o complained t hat her
hus band was a workaholic. ll re-
ally made me mad. Whal do
these women want from their
husbands, anyway'! If you ask
me. they are crazy.
I would rather have a husband
who works too ha rd than not at
all, and I have had both kinds When we were first marned I
My fi rst marriage was a dis-fe It rese ntful bec ause m y
aste r because the man's main hus band's work was more im-
aim in hfe was to lake it easy. portant to him than I. After I sat
He worked about one-third of the down and had a good talk wi th
time. The rest he spent hunting. myself I decided lo stop nagging
fishing, playing golf and poker him or he might work even later ·
His favorite pastime was point-to avoid coming home.
ing out in the obituary c·olumns You were right when you said
the names of young men who women marry men for t he very
died of h car t attack s . qualities they complain about
"Overwork." ht· always -;aid later 1 wanted an a m bitious
"It won't happen to me " husband who would "go places."
After working a double shift Well I got one. I no longer feel
fo r six years so we could eat and sorry ror myself and am looking
pay the rent. I got s m art and al the positive s ide. Beli eve me .
filed for divorce I am now mar-Ann. life is a whole lot better. -
ried to a man who loves to work. GOT IT ALL TOGETHER IN
So m e peopl e s a y h e 's a RRIDGEPORT
workaholic. but I don 't care DEAR ANN LANDERS : Mu ch
what label they put on him has been written about the male
he's full of pep. always ha!. a wo rkahol1 C'. One h a rdly ever
s mile and we don't ow(.• anybody sees a \\ord e:ibout the female of
a dime . REE N BOTH thespeCics.l am an aulhority on
PLACES AND T HI S IS BET· the subject. because I am mar-
TER ried to one.
DEAR BETTER. Read on. My wife does not hold a pay-
Tbere's more. in~ job, but she is busy rooming.
DEAR ANN: Your advice to noon and ni ght doing for our five
the woman who was married to kids. helping out with church ac-
the workaholic was right on.J tivil ies. cooking , c leanin g .
You said. "Stay off his back and marketing, shopping and read·
keep yourself busy. He's not go-i n g T im e magazin e . S he
ing to change." manages to do everything ex-
cept get enough rest and spend
time with her husband.
Whenever we sit together to
watch a TV s how s he falls
asleep. She also dozes off the
minute we get into the car to go
some place. Any loving that ean
be fitted in must be in the mid-
dle of the night. She is never
ready to go to bed when .I am
because ther e's a l ways
som ething she has to do. I get up
~fore s~~~~dfixmyo~
br eakrast.
Any s uggestions for a husband
who doesn't hang out in bars or
chase other women? I am -
LONELY IN TH E NIGHT IN
PATERSON, N.J .
DEAR WNELV: Your prob·
le m is not "workaholism ." It's
a marriage that has gone flat.
All the busy stuff that occupies
your wife's attention is designed
to keep you al arm's length.
Show her this leUer aad tell
her It's yours. Tell her, too, tl•at
I hope you will sit down together
and talk about what went wrong.
U you both make a genuine ef-
fort you should be able to get
things back on the track. A
counselor may be helpful. Good
luck, and let me know what hap·
pens.
How young is too young for a child
to learn about sex? That's 1ust one
thing you'll find in Ann landers'
new booklet. "How. What, and When
to Tell Your Child About .Sez." For
your copy sent SO cents along with a
long. stamped. self -oddreued en·
ve lope to Ann landers, P 0 . Box r 1995. Chicago. lllinou 60611.
ttUI tllt.MDll
ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a cocktail
party at 8 p.m. Saturday in Costa Mesa. For in·
formation, call Ann at 751-0291.
OUTDOOR SINGLES will have a "Knurd" par
ty -"dress as your favorite tacky person"
at 8 p.m. Friday in Garden Grove. The group
will go cross-coun try skiing at 9 a.m. Saturday
in Green Valley. For information. call Bob at
556-7026.
BACHEWRS 'N' BACHELORETTES singles of
Irvine will begin a square dance class at 7:30 p.m .
Thursday in Tustin. For information. ca JI Judy at
997-4518.
CENTER CLUB SING LES will sponsor a dis-
cussion on ·•Single with a Passion" al 5 p.m.
Sunday in Newport Beach. The event includes a
barbecue and social. For information , caJI
975-0700.
WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP of Orange County
will have a brunch at 11 : 45 a. m. Sunday in the
city of Orange. For Information. call Maggie al
531-0701.
BIG BAND SINGLES willl have a dance at 8: 15
p.m . Sunday in Anaheim. For information. call
525-7657.
JUNIOR EBELLS of Newwport Beach pre-
sents a Valentine 's Sweetheart Ball to raise
funds for the Albert Sitton Home. 8 :30 p.m. Fri-
day in the Balboa Bay Club. For information,
call 673-~.
IRVINE BRANCH of the American As-
sociation or University Wome n meets at 7:30
p. m. Wednesday, Feb. 11 in the Irvine Senior
Center, 3807 Sandburg Way, Irvine. For in-
form ation. call 644-9060.
SOUT H COAST MEDIC AL CENTER
Care Unit presents "Alcoholism and Anger" at
7: 30 p.m. Thursday in the center 's Auditorium.
Ad mission is f ree. For inform ation, call
499· 1311. ext. 560.
BRIDGE G ROUP of the Newport Beach
Senior Citizens Center meets at 10:30 a.m . Fri-
day for contract bridge at the center, 2101 lStb
St ., Newport Beach. For information. call
548·7534.
S ADDLEBACK VALLEY Chris tia n
Women's Club meets at noon Tuesday at El
Adobe Restaurant in San Juan Capistrano. For
information, call 581-8579.
• • . Preview of cookbook
(From Page ~l >
6. STUFF THE MUSHROOMS. tops but try not to spill It over
the edges . Make them nice and ·
'
FeATUAES
552 ClulJ
Coed roast needles Poag
ByMA&Y,ANESCA&CELLO
Olt ... o.lly,. ........
The atmosphere was anything but s terile
Monday evening when Hoag Me m o r ial
Hospital's 552 Club held its first.ever coed
Celebrity Roast/Toast.
Guest or honor for the evening, part of the
annual Clambake Week events, was George
Hoag II, president' or the hospttal's board of
directors and Ufe-long supporter of community
philanthropies.
Greeter at the $50-a-plate dinner was a
gorilla relaxing on a hospital bed. which gave a
clue to the medicinal quality or the decor inside.
ROUND TABLES were tastefully decorated
with plastic bedpans in which flowe rs floated,
n a pkins were courtesy of Johnson and
J ohnson's sterile s urgical s upplies. and a
hospital menu was rolled up beside each place.
Waitresses wore hospital gowns over their
uniforms and served wearing surgical gloves in
proper banquet-side manner.
Women were presented with white flowers
be fore dinner, which was green salad, Veal
Cordon Bleu. rice. wine and a creme de menthe
parfait.
After-dinner mints sat beside each place in
pharmacy pill bottles labeled, "Take one dose
and that's all folks!" It was real hospital-ity.
PAUL SALATA, master of ceremonies for
the program, began operations by welcoming
the ladies. presenting flowers to Mrs. Hoag, and
admitting, "We'll have to clean it up tonight ..
(Previous, all-male roasts have honored
Joey Bishop and Jim Fregosi in the past t wo years.)
Indicating Newport Beach MayO'r Jackie
Heathe r on the dais, he said . "This isn't my
idea . The mayor was upset because we were
holding stag roasts in an R lzone."
Salata introduced her as "the best mayor
money can buy.··
MAYOR HEATHER responded hy teasing
Hoag about his "impoverished childhood " and
asking him to move medical books into an e m·
battled local adult store and change it into the
"George Hoag II Memorial Library ...
THlJRSDA V , FEB. 5
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (Ma r . 21-Apr. 19 1 · T1 m 1ng
dominates you can "get in step .. Know your
limitations and potential.
TAURUS (Apr. 20·May 20 >. You gel your
wish . Opportunity exists for new start, added in·
dependence and "heavy" romance.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Hunch is on
target -you sense truth and can follow to ad
vantage. Promotion may be part of scenario.
CANCER (June 21.July 22>: Social life ac-
celerates -calls, invitations multiply. Green
light for publishing!
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Dig deep you are
close to a possible fin a ncial bonanza !
Pers istence pays off.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Go slow. lie low.
study written material, be analytical, make in-
quiries. Me mber of opposite sex makes dema nd
see situation in practical. mature manner.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Utilize powers of
persuasion. One who s hares interests offers
partnership proposal.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 -Nov 21 > Feelings
dominate logic; significant changes occ'ur and
me mber of opposite sex is involved. Young
person pays meaningful compliment.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21 ): Plans are
solidified -values will be defined. Establish
policy, slick with practical course.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J an. 19>: You suc-
ceed on "third try." Check notes. be selecti ve.
get rid of burden not rightly your own in first
place.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Highlight in-
dependence, originality. new start in new di rec. -
tion. Leo and another Aquarian play key roles.
PISCES <Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Reach beyond
current expectations. Lunar cycle indicates ad-
ditional funds, productive contact and project
offering chance for creative expression.
Club Calendar runs each Wf!dnf!sdoy in thf! Doily
Pilot and contains notices of women's and servm! ·
club meetinga and events open to the public for the
following week.
Send notices to Club Calendar. Daily Pilot. P .0
Bo:r 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Include your name
and phone number Notices mu.st be in our hands
three week.s in advance of an ewnt.
Pictures are limited to major fund·raisers open
to the public.
J im Villers, a 552 Club member, noted that
"George won first prize in the n ame-the-
hospital contest. it was a free appendectomy "
Dr. Fritz Westerhout. a former 552 Club
pres ident, feat~red Hoag's love of puns with.
"He was a dermatologist who was starting from
scratch." a rash joke.
J ohn Schmitz complained , "I thought I'd be
in t he m ainstream now that Reagan's been
elected.'' while laughing about his problems in
gelling a resolution passed honoring Hoag from
the slate Senate.
Ray Malavasi, introduced by Salata as "the
athletic director at Hoag." said his team ·s
problems were "not a lack of Rahs, but a lack of
llalians."
DENNIS CARPENTER , after mentioning
"George's 700 Hawaiian shirts," call ed him
"the only bona fide philanthropis t I've known recently ."
No tongue depressors got near the roasters
as Dennis Mangers identified himself as the
token Democrat at the head table.
"l represent the only six Medi-Cal patients ·
allowed into Hoag Hospital," he said. "I knew I
was in trouble tonight when I looked over the
crowd. The only other Democrat I saw was Jim·
m y Roosevelt. a nd he s upported Reagan."
Monsignor J ohn Sammon claimed to be a
speaker "because no Presbyterian minister
would come tonig ht."
A s~lf-styled "token Oriental," Dr Sammy
Lee. said he was there to .. add a little color tu the program."
Some or the added color was blue. mostly in
his jokes, to which he s aid. "You girls wanted a
coed roast you izot it "
Jl'DGE ROBERT Gard ner. a long time
Hoag friend . advised. "Get your name off that
hospital. George I broke my ankle two months
ago. and they charged me s.5 just to say hello at the door ..
The <>hject of all that affection. who oc-
casionally took notes while his tormentors toyed
with his blood µressure, s aid. "It's a wonderful
thing that so many people turned out this eve-
ning on Ground Hoag's Day."
In a serious mome nt, he talked of his loves
fa mily. community and hospital.
lie didn't probe each speuker's comments
too deeply but was correctly diagno!>cd as a
µunster by Wes terhout
"We'r<' going to open a new rest:iuranl on
lh<' 11th floor of the hospital." ~ai d lloag.
"We·re g<>1ng to rail it 'lligh on the lluag · "
, •• .,,,,. , .,. .. ,,..,,, .. , .""'. <""-..
' I( A· ~I .1., ,...,.,, .. ,. •"'-6 ., ....
COSTA •s.641-1289 •u...._ ....
lllSSOOOI v~95-04C)1 ,..,, c.,....,. c .• ,... ....
fS•" °"'911 f,_, e t Aw.,.,. fl'"•Y I
• • • • • •
Turn your
unusables
into
usable
cash.Call
Daily Pilot
classified
1000 Winners
See's Candy
Guys & gals. check
your CA ID or driver
he at Hunltngton
Center for sweepstakes
prizes up to 5450 Also
100 1-tb wtnners Sees
Candy for ladies only
durtflg Ladies Days Ends
Tues Feb 10
THE
HAYR BARN . .
BEAUTY SALON ..... --------------.1Au:n1
v ALIHTIMI COUPON SPICtAL I
IH THI llAun SHO, I
•C--I ~ w 19th St c..t1eiower, s7so
UV1' • 'rp Rev 11400 1
COSTAMESA ·-.s25001 Rev "4000 I
1 646·8480 .., ' ·IMA-IW' s5001
I r."''"'' 1& e• Rev 11 00 I ~----------------~~~..!:'1!!-~.
AUSTON MODELING
AUSTON STUDENTS &
GRADUATES CAN BE SEEN tN:
* VOGUE
•' * GLAMOUR
* SEVENTEEN Art Show
Huntington Center * COSMOPOLITAN Valentine Art Oecit. MADEMOISELLE dally thru loo. *
Ung board with the palm of your
hand on top. Roll back and forth
while pressing down. It will soften
the juices and get them working.
Cut the lemon in half right down
the center like the equator on a
globe. Hold one of the halves over
the bowl and squeeze out as much
Juke u rou can . Stir it all in. Take
a Uttle ~the filling in the front of
10\lf mouth, smack your Ups and
tee how tt tastes. It will be bland,
but if theft.'• a faint lemon tang,
you're doing fine. If not, squeeze
lD a few more drops a nd taste it. .,aiD. The more lemon you add,
U.. montbe na.or will blossom. 4dd •much u you like, but half a
lemm ii probably pleaty. Put tt. in
die rtfrtcerator ror a couple of
mhlulll \0 ri~hen.
Place the mushroom caps on a
cookie sheet so they're lined up
like little bowls. Pre-heat the oven
to 350 degrees . 'llake the filling out
or the refrigerator and taste it
again. How does it taste? Jtshould
be mellow. Ir you like it mellow.
that's fine. It you want it spider, .
add a teaspoon of Worcestershire
sauce and mix it ln. Jf it's still not '
right for you, try 2 or 3 drops of
Tabasco sauce. It will really
bring up the n avor and round lt
o ut . Be careru I wllh the
tabasco; don't use too much.
Add a drop at a time, atir It ln,
a nd taste lt ·before addin1
another drop. Use a apoon to fill
the nn11broom caps with· the
ahrlmp. Mouncl lt up over the
pretty. 1------------i INTERNATIONAL AGENCY ANO ._.OOEL ~ANAGEMENT OPPOm'UNmES AVAILABLE.
f t \
7. 8AKE111E MUSHROOMSin
the oven at 350 degrees for 10
minutes.
8. DRAIN THE MVSB&OOMS.
Take them outort.he oven and put
them on the counter. Put a few
paper towels nat on a plate and
1entlY place the mU1brooma OJI
top. 11>e paper towels wlll ablorb
moat of the liquid. !'lace them
back in the pan and bake them for
another 5 mJnutes. If there la still
a lot of juice, do It a1ain. Wiien
there'• very little juice on the pan1 tber're done. Take them out ana
put · them on a aervln1 ttay.
PrHto, you hav-s fancy hors
d'oeuvre1. • •
YOU COULD BE A COVER GtRL TOO!
j
' .
l
,
,...
riUllLW
c1ac111
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"Father Forrest said peop&e are mode out of
~.Who ore we putting together up here?" "I t1ke It you've come to esk for Princess p1w in
m1rrt1ge?"
by 'Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
K~ 'l· ~
).·~ 01111~-~ ...
~~
'-
"Thanks for keeping me company,
Marmaduke!" ·'Who am I? What am I
doiag here? Who are YOU?"
"She's oot all
the answers."
llJDGE P A8KER by Harold Le Ooux
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~;jjVl TIM 5AID PEOPLE WOUl..DN•T A5K WHEN I FOUND OUT WHAT Hf WA!:J
REALLY LIKE, l TRIEO 10 l..EAV€ HIM,
*RC7EANT ... 6UT I WAo AFRAID! l{E
H-IREATENED HE'D KILLM E lf t DIO!
ARE YOU TE\.llN6 ME THE
TRUTH A&OUf YOU!t MME
... THAT IT'~ JEANNIE
KEL~O? ----....--
MISS PEACH
1-1AVE )OLA ~AflO
i"MAT tlfA WAN"f'~ ?
rt? WA:liE A NOVE:I-.
--
MOON MULLINS
fOO MANV OUE6Tl0N6 1F WE 10\..D
THEM THAT WE WERE ot!'JTER AND
~OTHER. THAT Hlo NAME WAo
t<.EL50 TOO.'
~fiAU..V? ~ Hf.
... AVE ENOLAQH
IMAGINAilON ?
He l"HfNI(~ HE'~
A w"11ei;c,. ooe~1T He?
by Mell Lazarius
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
AND WHA1 .ARE You
(JOING 10 PO A Bour IT?
PMNIJTI
VOU CHEATED ME... i
~~T~~pc::e If
TMIS COOKIE ...
I J
TlJMBLE1tEED8
~/N6 ME:A FIL.£:, vrePtrTYt
ONE: OF PA LE:GS ON ME
fJUNt{'S lbO L.Of'.k5-. I WIWT
-PFIL.E 11 '70Wl\I.
SHOE
~~ 5ff.AKER T~Y ~ ~n,y A&J<£JJ M£ TO
l<eEf UI' INWOroCTION ~oRJ
NANCY
MAY l GO
OUT AND
WATCH
THE KID5
PLAY
BALL?
GORDO
CALLIGlllA#>H'( ~L~
•'1&1111t OF 11>11 ~Tl!JI."
~· Ftbr111ty 4, 11181 OAlt.V PfLOT CJ.:
by Charles M. Schultz ,.---------.
WAATS ™AT 'f'OV'RE 1 ™~ IT'S A
EATIN6, CHARLIE MOWN? CHOC<lATE 6'(P C~IE •
NANCY---I
TOLD YOU T'J
TAKE A HOT
FOOTBAT H
by Tom K. Ryan
WHA''f ITIAKt=S FER
SOMciHIN' LIKE iHAi'S
A HACKSAW!
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushmiller
B OOTS
~ -. r
P) RED HOT
\.JA.T ER IN MY
j/ J f ~~ -I~
~,..;.,>-t(;' ..
. ..-.r--> C1•~·.....,.. ,-...... ••
by Gus Arriola
l AA(
IJOIA CWCJt:.f •
by Tom Batiuk FIJNKl' •INKERBEAN
DID<(()() OC>l)Bl.E.-CHEU< ~R FIGURE.~, FRED z Ir~ EX'TRE.MEL '(
1MroR'TJ\Ni IHAT 1HE4' Bt
ACWRAiE: !
YE!>! I'VE: Ruf\.. IT 1'"HP01 ,(,,..,
THE CLMP:.JTER ... w CE
:-, ':PCEP .,.0 &;:f E.vER~'S
~ ..... Jl)P "'1= Uif•L RJR fME
'1:'.Pt..ii: ~ ....:C~KP ·r l'f WE
N:;:;;'j ,,. r.,· ci:~ · 1 6~PZ£D
, ~E. 'Ji'.£Ar'{. ~ ~...£0 1i;.JO W11H
tP"",r Lc(. c~: r:'.~ Jt=l..L',l I
I
I
I I
Q
'· .
DR A BBL£
Ml,11.1£MO'I'! 1'~1~ 1$ >-IORMA~!
I II~~ A RtAl. SAO COC..O 1•
*>IJ wfRE PJW&ASL 'I
lulhl'1f;RINb ~~ l 1(-.vttol'i
SEEN IN -SlMOOL A~L ~El(,
SO I 'fllOUbllf 1'0 CAl..l-
AMO 'fEl.\.. '40\J. I f1bUREO
DR.SMOCK
:t SAW SMOCK
L.Ot1"eRING
OIJ"T"SIPES, RO'f'H
~ Ml&~f ~ &~ WORRIF.:0
~·J ~~ b
:,t WONDES~ WHY~ NOW
L.fSMMES 6tv'f!a YA 1l-4e L-A-res-r
. t'IR"f' ON ANN FORL.~Y' ANc::> '1'He )(-RAY
-recHNICIAN ...
wllA'? •J14 ~E.L.\..
I ()ON' f .: .. ow ~L.£7 I
ON I l'l.l.. ASl<.
by Kevin Fagan
MJ~, fS 11' F~16\.E 1'0
4i'l{EA0 ltN 01S6VS1'1fl.I&
&i~M<S ~£~ 1'~€ 9140~E ?
by George Lemont
Cll OM. y N.OT
\ \ ' I'· I • I I ' '
............
at~MllD
HUTC:lM
,._. .. l~I\
"* l>V 11w .. -during a Mulec>-to-T-lllll1le
drlwl. e o llGH'T • INOUCIM
T °"' 81\d ADOy oei.btete
,,., '"'" ~ ..w-. UfY end Oellld end J-
ennouncie thet 1n.y er• _.,.,Ing.
• , .... MAGAZINE
A 111111 with Aotlatt 1.Klctl
on the "Vegd" Mt; a tiny
elrpl-l)OW«ed by eri
ordinary fly, Cnel Tell
makH brelMCI tennal:
a.-.er1y Sauoon on finger.
nell problem•: Cathie
Menn !Inda out how
lltcoms are made funny •wow • • • "79 P81'k A_,ue ..
(Perl 2) ( 19771 LMley Ann
Wwren, Polly B«gen A
atrfft-wlH young girt
unjullly eenl to reform
M:hOOl )oins an undeNrOfld
hOUM ol prOlflluhon upon ,..,, ......
TUBE TOPrERS
KHJ e 6:00 -Laken Basketball.
The Lakers travel to frozen Indiana to•
take on the Pacers in an NBA contest.
CBS 9 8:30 -"Crisis at Central
High." Joanne Woodward stars in this
TV movie drama about the lntegration
of a high school in Little Rock in 1957
(photo at left).
ABC D 9 : 00 -"The Enforcer."
Clint Eastwood stat;; in this sequel to his
''Dirty Harry'' movie, this time pursuing
revolutionaries who have kidnapped the
mayor of San Francisco.
··~ ,,....,. ..
lw ,.._, Ill vteouM. ; ... ..
A .....,. .... to prowet
N ,.,._Ion ol 1111 -'•
leKllef, 9lld tac.a• a
cfl8rge ot Mlltder ~
otll. -~ IMll'OHS I
A ~ u-eoiwlc1 It deletmitled to .., .. ....,,.
~on eoclety.
11:» D TOMOMOW
Guee1s: act« William Hol·
den: act,... Mery CrMby
and lier l\Ulbend; ~
linoer 8.8. King.
1:00D DON~
.... prtlofl .... 1:•1-1:• ~
.. lllllOllll ••··~oeri ...... , ...... 11961)
lllyM, ""-" ,.....
lwd9lt 9lld .... -....... ~ ........... ....
N9wOl'IMM Mii, ....
l:40 llCMI * * * ''TN LOflCI V~ Home" ( tt40) John
Wayne, Ian~. OiNct"'
.0 by Jofwl F0td . ._..,on
tM ~by a.-o· ..... ,
A crew ot IMlf*I ..... ,
adventure and .. ~
on INlr retum lrfO ~. • ··1 .... t:IO llCMI
• • • "Merl With Wlng9"
( lt3t) Fred MecMuney~
Ray Mlllat\d. A plOl.erlnQ
alllator i-tM -he 1o ... ®a to hll lnebilty •
toMttledown. ._.MMITMU
~ Pee.er• ""' LO.
Al\Qlllet l .... ,. ...........
A IOOlbe• htltO c:rNi.. •
!.*Ol9A1ng P•Y~~fOO<al
p<Ob141m IOI H•wlo.~ ~
8 J wl\en n. ..,1ter1 •
wOUnO 111•1 ..... ...., "''
Tur111oll In 1957 • IUTTY: NT'UNf TO
AU9CHWIT2
Kitty Hart. a aurv111or ol
Ausctl'#iu now living on
Engtend. returns to the
conc1H1tratton cemp With
her son to talk a.bou1 1 the
hOfrOfS She 8lpeflerl(ec!
there '°' nearly lwo yNrs
the p11me suspect when his
glrllrlend, a •1-atdesa on
the International •oute,
dies white smuggling
drugs
• DICK CAVETT
Guest· Jonathan Mtller
(Pet12of 21
~ts: Lee Meriwether.
Or. DeYld Smith, Peter
I.edger. Judy Stone. Cltrle-
tlne O'DonMll. o-telt .
• YOU 9ET YOUfl LR
Buddy l'leckell '""'s •
woman Who ~ tour·
1111. a plllow·llghtlng
o:l\atnplon and • 1..-nllle
beef expert
• INOINNOINT
NE1WON< NIWt
Tl111nda11'•
Da111 I-. ifl.o.,ln
~-• GOOC>TIMU
Thelma toeal .. net Q'lmCI·
llt!\411 ana in•1tes him nom• 1or ,.., dad • bot t1 ·
oay
J o ann e Woo dw a rd stars as a
schoolteacher embroiled in the 1957
school integration controversy in Little
Rock in ··crisis at Central High" tonight
ut 8: 30 on CBS. Chaonel 2.
•• E1.ICTFUC
COMPANY (R)
Ca8NEW8
MICHEWS
1:30 • Wll.OOME BACK.
KOTTE A
Wll<tn 11>e SWilaltlogs tom
Ille schOOI n ... Sl)ape1 u
1nvesllgalt•8 repollers
!hey uncover .ome shady
dealings
• 9ENNYHILL
A ledy pllllate41s1 oecklel
to tell• up more than
s1amp OO!lecllng when sne
mee118etlny
• pft()ftl,U IN POWE.A
Guest Rabbi LeonarCI
Bee<man, Leo B..ck Tem· 1
pie of West Loa Angeles
8i) IT\JDtO SEE
Cl) w•A08"H
Hawll..,. dtte:overs 1hat •
,,,.,ling doctor who must I
operate on a wounded sol·
dl4lr Is a lullh • III MANEY MILLEA
Flllh wants to quit when
he's put on rellrlcted duty l
t>eeeuse ot his health. but I
C>Mltrich talks him out ol 11
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8:561 f.DO'OAIAL
1:00 CUHEWS
I NeCHEWS
HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Fonz .. 11 persuaded to put
on • pOlice olficef's un1.
1orm to help p. .. ent a
fumble be"""" two C•••I
Q!ngs
II UCNEWS
• M"A"l•H .
Al Chtlllmashme, H•wk· ev• writes • letter to his
lath« delCrlbing wtial •
doctor's ~•• 11 Hice 11 lhe
•0771h
• IAAETTA
Followlng •-In ol over-
dose deaths, the trell ol •
drug a..ier leads str lllOhl
to a ciote ltiend of Batet-
ta's. 8 OY£AEA8Y
Guesl Gordon MICAH
(fl)
'1!) MACNEIL / LE.HAER
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH o.:t MERY ONFAN
Guests Tom Wopat, o..na
So•lero. Harry James.
Montieth and Rana
T:JO II 2 OH THE TOWN
tJ KN)(T 1CB S) Lus Anl'jl•l1 •..,
D KNBC 1NBC1 Los Anqetc~
IJ I( I LA 1lnd I Lo'> Anql'il.!'> 1J K.ABC rv 1ABC1 Lo., Anqplr '>
,"11 "FMB tCB !>I San 01eQo 0 l\HJ rv Hnll t LO!> A nqple ..
10' KCS r I ABC1 San 0 11'QO ID Kl rv 1 lnu I L ll'> Anq1•lp-.
Q) KC...OP rv llml I Lo<; Anqt•lf">
ED KCf I IV 1 PBS! Lo., An4t•l1". m l<OCE TV I PBS! Hun\lnqton Bc..ich
Holts Steve Edwards.
Melody Rogeta MelOcly
spenas lhe day •• • pol/I
health spa, an lntet'tlew
with sports oolumn1S1 Jim
Murray
.. FAM4LYnuo 8 IHANANA
Guest Paul Anka II HOLL YWOOO
SOUAAU
• AU IN THE FAMILY
Edith and Archie cauS<t
havoc at the hospltel wllen
GIOrla Is about to llave net
baby (Pa<I 2)
fl) MACHEll. I LEHRER
MPOAT
'1i) OM.AT
PEAFOAMAHCE8
"L1..e From Lincoln Cen·
te<" The Chamber Musi<:
Society ol UncOln Cente<
undef the direction ol
Charles Wadsworlh wtlll
v1ohnlst 11.mak Perlman
presents a program ol
Bach, BeelhO••n and
Tcl'\alkovsl<'f
(I) p .M. MAGAZJNE
Meet San Otego Soctcer's
star, Jul,. Vee.
1.-00 IJ Cl) BUGS 8UNNY'S
VALENTINE
An1mlled Bugs Bunny
t>eeomes 1nvoM1<1 In a wild
and crazy compehhon with
Cupid lo -Who IS Ille
bell&r matchmaker (RI D REAL PEOPLE
Featu1od· sottball played
1n lhe snow. hockey played
unaerwate<: a lady w110
has 1eo alhgators tor pets
ballet classes !or wheel·
chau-boun<I S<tn1or Cllt·
zeos
D MOVlE
• • • "Tl>e Last Sunsel''
(196 t) Roel< Hudson, Kirk
Douglas A woman 1s pur·
8:30 f) Cl) MOVIE
''Crisis At Central High"
(Premiere) Joanne Wood-
ward, Charles ()urning
The story ol Elizabeth HUC·
k•by. a high school t••Ch·
ar who was embroiled In
the t9S7 contro-ers) over
1ntegratk>n at Central Htgll
SchOOI In Llllle Rock,
Ark1nsas. 11 dramatized
I JOt<EA'I WILO
CAAOl. IUANETT
.ANOFMN08
9:00 0 OIFF"RENT STAOKES
Arnold takes par1 1n • vol-
untary lnt1N-cuttu1al busing
program "' a long ISiand
town. G O MOVIE * • * "The Enlorcer"
( 1976) Cllnl Eastwood,
Tyne Daty A detective
known lor his unusual tac;.
lies and a female rookie
1rac11 down a band ol revo·
tutionaries ..no have k•d-
napped the meyor ot San
Francisco. (R)
0 TICTACDOUOH
• ME.RV GfWf1H
Guests Tom Wopal. Dtana
So•1ero, Harry James.
Montieth and Rand. Mike
Oav11. Murray Langston
t:30 0 THE FACTS OF LIFE
Na1ahe becomes one ol
the most popular gorls 1n
school alter lier llrst <late.
but doesn'1 know why
0 80U.SEYE fD '1!) GEOAOE
SHEARING AT THE
CAALYSLE
Jan p1an1s1 Gecwge Shear·
1ng performs "This Can't
Be Love." "My Funtiy va1.
en11ne" and Olher classics
w1lh ba.ss1S1 Bt1atl Torll
lrom the Hotel Carlysle m
New York
10:00 8 QUINCY
A narcotics cop t>ecomes
eo• NEWS fl) IAEMEMBER
H.AAlnt
.. Toward A New Day
1965-1980" Harlem's
decline. rebifth and de•el·
0Pfnet1f -tree.a and
Mver•I ot its promlnenl
citizens otter predlcllons
lor the fulure
10:30. NEWS
• tNOEPeU.NT NETWON< NEWS
11:00 8 811 ()) Ǥ) NEWS D ITAATl'W(
The Entwprise 11 11mo11
destroyed by • ttrange
ob)eGI which calla ltMll
Nomad 0 NEWLYWED GAME
• M •A•s•H
Traps>er'a utoer p.ovldes •
ticket home until the Army
thinks up • regu1111on that
spoita 1111 gc>1ng-away par-
ty
ti) MOVIE • * * "San Anionlo"
( t945,) Errol Flynn. Alexis
Smtih A ntghlctub "flQ8f
on a Western tour tells In
love with a rancher white
wonono tor his nernet1s
JOHN DARLING
11:IO 8 Cl) MOVIE * • 'h "Hltlar's Gold"
(19751 Telly Savalas, Rob·
ert Culp Three men plat to
kidnap a lormer Getman
oll.cer wno knows the
1cx;auon ol • fOftune lfl
gOld atolen du11ng World
War II D TONIGHT
Holl Johnny Carson
Guest: Charlie Callas. 11 9 A8CNEW9 0 FACE ntE MUie
• HOCW"I HEAOE8
• Crittendon paracllutes Into
Stalag 13 with plans to
ca,i>ture a German officer tD ID CAPnONB> A8C
NEWS
-t.tm>NGHT-
12:00 D MOVE * e * "Soula At S.a"
11lr.l71 Gary Cooper,
George Rall Atter • Ma
wreck, 8 enip•a Olf1C9' II
fOfced to malce en lmporl·
ant decision concerning
the only lileboat
11 9 LOVE BOAT
"Celebration" Altee Faye,
Noah Beery Jr . "Captain
Papa" Lo11 Nettleton.
1:06 8 (fl POUCI WOMAN
Pepper po9" ... moOel wne.. gatlQ91ers threaten
one aegment ol the gar-
ment indullry (R)
1:30 0 ntE LONI MNGIR
• YOU 9ET YOUfl L.ft
8Uddy Hacke11 "'"11 a
pretty woman who teacnea
hend·lo-hand combat, a
poatal worker wtlO flu
med• some interesting
dellve<let and • human
mennequln
• MOVIE * * • "Wtkl la The Wind"
( t957) Anna Magnani,
Anthony Quinn. Trouble
erupts when a young man t• in IOve with the new
wlle of hit guardian. 1:•1• NIWt 1:80 MOW
•**~"The u ... Of A
Bengal Lancer" t t93S)
Gary Cooper. Franchot
Tone. England's lndlen·
oaaed Lancers win all thetr
l>altlM. no matter what Iha
odds.
2:000 NEWS
• MOVIE * • "Act Of VIOlenee"
( UM8) Van Heflin. J-t
Leigh. An American SOid•••
turns Informer wtllle '" a
-MORI•-·
11:00. •*"Red Riv. ,
Range" ( 1931) Joll11
Wayne, Ray CorrlQan. The
Three MMquil-• Mt out
to nab a gang of cattle
lhlewe operetlnQ alotlQ !tie
fled River.
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 . * * • "A Thousand
Clowna" ( 1955) Jaaon '
Robatd1. Barbara Harris
A social wortcer oon\llncel
a11 unemployed writer to.
gel his lob back and merry
h«. ao that he won't k>M •
cullody ot his nephew.
• • • • ~ "Hlgn Noon"
(1952) Gery Cooper. Grece •
Kelty. A IT\Ufderer and hla
brotheta ettempt to ..,,.,.
the sc;ore with the aherllt
wtlO s«ll him to prison.
S:OO ltlJ "The Moneychangers"
(Pert 2) (1976) Klrlc Doug·!
tu, Chrlllopher Plummer :
S:30 G *•'-""How To Com-:
mlt Matrlage" PHii &ob~
Hope, Jacille Gleason. An•
unmatrled couple give
tneor b•by up lor 1do9tlon.
an<l lhe girl's dtvorc.d par·
ents decide to rN r •rwt ,
ohlld under• falee name. "'
by Armstrong a B•tluk :
'Belle'
quits
'Alice'
PBS offers
By PETER J . BOYER
an inside l~~.~ry•~~hw~~~w.~~~~.S~~~~ ~
m i ll ion victims not die with came here and thee was the smell ~
LOS ANGELES <AP )
Diane Ladd, who just
last week won a Golden•
Globe Award for her
role in the CBS comedy.
.. Alice." has quit the
~ popul ar TV series, the
network said.
Miss Ladd said her
role the hip-swinging
waitress from Mississip·
pi, Belle -"just hasn't
developed the way we
hoped it would in the
beginfllng."
The network quoted
Miss Ladd as saying
that she and CBS "have
mutually and amicably
decided we s houldn't
continue.··
Miss Ladd dido'l join
the cast of "Alice" unti l
last year, when her
cha r acter replaced Flo,
th e Polly Hollida y
characte r t h at
blossomed into its own
NOW SHOWING Mn..--Md Driw·IM hwrywt.re! -. ............ .................... _ ............ ,... --==.._. ..... ......... "· --ftllll· ..-.............. ___ ....... __
t.A-.'8--· ...... -. .... -..... , ..... UIOP•. -. ........... WIWm&.. llA-·---
APWI ........
QUITS 'ALICE'
Diane Ladd
series on CBS. Ironical-
1 y. Miss Ladd was
nominated for an Oscar
in the movie from which
"Alice" was derived ,
"Ali ce Doesn 't Live
Here Anymore.'·
"Alice" has remained
a solid ttlt for CBS in its
fifth year. A replace·
ment for Miss La dd,
wh o will tape her last
segment on Feb. 10, has
not yet been decided
upon.
-NOW 9HOWINll-
!DWARDI CINEMA
COSTA MESA
(7 14) 546-3102
ltlln CITY CENTeR
ORANGE(714) 634·9282
.-.,..,.,.o ... ~~v •
NC PAS~S ACCCPlfO
CURfNO T"MIS £NGAQ.M£Ni'
LOS ANGELES CAP > -When Kit·
ty Felix was a youngster in Poland
around 1940, she was fascinated by
the occupying German troops. drawn
by their shining black boots and
s plendid uniforms . Although he r
family warned her about the Nazis.
she often sneaked out to watch the
military par ades.
1\1 npi\C\11 Auschwitz survivors, she determines roasting meal ... I wondered why; \ 1 1\l.1't.n to visit the grim memorial with her there should be the smell of roasting
Then one day she was walking
down the street with a friend. When
her frie nd faile d to l eave the
s idewalk at the approach of a
German officer, the ofri cer withdrew
his service revolver and shot him
dead.
learn more of the Nazi horror first
hand: She and her mother became
prisoners at the Auschwitz-Birkenau
death cam p. In a r e markable
documentary tonight at 8 on KCET.
Channel 28, she returns to Auschwitz
to recount her life in hell .
"The fact that Germans were out
to kill people like me came to me
very suddenly.··
Agains t the many recent TV
dramas dealing wi.th Nazi Germany
and t he Holocaust. ·•Return to
Auschwitz .. is quietly reflective. un·
adorned; and in its way, it is more
devastating.
Kitty Felix Hart. now a radiog-
rapher in England. was soon to
"I don't know what it wilJ do lo me
to see it,·· Kitty says at the beginning
of the documentary. But intent that
Howard stars in
'Bitter Harvest'
·BATTLE CREEK. Mi ch. CAP) -One of the
biggest chemical catastrophes in Mi chi gan is be·
ing filmed as a television movie in California.
Ron Howard, former star of television's "Hap-
py Days," will play Frederic Halbert in a Cilm
based on "Bitter Harvest," t he book Halbert and
his wife wrote about the state's PBB disaster.
Halbert, a Calhoun County dairy farmer and
chemist who first discovered PBB conta minating
his dairy herd. is technical adviser to the NBC
television company. The company is filming ''Bit ·
ter Harvest" in Santa Rosa.
Though the production is not intended as a
documentary, NBC spokesman Jim Murray said it
"is an attempt to relate the facts."
In 1973, Halbert identified polybromlnated
biphenyl, meant for industrial u.se, as the cause ol
a strange illness of his herd. His work led to the
discovery that PBB had been accidentally mixed
with livestock feed and distributed statewide.
The contamination forced destruction of
thousands of animals but not before PBB had
"'orked its way into human food.
Halbert's father. Frederic P. Halbert, was
pleased by the choice of Howard to play his son,
saying, "I think he and my son resemble each
other. Their hair and coloring are a lot alike."
"'TRIBUTE' IS TERRIFIC."
The
Power Behind
The Throne
-~------
son David, a doctor living in Canada. meat." J
She is an articulate guide, leading T he incomprehensibility of such a
her son through those hellish acres. place and such deeds are reflected i~
sp illing forth welled -up remem· David's innocent curiosity. How di
brances of unthinkable c r imes you wash? Did you have toilet paper.,.
against humanity. Here is the road Newspapers? .•
on which she arrived; there is the Kitty tells him that each prisone~
barracks she stayed in; and there bad a bowl attached to his bodyi!
are some of the open pits in which .. And if you didn't have your bowl~
bodies were burned. you didn't have your soup; if you
"There are people in OU. world didn't have your bowl, you didn't
who say this never happened," she have your toilet.•· , ]
te lls David. "Thirty members of "It was very eby to lose the desi ~
your family died here ... every· to live, Jet me tell you."
body'sashesare here." It is a shock lo come face lo fac
She sees the gates through which with Auschwitz itself. That is precis
she entered Auschwitz and recalled ly what Kitty Felix Hart wanted it
her first thoughts: be.
LILY TOMLIN AND CHARLES GRODIN IN AN EPIC COMEDY
fGIVI 01 IAQ AH !NO<!
THE
INCREDIBLE
SH~ING ~
A lJNIVtl\SAl 1'1C Tl.II\£ ~!!It fO't 8aol t..,..... "" ., U...,.... C" 11 ...... c-011"91 6JHSS3
•lWllClml&I -.-SW"3·1~
.......... If
'"'""' SS l ·06S$
NOW PLAYING
llWIUll'I CMMClllTP eosu ~ 979 •u•
.......... NII
ltl>UIOft V"IO 830 6990
II PAC#C'I ...,.. CllUT
l olQUlll lie«~ 04 I ~ 1'
N.Y. TIMES:
= ,.~··..,
"Exh61e,..lngly b&unel Ob .. ,.-. excttlng, acery,
wlldty .,...etc.·•--·-.-"•~
One of tlte r-r'• f O beef.,
-TIMe
oore,
ra"6lta
Jaonored ~I CAM8aJDOS, MUI •> -Nm Ital ...... .......... .,..u ..
trtrH• •ar1 T1ler .....................
... md ---of tM t by tM Hu&y Pud·
I '11tHlr6Hll. lht nerd u ....... ,y club
at ,.,.. l'lalm to beiq
aedc1 '1 oldt•t
malie orcaalaaUon.
111 Moon. who will
-. ha.and by a parade
•roup Cambrld1e on re• 11 . was named •ra•b becaute ol ber ~le in "Ordinary Peo.
tle," a movie Hasty
ruddanc said . ·revealed
f tremendous depth of
•ramatic ability in this
(llm concernina the
Foblem1 of cont em ·
rary family life."
Travolta. who has
•tarred in movies such
•• "Saturday Niabt
{
ever." aad "Urban
ow boy," was named
ecause "bis tremen·
4ous popularity as an en
'-'rtainer has been reaJ.
(irmed with each new
project he undertakes.
S.C. Hlwey ....... y
..... 1s1 ..
Travolta will accept
the award on Feb. 18 at
the openlna night of the
eroup's annual produc-
tion, this year entitled,
"Serf's Up.'!
Organized ln l&U, the
Hasty Puddjng club has
featured Harvard under·
graduates in satirical
revues with male stu·
dents taking female
roles.
In the past. the club
has honored actors Paul
Newman , Robert
DeNiro, Dustin Hoffman
and Jac k Lemmon.
Among act r esses
-~------TlU9UTE INI tkll· .............. ,..
_.NHlf'l"O'NUL.L •
ITl .... NLACK
.~~~!!.l~l. ... _ ... _ .... ,_
NINE TO FIVE INI t ................. , •• ........ ,, ......
PO~YE ,..,
t••t:·tl •at:••t.M•I ..
STI" CRAZY 1•1 ······••·••·11:•
.. ~ v~ a,~, co--, ..
ll:ARTH90UND -tt>:•• ~-........ '••teet• ...
mRCRAZY ,., •t>-•·••·••· ......... -. ..... ''"''' ..
POPEYE INI .•. , ......... ,. ..
_... .. _
RAGING BULL ,., , ... , ......... ,...
CMIVf c-· ao.-,..._
SEEMS LIKE
~DTIMH -• , ...... ,. ..... ~. --· ANY WHICtt WAY YOU CAN ,_ .. , ___ . ., .. , ... _
U,f_ ........ ~
THI INCREDIBLE
SHRINIUNO WOMAN --.-. .,.. ..... .. , . -· .•. ., ....•. ,, .. ~-
~ l:tl .... llM.......,. ........... .
IM,OflTHT llOTIC(! CNllDIU• UIDlll 12 JllU! -·----(_ .. i;=-1TOAS=~.::::c:
., ... AM CM ,_.._ Willl ..... ,'-' Ao:c•-r ...... y-Own AM .....,. ........
\sm~=I
f ... /II/Ill CM ,_ .... Wllll ltnlll., A<:c•-Y lltl ... Y-oWn AM Porta
I~--iWi· l 'lc=~~:---
1 ... /II/Ill CM ".-0 Wltll lenill_, Ac«ot-y lltl ... \'9Uf Own AM Po
·,~
"""'°' ..
wedMed8y, Febtuttv ... 1811
~ealed Fell. l 7
Oscar nominations in
HOLtYWOOD CAP> -Nominau,._
ballota are in for the Academy
Awards and tbe familiar phrue,
"the envelope please," will be heard
aaain at the S3rd annual Oscar
ceremony on March 30.
this year to the forelen lan1ua1e nJm
nominatina committee, the academy
said, noting that only one film per
country is accepted. Nominees m~
have primarily f~ian·laneuage
soundtracks with Entlish subtiUes.
Foreign films may be nominated in
other categories, except best picture
BaUota were due at 5 p.m. Monday
at the Price Waterhouse accounting
firm in downtown Loa Anaeles,
where they will be tabulated for the
Feb. 17 announcement of nominees In
17 categories, including best picture,
director and all the writing, acting
.and technical areas.
and best feature· length documen. ·iij;i·~-~iiiiiiiiii~iijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; tary. .im
'Gwrw' goes to BBC
honored were Katharine
Hepburn, Jane Fonda.
Gertrude Lawrence and
Elizabeth Taylor.
This year, 189 English-language
films were eligible for nominations
by the membershlp of the Academy
or Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,
while nominees in an additional four
categories -foreign film, documen·
tary short, full-length documentary
and visual effects -are determined
by academy committees.
LONDON CAP> -The British
Broadcasting Corp. has announted
purchase of 56 films for $10.5 million
from MGM Productions for showing
on British television.
The package includes •'Gone With
The Wind" and "Ben Hur." BBC out-
bid the rival lndependent Television
commercial network by $50,000 in the
sealed bidding, a BBC spokesman
said. A record 26 films were submitted
Tickles from Rickles
Q: What u Don RickLes really Wet? And how
dot• he rt0ll11 /ttl about Fronk Sinatra and aomt of the
other atq>tratara he innilts? -Mark Franklin, Loa
Vtga.t.
A . We tned valiantly to /md out. Htrt's what hap-
pened :
Q: Are you and Sinatra really 1ooc1 friends?
A: We're such good friends that l\e always
makes me walk in front of him lf we're In a big
crowd pr in heavy traffic. We also have an un·
derstanding that if there's gunshots, I stand while
he ducks.
Q: What otber profession would you bave 1one
lnto lf you bada't become an eatertaleer!
A : I would have become an insurance
salesman. J did, in fact, seJI one life insurance
policy to an unde who died in my arms when he
finished signing his
name.
Q: Can you tell me
wbat ldnd of a person
Dean Martin really is?
A: Sure . I once
asked Dea11 , "What
kind of a person are
you, really?" a nd be
answered, "I don't real·
ly know . because
nobody's told me." And
he may have been sober
at the time.
Q: Do you know
Geor1e BunuJ well?
A : So well that in
order to amuse him r often let him set fire to DON RICKLES
my pants. Also, George needs a prune juice fix at
least twice a day.
Q: Before yoa became well knowa yoa stlldled
at tile A1nertcan Academy of Dramatic Arts.
Woald yoa ratller ad or do comedy!
A : I'd rather act, but let's face it, comedy bas
given mea big house and twohuntingdogs.
Q: What are Jolullly Canoe, Ed McMalaoa ud
Doc Severluee really like?
A: Johnny's wonderful to me, because I'm a
hit . If you ask MacMahon what time it is, he
stomps his fool five limes like a Clydesdale. Doc
Severinsen runs around the studio asking ever-
ybody, "ls m y lip working?"
Q: la tllere anytblnl yoa'd like to say aboat
your best'frteed, Bob Newhart'!
A: He's a lot of fun, if you like to yawn. If I
were to tell you that Bob is filled with electricity,
that would shock a lot of people who know him.
Q: Now tbat Ronald Reagan la preskleat, wllat
do yoa think the next four years will be like!
A: There will be a panic among barbers,
because a lot of them will run out of combs. Also,
you can expect Congress to pass a new law that
e'<(er yone has to be home at 11 p.m . so t.fiey can
watch Reagan's old movies.
Q: Do you enjoy sporting events? If so, wlto
'Glad You Asked That'
by Marily1t Clftd Hy GordHr
are your favorite sports personalities?
A: I love sports, and my favorite sports
personality of all time is Tommy Lasorda , the LA
Dodgers' manager. Tommy's so small that
whenever he goes out to change a pitcher , he
winds up falling off the mound because it's too
steep. By the ·way, Tommy has changed some
pitchers so often they have diaper rash. I also love
the owner of the Philadelphia Eagles, Leonard Tose, because he keeps s ending me football
uniforms that are even too small for my kid .
Q: I saw you in a mm with Clark Gable. What
do you remember about bim?
A : He was warm and lovable. He liked me so
much that every time he saw me he'd say. "'Get
out of my way. kid."
Q: Are you and Steve Lawrence ever going to
work together again?
A: Yes. provided he gets his voice back. If he
doesn't, I've got Eydie warming up in the wings.
Q: Can you give me some fast tboul bta about:
-Muhammad Ali?
A : He should enroll in the Leon Spinks Driving
Schoolsohecan learn how tohitsomethang ..
-President Gerald Ford?
A: I watched him play golf once, and
knocked six sparrows out of the treu .
-Jerry Vale?
A : When he grows up he wants to be Eddie
Fisher.
-Burt Reynolds?
A : A very lonely guy. He has trouble com·
municating with girls.
Q: Wbo's yoar favorite comedian?
A: To be very honest with you. I searched my
mind and my heart, and found out that it's mtt.
Send your questions to Hy Gardn.tr, "Glad Ym&
~abd Thal ... core of lhi! n~apaptrr. P 0 Bor 1960.
Irvine 92114. Marilyn and Hy GardMT unU CJftftOtt as
many questions a& they can in their column, but the
volume of mail make& personal rep4Ms impossible.
Hutton, Vaccaro star
HOLLYWOOD (AP} -Timothy Hutton, who
plays a troubled youth in "Ordinary People,"
stags with Brenda Vaccaro in the ABC movie
"We're a Family Again," now in production.
The movie also features Geor ge Dzundza,
Rosanna Arquette, Paul Regina and Bonnie
Bartlett.·
The teleplay by Dennis Nemec was s uggested
by a true story of three children abandoned by
their parents and adopted by separate families -
each not knowing where the others are.
~OPHl~TIC4T£0 PROORAMMINC ..
"9 to 5"
(PG)
I ''SEEMS LIKE
OLD TIMES" (PG>
I "'POPEYE"
(PG! I "TRIBUTE"
. ,
4 "1NCR. IBilLl'ji SHRINKING
M?MftN"p
"ALTERED
STATES" CR>
srA01um D
Scrctctn Chiv« In
call 61~ 7860
~
"INCRIDIBLI
IMRMUNGWOllAW'
"THI NUDI BOll9"
I "'9LUIS POTHERS"
.. Al.UN!" ('Cl)
"MlllAL HOUie" (R)
I "'R.IVATl HNJAMIN"
··ooooen OIRl" (flG)
I "1"tlUTI"
'"llm.MINO A~AY'' . ··.: _____ ,
"OROltlMY N~I"
"IT AflTING OVI"" f"t .,;w.
··~LI .. ,.
Beaulifu/ ~IBrBo Mu~ir:
NBw~ MarinB WBalhBr-
~loek MarkBI RBporl~
Con~umBr RBporl~
G&Ai'MDfa
IOl..-wAAJ
FIPtST o
..._.,.FAMILY ml
"WINO·
WALKER" '"°' -T-S 'u. ,,
"SCANNERS"
(Ill -n«HI• f.JI, .,.
I'
I ' /J ,
•ICTt,.._,. eUM•eU
-.U.tTAHMllllT
I .......... fl. Mf .. lll ., ... hit
~ ....... .
ltlLOl , IMANC:t , 1111.or 110M•
LOAN. t1• Mtlll SI , Soil .. U., '4"1ftl·
'"'*'._,.,CA., ....
W • WHllem• & A•_ .... ,, 1 ..... • Call~ftle t.,W•llOfl. 1110 Meln St., ,.., .. UO, IM!t"'-" ._ 11. CA '1 ....
tllll ~" ,, ....... ,.., h. '"' ...,.utfl
W II WOlltllli &
A• ... i.1~.1 ...
~Wllll•m•, &KfTr-~ fllll netet-.1 w•• llltQ with tht C:~niw Ci.o. OI Or<WIOI cou"t• on Jftl , .. "" l'tS.Slt "110lt.,_, 0tenQoo (6'\I 0.tly Piiot,
J.,. 21, I' .. 4, 11 II, 1'11 OMt
P UBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE PllBUC NOTICE
C~ _, ll'ICTl'10Ul IMIMNeU
•OTICS W T•UtTee-s IAl.e MAM8 ITAT•MeNT
llO,._ TM,...._.,.~-ll OOlflt 11<1•1
Ofl ..... _, II. IWI, •I tt:• AM . -··· '"~..__.....,ti i...v... Tiiie IUOCO 11.•CTRIC COMPANY lfltvte flU Ct111,e11y, 1'00 N•rtll 1.7., ~ ..... levwd, M~IJ'9lD!I.
1..-w•w. '" Ille Cltv ot '-"t• ""•· .ttec:11. Celltor11le HW7 C-ty ti Or.,.., SI ... ti C.lltotllle, Ectw¥d Douet• HlftOtle. t .. 21
CAL.,ORHIA IU:COMVIVAMCe Oon Drive, H11nlln9to11 luch
COMP•HY, • Gellfwlll• C.,W•lltfl, C•lllor..it._.,
•t _,,, --'"*°" TNMM llMef llMI Th!J IMINIU ll tOlldli<IH lly.,. Ill cerleh• o..d 01 Tnul necwl4d l>Y dlvlduel
P AMI LA GENE SCl1 ULTE, A EdWMdOoutl•1Ridt4Ale S INGLE WOMAN, PAT .. ICI JOY Tl\l1 te•l-1 w4" filed wlln ,._
SCHUi.TE, A U NGLE WOMAN . Counly Cttr~OIOf#IQt CountyonFtll ll'AGE ANH SCHUL Te, A SINGLE J t .. 1
WOMAN • .u '""tort, ttCOfcltd D!1 • • Ft~'lll
Otumbtr '· "''· H lllJl•Umtlll Pulltl~lleCI OrMQt CNU O•llY Pilot NO ., .. In a-1m1, ......... of Of· ,..., 4, "· ''· u. Itel 6lHli 11<1•1 Re<.ordl Of Of-. c:o.,nty, Sl•I• I of C•lllonlle, llllCllr Ille _, of Wit
llltrtl" <OfltelllH. wlll "41 et 1>111>11<
•1><llon lo fW lllptl llld*r for cH/\,
P•yalllt •I Ille ti-Of wi. In l•wfut
"'ont y ot tr1t Unlttcl S1•tu 01
P U BWC NOTICE
l'ICTITtOUS IU51MI SS
MAME STAHMEMT
NOTlc• 01' SALE UNOI R Amtrlte, Without w.,, ... ,, HP ... U or
DIECal!E 01' l'Oal!CLOSUllE Implied ••tu llllt, uw, poueulo" or
Tht lollowln9 ,..rson• ere do•"CI t>usjrwtun·
..o. n -tJ.IS t11<11m1Y-", •II rlOflt, tlllt •nd ,,..
PVBLIC NOTICE
P U BLIC NOTICE
l'IC'TITIOU5 IUSIMl!SS NAMe 5TATeMl!MT Tne totlowlr>Q ,..r..,nt t r• dotno
bu•lneuas
Pll...H. NOTICE -:r
P U BLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU$ IUSIMEU
NAME STATl!Ml!!fT T tit IOllOWl"Q Ptrson h dol"Q b;,o\I nen .,
NATION
PVBUC NOTICE t
P UBLIC NOTICE '
l'ICTITIOUS •USIMl!SS
NAMI! STATl!M•NT
Tn1 fotlowl"CI per>on• •re d''"CI buSlneo as. fl,LAZA OEl SOL HOMEOWN ERS t•••ll-hekll>Y ll•••ucllTrwstMln AS~OCIA TtON, tlC , Pl•tnllll •s end lo lht foltowlr>Q l:IH<rlbed prQPfr·
F I AOUl S.AG' AH •1•1 0.lefldent ly •llu•tect '"""'•lore.aid County •nd
1 tllt u-rt•On~o 8r•d Gett\, Sttlt, towll
Shtrtll·Cor-r. County ot O••nll•· DISCIUfl'TIOM
LINDORA MEDICAL CLINIC,
l:IOl H•rbOr 8outev.,a. S.ulte H-3.
cos1a ~. C•lllorllle "',. Sl•mj)er M<tdl<•I Cllnoc Inc
C•llfornte, >JO> H•rb01 Boulev•rd,
Suitt M·3, Coste Mew, C•lllornl• 9,.2•
Tiii• D;iSlnen I• conc:tucte<I by a cor
INFOMEOtX.. 11tDO Gerc:te" Grove
Btyd • G•rotn Grove. C•tllor"'• ""'4J
Forurr1S MantQtmen1. tllC . 4001
'W .. lerty Plo1ce, e 103, Ne•oort BH<ll. C•tllornl• 92660
WESTLAND ENTERPRISES. lto.1
CIH••at.e< Corcte Hu,.llr>Qto.. Buch,
~alttor,.i• t2"49
llNY OLOTIME DONUTS, l1t3
B•-•r St • CMI• Mesa, CA t2U6 ' Rl<ll•rd D. Lies, 1tMJ Surtbrdhr Ln • Hw,.ll"lton Beech, CA n.-
TllOm•s M. Rvtr1. U01 Marcoll1N Dr , Huntlnglo.. Beach, C.11 t2M7
I give lhe d rink s an 8 1he hors d 'oeuvres a 7, t h e
ciinn r a S and the conversation a 2 to mak e It a 5 5
e vening ..
I \t•I• 01 Ct lltornl•, do twreby urtlly All 111•1 cern1n ltncl •llUtltCI In Int
I 11\tl by .irt.,. ot o.<t ff of Forecloturt $tett ot C.1110.nlt, County ot Or.,,ge,
•nd S•I• In IM Sucier1or Court ot tnw City ot trvtne, .-Krobecl ••follow•
ooret10 ... s1.mper Medical
t llnle 11\C
Thi\ bu~l .. ess ,, COndUCltd Dy . COi
p.orallOf'I
J on" Paul Roo1nson, 18062
Ct .. rwator Circlt, '1ur>tlr>qlo" Beech,
Calllornla 97"49 Tiiis Duslneu Is condu<ltd by o QeN••I p,artnershlp,
County ot <><••~. St•I• of C•lilornl• PARCEL I
tnttr.., °" Dtctmcitr 11, 19'0, •no r• u .. 11 1•1. •• ~-" •ncl e:1e11,..c1 °" Nell B. Sl.,,,Ptr, S« Forums M<on-.....,1. '"( Jee~ RHsor
Tnl\ bu>lne•s "tOllductea Dy an.,,.
a 1v1au•t R le hard D. Lie.
Thi\ \l•le,,_t WfS lited with 11\lr
Cou..iw ci.r1< of 0rat1Qt CounlY on Jt11 11, l .. 1
Jann P. Roi>"''°" corded ()e( • ....,., ti ttlO ,,. ""'atiove 111•1 c•rt•I" COtlCloml,.lum Pt•" re
... 11t1edl«Oon -(''" Pl•za 0..1 Sot cor-Ail<ll 11, 1'11 In -., ... ,
HO,,.•Owrwn Auoc .. tlO" • C•lllorno• P-0• Mt. of Offlclet Rt<ord• of 0•••
Ptesldent rn11 •tat-t w•• tllect with the
Covntr Cltr-OI 0.Ml99 County on J.,, T11 .. slAlttnent w•s tiled with lh•
Ft).f20S. Co11nty Cler-ot Or<tnQ<! County 0,. 21, ""
Tnl• statement w•S Ill.cl wllll Ille
Coun11 Cltrt< ot or.,... County on J..,. ,.,,,...
l'lMIJ4 PuDllSlled 0r'""99 Cotst D•lly Pllof Non Proltt Coroorallon tnt •Dov• County, Catlfor,.I• 16, 1'81 Most Americans n•"'e<I plt lnllflhl. OOl•on4'd a 1uOQ P.llRCEL 1.
mo"I and d«r ... ot torectosure •ncl "" undlvoducltel llS2 lnttrt•I in •fld
PuDthhed Oranoe COol\I O•llr PtlOI J•nu•rv tt ,,., 1'1S>ft7
PuDI ...... °'""91! Coast D•llY Piiot. Ftb •_.~.It UHi PuDl"tw<I Or•~ Co.•t Otlly Piiot, J•n u . 21. U, Fol> 4, 1'81 201-tt
\flt •ci•ln\I r 11ou1 B1g'an dtlon lo Loi 1 of Tract No. 10137 o SlloWn °"
d•,.1111. lor tnt tum Of E 19h1 """°'fel • M•P recorded In boo.I 416, o-• 4• •"° e1g111 ollM no IUU Oollars, l••'lut lo SO of MIKtll•neou• MAIP>. records
Jtn 21, 28, ~·•,II, !'ill l5o41 Jan 14, Feb •. 11, 18, 1'111 '18·11
'write poorly'
NEW YORK (AP) Americ ans jus t don't
writ e right, s ays the Writing Inslrument Manufac-
turers Auociatioo.
So in booor of John Hancock's 244th birthday ,
tile group sponsored its fourth annual "Great
Scrawl-Out," designed lo improve illegible John
Hancocks around the country by demonstrating
&ood writing.
American handwriting is in a ·'deplorable
s tate ," says association Executive Vice President
Frank King.
To illustrate his point, be tells•a s tory about
n e wspaper editor Horace Greeley, who once wrote
a letter saying terrible things about a young man
leaving his e m p loy . Greeley's handwriting was so
difficult lo read, he s ays , the young man used it a s
a Jetter of recommendation .
Some S200 million is lost annually by busi-
n esses as a · r esult or bad writing, K ing says. A
W est Coast h ospital even o ffere d d octors a
h a ndwriting course because prescriptions w e re n o t
bein g r e ad p r operly , h e s ays .
P U BLIC NOTICE
P U BLIC NOTICE
mo,..y ot l!>e U"ited St•tts. •fld by pt Ora"ge C-IY. C•llloml•. l~Mr l'ICTITIOUS I USIMES.S-
v11t1W of • """ ot ... 1orome .. 1 '" ... d with alt improvem ... u IMr-. .. MAMI! STATEMENT
•CllOI\ ""'"' on Dt<tm~r t• 1'90 I ctpttno ther«trom Conc:tom1n1u"' U"'" Tht 10110,.1,.Q lier'°"' ••• 001,.4 •m comrTWnOt<t 10 M il •ti ,,.. P•-•tv IS/ lhrougn 108, lnclu•l•t. looted ou>1,..uu
tn the County of Or•noe. St•I• of thereon BEST MAR KETI N G AS C•lllornl•,descr1111H1 .. foltows PARCEL3: SOCIATES, '* LQ9en A•tn .... C~I•
Lot 53, Tr•cl No. 98&6, a. per "'•P An u ch;sl..,. ta.tment for pu-ono Mua, Callloml• ':16:16 recorded ;,. Booll 411, Pa90s •I to so and roteted 1>11rpou• over that l>Orllon .t1r11111r C Pucoc~ Sr . UOt
1 .. cha1v•. of MIKt ll• .... ou• Map> tn Of Lot, ot Wld Trett No 101]1 H W•lotll•m Place s. ... ,. An•
lhe Ollko of the Countr Reco•d•" ot shown °" Ellhlbil 'A' to 111e Oect.,• Ctlltornl• '12704 · •eld OrM>gt County Calll0<n1a tlor> ol R.-s1r1<1oons tor The Sortr>QS Wlll••m W 8•rr•O., 10 G••..O
Propeny " ,,_,commonly ~r>awn Corwlomlnlum. reccwdtd Al>"ll 21. t'7•. "'•t"'1e Apt 5. Lonq Bea<,., C•htorno•
H 11()<1 Dan• Drive c~·· Mo•. Ill boo• 12.U, oeci• 110 of Otllcl•I ~3
C•lllornla Record• .,.. re-recorded ~Y 1, 1'7' T"°"""' G. Fulghum, U231 ~rch
Tot•lt>er wltll 411 Mid 51ngulu the 1n --12'60, ,._ 518 of OHlcl•ls Str .. 1, o..,. Pol,.t, C..lllornlt 9161'
to,.omen1s, neredltamen" a,,d oo Record\, of Or.,ve County, Calttornl• Tnos \l•leme"t w•s flied with tne
ourtenenGes IMrt•unto l.lc!lon;1"Q or ,,, lhertln•ller referred lo H "Oe<l•r• Co11nly Cl•r' of Or•nge County on
•"''"'"'•ooeri•lnlno llon"l a• c.,port se>acu 157 to 708 1,.. Ftb 1. t'lt PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY clu\lvo. S.ld ffH me"t 11 lurlher de•
GI VE N rh•t on Tllu•Ml•r. Fet> 1• ,,_ •nd dHCribecl Ill "'"lctu II • ..., ..... •I 10 lO 0 cto<• AM of '""' O• Ill ot Ille 0ec1 ... e11on
t i M•1n L-r. Courtllouu 100 CIVIC PARCEL•
Center Drlff We.t, Cit y ot S•nta An• I A ~clu!>lvo H\emtnt for uu
,,,,....
PuDll~ Or~ Co.., D•1ly Piiot Feb 4, I I, 18, 7S, I'll H I-ti
P U BLIC NOTI CE
P U BLIC NOTICE
l'ICTtTIOUS IUSINlSS HAMESTATEMl!MT
f h• 1011ow1n; 1Mr•on' •r• ao1no '"-''tneu .,
GOLDEN WEST FLORIST. t37k
Goldttnwe-$t Street, We\tm,niter ,
C•llforn1a '11683
David W Werkheo,er. t.aol Mt
f letctter .. Fount••n V•ll••· C•htornt•
t1IOI
K lGnQ C Wtr~lle"er 16803 Ml
Fl•tCfMr., Fount4tn v•1tty, C•Htor"'• '1IOI
This l>U•I~• " tonduc ted Dy an 1n
d1¥tdua1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIME$S
MAME STATEMENT
T "• loltow1"9 ""''°" \\ 001"9 bu SI ftl!U1 .,
SOUTH SHORES CONSTRUC· r ION SERVICES, 34• C1m1 .. o D• :2~t7r1e11•. S4in Chem•nte, C•Utorn1a.
L"loe Cltn10.. Reyr>otd\, Jr • 323
t-.•rlt.\pur. CorOl'lri!I Ht M•r. C•lltorn1•
'2'25
Tn1' t>u:i•ne\s I\ conouc.ted bY an in dl~lou"
LC Ro.noldl
1111\ staleme<>t w•• Ill.cl with ttw
O•••dW Wer•Ml\<!r County Cler' ot Or•"O<' County on
'"" •l•lement WH tiled wottl Ille l•rl 1• 1'181
Cou,.tr Cle,.. ot O•fr>Ot County on J an
,. 1 .. 1
F IS.580 PuDll\he<I 0.'""90 Caot\I Deily Polot, FtS.~2 J•n 11. Feta,i, 11, II. I'll OHi
Put.>l•\he<I Oranqe C04\I D••IY Pi•ot
hn 11, Fot> •,II 18, 1 .. 1 fl7 It P U BLIC NOTICE wlll sell ~ aDOve deKrl~ P•-rh •nd •nt.,.,_,,t ot 1roe C:Olnmon Area
unO.r ••Id writ •nd dolt r.-e. or •o muc~ dHIO,.•l•d In Ille D<tct•••llon, Hod ll>er.01 •• m•r I.le! ,,.,c.,.wry 10 ••11\lv U •ement t»lno turtMr aetlned end
Hid ludQment with lnt••h tS •nd CO>!• dHcrlbecl In A•llCIH 11 •nd I 11 ot Ille
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
JEANETTE I. BOWMAN PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOVSIUSIMESS
AND OF PETITION TO HAME STATEMENT lo Ille lllQheSI b1deler. tor t "\h '" 1awtu Otclarttlon money Ol lhe u,.1ttCI Stele• T"• 10461 .,,_,,,of the unpaid prln
Otlod at S.nt• An•. C••••o•n•• <lp•I Dater>re lnttrt\t thueon
J•"'1•rv n. "'' '°'''""' wltll tt•~bly •S11m•1eci BRAD G"' T ( s. C~I\. HOMsai and f<lver><M at tho
Slwroll·Coranr• I lime of the 1 .. 111a1 Publlution ot lhl• Courtly 01 o,.nQ< Notice ere S60,"7 f.f
c .. morn1tt From •nfor~tlon w hlC-tl t~ Trustee
By J DeV••~•u~. dHm\ retla1>11t, b<n for which Tnl\tee
Caplaln mo ts no rei>reknt•llo.. or warranty
I l'•id .. 11 a Lff the \l•HI addrH• or otller comm~
t•l7 Wttlctitt Dr , Swllt 104 dH•onallon ol Ille •bOv.-ducrlbed
ADMINISTER ESTATE "~c;:,_T~~!:~!'e~:s ~•~~~.'011°"''"CI 00'"°" 1' doin9 DUI•
NO. A 107420. Tnt lollow•"CI peoon I\ do•"CI t>u\I I 111 L AM 111 LA MECA ()1
T f f h · "*''.. EN ERC.Y CONSERVATION AS
o a e I r s • c.E~GE w BROWN & •S ISOC:••TES 111 "'vocaoo s1 .... 1. c~•• b e neficiaries, c redit o r s soc1A~.1.01 B•mboo sr Ne .. oo•1 M•\• ce1.1om•a9?U•
a nd contingent c re ditors o f Beach, C•l•I 91l>l>O Ge•ald E~ Odecio•a. ••37 P1oa•us
Jean e tte I . Bowman of t;eo•o• w Br0wn. 7ol01 B•"'Doo S! Stru t \ant•"'"'"· C•t1torn1~92101
N e wpo rt Beach , Cal1'forn1'a Newr>0'1 8ea<n. c a111 <nw> l ho\ Du••,,..s1 '' conc1uc1ea Dy an on f h1" bu\lneu 1s tondv< lfl-d n1 an ,, d1v1due1
a nd per son s w ho may be a 1••du•1 ~ ... 10 E OdeQ•i"o
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIMEH
MAMI! STATl!Ml!MT
T lie lollow1"9 person ;, dol"Q t>us> ,...,, .,
EX.ECVTIVE SECRETllRY, 1'70
trvlnt A-'""· Newport Beach, CA
'2..0.
P•trl<I• " LOUMn. !9091 HtmO.n l tr>e, Hunll"910.. Beach, CA '7Mt,
This bu-'neu I• <Olld1><ttd by •n '" dlvldutt
P•trl<la A. LouMn Tiiis si.tt.._t wu llted woth ttle
Cou,.tv Cieri( of OrM>Qe Cw,.ty on J•n.
11, "" l'ISUll Publt•lltd Orano-Cou1 D•ll Y Pllol J•n. 14, 11. :N, Feb. 4, 1'81 101 .. 1
P U BLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS I USIMl!St MAME STATEMENT
The tollowlng persons •rt doing
ouune\\ ., ·
w c ENTERPRISES, 17777 Main
it . Suite B·lc». lrwlr>e. CA 97714
To"y A Wl,.ce , 1000 Sp1rrow '°' ve,.ue. Fou..lain V Alley. CA 977111.
J•"'" R Cr••o. t.16' E Kentuc•• "v• .A-lm,CA~1
Thi\ bu\ln"'' I\ conducted Dy a
1tne••t p,artner>lllp
lo..y .ti Wlr><4'
Tn1> statemenl ••• flied w111> the ~ov,.ty Clerk of Oran~ County on J11n
12 1911
Gum lifted I Ntwper1 IH<ll, CA •IMO property '' 1•1 Str .. mwOOd, ''""'" "141111111'> An-r C•l•lorn1a '1271• SU,.EatCNt COUIHOI' THE Pubhshrd 0r""9" C""" Daolv Polot Said 11"-rty os De•nt M>ld tor thtt
o therwise interested in the C..0.91' w (lr0wn lho\ \l•lemenl .. a. 111-d with tnr
Wiff and /Or estate· ln1\ \t•ll'mtnl ,..,., tolt<1 ,.,,,. the Counh c .. ,. ol 0••"91' Cwntv on
· (ounl f C.,.r• ol Of~ Cou"IY on J•" Jctnu•r1 '4 tQ81
l'U J4" PuDll\he<I 0r•"OI' CotJI O•llr Pllol J•n 14 71, 71, Fol> 4, 1'111 1QO-t1
STATEOl'CALll'OllNIA l'O" J•n 28, Foo 4, 11 1'111 •0811 purpou ot paylnQ .... ODl•oat•On\
THE COUNTY 01' OllAMGE 1 s.curea bv said Oeed of Tru•t 1nclua
Me.Alt7MJ P U BLIC NOTI CE •no '•••""" e~e>tnt•• ot ltw lrustee
by E r n est c r e i g ht 0 n I FIUSU Puo•o~a °'""'1" C04\I 04••• Polot
Bow man in the S uperior Publl\...O O.d"<I<' c ...... D•1t• P1101 Jan 11 '8 ~.D • 11 1<ie1 31, 81 P U BUC NOTICE
SAN JOSE (A P)
Santa Clara County of·
fic ials h ave voted to
take aw ay the g uns or
Burns Security guards
who we te armed after
th e December s hooting
deat h o r a co unty
w e lfare o ffice guard.
Board o r S upe r visors
C hairman Rod Diridon
s aid the board voted 4· 1
to di s arm th e four
guards given weapon s in
r esponse to the s h ooting .
OaOEa TO Sl10W CAUSE a..O of S.10 1'011 CHANGE 01' NAME D t '" ttw ~Hu of the Appllutlo" of SUll'ElllD'tCOUllTOl'CALll'ORNIA d edJMOuary' 1981
Vt RGIL CARMEN GENTRY DY Ill\ COUNTY 0 1' DllANGE C"'LIFORNIA
A petition ha s been f iled 13 1~11 I Fu> ...
C t f 0 Jan 2f 111 F•D • 11 1981 >•1 a• o ur 0 range County ' p FICTITIOUSIUSINESS
request ing that Ernest.Jo.. P U BLIC NOTIC E U BLIC NOTICE NAMESTATEMENT
HO. A·-RECONVEYANCE mother, '\SENA TH TANN IE GEN NOTICE OI' INTENT!°" TO COMAN>' •H ••d TruUtt
C r eighton Bowman be ap . ., THE FOLLOWING PERSONS ARE
PO i nt ed as p e r son a I NllJtt F~c;~T~~!:~!•;,::s 001~~'~0':!1~!;.~~s ~ St•mponci 01 TRY,ForChanQOotN•mt SELLllEALESTATE AT Suan .... For~ncl
Tht •PC>llCatlon ot Vorq1t Carmen PlltVATE SALE E•~CUllV<' Vlt• Prnld•"'
Gentry by ni. motner .tl5MWth Tar>n1e In 111,. Matier 01 Ille Glkl•d•ansnip 01 '•51 Cort><" .tlven.,..
re presentati ve to ad-l'ICTITIOUSBUSINESS Tn .. IOllOw•"Q p+•\On• .... dOl"O Or•nqeC-y, lrl( lOIS W W•rner I
• • t th t t f NAME STATEMENT °'"'""" ., Santa A .. a C•.,104
Gentry tor cha"~ 01 name t1<1vln; tne Ptrson$ •no Esta••• 01 SUSAN Nortt1r1~ c"' 'll78 m1 n1S er e eS a e 0 I n .. fo11ow1n11 P•"O"\ ••t DOohQ OUTERS <NN IVJJ f t C.•mono I Rol.lc!rlD McGlll,~Del\y,Fouo
Jeanette I. Bowman Cun-"u"n~""' co"• Mru Co••to•n•• q)•l• ,.,,. v.11-v C• '2708 I b"'n tiled In Courl, and II appurong ELIZABETH DOUGLAS!> 0 1 .. NE (113110173511
from said appltC•lton 111•1 V1r 91tl MICHELE OOUGL ... S!. ""d JOHNPut>ll•~e<IOr~CaotSIO•llyPllot
C•rmen Gentry •no "" molll••1 DAVIO OOUGLA'S J R M J•n 11.11. Feo • 1'191 '""~I
d e r the Independent Ad • CANNON DRUC.S IJJJ "onn M,ron L ... Moll~• lll 18th St•~• EuQe"f> 8 McGrew 16nv willow
min istrat ion o f Estates Tu'"" Mri;,t O••n~ (•l•fO•n•• 9?1tfJI Hun1'"9ton8ea<" C•ltforn••'lll>All Cor Fou .. talnVallev.Ca '1?70t •~n,ath T~~ Gef\try h•Yf: titf'd •n ~ • inoq, • •PPltt•llOr> propostnQ 111•1 VltQll NOT•CE •S HEREBY GIVE"' lnat . • . J u\l•n CnunQ Hin l a u •l P r,•n•ur f" c,,4 _,,., llH tow• W.tyne-E M1tc~ll, 1J091S..nta t:t1t.a
A c t ). The pet1t1on IS set to r S•r••·· Strttt .... n .. Ce11fo•n•• '1211• (O•••-w (••••O•"·••ht2• Fount•on v.w .. v Ca •1108
C•rrnrn Gent,-., n•tnt be' ch.anQf'd toj \ubJe<t lo <onftrm.it1on bv ttw abovf
RICK CARMEN GENTRY N •ntott~d S.-nor Cou•t on Ftl>•Vd(•
Pl'BLIC N OTICE hearing in D ept No. 3 at "'•"Cr Wol\on LOW n•"O •J Tn., Du''"~· '<ona"tt•d o~ • !no\ DU\l~\S ,, conau(.,d Dy 'I
700 Civic Cente r Drive SluDD• Ro.oa '""Foor =B ~ '10nQ 'l"""'"'""'t""' noo qf'ner•IP<tr1,...,. .. p tner•lorr, 11 •• hertD• Orde••d a0,.'; l7 1~1 al IO OO 4 m or tl'W>r•att•r FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
directed. tllat •II IM!r'<on\ •nt••ested In Within ""'"""' AllOW•d l)y law '"" un NAME STATEMENT
t\oa matler do •opear l.lc!torr thl f der\oQ,...d, "' ou.trc!"n woll sell •t TRENT, L.TD 74811 N•ll•• <;111
w . t c· I Kono M,,?nM•llf'f ..Robtrt 0 MfGtll
est, tn h e tty o f Santa I c "" Morl>C• LOW n•no •l Srvo~ Tno\ ..... .._.1 .. A, •• •o ...... II•~ '"'' stdt ..... ment Wd \ !olf'd wotn 111~
court In ~Ptrtment 3 on Ille lllh di; l>"lute s<ile to tht nionht <1nd 0.\1 n~I Ro6d L<llJUN Holls, Colllornla '176~3 Ana , Californ ia on F e b . 25, Ro•o.l1t1>r 10()( ~8 1 Hon11 .. onq 1.ount,(11,,•0•0 ••"'1" ou,. .. o .. Jan Counly C•er• 01 or .. n9• County on
1981 a t 9:30 a .m . I Th•\ Du\•nPH ,, conaut t~o D~ .. ,. ••II Janu.,y 17 1'181 1'1U4tJ
P U BLIC NOTI C E Of M•rch, 1'81 al ti lO O'CloCk A M • OI Dlddtr "" ..... '"'"" •nd tondlllOn\ Roberl E W-ltr 2'811 Nell•~
'••d d•y lo ShOw c•uW' why su<h ap ~••n~ft&r ,me~tto,,,.CJ, •It ru;3nl htlc G.tll Ro.cs. LilQurw Hllh C.•l1torn1•
IF YOU OB E l1m1tPd p.>nnersnop F 15.~1 PuDll\f>P.dOronqe C0.t•I D•llY Potot
. J CT t~ the JU\lln c .. unQ Hon l •u Pvt>I"""" 0r .. nor '°"" O••I• Piiot Jan .. 21 111. F•t.> ' 1981 , •• 8' ptlcallon for cha,... of ,.._ \llould in er... o m• unCl••\IQntd, n '17•~> granttng Of t he p e t tliOn, 1 Tn" \latr-nt wh lolf'd •In In• J•n 18 !'po f t 11 t'ill •0$-81 l'ICTITlOU' IUSIMESS MAME STATEMENT T lw lollowl"9 pe,_, IS OOl"CI bu SI·
lle»H-
"°' bt Cl,.,..., Qu••d•M't, 1 .. llw •HI PfOPe•IY locatt!d Jtmn G Brat.•• 7UJI B •
It ts furttwr ordtt-rlfd l~t • copy ot ~.1:,~~n co=. 0t!.c,0'•~!:; St•I~ ut Ou L•ne L•Q"n• H1U\. C•11.'0°,.n~ vou s hould eith e r a ppear County ci.r~ OI D•-Cwnl~ on J•n PUBLIC NOTICE
at the hearing and state 11ic~~-~ E'4 PUBLIC NOTIC E
DANA'S WORKSHOP 118~1 Joy
Strt-rt, Garoen Grov•. C"' 97&48,
Dana G. Bunon, a'9 A"'I-• W•r Nrwp0;1 BHcll. Ca hlorn1a 92l>l>O
T"'' bU\uwn 1\ <ondu<.IPd by an 1n dlvu:tual
O.na Bunon
tnts Ordff to Show C..UM tit pubtrs/\td ••. " as ws O.S3
1 .. the D•ily Piiot Newsptper, •1 Ut::~~~e;.:, .:nL~:-c:·~~~.:C1'~'s'! on TIHS DuslMU • IS CondUCltCI by •
now•P•O-r of qe,.er•I c1rcu111ion, f)flr Map r1>eorded in BoOll H I Pa~: oeneral oart""''"'P
printed tn said '°""'Y. at tust onol 2,, 15 and l& of Ml><ell••>eous M•P• tn Rooert E Wllrelu
fl•(h week tor tour succ.~H6ve wtttu Int! Offt<f' of 1~ County RKord~r t Mcloa9m9 G~ntr•• P•r1ner
prtor to ttte-O•yot Mtd Manng. j w ia County 0 Th•\ "••f'~l •~o ttllld Wit" tnt
D•l<'d 1h4\20lhd•y of Janvtry 1981 EXCEPTIN(i !HE Ri;~ ROM Unot\ I Co11ntr Ct•r' of Or.tn04> County on
Ron.Id H Pr~r 1n•ou9n 133 •• '"°,." on l"e Con ~•D•V"'Y 1 1"'1
your o bject ions o r f i le v1rt ... ~5<11Kk, 1..C.
·Written objec tions with the P.o .... mo
c ourt befo re the hearing 17 co'"'"'' Pt•ra or1n
Your a ppearance may b~ Nowpert~ft,C•1110"'1.,2~).f11~
in p e r son o r by y our at-Puo"'""" o. .. ._ '°"" ll•••• P1101
to rney. J•" 11 F•D • 1 ' 1"'11 •• , s1
l'ICTITIOVS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
T ,,,. tot1ow1n9 Pt"r \On\ ''' 001ri9
OU\in•n A\
... "A NT <N1') PtZZAR IA 187•8 lt,.,..," 81..,CI Mul'\ttnqton Be.en CA ., ...
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIMllU -I MAME STATEMENT f",. '011ow1n9 P~r\On\ ar• dofng
OV\ln.t\\ a\
PRECISION POWDER CO .. TING
711 w 111h Unit E-8. CO\t~ M~s· CA ~1&71
Tllo\ s1a1eme,.t w"' toled with tnr
County Cieri< qt Or~ County on J•" ..... 81
Judge of Wtd Supero0< Court aomonoum Plan •e<OfOe<l t" Boo• 111~1 F ISMOI L .... t Aclieot Servi<" Pul)h \r>\'O Orano• County O•ol v 1787> INCll llv•. ~=I 9&A of Ollt< 1~1 RKo"h ot °""d PolOI F•t.>•uary • Ir II, 1S 1'191 •l0_.1
IF Y OU AREA
C REDITOR or a con t -
ingent c re d itor o f the d e -
P lJBLIC 1'0TICE AuQiu\t .~ Ant"°nv A"11nhn1 qsg..
J•m~\ M HOllOW'•Y S9~1 ""noroo•
HY,.ltn9ton Suen C.11 91..,
Al1>er1 C l<Oll0w•, S•SI tC•nD•oo• Huntong1on Beach, CA '11>41 l'U~
Put.>tl•he<I Ora"~ C0.t•I Dally Piiot, Jan 21, 18, Feb 4, tl 1981 30'I 91
P U BLIC NOTICE
P U BLIC NOTI CE
Hu1111...-INcll, CA '1M7 y 17H > '42·5100 PARCEL I u ... , II ... '"°w" on In•
Pubt1shtdOranoe Goalt Daily P110• ~:~:.~";1~';..:,uv'; Pl dn frt••t n ·d lo in
~Feb, 4• ti. ll.~ __ ,_;_1 ~' S.ld pr~riv "<ommonly r•l•,.•d FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
PUBLIC NOTICE to •s • tondoml,.1um unot loc;ated •I NAME STATEMENT
1'H M<'adow Brook Slr••I Co\I• Th<' •otlOwt"9 ""'"°" " ao1n9 bust
Mf\tt, C•lltorrn• n•'" ·~
cea.s ed, Y.Ou mus t file your STATEMEH;Fo~s~·~:DONMENT
c laim with the court or I l'ICTtT1ous BUSINESS NAME
p r esent it to the personal THE FOLLOWING P ERSONS
t t . • H.llVE AB.llNOONEO l HE USE OF
Qh .. Fovn1a1n Vall•y t A '>'1108
D•rl~rw H1ida Aw•nt1n tse.t qn~tt
Fou"'••n V•lley C"' '11108
fn1) OU\1n~\ tS <onOu(:l•O O'f' 11n 1n
dtWtdu•I
Otlr•~~ t'1 Av•n t1n1
tn•1' )1a1"~' Wth ltlf'O ••t" t"f'
Coun1 .-C~r., oi Ora~ County on J•n
~, .. I
f h 1\ Ou\1n~s\ I\ conctuctpd by J
hu\CJa"o and w1f P
J<lmt~ M Ho1towov
f1"11\ \tatenwnt was flf~ w1tn 1n~
County c i..r' on J•" IJ 1'181 FIUOS PyDfo\...., Or.tr>ge Cot\I D•lly Pilot CONSOLIDATED
REPORT OF CONDITION
Tllo\ \<)I<'" \U01t< I to curr<"'1 '"'"'· K Y l E R E S E A R C H cov•"•nto;. cond1t1on•, rttlro<l'°"I r.-LABORATOR IES 2'tl71 Vt• S•n
..,.rvat1oni. right\, riont~ 01 w•., lt~U• Clement•. M 1\5M>n V1~10. Ca 9'2b<n
represen a 1ve ~ppointed THE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS ....... £
by the court w 1thtn four HUNTINGTON BEACH LEG"'L
months from the date o f "-'"'' 1•••7 a.. .. 11 Bl-er !.u·•~ 202
fir s t _issuance of letters as H~~'~"}'~.~~~~8~~.~~~' Nam• , ..
provided In Section 700 of !erred to •tiove ..... , lllf'd ... Ora"9<'
FISmt Jt " " 11. 78, F~ •.I'll 10S-ll
C onsolidate d R e port o f C ondition of "COMMERCE
BANK" of N ewp o rt Beach , Orange Count y , afld
Domest ic S ubs idia r ies a t the close of business on Dec-meb e r 31, f980-. ,
A SSETS
State Bank No. 121'
Dollar Amounts
in Thou~nds
cash and due from b anks ••.•.••.........•..... 14,768
U .S . Tteas ury securities .......••....••••••• , •.•. , 317
O b ligations of other U .S. Government
agencies and corporations ......•..••.••..•..... 800
Federal funds sold and s ecurities
purc hased under agreements
to resell in domestic offices ....••.•.•........ 3,620
3 . Loans, Tot al (excluding
unearned Income) .................... 17.521
b . Less: Reserve for
possible loan losses ....•••••.•.....••...••••... 145
c. Loans, net ••••.••.•.•••.•.••..••..•.•.•••••• 17,376
Ba'n k premises, F .F . & E ., etc ••.•..•.•••••••.••.•. 389
O ther a sset s •.••...•..••••••••••.••••...•..•••.••• 323
TOTAL A SSETS .•...• ,, ........................ 37,593
LIABILITIES
Demand depos its of individuals
partnersh ips, and corporations ....•••.••••.. 17,539
T ime and savings deposits of individuals ,
partnersh ips and corporations ••.••••••.....•• 15,710
Deposits of U n ited States Government •••••• , ••.•••• 48
De posits of States and
political subdivisions ............................ 200
C ertified and officers' c h eck s •••.•.....••••••. , ••.• 497
a . TOTAL D EPOSITS IN
DOMESTIC OFFICES .·: .••••..•.•.• 33,994
( 1) T otal demand deposits •••..•.•••. 18 ()8.4
(2) Total time and '
s avings deposits ..................... 15,910
b. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
AND FOREIGN OFFICES .................. 33,994
Other liabllltles .................................. 511
TOTAL LIABILITIES .......................... 34,505
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Preferred st ock
N o . s hares oots tandlng None
Common stock
a . No. sh ares authorized 500,000 q .• ~ .... shares ootstanding 275,000 2,895
TOTAL C ONTRlBUTED CAPITAL. ...•.•••••••• 2,895
1 Retained Earning ••.•••••••••••••.•••••••...••••• 193
TOTALSHAREHOLOERS E QUITY .••••••••••• 3,088
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO
SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY •••••••••....••••• 37,593
MEMORANDA
a . T ime certific ates of deposit in
denominations Of $100,000 or more ......•.•. 11,938
Market value of •
Investment securities •••••••••••••••••••••••.•• 1,063
The unders igned, Samantha 0 . Ketchum, Senior
Vice President and George R . OChsner, Executive
V ic e President of the above-named bank, each
dec lares, for himself alone and not for the other: I
have personal knowledge of the matters contained In
this report (lncludtno the reverse side hereof), and I betleve that Heh statement In Mid report Is true.
Each Of tM undtrsigned, for himself alone and not for
tlM OChtr, certlflH under peNlty of perjury that tht
foregoing 11 true a nd correct.
Executed on Jen'-'ary 29, 1981, at Ne wport Be.ch,
Cellfotnla.
/s /Samantha D. Ketchum,
Senior Vic• President & CaShler /s/c;.oro. R. OChSner,
Executlv• Vice Presld9nt .......... °'~ CMtt Dell•"'* .. ..._y .....
P"'o"'hfiO Ora,... Co.st O•••Y P.to1
men•~ ...,0 tx1st1nQ ttf"l<umbrancf!'!t o J am•s C. Kyle1 1•37~ Vta Sttn Ja" 11 FtD • II 18 1'81 •"6 81
record Clement•. Mlulon Vie to, Ca. '2697 ar!h~ term\ ttno cOf'd•t•ons. of \at'\ di!l~i~8~11~\\ 1, conductcro bv an in· th e Probate Code of Countron1110.ao.
California. The t ime for Jot>,, P RM>ollo. inc • C•lllorn•o P U BLIC NOTICE
C••" '" t.awtul mono 01 tht! Un•t•~ J amtsC Kr•• St•le\ o4 Anwnca or l)arl t ttsh an HU\ st•t~t ~iii\ tlff'd with in.t filing c laims will not ex-~~~~\~1a':~!.~~~: :;;:, Su11" --------
p l re prior to four months Th·•~ ........... Conduc:led DY ·1 FICTITIOUS8USIHE5S oart cre<l•I. 111e 1 .. ,,,. DI \Utt> credot t County Clerk of Or-County on J•n
I.le t ccept.01\' to Ill<' 11uara1..,. ..,.o td 19, 1'191
NAME STATEMENT f r om the d ate Of the hear· <oroor•t-. Th.-1o11ow1nq ,,.,..,,, ,, oo•nci 1>vs1
ing n oticed above. Th" •1atement w•s "1"" ,.,," 111e ness 0 •mount bid to •ccom11<1nr Ille olte Publl\he<I Or..,.ge COHI Dally Piiot.
•M the b•lence to o. pala on (on Jan 11, 28, F•b 4, II, 1981 lS'l·ll
the Court Ftvt perce"t U'l of t~ l'IUt» •YOU MAY EXAMI Cwnty CltrkotOr-Counfy on J en OS.ti DC HE DEVE LOPM ENT,
. NE l2, l98I M l T C HELL & OSADCHE "'S
tlrm•tlon ol \61t DV '"-Court the file kept by the court. JollnP Rapotto,lnc !.OCIATE!>, M & 0 tONSTRUCTION If vou are interested in the JOlln P R"01110 P•tt•ld~~~11., co . s.1 s.... N1eo1.s or.v• s..110 t06, Bids or ollt!'I• are 1nv1tt!d lor 11>1 P U BLIC NOTICE Ptoperty •nd mut• be 1n wrlUnQ •
t1tlll be rec•lved •I lh• o U ICf' o estate, you may file a re-Publl•,,.., Or•n90 t CMst O••lr Puo1 N~::::'.:. ~~<;::.~ w B••t>oa qu~st with.the co.urt to re · 11n u.11 n .F.o 4 1'-1 210.at Btvd ,P O eo~u1 B••1>oa.CA01w.1 Tt.omu W Hllftdtrson Jr 41lornh' l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS
for ttw gu<trdtM't, et ))0 E 171" Stru t) NAME STATEMENT
!Wile 111, Cost• Mtsa, Calltornl• o~ fh<! lotlowl"ll person I\ do1n9 bu\I
m•y De llled wilt> 1114' Cler~ ot thd ,. • ._a•
ce1ve special notice of the I rn., Du""PU .. '°""uc1eo Dr .,.,,.
inventory of estate a sset s P U BLIC NOTICE •1v•du•1
a nd of the petitions. a c. Th•• ~~ °..':,«,~ .. ,,,, th• Supertor Court or dtll•er..i to 111 t OSTEl LO INDUSTRIES. ?0102
eu•rdl•" r>ersonall•, at 1ny lln'M! •f te Birch St. Santa""•· CA '>'1101
""' pu1>11u11on of tho~ not•o .,. Wltll•m l C0>te110, 10101 Birch St
C 0 U n t S a n d r e p 0 r t S l'ICTITIOUS IUSIMESS County Cler~ ot Or&ft91' County on J•"
d escr ibed in Sect ion 1200 NAM£ STATEMENT 1•. "" Defore m<ll<o"9 I~ \lie s.n .. Ana,, ... 97701
For further 1n torm•t1on a na b • TM\ tMIS'nHs I\ conducted bY an 1n of the California Probate .. ~::,10"°"'1"CI ""rson " doing Du.i PuDll•hrd Or•"OI' coast oa11~1!::/..'
Cod e . SARA'S ooos ' 'Nos. 01 nnd J•" 11 FC'D 4 11. 11. 1'81 4~_.1 form,, ~., •• .,,. Otl•Cf' Of tne •• dl1tldU•I
1orney tor the ou.raoan Tne • '9hl , Wlll••m L CO\tello
r•wrvttd toretett Any •nd all b10i Tht\ i1ate,,,.,.t w•\ fltfld with I.he
John C. Penney •1'Ht. N•-1 B~•" CA 97'63
Penney & Penney ;1s·;~'i.,~::;;1i::c'~·c'.:~.631•111 P U BLIC NOTICE DATED Jan.,.rylO, t'8t County Clerl<ofOr-Countyo,.Jan
JOIWI Da••a OouQIHs. 1,, ttll Attorney at Law ThlS bu\i""" Is conducltd Dy en In· l'ICTITIOUS auStNl!SS
NAME STATEMENT Guardian l'ISHSJ
Publl•hed Or•nllf' CO•st D11lly Piiot,
3471 V ia L ido, Suite 203 a1v1oua1
N ewport Beach, CA 92663 TlllS ~~:::!.l!~~·llled with .,,. Ll .. P OLD, HE NDERSON •n
OIHSMOOa
THOMAS W. HEMDEllSOM, J ll.
Ht l!Hl 17'11 Strwt, SVllO 111
et.I•~ cal!Wftl• OU7
J•n 21 . 78, FeD. •. 11, 1981 360-11 673·7210 countv ci.rk of O•MIJ" County on J•n
f h' follow;nq 04tr \Ont. tHP dOtnQ
bu"nf)\ •~
SIC.N ET MARICIN (i DEVICES 3111
Red Hiii """ Ca.I• Mow. CA 92•2•
W•YM 0 Andr~ws Pr•SIOf'nt,, a
C•U•orn•• cor-oorahon. 3111 RH H•tl
A~e CO\la Mew. CA t1•:1t
Tel ...... (714) _,,,.
P U BLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIU SS--
HAME STATEMENT
1'15.JU. Publis hed Orange Coa s t '· ""
Daily Pilot, Jan. 28, 29, PuDll~...., Or-Coast D•••Y Po tot
Aft-ystw~lllelltf''
Publlsl>ecl 0r'""99 CN \I Oaoly Pllol,
Ftbru•rv J, 4, 10, 1911 613-81
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiit tollow•r>ci per'°" IS doing bu51·
neu ••
Feb. 4, 1981 466-81
PUBLIC NOTICE
ARJO HOSPITAL EQUIPMENT, INC , 3001 Red Hiii "'ve., Esottnede M·7UM
IV, Suite 141, Cost• Mtsa, CA '161•. NOTICE 01' SAL.I!
M·7Ull Mtrsll•ll G"'"" HU90, 4-Con t•nd 01' "EAL ... CWE•TY MOTICI O'° SAL.£ Or , Corontdel Mar. CAt7US. AT ... IVATI! SALE
0,. ••AL .. ltO .. E•TY This bu~INU •• c-.ctea by •n .... .. •• AllMJZ
'AT "'llYATI! SALE dhrldutl. '" tti. S<lpericw CO<lrt of tlw Sl•le of
-AIU7.e M<orwtl G H"9Q CelllorlM•, tor the c-1y of <>renve.
'"Iha S<lperlor CO<lrl ot lht Stale of Thl5 slal<'ment w•s llted wlln Ille tn lht M•tler ot Ille EU•le of C•tlfornl•, I« Ult County of Or.,,te. County Clerk ot Ort,.._ County o" Jan, Frederic-J. Ferrin ell• F. J. Ferrin,
tn the MMtor ot Ille Estate ot SAN· 26, 1 .. 1. l'reclerlc-J. Ferrin, 0.CUM<f,
TOS MENDOZA SALINAS au SAN· i 1'1$457J Nolltt "hetebV OI-' lh•I IN 11n
TOS M. SALINAS, 0.CHMd Pubtl 0.11n9t C:0.\1 Deily Pilot clerslgnecl will sell •I Private w ... to Holk• 11 '-'"" elven lt>al the un. Jfll. 21, • 4, II, ta, 1t11 43t-ti lht Mei.st -best bldc99r, 111111«1 to
c:ters19-wlll Mii •l Prlvete Wit, tol -------conllrmatlon of Hid S.-.1« C-1.
ti. 11'9flesl -ll9ft bidder. w b1tcl tti PUBLIC NOTICE °" or •ft.,. Ille 11111 <Ny Of F...._,Y, <onllrmet.., of Hid ~10< Court., '"'· •I Ille office of 8rlon G. S.ylln, on or elt.,. lht 17111 <Ny ot Fet>ru•ry,1 Atlorney •1 uw, 14140 a..ch BIVCI.,
Itel, et Ille Offkt Of Brl•n G. Saylln, "'CTITIOUS I USINIH Suitt 102, Westmlnst.,.,ftttJ, Couflly
AllorMy M Uw. 14140 Beec:ll Blvd. MAMll STATIMl!MT ol OrenQt, Stele of Cetllornl•. •II It'll
51111• 102, 'Mt$1"'tnster. t2"3, Cou,.ly The loll-1"9 pen on Is delnci buSI· rl911t, tllte encl lnltt'.,I of .. Id •·
of Ot•ftlllt. Slee• of Callloml•, •II I MU H . ctHtd •I Ille "-of .... II -•II the rltlll, Ill .. -1111 ... •SI Of seld de· AUIV PAI.ACE, IUJO 9eech Blvd .• rlQlll. title 9"d Int_. 11\et tM m.te
<HMd .. flt time Of clMtll •ncl ell I Hwntl"f'OR llffc;h, CA "'41. ot .. Id dtCHstd llet ecq11lred ••
rltflt '"'• 9"d lnt-1lllel1,,_ Hl•I H-11-VllflQ HSU, 201 Venkt, •>, -r•tlOfl of I-or tMMFWIM ~
Of .. Id___,, et Ille Omo Of death Hunll"Qlon8each,CAt2.-. IMll « lfl edtlitlon .. 119' ef N ld dt-
ln encl to •II IM cert•ln rt•t pr09tfl Tiiis tiuslneH 11 condll<tect by.,. In-, .. ,.., 414 Ille lime .,....,., lfl eM lo
Ill e«lllltfl lo 1"'4 of .. Id dte .. Md, • dlvldu•I. •II tllt <eNlft r•l ,.,...,,y 111 ... IM In
Ille lime Of-II, In -to all uw ctr• H-"''l'unv Hsu Ill• Co11"'y of Or•ntt, Stet• of t•ln r .. I PF'Oll9f'IY lllUlll.0 In Ille Cit Tllll stettmefll w•J flied wllll Ille C•lllo1nl•, •lkul.rty tlHCrltllHI H
el Slet1IOll. c:-itY of Or.,..e, Slllte CO\lftly Cieri! of 0.-O>unly o" Jl>ft. loll-I, t•wO: C.lllorllla. '*11Cutarty detcrltled a 1t, 1w1. Lot 76 of Traci Ho. «11$, 111 Ult tetteoin • ....,....: . ,.,,,.... C-tr of Or._. Stete of c.tNomle,
Lot am Of Trect U•l es per m Pwl>llllWCI 0r.,... eo.n Detty Piiot, •• per mttp rec•.,. 111 loM U1,
re<..-cl lfl _. !O, "991 1t -10 Jef\, 21, 11. Feb. 4. 11 IWI UJ..111 !MlfeS H, );) 'Od l4 of Mltc•l'-1
Mltc .. 1-Mltett In tM of'lk • ot t Meps , In tile ofll<• et Ille eovn1y
ltecor•r of Nlid Collll«y. • mert com PUBLIC NOTICE Recor-Of ..i. ,_..,, • ,.,.... -mont\' k"ow11 ••l JUI Se nt• mo11 ly k-": 4'al M<Cerll'llKk o.rtrlldK, 14..,., C.lltornl•. Lane. Pl«Olllle, C•tllwnl•. Terlllt of .... tU11 In 1 ... 1111 -V "ICTITIOUI IUllN•ll T.,.ml tf .... utll In 1 ... 111 ITIOflty
.. '"' V""9d M-°" conflr111etlOll of NAMll ll'ATeMeHT of .,,. Ullhed ..... Oii <tllfl ........... .. ..... or °" Mfl te<IM es.,. • ..,_ l 11e tel-Int""°" I• dol"CI t.>vtl· ..... or•-"....,.. .. -•-·
..... IN ,.._ .. u .... Ten "' COlll MH .. ! Me .. , .. ,__i.c1 .... Tell,., <•flt ofe1M11111U1t1i.•-.-11Hwitlltlld. CUSTOM. P00t. SE"lllCE, 2090 •h--aidle ... ....,_wfUIW
.... or ............ Ill -· .... Ml4I IC ... -. C-_. M.tr, Gel......,e .... ., ...... te .. 111 -llln9 ... will " Neel ........ ...,_ ... llfflt• .,.,, •Ill" , ................ efflo et llftY lllN ...... Ille flrtl pullllc .. Nn Ardell 9. Flem-, J0DD IU w-. et •fly lft ..... IM rlnll ..... lc.MMlll Mffff .,....,..Nie ot 11lt. CeroMtltlliler,Cellf«le~ ,..,.., .,....,. ... ,., .... .
Oetff1hlltar.s*vot J-.. 1"1, Tlllt ~t It <eMltoc'"' llf •n 111• O•IHWtnnt*Ytf ,_.,, ttt1.
MAltlA L. SM.I NAS dlvlfw•I. JelWI "-'ti ~lft
:::.-::::-...... Tlltt .::::: :..-::. wlttl ._ ~~II
.,._ ........ ..,_,. M Law, c-11 Cltf'I ti Of•flte CMll'ttf Ml .,_ ................ 11 t..w1
.. , ............ ,, ..... "'· J-ry "· "'1. -..................... 111, ... .CA-r1 ..... •• • ,CA-. ,_.....~ Ctiet1 O.Hy Pilll. ~l .... Clf ... C.... Delly~..... ~Or-. c.. o.t1y ""9t. M , •· S, fl,"" .... , Jet1. II,•• .... 4, ti, Hll ..,.., ,._., 4• '•fl, "9' "'"'
J•n 14, 11 21, Fol> .... 1'81 lSI II
P U BLIC NOTICE
N-1»61
NOTICE 01' SALE~ 01' llEAL ll'RO .. llR Y
ATntYATEHL
.... A·1•7-
'" the S.-rlor Cour1 Of .... St•I• of C•ll lorn•e, lor the CO<lnly of Oranve.
In lhe Malter ot Ille Estele ot
WVNOLA CAROLYN MACOONALD,
•l•o -..awn as WVNOLA c MAC·
OONALO, ••so ~r>awn u WINNIE
MACOONALO, OeG .. Md.
Thi\ ousuwu h· conctu<tfd bo; • (Of• Por•••on S IG NE'f M llRICI N G
DEVICES
Way"9 D Anclrtw\
Proslelent
Thi' state""""' was filed w ith lhtt Cou~h C"''~ of Orangr Countv on Jtfl 1•. 19'1 1'1MS7J
Publl•Ncl Or•no-c0.11 Delly Piiot, Jtn 2'. FeD •. 11, ti, 1'111 "'·81
P U BLIC NOTIC F; Nolk • IS hereby olven ,,,., Ille .....
dertlt Md will sett •t Prlv•lt ~le to 11\t 111 ..... 1..c:t l>esf blddtr. subject lo l'ICTITIOUS I USIMl!H
COr>llN'llellofl of Hid SuperlO< coun, MAME5TATl!Ml!MT
Of\ or •lier tilt tl1h dey Of Ftbr11.1ry T tw fofl-1"9 pertoft Is CIOl"o bull·
19'1 •• the Office Ol llOBERT w LIT· neuH TLE. A u w Corpoutton, 610 Newoon IM PLEMENTED OESIGN. 1"651
Center Orlve, Suite S70, Newport EverorHI\ Clrcle. Fount•ln V•lley, CA
Beacn, cn..e, County of or.,..., Stete' n 1t11.
olC•llloml•.•tllllerlont,lllleet1d l"· "obert Broc-ett, Jr . •UH
l•rtSIS Of w ld iac.·-., IM llm• 01 Ev•rci.-Clrclt, F-•·'" Vt ll•V. CA
dHth •tld •II Ille rltl\I, tllle ond In-977'1. l•••st , .... ,,. •stet• of Mid dlKeasect Tllh llusl-IS c-ltd bY ... 11'1·
lies •cqwlrect by oper•llOll of l•w or dlvldv•I.
0111erwl1t Olht' llltfl or In edcllllon lo Robert B-11.•11. Jr
••Id 0.CHMCI, •I tile lime Of c:te•tll. In Tiiis Jl•temenl w•s fltfod wllh IM
enel to ttl Int ter1•1n rHI pr-r1• CO<.lntv Clerk Of Or .... CO<lnty 01'1 Jt11. sttu~led In Ille County ot Ortf!Qe, Sl•te IJ, 1tet
Of Catllornl•, ptrtlcul•rly delCrlti.d.. l'UHH lollfWS, t•Wll! Pw.il•-Or ..... C:0.11 Deity Piiot A MO"E CiOMMONL Y KNOWN J t n 14, 11, '9, Feb. 4, Itel io.-tl
11' "0" .__. ,,,__,., Lt911M
Hll!i,, CoeliloMla taS),
Terms of Mle cetll 1 .. tewfut _,, P U BLIC NOTICE
ol Iii. U"lted St .... on tllllflrrMllOfl tlf -----
'• '• • qr P••I cull •nd U l•nu .. ICTITIOUS•Ull•llS ••ld •ll<H • ., nol• HCll••d llY NAMliftAT•M•NT
Mortt ... • Tnnit o..d onll• ~aper. Tiie lotl6wlflt "'IOfls •rt oe111a ly to toltl, r.,."' C9flt of a-I Md ll<l•IMU eJ.
......... ._w1'91111t. GUNOY 1"0$. AUTO . 111 Gr..,O IMIS w ..._.. to M tn writint and e-t . ....., ,_., CallfoM!a tta62
wlll M~ ..... .w-'<leffke One A. GliMff .. 11, 111 Gt ....
.. •llY ti.....,_ l"9 ttl'llt ,._,l<•tlen c-1. 1.-..1.....,, C•'""""• '*1
llerMfandllefOf'a4INOf1.... Gery IC. GW\tlef-, 111 Or•llCI
OetN ttllt lllO "'Of l'ellrwtry, c.,..1,.....,1.llallO,CallfWl\le.a.t.2
l .. f, Tll\t MIMU 11 <et141KIN Iii' a
•o•••T *· LIYTI.•, A Lew ttMf•llM!Wf ... c.,,., ...... "' ...... rt c...... O..ll.0 ••11-°""· ..... -......... .._... CA T1llt .......... -..._ ....... ..... 11MI ...... L....., tw .... e-1, C-tf 0.,... c-itJ M
tlH•r, Tlt0MA9 l.LO•O MAC• _., "· "9t. DOllAl.O.
.... ._.Or-.. cw.a OeltJ """" .......... °'911 c..t .......... ......... ,,,,., ..... 911.2' .......... ,."" , ..
PUBL~C NOTIC~ I
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
Tne foll-lllQ iw"°" " do1nlf bu" ,..tH •S
SENNETT ENTEltPRtSES '44
C••n•llon Aff. Coste Me .... CA,,.,.
Don ... Wiiii•"'' ee ..... 11. , .. Ca""' I
llon "v• , Cost• Mew. CA '12Uo Tl'llS Du$1,.e\\ IS COl\dUCIOd Dy In ,,..
dlvlduel I Oof1N w. •'•nnett rn,, ~t•t91T'W'nt \vas flltd w1tn tn•
Cou,.ty Cieri< ol Ora>ge County o" JM
1• 1 .. 1 I 1'1MJ7•
PuDlo•he<I °'11,... Coast O•llr Pno1
Jen 11. Feb •. 11. U "" .OWi
P U BLIC 1'0TI CE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIMESS
MAMI STA' EMEMT f llt lollowir>Q penon IS doing l>Ulo·
nes' ., 1 PRO ELECTRIC, 40J 19111 Str-,1.
Ntwoort Beath, Callfornl• •Ml
O•vld E Zemor•, A03 tttn Str-1,
Nt wPOrl Beach, C•lltornla Utoa3 l fhl> blnl""n is conducted DY 8n n
dlVldu•I
O.vld E Zamore
Thi> •Ute,_,1 w•• filed wltn~ County Clerk ot Drane-Cou,.ly
Jenut ry tt. 1'81 F1 5 Publl\N!d OrMIQe 'cNsl oettv Pl 1.
Jen 11, 78, F~D. 4, II. IWI 32Q;t1
PUBLIC NOTICE T
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS ' ' MAME STATl!QMT I
T tw lollowl"I! person 11 clo1nci ~I·
neHal
A·TYVOlt LOAN INVESTMEtfT
COMPANY, 119 VI• Lido Souc1:
Newoort Beec:tl, CA ttt6J, •
R•rmond o. v1nc ... 11, tit "'• L~ Soud, N--1 Bffdl, CA n...i
This business Is C-led by •n r· dlvldu•I
A•ymonctO. Vlnc..,11 t Tiii• 11•1..-.! WM llled •1111
Cwnly Cler~ ol Or-County on J •
1t. l .. I , I ,.,,..,
Publls/\ed Ora,,.. Coes1 0..lly !'..'..'1!:
J•" JI, "eo. 4, 11, 11, IWI ~
P U BLIC NOTICE J
"" .. l'ICTIT1ouaaut1N111 MAMIESTATeMSNT
Tiit lollowlnci PfrtOl\t •rt df.O o DuSIMU al, 8 & H AIR SERVICE$, , ..
Street, S..lle 210, '"-'I lellich, A
fl6tO
Hewco Con•tr'ucllon COl'llN"'l'j • c.i11~ ~.,,,., .. 1o11.
TllOmu J . ltfreO , Jr , fflC, •
C•tllornl• tror"r•t..,_, IMO ~ S1r"1, toltlte tlO • ........,. 9M<ll. t?MO.
Tiii• llllSIMU Is t~I .. b a
.. 11efat ~ n.-J ... f«l. .,,, • lrlt,.
ri-,,.9¥~11.Jr. ............ ll'WI E • .._.
Tiii~ ~ -..... wfttl ·~yC--CtilOr ... C-..fe!IJ '
Jl, ... I. • ....... ~ .. ; ......... .. ,L,....,_._.._ • u.-......c:a ...
./
I
-
\
U D lll'N -Joe Oirtmallte ol Atherton ..._ taill p&ate. Qlrimaate mean.a "round
tbe maullltaln'' In Italian.
·--.., -....._ .. .,._ P.• "...._.IM_, .,,iu f'ann. .. ,_ .. -. ltJlt •Ill.., ti ,,. ' w .. ·, WN of '9r-llt•4 t alitl>t-ll(-.... _ .•
PUBUC NOTICE
Pictmous ausu•us ...,...STAT• ..... t
flle 1.U-11141 -IOfl~ •rt dOl1'1 htlMu•· A0VAN C8 0 ENfRGV
IUlSOllfllC(,, •» Pros..-cl '""'· lffwoort 8"Ch, C:.llfOf'ftl• t2"11. Pl.,.,_. El\ef9Y 1-tmtnll, I llC .,
Pl18UC NOTICE Pl18UC NOTICE
• C•ll~ ~911oft, 4tt Pr-I a.::;;~:!!:=::====:-=========:i~•t. Newport loacll, C•lllornl• · PVBU C NOTICE ...... ~··•«"•• .,_,,. \'•f Irr• CONSOLIDATED Tiii• IW~IMU ,, condwctocl Oy •
llrnlloG Pl~lNP llNOCo &..Pl.ANTI PC.-d £nar01 lftYtSl,.....,J,
E I~ REPORT OP CONDITION
Consoli dated Report of Condition of
"INTERNATIONAL CENTRAL BANK & TRUST
CORPORATION" of El Toro, Orange County, and
Domestic Subsidiaries at the close of business on
December 31, 1980.
ROBERT EDWARD ALIC P. LaPLANTE, 1111i..i.1..,,1uPrn1c1e11t ARNOLD. passed away on resident of Costa Mesa, n 1s ,, ... .,....,,. wa. rnec1 "'"" .,,. February 3, 1981, A Ca . Passed away on County cie,,. o10r.,,.. Coun1yon J.,.,
member of the Costa Mesa February 1, 1981. Survived "· "" ,.,UtM
Police Department for 19 by .2 sons Donald W. "....., • .....,. years-the last 3 years he LaPlante of Santa Ana, ...,,, 111r was on detached duty to Ca . and Leona rd c . •P•ll111trae11.A•
t h e I r v I n e P o I I c e L a P I a n t e of N o r t h :.--..::,-.._.,..._,
State S.nk. No. 1237
Oolt•r Amounts
In Thouwnds
Department, he wa s C arolina, a daughter w..• ASSETS named officer of the year Diane Goodall of San Jose, .......,.._., Cash and due from banks ........................ 2,838
by t he Irvine Police ca., 3 brothprs and 7 ~ U .S. Treasurysecuritles ........................ Sl ,~
Department In 1972. He s i s t e r s , a 1 s 0 2 ........,., .. acll, C•11••r11I• Obligations of other U.S. Government
was a resident of Costa g f'andchi ldren and 5 Pwbi=Or-COAllOellyPllOI. agencies and corporations .................... 1,989
Mesa, Ca. f rom 1935 to gr ~~t-gr~ndchildren . J•n.21.?t,Fe1>.•.ll,tt" . ObligationsofStates 1977 at which time Mr. Services were held on uw1 and polltlca11subdlvlslons .................... 16,367
A. r no 1 d mo v e d t o Wednesday, February 4, Federal funds sold and securities w i I do mar-R iverside 1981 at 10:00AM at the pure~ undet' egreements
County to make the family Harbor Lawn Memorial PUBLIC NOTICE to resell In domestic offices .................. 10,400
home. Unit or med Chapel with Chapl ain Bank premllft, F.F. & E., etc ..................... 20
members of the Costa Fred Sc hroeder '~~~!:~::::• Other assets .................................... 1,799
Mesa Department will act officiating. Interment was r ... fo11-ine s-r"'" 11 c1o1no """· TOTAL ASSETS.······.· .•.... ·•.· ............. 84,417
as honorary pallbearers at at Harbor Lawn Memorial neu es LIABILITIES the services which will be Park. In lieu of flowers HEAR1Na HEALTH·C•RE Demand deposits of individuals,
held on Friday, February donations may be made to ~:1~~:~!~1:::'2 emwOO<I, •rvine, partnerships, and corporations ................ 6,950
6, 1981 at 11 :30A.M. at the Muscular Dystrophy Sondr• a. sorkowllr. ou Time and savings deposits of individuals,
Harbor Lawn M emor ial Foundation c/o Jerry eeuwooc:1.1rv1ne.ce111""n1• n m partnerships, and corporations .............. 66,985
Chapel. Officiating will be Lewis. Services under the d,J,~1~.~--s )HoMU<iec1 br •"in· a. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN
a nephew of M r. Arnold, direction of Harbor Sondr•Sorkowlt• DOMESTIC OFFICES .............. 73,935
The Rev . Benjamin La wn -Moun t Ol i ve Thl\llat-•••,rnec1w111\1ne (t)Totaldemanddeposits ............ 6,950
Madison, pastor Of the Mortuary of Costa Mesa. Counly ci.rk of Of•n9t Co...nly on (2). Total time and
Fu I I Gospe I Chur c h , S40·SSS4. Fell. 2• 1"1· ,..,54"1 savings deposits .................... 66,985
Quincy, Ca. He Is survived ST48LER Pu1111s11ec10r..,Ge coas1 O•llY Piiot. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
by his wife Irene Arnold of ROBERT L. STABLER, Feb'· 11· 1l,7S, l'lt1 m .ei AND FOREIGN OFFICES .................. 73,935
Wildomar, Ca. 2 daughters resident of Balboa, Ca. Other liabilities ...............................• 1,748
P a t M o r r i s o n o f Passed away on February ------------TOT AL LIABI L I Tl ES .......................... 75,683
Wildomar, Ca., Judy 2, 1981. Survived by his PUBLIC NOTICE SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Ehrlich of Costa Mesa, wife Marie, daughters Common stock
Ca., a son Robert Arnold Mrs. Valarie Clark and '~~:!:~!':::s a. No. shares authorized 10,000
of W ildomar, Ca., h i s Mrs. Jane Owen and 7 TRENT ANO KAR•rsu. LTD.. b. No. shares outstanding 10,000 1,200,000
mother Mrs. Edna Arnold grandchildren. Private 24 11 Neille Gell Roecl. Legune Hlll1, Surplus ................................. 6,060,000 of Sant a Ana, Ca., 2 burial at sea. cauiorn1a926SJ. Retainedearningsandother
b th H Id d J k Robert e Wlleelu IM•n•glng it I 7 260 rO erS arO an aC 0. Gener.ti Partner of Trent, l.lcl., a Cap a reserves ...... , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,
Arnold, both of Costa ouglas C•t1forni•.9tnera1partners111p1,2<1t11 TOTALCONTRIBUTEDCAPITAL. ............. 7,260 Mes a, Ca., 3 sisters Nelllo Gell Rou , Laguna Hiii\, Retained earnings .............................. 1,474
Margaret Walker Of C•111J0;':!,•.':~~: aroke IGenera t TOTAL SHAREHOLDERSEQUITY ............ 8,734 Escondido, Ca., Virginia • P•rtner o1 Tren1. Ud .. a c.111ornl• TOTALLIABILITIESAND
Overton of Huntington services <JeM••l-1norWPl.USJ1 &rOkon au SHAREHOLDERS EQUI TY .................. 84,417 Beach, Ca., and Doris Lene, LeounaH111s,ca11tornla9»SJ. MEMORANDA
t of Mi · v · j Hlclto Karalw, M.O., TrwllM o1 Wilmon ss1on 1e o, h ,,,. Amlio. Anes1r.os1a Mec11ca1 Group, Market value of
Ca. Interment will follow 8C edul d In(., Monty P\lr<l>aM Plan F~ T... I e t t sec Tes 67 620 at Wildomar Cemetery in e a-flt ol Hi-K•rmu, MOO., .... nv s men Uri I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I
1 C t ,,..,.,.1 11oac1. ~ eeech, C•lllocnla The undersigned, Jack L. Tauter, President and RI v er s de o u n Y · LOS ANGELES (AP) 90lu. Daniel J . Fedrick, E.V.P. of the above-named bank, Se r v i c es under t he Tiiis 1M11lnou is conc1utled 111 • h ,. __ I f hi s If al a d not f-the other
direct'·on of Harbor -M emorialservicesfor eac ....... ares, or me one n .... : Qener•1119-st1ip. 1 have personal knowledge of the matters contained in
Lawn · Mount 0 Ii v e a er os P 8 c e Pi 0 n ee r ~'::rt ~0"wt-,., this report (including the reverse side hereof), and I
Mortuary of Costa Mesa, Donald W. Douglas will MeNolno<>-•• P•r1nor believe that each statement in said report Is t rue.
540-55.>4. be held Tuesday at 11 co:~~' '~i:'::~: ~~!,,!:!°':;.;::~~Y •: Each ot the undersigned, for himself alone and not for a .m . in All Saints F•t1.2,1t11. the other, certifies under penalty of perjury that the
LEW ICSOCEKD WARD Episcopal Chur ch in ,.,._ foregoing is true and correct.
B I Hill f ·1 Published Orange counly O•ily E t d J 30 1981 t El T COCK, resi d e n t of every . s, a am1y Plloi,Fet..•,11,11,15,1,.1 ,31 .. 1 xecu e on anuary , , a oro,
Newport Beach, ca. He spokesman says. California.
was a native Californian. Douglas, 88, died Sun-
H e passed away on day in Palm Springs
January 31, 1981. Survived after several year s of
by his wife Dona, daughter . declining health.
/s/J6ck L. Tauter,
President
Donna Keberle of Costa He was the founder of
Mesa, Ca., sons John R. Douglas Aircraft Co.
Cock of Silverton, Oregon and honorary boar d and Don Edward Cock of . Santa Ana, ca., sister chairman for the suc-
Margaret L . Morris ot c e ssor M c Donnell
Brookings, Oregon. Mr. Q_ouglas Corp.
Cock was active in Boy ~Y requested
Scouts. He belonged to the that memorial donations
Knights of Pythias. He be made to the Donald
was recen~ly retlr~d from Douglas Museum and
the Un1vers1ty o f ·b · s t Californ ia at Irv i ne Lt .rary i n a n a
PUBLIC NOTICE
N-72599
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
JOHN DAVIS StMS, AKA
JOHN SIMS, AKA J.D.
SIMS, AKA ..JACK SIMS
AND OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A·1074t1.
To all heirs,
beneficiaries, creditors
and contingent creditors of
JOHN DAVIS SIMS, aka
JOHN SIMS, aka J .D.
/S/Danlel J . Fedrick,
Executive Vice President P110ll•hod <>reno-CoeJI Oelly Pllol F•bNarY '· ltll . ~~~~~~~~~~·
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
CONSOLtDATED
REPORT OF CONDITION
Consolidated Report of Condition of "SOUTH COAST
BANK" of Costa Mesa, Orange County, and Domestic
Subsidiaries at the close of business on December 31 ,
1980.
SI MS, aka JACK SIMS and ASSETS
State 8aM No. 1"9
Dollar A""*"b
in Thouwnds
where he was supervisor .M~nica.
of pest control. Services!' •
persons who may be ,., otherwise interested in the Cash and due from banks ........................ 3,739 willand/orestate: U .S. Treasury sec urit ies .......................... 402 Wi ll be held on Thursday, DeatL-F e b ruary 5, 1981 at IUf
lO:OOAM at Christ Church
A petition has been filed Obligations of other U.S. Gov't .
by SECURITY PACIFIC agenciesandcorporations .................... 1,550
By the Sea, Newport NATIONAL BANK, A ObligationsofStates
Corporation in the superior and Political subdivisions ...................... 1,976 Beach, ca. In lieu of Elso.•'lhern t Io we r s the f'a m i I y l · ~IN, • ~Court of Orange County re· Federal funds sold and securiti ...
CANOGA PARK (AP) questing that SECURITY purchased under agreements requests donations be
made to the Boys Scouts of
America or the American
Heart Fund. There will be
cremation with burial at
sea.
p Ac 1 F 1 c NAT 1 o NA L to resell in domestic otflces ....•............... 6,400 -Herbert L. Robinson, BANK, A Corporation be a. Loans, Total (excluding
59 , g e n e r al sa l e s appointed as per sonal unearnedincome) .................. 24,156
manager for Avco Em-representative to ad· b. Less: Reserve for
bassy Pictures Corp .. mini ster the estate of possible loan losses ................... 179
died Wednesday. Jo H N o Av 1 s s 1 Ms, c. Loans, net ................................ 23,977 -----------;;;::;::;::;::::;::;:::;;:::;;;;:;;::~ Irvine, ca. (under the In· Bank premises, F.F. & E., etc ................... 2,764
dependent Administration Other assets ...................................... 636
PIHCI lllOTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAIY
627 Main St Huntington Beach
536-6539
,_FAMILY
COU)MAL FUMllAL
HOMI
' Neatme Society CllalllAT&i 9UlllA&. AT NA
646-7431 , ••• e-1 -~ ........ ,.w e••lwl•lf-•-• _, • _.._ ........ _
c.1 ... -...-,..... c-..ew.
of Estates Act). The peti· TOTAL ASSETS ................................ 41 ,444
tion Is set for hearing in LIABILITIES Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive west, Santa Demand deposits of individuals,
Ana, CA 92701 on February partnerships, and corporations .............. 10,527
25, 1981 at9:30A:M . Time and savings deposits of individuals,
1 F YOU OBJECT to the partnerships and corporations .....•....•..... 23, 163
----------: ,gr anting of the petition, you Deposits of United States Government. ............. 25
should either appear at the Deposits of States and
hearing and state your ob· political subdivisions .......................... 2, 150
•
D
A
I
'Wedi ... ,..., 4, 1•1
lite ....................... 0.-.. c...
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFtED ADS
Y0tt C. lel tt, l'lnd tt, (W•l8TIJ OM Cell..._
TrMI • .... I ..... Ad l'UI C.-/t#re••
••••Ill IOOZ ••••• lllJ?' ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
, .... , .. tWM:
AU real -..e advertlMd IDW......,.perll•ub-Ject 10 d9e r.t.al Fair
h ou•ln1 Act of lHI wlUc:la IDllkea it Wetal to adverti1e "any pre-
ferenee, Umtt.Uoo. or
.... =_.. .. . 0..1 .... , ..,.. _ _..,.leer ......................
rr.t ....... -· 11.c ....... Met ud ii ................
Uan. , ....... ud tbe
owner will ftaanee at 12'16.,, ......
dlac:rimtutlan bued Oft1--__;~----raee, color,,...,._, 1ex,
or aat...., Ofilia, or an
tnt.eetiaa IO make any 1udl pnferenee., limita·
Uon, orctilcriminaUon."
nu. newspaper will not
knowi .. ly accept any
a dverti1ln1 ror real
estate whidl ia in viol•·
Uoa ol the law.
.. on: Ari•• .......
....Wcllldl ..... .., ... ....,.,. ..... ,... ........ .
DA&.YPILOT .. a 11 .... .., ........... ..
....
I V2"tLOAN Onb ~ tor Ulla a
Bdrm c:ln1rmer with
heated pool A fruit lnel.
CaU now~5110.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
UDOISLI
lmmed. occupancy . Price reduced. No quali· fyiD1. no pomta, no pre·
pa)'ts .. Seller will carry
eoatract. 4 brfrdea. 4 ba, frplc, new crpt It paint.
MlS,000. Alt. m.1182 .
cerftd ........ .,,,. --------JUSTUST9t -------1 Oa.l'/J ....
••••••••••••••••••••••• ... , .. 1002
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
·~ $IOI.HI
FamU, U*l •l lta bat
with room to crow.
Dramatieally UPIJ'llded•
thr.::.Jbout. Huse
enc s-tio overloob
aunny roae 1arden1 .
Super ..umable. ftnanc·
inc. Don't wait!!!
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
114-63 J-6990 ••••••••••••••••••••••• L ll--::1N~+=11=,~oa=s~-_.."'
Owner Amioul! Warm &
cosy dollbouse! 2 Bdrms,
2 car cance. Pl .. extra
partdnc. Land included
at 1171,500! 1---------..... ..,,,..,. MIWPOn POMr
..... DwLIX
Y lluimum levera1e with *'75-7NO• Spectacular 2 and 3 bedroom Wlita. Picture $5,000 down. 2 Bdrm COO· I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ do. Owner will carry
balance with aireeable .._TrWn
Superrenta(s ! Two
Bdrma, 2 Bdrm " 1 Br. SS0,000 down. Asking
SH0,000. Larry will
carry!
windows provide birds
eye view ol the ultimate i n seaside living.
Fireplac:ea. new tile
kitchen and baths .
Owner will cany fillanc·
ing. A steal I Call now.
I terms and payments.
Gron income t5400. A11t-
tn1 f1UOO. Call 540-ll!il
ror mOft details.
p JACOBS REALTY
675-6671
-. : _,~ HERITAGE
REALTORS
I II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. i----1 MWPTICH 1-
HOUSE ~.511 SEA COVE
PROPERTIES put.a. JOU iato your own 4 714-631-6990 L $111,•. Siqles, young lldrm, A/C home. 12
married, .a. to beach, 17'"1 ftn-riftl. Call ror pool or ....... from Ulil J d i I ,_ ______ _
Bdr m catbeclral ceil-• .;. t a ~ 0 n ,: u r lf JOU've never placeci a
lqed lt1'e beach home. CKrr pl'Olra · · a..ifted ad, you're in
T
c l
L
A s
s
I
F
I
Cosy brick fireplace. • RED CARPET· tbe minority! Try It once formal dmlnl. Secluded 9Dd aee bow quickly you
foantain In enclosed 754-1202 _ cet re1Ult1. Phone
patio. 111n1 • ..,..., 1ut. I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ .. ,..,.. canmw
WMATAYALUI
Auume tllil '14.-loan
and OWDm" will carry a 2nd T .D. Newport
Riviera end unit, J
bedroom S b9th in UD· blemi1bed condition . Ready to move into witb
appeallnc oew urpet,
drapes and wallpaper.
Beller call DOW. 551-21111Cl
··SELECT
_ .PROPERTIES
TUDn10MAI. ocs ma•s 3 lovely blldbay homes.
All bave unob1tructed
mountain and nit.e lite
views. Priced from
$115,000 and creative
terms are available. Call
now for an appointment
to view tbeee fine homes.
AESIOENTIAl AEAl ESTATE SEAVICES
THI UDO ISLAMD SPECIM.ISn
Present 5 extraordinary listings
ranging from 2 to 6 bedroom.5 and
from $380 000 to $825,000. Call to see
any of these Special listings in a
very Special area.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
~ 644-9060
.... ,.," STORMY WEA TitER
E~
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
jections or file written ob· Certifiedandofficers' checks .................... 1,813
jections with the court a. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN before the hearing. Your DOMESTIC OFFICES ............... ,37,678
D llf.U fJTAff rtC(UflfCf SMC( lt'f
MIWfOIT.-..cTS
I 0... ... l-4:JI
4ZlS.law•• Cut.om three bedroom
home. Sunken llYIDC
C S I H A T L Y L R W A 0 S T B M S E
0 f L H l M G 0 M I U S I H L B R 0 M
T L 0 I C C R 0 M I 0 N U A L U T A H
T A 0 Y G A E 0 E L A N P R A T 0 N S
H S 1 S Z H S S E M 0 P U t U H D F H
V H 0 Z U T T H T E N E T R Q A 0 0 0
I F I R 0 0 A N R 0 T N 0 0 S N 0 M W
L L l R G C 0 S I X R A M C A H l T S
B 0 M 0 l S T 0 E N X M 0 H P 0 f I Q
0 0 T R H 0 I N G l G 0 R Y W A T V U
TORORATEMPES TOONGAA
O U W M E V A W L A D I T R N E P l L
rACllltC YllW
MINOltALrAR•
Cematery Mortuary Chapel
3500 Pacific view Drive
Newport Beach
644-2700
McCOIMtCll MOITUAllH
latguna Beach
494-9415 Laigun• Hills
768-0933 .
San Juan Capistrano 4gs.1ns
.-c:lllOfHllS ml llOA8WAY MOITUAIY
110 lkoectway Colt.Meu
"'2-1150
IALTI •••OM
...... aMMLL
~CMAPIL 4Wr I . 171tl It c..-.. ..... 71 H
Rowers :ar
everything
you can~t.
tMlplns you Ny It riJht.
a~pearance may be in (t) Total demand deposits ........... 12,365
personorbyyourattorney. (2) Total time and
I F You A R E A savings deposits ..................... 25,313
C REDITOR or a cont· b. TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
ingent creditor of the de· A.NO FOREIGN OFFICES .................. 37,678
ceased, YoU must t ile your Other liabilities .................................. 1,005
claim wtth the court or pre-TOTALLIABILITIES .......................... 38,683
sent It to the per sonal SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
representative appolnte Preferred stock
by the court within four No. shares outstanding None
months from the date Common stock
first Issuance of letters a a. No. wres authorized 1,000,000
provided in Section 700 b. No. shares outstanding '33,lM 1,497
the Probate Code o Surplus ................. ., ................ 412
Callfornla. The time for fll TOTAL CON1RIBUTED CAPITAL. ............. 1,909 In~ claims will not e)Cplr 'Retalnedurnlngs ................................ 8S2 fheord~~~~~ ir,:t~!~~fn TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY .•..•••••... 2,761
notlcedabove. TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
YOU MAY EXAM IN SHAREHOLDER~~~~XNDA ............. 41,444
~~· file kept by the court I Time certificates of deposit In
11ou are Interested In t denominations of $100,000 or more .......... ti, 137
estatewf:' may flle • re b. Other time deposits ~uest th the court to re In amountsof$100,000or more •.•••.•••.••.•••.. 151
celve specl•I notice oft M ar ket value of
i nventory of est•te asset 1 --t ltl 3 s. •nd Of the _.ltlons, ac nv~dNn sec:ur "· · · · • ·' • • · • • • • • • • ·' ·' • · · • · • -· The undersigned, Nick J . Florlo, President and counts and .re Port Maty A. Ale, Vic• Pre1ldent .lo talhler of the HDY•
---------. described In Section 1200 n.mtd benk. each declares, tor htl'Meff alGM and not
the Callfornl• ProHt for lhl other: 1 he= pertonel.knowta• of u.e mat·
Code. ters contAlntd In t II report (lnetudl"8 the rewt'M
--.. -ona--Ofl-AH'UCA--T1-.. --· ltHOD•~ •AllNAltD, •Ide hereof) and I Ueve tMt NCfl 1tMlnMntln Mid '° .. u.-. conauc .. .., .. ,.... ::kf::.U1.LaN report II trU.. Each of the W1CllrlltMd, for hlmtett
MP.fl , llOM n not for tM olMr, wtlflel under penalty of •'"*""*'cw-. •Y • ctwtll R. !l:l!t. Jr. per Jury tMt the fGngofna lstrue _. cerr-ct. • .. ~C,.K.:,:i:::::==::; :l.lfi.W.alal......, .,.,,, Eacutecl °" January It, "'1, et COit• Mell,
~* .... llfll<:::::':=:*,,.*~ ..... A,~'!-,CA .. I C.llfornfl. /l/NkllJ.,..,... I
..... l'IM•t ...... 81Ull•llc: Cl1l , __ , -Ill •
ti m ~ ._., "-'· -..... , .... Or-co.It Wll IR ~. r-.. ,.... /I/Mary A. Ale, cw. DllllY ,.._ Deny PIM. ,..,, 4, 51 11 Ya ftr11l•1nt & C11lll1r
•. ""· •!Nt 1911 • 61M .,.....,.. .,,..._. C'MltC ~ ,_ ,..,_, ._""
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
room. Family room witb
wet bar. Owner wlll
carry complete ftnuc-~ Quick poaeeaaion. ,oao.
611·7• .........
,,. t , ... ~.
4 Bclilll (I .. ->. formal dlalnl room,
tarp .... nlOID, qalet
c:uf·d .... e . UnuHal
co.rt1ard .. try wtt• rnataJa ... naaln1 ..... ..., ....... ....
H 1 ~ l ~ l l A U ~ S W 0 0 S E l E l Z Ml T R M Y W A T H E lJT E R l
TSHTAAT.AIHE I THHMEOE
fllllL=~.!?~-..p.-.:;....__,,~·~-~1~11~•!1C!:·~·~-~-~-!"2~ .. ~'·!!.' Ml"".... H11111 .....
I' 11,... llU •-rtl ·~~~ .... ···•· .. ·····-·····-............................................. .
-~··=~·~~-=~~~·-~ I ... t~ POINT llAa .. ONr .
,.. ... ,.._
ftia ...... I Betit
...... , .... co.. llALTOll
.. .,.911!• .. •.,• • .. Jt I c I ... , ... ........... ,.. ..... '44-4tll.
.. P.CllllllMM
CllECI I C..llE TllSE FOTUIES
./LOCATION ./MICRO-OVEN
./SIZE · 1650 SQ. FT . ./DISHWASHER
./ TRASH COMP. ./ AIR COND.
=:i-a1·~...,.-,:::: --~~~~~~~~~~~~~-J
t»eaclMa~u.,.tain WAID INYESTM&fT INC.
•eek an~ provide• a SALIS OMCI C714J Hl·IOll
beautN cauuaa view. JIO W. W.... St.
11le owa.-will finance c .... ...__ ,.~.
wltJl • ~ down pay· -_..-,
m•t.-.•.
D.M. H•11MAL1
,4 llALTOltS The fastest draw in _the SELL idle items with a
4-9"1 7"""JI West .. : .a Daily Pilot Daily Pilot Classified
Class1f1ed Ad. 6'2·5678. Ad.
38r, 2 car 1ara1e, re· p•••••••lli••••••• .. Udeatlal area, cloae to
towa, .._.., act.ool, etc.
lhly tltia oee DOW It'll to fHt. Priced for q1dclt
ule by OWDel' 5n·!11Z
~ ... """ -
1 ... m1
OM MJl.FCOUUI
lleu Verde Country Club Yiew bome. 8raDcl
new on U. martet. This
• bdrm, a blatll hidden z
story shows like• model. Remodeled kitchen with
new ranee 6 oven. Ex·
tensive alarm system.
Lar1e lot rill separate
play •re•. Offered at
$125,000.
759-1616
OMA••e111 Hen .. .,.. damee to llYe la ... ....,, .,...
al Newpart lleedl at a
price,_ waald apect to
pay far • muelt Jeu de· sirable loaltiaa! A lovely
2 bdrm. 2 blatJI aduJl COD·
do dehue tbrouOout in· cludint wood l>umin1
fireplace md • bar for only $121,500. Assume
low lnterM loan.
A Division or Harbor Investment Co. . .
llE
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
LIDO ISU
Exceptionally Good Location Near Tennis
Courts & Be a ches .. Really Neat Two
Bedroom Home With Den, Plus Formal
Din.in1 Room, Assumable Loan. Price Only
S37S,OOO.
OUTSTANDING IA YFIOHT HOME
Lovely Custom Built Home On Promontory Hay. Living Koom, l''ormal Ulrung Room
Den/Library. Spacious Master Bedroo~ Overlooking Bay Has Fireplace &
Luxuriously Appointed Bath. Three Other
Bedrooms & Maids Room & Bath. Pier & Slip For Large Yacht. Sl ,850,000.
759-9100
#2 COr"pcNahfllau
Newport C..twr
WOODS, WARMTH -tll!
•-"My dKoratecl 2-stary ca.do wfftt
flnpl1c• & 2 balcoMes. l b9cl. wt ..
........ dht. Mil. co ....... Newport
locatlott with partial VU. Clorestory
wlMows & hic)ll cell.... a..c.ct to
SIH,500. owe MCCMMI T.D.
A WATEIFIONT HOME I/SI.IP
la• ........ Cl ltJ. Weed; .....
..... & .......... perfect c..-. fer
tllhJbMf-'r ...... ~&.,.. ..... ,._, .... ~._., ......
Panoramic view at wed1e. from .
prime Iara• lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom
bome. 3700 sq. ft. featurin1 marine
room. e ntry, llvin1 room. dining
room. built· in•. etc. St ,385,000.
UDO ISi.i
Newly remodeled traditional style 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large
recreation room & 2 patios. Living
room has attractive beam ceilings,
rlreplace & french doors leading .onto
brick patio. New kitchen bit-in
appliances. Close to ten'nis courts,
sandy beaches & clubhouse. Can be
sold fully furnished $420,000.
IAYNlOMT
We have several fine homes
with pier & &lip
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
. ' ' I· I , • .. ~ •• , •• } I 0.
C,1. r o/ newparl
;.> J,-fi REALTORS
675-551 I
r ---·
LOVILY ''I•• Pl.AM. MOii pap .. ar mocW
..... b•flt •• .... ll•ffs. SffHted °"
.. chic ............ wfftt ......... .
J ... F.R. IHt b•y 111 ... _... at $212,900. .
COLI OF NIWPOIT llALTOIS
2515 E. Coast Hwy •• C.-.. W..
671-1111
C~Uvt.g
SEAVIEW
Re modeled •·P o rt
Royal" w/super ocean
& night light view.
Beauli!ul pool & spa. Smashing decorating &
a bl oc k ·bu s ter
assumable 10'l4 3 loan. ~.000.
Rustic older I bedroom 2
bath Villa Pan. The lot
is • lovely ~ acre loaded t:.~...:-=~~~~...........::~ with fruit trees and a
PllC• llOI 9'KI
SAU .. . ..,..... ,.. ......
* *' • ' lllJ,N. OOAftlnn Your 1peetal ..... LAOUNABSAal will lo'9 tltia .... .ut.llJ ., ...
............... I-tty
detulted ltome ID L a ...... IMJ
Irvine'• CoUe1e Pan. •••••• .. ••••• .. •• .. ••••
Ut>Jradel 1alore and OPDITllEGATS .._.., into a ...nbl I Bdrm w/prlvaq. n. _..
patio ~· tlile ..... anaf/i ......... .
Oner "'J ......... CID
ftnandlll. NowSIG,•.
.. -
~. ·, .
\Mi) ,Iii)
..... . o.... wm help n...ee
W.4111',a..~
Beacb Beauty. 12711.,l--ji~~-·;:fii1iitl lateral rate available V'ft'11•
..-.,~ ...
too: Woodllridle I ltr CODdo, Mll1h•"'le 1167
CU8tOln deear, lllDt loc. ·······-······ .. ••• .... 1'11-1GZ ..... '-''la%
0tt•tte21m
CoteO
1 BEDSOOll + loft
tbarpaldunit
Dell11ttful lbr, Zba , w /couatry kitchen ,
cathedral ctilblo. many
UPlf'.... Earth toees,
Slll,.710-SN ----c:o:;;;r.:;;-·1 ....... C/JI .... ,_.c.e.r .... ,......_. I06t COt SOIT... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I 640.1•7 76N761 ...................... .
J ... HOMI Wood ,._., fireplace, .oiMftlTOaS DECORATOR'S DREAll
LARGE lat. SMO.•. Spilt Owneraltlp Pro· in Woodbridce wit.It • f
...........
Oeeaa ft, llldnn 2~ Ba, aear,.....sm,ooo. lerMcCc•.Br. IJ'•lll.UOW.YoUtobuya BR, I car 1ara1e. ... 11Jt home witltout ne1ative Notbinl hM been .Jpared ~ •------... •( caab flow without · lluat aee • Atkins manasemeuut problema, SZSl.500.
OMLYS7JI uaint minimum down '""? ~
719-tUI .. ~mH paymeat!Startyournest '"l>-..JL111 v4~1tu -.. eel today. Call for more 1'.C::'U.Illil ~--.,
Pantutic takeover Information. 552.-7~ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ oe 3 br family home. mTYALUI
Priced at on1y siu.0001 .. MIWPOIT
Double Rone ftnplaee, TAD O¥la 131/~e Cliff Hnen Condo, 2 new nnre w/microwav .... ... ............. bd ........ .._ -
• • home wan-aaty I • • ~ rm + -· --· 4 moa aew • Zltr 2ba 1.ar,. A llPt. Last oae ~~of ml~d. BK condo: completefy up: Ba, atrium, all upcradet, availal6 oat al cmty lO. ---------1 traded with custom ftaaaeed Ill l~~. Call Commuaity pool, lovely ASSUM4ILI drapes 6 carpeting, Tim Rbone.Gl·lal nel11tborltood. R.H .R. ~:::::.2~·::.~ ~~~!~~=~~ ·l:iJ.~TOIZll Alt·:.n::, "7S
do, 1 yr old forme pool/ape! Won't last. call , ___ ~ ___ rs___ Paaonunie Yi11ta al luab
model.Call---ast. now. r--====~=--i 1reenbelt from this t pacloaa I bdrm, z~ MOm'IMWOOD batb "End Unit" ••WOW•• .. ,, .....
COSTAtimA
A ..,..lltkeal barpjn I.a todays martet featuriq
3 bclnna • eovered patio
in much sou1ht after area. Call 751·1501 or
7S2·73'1S.
J .... JIA.Stt•
Take Oftl' .-ZS/mo. FHA
paJmeata, at MCX. in·
t.ere9t ! °"9er' H)'S sub-
m lt all offen! Don't
Wait, Call Now for mott
lnfonnatian.
liOLIDIEST
. ~ EALTORS 4 ... ~~ /ASSOCIATES ••••
J • ... SPA towaltome. Offered at N~ W I A Plan ll -··Alt, MO-~. Northwood Park de·
tacbed bome witlt air I 4 Y F I 0 M T
coad, llkbumy clJp •P• CHAatGI. SUPll
area, 1N11t ladaeaptn1 T 11 MS I O %
and dewilltial. $1.CD,000 DOWM
in uaable flnancln1 . Dont wd tlais lo..i Pricedtotellat$15Z,OOO. ......_ _ _., .. cm . t.e ~~J CALL MOW -.... pn•• '"""•· 644-n I I $f75,000. IO-O'ID.
CHAltB
forever view from the 14111N»e hlmd I 006 --------
f!"OUDlains. It will take • ....................... COSTA timA .... Is D ....
1 block to ocean. As·
tamable SISZ,000 loan at
terrific interest rate. nm ctup1a 1a · cec1 to
Mil at tza,000. ~ quali·
tytq11c•wL
httle elbow grease to 2 br, l~ be. LoW clown.
make this house• palace MW U Stnctse fbawiD& tot----=--------
but t11e 1uc111 worth the .. T'lli8 .. .....-.1•al•11 ,... .... .._ LOW price of $185,000 with B a lb o a It l a n d ...... Wellt Side ar ._._. ___ _......,.,
owner ftnandng offered. waterfront.~ all lite ~~ ltome cm • Ice 54 X Claee to '-da. aew l Br, .. ,.....,_., ~
C.11751·3191 benefitsalap1eran;dtlip UO lot. W /several maa1 atras, 1.rg· ynl, beaatihl I bdrm, 2~ ba
in t.ltia ao.ely location. 2 mature trem alleJ ac· O.W.C. ••· MZ-1S1, co~do. Lovely back *cote Realty
& Investment
MC):.5777 !p SELECT Bdrm cottage + lonly ceu ai p1eaty'a1 room to ~-patio. Owtluub treen· location. 2 Bdrm gara1e build _ _____. _.. beJt. Waldmc diltaDc:e to PROPERTIES apartment. Call llu •~-. ...... 1044 pool. S.mded'. all mast. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Adrian far all the details. IY ~ • ...... -............ bdrm. Newly paiatecl. ()pea eo--Sunday
CAUFOltMIA 642-1200 C714'11f.ltl0 4br, ..,_, 1~"' Jou, Spedalllome
DllAM --1111 ,.--..a... balaaee h•.SOO. view, , i.. SpedalLocatioa
LLUW -vallJted-nM-aaocia s Cona''"'"' oceaaview Beautifully spacious 3 Lrc llm 8t.e, formal cliD lion ID-Dl.._..., · ~ -. Bdrm home in great rm, luesl Bdr • Ba, i---------i 441 Jledlanda Ave. location. Fabulout fami· pie, pool loae to 4/.:J Owners alkmt SZ'75,000
ly room, 2 fireplaces. ::-co-Ptu.; VA •P-•IJOWI $11 •0 ')' Sealed Bids. Probate
jacuzzi, decorator proved, SUl,900. Ast. Seller'• plans' have 833-8600 1~1::. wallpaper. Assume loan. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 754..Qlt7 cbaa1ed quickly! We SUf,900. Call today C .... awwwlledt IOll ---------•have reduced this C.rcn.e
m.ssro. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... CIOUS SUPER Madison model ttS23 CAM"'5Dl~IRVM 2HOVSES
A LLS'PA TE-WMl'nWATa YllW Su Cote()=~ ibn idpresti1ious Wood· Nwpt lflta. Owner fin.
•. I~ Blufl'top caatom home, per3.-nn,2~ r 1e Estates from!L,9 .... 1..ti 1041 Only Sllt,000 both.
-Dana Pt Harbor vu f Br batlt ... tew eoaclo. Sl.9,000to U. Ci•••way •-MS--
OPIMDAILYM
JM40...""8
Prf•• ....., ... ,... ........ &
IOAT S&Mt. OWMr w• ...W wfHI ••c .... Sll0,000. FM.
Rr aLTORS B ...;...000 A ... ' Ron Ideal mil UDll wlllt = price al h7a,OOO. Call for 0 ••••H•H•••••••••H• --------
19ft iouhonaaio ••· ~· perqoet detaill an this super buy, For S., Al Or,_. "NEWPORTllEIGJn'S lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii---------• 2 _, petiol. Love-flexible terms too! WOODS COYI CbanniDC Ur, lBa, 11 ~-~~ ... !~.~ C:-JE:(f11)"'*"•ddte DUPLB,J.:,um l;'!;..~....::f·..., 2 8dnD, l ...... aittap. Beam_..,, bk, acu parkl•I· Pr{ced at -·--associated
I .. ~ . .., ~ I • ,_/ '
------~-
~··· -·-7 ... 1111
Ow..t lllMAMCIS
View ltome in Cdll.
Owaer mey carry lat
tnllt deed et 12~"' ....
nual percenta1e rate
wltla amall down pay·
meat. Small private
comm.tty wltla pool,
lte, airy, 4 bdrm, 1 blatlt
ltome. 2 P'lreplacea,
formal dlDlac room•
...... l'Olllll. Perfect
... • tlllta't.abl· .........
'""'"' Calf~ ........ ,.1rw2
MtllV.P.-.,,.lat ....... " .... ....... .. ._...._ ... a
.......... ,.... die
• st •wlDtaba
............ to .... IMl .... a Pllace ~ ......... ~ ...
'"8 ., -·-wltll ................ eaam.-
*SELECT .
rPROPERTIES
To Pl•ce your
"P'a1t R••lt"
Senlte Dlr«tory
ad .... Call Notr
'41-1671
CHALLENGING VU PIOPEITY =wet..r&•••sad•lt _. ltllh-'-PW_.,._fw
~ ... -Cl .... s• ....
tie& ._ fw ,.... I , A I :c••
_. cm .. 2 _.. er ••• .. 11•... ._.., ....... S4tl,Ht fff.
631-1400.
l.,_FIOO U• ISLE
P•rfectloa flt eHry detail °" Lido Ill•.
Gor..-CCMMtry Fnttch 4 ~ Jt/J
befits. J frplcs, pl_.ati0tt slMIH .. 1, braas
flxhlns. Hrdwd floors, beaWIM Hle1,
qoklett oak 1talrca1•, 511afchilNJ wal co••r-
li.91. Mashr 111fte with spa -.d flreplac•.
Laachcapecl by Rogen G_....a. Vl•w
fro.a -.hr sulff. Rechlc.d to $665,900.
631-1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
5.okos. R•n•.ol•. PrOPf'tl• M•,_nwn1
2436 w Coast Hwy 631•1 ~OO
Newport Beach
-=~=· ~\l~lA-ar.-~s· = -----._.,..., QAY L NUM-----
•
.......... ..._.of .... ._ IOO......, _.be-... IO._l_oilliple_.
REPICH j l I I I I' I .
TALSN I! 1 1· 1 r . ·
_c_A _B...,.T_H_, !! 1-I I I _
K I T C R Y
-h-
SOZ.Acada;IDJ.• 1ou SDI SJO. ... DOWM OW..&Yilw GO Acacia; .. .., • • .-. Realtg Outra1eoa. 2br, lb•, Z2100Wllterfrolbt; ... 000 551.3118 owner'• unit .. Slyllpu, Jbr, + dee, Iba, 200 .
Dri=·=all mt rrHn l'kwy,I"• AntiqueDoon/WlDdowa, ~';."'.i.:".:9.,:ta'·
UIDqaellomes Beamed Ceillat. Jl'rplc, 175-59;~ * *ftl'l'8nrl nt. New Kitchen /Bath, Cll• TIAlmt --------• m -nu ,., .ulrl'-L.Y SZ'75,000 by owner. Days -~~~~~~~-!::-=::-::-:-:--=-:::-::-::""'I L • r 1 eat mode I i n IJl.3544, eves •1-Gl42, Tldl ..... al ..urtaia· * JASt •• C-0 W N E RS PR I D E : Deerfield. Tbe Plan 5 3'70 Flora sn•t .._ • tlapical iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii----~I A uniq• combination al Spanialt styled thre done a aever before! •--------weleome! 'Ilda timeless location, desi1n and bdrm. Beautifully de· Pool, ape, malbificeat ZBr, C•blana Ir trlr, 3 pvt ::.-:: :r:Jd ~.:::~
value! Thia ele1ut A corated. ...._..ly paint· decor and landaeaptng. bcltt, pool• ftallinl pier. placee to be alone wltlt 3 spacious home featurea ed. Laadoua yard wt All this 6 aaume • high Slt,900. -..M lar
the won al a craftsman fruit trees. S125,SOO, loan~.Callnow ! Beautiful lnlne Cove. y~~ r!'!i.;'su!oc!:n~e~
throu1hout and tbe TARBELL,.REALTORS. IJ. . . White ..t.er view pvt fireplaces. Definitely
security ~ • pant l•t.e Call 540-lTJO ~I \\bodbrld-atreets. Guarded g' •• : maalmam 11 .. bllit• at community. If )'OU want -' . maximum livablUty at a1---------c Realr1 5Br, l~Ba, Poo l. mlnimmn east. 79-1501
minimum coat , call 9 5 SSl·3"0 $1,500,000.41f.5430. orlSZ·'ml.
751-lSOlforprivat.etbow· • 4ftt arraau Pllwy,lrv• .,..... 1044 • ing. Compere tlais out·
s t • n d i n 1 v a l u e • t IUITBrt'T •••••••••••••••••••••••
t3ls.ooo. n1uw Assume._ down. Lov·
-
ely a Bdrm, 2blatlt family
. room, fireplace, open PUTTING-2 1reena .'., . beam ...... -IU I
Pool, fruit trees and ... ..... n •· new copper ... bin.. larp
country decor, Irvine ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f yard, doable 1ara1e.
Terr. -,500. = ~llOL Only $114.-. . SpadoalSllr, IBa, formal 16t111
LIGHT AND AIRY-4 diD.iq rm. P'amUy rm -
Bdrm, den, Carmel w/wet bar. Pee Jud.
model, ck»e to ever· Owner IDIQ' help ftuace.
Jtltbt1. -.-fee. Sltown bJ appt. oely.
-
t J "' ,i l.
~ " '
IN SEABLUP'P'-2 Act ...... /
Bdnn I Ba, tmmia pool C.... W.. 1114111-!!!·!!· !!!!!-!!!!!~!!!!!!!f
and his aun:ound.1n1a. ••••••--••••••-•••• F C1olebJ11tSM1.•. .. .. v .. Villa c... . ._.... • ..
··-· 2 Brdm, l ... ······-........... . SUNSET P'ROll-Neat 6 clean . Tnll0 ---=:~ Settla1 .s.m, 4 Bdrm. 0..../Alt.9Gll tJ ... Pl. u
pool, laeredlble Cdll "'!t"fi • ,_.. altl.
riew,..UllDaaeed,fee1 .. ':':~~~~~19ll~ .. !!!:~!!!~~~~~-I at..... 1 I !'Mt ....... 1 A.a. .. ... ~;;:"'. .... .... B I G CA N Y 0 N -botl• N01D wltlt bar ......... , .. , ......... ..
~!'·~....!.~· •~ Near·H•1 1Hrt1ttoH ITAl•OUI'
-· --...--ape, .e~ .-. 6 ... A a1 1.... •••••• ... 1, redecorated. w. .......... ......, rr ........ re ..... . -·-~----................. ...... AMilll an-. rw • ..._-. ......... . I UPsa HOUIS-............ aw ... ...-.~~ t ca_-., • .._, =, .. _, .. ~r· ·~-.r.r:. ~ ,.. ,;,; ~ = "'""~r ~1 = .... ra.~.,·~·
Brt .... II ..-
\
macnab I lrvtne
realty
A SUUIDIARY OF
THE IRYINE COMPANY
MOUHWOOD SPACIOUS UYI ....
lovely .. La Cuesta" plan w/4 BR le
pool siz.ed back yard offers room for
the lar1e family. Decorated in
neutral colors le featurinl upgraded
wooden abutters, woven wood
window coverings • up1raded carpets. $173.900 Scott Al1ton
551-8700 ( A65)
AWAD wn••t• D .... I. Rancho
San Joaquin Villas. offen=tr IUite w /den ... ltUn1 rm
l-1tory Uvin1 rm. Decorated
up1raded in impeccable t11te.
Fannal dbaiDa • atrium. $151,• Dorathy Lewis 751·1414 <Ml>
~&
BUILDING LOI'
Cleared aad read1!
Dealrable Pnla. loc,
ltept to.-. Dmt't wait. can c.t • -..... OD· ., .......
REAL ISl'ATE STORE ' •mi
.......... "' Oww': Jbr, w /I •bl tar I -.-(1)......,
.'le
Huababd already left 3 beautif uJ 3 bedroom condo unll. Pool, spa, near
cbool5 and So. Coast Plaaa. Great invutment property. Owner will ~P rmance al 123 A Quail Place
Exclusive . . J
lllCUTIYI HOMl-
LIASI OPTION 01 IUY L~ase it, lea~ option it or buy it ~th extrao~ary terms . Family
sized executive home in excellent
area. Owner t r ansferred and
motivated. Call us for an ap~. to
see this outstanding 4 bedroom home.
fi>UAIL PLACI
PIOPllTllS
IOOMfwWIOAT
Duplex on the water. 3 Ir z Bdrms. Deck and patio.
Flreplaea. Prime loca·
lion. Xlnt cond. 4010
River Ave. Large as·
sum able loan.
C/21 Mlw,.,.c.tn
640.5317 760-6767
Ml'WPOIT CllST
111REE beautiful condoa
available. Different loca·
tioaa. Pool, t:enftil, spa.
CloM to beach Is Hoag
Hospital.
C/21 Mlw,.,.c..
640.5317 760-6767
ANXIOUS
Upgraded 3 br Condo,
Cremve financing.
$115,IOO
Owner/qt,ai.,751 ..
S-CI I 1176 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ sq ft J Bdrm house. bllu from b each ,
beautif\11 ocean vu, creat
terms. $150,000. 811·240'1
C:SELECT
·tPROPERTIES
71Z.lf20
* * lllle TIStil If you appreeiate the
loob and quality of days me by-JOU'U love this
ammacul* 2 bedroom
home. Tile r oor ,
hardwood noors, sun·
room, balconlea and so
much more-all in a
parkllb leUift&. Call ror
details and your penonal
I I I I
C i ,.",CH
i • •·• t r v
')~) 1 2000
•
SELECT · Mobile home spa~e for
rent, SZ', E .side, CM. PROPERTIE$ $2CIO. ~T117 ... 9IOO
Owner Transferred, &DX•
ious. s.,.dous Zbdrm on
lr1 lot. Super buy at
SllS,000. Act49M1118 .
••• .......................
tWMt.A.1 , ..
Wo0d1 w.•em·
::.. ... _. • Green· __ ...., ...... . ... . ,...
WClii, .... .. -•••lllflll ..... •"'' featHH : ' ............ leer .............
e._~i•°'llm. iiiaa••.-eau
641 AClll I o.M. UIAILI
Priced at '1000 pr acre, free and clear. Owner wishes to exchange
fOI' commercial industrial. Water well on property.
"'~· . ,.
712·1900
MIY IUYll POUIPUI Spactoua owner'• unit with
fti'el>lace. 5 car 1arage. Beautiful tree lined atreet. Top Meaa Verde·
area.
)
....... __ -. •. .
Coado, 1~41rm. ••• e...,...• ...... ~ . ..................
Sitt. (114)1Tl·Tlll , m.-.
3425 ......................
I
,
................. ..... .. ..... .... ..... ............ ....................... . .................... .
...... ... •••••rt lllaor•• I~ L "AU IOll ... 911111 4411~..._. 4411 II"'-' •iilW 4tll "4._. ...... ~ ........ blot" to beecll1, pOol. DKUIWIMI•· .................. , .............. -...... :.:,: ............ , ..
8r. a .. AQd. ... tn• CMrt. P••••• . .,,............. •W'IUlll* 111.., 1n.a ,... ... •= ·
ANe ti ...... 6 ONll 11-•. -· Feb. lltll. laAar.tANI.' ....... Pri .. C.11 ...... -mtllft•_, -~--8w1 .... mo ID Cd ,._ .. JmAM, 714mMIM ............ ., ... •tor• .. ll••-a. h•a..aN·B• ~ u'\"i .,.·,.,., .... ..;.: ....... -•iht•Dr.tm .... , ... rro•••••ti• ... , .......... 'i"ntl ............... nal _,_..--...... ----t gel ffHIH. ,. •.• ,.,. Afl .................. 41• lm~Lma.trtJU ~'~ ......... TlnJC.-• ................ or -:0:&:!~ -...... _.-........ -~ -~~ ' ...... -........ ".,. Liv• "T .... _ _.,,._.. ·-,. o---........ Pn•• ...._, aY.u.aile ~ , ...... , ~ I •· 1 la. WW. 1r.lc:ff roa;,../~/.,T ••II ..tabll1W a.• --•Mt ltudlo. ....., 4411 •••......., 10 YNr = , 1.._. ..-. · l•ra••· P•tlo, pool. _...., 14.ft. doctora offte•-, -frple, --== NIU.,, •••••-••••••••••• •••••· AUraeth•IJ' Ra. .., -Achllll. No ..... a.-t H o.Jle ....... Aciapta. mo. .aN No. ForatGn•aftklfapMlat 111111111111. __
'..._ ... -.-it Utlt. It. Newport Y• ..... 4110 bit for -°' I pllfaJ· Pan..._ ol S..A. Cloae ,. • ., .. nt.. l"IU4Jll,ntll6
•---------• ....,...._ ... eo.neo ••••••••-••••••••••••• <'iau. Call, '° twy. _,.aftlPll. .. .. 171f ~· W9*daJt
Mas ... aW•Aflh. a br, l~ b8 + 1u. H~I •t:::·.c:. ~a~:.::. RED-~rrr llt1qftolfteew/p.t8atb lll'M~E R C1 ....
I. I Ir hlllllae fNe Hoep area au decor 1'uUy hn 5/mbl f la prime C.M. comp&ex. 1U511 V .. E CM ..... 4471
tftl. y-~~J Of9ll a.. Set• SUD u.s: Nortb Stai 9400/w~ 1817 W..edff. N.I . Waat J'aetaatlc ot .. n vu I ~123' . . •••••••• .. •••••••-•••• f:M,;,,,•r . ar ur UH Hlluia Wa y, .,.-_-... Ben .. flaaaelal laat. 7000..f. NM/mo. NO LEASE. Slorelpece,.. ...... uoo
· -/mo.a.975 ' i.t. no... "'9MMJ.IOll. Al·TTIO Newpirt&eadt,tt.a 8g. ft. • lJ9 8'· ...._
• I .. Oaaiti9...,. IC WAL& TO HACH. 1 81'. SllYAIL aq. ft. New db olftee or Hlllltiqtiana.etl,.,,.•i·
...... M . Pool, ........ • rel'li ... taas. Br •-.. w lbr, lbe, eoado, alpt 1. IUlntle Newly carpeted, own Maihr/p¥tbetll,aeeuri· a.ae ..... m~119 .
....... ..... -· ............ . I .... ~to be•eb. • .. ~-........... _ ii .. ,---·~1 rettroom aoo ... n ..,..,. .---· ~ -. ...... 71'1'1. Oceaa •lew. seso . w .. , .... --· na · ~ , .... _. ' ..... · -ty,a /c,llJ0.1Daq.ft.50I ---_.._ -.. .... 1 ........ LA ~•UallOIA Olt ......... 1.a., Call lllb ... 1111 zi.1ut,,. 14.ft. otnee mo. tc.llM. list St <neat to Bank of .......... --· ...-_.
MIU,., " i.. a Wk --------LoweJ1 a•· with built· P~i-·oHouae. MZ·3150 bld1 .• ID clowldowD HB. · Newport· 'I..&... can-by. ••ao1q.ft., •" w. ti...._ 1~1 ., ..,.. ... 1 •· •~ a. .... CllDllOK.-. or-· v., · Lar1e9ilBearC1bla Newer blct1. w/onalte Exec. omce Space for are•)'. a7's -szai". up. E/SldeCM.Ma-7241
....... .,_,... :.::ull•N::ro:.•:.i la.Im VILLAIALIOA =a~014~' 2 l>Uk~RPET ~~ °a~~=u~ <n 3>141-mo lalh11rW ...... 4500
lllt·iu. car., fr•le, Nr lllladl 1-2 br. 2 M. .w.allonly •1au boat d ock ad e 1c 1000 "t -1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -1-11 ......._ .......i ..... ~ _ _. -.... pr .... • ·•-lBr 1 8 "' ....... a.re 4300 D • aq ·~ rom -mo. 2115' ..._,,--ce 1.8101 _.. _ • --· -· ,...,,_,_ .. _, , 1 .. pauv. . .... elaney's restaurant. Ideal for ma .• acct1. r.e. Rec1--.a.... er"11•'o H B
1-· .... -n.rida, TILllO..-.IG.-ast5. Awalt 1·5. Call l Br. + DenH4 Ba. ....................... IOU..C841& A ·1 · -,.. •• -II in ?A ....... """'-'u•-va&. lft'Ylca at reas or lv repair. C .M. _,..__._..;.... · · ·
11.a ... w .... un -...-:1•.1 ... A,... mtm 2 ~itl~RJ.!,:afn~: c~~ ftvin~;"'p';;;u! MIWPOIT coet: xeroain1.wordpro-640-52'15 -----........._ •7•• r-•.... -•'--·--"" BR l ..... ......-..a.... Pool I& ..... ...... p r i ti i Elelant aeeutlve awm cesaing, I& computer -----,,.-. ---ISfcN'... 4510 .....,._ • _ ..... _, • -· _ , -~. _._ ~MSt ro eas ona Y a nee ln ---location With tl h · San Clemente on buav E ••-•••-••••••••o•• 1111.am c11111. Smail pet Jae, immac ec.d. s.50. 1971. ,. ...... .-· me a ann1. Ask ror . .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rua /uafara Coaclo, OK. A•l2/1.._ YEARLY Beaut. 3 br. 2 HOU584AllS co ml pl ete au pport Cathie or Barbara at CamanoReal,new bkla. Approx.l ,OOOsq. ft. avail . .._ .. •-_...._. 1..... ba w--•-bav It ocean aerv ces. 67S.803S spacea, 1000' ea. con in Founlain Vallev -·ar .__ ........ _.,, -· TSL lllJnl. tc.11111.9 · ~.., " · 111_.IM 714/151-481 cesa\on avail. '18-7357 " '"' A•.u-. ... .-1. Beaut aalu, lbd 2 b• S7&0Btr.MS.a3 · S.D. Frwy. SlS20 mo.
. THE VICTORIAN 2er. P /P '•,.....,c1.ryer,JO' <.nu•~~l11••• .. -..500 ft ·g d n 1or2omcesavail,immed._-.................. 50 John~m>.548-7533. a......... J741 l~Ba . •a:· Adlts, Gar's•6up.Ml-l501; WESTCUFF 2Br. lBa. "nv "'V~ _,. ICI· . m r, occupancy, prime loc. m -•••-.. ,. ;~;...-••••••••••• CpU,drJS, .~yd, JCR!Duabar. Condo. Pool. adlts, no ~f1" iitflcf'Jj ... t utila pd. From aoo. 779 N.B. Recept., conr. rm ..••••••••••••••••••••••• Stor11e. R.V. Boat. St~ .......... ,TV.makl waterpd.-...UO. pets.9M!Omo.754·1'30or -·--·~---:1.~::.· St. C.M. Tom law library avail. Non· NrN~Stcnl~h"· Truck,_ Car, Hunt. Bch. aernce.-.-...... SUIO/wk. 117\'ktariaSI. 1115. •MllNlllACH• t57.u50aft7PM. Oldeat1tlar1esta1ency smkrs. Contact Sara Hall a:, c City Nr. EdiaonPlant549-91536 '
-· 1 • 2br, 2ba, blt·laa. ServlntSo. California ..,..... 851·8141. le•ei.-.-aq ft, street Sell Idle items ·-..-8 Mew ,..._. 1769 Jbdrm, lbe, frple, encl slrylitea, patio, 1ar. WESTCLIFF 2 bdrm. l 'r'l PhotoaandReferences IXICUllYISUITI .,_.....,, ,er 1ar ..... Adult.I, DO pets. AduJta. "10 • up. tm ba. Townhouse. S550 mo. c.......au-ABC NBC CBS Full--_, ••••••-•-•••••••••••• m.lllJ. Edla1er. 140·3101, AduJtaoaly.nopets.1728 ·~ .... : · • _.,,,ceofficesin ~eular Oceanfl'Oel. Ml-GM Bedford Lane. Ml-7533. Co.mos-LA Times· Etc. Newport Center
A.ail. 8DW. M Br. Con· lbdrm, qita, &,., bk·iaa, Since ll'71 a.5470
do.ma.JRP. aftl&lcml)'.ao peta. v1e.3BR,2~8atwnhae.fplc, 2 Br. 2 Ba. All Adult, no lrvine,&ll-lM MWl'TPIOMJA•H
Luxury o..arroet Week-=-~.!. =~unt. :.:;·.:~=.~ =-2 <::!: ~·r::: ::~s:~·. Garden Grove, 1191-1773 WTALS
ly. 2 orSBr. Comp. furn. gar, cbildrea OK. 1 mile c Id . Acro ss from •se..-.dU•illt* 2 Rental ~ces Approx.
iacldliaeaa.MM'nM. Sbdrm, l~ba. nr new, toPCH.Nnmo.984-2937 Newport Beach Golf Counselontopenonally ~sq.fl.lcup.lncluding
2 Br. P\nplace, ...... -. ~·~Hts. area. from tAM-5Pll. Course. Shown by appt. select your compatible utils. S350 Ii S4.50. 2450 •-___ .. only ~ rmmte t o suit your Newport Blvd. Costa
$4 '15. Call E vea. • · · l Ir 2 bdrma, cottage style · · Ufestyle. Shared-Living Mesa. See Manager.
Wkada.ZIJ/-..mf. Lar1e 1 Bdrm. Near livinc, child O K . Weatcliff. owly decor. 631-1801. 833 Dover Dr.1-------=---1
allope, pool, all uUla pd. 1335-$.'liO/mo. 2Br, lBa, 1r1 . kitch, pat.io Ste 31 NB CdM Deluxe Suites, 1100
NO
LEASE
1114 Mcmrovla. 5Cl-ODI. M'f-3020 It encl. gar. $175. &&2·2134 sq.ft. AC, ampl pkg, util ---------Gal to shr 3bdrm condo pd. 2155 E. Cst Hwy.
Newer 1 Br. witb 1arage. For lease or by Option NEWPORT HGTS, 2 BR 11 near O.C.C. SZSO/mo incl. 675-8900
Adulta, no peta. S.S mo. Br.ad New Condo loc. Ba, no kitch., adlt.s, nor util. 545-sn? 1---------1
145-5ST7. Seaside Village at pets $400mo 644-6780 0 .C. AIRPORT AREA Beach/Au.nta Blvd. (1) . . WantM/Ftoshrnewi dlx 150 to 3000 sq. rt. of
REQUIRED 2~:.--c=~lf~u: 2br +library+ 3ba. (1) Adults. 2 br. 2 ba. newly C.M. condo, nonsmoker elegant exec. space. No
lap, w/eocl pr. In quiet 3br, + 3be. approx. 1650', decor. pool. Walk to pref. $300/mo. + in utils. lease req. 759-8978.
adult complex w/pool, sec.gete,3tennlscourt.s. beach . $650. Eves Call64S-62'74. -VUR·ROUNO FUN:
Soetal Ac1tv1l1es 01·
rectnr •Free Sunday
Brunell• BBO·s •Par·
t•es •Plus much more
apa, bbq 6 lndry. N pool/spa. tlOO/mo per 841-2841;days548-9341 F t iL_ Jb t 450 sq.fl.M50permo.400l each ZU/11:H.319oreves e m. Ollllll"Spac. r ap Birch St. Newport
peta ... mo.JaOH•rla. 2l.3/m -5'7M 2bdrm. 2ba Versailles w~2 same, CdM, S242 + Beach. Agent541-S032.
549-2"7. · condo, penthouse, securi· uttl. 644-<875aft. 6.
St n i g 1 1 6 2 Near new xtn di.it townhs t y amenities, immac. E Shr Twnh p Great Loe. Ample park·
GREAT RECREATION:
Tennis• Free Lessons
(pro & pro shop)• 2
Health Clubs• Sauna•
Hydromassage • SW1m·
ming • Or1v1ng Range
~ n arge apt lrg 3br 2ba fflllc SSSO. Elaine64.S-0650. xec. se vt. ing. 600 sq ft. SSIS/mo.
.2Ba.cardenapt. bllns w'/d hkup ' 2br. 2 'r'l ba , wa /dry, Call494-6t(M,49f.7sst.
Pool It rec. area. 710 W. skyUgMa, vaulted cell'. Wes~clilf area large t Br. f r plc /pool/jac $3501---------
llth. St. ings, dbl aitch gar, many Patio, pool. Adults. no _559_·_51_42______ 545 SQ. FT.
t -........ ...,... rwots 645-8152 Excellently located on Avail. Now 2br, 2ba, x ras.-.-.-... ..-· · Resp. roommate to shr 3 17th St. Cceta Mesa. Call
BEAUTIFUL APART·
MENTS: Singles 1 &
2 Bedrooms • Fur
n•shed & Unturn1shed
•Adult L1v1ng •No Pels
• Models Open daily
9 to 6
patio, E. Side S4SO/mo 3 Br. l'n Ba. 1 house from br condo. Woodbridge Realonomics 675.6700 ~ 640-0987 ocean, beautiful view. a rea, Sl90 & v.i utils. ---------
Bit in kitchen. Yearly 559·5699eves. Unique Bayfront Office
1750 mo. 675-8018. 600 sq. rt. View
\~o ADULT ~~. LIVING 1 BDRM DUPLEX
Oakwood
Garden Apertmenta
Wa llace St. S300
~1131allS:30.
2bdrm, 2ba condo, nr S.C.
Plua, $17S/mo.
5S-.-eves.
• 1 & 2 BA Palto AOls
• Dishwashers & 880 s
• Poot & Rte Room
• G11den l 111dsc.p1ng
• JOQ lo Such & Sl'lops
• S I GI
1 Br.Condo with ocean
ni ght l ight view .
Prestigious Versailles
Complex with pool, spa,
clubhse, guard gat e. ssso. 642-~.
Fem 25 + to shT 2bdrm. 673-1003
2ba apt, E. side C.M. .
548-4151 af'terSpm. 250 sq ft office. Share
recpt rm & secty sp. use Fem toshr3br, 2ba. hme of c p y mac h . L-aw
nr. bch H.B. newly re· library. Westcliff Bldg.
decorated. $250. 536-1140 646-4844.
Newport S.ach/So.
1700 16th St
1Do•e1 •i 161nt
17141 642-5113
2bdrm, 2ba, clOlled gar.
balcony, gd location.
$450/mo. Pleue call
145-&473.
SEA ENVIRONMENT
~·. l,' ~'1A~lt T ( '~-' ~ H
.. • .J 11
Lido ls le , on water. Fem zs.35. ~·smkr, lo Luxurious, full service of·
lbdrm, lrg liv rm & din-shr 4br, lrvme House. fice space. 1-6 rms. con·
inc. bay view, S77S. S230 Teresa day 64l·0977 fe r ence room . set' I
1 Br. 1 Ba. Stove .tr Dis· • 875-7~. ext 24t.evesl57-t447 setv ices . N e wpo rt Newp0rt S.•ch/No.
880 Irvine I ,_,. .. -bdrm. frplc, wet bar . e-c h c 11 f . f posa · 1 ........... _...mo. Roommate to shr Condo. "'a • a or in o: I
9.5 Mon thru Fri. $425. Afternoons only Ocean viewlux 3bdrm ex-Jrvine.S225 mo. 752-6188 1a1 161~• 17141 645-1104 138-8Clll. *-2445. ecutive condo, all new ---------
---------1 appliances. trash com-5512-0637 450 sq. ft. Delightful work-
....._ ________ ! .. Lge 3 BR l Y.t Ba apt. cpts, Small l Bdrm,·1 ba. 1. ca~ pactor. washer /drye r. Fem to share with same ing space with ocean
drpa,bltns.NrOCC.$475 gar . Clean, quiet. microoven,self-deanfog lrg hse nr s .C.Plaza. view. Fullbath.3yrold
mo. Aft2:30,54S-7214 =n:-~~e.'t\ oven. new crpt & drps, Frplc, wet-bar. S250. bldg. M:i()mo. Turner As-
S.C. Plaz.a area. 1 Br. Con· &pm. ~rpatl. ~~ PoOl(7l~)~ 3023Sec. 957-0899 socs .• -.u77. w.;;;··;·~·;: .. iio7 d::uP:~ te:n~·7 ctu~ 1w1i 3141 (11:}m:7i91. • .,,.,. ' Easy-going F to shr c.M. AllPOn AREA
••••••••••••••••••••••• S . 5 S 80 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dplx. pet.sOK. S210 + ~ Furnis h ed o r un -Nice 3bdrm , 2ba , 557-31116. LargeZBr.Frplc,deck,1Br,$42:5mo.UUlpd.SlSO utils.646-9029 furnished Executive ~/ till J W·11 · · .... stt Dys 631-6990 eves Suites 12ll1S i.n Irvine. mo. une. L 2 Br. 1 Ba. mW. Jo Ann some new, quiet, wa ... to . . . rn.m.mo. St. 2 children OK, no be•ch6:town. Ad~. 00 fW6.57430luckJones Luxury H.B. house. Fem. walking distance to
C--.. Mw 3122 pets. S-. s.erra Mgmt. peta. •· HAS Invest-New Villa Balboa Condo, ~~r;ts ~-hg;i~ldren ~i=-: Michelson.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Ml·lSM meatalnc.41'7·lll7. lg lBr, ml mo .. pool, ------------------
Nice View, 3bdrm, 2ba, 2 Npt Hts uea 2 br 1~ ba Lge, upstn 2br, bale. Jae, quiet-.7010 Room mate wanted , Office spece for rent, up .UDd-~ ,_,_ ..._ · • · td I N 3bdrm home in C.M. to3500sqft.Modembldg ........... ••tr"'· uo::ams , Bltna nu cpt M50 203 crp , enc . gar. . V "'-1 . . b adults. no pets. StoO. Oile '541-3Z11 · · wgum. '545. 1-Sa-31127 ersfri·~ ux 1uruor l r. Furn, util incl. $350/mo. nr ai..,,ort, covrd pking. Richard 640-1850 dys: · re g, vteW, secur. gar, Call Answer Ad #420, 24 all util pd. Sl.05/sq ft.
175-3058eves. Lovely E Side 2br lba Oceanfroal. pvt beach, 2 $440. MMN.37. 7~8390. hn. 642-4300. 833-!Ma Peggy.
nopetasiTs/mo ' ' Br MOBILE HOME, Lge 3br2baallnew,gar, Ul-ct.55 · comp!. furn. Heated 2 BR 2 Ba upper dupl~. I Bdrm. 38athxlra large WATERFRONT
patio, -=so. Open Sat. ---------pool, aecurity •garage. gar, M50 mo. w/cred.1t house. Nwpt Bch. Beau. I07~1ria.SM-Sll2. tBr.lleaadelMar.Elec:. SIOO mo, by owner. approval. 233 Prospect S'13-48rl. l:awallft511!'" __ ___.;__;___....;.:....__ paid Sia &U-tmort7~ St. ~12 Ofc sp fnn SZ.25 NHN.
Spacioua Studio, frplc, · · PVT. Rm, kitch prlv. Nr. Also Boat ap. •.50' NNN
$400 moutil pd. 754411 Huse, ocean vtew 1 Br. 2 Br 2 Ba, k>wer unit, close bch. S225 utils incl. Shr. Davis It Clark 151-1666
Call7•9657 Lar1e private E-Side Dls. '550. inclch utlla. to ~acb, patio, lots of w/1d. people. 536-7425 Ba h Kitcben full bllt.b F -alllfS.%317 parklftl. 1585/yrly. Call ---------Executive office for rent. 1 br, patio, ref rig, rear c · • • « •rr· c · Lloyd at Jacobs Realty ·~ . Air conditioned. New
apt, $390/mo. Days: ~:=· $330. No pet.a. L• ... •...... 3152 875-e&'70 for._. 4350 modern building. 2nd
840-9350; Eves: 840-l.519. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• floor view. Util. in-. Newer 2 Br. with garage. Coado 2 Br. 2 Ba. on golf BEACH YEARLY. 2Br, E.SideC.M. eluded. Centerpointe
Spac1oua lbdrm, newly Adult., no pet.. MlO. c 0 u r a e . Incl d 8 28~. Ocean view from SincleMO a r e a . J r v i n e .
decor. pr, South of hwy· 548-5'111 w u.ber /dryer, frige. patio, fflllc. It D/W · Sll25. 631-&ss 714·851·1&'111.
$ISO/mo. Adult. 642-9551. 1515. 4llU100, -..2711 (%13)ao.t880.
2 e d pie blk New uptnded Z2IOO aq. fl. r u x, 4 s to Exec Townbouae Back 2 Br.2 Ba. Condo with S.. Chi II ft 117'
beach, I a r , W I D , Bay Newport Bea~b with view, pool • rec rm. •••••••••••••••••••••••
$525/mo. Avail 2/10. view. 21 unit complex Near beach. Adults. 2bdrm. 2ba condo. ocean
7•IB with t.amill cowt pool m 1-.DJ. It canyon views, no kids
.. 000 ' c 11' or pets, '550/mo. Whitt C .... MIM 1124 spaii:' per mo. a MewpartlMdt 3169 Waterltealt.ya.2722.
••••••••••••••••••••••• She Ml•IOZ2. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
2 ... I .. "-' L1e 2 br, 1~ ba, patio, PAii llWPORT ~ L.' ''J .... ••c1•\~~ Newly decor. C:u pd. 275A c.brillo, 9'25. Noa ••••••••••••••••••••••• encl 1u. pool, d/waaber. peta. m.7450 CotMnY CUii
Adulta. •5073 a.m. Seawild Yi-e
MIWLY DICOI. ~ Sintles, 162 bedroom New tU bdrm luury
1 Br. ps pd, eael gar, 1 Bel -Pl utlll apta,•townbouaes..:...1900 adult apta ln 14 plans :::::r· pool. AduJta. No c:Mr.. No::... N~•-From __ aat ______ , ~r:>..'!' ~poo· 2 ::1.~e!~:1.
' water'8da. Oceaafroat for Winter .-~ ..... _ .. _ rt Bl d -._ ....... _. waterfalla, ponda! Gu l .. Tow .. 1•• -...,.,..or v · Rentala. r___.fsun-for cooklnl • beatin1 Ne••r decor. 1u pd .• ___ 0m&a __ .. _ .. ___ 1_rurn..::.:...:.:..:· 81:.....:..:'*:.:.•::..·~t7Mt12:..:._.:::.=·_1 paid. rrom Su 1>1ego
• a c I ar . . po o I , Sma1J I Bdrm. NO FEEi Apt. I& Condo Frwy dri.e North on d /wulter. Adulta. CllilldOK BeacbtoMeP.cldenlben IG..-a reatala. VW. Reatala. West -Mc •.ctden to Ml.O'Jll l7Mlll Breker -r Wll1Ua ft.LAM ._,..., JIJ' f,~4)~.V i 11 a I e .
... a:11w1 Adlll Apa. No ·······-············· lin!nm ,.... I__. Oeeap9aey. rm, lb9, $111, very .____.0 · 1..a,_. Beactt beautiful 1
"-:h..,.,,..,,.r. deall, Dlrt1ne .,,.., -'"'•'l bdr apt .. 71 loel util. •• ?.=:'· 111-11& ::: = ~-.:: .....,.,.,_,., --••JD y_.. JIJ2 11te, pool, \Htefully ._ 4000
. ······--·-.. ····-·· lam. • •••••••••••••••••••••• LOVELY Jbdrm, Jba .... l JW naw iBr. OCIAl .. OMr·TILY LapulladlMotorlan,
_..., wD rr,ae, peUo. 1~ Ba. Omit wD ...a. IBr, -frplc, eel9d 115 No. Paetne Cout
tMI ,... ~ cteear. Janal. • eallll tt .. 1ar. • /aato ., ... ,, Hw~ La1••a leaclt.
tHt. tN·llll. $110 dd. Y.-.r -· ....... ,,_.,.,......._. . Da , Weekl.J, Kltehen .....,_, .,..... HUMr.MAllOUI an lable. Low wloter
... .. IBr l\4illa .... •"-' ......... . •ar·••llJn -..... ,.~ • .., .... , .... w...--wort1n•
dMft mfti w, I'!-"-• wt W . =•a., 2 ::.'#,.,~/= ......... TV rm , lrtt • ....... ,.... .,... Cail anwaocw , ••· ran.1ar.-1o.r-n. batlla. tllt/mo, al10
Make your shopping The raatest draw in the
easier by uain1 the Daily West ... a Daily Pilot
Pllot Classified Ads. Clauified Ad. 642-5678.
Use "'6wet' At/ service
when placing your ad ... a .
Daily Pilot. ad number will
appear in your classified ad . we take your messages
24 hours a day ... you call
in at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
this service is onlv $7 .SO
,week. For more informa-
tion and to place your ad ,..~,... ..... • Prt.•-111......rwcs ..... 1mo,eer-~ ........... lnM... .... .... ~.... _.,_.,....... _________ , -· ....... =o..a. ..... .,., ............................ Oii(. u
call 642-5678.
.......... ..,., ........ , ........... ,..,.l~bllto
line IOllletlllq to ..U'T (Ill)----; (TM) Olllem.L itcla . tnl mo. Call a l'lldadadott..n. -....... 111-Ulr
:
·VALENTINE LOVE LINES
Send a valentine meaaage to your wife,
husband, sweetheart, boss, secretary, teacher,
friend or anyone special with a LOVE LINE ad.
Your message will appear on Saturday morning,
February 14, on the VALENTINE LOVE LINE
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 offer a choice of hearts
to place at the top of your
LOVE LINE AD
n I wish to send a message through the DAILY PILOT
LOVE LINE. 0 I wish to create my own S2()00 Val~ntine. 0 Payment enc losed .
O·· VISA ~ ........... 1 ••••••••••....••.• : ••••• Exp ...... .
0 Mas1er Charge # .......................... Exp ...... .
0 Please bill me.
Name ................................................... .
Street ................................................... .
City ..................................................... .
State ........ Zip ........ Phone .....................•..
I
U9e the handy box below to write your Love Line Message
(Minimum 4 lines)
•
O Add $4.00 heart to my Love Lines
0 Add $2.00 heart to my Love Linn
Mail to: DAILY PILOT LOVE LINES
P.O. Bo• 1580
Colte Miu, CA 12821
4.00
,
I
--·-
Ail• a s •• , o , ... : ...................................................................................... ·················~·····
Co•plete BoolllHpina
&en. -· n. 9'.aterMl'lta 6 tax.a Rt>H Rates -..u .
Dri•eway1, park1n1 lot
repain, 1ealcoathl1. S&S
Aaplaall.Ml-4871 Lic'd
OU CGWIMutTIOM a.mpao 6 .... In den. NOWAVAILABL! JHtle'iGardeninc BAROWOODn..<>ORS lletp. R.N wW bouM9lt AOAPEFORCE Exp'd. Plumblaa +Heat·
AM._,, •m•••I Color ~. wht Total ...,.eedoe proper Clean.up, gen. malnt, Cleued6Waud for I mot or?, Npt Bc:h. PaialiftlCompany Ina Repair, Low Rates.
Ueftlll ._.,,....ll c~• lO min blHth ty m~toftware hauJin1.treetrimmln"• An~.az.419lS.A. Joyce...,, 30-.t.ioDlol CallJlmMMm · · for DIX: s~. Call • ~••t'" 2 Ha • Mv clill rm1 SlS; Pyr8lnid o.t.a_ at.U2'7 rem ova I , comm . Hi• 1 a.c-T• Palntinl bc.eUence P.O • ._._..
••••••• .. •••••'"•••••••• ••I rm SJ,IO; ~h SIO: · · I an d s ca &le ma Int . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5115-ml •••••••••••••••••••••••
N•• lltclN• or ?atlt ~-ti.,_.Guar. •lrlim pet Dec.oe a1 ; '45·Zl22 Haul, cleanup, concrete Save grief, save time, lnter/Exter/Refinlshlng, THE lllAJL ROOM
t•ellllUIN for about "' -.... ,.. ,..,. · 15 1rr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~moval. Dump truck. uve • Guaranteed •c· ceilina./wallpaper Lie 2800 EC. Hwy CdM ·NB ~:~,..... l:tllmat• ~ •. ~.o:,~rk myaelf Hcl= =~~ :!~~· ~a~~~:1:'~~~~~:: Quidtserv.842/7'31 r!"!~.~~1~-Call Cain6Sonam.st06. _MCMLMOorM4-'411
-~ murala. Custom de'. Churches, Business, Cleanups, Trimming & Palntln&: Comm'I, In· 1..-s.r.tc. c..,.. C .... ~Cllltk s I g n s . A unique Re~ldenb.548-2489 hauling. Freeetlimates. Mein r duatrial, Residential. ..................... ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• altemaUve in home and 557,1271 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fr. ee est low rates YOU suPPb' Info, WE aup. llMOOSL-RltPAIRS Accou1tlc uilinaa + busindl deror. 837·<XW5, G..,..s.nlc" I EXPERT Brickwork • ·· · ply prcleieional·loolcinl
Allol.'\alloalCabineu cUl&oln Mad teaturln&, 4t4-74UI ••••••-••••••••··~·••• H.-.C...s.r.ke masonry.Loe.ref's.Fair &73-071'7. typed resume + ZO
2llMI e-atioft 17 yrs In Uc ...... S»-5.549 -----CHAIRS, Hand Stnpped ••••••••••••••••••••••• prices.551""555,790-7074 Painting•Pa-rtng • coplesforSlS.5'9-8001
a ru IM'd , Top qual -Dryw.. $14.95. Refm.ishedSl9.95 M&BWinterSpeclalsl ~ llr PaJombo m UH C....t~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'M2·'TT1Z Cleaning, paintin g, Custom brick, atone, WallpaperRemoval looflltt
' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drywall Specialist carpentry. Lie .. bonded. block. concrete, stucco. Paul Cutler, 962·3006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
CUSTOM ARP ENTRY Cement, 8*'11 Is Brick Qual. •prod, New & re· H---s est. 546-3608, !J'i'1M149 Refs. Free est. 549·9492 RALPH'S PAINTING New & recovers, Repair
Home/boat Qual work, Wortbyjob.P'rft mod.Uc. .532·5549 ~..,..._ LI 1 /""-Lo R s pecialist/s tay.busy ........ pn ............ -estimate&. Gl-3151 Our martretln• program Courteous, resourceful re· Mo•'--c. nt ..... t. "" ates. · R Ii ble ..... ,...12 • .,_ n• _..._.., .__L.L,_. .. ..., me Est. 962 .. 70 I ·prices. e a . ....,....... C~,.--...-can show you how pairs-designs. Est. ref. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
CUSTOM INTERIOR -_.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SOLAR ENERGY can 2x4 INK673--4279 Moving! The Starving . -QUALITY ROOFING CARPENTRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• EL ECTRJCIAN priced b e c o m e Yo u r College Students Moving Murals, Graphics, Unique All types, free est.
By Jay M2 8809 $29.50/weetl right. free estimate on INFLATION FlGHTER HcMnKll• i g Co. has grown, lruiured d~igns, free -:st. H~nd Visa, MC. 541·5930
Hot lunch. C.M. Chris-largeorsmalljobs. against the high cost or ••••••••••••••••••••••• sam e good service. painted. R~stdential. HARBOR ROOFING
HELP ! Starving lianPreschool.64&-5423 Llc.13116621 673-0359 UTIL ITY BILLS & WantaREALLYCLEAN IT124 ·436 License. comrre r c tal Jud y -------
ca rpenter• Patios. ----- -TAXES. Often with no HOUSE? Call Gingham 64l·&t27 637-lOtO Scf"ffM
garages, remodels. c......... Eleclr ician·Sm jobs, net investment on your Girl. Freeesl.645·5123 StUdenl will move you-al ...................... .
fences. docks .. or a ••••••••••••••••••••••• maint. & repairs. Lie part. For information --PAINTING MOBlLESERVICE
ti ..-""Cl Ith obli t " Ho usecleaning done ve r y re as . rates. 15YearsExperience R s s BOX! AJ. 87S-62!M. P .S. 1 M .... C•1•ullllfllr1•adi ... i.a.. 1 ....... 1..... O. 548·5203 w no ga ion con· 752 1493 848-3"177 e· creens. new creens
was In th.is area before Oen cc.Lr, foundations to Fonwic JTa.. -tact Ben Lang Sunchief thoroughly. Call after 5 ~ · 548-4162 Custom Made 642·9552
John Wayne! finish. Uc. ins. 493-3358 o,. _. Solar Systems. 641·8816 pm 962-8675or 962·6786 Nws'--Senk" REASONABLE PRJCL', T--ir-ic• --•••••••••••••••••••••••1~~~-------1 ~ r • .-... ~ 1~ •tOUS"'' DOCTO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1· /"" ... "'---t C ..... Serriu Construct.ion all types. 20 All kinds of Formica ---------C: R nt. c.J<•. r1c-.:es . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ • ...................... yrs. exp free est Work.FreeEstimates. Ha.cfy a Rxforaclean house Practical Nurses. Any Cust.work63S-9t53Jack Tree &Shrub trimming, •••••••••••••••··~··.••• Carpet Care of Costa lic1334.59. IMS-m3 64.2-9125 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494-8906 Shift, Full Time & Relief. removal. yd clean.ups.
DR JAGUAR spec1ahzes Mesa Quality work only - -----------Home & Apt. repair. Elec· -----831·7~ _ rloster/l.,.ar hauling, concrete. dirt
exclinJqMaint&Sales shampoo. steam als~ New con..truction & re·,_,.,..... tncal, drywall. tile. etc ROBIN'SCLEA.NlNG MALENURSE ••••••••••••••••••••••• JimCoru.m.631·4530
711W1'1\h, CM 646-2116 rum. 540-02!08 models. Bonded & Insur. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dory (7141631·4793. Service-a thoroughly S6.~ per hr 18 yrs exp. Neat patches & textures
l3'1B71lR.W.D.S48·95S7 ONE STOP QUALITY ---cleanho~.540.Cl!S7 s:&-10-U Frffht. atl-1 09 TypllM)Senice ••rlilllu; Carpet & uphol. cleaners. --F U R N I T U R E Carpe ntry, Masonry . -----••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~..................... Steam, shampoo. Pror. ROOM ADDlTIONS R E~INISHING : Hand Plumbing, Roofing. Stuc· T.LC. PaiRtilMJ!Pciperi119 -PLAST ---TYPING SERVICF.
Lie Day Care-Nr So Cst noor working. Wood. tile, Rem od I p I an Geo . stripping, repairing & co. Drywall, Tiling & Tender U>ving <.:leaning ••••••••••••••••H••••• ERING Wkdys (213)593· 1504
Pia za · Da.y & Swing parquet. Stripping, wax· Pilmer & Son. Lic'd upholstering Specializ· more. J.B. 640·9990 by Star . 15 yrs exp For DAVE'S PAINTING All types int/ext Eves (714)846·6237 S5Sh7~2f1~! B1rth ·4 yrs mg.Guar.838·5543 557-6932 Ing in antiques, kitchen personalized service. ServingArea9years 645-8258 ..., cabinets. patio furniture Carpenter/handyman, re· call Sandy al 642-6149 Most Reasonable aa..-L.• Wiltdow C~
TiptopCarpetCare Masonry.Brick. Block. rree esltmates. Pick up & pairs. misc d r ywaJt, - -Insured. Ur'd. 586~8425 r-.-nu1ft9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysitting in my home.
ages 1 yr & up, nr. Vic·
toria C.M. 64.2·8482
~ Tile. Carpentry-Patio delivery. Visa. A Touch painting your spec1rica· MRS. CLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• "L~t 'Ille Sunshine Jn"
Steam &Shampoo<;:ltan covers. decks . rences. of Class. 642·7712 lions. 754-0899 Homes. Offices. Apts f'ine ext/ml painting by Plum bing, Remodeling, Call SW1Shine Window
Only l2"persq ft ! Concrete.Patios, lks --------646-2240 Richard Sinor. Lie. ins. \tepairs, Leak Detection. Cleaning. Ud. 548-8853
---drives. Lic'd wa ·Gorcle•g HAMDYMAH ----Try me631 441 0 (24hrsl & Drains Cleared Top ---Will Babysit Days, very
reliable with ref. Co5ta We Care Carpet Cleaners 646-0'161 Do u R ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549.2457 645-1929 llOUSECLEA.NING Hat Plumbing 636-2030 Bargain shoppers read
Steam clean & uphols. ----•VERYLOWPRICES• -----Japanese Candrive. Pamllng&Papering th e littl e ad s in W~rk guar. Truck mount Find what you want in on landscape maintenan· SEl..L idle item~ with a 546-0527 Cabinet Refimshinl'( Plumbing repairs made Classiried regularly.
WantAd.Resulta 642·5678 t 645.3'7l6 ce·c lnups Geor ge I DailyPi"lot Cla~.,~·iri·cdAd Prof.work.Freeest ~imple Call Raymond And they find what
Mesa 742-4397.
um · Daily Pilot Class1r1eds. 549·20l5 _ _ _ .. w b42 56il:I Rsnb.!:_ Steve ~7-4.28l _ Worth 5.s.2·0537 _ they're looking for. __
....... Lost & "-d UOO Lost & "-d UOO Help W..i.d 7100 p W..ted 7 I 00 H.tp W..e.d 7 IOO Help W_..... 7 IOO Help Wmhd 71,00
Opp a l&Jtr 5005 o,,: ll:<y 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••. •••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••.••• •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••'••••••••••••••••••••••• F 0 U ND · W h it e AC C 0 UN TANT . 2 ASSISTANT Banking/S& L Bookkeeper. Ftr, s days Clerical
Coekateel. vie Mariners Co rporal 1 on s . a week. Apply in person HEID IMMEO.
.,,LIANCI STOii FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
& Dover Or . NB partnership,&asolt!pro-OfflceM•opt TB.lH between J..5pm at The Typisl·Bookkeeper·Girl 548 7114 prietorship. Post to the Exp bookkeeper & typis t. R Peli 27 w r d · 1 · 1 led F1·rm m· N•"'....,,..rt Beach usty can. 35 . Friday or me t ea Been in business 812 years. Priced
at $70.000. Owner says s ubmit on
down and will help finance. Owner
retiring and leaving s tate.
genera ger. account ... -,.... · I N B 5l50 analysis. fmancial state· area Xlnt benefits, send Immediate opening for Coast l:!..wy, N.B. - -eqS u,1pment m g co. .t .
I resume to·. Mr Anderson full lime tell•r 111· grow-a ary commensura e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ments. tu & payro I tax "" BOOKKEEPER · """'3215 PRE LAW student n--... s. t ti p · 177 'F' Riverside N 8. ing Savings & Loan. Ex· wtexpenent'e . ....,. · ""°"" re um prepara on. os1 perience preferred, but Full charge for retail
$25,000. Will do anylhin~ lion includes supervision 92663 will train. Apply at: j ewe J r y s t o r.e Ex . C I e r i ca I Seue la r y .
Legal. Confidentia I or 4 employees & reports ASST. DlllRl>TOI perience a must. Cathy. 60Wpm, apply in person, '42-5671
SMALL GIFT ITIM
MANUFACTUllNG COMPANY
7 year s in business netting approx·
imately 22% pr year . Priced at only
$44.950. Seller says submit a ll of· fers.
DVM . P.0 Box 3242, directly to the owners. ~ llVIHESlrL 64&-7741. Personnel Dept N e 92663 Experience in construe Full time-pre·school 14376Culver Dr. -·-·--·-85712.163 I · CA92'7l4 --------Newporter Inn, 1107 lion helpful. Non smoker _ __.:_ _ rvtne, Bookkeeper, Full charge. Jamboree.
Prererred. Convenient to SS2·6S51 D" ho · D Lost or fOWKI a pet? Call
Animal Asslstan ce1
League. 973-7387. No fee.
TOMMY'S
OF NEWPORT
ESCORTS 752-9368
AUTOMOTIVE EOE M /F inner use m ana Santa Ana & Newport PAaTS · · · Point. Sa lary com. Clerical,. .
Frwy in Fountain Valley mensurate with ex· W.,..._ty/Senic•
*Found or lost a pet? Call ATLAMTIS MASSAGE Free parking. Must be COUMTBMAH Banking perience. Immediate Irvine engine distributor
rlexible & able t o Dealership or foreign Co JScWT.... opening. For appt, call has immed. opening for
EQUIPMENT RINT .AL IUSINISS,
Price $1,011 .000. Profits las t year
$300 ,000. 25r; down with owner
financing availabl~.
us! We' re the Pet Pals SPA
(714>7»21188 Be Pampe re d by 16 perform under pressure auto parts experience Norman Whitfield : highly motivated & nexi· & work well with people. prererred. CaJI Glen for 1_21 .. __ ble self·starter wtgen.
A found or lost pet? Beaut. Girls Open
10AM-4PM 7 days. Phone
645.3433
V · an apnnin•--t Previous e-xperience de-.........,._ oung aggressive com· ..--·"'"""'' sirable. ofc skills, congenial pany with potential to IOY CAltYH I W. Ill c~ norsonality. & pleasant Call A Pet Hotline
(7141761·1209. 'th pany oa up !I ...,... ,,.. g row wt com IOU.SIOYCE · 1·f phone m~""•r to asst"st S I ~--' t United Ca 1 onua Bank Full time, exper . helpful '"'""' a ary ac .... vn1mg o ex· AHD IMW bul ndt nee. Many com-Service Mgr. Will· pro-
FOUND: Sm female COVER GIRL perience.Sendresumeto 630 "A"NewportCtr Dr. benefits A I cess warranty claims• J QUAIL 'LACI
'IOHITllS Golden Retriever mix • OUTCALL • Ad "706, Daily Pilot. 64M 444 Newport Beach r:~K Plac~ntiapplv!t: work orders including re·
dog, vie Hamilton & 953-0778 MC/VISA P.O. Box I 1560, Costa Babysitter: Mother Look· 644-6464 Costa Mesa lated correspondence,
Thurin, CM. 64.2-1295 - -Mesa . Ca. 926216· ing for work needs sitter telephone followup, •
LOST -:-. Fe-m Go-Iden FIRST L_.DY ACCOUNTING-FuJI time, for 15mos. old girl.I E .O.E. •CAIDRIYBS• lcustomer billin~~· "'Tip·
A I A/P accounting assis· Days/Niles my house. CheckerCab ng <SO+wpml,"' hraey
Retriever vie. Beach/ E orf M-...1-1 t t I d d I TTo.-0222 by touch nee. Gd. co.
Ellis "Aulri " D~'""""""' Lie SC • uuc S an . ar:i eve oper Mesa/N.P. Blvd. a rea. Beauty ----benefits. salary comm .
752·1920
..... .,...... ~ ,_... ... _ construction exper pre· Ca 11 for inte rview S..._ 4550 Mortg1gu. T,...t j 1'19120 -•r ..,_en. ferred. It phones, oc 631.2589 Haircutter w/f, pays up C A S H I E R wtexper Ca.JI · 754·19Sl, .;;:~••••••••••••••• D.ecli 5035
1
G •. -h· *: 972-1345 * Airport. area. $1,000 1-to 70o/. or lse a space. be HOUSEWARES SALES or send Dresui:ne: ACttn: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost cat. ray .,. w Ile MC •·VISA A l d 955 ......,. BABYSITTER, mature your own boss. 241 l Apply ln person: Crown Wayne emtng, on·
I H · gt e h .,. ccep e ·v~ troller, Chari-E. Smith 1.000 sq ft lot, rncd. elec· rra e. unlm on eac --- -----adult. for 20 mo. old in p C.H .. CdM. 673-2552. Hardware. 1024 Irvine .....
trical,nr OCAirport,all T.D.FoaSALE 53tH978 TOUCHA CLASS ACCOUNTAMT our home. Please call <WestcliffPlazaJ NB. Co .. PO. Box 19129 .
orpart.S375mo.orless 1 year$18,000T.D. on a ESCORTS F IT . general o rti ce lrvine.Ca.92713
646.4631 Newport Beach bayfront LOST: Mini collie. vie 752.0817 duties. 1131 Backbay Dr <714)957·2819 Banking CASHIBWAMTID ----
condo project at 12~ in· Newport Blvd & Monte ------N.B. 644·~10 Co ... rcWT.... Full time. Good pay
.. lzaujlPHt/
Fltt&IC•
terest payable monthly, Vista, CM . Reward PSYCHICIEADIMGS Banking/Sti. Growth company S lora Clerical
discounted to yield 30~. 646·3163 556-1178Jack ACCOUMTIMG 'T"... Previous experience pre lions. Over 20. We train. TyplS' ts 50WPM
Owners will guarantee - --,.. -• ferred. 2950 Harbor Blvd. C M ••••••••••••••••••••••• payment. 6"75-glll. REWARD. Male German ~ Fullerton S&L has an ,
... "..... s hepherd ca 11 e d • FOXY LADY • Rapidly growing inlema· opening al the Hunt· United California Bank Dicta Sec ys Oppa lwlltr 50IS "Smoky". Lost Sunday. Otrr<:ALLONLV t ional co. seeks en· ington Beach office for AS S
.a.. 1 / 1 ... c:.8i. Nr. s.c. Shopping VISA MC thusiastic, self·starting full lime teller. Ex per. ...... Mai·n St. C HIER Exec. Sec'ys ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""•0 •c•=• • ...., 972 11 ~. • . d" "d I r ·u· . f rred but ·11 t . ~ LOAN Sl500 or more. Dbl. P~n Ila/ Center. Please. 557·7489 • • ~ m ivi ua or posa on m pre e · wi ram. Huntington Beach
your money. Loan is Lost&,..._.. or&46·35C!I. Acctg. D~l. at cor-Typing r equirement u M Looldltc)foro
secured by unprecedent· •••••••••••••··~··••••• ------..... peut· M g b pol r.ate Gdhea t u~rters& Ji~ 30wf pmpt. Call 714 ·871-4244 E.0.E. TUTE choll"91itl IHI? ed lsl in ftlm financing A al 5 I 00 Lost: bm & wht Male ... era. IC as~a e Y rvme. · yp111g .,. or ap .
hiatory.114.957.4()86 .. ~~~~.' .. 1! .. ! ........ Shellie. "leus". Jan. 23. Phys1calTherap1sl. Earl k ey capabilities re · EqualOppEmplyr
C c:.D28J7 by appt 10-7 quired. Excell. oppty. for l~~~~~~~~~~I Priv Studio Photoshoot ~~44 ____ .....,. · advancement. outsland·I:
MoMytoLo. 5025 on Sun. Feb. 22nd. 21Fou.n.d : 1 black & 1 while ing co. compensation &1---------•I ........................ s h ooting sess ions. kitten. both remale. both GrtalC•~mry benefits in ple asant / Equaty~PurchaseMoney 9·'1 211·4. For serious declawed.64.2·7072 Escorts workin11: environment. V
Loans. S50K·S7~K. !lo amateur photographers -Contact: Pat Mills BANKING down pymt C_redit or tn· (18 + models) Limited Found: little lonR·haired 24Hrs. S4l·Ol80 Sci9atffic
come r equirements: registration.Call Stone& Chihuahua. male. v1c Caah/Ct.cu D,...._Cwhola ON YO.JR FUTURE
Hom.ea, Apts · Com · Bower Produc tio ns. Irvine. 754-3734. AM bp/MC/Yisa 180ll Milchell South mercaaJ bid.gs. courtesy 979 2498 I EOE Tellers to bkrs. Mr. Thomas . Found : Old English -rvine,557·9051,
BKR. (714)752·6363 GASOHOL. Sheepdog. male. vie NEEI?ED: Male ~ate, at·l;~~~~~~~~~ Pon Tome 30 Hours
S-.a.--... Greenbrook. H.B. Nr tractive, proressional, ~Ii If you 're a career
Widow has money for 2ND ~COHOL' Ta I be rt I N e w I and .~ to 42\Al yrs old , on. Fri· Accounting minded individual with a
T .D.'s any size above _ 962.~106 day, Feb 5. for dmner BIWNG DEPT .,.0 ooo No _..,t , " minimum of 6 months •• . . cn:u1 •. no Make fuel for that com· · par ty al 7 :JOPM ror •
.. .. OltSC..._ am ~ perlence. Wells Far~
"' Macled .._.. ~ Bank can offer you a
IOAT ASSIMILY Full time. Some expr.
prererred. Apply at 3401
Fordham, Santa Ana
Vagabond Sa.ii Boats.
MARKETS
For 2nd & 3rd Shifts
DELI MANAGER
We promote to manage· --..-------~ ment & supervision from
Cashiering experience
would be desirable,
United Califonua Bank
19945 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
96().6575
within.
WANTA CAREF.R~
Costa Mesa
Ill Del Mar
631·9421
Laguna Beach
494.9233
Huntington Beach
962·9116
pnlty. For action call fortable gas guzzler. Fo"nd : male bl a c kl Vivacious. oood lookinR C t...-111 previous banking ex·
AGT873-7311 anytime How to book available· Maltmute, about 45.50 birthday 0 irl. Include .__On). C
local energy club form· lbs . Vic Beach Blvd 8x 10 glossy. Re ply i WLif SiiFArn ing. For info; write <between Ellistralbert) Classified Ad 1839 Daily ty's ~~·~ ~~i~~~e~i> pha:Jrs\ ~n E.O.E.
Any amt·bt, 2nd, 3rds· ~~.r~xRi9~ g-:,s~"A H.8.840-7'73. CPoislolat.M~Oa .. CaB.~_,!,560 , 419"Cf· ...,...... LagunaHlllsorEIToro. ·~~~~~~~~~Chef. Italian food . 2/yrs .,._ ,. 1 ~ .,~ ll•ybyt.adt&4Jd.~ exp. Prepare soups , •oc•. terms, reuab e ten· 9211126 Found : Golde n Lab . =..._ MCI 395 Along with an excellen lo1W.1,...r/Tpf meats. vegetables, etc. .·de_n_.•E•.•Starr __ .. _-8133 ___ "••.,,,•••••Atk•••••••••••5••1•2•0• ~:C::kh~~~~ o~~·a~~~ INTROSPECIAL w wll .,.._ salary and benefits forCPA.fullorpatttime. Plan menu, estimate ----------MYSTICMASSAGE ca 11 • pachge,you'llenjoyou Salaryopen.675-2070 consumption, purchase
Use temporary jobs as
your sl)Opping tool We
have long & short term
Jobs available in the O.C
Airport area. Weekly
paychecks. quarterly
bonus trips. Call for
appt. today:
557-0045
. . en-Lin:
llMPOl!AflY PfllSONNH SllMCU
l723 lirdl Strfft
.....,..,. IMclt
Clerical
Busy auto ins. omce
needs clerk for filing,
phones & general office
worll. Good salary ai paid
co. benefits. Call Llnda
at 848-SMI. W.T. MORTAGAGE H.B. 83M70Z. Sa~t~~GE SlO~~ wit• Hper. lxull. ~:,::~. ';-~~k~nc!e ~: __ B_OOIOC __ E_E_P_E_R __ , food Ir eupervise kitchen
2nd Trust Deed loans, Found: small white dog,1---------bewcfla: ••ca .. formationpleasecall: For Ra. D firm. Usual staff. IUO/hr. Take ad ~~~!!11111-----$10,000 to SU0.000. All female, Harbor View •PACIFIC• hll _. 111 "--'--benefits . Marae , to nearest Employment Clerical terms. Bkrcourtesy. Mr. Hllls,CdM.644-l!r13 • r-YecW..,,... _._ 752-41219. &evelopement Dept. ol· CAIBPOSIT10M Stuart.se-ms •ISCOltTS• flt s .. rl•t· l•••t. 714-973-3724 --------t nee. o.o.T. 313.131·014.
Eaay money avail. for 2n
6 ll'd R.E. k>ana. Aak for
Mr. Tlttmann. Bier.
5'M·-
M..-S .. Trwtt ...... IOH .......................
hlllr'~c .. All tn-ol real atate
............. ~lMI.
S,.11 'I ... ...
'42·2171 14'"°611
MAKE IOMaOM "°'""' M._E IOlllONI ... Ill
Found : Pomeranian , 549-1519 lnlM loc....._ C .. : Adpaldforbyemployer.
Huntington Beith, vie. JwitOpened 24hrs. M rs . Ir• c II•, Smr +~11u: BOlllEEPEI Child Care for aies l~
Yorktown I Be a c h . • & 7 I 4 75z· .a.171 ·--••:,....e · -llaru I at Racquet 990-uov P;pa\dtH Coctr.. C.... 1't.. ""•c• Dip..... 8all/Heallb Club. Tue 6
Found: Parakeet. vie........................ Urllw WELLS ...t ...... e '1"• Wed 5-tPM. Call Leo
20th St.' Is Sant.a Ana. Jolts Wmalil4, 7075 & C..:-Ille. FARGO l•rtHt Yecetl•••l,_ID_·l_l7_4 _____ ,
C.M.54M.Weves. ~:·~·;;;,:•;;;•;:•:t~~ ~~~~~~~~~!!I BANK ......... n:•:rv h CIVIL ENGINEER
Found, German Shepherd Gen. on. Acdng Clerk. Answeriq Service taklnl ....... • .. ttr.u. GRAD. Elsper. In aub-
mb. Blk/brwn. Hunt· Many yn eq>er. wrtt w/ applicaUom for ttPM· M .......... k .. dlvialon1, 1radin1.
ln1ton Harbour area. public 6 off. resp. 7AM shift Sun & Mon on· ~Eq~u~a~l~()pp~!E!m!p~ly!m~/f~/~h prifern41 iet ••t uUUtlea. Donald E .
841-5054. RobertaTaylor548-2890 ly. 382 3rd St., JC,~ me~ ............ st.eYemlDc ..... 15
Place a HAPPY AD Lost: Sml Siamese Ca( Companion Aide for elder· 1 iiLa_guna_. iiiltea-ciiihiiiiiiiiiii•iiil IAMCIMCI _. I Nlly 0¥,._. C'leltcal
lnW.cohunn ana. to Yanc. vie. Dover ly Male or Fem, Xlnt 11 Savlnp Teller r;•t1on r••lre41. IHel .. •t ••aM OflllCI
a.cl Trwt o.d In •crow foronlySU5. Shu. NB t42·901Z o Ref•. willlnl to travel. ASSe•v'!!. •11t~lewpmtm-,~!f:s.•8L . ..e.y _. uqh'" We1'a-.2partlhnepot.1· ._ ....... _ Callta-5171 MCMIOO.Olna.lteward. 17S.74SUadt Loe. Mllslon ._,co. ... .... .., • .,,. o..••'efltt •pply· Uom ID OoMa 111 .. • n.-• -2 yr In· nucb .u.eanblen w/J L exper. pre erred. • , • .,. • Nnpalt.._.totn»e•
......., ~yield, •II Found: Bo)''• bike, vie Oal'detdq wanted: Mow· yn. exp. CandldatH Salary comman1urat Pwt ..... to 41 W(ll!l. WClltial '""
L.A. Federal Savln11
currently seeks capable
individual wit.h 50+wpm
lypin1 to train ln all
f)hHes ot Penaioa Ad· mill.iatntion a ~
Senlcee Processor In
our Newport Beaela ol·
~-11'A/Keocb or corporate
esper .• m•t. warn word~ 6 UM ol
CRT .
All repliea wlll be
~.Conlad:
Deltnllnddicl
n.Ma-•l
lam.,.,-.,... Happy lil'thday to SuraelAM.H.B. Plea l n1·ed1ln1·raktn1 m111t e.ve td. manual w/eirper.Oalt&ac:t: tM ,..c • .alaU.1
IJll'VD'l'OaSWANTED KaUl1:Af\mly,ndt.ln1 tdenttfJ.97'2SW-pl.n, 1weepln1 free ut dettertt.J, Id. e1ealpt, MJ..IKIJD MA110MAL NIU•.,mU..,._.. =~~~~~;;;= Well_.._......._, rn..t wkb a bMrt of H.B. ._.... . neatlnaJIPMrance6de· 64MHI •DIJC_. ... ...._. • .. ~*~l!!t ~L'}~. ----• ..,. llDld. a... ahraf'I, LM peedablt. Wd w ... llfe O 5 ~''""°" ......_ -·--.... · a.a . ...___ A8M Found: amaU male blacl Pnctkal Nune Ir Mate. .. HPPGl1 medlcaJ elec· !! .. E. 4411 • .....,., c.D 9Gll nt '
IRAJIDS.INVDTORS .. I UIO ut/lonl·halred. vie Aa1'9tlm .. aU ftW a/hr t.roldes. Gd. baeeftta. On· Make your advertlalna ':~ ,,;_ ....
• "" T • s TT E It ~!!!!!!.......... ::.~~~/7tb St, H.B. !!.'!!!: IHch .,.. ~.~t p~~.::'n-:i dDUar IO rarther! Liat ~ ..... ,., ...... i.r=--.==n.
YllUJ9 ---........ .._._ I --I ,... bull1•1 every day ··~ •T.D."S6 ...... TI -·-"'fi11D --ap~J . indteClwlfledwtkm •
C .. i D ........ a--.... Pait, A«e1rate , rOUND : Germ a Qullfted Adtnill. Aaallt. Ca I: Mn. Pare II , of tbh aewtptper. __ ... ,_._ Com,i:t• 115 Aetlo Slaepberd Ihle. Vk Xlnl NL PWDll Bula. ••·---
_ _.,_. (TM ,. lftda/11111... -----··
I
Wlldneeday, Fee1uary 4, f M' WtlltM 7100 twp W-...ci 7 I 00 H.lp W..t.4 71 00 r---~~ ..... --...;....;._ __________ .---,;._, .. -~~~.-..;.. .. ~ • 1111 •• ................... •••••••••••••••••• ••• •• • •••••••••••••••••• ··~· ,) .
••••-• .. ••••••• ••••••-••••••••••••• l..ef•l S.eretary, H.B. lledlcal r1anll , Int ena nt Pff • W..eM 7100 HefpW.._.. 71M~w..-.. 7111 c••teA&. r.AROIClf 11 a ho•a ltAaDWAASIALIS m D J )'tt. Calif exp, TIAMSClllH 14 hr to s t art , Co • ............................ - ................... _ ...... -•
a.._ Uf p OIN,._. fer Oua Pt IU•im1a A• Iii....-: Crowe hfny rnponalblllty, ~xp for tad.lok)gy offi<'t' bcnct1taCJAU~ l~ST SAUIMlllOM IECRl:TAJlY w/tnnt
ruaCur ujft« •t1ntan ma .. '--" U )'OU a Har.a-... •• lrvlM. •lotalW.,quallfiedonly lnN.8 .Gl-4422 P h 1 t i -LOAMPIOCISSOI E•pertence neceaHr blitmd~d -• !!!' I l•r•~t111• .. ur • 1n .,,,~-• ...... IA i....a. ral CW..edUr Plua) H It CaU <7l4)tn-eou Sut'. ..... • ..,..,. ..,1 COUlllE8 tr..-sh~ 00 ~1ar t "!1' ~ for wom en'• app ere typial I ""I · .. .,,. a ...,.. I .J "" 1 ..._ ,.,.,, --------"--...., f'IU' ma: pos1 .. ons ava1 at.ore Xlnt beoeftt.a i cell:-.... N t ~ "'' on pt fl • 6U '"'"/~ ...,WAM'f9 L .... Secutw t Must h.an own trans & f:x~rit'f\Ce & edut ullor Ac c u r ale t Y Pi ~ g . full time Appt· M4-7100 P •P • m\411t W ___,,_ Sm air. dynamic rul be familiar with 0 c· needt'd !lft33 pleasant phone vQ1te • . Alf AC't urah• l) Int, '"' ~r.aa1 QlTM'( e •r:= ae .. __.1 eatate litigation firm ln L A areu no 1':tlt•11, , PrC'f no n-s m kr. C all •SALIS LADY• SErPKET
hrthd "' _ ... lft ~ rrRt appUc for a rwl pleasant posltJoo for In PrnH h oul lf'ar hc n blwn 9 llAM 963·9784 u.IK ,1 I ,. SWt llr11 Oro•tllllrvlMf'llMllpaay Ume ......_ill OW' re-New~rt Cl'nter s eek s dlvidual ..,hocnJ<1y~dr1v aides. & ubs Full t1m1 . . F\11.16 PartTime FHb. Jala nd Jnvat mt. I AM 3 at•~ t'1lll has fWlblne position Im ader ad dlpt. ~ eic P d • e fficient & '" RfCB'T'IOMIST SHOWOl'P ti rm . C h II n 1In1 . M Hitt ni~ •vailallla. W • coHter ulea. Re en e r I e ti c L eg a I iFnn~· 9c5an 788 11.';00 Mon & put llrnt' positions Fuhion laland dlvenlflecl aec..,t.rlal
CL k TYPIST
t 1, '" 1'\p1 t m l'd~ for
vur • • :-. f•fl S'r1~I '>'J
111 .. unr ,,. h11 n111 I \IH
Ml IS'" 1•111 ~ 1• 1t1lt I••
h Hlltl• h\ \ llho.t' lu.-11
t. rrJI ~n111.1h poll•nllJI
", '4111 tr 1111 tu 11'1' our
111m1•11h·r krnun.11 .,."
l't'lt I'll IJ'41tl l>t•nt•fl(\
l'I~ JJ>!'I> UI ~lt'l 'Miil
Plt'''-t'\< 'Wn111 v111llh tor'
lt>41 ~.11"·r \\1 In 1111'
l'Oi\11''\MllJ\ "lol 'HSf.
\\~nit' u11h &'10 rl.J\ F~
Vt'' h1•h1ful 1\111 .11·11-.
µl1•as.1nt '11rr11u111l1111'' 111
L oi( H1·•1r·h 1!14 4 t~,;
C'om putr·r
EXECUTIVE LADY
(.'nJl1'j?I' (;r,111 ((I .1-. ... 1 .... t
tht' 1•11..., 11f .1 rornp111t•1
' 11 ( t ,,. ,I rt• f Ir Ill Ill
NPv.11ort lkn1 h ..,h 1ultl
hav• 11nwr;1111rr11111o; '''"
10 h<1 .... 11' I( 11r f11rt r;111 t..
l'olJl.lhlt if •l''-1111 lllj t''
c1·utl\ l lt-1 t•I prnJ1·1·1
ft'<;JlllO'ii11tla l1 ..... ti If\
1 om mt•n,uralt• " t"< I'
Pleasl' :.c.md n·,unw < o
f) 11 h l'ilot I' U I :•hll
(' \1 t \ Q262f; '\rt "!Ml
* C OUMSELOR • f' T 1t1•1•r..,. m rt>IJl •11
;1 r 1· .1 " 1 11 I r .1 r n 1 n
tw h<i111•r 11•1t1l1 f11·.1l11111
It >'hlll'llll'' fur '"'11-!111
l'IH1trt1I '>tlfi ':1:1.'>
""41 • Wifht penoo wl q uirH lood apelllnc. Secretary S horthand, fo'lriohl<' hl'I 770 l99'J IPM-SPM oppty. In very fut-paced
1ooct WlephoM "' Ir am mer 6 pen . dictaphone & xlnt typing Pho~e ans~ering and ~le SALES/MANAGEMENT: cor prte hdqtn . Sbtnd, w .. w "'our Servlc manablp Muat enjoy slrllls amust Xlntsalary MEDICAL f>r1•t1<'hool c leri<"al 111 _Executtve Image Consu ltant-typln••exper.nec.Non·
f P•l1ftlll!nl Out1e1 In mMtJnc the public. App. depending on qualifica· FR,,.._ OFffCE TUCHIRS Suite ~peration. Pina Intangible sales exper. smkn p . Xlnt. med/·
d ude twny plaone con ly · Pennyuver, lHO lions & ex per. Good """' To •t"rt tmmed1ately F:xC'ruttve Suites, 2082 Mr Dalton4M0-0207 denta l benfts . Heavy
t .. ,.l •llh r uatomen Plac•UaAve.,C.M. benefits.~. BookkCeealper , Med1or .. & P;irt llmt or full lltr1c-Michelson11212,752-0234. ho l~ Ir k
d.. ..._ . --Medi exp req. Ilea\ v l'rt'·,<'l1onl ~7 12ro p nes, y I wor
U l)ltC'fWJI , lYPIDI ,.. •• Hilb "A3hlon Sto-L ....... s~·y phones. ~1-6480. I ' *SALES* variety. c : 64().()123
qu1nod Trt&Ui1111 will . '" ~ .,.. RECEPTIONIST p bl ~~~~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!' "rov,ded C•ll M r . needs help, office o r For Newport Beach law ----___ 111r111t111v ersona e, attractive ~
Riehvpfoqppt '79 2333 11lea .xper ~ired. NB offke. F.xcellenl skills a ~K.¥.JL.4.G.L> OffM'f Prnsman needed in our inlema· mature lndividual. pre·
' a,.a "'°"Ofn must. Duties include typ. Meclcol S.C'y F • .llJ>t'r d lltl Prh~man lion al corporate head· fe r direct sales exper. ro O~n•ralOrtk in& corresponde nt'e & Woodbridge Mt'd 1'11 I c,11.,b C'mtunumtv 4 unit <I ua rte r s lot'a l e d in profess ional office. Bas
ManufartUl\nl t.:o need Hotel dot'ume nls a nd othe r person oCc, lile bkµ~. ll" \5'flh IGGO Plarentrn Ir vine . ~aut working + comm. in Hunt Be
•---• Sh e n vi ro.nm l;'nt . PBX area 8423400 'lhupi.df t.1u'tf'r w/e11p f res ponsibiliUesass<K'1at·' i . p \w '"M ~witchboa rd.e xpe r · ·
Herept . 1nvou_•ina Hom.Ath1 duel ed with front desk. Con 488rv:,_ne17lheri;?011'e1.~I!) h<'lpful Some typing re· Salesperson. Sandwich payroll. l<'t'Uttle typing 2nd ahJft. Apply: Miss tact P al, 644-9190 '" • ... ~ ·1 '" ,., .. IOkt'v by wuch ble m M arci, Surf & Sand Suite224 &1? 14711 ,ROOUCTIOM q 'fl lhouare lookmgfor route, ~I. Comm. bas is.
mv l(d ,,._Y at benefits. Hotel, Laguna, 497 _...77 Legal Se\relary Santa MACHINIST J <::iret'r with excel!. opp Ca ll Renl·A·Chef 642· l "~ 1 • , , '"'t'n Rous A.nu /Tusun area P11"1 I' for a<h ant'ement plu:. ~-• v., H t I 1 bl r MODELS 12nd Shfftl l!tl rompany benefits M anufactunn.: S.S7 90'JO 0 e ti on a vat 8 e or e x n r i.: <' n ,. I t'(' I r o <"Ont Jct Pat Mills
I n r fl II r 'b .. r & FrCMt. o.tl&Clerll perlen<'.ed. l eg.a 1 t'emale onh l'hoto h 1 f Sc:--AU:c
v E f d se creta l t at screening frf'1• 'i,11 m .. r ·1111' 1 "'I: h:.'i an rtnn1TI ~l(el"Slf\)tnl xperience pre erre ry in 1 1g ion. 2 6 81 Female' 11, i·dinJ: \fn111r'll o11,.,·mn1: fur ar ...___ ' Apply to Cindy, Surf & municipal & bus1nt>ss c>oalt'r'<I 1m1d11nrst ,,.,.,t .........,."9 C:F.Nf:RAl.OFFl<.'~. Sand Hotel Laguna law with knowledge of ex~rient't' &. ~·''"''11"' toc• ahl• tu ~c·tup & lntet"natioftal
S»orted uffi<•e rlut1 .. ~ BeiU'h,4974477 M ag Ca rd 11 IBM v.ith lo<"a l r.111"1' ~ t h l80tlM1tchellSouth "' ma.:az1nes Phutc" fnr ••1.rrati II 111ac lint s OJ I
SALIS
Pos1t1on a vaiJa ble in
floor covering s ales
Residen tia l and com -
mercial. Call Mr Terry
Welch, 751·2324
John Bloeser Car pel Co. Prefer 10 l(ey by luuch Memory operation S II ro.1lm1• qu·n .ti. mrlb 1 lrvme. 557-9051. EOE
l',1st bank ex"er1ence llousf'cleaners want~d. skills n~essary Must be year dalt' bool< & 1"''11 1 1.itt1" . urfon· "Tlndn:. •·----------1 Sales ,.. good pay C II Cl contl':.t N CJ fl :'t1 i .. I h a lpfu l Wkn d s • . a eaning ab le t o wo rk 11.1 th 1lrill· .11 \\111 he rr· "' ~ Uni t"" ~ .. ,, 3726 T 1 me~ m 1 i: :1 1 1 11" 1 ·-~~mlllll~-..... -•I holidays only 8 S. Hunt imi ""....,. minimal instruction & S4:! 44tll, 1 u irt ti 111 v. 1•r k f rornr-
1 n j.! t On llt'a ('h Ca l HOUSEC'LEA"'ERS supc•rvision Salary l'Om 11! J ra1 I ,k. ti ht•, & RECIPTIOMIST
J" • 1 f t I\ w11nted for adv ajly in 1 536 7551 Mo11 )o'r1 To v.ork for J"nic·e·~ men!lurate with ~kills 1\ Models 11 r 11 111 11r111J mn Pfl
v ~ I 11 1 .. r II ~Jlt Ctr Front ofr ap·
GENERAL OFACE
M U!'t enj-Oy phone C'on
Raog·-'" Ann Prr. 8 3, ex per i en('(' x Int lllt'ed ti) l.adu•'I hi llltt<lt I• I Ir ' I""' t'U .. ""J S · pt>arant'e. ext'ell. t) pin~. Tues Fri 675 2514 benefits !173 21J7 Ask for JeW<'lr) If 11tu 111•1·11 •t• Mo~~ P,CC•atties i:d. phone manner F.x·
Kay earn$10 '20pt•r lu 11111;. 11.i1t \1r111r111~ r \1'
ma 2 4 hn; iwrrla~ 1 um 1>1:• '>t "' 1-. o t• "ell advancement op-... port Un Ill<'!>. 644 7644
miss ion. bonus l 'ull 111111· ----------•J.;..--------•J pos1lion.o; avail Al,11 nt t·1I
Retired-military
We wiU tra in you for a
new career in mortgage
ban k in g . Excellent
pot e ntial for
$25,000·SSO.OOO incom e .
National mortgage bank-
ing company with many
lending sources wa nts
t .1 l'l , work 1 n !': w 1t h Housekeeper Wa nted Sun
~·o s tome rs . detailed day /M onday onl y
work, & typin.: ·!'aid B a by s 1 t t 1 n i: &
1 acat1on. sick pay., & Housekeep1n jl Lovely
h<>u lth ins urance fo ull s u rroundings in l.a J:
t1m1• Apply an perso~. Beat'h. Call days 641 8700
Mun F'rr at Rarden s evesiwknds497.3983
Liquor Cle rk. mJtun'
pt:'rson for stocking, de·
livery & storP nf'cds
PIT . m06tly nt!?hls App
ly in person, Holidav
llo use Liquors, 2'.)37 ~:
2 ta dies for M f!'11\ '"'' 1
lions Call Mr S..tirm1· ,11
l'r111t1111• RECB'T10HIST highly-motivated people
Full 11me Mon·Fri ~uM who want to develop a
ht• peri.onable & well· new career Commission
l!room<'<J. & enjoy meet only. EOE (714 )772·9330.
m i.: thP pubhC' Requirf's -f'e'lt Contml. 696 Ran·
1t ulp h Ave , C M .Housekeeper 2 /dnvs
546 5.570 week . Thurs ·& F ri · 2
VOLT
t'hildren 8 & 11. Ref rt>q
Call Mon-Wed.831 -6977
H OUS EKE F:PE H
WANTED, two ~':days. 8
hrs wkly HB 84&-0904
HOUSEKEEPER/AIDE
Coast llwy, Cd M
LOAN OfftCBl
SIECIET Al 'Y
Prefer expr 'd real estate
loans t900 to $lSOO per
mo + bonus & beneflls
Work in Orange Co
PAN &Company
2131574·1707
TEMPORARY
SBlYfCES
OFFERS· ~:ature Live.in Laguna1 _________ _
Beach. Pvt room & bath
494·5093 bef. 8pm MACHINE Top Pay
Paid Holidays
Paid Y acotto.. HOUSE«HPERS SHOP
Group ~col Plan
673 75!15
NURSEFINDERS
net-<h
RN's-t.YM's-N.A''
W e Pay!!
•Sluft d1ffl·r·•nt1Jl •Spc.c1alt~ tl1rr r •·nll 1•
•Weekend thfft.·rt 011.11
•O \ll.Yor "' 1 YI•
HO FEE
547.7537
12ZC,V.111h -
HEVER A FH TO YOU
We have an 1mmt'<hatl' 1 m"' e d . o pen i nq .
o p e n i n g f o r ~ mochine optr trainee . housekeepers. Full t1m t• All CJlrf d ept 6AM_, ___ .,. ____ _
Offwt P~simon
I-•111 r tf >11tl l'rr~ ... m.1n
r, .. i. r " , llHmlt 1 ~ un11
\ttioll lhol1 1'iar·rnt1a
\\ (. \I
Pi>OOUCTIOM
('r .. v.1111• c·1111 ~1,1n' v.1th
L:l 1 IJI !1,.111 llt'> lll't't.h
1" 1 "n f•1r 11r11d1ntaon
1 • t •l• fill & lalw·I
holtl1 ~ l\111tv.11'1l ~l' ur
', •.• I• '• Fl 1 \ r1·1'' pr,,
f1rr11 \1111 1 1tar
t11,1 •n., I <;, ~tl II\.);,
~'nor! ~pf'lling & pen SALES· Seadol Com puter
mano.,hiµ !'o:o tvping Corp is expanding We
f>t111n• eitl)t'rience prt' ha ve v acan c ies f o r
f Prro•rJ 1-ull i·ompany qualified outside s ales &
bt:ncf1i.. Appl) Pen sa les mgmt candidates.
n\ .... a vrr 16FJJ Pl:it•t•nt 1a Call 6424435
l\v1• C M
RECEPTIONIST
With or v.1thout typing
n••Pdl"'ii Top pay. Tern·
p<Jra rv & full lime. Call
Tfld <;,. n.'IC'(.~ at !!79 ij9()()
•A Y AJLAILE HOW
Sales
SS~ALES$SS
Secretary
SICUTAllYI
Self·starter with gd. typ.
lng fr shorthand skills for
pos ition with lots of
variety; some pc!nonnel
& lnauraMe work. Call;
540-7&30 for appt. A Ken-
davis Ind .. Co. EOE
* •SICUT ARJIS• • Acct Pay /Mfg/Fshlshz.ooc
T70/ Anah/Ful'13 200
Acct10eereem,ooo
T7S/ShlOO/FshJsS15.600
Liz Reinders Agency
4020 Birch Est '64 EOE
Newport f833..8190/ Free
Secretary: Full time. typ.
Ing, filing, lite bookkeep·
Ing, phone. Small office
TSL Mgmt. 642-1603.
Secr etary /T y pist fo r
dynamic: Investment
company. Top salary for
ex cepti9nial skills &
motivation. Re ply in con·
fide nre to : P.O. Box •296. Corona del Mar.
92625.
SECIETAl'Y
Needed immtld. With or
wit hout s horthand. Tern·
porary & full time. Call
Tod Services at 979·8900
Security
< '( H ''\ fl-I< II ~ I P \I .it 11r •
v.11n1;1n full or [':111 111111· 1
'll)f)h l~a ... 1011 II 11lol•1t1' MTS
PBX
CRT
pos itions lO P M·GA M 2:lOPM. C osta Meso NURSES AIDf.S s hifts Xlnt fr1n1te LYN'S ~we benefits package Apply p I a ft t . x I n t . c 0 . m
m rx-rson at Adv;:inn·d ben~fits. & re•iews ., CR CAl C).t I I• I',.
I 'I II \ l'I• •
I \\I I '1
;.-po,,1t1ons an exc·1t1n1o? & I
,. 'PJ 011Jng eentury 21 of
f1t·r' Call for appoint
1t'1·nt totla} onil d1 o;
f II\ f • r
,\\11111.t i1rt·t>ett1·r'
Stimulating. challenging
& 'ery rewarding career
opportuni t y with
NcwPort Beach office of
a rapidly growing multi
state personnel serv1t'es
C"ompany. If you are an
or ganized Sl'lf s tarter
with a proven trnck re·
t·o rd. who enJoys pro·
s pf'ctmg & developing
key a<"rounts & able to
v.·nrk In fast·pa<'ei1 en
11r11nmenl this 1s the
po:.1t1o n f o r )OU
<'OM PLETF. T RAIN ING
PROG RA M F.xn•llrnt
to:i-.\' ..,alan plus !'Om
"'"'~I-On & profit ::.hannj.?.
m aJor medical & dental
h1r 1nttr11e11. appoint
11 t'llt call
SECURITY
OMCH
Pr estigious hotel has im·
med. need for exper'd.
Sec urity O H ice r
Qualified candidate will
possess a min. of 6
months exper. to in
elude: dispatching, the
ability to interact quick
l y. r eq uir e m in
supervis ion & have min
typing requirements
Enjoy excel!. C'o. benefit~
inrludin~ a free meal per
sh ift App.ty in person
9A M NOO'TI , Mon -F ri
Personnel.
!.01 ~ l!lthSI < ... 1
C'I II ~·1 ~ 11 l'F H!'\t I~
Hr1 "1•·J11"r' I" T "' I' I v.11ltr.111 IM!l:!~•H";!I
Cl It '\'It II ""'" for donul 'h1•11 \\I \ l'\1 •htfh 1
,l\I '" ~I' 111·1 ~11m.1 tt
µr1•f \1>1>1\ 111 111•r<.on
""'"''' l•11n11t' 11<~1
"'''" 1•111 lth•I ( \I
DF T AI. A .... i.t
I h ui.1asl 11• Jlt'r,on for
p t1mt' • 111111~ nit 111 So
LJ.l(u n.1 fo 'I' prd cl
l'all H11fln1t• IQCI ~:J.1 1 ir
1% ftXIJI
P1·n' .ii I' ,, t•pl 1•111"1 Full
t. n1• ··' ~·· 'tt flf 1•d
m.durc 1n • t, ''\ ,,tf,t 1·
n1·;1r :, ( l'I 11.1 ' .. t , 1•,r,~
,,, 11t, \ ,'J'I lr.f, I ~Ii
fltlll ,.1111.!<1111 l(fl '· ~ 1.
1111 I'\ II 1•1•rwr.il pr.11
\I( •• t.40 ."Till
Ill'" l1•.1ntni.: lll'lr F T
6 da~s. l)11r1111 11t
('lt-am•r. C'r!M 7!'i!l !11101
El fo'l'TIWNll'S Stolrtl
bt'IH'h lt>l'h l11J?lt;tl 0&
rc1v. t>r Mlppl11·~ M7 1111.
Hnnnw
EMGIHEHIHG
T~HHICIAH
I 2 vr' M1·1 han1"a l
)o:l1·t'I ro M('d1c1111 t·•1 I ""
flt.'r11•n1 I'
C\lt
1 :t ~ r.. t 11111 .it'. t•lt•('
t r••Ot<' lt••·h ~1·hrw1I ur
rr11lltJ1 )' ll·• h '<t'hool
•( 11 w1lltr.11n
• ll1·1rnrti. d trf'"lly lo
C'h1d Fraguwer
•t 'o rm1d µrof1l 'iharm.:
•" .ic· i!ltoni. & holid:t V!I
JJl'lld
•M1•1li1·11I hf1· m,;
nolv thtl!H' wed1 1n1t
pt'rmannnt 1·mploymt
lll'l'd a111Jly • c cl Mn.. Pieridl
511-3130
EXPAtettt&
Need M IF Exp'd In
'!mall hu!';aness p ro -
cedures or a desire to
learn on a pit basis.
BonusH & travel for
r igh t peo p le Call
Aruiwer Ad •JBS 24 hrs. •l
642-4300
Exp sales personnel want·
ed for oontemporary re·
tail s ho p Mus t be
f ashio n o riented It
caree r m mC:ed Salary
open. ref's req. Call for
app't Ask for ~le.
Apropos, 1129 Fashion
Island. 644 21652.
Fron t .end Alignm e nt
Man, experienced.
MS-~.
F RONT OFF I C F.,
SECRETARY-Mmt ty~
35WPM. neat, IO key ex-
.PU ls he l pful , h v y
phones It get! ore work.
Call Brian btwn 7.30AM·
4 :30PMat~77
F\lll time employ~ want·
ed for el~ctrlcal as-
sembly Ii'. clean·up. Will
l rai9';_alart hlinlmum
........ 21.5
VOLT
·\I' 1'1. \'
Health Cent er . 1300 A ty 54S-0413 N<'Nlell fM 1a'I
Bristol St . North. Sh• •-·PP------··--· all shlll ..• 1111•• 11100. Nt>wport Ht•at•h ·-ll•·'1'''1 111u1
F'. 0 E U /L' ~·· .. k "''"' '"' I I -,., r Moilwtwe Mon
G<'neral mf'c han1<·al• 8~tM11r<
knowled1te. cxpn11•n1·" R~try
in elecln<"al & plumbml! t osta .\1• ,.,1
Ir
t I I
I I
helpful Apph lo I.arr 1 \nahMrr '• . Temporary ~rvices
184)1 Campus Dr
I HOU SEW ARES SALES
Experienre prefe r ret1
Hours: 9-6 Wed Sun. Ap
ply in µerson. Kcrm
Rima Hardwa re 21166
Harbor Blvd (.' M
Su rf & Sa n d 11 11 t e I _______ !ff"_,,..,.. __ ..,.;,liill_!:ltl ____ _
\;t 1· lllt\ Npt Bch
l\<·m ... s fmm O C ,\irport
54~4741 lnsuran<'e off1l·e needs
F:qual Opp Employer bnght gal to ha ndle busy
I .aituna Beach. 497 4477 1 .. , .~urs1ng
M a k e money 1n ,your NURSES AIDES
• Y. h' wt• arP j?rll11. inJ!'
Jt1• It f' lrarr>inJ.'' I
I ii I 1'1 •1,11 f:i4n 7434
c~nhry 21 /Gofdstar I
~··· .. AN EXCITl ... G
SALES OPPTY
\\ 1 r r " n t e r 1 n I! ·1 Kare n C:O<'o
714 955 m2
t-:qual Opp Emplyr
MARRIC>TI HOTEL
900 New1))rt Center Dr
Newrt0rt Beat'h
F:qual Opp Emplyr
----------. office. Exp he lpful but not nee. Flf. permanent.
spar.-lime F1orist neN1..,1 F:x t·el hent-111.. •I
a ttractive wom<'n for! s h1fl5. top o.,alJ11 l ~·rt
s ales promotion Houri. <"lasses on pr.·n ·~·
nexible, unhm1ted t>arn I on1 Ho-.pt f'.I" :""'
rt mendou..'5 ne~ field of'
f'nlt'r taanment that ts
<;11.c·t'pmJ! tbe nation WP
.1r« IOl>ktnl! for a i.alesi----------1111
Se<"· y ·a 1 rr>orLlaw.Jicm_
Self ·s tarter, organized.
gd s kills . nons moker.
Josie. dSV~.
G IRL RUOAY gd Co benefits C'Jll
644-4242. tn!? Call 646-:ms •ri ·nH'<i rcn:nn 11.ho ha' SALES TaAIMHS
1 •
1r''1 :,~' w~·'11~. 1:
1 "~·~,:; f'ull or p 1t1me Mission Pi\RTTIMF:
)o"xp'd . responsible &
m;iturt• for front dC's k m
hlM tJ~ ofr S6 per hr & INVESTIGATORS Mall•
uµ S.•nd resume· 'llalmg or female tramt.>e Send
qu.1hf1t·attons to Allen res ume _ 11671. Dail\•
llo1 mn ond <.'P A 2041 Pilot, P 0 ·Box 1560 .
B11.,.n1o.;,c; Ctr Or : ltl03, Costa Mesa. Ca. 9'.!626
Mature woman for read1
lo wear. no nites. fi Sun
dnys a vear , full & I' T 1
646 SJ!!R I
Off11•1• fl<C-11 01 o:•' I
~t1 knr•,,.l•~li"· i·1
"Pt•lhr J ""'I"' 11, ,
1n1• I• 1• k1 r. 111111
~ ,1hh' lu •.ti.. 111
\'1eJo area Xlnt opport
• "'1 U. 1" r "11'1tilt• & for coll('l!e st~ts & t Hnl1<l••nl 111 H•llf ,1h1l11\ moonlr.l(hter!> over JR
1 1 ' "mm•mit "1t' "'ithl f a'itly cam $10 Sl5 per
;••h"r" ,•, hJ•t d•r>•nrl.i h.r \a11Jackbtwnl4pm
S~C"Y-OFC. MGR
Real estate. assume total
office conlrol, front of
f1t'e apperarance. OC
a irporl a r ea . S I OOI
+ hased o n e x per
8J3 2237 f td pht1111 n1 •n I
r\'k f .-1 Iii• MECHA NIC I
In 1111·, (';. 92715 ,
Jclllitol W/H~ G IRI. FR IDA Y , Full time &in Cl~menlc
Fat'lory trained Pors< he I r~1~ i If,\
me"hamc Apply a t IR!lll I
So. Coast Hv.y Laj!una llrd11d m.11nlr1t r •"
11 t1:111<;J1ort:it1on "l' at 951 2642 "'111 t rain 1( nt'Cl'~san I ~1-.l fnnj?f' lx-nefits .\j, •SALF:S ynA t'X Cl led
ph ... 1 Tt'l('pronipt('r r1f men-willing to Jeam uni
'<·v. port Bc•ach. 901 "' que sales approach Cash
f'a't lhmker for exdling area. Refs. & experit>nt'e
nt•w rom pan y. Must required. Xlnt. salary &
typt•. good on phones. lite benefits package Kathy
Bch p 3 rt ·" I rm I.. 1 '' Jhlh St !\e•Arport BPach daily average S200·S800
bookkeeping. 645-7053 Croll: 714-498-2350.
M ec h ani <' want e d
w /g e n era l .,q u ip
knowleditt> for small con
G IRLFtUOAY
I gir l office, English &
Spanish speaking, ac-
c u rate typin g, C.M
556 1787
GUARDS-Irvine & S.A.
locations. $4.00 & up.
978 7 24:) Of' s:Jl..8191
GUARDS
JAMT<>a s truclion l'(luipmcnt d('
Immediate ope nin ~ aler. Health prog r am.
Part time, wknd posi-' l°"' O,T Call for a pp't
tion, 2·11 shift. Salary Mobil Scaffolding. 14792
negotiable. Apply in E. Firestone, La Mirat1a
perso n al Advanced ( 7 1 4 ) 9 9 4 6 3 fi O .
Health Cent e r . 1300! (213)80'l-137R
Bristol St North. Ste .1 #100 Newport Beach.,Mechan1c , Generator
E.O.E. M/F. diesel & gas. with exp
. T o m Ke ll y M arin e
LEGAL SECRET Al'Y Engineennl?. 548 9617
Litigation exp. desirable MEDICAL OFRCE I
G d . skills: fas t , ac I <"urate. Willing to as Bright & enthus1a~t i<"
knn"' h•rtj!f'at•l .•
tlt'rt('nt·1~j j)('r PO l• I
ror f)rrhrl1s 31n t hn11r , .....
11..e e k <·ti M Ht 111 •
Orch1cl-., I'() l\o' V'"
Newpo rt lk•ad1 ~i'f;l,;t 'I
ra II r~t.5-3323 d a'
P a r t T1 mf' "'urk ~ I
good pa). tr,111'1 ,iii
hnnu .... e~. adv:..n 1·m1 n•
for riithl peoplt• !Iii:• !":\:'
PART-TIM E
lluubl» ,nu r 1n1 "Ill•'
urj.?enUy need amt'>tht11"
people person tu .1 1st 1
expansion of v. h• 11·"' rlr
outlet 848-~
QOAUTY
ASSURANCE
M.A~AGER
\H1 111 111 ••l1 .. tr 1t~I
I f Jl p I U'I t ' f1f'"' \OJI
fl11 ht 1·,,11•r 11 l/.\ M1 r 11
\I' 111111 •\JI :I' I (~1\
:'111.,•r\t"1r or ()I\ 1\11.!r
Mr 101 \11•11 1rt• 1 ~'
SALES CLERK
i-:~ta hli :.h1·d s tattonen
<;tor" nPPds 1n!i1de
.. alt·s~rson (Jfftce s upp
I> t•xpcr ht..'lpful but not
nt'<' 1-'nnge benefits .
i.;roup medical. pd \aC:a-
t 1on. 6 holidays For
;ippt. r ail Bell) Cazii..
751 17:t2
1 1 11 1· • • ( ll • 1• rm• 1 h Sa !f's
1~·1•·11 ·" "p1111•t Jlltl cosMmc SALES
I I f• <: ,. ,., h '"" .• 1 Ill
'l ••l111n , 11 r11
""Ill• : 1u1t \f ll'·I bt ,1 bit•
l1t , II 11\ I Ir •hit II" ,'I,
, , • "'""" '" "l•l11t111n~ I! I' .I t I .'1 I I I I\ Ir,. n 11
1<kly ~76.52af IOam
SCTRY /RlCEl'T
needed by local CPA
firm Duties incl. typing.
.filing, answenng phones
& some accntg . No expr
nec Call 833-9062
Full & part time. All
areas Uniforms fum'd.
Ages 21 or over, retired
welt'ome No exper. net'.
Apply U ni ve r sa l
Protttlion Service, 1226
W Sth St . Santa Ana. In
lerv1ew hnl· !H2 & I 4,
Mon Pn
p e r son needed f u r sume respons ibility & medicaloffire in Fa!>h1on ---111111 ... -----•1
use initial.Ive essential Is land. Frr or P /f Tvp. PorlTtme hettmqs
1n.tl\•I). 1':\IW r I" l•l '"I
:.0111 11111\ tho-.t fft1Jltfft'r1 pl• I' t .•II ,,,, , .... ,fl k
\Ii e :ire now inlerl'le~ mi?
ror full lime pos111ons tnl
our l00Smet1c dept The
lrn<'~ open a re Men's'
H.1r Eh1.abeth Am en. &
\fo11tetl We would hke to
m('(•t you to discuss thel
po.,:.rh1 ht .1-or your join·
1n1? our o.,taff of p r o
ft·~~aonal sales person·
nel We o ffer ~Int
lwnef1ls & 11.orkml! t'on
d111on..,
• SCTIY /IC"* Rapidly gr owing 0 C
land development co.
seeks well groomed. b1·
lingual. s harp i nd1 v
11. good typing skills &
pl e a s ant phone
personality Xlnt work·
mg cond. benefits. o pport
for ad\•an~ment Sala ry
commensurate w iexpr
Call for appt
Xlnl. benefits. salary
o pen. CaU: AM Harvey. Ing. 640-20'l3 <Cindy1 COUNSELI NG
714-95S-0313 Medical records clt•rk,
·1• : I I ""' :1100 rnr .1n
11,1t
H AIRDRESSER Assis t
<.':osm etDlogy lit'. req'd .
J\111k for Mgr. Judy ,
640 6M3
LEGAL SECIET AIY hard woriler needed for • YOUTH
S II . f I ff' busy office Laura su:Al e~T ATE
3ALES ma . 1n orma o ice 557-6300 CARRIERS needs mature pe rson . Apply 1n person.
Mon -Sat. IO-ll.30AM
Or<"all for an
appointment
644-1212
Ma k e your s hopping
easier by uamg the Daily
Pilot Cl&Milied Ads.
Good typist, ability lo
learn-will train. Salary Have something you
commensurate with ex· w ant to sell? Clas111fied
perience. 67S-l024. ads do it well. 642-5678
. -~ .. : --'~
Reach the richest rec ruitment mar ket in
Orange County In a special Dally Pilot JOBS sec-
tion planned for February 25, 1911.
Orange Coast households served by the Dally
Piiot ar'Si Coast Life number more than 103,000.
The y c.Nlke up the most responsive, best educated
and affluent reading audience tn the county.
JOBS standard-stied sections Include a story or
a photo prepared by the Dally P iiot staff
describing advertisers services or e.mployment
needs.
Adults w1U1 ot1ht•11Hh•1,
Atlra<"lrv(· 1w•r• 011.11 1 ....
who enjov ,,.ork "II' v. 111
1 O· 15 \•car olt1 vo111 h .
Start' at $4 O(t h11111
2 .30PM and :> :llll'M
642-4321 Ext 250 A~k for Lor i. I
1 , 11l•n 11 .II ... 1.11 .. rom
p.111 o;.11 Jo;;' pr 1'-'""'1or1 .. 11
111• IJ•I • 111 111 .11.11 " fo•o.,,ol1•
11lr 11 1•~ 1'1111"' • r1•a ....
"' I I I l I "I I ,1 \ 1'1.
f.1111•f11s J. . .>V
711 !lti.'l 51i71
~ CoCHt RECEPTIONIST
THE IRO ADW A Y
47 Fas hion Island
Newport Beach
F.qual Opportunity
Employer
DaityPUot ll·Jt1 .. ~ \\tll ml'l11dt• t)ll •SALES•
JJOW ftayStrect 1ni: f1 ll11t 010 ... v.1·rin1o? 01rect MktgC-Oncepts
Costa Mesa. CA 1~1·•"'''" ~hit• .11·11111nl1111? SIOO to S200 per day Will
Equal Opport F:mplo\ l'r < 111 "1m 557 <~ I I ram Call: 964 2028 _ _ __ IH· 11 pt 111n1~1 ~.1nt 1•dj Snles -----
PBX A.nSwermg Sen ire 1•v. port Hrnrh 1·nm
E\·es f\ill & r.,. f >-1-l l'<ln~ I ,,.,, bc:nerth i\r DESIGHll
nee C M. S40-1777 I '' 1w • r11~·,1 ~.,., tin DRESS M---111~· ·.1tarv nei?nt iahll' rft.
P ersonnel
PaSOHHEl
CLEIU(
h.1<;1·11 1111 <'lCJlf'r PCM.
B33 3.'.113
ffr t·t"~1t 1onr"lt . X RAY
I.A 1:1. N B bte bookl<eep
inl?. promot1011al '1utles.
tr nln1n1t In X·Rnv pro
Cl•dur~ Por interview
phone 640 0202
Re<'rpt1on1st IClt•ricat
Immediate opening
Crowln J? rompu ter
11ortware rompnny is
look In g for 11 bright.
P r o d u c tio n Jiaison
nl'eded imme diately
Mu5t havexlnt memory.
be good with numbers &
should be familiar with
the best stores across the
rountry.
Apply in person
ST.JOHN
17422 Derian Ave .. Irvine
(Co rner Kelvin &
Derian)
714·54().1171
personable Individual ---------
7 l4 1~9-<t266 Ask for Geri
SECRETARY
Ins urance Office 957-8507
SECRETARY
Lite bookkeeping. lYP·
1ng. phon e , S alary
nel(otiable. Irv. 556-2323.
SECR F.TARY-Part-time.
can lead to fu.11 time . xlnt
typing s kills & S H.
Im med. 642·8612
Secretary
Legal office. min. 20/h rs
week. must have xlnt
English & secretarial
s kills, pleasant s urroun-
dings & opportunity f7
+ per hr N B. area
97S-1156
Secretary HELP ! our
s ecre tary is In t h e
hospital and we need you
lo fill in for a month or
two, There is a chance
tha t this position will
become permanent with
us or . transfer to one or
our other companies!
here in Newport. Need
great skills, ace speller
and can operate an IBM
Memory 100. Good phone
personality esaen tial .
Salary and age open .
Please call ror appt.
Interior O.ip Firm
714.e44-IDO JOBS sections wlll ..,.,_r both' In the Dall y
Piiot and Coast Life oq February 25. Deadllne Is
February 11 If • story or photo Is desired or February' 16 for M advertlMNNnt only.
An Orange C.0. mfg. com
pany h as an immed
need for a pel"80n to al\
slsl ln the Personnel Ok
Primarily in the healtt-
1 n s u r a n ce t'laims '
workman's comp. area
Candidates should havf
a min. of 1·2 yrs. ex per &
able to type 50wpm
Knowledge of First Ai~
would be helpful. Senc
reaume with salary his
torylo:
w trront office a p -----------
c. .... ,.._, ........
M..._.Spedlllltl.a
l&tOMonrovia , C.M
142·242'7 E.0 .E
,.. I 1:J Cilrll
Perm. PIT Wkk day
monliao. tti..-i
µ~~run e~ lo h a ndle
phonC3, hte t)'ping, filing
& otht'r offict duties Ex-
t'tll. benerita l1111clud ln111
dental. Grtat worklna
environment. Send re-
-umt tt1/aalary require
ment.s • hilWr)' to: 1901
To place your me5sage
before the
readlnc pubUc.
phone
Daily Pilot
Cluained, 642·5'78
St111art Clr. Ste 100,!l"~.~!!!l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 C•. mu. Or call Ml ·
•SICllfAllAL•
Dulles to lnelude ell
aapeda ol ll\kU. support.
We are a amall rab. COii·
~em •Iese.I . .....,..,
Salaf)' comm. w/a.per,
• aklU ...... c an rw ..... -.-
Set''y Receptionist
Mafure phon e ex
perience & excellent tYP·
ing s kills. 90wpm req'd
fo r busy front office at·
mos phere. SI 100/m o .
Contact Vicki at 549·3185
SERVTCE STATION
ATTENDANT
Days. 6-3. Apply Shell
Station, f7th & Irvine.
N. B. 642· 1259.
SHAIPLADY
Booming R. E. office nds
liharp secretary Hurry.
Call for details. Dana or
Mack. 962-7788 .
S .. illllilla & Pridag
Neecf "ma1ure person.
fulltime, for stationery
store Some furniture .
Fringes. For appt. t'all
Belly Cazis. 751-1732.
Stock
THElaOAOWAY
MEWPOIT
NOW INTERVIEWING
FOR
STOCK rosmOM
Per mane nt , full time
s tock position Is n ow
open. Hours wUI be 7AM·
4PM. 40hl'5 per week.
Will be respomlble for
material h andl i n g .
marking , & r eceiving.
We offet" xlnt. benefits. &
working conditions. Ap-
plicants need to be at
least ll)'nl of age.
Apply ln person
Mon-Sat . 10.11:30AM
or c•ll for an
appointment
M4-l.2U
THl•OADWAT
47 Fasbbi JalaDd
Newport Beach
E-qual ()pportllll.lty
Employer
SUCCISSGa , .......... 1,
1. Have 1'CJU comidered
t h e r.ltralla or com · mett al 6 resldefttial re-
•I est..te! Jl'or eumple:
17~ INT. rates, IOfll
escrowa, fannin1 for liat-
in1a, competition, ett. ! ,.. ...... ..... c.,. •• a .. u.e ..... 1or 1o.ar
·~·-· 2 . .....,.. '° marbl low
eoll la&a ... ~I• So. Cdf ....... lK INT. ,_, SUll .. to
tlJ!.ll i. ftn& ,...,. ' --.............. ,
U11 .,,. .... r::.,.... ... ..........
IU•Ol'f AH CAI MASffl
Independ ent
M A C•Or
FREE OIL C HAHGE
wtttt r .... up At ltf'CJlillkr hio
<?Ot>2 ; ....... L • " ''"'
TILESETTING
30 % OFF
Ceramic Tile installed by
March 1st With this coupon
DRfCl510r; l ANCSCADE AND
LA\VN M1\INTfNA:"'!Cf
...... ,. me.
FREE ESTIMATE
WITH COUPON OHL Y
ALAM Miu.a
owwt•
10% OFF Any Grooming
W This Coupon
A -1
SILVER CLIPPER DOG GROOMING
~for awt· 8:30-5 TlllH-SGt.
.
t I ' ·-·-----------------------------------------------------~ ~~~;/!·~~1 ~~'l';~o;;t~'I
Preschool teacher. Cost:i Sohc1tor.; Wantt:d 5pm •
Mesa area 642·0411 9pm univ S:I hour • l'omm1~.,1on IH '<':tr!' oltl
nr n Icier !'145-54111 TEA.CHY AIDE
E.C.F. units required
Co s t a M e s a a r e .1
642·0411.
TB.EPH OtU
SOLICITORS
J.C. 'S
TREE
SERVICE
,
Speci ... lllH19'rwfoo1•c•
GeMrd lepalr °" DCNMStk & FCM -'CJ"
Can & Tnteb
1366 LOGAM 4 VE.. UNIT A
COST A MESA, CA 92626
'7141 754-4174
\V
YMCA
SWIM FREE
All ~ory SUMDA YS
Adults 12-1 :30 P.M.
4-5:30 P.M.
Families 1 :30-4 P.M
Enclosed Heated Olympic Pool
2300 u.Mnnity Dr., M.8.
642-9990
LENHARD TAX SERVIC E
s20
Early llrcl Special
8ottt Ffltttal & Califomia I 040/11./S• tOA
For Further l nformatim
R egarding P lacement 0
Advertis in g ln Our
Coupon Cape r s Section
Please Call
Debbie Kosmin
:'>J(•('d 1mm.-d1atelv 642-5678, ext 330 Teachers
ESL -·CHERS llCIUl'CWIV~ or <;lUdl'nt... Next Coupon Ca pers Marci •!!;A to work 9 I or J !1 Nl• l"'I p
&GIOUPltE-r nt'<' No .. Pthnl<t cro.... Reserve Your Space N1
h 4th
IUlO,IAM PACIAL
WITH MAS9UI
Eyebrow Arch & Make-Up
With Instructions
R~ $46 w/c~ $29
PRIVATE
SEWING
LESSONS
1 free hour on first lesson
' ..
'It It~ WlJ~l[IS,
" ~ &• HCS
"'" ' ,.. ais If~•" l T <l
ONE CALL DOES IT A LLI
FOR APPOINTM EN T
114 -673-6743
HENDERSON'S SALES
Cor Shreot
AM /FM CASSETTE $58.95
Service & lnttalatto.
642-3154
THE RIB FACTORY
(Formerly the 4 Winds)
Texas Style BBQ.
I 64 3 I Bolsa Chica
Huntinqton ~uch
1s1 00 off Rib Lunch with this couPon)
Also sttYe catfish, with hush ,..,iK. h•f
brisket & SCIUSCllP·
Being hired now for from 0 .!' Airport Call :
em ploymenl in Feb 19flt 640·4647 or a fl I P M , -: , , · • • •· with student exchan~r 966·0151 ··---·-······' "'-·-···--···-· ·· ···•••· · ·····• ·· -··--··· ····-·······-···' f;ff,~~7J;~0~ts:i~· Tt'letypetC'lemat Stork I~~!.~~ ..... ~!.~~~~·!'.~~-~·~.~ ..... ~!.~~ ~!~~~~••••••••••• ~-~~~~ ••••••• ~~.'.~ ~-~~i~~ ••••••• ~?.'.~ -----~::.!~ c·!o'irrr ~~t~~1 TRAFR.C M.AHAGEI TYPIST .......... 8005 1 Big refrigerator. G.F. .. TIACHB-I"' I t l I kt f PIT M be ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refr1i:. <'lean . works xlnt C'ond. Jack 642·7293
K. d •. F.l per-;on. :irruratf' lypin)!• n f'rna iona m g, 1r!1' ust aC'curate l(OOd SIOO 5411·B513 or eves ,641·283Sdys. an ergarten"' · emen necf''il'an \all ,1arJ·or1t• nef'ds person exper d. 1n 20 hrs/wk to suit y~ur .,,.0 .4 .. .,"' __ _ tary. Full time Pvt ~ r & ~an cargo Ex d Or c WESTMrNSTF.R ,...., ..,.... 6442442 .. 1 '""' · nee s . ange 0 • , FrostFreeRefri0 erator& school. Costa Mesa arrr1. I II "' Top be r·ts A. rt 0 .,., """'2 ABBEY " c•e . op.,.y ne 1 1rpo area ~"'&..> II ARBOR ARF.A Upright f'reeier gd C'ond.
M2·041l. TBJ.ER For appt.. rail: Mrs --ANTIQUE MALL APPl.IANCESERVICE $100ea.OB0540-A698
Looking ror that spec•1al I Coplan. ~6901 ~O. F. TYPISTS Dally I0.6· Fri l0·9 We buy used appliances - ------
I Be t c d " I g •Immediate Openings CI06ed Tuesda~· -we sell recond, i;tuar Dogs 8040 ~~rm. ~~ 'T. ;~;: w~;~ T1lAIMHS . •P /lime, f /lime. Temp 11751 Westl"(linsler Ave appliances 549-3CY77 •••••••••••••••••••••••
TIACHEIS
••
''I
Say
Love Yo11''
s20
fJrd.:r .:a rl)• fur \'a k n On.: .. Ota}'
Balloons for Hlgber
t '•"ta '9.:,.a • 1'4H-611'5
-.A.van/in~
Pizzeria
-~
LUNCH SPECIAL
Spagll1Hf Wltla Mt•al1
Or S•••p & G.tc Toott
$2.C\} W /COUPON
We make our own sauce. meatballs & dough
I 8748 l.ach ll•d. (H.1.1
letwtttt Garfield & Ellis
968-8144
OI & Altet-Chancp ,_°'" °"" $14.95
'I' .. ~~.
E ~~ c ...... 0 •
AUTO REllAIRI
3042.0 &1fet"priH . 979-2553
$50FF
with this ad
8050
~-····················· .....•..•.....•........
llo) ·s 1'rundlr bed with
matchm~ dresser. spa<'e
saver bed with bit in
dresser. gd quality
642-5286
RFAUT 4pc Ii\•. rm set.
I wk old Cost $600. sell
$350. also. like new corr
tbl set S250. 963·2489
European smoked f?lass
dininii set . almost new
Sora & Loveseat S275.
M ar ranlz Stereo. tradi
tional Coffee & F.nd Ta
ble set. bea utiful 25 '
ColorT.V. $200. Formal 3
pc Sofa set includ Sofa
bed (immaculate) all in
xlnl cond. Can move
(714) 641·2998
King-szWATER BF,D
With htr. liner. mirrored
hdbrd . 2 shelves. 1 yr
old. $250. 963-0433
6 pc kinJ? ~kdit. bdrm set
perf cond All wond
$690 968-7076.
Selling contents of larl!<'
homr Dining tahle & ti
chairs. Antique chin;i
cabinet Old oak rocker
Victrola. Sony TV . Anti
q ue pictures G rundif!
radio Sofa & love seal.
mattresses 12 twin.> 11111
pie hdbrd. I full sz foam.
all like new.end tables.
crystal, much more. 1984
Kornat Or C M. Adam!'
& Mesa Verde West
979.S(g!,
To start immediately
Part lime or full time
Pre·school 857·1263. Xlnl benefits, & adv Will For any or 8 stores m •Top Pay Garden Grove 554 6103 KEESHOND Pups. AKC.
train E.O E. O~ange Cou!1tY or San For .more Info. C'all To d I IUY APPLIAMCES Champ sire. M IF Pet & I IUY FUR .......... 'IE
racificF-.dScrfiow!ls 01eg~ Rapid Growth .... Serv1cesal979-8900 - -.-----Les 951·8133 s h o w . P v t pt y ""''" Technician ~ E 17th ~ C "M"' benefits. Apply, PETCO -V1ctorrnn oval marble·lop _ _ __ 2131697.1345 afl6 pm. Les 957-8133
King si1.e waterbed, old
fas hioned. solid oak .
headboard & 4 C'Om ered
post frame with heater.
liner. matt & pedestal &
side railings. l /yr old.
worth $800, sell ror
$350/080. Dining rm
set. 4 brand new re·
upholstered chairs, cop·
per brown nagahyde.
was reupholstered ror
$600, will sell whole din·
Ing rm set for $300/080
641·755'7.
.. · · · A n 1 m a I S u p p 1 y • table. <' 1860. $450 Louis New IS cu rt. Frostrree ------ -Octagonal Drexel din. ta·
•-IHG TIREM AN fo r Newport Supermarkets . 15041 VALTEC Heeds Yot1 XV arm chair. SJSO rE>frlii. $450, MiC'rowave A A A H 0 M E D 0 G ble, 2 Ives, 4 cane·baC'k
. TICtMCIAM Tire Ctr lmm('(I open· Goldenwest St at Aolsa. OptiC'al lab tech lralnet> s Mahog. brkfronl. c 1940, Am ana Radar Range T~NING chairs. perfect. S900.
Our growing electronics ing, will train. salary H 8 .891·0355. Duties Include workir 1g S7S0.6210653 $150640-7845 We tr ain owne r /dog. 642.2173 co. has an immed. open· with precision optiC' al ---Obedience/problem solv· --------
lnl for an En(!neerinii ~':~· 3000 E Coast fl wy. TYPIST/ components & perrori m-OAK BUFFET Washers, Dryers : GE. Ing. show & protection. Antique oak swivel desk Houseful :
Tech. with 3-5 yrs":-tX'per WORD NOClSSOR In g a variety or p1 ·o· Sl.000 Whirlpool. Ken m or e . Free evaulatlon 739·7684 chair, SllO. Complete wall Cheap for cash
I rib prW!type It lest of ..., _______ -C Entry.level position in cesses. Need depcndal )le _ _ ~8688 Maytag, Reconditioned, u nit , s he l ves. desk. 881-8775
'
analog/d igital micro Tooling well-established rirm. person with desire to oak pedtbl 5 1ves S62S48" refinished, guaranteed ! 11 mont.h o ld female ca binets. 1450. Plaid -.-.-
proceuorol mcllcr;_ucoitrmy.puter DIE & MOLD Must have strong lyping leam & work in prod uc· I It 1890 $1500 SHS delivered 750-3103 H~rleqwn Great Dane sleeper sofa It loveseat Sohd Mahoguny dmmg rm Use •V" lion oriented envir• on r o op s · with pa~. Aller 6 pm 1300 GI I' s h · ' set . Drop lear tblc .
development systems MAICBS &. grammar skills. Full ment. Call: VALTEC i~ 492·4281 eves/wkends SEARS Washer & Gat5 &46·8315. · r s c wino breakfront. 4 <'hrs. See to
would be desir able , IWSllHtt time.Applylnperson to: Costa Mesa,714.Qt-68 oo ----Dryer SllS/080 Good bike. S50. Ha mmond appreciate. A rt 5,
alont with a knowledge MSC is continuing to ex· Mr. Fuentes at Robert:.Jll-------· Clawfootlal.,I• Cond. Great Da ne/Shephe rd Electronic Organ. 3/Y'1 968·74•1·
oldittlal meter cks. A to pand it's tooling opera-Bein, William Fr08l -Good condition. SlSO. 642.3215 puppies. 7 Weeb $10 old, SI00.644-Zllt. ---------
D. o to A ckts, rontact lions It have an Im· Associ1tes, 1401 Quai ~&1'15 MS.'1212 -Tealtdin rmlblew/lehrs.
reslstuce dtts. & hipot mediate need for die & _st .. Newport Beach WAn'llSSIS t -F REEZER Comm'l 2.11 Llvlng room suite, comer 2 trs tl50 mat<'hlnl teak
ctts helpful. mold makers. 5 yrs. min. Now accepting appl ica· .Applmc" 0 I 0 cu rt to'p load S3'>0 FrH to Y• 1041 sectional, Jllnt cond. lite hutch a.is. 2 Henredon
WUI be working with ex per. required. must lions, Reuben E. I .. ee. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7~ ' ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• beige. t«IO firm. M&-38115 e«lltail tbls mea, eed
min. supervision from ti.ave own tools It be able orrc>RTUMITY N 8 , Cull & p /T d. ays. R~rit:= WO~. mall Awit. Shep/Shellie evs. at 1:30 tbl ao. omc:e ehr lll •••• enctneerinl drawings & lo opeu t.e all standard knocks often when you _67_5·_58_1_1 _ __,___ · or _ G . E. Refrigerator, 1Cd mix, ltn yrs, spayed. Ha rdwood pedestal din. leath ch.r 135. All-Jtlnt spffift~. Qmlified tool rm. equipment. me rault·getting Dally. w• ... .a51• t cond.~-shots,llc.~72ZZ rm table w/leaf, perf. cond . ....,.
HDdMlllta are invited to Com ... in or call: Pilot Cl I fled A .. _ to ~ 11111~ ci ' _._, coatact· .. 881 .,. Apply btwn BAJ ,i & OPPOITUMITY · -Happy 1 year old male cond. priced for qulcll HOUMfUlolftneharnkure
........ S,.IWI M ...... Spec...._. 1 rea~ the Orange Coast t2PM. Cbarlie's c !hill. lmockl often wben you Refrl1erat.or, frosl·free, Keeahond Lab. 531-&S'71. sale. aT5. m.'719 Ll•l•I rm Inc l. l ·pc
1 .. ...:;:;:.c:;~ sJ.~lknrovi.a.i~:E. ma ~142.5678 JOOt RedhlU, Bldg. 112. 111e re1ult-~ettin1 DallY StOO. Good condlUon HunU..,..Beada. 7• c.._, tol• ~ leatlMr lnOd•lar Iola .
... ., E.O.E. Ste.#226,C.M.8218 PUot Cius fted Adi to 790-n45aft1PM. ... prtllt .... ·COit-U••atm .... briet ~~~~~~~~~Wir e Ope rato r As · =~ Oranse Coaat United Harvest Que;.; ....................... f o ,' 11 So'. N •;, =~~· UtUe ia Bll l ! ClaHifled.
ads a re really s m all
"people lo people" ules
calla wtth blg readenhlp
and bi1 re1ulta ! To place
JO&lf claulfted ad, call
today M2·58'78.
Wbetber you're b\lYinl or slatant/Clerieal. t ;tock PboneMJ.51'79 Freezer lmmac Coud. * * I IUY * * Baru--.er, rattaa. W 01 0 ... ~ •n'
selllni . Classified ad· B r o It er a I e F l r m ,,. Qu.lncy Air Oom.,,_... QeOll ..t l"wntt.,. • ldtlabec* retllM.r ....... -·-------
,vertisinl will 1et your Newport Center. M ature '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ,.hap.-... ADDl&w• oalwil.l..U •Jloa,..., I /mo. COit M..a ..... hllli ,..,
meua1e to the r laht penoa, Ht1lr'8te t yplaf SELL 'Idle Items with a W.._.6DrJwlDnt GiiaillrY• ......... ta -f•r•ll•re + l••P•·
people . Catt Todor nteflUl7.CaDM• .rjorie Dally PllQ\ CIHslrled Cae4 llJD/ea Apt -MASMIAUCTIOM •llHaftlPM. ~5871. M4·MG. Ad. lttfrll•••·. • ........ , I
..
.I ,
.......... ,.,. ....................... .
••• • ........... I 119"dl 1 (Pudl), m..a
... AVOft II&&. 1111. a•p ..U bnn lllCI., slat mod .
Mlll•la. • .. .-.............. 0 /8-. -M.•t >IO.fQ.tU• ...:.a: ............ Madi... --........... ,
llwaW, .,.,..-c... '~'8~=~• ... 11.t lafieteble "SportlC:lli I ft tlll ..... ,. ....... ,... . lo•t" -toedlUoa ....................... .
C .. &er. &itc'-... ,, • wtlJ ...... uP to a-· DUt 8lkf I ltl'eet lefal -UH• lrld Pntau ... ~ma1ar.111.-r SVZtJKl : cocna*tely re· ..... •H• • •••••• .. ••••••• coodlUo tied. tl000/080 MOWAYMA•I IAltlENT WINCHES, M0-1145
f I 1a1t1 ........ ..... iaftw.,.. for DEC ::r.;..:-..:-.: Is •. BULTAO O J'10 1dnt cond •••--..at. ,... ,,..._.. AU Nl'l....,..I, · • Never 1 ··•· red. steal at
I• h M71 ....... • .. .ai.. •ulU 11 •"· com DORY. 11' 11 .... Teak HOO t s .3799 man .... --............... .. hi , , I U. Ctl merclal/had~trlal ap-c • p r a 111 • 1 rat u . st.rai. S Y
.._ ~a= .U ftM .-1111 I •=o.": ~'"'~U Complete wttb ll1bt· 1y -g ....... -t .. Py..!. -• -·· wel1htoan. IU·211Z. A'MA1 I.A 1 '.T .SOO lt'17
111 '1. •11•••1 N•wflOl'l .. atll Tennl• COPl&RS: Xeroa ffO , Al1&m. ~ '-M o~arm. Have (al___,. Club ~P avail. tUOO, Toiltit.a tno. Caaoct, 17 SlOOO xi .r1 1 s. 968-9538
• .......,. .. c........a.. 0.W/ .. IY .. el•• eo•t. "Tonia ...... tc1·1W ~off7er. llOO. - -• ......., •. prwv-. f\artaer -··l 41 s.~ "'9c'lal alt .__,.._....,....J>. Im COPYMAatlNE ..... ,.._. tO•O 'llO Suzuk l GS.4SO, xln't
,_..,. __ •aen11UorDavid M1A1t1eU,MIOorbfftof •••••;••••••••••••••••• ~~ic:n, .. ~ :~~~~5~~9
~-=-C='Tol INOLElll!MBERSHIP· ftr.SU.SZU 4J' .. Ualwv '77 Honda '750FSS ln ~ New,oft 8-yvlew Yach\ ,... ••1 "'1b equipped. Perfect · • • t = •/ .. pen C~ Club ... Oun 117 SO ....................... Uve-aboircl:-.>.000. Slip. c:ond, Sl2lOl l. Call an 6pm
...... VSl, val• mo Luvin& nu (714) GnJal Va»nUfte sift. Pair '50,000 lou for 15 yn. at 493..-1 A.Ill. ull••I Jl.OO •ml Puch·fac:ed Lovebirds 11 \.IJ'A> avail. Pvt. pty. • ____ 1
••I .s. MalU"4Wf\ . 110 . ..,..,, . =-:.• or 940-2254 on 76 I 'c '1400
t1 ., f I m K&ny Vacuum UI" heavy -l"J -.-i~-----
••-••-••••••••••••• duty Ct ... lc: complete ••••••-••••••••••••••• Xtras, nu t ires/baU.
Air Co 111/re 11o r U..enew.OoSt~.SellsACRIFlCE, Price r e -Jl'CtmSTW91 fJOO/OBO. ! •8lt2dys
... ltt/Sol • Service SllO. --~· duced. Hex~I BlueUtes Slip avail. Sipe 6. VHF· ....._. "-5*~ ~ Wanlt, Champ. Model sampk!rabblt eoa\, 175cm w/Solomon SSS CB. 1reat shape, 900 .... ,~ •" 60 --1· 55'1·Jlll beaut. 51 10.lZ, + hat a, b!ndinp SlM. Xln't con· OBO. 54S-2lllOO _. • " I ................ -.... .... b m ..... ,_ dttloo ... ~ ---••••••••••••. ,, ••••••••••
-· • • •• ac~ ~ --·----32' Grand Banks diesel RENT:22'hn . mtrhome.
.. _................. N EWPOBT BEACH Sp11 ....... ln4 trawler. dnl cond. prof. Sips 6, self-co n ,t. 1275/wk .
L.,..A .. TA•S TENNIS CLUB mem· ••••••••••••••••••••••• m alnt.Ablolutefineslon +&r/mi.&t0-8 :S 85.
f.--,.,urbualnealcard. bera hlp . mus t sell. SURFBOARD 6 '8." W. Coast. Firm Mt,500. For Sale: · 7 6 Fie ld-
Stream 22, rt? 1a r dinette.
sips 6. For< 1 440 eng,
27,000 mi. S ~ '00. P.P.
493·2319.
S-.. oee card for each M4-l'58 SCHROFF ~ pin. PP, 144-21514. tat pha one spare. We --good cond. $100 J im ---------
relun permanently Pecan Cocktail lbl, $50. S48·5103 16' Chris Crall. Cull wing
seai.d attractive taf & c h r SS . KI n g s i ze TV l..-0. Se a s Po r l. l 5 0 h p
strap, meeting airlne bedspread . vel vet Hllll ~ 10,.1 Bui~k/Chrys englne.Slip l.D. requirements. Pre· (\angerine>SSS 6«2943 ,_._ .., avatl.N.B.642·4644. ------vat IOla Is theft! For a - -· · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------WE CAM ! 'llLL
penonalized tag enclose Desk w /5 drawers $75. Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr 31 ' Owens E"press. '57, YOUR l V
wallpaper, fabric or BureauS25. wrnty. Free delivery dbl plank hull. twin I • •
"Dey Glo" paper & we 644-2943 Sl48. ~1786. screw. recent refurb & ____ 559-!~•
wUI badt Ir trim your ---- -survey. W /prime Peter's
t•ta. Or try two cards 6' Booltcase $75. Folding Brand new rolorTV, Landing, Hunt'. Harbor
b .. .___ ._ _ _. S8 still in Ix>"· l · M &Ca lo ....:It. """' . $300/0BO. 642_7850 S I P . U S l Se 11 . PRICF.s: 644·2943 _ _ fJ000/080. 64G-9134.
Alltos.rrice,,9 m &A~ 9400
••••••••••••••••• • ••••••
ES
'-ITS arts
1979
JEEP
CJS
4x4·
4 speed transmission,
AM·FM stereo. roll bar.
power steeri nQ , 5
Tacoma whHI• with
olf·road tires and only
20.000 or1g1na1 miles•
(996WOW) Priced at
BELOW wholesale
Kelley blueboOk at only
s5495
IAKER STREET
USED CARS
1425 Baker Street
COSTA MESA
545.3334
1978
PLYMOUTH '
TRAIL DUSTER
4x4
19~8
D·ODGE
CLUB
ABW/
AMPE
SHELL
...
WANTED! .
'· •
Late model Toyotu and
Volvos . Call u e
TODAY!!!
PORSCHES
WANTED Allow UI the opport\11\ily
to consider the purchase
or trade-in ot your clean
Ponche. Check with Us
Today!
136JI HarbO< 81vO
G••a.<1 Gtcwe '" IJl.1JJ3
Top Dollar
Paid
For Your Car!
JOMMSOM & SOM
Lille••·~ 26311 Harbor Div .
Costa Mesa :>40-5630
w.r.,
OVER
-looll
197721112+2 Air . ••••••tic, ...... , ...... ..
DATSUN Z turbocharger
Ii installation kit. ~
pit.ts hp. lll50. Complete
Dats\11\ Z turbo motor.
$2000. Fiberglass rear
racin1 fenders -extend
stock 8 inches -$250. ~::_or'j.'6 Darkroom equipment. JBL best speakers. L212 1J · ;; u-t~ r-d :ttu:! ii::::: enlarger etc. S\25. Li~t $2.200. Sell Sl.290 weatherbe.at.en wood o~
lOor matt S1.40 H . 759-0295 ~~~;arranly. Perfect. ~'glass. old motor. st~r-
SalesTax Included 1ng, elec start. trailer. NO CARD? Se a r s Power Ma t e n eeds wo rk . $375 I
Draw your own or send Vacuum. lllnt cond. $95. COi.Oil TV 964·3316 I
SSAVISAVI
WrTH USID t•1
. Imported carp
IMPOR'J'
AUTOSUPl'l
101 N. Manet\.?:!
Anaheim 7
,v
;ter
76-9900
A utoma t ic
transmission, air
co nd i t1on1ng .
power steering,
stereo cassette.
custom wheels &
tires. (1 92648).
VB automat i c
1ransm1ss1on air
cond•t1on1ng AM·FM
radio and beaulltul
IWO·IOne (IJ410661
For Your Good
VW, Porsche or Au~i I 718-5837.
'78 SlO Sedan am/fm, a/c,
immac. cond. 29K mi,
S51·90l'7
name, addras. phone & 846·764!_.~l 6PM _ 990. 64S·723l we'll make one card per . . TRADE WIND YACHTS
tat. Add 25' each. Heavy duly s hd1ng dr loah, ti4•t•so•cv. 28. Luhrs .. 69. 20K
Send check or money or-I f~ame & screen. ~x7. An-Senoia 020 38' Chris. S.F. 58K der to. t1q ue bathtub, W mdows, ••.•• •••••••••••• •• •• • • • 40' Concorde. S. F. 84K
PILOT'rRIMTIMG rug, Georgia BugRy . Ma~.El~trician. -40'Bluewlr.Trwlr.70K p
0
Bo
1560
646·4382 Des1gn/tnstall/repa1r 55. Chris. FDMY. 79K
C t
·M· xc .....,..., ------Qual. work. 549-2520 evs , oa a esa. a . .,.,._., John Wayne· Tennis Club ----60 Hatt. S. F. '79 53SK
DATSUN Z turbo cl
& installation k1l.
plus bp. t850. CoD
Datsun Z turbo t
$2000. Fiberglass
racing fenders e
stock 8 inches
768·5837.
1arger
50<;. ••
i plete
riotor,
rear
'ttend
S2SO
family members hip. Boat Rerurbis hing TERMS AVAILABLE
Buying Gold jewelry & Sl400. Transf er fee Expert Paint. varnish. 675-9007900-1725eves Silve r & Diamonds . JAGUAlC••""' ioM Jewells ot the Kingdom. absorbed by seller. Call R . etc. , '79 Penn Yan 26' D iesel 675·9007 960--1725 eve. .u,. ~-2 C-kdys. 75Z.650.5. epa1rs, 496-89S4 eves. r 11 . ped ( f' h .....,..,..,, __ _ __ _ _ _ _ u y eqwp or 1s ing
OAK FIREWOOD -1 pc slate Pool table $40 loots, Msilw or. pleasure._ Must sell ! Allfos for S.
Deliv red&S k . o/Bestoffer. Parrot cage Eqlli,.....t 9030 Wtll sac rifice . PP ........................ .
e tac ed apJ7rox s'x3' wrought ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714 /775·7l25or 673-3729. IMPORTANT
Judy,494·4764 · S7S 6t288.50 lO'XlO' Canvas Boal Top ----NOTICETO ---------ir~ · -·--- -on 11' X 12' alum rrame Wanted: Boat partner lo READERSAND Lo'H 1•0•1 shr Vi · t t · 36' Helium Bouquets de· Travel Pan An>. Two for cost $1800. SSOO/O(r .. in eres !n ADVERTISER!i livered. Perfect ror One international coupon 846·3Ui6 Pacifica s portf1s her. The price of 11., ms
every occasion.
67
3-«
19
SM. Call 759-1880 S25.000 down. shr i,~ of advertised by vehl c le ---------•I $1500 avg. monthly ex· dealers in the veh1 cle
Phone Mate Telephone scn•ULETS HI IOATBS pense. Fully equipped classified advert is 1ng
answering machine with ruutr ll 's me again, your old for fi s hing . SI i p in col um~ does nol inch 1de
wananly. $79 with re· 1~WERS marine junk peddlar. Newport. P.O. Box 7695. any applicable tax es. es.
ror
le·
le·
moteS1t9.
7
»
379
1. ft"'1 I'm still lrying lo give Npt Bch93660 license. transfer re
Cipher _ Slant lb at radar set away . finance charges. feei B t h Tri k Anyone with the same 26' BayUner Cruiser air pollution control t ~ price! John Wayne
Tennis C lub mem·
berehip. Mus t stll !
752-2414. 144-1516.
a cKARAT'k y mode1 can have it. I'm X I nt co n d . f u 11 y vice certifications or<
My sister just passed a certain that al least 2 of equipped. very low hrs. aler documentary pi ·e·
course 50 she could be a those sets were manurac· s a c r i rice. s 1 1 . 9 9 s. paratian charges unle ss
substitute teacher. She's lured. I've got one. and 661·0804 otherwise specified I >y
s4995
* COMME:ll
, CHEVROLET
.!X2>1 llitrt••r Hh •I
I'( ~1 .\ \l ~~'-\
, 546--' 200 I --
'70 1 2 T Ford P U
w /overhead camper
VW ·PORSCHE·AUDI
445 E. Coast Hiway
al Bayside Drive
Newport Beach 673-0900
Premium prices
paid ror any used car
Cforeignor domestic>
in Rood condition ..
See Us First!
.!~8 ll.1rl1<1I Hild
I "'I.I \I 1·' I '>Ill II 1:10
• ,, .... , \J,.,,, ·,h111,J.IO S3200 or bestofr.646-7685
-;-
7
-------. Autos.~
1969 CJ5 Jeep. 2n.OOO orig 8 Luv flat bed. l~e •••••••••••••••••••••••
m i, new top. neiA' paint. ~ustom rack. new eng, Alfa•~ 9705
new everything. Perfect _!. 964~ 1230._~l-450~. ••••• ••••••••••••••••••
cond Daytime: 557-0551. 66 Ford Ranchero &cyl LEASE
Eves: 494-0J67 aulo, new eng new paint.
'78 Jeep Wagoneer. 2lmpg see lo app. S1850 DIRECT!
loaded. lo m1. S6000 spr 979·036!· ___ _
c I e 3 n . P \' t pa r t y . '80 Chev Custom Dix 1-:
955-0289 ton pickup. ps. pb. a c.
1981 ALFA
SPIDERS
·FLY INTERNATIONAL
on Pam Am with airline
two-for-one ticket slip.
S ingapore. Central
America, Germany
any of l1 countries.
Hurry! Good until Feb.
28. 790-1.999
n
0
w an e" pert i n there was another one on ------- ---
1
the advertiser. _ KARATE. a ship called "ANDREA,_ _______ _
DORIA"! A fisherman ~/ ~~~~~~/~~,cfs~y~~~ SACRIFICE !~.!:~···~····!~.~
Tnteks 9560 dual tanks. std trans.
0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS700.54,5-.0C2l IEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH Encly. Brit.. new. sac.
World Book & Jr. And
Creal Books set. 731· 1420
operation for the hernia 7• l"'YLl.._.H 46 Ford Woodie. restore-he suffered while trying ~ "' " SlJ,000. ALSO '29 Mode
to lift il in to his truck 27 ft. twill 130 A Town Sedan. 4 dr Mkwc•l-oea cost anolher Sl800E The y_._0 •• LM restored. Ideal for stu -.d 8081 City Fathers fin ally C~~~-_... dent. $10,000.675-6161
Racquel Club of· Irvine •••• ••••••••••••••• •••• asked me to remove that -.......--_.... Coup~es Membership. Want to buy Paint attractive "MARINE •CIT,...,..Ay '58 AUSTIN HEALEY
$450 incl tra~sfer fee. sprayer w/compressor. JUNK SALE" sign, con· lridp! w.y Roadster recently re.
551·2488 tank, llSV. 644-2052 trary t.o popular belief, htNa. SI S,OOO built, grt shape. OBO or
Tires (4) E'Tll4 Steel Belt· -sCALE-.-DOCTOR ;S-· Sm illy didn 'l paint that C .. '75-JHS IYH. will traW! fof late mod11l
ed, Uke new, first SlOO Balance Type Wanted. sign, I did. After all these J ton TI at bed truck .
M2-r141aft5PM 534-tSOS years I finally sold Tom &&S-8165
Kitchen ll a.th Cabinets. Snap-on or other large
\.IJ Price. Veneer your tool bo".
caba. Ada new doon ll 54"447~
d.rawen Btrch/Aah/Oak. "" "'·
Formica tops IG-tl25 Mnlcal
SPLIT ... SEASONED tws.hhrwa•:•a•u.ets1 IOll -•····•··············•·· * AllWOOO * CONN Director trombone
• • • 848-9111 • • • with case. Excellent con-
T. ........... ............ It diUon. SlOO. 675-8052 arter 1me c ........ m..a wr:s s. 6PM -
indaatrial shelving. 4 ---· -------
drawer file cabinet. Ibanez electric guitar.
Steele something. A pre· lcHth, Sal 9060 ------
s s ure al cohol tank••••••••••••••••••••••• '54Sflldlls-.r mar~ed do~ to $3.~. Cal 20, IUOl2. "lnl cond. 3 Commander Coupe ,
The JOY of this sweet v1c-bags with spinaker. low mostly restored. makt•
tory was 5000 shattered us e 6hp OB. VHF . ,_of_f_er_._&tG-0946 ___ . ___ _
when Tom returned an S4000/080. Call afte r hour later for a rerund 6:30pm (7l4)840-UlS 'Sl MGTD. r estored. because the tank had a · · be.aut ~ bargain al slig~l leak. You know, AJbalross. 21'. wood sloop. S 1 O . 5 ~ . P P .
my inventory tum~ over masl sails. rigging . (714)551-1086.
so slow thal_ I bet I m l.he needs work, as is . where I r N II
only store m town tt_ial IA, beslolfer. 642,4995 -;~ 9530 has a yearly ma1n-1---------,._. lenance sc~ule on lhe 27 ' Erickson. s potless. ~··••••••••••••••••••••
m e r c h and 1 s e . Th e diesel sips s great boat 78 Dodge RV Van. Self-painl's easy. we jU.9l pul 833-08i8 ho~e · 640-ooOO contained. Xtras. low
it in new cans. But the busl · miles. MZ-5241
Mid-Week
·:·SPECIAL::
ALL
1981
• COURIERS
• PICK.UPS
• VAHS
• VAN CONVS.
• IROHCOS
OM SALE
THIS WEEK!
SUNSET
'55 International P .C
Sl500/0BO after 5PM
ca II 9604078 752-0900
'79 El Camino. lo mileage. AIHfi 9707
air. shell + many "tras. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Duel tanks, propane & '72 Audi l..SlOO. 4dr, clean
gas. Operates on oolh body & int. Needs minor
fuels. $7.500. 646-6503. w o rk . S 7 0 0 I 0 8 0 .
arter Spm or all day 642·5962.
wk ends. • MW '712
V..s 9570 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• For the best d ea l in '77 1 ton Chevy. custom Orange County ... Come
conversion, new paint. See Us TO<!ay! !
tires. chrome rims. Air, ~
power. $5300. 545·<M21 ~
dys.
·75 Dodge 15 pass. bus
van. new pnl. nev.• trans.
s ac. at.~. 963-0516.
'78 Ford Van. :dnt cond,
ps. pb. auto, $3900. Ca ll
after 6pm 49'l.a>23.
9590 ··········-············· WE PAV TOP DOLLAR
SADDUIACK
V AU.Ff IMPORTS
28402 Marguerite Pkwy.
Mission Viejo
131-2040 495-4949 Closed Sundays
CREVIER
'78 280'L 2+2. xlnl c0nd.
Am/Fm cass. A/C. snrf.
$7450. PP. 640-1948
eves /wket1ds.
'78 1.llOZ, A/C, 4 spd. xlnl.
cond. fJ,150. Michael
857 · 1322. s.52..Q98
"19 310GX. xlnt cond,
am /fm stereo cass, lo
mi, bestoffer.642-5373
'80 200SX . black
hatc hback bea u ty ,
w/wire whls & Decor
Pkg. sunroof, amtrm
stereo cass. only 8000 mi.
like new. S1SOO & l•ke over pymts. Michael.
646·9911.
Must sell '77 280Z. Stick
shirt. mag wheels. Ex·
tras. Perfect cond. $6200.
640-50'74
'78 Datsun P.U. 29,000orig
miles. steno. like new.
make orrer. Steve
957 -4089 or 731 ·3262. .... 9725 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'i4 Fiat 124 Sport Coupe.
$1750/080. Am /Fm
s tereo cass. gd cond.
498-2:103.
'78 FIAT 124 Spyder. new
top, lo mi, xlnl cond.
SS,500 080. Must sell.
951·3057 Mon t.hru Wed.
'79 Fiat 2000Spyder
9100 mi, am/fm tape.
mint. f1500. 493-53116
Hoeda 9727 ...... , ............... .
VISITTC>Ua
ORAMMCOAST
HONDA
HIAl)9UAITllS
TODAY!!! U..V.srrY
SAUSls SERVlCE
OUtSMOllLI
HOleA
5MCTIUCIS 2850 Harbor Blvd. COSTAM~A
rest of the stuff .... ? 1 ·
don't have to worry too Erickson 32'. '75. whl.
much about the parts for loaded, custA:>m int.-ext .
12 string Fender elec, fiberglass boats because Bristol cond. Offer. PP.
in Music Mal) am". dnt arter a year or so they 968-7903 988-0872
price licket machine. Proressional model with
Monarch mdl 146. glass TTtt of Life going up to
shelving & misc. office the neck. Woodgrain
supplies. 846-0223. R.M. body with hard shell
Abrams. 1819 Newport case. $500. :>48-6446
Blvcl,C.M.
9550 ~ F RD
for top l.ISed cars-forei~n.
domestics or classics . If
your car is extra clean.
see us f1RST! · &I~; & HOADWAY, ~f640
SAtnA AHA '78 Civi~. S spd, cass.
835·3 I 7 I deck. silver, xlnt cond,
!HE U~flMATE OAIVING l<IACHINE $3500. -.a558 .. SELF-DESTRUCT right ' ---
c_o_n_d_._of_f_er_._963-_8559 ____ 1 on the shelC! All the lloah, Sips/
,...------------------•!aluminum frame win· Docb 9070 dows I'm trying t.o get rid •••••••••••••••••••••••
or already have cancer s· mooring with ooat,
636-4010 w ...... 'T.,. SW\ 0'-90 •o•o...Gr.,.,. ,....,. ""-'
Use ,,,,,,,., Atl service
when placing your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad
... we take your messages
24 hours a day ... you call
In at your convenience
d,urlng office hours and get
.the responses to your ad ...
this service is only $7 .so
week. For more. informa-
on and to place your ad a I I 642-5678.
and they're SO yds from Balboa Island. SlS,000
the bay! I'll now give firm. (714)760-9428. 1213)
them to bay! I'll now 719.5542 give them lo all of you ----·------•
that have boats they will 600 linear f\ avail. Prime
fit. If mine a.re dying on NB . Negotiating 2 yr
the shetr, I can only leases now. S51-Ul66
speculete on what is hap· peninc lo lbo&e aboard Sail Boat 211· Max. Side
your boats? Everyone Tie al 300 E. Ed(ewaler
knows aluminum and Balboa Pen. 1-171-2866.
salt water are mortal enemies. We should all 13' beam. up t.o 42' lngth, 4
be proud ot our marine blkt N. ol Balboa Ferry.
indmlries because they 1375. 551-7498
are world leaders In
P L A N N E D r•ipa ......
OBSOLESCENCE. Our ••••••• .. ••••••••••••••
quesl. for Moby Dick lut AJrcNft t t IO
inw .. .,...,,...,
=
79C ... YJ
'h T • l'lcll • Di esel. Sootlsdale model.
Ai r cOftdltioned. extra
ta nk 's Aut o mat ic
tr1 •nsmisslon. 31.000
m\ les (LPllllZl)
S6f95
Sunday was a lot ot '""'· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Everyone got a chence lo LA>nl Beach Flylnl Club
aaU the boat and • few bas Ue down avail for
cues of beer dltap· aircraft with leaseback. USI THI
pearfld. Thanks Bruce (211)4Jt.ll5'71 • • t "'ILY PILOT Myers for the guitar · • ,..
music. a•p•n. S./ "'AST
II I n n e Y ' s S h I P lteiut t I 20 llSUL T" a..n.s•y. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SllVICI
m7W·=:w1.NB. '7IYWCAMfll
P.S. WeMher permltUnl POP·'°' 1C •lllCTOIY
th e 12 • • c 1t o o a • r Ea«u.& caadttlon, low For Result
SHEARWATER .. 11. mtl.ea ....... brown. 4 s ~rvice Call
Sat. Jl'eb 1tb .. NUCh ol •'*"'· (mMI) wllalea. Th• lat JO S14fl \ 642-1671 c:....,.... ....... tlalt • • .... Ill
acl lato UM 1tore a,. ~' ~ MCMUMd Loae aometlllDI .. ha•· • welccllnetoawwlDrme. fJ1. VOU(MfAGIN.INC bit? Place .. ad lft our Wille : YOU .... a.pert
~:
#I 111 0r-.. C_.,
2925Rarb0r Blvd.
COSTA MES/\
979-2500
HIGHIUYB
Top dollars for Sports
Cars, Bugs, Campers.
914's. Audi's Ask fOf' U /C MC R
JIM~O
VOl.KSWA._.
1m1 Buch Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
MJ.2000
TOPDOLLAI
PAmPOI
•OODACLIAM
u•CAISI
mirilcle
ni <l z d <-i
T ,_... -"-"
•US9IMW1• ;13 2002 (~) -1 ·
'75 2002a (0035)
'i62002s/r.Up. 0578)
'77 320ia (004)
'776.30cai auto (()(MO)
CloMdS•hJ•
OIAMMCOUMTY"S
OLDIST
&
·79 HondJll Accord, xlnt
cond, Sspd, Ain /Fm
stereo. 28,000 mi, $5200.
552·'11211.
it Prelude Silver 6,500
mi, Jo:4:1! ~ FIRM
m-~-
·-· _ .... t7l4 .......................
•• Kal"lllmm Ghia, sood cond. &.!llloffer.
M5-llM2
Sales.Service-Leasln.g L8cl9 t7J6
loY c.r.w.t.c. ···················-·· Rolu Royce BMW ..,. 4 dr ....... Lo ••. U40Jamboree auto, pwr wladow1.
Newport Betldl brake1......,.m..-.
IOIMdA .... 1
&
e:ION ...... Blvd.
t.AHAUA
(511l.No.otSAr-y>
1714IUJ.IHI .....,tttA.,a.
·······-···· ... ····· ..
....... 111Md,c.pl.lfn6e. I & 114-41• !::a.~t•!:'::.::!: =:'1 ~~
--· .._ 13731 HarbOr pW 1acJk wlMa tlaeJ'•• la Cha •lftld t.o 1oln ...it-======::=:====================:!Ec;••=•=~= ... i=~:=::::::ea:= .. :"':3 ___ ~~0..~~~:;:"~:3:•~,...~~ .. ~1&em~=°'~··:•ue~.=1~,..==~'~ ~··~· .. ~·===·==::d~~~========~~~~====:::::;:::::::d:=:=i!l~=c====~
,·;~~
CHEVY .
CA MAR Os
Loaded w i th air
oondltloning, power
atetdng, automtltc
tran1m1ss1on. r ally•
wheals and moftl
(202WVC). (101WCU).
(551 WCW). (569WCW).
·--~··· LIASI
DlllCT!
•-----••TAKE YOUR ...... ,,.. ... , .....
ona ...... l eivtr, all
Hf record• PP m.aa
"71 .. __.. MID. alllO,
Am/ ... ~.111.• ......... _
·u HI MBZ •• dr ,
11111 •• w1111 c-.1. moo. . ..,.
"11 um.. 1.5,000 mi, all lrtru, alum. whla, 2 tops,
• tell /lean, $32 ,SOO
·1•im.s.. ...
ltll IAAI
1'UllOt
llACH IMPOITS
Ml Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH 7sz.noo
9762 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MiJ -Week
'
SPECIAL 1
1977
BUICK
ELECTRA
Air cond.. auto.
trans .. power
steering, power
brakes , vinyl
root, cruise. tilt
wheel, custom
wheels. stereo
cassette .
(348SPS).
s3997
I
'78 4SGSLC, 31K mi, lthr '74 DI AM/FM rbll eng.
int.. nu tires. lite blu Immaculate. sisso.
metallic, s unroof. all ~
ll t r a s . I m m a c .\•------------------•
7l4/UU449 Toyota '765 ESTATE SAU
'73 '50Sl., clasaic white on
white beauty, immac, 2
tops, new Mich., am/fm
cass, 11$00 & assume
lease 1276 mo. Michael,
646-9911.
'it 2506. 1 owner: Xlnt.
cood. '5500.
Eves: 759-1040
450SL "18, yellow. loaded.
Ski racks. etc. Perf.
cond. Pvt. owner moving
Eut. $26,850. Call :
714-~
'742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'i4MlDGET
l2'15cc eng-Weber carb
12~. 548-7127
MGI 9744
'73 MGB ROADSTER
Low mileage, Sharp.
PP. 548-2001
Pe.geot 9741 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
1911 ,.,.IOT TUllOs
llACH IMPOITS
848 Dove Strttt
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900 /
Estate Sale. '78 Diesel, all
options, make ofrer
875-lo.11.
'17Pe~80t: Loaded, .,., ..........
Porsc._ 9750 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'72POaSCHI
914
••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Buick Electra Limit· ·:~'iJ'.°~c~,~~!!~ ~On~, ~:mi~~:
23,000mi. P.P. Call aft.---.------•
ft»M : 982-5388 "18 B ck Centu~ Limit·
'78 Celica, liftbk. PS, PB. ed, 4d xlnt con ' S3.950.
air. AM /FM stereo, S ---~-----•
spd, bea~ $4800. '80 Buick Park Avenue,
847-1M8 6/mo ol , xlnt cond.
... W91)111 9770 Ve~;'! in 1:U::o ~o~::j ••••••••••••••••••••••• (7 t
'71VWI ......
Sun roof, 4 speed. C..a.c 9915
cassette. DIESEL.•••••••••••••••••••••••
C7l7UNP)
S6H5
. '79 vw llAlln'
Low miles, automatic,
air conditioned .
Dynamite Bronz
Metalic. (23ZMUN>
S4HS
JIMMAllHO
YOUSWAGilH
18'111 Beach Blvd.
842-2000
'73 VW Bug, xlnt
S3.000.
VW parts. '68 left & right
door, 'i3 left door. S50
eacb. 548-97+1
'17 VW BUS: lo miles,
s/r,
5.s2.Qr7. $5800/0BO
EUIOPl IOUHD
'76 Bua, 31,000 mi.
'7& Rabbit. $3200
Must Sell! 644-4208
'63 BAJA. 1776 eng.
, .... at.cl
u..c1c ... u
'77c.LS..•
Astro roof. split
pow.,-.......,. SHh.
tit ....... crwlM co.
trot. door locks. (012ZER)
YOUl#I
CAIMU.AC
DIAlBStWIM
OIAMMCOUMTY!
SALES, SERVICE
AND LEASING
NABER~ CADILL1\"C
Jc .<JO 11 ... 1 .. ,. (ll\,1t
c '"'·' \ '""' '>JO , >1
w /dual p9rt, dual ---------•
kadrons, oil road susp.
$2200. 494-80t6, 8 to 5 76S.•• Power windows. power
seats. cruise. Ult, very
low miles local car.
PICK!!! s4995
* COHNEll I
CHEVROLET I
C OHMELL
CHEVROLET
"~,.. II,, r •., 1 \
• ' r., I \ \I ~ . ,
S46-I 200
**** ··ao Olds •c.._......,
'7S MONZA liftback. very
good cond. wht/whl int ..
29 mpg, S2250644-111SS aft
'80 Z2B, 4 spd, 'an xtras. 6PM
""-" 11.Hhoor 111' ' I"' I \ ,, ~" I
I SU -1200
Automatic, stereo
tape, heater ,
power steering,
power brakes,
electric seats and
windows , air,
cruise, vinyl top.
(1AHF942)
zsoo mi. $12,SOO. oo-sa ~7 8_M_1 _· b--c I · dys, 64.5-1271 eves. a 1 . u ass 1 c . Loaded. Nace car. S3800
Che rolet 9'20 or S500 & assume lse.
•••• :.................. _5S2_·_CM02 __ . -----
'63 Chevy Nova, 6 cyl.
Clean• runs good. '600.
M2-t7S3.
'12 Nova, gd transporta·
lion car, 2clr, 6 cyl, auto,
pa, new brakes, runs gd.
$475. 646-,3473.
S8495
l~~~ ......... !!.~~
SHOWROOM COND.
*
1978
CHEVY
LUV
PICKUP
Economical 4 cylinder
engine. 4 s peed
transmissi on. radio.
heater and more'
( 1 L55003) A s1ea1 al
only
s3995
* COHHEll
CHEVROLET
~ 11 . .rl••r II.. d
,,,...,,,...,~..,,
SU-I 200
"7ST-TOP
Power brakes, power
windows power steering with tilt/telescoping
steering wheel, air.
AM /FM stereo, rear win·
dow defogger, automatic
trans. Snow white with
Burgundy interior. 27,000 orter. 64.5-9004
miles. Immac ulate Pildo thruout! $11,100. 754-6790 or Ans wer Ad #209, •••••••••••••••••••••••
6424300. 24 hrs. '13 Pinto wgn, nu eng, fm
tape, sharp. nu tires,
must sell, SUOO. 645-91511,
642-3789 '17, red. loaded, 36M mi.
xlnt cond. must sell,
$8150. 7«>-8816 -------"'"'°""' COtlfW 99JJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••• •• •• '76 Ply~ Volare Sta·
'73 Cougar XR7 Conv .
Loaded. $3200. Call
752-6912 or 675-3584
'79 Cougar XR7. loaded.
xlnt cond. 16,000 mi.
l ion Wa1on. AM /FM
stereo. full power, good
cond. needs body work. $1500 OBO. Call after
5pm. 4M-G'19
'66 Slant 6. Very teOOO. m-5113. ---------S88S. tt40
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'18 Granada, 6 cyl, 2 dr. '69 Plymouth as is.
lllnt cond,. a/c. ps, pb, any time.
tape dect, $DIO. 496--0246 631-53113
eve/wlmd 1---------2·1978 and 1·19'19 Volare 4
1978
NOVA
CUSTOM
2DOOR
17, 161 original
miles. 305 V-8
engine .
automatic. power
steering, air. tilt
wheel . radio .
vinyl top .
(41 3UZJ)
llAUTIFULI
MUST SH
AND DllYI
TOIBJIYI
131.0110
HAL GREENE
CHEVROLET
1 S. El Camino Rea ·
San Clemente
'945 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'7'1.MCOLH
MAB¥
Loaded with extra 's love-
ly condition. CIAJN617)
$Uts
JIMMAAIHO
VOLKSWA61M
16711 Beach Blvd.
842-2000
'7S Mark JV, 67K mi,
velour uphol, top shape,
$3200. 548-33155
Mft'CIWJ '950 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ORANGE COUNTY'S
AHIST .
LINCOLN-MERCURY
DEALERSHIP
~?t.llJ.•
LINCoC.N·M ERCuit·v
16· 18 Auto Center Dr. SD Fwy-Lake Forest exit
IRVINE
130.7000
Mln'-J '952 ....••.... -. .•......•.•
'7'MUSTAHG . GoHIA
door station wagoos. All
have V-8 CID engines.
air conditioning, power
s teering and brakes,
AM /FM stereo&,· tinted
glass, 2 have power win-
dows and 1 has speed
control. All are high
mileage: Priced $1,000
below blue book
wholesale at approx-
imately S1600. Offers will
be acCe'pted. Can be seen
al Orange Coast Daily
Pilot plant, 330 W. Bay.
Costa Mesa. Ask for
Fleet Administrator or
the garage. 642·4321.
Powffoc 9965
'7 7 Firebird
y,... ..
Sport coupe. Mags.
cassette, t.rEOU>
$4295
JIMMAllMO
¥0USWAMM
18Tll Beach Blvd.
es Bug. Rblt, new tires, in·
lerior. Perf. paint.
St ,650. 1-e&l-31182 (831RYY> ~------------_.
Like new, Black on
Black. Automatic, air
co nditionin~ power
•steering and brakes
(321-RES>
Automatic ,
heater. stereo
tape, power
steering. power
brakes. electric
windows. air,
cruise , sport
wheels. (584TPI)
'63 Volb for sale: cheap
for cub.
81Jl-87'1S
112-IOOO '99 VW Camper, perfect
---------cond, new eng. poptop,
197' POISC.. all xtru. Must sacrince ....-cOW'I $2800 or b~t o ffe r .
$7H5
$32'5
~Uowcwl
vou<SWAG(N. INC
VI, 5 llle9d. air eoad .. 145-1•. ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!.I lii'inr'"':.'·.c=r •• 9772 '17 Eldo loaded MUST 1·978
CHEVY
NOVA
~100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove s5495
tt.•milell (aomllll). ••••••··~·•••••••••••• SELL, XJntCoftd. Lo Mi. m.• YOL YO Mtl6 eve, wkndl 548-1912
TH(Q("IORE
ROBINS . ()~ [)
.. 1.11
•t • • 1)
"It m Or1111pe. s 111"4.
1tereo, ailo11. very eleH. tlO,llO. 1 Han1, ...........
,
SAUl.lm'ICI
MeLIASlle OVERSEASDl!UVERY
UP£1l1'5 ...... •0&.•o
'15 Sedan DeVille. New
enc. A/C, brakes.
radiator, new water
pamp . ., ......
'71 SedaD DeViJle, blue,
loaded, xlat cond.
mG0/080.--
t•HartMwBlvd. '11 El Dorado: Needs
CDTA llESA 101ne .......... $lllOO or ,......,., ... , .. 7 '*t ......... . .
OIA•ICOUMn c... n11 '~ .. o ...................... .
w.IY •rr c._U'O, DT I cyl •. EX~=o crHt 1hpe. 11100. 1-:=a.tJ! ........
~E
'•I. /, • • .
vo~vo
Air cond., auto.
trans., power
steering, power
brakes, vinyl
roof. rally wheels,
radio. Real Nice!
(760TKC)
$3591
\I H : I I t i ) ',' l
iJ«1dge
lt77MUSTA._
Atltam.SC. *·power
1teerla9, A•-F• ............ , .... r:i=-...,
!!td1Wi(lt'
"
•MUST._• '1'1, • DaPM, VI, .a /c1 '77 Trana Am. Power
new r,dlal Ure1L rea 1tffrial, bralr .. , wiD-w /bllr llltertor, ,,, ... doWI. AJl/P'll 1 tndr.
Da11 ta-4111 nt no. -...u
eveee..,.. 1---------f'lrlllbd ..... ~ fld. "7111--.,4tpd,alr,119, ~loaded. MIOO, ~II
eaaa . ........, 14M al. -•••• •l•t. oa4. ·••tto . ---........ ·-·=-·-·--.....,..,..---"-,-
.... , •• , . Mull r. •et, .~ ....... -..... ::'j.
......_. ta111--.11a111L '" v~a ..... .... ...... II ....... • c•••· •UIT'; llLI. .... -....... . ...........
TRADES
ACCEPTED
ltlO HONDA
ACCOID
A -~ -S _.r--· AM-FM-
--IUOD -· Tllit -lltows -· ~I ltllYIAi-~
55611
DEALERS
WELCOME
tt74DODal
COLT
Hfl(4t0j) -""""4 -Ir-, A"°' FM~· buc~•c Hiii & 9old ncerrot Sohd tow co.I
l11n1DOrtllionl 161'KCXIJ ISi!< 0133AJ
51688
1'7tW.
'TIOADSTll 4 _.i ,.........,,., AM/FM-·,_~
rodlll '"" & ,. .. tllen 11.000 orltlnll mliftl 14$&WOVl (8'11. IOI~
•
I·
I
t-u
:t
4 ..
.D
BRAND NEW 197! 'CHRYSLER CORDOBA
USED 11111 CllYSl.EI le BARON
4 .. SEIAN
$
INCLUDES MEW
CAR WARRANTY!
Equipment includes \/8 engine, automattc transm1u1on.
Ult 1teer1ng wheel. Power 1teenng. power brakes & morel (114761)
USED 1980 ARROW
SPORT PICKUP
Equipment inclydes an economical 4 cyltnder engine, automatic
tcansm1ss1on a1r cond111oning. power steering, Power brakes. AM·FM
radio. custom wheels and more' (1\/20856).
a cyl. engine, automatic trans •• air cond1t1on lrfV. power steering, power brakes. speed control. AM·FM
radlo. vinyl top, wsw tires'& morel (728ZOT). •
.. ID1979
PLYMOUTH HORIZON
TC3 HATCHBACK
$
1975 PLYMOUTH
YAUAMTS9AN
Automatic trens., air conditioning,
power steering & brakes. vinyl top,
radio. wsw tires and more!
(336MCG).
5 1995
1980 PLYMOUTH
Youal •AM
6 cyl., automatic trens .. air cond ..
pwr. steering & brakes, radio,
custom moldings. vinyl top, wsw
tires & morel (703YVU).
54495
$
1979 PLYMOUTH
CHAMPCOUN
Economical 4 cyl. engine, • speed
tranlmisalon, power brakes, radio,
MW tires & morel (115WVB).
53695
1978 PLYMOUTH ~ocoun
4 cyt. engine. standard trans.. air
c:ond .. pwr. brakes, AM·FM s-.O
~. bucket ... ta, WSW ti .... &
morel (1SMWKR).
54695
1978 CHRYSLER
CoaDOIA COUPI
Loaded Inc. \18, auto. trans.. air
cond .. pwr. steering & brakes. pwr.
windows & seat. tilt wheel. cruise
control, AM·FM 8 track. vinyl top &
much more! (244WCO).
53995
1980 CHEVROLET
CJTAT10M ieAN
6 cyl., automatic trans., air cond ..
pwr. steering & brakes. 2 tone
paint, custom moldings & interior,
radio. wsw tires & morel (294YYI<).
Based oa the manufacturer's suggested retail ~
price direct from Chrysler to you, on all
filwwwcecl brcmcl HW 1981 ·Chrysler, Plymouth
Ccrs, Including l1nports cmd the '1( .. Cars,
but not the Imperial.
1977 DATSUN ... , ....
6 cyt. engine, automatic trans .. alr
cond .. power brakes. wsw tires &
morel (001140).
54195
1980 PLYMOUTH
AUOWCOUN
Economical 4 cyl. engine,
automatic trana.. air cond.. pwr.
~. buckM ... ta. rlldlo, wsw
ti,.. & moral (548ZGT).
55295
FOil FLEET SALES &
INFOIMADO#, CA1f~'
SEllE FIAlllO
546-1934
SEIVICE HOUIS·
MONDAY THiii flliAY
7:30 A.If. TO 5:30 P.M.
SA1UllA1· 8:00 A.Al TO 5:iJ P.M.
----· NEED CASH?
:-.~~~for ...... c.:.. ....
,....... t d Cwt o..,. .,. ..
Doaua,;. ;~w· All.OW TO,
TOD4 Y!U T14DI IN. -US
SEE OUR SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
AIOUT R&rnN•
I 98_0 PLYMOUTH CH!MP
..
.....
,
----lllll PINI
Union h bUctget slashed $1 ·mi11ibn
8J PATUCll KSNNS•Y ...... _ ...
H ..... .._..UIUoaffiP
SdaooJ Di1trlel tru1teff tut
mon U.. ti mW6aD r..... Mat
year's ..U.ated budlet T\lel· day.._ . ...,
T8aey ndueed dririq traialna
pro1ram1, restricted tllle
auma-ol dMHI for junion
aad HDion. laid off nine
libr....W., reduced bus service
ud lowered sraduation require·
.Vicious
letter
~eve a led
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)
-The jury in Jean Harris's
murder trial beard today the so-
c ailed "Scarsdale letter" in
which Mrs. Harris attacked her
rival for diet doctor Herman
Tarnower's affections as "a
thieving slut" and a "vicious,
adulterous psychotic."
· Assistant District Attorney
George Bolen read the letter to-
lbe jltry.
"I am distraught as I write
this," her letter to the 69-year·
bid cardiologist began. "Your
'Call telling me you prefer the
company of a vicious adulterous
psychotic kept me awake for
.almost 36 hours." ·
Mrs. Harris, 57, former bead·
mistress of the Madeira School
in McLean, Va., wrote the letter
last March 10 before she drove
to Tamower's home and alleged·
ly shot him to death. She claims
she did not kill Tamower in a
jealous rage b11t that he was shot
attempting to prevent her
suicide.
Mrs. Harris closed her letter,
h andwritten in red ink on
Madeira School stationery, b)'
telling Tarnower, her lover 14
years, that be was "the most im·
portant thing in my life."
In the l~tter, she reacts to
learning that Lynne Tryforos,
ber 37·year-old rival, would be
invited to a testimonial dinner
April 19 held by the Westcbeste't
H.eart Assoc:iation to honor
Tarnow~r. Mrs. Harm appealed
to be allowed to attend, writing:
"Indeed, I don't care if she
pops naked out or a cake with
he r -breasts frosted with
chocolate," Mrs. Harris wrote,
adding, "I intend to be there.
''She bas you every single mo·
ment in March, for God's sake,
give me April. T.S. Eliot said
it's the cruelest month."
Mrs. Harris ' birthday is April
23. She concluded the letter by saying, "in all these year s, you
have never spent my birthday
with me.
(See DOCl'OR, Pa1e AZ)
Parking lot work
at airport OK'd
Orange County supervisors
have approved a $13,500 project
to provide a slurry seal oil coal·
in& on the dirt surface of the
overnow ,parking lot at John
Wayne Airport.
The board's action is in
response to passenger com·
plaints that the parking lot has
been mired in mud during rainy
periods.
Coast
Weather
Patchy low clouds in-
, creasin& tonight throu1h
Thursday morning .
' OtherwlH fair with sunny
• and cooler afternoons.
•••" la cutl»aekl totali•I
•1 ••• 111. TM culbeeb, lbade bl • at-
tempt to baluee next year'•
bucl1et, will eliminate 43
teac~ poe6tleu, accordiq to
district Oftlclala. ...
After a four-and-a -balf·bour
public session , the board
postponed what la expected to be
a lengthy d.lacuaaion of the pro-
posal by Superintendent Frank
Abbott to e l iminate 53
Making tr~la
coumelon and seven nunes for
an estimated aavin11 of $800,000.
The lnlltees will meet at 7
p.m. Tbunday to cooaider cut·
tinl an additional $2.I million,
for a total reduction · of $3.9
million from next year's project·
ed buqet. The upcomin1 COD·
siderl!lioas include reductions in·
various athletic pro1rams, witb
the largest cuts proposed for
water sports.
Superintendent Abbott told the
Tim Calhoun, 19, of Huntington Beach, pops wheelie while
cruising the beach in Newport. AU those tire tracks aren't
his ·though. Most belong to larger vehicle that passed ea~lier. Calhoun was kicking up his heels and his wheels
during Tuesday afternoon's splendid weather.
BB votes to keep
final CETA link
Huntington Beach City Council
member.s by a one-vote margin
decided not to eliminate the city's
qne last link with the Com-
prehensive Employment a nd
Training Act (CET A) program.
The council also reaffirmed an
earlier decision by a three.-
member council committee to
unanimously call for an Orange
County Grand Jury investieatioo
of the Orange County Manpower
Com mission and all its subgran·
t ees, including Huntington
Beach.
The Manpower Commission ad·
ministers and oversees the spend·
ing of about $30 million in federal
funds annually in Orange County
job-traininl programs.
The City Council, on a 4·3 vote1 decided Monday to retain a CET A
program that finances about 30
workers in city government jobs.
"If we don't accept it, the
money would be squandered ln
other areu," Councilman Bob
Mandicdetlared.
Voting with Mandie to seek a
grant for $470,000 to carry the pro-
gram through most of 1982 were
Jack Kelly, Ruth Finley and John
Thomas. Voting to drop it were
Mayor Ruth Bailey, Ron Pattison
and Don MacAllister.
The city's call for a grand jury
investigation into all Manpower
Commission /unctions followed
year-long developments that in·
eluded the dismantling of the
Western Institute of Careens Inc.,
a non-profit corporation set up to
handle the city's job training pro-
gram.
Its former director, Robert
Cunningham, was indicted by the
grand jury and ls facing trial on
embeulementcbar1es.
A Manpower Commlui6n audit
released Jut weelt said the city
should repay the federal govem·
ment $186,000 for CET A funds that
alle1edly were spent inap·
propriately.
City officials are contendiq
(See CETA, Pa1e AZ)
board that tM ctiltrtct '1 IPIDCI·
ln1 reduction ia beblnd·the-
wbeel driver traiaiDI could
eliminate tbe Pl'Oll"Hl nest year
bee••• Gov. Jerry Browa'1
proPOMd state bucllet doeln't in·
elude tbe pr'OIJ'am u it bu in
put years. It 1'0Uld mean 11
behind-the·wheel trainin1
teachers would be out of Jobs ln
the Huntington°Beach district.
Last year, about 500 students
received the trainin1. Abbott
said. With state fundin1, the
superintendent told the board
the pJ'Oll'am could b& offered
before and after school next
year. 'l1lla year, the district of.
fered it-durin1 the regular
school day.
The IAJ'lest bud1et reduction
-tea,500, or 25 teaching poei.
lions -calla for limiting Juniors
and seniors. to five classes a
semester, down rrom six.
Tboee students who need a
sixth clau to eraduate would be
allowed to take it, Abbott told
the board. Fresbmen and
sophomore students will be al·
lowed to take six clUlel nest
year. But Abbott •U11eated that
the system may have to eo to a
five clus maximum for all stu-
dents in future yean.
Board president Helen Dille.:
opposed the cutting of available
classes.
<See BUDGET, Pa1e AZ)
'Among the best'
HB's new city
lllanager. hailed
By aOBE•T BAa&Ea
Ol .. Oelly,..... .....
City managers have one thing
in common with fpotball coaches
and managers of professional
baseball teams -they usually
don't last long in the same job.
. But Charles Thompson, the
man who will take over as Hunt·
ington Beach city administrator
next month, appears to be an ex-
ception.
He bas spent 11 years aa city
manag e r in Downey . If
Theodore Jackman, the mayor
of that Los Angeles County city
bad hia druthers, it would have
been even longer.
.. He did an outstandln1 job
and is one of the better city
managers," Jackman said Tues·
day.
"But I am a litUe mad about
the pirating. We bate to lose
Thompson and now we will have
to find a good person to replace
him."
Jackman said that Tbompeon
bas been instrumental in puttiq
the city of about BS,000 on llOUDd
financial footing while also
building the police and fire de·
Mile Square
Park bicycle
trail backed
An agreement to build a
landscaped bicycle trail at Mile
Sqaure Park in Fountain Valley
was approved Tuesday by the
Orange Cou nty Board of
Supervisors.
The trail will be developed
along Brookburst Street and Ed·
inger Avenue at the county park.
According to the agreement,
which already bas been ratified
by the Fountain Valley City
Council, the city will use a
$4.5,000 federal grant to build the
trail.
The county will maintain and
landscape it at an estimated an·
nual cost of $1,800.
Construction is expected to
begin about April 1 and finish by
the end or the month.
Senior singalongs
at Golden West
A singalong program for
senior ci\Uena will be conducted
at Golden West Collete in Hunt·
ington Beach on the nnt Satur·
day of each month, be1inning
Feb. 7.
The free seulons will be held
from 2 to 4 p.m. in Chorale
Room 108 in the Music BuildiD1.
PMJaED BY OLD 8018
N .. c11J Wt TiloMpeon
partments into top notch or·
ganiutioaa.
TbomplOll's tenure in Downey
was mor~ than double the
average length of stay of city
managers.
Former Huntington Beach city
administrator Dave Rowlands,
for instance, wa• fired in 1976 by
the City Council and Bud Belsito
was relieved in 1980.
Thompson , a 53 -year·old
native of Oklahoma, said he has
spent 11 "very happy" yean in
Downey.
He appears to be most proud
thal the city financed a perform·
ing arts theater with available
funds, added a golf course and
major parks, doubled the city's
water system and upgraded
police and ftre services.
He said this was accompllsbed
with 100 fewer employees than
when be took over.
"Many other people were in·
volved. I can't lake all the credit
myself," be said.
He said it is difficult to leave
Downey "but the more I see of
Huntington Beach the more I
like it and the people."
"My main goal will be to try
to accomplish something
worthwhile for the community."
Thompson is scheduled to
start his new job March 16.
lleplares Stanton
Van Dask seated
on Valley council
By PIDL SNEIDE&MAN
OI .. DeMy ""'Sutt
Eugene Van Duk, a retired
Rockwell International purchas·
ing m~er and a 16·year resi-
dent of. Fountain Valley, was
selected unarlimously Tuesday
night to fll1 a vacant City Coun·
cil seat.
"This moment, to me, is
awesome,•• 'be said after the ap-
pointment .,fas. announced. "I
pledge t.o1.be citizens here and to
the community that I will give
you everytbin1 I have. I love all
of you, and I love this city."
The city's four elected council
members received 16 applica·
lions for the seat vacated in
January by Roger Stanton, now
Orange County supervisor for
the lit District. Tbroueh in-
terviewa,t the council narrowed
the field to four finalists, then
selected Van Dask from this
group on the first ballot.
Van Duk, 61, .will serve the
remainder of Stanton'• term,
which upirel ln April 1982.
City Clerk Evelyn llcClendon
adminlltered the oath of oftlce,
and the new councilman im·
mediately took bls seat.
Del!YPllll ........
FILLB, COUNCIL VACANCY
AppolnlM Yen Daek
necessary and where additional
fees milbt be imposed.
When be first applied for Stan·
ton's seat, Van Duk, who baa
never run for public ottiee,
pledted be wo'-ld not seek elee·
Uon if appoiated-to ftnllb Sta-
toa '1 term. Lows toallht 45 lnland to
low 50s at beaches. Hltba
Thursday 83 alon1 coast to
69 inland.
. IN81•E'IW9~~
QuHC, oOd.t•c COGCMI
or• cit....., Old of U.. loc:al
IC.-. ,,,...., ~ CarlloR
npiora ..... of Uw NGIOIU.
Transit s~e nearing
In an inlerview after the meet·
in&, Van O.U said be hopes to
draw an bia ~ in ftnan.
cial matters when bud1et prob-
lem• coafroat UM city. "I ftrmly bellne tbe c:oundl
1boulcl 1oDk at tbe operatlaa ol
tbe city• If It..,. BO.._._
from a pr'Clftt-makinl earpora-
tloD,,. be Mid. "We llaouJcl haw
Yahae reeei.ftd far eftl'J claUar
we ....... "
However, after bls appoblt·
ment n.ctay, be said be will
esamiDt tbe commualtJ HPtMt
be recelvea duriq bia •=:-' tenn before reeddq • ..
cillon an ....... fw tM lllll la 1982 ..
·.lff POfl'BJ.
BJ GLBNN 8CCm' °' .. ..., ......... A state eonelltator was
lcbedllled today to resume ecm-
tra" talb bet..-union ud
Oraqe County Transit Diltrlct
offlelal• on tb• ••• of a tbreat•n•d •trite bJ HT
meebalel md bal drlHn. . ,
If called, tlle strike could
...... Ill 11:01 a .m . Tlu1nda1,
, balt1a1 b .. Hnle• to •n
••Umate4 11,111 dallr .......... -. ..., . ., ..... ... ................. .
daJ .... _~•Ideal.
District otnclals were pus ...
out men today to bus ndln.
The notleea cautioned them tbat
buHs may atop runntn1 on
Tbunday.
Tbe eaneillatGr WU reqUlltld
bJ dl1trlet official• after
work .. "*" lut wMtlDd to
reject tbne·JMI' contract If·
fen. Talb nnmecl 'h11_,, ::!r..~·u--
Rowner, dl1trlot Qfftelall· .................... _ . , ........ ~-drlyen _ ,... " .....
He aald tM dty IOOD will M
faelq tlle clelaJed l91apact al
Pr~ll. .. ;.n -....... • ... tbe ballaal..., ................ ..
=~ . '-" to tllMlm ..... .. v:;.,_._..._ .......
enwmtlat111112 11nm•11
to ...., ···-=-··-· .......... 71 ......
.... NH I l!lll•z .... ...... -··.,. -' I
LI
Jetaalee ~een
'
\
...
•
,. •a s M!•t.1•1
Talia brealc Clo•n
Ua Palilla 11rilce
WQMW, P Ir ICAPt.-!lllieza•.W., .......... ,.--~@!!'='• .. •1ll-... I to-l&ala, ... .,...,.~. ........c..aa. o&elaNturwlto ...... , ......... ,..., .......... ,.
1111.•rilJ &r• u• ....., Lec9' Waleta, who wa1 ~Ji!-... ....... .-...,.acs _..i ltrille ID ::;~~ A•ot• .. ,..... .. , .. a,p... ••1 am •till
··•11nw .. .,. ..... ._. .. ,orc9"UPGD UI byUf1. We don't
wutto1D••~ UJWMn. ht wear,ecoutr~todoao.
"W9 an DOt llrlW. aM ewo ll wt 1llould IOle -lt'I better lo
tall I* r r,. ......,.. ~to IO ltnomlnloully backward." ...................
L<*DON (AP) a.venlnl lta recem slide, the price of 1okl ,.. ........, la Swope today to eeUpae the SSOO-an-ounce mark.
Tbeclallllrf.Ucmentau1emarteta. (ftelatedstory,841).
loMon'a five bullion~ fixed the 1old price at S505 a troy
ouace. up from .-.n late Tuelclay. o..Jen said b'-yin& by
~ea tr al bMkl belped push up the price.
.,............... I
TELUIO, Italy CAP> -A youn1 man hammered and badly
damqed works of art in the calbedral of this central Italian town
today. police reported.
A Uth century panel by the school of Italian painter Gentile da Fabriano was amon1 lbe work.S damaged, along with a statue of '
the Madonna and other mi90r art.
Damiano di Dionisio, 22. who police described as unbalanced.
was arrested and char1ed with vandalism. · . .., ..... ..,,,,. ....
WASHINGTON CAP)-'lbeSenate Finance Committee voted
6·3 today lo raise the government's borrowing authority by $50
billion.
The votes against the first bill pressed by the Reagan
administration were cast by Republican Sens. William Armstrong
~fColoradoandStevenSymmsofldaboandSen. Harry F . Byrd, an
mdependentfrom Vir1inia. Sens. BUI Bradley, D-N.J . and George
Mitchell, D·Maine, voled present. '
A.aerie•• ••W rele•RI
BERN. Switzerland (AP) -The Swiss Foreign Ministry
said today that an American held in Iran on unspecified
charges, Mobi Sobhani, 44, of Los Angeles, bad been released.
Spokesman Othmar Uhl, wbo earlier reported a trial of
American freelance writer Cynthia B. Dwyer on espionage
charges took place today. said the Swiss Embassy bad been in-
formed in Tehran that Sobbani bad been freed.
Sobhani, born in Iran and a naturalized American citizen
was arrested in Tehran on Sept. 6. '
&pionage elalmed
American writer
in Iranian trial
BERN, Switzerland CAP) -
American free-lance writer Cyn·
tbia B. Dwyer, arrested last
May in Iran, was tried today by
an Iranian Revolutionary Court
on espionage charges, a Swiss
diplomat reported to the Swiss
Foreign Office in Bern.
A Foreign Office spokesman
said the diplomat attended the
trial and that a verdict was ex·
peeled Monday. The diplomat
reported Mrs . Dwyer appeared
"nervous but in good condition"
at the one-day trial in Tehran.
The Buffalo Evening News,
meanwhile, quoted another
Swiss diplomat in Tehran as
saying that Mrs. Dwyer, if con·
victed, might be sentenced to
prison or expelled from Iran.
The State Department said to·
day it has been told that Dwyer
was given a hearing in lran, but
not a trial.
William Dyess, the State
Department spokesman, said in·
formation received in
Washington didn't confirm re·
ports from Swiss officials in
Switzerland that Mrs. Dwyer
was tried on espionage charges
and would be sentenced Mon-
day. Mrs. Dwyer, 49, of Amherst, a
suburb of Buffalo, N.Y., went lo
Iran to write about the Iranian
revolution and was arrested
May 5 on suspicion of espionage
for the CIA. Swiss officials, look·
ing aft.er American interests in
Iran. have been attemptinR lo
Nursing ~ome
fire kills 6
POINT PLEASANT BEACH,
N.J . (AP) -Fire swept through
the Keifer's Quarter boarding
home, killing four elderly people
and injurin1 15 in the fourth
boardin1 home fire in New Jersey
in less than a year. officials say.
. Tbe blue late Tuesday al the
facility in this seaside community
destroye d the wood;frame
buildin1. which ho used 21
residents in need of partial care.
.. ~ ..........
ON TRIAL IN IRAN
U.S. writer Dwyer
negotiate her release.
John Dwyer, her husband,
said in Buffalo be bad beard
news reports about the trial but
had no comment until he had
talked to the U.S. State Depart·
menl.
Mrs. Dwyer was not included
in negotiations between the Unit·
ed States and Iran on release of
52 American hostages freed
from 444 days of captivity Jan.
20.
Mrs. Dwyer, the mother of
three, has been held In Evin
Prison in Iran.
The Swiss Foreign Office
spokesman did not disclose de·
taiJs of the trial proceedings.
He said be understood that the
public was not admitted to the
trial. He said the Iranian
authorities sent an invitation
Tuesday lo the Swiss Embassy
in Tehran to send an observer to
the trial.
He was Wilhelm Schmid, bead
of the embassy's foreign in·
terests section, who was accom·
panied by an interpreter and a
local Iranian employee of the
embassy, the spokesman said.
ORANGE COAST · Dilly. Piiat Cla•etfled 8dwenlelftl 1141142·1171
All othef depertme"'9 141-4111
l'ho·"NS P. H•ley ~
Aobeft N. Weed ...........
M. Thoma• l<MYll ...
~Murphlne
~J-m...
~ ..........
~~
~•NiaGoddanl. Jr.
OA ... l•ee
Admiral E .R . "Bobby" In·
man, nominated to be depu·
ty director of the CIA, ap-
pears before the Senate
Select Committee on In·
telligence on Capitol Hill.
F,...Pfl,,eAJ
DOCTOR .••
"There aren't many left," she
added.
Mrs. Harris wrote that she
had received a COQY of
Tarnower 's will with her name
"viciously scratched out" and
Mrs. Tryforos' name written in.
She accused Mrs. Tryforos of
slashing clothes Mrs. Harris bad
left at Tarnower's home and of
smearing a silk dress with ex·
crement.
"I have indeed grown poor lov·
ing you while a self-serving, ig-
norant slut has grown rich,"
Mrs. Harris said. "It made me
feel like an old piece or dis·
carded garbage."
Mrs. llarris admitted in the
le tter that s he called Mrs .
Tryforos' house at 1 a.m. or 2
a.m. almost daily. On Tuesday.
Mrs. Harris testified that she
had telephoned her anonymous·
ly ''to ask her to leave me
alone."
''I didn 't think anything
second rate belonged in Hi 's
(Tarnower's) life," Mrs . Harris
said during her sixth day on the
stand.
"She denigrated rum and gave
me a great deal of trouble with
my integrity and common
taste." Mrs. Harris said.
Mrs . Harris sa id Mr s .
Tryforos "socialized" with the
van der Vrekens, Tarnower's
live-in servants, and added:
"It's not like me to rub up
against people like that."
Prosecutor George Bolen
asked Mrs. Harris. if she had .
mentioned Mrs. Tryforos when
s he was writing a letter to
Tarttower the weekend before he
was shot.
"Yes. she was part of the let-
ter to Hi.'' Mrs. Harris replied.
"How did you refer to Mrs.
Tryforos in that letter?•' Bolen
asked.
"In as m a ny unattractive
ways as possible," the defendant
replied.
"Did you describe her as a
dishonest adulteress?" Bolen
asked.
"I think so," she said.
"And did you use the words.
•your psychotic whore'?" he
asked.
"That pretty well sums it up,"
she answered.
"And did you use the word
'slut'?" Bolen asked.·
"I may have," Mrs. Harris
responded. "Do we have to go on
this way? You've got the letter."
Mrs. Harris said Tarnower's
relationship with Mrs. Tryforos
''probably had something to do
with my loneliness."
Fro91PqeAJ
BUDGET •••
"I have trouble dealing with
this," Mrs. Dille said. "Instruc·
lion has top priority." But the
measure passed 4·1. .
Other approved cuts include:
-Laying off nine librarians
for a savings of $153,717. There
will be one "media specialist"
at each school library. plus
classified assist.aftts.
-Restricting bus service to
those student! who live more
than four miles from a school.
The prior standard was three
miles. This will save an estimat·
ed $80,000. ·
-· Reducln1 graduation re-,
quirements by one class in
social studies and two classes in
physical education. These
cban1ea .have no cost savinp.
but 10 alon1 with the clan re-
duction for junion and seniors.
At 11:30 p.m.. weary board
memben went into executive
lffllon to ~UIS pohntial court
action threatened by coumelora
wboae po1itiona would be
eliminated bJ proposed budaet
cuts.
Tbe counaelora bay• made
alteraate budlet proposall .that
lncl•dt Ndaelq the worklq year al ,..,.._ 8dmbdltnlian
1nd redaoi•I eo1ll lD data
proe1111na.
•
~"·~el., I
chdrgesi
LOS ANO&La (AP) -A
maa d= to be a aportl pro-moter bJ WeU1 P'arto in a $21.J mllUcm civil embeule-
ment ault denied in a pbone call
to a radio ltaUoa tbat he or b1a
Muhammad All Profe11ional
Sports or1anlutlon were
reapopaible for the mlsain1
funda.
"My family ia safe now and
I've come back to fi1bt. I'm a
flabter," said the caller on Tues·
day evenin1's KABC Radio
Sports Talk pro1ram.
He was identified by
sportscaster Bud Furillo as
Harold J . Smith, 37, chairman of•
Muhammad Ali Professional
Sports Inc.
Smith bas been missing a
week. The caller said in the
broadcast interview that be left
the country to lake bis family to
safety and that be would return
to Los Angeles Tuesday ni1ht or
today to fight the accusations.
"I'm doing all ri1ht now tbal
my family's all right," be said.
"I had to leave under gunfire. I
know they're going to try to stop
me because they tried to kill me
and my family before I left.''
Asked by Furlllo who he
meant by "they," the man
responded: "You can start at
the Miracle Mile district (in Los
Angeles) of Wells Fargo Bank.
This thing involves bank of·
ficials.
,. ...... fl,,e..tJ
STRIKE .••
much of the same set of agree·
ments as a basis for a contract
with the mechanics, who so far
have been less willing to settle.
"I'm still confident that we
can still resolve our differences
without having a strike." he
said.
Reichert said the district is
trying to help set up car pooling
-or "ride sharing" -pro·
grams with many of its patrons
in the event there is a strike.
N ..... lellni
Gro Harlem Brundtland, the
new Norwegian premier and
the first Scandinavian
woman to hold such a post,
waves a bunch of roses out-
side the royal palace in Oslo
after being received by King
Olav.
CETA •••
that the commission has provided
sloppy leadership and has been
remiss in other areas of ad·
ministering the program.
Robert Nelson, director of the
Manpower Commission since it
was founded in 1974, announced
his re5ignation last week at the
time the audit reports were made
available.
He denied anr connection between his resignation and
problems in the CETA program.
Valley foggy
By The Auociated Press
Fog socked in Northern and
Central California valleys today,
forcing officials to call a
travelers advisory due to poor
visibility. There is a chance of
showers near the Oregon boun·
dary Thursday, the National
Weather Service said.
Kids chide Reagan
about jelly beans
CATHEDRALCITY CAP>-As
if President Reagan isn't getting
enough counsel these da~s. a
group of elementary school kids
here are advising him to change
his eating habits.
"Jelly beans equal sugar" and
·•are bad for your teeth," wrote
Ricky Bowen. admonishing the
president for his penchant for jelly beans.
He advised Reagan to •·eat
celery sticks."
"Try something like apples,"
urged little Paul Silva.
''Cheddar cheese might be bet·
ter.'' offered Shelby Hammer.
·'Too much sugar can make you
sick. We need a healthy presi·
dent," declared Jennifer Steb·
bins. concerned about the state of
the nation.
The stack of letters came
from the class of Judy Bashore, a
kindergarten and first-grade
teacher at Cathedral City School.
She said when her class learned
that Reagan distributed jelly
beans at Cabinet meetings, they
decided to send him a "goodnulri·
lion edition" of the "Kidlinger Report."
A lthougb all the letters
cr!ticized the president for being
a Jellybean junkie, they were all
signed: "Love."
. "You should stop giving away
Jelly beans." warned Autumn
Brindle. "It will make a bad habit
for little kids.··
"Don't pass around jelly
beans," implored Gallagher
Crook, who had sage advice for
the president, but needs to brush
upon his spelling. "It will give you
cavaties."
ft~elipe DeLeon was more to the
point: "Don't waste money on
candy." •
And Tasha Gast reminded the
chief of state that "candy is not
one of the four basic foods."
The president al'so was in·
formed by the pupils that they
plan a Chinese New Year celebra·
lion Thursday "with banana ice
cream without sugar" and a
classroom visit from a nutri· tionist.
2/ound·
~lain
in Mesa
BJ RUT CIAVRN ................
Co1ta lleaa pollce are Jn·
ve1tJ1atinC the e:aecutlon·atrle'
•un1bot lla)1n11 of two men
wbme bodi• were found QI a
ranaacked fourples Unit Tueehy
afternoon. :
Tbe •till unidentified victims.
deacribed u ln their mid aoa. ap-
parently died ol abota from a tun
or IUDI held to their beada, said
detective Lt.Jack Calnon.
Officers eetimated the two clled
about twototbreedays .. o.
Their bodies were discovered
by a suapiciOul Coeta Mesa man
who used a bonowed ladder to
climb to the murder scene in
Apartment D on the second floor
of 1251 Baker St .. officers said.
Calnon said investigators are
followine one theory that the two
died during a robbery.
Neither victim's wallet 1'85
found in the apartment rented to
Brent Wheeler, a butcher. and
Giovanni Paz, a hairdresser in
Laguna Beach.
While officers reported t&at
neither of the dead men bad been
Identified today. neighbors said
late Tuesday that they last saw
Wheeler and Paz Friday.
One neighbor said she thought
the two, described as "quiet and
polite," had gone away for the
weekend because both of their
cars were parked in a lot behind
the fourplex.
Investigators said the murders
were reported by Michael Angire,
30, Wheeler's brother-in-law.
Angire, they said, had tried to
raise someone in the apartment
three times Monday and Tuesday
because Wheeler had not kept a
weekend appointment with his
mother in Tustin. .
Police said Angire borrowed an
aluminum ladder. climbed lo the
men's second-floor apartment
balcony and parted the curtains
behind a partially opened sliding
glass door.
He saw two bodies lying in blood
on the living room noor.
Angire, officers said, climbed
back down the ladder, went to a
neighboring apartment and
called police.
That was at5:30p.m .
Investigators , hampered by a
U .~ .. Supreme Court ruling re·
quiring a warrant to enter a home
where murder is suspected did
not begin their death seen~ in·
vestigation until nearly 10 p.m.,
Calnon said.
Neighbors said late Tuesday
that Wheeler and Paz bad moved
into the white and gold fourplex
a bout two months ago.
"They weren't low lives like
some of these guys who live in
apartments," commented one
neighbor woman who said she did
not wish to be identified.
"They were pretty quiet and
polite. Oh, they held some dinner
parties once in awhile. But it's
been quiet up there for the past
few days," she added.
None of the neighbors in· te~viewed heard shots , and police
said today they have found no,
murder weapon.
Border at issue
LIMA, Peru <AP) -Peru has
called for demarcation of its
border with Ecuador along the
disputed 50-mile mountainous
stretch where the armed forces
of the two South American
neighbors battled for five days
las t week.
Winter .clearance
Feb. 6 to Positively Feb. 8
Super Savings to 70%
on Skis and Boots
Save 50% .on all
~n's, Ladies', .Kids' Clothing
.,..,,.,... ..
Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger
says U .S. may deploy
neutron uxirheads to
strengthen tactical
nuclear forces arou nd
globe .
American actor Burt Lan·
caster arrived in London to
finish work on his latest film.
"The Skin."
· · 1 play a n Americ an
general in the film which 1s
set in World War II." he said
al Heathrow Aiq:>or t. "Most
of the work is fin iShed but I'll
be over here for about a
month just to tidy things up."
Costa Mesa's City Council
will attend t he Nat ional
League o f C itie s ·
Co ngressional-C ity Con·
fere nce in Was h ington on
Feb. 27·March 4.
It came with no a ppa rent
s urprise to council members
dur ing a study session when
Councilman Eric Johnson an·
nounced to colleagues that he
is in a JO-day h ard-stuff
drinking hi atus.
"I usually do it· for lent ... he
confided, "but I want to get it
out of the way before l go to
Washington ..
......... ••••e•tls'
r....,oew.,..c1111'l3'
<below>. weto •P••l ••14
....... and .. mWtma for ...
dete1a&e" to the aepubllean
Na&loul Convention ln hla
q\Mll for tM prttlde1acy, ia
a1noac U.. nominee• for tbt
1•1 .. Bonehead ol the Yt ar"
a wa rd
The Bonehead C lub of oauu. M\leh laat year aave
It.I award to the 8'iaa• 9. M ·
&Me1 dollar, aaJd that actor
Larry ....... the villain ol
the "Dallu" TV aeries on
CBS. w u nominaled "for
provlna that gettint shot can
be prolitable ." '
And Nel10a •-'er B•t
and WUUam Herbert H•& or
Dallas. lhe biUionair e in·
veston, were suggested ''fbr
being on the wrong end or the
world's biggest ma rket jug-
g ling act. the 1980 silver
fiasco."
T he award goes elJch year
to a person or group that
"has committed a n act or
pa r ticipa t ed in an event
which, in the eyes or the
Boneheads. is a monumental
goof
T he winner will be an·
noun ced Feb. 13 during a
luncheon at Lakewood Coun-
try Club in Da llas.
,.,..~
Lady Diana Spencer i s
quoted in West German
magazine as saying she
wants to give Britain's
heir to the throne lots of
pretty babies. London
reports said Prince
Charles is upset ,
particularly with
magazine's mock photo
showing him cradling
baby in his arms.
Singer Helen Reddy filed
for divorce from m anager·
producer Jeff
Wald , h e r
husband of 13
years.
ln a. Su·j
p e r1 o r
Court peti ·
t i o n . M iss
Reddy cited
"irreconcila·
b I e d i f •
fere nces. ·· A EDDY
T h e couple separated in
early J anuary, with Miss
Reddy staying in the couple's
Brentwood home a nd Wald
moving into a Beverly Hills
hotel.
Shortly t hereafter . Wald
revealed that he was under a
doct or 's ca're to stop using
cocaine -a habit he s aid did
not cause the separation "but it certainly was a factor ...
Muhammad AU has found
a job at Smith Tool in Irvine
for an unidentifi ed 2l·year -
old m an who last m o nth
threatened to comm it suicide
by jumping from the ninth·
floo r windo w led ge of a
Wi ls hire Boule vard building
in Los Angeles, said com-
pany personnel officer Ron
C rowde r . T h e fo r me r
heavyweight champ talked
the younger black man out of
jumping a nd p romised to
help him get str aightened
out.
Glass out ,on beaches
Supervisors cite foot danger in ruling
By GLENN SCOTT
OI tlM D•lly l'olol Stat!
Glass containers and other
dangerous articles that can lead
to foot injuries will be banned
from Orange County beaches,
the county Board of Supervisors
has decided.
Despite obvious proble ms with
strict enforcement of the ruJe.
the supervisors agreed the or -
dinance ~II help reduce cuts
a nd punctures caused by step·
ping on sharp objects
ranger for the county. said
lifeguards are reporting increas-
ing cases of cuts caused by
pieces of glass in the sand.
A ODITIONALLY, s he s aid
lif eguards at Sunset Beach
believe that youths have planted
jagged bits of broken glass un-
der the sand to injure unsuspect-
ing s unbathers.
In some cases. the glass ap-
pa rently has been placed in
front of lifeguard stations or
near the water's edge, where
broken glass no rmally isn't
found, officials say.
County offi cials have stressed
that the prohibition won't be en·
forced stringently, but is needed
to harness troublemakers.
In voting in favor of the or.
dinance, lsl District Supervisor
Roger Stanton said he had res·
servations about the county's
ability Lo enforce t he rule. He
sa id after the meeting that his
approval was based on the no-
tion the prohibition "would be
relied on only in difficult situa·
lions."
Because the title of the pro-
posed ordinance was modified -
part of its titl e was changed
from "glass contai ne r s" to
"dangerous containers " -the
s upervisors won't take offi cial
action to approve it until next
week.
THE ORIGI NAL proposal
fro m the county H arbor s ,
Beaches and Parks Commission
was a restriction onl y against
glas s . But 2nd Di s trict
Supervisor Harnett Wieder suc-
cessfully pus hed for amend·
menls to the law so it would in·
elude other mater ials. s uch as
crockery. Volunteer Aviles
Mrs. Wieder 's suggestion was
meant to be a compromise to
placate lobbyists for the glass
indus trv a nd related l abor ~roups : who hcga n visiting
supervisors two weeks ago to ob·
ject to what they said was a dis·
c riminatory, glass-only restric·
honored; for service
>I" Lion.
:: Pickett Scott. vice president of
.-:·Glass Containers Corporation in ~·Fullerton, explained t hat in·
"'.dus t ry officials don't like the 9. l•outright ban" against glass on
~,beaches. • t HE SAID THE law appears in· t tended to stop troublemake rs ~-who purposefully break bottles ~~·-<>n t he beach. Ins t ead . he
claimed, the r estriction will
"....b ave the opposit e effect -it will
~~onvince responsible beachgoers
"'~not to buy and bring glass prod·
ucts. even ketchup botUes to
he shore. ,
The supervisors . how ever, l aid the prohibition will help
'lifeguards and county Sheriff's
'·d eputies crack down on bottle
r e ake rs while riddi n g the ~~beaches of products that add ~..j,otential for more Injuries.
" • P atty Schooley, senior park
HONORED FOR EFFORTS
Voluntffr Avll••
We're Listening •••
'• The Dally Pilot wants to hear rrom its readers, what you like
aboul the paper and what you don't like. We also would like lo
publish your vie ws on any subject in our letters to the editor col·
umn. Call the number below and your meua1e will be recqrded.
Me.sages will be lranscribed several Umes dally Md delivered to
the desk of the appropriate editor. llallboll CODtribuUons will
be delivered to the editorial pase editor. Mailbox
contrlbuton mual include \heir name and telephone
number for verification. Nv circ:ulaUon calla, please.
Tell us what's on your mind. 11M number is ln
service 24 hours a day, seven Aya a week.
O n e wouldn 't e xpect Art
Aviles, of all people, to be much
of a volunteer.
He spent 21 years in the U.S.
Air Force and, in t he military,
one usually doesn't volunteer for
a nything.
BUT AVILES, who flew both
B-52 bombers and aerial tankers
over Communist targets in Viet·
na m. bas been a devoted volun·
teer for civic activities in Hunt·
ington Bea ch.
In fact, he was honored re·
cenlly as the top volUJlleer for
J anuary by Mayor Ruth Bailey.
Aviles, who sells insurance in
civilian life, has put in countless
free hours as a chairman of the
city's special events board
wh ich is planning this year's
17th Fourth of July Pa rade.
MAKE THAT past t ense.
Aviles announces that the plan·
ning is already completed with
the exception of lining up
celebrities for the p atriotic
march through Main Street .
Last year an estimated 200,000
people vie we d t he pa radt .
A vlles said the e vent will be
e ven bigaer in i981.
The parade also will be funded
entirely by voluntary contribu·
lions to the tune of about $.15,000,
he said.
A vilea, 47, entered the Air
Force oul of the ROTC pl'()gram
In Loyola University in l~.
HE n..aw MO&E than 100
combat mission• durtnc the
Vietnam war and when
hosUlltl• ended, he wu spedal
projects om~r attendln1 ~ tbe
elWn of about 40 pri...n ol
war.
OAtLY PILOT ,t •
o.i1y l'fl.C SI.it ,,_
I NS Pl RATION POINT AT CORONA DEL MAR MAY UNDERGO S~ME CHANGES SOON
Newport Beech City Councfl reatored realdentlel zoning on bluff areH
Enrolllllent
• soaring
atOCC
Enrollment at Orange Coast
College in Costa Mesa has in·
c reased 6.9 percent over last
yea r . with 32.000 expected to
e nroll in c la sses before t he
spring sem ester is over, accord·
ing to school officials.
•
Approximately 25,200 students
have enroll ed in spring sem ester
classes that began Monday. ac·
cord ing to Kenne th Mowre y,
OCC's dean of adm issions and
records.
Anyone attempting to sign up
for classes this week probably
rou nd the m already c losed.
Mowrey warned.
Popular classes are fi lled soon
after pre·registr ation in No·
ven be r, said Mowrey.
Enroll ments are expected to
increase when short nine-week
courses begin April 6. The Costa
Mesa community college is the
largest in the county and the
third largest in the stale.
Boy Scouts
out for blood
in Laguna
T hree Lag una Beach Boy
Scouts are just one project away
fro m becoming Eagle Scouts.
And they're asking help from
the com m unity in completing
their final good deed Feb. 13.
Th at 's the day the Red Cross
community bloodmobile will roll
o nto the p a rking lot a l the
Mormon Church al 682 P ark
Ave., just across the str eet from
the high school.
Robbie Hellewell, Chris Eadie
and Greg Matson organized the
blood drive. selected the loca-
tion . and are coordinating 'ap-
pointments for the Red Cross.
Those interested in donating
blood should call 951-0729 after 2
p.m . for appointment times.
T he bloodmobile will be at the
Laguna Beach site from I :45 to
6:30 p.m. Feb. 13.
Gem
Talk
8yJ.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Gemolo11ist. AGS
PRESIDENTIAL JEWELRY
WhoJ"s 1hr s1gn1/1cance"'
Down through the years. our
presidents have been j ewelry
conscious. Their advisors, very
much aware that a president
must look his best. have often
recommended that they wear
tast eful jewelry. In the closing
days of President Carter 's final
election campaign , he began to
we a r a colla r pin at the
s u ggestion or his m e dia
a dvisors, who believed it would
m a ke him a pp ea r m o re
'statesmanlike .' C ufflinks
bearing the presldenllal seal
have long been considered a
special gilt from any president.
The Rea1an inau1uralion
· Included an unusual number ol
J ewelr y and souvenir"
keeps takes . ll will be
interestint to observe what kind
of jewelry President Rea11n
will favor. Incidentally, the
fellow who aeUa watches with
the. Ukmna ol famou people an
the watcb faeea knew who wu
coins to win the preatdenUal
election. In October, bis Rtacan
walc)l t>uUold hla Carter watda
by t O per e en t•. That
measurement of popularity
proved to be more ac~urate
tb1n the PGllUeal a.
'Point' made
Newport OKs bluff buildin{{
By STEVE MARBLE
Ol 1 .. 0~11y 1'1lel \I.it
A battle over construction of bluff.face homes on three lots
below Ins piration Point 1n Corona del Mar ha~ ended
The end was a happy one for the three Newport A<':.i ch lot
owners who now can move ahead with construction µIan!> or sell
the lots to potential home builders .
ON A 4·2 VOTE, NEWPORT councilmen agreed to rest<_>re
r esidential zoning on the lots. striking down a recommendation
that the ocean-view lots be preserved as open space
Councilmen Don Strauss and Paul llummel voted against the
action. Mayor J acki e Heather was ab!>ent during Monday's vote.
Wording in Newport's proposed local coasta l plan suggested
the three parcels below Ocean Boulevard be purc hased with stale
fu nds.
INSPIRATION P OINT runs aside Ocean Boule vard from
Narcissus Avenue to a point midway betwee n Orchid and Pomset
tia avenues.
The trio of lots beneath Lhe state-owned point are vacant One
of the lot's owners. though, was issued a building permit last year
and has begun grading. .
A second lot owner, Cli({ Cooper. told councilm en that he had
been more than will ing to sell his land to the cit y in past yea rs .
"But I think the time has past whe re the city could even afford
it."" said Cooper. He once offered the land to the city for less than
$200.000. He said he's now been offered SI 2 million for the llarcel
by a private party.
AS EARLY AS 1973, according lo Newport City M an~ger
Robert Wynn, Cooper turned away private offers on his land so he
could let the city purchase it. But that never happened
In 1974 then·assemblyman Robert Badham anlrodut ed legisla·
tion to pur~hase the lots. The bill failed In 1976. a sp,,cial New port
bond election to purcha se the lots and 11 others in the city was
held . The bond measure was defeated
Monday evening, council memtwrs \H•r e told that the lot·
owners had waited long enough.
"ATl'EMPTS TO BUILD on lh1s property have been frus trat·
ed for more than eight years because of statements . like 'Gee.
we'd like to buy this property,"' said a ttorney ~herman Stacey.
representing one of the lot O\\'llers. . .
He said ~iven the history of the 1tarcels. 1t wa,s unhkely that
the0cityorthe state ever would be able to buy the land
Panel slots open
Fountain Valley City Council
is seeking applicants for lhe
city's advisory committee for
the handicapped
The committee meets on the
third Thursday of earh m onth at
7 : 30 p,m . in the council con-
ference room at City Hall, 10200
Slater Avenue.
T h e c ommittec ·5
responsibilities include helping
cily officials e liminate barriers
to the physically handicapped in
buildings. p romoting educa·
~ Heart
of Gold
t1onal anrl re cre<tt ion al pro·
gram~ for the handicapped and
t'rtco uragang emplo) mcnt of dis·
abled µersoni;
ll and1capped \\omen and peo·
pll' who a r<' v1<.uull) han -
d 1t·:.ip pcd a re e:-pce1ally en ·
couraged to apply for this
C'Ommittee becau!.e. currently, it
includes no repn•s<'nlatives from
these i:?roups Appl1t·at111n~ ('an bt' nhtained
from the cit ,. <'l<'rk or h\ calling
963 8321
OUR FREE FALLING HEART
suspended on an 18" rope chain will let
her know that you care. l-feart and chain
are of 14K Gold.
J. C.Jl,,,,.,,tw .. J.-1.,.,.
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY @·
1823 NE.Wf>ORT BLVD COST,t. M~SA ~
INTHESAME LOCATlONSINC£ 1M
BankAmencaftl-M_.., Chefge PHONE.,....,
.
~ ';:!~
ll11rp•111e
W anderiq typewriter
tJPCOAIT, 80WNO>Aft: TwMd ..... trom deM·
Mud cllltAel • • • ..., ........, .a.nooa. \Mn'• Nlttlit..._ UM a mow tau.t .aa.. our COMelM to IOOtM tbe ....... .wtt ...... a& ........ dMqa aoo&M. .,,.. (aay S'd, roUlaa·a.Ab drive alonl Paclftc Cout
Hiataway M&weea Corona Ml Mar ud Lqua. Beach 1Ull hofcta u.. rffOl'd aa Ua1a corner few tlM m•t peaceful and
beaulil\al remaiDlai lD our ~•peel re1ioa. Sun dapples
the Pacific. Va1rant 1ulla bover and dive over the
beacbtront. Coutal hlll• rtm&in vacant. Not a billboard ln
aaibt. Noe a taco 1tu d to be found. The oranie Juice stand
aUdet by the window. Old tbey re-paint the front porch?
Maybe they built a new front porch. Tou1h to tell at SS
miles per hour. Beller to slow down and enjoy.
CO&ONA DEL MAa 18 the community r"eoord-bolder
·on a· bit more franUc ~ote. You can still traverse from
Avocado to Poppy and never hit a sln1le signal on the
green. Jlumpb.
Downtown Laguna actually has parking at this time of
season. You drive right down to the Lumberyard shopping
complex and park no-hassle. A man wearing a metal
hardhat hands out your 1>arking tab. la be trying to tell you
something? A hard case. maybe? Don't fudge on the park·
mg tab.
.
ff'r!!ll-••1•1i1efl
Abducted tot
saved by lookS . . .
llSTAIRIE, La. (AP) -A 17-moatb-old '11'1 1Datcbed from
ber bome bJ a swamaa wbo 1tuffed ber into a stft·wrapped box
wu found unhurt alter a man telephoned ber Hxioul pareatl and
laid lbe WU too pntU to kW, autborit1• HY.
"He ealJ.cl ud told ua ... •be wH aucb a beautifW baby,
otherwlle be would bave wuted her," the toddler'• father, Roa
Hoc um, 1aid late Tuesday.
He and bia wife found tbelr dauahter, Lori, 'sobbin1 and
wanderinc alone at the Lalle Forest Sbopl>ln• Center aeverai boun ~fter Hocum made a televtaed appeal for laer tale return.
NO StJ8PEcr RAD BEEN apprehended by early today, but
Jefferson Pariah sheriff's deputies bad a compoaite sketch of the abdudol'.
The abductJoo occurred about 1 p.m. Tuesday when a man
armed with a pistol broke into the Hocum home in this well-to-do
suburb of New Orleans, authorities said.
The Hocum house ls a few doors away from the residence of
Gov. David Treen. Hocum -ii a aalesman specializing in luxury
foreign 'can, authorities 11id.
THE GlaL WAS AT HOME with a maid at the time, according
to Kathleen Landry of the sheriff's department.
''The man forced himself into the house. He tied up the maid
and he stole a camera. He bad a big box that was wrapped up like
a Christmas present. He put the little girl in the box and be took
her and left." she said.
• . NATION I WEATHER
.,,, ..........
GUNMAN SAYS LORI HOCUM TOO PRETTY TO KILL
Father Aon •nd detecttve (left) hold flrl after ordeal You may wonder, new coast resident, why t.hey would
call a shopping complex in downtown Laguna the Lum·
beryard. That's because the site once was a lumberyard.
Back then, visitors to Laguna, on tour, would sight the
lumber piles and big chip-burning smokestack and ask the Soldier sentenced for h .. nging
NEWPORT NEWS, Va . (AP)
-A defense lawyer says he's
pleased with a jury's decision to
sentence Army Spec. s Nancy
J ean Varraso to eight years and
a dishonorable discharge in the
hanging death of a soldier who
prosecutors described as her les-
bian MvaJ.
The jury, which handed down
the sentence Tuesday, could
have imposed We imprisonment
on tbe conviction of second-
degree murder. The discharge
carries an automatic reduction
to the lowest enlisted grade.
Ms. Varraso, 23, who has been
in the Army four years, also will
have to forfeit au pay and al-
lowances. She will be eligible for
parole in roughly two and a half
years.
"We're very happy with it.
We're very satisfied ," said
civilian defense lawyer Martin
S. Cosgrove of Ms. Varraso's
hometown or Quincy, Mass.
Ms. Varraso bad been charged
with premediated, or first.
degree, murder in the hanging
death of Pfc. Tammy Meza.
Luna last Sept. 28 at Fort Story
in Virginia Beach.
Prosecutor Capt. Keith
Hodges argued the defendant ·s
actions directly caused Mrs.
Meza-Luna's death.
Leaving the victim -an emo-
tionally unstable woman who
threatened suicide in the days
before her death -in the woods
at night with her bands tied and
a noose around ber neck
amounted to murder, Hodges
argued.
Laguna tourists (ciTcleJ pondering traffic ipurts
6 dk in plane crash
In a statement Ms. Varraso
tried to repudiate after she gave
it to investigators, she said she
helped Mrs. Meta-Luna commit
suicide.
Cosgrove, who first fought to
suppress the statement, read
frotn it verbatim to the jury of
four officers and thrff enlisted
personnel, arguing it showed no
murder had occurred.
native guide : ''Wh y do you have a lumberyard in the mid-
dle of your njce little town?"
AND THE NATIVE would repl y, "Because we've
always had a lumberyard there. What's wrong with that?"
And the visitor always looked a little funny.
Wonders of February in Laguna: A beautiful lady in a
teeny-weenie green bikini, walking her poodle down the
sideslreet. The poodle wears a green ribbon on his ear.
Everything's color coordinated in,Laguna.
HA! VOU DIDN'T think I'd see the green ribbon, did
you? You didn't even think I'd see the poodle.
Nobody ever tries walking across North Coast
Highway in the Art Colony. That's because the traffic all
comes in spurts. It spurts downcoast in a stream and then,
just when you think there's going to be a lapse, it spurts
upcoast. Pedestrians have to try spurting across in
between traffic spurts. •
This could be hazardous to your health. It's a lesson
Co rona del Mar pedestrians never learned. upcoast.
NEVER MIND THE spurts, they say. Corona del Mar
pedestrians still cross East Coast Highway with all the
calm confidence of a Christian, holding four aces.
Still further upcoast, wonder of wonders, you can get
across Newport Bay Bridge at 3 p.m .. despite construction
of Newport Bay Bridge II. And the new bridge? It's com-
ing along, coming along.
\ YOU ARE LEFT to wonder what they did with the his-
torical marker for Newport Landing, site of the beginnings
of all things New Port. Maybe they gave it to the Elks
Lodge?
And you can still puzzle over why the bridge warning
signs light up to tell you to "Prepare."
But for what? Maybe for dinner. Who knows?
Call it what you want, this is still the best of all possible
coasts.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(AP) -The fiery collision of
two s mall airplanes that
claimed the lives of six people
apparently was ·'just one of
those freak things," airport con-
trollers say.
Witnesses who watched help-
lessly as two planes collided
o v e r a runway at Fort
Lauderdale Executive Airport
said it looked as if the planes
would recover. Instead the
planes tumbled to the ground,
where one broke apart and the
other burst into names.
Six people, including a young
student pilot, were killed when a
single engine Cessna 172 crashed
on takeoff into a twin-engine
Cessna 421, which was preparing
to land. ,
All five people aboard the
twin-engine Cessna 421 were
burned when the craft plummet-
ed into cars in a parking Jot,
enguUing five cars in fire, of-
ficials said.
Kirk Kingsley, 1'7, the pilot of
Sect denies tie
OAKLAND (AP > -Two men
arrested after authorities say
they found drugs and weapons in
a car are allegedly members of
the Hare Krishna religious sect,
according to a reoort in the
Oakland Tribune.
Eastern u~s. envies us
Srww, cold snarl traffic, harm citrus
Coasral M'ftadwr Orla ndo
P"ll•delptile
Plloenl•
PllbburQll
Ptl.,,d, Me. pu..,.i, are
Repld City
Reno
RlcllmO!'CI
S.11 Leke
!>en 0 1'90 san ,,,.,,
5' JI ,. u Pe telly towcloucb lncroeslnv tonlqht
t t1rou9h Thunlley mor11l119
Otherwise 1•1• with sunnv etwl slltlhl· lY cooler ·~-.
Coesl•I -S2, i11I-o. c ... st•I
lllllh '3, 1111-... w.,., 51.
Ehewhere, 119111 v"l•ble wltwls
>JllQhl end mor11lr>Q hours 11Komln9
-lhwHl .. lv I lo IS kllOls Tllurw•v lier,_.. with wind -vH of 1 loot.
WU I •-II Of I to 1 IMI V•rlM>le low
clouds lncrHsl119 over SOulller11 ····"· ( 11.S. s.-•• ,,,
Snow showers •net fh.trrles were
tered over Irle Greet Lakin H rly r. end• dusting of snow wet ... ~led 111 Erle, Pe., where retldtl'lll
re d'911ne out from • storm lhet '"''d 16 ll1ellu on t11t city,
..... lytlftg treffk -lotclf111 K'-1
CIONfttl.
, MM\ el 1111 E.st heel unM8SONbly
«old temptretures, with ~low
,..,,llO ~ rn<NllO es l•r •s IOr14111. ~'"'' Florld• cllrus t rove
retors "'"'" 0111 their wlftd eclllllOS T..-., 1119"1 to -U.lr ,_.,
Ill Mny momlflll Cleu* WOfe Of•
"I --mtll .,. protectlofl, t,..._.. .... _ ..... __
efter e J ..... ry COid Sftep, e
rr•1ori.e ''""' ...,._ o-rs ,.,.
t,lo<lellOn Oftlcltl Mid. •
.. s=
(Al.I l'OttlOA
8.tkersfleld
81ythe
"'""° Lencetl•r Monterey
10 43
It 1 .o.
ll •
j(I"
JO ' .. 21 1' 11 ,. 17
.. 5" .s j(I
'° ., 11 Jt
51 •
5' " 61 JI
.... 71 '""''" ~ ~ ..:.::.. ~~=-.. -
SI -S7 l7
'3 J7
'2 -15 u
65 J3 .,
iho••h ''"''0"'0• • Oufv4ed Senta Bertaer• u:m:ml ---=== NOA ·Stockton "-=------------,;,;;;,; ... -.....-.. ......... -TMrm•I € ... , .......
Sovtllenl c..llfonll• wltl cofltl-
WMY bUt llltflll'f C .... with IMllCllY ,_ c!Oudl ... .,...1111 lft c-t.1 .,...,
•19111 "'"""" n-... y '"°'"'"'· Ille N-'leMI WINlllW Jefvke •aid. El....,., .. .,i.. clwd!Mta 11
••PKlM wt"1 • -· el "*'"Mt I~ 11'1 C ........ li.yt. Siii• Wiii cl-lly after,_, .. torVke tald.
I.OWi """"' wlfl lie ~tl'f 11'1 l:fle
low ......... --'" tM --t•l1t• --tM IM<C\lrY Wiii Cir., ~11...iH.
Ml u ~llo ,. ,
50 '2
SJ 2J
2' • as 10 D I
11 I • • ti 4 ., .
• ta ... ·" • • •• " .. 11 M .. . " '
Clncl l'IMll U ' , ..... 1-10 1
Col11m1111S U 10
Del·FIWlll S1 a. Denver 40 I
0.1 Molltft II J
0.1 ... 11 10 •
Dvllllh u ·10
H•r110<1I 2' 10 .02 ........ JI ,
Honoltllu 14 66
Hou1t011 5' 44 .01
ln~ll• 11 1
Jed1-111e 46 n
K•M City 14 0
LHV.... '1 )4
L lltl• lledl 46 21
LM,......_ U IO
Lovlt"1tte n u
·~· • 21 MIMtl 61 40
Mllw....... S 4 ~11-SIP 1) ·I
NelftYllle Ji 17 .._~ ,. JS ..... ..,.,. " ,, ~-., 17 Ollie City M • ~ It 4
8erslow
819her
l lSllOP c.-.11 ...
EICelltro
LOt\9 8Ntll ...W-111Me11
Oflt.rlo
Saft ht'Nnllno
SeftJ-$eftte AM
SenteCna
Seftl•~le r.-.ve11ey
TOOAT
5' 22
64 ..
10 n .. ., .. .. 70 .,
11 •
•1 •
•• 44 10 ..
•J a ... -
*-llleill ti•'·'"· ... TMUlllNT Plrst IOw t :.U a.111. U
Pint llitll t :• e.m. •.a
--... 1:00 p.111. ·1,' Sec:...-llltll te:IAp.m.' M SUI\ ... ,, ......... ,._ TllurMly ,,., ··"'· ._,. rt-t :41 e.m. TIWrNey,
~·!•p.111 .
S...llifa •;ff"I ..... ll•rl • ..,_,., . .................... ..... . .. _ .... __ ..,
I-I I II I ....
1 I II I I W .. ClllMY J • .. t J • ..,,,......,; ....... ~ . . '
the single-engine Cessna 172,
was pulled from the wreckage
but was pronounced dead at a
hospital.
''He rotated (on takeoff) and'
came up underneath the twin·
e ngine plane," said Keith
Terhune, 27, an employee of Cav
Airlines Inc .. who witnessed the
4:10 p.m. crash. "It kept going
and I thought it would be ·all
right, but the single engine plane
just fell out of the sky."
Witnesses fell the young pilot
was "going to be all right, but
all of a sudden the airplane
started to make a r ight turn and
go down and that was it," said
another witness , Robert
Bradley, 24.
The young Fort Lauderdale
pilot had soloed for his first time
last month and was practicing
touch and. go landings Tuesday,
officials said.
Joe Lopez, supervisor of the
airport control tower, said
Kingsley appeared to be a profi-
cient pilot and both planes ap-
peared safe.
He r e lied on cro ss -
examinations and his closing
statement to rebut the govern-
ment's theory of a motive based
in homosexual jealousy.
The prosecution's star witness
was Spec. 4 Becky Smith, Ms.
Varr~·s former lover, pictured
by · herself and other witnesses
J.s passive and cowed by the de-
fendant's threats to ber and to those wbo interfered with the
relationship.
Wailing la Hea.-?
Have you sent for merchan-
dl•• and not received It?
Ar• you having • dlMgr ..
ment with• bltllng computer?
I• City Hall giving you the run-
•·round?
"At Your Service" offers help In •II theM
matters and more. You can count on Pat Dunn
and her "At Your Service" column to help 90lve
probletM.
If you need help, mall your question• to Pat
Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coast Dally Piiot,
P.O. Box 1580, Coata MeM CA 12121. Be sure to
Include your telephone number •
Pm Dunn get• action and ftghta Nd 18pe In
~·At Your Service," publlehed every dllJ·••cept
Saturdey In The Dally Piiot.
----___ ...._..__
Circus tiger
niauls worker
NAnoNAL CITY (AP) A tlra. worker ... ••lllell ~a,.,.. whJw U.• wtalcla NaCWoutol •u ~M w~td b)', aael 1 feUow work• trylai to Mm wu Mt\em on aa arm by uotMr User,
•• r....,-t Stevee Curl, a 30.y .. r-old Clrc-.• Var1u
'-ad .. ••• h'om Chasnbl .. i Ga .. wa treated at Bay a...r.l llolpltal Tuesday or a punctun wound la
u..Wt ...
a.a Obrlt Brook.a, allo 30, wu oear death by the
Ume ~_,.. 1ot hia. to \be same hospital, a
paralMdicaaid. St~leed up
DAILY PtlOT ~·
Mor.e media coverag 1
ofco~rt~asesseen
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A de·
cision that lets Californla judges
alone decide whether criminal trials
may be photographed will result ln
more m edla coverage, says an
evaluator of a year-long stat e experl·
ment.
Undel' the rule change announced
by the state Judicial Council Tues-
day. a judge no longer must seek
permission of a defendant and pros-
ecutor before aUowoing a criminal
trial to be recorded by still or television
carueras.
"we found those which did make t
through the party consent were of a
certain type, a type that did OOl i ·
volve sensational crime events i• much as others involving poUUc I
figures ani:t people who had so e
·message they wanted to fUJ'ther y
getting media coverage," Doolitt e
said. ' 1
The rules change became effecti e
Jan. 31.
After the experiment ends July ~.
the council will decide on a perm~·
nent policy on the use of cameras rn
the courtroom. , • THE CALIFORNIA experiment, j 5
A lllolpltal 1poke1woman aaid tbat after
e111eriency IW'l•fY Brooks wu recoverin1 today
with laceration.I about tbe face. chest, stomach. arm
aadlowerlec. wbichleltm&UCleandnervedamaae. ..................
RANCHO PALOS VERD~ <AP) -Deapite
u around-the-clock rescue effort by Marineland
worten to save an allinl pyamy sperm whale, the
mammal died early today.
A mangled mass of shredded metal was all that remained of 18
parked autos after they were struck Tuesday by two slow-moving
Western Pacific freight cars which jumped the track in Oakland .
Only one person was injured in the wreckage.
THE CHANGE IS in keeping with a
Jan. 21 U.S. Supreme Court decision,
which said states may allow
television and still photography cov-
erage even if a criminal defendant
protests, accol"ding to Ralph Gam-
pell. executive director of the coun-
cil.
Charles Doolittle, an executive of
Ernest Shor t & Associates, a
Sacramento firm that is evaluating
the experimental use or cameras in
California courtrooms, welcomed the
rules change.
originaJly envisioned , would have rF·
quired only judicial permission.
However. the rules were chang~
May 10 to require consent or both the
defendant and the prosecution in
criminal trials. ,
In upholding Florida's policy of a;t·
lowing cameras in the court, the U .s.
Supreme Court said photograpt\y
does not automatically violate a
criminal defendant's right to a ra!r
trial. The court left it to a state's dis·
cretion to permit cameras in t he
Tim Desmood, assistant curator of animals for
the p.,.., said an autopey would be performed and
specimens from the dead rdammal "will be col·
lected for further study.
''We know the secondary causes of death were
dehydratioe and kntney failure," Desmond said.
"What we are looking for is the primary cause."
Sl••••al•U.r
LONG BEACH (AP) -The slayings of two
youne women whose nude bodies were found on or
near school campuses six days apart probably
were related, police say.
Police Lt. Norman Benson said the latest
body. as yet unid entified, was spotted by a
newspaper delivery man Tuesday oo a grassy area
near the tennis courts at Millikan High School.
The woman was in her late teens or earlv 20s.
about ·~feet-4 and 130 pounds with reddish-brown
hair. "It looks Ute she was killed someplace else,
then dumped there," Benson said.
Last Thursday, the body ol 21-year-old Edna
Louise Bristol was discovered by a jogger in a
par kway a<ljacent to Marsball Junior H.igb School,
about six blocks from Millikan.
T•rf 11re l••I ... t.W
TORRANCE (AP) -A priaoo fantasy of sus·
ceptible young nude girls held in an under~
city replete with torture cbamben wu unfolded lD
the trial of Lawrence S. Bittaker, charaecl with
kidnappina, raping and murdert.ni five teen-age
girls in the Los Angeles area ..
Richard Shoopman, a coolessed murderer
servine a life sentence at California Men's Colony
East at San Luis Obispo, said Bittaker's alle1ed
accomplice, Roy Lewia Norri.I, told him of Bit ·
taker's fantasy of an widerlJ'C)Wld city with torture
chambers and holding cells for naked girls who
would be kidnapped and kept there. J
Drl9'er ,,eca 4 lfftlN
VAN NUYS (AP) -A man with an extensive
tramc violations record baa been sentenced to
more than four years in jail on a variety of
charges, a sentence authorities believe is the
longest in recent memory here for traffic offenses.
James M. Haendiges, 27, was sentenced to
four years and three months in jail after a jury
convicted him of driving under the influence of
drugs and causing injuries.
He has eight prior convictions, six involving
drugs and two involving alcohol, said Deputy City
Attorney Susan P. Frauens.
Divers recover
body from plane
OCEANSIDE (AP) -A Sheriff's Department
underwater diving team has uncovered the body of
a Davis veterinarian from a twin-engine plane
which crashed Dec. 29 several miles off the coast
of Oceanside.
Sheriff's department spokesman Doug Cle·
m ents said the body of internationally known horse
veterinarian Dr. Humphrey K . Knight, Sl, of UC
Dnis, was found strapped inti> the passenger seat
of the Piper Seminole in 75 feet of water.
Clements said cause of death is unknown
pending an autopsy.
The aircraft was bound for Palomar Airport in
Carlsbad from Sacramento when it crashed in·
thick coastal fog at night. The pilot, Ken Crosby,
39, was rescued by the Oceasnside Harbor Patrol
Several hours after the crash with no serious in·
juries.
Clements said cause of the crash remains un·
der investigation by the Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration.
The wreckage was discovered by a salvage
team Monday.
Gays glum at title
SAN CARLOS (AP) -Ever since a newspaper
reported that Bob Out man was titling his
forthcoming book "Help! I Think My Dog ls A
Homosexual," the dog trainer's phon e hasn't
stopped ringing.
"Homosexuals have been calling all day."
said Outman, who runs a dog training school here.
"They said I 'm comparing them to dogs and that
they're human beings, and they shouldn't be com-
pared with dogs."
But outrage from San Francisco's gay com-
munity isn't going to compel Outman to chapge
the title of bis book, which details some of bis ex·
periences as a dog handler and trainer.
Hot Air Balloon Adventures
...... aa ....... drlhlac n••
Perr le Yall•J la a "alloea. w• eaa •Illa a •••• or U oat
aUe,. at.••• tllto eart• • a tr•l7
.,..tao•la r ••peri••e•
fllsllt fer two· U60. •-•260. 8 e:aoo
{jilt <:ertiricat~ Available
IJ;
CHAMPAG~~
'17 sst-6033
Send Your Valentine
The Vety Best
Loving Hallmark Valentines . . . the very best
way to tell someone special you care on
S~turday, Feb. 14. *"~
''Purveyors of Qldtime Neighborliness''
• Ba.VSIDE' PHARMACY VFole .. ,.. •• •· • ... , ... liMch & 790-0111 · .
•
Hiring OK'd
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -West Coast
Longshoremen can't
conduct selective strikes
over alleged racist hir·
ing, the National Labor
Re lations Board has
ruled.
··A criminal case is of more media
interest if it involves sensational or
heinous actions, and we will begin to
see these receiving more TV cov·
erage since the defendant's consent
is no longer needed," Doolittle pre-
dicted.
court. ,
Since the experiment began July l.
G ampell said that in the firtt
quarter of the experiment. from July
to September . there were 53 requests
from the media for courtroom
ca'mera coverage of criminal trials
and seven were approved.
---~
llant Sale ·
Crown Hardware Stores
ONE
WEEK
ONLY
9 .
• l . 7 INN scpower
• 5-foc• ..t.ctor ...........
• Poww cord rewh1d
• Utt off tool pock
• log signal -..... • Exc1•.t for cwpets
md IMrdwood floors
HOOVER VACUUM
CLOSE OUT SPECIAL
s54•
• Al ..... aglt.eor . ... °"'° ... ,.bog ...........
ct.. u....11..,., .....
Model U4119
•
CONCIPT
ONI 8 POWllDllYI
Self" ....... Forwwd ...................
Model 13105 also has
headlight, tools. retractable
cord . Modal 13103 hu
helldtlghl
·-r-••..ti•-w. Model 13105 and #3103 are
on limited supply.
Model #3109 shown.
Model ~=S 1015 -
PORTAPOWER IM
VACUUM CLEANER!
VACUUM PACKED
l woy flthnd
air.,..... s5411 '•l.:.T.:
co..,.._ wlth
tools
HOOYll
SHAMPOOH/POUSHll .. .... .. ... .......... " . .......
Laws a mystery
to many refugees •= traveUD1 thouludl ol mllel, tadwiAI count· leas .. and evmtually 19'tll.aa ln a complex urban
socleu wtalcll bean Uuie NMmbluce to the rural,
somtdllm pftmltlve life yaucmce bad known. Tllla eome1 veey elole to de•erlblu the altuatlon ln
which -..., ~ldnue rtf"P" have found themselves
u th., ...... w Uva lnOr..,eCounty.
Pmtol their adJustment proc. .... ln addition to learnine
Imply hDw to aurv(ve ln their new home, la comin' to &riPI
With tJle lnUe ol ktlll retu.latJOftl tbat IOVlm the lives Of all
merkam.
Someolthese rules can be mundane and simple. others
far man complex.
Aa Oraqe Count)''s pres1dina superior court ·judge,
Robert E. Rickles, observed recently. certain laws can be
considered universal, especially those that prohibit acts of
violence. But t.bere are ot~ers which take time to learn and which
can easily be misunderstood because of obvious cultural dif ·
ferences.
Though resettlement agencies already provide orienta·
lion programs that touch on such topics as traffic and
welfare laws, overall refugee interaction with the law is an
aspect of the resettlement equation that bears close
scrutiny and perhaps extra effort by public and private
agencies.
As Judge Rickles noted, it is better to spend funds on a
preventive basis than on a remedial one.
Court vacancies
With two vacancies on the state Supreme Court.
eyes are on Gov. Jerry Brown as he ponders filling the
posts.
The death of Justice Wiley Manuel and the departure
of Justice William Clark, who was summoned to
Washington for a State Department position, has re-
moved two conservative voices from the high court.
The issue of the death penalty is one of the places this
situation becomes most visible -and most volatile
politically.
Both Manuel and Clark had voted to uphold the death
penalty in a 4-3 decision.
Brown himself is known to oppose the death penalty.
Following a popular vote to reinstate capital punishment,
he refused to sign enabling legislation, which eventually
was passed over his veto.
Confirmation of anyone he appoints to the vacant
seats is sure to run into problems with the three-member
Commission on Judicial Appointments. which must ap-
prove his nominees. ·
The commission's members are Chief Justice Rose
Bird. a Brown appointee who voted against reinstate-
ment of the death penalty. Atty. Gen. ~eorge Deukme·
jian, who s upports capital punishment, and the senior
presiding justice in California. who now happens to be
85-year-old Lester Roth of the Second Appellate District
in Los Angeles. Clearly the swing vote will be that of
Roth, who is reputed to take a middle-of-the-road stance
in judicial matters.
Meanwhile, Chief Justice Bird has been accused by
Assembly Democrat Alister McAlister of attempting to
·istack" the court by appointing two temporary replace·
ments to hear a current death penalty case.
Both were named to the appellate bench by Gov.
Brown and are declared by McAlister to hold liberal
views. A Bird aide called Mc Alister 's accusation an insult to
the two justices.
The question of the next two appointees to the
California Supreme Court has much broader and more
significant aspects that deser ve consideration. But the
death penalty is the lightning rod in what promises to be
a heavy storm.
Rivers not quite lost
In one of his last acts before the Carter administra-
tion left office, departing Interior Secretary Cecil D. An·
drus acceded to Gov. Jerry Brown's request to place four
Northern California rivers in the National Wild and
Scenic Rivers system.
The rivers already were protected in the state wild
rivers system and could not be developed without a
popular vote or a two-thjrds vote in the Legislature.
Nevertheless, Brown took it upon himself to take the
protection a step further by having them locked up in the
federal system.
This sparked an unsuccessful legal battle to block An·
drus' administrative action on the part of Californians
who insist the rivers should remain under the jurisdiction
of the state. ·
Now, however, a move is afoot to persuade the
Reagan administration to overturn Andrus' decision. The
law appears to require an act of Congress to remove
lands from federal control, but that rule has not been
tested in court.
As things now stand, it appears such a test may well
be forthcoming.
It's estimated that some 22 million acre feet of water
. from the rivers now flows into the ocean each year. For
Southern Californians, the status of the northern rivers
could be critical in the event of future severe water
shortages. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is Invited .•. ddress l'he Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . '
.
Boyd/War fortune
ByLM.BOYD
Another military contract
that eventually led to big
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
••An occulonal nail
placed under tbe tire of
a car~ ill .. ally In
a banclleapped 1pot
mltbt laelp make tbe
driver juat wbat b•
needs to be -ban·
dlcapped.
J .C.V.
I t
business had to do with a lit-
ll e mutton. In 1881 , a
Philadelphia butcher named
Peter Widener, 27, landed the
deal to sell meat to Union
troope thereabouts. A quick
$50,000 profit. He bouaht
more meat stores and put
money into strMtcan. His
fortune arew. By 1890, J amea
''Buck" Duke accepted
Widener money in his lnveet-
m ent pool, meraed some
nrm1, IDd wound up with the
American Tobacco Com·
paay.'lt bu bem Hid -or
will be -tbat beb1nd each
fabulous fortune of war
ltaDdl a mlUtary 1upply of.
ncer wttb a 1mlle on tilt taM.
Do YoU realll8 that more \ban 100 entertalnen now an
makln1 a li•l•I b)' lm· ........... .......,,~
\ ..,
W9dneeday, February 4, 1111
ThOmnlCMVll/l!dltor '
Persian Gulf crisis continues ·
WASHINGTON -Tbe re-
moval of tbe American hoatqea
from lrm unfortunately bu not
defused the Iranian crilil. The
captive Americans were merely
pawns ln a far more deadly ..
stru11le for control of the
Persian Gulf. Here are the
frlghteftina facts that now con·
f~ont President Reaaan:
-Iran dominated the Persla.n
Gull, which ia the source of moet
or the wes~
world's oil.
Yet thi s
strategic land
has fallen in-
to the bands
of fanatic s
who '1ave
brought the
government
to the brink of
chaos. Their
ruling ayatollah. who looks like
the Wrath of Allah, with blazing
black eyes and a fierce pon-
tifical scowl. Is viciously anti·
American. A devotee of
purposeful s uffe ring, he has
dramatized the vulnerability of
the m?f.~ United' States before the po e11 zealot.
-The nearby Soviet.a aH ex-
pected to slide across the great
divide into oil dependence later
thls, year. In a desperate at-
tempt to Increase their produc·
tio11', they injected water into
some oil fields but merely
flooded the wells and dam.aed
the understructure. Now the
weakeninc of Iran has presented
the Soviets with an opportunity
to mo-ve in on 1he Persian Gulf
oil region. They have positioned
23 divisions near the Iranian
border and are effectively fan ·
ning the propaganda fires
thr'Oughout the area.
-WITH THE RED Army in
Arghanistan and s urrogate
Cuban forces in South Yemen
and Ethiopia, the Kremlin has
thrown a ring of steel around the
Persian Gulf oil region. Thus the
Soviets "could curtail access to
the oil that is required by the
.United States and its allies,"
warns a secret Pentagon study.
-Jimmy Carter established
\~~\~~r~I~~
AMERICA-
ANEW
BE€JINNING
Andy Rooney
the far-flung, mulll·aervfce
Rapld.Deployment Force to pro-
tect our oil lifeline. Yet top
military baqda warn it not only
le crippled by intereervlce
rivalry but could never be a
match for the Soviet Ju11emaut
acroas the Iranian border. Its
Marine commander, Gen. P.X.
Kelly. bad admitted in clualfied
testimony that the Rapid
Deployment Force would be no ·
more than a "lrip wire" acainat
the Soviets. The contincency
plan calls for a nuclear strike to
stop the Soviets from annihllat·
ing the force.
-According to Kelly's secret
testimony, the force might be
used lo seize ·oil fields, "moet
likely in Iran." Yet the Defense
Intelligence Agency has warned
that any U.S. military operation,
against Iran would likely trigger
Soviet intervention. The Joint
Chiefs have added their opinion,
also classified. that the Soviets
can now be expected "to take
greater risks tQ. achieve their
goals."
. .
I. 4 Z
·.
I. s 2
. -Indeed, the Joint ChJeb
foresee "• period of part.lN!ar
dancer to American security in·
terest.a ln the earlf 18808 •..
The possiblllUea o a military
confrontation with the Soviet
Union will increase significantly
ln the first half of the decade."
WHAT ALSO worries the
Joint Chiefs iB "the ausceptJbWty
of U.S. allies and non-allped ma-
tlona to yield to pollUcal intimida-
tion by the Soviet Union."
The oil caliphs in particular,
fearful of Soviet military power
and uncertain of U.S. protection,
might seek an accommodation
with the Kremlin. ,,
I would add to this dark pie·
lure one other cloud. Throughout
the oil crisis that certainly lies
ahead, the corporate oil giants
will be pulling wires in
Washington. They have dem·
onstrated their ability in the past to manipulate U.S. policy to
advance their own selfish ends.
Yet the oil companies have a
history in the Middle East of un-
reliability, criminality and
dubious loyalty.
DURING THE last Arab-
Israeli war in 1973, the chairmen
of Exxon. Texaco, Mobil and
Standard Oil of California dis-
patched a secret, hand-delivered
memo to Alexander Haig in the
White House. The memo warned
bluntly against increasing
military aid to Israel.
But tbe oil companies did not
stop at trying to influence U.S.
action; they also furnished
Saudi Arabia with exact in-
formation about the amounts of
Saudi oil normally going to the
U.S. armed forces and the pre-
cise steps necessary lo choke off
this supply.
When I learned about th.is, I
alerted the Senate Subcommit-
tee on Multinational Corpora·
lions. Jerome Levinson. the
chief counsel, checked i.nto it
and reported back to a secret
session or the s ubcommittee:
"You can form your own judg·
ment as to the propriety of these
activities, but to us it reads as if
(the oil companies) are instru-
ments of the Saudi Arabian gov-
ernment and carrying out Saudi
orders in terms or influencing
U.S. foreign policy."
It's hard to keep up with national images
The funniest story I read th.is
week was about the U.S. press
officer in Ireland. He wrote a
letter to a friend about what it
was like in Ireland and his letter
got mixed in with his press
• handouts by mistake, so the Irish,
newspapers got the letter and
printed it.
Our man in Dublin, Robin Ber-
rington, told hi s friend in the let-
ter th a t
Ireland is
"pretty small
potato es'.'
compared to
other Euro-
pean coun-
tries.
That just
isn't the kind
of statement
you want
your press officer to make if you
sent him there in the first place
to maintain our friendships with
the Irish. He had a lot more to
say. too.
"THE IDGH COST of goods,
their unavailability, the dreary
landscapes, the constant strikes
and the long, darlt and .. damp
winters combine lo gnaw away
at one's enthusiasm for being
Art Hoppe
here," he wrote. "The hottest is-
sue seems. to be whether Presi-
dent Reagan's ancestors really
came from Tipperary."
"I submit," o ur man in
Ireland said, "th.at while Ireland
is a great place to visit, living and
workinll here is something else.·•
If the story was about Italy or
Israel or a lot of other countries,
I probably couldn't tell you I
think it's funny. but in the case
of Ireland, my name gives me
my license. You aren't going to
accuse me or being anti·lrish.
Fortunately for Mr. Ber·
rington, he sort or saved himself
with the Irish al the end of the .
letter because he said, "Wbat's
amazing is that th e Irish
manage to muddle through with
such good humor, pluck and in-
ventiveness."
I HOPE Mr. Berrington
doesn't get fired or demoted in
our State Department over the
letter, because it Isn't going to
do us any harm. It won 't change
our minds about Ireland or
theirs about us. Our perceptions
of foreign countries do change
but not for reasons like that.
The country Americans have
changed their _mind about most
is Japanese. We 've had three im-
pressions of the Japanese in my
lifetime.
When I was growing up before
World War II. Japan was the
place all the cheap. poorly-made
imitations of something we
made better here. came from .
We couldn't tell the Japanese
apart from the Chinese.
During and for a while after
World War II, we thought of the
Japanese as sneaky. double-
dealing Orientals whom we
wouldn't trust as far as we could
throw a Sumo wrestler.
NOW A TIDRD image of the
J apanese dominates our im·
pression or them. We see them
as careful craftsmen, capable
businessmen and international
friends. l don't offhand recall
anything more amazing to me in
international trade than the way
the Japanese have taken the pre-
cision, high-class camera market
away from the Germans.
Another statement about a foreign country that appeared
this week was Bruce Laingen's
memo from the embassy in
Tehran to Secretary of State
Cyrus Vance. and there was
nothing funny about it. It was
written shortl y before the
takeover of the embassy.
Laingen was trying to explain the
Iranians to Vance.
"Perhaps the single dominant
aspect (of the Iranians) is an
overriding egoism." Laingen
told Vance.
The Iranians have "a bazaar
mentality," he said. By that. I
guess he meant that they'd cheat
yo u in a deal if they got a chance
but they were always
ready to dicker and make a deal
the way tfiey do when they're sell·
ing rujlsinthe bazaar.
THE IRANIAN , he said,
·'often ignores longer term in·
terest.s in favor or immediately
obtainable advantages and coun·
tenances practices that are re-
garded as unethical" by normal
people around the world.
"One should not expect an Ira-
nian readily to perceive the ad-
vantages of a long-term rela-
tionship based on trust."
Laingen wrote that three
months before he was taken
prisoner . Not all our State
Department operatives are such
lovable bumblers as Robin Ber·
rington was in Ireland.
You can't keep a truly dedicated worrier down
Once upon a time, there wu a
man named Huntley Tureen,
who wu a big worrier. Huntley
was a big worrier because he
worried about a lot of bil wor-
ries.
Huntley wasn't always a blg
worrier. He used to be, like most
of us, only a
llttle .-orrier
with a lot of
little worries.
He used to
worry about
problems like
h1I loeb fall·
ln1 down,
tbrlps la b11 :=, ~r:=
offtce Dart1 and 1ettln1 ftre to
bl• deik, bllll, wbere be put the
claim ebeck for bis r•·10led
tboel, fllldiaC. ~ ...... ftllnc bla rarm 1oeo oe' tima IDd
rem....._.. to tell h1I wife,
Hilda, tMt i. kwed ber oa Ila,
24. tbe mml..au'J of tbe daJ
the, ftnt met at a Bolton ten
roller rtnll.
BlJT 'l'IDN .. monalal be
ru4 bl tliie..,.. Uud Ml rct'm •
now predict the profligate bu.m-
ing of fossil fuels will increase
the earth's temperature lo the
point where the polar ice caps,
will melt, the sea level will rise
20 feet and coastal communities
around the world will be inun-
dated -all within the next ctn·
tllry or two.
"Good grief, Hilda!" be cried
at the brealdut table. "Here
I've been worried about little
tblngs like the soaring price ol
charcoal briqueta when cities
from Bolton to Bombay are go.
iDI to be up to their second
storiee ln tee water."
"Yes, dear," said Hilda, u
any good wile would. "Don't put
so much salt on your e111."
ONCE lll1N'l'LBY beau wor-
rylnc about bit worries, Uttl•
worrte1 no loqer beld any al·
lure. 'lbe nlpt the u.ht.a wmt
out, HUda aalled lf be bad paid
the eledrlc: but. ••How tan )'OU worry aboat tM
electric blll," aald Haatl11,
Jllbtllll I t..U., ".rblD Nft
Yon faces 1 lbortal• of ...-
mlWoe 1owbo9ta?"
'l'b do ldl part, be '-fan ..a-
---
ing to work, poUnclmg on the
doors of cars stopped at in·
tenection.s and sboutinl at the
driven: "Don't you know JOU're
contributing to the coUapee of
the West Antarctic lee sheet and
reeultant climatic chant• tbat
will tum Central America into a
desert?"
TRIS, PLUS tbe fact tbat be
wore no aboee and bis IOCb fell
down, 1ave blm a reputaUOD u an eccentric. Nor did lt help
when be got drunk at the offtce
party and set fire lo bia dtlt.
When be mentioaed to bis bau
as they waited on the sidewalk
for the eqintl to arrive that the
Quotes
"Nobody baa ner doM tbll before, but we dcm't aped _,
UDUaal emtNioM." -1hr7 Ma I',$ ............
..................... Qa.
ftldt ......... ~ .. -......... l'Wt~••Slttn
wltb •artJuua• aMl lll•M•lll
••lHd bJ nstoma ...-• ICNllftaitda.
\
earth could be stnac~ at any mo-
ment by a meteorite u large u
the one that wiped out tbe dinoeaurs 80 million years ago. be
was fired.
Hilda left blm after he re·
membered to tell ber on May M
tbat ftuorocarbona would prob-
ably wipe out the human race
by ~ the oaCJDe layer
before anotber 111apet1c polar
reversal bolllsed up all lb• C01D·
pa11es and no one could ft.nd
their way home.
"But my bluest worry," be
told tbe Judie at bia trial for lax
eva••· '11 wbetber to wony
tbat the IUD will bum ltaelf out
in nve tlWiGa JMn ud tr...
ua all to de1th or explode lDto a
supernova aad fry ua all to
death."
AT RS Datlodil Dell lllppJ
Farm, to wtllllcla tM Jadl• CGm·
mltted blm, tlla• cllllef
DQtMllll'ilt an. .. a ...... .,. •• fl, ........... y ... .............. .......,, ....
aali. ''We1' tan._. fl Ill rov,.r:-........
··~-·, ... t
-
1i
A
..
Auto woes touch heartland
Town dependent on Chry1ler 1uffer11etbacka
NSW CAITL&,.1 IDd . CAPl WlU. a
...aflll ti a C\w War laldlw OD UMt
e-1111 •1 tquan .ud U.. 1• IU&e ~ .......................... ..
Hw lldP tellool c· N•w Ca1'1e Me•• .. very tm •"'* ol, mlddl• A•uk-1.
A dly ol 11 ... ,..a. Uwbaa aekt
tor1I IDd IO)'beU n.ldl. nUlel from
............ it ........ ol Wlfallift•
l'OUJUly and dMp pride and dM.p
ua.ty.
H~ '8 wt.at people la New <: .. lie are
aay'-a, le\ their own wOC'dl, u their m•
)QI' e.._..)'er Cbryaler Corp. 1tr1A&·
pea few life
"MY CIDLDaSN A&I arowln& up u.e &realell people iD Uae wodd ~au.ae ot tlw1 place. . . If Uaey say they're
&o•DI to play baaketball at 10 o'clock at
niaht in the school l)'m, that's where
you'll find u.em." -Dick Gross, who
WU maucer ol Chrysler's focte aad
machini"' pjut here from 1974 lo Jan.
23 of tbis year.
''The community was comfortabJe
with the situation before. There were
seasonal, and market, ups and downs .
Now it's a hunjry community for the
first lime in decades. ll will not allow
itself lo be kicked into the ground. . . .
' Whether Chrysler fails or whether
Chrysler lives, we have got lo
diversify." -Rick Thrasher. a busi-
ness development specialist.
''No names, please. They take
reprisals over there. Not Gross. The
superintendents. Gross was the best
manager we ever bad. He shoot every·
body's hand every Christmas. The
others just put up a notice on the
bulletin board." -A worker quaffing a
cold one at Brown's Hole, a tavern
across the street rrom what people
sometimes call "the Chrysler" when re·
ferring to the 74-year-old plant.
Synthetic
fuels
plan last?
WASHINGTON (AP)
-The head of a group
of companies t.rying to
build the country's first
commercial synthetic
fuels plant has a n ·
nounced a fmancial plan
be described as "in all
probal)ility the last ef-
fort" to save the $2
billion facility.
The ne w financing
plan for the Great
Plains Coal Gasification
Plant in Beulah, N.D.,
tries to meet objections
by gas consumers who
were successful in de-
feating an earlier pro-
posal.
· 'Afttr l11t w"k '1 layon.,U..an743
P•oplt OD ·rOll tlure; 1,100
uHd to M th• maclc number." -
Mayor BMd A)'HI, wbo once ru a
atea• ummer ln ''the Cbryl&er. ''
''1 reDMmber frl.nda whose dads
were la1d off ln the '50I. Tbey ~· potato
aaadwicbel. There were a kit fewer
beneftta then." -lnlurance A1ent John Lane.
"We'd be beat II it weren't ror the
TRA (Trade Readjustment Act) -
down the tube." -A worker in Brown's
Hole. 1be federal TRA payments may
provide up lo 70 percent of a worker's
pay ror a year.
"In December, Chrysler workers got
3,819 weeks of TRA payments. The
December unemployment rate was 17.7
percent." -Cletis Kinser of the slate's
Employment Security Division office in
New Castle.
"l'VE GOT TH8EE JOB offers in
Florida, I'm single and l may go ... -a
newly laid-off worker in Brown's Hole.
"I've got two houses, one paid for and
one not, two kids in school, a wife and
I'm supporting my mother. I can't pack
up and leave, l just can·t. That's why I
voted for the concessions." -The first
worker in Brown's . United Auto
Workers Local 371 approved, by a 3-1
margin, a contract that cuts workers'
pay by 13 percent.
"Any decent jobs out there, the young
guys laid off early have already got
them." -a worker in Brown's.
"I WON'T TALK TO you, not alter
that Wall Street Journal article." -
Larry Lawson, night bartender in
Brown's, referring to a story 17 months
ago.
"The article was not offensive; it was
everything that came after that. The
article made us a hot topic and the TV
1tatlona descended on us. They were
beatlq people over the bead for stat~
menu. Ooe of the •t•tJona uked •
Realtor the ume question seven times
-what doel Chrysler mean to New
Castle? -and she answe..-it sev~n
times and finally she said. 'I don't real-
ly know,' and what gets on the air? 'I
don't really know.'" -ex·New Cutle
manager Gross, now manager of
Chrysler's Kokomo plant 65 miles
away.
"IN t•, WE HAD 65 attempted
suicides up to Nov. 1. In all '79 we had
only 61. The average age of the people
who attempted suicide was 56 in 1979
and 31 In ~-" -Roger Reeves, bead
of the police department's emergency
medical service, which covers all of
Henry County, with 48,000 people.
"It has not been a textbook case. We
have yet to experience what we expect·
ed in behavior problems .... What has
happened is the adults are trying to up·
grade their credentials in the job
market in our General Equivalency
Diploma program . . . and in the
machine shop and welding in the voca-
tional school. we now have lo tum peo·
ple away." -School Superintendent
· Phil Borders. ·
''FROM A MARKETING viewpoint,
we can tell potential clients the new
contract shows that they are practical
people here." -Thrasher.
''It could ope rate as a job shop.
There's a lot of forging work out there."
-Local 371 president Luther Ferrell.
"The first positive thing is the people.
With the productivity these people have
begun to generate, you can't turn your
back on it. . . . Selling the plant as an
ongoing operation is sf ill a live option ...
-Gross.
Arthur Seder Jr.,
chairman of American
Natural Resources Co ..
said Monday the project
likely would be aban·
doned if the consortium
did not have affirmative
responses on the latest
plan within three weeks.
ALL IS NOT SERENE IN PICTURESQUE, SMALL INOIANA TOWN
Chry•l•r fln•nd•I trouble• c•u•lng •nxlety In New CHtle
..............
THE PLANT was a
major e l ement in
former President Jim-
my Carter's push to
spur development of a
domestic synthetic fuels
industr y. The plant
would convert coal into 125 m1U1on cubic reel or
natural gas daily.
Th e Carter ad ·
ministration gave ten-
tative approval for a
$1.5 billion loan
guarantee.
The future of the plant
wa s se ver e l y
jeopardized by a federal
appeals court ruling in
December whi ch in·
validated a financing
plan approved by the
F e d e r a l E n' e r g y
Regulatory Co m -
mission.
MEANWHILE, of.
ficials said multimillion-
dollar synthetic fuel pro·
jects in seven states may
be baited or sharply cut
back because of stiff
budget cuts being con·
sidered by the Reagan
administration.
Adoptions·
aided by
business
MINNEAPOLIS CAP)
-Big bus iness i s
reaching out a helping
hand to empl'oyees
wishing to adopt a child.
A typical new adop·
tion policy now offered
by Honeywell. for exam-
ple. provides that the
company will pay a ll
direct adoption expenses
up lo a maximum of
$1.000 per child. Typical·
ly. adoption costs here
range from $300 for a
stepchild to $3,500 for a
foreign child. ·
"Since the company
provides medical cov-
erage to employees who
have children through
childbirth. we decided it
made sense to also help
our employees who have
children through adop-
tion." said Ed Lund,
vice president of ad-
ministration.
CORNER
A•re ColM & .. mpe
GOLD & SILVER
pftcH for 2-341 c-...... -Cl.tu ...
Kr-r..-s Mapl4!LHI
100Coronas
SO Pesos
'11'!1.Sil .. r~
..., -uef.tt Ult.M "92.• UH.M ... , ..• ...., ...
i41t.• MU ...
'"'"' lt77'!1. .......................
c.1 ... -.... (714) 511 tt50 '°""' Coeet Plaza V111•g• ......... -... (----~"-•I
NET lllT1I 5511.• Ill?
Htun.•TAXES
.. YllOIT?
CALL 751-3911
Isl ftr •. Clrtis Prict
Certified Financial
Pinier
fntYJ ... ~
AU1Qqa
C•ll 642-5678.
Put • few words
to work for ou.
fHE
ROADSTER
When you're away and someone's trying
to reach you, an Answer Page beeper lets
you know-mstantly!
• World's largest computerized paging agent
• Widest selection of pagers: single-tone.
dual·tone, silent (vibrating)/audible
combination, memory storage and more.
• Wide-area ooverage-15,000 square miles.
• Direct dial access.
• A location near you, plus field representa-
tives at your beck and call.
• 24-hour service. We never sleep.
• Daily rental or month-to-month.
• Free unlimited beeping. free delivery and
free full maintenance.
• Quantity discounts .
. • Call today for literature and a free
demonstration!
With Answer Page, you mav. be out of
reach, but you'll never be out of touch!
fU~5WER PRBE
645-1342. 731·7777 •831-2493 ................ ..._,... ..... _,,..
OAILVf'tLOT 87 .
8i--· Emn <t.a
"" On PasSbOo:ts r1.,.
of as little as $10
I
9% Annlial Yield·
8.50% Annual Rate
NO TEAM REQUIREMENT THRIFT BY MAIL
'Yield It beMd on lnteretl being crectltect "'onthlytoth• PtHbook balance and being mtlntalnedforoneyear. f'unda In ~the 10th ettn lnterettfro"' the 1 atofth• month. PtHboOk lnterett 11 co"'Pounded deUy tnd credited monthly.
FOR CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS ONLY
··FREE CORDLESS EMERGENCY LITE
PERFECT FOR POWER FAILURES,
BLACKOUTS AND OTHER EMERGENCIES
Operates on 2 "0'' batteries (included)
Pull off ... it lights ·
Put back ... Ifs off
Complete with wall bracket
•FREE WHEN YOU .
Open a passbook account with $1000 or more,
this emergency light is your FREE. Limited quantity,
offe'r good only while supply lasts!
HIGH INTEREST PLUS FREE GIFT
A REAL VALUE FROM ...
731 North Euclid Street 18820 Brookhurst A Centennial Thrift and Loan Association
Post Office Box 4606 Post Office Box 8310 • ~ 6,. Anaheim, California 92803 Fountain Valley, California 92708
.._... (714)533·3072 (71 4)964·911 1
THERE'S
A THIEF IN
YOUR HOUSE!
You're being robbed this very moment and it's an inside job. The
t hief is disguised as your water heater. It can account for up to 40%
of your total eoergy bill.
The sun can heat your water and at the same time reduce your
cost by as much as 75%. State and federal governments and the
public utilities provide unheard of incentives. Government tax
credits alone reduce installation cost by more than half.
1. Federal tax credit: 40%
2. State tax credit: 15%
3. Utility credits totaling from $720 to $1.475
4. 100% financing on approved credit
There will never be a better time to consider solar. The sun
will be around forever ·· but not the incentives.
Call : (714) 661 -6881 or (714) 831 -5670
SAVE WITH SOLAR I GAS
Authorized Distributor Fur
King Energy Systems •
32422 Alipaz, Suite B •San Juan Capistrano, CA 92675
Contr•ctors State License 391503
If it'sgot
wheels, you'll move
it taster in a
Dally Piiot
• ,
classified
ad.call
642·5678 and a
f rlendly •d-
vlser wlll
\.
I
• Dk
all , ..
..
... u
ld .,...
ve
an •n 1ld
nd
..
I
t
I
.......... ,...,_, ...•.
COMPOSITE
•
BU81NU8/8TOCK8
force doe in U.S.
87 SYLVIA P0aTBa
OUr 1980 ce~ua prclUe llYI tbat OD ~vera1e,
Americana have no• reaeMd the "matuN" .,. M-• -a
higher ace level than ever has been ee!Uved by malt ol
lbe rest of the world. and a ripe a•e that we ID our own bil· tory have reached only
once befo~.
(That previous 30-
ye a r mark was re·
corded back in ,1950, a
generation ago, when
tbe low birth rates of
the great depression
era followed by World War n compelled a rise ln our
average age).
Now at the start of the dec'ade of the 1980s, we've re· ·
turned to~the unusually high average age. ls that good or
bad news?
FOR mE ECONOMY, it's &ood news. And It's a dem·
~o,raph.ic factor _upon which I.. have been baaing my op·
llm1sm for our nation's outlook as the decade rolls on.
The reason is simple -as this generation's workers
become olde_r, they will become more skilled in their jobs.
more experienced and productive. A more productive
worker means a more productive economy.
The prolonged era during which our nation's produc·
tivity <amount of goods and services produced per worker
per hour worked) has lagged so conspicuously is drawing
to a cl06e.
WITH TIIE SHI.FT will come a revival in the rise in
living standards and a return to economic stability.
or . course, _there are many explanations that
economists submit for the slowdown in growth In recent
years.
Among them are the spiral in energy costs; excessive
s pread of government regulations throughout our
economy; destructively steep and broad taxes; degenera·
tion . in ~elations between labor and management and
decline lD the fundamental work ethic associated with
Am.erica's history of prosperity.
But no matter bow much weight is given to any or all
these explanations, a basic cause that cannot be ignored is
the influx during the decade of the 1970s of masses of
young, unskiHed workers into the labor force.
THE RlSE _IN THE proportion of young to older
workers. of unskilled to s~Uled in, our working population,
had to reduce our overall l>rdductivily -and did.
The oversupply of young workers is a major, though
overlooked, reason for the persiste\)Ce of a high rate of in·
flati~ side by side with a high rate of unemployment, ac·
cording to Richard A. Easterlin, University or Penn·
sylvania economist .
Easterlin argues. past governments would revive a
~luggish economy by cutting .taxes, biking federal spend-
ing or increasing the availability of che~p credit.
Those policy moves would prompt consumers to spend
more liberally and in turn prompt business to produce
more goods as well as jnvesl in modernizing equipment
and plants, Easterlin said.
THESE DEVELOPMENTS would, in tum, always
create more jobs and lead to a general era or prosperity.
But lacking in the 19705 was a fairly steady supply of
skilled labor. As Easterlin emphasizes in his new book.
"Birth and Fortune," throughout most or the past decade.
lbe labor force consisted largely of the young and un·
skilled. And accord ing to associate Brooke Shearer. it bas
been "an important contributing factor" to our problems.
As the numbers of teen·agers and young adults looking
for work stabilize (ana fall > the unemployment level will
decline. The contras t between the 1980s and the '70s will be
dramatic.
"Reaching 30" is a complex achievement for the na-
tion and it undoubtedly will take years before "experts"
Cully understand all the implications of the years.
Bot this degree of maturity bas done wonders for the
populati~n. It will for our nation's economy, too.
!tl.O("k• In Tit•
.4ipat llgltt
M'ltat .fiitof"k• Did
HEW VOfllC (API Fftl. l
WHAT AMEii 010
HEW YORK (API Fe«I. J
Prev. ~ IJ20 .,
"" i. "
,Due to late transmission
today's listing will not a~ar iri the Dally Pilot.
Slh·rr
HEW VOltlC CAP) -Hendy & H•r ..... silver IOCl9y 111.J«I, uco SO.:M.
Enotlll••d Jllver Sil.HO. UP SO.lt; IMrlceted Jll,..r 114 1«1, uco SO.•U.
ORANGE COUN TY. C ALIFOn NIA 25 CENTS
87 P•1 DUll(Xtcm)S• .... ..............
Aa Or .... CoualJ Superior
C.OUrt Judie Ml placed a no-bail
-.old • a .....,_. Beaeb m• .,..
.... , ... -........... ud ......
char,_ wlUAe he wu fr. ..-1·
inC an appeal of a previous sea of·
feuecmvictlon.
Judge keeps Lagunan behind bars the lime," Thomson said. "I thlnlt
it ($25,000) was a substantial ball
for someone with no criminal
background.'·
Judie William Tbomson -tbe
same Jurist who permiUed
Donaad Sleplllell GiWD, •. lo re-main ,,_•ata,000 appeal bond
followiqtheAqust ~vicUon
said be hoped the victim in the
moet recmt ra.pe cue will not
blame IUmfor wut happened.
G lttlD, of M9'1 Alta Laauna
Blvd., WU arn1ted by Lquna
Beach Police before dawn Friday
after a 11-year-old woman
claimedabewuabducted,driven
to an unknown location, raped and
forced to participate in other sex •
acts.
Blufftop, nuke power
Court records show that Gitt.in
was convicted by a jury of uaaull
with intent to commit rape, as·
aault with a deadly weapon and
oral copulation in a case involving
two 16-year-0ld girls who bad
'been hitchhiking from Buena
Park to Huntington Beach.
Judge Thomson sentenced Git·
tin lo six years and four months in
Measure oppone~ts
outspent hackers
Campaign financial statements
filed this week show opponents of
two controversial measures that
appeared on the Nov. 4 ballot in
Laguna Beach far outspent local
supporters.
Laguna Beach voters defeated
a blufftop preservation initiative
in November, and also rejected
an advisory measure that op-
posed tbe San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station.
The vote for Measure E (the
blufftop initiative) showed 5,170
opposed and 3,896supported strict
controls on blufftop development.
l>.ilff'l ... M,,,._
Honored citizens
Janet Nudd, 17, and Jonathan Cohen, 16, both Laguna
Beach High School seniors, have been chosen "Junior
Citizens of the Year" by the Patriot's Day Parade As·
sociation and will be honored in the parade Feb. 21. Janet
is a musician and is student representative to the Laguna
school board. Jonathan has participated in varsity
athletics in three sports and is president of the Southern
California Federation of Temple Youth.
Art-A-Fair moving
the group will be able to sublet
the property when it is not in use
for the summer exhibition.
In the advisory measure on
nuclear power, (Measure F> 4,749
Laguna Beach voters supported
the plant, while 4,136 opposed the
use of nuclear power.
On the nuclear power issue,
Sou them California Edison Co.,
co·owner of the power station just
south of Sari Clemente , gave
$17,167 to defeat that advisory
measure.
More then $13,000 of that
amount was spent on a survey the
company said it conducted with
359 registered Laguna Beach
voters prior to the election.
Tbe '3-question survey, ~on
ducted in telephone interViews,
asked voters tbefr opinion on
nuc I ear power.
Deci.sioo Making Information,
of Santa Ana, conducted the in·
terviews, the utility company
said.
The remainder of the $17,167
war chest went to salaries and to
another pro-nuclear group calJed
LagunansforlndependentForms
of Energy.
Richard J ahraus, who operates
the Laguna Beach Lumber Co .•
was treasurer of that group,
which used a $700 contribution
from Edison lo pay for printing
costs of a brochure su.pporting the
utility's position.
The $700 contribution from
Edison was the only contribution
listed for the Lagunans for In·
d epe.ndenl Fq,rms of Energy
group.
Supporters of the advisory
measure raised a total of SS,164 in
their efforts lo garner votes op·
posing nuclear power.
Maureen Koo ls, treasurer of the
Committee for the Right to Vote
<See Mt:ASURE, Page A2)
Thief saws
way to loot
A burglar apparently hand
sawed his way through a wall to
enter a Laguna Beach business
and took $1,000 worth of jewelry
beforeofficersarrived.
Investigators said the suspect
cul through a plaster board rear
wall to enter Orcutt Designs, 1590
S. Coast Highway at about 4:45
a.m .Tuesday.
He apparenlly used other un·
known tools to enter a room where
jewelrywaslocated, they said.
Police responded to a silent
alarm. but the thief was gone by
lhetimetheyarrived.
1!4embers of the Art-A-Fair,
one of three summer: festivals in
L&flSDa Beach, are moving their.
operation across the street and a
bit closer to town.
The 120-artisl member group
bas agreed lo lease a parcel at
the southeastern corner of
Laguna Canyon Road and Can-
yon Acres Drive for three
years, with an option to rent it
for three more years.
Officials of the non·profil or·
ganizaUon did not release cost
details of the lease, which takes
effect March 1. Bunlley said the
arran1ement would represent a
1avinp for the festival.
Ailment sidelines
Chief Jon Sparks
The l5-year-0ld festival for the
put four years has been located
at I.be northeastern corner of tbe
lDteneet.ion, on property owned bf Vernon R. Spitaleri of Lap.ma
Beacb.
Tbe new site Is owned b:y
David J. Phillips of La1UDa
leach. Both pareela are •lilbtlY leu Uum an acre.
l'..Uval oft'lclab pointed out
tlaat tbe former 1lte, divided by
MToyo Drive, requlnd UH of a ,, ............. -1.la..!....•lll DOl DOW be .
~~ did DOt bave year-i9'Dd .. ol UM former 1tte. But ~-.. -·~· • .met• .....
Laguna 1feach Police Chief
J9n Sparks is undergolnt an
extensive therapy pro1ram at
South Coaat Medical Center for
injuries be received more I.ban
two yean ago.
The 43-year-old poUce chief
will be off duty for between a
and 90 days wbile participatlnc
in dally pbJllW tberapJ at tbe
South La1una 1aospttal to
overcome the effeets of beck
illjuries be reHived in a t.ramc
collialml in December 1171.
Police capt. Nell Pur.ceD ns
named act1n1 police cblef in
Sparks' ablence.
Spark• and three other La1una Beacb pollce offtcen
wenin•.....,...-=ar ..... tbe ...... wlla
tlae rear of a Calta 11 ........
antt dulDI a polJee fueral
'"'' rl•DM.t.IN.'
state prison, but stayed imposi·
lion of the term pendin1 the ap-
peal. He allowed the defendant to
remain free on the $25,000 bail Git·
tin posted shortly after his arrest
by Cypress police last April.
"He has a right to bail on ap· •
peal," 1bomson said in an in-
terview late Tuesday afternoon.
"His appeal wasn't considered a
frivolous one."
The Judie noted that Giltin's
lack of a criminal record and the
su1>portofhis family and attorney
were factors he used in permit·
ling the convicted felon to remain
free.
"I was wrong, but that's the
kind of decision I have to make all
Thomson said he was "COD·
vinced'; that had he denied Gitlin
bail on appeal the decision would
have been overturned by an ap-
peals court. "Bail would have
been set and his brother (Harlan
Gillin, part owner o f an
automobile dealership) would
have made it."
·'The reason for the appeal bond
<See BAIL, Pa1e AZ)
Dally ~ .... le.ff "'9'9
STANDING ROOM ONLY FOR PUBLIC MEETING ON FUTURE OF LAGUNA SCHOOLS
Supertntendent Robert S.nchle (rtght) addr••M• parent• and teacher•
School merger rejected
Laguna 1eela alternate budget 1aver1
By DON CHAPMAN °' ""' Deilf ....... lutf Laguna Beach Unified School
District officials are not con·
sidering merger with another
district to cut costs, but a
money-saving consolidation of
administrators' posts could be
down the road.
And, the district's new educa·
lional foundation will not be pre·
pared to provide much financial
aid "for another year or two,"
about 200 parents and teachers
were told Tuesday night.
The standing-room-0nly crowd
met to hear a report on the
future of Laguna Beach High
School.
* * * LB trustees
may cut 10
teacher posts
Laguna Beach school trustees
will consider reducing up to 10
full ·time teaching positions next
year, as well as that of Aliso
Ele mentary School principal
Lyle Proctor.
And while any teacher layoffs
would not take effect until next
fall , the school board must
notify teachers affected by
program cuts by March 15.
Because of that
state·mandated deadline,
trustees will be asked Thursday
night to approve a resolution
that outlines the programs and
the number of employee
positions that would be affected
by cuts.
The school district faces a
possible budget deficit of more
than $500,000 next year, and
school administrators are
looking at program and service
cu~. the possible closing of a.
school, and personnel reduction. ,
The moat controversial of
those cuts is the proposed
demotion of Proctor from
principal to clusroom teacher.
Proctor, a as.year teacher and
atlminiatrator in the Lagµna
Beach · school system, was
notified late last month by
SUJ)erintendent Robert Such.la
that tbe superintendent would be
recommeadln1 the job chance.
Teacben at Allio Elementary
School say they'll aUead bl an
effort to penuade truateel lo
retain Proctor u principal.
The board will meet at diltrtC!l
offices, 550 Bhunoat St. at 7:30
p.m . The publle ta tn.u.d.
·Border at ia1ae
LlllA. Pwta (AP) -Pena ....
called for clemare•Uaa ol ltl
...... ..... Seudor = .. ctl1pated .. .u.-.... ... 1tn&ell .... die ....... ,...
of tbe two loutll 4merteu
.......... battled ,. "" ..,. tut"*.
Ron Ross, a math instructor at
the high school, said the district
should be "innovative" in its
budget paring.
"Dam it, we're small," Ross
told the crowd jammed into the
high acbool library. "May~ the
only w•Y we can do well ls to
merge with another district.
That's your choice."
But school Superintendent
Robert Sanchis said other di.a·
tricts have their own financial
problems.
Ross also suggested combin·
ing superintendent and high
school principal jobs.
"When you do that, you aJso
reduce the support people -
secretaries," he said. "The sav·
ings would be about S60.000 when
you are through."
The math teacher also sug·
gesled assigning one principal to
two schools.
And. when it was sugge,ted
that principals be required to
teach part time, school board
President William Kentle,
responded. "It could come to
that."
Another member of the panel
discussing· the high school's
future, Kenneth Beyer of the
Laguna Beach Educational
Foundation, said his group is ac·
cepling •·any and all" conlribu·
lions.
One proposal being studied by
the foundation, which was
formed nine months ago lo as·
sist the district financially, is a
cooperative bank account effort.
The idea is for a donor to share
interest earned in a bank ac·
count with the foundation.
The foundation is planning to
solicit in the community, and
establish funds for designated
academic areas.
Parking limit set
on ~arge vehicles
Owne-t"s · o"F recreational
vehicles, commercial trucks and
trailer-mounted boats who park
on Laguna Beach streets had
better also own a watch.
Laguna Beach City Council
members Voted 4·0 Tuesday,
with Mayor Wayne Baglin
absent, to adopt a strict
ordinance that allows parking of
the lar1e vehicles on city streets
for a maximum of five hours.
But council members
hastened to add that the police
department would be enforcing
the new law Only on a complaint
basis.
The law is intended to keep the
large vehicles off ' Laguna's
narrow, windinl streets, where
they often pose a safety problem
for motorists attemptint to
maneuver around the bulky
obstacles.
The law does not apply to
many truck mounted camper
shells, nor pickup tnaclta or vans
with a c~ capacity of a ton
or leas.
It a1ao does not include house
can that are 2JO feet or less in
lea 1th, nine. feet or leas in
Collll8eling &et
for Lagana eenion.
Senior clUHDI la Lapna
Beacb wltbjlrobleml eu 11t lld· .tee ,,_....,. from 10 a.m. to ............ ~a.lb.
lllrw.tAft.
Tile ea-1''11 II pl'OY*'9 bJ Kat. L. 8-1. I memblr ol
tlae CaManla ... co-"• AMMI ..
height. or seven feel or less in
width.
Vehicles that do fall within the
five·hour limit can be parked ·
longer if the operator is loadin1
or unloading the veh icle, or
making repairs.
Th e law c ould become
effective within 45 days.
Coast
Weather
· Patchy low clouds ID·
creasing tonight throq1b
Thursday mornin1.
Otherwise fair with sunny
and cooler afternooDI.
Lows tonight 45 inland to
low 50s at beaches. Hi1hl
Thursday C3 a.lOftl cout lo
69 lnland.
INSl•E ..... ~Y
QllOUfv alMft~ ce.e•
are dr..,... ow of CM local
ten.. WriUT Roger C.... uplorn .,,,._ Of Ute ,......,.
·s.ePOQeBl. ......
Talb break down
in Poli1la 1tiike
WAUAW. Pa&aM1tAPJ T.aa ......... M&w .. ltriklDa ~ ..................... b ... ol .... o-8'ala.
aDcl 0..-r Ad..--aUcm........, Cllll9w loteJa ~to Wane•. PoMall1&.aierNMa ,._....&ode)'.
lolMlaril)' trade ualoe .... , lMb WalHa, WM Wat .. , •• ,...to,... ... • ...S '9 •.._.)-old ....,u strike '8 .,.,.,:aw •. ..w,,.. AleoclMM PNea by,,..,.._., ··ram Alli
optJma.&t.., ''but added
"Wu&enr we at• dOa., MM la forced upon ua by Ute. We don't
•Ht to10an•trU1lq uywh•n .But weart routralDedtodoao. ··we anoot afrakl, aAdev• Uwt aboWd lole -It's better to
fall 11wttq upri,._l thaa to 10 l1nomlnlOU1l)' backward." ...............
LONDON CAP ) Revertln& its reCHhlide, the price of gold
ro1e lbarply in Europe today to eclipte the SSOO·an-ounce mark.
Thedollarfellont•chan1emarll:ets. <Relatedstory, 86).
Lorwtoo's five bullion hOWJes fixed the aold price at $505 a troy
ounce, up frotn $d&.25 late Tuesday. Dealers said buying ~Y
central banks helped push up the price ., ........... _ .....
TERAMO, Italy (AP> A young man hammered and badly
damaged works of art in the cathedral of this central Italian town
today. police reported.
A 15th century panel by the school of Italian painter Gentile da
Fabriano was !lmong the workS damaeed. along with a statue of
the Madonna and other minor art.
Damiano di Dionisio, !2, who police described as unbalanced,
was arrested and charged with vandalism. ,,.., ...... .,,,,. ......
WASHINGTON lAP) -The Senate Finance Committee voted
6-3 today to raise the government's borrowing authority by SSO
billion.
The votes against the first bill pressed by the Reagan
administration were cast by Republican Sens. William Armstrong
of Colorado and Steven Symmsof Idaho and Sen. Harry F . Byrd, an
independent from Virginia. Sens. Bill Bradley, D-N .J., and George
M.itchell , D·Maine, voted present. .
A~•••tflrefe•efl
BERN. Switzerland (AP> -The Swiss Foreign Ministry
said today that an American held in Iran on unspecified
cha rges, Mohi Sobhani, 44, of Los Angeles, had been released.
Spokesman Othmar Uhl, who earlier reported a trial of
American freelance writer Cynthia 8 . Dwyer on espionage
charges took place today. said the Swiss Embassy had been in-
formed in Tehran that Sobhani had been freed.
Sobhani, born in Iran and a naturalized American citizen,
was arrested in Tehran on Sept. 6. .
Espionage elaimed
American writer
in Iranian trial
BERN, Switzerla nd (AP) -
American free-lance writer Cyn-
thia B. Dwyer. arrested last
May in Iran, was tried today by
an Iranian Revolutionary Court
on espionage charges, a Swiss
diplomat reported to the Swiss
Foreign Ofrice in Bern.
A Foreign -Office spokesman
said the diplomat attended the
trial and that a verdict was ex-
pected Monday. The diplomat
reported Mrs. Dwyer appeared
"nervous but in good condition"
at the one·day trial in Tehran.
The Buffalo Evening News ,
meanwhile, quote d another
Swiss diplomat in Tehran as
saying that Mrs. Dwyer. if con-
. victed, might be sentenced to
prison or expelled from Iran.
The State Department said to·
day it has been told that Dwyer
was given a hearing io lran, but
not a trial.
William Dyess. the State
Department spokesman, said in -
formation r ece ived in
Washington didn't confirm re-
ports from Swiss officials in
Switzerland that Mrs. Dwyer
was tried on espionage charges
and would be sentenced Mol);
day. ·
Mrs. Dwyer, 49, of Amherst, a
suburb of Buffalo, N. Y .. went to
Iran to write about the Iranian
revolution and was arrested
May 5 on suspicion of espionage
for the CIA. Swiss officials, look·
ing after American interests in
' Iran, have been attemptin~ to
negotiate her release.
John Dwyer, her husband,
said in Buffalo he had heard
news reports about the trial but
had no comment until he had
talked to the U.S. State Depart-
ment.
Laguna burglary
hearings delayed
Preliminary hearings for a
Long Beach couple charged with a
Laguna Beach burglary have been
continued to Feb. 17 in South Coun-
ty Municipal Court.
William Knox Bottles. 23, and
Robin Lynn Petersen, 19, have
pleased innocent to charges that
they stole $3,000 worth of belong-
ings from a Lookout Drive res-
idenceJan. 9.
1i.rw1...,..te
ON TAIAL IN IRAN
U.S. wrtter Dwyer ...
Mrs. Owyer was not included
in negotiations between the Unit-
ed States and Iran on release or
52 American hostages freed
from 444 days of captivity Jan.
20.
F,....P-.eAJ
BAIL •••
was -it was him. There was
nothing in his background t.hat
would indicate that he' would goon
a crime spree, "Thomson said.
The judge Tuesday revoked
bail for Gillin at the request of
Deputy District Attorney Jan
Cummins. She prosecuted Git-
lin 's earlier case.
Ms. Cummins, who had argued
against Gitlin remaining free
pending the appeal, said, "I felt
hew as dangerous all along.••
"When it comes to these sex of.
fenders, we need to take a closer
look," she said.
Gitlin bas been charged in the
I aguna Beach case in a com-
plaint filed in South Orange Coun-
ty Municipal Court with kidnap-
ping, ralse imprisonment, rape
and sex perversion. Judge Blair
Barnette has set bail in that case
at $500,000.
However, Gitlin could not be
freed because of the additional
no·baU bold imposed by Judge
. Thomson. ·
ORANGE COAST l1llyPHat CIHtiftff ecl...U91nt 7141142·5171
All othef d9partment• 142-4321
Tho;nu P Haley
"'*""-
Aoben N. Wee<S ..........
• M. Thom11 t<eevll ....
ThomM A. Murphln• .............
CNr•H.Looa .._.........,.._
lltMrd SchulrNn o...r
OFFICES '
Cost• Mow: .uo WHI •• , s1r· .. 1.,.,. L.,..,.. hodl. 1127 No. Cout H..,.woy .i.s1 H1111ll ....... llNcll 17.,S 9 .. Cll a.wttvOfd 9*7
Cocivrl9"1 "" 0r.,,. Coe11 '""4lllM1111t C°'"'*'Y. No ..... , tll>rln, UluM••liOllS, tG•toriOI mlllltr ... 00>
vtrllse,...nh herein m1y be rtprOduCtCI willlOut \~Ill .,.,.minion of copyrl9M owner
Second cron "°''• pold et Cosio M•"'· Catlfonll• IUPS tu.«IOI. SubKrlptlon by corrltr M.00 lnOl'llllly, • by moll U.50 monllllt'. "!llllery desll,...IOfls M.00 •
monthly
Vicioua
Inter
' revealed
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)
-The jury ln Jean Harris 'I
murder trial heard today the so-
c &lied "Scarsdale letter" in
wblcb Mn. Harris attacked her
rival for diet doctor Herman
Tarnower's ·affections as "a
thieving slut" and a "vicious,
adulterous psychotic."
Assistant District Attorney
George Bolen read the letter to
the jury.
"I am distraught as I write
this,'• her letter lo the 69·year-
old cardiologist began. "Your
caU telling me you prefer the
company of a vicious adulterous
psychotic kept me awake for
almost S6 hours."
Mrs. Harris, 57, former head-
mistress of the Madeira School
in McLean, Va., wrote the letter
last March 10 before she drove
to Tarnower's home and alleged-
ly shot him to death. She claims
she did not kill Tarnower in a
jealous rage but that he was shot
attempting to prevent her
suicide.
Mrs. Harris closed her letter,
handwritten in red ink on Madeira School stationery, b)'
telling Tarnower, 'her lover 14
years, that be was "the most im·
1>0rtant thing in my life."
In the letter, she reacts to
learning that Lynne Tryforos,
her 37-year-old rival, would be
invited to a testimonial dinner
April 19 held by the Westchester
Heart Association to honor
Tarnower. Mrs. Harris appealed
to be allowed to attend, writing:
"Indeed, J don't care if s he
pops naked out of a cake with
her -breasts frosted with
chocolate," Mrs. Harris wrote.
adding, ''I intend to be there.
·'She has you every single mo·
ment in March, for God's sake,
give me April. T.S. Eliot said
it's the cruelest month."
Mrs. Harris' birthday is April
23. She concluded the letter by s aying, "in all these years, you
have never spent my birthday
with me.
"There aren't many ten :· she
added.
Mrs. Harris wrote that she
had r eceived a copy o f
Tarnower's will with her name
"viciously scratched out" and
Mrs. Tryforos' name written in.
MEASURE ••
on San Onof¥e showed an ending
deficit of S685 for her organiza-
tion.
Out of town contributors were
prominent in the ranks of oppo·
nents of the blufflop initiative
also, final financial statements
show.
The Laguna First Blufftop
Committee, formed to oppose
strict regulation or development
along Laguna's bluffs, raised a
total of $13,891 in their successful
bid to defeat the initiative.
Major contributors shown on
the group's financial report show
E . W. Merritt Farms, of
Porterv:llecontributing $2 ,000.
Another major contributor was
Gilbert C. Van Camp Jr .. of Long
Beach, who also gave $2,000 to the
committee.
Kate L. Wheeler of Corona de)
Mar contributed $1,000; the
Laguna Beach Board of Realtors
gave $500, as did Michael and
Diane Goodwin of Laguna Beach.
Earl Rippee, whose house is
located on the bluffs above Cres-
cent Bay. contributed $350.
The committee lists a total of
nearly 50 contributors who gave
at least $100 to defeat the ballot
measure.
On the other band, Laguna
Beach physician Gene Atherton,
author of the blufftop initiative,
said he raised only $2,895 in h.is un-
successful effort.
Atherton said he raised nearly
all the money himself.
Some Laguna
brushlanda
f • open again
Outdoors enthusiasts now may
e nter certain brushlands in
Laguna Beach which have been
closed since summer due to the
threat of fire .
However, {>toperty owners'
written permtssion is required,
said Launa Beach Fire Chief
Charley J. Kuhn, who made the
announcement Tuesday. Recent
rainfall bas reduced the fire
dan1er. Kuhn said, but pointed
out current rainfall is still far
from its normal level1 so extreme
care must still beuseo .
Chief Kuhn says moat of iuch
brushland and forest is prt9tely
owned, so ownert' permluiba la
required.
No open fires will be
permitted and any veblcJea
drivm Into tbe area must have
1park .. r9lton.
Kuhn laid the aame l'elllla-
UOM lbould nteDd to bruab.y
anu outskle I.alma ... ell city
Umtta. /
•
. "
--··----~------
• ArWI ........
SHE'S OUT OF HOT WATER WITH THE NAVY
Pt•yboy model D•rlene Reina grin• •t newa
Nude set free
Charges dropped by Navy
WASHINGTON {AP) -The Navy has dropped charges
against a female petty officer who posed in the hude in Playboy
magazine, officials said.
Asked about the status of Yeoman 2nd Class Darlene
Aubrey Rein. the Navy said Tuesday in a statement it decided
to drop charges and discharge her from the service because of
delays in pre-court-martial procedures. The statement also said
she had been kept on duty beyond her scheduled discharge date
of Oct. 21 pending a court·martial.
"The Navy does not condone activities either on duty or out·
side normal working hours which bring discredit upon members
of the navaJ service or the Navy uniform," the statement said.
"The Navy considers it inappropriate for its personnel to pose in
the nude or semi-nude."
In October . the Navy filed charges against Ms. Rein, alleg-
ing conduct prejudicial to good order and discipline, disrespect
to a superior commissioned officer and violating a general or-
der or regulation.
OCTD to resume
contract parleys
By GLENN scon
OI -o.lly r11e1 St.ff A state conciliator w as
scheduled today to resume con-
tract talks between union and
Orange County Transit District
officials on the eve of a
threatened strik e by 957
mechanics and bµs drivers.
If called , the strike could
begin at 12:01 a.m. Thursday,
halting bus service to an
estimated 80 ,000 dail y
passengers -many of whom
are commuters who ride twice a
day between work or school.
District officials were passing
out fliers today to bus riders.
The notices cautioned them that
Ex-hostage
sues Iran
WASHINGTON (AP > -
Former hostage Gregory A.
Persinger has filed a $120,000
lawsuit against the Iranian gov·
ernment in what is believed to
be the first court challenge to
the agreement between the Unit·
ed States and Iran that se<:ured
the release of the 52 Americans.
That agreement barred any
damage claims arising from the
takeover of the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran on Nov. 4, 1979. The
hostages were released Jan. 20
after444days in captivity. ·
t>uses may slop running on
Thursday.
The conciliator was requested
by district officials after
workers voted last weekend to
reject three-year contract of-
fers . Talks resumed Tuesday.
but JitUe progress was made,
sources said.
However, district officials
made public their latest orrer -
a three.year contract to bus
drivers that represents a 31 per·
cent salary increase. including
projected cost of living raises.
OCTD drivers currently earn
a top pay of $9.46 an hour. The
contract would boost that pay at
the end of th'ree years to a pro·
jected $12.70 an hour, district of·
ficials said. Union leaders were
unavailable today for comment.
James Reiche rt, district
genera l manag e r , sa id
negotiatQrs are trying to reach
an agreement with~ the drivers
first. Once that contract is ac·
cepted, negotiators hope to use
much of the same set of agree·
ments as a basis for a contract
with the mechanics, who so far
have been less willing to settle.
"I'm still confident that we
can still resolve our differences
without having a strike," he
said.
Reichert said the district is
trying to help set up car pooling
-or "ride sharing·· -pro-
grams with many of its patrons
in the event there is a strike.
2/ou·nd
slain
in Mesa
By JPaY CIAVSBN °' • ....., .......... Costa Mesa police are in·
vesU1atinC the execuUon.atyle
aunabot sJayinea of two men
wbote bodies were found in a
ransacked fourplex unit Tuesday
afternoon.
The still unidentified victims,
described ·as in their mid 308, ap-
parently died or abot.s from a·gun
or 1una held to tbeir heads, said
detectiveU. Jack Calnon.
Officers estimated the two died
abouttwototbreedayaa10.
Their bodies were discovered
by a suspicious Costa Mesa man
who used a bouowed ladder to
climb to the murder, scene in
Apartment Don the second floor
of 1251 Baker St., officers said.
Caloon said investigators are
following one theory that the two
died during a robbery.
Neither victim's wallet was
found in the apartment rented to
Brent Wheeler, a butcher, and
Giovanni Paz, a hairdresser in
Laguna Beach.
While officers reported that
neither of the dead men had been
identified today, neighbors said
late Tuesday that they last saw
Wheeler and Paz Friday.
One neighbor said she thought
the two, described as "quiet and
polite," had gone away for t.be
weekend because both of their
car s were parked in a lot behind
the fourplex.
Investigators said the murders
were reported by Michael Angire.
30, Wheeler's brother·in·law.
Angire. they said, had tried to
raise someone in the apartment
three times Monday and Tuesday
because Wheeler bad not kept a
weekend appointment with bis
mother in Tustin. • •
Police ~a Angire borrowed an
aluminum ladder, climbed to the
m en 's second-floor apartment
balcony and parted the curtains
behind a partially opened sliding
glass door.
He saw two bodies lying in blood
on •he living room floor.
Angire, officers said , climbed
back down the ladder, went to a
neig hboring apartment and
c ailed police.
That wasat5:30p.m .
Investigators. hampered by a
U.S. Supreme Court ruling re-
quiring a warrant to enter a home
where murder is suspected, did
not begin their death scene in-
vestigation until nearly 10 p.m.,
Calnonsaid.
N eigbbors said late Tuesday
that Wheeler and Paz had moved
into the white and gold fourplex
abouttwomonlhs ago.
"They weren't low lives like
som e of these guys who live in
apartments," commented one
neighbor woman who said she did
not wish lobe identified.
"They were pretty quiet and
polite. Oh, they held some dinner
parties once in awhile. But it's
been quiet up there for the past
few days," she added.
Chambeyl gets
retiree talk
A representative from the
Ser vice Corps or Retired Ex-
ecutives will address the Laguna
Beach Chamber of Commerce at
a breakfast meeting Tuesday.
Chamber members will bear
what the organization of retired
businessmen can offer local
merchants.
The meeting begins at 8 a.m.
at the Hotel Laguna. Breaklast
cost is $4. For reservations, call
the chamber at 494·1018.
Winter Clearance
Feb. 6 to Positively Feb. 8
Super Savings tq 70%
on Skis and Boots ..
Save 50% on all
Men's, Ladies', Kids'-Elothing
........
4708 lotOiiCU '°4woy INN, CA
llNlll
----
• ---· -mllll lllll NIB
0 n AN GE c 0 u N r y {.Al I~ 0 H NI A / '.> cf NT s
R~ling renews l1·vine hous~.g suit
A tut41 COW1 ol Appeal Judi• llau siYm Mw We &o a leWIUtt
aU•ai!lc &Mt IOG1u poUca. lit
lnlae uclude fow-iacom•
penoM frolll Uv1oc 1a ta. clty. · lnlM City Attorae1 Boter
Grable aaad toda1 t'-•l ll••
Slale'I P'ourt.b Oia\riel Court of
Appeal iA Su leraaNiDG Ital
ove1"UarMd u Or...,• Coualy
jwlce's deciJU. that tbe cue be
dismissed.
• Grable said the city's next
Vicious
letter
revealed
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. <AP)
-The jury lo Jean Harris'•
murder trial heard today the ao-
called "Scarsdale letter" in
which lln. Harris attacked her
rival for diet doctor Herman
Tarnower's affections as "a
thieving slut" and a "vicious,
adulterous psychotic."
Assistant District Attorney
George Bolen read the letter to
the Jury.
"I am distraught as I write
this." her lette r lo the 89-year·
old cardiologist began. "Your
call telling me you prefer the
company or a vicious adulterous
,.psychotic kept me awake for
~hours.''
Mrs. Harris, 57, former head-
mistress of the Madeira School
in McLean, Va., wrote the letteT
last March 10 before she drove
to Tarnower's home and alleged-
ly shot him to de"alh. She claims
she did not till Tarnower in a
jealous rage but that he was shot
attempting to prevent her
suicide.
Mrs. Harri.I closed her letter,
handwritten ia red ink on Madeira School stationery, by
telling Taroower, her lover 14
years, tb&t be wu "tbe most im·
portent lhinl in my life."
In the letter. sbe react.a to learning that Lynne TryfOl'OCl,
her 37-year-Old rival, would be
invited to a testimonial dinner
April 19 held by the WestcbesteT
Heart Association to honor
Tarnower. Mrs. Harris appealed
to be allowed to attend, writing:
"Indeed, I don't care if she
pops naked out of a cake with
he r -breasts frosted with chocolate ," Mrs. · Harris wrote,
adding, "I intend lo be there.
"She has you every single mo-
ment in March, for God's sake,
give m~ April. T.S. Eliot said
it's the cruelest month."
Mrs . Harris' birthday is April
23. She concluded the letter by
saying, "in all these years, you
have never spent my birthday
with me.
"There aren't many left." she
added.
Mrs. Harris ~wrote that she
bad r eceived a copy o f
Taroower's will with her name
"viciously scratched out" and
Mrs. Tryforos' name written iJl.
She accused Mrs . Tryforos of
slashing clothes Mrs. Harris bad
left al Tarnower's home and of
smearing a silk dress with ex-
crement.
Handicapped
aides hacked
An $80,000 project lo make
John Wayne Airport facilities
fully accessible to ha.ndicapped
people was approved TueSday
by the Orange County Board of
Supervison.
Plan call for modification to
restrooms, stairways, drinking
fountains. telephones, ramps
and parking areas so that people
ln wheelchairs will have full use
of the airport facilities.
The project wu mandated by
the federal government. The
F•deral Aviation AdminJatra·
lion, accordlnJ to · airport of·
ftclals, will pay °'e-half of the
project cost.
Parking lot work
at airport OK'd . .
Oran1e County aupervllon
laawe approved a $13,500 project
to provide a •lWTJ IH1 oil coat. ma OD the dir\ IUl'f aee of tbe
oHrftow paftins lot at John Wune Airport.
The board• 1 action .. ln
,.poaee to pe1Ha1er eom-
JJlldata tlaat Ille =lot ..... .. mired.... ......,
ftl'todl. 'J'be lot .. .. DOl'tla fl .... airport tennlnal.
atep la to request tbat the
CaJllOllUa s...pnme Court dil·
llll,. tbe cue oa the aJ"OUDdl
Oaat tbe plaiaWfl cu't polat &o a
1peclftc lrvlae reaidentlal de·
velopmeat from wblcb they
were ucluded.
Tbil ar1u.,ient convindd
Oranae County Supedor Court
Judie James F. Juqe to rule in 1m that tbe cue tbould be dis·
missed since t.be plaintiffs "bad
no lecal staadilur:"
In overtW'lllng Judge Judge's
decision, Court of Appeal Judge
Mar1uet Morris said lbe plain·
tiffs -seven low-income
persona who expressed a desire
to live in Irvine -didn't have to
point to a apeciric residentJ,al
project from which they were
excluded.
Instead, lbe judge said, in or-
der for t.he case to be tried in
court. the plaintiffs merely have
to contend that there is a
'!camel relationship" betweeen
lrvlne'a aonina policies and tbe
plaintiffs' inability to find 1
place to live in Irvine.
The lawsuit, filed Oct. 10, 1978,
by a coalitloo or legal groups,
has cost the city $88,887 to da~
in legal fees. according to Assis-
tant City Manager Paul Brady
Jr.
A second lawsuit; also charg-
ing that Irvine's housing policies
were dlatriminatory. ended up
costlna the city $213,000 before it
waa finaJJy settled out of court
with tbe city and the Irvine
Company agreeing to provide
sites for 725 "affordable" hous·
ing Wtits, Brady said.
The lawsuit currently under
way was filed by the Legal Aid
Society or San Diego, the Legal
Aid Foundation of Los Angeles,
the Legal Aid Foundation of
Bodies unidentified
Long
Center
Angel
each and the We•tern
Law and Povery in Loi
Last ear, the Irvine City Coun·
cil pa sed a c:.omplicated
"hous· element" to the city
Genera Plan in an attempt,
among other things, to develop
an affordable housing policy
that could stand up in court in
case any future housing lawsuits
are filed.
Two nien executed
in Mesa apa1·t01ent
Mater sollttlde
Looking for a quiet place to read? This woman (ound one
Tuesday afternoon on the Balboa Peninsula in Newport
Beach. With temperatures in the mid-60s along the beach,
her outdoor reading room wasn't all that uncomfortable.
OCTD to resume
contract parleys
By GLENN SCO'M' Of_.,..., ..........
IC stat e conciliator was
scheduled today to resume con-
tract talks between union and
Orange County Transit District
o fficials on the eve of a
threatened strike b y 957
mechanics and bus driven.
If called, the strike could
begin at 12:01 a.m. Thursday,
halting bus service to an
es timate d 80,000 daily
passengers -many of whom
are commuters who ride twice a
day between work or school.
District officials were passing
out ruers today to bus riders.
The notices cautioned them that
buses may stop running on
Thursday.
The conciliator was requested
by distric t officials after
workers voted last weekend to
reject three-year contract of-
fers. Talks resumed Tuesday,
but little progress was made,
sources said.
However. district officials
made public their latest offet -
a three-year contract to bus
drivers that represents· a 31 per-
cent salary increase. including
projected cost of living raises.
OCTD drivers currently earn
a top pay of $9.46 an hour. The
contract would boost that pay at
the end of three years to a pro-
jected $12.70 an hour, district of·
ficials said. Union leaders were
unavailable today for comment.
James Reichert, district
general man ager, said
negoUators are trying to reach
an agreement-with the drivers
first.
By .JEB&Y CLAUSEN
·Ot-o.6ty ...........
Costa Mesa police are in-
vestigatin,-the execution-style
gunshot slayings of two men
whose boClies were found in a
ransacked fourplex unit Tuesday
afternoon.
No bail
for rape
suspect
ByF&EDEIUCX.SCHOEMEHL
Of .. Del..,........... .
An Orange County Superior
Court judge has placed a no.bail
hold on a Laguna Beach man ar-
rested on kidnapping and rape
cbar1es while be wu free pend-
ing an appeal of a previous sex of.
fense conviction.
Judge William Thomson -the
same jurist who permitted
Donald Stephen Gittln. 38, to re-
main free on a $25,000 appeal bond
followingtbeAugustconviction-
said he hoped the victim in lbe
most recent rape case will not
blame him for what happened.
Gitlin, of 2807 Alta Laguna
'Blvd .. was arrested by Laguna
Beach Pol!ce before dawn Friday
a fter a 19-year-old woman
claimed she was abducted, drivtlh
to an wiknown location, raped and
forced to participate in other sex
acts.
Court records show that Gitlin
was convicted by a jury of assault
with intent to commit rape, as-
sault with a deadly weapon and
oral copulation in a case involving
two 16-year-old girls who had
'been hitchhiking from Buena
Park to Huntington Beach.
(See BAIL, Page A!)
Irvine teens face
mischief charges
Two teen-agers, who police aJ.
lege used a forklift to tear down
several trees al Irvine High
School, have been charged with
felony malicious mischief and
joy riding, police said today.
Irvine police Lt. Bob LeMert
said the 15-year-old and the 16-
year-old were released to their
parents after their arrest Mon·
day. He said the incident oc-
curred last month. •
Battle lines drawn
Pro, anti-pomo force• claah looming
Can Miss Candy Samplea, the
fresh ruck movie queen, Counter
the en.made of anti-smut f0ttea
in Newport Beacb?
That answer may come a
week fro.m today when
Newport's one-and-only adult
booll: store and X-rated peep
show arcade is acbeduled to re-
open for business on Mariner'•
Mile.
·Antt-porno1raphy foreea,
however, may be out front
before the tu shop even °'*"
it.a doon. •
Spoke1man Jim Helfrleh
HJI Ida IUllPGl'terl wll) blllD
• rouad.u..cloek •tl·llDul ¥llll
Prida1 .......,. to protelt re-
,... ........ baolE .....
llellrlell lllO ~ • ~e ..c ... na.,.llb raUr 18 fl'llilt
ol It -w. OoMt .. , . .....,._
• Hb•••l•4 1raad re·
openin1 day, ·however, Jack
Tupler, mana1er of the Tilt of
the Town Book store, plans to
muter bis own pro-porno people
to counter the antl-amutten.
Tupler-says hls X-rated sup-
porten will be led by porno ·
movie star Kiss Samples and a
couple ol others. . "If we 1et them out front, I
think you'll really see tratflc
•~art to back up," Tu pier suc-
1elted.
It la unclear if Mias Samplel
and tbe otber movie fl1un1 would f~ a eanfrontaUon, but a
c6uple of otber women are
ac:heduled to be out front SandlJ
at tbe 2 p.m. r.U,.
Tber are Newport BHell
M a1or .laekl• Heather ... couaell.,.•u S•el1• Hart .
Boda Gftld•lr ...... ., -.... •kl•llf ............. .
Tlaeewf0t•118111loek ....
was closed lut October when its
stock waa incinerated by a ftre
blamed on arson. Thia was
'followed by an Oran1e CcKmty
Superior Court cease-bualaeu
order.
But now the st-te Supreme
Court bu allowed the book store
to reopen, at leut temporarily,
pe.ndinl the outmme of oCher'
lecal teatl.
Tupler, who waa watcbln1
workmen put tbe ftal•b'°' n-
mode ll n 1 toucb11 to bla book1tore TUeaday afterDOOD,
1ay1 be bu DO obJectloaa to tbe
pnMlt rall1. Re taJI lt'1 fNt ...............
Bat 1ae bM tlil own adverUltaa ....... .=.=.=:..at.= ear.a._,.,..._....., ., ...... -. , ... ......,, .... Al)
..
The still unidentified victims.
described as in their mid 20s, ap-
parently died of shots from a gun
or guns held to their beads, said
detective U . Jack Calnon.
Officers estimated the two died
abouttwotothreedays.ago.
Their bodies were discovered
o.M, rfNt ,..., .......
s~s TO CANCIA
Robert 'Pop' Amold
'Pop' Arnold
dies; lroine,
Mesa of/icer
Cancer has claimed the life of
veteran Costa Mesa and Irvine
P.olice Officer Robert E . 'Pop". Arnold, who succumbed
Tuesday while on leave from his
duties with the City of rrvine.
He was 62 and had served 16
years with, the Costa Mesa
Police Department before retir-
ing and then rejoining law en-
forcement with Irvine.
Funeral services for the
veteran patrolman who came to
the Harbor Area with his
parents as a boy during the
Depression will be Friday at
11 : 30 a.m. in Harbor Lawn-
Mount Olive Mortuary, Costa
Mesa.
• Officiating will be a nephew.
the Rev. Benjamin Madison.
Burial will follow at Wlldomar
Cemetery, Riverside County.
Uniformed members of the
Costa Mesa Police Department,
including bis younger brother.
Harold "Sam" Arnold, serve as
, honorary pallbearers.
Officer Arnold was a U.S.
Army veteran of World War II.
He served in South Pacific
island campalgn.s.
He seldom spoke much of
wort as 1 policeman, but his
written reports were lenstby
and tboulbtful, with every key
detail of a cue included.
(flee AaNOLD, Pa•e M> ~
Newport man held
on anon eharge .
A 41·rear-old. Newport llMeb
mu Ml beea al'"9led • a SH.MO Waabta1toa warraat
cibarlbta ldm .ttb anon aDd couflrM1. .
Police aa1 ••tborlU•• la Clallam 0-.,, W.U.., ~ ..., ................
l•Hllore DrlYt, blred •• adlYldual to Ht nre to Ill• ........._ ccmdomlolam.
by a suspicious Costa Mesa man
who used a borrowed ladder to
climb to the murder scene in
Apartment D on the second floor
of 1251 Baker St., officers said.
Calnon said investigators are
following one theory that the two
died during a robbery.
Neither vicVm's wallet was
found in the apartm~nt rented to
Brent Wheeler, a butcher, and
Giovanni Paz. a hairdresser in
Laguna Beach.
While officers reported that
neither of the dead men had been
identified today, neighbors said
late Tuesday that they last saw
Wheeler and Paz Friday.
One neighbor said she thought
the two. described as "quiet and
polite, .. had gone away for the
weekend because both of their
cars were parked in a lot behind
the fourplex.
Investigators said the murders
were reported by Michael Angire.
30. Wheeler's brother·in-law.
Angire. they said, had tried to
raise someone in the apartment
three times Monday and Tuesday
because Wheeler bad not kept a
weekend ~poin(ment with hiS
mother in Tustin.
Police said Angire borrowed an
aluminum ladder, climbed to the
men's second-floor apartment
balcony and parted the curtains
behind a partially opened sliding
glass door.
He saw l wo bodies lying in blood
on the Uving room floor.
Angire, officers said, climbed
back down the ladder, wen~ to a
ne ighboring apartment and
called police.
Thatwasat5:30p.m .
Investigators. hampered by a
U.S. Supreme Court ruling re-
quiring a warrant to enter a home
where murder is suspected, did
not begin their death scene in·
vestigation until nearly 10 p.m.,
Calnonsaid.
Neighbors said late Tuesday
that Wheeler and Paz had moved
into the white and gold fourplex
about two months ago.
"They weren't low Uves Ute
some of these guys who live in
apartments,·· commented one
neighbor woman who said she did
not wishtobeidentified.
"They were pretty quiet and
polite. Oh, they held some dinner
parties once in awhile. But it's
been quiet up there for the past
rew days." she added.
Coast
Weather
Patchy low cloud~ in-
cr~asing tonight tbroqb
Thurs day mornin1 .
Otherwise fair wttb sunny
and cooler afternoons.
Lows tonlCbt 45 illland to
low SOI at beaches. Htsbs
Thuraday 63 aloft& coast to
st inland.
IN81••191MW
Quolift calla!dkl CCMldMt
ore d"""*'8 Ollt of Clw local
ec.u. Wnalr ltOffr cor,_ ••lorn .,.,.. o/ Ullt ,........
· Sn POfll Bl.
. . ....
~-::-·-= .... .. .,_._.. ... ·~=
S-1 :
::.;: ....: &;:.~
.... CM ~IM
tJCM
I
Dllty ...... Swt-
PUn. .... OP COITA ..U .. ITORICAL IOClnY PURCHASED fOR ll0,000
Ola • 1 ••lu1111t Md._.. IM&Mdlne • hoUM city'• dOcumenta end erttfect•
Mesa to purchase
home for artifacts
City Council members have
decided to purchase an Oranse
Coast Savin1s and Loan Associa-
tion office for SI0,000 to house
the Costa Mesa Historical Socie-
ty and its collection or docu-
ments and artifacts.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal
proposed the purchase, report-
ing the 3,000-square-foot build·
i ng •s estimate d value at
$200,000.
He said tbe savings organiza·
tion looted at the lowered price
as ·•an opportunity for com-
munity service."
In agreeing to purchase and
move the orrice from the corner
of Adams Avenue and Mesa
Verde Drive, the council also
displayed thanks by ordering
$100,000 in municipal funds de·
pos ited with the savin~s firm.
Orange Coast Savings recently
moved its offices from the older
one story structure to a new two·
story buildin~ next door.
The city is expected to move
the three-year-old building -
complete with a walk·in vault -
to a new location al Lions Park,
part of the new so-called Super
Block in downtown Costa Mesa.
Betty Beecher, historical
society president, called Mon·
day night 's coun cil action
"almost unbelievable."
ForJner mayor and active
society member A.L. Pinkley
said, "This is the best news the
Historical Society has had since
we acquired the Estancia
Adobe."
He said the group bas been
struggling for 15 years to find a
place to store artifacts.
Society Vice President Trudy
Ohlig thanked the council, but
admonished members not to
give up her group's request for
land on which to place several
buildings considered historical
in nature.
Councilman Donn Hall, who
motioned to approve the build-
ing purchase, said later, "There
is a possibility it (the structure)
might be available for other or-
ganizations."
But he said he basically
moved to spend the $80 ,000
because it enables "some very
nice -people to be custodians of
the past."
Dick Read. president of the
savings and loan firm, said land
on which the building now rests
will be converted to a
landscaped parking lot.
---JVST BRElfKING---
Late 1terru from today's world and natioftol rwws dne~s.
Talks break down
in Polish strike
WARSAW. Poland (AP) -Talks broke down bet ween strildng
workers and the government in the southern city of Bielsko-Biala,
and Deputy Administration Minister Czeslaw Kotela returned to
Warsaw, Polish state radio reported today.
Solidarity trade' union leader Lech Walesa, who was
attempting to mediate an end to a nine-day-old general strike in
Bielsko-Biala. told The Associated Press by telephone, "1 am still
opli mistic," but added:
·'Whatever we are doing here is forced upon us by life. We don 'l
want to goon striking anywhere. But we are constrained to do so.
"We are not afraid. and even if we should lose -it's better to
fall standing upright than to go ignominiously backward."
Gold prke re .. __..
LONDON CAP) -Reversing its recent slide. the price of gold
rose sharply·in Europe today to eclipse the $500-an-ounce ma rk.
The dollar fell on exchange markets. (Related stor y. B6).
London's five bullion houses fixed the gold price at $505 a troy
ounce, up from $488.25 late Tuesday. Dealers said buying by
central banks helped push up the price.
¥aRclal da•age• .,..
TERA MO. Italy (AP) -A young man hammered and badly
damaged works or art in the cathedral or this central Italian town
today, police reported.
A 15th century panel by the school of Italian painter Gentile da
Fabriano was among the works damaged, along with a statue or
the M adoMa and other minor art.
Damiano di Dionisio, 22, who police described as unbalanced.
was arrested and charged with vandalism.
~· ...... .,,,,.,.,.
WASHING TON (AP> -The Senate Finance Committee voted
6-3 today to raise the government's borrowing authority by $50
billion.
T he votes against the first bill pressed by the Reagan
administration were cast by Republican Sens. William Armstrong
of Colorado and Steven SymmsoridahoandSen. Harry F . Byrd, an
independent from Virginia. Sens. Bill Bradley, 0 -N .J., and George
Mitchell, D-Maine, voted present.
A..erie•• •alfl relwefl
BERN, Switzerland (AP) -The Swiss Foreign Minlatry
said today that an American held in Iran on unspecified
charges, Mohi Sobhani, 44, or Los Angeles, bad been released.
Spokesman Otbmar Uhl, who earlier reported a trial of
American freelance writer Cynthia B. Dwyer on espionage
charges took place today, said tbe Swiss Embassy had been in-
formed in Tehran that Sobbani had been freed.
Sobbani, born in Iran and a naturalized American citi1en,
was arrested in Tehran ~n Sept. 6.
ORANGE COAST Dilly_ Piiat
Thomaa P. Haley .......
Robert N. Weed ,,,_
M. ThOmu KMYll ·-Thomas. A. Murphine .....,.,_
cewteaH.Loos ~~l-
lernetd Schulman ~
Cert ear.t.nMn ,......o.....
~~oddard, Jr.
CIH.m.d edwetd•ntt 714/142·M71
Alt other dep9,,rMftta 142-4121
OFFICES
Cotti MIM, t:J0 WMI .. y Slt"Mt t1•2t l~ llNdl: tea1 No, COHI Hllftw•Y ..SI H11MI .... 9M<li: 1111S 9Hcll .... le¥Md'2!N7
Ce111yrltllt nil Oftftllt C..ft "'*111111 .. C..,..,..,. NO
"•Wt ttlwlH, l11111tratloM, ed1tor1•t m1111er o< to-1rer11se-n1> 11ereln mo be ••P•ocluceo wllhoul \pedal permln lo<I ot«~OPY•illll' owner.
Se<Ofld <ltis -•• p91d •• Cot•• Mew. c .. 11on1I• !UPS 1..-0l . S-•19110n by c•rrltr M 00 INM!lty, by mall U to monlllly, mlHl•rv dttllnatlOll1 M 00
""°""''"
..
r ..... r~..t•
BAIL ..•
Judge Thomson sentenced Git-
lin to six years and rour months in
state prison. but stayed imposi-
tion of the term pending the ap-
peal. He allowed the defendant to
remain free on the $25,000bail Git-
lin posted shortly after his arrest
by Cypress police last April.
"He has a right to bail on ap·
peal," Thomson said in an in-
terview late Tuesday afternoon.
"His appeal wasn't considered a
frivolous one."
The judge noted that Gittin's
lack of a criminal record and the
support of his ramily and attorney
were factors he used in permit-
ting the convicted felon to remain
free
"I was wrong, but that's the
kind of decision I have to make all
the time, "Thomson said. "I think
it ($25.000) was a substantial bail
for someone with no criminal
hack ground.··
Thomson said he was "con·
vinccd'; that had he denied Gittin
bail on appeal the decision would
have been overturned by an ap-
peals court. "Bail would have
been set and his brother (Harlan
Gitlin, part o wn er o f an
a utomobile dealership) would
have made it."
·'The reason for the appeal bond
was it was him. There was
nothing in his background that
would indicate that he would goon
a crime spree." Thomson said.
The judge Tuesday revoked
bail for Gittin at the request of
De puty Dis trict Attorney Jan
Cummins. She prosecuted Git-
lin 's earlier case.
Ms. Cummins. who had argued
against Gillin remaining free
pending the appeal, said, "I felt
·he was dangerous all along.··
"When it comes to these sex of-
fenders, we need to take a closer
look, "she said.
Gitlin has been charged in the
Laguna Beach case in a com·
plaint filed in South Orange Coun-
ty Municipal Court with kidnap-
ping, false imprisonment, rape
and sex perversion. Judge Blair
Barnette has set bail in that case
at $500.000.
However , Gillin could not be
freed because of the additional
no-bail hold imposed by Judge
Thomson.
PORNO •..
"We'll have a photographer
here," says Tu pier , giving a tour
of his unstocked bookstore, :·and
customers can have their pic-
tures taken with them. This
should be popular.··
He says the sex shop will be
open 24 hours a day and will
have security guards on the
premises at all times.
Newport city o rficials .
meanwhile, are hoping the
California Supreme Court will
block the reopening. Last week,
the high court agreed to tem-
porarily block enforcement or ci-
ty adult entertainment laws.
The decision means that the
bookstore can go back into busi-
n ess until justices decide
whettier to hear the shop owners
appeal of city laws that have
kept them locked up.
City officials. however. are
asking the high court to reverse
its decision and keep the shop
closed until the court battle is
settled.
Apartment thieves
get S 11,000 loot
Burglars carried orr nearly
$11,000 worth of loot from a
Newport Beach apartment this
week after removing a second
floor window and cuttin1
through a screen.
Dr. Roy Ruzas told police tbe
crooks broke into his ~romon
tory Point apartment Monday
anemoon and made off wttb a
diamond ring, television set and
remote telephone.
Embassy seized
MEXICO CITY (AP) -About
80 unarmed students have selled
the Lebanese Embu1y here and
demanded tbat the unbuaador -
help tbeql set .., lntemew wltb
the Hm!tary ol education to alr
tAelr pievabees, witnetlft aald.
No violence •at reported .
iii
in crash
A 4-yeU'-old Cotta Mesa boy
and an urudentlned 20·year-old
motorcycllat were killed in
unrelated traffic accidents
Tuesday in two Oran1e County clues.
The child, identlfled a• Brent
Wilson, died of injuries he
suffered when the car his mother
was drivinl collided with another
vehicle at the intersection or
Broadway and Edinger A venue in
Santa Ana.
Neither the mother, Olga H.
Wilson, 32, of 147 21st St., Costa
Mesa, nor tbe driver or the other
vehicle, Virgil Starnes. 65, or
Santa Ana, was seriously hurt.
OHicers said Mrs. Wilson's
vehicle was northbound on
Broadway while Starnes was
proceeding in an unspeciried
direction on Edinger when their
cars collided. The accident is
under investigation.
In Orange, a 20·year-old
motorcyclist was killed when his
vehicle slid out or control on
Glassell Street and struck a trash
truck. which was backing out or a
driveway.
The Orange County Sherif£
Coro ner 's Office said
identification of the crash victim
was being withheld pending
notificationofnextorkin.
Both accidents occurred
Tuesday morning.
r ..... rflfleAI
ARNOLD ..•
One involved a conversation
with a pair or hippie brothers
rifling· a market dumpster for
overripe produce for home con·
sumption. He recorded their
philosophical discussions of
lifestyles and concluded the
young men were harmless.
During one 24·hour period, he
helped talk a berserk gunma
who had already shot. one man
out of an ups tairs bedroom
where the man was barricaded
with an arsenal of loaded rifles
and shotguns .
Hours later. Officer Arnold
was chasing a berserk organ
grinder's monkey that invaded a .
Costa Mesa home, driving out
the occupants with hurled pots
and pans and leaving the place a
shambles.
"Wildest case I 've e'ler
handled," the taciturn police of.
ricer said, surv~ing tbe mess.
He is survived by his wife
lreen, and a son, Robert, both of
Wildomar. Also surviving are
daughters, Mrs. Pat Morrison,
or Wildomar. and Mrs . Judy
Ehrlich, of Costa Mesa.
Survivors also inc lud e
brothers Harold "Sam" Arnold
and Jack Arnold, both of Costa
Mesa. his other, Mrs . Edna
Arnold or Santa Ana ; three sis·
ters, Mrs. Virginia Overton of
Huntington Beach. Mrs. Doris
Wil.monl or Mission Viejo and
Mrs. Margaret Walker of Escon-
dido.
The family suggests memorial
contributions in Officer Arnold's
name to the Costa Mesa Police
Officers' Associ~tion. in care of·
Capt. Robert Green, P.O. Box
1742, Costa Mesa, 92626.
Pay pact signed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Acting
Mayor John Ferraro has signed a
pay pact giving Los Angeles
police officers a 10 percent wage
hike retroactive to July 1.
Ferraro's action followed a 13·0
vote by the city coundll.
""~ SHE'S OUT OF HOT WATER WITH THE NAVY
Playboy model Der1ene Reina grin• et new•
Nude set free
Charges dropped by Navy
WASffiNGTON CAP) -The Navy has dropped charges
against a remale petty officer who posed in the nude in Playboy
magazine, officials said.
Asked about the status of Yeoman 2nd Class Darlene
Aubrey Rein. the Navy said Tuesday in a statement it decided
to drop charges and discharge her from the service because of
delays In pre-court-martial procedures. The statement also said
she had been kept on duty beyond her scheduled discharge date
of Oct. 21 pending a court-martial.
"The Navy does not condone activities either on duty or out-
side normal working hours which bring discredit upon members
of the naval service or the Navy uniform," the statement said.
·'The Navy considers it inappropriate for its personnel to pose in
the nude or semi-nude~"
In October. the Navy filed charges against Ms. Rein, alleg-
ing conduct prejudicial to.good order and discipline. disrespect
to a superior commissioned officer and violating a general or-
der or regu.lalion.
Espionage elaimed
American writer
in Iranian trial
BERN, Switzerland (AP) -
American free-lance writer Cyn.
thia B. Dwyer, arrested last
May in Iran, was tried today by
an Iranian Revolutionary Court
on espionage charges, a Swiss
diplomat reported to the Swiss
Foreign Office in Bern.
A Foreign Office spokesman
said the diplomilt attended the
trial and that a verdict was ex-
pected Monday. The diplomat
reported Mrs. Dwyer appeared
"nervous but in good condition"
at the one-day trial in Tehran.
The Buffalo Evening News,
meanwhile. quoted another
Swiss diplomat in Tehran as
saying that Mrs . Dwyer. if con·
victed, might be sentenced to
prison or expelled from Iran.
The State Department said to-
day it has been told tliat Dwyer
was given a hearing in Iran, but
not a trial.
William Dyess, the State
Department spokesman. s'aid in-
formation re ce ived i n
Washington didn't confirm re·
ports frpm Swiss officials in
Switzerland that Mrs. Dw yer
was tried on espionage charges
and would be sentenced Mon·
dav.
Mrs. Dwyer, 49, of Amherst. a
suburb of Buffalo, N.Y., went to
Iran to write about the Iranian
revolution and was arrested
May 5 on suspicion of espionage
.,..,...,.....
ON TRIAL IN IRAN
U.S. writer Dwyer
for the CIA. Swiss officials. look·
ing after American interests in
Iran. have been attempting to
negotiate her release.
John Dwyer. he r husband,
~aid in Buffalo he had heard
news reports about the trial hut
had no comment. ------
Winter Clearance
Feb. 6 to Positively Feb. 8
Super Savings to 70%
on Skis and Boots
Save 50% on all
Men's, Ladies', Kids'. Clothing
lnm
4708 Banonca P~ ~ IMne,CA ,_..
llNIU ·
'
Auto Woes iouch heartland
Town dependent on Chry1ler 1uff er1 1etbacks .
NSW CA.Wl'LI, lDd (AP> Wllla a
.._. ti a Civil War IO&dMr on U..
~ 1quare and tM am atal•
Mall...U cbamp60Mlllp IMUIMr la lh• uw IUD sc!Mol nm, New Caall.,
........ very ... ,bodlmenl ol mlddlt
Amerita.
A ctty ol 11,llt people llvln• amid
C'Or8 _. soybHn fields 46 mUet from
l9d6.....-11. t l• • plact ot 1&nfallln&
coelUlly and deep pride and deep
aauety. H.,.•" what people ln New Cu\lt 111t .. ,....,, m their own words, a their ma·
jor ell\Pk)yu Chry•ltsr Corp strua
1te1 for Ille
"•Y ClllLO&IN A&E arowln& up
lhe l~l people 10 the world because
ol \his place. . If lhey say they're
1oin1 to play basketball at LO o'clock at
ni&llt ia the school gym, that's where
you'll ftnd them." Dick Gross, who
was maoaaer of Chrys ler's forge and
machiain& plant here from 1974 to Jan.
23 of UUs year.
"The community was comfortable
with the situation before. There were
seasonal, and market, ups and downs.
Now it's a hungry community for the
firs t time in decades. It will not allow
itself to be kicked into the ground. . . .
Whether Chrysler fails or whether
Chrys l er lives, we have got to
diversify." -Rick Thras her, a busi·
ness development specialist.
·'No names. please. They take
reprisals over there. Not Gross. The
superintendents. Gross was the best
manager we ever had. He shook every-
body's hand every Christmas. The
others just put up a notice on the
bulletin board." A worker quaffing a
cold one at Brown's Hole, a tavern
across the street from what people
sometimes call "the Chrysler" when re·
ferring lo the 74-year-old plant.
Synth~tic
fuels
plan last?
WASHINGTON (AP>
-The head of a group
of companies trying to
build the country's first
commer cial synthetic
fuels plant has an ·
qounced a financial plan
he described as "in all
probability the last ef-
fort" to save the $2
billion facility.
The new financing
plan for the Great
Plains Coal Gasification
Plant in Beulah. N.D.,
tries to meet objections
by gas consumers who
were successful in de ·
feating an earlier pro·
posal.
·•After lut week '1 lay,olfl, there are 743
peopl e on -roll fhere ; 2 ,100
uaed to be the ma1ic number." -
Mayor Bud Ayera, who once ran •
1leam hammer in "the Chrysler."
: 'I remember friends whose dads
were laid off In the '508. They ate potato
undwlches. Tbfre were a lot fewer
Mnelill then.'' -Insurance aaent John
L•ne.
"We'd be beat if it weren't for the
TRA (Trade Readjustment Act) -
down the tube." -A worker in Brown's
Hole. The federal TRA payments may
provide up to 70 percent of a worker's
pa)I for a year.
"In December, Chrysler workers got
3,819 weeks of TRA payments. The
December unemployment rate was 17.7
percent." --Cletis Kinser of the state's
Employment Security Division office in
New CasUe.
''l'VE GOT THREE JOB offers in
Florida, I'm single and I may go." -a
newly laid-off worker in Brown's Hole.
"I've got two houses, one paid for and
one not, two kids in school, a wife and
I'm supporting my mother. I can't pack
up and leave, I just can't. That's why I
voted for the concessions." -The fi rst
worker in Brown 's. United Auto
Workers Local 371 approved, by a 3·1
margin, a contract that cuts workers'
pay by l3 percent.
··Any decent jobs out there, the young
guys laid off early have already got
them." a worker in Brown's.
"I WON'T TALK TO you, not after
that Wall Street Journa l article... -
Larry Lawson, night barte nder in
Brown's, referring to a story 17 months
ago.
"The article was not offensive; it was
everything that came after that. The
article made us a hot topic and the TV
statiom de9cended on us. They were
beatinl people over the head for 1tate·
menta. One of the stations asked a
Realtor the same question seven times
-what does Chrysler mean to New
Castle? -and she answered it seven
Umes and finally she said , 'I don't real·
ly know,' and what gets on the air? ·1
don't really know.' " -ex-New Castle
manager Gross , now manager of
Chrys ler's Kokomo plant 6:> miles
away. ·
"IN lt8t, WE HAD 65 attempted
suicides up to Nov. 1. In all '79 we bad
only 61. Tbe average age of the people
who attempted suicide was 56 in 1979
and 31 in 1980." -Roger lteeves, head
of the police department's emergency
medical service, which covers all of
Henry County, wilh 48,000 people.
"It has not been a textbook case. We •
have yet to experience what we expect·
ed in behavior problems . · ... What has
happened is the adults are trying to up-
grade their credentials in the job
market in" our General Equivalency
Diploma program : .. and in the
m achine shop and welding in the voca·
tional school. we now have to turn peo·
pie away." -School Superintendent
Phil Borders.
"FROM A MARKETING viewpoint,
we can tell potential clients the new
contract shows that they are practical
people here." -Thrasher .
··It could operate as a job shop.
There's a lot of forging work out there."
Local 371 president Luther Ferrell.
"The first positi ve thing is the people.
With the productivity these people have
begun to generate, you can't turn yo ur
back on it. ... Selling the plant a,s an
ongoing operation is still a live option."
-Gross.
Arthur Sed e r "J r .'.
chairman of American
Natural Resources Co.,
said Monday the project
likely would be aban-
doned if the consortium
did not have affirmative
responses on the latest
i>lan within three weeks.
ALL IS NOT SERENE IN PtCTURESQUE, SMALL INDIANA TOWN
Chrysler financial troubles causing anxiety In New CHtle
THE PLANT was a
major e l ement in
former President Jim·
my Carter 's pus h to
spur development of a
domestic synthetic fuels
industry. The plant
would convert coal into
125 m1lhon cubic reel or
natural gas daily.
The Ca rt e r ad -
ministration gave ten·
tative approval for a
$1.5 billion loan guarantee.
The future of the plant
wa s seve rel y
jeopardized by a federal
appeals court ruling in
December whic h in·
validated a financing
pl an approved by the
Federal En e r gy
Regulatory Co m -
mission.
MEANWHILE, of.
ficials said multimillion·
dollar synthetic fuel pro-
jects in seven states may
be balled or sharply cut
back because of stiff
budget cuts being con-
sldered by the Reagan
administration.
Adoptions·
aided by
business
MINNEAPOLIS CAP>
Big bus in e ss i s
reaching out a helping
hand to employees
wishing to adopt a child.
A typical new adop·
lion policy now offered
by Honeywell , for exam·
pie. provides that the
company will pay a ll
direct adoption expenses
up to a maximum of
$1 ,000 per child. Typical·
ly. adoption costs here
range from $300 for a
stepchild to $3,500 for a
foreign child.
"Since the company
provides medical cov·
erage lo employees who
have children through
childbirth, we decided it
made sense to also help
our employees who have
children through adop·
ti on ," said Ed Lund.
vice president of ad-
ministration.
_._..,.CT
CORNER
Rare Colna a SUmpa
GOLD&SIL~A
prices for 2-3-81 _C___ -C111U15
KruQerr•ncJ• M•ple t.eat
100 Cororw• so Pesos 'IO'Sil-.r~\
..., -U07.M Ult.50
UOJ.50 U14.50 '
M74.00 5487 .00
'412.00 '4U.ot
1017% 1071, ,,..-...., ............ ..
c:.e ... -..... . (714) 55&-ll50
South Coest Plaa VIiiage -·-·· ·-----)
NET WOITII S500,000 _,?
IMRA• .. TAXES .. ,.om
CALL 751-3911
bl fir •. Cris Prica
Certified Financial
Plcmer
first Y2 ""' c.s.ttltilll At Ml Cllarp
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
THE
ROADSTER
gm....,.. 91wd ................ ,,Ce.
............ -......... (nt) • 1111¢ (?M) •-191
When you're away and someone's trying
to reach you, an Answer Page beeper lets
you know-instantly!
• World's largest computerized paging agent.
• Widest selection of pagers: single-tone.
dual-tone, silent (vibrating)/ audible
combination, memory storage and more.
• Wide-area coverage-15.000 square miles.
• Direct dial access.
• A location near you, plus field representa·
tives at your beck and call.
• 24-hour·servlce. We never sleep.
• Daily rental or month-to-month.
• Free unlirttited beeping, free delivery and
free full maintenance.
• Quantity discounts.
• Call today for literature and a free
demonstration!
W ith Answer Page, you may be out of
reach. but you'll never be OUJ of touch!
~~Sl\IER MllE
645-1342e 731-7777 •831-2493 ~ Ull ---....... _,.,. ..... -~·
Agent fOf ~Relay Corll0!8IOI
DAILYl'l.OT
8+. Earn ·("Cl
"'" On P.aSSbooks ~ of as little as $10 . .
9% Annual Yield·
8.50% Annual Rate
NO TERM REQUIREMENT THRIFT BY MAIL
• Yleld 11 baled on lntere1t being credited monthly to the Pa11book balance end belne
m1lntalned for one year. f'und1 In bythe 10th earnlntere1trrom the 111 ofthe month. Pa11book lntere1t 11 compounded dally and cre4it•d monthly.
FOR CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS ONLY
*FREE CORDLESS EMERGENCY LITE
PERFECT FOR POWER FAILURES,
BLACKOUTS AND OTHER EMERGENCIES
Operates on 2 "D'' batteries (Included)
Pull off ... it lights -
Put back ... ifs off
Complete with wall t;>racket
•FREE WHEN YOU ...
Open a passbook account with $1000 or more,
this emergency light is your FREE. Limited quantity,
offe'r good only while supply lasts!
HIGH INTEREST PLUS FREE GIFT
A REAL VALUE FROM ...
A Cenlenn1a1 Thrift and Loan Assodation
• • 731 North Euclid Street 18820 Brookhurst
Post Office Box 4606 Post Office Box 8310 ~ ~ .. Anaheim, California 92803 Fountain Valley, California 92708
...... (71 4)533·3072 (71 4)964·911 1
THERE'S
A THIEF IN
YOUR HOUSE!
You're being robbed this very moment and it's an inside job. The
thief is di~uised as your water heater. It can account for up to 40%
of your total energy bill.
The sun can heat your water and at the same time reduce your
cost by as much as 75%. State and federal governments and the
public utilities provide unheard of incentives. Government tax
credits alone red uce installation cost by more than half.
1. Federal tax credit: 40%
2. State tax credit: 15%
3. Utility credits totaling from $720 to $1.475
4. 100% financing o n approved credit
There will never be a better time to consider solar. The sun
will be around forever ·· but not the incentives.
Call : (714) 661 -6881 or (714) 831 -5670
SAVE WITH SOLAR I GAS
Authorized Distributor For
King Energy SyJtemJ
Systems Inc.
32422 Alipaz, Suite B •San Juan Capistrano, CA 92675
Contractors State Llc•l'lse 391503
If it'sgot
wheets,
you'U move
It faster In a
Dally Piiot
> ..
:
}
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS • .-r•-:==:::":-r:.:·~-i::·--~~~.m'r::'·..._ ........... ~ ..... _, .. w:M... .. ........................ .
"
UP .60
CLOSING 141 .17
Boosttoee....-.
'Mature' work
force due in U.S
By SYLVIA POaTER
Our 1980 census profile says th at on avera1e.
Americans have now reached the "mature" age of 30 -a
higher age level than ever has been achieved by most of
the rest of the world, and a ripe age that we in our own his-
tory have reached only
once before.
'(That previous 30·
year mark was re-
corded back in 1950, a
generation ago, when
the low birth rates or
the great depression
era followed by World War U compelled a rise in pur
average age).
Now at the start of the decade of the 1980s, we've re-
turned to the unusually high average age. Is that good or
bad news?
FOR THE ECONOMY, it's good news. And it's a dem·
mographic factor upon which I have been basing my op-
timism for our nation's outlook as the decade rolJs on.
The reason is simple -as this generation's workers
become older, they will become more skilled in their jobs,
more experienced and productive. A more productive
worker means a more productive economy .
The prolonged era during which our nation's produc-
tivity (amount or goods and services produced per worker
per hour worked) has lagged so conspicuously is drawing
to a close.
WITii THE SHJFf wiU come a revival in the rise in
living standards and a return to economic stability.
Of course. there ar e many e xplanations that
economists s ubmit for the slowdown In growth in recent
years.
Among them are the spiral in energy costs ; excessive
s pread of government regulations t hroughout our
economy; destructi vety steep and broad taxes ; degenera-
tion in relations between labor and management and
decline in the fundamental work ethic associated with
Ame rica's hJstory of prosperity,
But no matter how much .weight 1s given to any or all
these explanations. a basic cause that cannot be ignored is
the influx during the decade of the 1970s of masses or
young. unskilled workers into the labor force.
THE RISE IN THE proportion of young to older
workers, of unskilled to skilled in our working population,
had to reduce our overall productivity and did.
The oversupply of young workers is a major, though
overlooked. reason for the persistence of a high rate of in-
fl ation side by side with a high rate of unemployment, ac-
cording to Richard A Easterlin. University of Penn-
sylvania economist.
Easterlin argues. past governments would revive a
' sluggish economy by cutting taxes, hikjng federal spend-
ing or increasing the availability of cheap credit 1 Those policy moves would prompt consumers to s pend
more liberally and in tum prompt business lo produce
more goods as well as invest in modernizing equipment
and plants, Easterlin said.
THESE DEVELOPMENTS would. in turn, always
create more jobs and lead to a general era of prosperity.
But lacking in the 1970s was a fairly steady supply of
skilled labor. As Easterlin emphasizes in his new book.
"Birth and Fortune," throughout most of the past decade,
the labor force cons isted largely of the young and un-
skilled. And according to associate Brooke Shearer. it has
been "an important contributing factor" to our problems.
As the numbers of teen-agers and young adults looking
ror work stabilize '(and fa ll) the unemployment level will
decline. The contrast between the 1980s and the '70s wi ll be
dramatic.
1'<1. Up IS.4 Up IJ.I Up IU up n.s
Up lO.t Up 10.I Up 10.0 up u
u11. '·' Up 1.t Up U Up U Up U ~" H u: 1.J Up 7.1
IC......,.... 1 trtyoa,, &m,00, •&II.It.
~ .... ',,., .... uu,oo, ""'" •• Me•IUlll ...... u ,,.. ........... .
112.00 • ........ -~-·"""'"" ...... .....
te.Ke: 0..-...,..,.
Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appear in the Daily Pilot.
Sllrrr
NEW YORI( CAP) Hanclv ' Harm.tn
sllvtr lodrf SU.Ml, up $0.~.
E n9e111ard \ll•tr sU.t tO, up SO.lt;
laDrlcat41d illver SU. uo, uP to 413.
L-: moml"9 11•1"9 "°' U, 1111 Sll.00, Leaf .. : anernoon 11•1"9 ISOS 00, 1111
Sii.JS.
... ,,., a•tv-''-'"' ti4t.tS,..., si..1s. ,,...,_, flalng "°' 01, I.IP Ut.S2.
lttrkll: , ....... moon li•inv '*·ao, "" no.oo "°'.oomed.
Maafy a Ma•,,.••: only d•llY QllOtt
$j0j,00, ""$11.11
............. , O'llY Oelly Quott UOS.00, U11
S11.7S •
......... : Oflly ... 11, llUOI• ·-i<.wct
uu.to,.., '"·'°·