HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-04 - Orange Coast PilotI
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DRAIG I GUST .YOUR HDllTlll llllY PIPll
l/V f DNt:: SO A 'V NOVl MfJl-A l , -4l:J 1 ORANGE COUNTY C A L It OHf'.41t. 25 CENTS
M~sa short-circuits electronic gallles
Despite protests by a local
merchant, a game machine
salesman, an electronic game
center owner and former Gov.
Edmund ''Pat" Brown, the
Costa Mesa City Council bas
passed a new electronic game
machine ordinance.
Brown's comments were aired
during a pre-council s tudy
session Monday wben Planning
Director Doug Clark reported
the former governor had sought
an ordinance delay by phone.
Clark said Brown bad alatN
be is lobbying for iame
interests in the state.
Clark said be sugg~ated that
the former aovernor come to
Costa Mea for the ordinance's
second bearing, a requirement
before lt becomes city Jaw.
The ordinance -redrafted
after game promoters packed
the City Council chambers to
protest tough regulations
proposed by the Planning
Commission -allows the
controversial games.
But it clamps some
requirements, including adult
supervision and a ban on play by
youths during school hours, oo
those businesses installing four
or more of the machines.
Such firms must acquire a
permit good for six months and
re-approved on the basis of how
well the individual business
performs ln policing itself and
youngsters.
Business owner ~ucien Blason
complained, "Di>n't you tbin1t
we are over-taxed, over-licensed
and over-everythlnged right
now?"
He called the games "good
baby sitters."
•'These games take money
away from kids so they don't
spend it to smoke pot.'•
Lance Hailstone, spokesman
for a game distributor. said,
"We reel discriminated
against." He said be la
concerned about the cost of
pe rmits and adult supervision.
Georg e Katsanpes of
Huntington Beach ls an
electronics game center
operator who took a different
view.
"I'm for regulatint them.
They're a definite problem. But
if you are eoina to regulate it. do
it for the sin11e machlne, too." ·
He added. "'lbe way it la now,
they put in t.boee machines, one,
two or three of them, and foreet
them."
He said the regulations should
apply to all businesses,
regardless of the number of
games installed.
Space shuttle launch postpon~d
County v ote
tabulation
'on schedule'
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEBL °' ...............
The turnout in Orange County
In Tuesday's election for school
boards, special district boards
and various initiative-type
questions was 10.8 percent, the
county Registrar or Voters office
reported today.
While breakdowns for specific
districts weren't available this
morning, the registrar's office
s aid the couotywide average
was well below the 15 percent
turnout that had been forecast.
Shirley Deaton, chief deputy
Catalina I sle
boat mooring
b id s so ught
to registrar Al Olaon, said final
results were known at 1:30 a .m.
-"ri~t on schedule."
No problems were reported
with the county 's new Sl.5
million vote counting system -
a sys tem that performed
miserably during its nnt use in
th e June, 1980, primary
elections.
Election res ults were not
r emarkable. In Irvine. voters
opted for a $250, rather than a
$100 , limit on individual
contributions to councilmanic
campaigns. At the same time,
the voters in the Irvine Unified
School District said the district
should be permitted to increase
t he interest rate on school
con~truclion bonds beyond 7
percent.
Irvine voters, in a non-binding
statement, said the city should
proceed with plans for a $38
mUUon civic center. City offices
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The today are housed in a pair or
s tate has opened bids for buildings in the Irvine Industrial
handling boat moorings on Santa complex.
Catalina Island, but any but the In Newport Beach, voters
present operator would have a overwhelmingly agreed to an
hard Ume meeting the terms. increase in the city's tax on the
The State Lands Commlasion rental of hotel and motel rooms.
voted 2-0 Tuesday to seek bids Thal rate will go up from six to
next month for a 15-year lease, eight percent. minimum $1.9 million. Io Laguna Beach, the city was
It did so after hearings in given permission by voters to
which Southern California seek a loan from the state to
·boaters said the present firm, fund the city's financial
the Santa Catalina Co., bas done obligations ln the Aliso Water
a good job and they fear another Management Agency. a regional
firm might raise the rents too network that provides for
high. sewage tre~tment. .
The Island Co. has handled the Voters .10 Laguna Niguel
moorings for 30 years . .....--i resoundingly defe ated a
Contf'olled by the Wrigley prol?osal to for~ a munlclp~
chewing gum family, it owns the advisory counc~l. The eounc1l
island outside the City of would have adVlSed the county Avalon. Board of Supervisors on matters
The offshore state land-· affecting the unincorporated
consists of the harbors and community.
coves, except at Avalon. The
most-used state land is in the
Two Harbors area.
Any firm but the bland Co.·
would be hampered by. not
owning the island outside
Avalon, about an hour by boat
from Two Harbors. Also, any
new rmn would have to buy tbe
moorings from the Island Co., or
Install new ones. ·
Bidden will have to make a
rental olfer...U.t the renta it will
cbarae, and describe how it
would provide dally 1arba1e
1ervic11, patrol boats, rescue
1ervlt11, towinC and mechanical
work, moorln8 maintenance and
fresh water.-
The b6dl will be oonaiffred by
the three·member commillloe
at Ua Dec. 17 meettn1 In
Sacramento. The current 1 ...
uplre1 Dec. 31. -
CommlHlon membera aatd
they would bate t.belr dedlioa
on the revenue to tbe aute, t,,e ~ qualll)' of_ 14FVICft, and tbe
r1C.1 tor moortaP. ' t
·E lvis' drug
'die t ' relate d
during tri~
MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAP > -
When Elvis Presley went on tour
with his rock 'n' roll show be
followed a dally drul diet drawn
by Dr. o.r1e Nicbopoulot th.at
Included a smor1ubord or
medications, .the physician
taUfted. Nkbopoub ended more tbaD ·
two days ol leltlmoay Tuelclay
In bJI Criminal Court . trtal on
cbar1ea of o•er·presed-1•1
dru11 to ..._ley, who died ta
Au1uat 19'1'7, rock 'n' roDer Jen;
Lee IAWil and otMr pa&l..U.
Final .ar1umenll were
1cbeduled today by def ..... and
proaecuUon auom.11 befon ~
cue loel f'> tbe Jury. ,.
.........
The countdown cl.ock for the Space Shuttle launch is ltopped at 31 1ec011iU during an attempted launch
today.at Florida's Kennedy Space Center. They'll try U again Friday.
Solar power backed in BB·
Use recommended for. all new homes and buildings
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of .... DlllfJ ~ .....
Huntington Beach pl•nners
have recommended that all new
homes and buildings be required
to have solar water heating
sytems instead or relying totally
on conventional energy. .
"The price of electricity and
natural gas bas now reached the
point where solar has become an
· effective option in Southern
Calltornla ... ·· states an
89.page report, which is in draft
form.
The report suggests that, U
city officials don't want to
mandate solar heating system•,
they cQuld reqvtre new
construction to include book-ups
for easy conversion to solar
power.
The study alSQ notes that new
con1t111ct101'I and land1capln1
ahouJd take Into c9n1ider1tion
"·solar acceu" and not block out
the sun'• rays to nearby
bulldlnp.
'• Wltb the Slat• lner11
, COmmt11kla pndi~ Uaal cme
la Het'J "" Callfonlla bomel wUl be uaiq some form of IOlar ~ 1•. tt lt tmperatm tbM
Jlunt.lnltOD Beach aamme now
the i11ue of provldlDt solar
acce11 lD exlltlaa •DI hltun den~l." the report 1111.
The study should be completed
and forwarded to City Council
members tater this year,
according to city officials.
Jim Barnes, associate planner
for the city. says it baa become
commonplace for the city to
process applications for
'The most
co m pelling
argumen.t in
f,a v or.
economic.'
. is
residential solar bealln1
equipment. Accordln1 to the
report, city officlala received 111
permit appllcatlona to iutall
reaidenthl solar he1Un1
sy1tem1 durln1 the flnl ftve
monlbs of 1181.
The ~ saya a l'eUdlaUal
solar beaUna 1y1tem coetl up to tt.ooo. Tbere an vu1oal ._
and federal tu credltl and
low·lnter11t loau anUable fot
the purcbue aad 1D1«1ll1t• al·
tolar ,Jhe report 1tate1.
• 'Tbe cttr ••• eHoara .. wtaU.Uoa ol aolar .......... new~t.or,u ....
cities have done, solar can be
required in new developments,"
Barnes said. ""
Cerritos and Davis are two
cities that require solar water
heating ln new developments,
the report notes.
·'The most compelling
arsument in favor of
conservation is economic:
saving a barrel of oU can be up
to 10 limes cheaper than
producing a new one, •1 the study
says, adding that conservation
reduces reliance on imported
oU.
The report also states that
"passive solar desl1na'' can
provide between 85 and 95
percent of heaUnt and coollnl
needs for a typical Oran1e
County bome wit.bout tbe me ol
connntional enerty.
A pa11ive s11tem la
"accompllabed thoru~..:
carefUl lot lit1n1 and
de1t1n •.. ••the report 1tate1.
Thia inctudu "winter
HPolUN met aumnmer 1b1•ttn1
of 1outb·facln1 11111 ... lncrellld U-.al ... Of tbe
ll 1' u 't u r e tl» e • • a o • t temperature YariaUOu . . .,~ ............... ...
...... to ...... ......... ......... , ...... .
•
Friday
take Off
targeted . 1.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.' \
CAP) -Launch of the shuttle '
Columbia was delayed today, l twice, and finally postponed
until Friday at the ea=
TetboicaJ problems elev , I with an .,.u.nng 31 ffCODds
on the c:ou,qtdown clock. 4
Joe Engle and Richard Truly
were strapped in their cockpit •
seats, ready to fly, when the I
clock was stopped cold. ' I
Columbia. filled with •
half-a-million gallons or volaWe 'I fuel , entered its ''terminal I _
countdown'' flawlessly at , ·
sunrise as excitement mounted 1
here for the ship's never-before I .
accomplished return trip to l
space.
High hopes ended at 6:35 a.m.
PST when launch director
George Page revealed a
problem with a lubricatin1
device ln Columbia's on-board
auxiliary power units. The APU;
steer the ship on launch ancJ
stabilize its landin~. ·
The astronauts, 10 the ship for
more than four hour.. were
taken from Columbia and back
to their crew quarters. They
wore smiles of resignation.
A last-minute problem also
halted the first attempt to
launch Columbia on ber maiden
flight April 10; the problem tbeD
was with communication•
between computers. It wu flxedo
quic.kly and the ship launched'
two days later.
Now, as then, a two-day
postponement is necessary
because Columbia's fuel tanks
must be unloaded and
decontaminated -a difficult
and lengthy process .
Unfortunately, the weather·
outlook for Frlday la none too
favorable, forecasters said.
(See SPACE, Pase AJ>
llllCf ClllT lflTlll
M 01tly cloudy toni&bt
and Thursday morninl
wllh partial clearlna
Thursday afternoon.
Variable hl1h clouds.
Cooler days with hi1bs
Thursday rangln1 from
the upper 801 at the
beach• to m1d..-'70ll lnland.
Lows toni&bt mostly in the
SOs.
llll•TIUI
The gia•at .ore 1tl1•t ••
Beir"'· but for 1aoto lotlf1
Atdhorutet .or• wary of
leUfng lhdr ftlGrd doWll.
P,afe A1.
llRI
: I
COAST COM•VNITY
COLLEGE
-predlldl -of ....... d8
........ An•l-
Eledl
Jamn Evans, 10.218
alellanl 0..-, H, 7U
'l'nl1ee Ana I
Eleet l
Mark Bayless, 8,225
Geor1e aodda, 11,M
SADDLDACK COMMUNITY
COLLEGE
ZJZ preelaeta Mt of
. marttlaeta
Tru&ee Area 4 •
Eledl
Mary Jane Hanneun. 4.599
Perr)' Jacobson, 4,299
Ea1w MeK•l11d, 1%,51%
Donald Cole, J,aB7
HUNTINGTON BEACH
UNION IDGH SCHOOL.
1 .. predadl -of l .. predaeta
Elects
Norma Vander Molen, 4,207
Zita Wessa, 5,532
Marlette Slates, 4,906
Stepbell Smltlt, 1,351
Re Stevena, 1,279
Pat Sullivan, 1,251
Jerry Supernaw, 5,881
Sherry Baam, 5,M8
Roa Mareu, 8,M5
CAPISTllANO UNIFIED
SCHOOL
15 predneta Mt of
15predacta
Tnll&ee Area 4
FATAL CRASH -William Tate. a 21-year·old ~ewport
Beach man, died Tuesday morning when hi s small car
s mashed into a concrete support at the Red Hill A venue
overcrossing at the Corona del ~ar Freeway in Costa Mesa.
Eleet 1
P-.ul Sayre, 1,136
Doris Driml, 418
Peg Maynardi. 1,291 Jan Ovenoa, ;s,ztz
,~Di e d .r;ich bribery reversal -hit . Prosecutors tseek to topple appeals court decision
LOS ANGELES (A p ) -But Diedrich's attorney, Keith
Prosecutors trying to overturn M o .n r o e , s a i d , ' ' T h e
an appeals court teversal of prosecution's theory that the
r o r m e r 0 r a n g e Co u n t y crime is the receipt or money is
SuperVisor Ralph A. Diedrich's a m i s 1 e a d i n g o v er ·
1979 bribery convictions argued simplification.
before the state Supreme Court He argued that payment or
that one shouldn't be able to money may be evidence of a
avoid punishment by arranging bribe. but it is not an element of
, delayed payment of bribes. bribery, because the crime can
Diedrich had been convicted b~ corqmit~d without actual
on three bribery ,counts related ·. P'1Y~eqt. to cancellalioti '6( a land Attacldng lbe idea that a
preservation contract betwie~m corrupt orritlal wh~ e xtended
the county and a developer. payment would ever expect to
But the appeals court reversed get paid, Monroe said, ,"Any
' decisions on all three counts, bribee who is plannlng on
including bribery-conspiracy, extending payment beyond the
'• after Diedrich's attQlln~y argued stalute of limitations is probably
t. that the actual bribe tbok place ID for a rude s bpck."
beyond the statute olllimitatioos 1he bribery ~legations were
and the later transfer of fl'!oney related to ttie Marth 6, 1974,
was not pa~ or the a,~t of bnbery cancellation. ,ttf~ an agricultural
from which the period or la.nd pr~servaUon .contract
limitations would be.measured. signed wlth the county by
"The o~ject of the consp~acy Anaheim Hills Inc., a developer. was not JWll to ask for bnbes,
but to receive them," said
assistant Orange County district
attorney Michilel R. Capiz:z.i in
attacking that argument
Tuesday.
U nder the contract the
developer pafd lower taxes. on
the tract alter acquirine it ln •
1970. When lhe developer waqted
to build on. the land, the cOWtty
............
ROYAL PAIR Princess Diana 1 foreground 1 and her
s ister-in-law Princess Anne ride through th'e gates of
Buckingham Palace ip a horse-drawn QOach on their way to
the opening oC Parl(ament. ...
0 .. ANGECOAST Daily Pilat _ lo
···-__ _......,
'CIHelftM ~-714'1424171 All other depenmente 142-4321
had to approve the contract
cancellation.
The appeals court also ruled
there was a prejudicial error in
jury Instructions on the first
count, and on a second count,
that the bribe agreement must
occur before the official action
to be influenced takes place.
The dispute on the second
count hinged on charges that the
bribe agreement was made the
December after that March 6
vote. Capizzi argued tbe March 6
vote did not settle the matter
since the development 's
approval was still liable to
county review.
On the jury instruction point,
prosecutor J . Richard Haden,
the deputy state attorney
general who argued the state's
case during the appeal, said that
the instruction that the jury
could choose a lesser ofCense
had properly not been given
because the statute of
limitations on that lesser offense
bad already expired.
Brown mulls
special
• session
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr., in response
to the state's fiscal crunch and
the battle over reapportionment,
may call today for the
Legislature to meet in a special
session, the Sacramento Union
reported.
The newspaper , quoting
unidentified admlnistrative and
legislali ve sources, said the
governor moved closer to calling
tbe · session following reports
that the Democratic leadership
in the state Senate had softened
its opposition to such a session.
Brown's closest political and
fiscal ad vise r s h ave
recommended calling a session
lo enact changes in welfare
ellgibllity and perhaps some
measures to increase stale
revenues.
The proposals come in the
wake or a state deficit, caused
by increased spending a nd
declining revenues, estimated at
more than $500 million for the
current fiscal year.
Late last week, Brown said he
would make decision on whether
to call a special session "within
a few days."
Democratic legislat
want to handle n
state's Cisca1 proble
lake care or reappo
state 's four B
Equalization district.$
Republicans, mea are
willing to return to s• ento
to consider financial le lion,
but oppose dealln1 ·witb
reapporlionm41nl, fearl:tJ the
Oemocrats will attempt lo
thwart GOP efforts to overturn
the reapportionment plan by
referendum.
During the last legislative
session, the Democratic
maJbrity approved bills to
chan1e district llnea accordJnl
to the 1980 cenaus . The
redistricting plana protect
Democratic Incumbents 11
much u possible.
The Republicans hav,e
launched a referendum drive,
seekln1 to co11ect the 34f,119
1l1naturn needed to put the
rHJ)portjonment IHue on the
ballot next 1ear. f
From Page A1
SPACE. • •
Moreover. "It could be longer,
depending on what the problem
is with the auxiliary power
unit,•· said launch control
spokesman Hugh Harris.
He said too-high pressure was
detected in two out or the ship's
three APUs. ·
"We know it will take at least
two days, so we're looking at
somethihg like Friday -or
Saturday , or Sunday or
Monday,'' flight director Neil
Hutchinson told reporters.at the
Johnson Space Center in
Houston. "It's goiag to taketJme
to get the filters °'*t of the APU's
and purge them and clean them
and bring them back on line."
APU manager Dwayne Weary
said NASA's experts felt the
units would have worked on
launch, but they were not so
confident that they could be
restarted satisfactorily for
re-entry.
"We felt it might have been
OK, but we did not have the test
history and data and experience
to give us the confidence to go
a head," he said.
Once the weather proved
acceptable, it seemed today that
Columbia's Launch II would go
as smoothly as its debut flight..
The countdown was runninl a
few minutes late until lt bit
0:00:31 and froze. It wu 4:48
a.m. PST.
At first, the unwanted "hold"
was a mystery to everyone.
"We were not able to restart
the coundown clock. We do not
know why," Harris said.
The cloe,k, like Columbia
ists&U , is controlled by
computers which automattcally
command a shutdown ii they
sense anv malfunction. National Aeron'Ulti<:s and
Space Administration experts
determined that the computers
halted the pre-Ignition sequence
because messag~ to lower the
acceptable pressure threshold in
two fuel tanks got to the
com uter too late.
Trutee Area &
Eleet I
Paul Haseman, 2,118
Ilene Krawie, 1,734
Al Keller, 1,729
Tnastee Area 7
Eleet l
Michael Vaughan, J ,226
Merl Doty, 1,869
Annette Gude, Z,"4
FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL
30 precincts oat of
30 precincts
E~t3
James Woest, 1,'88
Roger Bel&ea, 1,351 David Boyd, 686
William Manes, 1,256
Suzanne Moore, 1,3H
Stacey Richardson, 482
Ann Galas, 945
HUNTINGTON BEACH
CITY SCHOOL
34 precincts oat of
34 preclacts
Eleet 3
Roy How, 1,934
Sherry Bartow, Zt28'
Pat Cohea, 1,MJ
Brian Garland, Z,311
IRVINE UNIFIED SCHOOL
38 preclntts oat of
38 preclaeta
Elect Z
Jobn Flynn, Z,MI
Baff Wlllte, 3,358
Jeff Winneke, 438
John Jaeger, 429
Roger Denney, 252
Andrew Barna, 245
John Mundy, 1,415
Irving Marks, 1,265
Gene Conley, 1,307
LAGUNA BEACH
UNIFIED SCHOOL
IS predllda Ollt .t
18prec•ta
Eleet s
John Luna. 80
Bruce Hopplng, 330
Janet Vickers, 1,453
Carl Schwan, 1,540
Tom Philo, 342
Dan Danlea., 1,138
Pat Barry, 1,129
Jack Miller, 284
Arthur Moskowitz, 160
William Kentle, 998
William Kadi, 53
John Chrispeos, 215
Roberta Christiansen, 163
Terry Carter-Humphries, 86
TERRAILLON
The newest dimen-
sion in time keeping.
Great gift item, practical
l\ tool
!:\ ~
Reg. '1 9"
SALE ~-1099
Sale prioea .n.ctl\08 thru 11/Ml1
Subject to Supply
on hand
~
NEWJIOltT-•UA VNlftU IClleOL ............ ., .. ~
TnaeeAna z
David Nat.Jdn, • Ferrett Wener, S.tH
Charlie Olbbl, l,MO
Tl .. eeArea• Walter Zillar, 181
Slaerry ....,...now, 1,MI
Lawrence Maaeet]22
John Rinaldo, 1,178
~Areas
JudlUa Frueo, 1,m
Jose_pj\ Phllbrtck.Z,380
Traaee Area 7
Lenard Davta, 1.492
Vincent Bellone, 810
Aoclertek MaelOUlaa, 4,511
Beverly Ritch, 901
OCEAN VIEW SCHOOL
41 pred•eta oat of ·--•eta ElfftJ
Steven Sm.1th, l,0$3
Jim Powers, 575
Marlaaae Bl au, 1,7%3
Susan Markham, 1,075
Flint llorrison, 729
Doris l!:nderle, 1,298
Darrell Carter, 1,305
Charles 0.tert...t, 1,9'1
Jaaet Garrtell, 1,411
COSTA MESA 8ANITAaY
53~oatof
53 preclnda
Eleet S
Jlm Wu.er, 1,813
C. L . Ropp, 1,472
Ormy Cranll:, 1,MI
Harry Gnea, l,tll
DANA POINT 8ANITAaY
t precincts out of
t prec•cta
Elect 2
Rlcbard ll•ce, 438
Fred llobelU, 33t
Donald Klaasen, 159
ha Kelly, 311
MOULTON-NIGUEL WATEa
DtrillGa z
Elect I
t precincts oat el
t preclatta
Howard Lanis, 313
Gerald Back, JTI
Dtrin-3 Eleet 1
10 predncts oat of
It prttlaets
Jobn Zorger, 203
Dwl&bt WUUam ... , Mt
Mike Chilver, 116
..
SUNSET BEACH SANITARY
Dlree&or
Eleet Z
Bnce Hieb, 81
Francis Maywh9rt. 47
Stepllaea llowe, 137
1"1H:llOI'
Elect 1
Billy Lavinger, 23
8aaaa Proser, UI
lavtNE
Measure A School Construction
Bonds
Yea, 4,471
No. 1,421
Measure H -Civic Center
Yea, 3,817
No. 2,149
Measure J -$100 Campaign
Contribution Limit
Yes, 2,757
No. 2,MJ
Measure K -$250 Campaign
ConUibutioo Limit
Yea, S,%44
No. 2.418
IAGUNA BEACH
Measure L -Water Loan
Yea, 1,531
No. 503
NEWPOaT BEACH
Measure M ~Increase Bed Tax
Yea, 3,1Z5
No, 1,891
LAGUNA NIGUEL
Measure N -Municipal
Advisory Council
Yes,m
No,1.-
TOO MUCH
TIME ON
YOUIHAMDS~
..
'.
........ ~ .. •• "1
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,Wednelday, Noyember 4, 1881
~ ... '"' '
GRADE 12
<A~-ot scores on• S(llt of 100-4'00) <•v•r•oe scores In percent of corrtet answers > •
RMCllng Wrftlftt ~th lltNdlng Writing Spelllftl Mat9'
APISY.RANO UNIFIED 29•1305 297/306 292/306 1'.on1.o 72.8/72.S 69.tno.1 6'.7/67.•
FOUNTAIN VALLEY ELEM. 213/292 2M/302 270/293 73.3fl3.8 72.3fl3.7 68.1n1.o 65.•/MA HUNl'.ING:fON BEACH-UNION HIGH-
RNdlne Writing SpetlJng
68.ono.1 67.7fl0.0 1•.•ns.•
6S.7/61.I 6S.V66.0 10 ... n1.• 10.1n 1.2
HB CITY ELEMENTARY •ms 2811295 283129~ 74.l flS.6 71 .3/72.3 64.7/69.7 M.2/63.7 ..
IRVINE UNIFIED 293/297 29 .. /300 285/292 76.1fl7.'-73.8fl5 ... 11.on1.2 64.7't'.0
LAGUNA BEACH UNIFIED 3111333 292/328 301 /337 16.1n 1.9 16.on 1.2 69.0fl1.5 11 .2no ...
67.6/67.3 68 ... /66.9 12.6n3.3 11.2n 3.2
71.6fl0.0 70.7/69.1 76.2n s .6
NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED 286/302 2761293 2841289 1'.2n s.2 70.6fl2.9 64.9no.2 ~.1 /65.,.
OCEAN VIEW ELEM. 280/287 281/289 293/303 76.2/175.8 1e:on1.2 72.8/71.4 70.7/68.9
68.0/64.2 68.3/66.7 12.2m.6
J
SANTA ANA UNIFIED 22 .. /22A 232/233 230/2..0 S9.S/62.0 59.2/63.3 60.2/63.1 53 ... /56.3 58.3/58.0 57.7/58.3 ... 62.5163.4 •
SEAL BEACH ELEM. 326/334 320/ll" 339/3'3 n .6n 3.6 73.8fl ... 2 64.8/65.0 6S.5/63 ... •
WESTMINSTER ELEM. 273/271 269/265 263/257 ' 71 .2/69 ... 70.3fl0.2 ~.3/~.2
STA·TE AVERAGE (1980-81) 25' 255 2S.. 66.2 • 65.6 60 ... 63 ... 63.1 68.0
State skill test results 're
, )•
J ... ct positive attitU~e'
Do Orange County students
have more positive attitudes
about 1olng lo school and the
importance of a good education?
An Or an ge Co unt y
Department of Educ ation
specialist in test scores believes
they do, based on s tudents'
perfo rmance on the 1980-81
series of California Assessment
Progra i:n tests in the areas of
reading, written language,
spelling and mathematics.
With the exception of the
S a nta Ana Unifie d Sch ool
District. which has a 76 percent
minority enrollment, all school
districts in Orange County had
average scores higher than the
statewide average.
Along the Orange Coast, as
has been t he us ual cas e .
s tude nts out performed their
inland counterparts, the test
results show.
The relative afflue nce of
residents of most Orange County
com munilies contributes t o
bette r -than·a verage s tudent
performance. according to Dale
Russell, the county Education
Departme nt's research a nd
evaluation administrator.
And, says Russell. the test
results "refl ect more positive
attitudes towa rd schooling."
T he single most · remarkable
aspect of the 1980·81 results.
released Monday. is improved
per formance · by 12th grade
·I , •
High school seniors' i~.!..i.J......vement increases have been noted at the that dts""1ct.s~.terrormance m r UtpTU secondary level. be com~ >
leads COUnty Students' k.' ()re SUrge The tests. administered maFtohremexaatics .·sec'o~~e f:;e~h~lS~ annually, are given to students
in the third, sixth and 12th grade studelin the Seal Be h students on tests of the tour areas and the same or lower in grades. Elementary ool Distr ict s
basic skills. only 27 percent. 3-43. That tr tales to a 91.h F o r e I em en t a r y sch oo 1 Scores for third grades are percentile r ing. which me~
For exa mple, Russell said, districts, which offer education reported on a scale of 100 to 400, th l B h ,... resuJts for the county's three with 400 being the highest e avera~eJ a eac sc~ e high school districts show that through the sixth grade. scores possible score. was betterea by only 3 percltll scores were higher than in 83 we re higher in 58 percent of all of districts statewide.
f 11 possible scoring areas and lower !.icores for sixth and 12th In the Laouna n .. ach Unified percent o a possible scoring • ~ areas. In only 17 percent of the in 42 percent. Russell said. g rader s are reported as a School' Dis\rict. the third gradf'
possible cases were scores the "What the fig ures show is that pe r cent number of correct math score was 337 , for a 96th
same as last year. or lower. they're doing exceptionally well scores and thus fall on a scale of percenWe ranking.
a t the secondary le vel, and Oto 100. Other scores fo r sch ool
In unified districts. which h o ldi ng t hei r o wn at th e Each average score for an districtaalongtheOraogeCoast.
offer education at all grade elementary level." Russell said. i nd ividuat grade level in a the Santa;¥· a district and thl'
levels. scores were higher in 73 Russell said 1t is the first time particular subject area can be s t ate aver, es are shown in t ht>
percent of a ll possible scoring s u c h "ac r.oss the bo a rd " compared to statewide norms so a ccom g table. •
* * * * Encouraging trend
draws Riles'praise
* * Superagency to split ii
Supervisors aim for more health aid, better service .,
SACRAMENTO <AP> -State
school officials bave ha iled new
test score results that showed
California's high school seniors
improving in reading, math,
spelling and language use after
a long decline.
··California's s eniors are
holding their own with the rest
of the country. and getting
better all the time ... state sch..x>I
Superintendent Wilson Riles
said in a statement.
Analysts ln Riles' department
said it appeared that the state's
n e w r e quirem e nt that
graduating seniors pass tests in
bas ic skills, a new e mphasis in
state programs on the upper
grades. and possibly a more
serious student altitu<le toward
tear uing contrihuted lo the
im provement.
The tests were given last
December to all 220.533 public
school 12th.graders. a nd this
April and May to the 265.463
t h ird.g rade r s and 293 ,920
sixth.graders.
Scor es f or third -a n d
sixth-graders continued their
steady climb of the last fi ve
years. again exceeding national
averages set by test publis hers.
But the high school scores had
beep f a lliag for a decade.
mirroring a national decline.
The California scores s tarted
leveling off a bout three years
ago, and last year showed slight
Improvements In a ll areas
ext:ept reading.
T his year's scores s howed
s ub sta n t i a l g ain s i n
mathe m a tics and s m a ller
improve ments in the other
subjects.
Riles. for whom the Seniors'
performance has been a political
embarrassment. could point to
several other en couraging
signs:
A nationwide test taken last
year at 106 Californi a high
schools yielded slightly higher
scores tha n the n a t ion a l
average.
T his year's Scholast ic
llAILS AClllF:\'£.\TF.\I
.'i11p1 \\"1/su11 Htlt>s
Apt i tude T es t sco r es o r
college-bound seniors also were
s l aghtly above the na tiona l
aver age. And a new a nalysis
Mon day m'a de California's
per formance look even better
because 35 percent of its seniors
took the SAT : 19 other states
had a higher percentage take
the test but only one , New
Ha1T1ps h ire . h ad a h ighe r
average score than California.
Cooling trend due
•
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Tell us whit's on your mlnd.
By GLENN SCO'IT workers and SlOO million of the The details of separating the ·
0t 111eoe11, ,.. ... s1ett annual budget. social .services division from the •
Orange County government's County experts did not say if mental health a nd h ealth
r\irgest superagency, the Human t he c hange would improve department.a is to be worked out 1
Services Agency, will be split administrative problems long by staff workers in the next 45 • •
into two independent units: a associated with the HSA. But days.
health agency and a social Mrs. Wieder Hid the current In other matters Tuesday. th~ ,
services agency. sys te 1t1 ba4p·i aucoeded. 'upervttort t.ook jac:ilion on these
Th 4; count y Board of Her talks wlth state health lasues: •
S upervisors authorized the and social services officials
change Tuesday-on a 3-2 vote. revealed that Orange County
Pro ponents o r the plan, bas a poor reputation witb those
DISABLED: Author ized an
app)\cati o n to the s ta t e
Personnel Board for a SS2,500
arant to start an advocacy
program for hiring disabled,
persou to county jobs .
Harriett Wieder. Roger Stanton who control the purse slrin&f.
a nd Bruce Nestande, utd the "Now I discover we lack
c h a n ae wi ll help clarify credJbWty, do bot resSJObct ln a
conflicting1 directives , increase timely manner and have
chances of attracting state and difficulty presenting accurate HARBOR BOULEVARD:. f e dera l a id a nd improve and documented data," 1hesaid.
services to clients. Selected consultants Berryman
& Stephenson Inc. of Anaheim
to prepare a $70,000 t raffic
safety and flow study covering
the Harbor Boulevard Corridor
from 19th Street in Costa Mesa
to the north county line
··Based on its performance
a nd from t he pers pective of
accepted prin c iples of
organitation. the present HSA
s tructure 1s irrational," said
Stanton. a former university
instructor of management.
Supervisors Ralph Clark and
T hom as Riley, the two veteran
members of the board. voted
against the restructuring. They
said splitlmg the superagency.
which was formed in 1976, is too
drastic a step.
The largest of the county's
t hree super agen c ies. HSA
currenUy employs almost 3,000
wor kers and has an annual
budget of \S231 million. Much of
the money is channeled through
the county agency to clients
from sta te a nd f e d e ral
sources
The social services division
accounts for about 1,500 of the
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Cert1fitd GtmoloRllt, AGS
OUT OF THE POCKET
and onto the wrut
Until the la te 1920s, most
wa t c hes we re made to be
ca1':1 . in the pocket. By 1935,
a 95 percent of all watches
fist watches. The history
watch and how people
ed il as jewelry is very
ng. Way back in 1530,
arles V had a watch
in Ms ring. Watches
w so placed In the heads of
w ng sticks, the clasps or b~elets and on pendants. The p dant watch Is still popular
w th ladles and Is a treasured
glft. ln the late 1700S, some
ladles wore wrist watches as a
novelty item. Yet, as late u
190·0 , a s hipment of wrist
watches from Switzerland wu
returne d to that country
because Ame ricans slmply
would not buy them. By th•
twenties, wrist watches were
beln1 accepted, even by mea,
and the nrst aell-wind1nt wrtat
watch •u introduced iD Im.
''Based on its
performance
the present HSA
structure
irrational."
.
is
As ked by board Chairman
Ralph Clark whether he thlnka
splittini the two divisions will
help win grants, HSA Director
Larry Leaman said he wouldn't
be able to tell until a state
procedure for disbursing federal
block grant funds to counties is
adopted .
Leaman added : "My gut
feeling -and it's only that -ia
that one agency would be better
for competing with others for
funds."
AMBULANCES: Approved a
new master cont ra c t for
ambulance and van services for
certain county clients effecth·e
immediately and doing awa~
with situation discovered last
spring in whi ch variou!-
contracts paid differing rates
Master contrati is indexed , tn
medical rates. ,
' WASTE MANAGEMEN{I'.
Awarded to Engineering Scieq~e
Inc. of Santa Ana a $168.~>0
contract to analyze county wru;tc
manacement program and
recoq>mend new co urses lol
actlo'\ _to address expense ~nd
unpop\alarity of land!Uls. · 1
·r
Skilled, Professlontl • • •
·sERvtCE
·~
For your valuable jewelry ~w•tches is as
close to you •• J . C. Hu~les Je·weters
where our own cr•ftsmen ~~he work under
personal supervision.
./ Fine Watch Rep•fr
./ Diamond • Precloua hm Setting
./ Fine Jewelry C•re a ft!tpalr
./ Original Jewelry Deelgn and
Creations
I Gem & Jewelry Appraisals
tlghfft prtcH pek1 tor lrnpottaftl .. ,.. and
Jewelry piece• expeftty apptalMd by . . .
J. e.JJ"'"l'J.,;., ~-&rd
The Mickey MOUN .nat wateb MEMIEA AMERICAN GEM IOCIETV
of 1933 Wal • blc hit. Tbe Nit.. 1~3 HE~T BL\IO COSTA MESA @ hlal.Ory. Wrilt wa~bet of tM • II YIMl IH THI IAMI 1 l'lli!.&,Tl()tl
latest detip are now ·~~Jl!!lel$Al!!!!"'!•!1ee1!!,.iu!....,!!!! ~ '\f'e,moat SOUlht·•fter 1Hta. _
S Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wtdne1day. November4. 1~1
~standards • remain
S~ate panel will ignore cost considerations
t'AsmNGTON (AP) -In ita vulnerable groups , s uch u co ntrol equipment at lenat 11rJ,a. action on rewriting the child ren, t he e lderly and con sidered ln setting the
Cwan Alr Act , a Senate pregnantwomen. primary standard s and
committee has t e ntative ly The tentative vote Tuesday, d etermining the margin of
a •r e e d t o k e e p t h e which must be followed later by safety.
ct11rent system of ignoring cost a formal vote· on precise The Reagan administration
cqmsiderations in settin & language.__ was taken almost rejected the lndustry .approach
pr,ill)aryalr standards. without disc ussion . Both in its general principles on the
The Senate Environme nt Republican and Democratic Cl ean Air Act, sayln& it
C tim mtltee approach would members said it represented a supported continuation of the
rtWJ.&ire primary air pollution clear consensus oo the issue. health-based standards and the
Jirajts lo be set at a level that The vote represents a blow to safety margin. However, it has
w~ld provide a margin of som e in industry who had sought argued that more data are
h4'Nth s afety for particularly to have the cost of air pollution required on what health risk
tut actually is posed by various
t pollutants. • kl nd d rs es The voice vote was the ... ' i r a ·e n 0 highlight of an informal session ~ during which co mmitt ee
Orrupt;on co.ntrols m e mbers discussed t he .act
11 ge n e r a ll y . hoping to -Cl od
consensus and plan art agenda ,s-for more formal action later
WASHINGTON (A'P > -"Both reason and huma n It also dealt with one of the
'A f~·C I O Presid e n t La n e feeling s upport the view that r elatively non-controversial
K lif kl and h as endor se d there are situations in which a sections of the law. Still before
l ea;s ta tion to toughen the 10-year disqualification is too the committee are disputes over
g~rnment's attack on labor severe."hesaid au t o emission s tandards.
COj'lfUption, saying any union Wh i l e Kirk l and lauded protection ofalr quahty inareas
lei(ier who abuses his office cong re ssional e fforts t o that are now clean and federal
"~s not simply stain his own strengthen the law against labor action on the problem of acid
h1r... corruption, he said t he entire rain.
.ith mild reservations, movement s hould not be blamed The auto industry ss among
Klr land embraced a bill that he for the misdeeds or a few. those pressing for quick action
saA!l would help eliminate the He also u~ged the committee on the Clean Air Act, saying it "~w'' union o ffi c ials who to c larify a s ection of the must know soon what emission "~cumb to temptation... pro posed law dealin g with controls to install on 1983 model
.Si rk land told a Senate illegal payoffs from employers cars . The indust ry is supporting
G RtN ernm ental Affa irs t o union l ead ers so that legislation in the House. known s ~commlttee Tuesday that legitimate-financin g of joint as the Traxler·Hillis bsll, that
corrupt union leaders dis honor labor -management benefit funds would weaken e xis ting a uto
all working men and women. would not be threatened. standards.
"If a person holding union The bill under review would But Sen . Danie l P a trick
offiige takes an employer payoff upgrade from a misdemeanor to Moynihan. D·N Y., served notice
foP a s ubstandard contr act, a felony any illegal payment Tuesday that the auto industry's
misuses the right to s trike from an employer to a union position jeopardizes action on
for his own t)errefit or pilfers representative of Sl,000 or more. the bill because it would embroil
from the union treasury. that It would include breach of a Congress in a lengthy debate.
person does not simply stain hss union pension or other benefit '..'..If anything approaching the
OINn honor, .. he testified . fund trust as automatic grountls Traxler-Hillis abandonment of
11 fo r disqualifying an official from th e c urre nt auto emission If:> He t arnishes the b rig ht holding unjon offi ce. standards is adopted by t he ef(~ts of the scores of men and The m easure is in part committee. the r e will be no
"'<Omen who have labored lo ins pired by alleged corruption in Clean Air Act this year ."
ctrtte ale and m a i n ta i n the Teamsters Union Central Moynihan declared.
051enizations worthy of the States pens ion fund . Some Sen. Robert Stafford, R·Vt .,
nwC'l bers we are privileged to fo rm er trus t ees. i n c luding the committee's chairman, has •
represent." Team~ters President Roy warned f o r month s that
.iiirkland objected to one key Williams. have been accused of attempts to make m ajor
pr9posal to automatically bar funneling money from the $3.5 changes in the Clean Air Act r~ union office for 1'0 years billion fund to organized crime could jeopardize the entire bill ~one co n v i c t e d o f a fig ures. a nd throw it into 1982 election
unjon-related felony. Moreover , Williams and two year politics . He repeated that ~Jte s aid a judge should be other onetime pension trustees warning Tuesday, noting that
a llowed to 11:npose a suspens ion were indicted last May on time is short before Congress fr~m five t.o 10 year s charges of conspiring to bribe adjournsfortheyear.
ending on the circ_ums tances . Sen . Howard Cannon, D·Nev.. "I believe we can complete
. curre~t law 1mpos~s a who was not accused of any a uthorization or the Clean AJr
1 x1mum five-year suspens\90-·wrongdoing. Act' this year,·' Stafford said.
{
AP ......... WARHOL PORTRAIT Artist And\ Warhol
talk ... \\Ith P hyll1 .., George Bro\,·n a fter
pn• ... e11l1 n~ his p.iinting of Jockey Willie
Shoemaker to Churchill Downs recent!\· '.\1rs .
Brown is the \\ 1ft• of Ke ntuck' Gov .iohn Y .
Brown Jr
Farm exports nearing record
Output gains in value due for 13th consecutive year
WASHINGTON <AP> -For
the 13th consecutive yea r .
ex p orts o f U .S . farm
commochtics are expected to set
a value record in the current
fi scal y~a r, the Agriculture
Department says.
OfficiaJs said this week that
farm exports in 1981·82 are
l'Slimated at $45.5 billion. up 4
percent from $43.8 billion last
)Car
The actual volume of exports
fo r the fiscal year that began on
Oct l was estimated at a record
180 million metric tons. an 11
percent gain from 162.6 million
last year which was down
-,lightly from 1979·80.
.. However . there is still
cons iderable uncerta inty about
l S exports, depending on
world economic conditions and
crqp developments," the report
said.
Imports are \expected to be
worth around $17 billion, the
same as last year. Thus, the
agricultural trade s urplus or the
difference between exports and
imports will be more than S28
billion, up from $26. 7 billion in
1980-81.
Grain and feed exports are
expected to be wort h $22.3 billion
th.is season, up from $21.9 billion
last year, with sizable gains in
the quantities to be exported.
Wheat exports. projected at 50
million metric tons, would be up
from 42.2 million in 1980-81.
Feed grains were indicated at
74.l million tons, up from 69
million last year
Soyb ea n expor t s we r e
indicated at 22.9 million tons .
com pared with about 20 million
last year.
A metric ton is about 2,205
pounds -equal to 36.7 bushels
of wheat or soybeans or 39.4
bushels &f corn.
Much of the increase in grain
export volume is due to short
crops in the Soviet Union and
Spain. the report said.
·'Mainly because o f low
domestic procurement, India is
presently expected lo import up
to 4 m illion tons of wheat.
mostly from the United States,"
it s aid. "Continuing increases
are forecast for grain shipments
to other developing countries in
As ia and Africa."
The report said, "Competition
from foreign grain e xporters
may s lacken. Argentina and
South Africa, which provided
strong competition late in fiscal
1981 , are not likely to repeat
thei r record harvests or last
spring."
In addition , it s a id , the
European Common Market is
e xpected to reduce grain
exports. However, Canada and
Australia "should expand
exportable supplies" in 1981-82.
'pigh-speed trains backed by Congress c ommittee
Exports of soybeans and other
oilseeds and oilseed products
were valued .. at $9.4 billion,
unchanged from 1980·81.
Other categories included :
Lives tock pr.o du cts.
including meat and hides, $3.6
billion estimated for the c urrent
year and $3.14 billion in 1980-81. J WASHI NGTON IAPi -The
nited Stat es. fa c ed with
e terioraling high ways and
owded skies. should emulate
apan. Western Europe and
a nada and develop ils own
· bullet train" service between
ajor cities. a congressional
anel said.
··T h e c ons truction and
peratson of a h1gh·s peed
assenger .rail system could
lay a vital role in reversing
merica 's economic decline,"
aid a r eport b y the J oint
conomic Committee Tuesday.
The 39-page study was
relea..,ed a day before leaders of
the newly formed J apan-United
States Rail Congress, comprised
of 15 members or the Japanese
Die t r parliament 1 and 15
members of the U.S. House and
Se n ate t es tified t o th e
CQ m mittee on t h eir goal Of
bringing high-speed t r ains lo
this country.
The U.S. delegation on the
congress is led by Re p. Adam
Benjamin Jr., D·lnd., and Sen.
David Durenber ger , R·Mlnn.
Transport Minister Hiros hi
Mitsuzuka is the chief J apanese
representative.
Wiiy ... .,. -"'II !his Sl!IO CUii ottet? 8ecause "-'""'•"zeo
Compud .. I ... nts IUCG.SS "~ All• ,..,. OI """''""'·-••ch Incl scienllllC anetv111. we 111 .. c• .. led, an allO<ll\l'llnQ, 1~c. age com
pul• program thal an.IVl" 'f04Jt bOdy 10 etNll 1uclly Ille d•ll loo
Y°"' 1119 r.e.0•11. '"'Ohl normal ec:tmly ,...., •"'2 '"'""" OfWl Now 1n oroe< 10 I"'<! the sue:~• 1100.es.,. ,._, 10 lau.,,,h lh' NlhOn•~
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duf1n9 Ille ne.i 90 .,..,_,
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COSTA MESA
1545 W. BAKER .
' (7141 '~ 1·6606 o,..M. Ml.a:a ........ t•a-tt11•
To sta) econim1cally health~.
the United States nee d ::. a
balanced transportation sy~tem.
the committee report ~aid
But. it said , while many of the
world's ma1or industrial nation~
have developed modern ra il
service since World Wc.1r II. the
United Stales has aljowcd its
system to deteriorate.
T he report noted approving!}
that the Japanese "Bullet
Train, .. the British .. High Speed
Tr ain" and the French "Tres
Grand Vitesse +Very Great
Speed" tr~in all average at least
100 miles per hour on their inter·
nty run~ and are highly popular.
Among other nations. Wesl
f;crmany. Sweden. Switzerland.
I ta I.> and Canada either operate
01 ha\l' firm pl a n s f or
h1i.:h·~r>et.>d 'it'r\'lce, 1t added.
R ~ contrast. the report s aid.
the a' crage s peed of U.S.
passt•nger tr ains declined from
i5 mph sn the mid-1'9505 to 40
mph now
The study quoted testimony
las t Jul) by Amtrak President
i\lan Boyd that the popularity of
Amtrak 's Bo s ton -New
Yo rk Was hington North eas t
Corridor service "has' proven
tha't people will leave their cars
a nd take the train on trips of
generally 100·300 miles if they
a re provided frequent, reliable.
safe and comfortable service "
Noting that the fo r eign
high-speed trains run through
heavily populated areas, the
report said similar service could
be practical here.
Such high -s peed r ail
development would cost billions
of doUars in private capital. but
the govemment could ajd it bJL
guaranteein·g loans for projects.
the report said .
Da iry products. $400 million
and S251 million.
-Poultry, $800 million and
S765 million.
-Cotton , $2.6 billion and $2.25
billion.
,Tobacco. Sl.5 billion and
$1.34 billion.
-Seeds, S300 million and $285
million.
Fruits, vegetables and outs,
$3.3 billion and $3.08 billion.
-Sugai: a nd tropical
products, Sl .3 billion and $1.37
billion.
Nu mber one to Phoenix, and getting better every day. Now
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More nonstops than anyone. Fly Republic to Phoenix
from 3 Los Angeles area airports. Choose from 3 nonstops
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nonstop starting Novembef 19, 1981), or 4 nonstops out of
Orange County.
Get down to business with our exclusive Business
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fares Complimentary cocktads, extra elbow room. londs of leg
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to anywhere 1n our domestic route ~--\: system It's simple, it's on going and I
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Lv • 1 40 • m Arr 9 40 a m
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6 JS pm I llpm
NoMtop OntMio 10 "'°9nl•
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0
I •
~UfilU ~
·Bomb blast hurts
Eolsom prisoners
FOLSOM CAP ) -Two
prisoners were hurt, one
seriously, when a bomb
exploded Tuesday <luring an
apparent attack in Folsom
prison's "security housina unit,·•
the facility's super security
section, officials said.
The bomb waa believed
thrown at Hugo Plnell, 37, who
has been ln prison since 1965 and
who was involved in a 1971
shootout at San Quentin prison
in which three guards arid three
prisoners, including black
revolutionary author George
Jackson, were killed.
The shootout occurred during
an alleged escape attempt in
which Pinell participated,
au\horiUes said.
The Folsom bomb Inflicted
only superfic ial wounds on
Pinell, who was returned to his
cell, according to Gil Miller, a
spokesman for Folsom.
More seriously hurt, Miller
said, was the prisoner believed
to have thrown the bomb, whose
name was not released pending
in vestlgation.
The bomb, which was believed
lD have been made in the
maximum-security prison, blew
off one of his fingers and part or
another, and severely Injured
the palm of his right hand.
Miller safd he has been
tr ansfer red to another.
unidentified correctional facility
for medical treatment.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, November 4, 1981 s
...............
He. won't quit ~
Stiff er sentence ballot delayed
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Only
Alex Bookston could 1ee victory
In defeat. The 62-yur-old
je·weter whoH store wu robbed
and bural.arized one too many
tlmes, launched a campalp to
stiffen sentences meted out to
criminals.
He didn't acquire the 346,119
sl1natures needed by Oct. 28 to
put the issue on the June ballot,
but he said he has refiled his'
oeUUon with the state and will
try to get it on the November
1982, ballot,
"I have in hand an excess of
250,000 signatures. This came a
lone way from me startin1 out a
lone man on the street. I now
have an excess of 4,000
volunteers who won't let me
quit," Bookst.on boasted. "I feel
that there ls only one reason I
failed and that is not enough
people heard about it.
Those convicted of aU.m
the crhnet would I ace elllbt to
years In Jail Instead of two tQ
slx. There would be DO o1-~
barealnlnc. suspended HDtmoil •
or probaUon; Blooutoa beU.W.
robberies and bur1lariea u.e v6
because chronic offender• .,..\1•
afrlad of beln1 put ln jall for al )
short lime. l v 1
The majority or the alanatuna
he collected were from t1tt11 ~
Southern Callfomia a rea, llllf> >
said, noting that bil weak 1~1 I
was Northern California. (
But after a recent appear...,·
on a Sao Francisco radlW, •
station, Bookston said he .-i
numerous calls. "I didn't ev• +1
scratch the surface in Northellp •
California before," be said ... _
after talking on the rai\ station, I got calls from over
voluoteers." Bulcally Boob
had his doubts a~ut belnl a •
to get 346,119 slpatures. "
down I felt this wu 1oln1 to t,..
warm-up," he said. "I ltne.,_
unless 1 got the proper ~xposq.re,
I couldn't make it." 11
Jobs rising,
hut not homes
in SF area
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
Lots of new jobs but few new
residences were created in San
Francisco in 1980, and city
planners say the imbalance
gives them a headache.
Miller said a motive for the
attack was not immediately
established.
He said Pinell had left his cell
on a long corrido~. intending to
go to the exercise yard. In the
"securit y housing unit .. only
one prisoner 1s allowed to exit at
a lime.
NEWBORNS Animal keeper Rirdit• rostt'r dt!>pla~ .... her
new charges. three endangl•red .hiun lion <·ubs. horn
recentl~· <1t the Los Angele:, Zoo.
Books ton's ·ire against
criminals was manifested Iii.St
February when he looked down
the wrong end of the barrel or a
gun for the sixth time. That was
it. He launched a petition drive
to m a nd ate 12· to 20-year
sentences for convicted robbers
and burglars, double the current
penalties.
To try to get the propef
ex pos ure, Bookstoo put hl
$25,000 of his own money takeil·
from his retirement fund. But 11¥'
says, "Now people are sendin1o
me contributions unsolicited.•l •1.
He added that he's gotten lb¥-•
backing from four state sena~1
and 65 chambers of commer~. The bomb went off in the
corridor outside Pinell 's cell.
There were fUards at each end
o f t he 75·tO ·lOO -yard-long
corridor but none of them was
hurt.
Hotel rolls out red carpet
in California. ·11
or the 40,600 new positions in
the San Francisco Bay area -
San Francisco, Marin. San
Mateo, Contra Costa and
Alameda counties -half were
in San Francisco. according to
statistics gathered by state
agencies and provided by the
Department of City Planning.
Jordan's king only one visiting dignitary in LA As far as the jewelry bus~
is concerned -the seed of thtil initiative Bookston h•_.
The same counties approved
building permits for 13,460 new
housing units. San Francisco·s
share was 1.202 new residences.
·'These figures confirm that
we cannot keep adding jobs
without adding housing,·· said
Dean Macris. chief of city
planning ... Unless we are able to
do so. we are going to increase
the commuting load to the city ...
Of the 980 units completed in
Sao Francisco last year . 423
were condominiums.
Statistics b y the stat e
Employment Development
Department indicate that jobs in
San Francisco wUJ grow by 3.8
percent this year and by just
less than 2 percent next year.
Both Pinell and the suspected
bomber have long histories of
disciplinary problems in prison.
Miller said.
Pinell was originally
sentenced lo three years to life
for rape in San Francisco. That
term was completed in 1979. but
in the me antime he was
co.nvic.ted._of several other
crimes m prison.
Besides the 1971 San Quentin
shootout, Pinell was convicted in
1972 of voluntary manslaughter
in the death or a guard at
Soledad prison.
Pinell was one or the .. San
Quentin Six .. charged with
murder in connection with the
deaths of three guards. two
prison trustees and Jackson.
Jackson was the author of
.. Soledad ~rother:· an expose of
the California prison system,
and the boyfriend of black
militant Angela Davis.
BEVERLY HILLS <AP > -
The chef has put in a large
supply of lamb and yogurt, figs
and dates. The flag of Jordan
has been hung and the police
bomb-detector dogs have sniffed
out every nook and cranny of the
Beverly Wilshire Hotel.
All of these preparations and
red carpets, singing mariachis
and an army of Secret Service
agents are for the arrival or
King Hussein of Jordan, his
American-born wife, Queen
Noor, his prime minister and
their e ntourage of 47 on
Thursday for an official state
visit.
Helen Chaplin, the hotel's
executive assistant manager,
says it's probably the most
e laborate backstairs set or
preparations she's seen slnce
she arrived 30 years ago at the
swank hotel at the root of fabled
Rodeo Drive. The Beverly Wilshire's plans
Fall Spectac~lar Salel
--:-·;,1 ·-.
. .
II I .J
We hove designing Ideas !hot con change VOJf outlook wi~t ao1n1ng VCAll budget
Sun·nltering shades ond binds thot lghten 0< dcrten o room lnstonttv w<Nen woods In colon
to motch onv deOOr, or;id wood bWnd$ to complement Vo\JI most elegant tumltvre.
And we hove them oil ol SOie pr1ces that Yllll gve yoo fcleos. .
65%' off on 811 Custom Drapes
;
CHAPMA~ INTERIORS
8077 WHhnlnst..-Ave., We1hnln1hr
Call Now For Free Estimate
171 ~) 893-0022 17141 898-1 ,
for Hussein are complicated by
a few other ranking guests.
On the same day the Hussein
party checks in, former First
Lady Betty Ford arrives with
her own phalanx of Secret
Service agents, and former
President Gerald R. Ford jolns
her later. ,
"We also have the governor of
Tokyo, Mr. S. Suzuki, arriving
the day before the king," says
Ms. Chaplin. •·And then there is
the p ar.Ly of Hungarian
diplomats who are coming here
to meet with oil tycoon Armand
Hammer. And we will have 500
people in the ballroom for a
banquet at the very hour the
King arrives."
Jt might have been even more
confusing. Philippine First Lady
Im e lda Marcos bad been
scheduled to stay at the Beverly
Wilshire the same week but
canceled her visit.
As It is, Ms. Chaplin has had
~.
to ask some expected guests to
delay their arrivals or ac~ept
accommodations elsewhere
because the Hussein party is
taking over three floors of the
13·story hotel, and the Fords will
have one floor.
Guests on other fl oors are
being sent messages by Ms.
Chaplin warning them of
possible delays al the elevators
and congestion at the carriage
e ntrance due to "security
su rr ou nding visiting
dignitaries."
.. The security is the tightest
we have had here for any head
of state." says front office
Manager Susan Schenher ... The
king is a controversial figure."
Ms. Schenher said no other
leader had ever been given three
fuJl floors of the Beverly
Wilshire -two floors for
security people and one for his
party in between.
ASAR
turned most of it over to bis SOD.
"I feel this is more important •
than anything I have to do Uf;
life." i•.
11 ••
Cannery Row;;
to develop
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> l:.l<!
Monterey·s Cannery Row, 'i
o ne-mile waterfront stretch
made fam o us by Joh'd
Steinbeck·s novel, was openedtt&o'
development by the California ·
Coastal Commission, endi11··
years of controversy over ~·
area. q., •
The action by the commiasm,
meeting in San Francisco, '"9'J
expected to lead to city builW..' permits by the beginnin1of 1tei r 0 r 1 • 7 0 0 h 0 t e 1 r 0 0 m Sl}I'
restaurants and shops along • row . 111
•
THE LOWEST
UNRESTRICTED
ROUND TRIP .FAR STO
aLL THESE CITIES.
Chicago
Ea'h way with
rounc.J trip
purchal>C.
Each way \\ ith
roumJ 1rip
pun:ha'c
Each way with
rounc.J trip
purcha'c.
Miami. Ft. LC1uderdale
Each way with
rn~nd trip
pun:ha,c.
Peorin Soi.ton, New York/Newark and LaGuardia.
Our new ASAP fares from Los
Angeles International , Burbank or
Ontario to the East aren't just lower.
They're a lot lower. Downright un-
beatable.
Best of all, there are no {e·
stricrions. No advance purchase. No
length of stay requirements . But seat
are limited, and fares are effective
through November 30, 1981 .
Philadelphia, Washington, D.C.
..
AN •XTllA CITY• NO
IXTllA CHA•••· When you fly
to any of these cities in the East,
you can rerum from one of the other
cities at no extra charge. For example
fly to New York and retum from
Washington, D.C.
So for the I owe t fares to all
these citie~. call your travel agent or -
Continental. ASAP.
NtHt. ASAP tare' $20 00 hi11hcr fmm 811itlank ind Ontllflo 111 CMnifi\.
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day, Novtmber4, 1981
..........
VRPRISE ARRIVAL Woodland Park Zoo workers in Seattle didn't
now the ;.~·ear·old .\fri~·un lion in the Sc.1\·:mnu Exhibit was prcgnmll
nt il she dt'lin~red thl'-.e l\\o (·uh:-rt'tl•ntl~ Zoo l'm plo~·l'l'S hud tn
'l'S<:lll' thl' nl'\\·horns from thl· othl·f· linn' in thl• L1 -.:hihit lh ~11
L'portedly tried 10 maul tht> c·uh:-
Sin ·taxes' end.orsed
ore cigarette,. alcohol revenue favored
NEW 'YORK (AP> -A majority or
mericans favor raising federa l
xes on cigarettes and alcoholic
veraaes, according to the latest
aociated Press·NBC News poll.
The proposed "sin taxes" were
doraed both as a means or raising
x revenues and to discourage
oking and drinking, according to
e Oct. 25-26 telephone poll or 1,598
dulls in a scientific random ampllng.
Fifty.two percent said they think
eral taxes on cigarettes should be
aised, while 41 J)ercent said they
bould not. .
The 52 percent who said cigarette
xes shouJd be raised broke down
is way: 7 percent said taxes should
raised to increase revenues, 11
rcent to discourage smoking and 34
rcent both.
Fifty.five percent said federal
xes on alcoholic beverages should
raised, while 41 percent said they
hould not.
The 55 percent who said alcoholic
verage taxes should be raised
roke down this way: 11 percent said
xes should be raised to increase
venues, 9 percent to discourage
rinking and 35 percent both.
The Senate Budget Corpmittee
ecently drew up a number or
roposals to raise taxes next year,
eluding one which would double the
xcise taxes on cigarettes, liquor,
ine and beer.
The proposed increases, which
nate leaders say will be considered
ext year, would raise the price of a
ack of cigarettes by 8 cents, the
rice of a gallon of liquor by $10.50. a
barrel of beer by $9 and a gallon of
wine by 34 cents.
Sixty.two percent of the poll
respondents ·said they drink alcoholic
beverages, while 32 percent said they
smoke cigarettes.
People who said they amoke and
those who said they drink were less
likely thAn non -s mokers and
non -drinkers to say either cigarette
or alcoholic beverage taxes should be
raised.
One.fourth of the smokers said
cigarette taxes should be raised, and
half the drinke rs said alcoholic
beverage taxes should be raised.
The poll said single and dJvorced
people were more likely than
married people to say they smoke
and drihk.
ProtestMts were more likely than
ei th e r Catho lic o r Jewi s h
r es po ndents to say they are
teetotalers; and people with more
education and higher incomes were
more likely to say they drink.
And while people with children 17
or younger were less likely than
other·respondents to say they smoke,
they were also more likely to say
they drink.
As with all sample surveys, the
results or AP·NBC News polls can
vary from the opinions of all
Am er icans because of chance
variations in the sample.
~
Emphasizing Spiritual Glfte -in
your life, your family, Church. Community
Public Welcome
Nov. 6, 7:30 p& Dr.,_. Weod
Noted Psychiatrist & Author
Nov. 7, t &&-J p.-. Seven
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Professors. Psychologists
Pre-register by calllng church office,
846-6330 or 894-6338
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Quitting Business
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November 6, 7 & 8th
10:00 a.m. thru 4:00 p.m.
471 N. Newport Blvd.
Newport Be.ich CA 92663
(714) S48-1767
Spec~lizing ln Crocks & Distinctive Stoneware
GOURH£1
ITALIAN • AMERICA N
Dellc•teaen • .. k•rJ
«~uantitie' and a'sorhnt·nt~ are limited, so hurry in! 11 Sears I. HUNTINGTON BEACH
E AC H () ~ T Hf ', F I T£ M · d F I\: Ii L Y t\ V I\ : t A 8 l f F 0 t~ 5. AL f AS ADV~ R T I':, l 0
SURPLUS STORE
We sell first quality and discontinued
merchandise from Sears Retail and
Catalog Distribution.
"Was" prices quoted are the re..,..lar prices at which
the items were fonnerly offered b y Catalo~ or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
-FASHION VALUES -Effectllfe 1114111
SUPER SAV INGS ON WOMEN'S
WINTE R WEATHER JACKETS
CANDY-COLORED
. RAIN JACKET
WAS S36.00
NOW$}749 CUT 51 %!
(Reduced from '80 Fall Catalog)
Av&ilablc in S, M .-nd I. Si1es.
POLYURETHANE
JACKETS
WOMEN'S .
LONG SLEEVE
. POL VESTER BLOUSES
were
9.00-10.00
NOW
3.99
SEARS CANADIAN
PIN£ 71/2 FOOT
CHRISTMAS TREE
• Eesy To
Assemble • Beautifully
Shaped
Branches
• Reallstlc Molded Trunk
• Complete
With Stand
• MaOe of Fire
Resistant Potyethylene
NOW34.99
H •":.'-di ... Aft, ~ ...... .
(114)'°'*6
SAVE 44%AND •47%0N
WOMEN'S
BRUSHED
TWILL PANTS
WERE $18.00 AN D •$19.00
NOW$9 99
CUT $8.01 &. •$9.01
(Reduced from '8 1 Fall Catalog
Available in assoncd colors
and sizes in Petite. Average
and •Tall Misses.
GIRLS
SELECTED PANTS
~ND JEANS
NOW 2.88
Texas Instruments
SPEAK & SPELL
Electronlc Leaming Aid ,.
Talks to yoor you'later with no pull·strlno• or ~=:~~tg:l•i~~{:l:: d4ds fungand e:cgllemen5t to
(not Included).
#14 •
1'11 fOUOW. Sl'Ul'I snu CMl9KI,,. AVAIUIU AT Ml uv .... ~.,_.,... "*tU•S.5-· ... u. •. 1 ... ., .......... .., •• .....,. ........
. 1,1 • s.e.a ..... z.e ........ 2
• .......
"''~ ~
AO PRICES PREVAIL : WED .. NOV . 4th thru SAT . NOV . 7th
ZEEHIGHWAY PATROL
RESCUE SET
FISHER PRICE
NIMAL
GRABBERS
*='c:::;ri::::;;i Contains 3 each
plates. cups. spoons.
saucefs and teapot with lid.
IMITH'°"T SPIN ,BINGO
TAllLI
PLAYSKOOL
Flutter Ball
Encourage baby to craws
by spinning and rollino 11111
while butt1rlhes flutter
around.
:~':~L~v CANDYLAND
.. CAnlY &.MD 81NQO GAME 9INO Ages· 4 to 8 A color
recognition o•me for
2 to 4 players.
~_4.99
IDEAL
MISSING lf NI(.
PUZZLE
Will perplex and bewlldtr
the most zealous
puzzle freak.
_4.99
-. ----·---·
Orange Coatt DAILY PtLOTJWednHday, November <4, 1981
~-Shhhy Cease-fire hangs over Lebanon's capital
8!JRUT Lebanon (AP> Guns 1uarda and thieves.
aandbap no lonaer rin1t.M1treet1 al.lee Belrut'I Shootlnsa, bombln11 and klllln11 have pla1ued
political partl" aarffd to ttilarm, but authorities the picturesque capital alnce the 1175-76 civil war
ftar the ceaae·fire wlll not aurvlve In this lawle11 between rt1bt·wln1 Chriattana and leftist MOilema
city. that destroyed all central authority.
''If the pollce olflc~r decides to make the In efforta to demllltarbe the embattled clty,
arrest, he knows he mlJht be shot. Thls la the way the Palestine Liberation Or1anlzatlon and It•
we have to work," says Charles Kharar, a leftist Lebanese allies here put down thelr 1una
policeman who lost two collea1uu to a Monm. Thf dllarmament wu uraed by UM PLO,
machlneiun gan1 for detalnlnc suspected car -an ls-Policed by 22,000 Syrian aolcHen wbo keep
peace ln the wake of the ctvll war.
Beirut, a Mediterranean seaport 1urrounded
by mountains, wu once t.M poeh commercial
cemer.
But today the city, etpeclally the western
Moslem side, ls compared by 1ome to 19301
1an1land Chlcaso or the Wild West, when touah
aherlffa such u Wyatt Earp tamed lawbreakers.
More than 20 letuat miUtlu and the PLO's
el1ht factiona maintain private armies. Before the
dl .. rmament, m<Hrt polltlcal party otllcet wer•
defended b)' 1uards, aandba11ed bunkers and
m achinerun turrets on rooftopt aod apartmen
terraces. A apot check early thla week reveal
most mlUUu were dlaarmlnf,.
"We hope we can aurv ve lon1 enouah as
country to that one day we wlll bt watehln
movies of Lebanese heroes who tamed our cowat
the way your cowboys did," Ibrahim Battourl,
alrport cuatoma officer, told a reporter. ~--~--y--;;iijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii --------------------~ ----
REBUFFED
G u ,. a n a m u 1· d e r
suspect La r ry Layton
has lost his bid for
dis missal of a grand
i 'lt r ,. i n d i c t m e n t
"agai'nst him in San
Fran ci!\co . Ile i ~
eha r ge d with
eons-piring to kill
R e p . L l' o R ~· a n .
D·Calif .. prior to tht•
.JonL•stown massac·n•
New flu ·
drug
tested
HOlJSTON <AP> -An
e-xperimental drug that
appears capabl e of
killing influenza virus
within 24 hours could be
especially effective in
preventing deaths from
the disease, according to
a medical specialist.
"We believe this
therapy ultimately
offers great promise in
tteatlng influenial
pneu111onia, which la the
lethal form of the
disease, especially for
people with heart failure
or emphysema," Dr.
Vernon Knight ,
c h airman o f
mi c robiology and
immunology at Baylor
College of Medicine's nu
• research center, said e this week. • I Ribavirin is alread.,y
. marketed in Mexico.
Studies conducted with
oral forms of the drug
are inconclusive.
Doctors first used an
aeros ol version of
ribavlrin lut J anuary
during a nu epidemic at
Texas A&M University
at Collete Station. The
results ol the test are
being published in the
current issue of The
Lancet, the Britis h
medical journal
Doctors at A&M 's
student health center
randomly selected 14
students to receive the
treatment and 17 others
to be treated with an
ineffective aeroso l
saline solution.
The 14 student& who
received ribavirln bad
to wear facial masks 12
hours a day for several
days. They inhaled a
mist containing tiny
particle& of ribavirin
that spread through the
respiratory tract and
pene£rated the lung
tissues.
Those tl'eated with
ribavirin recovered
from their nu symptomt
,faster than those. wbo
did not, and shorid DO
•lgn1 of toxic aid e
!effecta, KnJ Mid.
SAVE30e. SAVE•t .oa
...... an· llC ·
4 ROLL PAil
DTIA CW .... O POWEi
AXION
l.AUNDIY Ptl·SOU
&DETIMUT
IOOSTl'.1
25 oz. 1.39
SAVE30e
™ FABRIC
SOFTENER SH£m AD PRICES PREVAIL:
WEDNF SDA'r NOVFMBE:R .ith THRU 5ATIJRDA"t' ~O'W EMB£R /th
__ ao_x Of_401_.29_ ZOOMMm
SAVE&Oe
ARMOR ALL
PIOTICTMT
Protects & Buuhhes
V1.nyt f>lastte. Rubber
& Luther
4 oz. SIZE ggc
SAVE 8 2.00
~-----"DAZEY" wcmc:
CAN OPENER
wttlt IAG OP£MI
Sleek compact desion
opens any size or shape
can
~· 10.49
SPECIAL I
GHIRARDELLI
QIOCOUTl
UIS
• ~ ... QIOCOUTt .... -.-Tl
• mT ClllCllUTI
•9lalYmALT
SPECIAL I
GOLDEN CORN
CONTEST ENTRY RULES
Soltly shirred yollt
with lact trimmtd collar. In easy care
polyester fabric.
llZU4tl 1'
5J8 PRO··
BRUSH a•• -
3% oz. StZES
WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT!
• VISA'
~ ---
l
SAV• •1.oa
SNACK7r ~
t" IQUAIE Dllll ~
Weleome guest at
any dinner table. 3 119
1 ~, .I. IA.
SAV• •s.oo ,...,.,.
~
WATCH ...,., .. 111 .... ._..__
·-34.95
• Coffeemate ll
.. CGfFUIUID
llftws 2 to 10 Cups of
Coffee.
~~22.a8
·::u_4.00
:.:18.88
........ Llllll •.""' 111 ....... ---• ...... •.• C..-ll 115M• lrla 5'1111 .. ,. ...........
Mil
COLONEL LEE
wmuY
8.49 .,_
1.75 LT.
COUllT vmA
WOllA .,_
1.71 LT.
HOF-BRAU ...
12tz. CMS \
SPECIAL.I
SAVE30e
l£VUMt
MILK PLUS 6
CID.Un..
:~·&-219
24 MOUi llOtSTUltlZH
::-"'-3.49
SPECIAL!
............. AC/DC All/FM
RADIO CASSETIE
1£COIDU PUYH
Records cassette tapes
directly from Ille radio
or live will\ built-in
condenser m1c Batteries
(not 1ncludedl
SAVE llt e
SAVE&Oe
TRIAMINICIN
FOi 1£lJ(( Of
llAUl COMESTION
•IEADACllE
SAVEISOe
1S9 POOFS
STAYFREE
MUM'IDI-
TRI
f "Jllll"··
Cl•C:tl
' by Bii l'teane
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
11Which channel do you tum on to make a milt
shake?"
"George, don't you DARE_aet lost In thought -
whlle f'm 1dchulng youf''
' '9:\R~ADlKE by Brad Anderson k Ketchum ~
11-c+
l/·f
"Obedience class was YOUR idea."
. Jl'DG[ Pi\llXER
r::n:~~~===z:::?-;tEN"Eru~)W'Fiiilll 5HE'5 AWL LITTU m>ur£1t! ~
GARt'lt;LD
GAA.FIEL~tl ~T
t't>¥:NI CAT5 C.OOLV
PL.AV OOrTARS
16 5Hf ~!)THIS MO~NING. HER
ONLY THOU(;HT WAS ~E DIDN'T
WANT TO MES!> IJP YOUR &CHEDULf ... ,..__
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
STAY--1 WANT A 2·
GOOD DINNE~, TOO.
PMNIJTI
SHOE
DONT
BESO
STUCK UP
FIJNKl' WINK£R8UN
-.SMOCK
WHeRl!'P
'fHA'f'
F(ACCOON
ee-r~w Of' A MAf'KINe
Pl!IN!
r8••ETTE•••r••••••E
HUH'? '{6S.1HtS
E5PeC!Al.'I FffU£5
10~~
REMTI~
by Tom K. Ryan .
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushmiller
THAT MAN ISN'T Sf-fAKING I
BECAUSE HE'S 1
AFRAID s
OF YOU l
WHAC/<I •
•
I
0
by Gus Arriola
EY Kevin Fagan
~0\0~£ ~~
J !Ala~ °'-£A_.., ~6ol>1'
(~~N01'~?
by Lynn Johnston
\.Ef s SEE. ... HOW a..o IS THE 009 ....
J
DIA& PAT DtJNN: I would Hite to
to•...U • yMJ' l'ffe•t auwer to N.L. of
F011naa. Valley eoaeenln1 llexlcan Toart1t
Carda ud •b'y lato •exlto for aa enended
1ta1. TM eutest way to obtallt aucll a card ..
ao& ..... , for It at the Mexican Governmellt
Toarm.t Office la Los Angeles. ·
Al80lt every travel agent la Oran1e
Co•aty will have the cards on band la t.belr
offtce ucl can advise U1e traveler which ..
the best proof ol clU1ea11llp to carry wltb
them. Some people are reluctant to carry
their birth certificates wltll the• wlten
travellag. I always advl1e my cUeab to
apply for a pauport lf tltey lateDd to traveJ
lnteraatJonally 1everal thne1 durl•I the
year, evea to Me.idco and Canada.
Wiien traveling to Mexico you will be
asked to allow your proof ol cltllen1hlp both
by Mexican aatborttles and U.S. Immigration
peraoanel. lateraatleaal travel cannot be
taken UgMJy as yoa are subject to local laws
whell "'9KID1 anotbe1 country.
R.A., La1una Beach
A YS thanks the president of the Orange
County Chapter of the American Society of
Travel Agents for this information. Although
the advice given to N.L. was provided by the
Mexican Government Tourist Bureau, it does
appear less complicated to use a passport for
extended Mexican visits.
Refund not easy
DEAR PAT DUNN: I jolaed a Nautilus
health club la Newport Beach last Jan. 31. I
was dissaUsfled with the plan and requested
a rehmd after three weeks and about seven
visits. I was told a refund check would be
mailed, but it was not.
Then I was told to make an appointment
with a staff member. I did so, waited 30
minutes and then was asked to turn ln my
mem bershJp card and tbat a refund would be
Issued. Again, nothin1 happened.
I called and was told tbe person to whom
I'd given my membership card had been
promoted and I should talk to someone else. I
called several times and couldn't make
s·1s ~ANOF' IAU.S
COSTA MESA
TENNIS CLUI
557-0211
SAVE
TAX
FREE
Where Roy And
Dale Save . . . --•-==== FAR WEST SAVINGS
and Loan Association
Where Tax Free Savings Begins With
NO MINIMUM
·DEPOSIT
Al FM WEST SAVINGS. we bel-that the All S.ve111 Ac!~
by Congr.-.__ tta ~. thould truly t>enefrt ALL ..-s That s
why 81 PAA WEST SAVINGS-our Tu Free/All Sav.rs account has
NO MINIMUM SALANCE1
The NA SaYeta Acoounl proYldla a one tome laJC exclullOn on
lneerlll ewningl up to $2,000 on J<Mnt Federal Income Taic returns
Md up tos1.ooo on individual returns (Thll ea:ount 1s NOT exemol
trom C8llfomia Income Tax)
So. If you haw be«! excluded from Iha All 5aYllfw plan by oChars
wN> require SSOO. 11.000 Of mote to open a Tax Free account -
open your ICOOUnt wHti FAA WEST SAVINGS
But ... don't delay! Lock up this high interest rate
now to Insure highest earnings. Then. come 1n and
' n ur account T DAY!
10.77%
.... ,,,_ Mew. 2lld To Mo•. 29 ..
The ALLSAVEAS RATE 11boW 11 8QUal to 7~ ol averega 1n-
Vfflmanl ~Id on ooe year U.S. Trauury Biiia u of the current
Mletlon. ThrM months Interest penalty II nominal rale and tax
uamp11on -kllt 11 ICCOUfll cll-i before ooe 'fNI lntaraat on tne AU. SAVEN CERTIFICATE la peylbla only at maturity.
la NOT nempc from Californi. ~Tax.
·~~J!,!Jl~l!fE
~ To $100,000 ·~ ~ mil • I. -$1 ........
.........._ mma
FAA WEST SAVINGS
MCI Loen AaeoclBIOft
DANA POINT (714) 661-3356
NEWPORT BEACH (714) 833 .. 8383
HUNTINGTON acH. (714) 963-2900
co.&act with WI pertOG. EveatHlly, every
Uae I called I •as pu& •• "permHetil Mlcl." It'• bffa m•thl aow and I ••t eve1 laave
accea to &be club, aot to melMloa ta.e refud. L.a., Newport Beaclt
Nautllus' corporate beadquart.era l11ued
a S72.&4 refund to yoµ, th• prorated amount
from Feb. l to the time you wrote to A YS.
Nautilua' customer aervlce spokeswoman
said your membenhlp cleirly atatea the only
reason for refund ia death or dla abllity, but
the pel"'80n you tried to contact at tbe center
ls no loneer employed by the company and
checklni on circumstances ls impo11lble.
It was for this reason only that the refund
was issued, according to Nautilus. Next lime
you sign a health studio contract, take the
time to c:heck into the plan and the fac:Ulty
thorougttly. As you found out, getting a
refund when things ar'e not satisfactory c:an
be extremely difficult -ir not impossible. .
Shop locally
DEAR PAT DUNN: I fecently saw an ad
by a mall-order company ln Arizona for
denim jackets that were ldenUc-1 to ones I'd
ordered from Harrels In Minneapolis, Minn.,
last May. I paid $32.95 for them by check and
finally received only one Jacket and It was
the wrong size.
A note was enclosed statln1 that no
exchange or refund would ~ liY.eA. aad. Ill.at
the company was no longer la buaiae11. Tile
post office said they couldn't help me. I'd
still like to get these Jackets. Do you tlllnk I
should order from the Arizona company?
M.D., La1una Beach
Harrels was a very reliable company -
until it suddenly went out or business. ThJs
has been the case the past few years with a
number of large m ail-order firms throughout
the country. A YS does not advise mail-order
purchases. As you found out, you don't have
any guarantee you will receive what you paid
for, but you can be sure your check will be .
cashed. Shop locally whenever possible. The
firm you mentioned in Arizona is reputable,
but one never knows how long this will be the
case.
• "Cot a problem'> Then wnte to Pat '-l Dunn. Pat will cut red ta~, getting
• the answers and action you need to
•
solve inequities in government and
r-t bwiness Mail your questions to Pat
I I Dunn, Ar Your Sennce. Orange Coast
Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626
..
-
Or•nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, November•. 1981
Pressure to approve
cancer drugs told
WASHlNGTON CAP> -Food and
Dru1 Administration scientists are
under "extraordinary pressure" to
a pprove experimental anti·cancer
drugs even if they have lo Ignore
some test results. an FDA official
has said.
Dr. Rebecca Wood , a supervising
chemist with the FDA, told a Senate
hearing an increasing workload at
the agency "would be tolerable if you
were not subjected to pressure lo
compromise your views and approve
everything as fas t as you can without
being sure of drug quality."
"Wh o Is askl n e yo u to
compromise?" asked Sen. Edward
M. KeMedy, D-Mass.
"( would say FDA management,
under the &uisc of' speedlnt up the
review process." Ms. Wood replied.
Asked about Ms. Wood 's allegation,
FDA spokesman Wayne Pines said:
"The agency's management has
made il clear it would like lo see new
drug applications processed as
quickly as possible, but it has been
made equally clear that the reviews
must be founded in good science."
Video CasMttes for Sale
orR...t
Pay No Income Tax
In 1981, 1982, 1983
And Legally Recover
Taxes Paid In
1978, 1979, 1980
You can mvest dollars already spent. are rurrently
spendmg and Wttl spend In the ruture for taxes, tnlO
tax shell~red inveillments that SPECIAL THIS WEEK!
*Rent "3" movies for price *
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•I ,000'1 of rnoviu
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Learn ho~ this can be done b) attending a com·
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I
359 San Miguel Drwe. Suite 110
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i I t
--_. _______ ....,. _____ _
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOTrNedf'Hday, November 4, 1981
New 'sin taxes' eyed _
as revenue boosters
Casting about for ··painless"
ways to increase government
revenues, both state and federal
officials are eyeing the so-called
.. sin tax~s " as possible answers
to their fiscal dilemmas.
Treasury Secretary Donald
Regan says that increases in
federal taxes on liquor and
cigarettes, unchanged since the
1950s, are an "obvious area .. for
the administration to look into in
t its efforts to balance the budget.
I At present these taxes -8
1 ' cents a pack on cigarettes, $10.50
t a gallon on liquor , $9 a barrel on ·1 beer and 17 cents a gallon on ~ table wine -raise about $8.5 · I ~ billion a year. While the tax
I . increase still is in the speculative
stage. many in Congress have
's aid they 'd go along with I doublin~ the current rates.
At the state level. Senate
President Pro Tern David
• Roberti sa ys he sees a "sin tax"
. increase as one way to make up
, for cuts in federal social service
, 1 funding, especially since drinking
' and smoking contribute to social
• problems that are a burden to the
• state .
Federal funds for alcohol. I; dru g and mental health
, programs are due to be cut by $10 t million . preventive health
, ~ services by $7.4 million and
federal Medi-Cal support by 547
. million. says Roberti.
Meanwhile state Sen. Alan
Sieroty. D-Los Angeles. already
has introduced t\Vo measures
calling for increas es in the
cigarette and alcoholic beverage
•
taxes. These will be up for debate
in January.
One measure would raise the
state cigarette tax. fixed at 10
cents a pack since 1967, to 20
cents which compares with an
average of 19.S ce nts in the eight
large indus trial s tates. This
measure would ra ise about S300
million in addi tional s t a\e
revenue each year.
The second Sieroty measure
would raise the state tax on wine
-1 cent a gallon since 1933 -to
54 cents a gallon. the average in
other major states. The tax on
beer . 4 c ents a g allon and
unchanged for 22 years. would be
increased to 14 cents a gallon.
and the tax on distilled spirits
would go fro~ S2 per gallon to
S3.60. .
These increased liquor t axes
could add another S200 million a
year to state revenues. The exact
amounts. of course. are open to
negotiation.
Th e r e v e nu e -s eeking
la wmakers probably are on the
right track here. Ttae proposed
··sin taxes ·· would just about
balance off the state's cu{Teot
SSOO million deficit. And, while
manufacturers of the products
doubtless would put up a major
lobbying fight to block the move.
these probably' are the only tax
increa ses that would find a
~easure of public acceptance.
And, unfortunately for the
public h e alth . e xpe ri e n ce
indicates that cons umption of the
"sinful" items goes on. inflation
and ta,xes notwithstanding.
!Vote change triCky
A bill by st ate Sen. John
Sc hmitz, pa ss ed b y th e
Legislature and signed Into law
by Gov. Brown. would permit
general"law cities in the state to
hold their municipal elections on
the same day as the state
• primary in Junei
At present, charter cities are
gi ve n this option. but general law
c iti es mu s t adhere to a
state-mandated April municipal
e lection date .
Proponents of the measure.
which was backed by the League
• of California Cities. contend that
the high voter turnout for June
primaries would provide better
e xposure for municipal issues
1 • and candidates .
That's a questionable theory.
Typically in California, the
June primary is preceded by a
barrage of pro and con partisan
publicity on candidates for state
and national office, and on often
controversial state propositions .
lt's difficult to see how local
c andidates and iss ues could
compete for attention on a June
ballot that often is so long it
resembles a s mall bedsheet. And
the ine vitable risk of linking
non -partis an candidates to
partisan slates cannot be
overlooked .
It's probably fair enough to
give all cities the option of
choosing their election date.
But a candidate for local
office or proponents of strictly
local measures would clearly run
ttie risk of being losf in the
s huffle if their city decided to opt
for the June date and of facing
voters who have not taken time
to inform themselves on local
issues.
The April voter turnout may
be s malle r . but a l leas t it
gene rally is made up of citizens
who trul y c are a bout their
communities. This is one time
when the quality of the vote could
be more important than the
qua ntity.
Was this an Italian joke?
It was only a short ite m :
··s en . Edw a rd K e nn e d y,
D -Mass .. will be g ive n an
honorary degree in commerce
and ecooomics by the University
of Bari, Italy.··
Our first thought was The
Associated Press e rred and
meant to say the ·u niversity of
Bologna.
Then we got to thinking: Why
in the <Western l world would
an y one award a n honor a r y
d e gree in e conomics and
commerce to Ted Kennedy?
Few, if any, members of the
Congress have demonstrated less
knowledge or economics or
concern for commerce. That's
not Ted's bag, as even his
supporters freely acknowledge.
Teddy, of course. is a
conspicuous consumer of the
Keynesian brand of economic
thought. This view is that
government should spend, spend
and s pend, even at the risk of
budget deficits and inflation, to
stimulate gro wth and
employment.
Maybe the unive rs ity is
asking hitn to s t a nd in for
e c o n o m i s t J o h n M a y n a r d·
Keynes. not knowing that he died
in 1946 -and that his theory is
gravely ill from malfunctioning.
One usually unreliable source
has suggested that Ted enrolled
in a quick correspondence course
in economics from the University
of Bari last fall, right after he
read the election returns and
found out how the voters fell.
On the othe r hand <as
economists always say> it is true
that the Italians always have had
a good eye for commerce and
practical economics. along with a
delightful sense of humor. The
University of Bari is not exactly
a household word . and the
Kennedy name is good for some
international media attention.
And. in this case, a chuckle or
two.
Ah. those irrepressible
Italiaqs!
• Opinions expressed In the Ss>Ke above ere those of the Delly Pilot. Other views ex-
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ed. Address The Oally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 921>21>. Phone (7U)
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ORANGE COAST .£
DailyPilll
T"OIMI P. Ha ley
Publisher
·Thomas A. Mllrphlne·
Editor
B•rMr• KrellNch
Edltorl•I P-ve,. Editor
. ..
-~ . '.::.
Car lobby fights disclosure
WASHINGTON CAPl -Ever wonder why the used car you bought breaks
down shortly after you drive it home?
Why the dealer didn't tell you that the
·horn didn't work or theC"adiator leaked?
One reason is the used-car lobby is
one of the most active -and most
unpubllziced -in Washington.
Under current law (except in a few
states> dealers in "previously owned"
vehicles don't have to disclose defects
to potential buyers. The Federal Trade
Commission would like to change that
with a rule that would force the dealers
to inform buyers about their warranty
rights a s well as defects such as
cracked engine heads, damaged ball
joint seals. bad suspension systems and
leakage in the transmission, cooling,
brake and steering systems.
The lemon· peddlers, of course, don't
like the FTC proposal, and they're
flexing their muscle on Capitol Hill. The
dealers' political action committee was
the fourth largest donor in the 1980
national elections . It coughed up
Sl,034.875 in political contributions -
e xcee de d only by the National
Associ ation of Realtors. American
Medical Association and United Auto
Workers.
And as of Augus t 1, 1981, the
committee bad raised $378,000 for the
.1982 eledions.
SUCH FI GUat:s tend to impress
lawmakers, and many of the public's
representatives on Capitol Hill appear
to be convinced by the dealers '
arguments that the proposed FTC rule
is "ambiguous," "vague" and too
costly at a time when the industry is
without question being pummeled by
inflation and high interest rates.
On the House side, the No. 1 water
boy for the dealers is the obscure Gary
Lee. R-N. Y. In 1980, he received one of
.IACI 1111101
his largest contributions: $3,000 from
the used·car lobby. In the Senate, the
charge is being led by Republican
Larry Pressler , the handsome
lightweight from South Dakota .
When Pres&ler was asked by home
state car dealers to sponsor a resolution
that would veto the FTC proposal, be
agreed if the National Auto Dealers
Association would draft the statement.
The dealers happily complied. Lee
introduced an id~ntical resolution in the
House.
Other members of the House who
have benefited from the used-car
lobby's largesse and support killing the
FTC ruling include Phil Gramm.
D-Texas, $6,200 : James Collins,
R-Texu,-i-7,250; Thomas Bliley, R-Va ..
SS,000; Ray Kogovsek , D·Colo .. $9,6:i0;
Stan Parris, R-Va., $8,400; Frank Wolf,
R-Va ., $8,000, and John Edward Porter,
R·lll., $5,800. Oddly enough Morris
"Mo" Udall, the liberal Democrat from
Arizona, is supporting the dealers even
though he received no contributions from
them .
·THREE SENATOR S -Steve
Symms, R-Idaho, Paul Laxalt, R-Nev ..
and James Abnor, R·S.D. -received
$10,000 each from the dealers In 1980.
The resolution to kill the proposed
FTC resolution has more than 150
co-s ponsors in the House and Senate .
My associate Tony Capacclo reviewed
their campaign records and learned the
sponsors received at least $329,200 from
the used-car dealers since 1980.
The dealers are claiming that the
FTC rule, if passed. would force them
to conduct expensive inspections. On
close examindtion. however, this
appears to be a specious argument.
Most dealers thoroughly inspect used
cars before they purchase them. The '
more likely reason for their concern is
the prospect that, having bought a
clunker. they would then be unable to
foi st it off on the public.
WHAT NEXT? If the us ed -car
regulation is killed -which is likel&"-
lobbyists for such special interests as
the funeral, bearing aid. mobile home
and eyeglus industries can be expected
to redouble their efforts to kill pending I
FTC proposals that would more strictly
regulate them.
TV • ID court can give false picture
In what Chief Justice Rose Bird
proclaimed "a historic first," the
California Supreme Court voted 4·3 to.
permit photo coverage of a court
session during which oral arguments
were heard on the appeals of two
criminal cases.
The cameras were allowed in the
slate's highest court on a "one-time"
basis to provide what Bird said would
be an aid to evaluating an on·1olng
18-month experiment.
The year-and-a·half experiment in
which cameras are being permitted ln
trial and appe llate courts was
previously authorized by the State
Judicial Council, headed by Bird, and will end th.is December.
UNDER THE banner of freedom of
the press the battle to bltroduce the
oamera into the courtrooms bas been
waged for years. Increased pressure
however has come In recent years from
the television industry.
At flrst blus h the idea of television
coverage of trials seems consistent both
with the principle of public trials and
freedom of the press.
In its infancy following WW 11 ,
television got off to a slow start and
gained tremendously when it turned to
public affairs giving full attention to the
Kefauver crime committee hearings
and the national party nominating
r .
~ ~t:\'. ~., IAll IATlll
the conventions. There wu no panning
of the audience or inane s ide interviews
with participants. And, blessedly, there
were no "anchor men" distracting from
the proceedings to offer their gratuitous ,
views of what the audience was seeing '
o hearing.
OBVIOUSLY THE dissenters on the
court were well aware of the evolution
of television from mere camera
coverage of events to super hyped-up
sho.w businesis. Modern coverage of the
national party convention pays little
attention to the actual proceedings and
conventions . From that point on their continuity is lost as the showmen pan the audience, badger delegates with television sets sold like hot cakes. silly questions, and keep their "show"
But the coverage of Kefauver and the moving with the chatter of the
party conventions in those early days "anchors" who become more important
was s imple <?amera viewing of the than the events they are coverini.
events taking place. The camera stayed No doubt it was the recollection or
faithfully throughout the entire such hippodrome performances by h earings and convention sessions. Television coverage of public affairs television that prompted Justice
h d b h b · Stanley Mosk lo denounce the court 8 not yet ecome s ow usmess. action as an "ill-advised submission to
They had no producers to dream up the entertainment media."
activities to keep the viewers' interest "It is re-ettable, .. Mosk read from a during dull momenta in the hearings or e• _ prepared statement, "that a majority of
-------------------------------this court has yielded to the persistence
Simple answers nonexistent
Don't believe that anybody has the
"answers" to people problems. If we
did, great mlnds that hne dwelt on .
these problems would agree far more
than they do.
There are, basically. three things we
wa nt: s ocial stability, personal
freedom. and equality. Every society.
IYlllY 01111
.and most people ln It, would llke lo flnd
the happiest coexlstence of °'8te three.
Nobody has found it yet, nd ftobody
has the answer, thouah many voices
• clamor that they have. lf you want
social stability, how much personal
freedom can you allow? If you want
personal freedom, how much equality
can you afford?
Thi• Is more difficult then any
mathematical equation ln the world.
Every· platform, every pollcy, every
polltlcal creed, hu to ucrlflce
• 1omethtng of one or two of lhfle de·
slderata ln order to 1et the othen. If
they say tbey don't, they Ue, or they are
decetvtna tbemnlvn.
Capltalllm 1lv" U1 th• mOlt rnonal
freedom, at tfi• expenH o lfflal
atablllty and equality. Communltm, ln
il f t r I e d .f o r m 1 , 1 l v • 1 u 1 a •
spurious equality and a repressive
social stability at the expense or
personal freedom. Fascism and Its
counterparts provide social stablllty at
the cost of both equality and personal
freedom.
Yet it seems clear to most unbiased
minds that'what we reaUyrequlre ts the
optimum blending. of these three ele·
ments -and no single system offered
thus far seems to meet thls require-
ment.
And this is why we need much more
public di!cussion and dfalogue; we need
better defulitions or terms, end more
honest reckonings by the proponent.a of
all systems; we need to apply our
brains and energies nol to promote one
ideology or another, but to discover and
develop a way to maximise the e.le·
ments at the lowest toes ld society. •
of the entertainment media. As a result
th is temple of justice is being
transformed into a theater, and lawyers
and justices are to be the actors."
AND MOSK WAS on target when be
suggested the court coverage would
become the subject of Nielsen raU,.p.
For, whether they admit it or Dot,
television news is show bualness and the
networks lteep their eyes glued to the
ratings of their "newscasts." For Ute
most part court proceedinp are dull I
affairs and television coverqe would
be nothing more than a few seconds of I
hi1bligbts 1lving the public a falie
impression of the proceedinas.
The issue of TV cameru in U.e
courtroom hes notbin1 to do with
freedom of the press which bu been
and will continue to be amply proteeted
by the reporters of the print media .mo.
not limited by air tlme, provide full and
detailed rovereae of trials.
I l
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, November 4, 1981
e hunts werewolves
olklore professor travels lair of legendary beast
CLAREMONT (AP> -Talk of
-rertwolva la pretty common
around Halloween but for Harry
A. SeM the aubJect ls not just a ~aaln• excuse for blJlnkl. He ~nta them.
The 42•year·old professor of
rench and folklore at Pitier
Oolle1e, about 40 mlles east of
Los An(eles, •has left for the
Romanian lair of tbe legendacy ~asta for tbe third time.
Senn, a 42-yen-old famtly
ll'Dan, doesn't howl at the moon
OJ wander at ni1ht but he is
fascinated by tbe beast.
·'When I first went, six years
,ago, my intention was to collect
fplklore," Senn said. "l was
accompanied by a speclallst
!rom the Institute of Folklore in
Bucharest, which is affiliated
with the Ministry or Culture.
"During our. travels
throughout the villages, I was
astonis hed to find ,t hat
three-fourths of the narratives
we heard dealt with werewolves
and the reanimated dead or
vampires," he said.
Everyone they met in villages
wanted to talk about
werewolves.
·'They either insisted they had
seen, or knew somebody who
had seen. humans go into the
fbrests, take off their clothes
and become wolves." Senn said.
''Such werewolves usually were
claimed to be from their own
village and wouldn't ever attack
anyone, but rather would run
with a pack of animals or
1ometlmea attack shMp."
Senn explains that ln the
de ve lopmental sta1es,
simulation of werewolves wu
part or the rite or becomlng a
warrior. Accordin1 to bis
research, outlaws subsequently
' They insisted
they had seen. . ..
humans become
wolves."
played on the s uperstition by
wearing wotr skins over their
armor, be said.
Tales of werewolves persist._in
Romania today because the
people continue to live in rural
regions and are much closer to
nature. SeM said.
"In a way their perpetuation
reaffirms their association witb
nature." be said.
·'To most of us, s uperstition is
ignorance. but to those people it
is a rationalized body of beliefs
that maintains harmony in a
village. Lt is a cohesive force
that works to keep a .village
harmonious and peaceful."
But what o f the unlucky
• peraon aald to be the werewolf?
•'There J1 a whole code of
explanation tor this
occurrence," Senn said. "For
example, an infant wbo 11
weaned and then retu"" to the
breast may be a candidate for
becoming a werewolf, the people
believe. Another possibility ls a
child conc4'ived on the eve of a
high religious holiday.
··Even people of high
intelligence, who don't subscribe
to the bellefs, won't put them
down either," he sald.
Ironically, be added, the same
ominous portents of werewolves
and vampires doesn't mean they
are morbid," he said. "On the
contrary, these legends allow
them to be more at ease with the
question or death ...
Be lief in werewolves isn't
exactly in line with the beliefs or
the Communist hierarchy of
Romania but there bas been no
interference in his efforts to
study the strange tales.
Hjs trip to. the homeland of
Count Dracula will be financed
by a $'9,000 Fulbright award, as
were previous trips. The author
of ·'Werewolf and Vampire in
Romania," Senn plans to spend
six months in the archjves of the
University of Cluj Folklore
Center, adding to his collection
or werewolf stories from
Transylvania lo compare with
folklore in the Brenton province
of France.
............
Harf'1J Senn. 42-year-old Pitzer College professor, discusses his
upcoming trip to Romania, where he will embark on lengthy study
of werewolves for the third time.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
CAP> -There's silver ln that
thar courthouse. even If the
"lode" isn't exactly a bonanza
for taxpayers .
A bout 31 ounces of unrefined
sliver "mud," the dress or a
base ment film processing
operation, has been recovered in
the bowels of t he Broward
County Courthouse, says W.W.
"Bill" Kuchinskas, director of
the county recording divlsion.
"We knew we had a sliver
mine down here and didn't ~ant
it to go down the drain."
Kuchinskas said.
The silver co mes from
developing m icrofilm. which
contaiQS a thin coating of the
mineral. The silver is washed
away by a photographic fixer
solution.
Tbe_siiver "mud" has been
saved for six months and last
w ee k wa s sifted b y a n
electrolyte mineral recovery
unit. Kuchinskas said once an
assay purity test is compiled,
the county will receive a check
for its mining operation.
Officials expect to get about
$284 for the initial r ecovery
e rrort . Kuc hins kas s aid the
county also benefi ts because
there won't be any more waste
s ilv e r polluting Fort
Lauderdale's waterways
---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
·B irths
MOAG MllMCNllAL
NOSP'ITAL P'allSaYT•alAM ··---Mr. a ...:i Mo. CO..., ~. FCMlftt.jn Valley, boy
Mr. a11d Mr1. Gregory Fer11uson,
lr¥111e, g irt
l4k ... 17 Ml. a...:i Mn. K.., Fui.u..-. Cost.
Mesa, boy
S4l '*''It Mr. a...:i Mo. Joa Oe Los S-llK, Costa
Mesa, 9lrl
Mr. allCI Mr-. -'-Ces~. Co&t.
Mesa, 9111
Mr. a...:i Mr\. s~ a1-.11s111p,
'"'•M,9lrl ,.,,, ..... "
Mr. a 11d MF\. Mlcl\HI Wata nabe.
Huntlft9ton BM<h, 9lr1
Mr. •llCI Mn Patrk ti Taft, H""'llllllton Beach, boy
Mr. a...:i Ml'-. Wlll!Mn Ma..-. Cost. Metoa,Qlr1
M#. a...:i Mo. OaMel Aeol, Intl,.., bOy
Mr. a...:i Mn o..nl\ Wllllami. trvlfte.
bey
M( •• ,,., Mo._., Mar'llMI, Coote
Mesa, girt .........
Ml. a...:i Mo.~ Sll'*Y, Irvine. bey
Mr. ••d Mn. TllomH Sceberras.
CMt.MeM.twt
Ml. allCI Mo. Paul Hol•Kil, Costa
Masa.11lr1
Mr. allCI 'kt.. ~I AajK, N--1
8Hcll, boy
Mr. and Mrs. 0011 Att1rec 111.
~nt11191on 8"<11, lloy
. alld Mr-. J-Trolinger, Costa
sa. boy
WESTEaN MaDICAL
CEMTaa
• .L ...... ,.,.. • a11d Mrs. Joseph Luecti•.
*
11tel11 Vatie'y, tlrl
Odlllilr J . a11d Mrs. Heel Prltc11arcs.
11t1RQ11on a..o.. tlrl
Odlllilr I ~-alld Mo. Ak Nrd Cl-. trviM.
?:'. a...:i Mn. Donald Buctii.\, I rvlM, .....
Odlllilr. Mf. end Mn. Joe GolM, Irvine, Qlr1
#Ir. allCI Mr .. Erk .-......, L.9.-
llff<ll. glr1
Odlllilr '' Marla,,,,. c. Slront, F-t.ln Valley,
.. y
Mr. allCI Mn, Sem.MI M<Gr-r,
Coste Mesa, Qlr1
I POVllTAIM YAU.SY COMMU'"TY MOIPtTAL • ,,,, ..... M
Mr. -W'S. Gre9or'f '"-... eosi. Mesa.Ny
Mr. e11d Ml'-. 511.tnQ Ll11, l'-lalll
Velley, 9lrl
1¢1 • u
Mr .• ,,. Mo. Cer1 si.-s. F-i.i..
Valley, boy '"" ....... /'Ar . a11d Mrs. Waldo Briggs,
HUnll"lllOn llMch, boy
Mr. a11d. Mrs . Maril M•<•, Westmlmtef,9'r1
........ It
Mr. a11tt Mrs. Maril Abeyta,
~1111ll11910n Beecl\, bop
I ll1t1 .... 1•
Mr. and Mn. Robeft Over. H""'ll""°"
BflCll. girl Mr. a 11d Mrs. MlcllH I Compbell,
wutmlM9f', boy
Mr. aNI Mrs. Jt//M WlllOft, Huntl"llloft
~h.tlr1 . ., .......... ,
"Purveyors of
Oldtlme Neighborliness
IOl6a.,.w.Dr.
"-.-th eclll 7'0.0111
* PUBLIC NOTICE!! * WE HAVE CLOSED THE DOORS IN OUR ARl:ADIA STORE FOREVER.
THE ENTIRE BEAUTIFUL INVEITORY OF FINE lAOIES'
FASHIONS WILL BE LIOUIOA~D AT OUR
COSTA MESA LOl:ATION!
SALE ·
THURS.
-SALE HOURS:
THURS., FRI.
9:30-8
DAILY 9:30-7
SU"DAY 10-5
"THE BEAUTIFUL"
BUTTONS AND BOWS
','WOMEN LOVE US"
179 -"0" E. 17TH ST.
COSTA MESA
SHOP
FOR
CHRISTIASf
1 I I
WEDNESDAY, NOV.•. 1981
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
~---,~.,....-:---ENTERTAINMENT-
82-3
8.4-5
86-7, 89
I Dr. William Burke of the
·Federal Reserve says the
tight money policy will
continue. See Page 84.
. .
~ ..........
_·Galilee h~me f o:ri gators
Florida-born creatures settling in after chilly welcome
TIBERIAS, Israel (AP> -
Florida alligators are settling
lnto their new home near the Sea
of Galilee alter a chilly welcome
from 10me Israelis who feared
the creatures mi1ht attack
s unbathers and religious
pilgrims.
The 120 alligators seem to be
thriving so well in the hot,
humid Yarmuk River gorae that
some of them have grown four
incties in three months -triple
their normal growth rate.
Shlomi Ranon, an enterprisin&
youn1 Kibbutmik, has brought
the beasts to the Holy Land to
help populate a tropical park he
is creating on the Yarmuk six
miles east of the Sea of Galilee.
sun bathers and Christian
pilgrims who baptize
themselves in the lake.
Glora Ilnani, a zoologist of the
Na tu re Protection Society,
sparked the controversy by
claiming the alligators could
escape or their eggs get washed
downriver lnto resort areas.
It sounds like the stuff of a
nifty little horror movie, but
Ranon scoffs at the notion.
·'There are at least eight
barricades and fine·mesh fence
between the alligators and the
river. And besides, no egg could
1urvive the journey.'·
under a little bridge. ~
"There was no danger," he
says. "Her mouth was still taped
shut from the flight. We kept It a
secret to avoid causing panic."
Then a story was published by
the press here about how
Florida alligators, proU/eratlng
as a protected species, were
attacking swimmers.
But Ranon says that even at
close quarters, alligators are
hartnless. "It's the African
crocodile that attacks. The
alligator is to the crocodile what
a pussy cat is to a tiger.··
Shlomi Ranon checks one of the 120 Florida.alligators he ha& imported to populate a tropical pork near
the Sea of Galilee.
But some nature specialists
have voiced the fear that
alligators might escape into the
Sea of Galilee and munch on
But public anxiety worsened
when one of Ranon's new pets
fell off a truck enroute from the
airport to the park. Ranon kept
the loss a secret for a ~nth
until he found the reptile hiding
To prove his point he jumps
onto a sandbar surrounded bx
waters filled with alligators. He
makes cooing and clicking
sounds and half a dozen fully
grown alligators shuffle ashore
and gather at his feet like
cringing dogs. hoping to be fed.
Vital documents stored in 4 railroad tunnel vault
SANTA CRUZ,(AP > -The
Western States Underground
Stor age Vaults company
advertises "absolute protection"
for vital documents.
They aren't kidding.
Their•vault, in an old railroad
tunnel in the Santa Cruz
Mountains 70 miles south of San
Francisco, originally was billed
as able to survive a nuclear
holocaust.
Today, depositors ranging
Crom IBM to Walt Disney, from
I the Rolling Stones to the Defense
Department, keep records there
to insure their survival in an
inereasingly perilous world.
''With malcontents and
revolutionaries blowing up
1 banks and casinos, peopl.si_h_.~ve
a need to protect their re~."
said Western States President
Dan TinDe)t.
Opened in 1954 under the name
Western States Atomic Storage
Vaults. the vault was an answer
to the fears of the Cold War. AB
those fears subsided the name
was changed -·'The word
•atomic' scared everybody to
death,1' Tinney said -but
Western States' directors still
point to the "vulnerability of
Western cities."
.. Although the United States
has been spared the menace of
enem)' aggression thus far, the
threat grows with each passing
year," says a brochure.
··w estern cities are regarded as
inescapably primary Urget
areas for atom bomb·laden
enemy planes supported by a
submarine fleet having guided
missiles. In contrast, top
echelons of Civil Defense do not
regard isolated mountain areas
as targets."
Whether thanks go to the
Russians. terrorists or just fear
of an earthquake, business at
the vault has grown steadily -
up between 8 percent and 10
percent each year . Tinney said.
Today, two-thirds of the 300,000
vault are those used to store
classified Pentagon documents.
· ''The Defense Department has
their own strong safes they
bring in there," Tinney said.
"Nobody gets in there."
There are at least half a dozen
other vaults in 1the country.
Tinney said. In fact, Western
States was patterned after the
Iron Mountain vault in New
others began looking ln 1950.
"Our first thought was to start
the vault near Carson City,
Nev.. in some old gold mines.
but they weren't suitable." he
said.
"Then we planned to build ln
San Francisco, but we found out
the cost or excavation alone
would be $8 million to $10
million."
''The Defense Department has
their oum strong safes they bring in
there. Nobody gets in there."
Another idea involved using
abandoned Yosemite Valley
Railroad tunnels in a scheme
combining vault storage with
mushroom growing.
Finally, Tinney and his
associates found a tunnel that
until 1940 had been used by the
"Suntan Special." a train that
ran between Los Gatos and Santa Cruz. They got it ror a
fraction of the original $300,000
cost of buildiog the tu"nel. cubic feet in the vault is filled,
mostly with microftJm.
In addition to the papers of
leading corporations, records of
universities. cities and 46 of
California's 58 counties are
stores in the 246·foot-long tunnel,
kept at a constant 63 degrees
and 46 percent humidity.
"We have 16mm and 35mm
microfilm records dating back
to the 19th century down here,"
said Warren Slocum, assistant
recorder for San Mateo County.
"In the event of a natural
disaster, a bank really wouldn't
be the most secure place to store
these.
"The vault has 18·inch thick
con crete walls and is very
secure. Ir there was a disaster,
we could re·create the records of
our office."
The most secure areas of the .
York. But that, like other East
Coast 1auJts. is in an abudoDed
salt mine, not a railroad tunnel covered by a mountain.
In addition to the obvious
security ot a thl'ee·tdn steel
door. four guards and a bur1lar
alarm system hooked into the
local sheriff's office, the vault
offers economic advantages,
Tinney said.
Companies don't have to pay
insurance on their property.
which would be high." he
explained. "They don't have to
hire extra security guards to
protect it. AJ\d we also perform
a great deaJ of clerical work that
saves them many hours."
Tinney, an 84·year-old retired
railroad man, says the tunnel
was not the first choice for the
vault when he and several
Nestled in the mountains three
m Hes east of the town of Felton.
the tunnel is a perfect
repository. with almost 100 feet
or earth on top of it.
After 27 years of faithful
service, the vault is now getting
a facelift, including new paint
on the walls and carpets in the
receiving area.
"We're sprucing it up." said
Norman Larson. chief custodian
at the vault.
A tantalizing thought is that
the vault could. unintentionally,
turn out to be a time capsule
some day, harboring a sampling
of what life was like in the 20th
century. 'Tve thought about
that," said Tinney. "It would be
like finding the Dead Sea
scrolls."
STAYS ATOP SIGN -
An unidentified
woman ignores pleas
of police to come
down from a lS·f oot
traffic sig n a l
warning sign on a
Bakersfield highway,
and then struggles
with officers when
they remove h e.r
from the sign after
an hour. She was
taken into custody
and transported lo
Kern Medical Center.
.............
Custodian Norman Larson stand!J .at the back entrance to the
Western States Underground Vaults company, once a tunMl
through the Santa Cruz mountains.
I
I
J
i
I
-I
I
•
'
•ANN LANDERS
• •HUGH MULLIGAN
BEACH STROLL -Former Washington. D.C ..
radio and television talk-s how personality
Mike Wolf enjoys warm weather and sunny
skies on a beach stroll near his Oxnard.
Calif .. home. Wolf now owns KKBZ. a s mall
popular music radio st ation in Ventura
County.
Antique Show
a. Auto & Homeown&rs-~ ;;,.-. Ouotes By Phone
FAllOS IMSIUMC( . ,
54 .. 5554 w IJS.J07
ltl4Hmrtlor ·CMt.M"9
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lloob ,, ....
f amrty To ... At>ovt la•
Monday
Nov. t 7·10 p.m.
•1~00,........,.. uooo,..
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223 Main Seaclitt Vlllagtl4
Huntington Beach
Main at Yorktown
536·5150
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Advertisement Wyoming
. n .tL ''-01TERY' ,-,en to Al li.s. Citizens in November
Every month t housands of You may enter these little-known
citizens are wlnnlng OIL LAND drawings for as little as $30 -
lease rights from federal draw· TAX-OEOUCTABLE.
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public drawings .
Official Entry Card(s) and infor·
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writing to: AGAOLIC (American
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Suite 1000, Imperial Bank
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P.O. Box 1858, Costa Mesa, CA
92626. Enclose $1 for postage.
• • •
To LaVonne Aerobics
-tt (A Slcfer'• Delfg:..h-.t) ....
FITNESS STUDIO
18832 Brookhurst
Fountain Valley
Tired of waiting ih line
for exerC(ise equipment at
crowded health clubs'!
Come to LaVonne Aerobics
Want the cardiovascular work-uut
equivalent to running 3 miles,
without the smog or boredom?
Try LaVonne Aerobics
Leave your tToubles behind at
the end of the day with
a stimulating hour of
Aerobics Dance Call today
fordetails JOIN NOW!
Limited (714) 963-3444 Enrollment only1
Not to Medley's Restaurant
----~---~ra-e }~~~~---
t ·.-.... 11\:..a ........ ~~
MIT HIPOIMANCI
Save 14.00 on adyneml .. ~ Shamp00,
P~ Qr, end~ Dry (nonnally ·~18.00) .. YoU,. foronty 114.00wheii ~Introduce
)fOurMlt •a II,... a"'°"'9r wHft thlt coup0n.
MT JOUI _,, PllllOIMAMCI
llOl llLllll
eaders to test taste?
DEAR A'.'l'.'l LA~DERS : Pleast> tell
your readers that they should never usk
country people how many acres they own
It is the samt' us asking ... llow mur h
mone" do \'OU han• in thl' bunk···· .Just ('all
mt• . A=" .E)fBARRASSED R.\~CllER I ~
)10'.'ITEREY. C:\Lr F
DEAR RASCHER: Why are ~·ou
embarrasse(I? Too fe w or too many?. ·
Actually, I don't think the question is
. In poor taste. But what do I know -me in
my Chicago ~artment? How about U. ~·ou
folks who own property -am I wrong?
DEAR A~~ LA:'\IDERS: I am 2fl 'eat·s
old. After my child "as born I had a ·l ubal
ligation. Is there a wa~ a doctor ('an unlit·
the tubes'! I would Ion.• to han• one mon•
child. if possible .
1 hope you will print your answer in
your column. beca u~c· I han· no om• to
discuss this with. I would bl' <1s ha m cd lo
admit what I did.
P .S. Please tell ,·our n•aclt•r.., th<1t ••
woman who is preg nant 1:-. not in tht• propt•r
frame of mind to dt•r1d<> whether she wunt:-
more children. Sign mt• \'ERY SORRY
I ~ CALI F'OR:":lr\
DEAR SORRY: Some tubal ligations
can be reversed. Others cannot. Onl~· ~·our
.l(~·necologist knows for ..,un·.
I agree: ~o woman should make s uch
a decision when she is pregnant -and at
26. after onh· one c hild! Please tell me
. "our doctor tried lo talk ~·ou out of it.
DEAR A:"::": I hope \OU will allo .. , m l'
to s hare ~,. ston· ''1th vo ur reader:-.. I am
<.i compulsi'\'e o,·er cutei· but. thank!. to the
s upport a n d 111\·e o f o,·ercatcr..,
AnoO\·mous. I am now able to limit m '
eating to three balan('ed meab u da ~ I hkt•
riwsclf for the fir-;1 t1m1.• in mv hfl'. and m'
\\ orld keeps c hang in g for thl' hettt·r .
Before I 1oined 0:\ I ''a:-. out of ('ont roi
I de\'oun•d half pounds. µound:-.. lu~ 1.·r .....
Brickbats,
RIDGEFIELD. Conn .\P On th1 :-
the fourth annl\·ersa r~· of :\lulligan· .... S\l'''.
dass1cal scholars and medie' al 1st~ an·
threat ening to boil the <>tew master in hi:-.
own 1uices for bobhl1nJ? th1.• '">rd
mutriculut1on·· in a rt•rent C'Olu mn ubou1
an Irish C'astll•
I will ha\ t• to n:-.t> and ,go n11\\ l11 I h1·
lukt• is le or lnrnsfrN· a nd a round lll\\l'I' qf
da.' and \\Ulllt•., bi111l in a bt•t• loud glacil· to
h1clt• out. hkt• u hu11ll•d I n:-.h m1mk. uni ii
•hl'lr fun abates 11 t h1:-. <·olumn , .... to
"ll n I\ t• f1)r a not hl·r lour·, t•a r 1 t•rm
The tempest roared ·,,ht•n l mt•nt111nl'<I
that a guide al Cah1r <'u-,1lt• mfnrmetl u'
lht• tiny openings ulop lhe C'l't·nelatt•d w<.iJi ...
\H•re for matriculation. pounnl! llflai <.irHI
hubblmg nil ont11 tht• ht•ads nt '"' adt·r ....
Outraged readt•rs wt•n· qu1 (•k l11 J)l llnl nut
t h a t t h e '' o r d I h t' a r d \\ ;1 ...
··machicoiation ·· Firs t 111'1' tht• m<H"k wu ...
r i t ,. c d i t o r .J a ' B r u !> h u rt o I t h t•
Portsmouth. Ohio Dail~· Times. a mt•dil•\'<.i]
buff who know!> what splendor falls from
<:as Cle walls "hen the rorrect word ts ust•d
F rom ,\nc horagl' .. \laska. Ph1l1:-
\\'alke r calls atten\ion to another boo-boo
"Cook Inlet doe.sn't frN~ze solid during
wi nter bccau:-.e or the l'Xtremes in tides
You were probahl~ rererring to thl·
~enana Jee Classic. about 3()1) mile:-. n1ll'th.
"hl're a tnpod is set on the ice to re('ord
I he exa('l minute tht• ice unfrl'l'7.e-. h'
pulling <1 lint• attached to u clock.· ·
COC~TERATTACKI SG )I\" column
allackmg att<>mpts to unsex tht• lang_uagt•
o f th<.> Bible. Elsie Hamm . Ph .D. in
Lawton. Okla .. ~uggests thnt "for all ~·our
olwious lilting Iris h lo,·e of words. you an•
n·a II v a few bricks sho1•t of a full load when
it comes to defending s exist languagt'. Why
iS it always Cl man WhO pokes fun•/ If men
\Ve r e referred to in Scripture. sermons and
h y mns a s ·siste r s .· would they be
t·omfortable a nd uncomplaining._, ..
boxes and bags of junk food in addition to
m y_ regular m eals I learned through OA
that compuls i\·e O\'ereating is a diseusc
like alcoholism and gambling Will power
is not enough to muke a compul~i\'e stem
s tuffing his face I tried for 15 year"' and it
didn·t work.
~any diets and diet groups can help
you lose weight. but OA offers a s piritual
;.md mental approach that "will teach ~·ou
how to handle life's chall enJtl'S without
turning to fOO;d.
Please. Ann. urge your 1·eaders to hunt
up the nearest OA chapte1• l'n• gonl' from
u "'ize 22 to a Ill. Size 1-t is my goal • J"m ;;.1)0
und l"m going to mukl' ll b~ Chnstma:-
0 God hks"' vou for the serdce ,·ou n•ndcr
11.S . FI.°l~T. :\flCll.
DEAR )l.S.: Thank \"Ol' for rt'·
minding me that it ·~ time to 1>lug 0 .\
again. Tht>\ do a rt•markahlt> job.
Anyone who wants information ahout
this organization should look in the phont>
book. If \'OU don't find it. wrile to the
following addr~ss and learn lhe location of
the nearest group:
Overealers .\non~·mous, World S<>rvice
Office. 2190 190th Street. Torrance. Calif .
!f0504. Please send a long, self -addre~sed
envelope.
Teach1114 Y""' k1rh al>t1ut the tat:ts 111 /11 i-
ca11 he easy'" ait•kwarrl An11 Landers h<H1klet
lfnic \\'1101 and \\'hen 111 Tell Y11ur C/11/d
. \ f>nul Ser ca11 spell the dt f terenc:e Senrl .l/1
ce11~ts a/011g 11:11'1 a long .. 'l tamperl
wll-addre,.,ed e11 re/11pe •c1th lftJUr request . /11
\1111 f...anrlNs. f' f) H1u 119<4.1 C111caqo Ill
ljf/l)JJ
bouquets
HUGH MUlllGM
MULLIGAN STEW
down in Halon Roug1.· :\Jr .... Bl'unl \\ ri1 .....
th.at Ruth and I han• t·er't&Jmf\· •·n 111\ ,.,,
'llllr c·olurnn O\'t•r t ht• pu~t fou r ~ l'<11· ...• m il ''t' hJ\l' fa11hfull~ d1ppt•d them .... , rh.11 "'
pr11 hahl.' ha\ l' ;1t il•a..,t ~i!) ''' tht• .)I~> \ 111:
h;l\·t· '' n tl t•n in th<1t 1a·n11d
Tht•st• random :-.C'n hhlml!:-. in t ht• Ro mt·
()~uh .\mt•ric<.in fnund l'anu-\\Ith .:\Jr ....
T1t·ti·n de Franl·1sc·1~ in ~aplt•:-.. Ital.'. \\ho
\\ J.., ·particulady amu:-t•d .. h~· m~ ··.,.f\
as-,ault:-. on dt's1g nt·r 1ean:-. and tht• nc•w
('l'lme of wood-napping ··
.:\Jrs .\rthur Zot•tklt•r. ··<tn ~1dm1nnJ.!
n•ud t•r in Flonda think:-. m~ rl•p11r>s fr,,rn
London ··on thl' royal wcddinJ! a1't• worth
... ome kind of pri1.e. · · but she can ·1 :'il<1n<l
t ht• pil'lure or me that tht• Da,vt,KW R1•ac·h
.fournai t·a1Ties aloni?s iclt• tht• 1,..,,..,t!: ·J
l'l'all~ hatt• and abhor lhat l'ktun.· Can r
'1111 tin s11mt.>thinl!" ·
\\'t•ll. i.I fut·t•·lift m1J!ht pl'l•\l' t)(.'fll'fitta l
1r I can find i.I pl~1..;t 1t· 'lll'J.!4.'0n willinJ.! '"
n ... k a hl•rn1a
)IY Sl")l)IER REC'O)l)IP.~OF.O
n·admg. an annual fi~ture "°''. dl'hJ!htt·d
Rosalct• O'Connor of Woodhur.'. Conn. I
1usl had lo lt.>11 ~nu whul tcrririt· ~hn1n• ...
the~· wen.• and how they madt• m~· summl'I'
-;o memorable Thank ,.,,u for mtroduc:inJ,t
me Lo · Oa\'id Coppt•i•fit•ld · It wa .... .,,,
wondcrrul: I ne,·er wunted it t11 enrl ..
Introducing j u:-.t 1me reader L'> tht•
dt•lights of "David C11pperfidd .. mak1.•:-. lht•
fourth hirthda~ 11r :.\tulligan·s Stt>\\: worth
tclt•hratin~ here at Hard:-stl'ibble llOUSl'.
wht•rt• a con\'i\'ial beaker shall fo1'\hw1th
he quaffed with jo~ and satisfacllm">
Keep those letters ('ominit in. al\hottJ!h
when stamps reach a buck ap1t'tl' I l'SIK'<'I
th<.· <:omplaints lO tupt•r 1>ff
Punch
Despite these brickbats. whil'h may
help us attain a full load again. )lulligan ·~
Stew ,.,.;11 continue its policy of letting the
t·eaders ha\'e their Sa\' on each birthdav of
the column. Behind the barbed ~·ire
barricades hJre at Hardscribble House.
comforted by the baying of our ferocious. r---------------......;.;.. __ __,
snaggle-toothed hounds. we dare to be
tol.erant and understanding with <>u 1·
critics.
On occasion. even a few rose petals are
tossed O\'-er the fence b" the mail carrier
"Thanks ror your printed words.·· writes
Leonard W Leeds from Atlanta. Gu ... You
range far and wide as ~·ou write. You1·
A I ask an reports were lyrica I in an
adventurous way,"
"Allow me to thank \OU befort• I
forget." writes W.O. ··Kit'" Car~on. un
)I. D. in Bowling Green. K~'. ··for makln~
the e,·ening hours ol 1a re~I Kentuclf~·
colonel more pleasant. from perusing your
columns. r especially liked the one whert
you compared llardscribbh• HouKe Uf
Treetops In Africa Is tht•re any roll~cUQft
o f your work~ in either hard or
softbound'! ..
NO, B T LITERARY •1~nt11 anti
publishers pl~ue fake note. n.. ,...,_
thing would 1~ Bill Beard's 'ltr11pboek
...
"And now, 'The best of from the desk of Arnold
Keams, Vlce President.' "
I•• 11 HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
'Capricorn:
i"Money due
II
•11 Thursday, November 5
•\I •
'''. ARIES (Ma rch 2l ·April 19 >: Refuse to be lured by false sense of security. It is
.•. time for a change and you '11 know it. Let
:1.go of security bla nket.
h· TAURU& <April 20-May 20 1: New
opportunity is on horizon -be ready to
pounce. Rqom is made for you at top:
y ou 'll encounter creative, stubborn,
• t a lented people who appreciate your
efforts. · ·.;
" GEMINI <May 21-June 20 1: Emphasis
1 on travel, settling of family differences,
securing of property and installation of
saf ety devices .
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Horizons
expand, social activity increases and your
popularity is on upswing. Money comes
from unus ua l source. You could be
reunited with one who played important
r o le in your past.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): What appeared
to be an error turns out to be correct
-j udgme n t. Bide yo ur ti me , r evie w
n egotia t ions and begin reb u il ding
program.
-VIRGO I Aug. 23 -Sept. 22 >: Gain
indicated through written material. You'll
• receive outline of assignments. Future
projects will be c l arified.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 J: Change
occurs in connection with home. ramify,
long -term financial arrangements. You'll
be dealing with young persons, emphasis
will be on creativity, s peculation and
self-expression.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 211 : Define
·ter m s, avoid self-deception . check
property rights. S omeone may be
attempting to sell you proverbial bill of
goods.
SAGITTARIUS C Nov. 22-Dec. 21>:
' Short trip figures in connection with older
'relative. You'll have added respons ibility,
greater chance for promotion and reward . .
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22 -J a n. 191:
Financial relief is in sight. Roadblock to
progress will be removed. Spotlight on
per sonal possessions, locating needed
m aterial and increasing income potential
, AQUARIUS <Jan . 20-Feb. 18 >:
Emphasis on new starts, fresh concepts,
, personality, special appearances, correct
timing and judgment. Cycle high, you get
what you want at propitious moment.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar ch 20 ): You gain
valu a ble glimpse behind scenes .
Knowledge combines with intuition for
• correct move.
AIT llOP,I
THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER
·Propping op
the market
SAN FRANCISCO -In a desperate
attempt to shore up a sagging economy.
the president's economic advisers are now
con sidering s uppl y ing the n a tion 's
stockbrokers with satin sheets, powdered
rhinoceros horn and free subscription& to
· · Lus~. ·' the magazine of m eanin gful
interviews.
What stimula ted this imaginative
proposal was the recent discovery~ by
psychologists of a direct cor relatio n
between sex and the Dow Jones industrial
average.
"When the m arket goes down ...
explained one. ·•members of the financial
community feel tense, dispir ited a nd
inadequate -scarcely the mood in which
sexual interest m ight nourish."
For proof of this theory. one need look
no further than to Felicia Frisbee and her
husband, Fred , once an e bullient and
a m bitious young broker.
"WHEN MR. R EAGAN WAS elected, ..
said Felicia , da bbing at her mascara with
a Kleenex, "our marriage seemed made in
heaven. Fre d would come home even·
evening with candy or flowers. take me in
his arms and mur mur sweet nothings in
m y ear like : ·1 find you and the high-tech
glamour issues irresistible, dearest.·
"Oh, I can still remember the night the
Dow-J on es industrials hit 1000'. F red
had n 't been t h at bullish since our
ho n eym oon . In fact , Jor the e ntire
following week, ever y time E.F. Hutton
talked, I got a headache ...
Then t he ma rket plummeted 150
points. The spark, needless to say, went
out of Fred and Felic ia's marriage.
"I did everything I could, .. sobbed
Felicia. ··1 woul~ greet him at thMoor in
my black-lace baby-dolls with a cold
martini in my hand. He's take t he martini.
look at me as though I were ten shares of
Pan-Am and.turn on ·Laverne and Shirley.·
"DURING OUR CANDLELIT diriners.
I'd pour hi m a glass of wine. put on a
M a n tova ni r ecord a nd w h i s per
encouraging li ttle tidbits ln his ear . s uch
as, ·Louis Rukeyser says many attractive
a ssets are now within reach.·
"But he 'd m erely mutter, ·Down '.
Down'. Down! Everything ·s going down'.· I
mean he's been a real bear."
Whether Fred and Felicia's marriage
can survive is one question. Whether the
economy can survive is another. For if a
sinking stock market can depress sexual
interest. the converse is equally true.
Each m o rning acr oss t he land .
stockbrokers get out of bed feeling tense .
dispir ited a nd inadequate. When thev
arrive at the office in this mood, do the\·
o p t i m i s t i c a l 1 y b u y ? N o , t h e ~·
pessimistically sell. And down the market
plunges further. It's a vicious cycle.
NOW WE SEE THE ingenuity behind
the plan proposed by the president ·s
economic advisers . It is not the high
interest rate in lending that is causing our
woes: it is the lower interest rate in sex.
One adviser frankly admitted that his
major concern in this hour of national
economic crisis was whether powdered
rhinoceros horn would work.
"But look at it this way ... he said.
"You got anything better'?"
'POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
'SN"T
IT &TTER
TO S.E GOING
THE WRONG
WAY,
THAN TO &E
GOING l
NOWHERE
AT ALL'?
·;Stress plays big role
DEAR DOCTOR : I have had
osteoartbrttls for at least 10 years. At .
times I would feel perfectly comfortable.
The pains in my neck and lower back
_ would let up remarkably. I could get along
t without any aspirin at au.
t i f 1
But then for no apparent reason the
pain would return and be wone than ever.
I'd need to take at least eight to 10 aspirins
a day to find relief. How do you accoant for
this change In well-being? -MRS. O.
~ , DEAR MRS. 0 .: The easy way to
f~ explain it is by saying that remissions are
• common in arthritis. For no apparent ~! reason patients wlll say, "I feel much
better. I don't understand why." And
doctors often admit they don't understand I It , either. Such apparent Improvement
may a lso be found in other types of
patients.
But there's a corollary. Many patients
al.lo wonder why they don't improve while
taldna treatment. Why do they feel wone!
Often tM mystery iniibt bave -.n
solved ti tbe doctor aaked 1peclflc
~ qae1ttona. In addition to th• rouUae
<. qoeaUani about ~. aleep, bcnnla, . eta, tt'• lnipOrllnt eo e.ttmate lhe lmput'.
1.
T JOUI lllAl TH
OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN
of ·stressful changes going on· in the
patient's daily life.
Without question, life stresses do
influence how we feel. Undoubtedly, a
recent death in the family or financial loss
will have profound physical as well as.
psycholotical elfect.s on any human being
-sick or well.
As we've been .H)'in&, the competent
phy1iclan will inquire about chan1e1 ln the ·
patient's way_ al life. But if ihe doctor doesn~t find tbe time to uk, the patient
1bould take the time to reveal current
1tresH1 that are affectln1 his or her
health.
Dr. sa.-,. wlcomn ~ from
rtaMn. Ht cmllOC .w .caU 9dPkfuallw but
MNll ....... ,,_, of ~ ..,.,.., DI UU colaa,_...,,.......,.,.,. ... .,.of
UW ~ .... P.O. lltla 1•, ColCo lino, Cdf;.... .
---·--------------
Or1nge Coast DAILY ptLOT/Wedneaday, November 4, 1P81
SETIING SAIL -The dozen Seattle-are a m en
and women a board the Sea Shepherd · II.
destined for Iki Is land, Japan, where they
will try to stop the dolphin kill, face passible
·~---cens ure, imprisonment a nd violence. But
m ost say they wouldn't miss the mission for
the world.
THE VOYAGERS CLUB
AND
WESTERN CRUISE LINES
I NVI TE YOU TO A SPECIAL
CRUISE NIGHT TH URSDAY
WJ\'F:.\1RER 12th. 19HI
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
AIRPORTER INN, IRV~E Admission Free-Seating Limited.
Drawing for F'REE CRUISE 011 SS A7.l'RE SEAS'
RSVP
HARBOR TRAVEL -87&-1311
MESA VERDE TRAVEL -556-6311
ANCIENT MARINER TRAVEL 138·9780
TRAVEL COUNTRY OF IRVINE 551 ·2129
40% to 70%
on avarythingl ,,
¥ * OPEN -THURSDAY * :
~ T1lE Grand Oponing.
• Colobrationf *
,GLOVES FOR EVERYONE IN THE FAMIL YI -
Keep warm this Winter! Our buyers have purchased over 250,CXKI
pairs of lk>•~ for men, women & children. Take your pte' of blue
denim, patch palm, nylon, acrylic kntt or vinyl in assorted cok>1s.
These aftd mny more styles avallat* rn an stores. To eo alone with
the elowes we have a cutted style hat of washable acryhc kmt and a
ski hal both 1n assorted soled colors & patterns.-------,
Assorted handpainted desens on honey colored
stoneware body. Creal lof 111t IJYI,. durq the
c°"'"' holiday. Come tn now for 1rut selecltons.
SET OF 4
TEMPERED
GLASSWARE
Made to W1thst1nd
shocks and boilinc
water. Availlble 1n
9 oz. (on the rocls),
12 oz. (tumbler).
13'h:u.~ I
LIQUID 'HOLD'
COUGH
MEDICINE
79c 1·::r.:c-...............
Cl Ill~ A ... to
ClllllOll c:eMI. .....
~~0 $595 CASSEROlE e
20 PIECE CHINAWARE
DINNER SET
$}49.S
F 1ne porcttlin !Jblew1re.
Set'Yict for four. Beautiful
floral desiln wittl l'* tnm.
Set mdudlS 4 each: dinner
plates. SIAlll plates, soup
bowts. CllPS and SHCn
CHROME PLATED
KITCHEN TOOLS
·59c
()wome plltllt ~Chell
.... _..._.,strllMf
IPOOft. ......... --
Matched pt«es beaullfdy boxed for Ii~
• 12" AU GRAT~ OISH M.11
• 13" MU.O YEGETABlE DISH I.II
• 2'h QT. COVERED CASSEROU I.•
Other pieces awailablt tn most stores.
l
I
• ..
o.11• ~ , .. ,. .._
Dr Willlam M Burke. t•tce pre'11de11t of Sa11
f 'ra11c1sco rederal Rest•n·e l3at1k erp/u111s f't•rl '
monet1 pol1c1es to .\'ewporl Reach aud1e11r·1>
Tight money
• to continue
By RICHARD GREEN
Of ... o.ity ~ S\llfl
Despite a recent cut by the Federal Reserve
Board in the rate at which it lends money to banks,
a Fed spokesman said in Newport Beach that It
will continue with policies designed to. slow the
growth ortbe U.S. money supply.
Dr. William M. Burke, vice president of the
Federal Reserve Bank in San Francisco. said
these policies are designed lo reduce inflation.
which be said is the primary driving force behind
high interest rates.
The Federal Reserve Board receotJy cut ils
basic discount rate from 14 percent to 13 percent. a
move that led to a cut in the prime rate of major
banks from 18 percent to 17 5 percent. with further
reductions forecast.
Burke said in his speech Tuesday at the
Newport Inn luncheon of the Greater hvine
Industrial League that while the Fed can influence
short-term interest rates through its basic discount
rate. long-term loan interest rates al'e tied to the
inflationary ex~tations of lenders
He explained that iC a lender fears the Inflation
rate will increase. that lender will want lo charge
a high interest on all long-term loans.
Burke said there are similarities between the
current economic situation in this country and the
situation that existed from 1974 to 1976
In those years. tight monetary and fiscal
policies resulted in a halving or interest rates and
inflation. he said.
Similar policies have been in force in this
country since 1979. he said.
T-bill yields off
nearly one point
WASHINGTON tAPl -Yields on short·term
Treasury securities are down for the fourth time in
five w~ks and are al their lowest level in seven
months.
About $4.7 billion in six·month bills were sold
Monday at an average discount rate of 12.721
percent. That's down nearly a full percentage
point from the 13.619 percent of the previous week,
oCficials reported after the weekly auctions.
Beginning Tuesday, banks and sa viogs and
loans were able to pay as much as 13.659 percent
interest on their six-month. Sl0,000 savings
certificates. down from the previous 13.869
percent
Starting this week, interest on the certificates
is limited to one-quarter point above the average
yield on six-month bills at the four most recent
auctions.
For 0-itl«I Ad
ACTION
Call
4 DAIL T rlLOT
AO.YISO.
'42·'471
COLaCTOM~ ,._ c-. • ""°"' -a lh ..
o.MC_.,._..., Mt-ct.St.IS
tl.J.41 ..,., ....
KrU9e"-~.St ..., ... M•Plt Lfffs Mll.7' M4L71 SO Pt-SSll.1S 1M1lS ..,, Sllv1r &eot tmt.• SIM.• ._ c.... ,.. ... Yllefl m••--·
Free to
the Public
FOCUS ON COMMUNITY HEAL Tl!
\fliff,\(ttU I•"'
PACIFICA COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
DIABETES EDUCATION
TEN HOUR COURSE FOR DIABETICS
AND FAMILY MEMBERS
< Ollrt01'1A fE 0 R'
MA AFRASIAHI:. M 0
MARY JO "11LLEll R N
DOROTHY KE.LLV RN
7:00 -O JO PM
Wl'dne~t1\". No'·l·mhn II. HIH I
Wt·<l11t>~lnr, Nm·rmlwr I H. I~~ I
Wcdnc~n>. 01•t'1•mhi'r i. 1981
WedntMl<n . l>l'n·mh1·r ll. Hl>41
LIMITED ENROLLMENT ...
'"'"" 11~2 (In I I h I 1 ~It lu1 Rt'4'r\ lli'11l\
CAR~n:N YI 'f'PA CONFF.RP.:i-c1~ l;f.~1 Ji!{
IMIU 1)\-1•••~ 'lrt'(•t
1'4 Hlo<'k ~11th of \111111
ffunllnl(lnn fk1u•h. l•llrnrnln •
Few understand big topic: Debt
81 JOHN CUNNIFfo' a, ...........
N~W YORK Everyone ls lhlnkln1 about
dobt th se day1 because almost everyone 111 lo
debt.
Uncle Sam owes Sl lrllllon, atatea owe at least
Sl25 biJUon, loeal iovernment.a no leas than S200
bllllon, and developing countries at least SSOO
billion to other n11tions.
Homl'Owners, of course, are In up to their
necks, owina banks and other mort1a1e lenders
about $1 trillion, aad people who buy on
installm nt ctedit plen.s have •t least S300 bllllon
to worry about
Contempta\loa the stunning amounts of
borrowings, an observer can be pardoned for belnl
confused on learning that so little is understood
about debt, even by those deeply involved ln It.
Here are two obJervaUons about debt that
might sbed some small amount of knowledae on a
vf!'ry big subject. ·
-Why Japan can tolerate a relatively higher
level of government debt and still finance
industrialization without
incurring the devastating
lnOallon and hlgh interest rates
that plague the United States.
The explaoalion. s ays
Richard W. Rahn , c hief
economist of the U.S. Chamber
or Commerce. lies in the
Japanese personal savings rate.
the highest of any major
industrial nation.
The Japanese save more cu•om•"
than 20 percent of their disposable income,
compared with 15 percent by West Germans and
French. 10 percent by the British and S percent by
Ame ricans.
This, says Rahn. permits the Japanese
government to run fiscal deficits three or four
times those by Washington. The projected U.S.
deficit is only 1.3 pe rcent or gross national product
while the Japanese deficit is around 6 percent of
GNP. according to Rahn.
"At our rate of savings. roughly S percent of
GNP, American are saving approximately SlSO
billion a year. which 1s available for business
investments and for consumers and consumption."
says Rahn.
I( the federal government borrows S50 billion
to finance the deficit, it means only $100 billion is
left for all business and individual investment and
consumption. But if you were to raise the savings
rate to 7 S percent. you would have $225 billion
available.
The Japanese savings rate is nearly three-
National Ed's
• I •• income rises
Newport Beach-based National Education
Corp. has reported record third-quarter and
nine-month results. Jus t one day after announcing
the acquisition of Skadron College of Business of
San Bernardino -lhe firm's fourth vocational
school acquisition in the past 90 days.
For the third quarter ended Sept. 30. the
company's net income increased to Sl.6 million
compared with the Sl.5 million a year earlier,
Record revenues in the quarter rose to $29.1
million from $23.2 million in 1980.
Earnings per share .in the third quarter were
78 cents primary and 61 cents a share on a fully
diluted basis 1981 fully diluted earnings per share
reflect the effect of the company's successful
convertible debenture ofCering or October 1980,
according to a company release.
For the nine months. net income advanced to
S3.S million compared with $3.1 milhon in 1980
Revenues for the period rose to $79.1 million from
last year's S65. l million.
Earnings per share for the first nine months of
this year were Sl. 71 on a primary basis and Sl 39
on a fully diluted basis compared with Sl SS
reported in 1980.
Jerome Cwiertma. vice president of finance,
said the recent acquisitions -which include
Skadron, Tampa Technical Institute. Arizona
Automotive Ins titute and Bauder Fashion College
in Miami Beach -would have only a minor
impact an earnings.
" "It will add to the bottom line:· Cwiertnia
said, "but it is not a material addition. It's not
significant to the overall company figures."
He said National Education is not in the
process of negotiating right now. but more
acquisitions are planned in the future.
Jn a release, company, president and chief
executive officer. H. David Bright. attributed this
year's gains largely to the company's technical
schools group. National Education Is a leader in
human resources development with worldwide
operations in vocational and industrial training
and educational publishing.
CONSTRUCilON
MONEY
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK
•Raidendal
• Commerc:iaJ Buildinp: Takeout
c.ommitment required along with leMa.
• Land Loane up to one vear 50% appraisal.
CONTACT:
• Jeff Jotuuon
South Or.mac Counry/ lrvine
7141851-4050
• TomWllcher North On.nae C'.ounry/ Riven~ Cnunty
714/851·4126
• John Hnthkld
San Di• C'.ounry
7141299·9330
Savings, deficits, high
interest rates linked
tlmt!s 7.5 .(>(lrcent. 'rhtirefore, uya Rahn, they can
tlnttnce bluer detlclts without the threat ot
inflation and hl(lh Interest rates as h\ the United
States.
How high Interest rates have all but
eliminated first·llme buyert from the new·bOme
market. tr home mortgage rates were 8 percent,
instt'ad of more than double that, more thon 44
peretmt or romille would have sufficient Income to
quallly for a S6C>,000 mongo1e with a 30-year term.
But lntereat rates are closer lo 18 percent ln many
ar as of the co1mtry, oand lhal means Je11 than 14
percent or U.S. households can afford the monthly
carrytn11 c<MiU. Thf' National Association of Home
Build rs, which d eveloped these atatlttlcs.
t-s\lmetes that at an 18 percent Interest rate a
ramlly would be required to pay $904 each month
1n Interest and prtnclpal and $215 for loaurance
taxes and ullliliea. In order to cover thos~
expen e . a family would have w earn an annual ..
income of $40.284.
Bond swaps can cut taxes
T echnique can be used to off set capital gains
By LORIAN PETR\'
If you are an investor wbo bas taken short or
long-term gains ihis year on real estate, st.ock.
precious metals or some other investment, a bond
swap may save you thousands of dollars in taxes.
Even if you haven't taken any galns this year, this
strategy may reduce your ordinary Income before
taxes . If you hold municipal or corporate bonds, it is
likely that the value of your portfolio has
decreased substantially this year. You may want
to offset a gain by selling your portfolio or
consolidate your holdings into just a few
municipalities or corporations. A bond swap is a
transaction jn which bonds are sold and procee<js
or the sales are used to buy other bonds of similar
quality, yield and maturity.
Before beginning a bond swap. your broker
must know your financial
situation and estimated current
federaJ tax bracket; the dollar
amount or tax losses you seek to
establish; the estimated capital
gain you wish to offset; a full
description of the bonds you
wi s h t o swap (issuer
description, purchase price,
purchase date. call features.
and whether the bonds are in
bearer or reli'(istered form 1; l'RH Y
your investment objectives and willingness
to put up additlonal money and/or extend maturitv
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
MUTUAL FUND
or reduce bond quality. and state mcome tax
considerations.
'Bond swaps are executed for a number of
reasons, but chiefl y to establish a tax loss to offset
capital gains or to reduce taxable ordinary .
income You may also wish to increase .
m arketability of a portfolio by consolidating small
par amounts into larger block sizes or improve
current return on a portfolio by swapping out of
discount bonds and into par or premium coupon
bonds.
The full amount of capital losses resulting
Crom tax swapping bonds can be applied against
gains. ff capital losses exceed capital gains. the
excess loss must be applied against ordinary
income up to $3,000 and the balance carried
forward until entirely used.
For example. an investor may apply $6,000 of
net long-term loss to offset SJ.000 or ordinary
income under the "two-for-one·· rule. IC a n
investor has held his bonds less than one year he
can apply n e t s h ort -term losses on a *
dollar-for-dollar basis against ordinary income
s ubject to a maximum limit of SJ.000 Short-term
tosses may be applied in full against capital gains.
ffowever. losses will not be allowed if the bond
1s replaced with a substanually identical bond 1 within 30 days of such sale. This is the "wash sale
rule."
r t..orian Petry 1s an account ezecutwe at the Santa
Ana office of Mernll Lynch, Pierce. Fenner & Smith 1
PcL
Off lU Off 1U Off u..o Off U.l °" 11.S Off ti.A Off 11.1 Off ti.I Off 10.7
Oft lU Off lil.J °" 10.0 Off 10.0 Off t.S °" u Off u Off 7.t °" 1.1 I Off 1J Off 7.7 Off 7.J • Off I .I °" 71
Off "' Off .,,
Off "'
Orang• Coaet DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, Novembe-, 4. 1981 s
NY E COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOUTIOltl lltC'-UDI THOU ~, ...... .,o. •. MIOilrllf,flA(;l"C. ..... IOUON, on•••• AIU> c1•t1Nlll4Tl UOCll UCllAltH UN• H"l~"D n , .. , ...... ANOllOTINIT ~ '-'' Firms stir
• • • • creative JUices
It's not true that American bu1ine1 baa Iott lM
knack ot coming up with lmagjruttlve new producu. r recently received a relnse trumpetlna • MW
calendar detigntd ror people who "hate Monda)'s."
It 'is a calendar where all Mondays have btto
removed.
Another releHe told me about Keep.Sare. a·
privately owned. ufe·deposit vault established in
Pnlo Alto. near Stan!ord University. It seems many
banks a~ running out or safe-depotlt boxes for their
customel'fi. So now local entrepreneur• are building
vaull8 where you can rent spact! to hide your
vuluablcll.
11n11 1anwnz
Still another '
breakthrough,
coming fr'om the big
drug muk er ,
Schering·Plough, is a
liquid form or its
Correctol laxative.
Also new and
exciting, backed by
big advertising bucks , are sweeter·U sling gel
versions of Crest and Colgate toothpastes.
Nor are those all the nt!w entries. There's more,
much more. Here's a smattering of them
Crystal Creations Apparel , a Costa Mesa
company that hit it big during the disco craze with
rhincslone·studded Diamond Dancer pantyhose. has
a new line or pantyhose with hearts. flowers, pearls
and butterflies in the designs.
lleuble1n, master or the vodka market
!Sm irnorr. Popov . Rels ka 1. is bringing us Steel
peppermint schnapps
A company called MEM. which we have to
thank for English Leather~ has developed a new
women's fragrance. Essence of Musk.
Not to be outdone. Max Factor. a unit of
Norton Simon Inc., has a new fragrance called
M1ssoni, named arter the fashion designers, at $135
an ounce.
California's Ge,ser Peak winery 1s moving
into national d1Stribution with its line of Summit
canned wines· <no corkscrew needed 1. Geyser 1s
owned by Milwaukee's Schlitz. which knows a thing
or two about cans
Lorillard, a maker of Kent and True and
Nev. port. has two new low-tar cigarettes 1n test
markets. One is Bistro Lights. the other is Ma verick,
billed as a woman's cigarette that's "a whole new
breed."
Would you believe this Oink> Donuts cereal"
It's from Ralston Purina. maker of Purina Dog
Chow.
General Foods has whipped into Houston and
San Ant.onio with a new frozen whipped topping under
the name Dover Farms. It's said to contain "over 30
percent real cream," which will enable the company
to boast . "The one and only frozen whipped topping
made with real cream." And lh~t should tell you
something about Dream Whip and Cool Whip. also
brought to you by General Foods
-Lever Bros. has a new dishwashmg liquid.
Sunlight. which has "real lemon Juice
The Japanese better watch out.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW VORICIAPI Ffr,.I Oow·J-t •"V' IOf' TUMda,, Nov. J STOC.CI
JO INI °l:;".19 :r:. ts'::1 ~ • ~ 20 T rn J11.72 llJ 10 J7S tJ •1 a.• U .S
IS Ull 10l.43 109 11 101.11 IOI 2' • 0.1.S t.s Slk ~S Jt J.ol t7 S'1.4'1 M • • 1.H lndU\ S, UJ.100 Tren "1,too
Ulll• 1,...,,IOO
_: :: U Slk 7,427,200
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW VORIC (AP). S.IH, Tu .. prlu end Mt ,...._ of h Mn most ec:tlw
Amerk., Stoo. E_.t'*'9e Is-. treo1n9 NrtloNllly •• more !Nn $1 . GutfCan 9 317,60D 17~ • ,. 1n11 lnMol m.400 1w. • ~
HouOllTr 1Jt,200 "· 11414
W•llQ 8 121,'0D ~ ···-IMtrSyst s 114,IOO 2'-Ra,,..rOll 103,00I '* + 'i4 AZL RH M,700 Jllllt -t
Helrercp n •.• 11\to -~ HuSkyOG n ,100 1~ + ... S~rCNIE"9 • n,JUD JO + , ...
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW VORIC IAPI No" J
AO••n<ed 0.<11,,..,
Un ell eft9eC1 Tot•I Is-• New lllQM
New I~
W~AT AMO ()IQ
NEW VORK IAPl Nov
METALS T ... M ..
Puv
~· m • JJ• 1'4.S ..
"
.,, Pr...,
...~
17J
174
Df tJ 10
c.,,., 11 ... 14 cenh • pouno U S
destinations ...... ~,-··-· I.Inc 4'' •4''" c.ents • POUft(I, oellverocl
Th• s.t.CIJIO Metals WM« G-llf lb
Alllml-76-«I GMI\ • pcund, N Y
_re.....,~ 00 per ll•W<
1"1•1'-.. 11 00 lroy or • N v
TueMIO
lt.010 lltf lroy o..nce, H•NI' & He,,.,...
Oftly O•lty quote
,_.,
'-.......,: momino ll•tno "" 1.s. o11 u u . L-: •It.,......,... fi•lno .. 11 u . 011 \US. ~•rl•: ettemoM ll•ino "'31.n f'raltllhll1: t"tt.97.oll\4 01 / brklt: late 11•1"9 $'171 00, l>IO' Oii U 00.
~00•"'-ed
M•••r & Marme11: only dally 11uo1e
M2t U . oft '1 7S e "991-.I CIOWO
---.__.._. --. --=--------------""'\ --
Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT /Wednelday, November•. 1981 . . .
He offers two soaps for price of one
~ .
By IEaav BUCK show three tlmea 1 week, but lt'1 now down to one he uld, "whlch has plenty of sex. But It aUll .~,......_..,.. niaht. It lt catches on, however. lt could be doesn't need the sexlneaa that 'Dalla•' bad ln the LOS ANGELES -David Jacobi, the man who lncreued to two nt1hta a wetll. flrat 1lx months."
created "Dallu" and "Knota Landln1." baa come "I didn't ttudy the eoape," J1cobl utd. "I
up with two soap operaa tor tbel)r1ce of onf. · didn't want to have the Ions 1cenea or the pac4t of a
"Behind the Screen," 1 new CBS l1te-n11ht 101p."
aeries that telecull Friday nlChta. follow• the on-"Behind the Screen" lln't the only soap wlthln
Jacobs said he la 1olng to have fun with the
soap within the soap. "For Me thlnJ," he said, "It
la aotn1 to make abaolutely no sense. No one wlll
be able to li1ure out what's goln1 on." and off-camera Uvea ot tbe people who work ln a a soap. A8C's "Ryan·1 Hope" a1Jo it employln1
daytime aerial called "GeneraUona." the dramatic device once UHd by Shakespeare. Tbe aerial stars Mel Ferrer, Joanne Linville,
The premiere eplsode wu an hour 1001, but Thelr l.nner soap lJ called "The Proud and the Joshua Bryant, Loylta Chapel, Bruce Falrbaim,
thereafter the story unfolds ln half-hour cb1pt.er1. Paaalonate." Debbi Mor1an, Lew Palter, Catherine Parka,
CBS haa ordered 12 eplaodes. The new dlrection for the daytime aerial, led Michael Sabatino and Janine Turner.
The show be&an to take •h•C about a year by ABC's "General Hospital," ii toward sex -the The opening episode focused on Jainle Claire
b Dal t Id t f steamier, the higher the raUnp. Will I ed b M. -·--and a half a.go when Bo y, en pres en o "I like sexy stuff," said Jacobs, "but 1 think ow, pay y ass .1wner, a beautllul soap CBS Entertainment, asked Jacobi and Lee Rich, opera star who has no control over her life. She 11 prealdent of Lorlmar Product.ions, to come up with the emp}laais will be on the story. It'll be more manipulated by her cousin <Ferrer) who alao )J
a late-nilht strip show. In TV-ese, a strip show 1a provocattve than titillating. I've been burned in a her manager, and by her crippled mother (Miss
one that runs every nl1ht at the same time. way by doing sexy material. Linville>. Sabatino plays the part of another actor
"Then we boiged down in ne1otlaUon11," said "When 1 di.d 'Secrets of Midland Hel1bt.1,' the who resents being in a soap. There are many other
Jacobs, a cheerful, bald·headed man who was programmlne people said to put in •ex, saying relationships too entangled to unravel here. they would Uke care of the censors. 'Secret.I' was •. ~bl!~.~ks for children until be came up with always designed to be an 8 o'clock ahow, and it Every story about Hollywood has its wide
"We couldn't agree 0 0 a budaet. Then Bob wasn't meant to be sexy. 'Dallu' ii about power. jokes, and "Behind the Scenes" has Its own. The
Daly left CBS and it seem~ to die. 1 didn't want to which is based on money and sex. studio head played by Lew Patter is a dead·ringer doit.I~UI~~neenough~~eddnma.~d ~~~··_·_ae~~~d_lh~e_Sc~e_n_e_s'_d_e_al_s~w_ith __ H~o-ll_yw~ood~·-··~-'-M~L_oo~R_k_h~~-Lo~r_i_m_a_r_.~~~~~~~~~·
this was out-and·out serialized drama. But It wu
tape rather than film and I felt I ou1ht to learn
tape." Trw.e,~ .
DA VlD JACOBS. : .A late-nigh! soap.
His pilot script sat on the "Shelf for more than a
year. Tben GBS called and they had two weeks to
get jt done. The original plan was to present the
-NOW PUYINO/ ...... Arblts
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The • nervousness is gone now
S40 7444 1131 3SOI 830-H90 634 9282 893 1?43 ~---.... ~Uf't_..__.,.., • L___-~~
I By TOM JORY ._ ................. done before a live audience .
"It takes a tremendous amount of energy, and
creativity, to take a script -which is really just a
blueprint-and tum it into comedy."
*BARGAIN MATINRES •
Monday ttlru Saturday
·;
I
NEW YORK -Producers of ABC's "Three's
Company" spent three months looking for a
successor to Suzanne Somers, and when they bit on
Priscilla Barnes as the new roommate, the actress
recalls, it was, "Break out the champagne! We've
found 'Scarlett."·
Not quite, though the search at least suggests
David Selmick's drawn·out endeavor lo cast the
female lead In "Gone With the Wind." Vivien
Leigh got that part, though Scarlett O'Hara is
indeed a far cry from Miss Barnes' new character,
nurse Terri A.Iden.
For Priscilla Barnes. the stakes are
nonetheless high. Suzanne Somers, who abandoned
her character -Chrissy Snow -in a contract
dispute with the NRW Co. and the network -is a
tough act to follow . Md Miss Barnes, wfth a long
string of TV guest shots to her credit, seems to
have the proper attitude.
"That's what it's really all about." she says,
"exposure. I'm watking into a great series.
"I've done series before," the blond actress
says. "One thing I like about this one ls that it's
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The problems with Miss Somers -she was
asking for more money -began last season, and
by the end of the TV year, Chrissy Snow had been
all but written out of the show. Jenilee Harrison
was added to the cast as Cindy Snow, Chrissy's
"country cousin."
Miss Harrison will return this season, but Miss
Barnes' character will fill a role more closely
related to Miss Somers'.
"I 'm still in a fog," Miss Barnes says,
attempting to describe the character she plays.
''People ask me, 'What's Terri Alden like?' We've
done only a few shows so far, and I really don't
know. I know Suzanne's character better -she
was dumb.
·'There were a lot of girls trying out for the
par:t. and most of them tried to copy Suzanne,"
Miss Barnes says. "No matter bow competent you
are, that's instant death. People are always
comparing, and Suzanne was so good in the role,
none of them could measure up."
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MI SS ION t'~·•vt ·N . " ..
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Newton-John waits awliile.
comes back with 'Phy sical'
-
~1.~~,,y~~IELL
Some mu1lclan1 and atncera 'Want to be
•tourtn1 and cuttln1 records all the time. Other•
art happy t.aktnc time off.
-Olivia Newtorr-Jobn 11 one of the l•tter. She
hat •new album, ''Physical," en MCA Recorda.
The single, ''Physical/' la No. 218 and climbln1 on
the bett·Mlllng chart or Oct. 24.
She says, • 11t has been two years, maybe
three, I think since I made an album. The
/Xanadu.' album was after it but that wasn't atrictly mine.
·'I knew I was supposed to have done an album
Jast year but I didn't do it. So this year J knew I
1 bad to do one. We started in March and It took a
, while, partly because the producer, John F1trrar,
was doing his own album.
"I haven't toured for three years now. I didn't
·~feel Uke I wanted to. I don't miss lt yet. I'm very
• fort\lnate J don't have to tour. I appreciate that.
"It's fun once you get golne. But I've been
having such a nice time being at bome, I didn't
want lo leave for a length of time."
She lives on a small ranch near Malibu, Calif.,
and has five horses, eight dogs and a cat.
. She wrote one song en the new album, "The
.. '°promise," subtitled "The Dolphin Song," to state
lier belief that dolphins shouldn't be caught in tuna
ets and Jcilled, in fact that man shouldn't destroy
· other species.
• On an enjoyable day at home, Miss
.Newton-John uys, she likes lo make breakfast
and take It back to bed with the newspaper. She
swims, than deals with mail and phone calls. Then~
she rides, checks her property, picks fruit and
generally putters around. Then she'll visit a friend
or have someone over.
Choosing songs for an album, Miss
. Newton-John says, is a matter of listening to
hundreds or tapes . "You usualln end up with
. friends. You ring up friends and ask if they've
~-==-==~~-=-=====-~
Jbuth Coast R ep ertory
The 81-82 S eason
loose Ends
By Michael Weller
Lut year's New York smash makes its
West Coast premiere at SCA. The ideals.
dreams and desires of a vibrant young couple
-survivors of the turbulent 19eO's -are put
to the test as they struggle to create new ltves
ln the indulgent 70's.
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Mainstage Curtain Times:
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Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
Sat. anQ. Sun. Matinees at 2:30 p .m.
Limited Seating Still Available
655 Town Center Drive. Costa Mesa. CA 92626
For ticket information or
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written anythln1." The new album 11 her most
rock oriented, to 1lve the sln1er a cban1e of pace.
John Farrar wrote or co-wrote flve of the 10
son1s on "Physical." Ml11 Newton-John Hys, "He
has written moat-of my blt.a, 'You're the One-'l'b•t
t Want,' 'Hopeleasly Devoted to You,' 'Ma~ic,' 'A
Little More Love.' " She says that "You re the
One That I Want'' probably hu been her bluest
hit.
Miss Newton-John was born ln Cambrld1e,
England, and wu s when her famUy moved to
Australia. She tblnJcs of herseU as Australian and,
she says, when she aaw the movies "Breaker
Morant" and "GalUpoll," she walked put sayln1
proudly to herself, ''I'm an Aussie."
She says, "I'm supposed to do a movie in
Australia next year. a straight drama, based on a
book D. H. Lawrence wrote when he was living in
Australia."
Miss Newton-John's recording career started
In E;ngland. She toured. early on, with Cliff
Richard and became a regular on his TV show.
She won her first Grammy Award in 1973. But her
big career leap forward was starring in the movie
"Grease."
"All 1 knew was I got sent a script," she says .
• "I did have an agent, but this came about another
way. It happ~ns like that sometimes. John
Travolta now tells me he was plugging for me
from the beginning, thinking I was a perfect
Sandy .
''I thought John was going to be a big star.
·Saturday Night Fever' was not out yet, then. I
saw he had charisma and knew he was going to
make it. Aeling was a big step for me. I'm glad I
took it.
"But when I do something new, I'm a nervous
wreck until it comes out. It was a year after we
finished that mm until it came out. It was a long
wc,.it." Both she and Travolta are scheduled for
ca'meo parts in "Grease II." .
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•-rt L.. ""*·-Secy., T.....urer
T"ls ~t w•s llled wllll u.. • c:-1, ci-of Or•nve eou,.ty on Oct "· ""' , ___________ _ ~ L.. :_.., • •n< E s......... HN•Ti ~s; 1"1 m• HC>Mn: 0c1, u. t1, a. ....... •. ••11 4!0M1. t t.• .... ~-• .....,.,,., •IM ., Pretlde"' _._, I 0 I T & L H 0 ~ a I I < H I ..... Ltt 12, .._ .,._., altll8 tM
Tiii• .....,,_, ..... fll.O wltll tfll Tlllt I ..,.. llltd wltfl ttw TllAOITIONAL HOMaS; 11> UNI<* wtltMI\' llM fll LA4 12 9lld 1~ ~
,.,,,.. NOTIC:• Of' T•unaa·s HL.• COUllty CleR "'OrMQe Countr 011 Oct. ~. ,1•r,tlwl .. er.... GollfllY Ill Oct. HOMH; (J) Wast41NGTOH HOMH; -... -~~ ~~ ., It '"1 • .. · Cit) YAMll HOM«S; 9lld IL) ZEA .-.-.. -·-• " • PliDlllMCI a...,.._ CNS! O.lly Pllol. NOTICE IS HEltEBY 4;1Vl!H Ulel
Oct. 21, •. Holr. 4. 11. "" *741 011 Wednodey, tll• u 111 d•Y ot LEGAL None• ' • ,.,,,.. HOMl!S, UH .. Mein kl'Mt lrvlM :WM fNtr lMftCe ' ..... ... Th• <ke•.n Vie ScllOOI 01t1r1c1 ,..,..., Pul>llllltd Or ... Coul O.llr Pllel Cellftrllllmt.. • • NOTtCI TOCCNfTtlACftHtS llM .. r ..... wftll h ..,.._,y ..... .. AIMrlCen IMlell ~Itel It U lllllO . Publldltd OrenQe C:O.st Diiiy Piiot, Oct. 21, .. "°"· .. 11• 1•1 .,,,.., P11111, H. Mc H•m h , ... ,, CM.U• NII •tot LM "· • ...._ ., .... ,_ .. . Hovtmbff, t•• 11 '°:00 1.m. 9t .. 50 Von !(¥min A....,w, 111 ti. City of .. N'"""'' a..c11, County of 0re11oe. "!'"------------Sl ete 01 C1 ll fornl1 , H UGH BRECICENRIOOE M ll'lt Tcus ... fW
llW Be11eflclery, CAROL. A. HAGEL.
wnose street ll<klteu I• 46SO Von Kermen Avenw. HtwPort BtKll, Clltlornll l "d whOH telephone
number Is 714-U~ll, wlll w ll 11 oubll< 1ucllon to IN lllgllest blddt• lor cull. lewful rnoMY of ,,.,. Unlt..i
Stilts, 111 PAY-11 ,,.,. llmt of Mle,
111 11111 c...i.I" rtel pr-rty sltueteci
In 1111 City of Newport Bel<ll, Orenge
soecl•I INtlllle. T....O.y, .......,,,bt, Oc1. ti, •• Hew ... 11• •• , .... , Mc0."""'1 •I ,,.,, .... Cellfontll k lleel o..rtct: NEWPCHIT-MIESA ........... Mtllwt\O ....... MU LM "·
10, ltll INn'I 7 ID t p.m. T,_ flffrlft9 -Ill -'2714. ' ' ' UNl,-IE05CHOOLOIST"ICT Miit ...... lltillt IWtMfl,, • .,.._
wlll be lllld to dlscun tM 1'111~> PlllJC •Ill ~ ""'~ 0•1• llmbre tOO S111te11•ll• llf 0.-.IM: 2:• o'ctecll p,m, et If *'·• .... fr-•.....,.,,, llM of
prolt C1 PIOPOHI, At 11111 time, ·-------------Ten.a c:.r-• •• MM Clllfomle ... 12111•• ...._...., 1•1 .... L .. n , ~ ...,.,,.,.., ...... f'ICTITIOUS aUSIMllS
NAMa ITATaMlltT Tilt lellowl111 per10n Is 4olno .... _ .. :
CAI ECS. HATIDHAL., 181 "IELD
.... VICI!. ••s. Rltclley, Saftl• Al\a, CAt270S. •
l!C$ l!lectrMlc Clk ul1tor S«vlce,
• c .11 .. r1111 corp0r11lon, '"' 5.
ll!WM\O, SMle AM, CA '2105.
resldtntsol A1"t(i(M lndl.,,1nce .. ry nut • ' l"lecef/I 91111"-•:11S1 P"l~le Miii......, llN el l...c ti -...... ere urged to .. .._ "'-"'· <rltklMI, end f'ICTITIOUS auSINaSS f'ICTITIOUI MIMNHS n it _._ It ceMu<ifd •Y e st .. C.11-.., CA *11 .... _....., llllt f//I LA4 12, I...._ Of
,.,.Ip lll\lllN ... CW'Ole<t pr_., Tiit ...... ITATaMalfT MAM& ITATUiUUIT " ""'''" ~ ProJ1ct lde11tlf1Utlt11 "•"'•. i4.00 ..... ~......,.., .......... PUl>llc 1>e1rinowlll behlkllltl"lffs ... 1 Tlle ... lowlfto __ .,.dolnollus ~:~0:.-1"' _ .. n, .,. olnt ....... H.*"-•oE ·•O OF' GYMNASIUM AT -~·~~t//1-.00fwlliO
View School, 1'6'l L.1nd•u LI M, lneu as: STAIHEO GLASS DVIRLAY OF' Tiii• ......._. -,. ... wlltl lllt C ltDNAOf!L.MAltHIOHSCHOOt. llw...,wn ., ___ _
Hunll"9fon Buell, Cllllornl1. II you ROBERT WOLTZ ASSOCIATES Hl\Wl"ORT a lACH IU OS Mt c-trC"'11fllOrwlttC.-..yenOc1 Pleu "l•n1 It• en Ille: tt'7 Ell(-811.,....,.. ~ fll ell lle•t •nr qutSllonS.. PIHSI <•II lndt.n IHC. Slt ~lor A-, NtwPOl1 "'eltfmlll Stl'MI, ,...,;.lelll VellOY• 17, 1•t. P'-llett., C.11......_ CA etld!m Oii, l•I m l11e r •h llld etllor Educ1tlon111 1714l lM7·7001. BHCll,CA~ C lllorllle"-7tl • 11174,. a.erSt.,c:.teMIM.CA 11,droce rHn •ult1te11c., H ••d
PYbll$hlcl 0r-. c:o .. t D•llY l'llOI, Robert Woll1 Auocl•lff In<.. • • Slltpllell ..... I Glnerkh lllOS Mt PYbtltlWllDr ... eo..t Dlllr PllOI NOTICE IS Hl!RIE•Y GIVl!H ,,.. .. ,.,.._ .............. 11,,..,..fl'llf'll
· Tiits butlllffs Is <011ductt0 bp c.,..1non. . • County, C1lllo•nl1 described u Ho•. 3, 4, '· 6, 1•1 47IHI c 1111ornl1 corpor.,lon, Sit 5-rlor Weterm.,. Stl'Mt ,_~In VallOY · Oct. 21, Nov. 4, 11, (' '"1 ...,_.j tllt •llwl ,....... klMlof Ollltkt .. ¥11 '· 19'5 _, M .... ......,.., H
Aw,,.,., Hewport BMcll. CA n6t1 Cellf0tllle'2'1'1 ' ' Oreft99 ~. cat ......... ectlllt.., -II ~ INll ._ flf-.ctd Ill
ECS
Wll .... J. Gelltry
S.C .. Trwew,.,
Tiii• ...i-t weJ llled with ttlt C:-tf Cler1r o1 Orenoe Couftly Oft 0c1. 11, 1911.
lollows
Lot ... Tr1<1 ml, IS "-" on •
mep recl'dld In a-214, P-oes Ml
ln<hlll ... Of Mlt<•ll•-IMPS. In f'ICTITIOUS •USINaU ,,.,. ofllo of tN c-tty Rtcoroer of ,..,._ STATUdltT
Or1r>0eC-tv.c.tlfwnl• The fOllOWl"9 P•rSOll .. doln9
Thi• buslMU Is conflicted llY • • ......... Glnsrkll ... Mt. .... tllr .... lb Gewrlll ......... .,.,..,. .......... -..... ·-· ...
CotpotMIOn. Welef'mlll ltl'Ml F-laln Vl llOY -II'·-llert lnUter referref l e •I ... , ........ .,._lr'lfftA!lrll6,ltff, R-.!WOIU CAllforNlt!M ' ' r-..., llK "OISTRICT," wlll rte.11 .... ,., wt •t reMIWll "" .,.... P. Smltll, ..
AJl«lllH I -llW. ._ ............... llmt, .... NCerWd .-.,i1 a, lftS, Ill ._ Rolllrt L w:t. Tiiis ....,,.. 1' ~'""" 111 ltOTICtlTOCOWTllACT'Otl• ,., ... .,...,., .. _....,•ceMtect ... fl ... Ml.elOfttclelRec-. lnflvldliel l-lndwlft l CAW•"°" twllw ..... -itcl Altt .__. .. ~-of u.
Tnt \!•••• •ddr•U O• ot her INSIMH•: f'1741tl common dUlgn1tlon ol Hid 10 1 1 E ot!SIGH !Two.El, JUO EMt PWll...,. °'"""Cont Delly Piiot, property ts tt GrHftbrl4r, Hewoort Mol1lr, Ho. A. Orenoe, QlllfMlll•
......,,.,,, ~II'. Ol•ICll •~ .......... ..., atDI a1a IMll .. ,_,,,... Ill tllt ~ rltlll ee ....,.., .._.....Md --Tiiis st.Ill-I wes llled wllll lllt Tllll llll-' -fll• will\ lllt ... ._.. .,,..,1<1: CoMt Cllmmllnlty ldtntlflell...,,. end tlNll .. _...., llltl "'1lell ttl Ml• 1..., lytfte .._
COlllllY Cler1t ol Or._ c;-iy on Oct. county CI0111 of o ... ,. C:-ty on Cel9
1
1• Olwlc1 .. ud pwltllcll' ·, .. 4 11..,d •• tilt • fMl ._,, t11t _. .. ......., tw
It, Itel. f'l7Mr9 ~ 12, "'1 f'tmn llw 1~ =--~:~':," p.in. tf -.. 1& .... ,.,,. _,,.. •II, tH end •Iller llydrec•rllen Oct.». Hoot. 4, 11.,11, Hl1 4'JjMI 9e1cll, Or-c-.ty, Cell!O<nle '2 .. 7
PIC't!TIOUS aus•N•U ...,_.STATaM .. fT TM ,_,_l"O PtnOf'S are dOlnQ ...,.._. .. :
SAN CLEME NTE LI MITED
•A .. TNEltS, JUO C1mpy1 Ori••, t.titt I • ......., .. ICll, Cllltofflla ..... Tiit aerrlmerll Cor\>oretlon, •
C.lltorllll c--MIM, S140 Cem-Dr1¥t, Svlt• 100, Hewper1 Buell,
CM ........ 9M60.
Tiiis ..... ,,. .. Is <OndVCltd D' • IMlttd~P. ll'lt 8wrl~ Cor·p
Jlldltlle ao-.,.
Pr9tldMI
Tiiis i1.t--111'4 "'1111 t11t C:-ty Cler1I of°'""" County on Oct. 27, 1"1. ,.t741tl
ll'VblllNd 0..-c-1 o.tly PllO'-
Oct. 11, "°"·'·II. II. 1•1 ... l~I
PllUC NOTICE
f'J<T1TIOUS aUSINESS
NAME ITATEMENT
Tiie followl119 person• •re dol119
w.1""1•· CO CAHYD94 AUTO SUPPLY, 111
THE PARTS DEPARTME NT, '43 Lee-c:..won R-. ~ 8"<11, CM...,.._• f'MSI. ~(:.!yon Auto Supply, In<., e
ClllfOrnf• cor-•11on, Id L•OllNI C•111on Ro1d, L.agun• Beech,
Clll'-'•'3661. Tiiis ltuMMSs ts coftcl11<19d Dy •
~ ..... L....-ClnYofl Auto
So.lpply • Inc:
~G.Emtr-.
"'"!dint Tiiis st.Ill-wu 1119<1 with tr.
Cou,,ty Cleril of Or._ Count,°" Oct.
21. 1911.
Seid "I• wllt be n11oe wltllOvl Eric AIT!etW. 11• Eat Aqvfelr.
co-nt or werr_... A91/0l"O tlUe. Or.,,99, Clllfoml1 9M1
pouoslOrl, or .ocumbr•n<.s to u t1&1, Tnl1 ....,.I"'" Is conducted by e11 Ill• obll91llon1 secured by •nd lndlvl0...1
pur&u•nl to Ille PO••• of l•I• es Eric Arnett.I r•ferred to In .,.,., cH11tfn Dted ot Tiiis __ , wn llled wlll\ Ille
Trust d•led October 2, ltlO end CWftlY Cl-o4 Or.not COQ!lty °"
••• , .... d by I H T ERV E ST OclOber lt.1"1
ASSOCIATES, INC., e Oelewere ' "171976
( 0, l>O•• I Ion' • ' T '"" 0 r lo Publl-a..-. CMsl Delly Piiot, A E S I D E H T I A L E S C • 0 W Oct 14, ti, 21, Ho¥. 4. 1"1 ~ CO R PORAT I DH. e C•llfornl1 (OrporetlO!I M Tnist• ~ CAROL A.
HAGEL.. merrltd women IS ,.,.r .Ole
Ind .. _ .... ...,..,..,,., 8-flcllry, "ICTtnous •UllN•SS •K or-on Oc-J, ••. In 8-1l11J, Peoe ""of Offktet Re<of'ds of NAM• STAT•M•NT Oran.,. e-.ty, Cellfon>le. Th• lollowlng person Is doing
Notice ol o.f~• -Election to Sell buslneu as: tN ~scrl-,..., ...-rtY lfflder Mid AIEA• INSPECTION $ER\11Cli, Deed of Tl'\ISl was ~ on,,..,._ ~!: • .::.~ll~J''"'· CUii M•H.
J, 1t11, In 8ooll u1 ... P-.e ltOO. of 0-ld,,...... Hebert, 24; w11,,.,1 ~~~:~!~~1:ec0<4' of Or•• County, SlrH t, Colt.I Miu, Cltflfcwnle ••11
Tiiis HotJc• ,, ....... In compllM<t Tiiis -''-' " Conducted by ...
wltll Ille -tlttn eppllcll-to HUGH lndM OUll Doneld J H.-rt
BRECKENRIDGE, 11 Tru1ln T ' 1ub1tll11ttd by SUBSTITUTION OF Ills , .............. flled wltll , ...
TRUSTEE BY BENEFICIARY 11919'1 ~:i:. fi~ of Or•noe County on
Honmbff l . 1•1. by u ld a....fklary • ,.,ntn
On No-'· ltll, Wlll<h 1' Int Publf-Orenoe Co.SI D .. ly Piiot
oal• of .,.. tnilt•I putJCk eUon of ""' Oct H 21 21 Hov .• 1tt1 4t7o.ti Nolle• o1 S.le the 1o11-1no •mounts · • ' '
reproent ,,.,. IOYI 1mou1"' ol 1111
unpatd ~lln<• ol the obllgello"'
secured by Ille 1bove ducrlbeo
orOPerty lo be .Old .,,., rH iDnlbly ,-ICTITIOUS aUSINEH
u11me te<1 co•h, ea penus end NAM&STATaM91tT ";-•~-.i:"T~!, 10 W<llf'• •n Tiie followlnt oertOfl Is delng
lnO.bte-.1 ot $1t0 000 00 r•<or-busl,,.n n Mat<ll lO, ••Tl In 8°'* 12123. -1"7 LIDOTEC, )MS VI• Lido, Htwoort 8 t .c:h, CA '*3. •I Olf1<te1 Recoros of Or.,,oe Countv. 0 .. ,. Doutles R .. vle, uo1 M<on-• C•lllom1• Olt.l<I "'-r<ll IS, 1'n with Dr., HtwJIO't .._,CA fM60
John L. H•tel •nd Cerot H•o••. This _-,1190 11 ~.., by en
nu11>•nd ..ct Wlff M Tn.ttou, 5err•N ln<IMduel.
ReconvtylWIC<I Compelly, • C•lllornl• OMn o. Ruvle
Coroorelion, •• Trust"· •no Home. rhls 1~111 w•• lllld wltll tlle
S•vln9s •nO Loin Ano< l•tlon. • County C-ol er.,. County°" Oct. C•lllorn1a Corpor•toon as 19 ltll
BtOltlkllry who<ll ln4eV!edMH 11 In' ' f't7Mtt
l'\lbll-Or-Ceell Delly ... ~ Pllb1191Wd Or ... Cettt Delly l'li.t, ~· f//I ......... : Office of ... Tiier• •Ill .... N/A dtPtlll SllllSlallCH llld Ill t he ll•relft
Oc:t.11,21.Nov.4,11,lttl ...01~1 Oct.14,2l, .. Nov • .,l"1 4457 .. , Pvrellellnt ....... Ml.~,..rrln, requlrt• for ehll HI ef 1tl• :-':':t:':~a:.o='
f'ICTITIOUI •u•1Na.u M.,.. ITATaMaltT The followlng oers_,, Is dOlnt
fMISl-n: M.E. L.OYE & ASSOCIATES, tJl1 L.elle"I Drive, Huntl.-olon Be.ell,
Callfornle..,.
Mervin E. Love. tilt Lell•ftl
Drive, Huritl""on llNCll, C.lttornl• ,,....
Tiiis llUMnes II C_\I(..., by .,.
lndlVld\111
M.E Low
Tiiis •tet-t ••• lllef wltll Ult County Cl-ol Or•noe CO\lfllY °" Octotler 12, 1"1
f'lntft
Pvllll-Or-. Goest Delly l"llot, Oct. 14, 21, a. Nov. 4, 1•1 44~.
PllUC NOTICE
•· C•Hl cemmunlty COii• District, dt<"""'* W .......... Ole reWrll ltt • ... .. 111'1 ...,_A-, C:..U MHI, CA ..... ~ ,..._ NIA -,,s efter •-a
f'ICTl'TIOUS IWSIM•M lllAMllSTATllM9NT Tiie ... .....,. __ ere ......
Ws!MWes: Sll>IC AHO Sl"AN LAU .. DRY ANO ORY CLEANING SERVICI!, 2611 .... ,.,, ........... H...-rt '-"· C.llttnlll...,.
OHre• W. Gulll•r,, Jr .. Hit Cll•P"'•" Aven11t, G., .. ll Grov•, CllltwllletlWI.
• ...-J. G..illety, ..., ~
Awellwe, Ger..., ONw, C.llf~111e
ftMI.
Tlllt IMltlMU It collducted •r lftellv.,_.C......,..&wtr.I. 0-,.. W. G41111ory, Jr.
Tll .. ......_.._Ot.dwltl\ ..
C-ty Cltt1l fll 0rMtt ~ 911 Oc1.
tlU6 C1MI ,.,._S1• IN 11141 _...... ... ~ Tiie strHt •114rus •11• otller
l"r•J•<I ldentltlutlen Neme: EHll .io _. ctftf•"" .._. .. c...,_ ~. If ..,,, of -CoetUlne CMnrN,Wty Cell• CeftW r....,.sl.,.to-<Mtratdt<-. reel 11r..,_rt, 4ffcrllled •bOve It -••O 1141 Eec:ll ll6d INll .. ~--., pyrpert•d to lte: 421 P rOtPICl,
,.lee• ,.._ -• tlle: Tiie atv...cll llw M<..ntv ,..,,_,., .. 1tt .. <9M!ract ........, e.cll. CMIMt"ML l"lrtMr ..... 2211 ...._,.........,.., de<_.. Md-, -lltt f/I ~ TM •-sis-T,.._ dlsclelms
Hew .. rt aHcll, CA tUU 1714) Wltc...ir...,,_ -11 ..... tty .... .,.,., ~-tlltM Of .,,.._, ,.._,. Hencll, AIA Tiie 0151',_ICT , __ Ille r1ti11t tt tM tlrwt ....... 11111 _, ,_
NOTICE IS HERIEIY GIVEN tMt ,..led 8ll'f or ell ..... ~ ID welw -....... '*'-If lftY • .,._ ~. tlll ....... ,iemed ScMol Dlltrlct of I~ er l..,.,_,IU.. In .,., Self ... Wiii lie ,,..., -wltllowt °'aftlt (euftey, (81 ........ ec:t.lflt .., llNletln .. ~ ctWtlllnf et Wtf'f ... ll', u .-n s et
tlld 111•°""" lb Gevernlnt ao.r11, Tilt OllTltlCT ._ ..,...,.. tr..., 1....i1td, ,....,. ..... tlllt, -.ulell, or
ller1l111Her r eferred to et tilt 0 1...ctor of IM OepertlYltllt of eMvmllr-.-. to Ill' t11t ,....•lftl119
"OllTltlCT'', wlll recefw yP llO, Wt l11f11ttrl•I Relell~t Ille .. Mrel fl'IMi.tf _,, flf .. nMt Mell,..., bf
-let« ttw. ._ _,........., tlmt, -v•llllll ,... t//I -~ .._.. Ill 111• 0... ol Trust, wltll l11terHt _..,.,..fer -._.. fll 1 -•t Ille ltCMlty Ill wf1k11 tl'llt _.It"°.. tllel'Mn, It provl4td In Slid _., ._, .. ..._,,..jed. ,.mtrmtd fot -crlf'I er lY'flt of MYlfK.._ II.,,, llfldlr tlw IM-of
II• .,.., .. recelwf lft Ille Pla<.e wor ll:m•n ,....._ to •••<MIO Ille .. Id O..cl 8' Tn.111 ...,, dle•tH eftd ..._. .. ._ -... lllf tNll .. -"" c...trec:t. n.. , .... _.,. ftlt ..... ....., ... -' h T~ ..., of tN
111• •11•llcly , ••• •••ud •• lh• OISTRICT effk • lecet•• .... ,, lrvtU c..-..., aid Deed of Trwt ~-11mtlfMl•ec1. P*etltll M., c.e. Mne, CA ftUJ. fer IM -'--*' "11m«lecl Tl\ert wltl .. e ., .. 00 1-llUndtW Cop ... fM'I' tie ....... ., ,....,.... A W be: Pt...161.1'0.
tlld ftOllOD *'l•tl dtOotll r ...... rtd c._y of t1w9e , .... INll be Po•ecl et Tiie 9tftoflcltry -.. Id 0... of f'114t• ,., •ec:ll Ml of 11111 dKYIMlllS to IN Jol»lllit. Trwst ll•r•tot•r• •HCYl•d ... d
PllAtll.,., Or ... Coell Deity ...... ..,..._.. .. ,...,, lfl .... cMdltltll TM .......... ~ t//I...,. .. .,. .. 11 .. rM It .. ---• wt1-
2', 1•1.
0c1. • ......... 11, 1&, IWI •Ml wltNft ti •rt efWr H .... ~ ween la.._......,. e _...,.,. .. , tf DtclerM .... tf o.f81111 ...0 OtfftMd f'ICTITIOUI au1tN•ll dlte, Only two wts ot c-tnicti.. •'911• !ti 11oun. nw rete tor llOflde~ for s.11, end • written Notice of
NAM9STATaM91fT -Ill -dOC_. will .. 11~ to oenerel •lld ..,tftfml _.. slWll .. et le•t Oefeull lfld Elec:ll.,. to Sell. The
Tll• followl119 .,.,..,., •re dolnt ~ -•-centred 1111fe1n. time •ftd ~. u"4tnlfMd ullHd 11111 Hotk • of
1>1>11-•: -------------1 Eecll _.. nwll c-orm Mid .. 11 111111 tie mendetor' UPOfl tlle Otfeult lftll Et«tl.,. to Stll to be a LUE SAILS STAT IONERS, JIM .......... ,,. ..... centrect~. CONTRACTOlt to M1om .. ~reel ,_......!ft U. ~ -· ... rMI "";l:r.,s~··~~'.:~;...., • E. "~~=:::."..-:S Eec:tl ""'-'.I be ~'*"l*lltd-. 11 •Wiided, enf upo" e n ' ..-oPer1fltlouted. T..... !tie -we.v ,....,,... to 11111\e c-ract -Ofttrectlr ~ llim. te "y -Oete: ~ 19, N I Coelt H._.,. •'1. ~ 9Mcll, CA "'" fOl-lllO per-s ere dolnt Wc:1 ~ Mll-, IN ll• f!I ,...,.... 1tu -.. Niii -lfltd , .... It Ill T R A It I AM a ll I C A T I T L a
,_, ~-•: ~ _,II _ _,....... ..,, -In t11t lfltSUAMtCaC:O.
N...,e J , flkllOtb. • E. C-Hlwey N E W RI! HA 1 SS AN C a T,_ OISTltlCT _.... 11\t rittM It eaeclltlellf/111\tcentrect. .. .0 •....... •'7.N.....,.9Mdl,CA 9MM. PRODUCTIONS, LTD., CS6em "'' ,..l«t81l'l'W•llltldlortowtl .. _ No _,..,.....,,.,.__llleW.fw I" IM ........
Thi• llWIMI• la C-..ntd by Ml 17th StlW'-Sul .. A200 Cost.I MMe, 1,,....1eriu. or lllfwmllll'" In t11y •period .i ~ ..... <~I w-~ La .......... CA .. lnellv...... Cellforllleft'27 ..... .,, .. ...,,. -·.-.· •• ·-...... --...t. Pl'tcMtts G•r'I' H .. ...-Cll. ,,,. --· W .... -............ __,,.ofllNs. '"-' ~11 =-~ -fl~ _ .. -aov1ev1f'll. Celt. -H. Celllornle TM DllTltlCT ----'""" A PoYf"tlll llllfW Md• .......,_ ...... T ...... , , " _,_.,, ........ ..,, ..... lllt Olrecw • lllt O..rlmeftt tf 110114' wlll be reQulred 11rlor to .., _.. ..,_,
c-ty Oeftf/IO.. ..... C:-,onOct. m11 lnfwttrlel ••••t1en1 tll• venerel e aecuUon of tll• contrect. Tiie ,......_.~ t1, ltlt. •· M.ico1m Hullett, ns Eest 1"' _...11._ , ... ., -fief\'! -1 .. 17•-Streel. Suitt 10 . Cost• -"•••· ..... ..... ---· " PIY,.....I ltMd -II be In t11t '°"" _. ·-....... ..., "'wNo ""' _.. ,, .... ..,,, "" .... c.Mrecl ~ Putlllslltd Or.,.. Coest Dell' Pli.t, Clllfotnl• ftU7 ,..,._med tar M<ll crelt ., '"°' of ~mlflO ...,.d Oc1.11.Hov .... 11,11,1•1 46M41 He"cy I . Gulllle n, I H J L• werllm•n IMffed to u ecule llle OorotftrH-y l"l-r • =~cie, Letllft• .. ec:ll, c111t .... "I• ,.,trec:l n-•••,,..on flle tt u. PurcNllno Olrec:w
Pultll_Ort ........ ~.11.
1 .. 1 4'77-tl.
clefevll IS Of July '· 1"1 Ind .... .,,. PublfSlled Drenoe CMJI DIUy PllOt. '"int lollowtng~lllKH-Ocl 11 • -' 11 1"1 .,,.., PubllJhtd DrlftOt Co.Kl Delly Piiot, Unpaid"-"'"'• Of • • • •
Tiiis ltUslMsa Is cOfMN<t9d by • DISTltlCT 8'flce l8cated et flflyskal Put111"'9d Or.,.. Goe .. o.llV PllOI
F'eclllllft """"""9. Coest Cllmm\lllltf DC't. 21, -· 4, 1WI ......, i1m1t"~11en1tec:• ce11..-, Olstrtct, Tr.,1w c .... ptu, NOTICE OF DEATH OF
PllUC 1111C( .
Oct. 21. Nov.'· 11, 11. "" "-' ob119111on \IU.tn .. "'CTtnoul aUMltESS Tiiis ltM......,. wes lllecl wltll tllt i:~. :·.,:.,~· .::_ :! F R AN CI S E D WA A D
"'auc NOTICE
NOTICE OF D E ATH O F
NORBERT J . TIERNEY
AND OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A-110882.
To all heirs.
b eneficia ries, cre dit o r s
and contingent cred ito r s o f
N o rbe rt J . Tie rne y a nd
p e r sons w h o may be
othe rwise Interested in the
w lll and/or esta te :
A petition h a s bee n filed
by M a r y Anoela Tierney
In the Superior Court o f
Ora nge County requesting
tha t M ary Ange la T ierney
be~ a p pointed as personal
re prese nt a t ive to
admin is ter the estat e of
No rbert J . T ierne y <und e r
the I n dep endent
AAdmlnlstra tion o f Estates
ct). The petitio n is set for
hearillCJ In Dept. No. 3 a t
• 700 C ivic Cen te r Driv e,
West, In the City of Sant a
Ana , Califo r nia on
Nove m ber 25, 1981 a t 9:30
a."!c I,.. Y O U OBJECT to the
, grantlOCJ of the pe tition ,
you s hoold either a p pear
at the hearin g . and s tate
y o ur o b jections o r file
written objection s with t he
c ourt befor e the h ear ln g .
'Your a ppear ance m a y be
I n p ets on o r by y ou r
, . 1ttqrne y .
••• tF YOU ARE A ·~~.c; R E 0 I T 0 R o r a
• ,:contingent creditor of the ~!·deceaSed, you m u s t flle , ·.'IOUI claim w ith the c ourt :.·or p resent I t ~o the
• -'.pettsOf'la l representa tive
: • ·eppolnte d by the cour t
within four: months from
.~ttw date of first Is su ance
Df letters a s provl d ed In
jectlon 700 of the Proba te -~Code of California. The 1111W for flllllCJ cla ims will '"°' t)Cpl,.e p rio r to four ~ths from the date of
•1hehe•rlng notic ed a bOve .
• ' YOU MAY EXAMI N E
fllt kept by the court.
f ypu are Interested In the
atete you m ay fl le a
' w ith the coun to
"'Ive specia l notice of
M Inventory o f estate and of tht petitions,
ccounts •u'd rep oru
r lbed In Sectton 1200.s
.. 1M C.lttornf• Pf~~ cooe.
Interest •ncl ....
<haroes a... '·"°"' rrustet's leet ,_., 11 "ICTITIOUS IUSINESS l A o...i ol Trull to M<Urt •n .. _. STATEM•NT
lndebledntu ot JIOS,000 00 r...:or-T "• 10110 .. lno person h dol nv M•rcll 1', 197' In 8"'* 1J070, Peoe 11107 DuJlness e.s ·
of Offl<l•I R0<0<d1 of D••noe County SPORTS PHONE USA, ,,, ,
C•lllon1l• _.., J.,,...ry l, 1'7t, wlltl Rlo rsloe Drive, HewPOrt Beach. Jolln L H•o•• end Cuot H19•I, Calllornle'llMO
hUiNnd -wilt., T"'''°''· C•O<l<ff JOllll A, VIVllKq\11, 1ns Aider CYltody CorPOrellon, • Cellfornl• Lene, Cos'-Mesi, Cellfel'nle t1'27
Corpet1llon, 11 TNllM, -Croclltr This bullnns Is c-uclltd by en HlltOl\ll B<wll<, I ltellonll B.,.lllng indiVlcl\111
Anocl•llOll, 11 &.neflcl••Y. wlllch JOIWI A. VlvllKCtue lnclebl-.SO •• In oeteun IS of July I, Tiiis •Ul-1 WH llled wllll IM
'"' and hN 1111 toli-lno bltances County CJerll of Or•ll9t Coullty on d~~Pllcl bllen<eOf I oa.ber 1:Z.1tl1 f'I,,_
otlllgatlofl Stl,660.01 PllblllNd Drlft9' CMst Delly Piie\.
A«ru9d lnt-t ~ Oct. 14, 21, •• Hov. '· 1tll "'WI Prln<IP4•PAY.....,IJ J,l90 •j------------lrvsteoe'1 1 .. s '00.00
Th• peyoff Oii Mid 0-0 of Tr\111 PllUC •TICE Ooocl ll\rOUQll Howmber •. 1tl1 11
1102.726 Jl •nd Interest •<cruul "ICTITIOUSaUSINUS ,,.,., ..... ,. •• ,,.,. •Ill.• of 33.7171 per .. _. STAT•MaNT
oev I Th• lo11owl119 11er1on Is oolno , • DMd ot Trust to •<Utt •n INllN U IS.
lnOtbl-H ol $76,000 00 reco•-1 s A 8 ER SD F T w A. E . ltU Ml~ t, ,.., In 8oo4I 13601, 0101 lttO ol Pl1unlle, Costa Mesi, CA ttn7
Olficlel Ae<Cl'OS of Or•-oe County, Frank Brien Fer90, 1 WlnQH Foot C•llforni. -eel Mey S, t•. wl111 Jofln ~•wPOf1 a.1Ch, CA .,_
L H•991 -C•ot Hagel. ~ This b\1Mnn1 h conouctecl by 111 end wife .S jol"t lenllnll, Trullon, 1ndlvkluel.
Peclltc Rtc.0nveyan<t Cl'PGr•llon, • Brl., Fergo Celllor11la Corporation, es Trusftt, Tllh 1111-1 wn 111.a wltll Ille
and SPtn<er J Morgan,•• B-llclery county Cltt1! ol Orange c-., on Del. whkll -1o<lef lnl<'fHt Wti Hligned It ltll to Georoe J S..tata •ncl Merilyn M. · fl17Mll
Publlstltcl 0r-. Coetl Delly Piiot,
0<1 11, 21. -~ II, t•t ~I
S•l•I•. hu•w no ~ wile es joint lt nellts by Hl"""'*'I record<!O M•y
U, ltlO lft 8ooll 13'1S. P-SIO of Olf1<1a1 lte<erch of Or•not County, ------------
Clllfornll, wtlicll l_,..,,,.H WH •II PIRJC •TICE
due •nd PllYtblt July 1, ""· I\ In default -... ~ .... loll-Ing belln<H f'ICTITIOUS aUSINaSS
d,.. ltAMa ST A Ta Ma NT
U11p1lcl bel...ce of I T II• lollowlnt pe,.on h doing obl'91tlon '7•.000.00 business es:
lllltrest end lite CROWH JAHITOltlAL, 11702 Liiie
<h•"9Hdue },l•t 21 VI••·~ f'Of'MC.CAllfornl1t1'»
Tnill" 1f9K 607.• MlcllMI R~mond Buller, tl102
Forectowrt costs L••• VIile, Liile Forttt, Cllltornl•
•nd ittt '·"• M nuo 4 A DHd ol Trust to M<ure 1n This flulNM Is c-.Cl9d by en lnd4bted!nen of 1146,100 00 •t<or-Individual
of Olflclal •~-of er.,... c-ty, Thia ltMtlMllt wet flied wltll Ille Octotler a, 1• 1n 8ooll 1vn, ~ 1eu l Mi<Mel R. Butler
C•lllornle IM1eo OclOCler t , 1917, wltll Co1111ty Cl-of Or•noe County on lntervnt As.-:lates, '"'~ • o.l1were Septem-I~ 1'11
cor110rellen, Tnislen, Resldent111 ""'"' E.crow Corporetlon, • C1lll0t11l1 l"ublllNd 0r....,. Goeat D.,ly Pit.I, CorporallOfl, es TruSIM, lor whlcn Oct. 14, t1, 21, H9V. 4. 1•1 "'741.
"""'9STAT•M•NT c -nty Clm ot Or ..... County on IMYMeltlllMCl•r ....... Ac-fll _.,. ·-KELTER, aka FRANCIS Tiie followlno penon• 1n dolnt Octoller 11..., ~• ,_ lllK buslMSs n ..,,,.,, .,.,. ,_ lNll • --et t11e Joi» E • K E L T E R , a k a
"A • K s u P E • I o • Pvbll-0r-. eoest Olltv Piiot st':t,_ ,.,_,.. ICl!edllf• ot -c11... NOTICE OF DEATH OF FRANCIS KEL TEA, AND
CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL, t&.U Oct. u, 11, 21. Nov. 4. 1"1 4.421-tl. -s ls.._... -• -i-.._ ... SU SAN GERT RU DE O F p E T I T I O N T ~ Su .. rlor A .. nue, HewPOr1 9e.cll, --.. -" .... -• -c1111orn11...,.m1 . ._,k.,ee.t•-----------eltflt <ti ~ Tiie ••tor llolleiOY ACKERMAN, aka SUSAN ADMINISTER ESTAT
Medic.I Services In<., • WIKOftsln .-JC 1911( _, _,,..,.. _. IMll .. et IMM G . BABCOCK, AND OF NO. A·110917.
corpor•tton, to" e .. 1 0 9d111, llmt•nd~. p E T I T I O N T O T i Mii*•'*•· WI-In SJJ02 It ...... l>e m•ftd•tory .,..,. ,... 0 a I I h e r s '
This bllllntSs 11 conducted 9, • f'IC'T11'10UtlWSIMaM COHTltAC'TO't tt wflom .. C411ltrec1 ADMINISTER' ESTATE ben eficiar ie s, creditor s
corpor-• •MMITAThMltT Is •••rdu, end "•"' •11 Y NO. A-110911. and contingent creditors of
Amerl<•ll C•I M•dlUI Tiie ,.._ .... --· ......... WltcentraclOr...., """·to,..,. - T 0 a I I h I F I E d d K It
AllM StrlltGft, V.P.
Tlll1 IUI-wa flled wllll -c-1, citr• of o.-._ COllfttf ...
Oct~ 11. "'' f'1ntM
PublllMd Or.,.._ Ceell 0111, Pllet. Oct 14, 21, a, Nov • .._ 1•1 ......,,
f'ICTITIOUI au11Nas.s NAM& STATaMUfT The fojl-lnt persons ere doing
builMHM: MAHV T·SHIRTS COMP AN Y
IPertMt'tNPl .. T•SHIRTS PL.US, m1 £dlnoer, M. Hunt"'910ft .. .c ...
CA ""7.
Clleull s. icw .... •1 L.OaAmleosC•., Hunt"'9li0n llMCh, CA~.
A119el1 ~ J70I Velley Ll9"CS
Dr., P ........ CAtlt07. Merle ._,., 691 Lot Am'9M Cr.,
Huntlfttlltn ...... CA mo.
Clleulluen Kw1n, .0 M•rte "" S..llMllllO, CA 9"'5..
This bUllMts Is conducted by • general~p.
Oleull S. I( wen
Tlllt stM-1 .,.. llltd wlll\ IN
C-tr Cltf1! Clf Or-County.., Oct.
1', 1•1. • f'17Mll
l"ublllNd Orenoe Coat Diiiy Pllet.
Oct. 11, •. "°" 4. 1•1 '60UI
f'ICTITIOUI •u111ta11 .....STAT9Me•T
Tiie foll .. lfll Pttrtonl •r• del119 ............. :
NEWfl'ORT "ETR<X.EUM f'UNO
•1v, LTO" 161 ,.-.,.,.... i.-, Sllltt
Ill, f 111111\ Caf lfomll .... I
"•I H. Olc:llrlfl. 1'1 ""'"" Llfle, Suite 112, T.,.ln, Cellfonll•,..
M.H. OMlllnl, 16t ,......_. l.eN,
SVll• 11 t. T\llUt\, Clllfontle tallO
'"*-•: 1tn,..... .. Mld..-Hlect r•stoall e r s , ran c s w a r e er
CAI ARAHsoue HOMH: ca1 _.._ ~ w llltf'll 1n .,. b e n e f iciaries, c re d itors a nd persons who may be
1 1c1NTEHNIAL HOMES; <C) •~"'*'"'""c...,,ect. a nd contingent c reditors of o therwise inter ested in the
•LOOMf'llLO HOMES; t o> ... ~,,...,..,.,.. .. ._ .. ,..,.,Sus an Ge rtrud e will and/orestate : KHJ.111(0 HOMRS; (l!I ""alOOM •..,. ... el_.,...,.,.. 11'1 .. .,. _,.., HOMH: u •1 001..oaN NUGOU .,.,. .... .., .. ..-.111of l>ldl. A c k e rman, a ka S usan G. A petition has been filed
HOMH: 1G1 H01..10.ttY HOMas: '"' A"°'"*"...., 1n11 • ,.....,...,_. Babcock , and persons whO by Crocke r National Bank,
INOl l"£1tDaNCE HOMl!S; <•> Hll• •1" .,. •uuiru 11•10• •• ma y b e o therw ise Wllllam F,.a n cis Kelter, J E f'F'EltSON "°ME•; 111• (J I ••ec .. u en er 111t centr1ct. T.,. I t i L.1aa 1tTY HOMES, m• SE Mein ,...,,.._..,. -..1 .. "'"" 1orm... n t e r es ed n the w I 11 a nd Sha wn J oseph Kelter
s1r .. t.1f'VIM,Ce1Kw111att7t•. twt11111 .. C811trect._ts. a nd/orest a te : In t h e S u per ior Court of
1"11111 p H. McN1m .. , uus a...rnlfltlMrd A petition has been filed O r anoe County requesting :;:1~rmott. ••. '"'.,..· C••lf«111e ~,.!,:-111-by M ary Joanne M cVlcke r that C rocke r National
D••• s1m11ro, 100 s.111111•11• o1~ In t he Superior Cou rt of B a n k , Wiiiiam Francis
Terrec:•. c..r-•• -· ce11femle P111>111Nct a-..... c:e.11 Diiiy PllOt, O ra noe County ,.equestlng K e lter and Shawn Joseph
92US. Oct. 21• N8".4, l"1 4'lM1 t h a t M a r y J o an n e I( It b I d Tiiis llWI-" ct114111<-Dy • e er e appo n te as 11m1...,.,.-..... M cVlc ker be a ppointed a s pers onal represen tatives flNtlp"·*"-Nale llmE per sonal representative to to administe r the estate of
Tiii• -..... -.,,... ..;., t11t a d minis te r the estate of Francis Edward Kelter
c-1rc..,..,o.-.,...tAllM'r ... 0c1. ....,..,. Sus an Gertrude Ackerma n (U{'de r the Inde p e nde nt
"· 1wt. MOTtc110PT1tUSTH'ISAL.a (under the lnde-<ehde nt PtHte T .s. "°· T·..,_1 ., Adm lnistration of E s tates
,....,,..., 0r.,.. Ceatt o.11y 1111et, °" .._..., 11 1t11, ., 10:00 A.M .. Adm in istratlon of E s tates Act). The petition is set for
Oct.• • ...., . ._ 11, •a."" ...,..,, c E N Tu • v • s c •o w L. • A ct>. The petition is set for hear Irv. in Dept . No. 3 at • Cellftrllle c•t••••ll•ll •• h I I n.....• N 3 t ••w • .,,, ,_......, Tr111.1 .. _, eftf ear ng n ..,.....,'"· o . a 700 C ivic Cente r Driv e , PWll ll'ftCl ,.,,.._.. " OM ., Trvst ,...,.. 700 Civic Cente r D r ive, west , In the City of Santa -~ 4,,... n l111lt'. H• • .us7,tn We s t, In the City of Santa A n a , c a 11 f 0 r n 1 a 0 n
0 ,. ,. 1 c 1 0 ,. T " 1 .,.... 11m , ...-n t , ot o u 1c1•• A n a , Ca 11 fo rn la o n Nov ember 2S, l981 a t 9:30 ~~~::~~u. CQYHTY o • ::::..."'..":.!':C:..:. = N ovember 25, 1981 at 9:30 a .m .
NOT1CaWJMAUtt0•• C•llftrlll• ... cwtM •v O~HNIS a .m . IF YOU OBJECT to the
HCltHOPflOHCLOMI.. MUltltHYuwriMmen•llltMlt6 IF YOU OBJECT to the g,.antlng of the petit ion
o • A H G 1 T • a 1 11" T 1 .c .... ,., • ..,....ny, ., .. "-" •• g r a n tlllCJ of the petitio n, you should eith er appear
=OIMl!OWHH ASSOCIATION ~~AUCT~T~l~~G~:~~ you Should either appear a t the hearing a n d state
••" ::'.,U:O~~s.TAl"PAN, • e1oou f!OftCAIH <Po~Mlt•ttimt a t the hea r ing and st~te your o b jections o r file I. 111e ..-r...,_., .,., Getat °' .... "'......, -Y °' .. ~ y our o b jections o r file written objections with the Sheriff~. c-it't • or...;~ ....._, • .. ...,. "'-....,._-' writte n objection s w ith the court ~ore the -arlnn St ... of cat...,.., •......, c.,,NY Ille ~ ~. JM Civic ...,, ,.., •
tlwlt-.YtrMafo.cre .. ff'-!OttW• Ct111er D••w• wu1, s111t• A11e, court before the hearing. Your appearance may ~
_. .... "' .. Sleltlw c-t -'"" c .. ...,..... • .,.,..,... ttu. lfMl lfll-• Y o ur appearance may be I n person or by '(our
c-t,e1 or.,.,tt,...,Ce1tfMl!a, _....,., .... _..._.,"_...In p e r s on or by your attorney. _,... ., ,,_., 1, "'1, lftll rec,,_. uN 0... f//I Trwt Ill tlw ,,..,.,,., tt
Miy 1, iw1, '" ... --... ... uuw tft1111H Ill .... CevlltY •"' St•tt a · orney. I F YOU AR e A
ec i.ll, ""'"'" or....-1'" l"etl• -.crt•a: I F y 0 U A R E A C R E 0 I T 0 R o r a
Hem"-~ ... ,.... "" ._ ~ n, Tract tt», .. "" ,... •11 C R E 0 I T 0 R o r a contingent c reditor of the
n•m•• 11lt1llt11tu1, Hlalll•ll • .._"' ._ .. ..._ .. _ ._. ... ~oatl......,.t c reditor of the decea·-, you mu•t flit ,.,.._. -...... fwee ...... ----=--· .. _.. ::MIU .. •lld .. ,. ._....., ,., .. A T.....,., Tll• strt•• ,.,r .. • '"' 1t11er d eceased, you mus t file your c l•lm with the court
T!Yllee WAI I UIUlllUlt d H11gh
lre<UMklte bf written SW.tlt11tlOll ol Tr111'" lly Be11e11c1ary, d•l•d
Ho•t mber l , ltll, end ••<trded co11<urrenlly turrewl111, end C1101
HIOfl, I Mettled -ti 1'1tr Mlt
lllCI ..... re1Jt sw00trly, H e.MftclMV. ttllkll l~ .. u 11 111 ...,Wl1 M ti
J uly t, "" ..a 1111 1111 fttllowlnt
Tllll l>li•lness It cOl'Mtll(ttlf llf •
"ICTITIOUI aUllNH8 llmt•• llWtMrtllltlo "'•"''"'"'·fir 111e ... "' "'o.. -•••~." ... ,,.,""your cl•lm with the court or present It to the ~:::.":...::' =r:.•,:. ~::~:~~~,..~-;:.:.or present rt to the person.I r•p,.esentatlve
b•l•no1 OUe'
u11pelcn••-•llf .. lloott!on
lnterett -••••
....... 00 ,............ . ...
(OU• 00.00
Trull"'•''" 1•1 OI
NAMa ITAffMaNT ... H. C«IW911
Tiie fOll ••lnt "'' ..... dol111 Tiii• ,.....,_. -,...., WIOI .. 1Ntlne1t ft: c.,nty Cltn _. ~--c _.., e11 Rl!HU·ALL $YtT•MS, 4tlt A O<t ... '7, t"1. Hllerle Wey,.._. 9each1 CA~ 1'1"114
Fren•1111 M. Mc1tln11ltll, 41it A JAC•IC*. •tootll & WCllL.t• H 11 er II Wey, Htw,.,-t h etll, CA ... 1t•WNllT Cll-. OftW, •"'4 .,..a, ....,_. ..... CA ...
T'lllt M IMM It CondUCtef .. ell Plnh4 llld1Vld11e1 ,..,..,..., er.,. GNtt De11y ,.....,
f'. M. •Kl""'9fl • OCt. 14, t i, ........ 4, !tit ._.. ™' .......... -fllH .......
C-IY C'"11 -~ c-tl' ~Od
1111H , Mii 111¥ vlrtllt tf I writ ef ...... ~ pers onal representative appOlfttM by the ~0Urt ...-w"""' i. ..., ect1111 ..... • TM ....... ~ .. ..._ appointed by the c ou,.t within four monthl lrom
Allflltt 11, ""· 1 -c-•• .. .., ,....., .., .,, _........et within four months from t..._ d-"'-Of flnt 1 ..... ..,. •M elltM~lftHc.-eyai .......... .._ ... ..,..._ t d Of .._ •--·-~ ..... ---~.---......,..,w...,,.,._.....,, he aw f irst lssu.nce of let•rs es provided In .............. ., T't ect ... ,,_. ..., .... ..., • _.., ... ...._. iDf letters as provided In Section 700 at UM Proba\9 :.=.:'...":.::::.::..°.'::. -~r:.!.'; ~~': .. : ~od1ctfon 11ooc ofllfthel IProbaT~! Code of camornle. Ttte
•• caur.nt1e. ,,.""' '' ,..,1 .-. ••.-. ......._...., "*""' "-• o • orn •· , .. Um. for filing ca.lms wm -IMftl\I"'-"•· •'--....._. ........... T,...._. .. .._ time for flllng claims will not expi,. prior to four !'::"91~,:~.:':,~ :;-.:.~.=:=: ~t t•hxplfre prtl~ tdotfouofr months from tM dlte of ' A 0... flf Trut1 lt 9"Wt Ill 111c1tbttfMu of us,•• ~ .. ~ A\191111 n. t•l, In._ 141'1, ...... ,
of Offl<lel RKM"dt of Of' .... c:.-.l'I', Cellf.n.le.....,,,.,.,.,. It, "'1, wl111
Olellll ROYl'Nftd ~ a T,,,..,,
Tiiie llltur--f,... ~. e Celllor11I• c...._ .. ._. ., Tr119' ...
•ftd HOCIWNln, S.111111 & Otl'OY, I
oroleu lt11e1 C•'•••ittl•ll, •• lt.,.tl<lery, """"" II f U I AK flM
Ille lon.wlflt -----911 .......
,..,., .. _,, ... 4 .... , .. _.1 .. ,....,, ...... -. .-. .,... « ~ .. on s rom ..... • e the tte.rlna natked ebow9. ~.,,_ ..------------lllttt1111tt ........... er 111 ...._,. ~ • w11: .,,._...,.. ...,_ •tte hearing noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE ..,,_.l....,DrMa1 C-t0111y~ •tc:Ttnouuu...... ••rtt......... ..,... ..._ '-" 1• tt11 •:: YOU MAY EXAMINE the file Mpt by tM court
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CMAM.11'1 ANG8.a
TMMl ... t4UNT
Oc.e~~
• HAWAI fWe..O
A fof4'1Qn agent e11poMS
Mc:Gllrre« 10 1ti. poulblll-
ty of germ werl-8nd ,,,.
ION of H•wlll'• SUO*'
ct op
1 ••1.11• .... amae MPORT OICKCAVITT
"TV Joumaliet1" ~tr
DeYld Brinkley, Ted Kop-
pel, .Wry AMloMt. Rol>-
lert ==art 3of 31
'9(;NlWI
• TME NOTONOU8
JUWltNG FROG CW
CALAYIJllAS COUNTftY
This •nlmeted sp.clal,
t>eMd on humorist Merle
TWein'• dasslc lhoft llO<y.
••kee • brOld end cynlcet
loot< •1 human ""lure
l:M I 8UU.8EV( WELCOMI! IACIC.
KOTI'IR
Batbatlno Is overlhrown
When tM S-lhOgl hold
en elec11on lor c:tua lead-
er. (P811 1)
• KOET MEWSllEAT
C!)IMlllNDINPORT
(l)QJNEWI
QI 8AANEY MIU.ER
B&tney finds himself In hol
wale< when two young
women oops exceed the!<
aulhonly •nd m•k• • dfUQ
bust.
THE sa::AET CW
90't'NE CASTLE
Glenn Corbell •nd Kurt
AuSMN '"' In lllis flll\'lily ecr-ture, Mt II) lrllend,
of • )'00"9 Am«tcan boy
Md hill Irish friend who
become lnYOl\led In an ~ plOt suuound-
lnO • ~Ing SCllnllSI.
(PM 21
1:t0 I cee NEWS N9cNEWS g HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Richie le vtaited by Mork
lfom IM plSMI Orie who
wants 10 tilt• him beck as
• spedmen 01 nrthhngs.
I MCNEWI
LYNN 8HACKELFOAO
~
• M•A•&•H
Chet ... bee-IM most
UtlPOl)UIM man In camp
*"«I,,. rec.I-• winter-
ized poler ellil lrom his
petenU.
I JOKER'S WILD
OYER EASY
"HMrlng" CW.I Flo111"ce
HendertlOn. Q
I!) MACHElL / LEHRER
NPORT (I) TIC TAC DOUGH tII ENTEATAINMENT
TOMQH'T
Cl) THE MUPPETS
Guest. J-Coco
CC)MOVIE
**•'Ao "Oo The T-n"
( 1950) 0-Kelly. Frank
' S1nStra A lno or ... 10<s
team up with • 1a.i1 driver
end 811 enlh«>poiog1'1 to
llnd • beauHtul girl whose
pk:lu•• II dtSPl•yed In lhe
aubway
(O)M<>vtE
* ** "TM LC>f\9 RICM<s"
( 19801 J.,.... 8tld StKy
Kuch. DIM<I •nd K111h
C•tr•dlne Th• Jesse
J--coi. Youoger gang
1Nves a "'" ol emptied
b•nk1. plundered at•-
~ '"° dNd bod-
'" in Ill wak• H t,,. OUI·
iews ride lo-d lhlit linel
lll!oWdown. 'R' •
0MOVIE * *'"i 'Americetl Gigolo"
( 1980) RlcherO Gefe. Ulu-
''" Hutton. A Bevetly HIHs
glgolO ~ IM pnme
Joan Collins is
called to the stand as a witness for the
prosecution in the season premiere or
··Dynasty" tonight at 10 on Channel 7.
IUspecl In • murder lnve1-
~etlon 'R'
7:20 D N8A llASKETBALL
lo• Angelee l.ailerl YI
S..ttle SuperSOllic1
7:30 8 2 ON TitE TOWN
F .. tured· t,,. Erotic Film
Fntlvlt. 1 trip 10 Stenlord
w11h the UCLA 1ootb11t
team lor on. of ,,,. biggMt
gemM of the ye.,, people
who go to clubl •nd ot,,.,
prol..-.onal ISSOCl1tlon1
to 1 .. rn how to win ,,,.
thou11nds ol contest•
offered 10 A'™'icens etch
yea<
I (3 FAMILY FWO
LAY£1'NE & 8HtAlEY
&COMPANY
AllW Shirley " lnjUred in •
'"'· sNI unci.rgoee • com· plell petlOtllllty Ch8(1Qe II EYEONLA.
Featu•ed I took •I dey-
11me so•p operas; • ¥11111 to
the oper11ng ol "Pel.,
Pen.'
.. M•A0 S0H
H1wkeye and Tr1ppet'1
~ to go to Tokyo.,.
lntenupled by the lurten.
det ot -wounded U S
IOld..,s by IM Chinese
., TIC TAC DOUGH
S) MACNEIL/ UHREA
REPORT
'1i) THE 808TON
SYMPHONY'S
CENTENNW.
CELEBAATION
Setjt Oz-• and the Bos-
ton Symphony are jolned
by trit\allc Perlman, Leon-
fVM Price. Mstillev ~
lfQpOvlCh. Rudolf Serkln
and llUIC St«n tor 1 con-
cen celebrellng the
ora-•r•'• tOOth l>Wlh<l•Y· Cl)~.M.~
A oontinuetton of • vlllt to
the mo•t sought after stunt
ck"IV1ng tum 1n Hollywood
[t YOU AMS> FOR IT
ttiJ COUNmY MUSIC; A
FAMILY AFFAIR
Severi! 01 country music's
belle• known pe<IO<ming
lamlllls •re l11tured
1nclud1ng Dome and Shel-
ley WHI; lhl Kend .. s. and
L.,ry G•U•n end thl Galhn
Brot,,.,s,
Zl MOVIE
* * "Wiiiie & PM ( t980)
MIChlOI Ootkeao. Msrgol
K•OOer Three people
begin 1 tnangul., tomance
1n Greenwich Village that
continues thtOUQhoul the
tne<CU"al SOC•" m11leu ol
lhe '705 'R'
9:00 IJ Cl) MA. MEAUI
Zack begs M .. to conjure
up en •ntlOole tor lriend-
lhtp alter -no hos best
trier>d on a 0118 wltll hla
girt.
0 Ci! REAL PEOPLE
Fntured • lovable l•nd·
lord. a 0<11-men band. •
1-.. split by the U S I
Cened11n border. a 12-
yeat·old •UCI~
0 MOYIE
• • "Bruce Le's Greatest
Reveoge" Bruce Le The
Cho-oeoole I ... qrest
re11ntment tow11d •
group of pollliedy ~
lul WNternen In Chin._
II 9 THI GMATUT AMENC.t..N HlAO
When 811 1111tom1tk: m11111e
1y1t1m goH h1ywlte.
Relph llnd Silt Ma.xW911
111emp1 to hall the Sllll'I ol
WO<ld W., Ill
• P.M. w.oAZJNE
An 1<1optM'• reunion with
her ,.., mother •lier :u
yeetl, • prof~et 11unt
womtn; Or Wuco on
~lteH 11111; Sus1n
W-•tlin on llUC11on
bidding.
II) MOVIE
••~ "Malibu Beech"
( 1978) Kim L1nglo•d.
J-D•ughton A beeu-
lllul lem•I• llleguatd
becomeS ,,,. objeci ol •
rlvelry ~ two young
men st a Southern C•lilor-
"'' bellCtt ID n.EllOITON
SYMPHONY'S
CEHT8NAl ca.DAATION
Seljl Ozaw1 Ind the Bol-
ton Symphony .,. IOiMd
by llzh•k Penman. Leon-
tyne Price. Mstlll1v Ros-
lt<>pO\l'dl. Rudoll S«kln
and laaac Stern for • con-
c et t cet1bt1llng th•
orchestre'a tOOth birthd•y
[°S)MO'AE
• ·~ "S1turn 3" ( 1980) Kirk
Oougl ... F.,reh F-11
A pelr ol SClenllSll w<><klt>g
in • llP8CI S1"iotl er•
~ by • med genlu•
end 1111 rendy tObOI. 'R' 8:30. (I) WkJWI ..
~TI
Hetb deWfopa ChMI pelns
and Metetly ~ Into •
hOIC>lt• CD All IN THE FAMILY
Atehle eurpr--vone
-he comN "'°"" lrorn
work bNllng gift• end
good~
1:40 (0) AMENCANO (TlME
APPAOXIMA~
t:OO IJ Cl) t.tOW
"T,,. 01her Victlrn" (Prem-
letel Wi•tt•m Dev-. Jen-
nder O'Neill .A cont1NC·
lion rorem•n l1ncl1 Na life
llnd teettnga d•em•llc:e"y
alteted '"" hll wff• .. •• pea. o a THE FACTs Of'
LIFE
N•talle tearns setf-delente
aller being accoeted on
the 8ChOOI ground• G O THE FALL GUY
Cott tred<a down I corn-
putet expert who hH
stolen mllliotla Ind tied to
MexlCO. !:GAfflN
......... _ .. (1979) S.er\
Connery. Natalie Wood.
Am«lcen end Ruul•n ICl-
ence upert• tolli 1orce1 In
an ene<npt to w1td ott 1
giant met-lrom outer
~. whleh Is on • doreci
cotllslon cou•" with Earth.
belore mus dt111ter
atnlr." 'PG'
MOVIE
CHANNR LISTINGS • • • "T,,. Thirty-Nine
Sl9'>1" ( 1978) Rob«t P--
ell. Oavl<I Werner A m•n
t1ecom. ,,,. QUMry 01
both the police llnd •
MCtet group of foreign
llQltlll oper•Ung 1n e~
land wNH> he Is lt1med for
a 1t•t11191r'1 murder 'PO'
It KNXT ICBSJ 0
D KNBC INBCI t
0 KTLA (Ind ) ..
• KABC IABCI c
0 KFMB ICBSl m
0 KHJ TV ltncl l '!1l
D KCST IABCI f
• KTTV ltnd I $ e i<COP-TV (Ind.I " • KCET IPBSI •
ID KOCE IPBS1
On TV
Z TV
HBO
1C1nem«h>
IWOR> NV , N Y
IWTBSI
I ESPN>
1Showt1m(')
Spot11Qht
(Cciblt' News Network>
(O)~GOU:
L.ET'I PlA Y DOCTOA
Rlc:k Podell host thla edult
comedy 0-910'# whet'•
contHt•nll mult tek• off
their ctothM II I~ Incor-
rectly --• quNtiotl
th .. "" been giVll'l them.
.MCMI • • * • "CH1l"•town" (1t74) Jectt Nlc:llOltOfl.
'• °""""8y. °"'"'t '"' 19*,. Pf~ cMlec1M
"'"-lltM• • CMe 1hat ~I I trill Of eMNP.
tlon, lfteetl tlnd --· .... ...... UMl. llOHIV
~ ttwOWI e petty to
Pf0\'110 l.Mle tMi ,,. "" •eoc:l.i•. • VtlWe cw AllA
"TIW '1lltlpt>ll\... Tiit
Furth .. , CtOH" John
TttnPll ~ Aall't
OnfW Ctltleilan tOCi.ty.
wtllQtl "" .,_.. ll'llMnoed by .,.,.... llWI ~
OOIOllllllMI. ("> (.D)MOVll • * • "The 811.te Letoon"
( 1110) lfO«K• S"'91d•.
CMetollf'* Alklfle Two
~ elepetler!Qe ,,,.
l*lgl of flrtt low wtllle
dltco\llting Ille tlnd Md'I
olher 1l11r lhey ltl
antowrticlled 'GO"'* on • delettecl llltlnd 'A'
Cl) T-.. WIO!f.Y W0M.D
CW JONATHAN WM'IN
-0-t; Ted l<nlgflt
(J)MOYll • * ~ "T,,. Ollllne Nymph"
( 111711) Leur• Antonetti, T•-Stemp.
10:00 D a OUINCY
A gitl die. In I hoepftel. but
,,., lelhet:. more 9"ioU9ly
Injured In ,,,. .. me e.ecl-
denl, _...i-In • """'"" cen1«.
l •• NeWI Ill D't'NAITY
(5-1 Premiere) Bleke Is
•tunned by ,,,. IC>PM'·
·-of his ••·wife. llnd Kryetle • bolts from ,,,.
courtroom,
• YIEWI CW AllA
"Th• Phlllppln11: The
FurChelt Cro11" John
Temple eicMllMI AM'a
only Chrilll•n 1ocl1ty.
which haa beer1 Influenced
by Spenlth end Am«ICM
colonl•t••m. (RI
(l)MOVW **•'Ar "Lalt Tengo In Perla" (19731 Merion B,.n.
do. M1tl1 Schn•ldet
OINC!ed by Bem¥do 8er-
1olucct. A mlddle-eged
mtn whOM unleithtul wtfe
recently commllted eulelde
end 811 unlnhlblted youno
WOtnln mMt Ind beglrl I
compllc•ted •ff•lr
throughOul which they
remeln nerneteu to MCtl
Other. 'R' 10:30. NEWS
• ICJSl£NOINT
NITWON< NIW8 '9 C08M08
"Tr......,.· Te181" Or c.rt
Seo•n r.-ctHI" the Hol-
1 • nd of Chrl•ll••n
Huygen1'1 llme end tllk81
viewerw lntlde t,,. Jet Pro-
pulllon Lebor1lory. (R) Q
MOHl'Y MATT£M
Spec:lel l<IYl<:e on pettlOnel
money ~I on
topics ,.ngtng from
1nc:ome '"' .. v1no• to "'vestment IOe8s in the
•tocll merket and money
""""' fundl It ott.fed 11~•••(1)1118 ....
• Ml"UNaAY NIGHT
Hoit: ••••.. M.,tln 0--.: !..--. tlnd Mery
RusMll.
I ~MJlHOGAH
THIE AS IE ilONI
A ~ mldfllght eel cau.. ~In the Jener-
tlOn houMhold.
• 8ENNY*-l
Benny 011ebr8tee hie IMlh
blrthdey In • hoej)ltel --rounded by be•utlful ,_,._,
• DIC* CAVETT
"TV .Jour"*11'. 0-11:
o.\'ld 8rlnlltey. Ted Kop-
pel, Herry RMlolw. Rob-
.,, MKHeil (Pwt 3 of 3)
(C)MOVW * * "Home To Stey"
( 1978) Henry Fond•,
Mlc:l'IMI McGuire A t_...
'98' tell• ,_ llC)lrited
grtlndl11Nr on • trip eo he
woo'I be Miit -ay to •
~ '°' !tie lgld. (%)MCME * * "FlgurN In A lend·
1c1pe" ( 19H) Robert sr-. Mllk:olr!I McOoMitl.
'PO'
11: 15 (,0) MOYW
• • "Stone COid C>Md"
( 1979) Peul WlllWnl. Aich-
erO er-. A cop end •
amlll-tltne crime bole join
forcee to find ttle men
relpC)tlllble lor • ...-of
proetltute klllingll. 'R'
11:30 9 Cl) WKNt IN
aNCINNATI
lei 1"1n1 .,, ew11d for hi•
term reports Ind Mb~
niter to llCCoOl'nf>"IY him to
tM eccept-INlnquet.
(R) D 8TONIGHT
Holl: Johnny Cereon.
au..; Get>e Kaplen. Teri G.,.,.
8 111 MC HIWI NIGH'TUNE
1 ..-T cw CMQJCHO
lMI ODO OOUPl.I
Feb Mtect• • grew llt•
end eotrutt• Oecer with
Orange Coatt DAILY PtLOT/Wedntf1d1y, November.a, 1981
TUBE TOPPERS
KOCE 97:30andKCET98:00 -"The
Boston Sy mphony 's Ce nt e nn ial
Celebratlon. '' An all·star celcbr atton tor ·
the orchestra's lOOth birthday.
CBS 9 9:00 "The Other Victim."
Wiiiiam Devane and Jennirer O'Neill
star in a premiere movie ttbout a man
whose life is changed when his wir~ is
raped.
ABC fl 9:00 -"The Fall Guy." Colt
pursues a computer expert who stole
millions and escaped to Mexico.
ABC fl 10:00 -"Dynasty." The season
p r e m iere has Blake stunned by the
appearance or his ex·wire.
the money I<>< • dOwn pey-
ment.
.MHFON>AH080N
Fred pull hit hon>e end
bullMU up for Ille Wiien
he he•rs • dluttrout r:e wllthil
Kc:aT NEW88IA T
CAnlONE> MC
NEWS CB)MOYIE * • ·~ "l.OYlng COuples"
( 19801 Stll<ley M11elelne.
J-Coburn Two cou-
l>Me --mettled, OM
not •• teke • 111b " -unconventlonel regrouping
with r101ous r--111 •PO'
OMOYllE * * "Frld•y The 13th"
( 19801 Bel•Y Pllmer, AOrl-
eone King T,,. reopening
of • summer ~. doeed
20 yew• eatllet •lier thr•
murder•. 11tracts • vlndlc-
llve klllet who knllet
uneu199Cting 19'"-egett
'R'
-MENGHT-
12:00 8 MOVIE'
• • '1' "The Blue Dllhlie"
( 1946) Alain Ll<ld. Veronica
Ulk• An ex-aervlc:eman hi
tu9')1C1ed or mu•Olring
his unf1lthtul wile •nO
rnwt prOYe hit tnnocence.
D 111 LOW BOAT
1seec'1 mother villta, two
shOw buslMll vetetenl
fBtt In tove. w)d 1 chimp
wreck• Gopher't•)ove Iii•
(R) 11 MOVIE
* • ~ "Llvlog Free" ( 111121
Su_, Hempatllre. Nigel
O•venporl. ThrH mla-
Chievoul llon cub• get Into
.,. 10rt1 of trouble wNle
being trensported to •
i-pr-~AI
A mentelly reterded men.
wfto longs to be t police-
man. wllnMMI • murder
In •OU 118llon.
• INTAOOUCT1()H TO
"41L.080PHY
tl:Ol 8 (I) MOl'1E * * •• "Hetwortt." (1971)
Feye Dunew1y, WNHatn
Ho6dln A~--
1'\Wf on the brink of • ner-
voue btMkdown .,__
en orllCle of the -end boolll I,,. retlngt of•
telling shOw I RI
t2: 11 (C) MOYW •••'1' "a.t-The LlnH" ( 19771 LlndHy erou... Jeff Goldblutll
The tlldf memt>ers ol "'
"underground" 8 011on
·~ n-verioue romentlo end )oumellltk:
encounter• with Mell otMt
end the IUC>jectl of ttlelr
1torlee. 'R'
12:a0 D 8 TOMOMOW
Oue•ll: Lorett• Lynn,
Stlelley Dwelt: Ktor Oevld
NIYen • rre EVEAt'800't"8 .......
"Accounting"
(I) WHAT'& aw AlttlENCA
F .. tured: ArMrlce'1 only
mat.oor: • GfC>UP of a.
month-old 1wlmmer•:
homemllde elrcrefl end IM
d8rtng young men wfto fly
I hem.
1:00• MOYIE "Coo• N•m•: Trlale"
( 1978) L-Cerroll. W.G.
McMlllen.
• INDEPINDIHT
NITWOMHIWI
OMOY1l
• • •~ "Privet• Benje-
min" (19801 Goldie Hewo,
~ 8renNn A well-to-
do young wom•n mlat•k·
enty jo1n1 IM Asrrry IOllOw·
Ing tM deelh of her ,_
hU.bend on their wedding
(!'~
• • "Terror Tttlln" {19801
Ben Johnaon. J.,.,.. L•
Curtll. A college lreternl-
1y'1 New y..,·. mu(IUlt-
ede per1y I~ Into •
nighlm•• wrien I .-lndie-
tlw guMI llWll kitting OH
IM C>"IY..goert. • R.
1:108 MOVll
**°" "MUKll a..ch p.,.
ty" ( 111641 Frenkle Av.ion.
Ann•tle Funlcello. A
__,thy women Idles •w•y
her 11tne. mOt'9Y end 1lfec-
llOt11 on muscle meo •• the
beech
0 NIWI
(H) COUNTRY MUSIC: A
FAMll Y N'f'NA
Severll of country mus>c · •
beltlll' known perlorming
f1mllle1 ire te11ured
, lnduding Dottle •nd Shel-
ley W•I: !tie Kendlla. llnd
Leny 0.1111"1 end ,,,. G1tllf'
Brother•.
1:ao• MOY1l • * * "Young Al HNrt" ( 1954) Frenk Sln•tr•, Dorl•
Dey Prot>leml beMt •
young couple "1er t,,.
men stNll his pe11ner'1
flencM.
Cl)MOVIE * ·~ "Fede To B18ck"
(1980) Dennlt CMatophef.
Lind• Klll'tldge A dft. 1urtied young movie ten
reect• to romantle rejec-
tion by committing mu•-oer. In ,._ guise and style
of 1119 '-'l• ICI'-¥11-
lelnl. 'R'
2:00 D INTMTAMilEHT
TONQHT
Ethel Merm•n. C1tol
<;henning end Ann Miiter
flm I IC)9del IWO-hoUt
"Love Boet" mulllCel
• MOVll •• "C<--.d•" (11151)
Johrl Peyne, Rhond• Flem-
ing. A lhlp'• cept1ln
eocounllll'9 per1I ""'*' he
•Hernpll 10 recover Na
1tolen etMc> Ind hi• lover
1:11!= * •. ......_ .. (1979) Seen
Connery, Netalie Wood
American end RU9elen sct-
.,_ expert• joll\ t-In
"' ettemp1 to -d off •
glen! meteor trom OU1111'
~. wtllcll Is on a direct
co1llllon courM Wllh &rth,
before m111 dluster
"'*-'PG' 2:30!= • * .. Wiiiie & Phil" ( 19801
MICNel Ontkeen, Mwgo1
Kidder. Thr•• pe6pte
beglt1 • 1rienguler romenoe
In Gr~ Vlllege 1"-t
~tin.-throughout the
merc:utlel IOCill milleu of
the'70.. 'R' t:AOee NEWS a:oo• MOVIE • "C•tmen Of Peril''
(lt46) Carl Etmond, Adele
M•• TM mysterioue Cet·
men II !tie prime autpeet
In • mutdlll' ~ In P"11.
OMOYIE * • • "Tiit ldo4mek.,.'
(1980) ~ Shlritey, Toveh
Feldshuh A menlpuletMI
men .. ., !kt•• ver1ou1
p60yl 10 ~lllj)Ult fWO lettl·
eott'• Into PoO elJIOll\O
tterdom 'PO'
1:11• MOVll
" • • "PO.derkeg" (1910)
Rod T ty!or. Dtnnll COit TWO ,_, •ttempt IO ,_
cue • Nl-Clltd treln end 111
7:1 PllU'lOt"I l:to(l)~YWQ
Thlt et'tlmeted comedy
~Int tM ..... Of Gii-
d• Rlldnlll' "1d INlly Cryt-
tll, looll• •I '-ttlt ,,.,.i.
-Mlm• prep.,. tor ,,_.own Olympic o-.
4:00. MOVll
• • "E~ ly Night"
( 111371 Wlltlem Hell, AMI
NHOI• Th• *>11CClllG
··~· of • term ~ ,,,. lnotntlw !Of
• OMO of etooh lo c:MftOI
thelr ..,, of Ille
4; ti ct) MOVll
* * "The Alp-Ott' (19791
Edw•rO Albert, K•r•n
Bleck A O'"O OI jewel
I~ doubi.-uON -enother over $8.000,000 In
dlemond• 'R'
4:20. WOVll .
• • '" "Jennifer" (1953) 1
H-wd Dutt. Id• Luptoo A
)'00"9 gorl uncover• dwk
Oieda .. the dtllly Old
mMSH>fl _._e 91'9 w<><ks
4:30 I%) MOVIE * * 'i'i "The Divine Nymph"
( 1117111 Laure Ant-hi,
• Terence Stemp
Tlaursdarf'•
LDafll l•ft Mo"I~•
-MORNIG-
8:00 CCJ • * "Young And f,.."
When lregedy forcee I
youno boy to loln • weoon
tra1t11t1 the rugged-I.,,.
meets • )'00"9 tndlaln girl
end ~•,_life. 'PG'
( 1) * * * "SlrllllOllf In The
House" ( 1976) Keir DullN •
Olivta HutlMY. A plyll:hOClc
murder• hldN In 1he ettlc
ot • college t0torlty houM
on Ctltt1tmee EYI
7:00 0 • • '.+ "frNky Frldey"
(1977) Jodie foet•. Ber-
ber• Herrts. The woOd ..
turned ~ for •
mother end dllVgflter who
tNgleelly 9Wildl bodies
-f•teful dey. ·o·
1:30 CC) •• ~ "Bladl S..Uty"
( 19461 Mone FrHmen,
Richar<I OeMlng. B•ted
on the alory by Ame
Sewell. A proud and -
1omely t>eeutllul nor"
uperieneea men diYerM _,,.,.
1:00 CJ) •• *'"' "Brlgedoon"
( t9~1 Gene K4111y. Cyd
Ch1tlue Two trlenOs
1tumble upon Brlgedoon, •
vlllege In ..... Scottlsll ~
l•nd•. Which ~ to IHe
tor • alngle dey ~ 100
~ e:oo CC) • * "Roeclle" ( 19801
Meat LOii, Kekl Hunter A
rOdt mUlic roedle lets
nothing get in hil w•y In
hil C>Ufeull of t,,. gl•1 of hie
dr-.•PQ'
• **~"LOOphole"
( 19~) B&try Su411Yln, Oor-
Olhy Melon• A b•nk
employ•• •ccuHO o l
plllering • lerge 1Um of
money eaoner••• hlm141f by "1ptehending the , .. ,
eulptfl. 9:30. * * "Dog ThSI Uf'lnl• um" (111581 Bowery Boys.
LllO Gorcey. The Boyl buy
• ur-.m mine Ind heed
W•t to cl"m their fortune
10:00(1 **'i'i"Foa .. "(1980)
Jodie Foster. S .. ty Klltet-
men T,,. vlet1m1 of b<Oken
hotMs end uncerlng pat-
ent•. four teen-ege gtrlt try
to M>Olhe their emotion•!
wounds th•ough drug• 1.nd
M• 'R'
10:30 ., * * "P.,sdlM Cen-
yon" ( 1935) John Weyne.
M1rlon Burns A ledetll
agent t•ec» down • gang
of c:ouoterf11ter1 operettng
•lono ,,,. Mealcen border
11:00 D • • ,,., "Hon.ymocH1
Hotel" (191141 Robert
Goulet. N•ncy Kwen After
being stood up 11 ,,,. "'"·
•men heeds lor the C1rf1>-
t>eert with his buddy where
they ~ently check
Into • '"°"t hotel I<><
newtyw9<1•
I
(C') • * * "Tiit l'8 "9d
One" ( tNOI L• Mwn,
Mtttl Hemlll A louoft Aim'/
Mtfl'll"l IMdl ,_ ~.
lnftpeifienc.d rec.tult• Into
the ~llllecl f1'1w ol WcwldW•"~I ~Po' • * * "llrewtler'I MIL
Uon•" ( , ... , OMllMI
O'IC#ft, ...._. welk.,-A
YOIMiO heir ,,,.., ~ •
mttllon doli.tt In bllO
monlhl or lie IC>.-~
lnherltlll\Ot WOt1h mUCll I lnOf• ' 11*t ... *. ••Cleudlnf" H
( 1t14J OlahaM Cwroll,
Jem11 l•rl Jo1t••
AoM•nce bto11om1
be4WMtl • clown-~·
lllOUlef Of •• eno • oer· baOt eolleCIOt. e • • "In Old c.ilt0tnle"
( 19421 John Wfl'IM. Blnnit
8ernN When • WOll"O
Boston pherm•clA't
1nempt110open•1t1CJC> In I • Cetlfornl• dutlng ,,,. p'ok.t
Ruth. ,,. encount•• W'9
big l'INd.cti. lrom lhe
f
•-n·a t1wleu l9lder •
tZ) • "Schizo" ( 1977)
Lynne Fredericll. John
Leylon A a1c1t1ng ''" II
I error IZld by • lflYSterloul
chwec:ler whd, for r...,,.
of 1111 -n. 11 l,.,..t tii Ult
newt of ,,., rnetriage to •
weetthy manulectur.,, :I''
12:30 0 * * "Liiiie ()reooM" • ·o·
1:00 (C) •••'A "Tile Bad And
TM a..utlfut" (1952) K#t.
Dougln. Lane TU< net A
cold-hearted Honywood
prooucer ettect• the 11-.
of __,., p.opM f)Uf'tulng
1twdom '
(J) •• ··~ "~·~ (1954) 0-Kelly, ~
Cherl1H. Tywo friends
etumble upon Br'lgedooft, •
YMlage In the Scottlttl "!Ir·
tends • .tllch c-IO Nie
for • 11ng1e d•y _., 100 .........
1:80(%) ** "Wiiiie& Ptltl':
( 19801 Miclhall Oollt~,
Margot Kidder. ThrM pee>·
pie b90ln • trl~ler ,_'"Gr~ 1111·
l•g• th•t conttnvn
ltlroughoul the metCUt'oel
soc:iel milieu of the '1&I •
'R'
2:00 0 * * "The AtnazinQ. _
Ad119nlutet Of Joe 119".
Puppell A meglcal In..,.
tlon enet>tes • 9-~odd·
boy to become • 19«111: -oeo• for ,,,. World ln1'J'·
Networ1t 'G' •
3:00 re)':'"'i .... "Bleck Beeull('
( 19461 Mon• Freenf1111,
-Rdlerd Oerlotog, ~
on ,,,. tt<><y by Anna
Sewell A proud end -
llC>mlly beeutllul hOtH
.. i>e<ienee9 men div9tte owner•
a:30 8 * * "Cennon For Cor-
OOb•" ( 19701 o.«oe Pep-
Pllfd, Giovenne fWI A
1m111 group of u:a Armt
lntefligef.c;e men MIS OU1
10 ~ • band of Meal--
cenouttews
0••'Ar"The~rel
Steirc:Me" I t977) ,,....
tine BINl4, Cht'11l<lt>t*
Plummer. A beeulffut .....
mule la terrorincl ~ >
myt1•ious lllller -.tlo Diii.a
In the INdowl 8Ul'l'odMI·
Ing "' ~· "'-'°" 'PG' '
S:45 (1} • • ''°' "Vincerll, Fr!Mlor
COIS, PM And The °""-
.,. .. (11174) y-Montend,
Mietlll Piccoll Thr• men
torm • d9IC) bOnO ol
trtendlhip lhat eutllllln•
them lhtougll • -· °' pertonll end proleaionel
Ulses
4:30 (C' * * "Young And Fr-."
When ltl!Qedy lor<*J ....a
young boy to 1<Mn a wagon
lretn in the ruOQed -•. ,,.
meets • )'OU"O tndien gtrt
and ~lros 1 new hie ')JG•
6:30 $_, * • • 'Coal Mine<-.
01ugh11t' ( t980) S.wy •
Spacek. Tommy t.ee,
J~ 815«1 on Lortlf\4 •
Lynp's eutobiogrepllr; A
youog girl lrom a MQI'
tam<ty "' """ Keotucky •
m•rr-• much older loc;al,
boy who englt-<S her fife
to Slltdom 1n the tnlJJfi I
Industry 'PG' ~
6:4412) ••• "Jeni•" ( 1974/ •
Oocumeotary Jenos ~ ,
rtMI ltorn an unP\appy ana •
obscure PHI 1n a Pnllf
Te11as town to held "'8 '
charts u e top •ock llnd ,
blues llnger
Young Muss9lini stars on Italian TV
By ROBERT McCARTNEY
~--..... wn-ROME -Italy's newest television personality
is a blend of two of the nation's most rlimous
families. She bu the surname of her grandfather,
World War 11 dictator Benito Mussolini. and the
almond-shaped eyes of her aunt, film star Sophia
Loren.
Seventeen-year-old Aleaaandra Mussolini
appears on millions of Lelevision screens as
a11lstant to the host of the nation's leading variety
show.
Miss Mu11<>lini hopes the job will boost her
career ln actJng, a field in which Aunt Sophia
already has helped her get three minor roles.
"l called my aunt in Paris and asked her what
she thou1ht about worklnB as a TV ·valletta'
(assistant)" Miss MussollnI said in an in&.erview
in her family's modest Rome apartment. "She
answered, 'There's no better way to make yourtelf
known. Everybody will see you.• "
Miss Mussolini and her 14-year-old sister
Elisabetta are the children of n Duce's third eon
Romano, a jau pianist, and Ml11 Loren's 111&.er
Maria. The marriage ended in divorce nine years
ago, and the girls and a pet poodle live with their
mother.
I f
David Letterman to get late night shqw
NEW YORK (AP ) -Comedian David
Letterman wUl 1et · another crack at his own
aetwork comedy 1bow, this time late at nitht,
aecordin1 te maiden at NBC.
A new Leuermao prosram la expec&.ed to
follow Johnny Cal'IOl\'a "Tonltht" show and puah
Tom &Qyder'1 "Tomorrow" lbow further into the
potl·mlckdpt houn.
Acc:ordlftl to U.. inaiders, Canon has 1tven bla
•pproval to the c'han111, which are expected to 10 meo eff9Ct euiJIUMst year. Letterman w111 have
" either 30 minutes or an hour, bectnntn1 at 12;30
a.m .
Dependln1 on the len1th of Letterman~
pro1r1m, Snyder .. "Tomorrow Cout·To·Cout,"
which hu been allpplftt in the rattn11, wW be
either 30 minutes or an bour.
NBC bu been 1earch1.n1 for a vehicle for
Letterman, who reportedly la be1.n1 paid .,,000 a
week wblle not wor!::.l.· He wu liven a lolll·term contract by tlw aet and an bour·lou monWal
comedy abow in June t•. But "Tie DHla
Letterman Show" never cau1ht on and wu
canceled tty. montha later.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /W4idnnday, No~mber 4, 1111
i....-... ----.. -~·.,....-.
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.... -'T ~ • . ,...,_ .... _ ....
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VANT~ ULTRA~·" -lQOS
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UftiO LOW~ smo .. J ----------·' ..................
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VANTAGE
lOOs
~-
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WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4, 1981
Beer cans.and bottles cost twice
USING HERBS C9
SPECIAL DIETS. C10 as much. as the liquid. inside. See C4
..., ................
For all their hard work. Ann and Bud Holstein's A and B Catering service hasn't added to their bank acccnint because ill profits are donated to Hoag Memorial Hospital.
2 guests no pro
By MARY JANE SCARCELLO °' .. ...,"91 .... Most couples might think twice about
entertaining 10 or l2 people for a dinner party.
but Ann and Bud Holstein of Corona del Mar fix
dinner for as matly as 75 guests every week.
Their A and B Catertne wu formed three
years a10 when Holstein, after retlrin1 as
co-owner of a land development firm, developed
a ruptured neck disc which ended his 1olf
games.
Successful surgery later restored the 1olf
swing, but these daysthe spends more time at
the chopping block than on a putting green.
FOB ALL THE COUPLE'S bard work the
business hasn 'l added to their bank account,
because profits are donated to Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach.
Holstein, an original member and former
director of the hospital's 552 Club, jokes about
the contribution: "It's a lot offun, keeps me out
of trouble and does the hospital some good."
He is master chef of A and B, baking all the
breads and pastries and creating the meat
dishes.
Mrs. Holstein is sous chef, keeping the
cookie jar filled and creating vegetables and
salads to round out the meals.
Food preparation is strictly a two-person
job, although the Holsteins can arrange for
maids, bartenders and a clean·up crew for
parties.
The caterers take no short-cuts.
Beef stock is made from scratch with meaty
bones floured, browned and simmered for hours
to serve as a base for gravy.
'l'HEJR MOST COMPUCATED recipe, both
agree, is canneloni, which r~uires a running
start of approximately three days. First, the
Holsteins make their own pasta. Then they
prepare a filling, a white sauce and a tomato
sauce (made from home-grown tomatoes in
season).
Then they boil the pasta, assemble the dish
and bake it. .. Most people wouldn't go to that much
trouble," Mrs. Holstein admits,. "but they
appreciate the taste of somet hing well
prepared. It's so much better than what you can
buy."
.
Appearance and nutrition count in menu
planning, and food must be portable because it's
begun in the Holstein kitchen and completed at
the party.
Vegetables can be a challenge, Mrs.
Holstein admits , because they're uaily
overcooked. She likes to ftx pureed broccoli,
which can be put on an artichoke bottom ·or
tomato slice and healed ln the oven.
Another favorite ls carrots glazed in
lemon-lime soda and ~ooked al dente.
The Holstein kitchen looks like any
well-eqliipped home food preparation center,
with no commercial stoves or appliances, but
the couple has invested in hotel-size pans and
chafing dishes.
THEY ATTENDED A James Beard
cooking school in Oregon and Aunt Tante in San
Francisco but still found the transition from
hosts to calerel'S nerve-wracking. Her husband stores recipes in a home
computer, with print.outs kept in a three-ring
binder for easy access. They aim for a variety
of dishes so party guests don't find themselves .
eating the same food al every event.
"It. was a big step," Holstein said of their
first job. "We were nervoua beforehand and
exhausted afterward, but now we can easily do
~ party for 25.''
HOLSTEJ.N ENJOYS experimenting with
new recipe ideas and describes his favorite as
"whatever I thought of most recently."
They try to limit jobs to one party a week
but admit the holiday seaaon crowds their
schedule. ·"We're booked up, through the first of
. the year now," Mrs. Holstein said .
..
A and B Catering hasn't bad any culinary
cataslrophles, but there have been a.Jew clOH
calls.
Scheduled to serve at the openinl of a
model home, the couple found no 1as or
electricity available. An operable pluc down tbe
ball was localed, so the cooks made do with one
eX\ension cord and large helpings of creativity.
ON ANOTHER OCCASION Holstein
remembers putting puff pastries for hors
d 'oeuvres into the oven at a client's home only
to find smoke pouring out after a few minutes.
The thermostat on her oven was broken, and
she had forgotten to tell him. "I include a
portable thermometer in my cooking gear
now," he says.
His wife added, "I admire caterers who do
this steadily, but some of the lar1er ones won't
touch parties for less than 100. We like bein1
small so we don't have to serve the same thinl
over and over. ,
·~we can't eat everything we coot, but we
can be creative for others."
The couple plans to write a cookbook baaed
on recipes they've found successful at their
parties. And they offered to share recipes for a
main course, Chi cken Parislenne au
Cbampaene. and a dessert dish, Chocolate
Mousse, with Dally Pilot readers.
I .
..
Orange~ .. , DAILY PILOT /Wedneld•Y· November 4, 1981
to packages
By •AJrnN st(MNB
Don't tbrow away that Kelloa1'1 .
proof-ol·purcbue teal.
HoldoatothatMlnuteNee1-top.
Save that Zlploc Unlvenal ·"'-'"" Code 1ymbol.
All oltbele are proof• of purcbU. required
by manufaetl&Nla'. refund off era that coUld fill
your cookie jar ... dollar bWa. ·
One ol the teereta of bia·IDOll91 refundlna
la to 1ave the prool1 of purchase. (we call them
POPs) from all the national-brand products
that ;you use.
Once you bave built up a larce co11eeu-.
the chanees are that you will llreacly have the •
required box tops or other proofs asked for by
the new refund forina that you find. This is what
J mean when J tell begin.Den that or1anlzed
refundinf will help them tum their trash lnto
cash!
I keep a l&r1e box in my kitchen. Tbere I
deposit all my national-brand boxes, eana and
bottles after they have been cleaned
thorouablY. Every few days I take the proofs off
these packages and file them away.
Whichproofssbouldyousave? •
Experienced refunders who have tbe
storage space try to save EVERYTIUNG !
I save the entire labels from cans, bottles
and jars.
From boxes, J save the "big seven": tbe
box top;. the box bottom; the product symbol,
trademark or logo from the froo& panel; tM
in1redient statement; the weia.bt atatem'ent;
the Universal Product Code symbol (the black
lines with a number beneath them>, and the
proof-of.purcbaseseal.
Bather than cut all theee proofs off the
packNt. I prefer to fold the enUre box flat and
ftle it awa)'. Wben I do cut certain proof•-1ucb
as the UnivenaJ Product Code Symbol -olf
the packa1e, I always write tbe brand name
and aiie on the back of each proola.
If YO\l follow tbia advice, your proof
collection will become a..cold mine. Each time
you find a new refund form in the supermarket
or ln tbiJ newspaper or read in t.b1J column
about an offer that doesn't require a form, you
wlllbe able to mine a little more refund told.
Nm week I'll WU you a retundlna aecret
that will make your proofa even more valuable.
I'll also show YoU bow to reduce the size of your
collection if you are1bort•lspace.
REPuNDUPDATE
The "Coupons of Qope'' booklet ls
available again. This edition contains 97
coupons worth $17.50on' many familiar brands.
A lithe coupons are good until March 31, 1982.
The price ls Just $2 postpaid -and the
money will hell> the Cuy or Uope Hospital in
Duarte, Calif., which makes free care
available to patients with cancer and heart,
blood and lung diseases. Send your $2 to :
Cou~ of Hope, Box Hope 3337, Los Angeles,
Calif. 9oo51. Allow four weeks for the return or
your order.
REFUND OF THE DAY
Write to the following address to obtain the
form required by Uiis 75-cent refund offer:
Felicity Refund Offer, P.O . .Box PM-067, El
Paso, Texas 79966. This offer expires June 30,
1982.
Hot cereals should dO more than . ·
fwarm you up.
A breakfast tb.at sticks to your ribs can also r:-- - - - - - - - --·
do something for the rest of your body. 11\r off 11n.. _ -·tena or ~
With Wheatena, you get the unmatched I JU"' Oil " nea
bran and fiber of a ~hole-grain cereal. Aitd I TOTHf.CROCto..R ~ ...... i...,,..:1 10•1••..,••r•11"''""""'"'· '"" ,-.,..,...i..i-• ...t•h..•oe-•lw'T<_pl..d .. ~h1hr1••"'•°''h" ',.,u each serving of Maypo is fortified with esse~ I ...-... ... -1orii.. • ....,..1 .... .1.., rl. 7• r .. i....n • .,. fl""'id.<1 1i.,.,...,.,., ~· ~ t.. a,.,.._,"' ch.•-ol fl"'<h•~ '' 1h.. bi • ...I .ln••d.'lo.;..., tial vitamins and iron. 1 i-,,.....,,.i.. ... o1...ii.tir••t1~l ul1t..•P"•Wp1od .. n10•-••owl""'• .. &..,,.d
Ycou'll 6nd they're J·ust as rich in taste as ,,..,..1w.i-nupo•11""..,.'' "''""""""",.,,... .. "N"k."""11•••1•"b1'an.lnu1..,. I b.1<1><0tf"'rd c.,., ........ m•••JM•••v..l..i.u \\itd .. 1w •• pro1i.1i.1..i ... ..i.i.c ..... d. they are in nutrition. · .,. ''""''"'lw'-Co<>d""'""' t.' S.A <..J. • ..i...1 zo• c ... .,..., .... a-i...'--<! 'J>tt"""""''*"""-'-"rd1t.•dpat1tn ~.,..,.d...,pt.,.. _,,,.~ • ...i. •• 1\1.11.,,. And the cost? Only about a nidcd.per I c-"'"" Pn Bo• lb10.ci. ....... '-• HH• 11-..11 o't l at PON Pl R
l'l. RCI tN>~t'O!\ COOi) 0"LY O'\ PROlll l l l"I >ll Alt 0..AN' servmg. I orHrn USF-l.~snrL.'TF-'\ I RAL o
W ith 10¢ off the price, it'll be like gettil}g
two brea.klasts absolutely free.Which we imag· f STORECOUPON 40300 104383 I
inc will malce your heart feel nice and warm . L_ ____________ _J
. .
()lltl 11q1trn NMl!lbll 1&, t981 Pflcta llllf •lfY It pertlci,.tlnt toc1tlon1.
C..po11 too4 My Iii s..tlletll Callforlllt
•II
Assertion hard for fat folk
BiBARBAllAGIB80N8
Reaearcb showa that
thole with a wel1bt
problem tend to be lt11
a11ertlve than peraona
with normal wel1hta and
that auert!veneaa
increases u weltht ll
loat.
While that's all to the
good, there la a riat of
becomlot 10 uaertlve
and aeU-abtorbed with
diet pr;oblfma lb.at you
croaa over tbe line,
becomJn1 demandln1
and Inconsiderate. Some
food for tboulbt:
SLIM GOURMET
uncomplainlnllJ, be
1rateful a,nd
appreciative of your
1ood fortune. If not,
learn to deaJ with the
fact that cMher' people do
eat potato cbipl.
-If you're invited to
a dinner by 1 fri•d, lt'•
not oa1)' all riabt, but
1ood lmM, to mentloo
what you can't eat. Wby
put ihe friend to the
trouble of preparinl
aometblnc you can't
enjoy?
-Are you a diet
bore? While it's okay to
dlscuss diet with people
w h o a r e r e a 11 y -ON THE OTBE&
interested, lt 'a hand, it'• an
i n c o o a i d e r a t e t o unreuonable lmpoeltlon
· · d o m i n a t e e v e r y to uk the bolt o( a larae
dbcussion with talk of 1atherln1 to provide a
calories. Witb everyone special menu juat for
talking about d1etine, you. Juat take smaller
some poor souls are portions, paH up the
being bored to death. obviously calorie-laden
Watch for thbse .signs of items )ike butter, cream
glassy-eyed withdrawal. s a u c es o r b e a v y
-I f y o u b a--v e deaserts.
1peclal preparation or
aervlce. Amoa1 family
and clo1e frlenda,
however, dUI could be a
dlffe..-matt«.
-Jf you can't or
•bouldn't eat t0metbint,
don't. Slmply decllne lt
wtt.h a bll "No, thank you .'' Don't draw
attention to your
ref\aaal. However, if JOU
are queatloned, booeaty
ll tbe best poUci; "It
loota po1ltlvely
delicious, and I would
love to bave. it, but I'm
afraid I can't." lleaUoa
your diet, if neceuary,
to make it clear that tbe
problem ii you, not the
food. .
-Should you brln1
diet 1oda or mineral
water to a cocktail
party? Depends. Can
you brln1· it lo
lnconapicuouely and
quietly give it to the
bartender? A bil
handbal helps carry off
this maneuver. In any
caee, keep your skinny
mixer in your baa until
after you're tertain that
your boat hasn 't
provided what you need.
dlet you are, doa't Mrvt
ti.em diet fooda (enata
ln1redlent1 or
ultra·reatrictlve
reclpe1). L .. n, nldural,
healtby foods -
carefully preparet and
attractivelr pNHntH -
are un ver1al11
appeallna and can sul\
botb dletert aad
non~ at the Hme
table. Au1ment tbeH
cbol~ with bread•
butter. cbee1H and
wine . CoDalder a
conventional· deHert
1lon1 witb tbe fresb
fruit you'll probably
want for yourself.
Remember, lt'a not
offeaaary for you to eat
everytMq you provide
for your suats.
-If Y• can't deal
with boetha1 and dletln1 at tbe aame tlme, bat to
succeeded lately in -It's best not to call
sllmmlng down, beware attention to the fact that
the temptation to you're dieting . ~f
proselytize among the pressed, you can explain
poundage prone. Walt to 'your small portions in a
be asked before you positive . m&\nner by -UNLESS all your
start giving diet advice. commenting that you guests are on the same
couldn't refrain Crom
overdoing on the
r.ut oft at -home
nvitatJon~tll your
wel1ht+9 r control.
If you bave aocial
obU1aUOM tO pay ofr,
cet out of tbe kJteben
and take your friends to a restaurant where you
can order· 1ometlaln1
allmmina for youraeU,
while your 1uests
lndul,-e.
-THE DIET that
works.tor you might not
be the right plan for
somebody else. Beware
the temptation to
become messianic about
a particular program.
Never attack the diet
that somebody else is
attempting to follow.
-Be careful bow you
define rat to others. It's
thoughtless to term your
former size 14 self as
grossly obese to a
woman who wears a size
20 or to talk or needing
to lose 20 pounds of lard
to a man who weigh.a
250.
-Your right to have
the correct foods for<
your diet ends where
somebody else's mouth
begins. Whlle it might
be helpful. charitable
and loving for those
around you to join you in
your diet for moral
s upport, thi s is a
s acrifice you c an't
reasonably demand. If
other family members
are willing to share your
low -calorie meals
..
delicious appetizers. or F d •
that the meal waa 10. 00 prena•at1on tempting you have no r-'
r~mJ0;~Zt·1sauch tied to 'Hunan hand'
tbat most menus are
virtually impoaalble to BOSTON (A p) -
de~) with -1evere. Preparing spicy Chinese
sodium restrictiooa, for f o o d c a ~ b e a s
example -pass up hazardous aa eatin1 it
di oner parties or savs a docl9r who warn&
arrange to arrive after of "Hunan hand."
or the New En1tand
Journal of Medicine.
The patient bad
1cuffed bi• fin1ertips
while ualna sandpaper
to rermiah furniture and
then washed the peppers
to put in bia hmcb.
the meal la over. (UY°'-'
are the host or the group
is an intimate famijy
gatherlna it's all right to
fix a special salt-free
variation for yourself. In
this ca1e, you can
explain -briefly -why
your ·dish .is different,
a~ then move on to
another topic.)
-SMALL packets of
sugar or salt substitute
or diet condiments that
c a n b e u s e d
inconspicuously are
permwible at dinner or
restaurants. However,
it's an imposition on a
busy host to bring along
foods that require
Dr . Richard B .
Weinberc of tbe
University of Chicago
identified the illness
after examining a man
who bad prepared a
lunch of kun1 pao chi
ting, or chicken wllb
peanuts and red pepper.
"A 32-year·old male
graduate student came
to the clinic in a state of
wild agitation, waving
h is hands. rapidly
tbroucb the air and
moaning with pain. He
was barely able to ail
sti ll for even a
moment," Weinberg
wrote in today's edition
"He noted the sudden
onset of severe bunlin1
in bis r101ertipe, wbicb
appeared to radiate up
bis arme in throbbing
waves and which was
associated wltb a
sensation of flushinc and
dizziness,'' tbe doctor
said.
The pain wae eased
with lidocaine eel.
Weinberg sug1esled a
preventive measure -
rubber gloves._ .
Hunan cooJung is a
spicy, rqional Cb.lDese
cuisine.
'°""good I; Nowmbef f I~ IO ():lobef 31 ~982 -
I Film o..elopMig ~ How many
rolls
Shipping &
Handling
12 Exp. Prints 99 50
20Exp Pnnls 399 .50
24 E1t Pnnts 3.118 50
36 E1tp Prints 5 99 so
I SEND I TO
TOTAL ENClOSED
COAST FILM-OEVEl.Of>ING OFFER
-'00 Rayon Driw
Pariwrlborg, WV 26101
Tocal
I Out responslbl~ty 10< loss°' damage it llmllld IO COit OI UMllposed
him Pnce subjec1 10 Change witllOOI notiCa Please allow" weelll tor I de•vtwy. Lmil ona ll~loptr'1g and two so< Coaa1 coupons per
name°' llCldr111. Coasl Film/Coupon Oller (Calll) ~'°" I Value 1/20 ol 1•
OOOER FORM/SHIPPING LABEL I UN this origin.t Older lofm Ol'lly. No oopes locep4td
NAME-----------------
ADORE SS----------
CITY---------------..,.~
STA .._ _______ ZIP ______ _
. .-:
I. .
1
Orange Coaat DAILY P1LOT ednNday, Novem~r ~~ 1111
.
produce meal fish
. tide ., .,. $119 ,_. .... , 49! ,,.. Im• ,. •• ,.,..n ...... • sworMl1h
. . t2-t4 "· ..... ,.., ....... ,, . ' . .... •n• .w. " ..., .,.,.. ....... II h I ........ ..... $169 ...... • , ...
r11lly rH 1ra•elt11it 3,.,~00 ·7-hone road •·
... ,.,
·,~'11)011 pears . •.
•• .
. llnt ., ,.. ...... ~At . sho11lder halihlt steaks
· n•el oran911 ;irr.. elod road .. $249 ,.,. ,,... , •.
... 9 plant 29+ · · $249 .111ahl-11ahl ·~ 1•. · honeless hrlslcet •· tna•
•• ,.
~~
t
M••lfa
. peni1111on1 69• $169 ·eatRsh , •. hlnd•••rler • " ...... ,,.. •· ·
•s.oo "' • ., so•·~' ••• · . -------------~ vitamins •to.oo tff •If too --· f:Nu•r fi• deli
rlM• n•• .,.,..,. •rbt
e-1200 111talned rele111 ••1•• •·.
250 .... .... ... , •17.15 mixed nafl 1• 11. ..... ,.. .... & 111tH $1557 el •tll•' 11" •"'• ~ p1ffed eorn
& hrown riee ·~· ,... ,.,..,. ••rbt. 111111111 ......... .
e-1000 with r• hips tea 24 .... ~. . . ....... ""· ... ..,, ·••"· ISO 11p1 rttlllr t6. ti ., .. 1,11 ,,.11,, ''"" ti•
.. ~ "'' $155 7 ...... nlley ' · eraekers
bakery .............. ,. ... ,...
t ....... , .'
. ••.roldlfl •eat rollt ~ii *1 t
. . ... ... ... ,. ... .. . ... " .,,.. ..... '*199 ....
l
.................. , .... 1111H ,, 111t Int
.. ,,... ., ... ,. •.
· ·rare r11st htl $465 .... ,. .. ,,.. -~""'· 1h1r~ tfhlte
he441r eheese
.. '
.. ,.., .. 69• genoa 1118111 ... " ·~'
$129 1 ... w & ,..., " ...
-' ~1rHe1e ehlelcen
-Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, November~. 1981
Beer cans, bottles cost more· than contents
By DOROTHY WENCK
When you buy food,
~ uisually buy som e
~of packaalna too,
thl packaaln& can
a lot to the price you ror food
s and beverages
a ccount f o r ob o ut
two-thirds or all t he
p ac k jl g l n g a nd
containers used in the
U.S., according to U.S.
D e partm e nt of
Aarlculture economists.
They use 62 percent of
the paper, 71 percent of
the m e tal , and 96
percent or the glass that
go into all forms of
packaging.
and stort•d eW clently:
a nd I t au rv o s to
advertlso the food and
vrovlde Informatio n
abo ut l n a r e dl e nta .
nutrlenu , and uses. A II this protect ion,
c onv e ni e n c~. and
Inform a ti o n coa t
consumers $34 billion, or
9 percent of their total
food expenditures, last
year .
Foods with minima l
p r ocessing , s uch as
fr es h produce a nd
meats, generally have
th e l ea s t c os tl y
packaging, while highly
processed foods tend to
have the-fanciest. most
costly packaging.
b er cost five tlme11 as
mu c h o~ r ood
Ingredients In beer
malted barley or other
grains, hops, and sugar.
Wnter, of course, is
· the bulky Ingredient In
bee1·. And any product
th al contains a I urge
a m ount o r wate r is
lik e l y to h av e a
relatively hi"h package
cost .
T hus, cun11 or bottles
used for soft dMnks a nd
fruit punches and drinks
cost twice as much as
the food inside.
Packaging o( potato
chips also costs twice as
much as the potatoes, if
r e gular pl astic i zed
the food ingrt'dlenl wllh
meat, 1>0ult ry. ch •eise,
butll'r tiod 11uaar
* • * QUF .. <;TtONS W.E A HE AS KEO
Q I hud sornc cunnC'd
sour chcrrit·s In my
pantry for severa l
y e u r s T h t• n t h i s
summer tht• t•nn c;tarted
to leak. so I threw them
away Why should they
suddenly slurt to lellk
when other ca nned foodi;
I b6ught al the same
time arc• still okay·>
/\ 1 ll~hly ucid foods
such as sour chcrrws,
sa uerkraut. and the like
gradually eat away the
in s i d e o f t h e Clj fl
t·:c 1H•t·1 ~1lly a t weak
!.pol!4, "l uc·h u~ thl' scum
or 1H•uJ i'~ventually the
ut 1d t•uu. through the
tri l•t u l an d th e can
.,11r1n1it!. .1 le<1k Bt>c uuse
of Um, problt'tll , canned
uc1d toods should not be
s torl'CI ror yl'a rs and
y<•ars it's best to use
Lh11m "1thtn u year
Q My husband and his
fumily cton't believe in
d ri nki n~ any t h i n g
Jkoholw, hut I like to
u s 1• wine in cooking.
ls n l 1t true that alcohol
ev<t porate s whe n yo u
heal 1l" Uoes this mean
its <·alone:-, disappear
loo'> If you'r e a ty pical
Am e rican con s umer,
you consumed about 400
pounds of packaging in
the edible products you
bought last year.
For some com mon
products you buy, the
p ack age cos ts m or e
tha n the value or the
food it contains. This is
based on the ratio oC
wh a t food processor s
p a y for· packagin g
m atenals to what they
p ay f or the f ood
ingredients.
paper is used, and even ..----------
higher if the fa ncy foil
M os t p ac k ag in g
serves one o r m or e
im portant purpose: it
protects the food from
co ntamination a nd
s poilag e, and i s
absolutely essential for
c a nn e d f o od s ; it
mainta ins freshness and
quality by s hielding
foods fr9m light, heal,
a nd air; it permits foods
to be handled, shipped.
Can you guess what
s o m e o f t h e
package-costs· more-than
food products might be?
The product that tops
the list is beer ! Cans
and bottles that contain
Quality counts
How much food is too
much?
If you're concerned
that your youngster just
isn 't eating enough, take
a tip from nutritionist
Lis a L a mbiase and
follow this s imple rule of
thumb for serving sizes.
A preschool c h i ld
n ee d s ab o ut o n e
tablespoon of each food
item for every year of
his life. For example, a
2-year·old child needs
only two tablespoons
e ac h o r a f ru i t ,
vegeta ble, meat product
or grain and fou r ounces
of J U1ce or milk to
s atis fy his appetite and
nutrient requirements at
any one meal.
.. P arents reall y
needn't worry so much
about food quantities,"
Ms L ambiase s a ys,
.. because the c hild's
internal senses make
s ure he eats until he's
had enough As long as
meal s are prep a r ed
from a variety of foods
from each of the four
fo o d groups. h e is
almost certain to obtain
a ll the nut rie nts he
needs for good health.
growth and energy.··
packaging is used. !•••••••••••••••••~ W it h br e ak f a s t
cer e a ls. soups, ba by
f o od s, a n d f rozen
dinners. the cost of the
container 1s 112 ttmes
t h e value o f th e
agricultura~ Ingredients
purchased.
You pay a lot for
packaging when you buy
s in g l e se r vi n g
c o?tainers of potatp
chips, breakfast cereals,
j uices, a nd th e like .
Obviously, much more
pac k aging is ne ed ed
when foods are sold in
small ttttits compared to
bulk-size containers.
At the other end of the
spectrum are foods that
have been handled or
c hµnged ve r y l ittle
between the farm and
t he consu mer . With
th e s e m uc h of th e
o r i g i n al va l u e i s
retained, and packaging
as a per cent of the value
is relatively sm all.
A good exam pl e is
milk. You pay five times
as much for cow's m ilk
as y ou pay for th e
container in which it's
sold.
Likewis e . packaging
accounts for only 3 to 10
percent of the value of
Refreshing, zesty flavor.
Ready to serve:
• in your favorite vegetable salad .
• with cold meats.
•as a side dish with hot entrees.
• for a new hors d'oeuvres treat.
If you like our Cara Mia artichoke
hearts, you'll love our marinated
brussels sprouts.
Bargain Food Basket
. .
19th and Placentia, Co~ta Mesa
~~ ~u~~·"'· In Vista Shopping Center Q~" ~~· CJ 0·'1· ,.~ ftricH Effectl•e Ho•. 5 tltnt Ho•. I I tit ........ _,. -. "''°" Co111e 111 CIRd ...tow friftCIJ IMltchen oad receive CJOod old ,..........: 'o.u• ~· fashloMd ov....,the cCMthr pen•ali••d Hr¥ ice.
Grocery Meat
SAVE 20• AHSIH 49¢ SAL TIME CRACKBtS ••.••••• 1 ._
MAHNtMGHUILADfCUT 98¢
CHUCK STEAKS • • • . • .. . . . . • .. •·
SAVE lf" UPTON LOTS-A-HOODUS 2 /99¢ CUP-A-SOUP ........... .
• ....... Ml 43¢
SAVE 24 MllLETS CORM •••••••••••• 12 OL
SAVE 24• HUMTS ~ FttUIT CUP •••.•••••••••••••• 4 ,._ 77"""'
SA VE 40• HEFTY 11 9 TALL KITCHEN BAGS •.••••.• 1 s ct. "'(
soW0a1NKS ............ 12 en.,,.. 1 49
SAVE•1 • =~D .............. I .. "'° 3I1 ° 0
Produce Specials
SMO-WHITI 3 I 1 0 0 CAULIFLOWER ........... .
YOUH• "H" TIHDU 19¢
SPINACH •.•••••••••• • • • • • • IMMcll
... SHHAWAllAM 29¢
PINEAPPLE • • • • • • . • • • • • • • . • • • • • •·
SWHT "H" JUICY
;c,;·;ii~~:~Msrw ... , , ... , . , . 29 ~.
MAHMIMG llEf TtMDHIUO 219
IEEF CUIE STEAKS . • . • • • . . . • • • • • •·
MAMHIMG IHf TOP ROUMO 29 8
THICK LONDON IROIL • . • . • • . • • . •·
roii 5;:1i:l:1s . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 4 ~.
WlSCOHSIM MOHTEHY 1 9 s •.
JACK CHEESE ................. .
HORTHHH 149
TURBOT FILLETS • .. .. . • • . • .. . • • • •·
ALL GRIHDS
FOLGERS
COFFEE
l La. '
VAllMCIA 5
OIAMGES • • • .. .... .. .. • • • • .. 100
100 U.S. MO. I ltUSSn 4 ~OJ:~~~................ • .. Deli & Frozen
LAii TO L.Alll 11 9 ' COLIY LOMGHOIH •••••••••• t ... SAVI so•
L'"DIN NAMS NOlat 59¢
CUT CilEIM llAMS •••••••• " ...
,, Ny..'" •JflfMr .... ,, .. , .... ,.. ... HI .....
14C);93253
A Y cs, thJs hs true.
Alcohol will vaporize
<turn to aa•> al 172.4
d e gre es u
te mp e rature
considerably below the
bolllng point of wuter.
So when you u e wine In
cook lne the alcohol will
disa ppear at a relatively
low t e mperatur e ,
leaving only the fl avor
of the wine to enhance
and blend with the other
food fl avors . F o r
example, a cup of wine
added to a large s hallow
pan. such as you m ight
use for roasting m eat,
will lose all of its alcohol
1n just 10 minutes of
healing.
The loas or alcohol
also will redu ce the
calor ie count. A dry
d inner win e ~u c h as
Bur~undy or Sauterne
will lose 8S percent of its
original cttlories when
subjected to enough heat
to cause It to lose all of
it s a l co h o l. Th e
rem ainJng 15 percent or
the calories are from
non-alcohol substances
In wine , particula rly
sugar With a s wee t
wine that contains more
sugar, such as Por t or
Sherry , the rema ining
calorie count will be
higher .
Q Is t he pr ice of
p unut butter ever 1olng
to <'Ome down?
A Th e U .S .
D e p a rtm e nt ot
Agriculture pre dicts
that this year's peanut
crop ls 67 percent above
last year 's dro uaht-
s tr i c ken c rop and
about 3 per cent be·
lo w the r ecord high
1979 crop. So by the end
or October peanuts are
expec t ed to b e ii\,,
adeq uate s uppl y,
i n s t ead o f In l i ght
su pply, as they h a ve
been for several months .
An adequate s upply o!
peanuts should help to
bring the cost of peanut
butter down.
~Glette ·~Swiver
Save $1.00 when you buy elgfwt Daisy razors, the
best and safest women's diarazor, or six Swivel
razors, America's first ra:mr .wth a
moving head and G' Twin Blades.. --------------------------SAVE '1.00 ...:. --= ~
Gillene will send you $1 00 when you purchase .0 Swivel ~....;;.~ C... ~ -
Rozon or eight Doisy roiors_ i 'II _.~ • ~
I hove enclosed the " roof of pure hose" seals or the ii• f ~ I I
"Un1versol Product Code'' symbol from the following
l J Four Oo1sy two-pocks OR Sox SwtYel S'lngle pocks or 1hree Swivel two ·pocks
Please mool my S'1 00 refund lo
NAM(
AOOR(SS
ON STAI( Zif
Mail to: s.;vol/Ooisy SUIO Refund Offw, P.O. 8os •200, Monticello, MN SSll>S
lh•t <eNrt<:ot• mit1110<comoof')' 'fO'tll '9'Cl"'_•Uof'd "'°Y~ be ,..,,ociu<ed Otfet f.n•tedtoone r>et ~whotd
.,. oddt-P1eo .. o11-, e .....-. '°'-...-,OH .. ~°""''"c-.... -' us A vood .....,•"'°" bned to•ed l'" ~...,. . .,.,nt_,K~by lo.,. 0Hrt e•~'t9''e-t>-"°'""?8 "IC18? c 191t TheG1HefteCo ----------------------------
Save a di'me on a hot &
satisfying side dish.
Pick your favorite mouthwatering flavo r. Chicken. Butter.
Chee!-P. Or Beef. Th en save a dime on a great-tasting side dish
of Lipton ~ Noodles & Sauce. .
With Lipto n Noodles & Sauce. you do more than 1ust save
money. You get a delicious b lend of rich, golden egg noodles
made with pur1;1 egg yolks, delicately enhanced w ith a creamy
sauce. And it takes just seven minutes to prepare.
Served alongside simple, everyday dishes, Lipton Noodles
& Sauce helps make hot & satisfying meals.
I · r:--------STORE COUPON NP..ee ---------:1
11(M 1CK Off )'0'8' next pschueof MY 10C I
UplodNoocles. s..ce Product. ,
OPFER LIMITED TO ONll COUl"ON !'£It l"V~HAH
EXPIRATION DATE 011u.,.her ll lte2--~
TORtlAllER n.<>MAIJ LM"TON.INC 0 W1Ut-llll\allll>Qll~liM:\'••l.,.plu• 11_._n, 1~ !Of Nlnohn:J' rolklll•on• Of or"" h•.,. -,.-~1u::"f.\!-~'" o~~o::.;~~r.ov~ ~ tur1t11~1 "~" ~ove• cnv= I,~ .,. l)tt'R~:.c..::.' '"~'°"~~,~~ •• llllterS-~ Of tr•"' •"~ (;Utt~_., ~t ~t~ ,:;,~~a:. ~~:h~ ~.Ml 1llroo•" ou1aod1 •a•ntt•t '~"" Of otMr wftO Me "'°' ret•t• "'' ,.,-..,...,, .. llUf -. .... ncl•\11 « •Plf'•f~ 41Vl-tftd IW UI In pttl\llm f-!of r«lfmp.
'""' V<>o<I ~· ,.~u<-0 1>r311tw1~ 1::::::.w.:~~~"r .~· ,,...~~·~· ...... ~~= .... ~'W~ j i~: "t.~~'ft T;tiOd llCIQft ,. ....... l.t+IOll .......... IWI l>V'C"°' ' _. PfOClll< I _,,.,... An, I ~"'°' .,.. •l•IUlh trawd, _ L.--------19-4N HOd~ lltOJ.t ________ _,
•
... .._ ..... _____ _
•
Orange Coaat OAll. Y PILOT/Wednesday, November 4, 1981
Snacks inake\ excellent
take-along food when traveling
Take·along /rurt txW-
W hen the weather Soak prunes and Stir just untll mixed. •COCONUT FROSTING cmd double·nllt cht~~i..'
turn• crlaply cool, who aprlcoh tn ~ cup Spread in a creased 13 x 6 tablespoons butter ba/1$. both Jlauof.f{I.
can reatat a drlve liqueur for~ hour. In 9 x 2·inch baklng pan, ormar1arine u•11l1 coconu t ''¥/i.
throuab the tall larsc bowl or electric Bake in a-37~·degree 3 cups confect liqueur. make idepl
countryside? Whether mixer cream butter and oven 2 5 ml out e •. loners· sugar IW$less gifts •
you're visiting a chlld brown sugar: add ens. Remove from oven; let \4 cup coconut rum 1 ·· '" 1 who's off at colle1e. one at a lime, beating stand 10 minutes. Pierce Liqueur
atiendlng a football well after each addition. cake with cake tester or In s m all bowl or ~ • .':
1ame at your old alma Add vanilla . Sift 3 ·prong fork ; pour electric mixer cream -/
mater, or traveling to a together flour. baking rem al n l n g ~ cup butter; gradually ada , 11
country cottage, a powder and baking liqueur over cake. Cool; sugar and liqueur. Beat ---------'ll"' week:~nd trip can be soda: stir into creamed Crost wlth Coconut unlit mixture is smooth ,if
e x c i t i n g a n d mixture. Add oats, nuts Frosting"'. Yield : 24 and creamy. Spread on "11''
lnvigorating. and fruits with liquid. birs (1 x J.lnches). cooled frult bars. , 11 1 Whenever you travel,.------------------------------~------------------------------------------------------------------------------:=::-:
it's a good idea to bring '1 :~:
along some special
snack roods. Enjoy these YOrl8 HDLID~r SWEEPSt~KES ;··'1 treats when you arrive , 1 at your destination, or ,,1,
present them to your , . , hoi-~e:::Along Fruit Bars 25 000 w1uasans GOARAMTEEDI ~·:~; ~~~~!t~~~{~ffv~~ti f . l'l~-.n ~ l'J
tasty gift. Dried prunes • ,,. WE'LL DOUBLE THE DIFFERENCE
OUR OUARANTEE OF VONS LOW PRICES
and apricots are soaked
in CocoRibe, a liqueur
that captures the sunny
flavors of Caribbean
coconut and rum. The
fruits, along with plenty
or c runchy nuts, are
enveloped in a chflt.ty
oatmeal bar that 's
s prinkled with
additional liqueur and
then topped with a
creamy icing.
Or pack Double-Nut
Cheese Ball, so named
for the crunchy toasted
almonds both inside and
all around this sweet
and savory snack. The
blend of Cheddar and
cream cheese, raisins
and coconut r:um Liqueur
is marvelous spread on
bread rounds, assorted
crackers, or lengths of
crisp celery.
TAKE·ALONG F RUIT
BARS
~ cup chopped
pitted prunes · -
Y.i cup chopped
dried apricots
% cup coconut rum
liqueur, divided
1-'l cup butter or
margarine
~ cup light brown
sugar, firmly packed
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanma
1 cup unsifted all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon bakiug
powder
1 2 teaspoon baking
soda
oats
I/• teaspoon salt
l cup quick cooking
1/4 cup chopped nuts
Coconut Frosting•
OOUBLE·NUT
CHEESE BALL
2 'cups ( ~ pound>
s hredded Cheddar
cheese
1 package (8
ounces> cream cheese.
at room temperature
6 tablespoons
coconut rum liqueur
1"3 cup raisins
lt4 cup rinely
chopped toasted
almonds
11.s cup sliced toasted
almonds
ln..smallbowl coinbirie-
Cheddar cheese, cream
cheese, liqueur, raisins,
and chopped almonds:
mix well. Place on
waxed paper; shape into
a ball. Chill 2 to 3 hours
or until firm. Roll in
sliced almonds. Serve
with thinly sliced
French bread or
crackers. Yield: 1 ball
about 4 -inche s in
diameter.
Turkeys
plentiful
this year
WASHINGTON CAP>
-The nation's turkey
supply is so huge that
holiday diners would
have to eat double and
triple servings to relieve
some of the market
pressure, an Agricullure
Department expert said
Monday.
"You might think
about having two
t u r k e y s f o r
Thanksgiving," said
Allen Baker of t h e
department's Economic
Research Service.
The abundance of
turkeys means lower
prices for b oth
consumers and growers,
who boosted output to a
record 168.5 mllllon
bird• tbls year. up 2
percent from 164 .7
mllUon ln 1980.
To reduce the large
inventories ot frOHD
turkey• to more·DOnD•I
level•, Amertcarw wOuld
have to eat an ..... ,e
ot 4 I pound• eacb durlnt the fourth
quarter of tlll• fHr, Baw laid b)' \elepbaae.
I
\?O!J"ICF OOITLE-Ol'>HOCTERCENT
139
I 7'>llffR
to convince you of Vons comm1~1 to low pnces,
W'l!0re making this olfer: N you can find lower prices
OYerall this Wffk at any othet s~tmalilet, Vons
will l>Ol you double the difference Just shop at
Vons 6Uy 25 dtferenc llems wonh •20 ex ~
Compare pnces on the same Items at any ochet
. su~rma111et •If their tOUJI is lowet, bring your itemiz.ed Vons receipt and the other ma111et's prices
to Vons and we'll pay you double the d~n« In
ca~ Vons-Low prices you can bell-"'·
.., -I ..... - - -..., •.. _ _,,,.,, ,.,, ..... &A$f'
•If> 0 / (,4,1'1 -';()"'0\1') T p,N~
1 l'lrT 2 f 11....,.n.,~ ~ l11n11 "'<l pric:~ I ~I I 1'111 > 1Pu..-l\a•~ ~ lom!lrpq po<r 9 991 1 l"'\lf 1 ~Pvt• t\oY l'JW'f hm• ff'tl pn." tJq•
'·' )/ I
""I .,,.. Hiil ii( Center Cut ~ef Roast
B~~~~s Stewing ~ef
'' I ---U. "'Y '" .... ! ~ef Rib Steaks
o\h1 I,..,..., ! '""fl-'li If-fit ~ef Cube Steaks
~ "'' '"" '"""'!\'' f\llQtJ" Smoked Turkey Breast
.,. .,. , ...,.. t ~, •• (,,..,.,. .......
Turkey Drumsticks
LB } 29
18 } 99
A 2 09
,,.2 48
18 2 19
111 2 79
l8 .59
LB } 59
18 .99
LIQUOR
t '\ Uttt Oordon'! Qin 999
1099
c'ihri Ml."Win:' &~ 2 l 9
PRODUCE
"" ' , ... '' •n Hawaiian Pineapple
4t ' ' Red Velvet Yams
.... f 4t"'f'
Fresh Spinach
'""',' "'"" Red Emperor Qrapes
R~d R~~e Apples
,\f 111 ,,,
Persimmons . """" ..... "' ..... Blooming Cyclamen
... 29
·~ .33
,., .29
, ... 69
IA .39
... 25
,. 3 99
DELICATESSEN
}49 • t/ ~ '•fft " f(lt)O ... fot,,A\1 "'
Borden Single Slices
........... •it<f-.t6 .,,.. '~"""'" 2 29 Mild Cheddar Cheese , ft
... tV "" YIW-.,, "'.., '" Roquefort Salad Dressing
"0/ ""'• ~·•'Hlo\~ Kraft Soft Cream cheese
a I'll PMo • 'lll"'lcl JOlt'O lMJIWUlllS I
Braunschwdger Chubs
}49
.95
.53
SERVICE SEAFOOD
AIC'f,tOtl tllllll'OO pt_9" ~ltNI.~ 279 Northwatem 5elmon Le 1~ •
2 39 f-;;;he~Trout ll ] 39
'HOT' BAKERY
lfL~'8f4,,._, 4\i"'l.Ae..f l""t1-. -.r \" ~ .. TTM
.. t Mllll R'\ '5( re-"'KA.Vf.'I ''Otf C"'-.1 ,_,..l..,.t 'J<ll\N 'l lt\TlO 4t flr1nf'lw. ,.... fMI'\ PW..J
' .... "' Raisin Scones 6~.89
• '"°"'JIJ'f'M'"'-1 JI ) 49 Cinnamon Chunky Loaf r"
T~Dl~nerRolls mz .99
4 •"'#. "'"flt •llt f,,..,..,_.,, • ...,f [A 4 99 Boston Cream Cake
VONS BAKERY
~·n(-"°'"'O<llY.l_H ":."J"ll><~t)I! ~llced English Mumns
' fllrv,,_ JISNl.f '' Hawaiian Dinner Rolls
AP'(K
Bear Claws
.39
.79
}39
.89
EAL TH & BE.A.UlY
HV ,...18'§! \ IOt"W""r-
CoJgate roothpaste
t 77
185
.77
}88
FROZE!'~ FOODS
299 ~~"' la 119 ~~'ChocolateCake
149
}57
,.,,,.,.um • 549 '.~111r~~ 2 29 •"'"'$!-"" Sugnlm'• 7 Crown IWIKM t1alDUt Ste.Ilka II Oh aoy Qar11c: Bread .79
GROCERIES
1, "' "' ... , f ti .. " ..... Slim Price Cookies
,. , ... -.; ' '~ lf, ,
Tree Top Apple Cider
.,, ... \ ~ ....
Hunts Tomato Sauce
f.t I ~,...r,-lr.t°"'f ('Alllt
Mandarin Oranges
'·~ (' ..... Nalley's Big Chunk ChRI
.. , 1 '\Iii! (')t)'i...,I New England Clam Chowder
.89
1 39
.20
.69
)05
167
OR YO<JR SHOPPING CONVENIENC
AU VONS MARKETS Will. BE
OPEN
v--E-1..,ERANS DAY
WEDNESDAY rcov.·11
9 AJllL TO 7 PJllL
GROCERIES
Nestle Hot Cocoa Mix
•• • \' I/ ttt! Italian Dressing
"' Gaines Gravy Train .,,,,, '""' '"'' "'"" .. Red Raspberry Pteservu
ai:i; Paper T owel5
l~t Pf\ \.•Ml (W~\~Ll> Northem Toilet Tissue
1 29
)10
4 39
.83
.68
)04
....ic:a WNCIM nutl. nM0 wrD.; ..OV. ! TO~. I I. 1111. CAU.(21J) !7'ol400 FOR LO<:ATIO" Of' ITC>llarlfAMIT\'00. "<)T l\U ITV\9 AMO ....US I" Tia AD uncTM ATYOM. JJJ4 W. Int If .. 1.0tAMaatlOOW • ..c:o..-..&mdltV •••
co.ta .....
1111. '"' .... ''"' o, ....... .
eont IT .. L09MelftD.. Ml'! (llfOOAl'IOl.AS YEOM. 1 MUI IN la!TAIL QiWmTU Ol'lt.Y. l'I04rl ST()ltt.S Ol'!l'l t.111" TO ~T '1 Mft A WllK.
HllfttMtt0tt hech , HVfta""on ... ch
21111 heott •tvd. '"1 Attente
lanJ..-nC•fllMr••
'2091 Ce9"tM CeptetreM 6 0.IC>bt9po
IMne
47JO •enence ,.d,
Ir.IN
4IOOtrvtne9MI
I
'I
I ti'
llP'
•
I I
i11'l
11r' I
. ,.
••• ..
~·· ,,
I
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT /WednHday, November ... 1981
Barbecue enhances fish flavo:r
Bartiecw.n, brtn11 out and apllt small whole 2 tabletPQOnJ melt· and place In a single ITALIAN STYLE FUJII except paprika. Pour
41a• bellt ft1Vor of mott flab should be barbecued ed tat or oH layer In a shallow bak· STEAKS sauce over ti.ah and let
ebellftlb and ftn·ftlh. It over coe1a which have l can (8·ouncea) lng dish. Pour aauce 2 pounda aalmon stand for 30 minutes,
wu UM method ol cook· burned down to an even tomato aauce over fish and let stand ate aka or other fish turning once. Remove •1 uMd by Amerlcan trey-whit• color. The 2 tabletpoona sherry for 30 minutes. tum.ins 1teaka, fresh or rroiu flab, reeervlnt sauce fj)r
Wia.na, who knew Juat b11teat Up 1a to b• ~ teaspe>on aall once~ Remove fiah re-2 cupa Italian dresa· basting. Place rtsh In
MW to p:epare ftlh ov1r aware that filh becomes ~ teupoon oreaano serving sauce for bast· Ina _welJ·1reaaed, hinged
tllt open ftre. dry tthen It overcooks, 3 drops liquid hot ina. Place fisb ln weU· 2 tablespoons lemon wire trills. Sprinkle
·Wtcandupllcatethelr soteatlt!requently. peppersauce greased, hinged wire Juice with paprika. Cook
wlldom by tryln1 a BA&.BECUt:D COD Dubpepper grills. Cook about 4 2teaspoonsaalt about' inches from
•arlety of lresh and FIUETS 'l'tiaw froaen Olleta. Inches from moderately If• t~aspoon pepper moderately hot coala for
froaen seafood on our 2 pounds cod fillets Cook onion and 1arHc in hot coals for 8 minutes. Paprika 8 minutes. Baste with
b •ck Yard Ir i 11 s · or other fish fUlets, rat unW tender. Add re· Bas\e with sauce. Turn Thaw frozen steaks. sauce and sprinkle witti
Medical Weight RedUdlon
$20 MOnthly -Includes . .
• Dodor YISlt
• Mlclcationi
• Pwunal IMeta
• Friendly Office
• No c.o....,oct1
-' Nl ttwnoth
• N9 SilUfypnoll1
• No Electtlc Shedl1
Dr. Joseph A. c.ortg M.D.
10 I ti4. T..tt. A••· #IOI .
IOI Medicellldt-. S• .. Alie .............. ...,.
Call 547·0341
lhpeclally suited for fresh. or Croze11 malnlng lnaredientll and and cook"" for 7 to 10 Cut into servina·slae paprika. Turn and cooJt
ttarbecuin1 -are: shark, 2 tablespoons simmer for s minutes, minutea Jonger or until portlona and place in a for 7 to 10 minutea
••clfic snapper, black chopped onion stirring occasionally. fish flakes easily when sin&le layer 1n a shallow longer or until fish
eod Calaoknownassable lclovegarllc,flnely Cool. Cul fillets into tested with a fork . baking dish. Combine flakes easlly when test.-
er butter fish). yellow c __ h_op;;..;ped'--_______ s_e_r_v_ln.....;g._·_si_z_e._..;...po_r_t_lo_n_a_S_e_rv_e_s_s_. ______ re_m_al_n_ln...;g'--ln.....;g;....r_e_dl_e_n_ts_e_d_w_l_lh_a_r_o_rk_._Se_r_v_e_s _&. I ~====~~===~~~~~~~~ \all, tuna, swordfish, sea .-L.:
~ .. -.od salmon._
Alaska King crab legs
ill the 1bell and snow
uab claws (split up one
tide with kitchen
scissors) and large
abrlmp, in the shell or
.peeled and deveined,
are excellent when
iCOOked very briefly over
the coals.
Mao,y barbecue chefs
llnd they need to take a
1rit of •pedal care when
-they barbecue fish since
lt tends to stick to the
bot trids, even after
ll'easing.
One way to overcome
this difficulty is to use a
.tiinged wire broiler ;
another is to wrap the
Jisb lo foil. Some cooks
llnd that placing a sheet
of oiled foil beneath
each fillet or fish steak
allows the fane flavors or
t he charcoal to reach
and penetrate the fish
but still the fish can be
moved easily.
Fish steaks, fillets,
Apples,
walnuts
in cake
Choice recjpes that
are handed down from
family to family often
undergo alterations
through the years to
conform to particular
life pattern s or
-convenience.
But in the transition,
seldom do they lose
their appeal of
)aomemade goodness.
This full-flavored
fresh apple cake with
cocoa, gentle spices and
cr u nchy bits of
fresh·tasting walnuts is
a new version of an
Oregon favorite.
Chocolate Wal nut
Apple Cake makes fine
use of the flavorsome
fruit -the cookin g
variety performs best -
and offers a different
twist from canned
applesauce. Both apples
and the preferred recipe
ingredient nut, walnuts,
are now in plentiful
supply on your grocer's
~lands.
Stock up on either
shelled kernels in
.handy, economical clear
film bags or vacuum
cans as well as
in·the-sbell walnuts In
cellophane bags .
Kernels left from one
recipe to another will
stay crispy and sweet
when refrigerated in
airtight containers. The
1 -pound package or
vacuum can is a most
economical buy.
Generous squares are
scrumptious served
plain but you can also
.aiJt a s how er of
i><>wdered sugar. swirl
on your favorite icing,
or top with ice cream or
•hipped cream.
CHOCOIATE WALNUT
APPLE CAKE
l cup walnuts
3 cups diced pared
apples
2 cups sift ed
all·purpole Oour
l ~ cups granulated
sugar
'4 cup powdered
cocoa l teaspoon baking
aoda
l teaaPOOD salt
1 teaspoon cin ·1 namon
~ teaspoon nutmeg
~teaspoon allspice
2egp
~ cup cook:in& oil
Cho p walnut•
medium-fine. Pare and
dice apples. Resift nour
wltb 1u1ar, cocoa,
baklna soda, salt and
aplcea into mlxint bowl.
Add e111, oO and 1 cup
apples. Beat a minutes
a t medium 1p .. d of
mixer, 1craplD1 bowl
frequently . Stir ln
remalnlDI apples and
walnuta. Turn Into a
.,.aHd t x 11 • 2-lncb pan. Bake at l50 de,,....
for about (0 mlaute1,
utll eak• tetta done.
Cool before cutUn1.
llak• ODt t x lMlicb ••• I
MEAT COSTS ARE DOWN SO YOU SAVE MORE!
LAROE END
RIB ROAST
Bonde(lllftf "118
GROUND BEEF 3 98 PATTIES Frozen. HI> ~
Ooes not 111ceea 3°" fat
BONELESS "188 RUMP ROAST
Bonded llfff Round
SlrlOln Cut
JOY
DETERGENT
Liquid. 32 Oz Bt1
149 ~ ..
J" LADY LEE 99 i E~NKS 16 oz ~11 • •
f"ALUMINUM 95 ~ ~l~ l7SSFROll. Heavvoutv
BONELESS 177 ~9u~~8~TEAK lb .
LAROE END
"188 RIB STEAK eonoeasee1
RIB EYE
FILET
SOIWss eonaeo Beef "298
Spencer
!"CRANCE 77
d> ~~~~oa~ ~ozcn 12 oz ~•
concentrate
HARVEST DAY
BREAD
countrv Style.
White IX WhUt. 24 Ol LOii
.79 ~.
f"VASELINE 249 d> ~!t!ENSI~~~
!LUCKYVODKA699 ORCIN
80 PrOOf 1 7S ltT 8t1
BLADE CUT 87 9!l!~,K ROAS\0 •
FARMER JOHN 129
SLICED BACC?~ Pkg
CROSS
RIB ROAST
eonetess llOndftl Beet cnuct "188
PACIFIC
RED SNAPPER
Fresn Ritt
J" IMPERIAL . 59 d> !ARCARl1~~cm .
WHOLE BEEF
BRISKET
BoneteJs eonoeo Beef
19Lm
OU ARTER
PORK LOIN
.. 129
!CITRUS
PUNCH sunnv Dellgtlt ~~ ... 89
D'ANJOU
PEARS
DELICIOUS
APPLES
COLDEN
BANANAS
~ s Ho 1, Extra Fancy Reel ElltTHancv lllPt. RtaOy To Ut
... 39 ~. 3 ~. 79~.
RUSSET
POTATOES
USNO ,,~SIH
... 25 ~.
FRESH
BROCCOLI
1~ GooCI Eating
".39 ~~
".25 ~.
RADISHES &
CREEN ONIONS
Salld Favorites
·~··15 ~ o.r ..,10..,oc-Kt*I_, ___ ._ .,,,. .. ,o 11t tf-_____ ... _. _____________________ .... _..,_4._,_.,_tO ,.,
Make it happen for less/ . , -More """'e for gour meat dollar.
Our ·v11uc·Tnm" pohcy amirts you better value
for your meat dollar Our butchcn whitt1c away
ucus (11. boM and tail end v..astc so you can
expect morudible 1ervinp per pound.
Choose lMlg L«
f plOduda for' grUW-_,..
Lady Lff PfGdUC'l• siw you tlle .. me 111ndard of
quahty you'd UPfC' rrom tht ftltM>MI bnincb.
but 11 arcatcr '1v1np •
Single price policy.
lnstrad o( conrusina you with multiple pricina.
hke •3 for 89c," bur Single hem Pnclng Policy
simply u.surcs you the same pri« per urm 11 1hc
shopper who'buys more o( that amc item.
LUCKY WILL BE OPEN
WID•mAY, NOVllmll 11,
YITllANIDAY
10A.M. T071t.M.
D I SCOUNT SU~l!RMAlttclTI
Lower.prba Ooaall
I •
n /.'1posahfe plaft>.\ a11d Clips do OWOI/ lt'tfli c/eOtl·Up cllores
I Tailgate parties • m season
Orange Coa1t DAILY PlLOT/Wednetday, November•. 1981
Tips for top turkey offered {
RoutinJ a turkey can M an u a I for P e op I e obtain the 40·p11e book your name and lddrea•
be 11 euy u one, two wlth Dl11b.UUea and the that gives •tep by atep to R ec l p ea -SR ,
... 10. A Uat ot 10 euy A1tn1" 111 a 269·pa1e ln1trucUona on setting C losure Ioformatlon.,
s teps to take _your a p l ral-bound boo k up and lmplementJne a Bureau, 300 E. 44th St.,.
holiday bird from offerln1pra c tic al 1ucce11ful bread falr, N e w Y o rk 10011 .•
freeaer to th• family aolutlona to problem• write to the tnatitute, In Reclpea were dealaned
table h• been pubUthed the disabled ml1 ht care of Day By Day by culinary 1peclaU1t •
by Swift & Co. encounter ln prep1rin1 Enterprises lnc.i W $. Carol Cutler for Closure ,.
"Ten Tips for Tap thei-r own m e als . Hyltraol1c, W cblta, M anufact"Ur•~•·IO
Turkey'' tella how to Orlglnally publlahed in Kansu 87211. The books In c 1 ude d are many
tafely thaw and atuff a 1970, the book renects are SS each. quick, easy recipes to be •
turkey, how to prepare research by the lnsUtute made with products off •
It for routine and how of R e h a bl l lt at to n S v G A a . F a E E the pantry shelf. _,
to select the_correctpan. Medicine, Ne w York coolrlnl ls the basis for a •
Publlabed ln lndex card U n I v er sit y Med I c a I free 20-page recipe book N • b b l J form, "Tips" gives Ideal Center . The revised available from Sucaryl f, e rS I
roastlne temperature edition incorporates the in care of S&S Public There'1nothinglikea. ,
and Usta indicators for I a tes t fl n d Ing s and R e l a t I o n s . 1 o 1 E . sprinkling of nuts over ,
kno w i ng whe n the e qu i pme n t ln t h e Ontario St., Chicago Ice cream. Walnut Nib·
turkeyls done. cooking field. The book 606 11 . T h e bookle t , biers are a deliciouslyJ
For a free copy, send is packed with clear entitled "Sucaryl Makes crunchy addition to tbet a postcard\ with your instructions for doing It Sweet~· explains how sweet stuff or can be
name and addre ss to hundreds of kitchen lo prepare basics such eaten alone. Spread 3
Butterball-Ten Tlp1, tasks from openl.ni Jars as canned kuits, Jellies, cups walnut halves inf•
P .O. Box 1320, Arlington w breaking an egg with jams and bread so they shallow baking pan and ~
Heights, Ill. 60006. one hand to baking a taste like the real thing. dot with butter. B~e iivr
Among other ne w cake from a wheelchair. It a lso has recipes for 3SO-degree F. oven 2<tr
cookin& lltierature ls : Separate chapten are puddings , cakes, pies, minutes or until eolden.'11
a imed at persons in whipped topping, tortes Stir nuta to evenly coat ~
wheelchairs) persons and exotic mixed drinks. with l lh tablespoons but·•lf "TRIED AND TRUE
Money-Saving Meals," a
32 -paae ·b oo klet ,
lncludine more than 60
pasta recipes. Specials
s u c h a s M ac aron i
Stroganoff and Chicken
Tetrazzini make up the
Money -Sa ving Dish
section. For a copy,
send 50 cents and two
using crutches, canes or t e r . Sprinkle with 2
walkers : persons with "THE S IDE AND tablespoons seasoned
arthritis or the use of Back Pane l C o o k -s alt and stir again.t
one band; persons with boo k ," a com pi I · SpreadoopapertowelstO'•
v i s ual diffi culties ; ation of recipes that dry. ~
Peanut hig·t
I The frosty ni~ in the OF chilled , the y 're
air that signah the finger-licking good.
emergeoee of corduroys, To serve with the
tweeds, and cardicana• chicken, add a Zucchini
als o heralds an<>ther a nd Cheese Casserole,
football season and the with the zucchini sliced
thrills of rooting tor and baked in a spicy
your favorite te am -t o m a t~ s a uce and
high school, college, or crowned with a crusty
pro. A key part of the l ayer o f mozzar e lla
traditional ritu al for c heese. The casserole
fans l!J the pre-game can be removed from
tailgate party. the oven, covered, then
chicken slowly on both lh teaspoon salt starredCreend flaps odfl'om
id t'I i Id ,,. •.easpoon pepper any amette pr uct s es un 1 er Sp, go en, "" " t T · d d T
per sons with limited are displayed on the
stre ngth and e nergy, pack ages of products
and persons with loss of t h a l I i n e k i t c h e n
sens ation. The book is she lves. Published for
available for $3.25 per $6 .9 5 each by De ll
copy from Mealtime Publishirrg Co. and
Manual, Box 38, Rooks, Norback and Co. Inc.,
Pa. 17572. the cookbook brings
TI FTON, Ga. <AP) -
Americans consume 114 ,.
tons of peanuts every• 1'
year, or a bout nin e·a.
po unds p e r p e rson .~
according tio the Peanut I
Advisory Board. Nearly r.
half are used in peanut•~
butter , with t he rest~
d ivided b et w ee n~
confectionery and candy •
products and salted. •fJ
d d b 2 •L te<>apoon sugar o r 1 e an rue a n ten er (a out 1 .,.. ,_ M s · M 1 m i nutes ). M a kes 6 One 16-ounce can oney-a vrng ea s, together the best recipes
o f Ameri c an f ood · Se h cut green beans, drained The Creamette Co.. 428 serv ings. rve ot or 4 medium tomatoes. N . F 4 r s. t S t . , THE WHEAT FLOUR
Institute bas prepared a
auide telling bow to run
a B r e ad Fair as a
fund -r aising ,
educational event. To
manufa cturers. cold. If w be served hot, M 1 1 i pl ace in a cove r ed cutin wedges nne apo ts , M nn ,
·casserole and wrap in a 1 large onion, thinly ' SS40l.
tow el a nd layer s of sliced • • MEAL T 1 ME
A F R EE r eci p e
booklet is available by
sending a po,stcard with news paper. If to be I n large pl astic, served c~d. r~rigerate refrigerator-ty pe ~wl ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a t leas t 3 hours a nd with a tight-fitting lid,
c arry to party in a stir together vinegar,
Besides providjng a wrapped in a towel and
welcome r epast, this sever a l l ayers o f
lype of hmcheon gives news paper. This will
t a i l K a t e r s •a n keep it warm for as long
opportunity to' i;oci~lize as two hours, re ady for
and e njoy fri endly ser ving on disposable
c o n ver s a ti on that t>lates.
cooler. oil, salt. pepper and
BAKED ZUCCHINI sugar until well blended.
AND Add beans, tom atoes,
CHEESE CASSEROLE and onions. Toss w mix.
One 20 -o un ce Cove r a nd c hill
package frozen zucchini thoroughly . Paci< i n
or 4 cups peeled and cooler to t rans port to
sliced fresh zucchini party. Serves 6. wouldn't stand a chance · For a tangy side dish,
on c e th e se ri o u s try a Ch ille d Green b u s i n e s s o f Bean and Tomato Salad.
game -wat ching gets coaled with vinaigrette
l medi um on ion , APPLE BROWNIES
sliced ~ c u p s o f t
2 cups tomato sauce margarine
One 8-ounce can of 1 ~. c u ps brown under way. The tailgate dressing.
tomatoes. drained sugar party -featurin g .
disposable paper and
plas t ic c ups, pl a t es,
bowls and other servin g
ute nsil s -ens ures
convenience, sanitation
and l i&b t c le a n -up
chores since disposables
are used just once and
then discarded.
Start off the meal witb
a steaming thermos or
your choice of soup -
either a hearty-style
commer cial b rand or
your own thick and
savory homemade kind.
P oure <l into s ingle
service'. hot-c ups llnd
served with slices or
crusty bread, soup will
w a rm you and your
rellc;tw fans while you
unpack and Jay out the
res t of your pottable
feast.
This could n'icely
include Fried Chic ken
Str ips, prepa red from
tender sliees of chicken
breast, coated with a scrumptuoua mixture of
bread crumbs, basil and
parmesan cheese, and
fried until -cHsp,
FRIED CHICKEN '~ cup P armesan 2 eggs
STRIPS cheese 1'8 teaspoon vanilla
l "'2 pounds, skinned, v. teaspoon basil I/, cups flour
boned chicken breast Salt and pepper to "4 teaspoons baking
3 tablespoons flour taste powder
~ teaspoon salt 4 • o u n c e c a n \4 teaspoon salt
1 egg beaten with 2 m ushrooms, drained l1'J c u p c h opped
teaspoons water 8 ounces Mozzarella walnuts
~ c up fine. dry cheese, grated 1 c up c h o ppe d .
bread crumbs Oregano peeled apple
'h c u p g r a l e d P r e p a r e f r o z e n powdered sugar
Parmesan cheese zucchini according to Cream margarine and
l teaspoon basil package directions, or brown sugar. Add eggs
'A teaspoon garlic boil fresh zucchini about a nd beat until we ll
salt 5 to 8 minutes. Drain . mixed. Add vanilla and
14 teaspoon pepper Mix with tomato sauce, mix again. Sift flour ,
3 tablespoons oil tom a toes, Parmesan baking powder and salt,
3 t a b les p oo ns c h eese , basil , salt, .and add to crea med
m argarine ~pper and mushrooms. m ixture. Beat until
Cut chicken b reasts Pl ace in a casserole smooth. Add apples and
into 1""-a·inch strips. Roll dish. Cover with grated nuts, and mix gently
c h ic k e n s trip s in Mozzarella cheese and wi th a strong s poon.
mixture of flour and spr inkle with oregano. S pr ead batte r in a
sail. Dip in egg mixture, Bake at 350 degrees for lightly greased 9x l3·inch
then coat with mixture 25 to 30 minutes until top p a n . B a k e i n a
o f bre ad c r u m b s . is browned. Serves 6. To 350-degree oven for 30 to
c hees e . basil, garlic transport to party site. 35 m inutes. Rem ove
s a lt , and peppe r . wr ap like chicken strips fro m oven a nd cool
Arrange chicken strips above. before cu t ting into
on waxed paper to dry GREEN BEAN AND d es i red s ize pi ece s .
fo r 15 minutes. Heat oil TOMATO SALAD Remove cut brownies
and mar garine in heavy 4 ta b J es p o o n s from pan and roll each
skill et over m edium vinegar in some sifted powdered
heat untiLbot . .Brown __ 4 t..abl sugai:..
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CITY ---------
STATE ZIP CODE
AREA CODE __ TELEPHONE ___ _
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wednelday, November 4, 1811
Simplify for football party
Wlth football aeason ln
f\lll swine tt'a time to
plan an ea1y, no-futt
party. Choose tlmple
hearty food which can
be carried to the
stadium for a tall1ate
party or serv~ It home
i.o...do.u.proximlty to the
televlslon set and
barbecue grill.
POCKET SALAD WITH
GRILLED SAUSAGE
BOBS
l packaee (8 ounce)
pocket or pita bread
rounds , 4 -inches
diameter
Rice
• . recipe
popular
• Marshmallow Squares
alias "Crispy Treats"
alias "Marshmallow
Treats." The name may
have changed but the
popularity of this rice
cereal recipe is still
going strong after more
than forty years.
Thi s cereal ·
mallow recipe has
practically become a
staple in millions of
households since its
introduction over four
decades ago.
At the first taste test
on record, a panelist
commented that this
r e cipe ''ha s
possibilities." This
taster would be amazed
to know that millions of
cupfuls of cereal were
destined for use in this
r ecipe since its first
promot io n as a
"thrilling n e w
homemade treat!'·
Nostalgia buffs will
appreciate knowing that
th e recipe has not
changed much over the
yea rs , just updated
occasiona ll y to
accommoda t e new
package s izes and
preparation techniques.
Here is the original
recipe written just as it
was in 1940.
A more adult-oriented
cereal treat combines
shredded cheese, whole
wheat flour and rice
cereal to make Whole
Wheat Cheese Wafers.
These cracker-crisp
wafers make a delicious
afternoon snack.
MARSHMALLOW
SQUARES
Y:i cup butter
1.Ai lb. marshmallows
<about 35>
1~ teaspoon vanilla
(if desired>
51h cups rice cereal
M e ll butter and
marshmallows in double
boiler. Add vanilla. Beat
thoroughly to blend. Put
cereal in large buttered
bowl a nd pour on
marshmallow mixture,
stirring briskly. Press
into s haJlow buttered
pan. Cut into squares
when cool. Yield: 16 s qua r es
(9x9-inch pan)
NOTE: Butter and
marshmallows may be
belted in saucepan over
low heat.
WHOLE WHEAT
CHEESE WAFERS
\12 cup margarine or
butter, softened
2 cups (8 ounces)
shredded sharp cheddar
cheese
3 cups rice cereal,
crus hed to measure 1 V2
cups
~ cup whole wheat
flour
In large mixing bowl,
beat margarine and
cheese until very light
and fluffy . Stir in
crus hed cer eal. Add
flour, mixing until well
com bin ed. Portion
dough using rounded
meas uring-t easpoon.
Shape into balls. Place
on ungreased baking
sheets. Flatten with fork
dipped in flour.
Bake at 350 degrees
about 12 minutes or unlit
lightly browned around
edges . Remove
im m ediatel y -from
baking sheets. Cool on
wire racka.
Yield: about 7 dozen.
Fruit criep
ti
• 11lce1 Provolone OU and vlnecar
cbeeN, cut in half Cut 1/2 inch ott top of
• allcet American pocket br,ad r ound1.
cheese, cut in half Place a b~t 1llce of
WI cup choppe d each cheea ln each
onion PoCket brea , fill with ~ cup chopped ooton and lreeD pepper,
green pepper dlvlded equally amon1 8
. ,.. or.,uo leavee nnd-wlchel. Sprtnkhr
aeries of locked fold a
allowlna for h eat
circulation and
expansion. Fold abort
ends up end over a1aln;
crimp to teal.
Place 1auaae chunkl
on • wooden skewer•.
G-rtll kabobs over
medium bot coal• 10 to
15 minutes, turnlnt
frequently . Grlll
sandwiches 10 to 15
minutes, turnln1 one
time, or untll cheese
inelts. Top sandwiches
with suggested rtllin1s.
Makes: 8 pocket salads,
C kabobs.
Pocket Salad with ,
Grilled Saiaage Kabob&·1
makes for an tQ.IJI.
no-fu88 party
l J)OUDd fully cooked1 orecano lnalde each
Polish sausage, cut In sandwich. Tear off a
blte-slze chunks I e n I t b o f h e a v y
Su11ested Filllngs: alumlnuro wrap lar1e
Sliced carrot& e-n o u I b to p e r m H
Fresh spinach adequate wrapplna.
Alfalfa soroutA Place sandwtcbet oo foil
Sllced ripe olives sheet. Brint Z aides of
Sliced fresh mush· foil up over sandwiches;
rooms fold down loosely in a
.. __ CAIUCIO'\~ -1n1-~·'-c--oll"
COllPOI' -991 double 11'9 eaw.os -'°" IMlfcl\eM 1"41 -~ IO lnd\lde ··--· ..,. .... Of "ll'O'*Y ~--IK -IN ,,,_ ol 1"41 ,..,.. b-liquor. IOIMCCO end ft\llCI
"''"' prlld-
L.llftlt OM Item,,_.._. ful •I' Coupon
end Unlit. 0..... c ...... ,., c ........
C-..o • .._.. Now. I In Now. 11, 1M1
U.S.0.A. Choice
Beef Loin-Boneless White or Wheat
,.,_ 11111 covP0<1 elOng wrt" 1111 one Menulec:1uret1 ··ce111a,Ofl'
-pon end get double Ille ... illg. -'°" PU•ClleM Ille Item Hoc lo ~voe retelle< ''" or "Qloce<V pVrCl\eM " ~ or
•-11141 vetue ol IM >tem b cl11de1 kq-10-0 •n<I ""'d milk PfOdUCtl
UMte OM!tem Per lllMufecu•l'C...-Md Umll • DoWtle c ....... ,., c .......
Coupen UIDllM Now. I In ..... 11, 1M1
Pres.ent '"·• couoon •k>11g W1lf'I 1'1y one Manutectutt fl c.., ••. otf COUPO" Mid get dOUOle Ille ... "'QI WMn yOV pVfCftlM Ille -
Nol IO .-. reta•., lrM or gr«.,r lki'C"41M c:ovpon1 or
••C:Md tt\e 't'lh.1• of tP\tt tt.,., Ea.ctu.de1 hQ\IOt 1001c.co and ttu•d
m1lll 0'0d"'Cll
Umlt One ta.m Per MMUlectw••' .Coupon
end Umlt t Double CoupoM Per Cualomer
Coupon E"9ctl¥e NoY. 5 ttwu Now. 11, 1H1
Coachella Valley White or Assorted Flavors
~
Bonus!.
Double Coupon
PreHlll 1n11 COUP<>" llonQ wrtn enr Of\e Men11llClyl.,I C*'ll•Oll
COUOOft e"CJ 09' OOvD•• '"• uw1ngt -nein rO\il pVtCnaH tr.e lfetf\ Not •o 1'1eluoe retattet t'" Of groc.,y pu1cn1H • coupona Ot ••c•.O lh• veJue of '"'• ,. • .,., Eactuo" ttQUOf tob~co 1no flu•O
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Double Coupon
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Coupon u.o.t.e Now. I tin Now. 11, 1M1
(
Ralphs-Grade AA
Whole USDA CHOICE
Top Slrloln
Ralphs
Super Bread
Rad
Grapefruit
Ralphs
Yogurt
Large
Eggs
11-13 lb . Avg. Size-& B
per lb.
II
Armour-Golden Star
Butterbasted
Frlih
Boneless
T_Urkey
69
per lb.
II
..... . . . '
Frozen, _____ ~-~-&?-~
Custard
••ch
Frozen Fillets
Potato Crisp
·I oz.cup s
3
for
corn muff •1 • -..-.z v JFFY
Jiffy
Mrs .Smith 's Gorton 's Corn L----. --=--.!
Pumpkin Pie Fish Fillets Muffin Mix
28 oz. pkg. 29 12 oz. pkg. 812 oz. pkg.
II
Here's one gift you
know they'JI use.
A Ra lph s
Gift
Cart if icate
Detalla at
all Aalpha Storeal
Prlcea effective Nov. 5 thru Nov. 11, 1111
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' Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/WednHday, November 4, 1981 C•
Puffs mOde with herbs great party fare
BJ MFl'ZIE KELLER
Wh e n you are
plannln1 a porty ,
conalder aervln1 my
Herbal Puffa. You can
uae them for h ors
d'oeuvrea, dinner rolls
or dessert.
For deliclo~s hors
d'ouerve s, make
miniature teaspoon·size
puffs with herbs that
complement fillings,
Fol" lit'ITT1 et rOJl s ..
prepare medium
tablespoon·slzed puffs
with herbs that enhance
navors of your entree:
rosemary for beef,
tarragon for fish, thyme
for chicken, mint and
garlic for lamb, sage for
pork.
For dessert, mint for larger 2-tablespoon·
sized puffs, nu wi'tb
whipped cream, top with
a streak of melted
chocolate.
Your guests may find
them unusual because,
to the !test of my
knowledge, I developed
them just by adding
various herbs to t he
standnd puff recipe
which mU.,t be hundreds
of years old.
Pulfs are extremely
simpl& to make. But
may I warn you to
prepare about twice as
many a.s you expect to
need, because they
quick1y disappear .
5t SAFE PUFFS FOR
HOR$ D'OElJRVES
1 cup cold water
1 stick butter 'I/', teas{>OOn salt
1 cup fine flour,
sifted
4 eggs
1 heaping teaspoon
ground sage
-· Boil water, butter.
salt, sage. Pour ln flour
all at once. Reduce
heat; stir vigorously
until rpjxture clings to
spoon in a ball. Remove
from heat; add 1 egg at
a time, beating until
silken.
Drop 1 teaspoonful at
a time on cookie tin.
allowing l 'h inches for
exp a nsion. Bake in
preheated 400·degree
oven 25 minutes, or unlit
lightly browned.
Cool ; cut in half.
Serve c losed , or
open.faced. If serving
open, you will have
twice as many. but you
Give
cookies
crunch
Put a little crunch on
your holiday cookie
plate with this delicious
candy-like bar made with baking mix .
Crunchy peanut butter
and crushed graham
cereal give these bars
their great flavor as
well as crackling
text141'e. Add the flavors
of butlerscotch and
chocolate, and you have
a cookie that's sure to
become a family
favorite.
CRUNCHY
BUTrERSCOTCH·
FUDGE BARS
3 cups baking mix
1 cup packed brown
sugar
~ cup shortenin g
lh cup crunchy
peanut butter
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
Butterscotch· Fudge
Crunch (below)
Heat oven to 350
degrees. Mix baking
• mix and brown sugar.
Cut in shortening and
peanut butter with
pastry blender until
mixture resembles
· coarse crumbs. Mix in eu and vanilla. Press
firmly and evenly in
ungreaaed jelly roll pan,
lS'h x 10 ~ x 1 inch.
Bake until golden
brown, 10 to 15 minutes;
cool 10 minutes. Prepare
Butterscotch· Fud1e
Crunch; spread over
warm layer. lt.etrt1erate
untll topptn1 ii firm,
about ao minutes. Cut
loto ban,. about 2 x 1
lncb. 75 ...... •UTl'8UCOTCll· . FUDGll catJNCB
1 PM'lrqe (IOUDHI)
aemi1weet choeolat•
chlPI "'.,.a.,. (I-ounce 1be)~hcldpa
'4 1up cru•ehy .,. .........
1 eup Goldea
Graham• e•rtal, coanelJ cr.w
lle8' clll1DI ....... ....... ~ ..
-~ ... lew llealh' Mia
will need twice 11 much
tiUlna. I 'allow 1 pound
or so or the main
in1redient tor 50 closed
pulls.
SAGE CHEESE
FIUJNG
1 pound Brie or
other son cheese
Ground saae
Melted butter
Spr~ad butter over
inner puff; covtt with a
slice ol cheese; s}?rlnkle
with aaae. Toast under
preheated broiler to
melt cheese. Serve hot.
CtbCKEN
LIVElt·SAGE nLLJNG
l pound chicken
llvers
~ minced chive for
each Uver
1 cup sherry
Ground sage
Melted butter
tfnt snerry. chives,
livers to cook th.rough.
PlllS IJ'fmM 1 Jal MYS
THURS. MOY 5-
WED. NOY 11,1!11
11111111111
Chop livera; mush; heat
to absorb sherry. Butter
the puffs; rm; sprlnkle
with sage.
CHlc&EN LIVE•· BACON.SAGE ,.
FILLING
Prepare recipe above.
Sprin kl e cris p ,
c rumpled bacon over
top.
PATEDEFOIB
GRAS.SAGE nLLING
Substitute pate de Iola
gras ror the chicken
livers.
PO"RX·SAGE l'ILUNG
l pound lean, cooked
pork
1 cup white wine
1 tabletpoon
mu.lard
14 teupoon caraway
seed• Groundaaae
' Melted butter
Cat.sup
Cut pork very thin,
mince. Slmmer wlth
wine, mustard, caraway
until wine Is absorbed.
Butter the puffs; rill;
You Always Save At Stater Bros.
aprlnkle with 111e; add
a drop or two of cat.aup. HAM~111YME nLLING
Substitute ham for
pork ln the Pork·Sa1e
Fllllng above; thyme for
the aaae. Prepare puffs
with tbyme instead of
sage.
CHICKEN-THYME
FlUJNG
Prepare pulls with
thyme.
l pound cooked
white meat chicken
·~ cup white wine
l bay lea/
~ teaspoon thy,me
~ cup Ri cotta
cheese, sieved
Melted butter
Cut c hicken thin,
mince. Simmer with
wine, bay leaf, thyme to
absorb wine. Discard
bay leaf. Stir through
Ricotta; heat. Butter
thyme puffs; fill.
save itli StaltS low. Pricesl
EXTRA FANCY CRISP RED
Delicious
Apples·
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JACll<mlll
KAAFT DINNER
MACARONI
& CHEESE
7.2S-OZ
BEEF CHUNKS
ALPO
OG FOOD
23.75-0Z
DOVE DISH
LIQUID
Pear Halves COCJIOfKlWAl l\ ,,oz&9'
'Apple Juice •PPlETIM[ &40Z sl.59
C&C Cola Ol[T()llRlG 81•20Z sl.39
Wishbone Dressing ~~~v~;l nc
Jonny Cat litter Z>l• s2.53
Pampers Diapers ~M~::~ ~.40
Shredded Wheat i£f>~ t ,~oz sl.35
Royal Gelatin •v•R t
MJB Tea Bags
Pampers Diapers TOOOlER
Pickles ~N !
Pickles ~~~,. I
Glass Plus m!ZER •
Pine Power OIS•NFEC'"'" •
P• kl Cl.AUSSEN IC IS ~~~vu
Pickles Cl.A~E ..
I
I
~oz27c
1~ $1.77
12~ $2.11
2•~Z $1.43
™>.? Sl.31
OAUON s4.19
AJAX
CLEANSER.
FOR 1.AUNOflY
ASSORTED EXCEPT LONG GRAIN WILD
Rice-a·
Roni I
All
ETERGENT &. $TA1'D$AY ... SAY•YOVMO-YI
-....... V"ldllc: .......... .._ .. ,..... .............................. , ,,.........,-.cwM .. ~ .. ... .... .,,.,, ........... ..,.c~ .......... ,.., .... •c-.. ... ._ ................. .....,,.., ~
I BElTY CROCKER
Pot~to Buds ........ 13.75-0z •I.I9 I SENECA STEMS & PIECES Mushroo1ns ............ a.S-Oz •I.49
I WISHBONE ITALIAN OR CREAMY ITALIAN
Dreain_g ............................ a-oz 79e
'POST ------Toasties ............................ 18-0Z99e I CONCENTRATED LAUNDRY DETERGENT · Fresh Start ........... 34.s-0z •3.I9
I BLEACH SUBSTfT\JTE
Clorox Z ..................... 100-oz •z.97
I KING CRUNCH BAR
Nestle ................................... s-oz 94e. I BOUTIQUE PRINTS OR DEEP COLORS laeenex ........................... 125·CT 69e
I PERFECTION WIDE OR EXTRA WIDE
Nooclles ............................. 12·0Z 59° I BEEF DINNERS OR SAUCE CUBES Frlskles .......... : ......... ~LB ·•~.69
~ "'"""" &tM 4-1 Fl• IEIETIREI
llflOCCOU,CAUUFLowtA.
CAAAOTSI IAOCCOU.
OHIOHl,GMlN 1....,..1'9\oj .. OfllaAOCOOL,COAH,
AIOPEPPPS
FROZEN
C9Pflfta
mlf'IY&TESC::."1. ... °" -.oz ..
--DTaH ~!:1#'"" °" ~oz· SM Fumsa DTAIUS 1661 ..
Sharp Cheddar I.AKE TO L>Kl
•••r (I wine· speelals
•• ..n.ble •• "'' .. _ -!Om• ,,,,.,.
. IU ··-BUA lJ111~ •2.11
P•-PJ1lfJtv ~~ 1 12.19
P•-m'Rt~ ,~ 1f.19
TIROi F.rdrl°u"0
' 1$L 11.19
I I I
..
·----· . -----..__.. -. -----·---.. -
Orange COut DAILY PILOT /Wedne1d1y, November 4, 1•1 ·•
High fat, ~h sugar met tli~arts oxygen
By l tJNB •OTB alm&>M exettlle that ii mUk ra1on
E:urclH l1 aot tbe outlined la "Aerobk ~ tu1akim mllll 1-•1••• 11111 ~ teaapooa black only conalderatton of NutrlUcm" cu pave tbe 1 tablelpoon leeltbia .-Wllll. pepper
aeroblca. Dlet playa an road to a new way ot Ute 1ranul• ~ te•pooa nut=~ important role in tbe that tun1 around the 1 tab&•pooa torula 1 lar1e omon, Y
ablllty ot the red blood de1eneratlvt dlaeaae yeut or brewer's yeut Parmeun cheele cblcken into milk: roll in 1llced
cell a to deliver both cau1ln1 pattern• tbat 1 teupoon honey 2 tab I e 1 p o on a crumb mixture. Place 2 table1poon1 diced
O"X)'len and nutrient.I to now exlat. Here are Place all ln1redienta chopped parlH)' pieca, akin ltde up and pimlmto
every Uvtnc cell in the tome recipes that are in an electric bleader. ~ cup skim milk not toucblq, la a U1bUy I t.blck 1llce1 tomato
body. You actually can featured tn "Aerobic Blend at hlsb apeed untll lff)'inl chicken, cut oiled bakift1 pan. Bake I tabl•poou allced
be aerobically active, NutriUon." cQm ple~ely combined in""' , ln a~ oven for 1caWon tC>PI _
th r o u I h Jo I I l n I , 8tJPD 811.\KE and fortby. Serve at 1 1ar11 c clove.· 1 hour or until tender. 1 cup thlnly sliced
exercise, or danctn1, 1 cup oran1e Julee once. Mak• 2 lcrvinp. ml need • Makes 4 aervi.Dp. muahrooma
a n d Y e t · c a u I e 1 banana · CHICKEN PA&llBSAN C o m bl n e b re a d SPANISH t,t cup dry sherry or
insufficient oxygen 1 apple, peeled and ~ cup whole wheat crumbs, cheese and 9A&&D 1188 white wine
delivery when you eat a cored, cut up bread crumbe parsley. Rub chicken 6 slices cod llsh ~ cup whole wheat
Preheat oven to S50 c r u m b i . B a k e
de1ree1. Wipe fllh with uncovered, H to 40
dampened paper minutes . Mallu t
toweUna. Sprinkle with tervlft&I.
tarra1on, pepper and
nutme1. Arran1e onion Jww Roth u tfw.author sllcea and plmlento ln o/ 29 coolcbook1, fnchul·
t be bot tom . of an ing "SaU·Freeeooldng With
8x12-lnch ballina dlab. Herb• .and spc.1." I/ .,ou
Top with aeuoned flab hove .o •P•ciol dl•t
slices, arran1ed 1lde by qMe.<, JIOI' m1111 IOrit• ~~ slde. Cover each piece of JuM Roth clo tlw DoilJI
fish with a tomato 1Uce; Piiot, P.O. Boz JSIO, Coco
sprinkle with 1ll.ced MelO nns. PW.. ncloN
scallion tops. Scatter .o 1el/r0tld,.1Md mmped
mushrooms over all. moelope /or .o fJe"01141
Add wine and bread r~lJI. hi1b fat/hlgb su1ar diet. ~ cup low.fat dry '4 cup Ir ate d parts with garlic. Dlp 'i4 te11poon tar·· bread crumbl
T~ere ls a tborou1b r--~~----''--~~~----'~~~~~;;__.;;._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~Hl~~i~~ LOWER PRICES. OVERALL.
"Aerobic Nutrition,"
co-authored with Dr. * Don Mannerberg. .
It la this sludging (or
aUckinl toeether> of the red blood cells, caused
by the high fat /high
sugar diet that ls
cons u med by tbe
majority of people in
Western society, that
pt-events both oxy1e
and nutrients from
reaching every part of
the body. When this
happens, the body
organs and cells gasp
for air and noorishment1 causing the beglnnin1 or
degenerative disease.
This entire situation can
often be prevented by
the intelligent change to
a lower fat, low auaar,· low sodium, hlgb fiber
way of eatilag.
According to
Mannerberg, who u a
former medical director
of the Cooper Clinic for
Aerobic Eiercise and now in the private
practice of preventive
m edicine in Dallas,
"Hundreds of my
patients have been on
the Aerobic Nutrition
diet program these past
few years. They now
have lowered
triglycerides, lowered
c holesterol and are
enjoyine better health."
Mannerberg believes
that it is more important
to keep the body in
constant motion, by
walking , dancing ,
bending, stretching and
doing simple chores
than depending on
s udden bursts of
exercise for physical
fitness. He suggests that
brisk walks replace the
office coUee break, that
de s k areas be
rea rranged so the
worker is not sitting for
long periods of time, and
that activity be built
back into everyone's
day. You don't have to
be an athlete to remarn agile all of your life, you
just have to keep your
muscles moving.
'•Aerobic Nutrition··
includes a one week
thousand calorie weight
loss diet, that is a
sensible combination of
well-balanced menus. It
aims to help the
overwetght to t~ two
pounds a week. The
book also includes over
300 gourmet recipes that
are based on the low fat,
low sugar, low sodium,
high fiber healthier way
to eat. Every recipe has
caloric counts and
content Information that
makes it possible to
com biDe them and know
what you are actually
servin1.
The new attitudes
toward nutrition and
Mllffins
nice for
burger
~ .
r.AVE\ ~
Pint 01 Season Gr.een Giant Navel Nib lets range Corn
Fanq
Pippin ~Apples ,..
Ht Brussel Sprouts ..,
~ Brown·Onions
--~-Ull ~Lettuce
...,... ...... i. ti! Drinking Water ........ ~Chocolate Milk
LB.
Macaroni fl Cheae
~Kralt
~Dinners '~iC:.·
•. 69 °A' Cii;g 'P8:'he";'
3 ~.69
•. 39
°A' Fr~ Cocktail op Clll ci.r
f\ Apple Juice
op Clll c.r \,:· . 45 f\ Facial Tissue op c.ra-
J:i!'. 69 f\ Tomato Sauce
lk
Clll
.65
.56
~:' 1.49
700-cl
pk9
.. .,
can
....,.....
. 55 ~ Buttermilk
•s.r. .19 fl! Winde x
32.,
Clft
12·•1
bll
.48
.99
La.
~ FAMILY PACK.,....
~ Chicken Legs
m ~n.-ITWU,
T.x;r Wings Or Drumsticks ..
.79 I
.39
-1.29
-.69
.. 1.48
Jersey maid
~Cottage
~Cheese •-•Y&D 85 A °" VAa l&TIU ~ 1...0Z. CTN. \
ConCutttt
Bathroom
Tissue 4·1lOLL
PltO. 79e =i Mu~ End $ ~ 78 m Rib Roast La. &
----==_)
.79 •:£·
Metllet IHket
lie.ch
.39:;::
Esptlt
Y09ur1
Aut1!td fl""'
.20=
0.1 Monte
Tomato Sauce
..:=::-·-
..a .....
•'V"T •"•· Merket le•ket
Cre•m Ch"H
• s2 ., .... ...
Aonrtta
Refried ... n•
.59 .-:: •
HM>rt
Towel•
l'lllCES EFFECTIVE Wf.11 .• NOV. 4 THAU TUES . NOV 10, 1NI
4
"
,,..•L • ~u.
AMtentA.fe .. ,.,......, ...
H·~· S
"
fa•llF • .-ck
FrHh Hot Golden
Fried Chicken GoW Only At SIOIH Wolft
.93-=-
letty Crodler
CtttMll Aul. ¥""4111 ,.,.,....,
1 ''---~I ~ ........ -.
FILM
DEVELOPING
Sllftf .. •C... FolM .,........ '"'"'" 12 EXP flOll 2.Z9 ZO EXP flOLL 3 19
24 EXP. flgll 4 l9 36 £XP. R LL 6 29
......... .," ,,. ilt ·~ .......... '"""<'• ..._
Orange Coaat DAILY P9LOT/Wldnffday. NovemtHtr 4, 1981 ,
Cll
Preserve tomato harvest
1 cup chopped onion
1,t cup chopped
1reen pepper
1 clove 11 rile ,
mlDced or preued
I tablespoon s chopped fresh panley
~teupoo9aalt
.,., teaspoon basil
leaves, cruabed
~ teupoon oncano
leaves, crushed
1 .,..... ..... •teall
1 cup ...._.. Tomato
Sauce
1 caa <• ounce•> cUced,.....cbU11
l cup 1rated Cbeddar .....
1 freab Callfonla
tomato. flU .........
Avocado1Uoea
Combine oll, vtneaar,
1arlic, ore1ano, Hit,
chill powder ud pepper
ln jar with ti1ht·fittln1
lid. Cover and ahalte well. Score nank ateall;
place ln aht.Uow 1lu1
dish. Pour oil and
vine~ar mixture over
•teak. Cover ••'d hl1b iD Vltamlnl A aDd
rtfrlterate uveral C, but low in IOdlum and
boura, turnlnl oace. calort,e. For optimum
Draln 1teak. roll to flavor , ttore frub de ~lred doneaeu. tomatou •t room
Cpaiblne tomato 11uctt temperature (50 to '10 aa4 clallle; lprMd over detreet) out of clirHl
steak. Sprinkle wlth 1unU1bt unUl fully ripe. c ...... lroll JUlt UDtU Do not retrt11rate
ebe ... meltl. Oaralab underrlpe tomatoH
wi&b fNlb tomato and because exteaahe
avoeado lllces. llakt1 ' reaearcb baa proved aervinp. tbat cold baits the
Stlrrin1 diced 1reen rlpenln1 proceu and
cbllea Into tbe baate deatroya freab tomato tomato sauce lend• a flavor. laatead, store
Mexican flair to them on a kitchen
marinated nau ateak. counter,. table or in a
Fresh tomatoea are hangfnl produce buket.
HomemaU Fresh
Tomato Sauer can be
Qltd i n mony ways
IUCh QI in Deep Dish
Pizza. C4liforma
Mariraara and
Marinattd Steak
Mer1caJ1
· ~ teupoon pepper
In food processor or
electric blender
container, puree 1i,.,
cups of the chopped
tomatoes; set aside.
Heat oil in lar1e
saucepan. Add onion,
rreen pepper and garlic.
Cook unW tender. Stir lo
chopped and pureed
tomatoes, parsley, salt,
basil, ore1ano and
pepper. Coot over
medium·lo" beat,
atlrrln1 occasionally,
until thickened, abQut 40
to 45 minutes. Cool.
Freeze, if desire d .
Makea about 2 cups.
We accept ALL coupons
·from other luper.;.Jlllrllets HUGHEI Gin CllllTIFICA Ill
DEEP DISH
PIZZA 2 .packages (10
ounces each >
refri1erated blacuita
1 packa1e (12
ounces> pork saY.Sage
1 cup chopped onion
1 clove garlic,
minced or pressed
2 cups Fresh
Tomato Sauce
1 cup slici d fresh
mushrooms
· 1 medium fresh
tomato, peeled and
sliced
~ cup each grated
Cbeddu--aad-llouareUa
cheesee Pat biscuits onto
bottom and up aides of
1reued 9x.13·inch pan or
12 .... , .. cut iron atUJet.
Balre at 375 d@grees, 15
minutes, or unW U1bUy
bTowned. Meanwhile, lD
medium skillet, cook
sa usage, onion and
garlic until meat is
browned and onion is
tender; drain. Stir in 1
cup of the tomato sauce.
s pread remaiDin1 tomato sauce on baked
cruat. Top with meat
mixture, mushroom~.
and sliced tomato;
sprinkle with cheefts.
Bate at 375 deirees, 8 to
10 minutes or until
heated through. makes 6
to 8 servings.
CAUUftA)WER
llA&INA&A
i U S.D A Choice Beef Rou"d Cul
SWISS STEAK ....................... la. 1.89
U.S.O.A. Choice Beef ... Roulld Cut I 99 OMAHA ROAST ...................... la, •
F_QITl•FA ...
GAMIHllll
loughlng Cow, R99. M low Col ... 6 01.
GRUYERE CHEESE .................... 1.29
llondele '01 3 Vorietifl
SEMl·SOFT CHEESE ... 1.29
1 cauliflower bead, cored Dokdlo Form1 Rolldom Wgt. Colby ..
2 c .. ps Fresh OllGHQRll 2 99 oma10sauce ---~ cup gr"ated OR JACll ....... lB. • ·
Cheddar cheese ~ tablespoons
cfaopped fresh parsley
Steam cauliflower
until nearly tender.
Place on serving platter.
Spoon on tomato sauee;
sprinkle with cheese.
Cover with foll and let
stand 2 to 3 minutes,
until cheese melts.
SpriaJde with parsley.
llakes' to a aentnp.
oil
PUTAIN
VBGBTAllLE
TOllATO SAUCE
I tablespoona oil ve
Available now in all stor ... For apedal orden & tlhount Information ...
CALL ( 213) 227-8211 GIFT PLAN DEPT.
/
87
LB.
U S D A. Choke llfff Roulld
BONELESS RUMP ROAST ....... Le. 2.49 El Ro,,cho
RANCH STYLE BACON ........... La. 1.39
U.S.D.A. Choice a..f ... Boneleu, Eatro leoll 9 STEW MEAT. .......................... La. 2.5 E.R Hot & Swfff
ITALIAN SAUSAGE ............ . .. La. 1.69
E.R Pottt & S.cnollillg
BRATWURST SAUSAGE ......... La. 1.69 U.S.O.A. Choice a..f, Cente«ut I 49 BEEF SHANKS ......................... la. •
U.S.D.A. Choice Lomb, Froun/O.fro11ed 9 LAMB SHANKS .................... la. 1.5
F1esh Atmours Verlbflt ... Boneleu
ROLLED PORK LEGS .............. LB. 1.89
llulk or Pottitt ... Doft Nol Exteed 22"' Fol
LEAN GROUND BEEF ............. Le 2 . , ,
E.lt. leoMtl Groulld e..t, Doft Nol Eaceed 15% Fol
CHOPPED STEAKS .................. la 2.49
From Cotoli"° Woi.N
FRESH SWORDFI H STEAKS ua.4.59
FroH!llO.lro11ed Cod.toil Sire . FrotMIDefrolled·Jumbo Sire COOlllD IHmlllt . ., ..... la •• 99 ICALLffS ........................ LB 7 .99
f•or~nl0efro11ed • frflh Sll111n.d MA• MA• .... , .. _ ........... le. 2.89 ... SOU ....................... .ta. 2.98
I0-01. Plig. 1 69 ALPS SllCED SWISS ................ •
W1iptide, 4 Va;ieties. •. 12 01. 2 29 SOFT CHEESE SPREAD . .. .. .. ... . .. •
Aloucltte. 4 Von.tt.s •.. 4 01. I 9
SEMI-SOFT CHEESE ................... 1.
GALLO
SA LAME
We'll• Brolhen •.. 750 ml
GREY RIESLING
Bollo ... 750 ml,
VAlPOLICELLA OR BARDOLINO
2.99
3.69
4 Vorlel~ .. .7 01. Moybud
EDAM OR GOUDA: CHEESE....... 1.69
Rolldom Weigh"
JARLSBERG SWISS CHEESE ... La. 3.69
Chumey ... 12 01. 2 99
CHEESE & NUT BALlS . .. .. .. ... ... . •
CHUB2 99
Vlllo Brenlo •.. 750 ml.
LAMBRUSCO .. .................... 1.79
2.99 Johonn Meiiler ... 750 ml.
JOHANNISBERG RIESLING
.::::.o ••..............• s 9
Sure & Noturol ... 30c1.
MAXI SHIELDS ........................... 3.2S Aul Vorlelifl ... 12 01. COM 9 SH AST A BEVERA~ES .•........ ~FOR I.•
S-Giolll, Nofvrol M Red •.• 6., 01.
PISTACHIOS ............................... 2.29 Reg. or Oiet ... 12 01. co"' ff
SEVEN·UP .. , ........................ ~Pock I.
Ni1tlll, Aut. Vorietift ••• 2 .5 01. Aul Vorletlei ... 15.5 01. •7 CUP 0 ' NOODlES ........•................• SS S & W BEANS ................................. •
&!!ilf.;J~ iL... c;•M•An& ~ _ .. NI N I H AMIH .. I
G.Mtl Glont 6 E-Am. Vort.tlft.,.4 01., Ind. 30c Off 9 -•Liii• 9ft AI I ·3 C08 CO••-...... e 7. DIDDOll:Ull. e
Aoprl A~kot ... 2 01. I 89
FACIAL SCRUB....... .... ... .............. .• •
EnchoMe, ~cw Ofy".I 01. 9 SHAMPOO .................... :~ ............. 1.1
Ellhonc•, Nomi., Ofy, Oily hi. I 19 CONDITIONER ... ................. ..... .• •
UMrT RIGHTS asemo. NO WH TO COMM!ltCIAl DfALERS OR WMOL9A-
THl$AO !PflCTM ONlY AT HUOttfS' fl RANCHO & HUGfflS' ~
f I t •
E.R. Ove" Re~ W /fre1h Eggi ... 8 oz. eo
STUFFED °CABBAGE ROLLS .... EA .69
U.S.D A. Choice S..f. Roulld cut
RUMP ROAST ... ll . 1.89
LA•GILOlll
LAMB CHOPS
Hughtt Rondom Wti9hl1 Reg. Cul
MONTEREY JACK CHEESE La.2.28
6~~~ 9 SARGENTO BURGER CHEESE I. I
Rondom Weights.Hughes Chullli
==~~~ .... le 2.63
5 Cello Troy.Varieties
MOTHER'S COOKIES ................... I .09
Wolter IC.Moll Fi¥et ... 26 01.
BISCUITS ......................................... 81
StYowb«ry, .• 10 ,01.
KERNS PRESERVES .........................• 69 Cllt"lllllbw or ltallon ... 16 01.
KRAFT DRESSING .... ....... ......... .. 1.29
2·lltef
COICEeTABeSPRITE .................... 1.31
Ora:nge COut DAIL V Ptt.;OT IWectnMday. November 4, 1•1
PREZ
star of T\ .. s ··Lou
1 Cr ant. .. hus \'Owed to
stem thl' erosion of
unionism as new
•Prt!s iclent of tht-
Scrt•en .\cto1•s Guild
Sex life
urged/or
elderly
WASHJNGTON (AP>
-Elderly people·
usually can and should
resume their sex lives 12
to 16 weeks after a heart
attack, and that actually
may cut the risk of
another attack. the
Nat'ional Institute on
Aging says.
j ' ·'The risk of death
during sexual
· hltercourse is very
lQw,' • the government
institute says in a new
publication.
The institute also said
stroke victims should
not fear adverse effects from sex. "Stroke rarely
damages phys ical
aspects of sexual
function, and it is
uhlikely that sexual
exertion will cause
another s troke,•· it
advised.
The institute, part of
the National Institutes
of Health in the
Department of Health
a~d Human Services,
issued a fact sheet on
"Sexuality in Later
Life" to dispel som e
myths and provide some
tips for senior citizens.
··Although a doctor's
advice is needed, sex
usually can and should
be resumed an average
of 12 to 16 weeks after a
bhrt attack, depending
o• n p h y s i c a l
conditioning ," the
institute said. "An
active sex life may in
r;ct decrease the risk of
a future attack."
· The report said most
older people "want -
and are able l.Q le;ad -
an active, satisfying sex
life. With age, women do
not ordinarily lose their
physical capacity for
orgasm. nor men their
capability for erection
and ejaculation."
_Protectio
offered
by pills
C HATTANOOGA ,
Tenn. CAP> -The state
plans to distribute pills
lo about 7,000 families
wh o live near the
&equoyab nuclear 1>0wer
pJanl to protect them in
case radioactive iodine
ls released from the
reactor. The state Department
of Public Health has
.said employees will
begin distributing
potassium Iodide tablets
to all homes within a
1ive-mile radius of the
plant by early
December.
The tablets would
saturate a person 's
thyroid gland with
todine, preventing the
1land from absorbing
any radioactive iodine
lhat mieht be inhaled as
airborne particles.
A b s o r,p ti o n of
tdloacUve iodine could
se a threat of thyroid
ncer. 1 ~f any radioactive
•Jl><line escapes from the
plant. the 1ovemor -
advised by the state
publlc health
commialonet -might
direct people Uvtnc near
Sequoyab to take the
pota11lum iodide
tablets. .
son-WHITE
LIGHT BULBS
4-PACI
A bof90ln ot our sole price!
NowtOYeeven,,_.. Choose
60. 75 or 100 wott bUlbs.
The Tenn•,.. Valley
AuthorltJ, wbich buUt
and operat. tbe plant
j u at nor t II ·of
Cbattaaoo1a, bOuall&
10,000 bottlH Of tlae~.; .... ~---..,~.-.-~--'
Sfi_Aio•NG
SPORT SOCKS ®
MEN'S 01 LADIES' 11118) CIEWS,
TUBES, OVll THE CAU m ANILm
f~ IEG. 2.09 TO 3.29 .!
'~'i f 161,02~
l~W~
KNEE-HI SOCKS ==-129 =~~199 ~CM llG. 1.H -•-• llO. !.H ::::.u TO 1.ff JO!. ff
So<ka for wormth! So<ka for doulel Pick
your favorite ond a tock up I Now 1ole
priced I 'Momen'a 1IH• 7-8· 1/2 & 9-11.
LIQUID~
PLUMR
'DUINCUANU llGJ1'' 1.33
I •qi, c'-w ctow" 4ro111t I
•spoldln9 la o Reglatered Trodemork of Queator Corp.
LADIES' QUILTED
SLlf.'PER BOOTS
USSMfl.
IWl·• 7 00 lllATI. ... •
MR.C~EE =12 99 10-CUP con. •
COFFEE MAKER
Whot o buy I Thia one
even kHps the coffH
worm, outomoticolly •
•tablets for tT,HO,
1 pokeamaa Bruce
Cadotte NW. ailcl wW
...,.. tbe ~ °"' lo
tb .. 1t1t• for ~tribudail. .(• it-!" ........... -................ -..~~ .... _;,.~.;.... .... ..,;;;.~----...:.. ....... _ ...... ~~=::.:::. _____ ._.~.
li1'1Pllat
WIDNISDAV, NOV. 4, 1911
CLASSIFIED
The Dodgers Angels
won't participate in
the re-entry draft. D2
NEW YORK CAP > -Rollie Fin1ers to win the award, in 1977. Bruce Sutter baseman Jim Gantner tor "gettln1 me says every pitcher who has ever won or the Chicago Cubs in 1979 and Mike out ot several jams."
• ballot. Mccatty had the other six
the Cy Young Award wlll tell you the Marshall of the Los Angeles Dodgers In He also said be was helped by the
aame thing, "that everything went right 1974 won it ln the National League. experience of catchers Ted Simmons
firsl·place votes and finished with 84"1
points. Jack Morris or Detroit was third
with 21 points.
durlng the whole year." and Charlie Moore, especially on "how
Fingers, a caeey 13·year veteran with a ··1 feel this was my best season eveT. to pitch to hitters I didn't know." Milwaukee won the second·balf title
in the AL East but lost to the New York
Yankees in five games in the
miniplayoffs. 1
handlebar mustache, waiioted the 1981 Very few guys get a chance to have a Fingers, 35, won six games and bad 28
Cy Young winner in American year like I had," Fingers said when he saves with a UM earned run average in
League by the Bas alJ Writers learned of the award after arriving in 47 appearances for Milwaukee. He
Association or America, the BBWAA Las Vegas, for a visit. "Every guy on worked 78 innings, striking out 61 and ·'Awards at the end or the season are
fine, but it's playoff wins and the World
Serles that really matter. We were
shooting for a World Series and I sure
would have liked to have gotten there."
said Fin1ers. who broke into the major
leagues with Oakland in 1969.
announced Tuesday. the ballclub played great behind me, walklng only 13.
that's one or the main reasons I won. He ft-'shed well ahead of Oakland's The Milwaukee Brewers right·hander uu said he was surprised because he was a "l gave up 10 runs all year. and every Steve Mccatty ln balloting by a special
reliever and "being a relief pitcher, it one of them was earned," he said. "The • panel that consisted or two writers from
doesn't happen that Often. It makes defense didn't give up a run when I was each ot the BBWAA's 14 franchise "winnhu~ even more gratifying.'' out there." cities. Fingers received 22 oC 28 tirst·place Sparky Lyle, then with the New York Fingers paid special tribute to ballots and finished with t2'"points. He
_Y_a_n_ke_es_, _w_a_s_lh_e_on_l_y_o_t_he_r_AL __ r_el_ie_v_e_r ___ s_h_o_rt_s_t ..... op..__R_o_b_in_Y_o_u_n_l_a_n_d_s_e_co_n_d __ ..,.;w""'a;:.;:s:........::th""e::....::ool;=..L,.y pitcher named on every
Fingers was an essential part of the
A ·s World Series victories in 1972, ·73
and '74. He was the Most Valuable
Players. Rollie Fmgers
...........
l.akt'r 1\a rl!t'•n. \h</11/ . .Jahbar '""~ ... ~ r11 pa.~s r1s \/11chnt'I T hompsvn 4:t and \like llarper appflf pre.>1~11re
Tough beginning for Lakers
They're 0-2. after two-point loss to Portland
PORTLAND (AP I -Paul
Westhead figures his Los
Angeles Lakers would have
beaten the Portland Trail
Blazers in their National
Ba s ketball Association game
here Tuesday night. if the game
had been just one minute longer.
But the game lasts 60 minutes.
not 61 , and the Blazers are off to
a 3·0 start in the young NBA
season after stopping the Lakers
102·100. Portland -with
victories over Phoenix. Seattle
as well as the Lakers -plays its
first road game at Golden Slate
tonight.
The Lakers, meanwhile. have
lost their first two games of the
season by a total of three points.
They go after their first victory
tonight against the Sonics in
Seattle.
Despite the loss. Westhead
s aid he liked the play of his
team. especially the inside work
of Kareem Abdul·Jabbar and
Mitch Kupchak.
··Mitch and Kareem ar e
showing that they can play very
well together," Westhead said.
"Tonight the combination fouled
out Portland's big people. Give
the game another minute and we
would have had it."
Jabbar had 33 points and 11
rebounds. while Kupchak scored
25 and icrabbed eight rebounds.
Portland lost both its centers
-Mychal Thompson and Kevin
Kunnert -on fouls in a 2: 14
span of the final quarter. Thal
left 6·8 rookie Peter Verhoeven
to defend Jabbar for the final
2:47 or the game.
Verhoeven was able to hold
on. although Jabbar had 18 of his
points In the final period, and his
Blazer teammates came up with
the clutch plays to clinch the
victory.
Chief among the key Portland
plays was a 15·foot jumper by
playmaklng guard K e lvin
Ransey with 25 s~conds left In
<See LAKEM,-P~
~~~_..;;;~~~~~~~~ .
It's Herbie vs. Rod
L i ons ' Campbell , FV's Emery matched
BY ROGER CARLSON Of~DaltY ...... ~ -
Two of the most productive ruMing backs in
Orange County are featured Friday night at
Westminster High where Fountain Valley's Barons
invade for a Sunset League war.
For Fountain Valley it's the last step before
the big one next week -Edison. For Westminster
it's a chance to get back into the ClF Big Five
Conference playoff picture.
A loss virtually ends any hopes the Lions
might carry toward a playoff berth. and a loss for
Fountain Valley, or course, would end any
ambitions of knotting the championship race a
week later.
For the Lions it's tailback Herbie Campbell.
wbo rushed for 209 yards against Edison in a
losing cause and for the season he has rambled for
1,165 yards on 183 carries in a workhorse fashion.
CAMPBELL HAS SCORED 11 touchdowns for
the Lions, but that's quite a bit less than Fountain
Valley's All·CIF candidate. Rod Emery, obviously
the best running back for the Barons since Willie
Gittens.
Emery has scored 18 touchdowns, including 12
in the last four games. Against Lakewood.
Huntington Beach and Ocean View he hit pa,ydirt
four times.
"Campbell is the key to Westminster's
offense," says Fountain Valley Coach Mike
Milner. "We've been a very good football team at
times, but in the two games that were big for us
<St. Paul and Marina> we lost 'em both."
Needless to say, the Westminster game
becomes a big game, too. since it'll take a
Fountain Valley victory to set up any kind of a
showdown with Edison.
As for Emery, Milner says: ··He's just been
playing great, he's a great back."
The Fountain Valley ground game has become
a force as the season has progressed, especially
because of the improved play of linemen Ron
Gomez and Paul Abshire at tackles. guaz:ds Greg
Victorino and Fred Branca and center Dale Crane.
"Greg Bolin, our tight end. is the guy who's
making our pitch to Emery go," adds Milner. "Hi s
blocking grades out to over 90 percent in every
game."
WIDLE THE BARONS' running game seems
to revolve around the pitch to Emery and the
passing of All·CIF quarterback Matt Stevens,
Westmin.stel' Coach...Bau)L-Walers .say& there is-a
basic factor to be concerned with.
(II ,.es at 1 :ll) ... ,..
r.osta Mesa vs. CdM at OCC
Estancia at Irvine ~leback at MewJx>rt KartJo<
University vs. El T1ro at Mission Viejo
Ea at H111tllgt111 Beach
f0111tain Valley at Westminster
llission Viejo at l.agll1a Beach
rt>tre Dame vs. Mater Oei at SA Bowl
Woodbridge at Valley Christian
Sltlrtly
Ocean View vs. Maina at Westminster
....
Cttt by 7
Estancia by 14
~leback by3
El Toro by 4
[dlSOll by 26
fV by8
M1ssioo by 7
Mater De1 by 3
VCby 7
M4W!na by 18
"By our computer Fountain Valley runs 63
rormatioAS," says Waters . "They boggle your mind
with variations, but it gets down to simple footbaU
with perfect execution. Bolin ? He's a great
reach·blocker on the sweep, overblocking the end.
"We have to put pressure on Stevens. but
Emery is the key. Hey, we're in good company. he
(Emery> has been doing it to everybodv."
Fountain Valley is 6·2 overall, 2·1 in league,
Westminster is 5·3, 1·2.
Elsewhere this week :
Edison vs. Huntington Beach
One or the year's big mismatches is here.
according to ,the numbers, which finds Edison,
two·lime defendin·g CIF Big Five Conference
champion with a 3Q.game winning streak going,
including an 8-0 1981 campaign. against the Oilers.
who have lost 31 straight Sunset League games
(3·5 overall, 0·3 this year).
"Huntington Beach always plays well against
us," says Edison Coach Bill Workman, whose days
have been brightened lately by the /lay of
.inebacker-Mtke-Powel1, defensive en Bryce
Malavasi and Malt Hombs in the secondary.
Don't let Bowie make Heisman prese'ntation
The Oilers get defensive end and offensive
guard Bret Blanchard and guard-linebacker John
Domingo back after injuries. and Coach Greg
Henry says he'll go to junior quarterback Buddy
Noble if his team experiences a must·pass
situation.
He might blow it and give it to George Allen, rather than Marcus Allen "It's a high risk offense," admits Henry, who
adds : "Giving the ball to <Dave > Geroux and
(Theo> Langford 30 to 40 times a game isn't much
Qf a risk. Bulour kids will be ready to play." Nobody came in on the noon balloon from
Saskatoon and asked me. but ....
• The San Diego Padres showed good sense in
asking for more than Dodger infielder-outfielder
Pete Guerrero in exchange for shortstop Ozzie
Smith. • If -make that when -Marcus Allen wins
the Heisman Trophy. let's have someone other
than Bowie Kuhn make the presentation ... the
award might go to George Allen.
• One wonders whatever became or the
Saturday afternoon sports show with which ABC
and Howard Cosen were going to capture the fancy
and imagination or the entire nation.
• Jerry Buss missed the recent wedding or
Laker general manager Bill Sharman. but you
may rest assured Buss was nQt at a wedding or his
own.
• U the guys who sell race track tout sheets
know so much, why do they have to sell race track
tout sheets?
• IC Dan Pastorin! becomes the Rams' solid
No. l quarterback, he may be filling the spot he
was brought in to flll. · · 1
• It is a warm feeling to know that In just rive
months, the National Basketball. Association will
bave determined which teams will get in to the
playoffs. • If you think time doesn't fly, consider that
when the Horsemen's Quarter Horse Racing
Association opens its winter meeting Tuesday. It
will be for the loth Ume.
•Guys who bet on NFL football are comparing
the season of 1981 to the stock market in 1929.
• The latest sugaestion for a fourth for bridge
with Howard Cosell, Jack Kent Cooke and Wilt
Chamberlain ii Geor1e Steinbrenner.
' If there is not a coaching Job open ln New
England soon, two moons will float acrou the
November sky. .
• At a sprin1 1et to1ether of NFL coaches,
quarterbacks and media lD llfew Orleans two years
ago, San Francisco •ee~ Bill Walsh aaid, "l
feel we wtll be serloUJ c..._..rt ln two years.•·
• U you can play d.renae , you can win at •ny
1ame, includinl pin• pon1.
• f'orm.r lllchl1an State Coacb Duffy
&au&berty'a plan for a Poll seuon colleae football ~urnement f dttermiM a lectttmate naUona~
"
SPORTS COlUMNIST
BUD
TUCKER
championship team has everything except people
in the proper places who will listen.
• A poll of the people who buy tickets to
Dodger Stadium will reveal that they do not want
Reggie Jackson.
• H the Los Angeles City Council really
appropriated $1 .117 tor a celebration for the
Dodgers, the city council of Anaheim could pull or
a public relations coup by votin1 right now to
spend $2,000 if the Rams make It lo the Super
Bowl.
• Almost any bet made before the NFL season
on a team making it to Super Sunday now looks
good M the appropriate odds.
• TV color man John Brodie says the NFL ~
evening out because or the forward pass. but this 1s
a maneuver which has been in football for several
years.
•Kareem Abdul-Jabbar says NBA salaries are
not ridiculous and he is right . . . they are
obscene.
• It may not have anything to do with
anything, but no one connected with the Los
Angeles Olympic committee seems lo know
anything about sports or athletics.
• Qukk now . . . What did you used to do on
Monday nights?
• In a dieting contest involving Tommy
Lasocda, Ray Malavasi and Stu N'ahan, no one
would win.
' • The Dallas Cowboys may be America's team
but as tough competitors against the spread. the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers qualify "ls Las Ve1as'
~am. ,
• More unique than a profUe of Howard Cosell
ls (a) athlete's foot through a microscope or' (b >
dried seaweed or Cc) John Matuszak or (d) none of
the above.
Marina vs. Ocean View
Ocean View has apparenUy lost quarterback
John Heinle for. the remainder of the season
because of an injury, and that's about the worst
news you .coul' give the Seahawks. who have
depended on the passing game for virtually all of
their success.
Marina, meanwhUe, is expected to use this
game as a tuneup for the regular season finale
with Westminster.
Marina quarterback Ken Laszlo has rushed for
269 yards on ?:7 carries <virtually 10 yards per
carry) and 5 touchdowns the last two weeks.
"That's what they gave us so we took it," says
Marina Coach Dave Thompson. Marina is No. 2 ln
Orange County, No. 4 in the CIF Big Five
Conference and 7·1 overall, the only loss a 28·24
setback to Edison. .
Ocean Vlew Is 3·5 overall, 1-2 In league. The
(See CAMPBELL, Pa1e DZ>
Malavasi 's decision --Haden or Pastorini?
From AP dlspa&ebea
In one ol the early·seaaon NaUonal Football
League upsets, the Rams loet to the New Orleans
Saints 23-17 and Coach Ray Malavali wants to
reverse that outcome Sunday. But will he use the
same quarterback?
Malavasl must decide on either Rama' veteran
Pin Haden or the ~am 'a new quart.erbaek, Dan
Pastorini.
He promised a decision tomttime today and It
alao could be decided whether all the plays will be
called by the eoatbea.
Haden, ~ bu been No. I all tnlGll, waa
taken out ln tbe second quarter lut 5-daY wlth
the Rama traillq 10-1. bMne .Jiff •81Jed•• marahaled the farce1 to 1 ,....._. toot ..... but
autrered a cUalouted thumb daat.....,.........,..
So with llu&ledat,lkleliMd,; the ..........
down to Haden .and l>MtOrtld. •
Malavasi ir\dlcated that he took Haden out ln
the Lions game because the quarterback called
·some wrong plays at the wrong time. 'With
RuUedie, the plays came in from the bench and
the Rams won 20-13.
Tbe coach aaid he boped tbe quarterback
decision will be for the remainder ot the seaton
with the s-4 Rama still In contention \0 reach the
SUper Bowl playott1.
New Orleant ha1 beaten only the Rama and
ClnclMati. The Salata lost to Atlanta 41-10 111t
Sunday.
Al~ be 1eek1 olfenalve linemen to tlll
1pota vac1ted by Injuries. llalavul Hid h11 team
thl1 time la better tban the one that loll lD New
Or leant.
''We're pl111A1 wltb more an&.mt1 ...a la
th1t ftnt came," he said. "Tbat UIDe we unw
lnterceptlpnl .... turned Ult ball 0\'91' OtMt ~.
. . ~ ,,
,.
,,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, November•. 1981
... -------------------........ s
Do~ers, Angels
won't p articipa t e
Dupont 1hot upends Colorado
Nn••• O.pea& took • pau ~ from Pa.. fll••IA•• and.. •cored at ~
14:M of the second period to break•
tle and help Wlnnl~I to defeat Colorado. 5·3.
Tuttday nl&ht ln the National H~k•Y Leaaue.
Tb• victor)' was the fourth of the 1ea10n on the
rOld fOf' the Jet.11 who won only two aw1y from
home a year a10 . . . Jim PtpllMkl knocked In
a 20·Coot &lap •hot late ln the second period to boost Calaary Into a 2·2 lie with the stanley
Cup ct1all\pto1iNtw YOrlC 11lander1.
13th·ranked Mi•ml put on probation
Miami. comln1 ore its blgeeat •
vlclory ln 55 years or football. • •
.Jlallered a major adback 'fuesday
From Page 01
CAM P BELL, EMERY MATCHED
two le•rue losses. wlthout Heinle, have been by an
accumulated score or 90·0.
£1tancle va. lrvlne
The Eagles of E!llancla Coach Ed Blanton
seek to ~nhance their role as Sea View League
lea.du <7.0·l over~ll, 4.04 In lea1ue and the CIF
Southern Conference's No. 6 outfit>.
Blanton, however, is hopeful of getline off to a
better Mart than the l11t couple or 'weeks, which
hat seen Estancia forced to extend Itself in the
tecond half In order to win.
• • •
=~•=='NEW YOllk -Ff ve major leaiue Fr•• AP ... adln • when the NCAA placed the. 13th-ranked
Hurricanes oo probation for two years and
barred the team from accepting a bowl bid this
season. The NCAA tound Miami guilty or 66 of
107 recruiting violations that allegedly occurred
between 1976 and 1980 ... Tony EHoD of
Illinois 111 the rlrst or three talented
quarterbacks Michigan must face ln the final
weeks of the season. Purdue soehomore Scott Campbell and Ohio State's Al1 SChllcllter are
the others ... Running back Earl Campbell of
Houston, hobbled by a hamstring Injury. did not
work out Tuesday and quarterback Ken Stabler
"We we~ lucky to be -up; lO=i, llt hatfnme
against University and Newport Harbor should
have had a T·O lead," aays Blanton.
L•guna Beach v1. MfHlon VleJo
L eaping from one fire to another, Latuna
Beach High's Artists C3·3·1 overall, 2·1 in Soulb
Coast League action> host Mltslon Viejo'•
unbeaten Diablos after absorbinc a 42·13 apanJdo&
at the hand of Capistrano Valley last week.
i
leama, lncludln• lbe World
Champion Loi An1eles Oodaers, will
DOt participate In the premier players• portion
of the free a1enl re·entry draft Nov. 13.
Besldes the Dod1ers, the An1els, Boston Red
Sox. Minnesota Twins and Seattle Mariners
have gained exemption1, Blake Cullen.
administrator.director of pubUc relations for
the NaUOl'lal League, said 1'1esday ni1ht.
Cullen said that since more than five teams
applied ror the exemption. the five were
selected by lot. He refused to identify the other
teams which had asked for exemptioo, but thefe
were indications two or three were involved.
The five "excluded clubs" will not be eligible
to select or sign any "Type A" ranking players,
the top category major leaguers at thelr
positions who have declared themsetves as free
agents. ror the next three years. But the clubs
may participate in all other aspects or the
re-entry draft.
Excluded clubs do not have to make available
a list or 26 players who will go into the
compensation pool, The formula was drawn up
as part or the settlement of the 50-day players·
strike this past season. ·
Quote of the day
Bobby Bowden, Florida State football
coach. after watching Pitt's D• MarlH
pass for 251 yards ~d three touchdowns. In
a 42·14 victory over the Seminoles desptte
playing with a bruised shoulder: "Boy, I
wish Marino couldn't have played. We
might have lied them.··
Malone, Hayes pace Houston victory
Moses Malone and Elvbt Hayes m com blned for 47 points and made key
fourth-quarter free throws to lift
Houston to a 101-98 victory over the New York
Knlcks Tuesday night in NBA action ... Kyle
Macy and Alvan Adami teamed for 33 poitlts
and rookie Larry Nance keyed a pivotal first
period as Phoenix beat San Antonio. 111-88
. . . Reserve guards &Icky Soben and Ray
Blame sparked Chicago's offense with nine
points to open the fourth quarter and the Bulls
rallied for a 104·96 victory over Atlanta.
Atlanta's Dan RoaadfteW led all acoren wflh 2Z
points . . . Mlke Mitchell scored 22 points and
Bob Wilkerson added 28 to carry Cleveland to a
125·110 win over Dallas. Rookie Mark Aguirre
poured in 27 points and Brad Davia had 24 to
pace the Mavericks ... Jllli111 Enlnc and
Bobby Jones combined for 25 first-half points as
Philadelphia opened up a 20-point lead and
raced to a ll2·99 win over Washington. Erving
finished with 19 points.
was favoring a wrist Injury. . /
Weaver has license suspended
Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver lost his
Maryland driving driver's license for 80 day•
ror failure to submit to a blood·alcohol teat.
Motor Vehicle Admlnlstrution offlclula 11uld
... A news conference 1s set Thursday to
announce plans for Su•ar Ray Leonard'" first
defense of his undisputed welterwelcht boxln1
championship against Brace Flncb . . I\
college kid presented Larry Holmet with un
orange University ot Plttsburah 11woal8hlrt.
then promoter Don King luld unothcr pl '<'<' of
apparel on the heavyweight chumpion u
full-length sable coat, priced ut ~.000 on the
occasion of Holmes· 32nd blrthd11y A mun
who held the world rJ!cord for 11>c ~d 1kallna
drew a three.year ~derul prl1Jon turm tor
s mugglin( two pounds or horoln Into the
country. Thomas Edward Slmon11 wu
sente nced in U .S. District court In San
Francisco ... T he 12-member Jupunese
women's golf team finished orr the U S team
Tuesday, to win the U.S .. Japan Pioneer Cup
women's professional golC tournament by a
three-day total of 18 strokes.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are : " ' " " excellent; I ' ./
worth w~tchlng; " ' fair; " toroet It.
7:20 p.m .. Channel 9 I
NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Seattle.
Announcers: Chick Hearn and Keith
Erickson.
The Lakers hope to turn things around tonight
in Seattle after suffering a pair of tosses In their
first two games of the new season. Seattle is 1-1
going into the clash. The Lakers will have Kareem
Abdut-Jabbar and Earvin "Magic" Johnson to
5end against the SuperSonlcs.
RADIO Basketball -Lakers at Seattle, 7:20 p.m., KLAC (S70). Hockey -Kings at Chicago. 6 p.m.,
KPRZ (1150).
From Page 01 Marina edges CV LA K E R S • • • University, OCC defeated the contest to give Portland a
Marina High School's Viking
water polo team edged
Capistrano Valley in non-league
action while Riverside Poly took
the measure of visiting
University in double·overtime
Tuesday afternoon.
On the Community College
level, Orange Coast dropped an
11·9 verdict to host Cerritos in
Norwplk in South Coa st
Conf~f'ence action.
University's Trojans traveled
to Riversi~e and appeared to
102·98 lead. . and the hosts scored the only
goal In the second extra session.. . fhat was a great win.for us, ..
Poly won. 1·6. Portland Coach Jack Ramsay "Riverside Poly Scored with said. "What 1 liked most was 10 seconds remaining in regulation,'' University Coach our abiUly to make the big pl-ay
Dave Kent said. "Then we when they kept coming back at
couldn'tscore. u s. E ve n wh e n we were
"I thought our kids played a s hort-handed . the g uys kept
super game. w e held the lead making the clutch plays ."
the entire way but had a The La kers blew o pe n a
breakdown at the very end. But lO·point lead in the rirst quarter.
1 was really pleased with the but the Blazers rallied behind
way we played. the play of Calvin Natt to take
Eatancla's game, lt seems when the going gets
tou1h, ls to run tailback Curt Wenzlaff behind
tackle Mike Smith (6·6. 245) and several other
huac linemen, who should appear even larger
aaalnst Irvine. ,
'·Smith has great feet and is much better than
Ke vin Sloan (Washington State's 267·pound tackle>
at this at.age." says Blanton.
"Sloan was bigger, but Smith Is something
else,'' adds Blanton. "When we aet in trouble. he
just cpmes up to me and says, ·come on coach, I'll
block 'em.'
"No·, we don't have too many secrets. We'll be
runnlna W~nilnff over him (Smith). Irvine Is an
lmprovl'd luum, though, and the winged·T can
confuse you M>metlmes. · ·
lrvlnc Coach Terry Henigan says he doesn't
expect to put the stops to the Estancia grqund
game. but odds: "We just don 't want to give them
the bl1 play . Hopefully they 'll make some
mletakes.'' lrvine Is 3·4·1 overall, 1·4 in league.
Corona del Mar v1. Cotta MeH
Wlth University's 15·14 victory over
Saddlcback last week, the Sea Klngs of Coach "ick
Morrll are f alrly ctrtaln lf they can win two
they'll quallry for the CJF Southern Conference
playolt1.
But lt be1ln11 with nemesis Costa Mesa and itJ
PH•·happy offenle and quick defense, which has
caused CdM numerous problems ln the past.
The Sea Ktn1s (5·2·1 overall , 2·2-1 in the Sea
VleW' Le•1ue>, probably won't have halfback
Lance Mart.in in -tt\e lineup becaust of an ankle
Injury. bOt Jeff Case appears to be filling the ifoid,
and ~I wllh Chr~ Briehl. are favored.
CfJM Coach Dick Mqrri s says' he 's
e mphasliing his goal line attack, because bis
offense had to settle for a pair or field goals after
geUina inside the 5-yard line three times against
Irvine.
Coata Mesa Co-coach Jihl Hagey reports
tailback J eff Goettsch is lost for the season
because or shoulder surgery. necessitating the
return of Brian Head to tailback <from fullback>.
"Onassis Nixon ls a possibility at tailback,
too," says Hagey. "We stiJl have lo throw the
football." adds Hagey. "It's hard to run against
defenses like Corona del Mar, El Toro and
Estancia.''
Costa Mesa is 2·7 overall. 1-4 in league.
Newport Harbor vs. Saddleback
Tailback John Barnett's availability is still
listed as tentative because or an injury. but that's
not all that's injured at Newport Harbor, where
the Sailors are s marting from a 1·7 record. the
most recent a 22·7 sting from Estancia.
"We 've shown the last two weeks we can go
out and play football." says Coach Hank
Cochrane. "All we have remaining Js to win our
last two games. to finish with some respectability.
And we have lo start with Saddleback,''
The Roadrunners feature twin running threats
Kevin Bradley and Kendle .Newson. Saddleback is
5-3 overall, 3·2 in league and badly in need of a
victory to remain in the playoff picture.
University vs. El Toro
The Trojans of University Coach Rick C,urtis
pride themselves on their defense -and it'll get a
good test against El Toro, which features AIL.CJF
tailback Damon Sweazy, who bas run for 1,005
yards on 214 carries. virtually a 5.0 average.
Sweazy has scored 10 touchdowns and Curtis
says he may be best running back ir1 Orange
County.
''Teams have stacked agains t the run, but El
Toro seems to do a Job passing the ball, too." says
Curtis. "We're pretty healthy, but El Toro is one of
the class teams in the league and we have to cut
down on our mistakes ...
Mission Viejo is 2·0.1 in league, 7-0·1 overall,
ranked No. 10 In Orange County, No. 3 In the CIF
Central Conference and has allowed only three
touchdowns to eight opponents.
"We've jus t go lo play better than last week,"
says Laguna Beach Coach Wall Hamera. "We
reverted back to our early attitude. Lut year's
group wait the same way. We dldn'& tackle and we.
didn't block."
Hamera mays
possible insertion
M arlno. defensjve
safety Madgi Ham
ft is lineup a blt, with the
oCfenslve lineman Doug
d Howard Quigley and free
url.
Woodbridge vs. Valley Chrlatlan 1
The seniorless Warriors are trying to bounce
back from a 24·19 loss at Ontarlo Chrlatlan, but it
they do, they'll be doing it against a team very
similar to Ontario Christian and boutitll a 5-3
overall record ..
The Warriors. 1-6 overall; are uo a1amt their
fifth opponent blessed with a rankin1 ln its
respective coolerence, but if quarterb~k kevla •
Burke comes up w ith another JU-yard,
three-touchdown performance, Valley Clui1Uaa
cnay find itself in trouble.
"We're gradually improvin1." says
-Woodbridge Coach Gerte Nojl. "But we hawn't put
a complete gam'e together, yet."
Mater Del v1. Notre Dame
After absorbing losses to Edison, St. Paul. Los
Altos and Bishop Amat, the Monarchs should have
a good idea or quality football and how to handle it.
Kennedy Pola. Mater Del 's 1terlin1
ta ilba<:k·linebacker. was banged ut last week
against Amat. however , and much of lbe
Monarchs' fate hinges on hts return In ttlis
non-league lest.
NFL
x-Rama 10117 over New Orleans x-Wa shington 21/7 over ~troit
New Enotand 1117 over Miami Green Bay 2 over NY Giants x-Houston 2112 over Oakland
Philadelphia 41;, over x·St. Louis
x·Minnesota 4 over Tampa Bay
x·Kansas City 1111 over Chicago
Atlanta 2 over x·San FranciS<o x-San Diego 4 over Cincinnati x-Oenver 4117 over Cleveland
NY Jets 3117 over x-Baltimore
Pittsburgh 41h over x·Seattle
x-Oallas 3117 over Buffalo
COLLEGE
Pittsburgh vs. x·Rutgers, no odds
Clemson 1 over x·No . Carolina
USC 18 over Cal
Georgia 4 over x-Florida
Texas 3 over x-Houston Penn St. 14 over x-No. Carolina St.
x·Arlzona St. vs. San Jose St., no odds
x·SMU 2S over Rice Nebraska 12112 over x•Oklahoma St.
x·Mlcttjgan 141h over Illinois x·Florida St. 3 O¥er Miami, Fla. x·M lssisslppl St. vs. So. M lsslssippl, no odds
x·UCLA 7 over Washington
Oklahoma 27 over x-Kansas St.
Ohio St. 8 over x-Minnesota the gam o.n...4gains a-..::.......~N'?"o ...... ~l ranked 3-A team. But a -1..•-sc()tt-Wuhbourrre playe lhe lead for good in the .second
especially well and John h Id ' 51 48 h lff Pendleton in goal had 12 saves." quarter. 0 mg a · a ime
El Toro is 4·4 overall. 4·1 in league play. a half
game behind Estancia. University is 3·2 in league
with a legitimate shot at a playorf berth. Overall
the Trojans are 5·3. on their way to their best
season since the mid·70s.
x·Arkansas 9 over Baylor
From Harrah's, Reno goal with 10 seconds re maining
sent the contest into overtime It was a wild finish at margin.
Capistrano Valley as the Vikings Portland built an ll·point lead
x·Penotes home team
R utledge speaks
at Irvine club
toppled the host team, 11·10. in t he third quarter. before
..Marina's Jeff Hopkins scored J abbar led the final Lakers' *************
with 1:23 to play to give the rally.
Viku a 10-9 lead. Then Capo N FL s tandings : JOHNSON & SON !
Valley scored with 7 seconds Portland guard Jim Paxson • •
Rams quarterback Jeff remaining and the Marina team li ed Natt for tea m scoring NADONALCONFERENCE
Rutledge is the featured s)1eaker took a time out. honors with 23 points. Paxson. Wettem Division AMERICAN CONFERENCE : Presents . . . •
for the Irvine Sports Club's A set play found goalie Sandy the Blazers· steadying innuence w L T PF PA Pct.
monthly breakfast on Nov. 12 al Vessey passing to Ste(ve Miller through their three victories, San Francisco? 2 o 208 1S4 .778
Western Division •
W L T PF PA Pct.•
6 3 0 227 185 .667 •
6 3 0 275 207 .667 • the Baxter Street Restaurant in who rammed the bat into the played 39 minutes without Atlanta s 4 o 263 172 .556
Irvine. net with 1 second remaining to committing a turnover. Ransey. llama 5 4 O 214 )93 .556
Kansas City
San Diego
Denver
Oakland
Seattle
It's all part of the pre-game give Marina the victory, 11-10. meanwhile, had l:J points and ti New Orleans 2 7 o 108 204 .222
breakfast sponsored by the club Or an g e Coast College• s assists. Thompson scored 17 and Eutem Dlvlalon
6 3 0 173 129 .667 •
4 5 0 125 150 .4« •
2 7 0 . 128 205 .222 •
for the annual Irvine-University Pirates ·battled host Cerritos on grabbed 12 rebounds. Dallas 7 2 o 214
football game. which takes place even term1 for three periods Philadelphia 7 2 o 197 181
129 14t
251
212
.778
.778
.556
.333
.333
Eastern Dtvlslon •
the following evening. before a scoreless fourth Jabbar. meanwhile. was 12 for NY Giants 5 4 o 171
ReservatiOflli for tickets ($5 quarter. In this period. the 15 from the noor and nine for 13 St. Louis 3 6 o 179
Miami 6 2 1 213 162 .722 •
Buffalo 6 3 o 203 141 .667 •
r or membe r s . $6 · 50 Co r Falcons scored twice to post an from the foul line. Washington 3 6 o 177
non -members> can be made by 11 ·9 South Coast Conference Central Division
NY Jets 4 4 l 191 209 .500 . ii
New England 2 7 O 207 210 .222 «
Baltimore 1 8 O 158 298 .111 • contacting Carolyn Rapp at victory. After playing the SuperSonlcs Minnesota 5 4 0 205 551·3553. Goalie Steve Simmons for in Seattle tonight. the Lakers Tampa Bay 5 4 0 163
218
138
190
208
218
.556 Central DivisloD •
.556 Ci ncinnati 6 3 o 228 176 .667 : The restaurant is located at OCC had 18 saves. five of them will return home to play Phoenix Detrott 4 5 0 210 _M_a_c_A_rth_u_r_B_l_v_d_. a_n_d_B_ir ..... c_h_. __ .-;;.i;;;.n_,;.;th;.;;.;e:;.....;.l_as;;;..t'--'._u_a_rt_e_r ______ F_r_id_a_y_a_n_d_D_al_la_s_Su_n_d_a_y_. __ 4 Green Bay 3 6 0 170
.4« Pittsburgh 5 4.. 0 188 175 .556
. 333 Cleveland 4 5 0 163 194 .444 !
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SUNDAY .... _
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, November 4, 1981
•
Any:one for suspense: "Try &a View football
While the Sunset League is filled with laughers every Friday night, Sea View teams battle on everl terms
I don'l bellevo there are too many who would
pute lhe valldlt.y of the Sunaet Lea111t ln term•
Of quauty football especlally when it contalna
..
PREP SPORTS
ranae County'a No. l, 2 and 3 teams. which
appen to rank 1·4·6 In the ClF Bl& Five
Conference. That's impressive, to say the least.
t. But there ls a rtaw in that arrangement.
\-Except for three or four 1ame1, there isn't much
ROGER
CARLSON
left in terms or super compeUUve leaaue play. That's because acroaa the street, at tiny
Liberty CbrlstJan High, ls 6-10 Mlke Pempef, a
20S;pound senior who will be in his fourth year aa a
That's where the Sea View f.eague certainly
outdoes the. Sunset -if you want to see something
W.' with a little suspense -try the Sea View. <\!1 Estancia enter11 the next to laat week with a
"' half.game bulge' over El Toro (4·1 ), while three
_.'others have legitimate shots at third place <or
starter for the Minutemen. ,
better) and a CIF playoff berth.
t1, University and Saddleback are 3·2, Coron"l del
·Mar is 2·2·1, tpe only team to mar Estancia's
'•') ntherwlie perfect record with a 10· 10 tie.
Liberty Christian, under Coach Larry Pryor,
finished ·14-8 last season, faJling to make the
playoffs because of the strength of the Academy
League. For instance, the Minutemen were 5-0
against the Christian League's top two teams
<Woodcrest and Inland Christian>. who obviously
qualified for the playoffs. , It's not just the crowded conditions, it's the
'/scores. Corona del Mar has won or lost by no more ~ than five pc>ints In rive games, Costa Mesa has ~ been involved in three decisions by a touchdown or ~'less and El Toro is the sal'Qe.
Pemper and his teammates often cross the
street to practice with the Ocean View outfit.
Irvine, University and Saddleback have also
'!}.ll been involved In three of five decisions by a 1 S• touchdown or less. .
Although Pemper remains in relative
obscurity, he's apparently not beiog overlooked.
"A lot of college coaches are looking at him.
they 're aware,'' says Pryor of his prospect.
• • • t\) The "rout" of the year, so far, has been a 21·0
decision by Estancia over Saddleback.
• • • '\' WHEN THE BASKETBALL WARS begin
l~ a~ew in. December Ocean View High's Seahawks
",will agam be a force to be reckoned with, although £i, Edison and Fountain Valley may be the teams to
HERE'S THE ULTIMATE in sure things -
Mater Dei High 's Monarchs are listed as
overwhelming favorites to win the Angelus League
c ross country championship Saturday.
Overwhelming is hardly the word. Coach Bob
Richardson candidly states: "I think our runners
will go 1·2·3'"4-5-6-7 (in the league finals),"
beat.
On the surface you would think Ocean View's di 6·9 Jim Usevitch would be the tallest in Orange ,;i County prep circles, but in reality, he's not even
• t;, the tallest on his own block, or gym.
Robert Planta, the two-time lellgue champion,
leads the Monarchs, who are also blessed with an
unbeaten junior varsity (all juniors) who
Richardson rates as "Maybe the No. 2 squad in the
3-A division.
"" ~;Vaqs, Artists, Lions
... near league titles
.. ,. Irvine and Laguna Beach High
1 School girl's volleyball teams 1: clinched at least a tie for the
·league championship while
,. Westminster went in front in the ~1 Sunset League by defeating
Fountain Valley Tuesday night.
Irvine's Vaqueros hold a
one-game lead over Corona del
Mar in the Sea View League
with a J.Z· l record and one game
to play.
Laguna Beach is two in front
ol second place Capistrano
Valley, the team the Artists
topped Tuesday.
Westminster and Fountain
Valley were Lied for the Sunset
lead before the Lions captured a
3·1 decision.
"Suzette Gervais played well
for us as a hitter-blocker and her
defense was outs tanding.'·
Coach Mar McKeniie said after
the lrvine match.
··Estancia bas a very good
team and this league has five
Corrales gets
Phillies post
PHILADELPHIA I AP )
Former T e xa s Rangers
.Manager Pat Corrales has been
signed to a two-year contract to
manage the Philadelphia
Phillies. a team spokesman said
today.
Spokesman Larry Shenk said
the club would hold a news
conference to discuss the
appointment.
Bill Giles. who put together a
group that bought the Phillies
last week for $30.175 million.
talked with Corrales Tuesday
night to clear the way for the
announct-ment.
teams that could do well in the
Cl F playoffs."
Estancia coach Joe Wulff
s ingled out Allison Cutler and
Jan Wallace was playing well
for the Eagles.
Mike Duncan's Laguna Beach
Artists improved their league
record in the South Coast circuit
Lo 9-0 Wlth one game remaining.
"Lynn Kessler, Snea Hutchins
and Krista Ely all played well
for us today, .. Duncan said.
Laguna Beach has lost only
one match this season, that to El
Toro of the Sea View League.
The Artists are 18-1 overall.
Corona del Mar, the second
place team in lhe Sea View
circuit had good performances
from Mary Anne Muller, a
middle blocker, and Pam
Lawrence, an outside hitter.
Both are juniors for the Sea
Kings.
Westminster toppled Fountain
Valley in four games. losing the
second and winning the first.
third and fourth to take over the
Sunset lead.
In another Sunset match,
injury-riddled Marina came
from behind a pair of 10-15
losses in the first two games to
win the final three for a 3-2
verdict over Ocean View.
The Vikings have had four
s tarters s idelined with a
dislocated shoulder, a nerve
disease. a tom cartilege in a
knee and another ailment this
season.
On the community college
level, Golden West romped to a
15· l l, 15-5, 15-6 decision over Los
Angefes CC to improve its
record to 13· l.
UC Irvine won over l}C San
Diego in a home match in four
games, coming back from a
Ludovise sets
course record
Barbie Ludovise Jed the
Orange Coast College women's
cross country team to its fifth
straight South Coast Conference
championship and the Pirate
men's team came within seven
points of upsetting Grossmont,
the perennial title winner,
Tuesday in the South Coast
Conference championships at
Irvine Park.
Brian Harold finished second
in the men's race for Coach
Gordie Fitiell's Pirates but
Grossmont placed three runners
in the top five with 33 points to
40 for the Pirates. Mike Herzog
was the second OCC runner tQ
finish in seventh place with Miktf
Serna ninth and Lalo Terriquez
10th.
Ludovise not only won the
women's race but set a course
record of 18 :01.6 in winning by
almost 28 seconds.
Sue Zika was the next OCC
runner in fourth place with Kelly
Ringer fifth and Lisa Gonzales
in seventh spot . Susan
Zahradnik was the fifth Pirate
finisher in 10th place.
The Pirate women are
defending state champions-and
will go next in the Southern·
California meet at Bonelli Park
near Puddingstone Lake a week
from Saturday. Citrus College is
hosting the SoCal meet that
includes the men and women
from all southland community
colleges.
•• Turnyour
unusables
• into e usable e cash.call e Daily Pilot e classJfied
• 642-5678.
"1 haven't seen 'em all (in the 3·A> but my
Junior varsity has to be one of the top teams." • • • EDISON HIGH'S PLANS lo meet Rancho
Cordova Hilh next September b.Jve fallen through
-the latler coU,kl not make other arrangements
and Instead, the Charier• will meet Vista Hl&h, a
power ir\,.the San Diego aecUon.
Rancl.o Cordova, wlth a reputation all one of
the country's better teams <No. l by some
experts), lost two in a row recenUy.
The Chargers' football team and other areas of
the school are scheduled lo be featured on Scott
Balo's television show Satµrday (10:30 a.m .J, on
Chann~7. . • • • ORANGE COAST AREA water polo continues
to dominate, but there have been some changes
this season -four-time defending Cl F 4·A
champion Newport Harbor has lost twice and is ran~ed "only" !'10. 2 beh~d Sunny Hills.
"Any one of five teams, including Corona del
. Mar. has a good shot at the CIF championship."
says Newport Harbor Coach Bill Barnett.
Corona del Mar is ranked No. 4 and shared the
Sea View League lead with Newport Harbor (each
was 6-0) before today's game.
Also ranked are Costa Mesa <No. 6) and
Estancia <No. 8) from the Sea View League. That
means four from the Sea View are in the Top 10,
but whether all four earn CIF playoff berths
remain to be seen.
And, I suppose the playoff format will be
something like last year's, which found No. 4
ranked Costa Mesa meeting second-seeded Sunny
Hills in the second round.
The CIF office. which throws these things
together. escapes the wrath for such poor efforts
almply because numbera of outra1ed are at a
minimum (water polo lacks numbers in term1 of
supporters). Keeping a low pronle and lookfoa
straleht ahead helps fend oft the arrows.
• • • SKIPPING AROUND -EdJson Isn't the only
school around with eyes on knee braces for lU
football players Fou"tain Valley boosters have
already picked up some wlt.b more on the way, at
$52 lf2 per pair . . . Westminster Hiah Coach
Barry Waters says the Lions are trying lo gel
Mater Del and Servile on their non-league football
schedule for 1983. ''We 'll probably drop Compton
and Newport Harbor," says Waters " .. Kansa•
University ls reportedly starting BUI Malavaal on
defense now. Sophomore quarterback Frank
Seurer and freshman tailback Dino BeU make
three &Uson High products on the starting roster
for the Jayhawks. Kerwin Bell, out for the season
with a knee Injury. is due for a new cast, but still
has a ways to go before it'll come off. Maybe
another four weeks . . . Edison High punter Troy
Richardson isn't getting much of kick out of this
season. but when he does get a chance to punt. it's
in the 42-y.ard range. Washington, Oregon. USC
and <naturally) Kansas are reportedly taking a
good look . . . The Irvine triangle Is complete for
the 1982 football season -Woodbridge will meet
University in its opener, then follow against Irvine
in non-league play. University and Irvine, or ·
. course. wait until the final week of Sea View
League action before meeting ... University of
Pacific freshman cornerback Bob SbolUn, a
product of Corona del Mar High, may be lost for
the balance of the season because of a bruised
thigh. which has not healed as quickly as first
expected. He was slated to start against Long
Beach State two weeks ago before the injury.
I d ·~. .
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..
IM Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT /Wedneeday, November 4, 1981
.Ji-------~---------..... ---.... ..... ----------------------.....
COMMUNITY COi.LiGE LOG
Golden WHt (M)
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20 IE I c.nlftO iS 20 c .. ,.... l6
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Nov. 21-M G...-
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Saddteback (7-0)
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41 An ..... Velley 0
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Nov. 21-.t Clln11 Nov • ._..,_lldit
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2. Los Allol CM > llt
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10. Ctlel Le llo\lrede (WI
V•iencle CS.Ml
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TUESOAY'S AllSUl.TS
'"""' t~l9M f•W felr "'""'"'' APPALOOSAS
"lllSTAACE.4 1\W~
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Mr IE1clt-CSIAllll"t'.51 6 «I M Sflor1l' I( Mo ( ._, • °"'
Also reucl· .Jeltln Eesv, Hurry-Scurry,
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Time .... l/S
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T rtumDIW!t Werr•
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HVINTM •ACl.•lur.__
StrelnH Aeletlont CSllllll•) 11.80 • 40 •• Sb OSodle l~I 780 S20
Llnle Kerot l..._I •M
AlllO reced: T-All K""· Butch's Gin
OHr °"'· Med"°"'' Dolly. E911le'1 Lest, NII•'• B .. u. Tllen llCIOtfKy Tl-. 1:121/S.
JS I XACTA 1'-'1 Hkl '211 00.
• IOHTH AAC•. • lurtonos.
Melor Pelec9 1°""99) •1.40 11.tO ._.,
WlnMn l'fwMNecl (Miene) 4.00 LIO
Oceen 0wmp (CllllWI) I.JO
Allo reced: 00-S-t lor tM "'-'·
M•c•ronl Prince, Goln9 Welly, Doll•
Ot'ecle, Mr B F, Pestlng Sefttence. 5""'
Tudor. 00-0~Hied frarn --to lllttl Time: 1:12 t/S.
.. l .. TH llACL •f~
w.s•s 11.e (Ollva,...> s.e J.e 2AO
Mr AN<W ISlllllle) •.JO U0
Oii ,, ,_(Ort ... ) uo
Alte f.cH1 Mr " J O, I~, IT9t
C•'"'· 11..-in' Aelle4, lwlltltv • .,, .... Qn11, Tl-i.z ... TlfM: Hl llS
IJ IXACTA lt41 ,_141 *'°·
U f'ICI( llX (7.J-H t.21 pekl ~
Wlttl 1WO WHWll/lt llcktt1 hla "'4'Nt). II
Pie• St• tento41110n pekl M.M.9 wltll •
wlnnlnt llON (ftve "°'1il•I.
T• .. TM aAU.•fl111tnOL
Matclll ... ( .. ft&rM) • liO a.• UI
Olympic Mol'ntnt (MCHertyel UO J.e
Oyll&Mlc Loft (Hhfieyl IA
AllO recoct; T-y·, f"olly, OrMM l!ll"'V,
Cheryle KlnQ, My Mere.de•, Gr•~''
Poolley.
Time: l :IU/S.
•1.•V•NTM llAC«. I 1/ .. mllff.
Doneld 1111 ... ra> •,oo a 20 J •
Hiii Cite ICNll J 00 UO
Lou'• De"" OAem IVeldlvlelO) t •
Alao r •ced. £1 M•duro, Cllolla ,
ltlnotmyfaul\, Meoel• 5'1<1•1, Dey l y Dey.
Time: l:"'l/S
'2 I JlACTA 1"21 peld W .tO
A llendll!W I, 2'0
Del Mar
TU HOA Y'S •HULTS
( ... ....., ............... ,
PIAST ••c•. One mllepec•. TllrM Fl11111to IMnlsl ... ,. • 40 uo
HO-.dy Sc-(~990f'Y) te.00 11,00
Go!Oen, Orazlette (Grundy I S.40
AISO rececl Aall •tcier, L•dV Slule,
Slumt>eri,., Meek Hitch, Lerffu.
• Time. J:OU/S.
HCONO ltAClf. One mite lrot
Priority N. CAul>ln) 12.00 S.80 4.JO
S--.. AOdney IGr-yl 7.00 l..eo
Tantlno IWlWnll IA
Aho reced· Alp Sliver, Gutlger, ~
AOdnev. Hell...._i,,
Time . .2:03 t/S. '2 DAILY DOUBLE C•71 peld Ul.40.
THIAO uc•. Onemllepece. n,. Punk (Longo) 20.IO •.OO 2.-
Howdv Glrl (Aullln) J.IO JAO
Andy's 0...-ICf'Olll*\I MO
AlllO reced· Rerun Riel , Time tor ~Ms.
Quick L•rrv, Andyl llr•n"•· Hunters
Hunter
Tim•· 2·ants.
SJ IX ACTA 17-21peldML10.
FOURTH AACI. One mlle tNIU.
J•mes ltl'ryUlm !Foley) J ... J.IO JOO Sent• 0.-l~lencl) ).Cl 2.tO
Mlnl1ter I Tessler) •..20
AllO reced· .._ Mystery, J 0 Fr-.
Bret• lloy, Pine Hell Setur11, Altllt on AM.
Time. 2:014/S.
FIPTM AAC•. 0... mlte pece.
El Tore nto ISIHtlll t.tO •M :1.40
Tu.elolll •Idle tv.i.-"QNm> uo 1.IO
Cardlo IC Id I Per11..,I 1.20
Also raced: Pec:lllc Dauller, Cllert.,h
MIOd, Modi! Loni, OUr Jeff, l(lnQ't Aell.
Time: 2.ot.0.
U lfXACTA ( .. SJ peld '37.JO.
SIXTM •ACI. 0... mlle pece.
01-Mlcftelle 1a.y1eu1 •.80 lJO MO
J 40 1.10
JA
Heby,
Trvly ~ CG<'\#ldyl
1<anr IC-(ValtalldlAQllleml
Allo raced: Ju9allur1, Bullbe
Prlmltl,.. SlrMk, Aftdys WI_,.
Time 2·02.0
SIVINTN AACI. One mlle pece
Shy Buck-(L-) •.IO S tO UO R•noml IUQfllNll) I 00 S tO
Windy 11-. CTOOdl 1 40
AlllO reced: Corube Command, e .. y D V,
Cl\ercoel H_.,.r. Tllorlow, B"1 Glenvale
Time J 00 4/l
U IXACTA (•ll peld$1t.80
I IGMTH llAClf. ON mt1e pece
M'l9hland Byro CTOOdl 14.JD 7.60 •.80
Crulwawey IL~lordl S 40 J 20
Hel ~ (K.-er) S 60
Also roe.a L-Chene•. SUper Sue,
Cl•nlc l M, 0r1 ... LIN , AndY• Skl-r
Time 1001"
U IXACTA C .. ll i>eld l1UO
NINTM It.AC«. One mlle pece.
::1':':'t=~· ... :·: ! :
T G Prlnc.e ll.JtfllNlll S e
Also raced 00-Aeach lor Ille Sky,
Buci.1 .... -.n1 Au. B cl-• 0<>-AN<h lor IN Solly dl_.flfled ff cm
third to lltlh.
Time I ,. •IS
J3 IXACTA ().2) peld S'1 70.
• tt•nden<• 1,3)9
Horse Rraclng 1tandlng1
(~llft.lj
JOCJC•YI
Plnc•y
M<Cerron
Cordero
0.1-.ave
S-m•k., A11muuen
Vel•JQue1 Meote
MIOllore
Fell
Wlllttl,,__,,
M<Anelly
Fra nkel
F. M•r1111 Cernpo
LullH
Delklnl1
St~ J. Martin
Alfeno
--, .. ,... ...,_
1.144 2'1 141 S.U7Ul2 1.-2n tot .,.n-"5
1,l51 tc:J ,_lla-..... 1»
l,UO 220 ,.. S,JU,M
164 ,,. IOS S,i45,ID1
1,IH 180 11• 4,411,t•
1,002 145 U6 •.Jl1.MI
1,W 1a IJ1 4,Jll,176 1.-Ht 2Q5 •..SOS."2 1.0.. "' ta •i-1'J,•71 TAAIN•ltS
MerW Ill .. m · 61 n .. 61 ,.
.SJO IOS fl
114 "' 107 S2' U n •1 ,. n ff)' 110 ,,
145 H JI t• 4' M 1• ,,. ,.
...,_
u,•.425
2M1.n1 2,41S,tJ1
t.1 ... , .. ,, .. ..,.
··-·"' 1,1 ... n s
l,7S1 .295
1,Sl7,J76
I.Sil ...
C""°"llU.CONP'•lt&NClf
Edmonton ..... Vanco..-
C••o•rv Co!Or-
Min-• Winni~
Clllcev<>
Detroit
SmytlMOlvltlell
WI.TIP GA "9
••011SOll
6•0 tO ffl2
••3 40 .. 11
2 • , 41 eo 1
2 1 2U S66 ........ °'"'""" 7 2 41J01' 6 l ).I 0 ,.
l .isetS
S OQ12
6 S2 !4 tO St Louil
Toronto l 1 2 St tO I
WM.IS CON .. IAINClf
Pl!VktOl•ltiell
NY lll•nd9n I I J 4' J6 It
PNl-lpl>le I J t SO 41 11
Plttsllur9" S 1 1 46 ff 12
NY Re"9'1'1 4 I 0 aJ U I
Wealll119ton I II 0 ,. S7 2
Bos Ion
OU.be<
MonlrHI
Buffe lo
H•rtford
~Ol•lsieft
72lU 42 11
1606}4'0 ..
624 .. 816
6tl42au
ISSJ7•1
T..UY"t._,...
C•l .. ry 2, NV l~n 2
WlnnfPtOS,Color.-J
T ....... sO-
IC 1..-•I OlluclD St. LollltetOl!Re<
NY llMlf" et Plttslluf'Ofl
Ml.....,.MW ...........
V•nc-M Hwtford
C.•o•ry et Mf•lo
Toronto et E-.....
WoftWft'1eocc•r
COMMUNITY C°'-1.aOe °' ... CMllJ ,......., • oru .. CMs1 .cer1~: Cery" Merli,
Mk llflle UMe<T.
~ ... · ..
AL Cy Young award wlnn•ra Pre .. ,_.,,,._, .. I .. Al'lltflton Le.,e
Cy Young Awerd for plklllne .. c•ttence, ..
M14Kted by votlflt mtf'lltlets ef t!w 1--.it
Wrlte'h •.-c111t1on of America:
"" -Aotlle Flnoen. MllWMlkM '"° -...... SloM, .. ",,,..,.. tt1f -Mike Pl-..n, aelllll'ltt9
1t1t-Aon O<lldtv, New Yor'
ttn -s.et'llY LYie, N-Yorli
tt76 Jim Pwmer ... ttlmore tt7S -Jim Pel,,,..., hlllmofe
1'1• -Jim "c;..,tltl!" Mto111*, 0.lllllN ttn -Jim ~mw. B•lll"*'•
1t12 -OOYIOt'CI ,..,.,y, Clevelend
tf1t -Vlde Biiie, O.klWld
lt10 -Jim 1'9«l', Ml-.ote t ... -(tie) Dennla MCUlll, Detroit, .....
~I•• Cweltar, leltl,,_.
'"' -Denni• Mc Lein, Ottrolt 1''1 -Jim L--.. lloSIOn
1 ... -DNrl Clltnte, Lo. A..-tes 1'61 wttltey Fonl, Hew York
If.St Early wy,..., Cl\lcoeO
1'51-llOll Turley, -Yorll
Note -One _. coverl119 bOlll IMOUllS
olv•n prior lo""·
Cro11 country
COMMUNITY CCK.1.IO• S....c.tt~ Cat I.WO. P0'11)
Tum KOl'ff' I G-'· J.J; 2. Or ...
co .. t, 40, J. P'uller1on, lOI; 4. Mt. Sen
Antonio, 114; s. $M'fl• Ane, 116; •· Sen Dleoo
MeN, tft; 1. C.rr11os, 113
1. P-(Gr.I, tt·U; 2 Herold (OCCI.
a,o:os;., Brownst>urger CGr.>, 2011•, •·
Flllller (Siil, 20•2'; S Alvera (Gr ), 20:U ; 6.
1.H CF l, 20:17. 1. HerJ00 COCCI. 20:11, L Santoyo IMSACI, 20.21; t . s. ..... IOCCI,
Jt:U ; 10. Terri-I COCCI. to:». ~:
12 l o Crosle COCCI, to·40; 21 ArlOQO
IOCCl. JI. IS; H . Merrrymon ICXC>. 21:21.
WOMIM 5-C..,StC....,_•
letlrvlM,.et11l
Tu m Kores I Or ..... Coest, 27, 2.
Grossmont. U , ). C»t'fltos. tot, •. Serol•
An•, Ill; S Mt. Sen Antonio, 124; •· Fuller1on, ,,., 1 Sen DJevoMeso, UL
I LudoVIH IOCC>. 11 01 6 (Coune
recordl, 2. Miii., CC.rr.1, 11.tt; l. Clllt
IGr.), 11·e>; 4 Zike COCCI. 1t·O; S. 11 .......
IOCCl, 11 SI. •. Mey CSA). ll:U ; 1.
Gonl•IH IOCC>. 11. 56; t . Folkett COr.),
II.SI. t Hwna,,du (Gr l, It 04; 10.
Zeflr.-!nllt ICXCI, It OI. Others. 14. ~
COCCI, tt:a ; 16 J, Duoe COCCI. 19:4 ; IL
K Oulle IOCC), tt·O
Cro11 country ranking•
HIGH Klt<IOt.
Cl, .... " 1 IEI Toro 2. ~•W•lel11 Valle7 ;. J
Newbury P.,l, 4 Cretcenle Velley, S.
Foollllll, .. El Modene, 1 VIII• Perl. L
TllOUIOndO.U, •. U11henlty; 10 Tufll"
Cl" J.A -..,.
1. MeS... Del, 2 Cen~ 15aU9'1•1. J. Le
eon..ia . 4 Norco. s w ......... -•llo;
1 Hewt,_,.., I Mire Costa. t . ScMi\h Hllll,
10. Buene Pa rl
CIF-.... s
t. u111....,...,; 2. T..-1n. a. c.u -; •.
Newt>ury Park, s. F-111; •· I..,_; 1. Palos Verdin, I T'houwnd Oelis, t. trwt.;
10 Oos Pueblot.
CIP'J.Atffit I s ... Merino, 2. u, ... Buell; J.
W•lnvl, •. Saug..-; s. Bishop Montoon-v;
• l• cenocs.. 7 llo\lr a Coste. I."-~ .• BISllOOArTWl, tO ~o.
Indian CIHtlc
, .. ~.1-.1 ,..,. ..... s-....
Jotln Ale-r def. Elio. TenKNr, .. ,, "4. Ivan LMd Ol'f Woltell Flbell, ._.., W
High school women
MeftM ti, Oc9" View t s ......
Cl•vs IMI def. Durr, H , -ICe,_, "'· dlf. ICerc., .. t; Alber1l CM) -... ,, ... ,. W ; C-y (Ml -._.., ... ,, ... ,, .,.,....
hfft·N9ft*' (Ml def TOfn..ltelley, H :
def . Me1 v1 e -Vo , •·O ; def .
5tlrl119e<'·T...Uumldo, W ; Lotlto.Slenlletd
(Ml won W, W 1 W ; Moo0,,_Harrl1 CM> _, ...1,M ,H ...... , ..... , .. "'" ...... ~
Kirk IE> del Che""·"'· del. Letcy, W ,
Ciel. Fleury, W, AuddllKll Cl!I lest 4-6, .... won ... 1; 5-llEI loll 11, _ .. t.6-4.
0....
Hept>um.Elll-. (El def IGOen-K-.
•·2 ; def A llurl-Mllla , •·I ; def.
Oempmen-V-tta, ,_., lott-Smllt\ (IEI
won ... 2. M .... 1. MellollC>-Sflln -.. 1. -u ,won .. 2.
.._ a-1116, C.,.. Valley 4
S ...... s
I( Wiiiette ILi def. MllC"911, .. 2, def.
Otcller, "'· def Mllll•.._, ... 2. Jeftde (U loll 2-6. wonH, H ; A. Wiiiette Cl) lottN.
won•.O.H
~
Smllh-Sc11wart11teln I ll d e f.
Denlsll-Alllen, .. ,, def ~-Herdy, 7·S,
Oel . Fll11lmmon1 -C e 1ey, 7-6,
ForkHdl-Gocllrey Ill Iott 2-6, -"'· ._,; HollancM:onQ'(1ll lost 31,...,.. .. , • ._,
u"'~n.••T-• ,......
Rao IU> IOJt to Helnbeu9h, 2-6, def.
Donofrio, .. 2. '*·Coss ... I; Beker CUI lost
1-6, won 7-6, "2; Ltfftvre fUl loll 31, 44
rel., won"t
o...1<11
Ollver-ZMtl., IUI def l'foties-Pope, .. ,,
d ef. Heuacl'lrod-Tanner, •·•. def.
Eerly·Arlefl, 1·S: Brlldth•w·Wlnlera'9ln
Bred-Wins...-fU> Iott 41, -w. .. ,; BrllHl• IWlldllltltoo (U) _ ._,, 6-3, ... ,_
....., Del M, It.,,... I ........
S.rmlento IMI def. Petrlerc•. w , def.
l(llO, W , def. LAwla, W ; Prletto IMI IOSt...,
won .. ,, H ; Miiier (Ml IOtt .... -w .....
0-..
Wll-l(eyiwa (Ml def. MllM>V• .......
•·O, del. 8rown-Aomero, 6·0, def. N•r•nJ~S,,.re1, M ; Altlll· .. ldrldjfe (Ml
-">. M , H ; SOlnner-Orlffln (Ml -.............
NIA
WDT .... CON .. a•eNCI
•11tlfttDM11M
* L ""' .. fl'ertl•lld , 0 ..... s. .. o .... 1 0 ,, ... 1
GAldenMe• I .. ·~ S.•"1• I .IOO ·~ llltlollnl• I m I
Lelle rt I t .. M ~Ol•ltlell
Houston t I .. 1
Sen A11tenlo J ' .. ,
Ot11v•r I 1 ·'°° v. Ulell I I .IOO ~
0•11•• I ' m ' ll•ntHClty 0 I .000 IV.
•AIT•AM COll"•••Nta A._.Dhlfll._
PNC•delpllle ' 0 1.000
eo.ton I 1 ... IV. .... 'l'ortl I ' .m t
NewJereey 0 I .000 2
Wellllnoten 0 2 ... M
c.Mr•OI,,._ Detroit J 0 1.000
1nc11ene 2 0 1.000
Cle•tl-1 I .soo ' Mllwault" ' .HO 1
Clll<eoo 1 .m IV. Alle,,te 0 2 .000 ' T--Y'•Scwee
Por11•nd IC, LAlllfs 100
Pllllade!Pfll• 111, Wetfllnoton '9
c111ceeo t04, Atlente"
Cle•elaftd IU, Dellos 110 Hou1lon 101, N-York fl
Plloenl• Ill, $M1 Antonio•
T ....... aO-
UClenatS.eltle c111ceeo al Bolton
At!Jlnta et Hew .JerMy
11\dlene et Plllledt!Plll•
Cleve lend et Se4\ Antonio
San Dleoo et IC-Cllv Houston et Oen"9r
Porll•nll •t Golden Slate
Bluera 102, Lakera 100
LOS ANO•LaS -ICWK-U, Wiiles I,
J abber JI, ~ to, Nhton 11, c...., •· l~ t. McGee o. JordMI o, llemlll•
2 T Ot•ls •JO.at 100. POltTl.AND -Harper 14, Helt u ,
TllOO\plon 17, Peuon u . RenHV u.
v ............ 0, K-.r1 2, V•lentlne I, 11 .. es
2, Lem,o. T.Uts 43 , .. JI 102
k-~Ollllr'9n
Los • ...,.... n 16 n JO -IOO
Por'll•nd 26 U '1 24 -tat f'oulM out T,_, l<unner1. Tolel
fouls -Los •"9•1H 24, Portla"d Jt. Technlcel1 -Portl•nO c .. ch AMnNy,
l<Ui><ll•k. lo• Angel .. tum. 1-. A -12 .....
Pro bowling
(et ......... P•r11. ONel a. ............ ..
Merit Roth dtf. 8oysle Huber, ~ta I Aolh wins lll1000, Hube• 11 ,JOO>.
Otllerk-Huller def. IE•rl AlllM!ly, 203-ltt; Clef. Nell
Burlon, 220-202, def Sine c-. 206-110.
CCook wlM "·*· Bunon wlnt ..... Anthony win• M..000.1
Women'• volleyball cou.••• . UC Irvine o.f UC Son 0ie9o, IS.17, IS.S,
lS..U, 1S.1l
COMMUNITY COl..LlfCH
G-W... def. loa A-les CC, IS.II.
IS.S, IS..
HIO-. ICHOCK. lrvl11e def IE1l...cle. lS-l, lS..10, 14-1•.
IS..10. Le9une BeoGll ,... CoplstrMo V•lley,
IS..1, lS-f, IS.ll
Corone ., MeT def. COSIAI -lS-2. IS.S,
••16, 15-4 Wutm._., o.f. -tel" Valley, I~.
.. IS. IS-7, IS.10
Mer1ne def ~View,'°'"· 10.IS. ls-4,
IW , IS.J
Newport Chrlltlen Clef. Orange LuU..ren,
16-U, IS.IJ, lS.13
MIOM SCHOO\. AAM.ICINOS
Cl"••
I San&e -.ice, 2. lrvlM; l. eer-•
.Ur; 4 • ..__ -~; S Avlellon, 6. El
Tord, 7. Mir• Col!AI. I H-, t . ,,,._
0.1;10.11-*
Water polo
COMMUN In' COl..Ll'OI ~1t,0r-..c..11•
Or-Cout 2 4 I I>-t
Cerrllos J • 2 J-11 or.,... Coast sawlno M<Cormklt 4, Soito 2, O'Donnell 2. Wlllmt I,
MIOMSCHOO\.
~ti, C9" Vetiey 11
Merine J t 4 )-tt
'-Velley I l 4 1-to
Merine Korlno Miiier 2, ....,_..,, 2. L-
l , l oller.lfy t. p.,_. 2, Alelly 1
.,_.....,...y1,u111..,..,.y6
Unlvtrslly 2 0 2 2 O 0.-.
lllv ... alca Poly I I 0 • 0 1-7
University .corln9 WHllbOurn• J Barrell I, Cotwk k I, Hermen 2. •
Weier polo, ranklnga
MIOMSC~
CIP~
1. Sunny Hiiis; t. ~ H•r9H; a. Lono
Beach Wiison; 4. C•r .. • Ml Mer; s.
Downey, 6. ~ MeM; 1. Senta ..,...,.,
I. latoMI•; •. El Dor-. 10. A•la llon.
Tueldey'a trenHctlon1
MOCataY
........ H«U1 .......
WASHINGTON CAPITALS -Aec•lled
Derren Veltdl, de .. ,..,,_, lrom M.,....y
of tlle Amwlewi Hockey Le90\l9. Aatlened
Pierre 9ouc.tlenf, ---·to H....,.y. ~·A .... .._._Stec., .......
TORONTO ILIZZA"O -P\lf'd>eled !flt c~trect of Dunc.on O.lrid9on, f-llf'fl, fr-
AIMrCleefl of ttw Sceltllfl Leegve PrMnler
Dl.,,lslon, Rele•Hd Or•flom Helley,
torwanl, -T Gemerl, mldflelder.
°'-L•OI !ONA 14* O'C-Mlbt.W
.. lletkdl •
Sl!TOl'f /ILL -Announced Ill•
rftl Of 1111 A..,_ry, .. ad ........... ,
<MCI\. Horece Mellon lnl ... I"' ..... cOlldl.
AP ......
TALLEST RUSSIAN -Alexander Srcommk11 c r ight 1 1::. thl'
tallest Sonet basketball player in histor~ Herc the 7.91 1.
286-pound s t<1r towers o\·er two other pla.' ._,,.., 1n a ,game tn
Kuib~ sh(•\. Ru:-. ... ta T h(• 2~1-~ ear-old :-.ll-t•d-. m ;.i :-iJH'('talh
ma<h.• 9·2 1 1 bed
Skiers attention:
It's. getting close
Your time of the year is. almost here
By EOZINTEL
Of IN Dolly Pl ... Stall
While we bas k under the
warm sun and blue skies of a
m agnificent Southern California
autumn, the last thing on our
m inds might be that the ski
season is fas t approaching.
Actually, it's here.
Skiers must have fallen dead
in their tracks upon opening last
week's newspapers and eyeing a
photogragh of a certain Sierra
Nevada mountain side, replete
with T -shirted skiers skirting
across genuine snow.
But that's how it is here in the
land or plenty.
THOUGH IT'S STILL a tad
early to start talking of snow
con diti o n s in the local
mountains. it's never too early
for s ki resort operators lo start
pumping up their grounds, nor is
it ever too early for an early
bird ski sale.
So while we wait for a break in
the weather , hoping and praying
that 'Mother Nature will bring a
better season than last, the ski
industry continues it,s march to
make sure J oe Q. Public is
satisfied when the snow does
come along.
The proof is in the numbers.
F o r exam ple , capi tal
Im provements at the nation's
alpine ski centers topped $177
million over the s umme r
mo n ths, acc ording to the
National Ski Areas Association,
a trade association representing
400 U.S. ski sites as well as two
dozen resorts In Canada and
overseas.
Thal represents an increase in
spending or 36 per.cent over the
previou s s ummer and is
Indicative of the general good
health of the ski industry that we
see this kind or growth.
Despite a mediocre 1980·81
season, there's little chan..ce that
skiers won't flock to resorts this
winter in record numbers again.
MOST SKI AREA owners plan
carefully Cor lean anow yea.rs,
Clguring that they inevitably
occur.
O n a national scope, tbe
biggest poM.Jon of the akl .,....
dollars is belnt 1peat on
anowmakfol 1y1tem1 ani
related expenditurel, -~ air compru1or1 1nd new •
expanded waler •••r•1•
lacltldel.
But I& 11 ~IS' .... un., .. ....
Also. 2.603 more acres of ski
terrain has been cut away and
fleets of new snowgrooming
vehicles have been brought in to
keep slopes and trails in good
condition. More than 350,000
square feet of new, expanded or
r e m od e led base a r ea and
on.mountain facilities will also
be ready for the winter ahead.
or the 68 new lifts installed
over the s ummer at NSSA
m em ber a r eas. 19 were
SKIING
re p lacem e nt lifts . That
generally means an upgrading :
of service to the skier as the new ,
lifts have higher capacities •
capable of carrying more skiers,
a n hour than the old.
For example, an operator may
replace a rope tow with a double
chairlift, or a double c hair with
a triple or quad passenger chair.
MORE THAN A quarter of all'
do llars s pe nt by s ki are a.
man age m e nt on capital
Improve ments this s um~er,
went into snowmaking. a tot.al or
$39 million at NSSA areas.
Ski area operators used to use
their snowmaking systems
largely to put their slopes back
in shape after excessive skier.
traffic 'Or inclement weather_
They used to call snowmaklng
their recovery systems but
today. many of the operators
refer to their snowmaklng plant.!1
as "live-by" systems.
Of the 662 ski areas lo the
U.S., 354 had some snow making
capacity las t season. This
s eason, that llsl locreases by at.
least 16, meaning that at least 58
percent or ski areas now have
s nowmaJdng.
While the re.sorta continue lo
grow , naturally, so do the
areas around them. Some Mao
million has been channeled lntQ new housing and vaeatloa
aceommodaUom at. 1tl N101U
thia aummer.
Two·lblrdl of that val• of ntwhoulblia·wUllllfoad IM
Rocka..
••• pre .... •••t ......
I
CPR
cla ea-~ • slated
Tht! Oran1e County
Red Croes will sponsor
nlne cardiopulmonary
reeuacltatlon cour1ea
lhla month at various
l~11tknu1 .
Courses have
catchy
N£W YORK <AP> -Colltl" may be head.c:t
"back to basics:· but at least some are lrylnf.to
serve up a bit of fun alone with the rundamenta .
At Oakland Community Collete In Pontiac,
Mich .. &tudents reconsrtuct the fosall remains of a
prehistoric ancestor of the elephant ln a course
called ''Mount a Mastodon." The Instructor,
Jeheakal Shoshani, has been nicknamed "The
Elephant Man" by students.
l'ICTITIOUI eu11NU1
HAMB ITATllWllH"Y
T II• IOll••lt1t P•rteft II llel119 ll\lllM .. et MlllA MNT.Al CCHTl ll, 21'1 I "'" Stroet. C•t• Me .. , c;elll•rnl• n..o JAClt THOMAS ~RO«. ,_, •, ••• 40, River Rted, Hte lllu , Cefllornle "1N Cl'.O 8o• 1091 T"I' llu\l,_tt 11 <_t._ h .,. 1"41vl0wl Of JeotH-Tl'll• \ltl-l wot fll.o 1'1lltt IN CtVftlY Cieri. ef Otell .. ~'f "' Ckt.-r ,., •• , ,,.,..,.
PvDllt!Wd Or•• Coe•I Dolly f'I ....
"1411' Nev '· I I, ti, 2S, ltll 41'1 .. I """""*' Or-CeHI Delly "''°'· ... ., •• It, ''· u . "'' .,,...
l'IC"fl TIOUI IUllNHI •AM91TATl ... NT Tiie 1,11ewl11t .. , .. 11 IJ delllt WtlMUIS: CAl. .. OllNIA 1.,.I MOUllNI
HllVIC&. Jff *II llTMt, """'""'*' 1 .. e11, CAl!ttt"llll .-.. 11111,, lltlien'-SJA l.._11 llf"4,
"""'~t.cll. Ctl ........... '"'' ...,,..., It c~ Dy en lndlvl4l11oel, sc....n • ..,,. ' Tlllt tlt ........ I Wot 1"-' Wit" I ...
C91111ly Clefl!. el Ot1J199 Ctll"-11 M Ne;oember I. "" ""m' f'~ll"'M OrallOt C:-tl Delly f'll01, Htv. 4, It, II. U. 1•1 41»11 Tbe courses, teach the
correct techniques to
provide heartbeat and
breathing In vkUms of
c ardiac arrest. They
also are ~esigoe d to
increarie a w11reness of
early warning s igns,
risk fa c tors and
sy mptoms o r heart
attack. There is a $9 fee.
"Wi.nes ot the Pacific Northwest" lS offered at MIC •ttE Portland State University in Portland, Ore. for ....., ________ _,
PUIUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI 941t1Nltl lllAMtl ITA'flMINT
T "• tellewlne 11er1011 II 0 1111
Af'WI,.......
SIGHTSEEING Quet>n ~oor ut I lu:-.st>tn of
.Jol'dan 1right 1 strolls \\'tth her' lWO children
a nd an unidentified aide in Washington whill'
ht•r husband. King Hussein. was meeting with
Ol'fense Scc·rct ar~ Cas par Weinbel'gl•r
D r aft signup
r olls lagging
WASHINGTON <AP> -Almost one or every
four 18,year-olds required to register for the draft
in 1981 has failed to sign up, but Selective Service
Director Thomas K. Turnage predicts compliance
will improve. -
"The year's not over yet ... he said. "There's
no reason to believe this year will be any different
ban-previous years . We anticipate compliance
will climb above 90 percent."
Accordin g to Selective Service System
records, 1,336,000 men bom in the first seven
m onths or 1963 were supposed to register by Sept 1
for possible military service. but a pproximately
307 .000 -or 23 percent -did not. .
Courses will take
p lace at Red C r oss
h eadquarters, 601 N .
Golden Circle Drive,
Santa Ana. Nov. 2 and 4
from 6:30 to 10 p.m .;
Nov. 10 and 12 from 8:30
a .m . to noon: Nov. 14
Crom 8 a.m. to 5 p.,m ..
and Nov. 18 and 23 from
6:30 to 10 p.m,
The Red Cross West
County Service Center
in Westm inster will
offer the course Nov. 9,
16 and 23 from 7 to 10
p.m. and Nov. 21 from 8
a.m . toS p.m.
The South County
Se r vice Ce nt e r in
Lag una Niguel will
o(fe r the course Nov. 17
and 19 from 6:30 to 10
p.m.
The North County
Service Ce nter in
Fullerton will offer the
course Nov. 10 and 12
from 6:30 to 10 p.m .
The Central County
Se r v i ce Ce nt er i n
An aheim will offer the
course Nov. 30 and Dec.
2 from 6:30 to 10 p.m .
three credits under the auspices of the Geography
De partment.
Said Eric Ris berg after completing the course,
"Going to this class, you can at le ast lntelll1ently
reject a bottle or bad wine."
It's not difficult for freshmen thumbing
through college cataJogues this fall to find courses
here and there with zany titles. But administrators
insist that's a sign or the continued vitality, not the
frivolity, of higher education.
J ack Peltason. president of the American
Council or Education. said such offerings also ii·
lustrate the dangers or generalizing about the drift
of American education.
''It shows the danger or saying that now. all of
a' sudden, we've gone bac k to a pure. rigid, back·
to· basics situation," he says.
Offbeat course titles frequently mask serious
courses.
P e nnsylvania State University offers
freshmen a course on "American Heroes" from
Superman to Joe Nam ath. It will exam ine the con-
cept of hero worship.
Penn State also offers "Shyness -How to
. Overcome It," about a ma lady that speech
Professor Gerald Phillips says afflicts 50 percent
of the public.
"Folklore Health" at the University of
Alabama will send s tudents to Indian reservations.
a voodoo doctor in New Orleans, and a herbologist
who lives atop a mountain near Gadsden, Ala.
Ther e is even a course called. simply,
"University 101" at the University of South
Carolina , to give freshmen pointers 0 11 how to sur-
vive their first year.
Many eye-catching titles reflect changes or
trends in society. At Al abama , Mi chiyasu Shishido
will teach "Japanese Culture and Society." "Busi-
ness students are especially interested, in view of
the fact that Japan is now Alabama's No. 1 foreign ·
trade partner,'' he says.
That is the highest number since Selective
Service began k ee ping de tail ed r ecords .
surpassing the approximately 225,000 who failed lo
register in both 1973 and 1974 in the wake or the
Vietnam War .
-Turnage said this week he was "guardedly
optimistic" that the 77 percent compliance fi gure
for the first eight months or 1981 will improve by
year 's end.
P ersons wishing to
r eg i st er or seekihg
further i nformation
should call Red Cross
Sa f e ty Services at
835-5381 Coffee beans
Dis~eyland stop tlllllors?
to give
A recent Harr is Survey, he s aid, showed that
83 percent or the people polled favored compulsory
draft registration .
Selective Service registration. halted after the
Vietnam War, was reinstituted by Congress at the
urging of the Carter admirustration. The draft.
however. has not been resumed.
Both President Reagan and Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinbe r ger have voice~ s_trong
opposition to reviving th~ draft ~nd h~ve indicated
misgivings about peacellme registration.
Nevertheles s , Reagan has continued the
registration progra m started by his prede~esso~
ln 1980, the first year of renewed ~eg1strat1~n .
men born in 1960 and 1961 were required lo s ign
up. The compliance rate was 95 percent for those
born in 1960 and 93 percent for those born the
following year, officials said. .
Officials said 88 percent of those born 1n 1962
registered when required to do so last January.
Turnage noted that men born between 1960 ~nd
1962 were registered during a month-long period.
while those born in 1963 are being registered under
a year-long s ystem. . .
This year. men a re reqUJred to register at post
orrices during the 30 days ·before or after their 18th
birthday. . .
Turnage said some men had been signing up
late this year and this is one reason _why he
expects the final figures for 1981 compliance to
s urpass 90 percent .
DEATH llTICIS
awards
Di sney l and will
j istribute $150,000 cash
to 63 local organizations
this year in the 25th
anniversary. or its
Community Service
Awards program.
T h is year's awards
will be distributed to
o r ga nization s whose
accomplishments In
com munity service
merit the honor.
A panel of commU{lity
leaders will select the
recipients and present
one top award or $25,000,
two specia l $12,500
awa rds, ten $5 .000
awards and fifty $1,000
awards. Winners will be
announced at a luncheon
at the Dis neyland Hotel
Grand Ballroom April 1,
1982.
Organizations wishin g
further information
should call 999-4299.
:\l.\RTI~ C a Pa.,, l' d ,, '' ,, ·' 11 n l'uuntn ll'am lit• \\<I:> .d ... n
, RHEA S .\l /\KT I :'\. Salu rcla~.Ortol11.·1 :11.l9lllm ,1t·l1 \c ph~s t C'all~ und
rC'sidcnt nf ~e\\porl lkurh. Po mona \'allt·~ ('ommunit~ 111\ol\l'd 111 lu:-. d1ureh lh•· -,-==-==;;;:=;;;;=:;;;;;;=:;;LJ llo,p1Lal. PnmunJ l'J 11,. ll ununi:ton Bl'ach Km!!dom ..... Neptune Societv' '"''born on \p11I fl 1~98 111 !lull o r .h•hm >th \\'itne!>S('S L:0-1·1, L".,11111r~' lk mo,l'd Hl'lml'fl wo of Ft•hpl' .ind CREMATION aUlllAl.ATSEA r_u "' b J d 10 1'11n11111.1 111 19:1ti from Yol.1 11cl,1 \rro~o. c• O\ e 646-7431 Kl'lllutb u11 d l1 1Pd Ill ornt ht•r of F c•lipt• Jr . Our literature tells the p.,1111111,1 1inl 11 1!11 l ,11 "hirh :\tijluel. Consul'IO and Ehda ~~~~le story of our tinw hl· moH•d l•l '\t•\\porl Arroyo. Friends mu~ cull at
c.111or1 ... port10110 lll-ad1 ('.1 :\I r \lt1rt111 wa~ all\ t1ml' at P1l'rre Rrothc•r ..
"1411n. Cem t•-• J ,1 mt•mll\.'r of lhl' \l.i..nnll' Smiths :\lnrt llJI~ Func•1<1l
I. o cl I! l' 1 n S >IC' I' a nH· n In . Sl'l'I 1t·e:-. \\ill lw C'onduc·ll'O
,._ ... ----------, Kenl111•k\ llt• 1-. ... u1 \ l\l'<I h.\ un \\edne ... d.J\ '\o,embt'r I
NEW YORK IAP> A diet rich in coffee
beans inhibits the growth of cancer tumors in ex-
perimental animals. researchers .at the Urtiversity
of Minnesota Medical School have found.
Luke K. T. Lam said at a meeting of the
American Chemical Society it is too early lo tell
whether coffee inhibits cancers in people .
The researchers fed a diet consisting of 2Q per-
cent green coffee beans lo a group or laboratory
rats and the same diet without the coffee beans to
another group of rats.
The a nim a ls were injected with a potent
carcinogen that causes breast tumors. Those fed
the coffee-bean diet developed fewe r than ha lf as
many tumors as the rats on the beanless diet. Lam
s aid
Lam's work is part of an effort by Lee Watten-
berg of the University of Minnesota to fi nd sub-
s tances in the diet that block the development of
cancer.
"Huma n beings are being bombarded with
carcinog(ms day in and day out." Lam said. The
researchers. trying to discover wh)' more people
don·t die as a res ult of exposure lo those
carcinogens. decided to look at diet.
They previously reported cabbage and brussel
s proµts contain substances that inhibit cancer
ln their research with coffee beans, the re·
s earchers ruled out caffein as the agent responsi·
hte for the tumor inhibition, Lam s aid, and even-
tually traced the effect to a chemical called
kakwiel palmitate. Othe r chemicals also seemed
to play a role. Lam said . but that one was the most
active.
Lam said the chemical appears to be related
to a jump in an anti·cancer enzyme found in many
animals and people.
The researchers studied the effect of other
s ubstances on the enzyme, called glutathione S·
transferase. They found roasted coffee beans also
s timulated its production but not as much as green
coffee beans .
Boy Scouts face
suit over blaze
,IC1'ITIOUI 8UllNIU
MAMa ITATUoUIMT Tiie tol10Wl119 119•tont ere d91ne bvllMt••= Ht!WPOll T f'.A'-THl!llS V, SI .. CeMP\11 Dfl.,., Solite tOO, N-119'1 IHCll, Callfomlt f'!MO.
J.,_llN ~ It CMlto, lr1tlM,
Celllon"•'"I~ JOl'lft M, AIC .. lttl•, 17"'2 lrvlfte Blvd .. T11ttl11, c;elllttftle ti61G. 0.nNS M. SMlpe, 115' 0...... Hllll Rd., uv-. c:..tltornl• tl790. Tiiis l>ullllftf h COndVCIM l>y e ........ ~,
Jlldl .. ~r9 Tl'lll Jtt,.,,_t wn fli.cl with , ... COllfltr Cle<tl of o...,,. <:ountv on Oct. '" .... l'U4tf7 PuDlllltled Or .... Co.It Oelly Pilot,
0<1. 21, Nov. 4, 11, 11, 1 .. 1 4"? .. 1
PUIUC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUI aus1"11" llu•lneM .. NAMl ITATCMC"T SANDHURU, t 411 Rtcll"llll Tiie followlllt P••Hll h dol111 Drive, Hunllneton h•"· (;•ll.10r11i1 ll<lelneu .,, .,..., A NI t! RI CAN MA 11 1 TIM II H•ll<Y tenser, tsl1 Re<~polnl CONll'AHY, kn Vie Ooo<to. NO 204, Orlve. HIH!llllQIOtt S.Ktl, (;elllor11I• Htwport 8"<11. Gelilornla '"4> . .,...,
Mfe'-1 len Bruce. 1t2t W Coett Tiii• lloNMU '' <-uc•eo '' an Hltll•ey. NO 210, N•WPOrt .. ec,,, lndlvlduel Celllornl• '*l Nancy KeyMr Tf'lll butlMH 11 'onducltd by '\11 Ttlll , .. ....,..., Wet Iii.cl wlltl Ille lndl•lcNel Co..ntv c .. , .. ot Orenee C-ntf °" Ml<'-l ltll Brue• NO••mller). ..... Tf'll1 stet-I Wff "'"" wlllo .,_. '114111 C.ourlly Cieri! Of Oran9t County on PuDlltNO 0r.,. Cout Oelly Ptlol, ~ovemoet 2, 1'11 ptU07t NOV 4, I I, '1, ?J. ttll 41Jl-tt
PuDll111eC1 Or•not Coal! Delly Pllol, NOY 4, II ti, ll, ttl\ .aoo-tt flVIUC 11800
PUIUC NOTICE OROl!R TO SHOWCAUH ,OR CMANOE OP HAMii CASE "UMaEll A·H•t ,.(;TITIOUI auSIHEH In I/It M91ttr Of .,,. APOllution Of N.AMISTATl!MllNT LETTIE JANE SNYOER, tw CN"9f T tie lollowlng perlOflt ••• doing Of Ntme
""'IMU •1 LETTIE J.AHE SNYOER Ml flied • "CTITIOUI aus1"'" P.M. NOVEL TIES, IS04 H•••n P•Ullon In tllh co..n for en O•Ot• "AMI! STATIMl!"T Pl•ce. Newport Bu ell, Cellfor,.le ello••no pettll-r 10 ctlen .. her Tiie followlno perton1 •re doing t2e4l ...,.,. trom LEn11; JANE 5NYOER bu1l11eu n Oev ld G. RlcUrd, IS04 Htven lo VICTORIA l.ETTll! ANGELINI REO LYON PROPERTIES .... Piece. Hewporl 8u cll, Callfornl• 11 11 l'ltfeb'( ord9ftcl lNl Oii -""" Newpon llVcl "F", Newport !leech. '2e4l lnlere•l.0 In Ill• matter eforuatd Ctlllornle~ Jeftel L RIOercl, IS04 Heven ep poa r Delore tlt ls courl In G.E. a. L INDUSTRIES INC., • Piece, Newpor t Bu ell, Ctlllornlt O.partment Ho l .. 700 Clvl< Ceftter C•ll fornle corpor•tlon, 3~1 Pnco '1'63 Orlve WHI, ~I• AM, C.llfOf"N• on Hetcon, S.. Clemente, Cellfor"nl• n.n Tiiis Dutlneu 11 cOflducted Dy •n OecemtMtr 9, 1 .. 1. •t 10 JO o'clock • Edwin Hume 111, 1S07 H•••n lncllvlduel m., •nd t,..n -,,.,..... sN>w ceuw, II Piece, Newporl Buch, C•lllornla J-Rlclo.trd •llf tNy ..,..,,., -Y Mid i-tltlon for .,.., Tiiis l1element WM Ill"" with -Cl\en .. ol -"-Id"°' ... Of .. ltd Tiiis Dutlneu Is conclucttd bf • Counly Cl.,.k ol Orenoe Co..nly on 11 ta further ordt•"" lMI • cociy ol this oeneral .....,,_rsNp. NOvtmbe< 2, 1 .. 1 order to ShOw C..,M De 1>UDllSlle4 In EdWfn Hume 111 "uni Tf'le Oelly Piiot, • newspeper of Tiiis llat-t •et tiled with lft• PuDllshtcl 0renQll Coe•I Deily Piiot, generel ctrcutellon, publlllled 111 thh Counly Clerk Of Orenoe County °" Nov. 4, t I, II, ll, 1 .. 1 472WI counly ti le•st one.• • -for tour November 2. , .. , .... ,.1147., c-cutlve -kl ptlor to the O.y Of
Putlllllled 0r""9t Cotti Oolly Pilot, Ml.IC •Tt£ ... ::.':::~-• 29, , .. 1 Noy 4. 11, II, 2S, 1 .. 1 4IOHI R-ld H Pre..,,.r, "CTITIOUS aUSINESS JltOQe Of IN 5-rlor Covn flUBllC NOTICE "AME STA"fl!Ml!HT PuDllalleel 0rM>QeCoe$1 O.lly Piiot, ------------i ...,:l~s~o~~owlno perton• ue Ooing Nov 4. 11, II, lS. 1 .. , 4IOl-t l
"CTITIOUS aUSIHESS S p R I N G 0 A l E G 0 l I' "AME STATEME"T SHOWROOM, S"S Engineer Orlve, PUlllC MOTlC(
Tf'I f II I d I Hvnllngton Bffc;ll, CA t2Mt -----------Dusl:.uo.,ow no Person& are o no GRE EHIRONS, INC , a C.lltornle
J E OROS lOOO BrlUol Strett corpor•llon, S"S Engineer Or Ive,
Cosl• Mew, ~lilornla'26211 ' H~n~::°!.c:'.="·1;-"',=ct..i Dy •
ST AT EME"T 0, A8ANOOHME "T
01' USE 0 1' FICTITIOUS aUSIHESS "AME Ttle follow•ne peoons h•v• •D•nclonecl IN use of the llctltlou• Dulinosname
Jof'ln F Rutan, oeneral partner. corporation ~~llt~:.~n~ven..., N•wporl hecll. GllEENIRONS, INC
Francis R. Stradling, '10 N-l'Of"l ~.;~,.~•ywr, Center Orio , Ntwporl &••ell. Tiiis .... .......,, • 111.., .,..,111 1,._ HORSESHOE CAN YON CONOOMINtUMS, 444 Newport Blvd ,
"F", Newport lkec.h, CA '214l Celllornl• n..o wa n Thh Du&lneu II <onduClecl Dy e Co..nly Cl•rk Of Ora-C0<i IY on llmlled _.,.,Ship Nov. 2, 1 .. 1. 1'1141 ..
Tlllt :'...!:;..~U1.::. flled wllll tJll Publl"*' Or-Coe•I Oelly Pllol,
Th• Fltllllou• Bu•lneu Heme relerred to aoo ... ..,., '''"" In 0.-Counly on July JO, , .. , Counly Clerk ol Oro1199 County on Nov , 4, 11, ti, U, 1 .. 1 47fll.-t1 EDWIN HUME Ill, tM17 Heven Plec e, N*-1 Bffcl\, CA tt"'1 CICERO JOSEPH JAY, H41 Pueo Halcon, Sen Clementi, CA tun
Nou mller 2, 1 .. 1.
"14m PvDlltlleO Or-Coe1I Delly Piiot, NOY 4, 11. II. U , 1 .. 1 41'2.'-tl
PUIUC NOTICE
,.CTITIOUS aUSINESI "AME S'f.ATaME"T
Tl'I" -nttS we• conducttcl DY t generel pertnerslup, Edwift HUl'N lll Th• lollowlno person 11 dolno TIU• (I.at-• WH filed wllh tM Dull~·~ E A N H A R B 0 R Countv Clerk of Ore-County on. ,~~~<::!:~:.·:::s l!NGIHEEAING, no E 11111 Simi, NO•. 1• , .. , l'H14Jt
Ttl• followlno perllO• ..... dolnt CM~~:·Hc::R~ .ANDREWS, 1111 PuDlltNO Orengie Coell 0.1ly Piiot. Dull"c!'~~'sE N TRA OI NG .ANO 8•<11 B•Y 0.1 .... N__, IMIKll, CA Nov •,l1,ll,lS.l .. I ....,...,
MARKETING, INC .. ru Parl<C.,.ter '2660 Orlve. S-.. A.NI, C.llfoml• t270S Thi• -I~\ Ii <onClucteCI t>y I " Cry1tel Eneroy Corpor•tlon, • tnclivlduet PUIUC NOTICE
C•llfornla COf'pore1ton. fU P•"'''""le< Tiii\ ~:.!,,,~~ llled •II" ,.... "OTICI: INVITING ••os Orlve, SenU .Ane, C.tlfornl• '21CIS Notlo Is ller•t>Y given '"•' \f'lt Tiiis D<Dlneu Is conctvcted DY • Counlf Cltrk 0' Or•-County °" Boerd of Trvst-ol ,,.. HunlinotOf'I
(ot-atlon Nov 2. t .. t pt00'4 BHCll Union MIOh Sc-Ol•lrlcl will
Crystal E,."9Y COl'P PuDllllled 0r4tfl9e C.oe•t Delly Piiot. rn•l •t weled t>ldl for supplying 0..rlesA R-. Nov •,tl.11,U,ltll •nwt P-r~.,....l"'tlor_..1 101i.e • ~ Spe(lfic•llon• on Ille tn tM offk• ol
'"'' Jteltmenl WU flied wit" lf'le -----------laid Oillrkt County Clerk of Or•noe County Cl" PllUC 91T1CE &Id• ll\all De ctMr1y ..,.,...., .. P_r "ovemller 2, 1"1 Copiero, Bkl No 411 .. , aodressed lo, Ml!M IL, JACOaS. l'l ll RHO & -----------.Allyn E Rowley, Purc"estng OERSH l'l(;TITIOUS auSl"ESS Maneeer, Hynllnglon S..Cll Union ... ~ aiv.., WW UI NAME STATl!Ml"T HIQl'I Sc-Olilrlct, 102.St Yor-town • 11ew.-ta..ca,c.MHw111e -Tiie follow lng person I• oolno A••. Hunt1no1on Be•cll, Cellfo•nle
o .. , J. "...,._· llt11. DUiiness u : '1646, •nd r..cel...o •I or -· 1 00 1'17..a M .A R I N e M .A N .AG EM E N T p.m .. Tl'lundeY. NOwefnDef "· ... 1 .•• PuDlllNCI 0r-. Coast O•lly Piiot, SE RVICt:S, ltJSt Weymouln Lii .. wlllCf'I llmt and piece Did• will ... Nov 4, It, 11, ll, 1 .. 1 47""11 Hunllnoton Beocll. CA m•. P"Dllcly -•nd rNO
PUIUC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS 8USl"llU "AMa STATEMCHT Ttle loll-ln9 119''°"' ••• dol11g Duslneu .. · Cl.OWN CLEANERS, IOU Bayside Otlw , N-1 S..Cll. CA. .ARTIN KUYUMCU, 2200 Pori Cet lllle Place. HewPOrt S..Cll, CA
'24'60. LUIZ KUYU MCU, 2200 Port Corlllle Piece, Hewpor1 8ea<ll, CA
'2660 HIS.AN 8 . H.AC.ATOllYAN, 1"4J Port NtlM>fl, N•WPOrl Betel.. CA
t2660 P.AR.ANSEM H.AC.ATORYAN, ttO Porl Helton, N•WPOrt B••ctl, CA
'2.WO. T lllS Du1lneu ts conducted DY ln<ll•lcluals. ARTIN KUYUMCU
1 Ills 11•1-t •es flltcl wltll tne Coulltf Cler-of 0ren9f County "' Nov. 2. t .. 1.
'17UU PuDll"*' Or-Cooil O•llY Pllol, Ho". 4, 11. It, 2S, ttlt 40Hl
Raymond E Mt Gr•w ltJSl Eacl'I bod shill ,...,,In ••11<1 for• Wom-ln. Huntington 8e1Kf'I, CA period of 30 d•Y• att•r the dale .,..__ -.-1 ·~ illed lor the receipt Of !lids Tiiis t>uslness I• concll.tC led by an Tf'le Board of Tr~tee• Shell .,. ll'te lnlllviduol tole ludOt of tM qvellly ol equlpmenl Re.,.,_ E McGr-ofter.cl •nd ,..""".,the rlQtll IO reiec• Tiii• st.i...,,.nt w•• lllecl wllll the at1Y or ell Didi and to waive eny Coi.onlY CIM~ ot Ou~ Counly on lrr19uleroty ltwr-.n S.111 21 .... , I Allyn E Rowley fl t7U1t Pur<N slno MeM911• PuDll"*I 0r•"9t Coast Oally Pt'?I. Put>ll•IW<I Or-Coost O•llY Piiot, Ocl. 21, 11. H0v ~ 11. 1 .. 1 -· NOV 4, I I, 1 .. 1 ......
l'UBUC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS aus1"ESS ,ICTITIOUS •USINEH NAME STATIMl!"T "AMI! STATIIMl"T Tiie tollowlno p•rson Is dolnO Tf'le tollowlno per'°"' ere doln9 business •• I buslneu a..
t a ) COTTA M CO NCRETE THOMAS PARTNERS, a l.lmlltd BREAKING ANO EXCAVATING ID)I Pertnef$Np, 1'Ml A ..... ., Ave 8 I, COTTAM CONCRETE BREAKIHG,I Coste MKI. C.lllw1'1•'162' "' Meonoll•. Coste #otw, Celllornl• RoD.rl 8 S••rles. t• Au• t2U1 Oouvllle, N__, lilffdl, Cellfornl• Telford T conem, "' MeQnoH•. t2WO Cost• Mew, Celllomle 91621 Fr-o Mor•fl, s H . u Send•. Tllh bU•ln.u Is conducted Dy en South l._. Celltornft mn '""lvld ... I J•rry l B«ry. II OH.-E .. Teltor'd T Cottam IN Int. C•litomle 91714 Thia st•t-t was llled wlltl IN Roberto Aldo Peruul , 1252 l.• Couniy Cler-ot Orenoe Coull!)' °" Lome Orlve, s.tlt• Af\e, Gelllornle '-------------1 November2, , .. , '21~
CCC
recruits
,1101' SteoMf\ M. HlPM-, 5'10 Cemlno PuDllsl'led Or•noe Coast Oelly Piiot. Correr, An•llelm Hiii•. Celllornle NOY 4, 11, II. 1$, t .. t 411HI t2t01
PUIUC NOTICE
Mlldno M v~. 1101 YMDel Streel, R.OOlldo 8u cf'I, Celllornl•
'°217 1------------Tiiis l>vslneu Is condu~lecl Dy • ,ICTITIOUS aUSl"ESS limited .....,,.,..lltp. "AMI! STATEMl!"T ROl>en 8. Sffr .. s • ., a dJU).(hll'I :\Ir-. JJ1111 ... :\I 19Rt al 11 Ul):\~1 a l lht• IALT% IHGH(?H
SMITH & TUTHILL
Wl$TCLlff CHA,EL
ll1rn<·rtnn of ltunt1n,gton llunlin~ton Rc•ach Kml(llom
B1•ac·h C 1 . 2 -.on!' <i1~11ri.:c• II a 11. 19 1 oo D<.> I u" an•
\\ of Cuc;11nun1w. c~1 and Jluntmgton Bl•ach. Ca . "'Ill
Hhl•u .. Jr nf Indio. C.1 !I Rroth e1 F1 a nk Shull.
1'(r.1 nlletiiltlrt·n .111d Ill offie1almR lnt 1•rmt>nl '"11 1»
I! r l' a I i: 1· .1 11 II r h 1 I <I 1 l' 11 In (iood Shl•phl•rd Cl•mc1t•n
Pn' ah• ~•·r\lt'l'" \H'll' hl.'ld llunlinl(lon Bl'arh Ca Jh
.11111 intt•r11wnt \\.is .11 l_.on'"' "111 oe lu\ mgl~ rcmembl'fl't
l.a \1 n t'H\'lna 11111-.. Todcl b' f<1m1h a nd f nl'nd.s
\ft·monal Cha 1>l'I. 1'11m11na p'1errl' Brot he r!> Smith.,·
\I a ~ I 11 C' h :t I' I! •' II f \J ortuarv flin•ctnrA 5:16·6539
BOISE. Idaho (AP> -
A Boy Scout troop's
failure lo put out a
c am pfire caused a
major forest fire in 1979,
the federal government
cla ims in a s uit filed
against the i;couts.
prosecutors> arc
their rocker ...
ocr women Th• followlno perlOfls ••• <1oln9 TlllS 1t.i.-t was tlled wll" .,_. 1>V.ineu as County Cteni of Or•noe County on l.UANIE S. WEBB CO., UOI W Oclober n . 1 .. 1
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
f'tHCIUOTHHS
5Mm4S' MOITUilY
6'27 M•lll St Hunt1nqton &ach
536-6539
'ACeHC YllW ...._,llAL,MK
Cerretery Mortuarv Cnapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1f1c View Drive
NewPOrl Beach ~-2700
McCCMlMICll MOITUAlltS LaQuna Beach
494·941 5
arrani.:enwn"
la Pl.1\ vrt:
:\1 i\ H \' ,\ L I C E
But John Darrington,
one of those named In
th e s u it . says
RECK prosecutors "are off
EI. L f; N R" Y A El' K their rocker" and denied rl'st1h•n1 or Cosla ~lesa. <:a t hat his group could smc~ 195:1 Pussed uwa~ on have st arted the fire . October :Ml, 1981. :iht> was a mrmlH'r of thl' Al An on A lawsuit filed in U.S.
\i.soc wtlon as well ll!> b1.•ing District Court here last
o mcml>t•1· or Sl. Jnarh1m s wee k a 11 e g es that
l'atholt c Churc h She 1s Darrington ond other
-.un·ivecl b\' her husband members or the Snake
lp hn . sons . William R or River Council of the Boy ~1pomn. Ca .. John P. Bt'rk Scouts faU ed to put out a or c o~lo ~tesa . Co and f' . h Ch 11· Da' id A Be<'k of L'tuh . camp ire tn t e a 1s
''I've been in the
mountains all m y life.
and I'm very familiar
with how dry it was. I'd
be very s urprised if we
set that fire."
Darrington. of S helley.
said about 30 scouts and
their fathers were on a
Cl oa t trip down the
Mid die Fork o( the
Salmon River on July
11 , 1979. whe n th ey
stopped t o build a
cam pfire near J ackass
Flats .
The former scout said
he built the fire to warm
his leg, Injured on rocks
In the river.
Th e Califo rn i a
Con se rvation Corps
currently is conducting
an all-out rectuitmenl
ca mpaig n aimed at
women.
Moore, S...\t An•. C.A..,104 lAe A Br_, l.UANIE SUEU.NN WEBB, 2S21 Counly Cler11 W. Sun!-, • Rl. SMI• An•. CA ,11_ '2104 PuDllll'led 0r.,. Coast D•llY Piiot, J0ERRY Willi.AM WEBB, JS2t W NOif 4, It, II. U. 1 .. 1 4,....1 Sunfto-r, •fU, s.rrte AM, CA '2104. Tiii• llUMMU Is cOl>CIU<ttel by •II
'""'"'di.el. LU.AMIE S WE BB Tf'llS state,,_t wu flltcl wllll Ille SUf'EIUCMI COURT 0' County Clertl ol Or•noe Coul'ty °"Oct. CALI~··· Women presently s.1•1. couNTY01101tA*»•
Constl. lute one-third of "™47 1·.~~ ~. ~ •. ~ • ..:!!.. .. ' PuDlll-0rM>9' Coast O•llf Pllo\. __ ...,. • .,.... the corps' membership, Nov.4,11,11,u,1 .. 1 .,..., MARRIAGl!OF
b ut the goal is equal PET ITIONER · HERMl!LINO.A MIC •TICE CASTRO representation between "t!SPONOENT EUGENIO
the sexes. CCC Director ,.CTmous eus1NHS CASTs':.~ CPAMIL v uw1 Jack Dugan said wom en NAM8 STATCMaNT CAH "UMaH 0-""4J make better leaders, Tll• 10110•1"9 per1011 •• dolne NOTICE• You ,,..,.....,......., Tiie ... s1,,.,. •: cwrt mey dKIOe .... ,,., Y9\I wh'-1 s tay longer and work 1u;o LYON 1,"' N-..on .,,,., your IMlftCI ... rc1 uni• .. fOU r"IOflCI harder for the COt"PS. "pt", NtwPOf1 BMcl'I, C.llf94'nlt~ wlltll11 • dayt.. RNCI IN l111W ..... l9ol Edwin Hume Ill, 1$01 Hewell 11e1-. l"l•te, HeWPOr1 eHell. Celltoff•lt 11 you wiSI\ to Mell tl'll .,.,IW Of e11 The CCC fight.a fires, '*' ettorner In'"'' met••. you IM4lld • tloods and erosion , T1111 ~s1neu •• cot1dllctM •v • •• 11rompuy '°'"•'your wr111e ..
Plan•· trees, bull.a-and "'"'-""~· ,.._.,. .. , o MY. may IM tll"°" u-. ..., wt l!dwlll H-111 AVISO Ulltcl N slcto ~-maintains trails, Clears 'T'hlt --~ •• tlltcl with 1!1 trtll\INI ~ dtclllllf Ctfltrt Ud La.quna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Cap111rano
495.1ne
Lu Pl.A:":TE. n•s1dt•n1 of
:o-;e,\ port llN1ch. Ca. Puss,·d
a\\a\ on '.\io,·emher I. 1981
';ht> · ,, ...,Ill'\ l\"l'd b~ h1.•r 'iOn
.John ancl 3 grund childn•n
:\1 :t!>'! of the n e .. urrt't'liun
\dll h e· o n Thuri.da '. No' emlwr 5. 1981 at 7 :lOP;\I
at St John \'iannl'\ Calhohc
(.'hurrh ~r\'ll:l's undl'r ll\l' dl1't.•t·t1on o f Rnlt1
BerReron Smith .\ Tuthill
Westchtr Chupc•I Mortuur>
1146-9371
ARR0\'0
<111111Lhlt'l's Ehubcth n~ National Fores• In July
Schleicher of St1n Clcnu•nll'. 1979.
Ca. uncl Rorbora J Beck of
Strea m s and relltore. (-ly (;IOfll flf Ot_,... ~'f 1111 tudltllCle • MtnOI Cllle Ud NO¥efll'9t2, "91, rt~ ~.,.de • dift. ~• I• "I had30peopleto take b a b itatl. Members "' 1ntorm.c:1o11..,."-• care or s"d the rearlesS" work for m inimum .._1t1W0r.,,..~o.11~"',.., S1u1ttc1 ....... ._ .. __ ... ,.
MA8°" LAWK-MT. OLt\'l
Monuarv • Camaterv Crematory
t-'r
...
•
1825 Gitlef Ave ,
Coal• Mesa ~5554 -
,_c1•0\t.s
la&. llOADW A Y
MOITUAIY s 10 Btoadwav
Coe1a~ 6*9150
-
......
ll E CTOR RICARDO
ARROYO. Ofll' 17, n senior :it
Edison lliah chO<>I. died
instantly in nn automobile
uc<'idt'nl t'u rl~ Snturdu.' morning Octolwr 31 . 1981 Hector w;1ic an honor 11tudent
"t Edl~on lll11h Schonl ond
tin imr><>rtant ml•mber or lh<'
Ed111on I U11h St'hool C:rol4i.
s n n l 11 A n u . C u . a I so The fire that followed
s u r ,. I ' l' d b r 1 1 cost $262,625 to put out,
arund<'hildrcn. Recitation of the Jawsutt claims. It
the Ro11ary wu~ held on allks that a mount in
Mond:iv, "110\cm~r 2. 19ftt d a m a g c 8 . News
Ill 7: aoPM lit Bal~t Bergeron· account.a from the time Smith & Tuthill Chapt>I . Mau of tht'.' Rcm1rrccllon said 100 firefighter s
Tucsduy, November 3. 1981 battled the blaze, which
at to OOAM at St Joachim's broke out in an area
C:otholk <:hur('h lntermt'nt known ~ JackatJ!I Flats.
1-----------, ~e~01~~~ ~~11 Eb,~e ~:1;~;~ oarrln~n. rather of
Cemetery. Rlver3idc. Ca. five former and present ~rvlcM under the direction Boy Scouts, said In a or 811ltt lkr1eron Smith & telephone Interview, '11
'ruthlll Wc11tclirt Ch14pcl think they (the Forest
.Mnrtuu>' or co11n 648-93'1\ ser;icc and aovemmcnl
(
C.11142-5871.
P1111 • few word• to work for wou. 1
•• ...... 4, II, 11. u. ,.,, .... 1111 .............. -.., ...., •• leader was hurt ,'' he wa1e1 of $580 a monlh, 1-----------"•certo ,,.,.~••t•'"fllte, "••••
said. "Two days later, mlnu1 $135 lor room and PlltlC 1111( =~,:_~..,-:.='!;=
when we came off the board, and must abide 1. To ""• tt•s110N0•'"• t i. r Iver. so m e Forest by tM five roles of no ,.CTtTiout au11•aa• .. 1111011tt 11h m•• • ••'"'•" aJ UMe ITA~MIUIT ~.,_--..,If,_._ Se rvice lnvestlaators dope, booce. refU.11 t.o T"• , ... _.,.. _." .. 11 •• ••111e ••• ,.._..,... • ..,. .. 9-i
came up to us and said w o rk , destruction of 1Mt11eu•: ...,. ... • -11 ~ ~· ~ d • f'ARO!la ~ATIH, tntt A,.. tw. ,ew ...... _,•.,_....Ill! that our campC1re ha a t a t t proper.y or M•.-U........,..K ... CA-. ""1e.tt _,...., • , ........
caused 1 major fire." violence. ore11e ~ '"" •-....-•• ~ca 11w • -
1....,.t Hiiia.CA-~r.-rl d '"''..._. ............ The blaie occurre The CCC hirH men ... .._... _:_"'.._
during on of the wor1t and women aces 18 to 23 • .-"':._. • tire seasons in ldaho for one year . Aoy ,___._!"II_ ...
"h istor y . More than woman deairin1 more ~°""• ... ..-•
125,000 acres oC NaUOftal information cn call ,., ...
Fort>t l land11 were toU·f.Ne ........... for ,.... ..... ...,
bu med U\at suq)mer. m(lre lDlormatioG.. Dd.11. -.-.. 4. "·""
•
~ Cout DAIL. Y PILOT JWtdnffday, November 4, 1•1
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 Among people looking for a rental , 70"(
read real estate classified ads.
•••
----
ltG CANYOtl "'¥BSAJUIS"
Most spectacular Deane Homes model
on largest corner lot o'looking Big Cyn
~olf course. Beaut pool, spa & gazebo m huge private yard. 4 BR , den,
rormal DR, 4 ~ baths. Exciting!
$950,000.
WESLIY M. TAYLOI CO .. ILU TORS
2111s ........ Ht1a1Md
MIWP'OIT Cami. M.1. 644-49 I 0
EASTSIDI
SIH,000
, .... 1007
Only. Sl0,000 down &et.s ~-----you l.nt.o thia tot.ally re·
modeled 4 Bdrm home. Large corner lot, Koi
pond too! Won't last, call
DOW! •
MEW IA YFRONT NEW50'00CK
UMDA ISLI HOMIS
Prestige pool family home. Main
chan nel view from beautiful
traditional, 4 bdrm, 5 bath home. Slip
for 2 large boats. $1,495,000.
R&"M~ of Newport Beach @ SEACOVE PltOPEltTIES
714-63 1-6990
3 Br, 3b1 with thermo windows thru-out. The
very be$l ol materials and fixtures Installed.
Even Uled garace floor. Must see to appreciate.
Sl,495,000. ...
• SlllDOWM * SIOl,000 DISPllATI! 3 Bdrm-huge back
Large lagoon view from spectacular
architectural design 6 bdrm, 5 bath,
playroom, dark room & den. Slip for 2
large boats. $1 ,350,000.
4 Bdrm 2 ba pool home. yard-great fo~ fi~st ~ Auwne bi-balance loan. time buyer-don, t mJH ~'.!.-o~~~~R';1tTY .@thia~011e.';;;c,vE ·
1a.1111 S.7911 PROPERTIES ._ _ _. ....... _. ClasailiedAdl 642-5678 7f4-631-6990
Find out about the hiib·
_ eamln1 ral est.ate sales •
7471 career opportunities
11• with THE REAL . -EST ATERS. Llceosiq :': school fees completely R E ~ l T 0 R S
LIDO ISi.i HOMES
Featu red on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, 3
bath home, newly redecorated. Priced
to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for family living.
Excellent value at $420,000.
PENINSULA PotNr WCHPIONT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft.
featuring marine room. $1,385,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
; : .... 'f ,-,, Dr " "• h "'7::., ,.. 1">1
ASSUM.W.I
14.SOf. LOAM Near oew Woodbrid&e condo. Mucb desired
sintle Stor)' bu 2 Bdrm. 2 batb, French doors, lovely neutral wall to wall carpeting & beautiful brick patio.
Hf.1616
SIOOODOWM
LEASE OPTIOH
2 NEWPORT HOMES
3 Br 2 Ba cottage UKE
~EW ! $119,000.
AND deluxe ADULT CONDO
WITH VIEW. Sl.3S,OOO. CALL NOW Ra e
Rodgers. •It Remu. 631-12166
••s refundable to school ol Sts,000 Wll W..e
: your choice. Exte\slve ... you and y~ _family •-----... -i -sales training. For In-into th.ii splendid coun· r-~-~ .+ -Classified Mt
Sell wilb EASE!
Jt'aaBREEZE
Clauified Ads 142-5678 : formatloo, call 751-61.91 try freocb esute with 4 VYCUVU•
-
;! l•--=:::=:::i--.Br.,..., Ba. family room1 Bay & Beach -1 library, 4 fireplaces IJlCI E at -HIWPOIT more. Financio1 for Red st e * YICTOIJAN STYU *
: DWlD qualified IMQrer at 13'J. COSTAMISA Spectacular 4 bdrm remodeled in .,. Steps to beach .• up & 3 ror 30 years Offered at v· . : down. 2 baths eacb . $745,000 · CIMny&.-.Arle lctor1an style w/custom kitchen
: FurnJ.shforwinter/aum-D.M.W.i••nr Clean •Gd neat tbref in prime Costa Mesa area . : ~~~.re3~·p~iu:t 1--~760-Gl----.-=-=l'-'S'--_ ~':n:!·rff~~~;r~~ I $138,500.
: $335.000. recreational veblcle. HIWPO.,.. 11t ... CH ...--E = l&.UfflSCOM>O Sl7UOO. "' -~ associated -3 bd. 2 ba, new cpt.s & '31·7300 M.I. 2670 S-...,... °"" drps, sparkling! Only !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1714J 75'·1501 1714J 752-7373 8P0 1"fRS Wffl, ,.,....'1S
: I , ..,. ~ I ' ,. ~ ~ " $134,000. Xlnl flllan. Agt. -----111111111~•
... &M·ll33 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!' : J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ------
-· -.,,
IMS Wll -llZS
*' .,. --
St1rtlng
1 New
ButlnH•
Acccordl119 to
C.J"orllla helMM end
Prol .. lloM COde IS.C.
11900 to 17UO) ell
perton• **'I IMlllM ..
undtr • llcllllovt -llllltl Ill• • 11110-111
MEWPOIT CUST
41MVESTOIS
Ocean vu. 4 Bd le 3 Ba,
fam rm. wet bar, din rm, pool, tennis, walk to
beach. $210,000. Submit
any offer. Bob or Dovie
Koop, ait 79-1221
... ~.a.111• 4 .............
t .7 ACllS
F~ <AGRICULTURE F.STATES) Very sulta· ble for avacado or other orchard plant.lnJ. Great for tax 1belter aod priced to sell S120. 000. Owner will carry the
loan. Wants a 1031 Ex-
chan1e.
759-1616
$6000 IUYS IT!
S&OOO dn buy s pre-stigious 2 Br 2 Ba condo lo E.alde Costa Mesa.
For det.a.lll call Joyce
Walue, •st 63J.1266.
1>91es .........
(Land Included)
2 up le 2 down on a HUGE lot, providini ad· diUooal off-st. plltin&
to tbe ex11tlog 4 car gar11e. F1ot11tlc
finaocln1, k1W down and
low lnteret ~yments.
Altina onq sm,500 ln
best rental area. stepa to
beach. JACEUTY
t7H670
Wa~ee
fial Eiit1t1
UDO ISU.HD LOY& Y Warm &
cozy 3 BR + 2 BA & south patio
gem! Enlarged lot -A·l
condition. Excellent owner
financing. $419,500. Tom Allinson
64.2·8235 <H57)
TOUCH OF HEW EH•LAMD -,
CAPE COD STYLE In Newport
Beach-Harbor View Knolls. 3 BR
& fam rm -Highly desirable end
unit. Comm. pool & tennis
$280,000 Fee. Flexible financing.
Tom Allinson /Terry Hanes
642·8235 (H58 )
-· --"""'
with lhe C-ty ea.ti!
a11d ll1w. It pvlllMlod
lo11r II••• 111 • M~Mf*ttM
'"' 111 wlllcll tllt bullllotl It locMod. <>wtanctADs cipponun1ty _.J
to cboole trom~me 3 ·
, S N L l -.. , ---•I ---"11
. Tiit •11101110 111 I• roq111fod lly 1.. Mil It _,...,111,......_
JOllf ll11tl11tH lll lllO. Mui lllllh ,. .. .,.,.
""' of ..... .. °"" OOllllMf'Cllel ~.
Tiie DAILY I'll.OT
proYldnllOflltlllflM
C*"""..,.... .. " .... .......,.,
fotllll OflCI -"'tllll I
d•llJ ttr•lct tt tllt
Or111e• C•1111, ~.--"' '"' ., .. , ""'°'"°"' ........ 11111111 ttlt LIOAL
-~to41. ht. U I ftr •trt ..., ............
Br 2 Ba floor am on
FEE LAND! ettd at
$224 ,850 to $237 ,150.
Owner will finance with
2$'9 down payment. CaU
for d.Ulla.
RC"k1vlnrCn . .
0 N E S 0 H A I 6 0 8 L S I Z A M N H E S N S R P
T H Q 0 II 0 t I A S H T E II S £ M S £
T E E A II S T I S P P F 5 5 I M E U S
0 K N II I A R £ R E K W II P E L T S II
t l 0 K L P H S L C M I E N 0 T S E H
I II t E I C M A 0 M R I M N I 8 E S Q
CA 8111 0£TL£MtAR SO,I C
KES,TMS EN LL HUEI EIM K
LIA Tl9£0 £L£1 KCANPC9
Ei UNOSIR OFR RA IKECS L
St 0 II I I UN I £ET t 0 UL U~ C
I I £ I t K L II T I 0 £ J M S 9 £"\ £
DllS"£Al l LlllHON UI TSO .................. .... ... .. ... ... ... .. ... ... .... .. .. .... ....
-= llDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
EMH.ALD IAY MODHH
One Of The Most Delightful Houses
We Have Had The Opportunity To
Offer In "Many A Moon." If
Modern Styling Is Your Taste, You
Must Inspect This Attractive Home
With All Its Special Attributes -
High Beamed Ceilings -Intricate
Custom Lighting -Sharp. Clean
Features -Lovely OCEAN VIEW
-Spacious Sun Deck. Priced at
$695,000.
--....... .....,.
759-9100
#2 Corporah Plcao
Hfwporic..ht'
CORNER COtlKJ ON GREEN
Dolor-. ,._ l ltecl. wttll ..._. decor ill
.W coHfticM. 18 Mis. o ..... ""41
INM/optloL $241,100.
NEW LISTING-IENIN. PT.
DtlgMfiil e.o.. I 00 Mt t.... beocla. 2
bedroo•1, I ta•, ,.tio -4 dee•
......... 1. fl•••ci•9. rrlced for ._ .... , ... SlJl,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES. INC
RCAl ESTATE.
~' HH'l'f-1, Pr11Qf'r'-, M~?Ot
315 Manne Ave
Balboa Island
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES
suru IUY IY THE SEA
Oceanfront duplex in prime rental
location. Attractive modern 3 & 2
BR units with fireplaces. sun deck ,
patio & ocean views. Low-low down
+ take over loan. Enjoy high rental
income & tax savings. $575,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
TAQU M
I I I I
H 0 RT T 011111 ot hollOt ., !Olll: "f'd
Ilk• to 11\tnl\ alt of rou wllO
didn't fall ••lttp lllCI tllOM ,.--H-A_S_l _l_N_""'t wllO did, t!ltnk• tor not -"
I r I I' I _ • f:':!-.. ~~ ------.,...,... ___ ,, ...
I' I' I I
HMIMSUU rOINT
Top location, steps to ocean. 3 Bdrm. l~ba. Garage, fireplace, •new· ly painted. Ouutanding price. S27S,OOO 1od
owner will carry.
c... .. w.-1022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
4l411GOMA New elegant 4 Br Vic-toria o partia l vu, ownr/contractor ftnan.
avail $575.000.
Co1y two bedroom cot· tage. Ocean Vlew. One
block t.o beach. owe 1st.
Agent, 631·'1:.>0.
OCEAM-5 aocKS
BeautifuJ corner 1n Corona del Mar 2 charming I Bdrm units. fabulous potential.
Priced to sell + euy terms. Only S24S,500
Ca II now. 64S-<'l:JOO
COLDWeu
BANl(eRO
CostoM"° 1024 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOWDOWN
LOWINTHEST
3 Br & 2.5 Ba on cuJ.iie-sac. Call for details.
Curt Herberts II. agt
S3H266
GET ASTA.IT Only SIO,OOOdwn and low mootbly payments ror
this U60 sq rt condo in
Costa Mesa. 3 Bdrm 2~ Ba, wet bar, 2 car gar,
BBQ and microwa ve oven and much more.
FllU price Sl2l,500
Tnbme. bi·level, !pc, 3 BR, 3 ba priv yd, micro, upgrade owe 10% dn.
IW.000. 851-9990
•GOnLOAHS• Possible S~ down
12· 14~ int. rate. 30 yr loans. Free info.
Wortdl.L
5 1n
NEAR BEACH 3BR, 2~BA. Sl0,000
DN. 631·5737
CITY LJGln'S VIEW
Nr Be.a ch. Dl,000 dn.
631-5737
CIYSTAL con Beaut. oew condos. 2
muter suites, Italian tile entry/skyligbt/dbl
11r/ w/optMr:Lce encl patio & Yd. Close to ocean.
XWflll•c~ 1932 MEYER p CE
OPEN 111URSSUN 12-S
M1·199li 131.0Sl •ct·
MmlY
215 E. Bay (Eut ol 20th.
off Santa Ana Ave.)
Then call Rutb for
term al rltr.
CASHTALIS
Astume 814~ 1Jt, 12W:l
2nd. Eutelde a BR a 8' condo. Owner/ageol
M2·2225or~
Pool Appeal
SltS,000 Spacious 4 bedroom 2i,,
bath Mesa Woods enttr talner. Priced at below market value! Grand dining room, war~ family room, romaour rireplace, big bonus
room . Beautifully
landscaped lot features cool, blue POOL! Home
la V ACAl'll'! Move right
in! Call oo financing de-
tails. 979-2390
T
OW...WIU.
Ff MANCE AT I J'Yo
With IS% down for 10 years. 3 Bdrm 2 bath .
great condition with
many extru, A/C.
S•lt•d For le-Law
Enclosed tJo. Comer
lot with RV access. Ask Inc su1.soo. For an ap· pointment to see, call
540-llSl
. -s. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
s.t11•1ForY• Perfect starter home
priced r iaht ! Im· maculau with a lovely
yard. Full price SU0,000
C:::. Sf! HT
~PHUPfHlll~
0.ar.w 1026 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SHAIE Ow.BSHtrl
S350000WN
SSJO/MONTH
2 BR coodo each have
~vt baths. PallO. pool ~CUZZl. Owner, 631~
Hw tlMjtOfl hodt I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
suraSHMP!
Beautiful 4 or 3 Br . oe~
carpet, drapes & pa.int inside & ou t Wel l landscaped. SlOOO down
to qualified VA ~tr or Seller will help f1t11nct
$114,000. D Bourke
Realtor, 546-~
No Qualifying Spec
tacular pool home. besl area Huge ram rm Cul de sac pnvacy Under
mitt. $136,000 Bkr
8'8-0709
s,-ltll Hoc1"da
rOOlHOME
2800 sq f\. 3 car gar. 4
bdrms. largt ramtly rm Macro + much much
more Terms A.f.T.D or
new loan Won't last
lone. call now
Rl'dh1Jl¢~Realty
I;~:; ~ :-;1 II I
1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
**11£1£ED! Hlghl,y motivated seller
Laree 3 Bdrm borne 111 prestigious Woodbridge Place. Very flexible
terms.
$210,000
\\bod bridge
Rcalry
551 ·3000
l9?08arranu Pli•,.lrvl•~
12Y2%
. Assau&LE Lovely 4 Bdrm, Walnut
Village. Owner wiU help finance. Submit! Only
Sl82.000. 645-9161
: OPEN HOUSE
REAL rY
/
WAL.SQUARECONOO
2 bdrm, J "' ba.. up
traded. xlnt. fin ..
101.000. Tty Sl0,000
down 552·1511, aft. 6
859-0147
COLLEGE PARK. S & S
4 BR 2~ BA. Unfin1Shed bonus room, rommunity roots le club house
165,950 .. By Owner.
i714> Utll8aft2PM
INVESTORS
SPECIAL
Exlalln1 ttuDt '"*'d
IU1e to MJ la Wa• 3
bdrm, a Ill. .... ram!· b .._. All Ulfw. Plrtt.
la11l ....... tab ........
EASTILUFf
3 Br. Home 2 Ba. New
c arpetin1 & etc.
$205,000 .
..,~.hr.
541-7729
ASSllMAIH
JtYnlf 11.3% Barbar lldle J ldrma. 3
b1lb te.,.a\omt •llb
VIEW. 11 pratlr!out
prlY1te tGIDiiiUIMJ wtll lfMil ..,., POOi .... .,... ([Olli..& a...c. tu wit• •••••ble
... ol -Prield for laltH 11le. Tr1 ........
IOlmmM.n 61NJll
Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Wtdntl\d1y, November 4, ,., I
~"''1i'!!!'!'milj.•ll111.i1M~1;1,~ll-1 D1111 ' s .... t s ...... 'rf11 •k I ,..... .~ Tit ....................... .•..................... ....................... ....................... ....•.................. ...................... ....•••.•.............. . ........................................ .
IO"-•tl Sh1mpoofrN1uncltan. GUARAHl'llD RalplaCahlJWo•&w HAUUNO~t w C U 8 T 0 M 11HpabaUDabJIUd>ard AA1 type w&U CO¥triol TILl11'9TALLID
For ttDall bllllA• .. • Color ~ wbt Pl1l1"a1, Drywall, Oardea5 lce 10 lit &natk 1.-.t rite LANDeCAPINO Ort.at. lblor Lie. Iii 1J yrt ol I o 1 t a I I t d b 'I AU killdl. Guatl.c.ted ~Mhome.• 71 • crpu . 1o mlft. bleach. Pl11ter1111. Palot111. '111 .txp. . m.t. Prom,t.Cau•im. · 1 unlq111 111vtroomeot. bappyN.8.~. Journeyman paper MJ. •Jf(!
--Hall, Uv/din. rma SlS; .nw Dtbtr.f'ltM Commlrtl6d. UllD· • . Tlluk1ou. a1,...10 bao1er. IAt, tic, work Cl&ICOlllc.nacme t•lllts • ava room 11 $0• coueb ht c.. us 6 remo¥al c&tu> Mlrrf ~ frntd. Ralph C1tu10 New·Remodel·RlpaJr t••• .. ••••••• .. •••••••• ito, chr 15. Guar. eUm ........ •••••••••••• .... upe. Free -. .... C:,~UUNWYOUIACT ...... ~!! .... :=.... r't.r~!!J~i'f1m~e~t •t.t Fr Hl.OMdffMf,11 .. llM~ * petodor.ei,trepalr. PETl "R''PIOPLI aft.4:30. "" 1· MARRYTODAY r-' .. WAlLPAPIRT ROGUSnL!WOAKS Rm add• oew conat lS yrs eap. Do work .~•Groomin lap. 1,._er cleao· A·ZBAUl.JNGCoutnc· No blood t.u ,.... Uc :.;.pera. drywall. Cuatom~1 Xllc...,,.B&tbl'loon
Rt1/Comm. Qv1llt1 .myaelt. Re11.sn__.0101_ • WeC ' u • free trim, mant. U. • l'tlkleollal cleu· provlded.•m7W.dy1 -R I . s.o.21ee rtotttCr..Umea
Guaranteed. Lemin& NoSteam/NoSbam.,00 "--II est .1.. · d .Dl· Afq, lllckYSltl&m. AU PaintlAf·iDl S4SO ext ,......1 • .-.... s.D. en. no.c7'1 Coutructioo(8-2701tt) St I s--i .. 11 t F .,.,.. . TR••S/SH.RUB TRIM U50 Neat complete ......---•0 ~ .. 1 · ut ....................... Tak a~ Japaoe1e "'"' M•11 r frt!nt,riiae1.7292 ....................... TN¥elS... --~ ...J!~n11-.....@-~ DRYWAU./ACOUSTJC Nlll'ltry, laodlcapl.ni & Gar11ie • yard cltao· ....... ••••••••• .. ••••• NeatpatdlelA:textum .............. ••••••••• MecHAUCOMSTI. C.,../tr,,1htar 14yruxp.hUyUe'dli malJlt.'l'reelrim.mlAa'* u · tit. 7.c71 BRlCkWORK: Small C ..... ,... "" • ltJ.14H SOU'llUllERICA ~uatom bomet, tram· ....................... Jn!W'ed. SW cltan·up1 . Spec. lo Haaa•at1i Joba, Newport, Cotti 2S 111 fll>, Ue. •i. Platter Pttchlna A: TJlA.VELSERVICES
111. rem~. French Carptt Ii upbollfer1 .,,........,.._ ~alpnmiO(.UIMfOO ....................... llH6, Irvine, Refs, Bonded. lnl. Refs. Color reatuccOI. Int/ext. 30 My Jl*iaJty. Call Tery
doOrs, alt,ylillbta & patio c I e I n e r .L f r e e ....................... · Wanta REALLY CLEAN l'IS..S175 u rt. eo.tWll Dick yrs. Neat. Paul 545-2977 _lM~oun. 7St-0873
coven. ~Olcb1uard,rMXWWU:• E.M DSGNaiaDC H...... HOUSE?CIUGlnlbam Cu1tom Brick, Stone, RENT~PIJNTED " 'Ill -T'"Stnb
ROOMADDITlON l.11 t12·-paekalinl/ahmU/prb ....................... Glr1.Preeell.MS-5UI 8Jocll1..Coacrete,Slucco. ~rfect,prompt,reu ......... ~ .................................... . SP~AUST C....t/C..crth Clll54.W'701 HOMEUIPROVEJllN't BOBlN'8CLIAN1NG Rel1. r-reetll54f.N92 uldePnt153M806 McCORMACKPLllBG THITlafll()ft.I
•••Ill; :em~1,decll~, ....................... Dryw• REPAJ.R, PUlMBlNG, Servic.-.UaouahlY MAJtBL&nLE-STONE All PalntJnc: lntk50ext 24HOUBSERVICE • Loweatpr1£t 8J5:(l53J
.............. ••••••••• U o~,~183o esl.~l l~l THOMPSON'S •••••••• .. ••• .. •• .. •••• beatiof, carpentry, elec, cleanboule. 5'CMllS7 Jncl. laatall pre-fab MSO. Neat, complete. Uc. 12N318 675-t~ 'Im All Aett Bkb& for amalt c. · · CONCRETECONSTR. Dryw1ll/Pluter-We We.Freetlt.NoJobtoo JIRSCLF.AN frplu . 145-SS02, Freeeat,rela.851-7292 T-H J" 'I JAYI C
buliatst. llarv Goens. IOOM ADOmOMS Uc. 313383 8'2·8'12 patch any bolea fut. NO small. 14.Sal l&AJCESrl'GLEAM! ZlUM.OlfO Ot. YMP'IC PAIMTlMG VT 11 • • • r I Complete 1ervlee and
11'·10·1751 Eves. Coocrete&BlockWallr NOJOBTOOSKALL mln.Uc.4055M. ·2430 JACKOFALLTRADES .... 8ryanl'1La.ndlcapln1 INT/EXT FREEE.5T Spec. ln restauranta le stump grinding. IO yrs . ....,213-~==-·.:.:1 =-----~nllis~°'58 Brit & 8111. Uc. 3514'9. Dave's Drywall, addl· Plumbln1. electrihl, Exp. HOOMClelintt. Rel. Brick, 1toae, block. ClOll-HJGH QUAL. WORK -~r~~· Uc. exp, Llc. lnl. Ml>-9308
A~. bkkpc, fin. state-· COMMI Dale,bome963-171'1 Uou, comm'I, 1CO\LU!c odd .DMOlll Ref. Free Ell. Svc 24 crete. Frpl~s, BBQa, LOWRATE.5 554-1.903 • -W.tda ......
mull, 1udltin1 for COHSTIUCTIOM Ans.835-2112 . 2313 ceilin11, textures. Carpentry ·MUON')' hn.955-Ull patlo1, dr1veway1. INT/EXTPAJNTJNG Draiob~~J~m~lO. •••••••••••••• ........ .
small buslneeses. Boyd 0 30 CONCRETEW.ORK &N.37&7 RoofiD&· Plumbln1 Houaecleanlof Is our Guar. Uc.•lnl. W-0814 Llc'd Reta Free est PIW:..,J~-ee Sale Ii Repair ol anUque
Wheeler, CPA. 536-4355 ver yraexperse~· Foundations.sidewalks, 8ectri II Dry1rall ·Stucro ·Tile bu.al11t11 Call Janice's Brlck-Block·Cement •*s.1-10&7•• est. and modem clocks. Ii
ev . 0& you. Room CddL patio slabs. custom •••u•~••••H••••••••.. Remodel. J.B.W.90 Ra11edy Anna t ·yrs frpl. '1. Xlnt. work. NE' "ONS NG Property t1• 11.i.t watches. Gus' Witch ons, new coosl. .om· brick:.Lk.96G«l39evea. ELECTRI""•~-pric .... HOMEUIPROVEMEN'T up 1175--2514 • Dependable. Pat ......, PAINT! ............... -. ....... SbopNoCatkwyatBoat m/residentlal/1 od. . "'-"'' ~ • -· e.g.oaa lot-Ext, Res·Com . Canyon Lacuna 4t4-l2:82 ;t ............. ~ ...... From design to comple-Res1d. Concr~te: A~so ritht, free estimate oo Tile floors, feDcln1. Holiday party Ume iJ acoustic ceilings, ref., PIOfBn Trade ills welcome. veways, park.in& lot Uoo. Mlke8'2r3Sl6 sportcowt.s. Uc. 374067. large or small Jobe. ' pl.umblo1. all •mall here! Let~tleao! Refs. Conc~·Flaptone Uc., freeest.837·2837 MAMAC18i41Hf Sr~~Salrs, hse1alcoatln1. c....1..t-....a.~a..... Bob8SH966/847-7078 Uc. f39863l 673-0358 Jobi. 28yraexp. 979-22115 Cyndi le Aimee,5'8-78111. CeramlCTile· Muonry p A J NT ER NEEDS Oranae Co. area. 1S yn Wil4ew Cll• .. I
• Asp a t. 631·4199 _.. .._.. ~--t-ftl... RESID./COIOl'L ElectricaJ-PlumbUl1 N d I d Free estimates 648-9012 0 experience. Call for info. ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Ut. ••••••••u•••••••••••••~·-C ee •ma or W RK30yn.exp.,lnt., d t OritlnalWindowWuber ALLSrATE PAVING All typts· ldtcMn, bars, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hiahly Clllllified. No Job arpenlr)', rouitl/finllb housekeeper? HrlY. or Mo•... ext., acc. ceil. Davis an ra es. Ava 3brbome $35.
"-I tin St · 1 garage units Da y THlTILEMAN Ir small.631·2CXM Roots·M~.stucco wkJy.Call lladridA1en· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Paintin 847-Sl.86 t'UllZ ... 1-' ~a coa g, rap ng, · Will ulf •. _...., __ . Refs Bill•l40levn M v --* • I~ "".,....., Repairs. Comm./Res. 645-&2l,eve.s49-168S Free est. ~2062 st "'-.a your · cy, · ··-'"· ,.. • .....,,,,..-•. 12 yrs Exp. NB, COM .• ........,,..,.. Free est. 097362 C.....-4« McCryst.alCeramicTile boards:Commerdal on-EuropeanCraftaman. AD HOLIDAYSPECJALS Top QualJty. Special Custom Wad. Ron. ....................... "Let eSWIShintln"
14S-8lll · •••• r.":;••••••••••••••• OisUncllve Installation . L die. 642-341' Jobs. 811 or Small. Call By Tiie HOUSE MOUSE care In ~· 25 yn • •m.t4T1 • • General Ccntracting Call Swasbioe Window ... ROUGH& PJNISH Uc. M0874&. ~8Sl2 ~-••Ill aflerlPll ..... 5231 CaDS-151.S UJI. Competitive rates. Home Improvements, Cleanlng,Ud. 548-81153
yliHleag Doors fences windows cLn ..1 c-••••••••••••••••••••••• General llalntainance CLIAM UP YOUI ACT No overtime. 730-1.353 RALPH'S PAINTING dama1e ~ra. Quality CLEARVIEW
•••0 •••••••••••••••••• ' ' ' .. .., -... CLEAN· WN RepainaiDecor1U111 •ABC MOVING· Ex work. Llc.1.-..9'198 WINDOW CLEANING ChUdcare, loving home, etc. Refs, free est ....................... _ UPS/LA •Qu Ill *Ra 640-Sl« HomecJeaninc m4'31 prof low Qulpk, Exlflnt-Reas.·Prompt ~ l11nch. companions. 840-~3 Chris Childcare, Mon-Fri days. M1tnte~Landscp a 1 1 "FREE" bolida.Y clean· ·~ ~tea. c ' Uc'd. Freeeat. 964-5566 looflllt CbrisorTlm!l&U484 ~ren~yard ~3mll Custom wood patios Infants through 6 yrs. Freeest. 1142-tto'J Jack of~ Tr-. Call ing. Oepeod. 6111/wife care uherv>ee.ssz.ouo , ...... ....._. ....................... Prof. WiodowCleaning. Babyalttin~. Gramma dtc~s. wood windows'. My home . N CM. Clean.ups·~Trim'g Day*o~Ncr~H• team . Bonded S-:Afri~~g ....................... LmdC,...nc .. Co. Frttest..1&ual.serv.
type. Mon · Fri. My Lie d. Reas John or 5'6-7$64 H1ulin1 ·Maintenance a • penoaallzed M:rv. Ex. CO Li ~... ..... Also fine/decor.fcomml Specialidna hi shake Ii guar. Ty-Rae 1'15-<IMI
home. COllU Mesa Area. Rlcll 919-3218 CRlLD/INFANI' CARE Arnleso.8414 Hwdwoo.t...... ref. 995-8050. -c. "• ---· a rt work . M a g 1 i shingle roots. WllMlow Tlnlleag
W.OIS4 Fine fmlsh wort. Doors Days, wlmds, my C.M. TllES •0 •••••••••u••••••••• BOGART'S CLEANING W~~Us84J~1 Morales, MFA. 675--4722, Freeestlma&e MZ-ml21 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'iabyaltlin&. our c. M. bung, dttks, remodel. bomej $1/hr.142·0162 Topped/remo¥ed, clean HA~1~~~ =RS €u1tom home aerv .. · 646-2lll Oraqec.out Roofio& Quality since im.
homes, 1 yr le up, Randy,673-5716 COAtrec'--Caner.. u lawnrmov.751·SC16 An .... me .......... SA. bonded, ref., est., Melkl..-p--a-Reroofang -Reepairs. Freecowteousest.
t. a.8 ,_~ G rd •-d ·-~-~. ~ · ~.... · '45-007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ ..., ~~1r.23119 .... 1733 644-M94 any 1me. 642·.,. 2 or Carpet StrYict ....... ,............... • en ..... ~-capt111, I...._._ Tbeory/Piano1<:1 .. 1.t •••••••••.............. _. ·-641-5751 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 22 Years Exp. Custom tree trlmm1n1 Ir r•1•--, CLEANING KINGDOM . . ,...._. 'Ibe Paper Hanger, Prof. BALBOAROOflNGC0.1-------.-IMh.M .. •c•/ WeCareCrpccteanen Homes, c:oodos. Apt.a & moyal, ~clean-up. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reald./Comm'I. Alao llD&mJ. Colle1e prof, lnatall Decoratorqual. Skyli1hts&Pluterln1
.ir-1--0 Steam clean&upboJs. Remodb.Bob,92-2208 lnsd.Freeesl.142-48118 Haul,cleu1q>,coocret.e janitorial aervlces. yovr bome, •Q>' a1e. Freeeit. SteveS47-4281 Ftteesl. 673-6743 .......,._ T k removal "'·--Truell: ~&no Gract$51.t211Z ---••••••• .. •••••••••••••• rue mount 11D1t Mowlti& S15-S2JO. Hauling k · ~ '11311 • WALLS BY BOBBY HORIZON ROOFING CO BoataCJeantdlWued I Work \llr. 8'5-3116 c-L...t &Dumpi.n&$25. 75'-9904 c aerv. HD•"M&r ,..... Qu lit fast I Verycotn-"1ve prices • . _ __. l ··--' • C 11--c or ...... ,.._ ... _.... D'ruPJO™" .... ..., ••••••••• .... •••••••••• a y, serv ce. '-.. c.xpen"'1A'.QI. ~w...,. Make your advertising 0.IPWWW 0 .............., .. .,.. v• u.> ....................... F 11 S · I /I l llYnexp. 6tl-C822 548.311(8 Jim 759·198Seves doUar go farther! Llst Master Builders, custom GARDENING WANl'ED le Small llovmeJobs Cooservatlve Female 1 . pecia · ext 0 All Ii
YacbtHuJJCleaning your business evtry day quality, room additloos. Mowin1. edgi.nc, raking, C11J MIKEMl-1381 teacher des1rel home lo ~tlnf Prof. Rsnbl. HANGING SIO a roll, R1~.:'.~~dis=· c.
Complete Underw•ter intheClasslfledsection Li~ Larry Wendell. s weeping , fr ee HAULJNG&DUMP bousult. Xl nt re· e1 .SteveS47-42.lll quality, free est., & Lam,642-82:33
Servire . or this n.ewspaper (213) 921·6541, (213) estimates. &U-4372 or JOBS.a.sUorRa.ndy, ferences. 5a-10IO btwn Fin~ •bat you '!'ant In strippin1. Call Scoll
Jim 640-0176 6'2·5678. 944-1468 6'5·5737 Ml·l427 8:30-3:30. AIUor Bonay. DatlY Pilot Classifieds. 645-9325 Want Ad He!e! 142-5171
5350 ,...,_. · 5350 Penon•
OPPOITUHl'TY
knocJts often Wbeo )'OU
use result,&ettinl Daily
Pilot Claaaified Ads to reach the Orange Coast
market.
Pbooe 642-5678
•
....... 1171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •111,. S.•l· retired
al"ll• U "If old l•Uta• looklaJ for f• tra..t WGl'tl. rwJ or llrt:Umt ...
~?~-.. ?~!! ~ta rn•able, 1c· eoiaat1 roablt book· 11..,.,. 0..al otnce
dllUla. Npt Bell Aotatioo.
C•••n1 bueflta. Salary o,e,. Send re-' aume to: llr. ADdenoo l77f Riverside, NB
WM
ACC~
Or1ngt Coat DAal y PILOTtNtdnttday. Novtmbtr •. 1981
, •• ~?~~ .. .?!!! ~!~ ..... ?!!! ~.~~-.!!!! ~~~ .... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~.?!!.~.: ...... J!lll~-----a-.J ..... WIW.AUtn19, '*r.:': SM.llNllOM All• II •zl J... P!"ftt•~ -·· ~~,..!~ r.:~:,::•!!_2 M1llor,_'UlliHI '""':.::=::;,'," , l4ldltto111 laeom1. AJVPM•·IPua Uoa Jt;;: -•• -Needed to M~J:'!OITS c c "'1 · SA&.BPlllOM Aatlque etrlll......_ el'9att I ... depart· Alia r11ta rut ODI. ror •llllt Mon. Pff. Wl1¥am HoalUl. aa&ed
•Ht for • 1rowlas, 0-aJ ' • PI u t t no• 1e•1 e nu. Caritliure et Jon
mtdl•• 1laed dalf1 AUAia..._ laelpful. Tb• Blurrt WlllrH. ramoue plect ~ ... New aala· VJCTOITlllPO\:.Y ~~ale, p_rc.1••= 8uaar,18NwptBlvcl. llaowa la Eaeyr~•
fn•t ~ ,,.._ N 1 tloawlde, loai pol'tfOllol NJ.• OH> Brittulca. lfavtitlSO
SafedrlvllsrtcOl'dllte, 1·------·' Wlll bt ordered la -'•"''" a.... •-• s•• 1111r appraJlal W&IJ Mill for 1• Jaauai {IDOlt likt'1 -· •·· -· •u-AOf ~ aZ5 cull ~ly
VIMYci.m cM:= ~~~!F ~~''"' •Mztw1 1c.. :~.~ 'r":o~i lf!i!3~r!!~c'::~.
Wt Melt l*'IODDtl wbo L.1 bor work aho. U. eoft.,.,.). • lllCJllTAJUa . pays fulltlm•~=me. rywood. Re1111 1r '
bave •ner11. •n· ho eel U &...1•-1· l•I aacl IUptfV aory IGEN••nomcE ......... -... ,ncuu rulUoo .... IUllltl·Tillk.40roll• Xlnt
th1a1la1m •'*1 work· m · ---'*· atilllty uHatlal. 1PMiJN0 --,.._.. qllincl. Womm'• !uro-Coodition. tzlOO. lvn,
lolWilhPIDPlt. !Q•llOO Delivery w lat wty ,....._ ........... •· IAISDIBLIRS Gold~v!f.Plauoum peao 1Hdalit.J at.ore lo IOHHI.1)1n.flH311
Newport enter Jon· cam.a rf v ~l~tla ~~., t ~·~ c:-e.J,.-:, ;z ~ IWAUHOUH Scrap ~ ~ = Aatlque etovt kitchen
U U I F lJ ti I T.. E I WCTOI •Dl•mooda I &.. av raqew/"'m,llDtcoad. on: tlt'e f'nt H ary. u me a_pp Y ue conom u car re-tar1_ 1rol-1~ml•J Ttm . •~ .. --•• _ l.l.'"'81M9ff .~~~'.!..~:.....C.all for Decorator Item ms. beoefita ' DrOlk •b•r· Earl'• Phamlllna. wt quired. AdWU oo.ty . .2~ wo.ld bl T'ldl ... iempcn17~ .__, Earp while JOU leam. _..UIWl"T-
101. For Interview Newport Ave, Cotta hrt. J)tr day. No colltcl· departmeat wlll be --_,.,,.11/P' Met6liltW. H E R 1 T A G E TNILOOI
phone: Mm nmMHW Ina. suo/mo. net + r har1ed wltb tlae ......,,,....,.. INVISTl(ENT will --......::==---'::u:esi:~~~Vci CASll9$ boa111 +pa allowuce. rupoulbllltJ t 2m1fo'iwllnAvelR tuch you treatlve wuherwcirb.'50
JactitEKVP 1 h b • Wutminater/Hunt· .,,.,. IP"a&ah, Md GtMral DMICiOl flnnclna. SOil 11. SALIS 1 1 c a od •· Fullerton, ln1ton Bearh area. repair tom~ ol ,....._._C.. chan1ea, lnveato-r de· $70,000~ aellin& by
AtBICAH :tm·~~~i~~{t'in!8 sa. tlt1•1 •11•ttm1 wltlt ~~haetWfolJow. W ~~7 .,.,, velopmetaltCOWlllhl. obone. cooeolt.be Old-Wllltr , STATllA* 81o'.92!12or.-. · Deliver L.A. Times to m • ,_. aH atuu ID& available· 1 ave_....p.or......, Exper cowuelors re· lot untouched tu oak with bHll hult. M
500NewportCeoter0r. c•"u;--ER · homes in H.B. It C.11. from~ ....... Repty • people to WOlt l9Pf'Oll. ctiYelOO'XtCGmm. Theis 1helters, oil ~pro-080 NBffO..SlOOEOEM /F ......u UAJI .-. ....... , toJtftWtblr, • ....._re .............. -10 d111 delivering ID uauaual ~ for duct. Prof. I.II
Fut lrowioi illal&i'ance 1-------a1tet1 baa OPeQiQJ in Ba~
account• recefvible TELi.ER
Must be able to work ·__,mo. + ~C.-_.. --telepboiae dired.oriea lo r plush Lido llar na ---.:t.~~--Sat. "Sun. Olber bn lo boaua. ~ble car. W..& Houn: 1 -s:aPJI, 4 the Oranse Co. area. rttht penon. de. Vlllaie, NB olc. Proven GARDEN GROVE .. ' be arraQ&ed. APPlY In StMUl~. ll8W &:St or5dayaperW9M. Ex· Wort {our avail. ttal Interview. Call phone claaen only nd ASSISTANCELEAGlJE
person: Kerm-lllma Delivery men over 18 for Coitdleia,CAilaT periearerequlred. d1yll1h hn. Men or Vince~. apply. Mr. La Rue 2lllth ANNUALOR.C'TY.
Hardware, -Harbor L.A. Tlma ,lo homes m4>MM321. Pleue call'°' 18 ap. women onr 18 wllll ~ S1H30Ztofu· •ASHOMTIOUI '
deft. lapW ad•ute-..--ns. ... ,. 11Cllt penoe, _,.,. CBlvd .. CQ!taMeg. ~~/:.,.m ~~: re ~aig. Pilot la lan POlatmeat. 9:30·5 PK, ~t~~:a ..:-=~~ Private At.bletic Club •S~S* & 5 ,.,i°'~
LASSIOOMAIDIS No co I J e cl Inc . E~up~yr. ~:.:~~una~l !!~~~ru Friday, PleHant outdoor wort, seeking allraetive, ,.....:* .... ,, COllUMtlllarate w1U. 1&perlente, paid =-~·Call:
AD AGENCY
RECEPl'IONlST
Enter the eaclint world
of adverlla1nJ ..
Beautiful Fuh1on
hland offices. Wust
bne 10od telepnone
manner and accurate tnlaJ . Pleaty ol room
(or t.il&ht penco to. ad· vuce. Call Sbaroo at
IM·!!ff
ADKIN COORDINATOR
, -New NB Oftlce Busi·
aeaa Uoiwnity. DeP'ft
pre(. $ll,.li0 to 117 ,621
yr. EOE M/F. Reply
Goldeo Gate U. 818 W 7th St. IU 1001. LA90017
ADVERTISING
FULL TIME LAYOUT/
PASTE-UP
Responsibilities include I layout, type1elting,
paating.up ol ads for
• new1paper reproduc·
t.ioo.
When you take your
place as a Teller at t.be
Newport Office ol Loi
Aqeles FeckraJ, you'U
experience the recogni-
tion you deserve.
Substitute ci.11room 'S4QO.k50/mo. + boaus. mlDoriUea encoura1ed ___ ..... .....,u1. vallddrlvenlic.•Cllif. personable, DOD · BrldaJ ahop aJteralioos NOV16-7U9PM
aidtt for ESL procram 646--0&37:ff6.*4 toapp'"· Uc. plates req. You can 1mokin1 pencn to hen. :fi·~Mesa. NOV.'8U.5:38PM.~ needed t..u HunUnJtn · 'Y .. "" to •fhr die pb·onea It 111 .. t ·-1 """' -8550SfAHI'Of'l,~ • n-a"h ci""ty School t Dental .... ~ earn .... -... . or u .... --DC.. • o th d I • El ,..._, la moredesiendinlooyour Clerical S:30All·2PM. BumaPI!. 3/hn. per day, SUl/br. r o ont .c 115 .t lllCUTIYI _!!8m~';.l'l_:,,.stha .. ry1. speed ol delivery. For II on-Fri. Call Al, SICllTAIY GRAN DllA 'S VJC· Apply 735 14th St. H.B. D;ffded, full time poll· ·--·• ....... ._........, •• "' · d 1 7S2 7905 or secretary trainee. TORIAN Sota. -celleftt ~8851 hon, exp. neceasary. N._._y per. Ge.ntral office. imme . au 1nmenls ,..-. .... · ........ ...._ _____ NwptCe!UrLa om ...,.
· HH405 A ewport Beach In· Pleue apply 1n penoo folio:_~ short train· UCB'T /SIC'Y w ce. condlUoa '®. &Q lf >'.OU J>OWSS t~~ ex· Clerical D E N T A L A s s T v e s t m en t I St o c k ltZ2 Plarentia, Colla in& apply at t.be Neat, fr011( Office ap-Ask for April N4-tS1' Oat Bufftt $105. Table
penence or a muumum W..ta.t chalralde neceas' Brotera1efinD llu Im· Maa loc. nearest you, al pearance req. for this Secretary IUO. Chairs U40.
ol l year recent cuhler· 3· 11 :30 PM lloa·Fri. 4 day 30 hr~ Lafuna mediate cpenJq for Ei· Girl With • 5 d 1:30pm, Nov. 4th Ir daily prestliiously localed P IT Recptlonist for Rocker 1150. DrfiJ.er Inc experience, light Clerical duties on adult Hilla 7TMm · ecutive Secretary with car .or aya t.bere after at 8:30am, firm II ba d ol amall Irvine Office. Fil· lll!C!. '6CHll1
typina and an aptitUde unit of Paycbiatric "-t ·1 ._._, _ _. ,_. word proctnln& e1· 'Pr:;: :¥~!~-~.P!'..t; 10:30amor1~3Jpm. nee ·ti:: a/:.' .u; !n•· Phones.~ typ. Two 18th Century
for detail and fi&w'es, Facility. Haodlepbooes, UO<U a ,.,_,.wan_., perlence to wort for -._... •w 810Lemon.Oranie ·1 m1. Hn f1exible. Cea· Windsor chain chtra
Loi An&eles Federal can misc paperwork and pa· wim~ = M: .!>f· Pres. • G.M. Applicant W . Calhfterl,l5H057 113 W Cb est nut , ~;~~th· :i ~::: tenoial r...uta. 97$-0tlZ drop· leaf tabfeL'1\iL
provide you with an ex-Uent request. No typmg 1~ ~ll av · llD· mu1t have 2 Yrs H · Halrdreuer wanted with Anaheim eculivea for multi· AatlorA.Oaterhout torian 1ola, aideooatd1 c e I lent benefits nee. but prefer some m 't. a 646-2411 for perlence, portray ea· f0Uowin1 only. VU1a1e US50Harbor Blvd, G.G. national orga-'iation. s1e-••y etc. f75=Ml
package, flexible boura, clerical or medical app · cellent communication Fairllall.•llOO 3019EnterJN'IH,C.M. Xlnl~~~· to~with A..-~-·-,__ ..,...c" •O~O
Cree continental beck&round. Position COOi~ stllla. Noabortband re-u••n us"'"-•. T••u ual Em lo er ---....,... I'! breatl· ... -and , .. _ I ail ' s 0111rUM1 ui....... "" n.iwu> vv• ..... co. dftl beneflll P/"m•.,.. .. -ve &ood •••••••••••••••••••••.!• ~... uJC op-a so av ,or at.Sun _.." G llY· 7JH070 rcO.E. Reflnery f:Tc· olfen an ursln& Contact Juile aftei u " • lUI -e:~~!'n~or career ad· 9th:30-eSe6PllCapistranoBy NMewt Eburopeanl Ca!~· •ALNtlDAY jlPportunlty or hiih in· LVN'a &: Nurses Aides 8:30am, {n4)7S2.f00.1. ~!i':!y'~mWeilmlturralnat~ I Mllt1l't1t,
· a ua e exper enc.,,.. P/TorFfJ't-2or3.1-11u. come PLUS c.aah needed lD 74 bed atiJJed AC~C-. "' ·-11
a5702 Sta .. , • ., Nov 9 App'"' m' ~ b d f 1 1 1 _,. w/expr. a1.mo Kenmore refricJor 3~n. For immediate con· '""" · v Prefer expel' Secretary onuses an ran&e nun DI facil ty. A I 11952 acArtbur Blvd. -.siduatioo.. pleue call person 9-4. PM. 3110 to manaae office tor benefit• ha t.be Costa shifts. Pre-certificaUoo Ste. 100, Dou&las Plau SICllTAIY old, copper ' rost John Laun: CLBtlCAL Newport Blvd. Newport local tu/lln firm. Mesa area. Reprdleu Prosram avail. Salary lrvine.CA.tz715 · Someone wbo doean't Cree, 5 .,._feet hlih. Call PAITTIMI Beub .1714) m3440 ! Plea.ae Call Mr. Vance ol experience, writeC.F. def en dent on exper. mind worting for a liv-955-HA2183R.BOR AR~,'
Looldn& for lntettsUnc DomeaUc · &41·3161 lfoq,Sal Seara, Pres., Box 711, Sa ary review after ' llC..r10MST ilia. RalMI without ult· U\
It' T . 1Career Womans asst. 3 • f\.WorUt'h.76101 3/mo. Call Director o1 Typin&. Jilin&. ln&ifyourwortbit.3&irl APPLIANCESE.RVJC~ :b~:U,~nd. Y&:i::·..;ao altemoomaweel.Ucht F•111 ti' /H•1 '1 •1 HOSTESS N en1ineer 'a office, office. Expr. or trainee. Wewbuyelll.-d•DPli•~
· . Houaeklleepln& er· u me or new PART PART TIME Newport Beach. E1· SU-9237 -es recona .. 1 ... r. Uonw--.. Olls pql.;.~s per rands, laundry. Some lownbome project io We have openin1 for . . , oedepced. fl}OOtO. apolitoca. S*f,n'l ....... at ......... 646-7431 meal preparation. Costa lleu. Only He>1ta1. Apply between homemaker or student, SEC RETnA~EY /PART llUY a-•a~IS l•!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!Bl!!li••!!!!!I . 540-l234. EvesMHOIB • ruponalble persods 3ud5Jlonthrouch Fri. 4·6 bra wt. Typin&· llC..r10MST · ... _.-y-...--. 3201.......,.ltYcl CLlllCAL Dom u· -need. appl1. s.alary Aoriesu Mariner2807 W. ftlin&. In C.M. vie OCC. Santa Ana Law Firm NB firm aeeta respooal· Les 967-8133 Mewpwt,CAt2U3 w ea cs. ne1otiable..caIJLindaor Pacific Coast Hwy, 556-1 Bid&. needs c-001eniaJ ble, dependable Sec'y Speed Queen Washer & lorklo1_~ary jobs Uve·in. Mature Wom1J> Jartle ·dan.mDu NewportBgd! PAIT·l'MSIC'Y prole11lonal lodlvidual 15-20 bnM; ':tMac· dryr, like new$J1;5·
E )=""" cose UUIUI:. • to ca.re for small boy. u_.__ d witheapr Hrs·8 30lo2 rf G M .... --*-14 Poaltlob requires ac·j qua ..... ,y VICKJ~N Ref Req. 760.9333. .._..,..,aper', f/Ume, Balboalalandlawolfice, · · : · cur. m; ap. w Aaue&nu....... -curate typinc, 2 years E yer &~. 'J2G.UQ7 6AID•B apply m penon: Beach S H O RT H A N D Jloo thru Fri. II per hr. I and .E terms pref'd. Fr i d I e , S 2 8 O.
ttlated experience., OpegJ:J!>.5:30/54()..(N()() - -Gardeoer foa-our com· iloue, IU Sleepy REQUlRED. Flex bn. Call Ilona for appt. C1U: HPM.13HC. Washer/Dryer~
Colle&epreferred. BEAUTY Driver for auto parts merce part facility. 1 Hollow Lo ., L.B. Call ...... I .... 14..,/""SH-IOO""-":::...l____ hwuber, SWO. Apt she
Clerical store. Must be 18 or year experience in ail 4M=l797. art·time wort, all type, llC..r10MST * SICnT AlllS * stove. 1100. ~H:t: ..
Pleue call Jon Pyle at PNlticiilGmSaioll over, have valid Calif. phase. of laodacape HOUSECLEANERS nofee.Lqi.inaBeach Law office In So Coast n.5Sb'10lotolpllones Gaffers andSaWtt~Clflt.
714/SS7·Bl. Eat • .219. Looll:ine f'o add to our JIC&.alCP/f lie. & &ood drivin& re-maintenance. Good Christian cleanln& 11/F 414-&7 Plua Area/ 1ood ap-forb1.11y~DevCo ill 1as ranie lite,,..,. staff several assistants. Local Newport Beach cord. Apply al: Hub command ol'..._ "'nt"·.. service needs belp. Exp. .,_,_ 'd ~arao~uired. Cail n--ut -.,,. w $lU. M§..4281 ... OSH ........ N.S RichardOuelletteSaJoo, Savin1s&Loanlwim· AutoSu~p:?· 2120 I ..... r.J ..... f but-'llt I art-tJme.--.exper . Bl uca ..._ ............ --l"'IA mediate -"'• for a H b 1 c u a~ua1e required. r;re .. •• ran. Motherhood Maternity· r. a . EspConlultanlOurs Br and New a at1>.
11._ 200 Ne.....-Center Dr.. .....--. ar or v ·• ·•· G ..... I a ""/hr --··1-,...., .,,,,... Li .,_, _ _._ &•u •-D till • I _._1_50005 -...,.. J Clert to wort rt &te-24&4 See Claud SwuuDI 11 ary,·-. .,,... ,... Boutique, Fashion vw...,,.... • ,,.........,.~....,, "'c. uras nqua·roxa e
Eq..t<>DDCY N.B. ll~e durin• weeJl d~ays.· · a nnual bonus, free Island, flex . hrs. 1--------tOZOBlrdlFAt'MEOE water distiller. ~~I Em..,.11/F ' Beauu-Generalofflceand1toct Drivers medical/Ille inaurance HOUSECLEAN'EBS lo Eves /wkend1. Call ReceptjcJldlt Newport/llMllO/Free 1899, must sell, $&IS . • ••!!II•••!!!!! r ~c....ys roomduUes.Mustbave EspPeopleooly.Brin1 and many ot ber tsllr.P/T,ear.~123 ._,M=im:.:i.:..:7:.:SMl51-:..·==-----1 •--.11-Sl,100+ IQ-H27 , ~11r....t-DllV Readout. Call for benefits. Call tor u a"' ""'!l!!!m _____ !!.--~wr.--Wub •---...... d A+---'•'-in C•--~-own tranaportatloo. aDDt u•.-.a• • r· = pa--.-E---rieneedfDrnewof· SIC'Y •-&• er, c..,..., w.,. .. I ..----..--Need haintylists,sbam· M/T /W/F 8:30AM .·--pouatmeat.MCllldayt.bn& HOUSBKEEPER/LIVE _, ,_ ~,... OC Airport'.__ t.a 95, Dryer, ps, c~n.
try, Ca:ftet inst., poopel'IOll&usistants. l :OOPM . all day DllYBSWAMTB Friday,IAll.ePll. INCoullkwit.bldrl2 CrewSuperviaon,wort 2c~e~~·o1°A~ · · area w worts &d S8S R~g ~~~~~~ ~ ·b~e~: T09aalary. Thursdays. ~call: Respooa1ble. matun, 11 C7141"'""97 yn .old, lite cleao.ln1. P ~~~m_!._ n 5enlnc.s,_& duties. all : Julne, ~l~ ~!Pek:t~!re~abi' frost free, llSO; Fniet.er'. -1 >" -B!TeGa~NB--s . ....__,•Parisla 1r1orov•.*-ti••• mMst speak aome •~•-· upervtSwl *"--• '"---•p · · upri1hl or cbnt. 175 ...... • • • "' uaJIJ.,, ad meal 11 Fri. 0 " the door to door sales -. ._... enoo· 2·5/yrs. lecal eaper. each.541M1513orsa.Ml5 • b It l I l I ----'$40.8'-"'-=1"-'77___ 71~ vance Oil.· ENERAL HELPER· •·•liab •lib to travel. c-ol ---. E·· llel AIY -R ... bor Salary,,._ ,.._,, "'-an nrc ec ura . MEWPOITIAUOA lam§pm.m.PS. lluat bave driven lie •. per mo. Call aft.er ... ,-1 l l-1 ~-,.. c.·· ,,,,_ .. -_ ........ -...... r• ; Refriferator, Yer/ c.1t~~I ~!~!~!'rq~f\~~\~; Poeb s~~NB seek· SAV..-S&LOAM Dry cleaners counter oeat hllldwrttlni1. • ~ Tues. (714) 710-0152 ~,..: ~na~~Y ~~ l!!!Bl!!!!v!ld• .. 11!!!!!!!.ll.•EO•E•!!!!!!!!!! s~:;"°' Newpor1. auto deftolt. sw. ~
architectural renderist inc E1thetJcian's with 1100 Int.Aft,. Ml ;omllltr~'~ ~7..!, week. 1112e~',!>-~~· 5454728· CdM. motivate. Van or large UCWllOMST law firm. pt st.ilJI~;! ~993=·90IOc::cP'n,klaitt:...___. __ _
It penpective It layout followin1. 61}S700 Pl!!·_.. .u.;ii n.5111 Houaek~/Uve-ln car is needed. Call Part Ume marninCS for pend able, resourceful, &as dryer lllS
man.. Salary ne1. Cail * a· 11P1 1,1--------1 IFYOU Just1llrtincupia abusi-Span.isb apeatin& OK.j Medlallerchants localReaJFAtateoffice. :.,.o1n . .,;.!!Doter. Josie: §7~3l» · Geor&e:9ff.M. CLERICAL haveaaervicetoolferor ne11 of your own? A Local references. Llle 21H2'1·2'156EQE Hvy pbOllel, typio1 a .., ~
Art Gallery Sales, $11 W * * * coodstosell,Dlaceanad good ••Y to tell people ccd'1, etc. Wkndt olf. musl Ph,ytlis4N-O'l'll Sb · I I k ·& E*tric Whirlpool d.tyr. mature penoo, p/Ume, .,.... in the Dally Pilot about il ii riJI a io.. l4M707 AIJ -1 PC, 01 c er good cond. 1125 ortl'llde
15'-comm. Laauna. NoG·smoker, .......t detail JOIN THE Classified Section ... cost Claulfled ad. HOUSEWJV!S, earn ea· P -Ratauraot wa!'e ouse person for for&1s.f73.?!t0 .. .....,.. # I yr..& ... ~ •y t d dded EYDlll$ Jecllw. Coob. Busboys acuve sporUware ml&. 4M-20E. for busy otrice. Irvine. ~A PboneSC.5678. Pbone&G5118. ra mone:y an a & Dishwuben. ApplY lo Shipping exp. helpful MntlCICr'fftu!
AUT0 .. 011V. E AP/AR payroll collec OSHMAN'S at la1 adv•"'••es workin& B·.. B . I ....... -s K • · ' ' . I •1y ,., .._ W• are -nu ·-... penon. ...er/ nslo . _.._ e a r s e n mo r e ,&-Uoa11, 11).11:-. 1'our. re-: II I ···········. ·····,,··· ... : ~t •• 2,! your home. "' ,.._ • ...., -c u R•fn'c•ra•-Xlnt _ .. -·· coo. Send mume & re-SPORTING --lo& adults with pltlbant I •. S ..... ,/Hte..... 645.fls7 ..... ~~ COUMt'aMAM ferences t.o Box 7S2 Dai-l'IOllallties who would llSTAUIAMT Part U sales 25 to • Dealership or foreign lY Pilot, PO Box 1560, GOODS JAMITOl-ft /t interested In working El Rancbito now hiriJlg 50% co::. Call Ron Fri&idaire Gas Cl~h~s
auto parts experience Cotta Mesa, Ca9'.2626 We curreotly have an We're seeking to bwld a labor pool of Jlmamnedi tla:0ter openint 0 w'oforr ~ in. Sales & . Prom~on CM ff2·U42. NB fl~ 7932 Dryer. $50.
Preferfed. Call Glen for n~ .. t ENTRY LEVEL clerical quallf1'ed graph'c rts I ( l .. with Da11u PilotCarners 548-6351 I -~ an appolnlmenl. """"· eeper position CJl)ell within our departments 1n 1our3 ..-.ppe~°::ea. °:'r y:~ weekends, day sbift. For 10 to 1$ Jears old. R~AURANT Swil~hhoard answerin& Maytac washer & dryer, IOY CAIYll Good opportunity for Division Office just have experience in '"~mposing room of interview, call: Scott Uolim lte earnings Catenng rum bas open· service. FfJ' & !'ff eJ!P· xlnt cood. $175 ;tor
.OU.SIOYCI rightper:!1'.,..,1 minutes from South camera department---'-and a-1·nter-t... Wheeler <m> '15-0100. available to ri•ht in& for respon, adult to belP.fui, bul wtll tram. $300both 840-8100 .,..,._ ""'" '" ,.., '""' EOEJl/F • operate Hobart auto le11ble handwriting req. · AMDIMW CoutPlaaa.Postuoare· in newspaper production, consider the · person. Hr. 5:aoPM to n · call:646-IOOO.E.O.E. G .E . portable dls·
640'444 Tus··~· o. kkfullffDetl e, Ar/R, quires ability to handle opportunities offered by the Daily Pilot. We Live In Housekeeper 8:30PM , Monday thru 1 cer " leam portloo -hwa1her. white, ~tnt ------.... llnfe. , varietyolc.lericaJdutlet ·: are seeking to increase our part.time labor Cook I meal a day, Friday. Some Saturday CC';Otrol. E:q>. pref. but TIACta/ cond. $225 cash OO!Y·
Auto parts dtUvery • A/P, pa~roll, bichly or· lncludin& light ty~ln& force; lull·hme openings may develop In the Salary, room. board. avallablllly. For •r· will train. 9:30All lo CO~tOI 511·71$8 s&oc.k wort. Bath female f _.._ and 10-tey. Previous near future. W• are-tan· te,-t_. 1·n ,,.,,pie 8'1}fM3 po Int men t, ca I ; SPll, Men.Thur. &PM to F _,,.it ch ...;:W::;h:.... :..:.,""--1-W--h-• -._ A male 1ppllc1nts can .• e gaol, resp., ti· clerical experience de-"' """' '""..,,. ~y 642·4321, ask for Ben lPM S~; ~47 for or non·.,. .... ex ance •r poo as· !!r "' we Jc 0 me. APP 1 Y : per. non4moter. Grow· sired. with skills in the following areas: Local Amway Diltributor Willi.am a. appt Lons Kftcben. prosram. Place up lo 15 Dryer =-3 ~old, i lnt
Automotive Supply Co., mg .Mfr. and Ser. related Paste-up. Ad building or page makeup la belpiAJ m:J!noos ""!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Japane1e aludents in cond. ~5~$Sf.1DS
1522 Newport Blvd.. business. Good salary Please call Terry Taylor experience desirable. AbOity to work fast earn money & two .,,, Retail Sala homes in your comm uni· Fridce. Admiral. 1 yr old.
C.11. 132.7300 at 714/SS7-118Bl, X214, for ~:x1~f:'h~~t~~n~n::~.pressu.re necessary. ~!o':e:ry::d:! ~~ --,· .. -IT-TI-M•E--1 $1LYEIWllS ~Te~~ ~d· ~ Apt~e·~OllD·SW.
Babylitm for 2 children IMllllet111rAI.._. information. Offset camera production operation/. tervi~C~SS'l-5675 ,,_ ~IMdl Sp~a. Salary appU:x~ -=:'6-o:a.,_,y;'.__"_· __ 1_e_x_1_ia_i
a few days a week. 4 to5 Pottery Shack:. Business stripping. Experience In shooting line and Mxt'n'itT..... llalllog~a~ be We hne an immediate 11500. Send leller to: Refrigerator. $175. r..-.1 hnforNBbome. Office Aaltstant. Li&ht EqualOppty halrtone work a must. Any strippin& or Noeaper.req' · usl openiag for a Jilli time 11125 CentineJa, Apt. F. Cond. v"!!"..""
1131-311:11 Bookkeeping. Good Employerll/F platemakin1 experience plu s . Pref. aomeabopexper. dependable and availa· sales penoo wlt.b ti· Santallonica,CAICM04. · .. Ml-0 Babysitter needed, H.B Telephone Manner Production-oriented person wbo can work for amall mf1. firm In ble on call. N/t Bch perience in fine 1pecial· TR VEL
area, pref. elderly, your lNeces~ary. Tue-Sac t. Ex· Clerk Typist-Trainee, inMdepekndent.ly highly desirable. NiJhu. 1Irpvp1!1t~. J!lhRiley for !!•050h10
1° lllan area. ty atore, Woman's wear. For n~rth AHGu.nENTU'n•ton lkycltt IOJO
hle.oroun.84().2Z50aft ens1ve omrany Costa Me sa cabinet ar ·up. Abilltyto speclypeforavariety. --~ '""" E1cellent commission " •••••••••••••••••••0•• 6 Benefits. App Y in shop. Phone, fllln&. of advertising and commercial materials. : MAIDS incentive proaram &I Beach a1ency. llin. 2 Oiamond Back BMX
per.son. 1212 South learn p11roll & basic Experience with electronic markup : needed immedialelJ. PAYIOlLCLm company benefits. App· yn ~ .. Compute.r ell· Boys Bike. Lilte~.Set --------1 Pacific Coast Highway. bootll:eepUll. 50me typ-desirable, but not necessary. Ability to : E 'd Apply Aftllt Experienced payroll ly In person to Mr. ~ience preferred. up for racin1. 1185.
Buklnl Lac11Da Beacli. in . 540-5578. typeset wovld be helpful. • S::C1eineate Inn, J5 clerk inctudinl tax re· Falkner. 45 Fashion 9939· 760·1559.67U403 j '
TB.La ~ Salary depends on experience. Tht Daily : Avenlda Eaplandian, turns Ir insurance re-Island , Newport Travel Ageu needed for SWAP · Boy's 10 spd
Local Newport Beach Tlil lluttt ~ CL.Ill( TYPIST Pilot is ao equal opportunity employer. : Sao Clemt1M. ports. Hmit. Bch. aru. Baeacll, or call for i.JI. Automated Irvine AJen· (worth approx 175) for
Sariop Ir LoeD baa im· on thl Or-..Collt PIT positioa open wit.b Women and minorities are encoun&ed to : 150·200 employees. tervlew appointment. cy. Sab~ ea~r. pre-&ids l0tP!l64HllO .
mediate opmiDa for a B s apply. : MA~T 842:§221. (714) Sf4.,2'24. fe~. Exper. m com· Beach cruiser llnl cocid
teller. SlrLand Cataline DAILY PllDT M~l~;!·~~~. rri: POlb Salon ln NB haa Printers E.O.E. mer~··1 travel a must. custom made. Cali
exp. preferred. Ex· c·LASSIFIED Ing a. aoswerine phones ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT openinfo for manicurist RI veraide counties Sales Lad1 Wanted. PT. Qualifie11oqlx. 957.2700 551-4407 foa-details.ll~t
celleal opportunity in a also req. 31+ hn per 330 W. IAY IT"../..· COIT.A MESA. CA. m2t with ollowiAt. Salary fastest frowilla Printin& For Gift Slote. Newport Travel see from 1125. tol240.
fut 1rowtn1 a11ocia· ADS week. Send resume to: • ANIOUAl.-P'O•TVH•rYIMP\.Ova• : neaotlable .r7W700 Plant. Ras need for 4/C UdoAru.f7J:Ol!ll OutsideSaJeaRep Columbia hpeed &ir420 lion. Salary com· KACOR DeveloJ>ment • ••••••••••••••.••••••••••••• , ............ •• Medical ~t. W Strlppen qualified in SMIS needed to sell .rruisa. inch like new. SU. ~=~!.a~ll~tuhra!~ r~::.':wS::·w~:;, Co .. uoo Quail St. Ste. ~~~~c"'-Yf~b~~ :r:;~~~::J:'~~':. Teleptblone aaluea-nt. ow ~e:es:~~~gne~ ..... 84"'"'7:....;·77:..:.'42=------Tf. w:=:rr ( 842 •5878 } ~·r ~:-~ °( 7c:~l 11°:!r~ back ~I Lul~~P· r!c: ~e c:e;: ~::'u~•:,::.e (~l~i !.~.~.~!M!" ...... ~~.~lill•la••~!!!
1.Deao;yPa111ia r.oT· 11/F/D ofllce for prlvate PriAUn; · •1,~ paatFttrelepbpon/Te 917-3870 MOWJ6t!Ff,
7U MS• One Col-W.ite J•neral practice. 440 1/T .. _~ ll..a exp. or T-a.A'!:r Redwood 218 3ffk~& -w-••• •o• ai C preuroom m: ' aalea polition. Apply in ',,_. 20' Ion ._, ,,._, -• fost Ctecll ~val COCITAIL r Dr., SU. N, .II. llon 3.:30 pm-Fla ah. pel'1oo lllO Placentia, Accuracy a m . 'Coo· 4. I! also red SA•W&LOAM WAITllSSIS 5'MIM. Tw 2.30 pm-F\nish. c.11. or eall: llr. Jones lr•ctor.15N))o fenclna. t>a • fman1 11°'~.1"··~B F'bld what you want In Ichabod's In H.B. ' SEU. Idle lteml with a Tburt·Fri. f.S. Apply Ma·Olll. URGENTLY NEED ~~·~ ~~~r.:.
Dally Pilot CJ'uslfleds. Fllllerton, llOtxptr. net. Daily Pilot Cl111lfled lllO Plactatia CM SALIS 95 D E P E N D A B L E pr tm IAl(iJne.ltHW,
WttraJn. Nlorp/tlme. ......,..,,._ _____ -! .:.i.e1UU~.._-X11il.LX:a;,iXJJ!.I Nau1ht1 Lady bome PERSON Wbo ca.a wort 1111111!1------· Pilat ...................... ~ ''DE.!.a~Y~•=l~nt1::.1.:.ib~=·::i:P::.b_o_ne_;-1 111•11 Pilat parties, needs en· Twit.hoot ~rilion for GIANTSALE!!n...-:, ,_ tzaor : I · · ··' · · · ··· · · ·· · ·· ····~. thuai11tic Wei 114ies. 11" oll company bl Hnlwart1 110. ~b-
, • COOK lllAIWT AlllOll Pl=SUO ~:.~ := ~ai>&:~ ~lo.P~: ¥~i.'l1~~ '?lllls loedu*ll ,_._., COOi : Mr'lllNIB(I ....,..... .. PrH., Soutlt•t1ttra al 1lau dr, sm. tollapl Milli 1Mn1•1• 111111 Nt• .Europeaa Cafa. ftlftM',.-IWIUllhll8'1 LCI Petroleum. lcs 11t, P'l. w/bnlwr.C...jaeb. 1'e Dally Pilot bas an lmthecliate openma ll••t be eaperincecl. M.611 t.a-!P, Wd, 'h. ma 145. IOO ctmeM bl:I. ~
for • Cta11lned A«OUatt Beceluble Startin~ Newt. rrr m· GWHIC mJ ''"' .--• .......,....,.. ea. lc· ue.a· ~ 1$ ::re..':.':~,'=,!':!':.:).. cloda -'· ~ty ID lmD\tdlate opeal111 ill tht creallvt PoalUoa Halla for ver 20. • moe. H · =a oodA · t IJI
.... 1'11 hall Ume job NQUlres •hlch ~trotn ... p I auo ttrvlcta departmeat now lllista for dynamic ... , .... to perleact. A,,,, la -~·COllltnletloa~
..... o1 tttvney. lurClllitul apptirant Bl¥d. ~ -~ Ml·UJllt artist. R...,_ IOOd ""'1ft ::a:. r~ t= r;•~•: :m 1t1dor. •· Br4wr ti 11 tiida, -.w tJpe .. .,. 18111 ._ a 10 key -cltaip and apaUal ...Wvtb. ablllt)' to ... ,,1y tompao t nt c....._. 0.-!l.te.
adclU.1 .. ~ ..... by IOUCla. !srtllfllt c~ ST TS lj)tt type, .... llll.9lrlllm or tecJlftlcal , _ _._._ v-·~ 1 • WAJTRll&IWAITIR .... .. .... ...
tomp111 'tatflt1 •lntauiial dHtal, la p.,lue .. for drawla1 ability, howled&eablt In 11e-;::'"..w. 7.:...1!1~ wlcar forwtdliw ...._ llrlaCM. ....... .,., m,... to die ffllftWI ~hm TiW&l IO ~lldloo, ID underlt&OCU.C" r.tall .~ .. -IHt~ ''"· •:•1 :111~----·· ••••<•1>1111 .. mw.111.c..caM1ta. ;::r-;•4t'r':B · UEEDED ~hla detl11. and atlillty to meet ~ .. ~!!!~[ •fcra PM, 1109.rn. Iara ••1• ,fr .. 'ff.· .:,, " • ••. ,.~::i.,.cec1 but tun to .un for, ~th <l~ u.s. "· :~11 ':t.!':r. ':
Utt "' .,..., Ptlot .. , ........ , ..... ,c.
dlrtdetJ. Vas .......
"*'81lj.
Clll •.,.at. m
E..n s:t0-'80 per Wiik. ~~~lltot beatf'lt l*k.,. lncludiac ..
TriPi I PrtDI. Ctl .... ff JOU h&Ye at '9alt Giie ,_.,a~
a1111 itlHoMll. ~~=.'°:!u•~,1~ ~ :O°'::t lll.IUlio~le• 1111 'n l '
OftANCll COAST DM. 't Pk.OT mw,~ .• •COITAW:Ol.-• .. ~"'~· . ... . . . . . . . . . . ....... ' .... · .... , .............. · .
Orange Co•t DAil V PflOT /Wtdnttd"1. November 4, ,.,
Samoyed, s months,
fem1le with papers. All 1boil w/receipts.
Hoaaebrolten. Loving
peraon11ity. Out of cbewiaf stage. $300.
"1t~·· Ext Ilk w/bltopen \op.
Ilk Jtlar lat. ~ Ac.
uuorlt1. Orif owar.
27 ,000 ml. 10,500 ta·-
COHHfll
CHEVROLET
•~ ..... r f I 1> j
I r'-j \ \1 t' '
S46-I 200 -·
DeSANFIS
CHEVROLET
4o1 S. El Camino Real
San Clemente
131-0580 492-8500
* * •••
. P11rchaSe of mi1ita17; Bir -bases eyed
By FREDERICK SCROEMEllL °' ................
Members of a committee
investl1ating possible sites for a regional airport to serve Orange
County have called ror studies or·
possible county government
purchase or military airbases
located in El Toro, Tustin and Los Alamitos.
Committee member s
indicated at a meeting Tuesday
in Santa Ana that they have
several ideas in mind in calling
for the so-called coat/benefit Santla10 Canyon east of tbe
atudles of relocatln1 all military Matine bue II amona locatiaDI
air operations from Oran1e under study for a major airport.
County to Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base ln north San Another poulblllty, aecordina
Diego County. to committee members, would
By eliminating operation.a at ..1i1. be uae of the Army reserve
the Marine•Corps Air Station-El •alrbue at Lota Alamitoe aa a
Toro, aircraft operations in base for private aircraft if the
Orange County skies )VO~d be bue were cloeed to military uae.
reduced -a situation that could Members conceded at the
free ''airspace" for operatlon.s meetin1 that relocation· of
at a regionfll airport elsewhere mllitary activities would be a
in the countv. A site in nearby blllion dollar proPOSltion. They
· County turnOut l>oor'
Only 10.8 percent vote in Tuesday's el~ction
The turnout in Orange O>unty
in Tuesday's election for school
boards, special district boards
and various initiative-type
questions was 10.8 percent, the
county Registrar of Voters office
reported today.
While breakdowns for specific
districts weren't available thia
morning, the registrar's office
said the countywlde avera1e
was well below the 15 percent
Shuttle postponed
with seconds left
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP) -Launch of the shuttle
Columbia was delayed today,
twice, and finally postponed
until Friday at the earliest.
Technical problems developed
with an agonizing 31 seconds left
on the countdown clock.
Joe Engle and Richard Truly
were strapped in their cockpit
seats, ready to fly, when the
clock was stopped cold.
Columbia, rilled with
half-a-million gallons of volatile
fuel , entered Us "terminal
countdown " flawleesly at
sunrise as excitement mounted
here for tJi.e ship's never-before
accomplished return trip to
space.
High hopes ended at 6:35 a.m.
PST when launch director
George Page revealed a
problem with a lubricating
device in Columbia's on-board
auxiliary power units. The APUs
ste,er the ship on launch and
stabilize its landing.
The astronauts, in the ship for
more than four hours, were
taken froin Columbia and back
to their crew quarters. They
wore smiles of resignation.
A last-minute problem also
halted the firs t attempt to
launch Columbia on her maiden
flight April 10; the problem then
was with communications
between computers. It was fixed
quickly and the ship launched
two days later.
Now. as then, a two-day
postponement is necessary
because Columbia's fuel tanks
mu st be unloaded and
decontaminated -a difficult
and l e ngthy process .
Unfortunately \ the weather
outlook for Friaay is none too
favorable. forecasters said.
Moreover, "It could be longer,
depending on what the problem
is with the auxiliary power
unit," said launch control
spokesman Hugh Harris.
He said too-high pressure wu
detected in two out or the ship's
three APUs.
"We know it will take at least
two days, so we're lootlng at
something like Friday -or
Saturday , ,or Sunday or
Monday," flight director Neil
Hutchinson told reporters at the
Johnson Space Center in
Houston. "It's going to take time
to get the filters out or the APU's
and purge them and clean them
and bring them back on line."
A PU manager Dwayne Weary
said NASA's experts felt the
units would have worked on
launch, but they were not so
confident that they covld be
restarted satisfactorily for
re-entry.
"We felt it might have been
OK. but we did not have the test
history and data and experience
to give us the confidence to go
ahead," he said.
Once the weather proved
acceptable, it seemed today that
(See SPACE, Page A%)
turnout that had been forecut.
Shirley Deaton, chief deputy
to reetstrar Al Olson, said final
results were known at 1:30 a.m.
-"ri«iht on schedule."
• No problems were reported
with the county's new $1.5
million vote counting system -
a syste m that performed
miserably during its first use in
the June, 1980, primary
elections.
Election results were not
remarkable. In Irvine, voters
opted for a $250, rather than a
$100, limit on individual
contributions to councilmanic
campaigns. At the same time,
COMPLETE RESULTS A.2:
LOCAL STORIES 81
th~ voters in the Irvine Unified
School District said the diltrict
should be permitted to increue
the interest rate on school
construction bonds beyond 7
percent.
Irvine voters, in a non-biDdint
statement, said the city sbouJd
proceed with plans for a $38
mllUioa eivtc center. City otflce1
today are housed tn a pair of
buildings in the Irvine Industrial
complex.
In Newport Beach, voters
overwhelmingly a1l'eed to an
increase in the city's tax on the
rentil or hotel and motel rooms.
That rate will go up from six to
eight percent.
In Laguna Beach, the city was
given permission by voters to
seek a loan from the state to
fund the city's financial
obligations in the Aliso Wat.er
Management Agency. a recional
network that provides for
sewage treatment.
Voters in Laguna Niguel
resoundingly defeated a
proposal to form a municipal
advisory cQuncil. The council
would have advised the county
Board or Supervisors on matters
affecting the unincorporated
community.
au1111ted . that •P.ctal. federal
le1lllatian milbt be required to .permit use of any money
aenerated from the sale of the
alrbues to f\md coutnadloa ot
new military aviation I acWtles
at Clllmp Pendleton.
In related actions at the
meettn1, the committee decided
af ainst pursuing further studies
o Bell Canyon, located several
m Iles east of San Juan
Capistrano, as a site for a
re1lonal airport.
The committee, _appoin~ by
the county Board or Supervison,
meet.a monthly. Its goal is to
identify a site for a regional
airport that would serve the
county's air transportation
n eeds, both existing and . . . ....... ·predicted. · ······ ·· ·· · -~·~· .... ..
committee member Don
CbristeDIOD, a developer, said
he'd like to see the El Toro bue
acrea1e returned to tbe tax
rolls. He said the land la localed
in a prime real estate area.
But the committee called ror
further studies involving both
Santiago Canyon and Chino
Bills, located near the boundary
between Orange and San Diego
counties.
Such a facility would reduce
dependence on John Wayne
Airport and provide a facility
Crom which long distance flights
could"leave.
............. Lm .....
A 21-Y«JT-old Newport Beach man, William Tate, died in thia accident Tuesda11 when hit .-i cot
smaaMd into a concTt'te support for tM Red HiU Aumue overcroisfng on the Corona del Mar Frff\001l
in Co.ta Muo.
Workers laid off
by troubled fir.ni
By K&ITH TUBE&
Oe4ty~ .........
American Home Mortgage
Corp., the Newport Beach-based
home loan firm saddled with a
four-count suit filed against it
two weeks ago by the State
Department of Real Estate,
fired 15 employees at the end of
the workday Monday, company
chairman John Rinaldo said
Tuesday. Earlier in the day, one of those
dismissed estimated the number
of laid-off workers to be between·
40 and~.
"We laid off what we call ~
junior sales trainees," Rinaldo
said. "They were brought on
primarily to handle expansion.''
Rinaldo said allegations of
fraud and negligence ·leveled
against it by state authorities
have had a negative impact on
the company, ma.king expansion
impractical at this time.
Rinaldo said the dismissals
were routine and affected only
five clerks and 10 sales and
training personnel. However,
another company source said
company attorney John Gloger
was among those let go. Also
receiving notice was director ef
mass marketing Gerald
Student dies
in car. crash .
A 21-year -old Dartmouth
College student vblting bis
parents in Newport Beach died
Tuesday when his small car •
veered off the Corona del Mar
Freeway and struck a concrete
support of the Red Hill Avenue
overcrossing.
William Tate, who
investigators said bad been
visiting his parents for the last
month al their Eastbluff area
home was killed about 9:30 a.m.
after his car slid about 330 feet
in the dirt divider before bitting
the support.
Brown calls solons
·to special session
Naughton. .
Gloger confirmed Tuesday
morning that he had been
dismissed.
··Two men came into my
office Monday and gave me the
news," Gloger said. He declined
further comment, citing possible
"complications."
California Highway Patrol
spokesman John Merritt said
investigators are considerlnt
several explanations of wh)'
Tate's car got so far away from
the freeway's northbound lanes.
State shuts down
home for retarded
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Faced with an increasing drain
on the state's already-strained
treasury, Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr . today ordered the
Le1islature back to Sacramento next week for an emergency
special session, Capitol sources
said.
Darryl White, the c hief
administrative officer of the
Senate, said Brown's staff
delivered an order to him callina
the lawmakers back to the
Capitol next Monday at 9:30
a.m .
White said the governor's
·order limited the session to
fiscal issues and
reapportionment.
The proposals co.me in the
wake of a state deficit, caused
by increased spending and
declining revenues, estimated at
more than $500 million for the
current flScal year.
Late last week, Brown said be
would make decision on whether
to call a special session "within
a few days."
Democratic legislative leaders
want to handle not only the
state's fiscal problems, but also
take care of reapportioning the
state's four Board or
Equalization districts.
Republicans. meanwhile, are
wlllln& to return to Sacramento
to consider fmancjal legislation,
but oppose dealing with
reapportionment, fearing the
Democrats will attempt to
thwart GOP efforts to overturn
the reapportionment plan.
During the last legislative
seaaion, the Democratic
.majority approved bills to
change district lines accordinJ(
to the 1980 census.
American Home publicity
director Joseph L. Groner later
denied Gloger's firing, as did
Rinaldo early Tuesday evening.
When informed that Gloger
had confirmed his dismissal,
Rinaldo responded, ·'There must
. have been a misunderstand.in&.''
Gloger came on the telephone
line five minutes later and also
said "There must bave been a
mlsundent.anding."
This morning, another laid-off
employee who prefer red to
remain anonymous, placed the
number or furloughed
employees a~~ to 40.
"Sales traipeea, clerical and
vart-Ume 'people were laid off,"
the. source said, "aa well as
others in the mort1a1e
company, le1al and escrow
departments and in accounting
<See ftRINGS, Pase A.2)
Mesa shoOting death resolved
D i strict Attorney rules 'justifiable homicide'
The •bootinl death of Costa
Mesa resident Arnold Nub
Broylea, 37, _by a pollce,
department Special Weapons
and Tactics team hu been ruled
"Justlfiable homicide" by UM
Oran1• County District
-Attorney's Office. ..., ... _.._ I Jn a statement nleuecl today,
STILL OFF UMfTI -The oaean and sand llt llaln Beach DeputJ ~ A~.lolm
Park in Laguna Beach remain quarantined today after ~~ ~ltuattaew,:
crews diverted about four million gallons of treated sewqe au .. ,..._., u. ._ .. 1 Of llr.
onto the beach Tuesday. The crews ·are repairlna a aewer aro1 tea, l»J oflleen wbo line and had to divert treated ernuent tnto a storm drain boe.ur ............ ...,Wt tlaM
channel whJc,li terminates at the beach. County health tb•J were bebll attaead bJ
oTficlall are "'onitoring the beach dally. l . blm, wu JUltlftable ~
under California law."
Broylel wu shot Oct. 7 ln the,
Costa Mesa home be and bl.I
parent.a and dauchter ab&Nd at
117 PrwkUo Ave.
Conley said tbe tnvesUuUoa
dlacloeed that Broyl• bad been
clriDldq, takJq drqs ud ...
actin1 ID a Yw.t maaaer-'*'
Costa lleaa offleen were
1ummGMCI.
.. ..... tbj om.-. ..........
realdmee, tbeJ llldleitid llalit ...................
blf• ........... "-'., .... . H•••.._ ................ •
RAMONA (AP ). -Patient.a at
a home for the menlally
retarded were beaten and
threatened with a knife, the
state or California claims after
moving them out and closing the
56-bed institution.
The action was taken jointly
by the state Department of
Social Services and the state
Com mqnity Care Licensing
Division, but operators ol
Heritage Ranch said Tuesday
they will appeal the 30-day
suspension of their license.
llllCI CIAIT IUTlll
Mostly cloudy tonicbt '
and Thursday mornin1
with partial cleariDI
Thursday afternoon.
Variable bi&h clouds.
CooJer days with hi1b1
Thursday ran1in1 from
the upper 60• at the
beaches to mid-709 inland.
Lows tonight mostly in the
SOS:
lllllf TIMY
The gun• .ore lilnC ~"
Befrvl. but for lao10 lotlf7
A•thorm., or• wort of
leUfng their pord don.
P.oge A7.
11111
COAl'I' COMMUNITY
COU.l:GS ........... .,
IM""'9e&I
TruteeAna t
£lee& l
Jamea Evana, lQ.296
Rleltard Olleia, M,785
Tnl&ee Area I
Elect 1
Mark Bayless, 8,225
Geor1e Bodda, 11,898
SADDLEMCK COllMlJNITY
<JOU.EGE m predacta oa& of mereetacta
Tru&ee Area •
Elee& l
llary Jane Hanne«an. 4.599
...Perry Jacobson, 41299
Ea1eoe McKalP&, lZ,57Z
Donald Cole. 3.287
HlJNTINGTON BEACH
UNION IDGH SCHOOL 1• preclac&a oat of
HO preclnc&a
Elee&J
Norma Vander Molen, •,207
Zita•Wessa, ~.m
Marlette Slates, 4,906
t ...... s.w.. 1,151
;: Re Stevens, 11279
•.Pat Sullivan, 1,251
,1 Jerry Supernaw, 5,881 · (
I 81ae1T7 ..... 5,151
&oa Marna.I.NS
CAPISTL\NO UNIFIED SCHOOL
15 pred9e&I .. , of
15 preelaeta
Tnltee Area 4
Eledl
Paul Sayre, 1,136
Doria Driml, 418
Peg llaynard~l JaaO~
Ta ••Areal
Bled 1 t
Paal Buemaa. Z,MI
Ilene Krame, 1,734
Al Keller, l,729
Ta w&ee Area 7
Eledl
·Michael Vau,i.an, 1,226
Merl Doty, 1,889 .taaeue Gtlde. z ...
FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCBOOL
• pNdacta Mt of
•Pftdadl
tledS
James Weest, 1,488
lloger llelgm, 1,351
David Boyd, 686
William Manes, 1,256
Susanne Moore, 1,356
Stacey Richardson, 482
Ann Galas, 945
111JN'11NGTON 8.EACH
CITY SCHOOL
'• 34 preclnc&a out of
Mpreclnc&a
Elect 3
Roy How, 1,934
Sherry Bartow, Z,%81
Pat Collea, 1,M3
Brian Gartaad. Z,311
IR VINE UNIFIED SCHOOL
J8 predac&I Ml Of
38preclnc&a
Elect Z
John Flyna, Z, ...
Baff Wlll&e, s,m
Jeff Wimieke, 438
Nestande
won't seek
.. · Briggs' post
11 Freshman Orange County
Supervisor Bruce Nestande said
today he wlll not seek election to
-the vacancy that will be
created by the forthcoming
resignation of state Sen. John
Briggs, R-Fullerton.
N"estande, who has been in
office since January, said at a
press conference that he would
likely endorse Anaheim Mayor
John Seymour, if Seymour
decides to seek the office.
Briggs announced hi s
resignation Monday. He
.; complained that the job no.
longer was a challenge to him-
N es l 11 n de. a former
assemblyman. said he still is
challenged by beina a county
supervisor. "I don't desire any
other position at this time and,
to use a Jotin Bri.urs phrase,
haven't reached the burn-out
phase."
The aupeJ'Visor aJso expressed
concern that any resignation
would leave the door open for
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr .. a
Democrat, to appoint someone
of hla poUtical penuaaion to the
board cl 1upervison.
iiifiiil
John Jaepr, 429
ao1er Den.Dey, 2U
Andnw Barna, MS
John MWMly, 1,415
Irvine Marta, 1,2t6
Gene Conle,v, 1,30'7
LAGUNA BEACH
UNlnED SCBOOL
II pndadl •t ol
llpreelm ...
Eledl
John Lun(l, 80
Bruce Hopping, 330
Jaaet Vlden, 1,453
Carl Sellwan, l,54t
Tom ,Philo, 342
Dan Dulell, 1,1J8
Pat Barry, 1,129 ,
Jack Mlller, 284
Arthur Moskowitz, 160
WtllJam KentJe, 998
William Kadi, 5.1
John Chrispena, 215
'Roberta Christiansen, 163
Terry Carter·Humphrjes, 86
NEWPORT-MESA
UNIFIED SCHOOL
84 preclad• o.& ot
Mpredae&a
tleet4
,.,.._AnaZ
David Natkin, ea
Forrett Wener, 5-#71
. Charlie Gibbl, 1,880
'l'nlCee Area 4
Walter Zillar, 888
Slaen'J ................. s,ua
Lawrence Mlll.ee, 722
John Rinaldo, 1,178
TNl&eeAreal
J.dHla Prueo, 5,512
Joseph Pbilbrtdt, 2,380
nw&ee Area :1
Lenard Davia, 1,492 ,
Vincent Bellone 110
&odertei 11aei'tiiiaa, 4,511
Beverly Ritch, ,01 ,
OCEAN VIEW 8CBOOL
.-~-~ -~ Steven Smith, 1,05.1
Jim Powers, 575 •·rt--JllaU, .. ~ Susan Markham, 1,075
Flint Morrison, 129
Doria Enderle, 1,298
Darrell Carter, 1,305
Cltal"les o.a.t_., 1,8"
Juet~l,411 •It
.' Q>l'l'~•·SANrrARY ,~..,.~IS of , • 11 ••
led3 .
llm Walmer, 1,IU
C. L . Ro\)J>. 1,4~
Ormy CrQk, 1.811
Harry Gree., l,Ml
DANA POINT SANITARY
I preelnc&a out of
tprecilld• d JClecU r
Rlcllanl a.ill•. 438 r
Fred lleberta,m
Donald Klaasen, 159 '
Aaa &ellJ,-1 1 ,
MOULTON-NIGUEi'.. W.-'TEB Dl&loaf
Blee& 1
t predac&a CMlt of
·~·d• Howatd Lanis, 313 ·
Gerald Baell, 37•
Dlrisloa 3 Elect 1
11 preebtc&a oat of
tlprec•c&a
John Zoreer. 203
Dwight Wllllaauoa, ztt
Mike Cbilver, m ·
SUNSET BEACH SANITilY
Dlredor
Elect Z
Bnice llkb, •
Francis Maywhort, 47
S&epllen Rowe, U7
Aueuor
Elect 1
Billy Lavinger. 23
Susan Proger, 111
IRVINE
Measure A School Construction
Bonds
Yet,4,471
No. 1,421
Measure H -Civic Center
Yea, 3,811
No. 2,149
Measure J -$100 Campaien
Contribution Limit
Yes, 2,757
No. Z,M3
Measure K -$250 Campaten
ContrtbOUon Limit
Ye1, 3,M4 •
No . .2.418
-LAGtJNA BEACH
Measure L -Water Loan
Yea, 1,531
No. 503
NEWPORT lu;ACB '
Measure M _:Increase Bed Tax
Yea, 3,125
No, 1,891
LAGUNA NIGUEL
Measure N -Municipaf
Advisory Council
Ye1,m
No, 1.-, ~ ..
.........
The countdown clock for the Space Shuttle launch is stopped at 31 seconds during an attempted launch
toda11.at Florida's Kninedy Space Center. They'll try U again Friday.
Diedrich co.nviction ~';~C~ ...
reversal. opposed Columbia's Laun~h II would go as s moothly as its debut flight.
The countdown was running a
LOS ANGELES <A P > -crime is the receipt of money is
Prosecutors trying to overturn a m i s l e a d i n g o v e r .
an pppeals court reversal of s impliftcation.
former 0 rang e County He argued that payment of
Supervisor Ralph A. Diedrich's money may be evidence or a
1979 bribery convictie>U areued bribe, but it is not an element of
before the state Supreme Court bribery, because the crime can
that one sbouJdn't be able to be committed without actual
&\'old punishment by arrangin1 payment.
delayed paymenl of bribes. Attacking the idea that a
Diedrich had ~en convicted corrul>\ official )vho extended
on three bribery counts related payment wourd ever expect to
to cance ll ation of a land get paJd, Monroe said. "Any
preservation contract between . bribee who is plannin1 on
the county and a developer. extending payment beyond the
But the appeals court reversed statute of limitations is probably
decisions on all three counts, in for a rude shock."
including l>rtbery-conspiracy, The bribery allegations were
after Diedrich's attorney argued related to the March 6, 1W74,
that the actual bribe took place cancellation of an agricultural
beyond the statute of limitations land preservation contract
and the later transfer of money signed with the county by
was not part of the act of bribery Anaheim Hills Inc., a developer.
from whic h the period of Under the contract the
limitations would be measured. developer paid lower taxes on
·'The object of the conspiracy the tract after acquiring' it in
was not j ust to ask for bribes, 1970. Wnen the developer wanted
but to receive them," said to build on the land, the county
assistant Orange County district had to approve lbe contract
attorney Mich11el R. Capizzi in cancellation.
attacking that argument The dis pute on the second
Tuesday. count hinged on chargd that the
But Diedrich's attorney, Keith bribe agreement was made the
M o n r o e . s a i d . · · T b e December after that March 6
prosecution's theory that the vote.
SA woman's body
found in back ylird
A woman reported missing by
her cemmon-law husband two
weeks ago has been found buried
• six feel' deep in the couple's
Santa Ana back yard, and the
husband has been booked for
inves tigation or murder, police
said,
Neighbors said Guadalupe
Garcia Zavala's two children,
7-year-old Alvaro and 3-year-old
Sonia, told them their mother
was not at home beeause she
was working extra jobs to buy
them Christmas presents.
information we bad
accumulated from different
sources didn't jibe," said police
Lt. Ken Reinert.
Ruiz was being held in the
Orange County Jail.
few minutes late until it hit
0:00:31 and froze. It was 4:48
a.m. PST.
At first, the unwanted "hold"
was a mystery to e veryone .
"We were not able to restart
the coundown clock. We do not
know why,·· Harris said.
The c lock, like Colum bia
islself. is controlled b y
computers which automatically
command a shutdown If they
sense anv malfunrtion.
National Aerona.u.Uc:s find
Space Administration experts
determined that the computers
halted the pre-ignition sequence
because message to lower the
acceptable pressure threshold in
two fuel tanks got lo the
computer too late .
While efforts were made to
co rrect thi s pron lem . a
lubricati ng d e vi ce in the
auxiliary units overpressurized
and Page slammed the launch
window shut for the day.
"We are going to scrub the
launch for today." Harris said.
.. A llb inimum of a 48-hour
turnaround will be necessary for
another launch attempt. ..
Ironically, the space officials
thought they had licked their
sole remaining problem just
hours earlier: the weather. Page
decided to defy ominous cloud
cover to make the launch and
the countdown was only slightly
behind schedule when the
press ure problem arose,
seemingly from nowhere.
Care bill OK'd
WASHINGTON (AP>
Vi.etnam veterans who were
exposed to Agent Orange pr.
other defoliants are to receive
priority medical care under
legislation signed by President
Reagan.
Officers working by floodlight
uncovered Ms. Garcia ZavaJa's
body early Tuesday behind the
Santa 'Ana house she 1hared with
Alvaro Vasquez Rui.t. TERRAILLON
Police said the woman had
been dead since Oct. 16.
Officers said they had
interviewed Ruiz several limes
since Oct. 20, when he had
reported her missing. They
declined to reveal the thrust of
those interviews.
"We continued our
in vestigalion because the
Editor faces
sex charges
SAN DIEGO <AP)
Edltor-publisber Steven L .
Larimore of "San Dte10 People
Maga&ine" ta free oo $5,500 ball
after beinc booked ln jail for
lnYettilation . of maintaining 8 bouH cil pro1tituUon, police aay.
Police Lt. Kea Moller iald
Lari..... M, WU arrested tn
Ma oftle9I ad Ule file• of the Mermaid Lla1erle Service
"8Hred b1 officer• with ......... .... ~,..... ...
=llW.:.. • •• ...-. .,..,,.........,,
The newest dimen-
sion in time keeping.
Great gift item, practical
tool
~
R~ ~I?:'
SAL:E $1099
S.I• prlcee ett.dlw thru '1Mt
Subject to Supply
on hand
•
From Page ~1
FIRINGS. • •
and marketing. To be faJr, a
number were In aupport
capacltlea, but any time you lay
off what amounll to nearly 40
employees of a company'• .Wf,
you 're t1lkln1 about H\'ere
cutbacks." The IOUrce aald be
wanted anonymity becaute, he
said, he and others were told the
layoff was temporary, and lbat
"as soon aa tbln11 are
stral1htened out, we'll be tbe
first ones back.••
The source aaJd client service
representatives for New York,
Chicago and San Diego also
were affected'. He aald he was
told Tuesday mornln1 by the
legal department that attorney
Gloger had been dismissed.
No .severance pay, or notice,
was given to the laid -off
workers, the source saJd. He did
say a memo lnlormin& them of
the situation offered a letter of
recommendation, If desired.
Catalina Isle
boat mooring
bids sought
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Tbe
state has opened bids for
handling boat moorings on Santa
Catalina Island, but any but the ,<.,.)
,present operator would have a ~
hard time meeting the terms.
The State Lands Commission
voted 2--0 Tuesday to seek bids
next month ror a 15-year lease,
minimum Sl.9 million.
It did so after hearings in
which Southero California
boaters said the present firm,
the Santa CataJina Co .. has done
a good job and they fear another
firm might raise the rents ~
high.
The Island Co. has handled the
moorings for 30 years .
Controlled by the Wri.Jley
chewing gum family. it o\f11.S the
island outside the City of
Avalon.
The offshore state l and
consists or the harbor.J and
coves, except at Avalon. The
most-used state land is in the
Two Harbors area.
Any firm but the Island ·Co.
would be hampered by not
owning the island outside
Avalon, about an hour by boat
from Two Harbors. Also, any
new firm would have to buy the
moorings from the Island Co .. or
install new ones.
Bidders will have to make a
ren taJ offer, list the rents it will
charge, and describe bow it
would provide daily garbage
services, patrol boats, rescue
services, towing and mechanical
work, mooring maintenance and
fresh water.
The bids will be considered by
the three·member commission
at its Dec. 17 meeting in
Sacramento. l'he current lease
expires Dec. 31.
Commission members said
they would base their decision
on the revenue to the slate, type
and quality of services, and the
rates Jor moorings.
The minimum revenue to the
. state will be 17 percent of the
firm's gross annual income, or
at least $125,000 a year.
Voting to seek bids were
Controller Ken Cory and David
Ackerman, representing Lt.
Gov. Mike Curb.
Susanne Morgan, representing
Finance Director Mary Ano
Graves, abstained. She had
favored giving the lease to the
Island Co.
Prospective bidders include
the Wrather Corp., which runs
the Queen Mary in Long Beach;
Pioneer Taite-Out Corp., which
has marlnaa on Lake
Arrowhead, and Jack Fennie,
owner of catalina Frehrht Lines.
TOO MUCH
TIME ON
YOUR HANDS?
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOTNltdnffday, Novtmb9r 4, 1981
Ca I iforn ia Assessment Proq r a n1 Test Resu Its
GRADE 3 District MHAlc_...
197 ... / ... , (AYWege ICOrfl on • SC•le ot ,,OCMCIO)
CAPISTRANO UNIFIED
FOUNTAIN VALLIE Y ELEM.
HUNTINGTON B E ACH UNIOJ.IHIGH
HB CITY EliEMENTARY
IRVINE UNI f!IED
LAGUNA BEACH UNIFIED
NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED
OCEAN VIEW E &.;EM.
SANTA ANA UNIFIED
SE.AL BEACH ELEM.
WESTMINSTER ELEM.
STATE AVERAGE (1980-81)
........
1'4/305
2711'192
•ms
2931297
3111333
286/30'1
2I0/217
224122•
326133'
2nn11
254
Writing ,.....
297/306 292A06
2Mntrl
21112&5
~I* 2851292
292/321 3011337
2761291 2M/289
281/289 293/303
2321233 230/2AO
320/334 339/M3
269/265 263/257
255 2S..
...
GRADE6 GRADE 12
· (Averege ICOrff In percent of e«rtct •ntWHI) ......... Wrltlfte Spelllftt Matta Reedlfttl Writ ing Spelllng Math
76.om.o 72.IM.5 69.t/70.1 66.7/67.• 61.ono.1 67 .1 no.o 16.ens.• 11.1 ns . .4
n.am.• 72.3173.7 61.1/71.0 "·''"'·' 65.7/61.1 65.2/66.0 70.,/71.6 70.1/71.2
7'.3/75.6 11.3m.a 66.7/69.7 6'.2/63.7
16.1m.• 73.l/7S.• 71.0/71.2 66.7/61.0 • I
67.6/67.a 68 . .t/66.9 72.6/73.3 71 .2/73.2i
16.1m.• 76.0/77.2 69.0/71.5 11.2no.• 71.6no.o 70.7/69.8 69.3/74.0 76.2/7S.6
7'.2/75.2 10.6m.• 66.9/70.2 64.1/65.3 61.0/66.2 68.3/66.7 71.2/71.S 72.2/72.tf
16.2ns.a 78.0/77.2 12.a n1.4 70.7/61.9 I
S9.5/62.0 59.2/63.3 60.2/63.1 S3.•/5'.3 Sl.3/58.0 S7.7/58.3 68.1/67.0 62 .5/63.4
77.6fl3.6 73.117•.2 66.8/65.0 65.5/63.•
70.1/69.6 71 .2/69.A 70.3/70.2 6'.3/6'.2
61.0 66.2 65.6 60.• 63.• 63.1 69.0 68.0
·state skill . test res-.ilts .'reflect· positive attitude'
Do Oraoge County students
have more positive attitudes
about going t.o school and the
importance or a good education?
Along the Oraoae Coast, as
has been the usual case,
students out performed their
inland counterparts, the test
results show.
Hi gh schodl seniors' impr ovement
leads county students' score surge
increases have been noted at the
secondary level.
The tests, admi nistered
annually, are given t.o students
in the third, sixth and 12th
that districts' performance ma''
be compared. ·
For example. the ave rage
ma thematics score for Hurd
grade students in the Seal Beach
Elementary School District was
343. Thal translates lo a 97th
percentile ranking. which means
the average Seal Beach score
was bettered by only 3 pertent
of districts statewide.
An Orange County
Department of Education
specialist in test scores believes
they do, based on students'
performance on the 1980·81
series of California Assessment
Program tests in the areas of
reading, written language.
spelling and mathematics.
With the exception or the
Santa Ana Unified 'School
District, which has a 76 percent
minority enrollment, all school
districts in Orange County had
average scores higher than the
statewide average.
The relative affluence of
residents or most Orange CountY'"
communities contributes to
better-than·average student
performance, according to Dale
Russell, the county Education
De partment's research and
evaluation administrator.
And, says Russell, the test
results "reflect more positive
attitudes toward schooling."
The single most remarkable
aspect or the 1980-81 results,
released Monday, is improved
performance by 12th grade
students on tests or the four
baslc skills.
For example, Russell said,
results for the county's three
high school districts show that
scores were higher than in 83
percent or all possible scorinc
areas. In only 17 percent of the
possible cases were scores the
same as last year, or lower.
lo unified .districts, which
offer education at all grade
levels, 'Scores were higher in 73
percent or all po~sible scoring
* * * * * * Encouraging trend
draws Riles'praise
SACRAMENTO <AP) -State
school officials have hailed new
test score result..s that showed
California's high school seniors
, improving in reading, math,
spelling and language use after
a long decline.
"California's seniors are
holding their own with the rest
of the country. ,and getting
better all the time," state school
Superintendent Wilson Riles
said in a statement.
Analysts in Rlles' department
s aid it appeared that the state's
n e w requirement that
graduating seniors pass tests in
basic skills, a new emphasis in
state programs on the upper
grades. and possibly a more
serious stodent attitude toward
learning contributed to the
improvement.
The tests were given last
December ~ all 220,$j3 public
sc hool 12th-graders, and this
April and May to the 265,463
third.graders and 293,920 s ixth.graders.
S cor es f o r third · and
s ixlh·graders continued their
steady climb of the last five
years, again exceedi:ftc national
averages set by test publishers.
But the high school scores had
been falling for a decade,
mirroring a national decline .
The California scores started
HAILS ACHJE VE.'\1£.'\IT
Supt Wilson Riles
leveling orr about three years
ago. and last y~ar showed slight
improvements · in a ll areas
except reading.
Cooling trend due
Cowtal
The NetloNI w..thef S.Nlce ukl
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Calif ornia
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I
areas and the same or lower in
only 27 percent.
For elementary school
districts, which offer education
through the sixth grade, scores
were higher in S8 percent of all
possible scoring areas and lower
in 42 percent, Russell said.
'·What the figures show is that
they're doing exceptionally well
at the secondary level, and
holding their own at the
elementary level," Russell said.
Russe)) said it is the first time
s u c h "across the board"
grades.
Scores for third crades are
reported on a scale of 100 t.o 400,
with 400 bein g the highest
possible score,
!;cores for sixth and 12th
graders are reported as a
percent number of correct
scores and thus fall on a scale of
Oto 100.
Ea~h average score for an
indiv.!_~ual grade level in a
parthr;war subject area can be
comP,.tred t.o statewide norms so
~
In the Laguna Beach Unified .
School District, the third grade
math score was 337, for a 96th
pe rcentile ranking.
Other s co r es for school
districts along the Orange Coa!>l
the Santa Ana district and the·
state averages are shown tn lht:
accompanying table.
Superagehcy to split
Supe rvisors aim fo r mor e hea lth aid, better service
By GLENN SCO'M'
Of ... .,.., ..........
ONmge County government's
largest superagency, the Human
Services Agency, will be split
into two independent uni ta: a
heal.ti) agenq1 a"d a s~cial
services agency.
The county Board or
Supervisors authorized the
change Tuesday on a 3·2 vote.
Proponents of the plan,
Harriett Wiederl Roger Stanton
and Bruce Nes ande, sald the
change will help clarify
conlllctinc direcUves, increase
chances or attracting state and
federal aid and improve
services t.o clients.
'·Based on its performance
and from the perspective or
ac c ept~d princip l es of
organization, the present RSA
s tructure is irrational," said
Stanton, a former university
instructor of manacement.
Supervisors Ralph Clark and
Thomas Riley, the two veteran
me mbers or the board, voted
against the restructuring. They
said splitting the super agency,
which was formed In 1976, ls too
drastic a step.
The largest of the county's
three superagencies, HSA
currently employs almost 3,000
worker s and bas an annual
budget of $231 million. Much of
the money is channeled through
the county. agency to clients
fr o m s tate and federal
sources.
The social services division
accounts for about 1,500 of the
Gem
Talk
ByJ.C. HUMPHRIES
Ctrtifittl G1mologut, AGS
OUT OF THE POCKET
and onto tht wmt
Until the late 1920s, most
watches were made to be
carried In the pocket. By um,
about 95 percent or all watches
were wrist watches. The hllt.ory
. of the watch and how people
perceived it as Jewelry ls very
interestinc. Way back in 1530,
King Charles V had a watch
Inserted in bis rin&. Watches
were a1ao phaced in the beads of
walkinc sticks, the claaps of
bracelets and on pendant.I. The
pendant watch ls still popular
with ladies and ii a treasured
clrt. In the late 1'700., some
ladles wore WTi.st watches u a
novelty Item. Yet, u late u 'i 1900, a shipment of wrist
watcbee trom Swluerland w11
· returned to t h a t country
• because Am ericana 1lmply
would not buy them. By tbe
twenties., wrist watebet wen
btln1 aec:epted, evea by mm,
and the flnt Mlf·wlodial wrllt
watcb Wiii &abu4aeed la .Im.
Tb• ... ., ...... wrtlt ...
of lfSI WU a bit hit. Tbe Nil II
workers and $100 million of the
annual budget.
County experts did not say il
the chance would improve
administrative problems long
aasodp!ed wlU-U.e HSA. But
M r1. 1Jiederl 'aid ~· current system haan•t succeeded.
Her talks with slate health
and social services officials
revealed that Orance County
bas a poor reputation with those
who control the purse strin1s.·
"Now I discover we lack
cred.lbWty, d6 not rflpond in a
ti m el1 ma•ner<·and have
difficailty pn.tnllnl accurate
and documented data,·' she sald.
''Based on its
pert ormance .
t he present HSA
s t rJP c t u r e i s
i rrdfional."
Asked by board Chairman
Ralph Clark whether he thinks
splittin& the two dlvlaiona will
help win grants, HSA Dlreetor
Larry Leaman said be wouldn't
be able to tell until a state
procedure for disbursing federal
block grant funds to counties is
adopted.
Leaman added: "My gut
reeling -and it's only that -is
that one agency would be better
for competing with others for
funds."
The details of separating the
social services division from lht>
m e ntal he alth and he a lth
department..s is to be worked out
by staff worked In the nel(l 4~
days .. J
In outer mattt¥"1 Tuesday~lhe
superviaors took action on t9ese
issues : i
DISABLED: Authorized an
applic at ion t o th e s~tl:'
Personnel Board for a SSZ.500
grant to start a n ad voc'ac\
program for hiring d1 sablE:'<l
person$ tQ coun y jobs
HA&BOR BOULtVARO·
Selected consultants Berryman
& Stepbmson Inc. of Anaheim
lo prepare a $70-.000 tnlff1r
safety and flow study coveh nl!
the Harbor Boulevard Corr'\dor
from 19th Street in Costa ME.-sa
to the north county line.
AMBULANCES: ApprOH'd J
new master con t r a c t for
ambulance and van ser vices for
certain county clients effectn l'
immediately a nd doing ay. o.\
with situation discovered la<;t
s pring in whi c h v ari ou~
contracts paid differing rate!>
Master contract is indexed to
medical rates.
WASTE MANAGEMENT :
Awarded to Engineering Sc1en1 ·
Inc. of Santa Ana a $1 68,Soo
contract t.o analyze county waste
management prog r am and
recommend new courses of
action to address expense aod
unpopularity of land.fills.
Skilled, Professional ...
SERVICE
For your valuable Jewelry and watches is as
close to you as J. C. Humphries Jewelers
where our own craftsmen do the work under
personal supervision.
./ Fine Watch Repair
./ Diamond & Precious Gem Setting
./ Fine Jewelry Care & Repair
./ Origin al Jewelry Design and
Creations
I Gem & Jewelry Appraisals
,..,_ .. ,..._ peld tor lmportattt .. ma •nd
jewelry ....... ••pertly •PPf•leed by .••
. J.e.JJ~~L..
. bl1tory. Wrilt watdlll ol tM
late1t deetp .,.. aow .,.... *~ .. m• ioaibt·.,... --· :UW!i!li8• ,,
,
I I f
H/F Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Wednt1d1v. Novemb8r 4, 1981 ..
B~agan says ll aig
f Umors unfounded
Ito • v.WAS ttt NGTON <A P > -Khomerni stirs Jttesident Reagan says reports
O.t>illssenaioo Withlo hls foreign StUdellllJ abroad 1•tlcy team are totally ~oundcd even though ~crelary of State Alexander M.
li-.ii g Jr. In sists a While
House-based campaign to
<ll!Nredlt him has been under
\llaY since J unuary.
a.Reagan, reacting sharply to
rtllbors of .. backbiting .. among
~bli lop aides, told reporters
a~ s d a y • • · T hey · re very
estruclive to our dealings
'i&~ldwide," adding that foreign
f!&lernments are being led .. to
ieve that there 's some
,rray here._"
Sbviets launch
?,W J/ enus probe
'MOSCOW <AP I -The Soviet
l.baon today launched its second
uwin anned spacecraft toward
~us in six days, the Soviet
n~a-s agency Tass reported.
The news agency s aid thi-
p~pose and design of Venus 14
l ched today is similar to that
o enus 13 launched on Friday.
1 e announcement said both
rockets were expected to reach
Venus in March.
Walesa, Poli.sh
leaders to meet
WARSAW. Poland CAP>
Lt>ch Walesa will discuss
land's economic and labor
Mes with Premier Wojciech
uzelski and Archbishop Jozef
mp today after faihng to
'te Solidarity's leadership
ind a ban on w1dcat strikes
eanwhile, an est1 mated
l 00 women lt•xtile workers
• ed their 24-day strike today.
I e· official PAP news agenc)
~rted.
BACK AGAIN \lban~
'\ Y . Ma \·or Era s tu ...
Corning 11 ·s miles a s he
hear~ returns Tucs da' night
I' et urning h 1 m t 'o th l'
ma~·or's ~cat Corning. 72
hus held the po. t sinte 1941
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP>
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
urged Iranian students In North
America to ''silence American
and Zionist propagand• horns" •
trying to damage the Islamic
revolution, Tehran Radio said
Tuesday. •
Tbe 81-year-old patriarch of
Iran 's revolution said Moslem
students have .. the divine duty
of uncovering the crimes of
rumor-mongel"S. ··
Algeria lowers
price of oil ·
PA RIS <API -Algeria has
lowered the price of its high
quality crude oil from $40 to
$37. 50 a barrel, a French oil
journal reported today.
The journal, the Bulletin of the
Petroleum Industry. said the
lower prices went into efrect
Sunday following last week's
price unification agreement by
the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
Senate unit OKs
curbs on busing
WASlnNGTON cAP> ln a
new e1ttack o n the federal
judiciary, a Senate
s ubcommittee is endorsing
legislation that would strip
federal courts of the authority to
order busmg to desegregate
public schools.
8} a 4-t vote Tuesday. the
Senate Judiciary subcommittee
on lhe Constitution sent the
proposal to the full Judiciary
committee. which is likely to
enctorse the proposal within the
next two weeks
Ford slowed
by pneumonia
CHARLESTON, W. Va (AP>
Former President Gerald
Ford canceled an appearance at
the University or Charleston
Tuesday after doctors diagnosed
that he was suffe r jng from
bronctual pneumonia.
A spokeswoman for Ford, who
asked not to be identified, said
the former president was told by
his doctors that he could not
travel and had lo rest.
Virgin Islanders
reject home rule
ST THOMAS. Virgin Islands
t AP > Voters in this U.S.
territory turned down a new
constitution Tuesday. rejecting
more self-government by a 2·to-1
margin.
The proposed constitution
would have replaced a 1968 act
of Congress that governs the
96.000 inhabitants of the U.S.
Virgin Islands. Recent polls
predicted approval of the locally
drarted constitution by a 3-to-l
Wiiy •re we ""'klftQ lhia 1150 CHll ollw? llet•utP 1'9<tonelt.ted
Compuotet wan11 SIX n.1 1t0t....,. A.Net v-•rs ot nul(1t10rt r~h Mid
~-t•hc anal)'9•s ,... 1>ave c•ut.a an .,,~"O .c>~••oe com
putet ptog1am thllt eNly1os ,,,.., Oo<IV ro tt•te t•arny Ille d~ '"'
yo.ir IQ<I, ""IQhl -Qh! no<"'31 a<:ll••t\' , ..... , and 11 flta•t O'>ll'' Ho"
"" ~ to f"'<! tr-• a.uc~• ,,Of.., we ,......., fil .. unt'" rn • ""-'O"l•JC»
orog1am. we M c>ay up tu S •C"() u~h '~ .,,yone •"'• u~t it '"' ,. ... 11u1~ ""'"'II the nt>t Ill) 01y1•
But wall, tll9N'• -.,_. good -0... nulrtlloml!a i><OQ/a>n· meo 1he com1>11ter 10 c, u tt a 0•11 1nat >tt a rou e.t yo.,r ••VOt•tt tood9
-you wanl Incl *"Ill-yOu ...,,, You ..... I nc.uMllWl'd lo I
diet 111111 c:.tlll tor ••Oii<. ,...,Cl IC>lll)(J IOOCIS You OOfl t ICfl'llP on ••Pf!f>-
.... 1>•91>K••Ql!O toooe All .,OU oo is let our ~nc«I comput., pro
g1am lffcl you •'°"9 tlle IC...,.,ed•scoYW.0 """' to lttt -'11"1 io..
MO thefe • no ,....., '"' "'""'°"' twt!fC-OI l\llfmkl! OIUOI '"" 19 the ..uy, ""'"'•'way to latttnQ #fight COl'trol 1t a to t lfecttve •hat "'"cell
I! THE LAST OIET YOU'LL £\IEJI HEEO'"f
Cell !Oday to tea1n al>Out th<! amaz•oq l)f'uonal we-Qnt -"'"IC"'
tl\81 1un•1 'fO'I< tloay onto a '""' U 'O<•e buf"!" you ti bll p<OUd DI And
the more~ you IOte lhe l>'OQe< Y0\11 cos~ llOf>u1I ti• 110 IHI to
tlmple, to tltecll.,.. lhtt you II bO your own 1'1.•0ti!~ tOQ<c ot t')nrj!(58
hOl'I IOI ff)C)lltMI to come And ""° <OOIO Dil'11e you? LO..ng. IOI Of W9!0lll II t 111Q eccompil.,.._I, Yl1 ... ~ lie> ....,.. fh..-fl'lill<e \'OU
l1tm-wett g,... you a uall oonut 111> 10 St!iO'
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_,.,.., L..,n mo<t .-1 tNs -~ •1>11'09'11 to ••leiOl>q
-o"I conl•OI i.-n "°"'II-• "°"' 'fOU can lit PtlCI '"°'lt'f to ION
.,...ghl end Why ,... M1 conllOefllly lll•l 1t111 IS TH£ LAST 04ET YOU'LL
IVVI HfED'"I Cell us ,..,. IOI" lull tnlotmel>On abOut ,,.,. Pwt0nal1Led ~ •'-°' 1.1eiong wetQ!11 con110I
COSTA MESA
1 S6 W. BAKER
11 141 641-6606 o,.. Mia.-M 1 --:-' ~ s.t. t ...........
,
\
A Jllbtlant Charlt•s Cliucl<' Hobb a11d lw1 wife 1.ynda Byrd look
1wer elt'ctwn re:;u/ts Tuesdou night at a duwntown Richmond
hu tel Robb's 1nctor11 e11ded I:? 11ear!i of Rep11b/1car1 control of the
governor's of f1c:e 111 \'1n:,11110
D e mocrat R obb
wins in Virginia
By The Associated Press
Off -y ear elections f or
governor offered no clear
message to President Reagan or
hi s opposition toda y as
Democ rats ce lebr a t ed a
com~back in Virginia and both
parties awaited the fin al count
from a near dead heat in Ne\\
Jersey.
over Reagan 's economic goals,
unofficial returns gave Robb
769.422 votes. or 53.7 percent, to
Coleman's 662,788, or 46.3
percent
That ended 12 years of
Republican contr o l of tbe
governor's office.
Both parties had hoped for
decisive victories that would
enable them to claim a public
man date either for or ·against
Reagan's economic program.
Nuke measure
passes; Gay
rights loses
,
81 TIM! ANoelated Preu
Proposed tax breaka tor
District of Columbia private
school pupils, a 1750 million
blghway bond In West Vir11nla,
and a l•Y rlghta measure ln
Palo Alto, w e r e among
meadures that went down to
defeat ln ballot contests across
the country.
But an 82-year-old Texas
farmer named Jesse Johnson in
danger or losing the land he
bought 4-0 years ago fared belt.er
at the hands of voters. By a 79
percent margin , T exan s
overwhelmingly passed a
constitutional amendment that
nullifies a 140.year-old defect on
the title to his land. .
With 249 of the 254 counties
reporting returns, and Z38 of
those complete, 603,008 voted in
favor of Johnson , 163,107
against.
Also pa ss ing wa s a
Was hington state initiative
which will give the public a
direct say in determinln1 the
costs of that state's nuclear
power construction pro1ram,
the moo ambitious in the nation.
A court challenge of the
measu r e was almost
immediately announced after
the outcome.
Sponsors insisted the measure
was not anti -nu~lear. citing
in stead the nee d lo brin1
runaway construction costs
under control. In the last few
years, the pricetag for nuclear
plants under construction in the
state have gone from $4.1 billion
to nearly S24 billion.
With 5.632 orecincts ou·l of
6,080 reporting, the initiative
was ahead by 463,563 to 327 ,493,
nearly a 59-41 percent margin.
..It appears we have gotten a
saddle on this bronc here!" said
a j ubilant Jim Lazar of "Don't
Bankrupt Wash ington ," an
or1anlutlon backin1 the
nuclear measure.
Meaawh lle, two poulble
Democratic presidential
hopetuls -Gov. Jay Rockefeller
of West Vlr1lnla, and Gov.
James Y. Brown Jr. of Kentucky
-found themselves on the
losing side or J)ropositloDJ in
their states.
A $750 milUonl West Vlrlinia
highway bond strongly backed
by Rockefeller was soundly
defeated. Voters apparently
balked al the lavish spendlnl
proposal, favoring instead the
argument that the state could ill
afford a fresh mountain or debt.
With 2,324, or 99 percent or the
sta t e's, 2 ,329 precin cts
reporting, the vote was 200,374,
or 61 percent against the bond,
and 125,136, or 38 percent, in
favor.
And a Brown·backed measure
that would have allowed state
officials, including ~e governor,
to s ucceed themselv,e,s, wu also
defeated. With 84 ~rcent of the
vote In, 319,000 voted against
Amendment 1, and 188,000
supported it.
Brown had said during the
amendment campaign that the
vote was a referendum of sorts
on his admin\Stration.
A hom osex ual rights
proposition in Palo Alto, Calif.
that would have forbidden
discrimination on the basis of
"sexual orientation" was losing
early today.
With 10 of 39 precincts and
absentee ballots counted, the
measure trailed by 1,491 to 2,251.
San Diego voters were heavily
favor ing a ballot m e as ure
calling for the firing of any
county e mployee who went on
s trike. The vote in 846 of 2,084
precincts was 40,921, or 63
percent, in favor of the l>a.ilpt
issue, and 23,958, or 37 percent
opposed.
Charles S R o bb . the
polit1call) c on!>ervative
son -in law of the late President
Lyndon B. Johnson. restored the
Democrats to control o{ the
Virginia governor's office with a
surpris ingly easy \'lCtOr)
Tuesday over Republican
Attorney General J Marshall
Coleman
Few surpri,ses • in mayoral race
But in New Jersey, where
Reagan's budget and tax cuts
were major issue!>. the race
between Republican Thomas II
Kean and Democratic Rep
James J . Florio hinged on the
tally today of absentee ballot!>
from six or the s tate's 21
counties
Big-city candidates ride economy views to victory
With all 5.647 precincts
reported, Kean led Florio by
1,424 votes out of more than 2.26
million cast.
The unofficial totals pending
com plelion of the absentee
ballot count were 1,142,279 for
Kean. 1.140.855 for Florio the
closet gubernatorial elecllon in
New Jersey in a century.
Boih candidate!> asked
election officials to take secunt~
measures to protect the ballots,
apparently in anticipation of a
possible recount request, and
Byrne ordered state police
protection for both men.
ln Virginia, where Robb and
Cole m an differed hardlv at all
The .mayors of several cities
symbolizing urban woes -New
York. Cleveland, Pittsburgh and
Detroit rode their vows of
balanced budget s a nd
revitalized economies to easy
re election victories.
But light races on Tuesday
forc ed runoff elections in
llouston and Miami and left
voling machines under police
guard in Bridgeport, Conn.
While Ed Koch in New York.
Coleman Young in Detroit.
Donald Fraser in Minneapolis
and Richard Caliguiri in
Pittsburgh won re-election
ea!ii ly. another Democrat,
Thirman Milner , became New
England's first black blg·city
mayor by winning in Hartford,
Conn. ,
Also winning b y a wide
margin was Cleveland Mayor
Georg~ Voinovich. A Republican
in a city where all 33 couacU
members are Democrats, hi•
popularqy -like bis
Democratic counterparts -it
based on programs for easing
c ity fiscal troub les and
improving the local economy.
In Miami, however, Mayor
Maurice Ferre was forced into a
runoff after failing to receive the
required SO.plus percent of the
vote in the nonpartisan election.
Ferre, the nation's first native
Puerto Rican big-city mayor,
collected 39 percent of the vote
in his race for a (ifth two-year
term for the largely cere monial
post that pays only $6,000 a year.
His opponent in next
Tuesday's runoff will be Manolo
R eb oso, who ls seekln1 to
become the first native Cuban to
become mayor of a major U.S.
city.
In Houston , wher e another
noa-partlaan runoff was forftd
because no candidate earned a
majotity, Mayot .JJm llJcConn
did not even make it into the
r unoff scheduled for Nov. 17
between ~ath Whitmire, the
city contr er, d Jack Heard.
the county sherif .
James Chase, a former auto
body shop owner became the
first black mayor of Spokane,
Wash ., and in Santa Barbara,
Ca lif., Sheila Lodge was
apparently elected the first
wom an m ayor in that city's
history.
And in a milesotne of another
sort In Albany, N.Y., 72:ye.ar-old
Erastus Co rning II was
re-elected to his 11th four-year
term. He was first elected in
1941, a month before Pear l
Harbor. And he promptly
announced he is thinking of a
12th and even a 13th term.
Number one to Phoenix, and getting better every day. Now
you can fly us to Phoenix for as low as SJ6, one way There's no
lower fare in the air And nooody gets you there as often or lv · 7 40 • m Air t 40 • m lv 1 OOa.m Al 1 ll t.m
as fast.
More nonstops than anyone. Fly Republic to Phoenix
from 3 Los Angeles area airports. Choose from 3 nonstops
out of Burbank, 2 nonstops out of Ontario (with a third
nonstop starting November 19, 1981), or 4 nonstops out of
Orange County. ·
Get down to business with our exclusive Business
Coach.'" Try out our executive comfort at far less than first class
fares Complimentary cocktails, extra elbow room, loads of leg
room and wide two two seating besides. All this for JUSt sao
Frequent Flyers'• fly free. Ask about our super Frequent
Flyer program for bonus free fltghts
to anywhere in our domestic route .,_,
system It's simple, it's on-going and ~ · "~
it's all for you.
12•15 p.m 2 11 pm
l :J5 pm. l:JI p.m.
l• 7 00 a.m At e St 1 "' 1 40pm J40pm
(tff. 11/IMll)
S·l5pm 7·27pm
l!on!!of Or!np C!!!!!!y .........
Lv 7·:10a.m Al. t :ltem
1·00 • "' t:st a m.
lt ff UJOllll)
II 45 am (.«. 11/ltlll) S•20p.m
I :IOpm
t 45 p"'
7·00pm
10 """'
II "° •.m, II.SI 1.m s 55 p.m. 1·06 p.m
lv 7 20•M. Al. 7·2)1 m
I.ISP.Ill. I ISpm
(eff. 11/IMI)
J «> p"' > 42 P·"' l!oM'!P ,,.__.. .. Or!np Cowlty
lv. 7•05 a.m. At. 7,10 a.m.
II Oh..... II 10 u n
(tfl 11/IMI)
11 SS•."'-s·1Sp.m t ·JOpm.
t'l5P-"'-(9ff. I t/IMI)
12 OJ p "'-
5.ll p,m. t ·Ja.p"' t «Jp.m
Sd'ltdulei and lam subf«t to ch•"9f wrtholJt not«
Orange Coast OAJLY Pll,.OT/Wtdneaday, November•. 1981 H/F ~
New sti.ulies sought
for .Diablo Canyon
;voters· .reject
lanllfill ban
By Tile ANodated Preu
W eat Covina votera have
rejected a measure to cl0te t.be
only state-certified hazardous
waste dump 1ou th of the
Tehachapi mountains, while San
Bernardino reeldents turned
down rent control.
.
residential to open apace. iJ.
A companion meaeure a
was roundly defeate ,
Eighty-five percent vot.ed
ualnat authorl1ln1 tbe otb
Council to Increase taH• W
Proposition K waa apJ>roYecJv •
Backers said a tn bike *ou.lcl •i
necessary becaua~ \Veet ~
could lose $1 mllllon a 1•:-~ hazardous waste dumplDt
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Nuclelf ~eaulatory Commission
sta rr wanl1 three new
lndependent studies of the
controversial Dlablo Canyon
atomic power plant, but the
governor of California ls
questioninc whether they will be truly indepe.ndent.
Harold Denton, NRC director
of nuclear reactor recutatton,
ordered the studiee Tuesday
after plant operators outlined
s teps they've taken since
September, when a design error
was discovered after the plant
was already licensed to test its reactor.-
Several executives ot Pacific
Gas & Electric Co., the operator
of the plant, outlined a plan for
PG&E to do its own studies of
"quality-assurance", at the plant
on procedures before and during
the period when the design
errors WJ!re ma~ in 1977.
Dentori said the three studies
would have to be completed
before the NRC can grant the
plant a license to generate
electrical pe>wer.
New Yorba Linda
diatrict opposed
LOS ANGELES CAP >
Creating a unified school district
for Yorba Linda would deprive
the Fullerton school district of
tax revenues, government aid
and promote racial segregation,
an opposition attorney argued in
a state Supreme Court hearing.
Attorney Spencer Covert
made the claims Tuesday as he
argued in the Fullerton Joint
Union High School District's suit
to p~vent a vote that would
create a unified school district
linking the Yorba Linda
Elementary School District with
a high school serving the same
area.
Geor1e has ruled that KeMetb
Bianchi was fakln& hypnoti•
when he confessed to the
Hillside Stran1ler murders and
impllcated hls cousin Angelo
Buono.
George's ruling Tuesday
means that Bianchi'• testimony
can be admitted Into Buono's
trial. The judge said that
Blanchi's competence as a
wltoeu had not been impaired
by attempts to hypnotize him.
Defense attome)'s had tried w
bar Bianchi 's confess ton and
testimony Crom the trial of
Buono, 49, who is char1ed with
10 of the Hillside Strangler
murders committed in the Los
Angele$ area in 1977 and 1978.
Baby dropped
from window?
EVERETT ABSOLVED Actor Chad Everett. right, said he
was "very excited and happy" arter being judged for a
third time not to hav.e fathered the 8-year-old son or former
actress Sheila Scott. left. The verdjct was returned Tuesday
by 10 members of an eight-woman. four-man Superior Court
·jury in Los Angeles.
SF cable car fare
increase approved BERKE-LEY CAP> -A
homesick college student wb.o-
gave birth alone in a dormioory
bathroom has been accused of By Tbe Associated PreSll blamed a low voter turnout for
putting the newborn girl into a Voters authorized an increase its defeat, '7,695 to 5,622.
brown ll&per bag and ~ropplng in San Francisco's cable car her out of a second-story fares, rejected a gay rights Steve Harris, a spok~sman for
window, police said. m easure in Palo Alto and the Palo Alto Coalition for Equal
The baby survived, and Lisa formally established a new city Rights, said he was "surprised
La France, an 18-year-old in Northern California. by the margin" of defeat. He
freshman from Los Angeles,· In Stockton, late returns said he felt opposition resulted
was charged with attempted showed City Councilman Jesse from fears that gay lifestyles
murder and felony child abuse, L. Nabors trailing narrowly in would become widespread in the
oolice said. his attempt to become the city's ci t Y if th e m easure wa s
Miss La France was first black mayor. With 88 approved.
San Diego County voters
approved a charter amendment
iri Tuesdaf's elections erohlbit-
lnc county employees from
s&rll9Jll and mandatlns them to
talte an oath promising never to
strike.
Elsewhere In Southern
Callfornla, residents in the
Westlake Village co~munlty,
northern Los Angeles County
voted w Incorporate. However,
incorporation was voted down in
Solan~ Beach, nofth of San
Diego. '
Santa Barbara elected the
first woman mayor in the city's
131-year history, and Rivenside's
incumbent Mayor Ab Brown
retained his seat by a landsUde.
In West Covina. 6,488 voters.
or 55 percent, voted against
banning further hazardous
waste from the BKK landfill,
while 5,366, or 45 percent, voted
for the measure, Proposition K.
It called for all wastes dumped
at the site to be encased in
plastic and rezoning of some
property near the landfill from
banned. " l
In San Bernardino, a ,r•
control measure almlla.r tCJ ·•
contrpversial one in effect ln
Santa Monica was defeated wtdl
9,190, or 69 percent, v0Un1 llO,I•
and 4,102, or 31 percent v~
yes. il
The meaau.re called ~fl creation of a seven-mem
board to grant initial. re ~
a djustments and authorlt
annual rent increases of up to
percent. ·
San Bernardino County voterf\
also rejected, by 65 percent to 31·
percent, a charter amendmte\
that would have mandate(
annual wa"'e increases '" s heriff's officers, dislrid
attorney investigators and
county marshals. '
Brown kept his seat •••· Rive rside's mayor with 1'
percent of the vote and left l•f-
hopefuls trailing far behind. 1 .. ~
Kaiser mill closure
to cost 3,000 jobs
discharged Tuesday from Alta p e r cent of t h e vot e in •
Bates Hospital In Berkeley, Councilman Arnold I. Rue led Harris said a campaign to FONTANA <AP> -The a nno unced the "volunta= h b · d educate voters would be ~o eJ: sH!p~i;r1s~~~:~~::i~ Nabors by a count of 7,5619 to necessary before backers or the decision by financially troubled ·resignation" of its president
Suen li·p· er s~id Tuesday the 7,239. idea would consider putting it Kaiser SteeJ Corp. to close its chief executive officer, Rol
h primary steelmaking operation A K j e 11 and . A Ka Is e'r 5-pound, 13-ounce baby was in Mayor Dianne Feinstein had back on the ballodt. T e meas,ure in Fontana and its iron ore mine spokeswoman declined td
good condition. championed Proposition B, the w a s intend e to out aw d ,· s c u s s d e t a ,· I s o f t .,. .. · h · d at Eagle Mountain will cost •• .. cable car measure, saying an discrimination m ousmg an S • '---d 1 h b · r about 3,000 workers their jobs resignation. ecurity re~e increase in tpe 50 cent fare is e mp oyment on t e aSIS 0 over the next few years. offi cials The shutdown decision ca~ necessary to save the aging sexual orientation. ~ t N . say. after years or heavy losses in a OrcO pnson oourist attraction. But Kent Allen, a spokesman Kaiser's board of directors, 1company's steel operations, '
NORCO.CAP> -Officials at The measure, allowing the rorPaloAltansAgainstMeasure meeting in Oakland, said numbe r of un s uccessf*f
the California Rehabilitation Public Utilities Commission to B, s aid such a measure was Tuesday it reached the decision attempts to find a buyer an4
Center said they are r1laxing set cable car fares higher than unnecessary in Palo Alto ... I'm to improve the profitabiUty of failure in efforts w cut costs
tight secutity that was clamped fares for city buses and street certainly glad it's over. I hope the firm's finis hed -s t eel streamline operations.
B •anchi· •es•i· .... ~ny · on the facility last week in the cars, was approved 56.505 to the public debate ls also over," operations at Fontana, which In 1979, the steel opera .. " " ,,._, wake of racial fights that left u 34,573. The amount of the fare he said. wttl remain in operation. put a $61 million drain on to be admitted Qetsons .i.niured. hike was not specified in the Voters approved incorporation There are currently 7 ,000 corporation, and in 1980
Prisoners were allowed to go measure. of the community of Dublin in workers at the Fontana plant showed a $34 million deficit.
LOS ANGELES <AP> onsick.callandpicltupmedicine In Palo Alto, baclters of the Alameda County by a 3 to 1 and the mine, 160 miles lo the the first three quarters of S · C rt J d R ald unescorted ror the first time "'omosexual rights Measure· 8 . east in the Mojave Desert. year, the steel operations ~u_p_e_r1_0_~~_o_u~~u~'-e~_o_n~~~•-in_c~e_frida __ .~~~~~~~~··~~~~~~~~~~~~-,--m~a-rg_•_0_·~~~~~~~~~~~T~h_e~K_a_i_se_r~d_i_r_e_c_to_r_s~a_ls_o~_S34_·~·6_m~il_li_o_n_in~th_e_b_l_a_c_k_.~~"41
Fall S~ular Salel
'Ne hove deslgnlng Ideas Iha! oon ChOnQ8 vo.s outlOOk wtthOuf draining VOJr budget
~-tillering Shodes and bNnds that lghten Of datken a room Instantly. woven woods In colocs
to match any decor. and wood binds to complement YoU moat elegant fumltlre.
And we hove them all at sale prices Iha! will t;jve yo.J Ideas
65% off on all Custom Drapes
CHAPMAN INTERIORS ...
8077 w ............. •••·· w ......... ....
ASAR IHE ·LOWEST.
UNRESTRICTED
ROUND TRIP
FARES TO ·
ALL THESE CITIES.
Chicago
Peoria I
Each way with
round trip
purchase.
Each way wi th
round trip
purchase.
Each way with
round trip
purcha!>e .
Miami. Ft. Lauderdale
521 Each way with
rnund trip
purcha~e.
Boston, New York/Newark and LaGuardia,
Philadelphia.,Washington. D.C.
Our new ASAP fares from Lo A• IXnA CITY M H
Angeles International. Burbank or IXTllA CllA•R. When you fly
Ontario to the East aren'tjusf lower. to any of these cities in the Eut,
Thty'rc a lot lower. Downright un· you can return from one of the other
beatable. citic at no extra charge, For example
Best of all, there arc no re-fly to New York and return from
strictions. No advance purchase. No Washington, D.C.
length of stay requirements . But seats So for the lowest fares to Ill
arc limited, and fares arc effective these cities, caJI your travel aaent or
through November 30. 1981 . ' Continental. ASAP.
Ne>1~: ASAP'"" s20.oo 111•r rmm Bvrbu .. ...a Oiilllio 1o ~
The ..... Blrd
·CONllNINTA
Yalley
buildings
to move
The Fountain Valley
Historical Society bas been
1tven permlasion to relocate on
city property three Talbert
Village-era buildings that had
. been scheduled for demolition in
early 1982.
The local organization n
roust raise funds or se r e
volunteer help to move the
llructures -a 1920s real estate
"'fice, a wooden water tower
and a J apanese bath house.
The Historical Society
members say these are the only
remaining structures of Talbert
Village, the com mnunity 's
original town cente r at the
lhtersection of Tai be rt A venue
and Bushard Street.
The organiza tio n 's
members applauded Tuesday
night when the City Council
unanimously agreed to permit
the structures to be placed on
undeveloped prope rty behind
City Hall and adjacent to the
Safeco Insurance property at
Brookhurst Street and Slater
Avenue.
Councilman Marvin Adler's
snotion included the stipulation
Chat the buildings' location may
bave to be adjusted if a new
police station is built in the
same area.
· ·'But if it will save the
buildings, I think we s hould
alJow them to use the site,··
~dler said.
The structures n ow are
located on Bushard Street just
south of Talbert Av enue on
property that is to be cleared for
construction o f an office
building.
Historical Society members
envision a small fenced park
b e hind City Hall where
reminders of Fountain Valley·s
past can be displayed.
Cycle victim
Lloyd Lund
rites slated
Funeral services for Newport
&ach resident Lloyd M. Lund, a
Long Beach police officer who
was killed Friday in a motorcycle accident, were
conducted today in Long Beach.
Mr . Lund , who was a
motorcycle officer, was off duty f't'iday afternoon when a gust of
wind reportedly blew his
mbtorcycle out of control on the
San Diego Freeway near the
£uclld street exit m Fountain
Valley.
The SS.year-old officer struck
a fence on the median strip. He
was pronounced dead at Fountain Valley Community
hospital.
Mr. Lund leaves his wife
Penny, a son Dennis and two
c!aupten Denise and Sheri, He
also is s urv ived b y two
trandchildren.
20VSD
incuillhents
• win seats
Two incumbents were
re-elected and one was defeated
in the Ocean View School
District election Tuesday.
In cumbents C harl es
Osterl und , 1 ,800 votes ;
Marianne Blank, 1,723 votes;
and challenger Jane Garrick,
1,416 votes were elected to
four-year terms on the school
board.
Eight-year incumbent Darrell
Carter was d e feated and
finished fourth with 1,305 votes.
Carter said today that be was
.. not that surprised, because the
campaign hadn't been going
well. But I'm not happy... An
engineer for an Anaheim
consumer goods firm, Carter
said he wasn't able to devote
much time to his campaign this
year.
Mrs. Garrick, a housewife,
said she walked precincts three
hours each morning for the past
eight weeks ... I'm surprised,
happy and tired, .. s he said
today. "I've got a lot to learn about the district now.··
Mrs . Blank and Os terlund
couldn't be reached for
comment.
Ocean View ha s 23
kindergarten through grade
eight schools including 10.500
s tudents from Huntington
Beach, Fountain Valley,
Midway City and Westminster .
Other candidates and their
vote totals:
Doris Enderle, 1,298; Susan
Markham, 1,075; Steven Smith,
1,053; Flint Morrison, 729 ; and
Jim Powers, 575.
Sing-along
program set
The monthly sing ·alon g
program for senior citizens bas
been resumed this fall at Golden
We st College in Huntington
Beach, with the next program
set for Saturday.
The free program will be held
from 2 to 4 p.m. in Chorale
Room 108 in the Music Building.
Mesa passes curbs
on electronic games
Despite protests by a local
merchant, a game machine
salesman, an electronic game
center owner and former Gov.
Edmund "Pat" Brown, the
Costa Mesa City Council has
passed a new ·electronic game
machine ordinance.
Brown's comments were aired
during a pre-council study
aession Monday when Planning
Director Doug Clark reported
the former governor had sought
an ordinance delay by phone.
Clark said Brown had stated
b e is lobbyinc for iame
interests in the atat.e.
Clark aald be 1u11ested that
the former 1overnor come to
Coata Mea for the ordinance's
second bearilll, a requirement
before it becomel dty law.
The orcllnance -redrafted
alter pme promoten packed
$be City Council cbamben lo
froteat touah reaulattona
fropoaed by the Plannlna
Comml11ion -allow• the eontJ'oftnial 1ame1.
But lt clamp• 1ome
recaulnmenta, laeJ•clina adult
1Uper.W. ad a baa OD plQ by
JOUUlll clla1q tebool boun, OD ........... _ ....... four
...... c11 ............ .
Sutb ftrma mmt'-a,:atn a permit .,.,.. far m iDtlll _.
'
re-approved on the basis of how
well the individual business
performs in policing itseU and
youngsters.
Business owner Lucien Bisson
complained, "Don't you think
we are over-taxed, over-licensed
a nd over -everythinged rieht
now?"
He called the games "good
baby sitters."
''These games take money
away from kids so they don't
• spend it to smoke pot."
Lance Hailstone, spokesman
for a game distributor, said,
"W e feel dis c riminated
against." He said be ls
concerned about the coat of
permits and adult supervision.
Geor1e Kataanpes or
Huntln1ton Beach ls an
electronic• 1ame center
operator wbo took a different
view.
"I'm for re1ulatin1 tbem.
They're a dellnlte problem. But
ll you are 1otn1 to re1ulat.e it, do
it for the linll• machine, too."
He added, ''The way lt ii now,
they put in thole machlD•1 one,
two or tlane of them, and ftlrlel
them."
H• Mid tbe ...,Watlont tbould
appl1 to all buaiDHAH,
n1antaeu ol the number of ...............
'
Dally Piiat
WEDNESDAY, NOV.'· 19'1
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
ENTERTAINMENT
82-3
84-5
86-7, 89
Dr. William Burke of
the Federal Reserve says
the tight money policy will
continue. See P.age 84.
ln.cu~nt, 2 othe~ win • m BB
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of .. Delly ..........
Two new trustees and an
incumbent were elected to
four -year t erm s on the
Huntington Beach Union High
School District school board
TuHday.
Defeated for re-election was
five-year incumbent Zita Wessa, a campaign target of the local
teachers association. She
finished fifth in a field of nine
candidates vying for three seats
on the seven-member board.
Elected ·were Ron Marcus,
who received the most votes
with 8,043, incumbent Stephen
Smith, 6,351 and Sherry Baum,
5,958.
The D istrict Educators
Association, which hired a
political consultant for the first
time this year, supported both
Marcus, a financial adviser for a
Santa Ana firm, and Ms. Baum,
a community relations worker
for a labor organization in Seal
Beach.
The district bas seven hilh
school! includine 18,000 atudenu
from Fountain Valley, Seal
Beac h , Westminster and
Huntington Beach.
Mrs. Wessa attributed her
defeat to the efforts of the
teacher association again.It her
re-election bid. Mrs . Wesaa wu
school board president durinc
the association teacher atrlk~ in
1979.
"It's something bard to
understand," Mrs. Weasa, •7,
said today. "I thou(ht I served
well, took a lot of heat and made
some dilflcult decisions. It's just
that I didn't have the ble bucks
that the teacher association used
against me."
The final tally was Marcus,
8,043 ; Smith 6,351; Baum, 5,958;
Jerry Supernaw, 5,881 ; Wessa,
5,532; Marlette Slates, 4,906;
Norma Vander Molen, 4,207·; Re
Stevens, 1,279, and Pat Sullivan,
1,251.
TOPS HB FIELD
Ron Marcus
ELECTED TO BOARD
Sherry Baum
2 newcomers join Valley board
ALSO JOI.VS BOARD
Su zanne Moore
LEADS I N VOTING
James Woest
By PIHL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. DMly Niii .._
Two newcomers and one
incumbent will take seats on the
Fountain Valley School District
Board of Trustees on Dec. 3.
J ames Woest, Suzanne Moore
and incumbent Roger Belgen led
a field of seven candidates vying
for the board seats in Tuesday's
election.
Woest , a materials manager
for an Irvine pharmaceuticals
firm, was the top vote getter.
According to unofficial results
with all precincts reported in,
Mrs. Moore and Belgen were
separated by j~t·five votes.
The unofficial totals were:
James Woest, 1,488
Saiuuae Moore, 1 ,356
Ro1er Be11ea, 1,351
William Manes, 1,256
Ann Galas, 9'5
David Boyd, 686
Stacey Richardson, 482
··I • m very happy. very
pleased,'' Woest, 33, said in an
interview today.
"I think this shows that a lot
of people want better planning
and professional management
attitudes in the administration
or ' the school district. That's
what I campaigned on,'' he said.
Belgen, 51, who has been a
trustee for nine years, said
today, "I'm just grateful to
those people who have been a
blessing to me during my years
on the board.
"I just hope during the next
four years I can be a blessing to
the district on the board.''
Belgen said be limited his
campaigning primarily to
candidate night appearances
and spent only $300 on the
campaign. He said he was
r e -e lected because of the
reputation be has earned as a
board member.
Former trustee returns to HB city hoard
tt'ormer trustee Brian Garland
h as been returned to the
Huntington Beach City
(elementary) School District,
Board of Trustees. leading a
field of four ca n did at es
competing for three seats.
According to the unofficial
vote totals with all precincts in,
Garland was joined by new-
comer Sherry Barlow and Pat
Coben in the winners' circle.
T he totals show incumbent
Roy Ho..w in fourth place, just
nine votes bbind Mrs. Cohen.
The unofficial vote totals
were:
Brian Garland, %,316
Sherry Barlow, 2,284
Pat Cohen, 1,9'3
Roy How, 1,934
' Garland, a 40-year-old Edison
High School teacher, left the
board two years ago in an
unsuccessful run for a seat on
the Coast Community College LEADS THE FIELD JOINS HB BOARD ALSO ELECTED
Pat Cohen District Board of Trustees. Brian Garland Sherry Barlow
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Mrs . Barl ow, 45 , who
describes h erse lf as a
housewife.businesswoman, said
she was not surprised by her
election win.
"I felt very calm," she said
today. "I felt that if I was
supposed to win, I would win."
The new trustees wlll be
seated at the board's Dec. 1
meeting'.
Free career
workshops
set for GWC
Three free workshops on .
career plannlnt will be offered
a t Golde n West Collete in
Huntington Beach, beglnnln~
Thursday.
The workshopa, aponaored by
the Women's Center, wUI be '
held from 1 to I p .m. ln
HUft!.aDi~el Room 107.
The llnt M11ioa will foe• •
ident1fyln1 one'• marketable
skills. Selllona oa Nov. 12 and It
will delertbe bow to wrtt. an eff ecllYe r•wn• aad a.ow to
••ke•IDOCllmpna-..... • • Job llantew. '
Colle~e incumbents • win easily
RETAINS BOARD SEAT George Rodda '
I,
I •
'I
.,
\
'1 I
•• ,
'"
!j
" • M
~
.... -.. --.,,,.,.-_,,,,,, ..--.
Orange Coaet DAILY PfLOT/Wednnday, November•. 1981
,,----:-~-t-~·r·~-·m·~-£~-~-.. -~-:-:o_F .. .,-~-i0-.,-,-r-~-,:-:-.-r-~--.. -P .. ~-,-~-.~-.1·J·.-,:r·"-.-~.;.-,-, .. -.c-.T· .. -.-.!--~-.-.-~-.-,-.~-,-,A·.-.-o-~-.-~-l-.-!-P-.-,-~---s--~
t.• Firms s r
• • • creat1:v.e JUiees
It._ ftOt true that American bUlinen· bu IOlt ta..
knack ot comtnc up wlth lma«lnaUve new product.a.
1 recently received a refeue trumpetina a new
calendar deslgl)ed for peoJ>le who "hate Monday•."
lt't a calendar wbtre all Mondays have been
re mo~ . ,
Another ~leue told me about Keep.Safe, a·
privately owned, aafe.depoilt vault estabUJhed ln
Palo Alto, near Stanford University. It seemt many
banks are running out of 1afe·depo1lt boxes tor t~lr
customers. So now local entrepreneurs are bulldln1
vaults where you can rent apace lo bide your
valuables.
Slill another
br e akthrough ,
com Ing from the big
drug maker ,
Scherlng·Plougb, is a
liquid form or its
Correctol laxGtlve. lllJll .... IJZ Al so n e w and
exciting, batJtcd by ·
big advert1slng bucks, ar~ sweeler-tastln1 1el
versions ot Crest and Colgate toothpastes. ·
Nor are those all the new entries. There's moce.
much more. Here's a smattering of them:
-·Crystal Creations Apparel, a Costa Mesa
company that hit it big during the dlsco craze with
rhinestone-studded Diamond Dancer pantyhose, has
a new line of pantyhose with hearts, flowers, pearls
and butterntes in the designs.
-Heublein, master of the vodka market
<Smirnoff, Popov, Relska), is bringing us Steel
peppermint schnapps.
-A company called MEM , which we have to
thank for Engljsh Leather, has developed a new
women's fragrance, Essence of Musk.
-Not to be outdone, Max Factor, a unit of
Norton Simon Inc., has a new fragrance called
Missoni. named after the fashion designers, at $135
an ounce.
-California's Geyser Peak winery is moving
into national distribution with it.s line of Summit
canned wines C no corkscrew needed>. Geyser is
owned by Milwaukee's Schlitz. which knows a thing
or two about cans.
Lorillard, a maker of Kent and True and
Newport, has two new low-tar cigarettes in test
markets. One is Bistro Lights. the other is Maverick,
billed as a woman's cigarette that's ··a whole new
breed."
-Would you believe this: Dinky Donuts cereal?
tt·s from Ralston Purina. maker of Purina Dog
Chow.
General Foods bas whipped into Houston and
San Antonio with a new frozen whipped topping under
the name Dover Farms. It's said to contain ··over 30
per cent real cream," which wiU enable the company
to boast: ··The one and only frozen whipped topping
made with real cream ." And that should tell you
somethiag about Dream Whip and Cool Whip, also
brought to you by General Foods.
-Lever Bros. has a new dishwashing liquid,
Sunlight. which has "real lemon juice."
The Japanese better watch out.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HIEW YORKIAP) Fl,,.1 Oow-J~et •¥91-~0C~~· Nov. 1
0... "'-"-c-QI JO Ind t.7.2t rn.1t as•» -.n+ 1.«1 1111 Trn l71.n m.10 J7J.fJ J11M+ 2.6.S U Ull IOl.G 109.11 I07.l7 IGl.!4+ O.U u 5111 >&S.Jt ,.,, M2 .. ,,.... .. 1.25
~":1.u,,' . . . . . . . . . . J, IU,200
Ulll• •.•...• •. •. . . 1.::u: ..:.·~ U Sil! 7,H 7..200
AMERICAN LEADERS
HEW YOJllK tAPI· 5-les, T~. prlc•
Md Ml <'-of IN "" moll ecll,.. AIMrk_. 5-11 R-.. 1-. tr~ ......... 11,, .. ,_. ..... 11
o, "'"• CAlft • 111.-11'-.. .. '" .""'°' --1111 + -~ITr lit,!!!! 1t14 •N9 ... ,,.... •.• IMV$'rd S 1'4-M "•~tOll lCll,000 -:.:·i6 All "" •.JGD JOY> _, HtlD~p II ... 1114 -\'I HUM'rOG 1J,100 ,.,_. + ... Supr~Eno ' n,• ao + ,..,
Pct. "" ,._. Up IU u, tu
Up 11.t
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WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YORI( IAPI New J -Aevenc:9Cf TOO:' ~ o.<1111941 •11 DS Uil<lle,...cl -• J:IA TOCel 1-,.,. ltu H-llltN • .. _,~ " It
WHAT A ... U:OID
Nl!W YORK IAPI Nov. It """· ,...,e!ICM T ... -:i,
0.CllnM 1't 11J
UMM ...... Ill 174
TNll-"' .. _,,._.. • D .... ._ • 10
METALS
C•11••• ll~·IM cents • pound, U S.
clettin•llon•. Leff ,._40 c..,ts e IJOU!'d
Z"'c .. 11.-49\lo cents• pound. dellvtr•d
Tie .a.011• Mewli w.et< comPOSlte lb Al•mlalHn ,._.,_ e ~. H.Y
Merc•r'r 1-122 .00 e»r !Ian.
PleOIMlm M12.00 troy Ol .. ,... y
SILVER
Hendv I. H ... men. $9.llOper troy ounce
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~: ..-n•nohtnoMJ1 oo.""u ,, ~: •ft-fllllng MJI U, UC> $.100
Ptrlt: elttrnoon 11111119 .Ut.n . up u 40
llraftllf•rt: Mll.O.. llP M.07. 1w1c111: l•• n•tno 5odCI oo. OIO ue> u oo, Sl».00 ... ed.
Haaely & Hermt11: tonl'r d•fly quola I
t.dl.U , up U.00.
......... "'' (only delly QUo4t) M31 tl. .... Ille."'; lonl'r Cl.Illy quot•) l•llf'ICAled
t.'SUI.
SYMBOLS
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Orange ~••t DAILY PILOT /Wednffday, November 4, 1981
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Tiie ,.. ... ,"' ..,_ .,. "'"' Tiit ••ll••lllt "''" It •• , .. , l&MllltHTaMllllfT OPCALIPOMIA ll9e9GOM1a1-.•wn •-••i ~-•: TN ,..._.., ,._ .,. 41111t "°"-'?!~.·n 0.. l'l"DAY, NO¥SMeaa a. --1 ... ~ OA•DINClt PINANClo\L, 19441 .,.._..I """"--•1 .,.. ' ... ._.,, .. ,,, C... 'll<1lr11 LA, ................ edl, CA ltOllltf N l1,$0N ~ OltOl•TOMIOWCMIMN• •t H :ll A.Ill., T•AMIAMl .. IC•
Mtt1,Ctl""1Nta• .,..., AISOCIATIS, INC., 1to11 l'ltell CM.ueelot'lifAMI TITl..I rNIU•.ANCI COllllltANV, f4 ,. ... ,. .... 1 l~lelltll, IM., I hi! A. Oerflntr •"' P•hlt f., lttwc, ll'Wle, (jltfwnll tl71' CAM*>• A-1,_ CALtrOllMIA Co•~•A TION •1
C.ltfwflll <Wl*9tlell, tM W, ... .,, O•rflller, ltUI Pi1c1lt11 l,n., N •LI 0 N • It A D I a • 0 In IN .,...,., fll .. .._.ket .... -' 4'1ilr .......... Tr111t ... ""*' Mii ••tl Cltll MIN, c.·~· ... -""' ........ fll T-,_.... T11l1 IKlllMo ",~, .. lty. N1H1t ....... 9M<ll,CA...... CONtULTINO IMCO•PO•ATID •• DAVID WIUIUlt SPCNCI, """,., "-n. ,.. • ....,, ....... ... <WP#•l9fl. Tlllt .,..._It ~IM"_. Cell..,1111 ,.,._ .. 1 ... , ll011 Plkll Cl\efltl.,.._ 1,_.,, p ... 161r, fllOMI ... .._._ ~--··11-..111(. lllfl¥ifllll. au..., 1N111t,Clllfwll&etVl4 flle .... tc.t ... -DAVID wu .. •u• _.,.. .. I WAVJll ltAUP•11111u ... , •tc-•o 1,_1, lellA.Oet911wr ,..._. ...._, tlf7t Plkfl Mtwt. SPaNce • .11t •• ''*"' flf -· _........~111 .. .-ic...
........... Tl* ........... -fllef .1 ..... 1"'1 ... CllllWNltfll4 l\ayl119 ..... Ill• Ill C-t, ...-" tll• C•Vt!W ••c.r•r .. Orlll .. Tiii• .........,., ... 1119 ....... C-tyCIMl•Dt".,,..C-.y9110cl. Tiii• ...., ....... (11\411(1 .. •Y ...... ""' fl'tlft .... ..iullM .... c-··· ICMe flf ClllMlll•. Wll.L
c-ty Ci.ft " °'~ c_ ... 1111 "· 1•1• ~....... OAVIO WIL9Ult .... NC •• Jlt. "" Iii.• AT "Ull.IC AUCTION TO ~ 1 ., ,..,.... ........,...,. lllef .,, .... ~ ""'"""'.., lllt .. r ,ltll. P1o1911 .... °'9fletCIMtt0.llf f'li.t. ~ .... ·~--.. ll•mt M ~ti DAVIO .i..aa HIGHllT 810DI" l'Olt CASH
-· -'°'*'l ..... Orent1tCMttOell~1~ OCt.n ,-.-... 11,1•1 ~t "*"'*-• llltltY, (pey ...... tlllw •.:,'" = ~ -·~ Oct.,., 11, •• Nov ••• ••t ·---• fllr..-it ..... ~. it,, .... "".,.,.. ........... IMltM ·~ ......... PICTITIOUSIUIHllll .._..., -· ~r Tlllt ,..._ ... llltd •1111 tlll enf fltet1•4f, tllet ell "•rHl!I , ..... ----• ... Ofllllt _.....,. -II' flm NAMllTATCMllfT ,....,., •IM ~ly Cl«tl flf Ota,,.. C-'V 911 IM«•tt• 111 Mild metw M ...... Olf ~ •• lttMll If w.t •-,u-Tiit tOllOWlno perso11 II'''"' "=:m:::-PllUC •T&E ()(....,. ,.., .... .,. 11111 (.-t I o-.1 , ..,... AN..,.._., City., ......
"IC'TtTIOUS•USIMIH llull:7•ut Tllt f•ll•wlnt ... ,..11 It •oln9 MC'TITtouttUIOtall ' , P:O~ Ille HUI •Y ti~.~.: =·.::=:=:::==
.... ITATaMHT Ptelrl:L!:!!~ ~~:v~.c~:;,.:=. ""'""••: TIW ,:::e..!T:,="·T. -Oct~·~= .. ~ 08lly·= :·••.'.!._llO~~~'!.."-·.!.. ........ M _. .... n... .. Trwt 111 ttle Tiie f9fle.1119 Hrtont .,. •01111 Cell .. rnle ~ POUi. TltY PLUS, ff SI l.e"Wtft "ICT1nou1 '"'....... ........ , fl9 • • • . --... -__ ,...., -<'*'II ..--rt? ....... Ill ,.... c-., .... ..__, ClrfH~ .. «--CAftMt. MAMCITATeMa"T Ml-•: _,,._ • .,_,..,,.. .. .,......, ..-.-•: Ptlll W. Meolll-. '* W 1 .. 11 T ... fell-Int lltfMnt 8,. ......... ADVAlfCID MOTOlt SlltVICIS II It IW'* .,., ... tN11 e '-'f ff .._...,._.: WISTertN STATES OIL l'IELO S1f .. l,1'erre11ee,Cellf0fitletotM 0,..........., °"*"· ''" ~ -·~».. .. ... CoMlt.utY, .. s.itll c.Mll °''"· .-x Illa lllltOtferT•"-Ceuw11t.-.1thef ,..,,. ., .............. II. ll«te ==~~t0t2 Cryll•I $1r .. I, Tllit ..,,,,,..,It <onMttd.,., •ft c1;·iil~~~~~ ... en THIE 1o'x STORI 0, OltANOI Stillelll,Collll~.CAtM1L '" Ill• D•lly Pll•I H•w .... "r·. It, ••• "" ........ ICtwl
' W..tem Sl.C•'~'!~, Go .. lndlvld'°:~MeOO'Mrl lncllv~~f'OflL.OnAIM ~fil!Hg;.::r Gr'-" lt4., L...-ct!"n':::: ~Is~.~~~ PtCTITICMIUlfllaM ~l~·:,·:~<:..i;,•~ ~~·~!"~ =~':':Y~•::~: 1
"'" • C111tomi. COtoof•llon, ,..., Tl\I• •141'-1 .., .. 11114 wllll tlll Tiiis 1~ WM flied wltfl 1111 Mov·ll Ellllfprlt .. lllC • Celllorllle COt!'Of'•lkln, 190) Seutll CMtt Orlve, •AMllTAT•MIMT --fOr ._ wccntl ... _.., "* •••Ill U , t>•I•• '' •11• • •I =~I~\ Hunll119t011 Be.ch, CA County Cl•rk Of Orenoe tountv on Countye1er11.i0r-.c:-11,onOct. <orporellon 1S2TI G~luom Rd Slille)11,0..W"'-.CA'26a. Tiie ... ....,lftt ,.,_, .,. dolne totllldeytlWldllffflnt. Ml•cell-•111 M•1u. reor" 11
w..tema. Nowembtr2, Itel .,174n1 It, ltl1. l .. .-Hllla 'CAtM.51 ·• Tllll Ml-• la c•"'"'t" 11, • MllllMM: Oelt4Wt 12'hda,of0ctotlfr, l"1. Or•11~~11ty, C1llf•r11I•, mor•
...... r-,11._, Tlli1 -1'8u It colldu<I .. IJY 1 llmltff .-i~p. (II MISSION HOMl!S: (II OLO ,._,A . ..,.....,. -11<-•r...,..... ..... ._.! 'N--IMl14jU,,,..,..,, ........... eo.1nt Pul>ll•lleCIC>91119 COilllO.lly Pllol, p I OrM19C..tO.ll Pli.t C°"'11f'etlen. ~.~etlllt OLOltY HOMIS: IC) PAT•IOT J ..... tla.tldS...•ltrCt\ln ........... e,w.tlll ......... fty
lt-'1 L.. ~non Nov 4• I I, II, JS, ltl1 4IOl .. I ul>I -' y ' Malo-! I! .,.._..., ·-HOME$; ID> 1tev11t1E HOMES; (I!) Pullll.,_ Or-... Coett Oellt ll"lltl It,. ., M4f I.It II, 4119'Mt. _.....,., Set,., T,.-., Oct. 21• .. llto'l.4, 11• IWI ~I I "....,,,. ... , l11<. OW ... S. Hel"lt Sl!NATE HOMl!S: Cf') tn6 HOMIS, Oct. 14, 21 •,Nov.4,.1"1 4JOM1• 21M .... ~IM ....,IY llM.,
Tiii• .....,._, ••• lli.G wtltl '"-' NU ·-p-~JOM L. bwlff ~ ( 0 > T A L Ho M I! s ; c H > ' • '*I.It 11. ClllftCe _.._.., .._. h
C:-tyCIMICllOrenoecountronOcl. llM ...i •m Tiii• .....,_, ... fll• wftll Ille Tiii• .._. -fllecl wllfl Ille TltADITIONAL HOMES; (I) UNION -•tHly , ..... ""It ellf 11 ...
"· ,,.,, rn~ MOT•C• 0, TltUIUa'l IAL• f:.":':i Clertl -Of ..... Ceuntr on Oct. ~:z.~ .... -Or .. C-lv on Oct. ~Mye:~~~:=::T= ~~z~'J. Pll.X .a =~ ~~.e:::'.:::
Pullllllled C>ange Coast Oelly Plloi. NOTI CE IS HEAE8V GIVEN INll LIGALNOTIC• l'tn.4 HC>Mel, llH SE ~ Stl'Mt, li'Vtllt, M,• ... , ._. _.,,, • ._ ...
Oci. 2'· •"°"·'-ti,, .. , 4'0! .. i on Wednodey, the 25111 day or Tiie O<H11 vi.w Scllool 01 .. rlct '11_, PulillllllN Or.,. Coaat Oelly Piiot, Clllltor!'Nft714' lfOTICaTOCOtfT•ACTO•s 1'"9 "'"'"""""" .. _...,,Y 1r,,. Oii ---...;,,.---------November, t•I el 10:00 '·"'· It .. 50 Al'M~lcen lllfllll "'°1«1 11 <•!lint • Oct P\ll>lltfled 0r.,,.. Coell Dally Piiot. Oc:I. 11, '9, Nov. 4, II, 1"1 417H1 "11111 p H M <Nam a•, U I U CAl.U ... f'Otl 81DI Lit 11, e • ._ fll ...... t .. a 1· PHUC NOTJCC Von Karmen 11Yfllli9, In ... City ol SDt<l•I INltlllO. tueldey, .. _.,., . 21• 21• Nov. 4, "· , .. , 4'0IM1 McCHr!Mn, • 1. ltvl11•. e e111.,n1e kllMI Olllrlc1: HW:WPOlllT-Ml!SA .... 111111 ... _,, ........... ~ "·
Hawpert llN<ll, C-ty OI Otenge, 10, 1 .. 1f"""1 tot p .. 111. TN lle••"'9 -· -'21H, UNll'll!OSCHOOt. 01$TltlCT Ml• ............. rwtMrly, • fltUll<t -------------Slate of C•'lllornle , HUGH wUI be IWld to 411Klltl tM 1"2-IJ , -· •'""r ~ -·-Olla Sin.bro, UJO S.lltell•ll• Ill 0..."'9: 2:•0'cleO 111.m . flf .. 2.S.•Mt,,__ ... Mllttltflyllllllf
.. 1cT1noius•US111flll BltECICEN'ltlOGE 8$ lhe TruJllw .... project propoHI. Al '"" 111119, nr8'A ·-Terrec•, c.-•• ,,,..,, Cellfwlll• t .. 12t11My.,..........._, 1tll .... I.It "· --.c. Wlilller1'f allftl llAM9 ITAThHNT tlW Btnefklery, CAROL A. NAOEL. ... .......... "-1<811 ,,._ __ y "ICT1T10US IUltllflll "'2j, l'lect" ... ltect4tiC: 1157 ,.._ .... ~ llM .. I.At 11 -.....
Tfl• 1-•10 I I I whose ..,,..., Wltrtu ,, 4'SO Von .,. ,,, ..... ., ........ <rltk1-, • ..., "ICT•nous •USIM•H ......... T .. T ....... T Tiii• IHIMMH I• COndlicted l>y • SC., c ........ CA ftU1 ""-ttr1y ii... ....... 12 •• --~ .. ,.. • 119 P•Non 1 •• 110 Kermen A¥-, Newpert Btecll, 1 "'8 tet -.. -II J II I S4.ll ro.e -.C. ..-rtv IM9 M6f ._._... Celllornle •11d whose 1e1e11hone lltPU~llc' '!!'.,1•1-w1':!... ..'..~,..~:.~, ~~ ~!'iowAMa1111ST,_• ... nM.•,."~-~-Tiie '9110wlno flOr'ton• are dol119 11"'""',..,,•oNrt. It '':. •0<0t 1••1111 cet.., Ne"'• ;,. ...__ ..... ,.,.. .. IA) IEQ. HATIO..AL, 181 f'IELO numtNt Ii 1!4-tS~I wlil Mii el v ·-• .., """""'"''"' --· ,,_..., ...,.,..,..,.. -IMUM: ,.,.llpH .• .._ E ·" f' GYMNA SIU M AT penll .. I •--• • lllllVICIE, ""S. ltllche'r, Senta An•. -·1111< ··-1-10-~1~~.~-YI•• Scflool, 1 .. ., L•ndMI LeM, INUM: STAINED GLASS OVERLAY OF Tiiis ............. -,. ... •'"' tllt COltONAOEl.MAltHIGHSCHOOL ... ~ ..............
CAft11S. ~;th, ,;rl;;j _:';jj~lt';d Hunll11vton llHch, Cellfon.te. II YOli lt08EltT WOLTZ ASSOCIATE& NIWl'OltT SEACH, IUOS Ml. C-tyCIM<of~ ..... C-ytftOct. Piao Pl•nt 1ro on Ille: IUJ bu•.,. IM!v ... _" .. all lfCS Electronk blculetOf S.rvlc•. Slettt •II ~,-.Ille ... tlw time Of.... l\tYt •ny ~'°"".,.._cell llldlall INC., Sit ~'°' ......... Newport ••• .,m.,. s ....... F-•••n v.11..,, 27, 1WI. l'IKaftlle St., C.ta ~ CA-fttS .... eu ml11•r•I• e11d otll•r
• C1llflr111a core>0ret1on, I"' s. •II 111~1 ce.1.ln ,..1 p._rty sltwttd EdPu<u!1'1~°!.!'0r(1~C1~11'·oelly Piiot, BNCll, CA ""1 C•llttt~ '219 P04111 8Nt St, Goete MHe. CA llydroc.,11011 tulute11c u Hvtf lttt<lllY, Santa Ana, CA '270~. In 1,.. City of ,.,...,,.,,, 8tKll, Ofonga v .,_ -._ -RoMrl Wolu Anocletff Inc • I Ste"'*' "9lll Gl~k:ll, INOS Ml. PulllltMd Or-. Coest O•lly Piiot, NOTICE IS HIRl!IY GIVEN lfllt ...,..,,_ .... e 111rlodel It.,..,. r,.,,. Tflh lllillMSt Is conducted l>Y • County, Calllornla ducrllltd •• Nov.>.•, s.•. ••1 • no.1 Cellror11le <«Poretlon, S1t 5-rlor WetermMI SCtwt, Fountelll Valley, Oct. 21, Nov. 4, 11, 11. 1w1 ...,.., ,,.. •IM-Sc'-' Dltttkt et "«II•. 1"'5.,,. 1111111 9'Weafter 01 <.,.,_•tloft. 1o11ows llwnw, .._,.,, llfftll, CA t2"3. eeorornlt '21111 Otenoe Colintv, Cellfwnle, Kllflt •Y ""II ~ ._., be ~ Ill
ECS Lot II. Trecl 1?23. •• sllown on a Pim.JC •TIE Th11 IMlslneu '' conducted l>Y • l•l'Mre .Jo Glftork ll, llJOS Mt. enf tllr9U111 I~ Glver111,.. ... ,,, HY"'e ..,....._ -ft9t .. ••u.f, Ill
WllfNJ "'~1ry e«por•loft. Weltrm.,. 51,..1 .• f'ounhlll Vall..,, lltrelnefte r ••''"•f 10 •t 8f'Y•v-. • ...,..1,.,..._,ll6,l9$S, .__.. map r.cor-In a-77•, Peoes M l ltobH1Woltl "•llfo-··-.. ..c .a "DISTRICT." Wiii ,_,,. ..... """ " r•Mnld.,., .-,.,.,. .. Smltft,..., $ac.·T-lnclusht Oii MIK•ll•-IMDS. In "'CTlnOUS.Vllllf•ll ..... _ • .,_ not I -"*' .................. ti ..., ---......... -· I ... Tiii& •••••1t wn flied wllll Ille Ille Office of lhe Coliney It.corder of .... ~ST .. -......... ,._lt..,.lnc;. Tllh ....,,..., Is tondu<l9d llV en • ___...._ ""· ·Y---....,." • ·~-. " C-... ......., o1 Or "•··-1 A... .._ .. ,,._ft• lt*'1 L. Wolb l""'vkhMI (""~ -wlf•) MOTICa TO OOtn'llACTORS tHIM 1169 fw .. _.of e <Mtlecl ... P ... wt.If OHklel It-. ,,..,._. .,...__.yon-.t. Orene•COU11ty,Cellfornle. Tiie tollowlne perto11 11 dtln9 -·~t .__ ....... --1 1or111eee.w,..o)lct AIM • .,... tflt ..._.., .. ,..of U. tJ, l .. l. Tllo 1tr1tl tddreu or Olhtr ~··'"IU •·. ro__, SI--P. Gl .... lch _ ... ....., IDS • ...... flllt ,...,._, WM lllecl wllll t"9 Tlllt --t WM r11t0 wlllt Ula Scllool Olstfkt: Cllalt CofMnunlty llfl _, lie rtC>tl..,. ill "'9 placa rl9fll lo ..,...._, ......., -_, ... -~i Or "1741tS common du19n1Uon of said rul IE DESIGN (TW().E). lllO IMI CountyC'"11.io.a-c:-tyonOct. County Cl-~ Ot•-c-ty on Coll ... Ollltkt ldenl"I• _,..,.., INll M aptMC1 tllil pertloft ol Mid l....S IYW. Delow .--ll'9CI tn9' COil•I Dally Pllol, pro1>9rty Is II Grtenbrltf, Newport Meyrelr, No. A, Orllftllt, CellfOlftle . ._ ~~ -...... Cl 1111 1 d 500 '-t ttwn tlle wrt "'8 tcJf few Oct. 21, Nov. 4, 11, 11, "" ,..,._., BNch, 0r-COUlllY, C.lltoml.. .,..7 It, 1tel. Oc-r 12, 1w1 lld o..d!IN: l:OO o'cloc.ll 11.m. of en PU c Y rea aloud el Ill• •• r · _,,,.. P11M1t ,.,11971 Ille 111 flrof 0.•mlltt'. Itel •l>Ove·tt.lod 1""9-fllect. 011, OH end olll•r llydrour1>on S•ld .... Wiii II• m•Cla •111\oul Eric .Atrlena, JllO l!Ht M•vt•lr, Publl"'9d OrMQit Coell Delly PllOI, Pul>lllhed 0r.,,.. C:0.11 Delly Piiot, Pieced 8lcl ••eel ... : Ottlc• of... The rt Wiii II• • N/A ••Potll 1u1>1tencu .... 111 Ill• 11.,.," NIUC NOTICE co•til•nl or ,..,,a111y reiierdlne tlll•, Or1111ge, Cellforllle'*7 Oct. 21, 21. Nov. 4, 11, Itel ..Ol .. I Oct. !4, 21• 2I. '"v . ._ tWI UJ7 .. I Purcll•sJ,. ... llt, Ma. Menan""""'· requlr•d ror ee~ll HI or -'• "'911lloMd ._ rec:onlotd H-Mr
poswulon. Of tn<umlH'encH lo setlsly Thlt bull"'"• 11 <onducttG l>Y e11 CoHt communll'r Coll• District. f0<11111tntt ta....,-. .,. returt1 111 u, "" If! 11otet .._ p ... J of Offklel tho obligations secur•d by end lndM-1 1110 Ade!N A-. c.te Mew, CA 90ed c~.+tllln N/A ...,s •ftilf ltKMfl. "ICTITIOUt•USINl!IS puriuent IO Ille powor of H it as ErkAtlitlte "8lJC •Tl£ -II' .lll'C mJt (71•) S»-S1Jll 1111 Mfopnlitii..... Tiit ttrut e•dre11 t lld tlller . llfAMa STATaMaNT rertrrNI to In 1u1 ce,,eln ~ of Tlllt -~ w-r11• wl ... •~ I"-1~ n""" .....__. I Tiit followl • dol ·~ ....... ··-~ -'" ...... ProJ•CI ldtlllltlcellon Ntmt: ~" llld lllliSI C-0 .... •1141 ... cam----·*· I tft'I'. of .... ,.. ,.,_. ,. ... Trout Cleted Oclol>•r 2, ltlO end C04111tY C!or1l of ~ ...... eo-iv Oft PICTtnous •uSIM•SS Coettll"I eemm..nity Coll ... CMl• ,._sJ .. tolllt<Mtrct~_..a. r•el P•tPlrtY -rlMd ........ . ...... ~ .. "cL'E~"'NTE LIMITEO •••cultd lly I N TE RVE S T~lt.lt•I ,ICTIT10USIUMMl!SI -81014W1 Eeclllllcl-••·~ ......... 1111r11ot1•• lo IM:,,. Prospect.
.. ... ... ASSOC I ATES, I NC ... Otl•w••• "''"7• MAMll STATaM ... T •MIUl ITAftM911fT PIK•,._ .,.on Ille: The Bhlroc::ll .... -Wlty relwNd"' In ... COll4r«I N .. ,.n llMOI. ~Hwnl •. f'AltTNEltS, SI• Cempin Orl•t. corpOr•toon. as Tru•lor lo P111>111Md0r ...... CoestDellyPllol, Tfo1e followln9 DOrJOn Is Clolnt T ... lolloWlne flO<SOftl ere dolllf P.,tNrlHp,DDONew_,hu ...... rd, dOCuments-biY"'811ttof,...__ Tiie ••sJ..,.. Trutt• dlKlelms
Suite MO, .._,, BNCll, Cellfolnlt A ES I 0 EH TI AL ES C It 0 W Oct. 14, 21, •. No¥.4,J"1 ......., blisl:~.~~E e. ASSOCIATES. t-I IMHJMU•t: Newport IHcll, CA '76•> 11U) sub<OlltrectoB. 911Y llMlllty lor ..,y lllcorrect111u of
..... ., CO A PORAT ION, • Ca lifornia -SPIC AHO $PAN L.AUHOltY AHO 61)..0300, ~ Mffl<ll. AIA Tiie OISTltlCT , __ t11t rl9M le tlle tlrMt ...._. -o4Nr cammon Tfl• SHtlm•rk Corporellon, • corporetlon .. Tnnt .. for CAltOL A. _.,. ~ L•llenl Orlv•. Hunllnoton Suell, DltY CLEANING SEltVICE, nu NOTICE IS HEltE8Y GIVEN u .. 1 ,.,Kt..,., or ill bids or lo wal ....... •sJtMtloro. ""'Y· "'°'"' .. "'"· C•llfomle COl'DOl•lon, SUO Cem11Us HAGE~. 8 .,..,rl.a _......,es her -,....,. ,..,_ Celltornl•"'4 I , _ _._ Seid Mlt wl ... d It"°"' Drlv,e, Suite 100, Newport B•ecli, and .. ~•l• Df'OCltrtv, e.s B•nellclery, Mervin E, Love, 91,. Ltllelll N-ll0'1 8clui.verd, H--1 llM<ll, Ille •t>ow~-Sc-I Oliltkt Of r,....._,.,_ or lnfOrmelltltt In .,., 11 lie -· vv• • c.lltwni. fJIMO. r..:ord<rd..,,. Oclol>tr l . ••. In 8ooll "ICTIT10US •VII Nall Ori,,., Hl.wltl""'°" a..c11, C•lllornle CeUlot11ie tJl6l. Ortllfe Olun4y, Celllomle, .ct1119 by l>kls H 111 U. lllOOI,.. cove11a11t or ••• ,.,.,.,. uprt11 ot
This ~""' Is conducHd Dy • ll71J, Pac,iit llU of Oftlclel AtcOf'cb of NAMC STAT•MaNT f2'46 Gtor1e W. Gulllory, .Ir., HJ1 llld tllrOli9ft lt1 Governlno 8oerd, Tiit OISTltlCT -.......... from lmpllef, ....-dlno l"le, --"°'1, ot llml ... ...,_1Np. Ore"9•Counly,Celtlorni•. Tiit roljowln11 11•non 11 dolnt Tiii• lluSllless 11 conducle<I llV 111 Cllepmen Ave11w, Ger..,, Gtove, llerel11e lhr r•hrred to e1 tllo Director of tlw Detiat11ftlllt of -umiw--. lo HY "'8 r9melftlno
Tllt ....... imM11C:-p NollctofDef•lilt-ElectlontoS.ll l>usJ"lu .. : ' lndMdual C.llt1tnle'21Ml. "OISTltlCT", wlll recolve .... lo, wt lllfullrlel ReletlOllS Ille 119n.,el prlnclpel """d ... netlt -u...a DJ
Judltlle ~ tno oescr1bed rMI -1'1' undtr .. 1c1 AllEAlt INSl'CCTION SERVICE, M.E. i..o.. •r-J. G..tllwy, ent 0Wlipme11 -letw 8---. .. 1 .. time, 11ro1Ul119 ,_ of ,., diam -· In Hid Oood of Tr
1
u II, j"" lnteren
Prtt101nt Otod 01 T""1 WM recordof on Ali9Ul1 241 Wel11\11 S1reet, Cute "'•H. Tlll.s ~I wes 111., wlllt IN ""•nw. Gerdlft Gt'Ove, C.llt.,111• -...111c11 for""' -r• d • c""trect tllt loc:ellly 111 wtlkl\ ,,., _,. 11 1o 118 lllereon. es llf'OV dtCI n Mid -··
Tillt ...-... llled wllll ti. .l Hll In aoo-,., .. p-"°° Of c.lllorftleft'27 CoollllY Cl-do..,,.. County°" t»lt. lortM...,._i.ct. peffor"*' for Mell croft or l\'lllit Of Mvenc:tt. If..,.,,~ 11te tanns of C-.,o.<1lClle>.,,..c-1yonOc1 Olll<1•i Records ol o,..,,.. Cou~IY . 0-ld)osepfl.....,.., JAlW•lnut Oct-12.1"1 Thh htlneu Is <•11fucltd llY 81dt Mell bl rectl-In Uw place wor~m•n ntodtf to •••cute Ille seld O...i T,,,. '-1, <M•OtS•""
11, 1tel. Celllornla. ' S1r .. 1, Coate Mone, C.lltomie t»17 "17297t lndlvldlials (Hultlelld e. Wll1). ldeft11fl• ...... ....S lillell 118 _ .... <e11trect. n.. , ... ,,. aft flit .. tN •-lff ol "'8 T,.,.... -of Ille
"1741tl Thi~ Notice 11 llf~ln compllence Tlllt tlwinn1 Is c-..c_. DJ on Pul>llllllCI OrMQit Coest Deily Piiot. a-.. W. G4111torv, Jr. end pul>llcly •••• aloud •I Ill• OISTltlCT Office localed •I 1151 trvltl ~ _,.. tald C>ttd of Trwl f'Wlltfled Or_,,.. C-1 Dally PllOt, wllll 1~ -i-n •-' II-,_ HUGH lndlvlclUel Oct 14 21 • No 4, ltll ~ Tlllt ,....,_ •H fllecl wltft 1118 ........ I .... lln>e -plect. Plec.nll• St., c..t. Mew. CA f1't1. for "'9 -,_ ... , Mtlinat• Oct. a . Nov.~, 11, II, 1"1 , *1~ &'"EC,_ICE N,AI o""'oE, .-,· -Truslte Oor!AidJ. Hellltr1 • ' ' ' •· ' Count'r C'-' fll0rM9!t ~yon Oct. TMrt Wiii 118e •1•.to 1-"°""'""' Coples....., 118 oetalntd on teq\ltl1. A lol>e: 116,l41.IO.
" This ··-flltO Ith the It, lte1. • ... no/100 doll••) ~t rtqllir.d CllPY of t""8 ,_ -· ... POttef •• Tiie l>etwfkltry -Ukl Deed Of ' s'ul>stlluled l>y SUBSTITUTIO.. OF •H • f111UC MOJ&E ,11406 for eecll set of lllf documentt ta 1f1t JM •lie. Tru11 heretofore tHt ul•d e nd PIU •nee TRUSTl!E BY BENEFICIARY ..... ~::,~.~of ~e ..... County on Plil>IW!ed <> ...... c..tt Delly Piiot, ... ,.., .... ,.......,In good (-lien TIM ........ ldleclul• of per --.. 11 ....... to.,. .............. •n-
HO•tmbtf l, ltll, l>y , .. d a.-flc l.,.., "17'2911 ,ICT1TIOUS .. Oct ............ "· 11. '"' ...... , ""'"'" IO .. .,. aflor .. Did ~ ..... It ...... ""*'.-·"' day of Oo<lerMlool "' Oefeull -~ °" No_,_, •. ltll, wllk ll Is Ille P111111-Or-Coe" oe11r Piiot, •USA"• Nit. Only -•ts of c-tructloll •It'll II> ........_ n. ••• 1or llOlldat tor Salo. •llf e wrlll911 Notk• of "ICT1TIOUSIUSIMISS del• Of tllt lnill.M puellcetfon of tllls Oct 14 Jt. Nov"'"' 6'104l ..... ITATa.-n _.,. ----w411 .. ..._to ..... ,.. -..,.,, ..... _... IMll .......... Oeteult -Eltc110ft to Sell. n.o
"AMI STATIMaMT "IOhU Cll 5al9 tlw lollowtee •-U ' ' ' ' Tiie fol-I ... --· ate folfl9 ..._ -·-Ctfttrtc1 ~ 1""9 •"" ~. unftfl..,.. U!'M' laid Notk• Of Tiit fol-1119 per.011• e re e1oln11 rtprt1~111 Ille lotel -•s or ,,_ --.a•: Eecll lild mull c-o'"' •llf .. 11 111811 .,. melld•IOry utlO" tllo o.raull -Eltdlen It Sell ta .,.
ltoMllleuas: unP•ld l>el•nu ol 111• ot>1l11•llons r.191Ta ~~~.~.!!!!.!~. E~., "tc'TITIOUS•UMM•ll ~, .... .,.c.tfttracldloc.li"*""· COHTrU.CTORlo~h~rect recoNtd lnu.-.,_,_,...,
(I) CANYON AUTO SUPPLY; (JI Secu••• DY '"• tDO••·CIUC•ll>•d -....... _ MAMCSTAftMllNT E.ch llld ....i .. •COMPalllecl"" It •••r•••. end upon e11y ...... ft?I•-·
TH• PAltTS OEPAltTMEHT, .. , pr_,., to .. ~ -reaoonaDly "ICTIT10UllUS Mau •9'YI L.. ......... f'lcllltts, -I.. ti. MCW!ly~ ..... lo In "'8COfttfkt lllk ... lrldor ..... Nm, to DtY Mt Oato: ~It.,., ~'~I. R-, U.-lloacll, ~!~.'~!,',' ,•-co111t.'..:.,y• .. cpensu •nd NAMC STATl~NT C..lt Mlw9y •61, Nowpert 8Mdi, CA Tiie '9ll-lng ll9fllf'll .,. dolfll fOclifMMI Mid 111' 1"8 ll1t d pr_... lost 1Mft 1118 .... -"ltd rotn to ell T It AMS AM a a IC A TIT LI
_ .... "_ ·-..... ·~· .... ftMe. l>lill""1 •: tlibeontrldon. -'""'aft ~ llV tlltm In tlle lldU"""c• co. Leei-ean....,. Auto 5-ly, Inc .• a I A !>Md of Trust to w<ure en 11u!i~s;:l:owlne perHll Ii dOlllO N..,tJ. pt(Mtts, •E. c-tHlwlY HEW It EN A 1 S $AN CE 1'111 DISTRICT --rl9ftt to HKullonoflltlG-ect. P.O • ._..,.,,
C1lllernl1 corporetlon, 14' Legune lndel>tPa...u Of l1'0,GOO.OO ruor-LIOOTEC, l6'S Vie Lido, Nf!Wpotl ••1, Howport 9Mcll, CA ""9. r1~.:>~~·~~ ~" C5'1GO ~t reject any or all Miit or \o waive MY Ho l>lcMtr may wttflclr-Ills l>ld for ... DI ........ Co11yo11 ltotci, Leguna 8t•<"', MtrcllJ0,1ffllnBOOll1212J,pegette ee~11,,. .. -... Tiii• .......... It COfldliC._ lll'r 911 C 111 ·--v Coate • lrr ... IMlUft or lnlormetlti. In •ny •-•loci-' ........... .,. 1 •• 1 ~-... ...-.. i..-....-,CA-Callforft4e "'5 OI 041 la A ch of 0 -...... ·-llldl"ldl6al. • orn,. ·-l>lds I --,,...., "" -•· •• ,.... . 1· IC I "'°' r'Wlllf County, Ote11 ~-........ ll07 Merlft«s .__.. L.. --·-· Gery HalltnbKl, 179ol NowllOt"I ot' """ blddlfll, . tllt date ..... "" ..-nine .. lllfl (ml ..... Tllh lluslnHt It conducl.O Dr • C•hlornlt dated Merell IS, 1tn , with Or Ht..., .._11 CA '2etD. _..., ~..-.. e Cosfe I The OIS1it1CT 11H ......... r,.,.. A,._.,....... bond -8 ~ et .... ,,_..., ~atlOn. John l N• .. I ..,. Cerol He991, This llYlilMU ,; C9lldlic'8o l>y •n Tiiis '*---flted wltll .. ~~•verd, Mil•. Cel rornle Ille Olractor of IM Detiartment of bond •Ill lie req11l••d prior lo ..,,..,... ...,., ~CanYOftAUlo INSbe.W-wlfeesT...-.s.s.n-lndlvldual ~-a..ti"'°'-~°"Oct. lt.Malcdm-ell,USE••tlttl\ l11du1trlel Relatl•• Ill• 119ner•I ... cullon or tll• contr•ct. Tiit ....._Sec-. ~y. lllC ~Konw•y...u C-Y. 8 C.llfor!'l•t ~ 0 R...,lt ~14 .... Slre•I, Suite 10, Cotl e Mue. ,....,•llill9 nltt-' -diam •-..S 1" pey,,,...l llGrld -De I" h ...... aet T-..G E....non ,<..orpor•lion. H Ttusle., •nd H°"" Tl\lt ~WM flied wllll tlll -~ ... ~-.... "~"·il'rr-.PI= Celllornltf'»ll tlltleullty lnwNcfltlllt -"'11 1111191ortftlllttle~td'80c-., ~I Savings and L9•n Atsocletlon, e C C CllOr c-ty 0c r_,.,._..,. -.,... --. N ,..,,_for 81Cll craft or 1.,,.. of Gowmlnt ..... d Tllb aWl-1wes 11!9d wll"' t"8 Calllornl • Corpor•llon, ••, ,:":'~~ let1I ._ 011 t. Oct.21,Hov.4,ll,11.lte1 -..1 •nc., 8 . Gullll•n. 1171 Le worll"'•n lltecltd to •••<VI• tll• Oorcll.,...H_yFl-c-ty C...,. ol Or-C-ly on Ocl. Benellclet'Y . ...Well 1-.....S.s Is 111 ' PUMU :!~~da, L...,,e &eecll, C•lllornle COlllrect. Tlleae rat• ere°" me et llW Pwdlasill9 01-
21· t•1-oetallll "of Jul'r t, IWI -ha. 11181 Pullll"'*' Or-Coes1 0•111' Pilot. NIUC •J&( Tiiis IMBIMH 11 conouc114 l>y • OISTltlc'r ofllco localed •I Plly*9t Pulllllsflld 0r.,.. Coelt Delly Piiot
Put>ll$119d Oct. 21. "°"· 4, 11, 1tll 4417-11.
1'171711 followl119l>elenctsdut· Oct 21 ft"°"._ 11 ltll 4S ... I llmll9d ----... Jp l"ecllltlat Plemlne. Olell Qlmmliftlty Oct .•• Hov,4, ltl1 ,...... '-------------li't*I-O.ange c-• Dolly Piiot,, Unpeld bofenc.e of • • • • • ,_. o;:, H•lltnbkll Coll ... Ofltrlct, Tr•llor Com111u. NOTICE OF DEATH OF
Oct ••• "°"· 4, 11, II, IWl 644CMI ol>l'9911on lllS.tn.• _.,. "tc'TIT10US •UMMIEIS Tiii• .... ....,. ... Ill .. wllll Ille ~"" .. " .• ~~·.2!'..."'~· ~!! ~ FRAN c Is ED w ARD
lnll<tit -•ot• ..--l9ll[ lllAMI STATaMC"T c~nty oen. of Ote,,.. county °" .. ..._.. --. ....,. ·~-......_. -.,. ·-TE <11••eeso.. '·"°·'' Tiit 1011ow1ne ""°"• .,. c1o1ne 0ctoeertZ.lt11 IMJDeotUINClonr-1.Ac-.i ..--,_ KEL R, aka FRANCIS PUIUC NOTlCE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
HORBERT J . TIERNEY
AND OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A-110882.
To all heirs ,
beneficiaries, .creditors
and contingent creditors of
Norbert J . T ierney and
persons who may be
otherwise interested in the
wlll and/ore.s tate :
A petition has been filed
by Mary Angela T ierne y
In 'the Superior Court of
Orange County requesting
that Mary Angela Tierney
be appointed a s personal
r ~·P res en ta t 1 v e t o
administer the estate of
Norbert :J. Tierney (under
the Indep endent
Administration of Estates
Act). The petition Is set for
hearing In Dept. No . 3 at
' 700 Civic Center Drive,
West, In the City of Santa
Ana , Cal i'f o rn ia on
November 2S, 1981 at 9:30 a.m. IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the heerlng a nd state
your objections or file
written objettion-s with the
court before the hearing.
• Your appearance may be
In person or by your
•ttor~.
•IF YOU AREA ,•.C R E D I T 0 R o r a
::•cbfttlngen1 c reditor of the
• deceased, you mus t file • vour claim with the court,
;.·or prtsen't it to the ~ personal representative
: !-.appointed' by the court
within four months from
the date of first Issuance
·of letters as provld~ In .• s.ctlon 700 of tho Prot;ate·
.,Code of California. The ·tfme for flltno claim s wlll ·;"°' expire prior to· four· ~months ~OITI the date of
!•tM hffrlnv notlc~ above.
-: YOU MAY EXAMINE !.Ute fl .. ktpt by t~ court.
If JOU are Interested ln the ~~!!i you may file • ~1 w ith the court lo
recelvtt special notice of tM Inventory of estate .... u and of the petrtlons. auounts and reports
dllcrlbed In Section 1200.S ft.tM Gallfornla P~t Codi. ,
M•1lc, P•t••r &
Oerr•lli. ~~tettt•ys et Lew, 1 ....... ,.. 81vd.1 No.
1111, I.el A"I•••• C•llfw•t• tt•n. uuf ... , ..
ltubellhed 0r_,,. Co,1st
Delly Plfot NoY 4, s, 11, "'' _.....,
lrusla't l~ l.lM.17 "'CTITIOUl8UllM•SS -fllffSet: • "'11971 .,. .. , _ _,, .. _ ... ••IN le* E • K EL TE R . aka ,,,!..:.!::: ;,~~~000 ~,!O: NAM• STATIEMSMT P A It ll S U PE It I 0 It Putlll-0r..,.. eoe.1 o.ily Piiot s":;. ,_...,.. KMdul• of per di.,, NOTICE OF DE~TH OF FRANCIS KELTER, AND
Merell 1•. 1'7t In a-1>0111, Dt99 1.01 w!.':,;:•:o•lno DOrton 1' dot no ~~!~~·~ =::~A~e.!c4:~ Oct. 14• 21• 211. "°"· ._ 1•1 4Qt .. i. •eoe• 11 -l4'0" • wor111,. da., of SUS AN GE RT R U DE 0 F P E T I T I O N TO
ofOffic 1••Recotds01 0t11nQeCountr SPORTS PHONE us•. 111 F c.111w-n1a9*>m1 . Amltk .. c.1 •lt'lt lllllouf's. nw r ... ror110llfly ACKERMAN, aka SUSAN ADMINISTER ESTATE
Callto•nl• a.tee! J.......,ry 3. im, wllll Rl .. fllela Orlve Newport BHCll M9dlcel S...Vlett Inc •• e WllCOMln NlllC •TJC( ...., owrtlme _. INll m el '-1 G . BA~COCK, AND OF NO. A·110917. John L Neo•I •no C•rol Nagel, C.lllot'11l•'2660 • ' corpor1tlon, toSI E •ll 09de11. ll_e...,_..,.11, p E T T f 0 0
hUsl>and .one! wit•" T~tots, Crocli., John A. VMlec:que, 2SU AICMr Mii••"""· Wl~n Snot It tllell ... mandatory ""°" .... N T T 0 a I I h e i r s •
Cuttodv Core>0r•llon, e C•llfornl• L-.costeMlw,C•llloml•••v n1s ""''""' 1s conducted Dy • ~ICTITIOUS•UMNlll c°"TRACTOR"'.,.,... .. contrct ADMINISTER ESTATE beneficiaries, cred i tors ~rporatfO'\.-.T,..,,tH ..... Crock., Tlll1111i11""•'•<olldliCl9d.,,•n corporation NMMSTATIIMllMT Is•••••••. •ncs w11o 11 any NO.A·110911. andcontingent creditorsof lj•hon•I 8-, e N•llonel Ben"l119 lndlvlcl11o11I Amttlcell C•I M•dlcel Tiit .. llowl119 .,...,..., e,. ... ,.. IUtlcontractor -film, to DtY MC T I I h · F · E Auoc1111on, .. ee,,.11c1a,,,. •"'<" .JoMA.Vlvllac-Stnkll IMlll,,..M: •••"*' .. Mlcl-lflOdr-•to•ll o a e Ir s. ranc1s dward .Kelter
•na•b1ednu& is In..,..,,. es ot Jiiiy 1. Tiii• """'*" wes "lef w1t11 111e .,191s.m-,, v,P. <•> AltABESOUIE HOMES: 111 -""*' .,...._...,, ..., "'"" 111 a. beneficiaries, creditors and persons who may be
"'' •"" -,,,. 1o1i-1110 11eience• c-•• cttrti of ar.,,.. c_.., 911 Tiii• Nt-e •• f1tt0 w1111 111e •tcENTENMtAL HOMES; 1c1 •-.cut1en.iU1tcr-act. and contingent creditors of otherwise interested In the ~~pe1c111e•enc:• o1 OctOblt '2·"" c-1., Clerti of °'""' c-i, on =~J~~:O"' ~E~; ~~>M .,"R~;e~ • :,.:'::' .::;.!l:"'1~1 ':.':':.:: S u s a n G e r t r u d e wi II and/or estate:
ObHoehon ••,....01 Put11lftd0refloaeoe.ioe11~'.!:'t Oc1"ertt.l• ~tntM HOMES; CF> GOLOEN NUGoeT t11eda•.i-.rt11t~119ofbldt. Ackerman, aka Susan G. A petition has been filed
Accru.o '"'-51 e. 0c1, "· 21, •·No¥.'-"" ,......, Pu1111,,.. <>.,.. coe11 0.11., Pti.t. HOMH: co> MOUOAY HOMES: CH> • ,..,....... .., -• 119rfor'rn811c• Babeock, and persons who by Crocker' National Bank, T,UP1•!~."".,• ..... , ,,.,...,., s.~.·00"l Oct. I•. 21, •· "°"· '· '"' -..1. •HOEt>EMOENCE HOMES; Ill l>ond ""111 b• '•11111r .. prior 10 m a y be other w Is e Wiiiiam Francis Ke lter, -._ ~ JEl'l"EltSON HOMES; end (J) uecut1011 of Ille co11tr•ct. Tiit
Th• peyolf on ••1d OHo o1 Trust NIUC llm _.,. _nPr Ll•IERTY HOMES, 111• SE"'•'" tN'l'mtnt...,,....,.11bo 1n-rormaet I nteres ted in the will and Shawn Joseph Ketter 11oo11 111•ouor. ljovtmt>tr '· "'1 Isl ,..._ ..v11K stroet.1,.......,c.e11famitm14. ltrtll.Jft .. _rectfOc-11. and/or estate: In the Superior Court of
S102.71' JJ end ,~ •• ,. .. .ccr11u l'ICTITIOUllUSrNH.S Philip H. Mc Nam ... U IU Oowmlfttllollf'd A petition has been filed Oranno County requesting lllerull•r •I tNI rate Of l3 7119 -NAME ITATIEMCNT McOtrmott, •I. ll'Vine, Cellfornle 8y Honntft E. Wotwon b M M ,,_
<Mir Tll• 1011ow1ne person "doing PICT1Tious•uS1M•H 911u. S.Cr.taryAioerd Y a ry Joanne cVicker that Crocker National
3 A !>MG or TruJt to M<ure •" Dlislnuus: ....... ITATIEM•MT 0•1• Sin.bro, l4JO Sllll•n•ll• ofTnatees in the Superior Court of Bank, Wiiiiam Francis
•nd.•ble<IMH 01 ll•.ooe.oo recorded' SABER SOFTWARE , 101 Tiit •o11owi,,. ... "°"'ere dolllg Tettec•. c.-*' -· Celll«nl• Pu1>111Nc10r.,..c:o.11o.11.,,..ioc. Orange Coonty requestlno Kelter and Shawn Joseph M•y '· 1t111 In 8-11'02, -'"°of Placenll4 Costa --CA mu. IMnlntM M: tBJS, Oct.•· ...... 4. ltll ~ t h t M J Dlllci•I Aec:orda of Ofenge County, Fr•n• Btltn Fargo. WlngH ...... MANY T·SHIRTS COMPANY Tiii• bull ..... Is <-u<t.O ,, • a a r y 0 an n e Kelter be appointed as
c.111or111e•11ec1May s, 1•.•tt11J-. N••_,Bao<h.CA.:i..o. • <Pert-•>-. T-SHIRTS PLUS, llmlted~. M c Vlcker be appointed as personal representatives
L. "'•r' -1o'f'°' Negel, TlluJMnd Tiiis llutl-• II Concllicled Dy on ZJ.1,::J':""· W•. Huntlnvton ...... l'lllllp H. Ille"-Piil.iC MOTICE personal representative to to administer the estate of ~~dclf"!~·~ .. n!....'..~~· ~~~·· inolwlduel. c11 ..... s.1e-. ..iLosAm1~cr .• T1111 .,....,_. -"'-•ltfl.,. administer the estate of Francis Edward Kelter • •< ec. Y-,.... ....,.POf.,~. e 8r1.,. F•f'VO _.. County C..._ d Of-c-ty on Oct. S Ge C•lllornl•1CorPOrellon, •s Tru ..... , fllls --•was llled wltll tfle Hunll ........ llo«h,CA"'47. 21,lttl. llfMll174 usan rtrudeAckerman (under the Independent ·~ S1Mncer J Morgan, u a-11c1erv c ounty c..,.. o10r.,,.. County on Oct. Angela wono. 17°' V•11•• l.ltllts P114tl1 llOTIUOP 'TRUT~!~:O~ ~~1 (unde r the Independent Administration of Estates r:~";'.i~1;:.::::·::., ·:.:~~ "· ""· "'™" °'¥!:-=. ~11~ Am._ er.. PIMIVwd Or .... c-O.lly '11oC, On NOWf'llllw ,., IW1,el 1t:•11.M .. AdmlnlstratiOf! of. E s tates A c t). The petition Is set for
Se1e1a. 11u~d ano wlle es joint Pul>llJfled Onlnga CMtt Dally Pli.t. Hullllfl9lon 8tech. CA ft6.a. Oct a, Now. 4• 11, 1e. lte1 ,.., .. , CE H TU It Y ES C It 0 W L , • Act). The petition IS set for he aring in Dept. No. 3 at
tenants ll'f asslQrltNnl record4d Mey 0c1 21 a.,... 4." '"' _,,., c11eu"""" ll••n. •O "'•••• s1.. ~Ii~;'!:;;,:.:/;,~:,:;•.!:,!:.!; hearln!l In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive. ~~11::' ~".!: ~·;:;.:;:-c:0..1:'. • . •
59~!"°~.!:'t. colldu<1ec1 tty • PllUC 9ITa ~ "' Oaed ., Trvtt ,_,.. 100 Civic Center Drive, West in the City of Santa
ca111orn1a, w111c" ·~ -s au Piil.iC •Ta .. ,.,a1 ~. ,.... .. ,,..., ._ 1•. •• IMtr. Ho. 4457, 111 W est, in the City of Santa A n a ', ca 11 f 0 r n I a 0 n
due end "'abl• Ju1 r •. '"'· 1s 1n c-s. icwen o " F 1 c E o ,. T H ... ,. u1tt, ... ,. 11•. of Offl<lll A n a , C a 11 for n I a on November 25 1981 at 9: 30 ~eu1t-he:StMloi-1n1111•1enc.es1 ,~~C::!::=::' ~~·,~:_~:;.=,;~~~ ~~~=:f:<Of!Oflll!lt, COUNTY D ::::n"' .. ~=·~s= Nove mber 25, 1981 at 9:30 a .m . '
Un1>ekl l>el1t11<•0I Tll• ro11ow1119 pe,.011 1, dOl"O 16,1,.1. MOTtCI0.1A1,euNOl1t Ct lllor111e uecuted l>Y OENHIS a .m . IF YOU OBJECT to the
ol>llgallon 176.(IOO.OO l>UllNUH~ P111U1 D•CrtHOl'f'OtllQ.OSUH MU•PHYemerrleclmenesllls...... IF YOU OBJECT to the orantlng of the petition, '":~':,~':':.::'' s.141.21 v1~.".?:."F'!:;~~~fti2~~Le11• ac';~~'.~,.:~~.f~1oa11,~\ ~o"MAE~; .. ·.~".~s~e~A·Tr~N =~=·~~~'°w~i'.'l:'·s~~~ grantlno of the petition, you should either appear
Truslff'S!ees .07.» Ml<Mel R"'-Bullor, !1102 Plelllllff .... PllTTI A. TAPPAN,. AT f'V•L•C AUCTION TO HIGHIHT you should either appear at the hearing and state
r=ore<..,.,,.co.o L•u vitte, Like"'°'"'-c.u1om1a _.,. ~r .1 .. ~No.Mlt7s. 11DOE1t l'OftCASH c,..,.... .. ,._ at the hearing and state your objections or file
.nc11... 1,m._ t1'JO ,.._ ,.,llK 1, ,,.. IM4ltn1.,..., .,. o.... "ui. "'...,. _., °' .. UtllMd your objections or flle written objections with the '"~11~.!::: :1'!~:C.:ooo .. ~~,!O:l 1..:1~1.:,...~..._ Is c-•".,, on 1'1CT1nounu1tM1u :::~"~~e;:,;..c;-::'.:.:.,~~ ='"J!:8e:=.":':o~ .. ~ written objections with the court before the hearino.
0c-,1.1•1neo.un1 ...... 1m ~1t,lllili.. UMlllTAft.MallfT 111.tt.,,vtrtw.iOK,...,,._.._. center Ori¥• wut, s.111• A11•. ourt before the hearlno. Your appearance may be
Of Ot1Jc1e1 R«ot'Os Of Orange County, T111s .. ..._, -111• wtt11 n. Tiit , .. ._,,,. .,..,..,.. .,. dOllll .,.. S.1• 111 .. .....,_ c.vrt.,"" Cll,..,._ •• ,..,.. ttti. lftd lnt-t Your appearance may be In person or by your
ce1!10,,,1a a.i9d 0c~ '· 1m, w1111 county c1.,11 of 0t•1191 c-tv •11 ..,,.,,.. •• ! c-ty "0r.,.... ••., c.tlfemll, <-fM•.w-...,.-."""""' In pers on or by your attorney. lnlervtst Astocl•ltt, Inc .. • Oel•wa,. Sellttmtler 14, IWl Nl!Wl'OIU f>l!TltO\.l!UM f'UNO _,.. en Mey 1 1 .. t enf _.,.... NIN 0... fll Trvlt Ill t .. .......,.., tt
corpor•llOll, Trullors, ltt1ld9llll•I "179111 •iv. LTO .. '6t .... "'°" 1..e .... SlllM M•'J 7, , .... Ill '111e ...... efltlll .. tltlietH '" .. ,. Clllnt'r .... St•t• orney. I F y 0 u A R E A
Escrow Corpor•tlon, e C•llfOtlll• Pul>lltlwd Or .... Coett Delly,.. ... , 111. Tllftll\Callforni.t-.. ""'"'· wllt••lfl or.,...tr .. P9tl• fltcrltoell•: # I F y 0 u A R E A c R E D I T 0 R 0 r a
Cor110relion, .. TnnlM, lot' wl\lch Oct. 14, 21, ......... 1"1 44f7.el. .. .. H. ClclWefl, ••• """'°"UM, "-"-' •u.c11.iei1, ,,. ...... L« "·Trad ti», .. ~ ...... '" R E D I T 0 R 0 r a contingent Creditor of the ~;.\~~..:.·~·~.~~u~u~~~ M':-'.~~=:11~:.::0u... ;:.;:!l::!."'!:!~· .... ~.::,,: ::.'~!':."·~,._.,. ontingent credltOf" of the-deceased, you must flle
ol Tru111M· '"' 8•n•llclery, dettd PlaJC 91Ta W .. 111. T\lltl11, (II......... elld .... ....,.., ,. .. ,. A. T._..., Tiie llrfft •Uren Hf •thtf\ eeeesed, YOU must file your Glalm With the court
No .. m11er >. ,,.,, enc1 ttcor••• Tr11. llWltlHt" CMlflllctN 11y • flf•11fMttt> • .., 111e "'"' "o... ~ • ..,.....If 811Y·.,.,. our claim with the court or present It to the ~=.'~•::!!:nZ:':::~c= ,1CT1nCMM111 .. • 111111•~... :::-;:,"~..:;:':.'~!!a: 2Cf.T.;'t.~~~-.~~ r present It to the personal representative e!'4'~,.,..,,., ... 1oMt1c1e,..,, Tll f~1n•n••r • 1 '"'• ......,_. ... 11 .... ,. .. tt•t•• • ..-.., .,,,. "• .,11 .. -...~. ersonal representative appointed by the court
wl\1<111....-11 .. u It In *faun•• Of Dli•l~t1:.:•w ... ""~ 1 1
"' C-IY c;..,_ ff OtMet c-ty 911 Mlfwclf'NM Ill tlllll l(ilM ..... Tiii ·---,,,,.... fltclllfilt ppolnted by the COUtt within four months from
JulY' '· "" 91\d 11 .. t11e r.11ow1111 1tl!MU·•L1. nn•M•. •tt• • Oc:t*fJ, 1t1t. ,....., .. 21• ""· 1 --•• MY,,..._.•.,.., 1111:...,...... Of lthln four months from the date of fl .... t fnu•nc• t1el•11u•-· . Hllerl• W•'f • ........, '"'"·CA....., '"VM ""~' IN l""ll'f1V 111 .. c:.vM}' t9l8 ttrwc ...._ Mf ..._ ,_ h d t of fl t I '~ ... .. v unp•ld 1>eie11teo' l'te111111n M. Mc1C111111111, "" a JACKIOfil. 1t1oot1111 • t.uacL1... 0r ...... CalltlrNI, ~" • .,......., If_.,, lfllw!l llef'el11• e a • rs ssu1nce of letters as provided In
011119111i.n 1146.200.00 HI••"• ••Y. ,. .. ,.,, .. 1e11• c• •M•Wf'OlrToim.ron-., .,.,. .,.. i uea, Trat,.., a... ... wt11 • ,,..., ""~ f letters as provided In Section 700 of the Proba1e '"::.,-;.,-=:•• •,IMO.,. '*'--...rt--.ca-. ~'::.~1::;::.!.!'.°'.": Q.nt,..:,.::':.';;.:::::.: ctton 700 of the ProlNtte Code of Callfornle. The
co,11 oo.oo ~:...,....,.. 1• ~"" • PWt...,Or911fic...to.i•~= .. c111ten11e. ,.,.. .. ,,, 11,...., -•..,..-.llldllfllll...._c..,.. ode Of Callfornle. The tlmt f« flllno claims wUI
Trutt"'''-ni.• ,,/11.Md(lfWlltll Od.1•,t1,.,...,,.,... ._.. --•~•:•u.-o-... ...,....., ... T,...._.., .. lme for flllno clalms wlll not expire prior to four 1~11~.!:':: ~1:,.~.':c"'o!.:: T110 .....,_ -fllif *'"'.. :::-.,=::--,~~'!':' • .::" :-.:;::=....w,:.:-_::=-: ot expire prior to tour months from the ct.tt of
"'-•• 11, 1w1, 111 .... 1•m.,......, c-.r c...-.i o....,.. ~ ... on. f11a1 19'11 ... , ... ,..._,, ..-. .,..rt_ w ......, _... ., .... °"" " onths from the date of the hearing noticed above.
of OfflClel Rtc:or• .. Or-.. c-.tv. "· 1•1• ... ,.. ...., ....... ~., 111 • '""' ..... ; ., ................ h e hffrlrtq notked tboVt. YOU MAY EXAMINE
c11w.1111•-..i Aut11t11e. "''·"""' ~1.,..ar..CM1to.11r ....,....... ..,_ .._ ._,., 1•,.,,. .'!:! YOU MAY EXAMINE the fllt k:Trt hu the court 0 .. !111 .. ...,,_ WOtl""9n •T~ • ...._, t .... .......... -PICTl~ ... IUll••• •u•LIC HOTICI II H•••• ~-...,~ .. ..,........ ... _ .. _ flle k;T,t hut-rt ,.., .,, • Tlti. '"--Md~~.. .... . '· ... ,_,., "· 1-· '9MMl ITAT ... WT OIV•M !Mt .. ,,_,...,,, ..... ,. ..... ,.) ... Cllllll ... MY ........ '"' .,, .... cou . ' you .,.. nte,..,ttd In the
C•ll•o,1111 """" .. ,.. • Ttvt11t, n. ,.. ....... ,.,_. .,.. •llllt "''· 1t •=•l'ct1ct1 ...... "... =:•• • ... ...._... • • If you ere nterest.ct fn the ut•te, you may file • :':!,~~.'::::·, ~!~:.~.r..':i~"·.: '91.. ..,~~-. CHt1to1"ucT•c :.:::"'~~:'..:: "":.,.":-:-..... .,.. .. state, vou mev flle a request with the court to
ltftef1ci..,. wN<fl "••* '" "" . 0111ou,, •..., •...-. Mtt •· 1 • .., .... u-. ..... ""'' Tr .. c ~.,~. •HotMI ... equest with ._ court to recelvt spec .. 1 notlc• of "'°'"'"""..._...,.._..,.: 1, fllCTlnauuu1t•• c.ee--.~,.. .,..,.,.,,.., .... .,.... ....... ... "' ............ ecel~ 1PKi.t notice of th• Inventory of estete
",......._.., ..... n•ftllll~ ...._ ....... -.,. • ...... ,, .. "'"" ,._,.,.. ...... , .....,....., ....... o...w'-' he lnvent~ot tstat• •Mb of ....... .__ ......._. ....... T>Mt.ii..1.., ... r-11 ..... 1.Me,Cll-.~~-__.,........... .... .... _ ..... tllD-.. MtJ~.,. _.It._.. -'"--
lflWfftUlftW-fYWft•1Ntl ---·; .......... """'"'· -...... .. ............... ... ... ......... Tiii& • .. I -_. -... •CCOUll • r•ports "0.1 ....... ._ ~ T... LOWCLL NOllMAllf MIOIA ..... cm.._~... ...., ... -................ ~ ......... .,...... ... ccc:.i~· ftCI '"
,., the 111\ne .... --....... ,... PltOOUCTIONS, .. ,, ,._, Lii., , • .,,.., '"" ..... ,. ,. ......... -. ....... -•• ,_....... ...~=~t!I~ fer IM.,..,,._.,,..._,,._. c.t1--.CA... ...._ ,,.._, 0.-..,, CMtfWwla D ...... ._ a-. ._.., ........... ,,_.... .. tM Clllr..a-. .... ,.. • ..,,.111 ... .-. ....... o.~·•--•LA... .._,.., ....._ ..,.. .. __ ,..,
........ S7 .. -· -.,...... "' o:.-::::i: •• ..__ -.. ~~:-:::.:::.-:-.:::. 11.l•i: 7.:ws ~~'*f&;llU\!!iGIS~ H<ll ~ ~ C-.-1"1 ........... '"" ~-• ·-~-1,Nt, ,.. _, . ...., -o•r•:.a..-=.\::.o.. · ,_ =..-:: ..... • "* -. -,,.. .... Milt·~~r..iiiiiil
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DIUJPllat
WEDNESDAY, NOV ... , 1981 HIF
CLASSI Fl ED 05
The Dodgers, Angels
won't participate in
the re-entry draft. D2
'.
Ev¢rythillg went right Fingers
NEW YORK (AP> -Rollie Fin1ers to win the award, in 1977. Bruce Sutter baseman Jim Gantner ror "cettlng me
Jays every pitcher who has ever wou of the Chicago Cubs in 1979 and MlJte . out or several jams.·•
~
ballot. Mccatty had the other six
first-place votes and finl1hed with 8'~
points. Jack Morris of Detroit was third
with 21 points.
the Cy Young Award will tell you the Marshall orthe Los Angeles Dodgers in He also said he was helped by the
game thing, "that everything went right 1974 won It in the National League. experience of catchers Ted Simmons
during the whole year." and Charlie Moore, especially on "how
Fingers, a cagey 13-year veteran with a "I feel this was my best season ever. to pitch to hitters I dldn 't know." Milwaukee won the second·half tiUe
In the AL East but Jost to the New York
Yankees i n five games in the
mini playoffs.
handlebar mustache, was voted the 1981 Very few guys get a chance to have a Fingers, 35, woo six games and had 28
Cy Young winner in the American year like I had," Fingers said when be saves with a 1.04 earned run average ln
Leagu e by the Baseball Writer s learned of the award after arriving in 47 appearances for Milwaukee. He
Association or America, the BBWAA Las Vegas, for a· visit. "Every guy on worked 78 innings, striking out 61 and ··Awards at the end or the season are
tine, but it's playoff wins and the World
Series that really matter. We were
shooting for a World Serles and I sure
would have liked to have gotten there,"
said Fin1ers. who broke into the major
leagues with Oakland in 1969.
announced Tuesday. the ballclub played great behind me, walking only 13.
that's one of the main reasons I won. He flllished well ahead of Oakland's The Milwaukee Brewers right-hander Steve Mccatty in balloting by a special said he was surprised because he was a ··1 gave up 10 runs all year, and every
reliever and "being a relief pitcher, it one of them was earned, .. he said. "The panel that consisted of two writers from
doesn't happen that often. It makes defense <lidn't give up a run when I was each of the BBWAA 's 14 franchise
· ln tr · " out there." · cities. wmn g even more grat ymg. Fingers received 22 of 28 first-place
Sparky Lyle, then with the New York Finge rs paid special tribute to ballots and finished with 126 points. He
Yankees, was the only other AL reli_e_ve_r __ ..:s..:h..:o~r..:ts;..;t..:o.::..p_R_o_b_in_Y_o_u_n_t _a_n_d_s_e_c_on_d __ ..;w::..a::.:s:....:lb=e...:o~nl::&..y pitcher named on every
Fingers was an essential part of the
A's World Series victories in 1972, '73
and '74 . He was the Most Valuable Players. Rollie F'ingers
1
• Lake r s off
'to a slow
beg inning
PORTLAND CAP> -Paul
Westh ead figures hi s Los
Angeles Lakers would have
beaten the Portland Trail
Blazers in their National
Bas ketball Association game
here Tuesday night, if the game
had been just one minute longer.
But the game las ts 60 minutes,
not 61, and the Blazers are off to
a 3·0 start in the ,young NBA
season after stopping the Lakers
102·100. Portland -with
victories over Phoenix. Seattle
as well as the Lakers -plays its
first road game at Golden State
tonight.
The Lakers, meanwhile, have
lost their ftrst two games of the
season by a total of three points.
They· go after their first victory
tonight against the Sonics in
Seattle.
Despite the loss, Westhead
said he liked the play of hls
team , especially the inside work
of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and
Mitch Kupchak.
··Mitch and Kareem are
showing that they can play very
well together." Weslbead .said.
"Tonight the combination fouled
out Portland's big people. Give
the game another minute and we
would have had it.'·
Jabbar bad 33 points and 11
rebounds, while Kupchak scored
25 and Krabbed eight rebounds.
Portland lost both its centers
-Mychal Thompson and Kevin
Kunnert -on fouls in a 2: 14
span of the final quarter. That
left 6·8 rookie Peter Verhoeven
to defend Jabbar for the final
2: 47 or the game.
Verhoeven was able to hold
on. although Jabbar had 18 of his
points in the final period.
Cl'\ief among the key Portland
plays was a ls.foot jumper by
playmaking guard Kelvin
Ransey with 25 secohds left in
(See LAKERS, Page DZ>
...., ..............
Rod Emery will lead the Barons against Westminster Friday night.
~--~~---~--~
It's Herbie · vs. Rod
Lions' Campbell, FV's Emery matched
Bv ROGER CARLSON of-OMly ~ SUfl
-Two or lh~ mo"st productive running backs in
Orange County are featured Friday night at·
Westminster High where Fountain Valley's Barons
invade for a Sunset League war.
For Fountain Valley it's the last step before
the big one next week -Edison. For Westminster
it's a chance to get back into the CIF Big Five
Conference playorr picture.
A loss virtually ends any hopes the Lions
might carry toward a playoff berth, and a loss for
Fountain Valley. of course, would end any
ambitions of knotting the championship race a
week later. For the Lions it's tailback Herbie Campbell,
who rushed for 209 yards against Edison in a
losing cause and for the season he bas rambled for
1,165 yards on 183 carries in a workhorse fashion.
CAMPBELL HAS SCORED ll touchdowns for
the Lions, but that's quite a bit less than Fountain
Valley's All·CIF candidate, Rod Emery, obviously
the best running back for the Barons since Willie
Gittens.
Emery has scored 18 touchdowns, including 12
in the last four games. Against Lakewood ,
Huntington Beach and Ocean View he hit paydirt
four limes.
··Campbell is the key to Westminster's
offense," says Fountain Valley Coach Mike
Milner. "We've been a very good football team at
limes. but in the two games that were big for us
<St. Paul and Marina> we lost ·em both."
Needless to say, the Westminster game
becomes a big game, too. since it'll take a
Fountain Valley victory lo set up any kind or a
showdown with Edison.
As for Emery, Milner says: "He's just been
playing great. he's a gl'eat back."
The Fountain Valley ground game bas become
a force as the season has progressed, especially
because of the improved play of linemen Ron
Gomez and Paul Abshire at tackles. guards Greg
Victorino and Fred Branca and center Dale Crane.
"Greg Bolin, our tight end, is the guy who's
making our pitch to Emery go," adds Milner. "His
blocking grades out to over 90 percent in every
game." ·
WIOLE THE BARONS' 'running game seems
to revolve around the pitch to Emery and the
passing of All-CIF quarterback Mall Stevens,
Westminster Coach Barry Waters says there is a
bas ic factor to be concerned with.
THIS WEEK'S GAMES
(II -It 7:31)
Friday ....
Costa Mesa vs. rM at OCC
Estancia at Ir.ft
snfleback at~ IWOOr
University vs. El T <ro at Missioo Viejo
Edison at Hllltilgtm Beach
f Odltain V*t at Westminster
llssion Yiejo at IJgma Blach
'*>tre Dame vs. Mater Oei at SA Bowl
Woocl>ridge at Valley Christiai
Saturday
Ocean View vs. Mirina at Westminster
....
Ccl1by7
Estaocia by 14
snfleback by 3
El Toro by 4
Edison by 26
FVby 8
Mission by 7
Mater Oei by 3 vc by 7
binaby 18
"By our computer Fountain Valley runs 63
formations," says Waters. "They boggle your mind
with variations. but it gets down to simple football
with perfect execution . Bolin? He 's a great
reach·blocker on the sweep, overblocking the end.
"We have lo put pressure on Stevens, but
Emery is the key. Hey, we're in good company, he
<Emery) has been doing it to everybodv."
Fountain Valley is 6·2 overall, 2.i in league,
Westminster is 5·3, 1·2.
Elsewhere this week:
Edison va. Huntington Beech
One of the year's big mismatches is here,
according to the numbers. which finds Edison,
two·time defending CIF Big Five Conrerence
champion with a 30-game winning streak going,
including an 8-0 1981 campaign, against the Oilers,
who have lost 31 straight Sunset League games
C3·5 overall, 0·3 lbis year).
"Huntington Beach always plays well against
us," says Edison Coach Bill Workman, whose days
have been brightened lately by the play of
linebacker Mike Powell, defensive end Bryce
Malavui and Matt Hombs in the secondary.
: Don't let Bowie make H eisman presentation
The Oilers get defensive end and offensive
guard Bret Blanchard and guard-linebacker John
Domingo back after injuries, and Coach Greg
Henry says he'll go lo junior quarterback Buddy
Noble if his team experiences a must-pass
situation. He might blow it. and give it to George Allen, rather than Marcus Allen "It's a high risk offense," admits Henry, who
adds: "Giving the ball to (Dave) Geroux and
(Theo) Langford 30 to 40 times a game lsn't much
of a risk. But our kids will be ready lo play." • Nobody came in on the noon balloon from
~ Saskatoon and asked me. but ....
. • The San Diego Padres showed good sense in
• asking for more than Dodger infielder-outfielder 11 Pete Guerrero in exchange for shortstop Ozzie
--. Smith.
• If -make that when -Marcus Allen wins
the Heisman Trophy, let's have someone other
" than Bowie Kuhn make the presentation . . . the ~ award might go to George Allen.
• One wonde'r's whatever became of the
' Saturday afternoon sports show with which ABC ~ and Howard Cosell were going to capture the fancy
and imagination of the entire nation.
,,. • Jerry Buss missed the recent wedding of
.. Laker general manager Bill Sharman, but you
may rest assured Buss was not at a wedding of fiis
,. own.
• lf the -.iys who sell race track tout sheets
• know so much, why do they have to sell race track
... tout s heets?
,., • U Dan Pastorini becomes the Rams' solid
No. 1 quarterback, be may be filling the spot he
was brought in to fill.
• It ls a warm feeling to know that in just rive
months the National Basketball Association will
have determined which teams will get in to the
• .playorrs.
1-· • U you think time doesn't fly, consider that
when the Horsemen's Quarter Horse Racing
Association opens its winter meeting Tuesday, it
"! will be for the loth time.
,. •Guys who bet on NFL football are comparing
Use season of 11181tothe 1tock market in 1929. ~ • The latest suggestion for a fourth for bridge "° with Howard Cosell, Jack Kent Cooke and Wilt
•Chamberlain LI George Steinbrenner.
• If there ls not a coaching job open In New 11 En1tand soon1 two moons will noat acro11 the
" November sky.
• Al a •Prinl set to1ether ot NFL coaches.
quarterbacks and medla In New Orleans two years
110, San Francl1co 49ers coacb BUI Walth said, "I reel we will be serious contenderl ln two years."
• If you can play defense, you can win at any
1ame, lnduclint plns pons.
• Former Mlchlsan State Coach Duffy
• Dausberty's plan for a po1t Muon colle1e tootball
toum6ment fl' det•mlne a l .. ltJmate natlcloM.
SPORTS COLUMNIST
BUD TUCKER
championship team bas everything except people
in the proper places who will listen.
• A poll of the people who bey tickets to
Dodger Stadium will reveal that they do not want
Reggie Jackson.
• If the Los Angeles City Council really
appropriated Sl,117 for a celebration for the
Dodgers, the city council or Anaheim could pull of
a public relations coup by voUng right now to
spend $2,000 ii the 1\ams make it to the Super
Bowl.
•Almost any bet made before the NFL season
on a team making it to Super Sunday now looks
good at the appropriate oddJ.
• TV color man John Brodie says the NFL !5
evening out because of the forward pass, but this ts
a maneuver which has been in football for several
years.
• Kareem Abdul·Jabbar says NBA salaries are
not ridiculous and he is right . . . they are
obscene.
• It may not have anything to do with
anything, but no one connected with the Los
Angeles Olympic committee seems to know
anything about sports or athletics.
• Quick now . . . Whal did you used to do on Monday nights?
• In a dieting contest involving Tommy
Lasorda, Ray Malavasi and Stu Naban, no one
would wln.
•The Dallas Cowboys may be America's team
but as tough competitors against the spread, the
Tampa Bay Buccane~rs qualify as Las Veaaa'
team.
• More unique than a profile of Howard Coeell
is (a ) athlete's foot through a microecope or (b)
dried seaweed or (C) John Matuszak or (d) noqe of
the above.
Merine va. Ocean View
Ocean View bas apparently lost quarterback
John Heinle for the remainder of the season
because of an injury, and that's about the worst
news you could give the Seahawks, who have
depended on the passing game for virtually all of
their success.
Marina, meanwhile, is expected to use this
game as a tuneup for the regular season finale
with Westminster.
Marina quarterback Ken Laszlo bas rushed for
269 yards on 27 carries (virtually 10 yards per
carry) and S toucbdown1 the lut two weeks.
"That's what they gave us so we took it," says
Marina Coach Dave Thompson. Marina is No. 2 in
Orange . County, No. 4 in the CI F Big Five
Conference and 7·1 overall, the only loss a 28-24
setback to Edison.
Ocean View LI 3·S overall, 1·2 in league. The
(See CAMPBELL. Pase OZ)
Malavasi makes d ecision --it's Pastorini
By JOHN SEVANO or .. D911Y,.......,.
In a move that really isn't surprising, especially
if you've watched the Rams' offense sputter the
first nine weeks of the season, Coach Ray
Malavui announced the ln.sertioo of Dan Pastorin!
as the team's No. l quarterback ln place of Pat
Haden.
Malavasi made the announcement thll momlng,
Just thr~ day• after Ylllkinl Haden Sundaf in favor of Jeff Rutledge ln the secoad quarter o the
Ram1' 1ame with Detroit.
Rutledge, who entered lbe same with bit team
traUln113·7, direeted tbe so-ahead touchdown.' and
put hit dub wttbba field toal ruse before leavtn1
with. a dillocated tbumb.
"{ t.hlnk it'• a~ a tlme aa uy to look at Du
becauae be'• hlld time now to be acquainted with
our offenM," uicl Malavut •the Rama prepare
to meet New otleam Sunda,y at babelm ltadlum.
"I didn't think it would be fair to put him ln any
earlier than thls. It's always toulb to make a
change like thls and someUmes the players don't
agree with you." ·
And, bow did Haden take the newa?
"Pat's a man " answered Malavasl. "He
questloned certa1n tbin1s but ln the end he
understood why we were dolna it.
"We just weren't p0utUn1 enou1h polnta oa the
board."
Malavui lndJcated that be took Haden out ln
the Lions came because the qu111erback called
some wrong plays at the wron1 lime. With
Rutled1e. the plays came ln from tbe bench and
the Rama "'°" 21H3. The coach said he hoped tbe ,........, ••
declsion wm be tor the remainder ol the .......
with the 5-4 Rama atlll ln coat•Uon to 1"UC1t1 •
SUper ~l playoffs. i_· ~
New OrfeaDI hu beaten onlJ tbl •-;-
,,
I
..
"
I•
I ••
.
' I I • j
Dodgers, ~els
won't participate
Fr9•AP ..... teMt .• NEW YORK -Five major league
teams, lncludlna the World ~amplon Loe An1elea I>odsers, will
t participate in the premler players' portion
Jhe free •tent re-entry dral't Nov. 13.
Besides the Dod1ers, the Angel.a, Boston Red
Sox, Minnesota Twins and Seattle Mariners
have gained exemptiona, Blake Cullen.
administ.ntor-director of public relations for
the National Leaaue, said Tuesday night.
Cullen aald that since more than five teams
applied for the exemption, the five were
selected by lot. He refused to identify the other
teams which had asked for exemption. but there
were indications two or tbree were involved.
The five "excluded clubs'' will not be eligible
to select or sign any "Type A" ranking players,
the top category major leaguers at their
positions who have declared themselves as Cree
agents, for the next three years. But the clubs
may participate in all other aspects of the
re-entry draft. ·
Excluded clubs do not have to make available
a list of 26 player~ who will go into the
compensation pool. The formula was drawn up
as part of the settlement of the SO.day players'
sttike this past season.
Quote of the day
Bobby Bowden, Florida State football
coach. after watching Pitt's Daa Marino
pass for 251 yards and three touchdowns in
a "42·14 victory over the Seminoles despite
playing with a bruised shoulder: "Boy. I
wish Marino couldn't have played. We
might have tied them." '
Malone, Hayes pace H~uston victory
Moses Malone and EM11 Rayes m
combined for 47 points and made key
fourth-quarter free throws to lift
Houston to a 101·98 victory over the New York
Knicks Tuesday night in NBA action ... Kyle
Macy and Alna Adam s teamed for 33 points
and rookie Larry Nance keyed a pivotal first
period as Phoenix beat San Antonio, lll-88
. . . Reserve guards Rlt)ly Sobers and Ray
Blume sparked Chicago's offense with nine
points to open the fourth quarter and the Bulls
rallied for a 104·96 victory over Atlanta.
Atlanta•s Daa llouadfield led all scorers with 22
points . . . Mlke Mltcbell scored 22 points and
Bob Wilkerson added 28 to carry Cleveland to a
125·110 win over Dallas. Rookie Maril Agalrre
poured in 27 points and Brad DavlJ bad 24 to
pace the Mavericks ... Jallua Erving and
Bobby Jones combined for 25 first-half points as
Philadelphia opened up a 20-point lead and
raced to a 112·99 win over Washington. Erving
finished with 19 points.
•
Dupont shot upends Colorado
Normand D•p .. t took a pa11 Iii
from Paul Maca..u and acor d at '
14 : 24 or the second p rlod to break 1
tle and help Winnipea tb ct.feat Colorado, 5 3,
Tuesday nl1ht ln the NaUon&l Hockey Lea1ue.
The victory wea the fourth or the season on the
road for the Jel!I, who won only two away f\-om
home 11 year a&o . Jim Pt>pllulli knocked ln
a .20·root slap 11hot late In the second period to
boost CaJiary into a 2·2 tie with the Stanley
Cup champion New York hlanders.
13th-ranked Miami put on probation
Miami, c:omlng ofC its biggest al
victory in 55 years or football, ' •
suffered a major setback Tuesday
when the NCAA placed the 13th-ranked
Hurricanes on probation ror two years and
barred the team from accepting a bowl bid this
season. The NCAA round Miami guilty or 66 of
107 recruiting violations that allegedly occurred
between 1976 and 1980 . . Tony Eason of
Illinois is the Clrst of three talented
quarterbacks Michigan must face in the final
weeks or the season. Purdue so{>homore Scott
Campbell and Ohio State"s A.r1 SchJlcht~r are
the others ... Running bac" Earl Campbell of
Houston, hobbled by a hamstring injury, did not
work out Tuesday and quarterback Keo Stabler
was favoring a wris t injury
Weaver has license suspended
Ballimore Manager Earl Weaver •
Jost his Maryland driver's license for
60 days for faillure lo submit to a
bloo d -a l cohol te s t , Motor Vehicle
Administratio n officials s aid. .A news
conference is set Tbursday to announce plans
Cor Sugar Ray Leonard's first defense of his
undisputed welterweight boxing championship
against Bruce Fbacb ... A college kid presented
Larry Holmes with an orange University of
Pittsburgh sweatshirt, then promoter Don Ki.og
laid another piece of apparel on the
heavyweight champion a full-length sable
coat. priced at $50,000 on the occasion of
Holmes ' 32nd birthday. . A man who held the
world r ecord ror s pe ed skating drew a
three-year federal prison term for smuggling
two pounds of heroin into the country. Thomas
Edward lmons was sentenced in U.S District
court in San Francisco .. The 12-member
Japanese women's golf team finished of[ the
U.S. team Tuesday, to win the U.S.-Japan
Pioneer Cup women's professional gotr
tournament by a three-day total or 18 strokes
Television, radio
Followlng a re the top sports events on TV
tonrgfi( Ratings a re : ( ( ., " excellent; ' ' ' worth watching; 1" fair;~ forget it.
7:20 p .m., Channel 9 ./
NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Seattle.
Announcers: Chick Hearn and Keith
Erickson.
The Lakers hope to turn things around tonight
In Seattle after suffering a pair of losses in their
first two games of the new season. Seattle is 1·1
going into the clash. The Lakers will have Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar and Earvin "Magic" Johnson to
send against the SuperSonics.
RADIO Basketball Lakers a t Seattle, 7 20 p.m., KLAC (570). Hockey Kings at Chicago, 6 p.m., KPRZ (1150).
·M aril_Ul edges CY From Page 01
LAKE RS Un iversity, OCC defeated
Marina High School's Viking
water polo team edged
Capistrano Valley in non-league
action while Riverside Poly look
the meas ure or visiting
Un iversity in double..overtime
Tuesday afternoon.
On the Community College
level, Orange Coast dropped an
11·9 verdict to host Cerritos in
Norwalk in South Coast
Conference action.
University's Trojans traveled
to Riverside and appeared'\to
have the game won against the
and tbe hosts scored the only
goal in t.Jle second extra session.
Poly won, 7·6.
''Riverside Poly scored with
10 seconds r e maining in
regulation," University Coach
Dave Kent said . "Then we
couldn't score.
"I thought our kids played a
super game. We held the lead
the entire way but had a
breakdown at the very end. But
l was really pleased with the
way we played.
• • •
the contc.'>t tu gin• Portland a
102·98 lead.
· fhal v.as a great win for us,"'
Portland Coach J a ck Ramsay
sa1Cl "What I liked most was
our a bilit} to makt! the big play
when tht•) kept coming back at
u s E ven v.h e n w e were
short handed. the guys kept
makin~ the clutch plays "
'
From Page 01
CAMPBELL, EMERY MATCHED • • •
two lea1t1e lotHI, without Heinle, have been by an
a ccumUtated 1coro or 90·0.
E1tencl• v1. Irvine
'rhe E-.ales of Estancia Coach Ed Blanton
seflk to enhance their role u S.a View Leaaue
leader (7·0·1 ovcrall1 4·0·1 in leaaue and the CIF
Southem Conferences No. 8 outfit}.
Blanton, however, Is hopeful of &ettlng off to a
better at.art than the lut coupJe or ·weeks, which
has seen Estancia forced to extend itself In tbe
second hall in order lo win.
'"We were lucky to be up, 10·7, at halftime
against University and Newport Harbor should
have had a 7·0 lead," says Blanton.
Estancia's game, it seems when the gotna 1ets
tough, ls to run tallback Curt Wenzlaff behind
tackle Mike Smith <6·6, 245 ) and several other
huge linemen, who should appear even larger
against Irvine.
·'Smith has great feet and is much better than
Kevin Sloan (Washington Stole's 267-pound tackle)
at this stage,'' says Blanton.
''Sloan was bigger, but Smith ls somelhin1
else , .. adds Blanton ... When we get in t.rouble, he
just comes up to me and says, 'come on coach, I 'll
block 'em.'
"No, we don't have too many secrets. We"ll be
running Wenzlaff over him (Smith). Irvine is an
improved team, though, and the winged-T can
confuse you sometimes."
Irvine Coach 1'.erry Henigan says he doesn't
expect to put the stops to the Estancia ground
game, but adds: ··We just don't want to give them
the big play. Hopefully they 'II make some
mistakes." Irvine is 3-4·1 overall, 1-4 in league.
Corona ct.I Mar va. Costa Meaa
With University's 15·14 victory over
Saddleback last week, the Sea Kings or Coach nick
Morris are fairly certain if they -ean win two
they'll qualify for the CIF Southern Conference
playoffs.
But it begins with nemesis Costa Mesa and its
pass-happy offense and quick defense, which bu
caused CdM numerous problems in the past.
The Sea Kings (5·2·1 overall, 2:Z·l in the Sea
View League>, probably won't have halfback
Lance Martin in the lineup because of an ankle
injury, but Jeff Case appears to be filling the void,
and along with Chris Bright, are favored.
CdM Coach Dick Morris says he's
e mphasizing his goal line attack, because his
offense bad to settle for a pair of field goals after
getting insi<fe the 5·yard line three limes against
Irvine.
Costa· Mesa Co-coach Jim Hagey reports
tailback Jeff Goettsch is lost for the season
because of shoulder surgery, necessitating the
return of Brian Head to tailback (from fullback>.
"Onassis Nixon ls a possibiUty at tailback,
too," says Hagey. ··we still have to throw the
football,'' adds Hagey. "It's hard to run against
defenses like Corona del Mar, El Toro and
E stancia.··
Costa Mesa ls 2·7 overall, 1-4 in league.
Newport Harbor vs. Saddleback
Tailback John Barnett's availabiJity is still
listed as tentative because of an lnJury1 but that"s
not all that's injured at Newport Haroor, where
the Sailors are smarting from a 1·7 record, the
most recent a 22·7 sting from Estancia.
"We've s hown the last two weeks we can go
out a nd play football," saya Coach Hank
Cochrane. "All we have remaining is to win our
last two games, to finish with some respectability.
And we have to start with Saddle back.··
The Roadrunners feature twin ruMing threats
Kevin Bradley and KendJe Newson. Saddleback is
5·3 overall, 3·2 in league and badly in need or a
victory lo remain In the playoff picture.
Unlver91ty vs. El Toro
The Trojans of University Coach Rick Curtis
pride themselves on their defense -and it"ll get a
good test against El Toro, which features AJl.CIF
tailback Damon Sweazy, who bas run for 1,005
yards on 214 carries, rn·rtually a 5.0 average.
Sweazy has scor d 10 uchdowns and Curtis
says he may be bes ning back in Orange
County.
"Teams have stacked against the run, but El Ioro seems to do a job passing the baJI, too," saya
Curtis. ··we're pretty healthy, but El Toro ta one or
the class teams in the leaeue and we have to cut
down on our mistakes.··
-Laguna Beech v•. MrHlon Viejo
Leaping from one fire to another, Lacwia
Beach High's Artists (3-3·1 overall, 2·1 ln South
Coast League action> boat Mission Viejo'•
unbeaten Diablos alter absorbinf a 42·13 spanklnl
at lhe hand of Capistrano Valley ast week.
Mission Viejo Is 2-0·1 in league, 7·-0·1 overall,
ranked No. 10 in Orange County, No. 3 in the CIF
Central Conference and has allowed only three
touchdowns to eight opponents.
"We've just go to play better than last week,"
says Laguna Beach Coach Walt Hamera. "We
reverted back to our early attitude. Last year's
group was the same way. We didn't tackle and we
didn't block."
. Hamera may shill his lineup a bit, with· the
possible insertion of offensive lineman Doug
Marino, defensive end Howard Quigley and free
safety Madgi Hammouri.
Woodbri~ge vs. Valley Christian
The seniorless Warriors are trying to bounce
back from a 24·19 loss at Ontario Christian, but if
they do, they'll be d.olng it against a team very
similar to Ontario Christian and boasting a 5·3
overall record.
The Warriors, 1·6 overall, are up against their
filth opponent blessed with a rankirtg in its
respective conference, but if quarterback Kevin
Burke comes up with another 312-yard ,
three-touchdown performance, Valley Christian
may fmd itself in trouble.
"We're gradually improving," says
Woodbridge Coach Gene Noji. "But we haven't put
a complete game together. yet."
M ater Del va. Notre Dame
After absorbing losses to Edison, Sl. Paul, Los
Altos and Bishop Amat. the Monarchs should have
a good idea· of quaJily footbalJ and how to handle it.
Kennedy Pola, Mater Del 's s terling
tailback-linebacker. was banged up last week
against Amat, however, and muc h of the
Monarchs ' fate hinges on his return in this
non-league test.
NFL
a-Rema 10'12 over New Orleans x-Washlngton 21h over Detroit
New England 1112 over Mi ami Green Bay 2 over NY Giants
x·Houston 2'h over Oakland Philadelphia 41;, over x-St. Louis
x-Mlnnesota 4 over Tampa Bay x-Kansas City 7112 over Chicago
Atlanta 2 over x-San Francisco x-San Olego.C over Cincinnati
x-Oenver 4'h over Cleveland
NY Jets 31;, over >c-Baltimore Pittsburgh 41/1 over x-Seattle
x-Oallas 31h over Butta lo
COLLEGE
Pittsburgh vs. x-Rutgers, no odds Clemson 1 over x-No. Carolina
USC 18 over Cal Georgia 4 over x-Florida
Texas 3 over x·Houston Penn St. 14 over x-No. Carolina St. x-Arlzona St. vs. San Jose St., no odds
x·SMU 25 over Rice Nebraska 12V1 over x-Oklahoma St.
x·Michlgan 141/2 over Illinois x-Florlda St. 3 over Miami, Fla. X·Mlsslsslppi St. vs. So. Mississippi, no odds
X·UCLA 7 over Washington Oklahomf 27 over x-Kansas St.
Ohio St. 8 over x-Minnesota
• No. l ranked 3·A team. But a
goal with 10 seconds remaining
sent the contest into overtime
"Scott Wasbbourne played
e s pecially w e ll a nd J ohn
Pendleton in goal had 12 saves ...
It was a wild fin ish at
The Lakeri• ble w open a
lO·point lead in the first quarter.
but the Blazers rallied behind
the pl ay of Calvin Natt to take
the lead for good 1n the second
quarter, holdmi:: a 51 48 halftime
margin
El Toro is 4.4 overall, 4·1 in league play, a half
game behind Estancia. University is 3·2 in league
with a legitimate shot at a playoff berth. Overall
the Trojans are 5·3, on their way to their best
season since the mid-70s.
x-A rkansas 9 over Baylor
From Ha"ah's, Reno
x-Oenotes home team
Capistrano Valley as the Vikings Portland built a n ll·poml lead
Rutle d ge speaks
at Irvine club
toppled the host team. 11-10. in the third quarter. before
Marina's Jeff Hopkins scored Jabbar led t he final Lakers· *************
with 1:23 to play to give the rally .
Yikes a 11>·9 lead. Then Capo NFL standings ! JOHNSON & SON :
Valley scored with 7 seconds Po rtland guard Jim Paxson
Ram s quarterback Jeff remaining and the Marina team lied Natt for team s coring NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Rutledge is the featured speaker took a time out. -.r' honors with 23 points . Paxson, Western Division
• • AMERICAN CONFERENCE it
for the Irvine Sports Club"s A set play tound goalie Sandy the Blazers· steadying inrluence w L T PF PA Pct.
monthly breakfast on Nov. 12 at Vessey passing to Steve Mlller through their three victories, San Francisco7 2 o 208 154 .778
Western Dlvlsloa •
W L T PF PA Pct. it
6 3 0 227 185 .667 •
6 3 0 275 207 .667 • the Baxter Street Restaurant in who rammed the ball into the played 39 mrnutcs without Atlanta 5 4 o 263 172 .556
Irvine. net with 1 second remaining to committing a turnover . Ransey, Rams 5 4 o 214 193 .556
Kansas City
San Diego
Denver
Oakland
Seattle
It's all part of the pre-game give Marina the victory. 11·10. meanwh1ll', had 13 JJ<>mts anci 14! New Orleans 2 7 o 108 204 .222
breakfast sponsored by the club Orange Coast College 's assists. Thompson scored 17 and Eastern Division
6 3 0 173 129 .667 •
4 5 0 125 150 .444 •
2 7 0 128 205 .222 • for the annual Irvine-University Pirates battled host Cerritos on grabbed 12 rebounds. Dallas 7 2 o 214
football game, whlch takes place even terms for three periods Philadelphia 7 2 o 197 181
129
147
251
212
.778
.778
.556
.333
.333
Eastern Division
1
•
the following evening. b e fore a scoreless fourth J abbar. meanwhile, was 12 for NY Giants 5 4 o 171
Reservations for tickets -($5 quarter. Jn this period, the 15 from the noor and nine for 13 St. Louis 3 6 o 179
Miami 6 2 1 213 162 .722 •
Buffalo 6 3 o 203 141 .667 •
for membe rs , $6 .50 f or Falconsscoredlwice topost'an fromthe foul lmc. Washington 3 6 o 177
non-members) can be made by 11·9 South Coast Conference Central Division
NY Jets 4 4 1 191 209 .500 ii
New England 2 7 o 207 210 .222 •
Baltimore t 8 O 158 298 .lll • contacting Carolyn Rapp at victory. After playing the SuperSonics Minnesota 5 4 0 205 SSl-3553. Goalie Steve Simmons for in Seattle tonight. the Lakers Tampa Bay 5 4 0 163
218
138
190
208
218
. 556 Central Division !
The restaurant ls located at OCC had 18 saves, five of them will return home· to play Phoenix Detroit 4 5 0 210 _M_a_c_Arth __ ur_B_l_v_d_. _a_nd_B_ir_c,..b_. __ __;i:.:;n:......;;t.;;;;;h~e.....;;.;;la;;..;;s..;.t_....u'"'a'"'r""'"t-'-er ______ F_ri_d_a_y_a_n_d_D_aJ_la_s_S_u_n_d_a_y_. ---i Green Bay 3 6 0 170
.556 Cincinnati 6 3 o 228 176 .667 ,.
. 444 Pittsburgh 5 4 O 188 175 .556 !
rot lerskates •
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Anyone for suspense: Tcy Sea View football
Wnile the Sunset League is filled with laughers every Friday night, Sea View teams battle on even terms
1 don't b41lleve there are tOo many who wOUld
PRlP8POATS l1pute tho valldlty or the Sunset Lea1ue ln term•
Of QUIHl)' football -Hpecially when It COQtlinl
i0ran1 County's No. 1, 2 and 3 team•. wblcb
happen lo rank 1·4·6 In th• Cl F 811 Five
. Conference. That's impressive, to say the least.
8ut there is a flaw in that arran1emen\.
t Except for three or four games, there lan't much
left in terms of super compeUtive league play.
ROGER
CARLSON
That's where the Sea View Leaaue certainly
outdoes the Sunset -If you want to see somethln1
\\l'Wlth a little suspense -try the Sea View.
1•J Estancia enters the next to last week with a
". halt-game bulge over El Toro «H l, while three
.:rothers have legitimate s hots at third place <or
, better> and a CIF playoff berth.
That's because acrosa the street, at tiny
Liberty Cba:iSUan High, la 6-10 Mike Pemper, a
205·PoWld senior who will be In hl$ fourth year as a
starter for the Minutemen.
Liberty Christian, under Coach Larry Pryor
finished 14·8 last season, . faJUn1 to make the
playoffs t>,,ecauae of the strenllh of the Academy
League. For instance, the Minutemen were 5--0
against the Christian League's top two teams
(Woodcrest and Inland Christian>. who obviously
qualified for the playoffs.
1 .University and Saddleback are 3·2, Corona del
'" Mar Is 2·2·1, the only team to mar Estancia's
t)therwise perfect record with a 10·10 Ue.
It's not just the crowded conditions, it's the
, scores: Corona del Mar has won or lost by no more
than _five points ln five games, Costa Mesa has
been mv6lved in three decisions by a touchdown or
' less and El Toro Is the same.
Pemper and bla teammates often cross the
street to practice with.the Ocean View outfit.
Irvine. University and Saddleback have also
been involved in three of .five decisio~ by a
"touchdown or less. .
Although Pemper remains In relative
obscurity, he's apparently not being overlooked.
"A lot of college coaches are lookin1 at him
they're aware," says Pryor of his prospect. '
• * * The "rout" of the year. so far, has· been a 21·0
decision by Estancia over Saddleback. HERE'S THE ULTIMATE in sure things -
Mater Dei High's Monarchs are listed as
overwhelming favorites to win the Angelus League
cross country championship Saturday. * • * WHEN THE 8ASKETBALL WARS begin
'--anew in December Ocean View }{jgh's Seahawks 1• will again be a force to be reckoned with, although .~'Edison and Fountain Valley may be the teams to
• beat.
Overwhelming is hardly the word. Coach Bob
Richardson candidly states: "I think our runners
will go 1-2-3-4-5-6-7 (in the league finals)."
On the surface you wouJd think Ocean View's
' 6-9 Jim Usevitch would be the tallest in Orange . ~' County prep circles, but in reality, he's not even
the tallest on his own block, or gym.
Robert Plid:lta, the two-time league champion.
leads the Monarchs, who are also blessed with an
unbeaten junior vars ity Call juniors) who
Richardson rates H "Maybe the No. 2 squad In the
3-A division.
'Vaqs, Artists, Lions
near league titles
• Irvine and Laguna Beach High
School girl's ~lleyball teams
clinched at least a fie for the
league championship while
Westminster went in front in the
Sunset League by defeating
Fountain Valley Tuesday night.
Irvine's Vaque ros hold a
one-game lead over Corona del
Mar in the Sea View League
with a 12·1 record and one game to play.
Laguna Beach is two in front
or second place Capistrano
Valley, the team the Artists
lopped Tuesday.
Westminster and Fountain I Valley were tied for the Sunset
: lead before the Lions captured a
I 3·1 decision.
"Suzette Gervais played well
for us as a hiller-blocker and her
d e fe n se was outstanding.··
I
! Coach Mar McKenzie said after
the Irvine match.
··Estancia has a ver)' good ! I team and this league has five
i • Corrales gets
Phillies post
PHILADE LPHIA CAP >
F o rmer Texa s R angers
Manager Pat Corrales has been
signed to a two.year contract to
m anage the Philadelphia
Phillies, a team s pokesman said
today
Spokesman Larry Shenk said
the ·club would hold a news
con fere n ce to discuss the
appointment.
Bill Giles, who put together a
group that bought the PhilHes
last week for S30.175 million.
talked with Corrales Tuesday
night to clear the way for the
anl'louncement.
teams that could do well in the
Cl F playoffs."
Estancia coach Joe Wulff
singled out Allison Culler and
Jan Wallace was playing weli
for the Eagles.
Mike Duncan's Laguna Beach
Artists improved their league
record in Lhe South Coast circuit
to 9·0 with one game remaining.
"Lynn Kessler, Shea Hutchins
and Krista Ely all played well
for us today." Duncan said.,
Laguna Beach has lost only
one match this season, that to El I
Toro of the Sea View League.
T he Artists are 18-1 overall.
Corona del Mar, the second
place team in the Sea View
circuit had good performances
from Mary Anne Muller, a
m 1ddle blocker. a nd Pam
La wrence. an outside hitter .
Both are juniors for the Sea
Kings.
Westminster toppled Fountain
Valley in four games, losing the
second and winning 'the first.
third and fourth to take over the
Sunset lead.
In a nother Sunset match,·
inJury-r iddled Marina came
from behind a pair of 10-15
losses in the first two games to
win the final three for a 3-2
verdict over Ocean View.
Th~ V1kmgs have had four
starters sideline d with a
dislocated shoulder, a nerve
disease. a torn cartilege in a
knee and another ailment this
season
On the community college
level. Golden West romped to a
15-11 , 15·5. 15-6 decision over Los
Angeles CC lo improve its
record to 13-1.
Ludovise sets
course record
for Pirates
Barbie Ludovise led the
Orange Coast College women's
cross country team to its fifth
straight South Coast Conference
championship and the Pirate
men's team came within seven
points of upsetting Grossmont,
the perennial title winner.
Tuesday in the South Coast
Conference championships at
Irvine Park.
Brian Harold finished second
in the men's race for Coach
Gordie Fitiell's Pirates but
Grossmont placed three runners
in the top five with 33 points to
40 for the Pirates. Mike Henog
was the second OCC runner tq
finish in seventh place with Mike
Serna ninth and Lalo Terriquez
10th.
Last year. the OCC ·men were
second in the South Coast
Conference, second in Southern
California and second in the
state. In each case, Grossmon
finished ahead of the Bucs.
In their only conference •meet
of the year, the Griffins defeated
the Pirates, 20-41. In that meet,
Harold was the top OCC finisher
with a third-place effort.
Ludovlse not only won the
women's race but set a course
record of 18:01.6 in winning by
almost 28 seconds.
Sue Zika was the next OCC
runner in fourth place with Kelly
Ringer fifth and Lisa GonzaJes
in s eventh' spot .
"I haven't teen 'em all (ln the S.A> but mr
junior va.nlty bu to be one of the top team1. '' . . ·•
EDISON HJGH'S PLANS to meet Rancho
Cordova High next September have fallen tbrou1h
-the latter could not make other arran1ement.1
and Instead, the Charaen will meet Vista High, a
power ln the San Dteeo aection.
Rancho Cordova, with a reputation u one of
the country'• better teams (No. 1 by some
expert.a), lost two in a row recently.
The Chargers' football team and other areas of
tbe school are scheduled to be featured on Scott
Baio's television show Saturday (10:30 a.m .>. on
Channel 7. • • *
ORANGE COAST AREA water polo continues
to dominate, but there have been some changes
this season -four-time defendin1 CIF 4-A
champion Newport Harbor has lost twice and Is
ranked "only" No . 2 behind Sunny HiUs.
:. Any one of five tea ins, including Corona del
. Mar, has a good s hot at'the CIF championship,"
says Newport Harbor Coach Bill Barnett.
Corona del Mar ls ranked No. 4 and shared' the
Sea View League lead with Newport Harbor (each
was 6-0) before today's game.
Also ranked are Costa Mesa (No. 6) and
Estancia (No. 8 ) from the Sea View League. Thal
means four from the Sea View are in the Top 10,
but whether all four earn CIF playoff berths
r emain to be seen.
And, I suppose the playoff format will be
something like last year's, which round No. 4
ranked Costa Mesa meeting second-seeded Sunny
Hills in the second round.
The CIF office, which throws these things
together, escapes the wrath for such poor efforts
•Imply becauae numbers of ouCra1ed are at a
minimum <water polo lackl numbers ln terms of
1upporterJ). Keeping a low protlle and looktoc
straight ahead helps fend off the arrow•. • • • SKIPPING AROUND -Ediaon Isn't the only
school around with eyes on knee braces for ltt
football players -Fountain Valley booatera have
already picked up some with more on tbe way, at
$52 .82 per pair ... Weatmlnater High Coach
Bury Wat.en says the Lions are tryln1 to 1et
Mater Dei and Servile on their non·lea1ue football
schedule for 1983. "We'll probably drop Compton
and Newport Harbor," says Waters ... Kansas
University is reportedly starting BUI Malavaal on
defense now. Sophomore quarterback FrHll
Seurer and freshman tailback Dloo Bell make
three Edison HJgh products on the starting roster
fo r the Jayhawks. Kerwin BeU, out for tbe season
with a knee injury. is due for a new cast, but still
has 'a ways to go before it'll come off. Maybe
another four weeks . . . Edison High punter Troy
Richardson isn't getting much or kick out of this
~easo~. but when he does get a chance to punt, it's
.in the 42.-.y.ard range. Washington, Oreaon, USC
and (rmturaUy > Kansas are reportedly takinl a
good look ... The Irvine triangle is complete for
the 1982 football season -Woodbridge will meet
University in its opener, then follow acalnst Irvine
in non-league play. University and Irvine, of
course, wait until the Clnal week of Sea View
League action before meeting . . . University or
Pacifi c freshman cornerback Bob Slllolll•, a
product of Corona del M'ar High, may be lost. for
the balance of the season because or a brulaed
thigh, which has not healed as quickly as first
expected. He was s lated to start against Long
Beach St.ate two weeks ago before the injury.
I d -~.
J e ~ PWIAlli: ~
VANS ~
LOIC TIACI llVITATIOIAL
UC Irvine won over UC San
Diego in a home match in four
gam es. coming back from a
15-17 loss in the opener.
The Pirate wom e n are
defending state champions and
will go next i n the Southern
California meet at Bonelli Park
near Puddlngstone Lake a week
from Saturday. Citrus College is
hosting the SoCal meet that
includes the men and women
from all southland community
collegt;~.
~~~~~~~~~~ Now save 40% with ftirCafs low-Cal fanis.
; College statistics
ll
LEADING INDIVIDUAL RUSHERS
TC Yds Avg
Allen, USC 279 1,725 215.6
Walker, Georgia 265 1,309 163.6
~ Redden, Richmond 185 866 144.3
Warner Penn St. 128 859 143.2 Bettis, Cincinnati 178 967 138.1
Diana, Yale 181 955 136.4
Ware, Drake 212 1,051 131.4
Woolfolk, Michigan 176 1,050 131.2
Mcintosh, NC St. 148 914 130.6
Lawrence, Va. Tech. 242 1.044 130.5
~ LEADING INDIVIDUAL PA~ERS
PA PC Yds TD
.. Campbell, Purdue 227 136 2,139 17
.. Pagel. Ariz. St. 192 111 l,SS2 18
McMahon, BYU 271 171 2,183 19
, Marino. Pitt 203 121 J .578 21
Blckldge,Penn St. 122 70 1.088 9
11 Eason, Illinois 279 173 2,334 14
( Ram sey, UCLA 148 92 1,201 10
I-King, UNLV 274 159 2,419 13
B.Clark, Mich. St. 109 61 904 7
"" 'Belue, Georgia 132 80 1,068 7
Jlt
\
INDIVIDUAL TOTAL OFFENSE
McMahon, BYU
Kofler, San Diego St.
King, UNLV
Campbell, Purdue
Eason, Illinois
Clarkson, San Jose St.
Marino, Pitt
Shon, Ohio U.
Schofield, Wake Forest
Stamp, TCU
Yell Avg.
2,093 299.0
1,988 28'.0
2,267 283.4
2,249 281.1
2,224 278.0
1,782 254.6
l,494 249.0
l,~l 243.9
2,1..24 236.0
1,855 231.9
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING
PC Yell A•I·
Bryant, Purdue 50 849 6.2
Was hington, TCU 37 623 6.2
Nelson, Stanford 48 614 6.0
Sandusky, UNLV 46 981 5.7
Champine, Colo. St. 46 585 5.7
Jordan, Vanderbilt 40 338 5.7
Rogers, Colgate 45 873 5.6
Buggs, Vanderbilt 45 635 5.6
Raugh, West Virginia '3 412 5.4
Plater, BYU 48 680 5.3
Grieve, Yale 37 555 5.3
Durham. San Diego St. 37 464 5.3
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
lliMDHEW
"" vw DllSILUlllT . FACTORY STICKER . $1050
DISCOUNT
StH
SALE PRlf:E
57095
FE l2763) (~oee8!)
-· IRAMDNIW
ltll ISUZU
, 4X4PICIW FACT.~1\IJICKEA
01\COONT t••• SALE PRICE
57395 -. (1 273)(7<>0eee) _
ltlOVWDASta
· DllSll. WA•OH
4 apeed tranamlalion, AM·FM stereo
& •sunroof.
(149876)
AlrCal 1s growing
again. Now the airline
that's winning the West
with style 1s heading
to Phoenix.
Going wit h us are
lower fares 40% lower
than what youve been
paying on other. airlines.
Pick up an AlrCal
Low<al fare.
Fmm Orange County
or Ontario. we'll jet you
to Phoenix for as low as
$36 Naturallv. there are
some restnctions~· But
even our unrestricted fare
offers a 40% savings.
AirCal's everyday, fly-right·
away fare is j ust $60.
Alrca1 styte Is service.
'ft>ur flight starts with
one-stop check in and
seat selection before you
board. A~er anival. it's
swift baggage deliverv.
And AlrCal style is one of
the best on-time perfor-
mance records rn the
1ndustrv.
A toast to stvle.
During November.
we're serving compltmen-
tarv cocktails to all adult
passengers on everv
non-stop A1ght to or from
Phoenix
Next time you're
flying to the Grand Canvon state. fly AirCal You'll
hke our style
For reservations ca ll
your Travel Agent or ArrCal
SCHEDULE TO PHOENIX
FROM ORANCE COUNTY
Departs Frequency
7·00a Sat
8.30a Mon.·Fn.
10·00a Sun
3:30p Daily
4:2Sp Ex. Sat
6:45p Mon.-Fn.
6-SSp Sun
FROM ONTARIO
Departs R'eQuencv
8·20a Sun
10:05a Ex. Sun.
1:35p Daily
l
t ~
COMMUNfTV couaot LOG
Golden Wfft (M)
1 ......... t1
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11 LAV...., r 1S5eftta~ JI
11 Mt, ... AIMftlo ,.
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1• h 'M' ell 24 1 p....... JJ
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1•
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Sporty Kine (ROfldl -
Also reced . .Jettlll EHY. Hurrt-Scurr,,
Ooft't Trlc>
Time •>15.
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1119 hd .. (~I) lt.00 ....
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Also reced: Llllle Too CNck, Trv A-9l.
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Time. :iL-.
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Sl<ywl,,., (Qerls•I J.00 JA
Jet•sn.--. (Ulc:keyl 1AO
Alto receci: Good RHMn, Roclledoo,
Light R-enl.
Time: :.._54.
U IXACTA (1-41) pelcl U.50
TMO!tOUGM8•1DI
l'OU•nt RACI. 6 tur1ong1.
C.utlout Decision (l"rulerl 4 IO l.20 2..40
Marc 's Glftm (Herr Isl l.00 tM
Kl"9 Cllfttoft CSlllllle) JM
Aho r eced. My Mondey Smite,
Su11nyslope Guy, 5-1.,·s Beck, Klee Hel, PIH1l11, G..-, Armor.
Time: 1:1U/S.
l'll"TH i.ACl.6f~
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Also reced· He Cl•rlte, 8r'9M 1w. OW
OISLO Oen, Tlc>sAllOy, Fet Tuesdey Boy.
Time: 1:1l1/S.
U •XACTA 1•11 peld '7'2.00.
SIXTH •ACI. 6 flWtongt.
Spit (Herr Isl 4.JO l .20 uo
Klrtly Kid (Solncerl UO '-l'O
Oeee'I Boy (Peullnel UD
Also reced: Du.K.e, s.ter ol All, U Bel U
Lose, Brenkln, Cllrlstepllera Merk.
0.t.rmlfted c.w .... Arelll., ~
Time 1:\U/S.
HVINTH ltACa. Uwrtonvs.
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Sis 0 Sedle I llllnMft I 1 AO UO
Lltte. IC-1"--1 6M
Alto reced: T .... All K-. Bulcll's Glrl, Deer Dell, ~·s Dolly, l! .. w·s Lest,
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• Time : 2\0U/S.
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Also recect: Alp Sliver, G11U99r, ~
Rodney, Hell~11.
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Also recect: ReNft Rlcll, Time few l!lvl1,
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P IJlACTA (Ml peld$61.IO.
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Also ,_, -Mystery, J 0 l"rOftt,
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Time: 2:ot 4/S.
l'll'TH llACI. OM ,,.J. pece.
l!I T-nto CSleeilll t .ID UG ).40
T.,.telll lllclge t\lelleftdl,.._.I J.40 2.111 Cerdlo Kid (Pef'llerl uo
Also reced: P.:ltlc Oe11ber, Cher1.,ll
Mled, Medtt LMd, Our Jeff, Kl ... 't llell
Time: 2:0t.O.
P •XACTA l .. SI peld U7 .20.
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Alao reced: J11941beers. Bul>I>• Prlmlllve 51,..11, Alldys Winner.
Time: 2·02.0.
llVINTM •ACI. ON mite pece.
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Renoml CLIOft!Nlll 1.00 uo
WlftCIY R .... (Todd) 1.AO
Alse recect Corull9 Com..._ftd, Euy 0 V,
Cllercoat .._,., TloorlOw, a.rt Gten••le.
Time: 2:00 4/S.
P IXACTA (•11 peld .... IO.
llGMTit ltACI. ON mile pece
H'9111eftCI B'ml (Toddl 14 20 1AO 4"'°
Cr11IM._y IL.undonll S.40 l.20
Hel Clle<le CKwecM.,I SAO
Also recect: LoOM Chen<•. Super Sue.
CleHIC Lff, Drive u ... Alldyt Skipper
Time: 2·001/S.
P IXACTA C•ll peoe1 '11.•.
N IMTH llACI. OM mli. -·· Barhop COennlSI 4.IO 4.20 UO
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Aho reced· DO-Rue" for tlle Sky,
Bucktue. -· ., •• B c Lionel. DO-Reec:ll for Ille Slly olsq.,elllled rram ..,
lhlrd tolHth
Time: I:" 4/S P llXACTA <•21 peld '-'l.10
Attefldenc9 -1,Dt.
Horse Rraclna 1tandlng1 """-Meow.I)
JOCltlYI
Pln<ey
McCerron
c-•o
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O.llolllt
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---1•11111 1.JM 161 ,.
1,JllS ,,, -1,lS7 143 ,,.
1,250 220 "' 1M I,. IOS
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101 , .... ...
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CAMP8•LL COMl'l••1tCI
Edmonton
K .... Yencou,,., C.l9ery
Color-
1111 .........
WIMlpee
Clllc990
Detroit
St. Louis
TOt'OftlO
,....,._Dlvlelea
W LT 81' OA Pta
••011•11
• 6 0 '° " 12 46 3AO U ll
2 13'1MIJ
2 1211'6 6
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7 2 2 .... • , t ,. ., 14
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Pwtcll DI,,.._
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Boston
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1 I J U G 17
•• 0 .... " ' , 4 .... .. ., • ..,.u
1SS'7•1 ~·.__
Ce ... ryl, NY,.......,.. J
Wlftftl ... S,C-.. J T__.,...,..
....... Ollc..-
11. LIUIUI QuMec
NY • ....,.. et l'lttMurtll
Ml .......... etW .........
VMC_M...,...,..
c.ttary .. ..,.....
T~et~
'Y'
' . '
"' "
AL Cy Young •••rd wlnn•r•
Ptevlow ,.._, .. IN Amwl<ell ~
CV VMlftl AWWll tw lllttlllftO ella41Mte, • tetectee.., veit1ne ~ ..... ,_....
Writer a ~IOll el A""rlu:
tttt -•otlle 1"1 .... rt, Mltweu"" ,,._ ...... s-. •.n~
1'19-MIU ................ .._...
1'71 -... ow.,.,, New y-1'77 _...,_,Lyle, Hew Yer11
1'76 -Jim Pel_,., Be111MWI
191$ -Jim p .. _.-, llaltlMWe
1914 -Jim "CetfWI" Hlll!Mr, C>elllelld
191l -Jim ,,.._,., leltlMW• 1'72 -OIY*'d ,..,.,.,, C•velend
ltrl -Vld9 Bkle, 9M11Md 1'70 -Jim ,..,.,.,, Ml-.ote
It .. -Ctltl Oemls Mcl.Allft, Oelrolt, -
¥Ike C"'41ar, Beltlmwe
1,.. -Oeftnls Mculft, Oelr•ll 1'6)-Jlm ~. Bolton 1 ... -oa. Cllenc•, Lot A11991H
19'1 -wtlltey l"Ol'd, New YC1f11
"" -e.rly WyM, CllicAleO 19'1 -.... TWW,. Nftf Yerll
Note -ON --<-rlftt "°411 ,....,_. ,,.,.., ~lor to 1"1.
Crou country
COMMUNITY COLLIOI .....c....~· (etl ..... P"'111
TH m KOrfl: I. Orout!IOftl, :U; 2. Or .....
Coest, 40; J. 1"11ller1on, lot, 4. Mt. Sen
AnlOftlO, I 14; S. S...te Ane, 11'; '· S... Otevo
MeY, lft; 7. Cerritos. 11>.
1. "-(Gr.), 1•:sa; 2. Herold COCCI,
20;0J; J. llr-J\Sl>w91r !Gr.). 20: IC; 4.
l"lalwr CSAI. 20:21, S. River• (Gr.I, 20:2J; 4.
L .. 11"1. 10:27; 7. Her1109 COCCI, 10:27; L
Sentoyo IMSACI, 20.Jt; t . S..-COCCI.
10:JS; 10. T~J IOCCI, 20:-. Otllert.
n . L• CrOMe COCCI, 10:•; ti. Arteoe
IOCCI, 21. lS; 24. _,,.,......COCCI. 21 :JI.
WOMIN .....,_ CM9l c:-ew-e
letl,.,,._.....,,
Teem scores: I 0reft98 Coell, 27; 2.
Grossmont. "5; J. Cerritos, lot, 4. Senta
..... 111: s. Mt. Sen A111onlo, 114; •·
Fuller1on, IJt; 7. Sen Ole90 Mone, ISi.
I. LudovCte COCCI, 11 ,01 .6 tco11rse
record>. 2. Miiier CCerT.I, 11:1'; l. C.llfl
(Gr.>. 11•40; 4. Zlu COCC), 11:45. s. A ......
IOCCI, 11:51 ; t . Mey CSAI. ll:SS; 7.
GoMelei IOCCI, 11.5'; t. ~lllett CGr.),
11:51; t Herneft-.1 IGr.l, 1':04; 10
Zellr.Onlk COCCI, lt·Ol. OU.rs. 14. GIMs
COCCI. It •. H. J. ~ IOCCI, 19:4 ; It.
K. Dube lOCCI. 1'·4S.
Cross country renklng1
MIGHICHOOL c ...... ...,.
1. El Toro; J. l'e••t•I• Veller ; >.
Newbury Perk, •. Cresce"te Valley, s.
Footlllll; t. Et Modltne. 1. VIiie PeA; I
T,,..,....soeu; t. Uai-wt-,; 10. Tomi,., Cll').A_,,
1. Mee.r Del; 2. C.,yon cs.wvus>; J. Le
C-.; 4 Norco; S. Wellllll; '· -llellO;
1 H•-N: •. Mir• Coda; • SIMltll Hiiis, 10.B-PeA.
Cll'-tlrb 1. Ualwenlty; 2. T111tln; J, C.te Mffe; 4. Hewl>Ury Pert!; S Footlllll, t. I._; r
Palos v ... ms. t. T1'louYrld Oeks, t. lrvllie; 10 Dos~
Cll' >-A tlrb
I. Sen Merino, J. L•t•N aeec1'; J.
Welnut, 4. S...OUS. S Bishop Mont.,.._-,.
6. Le C-. 1. Mire Coote: I. R_._; t
BIVI09 AINt; 10. Norco.
lndten Clank:
( .. Cek ..... 1 ... 1 ,..,. .... .......
Joftft Ate-..... Ellet TettKller, ~t.
M;lvM~_,,_,_~M,W.
Htgh Khool women
Mer* 11, Oc.-V ... I ,.......
Cteus IMI def. CWT, 6-0, def. KeftCll, ~1.
Wf. Kerce, .. 1; AlbetU CM) -W , 6·1, W ; c ... r cM>-M ... 1,,.1.
~
Tem·M(llllen (M) -· To,.,.Relley, M ; def , Mel'(IO ·Ve, 6 ·0 , Clef.
s.,1,,..r-T-.....10o, M ; Lo .. to-Si.Mleld
CMI -. ..a, M , 6-0; Moody·Herrls CMI -..1.M .6-0. . ._,., ............ ._,.
Slatlel Klrll <El dltf. Cllltft ..... 1. def. uscy, M ,
def. l"loury, W ; Rucldllldt CE> IOtl ._., .... won~I ; Slwe !EllOSl l ... ,_, .. l,M .
~ HoPl>UmsElll-!El def. Bo9M-K-*,
•·2. def. At111rl·M llh , •·I ; dof.
Oempm_V .... tt•. 1 .... LOll·Smlll\ (El
-•-2, r-s ... 2; Me11otto-Sftl11 -.. ,. 1ott .... w ..... 2.
..._ ........ c.,.. v....,,. .......
K. Wiiiette (L) dltf. Mltcllell, .. 2, def.
l>Kk•r ... 1, ..... Hellemer., .. t; Jeflde (LI
!Oat J ... , _, M , M ; A. Wiiiette !LI loll N. -..a . ..a.
~ Smltll·Scllwe rlutet" (LI Clef
0.111.,..Ahlen, .. 2. def, Coul ....... ercly, J.S,
def. l'lt11lmmon1·C •••Y. 7·6 ;
l"-•ld+-Oodlrer CLI Cott 2 .... -.. 2 ... I; Holleftds~ (LI lol1 M , _ .. I, W.
UlllwrlltyU,•tT-4 ........
Reo IUI Iott to Helnkutfl, 2·6. def.
OoftOfrlO, .. t. def. Call, .. 1: Beller CUI ...
1_., WOfl 7•, .. 2; L.efetlvre IUI !Oat U , ""
....... Oft .. 1. .,..,....
Ollver·Zlr11er tU) def • .._.._,..._, .. I,
def. Heuacllr•d·T•""•'· •·4, Clef. E•rlr·Arlen, 1·S; Bredlfl••·Wl11tert11t111
BredfNW.WIMei , ..... CUI !Oat 4-t, -..a. W ; Bri~MldllCOWI CUI_ .. t.6..a, ... 2. .... .,.. ,., k.,.... ....... Senni.M IMI -... Petri.re., W , _,,
Kiie, M . d9f. Lewla,H ; Prlette CM).._.._
-.. t, M ; Miiiet (Ml Cott4-t, -M.M. o.M9t
Wl,_.eynn CM) '-f. MllMl•\I...,...,
•·•· '•'· are•11·••mero, •·•. Clef. Here11 ... 5"rft, M ; Allln-.. 1« .... (Ml
-'3J, M , M ; S•111'111er~""" (M) -M ,M,M .
N•A WUT•••ce.P•H•CI .... Df.,... • "' ""' ..
"8t1141M I t , ... 1e11o:z:. ' • ··-I 0..11 .. 1 I ... I~ IHHle I I •• 1\11
l'MIHll• t t .m J L.Miera • ' -rv. ...... °"' ... He111to11 t I .w SW! A11tenle t I ...,
Oeftve• 1 I ... ~ Utell I ' •• ~ OellM 1 t .m I KeMetC11Y 0 t ... 1\11
IAl'f••1t C:OMP••IN(I A._.Df.,.._
l'flllede ...... , 0 1.000 ---t 1 .. '"'-HeWYer1l I t .m t NewJerwy 0 I ,000 t Wetlll ....... 0 2 .ooo 2\11 ~ DI,,..
Detroit ' • 1.000 1114111-t I 1000
Cleve!-1 1 .. 1 Mll•evk .. 1 1 .JOO 1 • Clllce{IO 1 2 .m I~
Alleftte 0
T......,.tk-.
2 .000 t l'Wtl-102, UMn 100 Plllledllljlfile 111. Weffll""°" tt Clll<eeo 10., Allente 96
Clev•Mlnd 125, Oeltes 110
H..,tl9ft lO'I, Hew Yorll ti
P'-ftl• 111, Se!\ Antonio• T__.,._
U.....•tSNU!e
Clllceeo « a.ton
AlleftU et Hew .Jeney
llMllMe et PNl ... llfil•
ci. .... i..-.. s.n Antonio
S.11 O .... et k--Cttv
Houat.on et Ooflwr
Portlend et Golden St-
Bluera 102, Laker• 100
LOI AteCNILal -KYP< .... U, Wit"" I, JH4Nr SS,~ 10, Hhton 11, c.,.. t, undNle'911f' 2, McGee o. Jordeft o. 11em111t 2.TotalUl>-»11100.
POaTLAMD -Herper ••• Hell u .
Tllompso" 17, Pexso" u . llensey u,
Verlloe-o. ICUNWr1 2, YelentlM I, BetOt
2, umpO. Tot.IJ 4J l .. tl 102 ac....,o.rten
Lot•,,..._ n " n •-100 Poni.... M U 1' M -102
Fouled out -T'...,._, KUMer1. TOU.I
toul• -Loa A"O•lea 24, Porue11d 21.
Tecllnl<•I• -Portlllftd Coecll ll•m,.y,
KllPCllell. Lot "'""81e$ teem, -· A -12M6
Pro bowllng , .. ,...,,,,.... PM, Otl6el
CIMM.llF 1"1• .......
Merit Rotll dltl. Boysle Huber. -1&
CRotll wlnun • .o. HUbert7.JOO>.
~Sar91
Huller*'· Eerl """'°""· JOJ.lts; clef. Holl B1,111on. 220-102; dltf. s-c-. 204-110. CCook wins U ,SOO; B11rton wlfts ._.,SOO;
AfttllOnY wins...,...,
Women'• volleyball
CIDUA ..
UC lrvlne dltf. UC Sen 0!e9o, IS.17, lS-S,
IS-12, 1S-1J.
COMMUMITY COLl.101
Goldef\ w.91 dltf. l.oS·A-les CC, lS-11.
IS.J, IW, .. .... ~ trvlM dltf. Etle11ele, IS.3, 1s.10, 14-1•,
IS.10.
L•ou ... Beec.h def: C•Pl••r-V•ll•y,
IS-1. IM, 1S-1J.
Cor.N ci.4 MM def. Coat. Mew IH, IM,
14·1', IM.
Westminster 9'. Fouftteln Velley, 1M .
M S, IS.r, IS-10.
"'-rlne clel. <>c.... View, 11>-IS, 10.IS, ls-t,
IW. IS-l.
N--1 Owbll., def. Or-Luttwr.,., l~lC, 1S-1l. 1S.1J.
HIGH ICMOOL •ANKINGS
Cll' .. A
1. Seftle ~; .. Ir .... ; ,. c-..
~; 4. I...-a.a.; S. AvlellCIOI; 6. El
Toro; 7. Mire Colle, 1. H-. t. Mlle.r
081;10.R ......
Weterpoto
CXJMMUltlTY COU.U• ~11,0r-..c.e••
OrengeC.... 2 4 , ~· Cerritos J 4 1 2-11
OrMtll C.out acor1,,.: McC«ml<ll 4, SoflO 2, o•eo.-11 i. win .... 1.
NIOHICHOOL
Mwtae 11, C.,. Vettoy 1t
Ma~I,,. J I • 1-11
CetlO Yelley I J 4 2-10
MerlM scoring Mii~ 2. HGl*lfts J, ~
2. Zelleay 2, p.,_ 2, lllelly 1.
•lwenl* ..... 7, Ual.....wty 6 Unlvet.ity 2 o 2 2 o ._.
ltlv...idlt Poty 1 1 O c o 1-1 Uftlverslly scorlftg . Wesllbour11e 2,
..rrett I, ColwlO I,...,.,.,,... 2,
Weter polo, renklngi
MIOM~
Cll'4-A
1 S-r Hiits: 1. .._... .--i-i. Lone
• .. , .. WllSOft; •. CHMe Ml Mer; s.
Downey; 6. c.ea Mae; 1. Sente a.ni.re;
t. llUlade; t. El Ooredo; 10. Avle1 .....
Tueedey'a trenuctlona
MOCKeY .............. u..-
WASHIHOTOte CAPITALS -•ecei.-OerNft Veltcll, •left-, lrem ......... y
ef tM A""'1un Hectier Lfftue, ~ ,. .. ,,. ~.• .. owowww, '9H..,,.y. aocc•• .... ,.__..lecc., u..-
TO•ONTO •LtUA•o -Pun,._. 1M
c111trect el Oul!c8ll ~ •-erll. ,,_
~ el IM k ... 11\ Le..,_ ~
Olvl1le11. ••leeHd Or•ll•m Hell..,.
IOrwerd, 1111411 TIW Oe!Mrl, ml«le*4' •
cou..01
IOHA -NM'lld .... O'C-etth..-..
et11e.tk "'9der. SITON HALL -An11e11ftctd Ille
,...,.,... ... " "" .... ,.,. llHd ............. CMCll. Heoft9ll Horieu Mefton lntwlm .....
CMCll.
I
i
,.
TALLEST RUSSIAN -Alexander Sizonenko 'right 1 1s the
ta llest Soviet basketball player in history He re the 7·91 1.
286·pound s ta r towers o\'er two other pl:.i~·ers in a gam e m
Kuibyshe\'. Russia The 23._,·ear-old ~le('ds in a ~Pl'<'l<Jlh
made 9·2' ~ bed
Skiers attention:
It's getting close
Your time of the year is. almost here
By ED ZINTEL Also, 2.J3 more acres of ski 01•o.1tr,....1..., While we bask under the terrain has been cut away and
warm sun and blue skies of a fl eets of new snowgrooming
magnificent Southern California vehicles have been brought in to
autumn, the last thing on our keep slopes and trails in good
minds might be that the ski condition. More than 350,000
season is fast approaching. square feet of new, expanded or
Actually, it's here. r e mode led base area and
Skiers must have fallen dead on·mountain facilities will also
in their tracks upon opening last be ready for the winter ahead.
week ·s newspapers and eyeing a Of the 68 new lifts installed
photogragh of a certain Sierra ove r the s ummer at NSS
Nevada mountain side, replete member are as. 1 9 were'
with T·shirted skiers skirting
across genuine snow.
But that's how it is here in the SK// NG
land of plenty.
THOUGH IT'S STILL a tad
early to start talking of snow
con dition s in the local
mountains, it's never too early
for ski resort operators to start
pumping up their grounds, nor is
it ever too early for an early
bird ski sale.
So wtille we wait for a break in
the weather, hoping and praying
that Mother Nature will bring a
better season than last, the ski
industry continues its march to
make sure Joe Q. Public is
satisfied when the snow does
come along.
The proof is in the numbers.
For examp l e, capita l
impr ovements at the nation's
alpine ski centers topped $177
mil lion over the sum mer
months, according to the
National Ski Areas Association,
a trade association representing
400 U.S. ski sites as well as two
dozen resorts In Canada and
overseas.
That represents an lncrease in
spending or 36 percent over the
previous s ummer and la
indicative or the general good
health or the ski industry that we
see this kind of srowth.
Despite a mediocre 1980.Sl
season, there's little chance that
skiers won 't flock to resorts thls
winter in record numbers a1aln.
MOST SID AaEA owners plan
caref\aUy for lean snow yean,
t11urin1 that they Inevitably
OC(Ur.
On a national scope, the
blHelt portJon of tbe aid .,.... •
dollars ia betnr spent on
I DOW maklDI •Y•l•ID• •••
related ~. illel ....
air compreuon aad aew •
••pended water 1tera1• fHIUU..
But It li ~ ~t"ilJllW 1111 W\a. • ill tiDld ,,.. .. .......
replace m e nt lifts . That
generally means an upgrading
of service to the skier as the new
lifts have higher capacities
capable of carrying more skiers
an hour than the old .
For example, an operator may
replace a rope tow with a doubl
chairlift. or a double chair with
a triple or quad passenger chair.\
MORE THAN A quarter or all
dollars s pent by ski area
manage ment on ca pital
Improvements this summer
went into snowmaking, a total or
$39 million at NSSA areas.
Ski area operators used to use
their snowmaklng systems
largely to put their slopes back
In shape alter excessive skier
trarric or inclement weather .
They used to call snowmakinJ
their recovery systems but
today, many of the operators
refer to their snowmaking plants
81 "livesby" systems.
Of the 662 ski areaa in the
U.S., 354 had some snowmakinc
capacity last aeuon. Thia
season, that list increases by 1t
least 16, meanlna that at least 56
percent or ski areu now have
snow making.
While the resorts continue to
srow, naturally, so do tbe
· areas around them. Some tao
mllllon bu been channeled
new bou1io1 and vacaUM accommodlU.. It al ....U
this IWDaMI'.
Two-tblrdl of ._
new ----lie Roeld• tllli
••• pro •••lilod •oat .........
)
••••
-11111111 IAllY PIPll
W EDNFSOAV NOVfMtHh 1 '•rlt UH ANGE COUNrv C AllfOH NIA r"·,~~ •25 ,CE~;r:s;~._)•,· ...
Purchase of military air bases eyed
By FREDERICK SCHOEllEllL °' .. ~ ...........
Members of a committee
investlgatine possible sites for a
reJlonal airport to serve Orange
County have called for studies of
possible county government
purchase or military airbases
located in El Toro, Tustin and
Los Alamitos.
Com mitte e members
indicated at a meeting Tuesday
in Santa Ana that they have
several Ideas in mind In calling
for the so·called cost/benefit
studies of relocating all military
air operatlons from Oran1e
County to Camp Pendleton
M arlne Corps base In north San
Diego County.
By eliminating operations at
the Marine Corps Alr StaUon·El
Toro, aircraft operations in
Orange County skies would be
reduced -a sitl.Ultion that could
free ''airspace" for operations
at a regional firport elsewhere
in the countv. A site in nearby
Santlaeo Canyon east of the
Marine baae ts among locauona
under study for a major airport.
Another possibility. accord.lne
to committee membera, would
be use of the Army reserve
airbase at Los Alamitos u a
base for private aircraft if the
base were closed to military use.
Members conceded at the
meeting that relocation of
military activities would be a
billion dollar proPositlon. They
suneated. thai •i>ectal federal
legialatlon ml1ht be required to
.permit use of any money
generated from the aale of the
airbasea to fund construction of
new military aviation faclliUea
at C1Amp Pendleton.
Corpmlttee member Don
Chrisft!nson, a developer, said
he'd like to see the El Toro base
acreage returned to the tax
rolls. He said the land is located
in a prime real estate area.
In related actions at the
meetin&. the committee decided
against pursuing further studies
of Bell Canyon, located several
miles east or San Juan
Capistrano, as a site for a
regional airport.
But the committee called for
further studies Involving both
Santiago Canyon and Chino
Hills, located near the boundary
between Orang_e and San Diego
counties.
The committee, _appoin~ by
the county Board of superv110n,
meet,s monthly. Its goal ls to
Identify a site for a regional
airport that would serve the
county's air transportation
needs , both existing and
predicted.
Such a facility would reduce
dependence on John Wayne
Airport and provide a facility
from which long distance flights
could leave.
County ·turnout 'poor'
Only 10.8 percent vote in Tuesday's el'!ction
The turnout in Orange County
in Tuesday's election for school
boards, special district boards
and various in i tiative -type
questions was 10.8 percent, the
county Registrar of Voters office
reported today.
While breakdowns for sr:cific
districts weren't availab e this
morning, the registrar's office
said the countywide average
was well below the 15 percent
Shuttle ·pos tpone d
-with seconds left
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<A P > -Launch or the shuttle
Columbia was delayed today,
twice, and finally postponed
until Friday at the earliest.
Technical problems developed
with an agonizing 31 seconds left
on the countdown clock.
Joe Engle~d Richard Truly
were strap~ in their cockpit
seats, ready to fly, when the
clock was stopped cold.
Co lumbia. filled with
half·a·million gallons or volatile
fµeJ, enterea::.. its "terminal
cou ntdown " flawlessl y at
s unrise as excitement mounted
here for the ship's never·before
accomplished return trip to
space.
High hopes ended at 6:35 a .m.
PST when launch director
George Page revealed a
problem with a lubricating
device in Columbia's on-board
auxiliary power units. The APUs
steer the ship on launch and
stabilize its landing.
The astronauts, in the ship for
more than four hours, were
taken from Columbia and back
to their crew quarters. They
wore smiles of resignation.
A last-minute problem also
ha lted the first atte mpt to
launch Columbia on her maiden
flight April 10; the problem then
was with communications
between computers: It was fixed
quickly and the ship launched
two days later.
Now, as then . a two·day
postponement is necessary
because Columbia's fuel tan.ks
mu s t be unloaded and
decontaminated -a difficult
and lengthy process .
Unfo rtunate ly , the weather
outlook for Friday is none too
favorable. forecasters said.
Moreover, "It could be longer,
depending on what the problem
is with the auxiliary power
unit," said launch control
spokesman Hugh Harris.
He said too·hlgh pressure was
detected in two out of the ship's
three APUs.
"We know it will take at least
two days, so we're looking at
something like Friday -or
Saturday , o r Sunday or
Monday." flight director Neil
Hutchinson told reporters at the
Johnson Space Ce nter in
Houston. "It's golng to take time
to get the filters out of the llPU's
and purge them and clean them
and bring them back on line.''
A PU manager Dwayne Weary
said NASA's experts felt the
units would have worked on
launch, but they were not so
confident that they could be
res tarted satisfactorily for
re·entry.
"We felt it might have been
OK, but we did not have the test
history and data and experience
to give us the confidence to go
ahead," he said.
Once the weather proved
acceptable, it seemed today that
(See SPACE, Page AZ)
...., ............
·STILL OFF U MITI -The ocean and sand at Main Beach
Park in Laguna Beach remain quarantined today after
crews diverted about rour million gallons or treated sewage
onto the beach Tuesday. The crews are repalrins a aewer
line and had to divert treated effluent Into a storm drain
channel which terminates al the beach. County health
olficial8 are monJtoring the beach dally.
turnout that had been forecast.
Shirley Deaton, chief deputy
to registrar Al Olson, said ' final
results were known at 1:30 a.m.
-"ri"ht on schedule."
No problems were reported
with the county's new $1.5
million vote counUng system -
a system that performe d
miserably during its first use in
the June, 1980, primary
elections.
Election results were not
remarkable. In Irvine, voters
opted for a $250, rather th~ a
$100, limit on individual
contributions to councilmanic
campaigns. At the same time ..
COMPLETE RESULTS A2:
LOCAL STORIES 81
the voters In the Irvine Unified
School District said the district
should be permitted to increase
the interest rate on school
construction bonds beyond 7
percent. ..., ........ ..,'-..... Irvine voters, in a non·blnding
statement, said the city should
procee<l with plans for a $38
million civic center. City offices
today are housed in a pair of
buildinga in the Irvine Industrial
complex.
A 2l·ycar-old Newport Beach man, William Tate .. died in thil accident Tuesday when hta lfnall car
sma.ahed into a concrete 8Upp0rt for the Red Hill Atienue overcrossing on the Corona deL Mar F"reeway
in Co8t.a MeM. ·~;..;....;..;;;.._~~~~~~~--...~~~~~~~~~~~
In Newport Beach, voters
overwhelmingly agreed to an
increase in the city's tax on the
rental of hotel and motel rooms.
That rate will go up from six to ,
eight percent.
Worke rs laid off
b y troubled firm
In Laguna Beach, the city was
given permission by voten to
seek a loan from the state to
fund the city 's financial
obligations In the Aliso Water
Management Agency, a regional
network that provides for
sewage treatment.
Voters in Laguna Niguel
resoundingly defeated a
proposal to form a municipal
advisory council. The council
would have advised the county
Board or Supervisors on matters
affecting the unincorporated
community.
ISy Kt;ITH TUBER
0.11, ...............
American Home Mortgage
Corp .. the Newport Beach·based
home loan firm saddled with a
four·count suit filed against it
two weeks ago by the State
Department or Real Estate,
fired 15 employees at the end or
the workday Monday, company
chairman John Rinaldo said
Tuesday.
Earlier in the day I one or those
dismissed estimated the number
of laid-off workers to be between
40 and 50.
"We lald off what we call o~r
Brow n calls solons
to special sess i o n
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Faced with an increasing drain
on the state's already·stralned
treasury, Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr . today ordered the
Legislature back to Sacramento
next week for an emergency
special session. Capitol sources
Stlid.
Darryl White , the chief
administrative officer of the
Senate, said Brown's staff
delivered an order to him calling
the lawmakers back to the
Capitol next Monday at 9:30
a.m.
White said the governor's
order limited the session to
fiscal issues and
reapportionment.
The proposals co.me in the
wake or a state deficit, caused
by Increased spending and
declining revenues, estimated at
more than $500 million for the
current fiscal year.
Late last week, Brown said he
would make decision on whether
to call a special session "within
a few days."
Democratic legislative leaders
want to handle not only the
state's ft.Seal problems, but also
take care of reapportioning the
state's four Board of
Equalization districts.
Republicans, meanwhile, are
willing to return to Sacramento
to consider financial legislation,
but oppose dealing with
reapportionment, fearing the
Democrats will attempt to
thwart GOP efforts to overturn
the reapportionment plan.
During the last legislative
session , the Democratic
.majority approved bills tG
change district lines accord.Ina
to the 1980 census .
junior sales trainees," Rinaldo
said. "They were brought on
primarily to handle expansioo ...
Rinaldo said allegatiol\S of
fraud and negligence leveled
against it by state authorities
have had a negative impact on
the company. making expansion
impractical at this time.
Rinaldo said the dismissals
were routine and affected only
five clerks and 10 sales and
training personnel. However,
another company source said
company attorney John Gloger
was among those let go. Also
receiving notice was director er
ma ss marketing Gerald
Naughton.
Gloger confirmed Tuesday
morning that he ha-d been
dismissed.
··Two men came into m y
office Monday and gave me the
news," Gloger said. He declined
further comment, citing possible
"complications ...
American Home publicity
director Joseph L. Groner later
denied Gloger's firing, as did
Rinaldo early Tuesday evening.
When informed that Gloger
had confirmed his dismissal,
Rinaldo responded, "There must
have been a misunderstanding."
Gloger came on the telephone
line five minutes later and also
said "There QlUSt have been a
misunderstanding."
This rooming, another laid-off
employee who preferred to
remain anonymous, placed the
number or furloughed
employees at 34 to 40.
''Sales Lrainees, clerical and
lJart·time people were laid off,"
the source said, "as well as
others in the mortgage
company, legal and escrow
departments and In accounting
<See ftlllNGS, Page A2>
Mesa shooting death resolved
District Attorney rules 'justifiable homicide'
The shooting death of c.:oeta
M"sa resident Arnold Nash
Broyles, 37, .bY a police,
department Special Weapons
and Tactic.a team bas been ruled
"justifiable homicide" by the
Oran1e County Dlatrlct
Attorney's Office.
In a 1tatement releued today,
Deputy Dlltriet Attorney Jobn
Conley said, "Allhouldl lh1I wu
a moet uafortunai. 1Ituatioa for
all Involved, tbe lhoottnt ol llr.
Broylet, by offlceu wbo
hoae1tly and reMOeaW, felt Uaat
they were betnl attacked bf
him, wu JuaUnabl• homicide .
under California law.''
Broyles wu shot Oct. 7 in the.
Co1ta Meaa home he and hll
parenta and dauahter shared at
M7 Prwldlo Ave.
Conley said the lnveaU1atioft
dlscloeed that Broylet bad been
drlnktna, taking drup and wu
actina lD a violent.manner when
Costa lieu offlcen wen
'ummoaed..
''When tbe oftleert •tend the
re1ldence, they ladleated that
BroJ• ra toward tbet:D wttb a
knife extended ID froet ot blm.
Re w• lhot I{' ~ mld·•bclomm
as be ran toward the officers,"
Conley said tn a press release.
In the wake o< th• 1bootin1.
Broyln' parent.a 11ld offteen
overreacted to the situation and
were wtjuaUned In usln1 their
weapoaa.
They have announced their
Intent.Ion to 1ue the city fOI' what
the1 claim ft tbe wroalful deetb
of tbelr IOD, wllO had a ....._., ol
mental dtllltm1NUlee.
Co1ta llHa Pollo llaH
malatataed tbat UM 1b00tl.,
... .t-tiftld. ctt1111 tlM ......
preaeated to offteen br ih•
kntf•·WWdtn1 nbjed.
Student dies
in car crash
A 21.year-old Dartmouth
College s tudent visiting bis
parents In Newport Beach died
Tuesday when hJs small car
veered off the Corona d~l Mar
Freeway and struck a concrete
support. of the Red Hill Avenue
overcrossing,
William Tate , who
investigators said bad been
visiting his parents for the last
month at their Eastbluff area
home was killed about 9:30 a.m.
after his car slid about 330 feet
in the dirt divider before hitting
the s upport.
California Highway Patrol
spokesman John Merritt said
investigators are considering
several explanations of why
Tate's car got so far away from
the freeway's northbound lanes.
State shuts down
home for retarded
RAMONA <AP> -Patients at
a home foT the mentally
retarded we'(e beaten and
threatened witb a knife, the
state of Californl{l claims after
moving them out ~d closing the
56-bed institution. .
The action was tli~en jointly
by the state Department of
Social Services and tbe state
Community Care Licensln1
Di vision , but operators of
Heritage Ranch said Tuesday
they will appeal the 30·day
s uspension or their license.
IRllCI CllAIT 1111111
Mostly cloudy tonieht
and Thursday morning
with partial clearing
Thursday afternoon.
Variable high clouds.
Cooler days with highs
Thursday ranging from
the upper 60s at the
beaches to mid·70a inland.
Lows tonight mostly in the
50s.
111111 TllAI
The guns .cart lilent ha
Beirtd, but /or hoto lcmg?
Authormu .or• aoorw o/
leUing their pord dotn.
Rage A7.
11111
•
DallyPlllt
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4, 1911
CAVALCADE 8~3
llllll lllCH /lllTI ClllT BUSINESS 84-S
ENTERTAINM ENT 86-7, 89
Dr. William Burke of the
Federal Reserve aays the
tight money policy will
continue. See P.age 84.
Niguel voters reject advisory council formation -.
Laguna Niaoel voters
overwhelmingly rejected a
ballot measure Tuesday that
called for the formation of a
,municipal advisory council in
the unincorporated community.
According to tbe Orange
County Regist.rar of Voters, the
measure failed in a 1,360 to 877
vote. Only 2S percent of Laguna
Niguel's 9,000 registered voters
weqt to the polls.
A municipal advisory council,
commonly called a MA C,
provides an unincorporated
community with an official,
elected governmental body that
deals directly with county
government. It is an advisory
panel and cannot make rulings
on its own.
P eg Maynard, a member of
the No On MAC Committee, said
today Tuesday's decisive vote
sent MAC supporters a distinct
message.
''A certain handful or
politically ambitious people ln
Laguna Niguel have been told
that we won't be pressured to
accept something we purposely
we re not informed about," Mrs.
Maynard said.
She said the campaign to get a
MAC approved was kept low ke y
by inlUatlve sponsors-:-and the
main reason it failed was
because pelple were not
properly lnformed.
"There were just too many
questions left unans wered,"
Mrs. Maynard said. "The no
vote doesn't mean that forming
a MAC may not be an
appropriate move in the future,
but people need to be better
informed first."
Paul Haseman, president of
the Laguna Niguel Community
Association, a nd one of the
principal MAC sponsors, said he
was disappointed by the vote
count, but sees some positive
signs.
Laguna incumbent Out
Voters elect three new members· to school board
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. 0.-., ...... Maff
Voters in Lag una Beach
elected Carl Schwarz, Jan
Vickers and Dan Daniels to the
school board, turnin g out
four-year incumbent William
Kentle.
Unofficial final results or
Tuesday's school board election
show:
-Carl Schwarz, 1.540
-J an Vickers, 1,453
-Dan Daniels, 1.138
-Pat Barry, 1,129
-William Kentle, 998
-Tom Philo, 342
-Bruce Hopping, 330
-J ack Miller, 284
-John Cbrispens, 215
-Roberta Christiansen, 163
-Arthur Moskowitz, 160
-Terry Carter-Humphries. 86
-John Luna, 80
-William Kadi, 53
The new me mbers will be
seated at the Dec. 3 school board
m eeting , at which time
inc umbents Kentle, Marylyn
Pauley and Michael Sagar will
step down.
Kentle was the only incumbent
to seek re-election to the school
board which has been the target
or angry parents, teachers and
community members the past
few years as budget constraints
prompted unpopular decisions
by trustees.
.. We got a clear mandate to
turn that board around." said
winner Carl Sc hw arz, a
professor at Fullerton College.
Schwarz, who garnered the
most votes in Tuesday's
election. said his first priority on
the board will be "to focus on
programs."
LB v ote rs a pprove
sew er syste m lo a n
Laguna Beach voters
overwhelmingly approved a
ballot measure that allows the
city to borrow up to $1.2 million
at a low-interest rate to cover
•cost overruns on a sewer
project.
Measure L on Tuesday's ballot
'received the support of 1.531 l voters, with 503 opposed to the
•proposal.
II Approval of at least 50 percent
C of Laguna's voting was needed
Q in order for the city to seek state
Water Resources Control Board
r runds at 5.5 percent interest.
a Had voters turned down the y ballot measure, city officials
ti said they would have to sell
arevenue bond s with an
estimated 10 percent interest
rate.
The money will go to cover the
city's share or cost overruns on
the $100 million Aliso Water
Management Agency sewer
system, under construction in
,\liso Canyon.
Design deficiencies boosted
th e price o f the system,
according to A WMA orr1cials,
and each of the seven partners
in the agency had to come up
with funds to cover those
overruns.
Laguna's share was $3.4
million, and all but $1.2 million
was raised by increasing sewer
fees to residents.
j Capis trano v ote r s
re-ele ct incunihe nt
j Voters in the Capistrano Tuesday·s balloting.
Unified School District have The three challengers for the a returned sc h oo l board post, held by Mrs . Overton for
• incumbent Jan Overton to serve the past four years. were well
a second term in Trustee Area 4. behind in the unofficial final
covering Dana Point and the tally.
nl coastal portion <ff Laguna According to preliminary
isa Niguel. figures, Paul Sayer r eceived
Ct Elected for his first term on 1,136 votes; Doris Driml, 418;
W< the school district board was and Peg Maynard. 1,291.
an Paul Haseman, a Laguna Niguel Haseman received a total of
ae rospace attorney. Haseman 2,668 votes, enough to handily
co will represent Trustee Area 6, beat his two challengers for the
Tu which includes the inland seat formerly held by Robert
i s section or Laguna Niguel. Bachelor. who recently moved
ac According lo initial figures to Oregon.
an released by the Orange County According to the registrar.
shi Registrar o r Voters, Mrs . Ile ne Krause received 1 734
ah Overton received 3,262 votes out votes while Al Keller gam~red
' or the 6,107 votes cast in 1.129. Hase man and Mrs .
am Overton will begin their new :: Anything board terms in December.
Coa
:!~ goes in LB
Dh pr~ trash pickup
Alli Beginning Monday, it's fall ~!.~ cleanup week in Laguna Beach, u;; and resident.a are reminded to
put bulky, wiwanted Items out
1aoT for collectJon on their regular
pickup day.
t e I · Items the traeh man would i~e normally laugh at and leave at
0 curbside will be picked up next
r• w e e k , l n c l u d l n I o l d ~ i 1 refrt1eratort, hot water tanks, '•C couches, cbaln, carpets, 1tovea
and bundled cUpplnC•· · ror1 If YoU're thlnkinc of puttlni ~=, :t :~~ u:a:i·,~~y f~ln
rr leoltb :'lii lnctMa ID diameter
1>a111, Ytti a •pound mHlmum per .. bUdle.
Put &M ltaft out on the cun an
your llOl"IDal ttub ~hp da1.
•
3 e l ect e d
to Dana pane l
Dana Point voters elected two
new directors to thelr
community's sanitary district
board Tuesday and returned an
Incumbent to his post in an
uncontested race.
E lected" to the board were
Richard Runge, with 438 votes;
Fred Roberta, an incumbent,
with 33t votes; and Ann KeJly
with 361 votei.
Th e name of appolnted
Incumbent Donald Klauen alto
appeared on the ballot.
However, Kl1a1en dl•d
followtna • lona-tJme m .... nearl1 two montbl aco. too late
to remove bl1 name from tile
ballot. ltlauen reeelnd ~
Y-Otft, acoonl... to t.IM o,.ii9 ~ lteflitrar ol Voterl.
• He said he will "pursue
vigorously funding alternatives.
both public and private" ror the
financially strapped school
district.
And, he.said, "I intend to open
up that board on a regular basis
to community input."
He said he wants to see
monthly public study sessions
for "brainstorming purposes to
tap the creative energies or our
community."
Schwarz and Jan Vickers, who
ran as a s late, campaigned
vigorously in Laguna Beach
prior to the election.
Both were active earlier this
year in the unsuccessful battle
by parents and teachers to keep
Aliso Elementary School open.
Vi ckers could not be reached
for comment on the election
today. but Dan Daniels, who will
RETURNED TO BOARD
Eugene McKnight
Vote rs re turn
McKnight to
coll ege post
Saddle bac k Co mmunity
College District trustee Eugene
M c Knight o f Sa n Juan
Capistrano has won a decisive
victory in his election bid for a
second term on the college
board.
McKnigh t , 74, a r etired
philosophy professor, received
12,572 votes, nearly three times
that of his near est challenger,
according to complete but
unofficial results in Tuesday's
election.
Others running in the trustee
race in Area 4, whit'h covers San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano,
Capistrano Beach and Dana
Point were Mary Jane
Hannegan, 4,599 votes: Perry
J acobson, 4,299; and Donald
Cole, 3,287.
McKni ght said today the
trustee race was very arduous
and he Is extremely happy that
the voters supported him ror a
second term .
"l have been receiving many
phone calls from people
congratulating me on m y.
victory," McKn11ht said. "l feel
this Is a victory tor the
traditional concepts of what a
communltv colle«e stands Cot."
Seniors to hold
cr afts boutique
An arts and craltl boutique
will be held Nov. 12 and 13 w1th
b1ndlcraft1 by the La1una
Beach TLC Senior CltJMU M
dllplaJ.
A vart«Y ol ornameata ad
deeoratift hoUci.y ftCQl"lDea wW
be OD .... at FelloftblP Ball,
411 l'onlt Aft. from IO a.m. to 4
p. m. botb da11.
f
'The community Indicated
thJt the MAC proposal was
unacceptable," Haseman aald.
"But I see this a1 an
endorsement of the community
assoclatJon."
Wlth the f allure of O~e MAC
initiative, La(Una Nl1uel will
continue to be represented at the
county level by Its community
association.
Haseman said the no vote
indicated that residents were
satisfied with the homeowner
group's work and believe
another representative body
isn't necessary. ·
"l still lbinlc a MAC ls a tood
idea,•,• Haseman said. ·•we will
TOPS V<YI'lNG ROSTER
Carl Schwarz
also take a seat on the school
board, said he looks forward to
working with tbe new board
have-to talk-with ttre oPJJOSttiC.
and see 11 there is a poaalblUty ot
brlntinl this back at some time
ln the future."
Haseman said thoee oppoeln1
a MAC had some valid
ar1umeots, and did a aood job ln
com muntcatlnJ their oplnloa to
the community.
Orange County Sth District
Supervisor Tom Riley, who
represents Laguna Ntcuel, said
be baa remained neutral in the
MAC election to allow resident.a
to make their own decision.
"I believe people are more
and ltW>l'e iatereated in maJdna
their own decisions concemin1 their community," Riley aahl.
HIGH IN BAUOTING
Jan Vic~s
(
members.
He said his top priority is to
work with the other board
"Tlaat ti" the Teuon for bavtn1
the election, rather than
appointing people to serve."
Riley said he believes the
boundaries of the MAC were
faulty because they didn't
include all of Latuna Nltuel.
Tbe propo&ed MAC included all
of OraJlle County Service Area
3. However, portions of the
community are In another
service area. because I knew
there were some sharp divisions
wlthJn the community," be said.
''I think when you exclude part
of the community you
automatically create
diltncbantment. ·'
ALSO JOINING BOARD
Don Daniels
meniben "to continue to bring
quality education to Laguna
Be ach."
Sycamore Hills move delayed
Laguna council postpones decision, seeks comment
By STEVE TJUPOU °' .. ......, ........
Laguna Beach City Council
members have pos tponed a
d.ecision on what they'll do with
city-owned land in Sycamore
Hills, saying they want to hear
more public comment and meet
with county Supervisor Thomas
Riley before taking action.
In related actions, the council
adopted a plan for future water
and sewer facilities in Sycamore
Hills, and a dopted several
modifications to the city 's
agreement with the seller of the
land and a firm that bought one
portion or the city's tract .
The council was to consider
sale to the county of about 27S of
the tract's 522 acres at
Tuesday's meeting, but agreed
on the recommendation of City
Manager Ken Frank to delay
any action for two weeks.
Frank urged the
postponement because he said
council members should first
meet with Riley to assure that
the county's information on the
sale is adequate, but council
members raised a number of
other objections to immediate
action also.
Co uncilmen William Wilcoxen
and Kelly Boyd said they aren't
happy with the proposed $13,000
per acre s ale price for the
27~·acre tract. The price, which
is supposed to be based on the
lan'd 's 1978 assessed value
because or a prior agreement
with the county, may be only a
fraction of the value, they said.
Land purchased by the county
would go for right of way for the
proposed San Joaquin
Transportation Corridor and a
regional park. T he county
already bas advanced $1 million
for those purchases.
Council membe~ alao said
they are Interested in seeing a
proposal from the dJrectors of
the Festival of Arts for possible
relocaUoo of the festival and the
Paceant of the Masters to a
50-acre Sycamore Hilla site.
Helen Keeley, president of the
festh'al board, said festival
directors would draw up a
proposal to relocate to the alte lf
the council expreHed interest.
She aald parkln1 and traffic
problems at the present lrvine
Bowl site on Laguna Canyon
Road are the main reasooa the
move la being considered.
Council members aald they
•re interested in seelnf the
festival board's propoaa and
noted that they 1tron&11 back
•fforta to keep the futlval ln UM
elty.
II ayor Sally BeUeru• Hid
tOUDcU members aboulcl cteeWe
bow they wut UM lud ...
before meeOaf'wttla :· MtM Mlllqolf .... .,.. ......
denlopmeal die _, .._.
more woyJd laaft to ... llM 11"
'
order to meet the S7 million cost
of the sale plus several mUlion
dollars more in other costs.
Bellerue and other council
m e mbers said they are
interested in keeping as much of
the land open as possible, and
s aid sale or the tract to the
county may help that cause if
the cowity establishes a regional park there.
The council also passed a
package of recommendations on
future water and sewer service
to the area, especially to the
62-acre Baywood Development
Co. tract which will be the site of
300 townhouses.
The package includes a
recommendation to construct a
rPservoir that would be 300,000
gallons larger than Bay wood development's needs , tn order to
m eet the needs of possible other
expansions.
Changes in the city 's purchase
agreement for the tract and its
sale agreement with Baywood
would allow Baywood to pay
three·fourths of a $577.000
payment on a deferred basis.
Frank told the council the
action is necessary because
Baywood cannot make the full
payment now, as originally
promised. He urged approval of
the move, however, saying that
Baywood 's $500,000
commitment to the project thus
far ls a "stron1 incentive" for
the developer to come up with
lbe rest of the money .
City gets $270,400
from arts festival
Directors of the Festival of
Arts paid the rent this week, and
the landlord -the City of
Laguna Beach -received a
check for $270,400.
That's $30,000 more than the
city received last year for rent
of the six-acre festival grouncls
to the Pageant of the Mastera
and Festival of Arts.
Fred Bouman, the festival's
accountant, said the seven week
productioo and art exhibit took
In $1,453,116 this 3Utnmer, up
from the $1,184,142 the festival
grossed In 1980.
Incumbents
returned to
Niguel panel
Voters in the Moulton-Nlpel
Water Di1trict elected board
incumbent.a Gerald Buck and
Dwitht Williamson to 1ecoad
terms Tuesday.
Buck beat challqer Howard
Lania ta a elOH 311 to llJ ra.,
accordinC to unofficial ftlUNI
releaeed by tbe 0r..,. Oaulltr
Re1t1trar ot voten.
Buck will be repre1..ua1 ,
Dlvl1loo 2 of tbe ,...., dtllbict,
wh ich eo•era t•• aorllaera
portion of M...._ Viejo.
Ia t•• dlvl1loa a nee, WtlHawlM_._ ..................... f.orlW ......... ... ..,,. ii111. Cllllftr. ......
And while revenues were up
this year, Bouman s8'd grounds
attendance continued to drop,
with 93,277 paying to go through
the turnstiles compared with
101,481 last year.
The reason , he said , is
bec ause the festival began
charging Sl admission to the
1rounds this year. Instead of SO
cents.
And weekend ticket prices for
the sold-out Pageant of the
Masters were also increased this
year.
La1una Beach owns the
property upon which the festival
is locatoo, and a contract with
the festival board insures the
city receives a percentage of
gro11 receipt.! based on a sliding
scale.
Most of the $270,400 received
this year by the city will IO to
retire the bonded debt on Main
Beach Park.
·.
Streets due
resurfacing
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1111111 CUii Ylll 11111111 llllY Ml
WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 4. 19H 1 O RANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA . II ··' -. 25 CENTS ',....-. ~.
Purchase of
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEID.
Ot•DllfYNlll .....
Members of a committee
investigating possible sites for a
regional airport to serve Orange
County have called for studies of
possible county government
purchase of military airbases
located in El Toro, Tustin and
Los Alamitos.
Committee members
lndicated at a meeting Tuesday
in Santa Ana that they have
several ideas in mind in calling
for the .'JO·called cost/benefit
studies of relocating all military
air operations from Oran1e
County to Camp Pendleton
Marine Corps base in north San
Diego County. •
By eliminating operations at
the Marine Corps Air Station·El
Toro, aircraft operations ln
Orange County skies would be
reduced -a situation that could
free "airspace" for operations
at a regional airport elsewhere
in the countv. A site in nearby
bases eyed • • a~ • tar-y
Santia10 Canyon east of the
Mari.ne base is among locations
under study for a major airport.
Another possibility, according
to committee members, would
be use or the Army reserve
airbase at Los Alamitos as a
base for private alrcraft if the
base were closed to mili(ary use.
Members conceded at the
meeting that relocation of
military acCiviUes would be a
billion dollar oroposilion. They
1uagested. that si>ecial federal
legislation might be required to
.permit use of any money
generated from the sale of the
airbases 1o fund construction of
new military aviation facilities
at Camp Pendleton.
committee member Don
Christenson, a developer, said
he'd like to see the El Toro base
acreage returned to the tax
rolls. He said the land ls located
in a prime real estate area.
In related actions at the
meeting, the committee decided
against pursuing further studies
of Bell Canyon, located several
miles east of San Juan
Capistrano, as a site for a
regional airport.
But the committee called for
further studies involving both
Santiago Canyon and Chino
Hills. located near the boundary
between Orange and San Diego
counties.
The committee, appointed by
the county Board oi Supervisors,
meets monthly. Its goal is to
identify a site for a regional
airport that would serve the
county's air transportation
needs, both existing and
predicted.
Such a facility would reduce
dependence on John Wayne
Airport and provide a facility
from which long distance fiighta
could leave.
County turnout 'poor'
Only 10.8 percent vote in Tuesday's el~ction
The turnout in Orange County
in Tuesday's election for school
boards, special district boards
and various initiative-type
questions was 10.8 percent. the
county Registrar of Voters offictl
reported today.
While breakdowns for specific
districts weren't available this
morning, the registrar's office
said the countywide average
was well below the 15 percent
Shuttle postponed
-with seconds left
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP ) -Launch of the shuttle
Columbia was delayed today.
twice, and finally postponed
until Friday at the earliest
Technical problems developed
with an agonizing 31 seconds left
on the countdown clock.
Joe Engle (lnd Richard Truly
were strapped in their cockpit
seats, ready to fly. when the
clock was stopped cold.
Col umbi a, filled with
half-a-million l{allons of volatile
fuel, ent~red its "terminal
countdown" flawlessly at
sunrise as excitement mounted
here for the ship's never-before
accomplished return trip to
space.
High hopes ended al 6:35 a.m.
PST when launch director
George Page revealed a
problem with a lubricating
device in Columbia's on-board
auxiliary power units. The APUs
s teer the ship on launch and
s tabilize its landing.
The astronauts, in the ship for
more than four hours. were
taken from Columbia and back
to their crew quarters. They
wore smiles of resignation.
A last-minute problem also
halted the first attempt to
launch Columbia on her maiden
flight April 10; the problem then
was with communications
between computers . It was fixed
quickly and the ship launched
two days later.
Now, as then. a two-dav
pos tponement i s necessary
because Columbia's fuel tanks
mu s t be unloaded and
decontaminated -a difficult
and length y process .
Unfortunately. the weather
outlook for Friday is none too
favorable. forecasters said ..
Moreover , "It could be longer,
depending on what the problem
is with the auxiliary power
unit." s aid launch control
spokesman Hugh Harris.
He said too-high pressure was
detected in two out or the ship's
three APUs.
"We know it will take at least
two days, so we're looking al
som ething like Friday -or
Saturday , or Sunday or
Mon day." flight director Neil
Hutchinson told reporters at the
Johnson Space Center in
Houston. "It's going to lake time
to gel the filters out of the APU's
and purge them and clean them
and bring them back on line."
A PU manager Dwayne Weary
said NASA 's experts fell the
units would have worked on
launch, but they were not so
confident that they could be
r es tarted s atisfactorily for
re-entry.
"We felt it might have been
OK . but we did not have the test
history and data and experience
to give us the confidence to go
ahead." )le said.
Once the weather proved
acceptable, it seemed today that
<See SPACE, Page A2)
.............. 1
STILL OflF UMIT9 The ocean and 1ani 1t llatia Be1cb
Park In Lacuna Beach remaih qu•rantlned today after
crews diverted about tour milliaa 1alloili of treated 1ewa1e
onto the beach T~sday. The crews an repairll\I 1 sewer
line and had to divert treated eftluent Into • storm draln
ch•nnel whlcti terminatee at tbe beaeb. CountY. health offlciu are ni0nltorin1 the beacb dally. t ~
turnout that had been forecast.
Shirley Deaton, chief deputy
to registrar Al Olson, said final
results were known at I : 30 a.m.
-''rit?ht on schedule.··
No problems were reported
with the county's new $1.S
million vole counting system -
a system that performed
miserably during its first use in
the June, 1980. primary
elections.
Election results were not
remarkable. In Irvine. voters
opted for a $250, rather than a
$100, limit on individual
contributions to councilmanic
campaigns. At the same time ..
COMPLETE RESULTS A2:
LOCAL STORIES 81
the voters in the Irvine Unified
School District said the district
should be permitted to Increase
the interest rate on school
construction bonds beyond 7
percent. .................... Irvine voters, in a non-binding
statement, said the city should
proceed with plans for a $38
rnUlion civic center. City offices
today are housed in a pair of
buildings in lhe Irvine lndl18lrlal
complex.
A 21-year-old Newport Beach man. William Tate, died in this accident Tuesday when hf.II small car
ama8hed into a concrete aupporl for the Red Hill Avenue overcrouing on the Corona del Mor Freeway
In Newport Beach, voters
overwhelmingly agreed to an
increase in the city's tax on the
rental of hotel and motel rooms.
That rate will go up from six to
eight percent.
In Laguna Beach, the city was
given permission by voters to
seek a loan from the state to
fund the city 's financial
obligations in the Aliso Water
Management Agency, a regional
network that provides for
sewage treat01ent.
Voters i n Laguna Niguel
resoundingly defea ted a
proposal to form a municipal
advisory council. The council
would have advised the county
Board of Supervisors on matters
affecting the unincorporated
community.
inCo!ta~M.:=..:..e'°:.::..:.·~~~~~~~~.,,-~~~~~~~~~~-
Workers laid off
by troubled firm
Uy KUTH TUBER
DallyP .......... 11._
American Home Mortgage
Corp., the Newport Beach-based
home loan firm saddled with a
four-count suit filed against it
two weeks ago by the State
Department of Real Estate,
fired 15 employees at the end of
the workday Monday, company
chairman John Rinaldo said
Tuesday.
Earlier in the day, one of those
dismissed estimated the number
or laid-off workers to be between
40 and 50.
"We laid off what we call o~
junior sales trainees." Rinaldo
said. "They were brought on
primarily to handle expansion."
Rinaldo said allegations of
fraud and negligence leveled
against it by state authorities
have had a negative impact on
the company, making expansion
impractical at this time.
Brown calls solons
to special session
Rinaldo said the dismissals
were routine and affected only
fi ve clerks and 10 sales and
training personnel. However,
another company source said
company attorney John Gloger
was among those let go. Also
receiving notice was director er
ma ss marketing Gerald
Naughton.
G loger confirmed Tuesday
morning that he had been
dismissed.
"Two men came Into my
office Monday and gave me the
news." Gloger said. He declined
further comment, citing possible
"complications."
SACRAMENTO <AP ) -
Faced with an increasing drain
on the state's already-strained
treasury, Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr . today ordered the
Legislature back to Sacramento
next week for an emergency
special session.
In his formal proclamation,
Brown directed the lawmakers.
who were in recess until
January, to convene at 9:30 a.m.
Monday to "act upon legislation
relative to state budget
problems created by recent
federal enactments and related
court actions" and to "consider
and act upon legislation relative
to reapportionment.··
The Legislature's failure to
conform state laws to the new
federal regulations ls costing
California at least SI l million
per month.
Brown said today he also
wanted the lawmakers to
consider bills transferring some
money earmarked for
construction or new state
buildings back to the general
fund, delaying some projects
until the state's fiscal condition
improves.
A legislative aide who asked
not to be named said the only
reapportionment issue which
would be considered is the
Board of Equalization districts,
which the lawmakers failed to
act on in the regular session
which ended Sept. 15.
However . Brown 's
proclamation does not limit the
reapportionment issue to just
the four Board of Equalization
districts.
American Home publicity
director Joseph L. Groner later
denied Gloger's firing. as did
Rinaldo early Tuesday evening.
When informed that Gloger
had confirmed his dismissal,
Rinaldo responded, "There must
have been a misunderstanding."
Gloger came on the telephone
line five minutes later and also
said "There must have been a
mis understanding."
This morning, another laid-off
employee who preferred to
remain anonymous, placed the
number of furloughed
employees at 34 to 40. .
"Sales trainees. clerical and
lJart-time people were laid off,"
the source said, "as well as
others in the mortgage
company, legal and escrow
departments and in accounting
(See nIUNGS, Page.\%)
Mesa shooting death resolved
District Attorney rules 'justifiable homicide'
Tbe sboolinl dealb ol o.ta
Mesa resident Arnold Naab
B roylea, 37, . by a police.
department Special Weapon•
and Tactics team bu been naled
"Justifiable homicide" by the
Oranae County District
Attorney'a Offtce.
In a ._ment releuecl today,
Deputy DIMrict Mlol'MJ JobD
eona., MW. •• AltlMNlh tJUa •• a mOll Ulifortuais. 1ltuatloa for
all lDftlved, tllil .,,,.. ... ol llr.
BroJIH, t.1 offleer1 who
boaN&4' -n•D .. IQ Wt tlall
they ..,. = •ttaelled bJ blm,w .... ......._ ..
under California law.''
Broyles was ahot Ocl. 7 lD the.
Costa Mesa home he and hie
parents and dauthter aha.red at
M'1 Preskllo Ave.
Conley aald tbe lnve1U1ation
diaclOMd that Broyles had *n
drlllklnJ, taktna dru11 and wu
1clla1 In a violent manner when
Costa lleu offlcera were
1ummoned.
''WhiD the olftcen tDtend al
residence, ~ IDdleaa.d tla8'
=•rmtowardtllelil.-1 •ntmdedlnhmtfll ..... ... ..................... .
Student dies
in car crash
.A 21-year-old Dartmouth
College student visiting his
parents in Newport Beach died
Tuesday when his small car
veered off the Corona del Mar
Freeway and struck a concrete
support of the Red Hill Avenue
overcrossing.
William Tate, who
investigators said had been
visiting his parents for the last
month at their Eastbluff area
home was killed about 9:30 a.m.
after his car slid about 330 feel
in the dirt divider before hltting
the support.
California Highway Patrol
spokesman John Merritt said
investigators are considering
several explanatlons of why
Tate's car got so far away from
the freeway's northbound lanes.
State shuts down
home for retarded
RAMONA <AP> -Patients at
a home for the mentally
retarded were beaten and
threatened with a knire, the
stale of California claims after
moving them out and closing the
56-bed institution.
The action was taken joinUy
by the state Department of
Social Services and the state
Community Care Licensln1
Di vision, but operators of
Heritage Ranch said Tuesday
they will appeal the 30·day
suspension of their license.
DRAIGI CIAIT 1111111 '
Mostly cloudy tonl1bt
and 'Thursday mornln&
with partial clearing
Thursday afternoon .
Variable high clouds.
Cooler days with highs
Thursday ranging from
the upper 60s at the
beaches to mid-70& inland.
Lows tonight mostly in the
508.
llllDITIUY
~ Collett ,,...., .,
/oUdON, Harrw A. ,_ llu .,..rltd l.ot ...... ,.,. ...,
llo•cu•Coa letr .., e ..... ,.,. .........
, .... AJI.
•
llllJ Plat
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 4, 1981
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
ENTERTAINMENT
82-3 a .. -s
86-7, 89
Dr. William Burke of
the Federal Reserve says
the tight money policy will
·continue. See Page 84.
n
,Irvine voters back civic center, campaign limit
1 Ballot measures supportlnJ
construction of a new civic
.center, limiting the a mount one
may contribute to councilmanic
campaigns and Increasing the
interest rate on school bonds
were approved Tuesday by
Irvine voters .
The vote on an advisory
question asking whether the city
of Irvine should build a new
civic center (Measure H> was
3,867 Yes. 2,149 No.
The construction of a new ·
civic center near Barranca
Parkway and Jeffrey Road to
replace the present facility at
17200 Jamboree Road was
backed b y two citizens ·
committees, the Yes on Civic
('enter Committee and Citizens for Responsible Action.
Bill Ciosby, an attorney, said
th e Yes on Civic Center
Co mmittee spent about $3,000 or
$4,000 in support of the civic
center advisory quesUon.
Crosby said most of the money
w as raised from "s mall
d o nors .'' He added so me
contributlons came from
solicitations of m~mbers of the
Irvine Chamber of Commerce.
He said the Irvine Company,
Fluor Corp. and Koll Co. als<>
donated.
Irvine Mayor David Sills said
the Citizens for Responsible
Action Committee spent in the
neighborhood of $5,000. Silla,
who says a new clvic center can
be built without a tax increue,
authored a cltywJde letter tn
support of the clvlc cent.er. Silla'
letter also supported ~easure K,
which places a $250 Umlt on the
amount one may contribute to a
c~uncllmanlc campaign.
Measure K passed 3,244 Yes,
2,418 No . Currently cit y
ordinance allows one to
contri bute about SSOO to
counclhaanlc campat1n. In
addltlob to cuttln1 that limit in
ball Meuure K eliminates one
of U.e two escalator provtslona
in tbe old ordinance whlch wu
ad.jus~ upward annually baaed
on infiaUOlt and increases in the
number of retlstered voters.
Now, the Un)lt will be adjusted
only by inflation.
MeMure J , an alternative to
Measure K, was voted down
Tuesday, Yes, 2,757 and No
2,943 .
. Challengers elected in Irvine ·
White, Flynn win in school race; neither incumbent sought re-election • • By RICHARD GREEN -Roger Denney, 252. Circle, Irvine, said today that Mrs. White, a businesswoman, OftMDelty~SUift -Andrew Barna, 245. she spent between $1,300 and said she's not sure how the
Voters elected Buff White and Winneke and Denney had $1,400 on the campaign. She said school district could afford to
John F1ynn to four-year terms dropped out of the race but too she spent the most of all the reinstate the sixth period but
on the Irvine Unified School promised to investigate.
District Board of Trustees .
Meuure J would have placed
the contribution limit at $100.
A thir measure approved by
the voters Tuesday was ballot
Measure A, whi c h · asked
whether the lntereat rate on $5
million in school bonds could be
increased from 7 percent lo 10
percent. School district ofncials
satd the increase is necessary in
order to make the bonds more
market.able. The vote on Measure A was
4,470 and 1,421 No.
Tuesday. according to final but Cl h d l t · ·th fl'.lYM, 29, of 22 Wall~w Run, unofficial results released today ass SC e u e' mee ing wi I~vt.~e. an .at~rne¥· sa1d today . · t · his hrst pnonty will be to meet
, 1TOP VOTE GETTER
Bufl White
by the Orange County Registrar rUSteeS prioritteS. informally with the trustees
of Voters. parents, teachers and studen~
The final vote tally was: to find out what they feel are
BuffWhite,3,358. late to have their n a mes trustee candidates. She said her ~~::i~~portant problems in the
-John Flynn, 2,066. removed from the ballot. first priority will be to find ?
John Mundy, 1,415. Flynn and Mrs. White will fill way to return the sixth period to FlyM and Mrs. White will be
Gene Conley, 1.307. the trustee seats of Frank Hurd high school juniors and seniors. sworn lnlo ofllce at the Dec. 10
Irving Marks, 1,265 and Fred Gahm, neither seeking Th e Bo a rd of Trus t ees meetinJ of the Board of Trustees
Jeff Winneke. 438. re·election. eliminated the sixth period last at T:30 p.m. in Lakeside Middle
John Jaeger. 429. Mrs . White , 41, of 3 Paine fall as a cost-saving measure. School, 3 Lemollgrass, Irvine. JOINS IRVINE BOARD
John F'lynn
Mesa passes curbs
on electronic games
Agran charge rapped
Despite protests by a local
m e rchant, a game machine
salesman, an electronic game
center owner and former Gov.
Edmund "Pat" Brown, the
Costa Mesa City Council has
passed a new electronic game
machine ordinance.
Brown's comments were aired
during a pre-council study
session Mooday when Planning
Director Doug Clark reported
the former Ji?Overnor had soueht an ordinance delay by phone.
Clark said Brown had stated
h e is lobby ing for gam e
interests in the state.
Clark said he suggested that
the former governor come to
Costa Mea for the ordinance's
second hearing, a requirement
before it becomes city law.
The ordinance -redrafted
after game promoters packed
the City Council ch am be rs to
protest tough r egulations
pro posed by the Planning
Co mmission -a ll ows the
controversial games.
But it c lamp s some
requirements, including adult
supervision and a ban on play by
youths during school hours, on
those businesses installing four
or more of the machines.
Such firms must acquire a
permit good for six months and
re-approved on the basis of how
well the individual business
performs in policing itseU and
youngsters.
Business owner Lucien Bisson
complained, "Don't you thlnk
we are over·laxed, over -licensed
and over-everythinged right
now?"
He called the games "good
baby sitters."
·'These games take money
away from kids so they doo't
spend it to s moke pot."
Lance Hailstone, spokesman
for a game distributor, said ,
"We f ee l discr i minated
against." H e s aid he is
concerned about the cost of
permits and adult supervision.
George Katsanpes of
H u n ti n gto n Beach i s an
e lectronics gam e center
operator who took a different
view.
"I'm for regulating them .
They're a definite problem. But
if you are going to regulate it, do
1t for the single machine, too."
He added, "The way it is now,
they put in those machines, one,
two or three of them, and forget
them."
He said the regulations should
app ly to a ll bu s inesses ,
regardless of the number of
games installed.
RETURNED TO BOARD
Eugene McKnight
Voters return
McKnight to
college post
Saddl ebac k Comm unity
College District trustee Eugene
M cK night of San Juan
Capistrano has won a decisive
victory in his election bid for a
second term on the college
board.
Nixon's niece set
for Congress race
Mc Knig ht , 74, a retir e d
philosophy professor, received
12,572 votes, nearly three times
that of his nearest challenger,
a ccording to complete but
unofficial results in Tuesday's
election.
Others running in the trustee
race in Area 4, which covers San
Clemente. San Juan Capistrano,
Capistrano Beach and Dana
Point were M ary Jane
Hannegan, 4,599 votes: Perry
Jacobson , 4,299; and Donald
Cole, 3,287.
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Ol ... o.lly,.... ....
Lawrene Nixon Anfinson,
niece of former President Nixon.
-s a ys if she wins a seat in
Congress in the 1982 election she
won't hesitate to call her uncle
and ask his advice.
S p ea kin g at a p ress
confer ence in Lagur;ia Beach
Tuesday, Mrs. Anfinson said she
i s proud of her un c le's
accomplishments as president,
and people should remember
she is a Nixon "first, last and
always." .
Though she hasn't formally
announced her candidacy. Mrs.
Anfinson, an Irvine resident.
aays she plans to run for
Congress in the newly formed
Ord District, which Includes
portions ol Orange and San
Diego counties.
If she w1ns the Republican
primary in June, 1982, Mrs.
Anfinson, 38, said she and her
family wouJd probably move
into the dlstrict, although under
the law she ls not required lo do
ao.
The district she i1 seeking lo
represent Incl ud es San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano,
ltl Toro and Laguna Nliuel in
Oranee County and Oceanside,
V i sta, San Marcos and
Zacondido in San Dle10 County.
. Iii rs. ADftmon 1akS she bu J\Ot
1ormui..t.d the iuuet ahe wtU
run ber campalp on, However 1
E
t Hid lbe ll ln full IUP1JOl1 OI
rt1ldent Re11an, and In
articular bit 1pon1onblp ol
lllnl Airborne Wamlil• IDd
4
McKnight said today the
trustee race was very arduous
and he is extremely happ,y that
the voters supported hiriflor a
second term.
"I have been receiving many
phone c alls from people
con gratulating me on my
victory," McKnight sald. "I feel
th i s is a victory for the
traditional concepts of what a
community colleie atanda for."
'Orange pick'
set Saturday Dall,,.............. . .. ....... Bl DS FOR CONGRESS The Auoclated Student ~
Lawrene Ni.ton Anfinson of Saddleback Colle•e'• N Campus in Irvine will 1pomor
control Systems (A WACS > an ''oranae pick" Saturday from
aircraft to Saudi Arabia. 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Mrs. Anfinson, the daurher of The campue ln located
form er President N xon ·a adjacent to an oran•• irove at
brother, Donald, of Newport the corner ot Jeffrey Road and
Buch, is currently llvin1 In. Irvine Center Drive.
M c L e a n , V a . , o u ta l d • The public 111 lD..W to p6ek ..
Wa.ahiniton, D.C. many oranpl u tbe1 wut al IO
Her huaband, Tboma1, I.I • centt a pound. Ptckera are
Rea1an appalntee aervlnf in the r-ulred to pro•ide tbelr .,.. U .s. Department ol Houalnt .ct -
Urban Development'• New coatamen.
Communlt7 Redevelopmeat ror ta form aU•• call
A,.ncy. TIM Anflntom bave SHcllet.dl ~la b"flM •
lhr'ff JCIUftl Chlldrlin, I ··-· ...... 116. '
Hof /man def ends. advocacy of industrial. authority
Chamber of Co mmerce
President Larry Hoffman has~
defended .bis appearance before
the Irvine City Council when be
s poke about forming an
Industr i al Development
Authority. He aaid he s hould not
have bad to disclose his ties to a company st.anding to gain from
its formation.
He s aid that Coun cilman
Larry Agran is "in error" when
be questions actions taken by
him (Ho ffman ) when the
Indus trial Deve lopment
Authority was formed last
summer.
John Nakaoka, an Irvine
Unified School District trustee
and ~bairman of the Chamber's
Economic AfJairs Council, said
that Agran's questioning of
Hoffman's actions amounts to
slander and represents Agran's
"anti-business position."
T he debate centers on an
appe arance by Hoffman, a
one·time chairman of the city
Planning Commission, at a June
23 Irvine City Council meeting
when the Authority. was formed
as a vehicle for attracting new
Industry lo Irvine.
Nakaoka was the official
representative of the Chamber
of Commerce at the City Council
meeting. He told the council
members the C hamber
supported the creation of an
industrial development
authority.
After Nakaoka spoke ,
Hoffman came to the pu'-Hc
podium and spoke about
ind ustri a l d eve lopment
authorities.
What Hoffman didn't say,
according to recordings of the
meeting, was that he was doing
1overoment liaison work for
Wyle Labs of El Segundo, a
company thal subsequently
inquired about getting a form of
advantageous financing from
the Authority.
Agran says that Hoffman's
failure to disclose his ties with
Wyle Labs raises an ethical
question that argues for the
dissolution of the Authority.
Agran also says the Authority
shouJd be disaolved on the basis
of policy emerging on the
federal level that might cripple
Solar power urged
by HB planners
By PATRICK KENNEDY °' .. .,...,,.... .....
Huntington Beach planners
have recommended that all new
homes and buildings be required
to have solar water heating
sytems instead of relying totally
on conventional energy.
·'The price of electricity and
natural gas has now reached the
point where solar has become an
effective option in Southern
California ... "· states an
89·page report, which is in draft
form.
The report suggests that, if
city officials don't want to
mandate solar beating systems,
they could require new
construction to include hook-ups
for easy conversion to solar
power.
The study also notes that new
construction and landscaping
s hould take into consideration
"solar access" and not block out
the sun's rays to nearby
bulldings.
··With the State Enerl)'
Commlsslon predJctin1 that one
ln every five Cllllomla homes
will be ualbg some form of solar
by 1985, it ls imperat.lve that
Hunllnttoo Beach examine now
the laaue of provldiDI tolar
acce111 in exuUnJ and futu,.
development,•' the report aa11.
The ttudy tbould be completed
and forwarded to City COWlcU
membeu later tbh year,
accordlnt to clty offlcla.11.
Jim Baraea, auocla~ = for lbe city, 11ya lt bu
commoaplace for tb• ell>' to
proceu •rpllcatlona for
retldentla aolar lleatlaa
equtpmnt. Acccmllal to die
report. altJ amdall ......... .
permit applleiltlalll .. ......
ruid••U•I eolar lleathll r
systems during the first five
months or 1981.
The report says a residential
solar heating system costs up to
$4,000. There are various state
and federal tax credits and
low-interest loans available for
the purchase and installation of
solar, the report states.
"The city can encourage
installation of solar beating in
new development, or, as some
cities have done, solar can be
requlred in new developments,"
Barnes said.
Cerritos and Davis are two
cities that require solar water
heatiftg in new development.a,
the report not.es.
·'The most com pelllng
argument in f. v 0 r .or
conservation ls economic :
savin1 a barrel of oil can be up
to 10 times cheaper than
produclnt a new one,·• the study
says, add1ng that conservation
reduee1 reliance on Imported
oil.
The report also states that
"pa11ive 1olar desi1na" can
provide between 15 and 15
percent ot beatin1 a.nd coolin1
needs for a typical Oran1e
Count1 Mine wtthout the UM ol
convenlloaal tner11.
A faulve 1y1tem la
••accomplttb•d tbo"''~:botb
caref\11 lot aklal ad ·Wkllal
deslJln . . . " tbe ..,art 1tatM.
Tb la lacladH '' ~:>:~ u~•--·• of Hut,·fael•I 1la11 . • . ................ _ ..
1tr••l•r• t• • • •• ,...... ~
the, ability of th e~ Irv ine
Authority to lure industry to
Irvine with the pro mise of low-interest loans.
Hoffman says he was n't
lobbying for c r eation of an
in du s trial d evel o pm e nt
authority at the June 23 council
meeting. He says he was merely
r espondi ng to questions by
council me mbers who were
considering whether to form an
industrial development
a uthority designed to stimulate
indus trial gro wth, o r one
designed to spur commercial growth'. '
··councilman Agran once
again fail ed to do his home.work
and is very sloppy in his facts,"
said Nakaoka in a two-page
public statement released t.his
week.
* * *
Industrial
panel to have
short life?
Irvine has become one of the
few cities in Orange County to
form an industrial development
authority, but events being
played out on the national front
may mean a short future for the
controversial organization.
President Reagan has raised
the possibility that he will seek
to change the tax code under
which industrial development
authorities can issue tax-free
bonds, the sale or which results
in low.interest loans to private
companies.
A change in the tax code
eliminating the issue of tax-free
bonds for the purpose of
stimulating industrial growth
would put Irvine's Industrial
Development Authority out of
business. officials say.
The authority was formed last
June 23 by the Irvine City
Council as a vehicle to attract
' industry to Irvin e with the
promise of low·inlerest loans.
The concept of Industrial
development bonds was first
established to attract heavy
lnduatry and jobs to poor rural
areas in the Depression.
Today, the bonds are used
na\Jonwide. The company that
sets money from the sale ol the
bonds is respomlble to pay back
prlnclpal and lntereat on the
bonda.
Compen6ee are lntereated lD
obtainial ftundn\!:' \beM boa ....... tbe tmd to
carry relell..&J low bUrttlt. ,11111..-.-·•
I -.. ,
t
IUlll £UIT ·
llllJl'lllt
WEDNESDAY, NOV .... 1981
CAVALCADE
BUSINESS
ENTERTAINMENT
82-3
84-5
86-7, 89
Dr. William Burke of
the Federal Reserve says
the tight money policy will
continue. See P.age 84.
n
0
Newport-Mesa incumbents 1-eturned to office
Werner, Loofbourrow join Franco,
McMillian on unified district board
h .JERKY CLAUSEN ., .. ....., ..........
Incumbents running for two of
the four Trustee Area seats up
for election in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District were
ove rhwlemingly returned to
office Tuesday, according to
fiaal but still unofficial ballot
counts.
Judith Franco, a homemaker,
1arnered the most votes cast for
any single candidate. As an
appointed incumbent in Trustee
Area 5, a Newport Beach
district, she secured 5,522 votes
districtwide. I
·Also returned to office was
tongtime Trustee Area 7
incumbent Rod MacMillian who
tepresents west Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach.
Also elected Tuesday was
Forrest K . Werner, a Garden Grove Hi(h School counselor,
who will represent north Costa
Mesa's Trustee Area 2. That
seat currently is held by Mike
McLaughlin who declined to run
this year.
Freelance editor.writer
Sherry Loofbourrow was elected
In Trustee Area 4, Corona del
Mar. That area currently is
represented by Betty Jo Bailey
who also declined to run for
office this year.
In Trustee Area 4 balloting,
Mrs . Loofburrow received 5,348
votes. John G. Rinaldo, who
withdrew from the race, took
l ,178 votes.
Rinaldo bowed out of the
contest but was too late to have
Water bond
sale ai™
Bay effort
By STEVE MARBLE .. _.....,,.... ....
The beleag uer ed Upper
Newport Bay cleanup project
was given a considerable boost
today when state officials
announced they sold $1:4 million
in water bonds earmarked for
the Newport project.
Carole Perry, an aide to state
Treasurer Jesse Unruh, said $50
million in state water resources
bonds, including those set to
fund the bay cleanup, were
purchased early today by a
s ubsidiary headed by Bank of
America.
State officials earlier this
week expressed little optimism
that the bonds would be bought.
They pointed out that the same
bonds . bad been offered last
September only to be rejected.
The bonds, reportedly snubbed •
previously because of sour
economic conditions, were sold
at an interest rate of 10 .l
percent.
Today's purchase of the bonds
means that Newport should be
able to move forward with its
cleanup plans this spring.
The entire bay project is
expected to cost $4 million. The
bond money will be added to $1.3
million from the state energy
and resources fund as well as
local contributions.
Most of the money wlll be
spent channeling out the San
Diego Creek and installine
silt-catching devices tn the river
bed. The San Diego Creek is the
bay's main waterway.
Cycle victim
Lloyd Lund
. rites slated
Funeral MrVices for Newport
Beach resktent Lloyd M. Lund, a
Loni Beach PGlice officer who wa1 killed Friday in a
motorcycle accident, were•
conducted today tn Long Beach.
Mr . Lund, wbo was a
1110torc1cle aft'lcer, wu olf duty
P'ridaJ .......... when a 1uat ol
1wl11d reportedly blew bl1
motorqcle out ot CODtrol on tbe
.8aa Diqo l'reewa7 aur tbe
hclld Binet ult la PouataiD Valley.
TM 51-,.-old olftC*' ltruck
a 1-.ce • die ....... atrtp. Re wa1 pronouaced dead at J'ouat1la Valley Community
~
Mr. l:Alilll l••••• Illa wife = .. -~-two lilll!!-1'1111111! .............. lllerL ... al••.J\ au••••• llJ two ......... ,,
his name removed from the
ballot .
The two other Trustee Area 4
candidates, retired school
president Waller Ziglar and
retired educator Lawrence T.
Magee got 886 and 722 votes,
respecU vely.
In Trustee Area 2, Werner
took 5,072 votes. Business owner
Charlie Gibbs garnered 1,860
and electrician David A. Natkin
got 669.
In Trustee Area 5, Mrs.
Franco r~eived 5,552 and her
only opponent. university
professor Joseph L. Philbrick.
got 2.~.
In Trustee Area 7, MacMillan
took 4,511 voles. Educator
Lenard E. Davis took 1,492 and
Vincent Joseph Bellone. a
building engineer, garnered 810.
Beverly W. Ritch, an
administrative assistant who
also withdrew from the race
after ballots were printed
earlier this year. had 901 votes.
Mac Millian ·s board victory
was his fifth in the unified school
district.
The Catalina Island
restaurant owner said this
morning, "I think that we have
a good team to tac kle the
difficult problems we 'll be faced
with in th~ next couple of
years."
Those problems, he said,
center on providing quality
education while faced with
district financial problems and
declining student enrollment.
"The people who lost," he
opined. "were those who looked
VETERAN RETURNED
Rod Mac.\11/11011
for alternate ways of meeting
the chaJlenge without closing
schools or releasing teachers. I
think the public realizes we are
going to have to do that."
M acMillian spent the least of
those elected Tuesday on
campaign materials. He said he
spent $16 for flyers.
Candidates spending the most
were Mrs. Franco and Mrs.
Loofbourrow. Each said she
spent about SJ.000 on official
ca ndidate statements ,
n e wspaper advertising and
fliers.
Werner said he put out about
$1,200 for his ballot statement,
APPOINTEE WINS
Judith Franco
fliers. posters and newspaper
and radio ads.
Werner said this morning he
was pleased with the number of
votes he garnered Tuesday.
"The overwhelming support I
got makes me feel comfortable
about the community beine
behind me as a board member."
Although som e of h is
supporters pushed for Werner as
the candidate who would see
that Costa Mesa High School will
not be closed in future years as
district enrollment declines, be
said he has not considered that
possibility an issue.
"We may get down to four
THE OLD AND THE NEW Less than 24 hours
after being put out to pasture, the old Upper
Bay bridge in Newport Beach 1s torn up.
Workmen who will spend three to four weeks
de molishing the 1931 structure. ripped out the
D9Ny ""' ..... """ bridge railings Monday to get at power lines .
Shown in the background is the new
seven-lane bridge. Both eastbound and
westbound traffic now is traveling on the new
s pan.
Collel{e incumbents
win offices easily
3 incumbents
hack on Mesa
sanitary hoard
Coast Community College
District incumbents George
Rodda and Richard Olson
coasted to easy victories
Tuesday.
The final but unofficial count
for the district's two trustee
seats up for election were:
Trustee area 5
-~rge Rodda, 16,898
-Mark Bayless, 8,225
Trwstee area 1
-Bkllard 01.soa, 14, 1B5
-James Evans, 10,296
Rodda, a Corona del Mar
resident and attorney who bas
served on the five-member
board since 1969, said he spent
lps than S300 on his campaip.
He attributed bis succes1 t.o "the
1reat success of tbia district."
Olson, a Garden Grove
resident and aale1 mana1er,
could not be reached for comment.
Sing-along set
The monthly 1ln1·•lon1
pro1ram tor ...uor clUMDI hu
ben N9UIMd tbll fall at Golden
WHl Coll••• lD Huatlnstoa
....... wttb ..... ant .,......... Hlfor~. TH free ""'818 Wlll= fro• I -.·-,: ·~~·' la ..............
Water issue
talks urged
Costa Mesa returned three
incumbents to their sanitary
district board seats Tuesday in a
four-man race.
Returned to the Costa Mesa
Sanitary District board for
four-year terms were Harry S.
Green, 1,961 votes; Jim Wahner,
1,863, and Ormy 0 . Crank, 1,880.
The fourth candidate, C.L.
"Chuck" Ropp, an energy
services representative, got
1,472 votes.
All three incumbents bad
assumed their eosts ill recent
years by appointment, repJacinl
resl1ning members.
The board, composed or five
members, it re1pon1lble tor
supervislna llKal policy and the
di1po1al of 1ewa1e and trub ln
the district servin1 all of Colt.a
Mesa and small parts of
northwett Newport Beach and
Santa Ana Het1btt .
OraJl8e pick set
•
FEELS ·COMFORTABLE'
New Trustee Werner
kindergarten through 12th grade
schools," be ventured, "but the
last thing we'd want to do is
close a comprehensive hilh
school facility."
Mrs. Franco, appointed to the
board in March, 1980, said she
actually was "surprised" that
she was swept back into office
Tuesday by more than two to
one.
·•1 felt Dr. Philbrick was a
good candidate who developed
interesting discussion during the
forums."
Mrs. Loofbourrow, active in
school affairs and on school
com mlttees for years. said she
·PEOPLE CARE"
Winner Loofbourrow
reels "really good" about her
victory.
"What impressed me most
during the campaign was the
number of competent, caring
people who were supportive,·•
she said. "I know those people
are going to continue to do
everything they can to help the
district provide a quality
education for our children."
T he newly elected board
members will be seated to four
year terms Dec. 1 during a
district organizational meeting.
They joi n three other
members who won't run for
re-election until 1983.
Voters defeat
bed-tax hike
A ballot measure ill Newport
Beach to increase hotel and
motel bed taxes failed to gain
the requir~ two-thirds majority
of Tuesday's voters.
The final but unofficial tally
on Measure M was:
-Yes: 3,125
-No: 1,891
The measure, which would
have meant an annual increase in
city revenues of $596,000, would
have needed 3,344 votes to pass.
All new or increased city taxes
must receive a two-thirds vote to
qualify.
The voter turnout in Newport
was 11.7 percent, slightly higher
than the county average or 10.&
percent.
Failure of the measure means
that hotel and motel bed taxes
will remain at 6 percent. The
measure would have hiked the tax to 8 percent.
"I 'm so r ry it failed ,"
commented Mayor Jackie
Heather today. "This was
earmarked to help support our
heavy burden of fighting the
airport."
She admitted that council
members did not actively
campaign for the measure "like
we probably should have."
The Newport B eac h
Convention and Visitors Bureau,
though, did actively campaign
against the measure which they
said would hurt motel and hotel
business in Newport.
Mayor Heather said the
council may choose to place the
measure on a future ballot and
put together an active
campaign.
Non-teachers back
one-year contract
Non-teaching employees of the
Newport-Mesa School District
voted approval Tuesday night of
a new one-year contract giving
them a 4 percent cost-of-living
pay raise retroactive to last July
1 and granting another 4 percent
next Jan. 1.
The contract, tentatively
approved by the local chapter of
the California School
Em pployees Associ a lion
bargaining team last week, also
grants an additional holiday and
up to two more vacation days,
depending on length of each
employee's service.
The 190-member local union,
which represents about 800
employees ranging from clerks
and custodians to mechanics
and bus drivers. voted 64·33 to
accept the contract.
Employees bad been working
since July 1 without a contract.
A three-year contract bad
expired last June 30.
The new contract expires next
Jurie 30.
The district and its teachers'
union still have not reached
agreement on pay raises this
school year.
The teachers' contract does
not expire unW next summer,
but salary and fringe-benefit
issues were scheduled for
re-negotiation this ye.ar under an
existing three-year contract.
Three to receive
awards in coui:tty ,
Tbree well-known Oran1e
Count)' leedera will be boDoncl
Thursday eventn1 by the
Na tlona I · Conhren ce of
Clarl1tl1n1 and Jew• for
promotln1 undeutandln1
between faiths.
Rooeevelt,· who llvea and runs
.a bualne11 consultinl firm in.£
Ne.,port Beach, la the otbelr'
co·cbalnnan. Mn. Wieder, from
H~ Harbour, rep,_..
Hunttajton Beach, Seal Beacb,
Wutmlnater and parts of
Gard• Grove• &be Board of
Su~. ~ ftrit v1et ualrmu
of tlae Or••I• Couat1 ....... c.Mral CommtttM u4l; ..Uor vice prealdftt ot
lloMlt Bein WUlam met • Al..S ... ol Nnpart IMtlt. He al• moderatH a raito
f ~'•Ir a m , • • C a t la o Ile p1m-'w."
J
l 11
r r
r
~
f.
r ...
,
I ~
Purch:ase of
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL °' .. ~ ........... Members of a committee
lnvestigatine possible sites for a
regional airport to serve Orange
County have called for studies of
possible county government
purchase of military airbases
located in El Toro, Tustin and
Los Alamitos.
Committee members
indicated at a meeting Tuesday
In Santa Ana that they have
several Ideas in mind in calling
for the so-called cost/benefit
studies ol relocattn1 all mllltaey
air operations from Oranae
County to Camp Pendleton
Marine Corps base in north San
Dlego County.
By eliminating operations al
the Marine Corps Atr Statlon·El
Toro, aircraft operations ln
Orange County skies would be
reduced -a situation that could
free ''airspace" for operations
at a regional airport elsewhere
ip the countv. A site in nearby
Santlaao Ciuon eaat of tbt
Marine base iS amon1 locatlonl
under study for a major airport.
Another possibility, accordlna
to commltlee members, would
be use of the Army reserve
airbase at Los Alamitos u a
base for private aircraft tr the
base were closed to military use.
Members conceded at the
meetln1 that relocation of
m111tary activities would be a
billion dollar proposition. They
1u11eated. tbai s(>eciaJ federal
le1l1laUon nU1ht be requn,d to
.permit uu of any mono
1enerated from the sale ot the airbua to fund cooltru~ ot new military av,laUon faeWUea
at CllmP l>ebdlet.on.
Committee member Don
Cbrl1tent00, a developer, 1ald
he'd De to tee the El Toro bue
acr,a1e re\urQed to t he tax
roll.I. He aakt the land ii locateid
ln a prime real Htate area.
In relattd actions at the
meeting, the committee decided
a,alnst pursuing further s tudies
o Bell Canyon, located several
miles east of San Juan
Capistrano, as a site for a
reclonal airport.
But the committee called for
further studies lnvolvln1 both
Santiago Canyon and Chino
HUis, located near the boundary
between Oran1e and San Diete>
counties.
•
The commit.tee, appointed by
the county Board oi supervisors,
meets monthly. Its goal is to
identify a alte for a re1ional
airport that would serve the
county's air transportation
needs, both existln1 and
predicted.
Such a facility would reduce
dependence on John Wayne
Airport and provide a racllity •
from which long distance fights
could leave.
County turnout 'poor'
Only 10.8 percent vote in Tuesday's election
The turnout in Orange County
in Tuesday's, election for school
boards, special district boards
and various initiative-type
questions was 10.8 percent, the
county Registrar of Voters office
reported today.
While breakdowns for specific
districts weren't available this
morning, the registrar's office
said 'the countywlde average
was well below the 15 percent
Shuttle postponed
with seconds left
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
<AP> -Launch of tbe shuttle
Columbia was delayed today,
twice, and finally postponed
for perhaps a week. Technical
problems developed with an
agonizing 31 seconds left on the
countdown clock.
Joe Engle and Richard 1'.ruly
were strapped in their cockpit
seals, ready to fly, when the
clock was stopped cold.
Co lumbia , filled with
half.a-million gallons of volatile
fuel, entered its •·terminal
countdown" flawlessly at
sunrise as excitement mounted
here for the ship's never·before
accompliahed return trip to
space.
High hopes ended at 6:35 a.m.
PST when launch director
George Page revealed a
problem with a lubricating
device in Columbia's on-board
auxiliary power units. The APUs
steer the ship on launch and
stabilize its landing.
The astronauts, in the ship for
more than four hours. were
taken from Columbia and bacJt
to their crew quarters. They
wore smiles of nsignation.
A last·minGte problem also
halted the first attempt to
launch Columbia on her maiden
flight April 10: the problem then
was with communications
between computers. It was fixed
quickly and the ship launched
two days later.
Now. as then. a two·day
postponement is necessary
because Columbia's fuel tanks
mu st be unloaded and
decontaminated -a difficult
and l e n gthy process .
Unfortunately. the weather
outlook for Friday is none too
favorable. forecasters said. .
Moreover. "It could be longer,
depending on what the problem
is with the auxiliary power
unit," said launch contr ol
spokesman Hugh Harris .
He said loo-high pressure was
detected in two out of the ship's
three APUs.
"We know it will take at least
two days, so we're looking at
something like Friday -or
Saturday, or Sunday o r
Monday." flight director Nell
Hutchinson told reporters at the
J ohnson Space Center in
Houston. "It's going to take time
to get the filters out of the APU's
and purge them and clean them
and bring them back on line ...
APU manager Dwayne Weary
said NASA'~ experts fell the
units would have worked on
launch, but they were not so
confident that they could be
r estarted. satisfactorily for
re-entry.
"We felt it might have been
OK. but we did not have tbe test
history and data and experience
to give us the confidence to go
ahead," he said.
Once the weather proved
acceptable, it seemed today that
<See SPACE, Page A2>
-........... .-1
STILL OFF LIMITS The ocean and sand at Main Beac:h
Park ln Laguna Beach remain quarantined today after
crews diverted about four million 1allons or treated sewage
onto the beach Tuesday. The crews are repairine a sewer
line and had to divert treated effluent into a storm draln
channel whicb terminates at the beach. County health
officials are monitoring the beach daily.
turnout that bad been forecuL.
Shirley Deaton, chief deputy
to registrar Al Olson, said rtnaJ
results were known at 1:30 a.m.
-"ril!ht on schedule."
No problems were reported
with the county's new $1.5
million vote counting system -
a system that performed
miserably during its first use In
the June , 1980 , primary
elections.
Election results were not
remarkable. In Irvine, voter•
opted for a $250, rather than a
SlOO, limit on individual
contributions to councilmanic
campaigns. At the same time,.
COMPLETE RESULTS A2:
LOCAL STORIES 81
the voters in the Irvine Unified
School District said the district
should be permitted to increase
the interest rate on school
construction bonds beyond 7
percent. ............. '-..... Irvine voters, in a non·binding
s tatement, said the city should
proceed with plans for a S38
million civic center. City.offices
today are housed in a pair of
buildinp In the Irvine Industrial
complex.
A 2l·year-old Newport Beach man, WUUam Tate, died in thi! accident Tuesday when hil~ car
smcuhed into a concrete 1UpJJOrt for the Rtd mu Affnue OVttcrosling on the Corona del Mar F'reeway
in Cort.a Meta.
In Newport Beach, voters
overwhelmingly agreed to an
increase in the city's tax on the
rental of hot.el and motel rooma.
That rate will go up from six to
eight percent.
Workers laid off
by mortgage firm
fn Laguna Beach, the city was
given permission by voters to
seek a loan from the state to
fund the city's financial
obligations in the Aliso Waler
Management Agency, a regional
network that provides for
sew age treatment.
Voters in Laguna Niguel
resoundingly defeated a
proposal to form a municipal
advisory council. The council
would have advised the county
Board of Supervisors on matters
affecting the unincorporated
community.
BJ KEITH TUBE&
Oelt,Nllll...._.R .....
A1merican Home Mortgage
Corp .. the Newport Beach-based
home loan firm saddled with a
four-count suit filed a1ainst It
two weeks ago by the State
Department of Real Estate,
fired 15 employees al the end of
the workday Monday, company
chairman John Rinaldo said
Tuesday.
Earlier in the day, one of those
dismissed estimated the number
of laid-off workers to be between
40 and 50.
"We laid off what we call o~r
Brown calls solons
to special session
SACRAME NTO <AP> -
Faced with an increasing drain
on the stat.e's already-strained
treasury, Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr . today orde red the
Legislature back to Sacramento
next week for an emergency
special session.
In his formal proclamation,
Brown directed the lawmakers,
who were in recess until
January, to convene at 9:30 a.m.
Monday to •·act upon legislation
relative to state budget
problems created by recent
federal enactments and related
court actions" and to "consider
and act upon legislation relative
to reapport.ionment. •'
The Legislature's failure to
conform state laws to the new
federal regulations is costing
California at least $11 million
per month.
Brown said today he also
wante.d the lawmakers to
consider bills transferring some
money e armark e d for
construction or new stat e
buildings back to the generaJ
fund, delaying some projects
until the state's fiscal condition
improves.
A legislative aide who asked
not to be named said the ooly
reapportionment Issue whith
would be considered is the
Board of Equalization districts,
which the lawmakers failed to
act on in tbe regular se11ton
whicb ended Sept. 15.
However , Brown's
proclamation does not limit the
reapportionment issue to jual
the four Board of Equall1at.lon
districts.
junior sales trainees," RinaJdO
said . "They were brought on
primarily to handle expansion ...
Rinaldo said allegations of
fraud and ne1li1ence leveled
against it by state authorities
have had a negative impact on
the company. making expansion
impractical at this time.
Rinaldo said the dismissals
were routine and affected only
five clerks and 10 sales and
training personnel. However,
another company source said
company attomey John Gloger
was among th<>&e let go. Also
receiving notice was director el
mass marketing Gerald
Naughton.
G loger confirmed Tuesday
morning that he had been
dismissed.
·'Two men came into my
office Monday and gave me the
news," Gloger said. He declined
further comment, citing possible
"com plicalions.' ·
American Home publicity
director Joseph L. Groner later
denied Gloger's firing. as did
Rinaldo early Tuesday evening.
When informed that Gloger
had confirmed his dismissal,
Rinaldo responded;· 'Ther& must
have been a misunderstandtnc."
Gloger came on the telephone
line rive minutes later and also
said "There muat have bee" a
mlsundetat.andina ...
This mominJ, •Jlother laid.off
employee wbb preferred to
remain anonymous, placed the
number of furloughed
employees at 34 to 40.
"Sales trainees, clerical and
vart-time people were laid off,"
the aource said, "as well as
others in the mort1a1e
company, legal and escrow
departments and in accountln1
(See IDINGS, P a1e A!)
Mesa shooting death resolved
Di strict Attorney rules 'justifi able homi cide'
The shooting death or UOl\a
Mesa residen t Arnold Nash
Broyles, 37, .bY a police.
department Special Weapons
and Tactics team baa been ruled
"justifiable homlclde" by tbe
Orange County Dlatrlct
Attorney's Offtce.
In a statement releued today,
Deputy Dlltrict Attonley .kllln
ConleJ Mid, '' AltbouO Uda waa
a mOlt \mfortunate 1ituatloa I«
all Involved, t.be lbooelal ol Mr.
Broyles, by offlcera wbo
honestly and reuonablr felt tMt
they were bela1 attacked by
him, wu Juatlftabl• bomleldl ..
under California law."
Broyles wu shot Oct. 7 In the,
Coata MeH home he ud h1a
parenta and dau1bter ahand at
887 Presidio Ave.
Conley aaid the lnve1t11aUon
dlacloeed that Broyles had been
driJlklal, tatinl drutl and WU
aclln1 In a violerlt manner wbe
Co1u MHa offlcera were
i ummoeed.
"W1Mn • oftleen • ..,... tM r•ldBce, t.ber llMlloa-.. llllll
Bro7kil nn toward tile• wttb a
lmlf• atmded In frwt " tatm.
He WM lhat 2 ~ IDld•all--
S tude nt dies
in c a r crash
A 21 -year -old Dartmouth
College s tudent visiting his
parents in Newport Beach died
Tuesday when his small car
veered off the Corona del Mar
Freeway and struck a concrete
support of tbe Red Hill Avenue
overcrossing.
William Tate , who
investigators said had been
visiting his parents for the last
month at their Eastbluff area
home was killed about 9:30 a.m.
after his car sUd about 330 feet
in the dirt divider before hitting
the support.
California Highway Patrol
spokesman John Merritt said
investigators are considering
several explanations of why
Tate's car got so far away from
the freeway's northbound lanes. ,
State shuts down
home for retarded
RAMONA (AP> -Patients at
a home for the mentally
retarded were beaten and
threatened with a knife, tbe
state of California claims after
moving them out and closing the
56·bed institution.
The action was taken joinUy
by the state Department of
Social Services and the state
Community Car e Licensing
Division, but operators of
Heritage Ranch said Tuesday
they will appeal the 30-day
suspension of their license.
llA"CI CUil 1111111
Mostly cloudy tonight
and Thursday morntn1
with partial clearint
Thursday aftern oon .
Variable high clouds.
Cooler days with highs
Thursday ranging from
the upper 60s at the
beaches to mld·70s inland.
Lows tonight mostly ln tbe
508.
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OFF 1.90
It's not true that American bus1oe11 b.u Iott the
knack ol ooming up with imastnallve new products.
I rttenUy received a release trumpetble 1 new
calendar designed ror people who '"hate Mondays."
It's a calendar where all Monday• have been
removed.
Another releas~ told me about JCeep·Safe, a·
privately owned, safe.deposit. vault established In
Palo Alto, near Stanford University. It seems many
banks are running out or safe-deposit boxes ror their
~ customers. So now local entrepreneurs are buUdlllg
vaults where you can rent space to hide your
valuables.
Still another
breakthrough ,
coming from the big
d ru g ~aker ,
Schering·Plough, is a
liquid form or its
Correctol laxative.
Also n e w and
exciting, backed by
big advertising bucks. are sweeter-tasting gel
versions of Crest and Colgate toothpastes.
Nor are those all the new entries. There's more.
much more. Here's a s mattering of them:
-Crystal Creations Apparel, a Costa Mesa
company that hit it big during the disco craze with
rhinestone-studded Diamond Dancer pantyhose. has
a new line of pantyhose with hearts, flowers, pearls
and butterflies in the designs.
-Heublein, master or the vodka market
<Smirnoff. Popov, Relska >. is bringing us Steel
peppermint schnapps.
-A company called MEM. whlcb we have to
thank for English Leather, has developed a new
women's fragrance. Essence or Musk.
-Not to be outdone, Max Factor. a unit of
Norton Simon lnc., has a new fragrance called
Missoni, named after the fashion designers, at $135
an ounce.
-California's Geyser Peak winery is moving
into national distribution with its line of Summit 1
canned wines (no corkscrew needed!. Geyser is
owned by Milwaukee's Schliu, which knows a thing
or two about cans.
-Lorillard. a maker of Kent and True and
Newport, has two new low-tar cigarettes in test
markets. One is Bistro Lights. the other is Maverick.
billed as a woman's cigarette that's "a whole new
breed.''
-Would you believe this: Dinky Donuts cereal?
It's from Ralston Purina. maker or Purina Dog
Chow.
-General Foods has whipped into Houston and
San Antonio with a new frozen whipped topping under
the name Dover Farms. It's said to contain "over 30
percent real cream ," which will enable the company
to boast: "The one and only frozen whipped topping
made with real cream." And that should tell you
something about Dream Whlp and Cool Whip. also
brou ht to ou b General Foods.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
GOLD COINS
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METALS
C•ttl'•r 11~'4 cents • pound, u !..
o.t!INtloM.
~ ~ Clflts. pound.
ZUK t6\lo-49\'l cents• PCM'd, OtOvered.
T'itt •sa.011• .1Mte11 -<;Om-'1• 11> Al-'-1'-40 oel'ts • pound, N Y -cwy Ml2AO I*' OaJll.
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SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~: morning fl•lng Mll 00. 11111.1.1S •
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l'ef1a: en.,,_ fllllnt $60.ll. Y11 DAI. flrelM!twt: MD.IN, 1.t11 M.01.
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