HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-11 - Orange Coast Pilot·-
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ORANGI COAST YOUR HOMETOWN DAllY PAPIR
OR ANGE COuNl Y ,. A. •' •·"' ' 25 CENTS
Transpac balloon heads for California
ALBUQUEROUE, N.M. CAP>
-A Jetliner established voice
contact with Double Eagle V
today and the four-man crew
reported "all systems were go"
in their effort to become the first
to float across the Pacific Ocean
in a balloon, a spokesman said.
Glenn Simoes, a spokes ma n
for the project in Miami. said
the balloon at 4: 15 a. m. PST was
about 2,100 miles a way Crom the
launc h s ite in Japan an d
speedintf> along at 94 mph at an
altitude of 16,000 feet.
After 45 h ours Into their
journey, Simoes said, "the crew
was in excellent s pirits and
condition.··
If the balloon continues on its
present traje_ctory. Simoes said.
it would be expected to land
near San Luis Obispo sometime
Friday m oTning . But that
p~oj ectio n is s ubjec t to
continuous change because the
balloon cannot be steered. ..
T he helium-rilled polyethylene
balloon, tall as a 26-s to r y
building. lifted ore from the
central Japan city of Nagashima
on Monday.
Jane Woodward , a
spokeswoman for the effort, said
the speed or the 400,0°00·
c ubi c -ro ot balloon
decreased to 40 knots Tuesday
afternoon as the result of the
Double Eagle V encountering a
band or ra~nshowers.
This had caused the balloon to
ice and "seek a lower altitude or
a pproximately 12.000 feet,·· she
said.
But the balloon s uccessfully
penetrated the showers and '"the
weather satellite shows clear
skies ahead." Mrs. Woodward
said.
The Double Eage V 1s piloted
by Ben Abruzzo. 51 , and Larry
Newman, both of Albuquerque,
who were aboard the Double
Eagle II that made the first
t r a n s-Atlantic c rossing b>
balloon in T978.
The other crew members are
Ron Clark, 41 , of Albuquerque,
and Rocky Aoki, 43, of Miami.
Aoki. a Japanese citizen, owns
the Benihana restaurant chain
and 1s financing the $250,000
venture.
If possible. the crew said it
would head to the East Coast of
the United States. cross the
A Uant-ic and make a final
landing near the European
border with the Soviet Unton.
g suspect batt~red Spouse?
CASE MAKES BIG .\IF:\\".°'
. Kat 1~ Beckett 1·1ct1 m1zerf>
Sick girl's
plight draws
Reaganfacm . ,
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa <AP) people they're meant to help,
-Like the respirator next to her and waste money at the same
h os pital bed , government time.
benefits made life possible ror Mark and Julie Beckett,
little Katie Beckett. Ka tie's folks, want her home
But the government rules that and her doctors say that's the
govern those benefits make life best place for her. Care for her
difficult for the 3-year-old·s paralyzing disease would cost
pare nts -so much so that their S2,000 a month at home Instead
plight was mentioned Tuesday of $12,000 a month al the
by President Reagan as a living hospital.
exampl e of bow f ede r al lfut if she goes home, tbe
regulations.can fail to satisfy the government won't pick up the
tab for treatment.
Nuke war horrors
told in teach-in
Beckett. 29, works al a lumber
yard: his 32-year-old . wife is a
schoolteacher .
··We're not poor enough to be
eligible, but we're not .rich
enough to handle it,'· Mrs .
Beckett said Tuesday. "No one
would be rich enough to handle
all the things she needs " CAMBRIDGE, Mass. <AP> -
College campuses around the
country wPre holding lectures.
music and even puppet theater
·today to dramatize the horror
and threat of nuclear war in
what spansors call the biggest
teach-in s ince Vietnam War
days.
•,
H arvard and the
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology scheduled talks on
the economics of the nuclear
arm s race b y Nobel
Prize-winning economist Paul
Samuelson, and a discussion or
th e s tatus of nu c l ea r
disarmament by Paul Warnke,
the form er chief S ALT 11
negotiator for the United States.
Wa rnke , who served in the
Carter administration, told a
Harvard audie nce that the
construction of new weapons
systems by the United States
and the Soviet Union did little lo
buy security for either nation
a nd o nl y in crease d
vu lnerability.
.. Militarily. these nPw
weapons add nothing to our
strength. but our leaders see
them necessary as sending the
·correct message' ... " Warnke
said.
Other scheduled speakers
included George Kisliakowsky,
for mer scie nce adviser to
President Eisenhower: Dr.
llele"n Caldicott, president of
physicia n s for Soc i al
Responsibility, and Gen. James
Gavin, a former a mbassador to
France.
J udge makes case
of Shields' mom
NEW YORK (AP> -A judge
who decided to permit continued
pu}>Hcalion or nude photos or
Brooke Shields m ade a case
against the teen-age actress'
mother, saying s he is trying to
"have it both wa ys " by
exploiting h~r daughter and
protecting her at the same time.
Miss Shlelds went to court to
alop a photographer fro m•
marketing nude photos taken of
her when she was 10 years old
under an agreement with her
mot-her . Judge Edward
Greenfield threw out the suit
;Tuesday and said Teri Shields
"must be respoosible not onJy
for what ahe does for her child,
but to her child."
Greenfield satd photo1rapher
Garry Grou could market the
pbolol u 1001 as he does not
make them available to
pornocraphlc publlc1tlons.
Grqu 11id he w~ pleased wlth
tbe'decltl'i'l• I
Mi ss Shields. 16, claimed the
photos. one of which shows her
In heavy m akeup s tanding
naked in a bathtub. embarrasses
her now that s he is olde r and
well-known through her thr'ee
movies and her TV commercials
for blue jeans.
The photographs were made
for a Playboy Press publication
called "Sugar and Spice.·· Miss
Shields was paid $450 and Gross
got Sl,000 from Playboy Press.
Greenfield, o r the s tate
Supreme Court, New York's
second-highest court, said the
photographs might cause Miss
Shields "personal
e mbarrassme nt'' but not
"Irreparable harm."
·'This is etpeclally ao In view or the nature ot th4! films In
which s he bu appeared, which
are sugcestive lr not explicit tn
what they reveal," Greenneld
wrote.
(See laOOKE, Pa1e A2)
Reagan did not mention
' Katie's name, but cited her case
dur ing his nationally televised
news conference, a sking, '"By
w hat sen se do we h ave a
regu la lion in government that
pays $6,000 a month to keep
someone in the hospital that we
believe would be better off at
home but the family cannot
accord one-sixth of that a mount
·to keep them al home?"
The family said the figures
Reagan used are out or date and
the costs have doubled.
The president learned of the
case from Vice President
George Bush, who was in Iowa
last week and spoke to Rep.
Thomas Tauke. R·lowa.
<See KATIE, Page A2)
Shuttle due
live network
coverage
NEW YORK <AP ) -The
three major comm e rcial
television networks are planning
live coverage Thursday morning
of the launching of the space
s huttle Col umbia , their
representatives said.
Liftoff was scheduled for 4:30
a.m . PST.
J\BC will broadcast live from
Cape Canaveral Fla .• from 3
a.m . to 6:30 a.m., Including a
special "shuttle." edition or its
"Good Morning America" s how,
s aid spokesman Alan Raymond.
CBS will be on the air from 3
a.m. to 5 a .m .• said spokes·
woman Geraldine Sherpe
Newlon.
NBC plans a special four-hour
"Today" show from the la&&nch
slte. from 3 a .m . to 7 a .m ., said
1 pofte1man Howard
Va nderinulen.
The Public BroadcHUn1
Service Hid lt had no plana for
II ve _coveri1e.
... ..............
R1d1arrl Tr11l11 awf .Jne f:nyle nrrire•! 1101 ;, /11 ,../11rt•/<1 T111•,·,fn ,
Fuel leak fixed;
shuttle crew set
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP > Launch cont rol
technicians fixed a troublesome
leak in the space shuttle's huge
exte rnal fuel tank today and
Columbia was on course for a
Thursday dawn liftoff, officials
sai4,
.. It's slowed down to where it
belongs," NASA official Michael
Weeks said or the leak.
NASA was also. chec king a
malfunctioning system needed
f or s pa ce-t o -ground data
a nalysis, but Weeks -acting
deputy space -adm inistrator -
sa Id "there is no reason to
believe" the trouble would force
postponement or the launch.
The astronauts, still -a little
worried about the weather, were
"relaxed and ready to go,"
accordin g to s huttle test
m anager Donald "Deke"
Slayton.
Either a fuel tank or data
Ins trument problem could force
a scrub -the second In as many
weeks.
Th e fuel tank leak ,
particularly, had jeopardized
the second effort to launch the
shuttle on its delayed return to
space. The drop in fuel lank
pressure was more than three
time• the normal IMS or .2 pel,
but by manually openin1 and
· closing a vent valve, Weeks
said, technicians were able to
stablllze the pressure.
Launch crews were workln1
the data instrument problem
during an 11 -hour planned
"hold" that began at 8 a.m . PST
today.
The problem with the data
system was discovered Tu-.day
night and a replace~nt unit
WH quickly fiown to the Cape
from Uae Johfon Space Center
SOAR/SC l\'/T// E .. \GLr:.'i
Crt>w wearmq 1111.<> 111s1t1rr1c1
In Houston. It a lso failed, but
NASA spokesman Hugh Harris
said, "there's a better than even
chance we can fix it."
The device -called a Pulse
Code Modulator -acquires and
a nal yzes data on board
Columbia and trans m its the
data to mission officials . The
fuel tank holds m ost or the
propellant necessar y to drive
Columbia into orbit after its
Initial boost rrom solid ruel
rockets.
A drop in helium pressure
brought the tank leak to NASA ·s
attention. The tank is loaded
overnight before launch with
s upercold liquJd hrdrogen and .
liquid oxygen propellant.
A week ago today, Columbia
w11 31 seconds from Hrtorc when
a problem with the s hip's
hydraulics syatem forced a
postponement.
Last week's scrub bas already
cost N.t\SA an eatlmated Sl.5
mtllton to 12 mllllon. Actln1
comptroller Tom Newman HY•
Clet lllU'M't.I, P11e .U>
Therapist
testifies
at · trial
By GLENN SC01T
Ot -DMI\' ...... M8ft
A psychologis t who bas
treated -Telford ··Tim .. Moore,
the defenda nt in the November
1980 shooting death of roommate
Sta nley Esp1nda, testified
Tue s da y M oo r e i s not
homosexual but was a classic ~
example or a battered spouse.
Or. Stephen Morin or San
Francisco told a n Orange
Coun.ty Superior Court j ury that
he consuJted with Moore first in
May 1980 al the r equest of
Espinda. who was homosexuaJ
and wanted Moore to believe
that he was too .
Moore and Espinda, who
shared a house on Newport
Bcach·s exdusive Spyglass Hill,
were both psychologists. Morin
said he was known to Espinda
because of his encouragement
for homosexuals not to hide their
sexual orientation
Mor;in said he is rhunding
preside n t o f t h e g a y
psychologists association.
But after hearing Moore
describe his '"wonderful,
joyous·· feelings of love for his
girlfriend, Glory Lune of Laguna
Beach. Morin said he counseled
Moore to follow his heterosexual
reelings and end the relationship
with Espinda.
Moore also told stories of how
E s pinda had beaten a nd
sexually abused him over their
18-year relationship. but bow he
neverth eless respect ed his
companion, said Morin.
That loyalty to someone who
bruta li zes you <"In some
situations. it was clearly a case
or rape ... ) is the key to being
classified as a battered wife, or
in this case, a battered spouse,
Morin added.
··1 told him his problem was
not sexual orientation , .. said
Morin. "The problem was that
<See SPOUSE, Page AZ)
DRANGf COAST WIATHll
Extensive lo w c louds
and local fog tonight a.nd
.Thursday m o rnin g .
Otherwise fair and cooler.
Highs 66 to 72. Lows
tonight 50 to 55.
llSIDI TODAY
UC San Viego pro/tHor
sa11s the feather tmt 1aid '"
the Bible to ha~ contclfMd
the ark of th~ couenarlt r•all11
ezbted. Se# Pagt Al3.
llDll
\
l
Orange Cout DAILY fttl0T/Wedneld1y, November 11, 1881
~Ions .eye late ta;x;es
Delinq uent taxpayers might pay more
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Strufallne lo nu a loomtn1 1tate
def clt of UU milllon ,
Callfornla'1 le1l1latora were pu1hlnc today to boolt lat.,..t
ratea on late tax payments.
The Auembly met today,
deaplte the Veterau Day
holiday, ln a apeclal M11ion
called by Gov. Edmllftd Brown
Jr. to resolve the atate anidpt
eris la.
It was alao expected to vote on
From Page A1
SPOU.S E • • •
he was wtbelievably passive."
He said Moore bad "10
extremely controllln1 mother
who ~made decisioru about
I abg-olutely everythinl for hlm."
I The defendant never learned i • bow to be assertive in intimate
relationships, Morin aaid. i ' Moore's relationship with the I dominating Espinda was much
the same, 'he said.
"Stanley made the major
decisions -everything from
articles of clothing to where they
were going to stay to what his
profession would be," he aaid.
In such battered spouse cues,
Morin explained, the passive
memtM}rs sometimes .. flip out"
from the constant abuse a•d act
irratlonaJly. Morin said Moore
told him be was planning suicide
because or the pressures from
both Espinda and Ms. Lane, who
be was-hoping lo marry~
.. His image was to stick a gun
in his mouth and blow his brains
out in front of Stanley as the
ultimate gross-out. That's the
way he described it," said
Morin.
Morin said a reasonable
interpretation of the shooting is
that Moore first did thrust the
gun into his mouth but then
experienced. due to stress, what
Morin called a "brief reactive
psychosis" and blacked out.
According lo a tape recording
of Moore's panicky telephone
call to the Newport Beach Police
Department soon after lhe
s hooting, Moore s aid he hMI
been in the bathroom when he
heard a shot and the words "you
dummy." Moore climbed out the
bathroom window and ran to a
neighbor's house to call for help,
he told a dispatcher.
Morin said that irrational
recollection is consistent with a
.ps ychoti c r e a c tion that
prompted Moore to tum the 1un
on E s p i nda and then
unconsciously invent tbe other
story.
All Moore remembers durin1
the shooting , Morin said, is a
··dull whiteness," with no sense
of sound. smell or taste.
Mori n 's s y mpathetic
interpretation of Moore
immediately came under attack
from Deputy District Attorney
Bryan Brown during a brief
c ross-examination.
Obviously questioning Monn's
c r e d ibility, Brown led the
psychologist to admit he had
purposefully lert his notes on
Moo re in hi s car to avoid
deta iled cross-examination.
Giant N-sub
to launch
GROTON, Conn. <AP> -The
USS Ohio, the Clrst Trident Class
nuclear submarine, was ready
for commissioning today as
protesters threatened another
demonstration agains t the
nation's most expensive ship.
Vice President George Bush
was scheduled to deliver the
keynote addre ss at
com missioning ceremonies for
the Ohio, built at the Eledric
Boat Division of General
Dynamics Corp. at an estimated
cost of at least $1.2 billion.
Protesters plaMed a vigil and
demonstration alone narrow
Eastern Point Road. which runs
in front of EB's huee plant in
this southeasCern Co1mecticut
community.
Israel den o unced
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP>
-Forelgn Minister Prince Saud
denounced Israel, accusing the
Jewish state of violating Saudi
airspace ln "a new ag1ression
against the Arab world," at a
news conference Tuesday before
the Persian Gulf nations'
summit which opened here
Tuesday nil(hl.
a companion m•uuH to speed
th• ~ment by employen ot
lncome taxea •lU,h•ld from
employea' payt'tweka.
The S.Dlt• took today otf,
achedu.llni ita nnt mfftlnt for
Thursday. The two bills befoH the
A11embly woa identiul 1-4 voe.
Tueaday of the levHue and
Taxation CommlttAte •"4 wwt to
the Ways ud Ilea• Cemmitlee
tor acUon today.
N.Y .
• Ulca
PENN.
I
• ~
BA RRI Fort Orum. :-.; Y
wall he temporar~· detention
tamp for a ll 1lleS?a l al1t.>n:--
now S<'atterecl am<>n g Hi
C n i t ecl St a t es fa c il1t1es .
P reside nt R e a ~an
a nno unced Tuesd a~. The
isolated m1htar~ rcsen ·at1on
1s k n ow n fo r s uh -r.ero
t e mi>~r a t ures a nd s no"'
winters
Killing victim
said drugge d
·by su spect
LOS ANGELES IAP) -The
pathologis t who examined
Freeway Killer victim Daren
Kendrick testified today that
traces or "knockout drops" were
found in the 19-year·old Cypress
ma n's body after it was found In
Carson last year.
Dr. Eugene Cari>enter, who
conducted the autopsy. said
traces of chloral hydrate were
found ln Keodrttlt, who h9d been
stabbed and stranaled.
··This ls commonly known as a
Mickey Finn,'' Carpenter said of
the dNg. "It's usocialed with
Sha nghaiing sailors ln San
Francisco ." However ,
Carpenter said he couldn't say lf
the amount of the dru1 found in
Kendrick's bloodstream had a
sedative effect. Carpenter was
testifying in the trial of William
Bonin.
Bonin, 34, a twice-paroled sex
o ffender from Downey. is
charged in Los Angeles Cowtty
with 12 slaylngs that occurred
between August 1979 and June
1980. A total of 44 young men and
boys have been murdered and
dumped a long Southern
California highways since 1972
in what bas been taeged the
Freeway Killer case, although
investigators say \he deaths
may nol all be related.
Bonin also races seven murder
charges In Orange County.
Carpenter said that the victim
had been both 1tran1led and
stabbed. but that be had been
unable to tell which had actually
caused Kendrick's death. Pohce
who discovered the body found
an icepick stuck into Kendrick's
ear.
ln other testimony, Dr. Watter
E . Fis cher . a forensi c
pathologist, told the seven-man.
1fi ve·woman jury about his
autopsy on Stephen J . Wells, 18,
of Downey. Wells was found
J une 3. 1980 in Huntington
Beach.
Fischer testified that Wells
had died from strangula\ion and
that ligature marks indicated
his ankles and wrists had been
bound.
W e lls had al s o b een
sodomized, Fischer said.
James Michael Munro pleaded
guilty to second-degree murder
in the death of Wells . Jfe is
expected lo testify against Bonin
In a plea-bargan arrangement,
under which he was exempted
from the death penaltx.
The trial before Superior
Court Judge William A. Keene
will resume Thursday, after tbe
Veterans Day holiday.
CIH IMeel ildv ........ n........,.
AM..._ •1pe1Wenta M2"4U1
MAIN OflP1Ca ........... c-. ...... CA. ......... : .. 1-.c... ..... CA._
~ ""ar..:-~-··. ~. ____ ........ , ....... ......, ...
_... a .... _,, M ••If Id __. _ .. _II-~-·.
Between them, the two blll1 by
A1•emblym10 Rtchard
Robinson, D-Santa Ana. art
expecl*' to ralae an extra S388
million f« the 1tat• ln the rlnal 7~ mont.hl of the current fiscal
year.
·'There should not be an
Incentive not. to pay your taxes.
lt'a exactly what the Cedl are
doing wtder President Reaaan,"
Robinson aald in a Tue1day
hearing on his bill.
He added that some
individuals and bualnesaea today
deliberately pay thelr taxes late,
along with late penalties ot 8
percent to 12 percent, after
Jnveating the money in accounts
paying up to 20 percent.
"This is generating addlUonaJ
money without anyone coming
up with more money except
tpose who fall le pay their taxes
on time ," added
As s embl ywoman Maxine
Waters. .
Meanwhile, the Assembly
Ways and Means Committee and
Sena t e Finance Committee
approved two other complex and
nearly identical money-saving
welfare measures In a marathon
joint hearing.
Although both Robinson bills
are almos t e xact copies of
revenue-producing m easures
enacted al the federal leve• by
President Reagan, party lines
are reversed in the convoluted
partisan battles in the California
Legislature.
Consequently, the Democrats
supported the bills and the
Republicans opposed them.
Th e vot es followed a
Department of Finance repdPt
Tuesday which said the skimpy
reser ve fund had been wiped out
and that without quick action.
the state could face a $359
million deficit.
.. The ship is sinking, folks,"
said Revenue and Tax ation
Co mmittee Chairman Wadie
' Deddeh. 0 -Chula Vista.
Analyst s s aid Robinson's
(\B Gx wo uld bri n g in an
additional $241 million this riscal
year and $70 million in 1982·83
by requiring employers to turn
over income tax and disability
insurance funds more frequently
after collecting the money from
employees.
Currently, large firms pay the.
state monthly, and small firms
pay quarterly, according to
committee consultant Dave
Doerr.
A B6x would bring the state
into line with fe<}eral procedures
by requiring employers to pay
up to eight times per month.
depe nding on the amount of
withholding they collect.
Robinson's AB8x would raise
interest penalties on late t·ax
payments from current rates of
6 pe rcent or 12 percent to a rate
equal to the prime rate charged
by ballks each September. Tbe
pena lty rate in 1982 would be 20
percent.
From Page A1
SH UTTLE • •
the extra costs are mainly for
extra fuel, overtime ~nd travel
expenses and charges from
contractors for repairing last
week"s hydraulics problem.
Be.cause of early morning fog
that shrouded Kennedy Space
Center . astronauts Joe Engle
and Ri chard Truly waited an
e xtra hour before rehearsing
e mergency landings . They
skipped a planned sunrise visit
to launch pad 39A to attend a
weather briefing.
Air Fo r ce meteorolog ists
predicted a storm front would be
out of the area by tonight and
that weathe r would be no
co ns traint t o launch . The
astronauts had been confident
there would be n'o more delays.
·'Columbia is ready. and Joe
and I are ready, and we're
really going to do it this time,"
Truly said on arrival here
Tuesday.
Bills contain
vil e m essages
DELAND, Fla. tAP) -Some
Volusia County taxpayers found
personal -and often vile -
me ss a g e s with the
compute r -printed tax bills
malled last week, courtesy or
the county inmates who stuffed
the envelopes.
F i nance department
t e lephones began ringin1
Incessantly as irat.e taxpayers
called about messages rUllinl
from four-letter words to
humorous remlnden, otrlce
worker Jane McEachem said.
··Put your tax check in the
mail or you'll join me here· in
jail.'' Is a cleaned-up example ol
one Inmate's wit, said Barney
Kane of the finance department.
2 leap lo d e ath
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>
Two people have Jumped to thelr
deaths from the Golden Gate
Brld1e. brlngln1 the known
bridge suicide total · to 719, the
California Hi1bway Pat1'ol
reporll
,.,, .........
From Page A1
BROO KE •••
Tb• tlrl played a e•U•
proatltute ln "Pretty 8aby" W
a te.n-a1er who dlacoven ... •
a dt1ert leland ln • • llH
La,oon." tier la teat fU• 11
"Endlet1 Love," which hat tl9 do
with a youna mu'• eblua•H ' with a characur play.cl ~Y ...
Shieldl.
The judge Hid Mrs. SMe*.
47, "la Uvin1 throu1h her dllN''
and "decided what Jobe .......
would takt, and what ,.. .. •
would appear In." He 111• ..
trte. to "en1nder a1 1 •• ,. .. •
the young 1ctre11 "wlllc-lit
sexually provocative •••
excitjng, while attempU-c t.
preserve her innocenc•.''
CTrttruield said Mrt, SltteJdl a. tqlin& to be "maternellr
protective but exploitative MU..
same time. . .ahe cannot have tt
both ways."
The judge sayed .his detiliee
for 14 days to 1lve Mist Sftieldl
time to appeal.
Mrs. Shields signed a releue
which Gross contended pve
him unlimited r11ht1 to
commercial use of his p!ctur•.
The suit. which originally IOUt9'•
SI million In punitive •••..-
as well as a ban Oft further
public ations. was filed to
prevent Gross' plan to market
blown-up posters or the phot.ol.
Greenfield said the pictures
were .. not pornographic shot.I or
·nudie pix'," and said "lllfl'
have no erotic appeal except lo
possibly perverse minds."
TOO MUCH CHAMPAGNE? Ida l ht• e lephant 1s shown a t
Copenhagen Zoo with newborn µan k hah~ horn Tut•sda~ Thl'
infant's color 1s allrihutahl<.> to pr e mature h1rlh. an·ordin;.:
to zoo spokesman.
ln his lengthy statement, Ille
said : "We are prese1tted with aA
im age of a sweet. unspot1td,
normal adoles~nt in her printe
lire, while in public hoer
appearances in pholognptw and
motion pictures is base• olt
tantalizing allure Hd velle.t
tinge of eroticism." From Page A1
KATIE PLIGHT ... Miss Shields and her met.her
sat solemnly· as the jud&e .
continued:
Medicaid pays the little 'girl's
m e di c al bills under the
Supplemental Security Income
plan. said Jayne Hart. an aide to
Tauke. If Katie goes home, the
SSI money would be cul off
because she would be hving with
a family that has income and
assets. Miss Harl said.
··one thing Mark and l were
taught when we were growing
up is to be s ure you have
medical insurance to cover
yourself. always be ready to
take care of anything you can.··
Mrs. Beckett said ... But no one
can be prepa red for this type of
catastrophic illness.··
Mrs . Bec kett s aid they
esp ecially worry about what
would happen if Katie did come
home and then had to go back to
the hospital. Medicaid would not
cover the first 30 days of care.
Mrs. Beckett said.
She s aid the family"s
insurance ran out in the early
days of Katie's illness.
The girl contracted viral
encephalitis four months after
birth and her ability to breathe
and swallow were affected. She
1s about 80 percent recovered
fr om the paralysis, but has
brain damage and a weakened
respiratory system. While she
can be taken home for short
periods, Katie has spent every
night since September 1978 at
the Cedar Rapids hospital.
She would need a respirator at
h o m e a nd e qu i pment t o
a dm ini ster h e r s pec ial .
h1gh·calor1c food through her
stom ach and to suction fluids
from her body.
T h e co upl e said th e
De pa rtment of Health and
Human Services rejected their
plea for an exemption from the
Medicaid rules and that's when
t h ey co nta c t e d their
congressman.
Mrs. Beckett said she and her
hus band were "dverwhelmed. to
say the least. when they said the
president was going to mention
il in his news confe rence.
.. Mrs. Shields is obviously 'a ·
concerned mother living for her
child, but she is also livln1
through her child. In puahille
forward Brooke's career she hn
bee n ea~er. aggressive and guilty of mistakes in jud1nieat
-one of which has resulted in
this lawsuit."
He calle d Gross .. not a
p o rn og r a pher but a
photographer of extraordinary
tale nt .. whose work for the
Play boy book was aiftled at
s h o wing y oung girls '
..childishness and their sultry
sensual appeal."
M 1ss Shields had no comll'tdl
as she was whisked out ot the
courtroom through a back doot.
J et la nds safely ,
BRASILIA, Brazil <AP> -A
Varig Boetnc 707 jetliner wtUt •
people aboard landed aaftl1
after its nose wheel failed tb
descend, officials reported. They
said there were no injuries in the
landing late Tuesday night.
Winter Upholstery Sale!
Stock Items or Special Order
REDUCED ... t or thi.s ~ventr
,_
Such manufacturers as: WOOOMARK-
ST ANTON COOPEH Included. .
ALL LEATHER IN STOCK 25°/o OFFI ,, f;~
'.
View Our New ...
GI FT & ACCESSORY DEPT.
Also
Custom Floral Arrangements
Made to Order
QUALITY• DESIGN• VALUE
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·I
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FRUIT FLY INVADER 1>11:-.t·rq•r .. ., .11 t!w l'aprtol 111
Sat•ramento were ... urp1·1M·d Tm• ... cl,1> 111 '<.'<.' a IH.'1°"11\ an .r
:\leditt•r-ram•:rn I n111 fl> v11:-t11nw <.1 '\1t111~ t h,..· .!m t•rnor'
1·ec:ept10n an.•.i Tht· 1nrll\·rilual rt1llhl1rl 111 1·lt•n111\ h 1m:-.t·li
hut said ht• w;is hired IH .a l1w.ll PR 11rm 111 •1a11rl ntll 11·.i!ki..
puh hl'lt.rn ~ .1 h11m11r1111' < '.tl1.111·n1.1 \h-·I: 1.' ( · .. n:..httu;.. ·
'Dead' Inotorist
alive hut sore
IMPERJAL BEACH IAPJ
Isidro Gonzalez lost control of
his car and fell out as it rolled
down an embankment. stoppmg
right on top of him.
When two paramedics got
there. Gonzalez appeared dead.
His head stuck out from under
the car on one side and his feet
on the other.
"l Celt for a pulse. but there
was none," said paramedic Bob
Sidebottom. .. I c hecked his
breathing . and h e wasn 't
·breathing.··
A, group of m en including
Jolice rolled the car off Gonzalez
litut "there was still no pulse and
no breathing, no vital signs.··
Sidebottom said.
/~
Although his heart started
beating s lightly after heavy
massage, "his eyes were dilated
with no reaction -a sign of
death." Sidebottom said.
·No broken bones wer e
detected by X·rays at South Bay
General Hospital.
Then Gonzales. 25. regained
consciousness. Two days later
on Monday, he walked out of the
hospital a lmost s pryly -but
said he felt ··sore ...
S ide bo ttom . a veteran
paramedic. said it ·s the first
time he ever saw "anyone
survive a car on top of them -
let a lone come out of. it without
any broken bones."
·Playboy
plans TV
venture
LOS ANGELES (AP>
Playboy Enterprises, lnc. plans
to launch a new televlalon
venture which ll bopea will
orraet loeaes rrom the end ol ita
London 1ambllng operations.
company founder Hu&h M.
Ketner told shareholders at the
annual meeUnc.
"We wanted to, quite literally,
turn the ma1ailrie Into a pay
television phenomenont" Hefner
told about 200 stockholders
Tuesday at the Playboy Club. Ke
did not elaborate on the project
except t.o say ll would begln in
January and Involve what he
called a "Playboy channel:"
Herner conceded that 1982
profits will be below last year's
levels, but said a renewed
emphasis on publishing,
licensing and what he termed
"other appropriate moves"
would produce "s igniricant"
earolngs this ~ear.
Playboy President Derek J .
D aniels released earnin gs
figures for Playboy 's first fiscal
1982 quarter which ended Sept.
30. Net income was SS.5 m'tllion
or 56 cents a share on revenues
of S92.8 million, he s aid, down
from S6.8 mUlion or 69 cents a
s hare on revenues of $97.S
million in the comparable 1981
quarter.
Lower earnings from the
company's British gambling
operations accounted for the
decline in profits. Daniels said.
Playboy, which lost two of its
London casino li censes recently
after charges of improprieties.
last week announced an
agreement in principle to sell its
British gambling operations for
S31.4. million to Trident
Television Ltd. of Great Britain.
The London gaming
operations have provided a
substantial share of Playboy's
overall earnings In recent years
and both Hefner a nd Daniels
discussed the proposed sale at
length. contending the company
had decided to dispose of the
Britis h casinos and betting
shops rather than appeal the
license revocations. London
police have cbareed that two of
Playboy's casinos illegally
extended credit to gamblers
there.
Dense fog dite
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Whal do you like about the Dally Pilot~ Whal don't you like?
Call the number below and your mnsa1e will bt recorded,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
, ~ .
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calla, please.
Tell ua what's on your mlnd.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, No11ember 11 , 1981
Retired engineer and physicist Robert Conger won fourth place honors in
competitioo for his bird sculpture. ··cormorant .··
Cd.M .resident honored
Wins national award for arc welding sculpture
We lded sculpture can oe
something other than old bicycle
wheels attached to ga('bage cans
or mazes of wires and other odd
metal parts affixed in abstract
design, says 61-year-old Robert
Conger.
Conger, a reUred engineer and
physicis t, bas received fourth
place honors in a national arc
welding competition for his bird
sculpture, "Cormorant. ..
Conger passes over the S250
check that went along with the
award from the J a m es F .
Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation
in Cleveland, Ohio. The money.
he said, doesn't mean that much
"I'm happy to get the award,
though." the Corona del Mar
resident . and Orange Coa st
College art and welding st\ldent
confides.
"It demonstrates the utility of
welding in creating life-like
sculpture ...
Although he spent more than
200 hours fashioning his
aluminum cormorant. depicting
the bird ready for fli ght and
measuring 48 inches across the
wing span, be says he figures
aluminum welding techniques
are easier than wax or bronze
Motorcycles
to utilize
bypass lanes
Signs at certain freeway
ramps in Orange County will be
c hanged later this month to
allow motorcycle riders to use
bypass lanes for ramp meters.
The riders currently must
wait in line at ramp stoplights
b e fore entering various
fr eeways . A Caltran s
spokesman said those riders will
be permltled to bypass meters
as do buses and carpools at
ramps where bypass signs say
"motorcycles OK ...
Tbe decision to in clude
motorcycles was made after
stud ying a year -lon g pilot
project on ramps leading to the
Long Beach and Ventura
freeways, the spokesman said.
"An average single occupant
motorcycle is about 30 percent
m ore e ffi cie nt than even
an averaRe three ·p erson
carpool," said Caltrans Director
Adriana Gianturco.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certified 01molosi1t. AGS
JADE ANO SYMBOLISM
in ChlMU cuUure
The Chinese carve an almost
infinite number of symbols and
scenes into jade. It has become
a natlonaJ art from. A phoenix
represents the maturity or
women. Newlyweds receive a
piece or jade with a man astride
a unicorn, symbolizing tbe
assurance that the marriage
wlll be blessed with a child.
'Men. give their fiancees jade
buttermes as symbols of tender
love. Because jade gives off a
resonant sound when struck,
the Chinese have made gonas1 a nd even entire m usica
instruments· from It, sizing
various pieces t.o emit certain
sounds. Volumes could be
w ritten about t h e spiritual,
practical and superatiUous uses
to which jade la put. It is sa1d
that even the poorest of Chinese
reel that, at sometime In life,
they must own a piece or Jade.
They believe that jade hu a
tranq\lllllinl and bappy errect
upon each peraoo wbo Polteun
lt. Fln1erin1 the cool I'""
alone 11 an exercise lo brintinl
1eTen&ty t.o lhe mlftd and the
castings. "I've done both, .. he
says.
Cormorant was created from
eighth-inch sheets of aluminum
bent into tubes and cones and
then welded and ground a nd
polished.
The cormorant bird itself. he
says, was an interesting study.
It can be found where pelicans
congregate and is known for
swimming under water faster
than many fish.
Althoug h sculpture 1s far
removed from Conger's original
profession , navy ordinance. he
reca lls he's always been
interested in art.
He turned to physics a nd
e n gineering in college, he
admits, because they promised
a better living.
He received his doctorate in
physics fro m Northwestern
University· in 1952 and was
employed as a civilian by the
U .$. Navy and later by a private
defense studies firm.
He retired in 1976 and
immediately enrolled at Orange
Coast College after arriving in
Corona del Mar from Arlington.
Va.
Supervisors view
FAA JWise study
The Orange County Board of
S up erv i so r s ha s both
commended and criticized the
Federal Aviation Administration
fo r the way noise limiting jet
takeoff procedures were studied
at John Wayne Airport
In action Tuesday, the .board
s upported a re so lution
s ubmitted by Supervisor
Thomas Riley expressing
appreciation for the two-mooth
testing program design ed to
d etermine at what a ltitude
pllots should be permitted to
institute powe r cutbacks that
reduce noise output.
But the r esolution also
expresses displeasure that the
FAA refused to permit tests of
cutbacks at an altitude or 500
feet, a pre-t979 standard that
county officials say they would
like reinstated.
Current regulations require
that aircraft be brought to an
altitude or 1,000 feet before any
power reductions are made.
The lowest altitude s tudied by
the FAA during the test period
was 700 feet.
Results of the test ing program
will be disclosed at a conference
in Seattle that begins Monday .
In the resolution. supervisors
urged t he FAA to permit
cutbacks at 700 feet because of
the noise-limiting e ffects. But
they said they consider the test
program incomplete until the ·
SOO·foot standard is evaluated:--
. The board also took action on
Lhe following issues during th~
30-mmule meeting.
COMMITTEES : Approved
recommeqdations submille<l by
lh• county Adminis trative Offic~
to re_gulate the county's 134
committees. advisory boards
and councils. All panels will now
be s ubject to annual review to
determine if they should remain
in operation ..
ABALONE : Authorized
spending '4,ooo to plant abalone
in waters along the Orange
County coast.
TAXI FAR~: Approved rare
increases ranging from 16 lo 20
percent for Yellow Cab taxi
operations at J o hn Way ne
Airport As part of the action.
the board also a pproved a
··share a ride" fare structure
that permits reduced fares for
passengers in cabs carrying
more than one person.
Truants captured
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
crackdown on truancy is netting
an average of 26 pupils a day.
ofCicials report. Robert Figone,
he ad o f t h e anti -truan cy
pr ogram , told the Board of
Education that about 500 pupils
were collared as truants in the
firs t 19 days or the program.
\
0
OMEGA
,
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Classic styling and Quartz accuracy
for the man on the go.
No matter what time mnt' hi1 lravel1 lead t.o, Omega Q\iart.& leta tfim
chan,e It w1Lhout loeing a eec:ond, thank.I t.o Omega's unique ttme•1ett1ng '
sy111.t'm. His gold-Oiled Seamuter Quaru timepiece provide• precision
11ccurncy ond w11ler-rHiat.ant 11Urety Ont> clonic 111 all one need•
eraoUona. It could b9 ealltd lht:~!!!!!!!!!!ill t nat~onal lt*?'Quillaer of China.
• •
8 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, November 11, 1981
'
.
'Wholesale leve·l inflation • rises
f. WASHINGTON <AP) -
Inflation at the wboleHle level ~ bumped upward at a moderate
6.8 percent annual rate tn
' October, with auto prlcea
speedln1 ahead but food and 1 ener1y prie'ea fallln1. the
' aovemment t\aa ... ported.
I \ October'• o.e percent lncreue ~ in the Producer Price Index for
finilbed goodl was t.be bluest
since April'• o.8 percent. But It
was still far short of the big
monthly increases common in
the middle ol lul year and In n the first three months of 1981,
the government said Tuesday.
" Economists saw the new
Teport as more good new• on
Inflation In 1eneral. Private
analyJt Donald Ral1Jc11k
1ummed It up with the
comment, "the numbers are all
1ood except for the autol."
Analy1U ate now confidently
predlctln& Inflation at the
wholesale level wlll be well
below 10 percent for 1981 a1 a
whole, down aubltantlally from
last year'• 11.8 percent.
In fact, Ratajcaak, who keeps
clos~ watch on the PPI aa
director of Georala State
Unlveralty'1 Economic
Foreca1Un1 Project, ui'tl
wholesale lnllation for the year
probably will be in the 7.&
percent ranee, down more than
one·thltd from lut year.
He said 1982 also "should be a
fairly decent inflatlon year,"
with overall prke increaMI no
worse than this year.
Jack Carlson, chief economltt
tor the . N aUonal Jtealtora
Aaaoclatlon, called tbe report
"further evidence that the
underlyln1 lnfl1llon rate 11
1ub1lc:Un1."
"Thi• 11 1ood ntw• ror the
badly depreued real eatato
Industry," he uld, not1n1 that
lesser price hH•reu11 ''are
havina a benerlclal etrec' on
Interest ratH" whlrh h1tv e
crippled hou•lng oonslrur.tlon
and salei.
Mich1tl K. Evan1, president
or Evans Economics In
W uhlnaton, called the new
r•port "pretty encoura1ln1,"
addlna that "the real question"
la whether prices at the
con1umer lev I c&m be brou1ht
down aa far very 1oon.
Prlco lncre1111 ahown In the
J>Pl are a iood Indicator of how
food , en r11Y and other
(.IOm m•uUly price. wlll move
ljttr Ill lh4it rotull level, as
rellerted In the 11overnment's
Conaurnor Prlcf' fnd~x. But the
Cflf ulMo lnrludoa 8 broader
ranse of Item•. Including
ho111lnM . ho ult h·cure und other
OOlhi.
Labor Department ortlclals
said lf October's wholesale
Inflation lncrease were repeated
each month ror 12 atraleht
months, the total rise would be
6.8 percent. They compute that
annual rat~ l)y compounding a
monthly figure that ia more
precise tban the rounded-off 0.6
percent ncure that ls published.
Wholesale prices had risen
only 0.2 percent, 0.3 percent and
0.2 percent In July, August and
September. And the October rise
would have been In that range,
too, If not ror a 4.2 percent
increase In new auto prices.
Even the auto increase looked
worse than il actually was
because September cer prices
had betn heJd down by special
deals desl1ned to sell off
dealers' inventories ~ the cJose ot the 1981 model year,
Ratajczak sold.
Prices for finished lood
products dropped 0.2 percent in
October, with analysts credlUn1
bountiful crop harvests ror the
good Inflation news that has
continued atl year in that area.
Finished energy. goods prices
Cell 0.4 percent, includinl a
fourth consecutive monthly
decline for home healing oil.
However. gasoline priceJ rose
0.4 percent after declining for
five stralght months.
Ch urch school d efies sta te
Collision seen between "gates of hell, Christ's ·children"
fl'Alltft'flt:LO, Iowa <AP> The principal of a
1•h11rch run 11chool declared "there is a battle about
to U•k•~ J>luce unleu the enemy chrckens out" and
roopanod his school despite a court order that it
mu11t 11tay closed.
School officials had said initially they would
send the 43 students to other private schools while
the legal battle was fought before the Iowa
Supreme Court. But they changed their minds and
decided to open.
Tho school, started this fall by the Suburban
llcl&ht.8 Ouptist Church, was ordered closed last
week unlll school officials furnished enrollment,
curriculum and starr information required by Iowa
law. The information 1s needed to determine
whethe r the students are gelling an adequate
education, the school district said.
But the school was reo1>~med Monday. and
school officials said they would go to jail if
necessary to keep it open.
Jefferson County Attorney Ed Kelly said he
planned no 1mmed1ate action against the school's
oCCiclals.
"The Lord opened our school." said the Rev.
0 0 Van Dyne. minister of the church. "fl wasn't
right to let men close 1l It's better to obey God
than man."
School officials have maintained that giving
the information to the state would violate
separation of church and s tate
"If they !state officials) take us to Jail. the
next morning there will be another pastor openmg
the school," Van Dyne said. "If they take him to
Jail, the next mornrng there will be another pastor.
and before they 're finished, they'll ·have more
pastors in jail then they'll know what to do with."
With about 135 supporters on hand, the school
opened briefl> and 43 students were in attendance
.~ ...........
<Lester Roloff, a Texas radio evangelist, waves Bible during rally to encourage members of Suburban
Heights Baptist Church to continue defiance of court in1unction ordenng church school to close.
"Tbe Bible s ays that gates of hell shall not
prevail against the children of God," said
Principal Ed Parker. "Today, there's going to be a
head-on collision between the gates of hell and the
children of Jesus Christ.
"We're not playing games anymore," Parker
said.
Jefferson County District Court Judge James
Rielly issued an 1njunct1on last week closing the
school until school officials suppl y enrollment
information required by lo~a law
Campaign spending ruling boost for R epublica n fu nd-raiser
WASHlNGTON <AP ) -In a
victory for Republican
fund-raisers. the U.S. Supreme
Court has said national political
parties can boost their
campaign s pending throug h
cooperative arr angements with
state party groups.
The unanimous ruling made
Tuesday, means state party
organizations, which frequently
are unable to raise as much
money as they are legally
entitled to spend, can "assign"
their spending authority to the
national organizations. ·
The case began in May 1980
when t.be Democratic Senatorial
Campaign Com m it t ee
complained that one of the
Republican Party's national
committees -the National
Republican Senatorial
Commjttee -was unlawfully
serving as •·agent" for some
Republican state committees by
spending on behalf of various
Republi c an se natorial
candidates.
The disputed arrangements
had increased the Republican
national senate comm ittee's
overall spending authority by
more than Sl million in 1978
alone. and by an even higher,
although unspecified, figure for
the 34 ~nate races in 1980.
The Democrats, who had no
similar system. argued that only
the state committees could
make the expenditures.
The Supreme Court, upholding
the Federal Election
Commission's rejection of the
com plaint filed wilh it, said the
Federal Election Campaign Act
of 1971 contained no bar lo such
agreements
The decision overturned a 1980
ruling of the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the District of
Columbia.
In other action Tuesda) ·
The justices heard New
York City law~er Martin
Guggenheim argue for a more
stringent s tandard for the
evidence a state must produce to
permanently take children from
their parents.
The court voted 5-3 to
reaffirm the right of Armed
Forces members to control who
gets the proceeds o.r their
military li fe insurance policies
even whl'n s tates try to
dictate a different res ult
Ju!.t1C·e B yron White
granted t·on\ 1eted Lou1s1ana '
killer T1moth~ George Baldwin
his fourth sta.> of execution. The
electr0<·ut1on had been set for
Saturda~
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642-5678
Quantities and assortments are limited, so hurry in! II Sears I HUNTINGTON BEACH
£ ACH OF THESE ITEMS HtADILY AVAILABLE FOR SALE AS ADVERTISED
SURPLUS STORE
We sell fin t quality and discontinued
merchandise from Sears Retail and
Catalog Distnl>ution.
"Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which
the items were fonnerly ofrered by Catalo~ or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country. ·
-LAWN CAR E VALUE -
SAVE $45.00 ON OUR BEST
CRAFTSMAN®
GAS-POWERED
EDGER-TRIMMER
WAS $194.99
NOW $}4999
CUT 23%!
(Reduced from '81 Fall Catalog)
Features 4 cycle. 127 cc. engine
that develops 3.0 reserve power.
SEARS
P OLYESTER P ANTS
THAT FIT
WINNER II
R UNNING SHOES
SUEDE UPPERS
were 15.00
NOW
4.99
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GIRLS' FASHION VALUE-
SAVE 39% AND 57% ON
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'
STOHHOURS -.f'rl.ttA_. .. l'M .. II A_.4 l'M ,._ 11 A*t PM
The curtain rises
and the show begins.
Come. Join us f Of a rare
personal appearance by a n
a rtist revered throughout
the world ... Theo Tu61asse.
Provocative. Emotional.
Religious. He works In a
variety of mediums ... oils.
gouaches, etchtngs with
carborundum and aqua-
ttnt. lithographs. All will
be displayed In this
•ana&.T•ll.L8 275 So La Clt'nfla Blvd ( 1 bloc-k so 11rw1Tah1re1
12131 l&f.122•
special exhibition. And to
commemorate his visit.
Tubiasse has created a
unique poster available
for yoµr acquisition.
Theo Tobta.sse. Now
offered proudly.'
and exclusively. by the
Upstairs Gallery.
MeetToblu•e
BEVER.LT KILi.St
Prlday. Nov 13th. 7 to 9 p.m.
LONG BEACH:
Saturd11y, Nnv. l4th. 2 to 4 p.m.
1.0110.auca
311&0 C~tr)' A~
1113142'"'1010
...
SACRAMENTO <AP> -State
revenue• are runnln1 a
stanertns $741 mllllon behind
bud1et •tlma*, pushln& atate
1ovemment even deeper into
red ink, California's top flacal
officer Hid. Flnance Director
Mary Ann Gravel told a joint
hearln1 of the atate Senate
Flnao ce Committee a n d
Auembly Ways and Means
Committee Tuesday that the
California economy haa
"deteriorated slgnlflcantly"
since the state's 1981-82 budget
was enacted in June, and that
1982 may be even worse.
Ms.. Graves said the economic
slump, which bu cut sharply
into both income and sales tax
revenues,. will completely wipe
out the state's· slim reserve for
economic contingencies and
could create a $359 million
deficit in the state's $25 million
budget unless action is taken
quickly.
She said California can
scrape through the 1981-82 fiscal
year by enacting Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. 's proposal to put a
freeze on $350 million in local
school and state public works
construction funds and by
freezing another $20 million in
miscellaneous funds. But she
predicted that the national
recession "will be deeper and
longer than previously
anticipate·d," requiring stllJ
more budget cuts next year.
Ms. Graves added that her
estimates or the state's cash
shortage are on top or the 2
percent cutback already ordered
by the governor, and on top or
the proposed $125 million
unsecured tax roll refunds to
business which Brown
reach'Cled.
''The economic situation hu
deteriorated si1niflcantly slnce
lhe May revenue estimates that
the 1911·82 budaet ts baaed on, '1
she told the lawm•kers, who
were convened this week by
Brown in an emergency
session to deal with the bud1et
crisis.
"Developments over the put
several weeks have led to a
major downward adju1tment in
tbe economic outlook.
Exceptionally low auto saJes,
the severe slump ln housing
Brown urges
d e fe n se,
dis armame nt
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Jn a
Veterans Day proclamation,
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. said
the United States should keep its
defense strong while pursuing
disarmament.
''The greatest hoaor we ·can
pay those who have served
America 's defense is ·to
rededicate ourselves. to the
cause of peace and to exercise
the political skill and the
political will to decelerate the
arms race and bring manklnd
back from the brink of nuclear
holocaust," Brown said.
"We must keep our own
defenses slrqng as we explore
a new world order where peace
is insured through fewer arms,
not more de st ru ctive
warheads."
The proclamation was issued
for Veterans Day on Wednesday.
Good conduct
rule ousted
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The state Supreme · Court, in a 5-2 decision, has ruled that offenders
committed to the California Youth Authority are
not eligible for early release because or good
conduct.
The bieb court, with Chief Justice ROM Bird
and Justice Frank C. Newman dissenting in
Monday's ruling, drew a distinction between
confinement to CY A for treatment and
rehabilitation and the need to provide "cOiiCJuct
credits" for prison inmates. ·
Such credits allow persons sentenced to the
Department of Corrections to have lhelr term
reduced by up to one-third.
The case involved Roy Frank Austin,
convicted in Los Angeles Superior Court in 1979 or
burglllry following a conviction on a charge of
receiving stolen property.
The defendant bad .argued that an adult
offender committed to the Youth Authority must
be entitled to the same conduct credits a similar
offender is entitled lo.ff be serves time in prison.
"The primary purposes of conduct credits for
prison inmates are to encouraee c6nformity to
prison regulations," said Justice Frank K.
Richardson, who wrote the majority opinion, "to
·provide lncentlves to refrain from criminal,
particularly assaultive, conduct and to encourage
participation in rehabilitative activities.
"In contrast to the rigid rules governing
application of conduct credits for those committed
to state prison. youthful orrenders who are
sentenced to YA are . . . under a different set of
guidelines." Richardson wr-ote the behavior of Youth
Authority wards, rather than being viewed as a
mere aid to maintaining order in the facility, "Is
considered as being relevant to the YA
rehabilitative and corrective goals."
activity and spreading layoffs in
many ~uatries 1u11eat that the
recession wUl be deeper and
longer than previously
anticipated."
In addition to estimated losses
from the recession of $320
million ln sales tax revenues,
$260 million in pertODal Income
tax revenues and S167 milllon ln
corporate and other state taxe1,
the state also faces the prospect
of higher-than-budgeted costs lo
several major state pro1rams,
Ms . Graves told the lawmakers.
'·Deficiencies are expected in
the Medl·Cal progratn, AFDC
Aid to Families with Dependent
. C hildren welfat'e aranta,
Forestry, Youth ·A\lthority ,·
Correctlone, plua· other
miscellaneous programa," she
said ln a written report. . ..........
r
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -~
new offlbore oU fleld lau been
discovered ln the wntern part ol
tbe Santa Barbara Channel,
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. aaid. •
Oil has nowed at fut rates
durln1 several te1ll on the field,
c alled Point Ar1uello .
Soil-borlnt teats will betin aoon,
in preparation for tbe deslan and
en1lneerln1 of a production
platform, Chevron said.
The tract was acquired
through a federal leue aale oo
June 1979 for $36,569,421, and
Chevron began drillln1 in
November 1980.
Chevron, lbe U.S. petroleum
subsidiary of Standard Oil Co. of
California, operatea the lease
and bolds a 40 percent interest.
The other largest ~partner is
Phillips Petroleum Co., also
with 40 percent.
She added a wan)ina that the
figures she prdented to I aw makers Tuesday were
calculated ln late October and
"reports since that time Indicate
a still-worsening situation,
whic.h may well lead to further
significant downward revisions"
ln revenue estimates before the
end or the year.
VETERANS' DAY REMEMBERED Foot soldiers of the 7th
Infantry Di vision at Fort Ord march in preparation ror
today's observance of Armistice Day. know~ as Veterans·
Day since 1954. The observance began on the anniversary of
the armistice of World War I Nov. 11. 1918.
The group has drilled two
exploratory wells on nearby
tracts, which also pl'oduced oil.
Further tests are needed to
determine whether the
ac c umulations there are
significant.
In May, the group bid nearly
$724 million for nine nearby
tracts.
Looking ahead to next year,
Ms. Graves said the state's
budget condition could get even
worse, particularly if two tax
cut initiatives on the June ballot
are approved by voters. An
initiative to make current
cost-of-li ving adjustments ln
s tate income tax brackets
permanent would cut state
income by $200 million in the
1982-83 b4<fget, and an initiative
to abolish the state inheritance
and gift taxes would reduce
revenue$ another $125' million,
she said.
Baby gets whatever baby wants
CORONA CAP> -What does a stolen, hungry
7'1'J-foot-long South African boa constrictor eat?
Whatever Baby wants, her owners say, advising
the thieves she hasn't eaten in a month and gets
nasty when her stomach growls.
In this case, she probably would like a rabbit.
Or maybe a few rats. .
The hungry snake belongs to Carl and Karin
Gallardo, but he said Baby was stolen from their
Corona borne last Thursday nigjlt while they were
gone. 1
"She gets upset when she hasn't eaten," Mrs.
Gallardo said. "She struck at me on ce through the
cage."
New Classics in Pure Wool,
Just s199.
I
• An exce11ent value! Here, the slim
coat with an asymmetric.al closing
contrast·color trim, optional c;owl
bib. In ginger with black trim for
sizes 4 to 14.
•And it's just one from a collection
of pure wool coats, ~II at 1199.
• Not all sires and colors available
in every style
• In Collection Sportcoats-where
we are all the things you are! •
The tan, black and red reptile usually eai.a
rabbit or three large rats every two weeka, but
because local pet stores have been out of boa foqd,
it hasn't eaten in a month, Gallardo said.
The snake, eight inches in diameter, lt not
poisonous, but it kills by wrapping itself around its
prey and squeezing.
When the snake was stolen, a color television
set worth $600 and a homemade set of barbells
were also lifted, Gallardo said.
The usually ,docile boa was inside its glass·
cage when it was snake-napped. The Gallardos
used to let her roam around the house sometimes
-after pulling their three dogs and one cat safely
outside.
J.
Potassium
·foods sought
DEA& PAT DUNN: I'm Ukl•I • dlaretlc to help coatrol my blood pre11ure,
Hd my doctor told me to eat food• hllb In
' potaaalam, perUculerly fruit• aucb u
baaaaH, OUDIH and dried aprlcota.
aeceaUy •friend told me l abould ue 1arllc
Hit becauae It'• high In potanhun. la thlt
true?
H.C., Newport Bead1 '
It's true that garlic does contain a
relatively large amount or potaislum. but
using garlic salt may not be a good idea for
you because of the sodium it contains. Moat
peo~le with high blood pressure are advised
to limit their sodium intake, so check with
your doctor about. this.
A better choice may be garlic powder.
However, even though garlic powder is high
in potassium, the amount you eat is so small
that It's not going to add much potassium to.
your diet. A teaspoon of garUc powder -a
tot for one day -contains only 31 milllgram&r
of potassium.
Freezing beets
DEAR PAT DUNN: We have a bumper
crop of beets ln our garden. Can I freeze
them? H so, what's the best method? P.M., lrvlne
Yes, beets can be frozen. Small and
tender beets should be washed. peeled and
left whole or diced. Blanch whole be.els for
five minutes; diced beets for three minutes;
chill in cold water, drain, pack and freeze.
Mature beets should be cooked whole until
tender; chilled in cold water; then peeled.
sliced or diced.
You also can freeze beet tops. They are
more nutritious than the root. Wash the beet
tops thoroughly and remove thick main
stems. Blanch in boiling water two or three
minutes until tender. Agitate the basket
during blanching. Cool thoroughly in ice
waler or cold running waler for at least three
minutes. Drain thoroughly. Beet greens may
be chopped befor e packing in freezer
containers.
Patent steps told
DEAR READERS: The U.S. Department
of Commerce's Patent and Trademark
Office advises aspiring inventors lo lake a
close look al what it lakes lo patent a new
product or process. Professional advice
should be sought at the earliest stages.
Lawyers and other practitioners who are
registered with the Patent and Trademark
Office are the only persons who are legally
able to represent an inventor and prosecute a
patent.
There are severa l steps anyone with an
invention !lhould take to be sure the price of
applying for a patent and the effort involved
is worth it. First, make sure your invention is
practical. No one makes a profit just by
patenting an invention. It shot.lld provide an
improvement people are willing to pay for.
Keep careful records, since later it could
become necessary to prove when the idea
was fi rst conceived. Do this by making a
written description or sketch and asking one
or more friends to witness and sign and date
this record. Make a careful search through
patents already issued. This costs less than
trying lo get a patent. Most inventors hire a
patent practitioner to do this for them. But a
personal search can be made at the Search
Room of the Patent and Trademark Office,
Crystal Plaza , 2021 Jeffers on Davis
Highway, Arlington, Va. 20231. Study the
patents found in the search. Look most
.carefully at the ones that closely resemble
your inventiop. Remember, any new patent
must cover features that make the invention
diCferent from prior patents.
After you've taken these steps, you are
then ready to prepare and prosecute the
patent application. This is a formal document
describing the invention. Although every
inventor has the right to prepare and
prosecute his or her own patent application, a
professional can help a great deal. The
application will be reviewed by a Patent and
Trademark Office examiner who will first
read it lo make sure the Invention baa been
properly described. lf earlier inventions
show features claimed by your invention,
your claims will be rejected. For more ..
information, order "Patents and Inventions,"
a step-by·step booklet with loads of advice on
bow lo apply for and get a patent. Send Sl. 75
to the Consumer Information Center. Dept.
182J. Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
~~~~
SP•CIAiS
•
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To LaVonne Aerobic•
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Wont the cardlova!l!C:ular work out
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the end o( the day wUh
a stimulating hour of
Aerobics Dance. Call today
for details dOIN NOW!
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Betulftn Ell,. & Godfeld Nat to Medley'• Ratauront
gorham Fine China
and Full Lead Crystal
at 200/o Savings
Now i1 tht Hmt to havt tht china and
cry1t11/ you havt 11/w11y1 wan ttd. Gorham
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NEW!!
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Save 20% on
16 Pc. Sets
VICTORS
SOUTH COAST PLAZA. 546-2700
Pilot advertising
is good business
for Sherman Clay.
"Our ad In your recent tabloid
section pulled more business
than any single ad we have ever
run." Marty C. Flinn,
Manager, Sherman Clay,
South Coast Plaza.
Number one t o Phoenix, and getting better every day. Now
you can fly us to Phoenix for as low as S36, one-way There's no lower fare 1n the air. Arid nobody gets you there as often or
as fast. .
More nonstops than anyone. Fly Republic to Phoenix
from 3 Los Angeles area airports. Choose from 3 nonstops
out of Burbank, 2 nol'l$tops 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
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I
"Say Santa"
~
Holiday
Special
16.45
• two 8x10s
• three 5x7s
• twelve wallats .
• No appointment necessary. • Age hm11 12 years.
• 95e deposit required. • Add $1 for 2 or 3 children
• Select from a variety of poses and backgrounds
·Copies and enlargements available, prices on request
Plxy gives you a reason to smile.
Thursd•y thru S•turday
Nov. 12 thru 14th
10 a .m.-1 p.m. & 2 p .m.-5 p.m.
JC Penney £l FASHION ISl.AND ~ NEWPORT CENTER
' i
i"::::=====================================;-J
Sale.
Have half
a handbag
onus.
Now rhrough
NcNember 14rh,
"'Ne' re reducing by 50% rhe prices
on a splendid selecrion of
our best merdlondlse. 5o you con
hove half o handbag. half a v.oller.
half a travel bog on us.
But hurr,c Ar savings like rhese.
what's here today may
be gone tomor:row.
l• ' 7 40 • m. An 9 40 e.m l• 7 OOem Al 7 11 elll 12 IS pm 2•17 p.m
I Upm. I Jlpm
lv 7 00 • m.
I 40pm.
Ar. I 59e.m.
)·40p,m
(eH 11/IMO
S2Spm 721pm.
NoMop 0...,. CO!!f!!y to "'-'Ill
l• 7 20 • m. Ar. I II e.m.
I 00 1.m. t .St • m. (•ff. 12/01 .. 1)
It •S.m.
(eff 11/IMI)
5 lOpm
I lOpm
7 OOpm
10 16pm.
11·4Q•m 11'5h m_
SSS pm 6 Olp m
lv. 7•20 e.m Ar 7:JJ • m.
I ISpm I ISp.m
(eff 11119111)
J40pm ;4lpm.
ltoM\Of ..._.. .. °'!!II! C!!l!!!Y
lv. 7 OS• m Ar 7: 10 • m. 11·os. m 11'10&.m. (tff. 11/IMI)
11:55. m. S·ISp.m. t JO pm
t JS pm.
(f'ft.11/IM ll
ll:OJp m
Nlp..111 t•p.111 t . .Opm
Schtdule5 ind f.,rs subjtct to ~<Without nolt«'
i
f s
J
~
j
l . I
I l
.TO QUIT Hoy.-ard
B. Johnson, 48. who
took over the
roadside
rest au 1•an t . mote I
chain that became
one or the e•rly rranchise succeu
stories, wlll quit Jan.
l as board chairman.
president.
SELECTED FAMILY
Clothing &
Shoes
50% off
The AU-READY
Marked Down Prices
Sell-out Prices
OTHER SPECIALS
20-500/o Off ••et· Prle•
WICKER WARE .
·50% off*
~ Baskets • Place ma ts
•Wall Decor• Dec. Pieces •a..,_p,.19
SELECT
l 4kt Gold Filled
Chains, Earrings
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50o/o off*
•Reg. Prle•
Or1nge Co11t OAILY PILOT/Wedn11day, November 11, 1981 ~~;~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~?m~~~~~l=~h; ~~~8~~~~~~:.:.!~:~ I
ll cataJOl\linc material saved over The maralns of the Warren her mlaslon or flndln1 out •II 1he ber and 1he tttmed very lhankrul."
the yeara by Lee Harvey Oswald'• Commission'• report on KeMedy'1 could about the a11111lnatlon1 and u n c rat In 1 the box ea and
mother, whose deathbed with was death are filled with her handwritten that there were placea which could catalosulni their contents could take
that the document• about the comments such as, "None ot thla help h~r get the monev she needed several monlhl, Parham aaid. ac'euHd uaualn ol President John sounds likl Lee" and "Lee never Crom the sale or her son's letters. F Kennedy be preaerved said th.la." He said the collection lnchJdea " or · · Sh l l i ted o id did She did tell some of her son's the 26 volumes ot the Warren Marauerlte Oswald'• obaeaaion klll KeeaMwedayy•. na s swa not corres~ndence to augment her Co mmlulon. The one volume that Is overnowed into 20 cardboard boxes Social urt•y ln"ome i i 1 M o Id ' ot memorabilia. Betore her death In January. she • '" . m u ng conta ns rs. swa s told 11tatr members at Harris Parham aald Mrs. Oswald abrupUy testimony be(ore the panel. Parham
"She felt she was a part of Hospital that she wanted her ceased communicating with him said he hopes it will turn up In
history," said Paul Parham, TCU's collection of aaaasslnation matertal several years ago when he called to another box.
librarian. "And maybe through this to be aiven toTCU for preservation. tell her a library patron bad offered Parham estimates there are
collection of materials she saved, she She lived 18 a recluse here after money to buy her collection. almost 500 books on the assassination
will be a party of history·" the Nov, 22, 1963 assaaalnation and "I called her about It and she huna amon1 the collection, ran1tng lrom
Crammed into the boxes stacked in her son's shooting death two days up on me," he said. "I didn't think I scholarly works to a book titled
a room on the third floor of the later at the hands of Jack Rub . But would hear from her aaain, but laat .. Jack Ruby's Girls."
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Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT /Wtdnetday, November 11, 1111
WASHINGTON CAP) -Sen. Wllllam
Prollmlre, D· Wla., h11 accuHd the Federal ·
Hl•hway Admlnlatratlon of havlnt "t"e worst
record ol clvlllan cost overruna in the federal
1overnment."
"Ml1mana1ement, delays and con!ualon" ln
the construction of the nation's lntentate hl&hway
1y1tem have caused a 287 percent, $100 bllllon coet
overrun "that dwarfs any other clvil project,"
Proxmire alle1ed Tuesday.
Administration spokesman Jim Abbee said the
aaency would have to study Proxmire's charges in
detail before lt would have any reaction
Proxmire sln&led out two projecta tor special ·
crltlclsm -the Weatway In New York City and the
Glenwood Canyon Project ln Colorado.
Proxmire said tbe tlnal coat of the
four·mile-loo1 Westway "wlll reach an incredible
Sl billion per mile, makin1 it
inch for i n c h the most
expensive hi1hway ever built
by man kind , any lime,
anywhere.
"Taxpayers wUl-pay tor 90
percent of West way, lncludinl
the actual construction of a
tunnel along and in the Hudson
River bed, creation of 234 acres
of development real estate, and
f'110XM1•• upgradinc of a parallel 6-8 lane
highway next to West way," Proxmire said.
New York Mayor Edward Koch defended
construction of the ur ban highway.
"I don't think he (Proxmire> is familiar with
all the facts." Koch said.
The mayor said the cost or the project is not
just for a highway, but also to "open up the
Westside waterfront."
Proxmire called the Glenwood Canyon, Colo.,
project "an outrageous throw-away."
"This 12.6-mile four-lane highway is currently
estimated to cost $300 million but more likely will
run lo over S600 million during the eight-year
construction period.''
·Proxmire said he was giving his ··so-called
"Golden Fleece" award for November to the
highway agency.
Proxmire issues a news release each month
citing supposed wasteful federal spending.
However, he himself has recently been accused by
congressional critics of failing to practice what he
preaches,
Tuesday's "award" is the first Proxmire has
issued since he used parli~mentary maneuvers in
October to block Senate action on legislation
setting a lower support level for dairy price
supports for three months.
The Agriculture Department said Proxmire's
one-man filibuster cost taxpayers Sl.85 million in
the higher dairy price supports it is having to pay.
'Walk over' shirts
flayed: Bad taste
DAYTON, Ohio <AP ) -A maker of T-sblrts
bearing the words, ''I'd Walk Over You To See The
Who," says he's not trying to offend anyone,
though some people think the slogan is in bad
taste.
"To me, it is about as low-down as a person
could get to make a lousy dollar," said Walter
Adams Sr. of Dayton. •
His son Walter, 22, was killed in a stampede
before a Cincinnati concert by the rock group The
Who. · T-shirt maker Steve Guccione of La Habra,
Calif., says there has been lime enough lo mourn
since the Dec. 3, 1979, deaths.
Ann Weldon, who represents the British rock
group in the United States, said the shirts are
"totally in bad taste."
Rats invading Peking
PEKING <AP> -Rats are eating toos of food
in China's capital, which bas three lo five times as
many of the rodents as 30 years ago, the Peking
Evening News says.
A story blamed the rise in the number of rats
on a decline in efforts to eradicate them. A check
of 1,000 families in Peking's western district
showed 65 percent had !lllffered damage from rats,
the paper said. ,,.
Announcing
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IEF -New York
ty Police Ca pt.
thur Deutsch, 49,
s been named
li ce c hief of
rmingham. Ala.
Baking firm fuming
over Moon tie rumors
BOSTON (AP> -The Rev. Sun similar letters to outleta whlcb buy
Myuna Moon's UntricaUon Church the cakes and pies, and is labellnt ill
has no coMecUon with Entenmann'• p a s t r y b o x e a t o t • 11 o t
Inc. and the baklna company hu Warner·Lambert ownership.
be1un a campai1n ln southern New Entenmann said the rumor
England to disclaim such rumon. 8 u r (aced t w 0 ye a r 8 a I 0 In
"The outbreak or this rumor has Westchester County. N.Y., near just occurred In the Boston area In h d d the last month or so." Chairman company ea quarters, an an
Robert Entenmann said. "We Celt we investigation turned up no Ind cation
had to act now... the Unlricatlon Church -or any al other group -was promoting the He said company driver-s esmen reports. A spokesman for the
have ·reported t\ar'8ssment by Unification Church in New York said
c'1stomers who refused to buy• and last week bis religious group has no church groups have told their congregations to boycott Entenmann cpnnectioh with Entenmann·s.
pastries. David Hager, church legaJ affairs
·'It's really not the American chiet. sald he bas heard d simHar
way," Robert Entenmann told a rumors about six or sev~n other
news conference. "It's a low blow." major companies and added he
Entenmann said the campaign Is to c o n s I d e r e d t h e r e p o r t s
tell people Entenmann's has been "anti-religious hysteria." / .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day, November 11. 1981
..... "* li'OOeU .. ""MIXIOMllO
coal• ........
IClmAUUa ........
teem II ""'' .... " ... , ......
YO.II • IOa• llUU-
CA_, ... , .............
OALMAftC)N ,*M..,..
MM.fttl
~AMAN
LEARN DOG GROOMING
wholly owned since 1978 by the Entenmann said the rumor wu red War~~m~~~~u~.~ ~a~~~t ~~~~~I ~~~~~~~~~~~~!~!!!!!!~~!!!~!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~ and his brother, William. continue as comedy show "Saturday Night Live" t;
chief executives of the company in 1980, which asserted the company
founded by their grand!ather. had been acqulred'by the UnilicaUon
The company has sent Jetters to Church.
For complete ad c!>PiJ and art ·services
advertisers all along the Orange Coast
congregations in southern New to go away," he added. "We laughed rely on m 0 re th an 1 • 5 o o churc h "It's sething that just doesn't want Da1·1y P1•1at
Englapd spelling out its ownership the first time we beard it, but it's nol
~a~n~d:._:a~sk~i~n!g~r~or~fafc~~p:la:y~.~l~l~i:s~s~en:d~i~n~g~~f~u~n~n~y~a:n~y~m:::::o:r:e·~"~~~~~~~~l=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::==:=::=:==:============================================:::::====~ he current edition of r
ollege
ta log
on sal e
e Sa ddl e ba c k
m munily College
alog is on sale in the
kstores al both the
th campus in Mission
ejo and the north
pus in Irvine.
he catalog contains
ings and descriptions
all the courses in
ddleback 's c ur -
c ulum , plu s de -
led descriptions of
s eciflc degree and
c tificate programs.
he cost is $2. Mail
ers are accepted if
companied by a check
f r $3 .50 within
C lifomia. Out-of-state
o ers are S4 and
o erseas orders are $10.
end the order and
c eek to Saddleback
liege Bookstore. 28000 arguerite Parkway,
ssion Viejo.
e fu n d s
ugh t
ASHINGTON CAP)
The Federal Trade
mission is seeking
funds for former
ude nls ol Lasalle
tension Univers ity,
c ntending that the
rrespondence school
led to make clear how
fund s would be
lculated if they
celed a course.
n a suit filed in U.S.
istrict Cou rt in
icago, the FTC said
asalle used a
root-end loaded ··
ethod of computing
s udents' obligations
·ch accelerated their
ition obligations.
from OC get
CLA posts
Four Orange Coast
sidents have been
med to coordinate
cal activities of the
C'LA Alumn i
sociation 's Advisory
nd Scholarship
ogram.
They are Paul Meyer.
d Robert and Hilary
rover , all o f
unlington Beach. and
irley Lawler of
lboa Island.
$25,000
in Prizes
Every lady guaranteed a
winner during Huntington
Center's Great New Mall
Celebration. Pnzes from
$1 50 to $150plus S1875
Re!Tlington Bronco Bronze
from the Heikka Foundry.
Check the computer for your prize today thru Sun .
... , Hiii' ..
' ' I\' 1111 ...
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Orange Co•t DAIL.Y PILOT/Wtdntld91, Novemblr 11, 1•1
T•E
'"•ltl'
Cl•Ctl
by BiLKeane
~~--...:=..._
..............
by Virgil P1rtch (VIP) ,
I
,, .. ,
"AM· means morning and FM means
afternoon." 111 t•k• It YoU forgot your key 1g1ln."
' '91'RMi\Dl'Kt: L
by Brad Anderson DEN~IS THE ME~t\CE Hank Ketchum
~
"Just a precaution."
GAR.t'lt:LO
OM , GARFIELD
ACAOSI 47 Jointly
1A ,..._ 49'1llf0Wln
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l ALWAYS
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SSCOND
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AN AMeRICAN
ClfrlE ROSE! ·
NANCY---YOU
TRACKED MUD
IN--GO STAND
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Fl:NK l' WINIKER8EAN
-FAMOUS CCMPOSERS-
Chapter Ten-Claude
Those who listen to the
music of Claude Barlow
rarely come away from
it without being cl}ansed
in some profound way ...
Barlow ·
V\t1 ~ Nf -.)A~ IN
1'11& '*1r~«.'4 UI<£ I 'fO\.V
'fl)\) 'Co'?
by Tom Batruk
nerve damage being the
most common symptom!
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Television viewers
will soon get a chance to
see former presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy ~-lllliii!---llllillllllillllliill ______ _.,.
Carter in embarrassing
moments b u t not
Pres ident Reagan 's
bloopers from his old
films.
A spoke11man for (he
Dick Clark Company,
which produ ced t he
upcoming NBC s pecial
"More TV's Censored
Blooper s," said t he
Wh it e House denied
approval for showing
flubbed outtakes from
two Ronald Reagan
films of the 1940s.
As .. a courtesy" to the
president, Clark sought
White House approval of
the scenes and
sub m itted t he m to
Reagan's TV adviser .
\ ODA \ ,.,.111$1 ............ ,,.._ ......
With polia!Mld brltt•
In for good dolly
orolhy~ ••
ADULT 1-40 Ol i -60.
YOUTll 1-20 Ol 1·30
REG. 1.09 & 1.19
Ma rk Goo d e . s a Id· .._ ______ _..._ _______ ,.
s p okesman Ge n e
Shefrin. The disapproval
wa s made without
comment.
The White House also
dis approved use of
Reagan gaffes in a n
t earlier blooper show.
I said Shefrin.
One scene is from a
Wor ld War lI training
film in whi c h
then-Captain Reagan is
seen briefing a U.S.
Ar my AJr Corps combat
crew. Suddenly a map
on a wall behind him
l rolls up, revealing a
pin-up poster and the
production crew. I The other is a n
outtake from the 1948 I film "Voice of the I Turtle." Reagan 'misses
lines, throws a mock
1 salute to actor Wayne
Morris and then breaks
up laughing.
Shefrin said that even
though Clark says he
legally has a right to use
the sce n e s the
production com p.._any
"bas no desire to do
anything the president
of the United St ates
would not like to have
done."
The show will feature
ne ws clips of former
President Gerald Ford
stumbling down t he
ste ps of Air Force One
and Jimmy Carter at
the 1976 Democratic
national conventio n
introducing the late Sen.
Hube rt Humphrey as
"Hub e rt Horatio
Hornblower."
Graduates
penalize d
PEKING (AP) -1
Chine se co llege
graduates who reject
t h eir official j o b
assignmellts will not be
offered another state job
for five years, the
official Chinese news
aeency Xinhua
reported. .
RIG. 2.59
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I alnva rer .. f. 149
YOUR
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The agency also said,
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All Or1nge Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, November 11, 1981
FAA takes noise test
results out of town
, Next wee!4 at a distance or
exactly 1,164 miles to the north,
the Federal Aviation
Ad m101stration Is going t o
evaluate some significant
information about John Wayne
Airport.
Meeting in Seattle. FAA
e~perts will be discussing the
manner in which commercial jets
Lake off from the facility. At the
center of the issue is the alti·
· tude at which pilots should be
permitted to Institute power
cutbacks that have the errect of
reducing jet noise.
The issue is ·not a new one
Prior to January 1979. the PAA
• permitted the noise-limiting
thrust reductions at an altitude or
500 feet. Citing safety concerns.
the FAA c hanged th e rule.
making 1,000 feet the minimum
power cutback altitude. And
noise exposure increased. In fact.
the hig h i mpact noise zone
doubled in size.
As part of it~ current effort to
reduce noise. Ot'ange County
government otflclals have been
seeking a return to the 500-foot
standard. The FAA responded to
those requests by ordering a
two-month test of various takeoff
profiles. but not. ironically. the
500-foot standard.
Now the information is in.
But the FAA isn't saying what
h as been learned. Something of a
lid of secrecy has been placed on
the data pending the Seattle
conference.
We feel that s uch withholding
Of information IS inappropriate.
P eople con cerned about John
Wayne Airport ahd the relatecl
issues of noise and s afet\' ha,·e
every right to know what the
FAA e\'aluation has shown.
Beyond that. we feel that the
FAA should conduct its meeting
right here in O,range County.
where the information. like the
noise. has an im oact.
Help for Viet vets
This Veterans Day brings
some good news for Vietnath vets
who for a time had reason to feel
they were being e:fcluded from
benefits lhat had been granted
Gls from previous eras. ·
. President Reagan has signed
the compre he nsive ''eterans
hea lth· and readjustment bill.
sponsored by California Sen .
Alan Cra n s ton . rank1n g
Democ rat o n the Senate
Veterans· Affairs Commitlee.
The bill specifically pro\'ldes
for Vietnam-era \'elerans 1n ·
se,·e ral ways.
It extends fo r three years
the time in whic h they can
request readjustment counseling
through· the s torefront centers
that to date ha\'e assisted &1 .000
\' 1e l vets.
It g rants new 1nteri m .
e lig1b1hty for VA health care tor
d1 s abilit1es that may ha\'e
resulted from Agent Orange or
other toxic subs tances.
lt extends G I bill eligibility
for on -job and voc ationa l
training.
-lt authorizes a new small
bu s iness loan Qro g ram for
Vietnam-era a n d s erious ly
cl is a bled veterans.
-It continues for three
\'ears the Veterans Readjustment :~ppoint men t Program under
which federa l a genc ies may
make s pec ial e xceptions to
appoint certain dis abled an<I
education a lly dis advantaged
Vietnam ,·eterans.
Given the fact that the
pres ident o rigina ll y opposed
several of the key elements in the
hill -including maintaining the
storefront counseling centers
its passage a nd ultimate signing
into law was a major
accomplishment for those who
feel the nat1on·s treatment of the
men and women who served in
Vietnam has been less than
admirahle
• • • and a fitting tribute
Me anwhile plans l'or con-
s tr u c l 1on o f the :"Jat 1onal
Vie tnam Veterans Me morial on
the Mall ne ar the Lin coln
~c mo ri a l in Was hingt on are
m o ,. 1 n g a h e a cl . w 1 l h
groundbrea king sc heduled for
Fe bruarv anrl dedication one ~ear from today.
The polis hed hlack g ranite
me morial. selected after a des ign
competition that attracted 1,400
entries. will be loc ated j n
Constitution Gardens. a two-acre
park or g reen lawns: trees and
walkwa\'s
On 'it will be inscribed the
• names of the 57 ,692 dead and
missing in the Vietnam War.
listed in chronnlog1cal order of
the losses between 1961and1975.
Public a wareness of the
memorial project was he1 ghtenecl
wh e n the wi d el ' hailed
ho m ecoming o f the hoslaJ!es
from I ran brought into focus the
less-tha n -dramatic wel come
•
g1 ven the Vietna m returnees.
By then. Congress alread~
had authorized the pr1,·ate.
nonprofit Vietnam Veteran:,
)lemon al Fund In<: . to proceed
with its plans. :"Jow that a desi,gn
h a s been a p·p r o ,. e cl . t he
organization has been able to
coll ect more than $2.5 m1ll1on of
the S7 million needed for the
project through donations from
corporations. unions. \'eterans
g roups and tho u sa nd s of
ind1 \'iduals.
T he million or more \'isitors
who are expected to view the
me morial each ,·ear will learn
from an inscri ption that it was
built "throu~h private donations
from the Ameril'an 1wople. ··
This might he ;111 appropriate
day for those who wi sh to support
the project to send contri hut1on~
t o the \' 1 et n a m \"el e r a n :.,
Memorial Funcl. P.O. Box 3i420.
Washington. D C 20013.
Opinions e)(pressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex·
pressed on tn1s page are thos.e 01 their authors and artists. Reader comment Is env1I·
ed. Addres.s. The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 1714)
641·4321 .
L.M. Boyd/ Bald heads
Balding men have been uplifted in
print over the years by the repeated
contention that a slick scalp is the
sign ol virility. But not all literary
observations on baldness are
complimentary. Samuel Johnson
wrote, "The cause of baldness ln
men is dryness of the brain and its
shrinking from the skull." Ovid
wrote, "Ugllness is a lield without
grass, a plant without leaves, or a
head without hair." And the Czechs
have "kept alive an ancleht proverb:
"A riood man grows gray, but a
rascal grows bald."
Q, Which of the Wild West outlaws
k11led the most men? A. Can only guess at that one, slr.
Mlght have been Henry Plummer.
While serving u a sherilf in southern
·Montana he led a gang of 2" men
blamed for the robberies or murders of 102 Montanana. Records don't
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
•
show the actual death count, nor how
man y Plummer personall y
dispatched. Vigilantes hanged him on
his own gallows In 1864.
Q. Why is a letter from the Pope
called a "bull"?
A. Relates to the round lead seal
called a bulla once used to close such
a letter.
Best-selling bathroom tissue in the
Republic of Ireland, as. you mitht
expect, is green.
A woman·teods to look longer into
your lace when talkinri with you than
a man does. The hidden-camera folk
found that out.
Q. Do whales sleep?
A. They do. About five houn 1
night.
. .
T......_P.Haley
Pubtlther
1 Tllomat Miia .......
Editor ·
•• ,._. KNlllldl
edltorlet Pege Edttor
_,.._,
Brandt CIA connection told ·~
WASHINGTON -Willy Brandt,
former Berlin mayor and West German
chancellor. was on the ClA payroll in
the 1950s , and may have sold
information to the KGB as well,
intelligence sources have revealed.
Brandl, whose East.West contacts
dated back to his days as a journalist in
World War II , providea. valuable
intelligence information to the CIA in
the postwar years. The spy agency also
regarded its payments lo Brandt as an
investment -helping him to further his
career in the Social Democratic Party.
But his CIA handlers never fully
trusted Brandt, because other agents
developed information that he bad close
ties to the Soviet secret Police, and may
even have been on their payroll.
BRANDT'S distinguished Political
career came to an abrupt halt in May
1974, when he resigned as chancellor
after one of bis closest aides WfS
revealed as a longtime East German
s py . As chancellor. Brandl had
continued to show secret documents to
the aide long after being warned that
the man might be a spy. It also turned
out that Brandt had been compromised
many years before by a Kremlin Mata
Harl. .
The disclosures about Brandt's
relations with the CIA come from four
separate U.S. intelllgence sources
interviewed by my associate Dale Van
Atta over a period of several months.
The sources all have had long careers
in the CIA and other intelligence agencies.
BRANDT WAS born 68 years ago next
month in the German port city of
Lubeck. While still in his teens, he
G
-Jl-Ci-1-11-11-11-1 -~
4
joined a Car -left political group and
battled the Nads during the tumultuous
years before Hille r was named
chancellor in 1933. Bra ndt fled to
Norway, where he became a journalist
and eventually a Norwegian citizen.
When the Germans invaded Norway in
the spring of l!MO, Brandt had to flee
once again, this time to Sweden.
It was in Stockholm, according to my
sources, that Brandt established lies
with both U.S. and Soviet intelligence.
American embassy files of that period
indicate that he was considered an
astute, reliable source.
'After tbe war, Brandt returned
!l to his devastated fatherland u boUI journalist and political activist. ·A
certified anti·Nazi. he was regarded ti~
the Americans as a Politician on the
rise. Among those encouraging t!le
CIA 's interest in Brandt was Eleat1Af
Dulles, the State Department's Germa9
expert and sister of CIA Director Allen
Dulles.
According to one former CIA age~ Brandt provide d ''sensation
information on East Germany a
Russia" during the height of the Co
War. At the time, Brandt was in Berlip-' a hotbed of East-West espionage. Times
were hard in the Postwar yean, and oaa
route to s urvival for well-placed
Germans was the sale or information to
the CIA. British intelligence -or the
KGB . <\
But a hitch developed in Brandl~
case, according to a former CIA age~
"We learned he was working for them;-1
he said, referring to the KGB.
DESPITE THE evidence that Brandt
was working both sides of the street. t~
CIA continued its payment! to him unffi
at least 1956. the year before he becam~
mayor of West Berlin. In 1969, ~~ became West German chancellor. •
sources could not say what Brand
relationship with the CIA was in lb'
years or his Political prominence. I
Huge hike lane expense questioned
The expenditure of some $400,000 for a
bicycle lane under the Yolo Cau.se'i{aY
n ea r Sacramento b y the Sta~e
Transportation Department while its
director, Adriana Gianturco, has been
pleading insufficient funds for highway
maintenance let alone new highway
projects. has sparked some reacUon.
The 3.4 mile path. which will be
flooded as much as two months out or
the year. links Sacramento with
suburban Davis, home of tbe University
or California Agricultural School as well
as a be droom community for
Sacramento workers. Davis it.self is
known as the bicycle city.
SPOKESMAN FOR the department
said the project was needed because
cyclists had become hazards on the
causeway which spans the OQOd plains
of the Sacramento River bypass
between the two cities. Peculiarly,
although they contended there was
great demand for the path by "many
cyclists" they could not provide the
tr affic count normally required to
justify roadway projects.
Lacking the traffic figures it is
impossible to determine the cost of the
path in terms of cycle users but the m o r e th a n $1 OJ) , O 0 0 per m ii e
construction cost, which shocked some
locals, turns out to be well within the
usual costs for such projects. The plain
fact is that bicycle trails are expensive
propositions.
Jn a rePort lo the Legislature dated
May 27. 1981, Gianturco listed 15
"non-motorized transPortation facility
projects" costing a total of nearly S2
llRl llTIRI
(, c:::. -., ,._
~
million. The mos t costly were a
two-tenths of a mile path on the Santa
Ana River Bridge at $100,000 : a
three-tenths of a mile path near
Larkspur at $100,000 and a 2.8 mile path
near Plumas at $378,000. The least
costly was an 8 mile lane from Saratoga
to Los Gatos al $131,000.
All of the projects were funded, at
least in pa rt, with federal fund s
allocated s p ecifica lly for
'·non-motbrized trans Porta lion.'·
ALSO LISTED were 18 projects
funded with gasoline sales tax moneys
earmarked for bicycle lanes. In some
cases local funds augmented the state
project. Many of these projects were
completed at considerably less cost
than those constructed under the
"non-motorized'' label. For example. a
21 mile bike lane system in the city C1I
Mer ced is rePorted to have cost onlj'
$54,900. Some, however, cost as much as
those under federal funding as in the
case of the 2.3 mile Los Angeles Riv~
bikeway built at a cost of $180,000.
The bike lane program got its sta_,.
several years back when Senator Jam~
Mills, himself a bike rider enthusl~1
pushed through legislation imposing a
gasoline tax specifically for bike lanes."'
The program gained supPort when t.H@
gasoline crunch made cycling appear ttl
be a· viable alternative mode of
transPortation. & u:
WHETHER T HI S form of 1 transportation has actually beetl
adopted by sufficient numbers to ju.stil9 ,
the huge expenditures for bike Ian~~
remains highly questionable despite~
high visibility of cyclists in colle.H!
communities such as Davis and Paili
Alto and despite Gianturco's claim thill
there are 13 million bicycles register~
in California as compared to 17 milli~~ motor vehicles. '>
Ironically, neither in England nof
Ireland, where the bicycle has been ·~
mode of transPortation as contrasted to
recreation for great numbers ever slnc~
its invention, there are no bike lane~
The cyclists take their chances \'i\ ,
traffic, even in crowded London an8 •
Dublin. -
Use of precise words challenges readers
I received an interesting letter the
other morning from an anonymous
reader who works in an advertising
agency. He (or she) circled 11 words In
a drama review I had written and
IYlllY 111111
passed the Ust around to a dozen of tbe'
agency's ''best, hl1her-educated,
top·aalaried copy writers,,'•
Nol one o( these persona knew the
exact meanings of all 11 wordl; only
one' of them defined 10 worda predtely;
the avera1e wu 8.5 words per reader.
Now let me give you the words:
"Ratrlsh, consummate, lackey,
dissonance, tempi, 1abbling, vacuous,
prl1. nucent, cavils and cburllth. •·
·With the exception of "nucent," I
ahould say that all of UMs• ,.ords should
be lo every cultivated person'•
vocabulary.
• y ANONYMOUS corrHpondent
seemed to feel that I wu writlnl too
"hl1h" for lhe avera1e reader; ud my
reaction, then, ls that the avera1e
I
reader should learn to increase both the
size and flexibility of his vocabulary ll
be wants to enjoy and understand the
language he was born lo. I never have.
and never will, "write down" merely to
satisfy the intellectual laziness of the
average reader.
A good writ~r practices economy and
accuracy. It ls my 1><>1iUon that every
word in Ws list is both economical and
says exactly what I meant. U you look
them up, you will find there are no
satisfactory synonyms for them -even
for "nascent," which means "be.inning
to develop" or "coming to birth.'
What other 1Ln1le word can describe
the mood and attitude of "raffish"'?
What else do y°' ~ll a "lackey"? Or a
''dissonance"? "Tempi" is merely the
plura1 ot "tempo." There is no excuse
for not knowing "1abblln1" or
"vac~." There is no other name for
a "prt1." or for a "churl'' And to
"cavil" means Just what I had in mind.
A WIUT!R who utes "procruUnate"
for "delay" l• beinl pretenUoul Md
dull. Where there is a abort, euy,
precise equivalent, lt should be \IMd •
Bu• our 11nsua1• has reftntmnY lild
subUetlee that the proft11kmal writ.er
must make hi• readen aware of -~
\
good painter would use
colors on his canvas. .
Moreover, an unfamtllar word i '
economical when It says what it woul
otherwise take three or f()\lr words
say. It is actually simpler to wri
"prig" than "an lrrltatin1I
self-sufficient or punctilious person,
which is the dictionary description.
have no patience with people who wa
.only the words they already know
which is as narrow-minded u refut
to eat any food you have not tu
before.
~ Some 20 pieces of
evidence /tom the Bible
P,-ot1e thB tent existtd.
!• ,ppects of the Bit»le to determine its oriein and
meaning, laid he ls not a fUlldamentallst and
gpean't ::re in eveni detail of the Bible.
He the exleteaee of the ark ltMlf la an J!"*•· sh*e no~ llu beea ~ tO Jt~........ ... , But he •a.kl M llu __.,. ...,_"" 4...-ee ltoa the llble that ,rvve U. tellt exWted. •.
' The praof, be arJffd, Mel la the dii:.1 bf the abe of Ute ... tbe desert I(
,Bolo••'• t•m~•~~*"" mHJ reat Biblical allltbon a,ree ln lffl*' desert,.._ el tM
tea\, it lriust MM bMB "91,,.. emll~
The tat stood Inside 0. tel9Ple '8ltl" ~
of two eheJ1.IM' lie aaldi nplabtiftl Uaat e..,,bl we• not C!hil~ ke an1e a wtM. carry '°"" ud
lJTOWS, U m.y ve oftea ......
'" .. These_,... sphlaxet," IN &aid ol \e~ '""::;
!;wltb tlle' ..a of a nm•. tbe body ol a lWa
\Ile Wiala et eaales." · • -
FriMlaM aakl the ttmr waa built •ldlltisne · "9Jfore &be nth eentw"y B.e., Mel amee ..... is
' t.e••Wd '9 have Uve41 ia U. tall ffDtury &,C., Ile
ha1 Mt fUlltttout MOll4a att-fta but~. ·'
· He Uhl· his flndinta •• ~ hhn la bis
r ... ..u le ftad out wbo Wnte tM ftnt Jive boot• .i the Bible, Wbk!b by U-~tlea. bave been ~Met
.'9 .. ~-\ 1111111 tcbelan •JI'• u.t Ute first five Molt•
art a mixtSe of lotar .._,arate aCCOWltl by I.our raut.bors. •
J'riedmaa llu e08cluded that two tales were W.~ltten by rival faetions of Prieata ln lirael hi the
W1or7tb cellturtes B.C. •
Tbe destruction of ~·s temple "1 the
abyloftiana, a hlltorica\ fact. la mentloaed iloa1 "f ltb tM ••tnaction ef U.e tent in Ute Old ~tament books DeateroDelft)' and Clrvnkln. ~ ill aeveral of the [Hlm1, 1"!1e4maa ·~· ~ 1'be flbok of amentatlona eonbhu a
eriptieft that ••ti"'9 the destrueUen of th
mple ma the end of the oblenance ot the
... bbath, another blstorieal event, alont wit.b the
~emite ot lite tent.
'-''The eompanion elementl here in 1'1s peaNCe
I¥.• aU rMt imtituUGDI ...... r.les la ~~em · ~~te cUdt9yet Hd ._,, _.ere ~~--~1111~man HU *ftt\ei bl ._ •bUell Arc , 81~~.. •.t i , A ~: •
-----~{~ }~~~~j
C 'on1naa11tl l~rror11ua1M!~
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s.t. '"'
Linda McCrossan __
consultant for Camp Interna-
tional, Inc. the natJon's number
one manufacturer of products
for the postmastectomy woman.
will be in our store through November by apPointment, to
demonstrate ·our new line of NaturaJwear postmastectomy prod-
ucts.
Neturalwear offers a variety of breastf orms that will make you look
and feel natural. Bras In a wide variety of stytes to suit your fashion
taste and com fort. Stunning swimsuits you'll be proud to wear.
DlstJnctively feminine sleepwear.
Come In and let Linda McCrossanshowyou how to face the future
with confidence -and ftalr -the Naturalflear way.
===l ~~·O'l'~t===
Hours:
. j
I '
I \
I
I' I
t\14 Or1nge Coatt DAILY PILOT/WtdnHday, November 11 , 1981
We are a group of leaseholders who are dis-
turbed and upset at our current relationship
with The lrvlne Company.
As our land leases come up for reap-
praisal or purchase, we are shocked to find
that you have escalated the prices of the land
far beyond any reasonable level.
We think you are being arbitrary and
unfair in your appraisals, callous in your deal-
ings with us, .an~totally Jnsensitive to the
severe hardships you are Imposing on the
famllles with homes on your land. These are
the very families who have helped you buitd
our communities into one of the most attrac-
tive residential areas in Southern California
In effect, you are forcing many of us
out of our homes and out of the community.
'Ne think you are failing to live up to
your responsibilities as our landlord.
We feel it is time that the public knows
the specifics of what you 're trying to do to us.
We want the public to know about the
Cameo Shores homeowner whose land rental
is being increased from $680 to $18,000 per·
year! An increase of 30 times the present rate.
We wonder how you will explain
increasing the price of a Linda Isle lot by over
$100,000 a month between February and
August of this year: A $700,000 increase in 6
months! From $1,116,700 to $1 ,836,700.
Outrageous.
We are curious as to how you will
justify increasing the rental of an interior
Bayshore lot from $407 to $10,296. The widow
who lives there can't afford your new land rent;
can 't afford to buy the land ($171,600, no
financing possible); can't find a buyer for her
home because of the outrageous price you
have established for the land.
'Paid Polltlcal Advert11ement
• . ne
• I
These are just a few of the hundreds of
horror stories being reported to our Committee.
You can understand why we are irate-
indeed.outraged, and why we are determined ·
to pursue every avenue available to us to
achieve a more equitable basis for our dealings
with you.
We understand and accept the fact
that land values have increased. But we think
that you are forgetting that we worked as
partners with the management of the "old"
Irvine Company to get schools, the zoning, the
parks, the community associations and all of
the other amenities that have Increased laoo
values, and made this area what it Is today.
Now we feel that the "new" owners of
The Irvine Company are taking advantage of
us. It seems to some of us that you are trying
to recover your total purchase price ~7-
million) of the ranch from the leaseholders who
~--------------------~ I I I Ms. Barbara Young, President I
I . Committee of 4000 I
3700 Newport Blvd. I Newport Beach. Gal if ornia 92663 I
I I
I I I I want to help. I I Here's my check for $200 I
I Name I
I Address I
I City State Zip I
I I ~--------------------~
NOTICE
Important meeting of Irvine leaseholders and landowners.
Corona Del Mar High School, Little T~tre,
Thursday, November 12, 1181, 7130 RM.
Get the full story on The Irvine Company and Its land
reappraisal and pricing program. Meet the officers and
directors of The Committee of 4000. Be sure to attend.
•
ff
(.ft .. ,~
tt
1• I • ··••l ., ,, ..
• ..
I 'J
tu• • .,... ,,
I I
, •I
J .. .
r.
( .u
,., 4
I
I I
represent just a fraction of the package which
you purchased.
We have copies of your recent letters
to leaseholders advising them of the upcoming
reappraisals and your system for "valuing" the
land.
'·
We want you to know that we are
incensed by the "closed escrow" method of
appraisal. We do not have a "free market" situ-'
atlon. You control the mar1<et. The prices you
estabnsh make the market. You give no consld-..
eration to the availability or cost of mortgage
funds; to "owner financing "; to lessees' contri-
bution to "on site" and "off site" improvements
-streets, sewers, etc. We find your appraisals
neither fair nor consistent.
Finally, we want you to know that we
believe there is a big difference between "Fair
Market Value" and "Fair Rental Value~ At the
time we entered into our leases, the property
could not be purchased. The "6°/o of fair
market value" in the lease agreement was only
a measure of fair rental value at that time and
none of us had any idea that our "benevolent"
landlord would ever change the policies and
use this clause as the basis for Increasing our
rentals 6CXX>0/o or more. Furthermore, we think
you had an obi igation to tell us about the
change in your attitude toward your lessees
and to the projection of anticipated values of
your land. You had the information. We did not.,
The Committee of 4<XXJ has been
organized to help all of your leaseholders get a
fair and equitable settlement of land rentals
and/or purchase. We have no desire to go to ~
litigation but we are prepared to do so. We
sincerely hope we can find a reasonable basis .
to resolve this matter and work together in
partnership to preserve this·area.
Le
Join .the
ers ·Unite!
of • m
•The Committee of 4000 le a non·proflt organization of the 4000 Irvine Leaseholders dedicated to fair and equitable dealings with The Irvine Company.
DlllJ Piiat
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
82-3
69
810
Aging is a lonely reality.
See Bob Green's column, Page 82
D
a
Vnusual operation en.ds her 9-year nightmare
Reporter's bout with painful colon diseas~ over after procedure
By JIU. LAW&ENCE ~ ..... ._.. .....
HARRISBURG, Pa. -At the
a1e of 27, when I should have .
been dreaming about marriage,
children and PuJ&izer prizes, I
wrote in my journal or a
1badowed, rragmented future. I
yearned for "time unlettered by
1tagging pain, discomfort,
embarrassment, concern. Time
without death I u rk in g so
obviously in view."
By then I had stopped skiing,
eamping and traveling. I no
longer felt rree to wander a\ong
l:!eacbes or city streets. And,
•lthoulb 1 didn't notice, my face ti~d swelled from years or heavy
qsedicalion. ·r bad become a master or
disguiBe, an expert at keeping
irecrets -Crom others and from
myself.
I kept a hectic schedule and
akirted tbe truth on employment
applications. Health? Excellent.
Why go into details that wouldn't
affect my job performance? l
bad almost convinced myself
there was nothing wrong wilh me.
What choice is there, realJy,
when you are chronically ill?
You can let worry and
depression eat at your spirit,
and lapse into the life of a
semi·invalid. Or you can jump
into the mainstream, counting
on luck and your own ferocious
will.
For as long as I could. I took
the second route. And when that
became physically impossible, I
made a leap of faith; I decided
to have a major and somewhat
controversiaJ operation.
The burden l shouldered for
nearly a decade was ulcerative
colitis-an inflammation of the
colon, or large intestine. Ccamps
doubled me over without
warning, and I lived In fear that
the inflammation would develop
into cancer.
The solution I chose was a
tradeoff: The colon, the pain and
a mountain of drugs for a
newfangled internal pouch made
out of my own small intestine.
The night before surgery, a
curtain sealing off my tiny
coYner or a four-bedded room, I
Uied U> be philosophical. . "I've got the best doctors an
' the country," I wrote. "They'll cal. They'll paste. They'll sew.
They will rearrange and
r~invent and redecorate. Then
they'U sew it all up and cross
their fingers."
I knew that no one had ever
died from this operation. And I
knew I could no longer live
where the future meant only
tomorrow.
The pouch. or contine nt
ileostomy, was developed in
Sweden by Dr. Nils Kock and
introduced in the United States
10 years ago. It is a difficult,
complex procedure that is stilJ
being modified as doctors gain
QlOre experience with it.
.. Few hospitals perform pouch
o]>eratioos on a large scale, if at
all. And many patients. advised
to consider surgery, are not told
that the choice is available. For
a year, I wu one of them.
Those anguished months were
the ultimat.e test of a reporter's
investigative skills. I c~nsulted
quacks and geniuses. I shopped
around for miracle cures and
second, third and fourth
opinions. I c ross·examined
people who had pouches.
When I chose for one myaelf,
some doctors praised 'my
wisdom. Others shook their
heads.
·'Too soon tor surgery," they
said, or "Too risky U> have that
kind."
An estimated one million
Americans s uffer from
ulcerative colitis. Another one
million are afflicted with ileitis
or Crohn's disease, a deeper
inflammation that affects ·the
small intestine as well.
Their symptoms include
bleeding, diarrhea, crippling
cramps and occasional
incontinence. But the pain,
incoove nience and
embarrass ment are
overshadowed by the systemic
effects of the diseases: fever,
weight loss , anemia,
dehydration, low blood pressure,
joint and eye inflammation, and
an increased cancer rate.
Doctors do not know what
causes inflammatory bowel
disease, although some ~uess il
atlll hadn't sunk in that 1 had a
disease drugs couldn't cure.
Asked what he could do, the
colle1e doctor nodded
noncommittally.
"Ob yes," he said. "Every
semester we have a few of you
that we keep an eye on."
So began a frantic senior year
of pill-popping -Lomotil,
Atropine, Donnatol, Llbrax,
Aiulfadlne. MeanwhJle, I edited
a feminist newspaper, was
elected president of my room
and board co-op, organized a
media conference, sang in a
choir and played in a
Renaissance concert. Sick?
Who, me?
But colitis cau1ht up with me
after graduation in New York
City, where I had my first tast.e
of "aggressive medical
management." Without
warning, on 70 milligrams of a
cortisone pill called Predrusone,
1 found myself unable U> eat,
s leep or keep my balance. I
broke vases. I fell In the middle
or Manhattan streets. I subsisted
on tuna salad and Ry-Krisps.
One day my arms and legs
"You're definitely a candidate.
Nine years is enough."
can be triggered by stress. Some
lucky patients experience
s pontaneous remissions. More
often, the disease must be fought
with endless doses of steroids
and other drugs that in
themselves can wreak long and
short-term havoc.
During six years on st.eroids,
my face ballooned ; my Umbs
trembled; I broke into feverish
sweats; I bad trouble sleeping,
and I frequently lost my sense of
balance. Had I continued, I
would have risked cataracts,
glaucoma, bone tbinnln1,
slipped vertebrae, ulcers 8Jld
non-functioning adrenal glands.
Illness and drugs !!ere outside
my ken when, in 1972, I arrhed
in Dublin as a 19-year-old
exchange student at Trinity
College. Within three months, a
doctor delivered the diagnosis:
ulcerative colitis.
Those first months were the
most frightening. Later, lhe
bleedin1 and everything else
became a routine part of my
life.
But I didn 't know then that I
would s pe nd most of my
twenties searching for health.
After three weeks in an English
hospital on a regimen of sulfa
drugs and cortisone enemas, the
colitis went into remission. I
took a few carefree trips to
Oxford and Paris, Galway and
County Mayo, and considered
myself cured.
But I was in trouble again by
the time I returned lo college in
Ann Arbor. A docU>r £here tried
out her allergy theories by
putting me on what one friend
labeled "the lukewarm water
diet." Actually, it also included
cream of wheat and non-dairy
creamer.
· But I got worse instead of
better, so I tried my fortunes at
the University HeaJth Service. It
started trembling
uncontrollably, and I went into
the hospital for another
three-week sojourn.
Later on, in West Virginia and
Pennsylvania, l stumbled onU>
doctors who believed in a
30-milllgram Prednlsone ceiling.
But I never got off it entirely.
For six years I rode the seesaw.
Up, down, every day, every
other day, back up again.
I guess I knew that it would
have U> sU>p. But I had never
confronted what I would do t.ben.
So it struck with the force of
an avalanche when, after eltbt
years of colitis, a resident at tbe
Hershey Medi cal Center
mentioned surgery.
He meant the standard
lleostomy. in which the large
intestine is removed and the
small intestine is brought U> the
surface or the lower abdomen,
where it empties inU> a bag -an
"appliance'' -attached U> the
skin. Just the thing tor a young
single woman.
I 'd rather kill myself, l
thought. Later I tempered my
view. f might do it, but I'd have
to remain forever unmarried
and celibate.
•·How could anyone ever have
that operation?" I asked.
"They come to me," the
doctor said gently. "They've had
enough, and they come to me."
"Never," I said.
But my reporter's instinct
soon overcame my denial
instinct. I called a nurse who
bad undergone a standard
ileostomy and now cared for
such patients. Yes, she said,
there ts life -and sex -aft.er
surgery.
Her reassuring manner took
the edge off my hyst.eria. But I
still could not accept the idea
that I -a young woman with a
devoted boyfriend and a
promising career -might have
to take such a drastic step.
That was in May 1980. I had
finagled one more Prednisone
step-up so I could enjoy my
summer vacation.'\ I knew this
was the last stand. I prayed that
my symptoms would not return
as I phased out the drug,
although they always did before.
Just in case .it failed again, l
visited a Long Island doctor who
quietly and profitably dispensed
under·the·table drugs. He bad
reportedly worked wonders for a
friend's mother, who had
asthma, and her aunt, a cancer
patient.
For me, the promised quick
relief with injections or an
unnamed serum made or
lncredients he could not, or
would not, specify. He wanted
about $100 in cash for two small
vlaJI': I dJdn't buy.
There wu one last unexplored
avenue, an experimentaJ druc
called Coherin , a natural
1ub1tance found in the poaterior
pituitary slandl.
For '1x monthl, 1 falt.h.fully
recorded exhUU'1tlnl upe and
dev aataUng downa. adly, the
101 did not attest to m y
1uata1ned Improvement. What tt
did do wu open my .,,. .. to the
Cacti ol my life.
lluch ol the tJme, I was ln
pain. While UM lot read Wee a
bolpltal cbut, the pa1• ol my
Journal were paactu1ted wtth •
dHpalr; tbe "lmpo11lble
~ream" al bealtb; lbe .. ......._
cl•eeat iato bell; .. U. -wlllftd
qaHtlOD, "Wiii ( ner l•l
better?"
.My readtn1 li1\ waa a
pathological Who's Who: Suaan
Sontaa on Illness as Metaphor;
Cornelius Ryan and Doris
Schwerin on battling cancer:
Andrew Potok on going blind,
and Norman Cousins on
laughing for heaJth.
Finally, fortunately, I found
"My Daughter, My Son," Inge
Tra'Chtenberg's book about her
c hildren 's s trug1le with
ulcerative colitis. That's where
I learned about the pouch.
1 filed the information tor
1uture reference. But I pulled it
out almost immediately, after a
particularly mortifying attack
precipitated the end of my faltb
in Coherin.
The doctor )>leaded with me U>
persevere.
"Your ego was shot," he said.
Then, musing on the decline of
other patients, he added, "If
the y really lose their
lifemanshlp, a way they go."
No question I had lost it,
wh'Btever it was, and had begun
considering a pouc:h in earnest.
Like the standard ileosU>my,
the Kock pouch invol ve s
r e moval of the colon and
rectum. But, because it is
continent, It requires only a
gau ze pad i nste ad of an
appliance.
The surgeon uses the last 14
inches of the small intestine to
create a reservoir and a nipple
valve lo keep it closed. The
reservoir or pouch Is emptied
two or three times a day by
inserting a plastic tube into a
s\oma, or hole, a few inches
below the waist. The operation
takes anywhere from three U>
seven hours.
"It's not something to··be
discussed easily. It's a pretty
tough piece of work," warned
Mike Trachtenberg.
Hi s daughter had the
operation after 12 years on
drugs and, I learned later, he
wanted U> encourage me. But he
also wanted me to make my own
decision.
So I made an appointment to
see Dr . Barry Salky, a
Manhattan surgeon. One of ha
three partners, Dr. ltwin
Gelernt, bad spent six months in
Sweden with Kock and bad
helped pioneer the pouch in
America. The team had done
nearly 300 procedures.
On the day of the appointment,
I tried U> counter my panic by
looking somewhat professional.
I wore a blazer and carried a
reporter's notepad. Still, I was
quivering as I stepped off the
bus and into Salky 's Park
A venue office.
I told him what I had a nd how
'Jong I'd had It.
"Does it affect your life at
all?"
.,.The floodgates burst open with
a torrent of Ii mi ta lions ,
humiliations and despondency.
Within minutes. we were
discussing surgical alternatives.
Salky spoke matter-of.factly
UWll pl I
Jill Lawrence. 27. works at her desk as a sta// writer /or the
Associated Press m Harrisburg. Pa lier damaged ,·olon 1s now
gone. along with related problems. ·
because only half of my colon
was diseased.
Frantically, I searcbed for a
consensus.
"You 're definit e l y a
candidate," Salky .said. "Nine
years is enough. The disease is
really manipulating you. That's
one of the indications for going
ahead."
"Surgeons a r e pretty
enthusiastic about surgery." .
s aid a promin e nt
gastroent.erologist at Hershey.
He added. "In a case like
yours . we would be less
anxious" to remove the entire
found myself more worried
about the a nesthesia than the
a c tual s urgery. What if I
emerged a vegetable? What if
the anesthetic didn't work and I
could feel them cut into me?
.J'he day before, I voiced my
fears U> the anesthesiologist.
"I'll tell you what," he said
with a straight race. "If you
start to feel something and you
don't think we've given you
e nough, just do this" -he
raised his hand slightly, like a
shy student seeking recognition
-"and we'll give you a little
more."
My visitors roared and I felt
more than a little silly.
"Then they'll sew it all up and
cross their fingers.''
I was relatively calm as I was
wheeled into the operating
theater. In fact, under the
influence of Valium, I thought I
was entering the set for a hybrid
situaUon comedy : MASH meets
Charlie's Angels . Flat on my
back, I was greeted by three
beautiful women wearing scrub
suits.
about the pouch, making sure to
mention an 8 percent failure
rate.
"There's no guarantee that it
works every lime," he said.
"And there's no way to predict
who 's going to have
complications."
Then he added:
·'When it is perfect , It's
terrific. Your life will be 100
percent normal. The only
limitation Is deep sea diving."
I felt in a quandary.
The operation would be long,
rough and expensive. The
recovery would Involve aleep
deprivation because the pouch,
growing from lemon to
grapefruit size, had to be
emptied accordln1 to a rigid
schedule. Tbe physicians were
at odd.a over the ufet,y an~
effectlvenesa. And my own
doctor• couldn't agree on
whether 1ur1ery_ wu called for,
colon.
And the Coherin doctor: ''I'm
in anguish over this."
He was not the only one.
Finally, I remembered that the
Hershey resident who had first
bro u ght up surgery now
practiced in Princeton, N.J . I
called him.
The operation is controversial,
be told me. It's permanent, it's a
big decision, and it would be a
lot easier U> recommend if the
whole colon were involved.
But he would hate to be
talking about back braces in five
years, he said, referring to the
long-range effect of Prednisone.
"I feel comfortable that there
ls no alternative," he said at
last.
1 wu at peace. Counting a
relative who was a doctor, the
vole wu H IA favor of 1ur1ery,
I schedUled my operation.
As the date approached, I
"I'm Tricia," said one, tossing
a mane of Farrah Fawcett curls.
"I'm Karen," said a second,
flas hing a million-dollar smile.
"I'm Judy," bubbled the
third. "Boy , it's cold In here.
Let's put some Ace bandages on
your legs ... "
I woke up with a lO·inch scar
bisecting my abdomen, and a
nickel-sized stoma that looks
like an overripe strawberry.
Months later. they remain
difficult to accept.
But if I eve r doubt my
decision, I have some vivid
reminders of how things used U>
be: a stack of blue S·by-7 file
cards documenting symptom
after symptom. day after day of
paln.
I still haven't fl1ured out who
won -me or ulcerative coUti.t.
All I know l•, it's gone.
Town tire~ of ·spare headache
ALLENSTOWN, N.H. (AP) -It's a
steel·bel&ed headache: town olficlala are tryiftl to
decide wbat to do with 400,000 uted Utet -more
than 80 useleu apar" for each man, woman IDd
child in town.
The tire9 were dumped In 1"I by Seolollcal
Ener1y Corp., a Newton, llaH., flrm tbat
propoeed to build a plant to lhnd UMd u.... and
tell them u r.a to an eleetrtc utillty.
Town offldall, 1war..S 1W tM ~-ti • jobl and. bel\1 ~tu........ ..... . buildlq parmlt. · 1u1~W1111AD • ,..., .,
Ecoloclcal l:Mra •utabed -IM ~
400,000 t1n. an a 15-acre lot. a
"The officers of the corporation can't be
found,·• .. ad Richard Therrien, the town'• lawyer.
Taxes haven't been paid on the land for two,..,.,
and it and the Uret wlll become town prvperty la a
1 .. r.
Alllu&own, population •.•. mar lane to ..,
about• emta ncb to have UM Uni IMMilld awar,
Hid Ntbur BeU.el, a Mleclmm. ftllt • gp JM
IOWD f11ee1a1100.-bW to clear lilDd ~--
..... ·-· ... •aid. ..,.... ..... bOIU& .. IMl &Mn .. ...
.................. lmaa& .............. ...
...., ......... eGlt ... 11& ilil ....... ...
al•oallt ........... "Mlil'Jlll ....... .....
..
. I
I
·•
I
'
•ANN LANDERS
•BOB GREENE
•HOROSCOPE
.. /
Battle relief sought
HONORING LIBRARY Edwin Wolf If.
li brarian o f the Li brary Cornp~n y (>(
Philadelphia which was started b~ Benjamin
Franklin in 1831. PoS~s nexl to a model or the
R i d gewa~· Li bran w h ich hous ed the
A~W...._...
com pany from 1878 Lo 1966. The Library
Company recently celebrated ats 250t h year
with a n exhibition of rare books a nd other
histQric treasures.
We ho\'e designing tdeos lhOt con change yo.x outlook without dro1n1ng y0ur budget
SUrl~hlterlng snooes and binds lhot lghlen or darken o room 1nsfontly. woven woodS 1n cciors
to match ooy deCOI and WOOd binds lo complement you most elegant tvmllu1e
And we hove lhem on al Jale Poces lhOt WI.II give you Ideas
CHAPMt(N INTERIORS
8077 w.-tmlnatet. Ave., W •stmlnster
Cdll Now For Free Estimate
DAILY PILOT
week ads.
-It
'DEAR ANN LANDERS : With a n
overabundance or m edia attention a nd
promotion of products directed toward
increasing sexual Potency. my request will
seem odd.
I wo uld la ke l o know about ·t he
avai l a bil it y o r n o n -prescription
pre pa rations for inhibiting sexual arousal.
For me, and possibly others who read your
column. intimate r el ations hips with
significant others are not feasible. But the
d esir e pe r sis ts. a n d the feeli ngs of
frustration are terrible.
Personal convictions prevent me 1 rom
enga ging in purely phys ica l one -night
stands. I might add this predicament is not
limited lo any particular age group. I am
in my mid-20s. well -educated and enjoy the
company of wom en. But r dr ead ba ttli(\g
m y libidina l urges ror the next 40 or 50
years .
Can you h e lp m e'! MIDD LE
AM E RI C A N WITH A S ERI OUS
PROBLEM
DEAR AMERICAN: Cold showers will
sound corny, and so will the suggestion
'hat you use up your sexual energy by
exercising. But they do work.
Actually, the best suggestion <which I
am sure will produce a ·1oad or critical mail
.._ but I'll offer lt anyway because three
authorities who speclallze in sexual
dysfunction say It's the best solution> is
self-gratl~icatlon. The~· point out it's
~armless and involves no ooe else.
D E A R A N N L A :'1 D E R S : M ,.
s iste r-in-la w buried he r alcohohc hushan(I
sever al yea rs ago. Now she has mar ried
anoth~r one. When he drinks. he becomes
m ean a nd abus a\'e. lie is parll cularl~
r ough with his s te pson < m~· ne phew
"J oey" 1.
Joe~ is ente ring has junior year an
college and has asked my wife and me to
let him stay with us weekends and school
holida ys. We have three child ren of our
own to supporr. so we told him. "Sorr~.
you'll have to tough it out on your own ...
The bo~· said he unde rstood and will work
it out. somehow. but he refuses to go home
o.ri the "break" periods.
I feel bad that we had to turn ham
away. We want your opinion. Did we do the
rig ht thing? CONCERNED G.F.
DEAR CONCERNED: ObvloUly you
fee l guilty, or you would aot have written.
But you didn't explain why it would have
\ -~--____ ......., ....... ......, ... 1
I
been such a barchblp to take leey fi I
weekends and holidays. I
Did anyone suggest a part-Ume job IW
Joey, so he could pay toward bis keep? I
I hope you wlll explore all tlle ~
alte rnatives and manage, somehow, to1
rescue him. The boy sounds desperate. .J
DEAR ANN LAN DERS: I ha\'e writtett
to you at least four tames and you have
never printed an) of my le tters . l 'tn
beginning to thank ~ ou are-a phqny.
J oy and I have been going together for
a ~·ear and a half. We lo,·c each other very
m uc h. and until recent!~· we were gettio"
along just fine . But now some problem.r;
have come u1> and things are getting out 01
hand . #1:P
We are both willing to go to a m arnare'
counselor. But who can we go to'! Wt
a ren't marned I I .\OU ar('' 10r l't!<.11. ,\ou·1
give us some help. SOS l.S BL:FF'ALO
DEAR SOS: What you need is Joint
counseling. I re commend a pastor, priest
or rabbi. Too many people are •nawar~
that most clergy have had excellena.
trainlng in pastoral counseling. U yoet.dOft.''
have a clergyman, look in the phone book
and call a church that appeals lo you. Or
check Mental Health in the photle hook aw
ask about joint pre -marital cotm&eliag.
Bette r to iron out as many wrinkles aS'
possible before marriage. The others pGp
up soon enough.
CONFIDENTIAL TO G R EENE·~
GRASS BLUES : omelimes tlat IT•S4
looks gr eener on the other side of the fen~
because the people ove r there take better
care of it. By )'Our own admission you
could use a little s haping up. Quit drooli~
ove r what's next door and go to wor'k •
what you have. At le ast it's ~·ours. ·· 'l
•,
I s pot a rlruy·> Can I.SD anrl pills open new
1cor/ds tor you" Stop quessmy Get the /ads /fl
Ann Lanrlen;· 11eu' hook/et. Straight Dope ori
Druys · For eat.Ii t>0oklet ordered . ~end a
dollar, plus a lonq selt·addresserl stamped
eni-elope 128 c.:etlfs pos1aye1 to An" Landers.
P 0 Ror 1199.5 . Clrtt:mio. II i 1)1)6 J 1 .. , ..
Aging lonely reality
.. ·~
't
'·
SCHENECT ADY. N. Y.
know what the thmg 1s that
people feel the wors t?.. s aid
wom an standing next to me.
··oo vou
makes ·old
the young
We were on the first floor of a senior
c itizens· center : it was early in the
evening, and some of the elderly men and
wom e n of Schenectady were beginning lo
s how up to kill a fe w hours.
··Do you know what bother s them the
most? .. the young woman repeated.
I said that I didn •t.
··rrs that no one ever touches the m , ..
s he said. ··People ta lk about old people.
and worry about old people. a nd feel sorry
for old people. But no one ever touches
them . and they a r e more aware of .that
than anything else ...
"WHEN YOU'RE OLD, no one has any
use for you ... said a 71-year·old woman
na med Blanche Colhns . "Younger people
just think we get in the way. IL makes you
feel like you're ready to go a ny time :·
She wasn't whining . Mrs . Collins as a
bright-eyed wom a n in full control of her
men tal and emotiona l faculties. She was
reacting realistica lly to the knowledge that
-among younge r people it really did
' make no difference whe ther she lived or
died . When a wom an outl ives her familv.
she begins to acce pt the fact that her life ·is
meaningless lo the rest of the world.
As another wom an sa id lo me:
"I think 1f young people had their
way. t hey would get rid of us the way
that Hitler got rid of peopl e. Just do away
with us when we got to a certain age, so we
wouldn't remind them that we are here ...
Henry J ohnson. who is legally blind.
told me that the m ajor problem facing
senior citizens 1s an intense feeling of
loneliness. He said that after spending
their younger years in daily contact with
others, it is a jarring thing ror them to
realize that . unless they make the eff orl,
they will not have relationships with
anyone al all.
"I've always been a loner, so it's not so
bad for me," he said ... 1-'ll just sit around
the apartment. l get so used ·to the radio
and records . . . sometimes in the evening
it wiU gel bad, though. So I'll go out and
1et on the bus and I'll iust ride ...
THE MEN AND WOMEN I spoke with
4uring m y time in upstate New York
expressed a common rear: that they would
die and no one would even know it. It was
as If t.be problems or everyday existence
could be dealt with, but the final
humiliation to become ill and to die with
no one noticing -was too much to bear.
"To live alone and have no one
cbecklng on you, • that's very bad," 1aid
Kathleen C rompton, 89. "I have a
9'tilhbor, and we check on eac" Otbll'
BOB Glfflf
: ,
every day. But some of these people ha''.~
no one. and they could be gone for weeks
before anyone would 'even know.'· ·
As I spent time with the people . k
s truck me that they were behaving as j(
s om eone paying a llention to the ir thought§'
was a ra rity. And undoubtedly it was ; the
staff men and wome n who ran tbe senior
citizens · cente rs s aid that one of the
gre atest tasks facing them is to persuade
younger people to come ''tsit.
··You act li ke this 1s something that
can only happen to someone else:· said q
man I found salting alone in a come~
watching the activity in the rest of ttie
room. "But wa it until it happens to )'00':
T hen vou'll see... i
For that is the piece of knowledge that
the older c1l1zens have. and tha t they knQ.,
is true the knowledge that wtaa• hfj
happened to them is going lo h~ tO 4JJ
of us. Those of tis who are young now~
destined lo learn what these people ha\.e
learned : that a life sentence can~
te rrible thing in a society geared t
y o uth a nd p r o du c t i v ity. Perha .
som e whe r e ins id e. we do. indeee.
understand t his: perhaps that is why the •
elderly frighten us so much. We look into
their faces. and we see our own fuklres. ,•i
Princh
~l
. I
-
8y PHIL INTERLANOI of Laguna Beach
~· e1•tltlloe""'-,1 .... w.to1...,._ IHI
~knct now, as they say In every movie with a drunk
'bi It, 'Coffee! Blac.k colfee! And loll of It'!"
llOimCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
' I
Sagittarius :
Change due
11• Thursday, November 12
1~ ARIES (March 21-April 19>: Leave fine
~ints, details for another time -perceive
cture as a whole, realize bits and pieces
entually wiU fall into place. ~I
1 TAURUS CApriJ 20-May 20 >: This could
~ your power-play day. You hold trump
cud. Emphasis on money , intensified
s:ielationship, responsibility, promotion and
rpward.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20>: You s trike
chor d of universal appeal. Circums tances
twist, tum in your favor. You're at right
pla ce at right time ~ judgment. intuition
ar~ on target. •
I ,., CANCER <June 21-July 22 >: Ne w
~r.ocedure throws light on area previous ly
fffr!'OUded in mystery . Sense of direction is
, heightened, you know where you are going
and why.
:: LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Individual who
alded in past makes reappearance, helps
!.Jou in correct choice. Focus on hopes,
tvishes, successful business investment. r VIBGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis
on versatility, humor, intellectual curiosity .
and coming to terms with one in authority.
Gem-Hli. Sagittarius natives fi~ure
prominentl y .
LIBRA CSep\. 23-0ct. 22 ): You'll be
asked to revise, review, reconstruct and to
reconsider plan s . F oc us on
communication, education , abstract
principles of law and journeys.
SCOROPI O (O ct. 23-Nov. 21 >: ,
Excitement replaces lethargy; you find
creative outlets, imprint style and express
feelin~s to a very special person. >
THE INNOCENT BYSTANDER
Home buy
daring move
SAN FRANCISCO -1 met a man the
other day who bought a house. In fact, I
s aw him do it with my very own e~·es.
I was tipped off to the exclusive story
by my old friend Milt Haberdash of
Haberdash Quality Homes. & Guaranteed
Used Cars -the latter being a recent
addition to Milt's business enterprise due
Lo his interest in automobiles and eating.·
"If lhis is a hoax, Milt .. .''I s aid.
.. No , honest, it's true," said Milt. ·'This ·
g uy just walks in and says he wanted to
buy a house. So I sold him one."
"That's incredible!" 1 said.
"IT WASN'T EASY, admitted Milt. "14 couldn't find any of my real estate forms to
fill in and I've long since forgotten all that
s tuff about closing escrow and ... Aren't I
s upposed lo mention termites someplace?"'
"Who knows?" 1 said.
··well. l'll have it all together by
tomorrow. If you want to see a man buy a
ho,use. be at my omce at high noon."
Needless to say, wild horses could not
have kept me away. The "buyer, .. as I
think they used to be called. was Buck' Ace.
a ha ndsome older man in jodhpurs. a
leather flying helmet a nd a white silk
scarf. .
··You are of lhe Arab pers uas ion, I
presume. Mr. Ace? .. I inquired.
··No, rm 100 percent American and
proud of il."' he said .
··Then why are you buying a house? .. 1 ·
as k~d.
··Because,'· he said. his gray eyes
looking beyond me lo some distant horizon
few men a re prh·ileged to see. ··it is
there.··
··That's incredible!" I said for tfie
second time.
TIUSSEEMEDtoplease him. ··Yes ... he
said . ·'I've devoted m y life to incredible
deeds swimming the Hellespont right
after an eight-c ourse lunch: climbing Mt.
E \'eresl wilh only an abominable snowman
as my guide: rowi ng the Atlantic in a
bedpa n with two tong ue blades ... Yet.
li ke Alexander. I had come to feel there
were no new worlds to conquer:· His eyes
blazed excitedly. "Until now.··
··But Good Lord. man," 1 said. ··buying
a house .. :·
· · 1t·s time lo sign,·· inte rrupted
Haberdash, nervous ly tugging at Ace's
s leeve. ··would you like a blindfold?"
Ace looked at him with disdain. ··Just
a last cigarette will do;· he said.
WE WAITED IN respectful silence while
Ace finished his cigare tte. Then, his hand
s teady as a rock, he picked up the pen and
sjgned with a flourish his eyes on the
ce1hng. ··As I learned when J leapt across
the Bottomless Chasm of Chingaja -Noor, ··
·he e xplain ed. ··never look down.··
In the weeks to com e. you will
undoubted!) he seeing Ace on ··That's
Inc redible!·· and the cover of Time . And
rig htly so. For his feat should be an
inspiration to us all, evidence that the
s p1 r it of dernng-do which made this
country great is not yet dead.
May the rest of us Americans find the
courage to follow in Buck Ace's footsteps.
SAGITTARI US <Nov . 22 -Dec. 2ll :
hnportant domestic adjustment tops
«genda. Emphasis on legalities, rights and
permissions and ability to calmly discuss ~pntrove~ial issues with one whose ideas ~re opposite your own. · You first.
• ,1 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19>: Delay or postpon ement will prove to be
pt<overbial blessing in rt1sg u1sc Ac·cent on
employment, health, diet and nutrition.
.•. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18 >: Doors
previously shut will open -you·11 have
gr,eater freedom of lhoug h_t. ac tion .
Qreative processes are s timulated ;
seenario highlighted by challenge, change,
pressure and reward.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar c h 20 ):
Transaction is finished -know it, don't
ttttempt to prolong it. Focus on property.
tiasic values, inventory, professional
•ppraisals.
•;
POJ SH01S
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
E :ver~ ti m.e
I turn,
I find I'm gotn5
in some other
dire chon..
···~-....... _ °'"' ~·-·-.,.. ...
Time to clear the • air
111 r d d. ,,1 DEAR DOCTOR: We re use inner
t invitations simply because their house was
filled with smoke. A cough and irritated
eyes were too muc h to pay for their
hospitality.
She continually had a c igarette
dan gling rrom her lips. And the stench or
bis big cigars was too much to bear .
But we weren't prisone rs . We. as
adults. could decide whether we wanted ~o
1ubject ourselves to the tobacco, But their
only son wasn't as fortunate. He wu a fine 9-year-old who suffered
from asthma attacks. 1 wonder if his
d<>etors knew that his home was
dloke-ftlleCI all day. . ' \ What 1oc:id would all the special new
treatment for asthma do if he had to be lab~ all the noxious gases from his
..... ~t• ct1arettea? 'II)' hUlbaDd arid I have bffn tempted
risk our friea41hlp for hll "rent" by ... _,., ~ our tlleor>' that they re wonenlnft their aon s a&thma.
.......... • WOUld)'OU? MRS. V.
T JOUI HIAl1H
DR. PETER J. STEINOAOHN
If your humane lnvolvemenl ln ~ls
welfare broke up your rrteodshlp, so be it.
Nothing lost.
Unquestionably, tobacco smoke may
be as much an aller1ea caullag u tllma
attacks •• dust, pollens, drugs, animal
d•nder from hones, dogs and cats and
sucll foods as eggs, ch~olate, wheat,
lobt~r, 1trawberrlet.
Watdaiag their SOii •••plal for air,
wheezln1 ud cou1hln1, .._ld.'be reason
enoup ·for tllem to make the 1apreme
sacrlllte of rtddlag their home ., d 1arette
1m .. e. Any cllll• c a1tllmaUc or •oU
coa1tantly expo1ed t• '"' Irritan t 1trug let Wltti an unaeeeaHrll)' iiavy
btlrden .
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedn11day, November 11 . 1981
..........
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!J,•U,Y ~~B&LL • 'lsw YORK (AP> -Tw1--r thty ttrat pwformed u a trio, ,_.. P Mary
don't have to drum up crowdl *'i . ut they
1tUI wort on their mualc. •
If they didn't , HYI Peter Vaftit1') ""k would btcomt blue and wouldD't .. .__..._,,
"We can't m~lntlln txtellhH wathout
reach1n1 ror lt. and challtftl.•ll th• tJme," he aaya. "We work upMW Nbtane
the •Id ones, ar1ue aboUt voe perta
and the meantn1 or the m beet
arran1ement to show the lyrtc. •
Thia rau, Mary Travers 11 t.aU.. .. ce leuona
to 1lve hersetr a "head tone" for ti* bt&ft notM,
• , lnateld of the cheat tone sbe hM ~· Yarrow, Mlsa Travera lfPd I Stookey
rehearsed -three 1in1era, tlle l1yln1
1ultar -for nine months in 1911, rmed
to1ether ror the nrst time llt -.. . They
played ror pay for the flrtt ti1nr"'1 er New
York club, the Bitter End, that o--..
Jn October 1981, they ~~the ant of rour
nights at the Savoy club ~ lti ... iw. album.
They could have played one ~t •t LJneoln
Center but, for old times' aakef, cno. ,&he more
intimate, club-type setUn1.
"How many times have yoe be.rd ndiences
referred to as fickle?" Stookey says. "I have, But
·ours aren't."
• 1'wenty years ago, Peter, Paul and Mary's
.. tolk songs like • · lf J Had a "-•cner" were regarded as popular music. • ·
"In the face of five years or dtfto, ~nk, new
wave and a kind of despair in •utar music,"
. Mlse Travers says, "there has hen a kind of
renaissance of our kind of music. There'• a feeling
that is more than nostalgia. lt 1s like a
reconfirmation of the validity of a patticular style
and intent that is s urvlvina lfld becoming
classic."
By BOB THOMAS ._...po,-..,... ,.
HOLLYWOOD -After two -Uae '°"gbest films any a~tress has endured1 SHMJtey Duvall
figured ''Time Bandits" wouJd oe a t»reeze. She
dido 't know it would be raining dwanes.
"I was making 'Popeye' ott Malta," the
Houston-born actress recalls .... Terry Gilliam,
• whom I had met through friends a few years ago,
called me and said he had a perfeol~ent in his
new movie, and J would work with Michael PaJlin,
whom I also knew. It would be four or five days'
work in London. After a year and a month on 'The
Shining' and six months on 'Popeye,' it sounded
· heavenly."
Producer·director·writer GilUam and his
co·scripter Pallin are part of the mad, mad Monty
Python team, and that should have been a tipoff
for Miss Duvall. The script called for her and
Pallin to be "Titanic" passengers on ..-r-om fall a
balr·dozen dwarves. eseaping f:rmn ~r era In
a time warp. "Time Bandits'' •OlttMnd o/ a
movie. ,
"The dwa rves didn't "'ant a> lh•'lftMjump,"
Miss Duvall, 31, recounted. ' •.t to leap
..
Dig into a delicious dinner. w5~ two
tasty shrimp. our crisW1
and a boneless whitemeat 0..-. plus
freh cole slaw. crunchy hushpuppld and BOiden frycs.
Jtls a great me.al .lt a specilll priccrt
''I UdU we pr.umed wlMa we 1tarted 1tn1ln1 and It felt to l'Od.'' Yarrow 1ay1, "that we would ~u.a. to b9 ~r forever. But there came a
Umt In ~ .. l'*allJ had dlrrtrent thln,. we w.._..fftlni that ltap. Then, It woul4 have bted~I to ltave conllnued." so. In lfJ'O, &lit)' dl1banded a trio which aome
yean pw • COIK'•rta and had aold mllllou of
reeordl. Yarrow beaan to pureue a c:arffr that
lncltldtd IOlll ~Un1, produclna records and TV 1peel•h. oruatsln1 talent for eveata like
..._....., ~. ~ maldn1 sure he had Ume rw bAI t-. •*J'~Mn.
Stootlly t• dla1dna an animated children's show tot TV and, uslnc tab real rlrat namt, Noel,
perforru-wttla a baod for a lar1ely C~rietian
audMDce, •nasic lbat ls more rolk than 1ospel:--
.Mtu Tl"Mea 1Rvel1, on • solo 1ln1ln1 career, and tie two .,,.., .. , who accompany her often
are mlttakee tor Peter and Paul. She recently
completed• blOk ot poetry.
Pwter,, Pau! ind Mary 1ot back to1ether a few
timn durbi'tl• moa. at bene(lt performanc:et for a~eftit e=. In 1978, alter getting tot.ther for
Survival r, they dfflded to do a 11·ctty tour
tot,0..r, 8nd to mate a record. Each year since,
they'ft -... ,41bout .ao concerti tofetber, while
oonUaulaf their '8dlvidual pursuits.
"We'9t had enormous respect and ~uccess and
been part of thf burrlcane or social change 11 the
music wotld partlclpated in it,·' \'arrow says.
"Now we're allowed to continue to .share all that
without havint to devote our whoJe lives to it,
which allows us to be whole people.
"Maay people, when they walk away from •·
career, ,,can't come back to lt. Because our music
really was a subltantiaJ part of the living or an
era, it did not s•t replaced when popular tute
changed. n was Integrated Into people's lives," he says,.
g
six a:warves ,
from a · ~Jdtag four feel high, which is the
equl,,..eat of six reet for normal·size people .
Tetry. who is 180 pounds and a big kid at heart,
decJded to ahow Uiem how easy it was. He fell
down on me without warning, cracking every bone
in my ve rtebrae. Miraculously I wasn't hurt.
Having the dwarves fall on me was a cinch alter
that."
Things seem to happen to Shelley Duvall. Like
starting her career almost by accident 11 years
ago. Robert Altman was in Houston making
"Brewster McCloud," and hls casting agent
happened to see Miss Duvall explaining an exhibit
of her boyfriend's paintings. She heard the old
chestnut, "How would you like to be in a movie? ..
She figured the man was either crazy or lecherous.
or both.
"I had never been in a speech class, I bad ·
never been 111 a (ltama cJass. J had never seen a ·
·play in iw ~P ,he taid. "J may have played a
gum 1lrop bl M"c:barcb play at the ace of 3, but I
doftlt re1Dftft6erit.~' She still hasn't had ti drama
-lesson, lbOugb she-as~ed one session in a Lee
S&ra o!ass.
Stlrrtng the world famous
<9Vouag ~11\_erica~
Son-g and Dance Company
•
Bring the whole family for a
def'lghthJI evening of
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Two dinner shows
nightly
Tues. thru Sun.
•
Call for reservations
and show times. • TI•IE'S MUSIC HALL
at Peter's Landing
betoW Dunbar's Restaurant
16360 Pacific Coast Highway
. Huntington Beach
PHONE (21' 692...072 • (714) S40-5e61
P.8. Big Band Jazz
&ery Monday Evening
Monday thru Saturday
All Performances before 5:00 PM
lJI lilllflAOA MAii M1rodo 01 loaecrol\J
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' turning 40
11 BOBTllOMAS
A11odaled Preti Wrt&er
. HOLLYWOOD -Sln1•r·actor·
ao»1wrtt.r Mac Davia wlll tutn 40 next Jan. 21,
and be approaches the date without a hint or
mid· lift crllla. Aa he explalna:
"Tumln1 30 was a bl11er trauma tor me-. lt
Juat seemed that my career wu never 1om1 to 1et
off the 1round: 1 was alwa1s a day late and a
. dollar short. l didn't get my Clftt hit record untJl J
wall 28, wtUch was pretty old for a rock 'n' roll
1in1er. l was playing college concerts when 1 was
10 years older than the audience. I felt llke a father figu,...
"Now I've got the movie I've been waitln1 for,
a TV special I'm proud of, a new album, and I'm
in good physical condltlon. Beine .., won't be so bad.''
The movie ls called "The Next Sting" --at
least that's the most recent title. Jt ls Universal
• Pictures' lone-planned followup to ita big winner of
1973. "The Sting." But not with the ori&inal cast.
The leading actors are Mac Davis and Jackie
-. Gleason.
"I play one of the gamest grirters, a guy who
· bas never attained class," Davis remarked.
· "Gleason ls the veteran con man, 'tt'idely respected
in hls field. The roles are similar to those in the
first movie, but of course there's no way to
convince anyone that I am Robert Redford and
Jackie Gleason is Paul Newman.
· "There are a few references to the first sting
in the script, but the names are different. The
• connectm1 character la Lone1an, with Oliver Rffd
in the role played by Robert Shaw. Kia henchman
ii Karl Malden, who playa auch a mean character
that you'll loraet 'The StreeU ot San Francisco'
and lhote credit card commerclala."
The reuon that Davia ii ln auch 1ood shape la
that he plays a boxer In a pHzen1ht that ta the
cllmact.lc stin1.
I've been workin1 out every day ror six
weeks," he said, "and I have a lot or respect for
Robert De Niro and Sylvester Stallone. In a movie
you have to fiCht all day, not Juat a few rounds.
Each round hu to be choreo1raphed, 200 punches
to a round. The body PW\Ches land, the head
punches don't. 8ut you've·got to throw your head
back lo make It look like a punch, and ')'our neck
can get very, very tired."
No complaints from Davls. "The Next Stmg"
is the followup he hoped for alter "North Dallas
Forty." In which he made a strong a~t1n1 debut as
a swinging pro quarterback "I knew a lot of those
boys Crom West Texas." He stumbled on the next
mm, "Cheaper to Keep her," which mercltully
vanished from the marketplace. "The script was
great, but-."
Other Mac Davis projects:
"Christmas ls Song," an NBC special on Dec.
14, taped in a Pasadena church with the Pointer
Sisters, Lionel Richie and the Gommodor~s.
Andrae Crouch.
"Midnight Crazy." a new Casablanca album
with a promising single, "You're My Bestest
Friend." all songs written by Mac Davis.
Grace Slick and the new 'Starship'
By LISA LEVITT
A..Cla•"'--WrlW
SAN FRANCISCO -Doing things the hard
way has always come easy to Grace Slick.
··1 learn very slowly because I'm so
stubborn," s he says. "I'm 42 and still living on the
extremes.''
To the undisputed queen or acid rock and acid
tongue, extremes include everything from the
jet-black dye she uses on her hair to her penchant
for rising daily at the crack of dawn.
On this day -her birthday -she is up at 6
a.m. as usual. but she isn't celebrating .
Instead, she's sitting wrapped in a pink towel
in a hotel room in Rockford, Ill., one of the
J efferson Starship's tour stops, talking on the
phone about attitudes and alcohol; music and
motherhood; her 10-year-old daughter. and her
15-year-old career.
"There's a clarity now. Things aren't such a
big deal," she said. "Some of it's good, some of it's
bad. It's just that the bad doesn't strike me as
being very important anymore. Actually, what it
is, is that 1 can do something about it now."
Last January, Ms. Slick hopped back aboard
lhe Starship, ending a 2'r!l -year respite that turned
into a kind of profession al and personal
renaissance.
During that time, she produced two solo
al~111s and straightened out the tangle of alcohol
abuse and confusion that drove her from the
Starship ln the first place.
"The band was in a position where we knew
we weren't going anywhere, but at the same Ume,
nobody could figure out how to change it: l Jeft
because the only thing I can chan1e is myseU,"
said Ms. Slick, whose husband. Starship lighting
I ·director Skip Johnson. has been terminally ill for
almost a year.
"I couldn't have handled that a while ago. But
I can act now upon things that are seemingly
negative without going to pieces," she said, noting I that the diCCerence now is "altered attitudes.
mostly."
The way s he tells it. attitudes are the
behavioral glue that mold a personality and
determine whether a woman can make it in a
man's business, a singer can make it as a rocker
and a rocker can make it as a mother.
Ms. Slick, it appears, has done all three. But
she blames the feminist movement for making it
more difficult for women lo do today what she did
when the legendary Jefferson Airplane got off the
groundjn the mid-'60s.
"I figured , if you were good at something, you
just go do it. I figured they wouldn't like it U I
wasn't any good at it, but I didn't figure they
wouldn't like it because of my ~ender." she said.
"When I started singing, people weren't going
around talking about being inferior or superior, ..
she continued. "I never had anybody tall< down to
me that 1 was aware of. But I have noticed in the
last five years, men have started talking down,
simply because they're so conscious of maybe
she's going to step on me.
"It's your attitude. basically. You just go do
what you can do," s aid Ms. Slick, whose
10-year-old daug hter . China, already has
Sherlock Holmes meets
Sigmund Freud
THESEVEN-
PER-CENT
SOLUTION
From the"'
S.st-S./Hn9 Nov.I
.
Dudley Moore
Peter Cook
In
''THE
HOUND
OfC THE
BASKERVILLE$"
Speetal otacount
To Sherlock HomH
8odety Member•
"I "TIM! BANDtTS" (PO)
U "FOX AND TH! HOUND"
"IONG Oft THI IOUTH'' (Q)
Ill "RICH AND 'AMOUS" (R) •
embraced that philosophy, forming her own
pre-pubescent punk band. Her mother Insists it is
all In fun . ·
"Whatever she's comfortable with. I doubt
she'll be a doctor, or a ballet dancer or anything
like that. Her attention span is not like that. She
likes to move around. she likes lo be around a lot
of people," she said. ''But whatever she wants to
do is fine."
And what about Grace Slick?
"I'm not very psychic about my life. I've
never had any game plan." she said. "People say,
do you picture your.self doing rock ·n roll at 60? I
doubt it, but who knows?"
'Billboard' names top
singles, LP's for week
By The Auodated PreBS
The following are Billboard's hot record hlts
for the week endipg November 14 as they appear
in next week's issue of Billboard ~agazine.
HO\" SINGLES
1. "Private Eyes" Daryl Hall & John Oates,
RCA
2. "Start Me Up" Rolling Stones. Rolling
Stones
3. "Physical" Olivia Newton'John, MCA
4. "Walling For A Girl Like You" Foreigner,
AU antic s. "Tryin' To Live My We Without You" Bob
Seger & The Silver Bullet Band, Capitol
6. "The Night Owls" Little River Band,
Capitol
7. "Here I Am" Air Supply, Arista
8. ''I've Done Everything For You" Rick
Springfield, RCA
9. "Arthur's Theme" Christopher Cross,
Warner Bros.
10. "Theme from 'Hill Street Blues'" Mike
Posl featuring Larry Carlton, Elektra
TOP LP's
1. "Tattoo You" Rolling Stones, Rolling Stones
2. "4" Foreigner, Atlantic
3. "Escape'' Journey, Columbia
4. "Ghost in the Machine" The Police, A&M
5. "Nine Tonight" Bob Seger & The Silver
Bullet Band, Capitol
6. ''The Innocent Age" Dan Fogelberg Full
Moon-Epic
.7. "Abacab" Genesis, Atlantic
8. "Private Eyes" Daryl Hall & John Oates,
RCA
9. "Bella Donna" Stevie Nicks, Modern
Records
10. "Raise " Eart h , Wind & Fire.
ARC-Columbia
Pilot Logbook -D ·1 p·1 A
Candid com~tar:ies II J I DI exclunvely m the
Orange CoHt DAILY PfLOT/Wtdnetday, November 11, 1981 ..
."Masterful"
-L.A. Times. Shella Benson
"Wonderful"
-Newsweek Magazine. Jack Kroll r c====HARI~======rs=o=r r=1RE=
I
A LADO COMMHY -o ~ 11AOS. MUASf ,_ .....--.,.o·-·~ ... ,_._... c .... _.._ _ .... " .. c-. •.....,....._
edwanls NEWPORT
MUI COAST HWY. & MACAITHUI ...... ,.ODISll '4~760
NOW PLAYING
lDWARDI IRllTOl
Costa Mesa 540·7444
lDWHDI ClllfMA WEIT
Westminster 891 -3935
PUTT c1n CENTER
Orange 634-9282
lDWARDI UDDlUACI
El T0<0 581 -5880
lDWARDI Cllllll CUITU
Costa Mesa 979·'4141
EDWARDS VIEJO TWIN
MlsslOll Vieio 830-6990 ._..
DU-Dlllfl.11
Orange 558-7022
HollywoOd Ida in NY
NEW YORK (AP) -lleny New York •et.on
become Hollywood actor• and nobOdy 1911 boo .
Bul let a Hollywood actor b9come a New Yori
actor and ttt.y 117 he beaon,ii ln a rubber room. Or
OJl ''That 'a lneredl ble." ·
Be that u it may, MlcbMI RuJ)elt, born iD Loi •
An1elea and once even a chUd actor there, aaya
he's been a New York actor on a full·time bull
since 1W74. He atilt •eema to have all bla marblet,
although It helps to be in a h.lt musical. wttlch be
is.
He celebrated hla 30th birthday in
oft-Broadway's "March of the Falsettos." He'a
been In it aince It opened lut 1prtn1. Playln1 a 1uy
who leaves his wife and eon for, er, another man.
A man or sunny di1po1ltloa and a three-octave
vocal range, he first came here ln 1988 for hia
Broadway debut In a mualcal, "The Happy Time."
Before that, he was a typical Hollywood kid.
Al 12, he saya, he wu at the Pasadena
Playhouse in "King of Hearts." Then thanks to an
agent in the audience, be acted in shows like "My
Three Soos" and "Gunsmoke,'' and a few movies
that were Bin budget, If not quality.
He's quite happy with life aa a New York
actor. He has no regrets he left the Hollywood
rranchlae lo set up shop here.
..
' ,
! •
I .,
frU
Orange Cout DAtL y PILOT /W1dn11day, Novtmbtr , ~' 1981
TAINTED PILLS -Customs agent Lawrence
LaDage holds some of the five million
contaminated spirulina tablets seized by the
111111mc11
ag ency in Portland. Ore. The diet aids
contained rat and mouse hairs. bird feathers.
lice. flies and other insects.
• •
•IC'ttn-Mii••• naH•lff Of' H ..... POC.-T •ectnlOUIWM••• .._ITAT9•'" WUNW ...... SYAT1Me•1 TM .......... ,_,_. •'• ... ,.. fllCTl'nOUt WM•l• MAM• Tiie f•ltewllll ,.,_ t t•lll _, __ t Tll• fellewl111 ••nt111 lltvt ~"~OaNIA l.IMOUllN NIW~T "AATNa•• V, JI• ... ....._. .. -tlf Ille llC11 .... C......,. Otlft, Mte !ti, N~ .,...._,
M•VtCI, ............ ~--" IM<ll.~...... 1to•111wo1 CANYON ._ ... ~..... ,.....-..... ·-, • .,. ....,.., .. *Ill llntt -.....,., 1 --· lrvlM, COHDOMINIUMI, ~,,.....,. 11 .... , .........,. ._, Ctlltwllle... cet...,_"7U. """• .. ...,..,.._..CA...._ TNI ......._ It <.-.c1M lllY t J.,_11 M. AICllit<le, lfMI lr•IN Tiie lllOlllellt 1111111•0 NeMe ·~ .. , .... ~.... r...,,.. ...... _ ..... 1110.....,.
....._ .... ...,,........ o.MltM. ..... ,111.0........HllM c:-tytll~'f-1WI,
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Or fllle ......,. -lllM wltll .. tMn. l'Wll.... ~ ea... Delly ...... Cllllf!IV °"""Or~ Qullly"' Oct. T11te .......... (~ .., • •tHm ...,_, 4, 11, ti, IS,"" •JaO.t 17, t•1. teftff•I....,......
f'Wll.._. 0...,... (Mil O.lly ll't6aC. ''""' lCIWIA....,. ,II N••· 11, II. ts. Dec. I. ltlt .-..i .... .,. ......, "'-II .... Or .... ~ OtllY ........ Tlllt ......._. wa fllef wttfl ...
rw.a "''-Oct. a , New.•, 11, ti, 1w1 ...... ct11111,, c1...-M Ore"91 Coull«y "' PWlJC 1111( Heot.2,IWI. llltCTITtout IVMlflU .,....ITATl ...... T
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...... 1 ...... 0r-. c-t Oeltot .......
"'"'°' ...... , .... 0r ... CMtt Dolly "11&1, New. 4, 11, ti. tt. ttlt •m..,
fllCTtnout MIMNHS MAMI ITATIMllNT Tll• fello•I ... "'H" ,. dOlflt
bulllltU It: UNLIMITIEO HltVICH, tMa f'relrte A-. llllto I'. Tonlfl<•. ca111on11e-.. f'e11.I W ..... _., •106 W. 1Nlll
'""'· T•r-. Cellfonll• .... Tlll1 llull-II c~ W Oii llldlv'-1. ..... ......_
Tllll ............. "'*' lllH Willi "41 Cou11ty Clttll of Or•"9t c-t• t11
,I
Tiie l&ll&Wlflt Hrllll I• dellll -----------
IMltlfte .. •1 "fCTtnout •ut•••• UNLIMITIEO •ALl.OONI, >M ~ ITATaMlllT W•l1111t • ., .. ,, N •• ,.,, IHCll, Tiit f1llow1111 .. , .... I• d&lfll
CtlHWM&.... ....i,.. .....
.... L ~-, •W•lllvt MrMI, (I I COTTAM CONClt ITI N .. ~1 ilee(ll, Ctlltomle ~ l•IAICING ANO IXCAVATINO (Ill Tiiie .....,_. It COlldut!M lly t11 COTTAM COHClllTI tltlAKING, IMI•._.,. •1 ....,_.., Caste !MM, CelllW!llt
It• l . LIMtlfl '26J1 • Tlllt ...._, .... Nlect wlttl T•lf-T. °'"'911'1, 4'1 Metlleflt, C81111t'r Cleft! If o..,... Ctllllty c .. 11 Mttt, Ctllfomlo'2627 N8"lf'llllttt, ltll Tiiie M1nMt h Uftdll<ttf 11\t .., •1,_,, ... lv!flMI.
"'*lalllt Or .... C..91 Otll-, Pl... T ....... T. C--. Nev.11,t,2S,O.,t.1•1 ..,.., Tiii• ...__,. .... fllect w1111 uw C..,,..,, Cltfll If Orenee C:-t,, ..,
'""8mtlw t . ""·
....... (.Mledlc«ll
fllC'TtT10UI • .,.. .... NAMSITATIMllNT
A f'rtle I IC...-.... ... •• c..t .. .., ....... c:-•-.CA ... Tiit lollewlfll "no11 It d1l111 • "t1417S
.....,_ .. : • 1'""41 ...... Or .... c ... , Otll• ...... ltlEO LYOH I, -......... llvcL N•v • 11 11, ... 1•1 4-~~ "Jru,H ........ eeect\,Cattfot'NetMI • ' ' ...,, ,...,..,
lldwl11 H11me 111, 150' Heve11 -----------Piece, Newport h•cll, Cellftn•I• ' taw.a Tiii• 1111Al11n1 I• ctfldllc-I>• • llml9" _,,.nlllp. ' fllCTITlOUI tU$1NHI l ....... H-111 NAMllTATIMaNT Tiiie ~ wa fti.d wltl\ t11t Tiie , .. _lflt __ , ere dolflt
C-ty Clettl "' Or ..... c ... ,.,, ... Du•l-•M:
New. 4, 11, 11, ft• 1W1 _.,.,
fllc:TITIOUI au11N•1S NAM• STAT•MIMT
Tiie .. 1..-.1,.. --· ., ....... llutiflOMos. Cl'YSEN TltAOIHO ANO MAltl(ITIHO, INC .• m Pemtllltf Orlvo, S4rlla Ant. t.ilforftl<o tt7tl c'""" ,,,.,,,, Corpereti..., • Cetlforftle _,..,._...., m .. ...-ceo1w l>flv•, s.Mt AN, Callfcwfllt 92711
Tiii• ""''""' It cOflcfwc-llrf • cor-atloll..
Crnl.ol EMtOY CGrp • Owrlft A. Aa&d,
"""'-71111 .... _. ... fl..., •1111 .... COllftty Clttt of Ort<IOO c.-1,, .,. Novo""'*' 2, ••t, MllMllL, JACOaS, f'l••NO & ...... ..... ,.,.., ..............
"--' teadt, ~ "*" Olt\'J ............... . ""-l'Ybli-Ortft90 Cotlt Otll• Piiot, How. •. 11, 11, u. 1W1 4,....1
N .. lf'llll9r2,I_,, P.M. NOVILTllS, UCM Htvtfl
"17a .. Pltco, Newport 8H<ll, Ctlllor11lo lr------------,.,,.,l9'IM Or .... Goest 0.Uy Piiot, ft...a PICTITIOUS tUSIMISS flt1cnt NoY. 4, 11, 11, IS,,,., 4'02-411 Onld O. ltkktrd, 1504 Htvofl NAMll STATIMINT Pll~,1-ar.,.. , __ Oellw Piiot, -----------Plt co, Newport a.tell, Colllorltlt Tiit lolltwlnt P•••on Is tol11g
Novomw t, 1•1.
... ........ . .... .,. -.,.., '"'''""' .. , Nov.•.11.1 .. u,1•1 •1 .. 1 ~ ... ~ Jtl\01 L. Alcktrd, 1504 Htvefl IA) DAZZLERS (81 PACl l'IC
Piece, Newport eeecll, Celllornle MEDICAL. U.1 u HeOrt eo.i'*v-. fllCTITIOUI •UstN•IS ~ Le Hel>rt, Ctlllorftle '°'31 MAM9 STATIIMllNT Tiiis ll;nlnou la c-ted 1>y en SI.,.., Rey eoi.-. 11D .. I_
t1 UPDIKE Church. ort1c1atmg Ser vices
1'1d C LAUDE ARTHUR under the direction of
A~erican, Briton
share eye award .. ICTIT10UI aUllNllS NAMIE ITATllMINT
Tllo lollewlflt porso11 II dolflt llldlvldWll. llouleverd, •"-· Ctlllomlt tmt 111111,.. .... : J-' Al<kt•d Tiii• ~MU ,, CondllCled "" ... C L IE A N H A It I 0 A Thi• ............. Wll fllecl wltl'I 1'IO IMlvHl ... 1
it /! UPDIKE. bom in Cleveland. Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
""' Ohio on September 19, 1909. Mortuary of Costa Mesa.
died on November 4. 1981. 540·SSS4. NEW YORK <AP) -Two vision scientists, one
American and one British. have been named to
share the. Jules Stein Award for outstanding vision
research. for work that has saved thousands of
premature Infants from blindness.
Tiit l&llOWlfll "''°" h dolftl llw1l11n1a: T. M. ACOUSTICS, .-e Tllurlfl, Costo MeM. CA tMJ7, Tllomu Jemu Moylleld, 20U
IENGINl!lltlNG, DD IE. 1n1' s~. c_ • ., c .. ,.. ol o. ..... c-ty on St-II••....__ ColtellMM.CAft621. Novem-2, 1•1. Tllb •le'-t '"" filed wllll IM OTTllE HARLEY AN01tl!W$, 11J1 P17471• CCH.Onl• Clerk or Or•noe Coum,, on 81<11 Bey Ort.,., N-1 hodl. CA Pul>ll-Or ..... Coel1 Doll• Piiot, Oc-r JO, 1'11
nMO. Nov. •. 11, II. ts, ,., 412WI f'1'4M Tiii• lluliftfts .• COl'du<IH l>Y ... Pul>Ulhtel Orenve CotSl D .. ,,, Pllol. T""'"'· c.&e MK1. CA '2127 0 IER He ls survived by 3 children.
r Betty L. Johnston. lack E.
1 Updike and Robert N . G,ERALD JAMES OSJ.ER. f Updike. Arrangements by resident of Mission V1eJo.
4 Neptune with burial at sea Ca for the past 8 years Passed away on November
8, 1981. He Is survived by his
The $50,000 award went to Dr. Arnall Patz, 81,
of Johns Hopkins University, and Profe11or
Norman Ashton, 68, of the Royal College of
Tllll "-'"'"' It c-.cted 11-, en Wlhtl-..i T1-\aJ. MlyfloHI Tiiis tlA-1 -llltd with "'8
c-ty Clertl • ~ ..... """"" ... Oct.
It, 1•1 .. ,,,..
ll'Mllvlltlltl. Piil.iC -~( : Nov. 11, 11, U, Doc. J, ,., 4ttMI
Oltlo~ Tiiis at~ wa flled •Ith tllO -----------
C..,11ty Clfftl of ~-c-nty on f'ICTIT10US IUllNllSS Nov. J, I_, NAMIUTATSMIUfT ,_ "'""IPtp7011~ T ht loll owing p1no11 I• dol119 PICTITIOUS tUSINllH Pul>tl"'9d Or ... Coesf Dolly Piiot, Plltlllllled Or ..... -.-It .,... " "'• 1>111tnou ts: Nit.Ma STATIIM•NT
YODER wife Carolyn and daughter DEBORA I YODER , Lisa, his parents Gerald and
passed away on November M anon Osier Servi ces will
9, 1981 at the age of 24. She be held on Wednesday
was a resident or Newport November 11 1981 al
Beach. Ca. She lS sunived 3.30PM at the H~rbor La"T
by ~e~ mother and rather Chapel. Services under the
Patr1c1a Yoder and Donald dire c tion of 11 ar b o 1
Yoder or Newport Bear h . L a wn-Mount Mortuary or
Ott. JI, ........ 4, "· 1•1 "'7-411 Nov.•. 11, ti, 25, ,_, •n..tt JIMMY ANO THE MUSTANGS. Tiit lollowlflt peno" II crolnt -----------·lttll Ster Ort ... HUfltl"91on 8ot<ll, llll•lllH••·
Surgeons. .
lllCTITIOUI luttM•N NMIUI STAT'llMINT Tll• lollewlllt peno11 ll dolfll ............. ,
Ct llloml•.... PAltOAE ASSOCIATES. 1nH Aft Robert J-H.-•• ,.,, Ster MtJorc.t, L.....-Hllll, CA,,." Orlv•. Hllfltl ...... Boedl, C.lllornl• 0 .. 11. ~. 1nH AYO. Miifort•. f'ICTITIOUS tUst•ISS ~ UO_. Hiiis, CA ft6S> Nit.Mil ITATllMIMT Tllll ......,_, Is ~led b• Ol'I Tiiis IMAll ... 1 " c-..cted by an The ftl-lllt _...,, .,. cfOl"t lfldlvlOllol .-ilflC.,_etecl -lotlon olfltr Ill.,
IMKIMH .. : A-rt Heddox • Otrtftenlllp. LES AMIS, 42» Mtrtlnetl• Woy, Tiii• ... ._, Wt\ filed "'"" lht ~.u.oi-Htwport IMdl, Celltomlo.,.,., CCH.111ty Clerti of Ort<IOO C-• on Tiiis ,........,. _, II._, wltll tlle
C a . s i s t e r a n d Costa Mesa 540-SSS<I brother ·tn·law Pa1Tl a nd
The award was ann ounced at the annual
meeting o f the American Academy of
Ophthalmology in Atlanta. It was named for the
late Jules Stein, founder of Research to Prevent
Blindness, a private research orga.nbatioo. Dr.
Stein died last April.
SANDHUltST. tstJ ltoellpolnl Orin, Hlllllilllltefl llNdt, ColltonMt
~ NtflCY Kt•Wr, t stJ ltoclltMllfll Drive. H""'I""°" ltedl. Colllonllo ... LH Amh lflC., IMO le~ CMll Nowm-I, I_, Couflh Clefll ol 0rt"91 C-1Y Oft Oct H...,_t ,,, eor-dtl Mer, <:elllor'llle fl17tU6 1', t•t.
'262' Pllbllllled ar.,. ~ 0•11• PlloC, P17J4W
Shawn Lyons of Irvine. Ca . OLNEY
sister Judy Yoder or FR ANK DENMAN The two scientists, working separately in the
same field during the 19505, showed that blindness
in premature infants, r etrolental fibroplasla, is
caused by the administration of excessive amounts
or oxygen in incubators.
Tllh Mal_ It~ b'r 111
lflcflvlcl\MI.
Tiiis INtlMH 11 coflductJ lly o Nov. 11, 11. u. Doc. 2. tW1 •m-t1 Put>ll-OrMQe C-t Delly Piiot. c.._e11&11 -----------Oct 21. a Nov. 4. 11, ,., ~ LotAml' lllC.
N ewport Beach . Ca . OLNEY. passsed away on
paternal grandparents Mr N(lvember 8. 1981. He moved
and Mrs. Frank Yoder of to Laguna Beach. Ca 8
Newport Beac h , Ca ·years ago fr om Woodland
• maternal grandparents Mr Hills. ca lie was a member
and Mrs. M. J . Reynolds of of the South Coast Literary
Lancaster. Ca. Memorlal c 0 u n c 1 1. Nat 1 0 n a I
"-'-,K..,_ Tiiis .....,_,. W&l fl._, with -C-ty Cltn of Or ..... c...my ..,
T1Nla M ....... Proslcf911f Tllll 11-1 w*' fllod wltll U.. c-tv Clttil of ~•floe county on Novem-t,1., Novem-2: 1•1. f'11C171 .., nm
f'IOIMI ...... ar.,... Cont Deity Piiot, Plll>ll"*' 0rtft90 c .. 11 Dtll'r f'llot,
l'UIUC MOTtl
"'CTITIOUS IUSINISS Nit.Mii STATllMaNT PICTITIOUS IUllNm.U Tiie IOllOWlflt perlOflS .,. doln9 NAME STATIMEtn Du&lllOHM: Tho tollowtf19 person& er• dolne Nov. 4, 11, 1' "· ,., •n1 .. 1 Nov. 11, tt. U. OK. 2, 1•1 ~-411 AIEO LYON PROPERTIES, U4 l>ll\iROUft0
NowPOrt 8lvd. 'T ', Newport 8eadl, Cl OWN CLE AN E It S. IO SI c .. lforfllo ftWJ 8eySlcto onvo, H-1 e.ec11, CA.
, serv1res will be held on Association for Ltterac) PIH l9nCl NU l9TI£
• Wednesday' November 11 . Act\' anc('. Friends or I ~e fl1CTIT10UI tUllNHS "'CTITIOUS tUSINISS
G.I . & L. INOUSTltlES INC., AIUIN KUYUMCU, 1200 Port C•llfOffllt corportllon, »41 Petco Cofll••• PIKt. Newport eo.c11. CA '411COll, Sin cion-to, Collfomlt t»n n.60. 1981 al ll :OOA M a t .st Library or Laguna Beach fllCTIT10UltU&INllS f'ICTITtoutMISf••u ...... ITATSM9NT Nlt.MaSTATU.UINT Andre ws Presby le r 1 an and UCJ. a member' or tbe MAM9 ITAT'bYtn ..,... IT,.,_..'" Tiie 1011ow1,.. Ptnofl h dol"t Tll• 1011ow111, "''°" h •01111 IEd•lfl H11mt Ill, 1S.0, HtYOfl LU IZ KUYUMCU , 2100 Pott Plato, No_. 81tcll, Ct lllorfllt Ctrll•I• Ploco. 14--1 a..dl, CA
Churc h with Dr J onn Communlt) Presbyter11n ,.,!.': .... _ ...... --· .,.. dol1tt Tll• 1•11.-1 ... "''-11 d01"1 "":.~4:-~c MANAGIMENT """"';':'~ 1c11 "o" PER . I Hufrman. Jr. omc1a~mg. In -~hurc!1_ _or La_gµnaJlea.ch~ ·-HOLSuuutaM .. TY,•t """"' ~-'l\1irn:~H MA._ 1Tl 11111 S11tv1cH. 1tu1 W•ymo11t11 Lfl., Acco u N T 1 No s Y s T EM s
:-Heu·-oHlowen contr1batf~DS Survi ved by his wire Jean. 2 Av·,~~'.. hit• nt. CHIO ...... COM .. ANY, MD 'VII °""'9 ..... *· H-1 ...... 0Mcll,CAn.4 CONSULTANT, JI> """" A ..... w .
t2'Q f2'60. Tllll bll.tlfl•U I• clfldll<led by e NISAN 9, HACATORYA.N, 1tQ oe,..r•I ~ Port HtllOll, Newport •••Gii, CA
Edwlfl -111 f2'60
t mal be made to St sons Ni cholls o r San c.1';,";;i~ca,11cert 1,... Vltte ~lleecll.CtllfonM9*J •ovmofld E. McGro•. ttn1 c ....... -.c.11....,.,.nu:s
An rews Presbyterian Cl emente, Ca. and David C•lld•I . ...-..,, ~. Colltentl• Mk-1 .. an.c.,1221w.c..tt =~:·~1eec11.CA Av~:;;c~-= =.':":~.'~11'::::::!
Tllll It.._ •• flied witll "'9 PAltANSEM HACATOAYAH, 1"4J Cou111'r Clltil of Otonee c ..... ,,, on Port Ntl\011, NtWPort ••• .,11. CA NoYOmller J, 1•1. t'JMO. c h u r ~ h L e u k e m I a Denman or Van Nuys, Ca .. 2 .,... ~T.~::r.::. !10, Ntwpor1 810<11, Tiii• 11u11.-. I• C-llCled lly ... "'"
Foundation or the Western brothers Edward or Oakland Otfl o.Mllfe, as Hot'll'll\let UN, Tftl• ....._ Ii (~ by ... lncllvl ... I. Tiii• .......... cOllcfuclecl by ...
POO.. Tl•ll lwlrlleH I\ COlldUCltd lly Publlthod Or ... Coll\1 D•il• f'llOI, lfldlvict<;ol&. Med1ca~ Cent.er Interment and WtlHam or Rolhng Hills. New=.. ~l~S VIU ll'MIM~-'"' en.c. Tiiis :..-: '..!'~:: wllll -lftdlvlduel J .. lee Met"°""°'
al Pacific Vie_w . Memon al 4 sisters Marjorie DuCfield or c ... del, "-' ... Cft, Cllllor11lt This ste1en'ltfll was lllect wltl'I -Couflty Cl-"' o. ..... °"""'' Oii This •IA""'-t ... lllmod ..... .,.
~ov. 4, 11, II. 2S, 1., 4'0).ll ARTIN ICUYUMCU Tllh stet-I •M 111«1 wllll "'9
park . p a c Ir I c v I e \\ W· h. gton Loi Cl k r t2MO of Or c Sept J1 "" Cou11ty Cltrtt of 0r.,... c ... m., on Mortuary directors as in • 'c ar o Tllh """-• Lt cOflductod h • ~..=..;~·~.., .,,.. ..,flty on . • . P11t111 No-•.••• ,.,.,.,.
Cou11ty C"rt. of Or•,... County on Nov. J, t•t PllllC MOTtE
. Long Beach. a. Anne .. ...,.1~ ' P1101t Pv11t._...0r..,..c ... 10.11yP1<ot ~OUM NOTICEOFDEATHOF Pu«>tlthodOr&111J1 Cottl DellyP11ot,
Finnegan of Mission V1eJO. ltoye4J,Gatf1Cet1 Pu1>1l-Or&111J1CMllOellyP11ot. 0ct.21,a,HOY . ._11,1•1 _.., P11bllllled~.,,..coe110011yP1tot. NORBERT J . TIERNEY Nov.•.11.11,u.1•1 •s..1
RJEBHOFF
MARGARET It
RI EBHOF'f'. passed awa)
on November 7. 1981. She 1!
survived by h er sister~
Elizabeth Moe and Ruth
Madsen both of Santa Ana
Ca .. Ella Evans of South
Gale, Ca. and numerous
nieces and n e phews.
Graveside services wlll be
h eld o n Wednesday ,
November 11 , 1981 al
l :OOPM at Harbor Lawn
Memorial Park Wilh Rev.
Aaron Buhler, pastor of
Harbor Trinity Baptist
Ca and Virginia Hernck of Tiii• Ml""*"•• filed •1111 ,,,. Hov.4,11,Tl.u.1•1 41111Mt Nov.l1,1l,2S,OK.2·'"' •ND OF PETITION TO · . c-•Y c .. ,.. ol ()ranee County .,, " of San Jose. Ca. Memorial Novemw• 1., f'lalC !Ill( ADMINISTER ESTATE
sen ·ices will be held on • PUSUC P9.l ll'lll PIH mla NO. A·UClll2. Sund a•:, Novem ber lS. I~ Pul>ll-er.,.. CMM Dolly Piiot, NOTICE OF DE• TH OF a l T"h e Co m m u n i l . Nov. 11. "·ts, o.. i. 1•1 .,.,..1 fllCTITIOUI ausi••ss PICTITIOUS tVMNIU NOTICE OF DEATH OF T o a I I h e I r s , " NAM•STAUMSNT MAMllTATI!M8NT RENIE K ESPE AND OF beneficiaries, creditors WILLIAM w. MURRAY Presbyterian Churrh of Tiit 101_..,. ,.,.....,, .,. dol11t1 Tiie 1011ow1,,. perso11 I• dolnt p E T
1
.T
1 0
N T
0
and contingent creditors of AND OF PETITION TO t=~~~~ ~:~h.4~8.Fo;~~ llW""'"' ~~:~v PLUS, sm L•"9POrt ADMINISTER EST~TE Norbert J. Tierney and ~g~11~::JER ESTATE
Re .. Arthur J. Tan"erslev ·1_..1T10Usau11wau SHo::OOM"1N:e:>:,,.L1!..:'g,..L.,: c1r .. H""'1.,.....totc11,CA.,..-. persons who may be • • .
• ...... " r N"AM.STAHM8'" Huf1Uf191 .. effcll,CA...... • Glrtll i...., °"*" '"1 .....-NO. A111050. otherwise lnt~rested In the T 0 . a 1. I h e I r s ,
officiating. lnur nmenl t Tll• ... ~,.. --• •r• 11o1,. 01tuN1AONS, 1Nc..• Ctltfenll• c1~.hi~"="::ec~":f"j,., •11 T o a I I h e I r s , will and/or estate: beneficiaries, creditors ~oel~~:f at a ~ar~~ ~·a~;e~~~ 111H171~~os. JOIO Brim• St•tt•. ~~..'rr;:.:"~ J:.O' Drive, lndlvldllel. beneficiaries, creditors A petition has been filed and contingent creditors of
il . eo.toMoM,catltwfll•.,.. n 1, llllAIMu 1, c0fld11ttec1 ,,, 11 Glf'OllL~ and contingent creditors of by Mary Angela Tierney Wiiiiam W. Murray and
Ca. The Cam Y requests m Jol!ft F. llW,., ...,.,. .. _,,.,,, u•-•Uon. Tiii• ,__, -11i..i w1tt1"" Renie K. Espe and persons In the Superior Court of persons who may be
heu of flowers. friends whom Tmm A--. ... H-1 9o.a., GAE1EN11tONs,1Hc. C-•OHt1•0rMtiteo..oty&110c1. who may be otherw ise Orange County requesting otherwise Interested In the
Cw o in~ r~ b ~t lao ~ s ~ o a lkh: can~-;::,:,~ s1rect1"'9 . .,o Hew-" . ~~~,.,.,, ,., ••1. flt7Ml7 Interested In tlH~ w 111 that Mary Angela Tierney wll 1 and/or estate: . c ..... , Orlv•. Newpor1 eeocll, Tllll Ml""'-t wes flied wltll tllt P\IMlllWCIOr ..... Cant Delly Pl .... and/or estate: be appointed as personal A petition has been filed
Restoration Progarn of the Ctllfwfllt'*6 c°""'' Clef'k "' 0r.,... c-ty .,. Ott. 21• a.....,,,._ 11·"" .,..., A petition has been filed re P resent at i v e t 0 by Carol L Murray In the
Com munily Presbyterian 11~::!:,~~ <lfldllcted 1>y • Nov.1, tW1. "".,.. by Alfred L. Beasley In the administer the estate of Superior Court of Orange ;;;:::=======::;~!Church of Laguna Beach Jclllll F. ,._ Pul>tl-°'""" eo.st o.u, ,.1.,., PlalC l9ta Superior Court of Oranoe Norbert J. Tierney (under County requesting that Neptune Society Ra y Fam ily M ortuary T1111 u""""'1-fllodw•t11-Nov.•.11.1,is,1., ,,.,.1 County requesting that the Independent Carol L. Murray be
cu.-anON aurtiALAhu directors ~~..;'r"..:. ~ ... C-'• on "::Z,:=:.U,:::," Alfred L. Beasley be Admlnls1ratlon of Estates appointed as p~rs onal 646-7431 ,.11an ....C l9TI£ no totiowmi ,.,...,., .,.. do1111 appointed as personal Act) The petition Is set tor represent at 1 v e to
Our rilarature tells the' HORNSBY P111>11SIWd 0ronoe.coe11 Deu, P11ot, -----------.,...1,...ea: represent a t 1 v e to hearing in Dept No 3 at administer the estate of
complete story of our S A L L Y M A R Y How. 4, 11, ''· u.1•• mu1 fl1CT1nous •u&1•1u CA1tcv Of'fllCIE suv1c1S, u administer the estate of 700 Civic Center Drive W 1111 am W . Murr a Y
,.eocietv. . HORNSBY. resident or _.,. _t Tho ,:=.!!A!::: .. ~. doi .. , ~i .... .......,.hKll.c.on1on11e Renie K. Espe (under the West In the City of Santa (under the Independent
ce111 .. 1reo~1. Newport Beach, Ca. Passed ,_ .. ,,.,.; 111.istneu•. Tl!Oma PMllCero'l'.JSLllldo llll, 1 n dependent Ana' California on Administration of.Estates
24 ""· Cem.it1ir. away on November 8. 1981. -----------o o HAL o J o H H s To N & N....,t 1tec11 c.ii.......o...,. Administration of Estat es Nove,;,ber 25 1981 at 9 . 30 Act). The petition IS set for ~==========::!....JS he is survived by her fllCTIT10UStUS11111u COMPAHY, 10061 Tell>ef1 Avo., s..i.. o.rtt La t:.llffY. 11 Llfldt ..... Act>. The petit ion is set for am ' · hearing In Dept. No. 3 at
PtlllClllOTHal
SMfTHS'..OlrTUMY
~MainSt.
.._,n\ington Beach
536-6539
PAafte YllW MIMOll.Al , ....
Cemtt4Hl Mortuary
Chapel-Qematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
644-2700
McCOIMICK WOlrTUAIUIS
Laguna Beech
494-!M15
Laguna Hills
768-0933
58n Juan C.plstrano
495-tn&
husband J Scott Hornsby. 2 Tll• ,!=,.."~= ... ',.. .... ,., 2000:=!"'~!:~~·~="· .,.., N~..=i'::'':::c'::°~"' hearing In Dept. No. 3 at ·1,: YOU OB.JECT to the 700 Civic Center Drive,
son s John Caster o r .,...,,.. .... : 51,111,., Av• .• ,....,,.,111,. valley, c• lfldl~HI-700 Civic Center Drive, granting of the petition West, In the City of santa
Modesto, Ca. and Charles LUAH•E s. wue co .• >J01 w . .,,.. o-yic.roy west, In the City of Santa you should either appear Ana, Californla on Dec. 9,
Caster of the V1rgm Islands. Moor~::-:~£i:t2'o:.l!la tu Tiii• .....,,_, •• coNN<tod.,., •11 c~~Y ~=-= ::,.::....,0::, ':: Ana, California on Dec. 9, at the hearing and state 1981at9:30 a .m .
daughter Marylee Chipman ~ Al H:.,,. " · ~ •fldlvklWll. No'ltlf'llWt, 1"1 1981at9·30 am IF YOU OBJECT to the or Burbank•, Ca ., 12 :704. · • · • ,.,., T1111 :::::.,~.dW_:::,='::'"' ttw ,,,,.. 1 F Y0°U OBJECT to the your objections or file granting of the petition,
step-daughters Daryl Klhg JIAAY w1LLIAA' wne. ui1 w, c_,.., Clerll ol ~.,,.. c:-ry "Oct. """ltllad ar.,. c-st °"'Y "'lot. gr anting of the petition, written objections with the you should either appear
of Palos Verdes. Ca. ond ~~i:::; ~=.~ :o4-.. ''· 1tt•. ~17,.,. Nov. 11• ''is. o.c. t. 1"' _,.,1 you should either appear court before the hearing. at the hearing and state
Christy Kinney or Santo 111c11v1c1ue1. Pu1>11-0r,.... eoe.11 Dolly ,.1..._ at t.he hearing and state Your appearance may be your objections or f ile
Clar a, Ca. and her sister LUANtes.wen oc1.21,2t,NOv.4.1t.1•1 m1-t1 . PlaSll'lll ,. yoUT objections or file In p erson or by your wrlttenobjectlonswlththe
Margaret Crilly or Novato, C:.,~', ~==;::;-----------...... -----------•written objections with the attfr~yy 0 U ARE A cyourt before the hearlnbeg.
Ca. Mass or Christian Burial S, ltl1. . rnuc •Tll IUN911CMlC:OUltTOll court before the hearing. c R E D I T 0 R 0 r a our appearance may
w i ll be at 10 :30AM on ""*' cou~::':.... , Your appearance may be ti t ..,.,1t ft•-In person or by your Wednesday, November 11. "111>11"4ICI Or&111J1Coostoe1h1 Pllo4,, I n p erson or by your con ngen er"" or 0 ""'attorney.
1981 at Our J..ady Queen or ""'·•· 11· ''·"· 1"' •1 .. 1 •=m:.U::::' ,._:,:_-~,: attorney deceased, you must file 1 F You A R E A
Angels Catholic Church. Tft• t•11ew1111 ""-I• fe1111 MA"•1AGROft-: I F yo u A R E A your claim with the court C R E O I T O R o r a
Visitation w i ll be on Piii.JC •m Ml-•: PnmoN••: HUMUINOA 'c R E o ITO R or a or present It to the. contingent creditor of the Tuesd~. November 10. 1981 si:~.~~,.':i'c:'.:;...,1:!.:1~ c":~"s0iioNOIE NT: •uo11t10 contingent creditor of the personal representative deceased, you must file
Crom 6:00PM to 9:00PM at "1CTmouaaustNHt CAttlll. CAST•o deceased you must file appointed by the court your claim with the court
Pacific View Memor ial Tll• ,:~T!!!!!1,1111Tr• ~1,.,1 act 1*"-k ~ ltNkt, tU..,..CflAMU.YLAWI your claim w ith the court within four months from or present It to the
I ""' ..... -· .... • c•",.""' cer...,e11e11, "" 1. CAM •UMae1t .,.... the date of first Issuance Park. Interment at Pac Cle....,,. .... : 1utc11ey,S.UAN.CAt1'1'tS. NOTICR1 v .. ._...,.._. n. or prese nt It to t h e of letters as provided In personal representative
View Memorial Park. In lieu AL1Tc;o.01v1s10N o" HI I.TRON Tiii• ...,_, 11 c...-n.ci ,., • ceurt 1MY _......,... "911..._. personal representative ~--tlon 700 of t•-p-... -te appointed by the court r fl h , 11 co""°"A"oN. '*° n1rty *...., ...... """ llMN""""' ......., ~ .... ·-0 ow era t e am Y 51, .. 1, Newport llff<ll, c.1110,,.10 c.--ics ::111 •...,.. ,.,.. .. ~ appointed by the court Code of California The w i thin four months from suggests contributions to the m10 WtllNIJ o.. ...._ within four months from 1 · the date of first Issuance
A m e r i c a n H e a r t o,. AolldOI "" M011>11t1. ms.._ 111c,T,.._,,;ry 11 .,W w11tt .. -... 11MCa .. "' the date of first Issuance time for filing cla ms wlll of letters as provided In
Assocla.Uon, Orange Count9 V•• A-, eaca Mo--. "'1"""' T1111 ......,_ -mat """ .. ~' 111"'" -""·,., ..... • of letters es provided In not expire prior to four Section 700 of the Probate
Chapter. 1043 Civic Center ..,.Mr. K-... Hiii--. P.O.'" C-4'Y°"'11fl00...,.CewotyM0ct. .. ,,.,,....,, .. '"" .,.iw ........ section 700 of the Probate months from the date of Code of California Th•
D S t An c 92\03 -· ·-· ,.. "· '"'· ... ..-... """· ""'" ,...,. "'"-· the hearlng noticed above • r.. an a a. a. . tn•. •nMyH111s,catK9"lletoJta "'""' .-v1so u.. 1111 .._ ..._. ..... Code of California. The YOU MAY EXAMINE time for filing claims will Pacific View Mortuary Mr.Oflelemllls.1t111•...,.....•111 P•ltllad0r...,.ea.to.11y...._ 111n..,..-.••tt11tnu.. tlmeforflllngclalms wlll not elCplre prior to four
directors. '· •reflord, N•. '· 11111• "111• oct. a. ...... 4. 11•" *' ..wt ''" •119•..-c1• ' --'" u•. not expire prior to tour the file kept by the court. months from the date of cai11em1emw ,...._.. ....,. • • ..., LH " . If you are.lnteres1ed In the M'· ""'K. AJlt, 1w Mott v.,.. ------------w.n..ec._........ months from the date of estate y'ou may tile a the hearing noticed •bove. Bia8 nixed ~.::;-.:.:::~~=.: .. ~·: PlaJCll'la 11u ............ _ ... thehearlngnotlcedabove. request w ith the court to YOU MAY EXAMINE
tllllftt.._ .... •-'-'""" ~""" :c~~:'W:.· :-:.": YOU MAY EXAMINE. receive special notice of the file kept by the c.ourt.
SA N FRANCISCO ,,.,._..,... PtCTmounvta••• -•· w ,..._.. "''*· t111&y the flle k~t by the court. the Inventory of estate If rou ere Interested In the
(AP) -Advertiten 1D '"'' ~·~-111 .. Wiii ... TM -==~T:.,r::·.~ ....... ~~.~=-:.:.~~ ~fsr:~:~o'::e~~,w:~ asset1.nct0f thel)9tltlons, ~ :.o~ ~"cc!!::.:
tbt Cbrlstlan Yellow c-ey CIWtl .. Or"'9I c-ty "' lloltlMea... "" .. "'" "" "''' • '''"''" ranues• with the court to accounts and rt~ort1 ._ • ..._ -a.1 ....... _ of
P I b ............. ""· T•••v HARltll IOUlf'MINT ~ ---... If..... -... ... deKrlbld"' Section, •• ·-.,,.. _... ._ a • • • t e e P o • • ......,.. or.. Ctell °"~•:, IALH, '* v"" .....,, N""'1 • '"' •,.,.......,... • .,,. ., • receive spec la I notice of of the c:alfforN• Pt..t. the lftVMtlrY of Mt•t• dlreetorle1 will Do ...... ,,,, .... --... ,--. •• 1 hK,11.CtllfWlllt.,... ......_, ,.. 111«~~~ th• lnventor~of Ht•t• c--ailltaMltllM
d ---.--· ........ . "· Htni .. lllC • (ti,_ .... .,...,.,_._,IOW'f___ t and-" _.,t...__ -· t • lo•1•r be llmltt to------------1'*'••••U•ll, uu V'11t• "''"· '"' ,..,. _., "'"', ,......,., ass1 s "' -· ._.., t\CP I r "bor'D·apila ~" .....,.,r--...~.... ,..,... .......... er...,.-. accou"ts an,,d rtporh M~lc Pe•l•r a •• 1191• 9a•tr aa a~melt To Place your' "''' ""'"'" 11 c.-.cttd 'Y • '"''""'"' •tvt••-" 111rwe"ti described In S.CtJon 1IOO ar 1 .. ¥.: fllti la~ .. .._ .... 11•· _,.,.~ ......... ,.. =.:;:C::::.:C.. of the ca11tom1a Prall•
C I ....., i.:-":...--....-. ''"'...,,.. ...,......,._, ........ ..,. CocM. • • If WfM,,,_~, ,,........ c..n. TM .-.1•1•111 M .,...., Re,ert A. ••• • ftt 11ree N ad ••.. Call Now . TMi ......_. -'*' .......... '* _, • ,,...,, • .._ A,,,, .. , at Law f .. • ... ..-fl .. , .. 1. ""· ........ Dewtr Drl • • • •••.. •• ""r.::,: C..ty OWll .. 0r-.. Cewoty -'-' ............... IN't .. AllU-11111=• ~-..,,.,. ....... ..._. .... Nll.lld '----i.iimiliiilllltllfl'"I .. '811 .... ~ .. n.CWIDeftt.= .. ~!~~~(Wt-..= ..::mr, •
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•
Orange Co11t OAU.Y PtLOT/Wedne1day, November 11 , 1H1
•
Re-irement accounts changing ...
By KE1111 TtJBE• Now fl.nanclal lnltltutlona an Recovery TH Act of 1911. tht OM t.My plOOMred fOC' AU
..., .... .....,.,..., looklnl aheatl to Jan. l , 1112, Locally baaed Paclllc Federal Saven Ctrt11lcata, on Nov. 1.
Depo1lta ln 1avin11 and Aoan when l"••tl.Y llberaU1ed ru111 Sa vln1s and Loan A11oclaUon A l rt ad Y, th t S le L b 1 •
111oclatlona lut month topped lo n c er n l n 1 1 n d l v Id u 1 I l1o't waitlnl for the new year; 11rnertd nearly uoo,ooo ln
wltbdrawall for the flnt ifme retk'ement accountl ud Kqb however. Tbe Calta Me11 5'l1. pre -slanup accounu, and
1lnce February thank• to the plana 10 t nto effect 11 1 be1an markttln1 a 20 percent expects Sl.30 mllllon ln depo1lta
new All Saven CertJflcates. conaequenct of the Economic repurchue pro1ram, not unllkt by the end of next year .. That rt1ure would quadruple the
Chamber: Let builders build
Government interference blamed f or escalating costs
8y GLENN SCOTT
Of .............
The belt aoluUon to Oran1e
County's housing problems ls to
11 ve home builders more
freedom to build where and bow
many units they want, the
Orange County Chamber or
Commerce says.
In a report made public
earlier this week , chamber
leaders who said they were
speaking for the business
community as a whole claimed
too much government
interference has slowed housing
construction and forced prices
up.
They call for relaxed zoning
laws to a llow higher density
housing projects, the end or a
count y program requiring
builders to construct units for
l ow-and median-income
families and a halt to resale
controls.
The report's conclusions
closely resemble those of
another report released recently
by the Orange County chapter or
the Building Industry
Association.
In that report, BIA leaders
also called for abolition of
county 1overnment atandards
Intended to enaure that at leut
25 percent of all new homes ln
unincorporated parta of tbe
co ty are '11 . the "affordable"
n1e.
. Robert Simpson, chairman or
the c hamber's Economic
Development Council, said bis
group belleves that free
enterprise ls a "mighty enJlne"
that shouldn't be constrained by
government.
••If we gear it u~ and take the
brakes oft, the private s_egment
of this economy can solve the
(housing) problems ," he
suggested.·
Simpson made his remarks at
a press conference in Santa Ana
also attended by chamber
offlcials Lucien Truhill, Jack
Callahan and Anson McArthur.
They said copies of the 10-page
report will be sent to leaders of
all 26 cities in the county and the
county Board or Supervisors.
Simpson said Oqnge County
has not had during the past tive
years the growth housing supply
it needs to meet its demand for
new workers. Without that
s upply, the county's economy
will suffer, he said.
COUllC10M COMml .... e-. .............. n-"41
FAIMOS lleSllMG ,.,
541-5554 ., l l5-J07
I' 14 tt..t.er • Coste ......
..... C.._M1UI Ill"" Cl. ..... .., ...
l(r~rr..,. $GI.ti....,.
~ .. LHfl .. ,,. IOt.11 JOP-..._. ......
~Sllwt'Be91 ., .... .,....
SMttl CMlt "'91• VIII... 1714) .......
For a.ultd Ad
ACTION
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MJ-~7·
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In 1981, 1982, 1983
A nd Legally Recover
.Taxes Paid In
1978, 1979, 1980
You can invest dollars already spent. are currently
spending and will spend in' the ruture for taxes. into
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LIMITED SEATING
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759-1401
GeTald L. Kozak, Fi'llandal Service.
359 San Miguel Drive. Suite 110
."lel.!lport BNch. CA 926«1 f114J_759·1f01
By allowin1 hl1her densities,
he said bullders can provide
more units per acre, whlch
makes it more profitable to
supply moderately priced
housing.
However, Simpson said there
ls no guarantee except market •
conditions to ensure that
builders would provide the less
expensive housing rather than
the higher priced units which, he
admitted, generaJly are more
profitable to build today.
"In that, we are hoping the
builders will cooperate," he
said. "We can't see solutions
here unless the builders pitch in
and help."
The chamber leaders also
agreed that the county"s
inclusionary housing program
was begun in 1979 because
builders until then had not
seemed interested in the
moderately priced housing.
But Simpson said govemnt'ent
regulation also was a cause for
the reluctance to provide the
cheaper housinJt.
"We don't think (government
programs) ha ve to be the
solution in the future," he said.
as low as
aaaoc1'Uon's current b•••·
"We came up with an idea
and decided to 10 with ll," said
llobert Johnson, Pac Fed'•
executive vice president. • •u we
do as well as we expect -our
All Saven Certificates exceeded
expectationa -then that meana
there will be more money
available for home loans."
Ampnc the changea under the
new ~w. the IRA deduct1on
limit is raised from Sl,500 to
$2,000, and there is no tonier a
requirement that an individual
not be an actlve parlicipanf in
an employer sponsored p an.
For Keogh plans, the maximum
deductible amount has been
doubled to $15,000.
What does this mean in dollars
and cents, upon retirement?
The answers are startling.
Say, for instance, you
contribute $100 a month for 40
years. At an average interest
rate of 12 percent, your capital
investment or $48,000 would have
grown to Sl.l million.
Or, if you deposit the
maximum S2,000 &flnually, and
leave your account untapped for
30 years -again figuring an
annual interest rate or 12
percent · your $60,000 would net
$604,611 after you reach the age
or 59~. <See accompanying
chart· for other growth rates.>
That's one or the catches · the
One-way from
Los AnaeJes to:
Phoenix
How en lndlvlduel Retirement
Account grows
Compounded d.ity .. -""*' , .... of '""'"'
nMI
.,. tf~ 14%
,.....,. ~.mo. AWw.MO. A#ft.-. ec z., veiue .. J:": Vllue• J:": Vllue• J:": •<~ ,000/yr.)..... ... ... .... ...... .... ... ..
20 ~~ IH1,713 17,753 12.145.142 128,W Sl.151,481 SH>*~
25 I0.000 832,554 5.099 1,121,0411 18,327 4,3!!,527 ' SU33
30 701000 413,125 3.330 1120.124 11.297 2,155:727 •.313
3' I0,000 288.145 2,151 51S,788 5,22:5 1,062.810 1ue2
40 50,000 1118,330 1.395 288,950 2.1110 510.043 t ,242
45 40,000 104,323 • 1141 157,554 1.514 243,192 2.878 I 50 30.000 IO.Me 4111 12.001 925 111.1127 1,388
~ 20,000 32,097 258 39,953 391 47.388 579
~ 10,000 12,138 103 14,147 142 15,817 181
• Baed on 22·yMt 1119, lncludlng luMYot bentil!tl
Cnocaeo '-°'-. ...._.., ,_., S---i--
penalties for early withdrawal.
The minimum term of an IRA
account is 18 months, after
which time the account may be
renewed at· the prevailing
interest rate. (Pac Fed's rate is
tied to six-month Treasury bills
on a floating rate basis.) IC funds
are withdrawn prematurely, the
account holder is subject to a
six-month interest penalty
charge.
The Internal Revenue Service
charges a penalty, too. If funds
are withdrawn before the
investor reaches the a1e of 58 \.;..
and he is not permanently
disabled, the tax deferred statue
is revoked and a 10 percent
penally assessed. In addition,
the state charges a penalty of 2
~ percent . The government
made sure the money in IR.M
and Keoghs would stay there
until retirement.
The 20 percent interest on the
repurchase agreement, which is
paid In advance, is taxable.
Rollover lnto the IRA account ii
voluntary.
~-"~ An-Iv~ Mon.-fri. Sat. S un.
9 00 a.m 11·15a.m s 59 s 59 s 39
'
12.30 p.m. 2:42 pm. 39 59 39
5 40 p.m 7:52 pm 59 39 59 CONSTRUCilON
MONEY
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK.
Our lowest fare with no
advance-purchase or length-
of-stay requirements. Portland 815a.m JO 30 am s 99 s 99 -;.·
CONTACT:
•Jeff)ohlllon
South OnnF County/ (nine
714/8S 1""4050
•'JOmWUcher North Or-. County/RMnide County
714/85Ml26
• John .... deld s.n a. Oounly
7141299-9330
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When you fly United's Friendship Express to San
Francisco. you can rent a 2-door Chevy Citation (or com·
parable model) from AJamo Rent-A-Car for onl{$15.95
per day. Along with a great low price. you get unlimited
free mileage. alr conditioning. automatic transmission
and primary liability insurance. In Phoenix. you can rent
any Alamo car and gel one day's free rental. regardless
of how long you keep the car. In San Francisco offer
explres DeCetnber 18 and ln Phoenix offer expires January
31, 1982. Gasoline and opllooal coJUsion-damage waiver
are not tricluded.
10·50 a.m I 02p m 99 99 s 99
1:40p.m 3:52 p.m 99 99 99
4.IOp.m 6:20 p.m I 19 99 99
7·00 p.m 9 IOpm I 19 99 99 '·
Reno 930a m 10 48 am s 59 s 59 s 59
3.30p.m. 4:48 p.m. 59 59 39
7:30 o.m . 8:48 p.m. 39 39 59
San Franclsco 700a.m. 8:07 a m s 39 s 39 s 39
800am 9:12am 59 59 59
9.00 a.m. 10:16a.m 59 59 59
10.00a.m. I 1:10 a.m. 59 59 59
l l ·OOa.m. 12,11 pm 59 ·59 59
12:00 noon 1·14pm. 59 59 59
l ·OO p.m 2·14 pm 59 59 59
2·00 p.m. 3:10pm. 59 59 59
3·00 p.m 4:07 p.m. 59 59 59
4:00 p.m. I 5:07 pm. 59 59 59
500p.m 6:07 pm 59 59 59
6·00p.m. 7 IOpm. 59 39 39
7:00p.m. 8:08p.m., 59 59 59
8:00 p.m 9.:06pm. 59 59 59
9 00 p.m 10:06pm 59 59 59
ll·OS p.m 12.01 am. 39 39 39
I 6 •••
" ... ,., . ...
Seattle 8:00a.m 10:28a.m. 5129 5129 -10:40 a.m 1:08p.m. 129 129 $129
1·55 p.m. 4:20 pm. 109 109 129
5-00 p.m. 7:25p.m. 129 129 109
7~30 p.m. 9·55p.m. 129 109 129
91000.m. ) 1:22 p.m. 109 -109
Fares and BChcdulcs 1ubject to ~ha.nae.
"Alt, Uaiud ... there'R no Mtttr wa~
lo Eqreu NCJNriftf!-·
Orange Cout DAILY PIL.OT 1WednHd1y4 November 11, 1881 .....
fl'tCTIWMtt•IUI ~'"W UMalTA.,._Wf CAU _,..,., , .. .......,,..._.,......, .. •• ·--:e..~:: .r.:+.i;~i~ ............. ~ -~-. L•n .. ,.... ... voe• llM ..... • §~~!::~ S:-~¥.1=13~ .......................... OrlW, ..... AM, Celltwllla lll .. rff .. Ill .. Matttr ..........
......,. M. H_.. lltte c-IM •••••r Hl•rt 111111 ceurt 111 er AMllelm Hiiie c11111111I• ~ Ne. a " * Cl¥1C CMw . . °''"' .......... ,.,,.. ~"' ........ M. V ... IW Y .... I ~ •• ..,, M •:• .. , .. 8
.. ....,. 8"C~ Collfeol• "'• 8M *" •..,, INW <-. N ' • '. ll>Y l!Wy MW, Wiiy ............ fir
1111 INll...-I, clHWlvctad ty • <Miiie" -.,.... ,... • .,.,.., • PllJC llll(
........... .. .. fwe.r.,.,.. ..... ~., .... -----------_...,.a • ...,_t "*r ta .,_ -.. ._.... ..... 111
"'" ............ -fl ... with ... Tiie Dolly ~ .. ,, a ........ , el
Cten .. Or ..... C-ty -91119rel <l~. ~..-111 '"'' ..... "" ,_, ....... *' .... .., ~ ,.,,_ ~""-... , ..,.., ... -..
b: .......... er-.. c... oaiiy ""-.. .,.....,_
·'·"·"'"·"'' 4ltMI o-.~ .. ..., _ tt-WH.~.
J
-· -Judlitll ... ~C-1 F--. -·~ Pullllthed Or~tl O.lly l"li.4. Nov.•, 11, II, IS, 1"1 *7.tl.
! UM91TAftMllWT
-:-"" --· .... Wlfte . Nae 1111(
ct.•M•lfTe 1.IMIT•D
•••• .... C-IHl• Ori ¥1, •OTIU Of' Taun••'l IAI.• .. ......,. 9MCtl, cal...,.. NOTICE II HIEttE8Y GIVEN tNt
ee Wad11t1dey, tll1 Utll day et
T errlMortl C~Mret1111, o No-W, 1•1 at IO:llO o.m. et .._
_...,..._., st• c....... von ~ A-~ 111 1M cnv "' Wtl I .. , N1w"'1 .. e<ll, NIWilltt1 ~II, c:.uMy of Or"1119t,
....._ Itel• e l Ce llfor11lo, HUGH fl'tUftl I ni. ....._. 11 <IMll<tad •Y • ••EC1CEN1t1ooe .. Ult Trv"'9,., fl'llMI.,.. er.,.. c;-t Delly ~ ~ .. -... tlll lenefklary, CAttOI. A. NAGtL, Oct.•, Neot.•, 1', 11, 1•1 ...... • i 1'11 ~Corp. WllOM llr .. I IOClrell It 4650 VOii t-------------,.,.... ~ Korm111 A"911111, NlwPOrt aeecll,
, ,,,,...... C•lllor11l1 111• WllOH ttlljlhl... -.JC Meta
I fMI .......... -II ......... llUlftlllr II 71~1, wtll •II at Clefll 11 Or ..... c:-.ty 111 Ott. fl'Ulllk auctMll to IN llltillMI ..... , l9r
"9t, Cltft, lawful rnOMY 11 tlle UllllM fl'tH Statll, all _..,..._ ot t.1111 time Of ..... L ~ ~ C-t Deify ~ •II 11\al ~ ,.... Pf'Otl9rt'f 11-.. ...
Dct.,11. !llW, 4, II, It,. ttel *I .. Ill IN City Ill~ •.P• Or .....
cau111y, Cellternl• •n"I"• ••
l Nae eltl( follows:
Lot II, Tract nh, ea ~ Oii e
fl'tCTtnous auMN•ll mop ••<All"Cled 111 9o011 21•. ,.._.. M l
I MMllS ITATaMaWT lncluslw OI Ml_.*-~ Ill
...... ....__._ ._._ --IM affi<• of IM c-.ty tt-..W If
·-___.... --ore-· -0•11181 ~. cae""'"61. ,., Tiie t i•••• o.cldrHI or other ltO•EttT WOLTZ ASSOCIATES common dlel..,otlOtl ol Hid rHI
Slt ~lor A-. -PO p._t1Y Is 11 G.......,lor, NIWOOf1
,CAnMI: Beec:ll, Ota11911c:-..y, Cellfomlo.
... ,, w.lb Atsocl•I" Inc., • Said .. ,. will 111 "' ... wltllolll ltwMe eerpet..,..., i1t Superior cow111111 « ,,..,.,_., ,....,...,.. tltla,
""""· ~ llffcll, CA ""3. pouitulon or lllC\WnlltllKlt '° utlely • Tlllt ..... NH It CDftduclld llY • Ill• 01111iollon1 tecur•• •Y tlld f°'""°'~~-t1ur1ue"I "lo IM PO ... r of Nie H • .._., ....... reflrrM to Ill llla1 cef'Ulll !>Md of
I _.._Inc. Tru11 dated Octoi>er l , 1ff0 •"• I lltollartL.Woltz •••cut•• llY INTEltVEST
'"9kllllt ASSOCIATES, INC., 1 Ollewor1 1 Tiiis , ... _, wes Iii.cl wltll Ille c or por1t1011, •• Tr u 1tor lo ~ Clet1ll/IOt'Mt1C-W'OflOct. AES I 0 ENT I AL ES C It OW • tt. 1'91....... fl,~ COttPOttATION, 1 Collfornl e I . 1 ,_. ~°'"'otlOll es TNStole for CAttOL. A. • ""*'""""()-..... Coast Diiiy Plio.. NAGEL, e -·rltel -es lier eo11 tOd. n , • "'°"· '-"· 1t11 ..01-81 ,,.. ...., ... .,....,,.,, .. a-tlcl•rv.
,_ .... ~ l. ·-· 111 ..... 11771, P• 11tS of Ofllclel It«°'* If
0!'11191 c.utlty, Cellfonll1.
Notice fA o.leutt Olld El«llOl'I to S.11 • fl'ICTtTtOUI •ustM•ll Ille detc:rlllllCI reol "'°"'1Y under ....
eeAMS STATaMaNT 01ec1 of nvtt wM r--on A"""'*
1 Tiie ...... "'9 ,.,_, ere dol119 J, 1•1, In 9oOll 1.4146, P ... 1 .. , of
-...-.. : Ottklal ..__ Of °" .... c-1,,
• •LU• $AILS STATIOHEttS, ... C•llfon!La •
.......... ,CAftMI. Tiiis HOt1u It ti-In <-'1111<1 I kyt L .. ...,.. Plctl.ttl, .. E. wllh tM wnttltll °""kollOl'I to HU0t1
=H'-Y •'7 • ......_,, BMcft,CA llttECICENRIOGE. u Trv1t11
1111Ktltvt• ..., SUBSTITUTIOH 01'
fl'ICTlnous MlllNSSI NAMIE ITATaMaNT
Thi llllOWI ... ,., .. ,,, ., ... 1 ...
lluiflNSI M :
Wl!STElllN STATES OIL FIEL.0
PttOOUCTS, ltolt Cry1t11 Stree1. H1111t"'9W119Mcll, CA t2IMI. ' W01tem Stein MHtw-t Co.,
lllC., e CallfonM c:.or,.oret-. 19'n
Crvstol StlWC, Hwltll .. ,.. 8Ncll, CA nwa. ......, ....
Mallllr-1Co., Inc:.
tt-.rt L. MdtrlOll
~.,,._
Tiiis ......._. -111111 wl .. Ille
C-ty C.lltll ol OrMgit c-ty 011 Oct.
"· 1•1. PU,_
PWllMllll ~ COMt Dally Piiot. Oct. JI, •• Hool. 4, 11, .. II "6602 .. 1
PICTtTIOUI aUStMtlll
MAMSSTATaMaNT
Tiie 1011ow1119 jlerton It dol110
llllSl"9UM:
AENU·ALL SYSTEMS, •Ut A
Hllerla W.y, ~ leodl, CA fM6)
Fre1Jllll11 M. M<l(lllflllfl, •1 .. A
Hllerl• w.,. N••POrl Boecll, CA
'*3. Tltll llvsllleu IS condvcted by Ill
llldlvktuel.
F. M. Mc ltllwlllfl
Tiils ttllltfNfll •IS fl!M wllll .,.
C-tv C'-'11 OI o...,.. C-ty 011 Oct .
lt,1•1. ,,,,_
P\lllllthed °'lnl9 C:-1 OIHy Piiot,
Oc.1. ti, .. -· 4, I I, 1"1 ~~
I N..,8J.Plellltb,•E.C-Hlwlf TttUSTEE •Y •ENU'ICIAttY ..... -------------••17, N~ 9Mch, CA ttM0. November J, "'1, Illy Hid a.nofklMT. ! Tiii• ..... It conduc1M b' en °" N~ 4, , ••• wtlkll I• IM -.JC llll(
llftdt¥1dM81. 0111 Ill .. lnltJOI ,.,.,.k .. IOl'I Ill Wt -------------a.ryl L. Pkutts Noll<• ol Sela Vie lotlOW"'9 -tt l'ICTITIOUS 8UllMllll 1 TMa ............ -lllld wltll 0.. tePrtHllt tlle lolll •-ts Of Ille MAMIE STAT9MattT
tc:-ity a..110f Or-COWllty '"Oct. u11peld lllleno Of t.,. o&ll .. Uo111 Tiie 1o11owlno perto" II 001"9 •17, ttin. 11cured by the ebov1·d11cr llled busllllu •:
I fl'1H1M ~operty to be told llld .-.-.4lty L.OW~LL NOttMAN MEDIA : ............. 0r-.. CoMI Oe11, Pl .. Hllm•t•d <Hit, ••P•"'H .,.. PltOOUCTIONS, IOlt N111cy L.ft.,
•Oct ••• -· 4, II, II, "'1 ....,., ldvlMH. r.lfl<tlVll'(: Cotae Mete, CA f»t7 I . I. A !>Md ol Tnllt .. M<W• Ill ~· 0. "'°"""'· 1012 NlftCY l.l'I., , PntJC •'Ill llMMMldlllss of •1•,000.00 recerded CottoMlto,CAfMt7. I Morell•· 1'77 lfl ...., mu.,... 1tea Thi• .....,_. 11 cOllduclOCI ..., an
of Offldel---. .. Of'.,. Count,, llldlvldl.9!. ! Collfomle 0.-Ml<'dl IS, tm, wltll '--'...,.,.,...,
JOllll L.. H .... 1110 Cerol N..... Tllh ~ ... llted ..... -~.
......... Olld ...... Tru--.., Ser,.. c-•Y Clltll"' 0r .... eo..nty 011 Ott.
Rec-••-~y, I~ ,. 1'9t
Pt7MM ON ,ttlDAY, NOY•MalEtt •· "91, CMPOrotlall H Trvstee 8M 14-' . et 11: .. A.M .. TltANSAMEAICA Sn• ... ~ • .:. LNfl AsMclotlaft •
Tf'Tta INSUltAHCI! COMPANY, A C 11 f I C r 11 ' l'vllllllWd Or .... Cea.st Delly Pl ....
C.Ll*o•N1A co• ...... •ATION • or" • 0 p•ro 111• ot r " ~ ,.r.,,. OI 8-fk laty, WhlCll II jJlt ••»ft Ill
dtlly •...iMM Trust" ulldlr •NI default as of Jiiiy I, 1•1 -Ills ..
........ ID Oeed of Tf'Vlt recer-lollOwl"9blllMftCllle:
J-U, t"9 • lllltr. Na. mtl llOoll UllPlklllalallCOflf
, ....... ,.., "' OfflClal "-'ts. ~o.-uon ••.en.• fl'ICTlnoul aultNHI
.... .., 1 WAYNE ICAUl'MANN, lnler"1_._ WAMaSTATW .. MT ~ _. ..... ~ .. lnlltor Ill Ula CM....... ,,..... Tiii lollowl119 plrlOll It •• 1 .. ,
... ice el lhl County Recorder of Trutl•'t._. 1,Jl4.17 111111,.es111:
Or .... C-.ty, State of COlllornl1, t A 0.... If Trust to 9KWt 111 S Alll!R SOFTWAttl, 102
WILi. HL.L AT PUBLIC AUCTION l"*b...._ f1f $115,GIMt ,_ .. P11<111t1-.c.i.MeM,CA'2627.
Oct. ti, ....... ~"· 1'91 ~
fl'ICnTtOUI •U11• ..
MAMllTA'1111M•T
TM .......... ,_,_, are ......
IN.W.•:
IA M1$SIOH HOMHi Ill 01.D
01.0ttY HOM«I: IC) fl'ATftlOT
HOMH; CD> tttlVlltttl HOMH; C•) SINATa HClllMI; (Fl 1116 MOMal;
(01 T 6 1-HOMtll1 IHI TttADITIONA&. HOMH; (I) UNIOH
HOMH; (J) WAIHINGTOH ~H;
110 YANKatl HOMAlS; .,,_ (I.I ZEA
HOMEI, 111' se ..... lttwl, ..........
Cell..,,. tl11•.
fl'lllllp H. McNam•1, UIU
McDermott, •I, lrvlM, Cill,...111•
"114.
Dale Slmllro, UM la11ta11111a
Terre«, OW-.. Mar. caeltonl4a tMK. j
fhll ~MH II C°"°"CtM Illy a
""'""~· fl'Nl .. H. '*"-
Thlt .....,.... -ti ... •"" IN c-ty o.n "'Or .... C-y all Ort 11, 1'91. ,.,, ..
1"111111 .... Or .... COHt Dally .......
Ott .•• Hclv. 4, "· 11. 1•1 ....,..,
fl'ICTITIOUI au .. N•M MAMSSTATWMettT
Tiie ........... --.,. 4191118 ..... _ .. :
SPIC ANO SPAN 1.AUNOttY ANO
DttY CL.tlANING SEAVICI, HU
...... ..., lloollw-• ..._. llaectl.
CallfomllftWol.
01or1• w. Gulllory, J r., ltll
Ch1pm111 Aw-. Gerdl11 Oro,,., COllfontlo ... ,.
8rtllda J. Gulltcwy, ''" ~ Av111'11, Got•11 Grow, Colltornl•
t2M1.
Tiii• l>tltlMH .. COlldUClld llY
llllllvlduels o~ & Wife). o.we-w. OlltlllrY, Jr.
Thlt ......_ -...... ..,. ..
C:-t1 o.r. .. Orlllllt c:-it1.., Oct.
M, 1'91 • ,.,, ..•
PvbllMllO Or .... CMst Delly .......
Oct. ......... 11, 11.1•1 .. ..,
fl'ICT'lnout au11•••
WAMS ITAT«Ma•T
Tiii foltowlftt POf"IOllS are dol"ll llutl-•: . IAI AttAIESOUE HOMES: 18 ) BICENTENNIAL HOMES; tCl
a LOOMFIEl.D HOMES; tDl
ICHJ·RICO HOM5$; IEI FttEEOOM
HOMES; 1'1 GOLDEN NUGGET HOMES: tGI HOLIDAY HOMllS: tH)
INDEPENDENCE. HOMES; Ill JEFFEttSON HOMEI; 1110 CJI
L.llEttTY HOMtlS. 106 SE Molll
ltrMt, I,.,.,., Coflforllla "'11•,
"lllllp H. McNamao, 1110
McOormott. •I. lrvlllo, Callfw11l1 tt714.
D• •• Slmtro, UH 511111111 II•
Terrace, ~ •t Mar, CofHornl• tMaS. •
Tllll Mt-la c.eMY<tM r, • ....................
..... H.Mc"-
Tllls _,.,._ -lllM wllll IM
C:-ty C*' If Or ... COtlfltY Oii Ort.
27, 1'91.
Pl14•
"""'lsl!W Or .... '-' Delly ,. ...
Oct. •• -· .. II, 11. 1'91 ...., .. 1
TO HIGHEST ••DOER FOR CASH Morell ... 1m"' .... Ul7t, ..... 1607 Frlllll Bfllfl Fargo,. WI ..... ,_,
INYOllle .. """ ...... 111 lowlul of Offklal R--of Or ... '°""'' N--1 BNdl. CA,,..._ ,.CTtnOUS avsa11•11
_, "' .... UllllM Stltd) et: Sowlll Celllorllio -J_., I tm wllll Tllll ~""' 1s C.OllCIU<ted Illy •11 MAMa ITAT .. dllT ~ -...C.. lo IN OrMtJt Covntv I ,._' ~· I •~1 ~-·-• T~ fol'~ 1ro dol119 ,.... Ceut11\ovte, 100 block of West Joll11 L. N... •11• ~rol ..... • '""y..,_. -.......... ""°"' :,::,A AN llovllvenl, City ol Sallte .............. wtfe11TnMof'l.Crlc.klf 8rl.iF.,.. 111111-M: z.,.-•• ~ ... ,. ... ..__. 11 ..,_. lltM CUll,OdY Cortt«•l!Oll, 1 Colltornlo Tiiie ........,_. •• lllld wltfl ,,_ MANY T·SHlttTS COMPANY
-.-........ "-"''·' ....... cor....,etlorl II r~ -O'ldler '°""''°"1tofOt-c.OUl!tv1110ct. IPertlllt'INlpl .. T.sHlftTS PLUS, _. , ... ,_. ec-.,.o '° "'° -lla4d N1UDt11I .;...,, • NollWI a-1,.. It, 1•1. rm Ed.,..,, M. ~ Ill-. ~ It ....., t.eld Deed of TrVll 111 Ula A1soclat1Dt1, et 8-fklory, Wllldl "1net CA ""1.
.,........., slhllltlecl '" selcl C:-tv ellO 1~ Is 111 dlfeult 11 f1ll Jiiiy 1 ....,I_~ COMt Dally l"llot. c.....,. s. It-• .., L.ot Am19os Cr.,
SU• dHcrllled 11: 1•1 •llO 1\111 t.1111 "'"°"""II MIMIC~ Oct. 21, .. No¥. 4, 11, "'1 oi60MI HWlt"'-' IHdl, CA t21M7. ~ f1ll I.al II Md UC 12, atocll -· A .... 11 WOlll. 170& Velll'f Lltl\11
.. llld •..., .... Of WellM St,...I UllPlld""-111 _ _. -Or., PetillllJlftl,CA•llOJ.
......... .-..nyofTractNa.m ,os olll'9ftlOl'I '-.. ._.I ~ -•lllK Mori.Wl#ll. •1 L.• Aml9" Cr., ........ ti!• MllP hrelll ,_...Ill Acc..--& Hlllll ......... _,.,CA'2647. =ll tJ, P•••• J end 6 Of PrlnclpMpa.,,,._ S,t... fl'ICTITt~8UStM•U Ch1ull11111 Kwa11. 40 Merle S,.,
ell-l M1111, recerdt If TN-'s"" .... ~ITATaMMT SawMl ... ,CA....,_
_... c-ty, C.lller11l1, -.• Tiie payOft ., said Deed flf Tnietl Tiie lellowl11• M~tofl I• del111 Thia -'""' 11 .col'd\ICfed by • ... I....,,., dmct1111d ......... : .... Ill"""" NoVOMter •• "" It -ina11 H : ..... r•I ~p. ............. I ....... Ill t.llil _.'1y 1102,12'.U olld l11toro11 occru... ft.W. & ASSOCIATES, I........ Olel*S. ICwaft .... Ill ......... tt, .. .._.. _..._,, lhlre-r .. t.1111 r ... If SL7WI ,_, •'4..C..UMna,CellforNa._, Tlllt _. -llllCI wllll t.1111
llM .... "-tN ......... ly llN If .. .,. tt.-rtG.w..-fh. t•Aa.Ms c-tyellf'tllll°"-Coulltv°"O<'-
....... t1.; IMllC'I_, .... _ a. A !>Md ot Trust•-·.,. •._L..C.UMna.COllfOnll•ttta. 16,1•1. ..-rtw llM flf UC 12 .... 11 alW l114ettedlleu of P,.000.00 l'K.,dld Tllll MIMSI 11 COftdllcled 11, 111 fl'l7Ml'I
....... IW9Wrly ................. tN Moy t, 1• 111 110011 llll02, Peet 1 ... of llllllYldvlil. ""*lltflld Orenta Coest Delly Piiot.
....... y llM ...... "· • dnl-of Offlcl•I ..... _ ol Or .... Couftty, ......, G. Woodwortll Oct. 21, a , ...... " "" ...os-41
..... '"'; ..,_ NRarty .._ IN Calllomla dMed May i, 1•. wlttl JolWI Tlllt .....,,_. wos fllad wltll .,_ ------------llM pw ..... -.. .......,., llN flf L Nl9M ...0 Cir* Ka9fl, C-ly Clarll ol Orlfllt c-ty on Wt II, a...._ Ill ... fllt lo• elld wife• IOllll-.. TrVlton, N-•t, N f.
.... le .. _...,y llNef .... Lat It, Pacllk A-yMCa ~ ...... 1 "t74711 ------------... """ ....... ,..,.....,y, ... IUllC. Celllornl• CorPotatlDft, " TruSIM, Publl-0r111Qt Goist Ollly PllOI, ..... ,. 8f UM""' Ir-IN saut .. rl' llM If MCI Spencer J . ~. H 9-llcLary Nov. 4, 11, II, U, 1-1 4n1 .. 1 llOTIC9 Of' TaUST•a'S IA ... MIMI 1.• 11, tMll<9 .utMrty ...... wtlkh lllMll<lel lllttrm wes .. ...,.. T.S. He.. T· .... •1
.... ..-...V 1• • Lot II ...0 ...... to 0-..,. J. s.a.to Olld Mol11yn M.1 -"' -Oii N--.r 11 1"1 et .... A.M •--'Yllllellf l..M 12,1...._ol Sel1t1. ~ a11C1 •II• es tol11~t ~ ... HK CENT U It Y i S C It 0 W L , e
..... ~; ._,.__,.Y• ... uld •-ts..,_~ recorded Moy C1lllor11 l1 c orporatlo11 as
_. ..... llM a~ of •.• teat to ts, 1• Ill 110011 1•1S, P ... "° PICTITIC*S 8USIMEU0 duly 1ppellltlel Trvttol IH'Cllr 11111
.................. Offl<l•I ttecordl Of 0r-.. c:-ty, NAMalTATtlMtlNT .,..,._ .. Died"' TNA "'.,.. ._ ... 811......,,.... w-Mlf of oM c.tllorml,whlclll!dlb .... uw•s•ll Tiie followln9 person 11 dol"O S."'*'•,1•,Hl...,.,No ... SJ,lll
•II 1• ml11erels 111d •ther -111d peylllll Jiiiy I, 1"1, Is I IMllJ1111111: llOoll um, .-ee 71t, ol Olflclal
llr.rac•r••11 tutttlllCU ••n• doflilll elld llel .... IOll-1119 Mien<• L.IOOTEC. :Moll VI• Lido, Newporl ttecerdl '" .. offl<• .. .,. ~ .....,_lllr•INflllllof 11'1'N"fl'Olll due: e.ecll,CA'*l ttacwditn llf 0r.,.. c-.ty, S-... If Jllllrtl •• "9 ... • lofltl...,........ It U"'°lclNllllClol 0.011DouglasR .. vta,1207 Morlners Calllornle Hl<UtM Illy D•NNIS -1 •I cot llMll .. ~ 111 otlltetlOl'I $7'-000.00 Or.,H......,,91«11,CAt21MO. MUttPHVa_... __ hluoll6
................. W MC tt llfC ... , Ill l"terett 8l'd lltl Thlt llWl""s It COlllNctlll by an se•erele .,..tty, llto tlllOWll It
Ii ...... .,....,,_ ... ,, ltSJ, c111"9HCllle i,uue lllOMtlllal. 0.Mlt ~ Mw9flY WIU. SIEl.1.
....... .., AMII "· 5"'ttfl, Illy TrutlM'sfea 607.JI OMllO. RHvle AT PUaLIC AUCTION TO HIOHllT ........ ,..,.., •• '9U, Ill... Foraclolurlcotta ~1111 .~ ..... n1«1 wllh 1119 8tDOEtt !'Oft CASH ffl'IYMlllt tlnw "-M1.llf 0Mclal It«"*· eM ,_. 1,A74.M C0vntf Clltll l/IOr .... Cioullty 0110tt. Ill .... Ill llwflll -V flf 911 Ullltad • _ ........ NWfWt1811 If t111 4. A 0.... llf TNlt te -. 111 It. 1•1. SUllt) .. 911 "-'tll lrlllt .,..,_. If
,.. ti ......................... 11141111 .. dlrlass o1 $1AUOO •• -fl't7Mt1 t ... C11111ty C04'rtll011sa, 700 Clvk Ill' f811llll., MH I-,....,. ....._ OctoMr 3, 1• 111ao.1mt, peee 1 PulllllMd Or11191 Co.tit Delly fl'llot. Center Or Ive Wul1 la11lo AH, .,,.. f'8m lfll .-face IMfelll ,_ of Officio! ttec:ardl Of Or .... Coo#lty, Oct. 21, •,Noor. 4, 11, Hll 41»41 CotllerNI, •I rltM, ~Ill .... I~
II, r.• •H 1111., hydrour .. 11 Collfl>rnll delod OclOblt 2, 1'77, •1111 COIWI.,.... tD 8lld ,_,.....,It~
•• e11<u 01141 1 .. tll• 111re111 111.,.....m At>9lldotls. '"'·· • Oel-•re' Pia.IC l9ll( Nl4 Died "' Trll9t Ill ,,. .,...,..., ....... ._ r-941 .,.._,..,. cerporotl.,., Trvstor1, ttoslde11t1e1 11tuatld 111 .. ,. county •1141 '5tato ""Ill ... ._,..._ J"' OlflClal 1!1<row Gorporelllfl, o Collfor11I• dltcrlted•:
Corperetloll, 11 Trust .. , for wfllcll fl'ICTlnOUS aUllN•IS Lot II, Tract lllS, ot ,_ Ill# 111
1trHt 8ddret1 a11d etller Tru1t11 wu autetltuted H11oll MMllSUAT•NMT ._ft, ..... n , Mlteotl-M..-
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f/I ...._..,.. DMIMd •••••nl111•I cerperat1011, •• ...._., ~ -.lkWr ~MIMI OtM f/I
.... e ......... -...C•,.!! a-flCIWy, ..._.. lr•U •:111 Mt ADVANC•O MOTOtt. Sltt\llC•S h .. I lleretel.,o .. tcttlld 811d ... •..U-.. 1•11• •-........... ~Miii..._..: CO.fl'Mn', ._ ._ C-. CH .................. a• ....... •..,. .... ............. If U_.. ...... ., Wtaltl,C....--.CA-. DIC..,.....of.._.. ... OMWldter
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• ,
Further recession forecast
Economist cites Carter policy for inflation drop
DETROIT <AP) -The United
StatH races another y11r of
rece11Jon, wllb unemployment
cllmbln1 to t percent by
mld·lt82, John Rutl•d•e ,
pre1ldtot of Claremont
Economic fnlltlute , bu
predicted .
RuUed1•. who baa served u
an advlMr to the U.S. Treasury
Department and the Office or
Manaeernent and Bud1et durinc
the Rea1an admlniatraUon, told
a news conference that to some
degree, the administration or
Jim my Carter should be
thanked ror gains the economy
wlll make in the comlnl monlha.
··President Car(er and
Federal Reserve Chairman PaUl Volcker are responsible ror .
a drop ln the lnflaUon rate,'' he
said. "It is a little early to be
blaming lhiap on Rea1an."
Rutledge said an lncreue ln
unemployment will be a
neceuary pri ce paid for
reduction in Lbe inDatlon rate.
"The choice that you ha.ve on
the menu Is pay that pric~ now
and get it over with, or put it off
for two years and pay it ln
triplicate," he said. "I thLnJc that
the people ot this part of the
country would much rather get
the job over with and tben get on
with growing again."
Rutledge was in Michigan to
address the Economic Club of
Detroit .
Easing inflation and faJUng
interest rates will be good news ror Michigan's ailing auto
industry. RuUedge aald.
"H you ttiink about it, the
average household gets to spend
only what's lert over aft~r they
write the mortgage check." the
economist said. "An 18 percent
morteage rate and the price of a
house which is rising at 20 or 25
percent a year mean that
houtehold mort1a1• payment.I
rlH 10 tail that hou1thold1
can.not artord to buy new can.
"II you brtna the mortieae
rate down . : to the 12 or 11
percent ranie where we lhJ.nk It
wlll be ln 1lx monl-b.I, tbal will
rree up household•' spendable
income by a Jarate proportJon.''
GOING ONCE John L. Marion. presidenl of Sotheby Park
Be rnet Galleries in New York. conducts an auction for
transmitting facilities on a new communications satellite. A
total or S99.10-0.000 was bid for leases on the seven
tran~ponders that will carry cable TV pro~rams .
Nlmt GllmS..
WolofWI V11Wltkt BrHO ~ SAL QI U11Voft 1 PerPI 1111 Gaol'lcl artn 1111yt• Nuw.st ........ SYM« wt Tr'MdtNI
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DOWNS Lisi CltQ
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t "' 2 "' 2 v. 2 14
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114 -"'
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VP 11.0 Up 12.S Up 11.j
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llllld I. It a.• ()pt11 12.7' U.• ~ret Gttl 22.Jt NL Olvld S.11 UI Tell I• l'-Sl 17.M r1fl IO OC 11.'7 GrwVI 7 .. UI Vitia IUt 11.24 H M90 1.L• H• Prefd U1 U• Voy19 12 •• IU3 TmpGll> 22.G ,., •. l11<om s.tS 6.42 tor ».Ot NL Tmt»I Gt 7.a e.01 $lock 1l11llw UJ NL. Tlftpl W tLJo! ••2' 7.lt NL Tmt Cop t.D IO.tll feco Sealr: Tm1 111¥ 7.SI f.'7 Eqvlt t45 NL Trev Eq ,._ .. ll.01 Orwtll 14 U NL Tvelr Fd 11M NL. l!!U t0.• l'IL TWllC Gt 12.19 Nl. IPa11t lnwtt: nm( Sii tUt NL ~~ ::-r, :;:: USAA Ot 11.U NL
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------------
NYSE COMPO ITE TRANSACTION
OVOTAttO-lt""l.UD• taADUO• flie .... 'Olta,MtOW U'r, ~ACf,.C, ~IW, IOtfON, OITIO" A .. D Ct .. CllOUlff lfOCW Ii ilCMAlteH A•O ltPOaHD l'f~l'I .. AH AWD 1 .. nt"I f
-
11 you're 1mon1 lhe mlWona ol Am~ricau who ln •A
coming month.I wUJ M mov1nt from one state t9 .•
another wain& the aervlces ot a van llne, I have creat :: cood news tor you. The interstate movint bualneH.
tong reaulated by the Interstate Commerce
Comrnlaslon. baa at last been modernlled. Thi•
action benetlta you directly because it allows for
more nexlblUty In prlclnJ and services and lncreans
compeUt.ion among moving companies. "'
Prior to puaaae
of tbe 1980 ~ modernization act, •
virtually no competition existed· • ,.
a m ong interstate -
companies because lftfll PllJfllA-? ·_ the carriers had to ~ ~
seek ICC approval
lor rate lncreases or decre81fe9~ reguJations did DQt '
allow lbe moving con'lpanies to ofter auaranteed •
estimates, so you never knew for sure what the cost •.
would be until seeina the fW\al bill at destination; if a
shipment was not received within a promi$ed time
period, consumers had to file for minimum
reimbursement; and if you, the consumer, could not •
reach a satisfactory settlement with the carrier· for
lost or damaged goods, you had to go to court.
The new acts allow interstate moving companies, -
upon prior general approval of the ICC, to:
-Increase or decrease their rates by 10 percent
without going to the commission and by an extra 5
percent with ICC approval.
-Offer guarantees that the final cost or the ~
move will not exceed tbe original estimate. ··
-Give customers an automatic. previously
determined cash payment for every day they are late .
in dellvering the shipment.
-Establish informal arbitration boards so that
consumers can settle claims out of court.
Instead or protecting you, the old rules actually
strangled the consumer. There really was little real
choice among moving companies; all offered the ,
same basic service at the same rates. Even if you ··
shopped around, hall the price quotes you received
were more than 10 percent inaccurate. Now,.
consumers have a wide variety of new services and can benefit from price competition among movers
for the first time.
Estimates a nd charges are not lhe only concerns
in moving, and the competitive differences ate now
appearing. Bekins Van Lines, fifth largest household '·
goods carrier In the United States, is, for inst.ance, ~
offering guaranteed estimates throughout the natioh, :~
reports Cliff Knowles, vice president for consumer . '
affairs Allied Van Lines is being more cautious, ·
although Patricia Bull, Allied's director of
transPortation economics, admits, "Some programs •·
we have been forced to put in due to competitors Ul
the industry." North American Van Lines is applying the
guaranteed estimates only through some of its ~
agents, according lo John Ruffolo, executive vice • .'
president.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ~
NEW 'l'OttltlAPl FIMI Oew-J-.~!a· for ,.......,, Hew. 10. ;
ITOClll °""" ..... U. C-.. a.•
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65 5411 ........... •• .. ~1~; i.5 WHAT STOCKS DID -·· ....
-t • ..,.......
2 YoroCo , 5"9nl5c"" 4 Sa¥~ 5-J~ 6 CNlleP "AA 1 S.UAtlll~lll • e: "''*' pl
:
IUIMA t , ......
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........... ,.....,...._ .... n ,tff PJt.. .......... , .,., ......... ,,,.. ttf.ll.?J. ... ...... '"'.u""-..~ .,,. . ....... *"'""' ... ""' ............ ., ...
9-w: o.a.""'9r .. ,,..,
HEW YOllK CAP! Nov. 10
AWeKecl TMeJ,
DecllMCI 7J3 UM......, VO
Total I-'* =:: ~ = WHAl AAIEXOC>
HEW voiiii"iAPi Nov. 10
METALS
SILVER
'*'n. JV m -' II
Pr~·
... "" ..... m• I~ •• 21,
H•IMly & .._,......,per troy --.>.t .....
SYMBOLS
Orange Cout DAILY PllOT/WednHday. November 11, 1981
!-EYBM-111:ao m NIA UIKETIALI. Oien vt. "OOett i ...... NlWI
j ~·~ • The Ang411e lnftttr•t• • ~ ! ny UFO c;lub 1119CM1Ct9d Of
1 doing •wev with WMlthy i rn.m-. atter tulng their
• l!ione)'. , ! • THI MIJPPET8
' ~· Mme O.Y11.
• HAWAIFM..O
A h919d dlct91or on • 111111
to HIWllM 11.oomM th9 tar·
i ol•lllllef'.
WIUIM..offr
Dta<C(AVUf
Guest· Ian MeKellen. I ~:= N8CNEW8
MOVIE • * ~ "Loophole" ( 195•1
Barry Sutllven, Ootothy
Molone A .,_,,k employee
acouMd of pilfering a lwgo
tum or money •xoneratM
hlmMll b)' apprehending
the rHI QJ!prit. t:'°. WEI.COME BACK,
KOTTER
Oot>e and WHhlngton
havo o problem •lier
Woahlnoton makoo the
varsity bali•lbd team
Wld dec:idM not to tM!e ~
exama. ,
I KCETHEWS8EAT
BUSlNESS REPORT IBNEW8 (!I BARHEY MILLEA
The question of who II aa-
zie< -the cops O< lhe pub-
llc -eomoo up when Wo!O
tntlmldateo • auapec:t.
': (I)MOl/11! • • * * "'Harold And
Mevde"" (1971) Ruth Gor·
•. don. Bud Cort. An 80-~
old woman meell on 111·
year-old boy ob-•ed
With dffth In a run.r.I par-
lor. ""' ptc>ceem 10 leech
him the art of IMng and
loving. 'PG'
Steven Carrington <Al
Corley 1 fails to cheer th~ injured
Claudia 1 Pame la Be llwood J. on
"Dynast~"· at 10 p.m. on KABC 171.
.,. IUCOMtfully wjnnlng
the ·~ of )'Olinger IW<fleneee: • IOOk al • very
unueuol 111tomoblte, the
carpel car.
I 8FAMILY F£VD
LAVERNE a SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
LoY«ne Wini 1"'8 mtnutoo
01 Ir" allopplng at a
aup«mll!itet. 8 EYE ON LA.
Featured: a look at wom-
en'• linge(le, • report on
ol<tlne •t-ard9Nft.
• M"A"S'H
Hawkaye reluaes to
releaM a woun<le<I Korean
wanted by U.S. lntllll·
~ICTACDOUOH
• MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
6l) CALIFORNIA
6AEAM8: THE 001.DEH
CITY
ovw 40 ~a. a1 1119 bot·
tom OI Ille ... with 400
people 11111 a11Ye '1l<I 1>e1no
ruled b)' e beneYOllnt die:·
tator (Chr!llC>Pf* LM)
(Port 1)
• CALIFORNIA
DflEAMS: THI! 00l0£N
CITY
A montage ol vif\llge pho-
tographs highlighting one
of the world's raataat
growing and most unusual
dtlee. Sen FrandlcO, with
a narration by Tom Boele)'
on the pollttce and history
of thedty.
-~ DREAMS: TIE DREAM~
DOH GUADALUPE
Ale)andro ~ and Edward
Olmoa offet o hlllO<lcal apptoacn to 111e ltte Wld
times or a-a1 Gua-
dalupe Vallejo.
®MOVIE
e aln49MC1'tOP
Lft
All ""-' motMt' ....
!let beby 111111\ Mrt Glf•
rell'• glrl• tllln dolen't
rl4urn to plctl uo the cllild e 111 THI 'ALL GUV·
Coll 11 aent alt« • IOpt\ll
Outed con man wno h ..
.. lpe)td o-11 Yll<I .. lryll\O
to ...... tbl country with
tnllllOn• In loot
I IULLll!Yl
MllWONFFIN
THIVIETMAM
YITIMH: A MATT9' Of:
LR ANO DEATH
IHCIAl.
"Fr.,. A POf1rall Of A
VleCNM Vl4ttlll" illeWt
one told*'•·~ In Vi.tntm end hi* lo-~
•lllW9 to rMdju9t to Mfe
NIOOlde: Md wwamor'•
WOl'f'ln ' toolce It tll•
f)fObllMI ol 11\1 ""'" 911<1 glt11rlendt or troubltd vet· •an• (D)MOVIE
•••• "R"urrectlon"
( t980l Ellen Buntyn, Sam
ShePlfd. Aller • ~ ••tel
euto eccldlr!t, • womtn
llndl lhal Ille hU tile abii-
ty IO h9ol Olhtn but la l)lf·
MCUled bleaUM Of her
rlfUUI to .ci&lm • divine
lnf1uence ·PG'
t:30 I QI LOVE. SIDHl!Y MATCH GAME
MOVIE
••• 'An Eolmlf Of The
People" (19771 Steve
f.A~. Charlll Ourn•
f!\g, 8elld on lbaen'1 plmy
The citit\ne of a email
town llr•t applaud thin
f)O(llC\llO a toc:ll phyetc:lon
tor cleclertng the local hOt
aptlngl unsafe due to pol-
lutlon ·a·
(%)MOVIE
• • "Perlorm1nc:e·· ( 1970)
Jemea Fox, Mick Jegger. A
hOod on the run from the
I
mob llnd• IOflc:tuety In the
hQme or a oorned-out tor.
mer rock star. 'A'
10:00 8 Cl) SHANNON
(Prem11re) Detective JM*
Shannon return• to New
Y0<k City to llnd out why
an olrtlgllt cue hu fal*'I
aper! • 8 80UINCY
Whlle lboard I luxury ship,
Ouln<:y trlfl to determine
Ille CllUH Ol a MrllS of
Violent deaths (Part 1) 8Gm> NEWS U DYNASTY
A montaoa or vlntaoa pho-
togr epl\I hlghlightlng one
of the world"• IUIHI
growing and mott unutual
c:ltloo. San Fr ondoc:o, with
e norrotton b)' Tom BOSiey
on the polltlc:o end history
ollheolty.
()) P.M. MAOAZJHE
• ·~ "In God Wa Trust'"
( 1980) MlrtY i:.tdman,
Andy Kaufman. A naive
monk ta Mnl out Into the
world to ,.,.. money for
his lmpoverlllled monast-I 'PG'
00°MOVIE
(Seeson Premllf'•) Blake 11
•tunned by the appear-
ance of !>1$ ex-wile. and
Krystle bolts from the
courtroom.
• VIETNAM VETERAN
FOUOW-UP
I TUBE TOPPERS
·ABC G 8:00 "The Greatest American
Hero." Our heroes try to prevent World
War III when an automatic missile
system mlsCires.
KCOP ti' 8:00 "Goliath Awaits ." Part
one or a movie about 400 people still
alive on a downed luxury liner.
CBS 9 8 :~ -''WKRP ln Clnclnnali. •·
JennlTer and Mr. C•rtaon ptnch hit tor Herb.
KOCE 9 8:30 and KCET.Clt 9:00 -"The Vietnam Veteran: A Matter of Life and
Death." Views or one soldier's 10.year
struggle to readjust to American life.
•t•te
(D)MOVIE * * * ~ "ThOH Lipe,
ThoM Eyoo" ( 1980) Frri
IMlgella, Olynnte O'Con·
nor A namboyant eurnmer
1tock Ktor, who dfMmll
of Bro•dway atardom,
~· 111 loCOml)etent, 11.-.tr\ldl PfOI) boy •rid
promotOI his romance with
a chOnle glr1 'R'
11:15 MOVlf * *~ "Tl\9 ShOUt'' (197\)
Alan BetH, Su11nneh
Yor11. A dllturbld man
confined 10 an lnltltutlon
~ 111 can,.,,..., a
"d•th .nout." a IOUnd
that~kffl
11:80. Cl) WMP IN
CINCINNATI
AMty ia l(nockod out b)' on
e•l)fodlng w1ndow wflerl •
lotl*IO hill the c;lty. (A)
8 8TONIOHT
Hoel. Johnny Ca"°"·
Ou11t1: Buddy Rich.
DiOnne Warwick. 8 9 AllCNEW8
HIOHTUME
I BEST Of' OAOUCHO
THE 000 COVPli
Aftet o.lng teunted by
09cot for being toll, Mur-
r~ the coc> arretll his
poker-playing buddlet
durjng a game. m> ONE STEP BEYOHO
""The PromtM·· A bomb
expert ptomlMI his wile to
give up doocllvatlng unex-
ploded bombt In l)Ol1Wlf
EngiWld. ID CAPTIOHEO ABC
NEWS
(C)MOVtE
ewoV11
• 'h ··c'*"* To Keep Her'' (1980) Moc O.vta,
T ovah Feldllluh. In order
IO meet hi• llllmony pay.
ments, a recently divorced
Pflv•t• detective tradta
down delinqueot hu•bandl
for • dlvoroe lawyer. • R • 1J:Oe 8 Cl) MOVlf * • • "Blume In LoYI""
(1973) George Segal, Kr11
Krletoft«lon.
'2:30 8 8 TOMOMOW
Ou1111· actors Devld
Naughton end MllH
o·~
• IHTAOOUCTION TO PHll080PHY
12:'60 (%)MOVIE ** * ""The Blue LtlQOOO"' ( 1980) Br~e Shllld1.
Chrlslopllet Atkins Two
children exl)l(tence the
'*'Ill ot llrat tove wfllle
dlecovet1ng me and 111et1
other elter th•)' •re
lhlpwrOCked together on a
deMrted ltlend. 'A'
1:00• MOVIE * •·~ ··Fut And Sexy••
I t960) Gina LoHobrlglda.
Vittorio De Slee
• INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
• IT'S EVERYBOOY'8
BUSINESS
"Internal Or9an1za11on··
1:10 8 MOVIE
O ·~ "II a A Bikini World"
( 1967) Deborah Walley.
Tommy Kirk
Q') NEWS
1:25 0 MOVIE . * * .... ··The Oblong Box··
( 1969) Vincent Price.
Chrbtoplllr Lee
1 :30 • MOVIE
wltll Clealll In • Ml«el per.
tor, Ind PfOOMdt 10 !NOii
him 1111 1111 cw IWll'lt w
~.'PO' uo l HIWI IM HIWI
1:11 MOVlll
• • "Wheel4t And Mur·
clocn" ( f972) Jet* Wet·
den, CM•toe>ftlt llone.
• MOVll • * t "Sttanoet• When We .,._.. (IMO) 1<1111
Doug!M, Kltrl .-...
•:•• wov. *'"' "Am-.on Oueat"
(1949) TGnl HMI, 0....
MettNwt An iwetlciOUI
""" 00--c:n1nt tor r~ In tM JullOilt llOf'8
tM Amuon NY«.
a:10 Ct> MOVll *•lit "Alfted Thi GIMI"
( ttell O.vld lletiwnfooe.
MlahMI York. A nlnlh-cen-twy WltrlOr ltlng MUil
CflOOM ~ Ille IOnf-
ln(I for • alnlC)le ... Ind Ille
Pf"8Uf.. Of leodlng hie
PIOOle In ''*' •lruogll ~nat the 0.0...
(l)MOVIE * * \4 '"Hurrl!y For Betty 8oop" (1980) Animated.
Voice of Tommy Smotncwl.
Betty gtte Into polltlCt and
llgnts tor women'• rt(ltltt.
'PG'
4:00.MOVIE * *'"' '"Tom Horn" (1980)
St-~. Rlc:herd
Farnsworth. In ~ 20tn-
Olf'ltUry Wyoming, a bOYn-
ty hunter hlr9d by • group
of renc:tllts to tradl down
rustler• It NI up fOf e
hanging b)' 1111 ernployera.
'R'
CZl MOVIE
····p~"(1970)
J-Foa, Mlcll Jogoer A
hOod on the run from the
mob rind• Mf'IC1uary In tlle
home of • burned~ for.
mer roc:k lfar. 'Ft' •:35. VO'VAOETOTHI
BOTTOM Of'THl 8IA
""Hell To The CNef•
Tlaursda11'•
lloayfl•e lffo.,le•
-MORllNG-
5:45 CIJ * * * •,.; "Gimme Shel·
ttr" (1970) Rolling St<>nM.
Jelfereon ~-Thll
doc:urMlltwy Of the Rolling
Stonoo' teet Arnenc:an
tour lnc:tudaa --or the
noting and murder at an
Altamont Speedwey "'• QOnCtt1
8:00 . *. * "One On 0ne··
( 1977) Robby Beneon,
An(lllte O'Toole A boy
ln1el1r, I •••11Ulvt ...,...,,Ind•·~ ........ "~--.... , ..... .,.,..... ...... -... ... .,... t0:•. * * "Tbt Mltft ~ Utlfl" (19$41 JalWI .....
~ .....
t1:00 ••• lit .. Aloftt c..."
lpicW' (1tt0) ~ """*" .. ~ {t)••~"NowTo ....
Tiit ..... 04* °' l.Mlll" (tt1t) ai.., ............
...... Ullft. No '°'*'
..... """' "" -.ti .... lion. ttlr•• Oreeon
llOIJU.tYll Mii to~ .. ...,_ ...........
'PO'
12:00 •••• "IMflf .... '*'· ~· (1MI)
01ne LollOO!'lglde, T Illy
Seve&M. "
• ••• ''The Proud AlttJ
The Prolone" (1Ht) Wllo-
-Item Holden, Debor111
l<etr.
••• "The lnc:t9dlblie
Voyege Of Stlngrey"
(11165) P~. Capt. Troy
Tempwt Wld the mlgftty
1t11p 8ttngrey ttY to M09
Ille eY!I ... lard, Tlten.
trOlft tlklna ov.r tn. wottct.
'Q'
12*1 CJ)**~ "30 It A l>lnomr· out .. evntnll"' ,, ... ,
Dudley Moore, Eddie Foy
A "*' oecldM "'-I within
llx wMI he wont.I 10 bl
mttri.d Ind famout after
he haa WUl9d ~ rnoet
ol hlallle,
1:00 CC) ***'A "WIN Blood"
(1980) Brad Dourlf, Amy
Wright. An eme>llonllty
dei.c:hed preecflet con-
tend• with • handful of
people, each of whom
wanle to uplolt him fOr a
~ r-.on. 'PO' (I) ••• ~ "The Bad And
The 8-ltitul" ( 1952) l(lr1t
Douglu, LMle T-. A
cotd-hunld Hollywood
l)<odllOOr tftectl Ille ._
of aaveral peop11 pureulng
~dom.
2:00 (Z) * * "'The Wonderful
Cro«*'" 0.Wd Dlplrdleu .
A ~. rMrtlod buti-
MIMlon turnt c:rooti In
order to meet ttle
.-..,.,,.. ol hit l>u*'-
and tale In love wftll -°' 1111 vlc:tima. "A"
2:30 • * * "The Meaneat
Man In The W..i" (1979)
Chertes 8'onaon, Loo Mtlr·
vln Two outtr.a et1ere a
hatred tor OOCh other and
a tove Of dou~.
lm(C) ***"Tom aawy.,''
. 7:00 I CBS HFNS NBC NEWS
HAPPY OAY8 AGAIN
AIONEW8
A main w'10 ulOd c:oupona
to ~ $312 worth ol gro-'*"" 10< $9.59; a looll •I
the slaptttck comedy
10\ltlnel of Gallagher.
* * * * "Ordlnety Peo-
ple.. (1980) Mary T ylaf I
Moore, Donald Sutlletland.
A gulll-rkloen teen-ager •
A KCET ..prodooecl I041ow·
up dltcu1&1or1 on the spa.
clal pt Obllms and llllpetl·
onces or the Vietnam vet·
• * ··w 11111 & PNr· ( 19801
M!Chael OntkHn, Margot
Kjdder. ThrH people
begin e triangular romance
In Gr91t1Wldl Village thet
contlnuel lllroughout IN
merCIUflal toc1at mltllu of
Ille '70s. "R'
* • * "Just For You··
( 1952) Bing Croeb)', Jane
Wy"*I
wno G<* '° ~ on a bullotbalt acholarehlp le
obuMd b)' th• coaen.
5CC>rned by hie tutor and
u'ld by the IChool for Its
own purl>OMI. "PO"
( 1973) Jonnny ~-.
Oolatte Holm. BllMd on
Maril Twlllll'e novel. A boy
wtlo "--Ille ....... ltippl R1¥« finds It lmpoee6-• M'A"S'H
Hawk~ and 8.J dlscowir
Chot1a hYlng the Ille ot
Riley due IO the allenllOM
ot 1111 menially paid K0<eao
llHVOfll.
• JOKER'S WlLD
• OVEAIEASY
'"Tile Mlddi.-Agod Child"'
Gueat: family therapist
Kath~ t<err.o
Ci) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUOH
(!I EHTIEATAINMENT
TONIGHT
An lnteNiew With Margot
Kidder. 8 THI! MUPPETS
Guest Pfftl Balley
Qi) HEP8UAN AND
TRACY
A poignant looil 11 tllken at
one of Holtywoocfs moet
POPUiar and enduring c:ou-
Ples -Spencer Tracy and
Katharine Hepburn
(D)MOVIE * * * "The World's Gr .. 1.
est Athteta" ( 19731 JOhn
Amoa. Jen-MH:hHI Vin-
cent A coach wno 11 hav-
ing a run of bed luck
returns to his roots 1n Afri-
ca and dltcovera a super
athlete. ·a·
CJ) MARVIN HAMUSCH:
THEY'RE PLAYING MY
SONG
Liza Mlnneltl, Johnny
Mathis, Gladys Knight and
Catty Simon ling some ol
today'• greotHI hlta
lncivdlng; .. The Wey Wa
Were," '"What I Old For
Lo-.."" and "'Nobody Ooeo
It Beltet "
!~ AIW.EDFOA IT
* * ·~ .. Alfred The O,..at"
( tM9) David Hemmings.
M~ voni A nlnt~
tury w.rlor king mu1t
ciloo9e betWMll hi• long.-
Ing lor o 91mple Hie and the
~-ol IMdlng htl
people 11'1 ''*' struggle ~linSI Ille Donoo
1:00 9 (I) MR. MERLIN
Zac rneltll • dolJb6e ol
h1mMll 10 thet he con be
In two placn at one time.
•• REM. PIOPl.E
F'eatur9d: a reunk>n Of an
alrcrelt carrier crew,
guard• et the tomb of 1111
Unkl\OWrl Soldier, cartoon-
ist Biii Mauldin 8 MOVIE * •" ··een· 119121 Lee
Hercourt Montgomery
Joseph Campanella. A boy
befriends an lntelllgent rat •
horbonng him from the
~ U (11 THE GREATEST
AMERICAN HE.AO
Rolph and Bill attempt to
stop the start of World
War Ill attet an eutometlc
mlnilt ayatom goH
hayw1r• tD P.M. MAGAZINE
A man '#NI uMd COUPOfll
to buy $312 w0<1h ot gro-
cerlee tor S9.59, got a took
at one ol the hOlt"t rock
and roll groupa In the
country, Little Alvef Band,
Marla Shriver HH a
Clllbrlty circus: Of. Gran-
idl on betting )NloUI)'
trying to put his llfe bac:ll
togethet .,.., ,. brotl'I«'•
dMttl and hit own Mc:lde
anempt r..a-out to his
~I father and his
c:dd. rMetYed mother 'R'
DMOVIE **'A "Tom Hom" (1980)
St-~. Richard
F lfn9WO(tll. In eerty 20th-
centwy Wyoming. a boun-
ty hunter hlfod by a group
of ranc:Mrt to tradl down
ruttier• le tot up for a
hMglno by hll ~
"R"
(I)MOVlE * * * ~ "Olllwlle Shelter·· ( 1970) Rolling Stan.. Jef.
~Air~ This docu.
mentety ol the Roff•ng
Stones· 1969 American
tour lnc:tud .. _,,.. ot the
rtollng and murder at an
Attamont Speed'«ey fr"
oonoert
8:30 9 Cl) WKRP IN
ClNCINf',t. TI
Mr cattson and Jennifer
take over Hett>• jOb our·
I~ hit hOlpitallzatton. U YOU ASKED FOR fT
Featured "WllllOITI Tell OI
Adan,.• AP911" and "'A
Couple That GeU M•rri.cl
~etet "
• AillHTHEFAMILY
Archie suspects that Edith
II turning Cothollc When
she tekH to -•nng 1
rellgloua medal and
111en01ng mesa.
• CAUFORtM DREAMS: THE DREAM Of'
DON GUADALUPE
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
F'Ntvred people wno llave
·•out-ol·body"' experieno-
ee; ,_, how ptOduoen
m> OOUATH AWAITS
A young aolenllat (Mark
Hermon) dtsoovera a Brit·
1111 luxury liner, loll for
Alejandro Rey and Ectword
Olmos ollet • historical
eppr09Ch to the Ille and
Umet or G.,,...al Guo·
dolupe Vallejo
• THE VIEOCA.M
VETERAN: A MATTER OF
LIFE AND DEATH
SPECIAL CHANNEL LISTINGS
8 KNXT IC8!>1 0
0 KNBC INBCI l
0 KTLA (Ind) ..
ID KABC fABC> c
0 ICFMB <CBSI • ti) ICHf TV (Ind.I ,,,
Cli> ICCST IABCI t
• IC TTV Clnd I $
~ KCOP TV !Ind l 0
On TV
Z·TV
HBO
IC1nt>mc1•>
IWORINY
(WTBSl
!ESPN)
t5howt1me>
SDOlll9M
NY
"Frank A P0<1rel1 Of A
Vietnam Vetetan" views
one IOldllf'• experllnc:ft
In Vietnam and hi• 10-year
atruggte to r90djtllt to nte
Slatllide. and "Warrior'•
women·· took• at the
l)fObteml Ol the wlvet and
glrlfrlend• or troubled vet·
et ans.
t:OO 8 Cl) NURSE
fD KCET (PBS> 8 <Cable New s Nirtwork)
(Seeaon Premtet•l Ono of
Mary's nur-It oocuaed
of giving a patient the
wrong medication. Ci> KOCE 109c;1
•.
· Dallas hack on top
NEW YORK (AP> -"Dall.as"
~ ;-was back in its accustomed place
~ as the No. 1 show in prime time,
{ • but ABC woo the networks' ratings
; race for the third straight week
· with some help from the firs t TV
showing or ''Grease." ·•Dallas," last year's top-rated
program, relinquished the top spot
the two ~revlous weeks to the
World Senes on ABC. The bit CBS
aeries now baa been first in the
ratlnp three times In the rive
weeks of the 1881·82 season. But ABC w'as No . 1 In the
competition tor the week ending
Nov. 8, flgurea from the A.C.
NielH n Co. 1howed, with nine of
the 20 highest-rated programs,
lncludin1 ''Grease" in second
place and "Three's Company"
fifth . The winning network
scored, too, with the ''Monday
Night Football'' game between
Minnesota and Denver , in 10th
place.
ABC's ·•world News Tonight"
finished No. 1 f9r the second
strafght week In its three·way
race, with CBS' "Evening News"
No. 2 and ''Nightly News" on NBC
third.
CBS was No. 1 the first two
weeks or the late-starting season.
NBC has rlnished last five
con!lecutive weeks.
The rating for "Dallas" was
27 .4. Nielsen says that meana or
the country's homes with
television, 27 .• percent saw at
least part. of the pro1ram.
wan, which lnctudlS a
p~ bank manned moat-
ty by Vietnam vettfens to
lleld Ylterans' and non-
vatetant' reapon-and
quer,.1 and gives addl·
tlonel referrals IM lnror.
mot too
®MOVIE * • "GOOd Guys Wear
Bl•cll" (1978) Ch1,1ck
Norrla, J-fir~.
A Vletnll'n v-.1ra11
1.una-lllS -~n-U
gotlOfl 1n10 tne myttet10U1
caM or 1r.,q~ _..
dlerl who ..... In ht. ~
tary unit PG.
0 MOVIE * *'~ 'A Small Circle 01
Friends'" ( 1980) Bred Dav.
la. Karan Allen In the
19609. the lriendlhlP and
Idealism of three Harva.rd
atudentt la tllreotened
when one or tl"ter'!I le draft·
ad to -•n Vietnam ·R
10-.30 • NEWS
Cl) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
«!)COSMOS
The 8ac:kb0ne 01 Niglll
Or Cert Sagan examlllell
human thOughl ebout the
heaYlf\S lllr<>ughOUI hi.to-
ry 9f>d attemp11 10 orga-
nize wtiot 1s _,. •bOve us
®O (S)MOVIE
• • "Thi Bllcll A million
dollar diamond 11 hidden
on o beaut1lut body on<S
one men 11 determined to
atop at nothing to find II
"A"
11;00 ea• Cll a1 a
NEWS
tt:'60 MOVIE
• • .,., Rough Cut'" I 1980)
Burt Reynotda. Luloy-
Anne Down A Brltllh
IOC18UI• tur.. an lntlfno•
tlonll i.....i thief out of
ret~I 10 help her atMI
$30,000,000 In dillmondl..
·p0·
-MDDrr~
12:00 G MOVIE
• • ··r111 .NOii ~··
JoM ~. C;njttta
PatrlCk
8 t1I LOVE BOAT
Gopller fella lor e beoutlfut
pHsenget. •man trmvellng
with tua glrltnend meets up
Wllll 1111 hanoee, end IWO
former boxer• dulce II out.
(~ fJ MOVIE * * '"Adventures OI Thi
Queen·· ( t975) Robert
Stock, Ralph Bellamy
tD MIKE DOUOLAS
Cohost Razzy Beiley
G~I Roger & Roger,
Petti LaAelte. Fr9d Wiiiard.
the Paflsacolt Choit
.., ROOKIES
(ifl) DICK CAVETT
Guest Ian McKellen.
MOVIE * * "'i "Fode To Black"'
(19801 Dennis Christopher,
Lln<le Kerrldge. A di ..
turbed young movie fan
react• to romantic: rejlc-
tton b)' committing mur·
dOfl In tilt gulM and ltyle
or his favorite ec:reen Vfl. 1 lolns. 'A'
{C)MOVIE • * • ··stronger tn Tr,e
House·· ( 1975) Keu Dullea.
OtlYla Huae.y, A peyc:hotic
murderer hldea In the attic
of a c:011ege aoronty ~
on Chrf11mu e... ·A'
1:35 (8) MOVIE * * '4 ""Fode To 8*:tt"
( tNO) Denm• Chrlelopher,
Uncla Kerridge. A dll·
turbed young moYte feo
,.... to r°"*ltlc ,..._
tlon by corntnllllng mur-
dtfl In '"' gulM and ltyle of his fevortte SCTeen vu.
• * "When A Stranger
Cons·· ( 1979) Carol Kane,
CharlH Durning While
bObytittlng. a young girt Is I
terr0<Wld b)' phone c.111
from• pl)'CllOtic k1llet 'R'
2:00 8 ENTERTAINMENT
TOHIOHT
An Int-With Margot
Kidder
8NEW8
0MOVIE
• ·~ "Kill Or Bl Ktlled"'
119&0) James Ryao. Chor-
lol te Mictleltl. A former
Neri commender. who tool
an lme>or'tent kar .. • rnetc:h
to the J~ dUfing tlle
-· aeek• to ~ 1111 defeat by enlllflf\O Ille top
Kung Fu lighters rrom
around the world In. IOUr·
nament 'PG'
2'..20 8 NEWS
2:25 (%)MOVIE • * • • "'Harold And
Meude"" (1971) Ruth Gor·
don. Bud Cort. An 80-yeer·
Old woman meet• en 18·
year-old boy obaelled
7:00 CC)••* "Tom Sawyer"'
I 1973) Johnny Whltekar,
Celeste Holm Baed on
Merk Tw.in'1 noYel. A boy
who tf\lel near the Mltell-
slppl Ajver linda It Im~
ble to atay out of troublie,
~""*"he toge
along wl1h hlti ~ Huc:k
Ann.'0 '
e=eo CI>"** ·~~ The Mlut!U'' (1952) Kitti
Douglu, ~ Tumw. A
c:old·hoarted HoflyWood .. pr~,.....
Of ..... ~ Pl#'Ml'l1
11ardom
0 • • '"Duke Of W•I
Point" ( 1931) Rlc:hord
Carlson. Louis Hl!yW8rd A
young. eoc:klure Wnl
POlflt c.det gait cut <Sown
to .Ue when hi IMrM that
hlS -Ith and '""'*-
don't exempt him from
dut111 and regulatlona.
9:00 CC) * * ""King &otomon"a
M1ne1·· ( 1950) Dlbor•h
Kerr Stewart Granger. A
11erc:h lor King Solomon"•
diamond mlnaa till<• ua
dMP Into the ~ ~
colorfUl Atrlc:en jungle. t:30. * * "'Hard Bolled
Mo~·· (1947) eow.y
Boyt. Leo aorc:.y.
10:00 CJ) * ·~ "'S.turn 3·· ( 1980)
Kiri! Dougll!•· F,arroh
Fawcett A pelf of ac:len·
t11t1 wortclng In • ~
station are menec:ed by a
mad genius and hie randy
robot "R"
• * * "Rold o.m.."
(1911) StK)' Kllleh, J11tr1le
Leo Cwtla. An eccentric
bll to etay out °' lloubte.
eapeclally ""*" he tl09
along with Illa buddy Huell
Finn. ·G'
3:30 0 * * * ·~ "A Gulde f« The Married M111" (1"7)
Walter MeWlw, AoMrJ
MorM.
Cl) * * "' "~ Leed And Co4d FM!"' (1971) Jll'll
O•, Don Koottt. In The a... W•. twlo t>rOIMfl --tOUlh 'fl' ...,., ...
~·~~ toast -compete In a
Q<IJllng contest 10 ...
..... .... llllMfll" ~ ,,.,_.., tortune. ·o ·
3; ... CZJ * 0 *'A •·Rio Brevo"
( 1959) JOhn Wrryr.o, Deen
Mertln. An old c:rtpple. a
former deputy-turned·
drunk, a yc>ung qulctu:lfew
guntllnger and • glr1 help a
lher'lfl to ou1tm0r1 a l)OW·
lflul rancher wtlO wonta to
get his 1111111' brolllll'
rtlM9ed from prlton.
4:30. * * "Zeto To Sixty"
Derron Mc:Oavln. Detll99
Nick.,._, A mlddi..eged
divorced man, needing
inoney for alimony Pl)'·
manta. le faoed wltll repoe.
Mtllng a Mallo '* oon-
telnlng a ci.ed body ..
part ol 1111 MW pw'lnenfllp
w1th • 15-)'Mt-old girl
·PG'
6:30 ® • •"" ''Thr" worn. ora'" ( 1977) Randy Quaid.
Char1el White Eaigle. A 13-
year -o Id lndlan boy,
ullamed Of being '«lOl>-
nlr.od ... wwrlor, tewne
to appt'lc:latt hie hlriWge
efter visiting hi• elck
grandfather. •o' 8 SATURDAY NIGHT
Host Ruth Gordon GllOSI
Chuck Berry.
G PAULHOOAN ID THE JEFF'EASONS
JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batluk
A publllh« asks Louise to
wnte t COOkbOOk ot • ghet·
10·· recipes m> BENHYHILL
Benny"• French leason
_,,, to be full of promlM
tor the ope>arent treats In
at0<e. ID VIEWS OF ASIA
"Malaysia Sparrow Wltll,
Sparrow. Raven With
Rayen·• JOhn Temple takes
I IOOk II Melaytle. a mufti·
racial society and south·
east Aall'a only Moslem
,---.~~~~~ ....... ~~~~~ SO IF 'tQJ LIKE ~ PROGAAMMtNG Twn-¥0U 9EE H~....oN 0.W..Nl!L. ~NTytFOUR,,....EN
GtVE U6 "' CAU. A"T 'THE NUMBER 'iOU !IEE ON
VOUR SCREE!:"...t ANc> MAKE A Pl-1SVGE !
fugrid Bergman's acting pure Golda
Ed1tor'1 Note. AP correipondent Arthur
Max cover ed most of Golda Meir 's
admini.!trotion In l arael. including her /irat
meeting with Egypt's Preaidenl Sadat In
Jeru1olem m 1977. Not long ago. Moz
1»9tched that meeting
recreqted by Ingrid Bergman °" part of a
TV movie ba$ed on Mra. Meir'a life.
By ARTHUR MAX
JERUSALEM (AP) -1t was a
memorable recreation of I\ poignant
moment in history. "You always called
me 'The Old Lady ,'·· said Ingrid
Bergman In Golda Meir's n asal
Midwest-American accent.
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat -
played by Robert Loggia -roared with
laughter, and those on the set who aaw
the event in 1977 knew that this film on
the life or the late laraeli prime
minl11ter would have an auu1entic
flavor.
M lss Bergman is a head t1Jler and not
8IJ 1tock.y aa Mr1. Meir wu. Her hair.
tled buk in Mrt M~lr'a cb1ractedltJc
bun , la not u wl1py The rubber·padded
nose sUll does n°' reach the dlmen.alona
of M ra. Meir'•· •
But ber hand movementa, the tum ol
her bead
1
Mt dee/ into her ahoulden, u
'
arch of her eyebrows and a puff on a
cigarette, were pure Golda.
"Ingrid is as close to Golda as you
can get," said Dlredor AJan Gibson.
"She had it from the beginning. She
really did her homework."
The scene for the four-hour televiaioa
special was shot in the ~m of the
Knesset, the fSraell parliament, where
Mrs. Meir and Sadat met on Nov. ao,
1977.
Mrs. Meir died or illness 13 monlhl
later. Sadat was aausainated Oct. e.
She sings the hard way
NEW YORK (AP) -For moat yount
slngera, rock or country are the only
way to 10. Few earn their keep the
old·f utUoned way -with the music of
guys like Johnny Mercer, Harold Arlen,
Yip Harburg.
But Suaann1b McCorkle Is one of the tow: a young HJoon 1ln1er in the old
tra.alUon. She doesn't c•r• that 1tae1• not th~ next Kim Cames, or that oddl are
allm ahe'll ever be a Top 40 queen.
"Thia 11 the musk I have UM dMpeR
feellnp ror," •h• 11y1 of what lbe "-o Id 1tandard1, lovel1 obaeure
cl111tca. off ·beat Jaaa Pateel 1111 .. Brookmeyer'• "UHIMl·Wll&L ..
"I'm more ~ •• trnM ..
of Amerlean ,po»•IU ... I••-~·-
•
I
·I
'· I
Wedn•ad•y. Nov. 10, 1981
USING HERBS
SPECIALS DIETS
SLIM GOURMET
c ..
C6
C12
,
Great gues ts are made,
not born . . . C7 .
Cr eam cheese has been a favorite for generations because it goes so well with almost everything and blends easily wit h other ingredients.
Entertaining. with the cream. of cheese
When entertaining. American food is
in.
After years of extolling cuisines of
oth e r nations. food spec ialists are
beginning to realize what m an~· of us
already knew: it ·s hard to beat classic
A m e r i c a n f o o d s . 0 n e r e a so n. f o r
recognition of American foods is the fine
q uality of American ingredients. many of
whic h are known a round t he world .
Am erican steaks. maple syrup and !\itaine
lobsters are good examples.
Another American classic is fresh
cream cheese. created more than a
century ago. It's a native American cheese
and one of a small group of packaged
grocery products that has been distributed
for more than 100 years.
Over the years. there han• been steady
improvemc•nts in the manufacturing and
packaging of cream cheese. In 1922. shl'lf
life for cream cheese was one week on ice.
By 1946. it had been ('Xtend e d· to
approximately 18 da~·s Toda~. it can bt•
kept refrigerated for m an~ weeks without
losing it"s fresh. delicate quality.
For today's consumer. it's no longer a
specialty item. u ·s a refrigerator s taple.
ready to use in many recipes ..
Cream cheese has been a fa \'orite for
generations because it goes so well wi th
almost e\'er ything and ble nds easily with
other in gredients.
On-r the years. the availability of
fresh cream cheese has influenced the way
.-\mericans cook and entertain dips.
:"ltuffed celer~ and canapes becom(' cas~
party food when made with cream chct•se
For exampl e . an easy Festi\'e
Appetizer Tray offers cream cheese w1lh
a n assortment of s imp 1 e. s a,. or~·
condiments such as chopped green onions.
c hopped radis hes. bacon crumbles.
a nchovies. capers. chopped olives or.other
favorites. lt"s an eas\' hors d"oeuvrc for
parties. but one that· has eye and t aste
appeal.
Beef Stroganoff is a favorite for dinner
parties. but usua ll y calls for expensive
beef filet. Instead. try Meatball Stroganoff.
just as delicious. but more budget·wis'e.
The sauce gets its smooth texture from the -
<:ream c hl'L's l'. r ath<'r than the
('On\·entional sour n <'am Top \\Ith sliced
green onions for f1<1 ,·or. t'Olor <.1nd crun('h.
Cream cheese <1lso lends its delicc.tte
fla\'Or to cold Grnsshopper Souffle Cream
de menthe gi\'es it the grasshopper name.
but you might • like to experiment with
other flavors: Substituting treme de cacao
or orange. fl a \'O red Ii q ueur a re two
possibilities
Frozen Part' Salad 1s a classic that
firs t was featui·ed in a 1934 Kraft ad.
Another perennial fa\'oritt• is Phill~·
Pastr\'. This delicate. flak' crust with a
unique cream cheese fla\'01: C'<>mbines wt•ll
with either sweet fillings for desst•rt or
quiche fillings for appetizers
Orange CoMt DAJL Y PILOT /Wednelda~, November 11 , 1981
Cookbooks hot off presses
lllerowavt cooktn1 Into three ma l n that are hot oft tht an ltaUan·atyJe dinner
and partlH are a 1tctlon1: helpful tlpa, pre11t1are: tor elaht .
utural team, aaya Terri m e n u p l a n • a n d -• • 8 E T T v -• • c 11 J: E 8 E
Van Valkenbur1, home microwave reclpH. C a 0 C K I a ' 8 QUICKJFJJ," a 1e.paae
tconomlca mana1er for Thirty-one menu Ideas Mlcrowavt Cookbook," booklet containing IH tton II i crow ave are 11ven codipltte with publlahtd by Random reclpet ror dJahea with
Cookln1 Products, In aervlnt •U11t1Uou and Houu.1. retalla tor cheese, lncludea 1 unounctna lntroducUoo preparation outltnta. J l I . 6 o . A 11 Io o d chHH chart and recipes
,of volume "Tlioe of the The book 1howa how a cat11orltt art covtrtd tor hor1 d 'oeuvrH,
Orm'• Hries of apeclall)' party·itv•r can 1lmpllfy In tht book which olftrt snacks, m ain dlahea,
C!OOkbooQ. eatertalnln1 with 1 1lmpl1 rtclptll H well undwlcht1, deuert1 Called "Rollday1 Ir microwave. 1 • t I a bo r ll 1 I nd and t oppln11. Jl'or 1 Part1e1 ," the book "H0Uday1 fr P1rtl11" unu1uaJ on•. A 1peol1I cor.y, nnct 36 centa In
fHtures impromptu and i1 Sl2.95 and l• available Hcllon on mtnut wl&h co n to Chet1t Quickle•,
aake·abead microwave throu1h houuwaru tlmttabln uplaln• how Amt r I c 1 n I> 1 Ir y
rec I pea for varlou1 departJMnta, book1tore1 to coordinate 1uoh Auoclatlon. P.O. Box
ltolidaya and ethnic and Litton dt1l1ra. mule 11 1 wHktnd 711, Dairy Center, eaoo
daemedinnen. Other book• and bNnch tor tour1 fMllve N . RI v • r Ro ad,
The book la divided llteraturt on t'OOkln llah dlMtr for rive Ind Ro1emont, 111. 80018. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~~,,~ .... ~--~~.._. .... ~------.;.....;...-.;..;.;;.;.._~-.
When you've worked up a blg
appetite, dig into new Lip~n
Lots·a·Noodles Cup.a.Soup. It~
soup and then some. There~
lots of enriched egg noodles,
tender vegetables, and peat
Lipton taste. Four delioous
varieties: Chicken Flavor, Beef
Flavor, Garden Vegetable, and
Oriental Style.
You never had soup in a cup
like Upton CUp.a·Soupl
.~
Save 600 and enjoy the
SunriseSu !
If you've never tried Sunrise® Instant Coffee.
you're in for a delicious surprise I
You see. Sunrise Is real full-bodied coffee.
blended from choice coffee beans and just enough
chicory to get rid of any bitterness.
And right now, you con save 60¢ on any size
jar. So go ahead ... try Sunrise Instant Coffee.
And surprise yourself!
11
"It's rich, and lt-S
not blttw."
OovldBrown
•
~ ~~~Coupons pay off at
supermarket checkstand ..
By MARTIN SLOANE
Dear Supermarket ShoPper -My bead la
1tlll reellns and I had to write you.
I Juat came back from the aupermarket,
where l boutbt more than SlOO worth of
croceriea tor only $20.
But that la only half of It. The mana1er
was ao Impressed with my 1hoppin1 akllla
that he offered me a job. He said that I wu
ao familiar with the layout ol the store and
all the prices that he was sure that-that it
would WQrk out wonderfully.
"Do you want to work part time or full
time?" he asked me.
I'm saving so much on groceries that I
told hlm that part time was Just fine. I start
next Monday.
Worktne in the supermarket has to be the
perfect opportunity for a smart abopper. I'll
be the first to lelll'J'l or specials and new
refund forms. I'll even try to catch some of
the manufacturers' salesmen on their way
Into the store; they always have some
coupons and forms.
The Job will give me extra money and
leave enou1h time for my couponin1 and
refunding.
By the way, after cuttinc all the proof• of
purchase from the groceries I got for my $20,
I will probably come out making a profit.
Refundlni la fantullcl -~. •
Otar AueUe -y.., leaer •• •1
day! I Mlle dla& mere C •H•n wM llave U. &lme ud Ute .. tan n&n
mo•ey will e•••hler 1 J•• a& ''' aaper•ar;Ut, wltere pan·UIHn an ......
alway• Meded.
8MA&TSBOPPEaAWA&D
Tbe Smart Shopper Award 1oe1 to
Brenda Wllcsymki ol Erie, Pa.
She found Colgate toothbrushes on 1ale at
three for $1; they reiularly are priced at 71
cents each. The store doubled ber 12·ffllt
Colgate coupon to bring her cost down for the
three tc)othbruahea down to 76 cepta.
When she g9t home, abe found a tl
refund offer requiring her three proofa of
purchase.
"I get such a thrill out of couponlac and
refundinc, ·• she says. "When you come bome
from the store you feel like you really
accomplished something!"
Ms. WUttynski and other readers wbOee
smart shopping experiences appear ln this
column receive a copy of my refuadbt1
magazine, The National Supermarket
Shopper. Address your letters to me in can
of the Daily Pilot, P.O. Box "80, Coeta Maa
92626-0560.
J
"·I .1
produce
,.,. ,,..
1pl11eh . 29L..
.. ......
~111h 59• I. ..... ,.
'1ett1 .. .. ,. •. ,.,. ..... ......
pineapple 39.1. ..............
1pplH 9 ... ,.,. ttoo
health foods
grocery
I .. tn. • .. ,,.... ._ 99
111hellle freaeh ~'"~ , ........................
•lll-•11~Ht:i, rili, •llitr t1tla1lll
bulk only
..... ......... -11 ,,..,,c 0 I ~I l•.W If ......................... u • ......... , ..... 911/ ...........
I •
,,
.,.~ pillll •r.• I . .... , ... ,.._, ··"',.\:' ·~ ..... ·· ........................... , , .. ,....._. . ..,.. .........
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, November 11 , 1981
meal
~1rl11te~ Htl-k-hh *949 •• . . ,,, .
trl tlp ·roaat *2'' ••
Miiiry lt;le 1p1re rih *1t~
h11l1n pirk .road *2t . .
•1rl1111• W ltlek rlh!1~
, ... ti..., *1'' -•.
'
"" lfil11 11•• flfllln •rbt .... ...., .. ..., ..........
ht ...... ,..,. *1''-•• ...... .,, • ., t• •. ,,..., tt•
ts.II tll llf SI I. lntur tt• . ..
fish
11ll•1rl . •r.• ..•• ""' ••
frelh troll *"'' •• --le ell•I' *1'' •• ~111.lt flllell
.
*4'' •• puille rH 1111pper *179 ...
bakery
(
deli
IRI•. r1•• 11,..n •fllet .111 .. ,.,, .......... ,,... .
••• tooo , •• ,.., prtz• r., '"'"" ....~!"·"~ ............ ...
• ..., ,.,. ......... try ..... "•
. .• , ............ .
.• ,.. ... ... . .. ,,, .,.. .... .. . ..... "
~·· ·~· ,., ...... ...........
...1n .... .,,. .. ...... "
U• W.1 .. In•• *449 •.
tl11i1h eh1H11 .,..., ... "' ..... ., .• .
........... ri.., •
t32• •.
*2'' .. ~ ..... ..... . ,. ... , ., .. ,. . . .,... ·•·• •s•••. •·•• ... •r••.
· swltzerl111d ehe•1 • ........ ,.......... •39•1• .
... ,,.,. .... ...... *449 ••.
. no~y .ehee111
Jl~'I ...... *2'' .. .
.,.., & tuly .......... *3'' .. .
~r~~ir ~1111
. 9er111111 ;ehH111
I Mtlt1I , .... ,..... t44t •·
I
1119ll1h ehee111 ............ *4''•· ... ri, ... ., ...... •s•• ...
1111erle1'1 favorite
...,,... fflfle )~If •••• ,,,... t94t I .
.,,... .... ,, ... ,, .... ti •. •22•11 .
..
Orange Coa•t DAILY PIL.OT/Wtdn11day, November 11, 1981
Use herbs to spiCe recipes ·fo:r-·FrenCh foods
•1Krnll&ILLE& bur1undy ; boll. Add aalad,hotFrenchbread, 1tea11pooncat1up ·v. over tlleU Cut Jomeatpan,bollbeef
0 o o d Fr e n c b onio n 1, carrot 1, bureundy wine. Volla . llllli 11111 IA to a 11 po o n remalnlni 1arllc Into 4 bro l h , bur i u n d y , r •It au r • n t • at• peppercorn•, clovu, QUEEN OF cornstarch slivers. Insert Into meat. shJillots, l tablespoon
extremely populat ba y leaf, paraley , SHE8A·FOR·2 4thlnbutteredtoast Cook meat In butter In butter. bay lear ,'
btcauae they atrve 1uch rosemary, marjoram, 2 fllet ml1oons1 1~ 2 tablespoons white 1 tablespoon butter trlan1les, without crusts w h I ch ham w a 11 rosemary, bul l to
dellclou• cuialne. But thy me, celery Hed : lnches Lblck wln'e "' cup beef broth, Mell some butter ; prepared. Set on top or reduce by ~. Smooth
\ they char1e a minimum boll. Cover; simmer 3 2 1Hces prosciutto ~ tea1poon lemon undlluted warm the prosciutto. Set artichokes. cornstarch throu1h
of '40 to S50 for dinner hours, addint remalnln1 ham. . Julee IA cup bureundy prosclutto on buttered S a u t e w h o I e catsup. Stir throu1h
for two. Can your bud1•t wine aner 1 hour. Add Marinated artichoke v. teas p 0 0 n wine toast on heated plates. mushrooms ln whlle sauce; boil. Strain over
afford auch prlcH peas, and savory ; hearts tarragon l bay leaf Top with artichoke wine , lemon Juice, mushrooms. Serve wlth
aeveratn11bts aweek? cover ; simmer 15 l clove1arlic ttableipoonbutter IA teaspoon heartlandlteaspoonof tarragon and 1 1 cup string beans
ff not, why not aerve minutes. Serves 6. Butter "°' ta b 1e1 p 0 0 n rqsemary marinade. tablespoon butter. Set on cooked with ~ tea1poon com parable food at s 1'h i 21 h c i· · h If R b .... or ru ts 1th e savory. home for leas than 1 .--~e_r_ve~w~·~-•~c_r_•_P~~~ar_.;.1_e_m_u_s_r_oo~m_s~~m.:.:...:..:.ln~c~ed~ah~a~ll~o~~;..._~~~~_.;.~~te~a~spoo~~n~b~a~1l_l ~~~u-t~g~a-r_1c~m~a~·~u-.--"""__..P~~e~,-w_.~s-a_u_c_.~~~~~~--,,--~-
tenth or the price?
Moat French entreet
a re unusually tasty
simply becau1e of the
herbs and wines in the
sauce. With them you
ca n ela m orize
Inexpensive cuts of meat
as the French do.
Here are two of my
favorites which I think
you will enjoy.
BOEUF EN DAUBE
3 pounds lean beef
chuck, round, or rump,
cubed
4 thin slices salt
. pork
"4 cup fine flour "°' teaspoon fines herbes aux francaises
2 gloves garlic.
minced "°' ladle brandy
10 fresh mushrooms,
sHced
1 ca_n beef broth,
undiluted
1 ~ cups burgundy
wine
12 pearl onions
12 small carrots,
-sliced
10 whole
peppercorns
4 whole cloves
1 large bay leaf
"4 cup dry parsley
1h teaspoon
rosemary
~teaspoon
marjoram
~ teaspoon thyme
"4 teaspoon celery
seed ~ pound'tiny peas
lf4 teaspoon savory
In a large Dutch
skillet, fry salt pork ;
break into t>its. Blend
rtour with fines herbes;
dred ge beef c ubes ;
brown in pork drippings.
Add garlic and
mushrooms ; cook 3
minutes. Heat brandy;
ignite. Stand back; the
flames could leap up 2
feet. Pour over meat,
allow flaQ)es to die
naturally. Stir through
beef broth , 1 cup
Sealing
spices'
flavor
PELION, S.C. (AP) -
Herbs and spice and
everything nice, that's
what fortunes are made
of, according to the
self.proclaimed "~arco
Polo of Spice." Keem
KaUon.
Like Marco Polo who
jo urn eyed lo the
legendary court of
Kublai Khan in the 13th
century. and returned to
Venlce with a precious
cargo of silks, jewels
and spices, KaUon says
be has been around the
world several times in
search of the finest
herbs, spices and teas.
"l have walked in a
part of the Himalayas
where few if any men
have ever set foot
before ." declares
Kalfon, whose family
has been in the spice
trade for 15 generations
in North Afric a and
Israel.
AND NOW, Kalfon, 48,
is marketing fres h,
whole spices and herbs
from his South Carolina
plant in all·plastic
disposable grinders that
he designed and
perfected.
He says that his
whole, sealed·in spices
will last up to seven
years on a housewife's
. spice rack, while a can
of ground nutmeg, for
example, loses its navor
alter six weeka, and can
absorb odors.
"l have a line I use
very often," he says. "Is
there anythln1 better
than freshly 1round
spices?"
The former llraell
army officer uae,t hl1
trainln1 in bualne11
ad ministration and
· plaatlcs en1lneerin1 to
develop the sealed
p l • • t i c
co nt a la tr ·Ir l nder,
which be ~del'I one
of uae ... &naovatklDI ln
Ute food IDd .. try lD the
pat•yean.
••1 WAI LOOmlfG for
1om911d1i11MI 2 Ml","
' ... laid. ... -to ::::-· . =· .. ,
) You Always Save At Stater Bros. !J · You Always Save At Stater Bros. ! You Always Save At Stater Bros. (
AVAILABLE IN OUR FULL·SERVICE MEAT DEPARTMENT
Finns Fresh Qlifnia Grown Chicken I
FAVORITE FOR HOLIDAY MENUS
I!!~~
~
-tea L8 •1·~· ••«..... ·-
DECOR WHITE OR~ORS
GALA II
TOWELS
8 AJAX
.DETERGENT
1at11 TiSS11 s~=? •, ,_.age
en Cllips ~~nu ·•or S1.4J Cauda Dry .=._ ... ._ •. ,. t ,.67c LltGOI' •to . DllT =IC w.ura
fW&ariH M=:'" t _nc
Spread ~~m~ "°' Sl.39
Cheese Slices ::~. 91 •DA>l Sl.69
ZACKY ~ARMS CALIFOAN.IA GROWN FRYERS ~-:-~ .... :.·.:-pl'lce• ...... 7·fuU ... ~--~ -nov I2·I8,I I
"Drumsticks a14t tJrrv/lol;,.J,.u'Rni-iHol or Thighs Zl4 v~s =:: ... ~v: · ·Walnuts
Drumettea
U.CKV '"'""''
IEST rOll • 1 49. FR"ftNQ • LI
I UOOIO ••• SUCD MIATS 2...oz
Wll.IOll IUCID • 1 •• •• ,.. LI
IWIPT 'lllDllANO ITllll'I Oii • 1 •• SIZIUA• 12.01
Haloed
iii s.w... LI• 17•
nAUU'saiiaiE ~ • 1" ums1 ~'I"
AOAll 90NILU8 lllOllTUM ADDIO •2• •ALP.All ~ c'Ams1 SllAK LI • 1 a•
STATER BROS CERTIFIED BEEF· LEAN TENDER JUICY
&()Hll.lSi ...... St••" •1."J'I~
1£ll' ILADC CUT
CllCISTIAI
It!' LAllOI lND
.. SllAK
lfD'
ClllSllAK
r11Qt4 HOT TO EXCHO IJ'M. FAT ua••-•am IUPIONU.U.
SftWlllAT
Coffn w•n<(\l ...... ~·o ..,.. .....
Round Steak.
1££' IL.ADI CUT
CllClatAST
IUF CttUCll llOAIT ·--llU QMICI( llOo\ST , .....
Ull' V.llOl llOO ..... ,,
IUI' -D IONI llO
a1MPatAST
REAL
KRAR
MAYONNAISE
ASSORTED COLORS
OR WHITE
NOJTHERN
TISSUE
...., '2.29 Dag food <(_, .. ,_ JV.,.., ••
4-RL
Coffee .., •• , ...... o • . .... SS.15 la Salce .. _, .. "'1,0 o-• "" ....
Rinso ~ .. .•, .. 01 Sl.33 Quaker Oats !~~0
Dial Bar Soap .,,.. •ot57c hKaU Mix ..... ,,.w ... • ClOl#\..1' I .. .. Ivory .... ,_,, I "°' S1.1J Syrup ....... ~ ...
Ivory ..... ,.,.,.,. • »Ol Sl,69 Fruit Snacks a-•• ~
I
EACH 33°
Ciiiioi"~ LB 15c
irrtrs(H OEL~-OUSl. 33 c
ililiiiiO ~AV(l$L8 3 3 c
Li39c US HO t l"RTLEn5
PEARS
'SweOn~~!
Fried
Chicken
MORTON
IVTTtml llSCITS ~ ...-::. ul 71"
..,.. l'llTE 11tu • 'tn Wiil CM1 ;:,; • ..:~ ~:-:-·-, • .,, '1.79
•Y RAT 111UD .... oc..""' ..• ,,89' 11nsm awaaE .,g, TJ'
"°' '3.15
'"° .. Sl, 15
''"'91 c ."' sl.12
,.N Sl.57
'°'35c
FOR LAUNDRY
WISK
LIQUID
HUNTS 3-VARlfTtES
PRIMA
SALSA
MOOR PINE FORUT LIOUIO
Evaporated Milk ....... ,.
Mayonaise :::t-:.t •.
Olive Oil _ .....
Vienna Sausage ·-.,.. !
Enchilada Sauce .. ~:..::.~·
Dog food ~~'*"· ·
! "°'44c • ~.,. Sl.15 ..
'°' Sl.32
I ,.,,54c • ~OI· I .. oilr
M I TAEESWEET WHITE OR PINK GRAPEFRUIT ~ /,Ip 1v" 7k /Mdqf4.I Ju.lee ..................................... 46-0Z 87° MASTE.ll BLEND MAXWELL HOUSE
AUTO.DRIP OR PERK INSTANT
• COFFEE COFFEE Millar Baar IMUiiift Mix .....•.. &az ••.•1 I MAXWELL.HOUSE AUTO,DAIP OR PEAK
1 Collee ........................... $0Z •6.S3
I LAUNDRY DETERGENT
Cheer .............................. &«>Z •3.42
1~z · 1.95 1oof4.09
LAUNDRY LIQUID I DYNAMO
12a.!6.09
BLEACH CLOROX
94.oz668
I LAUNDRY LIQUID
y ............. ·. · · ........ · ........ · .... 64·0Z •3.04
SPRAY CLEANER REFILL '~ML '
2·11 . I' Forn1ula 409 .......... 64>0Z •s."
'
NEWBORN DIAPERS
Pan1pers .................... eo.cr •7.94
EX·ABSORBENT DAYTIME DIAPERS • I Pan1ae ........... ~ ............ eo-cr •7.94
STATER IAOt.1Lcro 'W..APPEO "'
TOOOL.EAS
CLOROX DIAPERS TILEX PAMPERS 1~ 1.79 ..c~'l .84
·-MIRACLE WHIP
Chee .. Poocl ... .' ....... 1e.oz •a.09
•"'"8M ............. 4"1 ........ &.a4···~----· ....... ....,;;.........__...,. __ __.~ .............
You Always Save At Stater Bros. 1'4wu.w ... ••~
I
Orange Co11t DAILY PfLOT /Wedneeday. November 11, 1981
Handy holiday gilt tteatS
prepared ahead ' and frozen
Surpri1e rrlenda,
n1t1bbora or dinner
hOIU with a Iii\ ol food
dre11ed ln th• aptrit of
lhtHUOD.
A tin of frethly baked
conrectlona or a buket
of ye11t breads are
always welcome holiday
surprises. tnclose a
recipe card, and tbat
warm holiday spirit ls
sure to lut throuchout
the year.
marinated fruit. Fold
over to enclOM frllit and
knead li1htlr to
distribute. Divide dOUlh
Into thirda.
WorkiPI with one
porUon at a Ume, divide
In halt and shape each
piece into a strand about
16 inches Ions .
Intertwine the two strips
7 or 8 times, joining ends
to form a rin1 about 7
inches In diameter.
Place ln 1reued S·inch
oake pan, or oa areued
bakln1 aheeu. Repeat
wilb remalniAC 4ou1b.
maktna 3 rinp. Bnlh
each with a portion of
t h e r 'e m a l 1 l 1 c
tablespoon butter. Let
rise unUl douah 11 ll11't
to the touch, abc>ut ~
hour. Bake in 350 decree
oven 30 to 35 minutes.
Cool rlnp 11i1btly;
add Glaze• and decorate
with addiUonal candied
fruit, It desired . Maket
3 rlap.
•GLAZE: For each
rina, blend~ C'Up sifted powde~ 1u11r wtth 2
teaspooo1 orance Juice.
NOTE: Shaped rln11
may be frozen and
baked later. Cover aftd
freeze firm, then wrap
for 1tora1e. Allow frozen
rln11 to thaw, then rise
before baking.
II ol 1da11 r tng1 ore
/lavortd with ra11in1.
candftd fruit and
brandy.
For a decorative ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~...;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;~~;;;;;;;;.;;;;;.;;;;__;;__.;;;__;;,;;;;;;.;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;:;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;._~~__;,;;;;:::;;;;:::;;;;:::::..;..;_.:._~;__~~~--~~~~
gift.giving ldea, try
Holiday Sour Cream
Rings, flavored with
raisin, candled fruit and
a hint of brandy. One
recipe bakes into three
bread rings -specially
developed for the
hostess who bas tittle
time for baking.
The real joy or
Holiday Sour Cream
Rings, .,bowever, lies in
their cebvenience. Tbe
shaped rings may be
prepared ahead, when
time allows , and
wrapped for freezing.
Later, simply thaw
unbaked bread and
allow to rise, tben bake.
The addition of sour
· cream lends a special
tanginess to the bread,
while a light sprinkling
of spices complements
the marinated fruits.
HO'LIDAY soua
CREAM RINGS
2 envelopes active
dry yeast
'14 cup warm water
2 large eggs, beaten
% cup sugar
1 pint dairy sour
cream
1 ~ teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon mace
~ teaspoon
cardamom
SY.a cups sifted
all -purpose flour ,
divided
7 tablespoons
melted butter , divided
Ir; cup chopped
raisins
i,; cup finely
chopped candied
pineapple
Ir; cup finely
c hopped candied
cherries
1 tablespoon brandy
Glaze•
Candled fruit for decor.Uon (optional)
Have all ingredients
at room temp~rature
before starting to mix
dough. Sprinkle yeast
over warm water in
large mixing bowl; let
stand unUI softened.
Add eggs, sugar and
sour cream. Add salt,
spices and 3 cups flour;
beat until smooth.
Gradually add
remaining flour
alternately with 6
tablespoons melted
butter, forming a
moderately stiff dough.
Knead a few minutes
and shape Into ball ;
place in lightly greased
bowl. Cover and let rise
in warm place until
doubled, 1 to l 'h hours.
Meanwhile , mix
chopped. raisins and
candied fruit with
brandy, set aside.
When dough bas risen,
turn out onto floured
board. Pat out to a 16 X
12-inch rectangle and
sprinkle evenly with
Peanuts
high in
• protein
Did you know that
nearly 3,000 years ago,
the Inca Indians of Peru
began cultivating a
strange and homeJy nut
that grew underground?
The Incas thought
they were sacred and
used them lo religious
ceremonies where
priests lhre• the nuts
into the nre.
The strange nuts
became known as
"peanuts ," and
cultivation betan. The
PO'rtu1uese soon
exported them to Africa
From there they w.ere
brought lo tbe New
World OD slave ships.
P . T. Barnum sold
peanuts at his circus.
Other nut peddlen
began calllng them
''monkey food."
In 1880, a St. Loula
physician round that
pe.nutl sround into a
pute made a sood,
ht1b·protetn food. Hi•
discovery evolved lDto ••pean ut butter .''
Peaaull are ln tb• _. ..-.. oae ot tbe
foar foM 1roop1 for
·-....,... tUl allo laclude milk, "1.tabl•
and fndtl, and brtidl
aad cereall.
.YOftS HOLIDAYSWEEP8TAKE8
SHO OLDE 1~-SHIV'IPOO-l!EO.C:OND LO'TlOI'!
U"VT 2 IP\M<:twlte CWJ lml1-teg. ptlce l 49)
MEATS
llJll.( IWOCl-LOl'IOIT 2 37 ' Beef Porterttou.e Steaks 1..1
Tl\IUO<OllCU~l°" Top Sirloin Steaks
I l\lk.(JU.:!C)-UM i:vq:JI Beer Cube Steaks
I "81.f flnQ llfU llOtC1.t5S llOOl<O Sirloin Tip Steaks
LI 228
Lii 248
Lii 248
~ci;c;,ir:;,~c-1..1 2°9
l:tt~=:s°A::rl U1 188
llJILL IWOCl-tENI CllWJTY-DOCS l'IO'T l 59 Freshly Ground ~
~~~~. UI 198
•AcullS-~ l 39 Fancy 5llc~ a.con 1..1
~x.m-:r LI .99
~il:'fi ~r.:.r.~·39
~-llUTmlMSTU> 179 Atmour Turkey Roat 1.1
DE.LICA 1 ESSF N
&:rn~h~M U1 229
]59
~~~~ros;iurts .35
119
~~~20
........... " .... ... ..., . .,...., ....
Colt•Mffa
]99•
1U I . 1nt. ltrMt •IMI Or .. A ...
~tas DOl8LE'.COOP01'81 .
PRODUCE
SF i~Vl~£. Sl ,'\I < >UD
~'ft':d Snapper
r,:;~,.
r.~cyfu~rP&r.
~·~-ir.:n-
rROZLN t· n[)S
~'ith·. Apple,..
~col Cuti
~~
Hf .A! TH L, Ht 1\<l 'Y
,-----------------------------------~ ·WE'U. DOUBLE THE DIFFERENCE 1 Ml Ml*' Ml Wiii Ml wa ...... ¥111 wa .... _.Ml""•_.,
O<JROOARANTEEOFVOl"fS LOW PRJCES •I •332 I•
to cOIWince you d Vons commitmeat to low prices. we're~ this olfer. If you ~ find lower prices
Olltr!ID this week at ony other supermarl\et. Vons
will pay ~ double the dilfermce. Just shop et
• Vons. Buy 2' different It.ems worth $20 Of more.
Compiltt prictt on the 1111me Items at any other
supermarket. •If their 1ocat Is lower. bring your
llemlzed Vons receipt and the other market's prices
. to Vons and we'll pey you double the difference In
cmh. Vons-Low prices )'OU can belieYe In.
LIQUOR
s=vodb 799
...-~~""Wines 399
~~~ 279
~~ourbon 1099
~~~.=~ 329
~~:'ma"° 499
~ti.m~ne '249
HOT' BAKERY
s;';~~t\tollen
t!PT "°"10!lllMl't-1U r-rench Breed
~~.
l:"..e~~
~~ka
159
.89
6~139
299
fA.29
\'ONS BAKER Y
..
.99
]33
.79
.8 5
:1 DOUBLE COUPON 1:
1
111 Pre~nt thl• coupon along WtU\ any one manufacturers .. centa<Jff" coupon •': and get double the 1w1111ng1 from Vons Nol IO ind.de l't!'lailef. free coupons,
roupont g~r 11\an one dollar Of Heffd the VII~ d the item I I U.n11 one coupon Pf' monuleclun'• • coupun and llmd 4 coupom ~· fomll)' 1: 11 E.oclud"1g liquor, tobacco •nd lluld milk ptod\>cts I' I COUPO" tOOd MOii 12 thrv N°" 18 1981 I
~~~l°".!~~!!'-¥0!'-W!'-'!'!.'!'!.~~~~!O!'~-~~
I WM ¥111 WOii WM VOlll VOii WOii, WOii V0111 V0111 VOii .--V011S VOii r-Mii •I •332 1,
11 DOUBLE COUPON 11 1, PrnMt this coupon along with any Cini! manufacturers "cents~ coupon )II
and get double-~ savmgs trom Vons Nol IO ind.de ~. free coupoM. . I coupons 9fMlrr 11\an Cini! dollar Of tllCffd the vat~ d Ille item I , ',I 1,• L•m« one coupon Ptf ITWlnUIK1Vrt< a coupon •nd llmo 4 coupom Pff lemlly
1
1
1 ~liquor tob«co and llold moll. product> Ii' Coupon good Nov 12 tl>rv N°'1 18. 1961
I Wiii Wiii voa vo111 YOllS VOii VOlll von won won VOlll V0111 von V0111 V0111 VOlll ... , ,-----------------------------------· I WOii VOii ftllS ftllS VOlll VOlll VOlll VOid V0111 V0111 WOii V0111 ¥111 V0111 V0111 -V01111 •I •332 I' ii ~ DOUBLE COUPON 1i
111 Present this coupon along wilh any one manufacturers cmts-off coupon l'i and get~ the Sll'Mlgl from Voru Ncx IO ~ Mein. free coupons. cc:a..,ans ~then Cini! dollar ot excffd the value d the item
11 ltmtt one coupon Pff rnenihc1utt• 1coupon""""""'4 cc>upc>n<-IMn<ly 1:
11 fJoclucfing liquor •ol*co """ l1utd """ ptoduru I' I Coupon gooc1 Nov 12 th•u ,._ 18 1981 I
I WM VOllS ... Wiii Via VOlll Ml VOii V0111 ¥111 V0111 V0111 -V0111 Ml -VOllll r•••••••-••-••••••••1 :• •332 1:
11 DOUBLE COUPON 1;
Present this coupon along With any Cini!. manufacturers ··cmu-df' coupon : I and get double Ille sa111ngs from Vons Nol to Ind.de ~. lift coupons. I;
coupons ~ 1har1 one dollar Of oceed the volue d the ~ I 11 Lime one coupon -m.mJ<ICMW 1 coupon and lom• 4 coupons-1.mlly I 1 ' I E>ctudlng '°""' 1oti.cco and fluoo ,.... ptOducu I' I c_. fOOd Nov 12""" ,._ 1a 1991 I
!.~ !'!.!'! !.'!! !'! ~ .!'!'-~ -!'.:.'!'_'!!'!,. ¥!'!. !'!. !!'!!'! !'! ~!
12-0l. Bl\.-12P.-.C:KNR8
I.MT 2 CPutchex ....,, llmt rev price 4.l9)
GROCERIES GROCERIES
~(A. .. o sCut Yams .69 h'°°' PK<; -IETIY~ lueberry Mu n 129
~~Pumpkin Pie Mlx .79 z1.)0()1 ... c~Cll0(1(VI Brownle 119
~~apple Juice .89 ~Irr &\G-fV\'o(ll!C) I m Price Choe. Chips .99
~~-PIP:C:UC.5Tf..'IS .53 10 OZ 81\G ASSlD fVl>QIS .89 ushrooms SUm Prtce Cookies
.. ~'"fl Apple me Apple Cider 139 640tl"CE BTl Clorox Uquld Ble•ch .66 r C .. "l·COOff~ omato Sauce .22 ~ ... () -.ll>GAl..IDI'< Trash Bags 144
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/W1dne1day, November 11. 1881
H11mans inost poorly nourished of all animitls
a,. .IUNS aOTH • Thtn wt &.amed how to we need to be at leHl u ll1h flaJc• euUy. Servu Parmesan cheeae. OUJt 1 Iara• tomato, cul
We may be the hilhe•l provide our1elvn with healthy u lht animal• 1--1111108 4. llahtly with paprika. up
form ol animal apeclea cheap renned 1u1ar and In the 100 rlll BROILED CHICKEN Broll 10 mlnutea, then 2 cup• low ht
on urth , but It 11 ch~apbread. Theya.refed1oodfood PA&MESAN turn and broil 8 to 10 cotta1echeele
poulble that moil In thla century we that La free or additives 4 boneless chicken mln'4te1, or Ju1l until 2 tablespoon1 wheat
people are more poorly have craduated lo break and that hu ll vln1 food. The Idea 11 to cook 1 sprla paraley breast halves, about 4 cooked lh.rouah. Makes 4 aerm
no u r I 1 he d than the t o o d d o w n a n d tissue or lluue that wa1 food u 1hort a time as 1 sprig dlU ounces each eervJn11. 1 cup plain yo1W1
anlmalllntheaoo. reconstitute ll , recenUylJvln1. p011lbleto1etthemost v.. c up chopped 4 teaspoon1 lemon VEG£TAJH .. ECHEE8E 2 tablespoon•
Since the zoo animals producing what Hoffer Hoffer la concerned nutrients for your food scallions or onions Juice SALAD chopped chives
have to be kept healthy, refers to as "food that the food aupply haa dollar. Here are some 2wbolepeppercorns 4· teaspoons 1rated WIT ff y O Gu a T Comb In e t be
have1loesy coatsandbe artifacts" that are become atable but not fHt food recipes that P lace lish slices In a Parmesancheese DaES&ING vegetables Into a bowl.
.abl e to r eprod uce, cosmetically colored neceaearUy healthy for are nutritious and .Jaree 11klllel. Pour water v. teaspoon paprika 1 large cucumber, Add cotta1e cheese and
trained nutritionists and chemically treated humana. dellcloua. around fish. Pour lemon Remove any skln from diced wheat aerm; 1Ur U1htly
have been added to tohaveeyeappealand Thlt concept of POACHEDSOLE julceoverflsh.Addbay the ch icken breaat 4radi~he1,11Jced . until well mixed. Stir
many staffs to devise lon1er shelrllfe. ·healthier tood selection 4 sllcff fillet of sole leaf, parsley, dill, an~ halves. Place chicken 1 green pep per, yogurt and ch Iv es
diets that will help the In so dolog we have does not me•n that Joni 1 cup water peppercorns around pieces on a brolllng pan. seeded and diced to1ether and use aa a
·animals to thrive. lost some trace minerals houra wUI have lo be 1/4 cup lemon juice fi sh. Cover and simmer Sprinkle with lemon 2 stalks celery, dressing for the salad.
Humana on the andotherelement.stbat spent ln cooking the lSmaJlbay lear Sto8minutesorunlll Julee and then with sliced -MaketHlservlngs. 1eJf-cholce system at the .---------------------------'--------------__.:.~~....::...:.:.:...-=..:.;~:.........:.,;,.,:,,,,:,,i,;_:........;,..:....:_:.:....._ ______ __:::.:.:.;.:.:;:...:..:.::..;.;.:.:=.:.:..._ __
!!!E~~t;:~:~~ LOWER PRICES. OVERALL
was explained in Boston • ~
recently by Dr. Abram
Hoffer at a Huxley
Institute Symposium on
nutrition, health and
~ human behavior.
Hoffer, president and
co-rounder or the Huxley
Institute , conducts
research in human
nutrition in Vi ctoria.
8 .C., and is a pioneer in
uncovering biochemical
und e r sta nd i n g of
schizophrenia.
He Js concerned with
the quality of nutrition
and how it affects
human health and
beha vior on the
continent of North
America.
-Hoffer claims, "We
should be as healthy as
the animals in the zoo
They are fed natural
food that is alive (such
as grains and greens) or
food that was recently
alive. Balanced diet
does not mean eating 20
different kinds of junk
food ."
Hoffer explained that
when man discovered
fire and began to cook
food, he was able to kill
parasites in food and
make it easier to digest ,
but in so doing he was
a lso able to begin to
destroy some prote in
and vitamins in that
food. Then in the last
centu ry, c hemi sts
purified white flour. and
again the refining
decreased nutrition.
... Spice
From Page Ct
myself -to researc h
and find out what has
happened in the food
industry since 1900."
But Kalfon says he
found the germ of an
idea for his disposable
s pic e grinders in
diapers.
More precisely , he
was fascinated by the
development and
marketing of disposable
diapers. He saw how
American ingenuity had
developed a product for
which there was no
market and then
persuaded Ameri can
families with infants
that they couldn't do
without disposable
~iapers.
"I WAN'fED to take
spices in the same
direction," Ka If on says.
That was 13 years ago,
s hortly after Kalfon
ca me to the United
States from lsrael. But
even before that, Kalfon
says he "saw 25 years
ago lbat pla s ti c
packaging would change
the world.''
It was then that he
went to England to learn
all he could about
pl~stic engineering.
Then he returned to
Israel and put his new
knowledge to work.
• "They used to call me
in Israel the 'King of the
Stoppers' because there
was no bottle or jar ror
which there wasn't a
Kalfon stopper," he
recalh with a laugh.
HE DECIDED that he
wanted lo develop a
iconveolenl disposable
spice grinder after
discoverirrg there was
no such device already
on the market.
Kalfon's idea led him
to buy every spice or
pepper grinder he say.
"Al ona time I had a
collection or 20 dilrerent
·arlnden."
He says il took years
of research and teatlng
to produce the small
container, about the size
of a cl1arette pack,
w ll h a reliable
all-plaallc 1rlndln1
mechanilm.
• 'Tbe moat dlrrlcult
part'WM In developln1 a
1lmpllfied gear housing
for tbe 1crew
mecb..U.m," be 11y1.
"Standard metal
1rtndera have •ilhl paru. Miff ltu 01111·
four."
~~®.:. u•
&A. ....
Tender s~eet ·Corn
Stuffln1 Size
~Bell ~Peppers
WMll hlll ~ Shelled Almonds
WnllillflM &tu fMCJ '9ft• H! Delicious Apples
Cal-Pl• H! Fruit Cake Mix
81u1 t.Nllt StlO H! Margarine
e
OR
•FOR ·"
• 1.89
-.29
2,~. 2. 79
,, .. , 63
•kl •
Freeh
Ground
Beel
3·LU. Olf MOllE. LIMIT I-LIS.
24-0Z. BTL La.
Seml-SWeet S 89 F ~ Nestle T)"IOll • 49/A m Morsels ~ I ~ cT.~en L•.
op Cell Cellef
f\ Bathroom Tissue
°fi P~p;r Towels
¥ CntC.llt<
f\ Tomato Juice °" c~~; ,;;;~wv \
4:r. . 79 !l! Lon9t1~7nct1eese
IS-s~ II rll .59 .tn ""'" mr Nice 'N Cheesy
CUT·Ur MIXED fllYfll rAllTS
-:2.49
2 :.2.89
s... ~ Fresh Spareribs -.1.29
U.S.IA C....Wlillll ~ Fresh Lamb Shoulder.1 • 49
1..111111111 • m Dawn Dishwashing 3~f 1. 79 ., .. , .73 u•
USDA C-.S ..... ff! Fresh Lamb Chops .1.79
• 3.99 11
;/ 1 . 3 9 m Fab~rs~tt~er 't:' 3 .18 .... Ulll ~ Tenderloin Steak
SVlll!y llllit~I llll-..tt lllM ffH.. t .leUSfllll .. f1111ft ff! Citrus Punch '!:1
• 99 H! Orange Juice 'c:1 1 .19 !f! Whipped Topping
.............. . 61 ~ Sirloin Tip -1.89
Aaortecl Flavors ~Kraft~"•• $. 3§ ~ ~rlt ~Mayonnaise .IL ~ Yogurt ~
2.59 e.cJa
fr .. hlabd
Gourmet Pumpkln Pie
G* OMy Al Sl1tn
Wlt•IMI l1kll'f
ean
Hormel Chill
Wlth8Nn1
Htl Or lltfutar
..... ·-
Kraft
Dlnn«S ·-••CMn•
.55
Hearty
Cup ·o Noodl ..
AnlrtH V,,....1
•
1.59:
Coet Cutter American ct... .. ,ooc1 ~ . .,,..,_
·6S
JeU-0
Getatln
Anlflff fin• l
1.69
t.ofy
Llqutd
... -' -~
~wrn~ _AaPlllUN Lt\
~ WL) . .
1.09 so-ct.
"u.
S.yer Alplrin
·-·
1.35!:!
R~htGuard
Deodofanl Bronze
N ICU (fflCTIV£W£ll . NOV ti THllU TUlS NOV 11 ltll
1.09
Dr.Pepper a. ... 899
S1 .. F,..
3.59
PaulMauon
Wine
CllllMil.lltfr=· VlalMMOr lll!lt
~-Meat Wieners
'1.1 1I." ltr.
Scoreeby
Scotch .. " ...
.. i.a.99e
PltG.
1.71
ltr.
1 ......
Fre1h Fiiiet Of
•utterfllh
"-" ,.. ....
Ancient
A .. .. " .......
I."=! •·09 ..... Duteoell AIUllM ........
"C" Or "I " Sin
..........
LadlM ...... .. ,...c.i..
IC1 ll111lar ,._ c.nt
..
i
~ .
j . .
•
-·--~~------------~~.--~--.,
Orange Coast DAILY ptLOTIWedneaday, November 11 , 1981
,
Bargain FoOd Basket
19th and Placentia, ·costa Mesa
"t._,. \!PU:!.... In Vista Shopping Center ~" ~-'· •• ..,. ,.... .~rfCff lffecth• MOY. 12"'"' ....... ~*":.,a._. eo .. •• .... _..,., • .,Wellen mc1 nc•••• toed old
_. f•llllan1d ".,..... ca•lw ~ t9"1ce.
Grocery
................. 159
PEPSI COLA •••••••••• " ... Hit, ,.c1i: ·199
Meat
~ Wlli*
ucry PAIMS CALIPOIMA H OWM Of' 69 ¢
FIESH FIYEIS •••••••.•••• c."! '!'. •·
YOU ... TIHDH 89¢
IEEF LIVER •••.••••• : • • • • • • • • • • •·
Thank&giving is a happy hoUday when guests have planned ahead. ' HUNTS 39¢ IED KIDNEY llANS •• ~ ••••• t 5.5 ...
WiiTs C~T:~~ ................... • 1 7 ~.
Etiquette tips for guests
at Thanksgiving dinner
OIYIUI HDIMIACHmS . 89¢
POPPING COIN •••••••••••• 15 ...
""°"' Save 60c 119 IOYSENIERRY PRESERVES .. "OL
, .... H Y FRY Save 70( 1 29
YEGETAILE COOKING SPRAY I OL
iuFao:ST ......... ~ . . .. . . . 1 6 ~.
MAHHI ... H ff IOHILISS ':" 2 4 9
IEEF ROAST •••••.•••• c.~. . . . . . . . •·
IOH&IH LIAH 1 9 8
STEWING IEEF • • • • • . • • • . • . • . • • • . •·
With everyone
offering advi ce at
Thanksgiving lime on
how to be the perfect
host, it's easy to forget
that being the perfect
guest takes nearly as
m u c h thought and
planning.
Since more people are
guests at Thanksgiving
than hosts , food and
etiquette s pec ialists
were surveyed to collect
tips on how to be a
we lcome visitor at
Thanksgiving or any
other fime.
When you receive the
invitation, ask if you can
bring dessert or a side
dish. This wilt lighten
the hosts' work load and
may be appreciate4 by
those busy with dozens
of details.
DRFiiS appropriately.
Although you may be
more comfortable in
jeans, remember the
hoau .mi&ht want tbia
di n ner to b e an
extra-special arfair. The
way you dress can set
the mood for the entire
affair.
Arrive on lime. Unless
you know that your
hosts prefer you to be
late, make sure you're
there on time. Timing a
large meal for many
people is diffic ult if
everyone shows up at
different limes. Keep in
mind that heavy holiday
traffic may slow your
trip. Plan accordingly.
Ask if you can help
before the meal. If the
hosts say yes, do so. But
if they decline your
orrer, stay out ·of the
kitchen and their way.
They probably can work
mor e efficiently without
having to keep up a
conversation and work
aroQnd you.
DON'T TURN on the
television or radio
before, during or after
the meal without
consulting the hosts
first. TJle hosts might be
planning to tum on a
special sports event or
parade, and the dinner
hour might be planned
with this in mind. Or,
the host might not want
the television or radio on
at all that day.
Don ' l bring pets
without asking the hosts
for permission. Besides
the 1eneral uproar the
pet might cause, there
mitht be guests present
who are allergic to
certain animals. Your
pet mi1ht spoil their
day.
Bring a sift, even if
you're told that dessert
",_._.,._ ..... wew .....................
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.......... 194'' ........ ... ......... o. ....... 11
1111111••• tit• e 11Ure o. ..... c.....,.. .... .................... .......... .,., .. .... ... ,.., ......... ,., ,............ ..... .,. ,,.,,.... ..,., . ..-.
tlilHlll te TMI DAILY MOT. ,,0 .... 1•, ee... ..... c...-. ............ ,., .... .................. ......... ,. ...... .. ......., ... ...
or a side dis h isn't
needed. If you bring
wine, don't expect the
hosts to serve it at the
meal because it might
not go with the rood or
beverage being served.
A box of candy, on the
other hand, is an ideal
gift and is always
w e l co m e after the
holiday feast.
for them if they are not.
This might sound like a
minor point, but it can
be a real irritation to the
hosts ii wet glasses are
placed o n w oo d
furniture, leaving a
stain.
M.UTIMB..U 109 SPARKLING CIDER •••••••••• 150 •L
14~. IAI M IULJl
SLICED IACOM ••••••••••••.•••..
KEEP CLOSE watch
on your children. You
might not worry about
them, but they could be
ll source of worry for the
hosts. Make sure .they
don't gel into your hosts·
things or go running
throughout the house.
Or, offer to read a story
or play a game to keep
them occupied until
dinner lime.
Offer to clean up after
the meal, but don't
insist. Many hosts would
rather clear the table
themselves and wash
the dishes after
everyone leaves. Follow
the lead of the hosts on
this one.
Produce Specials
Cl lSP 110 DIUCIOUS 4
APPLES • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Lbs.. 100
SOUD•HIH 12¢ CAllAGE • • • • • • . . . . . . . . . . • • • • •·
LOHG GlH H
CUCUMIERS
SALAD SIH
TOMATOES
.............. 6 :
.............. 3
WE FEATURE ZACKY FRESH
TURKEYS FOR THANKSGIVING
. PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY!!
BEER
At the meal. try a bit
of everything. Unless
you have a real reason
not to eat something,
give it a try.· It wiJI
please the hosts and
mate them feel Chat all
their work was
worthwhile.
Don't overstay your
we lcome. Ont: of the
most common faults of
an otherwise good guest.
is not knowing when to.
leave. It can spoiJ the
entire day for everyone.
Make s ure you stay
aware of the lime an<I
'look for the first sign of
fatigue in your hosts.
Remember to write a thank-you note. Just a
•mall effort on your part
will mean so much to
those who have spent
hou rs prepar in g a nd
serving the meal. It's a
great way to show your
appreciat.Jlon.
MAH
AVOCADOS
l 00
Lk 100
l 00 .............. 3 ~ De.Ii & Frozen ~
l~~EAM ..... ~ ........ .,, •"-•"-179 •
Don't smoke without
consulting the hosts. It
is a simple courtesy to
ask if anyone minds if
you smoke. U someone
objects, move away
from the dining area.
Your smoke could ruin
the meal of some of the
other guests.
USE COASTE RS if
t,pey are provided. Ask
Your reputation as a
good guest grows over
the years and follows
you nearly everywhere
you go. Make sure you
give your actions some
thought and you will
always be a welcome
guest in anyone's home.
I
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FREE SYRUP
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WHEN YOU BUY BOTH
Aunt Jemima®
Pancake Mix
(2 lb. or. larger)
Aunt Jemima®
Syrup
(24 oz. or 36 oz.)
.
SenCI In certlflcat• and 2 proofl of purcha ..
for your Piii AUNT JIMIMA• IYIU' Coupon --------.. --••
lllNl fOID 97i9 ¢
COOKED HAM ••••.••••••••• J ... I
iOLC'i:A ...................... 79 ¢
~ e:a
Money Otclers Sold
Check Cashing
tf JM '" •Y di ot1r
aMpp•9 cwt. plHH c.,I •• ...
C crcls Available 540-3253
I I
L J
..
...
Ora~ Coat DAILY PILOT/Wednetday. November 11 , 1911
Microwave Ovens can speed
dinnertime classic di8hes
Microwave oven with cheeH. 2 tablespoons butter boll ; reduct beat.
owntra hnd to be Let 1tand. covered, a or maraarlne Simmer 2 mlnuttl to
venturet0me and admit mlnutee. Mak" aboul' 8 CUPI touted bread blend flavon . Add
t.hat t.hey learn to uae cup1. cubea (about hllc"> butter. tQu&~ond1
the new appliance by APPLE PUDDING v, cup chopped and raillM. ball
trial and error. They MBXICANA almonds of aoup mlxtuu In
al 1 o c 1t e rec IP e <Cioav•Uoaal) v, cup raillnl bottom of l~·quart
co Jl v er• Ion• • • 1 can (11 ounces) 2 cupt allced peeled cuaerole; top with
Information they wouJd condel)aed Cheddar apple apples and remalnln1
moat llke to have, cheeaeaoup v, cup 1bre-dded toaat mixture. Cover ;
Melted cheeae add• an
authentic touch to
Apple Pudding
Me:r1cana.
I II
• b
" . ' accordlna to consumer 1 cup milk M on t er e y J a c k or bake at a&O-d•IJ'ffl tor
research data. · v, cup packed brown Cheddar cheese 25 mlnutee or until bot. / In other word 1 , 1ugar In Hucepan, combine Uncover; aprlnkJe with / microwave users want v, teaspoon ground soup, milk, brown sugar cheese. Bake 5 mlDutH ~
lo know bow to convert a chlJ\amoD and cinnamon. Brina to more. Mak• 8 Nrvilll•· J> classic. If the family ,.......__::.__ ________________________ ~·~--:--:--------,-:--"~~-:-~..,....;....:___: __ ;..__;;,~-_;:,.:....:.. ___ ~-------__::,.
likes meat loaf, there's 1 no point In preparing ,
something else ln the
microwave oven. Far
better to adapt a
favorite meat loaf
recipe to microwave
cooking.
Following are tbe
classic recipes and their
mi c rowave counterparts, for those
who want to venture -
or be conventional:
MINI MEAT LOAVES
(MJerowHe)
1 can (10~ ounces)
condensed tomato soup
2 pounds ground
beef .
V.. cup fine dry
bread crumbs v.. cup finely
chopped onion
1 teaspoon salt
1 egg, slightly
beaten
li4 teaspoon pepper v.. teaspoon rubbed
sage
'A teaspoon thyme
leaves, crushed v. cup waler
Mix thoroughly V.. cup
s oup, beef, bread
crumbs, onion, sail, egg
and t,it teaspoon each
pepper, sage and thyme.
Shape into 6 mini-meat
loaves. Arrange loaves
spoke-fashion in 10-inch
glass pie plate. Cover
with plastic wrap.
Microwave on HIGH 8
to 10 minutes, turning
dish once. Pour off fat.
Combine all remaining
ingredients; pour t>ver
loaves. Re-cover.
Microwave on HIGH 4
to 5 minutes or until
done, spooning sauce
over loaves once. .
Let stand, covered, 2
minutes . Makes 6
servings.
MINI MEAT LOAVES
CCoavenU.aJ>
1 can (10~ ounces)
condensed tomato soup
2 pounds ground
beer
V.. c up fine dry
bread crumbs
1 egg, s lightly
beaten v.. C UP' finely
chopped onion
1 teaspoon salt v. teaspoon pepper
V.. teaspoon rubbed
sage
V.. leas_poon thyme
leaves, crusfied
2 tablespoons
shortening
2 to 4 tablespoons
water
Mix thoroughly V.. cup
s oup , beef , bread
crumbs, egg, onion, salt
and I.ii teaspoon each
pepper, sage and thyme.
Shape firmly into 6
mini·meal loaves. In skillet, brown loaves in
shortening; pour off fat.
Stir in remaining soup,
seasonings and water.
Cover; cook over low
heat 20 minutes or until
done. Stir occasionally.
Makes 6 servings.
AP P LE PUDDING
MEXJCANA
CMJcrowHe)
1 can (11 ounces)
condensed Cheddar
cheese soup
v, cup milk
1h cup packed brown
sugar
2 tablespoons butter
or margarine
1h teaspoon ground
cinnamon
S cups toasted bread
cubes (about 6 slices>
2 cups sliced peeled
apple
\A.a cup chopped
aJmonds v, cup chopped
raisina
v, cup shredded
Monterey Jack or
Cheddar cbee1e
In 3-quart round 11ua
ca11erole, comblae
1oup , milk, brown' ,
1u 1 ar, butter and
ci••amoD· CoTer •ltb paalld.
iOcrowft • HIGH • eosz, itM•illW•
1Urrlal •ft, ltlt la to~;&~-·•,._, .......... r •
'
..
U.S.D.A. Choke 8fff, loin Cut, Trimmed 3 99 N. YORK STRIP ... . . ........... LB. •
U.S 0 A ChOKt 8fff, BoneltH Chuck 9
ROLLED SHOULDER CLOD ... LB. 2.•
Bulk or Potties ... Doel Not Eitcted 22% Fol 9 LEAN GROUND BEEF ........... L8. 2. I
leoMtl Ground 8fff ... Doti Not Eicceed 15'Mlj,pt
CHOPPED STEAKS . . . ............. LB. ~.•9
l.R. FLA YORFUL
ALllBURY lllAll
PAN llEADY 59 s.oz IA.•
~
lltg. M Mlrrt •.. 6.'-oL fnd. 20' Off
CREST __ ,,., 1.2 7 • .....
SCOPE ............ 1.69
c-°' L>qvi<I 7-oa..' , .....
PRELL ........... .'2.19 ...... ~..., ,..,.
SURE SOLID .................. 1.7•
m YAlll ..... " ............................ l •• 29
·p
MIXORMAICH
99 U.S.D.A. CHOICf IH'-LOtN CUT
Fii.iT MIGllOll
U.S..D.A. CHOta IHf-4.0IN CUT ,
lllW YORK SllAll
GMAT~llQOltMOKIHG 1·12'9ll.
COLOSSAL SHRIMP LB.
U.S.D A. Choi<• Beef, Oiudl Cut I J9 U.S.0 .A. Choice a.,f ChU<k I 59
7 ·BONE ROAST ....................... La. • ROUND BONE ROAST ............ lB. •
Frou n/DefrosMd, Center Cu1 ~"' 9 HALIBUT STEAKS ............ LB 2.1 F1flh fillet of
PACIFIC RED SNAPPER ... .. LB. 1.69
C·HUCK ROAST
II.ADE
CUT
lllF
LIMIT
I
32-0Z.
BOTTLE
LIMIT I
C H.B ... 2..fb.
STRAWBERRY PRESERVES ........ 1.79
Nestle, ~ lonut 'od ... 31.•-oz.
CHOCOLATE QUHC.. ................. 2.69
22··0ll
BORDEN CREMORA .................. 2.25
11-or.
KEUOGGS CORN FLAKES .......... 1.25
.a-01. •
KNUDSEN ORANGE JUICE ....... 1.39
"'""· ... Soop PIHOllALSlii85 IV .. Y ___ •
•
8ttt)' Crocbf ... 21.S.Oz.
BROWNlE MIX ........................... 1.25
~ l'imllod's
IMO DRESSING ............................... 39
Sunthine ... 11~.
VANlllAWAfERS ........................... 99
.... '"-'·Ast. v •.... 5.S.Oz. 7
POTATO CHI'S ........ :..................... • 9
Henhey •.• li>-or. 39 MILK CHOCOLATE FUDGE....... I .
H.D •.•. Sl Off lobe! ... 121-oz. 9 Dfa 111411 ..... ._ ....... 5 9
LARGE
EX FANCY
Soto "" ... 10.75-oz. .,_, ltl!Odl""""' Of'°" ... Sol/909'
POUND CAKE ........................... . VfENNA 'fRANKS ...................... .
1 .... "'9devt I 19 RtCOTI A CHEESE .. . .. ... . .. ... .. .. .. .. •
E R Coor~ Do.l Not Exceed 30% F01
GROUND CHIU BEEF ta I .89
El Roncho
RANCH STYLE BACON LI 1.39
Ar"10ur Stor .. 12-or
PAN SIZE BACON
E II SwMt & Hot
ITALIAN SAUSAGE
EA. I .59
. LB 1.69
FllllH IAITIRN ARMOU
PORK SPARE RIBS
;!!~~~.~E Lii. I • 2 9
IC).Proof Vodko
I LITlll 429 KAMCHATKA ....
'°""'°°'. 7 '°""" OLD SMUGGLER SCOTCH .......•• 99
..ioi.. laOel 7 '°"""
MANOY ...................................... 29
.. ~
Show ~ff for speci81 guests
with festive dessert recipe ,
l:et' admll It. We
aff like to ahow oft once
ir'f) awhile. And if ever'
there's a lime to parade
our cuUnary talents, It's
during the holidays
when fri ends and ramlly
gather.
One candidate to win
you applause might be a
yummy Charlotte Glace
Saronno , a s howy
delight that is easily
assembled though it
looks most complicated.
You don' t even need a
special charlotte mold
a two-pound coffee
can does the trick.
Miniature jelly-roll
slices provid e a
jewel-like look to the
Charlott e and a
sprinkling of Amaretto
di Saronno a dd s
intriguing flavdr .
Layers of vanilla and
either peach or coffee
ice cream are suggested
for the Cilhng. but others
could be substituted.
CHARLOTTE GLACE
SARONNO
2 p ac ka ges (7
ounces each) miniature
jelly rolls
1.6 cup Amaretto di
Saronno
11"2 pints peach or
co ffee ice crea m ,
softened
11..-'l pints vaniUa ice
cream. sortened
1
2 tab l espoo n s
cornstarch
12 cup Amaretto di
Saronno
2 p ack ages ( 10
o'u nces each ) frozen
raspberries, lhawed
Cul j elly rolls into
1'2-inch U)ick slices. Line
the bottom and sides of
a 2-pound coffee can
with jelly.roll s lices.
Reserve some slices to
cover top Sprinkle.
jelly roll slices with Y.i
CU P. Am a r e tt o di
Saronno. Spoon peach or
coffee ice cream ·and
then vanilla ice cream
into can. Cover top with
r e m a ining jelly roll
s li ces. Freeze for
several hours or until
hard. To prepare sauce,
mix cornstarch, 'h cup
Amaretto di Saronno
Charlotte Glace Saronno 1s sen'ed w1tl1 a ra!fpherry sau!'e to he .~poonerl
over each temptzng portion
a nd juice drained from c h i 11 . To r e m o v e charlotte with rosettes
the rasp berries. Stir charlolle from can, cut of whipped cream, if
over medium heat until bottom from can with a des ired. To serve. cut
s auce bub b I es a nd can opener and use the into long wedges and top
thick e n s . Stir in lid to pus h o ut the with raspberry sauce.
raspberries. Cover a.nd co ntents Garnish Makes8 servmgs.
Carrots enrich muff ins
l'~ cups all·purpose
rt our
12 cup unprocessed
bran
1 teaspoon salt
l teas poon c in -
namon
~ teaspoon soda
"'• teaspoon baking powder
·~ teaspoon allspice
l cup shredded car-rots ( about 3 carrots)
23 cup orange juice
1':1 cup raisins
14 cup vegetable oil
14 c up firmly
packed brown sugar
1 egg
Heat oven to 425
d egr ees. · r ease 10
medium muuin cups or
line with paper liners. In
large bowl . combine
flour, bran, salt, cin-
namon, soda, baking
powder and allspice;
mix well . Combine re·
m aining ingredients :
add lo bran mixture.
mixing just until dry io·
gredients a re
moistened. Fill pre·
pared mumn cups
full. Let s t a nd for 5
minutes. Bake for 20 to
25 minutes or until
golden brown. Makes 10
muffins.
on New KelloggS
Banana Frosted 'Flakes.
Here 's some gr-r·reat news for you.
New Kellogg's Banana Frosted Rakes'~
cereal. They've got real bits o f banana
and real banana taste So you get.gµr·reijt
savings on gr r-reat banana taste.
"Now thats real appeal!"
l,075bS
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, November 11, 1981
Treat kid.
to sherbet
While a pltcherful of
uny ruvorlle flavor
br1mmin1 with Ice cubes
is sure to brlna Instant
joy lo a youncs ter,
moms should be aware
or other quick and easy
treats this product can
provide.
For example, Fruit·
rt a vored Sherbet is a
refres hing frozen
dessert with but two
simple ingredients. Dis·
solve 1 c up s u gar ·
sweetened sort drink mix -any navor -in 3
cups mUk. If the mix.·
ture appears curdled,
don't be upset. Pour jnto
shallow nonmetal· con·
tainer or bowl and
freeze until parliJlllY
firm . Spoon Into a
chilled bowl and beat
until sm ooth but not
melted . Freeze until
firm, for about 2 hours.
This wlJI yield about 6
servings.
I
...... • .,, •I ,.,,..,
For Claultled Ad
ACTION
Cal A DAILY PU.OT
AD-Vlso.
MJ-5671
Thegrapefruit~ce~th
die great fn11t name.
New Sunkist• Grapefruit Juice. expect from Sunkist.
It's nothing but 100% pure. delicious It's a kick. a pick-up, fresh and
juice from plump, delicious grapefruit. refreshing. In short, it's great fruit
And we guarantee it has all the juice for the morning. You have
natural goodness you'd -;::::.~~-==~!!§our word on that.
r--_ 11oe
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Cle Orenge Co11t DAIL'( PILOT /WednHday. Novem~r 11, , 981
Alfalfa Contributes to dairy
and bee~ industry products ..
81 MITll AYALA .............
SACRAMENTO
Ntxt time you're Uckin1
an lee cream cone or
billnl into a Dice Ju.icy
hambut1er. be 11aa we
have a healthf and thrlvln1 al alfa
lnduatry.
Alfalfa lnduatry?
Yea, and here's why.
Sixty-five percent of
California's alfalfa 1oea
to teed dairy animals,
and another 25 percent
1oea for beef ciattle.
Remove alfalfa from the
acene, and California
would soon be forced to
import much of its meat
and mµk . Prices would
skyrocket.
A common treat like
ice cream might become
a luxury and a T-bone
steak would be worth its
wel&bt ln caviar .•
R1tlontn1 mlsht even
become necHury to
insure that mllk would
be available for lnfaall.
W.e t11te 1lfalf1 ao
much for arented th1t
probably most of ua
never even thought of lt.
In the early 1950t,
however, there loomed
tbe poulbillly of losin1
the whole Industry.
When a military
airplane comina from
Morocco touched down
in Roewell, New Mexico,
il carried an unnoticed
passenger, one which
tiad the potential for
destroying the alfalfa
fields.
The little passenger
was the spotted alfalfa
a p h id • and lac king
native predators, it was
able to spread so fast
that within two yean, It
infeat.ed 85 percent of
the atr1U1 flelCla ln
California.
at the Nk Reaeareb
Station tn Woodl1nd,
Callfornla. He'• ln a
1reenbou1e, beodln•
over a tray ol about 50
alfalfa pl anti. In tboae pre-Medfly
days, one obaerver
des c ribed the tiny "Notice,'' be aaya,
invader as "the most ''that some of these
dramatic lnv11lon of a plants are three lncbet
peatUeroua Insect ln hl1h, while others are
world hlatory ." barely one-half lncb
Fortunately for those of hl1h and look sick?
us who enjoy dairy They're all two weekl
products and beef, old, but the short onea
science came to the ha v e no I en et l c
rescue. resistance to spotted
The spotted aphid alfalfa aphid. They'll be
problem isn't solved, but completely dead ln
It Is mana1eable today another week."
thanks to continuing l;Coipe turns one of the
research ertorts. fingernail-size leaves
Bill Knipe from the ·over to show us the
Northrup King Company infestation. The leaf bu
is one or the researchers three aphids on It. each
w h o work s on t h e no larger than the head
solution. Uet's join him of a p\n.
.................... _, _ _.___. ............... ....... .......................... -.....-..................... ._,~ . .............. ... _ ................. -..... Mlllll_ ..... c...-.. ............ ,., ...................... , ....... ~~-........ .....__°""_'_,_ ... __ .......,~ . .
-· ..... -··----'"----.....
--, SAFEWAY '":
· DOUBLE COUPON --:
~----.
C::
THE CHAMP • Dick
Giese was declared
the Orange County
Cookout King at the
Fall Fair in Costa
M esa las t w ee k .
Besides winning
overall first place, he
won for best seafood.
pork and beef. He
also won five years
ago.
/
•
•
Refreshing, zesty flavor.
Ready to serve:
• in your.favorite vegetable salad. .----~---------w• -· r:------...-------------I ;~ i Ir i
• 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.
THE BEST THING SINCE
SUCIDIRMD!
SPIRAL SUCEO FOR Mn SfJM#fi
No pAng. No teartg. No last mh.Jte carving.
Honey BOked Hans are slced around the bone
ha spral momer so that eoch sloe remains In
place unfl served. Each slce Is urifam n thickness
and unfalds'OOsty.
We Invented the spral slced hem and we tltlk it
reo'tt/ Is the best thing shoe slced bread It serves
g~ ar ~ pertectty and Is welcome at
ct occasions ... both formal and lrtormal.
Every Honey Baked Hc.rn Is slc:7...+( bal<ed CNet
J.'.)l.lfV8rlt hlckay chPs and glazed with a deicious
coatng of honey and spices. Try a free sampe in
cxry one of cu sf ares. Ycu taste buds wl bad< up
cu claim
For the pertect c:ompc:ri:>r\ we suggest voo try
Jessamine's C~d Mustard Sauce. Ifs the
best mro snce slced hem.
NOllFl IAKED NAM
---... 900E. Coad~ • (N)673-«X)O .-. rt.Vloge~ • l1Z2 SO.~(AI 8a1Aood) •
(714) 63.$-2'61
& ,_.. 8111 TO.-Plalo Nc7tt"I • 24601 Aovmor0 'NOV
(AIBTaoAcod) • (714)&37..J822 ---w-•---·lQOOQ 8eoc:t1 l!t.U (Al Gaftlld ~ IO~I) • (714)~
-· 14l9N. Tustl"l(Ac:roet-~ T~ootOcroe) • (714)<m-Q960 .._ ... M.l4Hwv m(Ronct'oMrogie ~> • (714)~
...,,... f{/]6 Mrt;;J~ A\19. (In Hi:S"arat ~Center) •
{1W) oe&-9081
'JIJl'1Aftiit'.191:1"dm:n:•=:r:==:2.':r':lr.
O#I MS7f IS AU" TAJ(fS!
· GIFT eERTIFICATES --"w==r-•
I t I :
I I I :
I I 11 I
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I :=:.-=:.-::.:::;...-::.--;a=:-,:.~."':r:-r.;::-= I I ==-~-=:.:::~-::."':~,-:_-:-.-::=.:-:::r= I I ~-°""--[-... ___ I I ............ ._._,_ ... ___ ._. I
b~-~-~-~-~-~-~-g-~--~-~~A~RMl-~-~--~-~-~---~-~-~-~-~-Q-~-~-~ ~ ------------------------------~
PLUS THOUSI DS OF LO PRICES
Round ........ =; ~1&8
a_ Walnuts '!If#' .... • 3t.69c
Margarine
~!~; ;H,:'4 ... i40 ~ Corton
Maruchan
~'-1. 0°· Gallo Wines Kraft Mayonnaise
mta-.!1. 59
QUALITY MEATS
Boneless Tip Roast-==: 1221
Beef Cube Steak """:..-• 1241
Beef Back Ribs ... -=:,...._ .. 991
Beef Stew Meat -:..--• 11"
Chicken Fry Steak.::=..~ .•111 .
Sliced Beef Liver a=. .• 991
Pork Spareribs ,~~ • 11"
Drumsticks === . 99•
Premium Ground Beef Ia' !1"
UtdlJuanBurrltos t; 37•
DELI
"'•· Cont
(UMlt 2 ............ 0... ........ .t1'1 (llMll I . .......,_ 0... -II.It)
GROCERY LIQUOR PRODUCE
•Wishbone ·=:-t:. 79' •Kamchatka ':::' :: 174' Delicious Apples =. 3:. 891
• Star-Kist Tuna ·~ 89' ile ~rlo Rossi :::::, ~ 11" Golden Yams :.•, • 39'
•HI C Orln~s 1: 75• rllt' Almaden :=. ~ 1211 Crisp Carro1S-2 :. 55•
•Arm & Hammer ~ 1: 391 •Scotch Buy Beer 6 E.•1•• Premium Russets - • 351
•louncan Hines =.~ 'I: 1145 •1eeeteater Gin .:.. u. '9" White Grapefruit -• 35•
•eel-air Oinn~s t: ''::'131 •·e&J Brandy :.. ::'10" Fresh Tomatoes ,:::.. • 59•
·Mott's Apple Juice ':: 1111 Fresh Limes ~= 2,., 39'
Porn Porn or Daisies .... 11" -Scott's Cheese CUps\: 99'
• Whipping Cream-= 65• ··Gold Medal FJour 5 :. 99' HEAL TH & BEAUTY
• Lucsne Sour Cream .. 89' .. Bell Bocadltos 't' 95• •Baby Oii ~ = 11•
• Lucemi Cottage a. . .J1• •Tree Top :::=:= ~ '1" • Bufferln i-1:::-
•
Edwards
Coffee
~ 89' BAKERY M PeppsldgefsmsOefls'.:'1" • Mylanta Antacid = 12°' ..__.....,. __ _.._......,
•:Oregon Farms 0~ .. ~ 11" -Multi Vltamlna ~:a 1111.
•eome·NGettt ~ 1:'9" •ThrOlt~qn.a• ~ 99' • Frendt Bread '":st:' 't: 79'
'= '2" .Hot
I ~
Spanish ch1c:ken is a c.:olortul dish with a .Wed1terranean an<:estry
Spanish chicken dish
When the sultry, hot 6 tablespoons butter
days of summer seem to or margarine
take the zest out of life, · ~ cup flour
a Spanish. banquet can 2 teaspoons salt
put the zing back in. Try 2 teaspoons paprika
this recipe for Chicken ~ cup t oasted ,
Andaluza, with its hint slivered atmonds
of M edit e r r a n e a n Black beans
ancestry. Hot cooked rice
_ Made with a dry In larg e bowl ,
1 4herry that you will co mbine c hi c k e n . 1 a nt to serve as an or ange juice, garlic and l aperitif, th e di s h pars ley . Cover and
1 eombines a number of refrigerate overnight.
ti colorful navo~: orange, 1 11 b 1 i · al d l' n s m a ow , 1 ra sin, mon ' gar ic. combine raisins and •-,Then, follow up with a i •s picy dessert of fresh sherry; set aside. Heat
I it 1 h d oil and 3 tablespoons 1 ru s, a so e n ance butter in sk1'llet. Season t with fortified wine. fl our with salt and
-CHICKEN ANDALUZA paprika. Dredge chicken
: 2 frying c hickens, parts in flour mixture.
1 cut up (about 3 pounds B row n c hi c k e n i n
quartered
3 ripe pears, cored
and cut into wedges
1 lh cups pineapple
chunks
1h cup fresh orange
juice
V.. cup dry sherry
V.. c up rirmly
packed light brown
sugar
V.. 'teaspoon ground
cinnamon . v.. teaspoon ground
allspice
1 tablespoon butter
12 cup sour cream
2 tablespoons light
brown sugar
' 1 each) skillet; set aside. Add f 2 cans (6 ounces m a rinade and raisin
• each > frozen or a nge mixture to skillet. Heat
: juice con cent rate , through. Return chicken
1 thawed lo pan. Cover and
' 3 c loves garlic. simmer 45 minutes, or ~ minced until chicken is tender.
•• >I• cup c ho pped Garnish with almonds.
Combine fruits i n
s hallow baking dish .
Combine orange juice,
sherry, 14 cup brown
sugar. and spices. Pour
o ver fruits and toss
lightly to bl~nd. Dot with
butter. Bake at 425
degrees for 20 minutes,
basting occasionally
wilh juices. Remove
f ro m oven and cool
s lightly. Ser ve warm
with sour cream blended
with remaining brown-
s ugar. Makes 6 to 8
servings.
parsley Serve with beans and ~ cup golden raisins rice. Makes 6 servings ..
1 cup dry sherry
3 tablespoons olive SHERRJ ED FRUITS
4 medium bananas,
Sa ve money and shopping A~~d th e Daily PilDi
IF YOU THINK OUR LIGHTING
IS BRILLIANT-WAI~ 'TIL YOU
MEET OUR INTERi@Rf>ESIGNERS
• I \ .... • • _,.._....._ -"' 'It... . . _.,..,. "":' ~----
A/ CF1m1dlrrs ll'f l'f addrd to our /op-fligf1/
pmfrssumal drs1~111 staff so 11 11·11/ br msirr for !JOll lo
wtJrd111<1/r tf1r p1rcrs !JOll /01'<' 111/0" lromr !JOU'// r111oy.
Wlrr11 you start 11•ill1 011r of Cf1a11dlrr's
111tcrwr 1ksig11rrs !JOll s11PIJ/!J !JOur budgrl. !J01ir taste
1m1l 11<Jur goals Your drs1g11rr 11•1/I slw11· !JOll the opt1011s
11mmgr all tfrc drtni/s n11d put it al/ /ogrlfrrr.
Brst of all. Cftandlrr's complrlr drsig11 servicrs
arr frcr of cf1argr t<' Cf1am1/rr·s customers. And
at Cl1amllrr's. !JOll can hr surr lf1al tlir wrvicr
t/Clll rr<rri'f rs ns nlra-t1rd111ary as tfrr l1rirloom-
qualily f11rnilurr you find.
Pkasr ml/ your 11rarc•st store for 011 apvoi11lmr11l.
or asfl for a drsignrr nrxl lime you sl1op.
FINE FURN ITURE· INTERIOR DESIGN
SANTA ANA • 1514 N. Maitt SI· 714 /54 1-4391
SANTAANA· lllON.MaittSl ·714 /'S41-091
IOptn tarl~ Dttrmbtfl
LAGUNA HILLS· 24·721 Alicia P~·~ • 714/951·7101
Or1ngt CoHt DAILY PILOT/WtdnHdly, November 11 , 1981
Take your choice, Regular or Diet Shasta. Either way, you save
25¢ on a purchase of six cans or a 2-liter bottle.
..
£11
t
. -... .. , ...
,..,...z.~~
And either way, you get that terrific Shasta taste. Bright, bold cola. Crystal-cold
lemon lime. Tangy, old-timey root beer. And a family of 11 other flavors to choose from .
Pick up a supply of Shasta now, while this special offer lasts. Your taste will
thank you for it. And so will your budget.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, November 11. 1981
Fried onions Can add flavor withotit gt'ease . 1· 878A&BA&AGl880NI o&ISNTAL divided wlth flour. Spray the Olver 1houJd be pink In ONION h at until undertld• ta o•er the llambtttt•r
f'rled onion• don't "8&0WNSD" ONION• Salt, pepper 1klllet llber1lly with the mlddl >.Return tho ~-pound lean browned Turn and M11ie1 2 1trvtn11. t
have to be inuy, Follow . HY of the PHI, halve and thinly cookln1 1pray. Add 1 onions to the pan. Add around be rround brown the other 1lde. calorl"each. •
rattenlna and hard to prececllnl na1 ... but add 1Uce onlon1. Spray a teupoon oil. Arr1n1e .remalnlna 1 teupoon l 1mall <or~ larae> Remove hambur11ra
dlaeat. In tact, fr led t or 2 teupoons of aoy LARGE nonatlck 1kllltt the l'ver In a 1ln1le oil. Cook, turnlna with a onlon, nnff~oPed ~ from the 1klllet and 8ort.c:1'H lparnibe>
onions don't have to .,. 11uce to the Uquld. Add or bit electrlc frypan layer. Cook uncovered, spatula, uqtll heated 1 tabletpoori"Weter place on heated plates Sld1n11 SNM K1bab, tANrl
fried at all. no 11lt. w lth cook Ina •pray. (or bfff broth, or wine)· oi: hambur1er roll1. and Ahthroomt, Lo,.JD
Today, we reveal the ONB·PAN RIBD Spread the onlont In a llll llUllO Salt, pepper, to taste · Orafn and discard any with Plntapplt ... J,:: secret or smotherlnt LIVI& a ONION& shallow layer. Add the Spray a non1tlck melted fat In the 1klllot. th•11 and '"°'' plu.
steaks, hamburiert or 1laraeor2 medlum water. Cover and cook aklllet or 1rlddle with Raise heat to hlth. ttp1, und a 1tamp ..
other meats wlth a sweetonlona over medium beat 3 to 4 cookln1 spray. Shape Combine the minced 11l/.oddre11ed "'v•lop,G
l u 8 cl 0 us l 8 ye r 0 f 2 tablespoons water mlnutee. Remove onions over medium heat untll through. Seuson to taste. the m\'at Into 2 patUes. onion and water In the ond 50 ctntt to SL/Mt
navorful "fried" onlon1 2 tabl~ns flour ' and aet aalde. underside la brown and Makes four 1ervln11, 205 Arran'e them on the skillet. Cook and 1tlr 1 GOtJRME:T LAMB. LIVJ)l)l
... without alJ the tat 1 pound beef <o r Sprinkle flour on a blood rises to the top of calories each. aklllet and cook them mlnute1 or until all the ANO PORK 015HES, P,Q,
andcalories. . calf)llver . shallowplate.CoatlJver the liver. Turn and SKILLET'f"RIEO uncovered. with no fat llqula evaporates . Bo:r 124 , Sparta, N.J .
Convent Ion a 1 2 teaspoons oil , lightly on both sides brown the other side ff AM B V R GER Ii added, over medium Season to taste. Spoon 07111. It tec hniques call tor .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..;;
cookin1 onions in fat
until they soften .
Trouble is, the onions
absorb fat as they cook,
and become high calorie
as well as greasy and
hard to digest. But it's
the heat -not the rat -
that causes them to
soften.
Onions also will soften
when cooke d with
moisture instead of fat.
However, for onions to
brown, they do need
s ome fat. So the
calorie-cutting trick is to
cook the onions in a little
bit of moisture (water,
wine or broth) until
they're sort. then add a
little bit of oil at the last
minute to aid them in
browning.
Some ideas on bow to
'.'fr-y.': .OJlloJlS with a
minimum of fat:
IN A NONSTICK
SKILLET -Spray the
s killet liberally with
cooking spray. Add the
thinly sliced onions. plus
1 tablespoon water and
·~ teaspoon of salad oiJ
for each onion. Cover
tightly and cook over
low heat 3 to 5 minutes.
Remove cover. Raise
heat. Cook and stir until
all the mois ture
evaporates. Continue to
cook until onions begin
to brown.
IN THE OVEN -
Sp ra y a non s tick cakepan or piepan w1Uf
cooking spray a.nd add
the thinly sliced onions.
plus 1 tablespoon water
and l'!l teaspoon oil ror
each onion. Cover the
pan with foil. Bake in a
preheated 450-degr ee
oven 6 to 10 minutes <or
l o n ger . i f oven
temperature is lower >.
Rem ove fo i l and
co ntinue to bake ;
s tirring occasionally,
until liquid evaporates
and onions begin to
brown.
ON THE BARBECUE
-Spray a s heet of
aluminum foil with
cooking spray. Arrange
thinly sliced onions in a
s hallow layer in the
center. Add 1 tablespoon
water and 1'2 teaspoon
oil for each onion. Fold
over lhe foil. Place the
packet Qn the grill while
meat broils. Turn the
pac ket occasionally.
Ca r efully op e n the
packet during the last 3
or 4 minutes of cooking,
to allow moisture to
· evaporate.
MICROWAVE TIP -
Thinly sliced onions can
be pre·coo)ted i n a
plastic bag. Once soft,
the partially cooked
onions can be stirred
into the skillet in whJch
meat bas been sauteed.
until they brown.
Brandy
fact sheet
Cherry Bounce was
George Washington's
family recipe. It can be
made inexpensively
today, by blending five
pints or fresh, mashed
and strained cherries
per quart of California
brandy. To every gallon
or the mixture add
three-quarters or a
pound of brown sugar.
More than 150 gallons
of various brandies were
discovered in Geor1e
Washington's cellars at
Mt. Vernon.
Frank Sinatra ·s
favorit e drink ,
accordloa to a Palm
Sprlofa bartend"', la the
Royal Brandy Ice,
reaturln• California
brandy, dllrl creme de
cac10 and Sltllilh toft•
ice cream Hned at
Lord "etela«'a. Amertu•• eon1ume
aa avera1• of 1•.111 btttl•• or Callfora&
bl' """ ... br
Ill
lrt
•Jd •• ________ ...... ____ .._. __ ..... ______ ......, __ ....._ ______________ ;;;...;;;;;;;;;..;;.;.;;;...;;......;;::;~--;;;;;;;;;....;;;;;;;;;.;;,;;~;;;;;;;......;;...;,.-..-..~;....~;;;;;;;;;~.._,,..._.-.,..;;....;;::;;..;;.. ________ .;...._ q
f"CRANBERRY 47 I> ~.~~E. ~6oz cane
· JdiedorwtlOle
CROSS
RIB ROAST ~19' IOnfleSS IOnOlll eeet cnuac
WHOLE BEEF ~129 BRISKET
IOnlllss IOnOlld llef. 71 I.bl
FRYINC
CHICKEN
wriolf IOOY. SOUttllm. ~.54
Qaot~
ORAN CE
JUICE
HarVet oav. Frozen Concentrate, 12 oz can
.77 ~.
t.'LADY LEE 168 A tS~~~A~~ Ctn .
LECOF ~188 LAMB
USOACHOICt
11.amb lltt> CfloPS LO. 2 88J
LONDON BROIL 218 STEAK
loneifSS IOnded 9Hf LO
Top Round
FRESH FIUET 1 sg OF BUTTERFIS~
AMERICAN
CHEESE SPREAD
~'/ lft Single Wriel
Shced 12 01 PkO
149:,,.
f"MRS . CUBBISON'S87 i ~!~~FIN~,~!~.
or com ll'ta<I \
f"WHIPPINC 99 A £~AM 160z Ctn .
. f-COLCATE 137
i !~~~!~~!!Ea
fl' IMPERIAL 59 i ~ARCA~~~crn •
T·BONE ~238 STEAK
BOnO«I llfff LOln
FARMER JOHN 48 SAUSACE
s.i~s Uf'll( 80Z PllO .
PORK LOIN ' ~158 ROAST SlnOln Cut ' LI> Avg
I CITRUS
PUNCH
Sunny Delight
LARGE ENO
RIB ROAST
9onOfd llfff
~187
FRESH TURKEY 138 BREAST
ITurtctV Ol'umstlelcs LO Ml lb
WE SHOULDER 1"8 ROAST
USOA~ LI>
1Umb ShoulOtr caoc>s 4.b 1 A l
OOLOEN DELICIOUS
APPLES
RIBIER
CRAPES
FRESH
LEMONS
SwHt & Juicy super $N(IC
... 29~ u 59:...
FRESH
SPINACH
TABLE
tARROTS
zesrv. flaYOrf\11
_.19:...
·" RUSSET
POTATOES
Crtsp & cruncnv us,., 1
tb
ftJ
•• II ?
iY
I ,.
!")
.. v
I rl
.11
H
•11
IW
m
lO
10
N
I -,,
lb
~1
.q ,.
11
llJ
w
1'.I
A
11
fll
.()
~1.
.n
";>
Jd
IQ
1b
'Jt.
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11
II
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d
:1 ,,
IU
b
I'll ,
I II
lft
.,
lq
111
rd
_..29 ~ ... 15 ~ 10 ~.98:...~
Make It happen for lesal
•
..
99
Ralphs-Chilled-100% Pure
Orange
Juice
Y. ... ctn.
49
II
FrasH
Rainbow
Trout
,
.,,rib.
39
New Crop-Californ ia
Navel
Oranges
s 5 . .,..
for
·n--ms ._, .. .... --&-aft.. CISTAD
. 1 tMsr .. 1m11
•
Apple Brioche 'fart
makea an attractive
and taity autumn
de Hert .
••• DOuble Coupon
Present this coupon along with any one Manufacturer•· "cent• off' coupon•
and get double the savings when you purchaH the Item. Not to Include
"retailer". "free~· or "grocery purchase" coupons or exceed the value of the
item. Excludes llauor. tobacco. anti 1111111 milk nroductt.
UMll OM Item fter ............,., Coupon
.-UMll 4.,....... c-;r••,.., c......,. c..-...... " ..... 1 tin ..... 11. 1111
Ralphs-Natural Grain or
Honez Run Brea
' ' ' .
• -~ -
( 111ftt1IHOn
',,~I"' t
Asst. Varieties
Instant
M
Quaker
Oatmeal
Here'• one gift you
know they'll UH
A Ralphs
Gift
0 7 ~!~!~~~!!.
II
Detella
At All Relpha
Stor•I
Prlc• effective Nov.12 thru Nov.18, 1181
..
'
,Cl4
. I
Orange Cout OAJLY PILoT/Wtdneaday, November 11 , 1981
(J~ I co~ ORANGE COUNTY .
~ <
•
Dec. 4
Friday, Dec. 4, 1981,.8:00 p.m.
Newport Harbor High School
Auditorium
600 Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach --.......
Tht' Or•ni:• Counlv M•strr ( ht>rAlt' .inJ c .. trr.•rn••n~ prttl'nl
• Chntlm•s f.ntov uf mus1< fr.,m thr '•n•tttnth .1nd Tw•nl••lh
ct>nlur1tt f•,atunn;: thr (..il1furn1.1 <. ••J•I li.illrt Thutt r th• M•Urr
Chor.alt' Br.i» Chucr, •nd Jth..:htful nt'" 'h••r.alt arr.1n;:Pmtnts "rtltt'n
'fur thr Ch••r•I• by Ht)!fyw1•uJ "•mr<1wr .irr.1n,;.-r. C.r1•r11«' Wyle
Dr. Maurice Allard, Director
Or All.ard ho ht'ld \C'•t'r.ll tN•hin11 "'"'s on C•lifurnt,. .ind
thrt•ui:h••UI thr Unttt'd St,ll<'S wholl' uindudtnl( ht• vru • "' publt<
•NVll'l' .tt the ·un1vt'r .. 11v 1•( (.il1f11rn1.1, ln·tnl', when• ht• w.is l'n•fo•••r
uf Mu•" tn tht' .1n•.1• ,,( .-o1H• .1nJ 'ho•rll "'''" fo•r t•lt•• t•n Yt'•r~ Aftn
.i brttf h1.1tu• on H••llv"'""" ... hnr h• \\.l• .1 '"'"' "'"'h. hf' h•t
mtl\t'J ht• >lud1u .anJ 1nll'rt~I b .. , I.. h• Or.inl(IP (<'t.lntll tu Jtvutt h•>
ltml' .. nJ l'nt'r);tt'> tu tlw <Uhur.al •u•nf' Tow.ud th1 .. t'nd ht>•••
mt·n\btor 11/ th<' AJ H,.,. (,1mmt11<'C' f.•r th•· O,.ni;t• Countv Arlt
Afh.m• r .. 1 mt'mbt•r .. ~ 1h1• .,J,.,..,,,. ,.,mm1t tt·r for lhr Or•nl(I' C••unl'
Mu''' Ct•ntrr .1nJ rront •r"' .1d1uJl\dh•r ,,., mu•ll ... h11l.tr•h1p•
rn·-.·nlC'J IU \uon.: Ml"I• l't\ lht· tlr,ln);I' (<•Uni\ rh1lh4rMHntt
S. ... 11•1\ Hr .af,,., .>-.uml'• rh< Jullt'• "' l>trt't hir .,f \1u~" "11n1>trth
.11 thr An .. ht·om Holl> ( ummun1h <. hurth'n .\n4hl'1m
.\• Dr 1\11.irJ bt•;:1n• h" f.,urth \ , . .., ·" Don'< ll•r. ht> un1<~ur
.ibiJ1t1(')' rn~ml>f' h• mt•lc· 1h1 ... ,uh•lht•r c~\ulJn..: { hPr'dlf' SC".t5\tn
Ttte Californians
The (.,,l1ft•rn1.tn' ..... tn Jnt.tt"J .. 1n.,:h J"l•rul,1r ..,,.., ... ,, ,:.n•up frum
"'thin th•·<. h1•r.1lt' Th"' h.wl' ·•1'~·1"·J on mdn\ 'I"'"•' u•nu•ll• in
.1JJ1111•n ... th••tr r('.:ul.or ( h1•r,1lt• u•n<1•rt """"'" ... h .. dult' Th .. r•\I
V('M tht••t' l,lff'ntpJ •111);1'r. hJ\ t' r.-rf .. rmt•J tn m .. n\ .. rU> "' thr
Co•untv ,1nJ bt-H•nJ Onr ••I thf'tr m1•r< m1'm1ir.1bl1 .1nJ M•»I .... .rml•
rnrl\t·J ·•rrt·.or.>n,c. "'·"" •('('\1.al ·h•"' .ll tht Bt-, .. r1, l\1l>horr Hou·I
bf'f1•r. .1 l.iri.;I' .wJwntt' 1nduJ1n.: n .. 1.1bic" Sen.1h•r '>I Hd\olU"•
.\111•rnt•\ ( . .-nN.>I (,,.,,,;:t• l)(.u~m«10.1n .. nJ r .. 1, ... ( h11 t Do1nl C.ttr>
Thf• (.1l1f1•rn1.1n"' .1rt .1~.>1n lt~•k•n~ *''r".irJ h• ,, H•nu>rt , .. '-'~·on with
thr ( httt,,11 ,1nJ h• numt r1tU' ~U(''f .tpp oHdn\t"" lhh•U):.h1•Uf thfl'
S.•uthl.1nJ
Dec. 5
Saturday. December 5, 1981,
8:00 p.m.
Plummer Auditorium
Lemon & Cha pman, Fullerton
ER CHORALE
·.
Dec. 6
Sunday, December 6, 1981.
4:00 p.m. & 7:QO p.m.
Trinity United
Presbyterian Church
17th & P rospect, Santa Ana
•
Oring~ Coun~ Mast~r Chorale
Thr M,tll'r c 1.ale IS rnlt'rlnj( lh loth •11nl(•rl •""""n .. o,..n.:I'
County> oldrst u nt1nu1nic pt>rf.,rm1nl( •rt~ enM"mblt• E••h '""'""
, '"""'"' fl'm•on~ " blr11d1n11 of th" Ir JJ1111in.al •nJ I ht .ontrmp•>r.,y,
th• molli'twl>rl• •nd r<'fl•·. lo bt·•I •All~fv the mu .. ,"' •••l•t ,,f thl'
County'• rt'ildrnu
OC. MC hu •ppeut>d in• w1J.· '"""" .,f •unu•rl .~111nl(• 1n.luJ1nl(
Chri•lm ... jM'rform•ntl'> "' tht> Dw<11h• C..t..ndln Pn-rf1L~ with tJir
Clend"I" Sym,.h.,ny, th• d"J""'"'" "' thl' C..rJ•n c,,,,, .. , Crv•••I 1 C•thedr•I. the op•n•flll of thl' S.1r1 l),,.IC" S1o1J1um tht' Jt>d1ul1<•n .,f
th• An•h•tm C11nvtn11<1n Ctntn JrtJ lw1• '""'"'' 1<1ur> "' Europt'
A ph1l;li.oph1o 11f tr•v•hnl( h • the Jud1t'ntt' h•• ''"'""J ••~•r tht' Y""" •nJ ••-'Pr•rrnt 1n 1h11, W'4><1n > "'n•l'rt "'ht'Julr "' Pf'rlurm•n« .. 1n .. ••ri•ty ul f,,..,,..,.. 1hn1tJl(h<1u1 thf' Count\
California Coast Ballet The.atre
Th• C •hforno• { ••••• K•llt·I I ht·•• r. 1> " r1<"' Jo1n, r '""'r.1n•
JeJ1t .. 1t1J h • mtt11n~ 1hr nt·•J~ t.•f t.)t.tn~t (,,uni\., ~"'"•n...: ,uhlu•I
nh•Hmt'nl It 1> ,1 b•ll• I lht'.ttrt' thJt .. tin• tro>•h .111J '11.1l ,,.,rlo1r{'"'"""
1n tht' 1 l•>>lt d1J .. pf1m· II\ hilt> ( ( KI will prt'>t nl t••tJbl1>hl'J wo>rl..•
with• nf'w f,iol... 11 will •lit• pt>rl .. rm 'h.irPoi.:r.>rh• 1hJ1 >hPw<J•• •
un~1n;tl ~·•rl~ t•f .-m .. r~tn.: .iu1h'''\ JnJ "''mf"'"""'"'
,, .
Feb. 27 Felix Mendelssohn, Eliiah June 5, 6 Best of'the Ac a demy __
vvith Chapillan
Syillphony
Orchestra
Feb. 27
Saturday. February 27. 1982.
8:00 p.m .
Santa Ana Higb School
Auditorium
520 W. Walnut. Santa Ana
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June s
Saturday, June 5. 1982. 8 :00 p.m
Santa Ana High School
Auditorium
520 W. Walnut. Santa Ana
June 6
Sunday, June 6. 1982 . 8:00 pm
Plummer Auditorium
Lemon & Chapman. Fullerton
I
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(1
Wl!ONl!SOAY, NOV. 11, 1911
CLASSI F IED 06
It wasn't unanimous,
but close enough. Lasorda
was also honored. D2.
Fernando Valenzuela . the rookie sensation of the Los Angeles Dodger pitching staff this past season . was named winner ot the 1 National League Cy Young award today. Valenzuela is pictured here inaction during the World'5eries at Dodyer Stadiu m. lie goes
into his windup at right and follows through.
~Fernando ~afiled Cy "¥ oung • winner
D odger rookie sensation edges Seaver and Carlton for ~Vational League av.;ard
NEW YORK 1AP1 -Fernando Valenzuela,
the sensational Mexican left-hander who took
basebaU by storm in his rookie season. was named
the National League·s Cy Young Award winner
today in a very close vote.
Valenzuela, who turned 21 last week, was 13-7
/or the Los Angeles. Dodgers this season, leading
the league in four pitching categories and helping
the Dodgers to their first world championship in 16
'years. He became the first rookie ever to win Cy
Young honors since the award was Instituted In
1956.
A pair of three-time Cy Young winners, Tom
1 Seaver of Cincinnati and Steve Carlton of
Philadelphia. placed right behind Valenzuela in
the voting by the Baseball Writers Association of
America. Valenzuela received eight first-place
votes, eight seconds and six thirds in the balloting
for 70 points based on rive points for a
;Edis o n, FV:
So Ille thing
• ID COlllDlOD
By ROGER CARLSON
Of ... DeAy,.... SUfl
It's Edison High's Chargers
and the Fountain Valley Barons
this week -the g11me which has
become the CI F 'southern
Section's showcase or the
regular season -with every
contrast conceivable.
ll 's at Anaheim Stadium
Friday night (7:30) and as
Edison assistant coach Russ
Purnell says, "If we were both
0-9 we'd still draw a pretty good•
crowd."
Well, neither is 0-9. The
Chargers are 9·0 and working on
a 31-game winning streak as the
two-time ·defending CIF Big
Five Conference champion.
And Fountain Valley is still in
the hunt with a 7-2 overall 3-1
. Sunset League record and
boasts an offense with explosive
tendencies.
Contrasts? It begins with
simply Edison and Fountain
Valley. It's UCLA and USC,
Stanford and Cal, the Arabs and
the Jews, whatever vein you see
it in, it's a conrHct.
· It's Fountain Valley's air
• force against Edison's stingy
defense, the Barons led by
offensive specialist Dave
PenhatJ a former quarterback,
aeainst' the Chargers' defense
led by defensive specialist Russ
Purnell, a former lineman.
Despite the contrasting nature
or tbne two school.a, they have a
few thinp in common -s uccess
because of quality athletes and
coaches. Penhall and Purnell -not
•xactly hoUHhold names <what
111i1tant Is?), but around
Fountain Valley and Edison,
they're knowri very well.
first-place vote, three for second and one for third.
Seaver, who was 7-1 In each half of the split
season. got eight first-place voles. seven for
second and six for third, giving him 67 points. The
difference between Valenzuela and Seaver was one
second-place vote.
Carlton, who woo the award in 1980. received
five votes for first place. six tor second and seven
for third for 50 points. '
Nolan Ryan of Houston, who led the NL in
earned run averag~ with a 1.69 mark, was fourth
(3-3-4) 28. St. Louis reliever Bruce Sutter was the
only other pitcher receiving a vote -one for third
place, giving him one point.
Valenzuela, wbo made 10 appearances with
the Dodgers in 1980, is only the second pitcher to
win the Cy Young honors in his first full season.
Vida Blue of Oakland was the fi rst to do so. in 1971.
The left-bander with the dancmg screwball
Like cheat marvels Boris
lpa11ky and Bobby Flecher,
Ul•Y ftpt it out with moves and
eouatermoves, probin1 .
eaplo6dne, prepartn1. plannldl
8841 ~ch Btu Workman
Ud l'amda1n Valley C~ach Mlke ••1•r•NG, Pa1e IN)
.................. ._
SUNSET'S I EST From left to right. Pounta1n VaJle~"s
Ned Mosher. Huntington Beach's Gus Quinonez and
Fountain Valley's Bob Ericllaon dominated the Sunset
League cr055 country finala lut week as they prepare ror
Saturdav's CIF prelims. Ericksoa won in 15: 12, Qulnone7.
was sccood in 15:20 and Mosher was third 115:43 1.
••
who inspired "Femandomania" in Los Angeles,
posted a 2.48 ERA, and led National League
pitchers in four departments: complete games. 11 :
shutouts 8; innings pitched, 192, and strikeouts.
180. ' In the postseason. Valenzuela won the
pennant-clinching game over Montreal. then beat
the Yankees in Game 3 of the World Series. giving
the Dodgers their first victory over New York. Los
Angeles then won the next three games to capture
the Serles.
Seaver's 14 victories led the league and he had
a 2.55 ERA.
Carlton, 13·4, was second to Valenzuela an
complete games with 10, innings pitched with 190
and strikeouts with 179. He had a 2.42 ERA.
Seaver, in a prepared statement released by
the lleds' front office. was phjlosophical about his
second·rate finish.
.. It would have beeen nice to win," he said,
"but the farther you go in this game , team goals
become more important than personal goals.
· · 1 would like to congratulate Fernando on his
season and win11ini the Cy Young ...
Valenzuela becomes the first Dodger pitcher
to wtn the Cy Young award since reliever Mike
Marshall in 1974. Other Dodgers to win the coveted
prize include Sandy Koufax ! 1963, 65, 66J and Don
Newcombe < 1956J
Valenzuela opened the season in a flurry,
wanning his first eight decisions and posting rive
s hutouts m the process. He then hit a short dry
s pell before returning to form by the end of the
season.
Valenzuela joined the Dodgers al the tailend of
the 1980 season. In 10 innings work, he didn 't allow
an earned run while posting a 2-0 record.
Rams a sputtering malfunction
I f their situation isn't zmpossible, it's very close to it
It was the year of our landlord 1972 and it was
rather a significant lime for the Rams football
side.
Tommy Prothro was the coach -not a very
good one -and in his final year as the Rams'
quarterback was Roman Gabriel. Jack
Youngblood was a sophomore Ram and the guy
who would be<:.ome his bosom buddy, Larry
Brooks, was a rookie.
Another rookie was Carroll Rosenbloom, the
proprietor. Rosenbloom owned the Rams ,as a
result of a memorable transaction wherein Robert
Irsay emerged with the Baltimore franchise.
The season of 1972 also was also the last one
the Rams completed without earning a place in
post season play. Thereafter, Los Angeles would
dominate, indeed "own··. the National Football
Conference West.
THIS SITUATION WOULD endure for eight
years. The Rams did not own anything in 1980
after the untimely departure of Carroll
Rosenbloom and the despair is likely to be
complete in 1981 inasmuch as the Rams probably
will not make the playoffs for the first lime since
1972.
In short, the Rams franchise seems to be
screwed up.
IC this assessment is accurate, there would
seem to be little doubt as to who's fault it is. This
distinction •would fall to the present owner,
Georgia Rosenbloom Frontiere, who has taken the
s mooth running machine bequeathed by her late
husband and reduced it to a classic example or
sputtering mallunctlon.
The realiiatlon of this state of affairs came
slowly. It came to pass that the Rams blew a
game, Zl-13, to the little New Orleans Saints last
Sunday and no one had \)otbered to understand the
significance or the contest because it was a
foregone conclusion the Rams would win it.
This was particularly certain because the ...
Frank Sanborn dies
Frank Sanborn, 23, or l:funtineton Beach, a
former natiooaJ team kayaker and world clan
outrluer canoelJt, died Nov. 2 roUowin1 a heart
attack, ~Ue playin1 a pick·up baltetball 1ame al
Edison Hi1h School.
Sanborn q_ualllled tor the Olympic TriaJJ in
both 1178 and '80 and competed In tbe World
ChamplonshiP1 in kayaklna ln lla).
He wu also a member ol the lmua outrt11er
canoe team, baled out ol Newport Beub, aacl
paddled in, the llolollal tons distance rae. ~
ytftlr, u well u m~or races ln T1hlti Ud Kema, Haw au.
Sanbom 11 aurvlved by bit wile. Lita. •
SPORTS COLUMNIST
BUD TUCKER
Rams ha.d rina ll y solved their quarterback
proble m by dumping Pat Haden and replacing him
with Dante Pastonni.
THERE WAS ALSO little consideration l!ive:>n
to the possibility the San Francisco 49ers would
upset the Atlanta Falcons on the same Sunday,
lhereby leaving the Rams three lengths off the
pace with only six games to play. The alternative
is a wild card berth or which there are two in the
NFC. Philadelphia or Dallas will very likely claim
one of these so you see the agony with which the
Rams are confronted.
"'In Lhis league ... says Ray MaJavasi, the head
coach, "I wouldn't say anything was impossible ...
Well, if the Rams· situation isn't impossible, it
is very close to it.
It started getting Impossible when the Rams'
ownership pinched pennies on the signing of three
players, linebackers Bob Brudzinski and Jack
Reynolds and quarterback Vince Ferragamo.
Perhaps this is to flog a weary horse, but it Is not
possible to engage in a discussion on the
shortcomings of the Rams without these names
being inserted into the conversation.
GEORGIA, MADAME RAM, Is probably to
blame In name only inasmuch as she does not
likely know a linebacker on the team from a tuba
player ln the band or a quartf!rback on the field
Crom a bus boy In her luxury suite at Anaheim
Stadium.
But the franchise is in her name and she
strutted around accepting accolades when her 1'71
team struggled to the Super, Bowl. •
Her advisers would include her current
husband, Oomlnlc Frontiere, a world champk>n
accordion player. People within the Rama
organization say that Dominic becomes more
visible with each game he witnesaes and the man
ls on record as making remarks about the
coacblnl competence or llalavul.
Actually, thoUjb. lladame Ram'• adviMn are
neither here nor there. TIM fact ii the francldH ii
a ahamblel from a ltandpamt II Ddde and ""'"
de COrpl from wttbln and =from wtUaoul •
The only thina robUlt a Ult .... ii the bottom Ha• because the _.......
atnactunoltM NFL makee tt ~tatnll'Wt for._..•~ &bat up.
M 1'1idiir _. .. flMfti ,,_.,...-* .. •
rad6o .cai-. KWIZ f lflOJ.
,, .. A .. 118p1~het
&.08 ANGSLES Now , ... , ,..__,_i.orcta h11 tasted *he fJ'\lttt.,
•
•Wlmlte victory. as he WOUl.t·~
:manaa•r of the Los Anp.lea
1 ror more.
"~'s no law against wll\nlng the World Seriu qaln," said Lasorda. "And that's .. hat
we're .,IQI lo attempt to do. Now '"-t we koow
.,. ~tL~ it, Jet's keep on doit1" Jt -1182 wllJ ••!Ai_ iw Ule )'ear ror Dodger Blue." · t.aaoM'a mi1ht ·not make anyone forcet at>~ut Wall Wbilm a n , but a P•nel of
sportsWciterS ud sportscasters throu•hout the t'bu~l'J was impressed enouah by the job be
dlft on the field that he was m•de an -
everwhelming cholte as The Associated Press'
NaUooal Leaeue Manaaer of the Vear.
Lasorda received 21S vot~s in reaults
announced Tuesday. while runner·up Whitey Henoe ti/ the St. LOuis Cardinals had 163. John
McNamara of the Cincinnati Reds was third with 81 \'Oles.
Quote of. the day
~~~e M1urer, footba ll coach at
WltWllberl University ~ ''We want to win
and our kids want lo win. But we're not ao;ac to exploit our kids in any way ror
ODr 4o0tball program and take away from •hat's 'really important in a kid's Ute
lier-. and that's his clan work."
BOuy'.s goals pace Islander win
-gqai ...... d Melauoa stopped ' Mite 80My soored two goats and m
34 •a':t\o lead the Ne\!{ York
£9ludeira ,ast Winnipeg, '$-3. T1i1esday in
National Hockey League a~ion. Bossy, the
NHL'$ leading goal-scol'\!r last s eason,
conne<:ted on a power play at 6:31 or the first
period and then beat goahe Ed Staniowstl at
13: 17 for his second goal.
U.S. women win In volleyball
TOfCYO -The United States beat Cuba 15·11.
15·~. 7·15, 15-3 to take a share of the ·1ead with
J •P•n and China with three victories against no
defeats In the eight-nation women's voUeyball
world cup tournament Tuesday.
Japan beat Bulgaria 15·1, 15-7, l!i-3 and China
beat South Korea 15-12, 15-9, 15·8. Cuba has a 2-1
record. The Soviet Union is 1-2. Brazil. Bulgaria
and South Korea are winless m three mat~hes.
The tournamenl ends Monday.
.
.Erving leads Phlladelphla over Detroit
JllHu t:rv1n1 •cored ae polnta, m
includlnic lh game-wlnnin& basket
with· 37 aeconds left, to 11ve
Phlladelphls a 95-93 victory over
Detroit Tuesday night ln National 8 11ketb11l
Aaaoclallon action . . . Jn oth r aamea aroupd
the circuit, Adrian 011Uey tired 32 polntl abd
Darrell Grltrtth contributed 26 as Utah banded
San Diego Its fourth consecutive los1, 106·97
• • • GWI Wllllam1 scored 21
of his 33 points In the third
period as Seattle held off a
late r1.ally by Golden State to
post a 123·113· vic tory
. . . Jim Paxaon scored 21
points and CaMn Nau added
18 as Portland rolled past
DallJls, 117-95 to remain the
only unbeaten team ln the
N BA ... Alvan Adami
scored ~ points, lncludlnJt a
10.foot jumpet with 10 seconds to play as
Phoenix came Crom behind to defeat Denver,
109-106 ... Anis Gilmore scored a season-hlth
28 points to lead Chicago to a 119-107 win over
Kansas City.
Rams' Carson out for the season
Reserve linebacker Howard [i]
Carson of the Rams underwent ••• surgery on his right knee Tuesday
and will be out for the r est of the season . . .
The Canadian Football League has ended for
the Montreal Alouettes but quarterback Vmte
Ferragamo had no part in the final chapter.
Ferragamo, with his wife Jodi, popped Into the
Alouettes offices al Olympic Stadium Monday
handed over the keys to his rented car and
waved a hasty goodbye before i:atching a tught
back to Los Angeles . . . The Chicago Bears put
a victory or sorts Into the win column as a judge
dismissed a lawsuit filed by a fan who charged
the NFL club with misrepresen~ing ltsell as a
pro team . . . Marcus Allen of USC and JI•
MeMa.bm or ·evu were the top two player.
named in a mock player draft for the first
Olympia Gold Bowl at San Diego, Jan. 16 .•.
Kea Sh11oa. an Alabama running back was
arrestect on a felony warrant and rereued on
S2,000 bond for a llegedly firing a shotgun during
au argument with two other students.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: / 1 1 1 excellent; 1 I 1
worth watching; 1 ./ fair; 'forget it.
[';) 5:50 P·'"!1 ·· Channel 9 " v "
NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Houston. Announcers: Ch ick Hearn a nd Keith
Er ickson.
The Lakers move from San Antonio to Houston for tonight's game and hope they don't
r un Into any more red-hot shooting. Ron Brewer
scored•• points to bomb the Lakers Tuesday night
despite Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's 29 points and 24
from Magic Johnson. Houston's record matches
that of the Lakers at 2-4.
RADIO Basketball -Lakers at Houston, 6 p.m .,
KLAC ~70).
Lakers still having problems
This time they're blitzed by the Spurs , 128-102
SAN ANTONIO <AP1 Ron
Brewer scored a career-high 44
points Tuesday night as the San
Antonio Spurs routed the Los
Angeles Lakers, 128·102. in the
National Basketball Association
lt was the third straight game
in which Brewer scored career
highs., w,hi,le starting m place of
the injured George Gervin. The
fourlh ·year guard rrom
Arkansas sc<>red 40 points an a
win ovet-New York and 39 m a
triumph over Cleveland.
Ma rk Olberding added '28
points, Da\'e Corune scored 17
and Johnny Moore hit 15 as San
Antonio improved its record to
5·1 atop the Midwe&t Div1s1on
Kareem Abdul -Jabbar
collected 29 points and Ean•m
··Magic" Johnson added 24 for
the Lakers. now 2-4.
With Abdul-J abbar scoring
nine points and Johnson getting
six in lhe first five minutes. Los
Angeles jumped lo an early 19·8
lead. San Antonio whittled the
margin to 27-24 at the end of one
quarter. mainJ!' behind 10 points
from Brewer
'Faylor-:01ade win for LA
ING.L&WOOD (AP1 Dave
Taylor mapped a 1-1 deadJock
on a power-ptay go;ll 6 25 into
the second period and assisted
on ano~r score to help Los
Angeles turn back Montreal, 4·2,
in National Hockey League
aclioo Tuesday mght
The victor y s napped a
four-game losing streak for I.he
Kings.
Taylor. who leads the NHL
with 1cor~ at 31 points. set up
the team's Clrst goal by Marcel
Dionne al 9: 12 or the opening
period When he made a perfect
pa'a lo bis t$ne male.
~onne acoted his 14th goal of
the se•s~n while the Kings
enjoyed a manpower advantage.
The Canaclicns roared back to
tie the ~cere 1·1 al 2: 17 into the
second period on defenseman
Larr 1'0btn11on's 35-foot screen
shot. which eluded Kings goahe
Mario Lessard.
The Kings stretched their
advantage lo3-l w1lh 6.08 lcrt 1n
the second period. while both
teams were playing two men
short. Greg Terrion knocked in
his own rebouhd alter Montreal
goalie Ri chard Sevigny blocked
'·his first goal.
Mark Napier narrowed the
Kings lead to 3-2 with 2.14 left lo
play in the final period when he
beat Lessard on a 20 footer.
Dionne added an insurance tally
wbep be scored an empty net
goal with 20 seconds remaining.
It was his 25th of the $eason.
Montreal w)ng Guy Lafleur,
his t eam 's leading scorer,
sarrered an eye irijury with j :49
left in the second period when
stru ck by Hardy's stick.
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The Spurs took th e lead
J:ood "1th 7 42 lert in the second
period on a 15-foot jumper by
Olberding Olberding and
8rl'\\l'r ~c·ored 10 points apiece
in th~ se<·ond quarter to help
!>l ake the Spurs to a 57 -48
halftime lead
In the third quarter. ;San
Antonto outscored lhe Lakers
16 4 1n on(' stretch and extended
lht.>1r lead to 89-75 behind
another 14 points from Brewer.
Brewer connected on 19 of 24
field goal attempts and sank six
of his s~ven free throws.
"Our offense and defense
were very bad tonight.·' said Los
Angeles Coach Paul Westbead.
··Brewer played a great game
and got a lot or good shots oCC the
break. He beat our guards very
badl) Olberding always plays
good against us and did so again
tonight We are JUSt not winning
rljtht 0 0\\ ..
Guard Norm N 1xon. who
scored only 8 points. said, "The
Lakers are not playing well as 1l
team. but there is no tr uth to the
rumor that Magic and J cannot
play well together."
Brewer said lhal all he needed
to show his potential was •
chance. He was silting on t.M •
bench most of the lime when s.m
An ton io obtain ed him from
Portland last year. .
·'The only thing_ I lost ia
Porlland was playing time. 1'111
getting that now anc!. no. I'm not
surprised al my play, .. Brewer
said .
B~g Carne week!'
CIF footbal) playoff berths on the line
ly BOGER CARLSON ................
• 11atre are enou1h allracUona thl1 Wffk In high
Kh.a football for Oran•e Cout area team1 to till
• Huon. GM weekend notwlthatandln1.
While .ldlaon and Fountain Valley tan1le at
An ... lm St19dlum, there are duel• In •very dire~Uon with Che stake• hl.1h. •
Corona del Mar is eyeln1 1 CIF playoff berth,
but Newport Harbor counters with hopes ot
11lvaatn1 a disastrous year with a victory over Its
arch·rtvaJ •
HunUneton Beach Is sick and tired ot losing in
tbe Sunaet League and is a lhree-poinl favorite to
anap a 32.,ame losing streak in league.
Marina will be trying to make It three in a row
over Westminster. an opponent which once held a
11·rear Jinx over the Vikings .
L.,una Beach and Laguna Hills tangle with a
CIP' playoff berth at stake and El Toro ·and
Saddleback collide ln a 1ame paramount to the
Sea View League cnamp&onship.
Ttlat's not all. Estancia and Costa Mesa
collide In an lntra·clt y squabble, while a sellout is
uaured al Irvine Hlgb, where University hosll the
Vaqueroa.
Woodbridge closes out its first-ever varsity
competit.ion and Mission Viejo seeki ill seventh
shutout,
Here's a rundown on each:
Newport Herbor va. Coron• del Mer
Newport Harbor C1·8 overall, 1-4 in Sea View
Lee1ue> holds a 15·3 aeries edge over the Sea
Kin1s (3-2·1, 6·2·1) and CdM Coach Dick Morris
aays: "We've had a lot of seniors graduate who
have h.cl a hard time llvln1 ln the area."
The Salton haven't loet since 1972 and Morris
aay1: "We're going t.o put <Ml on our helmets
<aJ1adlaf to eitbl s traight lONeS to Newport).''
811 ora coach Coach Hank Cochrane, •
aa~•whi&e. aclcnowlede.. an upfft over Corona
del Mar could soothe a lot of the pain endured in a
l.a c.mpelgn.
"It would ease the pain, but It won't be easy,"
says Cochrane. "In the past maybe Corona del
M.ar Celt each/ear it was a case of feeling this was
the year it ha to do it, but couldn't.
"This ts another year t hey hlYe to do it. ..
Each goes in al less than full strength. The Sea
Kings may be without halfback Lance Martin and
the Sailors may be without tailback John Barnell
because of injuries.
The oHensive kt!ys~ Newport's passing
combination of quarterback Greg Selby and
receiver Rob Berry (the latter has 70 career
catches, two less than Vinnie Mulroy): Corona del
Mar's Eric Woods at quarterback. backed by
halfback Bill Bright.
Huntington Beach vs. Ocean View
Neither is headed for the CJF playoffs. and
maybe it's .Ju~t as well considering the physical
shape each 1s in.
The Oilers of Huntington Beach Coach Greg
Henry are 0-4 in Sunset League competition, but
sport a 3-6 overall mark, the same as Ocean View.
Ocean View opened league play with a 28·14
victory over Westminster. but paid dearly with the
lose of quarterback John Heinle and have since
fallm three limes by a combined score of 125-1.f.
Heinle Is back and probably wilJ operate out
of a sbotg\m offense, which is expected to put the
Oilers' secondary to a severe test.
"I'm s ure it'll be a game of cat and mouse,"
says Henry. whose learn is still nursing various
bumps a nd bruises from last week's loss to
Edison.
For Ocean View Coach Ken Moats. a former
HB coach, it's Homecoming for his Seahawks and
himseU.
"We've got to use Heinle to bis fullest
capabilities ... says Moats.
"The rest or our squad is in pretty good
shape.''
Mertfta va. Weatmlnater ·
''We'll have no problem getting ready for this
one,·• says Marina Coach Dave Thompson, whose
Vikines, ranked No. • in the CIF Big Five
Conference and No. 2 in Orange County. seek their
ninth victory in 10 starts.
Westminster could enter the C1F playoff
pictwe • a wild card possibility witb a victory
aad la out to stop a two·1ame &osing streak to a
acbolllc.e Uons once owned. · . 'nae Lions are banged up, according to Coa~h
Barry Wa&en. who Hals atrooe safety Mike Waters
{brviaed bicep>. outside linebacker Scott Miller
......, .,.. (II ,_., 1t 7:311
lag111a Beach vs. uguna Hills at "°'
El loro vs. Saddleback at SA l!Owl
frtay
Edison vs. f tn. Valley at MMe1m Stad11JT1
Marina at Westminster lkean View at Hunttngtoo ~
NeWport Harbor vs. CdM at OCC
University at Irvine
r.o~ Mesa vs. £stancia at ~t
Mater Dei at Bishop Mootgorrery
taplstrano Valley at San Clerrente
Dana Hills at Mission V1e10
SltlrUy
Redondo vs. Woodbridge at lrvme
Em~ r Marilla bY I
Hgn. Beacltby
CdM !>f.•·
Estanica b~ 11
Mater Dt1 by ':II
C3ix> ~J. Jt
Misskln by Jt
' (should~r> and fullback Alfred Tauanuu ••pr
ankle) as 'entallve tor the gam e.
The Vlklnss feature quarterback Ken Laale&a
the veer offense, while the deC"'", k~l*I t,
linebackers Mike Fisk and Pat Knowt,.; betsltiil
nose guard P•t Cemen , has allowe4 .-Jr • poiJJta
to nine opponents (including 28 to Ed~>.
Westminster's one-man offenae la t•ll&l~ Herbie Campbell.
Estancia va. Costa Mesa
Stung by lasl week's 22-15 upset loss to Irv~ •
which may have cost Estancia the Sea View
League champ1onsh1p, the Eagles will Iulo"
exactly where they stand after Thursday's Sea '
View League game between El Toro (5-1) and
Saddleback <4·2>
Estancia is 4·1·1, but ent.ers with Curt Werula.(f
possibly' stJll hampered with a Charley hohe
surrered in the final touchdown drive a1au.s4
Newport Harbor two weeks ago.
Rover 8111 Sieker (shoulder> and tackle Dave
Coleman were also·banged up recently.
"Costa Mesa creates some problems with U.a
type or offense,'' says Estancia Coach Ed Blanton.
"The motion and t h rowing with a 1ood
quarterback (Steve Anderson> and good recelvera
makes them dangerous ...
"Our kids are really down after losinc to
Irvine," admits Blanton "All the ingredients wea:e
there for an upset
··we were coming off an emotional aame
~~ainst Newport Harbor, we had some key
tnJunes, we were playing a team just beaten by a
team we'd beaten easily. the game was .at lbeji
place, everything was just nght for an upset. · •
"We just didn't play well and I.hey deserve tbe
credit." •
As for the poss1b1hty of El Toro losing t.o
Saddleback to allow Estancia to re.enter Unough
the back door for the league Lille. Blanton says: "J
don't think El Toro will blow 1t."
Irvine vs. University
Universit y <3-3 in Sea View Leaeue, ~'4
overall ) s till has a shot at the CJF playoffs ii
things go right in other directions.
ShouJd El Toro defeat SaddlebAck and Coroos
del Mar lose lo Newport Har bor, the rr.jaas
would lie SaddJeback for third place and awn a
1.S-1.f verdict ~r Saddleback.
Irvine, 2·4 1n league, 4-4 -1 overall. has shown
its potenUaJ with a 22·15 victory over Estancia, a
27-26 1055\, lo 5-1 El Toro and a 3-0 loss to 4•J
Saddleback. '
Irvine boasts a n amazing 21-S ratio in
turnovers, 1?uffering only one lost fumble aad feul .
interceptions tor the season. while Uaivenlt)'
boa.ta one of the more formidable defenses ia the
league.
Regard.Jess of playoff µossibllities, OU. is U>t
<See P&EP. Page DO
·········••oft~ : JOHNSON & SON ! • .. .. Presents ...
NATIONAL CONFE&ENCE
Weetera Division
AMEIUCAN CONFERENCE -tr
Weetera Division •
• • • • ..
W L T Pf' f'A Pd.
$4'.P Francisco 8 2 o 2a 188 .800
.... 5 5 0 2Z7 214 •. 500
Atiant.a s s o 277 188 .SOO
Ii"" Orleana. 3 7 o 129 211 .aoo
\. l:aatera Dlvla._
Pbila41elphia 8 2 o Mt 139 .800 Dlrll•• 8 2 0 241 195 .800
M.Y. Oim\t.s 5 5 0 195 173 .500
WHtdaitoft 4 6 0 210 263 .400
St. Lou!S 3 7 o 189 303 .300
Ceatral Dlvlalee
Minnesota 6 4 0 230 228 .800
Tampa Bay 5 5 o 173 163 .'500
Detroit .f 6 O 241 223 .400
Green Bay 4 6 o 196 232 .400
Chicato 3 7 0 152 ~ .300
Denver
W L T PF PA Pct. -tr
7 3 0 196 149 .700 •
6 4 0 292 247 .600 ..
6 4 0 240 201 .600 ..
4 6 0 141 167 .400 :
3 7 0 152 226 .300
Eastera Dlvl1lo• !
Miami ~ 7 2 1 243 189 .750 -tr
San Diego
Kansas City
Oakland
Seattle
Bu~\.lo 6 4 O 217 168 .600 « if>~. Jets · 5 4 1 232 223 .550
New England 2 8 0 234 240 .200 !
Baltimore 1 9 0 172 339 .100 «
Ce.atral Divlslft •
Cincinnati 7 3 O 268 193 . 700 •
Hous ton s s o 176 213 .500 «
Pittsburgh 5 5 0 209 199 .500 -tr
Cleveland 4 6 o 183 21Z..,,400 • .. .. • .. • .. .. • tc ... .. • •
Jt .. .. .. • • ..
CdM ·t eam salutes its fOrin:er coach
Soehomores pay for Thompson's return so he can help coa~h them vs. Newport
Former Newport Harbor H11b linebacker
Dave Thompson, the hero of the Sailors'
memorable 10·7 victory over an undefeated and
No. 1 ranked SL. Paul team In 1978, returns to the
scene ol many triumphs.
He'll b4! on the sidelines Friday afternoon
•en the unbeaten Newport Harbor sophomore t .. m tansies with the Wlbeaten sophomores of
Corona del Mar for the Sea View Lea1ue
champlonshJp.
I . ~ut there's a sUght switch -Thompson will be
on the Corona del Mar side oC the field, helping I coach the Sea Kings. That's right -the Sailors'
arch·rival.
. ''To tell you the truth," says Thompson. "I
don't think 1'11 feel funny about it at all."
AND WHY SHOULD HE? The Sea Kings'
sophomores are comprised largely from the Junior
All-American team Thompson coached when they
were 13·year-olds and the bond between players
aJ'ld coach certainly go a lot deeper than usual. In
tbis case.
Thompson, now a 20 -year-old junior at
Harv·ard concentrating on Economics, was sent
round·trip aitfare in order to return for a week to
(1) help coach the Sea Kings for the big game and
<~> have a chance to visit wiijl his dad, Tommy,
wt)o is recovering from open heart surgery.
· What motivated 27 Cor ona del Ma r
sbphomores to chip in and get their assistant coach
back has to be a story which goes a lot deeper than
dM,
Mes a
~dvan ce
,. Costa Mesa and
G 'o r o n a d e I M a r
advanced lo the second
round or the CJ F 4·A
water polo playoffs
'Nlesday but Marina
lligh 's Vikings were
~.SPORTS
ROGER
CARLSON
the scratching on the surface here.
Sul things like this are us ually two.way
streets and while I didn't run down the 27
sophomores for their comments, an Insight lnto
this Is what Thompson has to say.
"This I$ just an outstandina 1roup," says
Thompson, which began with the Corsairs (in the Newport .Hench Junior All·Amer1can1 team.
"They deservl everything they get.
"EACH GROUP COMES UP with its own
characteristics and personality and this group at
Corona der Mar, well, you'll be hearing a lot about
them w.hen they are juniors and seniors."
Many on the Newport Harbor unit, too. are
from that Corsairs outfit which played under
Thompson a couple of years ago, so lt should be quit~ a homecomlng for this 20·year-ol<t.
Corona del Mar, 8-0 under Coach Rocky Ford,
is led by tailback Peter Stoughton. Newport
Harbor, 9 O under Coa-ch Mike Giddings, ls paced
by tailback Steve Brazas.
So. all the ingredients for a class game appear
to be there for Friday's 3 p.m. duel at Davidson
Field. Game accounts tor such endeavors naure to
range from minimum to zero from the media, but
the aophomores can rest assured, their etrort will
be clearly reCOi'\lied by those that really count.
• • •
DON'T ASK EL MODENA HIGH football
coach Bob Lester his opinion on the values ot
officials at least not right away.
Lester's Vanguards lost a 21·17 Century
League decision t.o Foothill recently and the aame
included a very crucial call In lhe latter stages
when what appeared to be a touchdown waa ruled
otherwise by Speedy Castillo, who felt he had a
better look Crom across the field.
Al any rate, Castillo was there only because
Lester and Foothill Coach Ted Mullens agreed to a
firth official when it was offered before the game. • • •
ASKED IF HE PLANNED on sending Irvine
Coach Terry Henigan and his football team a box
of candy fo~ their recent Sea View League victory
over Estancia, which enables El Toro a shot at the
title. El Toro Coach Bob Johnson says:
"Yeah, at least that. I've got to get hold of
Terry afLer lhe season, but now I have to wait uotll
after Thursday."
El Toro, you'll recall, lost its only league
decision to Estancia ( 14-7) in another game which
the offi cial played a prominent role 1n a crucial
situation.
NFL
JC·Clnclnnatl 31h over R•ms x-Phlladelpttla 131h over Baltimore
Buffalo 41h over •·St. Louis
><·Green Bay 3 over Chicago
• Denver 2 over x· Tampa Bay
x-Mlnnesot• 9 over New Orleans
><·New Enaland 2'h over NY Jets
•·Miami 4lh over Oakland
•·Atlanta 4'h over Pittsburgh •·Kansas City 41;, over Houston
x·San Francisco 3'h over Cleveland
Dallas 3112 over •·Detroit x·NY Giants 11h over Washington San Diego Sl/1 over x·Seattle
College ><·Pittsburgh vs. Army, no odds
><·Clemson 14 over Maryland USC 9V1 over ><·Washington ><·Georgia 13 over Auburn
x·Penn St. 4 over Alabama x-Nebraska 18 over Iowa St x-SMU 20 over Texas Tech
•·UCLA 1 over Arizona St. x· Texas 21 over TCU
Michigan 11 over x-Purdue x·Mlami, Fla. 131/1 over Virginia Tech
North Ca rollna 18 over x-Vlrglnia
So. Mississippi vs. x-Florlda St., no odds Oklahoma 7 over ><·Missouri
Arkansas 3 over x-Texas A&M
•·Washington St. 13 over Cal x-Hawail vs. BYU, no odds x-Denotes home team.
From Harrah's Reno Spor1a Book
sent packing. '
~Costa Mesa edged host
tsttena Park, 12-11 in a
high-scoring game in the
loser's pool. It was 11-10
itt favor of the Mustangs
1'hen Buena Park
scored to tie the count
~ith 1 ~50 remaining.
Then a ft er two
tu'rnovers. Scott Ashby
hit the winning goal for
the Mustangs, who play
al Edison Friday in
second round action.
THERE'S NEVER BEEN A TRUCK UKE IT BEFORE.
Aaron Chasen had five
goals and Ashl(y four for
the wiMing Pfustangs.
Coro n a del Mar
ilnproved its season
record lo 19-4 with an
eatsy triumph over Long
Beach Poly, 11·2. The
\Jackrabbits didn't score
until the final J period
when CdM nad a
number or reserves in
the lineup.
Goalie Joe Roh had a
shutout until the fourth
stanza but lhe Sea Kings
were hiding their
offense with mos t or the
Aviation High team in
the stands. CdM plays
all Aviation Friday in a
second round match.
Friday's score was
identical to an early
season game between
LHe same two teams.
Dave Imbernino had
lbur goals for the. Sea
~lngs with Larry Jacobs
llld Randy Taylor each
getting a pair.
Marina's Vikings were
l'~ppled by Lo s
Alamitos, a veter an
team in pla yo ff
competition . Lo s
J'tamilos won, 11 -7.
• Marina rinished its
~easo n wi t h a 10-7
_,verall record and a 4-1
~unset Le~gue mark . •
!Ru s tle r s, ·occ win .
• • Brett Del Valle scored
•three goals and Jim
-.Ross had 16 saves in
~oat to lead the
•uhdefeat.ed Golden West
~ollege water polo team
it\O an 11·5 victory over
+host Ventura in
.Southern California
~onference action
.,.uesday.
• On the South Coast ~o n ference scene. ~range Coast took an
•i!arly lead and held it ~hrouchout to defeat
'9.oat Grosamont, 13·11
:with Steve Simmons
playlq well hi the 1oal
ud lbe field.
Slmmona ,played tile
lint and tlllld ~ la
• Ulm Horild 4btee .. .. .... a.a peria_d .~n.1•.cb
EST.
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Two bo• lengths: 6-fl-1-ln. end 7.ft.-~n. Choose the With evallable vt, twice the towmng of lhe im· 108-tnch-Wtleelbue model Chevy S.10 f<>t the shorter porta. The S-10 works hard A pr equipped S.10
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Double-wall cargo box side panels that lhe lmPort
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c:atOO box side oa.nels and the tailgate
yqu should test drive soon. There .. s never been a truck Ttke
it before.
Use estimated MPG for comparisons. Your mileage may
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duced by other GM divisions, subsidiaries, or affiliated
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TOMORROW IS
8-10 ANNOUNCEMENT DAY
AT ~OUR CHEVROLET DEALER·s .
'
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"~' Trucllln, Ow Pel Pit, Mitt lely
$1W, TM 91fnb, SIKll • 919lrt. Tl-: :11.M. • st• XACTA 1•11 pokt '51.AO.
U .. ICX SIX 11-10-H·>•I pell! t1.tkll "1111 1' wlnnln!I tl<keb 1•1• llorMt. 12 f'ktr
SI• COlllOIMlofl paid PUO wllll 109 wlM\1119
lldi•ts (flw llorMSI. U Pkll SI• ttralcll
c-lelloll paid 120UO 11111111 11 wlMI ..
tltleelt (ftMlr --· -Krotcll).
..
...... ~ RANKUllOS
Cll' .. A
I. S..M91ke 11MI; J. tntlle O•U; a. ' cw--... (16-4)} ................ et••> I S. A...,._ 11MI; •· IEI TOf'o ll~JOJ; 1. Ml.-C.. 110-21; I. "'-flMI; t . CMflr UHi; II.-. Del 111-4).
BAllCRTU~ .......................
Nl'.W JfM&Y HET~Acllwated A*" 1u,.. ........ wa1ww0o¥Ma-,..,...
HIW YORK ICNICICS -AcllWltell 8HI
Carl••ltfll, Ctftter. lt•IHIM o.w • .,.. kales,,._...
(JOOTU~ ........ , ..... ,L....-
NEW YOlllC OIAHTS -PIKOCI El"l'ile
Hll9MS, center, ., Ille lnJllf9cl ,_ II._ lltMd Jlfll c--. cont«. MOCJCRY ................. ~
OETltOlT ltlO WINGS -A<i!lilre4 Erk
V .. , left wlfl9. frorn Ille Cel91WY Fl-for
Gery McActem, rl9hl wl111, encl •-'°'"""'-dl'lft chOlcn. IOCC•ll ....... L.fftllle
MAHCHl!STER -SI ..... Dennis T-', w1fl9, to a """"'ear c•lrect.
PREP TBl\~L ROUNDUP ...
title game for i he city of Irvine.
Laguna Beadh YI. Laguna Hilts
The winner goes to the CJF Central Conference
playoffs as the South Coast Leag:ue's No. 3
repreaentative.
The Artists or Laguna Beach Coach Wall
Hamera are 3·4·1 overall and like Laguna Hills,
are 2·2 ia 1 .. 1ue.
. LasuDa Beach 's game centers around ful~dt ·linebacker Damon Berryhill and a
balanced attack, while Laguna liUla features the
pa111n1 or junlor quarterback Blll MtVlcar.
McVicar, a 6·4, 190-poundeT, ha eompleted 141
or ztl for 1,698 yards and 9 TDa. lie has been
lnteTCepted 13 Umes.
The primary receiver is Dan Blaac!lk, fibo has
cautbt 55 for 747 yards and 21'Ds .•
Mater Del vt. Btthop Montgomery
The rec<>rd isn't much (3~ .overall, 1-2 in
league), but Mater Del's Monarchs are headed for
a CJF Big Five Conference playorr berth with a
victory over 1-8 Bishop Montgomery.
Kennedy Pola appeus to be on the mend and
the big Monarch tailback is hopeful of adding
s ubstantially to bis numben -149 carries for 996
yards.
Wo0dbrt~v1.Redondo
Woodbrid&e's aentorleas Warriors will be
trylnrw 1nap • two·11me losing strbk and finish
the 1981 Mason at 2·7, but are up against another
rated teem.
Redellde, W overall, is the Pioneer League
co-ch atnp Md eo111Wered a contender for the ClF
Dtt•rt·Motfntatn CoafererH?e Utle. •
SOMETWNG IN COMMON.
Milner accept moat of lht credit (and blame>, and
others ln each's staff are conlrlbutlnt their share,
the Purnell·Penhall duel each year 11 a major
factor to the outcome.
Let's race lt, Fountain Valley'• pualu tame
Is one of the finest you're 1otnt to aee uyw\ere on
the prep level. Edison•• defeu.e? Detpfte U.•
Charaera' lethal offense, ll'a the defente whleb bu
been the heart or a 3l ·same wlnnlnf streak.
Penhall Is a former WHtmluter Hilb and
Uni veraity of California quarterback ~ore
bringing his aerial ideas lo Fountain Valley.
Purnell was a center at ff untlnatoo Beacb,
Orange Coast Colle1e and Whittler Colle1e before
seven years as the offensive line coach, now the
defensive coach the past two years at Edlaon.
Here are some of thelt comments about the
Big Game-:
./Audible• 1eem to ~ commonplace /or tM oJlenu ..__ __ _
and de/en1e, true"
Penhall -.. Just because somethin& is called
doesn't mean that's where they're 10101. It
depends on the coveraie. When I went to hip
school we simply ran the play or route that wu
called against bnicaHy man-to-man covera1e.
.. Now, people are rolling up the comers and•
you have to go somewhere else. We try to call a
play. but supposedly no matter what theY're in,
we're going to go somewhere else.''
Purnell ··A lot of It is 1ue11ln1 and
anticipation, if a quarterback comea up and ahlftl
a guy, we're going to m ake an adjustment. Once a
motion Is started we might make an adjustment
thut la necessary."
• /The atudenta. player• and boo1ter1 ore
obv10UJ1ly e:rcited, how about the cooche1 /or thl• ou?
PenhaJI "Yeah, you try to treat lt 11 Just
another game, but the tact Is It la a bt1 :•me.
)'Even t.hou1b we've come out on the short en mOlt
I of the tJme, we like thl• same, we like pl•Jtn1
Edison, but we'd Uke to beat them.
"ll'1.not Just the football playenl everybody 11
1ett1n1 exclted, the people walUnl n Une to buy ticket. on the campus, all of a 1udden thla t1 the
week ... " '
PurneU "Yea, we're <the coaches) u h11h
as the kids are for Fountain Valley."
./Por Purnell, do you thmk Monn.a took owoy
the overcon/fd.ence factor an unMolen team mlght halH!
a teruUnc:11 to develop"
"Yes. we learned a very valuable, and cheap
lesson against Marina. We were lucky lo come out
of it without paying a pretty severe penalty. Our
No. l goal is to win league."
./ F'or Penlulll. how dut thu F'ounto1n Va.Uey
pcusmg game become what 11 1s today?
"When I left Cal Steve Bartkowski gave me a
playbook which had been used with Jim Plunkett
at Stanford.
"I asked Bruce Pickford about letting me use
it although it's changed a lot over the years. It's
based on stuff Cal and Stanford was ruruting 10
years ago. but it's still the base."
/For Purnell. do you t ry to outguess Penhall's
oflen!ive thinkmg?
./F'or PenhaU 11our o/fennue philo10phy?
"You have to pass In order to beat someone
who is better than you. It gives you a chance. I
firmly believe the best teams are balanced. Some
overemphasize the run, but you don't find too
many teams that win consi.atenUy who pass.
"Los Altos emphasizes the pass a lot, but it's a
controlled passing game. It's what makes Stanford
so unpredictable. If they're cUcklng they can beat
Oklahoma. But a week later they can lose to
nobody .. "If we couldn't throw, we would have lost t-0 El
Toro <El Toro led, 21·0, but lost, 28-21)."
,/For Purnell. 11our <U/en11ve phlloaophy?
"You Just try lo stay one step ahead of the
offense. Each week you want a little wrinkle,
something they haven 't seen before, M> we have a
lot of fun on Sundays. watching the films, trying to
find a weakness the other team may have,
something we can do that can make it ha.rd lor
them to adju11t.
"But you're not going lo outcoach them on
aame nllht. It's Sunday, getting your same plan
together. preparation''
./Any other comment?
Penhall ··1·m Just hoping it's a good 1bow .
that the kids play well. You totta be good. but you
have to be lucky. sometimes. too.··
Purnell "Knowing P~all 1.1 in the press
box, we know if there is a weakness Ul our defens~
he's going to find 1t
"What makes that scary is that he has the
tools to accomplish it.'·
,.8 TENNIS LESSOMS
-.. ~ + -$15 CAM OF I.ALLS
COSTA MES4
TENNIS CLW
5 -0211
•·Nol really, it's basically thinking against
Malt Stevens, Rod Emery and Joel Seay this year.
The running game is a lot more scarier this year
because Emery has improved a great deal." _..::......:_:__:.....:...--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rustlers
win; UCI
loses
Undef ea t e d an
conference play and 15-1
overall. the Golden West
College Ru s tl e r s
wgmen's No. l rated
volleyball team wasted
little time in disposing of
Los Angeles Southwest
College in three games
Tuesday afternoon.
The U C lr vine
women's team los t to
Ca I State (Fullerton) in
four sets as Titan hitter
Laurie Jakener made 26
kills for a .634
percentage figure.
Golden West didn't
give up a point in the
first two games and then
let Southwes t score
* -
•sPORt CH~~
SPORTING GOODS CENTERS
16242 BEACH BLVD. •'HUNTINGTON BEACH
1Jua1 2 Slocka Soul!! ol h •O& F...., I
COUPON SPECIAL
OF THE WEEK
1tilliiiilillit1•·---.-i-----------------------CHAMPIONSHIP OPTIC YELLOW I
WILSON TENNIS BALLS I
With this coupon pay only S2 09
per can of Wilson hea.vy dU!Y optic
yellow championship 1enn15 balls
Limit. 3 cans per coupon Coupon
expires Tuesday. Nov 10th 2 09i . I .. _____________________ ..
three in the final game. t_:::=:::::::::::==:=.=::~~~================:::::=:==:::!:::::::.::::::==::=::.:::...:_
College football
NCAA INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
Rushers
Allen. USC
Walker, Georgia
Redden, Richmond
Warner, Penn St.
Diana, Yale
Bettis, Cincinnati
Mcintosh, NC St
Lawrence, Va. Tech
Dickerson, SMU
Meyers, Navy
Tc Yet.. Avg
325 1,968 218.7
312 1,501 166.8
217 1,040 148.6
128 8.S9 143.2
219 1,133 141.6
197 1,059 132.4
180 1,051 131.4
242 1,044 130.5
211 1,159 128.8
207 1,003 125.4
PASSERS
McMahon, BYU
Jeffrey, Baylor
Marino. Pitt
Pagel, Ariz. Sl.
Campbell, Purdue
B. Clark, Mich. SL.
Belue, Georgia
Eason, lllinois
Ramsey, UCLA
Blackldge, Penn St.
..
PA PC Yds TD
336 215 2,721 26
138 84 1,307 8
231 139 1,817 24
234 131 1.8" 20
268 157 2,350 17
124 72 1,022 10
154 93 l,25S 9
332 204 2 '720 lS
164 101 1,300 12
141 78 1,135 10
TOTAL OFFENSE
Yds. Avg.
McMahon, BYU 2,632 329.0
Eason, Illinois 2,627 291.9
King, UNLV 2,570 285.6
Kofler, San Diego St. 2,273 284.l
Campbell, Purdue 2,466 274.0
Clarkson, San .tose St. 2,094 261.7
Marino, Pitt 1,720 245.7
Holly, Princeton l ,938 242.2
Pagel, Ariz. St. 1,922 240.2
Shon, Ohio U 2,110 234.4
RECEIVING
Washingtn, TCU
Nelson, Stanford
Champine, Colorado St.
Kearse, San Jose St.
Jordan, Vanderbflt
Bryant, Purdue
PC Vela. Avg.
46 779 6.6
55 721 6.1
55 711 6.1
46 622 5.7
40 338 5.7
51 858 5.7
55 749 5.5
4-4 598 5.5
49 1,023 5.4
48' 671 5.'3
Plater, BYU
Durham, San Diego St.
Sandusky, UNLV
Buggs1 Vanderbilt
.
OUTSTANDING
VALUES!
IRAMD MEW
1981 vw
DIESEL RAlllT
FACTORY STICKER
$7670
DISCOUNT
,975
SALE PRl~E
56695
(2983) (177663)
IR.AMDMIW
1981 ISU%U
4X4 PICK ..
SALE PRICE
57295
(1272) (02088)
1910 VW DAsta'
DIESEL WAGON
4 apeed tran1mlSS1on,
AM·FM stereo & a aunroof.
j149878)
•
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Wtdnt1day, Novtmbtr 11. 1981 ••
............... llAI
• t1 •• 116 ...... laa
• mall Nl MAUS W"1I
WITY&IV9
• llAI -SPOii ' llAI PIOIKTOI
• lAClel mu llAIMl IAI
•SMIU
• mOMI cu.·-• STIJI _,. • llCI ST•
IN OllOINAL CAITON
HARD WORKING llOll IUHJIMA#CE HEAVY MULTI-GRADE
DUTY
YOUI CHOICI • ,.BOY'S or GllL '5 • 20 INCH
MUllAY ,"' FL"1r HI-RISE BIKES
IOYS
MOl8
•1·11M
•RAMI -
,'
CHOICE .A
$64~~~-:-
srocK -UP NOW ,Oil CHlllSTMAS
· Duracell :k~A~n~.
;c,:.C 0" 1291 "'t'' , .. ,.:-::;_:. 99 C
'AK 2 ,AK
9 YO&.l 1!?
IUY NOW
& IU,
SlVYAl
ON MAND
FOi TOYS
(AMHAS, ·
TV's IADtOS,
FlAS&IGlfTS
CMa "'IOYS I.Mii SIUC1DI 4 UJlll lmJ •
IKYCLE ACCISSOllES
I ICY CLE
1~·· ·BUOY Ma.GIT Of r 6111111 SllEPSI•
SE T COVEi
TWO COLOIS
JOI MOST
UGITW8Gl'f •H 6!" •r-...=~ COOl IH WMMll
WUM IH WIHTH Cl
EASY TO
INS TAU IAIADA ~POWER TV ANTENNA
e WlthtMlall ...
cOPQbility • fdfa bo,tton ·-.... • l'totectl,,. V"')'IC-.
-· .. .,.,..,, ...... ' ...... 41t
''--•~/l.J4'...4..."'-~ ~-""-"' :.U-.-'-"" -~v '-¥--' -'" ~ -_....._.._ ~ .. "'"-..... ....,,,
AM ,. ''flOltrr tooi-ro rDMr fASr ua
• UE' YOVI CAI COOi.Ei • ,.EVENT INTUIOI FADING e ANTI· THEFT e EASY TO INSTALL
0.h,_..., ,.,fonnartee at a low, low price.
~~':~~f 78 SERIES
POLYESTER CORD TIRES
. TU•LESS llACICWAlL "'' ... HO DC tuie• f\llllUS tAA
2 2POtYUTtltAOW
IOOYl'\JU + 2 PLUS 2 STEEL IElTS
Wt ..Cl Ito UC .,.,,,.,...u. . ...
"f517jll4 $SS." $2.23
'20S/75ll4 $59." $2.34
. SPECIALS!
REPUa DltTY
Alt FITER
NOW & SAVE 1?9
11SflOl·13'
~vs nu f.f.T. ... ......-~~,,,·· .... ~
,21Y75ll4
'21Y7jll$
'22"75t1'
$61." ..... " 167." .... "
$2 49
$2.,
$2.79 ~~~,Jy~~~ 250/o OFF Sf'ow.
'23Y7Ulj 12 95
36 MONTH UMl1ED WARRANTY* llAIE SHOES & PADS WHllL
.-~~·oa :.'srt:'l:s•NO CYLlllDIRI •
T~s~ lACM
~
TOI I uCM
• v ... ~ .. ,.. •. , .... Iott•-
INDUCTIVE PICK -UP
INGINE
ANALYZER
e mn All < .. •UOUl • ILICTll09C .,.. .
• Ml•-llTACIUtl WM _,,..,
• All MITM QMSlliCnCJll ·~ • M.Lrmllll UCI
~ HMl·CUSFOM
-IOW CAR COVERS
LOWPllCll All-WUTIB PROTK110N
YOUR CHOICE e WATtl lf"lllNT DltllClOTH • WATll N<><>' COATfO FA..C
,_....,.~=='~· HIAVT DUn "-Atnc
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SEIYICES
~ll"t0UtdW)
EMPl.OYMOIT &
PIEPAHTION ~llltlrWltofl Jv•Waftled• Hd,v. ..... .II & •
MBCHANDISC
MITDS, 11£W
<~·· um. YSEI
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678
:::· COIONA .. MAI :I FHUND/VIEW : j s.14S,OOO with ocean and
-canyon view and private
beach sits this 3 Bdrm 2 -------~ ~~~~~~eb~~u~e?~~ w.tt,_.ow...,_,
hardwood !loors, new Dfler part °'· monthly
ta paint and carpets and payment on this charm·
Ml secluded master bdrm Ing Balboa Island home.
l lOll suite. Motivated seller. Ill H~. Ur
75'-1616· 675-28'6 =~ Find out about the high·
-m..11 • earitlng real estate sales : Lltttth _,.. ca reer opportunities -Classl~ed Ads are reallr, w 1 t h T H E R E A L : small people.to~le ESTATERS. Licensing 5 !~'!:,~Ti"' ~th b~~' ~~ ~~=~.~~ toco,=e~
: suits! o place your your choice. Extensive
.m cluslfied ad, caU today sales training, For in·
:: 6'2·5'78. formation. e&lJ 751-4iUll ... -----... ---
!IOlt -------tllO
tltl ,..
tilt
'"' ...
Jlllt .,. -... ----:.t --
-
IE
110111 ILlllS CG.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
EMERAl.D IAY MODEIM
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 Corpcnte Pina
Mt-wport CeMtr
FOR SAU Olt TRADE
98 UtlT JIARTMENT BUILDING
IMear DISMylcmdl
• Prictd to sell • $400,000 below
arpprolsot for .,a salt In
•scrow.
• Oftfy SS00,000 doww. Tak• o•tr
poylHfth.
• Low .....ts. 0 Voc..cy • WoffillcJ List
• UtHMGte ............. writHff.
For~CoH
714/760.7292 a11yfi11te
OCEANFRONT VU-2 lots
StllfMJled Chanl'I °"'°"91t IMhft trffs CHI
75 ft lot, Old N•wport ~ l bed,
ho1H. Owner will help l hta1to.
Sl,lS0,000. 631·1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATf
.._. 11. ...... """""" '~"'
2•JoW CN•t H""\' NN1>001 &.ch
631-1400
SllK & "Nit
JI~ M..rint Av~
B.ioo. lsl.vod
'7Uff0
ASIC
C S A R T W R M L I E W C H H J I Q C
S A C E H I T 0 J H C E E S E 8 H U A
t11AR SS ABUALRWRFE88BR ~O H E H U 0 P I 0 W 0 U G 0 R P I P
L#f C Y P M l R Y Y J I E R C L P
J D L P P R A Y 0 D V S A T C A
P 0 Y L H E L A U E A M T T I IC E
T P F Y I Q T D I R R Y D R S C It L
0 I 0 P 0 U G I R H C P N T E Z I A U
l R T P E It E T E S M A N N Y U L D £
I S I S E A Y I Y A M E T Y Q E 0 R 8
UATQAELONEARPEHWSOO
H H U N G It T H 0 ~ E A R C H E E R L
R A E 0 H C T P E A E L 8 S L H 0 I Y
C S T H T 0 I T T H I A 0 C N U S M A
wn, 1111. ~or~. FkJ:.,., i.1t 1n:;
~ = ~~j Solicit R..-e
OMlllld """" u... A#fllJ ......... c....
T OlllMVW: Uilr
RES10€NTIAl!R[Al ESTA TE SERVICES
SEA WIND
Th is exquisite remodeled Portofino.
with a forever view is a must to see
before you purchase a home. Com·
pare this 4 BR .. famjly room ,
private lot wi th space to breath &
yo u can judge it is a "buy ". S455.0®.
IN NEWPORT CENTER .
644-9060
FREE
1982
ROLLS ROYCE
•
TO THE NEW OWNER OF #41 LINDA ISLE
•
#I Waterfront Home on Newport Harbor
Prictcl for 9*• Sale .... UlltelltY91ta. .
$800,000 BELOW mai appraisal
Vacant -6500 sq ft. Waterfront Mansion will accommodate
two 90' yachts. Indoor/outdoor pool and spa with sunken
swim-up bar.• Huge master bedroom comman.ds
breathtaking view of entire channel and John Wayne's
residence. Marble, mirrors and solid walnut wood
throughou1. Separate maid 's quarters. Rewarding
entertainment and investment estate. 24 HOUR GUARD
GATE insures 100% security and privacy. c,ve like
staircase "below waterline" leads to large wine cellar
and/or vault that .,.;11 hold 60 cases of wine or GOLD.
Seller must sell -will carry all financing with low down
payment or will take 2nd TO for down payment. or trade for
income property. Once in a lifetime opportunity to own a
"one In the world home." Steal a piece of Newport Beach.
Ddebout
Bay&Beach
Red Estate
VILLAIWOA
Three lovely rondos In
l.st class building with
complete security -
r1n&1111 in prke from
$162,50()..$3!115,000.
Ul·7300 M.I.
l IDIM STEAL! Xlnt l'OOCl .. lrg yrd, good
locaUon. Assume 9\1.~.
Asking only 192,000 ~k -'"' •••••••••••••••••••••••
COLDWeu
BANl(eRO
"'-LIUGll_,. CUTE Z • I IA
WJMBLEDONVllJ..AGE IEACHHOUSE
Lease/opt, 2Br 2ba, ten· + b1ch. uni\ to rent ols, pool. Sl1S,OOO . Sales prire SllS,000 .
1S9-l903 aft•. You'll love the UIUml·
Pay SIU A Month ble loan. Otuck Spiller,
Mfttl V .. U.. •stS3MJ88
Assumable loan! f ay
just • a month on thls
Clusic 2 bedroom rondo
ln prime atta. Exctllnl
condition! Call for de-
taU1119w! •.soo. BKR. ------f79·23IO 2l0tltlD&.AMDS __ _..:T~.Al=llal~----tt%DWM
ASS .... AITD l~ DWN .... prlre
-000 al -i.. ,.,..,. In SW,000. 0WC IO'l fin.
-· "'"" u.ro • at 13'~P AJIPRTIZED terat, There'• plent)' of 'J A I "" country charm In lhls OVER-.. YRStu.OU.-. newly decontld 4 Bdrm IN t.. YRS. ON THIS
home lotMed °"' Jiiet XLNT " BR l'-ba
1-... ..t...1 home •I I fpln, fam
........ Ill ' -., '"'· • .... epplll' "' 8ett.r ll11n7. 111.-S kltdt. ,,. ........... ,.. -...
-
,.
"-"'-Wi ....................... . .................... .
~~.~ ... !~
Fllmlml
OPIM lt;.11 LAGUNA ICH new ow It t I bro ll tr 17071. IA Y ,._ •·• reiit MOO c t 1 ' > t • a • 2 • a a
IO' Baytroat. r11U1tlc t:=;;=-~-m:;~ vltw. 2 ..... ""* + ,. • ICNI ol lud NtwOCH1 4 bdnn1 • 4 bla&M. I leaC'b. OK tar Conaol,
----··--_-_-.-.-•1 llllctltftl, family rm, Offtct 01 Weal Bldl •WALJ<T08£ACH•
.,.11 • •u-• tl1v1tor, aenrJty 6 ONBAY•n-•ooo 1 Bt. I• "Wtl 1ln1I•.
BURR WHITE
R'-Al I OR INC
b]~ 4610 • .._ _,.. 1tC'lu1lo11, Seller may ._ .... ' dr"
Youn• -a..~ 1 Bdrm Ill tLM C'UHtf, ..,_, 1tovt. ... ~ · '°"t nnanct. Pritt reduced I , ... _ · · · .. · .... .-USO. 01 Lake. NO
mourc•. I I bdrm --• • · · · · · · • · •• ~~0!f:"'ctJ.~~ go::; 106 ., .. llNtt .!'t:.~= '"'"'C:~il ~~~ C...__...._-.. --.... --,-J-22-' Nr::·:.-:o. beach
onto fl111tont patio. 2 bdrm, 3 cu 1ara1e. •••••••................ • re • . ST So M o .
SlU,000 1uum16le 1t 4SxlOOt lot ••• ooo. SACIUF C ..s:a~1-----t CDMMe.twMlw 213/1115·4180. l.2". 2nd •M avallabl•. Tltlelu.•TniatCo. tri I I I Lovely ,._ ______ •I 2 bdrm, I bl, I "'C:'· HOME FOR RE ...... .. ., Lewi.a 15.1,_,, et 7371 Hit llr l...,_, l blll 1 • f b I , .. • Price$1A4,IOO. Truat/ .Sale to~IH.@.fl0..H2t COIOMAD&MAI Pc, •cony, lit 00 5 Bdrm. P~I. $1150. Mew ..... Slwlt.
i Prim• vlew let oversize mo. '5l-4m aft& Fenced yard & 1ara1e. lm 'i"" bdrm dtn Cote Realty ------· *EXCITING* wit.It excellent llnantlna. New• bdrm. 2~ ba. Walk KW1 & w1lec>m1. i..: mpae1 l .~ ' 1
1
Ii. I -000 .A ... .. -.. ....... ua. nv ean .... poo • • RVetlment • · w uoraCu. -· rnvle1 545·2000. ent nofte. fpe. -MO lie. ( (213)
, 640-5177 • .... Wt 17141 '7M400 :ocl 1ar11e. 190.CIOhft lrflM 1244 ... •=...::*'~----1
•JA,.._~
1Z·7 /I~ flnanclns on
former model ! Plan s·
w/cuatom spa 1349.000
FEE.
Walker & lee
Real fsMe
I ~q • ~ 0 I
'10,000 DOWN, Sl.950 per
mo. GrackM s BR, 2sty.
Back Bay area. Or, take
over 8~% 1st payable
S790 per mo. Asking
$260,000. 631 ·721S
ownr/a .
l•••u•••! 3' bdrm, 2 ba. 2400 sq (t.
11200 mo. SlS,000 do.
$179,SOO. 6.11..5476
With or without IJIJIH"Jlll ....................... HatborV\ew~ " It .,.....,... 0 2bdrm, 1l1111lic den, Twnhotne,ntW3br,3ba, SBR,38A,3car0ar, ium ore,........ rftll· HAR80R rrplc , 707 Acacia. atlo, 1ar. PA .... pool, britJ' Home In Lacuna -1 .._..._ anr. Cul·o.&ic,S1400mo. HillJnlcesUll&rpart. -mo.__... ac. 5/cno.11.\· 7 Daya,•9382
., ..... ,.. f'rollt Home. 2BR, lBA. 11aOOM Eves,--..
Beautlf\tl 30lll3 ~r Gar apace. Avail Dec 1· T rtJ rock Hi•t.• nds S Broceanlhlal home,
Home · 28r, ZBa. TblJ is •mo. 1st. Last. Sec. · u e .. ua S750wlnteronly.
the Best Buy In town. D r i v e b y . 7 O 6 ~~ 14.S-3"1 ........ lwll lhr1uerite. Call for PROPERTI~
Beautiful Belair Mobile l'!!!!!!!!!l•Bm!!!l!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!I A Evea. 752,1519 l\t<til::ll&~kt · ilt\
Home w/froot. ldt 12'x M1_, • .,._., Woodb 'd a R ho lt' Uv Rm. 12' x 10' ....... 2400 C.,..DllW.,. " n ce. B me. .. u•-r ..... _ . ., __ ,_... 1 ~I .:;81. ram rm. frplc,
• .., uouw ~llUM\V ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.·-,. plllios,Lab. Pool. Ten· patio . Near Hoac Custom Home.Joshua Enjoy private beaches nia, prlv, '900 mo.
Hospital.$23$1. Tree 1300 aq 2BR. 2BA. and beautiluJ sunsets in fM0.1327. SSMlllll, ornce
CWSIC Terina. SSS,000. Eve, this 4 Br 2 Ba home . ....;7~58'""-6517=-''------• .· . .:-.:;~:..:::::=~:....:..:=-MOIUHOMI 1·365·4158 -
•
SALIS Vikln1 Mobile Home Available for yearly New parttrront rondo, 2 ________ ,
(double), WC80, 2bdrm, leaseatll.500/mo. br, 2~ ba. Nr UCI. No Ver1111Jt1,2Br2bat875
2706Ha.rbor,Ste8-A •b d D.M.Mlrrt•lllr .866--<A OnWa•-·2Brlba :. -· rr.•ASf37 .. a , up~a es, Palm .r.A -__,., ...,.
.,,.._ th rt 000 n -7.-J5 l-.-1---'" 3••• N"tSh Br.,..A .,00 REH T RS '""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lm!!!!!!l!I ~ae . • . ocaut. -........ -&.. " ra -.... •• 1= park on Hwy. 74. Great ••••••••••••••••••••••• Panoramic Views: UllOffllJMG Ca•••rcW view of Mls. & valle,.y 2bdrm, lba,southolhwy. OCEANFRONT Mobile 2Br1baMotomo '750
SinalutoryBlutrshome Prop•,., 1600 surrounded w/beautifuJ P vt. yrd . Work : HomesCrom~to SlOOO WalerfrontHoma,lnc.
In outstanding condition •••••• .. •••............ I a n d s c a p i n g . 7 S 2 • 2 4 04 ; Home : mo. 499·3116. 6)1·1400
and location. 3 Br, cen· LAGUNA llACH 0 w n e r I A g t : 644-4504
I 1 I , 1 ,I j I
2bdrm hmhae, mature
adults only. no pets.
1425/mo. 755 W. 181.h St.
64&-9507.
our unus
items could
be someone's
Christmas •
. Sell them
with an oo
under the
Dai~ Pfllt
Gift Guide
Call 642M5&71 .......
lraJ air. Muat see to ap-16 ·-( 7 1 4 ) s SI . o 7 8 8 : ....:.:.:....==.·----~Lower 3 Arch Bay, 2 Br, 2 Nice Bach. Apt. for l
U"lv-.-p••11t preciate ... ,000 303 down~ even! (7141568-31174. C"teW... 3224 Ba. view. guard 1ate. WSl•CAKYOM Adull.Nopet.UUllincld al~•' ARR D.M .._, •• ._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• pvt beach. 11150. •1,200 Mo. 3 Bdrm. gas &r water. e-ic &r Detached patio home • __... built-in financing at Palin Desert Condo, 2 4BR h 494 9'54 • Adulta nopet.J """
Cllf'i11Mt
Acl-Vhm-
with large sunny ooun· 7'8-0l35 10.2~ annual coostant! bd., vert. blinds. pool, · owner. Towahouu on golf UtiliuS Free!. patio. SUO /mo. Call
ll')' kitchen and versatile S-. 4-1 OIO Ocean Views, Jblocks wash/dry, assum. loan. Lall)m9... 325 coune. 2\'i Ba. sep. DR. b t w n 9 A 111 ·SP M.
floorplanofbdrm&den ••••••••••••••••••••••• from beach. Priced at Own. will take 2nd. •••••• .. •••••••••••••• Newcarpets&paint. LAQUlNTAHERMOSA 645-6404. D .. PoW 3126
0 r 4 bdrm . 0 n 1 y IY OWtB/$tO,OOO 10.7 X grou! J~t listed. 165.000. •Oil 955-2258 or Beautiful Condo avail WtM M. T..., Co. 182tt-Pa.rtside'ta. 1 bllt-E.Jide upstain2er1 Ba. 1u.1a.e•u•uu.e ........ ~-sis7.~alltoday 3 Br. 1 ba, cpt Ulru-oul. Too good to last! Call 673-8967 ll·lS. 3 Er. 2 Ba. Lndry Rea1t«s'"410 w. of Beach. 3 blb s. ol $425/uHI pd, 111 car 2 Br.1 Ba. Pool • .lacuui. 642-SiOO 11 yard, shade trees, John Tuclter~9393 SILENT VAU.EY CLUB I rm. '850/mo. lat & last Lovely Westcitf home. 3 F.dlnger garace. l child OK. 1119 S57S/mo. lio 4UMTS Membershlp,$4495. + HC.644-lSlt. Br2b1,famrm,1erv.or· 147.5441 E.Walnut.~11Mdy1, 631.a&9&
A PETE BARRETI .. REALTY
~llMl~~.;;::t00· LAGUMAllACH 644·5906al\.Sor wknd ' Lall)m9..,.. 1252 c h , ore. dM gar, wltnds54M471 ,._..,._.._. Jl.40
-.._1_ .... ..........._ Magnificent ocean o.tofC......_ I •••••••••••••••••••••• wtr/cardnr incl. 11080 ........... 3741 2 Br 1 Ba, encl. gar,••••••••••••••••·--·
_.. --views' owe at 12% with .___;;;;:wr Lovely Garden home. eer mo.~ ••. •••••••··~··••••••••• clean. quiet .• ldults ooly TMI w~ •-....................... · . • • ..,,....., 2550 Luxury studio spa TV .._,.._ •-w.lttt-s 2$~ down. Excellent •••••••••••••••••••••••1 3bd, 2ba, walk to pvt. 4 Br. l~ Ba. Baclt Bay maid servi • ~· 279 W., Wll1on ID, LuxuryAdultuaitutaf·
locatiOD·waJktoYillafe Cfta.IDOAIUA beac h, leDDIS, pool. CUJdeSIC,nopeU.$875 hUW .. """~ ' 5'50/mo.94$-lllt fordable lviq.1,2 .. )
""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•l!!!!!!!!!!ll ,_ S. 1100 & beach. Seller is ""'" ~y , guard aorry no pets I Id d ~ ... •·-~· d .,, •••••••••••••••••••••••motivated & anxious! 140 lnc.ome units tn SIOOsl . inc scar ener. Be tifullyfum.Suit 2 Uh ... Airy Br. Well decorate .
-------•Viking Mobile Home Call John Tucker Oceans.tde ll,S00.000 · l·232'1&3l·l293 642.e&ll. Bau 2 B Spa, Sae. l or '2 BR' 1 pt1 . Olympic me pool. liebl· MIWPOlntllST (double), UX.80, 2bdrm. ~ Casb will handle. Bkr Tw.nbse, 2 br. 1"" ba, VIEW VIEW VIEW s~·telli:~ TV m~1d w/cathedral cellin&. ed tennis c:owt, Jaami. OMLY SI0.0000. 2ba, upgrades, Palm PllMIDUPUX (114J W.17Z3 Niguel Shores, gate 2 Br. Security Bldg. urvice 11000/mo frpl car pool" pa park lllte landscaplnJ.
Move Into tbis beautiful I Desert. '65.000. Beaut IAUOA PINMSULA lwlilet, ,__, guarded comm.. rec $1000/lllo. ~1. •·Z22'7 · · Aduiti ·pets ~ ,; Moat bea~ul b&ds. lD
3 bdrm 2~ bath condo park on Hwy. 74. Great Creath•e rr-.. ~ial ... -•A. Grons 2700 rac., pvt beach. 496-1651 Newport Hts. 2 Br lba. YU . up. • DO • . RB. Genenu rent a}.
with mlm,,.ed wet bar &I view or Mts. & valley. ..-.... .... u... Sea Terrace Garden house. Gar. fncd yard. Mtwpert.... 176' ,._24C7 Iowa.nee.
Pro tennis courts. Walk En c I with lo.st or tured with low..down for ....................... Home. 3 bdrm + den, 2 ~+d..-.u"s...,., ....................... MS-OSlt I d g right buyer! Attractive f•..._., ~ ~ ....,. '""' l BR, util. 810 Joann St. tobeach.HJGH assuma· an s ca Pin . cotta&estyleduplexone ._... ba, family room Gate THI .... ._ Nocblldren,1mlp«OK. MAllteSWALI·
ble loan Submit all of· 0 w n e r / A g t : blocktobay. Used brick, a.IS acres. Avocados. guarded comm. with _,-a $350mo.Dl·2JSIJ8 2 " 3 Br. Townhouse
fers. . (l7~41)~~41 . O 1 8 8 : fireplace, shake roof. view, $85,000. Assuma· beach, tennis, pool, jac, 1-4. ~· 28 tll pd ... ..,. AplJ. Patioa, sinale &
RL'llh 1 I I &,i~ Rc.1lty
I.~:; ~::111 I
. · paneling and much ble loan. Trade. Cash sauna. l9SO per mo. 1st 2CH01CE r. u ' .. 4 v mo. double car garages,
more! Call Brian Wolff dis . ·5800 + last + S200 sec. NO REDECORATED & Quiet adJt over 30• no near Hunt. Harbour. ASSOM•-U ..... ........ PETS. 1714) 851-1200 or lllOVE pell. 343 Cabrlllo. Cbildr•nOK ....... -. BANK Rii>O.I::oown ...... ...._. FALUIOOI 675-6892 INFRWIHOME.5 ....:548-;.;...;:95=1-.6 _____ , ...!=="'::.==--=-=:=='-
to good loan. low pay. APPUVALUY SanLuisReyOowrts ·2Br2ba.nrocean. Weatcllff area. Coiy leedy·....,...1111
!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!f ment•. 2Br. 2Ba late Near new 4·plex. 2 On Golf Course. 3 bdrm. Adlt community. no 3 Br, 2.,., Ba split level. Bach. upper at 1285/mo. Adult over-40 cocnmuni·
model dbl wide. Great bdrm, 2 bath each unit 2 ba. pool, spa, assuma· -~. parttside aettlnc. $1000 YfNl...-..0 FUN: utlls incld.. ty. Immaculate 2 bdrm, bl I t 13% $225 000 .--Social Acilv1tifl DI· park. (SL5977). with fireplace, enclosed e oan a . . S'125mo.644-72ll8 mo. r«:tot•Fr•Sunday Charming Duplex l Br. l~ ba . Hunt1a1ton MuutlAl.H patio, garage. Now OCfer Brunell• eeo·a • frplc, patio, beamed Landmark Condo. llALTOlS 1159.SOO. Bill Grundy, 1142--S600 Mia.._ Vilto 3267 4 Br. 3 Ba ''towllhome". Parttes •Plus,,_. ceillnu. ulll1 incld. Wu her & Dryer. a
DOYOUQUAUFY'
Are you looki11& for a
home wtth additional in·
come. a beach nearby.
great schools, brick
fireplace, wood floors
and a cozy cottage am·
biance? Then assume
the loan and buy lhis
ch arm in& duplex
$299.500.
......._.._..... Rltr.67S-4Ul.=" .. ~ 2100 •••H·o·· .. ·:=.·ro···R··e··E·~··· ~~pal~~ ~~t. ~r.~ ... ~: 1385/~!>.; •• -_..., pao ~;,.,~·~·~
(7' ... ,.__ 5fH ••• •, ew. I c.... ,... , ....... mo .. ,,..,....,.,_,. .... ... "' .._. _.,,_.... . .. ~ -· _,,, r-
.. ;,&1• a.-..tor 1700••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrms. 16SO·H7S. fiolfc_..Vlaw (pro &prosf\opl •2 2 Br. upstairs, stove, mo.1Jt&l.u&.+l300sec
••••••••••••••••••••••• Esch. El Nicuel Golf COO· Fenced yards & HMMC!llll&•Slune adullJ -•·a "OUpl--d e p o s i t. C a I I .... ca-·--do for income units. gara1es. KJds & pet.1 B.e 1 u l · 2 + de o • Hyd•omesaege • -1 ..;.~·~ • " ... (710759-4311 . .Mk f<W -•W--1•1--W•l -L ......,...""~ equit $125 000 . welcome. S0-2000. Pine1'um rndl oo Big Sw1mn11ng • Ooll pra. f"'H/mo.etf.1727 M B llwn C.U•S
0 "cAllY L ~:t:.rn"c:: 1,y • .J.1111' pnnc Oft• 3 br.2ba. BeautiluJ.com· A&ent,nofet. I Canyon 1olfcourse. Onvt'19 Ra"9• EASTSDIDUPL&z~. lBA uO::m!hedl.•z.u11c:
Euy to buy late model SlS0.000 to m .ooo. As· letlW. pl. redec. bome. 894 Mtw,.,.IMdt 12'9 StlOO/mo. ~ f;:. Fireplace, Wh l.n pa AsnMPACMC
3Br. 28• family park. sume loan &r owner u .. W..ted 2'00 Willoca.S'J$0.~. • ....................... Lrc 3 Bdrm w/boeuUp. •ooms • F111n1111e11 lilt .. one car enc. car. CJU'5t .. n02
Owner will help you ag sist fin a~. Res/act •••••••••-•••••••••••• Charming 2 Br, Eastside, Luse excl. U:od.a IJ~ 8 Private area SUOO/mo & Unlumlhect • ~ Super sharp! 21111) Santa Deluxe poohlde :llra
gel In with low·low Slleila. 2u:aS2'12. WW buy yow Nptlqtur beamed ceilings. f~ Br S Ba, fonnaJ din. Corporate Plaza Rlty I ~:,~1•0-::~; Ana St. Drive .by then larce 2t>r. 2 b&. bltns.
down. (SJ58llO). ONL y $10,000 DOWN. Co1ta Mesa properly Yard . pet & ch• Id F.R .. guarded 11te, ten· 760-9333 e to 6 call for an appoUltment. dlwbr. l \'i milt.I beadl MULHIAIM MacArthur Village, 2 direct. No commission. wel come. S48·78SS, nis,beach.roomfor21rg or_._ '550 plu• 1ec. Avall. Adlts, nopeta. U5Gmo.
644"7020 llALTOlS bd. full rec .• 12\.'1% U · Curt, 642~5554 631·6814. mso. boall. $3500 pr mo. Bob -.... 3210 Oekwood ll·lt. 957..(1101-A.&ent 5.36-13112 MolMlt"-Di'f· sumable. Own4:r will 3 br .. pool Mesa North or Dovie Koop, •&t •••••••••••••••••••••••' Gafden ~t• -=::.==------carry eeond Priv Pt 1..W. SBSO/mo. tll82. to move 758-1%21 3 Br. 2 Ba. Trt·level. Im· New leech EASTSIDI 2 BR. TOWNHOME l7 I 4t 527·5900 Call ""! ... 00 . . y · WESTCLI maculate Vi11 ... e Walk port M. COU..-YWOOOS Pool. p-... ~ .. ,...__-h ,,...,.o~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• IJ1631-6994or642·549'7 FF3bedroom. • ._ · 880tr¥me111161"' ""' ., ... .-uor-.:
F 1 to 'thpool f 'ly Townhome. Nr S.C. (71")6"5-11"" "A·•ntry 01ooc1s 2 B 2 98S-.Sltl e bif.l.go
SELLER MUST SELL!
SACRtACE!
45' bayfront w 'docks & beach.
6 bedroom home.
$475.000 DOWN & SELLER
WILL CA RRY BALANCE AT
6 '7c I NTER EST ONLY 2
YE ARS!!
$1,700.000 land included
Coll Dona Chlchtthr 642-1235
!DUL ammL TOW. IA!'lll'tOrm
lrllWJQllr llllltml
llCI oa.w lll'l'tt lwtor VltW 0...-~ a.ah. CA 9lle&.'S a..rpor\ a.di, CA oeeec> (714)~ ('1'14)IM+ell00
·~ UDO ISUMD LOVILY Warm ~
cozy 3 BR + 2 BA & south patio
gem ! Enlarged lot -A·l
condition . Excellent owner
financing. $419,SOO Tom Alllnson
642·8235 (155)
MIWPOIT CUSTOM HOMI
Spacious Newport Heights home_
w/3 BR & den. 2'a BA & lg bonus
rm . Enjoy private patios &
discover the separate storage rm. RV parking & 3 car garage.
Owner will carry financing to
quallrted buyer. m ,000 Fee Dan
Johnson ~00 (156)
ttw.. 11lll•d Lovely 3 Br. fam rm. So 5 ry W1 • amt Pfau. •· lat. last & " " .,.. ..,.,.. "' ' r. ....................... est Plza area. 1750. room, 2 rinptaca. din· l!te. SSl·ZSl60eves. Newport IMctl s. Ba. loft. large pat.lo. No Oceanfront vu. 2 BR, Im· 1100 h1N>41 I.._.. l 106 986.2754 or 833-8616 lDI room, 3 patlos, etc. • • 1100 16th St 10o ... 111e1M ch I Id re n or pets . mac, sunny. blt.N, cpt.s,
.............................................. Mesa Verde 3 Br. 2 Ba. etc.$l.500Mo.64tr4477. So.lllL.,... 1216 (714)M2·5113 $575/mo. 180 21st. St. drps,lndry.1undeck,clo IMllLATIOHAGHTB! Large4 Br3ba.$1400mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·1164 days. 645-9543 car. Married cpl, no
1 blk to bay Bltlns Fam. Rm. 2 Frplc·s. 2 •ut.c•uv-.. Lacuna Sch. Historic eves. kMls/pets.$53>1~2131 l2 Units. Costa Mesa. · • car gar. Gardener. $895. -_.... • ~ "··. Ho·-•or lease. 2 OCEANFRONT 2 &r 4 Br W/D67""163 ~ .._,, · . THE SEVILLE 2 Br Cutelbr,S"'' .. -to ..... a"'b, AssumecootractS310M. • -Sierra Mgmt . Co. LuxurlouJ . Three bd dio z b d Avail. Wlnter. Weekly/ UULli ~ ..
14 yrs l~. Sl2SM dn . ...._, ...... 3107 641·1324. bedrooms. Two baths. d~ ~u /~·· .,;:,· Month .673-7173. . . w/aar. newly decor. 132S.lnqulreat504Mlift
Owner 6312 .. A Rt' "h1u d ................. Muted .. v. rm. w p. · j adultJ, ~· drapes, St. 960-6505 2-. · ~. •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• 3BR. 2BA, 2 Car Gar. ... " ..,...., • ..,.. inc. l•rdener wuh/dry, bl · c '" 4 B 2 Ba tone 3000 tquare feet 1 5t·!~· ... -· •11 btwn Lae t br eondo. bale., Oceanfront Duplex. WinL·R~tal New Paint. Cerpet. WO Ove:ioo'"-1,..., t .... ot. no util. No1tJdl/ pet.s, by WIMTll 18fTALS . _......, 1 DW N Newport Beach. 10~ Kl """' Hookup. '675. Eves, iu vu:• .. ~ owner 494-m& or (213) 2 bdrm bath 1 1 216L9"1"SantaAna S46S poo • uuna, • 0
down. 3 Br./2 Br. direct· 213/»5316 760-0789 coif course. $2790 month. 906-0301 ... _.. • 1 • rp c. 96'7"G" Victoria ... 70 pets. $!2$. 80-70'2 ·
ly on be ..... "---r...., Yearly lease. 11 Rue W .......,w1'r.a>mo. ~ '" 1.__.1!'91
llUJ.\NIUC '"" c-i.w-•---'"llll Eastsideshn-28r.2Ba. Gra-... v-•-.OpenSun· .... -L......... l2tt 3 bdrm 2 "-·th bit BR WWW im culate rood 2914 ~· __. '""" uu ...,., -• • .... • DJ, l w/11ra1e. really H'A"'4 -,, ... 2 o ~! a n r r 0 ·11 t ........................ carpets & drapes. day l·S. To Jee call ....................... P•Li0.l650mo. n ic e w I b It n s . ..-.1• -.. Ow Duplex t1uest hse. garage. Avail. now. 631-1300 Realtor Three bedroom. 2 bath. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, frplc. EASTSIDE S31S. adlts. ••••••••••••• .. •••••-•
ner/Agenl. 544-0SI•. Paliudes. 2BR, lBA $525/mo. Call 540-1158 ' · DO pets, large back yard. $7SOmo. nopeta. mcm l " 2 Bdrm apts, neat
llSS232 Very Pvt $450. eve• asltfor Daveor Pam. 4 Br. 2~ Ba. Yearly, all '800141-9185 Huntington Harbour ..-Proparty 2000 951 ·7368 <Bob) Day. BT-1212 am-;ues. Club •-pool Ca1ll1 J 11 2 Br 2 Ba.l~~·ffrp.llc. $375,$495.M>-1480 ••••••••............... 661-6258 (Gwen) ..... ..... • •••• •" &•rage. a ...... ,, act .. nlM 3144
M•l(E .... ~•. •-a... 11 .. 1 ....................... rac'1. Good area. 11100. U1fa I till 3425 adults, no pets. '495.
A """~ _,..... .. HOMEFORRENI' Broker~l2. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -S40-'338~=;;.._----"-•0 •••••••••••••••••• ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrm. S67S. Fe.need WXUIYu---11-.--Irvine 2 story end unit. 3 lncome Properties.
Eastside Costa Mesa. ~ down. Owner will
carry.
714 641·0763
2925 College Ave
Costa Mesa. CA
Co•y Laguna BeaAh 2 rd •-.,., ... •-'"'~' __ _.. · -2 Br. enclsd 11rage. Lof' ..... bdrm. 1 ba. Up.. • ... ya .. garage. """" "' THI L'--Ad Ill 147 I ~ bdrm, 2 ba houu avalla· pets welcome. 54.S-2000. 3 Br. 2 Ba. with boat slip. ·-' "'" Ocean Front 2br., 2 ba.. u •no pets. S mo. trades. priv pallo1 pool,
bleforreit.Fum,close A&ent,nofee. Avail. now. Many Rent In Colta Mesa's 1 v a 1 l . n 0 w . 773W.Wlbon,C:Jl-4a. tennisspa.U.'731-4010
to downtown & near 2 bdrm, 2 ba, 2 car gar, amenities. $3500 Mo. NEWEST gated 20 Weekley/mo. winter EASTSIDE l Br. Newly home, 73H511work
Sleepy Hollow Beach. air rood. Stove, fence. Brok r67$.4112. Tow11home VILLAGE rates 7S2·948S decorated. Adults. no 1 __ .._. JM !213) 540-a1 COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br. -'• Refrige 1315 mo _,..... . . m5 mo Qnlo, no pets B f Immaculate 3 Br. 2 Ba. !':c"',;108 · · ••••••••••••• .. •••••-• ... ___. .___... 3 I 6t Daya mT4 e\' &UG OCIAlllOMT 2~ •· UIOO • 1800 •q. t. Winter Rertal. •!Mo. ....,"" · Ocean View. Deluxe.I & 2 -,...... --_ ofpureluxury.Oaraaes. N 2BR BA ... CJ\ ....................... F t• V*'t 3234 Ha.. hydro-tubs ln master Pr 0 Pe r.t Y H 0 use· ewer 2 • .....,, Br. Apt.a. Newly decor•"
LlbdDO TS2~Ebacthharm1 Ing • ~ .................. 4 bdrm, a bath, com· suite, formal dininc 642·3850 · 1010 7S0.1411orS48-8675 eel, refnge, dilhwuber.
rm. ,.. • rg sun· Park·Uke Sellin&. HR. pletely remodeled, rooms, wood burning eveiorweekendJ dlapoul, healed pool,
ny patio, newly re-2~BA , Tiburon Con· bhns,frp&c,Sl500mo. rlreplacn. mlcn>wave Al• ... • Eaatalde3BR2B1,2sty, elevator, subter. pr\ftf,
decorated S1700 mo. domlnluma. New Paint UDOISU oveu, fenced si'Uoe & Ueda '*111 encl patio. l600 mo. S8SOlcup.Call•IOl3.
Yearly· Bill Grundy, &r Carpeting. Family IAYlllOMT yard1. Private .. elecant •••••••••••••••••••••• 640..oll'J ....... ..... Jlq_
6?5-6l&l rm. Patio. 2 Car Gar & 3 bdrm l .. _,.. frpl"' Uvinf ....... IS minutes • ......__ w.d 2 Br, 2 ba condo near So. • .. •••••••••••••••••• .. w t tbl • _., .... "'"'I .....-IY OWtB an some nc xtra Pool.962-7470 bltu • .-mo. from Fuhion bland. 7 ...................... Cst. Plau,S.A. Prof.de-Condo 2bd., 2ba., .. ,
P In 1peclal In • 2 Br. minutes toS.C. Pluaor 2 BR '400. le 1 Br~ cor. Pool, spa, sauna, mo. Call 49'7·~ or
4-lex. l21.200 come. TownhoUlf, completely ta.t1a4Jt..._. 3240 O C Al-J111teutof ~ell relr'•. Utll pd. . Deb"""""" _GS-.=..;;1~064=----9~CX. loan Oii contract. r ' .. 7""9117 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . ..,_.. ... _...._. -612 Calle Campana, San urn. o . ...,. ' HOME FOR RENT Newport Blvd. & IO.°' y .6'2-JJM l5l·-... .,.,..... 3169
Clemente. 4200 1q. ft. LIDO 3 br. den. F.R .. 2 3 Bdrm. l650. Fenced San Dlesc> Frwy, &.art· .... ,...... JIO ••••••n•-•-•••• .....
pct,SOO. TI4l•!ll07. ba, lonC term. $ll00. yard & 1arqe. Kida It lnl It SlOOO I mootll. ...................... lleetiB.Alf , ... rrn111
S • Ca... tw.. LIDO 3 br, 2 b1, Ir& petJ welcome. 54.S-2000. '31-5439, 2473 Or1n1e Lwt. I br, 2 full ba. frplc, TOWMHOMIS MA RUff Exc~~t'H: ~~ ~ patio, Sl3SO. Alt, A en nofee. Ave.,C01taM!1!: beamed ctililp. Yrty. NE'N CONDO FOR COUMTITCUll
acres. SH.5,000. Assum•· 873-tolO. 4 BR, 2~ba. 2 stry. 3 car MIWPOl'l'HeHTS >vB1,! B2r~1.,11ot1 .... tbub1, W.l44l MD4llJ ~~NT..,!.1Br. +Den, 2~ LMMa .
ble 1st •,OOOlllWiUn· EASTBLUFrluxvry COii· far, avaU now. Walk to Uk• HW cuttom W.IU .., .. , -.-• n • c.r.. .. w. JIJ ot1. -mo. Dbl aer. Bacbelon, Wbedrooll
tereat. (707>a7·19H do. 3 bclrml. 2~ bath!!. bch. no pets . .-io. 20211 bedroom; I bit.It, formal ~:S:.s:.= re-...................... lrpl~, pool,spe. •Pll ltt.owda••·
Z4 Uaill o.c . 23CXo doW'll 1pUl·level. Tille ln1., Bre11t1tone. Call Stan diDiac l'OOID llomt. Eat-q · • 2 Br, 2 b1, bnc. view '1 • w. iah. MS-na ..!rrom~!!!..!!M~· !:,...l!!!!!..!M!!:! ... !!!
equall DCJlitive, 8.5 X ir. 9"-2020, ext 1311. D. •1JOT iq area ID kftdlan, Bay Tem1111 bay, private. Gar11e. ll!!!m!!•!!!!!ll!!!l••!!!!!!I ·
Johnw;MllJ!&. Lewi.a. l atory 1aoosq. tl. coodo, vift. h5GOIDOllt.b. Yur-U.ha • hll JIJI Refril . UOO mo. Eutllde·la llR, natural Wuldff
2bdrm, 2ba, atudy 11 leue. Ul·UOO, ....................... ......... wood cellln11 • Lar1128r.Patio.Poel,
N ~Clllfh v HMMtUilMlll•~ w/dryb1t,10111tutilpd. Reahor. Jbr,2ba.,•.,,enc. Ud,Jtepetobeach.•. cablneta, vtUltlea pd. Newly decoratd. .. ~ S.21tunit!:; ....................... Pool, 1p1, etc .• ear, nr 1ar., adulll only, MC. A11t for Darrell. Ill U /mo551·1· Adllha.161111. ~'!tini'.. pelioa, yda. •••"" JJ02 ocean • harbor. ·Lse ...,.,... a1teCaUP!ltl._ fill· Clan 2 Br I Bl, 1ood 'IA1'IOMJ
Older but very well ....................... I00.151'4l79eves. a bdrlll, ab• boin•. Niu, cltu J Br., E1ldo locaU., ""'ly Lllxl81,21A.XtnLrt
maiJ\t. sm.ooo. Le&M IMALS . · . 1mleo•lachlded.11100 Afalu1• .. ~••• eneloled ..,..., patio. painted, tm yrl)'. No lh rm. ~trleolfat
bold.Bllr/owperf9:P2'$ Yt1rl1·Wtokly·Wlnlr _:JBR, ··~·Pool. tennil IDO .. dl)'I TSl·tolS, ....................... •u~ llarl1old . J)!ta.Cal1Uoxdt7Ml10 .. ,. SteW... u...-: VllDI 2,1,4,Bdnlll. COllrt. 2 mi lo Beach. l40-I01f ......... 1706 WI/mo. + 1ecurlty. COZY·BIUTI l8r nr l"Md '*"'I·~
n...i .. ~.·~ ...... , __ 31.,. JA8,"'r.!1" Pl11 G"°""'. meta OK. •a..a...w. ........... " .......... •ma. ~ • ••Mltl. no ~~IJH!D ..,.. .. ~ • ,...... ..... o . :JI sn.JMS -a Wna. l bl. Pado, pull· 11 •1 ""--..__ 11 ---... ~ --"-1-· •• ·•••
1umable lotn. WC. Pl MfllS J8r.28a.Oladolnxlnt 4bdrm,tb1, ... a,,.. 1A1.aopell.Avallaowto r .• a.--to.,..c • ......,_, --..-•.-·• •• ::·~1::';· only. : loc. All 1menltlt1. :;..:;:.• .... L:;•~• Jut Utb 141t mo. ~:~: ~"}°.j~ NQ:itt~•:·.!~~n'i 19:.i.~~·,r::.~
· · Back 1•1 oa Oran.U 1 f700/mo ... l • • rrtM •t flH 1utI1 • u . UH. ,.., ...._ Miiia. • SwrT•S•1hr Wa7 4 IR·I~ ba.1S81katooc.a.E1tpnU rm.11m .... ,, t 11 J7t7 c:..e..._ ... ·~~ JN°TiSTORS: ONLY Modena I 1t1. 12,oto l Br. F1mUY lllD 6 Den. I Ir, I~ .... pool aad rw ........... ._._ ........ -~ lll, llA. ... 11111. )I
•.oooDN.Orutwritt-~ft. 1.-. llltt nto ..... o."'-bcrpta,Z\t ~,· M•~1'wrlet. IAYJIONTAGI ; .-...... .. .. ttf. Tri .. • I J1'1 old. ~Tlll;toJM Ba. Cedar 6 ..... IUD• !!.!!.M!!!!!WfAI lwll, PW. Ptq.1 Ir. ,......., -..
TrulJ ''pride of dull. 01 ur pn &rWV\lw._. ... =-~ •· •·•· 1 •. ,. ... _. . ..,
onentllp' C.JI. Ai· 1 MILY Mor l 1ara~~llJ ealal 1-."9.-llf. .. ll •e:: dl•lllllr. fllL Mill
... , lolill. a. 111~ a Alll .. ADS '°'· ••· ••· 1ar4. G.....,=.... ~ • &. • --All .,....,. fll --.. _...... IAn• It 8' iaa.. It. ar1&t•, I Itel. Al!!• _
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Y•tlllllla..iq Color ............ wht Ci•• .. C. H11&U11 ·M~ l)trt .... ,.,_ Jobi. N..-. Cotta e.at-tI11. Pret. Rsabl. rtetuccot. Jnl/ut 30 Htw·R ..... ·Rfllelr
Complete U•rwattr cr"ftl · • ... blttcb. 111Mter11111Wen,eu1iom -~ 14 nmoytd, 1RM Mtu, lrvlu, R1f1 . fl!!ttl.81fYtH!§L ..1"·~•l! P.WS6a'17 rmHt.~.'lud~l
Jl lervtet ::ii·r::.*;; ... ~t!:, QU&ky,l'OOIDlldditioftl, Takata hpnefe Hi•Hll__._ l LAHY'SPAINTtNO A llll ROOf!RSTILEWOllKS .:.:.:=-----...a~~I 117: etlr. o.l-etim C.lc . L1rry Weadtll. NIU'ltfl_. IMdlcap6nJ ' ......... ~ ....... C11ttom lrlck, ltoae, rail 8Pftlall Jnt/ut, ....................... Kltchm·llUs P1oon
loat/HO•• r1,alr1: petO.., ci,t........ ' (UJ) HH641, (2U) lllliat. TNetrimmiAlfl WuUIWLYa.&AM llotk1..c.miet,ltUttO. p1per1, drywall. MtCORMACKPLMBG rlDestCraft.lllMn
tarpealrf, ftblrllut ll rre 11 De Wort clt11·up1. Spec. In HOUllTClllOtWt• 1411.rmwt..... ..... MHOURSEJlVJCE ...:S'-.:ID<J-.:;.~:.:....--':~~
Glua 6 .... -... ll(lllf. :t,.. .... •• .tr.*1 Pnaaial · ao..oo Glrl. Milll.£.nt.U'IONI! All PaiAUac lat MIO tat ~_l_~_m.tlN ,,.. "'*-
Hll rfplHed. ltob•y NoS&a1m/Noa.mpoo ......... !\_ .. " ..... G ...am.Servi ROBIN'Sa.EANINO tact. 1_ 11tall pre·C•b NSO NutJ complete '°'NATA 'k I •••••• ................ .
!N=ll8 SW.StedeMlt hit GUABAJftUO aDlfttlli ce Senlff-.~y frplu . US·H02, t rtU 1·72t:Z Spec. ln reat111tarus' THITmPIOf\I I lfut · . rr. rlnllllln1. Dr1nll, Complttt ~nee clepl!ou!t. NO-m57 Jl.MM.0140 c ..... ,... rommerclaJ wort. Uc. Lowetl me &15-0A7 ...................... Pluterlna Palnlln1 · Eip Houaecleaner Rel 8ry1nt'1Land1upln1 25 Uc . ..e..1 1.ouz1 -~ ------.. WICI 1 IOM C .... /'l'U' ;' tar "1nll o..-. l'IMMI. . Japan"• GudtnJD1 6 •ei ,,... la s~c 24 Brick. etoae, bled, con· n..!.!!.. e~~: .!... c-·-,· -Dr.~lne c"7~ted-frorn .. 0 JA YI TUI CAii 1.ucs.n m..1M1 ••••\ ........ _ .. ••••• Ludlca11An1.M0Malnt, h 'm.a. ' nete. Frplce BBQ• -~· 11•· -=-•· _, -'" •-' · Complete aervlce and Addttl NIDDdeUa Carpet ' upbot•t1r1 DetC... Tree'Jlrt~ §!!:!l6l ra. patio• drtv'ewo•' ex rt. ea.<8UDtck Plumbln& repairs. Free atump arindin& 10 yrs ~r· ......... c I •. 11 • r I fr. e ·····-·!.·~~······· .. ·· H .... . IHOUJtelea.nJn1 11 our Guar.u'c.•lnl.51M114 All P•llltlna: tni S.SOext t. M~l42..:.~ es Lie.Ins .... . .... . -· Stotcll&uard, fJoor WU• PETS R PIX>PU ... q... • ...... Call Jwce'• M50 Neat complete ,... -~ •--'---='""""=:;:.-..::;:i:.si~70~ lg,cr72:9 Boa~~•Groominc ....................... Raised" AU& t .. ,.. Brlck·Blocll:·Cement -...,:nt _;_ ... 1-· ~....,._.. f-.&.....S...-..;:;_ .... ..,..._.::_ "W tartT' HOllEIMPROVIKIN'JI ' . ' frpl 'a Xlat worll: ....... •"""'·-··-H•u•u•u•••••uu•u ,,_.,
......... !!!!! CWedfAUCOMSTI. ew.t/C11n• !JP . Ml.a41 REPAIR, PWllBJNG, "2·175·2514 Depe~dable . Pai OlYwtcrA.lf1"M HOTTUSS. ... l~M~YOOR:nP-£9° Ullom lilom•. tl'llD· ........... -............ s.... hutina Cll'pfJl_trf tlec Holiday party time 1• ..... INT/EXT PREE EST PORTABLES /Put•~·
illJ, remod, Frtocll THO~'S ............... •••••••• We. rr"llt.NojObtoO berel Let•cleanl Rtfa. COncrete·,,.,.._ HIGHQUAL.WORK "N·GROUNDSPAS IRevilion/ecllWll/
doon, lkyli-"paUo OONCRET!CONSTR. E.M. DSGN•CHK _!mill. Clndl•AUpet,W.791. Ceramic'IUe·• LOW RA~ 5M-llm Swlm~pool formattiqupttiaUly mm . ...W Uc. IJUm p1ck1Cinl/lhmtJ/pcb c Need a 111 a Id or ...,, re~~ /Call me for 1U our ROOMADDITION NO JOB TOOSMALL CaUM.»101 arpent.ry ·ll~ ho111elteeper? Hrl)' or F!peeatJmat. -.eou lNT/,EXTPA1HTJNG lnauredandlic'd l _ _._ p tt y
SPEClAUST Brti•B• Uc &S1'41 ......_.. Rooli.111·Pl1.Unbinfi wkly.CaUMldridAcen· lluoo.ry our apeclahy. Licd.Refs.f'rMest PRIMR~EPOOLS typncn~ )',
Rtmodellna,deckl, Dale, boci..0.1717 . -::!.":.................. R DryC:a~l·~~~.:O c M.V. • Cleawn. qldcll, CSepencla. * * lOl7 * * 857·~or4M·5778
bomee,freult.John Ana.IJ$.2lgl!sl!2313 DRYWALL/AOOUSTIC llJ\ e .. ' HOLJDAYSPF.c~ ble. edotAYalztJob! NELSONSPAINTING ,, em t1• I u .. Watdll.,. Uc JU-•l·""l R Id C l Al J4 vne"p "'·"uUc'd • HOME IMPROVEMENT B"Tb e~ro•uOOS'" •831·~* lnt·Exl, 'Res-Com, ., 9 I -...................... . . . ::: II oncre e· 10 ~ ... .-~ • Tll fl f I , e vvou.• "" I a...tU ( ••••••••••••••••••r•••• Sal •-Rleotlr ol ••'A IOOM OMS aportcourts U iTm lp1111ed.532:H • oora, enc nc. Oerif13.4515tltl ........ acou.st c ... ~ n1a. re .. NOf f e .. odem a...,..ue "9'l~~·••uu ......... ,.~ .... ~....... Bobl6H-~'I078 · Dave's Drywall addl ~m!ln1, all 1m1ll CLE .. u.~,.V'ft&r_ooM ....................... lic.,freeest.83'7·21611 ............... ~ and m m clocwk' &h .• ltl:SID /OOllll'L .._.c.w.e • .....,........ • llou ' . ~.-xraap.fJt.21115 ftnu-.v ..... -.v •1.....--. PAINTER NEEDS "'"',__.., watches. Gut' ate ... ..u.;,..19 i.r I>eoms11141t1 •lohallullw11cSom -I cocnrn'I, acousUt EuropeuCratlam.an AJJ Re1ld./Comm·1. Al10 •,,_--·...-* WORK 30 In Oranae Co. atea. u yrs SbepN'oCatHwyat Boat 1Jol!.~73N ge 1....,'ssdlllt Cemntl brlcll, rt· ~II nu, textures. Jobi. Bia or Small. C.U .janitorial urvlcts. Top Quality.• Speclal ext. acc~eif.Poav\s experien(f Call tor Info. Canyon Lai\.!Ot.'9U282
..,... dandtcape, ttee remov. .... atte IPll •M70 care In handlna. a51n p · 'u 1ndnla Tr1de1nsftlrome C111tom .carputry, .wood duh. Llc'd m.ctrk411 r . aUt lbMc&eanln exp. Comp«IU~ rata. atn ncN7..Slll t U'I • -h .
H••n-••ou•e•u de<ks~Coaal 170-ZIU ....................... Geeeralllalnlainwe ~ith~enonalTOUIC: Noovertlme. 1»1153 RALPH'S PAINTING • Wi9dowCleB-I
Drlrew171, partial lot Co. N does It bet-ELECTRICIAN -priced Repalr1•DecoraUn.g Beth-.OUC •ABC MOVING·Exp Ext/Int.Reas ·Prompt .........,,..,. •••.•~••••••••••••••••••
ttHln. Halcoallnc. ter! Uc, . Ftee c:...lc Tie riebt, free ettimat.e on • Ill •Ra M0-5144 prof low rata Quiet' Uc'd FreeesL M4-5.SM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oriainal Window Washer M-S A1pllalt. a1.u9t est.CallJoeMt:~U ••••••• ................ larftor1malljobf Jack of all r...-Call General Haeclna. Apll, care'tu.laervict 55i.0tio' Qu · GeneralConlract1111 Av13brhome.13S. Yt. C.............._............. llc:CryatalCenmkTUe U t3Mm ...;.. ~ Day or NI..... empt1'1, wndws, crpta, • allly ptc/U>westrates Home Improvements, 63M . .=:688=---u u1... _......_, Ollt.illctivel_nstallaUon c. u•..........., J ~ M1id1 for Uve-ln/out. •HarriQll.ODlcSonl• lnO.C.Neat,prompt damaie.......,Jrs Q Ul .. , .... h ., .. _ ... I .. _.ATE PAVING .... ! .................. Uc 14G17.S -..12 RESJD JCONM 'L • a.,..,ns.aoi4 * 751·3707 Careful Courteoul& aerv 848-S6M/636-7149 •v..-· WI Y IJC\ l 1~°''111~ n . ~·'!f,~tin~o!_ ~1~::· c~~~:!rya:=lY.; Ha~en's~lcTile ~.bl)'/q~a1' ~job ................ Let UI Get Your Home Cheap.!!,mln. CUSTOM INT/EXT .:::.:lc. l-894·9'198 c~~l~~~~W~ow el• "' . . ' Floors Sbowen Tu... ...., re ,...,.... "'"''" •••••••.-•••••H•••n••• k 1 l t h • • -u EXPERTSERVJCE ~-._,, --.~818 Cutt.om to)'OW"1tyle. No · • .,. ,.___ HARDWOOD FLOORS a par n1 or l e ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEARVIEW ....... jobtoosmallt Callaft4p1D1lm-4G ..._...t Maint., repair& Cletned&Waxed Holldayal Exp. Own w.kU-LOWRATF.S a...dC Ho. WINDOWCLEANING !.~ .......... • •831-300.. c:wwc.. . ~~";;.est. Quality Anrtlme.&12-4881S.A. Producta. Donna. • ...................... NU-BROOK 642·1403 Speclat=':;u~o& Chri19rTim9l&-6484 :.t~pltU.,. My home. c.,,... ....................... .' .......__ TIMorytPlano/Siallt· ,.,.,.. shln1le roots. Prof. WlndowCleanin1.
11i'lLwlcllea.Uc.Rd. ..::: .................. QUldcare. Mon-Fridays. UCDELECTIUCJAN • ._.., Tborou.1.b, old·f11bto.ed aJe11a1. Colle&e pror ........................ FrttestJmate 642-8821 Freeeal.,qual aerv. ••~•• cualom wood atios lnfa.ata tbtouab a yn. QuaJ.wort·Real.rates •••••••••••••0 •••••••• bouaecleanma. extras, your home, any •ae. The Paperffanaer, Prof. --uar T .ftae 675-UMI decu wood .focsows' My home. N CM . F'neesl 6Sl-S072Tom Hau.1,cleanup,coocrm wash /lroo. 541·3'70ll aft, Graee•• lnstall.Decoral.orqual Oran1eCoastR.oo(.ang -"""="'-'"'"""--=-----""""""""'"" ~71lttln1, our C.M. L. 'd ' R Job · S.7SM Electric OW' Specialty removal.DumpTl'uck. 3. ~s.rnc.. Preeal. SteveS0-428! Reroofing -Rep&1rs. Wi9dowl'Wtllg .... 1 xr 4r 11p, IJIY· 0 !c .. .;... .:,::· n or _ ~.nuiwe.••• ,..__1 ,,_ -...--~a· Qulcll ~ 1 --L--.--_, -1146-23119, 548-1733 ...................... . ... ----~159 --a1c .... ,....,...., ~" """"*• "''"' ... """\;&' ~"' · .._..M.. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ••WAU.PAPER" · · -·-.._.,,_..., Iii CM bo llF ble WeDoAn:ySiuJob' DUMPJOBS ~ NURSEwit.bXlnlRefror : BALBOAROOFING CO QualJtys111ce1972. lalt11ltU111· Full time Fi.De fl.nilb wort. Doors 1 · · me, • • · · & S all Movln& Jobs •••••••••••• .. • .. •••••• 1f1 -Custom papertiall(Ulg Sk u h & Plasl · · Free cowteous est •1 bome near OCC bwia.· decks, remodel. aceslxr&:over.$41-GIO eS31-300I• ' C1U MIKEMS-l.391 C U S T O M . bo~e.:,~ Comp•· Resid/comm. S02766 F e!.=t ls 67~b 644-8494 ~ ' R1nd11 m.sne Caalrechn,........ Aoor Co..t.g I LANDSCAPING Create ruon e c. 1· HANGING $10 a roll ....__r....._. ...... __ -=-"-""-=-i
C---6•--t--•••••••••••• .. -••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••! HAULJNG-Studenl has a unlque environment. ••~2m6•• quality. free est .. & R~OFJ N'G ·Atl Typ~s . .------..-._. M.W re•/ _,....., ~ 22 Years Exp Custom CRPT-UNO.WOOD 1 •1e truck. Lowell rate. 494.9472 r..a.M.... slripplng Call Scou Lie. guar. Cash Dis-Use the Daily Pilot ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . Prompt Call 7!§9.1976 -.... . "OU t L '"2 8233 w c CrptCl Romes, Condos. Apls & lnstalled/repaired. Uc. · · Vandenber& Landscape ... •••••••••••••••••••• MS·932S ·~ n · arry "" · .. Fast Result" service eioto•uoe............. ~ are Jean& e~,~ Remodla. Bob482·2208 136_,, Grg'99-5142 Thank you, Court. )f a I ntenance, col · Fine palnlinJ by Richard •.-1....... Sat.Mon d'ar-l""'. Your Boa&t C&eaned/Wued I •m c u.-.:-'. j CLIAM UP YOUI ACT I Sinor. Lie. U\S. 13 yrs of ..--.,.,... /I.. -----1 "-" ~ 1
£1"1ienced. lnsured. Truck mount wut • G-••nlng HAUL NG-0 rJJ1'pede.i1 w u' ha N B custom ....................... Tiie service is our Jlm'J».l.915eves Workcuar. ~3711 Uyoujob'Jooll:ln&f~abet· ....................... , I 831-1.993 :fao m:si.s gn. c. Tb:t . -. 63~.Z.10 Neatpatches&texlul'e$ ..................... ..
Ji;d..bat you want in SellthinplutwithD1ily ~rmiss'~~~=: ~~~~P TJl.~;,~s.!'~~~ ~1~!~ Sellt~pfastwtthDaUy lbve so~c lo sell! frffut. HJ.IOt A11~fnJs~!1/'.!~ I ~~:S878e11t m · PIUY Pilot Classilleds. Pilot Want Ads. colwnu 111 Clas&ified. Free est. 642.-9907 u . Free mt. M7-827l Pilot Want Ads. Classified ads do it well. Wanl Ad Rauh$ IK2'5178 Refs John 893-lfi67 _______ ..
~~.~.~·:.~ .... ~ ............ ~ !=~ .. !~ ~~.~ .. !?~ ~:.~~ ..... !~~ "•,t:t.'""1 ~.!!~ ... ?!.~! ~.~~ ....... ?!~~ ~.~.~ ...... ??~ ~,,.._ 7005 teitp1rt~ ll6t LafunaBeach~ot.orlnn, 2 BR 2 BA, Oceanfroot 4bd,3ba .• t.osharew/2 MW"EXICSTE ....................... S50.1ooo-noo.ooo from11 FOUND : While Persian•••••••••••••••••••••••
.. ••••••••••••••••••••• 98S No. Pacilac Cout apt.· at Tiie IUk.al In otbers on Bal. Is. $225. Luxurious 3ID sf office ...._. pr vate party• we ca t vie Sth/lris CdM. Free lat leuon: expert
NO FEE! Apt. &: Condo H~ Laauna Beach. Kooolylu.. Don Pettijohn m o . u t 11 I 1 s l & avail ror sub-lease in o,,:: lwllt SOOS !~~7:. b~~i t;~t~:! 640·5172 before 9 or afl. ~:1n~s~:r'de~c~~~~;~ rntals. Villa Rentals. D .. feekl.Y· Klt.chen (213)a'807 last/sec.dep. 675· oneofNpC.s escuJsiveof· ....................... broker/owner . Ask for -=l'-"O.,_P_M,__ ____ _
l7M912Broter. avaalab •· Low wmter Lra Bl& Beer cabin. Pool 67621Bill.fl7S.S'l90wk. flee compl~. Airport LOSING LEASE, qull· Sunn Webber Black /arey male mi11 _,!.:.6-.:,,ll,..e.:.:;m,,..l ____ _
ti(eanfront for Winter rates.~ table colorTV 2f-tcs Flo shr aut .. decor. close . Includes : tincbuslnea,1elli""out u71-~1 . S4Hl7S Terrier vie or Vic· Spanish teacher will U ·
'lntall. F\lrnisbed & Newly decorated private s ' lt. m~:.i · Sbr. 2ba home, nr OCC. • Re c e pt f p bone ALL su-pptia ~ .. ftll· or on .._. loria /Pomona, 1119. cha nae lessons with
allll'll. Brok.er. 675412 !'OOm & ba~ fli>lc. ~· Lr Mt home Bi Bear J.J . 9e6-IC70, 7s..8870 •Utilities •Janitorial turn lnch.1dlq: W.t111ei. TNlt Reward ~Uf. piuoleacber. 67~Tl'N
.Ven11Ues Conier Pen-aoclds uuft. Eastsade J ski.ara.. id~s & Will shr 2 br, 2 ba 1111. •100 free copiest.mo. Display c&SeS. w11Unc Dti4i . SOJS Losl. M Greal Dane/Lab tWpW-.ct 7100
Uaoaae2Br.2Ba.Avail. C.ll.64S--0108 wtends 714 -.:z. Nwpt apt w/malure •A_mple pa,rk 1n1 room chairs. Beauty••••••••••••••••••••••• mix. black. \'lC Chap-•••••••••••••••••••••••
90W! £150.m.3787 Fountain Valley home, •~ · 4100 empl. woman, l300/mo. •Kllthen •Sect 1 urv. Salon hairdryers and $.....,.~Co. man 1n Oran e. 494-7226 Ace 3_. ..... 2 B ~ 1 kitchen prlv. Bath, pool, --tosa.. furn.640-811113aft.9am. avail Call. Roxanne hydnulic cha.in, mir-All lypes of rU1 est.le I _d___ 1 o •• b •.!:!....a 1 """"'1' oewy 1111111.SZSO/mo."3-lSU •••••••••••••••••••••••Fu 3BRu-a' CdM 9'1S-0740 rors,shelvesandplants. illvestmeotuincel9'9. Foun · young rema e Growm1Newport...,.c --· cpts. fp c, pool. call PM Culllv111Cexpenses! m .........., in · Also ake-Iba Ca I 1 co Cat. Crown CPA Firm bu Has 1m-!dlta ool1."7S.~l528 . Esllbllshed 1971. S3SOmo;. • SCIO sq. ft. Meu Verde .m up, mpoo S,.cl.l.,a. Valley area. Lag. Nig. medialeopeninisforan
lattblufll Townhouse F\lrn. pvt rm & be.,util Featured in nine M11. • 7eo.4*11• area. and~ll~Or z.IT'DI J!1'J681-CJ. Individual d Hlrlng
pt.Jbdrm,2ba,2 car ·pd .. waab/dry. kllcb Larae Cllentele. F shr 28R CM Apl.I 54.S-4123 fter&..,. 642·2171 54"°611 lllAKl lOMCOMIHAWf Lost. small black F c b a 1 1 en Ii n C
111r. No pets . No prlv. Walll: to OCC . Personal attention & 6:30-9PM. OfftCESPACI a ' Widow bu money for lllAKllOMlONllMllL Coc kapoo/Terrier, respo111ibililies Provid·
• datldren. $650/mo. p!O/m9.S48-1B. c1refulscreenin1. uM>-66216° FOILIASI ••1-........ ---·w.n---•I T.D.'a. 110,000 up. No PlaceaHAPPYAD blind. vjc. Presidio. log atcounUng Services
IM-1010. E·stDE C.M. yery TirneS.vi.ftl! Fe_m. t.o shr w/same 21 THECOLOMY ~ne;-·.n-u I creditchedt,nopenally inthisoolumn C.M.751-12Q.1_ to diversified clientel.
,8ASTBLUFF Jbr .. pool, C::'o;"'! Vtty ";;;!~! HOUSIMATIS Br/Ba. ~acArthur Viii. I 580 Broadway. Laguna 41 xn • money m er. Call Deni.son Assoc 'c~U"l:i.~· Found : M Siamese cal. !1~kco!°n"vi~':!~':nf. ~ area. 1iqle ldult. _If 1 D~Pttr ~ m..4131 $275 + ulil, 21~ 966--0588 1 Be a c b . Ca 11 Anne Top location. adjattftt lo ~673-.:..;'-73=11,_ _____ , neut & dedawed. 10/JO, Pub Uc accounting exp. ·.~P!b @OO/mo.644-4167 ~t:fa~t req. 64&-3375 Female prd. 3 bdrm hse.11 Hauser, on-ai~e mer. :!~~· ..::v:~= WanUut deal,~ a yr, --------~ion Island. S48-0027 Send resume' Classified
• Av~~adou1 a:~~=.~--or OCC ~B~chw': 9J5d7Sl·0007$22S2dep0 ~eHnv;s I c;:,,~llACH call. MELnJOIS. r.=: ~O:..~, ~ ---.·.·.·--• F:a'i1pom~S!'!~a~[ ;t •~ly ~.~·c3: , Br 2 B u r 1 .. ·-, • "' REAI.roR mos. Prime Newport If all lhe love you have Beige Coat wtdark 92627.9983 • · a. pper, rp c, for resp. em pl. non· A Proleaimal service MS-7902 Jim or Bret AllPCIT All.A Xlnt payor. 961·2990 liven me is ret.urned lo markings Nov 61.h. Vic .::..::;:=:..•;:.;c~c~------waelter/dryer, 1ar11e. s mo It er . Nit e ForProfessk>nal R F bd Full senitt omces. ~ mallO 27c;t.YIELD
1
you, .this .will be you
0
r 16 th & 1 · NB "' _..,~ Submit OG children. neipborbood.$2001ncl. p......i..-esp /rm.teshr3 2ba t.oSl.10perscfl800lol"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $1<,800 ID' vest ....... ms bapp1estbbthdayever. ..!v1PnMe r•y•-lr. pets. SlSOO/Mo. TSL utils.957-13110 ""'I"'""· N.BaptnrBcbS325mo. 2000sqftavallable. Ex ·u w\l ., cv ._ 63l·5070ancr 6 . " ------~•-ou .. ,..... 642·7S04 or 720--2091 Cl DI nu OllPOl't ly 21~ on ClOK TD. WeU . for Alwa.ys and More Found Black Men ·s 10 Detail minded Pfl"IOll to .;:;(""--·-· Xlnl loc. & room, wtpVt 3offices loscreei. check F 1 h BALBOA Mullan Rulty54G-2960 Obie. your inrome PIT, secured. SI00,000 ~uity J Speed Bike near Arches rill aC'counts payable
See. lBR. Versailles ba, nr Ho11. M, no m 's&: employment, wlll lS~A~O ~. $285 ind •utc. sunW low Invest. m7~1. pr~tection in custom l'l!!!!!!!!!!!!m!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!I!! Liquor, Newport. No poosilion in busy Orange
:Condo. Includes Dis· k.ilcben. $34.S. 646-1035 match you with lbe ri1ht tils 67~42a\l 5 I N port h t -. home w/pool & horses. Leet & F.-5100 brand labels. CaJJ Steve Counly ad agency. Ac· ''~'!_~ .. ~~e, Bit in Room In lar&e house, Roommate! u · · · d~w ':mca :va~i:: BUSINES.91EN Laguna Investments. ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• 646.7689. co unls payable ex· • -· · -• c II 1 mile from O CC 2BR • .1BA. 1215 mo. + eel 175 & 1IO . n HOUSEWIV&S bkr, 1161-'143 per1ence requJred. 10.. '15Z·ZD1Dap. ..;.01·mo IJ61E 30DayGuarantee half utll. Woodbridge m, ···-Recept_sq • RETtREDPERSONS 2ndT Deed' _, FOUND M/blk twhile key by lOUCh, typing a
'1 k apt w/IWfe, mrig, ,J;e (umilhed ~ In After 5PM. 559-0324 r::'n;;-m. ind. ·:.j 28 m~:en_ ~;J .. b~ loog hair doe. looks like must E1ttllent fringe
·=.r--ula.Call private home, Costa ~offwttbtblsad sr.:lacular Panoramic avail. Nr OC AiJ'l)Ort. Everyone wttb ~need choice HID. Sch. p~ fo.ADS .. ~~:!r A~es:~c ~utfi~:UCall llrs Si!D. lleu. Call after lpm ZS lew. Qua lily F Pre wa tma'll y'°'o'uuccm.bthia I is,ror ptrty. -19157 Broker. AIE rwr m.1297 . . rec e 171 tlr Jla G.,..,e Year ..__.._ Neat & Clean. NB. . A c 111ce o a rM.t ADlllNCOORDl'NATOR . . . . _._,. ~,._.,,_I 7714 673-4209 LAGUNANIGUEL lifetime to aet Into cal: , _ __._ 5150 N ,_, ·"· 2 bJocb t.o beach. Lido 1ai. Room le Ba, In .... _,.-., • OFfJCESPACE ....... do-......_ .. Farms. *•1•11 Jiit/ ...---ew NB vulct BllSi· man hnmed _,,. mo incl --.... rn•u , .. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ness Unlvenily. n....ree • Pvt Home. Clubholae. MASTERNISA · _.,., · · Professional building Diatribut« sirvcram at tr111 642.-5671 ........ ,llft".oceanview2BR2~ Wulis & tome prMaes. A~ utlllAtBeaut. house. wpa. wlth 5SOsq l\frontingoa ground level. U7ouwant Lott & ,.... illl!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! HECUTIYl ~~( E~Y:,~. ·~~·: IA, 2 ur 1ar. Days $275. car. l. 6. 731-8830 Crown Vafiey P\wy wlth lO be allttSSflll, even ....................... r-* SUl'll •
,,__,,Eve557.eell9 u~3llli•• 2resp.nonamoltingF'sto olf·slreel pa.mug. Call morethanyourdreami, •1 IEIU I ts 5100 FOUND: Beige" white 24hourESCORTS ~~~due~~:t~:~7W7lh
,'11! IDO. Mature ldult.s, Hohtl. ..._.. 4100 ~m°!:~i:;=~e;~ ~:1:,n3 N~~.d~~~o~ }~ Un10R.E.-.1120 & if youe*1YW011tln11r .. ·-··-•.••.•"'!'•-••_•_••.•.•-·•-•.••.•-•• ;:'O:f:iJ.•~e!:~tlL t5l·ll22 MC/VISA • llO klcb. Quiel&. secure. ....................... apac 2 bdrm twnhee, In utils. Leah646-94.53 MOW AVM Ull lalkin& W1tb people. then Monr-0via, Costa Mesa. COEDS· Would Love to
lltl N.ewporl Blvd. Live oa Newport Beach CK. $21>5/mo + otll. -• NEWPORT BEACH this ii a chance for ~ou 631.2973 Party with you. Call Sue
:M'-131S. $100/wk P ine Knot Avail tmmed-Call Offktl.W 4400 COMMERCECENTER t.o earn while keepl.n& F OU ND : Fe mah orDebbieanytime. l Br. Condo, SSSO Mo. Motel. 63112 W PCH. NB Shelley' 642·1161 or ••••••••··~··• .. ••••••• EXEClmVESUITE your own houri. This is 9153-9363
Ver 1a111e1. C 1 11 ~ '1Sa-l6ZS 1117 Westcliff. N.B. Want Hancbome all'ices, furn· ool a &immlc. It is also Shepherd. could be m.11 -------•
2 11 /I2 a. 7 a 5 • o r Yearly on tbe budl rum. Dana Pt. 2BR. 2BA. Rel. financial Inst. 7000s.f. /non rum. avalJ: prof oot sales. A lell hour op-~~~~; f0~~{.' Cv;,.c I G'"' c .. _,
Z3Z3Ridlard. room1 . Kltcb. •Ba. Whtll.UWlncl.DISlst ,llt.floor.Al@541-5032. ffC serv., copy mach, portunity meetlna· Cart 540-0593 £--~
VIEW ri-lllt & SZIO . ..-r mo. + SZIO. •1 .. ·.--Mavw anuen.PUJSPLUS. ~lJTllJIUel·om~~~· ~.,...... ~• ,..._. w n....--.._.._, """..--' """ .....iA•-•-.... · ce_...wo> Loll: 1old ring iJI shape 24 Hrs 641.0180 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 patios, sec. dep. 23111 . V\.'t'an-Share 2bd 2bt apt, DOii re•tSULA Hte pa • ..._ ....... t access • . of .. E... vie. Balboa C•/CMc:U
Jrplc. Adults. $1200. rrootNBm-4U4 smtr. pool, 01 s .C.P. Spacious executive 0r. Cell Mow 1714t .... ......, ls/NB /lrv.67S-3729 Ms-AM-nn..-
,m.ast pso+sisoaec.754-7028 ncea acro11 from City 71J.710J Give yourself a REW RD 0 """""'..._, .. _ t k apt view $500 mo: Dix bome full)' furn fhll. All serviceuvail•· 309 ft 2 of1i (l.2x14' 0,,13 lultr 501 Christmas bon s A : Iris green 31-lli!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!I ~~1"1. Ait, ~: ask incl.tel, TV. unens: Female t.o abare H.Bch ble, 'optional'. From 225 & 'iixi4')& :'ception ................ ~..... -sell unneedeud spd bike, milslng nr. Sr. A , ....... ' Ttrldeem.7DI slvretcS415/wU5f.S881 Apt.$200..;....,~•ble. sq.ft. up at reasonable area, rurnisbed,at.orage Roaers deli, In CM. _. -·· I Items in the Reward well over value -~•-, 1-. ,. .......... vuol founta· Vee--•-.t.-&.. 4250 reQtals. No ease te· ;r•ce available. 833-3361 ( blk N ti vr--....,._,, --1.r....a all"""'_.,. o-!ty P'lot 0 e. 0 ques ons Escorts/Modeling :ta /card1n. Million ....................... qll .... ,c 0 ·--=·~F_______ ill I asked. Sentimental MtF&Couples
:!)ol lar Clubhouse. OCEANFRONTU,t Br. EXECUTIVE BAYFRONT Gift "Ufde v1l11e.63H622 ~30CISMC/Vis.!..._ 's. ... pool, 1P1. gym, AvaJI. Winter. Wee.ll:ly / G R C SUITES 111 r -t· B'" Bm ng•r Cal bllllard1, aec11rlty Month .sn.7173. So . ~JI. · · · Primeofrice.•IM40. '''"" 2"' old..,,.._ Biue~larREWARD!!. If you would llke lo 1 ~. tllOO/mo. 97~114 PalmS rinOArea <Mon· ( lC»3!*>· IN ...._........ 4450 t111111., ,..,._.,_ C .. 642·5671 u114Mmu Escorl Attractive
"!'em. lerey=Club> con· Yrb'. NeatM/Fshr 3BR, HlllTAGI ....................... pr0jte1ed '* rtMn vi md ....... t Lolt med. SJ. blk. doe w/ _La_<!J.~taci_SU._1548_
do. lbdrm, 2ba, atrium, 2~BA Condo lb NB ~ 121• • -•n.ooo C • r I 1 t • • 1 red b .t ..... Red nd l ••:v:•l
fum .• aoll•tennis.Dal· w/Boal Slip. $4Wmo. Newluxuryolflceapace llTMSPACI tuwr11eoffln 111&.,,.. A4-YIMr lie. ~:;rsoo~aER~ r. p vJI•
ly wftkty •monthly Encl car.~ After In Irvine's bualtsl l280aq.flflltbor81Yd. l'rofttMNl'Ytntl\8!ICI. Vic Fairview & Baker •••••••••••••••••••••••
r ~ le a 1 v a I I . SPll.'7S.Jt13 center! F.aly Frwy •c· +atoraae.•mo. !:!!~:== ' Call54S.S1Cl8or798-3t41 Sdloell&
(714)u• .llOOl," c..m, u k NB, 1~r areat view, cesa. Avail. now! Call Rea1~~1-'"""' -oo .__.__ ..__ 7005 ,_,. "'"" tordel1Jla IUOVIDI.... u,.,..,, l'r111e10tlton1V C•Mn141 Found: Grut Dane. Blue ....,.._ for Mark. furn. ·· 2 ba. house. · JO ll!lm!!!!!!!l!!!!!!•ml•I!!!!!!~ 714 2012 AM tot 11 n......11 •H•••••••••••••••••••• Prof.maJef350.MtDS Hl·IHI St n.-n . . on. 0 MerleM .;n-ue,GreyF Now Enrolllinc : Chris· -------•I oreorvmce.13501q. . ......... w/Rlven1de Tap. Ter· llan Pre-School. 320 E. ,...-=::..=.:.=<=------Roommate need~ for •DILUDOflllCIS• llnaVerdeArea rltr Mix. Blk M, l&th St., Coata Mesa. OPPOITUMITY plueb oew d11plu on u • J room. No leue re-5'.WlD I Shtphetd Mb, moatly 8 Pe c I a I pro 1 r • m•.
ll:nocb on. wben 1ou Ouu F~onl Balboa quired. Adj. Alrporier Co.ta 11 .. ; or l?UI • WI, M. 2 Abo 2 cats. 646 5423
uae resWt·flU.lna Dally Pen.luula. Yearly ren-Hotel.m-ms. .. 12. Newport.1.5.ooosqn. 1s-r'-~P~iwt'::a~O:l~~-fl Tortoise shell M1n1 ' -·--=-'"-----Pilot CJ.-n.d Adi lo tal,@rlmo.m.l'712, HSO Up . Hunt. 8 ch. 1/f, all or pert. MM7S8 needa 11....,.. wtu-1'lt ' Lona ba_lred wht M. W111tAdReaults 64.Z>Wll
mdl Ute ar_. Coltt Luxuriowl Lallm bome/ Carpet. drapea. air. A . or more to mantl a ~1·~.1 ~.t FBeoundach ...._ W_.. 7100 market. non·smolr•r/ cl111lcal 17JOlleacS.MZ·•· .._. 41urA CHR'_. .. ., ·-··. rt...&es .J.:. nu... -u:i-._,. Pboneta.5171 muale. ,tlMlll 1...,._ -•-"'" '°!.~ --.r61.. QM\ ·HD· Altered MSlarnete Cal2 ..................... ..
WANT .. ~ON' , ..... ••-• •"••••••• .. •••••••••••• -• ca.-P!flODll v wk1
1
m110 Npt Area. 111. •ity ,., Cl ,_,ion COSTAleSA Comm'l "°"*lot (or lo a •Ide varttl1 of • Sllll••
zeraroo•olllceeullA!I rent. Vmuwf11ta. ~ Chrlatlan Hd ion· S II sed --------------•1c,1i.....t_ .. -.1 .... 1. uw· 25 X lJS. HB area. Chrl1tla11 commercial e your U Lo1t : F. Ira Friendly " ""'"""' ..,.. 8'1211 outllt.I P'Gtleldll ulll Slameae. 11·6. COM. M...I .. -" I.Del. vall.OOW.Call • ' m . 1'temS •10 OUr Bnndv. REWARD ! """' .._. Rtato.omia· l7UJOO ..... w_.. 4'IO million dall&r ballneN. Mt-mo' '-"~11*== ~? ••re a ofc auite 1n ,,.. ....................... Sll-llOZJtma, Dat'ly P1'lot ----=--------'" Ht llml •J"'I• et.lpou11Jrpartarta.315 Rtllr•d couple from MIMy•&.e. IUI Gift Clile •Found : White kitten.
ICl ft For details call Wilcontin 6 • poodle ............. "........ lecenUy ~· •ia 1 wtlb'°rtltallRMtOf' Uyouwlllalllll lltate
NIWPOiT llACH ICN ! MPtrlte ..... WW do Lo a 1 at 8 IL 0 W Cll 142·51n No ""'9r\Bml i.-a.l malottDUet ln c.•. MAUIT MTD tel
• •11.Jl IYIU. 11 II' a 1 lr!I Pr I• e Fl a 11c111 1M ... tw • fl...,..._.Co 1 YOE11....-*"Mr ... ..,.._ Qrl1t1111M.W.
'll!!ll:Jlll!i __ ..:...__· °"'''' ..... ""apt II FOUND : IA"A POINT 250• attd of remodell••· ,_,..._.~ I ~~::soj~ ...... ~Y"I ..,_ CM /NB 1re1. Jdll TW .......
W y= r:~= lfftt"* I DAILYPILOf Ill.I. ... ~ ,.,. t ... WlllMI c.• lllYICllD&'TOIY Daill PUii ~
ADMltlSTUTIVI srEa.WsT ,,.,.,
rAIT·TIME SlOO/weekend and up
Call 5S2·3173. Atmy
Rl!Hrve. Be au )'OU can
be.
AIDl-MJMGoUAL Bilingual Aide with
fluen cy in English &
L1ol11n-Hmon1 rt·
quired needed by llunt·
in1ton Beach City Sc:hool
Dist. 3/hrs. per day.
$4.73/hr. Apply 13$-14lh St.,H.B.53Sel_. __
Ans. Strv.~lsnt. olc. NB. exp. , but wiU
train. llpm· am shift.
631·5&40
Altr Ladiea who like to
dance, aut in Soc
Ba llrm dance c\ub.
Possible lo eam 11000
mo. or more, PT. Mr El-
lis 542-104'7 ••542ctOC'7••
If you're in tbe martltt
tor a bttier car, bt aure
to check the nwtY llltOI
1dvertl1ed '°' 11Je In .£1 lfied. ................... ·. . . .
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Orange Cout DAILY ptLOTN/tdnttday, November 11, 1181
JI ~W.... 71MtwiW_... 11Mllf 1ttaf]liiflj ..._..... UM aHT1 ............... .. •MT.t .................. ,_ .... _ ... ___ ~ .............. _ ...................... r. • • c • r "
.....,._.,_... .0 ~ -~;:;;;;;:~ ,.....,,.., WAIT~l/WAITllU. o11,11utor. M DIAIMlf~Hewi*t i,ollowlql ~~Ill· P/T,ttlrl,. .... ror ·••AW• K ~ 2.,... ... ••r,r •.• r~ ""· UMd ()Me. ....
ltaeb AlllllllM'°eMI. -~~·~·--__ .......,.....,...,........___ -rad«. Plta1t Ual*Ml,_.Ole ,...ICllooldW•· ti '· "°Cii· Pvlalllft· Dl'W. WW llMI•"-"
Xlnt bntrlta. C11l Hardware Salta. t1Ti-~;;~;;:;;r:-·1~~~::;rw:~--:~:... la* 1:4&~ _,.......,.,_ ~.:~i::. ~~.':":::: MOO.:~~~. fn.TmjtwnlMpm Potllloa la Rttalll OflllCI.... UC.WiiGUT IMM&A110M Olhn IAtlmriel T9FIOMI Wed·I•..:-__ _:::.:;.!~=;,.;;..-:---
COOi Hantwart &aort Stt· Coata lltu llarlu P/U .. , IMlwbdla, in-~.ierlnod ulf Ullrl 'knAD1loe . soucnon WAnmS C~:~:&d p T Mlllt Jobaon. H.W. hUdtr ..... Offlc. 111 ,.411red. Cill vattd people, um 40IUlrdallt'MIOI Appola,mHl 1tttl11 II I\ y -HlO WINSTON TIRES .,. I hr At~al ~ w r 11 b t c 0 l 2. ..., .......... worts ... '9r•'t. .• r:' ICl ft. Get paid Ntwport ...... ,...... Part.time ....... • 011111 c~-c:::a •• .. .............. -••
1rowll1 and lut11rin1 .ft' · ~·~ RofMl&er.C.M. &bt will allow rou '° wltla 5_....clQ•fll------•I Satmla1 All'•· tf/br, rtUm~~ ·-NlZ08".o.rran8Uptr
lllt btu tqialppecl Couater help. Mature Hotel arowuw ...... PINN UCWiiidlin t11nu..1 ill liaed tcr •mt. WAITRa8!61'ER I.Ito Uellll1.kr1.oom
Mt\'IH tent .. l8 UM eeraon. Prr. Mon Fri. Wearuowtaklq call: Tom,..aa IOI Good l)t,aa1, ca.rteal coal.rad. wcri an)' ara w/car fot .... tN&Mtt Xlat cond. Sokl new for
Weat. We i..ve I•· Gary'tDeli.CoutHwy., •ppti~fot: lkllla • '-1IU• fl Call : ltto (7 14 ) S!!!f}IY TB.EPHOME Juocfl •erv. t :to-l :IO •· Stll for 1125. Call
mtdl•opmlipforl'A· CdlUJI-~ ....... Ma.ti Put·dme ea.Mr Girts. dletaplaou rt4ulrtd. 540-lltl WOii( PM, Mon·Prl. Earn J1ck:l75-·la-MG&_,_
,.,._..,Urt,Mtt.try6 Dental Ortho ftecep-rtlCO..• Apply ill,..... Tmn· Xlntwoni.uoadlatr-Salel/Jln'ltmtat p n-a EARNX·TRA• 1150-1175 wkly. Muat be •MtcllOICOPI•
aboellllltlUen. tlonbt, exper. required. ... mi Stuntr a.t. 170 S. ~ ....... For 1pp't DtSSA,..._ _,... UDdate .diNetory, no neat, ruonable f Bifocal MJl.llpore. Mu·
WI troN Newport Beac h . Muttbeabletoworlt a .Brlt!Ol,CM'lll·F ~'r;Glf. TiNClolatto5pindfor Lear Sle<r ru., aelllni.Wllltn.io.Ptr, ene~rtc. ~~at lmum M11nlflcation. oen~ta...:':'.::: ~~-~s.:.·-----1 variable "'11\. Call ctn • PAIT·'IMSIC'Y t:l.000 to a.oao,... mo? £ntro Products am /afternoon shift•. JOA louft!Oln ..:.... 400. Never 1»H Xlnt
wtU-Ult mG1t .Sated DIMTALASSISTAMT dyaUN474ora1dY1t Balboaltludla•OMee, UMllW Sftyourowuchedulel I D.ivtaioft la a ltadtr IA S./br. to alert. G.O. W•1•m1...., cond. Retail IJ..20I> Sell
ttulpment and the Oreat oppGrtu.nity In 1555 So Cout 'llwy, S H O RT H A N D Ean wllilt 1°" team. madeoverM,OOOLnOct.. tlld•l1010dmanulac:· hwy' Hartlor In G.G. Wholesale Import com• • QBO, W/cue. Biii, ..
foOowlll1 : modern, team·orltoted L111ma Bdl. r.qua1 Op. RIQUIRED. n.. ~ H I a l T A C E rutel& oowtAi Co "' tureofmaat~. 531-tlU. P'"f needs wa.rebo1&1e ...::MMeOe=-:=----:---
priv1tepractltelnHunt· J!2!:tunlltem@ol!r. Call17S.5tl0. INVESTMENT will ourneld.-Mr. Warelulm nuclear rudor COllttOI Teller be p . No exp er . Ctlh '-'l5
• 'IU5 ltartiq <ralte lnstoo Beach for RDA HOUSIMAMA.. Part dmt. Co. needs •tu· teaeb JOU crHtlve (714)547·ml roda and airtratt lutl Needed. Note Teller. neceuary. Pleuut .................... .. art. tO 4-11> • Com· seelltna person1l job Female to supervlH dedtl to Ml.I baUoona ln fluietna, 1031 E•· Sales tanlra. We 1n tllrftntly New ~nt Bank work Ina conditions. s 11 m•1 e cat ~ ?'\..,.
puy paid medicaltlta· ntlsfactlon & excep· Youth• In Shelter. store la So. Cout Pl41&. cbHIH, iaveator d• Matute, experienced aenln1 a Secretary for Meda exp No&e Teller. Golden'• M1&1c Wand, Chocol1te Poinl..t TC>, &al/Iii•~• Paid Uonal financ:lll reward. Ml-0881 Must be 0¥« 1.5 6. Yff'Y ve&opmed6 coumelln1. 11le1wom1n, lnllm1te our Pel"IOMel Dept. ~Bacl&rowid tn City Na-MW. 17th St .. C.M. Ap-Good Home. $1 .0ll~
vacatlou, bolg daya & Many frin&e benerat.s in-out Io l n I . Ca 11 E1per. eouuelors re· appa.rel alq>, 40bra. per Uoul Syllem Delired) 1 tam-Uam. 541-8734 ,,
birtbclay otr • Unllorma cludln I medical In-l•-------1 eoo.m.2700 C!tlve 1°"' comm. Thil week Id Ui7 General pel'IOllMJ ~ Xlat Btoefita. Salary Yard man f« Rootin& Co. Purebred Siamese JCI~
• llercbllllllllediaeount •urance&4~dayweek. l~ATOll: Put-Time lari&IDbt ~. oPPlY .. ~ S ~•~-.. secretarial duties will Baaed 00 Exp. Sat in· ~fl llon-frl 3:30·7. ~na. a wk.I old, rro9' •Credit u... • Profit CallMl·O'm. • ••• ..---Conliua. ,_..,__~ inc 1 u de t 'f p 1.n & tervl.rlr if.._,_..,_ Call _ _..un and •-•A'-driv-...... -1 • llaarla1 -• MISS8•• tlal Interview. Call for retail •tore in (ISW ) ahortband la W7-'5ll -~ uu uuu er .w..-· .
To selltdille 1our In·
tervlew, pleue calJ Jim
lloaday tJarou&b Satu.r·
day at:
('ft4)a.5GO
WINSTON 11115
An Equal Opportllllity
EqiloJw
D..ttlAtlf.... PAIT·lM. needed f« commercial Vince54f.91 LaaunaBeach.Applyat req~fr.:s.;Wlllalaobelo-W1 lLMP!tmqn. in~. prtf., must be TonQualityCFAkjtieof
lroot -and back needed SlOO/weekend ind up. broltera1• company. U40So eo.atHwy LI& volved In Merit Tra¥e1Aaent , ~ ..... ~ble.CalJbeU·S. Siam's, Kim's, Bair'.:,
for new Santi Ana Cell 5S2·3173. Ar111y Flexbrs.Jllatbaveown Bell. . . . Reviewa, Affirmative Expcomm-.ilnin2yra --~ 12$-.541-8587
Group practke. Good Resnve Be all you can car " lnlurance. CaJI Reltaurllll AcUoo Service Awarda exp. To train u asst w.c• r , t Dots 10"1
benefits and salary. be. . Elaine: ID-l55L IUSn PllJCAM SALIS-I' /T1MI and shirt tnnlfm . .Must lll!!!&er. l::J3.0C77 ............................................ !.
'Minimum 6 mooths ex· PART/TIJll: -Mature. lUO II ain St. at The Loi~ Tl have minimum of S PIST/R!lCEPTI ........ IOOS KEES'HOND Pups. AKC.
per. Pleuecall951-8000 J ::~t·o·~.-~a.;.~:~~t~·. Your bn .. s.Aea ' ap-MacArtbur, lrviDe. Now CirculaUoo Dept. ::. yean'slmil.v personnel p /T perm. position ••••••••••••o••••••••• Champ iitt M/F. Pett
Dent.al Hycienist speak E~h & be de-pUcalloo. Will train. tJ. acc:eptja& appllcaUooa, reotly h'as poallion• experience. Costa Mesa mfg. Co. Olk Buffet $105. Table sh 0 w . pvt p t.y,...,
Conscientious & en· ft6ndable.~ quid Wallpaper, illpoeiticm. available In sales u a good typing skills. tele. $160. Chairs $160. Zl3/197-00alt6pm. ~
thuslastlc wl:b Ex· ~ -..zz. · COOKS representative. You'll Join our team! Ofcoune exp. pref. lhlt wotttnc R:k~. Dre11er SHIH TZU pups. AK~.:
pvandenedtatdlutiveeaDoeroptrae-1 LATHEOPllATOI , ... -• ......._ KJBATCHENRTENDHEELPRS eam an bourl.)' ••*e + a"'a•laofryfeandr a coma competip·~~ee c~.631-0700 i.. Bl Wiii SZSOandup.C.Shonly .•
A11toP1rt1. Fully exper'd.•mall to c.iliii ceoeroua commiaa"ions. IC1. T~fSHt Ant que ue OW W.93111 :
Exp Auto Part.s Counter practice in Laguna med. precision parts. HAIDW AllS COCKTAIL Call ~7-2311, at. lJIM, ::~~~:Y in'::.m~n1T:!~ Fin1nc1&1 stmps. Tax re-china, 4 Ir& serving plat· POODLF.S 'R' PEOP~E
Person. Beacon Auto Niguel. '495-4600 Tooling & short run. WAITRESSES medlt1I, prescription, tu ma, form.s. Type 70 ten & l milk pitcher. Home· raised Tcup/M1~
Parts ----'=-'=---• -=-646-=-"1=81=3·'------Full or p/Ume. Appl.)': FOOD SERVERS Sal-w p M. 10 hy. Non 1.50. 494-'roCM. Groom ....... _,. u"' · Crown Hardware, 3107 BUS PERSONS ~0 dental and YiaiOn COY· • 0 0 a ......... _,.,
480N. NptBlvd. NB. DIYCW.tBS Legal Sec'l E cl H Cd.. SEA-....DBAR Part-lime Sale., el· erue· Wulsooffer 12~ smoker . Salary .1000 ..... ct. I I Amer P1"t BulJ Pups Dam 541-".. Frf cou-•-'· Prr pr..... ' 1 · wy, •· .rvv 'd u tb h d mo .. CPA finn, Costa ••.,......••••••••••••••••••••• . ._, ,,_ • '"-HOST/HOST~ES per · .o er oo pa holidays lncludina 1 SSlbs. Sire 951bs. Brt4.
IAIYSITla aser. Michel's Cleaners.. for N ewporl · each 1--------1 DISHWASHERS Maternity Boutique, a Christmas week •hut· Mesa. Call Caro e. FOi SALi' for Size. All CotC){'S. •t
_ __,.ed ,,.,. 2 c .. " .. -n. Monarch Bay.496.5124 Firm. must be In-pan '1111r ,_ •1...,. ....... .a Fashion laland, flex. down. For tmmedlete 754-UMO Coottop-(1\lrlaC!e ;.nae. weeks old. S200 & •11.c
-''""
011
""'' 11-------111 telllgenl and motivated, •I ... Day•....__,.., av..... hn. Eves/wkends. Call consideration, call or ap-· '9U'DT buil I I moolh '"1 my home, Cost.a Meu have excellent skills. ~ Apply in peraoa Mon· Mimi: 7!»-1151. TYPIST,-.. l· .n sty e), s 541-Wl • Ar!• t'1M7'1 Btctn.k hhl One to two years liUga-t I~ Fri .. t AM-SPll. -=='-""=-:;;;=---1 ply in penroo to: Sharp profeuiooal for tfi· comJ.na, 4 burner & AKC Gold Retriever Pup.
Bebysitter needed, 1 or z Proc~ ~· · Uon eq>er. Salary com· We are prmently seek· I•-------Sales penoe outside for busy Newport Beach of. L KE NEW!!! ONLY pies, $250 inclds 5~ aftensoona per week. Needed. Oppclrtwiity to •-'th bllit Ing icfulU with pleuant l.ndependmt auto leu -LEAi flrf't El Cice. R~ lltJ>eraJ SlOO! Call Aft63&4·*2 ·' C4M area. MIM158. create a new depart-mensura.., WI a y. cnooaUlies who would ........ in& co. Comm ... pboneli --office, moderate typirig. 714/631-0I 71
BABYSl'ITER ment for a growing. ConlactMaaie.~ in l~:-:S~O: ~~::hr!f"-~::~ ·c..:·=Uto.::.;(=714=-)-M2--19"--M-r-1. .::s 851.0UlSharon. HARBORAREA AK~~ood~eaii
1'les thni Sat 8:»5:30 medium siled dally Lllal Sec't .... ,..'".. -VW:EPllSIDIMT APPUANCESERVICE c beauu'ful r---•-. all _. newspaper. New main· with Dally PilotCarrien per'd. Part and fulli-------~ DIYISIOM w bu llled Ii nces " "'llMUC't ra.720-lOll frame computer system N~~po ctrReaJ ~te 10 to IS yeara old.I tJme. MoathnaP'ri .. 3001 Sa.Its 10401.°""~Md FIAMC:HISIM5 e Y lPP a red.FromS200 ~
BaMtn1 will be ordered inl Litigation Law Firm Unlimited earnin11: Ste 108 ~II Coll• llCIUl1WtS "-11)1... Must bave Masters -Wesellrecond.,guar. ~9562 P.t lllllTtler January (most likely st;eks exper'd ~gal~ available lo rlcht Meu.54t-WO Extt\ltive SNreb Flrm ~. 2 years train-appliances. 549-30'17 Brn poodle, altered ip e
E1cellenl OJ!portunlty larce DEC hardware with good tyJlln&, ~c· penon. Hr. 5:30PM to RESTAURANT. Cater· seek• bri&tlt, aunsslve Dyw.... Ing in corporate plan-I IUY APflUAMCIS aJI shots. Approx 8 me.
for experteeCed penon with specialized produc-taphone and SH skills. l :IOPM . Kooday thru in& firm bu openina for tterui&en wbo lhlnk &t s.MAM. Dini & 2 years related Ln . 167..al.33 $60. &40-7329
in attractive Savmas & 1 Uoo sonware>. Orfanit· Salary open. 64IMi960 Friday. Some Sad.trday respoo. adult to operate ri b.CalJ6'13-2tOZ CA. f27H experience. R.ese~~ le G. E . portable dh-....=..-..-......__._. ___ _
Loan. Immediate open·' ine and superv sory LMAl.SIC'Y availability. For •r· Hohl.rt auto. slicer & pow c · 17141540-JJIO analyu cable tel~ion hwasber. while, xlnt FOXTllltla
iJlloffersvarieddutless. ability essential. Exec. type for Sr. polnlment, cal ;• learn portiOft control. Equal~unity needs of community. cond. Im cuh only. :~re.b•;~llay °loK~~
Pa.ltion requires 3 days Previous hardware ex-partner in N.B. law 642-~321 , ask for Ben Eip. pref. but will train. s.c.....-EmploYer l(/f Draft proposals & pre-581-7151 pipered. Great .. 0~1 a week and aJtemated perience n«eSury and fi H ..... , .. skilled ·th Williama. 9:10AM to 6PM, Mon. Paf1\Ume.20bra. SKIPPER ctrtilled cap-fflll to eovemment of . ..=;~=------• ~ Saturdays until lpm. knowledge ol rudimen-mn. 160""' . W1 thru Thur .•. 6pu to m-a5'1I flcials. $13,125tmo. Con· Whirlpool Washer & Loves people. To too& MAGCARDexper.Top • • talnto•kipper51'ltelcb tact Bob Clasen for Dryer, 3 yrs old, xlnl home only. $20V call Linda It ™'UIOL ,. tary programming c OJll pt nsa ti o o t o lPM Sun. m-0747 for SECRET ARY I PA RT ri& a.ailin& yatht le 43' app't. 1714)848-3611. cood. S31SlbothSS8-Z73S sacrifice. Zl.M26-2llNll A
E.O.E. would be helpful This qualified person. CaJI PAITTIMI •nt. Lori'sKttcben. n .ME twin dleael motoring
ORANGEOOASTS&L I department will ~e Joyceal(n4>640-5650. Mailinaoperatlom NB firmMlkarespontl· yacht.Mllllbavtcomp. Takeadtonearestsllte ~':i!~~al~r'~: SK~'.~&~~.~:~I~~
1700 Adams. C.M. I c barged with t e No esper. req'd. Mmt be llSTAUIAMT ble, dependable Sec'y set of uplainl papen to employment service of. 1146-31m, ~l ext 281
BaJI.'"'-• resp on s I bi I it y to d nd bl and 11 1S-20 hrs/wk ; req. ac· meet ins ........ Part time ,.._,_, fem1le. 1 year old S5Cl •u11• operate, maintain, and MAI E epe a e avi. •· L un c b eon Waiter I w/MAC toatart. 53•1-0i47 fice in <>ranee \,NUllly. days 642·41161 ~ TIU9 rep al r components of Are you a jack of '11 ble on call. Npt Bc:h Waltreaa for busy cotree ~~J'°:~; t::W wprd'd. oor 114.117~10. Ad pa.id ...:Ref:.:;>&..:ri::...ge_r_ator-.-11-~-.-G~ood--:-...__ ,. ..... _ 1 ...... •
Newport office seeks t be 5 y stem w ith trades? Interested in a Fuhlon laland area. shop. E1cellenl co. STUDIMf for by employer. Cood. n-ww '---
full·tlme Teller 6 mo. minimal assistance full time position? We 'Jt0.0501,l:J0.12~30 be.neflts which include Call : 3-4PM,m..zc. needed, p/llme. Thunl< .. TeWn.l ' .. _ __. people ••64&-.3122u mix. Female l yr old. S•·L o ba ... nc -p · dl t r1 ll SEC'Y/nnnorvc-!PER ....., u.... Loves children. &~ . • r na1 "" · from the vendor. Reply need a servicepenoo to acoun P Y e.1u. ~ Frl.12:15-Z:lStobuldlS· possi le ia inq>Ortant to Washer & dryer, good
preferred. For further toJeffWeber, do minor repairs for Pule.up peraOD needed medluJ/dealal,lifelns., ForArcbitecturalFirm. bu for a volunteer tbt success of any cood. lat DIG. Vacuum &uardd0&.MZ-Z44Z
information and In· O~C...t maintenance equip· Thun, FrilsSat. Exp. prolltahariqlspemioo ___ 7:..::;52::;..~-14"'"'~'----i operated hmcheon pre>-garacesaJe . .Makesure cleaner,D>.IM-&lOl. Dalmalion Puppiei.';.
tervlew calJ: BtianTag· D Plot menl. Mon thru Fri. preferred. t1pln1 • pla.11.APl)binpenm: SICllTAIY gram In CdM . C1ll yours is •sled in -==~·=-"-""'~-'----• AKC.S2QG..S300. •
prta.4-7256 schedule. Excell co. muat. Apply Mon-Fri J.C.'919Y For mai.DUmnce n-o. en-uu. Mon-Fri. Clauified , pbooe lSc\lftupri&htfru. Frost ~1317 WbiWlN 'UoW.BaySl. benefits. Apply in t-$. lllO PlacmUa Ave. Uf'MJlioolsland,NB ~ M ·IO MZ·5'78 free . Working cond Lff•"AAPSOPUPS
,_Al eos~;1~~~ person: ;;:c~.M;tC.;;;t~:--~~=l'!!!Eii!.o!!.!iEi!.!!!!!!!lm!!!!!!!!!!!.iM!!/~11' ~.~:=:: · · · 75M644 Aictweetsold : SAYIM4KILOAM The Daily Pilot is an J.C.ftwr ~edCoatrol 1aolaed peraon with Near new Sears Dryer, (714)4116-Z2161
HC.-.. ,...,. I ur..-.w..a.NB I.Jc ..... Brucll "2" eeraloft'ieeand ~ CUTIVE SlOO.SofabedSlO.Couch Cout,.H NB. ••••' Opwport•• tyd E.O.E. M/F Peat C"ontrol lecb,_.n-.-..-11 -----I ti ••• ,. ........ ~ EXE .642-8905 German Shepbttds(~. "1.. . . Emplyr. omen an '"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~ accoun Q&....a . .....,...,. tF 3v, yn. Great "rem· SOE M/F minorities encouraged r. needed. Xlllt ...... Call CHllSl'MAS Tm pbo1le wort, requiri.n& KENMORE ELECTRIC perament. m. Older If.
toappty. MAMAI• ...;:54f.=-.. "-="-------i a.or tact Ii fut thiakina. DRYER ExcelJent cui· G-enUe, friendly, Good
lluking Prlva&.e community. POllTaAJT "Spotter" P'\lll • p/tlme pcllit.iom Permueat Frr with ex· s EC RETARY dition. sso.~ wlthkJdLl50. THILAGUMA Full or Prr hdp needed Send resume to· Tbree 6 /« pril& ftmber •I available ill CU' Garden eell f~benefttl. Ex· Sear Coldapot Refrl1. ••64S-IS2'7•• IAMl MA in clothing store. prefer Arch Bay,$ BaJ
0
Dr .. So. C'' ap'4.;ijt.. P~ Shop. IdeaJ achedu.le. ;~d ~ ~· :~ xlnt coodS::.. FrH to Y• lo.ff
(In OT&uiution) will mature woman. some Ll&una,CA.m. an., oa °'a ApplyinpenoD: It cl ·4 Mon-Fri Park ----'=-=-"----• •••••••••••••••••-••••
accellt applicalioos for ~.! ~!.':.·~-~~.55 1 r Y · MAMAMll
1
~!ti:Tu'°." C:!; J.C. P9MY NeWJ>O(t ApU, cometa Refri1. very clnn. late, Blk Lab, alJ shots, lie. lbepoelticllof .,..,.,,_.. for sa i boat r ent a lt'UH needad. Apply 1o,2 24 Fashioelsland, NB of Jambcne & Sa.n Joa-111to defrost. SIU. Needs tc yd Ii children
COt18CIAL (i"'"'Offl~ operatioo in Hlllllincton at On Sit• l>&oto E.O.E. M/F quin Hills Rd, NB. BIG 8 CP ~ FIRM · R~rilOIOI. fN>&t f-. clean, ..::;55=1~·1=672~----0..,. SICllTAIY Part lime. AIR. lite Sec Ha tbour. Thorouab Grapblu-Commerce 111111-------6'4·211122. A "" ''I"" ·~ Sia.mese. 3 yr old ne\it.
duties. hours flexible. Nr knowledoe of bolt ,. p-,. E ", -Harbor worb fine SlSO. S48-8$13, male. Perl for elderly Eiperlence necessary. e ou• "<# ........ SAl.IOAT SECIEJllY 54M4&S
E.scellent salary and OC Air~~-fib~~111~s'i~ng~e~i~~f:i ~9'""l~vd=·...-.CP.-MR_·~--~,.--lt4STIUCTOll LOCATED IH FASHION ISLAHD W11ber, clean, works Acdpol.r~:1·:l~lleo, house beneftts. Please contact 0 tb d uuu~ needed In Newport Irvine ad 11enc:y has d ••c ••• 8513 or personneloffirerforap· GeneralHelp nec_ess~!i.~pt~ar Opera te AB Dick Be1cb. 15-27• cruising challengtna, fast paced ~"· _,. trained lo good home . .8
,ointment. Dellveries,HelpinShop. enguie .~ . 360/key 51 head. Need sailboat. W\end.s. Call spot for someone with B' 8 CPA r· l t d . weeltsF.64S-9153 • 494-9471 write orders, answer (213)271-2677 . uper. dependable (714)64$-7100. print production exper. ig trm oca e m Dryer. au. clean. works ,..... 1050
301 Forest Ave, Suite Al phones, etc. Apply lo 10 Management Trainees person for lop quallty Will be involved ln p~ Fashion Island is seeking a good $75. 548.8513 or •••••••••••••••••••••••
LlpnaBeadl,12651 Beverly Bel':fieen todistri~anewskl.n work only. Npt Bc:b. SALES duclion. traffic and professional secretary. S4l-448S ** IBUY ** EOE M/F lHPM. At WS C1rc:uts. care' product. Call for M4-8Z33 Telephone sales-now purchasing. Send re· Ty . 75 horth d lOO Refria. 2 yrs. old, 18 cu.
1211 Logan. CM. appointment Wed & -=P-../;;...;T=H"-e-l_p_W_ 1 1-n-t.,..e-d accepting applications sume to A4 No 938 c/o pmg wpm, S an ft.aide Xside. eold. $400. Good UJed Furniture le
BOATCLEANEft Tbrus 8 to 1Z only. Sandwlch5110ploc. near for an uaertivt penon Daily Pilot D> W. Bay wpm, capable of working_ 760-Gll5 Appliances-OR I will
OD t.be Wiler loation. GeneraJ ~91»6. f z oc Alrport. W'tll Train :.1~ lx~~tF~lec:,h~iT =~:~ 1.560, eo.ta independently, well organized SeanKaunore70washer M~S=~
PttferFem'.ale.513-9321 Attainst.atusasa m1turewoman,care or Hrs. U-3 Mon ·Fri. Call sales poaition. Appty In and versatile. Competitive IJ ,dr1er, needs •orlt. VICTOR TEMPORARY boys S & S yrs. Room & before u or all 2 Moo person 1_, Plicentia, Secretary 1100. G.E. Trub Com· 64M616,ll3-'6ZS
IOAT MICHAMC Nall onwlde. long board+ salalyMl-7052 thni Fri. &13-334Joxce C 111 all M J Small 1 1irl--Office. s tarting salary and excellent pactor, 125. '4 camper I IUY .. _..._ • needed for 111lbo1t estab'd'., loc. firm. Top bra da' · ·or c : r. ones General Office Wort. b f' b 11 US Call Art· ,._,.,_ cbarterclubiDNewport pay,bonus.neverafee! MOO&S/ISCO«TS P/Ume.7days.2 • I· 642.-u. 631.21JCN ene its. ;see.OU . . Les 951.al.33
Beach. Will work ,on We need: Attn Femilesonl)' ly. AM delivery L.A. Sales -=--·'-'-"-·'-·-----J KING INNERSPRING
pumps, maina & ng-ITYPISI'S 953-(871 Tima. SlOO per week. ~ ~ New Ma)'UIC Wuher & EXTRA nRM ma~
liog. On the job exper. tSECRETARJES Ll&una BeadL...,.. P011tioo opm Idling~ ForClwifiedAd CALL FOi APPOINTMENT Dryer. Im. ~. never med, worth + ref'areg.m.9060. I GENERALOFFICE MCIUO P/TIMllYm••S ader ad advertlslng to ACl'ION 17141 64().9200 •27Mor'J54.6836 SS30. sacr. S248 del Boolck~ IPACKING OPllATOI e ,. I local mercharU in a p~ Call a Westing~. Fridae. Never used queen $1,
t ASSEMBLERS Dulieswillincludepoet· T ... c.rtln tected territory. Ex-DailyPilot EXT 247 SS7·7M6 worth $399, cash only TuaUD. full ti • AIR. ./WARDIOUSE · 1 J d•uv 1-•~ li'""t AduJ'· _.. ....... ,-.. in& cellenl commiuio.11 &r AJ>.VISOR • / 1218 del. Usually boo)t.
A/P, payroll. highly or· vtCTc:>a ;;fie:'; & ~~No attr:ctiv';'~-bonus prograw. good 642-58'11 EOUAI.. OPPORT\JNITY EMPLOYER I GE wuberic•*· dryer, 754-73$0
au., effidell. resp .. ex-Temporary Service experienc-e ne.ceaaary, •bo ~ woftiDI with co. Mtlefita. Apply 1t --------x1nt cood, $150 ea. or Bunk bed; solid wood.
per. non-smoMr. Grow· 551-l520 EOEM/F wllltrain.Xlntcompany 1().1$ 1tar old youths. Th• Pel1A)'11ver, 1660 =======::J.!=======~~~~~~~~ $250both.118-16.Sl handcrafted, ouutaOd-ia&Mfr.andSer.related !'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ benefits -··e. Coo-Evetlblp &-t p.m. Call Pl1ceatia,C.ll. ZO cu ft aide-by-side innualit,y$US.S31H92i bualoeu. Good salary. w ~De --'-'-• cond --.7300 Gill rap tact Mr. we rmolt: 642-021, ext. 343 Salel/Ad¥w:11...... l'ri&idalre, :itlm , no 20 sofas. New. 118. Lov-
HICICOIYFAIMS (n4)644.181. between 2 p.m. and $ Eneraetic )'OUllS com· lcemaker,pz5.~16 eseats $88. SletJ)e(s,
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Call 631-9754 or
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1.
I,
By FaEOt:alCK SCHOEMEHL .................
An audit has revealed that
Orange County 1overnment was
overcharged more than S4.9
million by the University of
California for care provided for
indigents over a three.year
period at the UC Irvine medical
Center.
The audit report, obtained
Tuesday, shows that the county
has recovered about $1.4 million
of the overcharged a mount, thus
leaving a balance of S3.S million
~ounty officials say the
university should pay.
. The two.year audit was
performed b y the county
Auditor-Controller's office to
determine if amounts billed to
the county by the university
renected the university's actual
costs of providing the services.
William Gonzalez, direct.or of
the medical center, In a
statement released today said
the audit was based on
completely ··unreal isllc' ·
assumptions. He c laimed a
Niguel widow
'right'
to sue U.S.
• wins
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... Delty ..........
A federal appeals court has
r uled that a Laguna Niguel
widow may s ue the government
for negligence in the death of
her M.arine husband who died of
cancer in 1977.
Alice Broudy contends the
cancer of the lymph glands that
killed Maj. Charles A. Broudy
four years ago was the result of
expos ure to radiation during
atomic tests in Nevada in 1957.
In Its ruling Monday, the 9th.
U .S . Circuit Court in Sao
Francisco said Mrs. Broudy can
take to trial her allegations that
the government failed to warn
her husband after his retirement
in 1960 that radiation exposure
from the tests could res ult in
health problems. ·
Saying the court decision
"was a tremendous shot in the
arm," Mrs. Broudy'said she will
now be able to "ask for a jury
trial like everyone else in the
United Stales."
The government contended a
serviceman cannot s u e the
government Lor injuries
received while on duty.
Mrs. Broudy said Monday's
ruling means she can file suit
against the United Sl ates for
negligence.
·'I was suing the government
in order to be able to sue the
government," she said today in
a telephone intervie~.
"I 've been fighting the
government for four years and
this is the first 'up' l've had,"
she said.
"The VA (Ve t e ran 's
Administration > says a
<See MARINE, Pa1e Al>
Orange ma.n held
in hit-run death
By STEVE MARBLE ...... ......, ..........
A 20-year-old resident of
Orange was arrested today in
connection ,with the hit-and-run
death of Donald Barry Warner,
the 26-year-old who was struck
Sept .. 19 while crossing a
Newport Beach intersection.
James Samuel Gibbs, wlice
said, surrendered himself to
Newport authorities today after
an unnamed witness identified
him a s the driver of the
hit-and-run vehicle.
Gibbs was booked on charges
of vehicular manslaughter.
gross negligence and felony
hit-and-run. He Is being held in
lieu of $10,000 bail at the
Newport city jail.
Police have been seeking the
driver of the car for weeks. A
vehicle identified as the death
car was found abandoned in a
Whittier shopping center several
days after the incident.
Newport investigator Al Miller
said Gibbs was the registered
owner of the car. But, he added,
authorities could not arrest
Gibbs because there were no
witnesses who could identify the
Orange man as the driver.
M Iller said a witness came
forward Monday who was able
to select a photograph of Gibbs
from a stack of pictures.
Police said a warrant was
obtained for Gibbs' arrest and
that the 20-year -old turned
himself in today.
Warner. a native of Maryland
who had moved to Newport just
weeks before his death, was
crossing Balboa Boulevard at
31st Street when he was knocked
down by the car.
Witnesses told police the
driver of the vehicle had his
· headlights out. Warner was
thrown onto the car 's hood,
police said. They said the car
sped off after Warner rolled
from the hood to the ground.
Warner was taken to the
trauma center al Fountain
Valley Community Hospital
where he died several hours
later.
Fuel leak fixed;
shuttle crew set
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
CAP ) -Launch control
technicians fixed a troublesome
leak in the space shuttle's huge
* * * Shuttle due
live netu;ork
coverage
NEW YORK (AP > The
three major commercial
television networks are planning
live coverage Thursday morning
of the la\mching of· the space
shuttle Columbia , their
representatives said.
Llftoff.was scheduled for 4:30
a.m. PST.
ABC will broadcafl live from
Cape Canaveral Fla., from 3
a ,m . to 6:30 a .m .. Including a
apeclal "ahuttle" edition of ill
"Good Moming America'' 1bow,
s•ld 1pokeu11an Alan Raymond.
CBS wtu be on lhe air from a
•. m. to 5 a.m., said •Pokn· wom•n Oeraldlne Sharpe
Newt.ca NBC ~ a 1peelal four·hour ··~a.IQ lbow from lbe launch ·-. ,..,.. J a.m. to 1 •.m., 1ald
1i••f1man Howard y I_, 'm 'II• .. bile BroadtHllDI ~""·"~-~ ... for
external fuel tank today and
Columbia was on course for a
Thursday dawn liftoff, officials
said. ·
"It's slowed down to where it
belongs, .. NASA official Michdel
Weeks said of the leak.
NASA was also checking a
malfunctioning system needed
for space-to·ground data
analysis. but Weeks -acting
deputy space administrator -
said '"there is no reason lo
believe" the trouble would force
postponement of the launch.
The astronauts, still a little
worried about the weather. were
"relaxed and ready lo go, '
ac <:ordine to shuttle test
manager Donald • • Deke"
Slayton.
Either a fuel tank or data J
instrument problem could force.
a scrub ·' the second tn as many
weeks.
The fuel tank leak ,
parUcularly, had jeopardized
lhe second effort to launch the
shuttle on ill delayed retum to
apace. Th• drop ln fuel tank
pressure wu more than three
time• the normal lou of .z pal,
but by manually openlnc and
c101in1 a vent valve, Weeki
aald, tecbnldans were able to
atabllile tM ~ure. ~~ tl'eWI •• ,. wonliaa
the d•ta lutrument proltlem
durlDI an ll·boar pla•••d
.. hoht'' umbel• at I a .m . PST
tOday. •
preliminary rev\ew indicates
·•generally accepted·' audit
practices weren't followed .
The audit covers fiscal 1976·'171
1977·78 and 1978·79. No audits
have been conducted for the past
two fiscal years because a new
rel m bursement arran1ement
was instituted aner 1978•79.
Disclosure of the audit
findings may set the sta1e for
further disagreements between
the county and the university
about costs related to medical
care for indigents for which the
county has a tlnancial
responsibility.
That care ls provided al the
universily·owned medical
center, located In Or1n1e, under
a contract a1reemenl. The
agreement took effect in 1'78 ·
when the county sold the
medical center lo the unlvel"lity
for use as a leaching hoapltal.
The S4.9 million auditors
claim was overbilled is separate
from S8 million lo disputed
billings over which the county
and university are Involved in
A~...._.
Caseade or wa ter douses Dan Goodwin as lie l'l1m h.'i ./t>lin llam:o1:k
Centel' hwfdmy m .Cl11cayo
Building climber
reaches the top
C HICAGO <APl -A~robat
Dan Goodwin, wearing a red and
blue costume, crawled to the top
of a 100-story building with the
mayor's blessing today after
fir efighters doused him with
water to try to make him slop.
The 25-year-old Goodwin, "who
in May climbed the Sears
Tower. the world ·s tallest
building, began moving up the
100-story John Hancock Center
building at 7: 10 a .m . ano
r eached the top at 12:55 p.m.
He evaded a window-washing
scaffold and kept going, even
through a waterfall unleashed
from above by firemen in an
effort to render useless the
s uction cups he has used in
previous climbs. ,
But Goodwin wa s using
special clamps inserted in window-~ashlng tracks. Finally,
Mayor Jane Byrne ;rave him the
go-ahead to finish.
Groups of c hildre n out of
school on Veterans· Day formed
c heering sections and yelled.:
"Let him go! Let him_go!"
Some people passed him bot
coffee lo ward off the chill as he
came near windows opened by
would-be rescuers.
Earlier, Fire Commissioner
William R. Blair said, "We'U
stop him." Police Supt. Richard
J . Brzeczek, arriving late at the
scene, ordered the water
slopped and said be was wiJling
for Goodwin to continue to the
top.
The impasse was broken with
the arrival of Mrs. Byrne on the
37th floor, where Goodwin had
been boxed in by two crossed
poles pushed In front of him
from open windows on either
side.
While Goodwin drank more
corfee, the mayor spoke to him
from an open window. She
ac:J,,dressed him as
''Spider-Man," a name he had
taken when he climbed the Sears
Tower.
··We told him he was
jeopardizing his life and if be
went on , he would be going oo at
his own risk," said Mrs. Byrne.
United Way raises
$6.2 milli~n so far
arbitration proceedings'.
In a memorandum lo the
county Board or Supervisors.
Audltor·Conlroller Vic Helm
said the S4.9 million in
overcharges are attributable to
two fact.on.
First. ~ounty officials say the
uolver•lty ts charging for
servtcea not permitted under the
1976 agreement which governs
the provialon or indigent care.
Second, it is the county's
posltioo that tbe university is
cbargln1 for .services at levels
higher than that permitted by
state guidelines.
Heim recommended In the
memorandum that the S3.S
m illion In outstanding
overcharges be billed to the
university.
Medical Director Gonzalez,
said : "Ou r preliminary
Judgem ent ls lhat generally
accepted audit $tandards have
not been applied an this case.
··it appears from a
preliminary assessme nt of the
(See AUDIT, Page A%)
Newport group
terms Irvine
firm 'unfair'
Disgruntled Newport Beach
residents who say they're facing
up lo a 6,000 percent increase an
annual land lease payments to
the Irvi ne Company, have
scheduled a protest rally
Thursday evening at Corona del
Mar High School.
The group, which claims the
Irvine Company is "forcing
many of us out of our homes and
out of the community," calls
itself the Committee of 4,000.
There are 4,000 pieces of
property in Newport and Irvine
that homeowners are leasing
from the Irvine Company. Many
or. these muJli-year leases. put
together in lhe 194-0s and sos. are
comin1Aue.
Barbara Young, a n escrow
officer who IS pres ident Of the
non-profit citizen group, says the
cily is full of "horror stories" in
which homeowners are being hit
with iocreased lease payments
they can not handle
She s ays on e r esident of
exc lusive Bayshores IS facing
the prospect of going from an
a nnual leasehold fee of S500 to
S90 ,000. She also reports that a
fee of an elderly widow in
BayS'hores is going from S407 to
$10,296 a year. The widow, Mrs.
Young says , can't afford the
higher payment a nd can't find a
buyer for her house.
''We 're aware that some
people are faced with a problem
and we'r e looking into ways to
(See LEASES, Page AZ) '
Slaying suspect
battered spouse?
By GLENN SCOTT ..............
A p aychologist who has
treated Telford ''Tim" Moore,
the cMfendant i.n the November
1980 shooting death of roommate
Stanley Espinda, testified
Tuesday Moore ls not
homosexual but was a classic
example of a battered spouse.
Dr. Stephen Morin of San
F.raocisco told an Orange
County Superior Court jury that
he consulted with Moore first in
M.ay 1980 at the request of
Espinda, who was homosexual
and wanted Moore to believe
that be was too.
Moore and E s pinda, who
shared a house on Newport .
Beach's exclusive Spyglass Hill,
were both psychologists. Morin
said he was known to Espinda
because or his encouragement
for homosexuals not to hide their
sexual orientation.
Morin said he is founding
pr esi dent of the gay
psyctlologists association.
But after hearing Moore
describe his "wonderful ,
joyous" feelings of love for his
girlfriend, Glory Lane of Laguna
Beach. Morm said he counseled
Moore to follow has heterosexual
feelings and end the re lationship
with Espinda.
Moore also told stories of how
Espinda h ad beaten and
sexually abused him over their
18-year relationship. but bow he
nevertheless respected his
companion. said Morin.
That loyally to someone who
brutalizes you (''In som e
s ituations, it was clearly a case
of rape." I is the key to being
classified as a battered wife. or
rn this case, a battered spouse,
Morin added.
"I told him his problem was
not sexual orientation," said
Morin. "The problem was that
he was unbelievably passive."
He said Moore had ··an
e xtremely controlling mother
who m ade dec isions about
absolutely everything for him."
The defendant never learned
<See SPOUSE, Page AZ >
'All sYstems go'
for balloonists
ALBUQUEROUE, N.M. (AP>
-A jetliner eslabUshed voice
contact with Dou1>le Eagle V
today a nd the four-man crew
reported "all systems were go"
In their effort lo become the first
to float across the Pacific Ocean
in a balloon. a spokesman said.
Glenn $imoes, a spokesman
for the project in Miami, said
the baUoon al 4: 15 a .m . PST was
about. 2,100 miles away from the
I aunch site in Japan and
speeding along at 94 mph at an
altitude ot 16,000 feet.
After 45 hours Into their
journey, Simoes saitl, "the crew
was in excellent spirits and
condition."
U the balloon continues on lts
present trajectory, Simoes said,
lt would be expected to land
Qear Saa Luis Ob'-Po sometime
Frid1y mornlni. But that
projection la subject lo
~ti...,_. cbanse because the -.i;; .. be •leered. .ailed polyethylene
~ II . t•U H a H·1tory , MU b lfled off from the ,_.\tll:Jliillln di,of NapshAma ......
JJae Woo ••••· a 1D01-.11111111 .. w
This had caused the balloon to
ice and "seek a lower a ltitude of
approximately 12,000 feet," she
said.
But the balloon su ccessfully
penetrated the showers a nd "the
weath~r satellite s hows clear
skies a head," Mrs. Woodward
said.
DRllCI COAST lllTHIR
Extensive low c louds
and local fog tonight and
.Thursday morning .
Otherwise rair and cooler.
Highs 66 to 72. Lows
tonight SO to SS.
111181 TIDIY
A UC Soft DWoo profeuor
1011a the lftltlwr tent fOjd fn
the Bible to hove contained
the ark of the cownant 'reollJI
e;ri•ltd. Sft ~AU.
\.
From Page A1
MARINE. • • serviceman must file (for
• diasabilily) within a year or
discharge,'' she said. "What
they were saying was forget it,
Charlie, if you die 17 years
later."
Mrs. Broudy's attorney, Ron
Bakal, said the ruling and
s ubsequent trial "will be of
monumental importance,"
adding a n estimated 200,000
veterans were exposed to
radiation during weapons tests
between HMS and 1962.
The then-Lieutenant Broudy
witnessed the Hood atmospheric
atomic blast 24 years ago and
was approximately S.000 yards
from ground zero, the attorney
said.
He said that immediately
after the explosion. Broudy was
ordered to march from his
trench to ground zero in
ma11euvers.
Mrs. Broudy said the next step
will be to go back to Los Angeles
district court for a jury triaL
She said .she will be asking for
$10 million in damages, if the
government does not appeal
the 9th Circuit Court decision.
·'We could take from 10
months to a year to gel the case
ready for trial," she said. "We
Jlave to do a lot of discovering
proceedings. deposi lions.
interrogatories and contacting of
witness~."
But she's optimistic of a
successful trial. .
"I wasn't able to sue the
government because I was a
serviceman's widow. Now I can
• ask for a jury trial just like
everyone else .in the United
States." she said.
From Page A1
SPOUS E • • •
how to be W\Serllve In intimate
relationships, Morin said.
Moore's relationship with the
dominating Espinda was much
the same. he said.
"Stanley made the major
decisions -everything Crom
articles of clothing to where they
were going to stay to what his
profession would be," he said.
In such battered spouse cases.
Morin explained, the passive
members sometimes "flip out"
from the constant abuse and act
irrationalJy. Morin said Moore
told him he was planning swcide
· because of the pressures from
poth Espinda and Ms. Lane. who
,, .he was hoping to marry.
"Hi s image was to slick a gun
tn his mouth and blow his brains
out in front of Stanley as the
.ultimate gross-out. That's the
way he d escribed it," said
Morin.
Morin said a rea sonable
interpretation of the shooting is
that Moore first did thrust the
gun into his mouth but then
experienced, due lo stress. what
Morin called a "brief reactive-
psychosis" and blacked out.
According to a tape recording
of Moore's panicky telephone
call to the Newport Beach Police
Department soon after the
shooting, Moore said he had
been in the bathroom when he
heard a shot and the words "you
dummy." Moore climbed out the
bathroom window and ran to a
neighbor's house to call for help,
he told a dispatcher.
Morin said that irrational
recollection is consis\ent with a
p s y c ho tl c ·re a c t I o n th at
prompted Moore to turn the gun
on Espinda and then
unconsciously invent the other
story.
All Moore remembers during
the shooting, Morin said, is a
"dull whiteness," with no-eense
of sound, smell or taste .
OC she ·ff flays pUbiic defender
~ ~ PAT&JCK KENNEDY reportef that he believes Ga tu, O , who · s up for enforcement orrlclal1 can't &9....,"C..... Sh lit 8 d Edwards would have confessed re-election· nexJ June. "And mo v c u n tit we It t t the G ran1e ount~ tr ra to the 1hootlng1. Edwardl had there are other severe criminal permt11 Ion ot a jud1e... Gates
atu aays he belleve1 hi• a l read Y ad m It t e d to actt we suspect he waa Involved said. "But on the other 1lde, lnveaU~at.on would have 1otten lnv11tt11tora that he waa in the In that we'll never k11ow about." ther •a no concern about how a
a con etslon from 1 former torttt. But after talk Ina with public deft'nder aclt." Costa Mesa man who 11 a Giannini he refused to-anawer Gates contends the public d , I suapect In the •hoolln1 ol two queallona, Gates said. defender's office should have E ward!, a iormer emp oyee I l I Cl I d N U I or th Jrvtne Gun Club, wae Ir s n eve an 1 ona Galea said Edwards had euldellnes and should be urrested tn College Park, Md .
Forest if • county public declined the right to an attomey appointed to ca$ea by the courts and later questioned by Orange
defender hadn't volunteered to a n d had agreed to b e based on the suspect's financial County deputies for 11 couple of
rep0resent the suspect. Interviewed by invesllaatora. status, rather than being able to hours before being contacted by
ates, speaklna before an But after conferrln& with the freely volunteer leaal services. Giannini. Oran1e Coast A11oclation public defender, Edwards •
lunc heon lo Newport Beach refused to talk and decided to Orange County Public A shcrJft's deputy refused to
Tuesday, repeated his previoua light extradition proceedings to Defender R on Butler has let the public defender talk to
criticism ot_ Deputy Public bring him to southern defended Giannini's action as Edwards, but Giannini later Derende~ Michael Giannini. Callfomia, Gales said. Edwards being proper and with called a jailer who gave his
Giannini cqp~acted auapect ls charged with murdering one precedent. meuaee to Edwards. Edwards
Thomas Francis Edwards. 37. of the lwo l2-year-old girls he orange County Supervisors called the public defender and
by telephone shortly after allegedly shot on Sept. 19. The have formed a committee of s aid that -he wanted to be
Ed w.ards was arrested In other girl survived. lawyers and judges to evaluate represented. Marylan~ on Sept. 28· · • We had ha If of i l (a the public defender's action. Edwards was expected to be Afterhlsspeec~.Gatestolda confession) a lready,'' said ··u .seems that law extraditedthisweek,Gatessaid. .
J
Cl/Af'F.S O\'£R CASE
Slwri11 Brad Gates
Dancing out, .music in at Cuckoo -~i~~~~-..
help t~em," says Jerry ColUns ,
By JE&JtY CLAUSEN ·music, Talmo said. which it h"as created." appeal before the state Supreme an Irvine Com_Pany spokesman. °' .... .,...,,.......,. In February, the City Council Talmo said today principal Court But the citizen group, which
Dancing· will be prohibited at revoked the club's permit after corporation owners Jerry Roach Such an appeal. he said. as not 1 n c I udcs policeman· turned
the Cuckoo's Nest punk-rock owners or nearby businesses and Pete Williams aren't sure dc f1n1le at this point but 1s author Joseph Wambaugh on its
nightclub in Costa Mesa as the complained that punkers were whether the court ruling will "probable." hoard of directors, maintains
result of a state appellate court vandalizing their property. affed future club crowds. Costa Mesa's city attorney. ~h e I rvane Company is being
decision. Police rep.orted that law "Dancing is not a vital part of Tom W~. said today he's very ·u~fa•.r:. callous and totally
Ron Talmo. attorney for enforcement 1n the area bas tbeoperation,"Talmosaid. nappy with the appell ate court 1 n sen~1t1v e to the severe
Mc Duck Vorp. which operates been a . problem because of lbe "It's important In the sense of decision. hardships."
the controversial nightclub at cllentele the club draws at 1714 having live bands. When there is tie added. however. that has The group has placed full -page
17th Street and Placentia Placentia Ave. loud music. kids stand there and offi ce 1s studying the possibility ads in local newspapers stating
Avenue. said today he received An Orange County Superior have to clap hands move or do of requiring pe rmits for live it ha!> retamed a law firm and is
a 4 ·~·page copy of · the 4th Court upheld the revocation and som ething. It's tough listening to entertainment regardless or its prepared l? file a civil suit.
District Court of Appe4ls ruling McDuck Corporation appealed live bands without doing use in conjunction with dancing The Irvine Company leases
Tuesday. the decision on the basis the something. •. , . call for residents lo pay an
prohibit live bands which appear revocation restricted freedom of Si~cc Aug~st 01 last y~ar. annual fee of 6 percent or the
every weekend at the club. expression granted by the First "We 'll stay open with the police have arrested or cited la.nd value. The problem is that,
Originally, Talmo said, the Amendment to th e U.S . bands, providing the punks more than 200 persons aro~nd with many of the leases set to
City of Costa Mesa noted in Constitution. come in. IC they decade they the club on C'ha~ges rangang c:x p1re 1n lhe next several years,
court that revocation of the In the opinion signed by don't want to go to the Cuckoo's ~~~.m curfew viol a.lions to land once worth Sl0.000 now may
entertainment permit prohibits Pres iding Appellate Court Nest because they can't dance. assa~lt with a deadl) weapon, be valued at Sl million or
both dancing and live music. . Justice Robert Gardner, the it will hurt .. -." om cials report. higher
Subsequently , before the court ruled that dancing at the Ta lmo said he doubts owners The most r ecent of sax The development firm says
appellate court , the city nightc lub involved a will wait until after Dec. 9 _ c rackdowns occu rred twp that 60 such leases expire or
admitted that ordinances do not "negligible" aspect of free when the appellate court ·s weekends ago when 90 wer(: come up for readjustment in
regulate live band. only dancing speech when it Is compared to decision is effective and dancing a rrested or cited within a 1982 and that 40 leases will come
accompanied by live -band "the serious police problem is banned _ before filing an t\\oblockradiusof theclub dueeachofthe next sax years. . , The citizen group charges that
From Page A1
AUDIT. • •
summary Just receive~hat this
audit is based on the completely
unrealistic assumption that all
positions taken by the county in
all three years and since. are 100
percent accurate.
"No rational observer could
agree with this,"
Gonzalez said the university
would want the audit findings to
become part or the current
arbitration proceedings.
indicating the university does
not intend to pay the S3.S million
based solely on the county's
contention the money is owed.
County officials say the results
of the audit have been discussed
with the uni versity on two
occasions.
According to the report, the
county was liable for $15.l
million in university costs over
the three-year period, but paid
slightly more than S20 million
based on charges submitted by
the university. The difference
between the two figures ls the
$4.9 million.
Chuck Hulse. acting chief of
audits. said the county has
recovered about $1.4 milUon by
withholding certain payments to
the university. The county began
withholding those funds based
on a 1979 partial audit that
showed the charges were
exceeding the university's cos'5.
Hulse identified two areas
which auditors claim the county
was overcharged.
He said the university charges
for professional fees, such as for
physicians' services. "that we
believe are covered <paid )
under the transfer agreement."
And. Hulse said, the university
has charged "excessive"
depreciation by using as a base
the fair market value of the
large facility rather than its
book value, that is, the amount
the university paid for the
center. a substantia lly lower
figure.
Moral majority
wants n e w ERA
TUCSON, Arlt. <AP> -Moral
Majority leader the Rev. Jerry
Fa I well is calling for a new
women's rights amendment to
the Constitution once "we have
buried the corpse of the Equal
Rights Amenltment."
Falwell also said he fav(lrs· an
anti-abortion amendment to the
Constitution.
Judge lambastes Brooke's the Irvine Company. because 1t
owns large amounts of land an mom Newport, "controls" the market
and as responsible for the high
IC1nd values. NEW YORK <AP> -A judge
who decided to permit conUnued
publication of nude photos of
Brooke Shields made a case
against the teen-age actress·
mother. saying she is trying to
"have it both ways " by
exploiting her daughter and
protecting her at the same time.
Mlss Shields went to court to
From Page A1
UNITED. • •
indicating how much has been
raised thus far -$6,273,459.
Also aiding in the festivities as
"Gong Show" judges were
sports stars Rod Carew of the
California Angels, Doug France
of the Rams and Mark Creese of
the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Roger Owen , the famous
peanut vendor from Dodger
Stadi um . also delighted
participants with demonstration
or his peanut-pitching arm.
Mellow music from the Ralph
Blaze Orchestra and a
s leight-of-hand demonstration
by Howard "The Magic Man"
Morgan rounded out the
evening's entertainment.
Bob Elder. the ~lse-cracklng
sports director of KEZY-Radio
in Anaheim, was master of
ceremonies. Tuesday's pep rally was a
brief respite from the UnJled
Way 's serious business of
raising millions of dollars to aid
86 community agencies In an era
of evaporating government aid
to social programs.
Interviewed during a lull in
the festivities. Newport Beach
busrnessman Maury DeWald,
volunteer campaign chairman,
commented on the special
difficulties ·racing fund-raisers
this year.
··we estimate th at the
shortfall because of federaJ
budget cuts coulfl exceed $2
million -just to the 86 agencies
helped by United Way of Orange
Cou nty," he said . "That
shortfall must be made up by
the people who live and work
here."
DeWald acknowledged that
the lncre'aslng demand for
donations from the private
sector may alienate some
people.
"I think to a certain extent
when you're soliciting people to
death, it can cause problems,"
he said. ''But I think the proce&s
also causes people to prioritize
their donations.
stop a photographe r rrom
marketing nude photos taken or
her when she was 10 years old
under an agreement with her
mother .· Judge Edward
Greenfield threw out the swt
Tuesday and said Teri Shields
"must be responsible not onJy
for what she does for her child ,
but lo her cnitd ...
Greenfield said photographer
Garry Gross could market the
photos as long as he does not
make them available to
pornographic publications.
Gross said he was plea!led with
the decision.
Miss Shields. 16. clai"led the
photos. oqe of which shows her
1n heavy makeup s tanding
naked in a bathtub. embarrasses
her now that she is older and
well·known through her three
mo,·1es and her T V commercials
for hlue Jeans .
The photographs were made
loT a Playboy Press publication
called ··sugar and Spice." Miss
Shields was paid $450 and Gross
got Sl.000 from Playboy Press.
G r eenf1 e ld . of l he state
Su preme Court, New York's
second-hi ghest court. said the
photographs might cause Mi ss
S hi e ld s "p e r so n a l
e mbarrass m e nt " but n ot
"irreparable harm ...
I n •ine Company s pokesman
Collins responds that "1t's th~
marketplace. not us. that sets
the values." He says his firm
uses an independent appraiser
to set land values.
··We are concerned about
this." Collins says, .. and we're
cons idering alternatives for
helping special problems but we
can't artiflc1ally devalue th~ land."
The 7.30 p.m. rally at Coron
de l Mar High. the group says, is
bean~ called to put the Irvine
Company on wam~ng that the
gN>up 1s ser ious and means
business.
-STEVE MARBLE
Winter ·Upholstery Sale!
Stock Items or Special O rder
REDUCED ... for this event! ·
Such manufacturers as: WOODMARK-
ST ANTON COOPEH Included.
ALL LEATHER IN STOCK 25°/o OFF!
., , r
... View Our New ... ' GIFT &·ACCESSORY DEPT.
Also
Custom Floral Arrangements
Made to Order
ORANGE COAST D1ilyPilat CIH 9'ftecl.....,_elnt11....,...,. All ~ .,.,.,..,.. 142-4121
''I think the United Way is the
finest way for people to gel
behind 86 co m..aiunlty
oreanizallona throueb one
agency.''
I !
=\,
MAIN OPflea ......... 11..C-.Mele,CA, ......... : .. 1 ... c.. ..... CA. ..
c:.trllM"" Or-. c.... ,." ••• ~· ... _ ................................ .. -'••::=---_, .. •• 1 ..... ..-1e1"" J5*lefi1""'1114t-.
DeWald is managina partner
for Peat, Marwick. Mltchetl and
Co. or Newport Beach.
A1ked why he hJJ donated hlJ
time to be campal1n chairman,
DeWald replied, "I think any
person who h11 enjoyed any
dear•• of 1ucce11 In any
endeavor la not able to
experience real 1ucc111 until he
alvu a little back to t he
community.
"It'• nry important for
evtl'YQIM to 1tt IDYolftd Md plowlOllleol~t.ek
lDto COllUIHIDll1 ~··
,.
QUALITY • DESIGN • VALUE
..............
FRUIT FLY INVAD ER Oh~l'l'\l'l'S <il t lH.' l'ap1tnl 111
Sa<.-ramento \\'l'l'l' surpnsl•d Tul•..;da~ lo Sl't' a l'l'l"So l\ Ill .1
:\1ed itern .1nl•an I n11l fl.' l'tbl11nw l'\;tllll!.! lhl• i.'.O\ l•rnor ...
ret·ept11>n al'l'•• Thl· 111d1' l'lual retll'l"l to 1·ll•nt 1t' h11n~t·l:
hut s mcl ht• "a~ h1n•d '" .1 ltwal PH t1rm 10 •1a11 d ntll l1-.1 ~ll't-.
puhl1C.·11.rn ~ .1 l111m11r111i-. (';tl1.11n11:1 \h•d:h < '1111:..h1111:_
'Dead' Dlotorist
alive but s ore
IMPERIAL BEACH <AP> -
Isidro Gonzalez lost control of
his car and fell out as it rolled
down an embankment. stopping
right on top of him
When two paramedics got
there. Gonzalez appeared dead.
His head stuck out from under
the car on one s ide and his reel
on the other.
"I felt for a pulse, but there
was none," said paramedic Bob
Sidebottom. "I chec ked his
breathin g , a nd he was n 't
·breathing.··
A group or me n including
police rolled the car off Gonzalez
but "there was still no pulse and
no breathing, no vi tal signs,"
Sidebottom said.
A I though his heart started
beating slightly after heavy
massage, "his eyes were dilated
with no reaction -a sign o(
death." Sidebottom said.
No broke n bones ~ere
detected by X-rays at South Bay
General Hospital.
Then Gonzales. 25. regained
consciousness. Two days later
on Monday. be walked out of the
hospital almost spryly -but
said he felt "sore ...
Sidebdttom . a veteran
pa ramedic. said it's• (he first
time he ever saw "anyone
s urvive a car on lop of them -
let aJone come out of it wit.bout
any broken bones."
1.01 .\1f0EL&S <AP > -
Pl•yboy bWrtr'tle1, Inc. plana
. to t1unth a new television
vent ure which It hopes will
off Ht lotHI from the end or its
London 11mblln1 operations,
com ptn)' founde r Hu&h M.
Hefner told shareholders at the
annual meettea.
"We wanted to, quite literally,
tur,n the maaaain~ into a pay
television phenomenon," Hefner
told about 200 stockholders
Tuesday at the Playboy Club. He
did not elaborate on the project
except to say it would begin in
January and Involve what he called a "Playboy channel. ..
Hefner conceded that 1982
profits will be below last year's
levels. but said a renewed
emphasis-on publishing .
licensing and what he termed
"other appropriate moves "
would prQduce "significant"
. earninfs thti year.
Playboy President Derek J .
Daniels released earnings
figures for Playboy's first fiscaJ
1982 quarter which ended Sept.
30. Net income was SS.S million
or 56 cents a share on revenues
of S92.8 million, he said, down
from S6.8 million or 69 cents a
s hare on revenues of S97.S
million ln the comparable 1981
quarter .
Lower earnings from the
company's Britis h gambling
operations accounted for the
decline in profits. Daniels said.
Playboy, which lost two of its
London casino licenses recenUy
after charges or improprieties.
las t week announ ced an
a1reement In prlnciete to sell its
British gatnbllng operations for
S3l.4 million to Trfdent
Television Ltd. or Great Britain.
T h e London gaming
opet•tions have provided a
substantial •hare of Playboy's
overall earnings 1.n recent years
and both Hefner and Daniels
discussed the proposed sale al
length, contending the ~ompany
had dffided to dispose of the
British c&1inos and betting
shops r~r than appeal the
license revocations . London
poUce have charged that two or
Playbo>:'I caalnos illegally
exte a ded ere.tit to gamblers
t here.
Dense fog due
Co astal
Low c-end o.nw too locally
early todOy, °'""""''w lair. Motllt clOUdy lOftleM Wouetl T'llundey wllfl
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What do )'OU like a bout the Dally P!lot! WMi doe't you like?
Call the number below and your m ... ,. ril be recorded.
transcribed and delivered to the appropri1te ecllor.
The aamt 24-hour an1wmnc MrViee ••>' '9 lllecl to record let-
ter• to the editor on any toplc. Nallbol ~ musi include
their name and telephone munw fot •er'""A 1d. fllt dft•latm
calls. pleue.
Tell us what'• on your ........
'.)Ill-·-§(~_,, __
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wtdnt1d1y, November 11 , 1981 s
I
Retired engineer and phyaici&t Robert Conger won fourth place honors m
competition for hi& bird sculpture. ··cormorant.··
Cd.M resident honored
Wins national award for ar c W'1lding sculpture
Welded sculpture can oe
something other than old bicycle
wheels attached lo garbage cans
or mazes of wires a nd other odd
m etal parts affi xed In a bstract
design, says 61-year-old Robert
Conger.
Conger, a retired engineer and
physicist, has received fourth
place honors In a national arc
welding competition ror his bird
sculpture, "Cormorant."
Conger passes over the $250
check that went along with the
award from the J a m es F.
Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation
in Cleveland, Ohio. The money.
he said, doesn't mean that much
"I'm happy to get the award.
though," the Corona del Mar
r esident and Orange Coast
College art and welding student
confides.
"It demonstrates the utility of
welding in cr eating life-like
sculpture."
Although he s pent more than
200 hours fas hi oning fti s
aluminum cormorant. depicting
'the bird ready for flight and
measuring 48 inches across the
wing span, he says he figures
aluminum welding techniques
are easief than wax or bronze
Motorcycles
to utilize
bypass lanes
Signs at certain freewa y
ramps in Orange County will be
c hanged later this month to
aJlow motorcycle riders lo use
bypass lanes for ramp meters.
The riders currently must
wait in line at ramp stoplights
b e fore e nte r ing v arious
freewa ys . A Ca ltran s
spokesman said those riders will
be permitted to bypass meters
as do buses and carpools. at
ramps where bypass signs say
"motorcycles OK ...
T he decision to In c lud e
motorcycles was made after
studying a year -long pilot
project on ramps leading \o the
Long Beach a nd Ventura
freeways, the spokesman said.
··An average single occupant
motorcycle is about 30 percent
more efficie n t than eve n
a n average thr ee-person
carpool," said Caltrans Director
Adriana Gianturco.
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Ctrtifitd Otmologi1t, AGS
JADE ANO SYMBOLISM
In ChtMse culture
The Chinese carve an almost
infinite number of symbols and
scenes into jade. ll has become
a nationaJ art from. A phoenix
represents the maturity or
women. Newlyweds receive a
piece or Jade with a man astride
a unicorn, symbolizing the
a11urance that the marriage
will be blessed with a cbUd.
'Men give their fiancees jade
butterflies as symbols or tender
love. Because jade elves orr a
resonant sound when 1truck,
the Chinese have made gongs,
and even entire m usical
instruments from I\, sizing
var ious pieces to emit certain
sounds. Volumes could be
written about the spiritual,
practical and s uper1tltlous uses
to which jade i1 put. It i• 11ld
that even the poorest or Chlneae
feel that, at sometime ln 4lfe,
they muat own a piece or jade.
T hey believe that Jade hu a
tranquUilinl and happy effttt
upon each person who poe1•1e1
U. Fln1erln1 the cool 1reen
1toae ll an exerciM In brlftlla1
aerenlty to the ml.Del and tbt
castings. "I've d<:\he both," he
says.
Cormorant was created from
eighth-inch sheets of aluminum
bent into tubes and cones and
then welded and groun'd and
polished.
The cormorant bird itself. he
says, was an interesting study.
It can be found where pelicans
congregate and is known for
s wimming under water raster
than many fish.
Although scµlpture is Car
removed from Conger's original
profession, navy ordinance. he
recalls h e's a lways been
Interested in art.
He turned to physics and
e ngineering In college , he
admits, because they promised
a better living.
He received his doctorate in
physics fr o m Northwestern
University in 1952 and was
employed as a civilian by the
U.S. Navy and later by a private
defense studies firm.
He retired i n 1976 and
immediately enrolled at -Orange
Coast College after arriving in
Corona del Mar Crom Arlington, Va .
Superoisors view
FAA noise s.tudy
The Orange County Board of
S upervi s ors ha s both
commended and criticized the
Federal Aviation Administration
for the way noise limiting jet
takeoff procedures were studied
at John War ne Airport
In acti~Tuesday. the board s upport d a r esolutio n
s ubmill d by Supervisor
Thomas iley ex pressing
appreciatio for the two-month
testing program designed to
determine at what altitude
pllots should be permitted to
inslilute power cutbacks that
reduce noise output.
But the resolution also
expresses displeasure that the
FAA refused lo permit tests or
cutbacks at an altitude or SOO
feet, a pre-1979 standard that
county officials say they would
like reinstated.
Current regulations require
that aircraft be brought to an
altitude of 1,000 feet before any
power reductions are made.
The lowest altitude studied by
the FAA during the test period
was 700 feet.
Results of the testing program
will be disclosed at a eonrerence
in Seattle that begins Monday.
In the resolution. supervisors
urged the FAA t o pe rmit
cutbacks at 700 reet because or
the noise-limiting effects. But
they said they consider the test
progra m incomplete until the
500-foot standard is evaluated.
The board also took action on
the following issues· during the
30-minute meeting:
COMMITTEES; .Approved
reeo mmendalions submitted by
Lhe county Administrative Office
to regulate the county's 134
committees, advisory boards
and councils. All panels wilJ now
be subject to annual review lo
determine ar they should remain
in operation.
ABALONE : Author ized
spending $4,000 to plant abalone
in waters a lon g t he Orange
County coast.
TAXI FARES: Approved fare
increases ranging from 16 to 20
percent for Ye llow Cab taxi
o peralions at J ohn Wayne
Airport. As part of the action.
t he board a lso approved a
"share a ride" fare structure
lhat permits reduced fares for
passengers in cabs carrying
more than one person.
Truants capture d
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A
crackdown on truancy is neltine
an average or 26 pupils a day,
offi cials report. Robert Figone,
h ead or the anti-truancy
program, told the Board of
Education that about 500 pupils
were collared as truants in the
first 19 days or the p'logram.
0
OMEGA
An Omega .
Classic styling and Quartz accuracy
for the man on the go •
No matter what time aone hl11 trawl1 lead to. Omega Quartz leta him
change il without l<>&ing 11 eecond, thanka ID O~ga'1 unique t1me-!1eltln1
syatem. His gold-filled Sea master Quart.& timepiece providee preci1ion
accuracy and water·reai11tani M.lreiy. One clauic h1 all.one needs.
emotionl. It could be called U:11!!!!!;i!li i na~onaJ tra.nquill1er ol China.
H/F Orange Coa1t DAIL. Y PILOT/Wtdneeday. November 11 . 1981
Reagan tax cut 'Trojan horse?~
Stockman says magazine article quoting him 'grossly misleading' . \
.Toxic weapons use WASHfNGTON t AP > pol1tlt.'ully ucceptablc wuy to
Budget director David A . l ower the top rate trom 70
in Laos confirmed
S t ockman, In a s t a rtling pcrt·enl ofeach dollurof eliglble
magazine article, describes t.he income lo 50 percent, und the
"supply·side" tal( cut embraced 'solution was to lower a ll tax
b)' President Reaaan as 8 rates, Stockman said , according
disguised version of traditional to the article.
WASH1NG1'0N <AP) New
c hemical evidence proves that t Soviet· backed' regimes In
Indochina are usina e iological
weapons for ·'campaigns of
mounting ex t er m i natio n ··
against defenseless villages, a
senior State Department official
aaya. ·
"We now have the sm oking
gun ," s aid Richard Burt,
director of the department's t Bureau of Politico·Milltary
AfCairs. "We have confirmed the l use of toxin weapons in Laos,"
' as we ll as Cambodia, he said.
Burt told a Senate panel
Tuesday that the growin g
evide n ce of u se of
internationally banned chemical
and biological weapons "has
grave implications for present
a nd future arm s cont rol
arrangements ..
Solidarity hit
; by new charges
l WARSAW, Poland (AP>
Poland's Communist regime
' hurled new charges at Solidarity
: as more wildcat strikes broke
t
• o ut and th e government
prepared to open crucial talks
, with the independen t labor
• feder ation on the economic
l crisis. I Th e Co mmun ist P arty's
15·member ruling Politburo said
Tuesday t he '"stri kes and
•conflicts. initialed and fanned by
extremist forces ... do harm to
the Soviet bloc alliance and .
hit at the st ability of the socialist
state and its economy, and
deepen the crisis."
Marineland sold
by Taft, Kroger
C INCINNATI tA P I Taft
1 Broadcasting Co. a n d The
' Kroger Co. have said they ha-.e
agreed to sell a California
amusement park they jointly
own.
2 ex-Cl~ au,ent• Republican "lrlckle·down" Jn a slalcmenl late Tuesday. n. e ~ economics that favor the richest St ock man ·s off ace said the held in Beinit Americans. article "creates un impression
Th e Dece mber Issue of t hat is wrong and g r ossly
WASHINGTON (AP> -Two Atlantic Monthly quotes misleod1ng."
former CIA agents convicted of Stockman as saying the The article, which h as
conspiring to sell a rms to agents three-year tax c ut was a ci rculated thr ough Congress.
posi n g a s South Am e r ican "Trojan horse" aimed at dr ew c r i l I c i 5 m r r 0 m
revolutionaries were abducted lowering the top income tax congressional Demorrats, many
in Beirut last weekend. CBS rates. of whom opposed the tax cut on
News has reported. The obJ·eclive was to find a th d 't I l d too T he network quoted informed A -----=------------e__:.j.l.:..r_o_un_s_a _w_a_s_s_a_n_e __
sources Tuesday night as saying
the two men. Frank :rerpil and
Gary Korkola. "were abducted
in Beirut by three Syrians. one
of whom i s identified as a
free·lance Intelligence agent."
Puerto Rican
Miami mayor
MI J\MI~AP > -Maurice
Ferre, i ami's Pue'rto
Rico-born ayor, has won a
fifth term with a solid victory
over Manolo Reboso. who had
urged voters to "vote Cuban" in
an emotion.charged race.
Final tallies from the city's 87
precincts s howed F erre with
31 ,285 voles to Reboso·s 24,722,
or 56 percent to 44 percent.
Kean gover1wr
of Neu Jersey?
TRENTON. N .J . IAP I
Republican Thomas H Kean has
declared himself the victor in
New Jersey's g ubernatorial
election with unoffacaal totals
showing him holding a 1,677-vote
lead O\'er Democrat James J .
Florio.
"I am the wanner." Kean said
Tuesday, one full week after the
election.
Baja California
leadership shaken
heavily ln r:ivor of the rich.
Sen. Er.nPkl llollings, 0 S.C ,
c ulled Stockmon the "b(' t
off·Broadway show we've ever
had," while Sen. Gary Hart,
O ·Colo., accused the former
Mlehl~un congressmi,tn of being
In vol vcd an ··one of the most
cynical pieces of performance
by a public orticaal since the
Vie tnam era."
R eugan , asked al the
conc lusion of hi s news
conference for has reaction to
the article, replied that he would
have to ch eck it out with
Stockman.
The tax cut e n acted by
Con g ress this year reduces
in<hvaduul tux rotes 2S percent
ucrnl\s lht· bourd over thre(
ycori.
I l was based on a plan
11ponsor<'d by Rep Jack Kemp, ·
R·N Y . und Sen William Roth.
R Del . Cor u 30 perceait.
.ucro11:. the board t•ut. Reagan
adopted the Kcmp·Roth plan
dw\ng the 1980 presidential
cumpaagn. calling for cuts of 10
percent a year for three years.
According to the article, the
tax cul was given the new name
"supply side" for an old school
of thought that af the rich are
allow<'d to prosper. some of their
wealth wall "trickle down."
Mr. Bill suffers
'oh nooo' • again;
NEW ORLEANS tAPJ Mr
Bill has sulrered a nother of has
many personal catastrophes
this lime at the hands or "Judge
Sluggo." who chopped ham into
'three pieces as mock cries or
· ·oooh noooo ! · · fi I led t he
courtroom.
'"Judge Sluggo'" US
District Court Judge Adrian
Ouplantier cut up a Mr 8111
look·alike Tuesday to sym bolize
a three~way settlement over who
owns rights to the comae cla)
character, which a ppears on
televisaon ·s "Saturday Night
Li ve."
Walter Williams, Vance
DeGeneres and David Derickson
each got a pael'c of a sltced·up
Mr. Ball doll from the smiling
Judge. who presided at the lrlal
"1th a handwritlen s ign reading
"Judge Sluggo" casually taped
to his mahogany l>ench.
Duplantaer presided over two
days or a non·jur:. trial to decide
who dese'rves the profits from
Mr. Bill the figure comically
victam1zed along with his dog
. pot b:. Mr !lands and Mr
Sluggo in film shorts featured on
the TV comedy show
Thl' l'asc ended when lawyers
ror all three men announced that
the~ hacl reached a selllem ent.
Terms or t he agreement gave
Williams total <·ontrol of the
c haract e r s hul ordered
OeGenl'rcs namt• be included on
tht> t·opynght
2 Stones concerts
bring I 04 arrests
HARTFORD. Conn 1AP1
Fort) people were a rrested
outside an arena where the
Rolling Stones were playing
their second Hartford concert.
brang1nJ{ lo more than 100 the
numbcr or arrests at two shows
by lht· hard·rockang English
band
Tues da\ ni g ht s c roY.d was
·mort• naello" ·
The buyer was identt[ied as
Far Ea st H otels and
Entertainment. Ltd . of Hong
Kong Terms of the sale were
not a nnounced. but the two
Cincinnali·based companies said
that the sale s h ould be
completed b) the end or the
year.
M EXJCALI. Mexico !AP>
The rulin g l nstitut1onali2ed
Revolutionary Party has shaken
up il s leaders h ip in Baja
California on the eve of the first
\' I s I l b '.\' I l s p r e s I cl e n l I a I
candidate.
AP'#I ...... 1xty four arrests were made
Monda.\ night. an many cases as
a crowd tncd to rush the gatei,
of th(' C1v1c ('('Oler. and there
were 40 more arrests Tuesda~
night. pohce said
But 1>olil·e n•ported al least
lhre<.• rohhl•r ae s. one al
kn1fe po1nt out:.ade the llartford
C1' 11· Cente r Some of th e
assailants \H'll' <illl'r money. but
<1thcrs \\e re tr,\ing to get their
hand-. on the pn'' 1ous t1ckels.
\\'hilt• th.,se lue k.\ enough to
gel 1n..,1dc some paid as much
c.1s S:lOO pl'r l1 C'kN shook and
shnull'rl to the 25 songs the
Slonl'S 1wr formcd cal'h night.
hundred::. more "'athout tickets
"a1tt·cl nuL">1de hoping to get in.
I'
ONLY WHEN I LAUGH" .J11h11 \\ 1111t1·n "•111 • hum-. 111 hl· t "1
\\'orld .., SI l'flll!.!l'"' \J :in Ill''> 1111 l wd 111 •.Ott 11.1 t1 ... l'.lt n •,
Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado
as e xpected lo arrive today on
t he first stop of a three·day
swing.
11lt'hl1:-.. \\hlilc motun·~ dist \l1kl· Fl·l't ' u:-l'" pl • .111h 111 1u 111p
!11.., \l•h1d1• 11\l'I' \\"11ntl'l1 l"ht· m111111•' ll· ''1·11 1 •1!1 t'H' pl.111-o.
<II Ill n1ph \\'1111tl'll \\.1' 1111 111111·, .. • Ill 1111 -.t11111 r 11··--·l.1\ .•.
E' t·1·(·t1 \J.i..,, Police Lt. Thomas Moore said
Qua ntities and assortments are limited, so hurry in! II Sears I HUNTINGTON BEACH
EACH OF THE SE ITEMS READILY AVAILABLE FOR SALE AS ADVERTISED
SURPLUS STORE
We sell first quality and discontinued
merchandise from Sears Retail and
Catalog Distribution.
uwas" prices q uoted are the regular prices a t which
the items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
-LAWN CARE VALUE GIRLS' FASHION VALUE-
SAVE $45 .00 ON OUR BEST
CRAFTSMAN®
GAS-POWERED
EDGER-TRIMMER
WAS $194.99
NOW $}4999
c\jT 23%!
(Reduced from ·~1 f-all Catalog)
feature~ 4 cycle. 127 cc. engine
that de\clops J.O reserve power
SEARS
POLYESTER PANTS
THAT FIT
WINNER II
RUNNING SHOES
S EDE l:PPERS
were 15.00
NOW
4.99
wNe 18.99
NOW
8.99
SAVE 39% AND 57% ON
GIRLS' 100%
COTTON FLANNEL
SHIRTS
WER E $4.99
AND $6.99
NOW S299
(Reduced from
"!!O Fall Caaalog)
VINYL
RECLINER
SEARS BEST
HEAVYWEIGHT
FLANNEL SHIRTS SAVE 52 o/r
was :159.95
were 9 99 Now----....~
NOW
6.49
169.99
'\
STORE llOl'RS M-·~11 11 A'4 .. "'4
~ltAM .. N ~ 11 Allf.•r\4
A,JL •IKMll
!Win trtdll .....
)
The curtain rises
and the show begins.
Come. J oln us for a rare
personal appearance by an
artist revered throughout
the world ... Theo Tubiasse.
Provocative. Emotional.
Religious. He works in a
variety of mediums ... oils,
gouaches. etchings with
carborundum and aqua-
' Unt. lithographs. All will
be displayed in this
special exhibition . And to
commemorate hls vtslt.
Tublasse has created a
unique poster available
for your acquisition .
Theo Tobtasse. Now
offered proudly.
and exclusively. by the
Upstairs Gallery.
Meet Toblaeee
BEVltRLT HILLS:
Friday. Nov. 13th,"! 109 p.m
LONG BltACH: Saturday. Nov 14th. 2 to4 p.m.
•
~--------------""-----..... ----------------~ ....... .-·--·
Orange Co11t OAJLV PILOT/Wednetday. November 11 , 1981 H/F ~·
Snow 'forecast in state':s ·north ·
I t's expected to reach :4,000 feet in ~ierra Nevada, Mount Shasta areas
By TIM Alleelaled Preu
Rain and anow were forecut
rot Northem Callfornla today.
Rain and snow were forecut
at the 7,000.foot level in the
Sierra Ne¥ada and the Mount
Shasta re1ion1, lowerin1 to
around 4.000 feet Tbunday.
The National Weather Service ,
also forecast rain in the
afternoon in other northern
DEFAULT Angela Dans. a
former student aN1 ,·1st and
Marxist teacher . has been
orclere<I hy a jud~e 1n San
D1 e~o lo pa~ ~2 .2 1 2 for
failure to re pa~ u student
loan al the L'n t\'(~rs 1l' ol
California al San D1eco ·
areas with showers contlnulng
Thursday. Hlchs were lorecut
in the 808 and low• in the 408.
Ch ild/s death
apurs· co yote la1(J
LOS ANGELES <AP> -~e
death or a 3·year·old Glendale
child has led to a new law
against feeding wild coyotes,
raccoons, opossums, foxes,
skunks and ground squirrels in
Los Angeles County.
The Board of Supervisors
voted Tuesday to ban the
feeding of non·domeatleated
predators and backed it up wlUl
fines from $50 to 12!50. The board
acted ln the wake of the Aug. 26
death of Kelly Kean, who wu
killed by a coyote outside her home .
Threat delays
Mrs. 'M arcos
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A
Philippine Airlines 747 carryi.nc
the wife of Philippines President
Ferdinand Marcos left San
Francisco International Airport
today more than four hours
behind schedule because of a
bomb threat, authorities said.
Ervin Weber, ·a U.S. State
Department special agent. said
a search failed to detect any
borib aboard the aircraft, which
departed about 2:30 a.m. Weber
said be had no basis to coMect
the threat with a bullet that
struck the window of an airport
lounge about two hours before
Mrs . Marcos arrived from New
York aboard a Trans World
Airlines Cli~ht. Dormant savinus Pi.lot _s u~es
· ~ plane c rash .
Case nets man $230 AVALON <AP)-Thepilotof · · · a light plane that crashed into
the side of a bill on approach to
a Catalina Island airstrip SAN DIEGO (AP> -Bank of
Ame rica has settled a dormant
30 ·year pass book s avings
· account, which drew statewide
atte ntion la s t m onth i n
connection with a S23 million
award to the state controller 's
office.
Robert Estrada, 39, of San
Diego was given a check for
$230.59 to cover the interest
accrued on his ch il dhood
account which totaled $71.64
when he says he misplaced the
passbook. Earlier, the bank told
Estrada it had no record of his
account a nd refu sed to
reim burse him.
However, Fred Baranowski, a
bank assistant vice president,
said Tuesday the bank decided
the Estrada case ··was not worth
all the time and effort that we
had gone through already to see
whether the mon~y was there." survived with only minor cuts
At a news conference last although the plane was a total
month, State C.ontroller Ken toss, authorities said.
Cory accused Bank of America H h T s · h 56 th ii of deliberately confiscatin" ug · mtt • • e ,p ot • and only occupant of the money from dormant accounts single-engine craft, was treated
by imposing "service charges." Tues day for minor cuts at
Baranowski said the decision Avalon Municipal Hos pital, said
to rever se the bank 's first Sgt. Merlyn Poppleton, a Los
de c ision came from bank An geles Count y s heriff's corporate headquarters in San spokesman.
Francisco. He said he hopes the
settlement would not cause Mode rate quak e others with dormant accounts to
ask for their money back. hits county
Bank of America is appealing
a Superior Court ruling that BAKERSFIELD <AP> -
awarded the state controller's Three moderate earthquakes
office $23 million to cover were fell by some residents in
dormant s avings a ccounts K ern , Santa Barbara and
wh ose depositors were Orange counties but went
untraceable. Cory has vowed to unnoticed by others· and
return the money to depositors lf prompted no reports of damage
FUEL SPILLED .\ tanker trul k <.ind tralll•r • <.tl'I'' 1n;.! ~ 111111
).!Ullons of d1cst•I l lll'I l'aroml••I ull .i IJ't.'l'\\a~ ramp
O\'erturned and spilled the l11ad on a ·'11wnt•I\\ n -.;,111
Fr~mt·ist·o street Tuc.• ... da' Tiie.• l·a1i111rn1,1 111_•:"'·" J><1 1• .. 1
"a' C.'\.<.iminin..: lht· t l'lt• 1-. ... 11r.1!-.l· .. , .. 11·111 t·•·~ .• he wins the case. or injury.
~~~~~~~~~_:..._:...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Recruit 'OK'
hef ore death?
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Texas Marine Corps
private who drowned during a rigorous survival
test motioned he was fine about a minute before he
sank to the bottom of the pool, a swimming
instructor has testified.
· Staff Sgt. Rudy Rodriguez of San Antonio.
Texas, testified before a three-officer investigating
panel Tuesday about circumstances surrounding
the death of Pvt. Randall Christian, 18, of Dallas
last Aug. 27 at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot.
Rodriguez. who has been criticized by fellow
recruits for his role in the drowning, denied he
shoved or dunked the recruit duriog the survival
test. Rather , he said, he jumped In to rescue
Christian after he noticed he was sinking.
Prior to that moment. Rodriguez said another
struggling private grabbed Christian and f«?rced
Chr1stian under for perhaps 12 seconds. Rodnguez
said he broke the two apart and swam to the edge
of the pool with the private who had been holding
on to Christian.
"I told him (t~e other recruit> take off your
shirt and g~t out," Rodriguez said. "I then swam
back to Christian and asked him If he was OK and
he nodded his head and said yes.·· Rodriguez, who was in the pool with a group or
recruits that included Christian, told the panel he
swam a short distance away from Christian when
he looked up and saw a lieutenant outside the pool
looking at Christian. ·
"I looked back to my right and all of a sudden
Christian started going down. feet first. his arms
were moving like he wanted to do a backstroke.
' then his head went under.·· Rodriguez said.
··I reached him before he got to the bottom:·
he continued. "He started to grab me. I put my
arms around his chest and he put his hands on my
wrists.
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,.~------
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
tELEVISION
i . HAPPY BIRTHDAY A 210-pound l'ake With 90 pounds c>I ll'IO~ \\JS lhe
I ·centerpiece Tuesda~· at the :vtanne Corps :\1r Station. El Toro. when the
• Marines celchratecl the torps 206th h1 rthcla~· Cuttmi? t he take 1s :\la.i Ge n.
1 Johr. \!. Cox 'aho,·e •. tommancl mi: J:!t•ncral of :3rd :\t annt• Airl'raft \\'in~
• headquarters. One of the first to taste t he l'Onfe1·t 1on 1s :\1 astt·r Set Rohert 11
Mifflin. 5i. 1right 1 the oldest :\1al'lnt• al El Toro.
f '
f
STAIRWAY TO TllE BASK \'ou have lo note with
con s ide ra hlc inte r est that ou r Ora n ge Co un t~
governme nt. m its infi nite wisdom. 1s now gearing up 111
fork O\'er 150.000 clams to rebuild an o pen·air sta1 rt a:-1•
In this instance. the pro ject 1s known as Thousand
Steps. locat ed in South La.1rnna The s tairs. which a re no"
in a state of d isrepair. run from the Coast ll1chway le,·el
down the bluff to a small l'm·<•<I heaeh !lei<>\\
So secluded 1s
this patch of sand
in count~· t erntor~
that ce rtain
c itizens ha,·e been
known to sunhathe
upon the g rain s
wh i l e wearin g
nothing more tha n
~ b\ T-DM.._M ....... U.....,.IP-HIN-1 ,~lt
a smile. The pract1 C'e led to som e rumtni:? b~· prt\'ale
homeowners nearb~ and upon occasion , a few husts on
naked c harj?es hy Orange Count.' d e puties.
ANYWAY. OVER THE past d ecade. then.• has been
ope n debate on whether or not the Thousand Steps
stairway is public or prl\·ate and whether the bea<:h itself
is public or pn\'ate.
Searby homeowners. as ~·ou might well sus pe<:t. h<l\·t'
been ad\'OCales on the pn \'a<:y side of the issue.
Largely. they ha,·e lost the hat tie .
Thousand Steps will StO publu: and so will a s trip of
sand so \'is iting beat'hgoers can plant the msel\·es below
the mean hig h tide line. which has been ruled as public
· terntor\'. All this t·ame about throug h a court rullnSl or
Superio'r Court Judge Bruce Sumner.
Above the m ean hig h tide line will rem ain the {lomaio
of the pri\'ate hom eowners.
ALL THAT IS LEFT 1s for somehod~ lO clec:1de where
th~t tide line is loc atccl. This m~y he sol\'ccl h~·
neaotiation. . .
Probabl\' in the end. coul'lt.' olrtters and the pr1nsle
homeowner! will Just ~el a n old :;tick ancl draw a line 1n
the sand
Meanwhile. howe\'er. the slilll's . lhemseh'e~ are in
crumm\' condition and considered unsate for human.; lo
1tomp up and down in their bate tootsies.
Siilt'e in the Laguna sector Qf our ~l or 1111 ~slhle
coaats. il ts ha bat to attach . colorful names to the
.... • it should ht no~ that Thousand Ste .. '" 1 ........
THERE ARE SOT 1.000 stt•p:-. to I ht• hN1eh To
beachgoers. 1t onl~ seems like l.000 steps "ht•n. altl.'r ;,.1
long day in sun ancl sea. the~ tr~ d1mhin~ h<1d; up I hem
hauling beaC'h );(ear. to the h1.1.!hwa~ aho' t•
F or the record. there are aNuall~ 2 1:J ... tt'P" 1n tht·
stairwa\
So now our tount~ Board of Super\'lsor~ ha:-. 'llll'" lo
repair the stairs at a n est1ma tecl <:ost ol ='150.l)CIO
That fi gures out lo 5617.28 per step.
Our coasta l F irth D1stric:t Supen 1sor Tom Rtlt''
suggested earlier that he wasn't s un· s pt•nd1nJ.! thl'
Cortocinf.tt Tom Johuon'• IMw of the Tholuond Stepi houle
SlS0,000 on the steps was a proper ex1>e n<llture. ~iven the
hassle on who gets to use what s and below. .
l'IL GO GENERAL Riley one more step on that one.
In this da~· and age when we're tulkin~ about c hoppin,:r
back all kinds of puhhc sen·1,·es lor the wanl1nJ? an'l the
needy. spending 5150.000 on a staJrwa~ to a 1ups queak
beach sounds obscene .
we·"e already got m ore puhlu.· heac:hes than e ccsn
take care of. If the money has to be s 1>ent on beaches. the
county could enhance nearb~· Aliso Bea~·h. i\t least ll
draws volume use.
Better that the count~· keep the caHh 1n the treasury .
It sounds like our super\'lsor.t are sut'ter1nJ.( a lerminal
case ot CO.Stal commtt1101Htis. r
"'
0 ranee County Sul)e.rvisor
Harriett. Wieder and lf untington
" Beach City Councilwoman Ruth
Balley eaeh took hold of an oil
pipe line on the Bolsa Chica
bluffs Tuesday and lifted it
about two feet. .
The exercis~ was the
promotion idea of Mrs, Wieder
to get public donations to plant
trees and shrubs on the city's
new bluer top park.
A group of local Boy Scouts
and city and county e mployees
watched as the two women
officials held the pipe ln the air.
until cameras bad r ecorded
their efforts. (They were aided
by a bulldozer set up as a
crane.)
Next, the two officials grabbed
s hovels and, aided by about 10
Boy Scouts, plopped down two
canne<t trees into holes the
bulldozer had dug.
Their efforts were symbolic.
The pipe.line was put back in
place and the trees were put into
the back or a truck and' the hole was Citied.
"The idea is to get donations
from some of the 170,000 people
in this city to beaut1Cy the
bluffs," Mrs. Wieder said.
Presently, hundreds or oil
pipelines and numetous pumps
are situated on the bare earth
blurts olf Pacific Coast Hiihway
between Golden West and nth
streets.
But a city ordinance requires
the oil companies to cover up the
pipelines by the end or the year
and city officials want to create
a blurrtop park. .
One of the oil companies,
Amlnoil USA . has donated a
$25,000 "cha llenge grant."
According to conditions of the
g rant. the oil company will
m atch all public donations up to
S25,000 that are received by the
end of the year .
Although municipal officials
say the city probably will pour
some money into the park for
future improvements s uch as
lighting and benches and grass,
the Aminoil matching grant only
a pplies to money from public
donations.
City officials estimated that
SS0,000 would purchase about 75
trees and 125 shrubs for the
one-mile-long stretch above the
state beach.
Mike Multari, city planner,
says the landscaping could be
started by this spring. He said
for information about the park
fund call 536-5511. ·
··This will be a beautiful
park ," Mrs . Bailey s aid
brushing dirt off her hands .
"You can't get a better view
anywhere along the coast.•'
Huntington school
ro_lls dip by 600
Enrollment in the Huntington
Beach Union Hich School
Dl1 trict bu dropped by more
than 800 students thi& year, but
the system's six comprehensive
campuses generally remain
filled to capacity.
If high attendance c reates
over ·crowded ,condlUans at a
sch.ool, mobile classrooms are
used at that campus, district
officials say. .
Figures compiled oci. 9, show
district attendance at 18,016,
down 3.5 perce nt from last
year 's enrollment of 18,863.
The most populated campij.S in
the district. is Fountain Valley
Mobile home
re nt h i kes
• st i r anger
Al the De Anza Bayside
Village In Newport Beach
r es ide nts are callint It
"economic eviction·: while at
the Newport Terrace mobile
home park tenants there say it's
··just plain unlair ...
Res idents at both mobile home
pa rks, on opposite sides of
Newport, are up in arms over
s pace rent increases that range
from SlOO to $322 per month.
Mobile home dwellers at the
56-space Newport Terrace park
at 824 West 15th St. got the bad
news first. .
"I don't know what to do, I
just d on 't know." said one
tenan.t. 77-year-old Beatrice
Quinlan, explaining that s he
must m ake do witt\ a fixed
income of S400 a month.
"Starting next month," she
said . "my rent goes from S141 to
S250 a month. I'm not at)le to
pay that much, I can't work
anymore and I've just had two
cancer operations."
Park manager Betty -Perrich,
who reportedly told residents
that the hike was partially due
to hither taxes becauae the park
land recenUy was annexed into
Newport Beaeh, said owners
have directed ber not lo·
comment oo the 1Huatloa. Tbe owaers uuld oot be
reached for comm•:·
But Newport a,aeb Clty
Nana1er Robert WyM said be
wrote a letter to the owner•
pointlnal out that ~e anneut.lon
dld not lnorease tu•· M .. ~. m.a1 of the 291 resldtllU at tb• De ADU 8a-y1ldit mobtle hOmf pan .a.
received •ord that tbelr
monthly apace renu are to be
increased.
Realdent John
10-year De Aue
rent la -.:WJalllll~lll mon&L:
''I
High School with 3,704 students.
The s maUest is Ocean View
H11h School with 2,321 pupils'.
According to the size of each
school facilit y. t h e most
crowded campus ls Huntington
Beach High School. With 3,237
students, it's over-filled to 109
percen t of its c apacity.
according to district figures.
Westminster High School is
the least crowded with 2,902
students filling the school to 94
percent capacity.
The attendan ce breakdown
and capacity rating : Edison,
2,921, 96 pe r cent capac ity ;
M arin a, 3,145, 98 pe r cent
capacity; Ocean View. 2.321 , 101
percent capac ity ; Fountain
Valley, 3,704, 108 percent
capacity ; Wes tminste r High
Sc hool, 2 ,902. 94 percent
capacity.
The district also has 1,008
additional students in various
progra ms including continuation
high school. adult education
evening high school, and s pecial
education. Attendance in these
combined categories increased
by 18 students in the past year.
The district includes students
from Fountain Valley. Seal
Beach , Westminste r a nd
Huntington Beach.
.._C ounty GOP
fore es -protest
r e map OK
Orang~ County Republicans
rallied ·m force Tuesday night
against recent reapportionment
plans approved by the stale
Legislature, which is controlled
by the Democrats.
Despite the seriousness of the
issue, the rally at the South
Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa
was something of a social affair.
About 200 Republicans sipped
cocktails and danced to the
music of former state senator
James Whetmore.
Two members or the Orance
County Board of Supervisors,
Bruce Nestande and Harriett
Wieder, attended.
Neatande Hid "The President
la very concemed about wbat'a
happMlq ln Sacramento."
The reaPPortJonm e1'l pl8Jll,
Nesta a de said, are
"borrendeua" and "antl·10CMI ·~~.·· ·~~ioul an clalmlq ~ PllM to redraw the bouddariee ol the lta&e'I .... mbly, ..ate
and C<>nlftUion•l dia\ricu ..,..
cerrymaadered to beaeflt
electoral ortualtlH ror
" .
Orange Cout DAILY Pl~OT/Wedneld1y. November 11 . 1981
Mayor's . trip blasted
Feinstein sojurn to state without ERA said illegal
Mayor Dianne Feln1tetn•1 t.rip to Ull.oa. a
llate which. baa nol ratified the EquaJ Rltbtl Amendment, baa Irked two 8u
f'raaellto aupervlaora who eay
city pioUcy bars 1uch vtslts.
Ma . Feinstein waa Jchedul~ to leave today tor
Clalea10 to attend. the U.S. Conferenc~ of Mayon.
But before ahe could leave,
Supervisors Carol Ruth Silver
1tnd Nancy Walker co mplained
that the city waa tgnorina a
policy that forbids expenditures ra1N•H1N
in 1tales that have not approved the amendment to
the federal Constitution. • * Former Mayor Harry Kinney was voted back
into office ln Albuquerque, N.M., defeating radio
and television personality Gordon Sanders in a
non-partisan runorr election.
With all 119 precincts reporting, unofficial
results showed Kinney with 40.871 votes, or 63.8
percent, lo Sanders' 35,045, or 46.2 percent. ' • *
Nine buses retired from the Los Aa1eles fleet
have arrived in San Franel1co lo rill in for
Municipal Railway buses !lidelined by
maintenance problems. •
Ttte city will eventually lease 60 buses from
Los Angeles for $100 a month to help the ailing
Muni fleet.
There is no indication when the other SO will be
in use. • • Tttree people, who lived in expensive Santa
Barbara hillside homes reportedly paid for with
cash and held under fictitious names, have been
arraigned on charges stemming from drug raids.
last week by federal' agents, authorities said.
Lewis Henry Villar. 25. Villar Otero. 28, and
Robert Lahodney were quietly arraigned in San
Diego on federal drug charges, said Willard W.
McEwen Jr., the U.S. Magistrate in Santa
Barbara. The federal judge who conducted the
brief bearing in San Diego set bail at SS million
each, McEwen said.
• * Playboy Enterprises. Inc. hopes lo recoup
losses from the end or its London gambling
operations with a new television
venture, Playboy Chairman
Hugh M . H e fner told
shareholders at the annual
meeting in Los Angeles.
"We intend to. quite
literally, turn the magazine into
a pay television phenomenon,"
Hefner told about 200
stockholders gathered al the
Playboy Club.
•• -.= ....
Hefner concede d that ".~ ....
profits for the coming year would be below last
year's levels but contended that a renewed
DEATH llTICEI
.... ClllOTHBS
SMfntS' WOllTUAaY
U'f Main St
~ntington Beach ~
PAClfte Y•W
MIMOIJAL PMI
Cemttery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1llc View Drive
Newport Beach
644-2700
W.COIMCX WOllTUAR.•S
Laguna Beach
49'-9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
S.n Juan C.pistrano ••1n&
,
empbul1 on publlahln1. Ucenalnf and what he
termed "other appropriate movet' would product
"•l1n1ncaru.• · l'amlni1. • * Jordaa'a Kini Huueln and hls Americaa-bom
wlle1 Queen Noor. underwent routine phyalcal
examinations by Dr, Michul E. DeBakey and
other pt\yslclans at' Metbodltt lloepltal In H .. a&oe,
a hos~tal spokeswoman said. The royal couple completed nearly six hours or
teeta and doctors said both were In "excellent
heal lb," hospital spokeswoman Suun Russell
.aid. The king and qu~en left the hotipltal and
returned to their hotel.
• * A group of World War I flying aces, some In
wheeJchain and others clutching canes, were
honored ln the French capital today on the 63td
Plll:EI
anniversary of the armistice lhat ended the "war lo end all wars."
The French Ministry of Veterans Affairs
hosted a luncheon for the 40 aces from both the
Allied and Ge"rmao sides who were well enough to
travel to Paris at the invitation of French
President Francois Mitterand. All 85 of the world's
surviving aces -men who shot down at least five
enemy airplanes -had been invited. • • The Santa Monica City Council has reversed
itself in the face of a federal lawsuit and will
permit men to serve on Its new Commission on the
Status of Women.
The council's decision represents a victory for
Howard Goldberg, a self-described reminlst who
filed suit when the city refused to accept his
application for membership on the commission.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
SAN O(EGO IAPI
Retired Rear Adm Stanley
Leith, ~-who helped plan
amphibious a:.saults tn the
Pacific during World War
II. died F'ridu~
BEVERLY lllLLS 1AP1
A. Calder Macka~, 90. a
prominent ta'< allorne~.
died Monda)
PARIS 1AP 1 Abel
Gance. 92. the c1ne mat1c
pioneer of wicle·screen and
stereophunic sound. died
Tuesda~ Gance became
the first fil m maker to use
t h r e e s c r e e n s
s imultaneous ly and a
camera on a mov.ing track
in his rilm .. Na.poleon ··
\\' ASlllNGTON (A p I
Charles G. Ewing Sr .. 62. a
nat1 onall ~ s ~nd1 C'ated
c·olumnist s pec1altiinl'.( an
a utomobile news. died
:\fonday
PARIS 1AP1 Frank J .
Mallna, 69. an aerospace
pioneer whose work helped
the United States put the
first man on the moon. died
:\1onday.
B RIOGEPORT. Conn
1AP1 Clara Stern, 79.
sister of the late Is raeli
Pr1 me Minister Go ld11
:\1e1r. died Monda~
LONDON cAP> Ai1
Commodre Sir Lionel
Heald, 84, who served in
both world wars and was
attorney general in Sir
Winston Churchill "a
government from 1951 to
1954. died Saturda>
......
PIU""9Cl
f'ICTU'tOUI aUMM•N
f'teTfTtOUlaUMN811 MMMllTAT ..... NT
NAM8 ITAftM•NT Tht ftllowl119 11tnon It Oolnt -----------~ f 11 I I "' I lllnl.,.ttM: f'ICTITl~IUS.N• .. ~\t:.:ow nt "' .. 11 ' ••Ill UNLIMIT80 IALLOONS, MAMalTaT•MaMT
M•IA MNTAL CENTalll, »J •. Wal1111I ltrHI, Ntwtort IUCll, Tiie ltlltwl111 lltrton It dtllll
• ,._,_ ..... ,..11.. 1 CtlllOmlo....., ~••Mu et: 11lll trett, ,._,. ...... ,"'"••<'II• R .. l .l.lncol11.JOtWa1n.1111 ... 1, Co l COTTAM CONCllllTI ~ JAGK THOMAS MONlllOI!, Rt. 4, N••-' llM(lt, C.ll~nle '*-1 IRl!AIUNG ANO !EXCAVATING llt)
ae• 4•t, ltlw" ltHd, Nttdlu, Tiiie ....._ It <9Mu<IM llY a11 COTTAM COHCllllETI! 81tEAKING,
c.tlfWllN fZ»J (P,O .... ,_. lllCllwl~I 4'1 M ...... le. Cotta MeM, C.11..,....
.._ tit• I . LWOlll 'tt27 Thlt trullllHI II C°"4111Ctetl "' .,. Thll ...._. •• Ill• with Te"9"1 T. c:..ctMft, "1 MttftO!t., lllCllw~; •Jee.fl T. "'-VW County CltA el O.e .... COlllllY C...UI Met.a, c.tlfofftla '2611
Tlllf ... _,.,. WM lllecl wltll tN NtV9tft-t, 1"1 Thlt Ml""' It COllCIUCI.., lly en f't71D1 lftdlwld.,,.t Ce1111ty c .. ,. el O••noe COllll\Y Oft Pullll"*' OrMtt C:.•t Delly "'l!Ot, T ........ T CotlMn ()(t~ 2', "11 ,,,ten HOit, 11. 11, IS, Dec l. Itel ..,._., Tlllt ... ._ •• llltO witll N
P\IOll~ OrMgt (Oest Oolly "'llet. -----------CO<llll' C .. n el 0ttft99 C-IY Oii
Nov. 4, 11, lt, ts, 1"1 47t7 .. 1 Piil.iC 9l11C( No ... mltfft, Itel.
WlllllHllC.Hlldlcec*
~tCTtnout auttlll•U A ••~le tanet ear,w-::
NAMISTATaNNT .... c.tlNW\',,ML
"CTITIOUl•UllN•U Tiie to11owln9 person la •0•111 CWMt•MM,CA"'::,ms
NAMa ITAT•M8NT lllltlMUti: Putlllllltd er.,,.. C:O.tl Dell' ,.,lot,
Tll• lollewl111 "''°" I• doln1 ltl!O LYON I, 4M "'"'-' 11¥d HOv 4, 11, 1t, U, 1te1 •1"26-el l!utlNll .. : ....... H-1 llH<ll, C•llloml• 91'6)
UNLIMITED Sl!lllVIC1!$, ''"' l!dwln """'' Ill, IS07 Ht ... n
PICTITIOUI 8USINIA NAMa STATUMNT
Tit• IOllOWlllQ tAUOfll .,. Clolno
bv•IMUH: ClllYSeN TRADING ANO
MARKETING, INC., m PonUftt.e<
Of lvt, S-..0 -, CAIN.,.... '2705 Crytltl •neroy Corpo••llo11, a
Collfornl• corportllOll, IU Parkcenter
Drive,~ Mo, CollfwnJa mos
Thlt MIMU II CtllClllCltCI bf •
CorPOrtllOll
C,.,._l IE"9,,,Y CO<p
Clw ... A.R-.
"'"'°"" Tllll stat-I ... flltcl wlll'I IM
C0<111ty c1er11 o1 Qr•noe coun11 on
Nowmb9r 2. Itel.
M8MIEL, JAC081, PlllllNO &
OUISN ... ~..,..•1..-i .......... N••-' a.di. CollfenMa ,_ Prelrt. A-. Suite F, Torra"''· Piece, N••Port ••tell, Celllo•nla 1 PllJC mTIC(
Call10r111t .... '*> •------------flt1..U p~ W, ""911-. 410t W. 11«11 Tlllt ~llllMI It condu<led lly a Publl~ 0.'"91 CoaSI Dally Pllet,
Gery'·"...,._· ....
llmltecl PWtfltrtlllp. PICTITIOUS 8UllNIESS --Str•I, T....-,C41111omle'°'°4 l!CIWI H 111 NAM•STAT•MINT Nov. 4, 11, ti, U, Itel 47..,....,
This Ml-Is conducted IW"' Tlli. 11-::..,."":., flMll wltll -The followt1111 ""'°"'ere ctol1111 -----------lndlw~J County Clerlr. o1 o..,... County °" 11u11 ... u •: MJC mTIC(
Tlllt ::.~=filed wltll Ille No,,.mller2.1WI. P.M. NOVELTIES, 15CM Havtn ,,..-----------
c-·nty Clerk of Oten-CO<lnly Oft P11Qtt "'"''· Newport 8Hcll, C.lllornl• • • ••• --Pullllllltd Or ..... Coat Delly Piiot, t1t6J ~ICTITIOUS IU.IN~ Novemlll'r 2. 1'91. Nov. 4• II, II, U, "'1 _, .. 1 DHlct G Rloarct, U04 Haven MAMIE STaT•MENT
Pt7a19 -----------Pleet , Ntwport 8ttcll, c allfornl• The lollowlno p.,1on 11 dolno PvltllSllM Or.,.. Coalt 0.11, "'''°'· t2t63 1>111lnes1 u ·
Nov. 4, 11, II. U, 1'91 41111-11 fllJC '911( J anet L. Rickard, U04 Have" IAI DAZZLE AS 181 PACI l"IC
~ICTITIOUI IUllN•U
MAMIE STATSMaNT
Tll• lollowll'IQ P•rlOn " Cloln1
l!uthwutt:
T. M. ACOUSTICS. 10lll Tl'lurll\,
CHI• Mewl, CA mu Tl'lomH J tmu Maylleld, 101S
Thllrln, ~ Mno. CA tJ•V.
Thll blniftfft Is conducted "' en lndlwlct.,.1
Tllomel '· ... yflelG Tiiis •YI~ -fllecl wllll the
County CM<1< ol Oto,,.. Counly on O<I.
"· 1"1
1'111111-Orenge C.0.tl Dally PllOI.
Oct. 21, JI. Nov ... 11, 1'91 4S47 .. I
"CTITIOUI 8UllNHS
NAMa STAHM•NT
Th• tollowlno per.011· I• 001110
~slrwssn:
SANOHURST, tSU llloektolnt
Orlv•, H""4.I......, llMdl. C4111fomla
ntA6 • N•MY K•YM'· tSl2 lllocllpollll
Orin . HIHICl"Olafl .. tell, C.llfomlt
ntA6 Tiits ...,.._, It conducted by a11
lndMd...i.
NencyKey-
Thll It.I~ WAI flied wltll IN
cwnly C"'" et 0ttft99 ~Y °" N....-2.1"1.
"'l•c•, Newport eeocll, Colllornl• /lo\EOICAL. U41 Y Hatwe eo..1oard,
"Cl'tTIOUS a1111N•U ..., L• H•llra. C4illloml• '°'31
NAMl!STAT•MINT Thlt buslnffl It cOftGU<tld 11y •n Steven R•y ~. 1133 Btlboa
Th• lollowlno per so" •• ctolno lndlvlclWI. Boultvill'd. Belboa, C..lllornlo '"'' ~""'es: J-Rk Un:I Tl'llJ llllSinesl 11 tc>t1C111<lect llY •n 1
C L E A N H A R 8 0 tit Tlllt 11-1 WM lllOCI wllll IN lndlvld.,,.I $I._, A•y Boll.,,,_
E"fGINl!l!ltlHG, no E. 111h St ...... Counl'( Clent ot O••noe c ..... 1, ... This It.It-•• , llleG wltll Ille Cott• AM ... CA m27. Novtmller 2, 1'91. OTTllE HARLEY ANDREWS, 11>1 ~17'17'J Co..1\ly Cltrll or Otal\Qt Coun1y °"
BK.fl a.., onw, "-' &eecll, CA PllDll~ °'""' Ola•I Oally Piiot 0<1-•• 1•1
'2660. Now.•. 11, "· u . '"' •nwi Pu1111·~ Or-Coa11 0011~1t:1':, Tiiis MIMS• I• '<lnducled by an M._ -.,.. • llldMduet ...X mTIC( Now I I, 11. U, D«.1. 1'11 • ..,..,
Oftle-Tltl• ,......,_, WM ftled wltll IM
c°"'nly Clerk ol 0tt"9t C°"'nly Oft
Nov. 2, 1"1. "CTITIOUS 8USINESS NAM• ITATl!Ml!NT ~,,., Tiie lollowlnt pe,.on 11 ctol119 l'llbll~ 0r.,. c.a11 Delly Piiot, l>uslnen"·
Nov .•• 11, "· u , 1'91 41'2t-tl JIMMY ANO THE MUS'TANGS,
till Sier °''"'· H.,,,llngton 8H<ll, Calllornla .,.._
R~ J-H-•· ta1 SI.,
D•lve, H1111ll119ton Beacll. C.lilor11la
~ICT1TIOUS 8USIN•lS tU40 NAM& iTATIEM9NT Tlllt ~,,..., II <Oftdll<ted lly a11
Tiie foll-Int POU<>tU a ra dol111 lndlvldllel
buslllttl Al: R-rt H-•
LIES =-•W Martlnool• Wey. Thi• .c.ai-t ... lllld witll -Hewtort , Collf0t11i. fH63 County Clerk of 0.-C°""'y Oii
LH Amis Inc:., -Et1I c .. n Novemlll'r '· 1"1 HIQllW•r. eor-*' Ma•, Collloml• PUSIM mu Publllllacl 0r.,. Olall O•llY Piiot,
Tllh b<dlllftl II COlldUCltCI lly • Nov. 11, 1 .... 11. Dec. a.'"' 4'11.fl coroortllon
l..ftAmllln<.
Tuul• M,.,.., Pnrsldtfll
Tiiis ._,._. •• Hied wltll IN
c-1y Clef'll 01 o.....-County .,.
Novemlll'rt.IWI
FICTITIOU• aUSINllSS
NAME STA'raMINT
Tl'le followlno 1>er1on h ctol"I
lllltlMHM
PAROAE ASSOCIATES, 17JH A.,.
M1J0tc•. Leouna Hllll. CA nu2
0 ,.11. o,eoa, t71H A .. Ma)Oru,
i..oun• """·CA mu Tllll ""51Mll it <OftdVC1ecl by a11
.... 1ncorpor1u111 -1•11°" oe.r lh., a 1M11'111t,..,...,.
Oteil•O)eda
Tlllt •-••l filed wlll'I !Ml c-ty Clttll "" 0<'•"91 CounlY on pea
It, IWI. . ,,.,,...
P\ibll-Or ... C.-1 0.llY PllOI.
Oct JI, •• Nov 4. It, 1'91 .,.,_.,
"'lllC MO~E
~,,.,,, ~usm
Pul>ll-Or-C.O.lt Dolly Piiot, "'""""*' 0r...,. Cotlt Delly PllOI, NOW.4, "· tt..2'.1"1 4171~1 Nev.11, 11.U. o.c. 2. IWI ..,, .. 1
Orange Cout OAJLY PtLOT/Wednnday, Novemb9r 11, 1981 HJ F
NYSE OMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
•uoft.TIOlttlliCl.UOI Tl'AOltON , ...... •o••· .,., ... u. , .. ClllC, , ••• IOtTON, on•o•' .... c1•c•••Afl noc• •• CM ...... AlifO HllOttflD IV""' ..... ••• ••n1111u
• If
competitiori ::
rr you're amoo1 the mUUon1 of Americana who ln :
comln1 monlhl wUI be movln1 from one state lo :~ •
another ualnr the services of a van line. 1 have areal .
good news ror you. The Interstate movln1 buaines•.
lone regulated by tbe lntentate Commerce
Commission. baa at last been modernized. This ·;
action benefits you dlrecUy because It allow• tor '
more nexibiUty In prlclAg and services and lncresses '
compeUtlon amone moving companies.
Prior to passaae
or the 1980 ~-modernliation acl,
virtually no · competition existed ~ ,. -"'
among . interstate IYlllll PllTI*.::; •• compames because LIUI '~ ,,
tbe carriers had to T '
seek ICC approval •
for rate increases or decreases ; regulations did not :~
allow the moving companies to orrer guar-anteed
estimates, so you never knew for sure what the cost "
would be until seeing the final bill at destination; if a
shipment was not received within a promised time
period, consumers had to rile for minimum •:.
reimbursement; and ii you. the consumer. could not .,
reach a satisfactory settlement with the carrier for
lost or damaged goods, you had lo go to court. ·:>
The new acts allow interstate moving companies.
upon prior general approval or the ICC. to:
-Increase or decrease their rates by 10 percent
without going to the commission and by an extra 5
percent with ICC approval.
-orrer guarantees that the final COSt Of the I
move will not exceed the original estimate. .,
-Give customers an automatic, prev1ou~ly 1
determined cash payment ror every day they are late · >..
in delivering the shipment. ••
-Establish informal arbitration boards so that
co nsumers can settle claims out of court.
Instead of protecting you, the old rules actually
strangled the consumer. There really was little real
choice among moving companies; all otrered the ·,;
same basic service at the same rates. Even if you
shopped around, half the price quotes you received .
were more than 10 percent inaccurate. Now.
consumers have a wide variety or new services and
can benefit from price competition among movers •
for the first time.
Estimates and charges are not the only concerns
in moving, and the competitive differences are now ·~•
appearing. Bekins Van Lines, fifth largest household ~·~
goods carrier in tbe United States. is. for instance,·
offering guaranteed estimates throughout the nation..,,,
reports Cliff Knowles, vice president ror consumer ·
affairs AU1ed Van Lines is being more cautious; •·
although Patricia Bull, Allied 's director o! ••
transportation economics, admits, "Some programs we have been forced to put in due to competitors iD .-.
the industry ...
North American Van Lines is applying the.
guaranteed estimates only through some of its ...
agents, according to John Ruffolo, executive vice •
president. ·
... STOCKS IN THE SPORIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES <
NF# YOltlCtA~l F'-~ ·~
AMERICAN LEADERS
+SV.
+ " .~ + .. .:,t
NEW Y~I( CA~) -Sein, ,_., prlc.e
•1'14' Ml c....,.. ef tM 191'1 moll K11w
Amerlun Slotll Eac...,,.. •-. tredlfte
Mtlenelly al -· 11*1 $1. OofMfi'tr1 I M3,7GD HouOUl'r nt..a CnitcM' Rn t•,211 _...1111 ta~ ~=-tii :::: ICM llNI" .. ... AZllles .. .... NYTllMS A .. ,7GD OullCOl'I 0 n.-
HIW YOltK (Alt) -~ -........, .. ~ C--.~.rftll ,, ... ,., ,nc. . ............ , .,.., ......... ,,, ... .,,,,. ....-.... 1.,..,-. ..... n.attsr.a.., ......... • ...,., t.l.,.., -.. UILD • .. ,. . ......... c-..-.,., ......... .,,., ...
Woc~r--'· -· ... ..~
ID llWI ~" :t. ~2 r-~ 10 Tm 117.lt N.!1 m.to •-•• iM~
IS Utl 1•.0 111.75 M9.l'1 "9M~, U Siil MILt5 MIUI aQ,11 Sd.1'+ • ·-· ................• TrM • . . . . . • . . . . . . . . • . . . 1 , • ~ti~· ... :::::::.: .... ::. .. . :~~
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YORK (AP) Hew. 10
~II=' Ul'ld•..,.ocl T$11-He• Ill ... H .. lows
WHAT MIU DC
HEW voiiiiCii.P> ....... 10
r.i:•
121 m -t 1J
...
•
Orange Coa1t OAtL Y PILOT /Wednelday, November 11, 1•1
i ......... ____ ...... ., ~·~------;;;o..;;.....,..lmll!'~ ........... iiliiiii ...... ~~r-----~~~~--..,...------~--.:.---.;..~.;..;.--.;.;._,._..~~ .... --~~~""~ ... ~~~~~~ .... .., ~
·-EVB•tG-1111ao 8 N8A aASKETBALL til9"V. "9ck ...
I l.1IO 1 • e NIWI ' ~ANCMO..I j TM AllQtll tnllttrat1 1 pno.
I f'li'UFO cluO IUIPICtld of I doing IWIY with -Hlly
J "*"'*'' •lier tlklno their ! e;:. MUPPETI
~='=:o .
:·
!
T 111iec:1 cllct1tor on 1 vlllt
lo.._..~ thl ,.,.
i oflklller.
.. llltll88 N!PORT
Dea< CAVETT
Gullt: Ian MeKllten.
I == NeCNEWS
MOVIE **'h "LO<>Phe*" (t~)
Bwry Sualllan. Dorothy
Melon.. A benk emc>IC>Yll
eccujed of plllerlng 1 lwge
aum ol money 111oner1111
""""" by apprahendlng "",.., c:utprlt. ~. WELCOME 8ACt<.
l<OTI'EA
01bl 1nd Wuhlnglon
111111 1 problem alter
w11111ng1on m1k11 1111
111ralty bukltblll t11m
IOd cllcldel not to take 1\1$
•1m1.
I l<CET NEWSBEAT
IU81NE88 REPORT 8NEWS
BARNEY MILLER
Thi question of who II etl·
._ -1111 CCJ91 or lhe pub-llJ: -cornet up when Wojo
1nt1mld11 .. 1 auspec1.
ClJMOvtE '* ••• "Herold And Maude" (1971) Ruth Gor·
don, Bud Cor1. An 80-yllf·
old woman me111 1n ,a,.
year-old boY Oblllled
with dell h In 1 lunerll par·
lor, and proceeds to tNCtt
1111'1'1 1111 11'1 ol ltvlng llld
Ste,·en Carril\ft911 I Al
Corley 1 fails to cheer the injurecl
Claudia <Pamela Bellwoo<.11 on
"Dynasty" at 10 p.m . on KABC 111 .
.,. tuCC*llully winning
Ille ~ ol younger
~·look•••YW'J unulllll eutomoblll, thl
carpet car.
I 8 FAMtl Y FlUO
LAVEl'N! & SHIRLEY
&COMPANY
L111Wne winl 11111 mtnutea
ol lrll lhopplng II I
~m1r1t1t.
• EYEONLA.
F1111urlcl: a look 11 wom-
en '1 lingerie; 1 report on
llrttne lt-lldltlee. • tt1•A•&•H
H1wk•)'• reluHs to
r ...... a wounded Korean
wenled by Us lntllll·
~TACDOUOH
• MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT ID CALIFORNIA
DREAMS: THE GOLDEH
CITY
A montega of 111n111g1 ptio..
togrlQhs lllghltgntlng one
of Ille world'• l11tell
growing and moat unusual
cl1111, San Frenciaco, wttll
1 narration by Tom Boeley
on tile po4lticl Ind history
of lhlci\y.
I .
OWi ~ )'Mr'I, It tM ~·
lon'I ol "" -wlttl 400 people •tUI 111111 Incl being
ruled by 1 blnellollnt dk>I
tllor (Cllrl1te>phlr L .. ).
'lrt~ DREAMS: THE OOU>EH
CITY
A mont1g1 of \ltntega ptio-
togr1pll1 hlgllllghtlng ont
ol thl world'• l1tl11t
growing llld mo.I unusuel
c11111. San FrancltcO. wttll
I lllff lllon by Ton'I 8c*ly
on the politlcl end f!ll1ory
of the city.
ID CAIJF<>NAA OR!AMa: THI DAEAM CW
DON GUADALUPE
Alltenctro ~ Ind Edward
Olmol offer I hiltoricll
ll?PfOICh to the 1111 Incl
llm11 of General Ou•·
dll\llM Vlllljo.
CB)MOVIE
••.; "In God 'we Truaf'
I 1980) Merty Feldman, /V'K7t Kllllmen. A n11111
monk II Ml'lt out Into 1.1141
~ to rU. mon.y lot
hil tmpo.,wlthld monast· oo·:.
•. 7'l00 C88 NEWS n'PG'
Cl) P .M. MAOAZIHE • • • * "Ordlnery Peo-
ple" ( 1980) Mary Tylar
Moore, Oonakl Sutherland.
A gullt.fld<lln '-'·181'
trying to put 1111 ... bd
together alter 1111 broctier'•
cleltll erld 1111 own IUlc4dl
att1mp1 r..a--out1D lliJI
com~t 1111\er and 1111
cold, rM«Wd mother. 'R'
CIMOVIE
N8CHEWS
'· HAPPY DAY8 AGAIN
A mlll wtlO Ulld coupons
to t>uy 1312 WOr1tl of gr<>-
oerlll for $9.&9; I look II
tll• 1l1p1llcill' corn1dy
rouim. of OllegtMlt ! YOU A8KED FOR rT
A8CNEW8
'A'S'H
Hewlleye Ind B.J. dllCOl!ef
Ctllflee •vtno thl life ol AlleY di>t to lllii'-fltentlon1
ol hll menlllly pefd Kdreen
MNlllll.
I JOKER'S WILD
OV£REASY
"Tiie Middle-Aged Chllcl"
Guell: l1mlly tlllr1pl11
K1thllln Kerr. O
Ci) MACHEll. / LEHRER
REPORT
(I) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 EHTE.ATAINMEHT
TOHIGHT
All ln1ervllw With Margot
Kidder. 8 THE MUPPETS
0--t Peen Biiiey CID HEPBURH ANO
TRACY
A poignant look II tlken 11
one ol Hollywood'1 moll
popullf and lllclurlng cou-
plla •·• Spencer T r.c;y Ind
Katharine Hepburn.
(mMOVIE • • * "The World'• Ore•t·
ltl Athlete" ( 1973) John
Amos. Jan·Mk:hHI Vin·
c;ent A co.td1 who II hlV·
Ing 1 run of bad lucll
returns to hla roots 1n Alrl·
ca encl dlKovers a auper
1th1ete. ·o·
(I) MARVIN HAMLISCH:
THEY'RE Pl.AVINO VY
SOMO
Lin M1nn1tll, Johnny
M1tlll1, Glldya Knight Ind Oerty Simon ling tom1 of
U>d1y'1 gre1tt1t hit•
Including; "The W~ WI
W111," "Wllll I Did For
LOYI" Ind "Nobody Doll
• •~ec:t Tiie Great"
(19e9) Devlcl Hlnlmlng1,
Mlcl\MI VOl'tl. A nlntn-oen-
IUIY warrior king mull
Cfl009e bet-1111 lorig-
lng lor 1 llmple Nie 11\d tlll
pr~es of INdlng hit
people In .,... ttruggle
~thlO.-.
11;00. (I) MR. .........
ZAie makes 1 double of
lllrnl.if IO tllel Ill C*' ba
In two.,,_ at one time. D 8 REA1. PEOPLE
F11turld: 1 reunion of 111
1 lrcr111 carrier crew;
gu11ds 111 thl tomb of the
Untcnown Sok!Mlr; cartoon·
Ill 8111 Meuldtn 8 MOVIE • * '.; "Ben" ( 1972) Lii
Harcourt Montgomery,
JOMP"t Campanella. A boy
befriends en lntelllglnt rll, '
harboring him from the
police. 8 0 TiiE GREATEST
AMERICAH HERO
Ralph encl 81H ettampt to
stop the 1111'1 of World
War Ill 1her en eutometlc
m1111te syatem 901s
haywire.
• P.M. MAGAZINE
••"A ''Tom Hom" (1980)
St-~. Rlctlerd
Fwn.worth. In llll'1y 20tll-
oentury Wyoming. 1 bcJuno.
ly hunlef llifld by I group
of ~ to trectl dOWft
rud9ta II Mt up for 1
hanging by hll ernptoyoerl.
'A' CilMOW ***'At "Gimme Shlltat"
(1970) Rolllng Ston11, Jet.
lerson Alrpl-. Tiiie doou-
mentary of the Rolling
Stona' 1969 American
tour lncludel -• of Ille
rioting and mllfcler 11 an
Altamont Speedway tr ..
Concllr1.
8:30 8 (I) WKRP IN
CINClNNATI
Mr. Clrlaon and Jennifer
take over H«b'I Job our·
Ing Ills !W>191tlllzlllon. fJ YOU ASKED FOR rT
F.aturld '"Wtllam Tell Of
Adem's Apple" Ind "A
Couple Thi! Gell M11rled
Uncl-lllt"
• All IN THE FAMll Y
Arellil suspec11 lhll Edith
11 turning CIU\dtc when
s111 1&1111 10 -1r1no 1
rellgtou1 m1d1I and
attending ma11.
, It Bet111 "
A m111 who uMd coupons
10 buy. $3 t2 WOr111 Of gro-
cerfll lor $9.59; get • looll
11 one of 11141 11011111 rock
Ind rOll groupa In thl
oountry. Uttll River Bind;
Merle Shriver Hll 1
cellb<lty clrcua; Or. Grlll'\-
lcll on belting jllrou.y.
• CAUFOAHIA
Df'EAMS: TH! DREAtit CW
DOH GUADALUPE
Alejandro Rey and Edward
Olmol otter • hlltorlcll
approach to thl Hie 11141
times ol General Que..
dllupl Vellljo.
7:30 9 2 ON THE TOWN
F"eatured. people who heve
"OUl-Ol·body" IXpe<lenc·
•: r-1 how prOCIUClrl
., OOUATHAWArTS
A young .etentllt (Martt·
Hermon) di9cover1 1 Brtt·
1911 luxury ltnlr. lost for Ci) THE VJETNAM
VETEAAN: A MATTER~
LIFE AND DEATH
SPECIAL .. CHANNEL LISTINGS
O OnTV
l Z TV
H HBO
C ((111('maxt
f) KNXT ICBSI
Q l(NBC INBCI
9 KTLA llnd I
• KABC IABCI
U KFMB ICBSI
f) l(HJ TV (Ind l
II:> KCST IABCI
8) I( TTV find. I
• CWOR> NY , NY
17 IWTBSI
"Frank: A Portrait Of A
Vietnam Veteran" vllwl
one IOldilr' I lxperllnclll
In Vietnam Ind 111t 10.,._,
11ruggll to readjU91 to Ille
1111111<11; llld "Werr'lor'I
Women" tootc1 11 tlle
problenu1 ol lhl wi1111 and
gifllrilod1 of troubled vet·
E tESPNl
S CShowltm~I
0 SPOlllghl
·-· HO 8 (I) NURSE
II) KCOP-TV (Ind I
fll) KCET0 (PBSI 8 <Cable NeW$ Network)
(Senon Premlerl) One of
M1ty'a nur111, 11 ecciuNd
of gMng 1 patient the
wronQ medication. G) KOCE (O!i"'
~..,
.:. Dallas back on top
NEW YORK CAP) -"Dallas"
: : was back in its accustomed place
, as the No. 1 show in prime time,
but ABC won the networks' ratings
race for th-e third straight week
• wlth some help Crom the first TV
showing of ·'Grease.'·
"Dallas," last year's top-rated
program, relinquished the top spot
the two previous weeks to the
Wqrld Series on ABC. The hit CBS
series now has been rirst in the
ratin1s three times In the five
t ;.. weeks of the 1981·82 season. 1 • But ABC was No. 1 in the
COJnpelition ror the week ending
N6v. 8, figures from the A.C.
Nielaen Co. showed, with nine ot
tb' 20 highest-rated pro1runa,
lnchadlng "Grease" in Hc:oed
place and "ThrH'• Com,.a1"
I
firth . The winning network scored, too, with the "Monday
Night Football" game betwHn
Minnesota and Denver. in 10th
place.
ABC's "World News Tonight"
finished No . 1 for the second
straight week in its three-way
race. with CBS' "Evening News"
No. 2 and "Nightly News" on NBC
thlr~.. ·
CBS was No. 1 the ,first two
weeks oC t.he late·starlin1 seuon.
NBC baa finished last five
consecutive weela. •
The rating for "Dallas.. was
27.4. Nieleen says that meUI of the ·country'• bome1 witb
telHiaioa, 21.4 percent aaw at
least pmtol elle prosram.
All ~ l'llOIMf .....
... ..,., with ..........
r.et'I ..,. ''*' ....,., rwun to•"° ........ • 9 THUAU.9UY,
COi\ II eent aft• 1 __...
llOMed oon "'*' wtto hM 9'11PPed bell llM le trylnt
to 1eeY9 tfle ON!lry WIU-
l:lt~ ~
THIYllTNAM
YITIMN: A MAnw. CW.
&All ""10 '*'" INOW. "~lfll&; A ,onr_.. Ot A v ... VwWM" ..... -..... . ........ "'~ Jfld .... '°"*' *""" " ,...... .... ~ .... ..,,..,..
W0111911" lcM*i It ..
ptolt6enw of ...... -~of trowbtld WI• .,..,.,
Clll~
• 1lr • * ""eMrtotlofl" I INOI Perl IUtMyrl, leM
~-,.....,.,_, .....
IUto ICCldent, • ..,.,.
!Incle tnet ... hie .....
tr to hell CllWI bUt II I*· ........ '*--.,II« ,..._. to ollinl 1 ~
~.'PO' .... I. LOYt. llOMIV MATCHGAMI
MCMI • * * "All Entmy Of Tiie ~.opl•" I 1977) , .. II.
MoQ\IMI\. cnwtee Dum-
lflt. leMd on l"-l'• llleY·
Thi dtlunt of I MWI
town flrlt ICl9llud llM
pereeoute 1 loc8I ptiyllclM
lor dee..,lng I"-local hot
llPflnOI unMM cM IO pd-
lutlon. ·G·
(Z)MOVIE
•• "Performance" ('870)
JeiMt Fox, Mlclc .,.._. ~
llOOd on the run lfom H
lllob find• ~In ""
llOfnl of • bufnlO-cM tor.
mer rod! 11111'. '"' 10:00 • Cl) 8HAHNOH
(Premiere) OltlCllvl Jeck
Shennon rltUtn1 to New
v o'1I City to find out wtly
Ill llrt\grlt CMI hM ,._. HOUIHCY .
Whill 1b09rd 1 luxUty at'tlp,
Oulftcy tftel to clle«mlnl
Ull cauM ol ...... of
violent deaths. (Pert 1) l ?v~.na .
(S.UOO Premiere) Biik• ii
1tunnecl by the .,,._,.
enc:I of 1111 IX•wlle, llld
l(ryllll boltt from ltll
cour1room.
• V1mMM WTIMH
FOi.LOW-UP
A KCET·produolcl follow.
up clllc:ulllon Oft tfle ...
dll protlllfnl end ......
erlCM of Ille \lletnetn wt.
If Ill, wtlictl kldudea I
PflOGe banlunennldma.t:..
ty by Vlltnem Yelll'lnl \o
lllld ··-· Ind --... • .,_. rllP(lnlle Ind
queriel and G'-llddi-
tlonll ,.i.,,... Ind lnlor·
• m1t1on. ®MOVIE ** "Good Ouye W.. BIMll" (197~ Gttl•IJ ~.,_M;tn4,
A Vletnem veteran ::::ro-... o:.:a
0..thl of the otlllr IOI·
dler'I wflO -· In hll 11111-tary unit. 'PO'
.MOVIE • *"" '"A Small Clrcll Of
Friend•" (1980) Br.O Div·
11, Keren Allen. In tile
IMOt, lhl frienclllhlp Ind
ldMlllm of '"'" HerYwd 11uoent1 ts thr•t-'*
wMl'I one of them i. dtlft·
Id to -In Vietnam. 'R'
'10-.30 I NEWS INDU£NOeHT
NETWORK NIWS G 008MOI
"Thi Blc:kl>Onl Of Nlgllt" . °' C1r1 saoen 1xem1nes
human tll<>uglll •bout the
"'--'• tllrougllOut hlllo-ry and attempts 10 orv•
nlzl whit la -lbo\lot us ~o (J)MOVIE . * * "Thi Bltcll" A 'million
dollar cllemoncl .. hidden
on I bllUtlful body Ind
one man 11 dl1Mrlllnld to
atop et nottllog ti find It.
'A'
11:00•••C1>08
NIWS
• 8ATUAOAV NIOHT
Holt Rvlll GOtdon. G~;
Chud! Berry.
I PAULHOOAH
THf J£FffR80N8
A publisher 11111 LOUlll to
writ• • c:ookbOOll of "ohlt·
to" rectpee.
• IEHNYHILL
Benny'• French lffson
-•o be luH of promlll
lor the epp1n1nt 1r1111 In
et or•
• Vll!WSCW~
"Mllly9ia: Sperrow Wlttl
Sperrow, A1111n With
Reven" John Tempte tMl11
I IOok 11 Mll1)'111, 9 multl-
rldll aoclety Ind IOUtll•
1Ut Aa11'1 only Molllrn
ABC e 8:00 ··The Greatest American
Hero." Ow-heroe1 try to prevent World
War Ill when an automatic minlle
system misfires
KOCE 8 8:30 al1d KCET.QI 9:00 -"The
Vietnam V~t•ran : A Matter ot Wfe aid
Death." Views or one aoldllc'• 10.year
1truggle to readjU,st to Amer\oan life.
......
CDlMO'll« * * • ~ "TllOH Llpl, 'TlloM !)'ft" ( t9IO) trw
L.lntlell. Ol~ O'Con. nor. A IWl'tboyent IUl'llmer
I llC!clc taor, wtlO ctr.lrnl
~ lfoedwey ltafctofll,
dlMnde Ill lncompetirlt,
attlOl-atrudl Pfop ~ and
promotee Illa romance .,.,ti
a cllotul girt. 'A'
11: 111 CZ> MOY!! * • ~ "Tiie Shout" (1971)
Nin 81t11, ~11111
Yoni. A ~ "*'
c:on"*' to Jn tn11ttu1tori
~ lw can Melle a
"dalttt '"°"'·.. • '°""' tllltwll 11111 •
11:IO~Nt IN
~ It llnocMd out by Ill m wlnclaw ..., •
Ml .... OllY, {A) -~ HIDl1: Jotln!ly Otrte11
.MOVll *'A "~To 9(-.p
Har" (IMO) Mai Oa..ca, Tov'lltl ,......,..., In orw
to IM9t hie alln\Ofty l>IY·
191nt1, I ,_Uy dlloor<*!
prlv1t1 dltlet""9 lrectll
dllwn delinqutnt tMOllldl
for I .. VOl'CI lewytf. '"' , ..... (I) MO'lll * * * "BMnl If! LOI/I" (t971) Giorve S.0-. Krlt
~-,~--~ Gue111. ·~ 01\lld ~'u1111on 1n.d ~IH 0 '1<111•. • I. INflllODUCT1()N TO
PHll.~
12:AO (J) MOVll
... • "Tiii 8lul LIOOOn"
(1tl0) ltroolt• 8"111c11.
~ t'IM&.. TWo
,cllikStMI --ltnot tl'9 ~of tint 11'19 .... ~--""'lrlO"" ... llld eectt Other 1her tlley .. ,. .....,...,. '°""*on• deMrted lellnd. 'R' 1:00e MOVll
G""'1: ~dy Rich,
Off>nnl Wlr'Mck.
e 9MC..WI
NIQHTUNI l llSTCW~
THE 000 COUflLE
Alt11 bekl!! t....S by
OIClr lor being IOlt, Mllr·
ray thl cop •r•t• 1111
poker-pt1ylng buddle1
cluflng I Game•
•*'h "Fut And Sexy"
( 1960) Gina Lolk>brlgldl,
Vittorio DI Sica.
Tlt•ntl••'• LDa1111..-Me.,ln
• ONE 8TP ..VOND
''The PromlM" A tlalftb
ttP11'1 promllll hie wtl9 to
r#te up deac1!vwttne UMX•
ptodld bornbe In poetwll
lllglMd.
• CAPTIONED MC .-we (C)MOYll
1lr * "Wilk & Plllf" f1tll0)
MlchMll Onllielft. Margot
Klddlf. Tllr" •p.opl1
blglfl a ·~ '°"""°' "'0.Mftwictl v-. thlt
~ tnroughCM IM
merouri.I IOdll mlUeu of 1hl'10a:--W · .
I t!40 (II) MOVI!
•••.;"Rough Cut" (1180)
8uf1 ReynOlctl, L•llY·
Anne Down A Brltl111
IOcilllt• lur11 en Intern•· ttonill ,._. tlllel out of
rlllfwnlnt to help ,., .._.
.... 000.000 ~ dlMlondt.
'PG' _.......,_ ... ~. * * "Thi Moll People"
(19M) John Aoar. Cynthle
P1trictl.
•@ LOW90AT
Qoc>hll f• for • beatllful
pUMnger, e man traveling
with 1111 glrtfrllnCI m.11 up
wtlh 1111 llancll, end two
former bo .. • cllJU It out
; MOVIE
• • "Adventur11 Of Thi
Queen" ( 1975) Robert
s tacit, RllQh Belllmy.
• MIKE DOUOlAIS
Cono1t Reuy B111ey
ou..11: Rot« a Roger.
P9ttl LaBllll, Frid Wlllllf41,
Ille PenMCOll Ohair
• AOOKIES
• Dta<CAVUT
Gu.1· 1111 McKellln
(l)MOVIE * • •.; "Fide To Bleck"
(1980) Dinnie Cllrlltophlf,
Lindi ~rlclgl. A dll-
turbed young l'llOllll 1111
reacts to romantic reflc·
tlon by commltttno ,_.
dlr'I In the QUiii and ltyll
ol hl1 favorite ICtlWI \Ill·
lllna. 'R'
• IHDUEHDEHT
NETWORK NeWS • rrs EWRV800Y'I
IU8INU&
"lnlil'r\11 OrganiU:Uon"
1:10• MOYIE * '.; "lt'1 A BtlClnl World"
( 1997) Deborah Wiiiey, I
TommyKlrk. .
1:al = .,
•• 'Al "Thi Ot:>tong Bo• . I
lllna. 'R'
t:"5 (l)MCME 1 * • ''Wlw't A Str1ng11
Clll1" (t979) Catol Kane.
Chlrlll Oumlng. Willie
b1b)'llttlng, I you.no girt II
terrorilld by ptione ce.tts
lrom 1 payctlOtlc kllllr 'R'
2.-00 8 ENTERT AINMEHT
TONIGHT
An lnl9Mew with Mergot
Kidder . ·= •'~ "K.IM Or Bl KJMed"
(1980) JlrMS Ryen, Ctw·
IOlle Mlcllllll. A lonMt
Nazi oomm1nds, Who ..,..
111 lml)Of11nf 1111'1 .. rnMch
to IN Jap-dumq-Che
-· ..., to 1¥1ng9 111.s defllt by entlstlne tfle tOP
Kung Fu llg11ter1 from
erouna 111111Worlcl tn e tour·
n1m111t.'PO' l:20. NeWI
2::25 CZ) MCME • • • * "Herold And Mltlde" (1971) ~II Go<·
don, Bud COrt, An IO-yeir·
bid ""°"'"' "'"1• 1111 18·
yllr-oicl boy obllllld
JOHN DARLING
---··--5:41 CZ> •• * y, "<Mimle ~.t
,., .. (1970) RolNnO &tonM.
JttlMr'IOll M'*"8 ™'
dooumelltlty ot tn. "°"" Sc-· 1919 AMlrtoan
tour lnctu4ee ..,.. of \tie
~_, ...... 'wt
A---~--ceflCll't. •
·-· •• ' "One°"~
!LL 0ET 11'5 ~D FOR 'tOU.
10 GO TO A RESTAURANT
WITHOUT 0E'ING HOUNOEO
WELL, 50Me-
llMES 1 00
GET ALITTLE
by Ain•trona. & a.ttuk
~l.L.Y 'f'l...eN NO ONE ASkS.'
FOR AN ~TOGRAPH, .JOHN! ANNOYED!
Ingrid Bergnlall's ftcting
Editor'& Note: AP oom~ Arthur
Ma:r covered moat of Colda Meir'•
admintnration bl /1T<Ul, mctudl11g Ian fir1I
meeting with £f11/1X'I Prt"*"I Sada1 In
Jerualem in 1911. Not ~ng ago, Mu
watched that meethtg r•-cr.at~ liy Ingrid
Bergman Cl! part of a TV movW baaed on
Mri. Meir's life.
~rch or her eyebrows and a puff on •
cigarette. were pure Golda.
"Ingrid ls as close to Golda as yo&&
can get,'' seJd Director Alan Gibson.
''She had it from the beginnins. She
really did ber homework..."
lalty Plllt
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
.TELEVISION
Corps marks 206th year
HAPPY BIR'rHOAY :\ 210-puund take with 90 pounds ol ll'tn;.: ''J S the
centerpiece Tuesd a~ al the :\larane Corp:-. .\1r Statio n . El Toro. "hl'n tht·
~arines celehrated the torps· 206th h1rthda~ Cullan!! the l'ake 1:. '.\J<.11 Gen
J ohr. V. Cox i abo\'t' 1. eommandmg gene ral ol :Jnl :\fol'llH' .\1reralt \\'an ..:
headquarter:-. One or the r11·st to taste the t·onlt•1·tton IS '.\l <.t:.lt'I' S!..!I Roht•rt II
:\1ifflin. Si. ~ n gfit 1 the oltk:.t '.\hmne at El Toro ·
STAJRWA \'TO T llE BA~K You ha\·e to note with
co n s iderahle interest that our Oran~e Coun '~
government. in its infinite w1sclom. 1:-. now geanng 1111 to
for k O\'er 150.000 clams lO rehuald an ope n-air st a1n·u..,l
In this instance. the proiet1 1s known as Thou:.Jnd
Steps. located in Soi..1th Laguna . The stair:.. whu:h are no"
in a st ate of dis re pair. run from the Coas t l1 1gh\\U\' h.•,·el
down the hluf( to.,. s mall toH'd hea1·h helm' ·
So set'ludecl 1s
this patch of sand
in count~ terntor~
t hat t·crta 1n
citizens ha,·e heen
known to sunbathe
upo n t he g rains
w h i l e wearing
nothing more than
(;';)
----------------~ TOM MURPHINI .. ~~
a s mile. The pract1te lecl to :-;o m e fuming h~ pn,·ate
homeowners nearb~ a ncl upon oec:asion . .,. few hus ts on
n aked c harges h~ Orange Count~ deput1t':-.
ANYWAY. OVER THE past clel'ade . there has been
open debate o n whether or not the Thousand Steps
st a irway 1s pubhe or prffate and whether the heat·h itself
is public or pri\'ate.
:'llearby homeowners. as ~ou might well sus pe<:l. ha,·e
heen ae\'ocates on the pn,·ac:~ si<)'e or the issue.
Largely. they ha,·e lost the ~llle.
Thousand Steps will go publt(· and so will a strip ot
sand so \'is iting beac·hgoers can plant themseh'es below
the mean hig h tide lme. which has been 1·ulecl as public:
territory. All this ca m e about through a <:ourt rulin t? of
Superi<?r Court Judge Bruce Sumnel'. ,
Above lhe m ean hig h t ide line will remain the doma in
of the pri\'ate homeowne rs. ·
ALL THAT I LEFT 1s for som~ho<h to de<:1<le where
that t ide line 1s located. This ma\ htt sol\ eel IH
negot iation. , • ·
Probabl~· in t~e end. count~ orftcers and the pn' a te
homeowners will JUSt get an ohl s twk ancl clraw u hne m
the SW\d.
Meanwhile . howe\'er. the st1ua·~. thcmsefrcl'I artt in
crummy condition and considered unsafe for human111 to
stome up and down in the ir bare tootsies . Since m the-Laguna ~e(·tor of our best of 1111 po1J11ble
coaats. it is habit lo attach colorful namet to the
geo1raphy. it should he noted that Thou111nd St,. U' • mlanomer.
THERE .\RE ~OT l.00<1 "lt'P" 111 I h1.• hl'al·h l'o
bea<:hgoer:-.. 1t onl~ :-.t•em:-. ltkl• 1.000 s tep ... "h,·n a l1t·1 .1
long rlay in sun and :.ea. the.' tr~ d1mh1n ~ hat·!\ 11p tht'm
haultn}! ht>a c:h g<.•ar. to tht• h1 !!hwa~ a hen t.'
for th<.• reC'orrl. tht.•r<.' un• •H·ttwl h :ni ''t'P' in 1!w
sta11·w a\'.
So now our c:ounl~ Board ol Sup1..•n ·1:-.or ... h~ .... \ 11t 1·d Ill
repair the :-.ta1rs at an e:-.l1mutt.•cl t·o:.l ol ·'l.')O 111H1
That fi gures out to 'tili.28 per :.tt.•p.
Our t oastal Fifth D1stnl't Supt•n 1:-.or fom Hilt·~
su ggested carhcr that he was n 1 s un· ... pencl1m. l he
Cortoonilt Tom JohMOn'I IMw of the TllolUOltd Stq, lm.U
SlS0.000 on the steps wa a proper expenchture. J;!1ven the
hassle on who get!S to use what sand bele»\
l 'LL GO GENERAL Rile~ one more !Step on thctl one
In this da~· and age when we·re talkin.z ahout c hopptnJ?
t>ack all kands 01· pubh<.· sen 1<:es lor the want1nJ.! anti the
needh'" spendin' SU0.000 on a stairway to . a 1>1J>s<1uct•k
beac sounds obu:ene .
we·,·e alread~· got more pubh<.· lwa<'ht:s than we twn
lake care of, 11 lhe money has to he 1'pent on hea<:hH. the
count)· coukl enhance nearb~· AhlO @-at•h. Al le11!'4t 1t
drawa
Aging is a lonely reality.
See Bob Greene's
D
a
column, Page 82
SO uth L1:1guna
steps facelift
. gets board OK
A new set of concrete stairs
will be constructed at Thousand
Steps Beach in South Laguna,
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors decided Tuesday.
After postponing for a week a
decision on soliciting bids for the
estimated $155,000 r enovation,
tbe supervisors voted 4·0 to go
a head with th e contested
project.
County officials say the
cons truction to replace the
60-year-old stairway. for which
the beach is named, should be
·completed before sunbathers
return to the bea c h next
summer.
Orricials also are hoping that
by that time. some ty pe of
argreemenl will be made with
the Laguna Coves Association
the neighbors living near the
beach -which has fought to
close the stairway.
A lawsuit brought by the
association against the county
government was concluded last
month when Orange Count y
Superior Court Judge Bruce
Sumner ruled that the stairs
leading to the beach are public,
but the beach above the mean
high tide line belongs t o
adjacent property owners.
Su mner issued a court order
barring members of the public
from trespassing on the private
beach. He also noted, however.
that the exact boundary between
the public and private beach has
not been determ ined.
Aides in county Supervisor
Thomas Ril ey's offi ce have been
negotiating with the association
leaders to find a compromise on
beach use, but so far have not
reached agreement. Riley's 5th
District includes South Laguna.
-GLENN SCOTT
Anne Chase h e ads
art f es ti v al boar:d
Anne Ch ase of Capistrano
Beach, an eight-year member of
the Laguna Beach Festival of
Arts board, has been elected to a
one-year term as president ol
the organization.
Mrs . Chase has been a n
exhibitor at the Festival of Arts
since 1958. But she said while
she serves as president she will
give up her leathercraft in order
to devote full attention to the
post.
For the past year Mrs. Chase
ha s served as-vice -president of
the Festival of Arts .
It was announced at the
annual general membe rship
meeting of the festival Tuesday'
that veteran board members
Glenn Vedder and David Young
had been re-elected to their
posts . J acquie Moffett, a Laguna
Beach watercolorist a nd
actress, was elected Cor the first
time to a three-year board term.
The general mem bersh1p
meeting, attended by about 35
people, also saw Lagunans
Maxine Manson and Charles
Thompson r eceiving life
mem bers hips lo t he Festival of
Arts.
Mrs . Manson has been a
volunteer i,!'l the public relations
departmenf'of the festival for
several years. while Thomi>son·
ha s wor k ed in th e wig
department for 12 years.
F o r the pas t 12 years
Thompson has also posed in the
Pageant of the Masters in the
r ole of Jesus in Leonardo
DaVinci's .. The Last Supper ...
Emily Schn eeberger, a
nine-year board member who
has done volunteer work at the
festi val for more than 35 years,
was given a standing ovation by
th e m e m bership after the
announcement that s he was
returning this year.
Outgoing festival President
Helen Keeley praised Mrs
Sc hneeberger's work. which
involved virtually every aspect
of festival production.
* * *
Festival,
pageant set
cash records
Income from the Festival of
Arts and the Pageant of the
Masters in Laguna Beach during
the 1981 season topped all
prev~ous records .
Festival Treasurer Jack
Kemp, making his annual report
al a general membership
meeting' Tuesday ni1ht, said
receipts from the festival were
Sl.8 million, while pageant
income wu Sl.4 million. It was
the 46th year for the events.
In addition, Kemp said nearly
S200.000 hid been earned from
interest bearing a ccount.I In
1911.
It was announcea at the
meettni, that the festival bad
don•ted 1100,000 for 1cholanhlpa
and IH,000 for art related
1roup1 iD Lapna.
Ke~ takt •bite um. when
reeord1 were ftnt kept or
d9ndam, tile f..UvaJ has liven
more than SI mlllJon.
1-"f:ST/\':\I. PRr:SllJf:\'T
• \ 1111e Chns1•
t n :.w n-:1n1
,,,,(/Ill•' \I I ...
F ire victim
T. J acob son
.ser v ices h e ld
Funeral services were held
tod ay in Dana Point for Theola
T. J acobson. whb died Sunday
when her South Laguna mobile
home caught rire. She was 65.
Mrs. J acobson was a resident
ot South Laguna for 23 years.
She was a registered nurse and
wa s Involved ln numerous
volunteer tlealth programs In
the area.
Mrs. Jacobson is survived by
her son, Allen Jacobson or Irvine
and ber daughter, Cuollne
Grlmsgaard of Coeu Mesa; two
sisters, Belle Johnson and Hilda
Layton, both of South Dakota.
Mrs. Jacobson 's family 11
requestln1 that clen•tion1 be
m•de to th• c•riatmll Seal ·
A11ociation
Services were held at 10:•
• a .m . at GJor•a Oel Lutheraa
Church on Stonehill Drive lli
Dana Point.
11111 Piiat
WEON~SOAV, NOV. 11, 1981
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
82·3
89
810 ~ LJ
Corps marks 206th year
HAPPY BIRTHDAY A 210·pound <:ake with 90 pounds ol tc:tn t.! wa:-; the
centerpiece Tuesday a t the ~arine Corps :\1r Station. El Toro. when th<.•
Ma rines cele brated the corps· 206th btrlhda~ C utting the t•akc 1s :\bi Gen
Johr, \'. Cox 1abo,·e1. commancling t!l'neral of :Jrd :\h1nm• .\1rt rafl \\'in_
headquarters . One of the firs t to taste the tonleelton 1s ~1astl'r Sgt Ro twrt II
Mifflin. 57. 1right 1 the oldest :\tanne al El Toro
~\ . ~\~"-' Stairs repair step to waste
STAIRWAY TO THE BAS K You ha\'e to note with
con s iderahle interest that our Orange Count.'
government. in its infinite wisdom. 1s now gearing up 10
fork o\'er 150.000 clams to rebuilcl an open·a1r s ta1n ·.i .... 1·
In this instance. the project 1s known as Thou!'),.tncl
Steps. located in South Laguna. The stairs . wh1t h arc no\\
in a state of dis repair. run from the Coast H1ghwa ~ le,·el
down the bluff to a small cO\·ed hea<'h helo''
So secluded is
this patch of s and
in county terntor~
that ce rtain
cit1 7.ens ha,·e been
known to s unbathe
upo n the g rains
while wearin g
nothing more than
b.)
r..'\
TDI MURPHlll ,~!t
a smile. The practice led to some fuming h~ prl\·ate
homeowners nearby and upon occasion. H few busts on
naked charges by Orange Count~ deputies
ANYWAY, OVER THE past d ecade. there has hecn
open debate on whether or not the Thousand Ste ps
stairway 1s public or pri\'ate and whether the heac·h itself
is public or pri\'ale.
~earby homeowners. as you might we ll s uspctl. han•
been advocates on the pri\'acy side of the issue
Largely. the~· ha,·e lost the battle
T housand Steps will go publtt· ancl so will a strip or
sand so visiting beachgoers can plant thcmseh·es below
the mean high tide lme. which has been ruled as publit
territory. All this came about through a court ruling of
Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner
Above the mean high tide line will rema in lhe domain
of the Wi\'ate homeowners.
ALL THAT IS LEFT 1s for somebocl~ to deC'1de where
that tide line is located. This may he sol\'e cl h~
negotiation.
ProbabJ~· in the end. county officers and the pri\'ate
homeowners will just get an old stick ancl draw a hne tn
the sand.
Meanwhile. howe\'e r . the stairs. themsel\'es are in
crummy condition and considered unsafe for humans to
stomp up and down In their bare tootsies.
Sin ce ln the Laguna sector of our best or all possible
coasts. it is habit to attach colorful names to the
geography. it should be noted that Thou~and Steps Is a
misnomer.
THERE .\RE SOT 1.000 !->tt'P" to t ht• ltead1 fo
hcachgoers. 1t onl~ seem!'> like UHIO sll'P=--"hL·n. <tllt•r a
long <lay in sun and :-.ea. llw~ Lr.' d1ml~111 c had; up th(•m
hauling beach gear. to lhl' h11.!h" a.' ..ihm l'
For the rt•tord. thl•n• al'(' <t('lllall~ 21:1 "'l'JI' 111 th<•
s ta1r wa'
So now our cou nt~ Board ol Supt.•n 1:-.or:-. ha" 'nll'<I to
re pair the s latrs at an l'Sl tmated r ost ol .. .q.:;o.ooo
Thal figures out lo 'it-iii 28 pl'r :-.t<.•p
Our ('Oast al Ftllh Dtstnl'l Supl'n ISOI' rorn Hill-,\
suggested earlier that hl' "as n't surt• :-.p1.'nd111~ th<•
Cartoonist Tom Johnson's view of the Thousand Steps haule
5150.000 on the s teps was a proper expenditure . ,g 1\'en the
hassle on who gets to use what san~I below
l 'LL GO GENERAL Riley one more s te1> on that one.
In this day and age when we're lalkins;( about chopping
back all kinds or public: sen 1<·es lor tht• "anl1nJ,! and the
needy. spending 5150.000 on a sra1rwu~· to a pipsqueak
beach sounds obscene..
w e·\'e alread~· got more puhlt<: beat·hes than we t.·an
take care of. If the money has to he spent on hea<:hcs. the
county coul~ enhance nearby Aliso Bcat'h At lea!->l tt
draws volume use.
Better that the count~· keep the c:as h in lht> trcasur~.
lt sounds like our super\'isors arc !iutferm1.t u tcrmrnul
case of coastal comm114~1on.1t1s
-· --.
.' ~
D I
Aging is a lonely reality. ...
D See Bob Greene',s
column, Page B2 ... .
~
lliilustrial
Authority gets
OK in Irvine
By RICHARD GREEN °' .. ~ ........... Plans for activation of Irvine's
co ntroversia l Ind u s trial
Development Authority were
endorsed Tuesday night by the
City Council majority over the
opposiliort of council members
Larry Agran and Mary Ann
Galdo.
Council members David Sills.
Art Anthony and Bill Vardoulis
passed an ordinance allowing
the City Council to appoint a
three.person supervising board
for the Authority. City Attorney
Roger Grable said the board can
be co mpo sed o r cou n cil
members. other persons or any
combination thereof.
The board mem bers are lo be
selected after final adoption or
the ordinance in two weeks.
Then there Is a 30·day wailing
pe riod before the Industrial
Development Authority becomes
operalJDnal under slate law.
O n ce o perati o n al, th e
Authority is to issue low.interest
loans to industry interested in
building projects in Irvine. The
loa ns are made available
through the sale or tax -free
bonds the Authority can issue
under the t-:rms or national tax
laws.
Counc ilman Agran said
Tuesday the Authority should be
di s banded before 1t ever
becomes operational. He said
this should be done because a
policy is e m e r ging on the
national level that would restnct
the issuance o r indus trial
tax.free bonds.
Agran also contended that the
Authorit y is ethically
ques tionable because it was
formed at a June 23 council
meeting after th~ testimony of
C hamb e r o f Co mmerce
President Larry Hoffmafl, who
failed to publicly disclose he was
representing a company that
stood lo gain from formation of
the A uthonty.
That company, Wyle ·Labs or
El Segundo, slands to be the
first to ask for a low.interest
loan from the Authority, said
Ag ran
Ir vi n e Dir ecto r o r
Admm1strat1ve Services Mike
McNam ara said Tuesday he
understands Wyle Labs has a
loan application re ady to s ubmit
as soon as the Authority
becomes operational.
C hamber of Co mmerre
,President H of fman has
contended his actions on June 23
were proper hecause he wasn't
the official representative or the
Chamber at the council meeting
on that date. he was simply
explaining a n issue and he
wasn·t taking an ad\'ocacy
position.
Coun c ilw o m a n Gaido .
contacted this morning. said she
doesn't want lo have anything to
do with the Authority because
she believes its activation would
amount lo special legislation for
Wyle Labs and Larry Hoffman.
a former Chairman of the City
Planning Co mmission.
Irvine Mayor David Sills said
T uesday that as long a s
Ind ustria l Deve l opment
Authorities are allowed. Irvine
s hould move ahead with its
Authority lo help industry which
he s aid h as been l argely
responsible for lrvine's healthy
tax climate.
Irvine renewing
trash-hauler hid
Irvine City Council members
Tuesday decided unanimously lo
forego an open·bidding process
a n d awa rd a fi ve -yea r ,
s i x ·month renewal of the
r esid e ntia l trash ·haul ing
contract h e ld by Dewey's
Rubbish Service.
The renewal was granted after
a ci tywide survey indicated that
most homeowners associations
were satis fied with the job
Dewey's has done since 1t was
first awarded the contract in
1976.
The sur\tey was ordered by ·the ·
C it y Co un c il after
representatives of competing
trash·hauling firms appeared
berore th e c oun ci l la s t
September and said the fair
thing to do was to initiate an
o.pen ·bidding process for the
multi million-dollar contract.
Cit y officials said at the time
that an open bidding process
wasn't called for because in 1976
th e c ity gave De wey's a
fi ve.yea r co ntr ~cl with a
provision saying 1t might be
renewed in 1981 if the firm did a
good job.
A similar provision was
inc luded in the new contract
approved Tuesday night
Wh ile the provision doesn·t
require renewal of the contract
when 1t expires. the provision
provides an i ncenti ve for
Dewey's to do a good job during
the contract period . said
Councilman Bill Vardouhs .
Irvine City Councilman Larry
Agran. wh ile s upporting the
awarding or the new contract lo
Dewey's. argued that the
renewal provision should be
eliminated
Agran's idea was supported by
Councilwoman Mary Ann Gai-do,
but failed to win the support of
council mem bers David Sills.
Vardoulis and Art Anthony.
A~ran said th e r en ewal
provision should be eliminated
because 1l gave the appearance
that the city was "locked in" to
use Dewey's until 1992
OC Republicans
blast remap plans
Orange County Republicans
·allied in force Tuesday night
against recent reapportionment
plans approved by the state
Legislature, which is controlled
by the Democrats.
Despite the seriousness or the
issue. the rally al the South
Coast Plaza Hotel In Costa Mesa
was something of a social affair.
About 200 Republicans sipped
cocktails and danced to the
music of fofmer stale senator
James Whetmore.
Two members ol the Orange
County Board of Supervisors,
Bruce Nestande and Harriett
Wieder. attended.
Nest.a.ode said "The President
is very concerned about what's
happening in Sacramento.•·
The reapportionment plans.
Nesta nd e said , are
"horrendous" and "anti·good
government."
Republicans are claimin& the
pJana to redraw the boundaries
of the state's assembly, senate
and congressional districts were
gerrymandered to benefit
electoral oppoTtunltlea for
Democratic cJndldat•.
the friendly audience that \he
reapportionment plans would be
in e ffect for the next 10 years
and thus would affect many
elections.
Irvine nixes
alcohol ban
in city park
The Irvi ne C~y Council
Tuesday rej ec ted a
recommendation by the-Youth
Support Team, a citizens ·group,
to ban the consumption of
alcohol in clty parks.
Councilman Bill Vardoulis
was the only council member to
support the ban
He said that the ban would be
good because Irvine is one or the
few cities in this area that
allows consumption of alcobol la
parks . Consequently, people
come from aurroundial.,... to
drink in Irvin• parka. Ille·
contended.
State sen. William C;1a==~~ R·Hadenda Hellb.ta. ri
1
.. I
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1911
CAVALCADE
STOCKS
TELEVISION
Corps marks 206th year
HAPPY BIRTHDAY A 210-pound c:ake with 90 pounds ol 1t·in~ \\'i.l!-o the
centerpiece Tuesday at the Marine Corps Air Station. El Toro. \\hen lht>
Marines celebrated the c:orps· 206th barthda~ Cutting the take as :\Ia j. Gen
J ohr. V. Cox 1abo,·e 1. comma nding general ol 3rcl :\1annl' Aart'raft \\'me
headquarters. One of the llrst to taste the tonl e<:t aon 1s '.\l a~lt•r Sj.!l Rohert II
Mifflin. 57. t rig ht 1 the oldest '.\t anne at El Toro
~' . ~ Stairs repair step to waste
'
STAIRWAY TO THE BANK You ha,·e to not<.• with
con s iderahlc int erest that our Orange Count~
government. an its infinite wisdom. 1s now gearing up ll>
rork over 150.000 clams to rebuild an open-air sta1n·a~l'
In this instance. the project 1s known as ,Thousand
Steps. loca ted an S<luth Laguna. The stall's. which are no\\
in a state of d1srl'pa1r. run from the Coast H1_gh\\ a~· len~I
down th€bluff Lo a s mall CO\'ecl heat h below
So secluded is
b.)
T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-E~t;
this patch or sand
in countv terrato n ·
th at ce rtain
citizens ha\'e been
known to sunbathe
upon the g r ai ns
wh il e wearing
nothing more than
a s"mile. The practice led lo some rummg b~ prt\·ate
homeowners nearby and upon oc<:asion. a rew busts on
naked c harges by Orange Count~ deputies
ANYWAY, OVER THE past decade. there has been
open de bate on whether or not the Thousand Steps
s tairway is public o r pri,·ate and whether the beach itself
is public or p rivate.
Nearby homeown ers. as you m ight well suspect ha\'C
been advocates on the pri\'acy side of the issue.
Largely. they ha\'e lost the battle.
Thous and Steps will go publit' and so wi ll a strip of
sand so visiting beachgoers can plant themselves be low
the mean high tide lme. which has been ruled as pubtic ·
territory. All this came about throuj{h a tourt ruling or
Superior Court Judge Bruce Sumner.
Above the m ean high tide line will re main 1he domain
of the private ho meowners.
ALL THAT IS LEFT is for somebod~ to decide where
that tide line is located. This m ay he solved by
negotiation.
Probably in the e nd. county offi cers and the pra,·ate
homeowners will j us t get a n old s tick a nd clraw a line an
the sand.
Meanwhile. however . the s tturs. the msel ves are m ..
crummy condition and considered unsafe for humans to
stom1? up and down in their bare tootsies.
Smee in the Laguna sector of o ur bes t of' all possi ble
coasts, it 1s habit to attach colorful names to the
geograpb~·. 1l s hould be noted that Thous and Steps 1~ _.
misnomer.
THERE ARE ~OT 1.000 s teps 10 lhl' be<.1 l'h To
beachgoers. 1t onl~ seems like 1.000 !-il<.'p:-whl·n. alter a
long clay an sun ancl sea. the~ tr~ d1mhan g hal'k up them
hauling beat'h gear. to the h1ghwa.\ ahon.·
For the record. there are actualh 2..i:J ... lep.., 1n lht.•
staarwa'
So now our C'OUnt~ Board ol Sup1.·n·1sors has \till'" to
repair the s tairs at an cst1matccl c:ost ot .'150.000
That rag ures out to S617 28 per step
Our toastal Firth D1stn <:t Supernsor Tom Rill·~
s uggested earlier that he wasn't s ure s pcndinJ.! tbe
Cartoonist Tom Johruon'• ui~ of t~ ThQu1ond Slept htu1le
Sl S0.000 on the steps was a proper expenditure. ga\'en the
hassle on who gets to use what s and below.
l 'LL GO GENERAL RHe) one more step on that one.
In t.his day and age when we·rc lalkmg about chopping
back all kinds of public ser\'u:es for the ,., antin~ and the
n eedy, spending SlS0.000 on a staarwa~· to a pipsqueak
beach sounds obscene.
We'\'e alrcad)' got more public hcuthes than we 't an
take care of. If the m o ney has lo be spent on beathes. the
county could enhance ncarb~· Aliso Reat'h At least al
draws volume use.
Better that the county keep the ca h in the treasury
ll sounds like our supervlson. are sufrerm~ a terminal
cas~ ol coutal commiuion-ltia.
I
-
Aging is a lonely reality.
See Bob Greene's
D
D
column, Page B2
Teachers term
.
bosses' raise ,
'slap in fac~' ..
Despite cries from teachers'
union representatives that their
action was "a slap In the face to
teachers ,". Newport-Mesa
Unified School Dlsltict trustees
Tuesday approved pay tllkes for
district manage m e nt and
administration that will, by Jan.
1, boost pay 8 percent over what
it was prior to July.
The votes were taken quickly
and without discussion by the
board alter a closed session that
lasted more than an hour. The
raises will come in two steps -
four percent retroactive to July
1 i mm ed iat e l y, and an
additional Cour percent of the
pre -July pay starting Jan. 1.
Because the hikes are In two
steps, those affected will net
only six percent pay raise Tu
the first year.
Two persons spoke out against
the raises before the vote.
Ma ya Deck e r of the
Newport-Mesa Federation of
Teachers called the hikes '"a
blatant slap in the .face to the
teachers."
Ms . Decker said teachers had
called for administrative cuts in
a tif(ht budget earlier this year
but had been Ignored. She also
said the raises would widen the
gap between teacher and
administration pay even if
identical percentages were
{!ranted to teachers because the
administrators make more to
start with.
District Superintendent John
Nicoll, who was earning $54,486
per year before the vote. will be
making nearly $4,400 a year
more as of Jan. 1 with the raise.
Deputy Superi ntendent
Norman Loats will see his pay
rise from $48,778 to SS2,680;
Assistant Superintendent Kevin
Wheeler's pay will rise Crom
$43,362 to f.16,831, and Classified
Per sonne l Directo r Bruce
Hll_}'man's j)a_y will ri~ Crom
$38,952 to $42,068.
Tea che r a n d d i stract
n egotiations over teache r
cos t -o f -liv i ng hik es are
scheduled now to move into a
"fact-finding" stage after a
state-appointed mediator failed
to bring about an agreement last
month.
The school board as oCCenng
teachers a 3 .5 pe r cent
cost-of-living hike.
Mesa homeowners
eye recall lllQve
So me homeowners who
attended a meeting Tuesday
night with city officials over a
pl an to remove more tban 100
parkway trees from the College
Park area of Costa Mesa are
discussing a possi ble City
Council recall move today.
J erry Muller of 2438 Bowdoin
Place said the recall could be
launched against City Council
members who refuse to come up
with some kind of master plan
for saving trees and drafting an
environmental impact report.
Muller said a conjunctive
acUon could include filing for a
court injunction to halt tree
demolition.
An estimated 175 Mesa VerdP
and Co lle ge Park a rea
residents met at College Park
School to hear Bruce Mattern,
director of public services. and
Keith Van Holt, director of
leisure services, outline the city's
tree removal plan.
A quorum of the City Council ,
including Mayor Arlene Schafer
and council members Donn Hall ·
and Eric J ohnson, sat in for part
of the session without making an
oCCic ial Council m eeting
notification.
Mattern told residents. most
of t h em o bjecti n g to the
removals. that trees are causing
SI million worth of damage to
cit y sid e walks, curbs and
streets.
Van Holt indicated a halt to
cutting trees in the College Park
and Mesa Verde areas would
d epend o n a City Council
decision, that he and Mattern
would only discuss how and why
the removal is being done.
About 50 trees were cut down
in the CoUege Park area last
month before the City Council
put a halt to the action Nov. 2 for
study.
Thal report Is to be aired next
Monday night in a regular
council session at City Hall. 77
Fair Drive.
Unless something is done to
sa ve trees then, Muller said
today, his group will begin
working on a recall action.
Muller said his group is called
Sin cere Treelover s Against
Needless Demolition <STAND).
He said his group is not
satisfi ed with vague plans to
eventually replant smaller trees
or bushes in parkways to
replace trees that now tower up
to 60 feel.
He said area residents dispute
the city's stand that sidewalks
ruined by tree roots · represent
public liabalaty because of
possible pedestrian injury.
"Van Holt admitted he didn't
know whether or not the city has
ever paid a dime as a result of a
sidewalk injury... Muller said
today.
He said area residents would
like a city maintenance program
to trim roots and care for t rees
rather than remove them and
disrupt the current sidewalk
pattern.
-JERRY CLAUSEN
Mobile hollle rent
hikes stir anger
At the De Anza Bayside
Village in Newport Beach
residents are c alling it
"economic eviction" while at
lhe Newport Terrace mobile
home park tenants there say it's
"just plain unfair.''
Residents at both mobile home
p arks, on opposite sides of
Newport, are up in arms over
space rent increases that range
from $100 to $322 per month.
MobUe home dwellers at the
56-space Newport Terrace park
at 824 West 15th St. got the bad
news first.
•·1 don't know what to do, I
just don't know," said one
tenant, 77-year-old Beatrice
Quinlan, explaining thal she
must make do with a fixed
income ot MOO a month.
"Startlng next month," she
said, "my rent goes from $141 to
$250 a month. I'm nol 1ble to
pay that much, I can't work
anymore and I've just had two
cancer operations."
Park manqer Betty Perricb, who reportedly IGld ,.., • .,,,
th1t the hike wu
to hJ•taer m.. land NI
ba
co
But Newport Beach Ci ty
Manager Robert Wynn said he
wrote a letter to the owners
pointing out that the annexation
did not increase taxes.
Meanwhile, many of the 291
residen ts at the De Anza
Bayside mobile home park also
r eceived word that their
monthly space 'rents are to be
increased.
Resident John Kurlander, a
10-year De Anza tenant, sajd his
rent is going from $313 to $63S .
"I can understand a cost or
li vi n g in c r e a s e ," said
Kurlander, who admits he lives
on a desirable waterfront space,
"but this is ridiculous."
Art Sullivan, a De Ania
resident of 13 years and former
president of the park's tenant
association, said he believes the
owners ot the park are bent on
makln1 il •·a millionaire's
mobile home park."
Further, Sullivan said be
believes the owners are bopet\11
of 141,11 zina out ~.
Du,......,adceN•I •
t
I '
•
Up3.14
Cloelngl.51:12
• • compet1t10~
A
tr you're amonJ. tbe millions of Americana whom .,
coming months wilJ be moving from one stale lo ~
another using the services of a van line, I have great ¥~
good neW$ for you. The interstate moving business ·~
long regulated by tbe lnterstaie Commerct ~
Commission, has at last been modernized. Thi• •
action benefits you directly because it allows for ·'
more flexibility in pri~ing and services and increases
competition among moving companies.
Prior to passage
of the 1980
modernization act.
virtually no
competition existed
among interstate
companies because
the carriers had to
seek ICC •approval
.
mu Pllffl.t:~~.
...
for rate increases or decreases; regulations did not 1,
allow the moving companies to offer guaranteed •
estimates, so you never knew for sure what the cost
would be until seeing the final bill at destination; if a ~
shipment was not received within a promised time
period, consumers bad to file for minimum '
reimbursement; and if you, the consumer, could not
reach a satisfactory settlement with the carrier for
lost or damagec;t goods, you had to go to court.
The new acts allow interstate moving companies, ·>~
upon prior general approval of the ICC, to: I
-lncrease or decrease their rates by 10 percent
without going to the commission and by an extra S
percent with ICC approval.
-Offer guarantees that the tinal cost of the
move will not exceed the original estimate.
-Give customers an automatic, previously
determined cash payment for every day they are late ..:
in delivering the shipment. ••
-Establish informal arbitration boards so that~
consumers can seUle claims out of court. •
Instead of protect.in& you, the old rules actuaUy •
strangled the consumer. There really was little real ·
choice among moving companies; all offered t.be .
same basic service at the same rates. Even if yqu
shopped around, half the price quotes you received ....
were more than 10 percent inaccurate. Now,"
consumers have a wide variety of new services and
can benefit fr~ price competition among movers.:;
for the ftrst time. •
Estimates and charges are not the only concerns
in moving, and the competitive differences are now -
appearing. Bekins Van Lines. fifth largest household
goods carrier in the United States, is, for instan(e.
offering guaranteed estimates throughout the oatlop:
reports Cliff Knowles, vice president foT consumer,!
affairs Allied Van Lines Is being more cautioos, >
although Patricia Bull, Allied 's director of :
ttansportation economics, admits, "Some pro1rama :.
we have been forced to put in due to comPeUtors' tn •• the industry.·· ....
UPS AND DOWNS
GOLD COINS
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