HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-16 - Orange Coast Pilot. .
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UBANGI COAST
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WDUR HOMITDWI DAllY PIPll
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•)~~A"'4 C.t ( UU N 1 'f CALl.=OJ1 NIA 25 CENTS
Spacerco.lo~ie~ viewed
Columbia flights promis~ access-tdnew frontier· . ,...,
• LOS ANGELES (AP) -Much
of Canada was explored,
exploited, defended and
governed by a private British
firm called the Hudson's Bay
Co. that spread roads, trading
posts and forts throueh tbe
frontier.
Now a financial "futurist"
predicts that multinational
corporations may play the same
role in space, a frontier oow
beyond the reach of earthly
laws .
The space shuttle -which
completed its second test flilht
Saturday -pN>miaes
commercial access to apace
within a few years, and industry
will tak~ advantage of the
opportunit'J. says Hank Koehn,
Security Pacific National Bank's
vice president for futures
research.
As on the high seas centuries
ago, he said in an interview, "I
think the motivation is eoing to
be 'grab 'first'.'· If U.S.
c ompanies don't move into
space quickly, be said, other
nations almost certainly will
"Many people in Wubingtoo
think our competition ia the
Russians," ~oebn said. "I tbin.k
a more viable competition -
competition for producine the
"I think the
motivation is
going to be 'grab
first.':'
products in g>ace first -ia from
private bwUhess interesta linked
to the French, the Germans and
theJa~."
·For example, Koehn said, ·~u
a S)VisS pharmaceutical firm
wanted dqperately to get up
there and comer the market oo
\. a particular <true. they mlCbt
even cootract with the Ruuial
to put the thine~ orbit. You
could get an interestins mill ol
playen and they don't have to
be the traditional ones at all."
Space, Koehn said, could
prove irresistible to a
transnational consortium that
··is many countries, many
corporations in origin, but with
little or no alleeiaoce to ita
historical roots.''
Some businessmen have
dreamed of a transnational
company buying an ;..Janet and
declaring itself beyond the lawa
of any nation. Now, "you could
have that with a trans-space
corporation. It would claim ita
headquarten are in orbit and
not subject to any law.•• Such
corporations, be added, "would
probably have their own
military or police force."
''There are only two countries
(See COLONIF.8, Pase AZ)
Triple weather whannny strikes
War on Marines urged
Oceanside official wants MP's recalled to city patrol
OCEANSIDE (AP) -An
angry city councilwoman wants
to declare war on rowdy
marines and increasing street
crime by calling in the military
police.
MPs, a fading symbol of law
and order in military cities,
have been barred fro m
Oceanside 's ci vil ia n
jurisdictions since the mid·19'70s.
And it's hurting, according to
city councilwoman Melba
Bishop.
Their absence has placed
pressure OD the city's 160-man
police force and tb& city budget,
Ms. Bishop said in an interview
published in the San Diego
Union.
"I can remember a time not
long ago wbeo you felt safe
having the marines around,"
s he said. ·'The reason ·-was
Valley woman, 66,
held in gun attack
A 66-year-old Fountain Valley
. woman was arrested minutes
after she allegedly drove up to
her daughter's Newport Beach
home and fired a bullet through
the front door, police report.
Authorities said Bessie Lou
Hendricks, a widow , was
arrested Sunday when officers
arrived at h~r 9468 Warbler
Lane home. They said the
woman was carrying a small
revolver ..
Officers said they were
informed -the Fountain Valley
woman reportedly had an
argument ear~r in the day with
her daughter, Barbara Doore,
and had threatened violent
action.
1 ·I ~
The daughter told police that
s he and her husband were
w a l ching television at about
10: 30 p. m. when she believed she
heard her mother's car pull up
outside her Neptune Avenue
home.
She told police that secoods
later a bullet whizzed tbro\.IBh
.the front door. The daughter told
officers she did not actually see
her mother but was certain it
was her because her mother's
car "makes a very distinctive
noise."
Mrs. Hendricks, arrested by
Fountain Valley police officen
and taken to the Newport city
jail, Is being held today in ileu of
$10,000 bail.
• Superstar in soap
'General Hospital' creates stir
87 JE&&.Y BUCK
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Lute.
and Laura finally react\ tbe
altar today after a lone and ~ cowtablp OD ABC's '
super-soap opera "General
Hospital." (Channel 7, 2.p.m.)
The sexy, sophisticated and
fut-paced Hrlal, with a daily
audience of more than 1'
million. baa created the same
k.ind of st.11' for 4-Ytlme TV that
CBS' "Dallu," and the famom:
"Who shot J .R.?" epiaode, did
for prime time a year ago.
Lute Spencer and Laura
Baldwin, aft.er a 7ear and a b.a1I
on the nm, are married ln the
backyard of a Port Charld
. mamion decorated like Indian
summer. T)ie towmpeople tum
·out to. wtlb them well, became ·
1
the couple saved. the town from
mesalomaniac Mikko•
Cassadine's plot to take over the
world by means bf. carbonic
snow in the ·~Jee Princess"
caper.
Carbonic snow? Ice Princeu?
"General HosplLal" is no
ordinary soap. Since Pl'Oducer
Gloria Mooty iaved the lbow
from certain death lD 1'71,. due
to anemic ratlnp, the aerial U.
taken on upecta o( James Boed,
"The Maltese Falcon," "The
Fu1itlve,'' "Il Happened One
Nleht," "Tanan," aad 1oodll•• kno,v1 what elle.
M1. Monty introduced ftlm
techniques to the 1Juaw1t wwld
of the aoap. The camera ~ •
<See SOAP, Pase Al)
t.
because the MPs were always
here to make sure the Marines
stayed in line. As soon as the P4 Ps left, downtown started
getting bad."
_ Oceanside, a city of 75,000
located on the edge of Camp
Pendleton, IQSt the aid of MP
patrols when a base commander
removed them, basing hia action
on the interpretation or a U.S.
Supreme Court decision:
Alarmed by skyrocketing
street crime, Oceanside last
month put a special police
enforcement unit OD the streets
to combat the problem.
But it's costing the taxpayers
dearly to keep labs on tlM!
trouble spots.
"These days, the handouts
Crom the government are gone,"
Ms. Bishop said of her efforts to
get the MPs back. "Now they
(the Marines) are going to have
to start taking care of their
own."
During a recent visit.to.
Washington, D.C., Ms. Bishop
said she discussed the iuue with
Sen. Alan Cranston, D·Calif.,
and was told W· would take
con~reasional aetion to allow
MPs into civilian jurisdictions.
Since MPs often checked oo
the identification of people in
civilian dress wbo appeared to
be military penonnel because of
their demeanor or haircuts,
there was a chance they might
<See MAJlINES, Pase AZ>
............
A man and woman fight t~ WOii· along ndewaJk on Seattle'•
Second Avenue during windstorm SUM:lay.
Mesa resta·urant
I
fire cause prob.ed ,
Investigators began siftlne
through the uhea of Country
Bill's Restaurant today in Qosta
Mesa, aeekint clues u to what
started a Saturday nisht fl.re
that caused an estimated
$20~.ooo in damaee.
, J.lm Richey, administrative
fl" chief, said bis department ia
calling the blau one of
"suspicious oriein" at thia point.
Flremen reported that the ft.re
actually erupted in two separate
kitchen locations in the
restaurant housed in a small
shopping complex at 2000
Harbor Blvd.
' The name•, reporttd by a
paulna police patrol omcer at
ll:M p.m. Satu.-day~ suu.d tbe
restaurant and dama1ed tbe
adJolalq Alpba Beta Trnel
A1ency, police·~·
Offlcera ••id an tnltlal
la•HU1aUoa dld ut ""al a~ but tW UM ftamel .. 4'111Ck11 and .... ..., ......... •• attic uii1a1 •••eral .....,,,,, ............... . a.w &Idler .... .. .......
laapec..,. l'ftUled ftn ......
in a storaee area and near a
dishwasher in the kitchen, pamt.s
about 20 feet apart.
He said structural damaie LI
es ti mated at $10,000 and
contents damage at $125,000.
Reno college
clbses pub
RENO, Nev: ~AP) -studeDU
at the U n iverajty of
Nevada-Reno appaready would
rather drive lbemaelves to driDll
than patron.lie tbelr eampua
pub.
Sebool offtciall complain tbat
1Uff competltiaa from cumoa
cauaed the eam,_ bar'• earlJ
demlae. Alter a roc:k7 tlane
montt11 in wblcb lt 101t
thouaaadl of dollan, the pub'
• .. daMd ..
•I •• wbo rou,bt for ,..... · ................... '° ........... • bar c.a C8IQPUI taned ., tWr
•-••• once tbe bar ••• •tablllbed, tald PMe Perriera · dlnetor of tbe ltudeet UDlcm.
North
coast
pelted
By 'ne.Aueda&ed Pnee
Another powerful storm bore
down on Northern GalUorDia
today, threateDing to lull tbe
region with stning wiilda, ndn
and snow for the fourth lt.nQllt
day.
"It's bard to say, but it loc*a
like it's going to be another bic
one," said Susan Fisher, a
forecaster for the National
Weather Service in San
Francisco.
She said it was the third ~
in a series that felled. tnea,
knocked out power linel, ripped
small vessels from their
moorinea and foundered •
SS.foot ketch Saturday nortla ol
Sao Francisco where Uaree
people were reported mi11i111.
A travelers' adviaor7 wu
issutd for the Sierra Nenda
warnine ol ~ rain and,..-
in excess of 40 mpb. But wi8dl
could euily eust to more tba 55
mph alone the coast, sbe •aid.
The snow level in the S6erra
was eJQ)eC'ted to be at about 7,a
feet, d.roppiJll Tuesday to 1,ca
feet. ·
But the storm wa1 not .
expected to be as ferocioal •a
storm Friday that packed wtadl
that bit about to mpb atop SllD
Bruno Mountain, blew the roota..
off four homes in Crescent QtJ
and toppled trees onto
powerlinea.
By today, crews' bad ~
<See STOa• •. rase AZ>
ORlll:l CUIT IUTlll
llo1tly IUnD)'
aftef'DOGDI. Lowa tonitllt a at buebea, 51 iDIMCI.
· lltcba Tue8da1 r7 alODc
coast, '11 inland. Details 1-
Pase~
11111••1·· .
St~, U.. 1totn1 d
laGH .Q "'411ofl Mot. 8111
rumora ~it• to "''l•c.
.obold Coodl -•m..r• job. S.. ~ Bl-J.
illll
..
, I
. . ...........
TWILIGHT ZONE?~ Tow trpck driver eb~cks . the ~day night oddity . .''~t happen~ ~e ·
car !.!mysteriously swallowed" b)1 .street in something out of the twilight zone-, said
Haight-Asbbury district "of San Francisco. Btuce ~ell, one of tl_lree passe!l~ers . Each of
City officials could offer no explanation for the car s occupants escaped wµnJured.
••1 Marine dies • • in war exercise
~ {\t • •
~;!rwo injured in maneuver at Twentynine Palms
~ k TWEN'l'YNINE PALMS (AP)
-One Marine was killed and
'• 'cwo others injured during a
,. iive-fiPe simulated warfare
,. exercise over the weekend at the
~J lXarine Corps Air Ground
1 'Combat Center, Marine Corps
.•. ~fficials said today. ~ 'l, The dead man was identified ~ ·ll·s Sgt. R.A. Main, 26, statiooed
tJ. at Ca'tnp Lejell;"~· N.C. Report.e<! in good condillon today were
Lance Corporal Larry Hill of
Springfield, Mass., and Pvt.
First Class Derrick L. Allen of
Chattanooga, Tenn., both 19,
also stationed at Camp U:jeune.
From PageA1
The men were attackmg ·a
bunker complex Saturday and
receiving supporting rifle fire,
said Gunnery Sgt. George
Hobbs. ·'The fire that tbey received
was directed above and to the
right of them and somehow .
something went wrong and they
were fired on," he said. "They
were not being ·shot at. They
were shooting at an objective.
Evidently something went
wrong .... We don'la know exactly
what yet. We're investigating,
b ut they were shot by a
support.tng platoon.''
SOAP OPERA WEDDING • • •
'· :the actors moved, and how the ~-'stories moved! And the show,
-::.. once near cancellation, began to
make money -now a reported
, Sl million a week.
~· Even Elizabeth Taylor is on
.. band for the wedding. The
~ '"mternatiooal superstar. an avid
·" rfan. yearned to be there when
1 'Luke and Laura lied the knot,
and she was written into the
.script as Helena Cassadine, who
.. claims she wants to make
• .amends for her late husband's
6 misdeeds. Or bas she come to
. feet revenge on Luke and -:.µura? ..
: '-When Ms. Mooty took over the
· sagging soap four years ago:sbe
jmmediately began to infuse the
~ 1how with new life and new
til!baracters. Yet, such stalwarts
! *5 Dr. Steve Hardy and Nurse"
Jessie Brewer, who have been
with the aerial since its birth in f l963· remain as popular as ever.
But it is Luke and Laura, the
. -.. •'Jfomeo and Juliet of daytime TV
. -played by Tony Geary and ti~Genie Francis -who seized the
:.f From PageA1
1;
public's imagination'.
One controversial aspect of
their romance was Luke's
"rape" of Laura at the diaco be
manages. Ms. Mooty said later
it was ooly "a choreographed
seduction," and Laura SOOD fell
in love with Luke.
Repeated run-ins with the mob
and the sinister Cassadine kept
the Jover s on the run. One
celebrated episode found them
hiding out in a department store,
where they acted out the fantasy
or having every plaything
1maginaltle al band .
The ·:Jee Princess" sequence
took them lo a lush tropical
tsland. where Cassadine, like a
Dr. No. turned the world frigid
from an underground bunker.
Th.e marriage or Luke ano
Laura bas beeo an on-again,
off-again event for some time.
When the producers learned that
Genie Francis was thinking of
leaving the show, they backed
off. Then, a decision was made
to go ahead, and everyone bad
two weeks to get ready.
STORM TO HIT AGAIN • • •
service to most of the 100.000
customers temporarily without
power in San Jose and Sonoma
County. .
The C tlifornia Highway
Patrol reported a section of
Higbway· 1 was cleared of debris
and reopened Sunday near Fort
Brage.
Gale-force winds and rain
b•ttered the Paclfic and Atlantic coasts again today, hampering
efforts to clean up debris left by
a weekend scourge of storms
that killed 11 people and left
eight others missing.
Seattle's futuristic Space
Needle swayed in the brutal
•i•-'•· briefly trapping eitbt people in an elevator inside,
while a landmark of another age
-Ute Cape Hatteras Lighthouse
i n North Caroli na -was
threatened by rampaging
coastal waters lickine at its
base.
The Pacific storm raked
northern California, Oregon,
Washington and British
Columbia oo Friday with only
small respites over the weekend,
and forecasters today renewed
warninrs for residents to stay
indoors.
On the Atlantic sicle. the
weekend winds that came
ashore from Florida to New
Jersey beaded north and cut to
sea but at an angle that put New
England in their path. The
storm lashed New York's LoGe
Island today witb winds
estimated at 70 mph, and caused
ORANGE COAST ' D1ily Pilat Cl1111fled advertitlng 7141642·587'
All other depertmentt 142-4321
. .The three men arrived Friday
at the Twentynine Palms desert
combat center in San
Bernardino County with other
members of Company A, 1st
Battalion, 8lh Marines for .\he
weekend exerctse, which
involved about 1 ,500
participants, Hobbs said.
He said the only weapons in
use at the lime were M -16 rifles.
· Hill was hit in both legs and
Allen in the buttocks, Hobbs
said.
"This is the first time that we
have had a Marine killed in a
live fire exercise here." be said. ...
The future of Miss FranclS ts
still In doubt. Her contract.
expires in December, and her
agents and ABC have been
unable to reach agreement on a
new one.
The wedding sequences were
taped on location al a mansion
in an exclu sive private
community in Los Angeles. For
the fairy-tale wedding, Ma.
Monty assembled 140 cast and
crew members on the grounds of
tbe replica 17th Norman-French
chateau. She hacl wanted to
bring in 250 "guests," "but the
enclave 's homeowners'
association limited the show to 140. -
"Gener•l Hospital, .. now
immortalized in song, began to
take off about a year and a half
ago when Luke, a former front
man for the mob, discovered a
little black book wit.ft the coods
on underworld figures, and was
forced to run. Laura, with a
background equally as shady.
joined him as he tried to figure
out th e mystery o.f the
left-banded boy.
major flooding from New Jersey
to Mame. the National Weather
Service said.
Flooding and seas of up to
eight feet were predicted for
large parts of the New England
coast at high tide today.
* * *
8-f oot waves
• contmue on
some beaches
Waves that reached heights ol
8 feet alao& the Oranee Coast
t.hia weekend died down today in
Newport Beach and Lacuna
Beach but continued in
Hunu.n,ton Beach.
HWltington Beach officials say
waves were .reachln1 8 feet tbil
morning with &ood shape for
surfine. Moderate riptides were
reported.
In Newport Beach and Lq\ma
S,ach o(ficlala ny the breqen
are dowa 10 about 4 feet.
Hunttn1ton Beach state
ran1er Tom Nison saya the
wavt. have been stirred Qp by a
northern 1torm. He aaid weather
reports indicate there will be a
lull in the hjlb aurf but the
w av" could set laraer qaiD
later tb6a week.
Cold water witb tbe
temperataire in tbe low '°8, -.I
earlJ ~milt ud fol ba..
kept the badt crowda to ll'OUpl
ol 1urf_.., lletldl Gl!lldU N7.
ft
•
. .
Space shuttle resting
Columbia may be tlled again for third fliaht in March .
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE CAP) The world'• first
re-usable apaceshi,> wa1 r•tlnl
alon1aide lts desert laodlnl at.rip
today after apace a1ency
'officials a&id the Columbia came
throueb ita shortened second
night in great shape and may be
r•U5ed again next sprin&,.
"It looks great ..... much better
than after the last fll&ht . . .
We're very happy with it," said
Deke Slayton, abutUe flil'ht test
manager ·ror th e National
Aeronautics and Space
AdmlnlatraUon.
Although the mission planned
for flve days ended nearly three
days early, •·we accomplished 90
to 95 percent or \he things we
wanted. lo accomplish OD l~S
fli&bt, ·' h e told a news
conference Sunday. ''We 're
going lo press on to fhght 3
pretty n>uch as we planned it."
Shuttle operations director
Ge9rge Page satd the veteran
~lp sbpuld get in the air again
Nov. 23 this lime for an
easy.going ~ide on the back of a
jumbo jet that will ferry it
cross-country to its Florida
launch site.
Once back at Kennedy Space
Center, Page said, Columbia
will be readied for another trip
into space the third of .what
NASA hopes will be at least lQO
From Page A1
MARINES. • •
overstep their bounds by
inadvertenUy talong a ci~an
inio custody, according lo legal
.i:.easoning.
"I think that just thei r
presence would have. a great
deterreQl on a lot of the publtc
drunkenness and prostitution
and armed .robbery going on
dowp there," Ms. Bishop said.
•'This city used to have a
sense of pride in the Marine
Corps. I wouldn't want them
<the MPs> going around making
people tuck tn their shirts Wee
before. becau~e hmes have
changed. ··But I Uunk the pnde we bad
would. come back 1f the MPs
were here to help them and keep
them m line · ·
round 'tnp1 In the yeart w come. appear..t. ODtl ol tbrM fu~ etDt
That next voya•e• 1C'bedw.cl that t uPDl1 OD·board el.etne.a
\o laabeven day1, could come ln power fau.d IOOD after iURllr
about four moatha, be 1a1d. and NASA ·omc~eeidld. to
"We haven't flna.llsed lt )'tl brln• utroaauu oe &a;s. ....
. . . but ror tar1eUna purpoMI Rlcbard Truly • ii
ri1bt now. I'd say we're t.a1kiftl schedule.
about mid·March.'' . Columbla complet.ed • ortM<
The second trip, which ended the same number at OD tbe ftnt
in a picture-perfect landlac OD ruibt. JU 2 days, t bowl and 11
Roaers Ory Lake in the Mojave minutes of m1ht Ume waa about
Desert Saturday, wa1 to have nine minutet less than th'e April
begun Oct.· 9. But a fuello• journey.
mishap pushed the launch to "It's k1nd or heart-brealdq tO
Nov. 4 when a last-minute ana1 have to come down earl)',"
-contaminatedoUintwopower En ale said a hortl)' arte.r
units -brought another delay. returninl 10 Earth •
Columbia, ~pitting fire and ~ut he added ;,Thia la one thundv, soared majestically . • toward the heavens Thursday. magnificent flying machine,
But ne. problems Quicltlv We 've &ot us a good one." * * * * • • From PageA1
COLONIES POSSIBLE ....
(the United States and the Soyiet
Union) that can e nforce
anything beyond a few milet
up," Koehn said. " ... Who
c ould control sucb a
consortium?" .
ls that vision of free-bootlnt
capilalliun bightenlng7 Not to
Koehn.
"I think it's free enterprise
carried to I ls 21s t century
structure. That was the whole
point or the Eflgllsh and Duteb
explorer!l when they went out.
That was the way it was done."
Suell a development remaina a
far -off possibility . But
capitalism is already in orbit
wl'th satellites that have
revolutionized communicatiooa.
And Koehn predicts the shuttle's
ready access to the weightless,
sterile environment of apace will
lead to better drugs and
v accines, more efficient
semiconductors for elect.roolcs
and metal alloys impossible to
mix on Earth.
"You'll probably do something
with pharmaceuticals first," he
s atd, since a drug laboratory
could be small, lightweight and
require very little energy to
operate. Koehn said a major
U.S. pharmaceutical firm ia
already prepanng for just such
a project
Tapping the sun's boundJesa
energy with a solar satellite and
.....
then transmitUne the power to
Earth la often diacuased, but
"'what we overlook ia that a
solar satellite would have to be
.. bll as the island or
ManhatU.n," he said.
U.S. missile
explode4
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP > The .Navy uya the
ignition and launch of a Trident
missile were normal durin& a
teat but aomethl.ng went wroa1
alter the weapon started oo iu
course and that'a why it wu
destroyed.
A t.echn.iclan pushed a button
and exploded the misaile wbeo it
veered off-course after its test
launch from the submarine US&
Benjamin Franklin_ naval
officia,15 said. The N dy would
not aay which way the mi.uUe
was headin1. The sub was 50
miles from here Sunday when
the incident occurred.
The Trident missile~ to be
installed in nuclear subs of the
same name, bas a range of
nearly 7 ,000 miles. The Navy
said it was the second time a
Trident missile has had to be
destroyed in the air.
.!.
AP ........
JOURNEY BOAfUNG ..... The passenger's
manners may be a bit piggish, but that
doesn't seent to bother this chauffeur near
Prachin Buri, 38 miles northeast of Bangkok.
The Sty-cycle is the local answer to the
problem of transporting valuable, heavy and
sometimes cantankerous porkers from farm
to market.
Fila. for Skier
A~ .......
COMING UP FOR AIR -Brooks Deering, 4, of Boston
emerges from pile of leaves at the Boston Public
Gardens. It doesn't take much to keeP. some kids happy
-just a pile of leaves in the park.
Mobil still after
.Marathon buy
WASHI NGTON <AP)
Despite a new roadblock, M~il
Corp. says It is still confident
that its proposed takeover of
Marathon Oil Co. does not
violate antitrust Jaws and will be
approved.
The Fede ral Trade
Commission asked for additional
information from botb
companies on the $5.1 billion
deal, said Michael Ruaao, a
spokesman for Marat.hon. Under
antitrust law, the commi11.ioa
bad l b act before midoi1bt
tonight to prevent the merger.
The action means Mobil cannot
buy any Marathon sbarea until
10 'days after responding to the
FTC request.
Reagan
reckless
·-Mondale
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
f'ormer Vice Pre1ldent Walter
Moedale aays President Rea1an
baa fritbtened Americana and
theit European alll" with bis
"reckle11 di1re1ard" of tbe
dan1en ol nuclear war.
• In a 1peecb before the
C1llfornia Democratic Party,
Mondale attacked tbe
Republican president for wbat
be described 11 "dlaa1troua"
foreip and domestic pollcie1.
"We have not 1een anytbina
like it under any president of
either' political party," Mondale
said otReasan'a foreip policy.
He uid remarks by top
Reagan aides about "nuclear
wantlna ibota" and "lim1ted"
, nuclear wars "scares our
friends and undermines NATO ..
And Mondale said that
because of Reagan's so-called
"supply side" economic plan,
Americans face a receasioo
trig1ering the worse
unemployment in 40 yean.
"Supply side" economics is
based oo the theory that tax cuts
will stimulate the economy so
much that they increaae rat,ber
than reduce tax revenues.
• • Americaoa are aufferiog
from a radical, not a
conservative, economic policy
... they phonied the figures to
sell it," but now that the tax cut
ia enacted, the nation ii paying
through a recession, Mondale
said.
He added in a brief interview
between fund -raising
appearances for a Democratic
voter registration drive that the
cootroveny o\'er remarks m•de
~by Reagan's director of
management and bud1et, David
Stockman, to AUantic Montbly
was little more than • political
"sideshow."
But he said Stockmao's
com meota in the magazine did
reveal that Reagan 'a owo
adviaen had the same view that
Democrat.a publicly voiced of
the ill effect.a on the economy of
Reagan's tax cut.
In the article, Stockman
voiced personal doubts about
supply-aide economics, which be
described aa a variation of the
"trlclde-down" theory, ,by whic.h
tax cuts for the rich 1ive them
more funds to invest, ca~
the economic benefit.a to trickle
down to persons in lower income
bracket.a. ..
A fternoons sunny
Temperatures
NAflON
Coastal Al\Cllor-Alla,.ta
Mo'llY "-"WIY an..-. llaltlmor-e
CNstlll low •t. ,,.,_ S1 Coasi.I lll""lf191Wn
...... 61,1"'-7' Wat~60 ~ _
IEIMWllere, Sf\4111 Crall edvlsoo lluffelo
beceust of lerv• \Well\ Ll9hl c ,..rhtnWV
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lo •• """" lrt •11er1100ns Larqe Oaf.Fl Wiii -~terly _,, •lowlv dKrenlnv lo o.,.,,.,
t to • -IOftlOlll Five to I fool O.lrotl
breakers 011 ume •UI lecl"9 Felrbenlt•
toeacl>H dKrenlnv -.ilev Foo •nd H°"''°"
•-c-wttll OftlV .,.,,,., <1u rlnv '""""°"'
In afternoons K•"• City
U.S. summary ,,,
A t1•rrow b•t\CS of \P\ow•r'
stretcfttd tod1v from nort'"'"
Alabama artd Mlnlulppl 111rou911
llllnols and lnlo Wl\(OMI,.
Showers elto wlll be \Callered
today across Id-wettem Montal\8
ertd up ti. Ohio V•ll•v to Mlclll9an't
L-er Peninsula K<°"'i"9 lo Ille
National we-r Service lorault
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Celllor,.la lroto 1111 ~,. Ptaln\
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SltlH wlll ~.,.,,,,,cloudy ovor tlle
remalllditr of Ille United Stain
Lu Veoas
LO\ Alnljelft
Louls•lll• Mleml
Mll•auka
Ne•V-Oltla City
Omaha
Phoe,.I•
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Salt l •lt• S.n 0 1"90
S...Fr.,.
S.attle
SI Louis
Tul•a
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Re-City
Secram-o s.11 .. u San Bemanllno
S.nJ-Santa Ana
Saf\1•8.-•
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outlook
CALI l'OltNIA
ca19ary
Edmontllln
Montr•lll Ott-• R99IN TorOftlO
VMK-r
Winni-
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Sao ~•lllo
S.0..1 51,,.._.
StDcllllolm " n » M
NOltTHEltH CALIFO•NIA -
Lln9erln9 "'°""'" m•lnly In Ill•
""'111 w-•v but ·-" likely spreedlnt owr ""'111ern C•llf0<,.la
ellou1 Tl'Alndr( 1 .. 10 Friday. S.-In
Ille mountalfl• .00V. a4'0Ut S,000 1 .. 1
,,.., Ille e>r..,.. -r to-· 6,000
fff'I In IN Central Slerre Nev..ia
Hltll• In tlle '°'end tow 60s and tows
In the •O• to tow sos et lower
elevations.
CENTRAL CAILIFORNIA •
Vertallle' clolldlMH tllrouvll Friday
Cfla..ce of si.ow.rs spreadlnv from
the nortll about Tllursday Into
APOle Vallrt
llak enfi.tci
ll•r•I-
Beaumont
Blq Bur
Ills'-
81'(111•
Catalina
Eureka
Frtt"°
l •n<-""' l ""9 lle«1I
Marv•.,, Ille
Monrovl•
Montebello
Mortterey
MI Wll'°" NHdlel,
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Oakland
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Tel Aviv
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mid 50s at -etevetlons SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
DESERT AREAS -l'elr Wffllllr.
Hl9ll tem.,.raturet '" Ille 0••"' Valley 63 IO 13 and H>on In IM :IOs.
Hltlls. ll\ ll>e 11'91\ -.1 U lo 7S alld
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SOUTHEltN CALI FOlt N IA
COASTAl ANO MOUNTAIN AltEAS
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de<reasl"lf lly Friday. warmer lllOfl
temperatuNt will 6J to 70 at coest -1s IO 15 lnl~ L.OWt mostly O to S1.Hl9Met~ln-1UI06S wltll IOW\ ,,,_.,., U IO '17
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U:tt11.m..
We'r~ Listening •••
Wh at do you like about the Daily Pllot? Whal don't you llke?
Call the number below ana your mea111e will be recorded,
transcribed and delivered to the appropriJte editor.
The same 24-hour answenn1 service may be used to record let·
ters lo the editor on any topic. MaHbox eot1l11butor1 must include
their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation
calls, please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
Orange Coa1t DAILY PfLOT/Monday, November 1e. 1981
A LEAN ON THE PROPERTY -It's not
difficult to see which way the wind blows'
around Middletown, R.I. This old silo bas
stood up -more or less -to many a windy
Viet refugees' tempers short
Cramped quarters in Hong K ong leads to despai r , tension ·
HONG KONG CAP> -When
Vietnamese refugees be1an
arriving here in 1976, they ~ere put up in $40-a -day hotel rooms.
Now they are kept in more
cramped quarters that range
from former army barracks to
factory buildings with tiered
bunks.
This, along with processing
delays, is one of the reasons
given by refugee officials for
increasing despair aod tenaioo
among the refugees now as they
go through long waiting periods
for overseas reaetUement. •
For two nights late in October,
rioting broke out in the Jubilee
Refugee Camp, leaving four
persons iltjured. The camp ii a
restricted ooe; refugees are not
allowed to leave and
unauthorized visitors are not
permitted.
The October lncideots were
sparked olf by the transfer of
about 850 r efugees to the
r estric ted camp from a
government departure center
where they had freedom of
movement.
The trans fer w·as made
because the refugees' departure
for the United States has been
delayed following a U.S.
d ecision to reduce refugee
intake temporarily in order to
clear UP a backlog of processing
WO~. ·
The Vietnamese complained
of the loss of freedom aod said
they were being treated "like
prisoners."
Refugee-relief officials say
they fear the slow resettlement
program could lead to
recurrence of the disturbances
among the 16,700 refugees still in
this British colony awaiting
permanent resetUement.
These refugees are housed in
seven camps and the cramped
and primitive living conditions
there have further aggravated
discontent among them. More
than SO percent of them have
been here for two years.
Maurice Morgan, chairman of
the Red Cross Board wblcb runs
a refugee center here, said:
"When you are living in sucb
crowded conditions and are
uncertain of your future, almost
anything will make you
de s ponde nt.'' He added,
however: '·I don't think the
violence is too serious."
Deputy Secu rity Secretary
John Heywood, on the other
band, said Hong Kong will have
to revieW>-it.a policy if overseas
resettlement quotaa are lowered
and the flow of refugees from
Vietnam continues.
He added that the government
had revised its estimates of the
number of refugees who would
be left in camps at the end ol the
year to 11,000 from 9,000.
Heywood claimed the October
disturbances indicated t~al
some refugees are only
"economic adventurers," who
have no feeling of gratitude tb
Hong Kong for offerinc them
temporary asylum. He did not
elaborate.
Thia was not the fint time tb.lll
Vietnamese refugees bave
resorted to violence. In .r--..
1979, after spending five montbl
aboard the 3,500-ton frei&.bter
Skyluck, refugees-amooc the
2,651 Vietnamese aboard
severed the anchor io an
attempt to beach the ship so
they could land at Hong Kone.
Got $14 million?
This town for sale
BRASELTON, Ga. (AP> -
Hundreds of people are
interested in buytn1 this toYfD of
500 people after all, a local real-estate agent says.
"I guess we've bad 200 to 300
calls since the word went out"
last week that Braselton is for
sale, said David Moreland of
R~· 'i!AX Northeast Inc., the
agent bandlina the sale. "A few
calls even came from Europe.•'
Moreland, who hu set a price
of $14 millioo for the town,
refused to divulge the identities
of potential buyers, but said
most are individuals and
businesses seeking to bring
massive industrial expansion to
the area.
The community wai carved out
of the northeast Georgia
foothills in 1876 by William
HarNaon Braselton, whose
descendant.-have run it as sort
of a family busioeu ever ai.nce.
But the five eldest Braselton
men, an assortment of brutben
and cousins ranging in ace from
53 to 82, say they have no heirs
to take over the boldinp and
that it's time to sell.
The clan owns 85 percent ol all
property within the ci~y limi~.
including a 950-acre industrial
park, center-of-town 1boppi.n&
center, pblt office, blacbmith
shop, grist mill, barber sbop, 25
houses and a f' millioa bank.
Tbe five BrueJton.s who nm~
family corporation also
comprise the City Council. 1be
mayor's seat bu always beep
held tiy a Braselton, with
81 -year-old Lewis Braaelton
currently serving in the post.
Moreland said Friday that be
bas not received a firm offer lot
the town but expects to have ~
contract signed by the end of the
month. While $14 million la the
going price, the agent 1aid the
town ultimately may go to the
highest bidder. .·
The family's oniy request is
that the town keep ~ta name ~
that all employees m the family
businesses retain their Jot>..
Teen elect rocuted
V A LL E J 0 C A.P > -f\
maritime student who climbed a
power pole accidentally touched
a 115,000-volt line a nd was
killed, authorities reported
Thursday. Steven L. King would
have turned 20 Friday.
authmtic
cricktzt sWtZat<zr ...
...
'
s Orange Coest DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 1~. 1981
·can Stockman save credibility~
Budget director's incautious words will haunt him .. ,
JERUSALEM (AP> ..._ The
Israeli 1overnment bas nothing
good to say about Saudi Arabia's
eight-point blueprint tor peace in
the Middle East, but a tew
votces have a cauUou1 kind
word tor the plan.
One ot them ls Professor
Mordechai Ablr of Hebrew
Universit y, who agrees wltb
President Reagan and Secretary
or Stale Alexander Haig that the
1i plan i mplies recognition of
Isr ael as a legitimate state.
Abir says this may reflect
•··se r ious m o m e ntum which
could develop into something
very interesting." He suggests
"calling the Saudi bluff.''
· Prime Minister Menachem
Begin rejects the plan as a
"formula f or I srael's
li_q u idation."
~ T he plan calls for Is r ael ·s
withdrawal from all territory
-occupied si n ce the 1967
•A rab-Is raeli War and for a
! Pa lestinian stale with East
Jerusalem as its capital. Its 7th
·point recognizes the right of all
•states in the . area to live in
·peace, and Reagan. Haig and
Abir view this as implied
' recQgnition of Israel as one of
Lhose states. "
. Begin, however , says Clause 7
, does not refer to Israel since the
:Saudis do not cons ider it a
~legitimate state.
Chairman Moshe Arens of
•Parliament's Foreign Affairs
·Com mlttee, who was sent to
Washington to lobby against the
plan, caused a furor when he
s aid on his arrival that Clause 7
"goes a little ways in the right
I direction."
After th e I s raeli a n d
American press seized on hla
remark , h e s aid h e was
mis l n le r pre t eid and the
impllcallon ot recognition was
·•a veil of moderacy·." But
intormed IOUTCN say he Is one
of a handrul or mainstream
Israeli public figures who toe the
government line 'in public but
say privat e l y that o utright
rejection of the Saudi plan is a
mistake.
Yitzhak Berman, in cha rge of
e ne r gy matters In . Begin's
c a bi net, said s hortly after
Crown Prince Fahd unveiled the
plan in August that it cast ·•a
ray of sunshine" that pierced
the Saudis' mystical religious
fanaticism about larael. But he
has not spoken-on the subject
again .
Abir. a professor of Mideast
studies a nd a n occasion a l
adviser to the government, said
"the very fact that the Saudis
came forward with a plan"
implies recognition of Israel.
"I am very much alone on this
a mong my colleagues;" he told
T he Associated Press. "Most of
them are looking into the i;>ast."
Like all in Israel but the
extreme left, Abir scotfed at the
plan's p r oposals for a
Palestinian state and Israefi
withdrawa l from all ·the
occupied territories. But he said
he believes the Saudis gradually
have been moving toward
acceptance or Israel, partly
because of Saudi
interdependence with the-United
States.
H e said Is rael should
challenge the Saudis to talk with
ll.
CREDIBILITY CONE?
Dal'1d Sto<.'fnnan J
Sp ace plans
divide U.S.
NEW YORK <AP I
Americans are sharply divided
over whether t he primar}
emphasis of the U.S. s pace
program should be on national
defense or scientific explorat1on,
accord i ng to t h e l atest
Associated Press-NBC News
poll.
The telephone poll of 1.598
adults Oct. 25-26 in a sc1enta fac
nationwide random sampling
also said the public is split over
whether the United States
should participate in space
projects with other nations.
Yet a s trong majority of
respondents 60 percent said
they thank the space shuttle
program as a good investment.
whale 30 percent said 1t 1s nut
and 10 percent were not sure
By WALTER R. MEAR
•" 1tt«la1ce,111Ju•u1
WASHINGTQN -David
Stot• k man com mitted candor,
unit It was utmost a capital
o(f.ense
He's still direct.or of the OCCice
ol M unagement and Budaet, but
he 1s carrying baggage that 1s
goi ng to be a problem every
lame he goes out to sel I
Prl's 1dcnt Reagan's economic
program. "'
Arter all, he s aid he doubted 1t
will work, even while he was
hcl ping to push it through
Congress The Democrats are
not going to let him, or Reagan,
foq~et lhal~
When a preacher ·speaks
du baously. even cynically, about
tbe faith, the congregation is not
likely lo heed s ubsequent
sermons.
"' So it as with the aggressive.
am bilious young budget
manager, who came to question
thti Rt•agan program , then
nH·Jnled , apologized , orrere(I
Reagan his resignation and
pronounced himself a believer
after iill
rk :.aid he would have to let
othl1rs judge how effective he
t·1rn he an pushing the program
no~ The likely answer is not
't'n . at least not for a while
Ant.I there arc those who suggest
that Stockman. whose political
amh1t1on~ reach far beyond the
1.to\ crument ·s counting house.
wanted to ·be on record with
rc:.l•rvataons about the program
u1 l'lll>e at flops.
If that was a motive. he went
too far, for he's now had to
S\\allow his words to keep his
JOh
I ab:.olulely believe that the
supply-side theory is workable."
Stockman sa1d late lut week
after what he described as a trip
to the woodshed to apologize to
Reagan for poor judgment and
loose words.
That would appear to make
him a born-again supply-sider.
The supply-side theory is that
11• 11111111
an econom y rnruaed wtth
muslve tax reducllon1 will
thrive as Increased investment
and savi n gs pro m o te
productlvit.y and thus the i upply
of goods and services.
It Is the theory behind
Reagan's three-year. 25-percent
tax reduction. Stockman had
expcessed doubts about it. and in
tc'rms si milar to those the
Democrats used when they were
trying to block the Re1t1an bill.
Those gathering doubts were
chronicled in 23 pages of
Atlantic Monthly, in a piece by
William Greider, assistant
managing editor of th e
Washington Post.
In abbreviated summaries of
the Greider article, Stockman's
comments sound hke the pure
cynicism of a hired lobbyist
pushing a cause lo which be dqes
not subscribe.
For he called the tax cut
proposal on which the Reagan
plan was based a "'(rojan
horse" designed lo cut the top
tax bracket ftom 70 percent to 50
percent and made palatable by
reducing all the lower brackets,
too.
And he said supply-side
econ omics, boiled down, is
really an old doctrine that would'
gave the biggest break to the
wealthy and 'let the results
trickle down through the
economy lo the less afCluenl.
That is what Democratic leaden.
:.aid all along.
But the full Greider account
~aves a different picture, telling
a s tory of d1 :-.allusionment.
i.trowang frustration and doubt.
The s talemenb Stockman
<ick n owledged as a serious
d1sserv1ce to Reagan don 't
dotn an ale that ~tor} . they Clow
lrom 1t.
·· 1 have worried. but tOQ
publicly," Stockman said at his
a pology news t·onference He
worried t.o a reporter and said
he had thouaht It was all o1t t1M
record , but that Greider
understood that sllpulallon to be
only temporary.
Either way, Stockman ll I
former congressman ,_ho bal
been around Wasbln1ton 1001
enough t.o. know that wbat he
described as ·•careles1 ra m bllnc
to a reporter" is not the •ay to
keep a secr et or protect •
president.
His problem now is summed
up In one of bis less sentational
commenU( to Greider. He said
that for the Reagan program to
work, people have to believe It
will work.
·'The whole thing ls premiled
on faith," Stockman said. monlhl
ago. Jn the series of interview•
that followed. he confessed that ·
his own faith in It was shaken.
His apology to Reagan does not
erase that. ·
Medicaid
rules waived ..
for girl, 3
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa ~P>
Three-year-old Katie Beckett
was "very excited" to learn
she ' U be going home fr.om the
hospital s~o n , thanks to
President Reagan and a waiver
or Medicaid rules, her mother
said.
Mark and Julie Beckett,
K a t 1 e · s pa r ·e n ts , were
interviewed on ABC's ''Good
Morning America" pro,ram.
They described their hectic few
days since President Reagan
cited Katie's case as an example
of senseless bureaucracy.
Katie was stricken in 1978 with
vrral encephalitis. She has been
hospitalized since s he was 5
months old because the disease
left her with a respiratory
problem and she needs special
equipment to help her br eathe .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i --.
Rothschild out of business
French financier bitter over nationalization of bank
PARIS CAPJ -Baron Guy de Francois Mitterrand. I can't ans"er," the baron l>a1d
Rothschild, head of the family ·'The government. even 1f they of " hat I 1 es a h ead . · · IC
that for almost two centuries wanted to nationalize all banks. something which would be
has been the symbol of wealth in which I think is an extremely r espectable and valuable enough
France, is a bitter man. bad idea ... should have done to b e called 'the House or
"This office in which I am things properly. Thal means Roth schild' in France wall
receiving you is empty because carefully," De Rothschild said. survive or revive. I can 't tell ·
1 · ve already "They are acting in haste as if It Is not the first time Lht-
. taken all my they are being pursued by a n French Rothschilds. who
be Ion gin gs enem y and they wanted to burn descend from Meyer Roths('h1ld,
o u t , · · the everything befor e the enemy an early 19th-century German
soft-spoken. caught up with them, which is moneylender. have seen their
gray-h aired totally absurd." domain eroded.
b'a n ker and The nationalization'-In 1936. the leftist Popular
' financier told expected to take effect within a Front deprived lhe Roths<'hilds
a Vl·s1'tor to of theii-extensive railroad few months. The amount of ~the h ead · government compensation is holdinJ:s. In 1940, after German
quarters of under negotiation. As of 1978, the troops rolled into France. the • he Banque lltO"THSCHILD R h h 'ld B k h Vi chy ROvernment or Marshal cieRothschild on rueLaCCitte. o t $C 1 an was t 9t Henri Ph1l1ppe Peta an among France's 53 largest "This has been my home, banks, with an annual turnover confiscated the fa mily's fortune
1 perhaps even more than where I and stri pped them of their
lave because I've chanled places of more than Sl.8 billion. c1t1zensh1p after they fled the
whe re I live. This has been my Although the cornerstone or countn .
constant home in every respect the Rothschild empire has Afle·r the war, the fam1I}
fo rthelast50years." always been finance, the r eb'udt its prosperity in the
T h e 72-year ·o ld Guy de family's considerable holdings banking world and expanded
Rothschild, alon g with has m hotels and other real estate, into other fields
: cousins Elie and Alain, 1s m the mining, petroleum exploration, "The French R othsch1lds
, process of leaving rue Laffitte mutual funds, vineyards and com milled the error of behe\ mg
and the banking busmess. The other areas wall keep it a ma.Jor they could evolve and develop
, venerable Rothschild Bank 1s financial force. Nevertheless. with theu tames and in their
tone of 36 private banks being the future of the House of countr)," the baron said an a POOL SHARK An eight-fool s hark 1s loaded ~nationalized by the new S<1caalist Rothschild is clouded. re cent article 1n the Paras 11110 a tank at Ca<.'sars Palar e in I.as \'eg as to
overnment of President "lt'saveryopenquestaonthat newspaperLcMonde." ht•lv promoll' lhe movie ·Grc<.il \\'h1te" tu iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliil-=====~=====------~
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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 18, 1981 s ~·.
~UffiU~
Scielltists fight ln<Uan burials
They liken planned reinterment to 'throwing away chapter of California history'
SAN DIEGO (AP> -SclenUata are or1anlitn1
to batUe the eUert under way by Indian tribes In
C"Ulomla to bury hundreds of skeletons of their
ancestors uncovered over the years.
An anthropology profeasor At UCLA was
quoted as saying an attorney was being hired .Jo
atop them.
The Indians are "talking aboot burying more
than 800 skeletons and 10,000 associated artifacts
like beads, pottery and arrow points c~refully
collected over a half century at public expense on
public property," Dr. Clement Meighan said.
• "Burying them Is like throwing away a
chapter or California history," said Meighan,
chairman of the newly formed American
Committee for the Preservation of Archaeological
Collections.
Peter Dangermond Jr., state director of parks
and recreation, issued an order June 25 turning
over the artifacts and 872 skeletal remains In state
Professor
fights ·booz e
LOS ANGELES <AP > -The Bruins can't buy
a brew at UCLA's student union because of a
65-year-old professor's never-ending battle against alcohol on campus.
"AJcohol is a major public heath problem in
this country, and the university would be
promoting it and profiting from It," said professor
Edward Rada, who even succeeded In keeping the
Faculty Center dry for six years aner it sought a
Ucense. He did lose that battle, however, in 1974.
But the battle over the bar at UCLA 's
Ackerman Union continues. Al present, the only
drinks available there are water <bubbly and
regular), rruit juice, soda pop, coffee, lea or milk.
No beer. No wine. No alcoholic beverages of any
kind.
Rada, who has taught economics in the
university's School or Public Health for 28 years,
has been fighting the issuance or a liquor license to
the Associated Students of UCLA since last year.
when construction of a bar in the campus
Ackerman Union restaurant was completed.
Other University of California campuses have
had student bars for several years, as have the
state universities. UCLA 's archrival, the private
University of Southern California, has three
campus food locations where students can buy
alcoholic beverages. :-·
Rada, whose arguments failed to halt Ute state
Alcoholic Beverage Control office ft'om granting a
liquor license last March 27, has appealed to the
ABC's four-man appeals board, which ls expected
to make a decision by December. Rada bas
threatened lo go to court ii he loses.
One main issue. be said, Is bow to keep
students upder the legal drinkine age of 21 out or
the bar. UCLA officials say patrons would have to
show two identifications and proor ot ace.
Also, contended Assistant Vice Chancellor
Christian Smith, "It seems siUy that sludehts can
walk 10 feet off campus into Westwood and get a
beer, but they can't walk 10 feet on campus and
get a beer."
·'The students need a place for lounging and
socializing," Smith added. "And having a beer or
wil\e is a normal way many people relax. I don't
think we'll have students staggerinJ down Bruin
Walk (a campus walkway) or coming to class
bleary-eyed."
Dr. Roger Detels, dean of UCLA 's School of
Public Health, said, "I agree with Dr. Rada that
the primary objective of the college students
should be to learn', but I don't see any problems
with a bar on campus. Students must learn to take
responsibility for their own actions. That's part of
the academic process too."
Many of UCLA's 34,600 students are also
unhappy with Rada's stance.
"He's hopelessly paternal," said Erik Autor,
23, a history senior. "Maybe we should start
calling him Dad."
"There aren't any hate groups after him,"
said Brian Fuller, 21, an associated editor of
UCLA's Daily Bruin. "But some students have a
few choice things to say about him."
Sam Law , president of the UCLA
undergraduates, said: "The students are yearning
for respect as mature individuals. The very
presence of a bar on campus would serve as a
symbol of that."
But Rada stands firm.
"The university is supposed to promote the
well-being of students," he said. "But having a bar
would destroy the students. It's like a poison.
There would be alcohol abuse. No one every knows
who the next victim will be."
Offic ials stress
r elned y danger
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A folk remedy sold in
herb stores and prescribed by folk healers for
treatment of digestive disorders contal~ a
dangerously high level of lead and should not be
used, county health officials say.
The drug, called azarcon, drew medical
attention after it was learned it had been given to
a 4-month-old boy who was admitted to Olive View
Medical Cent~r with symptoms or lead poisoning,
officials said last week. Oran1e-rolOl"ed particles
found in the infant's stomach were shown to have
a lead content of 86 perc~nt.
• • Azarcon should not be used for human
consumption," said Dr. Shirley Fannin, chief of
acute communicable diseases for the county.
"Anyone with symptoms should see a doctor
and tell him that you may have poisoned
yourself." .
Symptoms of lead poisonin1 include loss of
appetite, apathy, anemia, initablllty, clumaineas
and vomiting. Lead poisonin1 can cauae brain
damage arid death. _.,,
.Fannin said the mother ot the aUlns baby
reported that a curandero, or baby beater, bad
given the ll\fant azarcon, wbfch abe aald ii KDOwn
to many Lalinot. However, the extent ot Ill Ute in
Los Anseles ii not known and Fanaln hid survey•
•how many people are reluctant to dl1cun their
uae of aurcon. It b uted to treat chronlc lndl,..uon ind other
IUlrolnteltinaJ prvblem1, .... laid. • u
posaeaflon to "appropriate Native American
1roupa for relnterment."
The first burial ceremony took place Oct. 29 at
an undisclosed location inside CuyamJlca Rancho
State Park In central San Dle10 County. Those
mostly cremated remains of 10 ancient Indians
had been stored In pottery urns in which
lhty were found in the same park between 1930
and 1960.
Arrow points, beads and oUter artifacts found
with the urns were reported burled with the human
remains.
Although the remains bad never been studied
in detail, president Ron May of the San Diego
County Archaeological Society esUmated them to
have been "pre-Christian" burials made before
1800. He said some of the urns had been in
collections of the San Diego Museum of Man while
others came from a small Indian museum at the
park headquarters.
A majority or the state collections, uncovered
mostly In highway work, is stored in a Sacramento
warehouse under supervision of state
,..
archaeologl,Jt Francis Riddell.
Lul month, Riddell sought a court order to
bar .. the reburials.
Meighan told the San Diego Union that while
the Sacramento judge ruled there was Insufficient
public interest "we are going to demonstrate there
is a great deal or public interest.''
"Inside of a month, we also are going to have •
the signed support of about 10,000 scientists all
over the country. for example," the UCLA
anthropologist said.
Meighan said Dangermond 's order was
comparable t-0 the cultural revelutlon in China that
expunged much or that country's cultural heritage
in the late 1960s and early l!nOs.
The Native American Heritage Commission
based in Sacramento contends that Indian
religious freedom was violated in the removal or
the human remains and associated artifacts. Its
director, William Pink, an Indian appointed like
Dangermond by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., said
Indians believe the unearthing improperly
··releases the spirit" or their buried ancestors.
'
............
RAPS CIA Kathleen McK enney. 28. says
that the CIA was b~hind the espiom1ge C'ase
that sent her tianre to prison for hre She and
Daulton Lee. l'On,·1ctecl with Christopher
Bo~ t·e. hopl' to marr~ in Januar~
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•
Orange Ooatt DAIL. Y PILOT/Monday, November 18, 1981 .
\ ....
Supervisors seek
• • rein on committe-es
The Ornnne County Qoard or Supervisors has taken steps to
sol\'t> o ptoblcrn the1t's existed for
years. J\ncl. b~ gosh . the board
cl i cl •l \\1tho ut for min g a
comm1tlt•v'.
Thl· 1s:-.ut! <:ame up during
lust sumrnel''s round of hearings
on t lw <·ount y budget. The
QU Cl"l t i on wa s how cou ld
supel'\ 1sors gel some hold on the
}Jr o lifr rat i on of board s.
tom m 1ssion.\. c ouncl Is. task
1111 l t'' and tomm1ttee!:> that is.
t hl• pa11eb that do e\'ery thing
I r 11 m h L' I p c s t a b I 1 s h f o o cl
:-.:.rn1tation standards lo re\'iewmg
"u'..., ol l'manting expansion of
.John \\";1y1w .\1q>ort.
!'here <i re a lot of ('Ount ,.
p.11wb. i.;34 1n all 01 that numt>e'r
82 'il'I'\ e at the d1!trretion 'of the
-.upl'I'\ 1sor:-. Others are recluired
I)\ -.tale la\\ or must t.>x:Sr so that
!ht· ('Ollnl \ ma~· qualif~ for some
types 'of st a t e and federal
funding.
As a result of the board's
action. all panel s w i ll race
scrutin y during n ext year 's
budget hearings., Panels will ~
r equired to provide information
on what i l is costing the county '
for their continued existence.
Man~· panels. for example. rely
on county e.mployees to provide
staff support.
It is quite possible that some
panels may be eliminated next
year. No one should be surprised
t o see panel m embers up in
arms. attempting to justify the
existence of their part icular
group.
We suggest members of such
committees take the hint earl v.
T he sympathy that has existed in
the past toward committees 1s
not likely to be extended.
·Disarray at the· top
Surel~. when Ale~an<ler Haig
.Jr tl'lls Con c~Tess that a ~ATO
<·ont1 11 genl'\ plun calls for a
11ul'lt•<u-\\arning shot to he fired
11 ,1 ('Ull\ l'llt111nal war hreaks out
111 t·:u1 opv \ tHI cl e xpeC't his
-.1.1t l'mt•111 tu l>l' acnirate.
. \lll'l' all l la1g 1s Sc('retary ol
:->t.1 l t' .111d ha..., C"1;l Cns1 n .• m1 It tar~
l'\J>l'l IL'llt't' in Europe
Hut. lo. along tomes Caspar
\\'1•1 11IH.·1 !.!l'I'. hc tor e ano the r
"t'll .t H · t'11rrnrnt1 l'l'. and denies the
11t 'l d<I\ that there 1s sut h a
pl.111
I llL'rl' 1-. ab:-.ol utl'I~ nothing
111 ,Ill\ plan that I know ot lh<tt
, •111t.1in:-. <111\ t hing r emot e I\
n•..,1•111hli11J.! t h~1 l. nor should 1t. :.
-..11d l llv ~t·1·1 l·t:..1n ol Defense
\\'hom dot"' onl' helte\'e ..
l IH•11 Jhl' ad min1strat1on
,1< I-1\11\\ lt·d ~l''> I hJI '\;,\TO has
d1 -.c·11 -. .. -<:cl l11'1 n g a nucl ear
'' <1111111!.! shot 10 dlSl'OUrage lhl'
Sn\'"" tl tnn \'entional war
1l11·:1i.. ... nut m Europe But the
1<11·:1 h.i~ Ill'\ er tw en transl~ted
into a military pl an.··
~ATO said there were a
.. thousand options.··
Then. President Reagan. al
h i s news con feren ce l a s t
Tuesda~·. said he still does not
know whether NATO had such a
plan .
If the president. of the l.:mted
St ates doesn·t know. we ask . who
cloes '! And why doesn't he·!
Europe 1s already upset on~r
Rea g a n ·s rec ent re ma rk s
toncernmg a ltm1ted nuclear war
1us t 1n Europe The l atest
disarray 1s .iusL as upsetting to
Americans.
The United St ates and ~ATO
d on 't ha,·e to broadcast · what
their policy 1s. but one would
hope the~· at least ha,·e one
We thmk the events of the
past few weeks including the
disagreem ents on these issues at
\'ery h igh l e\'e l s o f U .S .
go\'e!:.JlDlitnl are ('ause for great
concern. ··
Toward safer highways
Caltlorn1.1 ..., I rcewavs and
lugh\\ a\ s "Ill hl' so mewhat safer
Ill''' \ l·ar when a m easur e
t•-.1ahl1-.l111\J.: a lttensing and
1n-.pt'l tton p r og ram for
h,11i.Jrdou~ -.ubst a n('e haulers
lil'l'Oml'' la\\ on J.an l.
P rt•>;t•n t l a w requ 1rt'S
I I l' l' ll ... I n I! I () r h a u I e r s () r
ha1ardo11 ... \\t:i:-.tes. hut a mut·h
111ure pn·:-....,.ng danger to the
g!'IH'f'Jl puhlt<· 1:-. the r outine
h<1ul11\)! of <:ommt•1T1ul t hem1 cab
.111d flammable ga...,es used in
h 11 .., 1 n c•' :-. a g r 1 c 11 I t u r e a n d
incl usl n
Sp1'tls ol these highly lOXll'
.... uh ... tant'l'" ha,·e be('ome more
.ind more I requent in r ecent
11 ml'...,. but unl ti no\\ no special
l1<'l'l\:-.111g ha::. tll'en r equired for
1 ho<,t· ''ho t t an~port them .
E a rli e r thi s month . rn
('ttst<11t" a 2.000·gallon spill of
prnpy lene d1C'hloriclc. a chemital
u:-.t•d as a soh·ent and fumigant.
c•au!:>ed the t'\'<.lt tt a llon of 300
people from a two·square-m1le
aroo S1xl) of those exposed to
tht• poi sonous 'apor r equired
ho-;p1tal tr('atment
[n this msl am·e a t ruckcr had
•
pulled into the parki ng lot of a
s mall c afe to take. a n ap.
unaware that the chemical was
pouring from a leak in his tanker.
Fire Department inspectors
later said the spilled chemical
should only be hauled in stainless
5leel tanks. The tanks on the
truc k·lrailer r.ig were made of
alum mum.
The new state law. which was
supported by the Caltforn1a
Trucking Association. 1s ·aimed
s pec1f1 t·ally at pre\'ent1nj!
deliberate or mad\'ertent errors
of this type by eliminating the
use of unsafe trucks through
r egular inspect ion s and by
pre venting the operations or
fly·br·night haulers through stiff
penalties for failure to earn· the
special licenses. ·
It will g1\'e t h e Highway
Patrol new clout in che('king
suspect vehicles and pro\'tde
needed additional protection for
the public and at no pubtit
cost . since the licensing and
1nspect1on requirements will be
funded entirely b~· fees paid b~
the haulers of toxic substantes.
Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex·
pre!>sed oo th is page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Inv It· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O . .Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. PN>ne (714)
642·4321.
L.M. Boyd I Cha,rley horse
Q I know the t e rm "Charle)
horse" ori~mally referred to a lamt
racehorse. but who coined it?
A. Couple qf Chicago White Sox
basebaJI players. Billy Sunday and
Joe Quest. Their favorite horse of the
day named Charley -suddenly.
st arted limping in the stretch.
Thereafter, any leg cramp' became
known as a Charley horse.
Was customary for the Kings in old
England to give each knlgbt errant
four good horses. Each needed same,
certainly. The knight errant was a
traveling !flan. In search of wrongs
t.o right.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
""ll'•• .... ,.,.,1 0.• of II• ,_ " .U0 w.tl N¥ I tetl• 1#"'4 A~ Ifft• <Oft•l..,...,,.f II ... '"° c .. 1.ww , ••
Q. Stockholm's 1,400-bed Huddlnce
Hospital ln Sweden baa been
described as the finest in the world.
Why?
A. Arn not. qualified to Judie. air.
Imagine the doctors could debat• it
at. some lftllth. All l know II t.he
buildin1 ls lllled with aculptures1 tapestries and fountalna. -.ledlca
arts all ri1Q. It's Ute a modern
museum.
Not much dilcuued of fate II the
fact that the typical porC\IPIM bu ..
about. 25,000 qullla. Maybe a lourtb u
many aa a humu hu baln on tb•
bead.
Thomas P. H•l•Y
Publisher
TllolMIA._,.,..IM
Editor
larwaK~tl
EClltortelP ... a .. tlr
New CIA chief stirs ruckus
WASJUNGTON -The hazard of
populating the CIA 's upper levels with
form e r campaign managers and
wounded politlcaJ warhorses has now
bee n impressed upon President
Reagan.
He wound up after the election with a
surplus campaign manager, Bil Bill ..
Casey -an authentic curmudgeon who
was given custody of the CIA as hia
rewar4 for successful politicking. In the
usual poUtical tradition, Casey brought
a few old cronies with him .
Casey proceeded to crash around the
corridors of the CIA with t,be delicacy of
an old bull, trampllng on t~. upsettin&
apple carts and generally breaking up
the chinaware. Underat~ndably, he
aroused the hostility or some of the
old·line spooks .
THE POINT to remember is that the
CIA 's old hands are by definition
s killCul in subte rranean operations.
They have made their professional
careers by "destabilizing" enemies. So
it was child's play for them to exhume
lhe skeletons in Casey's closet and see
_J.ha't they were rattled in the· right
places ..
That being said, however, it cannot be
denied that Casey's background is
certainly worthy of in vestigation. At
one point, in'=' fact, Sen. Barry
Goldwater, R-Ariz., the certifiably
conservative chairman or the Senate
Intelligence Committee, declared that
Casey should resign as CIA director.
Goldwater has s ince bad second
thoughts, but there is sWJ room for
doubt about Casey's qualifications for
the sensitive job.
Jll:I 11111111
4
"'3sey, were sued by stock.holders for
concealing their knowledge or its feeble
financial pealth while they peddled its
stock to the public.
A MuJtiponics prospectus -approved
by Casey -claimed that the company
operated seven working farms with
little outstanding debt.iln fact, howvver.
only five or the farms were operating,
and each of them carried a heavy
mortgage. Proceeds from the sale or
stock went to buy a company in which a
Multiponics insider had an interest, and
to pay the directors for loam; they had
made.
Casey has claimed e was ·m'erely
an innocent investor. not involved in the
inner affairs of Multiponics. But Senate
in vestigators have a tWO·fOOt Slack Of
documents that discredit the CIA chief's
protestations of innocence.
A confidential memo prepared by one
of the Senate investigators stales that
Casey was aware or the details of the
misleading stock offering. And Casey's
own testimony in a bankruptcy case
in volvjng Mulliponics disputes his
claim that he was only an innocent
Royal kid doomed to. life
"The poor kid." That's aJI I could
think when I beard the news that Prince
Charles and Princess Diana are going
to have a baby. It's just pai.nfuJ lo
consider what that child has before him
or her for a life.
Most of us grow up looking over the
-world to see what we want to do in it.
Depending on what kind ol people we
are, we either drift along where the
current takes us in life or make plans
and head purpocefully in one direction.
We end up where we belong or where
we don't belong, depending some on
luck and lots on our own ability or
inab1Uty. The son or daughter or the
future king of England will have no
such freedom lo succeed or fail. This
kid's U/e is already all laid out and
we 're all going to know his every move.
It's like committing a human ~ing to
live as though caged for public
exhibition in a zoo.
THE WORST British newspapers are
the worst newspapers in the world.
They make our bad newspapers look
like bad journalis m amateurs. The
National Enquirer looks staid, stuffy
and reliable compared to half a dozen
rriass·circulation dailies in London. and
those are the papers that will be
carrying the s tories about the royal
child. From the moment that kid is
born, the trashy London papers will
assign people to hound the child every
I~"'
-AID-Y-RD-111-Y -§t
moment of his lire . The child ~ will be
photographed with long lenses ~om
hidden cameras a nd written a t
daily. The poor thing will never have a
really private moment. There were
probably reporters staring at the
darkened castle window when Charles
and Diana conceived the child. .
Would you trade what you've got to be
a prince or princess in the British royal
family? I like Prince Charles a lot and
Princess Diana seems fine but they can .
have what they are. As a matter of fact,
it's difficult for me to understand why
so many people want f.ame ·or
recognition. or any kind. It's assumed
that fame.is what everyone is after. .
Questions without answers
Que1tion1 I Don't E%pect to Have-
An1wered:
-Why should an American child
bother to learn correct Entllab, or think
it important, when be can bear the
President of his country say over
national televi.sloo, "They were very
kind to my wile and I "?
-Why do motorists invariably slow
mllY Ulll
down when t.b.ey spot a state patrol car
even when they are driving well wit.bin
the limit?
-WHEN I GET a letter poetmarked
"MS," in the new two-letter 1yatem,
bow am I supposed to know 11 lt la from
Mlaaisalpp{, Miasourl or Minnesota?
-When an lce·cream 1hop bu the
nerve to charge $3.95 for an ordlnary ·
banana aplit. -aa I apled on a menu thla
1ummer -why don't more cuatomera •
1lmply walk out ln prder to briq down
web autraceoua overprlclq?
-1lflaJ do '° many female network
..... nportAn, delplte tbelr otberwtM I
t
feminine looks, have such masculine
jaws?
-Why should I buy an American car
when an auto manufacturer will import
rrom overseas any comp0nents he can
get more cbeaply?
-Why do most furniture stores,
which should surely know better,
advertise a chaise tongue as a "chaise
lounge"?
· -Why are men's sports shirts with
llttle animals engraved over the pocket
-alligators, loxes, sheep -more
expensive than those without them,
when all they do ls ugUCy the shirt?
~ WHY CAN'T the hawks and
hard·liners in each country see that it Is
the same klnd of hawks and hard·linen
in other countries that represent a
threat to them?·
-Why are people who enjoy set.Una
Ul> early so inordinately proud. of lhe
fact., as it lt were a matter of merit
instead of melabolilm?
-·Why does the pbon' company bin
so many "Information" operatort
whose dlctlon would not. dllftify Uae
sponsors ot a dog·tltht?
-WRY DO so mary doj OWW'I
permit their pet.I to puJ UMm .....
a leuh, wbeo It la ob.-. tMt tM
master should do UM cllnitllil' •
investor in the firm. "I think the record
will show," Casey told the court, •'that I
had a great deal to say and a fair
amount or influ~nce In the basic
d~cisions the directors made."
Concerning the Mult1ponics insistebce
that its directors -including Casey -
were unaware that the agribusiness
company was financially shaky, the
Senate sleuths have testimony from a
former Multiponics executive named
Vernon Bacher. He testified that when
he informed Casey and the other
directors that Mult iponics lacked
adequate equity, "it was like informing
an Eskimo that it was cold -they
already knew."
Soon after , Multiponics defaulted on a
$1.2 million bank loan -and eventually
went under to the tune or a S3.2 million
loss.
WHAT NEXT? Senate investigators
told my reporters John Dillon and
Corky J ohnson that they haven't yet
come up with a "s moking gun" to nail
Casey. They do have other instances of
the CIA director's questionable deals.
But without rock-solid evidence of
misbehavior. Casey's job at the CIA is
secure. He has the president's
confidence, and for the tim& be._.,. that
ii enough.
Footnote: CIA general counsel
St a n I e y Sp or kin s a rd that t be
Mulliponics affair was "a commercial
matter" and that Casey "had no direct
knowledge" that stockholders had been
misled . The CIA director "is ao
hono r a ble man and the <Senate)
investigation is going to support that
finding, .. Sporkin added.
in spotlight
Each one of us hopes to be good
enough at something so that our name
comes to the attention or our neighbors
.and perhaps even t o some or the
strangers in our town. This seems like a
proper enough kind of ambition for all
of us to have, but the kind of fame we
see so much of is false. Too often rame
d~sn't have anything to do with ability
or with any contribution the individual
has made to society. Too often the
really important people are unknown
and the people whose reputations have
been made out of whipped cream or egg
whites a re familiar to all of us .
Everyone knows Elizabeth Taylor, but
who reme mbers or would recognize
Paul Berg, the 1980 Nobel Prize winner
for chemistry?
FUNNY THING about fame Is that,
while almost all of us would like to have
it, those who succeed in getting it
almost always start trying to avoid
what it brings to them . The movie star
who has worked all his life to get bis
name in lights sneaks out back doors
and walks down the street wearing dark
glasses and a hat pulled down over his
face so he won't be recognlzed. The
great Ame rican novelis t holes up
somewnere in New England, hoping DO
one will ftnd out where he's hiding. For
one thing , he doesn't want to be
bothered with fame because he's busy
writing a new novel that will make him
rnore famous than ever. he hopes.
There are a lot or drawbacks to
being Camous in a popular sense. The
most serious. I suppose, is the necessity
fame Imposes upon a person to Uve bis
or her ure the way other people expect
them to live it. The famous penoo
always has to keep ln mind bow what he·
does will strike lhe public, because be
can be dam sure the public will hear
about it.. That's what. thls kJd of Prince
Charles and Princess Diana will be up
against. IC I were Ip their jodhpurs~ I'd
give some serious thought. to offering
the child u_p for adoption so be could li•e
a life of blessed anonymity.
\
t
• ·<
-
-----~~--.. ~----'--··~---....... !1ilir!i --....--. ,_, ____ _
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Mpnday. November 16, 1981 1
Judge: 'Spell name r:ight'
Tax: refund ·p~o·ne listed
NBW YORK <AP> -U.S. District
Judie Mark Costantino la ordlnarUy
an artable man, but don't mlupell
hl1 name ..
The 6l·year-oJd Judge, who 1pent 14
years as a state Supreme Court
jusllc;e in Brooklyn before ucendlna
the federal bench, is fed up with
'having his laal name spelled 11
"Constantino" In le1al papers
1ubmmed lo him for action. So f('Om
how on he won't accept papers with
~he misspelling.
"~e : corr~l 1pellin1 or /udae'•
name. The correct 1pellln1 o Judge
Costantino 11 C·O·S·T·A N T I N·O
Coatuntlno mual be.' on all paper• to
be accepted for llUng. Con1tantlno
<the •n • Is underlined> Is Incorrect."
• DEAR PAT DUNN: I've moved &wlee
&bit year ud bave uver ,_elved •f &•
lacome tax refud. I• &bere aay way U.a& I
cH fllld out wbat bappeaed to ltf
P.H. Coeta MeH
Yes. The Internal Revenue $;rvlce asks
you ,lo phone (800) 242·4500 so your mi11l11g
check can be tracked down. l'he IRS reports
that 9,227 checks tor lhdlvldual1 and
b1&&lnesses were returned by the post omce
• aa undeliverable . These checks total a
whopping $5,012,872.!
AAA e JJdorsed
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've .tea some AAA
Club ''Approved MecbaDJc~ Repair"
• 1l1ns at aome car repair 1faops. What does
thls mean and bow ud a 1bop qu.U(y?
N.J., NeW)>or& Beach
Before a repair facility Is invited to
r.arlicipate, Automobile Club of America
nvestigators research,. records of the Better
Business Bureau, the state Department of
Consumer Affairs and ·similar agencies.
Previous customers are randomlY selected
and asked to comment,,. on their experience
with the facility. The physical plant and
equipment a r e inspected . personnel
qualifications checked and management
practices examined. A full range of services
must be available.
If approved, management 'can enter into
a CORlract with />:.AA and agree to: have
available at least one mechanic capable' of
meeting certified training and/or hands-on
experience requirements in each of eight key
mechanical areas (en11ine, brakes, etc.>:
maintain a training program for keeping
employees current on n ew automotive
developments; maintain an eHective quality
control system, preferably with spot
checking of work by someone other than the
mechanic performing it; sublet work only in
limited areas and WHEN it is n~cessary to
ensure quality results : and provide a sale
and adequate customer waiting area. clean
restroom facilities and customer parking.
The facility also must agree to binding
arbitration with AAA Club specialists serving
as arbirrators. When the facility is found al
fault the management must agree to do the
work over again or to refund the customer's
money.
Risk re moved '
[)EAR PAT DUN.N: I am planning lo
buy some new stereo equipment. Wbat klnd
of a warranty should 1 expect lo &et?
C.F .• Fountain Valley
A good warranty program will guarantee
the equipment you buy for at least one year
green-rust-
grey, $90
Both, sizes
6 to 16
from the datl or purchase. On some brands
you'll see warranties of up to three or five
years You alao may want to find a stereo
retaifer wbo often a seven to 30·day1
1aU1faet.lon auarantee.
Should you purchase a stereo and
discover that It does not exactly meet your
needs thls program allows you lo exchange
the equipment or 1et a complete refund.
Other programs that take the risk out or
buyinl stereo equipment include a one.year
s peaker trade in program llnd periodic
clinics and "tune ups" for your system.
Artto '.fixit ' aid
DEAR READERS : For many
consumers. Just lifting the hood of a car to
look for the source of a problem can brin& on
an a nxiety attack. There's so much "stuff" in
there! Anyway, it probably would take $S37
worth of gribet wrenches, widget
calibralors, and assorted specialty tools to
fix anything.
You'll be less easily intimidated if you
have a good guidebook to follow -one that's
written in plain English and assumes you
don't know anything about cars lo begin with
'"The Backyard Mechanic, Volume III" 1s
such a book. It waJks you through a senes or
r epairs ranging from replacing filters to
pounding out dents. To get a copy, send S4 to
the Consumer Information Center, Dept.
204J. Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
Markers replaced
DEAR PAT DUNN : My father was a
veteran whose grave marker bas been
damaged by the weather over the years. Is It
possible lo have it replaced?
K.J ., Costa Mesa
Yes. Replacements for damaged
marker s may be requested by writing :
Monument Service, Department of .Memorial
Arfa1rs (42>. 810 Vermont Ave. N.W .
Was hington. D.C. 20420. The cost of th
replacement will be paid by the government
if weatherworn to the extent it is no longer
legible. .
• ··Got a problem"' Then wnle to Pal ""'l Dunn Pat wall cu1 red tape getting
• the answers and action you need lo
•
so/I)(' anequihes an government and
~ -Ousineu Moll y<YJr questions lo Pat 1 I Dunn. ~I Your Sermce. Orange Coast
Dally Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 As
many Letter.! as possible will be answered. !nit phoned
anquanes "or Letter• not including the reader's full
name. address and b1mneu hours· phone number
•cannot be cOMicUTed. Thia column. appear• Monday.
Wedne.fd(fy. and Friday
He's prepared for publication in
Ute New York Law. Journal the
following notice:
l
.....
Hygiene for teem
PEKING CAP> -China's tlrat
national con(.prence on Juvenile
hygiene is uqder way here and the
official news agency Xlnhua said
medical workers called for more sex
education for teen.agers. ·
M[(l IDA GP[UAN .
AUTUOP or ·wAHHOPD
AN IP l~U A Pl . ~ Al 6W NlWPOPf BrACU
Attend an 1nformat1ve
side presemat10n and
lecture on the hrstory and
trad1t10nal craftsmanship
of Waterford crystal
presented by Ida Grehan
Ms Grehan will also
autograph your copy of
"Waterford, An Irish Art"
Lectures this Wednesday,
November 18, w ill begin
at 10:30, 11 30, and 2:30
For reservations please
telephone (714) 759·1211.
extension 284 Crimson,
leatherbound ed1t10n of
"Waterford, An Irish Art" ,
S 125 Crystal,
SW Newport Beach
~~ llOC~)
WI l~~ I ~b
m mwuv HOPI
83 FASHION ISLAND. NEWPORT BEACH. 759· 1211 , MON·FRI 10·9. SAT ·6, SUN 12·5.
MINIMUM BIDS 'FROM $67 PER SQUARE FOOT
Origin~lfy Priced From $92 To $ 139 Per Sq. Ft.
Special Auction Financing
85% Financing -28 Vear Amortization -13112% Interest Axed -3 Years
· -Optlon To Close 1981 Or Early 1982-
NOTE: Complete financing information a~llable at auction lnfonnatlon offic~
(
Ollke arus prolllde maximum lleJtlbllty to bw1d out eddlllonal space. Eacti wardlouse futura a 12' x 12' groood ~I door with minimum
16 foot truss heights. UtRltles aa underground. units lndMdualy mete~. Ampte partclng. Completely landscllped.
EXCEl..LEN1' TAX SHELTER ..• TM Economic Recovciy Tax Act ol 1981 provides an excellent tax shelter fOf companies. u~ lhls cype
of 11:al estate purd1ast. Yoo are ~,.o consult with your accountant'°' complete details. • t Pre·\UCUon property lnspecUon tours dally and weekends 11 to 5
Interested parties arc urged to p~ Inspect aM properties bcfd're Auction aod to examine al salu docu~nt.s lnducflng Pun:ha.se &
Escrow Agtument, Fonn ol Note & Deed ol TNst. Homeowner AssodaUon. Prdmfnary Title Report. and Pubic Report.
CAI.I. FOR A DESCRIPTIVE llROOtOft£
AIRPORT WEST B<.JSINESS PARK
24' fltcher twe .. Costa Mesa. c.. 92626
714-957-8751
IN..t~ev
530 WEST 711-1 STREET, LOS.ANGELES. CALIF. 9001J . •
FASHION ISl..AND, NEWPORT BEt\'CH 92660
NATIONWIDEAOCTIONCOMPANY
3961 l'\acM.hur 81., Ste. 210/212 N~ Beech, C.. 92660
714-752·2298
l'lrMrl A. Cllw, AM(I~
-
·-l 1
.. -. I
-.... .._...,....,._:,......,... __ ,, ... a.r•c--............. ~ ....... ..-...... ,
r
~~·.,...----:"' __ _...-:-:--~,--..---_--------------· ... l!llm--.•.--~--.................................................................... ~ ... ,
' .-~~
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT /Monday, November ie. 1981
.. ,.Nlwe
CHAM.WI ANCllU
An eglng rncwll ~
,...,_ tM Angell to llnd out
WllO i. trying to ckWe hef
lftMM tutt u ane i. about
to ll'lllic• • comebaell.
•
Nell c.. . ...,, ~·
Hlftton hllle, l"-'Jey
°"""' ·NO~UKI ...
Heat Heltn H11199 uplO(ee
tome vlebll ~.,.. \0
""""" llCNNI In • dOCUo mentwy looll M ioftg-lwm
cMfOr~~ !=..OOfMU. * • •.,. "Time A"4w Tlme"
( 19711) M.iooltn McOowell.
Oe'lld W.,Nlt. H,Q Wiiia
ClleMa , .. lnlemouia .,...
IN ~ lfom VloteltWi
LOllidcM lo modiatn-day
San Frlndeoo ttw~ tlle
UM of • tlfnt flltcnlne
'PO'
1:10 CZ> MOVll
..... "l>Mpelt'' (tll78)
Olrll Bogarde, AndtM Fet·
reol. A........,, con*oon-., llWio In Qermeny ..
laoed .... " IOtll Nin dur1nO
the ,.... ol NazlMl. •.ao• Cl) ~ CAu.t Ann'• r-ed ul\Cl4t lllt llt • 0 Hf\. FOOTIAU.
Sen 0Mvo CNlrgen at
a.tile SMhawk•O
I TMAIUM HUNT
ll41 lootUP9E'TI
~; Ctv .. lopM!r ~
• HAWAII flVE.O
An old advarHry ol
Mc0auett'1 eccomptts'.h..
IM perfect robbety' right
under the -ol Fi--0
TOGETHER Loretta Lynn and Sissy
Spal·ck I left 1 who portrayed Loretta in
"Coat Miner's Daughter,'' get together
for a boat nde on · · Lorettay Lynn: The
Lady. The Legen d"' at 10 tonight on
KNBC (4 1
and Wfaell • lllllOC wltn '*
prlvll• and proflMIONll
"--9 !NTIRTANISIT
TONIGHT
An Interview with Sally
Field.
Cl)MOVI(
• • • "Coat Miner'•
Deughter·· ( 18801 Sluy
Space k, Tommy I.••
Jonie. Baaed on l.Ofena
Lynn'• aulob1c>9r11Phy. A
'yq.ong girl fr()l'll • poor
, family In rural K9Rluelty
marrlet I muCll Older IOGal
boy wno angir--s ,_ rlM
to 1tardom In the mulle:
~try 'PG'
• 8UllHES8 AE.PORT
• Ola< CAV£TT
Ou.ta. ~ de Mille
and Or Fred Plum (Part 1
i2~=
* *"' "The LUI Chal-lenge" (1MT) Glenn FOfd,
Angle Olclllnlon. A. retired
gunfighter'• record I•
thrHtened by • bold
young gunaHnger.
DMOVIE
*** "The ldoltnaker'
( 19801 Ray Shat11ey. Tovah
Feldlhuh A manipulellve
manager uses various
ployt 10 catapult two tHn·
aoet• Into pop alnglng
alardom 'PG'
't:SO CJ 9UU...8EYE
• WELCOME BACK.
KOTT'E1'
In nMd OI rlliaing aome
money lor their clua,
Gabe and the s-thog•
decide that a lelethorl la
theana-
' • KCET HEWS8EAT
8!) 91 ISIHESS R£PORT
(J)a!NEWS
Ql)MOVIE .
**'~"Toby And The Koe-
18 e.&r" (1981) Roll Harri&
Uve 1Ctlon and anlmaUon
combine 10 tell the 1• of a
young bOy and hla pet lloe-
18 In A.uatr81ia"a lror111et
~.·G' · 1:31 (ZJ1HE VAOABOND
7:00 8 CA NEWS D N8CNEW8 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN 0 YOU ASKED F<>f' fT
Featur.O "UglleM F-
in The WMI" and Ge.-
man Finger Wr•\ler•
G) M 0A•S0H
Hawlt.ye rec:ords a leller
to his lather detaHlf19 hla
day In Ille O.R. with • mad
Turti, a missing c:orPM and
·~~ • JC>t<EA'I WllD
• OVE:AEAIY
GUMt-= linger e.rtba Kiii,
flnllndlll columnist J-
ery.n1 Quinn O G MACNE!l /~REA
MPORT
()) 1lC TAC DOUGH
8 THE MUPPET'S
~I Leos.yet.
a::J MOW
• • ·~ "'JllllhOuse Roell"
(19571 EM1 Presley, Judy
Tyter A young ~
IMtna 10 play t!'e guitar.
and after his r ...... ~
dlmbs lo ataroom. L
Cl)) MOVIE
••• "Ouo Vlldls" (19511
Aob«I T tytor • O.bor911
Kerr. A Roman ari.toc;rat
Q91n• ,_,o'a disfavor Mien
he , .... In IOve with • Ch<lr.-
tlen glt1
(.%)MOVIE * • * "0..th In V~"
( 111711 Olrti Bogarde, &IY ..
na Mangan6. During hit
•l•Y at I pluah Van.tlan
l>Otal, an aging compoaer
anc:ountar1 a young
Adon11 who ~ htS
~ ol matChteq beauty 1~ II 2 ON ™E TOWN
Featured • belund·t~
_... look 11 Atari; tome
new ways 10 cope With
migraine ' 11aadacha1;
lldvlce on how to dr..,
aexy
Q QIFAMllYFEUO
I) LAVEAHI! & SHIRt..EY
&COMPANY fJ MATCHOAME CD M'A0 S'H ~
A. caretesa COionei 1ncraa1-
as the number ot se<"IOUSly
""ound.o IOl<l141<1i arrMng
at ,,,. compound.
GJ TIC TAC DOUGH
&l) MACNEii. I LEHRER
REPORT
Ci) GREAT
P£Al'ORMANCES
"Edith Wherlon l.00k11'19
Back Kath~ WldOoe.
stars as Edith Whartorl In a
biog<aph~ drama t>aMd
on pan on R W B Lewt•'•
Pulitzer Pr1ze-w1nn1ng
biography and on the nov-
elist's own lellen1 and
memolfs
Cl) P.M. MAGAZJNE
Vosn • teacher 1n El Cajon
who 1141C,_ basics and
Pt~ff kid• to beclome
01ymp11n1
9:00 11 ([) PRIVATE
·BENJAMIN
Judy s secret admorer
Ralph mlllAllenly lrHIS
Ceptaln 1.-.1 to a mi<!·
night _.,,Miii meant tor
Judy
Q Qt l.fTTl.E HOUSE 0N1
THE PRAIRIE '
Mr Oleeol\ 11 kldMPC>ed,
•nd his 'Mt• r"'-to pey
lheraNOm 0 D MOVIE
It'*~ "Gable And Lom·
bard" (11176)Jarnes BrOlln,
-91f Clayburgh Thirties film
,,.,, Clal'k Gable and Car·
Ole Lombard d•9COll9r 11111
Mil'* Ille movie mogull
nor the Arnetlean publoe
are ready to aocepl 1'-
lltlc:ll otf-ICt-r°"'41R09
G MOVIE
• • "for Slngles Only"
( 19681 JoM Suon. Mary
Ann MOl>ley When two
young 11"11 dldOe to ,.,.,,
.,., ac>at11Nnl logetNr In.
IUl>lonabla ~ they
b9come Involved In the
world of the IWfnglng'lin·
gifts Mt
8) P.M. MAO.AZIHE
Behind .... --with
0.0.ge Burns and tlle
·CHANNEL LISTINGS
8 KN)(T (CBS> (OJ On-TV
8 l<NBC (NBCI 'T Z·TV
• ICT\..A (Ind .• lltJ FiBO
e KABC (ABCJ rc.i (Clnemaxl
eKFMB ICBSI C!l (WOR) NY ,NY
9 KHJ·TV (Ind.I Ql) (WTBS) ;
e l<CST (A8Cl (() CESPN)
• KTTV (Ind.) • (Showtimel
• KCOP-TV (Ind.I • Spotflghl
e KCET (PBS) • (Cable News NetWOl"kl
• KOCE !PBS)
Ptaymat•. • ptollle ot
cosmellc• entrepreneur
Mary Kay Allh, Paul Wal·
l1eh on the nne 111 01
"tipping" In r"l...,anta. .., YOGI'&,_,.
CHAl8TMA&
Anhnated Huell and Ille
11•"9. hOC>lng to malle
Chtlatmu • haoc>Y one tor
Mr• Troctunorton, awaken
Yogl Bear OUI ol hlt d*'P
winter SIMp to help In their
prapatationl (Part 1)
9 GREAT
PEAFOAMANCE8
"Edith Whitton. Looking
Baclt" Kath'-! WlddOM
II~ u Edith Wharton In a
blographlcal drama bued
In part on R W.B 1.ewl•'•
Pulil11r Prize-winning
biography and on the nov-
ell81 • own letters and mernon
MOVll
• • "Sunday Lovera"
( 11131) G-Wilder, Rog¥
MOOfe FoYr mldd~
man In IOW are IOllOwed u
lhey put-their amorout
adlllntur• 'R'
JAMIOM.E IN THE
HIU.8
' "Super Bowl 01 Country
MullC" This unique coun·
try music l•llval from
W•t Virginia lealUf .. IWO
dayt ol picjlln'. slno•n' and
flcklUn.. and Includes SUCh
.tars u EtrvnyloU Harrll.
Conway Twitty, T G Shep-
'!"d· Alabama and many
more
0MOVIE
• • ,,., ''The Spi<aJ Stair-
ca,.·· I u~n1 Jacqu111na
Bluel, Christopher
Plummer A ti.lullf\11 deaf:
mute 11 terrorl.zed by •
mysterious 11111« whO lurk•
In ,.,. 11\adows surround·
Ing an elegant l'Tl8NSon
·PG'
e:30 8 ()) n.l lWO OF U8
BtentwooO. unoer the dou-* ~e of teylng to
correct his OOfl lhoot and
sharing thef9'>}< With Gab-
by, finally losas Illa Brltlah r-m AU IH THE FAMll. Y
Gloria -• • bled< wig and Miki t>ecornlS URU9U· ally--61> lM! FROM THE MET
"II TrtUlco" The MatroPOH·
tan Opera'• production ol
Giacomo PUGCinl'a IUI
COf'l\Plllld worlt includea
"lfT alMWrO," "Suor ARQlllO-
ca" and "Glalonl Schlcchl";
Renata SCOtlO Is leatur9d
u the heroine in llCll of
the Of)ef'N and Jarnes Lev·
, lne conduc1S.
9:00 8 ()) M'A0S0 H
Hawt<.ye writ• a letter lo
Pr..ident Truman 10 com-
p111n about the -r D a olOflGE 8UAJlif EAAlY,EAAl.Y,EAAlY
CHRISTMM
Bob Hope, the P'-Yl>Oy
Pllyrnat•. Hans Cqnrled
and Ann-Margral join
Geo<ge Butna '°' a pr• holiday mutlcal-varlety
special. D THATl INCAEOIBLE
Featured:' • hypnotized
l>*'SOR tetla about an
encounter with a UFO. sltl-
lumplng In a ca< tn the
French Alps. an exotic l*-
ly dance
8) MEIWOAIFRN
Guella· George Carlin.
li)MOYll •••ti "Chinatown"
( 19741 Jack Nlcholton,
Faye Ouna-y Ourtng the
111GO•. • private detective
ln\IMllgal.. • c:aM lhal
reveele a tralf of COOUP-
tlon, inceat and murder 'A'
10:00 8 ()) l.OU OMNT
Chat11e NII up a contro-
verlllal tlp llOlllne '°' the
Trlb, and loY gets picMd
up fO< drunk driving.
D 8LOAETTAl.YNH:
THE f.,ADY ••• THI! 1..EGENO
Lor11ta Lynn cellbral•
,.., 201h ~aaty In
lhOw buelneet with ~·· Cryetlll Oeyle, Slaay Spa·
eek. and the Oak Ridge
Boyt.
D08) NEWS D MOW
••• "Shalt'" ( 111711 Rlctl-
ud Roundtree, Mo-
Gunn. WhMe tnv•llgatlng
•girl'• kldn91>9•1'19. a black
detective become•
lnYOIYed In • war 1>11-
the white Malla and the
black mob tD NO PUCE LIKE
HOME FOUOW..UP
Thta spacial covers auch
I-u the current state
or lonQ·le<m c.r• '°' ,,,.
elde<ly. publte pohcy rec-
omrnendaUons 10 lmprov•
the situation and what a
peraon ca11 dO now ""'h
the reaourus that are
available
®) THE AOCl<FOAO
AL.ES
Roc:llford d19QUi-hlmMlf
... coffin~ ••
psychiatrist and an IRS
agent lo fond • 1h1-Joot-tal
~whole
mlalng
(Q)MOVIE • * "T ... V191tor" (1878)
Mel Farrer. JOhn 11uston.
An ancllnl 11ramgeo-from
a d1&1an1 galaxy ComM to
Eanh 10 destroy an 91111 8-
)'Mf-old glr1 wflO .. dlta-
llned to bl the mother of •
• powerlut, malevolent raoa
'R'
10: 16 CID OH l.OCA TIOH
"The Third Annuel Rich
Little MM! The Qreat Pr•
lenders" Rlcll Is joined by
111anted lmpreaelonl1t1
Thom B1111\ and Julie
0-fOf an 9\ltlnlng of
zany comedy and g<eat
lamlly entettalnm«it 10:30. NEWS •• lfC>EPENDEHT
HETWC>N(NEWI
• PUel.JC T'ELE"'8IOH:
THE l'UTUAE 18 NOW
Larry Groseman, Pt'Qldenl
ot PBS and Ed Pfister,
prealdent of CPB ere Inter-
viewed by broadcaat
cotumnlst I.• Brown on
the Mure ot public ,...,,._
lion.
11:00 I a w o a NEWS SATVf'OAY NIGHT
Hoat· Richard Dreyfus
GUMI Jimmy Butt14
G PAULHOGAH
G) THE J9RMON8
The mernti.ahlc> commit·
•• ol an ~elusive tlMI•
Club tn1111 .. George to join.
,'Strike Force' strikes out
By FRED ROTHENBERG
NEW YORK <AP > -Right away. you know
this isn't the typical, late-night sleazy diner. It's
too clean; so's the hired help. Under their
aprons, Jookt could it be those lllw-enrorcmg
thugs from 'Strike Force" waiting to battle
crime a.1 violently as possible?
Th4! answer comes fast as a speeding bullet.
Criminals -maybe they hate greasy food -
stick up the joint. t he Strike Force s prings into
action. ln slow motion , with graphic sound, gun
violence .... begets violence.
Anofher victory for indigestion and
f naUJeous television.
· "What do you do?" one or the patrons asks
'Robert Stack, Capt. Frank Murphy of the Strike
Force. Pointing t.o the death and destruction at
the O.K. Diner, Murphy sys: "This is what we
d .. . D.
AL last, ABC has savage, bloodthirsty
brutamy t.o rival .CBS' sex shows on Friday
nights. "Strike Force." where have you been all
season?
Slack brings the same Shakespearean
slaccato he did tp Eliot Neu In "The
Untouchables." He can even tal~ tough with a
chill do1 &tufted In' his mouth. His every
conve.rsaUoo sounds like a Police interrogation.
He'• so authoritative "Strike Force" s hould be
watched al attention.
At hl• homely home, Murpby lifts barbells and raill about that nasty woman who divorced
him. "I don'~ live here. l sleep here/' he growls, try.., to find the phone, a runnln1 1•1 that is
1Uppoled to make Murphy m«'t human.
llUl'Ph1 bu • doc, who's att doc. Thi• momter muld play linebacker tor lbe Cowboyt.
Spot -not hls real name -eats raw
bamwse.r. •
For the pilot movie, the producers taxed
their imagination for something grisly eno'1gh
for lhe whole family: hatchet murders
decapitation. Every Tuesday, some victim ge~
the axe. When the count reaches five. the Whiny
deputy Police commissioner orders a solution by
next Monday.
But this is a 9()-mlnute s how, and the
guillotine drops again. ln the show's only touch
<;>f taste. w~ don't see or bear the head-chopping,
JUSt the grim. anti~ipatlon of No. 6.
We do see the victim's widow walking into
the coroner's office and going berserk. This
s ubtle m eas ure ensures sympathy for
hatchetees and malice toward hatcheters.
In another dainty touch, the creative forces
behind "Strike Force " have inserted an
annoying drum r o ll to punctuate every
dramatic crossroad . They do crack the case, as
they will every week. Tbls lan.'t '•Hill Street
Blues." Call the_ Marines, somebody says. "We
are the Marines," Murphy answers.
Murphy's Marines Include a thoughtful
black, a beauliful brune~. an insecure white
end a macho swarthy. Tlv! Q)esaage: in
television, anybody can grow up to pack a
blazing gun in the nanie of la• and order.
TUBE TOPPERS
KNSC D 9:00 · "~r e Burns ·
Early, Early, Early, Chriltmas." Bob
Hop e , the Playboy Playmates. Hans
Conreid and Ann-MarJ(ret ·join George
Burns for a pre·ho.liday special.
KCET 9 9:00 "No Place re Home." lleTen Hayes explores v ble ·alternatives to nunin1 bomea.
KNBC IJ 10:00 "Loretta Lynn.
The Lady. . . The Legend." L9 retta
t.ynn celebrates her 20th anniversary in
show business with guests. sister Crystal
Gayle. Sissy Spacek and the Oak Ridge
Boys. <See photo at left)
• lllHNY MIU.
Benny loo*• ...... "" ot
an lmaglf\9rf larnoua miM-
clen lrom boyhOod to
menhood.
• DICK CAV1"'
Gueall. Agnet C1tt Miiie
and Dr Fr.O Pkim 'Part 1
ol 2)
(t)MOVta *** "Adllanc:. To The Reer"" (tHA) Glenn Ford,
Stella Stewnt What\ a
coinpany pf Union aoldlers
11 detal~ to guard • gold
shipment, the ceptaln tell•
fO< a ternale Conlederala
11:10CEM<>w
• • ·~ "Dirty Hand1"
(111761 Rod Steiger, Romy
Schnelder A woman car•
fully plant the murder ol
her alcollOllc l>Uaband to
tllat Ille can bl free 10
return to her io-'R'
11:30 fJ ()) OUINCY
Quincy llnd• tr_. of
arserllC In the bOdy ot •
wet buddy who died In a
pianecrUh D 8 THE BEST Of
CAMON
Gu.ta Phytlll George .
Mllll Fanetl. Jerry Ka.in·
llkl. (Rl
D NEWS 0 BUT Of OAOUCHO G) THE ODD COUPt..£
Felix la lneenaed when
Oacar g1vH a nolou1
llCCOUnl OI hll pr\NI,....
on • talk lhOw
ti) SAHFOAD AND 80H
Fred renll Larnont'a room
10 • 1)11Qnan1 led)! wn11e
Lamont 11 or1 • fishing 1rtp.
fD KCET HEWSaEA T
(II A.80NEW8
NIOHTUNE
(Q)MOVIE * .. The 8oogey M_,,'
( 1980) Suzanna love.
Nlcholu Love YNrs •lie<
• they murder lhelr mother's
boyfriend, • b<olher and
Sister at• haunted by the
wctlm'• murderoua ghOlt
'R"
OREA T LAOtE8 OF •
COUNTRY MUSIC
Lynn Anderaon, Donna
Fargo and Lacy J Dalton
are featured In 11111 llve
~rformanc• from the
MOM Grend In Reno
t t:A6 MOYIE • * '* ''The Blue l.agoon"
(1980) Brooke Shiel<Sa,
Ohriatoe>hef A1ltlna Two
clllldr1n e.11perlenoe the
penga ot 1ir.1 low wn11e
dlicoveflng Ille and eecfl
other alter lhay are
aNpwredtad toge!Nr on •
des«ted Island 'R'
~MDIGHT-
12:00 • MOVte
"Pub41c: Cowl>Oy Number
One'" ( 1113'7} Oen4 Autry 8 MCNEWS
HIOHTUHl II MOVIE
***'h "II lt't Tuesday,
Thia Must Be e.lgium"
(19691 Swanne Pleahetta.
lan~Awomanm-IMds a group OI
""*1Cen• on a QUlok Ulp
lhrougfl ......,, Europe11>
count flee
• Ml(IOOUOl.AI
Conoat· Tony Orlando
Oueet1· JOH Fllk:lano
Ricky Jay.
• AOOKIU
The blood blllll •• the tioa-
pllel la rObl*! 911<1 lt1 GOn-
tenlS IOld to Ille black
rnat1cl(
• INmOOUCTtON TO
PHll.OIOf'tf't'
aJ THI AOCt<f'Of'O
FlLJ!8
RodilOfd la hired by a
man'• io-lo find out
wtlether he died acclden-
tllfly Of •N done In by his
wlle
OMOVM!
• •'h "Tom HOfn" (19801
Steve McO-, AIChard
Flmawortn In early 20ln.
ceritury Wyoming, a boun·
IY hunter hired by a gtoup
ot rant.hers 10 Ir IClt dawn
rutlllerl •• Mi up fO< •
hanging by hi• employer•
'R"
12:30 a a TOMOMOW a-t· Fred Travalene D MOVIE
• • .. Journey Into Oarll·
nesa" ( 1116111 Robef1 Reed,
Jennifer Hillaty Two 1a1es
of the unknown ln\lolv• •
ndlalic autocrat who
demand• lnatanl ob.ai-
enQe f;om his rotlewlrs
and • you1'19 bOy wllO
di<ecta 1118 tlvae b<Olllerl
10 commit dark deed• SI rra EVERYBOOY'S
8USIHU&
"Human Relatlons"
(l)MOVll!
• • "Hurnanolda F;om
The 0..0 (19801 Douo
McClure. Ann Turkel
U>alh-Cl'Mluret from
the ocean'• depths attlCll
• Cllltfornle coutal town.
kllllf19 the men and repof19
lhewomen "R'
12:AO II ()) HARRY 0
Hwry .,,_ugatas • man
whoea behavior Ilea
Changed rldlcally (R)
12:44 (l:) MOVlf
• ..... "JallhOuae Rock"
(19571 Elvls PrHley, Judy
T )'I« A. you1'19 prisoner
...,.,. to play lfll guitar.
end •fllt hi• r .......
cllmbs 10 •tatdOm
1:00. UOY!I
"Aldin' 0n A Rainbow"
(1ll41)0eneAulry
• IPEAl<Our
• INDEPEHOEHT
NETWON< NEWS 9 NEWS (%)MOVIE
• t • 'h .. Manha11an"'
( 111711) Woody Allen. Olllntl
KHIOfl f1 poignant IOOk la
tallen "II the d•y·to-<lay
event• in the Nf• of a New
Yorlc C.ty cocnedy writer
'R'
1:30 ., MOYIE
• • • ~ "Guna At Batul"
(HIM ) Richard Alt9Rbof·
ou(lh, Jack HawltlnL A.
protocol-minded Brltlsh
offic« ralu-to cooc>er·
ala with rebelS In an A.fro•
JOHN DARLING
THAI CAGLE YOU'RE
HOLOING,'..X>HN, HA5
BEEN KNOWN 10
CARA'l OFF SMALL
SHEEP!
II CAN"l CARRY CF
IALK SHOW HOST~
CAN IT~ HEH,HEH ...
CWlnatlon
OOMOYa
fl •'fl "TN TNfty·NIM
....,. .. 11'71) AoClel1 ,_
... ~ Wet,,., A man ~ the (fUllfty °'
• both Ille police 11\d a
... ll'OllP of ~
~ oPer•llne In lno-
letld "'*' ,. .. !famed tot
a .VMQW• murder 'PO'
1:90 ..... t:OO INT'fJll'T ANetT
TONIGHT
An lnler'Yllw with Sally
~....,
HIWI ~*™' ........
''SUC* Bowl Of Col#ltry
MualO'' Thi. ulllQUI coun.-
1ry ~ "'9tlvfl from w .. 1 Virginia teacir... two
days ot pldcln'. 11ng1n· and
liddfln•. and lnGludM lldl
tlatt .. FMmytou Hwrls,
CORwey Twmy, T 0 Shep-
ard. Alet>ama and rN"Y
more
9MOVll ·~ "Chaeper To Keeo
Her" (IMO) Mac Oavla.
T °".,., f'eldslluh .. n oro.r
10 ,,._. ,,.. allmony pay•
menll. • rKM!lly d~
PllY•te detecillve tr.cks
down delinquent huaball<la
for• dlvorc:e lawyer ·11·
2-.21 • MOVll * *'A "S«:fet 8-yond The
Doot'" (111411 Joen a-.
nett, MICllMI Redgrave 2:IO~~..wa
* • •'h "Time Ah• Tlone ..
J( 19711) Malcolm McDowell,
Dal/Id Warner
2:40 MOVIE
• • 'Sunday Lover•"
( 11181) Gene Wtt6er, Roget
Moore Four mld._aged
men In love "'' IOlio..d ea
they pu<-theft amorous
.Ovenlur .. 'R'
l:IO MOVIE
• * 'h "Hurray FOf Betty
Boop" (tlllO) A.nlmaled
VOICI o4 Tommy.Smothers
a.tty gets Into polltocs and
figMS for wornen't tlghla
'PG'
4:00 D OOMJfUNITY
PAOORAMMIHO
4dl0 ctJ MOVIE •••'A .. Betw-. The
Lines" (11177) Lindsay
CrOUN, .i.11 GOldblurn
The st•tt member• of an
"underground" Boatqn
~ have varooua
;omentie and j0umar1slic
encounter• with eacll oth«
and lhe M.1b19Ct1 ot thetf "°'-. 'R 4:50 (%) ANIMAi. YMPtC8
Thia animated comedy
laalurtng the vCMGes ol Gil-
da RAdner and 81lly Crys-
tal. IOOkl at how lhe Vlrl·
ous animal• prapa1• '°' ,,_ own Otymp<e gatneS
Taw•day'•
Dayti•e 1ffol'ie.11
-MoRt9tG ----
6:50 (fJ • * . .., · Dirty Hands'
( 1975) Rod Staiger, Romy
Sct\neldef. A woman 'ar•
fully plan• Iha murder of
her alcohOllC hulband so
that she cen be free 10
11turn 10 her IOYer 'R
t:30 (~ **"" .. BllCll Beauty"
(11178) Edwar d Albert
Gtynn•• o·eonnor Buec1
on the alOty by Anna
Sewall .... Ploud and -
tomely beaullful horM
experjllnce8 man diver,.
owners 0 • * "Tarlla The Otter"
( 111711) Documentary Nar·
r a1eo by P.tlf UsltnOY
The Illa Of a playtul Olle< ..
traced from his 1>11'1h 1n a
hollow tree to his epic bat-
tle l"'th the leader of a
houna P1C11 ·G·
9:00 CC) • * '"' 'Vlsil To A
CtMl's Son'" 111174) RICh-
ard Mulllgan. Johnny Selt-
k• A tat'* and ton man·
age 10 ruolve the differ-
-bet-them When
they emberk on • ular1
lhrOUQfl Ainu ·a·
CS) • • .... The Money
--Cl)•••"''TMOfllne 11'*.,.... ,.., ....
'-11t11mon. .HtM ,onde;
~~
HO. • • "H06d TMC ....
(194t) eo-, a., Leo
OOroay •••··r11etn0t-** vor•t• Of ltlngray"
( t"5) PuQoel.I C.,r. TrtYy
T er"'*4 eM IN tftltflttY
ltllC> Stiner~ llY IO 1lllDIP
1M I'll ... IOtd, TMMI,
110ft'I telllnO fN#"" WOttd ·o·
tO'.IO ••• •'Aed "'*
"•nge" ( tt3U John
w f11M. f'ey COrrlgell • 11:00 •• • lh .. ~Of
Het>i!" f leet) £M1 ,.,....
le¥. Maty T)'let Moore
1t-00 •···"'···~ .. ( 1946) ln91'1d lerrQfY19'1,
Gtegc>f'y ~. Oifected by
Allred Hltcflcocll.
•• •'A."&Nlle Handt
Wilh The o.N' j 1t.!lll)
J-~.Doti Mo#·
rrt •• *"' "The.,,,., .. 8111tcue" ( 1877) Jacque-
line BINlt. Ctltlatopn.
P~ A llMUtllul oe.#·
mute la t•rotiDd by a
myslatloua killer ..tlO lurlt•
In Ille 11\adowa MKround-
lnO an elegan1 rnanelon
PG'
(.Z) • •'A "The Swimming
Poot" I t9701 Alain Olton.
Romy~ A paa..
"on1te love rectangle
develop• among old
friends and io...... during
their llff'/ In aunny SI. Tro--
pez ·PG
l:OO (f J * *'"' "Tl'll Mon.y
Trac> ( t!IM) Glenn Ford.
Elka Sommer When the
comtltl\&11on o4 • Mle 11
gr.en 10 • oetact-...
oec'6es to s.1ee1 lb con-
ten11 10 tOIYe a tlnana8'
cr1sit t>tought on by hla
extrav39an1 ""'• 1 :30 c * •. ,. .. 8howani June,.
11on ( t9!>a) Ava Garoner
S1awa1t Granger A.n
Anglo-lnatan girt IMnO "'
PaluSlan e~iance. an
tdlnllly CllMS as the llrug-
gles to aort out her natlOrt-
•t IOyeltlel
'l * * The Thtal Of Par.
II I 19e7) .Jean·PllUI Bel·
monOo a.nev-BujOIO
2'00 0 * * 'Road G-( 19811 Stacy Keacll, Jam1e
Lee Curll• A.n llCClenlrlC
trucker • beautiful
hltchtMlter. and • psych<)-
pathte killer traveling the
aarne route we pt'Y'"!l
g-'°' "'* and death PG'
3:30 O • • • • ·r.,. Secret
War 01 Harry Frlgg" (1969)
Paul Newman. Sylva Kos.
cin•
) • • '"' · Hurray For Bet-
ty Boop" ( 1980) Animated.
Vooce o4 T-y Smothers•
Setty get& lnlO poljla and
llghlS IOf women'• rlghta
'PG'
l.Zl • • "Sunday l.oYers"
(19811 G-Wiid«. Roger
Moore FOUf' middle-aged
m«i In'°"" •• foilo..cs ..
they ~ thelf -°"'
.0-tur .. "R
4~ D •••"Caddle .. (1M1)
Hllen M-. Jadt Thomp-
1on A young woman
i.av• her eo<nfortabll
aubur'ban hOfne and her
cruel husband oetwmined
to talla IUll rMPC>Nlblllty
fOf aupporttng ,_ c:Hldrln
by doing what-odd
~· She can gel
4:30 (CJ • • ·~ "Black Beauty"
( 19781 Edward Albert.
Glynnis o·eonnor BN9d
on ll'le •10f')' by Anna
Sewell A Ploud and -
5omely beaulllul horse
l.llf)ll'lerlcel man dl\WM
~s
6:40 (%) * * * '"' "Manheltan" ( 11179t Woody Allen, ~
KMIOfl
by Armstrong & Batiuk
\
.. . . I ..
Daily Pilat
MONDAY, NOV. 16, 1981
CAVALCADE
COMICS
STOCKS ·--
82-3
84
BS
Son 's haircut revives
conversation of the past.
' See Erma Bambeck, Page
·B2.
0
0
Ghrist College. Jrvme. is nestled in the rolling foothills of Turtle Rock. Alt.hough there are only 212 students today, the growth potential calls for 1.500 students.
Christ ~ollege : room to grow
Two miles from tht• bustling,
11 .000 s tud e nt L'C Ir vine
ca mpus , the 212 students at
lrv111t•"s l 'hn-;t Colte~e toll in
rel a ti\ e anon~ m1ly
But tht•n• 1s no 'i horlage of
student pride at the four-year
liberal arts institution nestled in
the rolling footh11ls of Turtle
Richard Wmtencl1 takt s advantage of sunny day to a;ash his car m pa"rkmg lo t Building in the
background. one of four on campu.'>. houses rlorm1tones. offices arut clas.~rooms
Daily Pilot
Photos by
Charles Starr
Rock at 1530 Concordia .
And there seems to be no
shortage of growth potential at
the college. which has a master
plan calling for an ultimate
student population of 1,500.
Christ College, Irvine. certamly
has the land.
A total of 113 acres of rolling
footh i ll s co nt ai n s two
undevel11i1>ed archaeological
sites and a bird sanctuary.
Most of the sfodents who
attend the colleege live on
c a m p u s i n "f o u r · p e r s o n
a partment-st vie dormitories
Each unit has kitchen
facilities. which are essential
since there is no cafeteria at lhe
coeducational college.
An expansion of the student
dorms 1s planned. Also called for
by the master plan are a science
bu ilding, gymnasium. a
chapel/performing arts facility
a nd a library/administration
building.
The existing structures on
campus are the dormitories. a
founders' hall which houses a
lib r ary and a bui l di n g
containing classrooms and an
auditorium which doubles as a
chapel.
Nineteen full time facu lty
members, halC of whom have
doctorate degrees, teach at the
· campus. which is affiliated with
the Lutheran Church Missouri
Synod
Students are graduated from
Christ College, Irvine, with two
and four year degrees which
prepare them for career s in
such fields as education, the
clergy and social wot"k.
President of the college, which
was founded in 1972. is 0 . Ray
Halm of Orange. The four vice
presidents are Shang I. Moon.
Al le n H. Nauss. Robert 0 .
Barnes and the Rev. Frederick
J . Huscher.
Lynn Stockert 1s ready to welcome guest& to her apartment-like
dorm. Door seems to dcwble Q8 a message board.
Sherry Martin, surrounded by mementos, studies in her room. Dr. Robert Badn teacM1.ata advanced EngU.h claa• wttla cm nto'umem of 10 to 15 .,.,.,.,._ . ..
... • . ' .
Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 16, 1981
•ANN LANDERS
•BOB GREENE
•ERMA BOMBECK ) {
· Train.ing for the bji!d
SANDSTORM -Three American soldiers ride
throug9 a sandstorm that hit the desert last
week at Cairo West· Airbase, with winds
gusting to 35 mph. American Troops
participated in military exercises u part of
.............
op e ration 1 • B r i e b t St a r '•' J o in t
Eayptian-American maneuven. Exercises
are to live American troope experience with
desert cmd.itiona. · .
• • i
A NEW OWNER ... A NEW LOOK !
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TIRE
BARGAINS?
If you don't see the prices in print
are you really saving mone.y?
You hear a lot of radio and television talk about
tire "bargains ·· these days.
Wlen you want prices you C8fJ cocnt on, check
the tire ads in the Daily Pilot.
St>op the Daily Pilot before you but ... get the
facts . . . compare . . . then you know-)Qi are ~tting the most for 'IOfX rmney. .
Along the Orange Coast the best values are most
often advertised in the ...
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DOINO BUatNESS
UNDt!R A
'1CTIT10UI
NAME?
II fou 111tve ''* fhd ,_, new flctldoue 8HIM ..
Name #Id lwlve rlOt nt
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pultllefl JOUf ltettlllUI .., ...... Ow~
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eltttll It THI OAILY PH.OT, P,0 . h1 1 ... ,
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DEAR MJSS KNOW·IT·ALL: I eotcha
this time. You said in a column several
weeks ago that talking birds do not know
what they are saying--they are merety
JTlimics. Read the enclosed and go put on a
dunce cap.
It seems that Arlene Pepperberg. a
researcher in the biological sci4tnces at
Purdue University, found an African gray
parrot in a Chicago pet store. She named
him Alex and is teaching him how to cQ~municate ra&,her than mimic. She will
ask Alex a question and , instead or
permitting him to imitate her. she gives
him the correct answer and he must repeat
it. When he responds incorrectly, Miss
Pepperberg shows disapproval. When he
gives the right answer, she praises him
and gives him rewards.
Alex can now call 40 objects by name.
identify five colors and tell the difference
between a triangle, a square and a
pentagon. When he wants to return to his
cage he says, ··wanna go back."
Enclosed you will also find a spoon so
you can eat your words. -LAST LAUGH
IN WE.5T LAFAYETTE
DEAR L.L.: Sorry you didn't send me
your name aad addreas. I would like to
return the spoon. There are no words to
eat. For openers, Alex ls an extraordinary
bird ln that he is a student at Purdue
University. The article states that Miss
Pepperberg ls involved ln an experiment lo
prove that humans can communicate ~th
birds rather than teach them to imitate
sounds -which ls exactly what I said they
did.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I ca n
emphathize with ··Sad and Bewildered ...
whose husband has put an end lo their
sexual relations . I. too, am a victim of the
same rejection much too early in life.
Not only has my husband given up on
bedroom scenes, but he no longer kisses
me hello or goodbye. These past several
months I have noticed that he goes out of
his way to avoid touching me.
" I know there is no one else. He leaves
for work and returns home on schedule and
never goes anywhere without me. I have
made several romantic overtures this past
year , but his lack of response was so
humiUating I decided never to try again.
This man who had been my husband
for 37 years is a stranger to me sexually.
Granted he is overwei~ht and out of shape.
but after tour years of no intimacy
whatever I reel J have a right to tell him 1
want out of this brother-sister marriage.
Do you agree? -UNTOUCHED I N
PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR UNTOUCHED: I see more than •
a man who bas slowed down sexually,
which for males in their 601 who are.
overweight and out of s hape 11 not
uncommon. ,. ·
A hello and goodbye kits demands
very UUJe energy. Moreover, a hu.tband
who goes out of his way to avoid touching
his wile bas a deeper problem. He needs to see a doctor for a complete physical. If the
check-up reveals no physical trouble, the
physician should recommend a bead
doctor. Should be refuse lo lnvestigat.e the
reason ror bls hands-on policy, you have
every rll(ht to consider your own life.
( l>iacc>wT how to "-date baU IDithoul f olling
hook, line and m.ktt. Ann L.antki1 • booldd, "Dottng
Do'• aRd Doft'U," v1'U help p bs mors '°'* Giid
sure of JIO'fl"Wlf °" dak1. Snd ~ C..U aiOltO ...,. a
loftg, "°'"Ped, Nl/-oddrel#d lllWlopt tofah pr
requnt to Ann Landn1, P.O. 8o% llft5 CNoaQo, IU.
IOfll .
Punch
"I think It wort1-we haven't...,.. a fwnw In
inonthl.''
'City sickness' lingers
There must be others out there who
share this sickness with me. There are few
outward signs of it. but it is as real as the
dread diseases that Cill the medical
textbooks.
Keystone is a place or s uch beauty that
God Himself might choose it as a s pot lo
take a vacation. Amosl two miles up into
the Rockies. it is made for solace and
solitude. The snow covers the mountain ·
peaks; quiet trails wind through the forest:
the Snake River curls between the trees.
Keystone was made for a man to relax and
unwind.
I ·think the first time I realized the
sickness was when I was walking over a
plank bridge in the mountains n e ar
Keystone. and I noticed that I was
carrying my brief case in my right hand ; it
is filled with papers and phone numbers
and notes and ideas for stories. and I
always want it to be there when I need it.
The people who know me realize that if
they're going to get me. they're going to
get the briefcase too.
But in the mountains of Colorado? I
knew I should have left the brief case in my
hotel room . There was no reason on earth-
not to have left the t>rief case in the hotel
room. And yet ... I couldn't. There was
no way I could go out into those mountains
without taking the remnants of my city
existence with me . That is the sickness:
the non-stop city sickness that some of us
will never be a ble to leave behind.
ANOTHER EXAMPLE: On a tree in
the forest. there was mounted a pay
telephone , probably intended for
emergency use. I spotted it. and it was like
a parched man on the desert seeing a pool
or c lear water. Within seconds I was
barking a telephone credit card number
into the mouthpiece. and checking in with
the various bosses I have who work back in
the cities. They, too, seemed to be afflicted
with the sickness·; none of them wondered
why I would bother to call from the middle
of the mountains. They merely gave me messag~ and instructions, and inquired
when I would be retu~ing to the sane
world of work and deadUnes.
There is a man-made lake in the midst
of Keystone; mother ducks glide across
this lake, their babies behind them. You
can toss bi!!J>f food to the ducks, and they
will come,,-ght up and eat in front of you.
If you wish, there are little paddle-driven
devices that you can take out onto the lake.
They cannot travel very fut -only as fast
as your legs can move them. But there is
an alleged charm to skimming across a
lake so high in the ·mountains. I looked at
that lake u a cruel taunt. It wu made ror
the people who can deal with such
tranquility. People with the city aickneu -
people Uke myself -have no buainlu out
there. I saw the families pad41ln• around
c
IOI Glffllf
betw~en the groups of ducks. and the
families looked back lo see me s tanding
there with that cursed briefcase. I am sure
they could not understand me any better
than J could understand them.
There was a lime when I could do this
sort of thing ; but the city sickness has me
in its grip now. It has always been there;
but it is fier ce these days . r thought that
Keystone might be acceptable ; after all.
it's in Ame ri ca. and there are telephones
and television sets in every hotel room .
BVf EVERY SECOND that phone sat
silent I took as a personaJ insult. Back in
the city where I li ve. my phone often
seems to ring several times a minute; it is
music to me. the soundtrack of my life. In
Keystone I sat by the silent phone that I
called the front desk several times to ask
them to call me; I knew the phone must be
broken. It wasn'.t ; there was just no one who
knew whereto reach me.
I saw another man w1th the sickness:
In a mountain bar called Benlley·s. a
folksinger was playing gentle songs on his
guitar. and everyone else in the room was
paying him rapt attention. This one man.
though, had two newspapers spread out on
the table in front of hipl. He was 'hungrily
devouring the news of the outside world.
reading even t he tiniest stories on the
inside pages. He was like a man in prison
being offered a glimpse of freedom . I knew
his kind. I am his kind.
One day in the mountains , my
briefcase and I were walking one way. and
a tanned, healthy-looking young woman
with a red backpack and hiking sho.rts was
coming the other way. She smiled and sai<l
hello; she seemed to have not a care in the
worl'd . I don "t know how to explain this
but I wanted her to have a care in the
world. The world was meant to have"cares.
You can't possibly spend your life carrying
a backpack around Keystone. It just isn •t
right .
Of course, something insicle me envies
the young woman with. the backpack. But
we live in different universes; a he
probably doesn't even have a telephone
credit card, and even U she did, who would
she call? I went btlck kt my room with lts
view of the Roeklla. I abut the cir llDUI
it waa dan, and Uaeaa _~I~•==~ evftlnl Mtwork ...... a below the bab1 dueka tnre 1.., ..... u.m. Nat .... bell.~• out al WI -
(
~1-1(""9.....,•$.....,.,w wono,.,.._ 11 ·16
'Thls is not Monday night football, Woodley.
We don't spike a merger!" ..
rou1 HEALTH DA. PETER J . STEINCROHN
I' Temporary
relief OK
,. •
DEAR J)OCTOR: I don't believe in
laking pills. But exceptions arise. For
example, consider my problem . Although
I've always slept like the proverbial log.
for the past lwo weeks I haven't been
getting any sleep at a ll.
L know the reasons : financial trouble
and the loss or a loved one in an a uto
cra sh.
Contrary to my usua l inclinations, I
asked my family doctor lo prescribe a
sleeping pill so I could get some rest. I was
s urprised when he refused. llt• · sa~ s he
does n't believe in s leeping pills.
Unde r these.circumstances, would ~·ou
be willing to prescribe some thing so I
could get a welcom e nig ht's sleep? -:.1R.
K.
DEAR MR. K.: No doubt vou ·ve heard
that doctors often d1 s agr'ee In this
i n s tan ce. co n s id er 1t another
disagreement.
In certain circumsli:ftl<'t10 and ~ours
is one -the doctor should offer relief for
the insommac.,..-lf there is no physical or
severely e r00t1o nal co ntra ind1cat1on to
your taking a sleeping pill. we sec no
reason why you shouldn't have the be nefit
of much needed rest.
Taken for a few nights to br~ak up the
chain of insomnia ni ght after night. and
used as a temporar~· cr utth. 1l 's unllkel~
that it will harm vou
You haven 't mentioned spec1fiC'all~
how you feel. But undoubtedly your energy
h as diminished. vou're hstle~s. irritable
and depressed. You need support that i.J
few good nights' sleep will bring
Of course. the ult 1 mate deC'1s1on rests
with your physic ian. Ha\'e )OU explained lo
him exactly how you feel') ll 's unhk el~ ht'
will refuse to prescribe a few pills tor onl ~
a few nights lo get ~ ou over ."our present
crisis
Dr. Stemaolm welcomes quest 10ns 1 ram
readers He cannot onsu.'er all md1r1duoll1' hut
will include those o/ f/enerol mt ere.~t ,,, tl11s
column. Send yuur questw n.\ to him . m t o re o/
the Druly Pilot. P 0 Bor 15&1. Costa .\1eso .
Calif 92626
p
llMA IOMllCI
AT WIT 'S ENO
Conversation
• • revives past
You know how I've been nagging at m~
son for nine years to.get his hair cut'!
He finally-did 1t
And you know something'! It 's not lhl'
hig h l thought it would be. We ha\'e
absolutely nothlnJ.: to talk about anymore I
had no idea what a large part of our
r eli.Jtionship was based on such intimacies
ti ~ flow long doe!> 1t take )OU to wash all
I hat'.' flo'!" are you fm a nC'ing the shampoo·'
\Vh)' don·t vou at least st~·le 1t like J ad.' n
sm~th"
Our n s1ts now an· awkward Wt•re
s trangers
IT OCCll RR EO TO me that mo~t of
our. relationships with our children are
based on some form of e nt1cis m I tried
on ce to hold a llve-minut<' con,·ers at1Q11
wit h one of m y sons without c.•.xpressm.L( m.'
viewpoint Three s e c ond s into Ch e
l''C'hange. right after. "So what are ~ ou
doing these days., ..... 1 look O\'Cr and he
nt•,·e r .. got to speak anothe r word
Actual!~·. long hair in this <:ountr> did
all parents ·a big favor. fl broug ht. us
togethe r on some.· common ground Fathers
"ho had nl'ver bc.•fort.• not1t ed their sons
began to talk lo them from the moment
they entered lhl' door and c.·ontmued until
the moment thev s lammed 1t shut. T he,·
had rapporl The·~· shared threats ancl
I l'l' I mgs.
I found m yself planning our next
encounter and thinkinJ,? of creall\'e wa~ s to
bring up the.• s ub,1eC'l of his hair. Al t hureh.
when we wcre all as ked to s hake hands and
\\ 1~h one another peal'e. 1 ·<1 turn to him
and smile. "Gel a hatl'l'lll ... I USl'd lo show
him p1<:tures of D1 l'k Clark and sa~. ··~ow
th(•n"s a ho> who en.10~ s rol'k and roll and
·' ou l'<ln s till see his ca rs ··
Onc.·e on vaC'al10n. 1t was <Jll we talkt·d
<Jbnut from Gan . Ind .. LO Salt Lake C1l\.
l'lah The tune 1:eall~ fll'w ·
T OER E ARE FEW things parents l'an
ta lk about with their tccn ·a gcr~ Oh . s urt'.
the re are a fey, slundarcls hke, · You ll\'e
likt• a hog ... "Don't ><>U l'\'Cr oan(! up LI
l<rne1·•" and ·oon·t rum \Our dinner with
that .1un k .. But I'm ta lking about a
s url'-l 1re topic to whip everyone up into a
slute ol aggravation and ho..-;t1llty
:\I~· son dropped by the other rug ht ;,rnd
sa1tl:'··:\tom. how·s 1t gom"•"
I s a1cl fine and we lapsed into a long
silence. Fmulh-. I ventured. llow are ·
thmgs with >OU '' lie said oka~ and fi n.•
more mmt1tc s went b~ f<'inall y. I said, "S<>.
wh~· d1ctn ·t ~ou tell me ~ou wen~ ~citing
~our ha ir <'lll •·· \\'e ('hewed on thal lor an
l'nl 1rt• t'' l'l1 111 .L( It was like olct limes
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
EVERYTHING
MOST
PEOPLE SAY
MAKES SOME
SEN'3E-
THAT'S WHY t'M
SO VERY CON FUSED.
Leo: Appeal universal
J
I
Tuesda~-. November 17
ARIES I March 21:Aprtl 19 > \\'ntten
material aids in boosting income potential
Focus on personal possessions. \·aluables.
obtaming budget. Changes ocC'ur. questions
are answered regar<ltng rt;>lal1on sh1p with
m e mber of opposite Sl'X
TAURUS I April 20·!\l a~· 20 1. Moon 111
your sign promotes inillal1\'e , ong inaltl~.
independence. exciting contac ts and
suceess t hrough creative endea\'ors
Timing. judgment prO\e a<·l·urate
popularity surges upwards
GEMINI I Ma,· 21 . .J unl' 201 :\ura ul
romance should not be tontaminalecl h~
e lemen t of sc(f.cf et:ept1on Be wary in
e motiona l ~!inches don't lead with your
chin . You'll be c a lled upon to "is 1t one
con fined to ho me or hospital
C ANCER < J u n e 21 ·Ju I~· 2 2 1 . B ~
stan ding firm. you achieve objeC't1 ve
Business proposition turns in ~·our favor
your position is s trong and »our advi('c was
re l iable .
LEO <J uly 23-Aug. 22 1: You s trike
c hord of unive rsal appeal. People are
intrigued by your comments . views .
a ctions. Clear lines or communica tion a
lo n g -d istance ca ll 1s due to s p otlight
agen da.
VIRGO 1 Aug. 23·Sept. 22 1: Oc1ginal
material is worth more than you might
have anticipated. Focus on independence.
new starts. exciting contracts and bright
prospects. Avoid heavy lifting. Don't eat
a nd run.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 221: Som e
ad visers seem to be pulling you in t wo
d irections simultaneously. Heed your own ..
• HOROSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA ...
c ounsel. follo-w throu~ on hunch uncl
\t•nl' l1nane1al el a1m lnchv1<lual who
hoast:-l'Ould he m<'rcl~ whist ling 111 dark
SCOR P IO 1 Oct.' 23·NO\ 21 1 Lea \'e
dct alls. fine points for another time For
now perC'c1ve s1tuat1on in its t-nt1 rct~
Emphasis on legal alf;Hrs. par tnerships
and marital status
SAGITTARIUS 1 :'-lo,· 22·0 e <'. 2 1 1
Proc ess of rebuilding 1s under way. sele ct
qualil~ mate rial . be ready to rens e .
review a nd retnfQrl'e bas t<.' s t ructure
Accent also on emplo~·ment . relat1onsh1 ps
with those who depend upon you.
·c:APRICORN 1 Oe C' 24,Jan. 19 1' Good
lunar as peci coincid es with cr eativ ity.
chan ge. a \'a l'l et~· of sens ations a n<I
inlens1f1ed relation.ship. Focus a lso on
children. entertainment and s pec ulative
n•ntures.
AQ UA RI US I .Jan. 20-Fch . 18 1·
Spotlig ht o n re s idence . home
imp rovement. Camil} relal1ons h1ps and
purC'hase or luxury item. Ta urus. Libra.
Scorpio natives figure prominent!~·
PISCES I Feb. 19·March 20 >: Refuse to
be c hided into snap decision. See places.
people as they are, nbt mere ly as you wish
they might exist. Focus on trips. messages.
visiting relatives. Cancer, Scorpio and
another Pisces fig ur.e prominently .
..
,....
Orange Coast OAlLY PILOT/Monday. Nov,mber 18, 1981
............
MEETING A PRINCESS The J>nn<.'l"'" 111
Wale~. who casil~ e!'Jtahli:-ht•:. rapport \.\1th
children , won some new friends (and fans) in
Chesterfield recently, when she went on a
"walkabout" tour with Prince Charles.
...---~-DESKS INC.-----
SUPER SAVINGS TIME
typewnters
Immediate
Delivery
JUOGFS CHAIR
This plush Judge's chair is
regularly $175 00. HurTY
m 1oday and save!
5119 ,.
SUPER DESI<
~ )"x60''
4 drawers include
2 hie drawers
THE BUSINESS STORE THAT SEU.S AND RENTS DESKS
INC~~~·.=. 1548 Brookhollow Dr .. Santa Ana (Warner & Ne'.llpOl't Fwy/Dyer Exlt)
STORE HOURS: Mon~y -Fnday 9. 7 Saturday 9·6: Closed Sundays
(714) 751-3587
Now save 400A, with flirCals low-Cal fanzs.
A1rCal is growing
again Now the airline
that's winning the West
with stvle 1s heading
to Phoenix
Going wit h us are
lower fares 40% iower
than what you've been
paying on other airlines
Pick up an Alrcal
Low<al tare.
From Orange Countv
or Ontario. we·11 Jet you
to Phoenix for as low as
$36. Naturally, there are
some restnct1ons • • But •
even our unrestricted fare
offers a 40% savings
A1rCars evervdav. flv·right
away fare 1s Just $60
AlrCal stvte Is service.
'rt:>ur flight starts with
one-stop check In and
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board After arrival. it's
swift baggage dellverv
And A1rCal stvle is one of
the tiesc on t1ml perfor
manct 1ecr,r1s 1n the
1ndustrv
A toast to style
Dunn9 r~owmber
we rr serving ;::ompltrnrn
tarv coc1<ta1ls to all adult
passengers on everv
non stop fllqhc to or from
r>hoenix
Next rime you re
flying co the Grand Canyon
state fly A1rCal You II
li~e o ur stvle
For reservattons call
votlr Travel Agent or A1rCal
SCHEDULE TO PHOENIX
FROM ORANGE COU NTY
Departs fteQuencv
7 ooa Sat
8 30a Mon . Fri
10 OOa Sun
3 30p Daily
4 25p Ex Sat n 45p Mon ·Ri
6 55p Sun
FROM ONTARIO
Departs Freauencv
8 20a Sun
10 OSa Ex Sun
1 35p Daily
T•B
F1'•1Lt'
Cl•Ct:I
"BiMy will be right out -as soon as he finds his
other shoe."
by Brad Anderson
"It's just a chat. You don't have to call the
meeting to order."
Jl'DGE PARKER
k, L.INOA MAY
AND HER AGENT
RE"f\JRN TO HER
HOTEL. 5UITE.
THE PHONE
RINO!)!
"ft-JI/CNP iz,~~
.by Virgil Partch (VIP)
I I•'"
"I hate Mond1y1."
DEN~IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
~r
~
"I get 'em from the Wilsons' trash can. She keeps
buying 'em and he keeps th rowing ·em out!"
by Harold Le Ooux
l'VE: CONVINCED RANDAU
FOR5E5 THAT we &HOULO
HAVE DINNER HEf{f THl5
EVENINC>, M155 6AfER'IF THAT'~ A(,RE.E~Lf, 5AM
DRIVER WILL PICK YOU UP
IN AN HOLJR'
OH SORE, TME
GOtNCf MAV
CiET 'T006M
80T M'I SMEER WILL
ANt> P€TE.RMINATION
5MOOLP RESIST 1'ME
' 82 Pt<mot
83 look f()f
1 Uquor 84 Bugbear
AT TIME5 •••
IH6
UNITED Ftalurt Syndiellt
Sa1urd1y·s Puzzle Solves'
5 Art 641 Slender boll _ ............
movement Po e.rtld•
9 Legends II Dagger
14 Tutlush 89 T~
room 70 "Oeflre
t5 Fort1astt Undlf the
16 MIM«tsnl -"
17 C1tt11 j 71lodt11
19 Sotto voce
20 Tlr's sh0u1 DOWN
21 Brint
1 Toolll
2Tlkt --
IMUUrlf
23 Ada•.
2 words •
25Aed$qun
Tll<ow 1 11g111 1
name
28 Ott111td
Sf\ldy Abbf.
21 Apllludtt
32 AtlonlshinO 37~
38Fllttntr
39~
41S.
42'1idtn
45 ...... 41,... ....
to ..... s1oe.• IMTllundllld
'NClll..-
3 Molten rocks
4 --of
OeVld .
5Pertod
8Nlll'ltln
rldioloft
7~• ,,.,.
ITltM
·~ 10Slor.,_
" L.opt or "°' ,....,
talM__, .. ......,._ n...._.
MO.-
r
27 Kind of bt.tn 47 Seit!:
29 1~7 NObtl 2 WOfdl
winntf 49 Tiiie
30 Joint 52 Fine l\lr
31 T IMll unit.I 53 Embm:lt
32 Bettle 55 Or.a ltylt
33 NuetlCt 58 SoPhll -
3"t Oppo.d 57 LO¥*'
3S C:O.."' 58 Tr..cy
MlfMl*qp 51--0f ......... ~
.. toloulld
48 ,,.... • ' want roet: ........... Mer.
•• , ..... Ullllr
TEMPTATION 1'0 &ET UP
-----. by Ferd & Tom Johnson
COMPLAINT
D!:PARTM ENT, PLE,ASE:
PUNIJTI
WHAT'S THE
IDEA, NANCY?
GORDO
M o..J ~
CL.O'TliM f ,.~'EM Off/
Pl.)"( o.J ~~ 6'.Jfr!
T~rTCFFf
~A
~~, upn~~! ~.
//-lb
SINCE l HAVE
TO WALK MY
DOG EVERY
DAY-··
by Ernie Bushm1ller
l PUT A BOOK ON HER HEAD TO
IMPROVE HER POSTURE
by Tom Batruk f'l 'NK\' •INKERBEAN
STILL PRAC.Til.ING l.,OUR
1AIR (,OrfAR,' I SE£ !
~H I FUNK() . . I CAN'T
5lOP NCO.! ! I'VE 60T ro
GET IN .SHAPE !
I 'M ~11CJN& roR 1HE
'AIR GUITAR' NATIONAL$ IN
Cl.EVELAND!
FOR Pl NNeR, D'YA
WAN"f" MElA"T"L.OAF OR MACAR.ON I AN I CHeese. ?' we'RE! AU.. OU1" OF MESA1"L.O~F
FoR 8ETTE• OR 1~0. WO•ll
by George Lemont
YOU e>e.1".1 WES 'RE! AL.SO ou1" OF s-reAK, cHoPs,
ROA5"1" eeeF, L.OeS1"SR,
1"URKfSY AN c> RI es .'
-'~ "'' sac ;: a;;
•. Orange Coaet DAILY PtLOT/Monday. November 18, 1981 s
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ORANGE COUNTY ER CHORALE .
...
26th Concert ~son SuJ~ption
Dec. 4, 5 & 6 The Glqry_o_f_C__.i..;.h _ri_st_rn_a_s ___________ _
' Dec. 4
Friday, Dec. 4, 1981, 8 :00 p.m.
Newport Harbor High School
Auditorium
Dec. 5
Saturday, December 5, 1981,
8:00 p.m.
Plummer Auditorium
Dec. 6
600 Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach Lemon & Chapman, Fullerton
Sunday, December 6, 1981 ,
4:00 p.m. & 7:00 p.m .
Trinity United
Pres byterian Church
17th & Prospect, Sa nta Ana
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Th• Or•nR• County M•st•r Chuult' •nd C.1llforno•ns prt'Hnt
• Chri•tm.s f•nt••v ol mutlC frt•m tht' N1nl'lttnth •nd Twt'nll•lh
trnturon fraturon11 tht' <...ilof11rnod C..•o.1•t BAllt'tlhutt'r, tht' Mutrr
Churdlt' Br••s Chuir. ,rnd dt'hRhlful nrw <hutAlt •rr•n1tt'mt'ntJ writtl'n
for tht' Ch1•r•lt' bv Holl yw1•ud w mposrrl.rr.1ngrr, C:ri•rgr Wyll'
Dr. Maurice Albrd, Director
Or Allnd h•s h•ld nwr.l tuchonR Jl'tttt in C•hforno• •nd
thruugh1•ut tht' Un1trd St.alts wh1lt' c1•nclud1nJ( hot ytu~ 1n public
~rrYllt' ,1t th .. Un1vt'rs1tv of C.1loforno.I. lrv1nt', wht'rt hr W•S rn•frssur
11f Mu11< II\ tht' .irr.1s ur'v1u.i• .and 1 h11r.•I w11rk for t'lt'vt'n vl'drl Aftt'r
J brief ho.1tu• on Hullvw1>1>d whl'rt' ht' w.a1 .i v1•Cdl c1w1h. ht' hAI
muvt'd h1• studtt• •nd 1ntrrl'il b.ck h • Or•nRl' C1•unty h• drv11tr htJ
llmr .inJ t'nrri;1t'S h• tht' u1hur.1I "''nr. Tuw•rd this •nd ht' It•
mrmbt'r 1•f thr AJ H1>t' Cummillt't' for tht' Or.nRt' County Ar11
All1.1n1(' ,1m('mbt'r 1•f tht' .>Jv11i><•rv 1umm1tl'Pl' for thl' OrAnRt' County
Mu.11 (1•ntt'r •nd pnnup,1l •d1uJi<Ah>r fur muste k'hul•rlh1ps
"""'""11•J h• Vt•un>: .irt1»t• by thr Or.in)tt' County rhllh•rm1•nlc
51'< ll'lv t-11· .also .i•sumo lhl' J ut11'S uf Oirttt.<r <•f Mut1c M1n1flnt't
,11 th" An.iht'1m Hills C .. mmun1tv Church 1n An•h•1m
A. Or All.irJ b<'i;in• h .. fourth yt'dt ,,. Otrt'ch•r, his un111ut'
Jb1l1ht'' prum1w It• m.1kt' 1h1> .tn••lht'r «'•rttinl( Ch,•r•lt' lt'HOn
Th~ Californians
Thi• (. Jl1f,1rn1.•ns 1• ,1n 1nut'.as1nl(lll l"'rul•r. wlt'Ct group from
w1th1n the-Ch .. rJlt' Thf'Y hJVt' •Ppt'Jrt'd 1n m•ny Spt'Clll l'!lnl't'rls in
.1JJ1t1Hn h• tht'tr rt',11ul.ir ( h1•r.alt' tunct'rt st'.uun Sl ht'dult' Tht' pASI
y<•.ir th1·•l' tJlrntrJ smi:t'r> h•Vl' pt'rformt'd 1n m•ny •rl'AS of tht'
C1•untv .1nJ bt•v1•nJ Ont' ,,f thl'ir m1>rt' mt'm•tr•bk •nd m<>st wumly
rC'lt'l\l.J ·•l'f't'"'J"<I'• w,1> .1 SJ'l'C1.al shuw •t th«' Bt'vt'rly W1lshirt' Hott'!
bt·furl' .1 l.ir11r .1uJ11'n<<' indudin1t notJblt's St'n•t"r S l H•y•k.aw•,
Atturnl'v Ct'nt'rJI Ct1tri;«' l'Nukmt'11.an, •nd r ulicr Ch1r f Ouyl C.•trs
Thr C .il1f,•rnwn> Mf Jl(.lln k• .. lunJ( forw.rd t" • concrrt uuon with
the· Ch11r.111' JnJ tu numrwu• l(UHI •ppt".r.antu thmu,11h01.1t tht'
S••uthL1nd •
'-Orange County Master C horale
Thr Md;tl'r Ch1tr.ilt> 1s t'lltrnng 1h 2oth 1on;rrt •r.Jt•n n Or•nl(r
C;•unlv\ ,,IJht '"nt1nu1nl( pl'rform1111( Jrts t'n••mblt' EA<h ronct'rt
W•Wn rt'm.aint .i bl .. nd1n11: ,,f thl' tr•d1t11•n•I •nd thr u>nttmp.1t.rv
thr m•strrwnrlo.s •nJ "r><•p~· tu bt'st s.ato;fv 1hr music.I t.Slt'S ,,( thl'
County's rt'itdl'nt s
OCMC h .. .appt'Mt'J on• w1dt' ••nrtv uf n•n1rtt >1•1t1ng; induJ1ni;
Chn11mu pt"rfurm•n•t'• .11 thr Oor1•th• Ch•ndlrr r .. ,,1,.,n with th,.
Clt'nd.lll' Symphunv. thr J .. do<dt1on ,,( thl' C:.rdr n Grovt' Cryst.il
c~rhedr.il. thr .. pt'nln)t ,,, tlw s.1n D1t'K•• s1 .. d1um. thl' J .. J1ut11•n •• 1
th .. An•hr1m (. nn•l'nllnn c .. ntrr .inJ IWI• Cl'"'"'' luun '" Eun'f't'
A phil1t>1tph• 11t 1r.11t>ltr•K II• thr JodoC'n•I' h.i• ""'""J 11vl'r lht'
yt•r> .ind o~ •rPMt'nt 1n this St'Hl•n's C••n1 rrt schl'dulr ,,f pNform•mf'>
In .i YHll't y 1•f h•CAll1•n~ thn•ugh<•Ut thl' ( .. univ
•
California Coast Ballet T heatre
fht' <...tlil••rn1.i ( ..... , e.11 .. 1 Tht'.tlrl' ... n<'W J.n, .. .i•mr•nv
d!'J1utt'd "' ml't'ttni; th" nrc•J, ,,f O r .. n.:I' C.•unt• • lo:""'1n1< ,ultur.•I
mmt'mrnt It"• b•ll<'t thr,llrt' th•t ''""'' lrr;h jnJ ••••I ,,.-rf11rmJO•t'•
in Int'"""" d1s<1rhnl' Wh1lf' C. C. BT w1ll prf'•l'nt P•l•blo>h<"J work.
wllh" npw h><•I... 11 will .. 1,.., r><•rf1trm • hl'rl'••.:r.iphv th.11 'h''"'"'"'
ortJ(1n111I "''''l ) of rmerj.t1n~ .iu1h,1i~ AnJ '"mr",.,_.,,.
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Feb. 2 7 Felix Mendelssoffn, Eliiah ~~~~~--------~~~~--~----~--....,,...--...,....----------------=---~----------~~ June· 5, 6 Best of the Academy __
I with Chapman
Sy~phony
Orchestra
Feb. 27
Sat\lrday, February 27 . 1982,
8:00 p.m.
Santa Ana High School
Auditorium
520 W. Walnut, Santa Ana
Th<' Eh1•h " rPi:.irJ('J bv m•ny •S ••nl' 1•f tht' h•wrnnR urAtonos
,,f thr Nint'trrnth <l'nturv This wMk w•• t'nthu11dt1ully rt'c•1vrd
J unni: Mrndt'lss.•hn's l1ft'1tmr .and n•nt1nurs to bt' • f.avontl' 1>(
.wd1t'n1t'• h>d•y Tht' .Mol'tt'r Ch1tr.1lt' is plt'•std tu f't'rform "Elii•h"
with l1•hn K ... h.1k'> h1.:hl11 .1C.l.a1mt'd Ch,1rm.1n Symph1•ny Orcht'str.a
David ford
0.1vtd ford hJ> sun11 "Eli1•h" ,...,,, C>O hmt's •nd h.is bttn proc:L111nt'd
.1 st•\'.r('11tn 1>1 "'""""' H11 v1nlr b.ss voKt' h.as won for him .a ht,11hly
rt's~ tt'J r l.1ct' 1n th" flt' Id u( n•ncl'rt mu~1c
'"''""'' i•11I ,,, lltr 11111 ,,,/, t [/u11l11 u•1ll; " w.'"'' r11ut 1n l1H1t1tl "'",."'"'' •""
1t .. .,,.,rH,~•'" •11url11., '""'' ,,. 1,I, 1,, • .., ;n•rllt ,,.,,..,,IJH( '''''" N1t .. ~r,/lr •'' dHv:rawrt
T 1,, ""''" &m ~ o-•I• Nn.-.
5ECOME A MEMBER OF CHARTER 25 with a
tax deductible contribution.
Oran~e County Master C horale income from ticket
sales and grants must ~ <1u pplemented by public
contributions to'meet our needs. Your support is
needed, and by becoming a member, you will share
in the many exclusive ~nefits a nd privileges
awarded CHARTER 25 members.
0 ~fbctor S5(XJ.OO
ormon
4 st ason tlcktts
P.atron of tht Arts Gala
Ch.arter 25 VIP Rtctptlon
Program Rttattnltion
0 Patron S'99·SIOO
2 stuon tickets
Ch.arttr 25 VIP Rte~tt0n
Program Recognition
0 Affiliate $99-$40
1 SHSOn ticket
P~ram Rtcognition
0 Donor S39-S5
Program Rtcognlhon
Subtcriptfon Total
$ __________ _
0 Check p.ay.ablt to Ounge County Muter Chor.alt
0 Chargt: 0 ViH 0 MuterC.ard Expr. D.ate _____ _
..,l•.
Account•-----------------
Authoriud Sign.aturt .-......--------------
N.am·t =----------------------
Addrtt1=--------------------
'City=---------------Zip: __ _
Phone:(D•Y>----·-·-·~~--(Evr>-----~~~~
Season Ticket Prices
Adult-$20.00 Student (f2 and underl-S12.00
Stnior Citiuns (65 .ind ovrr)-S12.00
To guar.intee prtferred stating
ORDER SEASON TICKETS NOW!!!!
Name=-------------------------~
Address.'--------------------------
City: ___________________ Zip: ____ _
Phone <Day) __________ (EnJ _________ _
Adult
Senior o r
Student
I No. of T.<k•I• : P''" E"h
I. :
Tott!
• Tot.al Enclosed $ ______ _
SUBSCRIBE NOW ANO TAKE AlBow
Your name will appear In the program
name as you wish It to ap~u in tht program
O C heck payable to Orange County Muter C horale
0 Charge: 0 Visa 0 MatterC.rd b pr. Oo1te _______ _
Account •----------------~---
Authorized Slgnaturt=-------------~-==--
Pleue mail to: O range C<?.unty ~tter C hor.ale
P.O . Box 3157 • Anaheim, California 92803
P~ut enclote o1 tt.ams>N. telf·addr~1ted envelope for return of tickets.
Thank you!
•'
Awards . I
Junes
Saturday, June 51 1982, 8:00 p.m .
Santa Ana High School .
Auditorium
520 W. Walnut, Santa Ana
June6
Sunday, June 6. 1982, 8:00 p.m.
Plummer Auditorium
Lemon & Chapman, Fullerton
Our >prinR n1ncrrt will fr•lure •<tml' <tf thr bt'>t mu,11·.ll ~el<'! toulJ'
from put Aud«"my Award lt'rem1•nort Our frit'nd, H1•llyw<'<td
compost'rlarrAnR•r. C.t'OtJtt' Wyl•, will bt' ••Ur >J)t'udl xu•••t His
ri1Chdnt1nK voul .irtAngemt'nU, pt'r'<•n.il1tv . .and kt'yb\lMd m.utt'ry
will showc•sr thP Ch11r•lt •nd C•liforn1A ns 1n dn unfm11Pt1able
nost•l11:1c t'ntt'rt•lnmt'nl th•t will havt' y1•u ll'av1nx thr the.itn sini;ini:
Don't miss this unr1 Tht'rt' will •Is,, bt' • '111\rl:/'[ <l'lt'brttv l(Ut'st
•rt1st1
j
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George Wyle ,
Ct'orRI' Wylr h•• bt'Pn music.I dtrt'< tnr f1•r m•ny t!'IC'v1S1un sp!'toAI• I
u Wt'll., worktnl( 1n thfl c>nttrt•1nmrnt rndustry w11h m•nv start,
1ndudinR Bini( Cr05by, D1n.ih Short', Jrrry Lf'w1>, Fhr Wilson. l••hn
D•v1dson. l11hn Dl'nvl'r P•t B11Qnt .tnd Andy W1ll1Ams Mr Wyll'
wrotl' •II thl' Osmond Brotht'rs m•ll'ri•I on '"" Andy W111Mms Sh1•ws
from )Qo2·06 •nd hf' hu dtr«lt'd thl' music.al port101\ of Dick c1.,~·s
Amt'rK.an Music Aw.ards Sh,•w for th• Int four yt'.an Tht' Chor.all'
Adult -S7 .50
ts honort'd by •nd •pprt'Ci•tt'I th11 usoc1•tt0n with Mr Wylr
Single Ticket Prices
Student -(12 and under )-$4 50
5l'nior Citizen (65 and overl-S4.50
Name ---------------------------
Addrtss: ________________________ _
C1ty=-----------------Zlp·------
Phone: (O.iy) __________ <Eve) _________ _
Adult
Stnior or
Studtnt
Date Total I No. of n.> ...
1
: '''" Eu~ :
Tot.al EnclOffd $ _____ _
C heck p•yablt to O range Co\Jnty M.atter Choralt
C h.arg•: o Vis.a 0 MuterC:.ard Expr. D.ate ________ _
Account , __________ ..__ _________ _
Authorlrtd Sign.aturt=----------------------
PluH m1il to: Or1mge County M1ittr Chor.ale
P.O . Box 3157 •Anaheim, C.alif. 92803
Pie.alt' enclost a 1tams>N. fflf·.addruHd envelope for rtturn of tlcktts.
Ttlank you!
For group salH or other lnform.ation. c.all tht Chorale Buslntu Office .at
(114) 535-01.sJ.
A public Ml'Vlce 1pouonblp ot U. OrMt• Coat ~ Pllol I'
'!
!
Or1nge Coast DAILY PI LOT/Mondey, November 18, '981
British group won't be lal,eled
!Z..t~!W!~~a.u
LOS ANO ELLS -One or tha.t nice ~
little Ironies that crop up ln tbow buslne11 from
Umt to Ume ls the evolution ol t..be record trade
ma1a1lne disco charts.
Created at the height or the "Satruday Nisht
Fever" dance boom, they ori1inally were more or
le s carbon copies of the all·encwnpusin g pop
chart.a, tilled mostly with entries from the likes or
the VUlage People. Donna Summer and the Bee
Geea.
Top 40 songs with a beat $till do well, but
lhese days the disco charts are just about the only
l>lace where newer, more adventurous rock banda
can also make a showing. You won't, ror example. rind British stars
Siouxsie pronounced Susie and the Banshees on
the Hot 100. Yet "Spellbound," a mesmerizing
song from their recent "Juju" LP, has been
floating around on the disco charts not the
upper reaches. but somebody out there 1s
Obviously dancing to 1t. 1 The iron~ is that disco -or at least the kind ol music it suggested a few years back -once
~as the last thing with which a rock 'n' roll band
wanted to be ident.iCied.
Siouxsie and the Banshees certainly don't
onsider themselves a disco band in the Village
People-Summer-Bee Gees sense of the word. But
they aren't any happier being pigeonholed as
punk rockers, a classification that resulted
~ainly because they got their start in Britain at
bout the same time as the Clash and the Sex
istols.
"The thing we really notice about America is
t~at they have a horrible way or puttiTig things in
httle packages. The word punk is a media-created
word in the first place," says bassist Steve
Severin; a soft-spoken man with close-cropped
platinum hair who has been playing music with
Siouxsie Sioux for more than five years.
"You can say that us and the Clash are the
only survivors from 1976, but us and the Clash are
a million miles apart musically and in altitude as
well," Severin says.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
• YOUNG PEOPLE
"'-oct«-ot.,., • ...,..,o....,,,,,
,,.,_ •OOUt ........ e.toty"'
"1:>N """"1MI"" ~o Or ,..,, C!Wdfflft
: <t'~'Y,~·x0f r I An Ame11can
7:30 9•40
I c==ca::n::::d=:1ce=a.=,=ge=n==>
Ja!:(l.uel~s,11
I
RICH a F IRI
SHOWS AT 7:159:30
ALL D ~ ANO ll!l fiLMS RECEIVE
01£ SL\l. OF THE MOTION PICTURE
CODE Of SEV REGULA !ION
•
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1"
11
.
.., .. '°~"' . wl'ld n Ot1we '"Beto• YoWf AM Qtf ,adtO ._, vour _,..11:., It no AM e»r rM:flO w•t"' .. nthon c;oe-.o•¥ poinion bl"•
vou1 own AM po.tab ..
&WlS'ml Plus n. F09 RI
I Robert Duvall THE~ITOF 0.8. A IPG) Also_ ..-1ay1n9 NitlhlttmMta lRI ~ I ~J>un•w•m
I 'fp~
Also Ptay1n9
1 c:::R::dl==·=F==•=l=R=):::i[ I H•,,,son Fo~
I "t~'l\~P'GlE ':.C~~F .. 111re Airp!M IPGI
~~nu ·cc>.F.~u'• Dudley MporT In AIUiw lPG
Ot1ve·tns Open i; 30
NIGHTLY Under 12FR EEU euNoted
THE PORT THEATRE
n n-6260
ANNIE GIRADOT
PHILIPPE NOIRET
in
PHILIPPE DE BROCA's (ICl"4G OF HEARTS!
JUHJ:ff\S
. T~lftf RATED ·PG
l 0Qfl f COAST HWV CORUNA OEl MAR
"Masterful"
-L A. Times. Shella Benson
"Wonderful"
-Newsweel\ Magazine, Jack Kroll . r CHARIOTS OF FIRE
_) t
IPGI "LAOOC~Y "fCI W!UWEA ..-c>S M:U/la ............ ~o • ...._.~, ...... 0 .... ..._ .... _ ..... '--C-M .............
edwards NEWPORT "'
I MIA.ICOASf HWl.&MACAlTHUI
MWWIGllW .OSW'l'lla '44-0760 . . -I
• a
Swiu.~tl' nnrl t lie 1Jan11h1•1"~
Nor does the music of Siouxsie and the
Banshees conform to classic punk rock's grating,
rapid fire sound Created JUSt with guitars, bass
and drums. and Miss Sioux's low-timbered lead
vocals. the melodies are haunting and the lyrics
poetic rather than political.
"From the cradle bars comes a beckoning
voice. 1t sends you spinning, you have no choice,"
Miss Sioux a tall, s lim and striking woman
whose dark hair matches her heavy eye m akeup
s ings gently in the opening bars of
"Spellbound... It's a command that's hara to
ignore.
Mi ss Sioux. who says she chose her name
--STBIO·#RI FM
FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH
If you don't want
to drink-
That's our
business
COSTA
MESA
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Call 642-2734
Alcoholism Recovery Services
301 Victoria Street
Costa M esa, CA 92627
Approved for Medicare
SALE OF
EXPERIENCED FURS
'\;\}Q I\ I 1 J some of the most fabulous lurs as \}\[.!.. seen on TV and 1n tne movies ore
_.__ no w here for your se1ec l1on
-Wl D£rY YOU TO OtfflRlKTIA TI
THl HEW OHIS flOM THE llSAllS.
.u MllOI CtWll C.Vlll •AcclOI ,, ... .,,,
MerrlottHoeel
IOO Newpcwt Cntr. Dr.
I ......
Newpcwt ~.CA
m a
The l•rgHI Mt.c:lion .
of luxvry fure W•
h•v• ev•r 1hown .
Including dealgn9f
fure end ONE OF A
KIND 1p.clela.
Imagine buying a lme
fu1 !tote 101 .under
S 100 , a fine mink
1acke1 that was only
worn once or twice 01
a mink coat thal was a
Pille on a TV giveaway
Show They 1e an here
for your selecflon now
II you know furs. you
can buy a f~m1ly
heirloom 101 a fract100
of its value
Never belore. never
again will so many
valuable furs be
offered at such
11diculous pr ice& II
.make$ sense to buy a
line rental or
unclaimed fur Some
turs labeled "used"
have only beoo tried on, wom less than
most furriers' new
stock First come. first
served basis A small
deposit Wtll hold YoUI
layaway
" -and spells Susie 'Siouxie'
becuun "I hated cowboy' I stlll hale
cowboy•," and Severln had been han1ln1 out at
avant·.r•rdc London clubs ror aome Ume when
they d cldcd to Jump Into perrormln& head.first.
Al their debut a one·nif ht stand In London
in Seplcmbtlr 1976 -the band's lineup lncluCJed
the late Sid Vicious In bis pre·Sex Pistols daya H
welt as Maree> Ptronl, now a member or Adam
und the Ants.
"None or u11 had ever b«n on stage berore "
Severin recalls "Me aod Sid had never played ~n
lostrum9nt before lD our lives. We thouehl we
were wonderful." ·
In fact , Miss Slou~adds. the band doesn't
believe in formal training 1n music. "ll 's
something that should be ve,.Y perJOnal and come
Crom yourself and I don't think you can get that 1f
you're taught via the other clicMs."
Ov'er the years the band has had numerolls
persorl!'el changes but seems lo be holding s teady
now with a drummer known as Budgie, which is
what the British call a parakeet and guitarist
Joh n MeGeough.' ·
The group recently completed its second visit
to the United States, playing in several fairly
large clubs to what by now is an established and
*BARGAIN MATIN8ES •
Monday thru Saturday
All PerformtncH before 5:00 PM
(Exctpl Special Enpgemtnta and Hblk11y1)
L" MUIAP A "4All Mlrodo ot 10 .. cron1
LA MIRADA WAlK·IH 994·2400
•. I • t I•
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALi< IH
----.--.,., "TIMI! 8ANDt.,_-• -llll:la,I' .... __ _
focutly ol Conol•wooo
213/531·9HO
'llte PURSUIT OF 0 .8. C~R·t ...,.,.~.,.---I "IOUTHIRN COWOflT" 1111 .~ ........ " .. ,__ . .,..,.....,..., .... ,.~
"OHL Y Wt4£N I LAUGH" 1911 ...... ~ ... ..,,.
"SEEMS UK£ OLD TIMES'' -
·•-I
._ ... __
"THI! FRENCH LlfUTl:NANT'S
WOMAN""'
tUll~._..~,_ .... ,.
LAKEWOOD CENTER
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widely enthU81Htlc cull followint.
·"We're not here to. break Amerlce," Severin
says "Wc 'ri just here to ploy to the people that
waot to ace us We're not going to break 01,1r backs
Just to break mertcn. We're not careert1ta ln
tbtil 11cnse."
"That's l much like homework," MIH
Sioux tnterjeds.
"I think whaC eeps us going 1s that kind of
attitude, that we do • terms of sloaglng
uround," Severin continues "T re's Just nothlne
else we'd rather do "
Auditions d e
The San Clemente Community Theater will
hold auditions for the comedy "Send Me No
Flowers" on Monday and Tuesday evenings a.t 1
o'clo<'k 1n the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 Ave.
('ebrillo, San Clemente.
This play replaces the previously announced
"Vanities" and will open Jan 14 for four
weekends Roles are a vailable for nme men and
three women, and will be directed by Vince
tordio.
MONDAY. NOV. 16, 1981
CLASSIFIED C6
•••••
OCC basketball team
takes experience, ·depth
into Frkl:ay's opener. C3.
li:rit. not 'by IDUC~
a
Despite 24-10 thumping, they're still in the race. for playoff spot .. Sunday's NFL 8Core8
By JOHN SEV ANO Of-. o.11y.....,. s~
CINCINNATI -Clinically, the Rama were
pronounced dead here Sunday at ': 30 p. m .,
Eastern Standard time.
speechless again," said the Rama' mQlt vocal
spokesman Dennia Harrah. ·~e·1 no doubt in
my mlnd that you guys (referring to the media)
are going to crucify ua . . . and rigbUully ao." _
scrambles for a game-leading~ yards rushing.
...
The Cincinnati Bengala (8-3) put the patient
out of its misery with a suffocating 24-10 victory
before 56,836 at Riverfront Stadium and a
television audience that must have bad a bard
time watching the gruesome outcome .•
Indeed, the Rams · deserve to be crucified.
And, what's particularly diatreasin1 ls the fact the
situation isn't getting better.
.. It wasn't the defense, though, that gave the
Bengala' offense rield position at the Rama' 8, '2
and 9-yard lines. It was three Du PutorloJ
interceptions that put the Ram defenae in such
difficult footing. And. Anderson and Co. Jumped on
each opportunity to score a touchdown and sticlr
another nail into the Rams ' already half-closed
coffin.
Cincinnati 24, Rams 10
Cleveland 15, San Francisco 12
Pittsburgh 34, Atlanta 20
Mlllilesola 20, New Orlean& 10
Philadelphia 38, Baltimore 13
St. Louis 24, Buffalo.() ~
I
Only an artificial life-support ayatem called
the "NFL Playoffs" enables the Rams to lteep
breathing today. At an embarrassing s-& fur the
season, no less than seven teams -AUanta, Green
Bay, Tampa Bay, W asbington, Detroit, the New
York Giants and, yes, the "Rams -are· currenUy
trying to give away a final NFC playoff berth no
one seems to want.
''Here I am, just like last week, sitting here
Despite the fact Coach Ray Malavui cloeed
practices this put week in order to attain what be
called, "total concent.ratioo from bis players," the
Rama s howed about as much innovation and
togetherness as a high school drill team on its first
day at practice.
The offense, for the ftfth strai1bt '•'hk,
appeared out of sYllc and put less than 20 points on
the board. And, while the defense played
admirably, it still allowed the big play -
especially in the form ol four Kenny Andel'IOll
Green Bay 21 , Chicago 17
Denver 24 , Tampa Bay 7
"We have no excuses,'.' offered center Rich
Saul. "We just got beat."
NY Jets 17, New England 6
Oakland 33, Miami 17
Kansas City 23, Houston 10
Detroit 27, Dallas 24 or course, those searching for an excuse need
to look no further than the Rams' injury list. The
offensive line suffered another casualty when
tackle Jackie Slater left with a betMtring pull, and
even Pastorini couldn't escape the wave aa be bad
bis bell rung by Cincinnati's Eddie Edwards and
\\ ashington 30, NY Giants 27 (OT )
Tonight's Game
San Dte~o at Seattle <Channel 7 at 6 )
CN FL roundup, Page C4>
<NFL summaries, Page CS)
(See RAMS, Page C•>
Edison, Yikes
open at home
{ . .
CIF football playoffs begin Friday
By ROGER CARLSON
Of 1111 Dall, PllOI Slaff
Top-ranked Suns et League
c hampion Edison and the
runner-up Vikings of Marina
High hav e d r aw n home
assignments for the first round
of the Cl F football playoffs
Friday, but for many, the way to
a potential Cl F championship
begins on the road.
The Chargers of Edison will
play at Orange Coast College
against wild card entry Servite,
a team which won one game in
the Angelus League and enters
w1lh a 6·4 overall record.
Despite the record and wild
card status of Servile, Edison
Coa ch Bill Workman isn't too
crazy about the pairings .
"It's a pretty tough opponent
for supposedly the No. 1 seeded
team," says Workman. "We're
playing Servile, which just beat
St. John Bosco and Fountain
Valley plays St. John Bosco.
"That's neat, eh? \\ e must
have sajd something wrong."
10-6, lo Bishop Amat (28·13) and
to Mater Dei (29-18 ).
Should Edison get past Servile
and extend its winning streak to
33 the Chargers will meet the
winner of the Fontana-Hacienda
Heigh ts \\1lson game the
following week.
M artna, despite failing to win
a league championship, was
seeded No. 3 tn the eliminations
and draws fi ve-lime loser West
Covina (4-5> in the first round,
set for Westminster High.
On the road in Big F ive
Conference play are Fountain
. Valley and Mater Dei. Also
drawing road assignments are
Sea View L eag u e
r epresentatives Estancia and
Cor ona del Mar in the CIF
Southern Conference. El Toro,
the Sea View league kingpin,
draws a n automatic home
assignment.
Also at home in the CIF
Central Conference are South
Coast League co-champions
Mission Viejo and Capistrano
Valley, while Laguna Hills is al
Brea-Olinda.
• 11.PWI .........
Servile lost a 20-14 decision to
Fountain Valley on a 50-yard
touchdown pass with seconds
left. lost to No . 4 seed St. Paul,
the Angelus League ehampion,
Marina is hooked up against a
West Covina team which bas
bee n beaten by Lompoc.
Redlands and Fontana, in
addition to Sierra League foes
Los · Altos (27-7) and · Hacienda
Heights Y. ilson 131-0).
Cincinnati's Dan Ross drags Ram defender Johnnie Johnson (20) and Nolan Cromwell JO yards after grabbing pas~.
Lakers look to, their bench for help
And McKenna, Cooper respond in double-overtime win
By CUltT SEEDEN
Of tlM Dally 1"11 .. Slaff
INGLEWOOD 'Young Kevin M&Kenna sat in
front of bis cubicle in the Los Angeles Lakera
dressing room Sunday night and shook hil bead.
"We've played 10 games already. That's almost a
third of the college season,·· be surmised.
The firs t .year guard out of Creighton
University has, to be feeling the pressures of the
NBA , and there are still 72 games left in the
regula.r season.
In addition, the Lakers were playin1 their
third game in as many nights -the ltind of games
that make rookies and coaches grow just a litUe
• bit older.
WIBLE MCKENNA DOESN'T see a lot of
playing lime (10 minutes against Phoenix
Saturday night and another 13 Sunday against the
Indiana Pacers at the Forum). be certainly got a
taste of the NBA.
With 35 seconds remaining in the second
overtime period, McKenna tossed up an 18-foot
bank shot which got the Lakers even with the
Pacers at 123, and 27 seconds later, Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar sank a free throw which gave the
Lakers a 124-123 win for their fourth straight
victory. . '
club. He was 16 of 21 Crom the floor in his last three
games and bad shot 5( percent in seven of the
Lakers' first nine games.
Told about bis coach's 40 points remark,
Cooper noted: "I felt like I had a large amount or
points in me."
The Lakers' third-round draft choice in 1978
said he expected to be in the lineup Wednesday
night when the Lakers travel to Utah to face the
Jazz, but be wouldn't know for sure until be saw
the doctor today.
COOPER WAS ONE of seven Lakers to score
in double figures. Jabbar led the team with 23
points, Wilkes and Magic J ohnson scored 22
apiece, Norm Nixon chipped in 14 while Kupcbak
had 13 and Landsberger added 12.
While the Lakers have now reeled off four
·s traight wins and are a mere game be~ Pacific . .
I think Cooper might have had
40 by the time the night was over .
if he wasn't hurt.
-Lakere Coech Paul w .. dMad
Di vision-leading Portland, their games have been
characterized by an inability to bold big leads.
West Covina has a pair or
backs with 5 .0 per game
averages in the running attack
and features a 6-7, 270-pound
center (Drake Hurley).
For Mater Dei, which is 4-6
overall, it's a cematch at Los
Altos. In non-league play the
Mo narc hs dropped a 28-14
decision to the Sierra League
champions.
Fountain Valley's assignment
<St. John Bosco, tentatively set·
for Cerritos College), is a mirror
10 terms or won-loss records
(7-3). but the-task appears tough
because of St . John Bosco's
offensive line.
St. John Bosco;s interior, from
tackle to tackle, is ·listed at 230,
2 10, 235, 235 and 235 and
averages 6-4 in height.
Corona del Mar and Estancia,
two who tied In Sea View League
play ( 10-lO), are up against
formidable opposition.
Corona del Mar must travel to
No. 1 seed and unbeaten Downey
< 10·0), which boasts a defense
that has limited eight or its 10
<See CIF, .Page.CZ)
I
McKenna's basket was the only one be made
after three previous misses, prompting somone to
ask Laken Coach Paul West.head alt.er the game if
McKenna was his No. 1 choice to take the
important shot when the Lakers were down by two
points.
"It wasn't our firs t option,'' Westbead
responded. But then, Sunday night, \\'.est.head bad
lo take what be could gel.
Against the Pacers, who came into the game
winless in eight appearances at the Forum, the
Lakers led 59--46 late in the second quarter and
maintained a 79-66 advantage midway throu1b the
third quarter. ' •
Cub player
dead at 27 l
The Lakers, behind a torrid ftnt-balf 1bootin1.
performance by reserve Mike Cooper, held a 61-52
advantage over the Pacers. Cooper, in 13 minutes,
bit on 6 of 8 from the floor and added a pair of free
throws for 14 points as the La.ken maintained a
colJ\lortable lead throughout the half.
~UT COOPER 8UFFEa'ED a slight groin pull
with 1:59 remaining in the second quarter and
dido 't play the remainder of the game.
In addition, before the night was over, both
Jamaal Wilkes and Mitch Kupcbak fouled out of
the· contest, putting even more pressure on the
Laker bench . .And lb~ reserves performed
admirably.
"It was a game of the reserves,'' •treed
Weathead. "Cooper. got us 1olna in the flnt half,
Mark Laod.sberger was outstandtn1, (Eddie)
Jordan pushed us late ln the fame and McKeou
wins.it for us.'' .
• • "I tbint Cooper might bave had 40 by the Ume
the night wu over ll be wasn't hurt," Weathead
added.
Cooper came into the game . with a 60.1 .
shooting percentace on the aeuoa, belt on the ..
But with the Pacers' J ohnny Davis, BUly
· Knight and Tom Owens scoring clutch baskets..
and Don Buse connecting on a three-pointer, the
Lakera blew an eight-point lead in the final two
minutes of regulation play.
Buse's important three-pointer waa automatic.
He bad already cannecJ 7 of 13 from the tbree-1!'.Qint
range this season, includiq two the previous liigbt
against the San Diego Clippers.
His 27-fc>Oter notched the score at 107 with 33
seconds-:feft in regulation play.
. WESTHEAD seaUGGED OF!!' the
inconsistency in the Laker1lttack. "We've always
known we were a team of cblH'acter, and we're
still in the proceaa of eatabli1hin1 a same
rhythm. The l~Y• -played real bard out there.''
Added Malic JobDIOO: "Tbe 1am• WU played
in 1treaka. For •bout two mtnqte1 u.ere (la the
fourth quarter) we couldn't score a buket. It'•
nobody's fault, tbougb. ·
''We came down a1ainat HoultoD, Plioenb an8
Indiana. My main concern.. la that we wtD. I t.blDk ..
lt'a a tribute to the team that we could •till run • ...,,.. -..
<See IAD:ll8, Pa1e a> Mkhod eoopn, kiter ftMINd with• ,..,.,,, ,.,.,,.. • ftirJI W. . . ..
ARLINGTON, Texu (AP) -
Utility infielder Steve Macko of
the Chicago Cube died of lung
cancer Sunday at a hospital
here, a s pokesman for the
National Leaaue team a aid. He
was 27.
Macko bad been hospitalbed
at Arllnttoo Memorial Hospital
since Wednesday, after
c om plaining he couldn't
breathe, aald bl• father, JCJMPh
Macko, equipment,mana1• foe
the Texu Rangen.
A native ol Burlington, Iowa,
and a 1raduate of Baylor
Univenlty, Macko wu carried
on the team'• roater tbroulb
most ol the 1111 HUOD, but cld
pot ... actioD ....... ol llllia wa .... 1a two ,...,._ •• ••,
M compiled a ... 'i&Ua• . ....... ..... , .... , ... ............. .., .. ~
~1'9c.I" """" IDdlwla ...
..
c
Blazers' lead cut to one game
Injured skater has
• amazmg recovery
From AP 418pa&ellet
LOS ANGELES -Four moetbl •. ago, world clua ice akater BalT1
Haeen lay badly injured In a bol»6tal
bed, his chances of purauln& an 0lymptc'drea111
all but crushed after be wu bit by a ur. aut ill
an amulng recovery, he la back cm tbe tee ud
setting ready for •· major compeU&km neat
month.
"We 're practicing three or four bGu.n a
day, baclr up to lb~ normal acbedule," aald the
24-year-old skater, who la pr41parln1 with
longtime ice dancing partner Kim Krohn of
Brea for a competition ill Salt Lake City. "My
body and legs are strone, but I have a lot ol pain
In my ankle. I have tendlnitia ill it from com'lnl
back too Soon and stlffneaa in my back."
Considering bis inJuries Ha1•'' rec:o.ery ii
remarkable. He suffered a broka rilbt leg, a
broken left ankle, large cuts on .bla risbt le1,
cuts and bruises on bis face and body, a
c~ncussioo and three miasln& teeth,
Hagen was workinl aa a depart.tDent Id.ore
security guard to help meet the $8,000 to '10,000
annual cost of competitive skat1na and traveUnc
when the incident occurred Jut July.
He and another security cuard. 1uapeetin1 a
woman of sbopliftin1. followed her tmo the
parkint lot to obtain her Uceoae plat. uamber. ·
Tbe-wom•n alleeedly drove toward "'lllem,
knocking Hagen through a plate glua window
but missing the other guard.
The driver, Betty KacNeil, pleaded
innocent to charges of attempted murder and
assault. Her trial is scheduled for Dec. 17 in
N.orwalk Superior Court.
Quote of the day
Tim Wrightman, tight end for UCLA :
'"I'd like to think of my image as a blend of
.Sleve Garvey and John Matuszak. Then I
c an be a c razy man running for
president.''
Flyers overcome slow start
Ron Flockhart set up Iii
Philadelphia"s tying goal , then '
scored the game-winner on a power
P!a-Y moments later to lift the Flyers to a $-4 ~ciory over the Patrick Diviaion-ludillg New
York Islanders in National Hockey League play
Sunda,Y. New York scored three goals in th"e
first five minutes of the game but the Flyen
were able to battle back . . . Buf(alo's VYon,
Lambert and Jim Scltoeafeld each scbred in the
third period as the Sabres held off Boston.
3·1 ... Dawe Lamley scored his fint three
points of the season , including the
game·winning goal early in the third period as
Edmonton downec;t the New York Ran1era,
5-3 ... Tom Lysiak collected two goals and
two assists and goalie Tony EsposJ&o posted bis
74th career shutout as Chicago s wamped
Colorado, lo.-0 . . . Three goals and two assists
by Ivan Boldirev helped Vancouver to a 7-4
triumph over Calgary ... Butclt Goring, the
most valuable player in last sprin1's NHL
playoffs, has been named an assistant coach of
the New York Islanders . , . Hartford
purchased left wing George Lyle from Detroit in
a transaction announced Sunday
From Page C1
Matt& Olllerdial ied a .. 7 San • Antonio 1purt In the third quarter
end the Sp.ur1 po1ted a
come·lrom·beblnd 110·105 victor~
Oftl' .. Pwtland Trail Blaaen Sund•~ Dllht in
tbe Jfatlonal BHkttball A11oclatloa , Tbt
P...._. IOll, coupled-wltb Lot ADltl•' win o~ ladlene, cut the Blaiera• lt1d to Juat one
11mt bl the Pacltic Dlvlilon. Portland, wblcb
bas loll Ill Jut three after
wlnnina It.a first seven, led
70·58 early ln the third period
but Olberding scored 10 of hi•
18 pointa in the rally wbitb
1a\'Q;. the Spura an 8t·'7
mar~n with 2:47 remainlna
tn the tblrd period .•. 8*ej
•Hertef scored 12 of hll
game·hi&h 28 polnt.t in the
fourth quarter aa Milwaukee
rallied for a 98-96 win over
Oteveland. After tratUn1 by aeven points .. t•rln& the final quarter, the Bucks roared
•aclt and opened a 97-93 lead on a jump shot by
QulU S.Cluaer with 1: lS left~ to play.
Dodgers win thfs man a job
,PERBY. Vt. -Georee Benoit of III this northern Vermont town not
ordinarily a Dodgers fan, qttlckly
converted d~I the World Series. And when
the Dodgers w~ he won -a $700 snow-plow
contract. ,.
For the se<:ond year in a row, Benoit and
Armand FoumJer submitted identical bldl to
the school board for plowing snow from the
Derby Elemenfa.ry School yard.
The three-memeber 1chool board, not
wanting to show favoritism, assigned each man
a team ln the World Series. leaving the ael~Uon
up to fate and the baseball players.
"It was the oDly way to do it," said Susan
Watson, school board chairwoman an tbe town
of 4,220. "We bad to find some. w.ay tbaltoot-lbe-
dectiicil totally out of our bands.··
Contract extended for WSU coach
Washington State head football •
coach Jim Walden agreed lo a new
four -year contract with the
university. The decision was allnounced
Saturday, moments before the Cougar!!' final
home game against California, won by WSU ,
19-0. The Cougars can win a trip to the Rose
Bowl with a win at Washington
Saturday . . . The Cleveland Indians traded
second baseman Duane Kuiper to San
Francisco Sunday for right-handed pitcher Ed
Wldtlotl. \\hitson, 26, was 6-9 with a 4.02 earned
run average last season, while Kuiper, 31. bas
spent eight years in the major leagues with
Cleveland . . . China edged the United States,
15·8, ll-15, 15-11, 14-16, 15-6 Sunday and grabbed
sole possession of first place.
Television. radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
today. Ratings are: / I I I excellent; 1 11 worth
watching; / ./fair;./ forget It.
9 6 p .m ., Channel 7 ../ ../ ../ ./
NFL FOOTBALL: San Diego at Seattle.
Announcers: Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell
and Don Meredith.
The SeahaWks are coming off a 24-21 vlctorv
over Pittsburgh while San Diego lost to Cincinnati
last week. The Chargers with Dan Fouts at the
controls, are favored by S'h points and are
currently one game behind Denver In · the
American Conference Western Division standings.
Seattle is on the bottom In the same division with
a 3-7 record. Quarterback J im Zom paces the
SeahaWk attack.
RADIO
Football -San Diego at Seattle, 6 p.m. KNX (1070). •
CIF PLAYOFFS TO BEGIN FRIDAY. • •
vjclims to one touchdown or
less.
Mike Preac her, a 6·3 ,
205-pound senior, appears lo be
the key blockjng back for Cary
Williams and Jeff Kimble, two
backs wtth 5-yard averages per
carry.
~1 Modena. with its deceiving
6·4 overall record (1t includes
one forfeit loss, a loss to Edison
and a controversial loss to 9-1
Foothill>. awaits E stancia's
up-and-down attack.
El Toro hosts Warren and
Mi ssion Viejo is at home to
Mayfair, creating a home site
problem <each uses M 1ssion
Viejo as its home base), and St.
Be rnard is at Capistrano, Valley.
F!lltST lltOUNO l'AllltlNGS
Clfl 11• Fl .. CeottereM• C'rtu,. 7'. JI tt.m.I
Ser,,ite"' 1111..., •I Or-Coul Coll-
Haclende HtlQllt• Wiison •I Fontan• ,._..;,. Veit.., vs St Jolln BM<o et C.rrlt•.,
Colleqe Ctt<'l•ll~I El\enho-rat t,1 Peut
West Covlnev' Marln•al w ... 1mtn,ter
Loyola at 81slloc> Amel
St Fr MC ls at Colton
MAI ... o.I et L.,. Alt.,.
Clfl ~ C...lerlft<•
Corona dtl Mer et Oowr>tv
E1oeranta •t Fullerton
EstafKi. 81 El MoOeN
euen• Per-at El Oor-
K•nMd't •t Footlllll
Warr..i al El Toro
VIII• Par1l at Paclfk •
LaH-.atLY"-
ClflC...-~e Vat..-cle et Pl~)(
La Mlr..W at LM Am19K
An-Im al Artftle
St 8ff...,d et ~r-Vellev
L-.una Hlllsat ~IN•
La OulnCeat .. lltlowff
Rancho AlaMllG!l at St. O-vlwe
Mevtalr • Mlnloft VlelO
Cl .. C. .... ~ e ...... at l.on9 llNcll Pol¥
TlloVYnd o.-s •t Soutll Torre•10
Wtttlelle M SMta a,,....,.
Comololl • Al'Cadl• ~-.. Muw Wist TOr'l'lllKe .............. Part!
L0"9 8"cl\ WlltOfl et Dos Pvet>IOs Sa11 O.Wlel at Senl• Mo11lca
Cl"~ .... ,.,. C-fweM•
H-t-M Temola City 8talr atAnlelO!leVallrf
Mornl""lde et Mo<trovle
011wte at Sen 1.IM O&l-
H-·~ S.119'" Ill .. II Olrdt"I R~ltt81~
H111 llt 8unouQl'lt 1 .......... 1
a .. ..-. • ...,...~· C..itl'9411~ •
Sa11 DllNI at"--
80t11t1 et 8111Wtey
Vl<tw Vall.., et 8elfwl11 hrll
c111ne1 et llldlo
$<""" .. Aollla Vallw¥ ArroyoMGef'9Y
•a"t-• Noval ()ell
. Cl" .IS._ Celt•etKe
· C.lllontl• at RllClidoll•
Uol-atR.,_
Montet>ello at N•tes
Corona Ill Clenmont
Damien at Arll"91on
Nor"thvlew at I.A S.ma
Norco at Oon l.uqo
Nortll (Rlvenldel at~ .. Hilli
"" 1111 ..... c ... , ... _.
Memmolll at TeNlc"-pl Va lley Owl1tle<1 et SI MOntu
Cheml,_ at 8retlv""
NffdlH at Serr-• ,_,....,.,,,. Palms at Detert
I.A Beatlsl •t Borort
111.i.oo Unloll at AQUll\9S
Lutlleren IOranqel et W"lttler Clv
Clfll>ffert._....~.
St. eona,,...tu""t At•'<-•o
lllshot> Ol~at Rio Mesa
Notre 0..... I Riv I et .,_.ry Ster
8locwnl"910f\ al Ml rat"'• St JOHllll ISM) al CMolnteria
Serre et Rim of 1"9 World
Calabeus 9t lltedOndo
Perris et Verbum Del
Newport home
Top-r.anked anCl "top-seeded
Newport Harbor High will be lbe
home team Wednesday
afternoon against Empire
League champion Eaperaua a.a
CIF 4-A water polo action
continues.
lt~a bUled to start at 3, alon1
with other quarterfanals 1amea,
including Corona del Mar at
Downey and No. 2 seed Lone
Beach Wilson at Sunset League
titlist F.diaoo.
This Week's Special
ZiJlgitt
Q ~insurance agcntS ~ and brokers
Wright
Insurance costs rising? @
Contact us ror competitive quotes on Property, Liability, Dimcull •
Products Uab1llly. Commercial
Aulo, Grou..,.e Llfe and Medical as w,1111
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Jack Anderson
reveals in the
1981 SEDAN DEVILLE DIESEL .
FuU padded vinyl top, velour seat.a, AM-FM
stereo with cassette & Cadillac wire wheel
covers. (134515). · , •t-3,995
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2600 Harbor Blvd. __ ,_. Costa Mesa
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• Oetly ~II .. ,._ llf Clle~ ~QN
Indiana'a Don Buse geb tangLed up with Michael Cooper of the Lake"rs dunng first half Sunday.
From Page C1
LAKERS WIN ...
tonight after playtng a lot. of games in so few
nights." ,
The game had its share of oddities. There
were enough goaltending calla to warrant an
appearance by the Kings' Mario Lessard.
· J abb.ar recorded . a season·higb rebounding
~tal ~Ui 20, givmg him 37 in his last two outings.
L1keW1Se, Landsberger 's 14 points in 26 minut~
was his best offensive effort of the young sea.son.
'. And. McKeona's strange jump shot drew a
httle skeptJc1sm from his teammates.
''THE GUYS WERE kidding me. They wanted
to know if I really meant to bank the shot in. But I
was trying to do that," McKenna assured. "I was
practicing bank shols Crom there during practice.
But, I guess everybody was surprised as bell that I
took the shot."
Nothang S\lrprised •Indiana Coach Jack
McKinney, who coached the Lakers to lbe NB/r
championship in 1980. The victory marked the
third straight time his Pacers have failed to beat
the Lak~rs.
McEnroe suspended?
WEMBLEY, England <AP) -John Mc Enroe
lost a tennis tiUe to Jimmy Connors Sunday was
fined S700 for tantrums on the court and fa~ed a
suspension t.ftat could put him out of the Davis Cup
final.
Connors came from behind to win 3~, 2~. 6-3,
6-4, 6-2 and took the Wembley tOumament tiUe,
~wh ich McEnroe bad won for three)'ean ln a row.
The victory was worth $32,500.
The fipes, imposed by Grand Prix sJpervtsor
Keith Johnson after the match, sent McEnroe
over the statutor y limit of SS .000 for minor
offenses. Thal means a utomatic suspension for
three weeks , but 1t is up to the Professional Tennis
Council to decide when the ban st.arts.
The United States plays Argentina in the
Davis Cup final al Ctncinoati Dec. 11-13.
Edison (10-0)
still No. 1 ..
The Cl F playoffs determine-No. 1 in the
various conference eliminations, whjcb begin
Friday, but as far as Orange County tugb
school football rankings a re concerned
ther e 's still little doubt to the claJmanl or No'. 1 ~
It's Edison's unbeaten Chargers, 10--0 for
the 1981 regular season as they head into the
Cl F Big Five Conreren<'e 'Playoffs aga'lnst
wild card enlr) Serv1te , "'h1ch hn1sbed fou rth
m the five team Angelus League
Marina mamtamed its No 2 rating with
its 6-0 conquest of Westminster last week to
up the V1kmgs record to 9-1 as they prepare
for their first.round battle against West
Covtna, a team beaten fJve times dunng the
regular season
~ailing from the 1 2-3 Sunset League
domination of the Oranli{e C6unty rankings,
as select('(! b~ the Daily PLlot, 1s Fountam
Valley
The Barons ar<' now l'<o 6 following their
24·13 loss lo Edison before 20,773 at Anaheim
St adium
Oraoitt> County Top 10
DaiJy Pilot football rankings
Pos. Team. rernrd !'.ext game
1. Edison !10-01 Servile (6-4J
2. Marina 19·11 \.\est Covina 14-5)
3 Foolh1ll 191 1 Kenned> (6·4)
4 Pacifica <9 11 \-11la Park <7·3)
5. EIDorado 1821 Buena Park (5-5>
6 F'ountam Vallt:'y 17 3 1 St. J ohn Bosco (7-3)
7 M1ss1on \'1e10 19-0-11 Mayfair t5·S>
8 El Modena (jJ 41• Estancia {8·1·1)
9. El Toro <6-4> Warren (7-3)
10. Estancia 18·1 1 J El Modena (6 4)•
•one forfeit loss
************* .NFL standings f IOHNSON&SON :
AMERICAN c oNFERENcE : Presents . : NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Western Dlvialoll
W L T PF PA Pct.
~an Francisco 8 3 O 237 183 .727
Atlanta 5 6 O 297 223 .455
Rams 5 6 O 237 238 .455
New Orleans 3 8 O 139 237 .273
Easten Divisloll
Philadelphia 9 2 O 287 152 .818
Dallas 8 3 0 265 222 . 727
NY Giants 5 6 0 m 203 .455
Washington 5 6 o MO 270 .455
St. Louis 4 7 0 213 303 .364
Cetltral Division
Minnesota 7 4 O 250 238 .636
Green Bay 5 6 o 217 U9 .455
Detroit 5 6 O 268 247 .455
Tampa Bay 5 6 O 180 187 .455
Chicago 3 8 O 169 2S2 .273
Western Dlvi5lon . • it
W L T PF PA Pct. ii it
8 3 0 220 156 727 • ...
7 4 0 263 211 .636 • ...
6 4 0 292 247 .600 • ..
5 6 0 174 184 455 • •
3 7 0 152 226 300 • ..
Eastern Division • •
Miami 7 3 1 260 222 .682 • *
Denver
Kansas City
San Diego
Oakland
SeatUe
NY J ets l 4 1 249 229 591 • it
Buffalo 5 O ~17 192 545 • • • Pete the .. ,.~.-1." • New England 2 9 O 240 257 .182 ~
Baltimore l 10 0 185 377 091 • •
Central Division • M FL 1 S •
Cincinnati 8 3 O 292 203 727 • · Pieks of • Pittsburgh 6 5 0 243 219 .545 • Jt
Cleveland 5 6 O 198 229 .455 : The W eell :
Houston S 6 O 186 236 .455 • •
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MIWNOUISI
PllTS ltPAITIENT Ill
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By CURT SBEDF.N 1r1oro f"l•ture. In ·fac\, be &l•11 .. !~o...,,. ... ~.... . bejt wheo he's mad," illi• r a)tnt 11 • m•,ortant, but ootea of JUley. thtr s no 1 ub~trlute for ·
exper1rnce," nOte Oran ae '· J ·IM BALDWIN, a
Coast· COilene hA!ilietball c·oach· gradu~t.e Of Tustin High, waa a
Tandy Gilli• . starter oo the Redlands Junior
, With· th,t thought In mind, va~sity squad-last year, ·and
Cillis exiW-<:u "ome· bi thmee he ll hold dow!l the other
rrorn his 1981·82 .Plrntt' squad forwar.d SPot._ f't. -.t"?ng, pby1lcal 1
a t~am \\ hlcb boa.lih tour player, Baldwi_o weagha in at 305
sophomorts ·in the i.Urttng ;md h~ the muscle to control
l1 th inside game. .
!Jleup _ , .. Jim ts really tough Inside,"
The Pirates. op<·n th,. seWIOn agrees Gillis. "He's not tall, but
Friday night 1t ttlo Hondo (7:30) he's one of the stroHeat players
and return h(lme to tangle With we've ever had here."·
rival Colden \lil•::.l on Tuesday. Luono. a 6 ·7 s tandout
also at 7:30 • · pertormer while at Fountain
''We're .dt-epcr Uus yeai Uian \'atlley HJgh last season, ,v1U
we hilve been In a l:Llnt time," pJay tbe third forward spot. His
'Gillis ronllnvcs "We t.'4D go forte as passing, &nd Cillis
nine deep on 4'\UT bfnch h-•fq~ e>..{>N'ts big thing~ trom the
we have a.,,. droJI off •n rtb1l1ly 21:J·pound freshman ..
Tho11e nine pla"1•11J 11re ~pm~ to Returner Jeff Thomas and
see a lot or actio!lolnr us · n ·wcomer;' Tim Krohnreldt add
' depth to the guard position;
WITH QUICh. Gl ARDS Greg l W h i I e so pho n:io re lt'Oilltie
Krohnfeldt and Chris Beasley · Calhoun, who started for OCC
retlirning. a :.tronger, more two years a-go, figures to see experien c~d RH•k Riley al. plenty of playing time.
1181.-'l.u-ward no«J talent~d Cteshcpan Tim Krohnfeldt; an All·CIF ·
Frank Luongo in the i:.tartme RUfDJ:.Jne~years-at
• · · · ey-bave a sob<l Estancia, opted for volleyball at
nucleus with wh1ch lo work Pepperdine last season~
· Last vear'::. ~qua d,· which Other newcomers to the OCC
fin1 1$hcd ·th sea:.on· ell 17 12, squad inclwde DaVid Nanson
r ehed on justtwo sophomores <6·3) from Porllan<J, Mike
·Be ley, a 6·1 gradtJ3te of Markel (6-3) out of Estancia,
C osta ~le::. a Htgh, "'a'! an and Dana Hills grad Chris
All·So ~th tou .t Conferetice· Matrueu 16-6). In. addition, I.m
selection l&sl ><.•ar tJe lcJ u Am1gos ,High grad Tom
balanct'd Oc'( s'tor1ni' .:iilack Plumle1gh_._ at 6 -11 , "ha s
IS:-::.::l!!aJJt=Jt..:;.tLU--Au:..1:..:u:::s:.-...J.JJ::..·~o tt.emeiidous ·weelilfaT·· -despite
rollcdect .t~O :t!i~I.St~_flf' lhe his ra"' talent,· according to
season thml hrt:IH '>l M i.<.on Gillis.
... ~Malm-Const ht--tor,.-.---... -.. -·-· -.. ·we1rl>e--mucn better 'in the
Krohnfeldt. mc.!nwh1le, 1c; the rebounding department. Riley,
Bu p:. ~· ll p I a 1 n .\ 11 Luongo and Baldwin are all ·conf~i:t•n1.;l' honn.rnhlf' physical players and they really
mention • el-.-thon Ia .. t SNi un. he ~o after the ball," Gillis notes. a\Teraged 8. 7 vcnnts pc.·1 < 1111test .
and lh::.pht)"'d e:xn:llrnt h•XJting GILL.IS SA VS the "ersatiltty
ab1lll~ of his first seven _players ~111
''This team dot·~ ~l't'n1 t:.dter allow him lo utahte a quack,
than las1 yt•ar -., adnalls G1l115 ·ra s t breaking lineu p when
"es pecially at ltw • uurd. -;pot necessary, or a. s tr on ger~
But you ncH'r ._no"' huv. th1nw• board control rontmgent when ·
---~.____.._._..__ iu~clhc.r . 'l'h•• guy!' nct.-ded.
ce.N.a1nl y enJu.}' rdt1\Jrt J! ,'V._e can move Beasley to a
together" ror..-.ard. then go with Greg
Jl,1le)', U6uall\ Uu.! hr t m.an off Krohnfeldt and ooe of-o~r.,eUH;r ·
· the berl<'h la~t )'~.\r. in&y bt• gu ... rds and be pretty quick. \\e
the best puts1dt• shooter on U1e 1.11on t be the quickest team in
learn accord111~ tc1 his coach the conforence, but we won't be "H~'s stronger this ~<·:tr and the slowest, either," G11lis says.
...
~ CINCJNNATI Rumon b• ......... to
urfare luudly .. aln eoatw ' I* etl--of RAMS Rn ~lavui'• :lob u the Rmm' ~ .,..
, N ur&lly_. ~ .. c~ ~ •11~!9' llllt . -JOHN · .,,,., ·. moi.t or the rec•t tal .. com-..... t ....... ... •
no longer 1n.spi,.. hit pla7 ... Thul, &be Dlu.w • SEVANQ -. ' . . •
lonner have a detare to play fot llalavul. -· ~ • • f i l
t)nrortunately, ·Qlere may be IOIDe trutla to
· ~h8\t doesn'ltake ~ ;.,ecbanlc to aee tbe Rama are te._m '» q~et altitude in the tock~rroom, he •~Id: I · " k · 1•-t t t "You're calchinK us 15 mlnut.e.s alter I llJQe-la ackanfl any sp .. r , any exc wmen , .any ype o wh1'ch a te"'mJ'ust knocked us out otthe pJavoffa." emollon that a team usually needa to win ID thil . ._ When ioi . tbe Rams were •UU in 1~.' Haden business. · , ~ .
1
.... Yes, too much emotion can .be d•lll•fint -s heepishly remarked, ''Rul Y1
. bot so can no emotion at all. · * * •
Pnvfltcly, m-any &>layers have be.a polntiof to Add Haden: "The uithlne about t~~Y i1 tbat
Mulavasi's tack ot leadersb!p aa the princfpal the defense i1laycd pretty doe-gone go6d.
rt-ason for the team's slumber.· · * * *
Anyway, it looks as ii there will "°' be any The Rams had 63 more yards total offense
1 rrw t watt> < hangt>, at least not for be rest of than the Bengals Sunday -296-233-aqd Iott.
Ht" se~. • • * ~1mpl) put: For Malavasi to have any chance FOil TUOSE WHO wquLD Jlkt an D • d D • of Itel prng hh. JOb the Rams have to reach the explanation as to what would happen if there wa• I etro1 l 1>14) ufts. or (.'()Urse, the players know this, too, and aseven·way t1c for th<UUla.l.N.f'C pj&)'.O.(Lbtl1,A, ' ---·----.. ' -fh·~rb-~Oy Clicrenis l>een some ipecu if.iootllat-ere1Sltlestep$ you wottld Lake · }lave 12 mell th" te.1r1 1i. lyrng down 1. llead-to·head sweep <applicable onJy ii one I Let '• fat·e 1t. the Rams aren"t as good as club bas l<>Sl. to each, o! the others, or it one club. I f.• J d J, ' , +>n-.. nt> h.1s .made them out ~ be -b\Jt they're has lost to each ot the others 1 • • • Qll l )~ :.tC • . , t•rt,11111) not .!S Lad as they've -sbown of late. . 2. Best won loss t1~d pcreentage in conference
1 hNc'' Ju'. t loo rn u<"h talent. games. • . • :
.. PONTL\C,·
0M1~~A-Jl 1 -* •·• 3. Best won·loss·lit!d percentage in common I
Several members or fh<' OaJfos .. ~OR THF. REC'ORD, the Rams worked on a games, IJUIUfllUil of four. · ·
• Cowboys suy Detroit may t.a\•t f1v ... mun defensive line and a no-huddle offense 4. Best net point.:. m conference game~. -
had too many plnyPr11 on the durin~ the four days practice was closed to the 5. Best net pomtJ> rn all games. • 1
fieJd "'hen Eddie Murray .or U1e rue1ha 6. Strength of schedul~.
Liqni:. kil'ked a game ~·1nnin~ Rdieve it or not, those were the surprises 7. Best r\et touchdowns in all games. 47~ard ficld go~ as the e~tk MalJv~i~nUt&~~t~o~k~e~en~~ausHe~c~r~~.~~~~~~~~~~RdC~~~·~nut~~~sL·~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~
ran out. 1'1oti> The ~ams used the rive·m'an line once, You can take 1t from there, aWlougb it's reallyc
The officials did not ...call a unoJ "'f:'fc u 2 IJa.s.bJJl~ on no· huddle plays. too muddied yet to formulate.an ~iuwer. I ·
penlllty on that final pla.) which ·• • • • • • ;
gave the Uons a2121 at1on.tl 1ht Rams are now 0·2 in Cincinnati, having MALAVASI, INCIDENTALLY, said Dan : J
Football League v1ttor) inst to thf' Oen~als here in 1976. Pastormi will start. aflamst the 49ers, Sunday, j
"The)' won flUC and· Squa?f·, • • * assuming he'i. healthy. _., · ~--
but 1:11 bet there an an .. wrunot 1'hr Ham~ lead the league in interceptions -The Rams coach may have been a lftUe too -
of Lions on th" fwlJ wbf'n "'t ~ 11 t1 ':! <'onvt·~tly. the Bengals lead in throwing quick to make that announcement After watching J
look a t thf' ft I ms •• T)all:.ic: lh" r .. IH'l>l 1 the films Monday be may f~I clifferenUy. • (
quarterback D;inm '<\ h1tc •:no • • * • The general consensu11 amoo~ the media is•
oC lhe cruci.Jl-pla~ --. • . --" l ( ll'l>C'INNATl 'S s ix quarterback sacks th11l Pastonru 1sn·'l -the arn.wn. -either Rut,-then,{ · · -
"There wa~ t\\o gu} '> hnetl uµ Sund.t) the Rams have now given up 39 fo~ the neithe r was Haden 2
outside J nrl thf' "t c It·-. d 1ru o;, t1~11n tops in the Nf'L. So, who then? i f1eld-~oa1 .. .uA1~ .. imE'-41·-ll-f .. ·mbtd~.: .. ~-··-.. ·--t>at H.tden admits,· too._ that the QBs are Well why ooo t "~Lr) Jeff Kemp" Or let's :
added Cu..-. hoys rlt-f( n \ t' hal'k stJrttng lo get a hllle gun.sh~ back there becaus~" call up Bob Lee und '!PP ho~ ht.., arm 1s feeling .
A lilO · _l'tton \'l!I O\.;•i>"' b r o a d c d ~ I I or! ,, \ · ti ~ I h r
E n ~ e r c a 1 n 111 •: n t :,, p u r t
Progrnmmrn~ Nt·t \or k tt:l" P:'\
C'O'O f1r ml:d tt11 · t 11v. 11n ~"
com pl amt.-. ll st 1>"' t·cl l~ Lum•
wetc: on the fit> Id wlwn Murr a}
ki<'k<'<Htw Wlflnlnj.: fi1<ld 111H.I
Char he \\Jl•·r (lf t Maybe Jqe ~amath ha~ l>t'cn S't\Jm~in~ a ~t + _
\'ou recall> c.m·t thmk about it or.you won't lately .. -.·• · --•
The F~PN I.apt>. :.topped J'~\t
-beforP thr tratl -..-rr ~·"11
!>hO\\'f.'d \ht• fm111.tt1m rit••t
three l..c1ons S-~ ht t th•· h·. • ar:J
seven plavP•" 111.1 ~st•1I· lo .~th~1
On tht• ltnt• ( M'rt!Ttnt ll'., 111
addrtiort 1 th•• linlrf1•r '"" Murray
lio 'IH'll at aJI," he said , 'but psycholog1cally, you • Let's factr1t, the Hum.., art: hurting. although
l ·111 lo 1·all a lot more short passes and you.don't the quarterba~k .isn l solcl} r~spons1blt> for what's
1 11J up dro1>p1m, bark a!> deep as you should." go\ng on. •
\\ h t m.tkes matters worse is the fact
1 ast1 nni 1!>n t very mobile with ·his two tender
kllf't'!'t
* ••
II o\S i\' \'ONF: Et.SF; noticed that the only
11m\; •hi.' Rams moved on offense with an)'
1 Jt<.;11 rn ,· lh1.., vear was when Je(( Rutledge was
l ll 1111_.·, ,. • • . "' .
1\' t ·~p1i~LY, EVE N HADEN thought
1 rr.m h<llt>I..-~ after the game that the Rams had
U'>I h•·l·n J.-nork4'd out of the playoffs.
· In rc::.pon::.c to a ·question concerning the
Br~i~ sparks Royals, 4-2
·OSAKA, ·J~pan <AP > George Brett smashed ~
a two-run horn ... his seventh or the senes.toJe;uh.
£be Kwas city ·Royals to ;{ 4 :l victory . .over ~ ·
combined J apaneS<' tearv or the Tokyo Yomiun
Giants. Nan,.km 11 awkls and K 1~tetsu Kuffaloes"f
before 18.000 sptrtator:. lod"> .
It ·was ute ·Royal~ fifth '1ctory agatnst sa
defeats and one tie IJl a 17 game exhibition tour of Japa'n.. ' , ,._
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. November 18, 1081
• m NFC East LiOns :kick. Cowboys ' out Of first . . . .
Mu"ay'a 41-yarfl field goal as time ezpires capa. a furioua rally and keepB' Detroit unbeatm at home thia seaaon
, .
r,.•AP ~ntd•• PONTIA , lllda. -OtUok'1 &ddie llvny
klcHd 14'7·1ard ft.ad 1oal .. time nm out &mdQ,
aMn1 the UoDI a 2'7·24 N•timal Football Leape
•lct.ory over DaJlu Sunday. lmocklq UM Cowboy•
out ot a ftnt.place tie in tbt NaU.aJ Coalerellff
!11t.
Dallu bad 1ooe lbHd M-17 OD a 14-~
'°'1cbdown PIH from DUD)' WbJt. "° Jay
wltb 2:3"7 remalnlnt. But Detroit quuQ\"bmc~ Erle
Hl.PPle k>fted a bomb to BU11 Sima OD UM n.nt P1'Y
followtna the kickoff and Simms, all a10M at the
Cowboys' 35, raced into the eod zone to complete
an ll·Yard play that Ued the 1•me at 2'·M Juat 20
seconds ~r the DaUu TD.
· Dallas waa forced to punl on lta nut
po11eulon and the Lions be1an tbeir winniot drive
with 1: 13 to 10.
Hipple bit tieht end David Hill few completiom
of 15 and 30 yarda and, foUowtnc u ll·yard lou Oil
a HCk, completed a PHI to .ti&bt end Uly11ea
Norris to give the Lion.a • flrlt·and·lO altuation •t
the Dallu 30 with no Ume outa left and the clock
runnlq.
Murray hurried on to the field and, with
Hipple holding, 1ot his kick away with four
seconds showing on lbe clock. lbe ball traveled l.n
a low arc and barely cleared the croubar a.a time
ran out and the crowd of 7t,8't broke into a
deafenlnc roar.
Detroit, which has won all it.a home cames and
\oat all its road games t.hla seuoa, ii 5-6 in the
NFC Central, two games behind Minnesota.
Browns 15, 49ers 12
. SAN FRANCISCO -Clevt;land's Matt Bahr,
watb lbe Sao Francisco 49ers when their
seven-game winning streak beean ended it by
kick.ln&..-a 24-yard field 1oa1 with '3 lecoods to
play, giving th~rowns a 1>12 victory.
The 49ets, \.ho bad the longest winning streak
in the NFL this season, dropped to 8·3 but
remained three games a.bead of lbe Rams and
Atlanta in the National Conference Weal Division.
. Clev':1&Qd trailed the 49en 12·5 midway in the
fmal .~· But they tied the score with 8:46
rema.uung when Brian Sipe bil Reggie Rucker on a
21-yard touchdown pass and Bahr added the extra point.
:Sipe bad completed only 9 ol 25 puses before
gettiJll bot on the 43-yard touchdown drive.
_Cardinals 24. Bills O
ST. LOUIS -Ottis Anderson ran for 177 yards
and two touchdowns, leading St. Louis to a 24-0 upset ol Buffalo.
And~rson·s running .wu complemented by a
St. Louis defense which forced six Buffalo
turnovers. Ken Greene bad three interceptions and
a rumble recovery.
The Cards, who bad yielded 93 points and 901
yards in their previous two eames, picked off four
Joe Ferguson passes and recovered two Curtis
Brown fumbles, handing Buffalo its first shutout
loss in 28 games.
Anderson shredded a Buffalo defense that
ranked second in the Adlerican Conference with
touchdown runs of 18 and 8 yards in the fmal 13
minutes.
St. Louis, 4·7, opened the scorine in the first
From Page C1
quarter, moving 53 yards in eiabt plays to set up
Neil O'Donogbue's 35-yard field roaJ. Early in the
second period, the Cards m9de it UM> on Neil
Lomax's 2·Yard pass to Stump Mitchell, cappina a
75-yard drive.
Steelers 34, Falcons 20
ATLANTA -Terry Bradshaw fired five
touchdown passes, the most ol his 13-year career,
as Pittsburgh snapped a two-1ame lo.ins streak
with a 3'-20 victory over Atlanta.
Bradshaw, who connected on 14 of 22 attemptl
for 253 yards, threw scorine .at.rites •of 6 and 19
yards to John Stallworth, 18 yarda to Bennie
Cunningham, 14 to Randy Grouman, and 22 to
Lynn Swann.
The five scoring passes gave Bradshaw 189 in
bis career, movl.ng him three ·ahead of Sammy
Baugh l.nto 14th place on the all-time NFL Uat.
The victory came despite a brilliant puaing
performance by Steve Bartkowski, who bit 33 or SO
attempts for 416 yards and two touchdowns.
Broncos 24, Bucs 7
TAMPA, Fla. -Running back Larry" Canada
blocked a kick to set up one touchdown, ran 1 yard
for another score and caught a S.yard pus for 1
third as Denver shook off the Joas of starting
quarterback Craig Mort.on to defeat Tampa Bay
24-7.
Tampa's defense battered the 38-yea.r-old
Morton, the star or Denver's offeoae tbia year.
Linebacker Hugh Oreen sacked him twice before
noseguard Dave Logan put him out of the 11me u
he threw an incomplete pus with 2:35 remaining
in lbe first half. Mort.on, with b..ia shoulder heavily
taped, watched from the sideline in the second half
as Steve De Berg replaced him.
Chiefs 23, Oilers 10
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -J0e Delaney, KUias
City's quick-starting rookie sensation, rushed for a
team-record 193 yards and Nick Lowery kicked
three field goals to lead lbe Chiefs to a 23-10
victory over Houston.
Defaney, a second-round draft choice out of
Northwestern Louisiana, also became the (int
R AMS ARE STILL BREATIDNG • • •
had to be carried from the field in the foUrth
quarter.
Pastorini, who suffered a concussion, was
whisked to lbe lockerroom during the quarter
where he dressed and boarded the team bus before
the game was over. His dodge or the media was
lbe first rush be avoided au afternoon.
In the meantime, Pat Haden wu sent i.n to
mop up and be managed to put the Rams' only
touchdown on the board. In fact, in 11 minutes
Haden's numbers -13 or 23 for 167 yard.& and 1
interception -were far more impressive than
Pastorini's -8 of 24 for 78 yards and 3
interceptions, who had 49 minutes of work.
Haden wasn't celebrating, however. Nor were
the Rams. In fact, ir anything, the players were
having a bard time cQPcealing their emotions.
"I'm just as ft1J!trated as I could possibly be
right now," said Harrah. "I'm as low as I've ever
been.
"I'll tell you one thing, though. I'm not about
to quit. I don't feel too good right now, but I've
never quit before and I'm not about to do so now.
"I know it doesn't look good for ua ... but it
hasn't for awhile. You could say we're berely in it
right now."
Some players, like Pat Thoma.a, didn't even
want to comment -for fear of sayln1 the Wl'Ollg
thing. It's been a long time since the Rams have
felt as belpless as they do today.
Tbis is a team used to winning, and used to
Even the veterans can't pinpoint the problem
-or problems.
"I doo't know what's wrong," said George
Andrews. "If I did, I'd tell you ... honest. I know
it isn't an>' one thing."
"I wish I bad a pat answer," added Rieb
Saul, "but I can't put my fmger oo it. We have five
games left and I'd still like to believe we're in this
thing."
Yes, ironically, the Rams are still in it.=-but
barely. And with San Francilco, Pittaburgh, the
New York Giants, Atlanta and Washington ahead
-tbingS don't expect to get any euier.
"We still have some fiShl left," Andrews
insisted.
"We haven't bad a killer instinct -and we
need that," rebutted Haden. "I .don't want this
team to roll over, and 1 don'l think it will. The
worst reeutation you can get ii that ot a quitter.
I'd like to think we don't have any quitten on lb.ii
team."
With the number or games f•dinl quickly,
however, the Rams don't ftave much thne left to
turn things around.
"We have a lonf way to 10 back up," said
Haden. "But rather than worrying about wi.nnine
five in a row ... I'd just lllteto win oae in a row."
At lea.st with a victory the Rama would be able
to show there is some visible 1l»i of We again. Al
it stand! now, the situation appears terminal.
~---eomiai-up-with -the-right answers. -Smee-the
four.game winning streak, though. which occurred
more than a month ago, there have only been
doubt.a and quesUons.
Said one Rama front-office olficiaJ-a1-M-abook
his bead:
''It doesn't look as if thinp. a1 are getting any
better. I don't think there's any hope."
Call us.
We've got the money to do the things you need to
do ... and all the things you've been dreaming aboot
Every day Commercial Credit heJps people with
personal and homeowner Joans •.• smaD 31¥1 large. They've
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COST A MESA • 370 E. 17th Street • 645-8700
HUNTINGTON BEACH• 16075 Golden West St.• 847-7771
MISSION VIEJO • 24395 Alicia Parkway, Suite 2E • 770.2651
Alicia Town Plaia
SANTA ANA• 1224 Eut 17th Street• 547-5871
Crt411 Liit la•n-A,.lla~le 10 Ell1l~lt '''"'"" u CrHJ 14149
Local. county. state . nationql and i14ternational
events come to your doorstep I ·1 Pilat
in the bright . light and lively II J
r ,
"See me for car
home, life, beahb
udbuS1nea
insurance~
Calf759-9 15
l.ik1aeo4~.' SCllt i;.,. is clat. ·
... ,.... .'Cf:°""""'''" ...,.....__, ............
Eagles 38, Colts 13
PHILADELPHIA -Quarterback Ron
Jawonti threw two touchdown puaea ud WUbert.
Montgomery ran for another pair u PlilladelpbJa
beat Baltimore .. 13, ha.nd.iq the Colts tbelr lotb
stra11bt defeat.
Jaworski, who left the 1ame early lD the
fourth quarter, completed 19 of 28 puaea for ISM
yards. Montaomery played UtUe more than two
quarten before Jamming an ankle, but 1till 1alned ns yards on 22 carries.
Raiders 33, Dolphins 17 .,
MIAMI -Quarterback Marc Wll1on
completed 16 or 39 passes for 180 yards and three
touchdowns to lead 1tru11ling Oakland to a 33.17
upset of AFC East·leading Miami.
All three of Wilson's scoring aeriala came as
tbe defending Super Bowl cbai:oplons built a 21·3
halftime lead.
Jets 17, Patriots 6
FOXBORO, Mass. -An interception and
rumble recovery by linebacker Gree Bu~e set up
a touchdown and field goal late in the fint haU
that propelled the New York Jet.a to a 17-8 victory
over New England.
The rainy. windy weather stymied both
offenses in a scoreless first period. The Patrtota
took their only lead when John Smith's 42·yard
field goal l.nto a stiff wind just dropped over the
crossbar on the first play or the second quarter.
Vikings 20, Saints 10
BLOOll INOTON. lllaa. lllaaeaota
quarterback Tommy ~ • ..,.,...... lar 117 ,.,.
and wmt over 10,00l yardl for b&a caner, .. ...,
the Vlktnp to a JD.10 victory ovtr New OrtuM.
Tbe victory lDertued the Vlktul' reco.-d to
1 4 and boosted their lead in U. ff PC C..traJ
Olvlatoa to two 1a1M1.
Kramer completed JI ol «» ,..... for _.
touchdown In ltaitint tbe VlkJ.Dp' ......... He
puahed bia career total to 10,ost ,.,. ta ftwe
seaaooa ln the NFL. He ha be.a atarttat fw only
three yean.
Redskins 30, Giants 27
EAST RUTHERFORD, '4.J. -Mm fl(OMley
whose 49·)'ard field 10•• In tbt ralD forced
overtlme1 kicked a 41-)'ll!der a:+t lMo the extra
period, ••vinl w .. blnstcr.a. I0-2'7 vkt.ory overt.be
New York Giant.a.
Reserve quarterback Scott Bnumer'1 2'7·Jard
touchdown paaa to roolle wide reHl•tr John
Mistler 1ave the Glantl .a 27·2' lHd wtth 45
seconds remalnlna. but Joe n..t1ma.nn•1 .,.,.in•
brou1ht t.M 'Skins within MOMley'a rup.
Packers 21 , Bears 17
GREEN BAY, Wla. -David Whitebu.nt threw
touchdown pasaet covertna 1 and at 1ardl to
Harlan Huckleby and 2 y•rdl to Terd.U lllddlet.oo,
leading Green Bay to a 21·17 victory over Cblcaio
Safely Mark Murphy ael up Oren Bay'•
go,ahead touchdown with a 50-yard inter ception
return. Comerbaclt Mmrk Lee plcked off two other
passes by the Bean' Vince Evans u tbe Pack.en.
S-6, won their third game l.n a row. The Bean
dropped to 3-8.
~I Touchdown Crossworcti " j C h a r gers,
• Ac Ross An1werr0Lutw.-·1Pua1e • Se aha wks ·
1,4 Shown. Seahawtls' 2S In the -(aure l l )
RB thing) 0 a n a e
9 llon1'DE"Bubb1"-27 Jaworski or -~
11 s1 .. 1et1' backup CarmlchMI
OB M111( -31 Saints' S-CB
12 Ready -not Mencens
13 Have 1 snack 33 Penn -
14 -bounds (legal 34 Baxter and
catch) Bancroft
1s Put with 3S Llneman·1 1tance
18 Oolphln1' WR 36 Pua th• footbell
Moor• 40 Rama· CB -
18 BuccanMts' Perry
S Cott le 42 Shc·polnt1r1
20 Th• Bio -44 e.ara· LB WlllOfl
Confe,.-nc• 4e Buecal\fff1' LB 21 Hel1m1n winner Bonnn1
Blanchard 48 lutii dl1h
50 Hetpl 56, S3 Chargers'
atatRB S2 08 Conerly'I
1n9'0na '
S..55 Acrosa 23 St .. l•r1'SOonnle -49 08 Tldwall'a lnlllll1 S3
S7 Carolnal1' Ken -
S8 Swltcn setllnga
DOWN
1 RB Arne11'1
sign-off
2 Redikln1' RB
Forte
3 St .. lera' "-"JM
Gra.ne
4 Fonn.r Chl•fa• and
PacilMa' K
Sten«Ud
S 08'1 blocker•
8 H•laman winner
Walker
7 Hall of F1mer
Rot>ustalll
8 Vikings' RB Brown
9 Redskins' LB
Dusek
10 1 and 66, e.g.
11 Broncos' -High
Stadium
12 -aide kick
17 08 Rote
19 Exclamation
20 Rama• T Jackie -
22 Army's team
24 Minus
28 Coech George
Allen expletlYe
28 Football bowl
29 USMA grad,
..JO MIT grad.
31 Frank Slnkwlch'a
achool (ab.)
38 Overtime 42 Rac:etrecil pell 49 Deadlock
(,b.) 43 Browns' RB Hall S1 Football bowl 39 Alan ArMCht's 4S 59Ctlon ol London 54 Steeler1' coectl'a school (ab.) or New Yott! City initials 41 Hall of FamM 47 The -ChMlfa (ab.) S8 "8ubba'. Smith'•
Buttlus 48 Tlmea of day lnlt1111
32 Negative prefix
37 End Kyle -SM next w"k'a lsaue for aolutlon
Co liege football
Pedftc.10 Conference
UCLA
WHlll"91011 SI.
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SEATrLE <AP) In
the second hall •1•ln•t
the Seattle s .. hawh,
San Dleao Char1era
quarterback Dan Pout.
was Jutt about perfect.
Fouta completed 17 ''' 18 second·hall p .. Mt to
lead the Cbar1ern to •
24-10 National Football
League victory over the
Seahawtcs ln San Diego
Oct. 4.
Acainst the Su.hawks.
~e Chargers have been,
to say the least ,
imposing. They're 8-0
since the clubs' first
regular season meeting
in 1977.
De s pite som e
unexpected problems
th1a aeuoo, San Diego,
6-4, is expeded to boost
its record to t..O over
SeatUe, 3-7, in tonight's
nationally televised
iame. The Chargers are
S-point ravorites against
t h e'1 r A m e r i c a n
Conference West rivals.
"You just don't SH
San Diego play poorly
aga i ns t us i n an y
phase,·• SeatUe Coach
Jack Patera said. ··They
don't have a linebacker
Call down, defensive
backs don't miss tackles
and F outs doesn 't
overl .hrow hi s
receivers."
"They can beat us,"
San Diego Coach Don
Coryell said. "They're
capable of it. We've
been very fortunate."
·OUTST Ati(DINCi
VALUES!
IUMOMIW
'"' vw DIE5alAHIT
FACTORY STICKER
-$7670
OiSCOUNT
$671
SALE PRICE
5 6995 (~983) o n~1
llAHD Mtw
ltll ISUIU 4X4 PICICUP
SALE PRICE
57295
,( 1272) (02088)
1910 vw DASta.
DllS& WA60M
4 •P"d trantrnlaian.
AM·FM •'9r90
& • sunrOQI. (1498l't) . . .
SALE PRICE
OMLT
·'7995
..
.,
. .
Orange.Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Now.mber t8, 1981
NFL
Bena••• 24, Reme 10 lit .... ~o.rtitn
LOI A1>99te1 0 3 0 1 10
Cincinnati 10 O O U-1'
Cln FG Breech JI
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IBrH<llkkkl
LA FG.Cor••I n C1n -J°""6on J run IBrM<h kick)
Cln -J__, 11 run IBrffcll kk kl
LA Tyler 10 ~• lrom H-n !Corral
\IOI
• 56,Q
L•
"''"-· 21 Ru•i. .. v•rdl 11-101
P•u•nv ,.,~ 1"
Return YA'lh ..
Pano 11~1·•
S.Clls 1>y 2 10
Punll 1 11
Fuml>IH·lo$1 t.()
P•n•lllM·YA<IX ) 16
Time of Poutulon 11 JI ,,.,,....._I Sta1111k1
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1-0
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Brvent .. ,,, Cromw•ll 1·11, Guman 2 2
Tllomu I 0 Cincinnati, And•,.on 4 st,
JOllnr.on II S6 Alexander t It HoerQ<o,.. J~
A Grlttln • s
PASSING Los Anoe1 .. , Pulorlnl I 14·J.11 Htden U ·U t t•1 Cincinnati.
A.llO•f\OI\ '"Jl·l·l6 Th0m-l·S411
RECEIVING L~ Anve1e1 WtOdv • n
hi•• •·lS Arnold ., ?I Hiii l H 0..V..rd
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Mlnnetot• o 10 10 ~ 10
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NO FG Al<MOO J4
Minn S."\er 11 o•t.\ from Kr•mer
IOanm<'•t" kkkl
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RECEIVING Bullelo Bull•• 6·•S
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Crlt>C>• 1.e Bernen I 10 Hooll• 1 1 L .. u
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ReHI • 21 Wation l o Perros J--1. Odom
7 1J Canada l~J uocllurcn I minus I
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Green Bay Huclilelly 17·11. Elll• 1J JI
MlddlelOft J~. Wllltehu"t 2·mlnut 1
PASSING Clllc-. Even1 U lt-3·114
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0 1-0-0
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wans J..Sl, O Wlttlam• , ... Pef1on 2~. Earl
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S.n F r•N~o. Montana 24-42 2·21J
RECEIVING Cle .. lencl G Prvl11 .. JJ
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Altanta O I l 10-10
Pll CunnlnglWlm II ~n from Brad•haw I Troul kk k)
Pit Stallwortll • oau from BradtNw
!Trout kl<k)
All Jackton lt ~H trom Bartkow.lll
1 LUCkhu"I klCll'I Pit Stallworth 1' .,. .. from Bradll\aw
fTrout kk lll
All FG Luc•!lunl u
Pll Groum.,, ,. ~" from Brto•haw
f k lei. blooecn
All Jlnltll\l JO ~• from Bart•-•
ILuc•11um kk kl
Pit S•tnn 11 ~" from Bradshaw
(Trout lttO)
All FG Lucltl>Unl 71
A SI AIS
l"'lv ..... I Sblhtk •
RUSHING Pltltf)urgll Harri• 11 S4
Pollaro 7 U Dole' l \0, Brad1llaw 1.1.
Hawthorne I mlnul J, Matone J·mlnu• •
Allante Andrtwl 11 H Ca ln •JO.
Bu\1toW11<1 I s
PASSING Plt11bun111 Bradlllaw
14·2? I HJ, Malon• O I O 0 Allan1a,
Bartkowski U.10-2 116
A ECEIVING Pl1111>uroll S••tt•or111
6-121 Cunnlngnam J U Swann l 12
Grouman 1·11 Hurl• I '· Pollard , ..
Allt nla, AllOrew• IS.U•. Jackson S Ill'
J•t11tln1 ...., Franct1 3-lt Caln 3-2' Miit.,
1 JO St•ono I·•
Eeolee 38, Colt• 13
le ...... "°"",,." Balll"1'0f'e 6 O O 1-U
Pl'lll-llll\le I 14 10 1-• Phi Krepfle U ~,. rrom J•WOf'Skl
IFr1nklln•kkl
B•f Olclley I run (kl<k filled)
Phi _,_., 5 run IFran•lln llkkl Phi __ ,,I run l'ranlllln kkkl
Piii FG Fr-fin J7
Piii Smlllt lO P•U ''Om Jawor•kl
fFr-klln •k •t
kkB:,• Dl•on 11 ~ ,,_ J-• ,_
Phi H ..... , .. OHS ,,.,., Pharclk
IFr•n•lfn kk kl
A -... ilt ,....,,..._I StMh1k l
RUSHING -9alllm0f't, Dickey '-17,
McMiiian 6-11, Mc:C.Uley 2 .. ,,,..anklln z..
Dl•on 7-ml...,. s Pllll-•PN~. -·~ n >U MM<c•Y 7 s1, Ollve• 1.i1. c.,.,_....., 1·1' Ausw11 i,.u J•~kl , ..
PASSING -11.elll.._e, J-. ... ,, !•ft,
La11drv •·t+lt Plllltdlfplll•. Jawonll
lt·lt·I ""· 1'1-clk '·t.O.M
RECEIVING ll•nlrnon 8u11er ~Sol
Ol<k,.,.. 2_.. C..r 1·).t. Olwon 1 23, M<Clli
1 1', M<C..,ley I mlnu• I Plllladelplll•.
Carml<hatl l•tJ, H""ry ).70, Kr99fle 4-44,
Smith 1·46, Monl90mtry 2·J7 Campfield
1 11 soeonoo • 1 is
Raiden 33, Dotphln• 17
Sc .... 11yo.11en
Oalitencl 7 u J t -U
Ml•mt 0 J I I 17
Oak c."''"""~ 11 "" f,,.,,, """'°" I Benr ki<kl
Ook. '"""°'" 37 DO\ from Wilton <Banr kk kl
Oa" Riaimsev t 1»1\ from W1t10n (99"1r
1110 1
Mia FG von Schemann l4
,Oali FG 811P1r :n
Ml• Hiii S run Ivon S<hamtnn 11,l<kl
Mia N•""" II oan lrom S!rock f¥on
Schamann liklll
Oak Satetv Sl<OCI< ,.,, oul of ond ront
Oalt. Wlllh u 18tltr ldOJ
A "m ,,._I 51.ethlk•
RUSHING OakltnO J•nHn 4 JS,
Hawlll"'• 8·31 Wiiiis • H . King • 14.
Wl\llllnglon •·" WlllO<I 3 u Miami Hiii
• lt F•..-kltn& 1' Nllhant U W-l•y It
PASSING -Oeklan<I Wiiton 16-J'l4fto
Mttml Slro<lt UH 1 16' Woodley
10.2?.-CI 1172
RECEIVING Oakland Ram .. v 1 .. 1.
c11ana1er 2-45. Jen"'" 1 11 B••-•11 J "
Cnr!>ltnW<l I 11 Branch 1' Chest•• , ..
Hawkin• 1• Miami Nathan 7 "· Vl90rl10
S·JO Ctfllo 3-~. H•rrls >-JS, Hitt J·JO R0'4. 11) Moore I II LH l·I Franklln 1-4
Jeu 17, Patriot• 6
k-lly~r1•" NV Jth 0 10
New Engl.one! 0 3
NI! FG Sn\11?1 '1 ~
NV H•'lllt< 4 run !Leahy kkkl
NV FG Le.thy 0
NY N.wlon 5 run ILHhy ~•<kl
NE' FGSmllll?'
• 4S,..,
1,..v_I Sbfltlks
0-11 .....
RUSHING New York, Mcl\l•ll IS.SO,
Newlon l•O. 01er1dno .. J~ Auoul!ynlall
l-lS H•'lllt< 7 II Long t·J Todd 7-mlnus J,
Ann, ml~ J N-E119•-Collln•. I~.
Gr091n I·• Ferou-. ... , TllUllU S.t PASSING N•w Yorll,, TOOd 6-1>4S6,
Ryan I .. ,~ G..._.,, t.1t l·IOS, C.••anaugll
S.1-..S
AECE'llllNG Hew Vorll Wal ...... ).U,
H•ri>e• , "· OlerllfllO f.11, A119U'lynl•k I~
New Englaftd, JollMOn 6-41. HH .. llMCk ).57,
T eluou l n Collini I t , Morge" t ~
/
SCOREBOARD
Cht.fe 23! Olle,. 10
k-loyQNNrt
Houllon 0 , 0 1 10 1Can1a1Clly 1 J 1 ._,,
KC -o.i-v••unlLow•rv•tcltl l(C FG ..__., 11
Hou FG FrltKl'l11
I(( -B. Jacklon I •l>Q (Lowery •kkl
Hou llurrouvr. )() wu from Stabler
ll'rl!t.ell kick)
ICC FG Lowery 4'l
ICC -FG~lt
A 1J ... ,,,.,,,IWAI \ut1a11c •
RUSHING Hou11on, C.mpbell 11 ... ,
Armstrong 123, RHYft 1 13 Wflion :J.11
Coleman 1-0 Kanse• Cllv, Delaney 1'-ltJ
Hadnot 1?-47 8 JACkWI S·1•, l(...,,.y I_.
PASSI NO Houslon. Sltbl., 12 n.f.1 ...
A•aves 6 IS ,_., l(an.u Clt1. IC•nnn ._,,~Jt. H-f>.1 !.()
RECEIVING -ttouston. 8~ -· A•nfro •·'1 HolUon 2 JI. Wiiton 2 20,
Arm>\rong 1 11, BtrlMr 1·1'. Colemen •·t,
Campbell I 4 ICAnlAI CllV. Rome 1-t. J T Smllll 1.9 Oel-y .. , Manllall I I Ola.on
IS Ht-12
Lion• 27, Cowbo~• 24
k-~Qv.arten
D•llu
O.troll
Dal l'unon 10
ISeoll•n ltl<kt
Oat FG Sf9\len 0
I 10 0 ,_,.
0 I 10 10-11
pau from Wlllte
Dal -Puroon 11 pan from Wlllte
IS.Pll•n 11,k ll,)
Del SlmiSrunCMurrev11,k11,)
0•1 Nlchol1 •PHI from Hf1>9I• I Murray
klOl
Del -FG Murra, l1
Oat S.ldt II peu from Wiii!• IS.Plltn ......
kl~t\ Sims II NH from Hl1>9I• (Morray
Oet FG IW.Krav 41
l .... !Wal Si.tlflk s
RUSHING -Oe llu, Oor .. 11 IS SS,
Sortno• 111 OuPr" 1 12. w""• J.s. J
Jorot1 1-" Oelroll, Sim• 1>-11•, Nlchol• 1 ]I)
Hipple S.11. Buuey S-1', IC-l·J
PASSING Oallt• Wiii!• 20 J0.1·14•
Oelroll Hlppl• IJ 1J 1·264 Skladany
I 1 0·"
RECEIVING Dallas Sc>rl-S.S6 T
H111 •• _ _.. ... , °""'" >-17 0orwn 1 1 John1'0rl. I JO S.ldl I u . Oelroll 0 Hiii
S 110 L Tllompson J ;i., S<oll l·JI S1m1
'81 Cobb t ••. Nkllol• 1·4, Bu•wv l ·mlnu•
)
Redakln1 30, Glente 27
k en llY OV•rton
Wa•lllnoton 1 l 1 10 J-JO
NV Glen~ I • I 7 O-t7
NV~ Per\lns • pau lrom Simm•
IOaneloll,kltl
wur. -Tl'tom-•~"from Thelsmann
fMO"ley 11,fekl
NYG -Jackton •run (Pffl felled)
Weill -FG-tvJJ. l\IYO -llrlglll 1 run (0.fttlokkll
Wull -Aloolns I run fMoSll•Y kick)
Wnh -Warrin J NH from Thel1m•""
fMowlrt •kkl
NYG Mlttl•r 22 MU from 8,_r
IOt nelOkkkl
Wull -FG -IV" Wem-FG-•Y ..
A -U .llJ
~l~I
llUSHtNG -Wuf\1"9'0", WHl!lnoton
! .. SJ, Thel~"'-"" j.-49, Ai99ln1 1'-42. -
'l'orll L. JaclllOA 1~12. Perry 11 .. 1. 8rlllfM
J..7
P ASSING Wullfl\qlon Tllehma,,...
2S.Jl.1·2"4 N-YOf'ti, Simm• •·11·1 '"'
8runMr).I~
llECEllllNG -Wej111"9\on Waslllno'Oft
7~ Metcalf S.7'. We'"" ~ -).10 Rl99ln1 1 f.S ~ 7·11. Wall<er 1·1•
N ... Yor1<, Perlllnl 3-41, Gray l•S, Ml1Uer
I 71. L Jack-1·1', Perry 1·12 Slllrk l·I
Canedl•n football leegue
PLA YOf'F tEMlf'INALS
We11ffft Olvl•lon CllamplOfulllp
Edmonton n Bdll•h Cotumb•• 16
EHt-Ol•ltlon QI.emit!•""'"
Ollawa II H•mlllon I)
Sund av
M oritr••t
GllliY CUI'
Ottawa "' Edmonton •'
College
SATUllOAY'S LATI: K0"1'5
C"•<o SI 11 San Fran<l•<o St 1
Humf)OIOI "' 2l S.cr•m•"IO \t ..
Wtllem4'tt• 1' Wnll .. Of'll\O
NIC holl• 'it ?' NE loul\l ... a 11
' ,
]
IJ J
How top 20 fered
Pltnburgll (~I IM•I Army 41-0
Ct-fl(>-G.()t f> .. IMaryl-11·1
SoulhPrn C•I 1 ... 1.()J IMI lo Washlnq!On
• Geor9(a (,_l.()l l>e•t Auborn l • 1)
S P•nn Sl•I• 17 l.01 lo•I to Alabama )1 ,.
• Alabama 111-1-11 l>e•I Penn St••· ]I ,.
I Net>rasU 1 .. 1.01 !Mal low• Stele JI 1
a Soul""'" Methodt•• ,,.1-01 .... , T ....
Tl'<~ JIM
« Arltona Sltle 17 t-01 lo•! lo UCLA
l4 2•
10 T•u1 17·1 11 l>eal T .... Cl'lrlsllen ,, u
NAIA
DIYl91on II
(flMt)
~ Ptc:Hk Lutlteran
1 Wllllam Je-ll, Mo l Concordia, M,,...
4 Weslmlrt$14tr, P S Pam.ndle SI • Olil
6 Aultln, T .. 1
1 Andi,.,,, Ind
t OlcltlMn SI N Q • Sul ROSJ St Tni
10 Findlay Oltl
11 r~ordla, NI>. ! ! ~a 1 Llllller an
13 Bell*'Y Kn
14 Llllfiel<I 0.-
U St J°""'I MM
1• Jamntwn, N O
17 Mluou•I llell•v
" B•kH t(n 1' Peru SI Nb
to SI Tl'tomt,Mnn
Hollywood Park
SUNDAY'S JIHUL TS
''°"° ,,. ·~m t.(11 ..
~ 111
•~ tn •·f .() no
•• ,~ JOI
1.0-0 lt1
'1-0 19$
I 1.0 11'
•• ,.() 11•
• J.() !70
'1-1.() 1)2
I 2.0 103
1-1.() 13
• !.() " •·1-4 17 I J.() St
I 1-0 M M:O n
t "" ot n_.., 11tereu9'fllt<e4! "'"",.., F lllST RACI • lurlonq•
p.,fo<I SOlen<IOUr I RlvoraJ SI 00 I~ 40 I 00
Aino of Erin ISll>lllel • 10 ~Ml
E z FINI IOt1varu1 • 10
Aho r.tc:.ct Solu Gtow Cltver t,\..,.
Gr•n• Her a 'Win l•t1ff HOOl1¥
1'1mt I IOt S
SECONOllACI 1111•mllu
Rau• C~t! I 0.laho~W••' ,, .., 7 Ml •IO
St< Spruct <RI••••• l to •Ml
M<Cul<-IM<C.arronl J llO
Al\O r•ced Br•\t't tCnttvf! Jt•,r, lcy
8 1a\t lOOt'ICM>r \ Brolher O•"• Or•<le
G•oro~•tlte
T1mel 4't~
U DAILY OOUILE 11 JI o•ICI ~" 00
THlllO RACE It 16 mttH
P~hn fMc(arioant 1? .a • 00
Truc••n H•rold ITo,.ot J "° l to
180
An H•tr AllOUI Him IOll~u•U
Alto rac..O Tlml>er\DOrt Oenall
Alrroflng HMtV E~le. Gala<li<a
flm• I I) J S
• '° R'l<IQO
U I: llACT A 11 )I ~Id S'I \0
FOUllTHAACE I <1t•mtlf'
Ce Sh•ro IH•w•~•I 4 40 310 110
•40 140 , 10
lltqnt S1111t
F al>ulou• 0.0 CStbtllt•
Cal•~ C\/alt'<ll\H'IAI
Al\o ra<t'd Cnar~ A«nunt
Flrth<\UM' l'IVf'
nme 1 '3 •1S
K &llACTA 16-., "'"O ~·SO
Flf'THAACa II 16mt1Monlurf
l(renewtu fRl•er•I "60 110 1 oo
llO<laulfer COel<lhoUlsa••' I 40 s 10
Lu<ullus (L100...m1 •to
Al\O raco'd 8u1f110 Har1 Jettier Sall'•
Roy.al D"••m tncom~ont Sf41m,;,no11-tt
Po-•r Point
Tim• l414S
111llACTA 11 JI Hid St2 SO
SlllTM 11.ACI. OM mitt
Rott• A°"' 10.laho~\ .. t l
OM ~or Mornlnq fB.,mnl
Sier Prtwnltr IC.st.,,!dll •1,.0 rac•d C..rlH\•n
T •v•n• Admlr.a1 'Mt'\trf""
Tim• I l9 I l
1100 610 JIO
•110 soo
190
F0'4"f\411 Rf'ofv
Lo•t loot
SEVENTH llACE • lu"~
MtlChtnQ C8atl•r••I s 60
fmpprtel U\\ f P1nc•y•
Sn•·•• s-ISl••nert
260 ,..,
740 i20
1 IO
A f\O raCf'd II( •DOV Otamond 'IJ>Vf'"
Proud<'\! 8ft
T1Mf' ' ()It
U l!llACTA I• SI OA•d '21 SO
U 1'1(1( Siii I) l• 1 • •I tM•O l1' 460 to
w tlh f,~., •1rtn1nq ticti;.-1\ hh "O,.Y\I '2
Pie\ Ste Con\~4tl•on 1>11ld MSl .6C) with t•S
w1nn1nq Octu~t\ HIVf" nQl"W\•
EIGHTH AACE 11 e m•t~ on tud
01' ll A°"'C"'-'ottt l 40 1110 200
HIQh Coonwt IM<C.arron> J 60 ) 10
Lord T••ndy ICMlan...,81 J 10
r;~~0 ~= Hi~~~':-t.~'G':,'..~1Fr." r •b'"
Tlmt I 47) t
NINTH llACE t• • m lltt on turi
S•l .. vvlll• (V\l>nlO I SS 00 18 00 8 to
J;reno' Sass.efrA\ I llort4m' ~ .O • 10
W•tf'rw•v O""tvP f8all••' 6 ')O
Alto •!Ke<! StaQI' 0o0< tl•v Ro<-\ollly
S..arOOd Nall•• T 11< tlct H•ndwmt On•
Time 1 ~ t S -'
U EXACTA fl '1 otld\I 031 00
"ll•ncl....ce 111141 -
11 Miclll9A11 f .. l.Ol .... , Pu<dut ,..,0 •
11 Miami Fla 17 Hll l>eal lll•otnla Tl!Ch '-
21 u Men'• tournament
lat Wembl•Y. 1:,..1all4llt ,..,. ... ,, .... f
1l NOf'lh C1rolln1 11·2.()t IM•I \/lrolnla " ,. ~.,,, Mlutu 1op1 II o ll beet
Florida Stalt 5'-14
IS Ok.la"°'"" f"-3-ll loll lo Mlnourl 1'1-14
16. Ark.en\ll 1 ... 1.01 boal ft•a• A&M 11>-I
11 Wnllln9ton Slale (I I ll l>e•I
C:.llforftl.a IM --
II UCLA 11 l II IMAI Arltona Sia!• JA.l•
13
1: Hawell 11-1.0I lo.I to Brloham Young
10 Florlda Stal• ( .. 1.()) 101I to ~''-"'
MISllUIPOI S.-14
NAIA Pl.A YOFFS
Dtwtek>n" ..,...y-.o-.. '"'"" .._, l'ecllk Lllllter"" (Tec:oma, w a111 I al
Wllll.,., Jtw.11 Coll-ILlll9<1y, Mo.I
A..,..,_ Coll-( INl.I et wmmlntter
Coll-CN-Wl tmtnqlOft, Pa l
Ole k.ln•on Stale Coll•9• ( N. o J al
Conco,..dla Colt-C-heact, Ml,...,)
Au1lln Coll~ ISlltr man, Te•HI et
l'anllandla State Ul\IV•,.llY IGoodwlll,
<Mila l
J1mmv Connor\ Gef JOhn M< Ef"lrOf J'
1 h 6 l 1>-• 6 11 Connor• win• U? 50Cl1
~ Oouble1 FIMI ~nerwood Sl•werl Ferdl Taygan ~
< Ennw -•• ~ 7 f ' 1 • •
Taipei lnvltatlonel
It! Ttlpel, Talwafll
51 ...... ,..,..,
Robert """I Hof dtf Pe< Ouor• 1 s 6 1 fV~n I HOl wl"' lU 000 Duor• win\" SOOI
OovblH Flnel
MlcllMI 8auer John ~nton Ml JoM
Au•tln Mlk• Call I JI f 11 .... , B•n\on SPiii
'' 000 A.u~n Ctltlll \ofil U 400t
Federetlon Cup
latTollyal
Cl\a,..i•IM• Mt1<11
Unlll'd SIA("' ' Rrllaln 0 Anclr .. J-r clef V1'91nla W,,,,., 6-11 j;-1; Cltrl' &,,,..,
llovd def Sue B••"-•• •·1 • 1; Ao•••
C••••• Katlty Jordan df>f WaO. Jo• Dunt
•• I s
Camel. Where a man belongs •
...
•
Warning· The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 8 mg."\&(', 0.8 mg. nicotine av.
per cige~ue by FTC method.
,•
NBA
WISftlN CON,ClllNCI
l'•d fkOl•lo'-'
W L ~t. Ga
Portlend 7 3 .100
Ltllen • 600 I
P-nl• S SSi Ill>
Gol«Mn St.tit • • toO 1 SHiii• J • .Ot 21.; San Ola90 1 t 216 ,...,
~tDlvl• ....
Sen Antonio I I 17S
Utah ! J •U
Denver J S l1S • Houlton l • 333 ..,.,
Ka nws Cnv 1 • 150 S 0.11.. I I Ill •Vt
EASJEllN CONl'llllNCI:
AllOfltk OlvlslOfl
Boston • .. Phll•OtlpP\11 I ..
Wa'1ll,..10n J .,. •
New Vor• J lit 41'•
New J••w~ 2 111 •
Cefll,..f Ofwlsi.t
Mllweuk.. • 150
Del roll S US I
tndltna • 4o4A 1Vt
Allan!• 3 41' ,.,,
Chtca90 • 400 3 Clev•l•nd J • 333 ,.,,
~.., .. k ......
LalleN llA, tnolM\a 113, 1 OT
Mllwaulll!ll 'le. c1 .. e1ano"
San AnlOftlo 110, Po'11-IOS
TOftl9tt'•G-"
No Oln>H K-led
T-y'•G•rnu
1(1nset City •I New YOf'k
Hou'1on at lnoiena
Mllw ..... ft •I WHlllnoton
Bouon al ChicA90
San An!onlo •t OallH
Lekere 124, Pacere 123
INOIANA Bantom s Wllll•m• .. Owen•
,., BuM 12. Knight 1' Devis 21 Orr I) G
Jolln><>t'I 1 C Jollnson II Car1e• O Totall u
U-tt 11J
LOS ANGELES ICUC><hl' ll WllllU 11
AllCIUl·Jabbar n. E JOflnton n "''"°" .. Coo~r U Llftd\IMr~r 11 M< IC•nn~ 1
Jordan 1 Toter. S5 14 " 11•
SC....llyl'e-
lllOl•N 11 1S 21 ?' l ~ Ill
Lo• Ar>Qelft JS H 11 to 6 t 124
TPlrff·DOfnl 90.tto Buw 1 Fouleo out -
Ban1om ICupc:hak Wiiii•\ Totel foul•
I ndl-• 21 LcK A"91leS JO A U .140
NHL ~ILLCONl'lllll\ICI:
Sm,,_Ol•lt ....
Edmon IOI\
V•n.c-ouwr l(f ....
C••o1ry Color-
W l T GFGAl'b
11 • , " ,. 1• ••l """ e '° o '' to " 3 11 S1 ., 10 111 ... .,.
Mlnnetola
Clltca90
Wlnnl04!0
De troll
SI LOUlt
TOf'onto
NwrlsOlvhl•
10 )
I I • • I • s • 3
WALIS CONf'E"INCI
l'at<kll °'"''* NY llltnder\ 10 J
PlllltO.lptlla 10 •
Plttsf)urQh 1 1
NV Re._,, 1 10 I
Wt\hfnqlOft 1 U I
Montr••I
8011011
Buffalo
Ovebec
Hartford
ANmt Ofvloi.o
10 J •
10 •
e • 10 • , .
s-.v•1su .. ,
Bulle to l 8-lon I
PPlllacMlpNa S, NY ltta-r\ •
Edmont()ft s NY "-" J Clll<-10 ,.,..,._o
II 1ncou .. , I. Cal9<1ry •
Ttni .... '1Gam ..
NO ~""" K heduM!d
Women'• volleybell
COLLEGE
w-v·1c1euk
let Stoclrt.,.I
CNmtHOfl•lllD
., •·l 13
t1 II 10 '7 IS II
14 •• II 1• IS 16
IS 7' 13
.. St 1•
.. "ll
6S .. " 60 IS IS
., 11 s
91 •l14 IS Si )I
US6J1 •'
""" ti " "
Hawaii <l<'f Pac.fie 1~1 ·~ 12 111 ~ H
IS~
Tltlrf.l!JIU -
uct.A dPfUSC 4 I~ I~• IH tH
o .. ., ... fl•hlng
NIWl'OllT (A,,-1 u-.,.) ll a"9te"'
t l>Att, J l>onllO HO me<lter•I I cow cod, tO'
roe., cod. 10.vey'a Lecllerl n• anolen t
bonito, I call<o l>IH ' •and 1>au. » roo
Cod l <-Cod 1!0 mackerel
OANAWHA.F llO•no••n IO N U.:lln
bonllo, I hall but '1 roe It cod ?a. me<k•r•I
SAN 011100 Clol•Nllel .. •no••n SJ :::~!to lllO mA<'erel 1 rock fl\h U ""'°
LONG 8&ACM <•••monl l'l•rl 20
•noter1 297 •oc' fhll, J cow cod fOW-'•
Wllarf) 1)7 Angler\ 1'0 ClllCO l>AH, 2
l\1llbol ... rock <00 )A COw Cod
SEAL •EACH 11)1 •nolers .. s •oct
<od I <-coo I llngcod
Long BHch Yaeht Club
LONe 9EACH LA PAZ ll"CE
IC«N<ledTlrne llH .. h )
IOA I HP•I W•v~ DI<' Ptnninq1<><1
ILBVCt 1 llatcl\u\ Oouq Ba-•• IL8VCt
J f\lacit A1td All•n Pvrti.~tt f(V(' 4
Mftthn Oa•,HOJ'tnu tSt FV(t
PHRF-1 Jule~ M~•• El•as 'l8Y() 1
Prr1cu\ Jonn WitHem'\o,, f\F'VC:t J
llol>•lo JoM Snoo• IL SVC.I • Conlr•rv lo
Ord•n•rv R•c ~'htrt1 So•nOlr-r fC•••forniA
S.111ng Chltll
LOI AngelH Yaeht Club
C.AL·40 NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS
I W l1hwaw l('n frO't t A8V( 1
Porupl\Ont JI>(' WooOP\uU IC.Ye> 3
Sn•f)u1 Soot-v Kol>l'r tARYl'I
Newport Harbor Yac:hl Club
WINTEll llECATTA
fSlil-n onlyt
Sollno 1 Bruce end Maril Goll'°"
IA8YCI 1 Ga•l,,,.Or1t1 t8YCI
E tcn~11., 77 1 T m HOQ•n 4tl"ld Jtm
W llmtnqlon N'HYCJ ) Don Edt•r
INHVCI l Dons.,.,.., ''WV(t
Lido 14 t ,.,,.d iwucrw.11 fllYCI
Paul Bl•nc •S'>VC•
t._.awr • 1 Chart•~ Bun11nQh•"" 1"4H't'CI
1 Jor.n P•rn1c II. t 8CYr' ~,
S"'°" A I La""v Coon IN'fV( I Snloe~8 ' Jim EnQll•PI IC.pa BYC.I
S•l>OI t Ttm ("""'" I BCV Ct l '°""" Norm•n t8(Y(tl) O•v•O &on tot• t 8YCI
Capl1trano Bay Yacht Club
MISSION SEA I ES llACE J
O"'~r•ll t Funnv FHttn Pf'lt' ~ed
IC•oo 8YC• , Holo tC tllt fltc• A•ll fC.&00
BVCI J Sll-MlkeW•l-ICaDOllVCI
MO AC 1 Fr~'°' 4ioo.•tfli0 Crtll!'J t:f)f"1•y OPYC 1 w .. ,.,.._,_,, a. G ~•O•nq rceoo
five i c,.o....q1•11 ~"·•"••nt• o-c,
AACE J
Qvp,alt 1 A•wtu(M Kpnnv ~uhn 'C•oo
BYC"! 1 ... ot Fl;nh 8n"'" AttO.r\ftn 1(600
8Y(I l M.lthntQ..,.. O•vt! (00091' 1(..00 eve MOAC I Flap Jack Al<PIOrtMrd fCeoo
8YC I 1 Gou'Q L.-tt 1 \.\lr_.C.,11111'1
RACE•
0Yttf'811 I AA.,r11nt0\i# 1 ~.wr,;()1111 l
T humO#'r 11 Jtt'T'I a"o <s,.-,,o., l u" t nft"1 fC•oo
!1VC•
¥0RC I Wrtck••" 7 Goinq l t•I l
o w HarotCI 'looo< Rott<IO" 18VC I
Wffk•nd trenaectlona •
IASEIALL
AftWrlca,. La..-
CLEllELANO f>jOl.a.NS Tr-o.._
IC.u•o~r \•tono .,., • ..._." to tf'I• Sen
FranctscoG••"" for Eo Wl'lllton oll<Pll'•
f'OOTaALL .... ._ .... _ ... Le .....
NEW YORK JETS ACll•lled F~eem.,.
M•cNell """''"'I ba<k and MlcO y ShUler. llQllf •nd Pl•c to John Wooartno
fltteba ckrr on t~ lnlvr..ci '*"'"e Hsf
R•le .. •d Aelpll D•Loac~ dtfensln
Un•m•n
SAN DIEGO ~AAGEllS Cut Billy
Brook~ "ftdt r.ceiver
HOCK•Y
Nat-I Ha<llty Lt .....
NEW VOAIC ISLAH0£RS >jemed
Buie Pl Gorl"'l.,, HShl•"' <N<h
COLLEGE
WASHINGTON STATE -Sloned Jim
Wal~n -foo1btll <oa<h lo• lour·,..•• contt.ct
0 a 5 5 p 4 ••• ,... ... 4
OranoeCont DAILY PtLOT/~onday, November 18, 1981 .....
NMmi -.mw ....... NOTICI OF Ol!ATH Of' ..-w•l9M9.-f
eeTTY JO fllRAflfKQ0ekl ~~ ..,_ •te ... ...
81!TTY JO Tl LL AN OF •c.tMO "'-"IA, tm .. .
_,
4
.2
The marketp~ace ori the Orange Coa$t ... 642.:5678
.,p I! TIT I 0 N T 0 ~._._,...._,._.,
ADMINISTER l!STATe ,.111c=-Jtt1 .. , tlll a .. o NO. A·1110M. ....,.,.,._ ._.. .,.,._ c.1w.rt11• To all helra,.ut
btntflclerlH, creditors w1111e,,. "· M .. , ... ,. tttt
--•net contlnotnt c~ltors of ~-=· ...........,.. °""""' Ctty, Betty Jo Pranko, -aka Tiiie =. •• ~• .. •
Bt tty Jo Tiii end peraons --:-4...::r~
• who mey be other wise """' .......,.. ,.. , .... ...., .. --lnttrHttd In the wlll CtuMfCi•1u10r.,..c-ty•Oct.
t nd/or MUlte:. "· "" ",..
-· A petition has bffn flled on."':':.C:,:,':,~ Deny.= ~by Euvene E. Franko In--·--------the Superior Co1,1rt or PlkC •m
Ortnee County requesting----------.:.;>. that Eugene e. Franko be lfOTtc:8YOClOlf'fUCTOal ~; a ppornt•d as rersorial CM.UMeflOll ....
-. rt p rt st n t a I v e t o sc11:.:~ct: c ... , cem"'"""' -... d I I c•i 1 8 M ~ ster the estate Of IW : t:a .. Clecll em ef h _._:.Betty Jo Fre"ko, akl hu•u•O.-W."'1. ~ Betty Jo Tiii, Costa Mesa, ~t .. "" ""'•' Offkt " .,.
'Clllfornla (Under t he ~~==1·,~"f:!..,OIT,k~: -I n d e p e n d e n t ,.,. ..,.,. •-. c.1e ...... CA
Ad ministration of Estetes ,.., · Act). The petition Is set for "'•l•c• 1~1111ce11M1 H•-: e10
" hearing In Dept. No. 3 at :!-:.!:!.· 1~~:,J::~~= .,. 700 Civic Center Drive ,....~ ..
... ' Wt st, Sant a An a , "*• ,.._.,."' "1•: Hlll-Oellltl-~ Callfornla 92101 on ::~~~m:rn~-1
Jll.r December 9, 1981 at 9:30 HOTICll IS HIEllHY OIVllH hi a.m. ,,.. .-. .... ,,.. kMtl e>1w1e1 ti
2 11.a IF YOU OBJECT to the ::i:,~·.~·,.:'1:!,~ he. granting of the petition, 11e re1uiter •thrr•• to ••
, YOU Should either appear "OIST"lc'f." wlll rec:M"9 .. to, "'1 -t th I ,... 1~ "*' "" ...._. ..... 11 ..... O!, 8 e hear no and State Mt!M 11M1a.., lflt -.1 01 • CllftlrlCI your objections or file ..,.,....,.....,.Ject. -. written objections with the •1• wo • ,_..,,.."' llM ,._ _, t bef t"'-.. _ I 14"tllltd ....,,., ..,. 1M11 lie ....,.. illf,i cour ore ,.., .... ar ng. .,.. ,11•11,1, ..... 1 .... " "" ~.u Your NJiPe•rance may be ...,,. ... _."""_....,..
k.1' In person or by your Tiier• •Ill "• s10.N ..... 11 · attorney. ,.....,....,_ ... ., .... __ tt
- -I F y 0 U A R E A to e11•ttt1IH tllt rtt11r" '" • ..--,_. .... wltlllft 10 ... .,. ." .. .,. llld CRED I TOR or a..-........ . ":"::"contingent creditor of the 11•<11 bid mutt ceniorm Mid "
1''' d ed t fll re~Wlelflt'911lrKl~ll. llltll eceas , you mus e hell ._.. _ .. Kc.,...... .,
your claim with the court .,. 1ee..n1, ,..,.,.,., • lft .. cw1ec1 ; j or p resent I t to the :CV::.==., , .. 11•• °' ,,,_.,
-;.;;:, personal represen tative Tiie 01n1t1CT .. __ u. ,.._.,.
~~• appointed by the court re1ec1 .,., ., e11 iii.., to • .,,,..,,,.,
t.t•i within four months from ,,.,..,1.,,.._ • 1....._.., ... 1 .. "''
the date of first Issuance ~~ :;'1:;"~ ........ ,,_
-.: of letters as provided In ,..,. 01rwiilr .. u.. Get-~• .. -section 700 of the probate 1n111111r1e1 1tt1t1I•"• 111e .. ,..r.1 -code of Callfor nla. The -tu.,..,...°',...-.... -en in
,I( • ti f fl ... llC•lllY '"""'"' 11111 ..... It le .. 1 'f'll me or ling claims wlll .,....,_. .., •OCll crOlt ., ..,.. .. · not expire prior to four wt,_,,..,. ....... 10 n•n•• 111. months from the date of <•trKt. n.. ,_ .... °" , ... •t ...
th h I ti ed OISTIUCT office IOUIM ., 0111, ~ e ear no no C above. Adm I". Trolltr l'ecllllJ, Cotti ~~ YOU MAY EXAM INE Comlft11AllY coll• .. Dlt1rtc1, mo '>ltt·the file kept by the court. A._.. A-. o-s A.,•. c-te
If you are Interested In the MtH, CA •Hu. Ceplu m •1 ... *9llled ., .._t, A CllP'f Of ..... mi estate, you may file a , ....................... ,ot>tJte. request with the court to TM........,..~ .. -...,,. ""<receive special notice of ..... 1.--..-•WW1l"'9*'°'
the Inventory of estate and :::·..!~ ..!:9 ~"::: .':°'= I af. the petitions, accounts 11-_, ......,,,
and reports described In n "''" 11e .....,..,.,.Y -IM
Sec t ion 1200.s of the ~.T!~~:::" .. ':'.~J California Probate Code. 14*.,.,,..., .....,. 111m. to .. , Mt
_., ELMER D. MONTANO 1nttMAhMl4l-•n.trot .. 1o e11
113 1HS Cnscent Ave. #61' :::==:..:. -"' ... ~ Ana•lm, C•. HI01 Nt ~,,..., ....__ 1111...,..,
(714) 776-1550 • Ptrled Of alacty UOI ... n of\., Ule
'I Published Orange Coast ...... ,..,.,._...,M ....
D II Pll ... .,......lltfld ..... ~ a y ot, Nov. 16, 17, 23, t1ond w111 i.t •••11lred erlor 10 }, 1981 4916-81 utullon ol Ill• '°"1roc 1. Tiit .....
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coll•l•r•I: OM (I) , .. , 1( ....... lllle, .......... ~lty, -c..
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]IWwtflt .... tecur1tr 119"etmeftl. lollo•l119 coll•l•r•I: o,,. (II 1'90 ''".,,
ALHltT I'. OUINTltAU - -111 1t10 $! .......... Trellor, =
........ ....................... ·····················~· •••.............•....•......••................
I 4 • ..,.. totJ IOOJ ..... 1002
.) ••.......•...........•...•.......• , ••.•...•••...................... ,.
-Mlt ------
It l•~!~~m• .... doulllt door •lrY; Madi Into • formal lfy,
m1 room formal d.inla1
This new_sPaper will not
knowinf l.Y accePt any adurt 1101 for real .Ute wbldi ii In vtola·
Ugo of the la•
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ,... 1002 .......................
SA OPPOITUMTY! Immaculate S Bdrm bome wit.b fam.l1y room I ID beauWul H.vtlOt View
I Hllla, ,.~ painted ' Ill.aide and out. Newly ~~tt-= elfonb room for pool or acldl ti on. On er w Ill
room , 'ui• femlly room ltoM ft "plate
toulr1 kitchen. All overlook• spectacular
pool and •.P•· Ele11nt m11ter 1ulte, 3 other
tar11 bdnm, 1'1111 a den
wtth bl&Wa f»okcues.
Th&ly an uecut1ve home
lot onlY ~lOllO' OW!le. r will belp WIUI flnantin&. Call DOW, NJ.ZllJ
THE REAL
ESTATERS
ACISSFIMPU Lra 3 fr z"' Ba cOlldol •crot• from park db 1ar. a cleui warm l.ome
priced to ae!I at r.03,IOO. Bob Burdi<: , a1t
SllZ.000 CASH OUT! Newport Beach
townhome, owner desperate! Want.I out! 2
Bdim. 2 .. ~~~~L1in1le ltOrY. A NTpwl CaU now 1 5*-2313
THE REAL
ESTATE~S
YEIYLOWDM! Sbarp Ira 3 Br condo nr
So. Coast Plua w/terma! Only SUS 000:
Submit any ofler. Patrick Tenore, agt.
75'-1221
c .. ~_ larp. 1st or 2llcl. r--------
191,JOO THE STAITll
67'"141 t
41EDIOOM
ONLY llJt,900 Auume 1.st. lint ' Eathant.lu c.c.ta Mesa
home wltli hardwood floors. Heavy wood
1talrcuetoban1.11 room! ~llWO lot Call
THE REAL
ESTATERS ! Colt.t SJ~~pain! • Bdrm 2 bath. With 2K -,l-0_0_0_0 ___ _........._--.&1----llU -----------
down paJ1Dllltl at ... , ~ rr mo. laterelt ~~. lK dn, fantastic tums.
must .ee, call now. 4 Bd 2~ Ba Waitdiff .
541-ZSU Norm w Kasey 1Sl·l21M .
THE ~EAL
ESTATERS
or541-M1:2
: VIEW! YllW!
-Woods Cove. J.aauna 2 -Br 2 Ba.. A Z.sty..Z lot. STAITSMAIT wfl~~~~:.,
lie CAMYOt4 COUMTIY CUii
CHIA T aou COUlll Vll W
CALL FOi COLOI ROCHUU
Magnificent location o'looking 8th
green of golf eourse. Cull today Cor
appt. to see this luxurious Georgian
Colonial custom by owner /builder. 5
Bdrms, lge formal dining rm, family
rm , billiard rm, refrigerated wine rm
& 6\.1 baths. U>ts of marble, fines.t
wood paneling & custom molding,
great storage, 2 stairways, air-cond ..
.bit-in vacuum system + many other
custom features. $2,150,000.
WISLEY H. TAnOI CO .. HALTOIS
2111 s ......... Hiil loed
MEWPOIT CIHTH. M.I. '4 .... 4' I 0
of r/ewporl
REALTORS
'75-H,ll
OWHEl'S PllDE Hahnl ~or•or wood
p..tMg ............... "'" 3 ~ &
.. _..OMoftt.e...t ....... oW CdM + o I l drwtr'MW. Al for Sl l 4,500.
COLE OF MEWPOIT IEALTOIS
JS 15 l. Coa t Hwy .. CONM del M ..
675-5511
DICOIATOI COM00-$15,000 Former model condo in
mi.11t condiUon. Kosta views of greenbelts and 1wimmln1 pool Owner will urry fananclnj wkh low-down. Call now, ·
@ SEA COVE l'IOPEITIES
714-631-6990
tnllfuctTOOt in tbl1 taatelullr re· decorated 3 Bdrm bome
with a t yr old roor. Seller may 11al1t in
fma.ncinl. All this for U2!JO . Call today
979-»10
ALLSTATE
. REALTORS
H.a.llOIVIEW Trouble Sellln1 Your "' Property? Trade It with OML Y 1235,000 the G rut American Owner wttlcarry huge Trade Co. We have Hun·
2nd. Popular Monaco dreda of Eicbaogable floor plu. Cozy COWJtry Pr~perties tbrouahout tltchen, 3 larce bdrm•. California. Call Now.
Fabulous yard featUl'H m.J7»
bubblinc spa, BBQ and LOCATION
eatio beat.er! Fee 1and Triple 3 Bdrm 2~ Ba
Call today. f13..8S50 coodo swim pool, ten-
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
nis, beach. dbl aar,
priced to sell. SW.000. 'Bob Burdick , •It , : You m llll aee tbll em1> = Ucmal bome. Call Bob • I Butdtd., •It 751·1221. = Al'J,500
beach. Recently redu~ ·--------'20,000! Assume low in·
t.ettst loem. Motivated owner. Call now ,
R&IM~
-I -m.asso ---: Classified Ads. your one-
: ttoe sbops!nc qnter.
THE REAL
ESTATERS --... ---... ". ---.. ----•• --
·~ HAHOI l lDGE Beautiful "Kens-
ington " with panoramic view 4
BR + fam rm. Great financing.
Enjoy the private & security of
Newport 's most desirable ad·
dress. $710,000 Jerry Thompson
551-8700 (J49)
STIPS TO OCIAH
LOWDOWM Owner will carry fioanc-in& on this 2 story.
Spuisb Villa. Try lO"lo down on this one-
folllltalu. Spanish tile and charm. lf'1 all here!
Call DOW, only SMf,000.
@ SEACOVE .
PIO"ITIES
714-631-6990
s..tt JOIFOWll .... Defer part ol moalhly payment OD Ulil charm· m( )lalboa llland bome.
-~=·
WATmlOMf SUPER YINANCING ! as' .. Ith pier and dock. lofted R-2~. Been look·
in& for a beyfroat build· Ill& site? Or UH u ia-two 2 Bdnn unlll plus
double aarqe. Call Mu Adrian for details .
-642-5200
J PETE BARRE TI REALTY
BEST PROHT IN TOWN! w.· •• got 1 left to Ml!
13¥2% JI YEAR
FIXED ltCOME --OATllD: ..._,,..,2, 1tl1 ICllllol• Troe..,, Sfflal H-11-. I ""
AllWfloylor Model aiw7 .. Sorlol N-"91,.. ,_
$OQjf9d f>tny pOy "'":'::we': ffl:::;~ I __ _.,!!!!__1-1""'-iiiiiiONli~-----t' "'*' ...... Or Cot ,..
OATIO: ..._,..,t.1tl1 :::::... .. .,
We'll deal!!
... ~.
PActftC YllW
.....OlllAL. ,Aa.
CemlltetY M ortuary 'Chapel-Cfematory
3500 Pacific View Om1e
Newport Beach
644·2700
NcCOllMICa MOITUAltlS
Laauna Beach
494·9415
Lasiuna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Cap1s1rano
49S-1 776
HAllOa LA WM-MT. OllYI
MortuatV • Cemetery
CrerTWIOI)'
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
5'0-Sss.4
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C o llletnl t , LC A ll H O
btlll!AISO, INC.,__,.._.-, '
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CLA•IC'I OtlAOIMO, ......_ .....
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LIVE ON THE WATER! ~5,000
Leweat priced w .. trf,_. M.. " .... ,....._ Tohlr u•d1lad .._
wfttl 2 '*-_,_.for two II'
ltMts. 5°""' patio w/tWllA• '"-'-et
ldtct. --r e ... v.,., .-cltl "' ""Y w91! '7J.HOO
BALBOA ISLD. LOT + PLANS
Dmt by Jot Sq;'l t tiid c• for
dtt•ll1. Pl•• fw .... f-. ....
~td',....., ....... $145,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATI s... R..M.it l'lopffly ~Ill
2436 W COM! Hwy llS ~""' Aw ~ Stech B.llbot lsllnd .,..... .,,.. ...
Climb
Aboard
our
Gift Trin
111 sea''" Hatull It•.
It's• •Y ...
Jat Cll 1428 Ill
Ilk for your
Plllt a.• ... ,..
..
Mo yL licks!
Fr-. $136.000
· WILSON PARK
110 W.W._ Cost. M ...
631-5055
CE
llDUI ILlllS CD.
OYER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
..... UPPll
IASlll.Uff
Individual Home -Lar;ge Five
Bedrooms -Separate Master Suite
-Good Floor Plan -View Of City
Lights -Great Neighborhood -
School & Park Close By -Fast
Escrow. Listed At $255,000. A "Joy
Of Newport" Listing.
W ATllPIOMI' IU\D Bal~a "Little Island." Full Bay
View From Both Units. Urper Unit
Would Make A Wonderfu Owner'•
Unit. Hu Four Bedrooms. Lower J,a
Three Bedroom Unit. Larae Front
PaUo. Sandy Beach .
~
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....................... ·················•·•··· ••• ,.. llOJ ... ,
.............•.. , ....... ······••\••· ... ········
LtMDA ISll HOMIS
Prest11e pool family bomt. Maio
channel view from beautlf~I
traditional, 4 bdrm, s bath home. Slip
for 2 large boats. $1.495,000.
Wide lagoon view Crom seectacular
architectural design 6 bdrm, S bath,
piayroom, dark room & den. Slip for 2
large boats. $1,350,cm.
LIDO ISi.i HO...S
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spaci<>WJ, custom 3 bdrm, 3
bath home, newly redecorated. Priced
to sell quickly at $475,~. Mustaee .•
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plu.s
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for family living.
Excellent value at $420,000.
PEMIMSULA POINT llACHNOMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge.. from prime large lot. I bdrm,
3 bath custom home . 3700 sq. rt.
featuring marine room. $1,385,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J : f: I('> •I• U • 'II'' "• ~· ~ 'l I ,.) I
SUP&DUI.! Ownenhip ln Laguna
Bdl lkh l"llOrt. 15.000 +
fr. M:.C. ~-=· Call
OCIAMflOMf Dft.I
4br/2ba • 2br/lba. Balboa. SSS0,000. Will
trade for upitl, H0-7919
BeauUtur.-lmmaculate. nicely landscaped 4
bdrm home GD cul-de-aac . Spacious room1. View or &oil coune from
property. Owner will
help OD fina.ocln,. Only Sl39,SOO. Cal now ~LSTATE t•c-oa-4 ~111111W~::S~ .... -Al Just Hated! Prime loca·
RR AI 'J-tioo Oft quiet ltftd. 8ay .._ vnq • o t e a o v I e w a .
OCIAtROMf
Sltl,OOOUllll• ..
Seller will carry balance
•l l2'J. int.erest. Cboi ce comer dul>lex. 3 bdrm. J bath up ! bdrm, 2 bath
down. Can convert lo Jarae home. Submit all orrera. ..... ..,,,..,. . ......
•'75-7060.
11,950,000. 75Gfe f1nancin1 available.
A Oiv1s1on or
Hubor ln\'l'!ilment Co
RESIOfHTIAl REAL ESTATE SERVICES
OVUFlOWIMG WITH V ALUI
Great Plan Ill in Turtlerock.
Superbly situated overlooking park
& city night light view. Steps to 3
pools, & tennis courts. 4 BR.• 2\.1
Baths. Family room. Large lot w /2
patios . 3 car garage. Take over Isl
T.D. $233,500. Fee. .
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
• DISTRESS SALi • Seller behind on payments on
spacious 3 bedroom home in
HARBOR VIEW lilLL.5. $41 ,000
price reduction for quick sale .
• VICTORIAN STYLl •
Spectacular 4 Br. remodeled in
Victorian style w/custom kitchen
in prime Costa Mesa area.
500.
HEWrOIT HAcH OFFICI
2670 S• ...,.eDnn
1714175'·1501 '7141752-7l7l
~ Walker &lee
Real Estate
llllC&,,Nlf
CICP AA TllEICETT AI CODL E
S N W R I E N P I l T R A A T E M T R
0 A IC A 0 T T E R I I l U 0 T L I E T
A l A I C N A M K'E l £ P £ U H 0 0 T
W E R E I E D A Y E T A R [ T A Z IC I
T A R S U T R D R T S A S H S Q U I 0
E I D Q II E X I E D N S T S t A N C I
T 8 [ U L W N U E J A J I £ T I 0 P 8
D E M £ 0 A 0 D I P A l 0 T l E I 0 l
t S V I R R E R U 8 M I P I I T $ C
A E A ~t UtR E l~I Yll A l M
SQ AP XLS MUUlOE ll YTA
TUN A TATPE TC I T
SEI OISllLOD
UIDEYAL I CllTlllL
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RC"k1ylorCo
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COLDWeu.
BANl(eRO
FIHOOM HOUSE
l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l1 i:~~~.a ... l~~~~~-01'3
" ••OYTlOAMS•
Possible S% down.
-12·14% ml. rate. 30 yr
7ff.1111 loans Free Info.
Wortdl.I.
SPICTAGULU su.znz
OCEAM&LJC;HTYU NEAR BEACH SPY~SS JBR. 21,\BA. $10,000
Elegant s BR. single --~D.uN.i. . ...,6310EA:J·S .... 7..,_37 __
story hpme with ex· tensive use of brick.
Large patios. pool and
spa. Both borne and pool
are aolar heated.
9'75.000.
75'·1616
1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w.1t,... ........
Defer part ot monthly
payment Oii this charm·
ID.( ~_aJboa Island home.
.. H=,Ur ' '
SHAlP EASTSIDE
6-PLD
OML Y I Scyo DOWH
Owner will fmance lo
qualified buyer. Well
located. good looting 6
units + 4 car garage + ample park.ing. Below 11 times gross .
Ca II now 644-72 ll
/Jn NIGEL
(}AIL[ Y &
ASSOC IATES
S T A R GAZEK~•.
a;..::.=..:.:.!.:....---&. CL\Y l POUAN
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I HEDN18 I I I' I I I .
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Ii S A W £ T , .. :1 New bfldt: "Ooea wull and l l' l l ? w..r mHn 11111 tllt on• wno
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Mond1y. November 18, 1N1
WIMTa llMf AU
2 bdrm, l bath, frpl.c.
d.shwhr, ~mo.
3 bdrm, 2 bath. bltm,
patio, S650mo. 3 bdrm. 2 bath, frpk.
S750mo.
associated
BPO~ ERS RI t. .. w
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811>11Ulln1. Ollr C.M. W1C1rea,tCIMaen CRPT·lJNO.WOOD CL!AHINO KJNGDOM M11onry our a~lalty R4LPH'SPAJNTLNO BALBOAAoort~"'"·
,, 1 SPE.all_ botn•, a 1r a up, 181• *•••cltant11111W1. •....._S..CW• lutalled~red.Ur. .._ lq .. _ .. , Re•ld./Comm'I Alao Cluo qllldl, dtpfnda Ext/lot·hu.·Prompt Skylltbt.t&Ptaa~
• t .. ·~.IJ Pl'~ . Tnatkmouotlllit zs~~Omdeuln11 & ~ Janitorial 1trvlcu blt. Wedo ainJob! u · . fr1Utt,__ __ r"'~
labyiltllai· NI Umt ~var. MHUf lmmatulatt •••1tn1 Carptolry, tJetlrlul, .Mt-~ _ •.13 · • _ Qua1lly pta/LOWesl ralee Sec..ttr 5r"'-
• ll'tW.you y -home near occ !lhampoo61lMmdt1n. llalatenanr. •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• coorrele Ii heater Qu11JtyHouaocle1nJna Me•!'!f lnOCNulprompt ...... •••••••u••••••••
l • .• fora ' Color brlCbt"*1 wbt Hom•t1H7S&Ofncu CU!AN·UPS/LAWN 1trvlce. Ur. U10988. wllhPmon1IToud1 v '~'U6-'1..i1 Oran1e County'• o&dn t ~ • -dtt;-.. t t>N•. 10 mlft b'-b llalnttiwK•Landa~ Call Jay or Dick ...................... .tee '.J""aU -~ J It eel 81.1r1lar
IN ... ...... ...... •1•/ ...... . IC ; --.......... . •••• MOVM• CUSTOMlNT/~XT OCI y OW.ll J..,,; D~ .. • lenlc Hall, llv/clln. rm1 $15, C .... edws.l1Mrll rmi ut. ff2.~ .,.. P rof. Cluoln&. all . Q EXP.E.RTSERVICE Alarm Co. Sta Coe1t
Ith• _, ••••••••• ~ ............. l\'I room '7.~; courb •••••••• ._._._ ............. CleanUpi ·Tree. trim • phlHI' waU1 wndw• Top I ~!:d:. Special LOWRAT£S s.turit)', -Hewpolt N.Of Ya btHullOunlq no: cbr ti Guar. ellm. C_.._ Hallll111·Kalnten1nu .....,_ood....,. flra, r~pll. Allo Uva'. care n n1 25 )'rt Jru·BROOK 2·1 ...w.:lv!.!4.l.~ll!.:.·Z!t:::rz:~-
''4• -Comcplele Underwaler petodor.cr,itreplir. C I .._C A ' ••••••••••••••tt••••••• in/oul m11dl ~ orr exp Comp«.IUve rate.. ---·a s-....... 1 15 yrs 7.· Do work H S. a.-• T a .. a l a J a a n •1e HARDWOOD FLOORS 7<. Noovert1~no.1m_ ,_.......... ,, .. .. D .. ..,...OI" Setvict 11 .. ~··rB· .. , ......... "uatom a P "" ..llJ.:!Z2l .,,....._., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ,.__, ' J im mYH 'R .53\·0101 -= Ul.-: • .:.di' lJ N\lrff landlraplna " Cleaned ' Waxed I b E ri -f ~ •ABC MOVING Exp • ....................... C111tomCeramicTilt ~ • OOJTNOW! NoSteam/NoSbam1>00 qu•ny,room ... Oft.I, lint~ trim in" n e S~ ave xpe tnce or prof low ra tes Quick The P1perH1n1er.Prof IDCJdtl.ll al ,,_ • A•FerS... Boal /Home repairs : SlllnSP«l•lllt Fut Lie . Larry Wende ll . ,, . · * 8 ~ 11 .,._._ CLEAN Houle.Call ure'iulaervl~ ~000• 1.natall. Oecorato~Clual. New·Re flll 1
cleft Your Dally Piiot carp1nlr1. flbtr1l111. dry f rau•t -lH" (2 U) 92H541, (2U) ·tBonUianl·pU_!.~;.1 P!!·,:,.,!1~ *• _!.!___' STARVIN"CO.'LEGL'-.f.r!tllt. Steve~HZIJ RfOGr ERS'n~!.,OR'83KSl "°' · Olaaa Ii window than· --· __ !!!!,!:!!_·~-!!!!!! ·1 '""JUI ,...,.,.,,,,_ ....................... EXP HOUSECLEANER v "' " .... .. rot ServlctOirmory ntl1 replaced. Robby C.,../1'fb1ht•y XS . Haul,clcanup.ronrr1!te Reliable, rd1. free est S'tUOENTSMOVING HANGING S10/ROLL Kllrbtn·Batb '1oon
1111• 6•RJ•.gPnetn671.ta•~vJe2Z JB·UOZ ...................... Dtc...... Gardeoin&~rvlce removal.DumpTruck Call!A h,. IM-2418 C01Uc llTUA'36 QuaUly. A1ac> atnppln1 FtnHtCralllmto •• Carpet&upbolatery ••••••••••h••••••••••• ComMttll'a.lpl1 'ck .'42· __ .... ,._ -'-ln1ured.Ml84Z7 f"reeni.~~ s Ro WW.,. c I e 1 o e r f r ee GUARANTEED W DUMP JOBS HMM..... WATCHUSGROW! '1olttf'l9~ .:..11· ~·~~-.....,... c....... ••••••••n••0 ••••••••• St!otrh1ultd. boor wax-Flnlahln1, Dry wall, &SmallMovtng Jobs ••••••••••••••••••••••• --•••••••~:'?::':••••••••• T,... ~ ..................... GIRWICKI SOM JQ1m.g Pluterln1, PaloUna. ~litE~l391 IURONAMCPL ,..._CJ Neatpatches&texturtt ...................... .
Ac:.ct1. bkltp1, fin. stale-B,ullden SIJlce 1947 C ..... /Cwrttit r rant Qaber,@IMH8. HAULING& DUMP Will bout~il & takecare ........................ frn_ttk IU+Ut THI TUIPIOPU
ttitnll, auditing for Add1tio111, remodellna, ....................... .,,..,..s.r.icff . JOBS. askforRaody, ot your dog, cat &/or F!~e pa1nuna by Richard Plaster Patching & Lctwptprice m.0537
J • tinaD bu.sinHses Boyd plans. Free eat. Reu . THOMPSON'S ••••••••••••••0 ••••••• ~641-8427 cl11Jdren while you are Sinor Lie. 1n1 13 yra of ruturro• Int tut 30 A.II ~~~ler, CPA. ~ Lit, IS109i% 549-2110 CONCRBTECONSTR. E ~·~r'A'?!f b HAULlNG-Sludeot has away Ref Nov. _LS 29 bappy NB rustomera .l'.!I· Neal. Paul S4$ 2iT7 ct.::i~t~~ce and
MecHAU COMSn. ur. 13933113 ffZ.1482 par ··""u .. I ~ pr ~e truck. Lowest rate. Phone 49Ml7i. \Yrlte Ad Than!!~-6.31 4419 -stume grinding. JO yr1. A.I C~/ NOJOBTOOsu u • c II No. 173 Dally Pilot, 330 Holldav Special, exl/inl .......... ., r omc; Custom homes, fram· -~ "--el rompt. a 7~1976 . w 8 St PO Bov •"-"11 1 / P 1 R bl ....................... eiip le. Ins. lf9.P308 ........ i d ~ h Brk & Bl.k Lk 3514'9 •• r-.. Thank you_._.Qgurt ny ·• ,. ..,.,.,, pa nun g ro in . •••••••••••••••n•••••• dna • re,.mli~ .. i: .~enc1 Dale boine963.r7tl'I · ••••••••••••••••• .. ••.. --·-CM 926 rree eat Steve~7-42111 Drains cleared from SIO •Expert Tree Pruning• RESJO COMM'L oon, a..y .,,ta• pat o • . DRYWALL/ACOUSTIC CLUM UP YOUI ACT --·---Plumb1n1 repairs Free Commerml Landsrape
Frte esum'ales on large roven.8f8.3&2 A~.83H482 8tte23U 14 )'l'I exp. Fully lic'd & HAULING· 6311993 t..dtc.,.., LARRY'SPAJNTINC est M&M642-9033 Services 957;_8388
nrsmal1Job$.83}73116 ...... Cw.... Re11d. Concrete ; Also 1n1urecU3Z.5S49 TREES/SHRUB TRlM c·············T····o····M·· Fall Special' Int/ext, ·--•5--t--• .,.. TypMc)-;......a __ -... -----r-1port coulU. Ur. 374067. , U S paper g , dry w o 11 ,._ .,.. .. ._, rt __.-_. A~Clllt Custom rarpenl ry, Bob&Sl·1*/147.7018 Dave a Dry'!all, add}· Garage & yard clean LANDSCAPING Create 645.9383 ...................... , ... ~ .................. .
decks. patlol. J.S. Con.at. . lion.a romm I, acoustic upt. Free est. MHl27_1_ a umque environment --HOT1'18.S· I M ·YOUR· TYPE Btt~~;;;;~·;;.;;;;;·i~: C-0. Nobody does It btt· ~ohnM~"k~ns• u lllngs, lex l ures. HAULING /CLEAN-UPS 494-8472 Custo.P..._ rORTABLE.5 I Fas~~ accw:~te
repair•. sulcoaling. ter! Lie, bonded. Free emen r c • re· · 87 Dlrt ·Shrubs Trees Yd bt Lad c 25 yrs up. Lie 4<&.Ml &~·GROUNDSPAS /Rcvis1on/ediung/
l:iS&S Asphalt 631-4199 est. Call JoeS»SSll l1nd1deape, tree rem~v1 &.ctrktl re ved. 962 GS46 Ma:,~~ e :: nc-'! .s :~j Bonded lns. Refs Color 1iwlmmlng pool formatting a apec1allty
-·· c...a.1-....& ~ woo derks. Llr a --~x·l\#rt "''"'""ll DI~ .. --remod .. liog I Call me for au your nuur -..__, 170..2953 ....................... Hw.ca.....-&a.. ors ca p e . I awns , ~"' ..-:-~-•-~ ·
Ai.L.sTATEPAVING •••••••••••••••••••••" ELECTRICIAN -priced •••••••;:::::?••••••••• sprinklert, design Lie lnsuredandlk'd typ1ngneeds Patty -wtako1lin&. Striping. Cabinetry Spedalty, C9"91c Tl9 . rtahl. free eatimate on Want a REALLY CLEAN 4~ 979-5146 INT/EXT PAJNTlNG PRIMR~E POOLS l.e903
Repe1rs Comm /Res. kltrhen1, Bathrooms & ••••••••••••••··~··•.••• l1r1eoramaUjobe. HOUSE~ CaU Olflgham -- -Lit''d Refs Free est ~'l5"45Qr..4IN·577s Watcll Repair
.•397362 66-8181 Custom to your style. No M~C~yslalCtram1ci:tJe Uc. !""21 67~9 GI I F t 645·5123 MalOtlrf • • 646-• * EXPERT POOL CARE ...................... . 1.._fl.---·-~ Jobloosmall! Disunctlvelnstallation G IM · t l & r . r4;'es . -....................... NELSONSPAJNTING AbilltyPool&Repalr Sale &Repairof ant1que
AAMfo.off•t • l· • -_yc.!408741. 846-8612 den~n .fllll~r3:'ttl ROBI NSCLEANING ~RICKWORK Small l nt ·Ext, Ru Com. Service Tim968-2181 and modemrlocks &
ll11'••••u •u•u••00•0 c t Haosen'aCtramicTile u:nw.73.s · ua Y Service -a thorou!hly Jobs, Newport, Costa acoustic ceilings, ref , -----watrhes Gus' Watch u'd .,.,.. If' Floors ·Sbowtn·Tubs wo ,' .s.l!!nhQ!lSe. S4 0857 Mesa, Irvine, Refs llr freeest &'r1·263'1 r,.rtyM•li l•llt ShopNoCst HwvatBoat llCif' LfTI I OOY WOIW ................... ~... c u UC 0 ELECTRICIAN H I'd I 615 3115 =-=--....................... • _, " Cuatom wood patios _a afl.4pm.972@ Qual wort Real ratet 01 al part~me s ---PAl~TER NEEDS a C..:anaont.ai.Wla 4'4·8282
Sl'-tll2 dee~. wood w1Ddows'. Clllld c.. H}isso.@.5oriTom ~~~~I &eli~~ ~~:~ Bryant's Landscaping WORK 30 yrs up . int . M~~~18~Ef..,... "J Tra e ins w. ekome. 9•••••••111 L1r d Reas. Joho or ....................... El t I S ll Y.u • -Bnck, stone, block. con ut ace ceil Davis "'""'~ "' Whtdow C...-. ' .,.,ttMg Riclt f79·3218 ••CHlLDCARE•• e:ec r c~urk , re••/: Nee~ a ma Id 0 r cret.e Frplcs, BBQs , Pa1~tin 847·5186 Orange f;o area 15 yrs · ...................... .
l u••••••••••••••••••••• Fioe. finish work Doors My C.M. home, M·F. ble.a&'e0o~srf:iob! hi'i'e~eTrMer:i,~r~ or ~at10~,. 1r.~e~~~4 :::"fnce Callfortnfo I On&mal WllldowWasher 11Jf~ysiUing. M.Y home. huo1. decks, remodel aces lYrf!over.546310 •631-2000 _ ; ~Va &YJ-.a ,' gen 1 _uar._J_c 1~· --HOTICf ra es Avg3brhome,S3S m lfotLundlea Uc.Ref. Raody,67l-5716 When you call Classified Uttle is tlJI!! C..:lusified ~ . --=-00 Brtt'k ·Bloek-Cemenl how Daily Pilot Cla~ -'63-tlfl 6311698
nr _ __!•~•• Juststart1niup inabus1. to plareanad you'reas· ads are really small stucco, rooring , HOLIDAYSPECIALS frpl 's Xlnt work I •lied ads di.splay Uie1r 1Roofi1MJ · LettheSunshlne ln"
~ 1 llllllle ads in Classified, good ~ay to t;ell people welrome and help in calll with bi& readership etr. S'8.oM9 en~ art 6 _6!6 ~ I and impact! Our ads. Oranae Coast Roof mg C~aaj,!!.LJJ.d .}48-~ 1</f )'O\lrenotreadi.oithe oeaa o( your own? A 111re4 or a0 fr11ndly "people-to peeple"sales l masonry, carpentry, By~heHOUSEMOUSE Depend1ble Pal messageswilhleg1b11lty ••••••••••••••••••••..-1 CallSunshtneW1ndow
.)'ou're rrilss111g a lot of about 1t is ~tll a low· wordlng youradforbesl andbigresults!Toplace Make your shopping Good H~ I Concrete Flagstone weareproudtosay,re-1 Reroohng -Repairs Prof WmdowCleanlllg
,,Jiewsy information ..as cost Classified ad. response. Ca ll Now' your classified ad, call ea5ierby111ingthe Daily GuaranteedEverytime CeramicTlle -Masonry ally get re.ults Phone -~23B9.._548-l733 Frttest,qual serv
it•,;,.\ we~-~l~I a~s~s~ome~~l'l?~al~b~u~ys~.~P~h~o~n~e~6'2-~S678.~~~~~642~·~S67~8~~~~~~l~od~a~y~642~$18~~·~~~~~Pi~·1o~t~C~l~11~sifi~ed~A~ds~.~~~C~ba~r~ll;e~Tl~M8l~~d;Y.Yl~e~v~~F~re~e~e~s~h~filll~tel~~646~90~1~2~M2~·~567~8.~~~~~~~l~w~a~n~l ~A;d~R~es~ul~ts~642;·;56~78;e-'~ua~r~. T~Y~·~Rll~e~~81~S--~004~--~' 'IJ-: ~ I ~~!'!':.~~.~ .... ~!=--~.~ .... ~!'!':.~~.~ ... : ~!~.~ .... ~~.~: ............ !~.~~ ~~!'!!!~.~."!'! .. !?.~~ ~~~.~~~ ..... !~.~~ ~~:.~~~ ..... !~~~ ~~:.~~ ..... !~~~ ~:.~! ... !~.~~ ~'CodaM"° 3124 Co1taMtta 3124 ttwtlM)l•IHdt 3140 MtwportlHdt 3869 Laguna B'f,ch~oto~lon, Male/female to s hare~ sq. rt Mesa Verde BA YFROMT 525 ' ort1 ce , carpet.1-------•
c r••••••••••••••••••••t• i ••••• •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••.••••• .. ••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• 98SH NoL. 1r1 r8 oahst beau lg apt Npt Bch. area P . ffi 7 9440 paneled walls. prkng RETA.IL SP.ACE ' 'ssao M 2 8 1 B A T h 2 8t 1,,., 8 W---&-.-w Y • aguna eac · CM Area S2U 846 0286 ~41.Z! nme o e. · 2052 Newport Blvd C M 1280 sq . fl Harbor Blvd Cara:~. w~herf~ry::· I ::ll~.o;:~age. Adults :S LTHl WAHldultfR.lun.ITUlts t al Larae 2 _......Br P·•"·-Pool Daill.I· bwl eekLoly, Kit_chlen ~9-4323 _:_ •ri ~-..... L IMO sq ft prol offke suite S27 5 mo 644 2228. +storage. S500mo II b "i'lt Sm II hild 1 uxury a · · ....... · avai 1 e. 91 win er Resp busi F 25 3S 10 shr ,. llM -oc. w/orean view receplion 556-illl Realooorrucs 81~00 tt.l~K w ·IDS Onla 1 c yra ~ over~o pe 5 fordable livin&. 1,2 & 3 Ne wly d ecor a led. ra .41M· 2br 2ba ~pt 111 C M nr l Approx 100 ft office rm 12 large offires sep
r• ~d·~:irr:a Y year ~ o. Br. ~ell derout ed. Adyly.H}§152. Balboa Inn S90 & up OCC. 5282 ,mo + ,, space Pres11g1ous equip and storage rm ~~~P~~~~ j Prime-TU$lin & San
l·l tSl. MGMT ppl 6'2·1603 . Olympic Slz.t pool, llgh~· EASTBLUFF lbr., pool, weekly . K1lchennette, ut1ls Refs Call wkdys I Newport Beach location Newpon Center/Design COMM ERCECENTER l Clemente retail or office 11,P~Br-lBa S•SO . 9e81iBJIU ed ten~scowt~acuu1, quietarea,sin&leadull, oceanfroot.615--8740 . MS·48:MX337_ Come~1tnow! Plaza New carpet -EXECtrrlVESUJTE' Sj!aces.?30-IC7q._S3l·8&99
Matramonlo con2runos. A.PA.ITMIHTS t.-:S~ ::::ui';u1 b~~~~~~ nope\eWJmo.&4H.1§1 Nie~ furnished room IO 2 Br. 2 Ba. A1>4-. IO Wood I Hew~Arclwt/ paint:, $l.6S per sq rt Handsome WIO~OW or I ETA.ILSl'ACE
2043 Wallace. Costa Beauliful landscaped HB. Generous renl al-OCu..ROHT private home. Costa bridge Irvine Mao )' I Tokcil ... l lcMg. t7 l4J 59•9044 hces, furn~non furn . 900sq fl. ~mo Great ~\es 1 54 8 15 4 6 & garden apts. Patios or towance. Avail. Dec. lit. Spacious Mesa. Call after 6pm amen 1 t ies . M F _911_6.42-4644 for l!llt Mart.en Mlle avail Prof sec sen exposure Harbor Blvd
, 1.§1.1·2150 __ decks Pool & Spa, rov-19 4 Br. 2 Ba. Upper, frpk. 548-~ ~ eler. Mi9-lli68 _ Shr H B Office space 1n Newport Beach 1001000 cop) mach. ans serv. Realonoaucs 67s--6700 ... m-UNNING large 1 & 2 eredpark.in1.Heatp11d. RltaSWA.U w11her tdr)'er.,1ara1e. Rooms, Pvt Entrance Prof MtFRmmtewant RE off ice 1n busy sq ft mllll noor Ideal PLUSPLUS t -----f. Br. 2 Ba. Garden Apt Adults.nopets. 2 ~A3 Br Townhouse Submit on children Work1n1 Man.$25 0 ed, new duplex . CdM 31 center. Ideal for taxes, Manne Available Jan 1 Freeparklngxlntacces LL idle Items with a
·Pool.HOW 181.h.Sl. BACH S385 ~eta . Sl500/Mo. TSL Luuna.494-4459 ___ Br 2Ba 2sty $400 mo , in\uranre, accountant 2400 WestCstHwy Ca1Mowl7141 a1ly Pilot Cla!!sif1ed ~ice -Ba1:h Apt for 1 l BR 1430 Apts. Patios, single & ~roeertles642·1603. Moffit, Mohlt 4 100 979-IJS.5days ' 846·7777 66-3683 1 752-7102 I d 642·5678. __
i\dull. No ~ UtJlsiocld 2BR l V• BA $505-$515 ~~~~l~ucnat~ ~~~t!~~· Full Sec. lBR. Vertailles •••••••••••••••••••••••Retired Man has 2 ••• ,.,, ••••••••••••••••••••••••• l• ias & water Frplc & 2250 Vaniuard SAG-9626 Chi re Condo Includes Dis· Yearly on~ beach furn. Bclrma z Ba super con • ""~atlo S380 mo Call hw11ber, Fnd&e. Bil '° rooms Kitch & 81 do with seperate en •
"'t>two 9AM 5P M Mesa Verde. 2bdr mj ·~·Motr•la! Bar.SSSO Mo. $280 per mo + $280 trance,frplc.pool S2SO • 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL "~5-6404 11-')ba, pvt patio. Ava1 Adult over-40 rommuni· MO-m1s Evg. I sec dep 2306 W Ocean· 64~7953. I •
E std~ upstairs 2 Br 1 Ba, now. No pets. $495. 1552 ty. lmmarulate 2 bdrm, 1 br apt w/~ve, re{rlg, front NB BLUFFS /responsible. qi l • •
S 2• t'I d 1 _fil_m ,646:3627. 1~ ba . Hunllngton prka.OnPaumula.Call 673-41.54 ty aclive non s mkri • 8 Oas 3 Li e 8 Dollars e
J. r\~g~. 'i lhii/~K. c,~; E'side large 2 Br Iba, Landmark c 0 n d 0 . 675-0812 all. m. I SUL.AU MOTB. bus ·rrof fem lO shr sun I y n I •
,, Walnut~36&6dys, encl patio . New wa.sher tD{/~rkl3Br.2 81.GarageYear-1 wkjyrenlalsnowava1t ny urn 3Br. 2'-»Ba • 1tseasytoplaceyour8·DavWeek.Classd1edbyma.t and ii
1r l!k_nds 548-4471 ___ cpl dQl;t. etc. Ca~rt. g•tiOI, wet r. t ID ly, 2 blork.s to beach S112 & up Color TV twnhse w ume Prplr • •
• ~ Br I Ba. encl gar. kids 0 . no pets 75, . 2 tar gar ~per 11'13-~71. I Phones 10 room 2214 gar, pool, 1ndry clean costs 1usl sa -that s only a dollar a day' To Qualify for this
" ·llean. quiet, adults onl)' l ·~ e p o~'f: + C a'fi 1 Br. Co~o. SSS0 Mo. Newport Blvd CM Ing lady Your br furn • special offer you must be a non-commerc1al user offering •
· li9 W. Wil son ~ o, OC·~ENTALS 11141759.43111 Ask for v er s 111 1 es · Ca I I ~5 ---Pet conssdemt My fre. I merchandise tor sale up to $800 per ad and the price must e ,·.,.•sotmo64Sl8l9 _ 15BrsS200 toS2000 MB' CJJS 5 2 13 /823 -78 54 or y atl •~ah 4•50 q,uent travels orrs •
""T:' 750-3314 fu r. ~ am. a · · Zl3/830=2323Rlch•rd. _ .~ .. ~:'::." ...... : ... privacy Refs exhanged I be 1n yOlH ad Th-e--cost s tays the same whether your ad e ''2' 8T upstairs. stove, Cute sludlo apl, avail Unfum1.11hed l,2,&3br. UJ)(}.\l&n Ele1ant & OCEANF RONT 2 & 4 Br $350 + sec+,, uttl D •
adults, rtf's. couples 11.17. 1295 mo. Util pd A.SPEHPA.CIFIC Ire 2 Br. 2. Ba. 2 pitros. Aoil. Wtnter. Weekly I DuCharme. 64~ 8950. • needs eight days selling time or 1u5t one e
.J>rsr J3S5 mo 646-S7Z'L E Slde~M0-2981 12 llt t 202 ~~pie . Ad ults. s1200 Moothly.m7873 M-F9-_5 -e ~~~iet!~iFov::~.m:o lbr. lsly,gardensetttng. Deluxe poolside xt ra .a_S3S9 Lrg Mt. home, Big Bear. ~~~t5:;~hr~~ ~in e Use one word in each box About 4 wo rds make one
-.Ms 343 Cabr1llo pvt patio, beamed ceil lar1e 2br. 2 ba, bltns. 1 Br Stepstobtach. ~ nr ski area, holidays & 556-0071 kd 5 646·3787 I • classd1ed line of tyoe M1n1mum ad IS 3 lines Please pr'1aot •
5489516 111gs. nr Civic Center & dswhr. l\.'I miles beach mo. yrly. Agt, 615·5966, wkends l71!1_866-8662_.._ --~.!!ll'.!"" JI'' • tHE VICTORIAN 2 Br OCC .. Prk g $400 . Adlts, no pets. $(50 mo. a1kforl;dee673=7300 HAWAJl-;-7--G~a j • plainly
J_511·0S66 536·8362 I Br. Condo, vu of fouota-2BR, 2BA, Oceabfront for •twt · 4350 • ;:.:d~~[, n~~~ :;~~~· Lrg 2 Br l Ba, $(50 $175 2BR.TOWNHOME 1n t garden Million apt at the llika1 1olu••••••0 .. ••••• .. 0 :• • r-------a--------a--n--a--a----,
n drapes. bit tnS, patio. dep . laundry fa c1I Pool,park.near beacb Dollar Clubhouse Honolulu DonPetlljohn Ell~e c::. SUlglOn~n ';,;~ • I • ~Call blwn 1 563&-4 120 Adults. cat OK 200'J Ma· ~sm · Sauna, pool, spa, aym. ~lli_2168-lS77 e~3 ~ge Y
• 167 ' G"Y.cLona .J'.670 pie St Mg •K 548-5861 Lee I br colklo, bale . billiards, security ;---_,_ton_:___ 4l 001 mo____ • I • alt2 _ pool. sauna. ow No guard. $600/mo. 897-5114 "..t... ~ Office Rtlltd 4400j I • ~ewer 2BR 28A, S4SO. 2 B h LI . ts -..'>< ..... ., ........ Tom 0 •••••••0 •••00•••u ....................... • 760·14Hlor548-8615 r lwn ouse vmg pe · ~~ f7VO••,,.,. · Dana Pt 2BR 2BA Rel w liff NB w ti I evesorweekends_ Rm . Dining area ,• S395. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pool, Versailles Comer Pen· WhlM .Utili~cl si651s11111 e~tf .. 1000:~ • •
11 •
r.•:. •aas1--1 ••• ~ u ,,.. TOWHHOMES
't •NEW CONDO F ..... ·RENT 2 Br + Den, ~
i rea S695tmo Ohl ga .
Crplc, pool, spa
,, ,li66 w 18th 64>2'139
kitchen, frpk, trash & patio Jdry Kids OK No thouse·2 br. 2 ba. Avail & last -~ · I maRcaa insl · · I •
water paid.I a~tached pets.W ·9'66,9fi0.7484 now! 50EA.675-3mCH -femal~ to share H Bch lst oo~nlS41 S032 • I
fara/.e. I'::!· JICUUI, 3 BR iu>t 4 bl.ks to beach .. B •• A l S200 N oo bl HEWPOIT • I ·• aun ry ac. on prope~i $4 IO per mo. ca11 ' Yrly. 2BR, lBA ssso.1 P · eg a e. PIMIHSULA.
ty Adults. no pets. Aval 536-3815 or 5J6.-0496 675·97. 97, D--6645 Spacious executive of I • I A lmmed . $550 /mo N l B h GA.YROOMMA.TE ~ &JI· 984 New deluxe 2 and 3 bdrm. e w P o r e a c fices across Crom City • \ • -.-· fireplace. Enc gar. dis-Townhouse. 28R, lt,;B.A. CONTACT: Largest Gay Hall All services ava1la
asts1de 3 ~r. 2 Ba 2 sty, h w 15 her 555-o u P 2 story. 3 paUOI. Bit in. Male/Female Service in bit, ·optional' From 225 • I •
cl pa ho, S600 mo. ill .w ID far. Car. Hoag So . Ca I. G . R C sq.ft up al reasonable j I
s 8.00
10.60
13 .. 20
15.80
A!_ ii 11-1.5 64t().0997 -2 B 2 B •·Pleit $46.5 ·Hospital Aiu Walk to 213 rentals. No lease re· • I
: IL ---1 BR. UPSTAIRS oe~ ca~. w-d i\t.up' Bt1ch. S5SO mo. 1st last. Female pref. 3 tidrm hse. Jl!llred, call673=3002
•'°'j .Br. E side. small but With gar a~-· Super private patio, enclsd S300 dep. ~29'9 after fenced yd. S22S mo or EXECUTIVE • I
Add $2.60 for each additional line for 8 times .
;i..coty w /lots of neat cond .. lots of ht Slovt gar. 645-MM 8PM & Wknd s. hlewk + Sl.00 dep. Hntg • I
wood. $345 AdulL~ only. & refrige. A ults, no BRAND NEW 2 8 2 B Larae 2 Br. 2 Ba. frplc, Bch. 957.0120. eves SUlnS I Publish my ad for 8 days starting MH66Q ~ts. Sm . 1... stor_ ~ rrh, dishwu.ber, pool. W-'l902 JlmorBret lN • -----------t-:c-----if'tt1ttrr-t-M~*1'19--t-----.rrlrTt~.--encQU 1arage, ve . OS Wa1 . br m BALBOA ----1 --"'--
Li e new 1 Br Apts
w, gar or ca rporl
Upstairs w1balconies,
pool, spa, bbq, laundry
$475 & up Mature
Adult.5 NO PETS. Mesa
Pines, 2650 Harla.
~447. --~T28r w garage
dulls. no pets • 645MTJ
,~
f
h·
Your unused
items could
be someone's
Christmas
Sell them
with an ad
under the
Dally Pilot
Gift Guide
Call 642·5671
·~··* Clrittllel
I ........
. S52S ·M 536-7Vl9 ft0..1 14. e. PUIA I lass1 ficatton -----------------2LBr di Ba. Poolsidl e AhP.lld o. · 2 Br l 'h Ba. Adults, no utils. $7}91'2 alt. S. New huury office space aun ry room. c I ....... "' R . • I N ame OK no pets Call for LoCJ-olMdl 314 pee.a .-.. 2B 1 2BA. 1i27S mo. + In Irvine s busiest -----------------------appt beforeits gone •••••••••••••••••••••• 2682. hall util. Woodbridge. center! Easy. Frwy ac· e
1
1 Address TSL M&.nl 642:1603 Ocean View. Deluxe l & 2 S..C......_ 3176 After5PM.~0324 cess. Avail now ' Call
-Br. Apt.I. Newlyderoral-•••••••••••••••••••••••Tri· level. S_pectacular for details. • I
WlSTLA.UVIUAGI ed, refri&e disbwuher, 2bdrm l YJba ocean Panoramic View. Quali· 551·1 ll 640-4210 e I City Zip ___ Phone _____ _
Im med occupancy. diaposal. b~ated pool, view, (rplc, lau'.nclry. no ly F Pre. Neal & Clean. -DILUXl......,.CIS
Adult only complex elevator. aubter. prtng. pd!, $475.493-2710 NB.(13-421» * vrn * • I Check or M 0 enclos,..d D Pool , spa. laWld.ry room, pso& up. CfU4H-8083. 2bdrm, Iba, ocean view. lmmed. S300 mo. incl. 1.2.& 3 room No lease re · c pat101or d~. No pets. LoCJ-o..,.. 315 laundry,!~· No pets. ulil.a. Beaut. house. spa, ~~~id. A:ba ~wrter • ,' Charge my ad to : Garages av11l. ....................... Ii®. 411;s..mo. gar. At\. 6. 731·8630 ---· 833--•
Bach.$360 West 9, 2 BR. upper end • Duplex Unlt 2 Br. 2 Ba. Wanled. F Rmml to Shr 5250 Up Huot Bch I ~ l Br.$4JS.M25 unit.Superbloc,ongoll frplc, walk to beach. LtgHomelnCdM.Non· Carpet, drapes, air • I 0 m.t # ______________ EExp ___ _ 2Br.MSS-S95 coune. Avail 12/1. '650 1$00 /Mo .. 830-7145 or Smkr. Ref req. Call l?30IBeach.'42·2834
"!L M~mt. ~1603 per mo. 41!HMUvs 2131211·808'7. 760--0742 I 7TH STIHT • II 0 \/'rt ala~ ra~jf· HtwportlMda lHf SolllllL...-JIH Eu lslde CM, M tchrt COSTA.MESA. • # ______ _._ ____ Exp. __ _
hii':t°oK: S36S 979-074S " ••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ownr aeek1 F tchr / 2 or 3 room office su1tt3 L ~0.3666 · or pa•r ....._.,. Or eanfronl Sml IBr. nurse haemate, $150. A/C.X'e~tyof prltg. Util • ------------------------------
-""" nl.WfUlll alove..f! refrta. W/ 548-5035 Incl. vail.now.Call • r---------WE'LL PAY THE P OSTAG. E --------------SHARP 2 BR, gar, e~cl COUM1'1YCWI i•ra&e. $di/mo. lit/Isl, Share 4 Br. home, btwo ~ealonomirs 815-67~ t
patio, cpls. ~s. Child UYM aecvrilx. •2851 Bay & Ocean N B Shart 2 oft' suite In pre • 1 1 OK Mis. Avail now. Call h lo • ., "--'~ • • · ti l · ...,. I NO POST AGE t S40-l1$1 uk for Unda. Bae e n , i-.,.,..._m .... llfO Av11l. immed. 675-2637. • g ous lirport area ..... • 1 1 Ar 8 • apta&~. .. ..................... C1ll1ftf. 1q, ft. For details raU t NECCSSAR't' 1 J.!..U~!.>.!!2:!:.!:S:.i.>. ~--1 [~m INO:llooo HH900 Cozy new condo. Adulu . 1 Male »-~ lhr 5br 2ba ,.-15=.:..1"226=:.:c·-----• ' If MAILED t 2o~'c gar/pa~~~las~ea; Duplex, upat.all"I, 2 Br, 1 Br .• den, frpk. Rer. hsenrSC0Plu1/Frwy. NEWPORT BEACH 504 .:i. IN THE I
d · · · b~ d 11 Ba frpk, Ja,.ge. Near facilities. $4115 /mo. Spa. S225H bare ul111. No. Newport Blvd. 180to • ~ ,-------------------. l:JNITEO STATES Q st/im Ssz.aia 00 0 · Udo •holJPlll area. '800 W·HIO M t~ sq ft. avail. at 90' a • 'ii ~
· year leue. Adultl, no Ar ...... fwzhlt_it F emale r oomm ale aq. ft. Sim a Mgmt Co ~ BUSINESS REPLY LAB EL °" D .. P.W JIZ6 pet.a. Mlllt have rd'•. TerU.t Mlrt ~ )900 needed. toahare 2 bdrm _..64"""1""·1=324=."------• 1.11 > ....................... Avail 11/15. Drive by ........ ::. ............ bse ln COM. S275 + ulil. DAN A POINT 250' n FaRST ClA~SPER¥iTNO u COSUMB• c •u FORN•• ::
2.!r. 2 Ba. Pool, Jaruul. 814~ Clubhouse Ave. S E & W I .._. D §75=M19,Ml:tOOtSara Sl7S/mo. 500' 93.50/mo • ~ iC
..,75/moSn 49t·H03, " " , 34210 Vlolel Lanlern >< POSTAGE WU SE PAI() a~ AOORF S.<.H o --~~~f_.--INO FEE ! ,\pt. " Condo VILLAGE Tbet• utue adl realty , .... '7_..,.~ ..... llJ......._O____ • ~ Orange Co11t Dilly Piiot
1 Br· I Ba. re 11&e, rentals. Villa a.tala. fll .. 162 bdrm lllluty I work 1 Jo In · t b 1 MWPTDIC STI • ~ I ~ ~~:·":~~c"8:~i:to t7H11Jl mer. adult •P'I 1a w ptw. 11 u.o.anda o1 atber peo. Luxurious m ar otfl« Cl .1·11 Pl.IOI ;;imo mits1-u0o . · Ocnafroot for Wlnter Bd.rm from MO, 2 bdrm 1 _pit bl Ul\a .,. wbo are naH. for sub-leue in •
2 bd •2 .... l Reatala. rlll'll.bMd 6 from '510, TowUoule l rtluhr uu ra o f o..eolNJ1U.nru.11lve ol· • 0
rm, "": ar&e · from • + DOOla, l9a· 1 Claallfied. Call our ad nee eomplaa. Airport I 1round noor. Enflith 2 BR t Ba eoado a all, waterf.U., DODdal ta.rat...._. clo1e . lnc ludu : • t
Tudor Biel&. W11lltr· paialed CJl.t, iPa't , Gu for coatinc 6 beat· • • R, c e pt / p h on t I ~~·OPEN SAT· .... Ojbf.afi. la1 pald. From Saa = •UtlUtltt •Jaaltorlal • 1
1 et tA -Ambtr la1t•l•ff• Ton~.... DMlo 'rt, If!!'~ t · • t • 100 fr.. eoptn /mo. • l .f_m __ . .,1 ...,..,1 ., ~ ---~A mplt ,arkl11
I Ir. l II. Ible, • 1ar Ito J.th Ito .Wlll•MeP.... a lmBADS •IH$a •kt'7 ..-v. •
radtd, ool , •••· iA!WH· NHiao. ;,..;;gr vm111. . HallC•=-•
Box 1580
330 W. Bay St. ,
Co1ta Meta, CA nt21
-· , \ .
Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT/Monday I Novtmbtr 1 e. 1991 a
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l•aV .... ArM Orowlu~leacb JI ~·-· lap•rlton prtlerrtd. HICIOIYMIMI (COR.POB.ATEl RB,llta.C.,aRY P/T,ZOnper.-.tcw
CPA r&m biil Hu Im· :?l'1 Orlodtr Bt.ttnraat, luptnlM 1r coordinate loterwltw• belat Tt07 Clilro raclot. Plt111 C 1...W m.stata~foun Loul 1' Beach l.OOW.CoaltHwy,N.8. UM1Dbl1Gfbollday11ft 1tbtdw.dforlutw• OUiu btlp, an1wer...£illltiili.J~B:M._
..... 4471 lndhldual d .. lrtn1 Sawla1• • u H ........ '"""""'-----packs. )'Ju 1111. Wlll In Nov. for job optnln1 • Ill~-~ b 1Un1 ltc-•T ...... -l................ c b a I I • n t l D • r,mm•mrl· .. ll~ ... t!fi.11'."',' 'O!p· c 0 II IS .. ' Wo ID a D . ltala. W•teun Plau Ote. 1. 1·2 yr• U • • lll.f*Ja _., __ .. ' •i~ l qf\ tommerlul r..,_.lllllU. P~vkf· -. " • d •-1 d perlence. Two at Sa I•• ell P • r
1M1111Aaa • ........ ln& ~ lenlctt rroalmalt bo11rt ; w'::ku;-1·11 ,:n 0• toroeyl Salary com l•-11!11-~--~-llf ucrelarl1I u p,r.
IO' •"ft I •-di U t I l:•l:IO Monda" tllru · petltlve. O.C. Atrri;rt OMCI ..a. s.i.3 fdllll ~au ........... il .!t'1 •Pl~~..1 :'t-t ~P r,:rrc a'mn '.'. r""' .. ay; ~-·t .. -"·~" ..... 1 ...:o~-~-~-.. _... ·--· vu _. 114 ~ Am ........ • nu u....... • =-area. Great bene ll• Coate Meta Marln1 dHta ......... -work env roam•Jll year aavlnp ft an or Couoter he.JJ>. Mature • ..Llr.a&.1CU11ou..;:g;.o~---t Send rHwne«I: Penon· builder need• Offit•r .. -•.,..1111!!'!!1!!!'~1!!•
I . '1 D. Bkl&. for ltut.
-lq. ft. oMe., 10,000 eq. n. wanhoute at a.
sq , ft . Coate
lieu/Newport' aru.
Avail. Z·I 12. Call
............. 4100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Give yourself a Public ·~• exp. blnkla1 ..-~ r• ~non. Ptr&:oa·f'ri. Balnty. •man wanted. nel M r PO Bo2 7820, Mar. J.ottrttUll! work '' I.I.~ Christmas bonus Send r .. wne· Clatsllltd qutr.d. Paicl caNet •P. •.r7'• Dell. t Hwy·· All JOBS FREE PCH, NB. JlllUD Ray'1, ...u:.1c.:..csica:.----r tllal •ill allow lOll to .. 11• • .... rn . II d d ad ••1. Dall>' Pllot, uo ,.,..l PltwcaU: Cdll n}Q. ---X~Ea..--LIQ u 0 R c Lg R K ' arow ..... Jl'OW. Piette HE•'? :-. ,..,. -0 i -se unnee 8 W Bay Street CM 1111.l>enn,yPullfa DECORATING Hardwire Salt1, FIT p/Ume,uk lor&evt, caU.Tom,145-ZIUEOt: INVr."'PSTMETN J.T will Items In the (714~ CONSULTANT ... r II P.Osltlon In .Retail ---.&.:=:.=....___ teach you creattwe Dailv P'1lot ACCOUMl'S MIWPOITIMIOA or quid wallpaper. nLLIR Hardware Store. See:1-... -----·1 Part.Time rlnalll'ln1. lOll I!•· 11 SAYMSILOAM Pan/fuU time, mature, R1pldly 1rowlng S & l. Mlh Johnson. H,W. Jv£.JN MHSIMa9 I t da Gift Guidi Detail ~t?s.csAll.!..... to 1100 .,..... • ..__Ml willtraln . .-n seek• friendly Teller W r I 1 ht Co . 1 211 MO'TH9'S needed tor commercial ~::,;~!~u?:!:u-aa~
!Ill r-~ '•••••••••I Decorator Conaultanll with bank or S & L .._ _ brokera1e company Eitper. co11nJtlor1 re• Cal642-5671 accounts piyablei• 11/F, p/t fr rJt. Wll ,back11round r or Hotel "_.._ Flt1hl'1.MU8th1vc:own celve100fil,comm.Tblt
.... ArNI mtd •Ill for• eotltlton .!I! buly OranAie BOOKKEEPER \[aln.HHm.lr!!!e. beautiful new branrh DISMIY• ,.,_H,,_.. ldeal altuatlon In car & lnaurance. <.:oil II an un1Mual ~for Immediate occupancy Couny .v actncy. C· FULL"'°&0 G•' D'"NTAL, 0 /tlme Or'"at advon"'em"nt -..-..,,_ Ela1'ne·•"-~1 d Su,..r clean. 1200 1,, rt. C h r I 1 t "' • 1 counh payable u F C '-flftnl "" o""rt.hod U " 1• "' I I ,_ ' II., Now 1cceptlna appllca· Newport Beach area '-_._ -ri&bt ,Person. C,..ll ,.. .. Ad-YI pt rience required. 10.. or on1truct on Co on c ut .. t. U · potent a "' exce ent lloufor available for INilvlduaJ PAIT-TIMI tlal Interview. a 1n.:'11n,.omce. LC com tor kty by t.oudl typln& 1 COl\ltrucliaoap. nee eerpre{'d.Call!!4Hf05 benetltll. Ac C 0 UM TIM 6 to Uve with fimity, care C ua.ua Vlnc154t-80 :~o ~ab':"1es:i:,::1-------~ mutt. Excellent frtnce !714>41HS25 DIMTALASSISTAMT Cati: Corry CLm for lntant. and uaume H.AUWAHS
MOOmo. CwP... StS bentrlta. Call Mrs. Bootkeeper Great opportunity In 972.9955 (credltdept > h o u • e h o I d Full or_p/llmt Apply
1• • ...................... BrfCke75'2:ffU P /tlme full cbaree 3 modern, team-oriented retpooaibillliee. Pleue Crown "Hardware, Jt0'7
Ff'09 Mo. • Ylc. ACCT~PI day a per week. Call private practice In Hunt· Credit or accouotin1 call (213)Ml.f781. . H CdM A:~~1,_.,"f!"t(. to Ca.taMes~bY 4 p.m. 'Ex.Pfr wlthm':J'pleaet.s ~o.rlnne wkdys : 8 tDctoo Beach for ROA up. req. must beabletol'::::::~::::~1~-::"":'";";:~~';-=~-;;-;-;~j .... (W .. It ) Ph olboots, IUlv r .... _. aeekln& raersonal Job tyl)e 3S WPM" able tolMaintenance Supervi.aor PAIT TIME 11200nHmo.f42 .... 10 or. n e• . one r-.# ~--ti f •-. te IJ .... f __., --• f lllt --K,w;.--'"" (213) 86' 549 B & some tu r«um prep. CAIPIMTBS II a act on "' excep· commwuca we wi.o or • ~ur~~ IC y,
Costa Meu. Comb. 1300 · fllOll desirable. -Yor posit.Jon M111l be exp. In framlne. Uonal flnaDclaJ reward. · MOTE HEAD the pu bllCL. Monitor So. Calif. Presbyterian
s /f ofc It 2000 1 /f L..tt • ,._.. UOO in small bwinesa dept. finish & concrete. Many frinle beoefi~ln· Beauurul bt!ach lo<·11tL'd cu~ accaunt.1. type let· Homes in Irvine. Need (YEJINGS
wareho111e. Nr 405 & ••••••••••••••••••••••• of National CPA firm tn 631·2004 cl11dln1 medical In· bank seeks experlencl!d ten, file, check credit knowled&e ol all phues We are presently seek ~n~~:.L ~ r1n~~~~ ~::e~~:;'~/';!.1;:!. . C~ ~•urr=nce ~& 4VJ day week ~n~1;~~·~ gto 11J~1: f 1:b !~: 1=1 lheeu & ~:·~~e1~=·. i:ie~!r:~ ~~~i\'t:'!~e!:fJ
J D. Prop Wit. m -1111 FOM ADS Call 640-922 for appt. Manne Hardware Store. o;nt11H1 ~ Exl'ellent benefits and preventive maintenance be Interested Ill worlung 64$-l711~ ioua & en· start1n11 saluy to Sl200 ApplJ 1n person lo for new facility. Xlnt In Sales & Promotion ...e.a/ttrrftl/ IK fl(( AUMIM.ASSIST/ CAStfa thialutlc wllh Ex· Coll: Corry persoonel working conditions & wit.b Dally Pll~Carrien
.... Ml. SECllTAIY F II I 0 h paneled dutle1 for pre· 972 9955 benefits. A non-profit 10 to IS /ears old ••••~•••••••••••••••••• ,...._ Excellent opportunity u l me 4 ra per ventatlve Dental Pra<'· • I ISOW.Centtot co r P · Phone Unllmite earnings
....... .,_. fror hi&b powered in week. Must be able to ticelnLa a~lguel An••'-714/851-1655. auilable to right t)..os t'fw 5005 642-5'71 dividual with u~. typing work Sat & Sun. Other ....... w .. en lOA.M •· 4P ... , M " ...... '--Hr 30PM -,... · -r & short.hA..,.1 .. , ls M"•t bn to be arranged. App· ----='-"""=---....,, .. "' "' ,_,__ person. . 5: Lo
Restaurant
IUITY PIUCAM 1830 Mein St. at
MacAttllur, lrviae. Now accepting appUca\JGIO$,
a II POtl lion.s COOKS
KITCHEN HELP
BARTENDERS
COCKTAIL
WAlTRmES
FOODSERVEJLS
BUS PERSONS
SEAFOOQ BA.Jl
HOST /HOSTESSES
DISHWASHERS
Day & n1Cbt jhlftl avaU.
Apply IJl penon llon· ••••••••••••••••••••••• IWU .... • .... ~ i son K .. rm D-··uc-. MonThruFri. f lb t 1 8.30PM, Monday thru LOSING LEASE, quit· 1,.••••••••I be aureulv. e, self· n per : " ""'-..,., or sa1 o1t r en a . ,. starter & able lo assume ima Hardware, 2668 Exper'd, f/time for busy TELLERS _.E.,..O.,..E=------=M~/F operation in Huntincton Frld'ay. Some Saturday
Ungbuslna:s.sellin&out Lost: f . lrg Friend;. responsibility . HarborBlvd .• CM. office nr s.c. Plaza. Hotel Harbour. Thorough availability For ar I••·-----· tu';;si~~f~ and fix· Siamese. 11·6. CD . Con eenial Newport Clerical HS_.SS3. ~~~r:~~~l~~r bor!>~t~~"! DISMIYLA.MDHOTIL knowled&e of boat re· pointmenkt .f caJ • Relf__,
Fri., 9 AM-SPW.
o· : Brandy. REWARD! Beach comme1cla l lnsuranctClaimsOtrlce Now acceptine applica· pair/ maintenance, 642·4321 , as or en Sandwich shop counter isplay cases, wilting ·1 broke11aeofllce. seeks Clerical Peraon ORYCWHllS County for upcnen(•ed ti-· for fiberglassing(> r igginS Williama. airl and food pre~. Kx· room chairs, Beauty -=~. ""'------" / d · •. FIT 'counter & P/T pre-individuals lookina for ...... tbo '•lll!m•••!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!lll• p 1 II Salon hairdryers and Loet.MGreatDane/Lab w 100 typing"' LIFIGUAIDS necessary. u or,., per'd. art an 11 hydraulic chairs, mlr-mix, blaclt, vie. Chap. Contact Pew: 833-2900. pleasant phone manner. saer. Michel's Cleaners, career potl!nllal Water & safety cert req. eneine repair helpful. time. $4/hr. Moo tatv
rors, shelves and plants. man tp Or~e. 494-7226 ADMIM. ASST Some"" exp helpful. Call Monucb Bay. 496-5124 Colt: Corry as well as medlcal cert. __ _.(=21~3~>27~1~·2B77~--PAIT TIME Fri. 3001 Ste 1i. Redhill
Also, make-up. shampoo found: M Siamese cat, For active sportswear,~!'lr.lil!'0~-··13.1--9S•l•l-llf •-•s.c-·~---"'-....._-•1 9 72·9955 Muat work weekends. Meclt-'c,$9.25/Hr Mailing operations c;M. 646-88&1, Judy
and hair products. neut. & declawed,.10/30, mfr. Must be good wilh'-~ -Must b1ve yrs exper & Noexper ~·d Must be Restaurant
Call631-9754or Fa hloplsland.548-0027 numbers&customerre. Clerical Proc~Selp•. Apply in person to own metric toolll. dependiable and ava1la Food Prep & BUJ1bqy,
af rs LOST. Bla<'k male Scot-lations. Attract.Jve ap-WHIMYOUlHI.. Needed. Op¢rturuly to ~I Perform all types of re· ble on call Npl Heh now birtn&. U JOU In
--------•I tie, Vic. University pearance. fulltime. TIMPOIAIY create a new depart· pairs on Mercedes bwlt Fuhlon Island area fnendJJ;,coosdent.iocd& •
lc6oolakery ~.~Irv . Reward &4Mf88. THl .. ICIUY ::~~u~r sTz:dod!~fy H~~·t~o O~~~~~~or I ISOAWdr~ ~=n~!1m! oo~:r~ut.1._1eo.•050•1•,8•:•»•12•30•11!!1•I f~~nmabl::~w~::
41 yrs a money ma\er *"" R rd Bord T ""'Ml .. ~"'TIYE newspaper. New main-1 n st a I Im en t or ... 1w .... n lOAM •. 4PM . tune.ups and must know Pule.up pel"50fl needed w"kdays. Ap~ly in T~""a''-;ift•111c'"nt to -ewa : er er--.,,_ f "" "'"' "' f I In Tb • S E "•---I "' ~ ....... ""' "' r I er, b I k /tan, F , SP..,.." u CL.alS rame computer system com m 'r c 1 a I Lo an Mon lhru Fri. u' Jtcl. systemJI. urs. Fri & at xp person· """"'"" 1.er· Ba 1 Pa lion Good Newland & Slater. on ~sT wi 11 be ord,red in Officers. w1 th b.ink EOE M F Take ad to onrest State preferred. typing a rece Restaurant, 29U
leu,. For information 11 /12 , "Snuu I es... tlBID RECEPTIONS TS January (most likely background -=----------'"~'--Employment Service ofc must. .Apply Mon Fri Redhill, C M.
call 8929179 IM2-1444 PAIT-TIMI TYPISTS large DEC hardware Catt: Corry H01111dn•1 in Orance.Co. DOT 9-S 1860 Placenua Ave. RESTAURANT C1ter·
. MEL FUCHS. : ~ · d Wb' c ..... ..t.-d F $100/wee.kend and up. SECllTAlllS with specialiud produc-972_9 955 3 days per wk 4 hrs per 620-2151--010. Ad pd for by C.M. I mg firm bas openin• for
REALTOR rOUD : l ... ....,..~ · Call SS2·3173. Army WOID tion software) Or4aniz· day. S4 hr Call before 10 _,e""m~l...,r'-'-.------t respon. adult to operate
' 67S-8120 Terrier Mix. ·g.rey F. Reserve. Be all you can ' 1n1 ind supervisory oraft6~1.97 PEST CONTROL Hobart auto. slicer 4t i:•n~el M11, Bl:/Wb~ be. PROClSSOIS ability essential H 0 u 1 , k e e Per . MBCHAMDIS'*i Licensed Branch · 2· learn portion colll'f>I
Balboa Island gift shop, · ewport ea c Prnlous hardware ex. bullneuman w/luxury pest con l rol t er h Exp. pref. but wiU tr&lJI.
bln'gboootralfic Marine Ave . FArumaldSheltGer644·3656 AIRCRAFT CLEANING We ere not an employ-perienl~! necolessaryrud' and condo needs a neat MANAGEMENT needed. Xlnt wages !\ill 9.30AM to 6PM, Mon ~. ,Agt.67J.4062 ' o u n · er man FIT. Good oppty ror a t w know oouge unen-SECRETARY penon for lite duties in Tl.AIMEE 546-9468 thru Thur & &PM to &....•••"-......... I Sh.epberd w/short tail. hardwor .. -,w/n••.h.rs, men aeency. e pay tarri ~ogrammina b • , f t PRl....,.INC !PM Su"'. ,_""4T •or • -I .... H t B h ..... '"' you to work when & d h 1 ful Tb' 1 n t e r n 0 l 1 0 n a 1 exc an,.e 1or ree ren . ,... u "'""'' ,. "-=t't 50151 nJUroou. WI . c' nr 18yrsoroldu.492·772:5 b Ii f wou ep . IS 979•7«'--· .. •m• 2~--~s Op•rate AB D1 <·k appl.Lori'sKitchen. -....--r 1 N'wland/Warn e r. -were you ke. I In· department will be rorporat1on seeks ., ""a!UU ... ~..,........,.,.. "' --
••••••••••••••••••••••• .2 Apart,ment Manager terested, call or come ch a r g e d with t he poised organued person Housekeeper, $600/mo. MO IXPa. ME<:. 360/key Sl bead Need IOll'fEMAH urNV~RS.. Couplel:refel'Ted. With by. lb "lil · t fo r ra reer m 'nded Mon-Fri. 12 noon to IC>t«ISES ex per. dependable Mature youri• man· for ••W&....,.ED•• Found : you. na female some :1.erlence. 20 respons ' Y o ' 7 30p M h .... f I "
'-ses In "•-.. s, bonds, Se. al Pt. Siam.ese Cal, Units. estm1'nster. " ' ..., ' •• ' , ti C II • ,. ,. ""'" k I N B h " "'" " IEL[~. onerate rn11111' OA'n and ex0 Aut1v0 • 3 • years : m. Ult ave own PD y.a.c.a.nftUS pe ... on or top qua 1ty soft waler Co. San 'ua.n ....., ~· " Girl" repair components of secretarial experlenre lranaporla on. a PIOHrSHAllMG wor on Y· pt t' Cap area MusthaYt&d commodities? Tblnlt of v1c. 16lh & lrvme. N.B. Husband May have out· , the s Y stem with ok. Company orters _,644~·.:::;:0SU..=..=after=..,,,5ez.m=:..· --+ 044·8233 dri~lng ~ecord. Pa1d
wbmrnlsloOJ you plhaid! 63l·S070. sidejob.MuttbeHandy. seP1v1ces m inimal uaislance u cellentbeneflts plusa HOUSEKEEPER: Uve. $1200 JUO. P I T H elp Wa n t ed vac.,lns,et.c.'93-4S35. ynoteamfrom ose Found. Greyhound, w. Freeaptinclutil. from the vendor. Repty week s paid vacation at in for mature couple. Im SandwlchShoploc near FEES? Potential 6X Anaheim Wed night **~ •• 2102 Business Center to Jeff Weber. Chnstmas Refa. please, Call: after TOST.AIT OC Air}lOrt. Will Tratn SAIUOAT
lnvst Min 2K 66l·DS50 JJ.ill Cal11·82'7·2668. DEMTALASSIST. Dr .. J208. Irvine, O~Cod Rltca J°"'91CM1 UAM,BP-2312 Hrs. 11·3 Mon Fn Call IMSTIUCTOI End U/29/81 FOUND. Female Blonde 833-1441 CNr. MacArthur D -...... Ho ... -.. ~·aSu.....,••"r 171411t7 ... ll before 11 or alt 2 Mon needed In NewpO.rt C P/time, bffice nears C. Bl •-.,... -.> H •s w-_, 972 9955 _.,.. ..... _ ,..... • ...., ••••••••II B b ,;.. ~tou. 5025 ocker puppy vie p•A•A ca •cc• ... """" ...... , n .... -w Ba St • tor retirement (adlity,r Y,ru fn. 833-3294Mce eac 25.27· Crutlwl -;;:;:!••••••••••••••••• Oran&' & Bay, 'c.M. ~:~· or 27957 Cabot Rd., CosuM~.tA92s:z7 So. caw. ~byterian MODlLSJ'ESCo.TS P/TIMEEYBIMGS sailboat. wteod.s. Call lf you want a Real Estate 646-AUTOaOTIVE ucuna NiiueJ, l3l.QS42 1114) 642..a%1. Hom ea lJl Irvine. Re· Attn Fema\esonly (714)645-7100.
Lo an at BEL 0 W p.,..... . 5l5 L~ <Crown Valley Pkwy ex-The Daily Pilot ii an quire ablJity to 1et up & 953-4971 Ca ••at.II) ' S-.S Cow Ill If•
MARKET RATES call ••••••••••••••••••••••• Full lime. Re1poosiblede It) Hra. 9H·3 01r call Equal Op portuni'ty conlrols~foranew Y..eltc:.rien Por acti'v• spo-·w••r P · F · 1 t .....-847·3498. unt n1ton f ·u &....... • .. A .... t od ~ , .. ~ .,._rrv'1.mcese ananc1a EXECsumUTIYI ma ure penoo n....,.. Be1cb . . Emplyr. Women and ac1 ty. ex-....,.1250 ......... w1 ... ..,.... a mg mfr Directcommunlea·
""' for special duties.
1
minorities encouraged Ga.ERA&. OFRCE perience neceuary. n"W attracuvepersonahlles lion with sales reps re-* * References required E ~ to apply M b 1 h Xlnt working conditions OPERATOI who enjoy wort.ing with larding samples, e>nkrs 24 hour ESCOR'I'S Must have 2 years ex-qual unity · agaunt' pu 15 " & benefit.I A non-profit Dulles will includ' post· IO·LS year old )Ouths
951-1122 MC SA perience Call Steve Em er 111!!!!!!!!!!!1•••••••11 needs bright individul c o r p p b 0 n , inl ol daily sales. bgbt Ev,nings 6-9 pm Call produ~uon.'64§:§189. COEDS-Would Lov' to Harv'y for an appomt· M /F Escrow/Home loan exp lo handle a \ ariety of 71 1· ~. ollice & phone work. No 64 2 . 4 321. ext 34 3 SALIS
Party wilh you Call Sue ment. 1••••••••111 !,art/btime to sllrl. office duties Type 4S Interior Design e~peri~nce necessary, between 2 Pm ..ind S Eachbachs Flowers &
Qr Debbie anytime IOY CAIYB ..,.oo r. 95-13216 Any knowledg' of word Aulatant for Retail wVl tram. Xlnt company p.m Ask forAndro Gifts, formerly ol La1
953-9363 IOWIOYCE CLE'RICAL Food ~,.!X processing a plus 6 Showroom. Must be benefits packaee Con-Bch. is Joo«mgforpenn Ir IMW + * * WHll · months G 0 expenenct' Exp pa rt .t i me . tact Mr. McDermott P-time sales Own your & t'mp sales clert.s for
fitHICD .. ..,. 640-6444 for am. conval. boepl. as w,11 as med1ra1· .~we a SLAYICIC'S n'w natural skin prod V11l11' Apptyinperaoo. JOIN THE ok Company has dental 642 ~ 11 714)644.UllO own bus Sellrng Finest new le><: in udo Marina
Escorts Auto Parts. #I TEAM AT To coot & r.anage benefits EWB.aS Get in on the ground MaLins·Eschbachs. 1431
••••••••••••••••••••••• 24 Hn 641-0180 Exp Auto Part! Counter OSHMAN·s kitchen. . Rita JOMIOft IMTlll~ATOI; r!stuoolsland floor. Xlnl tra1n1n~ Via Oporto, Newport Cnlt/Clltcb Person. Beacon Auto Full or p rr belp needed 972.9955 MllDID avail. 644;42.89 B~ach~
S.ttlert!4hJ.Co. s-/MCfY'·-Partll SPORTING in clothing store, prefer PART-TIMI. NURSES AIDE, P/time Reel Estate Sal~ Sales h'lp, fabric store, AU types ol real estate A•....,. nu 480N.NptBlvd.NB GOODS mature women, some / k nd d 2 Sales Persons needed 1 t lnvestmentssi.nce 1949. 5411-1133 exper. neussary. wee e an up. lneroupPediatrlcprac-forourloca,iononl'oast retoi exper. pre · S~2.ti..a.a...11>t t.. A Tm k. We current~ have an 64.S-~2bet. lG-a. CR~I 552-3173. Army Uc&. Mature w/exper in Hw,. Walk I n~ daily ~·404~m.44~_7_1. __ ,..-_....., • Ban mg -""'erve Be au you can de 11·i!1 I bildr ENTRY LE EL clerical GIMRau ~e a w c en es· Cal Tom Miller. Proper !~--------• OFClau FUU•PAITTIMI poaltion open within our p --~1 be. sentla · Mrs. Austin. ty House Realt11rs Sales
642-2171 545-061 I Escorts/Modeling TB.LBS Division Office just erminent pit me, TAX ACCOUHTAMT 1111!!!1•-----· MS-4670 642-3850 HICKOIYFAl.MS Widow bas money for M /F&Cou~es Excellent opportuniUes minutes from South 20/hnperweet.Tyfln&. Recent Bar helors J1nitor. Part-Time. ....Ul<1t-••--.: -1 0 tr""3"eil t T D 's $10 000 up No for experienced persons Co Pl p 'ti telephone, geMra or-Degree in a<·count1n~ Eves. Must have auto, " ~ ,..,.,,.. REAL ESTATE SALf.S I t PP gourme ciedit~heck,nopen.ally MC .i5a in attractive S.vings & ut ua. os1 onre. rice. Huntington Beach speak English il be de" -7-3:30 & 3:30·7:30pm. Im med optntni:s oods & gifts for
Call D•ni·son A••oc If you would hke_ to Loan. Both ,,....ition.s of· quires •btlltytobandlea area 847-3563 necessary. plus some "'ndable.&U..s&S Sm. conv1I Hosp nr Vinous liberal rom holi~ays. Flu. bra.
.. oo ., t A ..-variety of clerical duties · · t a x e x p e r 1 e n r e ~ -c. M.. Fairgrounds mlssionllans. ror u~rd I Fashion Island ~. 673-7311 c.s cor ttractiH fer varied duties Ptr including ll&hl tyning General Co m p a n y 1 s J"..-OIS w I Westcllff Plua642.-r2 Lad1es,contact545-U48 position is approx 3 and 10-key. Prevfous Executiv! .seeking internati onal and ,. .... , 549-3061. agents all Dan a en . S 1,500 T. D. Dlllc Tronl 5450 days a week & alternate clerical experience de. ma~ure indiv1du~ls fC?r growth polenl1 a I is Parttimelfulltime, days Nursing line 645-7221
ll.S mo, 12"k, 3 yrs •••••••••••••-••• ... ••• Saturdays until tpm. sired. business expansion m P & nifcbts. Ml&St be l8 yrs IM. p /TIME Sales
for cash. Bltr T Call Lmda at 754··1801 Oran&eCount.Y.848-6995. :~~~~eonuts for 0!~\':~~! or 0 der, U.S. citize~. & 7.3 & 3:11or1ruglit11-7. ~ IHSULATION 631•7048 ro•tlAbroed? E.O.E . Orange Coast PleuecallTe~Taylor G_____.Offl,,... have transportation. SuperviseMeds&RX'1. Experienced self 2 for pnc' ol l. l3 coun-Savina & Loan, 1700 f .._..... -with hght background Call$32~M·F, l0.3 Sm. conval. hospt. nr j mouvated "*"'le, earn Amt•c••xl1/ tries Pan Am Coupon. "' it n•ISS7-111181, 14, or Part time, AIR. llte Sec and 1s career·m1ncled C .. f · d -,._.,..r G · PtrsOXllll/ lt'tl.J669 Adams. C.M. Information. duu·-. hours"-1'ble. Nr LIJi r-·z u;.m~l. a1rgroun s . --per sq t. et paid
• _ _. • 11t.....:-..1 .=A: "'" ""'" Rita Jo1Hi10tt _, #OJVVV ~ within s wort.mg days ol _. ... ,,_ Chnstian too«ing for a Banking Equal<>Poly OCAirport. 972 9955 for N wport each 1·N""'u=rs-=in=g"-------i (114) 6-45-71!1 I tum1.J1g in siened LCF
••••••••••••••••••••••• discount ticket to or TILLB Emplo)'erk/F 957-0548 • f1 rm, must be 1n . LYH contract. Work any area
Am09C ..... 5100 r oun d trip from Newport otr11ice seeks,"!!!!!!!!•••••••! fiEMHALOfftCE telll1entandmotivated, 3_11 .. 30 Conv. Hosp NB IEC~"'"""ST Call : Steve (714 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• California to Se1ttle. full-Um' Te er 6 mo.1"" • have LI l ... II u-''"'"' I u" 1196 to us1J1t on switchboard On exce en a.~ 5· area. Pos. attitude & I Good typmg, clerical ---·-------PlnseCalL.. S&L..or bankinf, up CLlllC (will train>. filine. e to two years litiga· smiles needed ilnt• skills & knowledge of SALES/ INT DESJGN
... 99-4722... f~1~~:ie:li:nor an~rt~~~ Work in beaut. Dana xeroxlne. mail dist.ribu· LI.on ex per. ~lll')' ~~m-benefits. Call: 642:8044. I d1ctaphone required l Need someone cr~attve. terview call: Bnan Tig· Point Harbor. Full time. tion & ml.int. ol bldg. CURk mensurate Wl_lh ability. Xlnl working conds & fr. artistic sell·mot.ivated. ~lrly--• gart644·72SS Tues. tbru Sat. Require" plants. Must have car Responsible position for ContacUlaUJe,64§-4466 Nunin& inee benefits for app't Flex hrs .. will train
,..,....._ WES,...M ment.s : Front otc. •P· for errands. 14/hr. + mature minded person l!ff ~' NURSES AIDE call 557-6316 499·1461 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.. arance typeSOwpm milea e . P!time Ex er'd. all shifts ------=-=-=-=-------
SUHIJ' accu.rateTv; aptiTuae ror, u:. pm. c an· ~ 11 IH Newpo ctr tate nv. ~wpTBCh. Ma"•s-meiil --. l1tttnlcffClli 7005 SAYl..._S •LOAM deuul, m1ri. 2 Y'f· gen. na. 549-8466. Payable Accounts Lltl&ation Law Firm Brina your smile & join -.....
Skates · skis ·
leds • snowmobile
Sell your used
items in our
Daily Pilot
Gift Guide
Call 642-5678
altd •Ill for 0
Cltri1hH1 Ad-Visor
SCIAIUTS
ANSIEIS ~lnd -Colcb
W ute -lthaaket -WASH&5
New bride: "Does wuh
and wear mean that the
one who wean them WASH!Slbe!n?"
••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. Corporate Plaza olfl S5 per hr R' cc i v a b I e 3 n d seeks exper"d Lqal Sec us! Free ntjr. med .. den·
Now Enrollling: Chris· CoastHwy.,N.8. Aba~~u~!J:"oo i>ersonai GENII.AL.OFFICE computer background with &ood typlne, die· tal & life Ins. Call:
tian Pre-School. 320 E. EOE M/F or telephone Inquiries. Recept/Typ11t/Phones plus a reasonable taphone and SH skilla. 642-8044.
18th ~l.. Costa Mesa. BANKING Reaumea only '°: Dana Min. 65 ~m; Hrs 8-S. accurate typing spc~. Salary Op!!!. IMO-_.,S --E~L~L~id .... l_e_i_te_ms_wi_th_a
Sp ec 1 al Program. Point M artna co .. 24705 1185/wk, paid insurance. Good growth potenllel Dally Pilot Classirled
646-5423 * Dana Or .. Dana Pt. Cotta Mesa. 631·2741. plus aood benefits. Sell Idle items 642·5678 Ad.
~~~~.~ ..... !~!.~ Jfil(I 92&29. l~G•en•e•r•a•I _____ , R~;;.;t:';;"
Care" minded family Codlhll Growing investment man 28 yrs old seeks Tbe beauUful Lagun1 w .... ,.... firm bu Immediate
employment. 1o yrs ex-Beach office ol 1 leading needed for ~ bowlin~ openlnes in Newport Of·
perienced mechanic, aavtnp and loen llu 1 center Full lime an fice.
also Class I drivers full time opening for a partlime.C&ll
license. can operate TelJer. Si.I months toooe 8$7-llOLS various heavy ~nuip; yea.r experience (pre· --C-.. -""r"nn""-"-~C~ ... --
B .. -·-"' 7' ferably In a~ or tom· ~..-ment. ac.g"'"'"' In re-merci'al .. __ .. )is needed GICU bu lmmed F rr tail sales & relates well -•-"-9 '""S 30 for this politoo, wblch open.w1. ""' : ..... : · to pubUc Rapid learner. olfer1: £1per p~'d, but not
S1l1ry negotiable. Call • Paid medical/dental necess. Full benefit pk&
_,B,_l=ll .-642=-4al-='""·-.......---t • Paid career apparel offered. Contact Steve,
Scandinavian prol. cooll • Frff paltine $$1:3110
SALES PERSON
Must have previous
experience tn dental
field and worked 1n a
lab so understand
alloys and non preclOUS
metals Aggt.ess1ve
outlook necesury to wants live-out job, pvt
bome or rest1urant. COOi C II P ---• 752 -o ob ta l n this st 1 b I e Please call Gene • e • ..,....,., .....,, . Friulle at (714) 494-7506 PIT-Weekends. SS.00 E.O.E. position with growing S5H&S
Ca .. 91111 ...
Warm compauionate,
reliable lady. Av1ll
daxt,ref.MZ=•
for more Information. eer hr, AMlhlft SU·P l•••••••••I com II• ny . Company car, $1,100. base, pll.13
FIDB.ITY FEDERAL s..-. ... ~ai~Pil
~
.................... . commlaalon and
benefits.
Rlt• Johx1e111
'72·tfSI
Need .e cash
for C~ri~tdils btlyilf?
L-.Ala
~ Advertisilf Sales
£1per. newspaper -ciiiP1ay saleapenoo lo
handle key accounts for Or1nge Coast
Dally Piiot. Salary, commission and
srOWIMTs
NEEDED Sell your unneeded
Items with a low
cost ad under the
Dally Pilot Gitt Gulde
excellent ben 11\J. Growth opportunlllea
for per1on h ca*r 1mblllons. Send
complete r ume lO MarJI f'endel. PO
Boa &MO, C Meta CA. 92126. No pbont
.
"
calla pin . An Equal Oppor·1 . twtltr E mployer. , ;
a..ANGI COA IL Y '9LOT :
1111 W, IA¥ IT...,,: COITA ~~ ~ ta2I :
"• Alt IOUA4Vl'flO!i~TY--.-.. ,• ................. ..... ...... .. ... ..... ... ... .•.. ........... I.A. .......
Earn $30-S&O per WMk.
TriPI & Prlzn. Ctl Mr.
Q F ce. IJt.1611 •
'
There's More To
Restaurant Managemeni
Titan Meets Tite Eye/
CARL'S JR.
Would lilce To Sltow You ' EJ.>• ToE~.
We'd hke ro show you why our Management
Cancbdart and Assistant Manager 1ra1ning
programs are some of the f1nesr available ...
anywhere' And how competitive our salarie5
and benefits are And how a future wilh an
organization hke CARL KARCHER ENTER·
PRISES means stab11i1y, security, reward .
recognition and growth, And where ycu can
progress. And a whole lot more.
Don't hesitate 11nother day ... apply 1n pef
son .. and wt will mttl Wllh ~ Ind ddcua
your future with CARL'S JR.
Orange Cout OAILY PILOT/Motid1y, Nov1mb4tr US, 1981 ...
r
'74 Sta Wagon. Good
cood. Needs Eng. S.SOO
848-0815
-
M'"·-~ ,1~, 69 M-~enz. 2IO SE. Good .....--. ~ nmn1ng cond, reg eas. •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• classic. htallty $6000
01.AN&E 548-Q5
COUNTY'S 210 s e.. T-'o EXCWSIVI Car ls completely new MA SERA Tl Sunroof, cruise, am/fm
DR• 1 -SHIP cuaette New MiMleUn llOA~ radials. 20 mpg. Will out We'U delivtt anywhere perform any 300 Turbo
tn I.he world! diesel. Phone for app't IEACH IMPOITS. 631 .. 153
8'8 Dove Street '81 3000, 8CXX>K, xlnt/x·
752..otOO tras, Met. pa.ant, assume
1969Hatbot8lvd. Jease. 974 5489 or n . 110 37t-l31Q__~ _
Merc'*t... '740 MERCEDES '77 280SE.
••••••••••• .. •••••••••• IMMACULATE Low mlleaee. electnc sun· roof, cassette, etc Mu.st
sell Pvt part y
TPD 714 SSl-9581
•
2929 Harbor d . Costa Mesa. Tel 546·1934 3 blocks A T!S CHRYSL.Ell..ft. YMOUTH
south ot San ego Freeway off Harbor Blvd. Complete
body shop S tes. Service Pans Service Dept open
Monday thru Friday 7.30 AM to 5 30 PM and 8 AM to
5 P-M on Saturday
HACH IMPORTS
a..& Dove Street Newport Beach Tel 152·0900 Catt us.
we're the spec1ahsts tor Alta Romeo Peugeot. Saal.J &
Maserat 1
THEODORE RO.INS FORD
Modern sales. service. parts, l>Ody. paint & tire depta.
Competitive rates on lease & daily rentals 2060 Harbor
Blvd .. Costa Mesa 642-0010 Of 54<>-8211
G) JOHNSON & SON UHCOLN MHCURY
2626 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 540-5630 57 Yeara
of friendly family service -Orange County s oldest Lin·
coin-Mercury dealership.
0
SOUTH COAST DODGE
2888 Harbor Blvd . CoSia Mesa. Tel 540-0330 RV service
spec1ah1ts. custom van conversions
WIWPORTIMPORTS
3100 w Cout Hi ghway, Newport Beach. Tel.
642·9405/540-176-4 The Ferrar• Headquarters.
• DGM LEASING. IMC. . 730 W. 19th St .. Costa Mt .. S.2·1944
Leasing apecitliat 1s our job. to tailor your 1 .. s1nsi fOf
you We lease alt make and ~Is or cars. trucks and
van a
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 18, 1981
COMM Ell
CHEVROLET
}\,,_"I 1 1 r r •• r fi, \ 1
'"'i\\H_,\
~46-1 200
77 Caprice. 4 dr clualc,
nice cond . S2150
751·0205 or&3J.5347
'78 Caprice Classic 4Dr.
GoodCond.~
• • 147*•
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE ..
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN ·THE BOXES
NEWptORT DATSUH
888 Dove Street, NefHort Beach Tel 833-lJOO At the triangle of Jambor . MacArthur & Bristol behind
Vtctona Station Sales. rv1ce, leasing & Parts. Fleet
discounts to the public ..,
MAIERS CADILUC
2600 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel 540-9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadillac dealer Salts Service leas·
ing
• DAVID J. ptHILLlptS IUla<...oHTIAC.MAZDA
Satea • Service • Leasing
24888 A1tc1e Parkway
Laguna Hiiis 837-2400 ..
G) TAIMT DATSUH
~ c.-ty'1 .._... .,.._ DMhr"
13731 Hartiqr. 91vd. Garden Grove. Two blocks south or
Garden Grove Freeway. Sales. Service Patta. Our aim
la complete customer satisradlon. Shop us and avoid
paying too much! Tel. 554-9000
• A'-AM MAGMOM POHTIAC.SUIARU
2480 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 549-'4300. Sales •.
Service. Leasing "Mr Goodwrench "
0 HOUSE OF IMPOlt'T' ~ Miit~ , ..... s.niu. a.--.
8862 Manchester Blvd .. Buena Park (on Sant• A·'
Frweway) Take Belch Blvd. offramp -sharp right on
Manc:Mttr. /
DIAL MER-CEDES (213 or 714) 637·2333
AMAHBM MAZD•
~o.1r o.c. ...... De* •• "'" ........... ~ .. 801 S. An1helm Btvd .• Anaheim 956-1820. Just north or
Senta Ana Frwy. on A.nahtlm Btvd. Call u1 llr1tl
'W E ARE HARD TO FINO-eUT WORTH ITI"
• • "
I 01 LONGPRE PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster Tel. 892·6651. Orange
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales,
Service. Parts
UNIVERSITY HOHDA
•2860 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tet 540-9640 1 Mlle
South 405 Freeway Sales. service. parts & leasing
• .
SAHT A AHA DATSUH
2001 E. 17th Street. Santa Ana Tel 558·7811 Your·
Orig1oat Dedicated Datsun OeelM
0 MIRACLE MADA
We've movedl Our new location is 1425 Baker Street.
Coata Mesa. Tel. 545·3334. St09 by & visit our brand new
showroom end see why we'rw the 11 Mazda dealer 1n
Southem Callfomla. Sales, .S8fVice. Parts and Leasing.
ALLEN·OLDSMOllLM:ADILUC
SUIARU·GMC TRUCKS
San Diego Fwy at Avery Exit on Camino Capistrano In Laguna Niguel Tel. 831~. '
• 5AM DI S.AKllS CHlftOLl'L --
401 S. Et Camino RN. San Clemente Sates. Serota.lAMlngAnd Parta
-Orange County's NEWEST Cti.Yrolet dealer; "Growing
Your Way." Eidt Et Camino otf~atnp.
831--0680 492-8500
COST A MESA DATSUN ·
2845 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 540 6410
Orange County tor 16 years 1 Mole So 405"
. SUNSET FORD, INC .
(Home of Willie the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove E\lvrt
Westminster Tel 636·4010
FRANK PROTO LINCOLN-MERCURY
Service and Parts Department always open
week 7 30 A.M to 6 30 p M 848-7739
0 CONNELL C .. VROUT ;
.2828 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa. Ov« 20 years servl
Orange County! Sales. teasing, service C&ll 546·12 •
special parts tine. 5'46·9400; body shop h!'le. 7~-0.00
• -· CHICK IVEASON ftORSCHE-AUDl·VW •
415 E. Coast Hwy . Newport Beech 673-0900 The ol)ly(
de'alershlp 1n Orange County w.th these three great
makes under one rooft .. 1
ROY CARVEi ROLLS ROYCMMW
t540 Jamboree fta-.ct.-Na~ Beac S40-64'«" Si es.
Service, Parts And Leasing
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ,. 42 5 6 7 OR TO BE PLACED ON THIS
AD , CONTACT YOUR DAILY. •
PILOT REP .
J
..
Orenge Coaat DAILY PILOT/Mondey, November 18, 1981
'
Irtmortant News For Smokers: • . ~ .
•.
.. • •
-
. . •
New survey results prove MERIT delivers in key areas
of taste, ease of switch, and long-term satisfaction.
· ·· Rigoro u s new MERIT
research proves it.
. MERIT smokers confirm
taste a major factor in
completing a successful
switch from higher tar . c.1garettes.
MERIT Switch Clicks.
Nationwide survey reveals
are glad they switched from
higher tar cigarettes. In fact,
94% don 't even m iss their
former brands.
Further Evidence: 9 out of
10 former high e r tar smokers
report MERIT a n easy switch ,
that t.kiey didn't give up taste
in switching, a nd that MERIT
is the best-tasting low tar
they've ever tri ed .
Warning : The Surgeon Gen eral Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
• •
2 Of 3 Smokers Prefer MERIT
In the second part of this
study, new tests confirm that
MERIT delivers a winning
combination of taste and low
· tar when compared with
higher ta r lead ers.
Confirmed: The over-
w he lming majority of smok er s
to -or better than -leading
higher tar brands.
Confirmed: When tar levels
were revealed, 2 o ut of ]
chose the MERIT combina--
tion of low tar and good .taste.
-Year after year, in study
after stugy, MERIT r e mains
unbeaten. The proven tas te
alternative to higher tar
smoking-is MERIT. ·
• O Philip Morm Inc. 19111
Reg : 8 mg i'tar:· 0.6 mg nicotine-Men : 7 mg "tar:' 0.5 mg
nicotina-100 's Reg: 9 mg ·:1ar:' 0.7 mg nicotine-100's Men :
10 mg ''tar:· 0.8 mg nicotine ev. per ciganme. FTC Repon Mar'.81
MERIT
Filter
Ki~&lOO's
I
I I
I·
. -. .
• • ••••
111111 auT YOUR HIMITlll UllY PIJlll .
M ll ND I\ ' N 0 V [ MB FA 16. 1981 OH ANCiflOUNTV I AllfOHNIA 25 CE NTS
-Shut~le to ·aid corporations coloniZing -splice?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Much
of Canada wu explored,
exploited, defended and
1Pverned by a private BrUiab
firm called the Hudloa'a Bay
Oo. that apread roada, tradini
ta and.. forta throu1b the
tier.
Now a financial !•futudat"
~redlcta that. multinational
ebrporatioaa may play tbe aame
f1)le in apace, a frontier now
'"yood the reach of earthly
law a .
The apace shuttle -which
completed lta aeeood t.t fllCbt natlona almOlt certaloly will.
Saturday -pro at la ea "Many people 1D Wublqtoa
commercial acce11 to apace ..-think our copipetlUoo la the
within • few years, and lndUIUJ Rmalana," Koehn aald. "I tblnlt
wlll late 1dvanta1e of the a more viable competiUoa -
opportunity, aaya Han.It Koehn, competition for proclucln1 tbe
Security Paciflc National Bank's producta in apace flnt -la from
vice president for futures private bualneu tnteresta Un.keel
researcl\. to the French, the Germana and Aa Oil the blab aeu centuries the JapaneM."
110, be aaid in an interview, "I For example, Koehn said, "U
think the tpotivatian la lolnl to a Swiaa pharmaceutical firm
be 'grab firs\'." II U.S . wanted desperately to get up
companies don t move into there and comer the market on
apace quickli. be aaid, other a particular dru1. they milbt
even coatract with the Ruulana
to put the thin1 into orbit. You
could 1et an interestln1 mlx of
players and they don't have to
be the traditlooal ones at all."
Space, Ko.ebn aald, could
prove lrreslatible to a
transnational consortium that
·'is many countries, many
corPe>ratlom in origin, but with
littJe or DO allegiance to ill
historical roota."
Some buaioeumeo have
dreamed of a tranaoatlonal
company buying an laland and
declartna ltaelf beyond the laws
or any nation. Now, "you could
have that with· ·a tre1·1pace
corporation. It would claim lu
headquarten are in orbit and
not subject to any law." Such
corporations, be added, "would
probably. have their own
mllltary or police force."
·'There are oo.ly two countries
(the United States and the Soviet
Unlon> that can e nforce
anything beyond a few miles ·
up," Koehn 11id. ". . . Who
co uld control such a
consortium?"
la that villoo . of free·boo*•n1
capita.Ulm 'frt1bt.eo.ln1? Not to
Koehn. •
••I think it'• free enl•rprbe
carried to lta 211t century
structure. That waa the whole
polbt of the En&llah and Dutch
explorers when they went out.
Thal WU the WI)' it WU done."
Such a development remalm a
far ·off poaalblllty . But
capita.Ulm ia already lD orbit
(See COLONIES, P11e AJ)
3rd storlD strikes
N orfh coast ravished by winds, rain
By Tt.e Auoclated Presa
Another powerful storm bore
down on Northern Callfomia
today. threatening to lub the
region with strong winds, rain
and soow for the fourth straiaht
day.
"It's hard to say, but it looks
like lt's going to be another big
one," said Susan Fisher, a
forecaster for the National
Weather Service In San
Francisco. ·
She said it was lhe third storm
in a series that felled trees,
knocked out power lines, ripped
Land use
hearings
scheduled
By STEVE MITCHELL oitM Delly ...... ,....
State coastal commission
olficiala say lhe purpose of the
public hearing Tuesday la to tie
u p Io o a e · en d.s o o t be
already-approved land use plan
for the t~400-acre Irvine Coast.
But oppooenta to that plan say
they'll be at the Hu'1tincton
Beach meeting to reiterate their
concerns, and lo ask the
commiuioo to reconsider the
land use proposal approved by
the panel earlier this year.
The coastal commiaalon meet.a
beginning al 10 a .m . In
Huntingtoo Beach Cily Council
Chambers, 2000 Main St.
0 oe of the firal iaaues
members will be conaidertni' is
the adoption of findin1s that led
to their e ndo rsement of a
development plan along the
Irvine Coast last summer.
"The coastal commission bas
to have reasons for approvina a
land use plan," explained
<See HEARING, Page A!)
Woman wants
war declared
on Marines
OCEANSIDE CAP) -An
angry city councilwoman want.a
to declare war on rowdy
Marines and increasing st.reel
crime by calling ln the military
sm·aU vessels from their
moorings and foundere d a
55·foot ketch Saturday north of
San Francisco where three
people were reported missing.
A travelerlf' advisory w's
issued for the Sierr~ Nevada
warning or heavy rain and winds
In excess of 40 mph. But wind.a
could easUy gust to more than 55
mph alone the coast, she said.
The snow level in the Sierra
was expected to be at about 7,000
fut, dropping Tuesday to 5,000
feet. · ·
But the s t orm waa not
expected to be as ferocloua aa a
storm Friday that packed wiDdl
that hit about 90 mph atop San
Bruno Mountain, blew the rooll
off four homes in Crescent Clty
and toppled trees onto
powerllnes.
By today, crews had restored
service to most Qf the 100,000
customers temporarily wit.bout
power in San Jose and Sonoma
County.
The California Highway
Patrol reported a section of
<See ST()RM, Pa1e A!)
Superstar in soap
'General Hospitar creates stir
By JER-Y BUCK ,
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Luke
and Laura finally reach the
altar today after a long and
star -crossed courtship oo ABC's
super·soap opera "General
Hospital.''
The sexy, aophlslicated and
fast-paced serial, with a dally
audience of more than 14
million. has created the same
kind of stir for daytime TV that
CBS' "Dallas," and the famous
"Who abot J .R. ?" epiAode, did
for prime time a year ago.
Luke Spencer and Laura
Baldwin, after a year and a ball
on the run, are married in the
backyard of a Port Charles
mansion decorated like Indian
summer. The townspeople tum
out to wish them well, because
the couple saved the town from
megalomaniac Mlkkos
Caasadine'a plot to take over the
world by means of carbonic
snow in the "Ice Princeaa•" NOW IT'S SOAPS
caper. Eliz.abeth Tayler at taping
Carbonic soow? Jee Princess?
"General Hospital" is no characters. Yet, such atalwarta
ordinary soap. Since producer as Dr. Steve Hardy and Nurae'
Gloria Mooty saved the show J essie Brewer, wbo have been
from certain death in 1978, due with the serial since ita birth in
to anemic ratings, the serial bas 1963, remain as popular aa ever.
taken on aspects of James Bond, But it is Luke and Laura, the
"The Maltese Falcon," "The Romeo and Juliet of.daytime TV
Fugitive," "It Happened One played by Tony Geary and
Night," ''Tarun," and goodneaa Genie Francia -who seized the
know\ what else. public's imagination.
Ma. Monty introduced film One controversial aspect of
techniques to the slug,Uh world their romance was Luke's
of the soap. The camera moved, .. rape" or Laura at the di.aco be
the actors moved, and bow the m~ages. Ms . Monty said later
stories moved! And the show, it was ooly "a choreographed
once near cancellation, began to seduction," and Laura soon fell
make money -now a reported in love with Luke.
$1 million a week. Repeale(j ruo·ins with the mob illc. ~~~~~~--il":MPs, a fading symbol or law Sven Eliubetb-Taytoi-ts ~and-the--ftinister Casudinr
hand for the wedding. The the lovers on the run. One
intemallooal superstar, an avid celebrated episode found them
fan, yearned to be there when hidina out in a department store,
Luke and Laura tied the knot where they acted out the fantaay
and she was written into th~ of having every plaything
~ Deity Nil ""'9.., •tcMN It ......
ALLING LEAVES -Two energetic
oungstera thought Don Montgomery's
acltyard in the 800 block of Paularino
venue, Costa Mesa, was in need of their
elp. So Shannon Lahey, 10, (left) and Nina
Rennie, 8, asked if they could rake the leaves,
and Mootgomery accepted their offer. Both
are stUdenta at Bear Street School. ·Shannon
is a fifth grader, and Nina is in third grade.
. ~
UCI doctor raps popular diet
Joins in criticism of program featured in book ·
a1 IODI CADENHEAD °' .. .....,,... ...
A UC Irvm. pbpk:iaa today
Jolned other medical eQeril ~rlUdlinc tbe coatroYenlal diet
blthlllbted lD the bat·Mllinc
~. "The Beverly Hll1a Diet."
Dr. Grat Gwtnup, ebief ol tbe
tiviakln of l'.ndoc.'l'idol ud
•etabolilm at tbt UCJ Xedial
Center, uld be'a seen paUeata
1uffertn1 from nausea and
cllarrbea after. Clft1)' a few ct.ya
OD tbedieL
An mtlcle publiabed Frlda.J in
tbe Journal of the American
Medical AllociatioD called t.be
popular diet, "tbe latest. aad
perb• .. tbe worse, entry ID t.be
dletflid~."
ID tWr article, Dn. Gabe
lllrkbl -ftGDald 8bon Mid
'1
they found 21 faetual erron in
"The Bev'9rly1 Hilla Dlet"
authored by Judy ~zel.
Dr. Gwtnup iald be became
famlllar with the diet after
aeelnl a number ol patienta wbo
bad fOUowed the restmea. MOit
quit after oaly a few d111, be
aald.
People will ION weipt OD tbe
diet only because tbey are
comumlns fewer. calories. Mid
UCl'a Dr. Gwtnap.
"Tbil .. t.be tame old trick ol
an unbalanced diet 1"tb a ...,
fancy name." be Hid. "A.a,IM
who '8 OD it wW pt alek. It m't
an eaay way· to lole wetsht." ·
JD ber book, Ila. Maael
reeomme9a eaUDJ vanou
\
frulta, auc:b u pm.apples and
papayaa, aayiDI tbat the
enaymea will make
bard·to·di1eat foods lea•
·rattenlnl. ·
. "Tbere la abaohltely no
aclentlftc bMla f ot tbe diet."
aaid Dr. Gwtnqp, ad41q tMt
11la. llull'a aua..U-tb8l cmb undl,..._ food la fattmlal la
totallyuaan..
.. .lult tbe oppoelte ........... be
aald. ..Sbe Just aat down ad
mate up her own lawa of
acleaee. It'• like me trJilll to
eon•lDce )'OU that tbe earth ..
Oat."
Tb• .... ••1 to loH welllll 11 to cut calorie bllake bJ w _.. ud laer ••• ,.. acti*Y,· ....
tbe UC lntDe ,_,..dm.
and order in military cities,
have been barred from
Oceanside's civilian
jurisdictions since the mid·lt'lOI.
And it's hurting, accord.lna to
city councilwoman Melba
Bishop.
Their absence baa placed
presaure on the city's 180·man
police force and the city budeet.
Ms. Biabop said in an interview
published in the San Dleao
Union.
"I can remember a time not
long a1b when you felt •ale
having the Marines around,"
' she aaid. "The reaaon was
because the M.Pa were always
here to make sure the Marines
stayed in line. As aoon u the
MPs left, downtown started
geWqbad."
Ocean.aide, a city of 75,000
located Oil the ed•e of Camp
Pendleton, loat the aid of llP
patrola when a bue commander
removed them, buinl bla action
OD the interpretation ot a U.S.
Supreme Court declalon.
Alarmed by 1kyrocketln1
street cl"lme, oe .. analde lut
month put a apeclal police
enforcement unit oa tbe atneta
to combat tbe problem.
But lt'a coattnc the ta~
dearly to keep taba on tbe
trouble apota.
"Tbeee daya, tbe bandoutl
from the~ an,... ..
1111. 8ilbop aaid ol .... eftortl to 1M t.be llPI bed. ''Now tM)' , ......... ) ..........
te •tart takiDI can ol ....., own.''
script as Helena Cuaadlne, who imaginable at band. •
claims abe wants to make The wedding aequences·were
amends for her late bµsbaod 's taped on location at a mlDlion
misdeeds. Or hu she come to in an exclusive private
seek revenge on Luke and community in Loa An1eles. For
Laura? . the fairy·tale wedding, Ila.
When Ms. Mooty took over the Mooty assembled 140 cut and
sagging soaptour years ago, abe crew members on the grounds ol
immediately began to iofuae the the replica 17th Norman-French.
show with new life and aew chateau .
Stocks post
broad loss;
Dowdownl3
NEW YORK (AP> -The
stock market 1)08ted a broad loa
today with rece11loo worries
apparently oo the rise.
Tbe~Dow Sones avera1e ol 30
l.dmtriala fell 13.12 pointa to
142.M in the first four boura of
tradlnc .
LoHn held a S.1 lead over
f ainera 1D the overall tally ol
New York Stock l:x· cbu,..lllted tuuee.
Tbe drop came delplw word
tbat Su Fruelaeo'a Crocker .... cut tu pri .. ltMilll,nM
lrom 17 to 11 percent.
ORAIGI COAST ilATllR
Mostly IUDDY
afternoona. Lowa toni1bt
62 at beaches, S7 inland.
Highs Tuesday 17 aloa1
coast, 72 inland. Delalla
Pae• A3.
:111101 TllAY
Stotidic:GUv, U.. RatM ttUl
hove o ploro// '"°'· Btll rMmor1 bcgtll.. to ~•r/•ce
.obc>W Cooch Raw lfolaoolt'• '/ob· Sft eog., OJ.J.
llDIK
•
I '
!
J
• • • • • 61 DAILY PI LOT /Monday. November 18,~1981 I
D•llf P1i.t I~ """'• _., RkMrtl 11~
LOOK FOR GUN Divers from Orange County Harbor
Department search waters off Balboa Island for sawed-off shot~un aJlegedly used m the Ort. 26 holdup or Group Tire
Service. 17281 Eastman St . l rnne. They sllll hadn't found gun by press time.
Cash but no kiss
Gunman gets $500 from art store
A gunman who took about $500
Crom a Costa Mesa a rt store's
cash r egis t e r s S un day
successfully made off with the
cash but be didn't get the kiss
he demanded (rom a woman
clerk, police reported
The 30 -year.old c lt>rk told
officers the man entered Aaron
Brothers Art Mart, 1714 Newport
Blvd., at about 6 p m through a
side door.
II e s t e pped to h e r cash
register , pulled open his coat to
r eveal a handg un and then
dl'manded that she put cash in
the vinyl bankbag he offered.
I le order ed her to repeat the
action at lhe store's three other
tash registers, closed up the
bank bag and asked for a kiss.
The clerk refused. The bandit
dashed out the door and Oed the
area on foot. she reported.
Mesa restaurant
fire cause probed
Inves tigators began s1fttnjil
through the ashes of Countr)
Bill's Restaurant lOday 1n Costa
'Mesa, seeking clues as to what
started a Saturday ni ght fire
that caused an est imat<>d
$205,000 m damage.
Jim Ri chey, administrative
fire chief, sa1d his departmenl 1s
•calling the b l aze one of
"suspicious origin" at this point
Firemen reported that the fire
actually erupted 1n two separate
kitchen locations 1n the
:restaurant housed in a small
shopping co m plex at 2000
Harbor Blvd
The flames, reported bv a
passing police patrol orftcer at
11 54 p m ~aturday, gutted the
restaurant and dam aged the
adjo101ng Alpha Beta Travel
Agency. polJ ce said.
o rr1 ce r s s aid an initial
1nvest1 gation did not reveal
arson but that the names spread
quickly and suspiciously through
a·n attic li nking se veral bu~me5ses in the buildiniz.
Chief Richey said an initial
mspe<'hon revealed fire started
in a storage area and near a
dishwasher In the kitchen, po1.0ts
about 20 feet apart.
lie said structural damage is
estimat e d a t $80,000 and
cohtents damage ar $125,000
(
:H .ot debate seen
f on Mesa t·ree issue
' College Park area are experted
to descend on City Hall tonil'(ht
in their continuin~ struggle with
City Council members over the
removal.of about 110 parkway
trees.
Many of the residents a re
re,presented by two separate but
vocal groups, Co ncer ne d
Citizens for Colle~e Par k and
Sin cere Treelo ver s Aga10 st
Needless Demolition.
Both grou ps h ave been
tu r es on
petitions and seek studies or
alternative methods of halting
s idewa lk , curb and s treet
damage caused by the roots of
tall trees m their neighborhoods.
T h e STAND group has
threatened court action and the
recall of council members who
do not seek creative methods to
ha l t tree demolition and
maintain parkways.
C'CCP isn't s upporting the
proposed recall movement.
Robbery suspects still at large
Police are continuing their
search for two me n and a
woman who allegedly robbed the
Home Federal Savings om ce at
15091 Golden West S t .
Huntington Beach.
Armed Wlth a shotgun and a
small silver revolver, the trio
took $594 1n c a sh plus an
employee's purse in the hoJdup,
"'h1ch occu'rred al 2:20 p.m.
Friday, poUce said.
OAANClf COAST . Daily Pilat Cln1llled aclvertl1lng 7141642·5678
All oth•r department• 642-4321
MAIN OFFICE JlO WH I k y ,, , (;o.le Me~ (A
M•ll tddre" k• U.O. C0tla ~'41, CA •7'2'
Copyr19111 1,.1 c:r.:_.cot,1 Publlshlf111 c_,.,,y NII H111f.....,.. ~! .. I.ti n>Mt.LOUWI• ••rli\e~ ..,_ ,.,.. ~ •ftlt'Vdllce4 wttN>lft ~la! ,...,,..._.et ,....,,It'll ••Mt ,
. .. . ,
SWA:T ie.am victim's kin file
Parents, children file wrongful death claim against Costa Mesa
Tbe pa!Wlll and chi\drea ol 1
Costa Mesa man shot to death
by a pol.let SWAT ltam otncer
bav1 filed a wron1Cul·dealb
claim a1a.lnst the Clly of Colta
Me ...
The five.page claim wu llled
with tbe Cit)' Clerk late lut
week by an attorney
repreaentina the dead man's
parents, Arnold and Betty
Broyles, and his c hildren , ·
Cynthla and Richard.
Arnold ''Arnie" Nash Broyles,
37, died at 2:85 a.m . Oct. 7 i.P
11urgery at Fountain Valle9
Community Hospital from a
.
ain1le ri.ne-ahol wound inflicted
two houri earlit:r
SWAT team oit.c ra bad been
called to 18'7 Prtsldfo Orlve alter
police and a pa y c holo1l1t
unaucceaa(ully tried to talk
Broyles out of the barricades he
erected ln the home he shared
wlth his pare nts und bis
daughter.
The psychologist said Broyles
-who had a hiatory of mental
problems had been drinking
heavily and threatened to kill
anyone who might try t o
approach him
t:arly Ulll moatb, th• Oranc•
County Dlst.nct Attorney'• otnce
rultd that Broyles' death wu
"JuJUllabl bomicid~."
Deputy D1Jtrlct Attorney John
Conley aald hls lnveat11ation
r e vealed Broyles had been
drinking, taking druaa and wu
acting in a vlolent manner when
ofllcers were c•Ued to the home.
· Broyles' parent.a claimed after
th e s hooting that police
over-reacted in the incident.
They personally seek $381, 110
for the emotionaJ distress they
C'la1m to have suffered.
Broyles' children seek $402,380
for IOU ol love, affec:Uoa Md'
support.
Tbe famlJy ulta ao addldonal tlM,070 lP exemplary dam.,..,
clalmln1 "-•t BroytH• civil
rlahta were vlolated.
The claim lJ scheduled to to
• before the clly council Dec. 7.
Such claims normally are
routinely denied.
The Broyles' attorpey. James
Gelder ol Santa Ana, lndlcat.ed
during an October press
conference that the c laim
probably would be the first step
1n what eventually would be a
wronilul-death lawsuit.
Slaying suspect sought advice
By GLENN SC01T Of-o.I.., Pl ... Shft
A Fullerton lawyer testified
this morning he a.dvised
Newport Beach psychologist
Telford "Tim" Moore lb¥ a
court order could be obtained to
keep Stanley· Espioda away
from him, bµt it might not work.
Alien McMahon said he gave
Moore that advice on Oct. is,.
1980, about three weeks before
Moore was arrested in the Nov.
5 shooting death of Espinda, ~
From PageA1 .
HEARING ...
com mission spokeswoman Katie
CorsauJt. "They must formally
explain why they adopted the
plan, maldng sure the wording is
correct to s upport the action
they took.
·'They will not be looking at
the plan again for changes," she
said.
But Fern Pirkle, president of
the Friends of the Irvine Coast,
s aid a contingent of local
residents opposed to the coastal
, commission plan will try to get a
rehearing on the plan Tuesday.
The Friends, along with other
e nvironmental groups, have
COf'(lbincd to form the Coastal
Coalition of Concerned Citizens;
which has filed suit against.the
state coastal commission and
the County or Orange over the
plan ror the Irvine Coast.
The group contends there is
too much density in the lancJ use
plan, objecting to the height of
buildings along the coastal
sector, the amount of office
building allowed and tbe timing
of phased land dedication by the
Irvine Company .
Tbe plan, drawn up joinUy by
county officials and the Irvine
Company, calls for up to 74
percent or the parcel between
Laguna Beach and Corona del
Mar to be left 1n open space.
What the citizens' group is
opposed to 1s development of
commercial buildings, bigh·rise
hotels and offices aTong the 3.5
mile stretch.
"We want them (the coastal
commission) to cut the density
of office and hotel development
lo c reate less traffic, thereby <
making public access to the
b e a c he s more readily
available," Mrs. Pirkle said.
From PageA1
STORM • • •
Highway I was cleared of debru
and reopened Sunday near .Fort
Bragg.
Gale·force winds and rain
battered the Pacific and Atlantic coasts ag8ln today. hampering
efforts to clean up debris left by
a weekend scourge of storms
that killed 11 people and left
etght others, missing.
Seattle's futuristic Space
N't!edle swayed in the brutal
winds, brieny trapping eight
people in an elevator inside,
while a le.ndmark of another age
-the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse
in North Ca rolina -was
-threatened by rampaging
coastaJ waters licking at it.a
base.
From PageA1
COLONIES· ..
with satellites that have
revolutionized communications.
And Koehn predict.a the shuttle's
ready access to the welgbtlesa,
sterile environment of apace will
lead to better dru1a and
vaccines, more efficient
semiconductors for electronics
and metal alloys impossible to
m llc on Earth.
"You'll probably do sometbinl
with pharmaceuticals flnt," be
said, since a ~I llboratory could be small, lightweight and
requir4! very Ultl• enerty to
operate. Koehn said a major
U.S. pharmaceutical fltm la
already preparing for juat aucb
a project.
Tapplne the sun's boundlaa
energy wilb a solar aateWte and
then tranamitilnl the power to
Earth la often dllc:u.ued, but
"what we overlook la tbat a•
aolaJ" uteltite would ban to be
aa bl• 81 lbe illaDd Of ~llhaAltaUa," be Saki.
t
roommate and bus10ess partner.
McMahon s aid Moore, 35,
wanted legal advice abo ut
terminating his bus iness and
pers911.aJ relat1onsrup with the
45·year·old Es pinda, als o a
psychologist.
Moore !l81d, however . that he
was afraid £spmda might hurt
or even kill him If he broke up
the relationshjjf, McMahon s41id.
The l a w ye r s aid they
discusse d the possibility of
getting a c ourt inj unction
Two
Two men, already sought for
two robberies near night bank
desposit boxes, ar e beh eved
res pons ible fo r a si milar
robbery in Costa Mesa Sunday
night
Two men threatened a Radio
Shac k employee outside the
Bank of America bra nch at 3300
Bristol St. at about 7 p m and
made oH with about $287 m a
bank bag, police reported.
It was the fourth such robbery
in eight days and the ftfth 10 the
ordering Espinda to stay away
from Moore.
• 'J said a court order could be
obtained," s aid McMahon. "The
problem 18, with people who are
not rational, the orders may not
ha ve any eflect ."
Mc Mahon told defense lawyer
Al Stokke that Moore's situaUoa
resembled those of several
ba ttered wives he had couruseled
at a Jt'ullerton woman's shelter.
Under cross·examination from
deputy dutnct attorney Bryan
Brown, Mc Mahon said be and Moore did not discuu
specifics ol terminating Moore's
relationship. He said Moore
began t.alkiftg about his fear of
Eseinda during the one-hour
legal session rather than
discussing ways of actually
ending the part.nersblp. --
Moore is expected to take the
witness stand soon in Oran1e
Collnty Superior Court Judge
Myron Brown's courtroom.
t
in • Mesa heist
past month, said detective Phil
McCormick.
T h e s a m e two m e n are
beltevcd responsible for similar
r o bb e ri es near night
depositones at the same bank
last Tuesday and at the Bank of
America bra nc h at Harbor
Boulevard and Adams A venue
last Monday night.
A lone man pulJed a similar
robbery at the Wells Fargo Bank
on West 17th Street on Nov. 7,
police said.
Still another bandit touched
orf the lat es t rash of
n ight·depos1t thefts when he
relieved a theater employee of
about S3,000 late Oct. 16 at the
Security Paclfic Bank branch,
2300 Harbor Blvd. McCormick
said.
Costa Mesa police are warning
m erchants and their employees
to deposit cash during daylight
hours or to travel in pairs while
making night drops.
W onian held • Ill
A 66-year-old Fountain Valley
woman was arrested mmutes
after she allegedly drove up to
her daughter's Newport Beach
home and fired a bullet through
the front door, poltce report.
AuthOrit1es said S ess1e Lou
Hendric ks. a w1 dJ>w , was
arrested Sunday when officers
arrived at her 9468 Wa rbler
Lane home T hey sa id the
womap was carrying a smaU
revolver.
Office rs i.a1d t h_,e y were
info rmed the. Fountain Valley
wom an reportedly had an
argument earlier in the da~ with
h~r daughter, Barbara Doore,
and had thre ate ne d violent
action
The daughter toJd police that
s h e a nd h e r hus band were'
watching television at about
10 30 p.m when she believed she
heard her mother 's car pull up
outside her Ne ptune Avenue
home.
She told police that seconds
later a bullet whizzed through
the front door. The daughter told
officers she did not actually see
her mother but was certain it
was her bec ause her mother's
car "maltes a very distinctive
noise ··
M ra. Hendncks, arrested by
Fount.aJ.n VaUey pohce officers
and talten to the Newport city
jail, is being held today 10 lieu of
Sl0,000 bail
Man injured in NeWporl crash
A 32 year old Los Angeles
man, ejected from a car· early
Saturday when it spun out or
control o n Pac1 f1 c Coa s t
Highway in Newport Bea ch,
remains tn critical condition
with head in,junes today al Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Rodney Hamilton, a passenger
in the vehic le, was thrown
through the windshield to the
road when the car struck an
e mbankment near Superior
A venue. skidded on it.s side and
t hen CLipped back up on its
wh eels after s triking the
embankment a second lime,
poltce·said.
Officers said Hamilton was
not wearmg a seat belt.
Ke nneth Lester DurreU Jr.,
who police said was driving the
car,· was arrested at the scene
on suspicion of felony drunken
driving. He remains jailed today
in lieu of $2,SOO bail.
Police said Durrell, who told
officers he lives at Peter's
Landing in Huntington Beach
where be said he's employed,
sul!ered mmor injuries in the
accident.
8-f oot waves hit som.e sands
w4ves that reached heights or
8 feet along the Orange Coast
this weekend died down today tn
Newport Be a ch and Laguna
Beach but c ontinued in
Huntington Beach.
Huntington Beach officials say
waves were reaching 6 feet Uus
mor:ning wu.b good shape for
surfing. Moderate riptides were
r eported.
In Newport Beach and Laguna
Beach officials say the breakers
a re down to about 4 feet.
Huntington Beach state
ranger Tom Nixon says tbe
waves have been stirred up by a
northern storm. He said weather
reports indicate there will be a
lull in the high surf but the
waves could get larger again•
later this week.
Cold water with the
tempenture in the low 60s, and
early morning mist and fog have
ke_pl the beach crowds lQ CJ'Ol.mS
of surfers, beach officials say.
__J
. ·~
• •
-
•
rtbabllltatloo eeoter In Dentoo. Tu.
"I wu dolo1 too much coc:al.De a kJt of dru11," be
uld ln ID interview. "l
couldn't do anybody a real
Jood Job."
Rodrl1u11, 28, la beat
known for h1a 1972 hit "Pua
Me By.(:
Harvard ls S7.5 O'lllllon
richer, thanks to a 1924
graduate who founded a
banklna and brokera1e firm
wlth his father.
Jou ....., .... Loeb'• Cift
may be t h e lar1est
non -anonymou s .cash
donation 1iven Harvard.
' Loeb, 79, who slready bu
given the university S3
million , aald, "the
fundamental purpose of tbia cm ia to enaure a fut ure
supply of YOUDI scholars and
teachers."
'The money will flnance 1S
junior profesaonbipa ln the
hu manities, social 11cience1
• and natural sciences.
CoraeUa Wallace competed
agairuJt hunters, trackers and
other sportsmen in a survival
game and almost won.
I
Actreu Brenda Vaccaro shares o toast with her huaband, '
Charles Cannizzaro, ofter their wedding in 8everJ11 Hill.s,
SJ4nday, at the actreu' home.
Mrs. Wallace, th~ ex-wife
o f for mer Gov . George
Wallace, joined 17 others oo
a Wilcox County farm for the
game, the second in the
country to be played in
conjunction with Na lion al
Survival Game Inc.
A rmand H ammer loans art treasure1
Multimilhonaire Armaad
Hammer says he gets more
pleasure from lending his
valuable collection s for
viewing "than keeping them
cooped up in my home ."
So after some gentle
arm-twisting from Gov. aad
Mrs. John V. Br~wn, the
83-year-old industrialist
consented to loan h is art
treasures to the University of
Kentucky.
"Your governor and tus
wife, Phyllis , a r e most
pers uasive," Hammer told
about 200 people during a
preview of "Five Centuries
• or Masterpieces" at the
university's art museum.
First lady Nancy Reagan
says she has developed a
thi c ker s kin about
unfavorable news coverage
since Preskleat Reagaa was
shot last Ma.rch.
When the Reagans were
ne w to Washington, "I would
be bothered a nd hurt by
things that were said that
weren't true," Mrs. Reagan
said in an interview today on
ABC's "Good Morning
America."
.. But then, after Much 30.
your priorities change," she
s aid . "You 're not a s
bothered. I don't mean it
doesn't hurt a little bit. But
you're· not as hurt, because
. . the things tbat wer•
terribly important to you
before aren't as important
and the main thing is that I
have Ronoie, a nd I'll go
ahead and do the things that
I feel are important. ..
Co untry music singer
Johnny Rodripea dJsclosed
that he was treated for d.rui
u se la st year at a
T h e contest req uires
players to fight brambles
and bushes to retrieve four
colored nags from woodland
hiding places without being
"shot" by another player.
Helen Hayea, the
81-year-old doyenne or the
American stage, says "of
course" she's in favor or the
Equal Rights Amendment.
The only reason she's not
campaigning actively for
ERA is she dQeSn't want "to
spread myself too thin."
Miss Hayes spoke as part
or a lec ture series on
Distinguished Ame rican
Women at the University of
· Notre Dame.
"I've never given a lecture
before in my life • . . and I
don't intend to give one
today," she said.
Her appearance coincided
with the dedication
ceremonies for two women's
dormitories oo campus.
Af terrwOns sunny
Coastal
Moitty """'' att¥_,s Coena1 -u 1n1-s1 (CM\lal
hlOh u 1n1-n wa1•r 60
Etwwhere sm<1ll <tall actvtsorv
becauu of laro• sw•ll• ll9M
v•rlabl• winch nlQlll •n<I mornln9
l'>ourt be<oml"9 _,, to \OUl-••t I
lo 1' ~MIS In alt•rnoon< La<1i1•
wrilerty ~ft\ \towlv o.cr-e.-s•no to
2 to 4 IH'I tOftlOhl ""' lo ._,_t Or••k•r' on iom• ,.,." '•<lft9
buchtt 0Kr•1t••"9 Mondo Faq anCI
low c~ ••'" onty ~1"1••1 cte•rlr.o '"•fl•,,,_
U.S .. sum111ary
A n•rrow b•nd of ir-o•er•
1tr1lc hed IO<lav from ftortllun
Alab•m• and MIHIUIOOI '"""'9" Hll"oh ano Into Wlw:-ln
(Mn<• "' _,, \l>"Hdl"9 lrom
tr-ie north about Thur\dey into
Frkl•v S-1"""' mount•IM •bo,..
•bout 7 000 le.I Hlqf>S '" the uppor SO\ to 1ow 1°' •I'd 10'#\ In ,,,. 40\ to
ll\)0 SO. •I -•tevallon\ SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
DESERT AREA!> Fair .... tMr
Hloh l•rn~raturH In the Owens
V•llO ~ lo n and !OW\ In tM 10\ '1'911\ In IM "'91' _,, u to 7S an<I
low\ 1n tM mtd JO\ to tJOCJlt' tOs,
Hl911s ln me._ dn•rt n to ts and
tows 47 to S5 SOUT'1ERN (Al.IFORNI A
COA!> T Al AHO MOUNTAIN AREAS
Fair o ceot coe•lal loq late In tN
•f'f!L GU'\t• ••f'dl lf"I ""°""t•ln1 •l"d lo< altv twto• the co.\lal c.,..,,.,..,
oe<rH•"'9 b¥ Frloav war-r 1119'1
""'""'•tu~ •1111 •S lo 70 at co"'I
an<I 7S to IS lnl-Lowl rnoltty 0 to
SI Hl9M al mountilln rP<Orts SS to u
with tows <nMllY 1S to 37
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l~:;iliiii ... ___________ ,. TO<OfltO
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Sun, moon, tide,
tOOAY
J:)f p.m. _._,
We'Te Listening •••
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you llke7
Call th~ number below and your messaae wlll be recorded.'
transcribed apd delivered to the appropriate editor.
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Tell us what 's on your mind.
· .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Novemt:fer 18, 1981
'
H/F
A LEAN ON THE PROPERTY -It's not
difficult to see which way the wind blows
around Middletown, R.l. This old silo bas
stood up -more or less -to many a windy
...........
winter over the years. The betting around
Middletown is that it will stand up against at
least one more storm -maybe.
Viet refugees' tempers short
Cramped quarters in Hong Kong lead to despair, tension
HONG KONG CAP> -When
Vietnamese refugees began
arrivln~ here in 1976, they "Y_ere put up m $40-a-day hotel rooms.
Now they are kept in more
cramped quarters that range
from former army barracks to
factory buildings with tiered
bunks.
This, along with processing
delays, is one of the reasons
given by refugee officials for
increasing despair and tension
among the refugees now as they
go through long waiting periods
for overseas resettlement.
For two nights late in October,
r ioting broke out in the Jubilee
Refugee Camp, leaving four
persons injured. The camp is a
restricted one; refugees are not
allowed to leave and
unauthorized visitors -ere not
permitted.
The October incidents were
sparked orr by the transfer of
about 850 refugees t o the
r estricted camp from a
government departure center
where they h ad freedom or
movement.
The trans fe r was made
because the refugees· departure
for the Uruted States has been
delayed following a US.
decision to reduce refugee
intake temporarily in order to
clear up a.backlog or processing
work.
The Vietnamese complatned
of the loss or freedom and said
they were beang treated "like
prisoners."
Refugee-relief officials say
they fear the slow resetUement
program c ould lead t o
recurrence of the disturbances
among the 16.700 refugees sWI m
th is British colony awaiting
permanent resettlement.
These refugees are housed in
seven calJlps and the cramped
and primitive living conditions
there have further aggravated
discontent a mong them. More
than 50 percent or them have
been j:lere fo11 two years.
Maurice Morgan, chairman or
the Red Cross Board which runs
a. refugee center here, said :
"When you a.re living in such
crow~ed conditions a nd are
uncertain of your future, almost
an y thing will make you
despondent.'' He added ,
however : "I don't think the
violence is too serious."
Deputy Security Secretary
John Heywood, on the other
hand, said Hong Kong will have
to review its policy if overseas
resettlement quotas are lowered
and the flow or refugees from
Viel.Pam continue~
He added that the government
had revised its estimates of the
number or refugees who would
be left in camps at the end of the
year to 11,000 from 9,000.
Heywood claimed the October
disturbances indicated that
some refugees are onl y
.. economic adventurers," who
have f\O feeling of gratitude to
Hong Kong for offering them
temporary asylum. He did not
elaborate.
This was not the first time ~
Vietnamese refugees have
resorted to violence. In June,
1979, ·atter spending five moo~
a board. the 3,500-ton freighter
Skyluck, refugees among the
2,651 Vietnamese aboard
seve.,-ed the anchor in an
attempt to beach the s hip so
they could land at Hong Kong.
Got $14 million?
This town for sale
BRASELTON, Ga. (AP) -
Hundre ds o f people are
interested in buying this town of
500 people after all, a local
real-est.ate agent says.
"I guess we've had 200 to 300
calls since the word went out"
last week that Braselton is for
sale, said David Moreland of
RE·MAX Nortbeast I nc., the
agent handling the sale. "A few
calls even came from Europe."
Moreland, who· has set a price
or $14 million for the town,
refused to divulge the identities
of potential buyers , but said
mos t a r e indi viduals and
bus m esses seeking to bring
massive industrial expansion to
the a rea.
The community was carved out
of the no rtheast Georgia
foothills in 1876 by William
Harrison Braselton, whose
descendants have run it as sort
or a family business ever since.
But the five eldest Braselton
men, an assortment or brothers
and cousins ranging ln age from
53 to 82, say they have no heirs
to take over the holdings and
that 1t~ time to sell.
The clan owns -SS percenC of all
property within the city limits,
including a 950·acre industrial
park, center-of-town shopping
center, post office, blacksmith
shop, grist miU, barber shop, 25
houses and a $4 millioo bank.
The five Braseltons who run the
famil y corporation a lso
comprise the City Council. The
mayor's seat has always been
held by a Braselton, with
81 -year-old Lewis Br aselton
currently serving in the post.
Moreland said Friday that be
has not received a firm offer for
the town but expects to have a
contract signed by the end ol the
month. While $14 million is the
going price, the agent said the
t~n ultimately may go to the
ti1ghest bidder.
The family's only r equest is
that the town keep its name and
that all employees in the family
• businesses retain their jobs.
T een e lectroouted
V AL LEJO (AP > -A
maritime student who climbed a
power pole accidentally touched
a 115"000· volt line and was
k1 lied, authorities reported_
Thursday. St.even L. King wou ld
have turned 20 Friday.
authz.ntic
cricktzt swrza.tcz.r ...
H/F Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday. November 18, 1981
France 'planned'
to kill Khadafy
NJ:W YORK (AP) -The
covemment of former French
PrHtdeot Valery Glac-ard
d 'E1taln1 waa pfannlDI an
H1Ulination aU.mpt on Libyan
leader Moaaunar Khadaly and
1ou1ht the Rea1aa
admiaistratlon'1 approval earl.1
tbl1 year, Time macuine
reports. Quotina unidenUlied aourc:es 1
ln Waahioitoa, the ma1aaine
aa.ya in it.s current iaaue that a
bigb·ranting official lD Giacard
d ' E1tain1'1 1overnment
presenteA tbe plan to
hl1h·rankio1 Reagan
adminiltratioo offlclala.
Tbe U.S. would not have been
directly involved lo tbe
aaaauination attempt, the
ma1aline says, but °'e French
asked that the U.S. five quick
recognition to Kbadafy 's
successor in the event of a coup.
Reagan plam no
cabinet changes
WASHINGTON <AP>
President Reaean. back in the
nation's capital after ao
unsuccessful buntin& weekend in
Texas, says be plans no changes
in bi1 adminiatratioo because of
persohnel problems involving
bis national security adviser and
his budget dirtttor.
Reagan flew home Sunday
aboard the jumbo "Doomsday
Plane" designed b)' the
Strategic Air Command to be a
flying White House during
nuclear war and said the
experience left him feeling
secure.
Leaden threaten
vigilanJe force
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(AP) -Protestant leaders,
denouncing British pleas to keep
ACTRESS DES -Silent film
star Enid Markey. who
played Jane in the original
"Tarzan of the Apes" in
1918, died Sunday in Bay
Shore, N . Y . of a heart
attack. Her career spanned
six decade5.
calm after the ..,..,lnaUon ot a
Proteatant member of
parliament, announced today
they will aet up vt1Uant. IJ'OUPI
lf BrttalD does not crack down
oo tbe lriab Republican Army.
• 'Tbe law-abldln1 people of
Nortben Ireland bave been
brou1bt to a · bolllnl point by
Brltlab Northern Ireland
Secretary James Prlor'a
inaulUna request to keep calm
wblle the IRA but.cbera ua," said
James Molyneaux, leader ol tbe
province's la.r1est Protestant
party, the official Unionist
Party.
Ohio labor chief
lauded by Reagan
CLEVELAND <AP> -Ohio
Teamsters boss Jackie Presser,
who bas been accused of ties to
oreani.zed crime, wu tout.eel at
a big-labor dinner dance here
and got_ a plaudit from President
Reagan.
Reagan aide Lyn Nohiger
said the president told him to
"tell Jackie Presaer that I have
not forgotten what be meant to
our campaign and what be
meant for ottr country." The
Teamsters and the Professional
Air Traffic Controllers
organization were the only
major \mioos to back Reagan in
the 1980 campaign. Many o! the
controllers were fired by
Reagan in August for atrilting.
48 dead, 49 hurt
at Mexico rally
MERIDA, Mexico (AP)
Part of an old cement wall
surrounding a bullring caved in,
collapsing the wooden stands in
front of it and killing ~ least 48
people at a political r'1ly. a Red
Cross spokesman reported.
A Red Cross official said 40
people were reported injured
and taken to five hospitals.
Some of the injuries were said to
be serious.
Terrorists bomb
two French bank&
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -
Suspected Armenian terrorists
bombed two French banks and
an Air France office in Christian
areas of Lebanon. It was the
i econd series of attacks on
French targets in Lebanon in
two days.
No injuries were reported in
the Sunday night bombings of
the Banque Llban-Francai.se and
the Union Nation&i Bank in Ea.st
Beirut, and the Air France office
in Jounieb, 12 miles north of the
capital. Damage was reported to
be minor, mainly broken~
Students strike
WARSAW, Poland (AP)
Mo re than 2 ,000 Warsaw
University students occupied
classrooms and administrative
buildings today in a renewed
sympathy strike for their
protesting peers at an
~ngineerlng school in Radom.
.
GAME W'.IZARDS -Andy Br.eyer (center) of Chicago bas
won a ~.ooo scholarship after being declared champion in
the 1981 Atari Asteroids Championships in Washington D.C:
Gary Wong (right) of San Francisco was second and won g
$..1,SOO scbolanftllp while Dirk Mueller of Hamburg, West
Germany was. third getting a scholarship worth $2,500. The
finals were held Saturday.
2itd sUicide try
by Hinck.ley fails
WASHINGTON (AP) -Witb " unsucce11fully tded to barm
tbe door lock Jammed, U.S.' hlm11lf •itb a overdoH of
marabala reached in tb• wiDdow Tylenol, ao uplrlo au---•,
of John W. Hinckley Jr. 's prilma and Vallwn, a tranq..W... ta a
cell and cut down tb• accUMd federal prUon ln Butaet NC.
prutdentlal uuilaot u be tried IHt May 27. PriloD otftd9i. ~ to ha'nl hlmaelf with a rolled-up Hlockley wrote of poHlbl•
jacket, the Justice Department auiclde alter that.
says. Hinckley pleaded t.nnoe..t to a
J u 1 t l c e Department 13 -count federal lndidmeat
spokesman Tom DeCalr aaid the cbargln& ·him with att.mDMd
lock on Hinckley '• cell door auaulnation of P~1ld•at
ma lfunctloned and kept Rea1an on March IO. HI•
maraball 'from reacbln1 him lawyers have told th• court tbe7
immediately after they aaw him fflll use an insanity defenae ud
beein the apparent suicide will not contest t.be fact tbat
attempt at 1 :55 p .m . PST Hinckley shot and wounded
Sunday. / Reagan, a Secret Service aimt.
DeCalr credited alert work by a D lat r l c t of Col um b ta
the manha.ls guarding Hinckley policeman and \IVhite House
in the stockade at Fort Meade, press secretary James Br.clJ.
Md., with saving his Ille. While Hinckley await• tile
The spokesman aaid Hinckley start of bis trial Jan. 4 lD U.S.
was "semi-conscious" and District Court in WublDIJt.Oll, M
s uffering from hypoxia, or bas been watched around tbe
oxygen deficiency, when be clock directly and on telev111on
arrived at the b<>'pital of the monitors in bis sinele cell at tbe
a r m y b as e b u t w ·a s in nearby army base.
satisfactory condition with "no DeCair said manhala 11w him
seriou.s injury of any kind." try to hang himself wlth a
U . S . m a r s b a I s a r e rolled-up jacket wrapped around
inve s tigating the incident, a bar in the cell window and
particularly to determine rushed to stop him. Tbe door,
wh e ther the 26-year-old however wouldn'tunlock,IOtbe
Hinckley bad disabled the lock marshal~ went outside in tbe
on h!s cell door, DeCair sald. exercise yard and reached
Hinckley has been under through the window to cut him
2 4 · b our w al c h s in c e he down.
Interview cash,.said marked for charity
TOKYO (AP> -The Japanese
magazine that paid $1,000 for an
exclu.sive interview with Nancy
Reagan "understood in
advance" that some of the
money would be given to a
charity by the White House, ooe
of the magazine's senior editors
said.
Richard V. Allen, President
Reagan's national security
adviser, bas acknowledged be
received the money that
magazine editor Katsura
Isbizuka called a c ustomary
honorarium.
Allen's role in the affair is
being investigated by the Justice
Department. He said he did not
s olicit the money but
"intercepted" it, lo avoid
embarrassment to the Japanese
reporters or Mrs. Reagan.
Allen s a id be locked the
envelope full o.f cash in a safe
and forgot about It until it was
discovered by others.
''It was understood lo advance
that some of the money would be
given to a charity by the White
House, .. Isbitulta told The
Associated Pr.esl...in a telephone
interview Sunday.
His statement indicated the
White House icnew Ln advance
that the magazine Sbifu·n-Tomo
-Housewives' Fnend -was
prepared to pay an honorarium
for the e xc lusive Jan . 21
interview with Mrs. Reagan.
I s hizuka, a directo r and
ge n e ral manager of the
magazine, said such payments
are customary among Japanese
newspapers. The practice bas
been s harply criticized in the
United States as "checkbook
journalism."
First word of the payment
came in a report Friday by the
'Japanese newspaper M ai.nichi
Shimbun that said Tokyo police
had investigated a payment to
an unidentified top White House
o ffi c ial Th e R e agan
a dmini st r a ti o n th e n
acknowledged Allen was the
recipient.
M ainicbi, quoting Japanese
police reports, said a magazine
editor who was present at the
1nter v1ew with Mrs . Reagan
heard someone utter the word
"honorarium?" as the first lady
was leaving the room alter the
session.
He aring that. the editor
presented a company envelope
containing money to a man she
thought was an a ide to Mrs .
Re agan, but she did not know
whether the man was Allen.
M ainichi said.
lshizuka said the decision to
make such a contribution and
the amount were agreed upon
beforehand in a meeting of
Shifu·n-Tomo's editorial staff. He
said they setUed on the tot.al
bas ed on the lim e s pent
arranging the interview, the fact
that Mrs. Reagan was taking
tim e from a busy schedule to be
interviewed. and the importance
or the story, which ran in the
ma gazine's March issue.
White House spokesman Mort
Allin said there would be no
c omment on lsh iz uka 's
r emarks. The Whlte House said
Saturday it would "refrain from
additional comments on this
subject" while the investigation
was underway.
The New York Times today
quoted administration offidala
as saying, there is no plan to uk
Allen to step down duriq tbe
investigation, but they added
that position could chanee ii a
special prosecutor is appointed.
But the unidentified officfals
said that question bad not been
specifically considered yet.
President Reagan, arriving in
Washington from a trip to
Texas, s aid be planned no
chan2es in bis admi.niatration.
Ish'izuka said the. interview
with Mrs . Reagan was
conducted by Fuyuko Kaml.aaka,
a well -known freelance
journalist who often writes for
the magazine, and Cbizuko
Takase . who be said is an
acquaintance of Allen and acted
as interpreter.
CBS News quoted Taltaae late
Sunday as saying that when the
interview was first discu.ued
before the election, Allen aaid no
gratuity would be accepted.
Teens denounce rock music as immoral
ROGU ER, Ore . (AP) -
Bidd ing farewell to some of
Am e ri c a 's most popular
r ecording s tars. a dozen
teeo·agers here burned
rock 'n' roll r e co rds and
renounced music as bad for
their minds and morals and
among the things that "on a
s mall scaie. were going to
destroy the m ," said Allen
Marks, youth pastor at the
Assembly of God church.
lnspi~ed by a revival las t
week in this Southern Oregon
town by e vange list Alton
Garrison of Dallas. the teens
gathered in the c~rch parking
lot Sunday night and committed
a bout 200 records and tapes to a
trash can of flames. "Say goodbye to Pat Benatar,"
s aid Jammie Norton, 17, who
tossed her album of rock mto the
bright flame that sent a pungent
s moke of burnt plas ti c
throughout the parking lot, as
people watched.
Records thrown into the fl.re
wer e exa mples of music that
p r o m o ted d ru g u se and
immorality, Marks said.
G a rrison !)as pro mpted
similar burnings throughout the
country, said Marks. But he said
others spumed the message that
rock music can be harmful to
youth.
Joy Cruise and her husband
Jim were the few aduJts who
turned over their collections.
They -donated about 150 albums
to the fire. ·'These are all my
friends," said Mrs. Cruise.
"They didn't believe we'd do it."
Ken Outlleet, a 15-year-old
who attends ROgue River High
Sc hool donated no records
because be said he had none.
That didn't stop his friends.
··People came over to my
house, saying, 'WilJ you give me
your albums,' " be said.
Some or the doomed records
and tapes included artists such
as Led Zeppelin, the BeaUes,
Alice Cooper, AC-DC, Fleetwood
Mac and Steppenwoll.
Also thrown into the fire were
records by artists not generally
considered to be bard rock
artis t s s uch as Simon and
Garfun.kle, Johnny Cub, Andy
Gibb and Bobby Sherman.
Rhonda Sarinana, 11, said the
records she donated to the fire
were some her sister bad &ben her.
"I wanted to get rid of them," s he said.
Marks said be expected more
people to show up. After
G11rris on 's sermon last
Wednesday, 75 teen-agen came
forward to say they wanted to
"shampoo their minds" of the
influence of rock 'n' roll. 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~~~~~~~-
CONSIRUCI10N
MONEY'
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK.
• Re.idential
• Commercial Buildinp: Tabout
c.ommitment required aiOl'll with le:aaa. ~
• I.and Loana up to one year 50% appniaal.
CONTACT:
• Jeff JohNOO
South Orange County/ Irvine
714/851-4050
e Tom Wilcher
North Orantie County I R.ivenide County
714/851-4126
• John Ha.Meld
San Oiqp;> County
714/299-9330
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(•ff tl/19111)
11 SS 1 m. s 15 p.m.
9'l0p m
t ·JSpm
(tff 11/lt/11)
12 OJ Pm 5 21 pm
9 llpm
9 .Opm
Seti.du~ and fern wt4«t to c~ without notice
I •
I
I
I
t
\
f
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November HS, 1981 H/F .41
• . .
3,000 see 'Aida' on screen
Crowd jams SF.auditorium; opera telecast.also viewed in Europe
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Three
thouand oper• tau, turned •••.Y from the box olftce of San Fraoclleo"I epera
boue, aaw • performance ol Gl...,pe
Verdi's "Aid•" oo • alant clOllel()slrcuJt televialoo acreen Sund•y.
Tbe crowd Jammed the Civic
Auditorium, about two blocks from the
War Memorial Opera House, Ud saw
tenor Luciano Pavarotti slna the part of
Badamea on a 20-by-30-foot acNeq.
Tbe telecast also was viewed by
audiences ln West Gersoany, Spain,
Autria and, by tape delay, Italy, Great
Britain and the Scandinavian countries.
Doctors arrested
paramedics wbo were treatlns a heart
attack victim durlnt a doctors'
convention, authorities aald.
Palm Sprtnp Police Sat. 'l'om Barton
on Sunday idenUfied 'thoee ~ at
the Gene. Autrey Hotel u Dr. Leslie
Scboenfield, .dlreetor of
gastroenteroloey and research at Loe
Angeles' Cedars-Sinai Medical Center,
Dr. Peter Barret, a physician at St.
Mary's Medical Center ln LoQi Beach,
and Scboenfield's wife, Connie.
Parachute bid
brings citation
Mark Sechler of Lakewood and Peter
L. Hammond of Venice were to appear
today before a park magiltrate oo a
cbarae ol cooaplracy to parachute ln
violatioo ol park re1ulaUou, said park
spokeswoma n Linda Abbott.
Additionally, Secbl~r was cited for
investigation of creating a buardous
cootlitioo, Ms. A'bbott said.
92-year-old
prisoner dies
,.~ ..........
in paramedic case
PALM SPRINGS (AP> -Two Loe
Angeles-area doctors were arrested for
investigation of interfering witb
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK (AP)
-Two Southern Callfomian.s were cited
SU})day after their unsuccessful attempt
to parachute from a cWf prompted park
officials to mobilize a rescue, a
SPokeswoman rePorted.
FOLSOM (AP> -A 92-year-old
prisoner with terminal cancer who
unsuccessfully souabt parole ao be
could die a free man, bas died ln pri.loo. •
Frank Hatnpton, who bad spent 63
years ol his life in prisooa for murders
and other violent crimes, died Saturday
of bladder cancer l.n Folsom Prison. He
had been the state's oldest prisoner.
AT RECEPTION -Mrs. Pattv Hearst Shaw and her husband,
Bernard, attended American Friends or the Hebrew University event
at Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills Saturday night. First Lady
Nancy Reagan accepted the Scopus Award for representing the spirit
Solo71rS leave
bills hanging
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Nothioa to do over the
weekend? Try playing the state capJtal's new9t
guessing game: When Will The Legislature
Return? Will it be:
A. Thursday.
B. Friday.
C. Jan. 4.
D. None of the above.
Torn by a new round of partisan and
inter-house bickering, lawmakers abruptly
interrupted their S-day-old special session Friday
with litUe accomplished.
The sBte Senate, which bad taken the day off
Wednesday for Veterans Day, decided without
telling "Assembly· leaders to cancel ita Friday
session and not meet until next Thursday, leaving
five Assembly-passed bills haogin1.
The Assembly responded by recessing
indefinitely. Speaker Willie Brown said be would
not call the lower house back unless the Senate
took some action on the five bills.
"I'll see you Jan. 4," the date the regular 1982
session is scheduled to convene, the Sao Francisco
Democrat told lhe lower house.
Assembly Republicans acrimoniomly accused
Senate Democrats of stalling because they want to
pass new reapportionment bills. But Brown
insisted be would not reconvene the Auembly for that purpose.
"I can think ,or no justification for taking up
S e n a t e r e a p.p o r t i o n m e n t , A s a e m b 1 y
reapportionment o r con2ressiooal
'The Republican paranoia
becomes wearying'
reapPortionment," be said. "Only Board of
Equalization reapPortionment," which is one of
the five unfinished bills.
In the five days of the session called to deal
with the state's fiscal crisis and with Board of
Equalization reapportionment, the Legislature
passed only one bill -in lhe first hours Monday.
That measure, SBlx by Sen. Alfred AJquist,
D-San Jose, was signed by Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. It conforms lhe state's welfare eligibility rules
with Reagan administration cuts that took effect
Oct. 1. The bill saves about $25 million and reduces
or ends benefits for 34,000 families.
The bills in limbo are:
-A related welfare bill, AB2x by
Assemblyman Bill Lockyer, 0-San Leandro, which
would add a state-financed S70 a month benefit for
pregnant welfare mothers and would spend $5
million on child abuse, work training and ln·bome
services for semi-invalids. Both houses paased
differing versions and a six-member conference
com m.ittee must work out a comp~ise.
-The Board of Equalisation <bill, AB3x by
Assemblyman Richard Alatorre, D·Loe Angeles,
which was passed by the Assembly on Thursday,
but stalled l.n the Senate, three votes short.
-Tbrf'e fiscal bills by Assemblyman Richard
Robinson, D-Saota Ana, which were pused by the
Assembly but ignored by the Senate.
The two important bills are AB6x, wbicb would
raise $21.S million this year by forcing employers
to transmit the income tax they have withheld
from workers to the state up to ei.tbt times a
month instead of monthly or quarterly, and AB8x,
which would raise penalties for late tax payments
from 6 and 12 percent to a floating rate tied to the
prime rate. It would ralse $85 million.
Bills during a special session carry an "x"
designation.
Both houses, wbicb met into Thursday
evening, bad scheduled meetinp Friday morulng.
Tbe welfare conference committee wu expected to meet and the Senate was expected to try again
on tbe Board of Equalization bill.
But late Thursday night, Senate President Pro
Tem David Roberti, D·Loa Angeles, decided to
delay the Friday session.
He said Friday that be postpooed the aeuioD
to ctve members more time to conalder the Board
of Equalization bill, addlnl that the Senate mi1bt
return to the capitol next Friday lnltead of next
,Thursday.
"A number of members had preued me that
'tbey felt they were beiDI presaed to Yote on t.biJ
tbln1 ln a naab," be said ln an interview. "On
reflection, I felt they were risbt."
lloberti said 6e tried fo c&ll Speaker Brown
Thursday night to tell him of hia deciaion but wu
unable to reach him. He left a meaqe with one of
Brown'• aecretaries, be added.
He ta.id be bad no inteatioll of dealln1 •with
leaillatlve or coqreuioaal reapportionment next
week. "Jl never bu been my inteation," Roberti
11ld. "Tbe Republican paranoia becomea
wearytnc."
A11embly GOP leader Carol Hallett of
Atucadero learned about tbe cancellaUoD and
called •Speaker Brown at 1:15 a.m. He nJd be new DCJ'Mn1 ol tM cbanae llDd bad aot teaed to RoberU. . 0
or the Hebrew University. .
We're getting together
to serve you better.
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Perpetual isn't saying good-bye.
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But we've put our heads together,
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• IRA and Keogh retirement
plans with all the new rules which
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tax-sheltered savings. And for
many, to take advantage of higher
contrib ution limits and added tax
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• Phon1Rate toll-free
information line tha t vou can call
any hour, any day for current rates
on all Home Federal money marke,t
accounts. Now's a good time to clip
our Phone Rate reminder and file it in
a handy place by your phone.
• Free Chaxlra interest
checking now2 just for visiting us
at any old location under our new
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Call Toll-free 24 hours for current rate'
on all Home Federal Money Markel Accounh
1-800.522-153 J
• Free Chextra interest
checking la ter, when you kl'ep
$500 in your account. Or at least
$1,500 in anv comb ination of I lomc
Federal savings account~. Or. 1f ·
you're 62 and ':iign up for Direct
Deposit of your ~overnment or
retirement check~. There\ no
per-check charge no matter whal
your ba lance. And ;,:ou may
qualify for overdraft ~ ~
protection up to $5.000. ~. l:=J
--lEllfDlll
1£xcmphn11a(>pllf~111 frdrr.11. but 11111L11/1tnn11a
S//J/J tax Yt'IUm> 2Lm11tcd 11/Jn
Assel~ over $5 b1/lio11
J-IOME
FEDERAL
Natum·~ 3rd larl(t'~t ~1111ual
FNkral ""' ings and Loan A'~'" 1.1111111
Canoga Park f>..lfJ() Platt Ai·etwcJ41Y-l/41
Norlhridgt 18540 Dr11n11sh1rc Str1 rt .1'60-2326
Fullt rlon 3334 rorba lmda Boulcl'1ml
993 -1200
Newport Beach 16.14SanM1gud f>nu
640·1634
Bevtrly Hills 9720 W1lshirt Boulr11ard
272-5656
Wtsl Los Angeles 10866 Wilshirt Boulevard
4U~SOJ ~~
Larchmont 250 North
Larchmont Boultvard 462-6463 ............. , ......
r
••
..
B)' The Aaocla&ed Presa
Selected world gold prices today:
1.-doll: morning fiiing $408.25, off $4.25.
Loedoa: afternoon fixing $404.25, off $8.25.
Part.a: $41.3.1.3, up $0.62.
Frukfut: $410.02, off ~.96.
Zarlclli: Late fixing $403.00, bid off 18.00; $406.00 aaked.
Rudy le Harman: only daily quote $404.25, orr SB.25.
Eagelllard: only daily quote $4(M.2S, off $8.25.
Eagelllard: only daily quote fabricated ....,.u 26 _,. $8.87. ~-' ....
(;ob1 ooins .
NEW YORK (AP) -Prices late Friday of gold coins,
comapred with Tbunday's price.
· l[ngerrud, 1 lroy os., $433.50, up $0.25.
Maple leaf, 1 troy os., $433.50, up $0.25.
MeJdcu 50 peso, 1.2 troy OI., $523.15, up $0.25.
Alllbiu 100 crown, .9802 troy oi., $U3.00, up S0.25.
Source: Deak-Perera
~ & Hannan, $8.22 per b'o)' e>pnee.
,. • I
Hnt Orange C9Ht DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 1&, 1981
.......
NOTICI! OF OBATH OF 1env j() FAANkOb•"-Bl!TTY JO Tl LL AN OP P~TITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
_..... fltCnftM.,....eM 'f~---.... ITAT&M8NT ....... Tiie ........... ,.,_, .,. ... flt ~---~-I Oil ............ M 1t1• .. "'· Ja•ONIMO ~IA, tut S.11
The marketplace
on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678
•t1t1T AM••tCAN TITLI ~ Hltllt ....... ......,, a.edl, uetuu..ce~v •• ~ ce11fltrtN ....
•·NO. A-111034. W • T o a I I h e I r s • beneflcl1rlt1, creditors ·end contingent creditors of
Betty Jo Frenko, •k•
._.,._a T,,.... • 111cc..-"l•t<ll•r Jt11u, Utt ••ecll ,,.._ •.....,... ,..,...., fll \NI '"411neN. a-"•"· C.llftftN citnel111 ell .. ._,. _...., T,... .... l
IHCllt• .. ttOea•T MOH •f WltllUft J , M1Hall"' tttt •ATkl•INI MOM,......,., 9M WtlAll!thft ~ CUl,..f (tty, ...... ,,... ............. ,..,.... ~-
He.et'-rW. .._....,Wt
• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • .. ,.. ·100J IOH . ............................................ . 41 ~·~-···•••aH ~.'t.~ ........ ~.":':..~ ........ ~.":':..':'!': ....... .
' • IOOJ 1002 ••••ti IOOJ ·'······················· ........•..........••••........••••...........
• • Betty Jo Tiii end persons
f' who mey be othtrwlse
;m,1nteresttd In tht wlll ~t,;; and/or ntate: • .,._. A petition has been flled
. •II "bV Eugene E. Franko In
• the Superior Court of . +-Or1nge County requesting ~·Qnhtthat EUQene E. Franko be
l lOQ.appofnted as personal
repre.se n tatlve to
Offl administer the estate of r !lf•Betty Jo Franko, aka
Betty Jo Tiii, Costa Mesa, ,.,_ Callfornla (under the
: Independent
•· Administration of Estates
Act>. The petition Is set for
•hearing In Dept. No. 3 at
•• 700 Civic Center Drive
"'West , Santa Ana ,
·&;.•Callrornla 92701 on ~·:December 9, 1981 at 9:30
, ..,~ ··~ YOU OBJECT to the
, ~.granting of the petition, '.._ you Should either appear au at the hearing and state
your objections or file
;.., written Objections with the
··~court before the hearing. l "' Your appearance may be
:· w~ I n person or by your
~ attorney. ·~ I F Y 0 U A R E A
"'!'°"" C. R E 0 I T 0 R o r a · -1: contingent creditor of the • ,.... deceased, you must file
'"t· 'your claim with the court
\: or present It to tht>
personal representative appointed by the court ~ ''''within four months from
• -the date of first issuance
of letters as provided In
..,.. section 700 of the probate
• Ju code of California. The
' (' .. time for flllng claims will
.. not expire prior to four
.._months from the date of ~ the hearing noticed above.
• ~· YOU MAY EXAMINE 1:.:-the file kept by the court.
~: *' If you are Interested in the *• estate, you may file a
;:, ... request with the court to
receive special notice of
I the Inventory of estate and
• of the petitions, accounts
and reports described in ~: Section 1200.S of the f-California Probate Code. ...,_ ELMER 0 . MONTANO .,r: 1695 Crescent Ave. #628 r.:· Anaheim , Ca. 92801
(714) 776-1550
~ Published Orange Coast
• • .:;. Dally Pilot, Nov. 16, 171 23,
........ 1981 4976·81
~
~· .>\.
Dentist
"'' convicted
t•-:"' SAN FRANCISCO
.........., M. me•....,_ .. ..._ Tltla .....,_ 11 ~-i." a tutt, 111 llM& llttl, ,.... tft .. 1911afal .......... °"lclet ~ti Of'-. Cewllty, ,.._._ .....
Ctllftr111l•io:"' .-r-flt It tllat Tiiie .....,,.... •• ,.._, wt• .. :':.~ =-.:.~ ~ ~~ a.rti .. °' ... c:-tt' ;;-,: "" •• lllMNa•• .... ..., .... --....... 0r-.. C.Jlt O.lly flt .... , ... , M91 II'!'\ flf O"'del ......... Oct.*'•*°"• 1, 14, ti, 1•1 •7lMI r.i-.. rni:."o'll~~.~ ---------
•«lloll ,., cMll. i.wtvt .-v ot '"' PllUC •TIC£
1 MISA~ IUC
••
U11I• ........ A-rite, at tllt Melll -----------1 EQUAL HOUSING
:_OPPC>_!t~;~ ~
lxtcvtlve me
wiU> ~ble door •trY: leacla 1111.o for'::al UV· IDs room d~ room, huse family
room •tone nre,.ace
country ltltcben. All
ovtrlool1 apectacular
pool and 19a. Ele1aot
mlJter auJ\e, a otber
lar1• bdrme, ot1a1 a den
''"'•n<t It fllnt Am.rlce11 Tiiie NOTICI TOCONT•Anolll t11a11re11ce ComMnY lte•ttf ti I It CAI.UM f'CMt tlM
•1tt l'I"" S4reet. !ft ll'll City .. SMta Sd1 .. 1 Olllrlcl: CMtl C""m11111ty AM, C:ellttffilt, all lMt rttM, ttl .. tM Cell ... 011Vkt
,_ .. tctllWWCltolOld-Mtllwll aid~: •••t'c1tct1.11."'· tf Ille 11n.ter Hlf 0Hf of "1't1111 '" tM ttt41ay" OK.,,._,,..,, .,._,., .,,...,. In ..... c-ity 11141 •tact Of ltlf "9<_.,.: Office o1 "" twit'"''*" e : •w<llaAlftl ....._Ma. Mlrltft .,.,,II\,
l• Iii, Tract IP', H -.... CNlt C:--lty Cell""° Ol1lrlct, ,_.. Ill ... Ill, ...... )4 W 0 Utt A..,_ A-. C:.t.e MIM, CA ........ "" Mite"'-.......... ..,.,
1111 OHb ti IN c.untv -.r• " •••l•U lfotltlll<eUDft Neme: 110
MNc:...ty. Nt. '946, Orenee c .. ,, Collet•
h«ae '" '"· .... ltr*--., ........ 1....n. Office flW'IMtflll'91 ...._.,. mw'911..,........., P,..Jtct.
-._.._I .... II .. -*4 "1ace Iii'!-.,. 911 Ille· HllM>MlehM
--~·ly ffWll Ille Miece 6 A_I.._, lls.DN St,..I, N-1 ............. ..,_.......,. .. ,...,.ti hecll, (AtaM.J; OHi '7~.
llltry i.-Mf .......... ti ... _._ NOTICE IS HeltllY 01\llN _,
..... .,.__ ...... ...-........ IN ellew-School Olllrkl ti
lor Ille _,... °' ••1Mtrl119 fer. °""'" CoufttV. Celllomla, 11<1"'9 1>y w1111. ,,...,... 1tt111...,, r-1119. 1110 111r....,. 111 ~ ... rn1111 IMr•,
t xlr•<ll"t er 111tr11e11n1 111<11 llorel11Utet reler••• 11 •• ..... ,_. "OISTltlCT.'' wlU rKoi"9 .. le, IMll TIM 11,... ..... w....., cem-1104 letor .,_ Ille ..._tateo time,
•nl1netlt11 of .. ,. aroMrty h ... 1 .. 111• lot ............. <MlfKI ~ tt • 1'11 ..,.....,_ ~. ler-"°"9 llf'O~L c:.ta --. C.Hwtlle. llft "'*' • rlcolvecr In IN lllK• Self Nit wlll M M-•lt!Mvl lcle11lltlef ....._, -IMll De ~ cn111011t or ••Nal'tY ••11rou er end p11llllcly reed el•11f el 1111 1...,11ed, • to Utle, ,.... .. ..._ er -·..i--1im. -place.
_"'"._ le Mtltfy Ille -'f Tiier• •Ill be • SI0.00 d•llO•ll llale11<e .. .,. llW ...Ce or r111t" r"1q11lrecl tor •«II Ml of bid doc-b -wed""' Mid Deed .. ""-'·• wit: I• 111er111IH Ille t1l11rn In good ....... , ... , ...... t.lltwlnt "'"'-C°""lllM wlll\ln 10 dly1 etter Ille bid tetb, .......... ~ .. Ille Ojltlllllt .....
lllM If .. lflltlel !ll*katle of 11111 Eecll btd mu1I conform end be
'"'k• flf .... , ta.7•'7. r•~•lw to Ille conl•acl fou1m..,ta. oetef: oct....,. at, 1t11 '1•s-r l!ec11 11111 111111 111 '"°"'""'" ltY AMI •tCAN TITt.I UllU•A•CI 1M MCwlly ref9fref '° 111 Ille contriacl COM•ANY, A CALl"O•NIA dOClll'Mflb -by 1,_ lltt .. pr~
COllNtlATIOel awkonlrecton.
9"11Et •• ......, Tiie 015TltlCT ,_.... IN tight te
.....,..OMcs ,.IKI any w 111 lllcb w to wetw any
114 I . ., ... • 1rn.,1ar1tie. or lllf•m••llll" 111 "'' ..... ,,.., c:.. ..,. llld• Ot '" Ille .,...,.... ~an ..... TM OISTltlCT ,_ ......... lfom l'WlllllM 0-..,.. C-$1 Dolly Pltet, llM Director .. Ille ~tm..,t Of
Nov, J, •. "· ltll 471MI l11d111lrlel Ao tallon1 "" .. nerel
PHUC llTICE , ..... 11 .......... -dMfl'I ..... In
ti. *'""' In wtllcll tllh WOfll ,, t• be perfw..-fw HCll cr•I er type OI
N•.-U wtrllmen nHded lo uec11le Ill• MOTICll Off .-uauc SALll COlllrecl. TlleM ..... •r• on ,., •• , .... On ~ 12. 1"1, el t :JO a.m. OISTAICT olllce teutell et Diii. ol 1111 0r-. c-r, Falrvrouncn. Adm In. T,.ll•r Feclllly, t out
Arll1191on Ori••. Costa M••• Community Colle .. DlalrlCI, uro c • ' I f • r n I • • L E ... s I .. Adema A-. Deon A or •• , .... EHTEAPIUSES, INC., HCUl"td Pl Mu•. CA ttlU. Copl11 m•r •• under • 11<urlty egrHmonl wll Oblolnecl Oii r...,., A """' of tlle .. OAVID A. OREW, delllor, date re1t11Mlllle--1tt11tJo«llllt.
Ftflru•ry v. 1"1, *-of*'°"' The IOl"9gDlng """"'•of -diem 11ftdtr Ille_.,_. wlll Mtl 11 "'*le .... , Is "-II -• wwlll"9 NY Of eucllon to Irle ~ .,._, IOI" u elglll 111 ......, The rote lot llollclay pey.Olt al Ille tltne of Mte, wlu-t Ollf 0¥"1il!M ~ INlll be al tent wa111n1l11 ol 1111•, fitness, 0 llme •"4-.ftall.
D
..... ...,. .
All rral eatate Id· V'erl 1ed l a lhla M'flll:r::t "lbjed to
=Act ol =~b miles It WeaaJ to ad·
vertJle "'41 pftfemiee, 111111 ltatlon, or dis. er ailaaUoa bued on
race, color , rell(lon, ~x. or utkiinal onaift. cw an 1titendon to mate
ID)' sucb preference.
llmilation1 or dis·
crimlnatioll •
Thia newspaper will not
lrnowln•!.f accept anY. advert111n1 for real
estate whieti i.s in viola· Uoo oft.be law.
HMMtfwWt ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ... ,.. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SWll
L OPPOIT\HTY!
Immaculate 3 Bdrm
home with family room I In beautiful Harbor View
I Hills. Freshly paint.eel
Y in1lde ud OUl. Newly carpeted. Quiet Newport
Beach loeatJoc. Lot aiu
arrordl room for pool or
addition. Owner will
wit!> builthl liookcues
Truly 111 neadive homt
for only • 000. Owner
will belp Wi1' flll111d n1.
Call oow. 541-Zlll
THE REAL
ES1~TERS
ACISSFIMPU
Lra s Br 2~ Ba ~ondol across from park db
aar, a duo warm 6ome
priced to lell at 1103,900.
Bob Burdick . act
s11~1000 CA~OUT! Newport Beach
t own home, owner
desperate ! Wanll out! 2
Bdrm. 2 bath1 1lnJle aeon. A bar&am ! Call now 1 S4f.Zll3
THE REAL
ESTATERS
VEIYLOWDN!
Sharp Ira 3 Br condo nr
So Coast Plata
w/Lerms! Onty 111.S 000
Submit any offer.
Patrick Tenore. aat
758-1221
carry Jarae 1st or ~ 1----.:::._.__;=:;,_;;;;,,_;:,;_
• 1291.soo THE ST AITEI
ONLY 1139,900
Mer<heftlelllllty, -In 4K<Ordlllne:I II 111111 be ~ltry ypon llM wllll Section tJCM .. tM Celllotnlo COHTltACTOA .. -h <Olllr-ac}
Commtrclat COde, tll• tollowtno II •••rded, •nd upo11 eny colleterel One Ill ltll l(ullote Wb<Mllroctor ~ lllm, 10 pey "°'
Treclor, s.r .. 1 Number "'"· to pey ltsa tllen h Mid -•tttd rllH lo 111 ollllgellons end tewlut ••P•ntea workmen employed llt lllem In 11,!l pursuent to Ille -IWlr, 0Qr""'9nt. 1 .. c .. 11on of Ille concroct.
DATED: ............ r 2:1•1 No bl-~ wlllldr-1111 bid fOt Al.BEAT F. OUINTRALL a period of lldy (601 NYI ett ... Ille Altof'Ny IOt dale Ml'°' Ille_,.,,,. of blOll.
SK..nd Pe'1y A ,...,,.,..,, flOlld Ind e "''°'"'"''° · Pybllllled 0r.,,.. coe1t Delly Piiot. bo11d •Ill lie reqwlred prl•r to Nov. 1', ltlJ'I ..,._., ••t<llllo11 or Ill• contrect. Tiie peymtfll llond -II lie In IN fwm Mt lortll In.,.. contract doc-ta
Gowrnl119 a-d /I/.,..,..,_![, W•'-'
Nw.lan Secnt.ry, 9ottd of TrtnlHI
.. OTlCllOff -·auc••Lll """"'"'"or ..... C-11 o.tly Piiot, rv -NO¥, f , 1 .. lt11 fflf .. I
Ofl o.c.meor 12, "''· 01 t ·JO e.m .. ----------11 IM Or-County Fair.,_, 17 ArllnQIOll Or•••. Cost• Mesa.
C e 111 or,.le , LE A S I N 01-----------
NOT1c• Off l"uttUC IAL•
675-3411
Assume! S% first •
Enchantina COila Mesa
home w1tb hardwood
floo rs. Heavy wood
ftaircase lO baou.s room!
Lar1e 13SX50 1ol Call 673.a550
THE REAL
ESTATERS 41EDIOOM
Costa 4J~~~aln! 4 Bdrm Z batJI. With 20'7o --------
down payments at 1899 $30,000 ~ffott
per mo. lntett:lt ~'ro. l°" dn, fantutlc lermt. A must aee.. caU oow. 4 Bel 2\'f Ba WestclUf ~2313 Norm or Kasey &31 12166 ,,.«--~
p
I
L
0 ..... T o.. o.c-12• 1"1• 11 • • •·"' • VIEW1• VIEW! 01 111e Or-c:oun.., Fairer_,, ., Ar11no1on Dr1,,,, Colla Meu. Woods Cove. Lacuna 2 STAITSMAIT
116 CANYOH COUMTIY CLUI
611A T 60U COUISI YllW
CALL FOR CO&.OI llOCHUH
Magnificent location o'looking 8th
green or golf course. Call today for
appt. to see this luxuriotis Georgian
Colonial custom by owner/builder. 5
Bdr)Tls, lge formal dining rm, family
rm, billiard rm, refrigerated wine rm
& 6'h baths. Lots o( marble, finest
wood paneling & custom molding,
great storage. 2 stairways. aar-cond .,
bit-In vacuum system + many other
custom features. $2,150,000.
WESLIY H. TAYLOI CO .. 11.ALTORS
1111 s. ,,_... Hlh Rood
MIWPORT C lN'TH. M.1. 644'-4910
REALTORS
'75-111.)
OWMH'S PRIDE Hcillrd decorator wood
p..ei.cj & 191.tell ....... tllil ) .. drooom &
de. •it~ow of Hit M0St ...... ill old CdM + o I ldrilt rntal Al for $314,500.
COLE OF NEWPORT IEALTORS
2515 l. Coa1t Hwy .. COFOM cMI Mar
675-5511
DlCOIATOI FtHPU.CITOO! COMD0-$15,000 in this tastefully re·
Fonner model coodo in decorated 3 Bdrm home
mint condition. Hosts with a l yr old roof.
views of areenbelta and Seller may assist in
awlmmln& pool. Owner financina. All this for
wlU carry fmancina with 112!~00. Call t oday
low down Call now. 979·~•0
ffi ,S/t,~~rYls ALLSTATE ~7'4-431-6990 . REALTORS
H ..s.llOI VIEW Trouble Sellin& Your A Property~ Trade it with ONLY UJS,000 the Great American
Owner wUTcVTY bu1e Trade Co. We have Hun·
2nd. Popular Monaco dreds or E1cban1able
floor plan. Coly country Properties lhrouahout
kitchen. 3 larac bdrms California. CaU Now.
Fabulous yard featutta 1---~61~S.~3l~5.1~--
bubblin1 spa, BBQ and LOCATION
patio heattt•.Ftt land Triple 3 Bdrm 2..., B1
Call today· 8'7US50 condo swim pool, ten·
<AP> -A 35-year·old
dentist was convicted by
a federal jury of four
counts of obtaining 29
ounces of cocaine by
misrepresentation.
ENTEAPAIS£S, INC., Hewed perty
Ulldtr • MCurlty oor ..... •n• .....
WESTE AN FARMS & RANCHES, INC , delltW,dOltd Jyty 21, IHO,
11ecaua1 ol dateull u11G•r Ill• eor""'-..tll wtl al .,.,.,.k eu<llOfl to IM htofwll llkNw fw Casll PIYlllll at IM time ol Mle, .,.,.....,. ••r.410.S of
Utte. lllMM, "' ,_CJ...,,loblllty, and In ace~ •ltll Secllon tSCM of IN Celllornla Ctmmerclal C4cle, th• tottowlng collllereL OM ( 11 '"° lollcel Loeder. MocMI US, S.rlel HYmlMr NA14"3 tftd -(I) HIO l lemtn Trell1tr, _, o ... Sltrl•I
c • 1 1 t • r " 1 • . L E A s 1 N G Br 2 Ba. A Z.lt)'·2 lot. ENTERPAISES, INC , HCWtd ,,.,..., You must see th.is emo-
under • Mc11rlty a9rHmtnl wll Uonal home. Call Bob
Terrlll LMlll -luter CorKVucll.,,,
1
Burdick ait 7St·l221 ,,f P~~a~3.r -THE REAL
ESTATERS
Oil, burb. dbl llr,
priced to ~ 1119.000
Bob Burdick . a1t
Roger Lee Palmer.
who lives at Kelseyville.
will be sentenced Dec . 4.
He faces a maximum ol
four year s on each
count.
Cleblor, -llCI J-I, 1"1, llKAWM of 1ZJ17 500 ' beach. Rettntl)' ~ut'fd •--------S20.000 • As5uow low in·
tereat loans. Motivaled
o wner Call now ,
felevll -tlll ... _....., wlll Mii '
•• Pllblk auction to uw lllghffl bidder c '
N11m1Mr Z"'°'33, to pay obt19ttlofl1
lllCI llwNI •---nl to Ille
fW <11111 PIYellle at Ille time of Mio,
wllllout _r.,,u" of lltte. '"-., merc11111....,.llty, end In accorfence 873-IS50
The government ·~·
-urllt _...._1. DATED: N_,..1, 1'11
ALBE AT F. OVINTllALL
wltll Section tMM of Ille Celllornta commer<l•I Code, the tellowlno
collelerel One (11 ltll Kubota L Trec10t, s..-i.1 ,,._,. 110), 10 "'' Classified Adi. your ooe-011t111•t1on1 and tewfut upe11u1 atop ab~ center. .~ ... alleged that from Jan. sJ A1--,r0t SKllF'td Parw
'"'".,."'to tlle M<ul'llY _....,..,,, --
DATED. H~2. 1"1 ,. 1977, to April 15, 1980,
I , ;c... Palmer obtai ned the
1 • .,,.. pharmaceutical-grade
cocaine for ostenisble
use in his practice. but
instead diverted it to other uses.
Publlallecl Orenoe Coe~t Delly Piiot,
No¥. "· '"t .... , ALIEltT F OUINTAALL A AltorlWY tw
Sl<ured P•rlY P11bflsn.o Or ..... C .. tl Delly Piiot. NOY, 16, 1"1 ••1).'1
JIULTGllEN
HARRY A. HULTGREN,
resident ol Corona del Mar.
Ca . Passed away on
November 13, 1981. Born
July IS, 1899 an Omaha.
Nebraska. He l.s s urvived by
hla wile Norma. a son Harry
A. Hui~. Jr. of Athens,
Ohio, daughter;s Norma J .
Daniel ol Eueene, Oregon,
and Barbara E. HosteUer of
Trade )'OW' old stuff (or
new goodies with a
Classified ad. 642-5678 NwmD NOTICll Off ~•uc SALi
Ofl ~ 12, 1,.1, el t ·JO • m .
el tlll Or-c-ty F•lt'Of'-. 17 Arllnglo11 Ori••. Coale MoH, C e ll forn l o , LE A S ING ENTl!APltlSES, INC., -lll'H pa,,.,
Ylldtr • MCllrl ty agreem•nl •1111 LOREN & DIANA ZOlltOSKY , IMblwa, detH $tpt•rntler 16, , ... , ll•<•un of •111111! unGer the
..,_,,,,. wtll 1111 al "'*k ""110fl 10
111e llllN9C lllddw tot ~ peyellle 11
Ille 1""9 of MM, WI"""" Wlf'r..,tltl of Ullo, lltNI .. tr m«d>entalllllty, 111C1
In 41<<•-.C. wllfl Section ..... Ille Calllornto Commerclel COdt, lhe rtllowlnt <Olllleral Ofll (I) 19'0
ICubOl.a Trocw. S.r1ot N-r IUM
Ind -Ill , .. s........., Trelltf, -1 M-11•. wi.1 N""'"r ,..,, to ,., Ollt ... tlot>t •nd 1..-ful .. ,..,. ...
purslltftl to,,. IOCurlty ..,.......,,
Corona de l Mar. Ca., 7
grandchildren , 1
great-grandc hild, sisters
Ruth Barnett and Jennie
Pnasterer boUi of Omaha.
Nebraska. Funeral services
will be held on Tuesday,
November 17, 1981at11 :OOAM'
at St. Michael and All
Angels Episcopal Church,
Cor o na del Mar . C a .
Interment at Pacific View
Memorial Park, Newport
-------------.Beach. In lieu or flowers
DATED:"-2, i.11 ALll!ltT I'. OUINTAALL Allon>oyfor
rACllHC YllW
MIMOllALrAlK
Cema!ef'i Mortuar)
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1l1c View Drive
Newport Beach
6"-4·2700
MeCOIMCI MOITUAlllS
Laquna Beach
•9'·9•15
La<iuna Hills
768-()933
San Juan Capistrano
•95·1776
HAGOI LAW,.._MT, OLIVE
Mortuarv • Ceme terv
Cre1n1torv 1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
o-540-SSS•
,_ClllOTHllS
~MOADWAT
NOeTUAIY
tQJ3rQadwav Costa Mesa
6"42·9160
IM.Tl .. 4110M
SMITH A TUTHtU
WISTC&.W CHArk 427 E 17th Sr •
Co.ta MeN
948-9371
memor1aJ contributions are-
requested to St. Michael and
A II Ange ls Ephc opa I
C hurc h . Pacific View
Secut'ld Per1 t Pullll•-Or119 Coest Dally Piiot,
Nov. 16, '"' 4'14 .. 1
Mortuary directors.
GOUDSWAARD NW..em.
C A R 0 L I N A S . NOTtc•oflPuaucsALI
GOUDSWAARD, resident o! °" DK.,,,._ n. 1t11, •• t :JO •.m ..
H t ' g t 8 h C el Ille er.,.. County 1"elrlf'CMll'd1, 11 un to on eac • a . Arlln91011 Ori••. Co ••• M•u.
Passed away on November c • 1 1 1 o r n 1 • . L E A s 1 N o
12, 1981. She is survived by l!NTUPAISES, INC., HCWtd peny
her husband Jan, sons 1111der • t1<11rlly agreement •1111
Gerttit ol Palm Desert, Ca., ~.?!~~~.:; a!:';:,.rz... ~!it=
Jan Jr. of Huntington 1111 •trHIMftt w111 1111 01 p1111111c Beach, Ca., Johannes al.lo of 1t1el1tn to.,.....,_, bidder tor c-
H I lllYlblt IC 1111 Ume of Mlt, wllllevl unt ngton Beach, Ca., 2 werran1111 01 tilt•. lllneu, or
brothers, 1 s ister. all of ,,,.,c,,.,,...11,.,, .,.. 1n eccorOetlco
H o 1 I a n d a n d 3 w1111 soc111111 "°' ot 1111 C•lll•r,.ta
d blld G Comm or<l•I Cid•, Ille lollewl119 eran c ren. raveaide co1111 ... 1. 011e 111 v .Jo D1tc11
services wUI be held on Tr"""°'· s.r .. 1 NumllJtr muJ. to
Tuesday, November 17, 1981 .,.., ..,._.ion. -tftrf\H • ._
al lO:OOAM at Harbor Lawn Pllfwallltoh-ur11, ... -. DATED . .._.,,.,2, 1"1 Memorial Park with Rev. ALHitT l'.OU•NTltALL
Eric Buhler. Harbor Trtnlty At..,.,.,,., S.Cllf'eCI Pertv
Saptist Church. officiating. P111111_ or_ cao1t Dally flt._,
Services under t.be direcUoa 1.N_•_•_· '-'-· ,_., ______ ..,_,..,
of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Mortuary of Costa Me11.
HO·~ ... ...., a.rNTON NOTIC• °" ..ueuc IALa
EDWARD R. CLINTON. 01°.:. ~ ~~~~~1 resident ol Orange County Arllne1011 Orin, Cotta Mu•. slne9' 18 -J>ueecf awav Oil-C I t I I o r 11 I e , L a A t I N 0 ' , """ISH. TNC,"Mt.,,_. "ttV' November 15, 1981. He was a titlMl•r • 11cur1tt •trHm111t •1111
veteran of World War II, •utHLL 1.. • o•NIH CLAH -. bnlna served ln the u s CLAllll.'S GltADIHO, ~ ..... · • oe ...... •. ""· ._ et •f..it Army. It. la aurvtved by hit ""°' , .. ...,_,_,.,, w111 "" ••
wife Maile, aon Wayne, Pl*k_,.t•W.MtMlt~..,
dauaht.tr Flora Mae Orut c .. 11 .-Y• .. • •• ,.. """ .,. ..... father D...-.. "' '"''-•---: wiu..t _.._... .. ttue, f"""'-.,. ~· ••,._..,_.a.DO ~~tty, ellf 1111 OU~ crandcblldren. Servlcea wtllt l«tl"' '* of 1'1t Call..,. wm be held 00 Tu"day t ....... .,cre1 eo.. , ....... -....
November 17 1911 at' nlloterall -10 ,.,. Tracter, • Sttltl. HllMMr CM•*• to ••Y ....Cl llOntllS lO:OOAM at Harbor Lawn 0111011 ... a ,..,. 1awt•t .,.,... ...
SMn'Nt' MOITUAiT Mt mortal Q,apel, Sttvtce1 ,.,... .... tle:Wttr a. u * t.
627 Mein St under the dlrectlon of DATa:~~·,:.1;',.ALL ~nhnS1(on Beach ~rbor Lawn-Mount Olive A....,..,,., 53&-6S39 rtuary of Cotta Meal. _ .... ._..Or ,..,., ......... .. '---------·~ 555(. • ,,_......... ... 0.... ,_1y ........ -• ., ...... '" "'1 ..,...,
s s:
I
F' .1 I
E
D
16
4·
2
• . s
6~
. 1
8
HAHOI RID~E Beautiful "Kens·
ington" with panoramic view 4
BR + fam rm. Great financing.
Enjoy the private & security of
Newport's most desirable ad·
dress. $710,000 Jerry Thompson
551·8700 (J49)
LIVE ON THE WATER! $595,000
Lowett priced woterftowt ho1M 011
lal»oo 1-'lftd. T~ 1111t0dalad llotlle wl.. 2 '*-...t dodt for two I 8'
boah. SCMlftt patio w/...,.._ G ..... t
WtcMlt .ct"'°"' ednn. Very .,.clal ill
t•ery way! 673·6900
BAL8dA ISLD. LOT + PLANS Dri•• by 30t s "'ti • .... .Cl. for dtt•llt. PIH1 for .-.. faa 9'oOM
.,,-o•ed Ir reedy to ...... S345,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, tNC
REAL ESTAn
S.. ~. PtOIWll'y ~I
~Co.st H...,. 31S MMft Avt ~ llHch a.a-ltleftd
631-14" '7UMO
Climb
Aboard
our
Gift Train
1111 sell ,..,
H-..tt .. .
Ifs• my .. .
Jlst al 142-111 •
Ilk fat your
Plllt Clli11w ¥Villi
STlrS TOOCEAH
LOWDOWM Owner will carry financ· 1--:...:;._ _____ _
in& on this 2 story, W"'---..IT Span.lab Villa. Try 10'\ ,. , _,._..
down on th11 o oe-SUPER FINANCING!
fountains, Spanish tile I lS' with pier ud dock and charm. It's all here! Zoned R-2\'f. Been looll·
Call now, only Sf.t9.000. in& for a b&y(ront build· , · In& site r Or 1ae u ii-@ SEA COVE two 2 8d.rm units plu.s PIOPEITIES doublt aaraie. Call Max
1 ~ 6,. Ad.rian forddails. 1•· ~ l-4'90 642.-5200
~yo. ........
Defer part ot monthly
payment on t.bll charm·
In( Balboa Island home.
··~=·· J PETE HARRETT .. REALTY
BEST PRODltT IN TOWN!
We'n got I left to Ml!
13%% 30 YW
AXED ltl:OME
We'll deal!!
Nopuadcb!
Frotw SI 36,000
WILSON PARK
310 W. Wlhoa. CCKta Meta
631-5055
£!1E
llDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERV1CE
AXIi U"9
US11Wff
Individual Home -Large Five
Bedrooms -Separate Mast.er Suite
· -Good Floor Plan -View Of City
Lights -Great Neighborhood -
School & Park Close By -Fast
Escrow. Listed At $255,000. A "Joy
Of Newport'' Listing .
AftlPIOMI' DWllX
Balb6a "Little Island." FUil Bay
View From Both Units. Upper Unit
Would Make A Wonderful Owner's
Unit. Has Four Bed.moms. Lower Is
Three Bedroom Unit. Large Front
Patlo. Sandy Beach.
·~ . -· 1iilli
• 1' tlCc:pa•-
-.!!! ' •.! CWllj
UNDA ISi.i HO...S
Presuce pool family home. Main
channe l view from beautiful
traditional, 4 bdrm, 5 bath home. Slip
for 2 large boats. $1,495,000.
Wide lasoon view from seectacular
architectural design 6 bdrm, 5 bath,
. playroom. dark room & den. Slip for 2
large boats. $1,~.000.
LIDO ISi.i HOMIS
Featured on Homes Tours tb.iJ lovely
traditional spac10~, custom 3 bdrm, 3
bath home, newly redecorated. Priced
to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great ror family living.
Excell nt value at $420,000.
PENINSULA POIM'I' WCHROMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. It.
featuring marine room. $1,385.000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J.11 B"y\•d• lJ, " N B t. ') t,,I):
SUP&DULI
Beautiful, immaCUiate,
nirtly landscaped 4
bdrm home ell cul-de-
sac Spacious rooms.
View of &oU COUl"le from
pro perty Owner will
help OD faoan.cin, Only i~oo Col oow
LLSTATE
REALTORS
OCIAIROMT
S ltS,000 celll dtn Seller will carry balance
at 12% mterest Choice
comer duplex. 3 bdrm. 3
bat.b up 2 bdrm, 2 b1th
down. Can convert to
large home Submit au ofren . ..... ~,,,.. . ..... •'75-7060*
Ownership In Lacuna Bch Bcb reaort.15,000 + S2S mo. Prin .=.g. Call Mr. Mota 751~,
OCIA .... OMT Dft.I
4br/2ba A 2br/lba.
Balboa. SM0,000. Wall
tradelor M . U>-7990
4VllWLOTS
COROMA•MAI
Just listed! Prime loca· bon oo quiet street. Bay t oce an views
SUS0,000. TS~ fanancint
available.
I\ Dtv1~ton ol
llnbor lnH'l>lment Co
OVHR.OWIMG W1TH VAUIE
Great Plan 111 in Turtlerock.
' Superbly situated overlooking park
& city night hght view Steps to 3
pools. & tennis courts. 4 BR. 2\.Al
Baths. Family room. Large lot w /2
patios. 3 car garage. Take over 1st
T.D. $233,500. Fee.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
• DISTRESS SAU •
Seller behind on payments on
spacious 3 bedroom home in
HARBOR VIEW HILLS. $41 ,000
price reduction for quick sale.
* VICTORIA.H STYU •
Spectacular 4 Br. remodeled in
Victorian style w/custom kitchen
an prime Costa Mesa area.
$138,500.
NEWPORT HACH OfftCl
2670 s. ...,..Ori ..
1714J 759·1501 171417S2·7l73
~ Walker &lee
Real Estate
SUIC & RNlt IALLETTU•
C K P A A T M E M E T T A 9 C 0 0 L E
S M W R I E N P I L T R A A T E M Y R
0 A K A 0 T T E R 9 I L U 0 T l 9 E T
A L A 8 C N A M M E L E P E U H D 0 T
W E R E t E D A V E T ~ R E Y A Z K 8
T A R S U T R 0 R T S A S H S Q U t 0
E 8 D Q M E X l E 0 N S T S E A N C l
T Q E U L W N U E J A J l E T l 0 P Q
0 E M E 0 A 0 0 l P A L 0 T K £ t 0 l
l S V 8 R R E R U Q M l P R l T S C
A t K G, lrt • S E l T ~ t £'A l H
bQAPXLSE"UU LO LNVTA
TUN~ IE R TA £TllT
SEI l OISDILOO
U 1 D l V A l ~ T II C I I T I I " L
I
j
J
'
-
,,.---~----------------------_.o;.;'.;•;.;,na:;•~..:.Co.:.•;:;•;.;•.:D~AIL, Y PILOT/Monday, Novem ber 18, 1881 .................... N ••
NY E COMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS
OUOUITIO!n ••c;.1.uo1 TllAOUOlll , ....... •c>•-· MIOWUT, ... c.,1c: ...... IOtfON OUIOIT ••O CllllCIN19Arl "00 ••CMAlllOU AN,. lllOOUIO 11' flfl NASO ANO I NOIWU ' Dow Jones Final
Off 10.84
Cloling 845.13
The trouble 1s, people can't leave well enough
alone. They're always messlng around, trying to
"improve" things. A good example is the way
companies change their names They're doing it all
the time It must have something to do with that old
·proverb, "You can't hit a movlng target."
Jn the first h a lf of 1981 nearfy 300 U.S.
corporations changed their names. l checked the
Fortune 500 roster for 1970 and found that 34 of those
big companies have since changed their names.
The most common factor m these changes is that
companies feel they have outlived their names
Continental Can was making much mor~ than cans.
so it became the Continental Group. National Cash
Register didn't want to be 1dent1Cied with that old
piece or hardware when it was into computers, so it
became NCR. Al lied Chemical drop ped th e
"chemical" and then went out to buy a clutch or
no1~chem1cal companies to justify its new name
Allied Corporallon
Companies fre
quently find their
new names Just
never replace the old
Qnes How many
people can quickly
identify E s mark"
Many more. I'll bet, Mlllll 111 .. ITZ
are rarruhar w1lh the -'
old name, Swift And a lot or people in the business
world still know the old name. Corn Products
Refining, and draw a blank on the name that
replaced it, CPC lnternat1onaJ
The big banks m the country are gearing up for a
new era and as a result they are really going in for
name changes. None. you can be sure. will take Steve
Martin's suggestion and call their places "Fred's
Bank.'' A bank always needs a more ponderous and
pretentious name. one that suggests sohd1ty
The largest banking company 1n Texas. First
international Banoshares of Dallas. owns local banks
all over the stale -and it lusts now for uniformity
So next year it's changing its name to lnterFirst. And
it plans to slap the lnterF1rst name on all its banks.
What a shame! Instead or the Alamo Heights
National Bank or San Antonio, It will ~ IoterFirsl.
Instead of the Lake Air National Batik of W1ch1ta
Falls. it will be JnterF1rst No more First National
Bank or Cor sicana. 1t will be InterF1rst. The
lnterP'1rst name wall also go up on a bunch of Houston
area banks · the Bank of Alameda, Creenspolnt.
Peoples Stale Bank. San Felipe Bank. San J<lcinto
State Ban}<. So much tor local color
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
NllW YOltlC. IAPI -The lo4-no 11'1 "'°'" IN Mew y.,. Slocl< E*'*9
ttllCU -wttrtlllt INt -9111'1 up
.. "'"1 --Ille ,,_ -Oft ~.,~,.._, ...... _...._
,., Monday. Ho M<urltlff tredl119 .,.,_ 12 at• Ind '*"· Ntt tllCI ~runreoe dlitnQft ttt file dlffe~e ~-•ft Ille Pf'JVIM ~IOM"9
prlet end todty'l ilfm price.
,..._ Utl Olll ~.
1 Glllf'llFl11 'Vt • Vt Up 10 (
2 Ht~oceCp 7 • ~ UP 'r J P$ G UOpf JOI.', • 1\'I Up I ' • cw 121't7 .. • 611'> Up • 4 S NIM J. 17 • 7 Up LC • COISO l. 2llf 1~ + 1'At Up 1.4
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SYMBOLS